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                  <text>TEMPO

SPORTS

MONEY

Fair weather:

Investing:

NFL
Falcons thump
Bengals 31-.16

Scenes from
Mason County
SeeC1

Making afuture
financial blueprint
See D1

See81

•

tntint

tmts
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Highs: 80s Lows: 60s
Dmlls on Pllp A2

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

1.25

5

Vol. lS. No. 25

Meigs Fair opens tonight New campaign
~J..."":.,!•~~

..

PAGE FORTY- 2000 MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDmON

theROCK
youngest
set to the mostFrom
vetSPRINGS_
eran fairgoer, there will be some!fling for everyone at the 137th
Meigs County Fair, which officially begins this evening with a
parade, a religious ceremony and
the crowning of the Meigs County Junior Fair King, Queen and
other royalty.
Opening events will kick otT six
full days nf junior and senior fair
events, nightly enterta-inment,
exciting horse racing, exhibits
and a midway filled with rides,
games and concessions.
Confederate Railroad, performers of upbeat country music,
including a number of hits, will
headline the week's entertainment on the grandstand Tuesday
at 8 p.m.
Grandstand entertainment will
also include Phil Dirt and the
Dozers, a popular oldies band, on
Wednesday at 7, and three local
bands in the Meigs County Jam
on Saturday night at 8: Blitzkrieg,
BC ind the Longhairs, and Bad
Habit.
Local talent abounds at the hill
ttage,.3Jld c;Jse&gt;vl&gt;e!'f-..Oll the. ~.~·~-~
grounds. The Swinging Seniors,
Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower, Robin D 'Hart and Vernon
Hendrix are set to appear, and for
- the younger set, th ll-Ghester
Mouse Fun Show will be ·presented all weeklong at various

·-~

.

to promote
local workforce

... , ~

kicks cfflhis week
BY TONY M. WCH
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

..

'-~--·f'l..,.-("he&lt;ter

Mouse Fun Show
is a combination of clown sketches. ventriloquism and magic starring Will Hatch and his sidekick,
Chester Mouse.

POMEROY - A new marketing campaign known as 33
WORKS designed to attract
industry to southeastern Ohio
begins this week.
The campaign will use newspapers, radio, billboards and the
Internet to promote the available
workfon:e located along the U.S.
33 corridor ofMeig;,Athens and
Hocking counties.
It is a joint effon of economic
development officials in all three·
counties and will focus on the
central Ohio area. Officials feel
that if all three counties work
together to promote the area's
workfon:e, a better job of letting
gmwmg compames identitY
southeastern Ohio as a valid business locati on can be accomplished
-- ~-The campaign is expected tu'
run for three months.
The site, www.usrouteJJ.com,
has been established to provide
information to intercst~d comparues.
Statistics ancl testimonials from

GROOMING A WINNER- Brooks Sayre of Syracuse and Tim Caudill of Pomeroy are seen grooming Sayre's

. Please see Fair. Pace A&amp;

around Columbus. as well as several other Midwestern metropol-

33WORKS

racehorse, "My Lady's Pocket, " a 2-year-old filly set to race at the Meigs County Fair on Thursday afternoon .

existing businesses are included in
a marketing brochure to be used
in response to various inquiries.
The brochure will be directlll.1iled to selected companies

itan areas.

"Our region has been losing a
number of individuals to central
Ohio · businesses for quite some
time now," said Perry Varnadoe,
director of the Meigs County
Economic Development Office.
"This demand in our local
workforce makes a bold statement saying that people fiom our

area are very good workers," he
added.
" However, we want to take a
reverse angle at the situation," s~
Varnadoe. "We w.mt these grow- '
ing businesses to realize that our

area is, in fact, a supetb location to
do bU!in ess."
"If our effons are successful,
the end result would allow local
workers the option of staying at
home to work instead of traveling
for employment;' he added.
o.,;,elopment officials said the
reg1on's high unemployment rate
has apparently grabbed the attention of various companies in large
metr6)l5lltan
areas
Touna ·
throughout the country.
Once these companies visit,
they are quite surprised to find a
number of quality buildings and
fi•lly-served industrial parks, said
Varnadoe.
Berlin Inc., a Columbus-based
sports apparel manufacturer,
opened a 5,000-square foot facility in Meigs this year. It eventually will employ about 25 workers,

•

Staff, program changes launched in Gallipolis schools ·
•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Recent additions to
.the teaching staff. an alternative school.
lit~ra cy ' initiatives, and
curriculum
changes highlight the start qf the 200001 sc hool year in th e Gallipolis City
Schools.
Four .new teachers, t\VO alternative
school
aides,
one
half-tim e
principal/ teacher, and one cemral oflice
staff perso n have been hired for the
upcoming year.

1

At Gallia Academy High School. Diane
Hamilton will be teaching the . new
Information Technology Program.
·
Hanulton comes to GAHS from the
Pike County Joint Vocational School as
the district begins to provide coursework
in Interactive Media as part of the Ohio
Valley 'Tech Prep Consortia.
Tvoo grants totaling $55,000 have been
awarded to GAHS, and a new state- ofthe-art lab with 25 computer stations has
been insta ll ed a~ a result.

Special blood.drive
in Gallipolis this week
..

•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

At Pleasant Valley Hospital, we

take pride in our community service. Each
year our healthcare professionals are on-hand
at thetri-county fairs to provide various
screenings, wellness information and giveaway
items.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
(304) 675-4340

We hope you visit our booth.

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GAL LIPOLIS A spec ial
blood drive in ho nor of th e late
Dr. William R . Smith Jr. has been
set for thi s Thursday from 11 :30
a.m. - 6 p.m . at St. Peter's Episcopal
Chmch in Gallipolis.
Smit h . a local orthodontist,
used numerous Lmits of blood and
blood produ cts dtJTing his illness.
He died Aug. 2.
Red Cross o ffi cial s said those
who want to re m ember Smith
can donate blood to help o thers
in need .
The Gallia Coun ty Red Cross
Chapter will provide hot dogs to
all do nors, along w ith special
door priz es and r~cognition for
individual gallon donation mile stones.
Tb e drive comes despite
"tremendous" donor response to ·

•

Smith, a local orthodontist, used numerous units of blood ·
and blood products
during his illness. He
died Aug. 2.
recent appe als. said Ted M azza ,
senior dtrecto r of do nor services
for Red Cross Blood Services'
Greater Alleghenies Region.
"Although o ur local situatio n
has improved signifi ca ntly 1n
recem weeks. across the country a
critical shortage still exists for
several blood types, especially
types 0 positive and 0 negative,"
Mazza said.

It is expected that this new technology to earn at least three units of science for
based program will help our students to graduation. Hal ey's position is in fulfill acquire the skills ne cessary to get better ment of federal regulations for special
jobs following graduation . Dean M ason, ed ucation.
Haley and Reynolds are both veteran
technology coordinator, has been superteachers with many years of experienc e
vising installation of the new lab.
Also at GAHS, Larry Haley has been in the Gallipolis City Sc hools and th e
added to teach students that have been Jackson C ity Schools, resp ectivel y.
identified with learning disapilities, and
Workin g throughout the 1999- 2000
school
year, the e ntire K- 12 sc ienc e
Jim R eynolds will be teaching science.
Senate llill 55 requires all students co mmittee studied the state proficiency
begi nning with this year's ti·es hman class, outcomes in order to identi fy gaps that

Cood Morning!

Gallipolis has a new shoe
store - Kipling Shoe Co ..
in downtown. Story, D1
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exis ted in the curriculum.
As a result of the teac hers' findings.
Discover y Works, the FuU Option Science System (FOSS), and supplemental
materials for K-6 instruction have been
purchased for 2000-01.
Teachers ca n attend a four-day inservice in August to learn more about the
" Inquiry Approach" for teaching science.
High school teachers will also be using

Please see Schools, Pip A2

ns,anyone?
Volunteers, from
left, Randy Skaggs, Dan Morgan
and Ron Miller
took turns stirring
the soup served
during Saturday's
130th observance
of the Rio Grande
Bean Dinner at
the Bob Evans
Farm Shelterhouse. The annual
event, a continuation of the post·
Civil War gatherIngs of Grand
Army of the
Republic veterans ,
is sponsored by
the Rio Grande
Memorial Association. (Kevin Kelly
photo)

Cl 2000 Ohio VaNey Publishing Co.

Please SH Blood, Pip A&amp;

•

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•

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P•ge A2 • 6unbap CJimtB -ltrntind

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

VALLEY BRIEFS

Schools

Public meeting

from PageA1

VINTON -Vinton offcials will hold a public meeting Monday at
6 p.m. in the village IWl to discuss the possibility of developing a Oood
mitigation project.
. Conununity residents are encouraged to attend and participate in
.die open meeting, in the project development process, and offer ideas
,.Qn possible solutions.
" "Public participation in this process is required if it is to be successJill;' Mayor Donna DeWitt said. "If you are unable to attend but would
. like the opportunity to conunent, please contact the mayor, council
members or clerk."

new texts and materials to
achieve "hands- on - minds- o n"
science instruction that will help
prepare students for the high
school graduation qualifying
exam.
Rosie Tolliver, director of curriculum and Instruction, has been
instrumental in meeting these
changes.
The district's top goal for
improving academic performance
is to improve reading skills before
the fourth grade.
Under the "Ohio Literacy Initiative" district and building
teams involving teacht!rs and parents have been established to
improve literacy in the Gallipolis
City School District.
The Summer In stitute for
Reading Intervention w.as a
week-long program in which 96
percent of K- 4 teachers participated in professio nal development for reading literacy.
Several grades 5-8 teac hers
received three days of inservice
for reading intervention as well,
and various parents were involved

Repaving set
GALLIPOLIS - Weather permitting, a tentative schedule of street
·repaving will be held Monday and Tuesday, City Manager E. V Clarke
Jr. said.
The schedule calls for work on Mill Creek Road to the Ohio
Avenue intersection, Neil Avenue and Vinton Court on Monday. Tuesday's schedule includes Pine Street, starting at Second Avenue to the
.~ity limits, Grape Street and Edgemont Drive.
- During the project work hours, there will be no parking on either
side of the streets. Work will begin around 7 a.m. and continue
' through 6 p.m.
. -.. "Residents are asked to move their vehicles from the project area
during this time;· Clarke said. "Your cooperation will be appreciated
during the duration of this improvement project."

·•

Crime Watch meeting
GALLIPOLIS - A Crime Watch meeting for the Gallipolis-Maple
Shade area will be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. at 2104 Chatham St.

~.·.

.,~::.
..
~::

Sign-ups begin

GALLIPOLIS - Sign-ups for twirling classes will continue this
week at the Cheer Station. Classes will be held on Thursdays.
For more information, call 446-9b03.

'

Speaking Sunday

)'

EUREKA - Michael Spina will preach at Eureka Church of God
at II a.m. Sunday.
·

I

'

GALLIPOLIS- 0.0. Mcintyre Park- District is now taking reservations for group hayrides in September and OctC)ber.
Cost of the program is $50 for a w~gon ride of up to 30 people and
{ ·$40 tor each additional wagon ride of up to 30 people. Rides are from
45 minutes to an hour in length.
. The park district will also provide a bonfire and hot dog sticks. All
hayrides must be scheduled at least three days in advance of the desired
·
date.
To make reservations, or for more information, call the park district
office at 446-4612, extension 256 on weekdays from 8 a..m. until 4
p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Free inununizations will be provided by the Gallia County Health Department at the following locations this week:
• Wednesday - Gallia Metropolitan Estates, 2-3 p.m.
• Saturday- Bossard Memorial Library, 12:30-1:30 p.m.

storms. Lows in the upper 60s and
highs in the mid and upper 80s.

EntryForm -

Please Check One:
_Teen Queen _
Senior Queen

See Us
r All
The Mew Coins

-

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At
BARGAIM
PRICES
2000 Silver Dollar

onlY$850

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 SECOND AVE

GALLIPOLIS

~: COLUMBUS (AP) -

Teen King (Ages 13-19)
Senior King (Ages 21 and over)

Proudly Supports Area High School Activities

.' .-.

.:r-~--------------------~

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6unbap -tttmt• 6entintl

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our maJn concern In all stories Is to be
accurate. It you know of an error in a
story, call the new.uoom at (740) 446·
lJ4l or Pomeroy: (740) 991-2155. We will
check your lnforma1Jon and make a
rorrettlon If warranted.
Nowa Oopartmanta
Golllpolla
The main number Is 446·1341.
Department extentlons an:

Manaatn1 Edltor ..........- .........-E•L 118
City Edltor...... -........................_E•L Ill
urestyi&lt; .......................- ..............E•t. uo
Sporu .......................................... E•L Ill
New! ............................................ Ellt, 119

To Send E-Mail

(USPS 21.1-260)
Comr~u nltr Ncw•p•pcr Hokll~~p, Inc.
Pub li shed every Sunday, 825 Third Aile.,
Oallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publlshlna
Company. Second class postap p.aid al Gallipolis,

Provided by

Holzer Clinic

-

: · · COLUMBUS (AP) - A former judge ca ught .in an Fni investi ga! . tion of corruption in the Youngstown area can no longer practi ce law,
i ·the Ohio Supreme Court said Friday.
; : The court accepted Andrew PolovischakJr.'s rt.'Stgnation as an attar' . ney, which Polovischak submitted to the court in May. The comt also
: . ordered Polovischak's name struck fmm a list of regtstercd Ohio attor:' : neys.
: : The court also noted that disciplinary action was pending against
1 • Polovischak at the fime of his resignation. That note fl'mai ns on Polovischak's record should he' ever reapply to practice law.
: : Polovischak, a former municipal court judge in Youngstown ii1
; northeast Ohio, pleaded guilty in April for ~oking bnbes to tix crimi: : nal cases. H e was sentenced to the maximum 2 1/ 2 ye-ars in prison.
; : The case was part of a federal investigation that has netted more than
: :60 convictions since 1994, including a sheriff, a prosecutor and former
~ :mob boss Leoine "Lenny" Strollo.
i .. U.S . Rep. James Traficant, a Democrat who rc•presents the
; ·Youngstown area, said he expects to be indicted b11t denies any wrong: :doing.
.: : . Polovisc hak acknowledged cohspinng with three lawyers from 1989
; : ro 1997 to fix cases in his court, which handl es misdemeano rs. The
' :attorneys have pleaded guil ty.

' ...
\

number

99 2·2 1.'i5.

Department utensions are:
General Manager ................ ..... Ext. II OJ
News .......................................... Exl. 1102
................................................or Ext1106

•

August 28 and running through October, every Saturday It 1:00 All.
(There will be no clinic Labor Day Wtabnd).
The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush, Chiropractic and Sports Injury Physician,
Certified Athletic Trainers, an X-ray technician, and support staff.

Ave .,

-

Parental consent is needed for evaluations and treatments.

Holzer Sycamore Clinic 740 441-5244
''

The Holzer Clinic's Sports Medicine Staff Is looking forward to
continuing to provide the area's athletes with quality hlalth care.

~~n:~~~i'Pf~'b):"~·~·i·i ·j;~ifl~d··;~-~~~-!~·c~

home canter tcrvk:e II available.
The Sunday T1mt..s-Sentlnel will not be responsible

for 1dYana p1~ments made 10 canlen.
Publl1hcr reservu the rl&amp;ht to adjult ntu durlna
the subKTiptKm period. S:ubscrip(ion nte d11nars

Best Wishes For

m•y be implc:mcntcd by c;hanalna: the duntlon of

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.Juc~essful Se~sonl

except for inflatiOn adju stments.
Palmer said the research did not attempt to
explain why Ohio's rate has, tncrcased so much,
espectally the 65 percent jump fmm 1979 to
1993.
It is possible that Ohio may have been hit
harder by the two re cessions sa ndwiched
a round the strong eco no mic growth during the ·
19SOs, he sard. There also has been an increase
in the number of low-wage JObs that do not
pay enough to keep peop le out uf poverty. he
said.
"I don't know that there is any simple
answer." said Jon Allen . spokesman for the Ohio
D epartment of Job and Family Services.

Fight to continue over ·
pay for public defender§

C IN C INNATI (AP) A lawye r, said he will ask the City
sta te appeals co urt has thrown Council to appea l the ruling to
out a lawsuit that would force the state supreme court.
gun makers to pay for damage s
C he sley sa id that, although
caused by guns.
the appea ls court decision was
The city of Ci ncinnati filed un animou s, two of the three
suit against gun manufa cturers judges, Lee Hildebrandt and
last year, claimmg they owed Mark Painter. d isa greed with
the city millions of dollars in some parts of Judge Ralph
ex penses for damages. The su.it Wmk1er's majority opmio~ ,
alleged gun makers are respon'Tm di sappointed, but 'I'm
sible for misu se of guns and enco uraged as well ," C hesley
says they 're negl igent because said . "We need to address thi s
their weapons don't have ade - With the Supreme Court ."
quate safety devices.
But Winkler said the ci ty's
The Ohio 1st Distri ct Cnurt
lawsuit docsn 't give any examof Appeals ruled Friday that
ples of dirc•ct injuri es ca used by
Cinci nnati \Vould "open a Pan a sp eci tlc gone model or
dora's box" if gun makers were
maker. The ctty also failed to
held liable. Th e 3-0 opinion
affirmed a decision la st year by show how 1t sust ained any
Hamilto n County Common direc t phys ical da mage because
Plea s Judge RobcQ Rudman . of gun vi o lt:n c ~.·. he said.
"TIH· city .. CJ !l prove no
who thn:w out th e c1 ~e.
The city mu st now appc &lt;d n~ h;n m to lt"l'l f in th ~.· form of
lk ath , phys1cal lllj tHy o r emoG l &amp;e to the Ohio S u preme
tional di strr..· o;s," \Vinkler sa1d 1n
Co ur t to keep It alive .
·
Similar law suits have been hi s wn t tcn opin io n. "The city
liled in tt early 30 ci ties across makes ge ne ric claints against a11
th e country. James Oorr, an the manufacttirers in an etron
attorney for Connecti cut- to gloss OV\.' r the fata l Olll iSS!O ll S
based Stur m &amp; Roger gun in its comphint."
He .1 lso s.1 id gun manufaccompany satd th e lega l opin turers
arc not :H fault if people
ions apphed in th e C in ci nnati
ca se should be applied to other 1111Suse we.1pp ns.
jurisdi ctions.
"M:mufacturcrs· -have no
"These cases never. had any dury ro giVe warnings a bout
legal basis," Dorr sa id,
the obvious dan gers of handStanley C hesley, the city's guns ." Winkler wrote.

C IN C INNATI (AP) - A $5
hourly raise for public defenders
doesn't satisfy a civil rights advoc:ate who says poor peo ple pay
the price of inadequate lega l rep rese ntation.
Robert Newman is trying to
force Hamilton County - which
sends more people to death row
than any county in Ohio - to
pay lawyers who defend indige nt
people more tha n the curre nt $40
an hour. He also wants the co unty to hire permanent staff lawyers
to represent defendants in deathpenalty cases.
" ] t\Jink it's a terrible , terrible
flaw in the criminal ju stice system ·
when anybody 'is facing a death ·
penalty and is not vigorou sly represented," said Newma n, a civil
rights lawyer w ho doe&lt; not han dle crimmal cases.
He sa id the pay fa il' to attra ct
c· nough good lawy,-rs to propnly
defend indrge nt people.
Newman had filt.·d a lawsuit
directly to the O hio Suprenrc
C ourt, clanning that H ami lton
County is violating the Co nstitu tion by nm ensuring adequate
dl;!fense for poor pcqple accus.ed
of major crimes.
But the justices rejected the
lawsuit this Wt:"ek, saymg there
were other pos si ble soluti ons. The
vote was 4-3 .
Newman said Friday he will

Man sues
funeral home
STOW, Ohio (AP) - A man
has sued a fimcral home claiming
two workers who came to
remove his father's body knocked
it against . furniture and exposed
the naked remains to gr ievin g relatives.
Larry DeAngelis. of Stow, filed
a lawsmt Thursday in Sununi t
County Common Pleas Cou rt
see king unspecified damages from
Schlup -Pucak Funeral Home in
Akron.
Donald Pucak, manager of the
funeral home, said Friday he
beli eves iri s workers acted professiona lly.
Vtto DeAngelis, Larry _D eAngelis' father, di ed on Aug. 12 .
1'1'18. with hi s d nldren, g randchildren and other familv me mbers prese nt. The 76-year-o ld
m;-~n d1ed in a fini shed b:-~sement
at Larry DeAngelis' ho me. where
hospi cL' · work~:.·rs tt!nded ro hi s
needs.
Two
unidcnrified, funeral
ho me workers c:nne to remove
the body and "proceeded to make
rallous re marks to grievin g f.'lnlily members" about how to ca rry
the man's body fron t the basement , 1ccordin g to tht• lawsu\ t.

THANK YOU
Shirley Angel
and J.D. Taylor

THANK YOU
Shelby Richards
Construction Co.

for purchasing my
Market Hog
at the 2000 Gallia
County Jr. Fair

for purchasing my
Market Hog
at the 2000 Gallia
County Jr. Fair

Molly Ruf

Annah Ruf

Rio Hopefuls 4-H Clu

Rio Hopefuls 4-H Clu

refile the complaint as soon ."'
next week , in H amilton County
Common Pleas Court.
Louis F. Strigari , the county

pub lic defender, said he think.s the
$40 hourly rate is fair but not ·
great..

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"Smart Move" program and smoking cessation

'AllEY'S CERTIFICA'E

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127.30

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....................... 55182

.. .... $105.56
Kalrt OuUkle Gallia Cuunf.¥

1 Gallipolis, Ohio
I
Jewelry Store Only
Coupon Must Be Redeemed at Time of Purchase
One Coupon Per Customer Per Visit

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52 Weck.l .................................................... S J 1)9.12

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Please call to register for this free, adult smoking

HMC

1 422 Second Avenue

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to the study released Thursday by the non -partisa n research group.The rate pea ked at 20 percent in 1993 .
The national rate increased 15 percent OVt:'r
the 20 years. It was to percent in 1979,
in creased to 22.5 percent in 1993 and fell to 19
percent in 1998 .
The study analyzed annual income data
from the Ce nsus Bureau for 1979 through
1998 , the last year for whi ch information is
available .
In 1998, a family of four was considered
poor if their annual income was below
·$16,600. The formula used to determine the
poverty rate had not changed in three decades

Court throws out lawsuit that
would make gun makers pay

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The child poverty
r:1te increased 50 percent in Ohio in the· past 20
years, much higher than the national rate during th e same period, according to a research
gmup.
" It wa~ a tough period for low-income children , but espcially low-income children and
their families in Ohio," said Julian Palmer,
spokesman for th e NatiOnal Center for Children in Poverty at Columhi a Univen&lt;ity.
He said only seven states had rates that
increased mort'.
The rate was 18 perce nt in 1998 when
524,984 . children lived in poverty in Ohio,
compared with 12 percent in 1979, according

1 TAWNEY
I JEWELERS

Dally IDd Sunfty
MAlt SUBSCRimONS
lnlide G11!11 CouDty
~(! W~c:h ,

Child poverty rate increases by 50 percent

Serving Gallipolis For Over 67 Years

SINGLE COPY PRICE

13 Weeks . .

Is

Third

SUNDAVONLV

the subscription.

Pomeroy
nuln

825

SUBSCRJPTJON RATES
Br C1nitr or Motor Rou1t
One Weet ....................................................... ll . ~
One Year ....................................................... $.65.00

Newa Department
The

Sent i nel,

Gal lipolis,Ohlo 45631 .

: IRONTON (AP) - Damage assessment tea ms from the Nat 1onal
:Weather Service have confirmed that tornados touched d own in
·southern Ohio this week .
; The tornados hit Wednesday evening near th e Oh10 River tow n of
Athalia in L1wrence County and east of Portsmouth in Sc..'ioto Coun i :ty. according to the weather service's C harleston, WVa.. bureau.
, . The Athaba tornado had wmd speeds between 73 and 112 miles per
, hour. the Ironton Tribune reported.
: . It destroyed a mobile home, snapped off trees. d.11mgcd several
; h~mes and destroyed a barn, the ~veather service satd.Th e danMgc path
, was about two nules long and 7:J to 100 yards wide .
· No major injuries were reported.

Holzer Clinic's newly expanded Sports Medicine Center, located at 4th &amp; Sycamore Street,
will be providing Sports Injury Care at our "Saturday Morning Clinics" beginning

En1ere d u second clus mailina maucr at
Pomero)', Otllo Post office.
Mtmbtr: The Anoc:ialcd Pren , And the Ohio
Newspaper AlllOCiatlon.
POSTMASTER: Send addreu corrections to The

galtribune@eunkanet.com

NWS confinns area tornadoes

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Sat11rday

Ohio.

Sunday-Times

Fonner judge loses license

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Advisory in effed

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: - POMEROY - Residents in the areas of Pomeroy which experi:: enced water outage Friday are advised to boil their drinking water
!~ until further notice.
; : · Testing will take place to be sure that the' water is safe for con!umption and the public will be advised once the boil order is lifted,
:•!"JdJohn Anderson, Pomeroy village administrator.

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The Ohio Supreme Court on Frid-ry
P,rdered a Geauga County judge to allow media coverage of the juvc~ile-court trial of rwo teen-agers accused of taking part in the Februpry robbery and slaying of a gas station clerk.
The court ruled 6-1 that Judge Charles H enry ntm t open the proi:!=eedings against the two juveniles. The coun comolidatcd m otion s
~ed by T he (Cleveland) Plain Dealer and station WJW-TV in Clcve~~nd to open Henry's court.
": Henry had closed the trial after the media reported the juveniles'
~ames and th eir pictures had appeared in ncwspapcn; and on tclevi~on. He further o rdered that media w ishmg to rover tirrther pro:::Ceedings invo lving the JUVenil es make the requests in writing.
:; Attorneys for one of the juveniles said the case should not be tri c·d
:through media reports. The j uveniles and a C leveland tnan were
~charged in the robbery and slaying of Daniello Kovac ic, 19, of Chester
:.Township and the wounding of her 17-year- old friend.
;:.-: The Supreme Court ruled that Hen ry's decision that open-court
~earings would harm the juvenile and a presumption that such hear··iPgs shou ld be closed "are little more than the pmonal predilecrions
·:e;.f the JUdge ... and, if accepted as appropr~otc, would arguably JUSti fY
tjle closure of all juvenile proceedings."

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Juvenile's trial open to media

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740- 446 - 1 (&gt; 15

GALLIPOLIS - All entnes for the annual Emancipation Proda:: mation Queen contest on Sept 16 must be m by Sept. 6
:
Those interested in participating should contacty Shelan Jackson at
: 388-8072 or Jessie Payne at 245-5216.
!• f All entries are welcome, but applicants.must be at least 16 to 30 years
( o age.

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Name,_ _ _ _ _ _ _..J~ge, _ _ _ _ __
Address
Birthdater _ _ __
City
Stater_ _ County_
Phone
ale
Female_
Parents (On Only for teens)'--------

Entries due

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Acquittal issued in jogger death

: · ' GREENVILLE (AP) - A man was cleared Friday of charges that ,
·.· he helped his father conceal evidence of the father's alleged abduction
· and killing of a female jogger.
. •
•. , Shawn Rodeheffer, 23, of Rossburg, was indicted in September on
· charges of obstructing justice and tampering with evidence in con' · nection with the 1998 death of Lynn Topp. Judge Stephen Yarbrough
· 'acquitted Rodeheffer in Darke County Common Pleas Court ofboth
' ·counts. The judge heard the case after Rodeheffer waived his right to
. a jury trial .
't -,· ·Topp, 19, disappeared on Feb. 21, 1998, while jogging near her
' ' ' home in North Star, about 45 miles northwest of Dayton. Her body
·· W..s found March 6,1998, buried on a farm near New Weston .
The owner of the farm was Rodeheffer's father, Tim&lt;&gt;thy Rod cheffer. The father was considered the main suspect in the death.
.;-' The father's body was found later that month in a barri on a neigho.\&gt;or's property. He had a gunshot wound to the head and authorities
Zbelieve he killed himself. ·
:: : Da~ke County Prosecutor Richard H owell alleged that the younger
! Rodeheffer rented the backhoe used to dig the Jogger's grave. Tlie
t&lt;Jefense said the son knew nothing about the body until police found

Mail Entries to: Antoinette Saunders I Chairperson
P.O. Box511
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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Entries must be postmarked by September 09, 2000
'Please Only Serious Entries Apply'

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HOLZER CLINIC

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Chapter Harley Owners Group's annual $2,000 poktr run will be Aug. 20, rain or shine, starting with registration at 11 :30 a.m. until 1 p.m. at Baxter's Harley Davidson,Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis.
The cost is $10 per penon. The event is sponsored by HOG and
Baxter's HD.
• - The last bike out will be 1 p.m. and and the last bike in will be 5
:::0 p.m. at the Gallipolis HOG Clubhouse. Free food is available at poker
"' runForstops.
more information, call Baxter's HD at 446-6336 or HOG
Director Tony Beck at 446-3096.

· COLUMBUS (AP) - A nursing student who had been celebrating her 21st birthday was beaten to death early Friday, police said.
,. . The body of Angela Greathouse was found in her apartment, poli ce
".said.
1
·Police issued a warrant for the arrest of her boyfriend, William J.
_Cooper, 22, charging him with aggravated murder.
· · Neighbor.; say the Capital University nur.;ing student had been celt ebrating her birthday Thursday night. They called for help early Friday after hearing argumeqts in her apartment.
- · Greathouse would have been a senior at the univer.;ity this fall .

;:-: Yarbrough wrote in his three-page ruling that he was convinced that
;-.!imothy Rodeheffer had killed Topp and "received the death penalty
Ol'or his crimes , albeit self-inilicted."The judge said, however. the state
b-ailed to prove the son had knowledge of the elder Rodchcffcr's
b lleged crimes.

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Poker run slated

Nuning student's body found

It's time again for our
Emancipation Proclamation
Queen and King contests.

tnr~r
le13] in
guaroian,
and oring a current
record
with _ .
C hildren
need ofinununizations
mustinununization
be accompanied
IJ'i!JlaJ-

them,

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inception.
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A staff addition to the Gallipolis City S~ hool District Central Office is Jim Craft, director of
continuous improvement and
communications.
Craft taught English and
coached football and track.. . at'
GAHS during the past six ye_ars.
He has represented GAHS o n the
district's Continuou s Impro~e­
ment Advisory Panel and . · has
served as co-chairman of the
North Central Associatip.n 's
school improvement process, .
Previously, he was an English
teacher and coach at Logan Elm
High School in Pickaway Coimry for six years.
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Clear skies prevail Sunday

Extended forecast:
Monday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in ·
the mid 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunder-

BUCKEYE
BRIEFS"
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Department, Gallia County Juvenile Court and Gallipolis Municipal Court; and parent volunteer
Amy Boster have all been instrumental in bringing about the n~w
school at Clay.
Mary Lynne Jones, director pf
pupil personnel services for Gallipolis City Schools, has spe~r­
headed the new school since its

Judging will be on
September 16, 2000 at
10:00 o'clock at the Gallla County
Fairground.

Weather foreca$1:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Lows 55
to 60. Light and variable wind.
Sunday... Mosdy sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Sunday night.. .Partly clou)ly.
Lows near 60.

Immunizations set

11 years.
He has 19 yean of experience
working with children with
behavioral problems. Carol Sevy,
former
learning
disabilities
teacher at G AHS, will also teach
there now.
Tracy Tackett and Gwen Craft
will serve as aides at Clay SchooL
Tackett has been a substitute
teacher, and she and Craft have
served in the past as school volunteers. Money from the Alternative School grant will be paying
for one . teacher and one aide
positipn at the school, and the
Gallia County Local Schools will
be providing one teacher and one
aide ..
Various local organizations
including Gallia -Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services;
Department of Human Services;
ACCESS Head Start; ACCESS
Human Resources; FACTS;
TASC; Children and Fa.mily First;
Prosecuting Attorney Brent
Saunders; Gallia County Sheriff's

Guidelines are as followed.

Sunday's weather will be fair
and seasonable. Skies will be
sunny and te mperatures will
climb into the low to middle 80s.

~ -s_u_n_d_•~y~,A
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u=g~u~~~1~3~·~2~ooo~..........................................~·P_o~m_e_r_o~y~·-M
....id_d_l~epo~rt--·_G_a_l_l~~o-l_is~,-O_h_i_o_P_o_i_n_t_P~Ie_a~s~a-n~t,_wv
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__n_nb_a_~_m_._"•-•-~--~-'-"-'t_n•_•_·_P_a~g~e_A_3_

Sundlly, Auguat 13, 2000

VALLEY BRIEFS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hayrides slated ·

as tutors.
There are now parent coordinators for each building, sununer
school attendance has tripled, and
proficiency analysis was comple ted.
Building level teachers at Rio
Grande, Green and Washington
elementaries are to be commended for their tireless efforts · a\
improving reading literacy in the
Gallipolis City School District,
school officials said.
All elementary principals have
attended a two- day Rigby "Leadership for Literacy" program. A
12-week on- site training with
Rigby, "Developing Lite ra cy
First;' for 98 percent of all elementary teachers will be starting
in September.
A new Alternative School has
been located at the former Clay
Elementary School and present
location of ACCESS Head Start.
This new school is a cooperative effort berween Gallia County
Local Schools, Gallia-Jackso nVinton Joint Vocational School
· and the Gallipolis C ity School
District.
David Perry has been hired as
t~e half- time principal/ teacher.
Perry has been a teacher at Rio
Grande Elementary for the past

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1101.1.ER MEI)ICAI.CENTE R

cessation class

44 6-5940

Th e Tobacco Usc Prevention Coalition of Galli a and Jackson Coun1i es is pleased to
sponsor the Smart Move program , dcvclopct..l hy the American Cancer Society . .
r:unt..l s for the program are mat..lc available through a grant to ll o l1cr Medical Center ;
1 o r Hea lth .
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from !he Ohio

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P•ge A2 • 6unbap CJimtB -ltrntind

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

VALLEY BRIEFS

Schools

Public meeting

from PageA1

VINTON -Vinton offcials will hold a public meeting Monday at
6 p.m. in the village IWl to discuss the possibility of developing a Oood
mitigation project.
. Conununity residents are encouraged to attend and participate in
.die open meeting, in the project development process, and offer ideas
,.Qn possible solutions.
" "Public participation in this process is required if it is to be successJill;' Mayor Donna DeWitt said. "If you are unable to attend but would
. like the opportunity to conunent, please contact the mayor, council
members or clerk."

new texts and materials to
achieve "hands- on - minds- o n"
science instruction that will help
prepare students for the high
school graduation qualifying
exam.
Rosie Tolliver, director of curriculum and Instruction, has been
instrumental in meeting these
changes.
The district's top goal for
improving academic performance
is to improve reading skills before
the fourth grade.
Under the "Ohio Literacy Initiative" district and building
teams involving teacht!rs and parents have been established to
improve literacy in the Gallipolis
City School District.
The Summer In stitute for
Reading Intervention w.as a
week-long program in which 96
percent of K- 4 teachers participated in professio nal development for reading literacy.
Several grades 5-8 teac hers
received three days of inservice
for reading intervention as well,
and various parents were involved

Repaving set
GALLIPOLIS - Weather permitting, a tentative schedule of street
·repaving will be held Monday and Tuesday, City Manager E. V Clarke
Jr. said.
The schedule calls for work on Mill Creek Road to the Ohio
Avenue intersection, Neil Avenue and Vinton Court on Monday. Tuesday's schedule includes Pine Street, starting at Second Avenue to the
.~ity limits, Grape Street and Edgemont Drive.
- During the project work hours, there will be no parking on either
side of the streets. Work will begin around 7 a.m. and continue
' through 6 p.m.
. -.. "Residents are asked to move their vehicles from the project area
during this time;· Clarke said. "Your cooperation will be appreciated
during the duration of this improvement project."

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Crime Watch meeting
GALLIPOLIS - A Crime Watch meeting for the Gallipolis-Maple
Shade area will be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. at 2104 Chatham St.

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Sign-ups begin

GALLIPOLIS - Sign-ups for twirling classes will continue this
week at the Cheer Station. Classes will be held on Thursdays.
For more information, call 446-9b03.

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Speaking Sunday

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EUREKA - Michael Spina will preach at Eureka Church of God
at II a.m. Sunday.
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GALLIPOLIS- 0.0. Mcintyre Park- District is now taking reservations for group hayrides in September and OctC)ber.
Cost of the program is $50 for a w~gon ride of up to 30 people and
{ ·$40 tor each additional wagon ride of up to 30 people. Rides are from
45 minutes to an hour in length.
. The park district will also provide a bonfire and hot dog sticks. All
hayrides must be scheduled at least three days in advance of the desired
·
date.
To make reservations, or for more information, call the park district
office at 446-4612, extension 256 on weekdays from 8 a..m. until 4
p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Free inununizations will be provided by the Gallia County Health Department at the following locations this week:
• Wednesday - Gallia Metropolitan Estates, 2-3 p.m.
• Saturday- Bossard Memorial Library, 12:30-1:30 p.m.

storms. Lows in the upper 60s and
highs in the mid and upper 80s.

EntryForm -

Please Check One:
_Teen Queen _
Senior Queen

See Us
r All
The Mew Coins

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At
BARGAIM
PRICES
2000 Silver Dollar

onlY$850

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 SECOND AVE

GALLIPOLIS

~: COLUMBUS (AP) -

Teen King (Ages 13-19)
Senior King (Ages 21 and over)

Proudly Supports Area High School Activities

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6unbap -tttmt• 6entintl

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our maJn concern In all stories Is to be
accurate. It you know of an error in a
story, call the new.uoom at (740) 446·
lJ4l or Pomeroy: (740) 991-2155. We will
check your lnforma1Jon and make a
rorrettlon If warranted.
Nowa Oopartmanta
Golllpolla
The main number Is 446·1341.
Department extentlons an:

Manaatn1 Edltor ..........- .........-E•L 118
City Edltor...... -........................_E•L Ill
urestyi&lt; .......................- ..............E•t. uo
Sporu .......................................... E•L Ill
New! ............................................ Ellt, 119

To Send E-Mail

(USPS 21.1-260)
Comr~u nltr Ncw•p•pcr Hokll~~p, Inc.
Pub li shed every Sunday, 825 Third Aile.,
Oallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publlshlna
Company. Second class postap p.aid al Gallipolis,

Provided by

Holzer Clinic

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: · · COLUMBUS (AP) - A former judge ca ught .in an Fni investi ga! . tion of corruption in the Youngstown area can no longer practi ce law,
i ·the Ohio Supreme Court said Friday.
; : The court accepted Andrew PolovischakJr.'s rt.'Stgnation as an attar' . ney, which Polovischak submitted to the court in May. The comt also
: . ordered Polovischak's name struck fmm a list of regtstercd Ohio attor:' : neys.
: : The court also noted that disciplinary action was pending against
1 • Polovischak at the fime of his resignation. That note fl'mai ns on Polovischak's record should he' ever reapply to practice law.
: : Polovischak, a former municipal court judge in Youngstown ii1
; northeast Ohio, pleaded guilty in April for ~oking bnbes to tix crimi: : nal cases. H e was sentenced to the maximum 2 1/ 2 ye-ars in prison.
; : The case was part of a federal investigation that has netted more than
: :60 convictions since 1994, including a sheriff, a prosecutor and former
~ :mob boss Leoine "Lenny" Strollo.
i .. U.S . Rep. James Traficant, a Democrat who rc•presents the
; ·Youngstown area, said he expects to be indicted b11t denies any wrong: :doing.
.: : . Polovisc hak acknowledged cohspinng with three lawyers from 1989
; : ro 1997 to fix cases in his court, which handl es misdemeano rs. The
' :attorneys have pleaded guil ty.

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99 2·2 1.'i5.

Department utensions are:
General Manager ................ ..... Ext. II OJ
News .......................................... Exl. 1102
................................................or Ext1106

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August 28 and running through October, every Saturday It 1:00 All.
(There will be no clinic Labor Day Wtabnd).
The Sports Injury Clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kelly Roush, Chiropractic and Sports Injury Physician,
Certified Athletic Trainers, an X-ray technician, and support staff.

Ave .,

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Parental consent is needed for evaluations and treatments.

Holzer Sycamore Clinic 740 441-5244
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The Holzer Clinic's Sports Medicine Staff Is looking forward to
continuing to provide the area's athletes with quality hlalth care.

~~n:~~~i'Pf~'b):"~·~·i·i ·j;~ifl~d··;~-~~~-!~·c~

home canter tcrvk:e II available.
The Sunday T1mt..s-Sentlnel will not be responsible

for 1dYana p1~ments made 10 canlen.
Publl1hcr reservu the rl&amp;ht to adjult ntu durlna
the subKTiptKm period. S:ubscrip(ion nte d11nars

Best Wishes For

m•y be implc:mcntcd by c;hanalna: the duntlon of

~:! W~tk~ ....... ... .. ... .

.Juc~essful Se~sonl

except for inflatiOn adju stments.
Palmer said the research did not attempt to
explain why Ohio's rate has, tncrcased so much,
espectally the 65 percent jump fmm 1979 to
1993.
It is possible that Ohio may have been hit
harder by the two re cessions sa ndwiched
a round the strong eco no mic growth during the ·
19SOs, he sard. There also has been an increase
in the number of low-wage JObs that do not
pay enough to keep peop le out uf poverty. he
said.
"I don't know that there is any simple
answer." said Jon Allen . spokesman for the Ohio
D epartment of Job and Family Services.

Fight to continue over ·
pay for public defender§

C IN C INNATI (AP) A lawye r, said he will ask the City
sta te appeals co urt has thrown Council to appea l the ruling to
out a lawsuit that would force the state supreme court.
gun makers to pay for damage s
C he sley sa id that, although
caused by guns.
the appea ls court decision was
The city of Ci ncinnati filed un animou s, two of the three
suit against gun manufa cturers judges, Lee Hildebrandt and
last year, claimmg they owed Mark Painter. d isa greed with
the city millions of dollars in some parts of Judge Ralph
ex penses for damages. The su.it Wmk1er's majority opmio~ ,
alleged gun makers are respon'Tm di sappointed, but 'I'm
sible for misu se of guns and enco uraged as well ," C hesley
says they 're negl igent because said . "We need to address thi s
their weapons don't have ade - With the Supreme Court ."
quate safety devices.
But Winkler said the ci ty's
The Ohio 1st Distri ct Cnurt
lawsuit docsn 't give any examof Appeals ruled Friday that
ples of dirc•ct injuri es ca used by
Cinci nnati \Vould "open a Pan a sp eci tlc gone model or
dora's box" if gun makers were
maker. The ctty also failed to
held liable. Th e 3-0 opinion
affirmed a decision la st year by show how 1t sust ained any
Hamilto n County Common direc t phys ical da mage because
Plea s Judge RobcQ Rudman . of gun vi o lt:n c ~.·. he said.
"TIH· city .. CJ !l prove no
who thn:w out th e c1 ~e.
The city mu st now appc &lt;d n~ h;n m to lt"l'l f in th ~.· form of
lk ath , phys1cal lllj tHy o r emoG l &amp;e to the Ohio S u preme
tional di strr..· o;s," \Vinkler sa1d 1n
Co ur t to keep It alive .
·
Similar law suits have been hi s wn t tcn opin io n. "The city
liled in tt early 30 ci ties across makes ge ne ric claints against a11
th e country. James Oorr, an the manufacttirers in an etron
attorney for Connecti cut- to gloss OV\.' r the fata l Olll iSS!O ll S
based Stur m &amp; Roger gun in its comphint."
He .1 lso s.1 id gun manufaccompany satd th e lega l opin turers
arc not :H fault if people
ions apphed in th e C in ci nnati
ca se should be applied to other 1111Suse we.1pp ns.
jurisdi ctions.
"M:mufacturcrs· -have no
"These cases never. had any dury ro giVe warnings a bout
legal basis," Dorr sa id,
the obvious dan gers of handStanley C hesley, the city's guns ." Winkler wrote.

C IN C INNATI (AP) - A $5
hourly raise for public defenders
doesn't satisfy a civil rights advoc:ate who says poor peo ple pay
the price of inadequate lega l rep rese ntation.
Robert Newman is trying to
force Hamilton County - which
sends more people to death row
than any county in Ohio - to
pay lawyers who defend indige nt
people more tha n the curre nt $40
an hour. He also wants the co unty to hire permanent staff lawyers
to represent defendants in deathpenalty cases.
" ] t\Jink it's a terrible , terrible
flaw in the criminal ju stice system ·
when anybody 'is facing a death ·
penalty and is not vigorou sly represented," said Newma n, a civil
rights lawyer w ho doe&lt; not han dle crimmal cases.
He sa id the pay fa il' to attra ct
c· nough good lawy,-rs to propnly
defend indrge nt people.
Newman had filt.·d a lawsuit
directly to the O hio Suprenrc
C ourt, clanning that H ami lton
County is violating the Co nstitu tion by nm ensuring adequate
dl;!fense for poor pcqple accus.ed
of major crimes.
But the justices rejected the
lawsuit this Wt:"ek, saymg there
were other pos si ble soluti ons. The
vote was 4-3 .
Newman said Friday he will

Man sues
funeral home
STOW, Ohio (AP) - A man
has sued a fimcral home claiming
two workers who came to
remove his father's body knocked
it against . furniture and exposed
the naked remains to gr ievin g relatives.
Larry DeAngelis. of Stow, filed
a lawsmt Thursday in Sununi t
County Common Pleas Cou rt
see king unspecified damages from
Schlup -Pucak Funeral Home in
Akron.
Donald Pucak, manager of the
funeral home, said Friday he
beli eves iri s workers acted professiona lly.
Vtto DeAngelis, Larry _D eAngelis' father, di ed on Aug. 12 .
1'1'18. with hi s d nldren, g randchildren and other familv me mbers prese nt. The 76-year-o ld
m;-~n d1ed in a fini shed b:-~sement
at Larry DeAngelis' ho me. where
hospi cL' · work~:.·rs tt!nded ro hi s
needs.
Two
unidcnrified, funeral
ho me workers c:nne to remove
the body and "proceeded to make
rallous re marks to grievin g f.'lnlily members" about how to ca rry
the man's body fron t the basement , 1ccordin g to tht• lawsu\ t.

THANK YOU
Shirley Angel
and J.D. Taylor

THANK YOU
Shelby Richards
Construction Co.

for purchasing my
Market Hog
at the 2000 Gallia
County Jr. Fair

for purchasing my
Market Hog
at the 2000 Gallia
County Jr. Fair

Molly Ruf

Annah Ruf

Rio Hopefuls 4-H Clu

Rio Hopefuls 4-H Clu

refile the complaint as soon ."'
next week , in H amilton County
Common Pleas Court.
Louis F. Strigari , the county

pub lic defender, said he think.s the
$40 hourly rate is fair but not ·
great..

ATTE:\TIO:\
110\IEO\\'\ERS
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company seeking to expand sales
in Ohio is looking for homeowners
interested in saving money, by
allowing us to use your home for
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have been thinkmg about windows
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tunc to find.mn how much money

you con save

b~

panictpating in this
program . Do to the HUGE,
~PONSE from thiS type of
J,';ogrJm we must limit the numbCr
of displa~· / referral homes to 1S.
The proclucts \\C oiTcr are
manufactured by
CI':RTAINTEED
m busmcss since 1904 and
consistently ranked at the top in
customer satisfa&lt;:tion. Each product
comes with a
LIFETIME WARRANTY
So if you arc tired of scrapmg,
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that worn out look give us a call

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FRU ESTIMATES
Financing available
Licen.OO in OHIO &amp; WV

0.1077~

Join us to learn more about the
"Smart Move" program and smoking cessation

'AllEY'S CERTIFICA'E

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127.30

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....................... 55182

.. .... $105.56
Kalrt OuUkle Gallia Cuunf.¥

1 Gallipolis, Ohio
I
Jewelry Store Only
Coupon Must Be Redeemed at Time of Purchase
One Coupon Per Customer Per Visit

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52 Weck.l .................................................... S J 1)9.12

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Please call to register for this free, adult smoking

HMC

1 422 Second Avenue

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to the study released Thursday by the non -partisa n research group.The rate pea ked at 20 percent in 1993 .
The national rate increased 15 percent OVt:'r
the 20 years. It was to percent in 1979,
in creased to 22.5 percent in 1993 and fell to 19
percent in 1998 .
The study analyzed annual income data
from the Ce nsus Bureau for 1979 through
1998 , the last year for whi ch information is
available .
In 1998, a family of four was considered
poor if their annual income was below
·$16,600. The formula used to determine the
poverty rate had not changed in three decades

Court throws out lawsuit that
would make gun makers pay

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The child poverty
r:1te increased 50 percent in Ohio in the· past 20
years, much higher than the national rate during th e same period, according to a research
gmup.
" It wa~ a tough period for low-income children , but espcially low-income children and
their families in Ohio," said Julian Palmer,
spokesman for th e NatiOnal Center for Children in Poverty at Columhi a Univen&lt;ity.
He said only seven states had rates that
increased mort'.
The rate was 18 perce nt in 1998 when
524,984 . children lived in poverty in Ohio,
compared with 12 percent in 1979, according

1 TAWNEY
I JEWELERS

Dally IDd Sunfty
MAlt SUBSCRimONS
lnlide G11!11 CouDty
~(! W~c:h ,

Child poverty rate increases by 50 percent

Serving Gallipolis For Over 67 Years

SINGLE COPY PRICE

13 Weeks . .

Is

Third

SUNDAVONLV

the subscription.

Pomeroy
nuln

825

SUBSCRJPTJON RATES
Br C1nitr or Motor Rou1t
One Weet ....................................................... ll . ~
One Year ....................................................... $.65.00

Newa Department
The

Sent i nel,

Gal lipolis,Ohlo 45631 .

: IRONTON (AP) - Damage assessment tea ms from the Nat 1onal
:Weather Service have confirmed that tornados touched d own in
·southern Ohio this week .
; The tornados hit Wednesday evening near th e Oh10 River tow n of
Athalia in L1wrence County and east of Portsmouth in Sc..'ioto Coun i :ty. according to the weather service's C harleston, WVa.. bureau.
, . The Athaba tornado had wmd speeds between 73 and 112 miles per
, hour. the Ironton Tribune reported.
: . It destroyed a mobile home, snapped off trees. d.11mgcd several
; h~mes and destroyed a barn, the ~veather service satd.Th e danMgc path
, was about two nules long and 7:J to 100 yards wide .
· No major injuries were reported.

Holzer Clinic's newly expanded Sports Medicine Center, located at 4th &amp; Sycamore Street,
will be providing Sports Injury Care at our "Saturday Morning Clinics" beginning

En1ere d u second clus mailina maucr at
Pomero)', Otllo Post office.
Mtmbtr: The Anoc:ialcd Pren , And the Ohio
Newspaper AlllOCiatlon.
POSTMASTER: Send addreu corrections to The

galtribune@eunkanet.com

NWS confinns area tornadoes

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Sat11rday

Ohio.

Sunday-Times

Fonner judge loses license

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Advisory in effed

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: - POMEROY - Residents in the areas of Pomeroy which experi:: enced water outage Friday are advised to boil their drinking water
!~ until further notice.
; : · Testing will take place to be sure that the' water is safe for con!umption and the public will be advised once the boil order is lifted,
:•!"JdJohn Anderson, Pomeroy village administrator.

.

The Ohio Supreme Court on Frid-ry
P,rdered a Geauga County judge to allow media coverage of the juvc~ile-court trial of rwo teen-agers accused of taking part in the Februpry robbery and slaying of a gas station clerk.
The court ruled 6-1 that Judge Charles H enry ntm t open the proi:!=eedings against the two juveniles. The coun comolidatcd m otion s
~ed by T he (Cleveland) Plain Dealer and station WJW-TV in Clcve~~nd to open Henry's court.
": Henry had closed the trial after the media reported the juveniles'
~ames and th eir pictures had appeared in ncwspapcn; and on tclevi~on. He further o rdered that media w ishmg to rover tirrther pro:::Ceedings invo lving the JUVenil es make the requests in writing.
:; Attorneys for one of the juveniles said the case should not be tri c·d
:through media reports. The j uveniles and a C leveland tnan were
~charged in the robbery and slaying of Daniello Kovac ic, 19, of Chester
:.Township and the wounding of her 17-year- old friend.
;:.-: The Supreme Court ruled that Hen ry's decision that open-court
~earings would harm the juvenile and a presumption that such hear··iPgs shou ld be closed "are little more than the pmonal predilecrions
·:e;.f the JUdge ... and, if accepted as appropr~otc, would arguably JUSti fY
tjle closure of all juvenile proceedings."

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Juvenile's trial open to media

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740- 446 - 1 (&gt; 15

GALLIPOLIS - All entnes for the annual Emancipation Proda:: mation Queen contest on Sept 16 must be m by Sept. 6
:
Those interested in participating should contacty Shelan Jackson at
: 388-8072 or Jessie Payne at 245-5216.
!• f All entries are welcome, but applicants.must be at least 16 to 30 years
( o age.

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Name,_ _ _ _ _ _ _..J~ge, _ _ _ _ __
Address
Birthdater _ _ __
City
Stater_ _ County_
Phone
ale
Female_
Parents (On Only for teens)'--------

Entries due

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Acquittal issued in jogger death

: · ' GREENVILLE (AP) - A man was cleared Friday of charges that ,
·.· he helped his father conceal evidence of the father's alleged abduction
· and killing of a female jogger.
. •
•. , Shawn Rodeheffer, 23, of Rossburg, was indicted in September on
· charges of obstructing justice and tampering with evidence in con' · nection with the 1998 death of Lynn Topp. Judge Stephen Yarbrough
· 'acquitted Rodeheffer in Darke County Common Pleas Court ofboth
' ·counts. The judge heard the case after Rodeheffer waived his right to
. a jury trial .
't -,· ·Topp, 19, disappeared on Feb. 21, 1998, while jogging near her
' ' ' home in North Star, about 45 miles northwest of Dayton. Her body
·· W..s found March 6,1998, buried on a farm near New Weston .
The owner of the farm was Rodeheffer's father, Tim&lt;&gt;thy Rod cheffer. The father was considered the main suspect in the death.
.;-' The father's body was found later that month in a barri on a neigho.\&gt;or's property. He had a gunshot wound to the head and authorities
Zbelieve he killed himself. ·
:: : Da~ke County Prosecutor Richard H owell alleged that the younger
! Rodeheffer rented the backhoe used to dig the Jogger's grave. Tlie
t&lt;Jefense said the son knew nothing about the body until police found

Mail Entries to: Antoinette Saunders I Chairperson
P.O. Box511
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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Entries must be postmarked by September 09, 2000
'Please Only Serious Entries Apply'

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HOLZER CLINIC

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Chapter Harley Owners Group's annual $2,000 poktr run will be Aug. 20, rain or shine, starting with registration at 11 :30 a.m. until 1 p.m. at Baxter's Harley Davidson,Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis.
The cost is $10 per penon. The event is sponsored by HOG and
Baxter's HD.
• - The last bike out will be 1 p.m. and and the last bike in will be 5
:::0 p.m. at the Gallipolis HOG Clubhouse. Free food is available at poker
"' runForstops.
more information, call Baxter's HD at 446-6336 or HOG
Director Tony Beck at 446-3096.

· COLUMBUS (AP) - A nursing student who had been celebrating her 21st birthday was beaten to death early Friday, police said.
,. . The body of Angela Greathouse was found in her apartment, poli ce
".said.
1
·Police issued a warrant for the arrest of her boyfriend, William J.
_Cooper, 22, charging him with aggravated murder.
· · Neighbor.; say the Capital University nur.;ing student had been celt ebrating her birthday Thursday night. They called for help early Friday after hearing argumeqts in her apartment.
- · Greathouse would have been a senior at the univer.;ity this fall .

;:-: Yarbrough wrote in his three-page ruling that he was convinced that
;-.!imothy Rodeheffer had killed Topp and "received the death penalty
Ol'or his crimes , albeit self-inilicted."The judge said, however. the state
b-ailed to prove the son had knowledge of the elder Rodchcffcr's
b lleged crimes.

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Poker run slated

Nuning student's body found

It's time again for our
Emancipation Proclamation
Queen and King contests.

tnr~r
le13] in
guaroian,
and oring a current
record
with _ .
C hildren
need ofinununizations
mustinununization
be accompanied
IJ'i!JlaJ-

them,

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inception.
..
A staff addition to the Gallipolis City S~ hool District Central Office is Jim Craft, director of
continuous improvement and
communications.
Craft taught English and
coached football and track.. . at'
GAHS during the past six ye_ars.
He has represented GAHS o n the
district's Continuou s Impro~e­
ment Advisory Panel and . · has
served as co-chairman of the
North Central Associatip.n 's
school improvement process, .
Previously, he was an English
teacher and coach at Logan Elm
High School in Pickaway Coimry for six years.
·

Clear skies prevail Sunday

Extended forecast:
Monday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in ·
the mid 60s and highs in the
upper 80s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunder-

BUCKEYE
BRIEFS"
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Department, Gallia County Juvenile Court and Gallipolis Municipal Court; and parent volunteer
Amy Boster have all been instrumental in bringing about the n~w
school at Clay.
Mary Lynne Jones, director pf
pupil personnel services for Gallipolis City Schools, has spe~r­
headed the new school since its

Judging will be on
September 16, 2000 at
10:00 o'clock at the Gallla County
Fairground.

Weather foreca$1:
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Lows 55
to 60. Light and variable wind.
Sunday... Mosdy sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Sunday night.. .Partly clou)ly.
Lows near 60.

Immunizations set

11 years.
He has 19 yean of experience
working with children with
behavioral problems. Carol Sevy,
former
learning
disabilities
teacher at G AHS, will also teach
there now.
Tracy Tackett and Gwen Craft
will serve as aides at Clay SchooL
Tackett has been a substitute
teacher, and she and Craft have
served in the past as school volunteers. Money from the Alternative School grant will be paying
for one . teacher and one aide
positipn at the school, and the
Gallia County Local Schools will
be providing one teacher and one
aide ..
Various local organizations
including Gallia -Jackson-Meigs
Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services;
Department of Human Services;
ACCESS Head Start; ACCESS
Human Resources; FACTS;
TASC; Children and Fa.mily First;
Prosecuting Attorney Brent
Saunders; Gallia County Sheriff's

Guidelines are as followed.

Sunday's weather will be fair
and seasonable. Skies will be
sunny and te mperatures will
climb into the low to middle 80s.

~ -s_u_n_d_•~y~,A
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u=g~u~~~1~3~·~2~ooo~..........................................~·P_o~m_e_r_o~y~·-M
....id_d_l~epo~rt--·_G_a_l_l~~o-l_is~,-O_h_i_o_P_o_i_n_t_P~Ie_a~s~a-n~t,_wv
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__n_nb_a_~_m_._"•-•-~--~-'-"-'t_n•_•_·_P_a~g~e_A_3_

Sundlly, Auguat 13, 2000

VALLEY BRIEFS

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hayrides slated ·

as tutors.
There are now parent coordinators for each building, sununer
school attendance has tripled, and
proficiency analysis was comple ted.
Building level teachers at Rio
Grande, Green and Washington
elementaries are to be commended for their tireless efforts · a\
improving reading literacy in the
Gallipolis City School District,
school officials said.
All elementary principals have
attended a two- day Rigby "Leadership for Literacy" program. A
12-week on- site training with
Rigby, "Developing Lite ra cy
First;' for 98 percent of all elementary teachers will be starting
in September.
A new Alternative School has
been located at the former Clay
Elementary School and present
location of ACCESS Head Start.
This new school is a cooperative effort berween Gallia County
Local Schools, Gallia-Jackso nVinton Joint Vocational School
· and the Gallipolis C ity School
District.
David Perry has been hired as
t~e half- time principal/ teacher.
Perry has been a teacher at Rio
Grande Elementary for the past

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1101.1.ER MEI)ICAI.CENTE R

cessation class

44 6-5940

Th e Tobacco Usc Prevention Coalition of Galli a and Jackson Coun1i es is pleased to
sponsor the Smart Move program , dcvclopct..l hy the American Cancer Society . .
r:unt..l s for the program are mat..lc available through a grant to ll o l1cr Medical Center ;
1 o r Hea lth .
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from !he Ohio

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Page A4
Sunday, July 13, 2000 .

ST~Pfo(eN Ki~G

CSeLF -fUBt.iStieD ot-1

'Btail(is/id in 1948
125 Third Ave., o.IHpoll•, Ohto
740-441-2342 • Fex: 448 3008

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
70-882~2158 • F•x: 112-2157

,~

THe iNTeR/'leT!

OLDE

-

IHTHEWAV

Charles W. Govay
Publisher
Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

R. Shawn Lewis
Milnaglng Editor

r-toVeL-·

Diane !Cay Hill
Controller

an
r

Uam .., dl~ ftliJg, ~ w~keM~. Tla~J Jlrolllll N Ins tJuur JO() wonts. ~U l•tt•n ""•lfh]«t
to ftlitiiiJ ruul •lUI b. SIJIId t~M ilteiiUI' Adrfn 11111/ lt'k,lwllt' IIIIMiwr. No Mltl~lt.d ltllt'n will
H p11blull.d. /Akn JlaDuld IH I" f(J(H/ uut., .,/dnssi"' U•••s, not ,.non4Utitu.
Tilt opi1tiom •qm•H ill tiN r:ohurtlt hlow en th• t:O!!!t'IU~ of tllf !H!i9 l'illlWJ PMblultinf

- Co. i UilorW boanl. Mlflnt

Choices

$15,000.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Still gentlemen
Dear Editor:
I am glad to say there are still gentlemen in
our town.
On Aug. I, as my husband and I were walking out ofWai-Mart, it had begun to ram and .1
gentleman was re-ady to entl'r the store, but
stopped and kmdly put hts umbrella atop my
head and walked me to our van so I wouldn't
get wet.
Most people would ·h.rve &lt;.tred less I thank
h1m very tnuch, whoever he W;JS. He bmught
sunshme to my day.
fu I wa.s tellmg my ~ister, she found tvvo gentlemen on her trip to town and back . She w,ls
hauling plywood and lost part of tt, trymg to get
it loaded by herself. Two kmd m en helped her.

So it's nice to know we still live in a towu
where some people take rime to stop and be
kind and caring for ochers (strangers) m tlm
modern world that seems to be so rushed and
crud
A little goes a long way in som eone's day.
Thanks, guys, whoewc you w"r ,._ God ble".
Wanda Cox
Galltpolts

Appreciated

to attracc.

have some Impact on Gore's appeal.
The focus on running mates tell us they're not mvisible anymore.

Dear Editor:
On behalf of the 1950 Holzer nurses' class
reunion , we want to express our appreciation to
anyone who helped m ake it a succoss - the
hospital tours, speakers, ptctures, and the noon
meal was proVJded by the local golf dub
Everyone pulled out tlw red carpet for us
Thanks agatn.
Barbara NuU
Galltpolis

As soon a.&lt; they're chosen, they htt the campaign trail. The message
they bring to voters should not be ignored because the nommee
isn't there to deliver tt.
_.
The running mate is not banished to the background anymore. ~
The position has become increasingly important to winning the
Dear Editor:
race, and 15 vttal in offering us a glimpse of our future leadership.
As a pare nt of three 4-H members . I wuu ld
So don't wrtte them off- we'll be h eanng more from them.
hkc to express my heartfelt thanks to the supporters of 4-H m Galha Cou nty

Supporting youth

TODAY IN HISTORY
p

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Saturday, Aug. 12, the 225th day of 2000 There are 141
days left m the year.
Today's Htghhght m History:
On Aug 12, 1960, the first balloon sate lhte - the Echo 1 -was
launched by the United States from Cape Canaveral.
On thts date.
In 1851 , Isaac Smger was granted a patent on hts sewmg machme.
In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to tmpeach
htm as he defied Congress by suspendmg Secretary ofWar Edwin
M Stanton
In 1!!98, the peace protocol endmg the Spamsh-Amencan War
was stgned
In 1!!98, Hawau was formally annexed to the Umted States.
In 1944, Joseph ~ Kennedy Jr. , eldest son of Joseph and Rose
Fttzgerald Kennedy, was killed wtth hts co-ptlot when thetr exp loSives-laden Navy plane blew up ove r England .
In 1953 , the Soviet Union conducted &lt;1 ~ecret test of 1ts fir st
hydrogen bomb.
In 1 Y72, the last Amencan combat ground troops le ft Vtetnarn
In 1985, the world's worst smgle-mcraft dtsaster occ urred as a
rrtppie&lt;l Japan Au ~mes l:loemg 747 on a ;domestiC fltght crashed
into a mountatn, ktlhng 520 people
In 1994, Woodstock '94 ope ned 111 Saugerties, N.Y.
In 1998, Swtss banks agreed to pay $1.25 btllton as restituti on to

It takes many mdtv1dudls and bu~ine-sscs to
supply the many troplu e!'i .md prenuums awarded at the fair. It also take&lt; many buyers to support the livestock sales. The co ntmued support
over the years does no t go unnoticed by- the
parents of 4-H exhtbttors.

I can not nnagme that any co unty has bener
support of [hclr hvcstock &lt;ales than our O\.,.n
county. Thank you all very mu ch I v.- as e~pl·­
nally unpressed by the lonmler,ltlon of D t' m1Js
Salisbury toward the young people who exhrbited market steers
Seven young people recerwd less than $1 P&lt;T

pound for their market steer dunng the salt:.
Mr. Salisbury gave each of these seven rh e

amount of moAey necessary to bnng thl' sale
pnce up to S1 per pound. How thoughtful of
htm! To reward the hard work of th e&lt;e you ng
people rn tlus way wtllmake .r dtfferem e tn the
future of Gall ra County.
Penny Burleson
Gall rpo lt,

Pmfiaions
I suppose

It

twl'nty-\o mcthmg. Aml'Tlt-111 women .lt the
turn uf the 21st LL'IltliT)' IS so ln cthm~ I am
thank fu l f01 every smgk d.ty.
The United States of Amcnc.t l'i an :i lll.tzmg'
pbce to !tve. I h.1ve mon.:' choJCl'S .md ti·l'l'doms.
than not on ly most womi::n m the world , but
:.tho Ili On: th.m many lllL'll throughout the

assistant supL·nntcndem getnng: (he nod
I further pn.• d1ct thar rwo ye.tro; from now the
two sttnng board members whml' Lh.ur w11l be
up for electJOil w11l nor ~L·c k rc-dt.•ttJOII T ht')
\VIll beco me ~o ti-u str,Jtcd '' ith thl' , 1rhu r. 1r ~
political Londuct . .liHI prob.1ble nmti._·:~s.Int c
unll111 g from both the st.lte .md 1m .1! k'd tl1.1 t
they will give up trymg to do the w1 11 of the
m.tionty of thl· pto pil· and ju't ~&gt;.\y th;mh, but

1 .un ht'l' ro d1oo ~ l' I h.IVl' thmcn ro get 1 Lol -·
k gl' t'Liuc.ttllHI ,111d Lonnnue un 111to law
!it' hnol I w 111 -..oon dmosl' t,llt"t:l' p .uh ~. w h~e.: h I
\\'Ill be ti·et• to th,Jn g t · .1t ,1n y ~1\L'II tllll t' 1f l so

no thanks.

.trrd my church. and ltvr by those values as I so
choose. And, of \.Oursc, the most AmtTI GUI
chmce I w11l have IS my hfL•style
I may not hl'COIIlt' WL'althy wah mdhuns of
dul hu ~ in my h ank ,Jccoum, but it that IS wh,lt I
Lhttmc tn .!LLOITI]JliSinnd WOI'k hJFd to ac hkvc
rt. then a nuddle cldss b.rckground would not
hold me bac k - nor would t'Vt' ll .l back~round
fium hungl.:' r .tnd poverty In Amenca, nothmg
can bt'come cvervthmg, ,mJ that doesn't JLISt

gr~ssm,,n \Xll se~

Jun Humphrl·ys wtll take .Uob \\l!'.~;· 's "ear 111
Congress as he has .tlreaJy bought &lt;~ ntl pc~1d
for the pn v1lege. He w1i1 )pend l'Vl'll 111m e 111
Novem ber What shmrld tfn, purdu,Jn g
power tell us .Jbout We't Vtrgmi.l pnlin c .. ?
Bush w!ll h.1ve ,) clme vit:tm y ovc.::r Gore
due to the Democrat poli cy on ,1burtton, ~un
control, h1 Ahcr t:txes / Joost· spe11dmg .md
mor:.lity. "A stitch m tllll t' can save mn e,'' an
old s:tying that has much truth to tt I w11lnow
g1ve Scn .Jay Rockt!fclkr a S(ltch that ca n ":l\·l'
mort: th,ln nme. I h.1vc n.'CCI\1 ~ d cJ lls and kr tcrs co ncernmi onl' of Sen. lt()l kcfdkT \
;ud!:S by the n .llll t' ofj uhn R1d1.1 rtb. w h o l\ Ill
charge ofwtldltft' .md whn o; t.md ~ 111 cot.d d1 ~.tgreelllL'IH and contliu wHh rhe prntl·&lt;.;s Jo n,d
w1ldhfe man.Igers of ri ll' 11Nit 111 our -..t.l h'
I bdn~v~ John R H h,u d~ l'&gt; 't·ry m tH h
opposed to trapp 111 g;. f.l\ oro; \ II ict gun ~o nnol.
and can 't t'\it:.'ll gLt along \\ 1th Rt)ll Fktdlt' l.
prestdl·nt of tht· West V1rgm 1.1 \X/on l GrO\\lTS
Associauo n
I suggest th.lt Agn n dturl' ( ·o n l ntJ SSlOJ ILT
Gm IJougb's have a long u lk wah SL·n .
R.orkcfelkr co nce rnm ~ Richard·" Sl'll R m~ kdl•lkr l1.1s .t!w,ly~ bc.:L'II .1 rc.: li.1bk \llppurtt:l of
the DNR .111d -; pnrrsllll' ll ll'!.;.unF,Jlltlll \ pollCJes 111 West Vllglllia . l Jo not unJt.:'l\flll d ,.,.hy
Sen. R ockt-fl'llt•J would h.t VL' 'iOl ll l'OII l' on h1 ,
staff that Ius ,111 ;:ttt1tudt&gt; hke !nhn Rtth ,t rds.
My "itJtch 111 tun t· to Mr. R1 c h.tnh h to
co mt· up with an attttudc .ldj m tm t· nt. 0 1 hit
the road. Sen. H..oL kdl·lkr ht• l'i yotlr 11l ,ltl,.11Hl
your rc;;ponsthilJty.
Wl: g JVL' ,1 lut o f hp 'l' l \ lt't' tn dll· llll]H llt.lll Cl' .. md

v.Jiut• of ow nglH' J lld l i L'l'llOlll\
H uw 111\JLh o( ,1 ~i gh t .HL' \·Oll "Jlhng tn f1lll
up 1f pu ~h UlliH.'\ lt l "i i Hl\'L' \\ h L' II ou r !2: 0 \t' l lllll t" nt .. md l'o llupt pohruJ ,ll l\ ll\ to mfinl~t'
upo n nght~? ·
I ~u~gnt yo u wrJt t· .1 k ttl' l t\l Hon o1 1hil· j.1~
R oL h fclkr.
s,• tJ.Itc. ) .11 H .rrt Sen.lte
011icc· Burl d rn ~. W.l'hlll~ton. l l.C 211'ill1llll1 1l . Yo u h.l Vl' Ill )' L'rKotl r.tj..:l'd p n11 1 1~''on tu
en do!\L' rht\ porunn o t 111)' krtn t o tl ll' \.'dll&lt;lr

us.

Dear Editor:

rmght be a W.:J'ItL' u( v,Jluable tu ne

to ponder the Imponderables t h.It umf1011t till'
people oftlus n.ttion , '):tate ,md (OUntry.
I have been try111g to we1gh. and put llll':l ll ing and value to th e many problems f;Kin g thL·
voters when thl·y r home th eir lcaJ..:r, 111

Holocaust survtvors to settle clatms for th eir assets.

November. Some of th ese probkrns c:ln on ly b,·

Ten years ago· Iraqi Prest dent Saddam Hussem sought tu tie any
Wtthdrawal o f hts troops from Kuwait to an Imelt wtthdrawal from
the occupted West !:lank and Gaza Strip. Atr Force Staff Sgt. John
Cantpist of West Cov ina, Cal if.. dted after bemg htt by a mthtary
tru ck m Saudt Arabta, becommg the erst U.S casualty of th e Persian
Gulf cmts
Ft vc years ago· In a rl}:thodtcal, daylong proce;sion, Repub!t can
preSidenn.rl ca ndidates cou rted RoS&lt; Perot's followers at a Umted
Wt' Stand Amenca conf~: rt"nce 111 [)allao;

weighed accurately as history

~IVL"i

u' thL·

wetghmg means
I have JUSt complete d my 1m of prnfl t t1on\
for the next two years I dn nor prt'tt'mlto hl' a
psyc hic, I ju\t try to read rhe ''h;mdv"'fltlll g on
the waii"J have been ~Ihou t (Ill pertL' Ilt ,)LLurate
over the pa.o;;t many ye. Jp,
I w.ts accuratt' when I p1t:.'JJCtl·J to Mr'-

(Sh irlcy) Guc, and m.rnv others tl1at Mrs
QoHannah) R orrer IHtuld be the next prnr-

New Yorker convicted in murder

dent of the Mamn Co unty Board uf Eduut1on
I d1d n ot makt• thl· c.Ill un the Vll l ' plL''iJ JcrH ,
ocher than 1t would bt· lllll.:' nfthl' newl y d cLted mt· mben Su far I .Lpl b atting; 1,0(){1
I w1ll not ptcdict that Mr. (D1. Lany) J&gt;JJsons'
co ntract wdl not be renewed tOr J second fo uryea1 term. The squ.1bble over thl~ )'l'.lr lt'llbrth
and salary wtllle.rd to 3 postm~ of th,· posit iOn.
I aha prediCt tht• selccnon of.l ll t'\'-' supLrmtcn dl.'nt will be ~hort and ~'veet. wnh thl· presl'llt

I prediCt that the Dl'11locrat Party wdl be
g1ven a rude wake-up call m November
because of the- m - fightmg dTtlong pohttcal
leadt' rs and past candi'd,ttcs. Underwood wt ll
"squeak hx" Wtsc. Uob Wtsc fdLfor~tJ&gt; e " d.urgltng carrot" 31ld I th111k he wtll r&lt;'gret the
move. How gret'll WJ~ your p as turl'. Con-

wnh yo ur ll'tt t' r

·

I 1111 ~l'ttln~ llL\11)' t.dh rl'I.HJ\t' to rllt' Il l'\\
gmwng l.J\V~ .ll llilll cl rkl·t The owr,dl prH. L'' on
11.!(1\'t' .J I!lln.uu r.ll ,,,J]d hl'rh-.. ,Jrt• lt m ' L'r .11 d11~
tJ lll l' A'. mfmnt.It Jon nll lll''o dm\ 11 . I "dl ''Jill'
.1hout lt Kl'l'P ymn letrl'l'\ llld t . dl~' ttllll ln g
Olston 0. "Nick" Wright
M.~,nn

f;fl har

AnllTIL .Ill Jlll' ,m tD

hoosc
SoJued.J\ I \V,llll to hJVL' .1 t~lllltl~'· ;md I ,.,.ill
nut h ,l\l' to 111.1rry thl' m.111 my fu111 ly has
"~dnted f01 1111.:. ,Is m.my WOIIIl'll 111 thl' world
.m: stllll·xper ted to do. ll an d10ose my rehgton

t

mtluJe d o ll.trs. ,
I ,nn full y &lt;lW.ll C of Amcnca'' unpt' li"4:c uuJIS I
bccumt· tl·usrrated w1th our problems too.Th ere
arc 111any d,u·k chaptl'r) 111 our t'O lllltl)''s short
but profOund lw:rnry. but Amt·ncm~ have done
more 111 J USt :1 couple of hundred 'y'L'ars than
~ome n,mons h.wc d o n e 111 nullenmums
Women's sutl i-age was o nly k·s-; than a century dgo, but here we are tod ,Jy It's Y2K, and I
h.Jvt· th e nght to vote - .1 n ght women thdn'r
ewn yt'( have when my grandmorh c.:.•r was born.
I L.\11 dwo~l' m y le&lt;td t'T' I don't h.we co be
m.dt:, own LuuJ m h.JVL' ,1 lor of liJOney. My vot~
couJlt!iJmt ,Is ll lliLh ,)'. Bdl G,ne~· . B11l Clmtnn's
01 ,myune l'i'.e With mmc powe1, mtlucnce and
money th.111 I h,l\'l'. (_)n th,tt nne d.Iy Election
)),\) - Ill\ \' Oill' (111y vote) " l'qtul Th1s 1' stm-

pi) bl'l,l\1:-.l'- I ,llll ,m Anlt:TJL.lll.
EVl'll 111 cou ntrtl'S a~ ,\dv-J.tKeJ as GctnJany
.mJ j.1p&lt;111, women ,111d JllL:ll J o n ot h.tVl' .111 the
chmces .111d op port llllltlt'~ rlut Aml' rit.,tm have.
Educmo11. htl·!iry·k. ;md JOb changes are not .l~
e.l\11~ nud e, .md lii L'l r gmL'rnuH:nts h:tvt" nu t
bl'l'l1 l] lll(l' ·' ' CHlZl'll on t' lltrJ .1s m our country.
\X/ hen WL' look ,\t mhLT parts of thl· world. w~
tould 110t l'Vl'll 1111.1!-':lllt" how they gL:t thrm1gh
cvc 1y day hti.· dl'.llmg wnh p roblem~ hkc th~:
pDhtJL ,Il .111d tnbal "tn tt·. hunger, health :m d
L'tmaH ni t p111bk·rm 111 Afi·JLL l.'thmc cleammg
and rd 1g 1om ,, , 11 ~ 11 1 E(1, te rn Europl' and the
M1ddlt- E,1 ~t. .111 d eumn mll' ,1 11 J polmol unsettk'lllL'I H h,1~ h.nt·ly lmp rmed Ill tht..• ~i.Hmer
~oVll' t Un1nn. Tl ll'~l' p1 nbk·rm \L'l:lll ,Jilllo'it
tu 11 ,

1 1J 1,

h nl'lll

,1[)

No\c rll hl'l.

AmcJH,lll'l

h,l\t'

tht'

oppoltlllllt\ to t.l kc .td\.Jill.tgl uf om· of o ur .
llto&lt;..t pr...·tl\llh tl\'l'dnm . . . Wl' L.Hl vo rc fi11 nur .
kh.lt'l' \X/ Iwn l.lt'd!Oll ]),n rnll~ .tmL Jild . thuJk :
.lhlllll
111.1\

\\' h.lt hl' ln g .111 Anl l'r H .11 1 llll'am to you It :

b...·

.1

u1l d d.l~.

ur Jll.l\ he

liU~ nnr h ,l\L ll lllt h tllllt'
\t.lll

II Ll~ hl·

un·d

vou;

FAYETTEVILLE (AP)- A New York man accused of killing a
bar owner has been convicted of second-degree murder.
A Fayette County Circuit Court JUty deliberated three hours Fnday before finding M1guel A . Quinones, 22, guilty in the !995 shooting death of Christopher Denms Reardon , 49, of Oak Hill.
Reardon, who had owned bars m Beckley and Mount Hope, was
found shot to death Ju11e 19, 1995, m his van, which had pushed mto
a creek Hts head had been encased m a plasttc bag
Quinones was the thnd of three New York men arrested for Reardon's murder. Danuen Bagut had earher pleaded guilty to seconddegree murder and Mtguel Angel Gonzales was convicted of accessory after the fact. Quinones was 17 and both Bagut and Gonzales
were 16 at the tune of the murder.
Pros~cutors s.1id Reardon was shot in a house where the three
youths were dealing crack cocaine.

Blast destroys residence
BETHANY (AP) -A construction crew accidentally hit an o ld
gas lme and sparked an explosion that destroyed a Bethany man's
house Friday.
Charles "Butch" Brown's three-story home went up in flames after
a crew from Savage Construction hit the gas line while digging
dramage ditches for a parking lot at Bethany College, Mayo_rjQhn_
Cole said.
.,
..
grown was not home at the time, Cole said.
Cole said he did not beheve the workers had permission from the
town to be diggmg in the area.
One firefighter was taken to the hospital for a twisted, knee,
Bethany Volunteer F1re Chtef Charles Schwertfeger said.

Flower theft yields sentence
BERRYVILLE, Va . (AP) - A Clarke County judge provoked
loud applause from court spectators when he sentenced two West
V1rgm~a women to a year 111 jail for stealing flowers from graves.
"You should have stayed in West Virgmia, ladies," General District
Judge Norman deVere Morrison said Thursday. "We don't want you

m Virgima.''
Barbara Gonzales, 42, and Jada Parsons, 32, both of Martinsburg,
WVa ., were each charged with five counts of stealing flowers from
graves the day after Easter and the day after Mether's Day. Witnesses
satd they saw the women taking things from graves in the first
instance, and police reported seemg the pair steal from graves agam
in May. .
Mornson sentenced each woman to a year m Jail for one of the
charges. He tmposed a six-month suspended sentence for each of the
four rematmng charges and ordered them to pay $75.71 in rcsntu-

,Hld

not

t\)

cw n -.. now Ynu ·
go to tht· polk ,md

H.'.Jll y tl·cl !Jke

It

Ar tl1.1 t nm c rl11nk .thmlt th(· R l'\ 'olut lOI J.t ry,
l · 1\ d. V!l'tll .llll. ( ;uif .111d \X/orld W.tr"~ . How .
I I Lill)' Anll'nt.lll' h.1w m.ulc tht· u ltl lll.lt~· \.Je fl - '
tltl' tl1r \\IJ,Ir rhL') lwlll'\'L'd 111 ~o th .Jt \\'t' C.\11
h,l\l' tlH' 1rght to t.tkt' 10 lllllllltl'" to go p t llll h
.1 l.mi \\11 11 t ,mt.l!d ; u e~ · Jl,lJllt'~ on a ;
Not .1 11 of o u r \ II ug~k ~ h ,l\'l' bct' n ,Jhmu g('tt lll~ the 11gh t to \Ole, I krrm\ Bllt 1t 1\ thc pnn~ 1pk tlt .tt \\l' ,dl ,h,nc. nf ,.,.h,Jt \W ,1, .1 nation
he ilL'\ c 111 •• llld know I' tlll' 11 ght tlnng ro do
Ill

llll'

Jodi Clark
M~mndw1 1l e' '

JudJe orders-teen to stand trail a~ adolf
CHARLESTON (AP) - A Manon· County judge Friday ordered a second teen-ager to
stand trial as an adult on charges that the
youths beat a gay black man to 4eath, then
tried to disgutse his death as a htt-and-run

accident.
Jared Wilson. 17, of Fatrvtew ts cha rged
wah first-degree murder m the July 4 beatmg
death of 26-year-old Arthur "j.R." Warren of
Grant Town and will be tried as an adult, C ircuit Judge Rodney Merrifield ordered.
Wilson has been held in the Northern

Reg10pal Juveml e Detentton Facthty m
Whechng smce his arrest last month.
In his order, Merrifield cited the testimony
of a I S-year-old witness, who told police that
Warren was sttll ahve when Wilson and another defendant, Davrd Allen Parker of Grant
Town , pulled Warren from the ear, then
repeatedly drove the car over h!S body.
Mcrrtficld said Jason Shoemaker's testimony was not th e only evidence police had mdicating that Warren's death was not an acCIdent.

LEWISBURG (AP) -

Gamblmg oppo-

nents are combmmg resources to fight a proposed casino at The Greenbner resort
A coalition of groups is planmng a twopronged attack m hopes of defeating a measure on the Nov. 7 general electton ballot that
would allow The Greenbner to operate a casino, said Mike Queen, a political consultant
htred to orgamze the effort.
Queen said an antt-gambling campaign
wtll focus on persuading Greenbrier County
voters to reject the casino. A legal assault
against the referendum also is planned.
The campaign will inelude flyers, advertis-

mg m local med1a and a door-to-door, get-

out-the-vote effort.
A pet!lton wtll be filed wrth the state
Supreme Court seeking to votd the referendum before the electron. The coalit10n contends that the 1999 legislat10n authormng the

casino was tailored for The Greenbner and ts
unconstitu twnal.
Queen satd the coahttan mcludes the West
Virgmia Fanuhes Agamst Casmo Gambhng,
the West Virgmia Council of Churches, the
local chapter of Focus on the Fanuly, the state
chapter of Concerned Women of Amenca,
the West Virginta Right to Life Conmtittee,

HUNTINGTON (AP) Cabell
County
authorities
arrested a 72-year-old man m a
crackdown on motorists who

live fn West Virginia but register
their vehicles in Ohio to avoid
paymg property taxes
Cabell County Assessor Ottre
Adkms sard the arrest on Fnday
of Harold M . Radford was a
warning to motonsts that they
cannot ill ega lly drive wtth Oh10
tags.
"You can't claim that you live
in Ohio when you really hve in

West Vtrgima, or we are going
to be lookmg for your out-ofstate plates," Adkins satd "You
JUSt can't get the best of both
worlds. You have to comply
with the law."
Radford had hsted hts address
as a post office box in Proc -

65 or older a break on the; "
property taxes.
Radford was charged with
filmg a fraudulent clatm for
homestead
exemption
and
unlawfully and knowingly voting illegally. Both are felony
charges that carry a penalty of
one to five years in prison.
Adkms sa td Radford also
f.1 ces about $1,500 in back taxe s

on

h1 ~ Huntmgton

home and

up to $5,000 in perso nal prope rty taxes on his vehtcles.
Radford was bemg held Fnd ay eventng Ill the Cabe ll
County Jail on $10,000 bond.
The county assessor's office
began the crackdown m the
sprwg. Investiga tors examine
and

cross

reference personal

property tax re cords , voter regtstrattGn , publtc- schoe~- record!
by the assessor.'s office and the
and occ upatiOnal records of
\state Secretary of State's office
people suspected of living in
found that he h~d regtstered for
a homestead exemptiOn in West Vtrginia but driving with
Cabell County and voted Ill a Ohio tags.
More than I 00 cases are
Huntington precmct, Adkms
bemg mvestlgated, satd C.A.
said.
West Virginia's homestead · Adams wtth the co unty assesexemption gtves homeowners sor's office.

torville, Ohto. An investigation

MON AUGUST 14
GALLIPOLIS
GALLIA COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
Sponsor. GALLIA COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY

4:30 and 7:30 PM

CHARlESTON (AP) -A Cross Lanes man accused of stabbing
his wtfc and forcing her to overdose on pills has been mdtcted for
felony attempted murder and mahcious woundtng
Robert Ke1th Adktns, 26, also faces felony charges of kidnappmg,
daytune burglary and grand larceny.
Adkms ts charged wtth stabbtng Rachel Nteole Adkins 20 to 25
ttmes, slaslung her throat and forctng her to overdose on prescnpt10n
dru gs. He is also accused of hittmg her in the head wtth a heavy
metal obJl'C t and trvmu to suffocate her wtth ceUoohane.

Gallia County Republican Party
Corn Roast
Monday August 14, 2000
6:00p.m.
The 2000 Corn Roast for the Gallla
County Republican Party Will be held on
Monday August 14, 2000 at 6:00 p.m.
at the Bob Evan 's Shelter House located
across from the Bob Evans Restaurant tn
Rio Gran de on State Route 588.
The Guest Speaker will be Mike
Azinger . Candidate for 6th District U.S.
Congress. The festivities will begin at
6:00 p .m. and the meal will be served
at 6:30p.m. consisting of corn, sausage
sandwiches and all the extras. IF anyone
neects any In .formation In this regarg
please call Roger Watson . Republican
Party Chairman at 256-6515

investigatmg officer) was

s u splCIOI I ~ o! th1 s

hypothesiS because there was no wlmlc

debris at the scene and the b ruJ ~t'" no Mr.
Warren's face appeared to be inconsistent wnh
a 'hit-a nd-run' acctdent," the Judge satd.
According to the order, Shoemaker IL'\ttfied that an argument between Warrm. W rlmn
and Parker beg•n when Wtlson too k S21J from
Warren's wallet.
·

groups representtng labor and e du cators, t he
NatiOnal Coalition Against Legalt zcd (;,unbltng and Busmess Leaders for a Better Deal
OffiCials at The Greenbner. w hllh ts
owned by CSX Corp, have satd th at the'·" ' no is needed to lure cuscomers dunng lhe
wmter when busmess falls. Only people 'tJYmg at the resort would be allowed to g.rmble
Aly Goodwin, manager of special projects
for The Greenbncr, would not dtsc uss the
resort's campaign in support of the casino.
..No coac h gtves out h1s playbook:· she
said.

Cabell man arrested in aackdown
on residents driving with Ohio tags

Murder indictment issued

A1TENTION

"Although Mr. Warren tmtiall y appc,.cd ·ro
have died from a 'hit-and-run' acc rdent. (the

Gambling opponents launch attack against casino

tion .

AmenL,I.

othn p.trt s ot' tht.· ~vo rld I ~know I
·w.mr 'lllllL' '-1~ 111 \\ ho kaJ, ll"~ rhrnugh the
'-IJu~gk·, .md thl· rriumph' oftlw; lll'W JllJllcn lliUIII ilut \ \\'h ,tt lh'l ll !! ,\II Antcncan 11ll':JII\ to

don't know If 1r ~ m lllLthmg rh.1t \ou l'\'lT
re::~l l y thin k .1bout. hut 1 knn\\ rh.1t hc11 1 ~ ,1
1

My l'ducanon, my carl't'r. sonll'd,Jy lilY Cu ni Jy. my n.:hg10n. and my htl:~ rylc .m· .Ill tlunp that·

here .111d

it all means

Dear Editor:
\X/h,u doc' bl'mg .m

wm-ld h.rw ever lu d

unll'. ll

.

· Curry was head of the tax office for 12 years until Dale fired him
two months after assunung office in January 1997. Curry, who was
75 at the ttme, had served as Pocahontas sheriff in the late 1950s.
:Dale told Curry, "You're too damn old. You need to go home and
rest," according to pre-cnal monons.
· In hiS response to the lawsmt, Dale sa&gt;d Curry was fired because
of problems in the tax office, indudmg late payments to governmental bodies.
Dale said he met wtth Curry and told him he would be dtsmissed
at the end of the fiscal year. Curry satd the mectmg d1d not occur.

Selection of rnnning mate
generates more interest

Gore need&lt; that kmd of balance now. Try as he might to skim over
the record, he's havmg a hard ttme shaking off the perception of
being an extremtst.
Lieberman's self-deprecation and crittc&gt;sm of Pres1dent Clinton's
conduct m the Lewmsky mess are among the reasons he's vtewed as
a moderate, and a guy who thinks for h1mself. That mfluence should

HUNTINGTON (AP) - Cabell County voters will step into a
new era in November when they enter the voting booth.
The County Comnuss10n voted 2-1 on Fnday to dump an optical scan voting system that was plagued by glttches during the May
primary and buy a touch-screen system.
County officials said Cabell will be the first in the state to use the
system, which will be purchased for $823,750 from Election Systems
&amp; Software. The actual cost will be $650.000 after the county trades
in its old voung system.
Voters will use a stylus to regiSter their cho~ees on the screens of
tbe portable vtdeo machines.
Comnussioner L.D. Egnor, who opposed the purchase, complained that the county had better ways to spend tts money. He said
some .courthouse offices are cramped and the county doesn't prov1de
dental or VISion msurance for employees.

. MARLINTON (AP) - A former employee of the Pocahontas
County tax office who chumed he was fired because of his age has
agreed to settle a discnmination lawsutt he filed against SheriffJerry
Dale.
Lawyers would not discuss the settlement reached between Wilbur
&lt;:;urry and the West Virginia Board of Risk and Insurance Management. The Pocahontas Times reported that Curry will recetve

OUR VIEW

Selection of a runmng mate dunng a prestdentlal election year has
become more fascinating than choosmg who leads the tick~t.
Obviously, people are mterested tn th e chotce of a potential v1ce
pres1dent in caso the winner of the election dies in office. The more
informatmn that comes out about the runnmg mate. the more mcerest is generated from the voting public.
·
Histoncally, the vtce president hasn't been a source of tnterest, particularly those who served under preSidents who surviVed then
terms in the White House. Does anyone remember who was No. 2
under Herberc Hoover? Lostng candidates' running mates linger
even less m memory. Again, anyone ren1emher Richard Nixon's vice
pres1denttal candidate in 1960?
(The answers to both questions, respectively, are Charles Curns
~nd Henry Cabot Lodge.)
But an increasmgly politicized populace is looking more strongly
at running mates. That's partly why announcements made by
George W. Bush and AI Gore have stirred such interest.
It also has to do with the fact the select10n of Bush and Gore to
from their ttekets was pre-ordamed before the primaries ended.
Wtth no suspense surrounding the conventions , political JUnkies
have had to get excited about something else.
And excited they have become. George W and AI believe their
choices, Dick Cheney and Joseph Lteberman, are good for the cam. .
'
pa&gt;gn
Cheney's additton ts beneficial because of hts conservat&gt;ve votmg
record m Congress and past experience as George H. Bush's secretary of defense .
That expenence appeals to a segn1ent of the GOP looking to provide the public with a counterbalance to George w:s outsider status
in Washington. Cheney offers reassurance m the le~dershtp mold
bec•uge he's been there.
Lieberman Slplilarly brtnS' a calnung effect to the Gore campaign .
Several punditS have satd the Connecticut senator will draw
Democrats back toward the center, the very aud1ence Bush IS trying

MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

State settles disaimination suit

udt,,.,;.,~ 1toi.t

&amp;unbap 11l:tmt~ -&amp;rnttnel • Page A5

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

cabell goes with new system.

iT'S 11ie HeW

junb~ ~imes • Jentintl

Sunday, August 13, 2000

CAST &amp; CREW Of over 200
Over 100
ANIMALS

THIS
IS THE
BIG
ONE!

At Ticket outl e ts l!cforc Circus Day
~_!)ULTS S W 00 (12 YRS &amp; UPl • C HILD : $5.00 (AGES 2-11)
At C trcus Bm O ffi ce nn Ci rnl "i D.ty:
c\DU Ll S 5t20il(llYRS&amp;U I') • C I\ILIJ S600(AGE52-ll)
For an adcht&lt;anal charge General Admtn1on Tickets purchased on M vance or &amp;I me C1rcus Box ONICe
may be up~r aded on C•rcus Day at the Bo~ Olfoce starling Elol9 00 am

Let the good times roll!

. ,.

DISREGARDING THE HAIRDO, IT WAS
EXHILARATING TO BE STANDING ON "
THE DECK OF OUR CRUISE SHIP IN ALASKA, WARM AND ' •
COZY IN ONE OF THE BLANKETS THE CREW PROVID ED, ."
AND TAKE IN THE SIGHT AND SOUND Of THE HUGE
''
GLACIERS AS TilEY CRACKED APART AND FELL INTO THE
WATER. KNOWN AS "CALVING" THE MOUNTAINS OF ICE
ARE CONSTANTLY MOVING AND RENEWING THEMSELVES.
THIS ONE "HUBBARD GLACIER" IS 92 MILES LO!'!G AND 300 .
FEETABOVESEALEVEL(ANDTHAT'SJUSTTHE I"JPOFTHE ,,
ICEBERG)
;
OUR PEOPLES CHOICE 13 DAY TOUR TO ALASKA LAST
MONTH CONSISTED NOT ONLY OF A SEVEN DAY C RUISE
ONBOARD CARNIVAL CRUISE SHIP JUBILEE BUT ALSO TWO
NIGHTS ' IN MIKINLEY VILLAGE IN DENALI NATION AL PARK
WHERE WE WERE GUESTS IN THE LODGE WHILE THERE
SOME OF OUR MEMBERS ENJOYED A LATE EVENING
TRIP AND SINCE IN THAT PART Of THE COUNTRY THERE
ARE 20 HOURS OF DAYLIGHT AND 4 HOURS Of
·
'
WE DIDN'T KNOW WHEN TO QUIT HAVING FUN!! A TUNDRA
WILDLIFE TOUR ONE DAY GAVE US A CHANCE TO SEE
BEARS, MOOSE, FOX, WOLVES, AND OTHER WILD ANIMALS .
ONE EVENING WAS SPENT AT A DINNER AND
·
ENTERTAINMENT AT THE LODGE WHICH PORTRAY ED THE
HISTORYOFTHIS GREAT I:AND. - -,
OUR INITIAL FLIGHT FROM CINCINNATI TO SALr LAKE , ,
CITY AND ON TO ANCHORAGE, WAS A PLEASANT ONE AND
OUR FIRST NIGHT WAS SPENT IN ANCHORAGE BEFORE WE ,
TRAVELED TO THE PARK. UPON LEAVING DENALI WE .'.
TRAVELED TO SEWARD AND BOARDED OUR SHIP. SO MUCH
FUN, FOOD, AND ACTIVITIES KEPT US BUSY NIGHT AND · ·
DAY AS WE CRal
ED THE SOUTHBOUND INSIDE PASSAGE.
WE STOPPED AND OURED THE PORTS OF VALDEZ (WI·IERE
THE TRANS-ALAS
PIPELINE ENDS), SKAGWAY (WH ERE •,
THE GOLD 'RiJs
GAN AND YES, WE PANNED FOR GOLD
AND VISITED THE CHARM ING OLD-WEST STYLE TOWN
WITH ITS BOARD SIDEWALKS, SALOONS, ETC.) Ju t" ot\u ,t
(CAPITAL Of ALASKA WITH ACCESS ONLY BY WATER
AIR) KETCHIKAN (CITY OF TOTEM POLES AND '&lt;Jl\I:Ctll ,
SALMON FISHING- WE SAW MANY SINCE IT WAS THE
SEASON FOR TRAVELING UPSTREAM TO SPAWN AND WE
ALSO ENJOYED A FANTASTIC SALMON BAKE ALONG THE
RIVER) AND FINALLY WE DISEMBARKED IN VANCOUVER,
BRITISH COLUMBIA FOR A CITY TOUR BEFOR E OUR
OVERNIGHT STAY IN SEATTLE AND OUR DIRECT FLIGHT
BACK TO CINCINNATI AND OUR MOTORCOAC H TRIP HOME·
WHAT A BUSY, BUSY TIME· BUT THAT'S THE WAY WE LIKE
IT SEE AND DO IT ALL WHILE WE ARE THERE THI S WIIS
OUR SECOND TOUR TO ALASKA AND IT PROBABLY WO N. T
BE OUR LAST.
LAST W EE K WE HAD ANOTHER FUN OUTINci
ALTOGETHER DIFFERENT. IT WAS OUR SIXTH AN NUA L
GRANDPARENTS AND FRIENDS TRIP THIS YEAR W E TOOK
OUR GRANDCHILDREN TO CINCINNATI AND UP.ON ARRIVAL
VISITED FORT ANCIENT WHERE WE LEARNED ABOUT
EARLY INDIAN LIFE AND PARTICIPATED IN GAMES SUCII AS !.
SPEAR THROWING, DOUBLE BALL CATC HI NG, ETC WII IC_I~
THE CHJLDRbN AND ADULTS ALIKE ENJOYED TIIEN WE,
PADDLED A RAFT (ACTUALLY TWO) DOWN rHE LITTLE
MIAMI RIVER AND ENJOYED A COOK-OUT WHI CII IIAD
BEEN PREPARED BY THE STATE PARK STAFF. A s ·IOKY·
TELLER PLAYED GUITAR AROUND TH E CA\1PFIRE AREA
MUCH TO OUR DELIGHT A LATE NIGHT SWIM PARTY AN D
SNACKS BACK AT OUR HOTEL COMPLETED THE DAY NI: \T
MORNING AFTER BREAKFAST AT TilE HOTEL. WE HE ADI: D
FOR KINGS ISLAND FOR A DAY OF PLAY AND SHARI\G
SPECIA L MOMENTS WITH OUR GRANDCHILDREN.
FINAL PLANS ARE COMPLETED FOR OUR TRIP 1\L.\ I
WEEK TO NEW YORK CITY. WE HAVE ACCOMMOD ;\\10'&lt;5
AT THE BEAUTIFUL MILLENNI C M HOTEL ON Tl~\I: S
SQUARE AND RESERVED OR CHESTRA SEATS I OR ,
BROADWAY SHOWS. MUSIC MAN AND ANN IE GE r ) m·R
GUN STARRING BERNADETTE PETERS DINNEKS INC! I ' IlL
TAVERN ON THE GREEN IN CENTRAL PARK. A 13f: Al 'Tllll
TOWNHOUSE RESTAURANT BAR BETTA , AND OUR I •\\ I
EVENING MEAL WILL BE ON A DEL UXE YACIIT C'l\\ ·tst:
AROUND TilE STATUE OF LIBERTY AND OTHER PO IN rs m
INTEREST. A CITY TOUR WITH OUR GREAT TOUR Gl 'lllL
PRIVATE BREAKFAST- TRAVEL-RELATED STYLE SH0\1 ,\ , .
PRIVATE SHOPPING TIME Af BLOOMINGDAL ES. '\Nil ,~
TOUR OF NBC STUDIOS WILL ROUND OUT A GRI.At \)
EXPERIENCE. SEVERAL OTH ER SURPRISES WILL POl' l
I'M SURE.
1 HOPE YOU HAVE SOME TRAVEL PLA NS fOR TillS
SUMMER· GET AWAY WH ENEVER YOU CAN ANIJ

s:

... LET THE GOOJfJ!:~MES
ROLL,

1

People$ Cho•ce &lt;$ e Oovosoon ot City
Member FDIC

NaHonar Bank ,

'\._/I /{
l

'

MARY FOWLER,
PEO PLES CII OICE

'

�~-- ~4

- - -- ·

---

.........

~·

·-.

r

Page A4
Sunday, July 13, 2000 .

ST~Pfo(eN Ki~G

CSeLF -fUBt.iStieD ot-1

'Btail(is/id in 1948
125 Third Ave., o.IHpoll•, Ohto
740-441-2342 • Fex: 448 3008

111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
70-882~2158 • F•x: 112-2157

,~

THe iNTeR/'leT!

OLDE

-

IHTHEWAV

Charles W. Govay
Publisher
Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

'

&amp;

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

R. Shawn Lewis
Milnaglng Editor

r-toVeL-·

Diane !Cay Hill
Controller

an
r

Uam .., dl~ ftliJg, ~ w~keM~. Tla~J Jlrolllll N Ins tJuur JO() wonts. ~U l•tt•n ""•lfh]«t
to ftlitiiiJ ruul •lUI b. SIJIId t~M ilteiiUI' Adrfn 11111/ lt'k,lwllt' IIIIMiwr. No Mltl~lt.d ltllt'n will
H p11blull.d. /Akn JlaDuld IH I" f(J(H/ uut., .,/dnssi"' U•••s, not ,.non4Utitu.
Tilt opi1tiom •qm•H ill tiN r:ohurtlt hlow en th• t:O!!!t'IU~ of tllf !H!i9 l'illlWJ PMblultinf

- Co. i UilorW boanl. Mlflnt

Choices

$15,000.

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Still gentlemen
Dear Editor:
I am glad to say there are still gentlemen in
our town.
On Aug. I, as my husband and I were walking out ofWai-Mart, it had begun to ram and .1
gentleman was re-ady to entl'r the store, but
stopped and kmdly put hts umbrella atop my
head and walked me to our van so I wouldn't
get wet.
Most people would ·h.rve &lt;.tred less I thank
h1m very tnuch, whoever he W;JS. He bmught
sunshme to my day.
fu I wa.s tellmg my ~ister, she found tvvo gentlemen on her trip to town and back . She w,ls
hauling plywood and lost part of tt, trymg to get
it loaded by herself. Two kmd m en helped her.

So it's nice to know we still live in a towu
where some people take rime to stop and be
kind and caring for ochers (strangers) m tlm
modern world that seems to be so rushed and
crud
A little goes a long way in som eone's day.
Thanks, guys, whoewc you w"r ,._ God ble".
Wanda Cox
Galltpolts

Appreciated

to attracc.

have some Impact on Gore's appeal.
The focus on running mates tell us they're not mvisible anymore.

Dear Editor:
On behalf of the 1950 Holzer nurses' class
reunion , we want to express our appreciation to
anyone who helped m ake it a succoss - the
hospital tours, speakers, ptctures, and the noon
meal was proVJded by the local golf dub
Everyone pulled out tlw red carpet for us
Thanks agatn.
Barbara NuU
Galltpolis

As soon a.&lt; they're chosen, they htt the campaign trail. The message
they bring to voters should not be ignored because the nommee
isn't there to deliver tt.
_.
The running mate is not banished to the background anymore. ~
The position has become increasingly important to winning the
Dear Editor:
race, and 15 vttal in offering us a glimpse of our future leadership.
As a pare nt of three 4-H members . I wuu ld
So don't wrtte them off- we'll be h eanng more from them.
hkc to express my heartfelt thanks to the supporters of 4-H m Galha Cou nty

Supporting youth

TODAY IN HISTORY
p

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Saturday, Aug. 12, the 225th day of 2000 There are 141
days left m the year.
Today's Htghhght m History:
On Aug 12, 1960, the first balloon sate lhte - the Echo 1 -was
launched by the United States from Cape Canaveral.
On thts date.
In 1851 , Isaac Smger was granted a patent on hts sewmg machme.
In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to tmpeach
htm as he defied Congress by suspendmg Secretary ofWar Edwin
M Stanton
In 1!!98, the peace protocol endmg the Spamsh-Amencan War
was stgned
In 1!!98, Hawau was formally annexed to the Umted States.
In 1944, Joseph ~ Kennedy Jr. , eldest son of Joseph and Rose
Fttzgerald Kennedy, was killed wtth hts co-ptlot when thetr exp loSives-laden Navy plane blew up ove r England .
In 1953 , the Soviet Union conducted &lt;1 ~ecret test of 1ts fir st
hydrogen bomb.
In 1 Y72, the last Amencan combat ground troops le ft Vtetnarn
In 1985, the world's worst smgle-mcraft dtsaster occ urred as a
rrtppie&lt;l Japan Au ~mes l:loemg 747 on a ;domestiC fltght crashed
into a mountatn, ktlhng 520 people
In 1994, Woodstock '94 ope ned 111 Saugerties, N.Y.
In 1998, Swtss banks agreed to pay $1.25 btllton as restituti on to

It takes many mdtv1dudls and bu~ine-sscs to
supply the many troplu e!'i .md prenuums awarded at the fair. It also take&lt; many buyers to support the livestock sales. The co ntmued support
over the years does no t go unnoticed by- the
parents of 4-H exhtbttors.

I can not nnagme that any co unty has bener
support of [hclr hvcstock &lt;ales than our O\.,.n
county. Thank you all very mu ch I v.- as e~pl·­
nally unpressed by the lonmler,ltlon of D t' m1Js
Salisbury toward the young people who exhrbited market steers
Seven young people recerwd less than $1 P&lt;T

pound for their market steer dunng the salt:.
Mr. Salisbury gave each of these seven rh e

amount of moAey necessary to bnng thl' sale
pnce up to S1 per pound. How thoughtful of
htm! To reward the hard work of th e&lt;e you ng
people rn tlus way wtllmake .r dtfferem e tn the
future of Gall ra County.
Penny Burleson
Gall rpo lt,

Pmfiaions
I suppose

It

twl'nty-\o mcthmg. Aml'Tlt-111 women .lt the
turn uf the 21st LL'IltliT)' IS so ln cthm~ I am
thank fu l f01 every smgk d.ty.
The United States of Amcnc.t l'i an :i lll.tzmg'
pbce to !tve. I h.1ve mon.:' choJCl'S .md ti·l'l'doms.
than not on ly most womi::n m the world , but
:.tho Ili On: th.m many lllL'll throughout the

assistant supL·nntcndem getnng: (he nod
I further pn.• d1ct thar rwo ye.tro; from now the
two sttnng board members whml' Lh.ur w11l be
up for electJOil w11l nor ~L·c k rc-dt.•ttJOII T ht')
\VIll beco me ~o ti-u str,Jtcd '' ith thl' , 1rhu r. 1r ~
political Londuct . .liHI prob.1ble nmti._·:~s.Int c
unll111 g from both the st.lte .md 1m .1! k'd tl1.1 t
they will give up trymg to do the w1 11 of the
m.tionty of thl· pto pil· and ju't ~&gt;.\y th;mh, but

1 .un ht'l' ro d1oo ~ l' I h.IVl' thmcn ro get 1 Lol -·
k gl' t'Liuc.ttllHI ,111d Lonnnue un 111to law
!it' hnol I w 111 -..oon dmosl' t,llt"t:l' p .uh ~. w h~e.: h I
\\'Ill be ti·et• to th,Jn g t · .1t ,1n y ~1\L'II tllll t' 1f l so

no thanks.

.trrd my church. and ltvr by those values as I so
choose. And, of \.Oursc, the most AmtTI GUI
chmce I w11l have IS my hfL•style
I may not hl'COIIlt' WL'althy wah mdhuns of
dul hu ~ in my h ank ,Jccoum, but it that IS wh,lt I
Lhttmc tn .!LLOITI]JliSinnd WOI'k hJFd to ac hkvc
rt. then a nuddle cldss b.rckground would not
hold me bac k - nor would t'Vt' ll .l back~round
fium hungl.:' r .tnd poverty In Amenca, nothmg
can bt'come cvervthmg, ,mJ that doesn't JLISt

gr~ssm,,n \Xll se~

Jun Humphrl·ys wtll take .Uob \\l!'.~;· 's "ear 111
Congress as he has .tlreaJy bought &lt;~ ntl pc~1d
for the pn v1lege. He w1i1 )pend l'Vl'll 111m e 111
Novem ber What shmrld tfn, purdu,Jn g
power tell us .Jbout We't Vtrgmi.l pnlin c .. ?
Bush w!ll h.1ve ,) clme vit:tm y ovc.::r Gore
due to the Democrat poli cy on ,1burtton, ~un
control, h1 Ahcr t:txes / Joost· spe11dmg .md
mor:.lity. "A stitch m tllll t' can save mn e,'' an
old s:tying that has much truth to tt I w11lnow
g1ve Scn .Jay Rockt!fclkr a S(ltch that ca n ":l\·l'
mort: th,ln nme. I h.1vc n.'CCI\1 ~ d cJ lls and kr tcrs co ncernmi onl' of Sen. lt()l kcfdkT \
;ud!:S by the n .llll t' ofj uhn R1d1.1 rtb. w h o l\ Ill
charge ofwtldltft' .md whn o; t.md ~ 111 cot.d d1 ~.tgreelllL'IH and contliu wHh rhe prntl·&lt;.;s Jo n,d
w1ldhfe man.Igers of ri ll' 11Nit 111 our -..t.l h'
I bdn~v~ John R H h,u d~ l'&gt; 't·ry m tH h
opposed to trapp 111 g;. f.l\ oro; \ II ict gun ~o nnol.
and can 't t'\it:.'ll gLt along \\ 1th Rt)ll Fktdlt' l.
prestdl·nt of tht· West V1rgm 1.1 \X/on l GrO\\lTS
Associauo n
I suggest th.lt Agn n dturl' ( ·o n l ntJ SSlOJ ILT
Gm IJougb's have a long u lk wah SL·n .
R.orkcfelkr co nce rnm ~ Richard·" Sl'll R m~ kdl•lkr l1.1s .t!w,ly~ bc.:L'II .1 rc.: li.1bk \llppurtt:l of
the DNR .111d -; pnrrsllll' ll ll'!.;.unF,Jlltlll \ pollCJes 111 West Vllglllia . l Jo not unJt.:'l\flll d ,.,.hy
Sen. R ockt-fl'llt•J would h.t VL' 'iOl ll l'OII l' on h1 ,
staff that Ius ,111 ;:ttt1tudt&gt; hke !nhn Rtth ,t rds.
My "itJtch 111 tun t· to Mr. R1 c h.tnh h to
co mt· up with an attttudc .ldj m tm t· nt. 0 1 hit
the road. Sen. H..oL kdl·lkr ht• l'i yotlr 11l ,ltl,.11Hl
your rc;;ponsthilJty.
Wl: g JVL' ,1 lut o f hp 'l' l \ lt't' tn dll· llll]H llt.lll Cl' .. md

v.Jiut• of ow nglH' J lld l i L'l'llOlll\
H uw 111\JLh o( ,1 ~i gh t .HL' \·Oll "Jlhng tn f1lll
up 1f pu ~h UlliH.'\ lt l "i i Hl\'L' \\ h L' II ou r !2: 0 \t' l lllll t" nt .. md l'o llupt pohruJ ,ll l\ ll\ to mfinl~t'
upo n nght~? ·
I ~u~gnt yo u wrJt t· .1 k ttl' l t\l Hon o1 1hil· j.1~
R oL h fclkr.
s,• tJ.Itc. ) .11 H .rrt Sen.lte
011icc· Burl d rn ~. W.l'hlll~ton. l l.C 211'ill1llll1 1l . Yo u h.l Vl' Ill )' L'rKotl r.tj..:l'd p n11 1 1~''on tu
en do!\L' rht\ porunn o t 111)' krtn t o tl ll' \.'dll&lt;lr

us.

Dear Editor:

rmght be a W.:J'ItL' u( v,Jluable tu ne

to ponder the Imponderables t h.It umf1011t till'
people oftlus n.ttion , '):tate ,md (OUntry.
I have been try111g to we1gh. and put llll':l ll ing and value to th e many problems f;Kin g thL·
voters when thl·y r home th eir lcaJ..:r, 111

Holocaust survtvors to settle clatms for th eir assets.

November. Some of th ese probkrns c:ln on ly b,·

Ten years ago· Iraqi Prest dent Saddam Hussem sought tu tie any
Wtthdrawal o f hts troops from Kuwait to an Imelt wtthdrawal from
the occupted West !:lank and Gaza Strip. Atr Force Staff Sgt. John
Cantpist of West Cov ina, Cal if.. dted after bemg htt by a mthtary
tru ck m Saudt Arabta, becommg the erst U.S casualty of th e Persian
Gulf cmts
Ft vc years ago· In a rl}:thodtcal, daylong proce;sion, Repub!t can
preSidenn.rl ca ndidates cou rted RoS&lt; Perot's followers at a Umted
Wt' Stand Amenca conf~: rt"nce 111 [)allao;

weighed accurately as history

~IVL"i

u' thL·

wetghmg means
I have JUSt complete d my 1m of prnfl t t1on\
for the next two years I dn nor prt'tt'mlto hl' a
psyc hic, I ju\t try to read rhe ''h;mdv"'fltlll g on
the waii"J have been ~Ihou t (Ill pertL' Ilt ,)LLurate
over the pa.o;;t many ye. Jp,
I w.ts accuratt' when I p1t:.'JJCtl·J to Mr'-

(Sh irlcy) Guc, and m.rnv others tl1at Mrs
QoHannah) R orrer IHtuld be the next prnr-

New Yorker convicted in murder

dent of the Mamn Co unty Board uf Eduut1on
I d1d n ot makt• thl· c.Ill un the Vll l ' plL''iJ JcrH ,
ocher than 1t would bt· lllll.:' nfthl' newl y d cLted mt· mben Su far I .Lpl b atting; 1,0(){1
I w1ll not ptcdict that Mr. (D1. Lany) J&gt;JJsons'
co ntract wdl not be renewed tOr J second fo uryea1 term. The squ.1bble over thl~ )'l'.lr lt'llbrth
and salary wtllle.rd to 3 postm~ of th,· posit iOn.
I aha prediCt tht• selccnon of.l ll t'\'-' supLrmtcn dl.'nt will be ~hort and ~'veet. wnh thl· presl'llt

I prediCt that the Dl'11locrat Party wdl be
g1ven a rude wake-up call m November
because of the- m - fightmg dTtlong pohttcal
leadt' rs and past candi'd,ttcs. Underwood wt ll
"squeak hx" Wtsc. Uob Wtsc fdLfor~tJ&gt; e " d.urgltng carrot" 31ld I th111k he wtll r&lt;'gret the
move. How gret'll WJ~ your p as turl'. Con-

wnh yo ur ll'tt t' r

·

I 1111 ~l'ttln~ llL\11)' t.dh rl'I.HJ\t' to rllt' Il l'\\
gmwng l.J\V~ .ll llilll cl rkl·t The owr,dl prH. L'' on
11.!(1\'t' .J I!lln.uu r.ll ,,,J]d hl'rh-.. ,Jrt• lt m ' L'r .11 d11~
tJ lll l' A'. mfmnt.It Jon nll lll''o dm\ 11 . I "dl ''Jill'
.1hout lt Kl'l'P ymn letrl'l'\ llld t . dl~' ttllll ln g
Olston 0. "Nick" Wright
M.~,nn

f;fl har

AnllTIL .Ill Jlll' ,m tD

hoosc
SoJued.J\ I \V,llll to hJVL' .1 t~lllltl~'· ;md I ,.,.ill
nut h ,l\l' to 111.1rry thl' m.111 my fu111 ly has
"~dnted f01 1111.:. ,Is m.my WOIIIl'll 111 thl' world
.m: stllll·xper ted to do. ll an d10ose my rehgton

t

mtluJe d o ll.trs. ,
I ,nn full y &lt;lW.ll C of Amcnca'' unpt' li"4:c uuJIS I
bccumt· tl·usrrated w1th our problems too.Th ere
arc 111any d,u·k chaptl'r) 111 our t'O lllltl)''s short
but profOund lw:rnry. but Amt·ncm~ have done
more 111 J USt :1 couple of hundred 'y'L'ars than
~ome n,mons h.wc d o n e 111 nullenmums
Women's sutl i-age was o nly k·s-; than a century dgo, but here we are tod ,Jy It's Y2K, and I
h.Jvt· th e nght to vote - .1 n ght women thdn'r
ewn yt'( have when my grandmorh c.:.•r was born.
I L.\11 dwo~l' m y le&lt;td t'T' I don't h.we co be
m.dt:, own LuuJ m h.JVL' ,1 lor of liJOney. My vot~
couJlt!iJmt ,Is ll lliLh ,)'. Bdl G,ne~· . B11l Clmtnn's
01 ,myune l'i'.e With mmc powe1, mtlucnce and
money th.111 I h,l\'l'. (_)n th,tt nne d.Iy Election
)),\) - Ill\ \' Oill' (111y vote) " l'qtul Th1s 1' stm-

pi) bl'l,l\1:-.l'- I ,llll ,m Anlt:TJL.lll.
EVl'll 111 cou ntrtl'S a~ ,\dv-J.tKeJ as GctnJany
.mJ j.1p&lt;111, women ,111d JllL:ll J o n ot h.tVl' .111 the
chmces .111d op port llllltlt'~ rlut Aml' rit.,tm have.
Educmo11. htl·!iry·k. ;md JOb changes are not .l~
e.l\11~ nud e, .md lii L'l r gmL'rnuH:nts h:tvt" nu t
bl'l'l1 l] lll(l' ·' ' CHlZl'll on t' lltrJ .1s m our country.
\X/ hen WL' look ,\t mhLT parts of thl· world. w~
tould 110t l'Vl'll 1111.1!-':lllt" how they gL:t thrm1gh
cvc 1y day hti.· dl'.llmg wnh p roblem~ hkc th~:
pDhtJL ,Il .111d tnbal "tn tt·. hunger, health :m d
L'tmaH ni t p111bk·rm 111 Afi·JLL l.'thmc cleammg
and rd 1g 1om ,, , 11 ~ 11 1 E(1, te rn Europl' and the
M1ddlt- E,1 ~t. .111 d eumn mll' ,1 11 J polmol unsettk'lllL'I H h,1~ h.nt·ly lmp rmed Ill tht..• ~i.Hmer
~oVll' t Un1nn. Tl ll'~l' p1 nbk·rm \L'l:lll ,Jilllo'it
tu 11 ,

1 1J 1,

h nl'lll

,1[)

No\c rll hl'l.

AmcJH,lll'l

h,l\t'

tht'

oppoltlllllt\ to t.l kc .td\.Jill.tgl uf om· of o ur .
llto&lt;..t pr...·tl\llh tl\'l'dnm . . . Wl' L.Hl vo rc fi11 nur .
kh.lt'l' \X/ Iwn l.lt'd!Oll ]),n rnll~ .tmL Jild . thuJk :
.lhlllll
111.1\

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FAYETTEVILLE (AP)- A New York man accused of killing a
bar owner has been convicted of second-degree murder.
A Fayette County Circuit Court JUty deliberated three hours Fnday before finding M1guel A . Quinones, 22, guilty in the !995 shooting death of Christopher Denms Reardon , 49, of Oak Hill.
Reardon, who had owned bars m Beckley and Mount Hope, was
found shot to death Ju11e 19, 1995, m his van, which had pushed mto
a creek Hts head had been encased m a plasttc bag
Quinones was the thnd of three New York men arrested for Reardon's murder. Danuen Bagut had earher pleaded guilty to seconddegree murder and Mtguel Angel Gonzales was convicted of accessory after the fact. Quinones was 17 and both Bagut and Gonzales
were 16 at the tune of the murder.
Pros~cutors s.1id Reardon was shot in a house where the three
youths were dealing crack cocaine.

Blast destroys residence
BETHANY (AP) -A construction crew accidentally hit an o ld
gas lme and sparked an explosion that destroyed a Bethany man's
house Friday.
Charles "Butch" Brown's three-story home went up in flames after
a crew from Savage Construction hit the gas line while digging
dramage ditches for a parking lot at Bethany College, Mayo_rjQhn_
Cole said.
.,
..
grown was not home at the time, Cole said.
Cole said he did not beheve the workers had permission from the
town to be diggmg in the area.
One firefighter was taken to the hospital for a twisted, knee,
Bethany Volunteer F1re Chtef Charles Schwertfeger said.

Flower theft yields sentence
BERRYVILLE, Va . (AP) - A Clarke County judge provoked
loud applause from court spectators when he sentenced two West
V1rgm~a women to a year 111 jail for stealing flowers from graves.
"You should have stayed in West Virgmia, ladies," General District
Judge Norman deVere Morrison said Thursday. "We don't want you

m Virgima.''
Barbara Gonzales, 42, and Jada Parsons, 32, both of Martinsburg,
WVa ., were each charged with five counts of stealing flowers from
graves the day after Easter and the day after Mether's Day. Witnesses
satd they saw the women taking things from graves in the first
instance, and police reported seemg the pair steal from graves agam
in May. .
Mornson sentenced each woman to a year m Jail for one of the
charges. He tmposed a six-month suspended sentence for each of the
four rematmng charges and ordered them to pay $75.71 in rcsntu-

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M~mndw1 1l e' '

JudJe orders-teen to stand trail a~ adolf
CHARLESTON (AP) - A Manon· County judge Friday ordered a second teen-ager to
stand trial as an adult on charges that the
youths beat a gay black man to 4eath, then
tried to disgutse his death as a htt-and-run

accident.
Jared Wilson. 17, of Fatrvtew ts cha rged
wah first-degree murder m the July 4 beatmg
death of 26-year-old Arthur "j.R." Warren of
Grant Town and will be tried as an adult, C ircuit Judge Rodney Merrifield ordered.
Wilson has been held in the Northern

Reg10pal Juveml e Detentton Facthty m
Whechng smce his arrest last month.
In his order, Merrifield cited the testimony
of a I S-year-old witness, who told police that
Warren was sttll ahve when Wilson and another defendant, Davrd Allen Parker of Grant
Town , pulled Warren from the ear, then
repeatedly drove the car over h!S body.
Mcrrtficld said Jason Shoemaker's testimony was not th e only evidence police had mdicating that Warren's death was not an acCIdent.

LEWISBURG (AP) -

Gamblmg oppo-

nents are combmmg resources to fight a proposed casino at The Greenbner resort
A coalition of groups is planmng a twopronged attack m hopes of defeating a measure on the Nov. 7 general electton ballot that
would allow The Greenbner to operate a casino, said Mike Queen, a political consultant
htred to orgamze the effort.
Queen said an antt-gambling campaign
wtll focus on persuading Greenbrier County
voters to reject the casino. A legal assault
against the referendum also is planned.
The campaign will inelude flyers, advertis-

mg m local med1a and a door-to-door, get-

out-the-vote effort.
A pet!lton wtll be filed wrth the state
Supreme Court seeking to votd the referendum before the electron. The coalit10n contends that the 1999 legislat10n authormng the

casino was tailored for The Greenbner and ts
unconstitu twnal.
Queen satd the coahttan mcludes the West
Virgmia Fanuhes Agamst Casmo Gambhng,
the West Virgmia Council of Churches, the
local chapter of Focus on the Fanuly, the state
chapter of Concerned Women of Amenca,
the West Virginta Right to Life Conmtittee,

HUNTINGTON (AP) Cabell
County
authorities
arrested a 72-year-old man m a
crackdown on motorists who

live fn West Virginia but register
their vehicles in Ohio to avoid
paymg property taxes
Cabell County Assessor Ottre
Adkms sard the arrest on Fnday
of Harold M . Radford was a
warning to motonsts that they
cannot ill ega lly drive wtth Oh10
tags.
"You can't claim that you live
in Ohio when you really hve in

West Vtrgima, or we are going
to be lookmg for your out-ofstate plates," Adkins satd "You
JUSt can't get the best of both
worlds. You have to comply
with the law."
Radford had hsted hts address
as a post office box in Proc -

65 or older a break on the; "
property taxes.
Radford was charged with
filmg a fraudulent clatm for
homestead
exemption
and
unlawfully and knowingly voting illegally. Both are felony
charges that carry a penalty of
one to five years in prison.
Adkms sa td Radford also
f.1 ces about $1,500 in back taxe s

on

h1 ~ Huntmgton

home and

up to $5,000 in perso nal prope rty taxes on his vehtcles.
Radford was bemg held Fnd ay eventng Ill the Cabe ll
County Jail on $10,000 bond.
The county assessor's office
began the crackdown m the
sprwg. Investiga tors examine
and

cross

reference personal

property tax re cords , voter regtstrattGn , publtc- schoe~- record!
by the assessor.'s office and the
and occ upatiOnal records of
\state Secretary of State's office
people suspected of living in
found that he h~d regtstered for
a homestead exemptiOn in West Vtrginia but driving with
Cabell County and voted Ill a Ohio tags.
More than I 00 cases are
Huntington precmct, Adkms
bemg mvestlgated, satd C.A.
said.
West Virginia's homestead · Adams wtth the co unty assesexemption gtves homeowners sor's office.

torville, Ohto. An investigation

MON AUGUST 14
GALLIPOLIS
GALLIA COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
Sponsor. GALLIA COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY

4:30 and 7:30 PM

CHARlESTON (AP) -A Cross Lanes man accused of stabbing
his wtfc and forcing her to overdose on pills has been mdtcted for
felony attempted murder and mahcious woundtng
Robert Ke1th Adktns, 26, also faces felony charges of kidnappmg,
daytune burglary and grand larceny.
Adkms ts charged wtth stabbtng Rachel Nteole Adkins 20 to 25
ttmes, slaslung her throat and forctng her to overdose on prescnpt10n
dru gs. He is also accused of hittmg her in the head wtth a heavy
metal obJl'C t and trvmu to suffocate her wtth ceUoohane.

Gallia County Republican Party
Corn Roast
Monday August 14, 2000
6:00p.m.
The 2000 Corn Roast for the Gallla
County Republican Party Will be held on
Monday August 14, 2000 at 6:00 p.m.
at the Bob Evan 's Shelter House located
across from the Bob Evans Restaurant tn
Rio Gran de on State Route 588.
The Guest Speaker will be Mike
Azinger . Candidate for 6th District U.S.
Congress. The festivities will begin at
6:00 p .m. and the meal will be served
at 6:30p.m. consisting of corn, sausage
sandwiches and all the extras. IF anyone
neects any In .formation In this regarg
please call Roger Watson . Republican
Party Chairman at 256-6515

investigatmg officer) was

s u splCIOI I ~ o! th1 s

hypothesiS because there was no wlmlc

debris at the scene and the b ruJ ~t'" no Mr.
Warren's face appeared to be inconsistent wnh
a 'hit-a nd-run' acctdent," the Judge satd.
According to the order, Shoemaker IL'\ttfied that an argument between Warrm. W rlmn
and Parker beg•n when Wtlson too k S21J from
Warren's wallet.
·

groups representtng labor and e du cators, t he
NatiOnal Coalition Against Legalt zcd (;,unbltng and Busmess Leaders for a Better Deal
OffiCials at The Greenbner. w hllh ts
owned by CSX Corp, have satd th at the'·" ' no is needed to lure cuscomers dunng lhe
wmter when busmess falls. Only people 'tJYmg at the resort would be allowed to g.rmble
Aly Goodwin, manager of special projects
for The Greenbncr, would not dtsc uss the
resort's campaign in support of the casino.
..No coac h gtves out h1s playbook:· she
said.

Cabell man arrested in aackdown
on residents driving with Ohio tags

Murder indictment issued

A1TENTION

"Although Mr. Warren tmtiall y appc,.cd ·ro
have died from a 'hit-and-run' acc rdent. (the

Gambling opponents launch attack against casino

tion .

AmenL,I.

othn p.trt s ot' tht.· ~vo rld I ~know I
·w.mr 'lllllL' '-1~ 111 \\ ho kaJ, ll"~ rhrnugh the
'-IJu~gk·, .md thl· rriumph' oftlw; lll'W JllJllcn lliUIII ilut \ \\'h ,tt lh'l ll !! ,\II Antcncan 11ll':JII\ to

don't know If 1r ~ m lllLthmg rh.1t \ou l'\'lT
re::~l l y thin k .1bout. hut 1 knn\\ rh.1t hc11 1 ~ ,1
1

My l'ducanon, my carl't'r. sonll'd,Jy lilY Cu ni Jy. my n.:hg10n. and my htl:~ rylc .m· .Ill tlunp that·

here .111d

it all means

Dear Editor:
\X/h,u doc' bl'mg .m

wm-ld h.rw ever lu d

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.

· Curry was head of the tax office for 12 years until Dale fired him
two months after assunung office in January 1997. Curry, who was
75 at the ttme, had served as Pocahontas sheriff in the late 1950s.
:Dale told Curry, "You're too damn old. You need to go home and
rest," according to pre-cnal monons.
· In hiS response to the lawsmt, Dale sa&gt;d Curry was fired because
of problems in the tax office, indudmg late payments to governmental bodies.
Dale said he met wtth Curry and told him he would be dtsmissed
at the end of the fiscal year. Curry satd the mectmg d1d not occur.

Selection of rnnning mate
generates more interest

Gore need&lt; that kmd of balance now. Try as he might to skim over
the record, he's havmg a hard ttme shaking off the perception of
being an extremtst.
Lieberman's self-deprecation and crittc&gt;sm of Pres1dent Clinton's
conduct m the Lewmsky mess are among the reasons he's vtewed as
a moderate, and a guy who thinks for h1mself. That mfluence should

HUNTINGTON (AP) - Cabell County voters will step into a
new era in November when they enter the voting booth.
The County Comnuss10n voted 2-1 on Fnday to dump an optical scan voting system that was plagued by glttches during the May
primary and buy a touch-screen system.
County officials said Cabell will be the first in the state to use the
system, which will be purchased for $823,750 from Election Systems
&amp; Software. The actual cost will be $650.000 after the county trades
in its old voung system.
Voters will use a stylus to regiSter their cho~ees on the screens of
tbe portable vtdeo machines.
Comnussioner L.D. Egnor, who opposed the purchase, complained that the county had better ways to spend tts money. He said
some .courthouse offices are cramped and the county doesn't prov1de
dental or VISion msurance for employees.

. MARLINTON (AP) - A former employee of the Pocahontas
County tax office who chumed he was fired because of his age has
agreed to settle a discnmination lawsutt he filed against SheriffJerry
Dale.
Lawyers would not discuss the settlement reached between Wilbur
&lt;:;urry and the West Virginia Board of Risk and Insurance Management. The Pocahontas Times reported that Curry will recetve

OUR VIEW

Selection of a runmng mate dunng a prestdentlal election year has
become more fascinating than choosmg who leads the tick~t.
Obviously, people are mterested tn th e chotce of a potential v1ce
pres1dent in caso the winner of the election dies in office. The more
informatmn that comes out about the runnmg mate. the more mcerest is generated from the voting public.
·
Histoncally, the vtce president hasn't been a source of tnterest, particularly those who served under preSidents who surviVed then
terms in the White House. Does anyone remember who was No. 2
under Herberc Hoover? Lostng candidates' running mates linger
even less m memory. Again, anyone ren1emher Richard Nixon's vice
pres1denttal candidate in 1960?
(The answers to both questions, respectively, are Charles Curns
~nd Henry Cabot Lodge.)
But an increasmgly politicized populace is looking more strongly
at running mates. That's partly why announcements made by
George W. Bush and AI Gore have stirred such interest.
It also has to do with the fact the select10n of Bush and Gore to
from their ttekets was pre-ordamed before the primaries ended.
Wtth no suspense surrounding the conventions , political JUnkies
have had to get excited about something else.
And excited they have become. George W and AI believe their
choices, Dick Cheney and Joseph Lteberman, are good for the cam. .
'
pa&gt;gn
Cheney's additton ts beneficial because of hts conservat&gt;ve votmg
record m Congress and past experience as George H. Bush's secretary of defense .
That expenence appeals to a segn1ent of the GOP looking to provide the public with a counterbalance to George w:s outsider status
in Washington. Cheney offers reassurance m the le~dershtp mold
bec•uge he's been there.
Lieberman Slplilarly brtnS' a calnung effect to the Gore campaign .
Several punditS have satd the Connecticut senator will draw
Democrats back toward the center, the very aud1ence Bush IS trying

MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

State settles disaimination suit

udt,,.,;.,~ 1toi.t

&amp;unbap 11l:tmt~ -&amp;rnttnel • Page A5

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

cabell goes with new system.

iT'S 11ie HeW

junb~ ~imes • Jentintl

Sunday, August 13, 2000

CAST &amp; CREW Of over 200
Over 100
ANIMALS

THIS
IS THE
BIG
ONE!

At Ticket outl e ts l!cforc Circus Day
~_!)ULTS S W 00 (12 YRS &amp; UPl • C HILD : $5.00 (AGES 2-11)
At C trcus Bm O ffi ce nn Ci rnl "i D.ty:
c\DU Ll S 5t20il(llYRS&amp;U I') • C I\ILIJ S600(AGE52-ll)
For an adcht&lt;anal charge General Admtn1on Tickets purchased on M vance or &amp;I me C1rcus Box ONICe
may be up~r aded on C•rcus Day at the Bo~ Olfoce starling Elol9 00 am

Let the good times roll!

. ,.

DISREGARDING THE HAIRDO, IT WAS
EXHILARATING TO BE STANDING ON "
THE DECK OF OUR CRUISE SHIP IN ALASKA, WARM AND ' •
COZY IN ONE OF THE BLANKETS THE CREW PROVID ED, ."
AND TAKE IN THE SIGHT AND SOUND Of THE HUGE
''
GLACIERS AS TilEY CRACKED APART AND FELL INTO THE
WATER. KNOWN AS "CALVING" THE MOUNTAINS OF ICE
ARE CONSTANTLY MOVING AND RENEWING THEMSELVES.
THIS ONE "HUBBARD GLACIER" IS 92 MILES LO!'!G AND 300 .
FEETABOVESEALEVEL(ANDTHAT'SJUSTTHE I"JPOFTHE ,,
ICEBERG)
;
OUR PEOPLES CHOICE 13 DAY TOUR TO ALASKA LAST
MONTH CONSISTED NOT ONLY OF A SEVEN DAY C RUISE
ONBOARD CARNIVAL CRUISE SHIP JUBILEE BUT ALSO TWO
NIGHTS ' IN MIKINLEY VILLAGE IN DENALI NATION AL PARK
WHERE WE WERE GUESTS IN THE LODGE WHILE THERE
SOME OF OUR MEMBERS ENJOYED A LATE EVENING
TRIP AND SINCE IN THAT PART Of THE COUNTRY THERE
ARE 20 HOURS OF DAYLIGHT AND 4 HOURS Of
·
'
WE DIDN'T KNOW WHEN TO QUIT HAVING FUN!! A TUNDRA
WILDLIFE TOUR ONE DAY GAVE US A CHANCE TO SEE
BEARS, MOOSE, FOX, WOLVES, AND OTHER WILD ANIMALS .
ONE EVENING WAS SPENT AT A DINNER AND
·
ENTERTAINMENT AT THE LODGE WHICH PORTRAY ED THE
HISTORYOFTHIS GREAT I:AND. - -,
OUR INITIAL FLIGHT FROM CINCINNATI TO SALr LAKE , ,
CITY AND ON TO ANCHORAGE, WAS A PLEASANT ONE AND
OUR FIRST NIGHT WAS SPENT IN ANCHORAGE BEFORE WE ,
TRAVELED TO THE PARK. UPON LEAVING DENALI WE .'.
TRAVELED TO SEWARD AND BOARDED OUR SHIP. SO MUCH
FUN, FOOD, AND ACTIVITIES KEPT US BUSY NIGHT AND · ·
DAY AS WE CRal
ED THE SOUTHBOUND INSIDE PASSAGE.
WE STOPPED AND OURED THE PORTS OF VALDEZ (WI·IERE
THE TRANS-ALAS
PIPELINE ENDS), SKAGWAY (WH ERE •,
THE GOLD 'RiJs
GAN AND YES, WE PANNED FOR GOLD
AND VISITED THE CHARM ING OLD-WEST STYLE TOWN
WITH ITS BOARD SIDEWALKS, SALOONS, ETC.) Ju t" ot\u ,t
(CAPITAL Of ALASKA WITH ACCESS ONLY BY WATER
AIR) KETCHIKAN (CITY OF TOTEM POLES AND '&lt;Jl\I:Ctll ,
SALMON FISHING- WE SAW MANY SINCE IT WAS THE
SEASON FOR TRAVELING UPSTREAM TO SPAWN AND WE
ALSO ENJOYED A FANTASTIC SALMON BAKE ALONG THE
RIVER) AND FINALLY WE DISEMBARKED IN VANCOUVER,
BRITISH COLUMBIA FOR A CITY TOUR BEFOR E OUR
OVERNIGHT STAY IN SEATTLE AND OUR DIRECT FLIGHT
BACK TO CINCINNATI AND OUR MOTORCOAC H TRIP HOME·
WHAT A BUSY, BUSY TIME· BUT THAT'S THE WAY WE LIKE
IT SEE AND DO IT ALL WHILE WE ARE THERE THI S WIIS
OUR SECOND TOUR TO ALASKA AND IT PROBABLY WO N. T
BE OUR LAST.
LAST W EE K WE HAD ANOTHER FUN OUTINci
ALTOGETHER DIFFERENT. IT WAS OUR SIXTH AN NUA L
GRANDPARENTS AND FRIENDS TRIP THIS YEAR W E TOOK
OUR GRANDCHILDREN TO CINCINNATI AND UP.ON ARRIVAL
VISITED FORT ANCIENT WHERE WE LEARNED ABOUT
EARLY INDIAN LIFE AND PARTICIPATED IN GAMES SUCII AS !.
SPEAR THROWING, DOUBLE BALL CATC HI NG, ETC WII IC_I~
THE CHJLDRbN AND ADULTS ALIKE ENJOYED TIIEN WE,
PADDLED A RAFT (ACTUALLY TWO) DOWN rHE LITTLE
MIAMI RIVER AND ENJOYED A COOK-OUT WHI CII IIAD
BEEN PREPARED BY THE STATE PARK STAFF. A s ·IOKY·
TELLER PLAYED GUITAR AROUND TH E CA\1PFIRE AREA
MUCH TO OUR DELIGHT A LATE NIGHT SWIM PARTY AN D
SNACKS BACK AT OUR HOTEL COMPLETED THE DAY NI: \T
MORNING AFTER BREAKFAST AT TilE HOTEL. WE HE ADI: D
FOR KINGS ISLAND FOR A DAY OF PLAY AND SHARI\G
SPECIA L MOMENTS WITH OUR GRANDCHILDREN.
FINAL PLANS ARE COMPLETED FOR OUR TRIP 1\L.\ I
WEEK TO NEW YORK CITY. WE HAVE ACCOMMOD ;\\10'&lt;5
AT THE BEAUTIFUL MILLENNI C M HOTEL ON Tl~\I: S
SQUARE AND RESERVED OR CHESTRA SEATS I OR ,
BROADWAY SHOWS. MUSIC MAN AND ANN IE GE r ) m·R
GUN STARRING BERNADETTE PETERS DINNEKS INC! I ' IlL
TAVERN ON THE GREEN IN CENTRAL PARK. A 13f: Al 'Tllll
TOWNHOUSE RESTAURANT BAR BETTA , AND OUR I •\\ I
EVENING MEAL WILL BE ON A DEL UXE YACIIT C'l\\ ·tst:
AROUND TilE STATUE OF LIBERTY AND OTHER PO IN rs m
INTEREST. A CITY TOUR WITH OUR GREAT TOUR Gl 'lllL
PRIVATE BREAKFAST- TRAVEL-RELATED STYLE SH0\1 ,\ , .
PRIVATE SHOPPING TIME Af BLOOMINGDAL ES. '\Nil ,~
TOUR OF NBC STUDIOS WILL ROUND OUT A GRI.At \)
EXPERIENCE. SEVERAL OTH ER SURPRISES WILL POl' l
I'M SURE.
1 HOPE YOU HAVE SOME TRAVEL PLA NS fOR TillS
SUMMER· GET AWAY WH ENEVER YOU CAN ANIJ

s:

... LET THE GOOJfJ!:~MES
ROLL,

1

People$ Cho•ce &lt;$ e Oovosoon ot City
Member FDIC

NaHonar Bank ,

'\._/I /{
l

'

MARY FOWLER,
PEO PLES CII OICE

'

�..,,,,..~-l.:'f:

--= ...!

.

·~ . - i .

•

- Page A6 • &amp;unba!' l!:nnr~ -ji!,rutmtl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunda~August13, 2000

Sundll)', Augu.t-1-3, 2000 ·

Dorothy Alice Spencer
W ESLEYVILLE , Pa. - D o rothy Alice Athey Spencer, 83, Wesleyville, died Thursd ay, Aug. 10, 2000 in Ha inot Medical C enter.
Bo rn April 7, 19 17 in C heshire, daughter of the late Walter and N ellie G rover Athey, she was employed for 25 years at H anune rmill Paper
Co. as mail room supe rvisor, retiring. in 1979.
She was a membe r of Kingsley United M ethodist C hurch.
C O O LVI LLE - Lisa Ann Anderson , 37, Coolville, died Sa turday,
Surviving are her husband of 63 years, Selva A. Spencer; and fo ur
Aug. 12, 2000 in Ca mden-Clark Memo r ial Hospital, Parkersburg, ·
g
randchildren
and seven great- grandchildren.
W.Va. , following an exte nded illn ess.
.
She was also preceded in death by a son , Harold Spe ncer; and a
Bo rn July 11 , 1~63 in C restline, O hio. daughter of R obe rt and ida
great-granddau
ghte r.
i ;:Mae Sampso n Spradlin , she was a U. S. M arine Corps ve teran, and
Services will be 11 a.m . Monday in Kingsley United M ethodist
: ;mended Vanderhoof C hurch .
C
hurch
, with the R ev. Matt Judd officiating. Burial will be in Laurel
:; . Surviving in addition to her pare nts are two so ns, Trevor and Kolby
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the c hurch one hour prior to ser:;Anderson; and a brother, T imo thy Anderso n .
.
:. : Se rvices will be 11 a. m . Mo nday in White Funeral Home, C oolville, vices M o nday. Arrangements are by Dusc kas Funeral Home, Erie, Pa.
M emorial co ntribu tions can be made to Kingsley United Methodist
: ;~ith Cecil Morrison officiating. Burial will be in Vanderhoof C etileC hurch , 9 13 C ranberry St., Erie, Pa. 16502.
~:t«y. Friends m ay call at the fun e ral ho me from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
• .
•

Usa Ann Anderson

--

..

!~: ·
.,.

Louvenia Virginia Coles

;. : INDIANAPOLIS, Ind . - Lo u venia Virgi nia Coles, 75, died Tuesday,
· : :4ug. 8, 2000 in St. Vincent Hospital, Indianapolis.
: :: Bo rn May 23, 1925 in Logan , W.Va ., daughter of the late C harles and
::::!arah Mae Wilson Jo nes, she was a 1943 gra duate of Middleport High
•;:ichool and a member of Mount Moriah Baptist C hurch in Middle::l&gt;or t.
.
:;: She resided in Midclleport until 1969 a nd moved to Indianapolis,
: :where she w as a membe r of M o unt Z ion Baptist C hurc h and the
: ·dturch's Levites Club.
: :: Before moving to Indiana, she worked at Bayr Industrial Sc hool in
::togan,WVa., as a nursing assistant at Dailey's Conva1esce nt H o me and
;:;..( Scott's Nursing Home, and worked in the dietary department at
·:Park Tudor Scho ol.
::. Surviving are her hu sband, R aymond T. C oles , whom she married
;;$ept. 12, 1951 ; a son, Charles C. (Rosann) Hollinshead of G allipoli s; a
: ·4aughter, Sandra M. Garnes; and three g ra ndc hildren and five great:!grandchildren .
::· Services will be I p.m . Monday m M o unt Zion Baptist C hurch,
::3500 Graceland Ave., Indianapolis. Arrangements are by C raig Funer,:al Home, 3447 N. College Ave. , Indianapolis, Ind. 46 205-3798.

Nora Ellen Tumer

PO MERO Y .:__ N ora Ellen Turner, 87, who resided at Rock Springs
Nu rsin g H om e, Po meroy, died Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2000 in Pleasant Valley H ospital.
Born M arc h 15, 191 3 in !-1enderson, W.Va ., she was the daughter of
the late Theodore and Ida Mae Asbury Turner.
She was also preceded in death by three sisters, Anita Dunlap, Rose
Ann Elli ot and Bessie Oliver; three brothers, Victor Turner, Earl Turner and Barney Turner; and a stillborn son.
Surviving are a son , Michael (Kim) Turner of Coolville; a sisrer, Opal
Darst of Po int Pleasant , W.Va.; and four grandchildren and a greatgrandc hild.
Services will be 2 p.m . Sunday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Po int
Pleasant . Bu rial will be in Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends
may call at the fun e ral home o n Sunday from noon until time of se r-

VIces.

Blood

from PapAl
"Seve ral regio ns still have less
than a day's supply of these blood
types." he added. " We try to
maintai n at least a three- day supply."
Strong demand combined with
dec reased availability of donor
gro ups have contributep to
dec reasi ng the nati onal bloo d
supply inventory to unde r 50,000
units, M azza said.
High schools and universities,
whic h supply R ed Cross with
abo ut 20 percent of its do nations,
are out for the summer.
" The mos t co mmo nly transfu sed blood produ cts have shelf
lives o f just five days for pl;lteiets
and 4 2 days for red blood cells,"
Mazza said. " As a result, blood
can 't be stoc kpiled far in advan ce
to m e et patient needs."
Inve ntories of 0 positive and 0
negarive are now at two -thirds of
the three-day supply ne eded in
the region.
"'We've exp ri 1ced stro ng collec tions since Jt e. but the need is
consta nt, 365 days a ye ar," Mazza
said. "Despite th e fact that giving
blood is easy, safe and ta kes j ust
abO&lt;tt an hour, o nly 5 pe rcent of
Anteri ca ns do nate blood every

d

year.''

'.-

Robert Fleming Me~de

_Alan W. Huninghake

VIN TON - Robert Fleming Meade, 80, ofVinton, diea Thursday,
August 10, 2000 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Huntington ,
West Virginia.
.;Ky.
("'
He was born October 28, 191 9 at Omar,
:; :. Born Dec. 18, 1951 in Ironton , son of the late R obert Huninghake,
West Virginia, the son of the late Walter Meade
::and Edna She pherd Huninghake of South P oint, he was an em ployee
and G eorgie Munc y M eade.
::of the CSX car shops m Raceland, Ky.
He was a U.S. Army veteran who served as a
·: Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, D rcama To ney
Corporal in the South Pacific and Philippines
: Huninghake; a son, C raig (Susan) Hunin ghake of C hesapea ke; a
Arena ofWorld War II from 1944 until 1946.
;daughter. Tracy (Morgan) Walters of Chesap eake; three g randchildren ;
He served as a military policema'n in Honolu :and two siste rs, Debbie Childers of Biloxi, Miss., and Bobbi Sampson ·
lu, Howaii, served in the Civilian Conservatio n
; of Franklin Furnace.
Corps (CCC) for two years in Greenbrie r
:; He was also preceded in death by a son , To dd Alan Huninghake.
County, West Virginia, and was a member of
: : Services will be 2 p.m ..Sunday in Hall Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Ame rican l egion Lafayette Post N o. 27 and
:Sammy Cooke officiating. Burial will be in Highland Memo rial Ga rVFW Post No. 4464, both of Gallipolis.
; dens, South Point. Visitation was held in the funeral home on SaturHe retired from the Gallia County Sheriff's
• day.
D epartment as a Sergeant in 199 1, following 16 years of service. H e
was also a po liceman in Wayne County, West Virginia, and a member
-.
of the Buckeye Sheriff Association .
.
He married Sarah Dillon Meade in 1947 in Louisa, Kentucky, and
:: PATRIOT- Lenora Victoria Rice, 70, Patriot, died Friday, Aug. 11 , she preceded him in death on July .30, 1997. He was also preceded in
;2000 at her residence.
death by three brothers, two sisrers and a granddaughter.
; · .Born Match 23, 1930, daughter of the late Van and lula Turn er
Surviving are 12 children, Dolly (Randall) Marcum of Crum, West
;A.Idridge, she was a homemaker.
Virginia , Nancy (Bill) Watson of Bidwell, Bobby (Kay) Williamson of
-:· ;Surviving- are a- son, I:&gt;o ug (Crystal) Ri ce of Hernando, Fla.; two e rum , Robert Meml" orerulfl,Bill (Maty) Williamson ofVinton,
!¢lughters, Karla (Charles) Hampton and Sherry (Bill) Peck, both o f H oward M eade of C olumbus, Roger Meade ofVinton, Flem (Donna)
l'atriot; seven grandchildren and five great- grandchildren; and four sis- Meade ofVint o n, R oy M eade ofVinton, Georgie B. Meade ofVinton,
:~rs. Linda (Henry) Willis of Hecla , Audrey Gaskin s of Ironton , Mari e
M ary (George) Pendleton ofVinton, and Sam (Gail) Meade ofVinton;
::Riggsby ofVandalia, and Eloise H ankins of H eath.
36 grandchildre n, 35 great-grandchildren and three great-great- grand: She was also preceded in death by her hu sband, C ecil R ay Rice, o n children; and two sisters, Dixie Stowe of C olorado Springs, Colorado,
:Sept. 1, 1995; and by a sister, Virgie Grout.
and Lydia D o rhety of Grayson, Kentucky.
:. Services will b e 1 p.m. Monday in M cCoy- Moore Fune ral Home
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, August 13, 2000 in McCoy- Moore
·Wetherholt C hapel , Gallipolis, with the Rev. Richard Vinson o ffi ciat- Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park.
:\llg. Burial will be in the Rice Family Ceme tery, Patrio t. There will be Visitatio n was held in the fun e ral home on Saturday, Augist 12, 2000
:Oo visitation . ·
fro m 2~4 and 7-9 p.m.
•
Military graveside rites will be conducted . by VFW Post No. 4464
•
and
Ame rican Legion Lafayette Post No. 27. '
•

.-...• •
·-~=

..
•
••

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..•
..•
...-..
· ·~

-.
•
•

Fair
from Page AI

: : baily kiddie games, kiddie trac.l &lt;&gt;r puUs, and a daily bicycle
·Prawing are also sched uled for
:~ung fai rgoers.
::: A to tal of 24 bicycles will be
;Jiven away to you ngsters un der
:J-2: A tic ket will be presented to
C:_hildren at the gate, and c)lildreri
: 'liUSt be prese nt at the hill stage
::f!lr the daily noo ntime drawing m
:l!rder to win.
: · It wo uldn 't be th e Meigs
~punty Fair w ithou t horse raej ug, and ho rses, sulkies and dnvcrs
:Jtit the half- mi le ova l o n Thursday
: @d Friday.
&lt;: Betwee n eve nts, fairgoe rs ca n
·:See th e han diwo rk of the ir ne igh:l&gt;ors at a nit mbe r o f ex hibit build'ngs.
:: The work of youth and senior
:f air exhibitor&lt; will be o n display
:4ii the Junio r and Se mo r Fair
;:buildings, in the air-cond itioned
' l::oo n Hunters building, and in
·l he livestock barns.
:; Ho rticul ture a nd domestic arts
:powe r arrangements , and pho to~~
. ! aphy and pa mtmg wt ll be o n dis~ay, as will a number of Grange
, e xhibits and displays fro m ot her
]-~ uth and adult co mmunity
; froup s.
.
. .
:, Commerctal bulldmgs will be
· tilled with disp lays from local
: ~u.sinesses, publi c age ncies , politi: cal parties and c hurch groups.
And then, of co urse, th e re 's th e
food: co[[on candy, fLmne l okcs.
samagc.;;, hot dog~ . lc monack·.
bl oo mi ng onions an d so m ethi ng

...

's enior Citi:u m will be
admitted at 110 cost ort
Smiar Citizens' Dt~y,
11umday 11111il 2 p.m., and
two Kiddit~ Da)'S, fM&gt;dllfS-

day and s.zturday, will
allmt • children 12 and under
untiluoon .
.{ree admissicm
.

rides will cost $3 fo r childre n
eac h day, including the two Kiddie D ays.
Transpo rtatio n around the fairgrounds will be offered by the
M eigs County Agricultural Society from noon until 9 p.m ., from

the highway garage to the grandstand area at no cost. Members of
the Tuppers Plains VFW post will
offer golfcart transportation to
the elderly and disabled .
Gates open at the fairgrounds at
7 a.m . , and close at 11 p.m .

HOME OXYGEN PROFESSIONALS
for every taste and appeti te.
Senio r C itize ns will be admitted at no cost on Senio r Ci tizens'
Day. T hu rsday until 2 p.m., and
two Kiddie Days, Wedn esday and
Sa turday, will allow childrt•n 12
and under to be admitted free
until noon. T he hand stamp for

lnU
•Oxygen Concentrator•
•Portable Oxygen
·Nebulizer•
•CPAP/ BIPAP

Kei!A

Vlelta
•Free Delivery • Set Up
•Reeplr8tory Therapl_.
•We Bill All ln•urance•

•24 Hour Emergency Service

70 Pine St.

70S E. Meln St.

1110 -llllh 7283
1 BOO 4~6 68 l·l

/·10 '!Ho i• HI •1
I BOO Hn 0 •1 ' 1 l

mn:I:ll•J:

&lt;TillJ:r.ll['J[•J:

Holzer Health Hotline
He has new "toofers" and now
he' s a big boy! Help kee p him
healthy and those new teeth
white &lt;Ind strong. Call the
Holzer Health Hotline when
qucs!H ms come up about health
is,ues. A Holzer Medk-ul Center
· RN is on du ty at the Hospital
-6 am until2 am, 7 days u ,

friend who has diabetes, but he

I

very healthy, and he exercises. Hi

----- --~- ---·----

-·- - - ·-- ...

doctor told him his cholesterol wa
good, yet he still had a heart attack.

His LDL chol'eslerol was 130. Coul
diabetes have contributed to his hear
attack even though his cholesterol
levels were good?
ANSWER
Di abel es can
dramatically increase your chance o
a heart attack or stroke, and may hav
very well been the culprit in you
friend 's case. Eighty perccn~ o
diabetics die prematurely from etthc
a heart attack or a stroke. Diabetic
are at an increased risk of a hear
attack or stroke due to several factors.
They tend to have abnormal vessels
which increase blood press ure an
increase the risk of clonmg disord~rs
Diabetics also produce a smaller
more dense, LDL cholesterol, whic
is more able to penetrate the vessel
and lead to a blood clot. Also
accordin~ to the American Diabetic
Assoc iat1on guide lines, the LD
cholesterol level in a diabetic shoul
be less than 100. What appears to b
a normal cholesterol level in.
diabetic may in fact not be, sine
diabetics produce a diffe rent type: o
cholesterol, which is more lethal.
normal blood test for cholesterol wit
not detect this more lethal type. ,
At the Cholesterol Ce nter, I g1v
ex t ~ a special ancntion to .diabe.ti
patients an'd treat all the vanous ns
factors in cluding Ibi s newl
di scovered, more lethal LD
choleste rol. I monitor all my diabcli
patients closely, se roget her, we can
significanrly red uce thei r risk o
premature death.

Coli today foro free heort ottaok
and stroke rbk asse.s.sment. '

•

------- ---------------~

•

IHIC
ac
•

1sease

ro

•

.•
\

'•&lt;

You may qualify for testing and evaluation at:

NO COST TO YOU!!!!

" R II!du c lna JIOUr rl&amp;k of 'h• II,.II!Jtpll!t:l#ld-;.

2500 Jeffers on Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25 5 50

304-675-1675
pu.iol u.U- rtis ing

You:
Hav.e A ·
earang
Loss •

Are you or have you been a:
Coal Miner
Welder
Insulator
Chemical Worker
Carpenter

Call For A

l
•
~7 Point"

Professional
Hearing Test
&amp; .consultation
Advanced Hearing Center
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis· Spring Valley Plaza

Ca/1441·1971 or (BOO) 434-4194
FREE Professional He~ring Test

100

toward the purchase of
any advanced technology
hearing instrument
Valid thru 811812000

Mel Mock BC.HIS

•
•

Wllh Dr. Robert Holley
QUESTION - I have a 42-year ol

For an swers to your me dical ques tid.n
abo ut hea rt auac ks and strokes, ma iltht
to th e Robert M. Ho lley C holes terol
'
Center at the address be low.

i\.\"k _
\ 'oll rph y.l·icitlll ahrmr
1

"

Heart Matters ...

in Point Pleasant.

week.
nu dicarion concerns

..

I

No Obligation • No Pressure

He's So Proud!!

&amp;unbll!' ~hilrt ·&amp;tnlind • Page A7

Holley Cholesterol Center, locate

Lenora Victoria Rice

..

wv

To give blood, individuals must
be at least 17 or older, weigh at
least 105 pounds and be in ge nerally good health . People can gene rally do nate blood eve ry 56 days,
Mazza sa id.

Doctor Robert Holley is the area
only cholesterol specialist, iJ
Athrrothrombotic Diseast
Specialist, which means he has h'
special trtJining, and is an expert'in
identifying and treating all tL
various risk fa ctors that lead to;
heart attack or stroke. Docto
Holley operates' tile Robert ¥·

.: SOUTH POINT - Alan W. Huninghake, 48, South Po int , died
.::Thursday, Aug. I 0, 2000 in Kings Daughters M edical Center, Ashland,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

•

I

I
I
I

''

•
'

Do you have:
Emphysema
Black Lung.·
Asthma

I

'•

If you answered yes to any of the above questions, contact Holzer Clinic's Black
Lung/Occupational Lung Disease Clinic to determine your eligibility.

Black Lung Occupational Lung Disease Clinic
7 40-446-5244
tn I'll' lu 1/: erd i11 ic. com

�..,,,,..~-l.:'f:

--= ...!

.

·~ . - i .

•

- Page A6 • &amp;unba!' l!:nnr~ -ji!,rutmtl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunda~August13, 2000

Sundll)', Augu.t-1-3, 2000 ·

Dorothy Alice Spencer
W ESLEYVILLE , Pa. - D o rothy Alice Athey Spencer, 83, Wesleyville, died Thursd ay, Aug. 10, 2000 in Ha inot Medical C enter.
Bo rn April 7, 19 17 in C heshire, daughter of the late Walter and N ellie G rover Athey, she was employed for 25 years at H anune rmill Paper
Co. as mail room supe rvisor, retiring. in 1979.
She was a membe r of Kingsley United M ethodist C hurch.
C O O LVI LLE - Lisa Ann Anderson , 37, Coolville, died Sa turday,
Surviving are her husband of 63 years, Selva A. Spencer; and fo ur
Aug. 12, 2000 in Ca mden-Clark Memo r ial Hospital, Parkersburg, ·
g
randchildren
and seven great- grandchildren.
W.Va. , following an exte nded illn ess.
.
She was also preceded in death by a son , Harold Spe ncer; and a
Bo rn July 11 , 1~63 in C restline, O hio. daughter of R obe rt and ida
great-granddau
ghte r.
i ;:Mae Sampso n Spradlin , she was a U. S. M arine Corps ve teran, and
Services will be 11 a.m . Monday in Kingsley United M ethodist
: ;mended Vanderhoof C hurch .
C
hurch
, with the R ev. Matt Judd officiating. Burial will be in Laurel
:; . Surviving in addition to her pare nts are two so ns, Trevor and Kolby
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the c hurch one hour prior to ser:;Anderson; and a brother, T imo thy Anderso n .
.
:. : Se rvices will be 11 a. m . Mo nday in White Funeral Home, C oolville, vices M o nday. Arrangements are by Dusc kas Funeral Home, Erie, Pa.
M emorial co ntribu tions can be made to Kingsley United Methodist
: ;~ith Cecil Morrison officiating. Burial will be in Vanderhoof C etileC hurch , 9 13 C ranberry St., Erie, Pa. 16502.
~:t«y. Friends m ay call at the fun e ral ho me from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
• .
•

Usa Ann Anderson

--

..

!~: ·
.,.

Louvenia Virginia Coles

;. : INDIANAPOLIS, Ind . - Lo u venia Virgi nia Coles, 75, died Tuesday,
· : :4ug. 8, 2000 in St. Vincent Hospital, Indianapolis.
: :: Bo rn May 23, 1925 in Logan , W.Va ., daughter of the late C harles and
::::!arah Mae Wilson Jo nes, she was a 1943 gra duate of Middleport High
•;:ichool and a member of Mount Moriah Baptist C hurch in Middle::l&gt;or t.
.
:;: She resided in Midclleport until 1969 a nd moved to Indianapolis,
: :where she w as a membe r of M o unt Z ion Baptist C hurc h and the
: ·dturch's Levites Club.
: :: Before moving to Indiana, she worked at Bayr Industrial Sc hool in
::togan,WVa., as a nursing assistant at Dailey's Conva1esce nt H o me and
;:;..( Scott's Nursing Home, and worked in the dietary department at
·:Park Tudor Scho ol.
::. Surviving are her hu sband, R aymond T. C oles , whom she married
;;$ept. 12, 1951 ; a son, Charles C. (Rosann) Hollinshead of G allipoli s; a
: ·4aughter, Sandra M. Garnes; and three g ra ndc hildren and five great:!grandchildren .
::· Services will be I p.m . Monday m M o unt Zion Baptist C hurch,
::3500 Graceland Ave., Indianapolis. Arrangements are by C raig Funer,:al Home, 3447 N. College Ave. , Indianapolis, Ind. 46 205-3798.

Nora Ellen Tumer

PO MERO Y .:__ N ora Ellen Turner, 87, who resided at Rock Springs
Nu rsin g H om e, Po meroy, died Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2000 in Pleasant Valley H ospital.
Born M arc h 15, 191 3 in !-1enderson, W.Va ., she was the daughter of
the late Theodore and Ida Mae Asbury Turner.
She was also preceded in death by three sisters, Anita Dunlap, Rose
Ann Elli ot and Bessie Oliver; three brothers, Victor Turner, Earl Turner and Barney Turner; and a stillborn son.
Surviving are a son , Michael (Kim) Turner of Coolville; a sisrer, Opal
Darst of Po int Pleasant , W.Va.; and four grandchildren and a greatgrandc hild.
Services will be 2 p.m . Sunday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Po int
Pleasant . Bu rial will be in Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends
may call at the fun e ral home o n Sunday from noon until time of se r-

VIces.

Blood

from PapAl
"Seve ral regio ns still have less
than a day's supply of these blood
types." he added. " We try to
maintai n at least a three- day supply."
Strong demand combined with
dec reased availability of donor
gro ups have contributep to
dec reasi ng the nati onal bloo d
supply inventory to unde r 50,000
units, M azza said.
High schools and universities,
whic h supply R ed Cross with
abo ut 20 percent of its do nations,
are out for the summer.
" The mos t co mmo nly transfu sed blood produ cts have shelf
lives o f just five days for pl;lteiets
and 4 2 days for red blood cells,"
Mazza said. " As a result, blood
can 't be stoc kpiled far in advan ce
to m e et patient needs."
Inve ntories of 0 positive and 0
negarive are now at two -thirds of
the three-day supply ne eded in
the region.
"'We've exp ri 1ced stro ng collec tions since Jt e. but the need is
consta nt, 365 days a ye ar," Mazza
said. "Despite th e fact that giving
blood is easy, safe and ta kes j ust
abO&lt;tt an hour, o nly 5 pe rcent of
Anteri ca ns do nate blood every

d

year.''

'.-

Robert Fleming Me~de

_Alan W. Huninghake

VIN TON - Robert Fleming Meade, 80, ofVinton, diea Thursday,
August 10, 2000 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Huntington ,
West Virginia.
.;Ky.
("'
He was born October 28, 191 9 at Omar,
:; :. Born Dec. 18, 1951 in Ironton , son of the late R obert Huninghake,
West Virginia, the son of the late Walter Meade
::and Edna She pherd Huninghake of South P oint, he was an em ployee
and G eorgie Munc y M eade.
::of the CSX car shops m Raceland, Ky.
He was a U.S. Army veteran who served as a
·: Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, D rcama To ney
Corporal in the South Pacific and Philippines
: Huninghake; a son, C raig (Susan) Hunin ghake of C hesapea ke; a
Arena ofWorld War II from 1944 until 1946.
;daughter. Tracy (Morgan) Walters of Chesap eake; three g randchildren ;
He served as a military policema'n in Honolu :and two siste rs, Debbie Childers of Biloxi, Miss., and Bobbi Sampson ·
lu, Howaii, served in the Civilian Conservatio n
; of Franklin Furnace.
Corps (CCC) for two years in Greenbrie r
:; He was also preceded in death by a son , To dd Alan Huninghake.
County, West Virginia, and was a member of
: : Services will be 2 p.m ..Sunday in Hall Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Ame rican l egion Lafayette Post N o. 27 and
:Sammy Cooke officiating. Burial will be in Highland Memo rial Ga rVFW Post No. 4464, both of Gallipolis.
; dens, South Point. Visitation was held in the funeral home on SaturHe retired from the Gallia County Sheriff's
• day.
D epartment as a Sergeant in 199 1, following 16 years of service. H e
was also a po liceman in Wayne County, West Virginia, and a member
-.
of the Buckeye Sheriff Association .
.
He married Sarah Dillon Meade in 1947 in Louisa, Kentucky, and
:: PATRIOT- Lenora Victoria Rice, 70, Patriot, died Friday, Aug. 11 , she preceded him in death on July .30, 1997. He was also preceded in
;2000 at her residence.
death by three brothers, two sisrers and a granddaughter.
; · .Born Match 23, 1930, daughter of the late Van and lula Turn er
Surviving are 12 children, Dolly (Randall) Marcum of Crum, West
;A.Idridge, she was a homemaker.
Virginia , Nancy (Bill) Watson of Bidwell, Bobby (Kay) Williamson of
-:· ;Surviving- are a- son, I:&gt;o ug (Crystal) Ri ce of Hernando, Fla.; two e rum , Robert Meml" orerulfl,Bill (Maty) Williamson ofVinton,
!¢lughters, Karla (Charles) Hampton and Sherry (Bill) Peck, both o f H oward M eade of C olumbus, Roger Meade ofVinton, Flem (Donna)
l'atriot; seven grandchildren and five great- grandchildren; and four sis- Meade ofVint o n, R oy M eade ofVinton, Georgie B. Meade ofVinton,
:~rs. Linda (Henry) Willis of Hecla , Audrey Gaskin s of Ironton , Mari e
M ary (George) Pendleton ofVinton, and Sam (Gail) Meade ofVinton;
::Riggsby ofVandalia, and Eloise H ankins of H eath.
36 grandchildre n, 35 great-grandchildren and three great-great- grand: She was also preceded in death by her hu sband, C ecil R ay Rice, o n children; and two sisters, Dixie Stowe of C olorado Springs, Colorado,
:Sept. 1, 1995; and by a sister, Virgie Grout.
and Lydia D o rhety of Grayson, Kentucky.
:. Services will b e 1 p.m. Monday in M cCoy- Moore Fune ral Home
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, August 13, 2000 in McCoy- Moore
·Wetherholt C hapel , Gallipolis, with the Rev. Richard Vinson o ffi ciat- Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park.
:\llg. Burial will be in the Rice Family Ceme tery, Patrio t. There will be Visitatio n was held in the fun e ral home on Saturday, Augist 12, 2000
:Oo visitation . ·
fro m 2~4 and 7-9 p.m.
•
Military graveside rites will be conducted . by VFW Post No. 4464
•
and
Ame rican Legion Lafayette Post No. 27. '
•

.-...• •
·-~=

..
•
••

.-.-.
.·•

..•
..•
...-..
· ·~

-.
•
•

Fair
from Page AI

: : baily kiddie games, kiddie trac.l &lt;&gt;r puUs, and a daily bicycle
·Prawing are also sched uled for
:~ung fai rgoers.
::: A to tal of 24 bicycles will be
;Jiven away to you ngsters un der
:J-2: A tic ket will be presented to
C:_hildren at the gate, and c)lildreri
: 'liUSt be prese nt at the hill stage
::f!lr the daily noo ntime drawing m
:l!rder to win.
: · It wo uldn 't be th e Meigs
~punty Fair w ithou t horse raej ug, and ho rses, sulkies and dnvcrs
:Jtit the half- mi le ova l o n Thursday
: @d Friday.
&lt;: Betwee n eve nts, fairgoe rs ca n
·:See th e han diwo rk of the ir ne igh:l&gt;ors at a nit mbe r o f ex hibit build'ngs.
:: The work of youth and senior
:f air exhibitor&lt; will be o n display
:4ii the Junio r and Se mo r Fair
;:buildings, in the air-cond itioned
' l::oo n Hunters building, and in
·l he livestock barns.
:; Ho rticul ture a nd domestic arts
:powe r arrangements , and pho to~~
. ! aphy and pa mtmg wt ll be o n dis~ay, as will a number of Grange
, e xhibits and displays fro m ot her
]-~ uth and adult co mmunity
; froup s.
.
. .
:, Commerctal bulldmgs will be
· tilled with disp lays from local
: ~u.sinesses, publi c age ncies , politi: cal parties and c hurch groups.
And then, of co urse, th e re 's th e
food: co[[on candy, fLmne l okcs.
samagc.;;, hot dog~ . lc monack·.
bl oo mi ng onions an d so m ethi ng

...

's enior Citi:u m will be
admitted at 110 cost ort
Smiar Citizens' Dt~y,
11umday 11111il 2 p.m., and
two Kiddit~ Da)'S, fM&gt;dllfS-

day and s.zturday, will
allmt • children 12 and under
untiluoon .
.{ree admissicm
.

rides will cost $3 fo r childre n
eac h day, including the two Kiddie D ays.
Transpo rtatio n around the fairgrounds will be offered by the
M eigs County Agricultural Society from noon until 9 p.m ., from

the highway garage to the grandstand area at no cost. Members of
the Tuppers Plains VFW post will
offer golfcart transportation to
the elderly and disabled .
Gates open at the fairgrounds at
7 a.m . , and close at 11 p.m .

HOME OXYGEN PROFESSIONALS
for every taste and appeti te.
Senio r C itize ns will be admitted at no cost on Senio r Ci tizens'
Day. T hu rsday until 2 p.m., and
two Kiddie Days, Wedn esday and
Sa turday, will allow childrt•n 12
and under to be admitted free
until noon. T he hand stamp for

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70S E. Meln St.

1110 -llllh 7283
1 BOO 4~6 68 l·l

/·10 '!Ho i• HI •1
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He has new "toofers" and now
he' s a big boy! Help kee p him
healthy and those new teeth
white &lt;Ind strong. Call the
Holzer Health Hotline when
qucs!H ms come up about health
is,ues. A Holzer Medk-ul Center
· RN is on du ty at the Hospital
-6 am until2 am, 7 days u ,

friend who has diabetes, but he

I

very healthy, and he exercises. Hi

----- --~- ---·----

-·- - - ·-- ...

doctor told him his cholesterol wa
good, yet he still had a heart attack.

His LDL chol'eslerol was 130. Coul
diabetes have contributed to his hear
attack even though his cholesterol
levels were good?
ANSWER
Di abel es can
dramatically increase your chance o
a heart attack or stroke, and may hav
very well been the culprit in you
friend 's case. Eighty perccn~ o
diabetics die prematurely from etthc
a heart attack or a stroke. Diabetic
are at an increased risk of a hear
attack or stroke due to several factors.
They tend to have abnormal vessels
which increase blood press ure an
increase the risk of clonmg disord~rs
Diabetics also produce a smaller
more dense, LDL cholesterol, whic
is more able to penetrate the vessel
and lead to a blood clot. Also
accordin~ to the American Diabetic
Assoc iat1on guide lines, the LD
cholesterol level in a diabetic shoul
be less than 100. What appears to b
a normal cholesterol level in.
diabetic may in fact not be, sine
diabetics produce a diffe rent type: o
cholesterol, which is more lethal.
normal blood test for cholesterol wit
not detect this more lethal type. ,
At the Cholesterol Ce nter, I g1v
ex t ~ a special ancntion to .diabe.ti
patients an'd treat all the vanous ns
factors in cluding Ibi s newl
di scovered, more lethal LD
choleste rol. I monitor all my diabcli
patients closely, se roget her, we can
significanrly red uce thei r risk o
premature death.

Coli today foro free heort ottaok
and stroke rbk asse.s.sment. '

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Point Pleasant, WV 25 5 50

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QUESTION - I have a 42-year ol

For an swers to your me dical ques tid.n
abo ut hea rt auac ks and strokes, ma iltht
to th e Robert M. Ho lley C holes terol
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To give blood, individuals must
be at least 17 or older, weigh at
least 105 pounds and be in ge nerally good health . People can gene rally do nate blood eve ry 56 days,
Mazza sa id.

Doctor Robert Holley is the area
only cholesterol specialist, iJ
Athrrothrombotic Diseast
Specialist, which means he has h'
special trtJining, and is an expert'in
identifying and treating all tL
various risk fa ctors that lead to;
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Holley operates' tile Robert ¥·

.: SOUTH POINT - Alan W. Huninghake, 48, South Po int , died
.::Thursday, Aug. I 0, 2000 in Kings Daughters M edical Center, Ashland,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

•

I

I
I
I

''

•
'

Do you have:
Emphysema
Black Lung.·
Asthma

I

'•

If you answered yes to any of the above questions, contact Holzer Clinic's Black
Lung/Occupational Lung Disease Clinic to determine your eligibility.

Black Lung Occupational Lung Disease Clinic
7 40-446-5244
tn I'll' lu 1/: erd i11 ic. com

�.
-

Pt~ge A8 • a.unba!' G:imtl ·&amp;rnlinrl

Sunday, July 30 2000

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

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Finn recalls eye drops
WASHINGTON (AP) - An Oregon company is recalling eye .
drops because of fears they may be contaminated with a bacteria
that can cause severe eye injury, federal regulators said friday. ·
Rich Distributing of Portland, Ore., made the drops, sold under
the name Rich's MSM Eye &amp; Ear Drops. There were no immediate repor!S of injuries. the food and Drug Administration said.
The product was sold in 1-ounce containers over the Intetnet
and at retail locations nationwide. Company spokesman John
Rich said slightly more than 100 bottles are in circulation, and
customers can return them to the company for a .full refund.
An fDA analysis found the drops could be contaminated with
yeast and Pseudomonas fluorescens, bacteria that in some cases
C:an cause sight-threatening injury. The FDA urges people who
have used the product to contact their physicians.
· For more information, consumers can call the FDA consumer
~formation line at 888-463-6332.
'

· GOP pushes for surplus benefit
WASHINGTON (AP) - · The budget surplus should be
returned to American taxpayers, Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa ., said
Saturday. .
Santorum, speaking in the weekly GOP radio address, said two
pieces of legislation passed this year by the. Republican-controlled Congress would have given some tax relief to American
families. One bill aimed at the so-call ed marriage penalty has
already been vetoed by President Clinton, an a veto threat hangs
over another bill that would eliminate the estate tax.
Clinton has argued that the tax cuts would cause deficits, and
that just as many married couples benefit from a quirk in the tax
code as pay more. He has also characterized an esta te tax cut as a
benefit for the rich.
Santorum said some survivors are force d to sell off family farms
and small businesses to pay the estate tax.
"Families that work together to build a busirress should be able
to pass it on to their children," he said. "Local, family owned business enrich our towns, small commu nities and cities with new
jobs and new opportunities."
Santorum is running for chairman of the Republican Conference, the No. 3 leadership spot in the Senate majority, assuming
he wins a second term in the November election . Sen. Paul
Coverdell, R - Ga., who died last month, had announced plans to ·
run for chairman to replace Sen. Connie Mack, R-fla ., who is
not seeking re-election in November.

Charges filed in alleged beating
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A police officer was charged
With assault Friday for allege dly beating a deaf-mute, homeless
man while the man was handcuffed. (I
Officer Alfonzo Whittington, 23, faffi charges of misdemeanor
assault on a handi capped person, according to warrants.
Police say Whittington pushed Dennis Ray Hunt, 40, off of a
bench and the punched him several times as he was arresting him
July 31 for allegedly assaulting a woman.

Poor schools recieve
more Federal
dollars
.
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's poorest sc hoolc hildren
are getting more federal dollars
than ever, but more than half of
che money set aside for teaching ·
is spent on aides instead of certified educators. the Education
Department said Friday.
The department's report
examim{d how funds are spent in
six federal education projects,
including the S8 billion worth of
Title I grants meant to give lowincome and other disadvantaged
children computers, lessons and
teachers.
The three -decade-old program has raised controversy in •
recent years because many distriers - woefully short of a qualhave
ified teaching pool resorted to hiring th e aides

instead.
Friday's report said those aides
spent 30 percent of their time
teaching classes without a
teacher present.
This spr ing. Congressional
auditors said most states that
share the funds cou ld not
account for how weU lowin come or non- native-English
speaking children improve on
their tests or other lessons - a
main mission of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act
that governs the grant programs.
Still , Education Secretary
Richard Riley said Friday that
the fimds make up "for support
that often fa lls short."
"Critical federal funds are
reaching the neediest children,"
he said.

Sky l"~n '-, ~.!p~.~.~
League Schedule

League ............................................ Meet.................... Bowl
Monday Night Men ......................... 6:00 8-28-00 .......... 6:30 8-28-00
Monday Mixed ................................6:00
8-21-00
Alley Cats (lues morn
Tues. Morning Women ................. .
Food land ..............................:' ·.::-•;,~~0
Wednesday Men1 .....,....~.. ~......~ .. \:·
Pinsplitters (Wed.
Swingers (Thur. Mom Woihfnl
Thur.• NightMen ....~~~~
Skyliners (Men u~
Bowling Belles''-'""""" lftonanl x
Sat. Night
Jr.

Loretta Young dead at 87
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Loretta Young, the elegant beauty
whose acting career extended
from silent movies to television
and included an Academy Award
for best actress in "The farmer's
Daughter:· died Saturday of ovarian cancer, her longtime agent and
friend Norman Brokaw said. She
was 87.
Young died at the home of her
sister Georgiana Montalban and
actor Ricardo Montalban early
Saturday morning, said Brokaw,
her agent for 50 years and chairman of the William M orris

"She was .:1n incredible
l.:~dy,"

Agency.
"She was an incredible lady;•
Brokaw said. " I learned from her
that if you can handle yourself
with class and dignity, you can
work as long as you want in this
business."
Both on and off the screen,
Young presented the image of
serene uprightness. In 88 movies
dating from 1927 to 1953, she
invariably played the strong-willed
heroine with firm principles.

CHRIST ACA~EMV NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS PRE-K-12

When your children graduate
from high school, do you want
them to be well-educated,
Christ-honoring graduates?

PREPARE YOUR CHILDREN FOR THE FUTURE BY SENDING THEM TO
CHRIST ACADEMY
A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALTERNATIVE
Blending Traditional and Modern Methods of Education.
Providing Excellence in Christian Education Since 1976.

Pre-K-12
College Prep and General Studies
Individualized Instruction- Educational Field Trips
Varied Music Program- Extracurricular Activities
"
Non-Doctrinal- Non-Discriminatory
Admits students of any ra.ce, color, creed, national or ethnic origin.
Conveniently and attractively located in Christ Episcopal Church
CALL OR WRITE FOR ADDlnONAL INFORMAllON

CHRIST ACADEMY
P.O. Box 224, 804 Main St. Point Pleasant, WV 25550
675-1559
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIM INATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS OF CHRIST
ACADEMY LTD.
Christ Academy school admits students of any race. color, national and ethnic
origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or
made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis or
race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its eductional policies,
scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school administered ·

programs.

Dated this 8th day of August, 2001)

~~~T'

Christ Academy, Ltd .
a West Virginia corporation

'\ Inside:

.

Dr. Sam: Golden Age of Sports, Page B2

College Football Preview, Page B4
Tri-County Notebook, Page B6
In the Open: Tips for hunters, Page BB ·

Page Bl
Sund~.

SUNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Local drivers excel
at Kanawha Valley
SOUTHSIDE Winners
were crow ned in four classes last
Saturday at Kanawha Valley Dragway.
In the Pro Class, Randall Tredow (Camaro) ofWellston, O hio,
won with a 5.83 di al-in tim e,
running a 5.844 ET at 11 5.09
mph .J.C. Motes, of Logan, W.Va.,
finished second with hi s '73
Duster. He dialed-in a 7.00 and
ran 6.990 at 95 .73 mph.
In th e Modified Class, Bob
Sheaves ('66 Nova) of Marietta,
Ohio, won with 'a 6.44 dial-in
time, running a 6.483 ET at
102.21 mph. Greg Sauvage of
Pomeroy, O hio, fini shed second
with his '70 Nova. He dial ed-in a
7.04 and ran a 7.225 at 93.51
mph .
In the Pure Street C lass, Scott
Math eny ('73 Ouster) of Vienn a,
W.Va. , won with a 7.50 dial- in,
running a 7.561 ET at 87.02
mph. Earl Adkins, Sr., of Eleanor,
W.Va. , finished second with his
'B4 S- 10. H e dialed-i n a 9. IS and
ran a 9.294 at 73.75 mph.
finally, in th e Jr. Dragster C lass,
Charley Betts (S pitzer) of HU!itington, W.Va., took first with a
7.93 dial-in, running a 7.967 at
80.47 mph. Second went to
Derek Baum of Pomeroy, O hio.
His '95 Spitzer ran 8.708 (against
a 8.71 dial-in) at 73.66 mph.

NASCAR families understand sport's dangers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Richard Petty, an d Kenny Irwin died this deaths in NASCAR since 1991. While
" It is an evolutionary pro cess and we'll
Napcy And.retti didn't need much time seaso n in crashes during practi ce at New erlgineering improvements - roll cages. co ntinue to speak with the developers to
to see th e downside of marrying a race · Hampshire International Speedway.
roof flaps and inner- liner tires - have determine the best way to handle it," he
driver.
T he drivers were ki lled eight weeks made the cars safer, there's only so much a said.
In 1987, she and hu sba nd John were on apart in the same spot - Turn 3 - on the body can take slamming at ISO mph or
NASCAR now requires devices to pretheir honeymoon in California, where he 1.058-mile oval. Stuck throttl es are wioe- more into a con1:rete wall.
vent throttles from sticlking and on-off
drove a sprint car at Ascot Park Speedway, ly believed to be responsible, although
Winston Cup star Rusty Wallace likes switches on the steering wheels within
a dirt track in Gardena. This was no NASCAR is still trying to determine the the idea of using foam barriers, especially reach of the driver's thumb.
rom antic getaway, but it was an unforge t- cause of the crashes that have had a deep at relatively flat tracks like New HampStill, the· sport will continue to scare
tabl e night.
' shire. Barriers, by design, would soften the some.
impact on the racing community.
" He flipped a few times down the
"I was shocked," said Nancy, whose hus- · impact. But some worry t)lat debris from
"I know women w ho can't handle it,"
straightaway," Nancy recalled. " 1 was in the band drives th e No. 43 car for Petty the barriers would spew over the track, Nancy Andretti says. "There are no preinfield watc hing and he did it ' right in Enterprises. "You look at those statistics causing problems for other drivers.
co nceptions; no pie in the sky.
front of me.
and that's not going to happen for a long,
Heeding the concerns of drivers like.
"This is what he does, what he loves.' ~
"He didn 't get hurt ."
long time. I neve r thought it could happen Wallace, NASCAR senior vice president
Michael Waltrip's wife, Buffy, has her
But drivers are sometimes killed. Adam so close togethe~.... It can happen ."
Mike Helton said there are several options
Petty, the grandso n of racing gre at
There have been seven on-track driver under consideration.
Please see NASCAR. Pap 82

FAMILIAR FACE

·

.· ·' ··

•· '

Savings On All New Cars, Trucks, Vans

J

McDyess takes

Duncan's Olympic slot

selection last season.

Clemens It Yanks
agree on big deal
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
Roger Clemens· and the New
York Yankees agreed to a $30.9
m il1 ion ,

three-year

contract

exte nsoo n. announcing a deal that
had been rumored ever since he

'

joined th e team.
'

C lemens, 38, had been eligible
for free agency after this seaso n.

Now, th e· five - time Cy Youn g
winner ca n remain in pinstripe s

through 2003.
C lemens gets a $5 million signirlg bonus - $2 .5 million pay01ble

BENGAL BACKER - Cincinnati running back Corey Dillon shows support for his teammates during Fri·
day's 31-16 loss to Atlanta. Dillon did not play in the game. (AP)

next vear a nd $2.5 million in

Reds rally
to defeat
Chicago

2002 ·_ plus yearly sala ries of
$7.8 million in 2001, S7.R million
in 2002 01nd SJ(J.3 m illion in
2003.
.,
The right- hand er ha s th e
option of opting out of the third
year, in which case he would
become eligible for free agency.
But even if he chooses to opt out,
he would be paid the S10.3 million.

cavs sign Coles
C LEVELAND (AP) - The
C: Ievelaml c .. vali ers sign ed tOyear guard Bimbo Coles to a co n.
tract Saturday.
Coles, 32, spent last season \Vith
the Atlanta Hawks where he averaged 8.1 points in 80 games,
including 54 starts.
The 6-2 free agent has career
averages of R.7 poi nts and 4.3
assists.

Coles was drafted in the second
round of th e 1990 draft. H e
played 5 1/ 2 seasons in Miamo
and 3 1/ 2 with Golden Store.
Terms of his contract were not
disclosed .

1100 ... c.b
IOOIModelt:
lebno ar
u Low • 0.8" Pltll

--Come See: Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, AI Durst,
Nell Peifer, .Jamie Adamson, .Joe Tillis, Larry Pierce,
.John Saunders, and Sherman Green.

•n t)u d1ty

Way ofDoing Business"

252 Upper River Rd.
O•lllpolla, Ohio 45831

(740) 448·0842 or
Toll Free 1·800-448·0842

Or Email ue at: superdodge@voyager.net

Rebetee And Flnence Retee

to

end

of Term Choeen.

Ready, set. hut!
The Sunday Times-Sentinel's
prep football coverage beg ins
Au g. 27 1

••

Falcons cage
Bengals
ATLANTA (A P) The cons a 10-6 first-halflead w het)
Atlanta Falcons accomplished he completed 2 of 18 pas~es
what they wanted to in th eir for 177 yards, mcluding a 38third exhibition game.
yard scoring pass to Brian
Tljey remained unbeaten Finneran. The Bengals blew the
with) a 31- 16 victory over the coverage on the play, leaving
C incinnati Bengal&lt; on . Friday Finneran was all alone inside
night , but even tno re important, the five.
Jamal Anderson finally carried
The Bengals (0-2) rallied to
the ball for the first time in take a 16- 10 lead on Neil
almost a year.
Rackers' 41 -yard field goal with
Although Anderson played 2:47 left in the third qua~ter and
only one quarter and gained no Scott Mitchell's 5-yard keeper
yards on five carries, coach Dan with 11 minutes left.
Reeves seemed. pleased.
Danny Kanell, intercepted at
"You don'1 just go ou t all of a the Bengal&lt; one in the third
sudden and pick up where you quarter, then moved the Falcons
lefr off," Reeves said. "He has a 74 yards in nine plays to regain
couple of more games to get his the lead on a 14-yard scoring
timing down, but he did some pass to Eugene Baker with 6:41
good things catching the ball to play.
and being in the right places"
The Kanell-Bake r combo
Anderson felt no pain in his connected on passes of 13 and
-surgically repaireu righr kn·ee:-~ 15 yari:l.&lt; earlier in-thedrive, ana
" It's not sore right now and Kanell also hir Ronnie Harris
that's a good sign, a really good on a 31-yard pass.
sign," he said. " I think I was a
Th e Falcons quickly put the
•
little anxious. I sped up some of game away.
our things we were trying to do,
Rookie Anthony M idget of
trying to make so mething hap- Virginia Tech intercepted Scott
pen,just trying to do something Covington's pass and return ed it
exciting."
.
.
48 yards for a touchdown with
The Bcngals had tlieir stat 5:46 remaining, and just over
running back in uniform for the three minutes later, Winslow
first time this preseason. Corey Oliver turned Kane\l's screen
Dillon ended his holdo ut this pass into a 42-yard scoring play.
week and joined the team for O liver's score was , set up by
the flight to Atlanta, but didn't Mark Simoneau's interception.
play.
Morten Andersen kicked a
"Clearly, we have a lot of 34-yard field goal for the faiwork to do," coach Bruce cons in the opening quarter
Cosier said . "I think they threw after Rackers gave the Bengals a
for almost 400 yards (actually 3-0 lead on a 47-y.ard field goal
355) un us. We had no pass rush just over three minutes into the
and they kept hitting corner b"'me.

DENVER (AP) - Antoni o
M cOyess was chosen to rep)ace
injured Tim Duncan on th e 'U.S.
O lympic basketball team.
M e Dyess has averaged 17 . I
points and 8.1 rebounds per game
since being sdect~d. b.y the_ Los
Angel es C lipp ers as th e second
overall pick in the 1995 NBA
draft. He was traded to the
N ugge ts that year and went on to
become a third-team ali- NBA

...

Au1ust 13, 2000

C HI CAGO (AP) -

patterns on us. That's what I

C incinnati's other score was a

saw."
C hris Chandler gave the Fal -

20-yard field goal by Doug Pelfrey.

PAUL BROWN STADIUM

Bengals .new digs more
than they deserve
C IN C INNATI (AP)- Born

C incin-

of political controvc:rsy and bui lt
at taxpayer expense, the new
Cincinnati Benga ls stadium

ruti manager Jack M cKeon has

no idea why the Reds do so well
when they're behind. Maybe it's
a challenge. Maybe they need a
it's something they're eating.
Whatever it is, it work s.
After Chicago Cubs starter
Kevin Tapani !eli in the eighth
inning with a kne e injury, Ken
Griffey Jr., Dmitri Yo ung and
Pokey Reese homered off reliever Steve Rain as the Reds ralhed
for a 6-4 victory Friday. It was
th eir 31st co meback victory.
"We're a club that's tough
from th e si..ch inning o n," McKeon sa id. "Guys come back to

offers football's worst team a
home with luxurious to u ches.
The grass at Paul Bro\~n Stadium won 't b~ gret·ner than at
Cinergy Field, but it will be real
turf.
N o longer sharing a 30-yearold stadium with the Cincinnati
Reds, the Bengals will play amid
a lo t more orange and black
tiger logos.
The tiger tmage is embroidered into the fab ric seat backs
of the private boxes. It is on
tables in eating an~as. h is displayed on ohe rubber-like floor

tht· clubhouse and gt't in to their

of a combination gym and din-

Wh eaties. I don't know what it
SEE YAI - Ken Griffey Jr. homered 'in the eighth inning to lift the
IS ."
Sammy Sosa hit his 36th home Reds past the Cubs Friday. (AP)
'
run , tying Cary Sheffield for till'
major league l.ead, but •:;dn't win this game," Sosa sa id. "It danger of being shut ou t for th e
matt~. as the Cubs squand red a doesn 't happen and we're like, first time this seaso n . ButTapani ,
'Wow.' "We let that one get who has had tendinitis all season
4-0 lead,
.
and aggravated it w hen he
" It was one of those days you away."
Tapani
pitched
st·ven
sc.:ore
less
think you have the opportunity.

in g hall, where players can exercise, play basketball and be fed

few innings to warm up. Maybt&gt;

We're thinking we're go ing ' to

innin gs, and the R eds were in

Plaase see Reds, Paae 82

between workouts .

Video boards over th e north
and sout h end zones can flash
images fmm the country's orher

pro football games -

or show a

Be ngal t'iger "j umpin g" to two
sideline scoreboards.
The Bengals begin their uc:w

era Aug. 19 with a preseason.
game against the Chicago Bears,
leaving behind a 1990s de cade
in w hich they set a National
Football Leagu e record for losses by a franchise .
Paul Brown Stadium , named
tor the Bengals' founder, is not
luxuri ous throughout. While tlte
club level has padded seats an_d
seat backs, genera] admission

fans enter through concrete
concourses to hard plastic seats
and have spartan restrooms. Seat
prices range from $35, up $1
fl1m last year, to SSO, up from
S a year ago.
n the leased private boxes,
su ites are each fitted with two
teleVision set s, private eating

areas and sliding windows that
eith er let in oufside air or shut
inclement weather.
Team executives have suites

out

overlooki ng the Ohio River.
The game-film viewing room
resembles a lecture hall at an
elite private college.
Cincinnati lawyer Timothy

Please sH Stadium, Pltp as

•
'

�.
-

Pt~ge A8 • a.unba!' G:imtl ·&amp;rnlinrl

Sunday, July 30 2000

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

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Finn recalls eye drops
WASHINGTON (AP) - An Oregon company is recalling eye .
drops because of fears they may be contaminated with a bacteria
that can cause severe eye injury, federal regulators said friday. ·
Rich Distributing of Portland, Ore., made the drops, sold under
the name Rich's MSM Eye &amp; Ear Drops. There were no immediate repor!S of injuries. the food and Drug Administration said.
The product was sold in 1-ounce containers over the Intetnet
and at retail locations nationwide. Company spokesman John
Rich said slightly more than 100 bottles are in circulation, and
customers can return them to the company for a .full refund.
An fDA analysis found the drops could be contaminated with
yeast and Pseudomonas fluorescens, bacteria that in some cases
C:an cause sight-threatening injury. The FDA urges people who
have used the product to contact their physicians.
· For more information, consumers can call the FDA consumer
~formation line at 888-463-6332.
'

· GOP pushes for surplus benefit
WASHINGTON (AP) - · The budget surplus should be
returned to American taxpayers, Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa ., said
Saturday. .
Santorum, speaking in the weekly GOP radio address, said two
pieces of legislation passed this year by the. Republican-controlled Congress would have given some tax relief to American
families. One bill aimed at the so-call ed marriage penalty has
already been vetoed by President Clinton, an a veto threat hangs
over another bill that would eliminate the estate tax.
Clinton has argued that the tax cuts would cause deficits, and
that just as many married couples benefit from a quirk in the tax
code as pay more. He has also characterized an esta te tax cut as a
benefit for the rich.
Santorum said some survivors are force d to sell off family farms
and small businesses to pay the estate tax.
"Families that work together to build a busirress should be able
to pass it on to their children," he said. "Local, family owned business enrich our towns, small commu nities and cities with new
jobs and new opportunities."
Santorum is running for chairman of the Republican Conference, the No. 3 leadership spot in the Senate majority, assuming
he wins a second term in the November election . Sen. Paul
Coverdell, R - Ga., who died last month, had announced plans to ·
run for chairman to replace Sen. Connie Mack, R-fla ., who is
not seeking re-election in November.

Charges filed in alleged beating
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A police officer was charged
With assault Friday for allege dly beating a deaf-mute, homeless
man while the man was handcuffed. (I
Officer Alfonzo Whittington, 23, faffi charges of misdemeanor
assault on a handi capped person, according to warrants.
Police say Whittington pushed Dennis Ray Hunt, 40, off of a
bench and the punched him several times as he was arresting him
July 31 for allegedly assaulting a woman.

Poor schools recieve
more Federal
dollars
.
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's poorest sc hoolc hildren
are getting more federal dollars
than ever, but more than half of
che money set aside for teaching ·
is spent on aides instead of certified educators. the Education
Department said Friday.
The department's report
examim{d how funds are spent in
six federal education projects,
including the S8 billion worth of
Title I grants meant to give lowincome and other disadvantaged
children computers, lessons and
teachers.
The three -decade-old program has raised controversy in •
recent years because many distriers - woefully short of a qualhave
ified teaching pool resorted to hiring th e aides

instead.
Friday's report said those aides
spent 30 percent of their time
teaching classes without a
teacher present.
This spr ing. Congressional
auditors said most states that
share the funds cou ld not
account for how weU lowin come or non- native-English
speaking children improve on
their tests or other lessons - a
main mission of the Elementary
and Secondary Education Act
that governs the grant programs.
Still , Education Secretary
Richard Riley said Friday that
the fimds make up "for support
that often fa lls short."
"Critical federal funds are
reaching the neediest children,"
he said.

Sky l"~n '-, ~.!p~.~.~
League Schedule

League ............................................ Meet.................... Bowl
Monday Night Men ......................... 6:00 8-28-00 .......... 6:30 8-28-00
Monday Mixed ................................6:00
8-21-00
Alley Cats (lues morn
Tues. Morning Women ................. .
Food land ..............................:' ·.::-•;,~~0
Wednesday Men1 .....,....~.. ~......~ .. \:·
Pinsplitters (Wed.
Swingers (Thur. Mom Woihfnl
Thur.• NightMen ....~~~~
Skyliners (Men u~
Bowling Belles''-'""""" lftonanl x
Sat. Night
Jr.

Loretta Young dead at 87
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Loretta Young, the elegant beauty
whose acting career extended
from silent movies to television
and included an Academy Award
for best actress in "The farmer's
Daughter:· died Saturday of ovarian cancer, her longtime agent and
friend Norman Brokaw said. She
was 87.
Young died at the home of her
sister Georgiana Montalban and
actor Ricardo Montalban early
Saturday morning, said Brokaw,
her agent for 50 years and chairman of the William M orris

"She was .:1n incredible
l.:~dy,"

Agency.
"She was an incredible lady;•
Brokaw said. " I learned from her
that if you can handle yourself
with class and dignity, you can
work as long as you want in this
business."
Both on and off the screen,
Young presented the image of
serene uprightness. In 88 movies
dating from 1927 to 1953, she
invariably played the strong-willed
heroine with firm principles.

CHRIST ACA~EMV NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS PRE-K-12

When your children graduate
from high school, do you want
them to be well-educated,
Christ-honoring graduates?

PREPARE YOUR CHILDREN FOR THE FUTURE BY SENDING THEM TO
CHRIST ACADEMY
A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALTERNATIVE
Blending Traditional and Modern Methods of Education.
Providing Excellence in Christian Education Since 1976.

Pre-K-12
College Prep and General Studies
Individualized Instruction- Educational Field Trips
Varied Music Program- Extracurricular Activities
"
Non-Doctrinal- Non-Discriminatory
Admits students of any ra.ce, color, creed, national or ethnic origin.
Conveniently and attractively located in Christ Episcopal Church
CALL OR WRITE FOR ADDlnONAL INFORMAllON

CHRIST ACADEMY
P.O. Box 224, 804 Main St. Point Pleasant, WV 25550
675-1559
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIM INATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS OF CHRIST
ACADEMY LTD.
Christ Academy school admits students of any race. color, national and ethnic
origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or
made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis or
race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its eductional policies,
scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school administered ·

programs.

Dated this 8th day of August, 2001)

~~~T'

Christ Academy, Ltd .
a West Virginia corporation

'\ Inside:

.

Dr. Sam: Golden Age of Sports, Page B2

College Football Preview, Page B4
Tri-County Notebook, Page B6
In the Open: Tips for hunters, Page BB ·

Page Bl
Sund~.

SUNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Local drivers excel
at Kanawha Valley
SOUTHSIDE Winners
were crow ned in four classes last
Saturday at Kanawha Valley Dragway.
In the Pro Class, Randall Tredow (Camaro) ofWellston, O hio,
won with a 5.83 di al-in tim e,
running a 5.844 ET at 11 5.09
mph .J.C. Motes, of Logan, W.Va.,
finished second with hi s '73
Duster. He dialed-in a 7.00 and
ran 6.990 at 95 .73 mph.
In th e Modified Class, Bob
Sheaves ('66 Nova) of Marietta,
Ohio, won with 'a 6.44 dial-in
time, running a 6.483 ET at
102.21 mph. Greg Sauvage of
Pomeroy, O hio, fini shed second
with his '70 Nova. He dial ed-in a
7.04 and ran a 7.225 at 93.51
mph .
In the Pure Street C lass, Scott
Math eny ('73 Ouster) of Vienn a,
W.Va. , won with a 7.50 dial- in,
running a 7.561 ET at 87.02
mph. Earl Adkins, Sr., of Eleanor,
W.Va. , finished second with his
'B4 S- 10. H e dialed-i n a 9. IS and
ran a 9.294 at 73.75 mph.
finally, in th e Jr. Dragster C lass,
Charley Betts (S pitzer) of HU!itington, W.Va., took first with a
7.93 dial-in, running a 7.967 at
80.47 mph. Second went to
Derek Baum of Pomeroy, O hio.
His '95 Spitzer ran 8.708 (against
a 8.71 dial-in) at 73.66 mph.

NASCAR families understand sport's dangers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Richard Petty, an d Kenny Irwin died this deaths in NASCAR since 1991. While
" It is an evolutionary pro cess and we'll
Napcy And.retti didn't need much time seaso n in crashes during practi ce at New erlgineering improvements - roll cages. co ntinue to speak with the developers to
to see th e downside of marrying a race · Hampshire International Speedway.
roof flaps and inner- liner tires - have determine the best way to handle it," he
driver.
T he drivers were ki lled eight weeks made the cars safer, there's only so much a said.
In 1987, she and hu sba nd John were on apart in the same spot - Turn 3 - on the body can take slamming at ISO mph or
NASCAR now requires devices to pretheir honeymoon in California, where he 1.058-mile oval. Stuck throttl es are wioe- more into a con1:rete wall.
vent throttles from sticlking and on-off
drove a sprint car at Ascot Park Speedway, ly believed to be responsible, although
Winston Cup star Rusty Wallace likes switches on the steering wheels within
a dirt track in Gardena. This was no NASCAR is still trying to determine the the idea of using foam barriers, especially reach of the driver's thumb.
rom antic getaway, but it was an unforge t- cause of the crashes that have had a deep at relatively flat tracks like New HampStill, the· sport will continue to scare
tabl e night.
' shire. Barriers, by design, would soften the some.
impact on the racing community.
" He flipped a few times down the
"I was shocked," said Nancy, whose hus- · impact. But some worry t)lat debris from
"I know women w ho can't handle it,"
straightaway," Nancy recalled. " 1 was in the band drives th e No. 43 car for Petty the barriers would spew over the track, Nancy Andretti says. "There are no preinfield watc hing and he did it ' right in Enterprises. "You look at those statistics causing problems for other drivers.
co nceptions; no pie in the sky.
front of me.
and that's not going to happen for a long,
Heeding the concerns of drivers like.
"This is what he does, what he loves.' ~
"He didn 't get hurt ."
long time. I neve r thought it could happen Wallace, NASCAR senior vice president
Michael Waltrip's wife, Buffy, has her
But drivers are sometimes killed. Adam so close togethe~.... It can happen ."
Mike Helton said there are several options
Petty, the grandso n of racing gre at
There have been seven on-track driver under consideration.
Please see NASCAR. Pap 82

FAMILIAR FACE

·

.· ·' ··

•· '

Savings On All New Cars, Trucks, Vans

J

McDyess takes

Duncan's Olympic slot

selection last season.

Clemens It Yanks
agree on big deal
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
Roger Clemens· and the New
York Yankees agreed to a $30.9
m il1 ion ,

three-year

contract

exte nsoo n. announcing a deal that
had been rumored ever since he

'

joined th e team.
'

C lemens, 38, had been eligible
for free agency after this seaso n.

Now, th e· five - time Cy Youn g
winner ca n remain in pinstripe s

through 2003.
C lemens gets a $5 million signirlg bonus - $2 .5 million pay01ble

BENGAL BACKER - Cincinnati running back Corey Dillon shows support for his teammates during Fri·
day's 31-16 loss to Atlanta. Dillon did not play in the game. (AP)

next vear a nd $2.5 million in

Reds rally
to defeat
Chicago

2002 ·_ plus yearly sala ries of
$7.8 million in 2001, S7.R million
in 2002 01nd SJ(J.3 m illion in
2003.
.,
The right- hand er ha s th e
option of opting out of the third
year, in which case he would
become eligible for free agency.
But even if he chooses to opt out,
he would be paid the S10.3 million.

cavs sign Coles
C LEVELAND (AP) - The
C: Ievelaml c .. vali ers sign ed tOyear guard Bimbo Coles to a co n.
tract Saturday.
Coles, 32, spent last season \Vith
the Atlanta Hawks where he averaged 8.1 points in 80 games,
including 54 starts.
The 6-2 free agent has career
averages of R.7 poi nts and 4.3
assists.

Coles was drafted in the second
round of th e 1990 draft. H e
played 5 1/ 2 seasons in Miamo
and 3 1/ 2 with Golden Store.
Terms of his contract were not
disclosed .

1100 ... c.b
IOOIModelt:
lebno ar
u Low • 0.8" Pltll

--Come See: Mike Northup, Pete Somerville, AI Durst,
Nell Peifer, .Jamie Adamson, .Joe Tillis, Larry Pierce,
.John Saunders, and Sherman Green.

•n t)u d1ty

Way ofDoing Business"

252 Upper River Rd.
O•lllpolla, Ohio 45831

(740) 448·0842 or
Toll Free 1·800-448·0842

Or Email ue at: superdodge@voyager.net

Rebetee And Flnence Retee

to

end

of Term Choeen.

Ready, set. hut!
The Sunday Times-Sentinel's
prep football coverage beg ins
Au g. 27 1

••

Falcons cage
Bengals
ATLANTA (A P) The cons a 10-6 first-halflead w het)
Atlanta Falcons accomplished he completed 2 of 18 pas~es
what they wanted to in th eir for 177 yards, mcluding a 38third exhibition game.
yard scoring pass to Brian
Tljey remained unbeaten Finneran. The Bengals blew the
with) a 31- 16 victory over the coverage on the play, leaving
C incinnati Bengal&lt; on . Friday Finneran was all alone inside
night , but even tno re important, the five.
Jamal Anderson finally carried
The Bengals (0-2) rallied to
the ball for the first time in take a 16- 10 lead on Neil
almost a year.
Rackers' 41 -yard field goal with
Although Anderson played 2:47 left in the third qua~ter and
only one quarter and gained no Scott Mitchell's 5-yard keeper
yards on five carries, coach Dan with 11 minutes left.
Reeves seemed. pleased.
Danny Kanell, intercepted at
"You don'1 just go ou t all of a the Bengal&lt; one in the third
sudden and pick up where you quarter, then moved the Falcons
lefr off," Reeves said. "He has a 74 yards in nine plays to regain
couple of more games to get his the lead on a 14-yard scoring
timing down, but he did some pass to Eugene Baker with 6:41
good things catching the ball to play.
and being in the right places"
The Kanell-Bake r combo
Anderson felt no pain in his connected on passes of 13 and
-surgically repaireu righr kn·ee:-~ 15 yari:l.&lt; earlier in-thedrive, ana
" It's not sore right now and Kanell also hir Ronnie Harris
that's a good sign, a really good on a 31-yard pass.
sign," he said. " I think I was a
Th e Falcons quickly put the
•
little anxious. I sped up some of game away.
our things we were trying to do,
Rookie Anthony M idget of
trying to make so mething hap- Virginia Tech intercepted Scott
pen,just trying to do something Covington's pass and return ed it
exciting."
.
.
48 yards for a touchdown with
The Bcngals had tlieir stat 5:46 remaining, and just over
running back in uniform for the three minutes later, Winslow
first time this preseason. Corey Oliver turned Kane\l's screen
Dillon ended his holdo ut this pass into a 42-yard scoring play.
week and joined the team for O liver's score was , set up by
the flight to Atlanta, but didn't Mark Simoneau's interception.
play.
Morten Andersen kicked a
"Clearly, we have a lot of 34-yard field goal for the faiwork to do," coach Bruce cons in the opening quarter
Cosier said . "I think they threw after Rackers gave the Bengals a
for almost 400 yards (actually 3-0 lead on a 47-y.ard field goal
355) un us. We had no pass rush just over three minutes into the
and they kept hitting corner b"'me.

DENVER (AP) - Antoni o
M cOyess was chosen to rep)ace
injured Tim Duncan on th e 'U.S.
O lympic basketball team.
M e Dyess has averaged 17 . I
points and 8.1 rebounds per game
since being sdect~d. b.y the_ Los
Angel es C lipp ers as th e second
overall pick in the 1995 NBA
draft. He was traded to the
N ugge ts that year and went on to
become a third-team ali- NBA

...

Au1ust 13, 2000

C HI CAGO (AP) -

patterns on us. That's what I

C incinnati's other score was a

saw."
C hris Chandler gave the Fal -

20-yard field goal by Doug Pelfrey.

PAUL BROWN STADIUM

Bengals .new digs more
than they deserve
C IN C INNATI (AP)- Born

C incin-

of political controvc:rsy and bui lt
at taxpayer expense, the new
Cincinnati Benga ls stadium

ruti manager Jack M cKeon has

no idea why the Reds do so well
when they're behind. Maybe it's
a challenge. Maybe they need a
it's something they're eating.
Whatever it is, it work s.
After Chicago Cubs starter
Kevin Tapani !eli in the eighth
inning with a kne e injury, Ken
Griffey Jr., Dmitri Yo ung and
Pokey Reese homered off reliever Steve Rain as the Reds ralhed
for a 6-4 victory Friday. It was
th eir 31st co meback victory.
"We're a club that's tough
from th e si..ch inning o n," McKeon sa id. "Guys come back to

offers football's worst team a
home with luxurious to u ches.
The grass at Paul Bro\~n Stadium won 't b~ gret·ner than at
Cinergy Field, but it will be real
turf.
N o longer sharing a 30-yearold stadium with the Cincinnati
Reds, the Bengals will play amid
a lo t more orange and black
tiger logos.
The tiger tmage is embroidered into the fab ric seat backs
of the private boxes. It is on
tables in eating an~as. h is displayed on ohe rubber-like floor

tht· clubhouse and gt't in to their

of a combination gym and din-

Wh eaties. I don't know what it
SEE YAI - Ken Griffey Jr. homered 'in the eighth inning to lift the
IS ."
Sammy Sosa hit his 36th home Reds past the Cubs Friday. (AP)
'
run , tying Cary Sheffield for till'
major league l.ead, but •:;dn't win this game," Sosa sa id. "It danger of being shut ou t for th e
matt~. as the Cubs squand red a doesn 't happen and we're like, first time this seaso n . ButTapani ,
'Wow.' "We let that one get who has had tendinitis all season
4-0 lead,
.
and aggravated it w hen he
" It was one of those days you away."
Tapani
pitched
st·ven
sc.:ore
less
think you have the opportunity.

in g hall, where players can exercise, play basketball and be fed

few innings to warm up. Maybt&gt;

We're thinking we're go ing ' to

innin gs, and the R eds were in

Plaase see Reds, Paae 82

between workouts .

Video boards over th e north
and sout h end zones can flash
images fmm the country's orher

pro football games -

or show a

Be ngal t'iger "j umpin g" to two
sideline scoreboards.
The Bengals begin their uc:w

era Aug. 19 with a preseason.
game against the Chicago Bears,
leaving behind a 1990s de cade
in w hich they set a National
Football Leagu e record for losses by a franchise .
Paul Brown Stadium , named
tor the Bengals' founder, is not
luxuri ous throughout. While tlte
club level has padded seats an_d
seat backs, genera] admission

fans enter through concrete
concourses to hard plastic seats
and have spartan restrooms. Seat
prices range from $35, up $1
fl1m last year, to SSO, up from
S a year ago.
n the leased private boxes,
su ites are each fitted with two
teleVision set s, private eating

areas and sliding windows that
eith er let in oufside air or shut
inclement weather.
Team executives have suites

out

overlooki ng the Ohio River.
The game-film viewing room
resembles a lecture hall at an
elite private college.
Cincinnati lawyer Timothy

Please sH Stadium, Pltp as

•
'

�'
0

1':1 "
-. ~ llllge B2 • 6unbap Q:imu -ittntinrl

Pomeroy· Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • folnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday, August 13, 2000

..

TODAY' -S ·scOREBOARD
~,illo ,, _,.,

..a-:

..

r

~ shampoos?
~ · I only bring this up because I always

t receive books as part of my · profession
~

and as holiday gifts.
One of the nice thing&lt; about my job is
' the frequency and variety of books I
i- receive to review. I love to read. Free
; books and times to read are two of the
~ many perks of my job.
~ Getting paid for doing a job I love is
:. probably the biggest perk.
My mother-in-law is quite envious of
me in this respect. She impresses her
.; poetry group by telling them about the
:: son-in-law who gets free books.
:· Naturally, ·it's not me but the books
:' that impress them.
f Of course, I am always grateful to
••: receive books as gifts from my family and
} friends. So it didn't surprise me when I
!; received rwo new sports books last

~

!· month.

~: This time, however, they are more spe·, cia! than I could imagine.
My sister sent me an autographed copy
, of Doris Kearns Goodwin's "Wait Till

t·

~- NextYear."

:- Goodwin is a historian who. won the
:· Pulitzer Prize for "No Ordinary Time:· a
_; book about Franklin and Eleanor Roo' sevelt. She was also featured in Ken
;: Burns' PBS video series on baseball.

"Walt TtU Next Year" is a memOir
about growing up in the suburbs of New
York in the 1950s in a neighborhood
that was divided among Yankee, Dodger
and Giant fans.
For Goodwin, it was the best time to
be a Dodger fan and to be in New York.
The team was in Brooklyn and had Jack. ie Robinson, Roy Campanella, Duke
Snider, Preacher Roe and Pee Wee
Reese.
Goodwin has decided to share her
childhood with us. Unfortunately, like
every childhood , it had to e~d. Goodwin's end coincided with the death of
her mother and the flight of the Dodgers
to Los Angeles.
Later on in life, she rediscovered her
love of the game with "The Impossible
Dream" and the Boston Red Sox of
1967.
The Dodgers of the 1950s were also
the focus of the second personally autographed book I received. I could scarcely conceal my joy when I opened the
package and discovered "Tales of the
Dod~r Dugout" by Carl Erskine.
Tlie 1950s are a significant time for me
since I was born in that decade and my
parents are celebrating their 50th wedding ,anniversary next month.
I have already sent them a video and
book on the year 1950 before I received
these books that give a unique perspective of this period.
Here was a time of the Cold War, the
Korean Conflict, McCarthyism, "The
Blackboardjungle,"TV dinners and base-

•
•:·- -----------------------------------------·~

..

')

:~

Reds

f;

from Page B1 ·

like being in the right place at
the right time. I didn't ask for
the game ball or anything."
Danny Graves pitched the
eighth and ninth for hi s I 9th
save in 22 chances.
Cincinnati shortstop Barry
Larkin returned to the lineup
after missing fiv e games with a
sprained kn ee and went 0-for-

f·
.. stepped aw kwardly on first
i·base in the fourth inning, was
;)ifted after giving up singles to
~pinch-hitter Alex Ochoa and
;chris Stynes to lead off th e
5.
oeighth .
An error by Griffey in the
e, "Tap's been tough on us all
.:year," McKeon said. "You're fifth se t up Sosa's three-run
':always glad to see him out of homer. Eric Young hit a fly to
right-center, and Griffey and
'..:the game."
:.; With the left-handed Griffey Bichette both ran for it. Grif~jl oo ming and lefties hitting fey appeared to pull up when
'o nly .154 against Rain (3-2), he saw Bichette coming at
&lt;;manager Don Baylor went him, and the ball glanced off
.:with him over Felix Heredia . hi s glove .
" I just
couldn't
hear
::rwo batters later, though ,
·:Griffey homered to right-ce n- Bichett~ and_he_couldn 't hear
:;rerto -cut Ch icago's lead to 4- me," Griffey said . "We were
;J.
both calling for the ball."
After Eri c Yo ung stole third
~~ Rain
struck out Dante
)3ic hette, but then gave up a and Rob )3ell walked Ricky
's ingle to Sean Casey and con- Gutierrez, Sosa se nt th e 0-1
pitch from Rob Bell over the
:~ec utive homers to Young and
fence and . boun cing dow n
:;Reese.
~ "Right now, I don't want to Waveland Avenue .
Reds Notes: The Reds did- ·
.iface the guy.s," said Rain, who
.:S till looked distraught long n 't get any extra-base hits off
zri fter the game was over."( just Tapani . Stynes was the only
t:Wan t to get out of here."
. player , to reach seco nd, and
;; Reliever Mark Wohlers (1 - 1) that came courtesy of Eric
!j:ot his first win since Sept. 4, Young's error ... . Yo un g stole
two bases Friday, giving him
·~ 997. H e pitched one inning,
:;walking one and striking out 40 steals this season. That's the
lwo. He also made an er ro r on most for a C ubs player since
1985 .... Cubs RHP pitcher
;~ throw to first.
:: Wohlers lost his ability to Kerry Wood, still bo thered by
:{hrow str ikes after he got hurt a stra in ed muscle in his rib
\I n 1998. The Atlanta Braves cage, will miss his next st·art .
haded him to the Reds, who Wood has been on the disabled
lent him to the minors to try list since Sunday, retroactive to
:lo work out hi s problems last July 30. ... The crowd of
'
40,586 was the la rges t at
·$Cason.
· " It 's not like I went out Wrigley field since Se pt. 13,
;! he re and pitched eight score- 1998, when the Cubs played
-less inning&lt; ," Wohlers said. " It's the Milwaukee Brewers.

Erskine's best year was 1953 when he
went 20-6 and set a World Series record
by striking out 14 batters in the third
game. H e fanned the great Mantle four
times that game. The book even includes
a picture of Mantle with a writtep
inscription to "Oisk" as "The Greatest
WS Pitcher in the World ~'
My in-laws know Erskine and sought
SPORTS DOCTOR
him out to dedicate the book to my family and me. I have previously used this
ball's heyday in New York. Although connection to invite the former pitcher
Erskine i~ only mentioned in po:tssing in to addr~ss my sports history class. Carl
Goodwirl's book, both works were useful goes out of his way to talk to fans and
in helping us tb understand a time when anyone who cares to listen.
The truth is that I have used a record·
baseball rule-d the American family and
ed interview with Erskine as one of the
sports scene.
Ironically, even ESPN appeared at Rio assignments in my sports class.
One of the first questions he responds
Grande a few weeks ago to research the
to
concerns his memory of watching
legacy of Bevo Francis. for a show that's
Bevo play in Anderson, Ind., against his
supposed to air Dec. 7.
I realize th at's an onllnous date frmn old high school teammate Johnny Wil,
the 1940s, but Bevo made his mark in the son.
Erskine, in his tongue irt cheek man· early 1950s when Goodwin was growing
ner,
talks about how Bevo had an off
up and watching Erskine at Ebbers Field.
For those of you too young to remem- night as he scored more than 60 points.
ber, Erskine pitched for the Dodgers for We should all have off nights like that.
Erskine is a wonderful human being
12 years. He posted a 122-78 record and
played on six pennant-winning teams. and a true gentleman. But his trip
These were the teams that were inmlor- through the 1950s is quite different than
talized in Roger Kahn's book "The Boys the one Goodwin remembers.
That is why these two books are such
of Summer."
Erskine won two World Series with ·a nice compliment to each other. Here
the Dodgers in both Brooklyn and Los are both the Dodger fan and player disAngeles. He pitched rwo no-hitters dur- cussing their remembrance of baseball in
ing hi s career, including one against the the decade of the Duke, Willie and
Mickey.
Cu~s in 1952 that was almost a perfect
One of the first thing&lt; I wanted to
gam'e:,

Sam
Wilson

know as I read these work.&lt; was what did
they remember about Don Larsen's perfeet game in the 1956 World S~ries.
Strangely enough; Goodwin remembers the game because of her &lt;Conflicting
loyalty over the Dodger " nemesis" pitcher Sal Maglie.
Brooklyn acquired him from th~
Giants in May 1956. He was the starting
and losing pitcl)er in the game against
Larsen.
Erskine remembers the game too.
His memory is of Maglie pitching a
solid game, but he trailed 2-0 in the sixth
inning when someone remarked, "You
know, we haven't had a base runner yet."
That's when the team woke up to the
reality of the situation. Erskine recalls it
ftom the dugout as Larsen denied the
Dodgers base runners and hits for the
entire afternoon.
Of course, Jackie Robinson and Roy
Campanella are prominent in both
accounts, and Bobby Thompson's home
run is .another seminal point in each
book.
Goodwin, however, goes into greater
detail of the social and political unrest of
the decade, but baseball is an important
part of her life and the memoir.
Both books give an intimate understanding of a period and time that is
slowly fading into a distant memory. It
was a period before high salaries, legal
troubles and fr_ee agency dominated the
sp·orts pages.
. It was a time we would all do well to
remember.

•

~

•

NASCAR
•

flom Plge 81

: way of coping with the
inev itable dangers of r ae•ng.
: "There's no good exp la nation w'hy one wrec k
:hurts
somebody
and
a nother doesn't," she said .
;· when it's your turn, it's
¥-our time . That's how I
h'ave . to liv e or I'd have 20

•.

i.tlcers."
N~ncy

Andretti recalled
whrn her husband's · car
tHaght fire at Texu Motor
~pu dway .

• llke molt wlve1 at the
tr~ck, 1he ll1ten1 to her
h111bond'1
converutlons
With his ccew and would
hgve known If he wu In
j!rent - danger.
" He ' ll 1ay •omething
right •way to let me know
lte\ OK becaUh' he know•
li m listening," she said .
: somctim&lt;~,
NASCAR
(~ milies must draw
on
l

faith and streng.th gained
from dealing over th e
years wit h the tragedies of
a dangerous sport.
"We
always
go
to
chape l, " Nancy Andr et ti
says about a race-morning
ritual for drivers and their
families .
" I
pray
to
myself. The kids will pray
for a safe race, and that
helps ."
Rick
Carelli,
nearly
killed an a bad wreck last
year on the NASCAR
truck circuit, has reaso n
to believe prayer works .
"I remember my wife
and p u tor Jim Lanning
praying _ over me, an~, the
blood J Ust !topped,
he
uld.
Still. the .hue! lnj'ury
cost him his ride: Fear for
Caelli's life ca used fanlily
friend Manhall Churown
to fold the team .
"He turned to me a nd
§aid, 'I don't l'Vcr want
hjm in 11 race car again,"'
1

s aid. Cat hy Carell i,
driver's wifl' .

•

the

Eoll

'' ·T•m

W L Pet.

" ......... 70 45 .6011
.......... 87 47 .588 2
Flo&lt;lda ............................58 57 .504
Montreal ......
.. ......... 61
.459
Philadelphia .................... 49 65 .430 20

Atlanta "
New York .....

eo

Control

Chic8go, 94.
HITS-Erstad, Anaheim, 179; CDelgado,
Toronto, 153; MJSweonay, Kansas City, 150:
Damon, Kansas City, 149; BeWIIliams, Nl!w
York , 141; Thomas, Chicago, 141; Garciaparra,
Boston, 138.
OOUBLES-COelgado, Toronto, 44 ; Garciaparra, Boston , 40; Olerud, Seattkt, 36 ; Lawton.
~lrmesola, 33; Higginson, Detroit, 33; BeWil·
llama, New York, 32; DeShields, Baltimore, 32:
Belle, Baltimore, 32.
TRIPLES---CGuzman, Minnesota. 17:
AKennedy, Anaheim, 9; Durham, Chicago, 7;
Alicea, Texas, 7; BeWllliams New Yor1( 6· 6
are ijed with s.
'
' ·
HOME AUN S-TBatista, Toronto. 34;
Thomas , Chicago, 34; COelgado, Toronto, 33;
Glaus•. Anaheim , 32; GAnderson, Anah eim. 30;
ARodnguez, Seattle, 30; Thome Claveland
30; Justice, New Yorl&lt;, 30.
'
'
STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas City, 34:
DeShields, Baltimore. 29; RAiomar, Cleveland,
27; Henderson, Seattle, 25; Erstad, Anaheim,
24; ~e. S&amp;attle, 24: Cairo, Tampa Bay
23; Lawton, MinneS01a, 23.
'
PITCHING (14 Decisions)- OWells, Toronto, t7·4, .810, 4.14; Baldwin, Chicago , 13-4,
.785, 4. t6 ; PMartinez, Boston. 13-4 , .765, 1.46:
Hudson, Oakland, 12·4, .750, 4 .74; Burba,
Cleveland, t0-4 , .7 14, 5.11 ; Moyer, Seattle, 11 ·
5, .687, 5.30; Pet11tte. New York , t3-6, 684,
4.21; Sele, Seattle, 13·6, .684, 4.38 .
STRIKEOUTS- PMartinez. Boston, 204;
Mussina, Baltimore, 148; CFintey, Cleveland,
141: C®n, Cleveland, 140; Nomo, Oetroft,
132; Butta, Cleveland, 130; DWells, Toronto,
128; Clemens, New York, 128.
SAVE$-TBJones, Detroit, 32; Sasaki,
seattle, 28; Koch, Toronto, 27; Weneland ,
Texas, 26: Dlowe, Boston, 25; lsringhausen,
Oakland, 25; MRivera. New York, 25; Percival,
Anaheim, 25.

GB
112

12
17
112

St. L.ouis ...........................62 53 .539
· Cincinnati ........................57 57 .500

4 112
Chicago .·.........................53 8-1 .465 8112
Pittsburgh ....................... 48 M .421 13112
· ·· Milwaukee ....................... 48 e1 .417
14
Houston .......................... 44 72 .319 18112

-

,San Franclsco .................. 84 49 .566
Atizono ........................... 63 52 .548

2

LosAngoles ...... , ............ 59 55 .518 5112
Colorado ......................... 58 58 .491 8 112
San o;ago ............,........... 55 51 .474 101 12
Thur.dly'a Gimes
St. Louis 5, ColOrado 4
N.Y. Mats 10, Houston 3
San Di&amp;I)O 15, Philadelphia 3
Only games scheduled

Frldlft Gamoo
Cincinnati 6, Chk:lgo Cubs 4
Colorado 10. Montreal 3
San Diego 3, Florida 0
Arizona Pittsburgh 1

e.

N.Y. Mets 4, San Francisco 1
Atlan1a 7, Los Angeles 2
Houston 7, Philadelphia 2

MUwaukee e, St. louis 2

s..u.....'•G•mea

Houston {MUter 1·3) at Pfljladelphia (Person
5-4). 1ata .
St. Louis (Anklel7·7) 81 Milwaukae (Haynes
- 10.10),1ate

. •

12~1~eaos(Valdos2·5la1AIIanaa(Maildux

•

.j ... PaO SOCC!ER

C~ncinnali (Williamson 4-7) at Chicago Cubs

(Ganboy 2·4), la1o
' , Colorado {Yoshll 4-12) 81 Monlreal (Thur·
• man ~-3), late
' San Diego (Clement 11 · 1O) at Florida
(C.Smith 1·4), late
Arizona (Schilling 9·6) at Pittsburgh {Ri1chle
- 5-fl), late
,.
San Francisco (Estes 11 ·3) at N.Y. Mats
(Hampton 11 -7), late
Taclly'IGimM
LosAngelesa1At1ama, 1:10p.m.
San Fraooisco at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Colorado at Montreal, 1 :35 p .m.
Houstoo at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
Arlltlf\8 at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p .m.
St. Louis at Mltwaukee, 2:05p.m.
San Diego at Florida, 4:05 p.m
Clncinnall at Chicago Cubs, 8:05p.m.

Green 73! -Green 73! Hut!hut!hut!
It's ba-a-a-a-ck!!

,

, 'TNm

Ea~

W

L Pet.
.559
.Bos10n ............................58 53 .523

GB

, INew YorK ......................... 62 49

4
Toronto ............................80 58 .508 5 1/2
BaltilllOft .................. ~...... 50 64 .439 13 1/2
·Tampa Bay .......................so 64 .439 13 1/2

Watch for weekly coverage of high school football in the Sunday Times-Sentinel beginning Aug. 26!
The SEOAL, TVC, South, Callia, Hannan and liVtlhama ... we've got you covered!

,
Contnl
Chicago ..........................89 46 .600
· Cleveland ........................59 53

owoo .............................64 eo

Kansas Ci1y ..., ................53 62
Minneso1a ....................... 53 65

.527 8 112
.474 14 1/2
.46t
16
.44917112

Orianoo 62, CleveJancl 55, Orlando leads
series 1.0

Saturdlly'a Gamea '
New VOI1t at Washington , late
Todly'a Game•
Orlando at Cleveland, 3 p.m.

Mooday'a Olmea
washington at New York, 8 p.m.
TuMdly'aGames
Orlando at Cleveland, TBA (if necessary)
Washington al New Yoril, TBA (il necessary)

Wntem Conference

Frlday'a Gamaa
LDs Angeles 86, Phoenix 71 , Los A,ng~es
leads series 1-0
s.turdly'a Gamaa
Houston at Sacramento , late

Today'a G1me1
Phoenht at Los Angeles, 5:30 p.m
Mond1y'a Glmea
Sacramento at Houston , tO p.m .
Tueadly'l Gamel
Phoenix at Los Angetes. -TBA {if necessary!
Sacramento at Houslon, TBA (it necessary)

Conference FINIIa
(Btll-ol-3)
Aug . 17, 20, 21

Chlmplon..,lp 5el:lu
CB•al-of·3)
Aug . 24, 21!1, 27

PRO FOOIBAI L'
NFLPrueaaon

Thurad•y'a Gamel
Miami 15, Tampa Bay 13
Pittsburgh 13, Carolina 0
Frlday'l GlmM
Atlanta 3t, Cincinnati 16
Washington 30, New England 20
Jacksonville 16, New York Giants 13

I·

L---::-----~--~-'

Saturdlly'a Gamea

MaJor League Soccer

New Orteans a11nctianapolis, late
Cl~and at Chicago, late
New York Je!s at Baltimore. tate
Buffalo at Detroit, tale
Minnesota at San Oi&amp;go, tate
Seatt le at -Arizona, late
Today'• Games
Green Bay at OerwBf, 4. p.m.
Oakland at Dallas , 7 p.m .
San Francisco at Kansas City. 8:30p .m
Monday's Game
St. Louis at Tennessee, 7 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 18
San Diegq at Allanta. 7 : ~0 p.m.
Tennessee at Ph1ladelph1a, 7:30p.m.
BallimortJ at Carolina, 8 p.m.
New York Giants at New York Jets, 9 p.m.
Arizona al Minnesota, 8 :20p.m
Detroit at Oakland, 9 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 1Q
Chicago at Cincinnati, 7:30p.m.
Washington al Cleveland , 7:30p.m.
Indianapolis 'IS. Pittsburgh, at MeKiCO C~y. e
p.m .
BuffalO at St. LOUis, 8 p .m .
Jacksonville al Kansas Cily, 8:30p.m.
Dallas at Denver. 9 p .m.
San Francisco at Seanle, 11 p.m .
Sunday, Aug. 20
Tampa Bay at New England, 4 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 21
Green Bay at Miami, 8 p .m.

Eaatem Division
Team
WLTPtaGFGA
NY·NJ ................ .... 13 9 2 41 42 35
New England....
9 10 6 33 37 · 39
Miami
............ 8 11 5 29 35 42
D.C.
. ..... ... ... ... 6 14 6 24 38 53
Central Olvlslcn
TampaBay .......... .... 13 10 2 41 46 35
Chlcago ............ ... ...... l 2 8 s 41 so 40
Cotumbus .. ................ 10 11 5 35 39 43
Dalla$ .............. ..... ..... 10 12 4 34 43 43
Wn1ern Division
KansasCity ............... t3 6 5 44 37 23
LosAngeles ........ .. ..... 1t 7 7 40 39 3 1
Colorado ................. .. 11 11 3 36 33 45
San Jose ......... ...... ...... 5 12 8 23 28 38
N OTE: Three poinls for a win Bnd one point
1or a tie.
Saturdly'• Game•
Tampa Bay at San Jose. late
New England at New York-~ew Jersey, late
Colorado at Miami. late
DC United at Dallas, late
Kansas City at los Angel es, late
Wednesday'~ Gamel
New York-New Jersey al Tampa Bay, 7:30
p.m.
Miami at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Dallas, 8 :30 p.m.
Kansas City at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

TRANSACIIOMS

w.~

,... ·Seonao ............................ 69

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

fl'
~
.,.
"'
,;.·
.,. ·
:

w
~

-

*"

,.

~

,.
,.
...

~ "'

~

47 .595
Oakland .......................... 61 53 .535
7
Anaheim .........................60 56 .517
9
Texas ..............................53 60 .469 14 112
ThuRday'l GIIMI
• N.Y. Yankees 12, Oakland 6
Tampa Bay 1o. Minnesota 4
Oetrol114, Baltimore 3
Seanle 6, Chicago White SOx.3 , ·
Toronto 15, Kan1a1 City 7 . '
Frtdlly'll GMMI
Chicago White Sox 6, Tampa Bay 5
Kansas City 7, Baltimore 6
Minnesota 9, Toronto 4
Boston 7, Texas 3
sean1e 7, Cleveland 1
Anaheim .I. tf,Y. YankBBS 3
betroit 11, Oaklard 4

J.

•
"'

,.
,.
'
"'

~
6

"
,.
~
~·
tt
~

rf
"

2000 FORD TAURUS

'2000 FORD IIIIUS'I'ANG
V6 , 5 Speed, Air Conditioning, AM/FM Casaett~ , CO,
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1999 MERCURY COUGAR
V6, Auto, Air Conditioning, AMtFM Ca.sl'!lene,. Tilt,
Cruise, Spoiler, Aluminum Wheel s, All Power, low Miii!!S

Phone
7 40-992-2196
www.jerryblbbee.com

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport ·

Woman's National Baakatball Aaaocla·
tlon
MIAMI SOL- Ann ounced the ret irement
of C·F Sharon Manning to become women·s
assistant basketball coach at St. Joseph's,
Pa .
FOOTBALL
Nlhlonal fQotball league
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS- Signed DE
Tony Brackens to a one-year contract
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA
THRASHERS- Agreed
to
terms wilh F Steve Guolla and 0 Yannick
Tremblay.
•
CALGARY
F LAMES ~ Named
Greg
Gilbert assistant coach .
DAllAS STARS- Acquired AW David
Ling from t l1e Chicago Blackhawks tor futur e
consider ations.
EDMONTON OILERS - Announced the
resignation of Doug Piper, executive vice
president ot business operations .
LOS ANGELES KINGS- Signed LW Peter
Le8ou1illier and LW Nate Miller.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Re-signed 0
Danny Markov.
East Coast Hockey Llague
PEE DEE PRIDE - T raded F Buddy Smith
to the Wheeling Nailers-for F Curtis Wilgosh .

1881 CHEVY BLAZER
4DOORLT

Leather Interior, Power Windows, Power_
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1998CHEVY
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GRANDAM

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Conditioning, AM/FM Stereo and More .

•

:
BATTING-Helton. Co!oraelo, .387: Ham·
.. monds, Colorado, .360; LCastillo, Rorida, .357;
r. VGuerrero, Montreal, .353; PiaZZa, New Yo~ •
.. .349; Vtdro, Montreal, .343; Kent. San Franc1s·
... co, .339.
::
RUNS-Helton, Colorado, 105; Edmonds,
... St. LOuis, 104; Bagwell, Houston, 102; ~onelfi,
... Atlanta. 89; Bonds, San Francisco, 88: Cirillo.
~ Colorado, 87; Sheffield, los Angeles, 86.
,.
RBI - SSosa, Chicago, 105; Kent, San Fran·
: clsro, 102; Griffey Jr, Cinclnna1i, 99; Piazza,
... New York, 97; Helton, Colorado, 96; VGuer "' rero, Montreal, 91 ; G ites. Pittsbuf{lh, 9t .
...
HIT&amp;-Helton, Colorado, 157; V\dro, Mon·
: lreal, 150; Kent, San Francisco, 143; SSosa,
.;. Chicago, 142; VGuorrero, Monlreal, 140;
• AJones, Atlanta, 140; LGonzalez, Arizona, 138.
.•
OOUBLEs..-:Helton, Colorado. 41, Vidro,
: Montreal, 36; Cirillo, Colorado, 36; Kent, San
.. Francisco, 35; LGonzalez, Arizona, 34; Abreu .
.. ~iladelphia. 33; EYoung, Chicago. 32
•
TRIPLES--VGuerroro, Montrea l. 9; NPorez.
:Colorado, 9; Belliard , Milwaukee, 8; Womack ,
~ Arizona, B: Goodwin, Los Angeles, 8; Abreu,
~ P11Hadelphia, 7; lWalker. Colorado, 7.
• . HOME RUNS-SSosa . Chicago, . 36 ;
• .sheffield, Los Angeles. 36: Griffey Jr, C1ncin·
:·nati, 34; Bonds, San FranciSco, 34; Edmonds,
~·st. louis, 32; Piazza, New York, 31: Bagwell,
~· Houston, 31 .
·: STOLEN BASE S---lCastillo, Florida, 46;
: •EYoung, Chicago, 40; Goodwin, los Angeles,
,• 40: Womack, Arizona, 32; Furcal, Atlanta, 26;
"PWilson, F.lorida, 26; OVeras, Atlanta, 25.
:
PITCHING (14 Decisions)- AOJohnson,
..Arizona, 15·4, .789, 2.25; Estes, San Francis·
•co, t1 ·3, .786, 3 .81 ; Etarton, Houston, 12·4.
•.750, 4.6S. KBrown, Los Angeles, 10·4, .714,
:2.47; Aleiter. New York, 12-5, .706, .3.28;
.Giavine, Atlanta, 14·6, .700, 3.86; Lieber.
·Chicago , t0-5. .667, 3.83; GMadduK. Allanta ,
" 12-6, .667, 3.21.
• STRIKEDUTS-RDJOhnson, Arizona , 255 :
~staclo, Colorado, 169: KBrown, los Ang9!es .
• 154 ; Klle, St. Louis, t49 ; Oempste~. Flond a ,
• t48: Benson, Pittsburgh, 142; ALe1ter. New
-York, 142.
:
SAVES&gt;.:-Aifonseca, Florida, 34 ; Hoffman,
..san Diego, 3 t; Benilez. New York_. 28; Nan.
"'San Francisco. 28 : Aguilera, Ch1ca~ . 27;
"Graves, Cincinna1i. 19: Veres, St. LOU IS, 18;
:shaw, Los Angeles . 18.

•~

Local Owner with 5.3 Vortec VS Engine, ..
Auto Trans., Tow Pkg., Air Conditioning, .
Chrome Wheels, Factory Warranty

Summer Parts &amp; Service Special

•

•
•

1899 CHEVY SILVERADO
4X4PICKUP
··

Prnfil

:* ~~~~=~.!
~:~h!i!~ ~:~p.m.
at
•••

•

JERRY BIBBEE

BASEBALL
Amertcln League
ANAHEIM ANGELS- Sent OF Chris
Hatcher outright to Edmonton of the PCL.

Act1vated LHP Kent Mercker from lhe 15-day
disabled list. Placed AHP Miic:'e Fytvie Of'l1he
15·day disabled list.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Recalled INF
Jerry Hairston from Rochester of the Inter·
nalional league . Optioned INF lvannon Cof·
fee lo Rochester. Placed RHP Alan Mills on
the 15-day disabled list. Catted up AHP lesli
Brea from Rochester.
ClEVElAND INDtA.N$-Signed 38 Dave
'Hollins to a minor league contract and
assigned him to Buffalo of the international
League.
KANSAS CITY ROYALs-Acquired INF
Wilson Delgado from the New York Yankees
for SS Nick Ortiz. Optioned OF Scott Pose to
Omatta ot lhe PCL and LHP Tim Byrdak to
Wicl1it a of ttle Texas League. Purchased the
contract of LHP Paul Spolja ric from Omaha
Transferred RHP Orber Moreno from the 15·
to the 60·day disabled list.
NEW YORK YANKEES- Placed LHP
Allen Wation on th e 15-dlly disabled list.
Recalled LHP Randy Choat e from Columbus
ot the International League.
Natlanal League
PITTSBURGH PIRATES- Activated RHP
Todd Ailchie from Ihe 1S-day disabled list.
Placed RHP Francisco Cordova and LHP
Chris Peters on the 15-day disabled list.
Recalled LHP JeH. Wallace !rom Nashvi lle of
t he PCL.
.California League
MODESTO A'S - Announced OF Rus1y
Keilh has been promoted to Sacramento of
th e PCL Placed C Miguel OUvo on the dis·
abled list, retroactive to Aug . 10. Activate't1
3B Gary Schneidmiller from the disabled list
BASKETBALL
National Baakatball A8IOCiltlon
DETROIT P ISTONS-Re-signed G-F Jud
Buechler and C Mikki Moor e. Signed F Tor ·
raye Braggs.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Signe&lt;l F Oarvin
Ham to a two ~ year contract .
NEW JERSEY NETS- Signed G-F
Kendall Gill to a one .year contract .
ORLANDO MAGIC- Signed F .Mike Mill er
to a lour-year contract.
•
SAN ANTONIO SPURS - Signed F Ira
Newble and C Shawnene Scott.
TORONTO AA PTOAS- Signed G Ma rk
Jackson to a tour-yea r contract.
UTAH J AZZ- Agreed to terms w ilh F
Danny Manning on a two-year contract .
WASHINGTON WIZAADS- Ae·signed C
Ja11ld l White, G Chris Whitney and G Laron

Denbigh -~ Garrett

Cleveland (Colon 11).8) at Seattle (Halama
10..5), late
Oet(Oit (Bemero 0.0) at Oakland (Hudson
12·4),1ate
Chicago Wl"lite Sox (Baldwin 13·4) at Tampa
Bay (Rekar 4·7). late
Toronto (Loaiza 6·8) at Minnesota (Redman ~
10.S), tate ·
Baltimore {Parrish 1·1) at Kansas City (Stein
3-3),1818
Boston (Wakefield 6-8) at Texas {Helling 13B), late
N.Y. Yankees (Neagle2-2) at Anaheim (Mercker 0-1), late
Tadly'a GlmH
Cticago White Sox at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m .
Baltimore a1 Kansas City, 2 :05 p.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 2:05 p.m.
Detroit at Oakland, 4:05 p .m.
Boston

V6, Auto , Air Conditioning, AM/F M Cassette, Tllt, Cruise,
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WNBA Playoff Glance
Firat Round
(!1001-ol-3)
Eaatem Confei'ence
Friday's Games

Saturday's G•mM

.,
.,.

~

••

-'I

NltiOMI l.Mgw

~··
"""
~·I
often wondered if mechamcs get
.., . I ~
~~Is 10r C hristmas.
·~:Ooes Santa deliver slippers to shoe
associates or pills to doctors?
r : Do vets get spayed on their birthdays?
r, Do hairdressers get coupons for free

ifunbap QI:imr5 ·l'lrntinrl • PageJ~3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, ()hlo Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, August 13,2000

,Hoses
ks
·check .
e'al Test
Ofle xpires
Oct. 1, 2000
h ACJnspection
Fluids
, Windsldeld wiper orientation,
IOOtSI Steering, associated linkages and parts.

1887CHEVY
CAMARORS

;.

3.8 V6, 200 HP, Auto Trans., Power
Windows, Power Locks, Tilt, Cruise, Low
Miles

-----------------,

I

Batteries

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I
I

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b.tfte&lt;)' IL&gt;I i1 CCJPV 0111\t hn~IIKI "''QI•~"IY

American l ..gua Leadera

BATTING-Oarciaparra, Boston. .385 ;
~Delgado, Toronto, .364: Erstad, Anaheim,
~ 358: IAodnguez. Te:;cas, .347; .Thomas. Ch1ca·
&gt;go 341 · Stewart Toronto, _340; MJSweeney,
'1&lt;a'nSas City, .339; EMar!lnez, Sm1t1le: .339.
" RUNS- AAodriguez, Sea111e, 102. Damon,
j(ansas C1ty, 95, CDelgado, Toronto. 95:_BeWII,.iams, New York. 90; Erstad , A1~ahe1m ;- BB ,
-oumam . Chicago , 68: ThOmas, Ch1cago, 67
... ABI- EMartinez, seattle, t09: BeWllllnms,
~ew York, 1o6; CDelga~o . ~oronto , 104 :
.Thomas, Chicago, 101 : JaGu1mbi. Oakland, 99,
.MJSweeney, Ka'n sas C.tty, 98. MOrdonez,

'_

__

~;\,0~ ~.:I • a_ ~ e' ..!'"'~rtt!_O ~ '-~'I?J ___

Monday • Friday

9 a.m. · 7p.m.
Saturday

9 a.m. · 5 p.m.
Sunday CLOSED

I

,

I· 77 Exit 132
Ripley, WV
(304) 372-3673
(304) 964·3673
1-800-964-3673

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

Call Toll Free 1-800-521-0084
1616 Enstem A·,,e .. GnlliJJoli.&lt;
.'
(740) 44,6- 3672

We usc

__....,."'··-

�'
0

1':1 "
-. ~ llllge B2 • 6unbap Q:imu -ittntinrl

Pomeroy· Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • folnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday, August 13, 2000

..

TODAY' -S ·scOREBOARD
~,illo ,, _,.,

..a-:

..

r

~ shampoos?
~ · I only bring this up because I always

t receive books as part of my · profession
~

and as holiday gifts.
One of the nice thing&lt; about my job is
' the frequency and variety of books I
i- receive to review. I love to read. Free
; books and times to read are two of the
~ many perks of my job.
~ Getting paid for doing a job I love is
:. probably the biggest perk.
My mother-in-law is quite envious of
me in this respect. She impresses her
.; poetry group by telling them about the
:: son-in-law who gets free books.
:· Naturally, ·it's not me but the books
:' that impress them.
f Of course, I am always grateful to
••: receive books as gifts from my family and
} friends. So it didn't surprise me when I
!; received rwo new sports books last

~

!· month.

~: This time, however, they are more spe·, cia! than I could imagine.
My sister sent me an autographed copy
, of Doris Kearns Goodwin's "Wait Till

t·

~- NextYear."

:- Goodwin is a historian who. won the
:· Pulitzer Prize for "No Ordinary Time:· a
_; book about Franklin and Eleanor Roo' sevelt. She was also featured in Ken
;: Burns' PBS video series on baseball.

"Walt TtU Next Year" is a memOir
about growing up in the suburbs of New
York in the 1950s in a neighborhood
that was divided among Yankee, Dodger
and Giant fans.
For Goodwin, it was the best time to
be a Dodger fan and to be in New York.
The team was in Brooklyn and had Jack. ie Robinson, Roy Campanella, Duke
Snider, Preacher Roe and Pee Wee
Reese.
Goodwin has decided to share her
childhood with us. Unfortunately, like
every childhood , it had to e~d. Goodwin's end coincided with the death of
her mother and the flight of the Dodgers
to Los Angeles.
Later on in life, she rediscovered her
love of the game with "The Impossible
Dream" and the Boston Red Sox of
1967.
The Dodgers of the 1950s were also
the focus of the second personally autographed book I received. I could scarcely conceal my joy when I opened the
package and discovered "Tales of the
Dod~r Dugout" by Carl Erskine.
Tlie 1950s are a significant time for me
since I was born in that decade and my
parents are celebrating their 50th wedding ,anniversary next month.
I have already sent them a video and
book on the year 1950 before I received
these books that give a unique perspective of this period.
Here was a time of the Cold War, the
Korean Conflict, McCarthyism, "The
Blackboardjungle,"TV dinners and base-

•
•:·- -----------------------------------------·~

..

')

:~

Reds

f;

from Page B1 ·

like being in the right place at
the right time. I didn't ask for
the game ball or anything."
Danny Graves pitched the
eighth and ninth for hi s I 9th
save in 22 chances.
Cincinnati shortstop Barry
Larkin returned to the lineup
after missing fiv e games with a
sprained kn ee and went 0-for-

f·
.. stepped aw kwardly on first
i·base in the fourth inning, was
;)ifted after giving up singles to
~pinch-hitter Alex Ochoa and
;chris Stynes to lead off th e
5.
oeighth .
An error by Griffey in the
e, "Tap's been tough on us all
.:year," McKeon said. "You're fifth se t up Sosa's three-run
':always glad to see him out of homer. Eric Young hit a fly to
right-center, and Griffey and
'..:the game."
:.; With the left-handed Griffey Bichette both ran for it. Grif~jl oo ming and lefties hitting fey appeared to pull up when
'o nly .154 against Rain (3-2), he saw Bichette coming at
&lt;;manager Don Baylor went him, and the ball glanced off
.:with him over Felix Heredia . hi s glove .
" I just
couldn't
hear
::rwo batters later, though ,
·:Griffey homered to right-ce n- Bichett~ and_he_couldn 't hear
:;rerto -cut Ch icago's lead to 4- me," Griffey said . "We were
;J.
both calling for the ball."
After Eri c Yo ung stole third
~~ Rain
struck out Dante
)3ic hette, but then gave up a and Rob )3ell walked Ricky
's ingle to Sean Casey and con- Gutierrez, Sosa se nt th e 0-1
pitch from Rob Bell over the
:~ec utive homers to Young and
fence and . boun cing dow n
:;Reese.
~ "Right now, I don't want to Waveland Avenue .
Reds Notes: The Reds did- ·
.iface the guy.s," said Rain, who
.:S till looked distraught long n 't get any extra-base hits off
zri fter the game was over."( just Tapani . Stynes was the only
t:Wan t to get out of here."
. player , to reach seco nd, and
;; Reliever Mark Wohlers (1 - 1) that came courtesy of Eric
!j:ot his first win since Sept. 4, Young's error ... . Yo un g stole
two bases Friday, giving him
·~ 997. H e pitched one inning,
:;walking one and striking out 40 steals this season. That's the
lwo. He also made an er ro r on most for a C ubs player since
1985 .... Cubs RHP pitcher
;~ throw to first.
:: Wohlers lost his ability to Kerry Wood, still bo thered by
:{hrow str ikes after he got hurt a stra in ed muscle in his rib
\I n 1998. The Atlanta Braves cage, will miss his next st·art .
haded him to the Reds, who Wood has been on the disabled
lent him to the minors to try list since Sunday, retroactive to
:lo work out hi s problems last July 30. ... The crowd of
'
40,586 was the la rges t at
·$Cason.
· " It 's not like I went out Wrigley field since Se pt. 13,
;! he re and pitched eight score- 1998, when the Cubs played
-less inning&lt; ," Wohlers said. " It's the Milwaukee Brewers.

Erskine's best year was 1953 when he
went 20-6 and set a World Series record
by striking out 14 batters in the third
game. H e fanned the great Mantle four
times that game. The book even includes
a picture of Mantle with a writtep
inscription to "Oisk" as "The Greatest
WS Pitcher in the World ~'
My in-laws know Erskine and sought
SPORTS DOCTOR
him out to dedicate the book to my family and me. I have previously used this
ball's heyday in New York. Although connection to invite the former pitcher
Erskine i~ only mentioned in po:tssing in to addr~ss my sports history class. Carl
Goodwirl's book, both works were useful goes out of his way to talk to fans and
in helping us tb understand a time when anyone who cares to listen.
The truth is that I have used a record·
baseball rule-d the American family and
ed interview with Erskine as one of the
sports scene.
Ironically, even ESPN appeared at Rio assignments in my sports class.
One of the first questions he responds
Grande a few weeks ago to research the
to
concerns his memory of watching
legacy of Bevo Francis. for a show that's
Bevo play in Anderson, Ind., against his
supposed to air Dec. 7.
I realize th at's an onllnous date frmn old high school teammate Johnny Wil,
the 1940s, but Bevo made his mark in the son.
Erskine, in his tongue irt cheek man· early 1950s when Goodwin was growing
ner,
talks about how Bevo had an off
up and watching Erskine at Ebbers Field.
For those of you too young to remem- night as he scored more than 60 points.
ber, Erskine pitched for the Dodgers for We should all have off nights like that.
Erskine is a wonderful human being
12 years. He posted a 122-78 record and
played on six pennant-winning teams. and a true gentleman. But his trip
These were the teams that were inmlor- through the 1950s is quite different than
talized in Roger Kahn's book "The Boys the one Goodwin remembers.
That is why these two books are such
of Summer."
Erskine won two World Series with ·a nice compliment to each other. Here
the Dodgers in both Brooklyn and Los are both the Dodger fan and player disAngeles. He pitched rwo no-hitters dur- cussing their remembrance of baseball in
ing hi s career, including one against the the decade of the Duke, Willie and
Mickey.
Cu~s in 1952 that was almost a perfect
One of the first thing&lt; I wanted to
gam'e:,

Sam
Wilson

know as I read these work.&lt; was what did
they remember about Don Larsen's perfeet game in the 1956 World S~ries.
Strangely enough; Goodwin remembers the game because of her &lt;Conflicting
loyalty over the Dodger " nemesis" pitcher Sal Maglie.
Brooklyn acquired him from th~
Giants in May 1956. He was the starting
and losing pitcl)er in the game against
Larsen.
Erskine remembers the game too.
His memory is of Maglie pitching a
solid game, but he trailed 2-0 in the sixth
inning when someone remarked, "You
know, we haven't had a base runner yet."
That's when the team woke up to the
reality of the situation. Erskine recalls it
ftom the dugout as Larsen denied the
Dodgers base runners and hits for the
entire afternoon.
Of course, Jackie Robinson and Roy
Campanella are prominent in both
accounts, and Bobby Thompson's home
run is .another seminal point in each
book.
Goodwin, however, goes into greater
detail of the social and political unrest of
the decade, but baseball is an important
part of her life and the memoir.
Both books give an intimate understanding of a period and time that is
slowly fading into a distant memory. It
was a period before high salaries, legal
troubles and fr_ee agency dominated the
sp·orts pages.
. It was a time we would all do well to
remember.

•

~

•

NASCAR
•

flom Plge 81

: way of coping with the
inev itable dangers of r ae•ng.
: "There's no good exp la nation w'hy one wrec k
:hurts
somebody
and
a nother doesn't," she said .
;· when it's your turn, it's
¥-our time . That's how I
h'ave . to liv e or I'd have 20

•.

i.tlcers."
N~ncy

Andretti recalled
whrn her husband's · car
tHaght fire at Texu Motor
~pu dway .

• llke molt wlve1 at the
tr~ck, 1he ll1ten1 to her
h111bond'1
converutlons
With his ccew and would
hgve known If he wu In
j!rent - danger.
" He ' ll 1ay •omething
right •way to let me know
lte\ OK becaUh' he know•
li m listening," she said .
: somctim&lt;~,
NASCAR
(~ milies must draw
on
l

faith and streng.th gained
from dealing over th e
years wit h the tragedies of
a dangerous sport.
"We
always
go
to
chape l, " Nancy Andr et ti
says about a race-morning
ritual for drivers and their
families .
" I
pray
to
myself. The kids will pray
for a safe race, and that
helps ."
Rick
Carelli,
nearly
killed an a bad wreck last
year on the NASCAR
truck circuit, has reaso n
to believe prayer works .
"I remember my wife
and p u tor Jim Lanning
praying _ over me, an~, the
blood J Ust !topped,
he
uld.
Still. the .hue! lnj'ury
cost him his ride: Fear for
Caelli's life ca used fanlily
friend Manhall Churown
to fold the team .
"He turned to me a nd
§aid, 'I don't l'Vcr want
hjm in 11 race car again,"'
1

s aid. Cat hy Carell i,
driver's wifl' .

•

the

Eoll

'' ·T•m

W L Pet.

" ......... 70 45 .6011
.......... 87 47 .588 2
Flo&lt;lda ............................58 57 .504
Montreal ......
.. ......... 61
.459
Philadelphia .................... 49 65 .430 20

Atlanta "
New York .....

eo

Control

Chic8go, 94.
HITS-Erstad, Anaheim, 179; CDelgado,
Toronto, 153; MJSweonay, Kansas City, 150:
Damon, Kansas City, 149; BeWIIliams, Nl!w
York , 141; Thomas, Chicago, 141; Garciaparra,
Boston, 138.
OOUBLES-COelgado, Toronto, 44 ; Garciaparra, Boston , 40; Olerud, Seattkt, 36 ; Lawton.
~lrmesola, 33; Higginson, Detroit, 33; BeWil·
llama, New York, 32; DeShields, Baltimore, 32:
Belle, Baltimore, 32.
TRIPLES---CGuzman, Minnesota. 17:
AKennedy, Anaheim, 9; Durham, Chicago, 7;
Alicea, Texas, 7; BeWllliams New Yor1( 6· 6
are ijed with s.
'
' ·
HOME AUN S-TBatista, Toronto. 34;
Thomas , Chicago, 34; COelgado, Toronto, 33;
Glaus•. Anaheim , 32; GAnderson, Anah eim. 30;
ARodnguez, Seattle, 30; Thome Claveland
30; Justice, New Yorl&lt;, 30.
'
'
STOLEN BASES-Damon, Kansas City, 34:
DeShields, Baltimore. 29; RAiomar, Cleveland,
27; Henderson, Seattle, 25; Erstad, Anaheim,
24; ~e. S&amp;attle, 24: Cairo, Tampa Bay
23; Lawton, MinneS01a, 23.
'
PITCHING (14 Decisions)- OWells, Toronto, t7·4, .810, 4.14; Baldwin, Chicago , 13-4,
.785, 4. t6 ; PMartinez, Boston. 13-4 , .765, 1.46:
Hudson, Oakland, 12·4, .750, 4 .74; Burba,
Cleveland, t0-4 , .7 14, 5.11 ; Moyer, Seattle, 11 ·
5, .687, 5.30; Pet11tte. New York , t3-6, 684,
4.21; Sele, Seattle, 13·6, .684, 4.38 .
STRIKEOUTS- PMartinez. Boston, 204;
Mussina, Baltimore, 148; CFintey, Cleveland,
141: C®n, Cleveland, 140; Nomo, Oetroft,
132; Butta, Cleveland, 130; DWells, Toronto,
128; Clemens, New York, 128.
SAVE$-TBJones, Detroit, 32; Sasaki,
seattle, 28; Koch, Toronto, 27; Weneland ,
Texas, 26: Dlowe, Boston, 25; lsringhausen,
Oakland, 25; MRivera. New York, 25; Percival,
Anaheim, 25.

GB
112

12
17
112

St. L.ouis ...........................62 53 .539
· Cincinnati ........................57 57 .500

4 112
Chicago .·.........................53 8-1 .465 8112
Pittsburgh ....................... 48 M .421 13112
· ·· Milwaukee ....................... 48 e1 .417
14
Houston .......................... 44 72 .319 18112

-

,San Franclsco .................. 84 49 .566
Atizono ........................... 63 52 .548

2

LosAngoles ...... , ............ 59 55 .518 5112
Colorado ......................... 58 58 .491 8 112
San o;ago ............,........... 55 51 .474 101 12
Thur.dly'a Gimes
St. Louis 5, ColOrado 4
N.Y. Mats 10, Houston 3
San Di&amp;I)O 15, Philadelphia 3
Only games scheduled

Frldlft Gamoo
Cincinnati 6, Chk:lgo Cubs 4
Colorado 10. Montreal 3
San Diego 3, Florida 0
Arizona Pittsburgh 1

e.

N.Y. Mets 4, San Francisco 1
Atlan1a 7, Los Angeles 2
Houston 7, Philadelphia 2

MUwaukee e, St. louis 2

s..u.....'•G•mea

Houston {MUter 1·3) at Pfljladelphia (Person
5-4). 1ata .
St. Louis (Anklel7·7) 81 Milwaukae (Haynes
- 10.10),1ate

. •

12~1~eaos(Valdos2·5la1AIIanaa(Maildux

•

.j ... PaO SOCC!ER

C~ncinnali (Williamson 4-7) at Chicago Cubs

(Ganboy 2·4), la1o
' , Colorado {Yoshll 4-12) 81 Monlreal (Thur·
• man ~-3), late
' San Diego (Clement 11 · 1O) at Florida
(C.Smith 1·4), late
Arizona (Schilling 9·6) at Pittsburgh {Ri1chle
- 5-fl), late
,.
San Francisco (Estes 11 ·3) at N.Y. Mats
(Hampton 11 -7), late
Taclly'IGimM
LosAngelesa1At1ama, 1:10p.m.
San Fraooisco at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Colorado at Montreal, 1 :35 p .m.
Houstoo at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
Arlltlf\8 at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p .m.
St. Louis at Mltwaukee, 2:05p.m.
San Diego at Florida, 4:05 p.m
Clncinnall at Chicago Cubs, 8:05p.m.

Green 73! -Green 73! Hut!hut!hut!
It's ba-a-a-a-ck!!

,

, 'TNm

Ea~

W

L Pet.
.559
.Bos10n ............................58 53 .523

GB

, INew YorK ......................... 62 49

4
Toronto ............................80 58 .508 5 1/2
BaltilllOft .................. ~...... 50 64 .439 13 1/2
·Tampa Bay .......................so 64 .439 13 1/2

Watch for weekly coverage of high school football in the Sunday Times-Sentinel beginning Aug. 26!
The SEOAL, TVC, South, Callia, Hannan and liVtlhama ... we've got you covered!

,
Contnl
Chicago ..........................89 46 .600
· Cleveland ........................59 53

owoo .............................64 eo

Kansas Ci1y ..., ................53 62
Minneso1a ....................... 53 65

.527 8 112
.474 14 1/2
.46t
16
.44917112

Orianoo 62, CleveJancl 55, Orlando leads
series 1.0

Saturdlly'a Gamea '
New VOI1t at Washington , late
Todly'a Game•
Orlando at Cleveland, 3 p.m.

Mooday'a Olmea
washington at New York, 8 p.m.
TuMdly'aGames
Orlando at Cleveland, TBA (if necessary)
Washington al New Yoril, TBA (il necessary)

Wntem Conference

Frlday'a Gamaa
LDs Angeles 86, Phoenix 71 , Los A,ng~es
leads series 1-0
s.turdly'a Gamaa
Houston at Sacramento , late

Today'a G1me1
Phoenht at Los Angeles, 5:30 p.m
Mond1y'a Glmea
Sacramento at Houston , tO p.m .
Tueadly'l Gamel
Phoenix at Los Angetes. -TBA {if necessary!
Sacramento at Houslon, TBA (it necessary)

Conference FINIIa
(Btll-ol-3)
Aug . 17, 20, 21

Chlmplon..,lp 5el:lu
CB•al-of·3)
Aug . 24, 21!1, 27

PRO FOOIBAI L'
NFLPrueaaon

Thurad•y'a Gamel
Miami 15, Tampa Bay 13
Pittsburgh 13, Carolina 0
Frlday'l GlmM
Atlanta 3t, Cincinnati 16
Washington 30, New England 20
Jacksonville 16, New York Giants 13

I·

L---::-----~--~-'

Saturdlly'a Gamea

MaJor League Soccer

New Orteans a11nctianapolis, late
Cl~and at Chicago, late
New York Je!s at Baltimore. tate
Buffalo at Detroit, tale
Minnesota at San Oi&amp;go, tate
Seatt le at -Arizona, late
Today'• Games
Green Bay at OerwBf, 4. p.m.
Oakland at Dallas , 7 p.m .
San Francisco at Kansas City. 8:30p .m
Monday's Game
St. Louis at Tennessee, 7 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 18
San Diegq at Allanta. 7 : ~0 p.m.
Tennessee at Ph1ladelph1a, 7:30p.m.
BallimortJ at Carolina, 8 p.m.
New York Giants at New York Jets, 9 p.m.
Arizona al Minnesota, 8 :20p.m
Detroit at Oakland, 9 p.m.
Saturday, Aug. 1Q
Chicago at Cincinnati, 7:30p.m.
Washington al Cleveland , 7:30p.m.
Indianapolis 'IS. Pittsburgh, at MeKiCO C~y. e
p.m .
BuffalO at St. LOUis, 8 p .m .
Jacksonville al Kansas Cily, 8:30p.m.
Dallas at Denver. 9 p .m.
San Francisco at Seanle, 11 p.m .
Sunday, Aug. 20
Tampa Bay at New England, 4 p.m.
Monday, Aug. 21
Green Bay at Miami, 8 p .m.

Eaatem Division
Team
WLTPtaGFGA
NY·NJ ................ .... 13 9 2 41 42 35
New England....
9 10 6 33 37 · 39
Miami
............ 8 11 5 29 35 42
D.C.
. ..... ... ... ... 6 14 6 24 38 53
Central Olvlslcn
TampaBay .......... .... 13 10 2 41 46 35
Chlcago ............ ... ...... l 2 8 s 41 so 40
Cotumbus .. ................ 10 11 5 35 39 43
Dalla$ .............. ..... ..... 10 12 4 34 43 43
Wn1ern Division
KansasCity ............... t3 6 5 44 37 23
LosAngeles ........ .. ..... 1t 7 7 40 39 3 1
Colorado ................. .. 11 11 3 36 33 45
San Jose ......... ...... ...... 5 12 8 23 28 38
N OTE: Three poinls for a win Bnd one point
1or a tie.
Saturdly'• Game•
Tampa Bay at San Jose. late
New England at New York-~ew Jersey, late
Colorado at Miami. late
DC United at Dallas, late
Kansas City at los Angel es, late
Wednesday'~ Gamel
New York-New Jersey al Tampa Bay, 7:30
p.m.
Miami at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at Dallas, 8 :30 p.m.
Kansas City at San Jose, 10 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

TRANSACIIOMS

w.~

,... ·Seonao ............................ 69

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

fl'
~
.,.
"'
,;.·
.,. ·
:

w
~

-

*"

,.

~

,.
,.
...

~ "'

~

47 .595
Oakland .......................... 61 53 .535
7
Anaheim .........................60 56 .517
9
Texas ..............................53 60 .469 14 112
ThuRday'l GIIMI
• N.Y. Yankees 12, Oakland 6
Tampa Bay 1o. Minnesota 4
Oetrol114, Baltimore 3
Seanle 6, Chicago White SOx.3 , ·
Toronto 15, Kan1a1 City 7 . '
Frtdlly'll GMMI
Chicago White Sox 6, Tampa Bay 5
Kansas City 7, Baltimore 6
Minnesota 9, Toronto 4
Boston 7, Texas 3
sean1e 7, Cleveland 1
Anaheim .I. tf,Y. YankBBS 3
betroit 11, Oaklard 4

J.

•
"'

,.
,.
'
"'

~
6

"
,.
~
~·
tt
~

rf
"

2000 FORD TAURUS

'2000 FORD IIIIUS'I'ANG
V6 , 5 Speed, Air Conditioning, AM/FM Casaett~ , CO,
Tllt, Crulae, All Power Equipment

2000 FORD RANGER

2000 MERCURY

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AM/FM Casette, Tilt, Cruise, Low Miles

Grand Marqul•. V8, Auto , AC. Tllt,
Crull&amp;, All Power Equipment

1999 MERCURY COUGAR
V6, Auto, Air Conditioning, AMtFM Ca.sl'!lene,. Tilt,
Cruise, Spoiler, Aluminum Wheel s, All Power, low Miii!!S

Phone
7 40-992-2196
www.jerryblbbee.com

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport ·

Woman's National Baakatball Aaaocla·
tlon
MIAMI SOL- Ann ounced the ret irement
of C·F Sharon Manning to become women·s
assistant basketball coach at St. Joseph's,
Pa .
FOOTBALL
Nlhlonal fQotball league
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS- Signed DE
Tony Brackens to a one-year contract
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
ATLANTA
THRASHERS- Agreed
to
terms wilh F Steve Guolla and 0 Yannick
Tremblay.
•
CALGARY
F LAMES ~ Named
Greg
Gilbert assistant coach .
DAllAS STARS- Acquired AW David
Ling from t l1e Chicago Blackhawks tor futur e
consider ations.
EDMONTON OILERS - Announced the
resignation of Doug Piper, executive vice
president ot business operations .
LOS ANGELES KINGS- Signed LW Peter
Le8ou1illier and LW Nate Miller.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-Re-signed 0
Danny Markov.
East Coast Hockey Llague
PEE DEE PRIDE - T raded F Buddy Smith
to the Wheeling Nailers-for F Curtis Wilgosh .

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:
BATTING-Helton. Co!oraelo, .387: Ham·
.. monds, Colorado, .360; LCastillo, Rorida, .357;
r. VGuerrero, Montreal, .353; PiaZZa, New Yo~ •
.. .349; Vtdro, Montreal, .343; Kent. San Franc1s·
... co, .339.
::
RUNS-Helton, Colorado, 105; Edmonds,
... St. LOuis, 104; Bagwell, Houston, 102; ~onelfi,
... Atlanta. 89; Bonds, San Francisco, 88: Cirillo.
~ Colorado, 87; Sheffield, los Angeles, 86.
,.
RBI - SSosa, Chicago, 105; Kent, San Fran·
: clsro, 102; Griffey Jr, Cinclnna1i, 99; Piazza,
... New York, 97; Helton, Colorado, 96; VGuer "' rero, Montreal, 91 ; G ites. Pittsbuf{lh, 9t .
...
HIT&amp;-Helton, Colorado, 157; V\dro, Mon·
: lreal, 150; Kent, San Francisco, 143; SSosa,
.;. Chicago, 142; VGuorrero, Monlreal, 140;
• AJones, Atlanta, 140; LGonzalez, Arizona, 138.
.•
OOUBLEs..-:Helton, Colorado. 41, Vidro,
: Montreal, 36; Cirillo, Colorado, 36; Kent, San
.. Francisco, 35; LGonzalez, Arizona, 34; Abreu .
.. ~iladelphia. 33; EYoung, Chicago. 32
•
TRIPLES--VGuerroro, Montrea l. 9; NPorez.
:Colorado, 9; Belliard , Milwaukee, 8; Womack ,
~ Arizona, B: Goodwin, Los Angeles, 8; Abreu,
~ P11Hadelphia, 7; lWalker. Colorado, 7.
• . HOME RUNS-SSosa . Chicago, . 36 ;
• .sheffield, Los Angeles. 36: Griffey Jr, C1ncin·
:·nati, 34; Bonds, San FranciSco, 34; Edmonds,
~·st. louis, 32; Piazza, New York, 31: Bagwell,
~· Houston, 31 .
·: STOLEN BASE S---lCastillo, Florida, 46;
: •EYoung, Chicago, 40; Goodwin, los Angeles,
,• 40: Womack, Arizona, 32; Furcal, Atlanta, 26;
"PWilson, F.lorida, 26; OVeras, Atlanta, 25.
:
PITCHING (14 Decisions)- AOJohnson,
..Arizona, 15·4, .789, 2.25; Estes, San Francis·
•co, t1 ·3, .786, 3 .81 ; Etarton, Houston, 12·4.
•.750, 4.6S. KBrown, Los Angeles, 10·4, .714,
:2.47; Aleiter. New York, 12-5, .706, .3.28;
.Giavine, Atlanta, 14·6, .700, 3.86; Lieber.
·Chicago , t0-5. .667, 3.83; GMadduK. Allanta ,
" 12-6, .667, 3.21.
• STRIKEDUTS-RDJOhnson, Arizona , 255 :
~staclo, Colorado, 169: KBrown, los Ang9!es .
• 154 ; Klle, St. Louis, t49 ; Oempste~. Flond a ,
• t48: Benson, Pittsburgh, 142; ALe1ter. New
-York, 142.
:
SAVES&gt;.:-Aifonseca, Florida, 34 ; Hoffman,
..san Diego, 3 t; Benilez. New York_. 28; Nan.
"'San Francisco. 28 : Aguilera, Ch1ca~ . 27;
"Graves, Cincinna1i. 19: Veres, St. LOU IS, 18;
:shaw, Los Angeles . 18.

•~

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JERRY BIBBEE

BASEBALL
Amertcln League
ANAHEIM ANGELS- Sent OF Chris
Hatcher outright to Edmonton of the PCL.

Act1vated LHP Kent Mercker from lhe 15-day
disabled list. Placed AHP Miic:'e Fytvie Of'l1he
15·day disabled list.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Recalled INF
Jerry Hairston from Rochester of the Inter·
nalional league . Optioned INF lvannon Cof·
fee lo Rochester. Placed RHP Alan Mills on
the 15-day disabled list. Catted up AHP lesli
Brea from Rochester.
ClEVElAND INDtA.N$-Signed 38 Dave
'Hollins to a minor league contract and
assigned him to Buffalo of the international
League.
KANSAS CITY ROYALs-Acquired INF
Wilson Delgado from the New York Yankees
for SS Nick Ortiz. Optioned OF Scott Pose to
Omatta ot lhe PCL and LHP Tim Byrdak to
Wicl1it a of ttle Texas League. Purchased the
contract of LHP Paul Spolja ric from Omaha
Transferred RHP Orber Moreno from the 15·
to the 60·day disabled list.
NEW YORK YANKEES- Placed LHP
Allen Wation on th e 15-dlly disabled list.
Recalled LHP Randy Choat e from Columbus
ot the International League.
Natlanal League
PITTSBURGH PIRATES- Activated RHP
Todd Ailchie from Ihe 1S-day disabled list.
Placed RHP Francisco Cordova and LHP
Chris Peters on the 15-day disabled list.
Recalled LHP JeH. Wallace !rom Nashvi lle of
t he PCL.
.California League
MODESTO A'S - Announced OF Rus1y
Keilh has been promoted to Sacramento of
th e PCL Placed C Miguel OUvo on the dis·
abled list, retroactive to Aug . 10. Activate't1
3B Gary Schneidmiller from the disabled list
BASKETBALL
National Baakatball A8IOCiltlon
DETROIT P ISTONS-Re-signed G-F Jud
Buechler and C Mikki Moor e. Signed F Tor ·
raye Braggs.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Signe&lt;l F Oarvin
Ham to a two ~ year contract .
NEW JERSEY NETS- Signed G-F
Kendall Gill to a one .year contract .
ORLANDO MAGIC- Signed F .Mike Mill er
to a lour-year contract.
•
SAN ANTONIO SPURS - Signed F Ira
Newble and C Shawnene Scott.
TORONTO AA PTOAS- Signed G Ma rk
Jackson to a tour-yea r contract.
UTAH J AZZ- Agreed to terms w ilh F
Danny Manning on a two-year contract .
WASHINGTON WIZAADS- Ae·signed C
Ja11ld l White, G Chris Whitney and G Laron

Denbigh -~ Garrett

Cleveland (Colon 11).8) at Seattle (Halama
10..5), late
Oet(Oit (Bemero 0.0) at Oakland (Hudson
12·4),1ate
Chicago Wl"lite Sox (Baldwin 13·4) at Tampa
Bay (Rekar 4·7). late
Toronto (Loaiza 6·8) at Minnesota (Redman ~
10.S), tate ·
Baltimore {Parrish 1·1) at Kansas City (Stein
3-3),1818
Boston (Wakefield 6-8) at Texas {Helling 13B), late
N.Y. Yankees (Neagle2-2) at Anaheim (Mercker 0-1), late
Tadly'a GlmH
Cticago White Sox at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m .
Baltimore a1 Kansas City, 2 :05 p.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 2:05 p.m.
Detroit at Oakland, 4:05 p .m.
Boston

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~·I
often wondered if mechamcs get
.., . I ~
~~Is 10r C hristmas.
·~:Ooes Santa deliver slippers to shoe
associates or pills to doctors?
r : Do vets get spayed on their birthdays?
r, Do hairdressers get coupons for free

ifunbap QI:imr5 ·l'lrntinrl • PageJ~3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, ()hlo Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, August 13,2000

,Hoses
ks
·check .
e'al Test
Ofle xpires
Oct. 1, 2000
h ACJnspection
Fluids
, Windsldeld wiper orientation,
IOOtSI Steering, associated linkages and parts.

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American l ..gua Leadera

BATTING-Oarciaparra, Boston. .385 ;
~Delgado, Toronto, .364: Erstad, Anaheim,
~ 358: IAodnguez. Te:;cas, .347; .Thomas. Ch1ca·
&gt;go 341 · Stewart Toronto, _340; MJSweeney,
'1&lt;a'nSas City, .339; EMar!lnez, Sm1t1le: .339.
" RUNS- AAodriguez, Sea111e, 102. Damon,
j(ansas C1ty, 95, CDelgado, Toronto. 95:_BeWII,.iams, New York. 90; Erstad , A1~ahe1m ;- BB ,
-oumam . Chicago , 68: ThOmas, Ch1cago, 67
... ABI- EMartinez, seattle, t09: BeWllllnms,
~ew York, 1o6; CDelga~o . ~oronto , 104 :
.Thomas, Chicago, 101 : JaGu1mbi. Oakland, 99,
.MJSweeney, Ka'n sas C.tty, 98. MOrdonez,

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Saturday

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•

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�Sunda~August13,2000

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

sunday, August 13, 2000

"

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

Jaguars edge.Giants with wild.last

s chasing.Nebraska and Florida State
Chuck Amato gave an honest
answer when asked how many of
his new players at North Carolina
State could start for his old team,
the Florida State Seminoles.
"None;· he said. "But don't
think we're the only ones with

that answer."
- Well, how many players would
make the three-deep roster for
the defending national champi-

ons?

I
'
'

I

i

I

· "Four," said Amato, a Seminoles
aSsistant for ·18 years who took
over the Woltj&gt;ack in January.
· Not exactly an encouraging
n'umber for those North Carolina
State fans wondering "Why not
t~s?" a season after frr.~hman whiz
Michael Vick led V:rginia Tech
into the national tide g~me: Marshall and Tulane produced p~rfect
seasons: and Hawaii turned an Illgame losing streak into th• greatest one-year turnaround in
NCAA history.
The answer might be because
Nebraska and Florida State, 1-2
in The Associated Press preseason
poll, are once again loaded with
talent and set for another charge
to the title game, in the Orange
Bowl on Jan. 3.
So which team out there is
ready for a surprising run at a
championship?
While Amato says it will take at
least three years to turn a
mediocre Woltj&gt;ack team into a
contender- "I didn't come from
Florida State to Nebraska;' he
said that's not the case at
Clemson, another ACC school
trying to challenge Florida State.
A bunch of others, including Illinois, Oklahoma and even TCU,
might be ready, too.
At Clemson, the time is now in coach Tommy Bowden's second season. The Tigers are No. 17
in the poll, their best start since
1992.
"There are high expectations
for us," Bowden said of a team
· returning 16 starters, including
star linebacker Keith Adams, from
last year's 6-6 bowl squad.
.In 1998, Clemson went 3-8 and
fired coach Tommy West.
"The kids have bought into our
system and t heyoelieve tliey can
compete with anyone," Bowden
added. "Now we have to see if we
can take it to another level."
Bowden has done it before.
Before his :urival at Tulane in
1997, the Green Wave had five
wins in the previous three years.
In '98, Tulane went 11-0 in the

JACKSONVILLE, Fla . (AP)Joe Pfsarcik got some company.
New York Giants rookies Jack
Golden and Fred Lewis combined for an unlikely bobble Friday night, transforming Lewis'

Vick , who led the nation in
regular season and wound up No.
tcan candidates and decades
passing
efficiency, threw for 1 ,840
worth of dommance.
I 0 in the final AP poll. Lofty
·Eric Crouch, who threw for yards and 12 TDs and ran for 585
heights, indeed.
"We believe in him, we want to
1,269 yards and ran for 889 yards yards and eight .more scores; Brees
ESPIWSA Todoy Top 25 COochoo Poll
Auoclatld Preu Top 25 Poll
for the Cornhuskers, directs the threw for 3,909 yards and 25 TDs.
play hard for him, and we know
W·L· T Plo. PYa.
TNm
W-L·T Pta. Pva.
As for coaching milestones,
we can win with him;· Adams y_,
option, which also features i1. Nebraska (36) ................ 12·1·0 1,442
2
1. Nebr.,U (36) ............. ,.. 12·1-0 1,732
3
Penn
State's Joe Paterno needs
2. Florida State (21) ........... 12-0-0 1,426
1
1
backs Dan Alexander an(! Correll
said. "He has gotten us to believe 2. Aorida State (29) .... ....... 12·0-0 1,720
3. Alabama (1) ................... 10-3·0 1,266
8
3. A1ol&gt;ama (3) ................... 10.3.() 1.570
a
Bu ckhalter. Linebacker Carlos ~even vic'tories to pass Bear
in ourselves. I honestly think we 4. Wisconsin (1 ) .............. 10·2·0 t ,..o&amp; •
' · Michigan .. .. .
.. ........ 10·2·0 1,196
5
5.
Wisconsin
(1)
5.
Miami,
F1a
........................
9-4-0
1,392
15
...............
10·2·0
1,
192
4
Bryant as the winningest coach in
Polk leads the defense.
can challenge for the ACC. We
e. Mi&lt;hlgan ........................ 1o-2-0 1,380 5 6 . Miami, Fla . .......................9-4·0 1,1 10 IS'
The 28"year-old Chris Weinke major college history. Bryant won
may have been 6-6, but we made 7. TtkU(2) ..................... .....D-&amp;.:Q 1,t'97 21
7 . Florida ........................9 -4-0 1,065
14
8.
Texas........
.
..
............
9-5-0
997
23
8.
Kanaaa
Slate
.................
11-1.0
1,278
6
·
returns for a final season at Flori- 323 games.
progress every game.
a. Florida .............................~-o 1,255
12
9 . Kansas Stare ................ 11·1·0 985
6
Notre Dame, meanwhile, enters
da Stacc and a run at a secon&lt;i
Even against the Seminoles, 10. CloorQia ..........................8+0 1,22&amp; 16 10. VirginiaTech
..... .. 11+0. 974
3
t 1. Georgia .... .. .......... : ..... 8-4-0 933,
16
11 . .\lirgln1a Tech .................11·1.0 1,0.W
2
wru;t
co uld be coach Bob Davie's.
straight
national
title.
coached by Bowden's father, 12. TenneUM .....................9-3-0 940 B 12. Tennessee ..... ................9·3--0 840 9
13. Purdue ....... ....................l-5-0 626 NA
He threw for 3,103 yards and final season unranked for the first
13. Wuhing10&lt;1 .................... 7-5-0 816 NR
Bobby.
14. Washington .. ....... ...... :.8-4-0 586 NR
1•.
Putdue ........................... 7-5-0 751 ·25
25
TDs, and will have Travis time since 1986.
" "I don't think the gap between 15. Soothom Cai .................. H-0 723 NR 1S. Ohio Slota .....................M-0 543 NR
16.
Southern
Cal.
.......
·
........
6-6·0
530
NR
Who knows whether the Irish
Minor returning in the backfield
us and them is that far," Tommy 11. 0111o 8 -..................... M-0 1101 NR
17. CiemiOII ......................... H.() 599 NR
17. Penn State ............. .. .... to-3-D 489
11
Bowden said. "1Wo years ago, we 11. Milllhippl ..................... 8-4.0 541 22 18. Mississippi .....................8-4-0 376 22 and a new crew of wide receivers will stay that way. As Nebraska '
1G. Clemson ........................ .fi.&amp;-0 340 NR
led by Anquan Boldin. End Jamal coach Frank Solich says, the 2000'
lost 48-0. Last year it was 17- 14." 1i. Oklanoma ..................... 7-5-0 455 NR . 20.
Oklahoma ................ .... ..7·5-0 283 NR
20. Tuaa Christian ..............8-4.0 404 NR
season could be full of surprises. ·
Reynolds leads rh e defense.
Alabama, Miami and Texas, 21 . Illinois .............. ..............8-4-0 361 24 2 1. Illinois ...
.. ...8-4-0 279
25
22. ~.,.., State ................... 1o-3-0 359
11
22.
Michigan
State ............. I0-2.0 245
7
"There are 12-15 teams that'
Wt"inke is among the toR Heisranked third, fifth and seventh, 23. SOutnem Miss .. ..............9-3-o 224 14 23. Texas Christian ..............8-4-0 215 NR
respectively, are expected to be 2•. CokJrado ........................ 7-5-0 168 NR 24. TexasA&amp;M .....................S-4-0 211 20 man conteliders alon g with Vick, have the kind of athletes that if
back in national tide form, but 25. Michigan State ............. 10.2-0 145 7 25. South8f!l Mississippi ...... 9-3-0 197 13 Crouch, Tomlinson and Purdue the ball boun ces right, have a
chance to end up No. 1," he said:
Oth8fl r~ing votes : Texas A&amp;M 139,
Others receiving YOtes: Colorado 164, Missis - quarterback Drew Brees.
others are poised for a. few sursippi State 116. UClA 69, Arkansas _
55, Min UCLA 115, East Carolina 75, Oregon 63,
prises.
Auburn 3e, Colora® St. 35, Mississippi St. 34,
nesota 54, Oregon 52. Georgia Tech 48, East
In addition to Clemson, watch Utah 33, Notre Dame 32, V1rginia 26, Ml...,..ll Carolina 41, M•rattaU 31, Utah 32, Syracuse
23, Arkansas 22, Georgia Tech 10, LSU 10. 31, Brigham Young 28, VIrginia 24, Colorado
out for No. 15 USC in the Pac- Syracuse 9, BVU 7, Minnesota 5, Boston Col- State 21, Notre Came 14, StanfOfd 12, Oregon
logo 3, K... ucl!y 3, Texas Tech ~ Tolado 3,
State 7, \landerbilt 7, Boston College 3. San
10; No. 18 Mississippi in the SEC: Stanford
2, Anzoo.~ 51. 1, Oregon :st. 1.
Diego State 3, Arizona 2, Fresno State 2.
No. 19 Oklahom.. in the Big 12;
Hawaii 2. Arizona State 1, Duke 1, Idaho 1,
Toladcl 1.
No. 21 lliinois in the Big Ten:
Pittsburgh in the Big East: and
No. 20 TCU in the Western Ath- McAllister and Joe G.}'nn.
he said. "But our staff went out
The Rebels were 9-4 with a and found good guys. That's a big
letic Conference.
J'urnaround teams of the past win over Oklahoma in the lnde- help."
have several common threads. pendence Bowl. This year's
Pittsburgh went S-6 last seJson,
Each had a sensational quarter- toughest games ate at Alabama just missing a bowl bid with a
back, a relatively new coach with and Georgia- teams the Rebels season-ending loss to West Virginia. But wide receiver Latef
a proven past, and players who nearly beat in 1999.
were convinced they could beat
At Oklahoma, coach Bob Grim insists the Panthers arc
anybody despite a history of los- Stoops brought a pass- happy ready for Big East powers Miami
ing. Staying healthy and favorable offense and junior college and Virginia Tech.
schedules helped, too.
transfer Josli Heupel - to Nor"We believe in ourselves and I
"But it all starts at quarterback;' man. Heupel is back after setting think we're ready to come
Amato said. "Look at Virginia nine school and six Big 12 together and have an exciting seaTech. It's had a great defense and records while passing for 3,460 son ," said Grim, who caught .75
special teams for years and .rhen yards and 30 touchdowns . The passes for 1, 106 yards and four
Michael Vick put them over the defense - Stoops was Florida's TDs. "There are a few teams like
top.You have to have someone to defensive coordinator - is sure us out there, ready to break out
pull the trigger."
to improve, but the Sooners must and have a really good year. We
·
Tulane had Shaun King in pass a rugged three - game test want to be one of them."
1998, and Marshall had Chad against Texas, Kansas State and ·
Coach Walt Harris, a former
Pennington in '99.
Nebraska.
Ohi o State assistant, enters his
At USC, where coach Paul
Illinois already pulled a surprise fourth season at Pittsburgh. and
Hackett's Trojans were a disap- by winning eight games last sea- has 15 starters back. John Turman
pointing 6-6, quarterback Carson son, including road victories at or David Priestly (both threw for
Palmer is back after missing the Michigan and Ohio State. Wit~ more than 1,300 yards in '99) will
final nine games with a broken Kurt Kittner (2,702 yards and 24 start.
right collarbone. The defense has TDs) among 10 offensive starters
TCU not only boasts Heisman
10 of 11 starters back.
returning, the Illini could be even Trophy ca ndidate LaDainian
USC needs to open strong better. Michigan and Ohio State Tomlinson , who led the nation in
against Penn State in the Kickoff visit Champaign, with the tough- rushing last season with 1,850
Classic on Aug. 27. WitnhQO.!!U;_t____.e.,s"-t_rro..,ad games_at_jlenn State-and - yards.--but- the-+lonle&lt;I- Frmt&lt;- llave-1-.-.league favorite Washington on Michigan State.
,
a talented quarterback 111 Casey
the schedule, the Trojans have a
Coach Ron Turner, . former Painters, 8-2 as a freshman stattcr .
good shot at the Rose BowL
quarterbacks coach for the in 1999. Coach Dennis FranDavid Cutcliffe, former quar- Chicago Bears, enters his fourth chione, who .a rr ived in '98, has 19
terbacks coach ar Tennessee, starts season. In his first two, the lllini starters ba ck and his team sho uld
•
I
I
I
.. AC, Clean, Local Owner

The National Polls

interception into a crazy, gamewinning touchdown for the Jacksonville J~guars .
It was just an exhibition game,
but it was on national TV, and the
play that ended Jacksonville's 1613 victory is one that could be
long remembered.
· Trying to force a pass into the
end zone during a late, desperation drive, Jaguars quarterback
Jonathan Quinn threw an interception to Lewis, who was standing just outside the end zone.
Lewis' momentum brought
him into the end zone, but as he
crossed the goal line again, teammate Jack Golden tried to tackle
him, hop ing Lewis would go
down and essentially end the
game. But Golden's hit popped
the ball loose, it squirted to the
back of the end zone, and founhstring Jags tight end Brandon
C hristenson recovered for the
game-winning touchdown with
7 seconds left.
Nobody in either locker room
could remember anything like it.
"It was the most amazing play
I've ever been involved in," said
Christenson, who thus far had
done little to distinguish himself
at.. training camp. " It just shows

.

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.

Stadium
from PageBl

Stop By Now!

1993 Chevy 4x4 1500 Pickup

season at Mississippi
of the nation's best
quarterback Romaro
running backs Deuce

won ,three games. R ecruiting was
the tough part for him.
"When you're not having suecess, it does scare some kids away;•

be favored in every ~e.
Nebr.iska and F\Jrida State
have superior quarterbacks, too.
Not to mention many All- Amcr-

HONORING A LEGEND

Jerry West Boulevard to be
unveile.d at Monday ceremony
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) South University Avenue as Don most outstanding player in the
- The timing of naming a road Knott~ Boulevard.
1959
NCAA championship
after basketball star Jerry West
' 'I'm obviously proud," West game, where the Mountaineers
couldn't be better.
said. "It's very meaningful."
lost to California 71-70. ~
"I never dreamed anything like
But the Jerry West Boulevard
A me mber of the 1960 gold
rhis would happen," West said as won't stan'q alone. Another road medal U.S. Olympic team, the
he- geared up for a c~remony in that runs from Logan to Cabin Creek native helped the
Morgantown on Monday that Williamson is being named after Lakers rea ch the NBA Finals nine
will introduce the new Jerry West West - West Virginia 44.
times. A 14- time All-Star, he was
Boulevard.
" No one knows where the hell named to the Basketball Hall of
[t's ironic · because I was a that road is," West joked.
Fame in 1979.
freshman at West Virginia UniverWest, 62, retired this month
West spent three years as coach
sity in 1956. And that was 44 a.fter a 40- year career with the and three more as a special conyears ago; · West said.
Lakers.
sultant before being promoted to
West wore 44 on his jersey at · "It's the only thing I've known . general manager in 1982. His title
WVU and later with the Los It's almost been like an addiction changed in 1995 from general
Angeles Lakers.
with the Lakers. It was like an manager to execucive vice presi"There's another funny thing;' e&gt;&lt;tended family. It was time for dent for basketball operati o ns.
West added . " What would be the me to leave."
A silhouette ofWest dribbijng a
odds that Ron Hundley would
West earned All- America hon- basketball is used in th e ~BA 's
graduate and they would name a ors twice at WVU and was named official logo.
street after me in the same year?"
Hundley, who left WVU in
1957 to became the first overall
pick in the NBA draft, earrled a
bachelor of arts degree in May.
•Fast, easy installation
West, who is in the midst of an
•Goes directly over old roof
annual family trip to The Green•Won't rust or corrode
brier resort, plans to fly to Mor•Reduces noise
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ny M onday.
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City officials will rename
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WHITE "BROWN "'lED •BLACK
H owever, the renaming is only
19! 1518 Klnlwhl Street
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Redskins 30, Pa.t riots 20
Stephen Davis made a solid
return in his first game since knee
surgery, and Skip Hicks ran for 98
yards and a touchdown as Washinilton (1-1) beat visiting New
En gland -(2-1).
·
D avis nursed an ankle injury
during the offseason after leading
the NFC in rushing, then reported to tamp late be cause of a holdout. He rushed for 24 yards on six
carries.
Bruce Smith had an impressive

out ·of this weeke nd's game as. a
precau tionary n1easure. A Browhs .
spokesman said Prenti ce shou!ll'
' ~ ~. ••
be able to practice next wee k. , "
Prenti ce had six ca rries for ·4[
.,,. ,
. Cl cveyards and a tou c hdown m
land's win over Philadelphia in its
preseaSo n opener. H e is L~xp_~cre a'
to back up Errict Rhett this soa'2'
.
'·
son.
The Browns an\: ban ged 'i~~ ·
1
going into their game w1th di~
.' : ' '
Bea rs.
·
Three starters - wide receiver
Kevin Johnson , linebacker Ja•ili?'
Miller and cornerback Coily'
Fuller - will all mi ss th e gafrte
I ,
with injuries.
.
Wide receiver David Patre'lf
also suffered an ankle injury o ~;,
Thursday but is expected to play. '

debut fo r Wa shington , sacking
Drew Bledsoe on the defensive
end's fir st play and making the
tackle on an upcthe-mi ddle run
on his second.
Browns Camp Notes
Browns rookie running back
Travls Prentice · sustaine-d a
sprained right ank.Ie during ' practice on Thursday and will no t
travel with the team for Saturday's
exhibition gam e again st the
Chicago Bears.
Prentice, who set NCAA scoring records at Miami of Ohio.
turned his ankle while running a
pass pattern on the next to last
play during Thursday's afternoon
workout.
,
He was able to walk off the
field on his own, but will be kept

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• Slidi~ retractable windows
in private boxes to allow spectators to let in outside air or shut
out bad weather.
• Natural turf, with automatic
irrigation and underground heating to extend the grass growing
season and prevent a frozen field .
• No seat views obstructed by
columns.
• More than oOO wheelchairaccessible seats.
• "Potty pariry" 57 pub~c
rest rooms (more than 1,400 toilet fixtures), 28 for men and 29
for women. In addition, 337 toi let ftxtures for players : game-day
~aff, administratio_!L.i!_nd ~Qpera~
tions.
• Wheelchair-friendly access
ramps to upper seating levels,
including intermittent flat spots
on ramp slopes to allow wheelchair users a chance to. pause and
rest.
• 114 private suites.
• Surrounding 20-foot high
floodwall and 17 wells to protec t
stadium if nearby Ohio River
floods.
• Exterior, perforated stainless
stee.I panels that allow people
inside to see out, yet reflect light
and give the stadium a mote finished ~ook from a distance .

new stadium.
The Bengals say the new facility and its increased revenue will
help the team lure top players and
be more competitive.
By 2001, all six telms in the
Bengals' Central Division of the
American Football Conference
arc to be playing in new stadiums.
The division rival Tennessee
Titans, last season's Super Bowl
runner-up, opened a new stadium
in 1999.
The availability of land as

straight up- and-down perfo rmance. The Hei sman - winning
first-round draft pick rushed for
66 yards on 17 ca rries, with most
of his success co ming against second-reamers. H e's averaging 3.4
yards on 34 carries thi s preseason.

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like it could use rush lin eman
Tony Brackens, who reported to
camp earlier in the day, but
watched the game fron1 the press
box . The Giants gained 203 yards
in th e first half. ·
On
offense, Jacksonville's
injury-ravaged line struggled
against the Giants, who were bigger and more powerful than the
reserves the Jaguars faced against
Carolina in a 34-14 win last
week.
'
Fred Taylor left on the second
play of the game with a sprained
ligament in his left knee. ·coughlin said he could miss 3-4 weeks_
Jaguars · quarterback Mark
Brunell threw most of his nine
passes off three- step drops and
rollouts, trying to avoid injuries
behind aline with no proven veterans.
Brunell went o-for-9 for 6 7
yards and led the Jaguars on one
nice drive in a little more than a
quarter. It resulted in Mike Hollis' 39-yard field goaL
For the second straight week,
the Giants outplayed their opponent in defeat. Last week, they
lost 20-8 to Chicago despite
gaining 401 yards .
Playing !))Ore like an everydown back~an a third-down
specialist, Tiki Barber accounted
for 110 yards - all in the first half
- to help the Giants to a 10-0
lead.
Ron Dayne put in his second

and Tll

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Plus

Plus

that you should keep playing,
keep playmg and see what happens. I'll take whatever I can get.
I need all the help I can get."
In the only other preseason
games Friday night, W ashington
beat New England 30-20, and
Atlanta defeated CinCinnati 3116.
Quinn finished 8-for-23 for 94
yards and struggled except for the
late d_rive in which he converted
two fourth-and-longs before his
"game-winning" interception.
"It was a weird feeling," he said.
"But any way you look at it, it's a
win ."
Suddenly, Pisarcik - who bobbled a handoff to Larry Csonka in
1978 when the Giants should
have simply taken a knee against
Philadelphia - had company.
"All week, coach stressed
being smart and making smart
plays," Golden said. "I saw Freddie
catch the ball, and my first instinct
was t&lt;&gt; get him down. I made a
mistake. I plan on boun cing back
from it."
The Jaguars were flabbergasted,
but not happy, with their victory.
"The good thing about this
game is we kept on playing,"
coach Tom Coughlin said. "It certainly isn 't the way you would
draw it up, hut I give credit to
Brandon for being the right man
at the right spot at the right
time."
Their first-team defense looked.

Mara , who unsuccessfully
fought the stadium tax, noticed
the nice touches in a recent tour.
"Then when you get to t,he
plain o\d folk, who are paying the
taxes for this facility, there's nothing special ," Mara sa id. ·
: Architecturally, the stadium
takes advantage of its location
betwe en downtown high - rises, . Cincinnati and county governments began a riverfront overhaul
major highways and the river.
: Open notches in the four cor- allowed 22 acres for the Bengals
ners of the 66,500-seat stadium stadium so the site could also
allow views of Cincinn ati~ sky- -a-ccommodate the team's offices
line, ~he river and neighboring and adjacent practice fields, a relative rarity in the NFL.
i10rihern Kentucky.
: "When you 're driving by, you
Cincinnati's new stadiums are
get these glimpses into the stadi- to be centerpieces of a planned
renovation
that
um, not so you can see the stadi- riverfront
um or the' game, but so that you includes a newly rebuilt highway
~now somethin g's going on ," said . and access roads and, eventually, a
Utn Streyle, project manager for museum, park, stores and resiG'e tz Ventures, whic h has over- dences.
Features of the new Paul
seen the $453.2 million project.
N ext week, his company trans- Brown Stadium:
fers the stadium to Paul Brown
• Curving canopies of woven
Stadiums Ltd., a subsidiary the polyester fabric stretched tight by
team formed to operate the stadi- cables atop the stadium's sideline
seating sections. The architectural
um for Hamilton County.
· County taxpayers in 1996 highlight also shields some sideapproved a half-ce nt sales tax Jme seats from rain.
mcrease to build the new stadium
_a nd a baseball park nearby for the
Reds. It was at a time when Bengals owner Mike Brown had
threatened to move his team to
another city if he wasn't given a

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NFL PRESEASON

COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2000

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

i»unba!' 11timt!l ·ittrntinel ; Page

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Jaguars edge.Giants with wild.last

s chasing.Nebraska and Florida State
Chuck Amato gave an honest
answer when asked how many of
his new players at North Carolina
State could start for his old team,
the Florida State Seminoles.
"None;· he said. "But don't
think we're the only ones with

that answer."
- Well, how many players would
make the three-deep roster for
the defending national champi-

ons?

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· "Four," said Amato, a Seminoles
aSsistant for ·18 years who took
over the Woltj&gt;ack in January.
· Not exactly an encouraging
n'umber for those North Carolina
State fans wondering "Why not
t~s?" a season after frr.~hman whiz
Michael Vick led V:rginia Tech
into the national tide g~me: Marshall and Tulane produced p~rfect
seasons: and Hawaii turned an Illgame losing streak into th• greatest one-year turnaround in
NCAA history.
The answer might be because
Nebraska and Florida State, 1-2
in The Associated Press preseason
poll, are once again loaded with
talent and set for another charge
to the title game, in the Orange
Bowl on Jan. 3.
So which team out there is
ready for a surprising run at a
championship?
While Amato says it will take at
least three years to turn a
mediocre Woltj&gt;ack team into a
contender- "I didn't come from
Florida State to Nebraska;' he
said that's not the case at
Clemson, another ACC school
trying to challenge Florida State.
A bunch of others, including Illinois, Oklahoma and even TCU,
might be ready, too.
At Clemson, the time is now in coach Tommy Bowden's second season. The Tigers are No. 17
in the poll, their best start since
1992.
"There are high expectations
for us," Bowden said of a team
· returning 16 starters, including
star linebacker Keith Adams, from
last year's 6-6 bowl squad.
.In 1998, Clemson went 3-8 and
fired coach Tommy West.
"The kids have bought into our
system and t heyoelieve tliey can
compete with anyone," Bowden
added. "Now we have to see if we
can take it to another level."
Bowden has done it before.
Before his :urival at Tulane in
1997, the Green Wave had five
wins in the previous three years.
In '98, Tulane went 11-0 in the

JACKSONVILLE, Fla . (AP)Joe Pfsarcik got some company.
New York Giants rookies Jack
Golden and Fred Lewis combined for an unlikely bobble Friday night, transforming Lewis'

Vick , who led the nation in
regular season and wound up No.
tcan candidates and decades
passing
efficiency, threw for 1 ,840
worth of dommance.
I 0 in the final AP poll. Lofty
·Eric Crouch, who threw for yards and 12 TDs and ran for 585
heights, indeed.
"We believe in him, we want to
1,269 yards and ran for 889 yards yards and eight .more scores; Brees
ESPIWSA Todoy Top 25 COochoo Poll
Auoclatld Preu Top 25 Poll
for the Cornhuskers, directs the threw for 3,909 yards and 25 TDs.
play hard for him, and we know
W·L· T Plo. PYa.
TNm
W-L·T Pta. Pva.
As for coaching milestones,
we can win with him;· Adams y_,
option, which also features i1. Nebraska (36) ................ 12·1·0 1,442
2
1. Nebr.,U (36) ............. ,.. 12·1-0 1,732
3
Penn
State's Joe Paterno needs
2. Florida State (21) ........... 12-0-0 1,426
1
1
backs Dan Alexander an(! Correll
said. "He has gotten us to believe 2. Aorida State (29) .... ....... 12·0-0 1,720
3. Alabama (1) ................... 10-3·0 1,266
8
3. A1ol&gt;ama (3) ................... 10.3.() 1.570
a
Bu ckhalter. Linebacker Carlos ~even vic'tories to pass Bear
in ourselves. I honestly think we 4. Wisconsin (1 ) .............. 10·2·0 t ,..o&amp; •
' · Michigan .. .. .
.. ........ 10·2·0 1,196
5
5.
Wisconsin
(1)
5.
Miami,
F1a
........................
9-4-0
1,392
15
...............
10·2·0
1,
192
4
Bryant as the winningest coach in
Polk leads the defense.
can challenge for the ACC. We
e. Mi&lt;hlgan ........................ 1o-2-0 1,380 5 6 . Miami, Fla . .......................9-4·0 1,1 10 IS'
The 28"year-old Chris Weinke major college history. Bryant won
may have been 6-6, but we made 7. TtkU(2) ..................... .....D-&amp;.:Q 1,t'97 21
7 . Florida ........................9 -4-0 1,065
14
8.
Texas........
.
..
............
9-5-0
997
23
8.
Kanaaa
Slate
.................
11-1.0
1,278
6
·
returns for a final season at Flori- 323 games.
progress every game.
a. Florida .............................~-o 1,255
12
9 . Kansas Stare ................ 11·1·0 985
6
Notre Dame, meanwhile, enters
da Stacc and a run at a secon&lt;i
Even against the Seminoles, 10. CloorQia ..........................8+0 1,22&amp; 16 10. VirginiaTech
..... .. 11+0. 974
3
t 1. Georgia .... .. .......... : ..... 8-4-0 933,
16
11 . .\lirgln1a Tech .................11·1.0 1,0.W
2
wru;t
co uld be coach Bob Davie's.
straight
national
title.
coached by Bowden's father, 12. TenneUM .....................9-3-0 940 B 12. Tennessee ..... ................9·3--0 840 9
13. Purdue ....... ....................l-5-0 626 NA
He threw for 3,103 yards and final season unranked for the first
13. Wuhing10&lt;1 .................... 7-5-0 816 NR
Bobby.
14. Washington .. ....... ...... :.8-4-0 586 NR
1•.
Putdue ........................... 7-5-0 751 ·25
25
TDs, and will have Travis time since 1986.
" "I don't think the gap between 15. Soothom Cai .................. H-0 723 NR 1S. Ohio Slota .....................M-0 543 NR
16.
Southern
Cal.
.......
·
........
6-6·0
530
NR
Who knows whether the Irish
Minor returning in the backfield
us and them is that far," Tommy 11. 0111o 8 -..................... M-0 1101 NR
17. CiemiOII ......................... H.() 599 NR
17. Penn State ............. .. .... to-3-D 489
11
Bowden said. "1Wo years ago, we 11. Milllhippl ..................... 8-4.0 541 22 18. Mississippi .....................8-4-0 376 22 and a new crew of wide receivers will stay that way. As Nebraska '
1G. Clemson ........................ .fi.&amp;-0 340 NR
led by Anquan Boldin. End Jamal coach Frank Solich says, the 2000'
lost 48-0. Last year it was 17- 14." 1i. Oklanoma ..................... 7-5-0 455 NR . 20.
Oklahoma ................ .... ..7·5-0 283 NR
20. Tuaa Christian ..............8-4.0 404 NR
season could be full of surprises. ·
Reynolds leads rh e defense.
Alabama, Miami and Texas, 21 . Illinois .............. ..............8-4-0 361 24 2 1. Illinois ...
.. ...8-4-0 279
25
22. ~.,.., State ................... 1o-3-0 359
11
22.
Michigan
State ............. I0-2.0 245
7
"There are 12-15 teams that'
Wt"inke is among the toR Heisranked third, fifth and seventh, 23. SOutnem Miss .. ..............9-3-o 224 14 23. Texas Christian ..............8-4-0 215 NR
respectively, are expected to be 2•. CokJrado ........................ 7-5-0 168 NR 24. TexasA&amp;M .....................S-4-0 211 20 man conteliders alon g with Vick, have the kind of athletes that if
back in national tide form, but 25. Michigan State ............. 10.2-0 145 7 25. South8f!l Mississippi ...... 9-3-0 197 13 Crouch, Tomlinson and Purdue the ball boun ces right, have a
chance to end up No. 1," he said:
Oth8fl r~ing votes : Texas A&amp;M 139,
Others receiving YOtes: Colorado 164, Missis - quarterback Drew Brees.
others are poised for a. few sursippi State 116. UClA 69, Arkansas _
55, Min UCLA 115, East Carolina 75, Oregon 63,
prises.
Auburn 3e, Colora® St. 35, Mississippi St. 34,
nesota 54, Oregon 52. Georgia Tech 48, East
In addition to Clemson, watch Utah 33, Notre Dame 32, V1rginia 26, Ml...,..ll Carolina 41, M•rattaU 31, Utah 32, Syracuse
23, Arkansas 22, Georgia Tech 10, LSU 10. 31, Brigham Young 28, VIrginia 24, Colorado
out for No. 15 USC in the Pac- Syracuse 9, BVU 7, Minnesota 5, Boston Col- State 21, Notre Came 14, StanfOfd 12, Oregon
logo 3, K... ucl!y 3, Texas Tech ~ Tolado 3,
State 7, \landerbilt 7, Boston College 3. San
10; No. 18 Mississippi in the SEC: Stanford
2, Anzoo.~ 51. 1, Oregon :st. 1.
Diego State 3, Arizona 2, Fresno State 2.
No. 19 Oklahom.. in the Big 12;
Hawaii 2. Arizona State 1, Duke 1, Idaho 1,
Toladcl 1.
No. 21 lliinois in the Big Ten:
Pittsburgh in the Big East: and
No. 20 TCU in the Western Ath- McAllister and Joe G.}'nn.
he said. "But our staff went out
The Rebels were 9-4 with a and found good guys. That's a big
letic Conference.
J'urnaround teams of the past win over Oklahoma in the lnde- help."
have several common threads. pendence Bowl. This year's
Pittsburgh went S-6 last seJson,
Each had a sensational quarter- toughest games ate at Alabama just missing a bowl bid with a
back, a relatively new coach with and Georgia- teams the Rebels season-ending loss to West Virginia. But wide receiver Latef
a proven past, and players who nearly beat in 1999.
were convinced they could beat
At Oklahoma, coach Bob Grim insists the Panthers arc
anybody despite a history of los- Stoops brought a pass- happy ready for Big East powers Miami
ing. Staying healthy and favorable offense and junior college and Virginia Tech.
schedules helped, too.
transfer Josli Heupel - to Nor"We believe in ourselves and I
"But it all starts at quarterback;' man. Heupel is back after setting think we're ready to come
Amato said. "Look at Virginia nine school and six Big 12 together and have an exciting seaTech. It's had a great defense and records while passing for 3,460 son ," said Grim, who caught .75
special teams for years and .rhen yards and 30 touchdowns . The passes for 1, 106 yards and four
Michael Vick put them over the defense - Stoops was Florida's TDs. "There are a few teams like
top.You have to have someone to defensive coordinator - is sure us out there, ready to break out
pull the trigger."
to improve, but the Sooners must and have a really good year. We
·
Tulane had Shaun King in pass a rugged three - game test want to be one of them."
1998, and Marshall had Chad against Texas, Kansas State and ·
Coach Walt Harris, a former
Pennington in '99.
Nebraska.
Ohi o State assistant, enters his
At USC, where coach Paul
Illinois already pulled a surprise fourth season at Pittsburgh. and
Hackett's Trojans were a disap- by winning eight games last sea- has 15 starters back. John Turman
pointing 6-6, quarterback Carson son, including road victories at or David Priestly (both threw for
Palmer is back after missing the Michigan and Ohio State. Wit~ more than 1,300 yards in '99) will
final nine games with a broken Kurt Kittner (2,702 yards and 24 start.
right collarbone. The defense has TDs) among 10 offensive starters
TCU not only boasts Heisman
10 of 11 starters back.
returning, the Illini could be even Trophy ca ndidate LaDainian
USC needs to open strong better. Michigan and Ohio State Tomlinson , who led the nation in
against Penn State in the Kickoff visit Champaign, with the tough- rushing last season with 1,850
Classic on Aug. 27. WitnhQO.!!U;_t____.e.,s"-t_rro..,ad games_at_jlenn State-and - yards.--but- the-+lonle&lt;I- Frmt&lt;- llave-1-.-.league favorite Washington on Michigan State.
,
a talented quarterback 111 Casey
the schedule, the Trojans have a
Coach Ron Turner, . former Painters, 8-2 as a freshman stattcr .
good shot at the Rose BowL
quarterbacks coach for the in 1999. Coach Dennis FranDavid Cutcliffe, former quar- Chicago Bears, enters his fourth chione, who .a rr ived in '98, has 19
terbacks coach ar Tennessee, starts season. In his first two, the lllini starters ba ck and his team sho uld
•
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.. AC, Clean, Local Owner

The National Polls

interception into a crazy, gamewinning touchdown for the Jacksonville J~guars .
It was just an exhibition game,
but it was on national TV, and the
play that ended Jacksonville's 1613 victory is one that could be
long remembered.
· Trying to force a pass into the
end zone during a late, desperation drive, Jaguars quarterback
Jonathan Quinn threw an interception to Lewis, who was standing just outside the end zone.
Lewis' momentum brought
him into the end zone, but as he
crossed the goal line again, teammate Jack Golden tried to tackle
him, hop ing Lewis would go
down and essentially end the
game. But Golden's hit popped
the ball loose, it squirted to the
back of the end zone, and founhstring Jags tight end Brandon
C hristenson recovered for the
game-winning touchdown with
7 seconds left.
Nobody in either locker room
could remember anything like it.
"It was the most amazing play
I've ever been involved in," said
Christenson, who thus far had
done little to distinguish himself
at.. training camp. " It just shows

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season at Mississippi
of the nation's best
quarterback Romaro
running backs Deuce

won ,three games. R ecruiting was
the tough part for him.
"When you're not having suecess, it does scare some kids away;•

be favored in every ~e.
Nebr.iska and F\Jrida State
have superior quarterbacks, too.
Not to mention many All- Amcr-

HONORING A LEGEND

Jerry West Boulevard to be
unveile.d at Monday ceremony
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) South University Avenue as Don most outstanding player in the
- The timing of naming a road Knott~ Boulevard.
1959
NCAA championship
after basketball star Jerry West
' 'I'm obviously proud," West game, where the Mountaineers
couldn't be better.
said. "It's very meaningful."
lost to California 71-70. ~
"I never dreamed anything like
But the Jerry West Boulevard
A me mber of the 1960 gold
rhis would happen," West said as won't stan'q alone. Another road medal U.S. Olympic team, the
he- geared up for a c~remony in that runs from Logan to Cabin Creek native helped the
Morgantown on Monday that Williamson is being named after Lakers rea ch the NBA Finals nine
will introduce the new Jerry West West - West Virginia 44.
times. A 14- time All-Star, he was
Boulevard.
" No one knows where the hell named to the Basketball Hall of
[t's ironic · because I was a that road is," West joked.
Fame in 1979.
freshman at West Virginia UniverWest, 62, retired this month
West spent three years as coach
sity in 1956. And that was 44 a.fter a 40- year career with the and three more as a special conyears ago; · West said.
Lakers.
sultant before being promoted to
West wore 44 on his jersey at · "It's the only thing I've known . general manager in 1982. His title
WVU and later with the Los It's almost been like an addiction changed in 1995 from general
Angeles Lakers.
with the Lakers. It was like an manager to execucive vice presi"There's another funny thing;' e&gt;&lt;tended family. It was time for dent for basketball operati o ns.
West added . " What would be the me to leave."
A silhouette ofWest dribbijng a
odds that Ron Hundley would
West earned All- America hon- basketball is used in th e ~BA 's
graduate and they would name a ors twice at WVU and was named official logo.
street after me in the same year?"
Hundley, who left WVU in
1957 to became the first overall
pick in the NBA draft, earrled a
bachelor of arts degree in May.
•Fast, easy installation
West, who is in the midst of an
•Goes directly over old roof
annual family trip to The Green•Won't rust or corrode
brier resort, plans to fly to Mor•Reduces noise
gantown for the 10 a.m. ceremo•Provides added insulation
ny M onday.
•Lifetime limited warranty
City officials will rename
Beec hurst Avenue and M o nongaSale
hela Bo ulevard, whi ch run continuously from downtown to the
Shelft (2e.3 tQ . ft .)
Coliseum , WVU's 14.000-seat
basketball arena.
WHITE "BROWN "'lED •BLACK
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Redskins 30, Pa.t riots 20
Stephen Davis made a solid
return in his first game since knee
surgery, and Skip Hicks ran for 98
yards and a touchdown as Washinilton (1-1) beat visiting New
En gland -(2-1).
·
D avis nursed an ankle injury
during the offseason after leading
the NFC in rushing, then reported to tamp late be cause of a holdout. He rushed for 24 yards on six
carries.
Bruce Smith had an impressive

out ·of this weeke nd's game as. a
precau tionary n1easure. A Browhs .
spokesman said Prenti ce shou!ll'
' ~ ~. ••
be able to practice next wee k. , "
Prenti ce had six ca rries for ·4[
.,,. ,
. Cl cveyards and a tou c hdown m
land's win over Philadelphia in its
preseaSo n opener. H e is L~xp_~cre a'
to back up Errict Rhett this soa'2'
.
'·
son.
The Browns an\: ban ged 'i~~ ·
1
going into their game w1th di~
.' : ' '
Bea rs.
·
Three starters - wide receiver
Kevin Johnson , linebacker Ja•ili?'
Miller and cornerback Coily'
Fuller - will all mi ss th e gafrte
I ,
with injuries.
.
Wide receiver David Patre'lf
also suffered an ankle injury o ~;,
Thursday but is expected to play. '

debut fo r Wa shington , sacking
Drew Bledsoe on the defensive
end's fir st play and making the
tackle on an upcthe-mi ddle run
on his second.
Browns Camp Notes
Browns rookie running back
Travls Prentice · sustaine-d a
sprained right ank.Ie during ' practice on Thursday and will no t
travel with the team for Saturday's
exhibition gam e again st the
Chicago Bears.
Prentice, who set NCAA scoring records at Miami of Ohio.
turned his ankle while running a
pass pattern on the next to last
play during Thursday's afternoon
workout.
,
He was able to walk off the
field on his own, but will be kept

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• Slidi~ retractable windows
in private boxes to allow spectators to let in outside air or shut
out bad weather.
• Natural turf, with automatic
irrigation and underground heating to extend the grass growing
season and prevent a frozen field .
• No seat views obstructed by
columns.
• More than oOO wheelchairaccessible seats.
• "Potty pariry" 57 pub~c
rest rooms (more than 1,400 toilet fixtures), 28 for men and 29
for women. In addition, 337 toi let ftxtures for players : game-day
~aff, administratio_!L.i!_nd ~Qpera~
tions.
• Wheelchair-friendly access
ramps to upper seating levels,
including intermittent flat spots
on ramp slopes to allow wheelchair users a chance to. pause and
rest.
• 114 private suites.
• Surrounding 20-foot high
floodwall and 17 wells to protec t
stadium if nearby Ohio River
floods.
• Exterior, perforated stainless
stee.I panels that allow people
inside to see out, yet reflect light
and give the stadium a mote finished ~ook from a distance .

new stadium.
The Bengals say the new facility and its increased revenue will
help the team lure top players and
be more competitive.
By 2001, all six telms in the
Bengals' Central Division of the
American Football Conference
arc to be playing in new stadiums.
The division rival Tennessee
Titans, last season's Super Bowl
runner-up, opened a new stadium
in 1999.
The availability of land as

straight up- and-down perfo rmance. The Hei sman - winning
first-round draft pick rushed for
66 yards on 17 ca rries, with most
of his success co ming against second-reamers. H e's averaging 3.4
yards on 34 carries thi s preseason.

$21 8·1

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like it could use rush lin eman
Tony Brackens, who reported to
camp earlier in the day, but
watched the game fron1 the press
box . The Giants gained 203 yards
in th e first half. ·
On
offense, Jacksonville's
injury-ravaged line struggled
against the Giants, who were bigger and more powerful than the
reserves the Jaguars faced against
Carolina in a 34-14 win last
week.
'
Fred Taylor left on the second
play of the game with a sprained
ligament in his left knee. ·coughlin said he could miss 3-4 weeks_
Jaguars · quarterback Mark
Brunell threw most of his nine
passes off three- step drops and
rollouts, trying to avoid injuries
behind aline with no proven veterans.
Brunell went o-for-9 for 6 7
yards and led the Jaguars on one
nice drive in a little more than a
quarter. It resulted in Mike Hollis' 39-yard field goaL
For the second straight week,
the Giants outplayed their opponent in defeat. Last week, they
lost 20-8 to Chicago despite
gaining 401 yards .
Playing !))Ore like an everydown back~an a third-down
specialist, Tiki Barber accounted
for 110 yards - all in the first half
- to help the Giants to a 10-0
lead.
Ron Dayne put in his second

and Tll

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Plus

Plus

that you should keep playing,
keep playmg and see what happens. I'll take whatever I can get.
I need all the help I can get."
In the only other preseason
games Friday night, W ashington
beat New England 30-20, and
Atlanta defeated CinCinnati 3116.
Quinn finished 8-for-23 for 94
yards and struggled except for the
late d_rive in which he converted
two fourth-and-longs before his
"game-winning" interception.
"It was a weird feeling," he said.
"But any way you look at it, it's a
win ."
Suddenly, Pisarcik - who bobbled a handoff to Larry Csonka in
1978 when the Giants should
have simply taken a knee against
Philadelphia - had company.
"All week, coach stressed
being smart and making smart
plays," Golden said. "I saw Freddie
catch the ball, and my first instinct
was t&lt;&gt; get him down. I made a
mistake. I plan on boun cing back
from it."
The Jaguars were flabbergasted,
but not happy, with their victory.
"The good thing about this
game is we kept on playing,"
coach Tom Coughlin said. "It certainly isn 't the way you would
draw it up, hut I give credit to
Brandon for being the right man
at the right spot at the right
time."
Their first-team defense looked.

Mara , who unsuccessfully
fought the stadium tax, noticed
the nice touches in a recent tour.
"Then when you get to t,he
plain o\d folk, who are paying the
taxes for this facility, there's nothing special ," Mara sa id. ·
: Architecturally, the stadium
takes advantage of its location
betwe en downtown high - rises, . Cincinnati and county governments began a riverfront overhaul
major highways and the river.
: Open notches in the four cor- allowed 22 acres for the Bengals
ners of the 66,500-seat stadium stadium so the site could also
allow views of Cincinn ati~ sky- -a-ccommodate the team's offices
line, ~he river and neighboring and adjacent practice fields, a relative rarity in the NFL.
i10rihern Kentucky.
: "When you 're driving by, you
Cincinnati's new stadiums are
get these glimpses into the stadi- to be centerpieces of a planned
renovation
that
um, not so you can see the stadi- riverfront
um or the' game, but so that you includes a newly rebuilt highway
~now somethin g's going on ," said . and access roads and, eventually, a
Utn Streyle, project manager for museum, park, stores and resiG'e tz Ventures, whic h has over- dences.
Features of the new Paul
seen the $453.2 million project.
N ext week, his company trans- Brown Stadium:
fers the stadium to Paul Brown
• Curving canopies of woven
Stadiums Ltd., a subsidiary the polyester fabric stretched tight by
team formed to operate the stadi- cables atop the stadium's sideline
seating sections. The architectural
um for Hamilton County.
· County taxpayers in 1996 highlight also shields some sideapproved a half-ce nt sales tax Jme seats from rain.
mcrease to build the new stadium
_a nd a baseball park nearby for the
Reds. It was at a time when Bengals owner Mike Brown had
threatened to move his team to
another city if he wasn't given a

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Bli.:.

NFL PRESEASON

COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2000

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

i»unba!' 11timt!l ·ittrntinel ; Page

v
'

..

.. ..

.. '
'

MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
MI D-OHI 0 VALLEY CENTER
#1 John Marshall Way

Pt. Pleasant, WV

304-674-7200

•

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/616 Ens rem Ave. (740) 446-3672

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OhiO • Point Pleasant, WV ·

Sunda~August13,2000

•

TRI - COUNTY NOTEBOOK
KCMS volleyball prac·
tlce IJealns Aug. 14
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
Middle School opens volleyball
workouts Aug. 14. The team will
practice from I 0 a.m. to noon.
1
For information, co11tact head
~ coach Amy Shriver at 367-7060.
I

.

Hannan 'lnlce volley·
.~ . ball begl11s Aug. 14

.

::
•

MERoCERVIUE - Hannan
~ Trace Elementary School will
: begin junior high volleyball prac; :ace Aug. 14. Workouts will be .
• :'held from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
· For
information, contact
Tiffany Bostic at44tf-t978.

GAHS cheerleaders

·hoSt mini camp

GALliPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy cheerleaders will host a
mini camp for students in kindergarten through sixth grade Aug.
14-16. The camp will meet from
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the GAHS
'.

~ gym.

The entry fee is $15. Registration will be held Aug. 14, begin.ning at 5:30 p.m.
For information, contact Lou
Anne Shawver at 446-6337.

Helmet fitting
set for Aug. 15
. GALLIPOLIS - Helmet-fit:_ting for junior high football play,ers in the Gallia County Local
:School District will be held Aug.
:15 at the Gallia County Junior

:

Fairgrounds. The fiiting will take &lt;Soccer Club is currently holding
place at 6 p.m. and is for players sign).lps for its under- 14 and
from Bidwell-Porter, Kyger under-18 teams. Players can
Creek, Southwestern, Hannan obtain registration forms at the
Trace and Vinton.
pawn shop at 324 Second Avenue
For information, call David in Gallipolis or by coilling 446Moore ar 367-7054 or 367-7378. 0840. The first practice is set for
Aug. 15.

Varsity G goH
toumey Aug. 10

Club Dinner, mention in the
home football program and
membership in the Athletic
Boosters Club.
For
information, contact
Randy Finney at 446-6637 .

Point football
tickets on sale

GSC needs coaches

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - The GAHS
Varsity G Alumni Association will Soccer Club is in need of coachhost its annual Scholarship Golf es for the upcoming season. InterTournament Aug. 20, at Cliffside ested parties should contact GSC
chairman Wayne Rose at · 446Golf Club.
The cost is $50 for Cliffside 4627.
members and $60 for non-membe".
3-011·3
To register, contact Jim ·
Osborne at 446-928 4, Tom
GALLIPOLIS - Registratin is
Meadows at 446-7570, or call underway for the 0.0. Mcintyre
446-GOLF.
Park District's 3-on-3 youth basThe Varsity G Alumni Associa- ketball league. The league is open
tion is honoring the Evans sisters, to children in fifth through eighth
Margaret, Sarah and Nancy; dur- grade, and games will be played
ing this year's event.
Tuesday and Thursday at Raccoon Creek County Park.
The entry fee is $30 per team,
with each team limited to a roster
of five players. Registration deadline ts Aug. 21.
GALLIPOLIS - The Wild
For information, call Mark
Turkey Federation will host a Danner at 446-4612, ext. 256.
banquet Aug. 26 at 5:30 p.m. at
.tlie Gallipolis Shrine Club. The
Boosters
cost is $20 per person for the
prime rib dinner.
members
Memberships are available for
$25 per person.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
For information, contact Bob Academy Athletic Boosters Club
Donner at 388-9436, or Mike is seeking new members for the
Connet at 256-1651.
upcoming year. Super Booste"
membership costs $110, which
entitles
members to early pur15
chase of reserved seating for
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia home football and basketball
games, a seat at the annual 200

league fonnlng

Wild Turkey Federation
banquet Aug. 16

CAHS
seeking

Club

GSC tryouts Aug.

PPMS Boosters

meetAug.14
POINT PLEASANT - The
Point Pleasant Middle School
athletic boosters will meet Aug.
24, at 7:30 p.m. in the gymnasium.

POINT
PLEASANT
Reserved and season , passes for
Point Pleasant High School are
now on sale.
Reserved seating tickets for
PPHS football are on sale for $25
at Mason County Insurance.
Those who wish to keep their
same reserved seats from last year
have unti1August18to pick them

up.

GAHS "Meet the Team
Nighr Aug. 14
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Academy will host its annuai"Meet the
Team Night" Aug. 24, at Memorial Field . The event kicks off at
7:05p.m.
In case of poor weather, the
event will be held at the GAHS
gym.

''

•

'·" ,
.... Sunday, August 13, 2000

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

TRI - COUNTY YOUTH

:\S&gt;unbap 'CI!:imr! ·:l!&gt;tntinrl • Page 87

~PORTS

l)llldget Football Leape
' slgnups underway :
GALLIPOLIS - Registratign
is undci:way for the Gallipolis
.
I
Modget Football League seas~.
The league is open to boys ~n
fifth and sixth grade.
~
Interested applicants shoUld
· send their name, grade, weig,,t,
phone number and a copy.'-:Of
their birth certificate to
Skidmore, 6865 SR-160, Bidwell
45614. The application fee is ~ 5
and should be made payable .Co
':
Gallipolis MFL.
For information, contact Skidmore at 446-3993.
'

J:if.il

Season passes for all PPHS
sports are also on sale at Mason
County Insurance. The cost is $25
for senior citizens and students
and $75 for adults.
UNDEFEATED -The Green A·ball team went undefeated with a record of 9-0 during the 2000 sea. Front row, left to right, Derick Veazey, John.Paul Finnicum, Barret St. Onge, Nathan Stevens, Jeffrey
~~~~~~ and Rusty Ferguson. Back row, left to right, Dave Carpenter, Andy Denbow, Aaron Carpenter, Zach
!I!
Sam Shawver, Thomas Cook and Tom Denbow. Not pictured: Luke Watts. (Submitted photo)

PPMS football
satmmage Aug. 19
POINT PLEASANT - The
PPMS and Wahama Junior High
football squads will scrimmage on
Aug. 29, at the Point field. Kickoff will be at 5:30 p.m.
Admissionis $2 for adults and
SI for students.

TOP MINOR LEAGUE TEAM- The Syracuse Hubbard s took first place in the Big Bend Youth Tournament
held at Tuppers Plains. The team includes J.D. Whittington, Justin Wandling, Eric Buzzard, Jordan Taylor,
Titus Pierce, Kyle Cunningham, Jesi Ritchie, Colby Roseberry, Taylor Lemley, Adam Warden, Ethan Marfin,
Andrew Roseberry and coach Chad Taylo r. (Submitted photo)

PPHS Athletic Boosters

All Goodyear Integrity
nres On Sale!

·meet Monday
POINT PLEASANT -The
PPHS athletic boosters will meet
at the football field on Monday,
Aug. 14._The meeting will begin
at 6:30p.m.

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INTERNATIONAL SOCCER

I

OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

:u.s. women·gear up for Olympics
: ANNAPOLIS, ·Md. (AP) ,
Mullinix, 22, Nikki Serlenga, 22, a three-game Olympic kickoff
:Despite a youth movement from and Danielle Slaton, 20
tour today.
ia new coach, the U.S. women's
The team is training 111
!Olympic soccer team will look a Annapolis and will play there
:lot like the team that won the _2g:.inst Russia in the.firsLgame..of
'World-cup a ·year ago.
~
Fifteen of the 20 players from
:the World Cup squad, including
,all of the regular starters, were
:chosen Thu"day by coach April
!Heinrichs to make up the 18ylayer roster that will represent
'the United States next month at
:the Sydney Games.
Hemrichs made the veterans
;nervous when she experimented
!with younger lineups after she
~ucceeded Tony DiCicco in January. It quickly became apparent
that five players from the World
Cup team - Tisha Venturini,
Danielle Fotopoulos , Tiffany
Roberts, Tracy Ducar and Saskia
:Webber - did not figure in
Heinrichs' Olympic plans.
' But the mainstays are still there,
from Mia Hamm to Brandi Chastain to 34-year-old Michelle
Akers, the oldest member of the
team . .Akm, who had shoulder
surgery in April and suffers from
chronic fatigue syndrome, has said
this will be her last international,
tournament.
. "Actually l didn't think I was
going to make it this year," said
Akers, who wore a shoulder ·har~ess as she prac ticed with the
ieam Thursday. "There were
many times I thought 'There's too
inany obstacles, too exhausting,
too much pain.' Every time I hit
the wall something was there to
!&gt;tip me over it and. one day at a
lime, I made it."
• Akers has played in !50 games
for the U.S. national team ,
appearing in three World Cups
al)d the 1996 Olympics.
:· Two other players recovering
(l'Qm injuries also made the cut.
~a prain Carla Overbeck, who is
also retiring tram international
~ompetition after th e O lympics,
had knee surgery in May, but it
~ld up well in Thursday's gru el!gg practice .. Goalkeeper Briana
:;curry Was selected after a long
~attle With shin splints, but she is
(low the backup to Siri Mullinix
"~'"'in the only major change to the
scarring lineup from th e World
Cup.
.
~ H einri c h s' eye on the future
CJPE N
S1~P. Hnll!l l'i ~ O N t f.IIDAY' ln-• D!t
5.*-T 'JO·J IHJ
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weren 't at th e World C up :

.•

IIIIINOR LEAGUE-RUNNERSUP ~The Pomeroy-Reds·flnlsned rurrnersup lirttfe BigBend Youth Tournament.
lhe team includes Adam Lavender, Austin King, Caleb Dawis, Ryan Jeffers, Anthony Frederick, Daniel Jenk·
, J.T. McDonald, Taylor Deem, ·Clinton Ohlinger, Brayden Pratt, Nathan Eblin and coach Doug Jenkins.
f.Sulbm itted photo)

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PLACE - The Reedsville Bulldogs finished third in the Big Bend Youth Tournament. Th e team
udes Michael Scyoc. Christopher Bissell, James D., Scott Whitlock, Matt Whitlock, Jacob Brannon,
Qe•von Riggs, Jacob Boston, James Brannon, Benjamin A~ers, Gregory Bamnger, a nd coache s Randy
lloston and Coach Barringer. (Submitted photo)

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Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

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except PR. See cardho lde r 1greemen1 tor dtlallt . Offer Is lor Individual I. not but lnetta.

• TaJ.es, Tags , Tltle Fees extra. Rebate included in sale Price of new vehicle lislerl where appHcab'e . ..On approved credit.
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.

IMAGES

ftLAOI - The Muon Rtdl took fourth pilot In th1 Bll Bend Youth Tournament. (S ub mitted

usee ttort lor com~ete dttalla

·

1
&lt;

�,,.

..
..

r

~ B8 • litunbap ~intrs ·ii'mtinrl

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OhiO • Point Pleasant, WV ·

Sunda~August13,2000

•

TRI - COUNTY NOTEBOOK
KCMS volleyball prac·
tlce IJealns Aug. 14
CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
Middle School opens volleyball
workouts Aug. 14. The team will
practice from I 0 a.m. to noon.
1
For information, co11tact head
~ coach Amy Shriver at 367-7060.
I

.

Hannan 'lnlce volley·
.~ . ball begl11s Aug. 14

.

::
•

MERoCERVIUE - Hannan
~ Trace Elementary School will
: begin junior high volleyball prac; :ace Aug. 14. Workouts will be .
• :'held from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
· For
information, contact
Tiffany Bostic at44tf-t978.

GAHS cheerleaders

·hoSt mini camp

GALliPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy cheerleaders will host a
mini camp for students in kindergarten through sixth grade Aug.
14-16. The camp will meet from
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the GAHS
'.

~ gym.

The entry fee is $15. Registration will be held Aug. 14, begin.ning at 5:30 p.m.
For information, contact Lou
Anne Shawver at 446-6337.

Helmet fitting
set for Aug. 15
. GALLIPOLIS - Helmet-fit:_ting for junior high football play,ers in the Gallia County Local
:School District will be held Aug.
:15 at the Gallia County Junior

:

Fairgrounds. The fiiting will take &lt;Soccer Club is currently holding
place at 6 p.m. and is for players sign).lps for its under- 14 and
from Bidwell-Porter, Kyger under-18 teams. Players can
Creek, Southwestern, Hannan obtain registration forms at the
Trace and Vinton.
pawn shop at 324 Second Avenue
For information, call David in Gallipolis or by coilling 446Moore ar 367-7054 or 367-7378. 0840. The first practice is set for
Aug. 15.

Varsity G goH
toumey Aug. 10

Club Dinner, mention in the
home football program and
membership in the Athletic
Boosters Club.
For
information, contact
Randy Finney at 446-6637 .

Point football
tickets on sale

GSC needs coaches

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - The GAHS
Varsity G Alumni Association will Soccer Club is in need of coachhost its annual Scholarship Golf es for the upcoming season. InterTournament Aug. 20, at Cliffside ested parties should contact GSC
chairman Wayne Rose at · 446Golf Club.
The cost is $50 for Cliffside 4627.
members and $60 for non-membe".
3-011·3
To register, contact Jim ·
Osborne at 446-928 4, Tom
GALLIPOLIS - Registratin is
Meadows at 446-7570, or call underway for the 0.0. Mcintyre
446-GOLF.
Park District's 3-on-3 youth basThe Varsity G Alumni Associa- ketball league. The league is open
tion is honoring the Evans sisters, to children in fifth through eighth
Margaret, Sarah and Nancy; dur- grade, and games will be played
ing this year's event.
Tuesday and Thursday at Raccoon Creek County Park.
The entry fee is $30 per team,
with each team limited to a roster
of five players. Registration deadline ts Aug. 21.
GALLIPOLIS - The Wild
For information, call Mark
Turkey Federation will host a Danner at 446-4612, ext. 256.
banquet Aug. 26 at 5:30 p.m. at
.tlie Gallipolis Shrine Club. The
Boosters
cost is $20 per person for the
prime rib dinner.
members
Memberships are available for
$25 per person.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
For information, contact Bob Academy Athletic Boosters Club
Donner at 388-9436, or Mike is seeking new members for the
Connet at 256-1651.
upcoming year. Super Booste"
membership costs $110, which
entitles
members to early pur15
chase of reserved seating for
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia home football and basketball
games, a seat at the annual 200

league fonnlng

Wild Turkey Federation
banquet Aug. 16

CAHS
seeking

Club

GSC tryouts Aug.

PPMS Boosters

meetAug.14
POINT PLEASANT - The
Point Pleasant Middle School
athletic boosters will meet Aug.
24, at 7:30 p.m. in the gymnasium.

POINT
PLEASANT
Reserved and season , passes for
Point Pleasant High School are
now on sale.
Reserved seating tickets for
PPHS football are on sale for $25
at Mason County Insurance.
Those who wish to keep their
same reserved seats from last year
have unti1August18to pick them

up.

GAHS "Meet the Team
Nighr Aug. 14
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Academy will host its annuai"Meet the
Team Night" Aug. 24, at Memorial Field . The event kicks off at
7:05p.m.
In case of poor weather, the
event will be held at the GAHS
gym.

''

•

'·" ,
.... Sunday, August 13, 2000

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

TRI - COUNTY YOUTH

:\S&gt;unbap 'CI!:imr! ·:l!&gt;tntinrl • Page 87

~PORTS

l)llldget Football Leape
' slgnups underway :
GALLIPOLIS - Registratign
is undci:way for the Gallipolis
.
I
Modget Football League seas~.
The league is open to boys ~n
fifth and sixth grade.
~
Interested applicants shoUld
· send their name, grade, weig,,t,
phone number and a copy.'-:Of
their birth certificate to
Skidmore, 6865 SR-160, Bidwell
45614. The application fee is ~ 5
and should be made payable .Co
':
Gallipolis MFL.
For information, contact Skidmore at 446-3993.
'

J:if.il

Season passes for all PPHS
sports are also on sale at Mason
County Insurance. The cost is $25
for senior citizens and students
and $75 for adults.
UNDEFEATED -The Green A·ball team went undefeated with a record of 9-0 during the 2000 sea. Front row, left to right, Derick Veazey, John.Paul Finnicum, Barret St. Onge, Nathan Stevens, Jeffrey
~~~~~~ and Rusty Ferguson. Back row, left to right, Dave Carpenter, Andy Denbow, Aaron Carpenter, Zach
!I!
Sam Shawver, Thomas Cook and Tom Denbow. Not pictured: Luke Watts. (Submitted photo)

PPMS football
satmmage Aug. 19
POINT PLEASANT - The
PPMS and Wahama Junior High
football squads will scrimmage on
Aug. 29, at the Point field. Kickoff will be at 5:30 p.m.
Admissionis $2 for adults and
SI for students.

TOP MINOR LEAGUE TEAM- The Syracuse Hubbard s took first place in the Big Bend Youth Tournament
held at Tuppers Plains. The team includes J.D. Whittington, Justin Wandling, Eric Buzzard, Jordan Taylor,
Titus Pierce, Kyle Cunningham, Jesi Ritchie, Colby Roseberry, Taylor Lemley, Adam Warden, Ethan Marfin,
Andrew Roseberry and coach Chad Taylo r. (Submitted photo)

PPHS Athletic Boosters

All Goodyear Integrity
nres On Sale!

·meet Monday
POINT PLEASANT -The
PPHS athletic boosters will meet
at the football field on Monday,
Aug. 14._The meeting will begin
at 6:30p.m.

P175/70R13 .................................... $43.54
P185/70R14 .................................... $54.54
P195/70R14 .................................... $55.54
I +P185/75R14 ................................ $55.03
P205/70R14.................................... $58.40
P205/70R15 .................................... S61.99
P215/70R15....................................$64.74
+ Extra Narrow White Wall

I

I'

INTERNATIONAL SOCCER

I

OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

:u.s. women·gear up for Olympics
: ANNAPOLIS, ·Md. (AP) ,
Mullinix, 22, Nikki Serlenga, 22, a three-game Olympic kickoff
:Despite a youth movement from and Danielle Slaton, 20
tour today.
ia new coach, the U.S. women's
The team is training 111
!Olympic soccer team will look a Annapolis and will play there
:lot like the team that won the _2g:.inst Russia in the.firsLgame..of
'World-cup a ·year ago.
~
Fifteen of the 20 players from
:the World Cup squad, including
,all of the regular starters, were
:chosen Thu"day by coach April
!Heinrichs to make up the 18ylayer roster that will represent
'the United States next month at
:the Sydney Games.
Hemrichs made the veterans
;nervous when she experimented
!with younger lineups after she
~ucceeded Tony DiCicco in January. It quickly became apparent
that five players from the World
Cup team - Tisha Venturini,
Danielle Fotopoulos , Tiffany
Roberts, Tracy Ducar and Saskia
:Webber - did not figure in
Heinrichs' Olympic plans.
' But the mainstays are still there,
from Mia Hamm to Brandi Chastain to 34-year-old Michelle
Akers, the oldest member of the
team . .Akm, who had shoulder
surgery in April and suffers from
chronic fatigue syndrome, has said
this will be her last international,
tournament.
. "Actually l didn't think I was
going to make it this year," said
Akers, who wore a shoulder ·har~ess as she prac ticed with the
ieam Thursday. "There were
many times I thought 'There's too
inany obstacles, too exhausting,
too much pain.' Every time I hit
the wall something was there to
!&gt;tip me over it and. one day at a
lime, I made it."
• Akers has played in !50 games
for the U.S. national team ,
appearing in three World Cups
al)d the 1996 Olympics.
:· Two other players recovering
(l'Qm injuries also made the cut.
~a prain Carla Overbeck, who is
also retiring tram international
~ompetition after th e O lympics,
had knee surgery in May, but it
~ld up well in Thursday's gru el!gg practice .. Goalkeeper Briana
:;curry Was selected after a long
~attle With shin splints, but she is
(low the backup to Siri Mullinix
"~'"'in the only major change to the
scarring lineup from th e World
Cup.
.
~ H einri c h s' eye on the future
CJPE N
S1~P. Hnll!l l'i ~ O N t f.IIDAY' ln-• D!t
5.*-T 'JO·J IHJ
SUNQ,o,y tlOSfD
WfHOAYS
was refle c ted in thre e players who
fN ~ON COUHTV F"...IAG ROUNOS
9 3&lt;HI 00
PO!fft
W VA,
PltOMI
weren 't at th e World C up :

.•

IIIIINOR LEAGUE-RUNNERSUP ~The Pomeroy-Reds·flnlsned rurrnersup lirttfe BigBend Youth Tournament.
lhe team includes Adam Lavender, Austin King, Caleb Dawis, Ryan Jeffers, Anthony Frederick, Daniel Jenk·
, J.T. McDonald, Taylor Deem, ·Clinton Ohlinger, Brayden Pratt, Nathan Eblin and coach Doug Jenkins.
f.Sulbm itted photo)

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PLACE - The Reedsville Bulldogs finished third in the Big Bend Youth Tournament. Th e team
udes Michael Scyoc. Christopher Bissell, James D., Scott Whitlock, Matt Whitlock, Jacob Brannon,
Qe•von Riggs, Jacob Boston, James Brannon, Benjamin A~ers, Gregory Bamnger, a nd coache s Randy
lloston and Coach Barringer. (Submitted photo)

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Brand New 2000 Chevy
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~~ ~-8550*
Vortec
Power
Air Conditioning
1 AMIFM Slereo
1
1

'.

~~ ~t·~-

·• . ' " .

~

· • Leather Interior
• Power Sunroof

•

p~oto)

cZ&gt;
OfO~moblle

West VIrginia's J1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick , Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.
·

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

Goodyear Wrangler RT/S
P265/75R16 OWL
othar Sizes Available
•

mide

FRII MOUNTING . FRII ROTATION Every 6.000 mllet. wllh !Ire purchaae .

~URTH
( rt-nui~ &lt; :~ntler

50

*With c::redlt approval lor purchllll
on the Goody..r Crectlt Ctrd APR : Prtfenad Rata : 21 .116"; l td. Rate 24.0'"4 Min . Fin . ChiJI. l .ac.
except PR. See cardho lde r 1greemen1 tor dtlallt . Offer Is lor Individual I. not but lnetta.

• TaJ.es, Tags , Tltle Fees extra. Rebate included in sale Price of new vehicle lislerl where appHcab'e . ..On approved credit.
On oeOOied models. Nat responoible '"' ~pograph&lt;alerrors. Prices Good Augusl9th Through Auguslllltl.

,c:g.

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• Color TV &amp;VCP
• Power Windows &amp; locks
Chairs, Rear Sola

Super Summer
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Other Sizes Aw ailable

Brand New 2000 Olds
Bravada With Smartrak

$599

S0-4-1~16· 2181

LT 31-IOSORI! C0Wl... .... l111.99
LT 225/l!Rl&amp; 0 !UL......... $1!2.99
lT 21!nSRI6 f BLL .......I126.99
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LT 23Si!!R16 f BLK .......... S133.99

95

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PACKAGE #2 FRED BEAR
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COMPLETE PACKAGE

.

IMAGES

ftLAOI - The Muon Rtdl took fourth pilot In th1 Bll Bend Youth Tournament. (S ub mitted

usee ttort lor com~ete dttalla

·

1
&lt;

�'

.

Sund11J,Aupst11,2000
•

·Inside:

•

"

.Celebrations begiu ~n Page C2
Char/me Hoeflich 5 Community Comer

you ready?
.

•'

PapC1
Sunday.August1l.2000

~

In the the midst of the fair season, it
!eems hard to believe that hunting season
, h~re in Ohio begins Saturday_with squir. tel season.
This year marks something of a departure with tradition in the Buckeye State.
Most hunters recall squirrel season
&amp;.ginning sometime in early September
(C'arly October for you Mountain State
Plunten).
So far, reaction to the early squirrel
season has been less than enthusiastic.
_ "It'll be too hot," they exclaim. "The
~uinels will have warbles."
' · So it remains to be seen how well the
neW, early season will be received.
' However, most hunters know that with
the onset of squirrel season, deer archery
"'ason - and then the deer gun season
- can't be toO far behind.
, · So with that in mind, I have a confession to make.
··The first few hunts of the year invariably find me rifling through my pockets
for things I forgot back at the house.
Maybe it's early old age creeping up on
me, but 1 seem to get more and more
absent-minded as the yean go by.
. - So this year I decided to write a checklist I will share with you, too, in the
hopes you don't forget anything.
- ·I n hunting, your top priority had better be safety, so now is the time to check

out your hunting equipment. Examine
your bow or firearm to make sure it
functions properly and safely. Practice
shooting both to regain confidence and
proficiency in their use.
Do you use a tree stand?
The this is definitely the time to double-check all 'ofits parts.While remaining
near the ground, test the stand to make
sure it bears all your weight and the
weight of your equipment.
While you're at it, check out your safety harness, too. This is extremely important! Hunters are by far more likely to be
injured or killed in a fall than by a
firearm or bow.
Do you have all the necessary permits
and landowner permission to hunt?
Don't put asking for permission to
hunt off until opening morning!
By now all of your equipment has
been checked and any deficiencies corrected. You have your licenses, and
landowner permission.
Now it's time for the fun part: assembling your "hunting kit."
Your hunting kit consists of all the litde things that can make a hunt more
pleasurable. It can be carried in a fanny
pack, small backpack. or even in large
pockets.
l'or hunting in southeast Ohio, I usually carry just the essentials. Those going

Wear suitable clothing and footwear,
because nothing ruins a good h'u nt like
cold feet.
Dress in layers.You can take something
off if it gets too hot, but you can't put
something on you didn't bring with you.
It may be warm when you hea\f out on
gloves. ~.
I almoEforgot, disposable hand warm- your afternoon deer hunt, but when the
ers and a;
pair of binoculars!
. sun goes behind a hill the temperatu~
IN THE OPEN
It see ... ' rd to believe, but everything can drop pretty fast.
·
Again, being cold can quicldy ruin an
I have m~oned so far - and more ·
"out west" or hunting in the mountains I can usu4l!J stow in my pockets. I like to otherwise enjoyable hunting trip.
Also, an old safety rule states: "plan
ofWest Virginia may wish to carry even wear Ar~~ue fatigues, which contain
your hunt, and hunt your plan."
plenty o(JVOcket space.
more.
Make sure somebody knows whert
To this list, add your various deer lures,
So what do I co nsider the bare necesuou
are going, and wheh you should
grunt
calls,
and
perhaps
rattling
antlers,
sities?
return. Provide a map of your stand locaFor deer hunting, ! generally carry two even a cellular telephone.
The above items don't weight very tions and, above all, don't change your
knives - a belt-sheathed, fixed-blade
.
skinning knife, and a small backup pock- much, but by the time you get dressed plan!
No set of anders is so big that it IS
and add your bow, arrows, tree stand,
etknife {both razor-sharp) .
1
I also carry a small flashlight for walk- safety harness , cord (for raising and low- worth risking your life.
I hope this information helps during
ing in the woods before sunrise and after ering your bow or gun), you're carrying
a
lot
of
weight
around.
what
I am sure will be a successful huntsunset.
So make sure you're in good shape, ing season.
Remember, deer don't carry flashI am sure as the weeks run down I will
. ,
too.
lights!
Part of t~~ day's hunt starts the day recall other things as well, but do try to
I also carry a small packet or two of
toilet paper scrounged from Army MREs before. Try to get an idea of what the remember this: hunt safe and bring along
(meals, ready-to-eat). These come in next day's weather holds in store for you. a kid to share the memories.
Uim Freeman is a wildlife specialist for the
handy for many uses besides the obvious. .A,Ithough . ~erybody makes fun of
Meigs
Soil and Uioter Conservation Distrilt.
When hunting, I sometimes also like to weather fo~casts, _ they are better than
He can reached for questions or comments at
snack. For this reason, I like to carry an heading out' (otally uninformed.
Pick out
hunting clothes based 992-4282, or jim:freeman@ph.nacdnet.org.)
apple or two, a candy bar and a squeeze
on the
weather conditions.
bottle of water.

Jim
Freeman

Also carry along a pen or pencil (for
filling out your deer tag).
Other odds and ends to carry: a bit of
string, disposable lighter, waterproof
poncho;:\(~epending on the anticipated
weatherf, il whistle and an extra pair of

Future
cler
wor for ·
the union

,.

"

ODNR . HUNTING NOTES

Puck blind lottery Aug. 19
:. COLUMBUS
Lottery name.
Applications will be taken
Opportunities for waterfowl hunt4Jg from some of the state's top beginning at 8 a.m., with the lot~uck blind locations will soon be tery immediately following.
available, according to the Ohio
Each entrant can apply for only
Department
of
Natural one duck blind permit; no one
Resources (ODNR).
can apply or draw for another
: Hunters who wish to apply for person. There is a $50 nona permit to set up a duck blind to refundable permit fee for lottery
b.unt ducks at an Ohio state park winners.
during the 2000-01 waterfowl
Lottery winners have 45 days to
~unting season must enter a lot- construct their blinds. All blinds
t~ry drawing to be held at select- must be dismanded by March 15,
"'i state park offices Saturday, 2001.
August \9.
Participating state parks in
Several locations are also avail- southeast Ohio include Oilable at state wildlife areas. Call 1- lonOpportunities for duck blind
800-WILDLIFE for information hunts are also available at the folon those sites.
lowing ODNR Division of
Duck blind permiu are avail- Wildlife areas: Mosquito Creek
able at 17 state park locations _ and Grwd River__in_ northeast
tfuoughout Oruo. To enter the Ohio; Resthaven, Pipe Cre.e k,
lottery, applicants must appear in Magee Marsh and Pickerel Creek
penon at the participating state in northwest dhio; Clark Lake
park office on the day of the and Spring Valley in southwest
drawing and show proof of a cur- Ohio; and Killdeer Plains in cenrerll or \999 Ohio hunting tral Ohio.
Call 1-800-WILDLIFE for
license, along with a federal duck
stamp and state wedands habitat specific times and locations for
stamp issued in the applicant's lottety drawings.

~

A
HELP - With just getting a cast on his broken arm Tuesday,
Matt Roush receives a little help from his mom, Gail, in pinning on his
number. Despite the cast, Roush showed his hog in the hog show.

COMPETING -

Mason County Fair Queen contestants compete in the streetwear division of the
pageant at the State Theatre Tuesday afternoon .

IIJiFi!iiiiiiii

Conservation club meeting notes
GALLIPOLIS -Two officers
from the Athens district office of
th.e Ohio Division of Fish and
Wildlife updated 45 members of
the Gallia County Conservation
Club on recent developments in
southern . Ohio during last
Wednesday's meeting.
Terry Hawk and Gerry Myer
told the group that the Crown
City Wildlife Area now . has a
grassland quail habitat and that a
3.5 acre . wetland has been
develped within. the boundaries.
Myer stated that the ODNR
has plans to build an observation
tower at the Tycoon Lake wetland
area, which will be available for
use by the public.
Myer said that construction of
the KH . Butler access ramp near
Crown City will begin this fall.
The facility will provide parking
for up to 75 boat 'trailers, two
launch ramps, lighting and public
restrooms .
Hawk and M yer told the conservation club that squirrel season
opens Aug. 19, mourning dove
and goose season begins Sep. 1,
Wild turkey season opens Oct. 14,
nbbit season begins Nov. 3, and
the deer gun season opens Nov.
27.
Meigs County will have nine
deer checking stations this fall,
while Galli a Cciun ty will have
eight stations.
Four of the Gallia Cou nty locations will also be used for turkey
checking, ·. while three of the
Meigs County locations will be
used during turkey seaso n.
Hawk told the group that
according to a 1999 season, some
,39 black bears had been verified
in eastern Ohio; mainly in Mor-

gan, Washington and Belmont
counties.
Hawk said that the bears have
no trouble crossing the Ohio
River, and travel from West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
In other business, club president
Bob Donnet said that the
Starlight 4-H Club earned firstplace money at the Gallia County Junior Fair by displaying the
best exhibit on outdoors and
wildlife. The club and advisors
will be recognized at the
Landowners Appreciation Dinner, scheduled for Sep. \6, at the
Bob Evans Farm shelterhouse.
Larry Betz said the annual
National Wild Turkey Federation
(NWTF) banquet is set for Aug.
26, at the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
The cost is $20 per person.
The
NWTF
co ntributed
$78,oo0 toward development of
the Crown C ity Wildlife Area in
1997,
Betz said that the conservation
club will hold the Women in the
Outdoors Day Sep. 30 at Raccoon Creek County Park. The
event costs $35 to attend and will
highlight outdoor skills, including
map-reading, gun safety and
archery.
Steve Salisbury said that the
Canada geese in the area can be
harvested during the upcoming
duck and geese season. Salisbury
also told hunters to check their
new hunting licenses. He said the
agency has not "front-loaded
their coptputer yet and you could
wind up with a hunting license
that is o ne year old."
(Editor's note: Information submitted by Odie O'DonnelL)

I

•

NEW YORK (AP) - James
Hadley, in a · high- collar shiil
that says he'll soon be a
Roman
Catholic
priest,
approaches an office building
in the heart ofWall Street, hls
union "Local 100" sign droop~
ing after two hours of march.
ing in the rain.
Accompanied by a nun, a
rabbi and Bree Kessler, 20, a
co llege student who plans to
become a rabbi, rhe 22-yea rold seminar ian walks through
brass doors into th e cavernous
lobby. They are a religious delegatio n, he tells th e reception~
ist, and th ey want to see the
company's chief executive officer to ask him to support the
rights of food service workers
to unionize.
"He's out of the country,''
the receptionist teUs him.
How about other execu.
tives~ Unavailable, she says. '·· Finally, Hadley walks o utside, makes his way through a
crowd of about 100 and jumps
on the back of a flatbed truck:
Grabbing
the
mike , .
.
announces that managemei\1
had refused to meet with
workers and now the religiOtls
conununity. But he vows 'tO:
"continue the struggle for th&lt;:_
right to organize."
-·
Hadley and Kessler are
among 25 interns in Seminary
Summer, a 10-week program
in 15 cities to teach future religious leaders the ins and outs
of community organizing.
In C hi cagO", for instance, Paul ~·
C raham of th e Evangelical
Luth eran Church is working
with day laborers.
In Little Rock, Alan Jenkins,
who is Presbyterian, is organizing poultry workers.
" In our semlnaries we study
th e theology," says Kim Bobo
o f th e National Interfaith
Committee for Worker Justic e,
which sp onsors Seminary
Summer with the AFL-CIO.
"What is otlen not (taught) is
how you live out your faith irf.
the world ."
Se minary
Sum mer, the
sponsors say, is the latest phase
of an old partnership between
religious leaders and labor that
has brought together ministers

BRUSHING Summer Stover
brushes her
hog in preparat ion fo r Tuesday's hog show.

He
~

and m eat packers, rabbis and
jan itors oi1 picket lin!.!'s Jlation-

wtde.
It was Pope Leo XII I\ 1891encyclicaL affirming the ri ght
to organize. that strengthen ed
th e bond between Cat h o li ~s.
and unions. ln the late 1800s,
Jewish l eader~ began organizin g garmen t workers in NeW::
York C ity. And m the ea(&gt;~
1900s, pro - union Pro testani!
ministers fa ced the wrath of
co mpany guards in the Weir.
Virgin ia coal mines.
In the 1970s, disagreements

SPECIAL AUTOGRAPH -Country singer Doug Stone took time before
his concert Tuesday to sign an autograph for 3-year-old Peyton
Humphreys, who is being held by her aunt Diana Johnson. (Michele
Carter photos)

Please see Cl•l'fY• Pap C6

Young couple's separation can be education for both memberS
'

Monday - Friday
9 a.m. - 7 p.m.

Saturday
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday CLOSED

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating my
~ ir\fricnd tOr '\ ix months. W~ have a clos.e
relatio"'hip ancl arc deeply 111 love. She ts
going aw;'y to college tl~ i " tan.The school
is two houf"' from ou r hometown. We had
a talk about what we arc going to do when
sc hool bl.'gins. She wants to break up with
me because wt· won't see each other as
often . I pt'~so na1l y bdit-ve we em work it
0\lt.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE

How can I convince ht-r that we should
remain a couple? In my heart , I feel we are

meant for each other. --HEARTBROKEN IN HAWTHORNE, CAUF.
DEAR HEARTBROI(EN: If you
want to keep th e lines of communication
open with your girl frieml, d.o nor. pressure
her into an exclusive rdatmnslup when
she goes otr to m llcge. She wJntl the

entire "college experience.'' to meet new
people and not feel tied down . It is a
healthy attitude -- for both of you.
Couples in love give each other the fi'cedom to be themselves. To do otherwise is
controll ing, and people run away from
those who .make them feel smothered. If
you are meant for each other, you can get

together when she comes honll' on week ends and holidays. She wiD be f.1r more
interested in seeing you if you haw not
made her feel guilty about other men with
whom she may have seen a n~v ie or gone:
for coffee.
While she's gone, think of new wa)" to
broaden YOUR life. This should be a peri od of exciting growth for both of you .
DEAR ABBY: 1 am an income tax
accountant During the past two years, I
have encountered several widdws and
widower; who are unaware that they quality for Social Security ben efit• at age tiO.
This is true even though they may have
been divorced from their spouse at the
ttme of his or her death.
Is there any way you can spread the message? -- CHUCK IN OKLAHOMA

...

DEAR CHUCK: Abdutd y. This
comes right· out of tht.: Social S.:curity
Handbook :
If you are divorced, you em receive benefits on your ex-husband's (or wift· 's)
So.: i.tl St.:curity record if he (or sht·) is
reo:iving Social St·curity bendits (or is
deceased) and your marriage lasted I 0
y..::ars nr longer; you are presl:"ntly unm arried: and you are age 62 or older. (If he or
she is deceased, you can collect ben efits at
age 60; age 50 if you bccume disabled.)·
Those who feel they may quality tor
benefito,; or have other q\Jt•stions about
Social Security should contact the n,carcst
Social Sec urity otlice. or call I-B00-7721213.Thc deaf or han:l-of- hearing may call
a toll-fn:e TTY number: 1-8011-325-0778.

The Wl'h

~ire jo.;

www.'\s,t.gov.

-..
•.
'

.

'.
t

DEAR ABBY: In your rep ly tt&gt;:
"Sneezing in New Jersey," who asked 'if i.e!
was OK to blow one's nose at the tablo,;
yoLI replied ." ... if the nose-blower sounds! '
like· the fir;t blast of Gideoh's trumpet .. ,'(;
Abby' The nam e of the archangel m""-~
scnger of God who blew the trumpet ii
Gribricl. not GiJt"Oil . Gideon was a judge.~
Just thought , vu would want to know. .:...- :
SARA IN ST. LOUIS
DEAR SARA: Not to be tooting my~
own h orn, bm I wasn't wrong. Gideon
a liberator as well as a judge. In C hapter 7;
in the Old Testament book of Judges,;
Gideo n leads a force of 300 men againstj
the Midianitcs. Gideon ami his men blow:
trumpets as they attack, which makes it:
seem a.s though a huge army surrounds the :
Midi.mitcs -- w ho flee in terror.

\Vas;

',,

�'

.

Sund11J,Aupst11,2000
•

·Inside:

•

"

.Celebrations begiu ~n Page C2
Char/me Hoeflich 5 Community Comer

you ready?
.

•'

PapC1
Sunday.August1l.2000

~

In the the midst of the fair season, it
!eems hard to believe that hunting season
, h~re in Ohio begins Saturday_with squir. tel season.
This year marks something of a departure with tradition in the Buckeye State.
Most hunters recall squirrel season
&amp;.ginning sometime in early September
(C'arly October for you Mountain State
Plunten).
So far, reaction to the early squirrel
season has been less than enthusiastic.
_ "It'll be too hot," they exclaim. "The
~uinels will have warbles."
' · So it remains to be seen how well the
neW, early season will be received.
' However, most hunters know that with
the onset of squirrel season, deer archery
"'ason - and then the deer gun season
- can't be toO far behind.
, · So with that in mind, I have a confession to make.
··The first few hunts of the year invariably find me rifling through my pockets
for things I forgot back at the house.
Maybe it's early old age creeping up on
me, but 1 seem to get more and more
absent-minded as the yean go by.
. - So this year I decided to write a checklist I will share with you, too, in the
hopes you don't forget anything.
- ·I n hunting, your top priority had better be safety, so now is the time to check

out your hunting equipment. Examine
your bow or firearm to make sure it
functions properly and safely. Practice
shooting both to regain confidence and
proficiency in their use.
Do you use a tree stand?
The this is definitely the time to double-check all 'ofits parts.While remaining
near the ground, test the stand to make
sure it bears all your weight and the
weight of your equipment.
While you're at it, check out your safety harness, too. This is extremely important! Hunters are by far more likely to be
injured or killed in a fall than by a
firearm or bow.
Do you have all the necessary permits
and landowner permission to hunt?
Don't put asking for permission to
hunt off until opening morning!
By now all of your equipment has
been checked and any deficiencies corrected. You have your licenses, and
landowner permission.
Now it's time for the fun part: assembling your "hunting kit."
Your hunting kit consists of all the litde things that can make a hunt more
pleasurable. It can be carried in a fanny
pack, small backpack. or even in large
pockets.
l'or hunting in southeast Ohio, I usually carry just the essentials. Those going

Wear suitable clothing and footwear,
because nothing ruins a good h'u nt like
cold feet.
Dress in layers.You can take something
off if it gets too hot, but you can't put
something on you didn't bring with you.
It may be warm when you hea\f out on
gloves. ~.
I almoEforgot, disposable hand warm- your afternoon deer hunt, but when the
ers and a;
pair of binoculars!
. sun goes behind a hill the temperatu~
IN THE OPEN
It see ... ' rd to believe, but everything can drop pretty fast.
·
Again, being cold can quicldy ruin an
I have m~oned so far - and more ·
"out west" or hunting in the mountains I can usu4l!J stow in my pockets. I like to otherwise enjoyable hunting trip.
Also, an old safety rule states: "plan
ofWest Virginia may wish to carry even wear Ar~~ue fatigues, which contain
your hunt, and hunt your plan."
plenty o(JVOcket space.
more.
Make sure somebody knows whert
To this list, add your various deer lures,
So what do I co nsider the bare necesuou
are going, and wheh you should
grunt
calls,
and
perhaps
rattling
antlers,
sities?
return. Provide a map of your stand locaFor deer hunting, ! generally carry two even a cellular telephone.
The above items don't weight very tions and, above all, don't change your
knives - a belt-sheathed, fixed-blade
.
skinning knife, and a small backup pock- much, but by the time you get dressed plan!
No set of anders is so big that it IS
and add your bow, arrows, tree stand,
etknife {both razor-sharp) .
1
I also carry a small flashlight for walk- safety harness , cord (for raising and low- worth risking your life.
I hope this information helps during
ing in the woods before sunrise and after ering your bow or gun), you're carrying
a
lot
of
weight
around.
what
I am sure will be a successful huntsunset.
So make sure you're in good shape, ing season.
Remember, deer don't carry flashI am sure as the weeks run down I will
. ,
too.
lights!
Part of t~~ day's hunt starts the day recall other things as well, but do try to
I also carry a small packet or two of
toilet paper scrounged from Army MREs before. Try to get an idea of what the remember this: hunt safe and bring along
(meals, ready-to-eat). These come in next day's weather holds in store for you. a kid to share the memories.
Uim Freeman is a wildlife specialist for the
handy for many uses besides the obvious. .A,Ithough . ~erybody makes fun of
Meigs
Soil and Uioter Conservation Distrilt.
When hunting, I sometimes also like to weather fo~casts, _ they are better than
He can reached for questions or comments at
snack. For this reason, I like to carry an heading out' (otally uninformed.
Pick out
hunting clothes based 992-4282, or jim:freeman@ph.nacdnet.org.)
apple or two, a candy bar and a squeeze
on the
weather conditions.
bottle of water.

Jim
Freeman

Also carry along a pen or pencil (for
filling out your deer tag).
Other odds and ends to carry: a bit of
string, disposable lighter, waterproof
poncho;:\(~epending on the anticipated
weatherf, il whistle and an extra pair of

Future
cler
wor for ·
the union

,.

"

ODNR . HUNTING NOTES

Puck blind lottery Aug. 19
:. COLUMBUS
Lottery name.
Applications will be taken
Opportunities for waterfowl hunt4Jg from some of the state's top beginning at 8 a.m., with the lot~uck blind locations will soon be tery immediately following.
available, according to the Ohio
Each entrant can apply for only
Department
of
Natural one duck blind permit; no one
Resources (ODNR).
can apply or draw for another
: Hunters who wish to apply for person. There is a $50 nona permit to set up a duck blind to refundable permit fee for lottery
b.unt ducks at an Ohio state park winners.
during the 2000-01 waterfowl
Lottery winners have 45 days to
~unting season must enter a lot- construct their blinds. All blinds
t~ry drawing to be held at select- must be dismanded by March 15,
"'i state park offices Saturday, 2001.
August \9.
Participating state parks in
Several locations are also avail- southeast Ohio include Oilable at state wildlife areas. Call 1- lonOpportunities for duck blind
800-WILDLIFE for information hunts are also available at the folon those sites.
lowing ODNR Division of
Duck blind permiu are avail- Wildlife areas: Mosquito Creek
able at 17 state park locations _ and Grwd River__in_ northeast
tfuoughout Oruo. To enter the Ohio; Resthaven, Pipe Cre.e k,
lottery, applicants must appear in Magee Marsh and Pickerel Creek
penon at the participating state in northwest dhio; Clark Lake
park office on the day of the and Spring Valley in southwest
drawing and show proof of a cur- Ohio; and Killdeer Plains in cenrerll or \999 Ohio hunting tral Ohio.
Call 1-800-WILDLIFE for
license, along with a federal duck
stamp and state wedands habitat specific times and locations for
stamp issued in the applicant's lottety drawings.

~

A
HELP - With just getting a cast on his broken arm Tuesday,
Matt Roush receives a little help from his mom, Gail, in pinning on his
number. Despite the cast, Roush showed his hog in the hog show.

COMPETING -

Mason County Fair Queen contestants compete in the streetwear division of the
pageant at the State Theatre Tuesday afternoon .

IIJiFi!iiiiiiii

Conservation club meeting notes
GALLIPOLIS -Two officers
from the Athens district office of
th.e Ohio Division of Fish and
Wildlife updated 45 members of
the Gallia County Conservation
Club on recent developments in
southern . Ohio during last
Wednesday's meeting.
Terry Hawk and Gerry Myer
told the group that the Crown
City Wildlife Area now . has a
grassland quail habitat and that a
3.5 acre . wetland has been
develped within. the boundaries.
Myer stated that the ODNR
has plans to build an observation
tower at the Tycoon Lake wetland
area, which will be available for
use by the public.
Myer said that construction of
the KH . Butler access ramp near
Crown City will begin this fall.
The facility will provide parking
for up to 75 boat 'trailers, two
launch ramps, lighting and public
restrooms .
Hawk and M yer told the conservation club that squirrel season
opens Aug. 19, mourning dove
and goose season begins Sep. 1,
Wild turkey season opens Oct. 14,
nbbit season begins Nov. 3, and
the deer gun season opens Nov.
27.
Meigs County will have nine
deer checking stations this fall,
while Galli a Cciun ty will have
eight stations.
Four of the Gallia Cou nty locations will also be used for turkey
checking, ·. while three of the
Meigs County locations will be
used during turkey seaso n.
Hawk told the group that
according to a 1999 season, some
,39 black bears had been verified
in eastern Ohio; mainly in Mor-

gan, Washington and Belmont
counties.
Hawk said that the bears have
no trouble crossing the Ohio
River, and travel from West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
In other business, club president
Bob Donnet said that the
Starlight 4-H Club earned firstplace money at the Gallia County Junior Fair by displaying the
best exhibit on outdoors and
wildlife. The club and advisors
will be recognized at the
Landowners Appreciation Dinner, scheduled for Sep. \6, at the
Bob Evans Farm shelterhouse.
Larry Betz said the annual
National Wild Turkey Federation
(NWTF) banquet is set for Aug.
26, at the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
The cost is $20 per person.
The
NWTF
co ntributed
$78,oo0 toward development of
the Crown C ity Wildlife Area in
1997,
Betz said that the conservation
club will hold the Women in the
Outdoors Day Sep. 30 at Raccoon Creek County Park. The
event costs $35 to attend and will
highlight outdoor skills, including
map-reading, gun safety and
archery.
Steve Salisbury said that the
Canada geese in the area can be
harvested during the upcoming
duck and geese season. Salisbury
also told hunters to check their
new hunting licenses. He said the
agency has not "front-loaded
their coptputer yet and you could
wind up with a hunting license
that is o ne year old."
(Editor's note: Information submitted by Odie O'DonnelL)

I

•

NEW YORK (AP) - James
Hadley, in a · high- collar shiil
that says he'll soon be a
Roman
Catholic
priest,
approaches an office building
in the heart ofWall Street, hls
union "Local 100" sign droop~
ing after two hours of march.
ing in the rain.
Accompanied by a nun, a
rabbi and Bree Kessler, 20, a
co llege student who plans to
become a rabbi, rhe 22-yea rold seminar ian walks through
brass doors into th e cavernous
lobby. They are a religious delegatio n, he tells th e reception~
ist, and th ey want to see the
company's chief executive officer to ask him to support the
rights of food service workers
to unionize.
"He's out of the country,''
the receptionist teUs him.
How about other execu.
tives~ Unavailable, she says. '·· Finally, Hadley walks o utside, makes his way through a
crowd of about 100 and jumps
on the back of a flatbed truck:
Grabbing
the
mike , .
.
announces that managemei\1
had refused to meet with
workers and now the religiOtls
conununity. But he vows 'tO:
"continue the struggle for th&lt;:_
right to organize."
-·
Hadley and Kessler are
among 25 interns in Seminary
Summer, a 10-week program
in 15 cities to teach future religious leaders the ins and outs
of community organizing.
In C hi cagO", for instance, Paul ~·
C raham of th e Evangelical
Luth eran Church is working
with day laborers.
In Little Rock, Alan Jenkins,
who is Presbyterian, is organizing poultry workers.
" In our semlnaries we study
th e theology," says Kim Bobo
o f th e National Interfaith
Committee for Worker Justic e,
which sp onsors Seminary
Summer with the AFL-CIO.
"What is otlen not (taught) is
how you live out your faith irf.
the world ."
Se minary
Sum mer, the
sponsors say, is the latest phase
of an old partnership between
religious leaders and labor that
has brought together ministers

BRUSHING Summer Stover
brushes her
hog in preparat ion fo r Tuesday's hog show.

He
~

and m eat packers, rabbis and
jan itors oi1 picket lin!.!'s Jlation-

wtde.
It was Pope Leo XII I\ 1891encyclicaL affirming the ri ght
to organize. that strengthen ed
th e bond between Cat h o li ~s.
and unions. ln the late 1800s,
Jewish l eader~ began organizin g garmen t workers in NeW::
York C ity. And m the ea(&gt;~
1900s, pro - union Pro testani!
ministers fa ced the wrath of
co mpany guards in the Weir.
Virgin ia coal mines.
In the 1970s, disagreements

SPECIAL AUTOGRAPH -Country singer Doug Stone took time before
his concert Tuesday to sign an autograph for 3-year-old Peyton
Humphreys, who is being held by her aunt Diana Johnson. (Michele
Carter photos)

Please see Cl•l'fY• Pap C6

Young couple's separation can be education for both memberS
'

Monday - Friday
9 a.m. - 7 p.m.

Saturday
9 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday CLOSED

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating my
~ ir\fricnd tOr '\ ix months. W~ have a clos.e
relatio"'hip ancl arc deeply 111 love. She ts
going aw;'y to college tl~ i " tan.The school
is two houf"' from ou r hometown. We had
a talk about what we arc going to do when
sc hool bl.'gins. She wants to break up with
me because wt· won't see each other as
often . I pt'~so na1l y bdit-ve we em work it
0\lt.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE

How can I convince ht-r that we should
remain a couple? In my heart , I feel we are

meant for each other. --HEARTBROKEN IN HAWTHORNE, CAUF.
DEAR HEARTBROI(EN: If you
want to keep th e lines of communication
open with your girl frieml, d.o nor. pressure
her into an exclusive rdatmnslup when
she goes otr to m llcge. She wJntl the

entire "college experience.'' to meet new
people and not feel tied down . It is a
healthy attitude -- for both of you.
Couples in love give each other the fi'cedom to be themselves. To do otherwise is
controll ing, and people run away from
those who .make them feel smothered. If
you are meant for each other, you can get

together when she comes honll' on week ends and holidays. She wiD be f.1r more
interested in seeing you if you haw not
made her feel guilty about other men with
whom she may have seen a n~v ie or gone:
for coffee.
While she's gone, think of new wa)" to
broaden YOUR life. This should be a peri od of exciting growth for both of you .
DEAR ABBY: 1 am an income tax
accountant During the past two years, I
have encountered several widdws and
widower; who are unaware that they quality for Social Security ben efit• at age tiO.
This is true even though they may have
been divorced from their spouse at the
ttme of his or her death.
Is there any way you can spread the message? -- CHUCK IN OKLAHOMA

...

DEAR CHUCK: Abdutd y. This
comes right· out of tht.: Social S.:curity
Handbook :
If you are divorced, you em receive benefits on your ex-husband's (or wift· 's)
So.: i.tl St.:curity record if he (or sht·) is
reo:iving Social St·curity bendits (or is
deceased) and your marriage lasted I 0
y..::ars nr longer; you are presl:"ntly unm arried: and you are age 62 or older. (If he or
she is deceased, you can collect ben efits at
age 60; age 50 if you bccume disabled.)·
Those who feel they may quality tor
benefito,; or have other q\Jt•stions about
Social Security should contact the n,carcst
Social Sec urity otlice. or call I-B00-7721213.Thc deaf or han:l-of- hearing may call
a toll-fn:e TTY number: 1-8011-325-0778.

The Wl'h

~ire jo.;

www.'\s,t.gov.

-..
•.
'

.

'.
t

DEAR ABBY: In your rep ly tt&gt;:
"Sneezing in New Jersey," who asked 'if i.e!
was OK to blow one's nose at the tablo,;
yoLI replied ." ... if the nose-blower sounds! '
like· the fir;t blast of Gideoh's trumpet .. ,'(;
Abby' The nam e of the archangel m""-~
scnger of God who blew the trumpet ii
Gribricl. not GiJt"Oil . Gideon was a judge.~
Just thought , vu would want to know. .:...- :
SARA IN ST. LOUIS
DEAR SARA: Not to be tooting my~
own h orn, bm I wasn't wrong. Gideon
a liberator as well as a judge. In C hapter 7;
in the Old Testament book of Judges,;
Gideo n leads a force of 300 men againstj
the Midianitcs. Gideon ami his men blow:
trumpets as they attack, which makes it:
seem a.s though a huge army surrounds the :
Midi.mitcs -- w ho flee in terror.

\Vas;

',,

�.. - -· .
f

•

..

.-Page C2 • ltunba~ Gl:imu ·lttnlintl
)

Sunda~August13,2000

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

..

Sunday, August13, 2000

&amp;unbap GJ:imrs -iuntintl • .Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

-'

,.

Myers reaches deal

Engagements==

.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mike
Myers is as happy as a little girl.
The actor has reached a deal with
two movie studios that dissolves
three lawsuits so he · can move ·
ahead with a movie based on his
"Saturday Night Live" character
Dierer.
Though details of the agreement were not disclosed, Myers
said in a srarem~1t_Thursday he
will write his come1'!)-as a .. coproduction" for Universal Studios
and DreamWorks SKG, with
Imagine Entertainment producmg.
"I'm glad to put all of this
behind me and I'm looking forward to doing a movie that we
can all be proud of," said Myers,
who created the character of
Dieter (pronounced DEET-er),

' i;.; ,/1),,.'~)
~..,; ....
....,./·.·,_'

/

'

Terri Lea Clark and Travis Joe Walters

.

•
•

Chrl1tlne Hannon and Craig Rouah

Bays-Lewis engagement

Harmon-Roush engagement

.
• GALLIPOLIS - Homer and
Mary Bays of Gallipohs are
announcing the engagement and
upcoming wedding of their
daughter, Tanm1y, to Benjamin D.
Lewis.
·
. The bride-elect is a 1995 grad.uate of Gallia Academy High
:school and a 2000 graduate of
:Ohio State Universiry, with a
'bachelor's degree in business
administration. She is currently
·employed by McGraw-Hill Pub-

lishing Co. in Columbus.
The groom-elect is the son of
Stanley and Sherry Lewis of Oak
H1ll. He is a 1993 graduate of
Oak Hill High School, and currcndy the owner and operator of
a restaurant in Hilliard .
An open church wedding will
be held Sept. 2, 2000 at Fellowship
Baptist Church, 600
McCormick Road, Gallipohs.
Music begins at 4 p.m.

RACINE Mr. and mrs.
James M. Harmon of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph T. Roush of
N ew Haven, W.Va., announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their children , Christine Nic.ole and Craig Lewis.
The bride-elect is a 1991 graduate of Southern High School
and attended Ohio University
She is currently employed at the
University. She is the granddaughter of Mae Christian of
Midcllepon.
Her fiance is a 1993 graduate of
Wahama High and a 1997 graduate of West Virginia. Institute of
Technology with a degree in
printing technology. He is cur-

rently employed by Tom Peden
Chevrolet in Ripley, W.Va.
He is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Young of Clifton, W.
Va., Raymond Lieving of West
Columbus,W.Va.; and Earl Roush
of Pomeroy. He is the greatgrandson of Quida Chase of
M iddleport Mr. and Mrs. Hervin
A. Lieving of Mason, W.Va., and
Emma Fox of Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will
take place on Saturday, Sept. 9 at
St. Paul Lutheran Church in New
Haven, W.Va. Music will begin at
6 p.m with the cere mony to follow at 6:30 p.m. A reception will
follow at the New Haven Community Building.

Space Achievement theme of 15
new stamps, 5 souvenir sheets
BY IYD KRONIIH
FOR AP SPECIAL FiATURES
~pace Achievement and Explo-

ration of the Universe is the
theme of 15 new stamps and five
aouvenir sheetalslued l:ly the U.S.
Postal Service. This ambitious
program features high-priced
stamps - not the usual 33-cent
items.
This colorful array was first
placed on di1play July 7-16 at
Stamp Expo 2000 in Anaheim,
Calif. They are now available at
your local post office.
The first two are $11.75
Express Ma il rate stamps. One
shows a view of Earth based on
images supplied by NASA. The
'
other illustrates the lunar landing,
also from NASA images.
•
Carrle Williams and Richard Wamsley
Two Priority Mail stamps
'
(S3.20) depict the International
Space Station. Six 60-cent International rate stamps portray the
Hubble Space Telescope and pho. RUTLAND Charles and employed at the Meig; License tos of the Radio lnferometer.
Karen W1lliams of Rutland Bureau . Her finance is a 1996
The final five stamps feature the
announce the cngagernent and graduate of Meigs High School first pentagonal stamps in U.S.
approaching marriage of their Sc hool. and a 1998 graduate of history. These $1 stamps present
daughter, Carrie Elaine to the Hocking Police Academy, and views of the sun, a solar eclipse, a
Richard Lee Wamsley. ll. s~n of is employed as an adult probation
Richard and Charlotte Wamsley office in Meigs Cou nry.
of Racine.
Th e weddmg will take place on
Sept. 2 at 4:30 p.m at the Racine
United Methodist Church.

..

~ Williams- Wamsley engagement

.

51-

..

.

"

Clark- Walters wedding
Terri Lea Clark and Travis Joe
Walters were united in marriage on May 20, 2000, at First
Lutheran C hurch in Parkers- .
burg, W.Va.
Dirk andValerie Roe were soloists.
Pastor James Kinsler officiatA reception was held at the ed at the double-ring ceremoRamada Plaza Ciry Center Hotel, ny. A reception was held at the
Wheeling.
Vienna Community Building .
The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a \992 graduate of
Buckeye Local Hi gh School and a Rodney and Shirley Clark of
1996 graduate of Ohio University, Waverly, W.Va. The bridegroom
with a bachelor of science degree is the son. of Lonnie and Carol
in conununication disorders from Walters. of Guysville. He is th e
Southern Connetic ut State Uni- grandson of Mr. and Mrs .
versity. She is employed by Hills- Richard Stephenson of Netborough County School District sonville, and Mrs. Eleanor Wal ofTarnpa, Fla. as a speech/ language ters M cLe ad of Albany and the
pathologist.
· late Denney Walters.
Her hmband is a 1992 graduate
Given in marriage by her
of Kyger C reek High School in parents and escorted to the
Gallipolis and a 1997 graduate of altar by her father, the bride
Ohio University. with a dual bacli- wore a long-·sleeved gown of
elor's degree in management infor- satin and lace . The fitted bodice
mation systems and o~ganiz.ation al was decorated with seed pearls
conununications. He is employed and sequins. and featured a
by Kforee.com ofTampa, Fla. as an scoop ne,c kline trimmed in
independent computer consulta nt. pearls . The waistline was
Following a wedding trip 10 the accented by' a matte satin bow,
French Polynesia Islands of Tahiti, and the full skirt .cu lmin ated in·
Moorea, Bora Bora, and Huahi'ne,
the couple will reside in ·Bradenton, Fla.

Mrs. Craig Wedzel Kingery

Shields-Kingery wedding

Robyn Stout and Jonathan Sargent

Stout engagement
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Todd Ragan of Gallipolis and
Stout
of Syracuse Drs. Ted Nichting and Craig
David
announce the upcoming mar- Green of Jackson.
riage of their daughter, Robyn
H er fiance is a 1992 graduate of
Ann Stout, to Jonathan Edward
Meigs High School. He attended
Sargent, son of Guy Sargent of
Rio Grande Universiry and Ohio
Pomeroy and Sandi Mathews of
Universiry, and is currendy
Athens.
The bride-elect is a 1991 grad- employed with American Electric
uate of Racine Southern High Power at the Racine HydroelecSchool, a 1955 graduate of Ohio tric Plant.
The wedding will take place
Universiry and a 1999 graduate of
The Ohio State University Col- Sept. 16 at Trinity Congregationlege of Optometry She is cur- al Church in Pomeroy with P~s­
rendy in private practice with Dr. tor Roger Watson officiating.

NASA image of sunrise from
space, a solar eruption and a
photo from Earth showing the
sun ag2inst a cloudy 1ky.
The Jlluvenir theetl are -tatltll:c"L1anding on the Moon" and
. "Space Achievement and Exploration" (each com $11.75),
"Exploring the Graviry of the
Earth" ($6.40), "Probing the VastCome Celebrate
ness of Space" ($3.60) and
"Exploring the Solar system"
Your New Beginning
($5).
&amp; Our New Beginning!
First day of issue postmarks are
Pr8 1 ·
Sunday, August 13 th
il
bl
b
I
"'"II··
"
ava a e Ymai .You may buy the
l'roparins..
845 Skidmore
Road
stamps or souvenir she~ts at your
l'roclairn5 minutes out SR 160 from
local post office, affix the items to 1--.. --.. . ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . . ... ................. ·-·Holzer Hospital
your envelopes, address the Pastor Chuck Stansberry
envelopes and place in a larger
one addressed to: Postmaster, 701
Services for the ENTIRE FAMILY I
N. Loara St., Anaheim, Calif. Sunday Morning Fellowship ..................... 9:15am
92803-9991.1ndicate your choice Sunday School. ................ ........ .. ... ...... 9:30 om
of stamps and/or souvenir sheets. Sunday Morning Worship Service ......... ·... 10:45 am
The Stamp Fulfillment Services Sunday Evening Bible Study &amp;
of the U.S. Postal Service will ·
Ch1'ldr
NOT offer first-day covers of
~
ens Workshop .. · .. · .... · ........ 6:30pm
these items. You can still order by' Wednesday Evening Bible Study &amp;
c aUing (800) sTAMP-24.
L...._ _ _c_. _h_il_d_re.:..;n.:..;s:._W_o.:..;r:.:.k::s.:h:.:o~
p~. .:.:..~. .:.:
..~.:.:
...:..:
...:.:
..~·.:.:
..~. .:..:
.._::6.:.::3::_:0~p_::m.:J
Your requests must be postmarked by Oct. 5.

( 'ountrysidc
l~:tptist

GALLIPOLIS- Tressa Renee
Shields and Craig Wedzel Kingery
were united in . marriage July 8,
.?(){)() at 2 o.m .. in St. Casimir
Church in Adena, with Monsignor
Kolesar officiating at the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Dolores and Charles Shields of
Cadiz. Parents of the groom are
Cheryl Kingery Sntith and Wedzel
Kingery of Gallipolis.
Shelley Ralston was maid of
honor; Angi e Cole, matron of
honor and Shane Blain served as
best man. Other attendants were
Heath er Shields, Melissa Wise,
Teresa Mink-Salcedo, Jamey Harrison,Angela Botz, Rashal Dunkle,
Laurel Bruhl, Eric Shields, Jason
Minton , Marc Villanueva, Gaerano
Aniello, Derek H arris, Brad Harris,
Shane Swisher and Kenneth
.~audiU. Shannon Meiser was
:dower girl and Colby Caudill was
~ ·iing bearer. Kathy Wiczulis and
·Misty ' Minton attended the guest
.15ook. Du•tin Kinsey was pianist,
·Rebecca Kowalski, organist and

a cathedral - length train with
sca ll oped lace edging. A headpiece of white roses held a
three-tier
ca thedral
veil

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Disposable Contact Lenses

trimmed in pearls. She car ried
a teardrop bouqu e t of gold
Did you know that millions of Americans now wear •
roses accented with dove
c harms, and silver and gold ribtact lenses which they need replaced only 0 " ' " " "· - •
bon.
or two ot longer? These lenses are
Jami M . Frazier, sister of th e "disposables."
bride , served as matron of
Fortunately for us. disposables are available to fit
honor. Bridesmaid was Jacklyn large perventage of the public. These lenses have bee n
K . McAtee.
big help for people whl have had problems in the pa •·
. The attendants wore floorth the regular cleaning of their contacts or with hP~\ru
length black and silver gowns deposits.
and carr ied si lver roses.
When disposal contact lenses were first developed,
Flower girl was Allexus M. only a small number of companies offered them a
Frazier , niece of the bnde.
limited options. Now patients can purchase
Ring bearer was Anthony J. lenses to be worn during the day or all day and "'~;m ,
Carr.
with tint, and even a correct for astigmatism.
Todd Walters was best man many options for contact lenses available today, m&lt;J(ej
for hi s brot her. Groomsman
le are ecperleclng better vision with greM&lt;•~"~
was Paul L. Carr. and ushers Jcclmfot't than ever before .
were Mike . Frazier and Vince
Are you a good candidate for disposal contact Iem&gt;es~l~
Bower.
trip to your optometrist can answer that and put
Following a honeymoon In tl)e road to Improved vision.
cruise to San Juan, St. Thomas
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.
and St. Croix , the newlyweds
224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
plan to live in Parkersburg.
992-3279 Toll Free t-877-583-2433

a

a

.

( 'ltapcl

j---:,---:---:-:----=-L-----------1

•

NAME·S IN THE NEWS
Madonna having a boy
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lourdes is gett ing a
brother: Madonn a confirms it'll be a boy when she
delivers her second child next month .
Her publicist, Liz Rosenberg. said Friday the
pregnant Material Girl has confirmed that she will
be having a boy.
· Madonna, 41, is eight months pregnant by Briti!h
director boyfriend G uy Ritchie. The baby is due
sometin1e in September.
Madonna and Ritchie announced in March thcv
were expecting a child . The si nger divorced acto.r
Sean Penn in 1989, and ha s a 3-year-old daughter,
Lourdes, from her relationship with Ca rlos Leon.

Guiliani wants to write
NEW YORK (AP)- Rudolph Guiliani is goinp;

In Your Sweet 1houghts

to write a book. Never nund that he doesn't yet

know what it'll be about, or when he'll ever finish it.
The New York mayor will need something to do
afier term linu ts force him ou t of City Hall in 15
months. He says he's not interested in being goVe-rnor or taking a cabinet post in a George W. Bush
administration, and he dropped out of the Senate
ra ce earlit·r this year after announcing he had prostate
cancer.

Giuliani has already disc ovcn·d the chief haza;d of
living the writer's life ... Sinn.~ I was U.S. attorney, I
thi nk actu ally it is four or five difl&lt;:rem versions rhat
i've st;uted,~· ht~ said .
Constance Sayn-, director of the pubhslun g trade
:1 Ssoci:1tion group Marketing Partners International.
predi cted a somew hat m odc'it adv:mce. "For :1 book
that Only ha s possibly region al imcrest, 1f he gets
S 100,000. I'd think he'd be doing well. although
what do I know'" Sayre said.
" Pu bli shers arc crazy." .

In tlie morning, in tfie evening,
in tfie scorcliing summer afternoon sun,
Your sootliing tfiougfits, my love, ·
'TOucfi me M.e tfie crisp ocean winds,
'T'fie wild flowers of tfie sfiore of my fieart
Uninliibitedly bloom .
On tfie moonless midniglit skies of my soul,
.'/[trillion brilliant stars twinkle incessantly,
Just witli your radiant tfiougfits,
.:My cfiarming love, to unveil
']Jfie dimmed vision with pfiospliorescence;
So well, my gracious love, l see you
.'1[/l across tfie endless universe.
Y~ur

with the right supplies for school at

Ages 4 through first grade will register at
Presbyterian Church
Grades 2 through 6 will register at the bandstand
in the Gallipolis City Park.

OHIO RIVER -PLAZA
Alcove Book Store
GNC
Radio Shack
Ames
JC Pen11ey .
Fantastic Sams
Rent-Way
Payless Shoes
Fashion Bug

'Do you know how fondly I love
.:My dearest loue, l loue to lose myseij·
In your meUifluous thougfit-s.

COMPLETE THE REGISTRATION FORM
BELOW AND BRING IT WITH YOU!I
SEE YOU THERE!!!

cfiJ{afesli rratel

r····- ~-------·······································

I

: Name: _ ___________
Address: _ __ _ _ _ __ __ _
: Age I Grade Completed: -------~
: Phone Number: ___________

I

!Admirers of poetry
I

·------------------------------- ----------------~-----·
•

ComplimerHs of

'Paul rTanedo, Cfiris .LucRscfieiter
.&amp; •Troy :Haslinger

I

State Route 7 Gallipolis

'

affechonate tfiougfits , my beloved love,
" .'/[re like tfie raindrops over tfie needy farmlands,
Like tfie smell of tfie soil
Yfjter a long awaited rainfall,
Like tfie nectar on your luscious lips,
Yf11d tfie fervor in your absorbing fiugs.

All Churches Invited to Come
August 14 - 18
6:30p.m. to 8:30p.m.
Gallipolis City Park

LOAD YOUR LOCKER

-. .

'

the slick-haired German host oH
techno-pop dance show calle(l
"Sprockets."
Myers had backed away fror(•
the movie, saying the script need~
ed work, and Universal Picturc&gt;s
sued in June for $3.8 million pltis
lost profits. Then, in July, Imagine
Entertainment sued for morf
than S30 nullion alleging Myer~
reneged on an agreement .·tP
write. produce and star in 'slt
film .
:•
Days later, the "Austin Po)Ye~ '
star countersued Universal ~
tures. Myers sought $20 1nil~1
for invasion of privacy and in~
tional infliction of emotional
tress, clairn.ing that a process s~»it­
er for the studio chased him "i&amp;"..
threatening manner down dalk,
windmg and unlit streets."
.: ;

'

llf.E;~~ !ii-IQfu~illlii5;;;,;;aPtmiD ~--.....
~ll!iiliiii!i[IIJI• -=s:-:=~
· :::;
· ~--QIJU..-:-=ii!iiiii!UJ

.,

'
'

to do 'Sprockets' movi~.

. 1 .

Benjamin D. Lewis and Tammy Beya

...

�.. - -· .
f

•

..

.-Page C2 • ltunba~ Gl:imu ·lttnlintl
)

Sunda~August13,2000

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

..

Sunday, August13, 2000

&amp;unbap GJ:imrs -iuntintl • .Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

-'

,.

Myers reaches deal

Engagements==

.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mike
Myers is as happy as a little girl.
The actor has reached a deal with
two movie studios that dissolves
three lawsuits so he · can move ·
ahead with a movie based on his
"Saturday Night Live" character
Dierer.
Though details of the agreement were not disclosed, Myers
said in a srarem~1t_Thursday he
will write his come1'!)-as a .. coproduction" for Universal Studios
and DreamWorks SKG, with
Imagine Entertainment producmg.
"I'm glad to put all of this
behind me and I'm looking forward to doing a movie that we
can all be proud of," said Myers,
who created the character of
Dieter (pronounced DEET-er),

' i;.; ,/1),,.'~)
~..,; ....
....,./·.·,_'

/

'

Terri Lea Clark and Travis Joe Walters

.

•
•

Chrl1tlne Hannon and Craig Rouah

Bays-Lewis engagement

Harmon-Roush engagement

.
• GALLIPOLIS - Homer and
Mary Bays of Gallipohs are
announcing the engagement and
upcoming wedding of their
daughter, Tanm1y, to Benjamin D.
Lewis.
·
. The bride-elect is a 1995 grad.uate of Gallia Academy High
:school and a 2000 graduate of
:Ohio State Universiry, with a
'bachelor's degree in business
administration. She is currently
·employed by McGraw-Hill Pub-

lishing Co. in Columbus.
The groom-elect is the son of
Stanley and Sherry Lewis of Oak
H1ll. He is a 1993 graduate of
Oak Hill High School, and currcndy the owner and operator of
a restaurant in Hilliard .
An open church wedding will
be held Sept. 2, 2000 at Fellowship
Baptist Church, 600
McCormick Road, Gallipohs.
Music begins at 4 p.m.

RACINE Mr. and mrs.
James M. Harmon of Racine and
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph T. Roush of
N ew Haven, W.Va., announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their children , Christine Nic.ole and Craig Lewis.
The bride-elect is a 1991 graduate of Southern High School
and attended Ohio University
She is currently employed at the
University. She is the granddaughter of Mae Christian of
Midcllepon.
Her fiance is a 1993 graduate of
Wahama High and a 1997 graduate of West Virginia. Institute of
Technology with a degree in
printing technology. He is cur-

rently employed by Tom Peden
Chevrolet in Ripley, W.Va.
He is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Young of Clifton, W.
Va., Raymond Lieving of West
Columbus,W.Va.; and Earl Roush
of Pomeroy. He is the greatgrandson of Quida Chase of
M iddleport Mr. and Mrs. Hervin
A. Lieving of Mason, W.Va., and
Emma Fox of Pomeroy.
The open church wedding will
take place on Saturday, Sept. 9 at
St. Paul Lutheran Church in New
Haven, W.Va. Music will begin at
6 p.m with the cere mony to follow at 6:30 p.m. A reception will
follow at the New Haven Community Building.

Space Achievement theme of 15
new stamps, 5 souvenir sheets
BY IYD KRONIIH
FOR AP SPECIAL FiATURES
~pace Achievement and Explo-

ration of the Universe is the
theme of 15 new stamps and five
aouvenir sheetalslued l:ly the U.S.
Postal Service. This ambitious
program features high-priced
stamps - not the usual 33-cent
items.
This colorful array was first
placed on di1play July 7-16 at
Stamp Expo 2000 in Anaheim,
Calif. They are now available at
your local post office.
The first two are $11.75
Express Ma il rate stamps. One
shows a view of Earth based on
images supplied by NASA. The
'
other illustrates the lunar landing,
also from NASA images.
•
Carrle Williams and Richard Wamsley
Two Priority Mail stamps
'
(S3.20) depict the International
Space Station. Six 60-cent International rate stamps portray the
Hubble Space Telescope and pho. RUTLAND Charles and employed at the Meig; License tos of the Radio lnferometer.
Karen W1lliams of Rutland Bureau . Her finance is a 1996
The final five stamps feature the
announce the cngagernent and graduate of Meigs High School first pentagonal stamps in U.S.
approaching marriage of their Sc hool. and a 1998 graduate of history. These $1 stamps present
daughter, Carrie Elaine to the Hocking Police Academy, and views of the sun, a solar eclipse, a
Richard Lee Wamsley. ll. s~n of is employed as an adult probation
Richard and Charlotte Wamsley office in Meigs Cou nry.
of Racine.
Th e weddmg will take place on
Sept. 2 at 4:30 p.m at the Racine
United Methodist Church.

..

~ Williams- Wamsley engagement

.

51-

..

.

"

Clark- Walters wedding
Terri Lea Clark and Travis Joe
Walters were united in marriage on May 20, 2000, at First
Lutheran C hurch in Parkers- .
burg, W.Va.
Dirk andValerie Roe were soloists.
Pastor James Kinsler officiatA reception was held at the ed at the double-ring ceremoRamada Plaza Ciry Center Hotel, ny. A reception was held at the
Wheeling.
Vienna Community Building .
The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a \992 graduate of
Buckeye Local Hi gh School and a Rodney and Shirley Clark of
1996 graduate of Ohio University, Waverly, W.Va. The bridegroom
with a bachelor of science degree is the son. of Lonnie and Carol
in conununication disorders from Walters. of Guysville. He is th e
Southern Connetic ut State Uni- grandson of Mr. and Mrs .
versity. She is employed by Hills- Richard Stephenson of Netborough County School District sonville, and Mrs. Eleanor Wal ofTarnpa, Fla. as a speech/ language ters M cLe ad of Albany and the
pathologist.
· late Denney Walters.
Her hmband is a 1992 graduate
Given in marriage by her
of Kyger C reek High School in parents and escorted to the
Gallipolis and a 1997 graduate of altar by her father, the bride
Ohio University. with a dual bacli- wore a long-·sleeved gown of
elor's degree in management infor- satin and lace . The fitted bodice
mation systems and o~ganiz.ation al was decorated with seed pearls
conununications. He is employed and sequins. and featured a
by Kforee.com ofTampa, Fla. as an scoop ne,c kline trimmed in
independent computer consulta nt. pearls . The waistline was
Following a wedding trip 10 the accented by' a matte satin bow,
French Polynesia Islands of Tahiti, and the full skirt .cu lmin ated in·
Moorea, Bora Bora, and Huahi'ne,
the couple will reside in ·Bradenton, Fla.

Mrs. Craig Wedzel Kingery

Shields-Kingery wedding

Robyn Stout and Jonathan Sargent

Stout engagement
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Todd Ragan of Gallipolis and
Stout
of Syracuse Drs. Ted Nichting and Craig
David
announce the upcoming mar- Green of Jackson.
riage of their daughter, Robyn
H er fiance is a 1992 graduate of
Ann Stout, to Jonathan Edward
Meigs High School. He attended
Sargent, son of Guy Sargent of
Rio Grande Universiry and Ohio
Pomeroy and Sandi Mathews of
Universiry, and is currendy
Athens.
The bride-elect is a 1991 grad- employed with American Electric
uate of Racine Southern High Power at the Racine HydroelecSchool, a 1955 graduate of Ohio tric Plant.
The wedding will take place
Universiry and a 1999 graduate of
The Ohio State University Col- Sept. 16 at Trinity Congregationlege of Optometry She is cur- al Church in Pomeroy with P~s­
rendy in private practice with Dr. tor Roger Watson officiating.

NASA image of sunrise from
space, a solar eruption and a
photo from Earth showing the
sun ag2inst a cloudy 1ky.
The Jlluvenir theetl are -tatltll:c"L1anding on the Moon" and
. "Space Achievement and Exploration" (each com $11.75),
"Exploring the Graviry of the
Earth" ($6.40), "Probing the VastCome Celebrate
ness of Space" ($3.60) and
"Exploring the Solar system"
Your New Beginning
($5).
&amp; Our New Beginning!
First day of issue postmarks are
Pr8 1 ·
Sunday, August 13 th
il
bl
b
I
"'"II··
"
ava a e Ymai .You may buy the
l'roparins..
845 Skidmore
Road
stamps or souvenir she~ts at your
l'roclairn5 minutes out SR 160 from
local post office, affix the items to 1--.. --.. . ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . . ... ................. ·-·Holzer Hospital
your envelopes, address the Pastor Chuck Stansberry
envelopes and place in a larger
one addressed to: Postmaster, 701
Services for the ENTIRE FAMILY I
N. Loara St., Anaheim, Calif. Sunday Morning Fellowship ..................... 9:15am
92803-9991.1ndicate your choice Sunday School. ................ ........ .. ... ...... 9:30 om
of stamps and/or souvenir sheets. Sunday Morning Worship Service ......... ·... 10:45 am
The Stamp Fulfillment Services Sunday Evening Bible Study &amp;
of the U.S. Postal Service will ·
Ch1'ldr
NOT offer first-day covers of
~
ens Workshop .. · .. · .... · ........ 6:30pm
these items. You can still order by' Wednesday Evening Bible Study &amp;
c aUing (800) sTAMP-24.
L...._ _ _c_. _h_il_d_re.:..;n.:..;s:._W_o.:..;r:.:.k::s.:h:.:o~
p~. .:.:..~. .:.:
..~.:.:
...:..:
...:.:
..~·.:.:
..~. .:..:
.._::6.:.::3::_:0~p_::m.:J
Your requests must be postmarked by Oct. 5.

( 'ountrysidc
l~:tptist

GALLIPOLIS- Tressa Renee
Shields and Craig Wedzel Kingery
were united in . marriage July 8,
.?(){)() at 2 o.m .. in St. Casimir
Church in Adena, with Monsignor
Kolesar officiating at the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Dolores and Charles Shields of
Cadiz. Parents of the groom are
Cheryl Kingery Sntith and Wedzel
Kingery of Gallipolis.
Shelley Ralston was maid of
honor; Angi e Cole, matron of
honor and Shane Blain served as
best man. Other attendants were
Heath er Shields, Melissa Wise,
Teresa Mink-Salcedo, Jamey Harrison,Angela Botz, Rashal Dunkle,
Laurel Bruhl, Eric Shields, Jason
Minton , Marc Villanueva, Gaerano
Aniello, Derek H arris, Brad Harris,
Shane Swisher and Kenneth
.~audiU. Shannon Meiser was
:dower girl and Colby Caudill was
~ ·iing bearer. Kathy Wiczulis and
·Misty ' Minton attended the guest
.15ook. Du•tin Kinsey was pianist,
·Rebecca Kowalski, organist and

a cathedral - length train with
sca ll oped lace edging. A headpiece of white roses held a
three-tier
ca thedral
veil

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Disposable Contact Lenses

trimmed in pearls. She car ried
a teardrop bouqu e t of gold
Did you know that millions of Americans now wear •
roses accented with dove
c harms, and silver and gold ribtact lenses which they need replaced only 0 " ' " " "· - •
bon.
or two ot longer? These lenses are
Jami M . Frazier, sister of th e "disposables."
bride , served as matron of
Fortunately for us. disposables are available to fit
honor. Bridesmaid was Jacklyn large perventage of the public. These lenses have bee n
K . McAtee.
big help for people whl have had problems in the pa •·
. The attendants wore floorth the regular cleaning of their contacts or with hP~\ru
length black and silver gowns deposits.
and carr ied si lver roses.
When disposal contact lenses were first developed,
Flower girl was Allexus M. only a small number of companies offered them a
Frazier , niece of the bnde.
limited options. Now patients can purchase
Ring bearer was Anthony J. lenses to be worn during the day or all day and "'~;m ,
Carr.
with tint, and even a correct for astigmatism.
Todd Walters was best man many options for contact lenses available today, m&lt;J(ej
for hi s brot her. Groomsman
le are ecperleclng better vision with greM&lt;•~"~
was Paul L. Carr. and ushers Jcclmfot't than ever before .
were Mike . Frazier and Vince
Are you a good candidate for disposal contact Iem&gt;es~l~
Bower.
trip to your optometrist can answer that and put
Following a honeymoon In tl)e road to Improved vision.
cruise to San Juan, St. Thomas
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.
and St. Croix , the newlyweds
224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
plan to live in Parkersburg.
992-3279 Toll Free t-877-583-2433

a

a

.

( 'ltapcl

j---:,---:---:-:----=-L-----------1

•

NAME·S IN THE NEWS
Madonna having a boy
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lourdes is gett ing a
brother: Madonn a confirms it'll be a boy when she
delivers her second child next month .
Her publicist, Liz Rosenberg. said Friday the
pregnant Material Girl has confirmed that she will
be having a boy.
· Madonna, 41, is eight months pregnant by Briti!h
director boyfriend G uy Ritchie. The baby is due
sometin1e in September.
Madonna and Ritchie announced in March thcv
were expecting a child . The si nger divorced acto.r
Sean Penn in 1989, and ha s a 3-year-old daughter,
Lourdes, from her relationship with Ca rlos Leon.

Guiliani wants to write
NEW YORK (AP)- Rudolph Guiliani is goinp;

In Your Sweet 1houghts

to write a book. Never nund that he doesn't yet

know what it'll be about, or when he'll ever finish it.
The New York mayor will need something to do
afier term linu ts force him ou t of City Hall in 15
months. He says he's not interested in being goVe-rnor or taking a cabinet post in a George W. Bush
administration, and he dropped out of the Senate
ra ce earlit·r this year after announcing he had prostate
cancer.

Giuliani has already disc ovcn·d the chief haza;d of
living the writer's life ... Sinn.~ I was U.S. attorney, I
thi nk actu ally it is four or five difl&lt;:rem versions rhat
i've st;uted,~· ht~ said .
Constance Sayn-, director of the pubhslun g trade
:1 Ssoci:1tion group Marketing Partners International.
predi cted a somew hat m odc'it adv:mce. "For :1 book
that Only ha s possibly region al imcrest, 1f he gets
S 100,000. I'd think he'd be doing well. although
what do I know'" Sayre said.
" Pu bli shers arc crazy." .

In tlie morning, in tfie evening,
in tfie scorcliing summer afternoon sun,
Your sootliing tfiougfits, my love, ·
'TOucfi me M.e tfie crisp ocean winds,
'T'fie wild flowers of tfie sfiore of my fieart
Uninliibitedly bloom .
On tfie moonless midniglit skies of my soul,
.'/[trillion brilliant stars twinkle incessantly,
Just witli your radiant tfiougfits,
.:My cfiarming love, to unveil
']Jfie dimmed vision with pfiospliorescence;
So well, my gracious love, l see you
.'1[/l across tfie endless universe.
Y~ur

with the right supplies for school at

Ages 4 through first grade will register at
Presbyterian Church
Grades 2 through 6 will register at the bandstand
in the Gallipolis City Park.

OHIO RIVER -PLAZA
Alcove Book Store
GNC
Radio Shack
Ames
JC Pen11ey .
Fantastic Sams
Rent-Way
Payless Shoes
Fashion Bug

'Do you know how fondly I love
.:My dearest loue, l loue to lose myseij·
In your meUifluous thougfit-s.

COMPLETE THE REGISTRATION FORM
BELOW AND BRING IT WITH YOU!I
SEE YOU THERE!!!

cfiJ{afesli rratel

r····- ~-------·······································

I

: Name: _ ___________
Address: _ __ _ _ _ __ __ _
: Age I Grade Completed: -------~
: Phone Number: ___________

I

!Admirers of poetry
I

·------------------------------- ----------------~-----·
•

ComplimerHs of

'Paul rTanedo, Cfiris .LucRscfieiter
.&amp; •Troy :Haslinger

I

State Route 7 Gallipolis

'

affechonate tfiougfits , my beloved love,
" .'/[re like tfie raindrops over tfie needy farmlands,
Like tfie smell of tfie soil
Yfjter a long awaited rainfall,
Like tfie nectar on your luscious lips,
Yf11d tfie fervor in your absorbing fiugs.

All Churches Invited to Come
August 14 - 18
6:30p.m. to 8:30p.m.
Gallipolis City Park

LOAD YOUR LOCKER

-. .

'

the slick-haired German host oH
techno-pop dance show calle(l
"Sprockets."
Myers had backed away fror(•
the movie, saying the script need~
ed work, and Universal Picturc&gt;s
sued in June for $3.8 million pltis
lost profits. Then, in July, Imagine
Entertainment sued for morf
than S30 nullion alleging Myer~
reneged on an agreement .·tP
write. produce and star in 'slt
film .
:•
Days later, the "Austin Po)Ye~ '
star countersued Universal ~
tures. Myers sought $20 1nil~1
for invasion of privacy and in~
tional infliction of emotional
tress, clairn.ing that a process s~»it­
er for the studio chased him "i&amp;"..
threatening manner down dalk,
windmg and unlit streets."
.: ;

'

llf.E;~~ !ii-IQfu~illlii5;;;,;;aPtmiD ~--.....
~ll!iiliiii!i[IIJI• -=s:-:=~
· :::;
· ~--QIJU..-:-=ii!iiiii!UJ

.,

'
'

to do 'Sprockets' movi~.

. 1 .

Benjamin D. Lewis and Tammy Beya

...

�•

Page C4 • &amp;unbap tlimr&amp; -&amp;rnlinel

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

Sunday, August 13,2000

Sunday, Auguet 13, 2000

Gardening by the sea ·grows in popularity
W EST PORT, Con n. (AP) -Gard ening by obstacle - lousy soil. Good g;mleni ng dirt has
the sea separates the men fro m the boys , the been transpo rted in repeatedly and constantl y
wom en from the girls. It L1kes · grow n- u p enric hed. After a severe inundation, you have to
endurance to ma~e th e beaches bloom.
start all over again .
What you plant &lt;m e year m ay be, and oft e n
In such conditio ns, you might expect garis, wiped o ut by the fo llowing spring. Storm - deners to limit themselves to annuals fl oweri ng
driven high wate r may demo)ish you r perenni - in June, July and August and take no chances
als. Tho ugh not an instant killer, salt spray is with perennials exposed to the weather the
merciless over time. And constant wind pick s year around . In fact some perennials do com e
up sand from the beach and drops it o n plan ts through and a certain degree of fatali sm helps
and infiltrates it into law ns.
you bear the loss of th ose that don't .
The hose is much in actio n at seasid e g:ml ens
One wotnan here lost tluel! successive
to wash off salt deposits.
screens of privet hed ges she had nurtured over
We're talking of gardens set rig ht on the th e years, each a victim of fl ooding.
beach and not those o n high ground or mo re
O utstanding su rvivors are .ru gosa rose va riirtland areas wh ere, if o ut of reach of salt spray, eties. Lovely stands o f them prosper hereabo uts,
co nditions an." similar to a country garden. A som e edging qu ite cl ose to the wa ter. They
good exam ple of beac h garderung exists in ·com e in white, pink and red. Here is w hat the
Westpo rt at an enclave I visit called C ompo ca talog of th e Twombly N ursery of M o nroe,
Cove fac ing Lo ng Island Sound on one side Conn. (203-261-2133) says about ru gosa:
and salt marshes o n the· o ther. A few times, h1gh
" Amo ng the to ug hest and most vigorous of
water has com e in from bo th sides, inundatin g all roses, with handsom e, glossy green foliage
the vegetation. This ca n be fatal, depe nding o n whic h never seems to get a spot. Rugosas are
how lo ng the water rc:mams before receding.
an excellent choice tOr the shore as they are
G a rd ~ n eTs he re have pe rsevered despit e
extre mely salt- and wind- toleran t and their
flood, salt spray and sa nd and an oth e r maj o r Sll ckeri ng habit helps to hold the soil. Brigh t

BY lH E AS SOCIATED PRESS

Eastman 40th anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Robert and
Sheila Eastman celebrated their
40th wedding anniversary onJuly
30,' 2000.
The couple was married in
1960 at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
A surprise parry in honor of the

couple was given by Kevin and
Susan Eastman at the Down
Under Restaurant. Several fri e nds
and family members attended.
Robert and Sheila Eastman
reside in Gallipolis.They own and
operate Ohio Valley Supermarkets.

Weekly cha rt' for the nation's
most popular vide os as they
appea r in next week's iss ue of
Billbo ard m agazine. Reprinted
with Penn ission :

FAMILY MATTERS

ora nge hips are an added bo nus in the fall."
Suckering refe rs to shoots that com e up fro m
the roots or lower part of a plant.
Hydrangeas, including climbers, and lilies do
well at ·the shore. The~blu e lacecap hydrangea
(H. macrophylla co eru lea), shows off its -large
h eads of clear blu e in July and August in most
gardens he re. Field Wies are abundant and there
are golden sweeps o f yarrow (achillea) contrasting with tall clusters o f purple Russian sage.·
Most vegetables being annuals , no heroic
measures o r special plants are needed to grow ·
to matoes, peppers o r beans. Beets, kal e and :
spinach are listed as having especially good salt
tolerance. G ood soil , r1aturally, is a must.
Because th e underlying soil here is so poor,.
mu ch gardening is do ne in ra ised beds containin g impo rted to pso il. Some of th e Cove is
a private area reached by a wa lk too narrow for . ·
cars or trucks. So the residents carry in thek
topsoil (and groce ri es) by w heel barrow from .
the parking lo t. Many bags of topsoil and trips · :
up the path are needed to fill even a modest · ,
raised bed. Since thiS must ofte n be repeated :
year after year, garde ning here is no t for the·
couc h ·potato.

Top Kids Video Sales
(Compiled from a national sample of sales reports)
1. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: SwitchIng Goals," Dualstar Video.
2.
"Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley:
Schooldance Party," Dual star
Video,
3. "Pokemon: The First Movie ,"
Warner Home VIdeo.
4. "The Powerpuff Girls: Bubblevicious," New Line Home Video.
5. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: Amazing
Adventures ," Dualstar Video.
6. "Powerpuff Girls: Monkey See,
Doggie Do," New Line Home Video.
for a family of four was an annual
7. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: Greatest
income . below $16,600. The for- Parties," Dualstar Video.
8. "SaludosAmlgos, " Walt Disney
mula used to determine the paver- Home Video.
ry rate hadn't changed in three
9. "Elmo's World ," Sony Wonder.
10. "Mulan," Walt Disney ·Home
decades except for inflation adjustments.
Video.
·
· L"d
Copyright 2000, BPI CommunlTh 1
e ong-term mcrcase 111 CCUJ
cations Inc. end SoundScan Inc.
poverty has been especially evident
Top VIdeo Rentals
in California, where the number of
(Compiled from a national sarnpoor children grew from 900,000 pie of rental reports)
in 1979 to 2.'15 million in 1998.
1. "The Talented Mr. Ripley,"
One in six poor American children Paramount Home Video .
.
.
.
.
2 . "The Hurricane " Universal
now lives m Califorrua, the srudy Studios Home V'd 0 '
found. ~
· ~-. 3 . "Magnolia,'~ ~ ~ Line Home
The srudy also found that paver- Video.
ry is less concentrated in the South
4 . "Th.e Ninth Gate, " Artisan
than it has been in past years. Of Hom~ Entertainm.?nt. .
the nine states that reduced their
5. The Beach, FoxVrdeo.
-1
.
6. "Botler Room," New Line
chid poverty ,rates by one th1rd or Home Video.
more since 1993, six ate in the
7. "The Green Mile " Warner
South, according to the study.
Home Video.
·
'
"
In 1979, seven of nine states with
8. "Girl, Interrupted, " Columbia
poverty rates significanrly higher TriSt~r Home Video..
.
"
than the 16 percent national aver9 . Dfi!uce Btgalow. Male Grgolo,
.
Touchstone Home-Ntdeo.
age were m the South. Today o rtly
1o. "American Beauty," Dre a mtwo of SJ X Southern states Works Home Entertainment.
Top Video Sales
Louisiana and West Virginia have a significa nrly higher pove rry
(Compiled from a national sam rate, with 29 percent and about 27 pie of sales report s)
percent, respec tively. ·

Study: U.S. children escaping poverty,
but still poorer than 20 years ago
NEW YORK (AP) The
povet1}' rate among American children has decreased since it hit high
levels in the early 1990s, and the
South is breaking its history as a
pocket of the poor. a study released
Thursday shows.
Despite the improvement, the
poverty rate for children still is
higher than 20 years ago, according
to the report by the National Center for Children in Poverty. a nonpartisan research center at Columbia_Universiry. _· - ·
About 13.3 million U.S. children
lived in poverty in 1998, the most
recent year for which data is available. They represented almost 19
percent of the counrry's 71 million
children.
In 1979, 16 percent of the
nati;o n 's then 63 million children
lived in poverty.
The rate reached a recent high in
1993, when 22 .5 percent of American youngsters lived in poverty.
The study analyzed annual
income data from the Census
Bureau for 1979 through 1998.
In 1998, the poverty threshold

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1. "The Sixth Sense," Hollywood
3. "The Matrix,'' Warner Home
Pictures Home Video .
Video .
2 . "American Pie,' ' Universal Stu4. "The Whole Nine Yards,"
dios Home Video .
Warner Home Video.
3. "My Dog Skip," Warner Home
5. "The Princess Bride," MGM
Video.
Home Entertainment.
4. "Sex Arid The City," HBO
6. "Jaws Anniversary Collector's
Home Video.
Edition (Dolby)," Universal Studios
5. "South Park: Bigger, Longer &amp; Home Video.
Uncut," Paramount Home Video .
7.
"Independence
Day,"
6. "Playboy Video Centerfold FoxVideo.
Playmate Of The Year 2000 1" Playe. "The Hurricane, " Universal
boy Home Video.
Studios Home Video .
7. "The World Is Not Enough ,"
9. "The Beach," FoxVideo.
MGM Home Entertainment.
e. "Playboy's Wet &amp; Wild - Slippery When 'Wet i ' Playboy Home
Video.
9. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley : Switch·
• lng Goals," Oualttar Video .
10. "Brltney Spears : nme Out
With Brltney Spears," Jive/Zomba
VIdeo.
Top DVO Sales ·
(Compiled from a national sample of sales reports)
1. "Romeo Must Die ," Warner
Home VIdeo.
2 . "The Green Mile ," Warner
Home Video .

10. "The Ninth Gate," Artisan .
Home Entertainment.

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Olasmoblle

Cooking is dirty work.·
Wash your hands
GALLIPOLIS - If you keep
ground meat in its wrapper, is it
okay to thaw it at room temperature ?
You 're taking a risk if you thaw
a ny kind of meat at room temperature. The problem is that
meat isn 't sterile - there can be
bacteria in the meat, even if it's
tu cked away ni'c e and neat inside
its store wrapper.
Th e problem oc curs when
meat stays for too long in the
"danger 'zone" between 40
d egrees and 140 degrees Fahrenheit. That's when bacteria multiplies most rapidly. Two hours in
that zone is recommended cu t-otf
ti1ne.
Too much bacteria increases
the likelihood of illness, even if ·
the meat is cooked thoroughly.
That's because some rypes of bacteria produ ce toxins . Although
bacteria is killed when meat
reaches cooking temperatures, the
toXins can remain .
Besides, most people can't be
sure that they're cooking meat
thoroughly. Using a meat ther- .
mometer is the only way to be
certain (ground beef should be
cooked to 160 degrees). In a
recent study, Utah State University researchers found that 35 perce~.t of study participants cooiting
meadoaf undere&lt;&gt;oked it. Another
42 percent undercooked chicken,
and 17 percent undercooked fish.
The study found a lot of other
kitchen safety violat ions. The
researchers put video cameras in
people 's kitchens, using the ruse
that they wanted to see how people cooked a special recipe the
researchers had given them. For
their participation, the consumers

Becky
Collins
GUEST VIEW
•

were given $50 and free groceries.
Similar studies have been conducted in the past few years by
other organizations, and two critical practices seem to be habitually ignored by consumers: handwashing with soap and preventing
cross-contamination .
In the Utah study, more than
half the participants failed to wash
their hands before starting to
cook. Also, each cook skipped
washing hands an average of
seven times during the cooking
process when researchers said
they should have washed.
Some cooks just rinsed their
hands and wiped them with a
towel a towel that then
became a breeding ground for
bacteria. Every time the cooks
touched the towel, they likely
contaminated their hands again.
Foo'd safery experts recommend using paper towels for
quick clean-up and for drying
hands during cooking. And paying attention to the old admonition "wash your hands" is always a
good idea.

(Becky Collins is Callia County's

Exttmion agtnl for family and con·
.sumer sciences, Ohio SttJte Univtrsi·
ty.)

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&amp;unba!' tl!:imrll -&amp;eittinel • Page C5

I

THE WEEK'S TOP VIDEOS
Shlela and Robert Eastman

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

An array of voices:
West Virginia oets'
anthology~pu lishedHUNTINGTON (AP)
More West Virginia poets than you
knew existed 134 of them,
from Wilma Startley Acree to Peter
Zivkovi c give voi ce to "the
enduring vitality" of po~try in a
new anthology by a Huntington
publisher.
"Wild Sweet Notes: 50 years of
West Virginia Poetry" is the first
of
compreh e nsive collection
po e ms by writers who have lived
and worked in the state.
The book "is a landmark in West .
Virginia's literary hi story," said
Gordon Sirru110ns of Huntington's
Renaissance Book Company.
"Tilis work is conclusive evidence of the enduring vitality and th e c urrent renaissance - of
poetry.'' Simmons said .
Many of the poets are well - ..
kn own, so m e of them former state
poe ts laureate like""'uriel Dressler,
Lo uise M cNeill and Roy Lee
Harmo n. Th e titl e springs fro m
on &lt;• ' of
Dress ler's
wo rks,
" Appalachia ."
.. Enigmatic.
"How can you find rappo rt
with me - ...
" You, who never dan ced to
wild swret n otes,
"Outpo uring of nnnble -fi ngered fi dd lers:"
.
Others included m the volume
are not so familia r, or are best
know n fo r their work in o th er
gen res.
Billy Edd Wheeler, perhaps best
known to the rest of the world as
a w riter of country-western songs
recorded by o th er artists, demonstrates in thi s volum e that -he d oesn't nee d a backbeat to get his
words to sing. Listen to the rhythm
of"Silent Mountain":
" What it was, was never mu ch,
1 know / A ca mp, the hills - o nly
t he f.1llc n snow/ Cou ld fla tter
w hat every other day I Sjw f.,d mg
bare and oily gray./ Bu t it was
home./ It was a pl ace to go."
T he volume is donlinated by
free verse, like Ed Davis' " He
Coul d Writ e":
" Man, thai dude could write;
slap dashes, carve clauses and frame
phrases glib as Gettysburg addresses,'' it begins.

Billy Edd Wheeler, perhcrps
be.•t known to the re$t of the
world as a writer o.f cmmtl'}'-ll'estern scmgs recordec{
hJ' other artists, demoustrates in this volume tlta(
lu doem 't need a l•ackbeat
to get ltis word.( to sing.
Listen to tire rh}'tlun of
"Silmt Mountain":
"Wllat it was, u•,zs never
rnuch, I kuouJ I A camp, tire
/tills- cmly tltc.falll.'lt
·snow I Ccmld jlatteJ· wit at
eVI.'IJ' otlm daJ' I Smv fading lwrc ,md oily grar. l Bw
it IIIIlS frome. I It w.zs a
place tv go."
" Yes, that dude could flat gab in
manuscript , tan go wi th lingo,
wo rdplay hi s way straigh t into
yo ur heart , gyrate , pontifi ca te,
then, dipping , rip o ut the page~
False Start'- and begin his wordwooin g all Over."
O r there is Victor Depta's recollecti on of the Buffalo Creek flood
of 1972, titl ed "Well Somebo dy on
Buffalo C reek" :
" Th ey m arke d th e kilt ery
hou ses w ith a yellow X like
Passover o nl y it already happ ened .
I wo nder wh ere they go t the
paint' Probably got it from Island
C reek Sto res. It's still there."
The boo k is pu blished by Publish ers Place In c. _o f Huntin gto n
and supported b y a gran t fro m
M-o untai neer R ace Trac k and
Ganling R esort at Ch ester in
Hancock Coun ry.
Mo un taineer CEO Edson R .
Ar neau h sald his co mpany bel ieves
in the impo rtance of writing and
creativity in stre n gthe ni ng . West
Virgi nia "as a vibrant ~nery:'
Jo hn Patrick Grace, co-dltec tor
of Publishers Place , said the work
fits nea tly into his org-•nization 's
mission.
The boo k's editors and publishers collected the poetry over three
years.

COMMUNITY CORNER

Noel compiles ultimate Wahama scrapbook -----.
•

Pat Roush Noel has prepared
an album of memories which
contains senior pictures and
class photos taken from school
yearbooks and personal collections of every class which has
graduated from Wahama High
School since 193 7. There is ·also
included a complete roster of
graduates.
Just imagine the hours and
hours of work which the WHS
Alumni Association officer put
into preparing that album , and
then think of all the pleasure it
will bring as the years go by.

•••
For Sen. Mike DeWine 's visit
to the Senior Citizens Center
Tuesday, the decorations were all
red, white and blue, as was Judge
Bob Buck's tie. He wore a flag
tie - not one of those tacky
ones that are so popular, but a
real classy one.

•••
From the time one Ohio State
Fair ends until the next begins,
Dale Hoffman of Lincoln
Heights is busy planning and
'· preparing entries. And for him
year after. year it pays off with
ribbons and premiums.
This year he had 51 entries
and won 22 ribbons .
He took firsts with his entries
in sugarfree candy, a watermelon
rind pickle, and apples; second!
in strawberry preserves and
applesauce ; third places in sugarfree pie,
carrots, dried
pineapple, dried corn, dried
mushrooms,
dried
flower
arrangement, and a picture
other than wool; and placed
fourth in sugarfree muffins,
sugarfree cake, red raspberry
jelly, grape butter, orange marmalade, corn relish, cherries,
dried green peppers, dried
onions and ceramic pieces.
Everybody likes to be a win-

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY
ner and Dale is that when it
comes to his fair entries.

•••

Pat Roush Noel ha..• prepared an allmm qf memories which mntains se11ior
pictures and class plrotos
takeu frmil sclrool yea¥boolts aud persoual collections 1?f er•ery class which
ha.• graduated jrom
Uilhama High SchmJ/,
on . We turn on the television
and a picture appears .
And if it doesn 't happen just
that way we get all frustrated
and out of sorts .Well maybe you
don't, but I do.
So when the ele ctricity went
out along with the cabl e and the
telephon e during the storm
Wednesday and for 20 or so
hours I struggled with a flashlight , ate tomato sandwi ches and
peanut butter cooki es, parked
my car far from the house
because a tree blo cke d the
street, and couldn't even call
anyone to commiserate with
me, I decided I must be defi-

When it comes to families and
marriages, th~ Piggotts lay claim
to a longevity ·record. The
brothers and sisters and their
spouses, and a couple of in-l aws,
have marriages which have each
spann ed nearly six decades.
In the group are Delmar and
Kathryn Bailey B aum , Rex and
Sina Piggott Bailey, Harry L.
and Margaret Thomas Bailey,
Rexal and Ann Piggott Summerfield, and Henry and Eileen
Piggott Bahr.
The Baums were married in
1944, the Harry Baileys in 1942, ~~SJ:~~,:;
the Bahrs in 1943, t.he Joseph ~
Baileys in 1942, and the Summerfields in 1939.

·-·-

..••-.

cient on coping skills. Anyo ne:
•
offering a class?

•••

:-·

-..

Whatever happened to the- ;
lazy, hazy, crazy days of summe r.:;
lr seems only yesterday th at :
graduations were taking place:
and here we are j ust nine days '
away from th e start of anothe~:
sc hool year.
•.
But first the fair whic h o ffi 7:
cially opens tomorrow, but gets:
into swing tonight with a :;
parad e, c rowning of royalry, and :
the traditional rehgious servi ce~ ~·
at the grandstand .
: ;:
The carnival rides are go ing ·:
up, some booths are already
se rving food, the ex hibitors are ~
adding the finishing touches to :
their di splays, and the judging
has already started.
The fairgrounds will be
ro ckin' all week. I'll be there.
Will you?
(Char/me Hoeflich is a Times·
Ser~rinel

staff writer.)

•••
We take everything so much
for granted. We pick up the telephone and get a dial tone. We
flip a switch ahd the lights come

Gallia County Health Department
Prenatal Clinic

Kids VB9 Revival
Rodney Pike Churoh Of God
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August 18 &amp; 19 e:ao p.m.
11:00o..m. 9unday-20th
Info &amp; Pre-register Cell:
(740) 246-9618

•

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�•

Page C4 • &amp;unbap tlimr&amp; -&amp;rnlinel

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

Sunday, August 13,2000

Sunday, Auguet 13, 2000

Gardening by the sea ·grows in popularity
W EST PORT, Con n. (AP) -Gard ening by obstacle - lousy soil. Good g;mleni ng dirt has
the sea separates the men fro m the boys , the been transpo rted in repeatedly and constantl y
wom en from the girls. It L1kes · grow n- u p enric hed. After a severe inundation, you have to
endurance to ma~e th e beaches bloom.
start all over again .
What you plant &lt;m e year m ay be, and oft e n
In such conditio ns, you might expect garis, wiped o ut by the fo llowing spring. Storm - deners to limit themselves to annuals fl oweri ng
driven high wate r may demo)ish you r perenni - in June, July and August and take no chances
als. Tho ugh not an instant killer, salt spray is with perennials exposed to the weather the
merciless over time. And constant wind pick s year around . In fact some perennials do com e
up sand from the beach and drops it o n plan ts through and a certain degree of fatali sm helps
and infiltrates it into law ns.
you bear the loss of th ose that don't .
The hose is much in actio n at seasid e g:ml ens
One wotnan here lost tluel! successive
to wash off salt deposits.
screens of privet hed ges she had nurtured over
We're talking of gardens set rig ht on the th e years, each a victim of fl ooding.
beach and not those o n high ground or mo re
O utstanding su rvivors are .ru gosa rose va riirtland areas wh ere, if o ut of reach of salt spray, eties. Lovely stands o f them prosper hereabo uts,
co nditions an." similar to a country garden. A som e edging qu ite cl ose to the wa ter. They
good exam ple of beac h garderung exists in ·com e in white, pink and red. Here is w hat the
Westpo rt at an enclave I visit called C ompo ca talog of th e Twombly N ursery of M o nroe,
Cove fac ing Lo ng Island Sound on one side Conn. (203-261-2133) says about ru gosa:
and salt marshes o n the· o ther. A few times, h1gh
" Amo ng the to ug hest and most vigorous of
water has com e in from bo th sides, inundatin g all roses, with handsom e, glossy green foliage
the vegetation. This ca n be fatal, depe nding o n whic h never seems to get a spot. Rugosas are
how lo ng the water rc:mams before receding.
an excellent choice tOr the shore as they are
G a rd ~ n eTs he re have pe rsevered despit e
extre mely salt- and wind- toleran t and their
flood, salt spray and sa nd and an oth e r maj o r Sll ckeri ng habit helps to hold the soil. Brigh t

BY lH E AS SOCIATED PRESS

Eastman 40th anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Robert and
Sheila Eastman celebrated their
40th wedding anniversary onJuly
30,' 2000.
The couple was married in
1960 at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
A surprise parry in honor of the

couple was given by Kevin and
Susan Eastman at the Down
Under Restaurant. Several fri e nds
and family members attended.
Robert and Sheila Eastman
reside in Gallipolis.They own and
operate Ohio Valley Supermarkets.

Weekly cha rt' for the nation's
most popular vide os as they
appea r in next week's iss ue of
Billbo ard m agazine. Reprinted
with Penn ission :

FAMILY MATTERS

ora nge hips are an added bo nus in the fall."
Suckering refe rs to shoots that com e up fro m
the roots or lower part of a plant.
Hydrangeas, including climbers, and lilies do
well at ·the shore. The~blu e lacecap hydrangea
(H. macrophylla co eru lea), shows off its -large
h eads of clear blu e in July and August in most
gardens he re. Field Wies are abundant and there
are golden sweeps o f yarrow (achillea) contrasting with tall clusters o f purple Russian sage.·
Most vegetables being annuals , no heroic
measures o r special plants are needed to grow ·
to matoes, peppers o r beans. Beets, kal e and :
spinach are listed as having especially good salt
tolerance. G ood soil , r1aturally, is a must.
Because th e underlying soil here is so poor,.
mu ch gardening is do ne in ra ised beds containin g impo rted to pso il. Some of th e Cove is
a private area reached by a wa lk too narrow for . ·
cars or trucks. So the residents carry in thek
topsoil (and groce ri es) by w heel barrow from .
the parking lo t. Many bags of topsoil and trips · :
up the path are needed to fill even a modest · ,
raised bed. Since thiS must ofte n be repeated :
year after year, garde ning here is no t for the·
couc h ·potato.

Top Kids Video Sales
(Compiled from a national sample of sales reports)
1. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: SwitchIng Goals," Dualstar Video.
2.
"Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley:
Schooldance Party," Dual star
Video,
3. "Pokemon: The First Movie ,"
Warner Home VIdeo.
4. "The Powerpuff Girls: Bubblevicious," New Line Home Video.
5. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: Amazing
Adventures ," Dualstar Video.
6. "Powerpuff Girls: Monkey See,
Doggie Do," New Line Home Video.
for a family of four was an annual
7. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley: Greatest
income . below $16,600. The for- Parties," Dualstar Video.
8. "SaludosAmlgos, " Walt Disney
mula used to determine the paver- Home Video.
ry rate hadn't changed in three
9. "Elmo's World ," Sony Wonder.
10. "Mulan," Walt Disney ·Home
decades except for inflation adjustments.
Video.
·
· L"d
Copyright 2000, BPI CommunlTh 1
e ong-term mcrcase 111 CCUJ
cations Inc. end SoundScan Inc.
poverty has been especially evident
Top VIdeo Rentals
in California, where the number of
(Compiled from a national sarnpoor children grew from 900,000 pie of rental reports)
in 1979 to 2.'15 million in 1998.
1. "The Talented Mr. Ripley,"
One in six poor American children Paramount Home Video .
.
.
.
.
2 . "The Hurricane " Universal
now lives m Califorrua, the srudy Studios Home V'd 0 '
found. ~
· ~-. 3 . "Magnolia,'~ ~ ~ Line Home
The srudy also found that paver- Video.
ry is less concentrated in the South
4 . "Th.e Ninth Gate, " Artisan
than it has been in past years. Of Hom~ Entertainm.?nt. .
the nine states that reduced their
5. The Beach, FoxVrdeo.
-1
.
6. "Botler Room," New Line
chid poverty ,rates by one th1rd or Home Video.
more since 1993, six ate in the
7. "The Green Mile " Warner
South, according to the study.
Home Video.
·
'
"
In 1979, seven of nine states with
8. "Girl, Interrupted, " Columbia
poverty rates significanrly higher TriSt~r Home Video..
.
"
than the 16 percent national aver9 . Dfi!uce Btgalow. Male Grgolo,
.
Touchstone Home-Ntdeo.
age were m the South. Today o rtly
1o. "American Beauty," Dre a mtwo of SJ X Southern states Works Home Entertainment.
Top Video Sales
Louisiana and West Virginia have a significa nrly higher pove rry
(Compiled from a national sam rate, with 29 percent and about 27 pie of sales report s)
percent, respec tively. ·

Study: U.S. children escaping poverty,
but still poorer than 20 years ago
NEW YORK (AP) The
povet1}' rate among American children has decreased since it hit high
levels in the early 1990s, and the
South is breaking its history as a
pocket of the poor. a study released
Thursday shows.
Despite the improvement, the
poverty rate for children still is
higher than 20 years ago, according
to the report by the National Center for Children in Poverty. a nonpartisan research center at Columbia_Universiry. _· - ·
About 13.3 million U.S. children
lived in poverty in 1998, the most
recent year for which data is available. They represented almost 19
percent of the counrry's 71 million
children.
In 1979, 16 percent of the
nati;o n 's then 63 million children
lived in poverty.
The rate reached a recent high in
1993, when 22 .5 percent of American youngsters lived in poverty.
The study analyzed annual
income data from the Census
Bureau for 1979 through 1998.
In 1998, the poverty threshold

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1. "The Sixth Sense," Hollywood
3. "The Matrix,'' Warner Home
Pictures Home Video .
Video .
2 . "American Pie,' ' Universal Stu4. "The Whole Nine Yards,"
dios Home Video .
Warner Home Video.
3. "My Dog Skip," Warner Home
5. "The Princess Bride," MGM
Video.
Home Entertainment.
4. "Sex Arid The City," HBO
6. "Jaws Anniversary Collector's
Home Video.
Edition (Dolby)," Universal Studios
5. "South Park: Bigger, Longer &amp; Home Video.
Uncut," Paramount Home Video .
7.
"Independence
Day,"
6. "Playboy Video Centerfold FoxVideo.
Playmate Of The Year 2000 1" Playe. "The Hurricane, " Universal
boy Home Video.
Studios Home Video .
7. "The World Is Not Enough ,"
9. "The Beach," FoxVideo.
MGM Home Entertainment.
e. "Playboy's Wet &amp; Wild - Slippery When 'Wet i ' Playboy Home
Video.
9. "Mary-Kate &amp; Ashley : Switch·
• lng Goals," Oualttar Video .
10. "Brltney Spears : nme Out
With Brltney Spears," Jive/Zomba
VIdeo.
Top DVO Sales ·
(Compiled from a national sample of sales reports)
1. "Romeo Must Die ," Warner
Home VIdeo.
2 . "The Green Mile ," Warner
Home Video .

10. "The Ninth Gate," Artisan .
Home Entertainment.

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Cooking is dirty work.·
Wash your hands
GALLIPOLIS - If you keep
ground meat in its wrapper, is it
okay to thaw it at room temperature ?
You 're taking a risk if you thaw
a ny kind of meat at room temperature. The problem is that
meat isn 't sterile - there can be
bacteria in the meat, even if it's
tu cked away ni'c e and neat inside
its store wrapper.
Th e problem oc curs when
meat stays for too long in the
"danger 'zone" between 40
d egrees and 140 degrees Fahrenheit. That's when bacteria multiplies most rapidly. Two hours in
that zone is recommended cu t-otf
ti1ne.
Too much bacteria increases
the likelihood of illness, even if ·
the meat is cooked thoroughly.
That's because some rypes of bacteria produ ce toxins . Although
bacteria is killed when meat
reaches cooking temperatures, the
toXins can remain .
Besides, most people can't be
sure that they're cooking meat
thoroughly. Using a meat ther- .
mometer is the only way to be
certain (ground beef should be
cooked to 160 degrees). In a
recent study, Utah State University researchers found that 35 perce~.t of study participants cooiting
meadoaf undere&lt;&gt;oked it. Another
42 percent undercooked chicken,
and 17 percent undercooked fish.
The study found a lot of other
kitchen safety violat ions. The
researchers put video cameras in
people 's kitchens, using the ruse
that they wanted to see how people cooked a special recipe the
researchers had given them. For
their participation, the consumers

Becky
Collins
GUEST VIEW
•

were given $50 and free groceries.
Similar studies have been conducted in the past few years by
other organizations, and two critical practices seem to be habitually ignored by consumers: handwashing with soap and preventing
cross-contamination .
In the Utah study, more than
half the participants failed to wash
their hands before starting to
cook. Also, each cook skipped
washing hands an average of
seven times during the cooking
process when researchers said
they should have washed.
Some cooks just rinsed their
hands and wiped them with a
towel a towel that then
became a breeding ground for
bacteria. Every time the cooks
touched the towel, they likely
contaminated their hands again.
Foo'd safery experts recommend using paper towels for
quick clean-up and for drying
hands during cooking. And paying attention to the old admonition "wash your hands" is always a
good idea.

(Becky Collins is Callia County's

Exttmion agtnl for family and con·
.sumer sciences, Ohio SttJte Univtrsi·
ty.)

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&amp;unba!' tl!:imrll -&amp;eittinel • Page C5

I

THE WEEK'S TOP VIDEOS
Shlela and Robert Eastman

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

An array of voices:
West Virginia oets'
anthology~pu lishedHUNTINGTON (AP)
More West Virginia poets than you
knew existed 134 of them,
from Wilma Startley Acree to Peter
Zivkovi c give voi ce to "the
enduring vitality" of po~try in a
new anthology by a Huntington
publisher.
"Wild Sweet Notes: 50 years of
West Virginia Poetry" is the first
of
compreh e nsive collection
po e ms by writers who have lived
and worked in the state.
The book "is a landmark in West .
Virginia's literary hi story," said
Gordon Sirru110ns of Huntington's
Renaissance Book Company.
"Tilis work is conclusive evidence of the enduring vitality and th e c urrent renaissance - of
poetry.'' Simmons said .
Many of the poets are well - ..
kn own, so m e of them former state
poe ts laureate like""'uriel Dressler,
Lo uise M cNeill and Roy Lee
Harmo n. Th e titl e springs fro m
on &lt;• ' of
Dress ler's
wo rks,
" Appalachia ."
.. Enigmatic.
"How can you find rappo rt
with me - ...
" You, who never dan ced to
wild swret n otes,
"Outpo uring of nnnble -fi ngered fi dd lers:"
.
Others included m the volume
are not so familia r, or are best
know n fo r their work in o th er
gen res.
Billy Edd Wheeler, perhaps best
known to the rest of the world as
a w riter of country-western songs
recorded by o th er artists, demonstrates in thi s volum e that -he d oesn't nee d a backbeat to get his
words to sing. Listen to the rhythm
of"Silent Mountain":
" What it was, was never mu ch,
1 know / A ca mp, the hills - o nly
t he f.1llc n snow/ Cou ld fla tter
w hat every other day I Sjw f.,d mg
bare and oily gray./ Bu t it was
home./ It was a pl ace to go."
T he volume is donlinated by
free verse, like Ed Davis' " He
Coul d Writ e":
" Man, thai dude could write;
slap dashes, carve clauses and frame
phrases glib as Gettysburg addresses,'' it begins.

Billy Edd Wheeler, perhcrps
be.•t known to the re$t of the
world as a writer o.f cmmtl'}'-ll'estern scmgs recordec{
hJ' other artists, demoustrates in this volume tlta(
lu doem 't need a l•ackbeat
to get ltis word.( to sing.
Listen to tire rh}'tlun of
"Silmt Mountain":
"Wllat it was, u•,zs never
rnuch, I kuouJ I A camp, tire
/tills- cmly tltc.falll.'lt
·snow I Ccmld jlatteJ· wit at
eVI.'IJ' otlm daJ' I Smv fading lwrc ,md oily grar. l Bw
it IIIIlS frome. I It w.zs a
place tv go."
" Yes, that dude could flat gab in
manuscript , tan go wi th lingo,
wo rdplay hi s way straigh t into
yo ur heart , gyrate , pontifi ca te,
then, dipping , rip o ut the page~
False Start'- and begin his wordwooin g all Over."
O r there is Victor Depta's recollecti on of the Buffalo Creek flood
of 1972, titl ed "Well Somebo dy on
Buffalo C reek" :
" Th ey m arke d th e kilt ery
hou ses w ith a yellow X like
Passover o nl y it already happ ened .
I wo nder wh ere they go t the
paint' Probably got it from Island
C reek Sto res. It's still there."
The boo k is pu blished by Publish ers Place In c. _o f Huntin gto n
and supported b y a gran t fro m
M-o untai neer R ace Trac k and
Ganling R esort at Ch ester in
Hancock Coun ry.
Mo un taineer CEO Edson R .
Ar neau h sald his co mpany bel ieves
in the impo rtance of writing and
creativity in stre n gthe ni ng . West
Virgi nia "as a vibrant ~nery:'
Jo hn Patrick Grace, co-dltec tor
of Publishers Place , said the work
fits nea tly into his org-•nization 's
mission.
The boo k's editors and publishers collected the poetry over three
years.

COMMUNITY CORNER

Noel compiles ultimate Wahama scrapbook -----.
•

Pat Roush Noel has prepared
an album of memories which
contains senior pictures and
class photos taken from school
yearbooks and personal collections of every class which has
graduated from Wahama High
School since 193 7. There is ·also
included a complete roster of
graduates.
Just imagine the hours and
hours of work which the WHS
Alumni Association officer put
into preparing that album , and
then think of all the pleasure it
will bring as the years go by.

•••
For Sen. Mike DeWine 's visit
to the Senior Citizens Center
Tuesday, the decorations were all
red, white and blue, as was Judge
Bob Buck's tie. He wore a flag
tie - not one of those tacky
ones that are so popular, but a
real classy one.

•••
From the time one Ohio State
Fair ends until the next begins,
Dale Hoffman of Lincoln
Heights is busy planning and
'· preparing entries. And for him
year after. year it pays off with
ribbons and premiums.
This year he had 51 entries
and won 22 ribbons .
He took firsts with his entries
in sugarfree candy, a watermelon
rind pickle, and apples; second!
in strawberry preserves and
applesauce ; third places in sugarfree pie,
carrots, dried
pineapple, dried corn, dried
mushrooms,
dried
flower
arrangement, and a picture
other than wool; and placed
fourth in sugarfree muffins,
sugarfree cake, red raspberry
jelly, grape butter, orange marmalade, corn relish, cherries,
dried green peppers, dried
onions and ceramic pieces.
Everybody likes to be a win-

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY
ner and Dale is that when it
comes to his fair entries.

•••

Pat Roush Noel ha..• prepared an allmm qf memories which mntains se11ior
pictures and class plrotos
takeu frmil sclrool yea¥boolts aud persoual collections 1?f er•ery class which
ha.• graduated jrom
Uilhama High SchmJ/,
on . We turn on the television
and a picture appears .
And if it doesn 't happen just
that way we get all frustrated
and out of sorts .Well maybe you
don't, but I do.
So when the ele ctricity went
out along with the cabl e and the
telephon e during the storm
Wednesday and for 20 or so
hours I struggled with a flashlight , ate tomato sandwi ches and
peanut butter cooki es, parked
my car far from the house
because a tree blo cke d the
street, and couldn't even call
anyone to commiserate with
me, I decided I must be defi-

When it comes to families and
marriages, th~ Piggotts lay claim
to a longevity ·record. The
brothers and sisters and their
spouses, and a couple of in-l aws,
have marriages which have each
spann ed nearly six decades.
In the group are Delmar and
Kathryn Bailey B aum , Rex and
Sina Piggott Bailey, Harry L.
and Margaret Thomas Bailey,
Rexal and Ann Piggott Summerfield, and Henry and Eileen
Piggott Bahr.
The Baums were married in
1944, the Harry Baileys in 1942, ~~SJ:~~,:;
the Bahrs in 1943, t.he Joseph ~
Baileys in 1942, and the Summerfields in 1939.

·-·-

..••-.

cient on coping skills. Anyo ne:
•
offering a class?

•••

:-·

-..

Whatever happened to the- ;
lazy, hazy, crazy days of summe r.:;
lr seems only yesterday th at :
graduations were taking place:
and here we are j ust nine days '
away from th e start of anothe~:
sc hool year.
•.
But first the fair whic h o ffi 7:
cially opens tomorrow, but gets:
into swing tonight with a :;
parad e, c rowning of royalry, and :
the traditional rehgious servi ce~ ~·
at the grandstand .
: ;:
The carnival rides are go ing ·:
up, some booths are already
se rving food, the ex hibitors are ~
adding the finishing touches to :
their di splays, and the judging
has already started.
The fairgrounds will be
ro ckin' all week. I'll be there.
Will you?
(Char/me Hoeflich is a Times·
Ser~rinel

staff writer.)

•••
We take everything so much
for granted. We pick up the telephone and get a dial tone. We
flip a switch ahd the lights come

Gallia County Health Department
Prenatal Clinic

Kids VB9 Revival
Rodney Pike Churoh Of God
Corner Of 9t. Rt's 860 &amp; 688
August 18 &amp; 19 e:ao p.m.
11:00o..m. 9unday-20th
Info &amp; Pre-register Cell:
(740) 246-9618

•

..

Take AWalk 0~ The Wild 9ide!

The forecast
this s
er
is 2 below.

'

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I '

... ..''
..••,
I •

'

~

Get Prime Minus 2%on Firstar's
Equil jne-Home Equity Credit line.
Pl11s, 110 clnsiti!J costs rm this 6-Jiurnth introductory fi!Ced
Yo u may be able to beat the heat
th is summer, but you can't bc.tt .
this rate . Right now, hrst.H i!l
offerin g o ur tkxi hk· F.qui l .inl'
Ho me Equity Credi t Line ;n an

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incredible Prime 'Rate minus 2%
A. P.R. To apph- or for more
inl(&gt;rnlJ tinn, stop by ~'our nc.ucsr
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or .1pply onlint..· .tt \n\w.firstar.cont

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RRSfAR t~*f~
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Bank Without Botmdaries

.

�..·

Page C6 • &amp;unbm!' Ql:imru -&amp;rntintl

Sunday, August 13, 2000 •

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

Pomeroy • Middleport ~ Galllpollll_, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,.August 13,2000

coming to Rodney
-,_,inistry
.

RELIGIOUS NEWS BRIEFS .

'
asked the La Crosse Court~y
boa~ to hold a referendum ·(n
'
November on whether to allow
the casino. Local officials have ,;id
the Ho-Chunk have discusse:d
paying the cou nty and city -~
nnillion each annually .in lieu ~f
property taxes.
•
The clergy said they opp~e
casino gambling for moral ~d
econonnic reasons . They plan Io
form an alliance with busines.es.
attend county meetings aod
advertise thei.r opposition.
·'
The Ho-Chunk issued a statement addressing the moral objections.
"Even within a sin gle faith. n.o t
all members agree on what is. a.
sin,'' it said. "That is the purppoe
of a referendum, to give all p~~ ­
ple a voice."
La Cross~ Cou nty votjrs
turned down a plan for a casiou
in an advisory referendum ·111
1995.
•
'jThere's still a sense the peo¢e
of the La Crosse area a;re
opposed,'' said the Rev. 'ijd
Dewald of Trinity Luther4n
Church. "Why is this coming .Up
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) ·
Clergy from a dozen churches again?"
have united against an Indian
tribe's plan to open a casino.
The He-Chunk Nation has

..•
••
•

Amencan and Vietnamese church' es, he says, where workers "let their
guard down and tell their stories,''
They've
told him about losing finPageC1
gers in the machinery and poverty ·
level wages. "There are no bath~ve r the Vietnam War divided lib-eral clerics and union leaders, but room breaks,'' he· says, "so workers
;-elations have warmed again. And some times have· to urinate on
themselves."
~o today labor can reach out to
In New York , the interns' target
hl1dding religious leaders, includ.ing some who never gave unions has been Goldman Sachs - the
.lnuch thought.
Wall Street firm where Hadley
: Despite growing up in Detroit, asked for the CEO. The AFLl(essler, a U niversiry of Michigan CIO's Hotel Employees and
jeligion maJor who hopes to Restaurant Employees Union is
pecome a rabbi, did not k.i10w trying to organize workers in the
union members. Studying labor company cafeteria, run by a subllistory led her to see a need for contractor called Restaurant Assocollective bargaining.
CJates.
Kessler, who has friends at
: Judaism had taught her the
lmportance of demonstrating faith investment firms' earning more
through actions, so she jumped at than S I 00,000, says some cafeteria
the chance to join Seminary Sum- workers couldn't -afford company
.. mer.
health insu rance. " I met a food ser: Hadley; the son gf a unign car~ --. Y:ice..--...worker who has- to go on
: penter, converted from evangelical Medicaid to have her b~by." she
• Protestantism to Ca tholicism in says.
-. part because of its commitment to
Cafeteria workers were skeptical
:·social justice." As business becomes at first. Abby Saez, 34, says: "Most
: more faceless , the religious com- young people just want to parry.
: muniry is the only one left to stand They don't care if we have a job or
: for the worker,'' he sa)'·
not. It's good to know young peo: Not everyone shares this enthu- pie are out there helping."
; Siasm. When Hadley spoke to a
Goldman Sachs spokeswoman
•'parish men's group about the AFL- Kathleen Baum says the firm sup: C IO, "the heat went on in the ports "the workers' right to decide
: roon1,'' he says. Kessler's Detroit for themselves whether they want
: friends kept bnnging up union to be represented by this union." A
: corruption. Undeterred, the Senu- lawyer for Restaurant Associates
~ t-Iary Summer interns trained for a
did not return phone calls seeking
: i.veek before moving tO their conm1ent.
·assigned cities.
When the intc.r ns' training
:: Graham went to Crucago, where ended, expectations were high.
: jle is trying to organize a team of Hadley says. "It all seemed so glo: ~y laborers. He spends mornings
rious: labor prevails:'
:at a shelter talking to workers who
Organizing in , the real world
' sleep there. "Some get up at 4 or 5 proved more complex.
and sit around for hours,'' ·not
Hadley and Kessler approached
. knowing if they will get work, he local clergy people to try to enlist
: ~ys .
their support. Some offered their
_: In ~rkansas, Jenkins is meeting signatures but others we re hesitant
· ;vith poultry workers while enlist- to sib'll, worried about offendmg
· ing the Sltpport of religious leaders . congregants who worked for
tJe has attended Latino, Afri can Goldman Sachs.

'

..

Clergy

.

AME Zion Church.
A merger committee proposed
that the name of the new denomination
be
the
Christian
M ethodist
Episcopal
Zion
Church. Delegates to the AME
Zion meeting objected, saying
that "African" must be in the
n ame.
Merger would create a denomination of more than 2 million
members. The two denocninations are theologically close and
have worked together for years,
The AME Zion Church was
formed in ~ 796 and has more
than 1.2 million members, making it the coun try's second-larg-est
body of black Methodists, after
the African Methodist Episcopal
Church. Members attend 3,100
churches, most o( them in North
Carolina .
The CME Church, with about
800,000 members, was formed in
1870.

Remavlngzonlng
obstades churches

they. tried to build a mosque.
They eventuaUy built it and
to
opened the doors last year - but
not before making many. concesWASHINGTON (AP) - A
sions.
coalition of more than 80 reli.. As religious communities, we
gious and legal advocacy groups,
do encounter situations, not
from liberal to conservative, supimposed by cities themselves but
port legislation that would make by people who reside in the area.
it harder to use zoning rules to They have certain prejudices and
prevent building houses of wor- they bring these issues up to give
ship.
the ciry a headache,'' said Usman
Zoning regulations cannot Madha, community liaison for
"place a substantial burden on the mosque.
exercise of reHgion" unless local
The law "will give leverage to
officials show a compelling gov- tehgious groups which we never
ernmental objective, according to had before,': he said.
the Relig io us Land Use and
Institutionalized Persons Act ,
which was passed by. both houses
of Congress on July 27. It is
expected to be signed into law by
GREENSBORO, N .C. (AP)
President Clinton.
Delegates to the African
The bill also seeks to ensure Methodist
Episcopal
Zion
that people in institutions like Church convention have delayed
. mental hospitals an'd prisons can plans to merge with another hispractice their faith freely.
torically black denomination
Supporters include the Ameri- until at least 2008 ·
can Jewish Congress, the Christ- · Leaders of the AME Zion
ian Legal Society, the Baptist Joint Church and the Christian
Committee, Amer icans United Methodist Episcopal Church had
for Separation of Church and hoped delegates to the AME
State, the Family Research Coun- Zion meeting last week in
cil and the American Civil Liber- Greensboro would approve a plan
ties Union.
that calls for the denominations
Zoning conflicts involving to merge in 2004.
houses of worship have become
But delegates voted to delay a
contentious across the nation in merger to give leaders time to
the past decade.
work out details, including what
Muslim leaders in Culver City, the name of the unified denocniCalif., for exam~le, ran into com- nation would be.
"The name is a problem,'' said
' ~aints about everything from the
possibility of tiaffic congestion to Bishop Cecil Bishop of Charsun · glare off the marble when lotte, the senior bishop of the

T~N YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Alan Stockmeister, Idee Chairman , Holz~r Hospital Foundation, Dencil Reynolds, Paul Hilderbrant,

Sherry Saunders, Janet Jones, Jay Mershon, Ann Elliott and LaMar
Wyse. President and Chief Executive Officer, Holzer Medical Center.

plan In Wis. county

lWENTY·FIVE YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stockmeister, Marianne Campbell, Ron Saunders, Rev. Art Lund , Marie Clay and Mr.
Wyse. Not pictured: Keith Bond, Richard Manley, Denise Null; Nancy
Ohlinger and Bessie Robinson .

When you pla.c:e
your yard/ga.rage
sale advertisement
in the cla.ssifiedsl

•Mueagor•
•oothe
body.

Cherrytime and any of the Ace
series (such as Ace Hybrid and
Ace itself). Hot peppers generally
grow and bear better under a
wider range of conditions than
do sweet peppers. Any vanery
billed as an All-America Selection
winner, such as Blushing Beauty,
is generally adapted for planting
everywhere.

~-,

J
$200 Coupon good
toward the purchaaa

I
I
I
I
I

INGROUND AND
ABOVE GROUND
POOLS IN STOCK

Il reaches
lleigs Resident.s"
Place ycur a.d today!

L-~!'!~!!!~!_!~~-j
FLAIR
t

The Daily
Tribune

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

"IPtANO NAil! PUitHI'TUM: AT DISC® NT PAIC:II'o

Rt. Z, G•lllpollo ferry, WV

675·137!

FOR A}OB WELL DONE.

&lt;h.

I I

I
•

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company salutes
the many wonderful people who have put a lot of
time and hard work in making the 13 7th Annual
Meigs County Fair such a great success.
Your support toward this six day event shows our
community spirit and warmth when so many
people work toward the same goal.
We take pride in our community by supporting
the many dedicated individuals and groups that
have given so much to make all of Meigs County ·

A WIRED

Yo11r Bankln41t···
Bank
Fs · &amp;Farmers
Savings Company

WORLD COMPANY

To better serve our Pt. Pleasant customers
Charter Communications will now have

Member FDIC

•

New Office Hours

667·3161
992·2136
211 West Second Street 42120 State Route 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio

Monday - Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
This change will take affect Monday Aug. 14, 2000

.-

446·2265
164 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio

••

olzer Medical Center recendy honored their emplo'ees at tile 27th Annual Service Award Ceremqny
which was held in the Hospital Cafeteria. Awards w~re
presented to those employees who had surpassed the
lWENTY
AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stoekmeister, Lynne Grif10, 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40 year marks.
·
fin, Sherry Ritchie, Shirley Coburn, Theresa Shaddeau, Bobbi Hill, Louise
After
an
invocation
by
Reverend
Arthur
C.
Lund,
Director
of
ChapNickels and Mr. Wyse. Not pictured: Debbie Evans, Gary King, Linda Lau- ·
laincy Services at the Hospital, and dinner. LaMar Wyse, President and
dermilt, Peggy _Ramey, Renee Smith, Carolyn Taylor and Kathy Thomas.
Chief Executive Officer of Holzer Medical Center, welcomed tile
awardees and their guests.
Congratulatory remarks were given by Tom Tope, Chairman, co·nsolidated Health Systems, Inc.,
and Alan Stockmeister, Vice
Chairman, Holzer
Hospital
Foundation Board ofTrustees.
Two special 40 year pins were
presented to Rosie Ward, Director of Human Resources and
Harold George, Director of Purchasing, who was not present.

Clergy battle casino

Peppers can be finicky
about .producing well
Pepper plants sometimes grow
well but produce poorly because
they are fussy about their environment. This is hardly the
behavior you'd expect from a
plant that over 2,000 years ago
was cultivated in both North and
South America.
The plants grow best with
temperatures in the 70s. When
_Jemperatl.lres- --•ue- -- not - ideal-,-though, no great harm is done as
the plants just sit for awhile without growing.
Peppers are more finicky about
temperatures when it comes to
yielding well. If night temperatures go below bO degrees
Fahrenheit or above 75 degrees
(or the average daily temperature
goes below 60 degrees or above
90 degrees) , the flowers drop off.
No flowers means no peppers.
The flowers have a greater tendency to drop in drier w~ather.
Peppers need a couple of
months or tnore to mature after
fl owerlng, so temperatures earlier'
in the season could be what are
responsible for poor yield now.
The outlook for pepper growing is not all that bleak, tho ugh ,
because certain varieties produce
well under a wider range of conditions than do others. One particularly adaptable variety is.Jtalian Sweet, so metimes called
Sweet Italian or ltalia . Not as tasty
according to many gardeners, but
nonethel ess a lso reliable, are

THIRTY YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stockmeister, M~ty
Fields. Florence Watson, Bill Gouckenour and Mr. Wyse . Not pictur~tJ :
Penny Moore, Eve Smeltzer and Marlin Wedemeyer.
··:
•

from

Bv l£E REtCH
FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

...

Holzer honors
long-time employees

·'

AME Zion church
delays CME merger

. Mit's A Jungle Out There" presented by Ron and Debbie Mason of Mason
Jar Ministries will be in our area on August 18, 19, 20 at the Rodney Pike
Church of God. Located at 440 State Route 850. This presentation is not
Vacation Bible School as usual. It is a high energy, action packed revival
experience for children all the way up to adults. The church sanctuary will
be trans-formed into a virtual jungle. Jesus is presented as the Great Daktari, our healer. Bible stories are drama presentations that bring the characters to life. The Mason's incorporate .music, puppets, scripture, and
games into a most memorable experience. Ron and Debbie Mason are the
Children's Pastors at the Milford Church of God, Milford, Ohio. One of the
fastest grcwing churches in Southern Ohio. They know all too well the dan; ;gers, challenges, and conflict that children of today face. In response to
: :this, the Mason's have developed the program "It's A Jungle Out There".
:·The lessons and sermons will give insightful instruction to encourage chil: :dren to rise to the.challenge before them. They will learn to trust Jesus like
::never before.The kids revival will begin August 18th at 6:30p.m. There will
; be snack and activities following each evenings program. To pre-register
·:,call 245-9518 or 446-94 71.

..

itunbnr 11timrf -itentinrl • Page Q7

Rate plans $20.95 and higher incl~e;
• Call forwarding
• Call waiting
• 3-way conferencing

f&lt; US. Cellular

The way people talk around here:

Visit us on the web!
www.fbsc.com
r requires a ntw one·yHr \rrvke agn!tment. Roamn'll}

chiJr~es ,

laxu, network surcharges and tolls not

,wa rlabll' on

~l'lf'ct

rare

self'ct phones while suppli@~ last Other restrrctions and cha rges may apply. See

~tore

fo r detail s. OHe r e~~:prrei Au gu~t 3 I. 2000.

'

�..·

Page C6 • &amp;unbm!' Ql:imru -&amp;rntintl

Sunday, August 13, 2000 •

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

Pomeroy • Middleport ~ Galllpollll_, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,.August 13,2000

coming to Rodney
-,_,inistry
.

RELIGIOUS NEWS BRIEFS .

'
asked the La Crosse Court~y
boa~ to hold a referendum ·(n
'
November on whether to allow
the casino. Local officials have ,;id
the Ho-Chunk have discusse:d
paying the cou nty and city -~
nnillion each annually .in lieu ~f
property taxes.
•
The clergy said they opp~e
casino gambling for moral ~d
econonnic reasons . They plan Io
form an alliance with busines.es.
attend county meetings aod
advertise thei.r opposition.
·'
The Ho-Chunk issued a statement addressing the moral objections.
"Even within a sin gle faith. n.o t
all members agree on what is. a.
sin,'' it said. "That is the purppoe
of a referendum, to give all p~~ ­
ple a voice."
La Cross~ Cou nty votjrs
turned down a plan for a casiou
in an advisory referendum ·111
1995.
•
'jThere's still a sense the peo¢e
of the La Crosse area a;re
opposed,'' said the Rev. 'ijd
Dewald of Trinity Luther4n
Church. "Why is this coming .Up
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) ·
Clergy from a dozen churches again?"
have united against an Indian
tribe's plan to open a casino.
The He-Chunk Nation has

..•
••
•

Amencan and Vietnamese church' es, he says, where workers "let their
guard down and tell their stories,''
They've
told him about losing finPageC1
gers in the machinery and poverty ·
level wages. "There are no bath~ve r the Vietnam War divided lib-eral clerics and union leaders, but room breaks,'' he· says, "so workers
;-elations have warmed again. And some times have· to urinate on
themselves."
~o today labor can reach out to
In New York , the interns' target
hl1dding religious leaders, includ.ing some who never gave unions has been Goldman Sachs - the
.lnuch thought.
Wall Street firm where Hadley
: Despite growing up in Detroit, asked for the CEO. The AFLl(essler, a U niversiry of Michigan CIO's Hotel Employees and
jeligion maJor who hopes to Restaurant Employees Union is
pecome a rabbi, did not k.i10w trying to organize workers in the
union members. Studying labor company cafeteria, run by a subllistory led her to see a need for contractor called Restaurant Assocollective bargaining.
CJates.
Kessler, who has friends at
: Judaism had taught her the
lmportance of demonstrating faith investment firms' earning more
through actions, so she jumped at than S I 00,000, says some cafeteria
the chance to join Seminary Sum- workers couldn't -afford company
.. mer.
health insu rance. " I met a food ser: Hadley; the son gf a unign car~ --. Y:ice..--...worker who has- to go on
: penter, converted from evangelical Medicaid to have her b~by." she
• Protestantism to Ca tholicism in says.
-. part because of its commitment to
Cafeteria workers were skeptical
:·social justice." As business becomes at first. Abby Saez, 34, says: "Most
: more faceless , the religious com- young people just want to parry.
: muniry is the only one left to stand They don't care if we have a job or
: for the worker,'' he sa)'·
not. It's good to know young peo: Not everyone shares this enthu- pie are out there helping."
; Siasm. When Hadley spoke to a
Goldman Sachs spokeswoman
•'parish men's group about the AFL- Kathleen Baum says the firm sup: C IO, "the heat went on in the ports "the workers' right to decide
: roon1,'' he says. Kessler's Detroit for themselves whether they want
: friends kept bnnging up union to be represented by this union." A
: corruption. Undeterred, the Senu- lawyer for Restaurant Associates
~ t-Iary Summer interns trained for a
did not return phone calls seeking
: i.veek before moving tO their conm1ent.
·assigned cities.
When the intc.r ns' training
:: Graham went to Crucago, where ended, expectations were high.
: jle is trying to organize a team of Hadley says. "It all seemed so glo: ~y laborers. He spends mornings
rious: labor prevails:'
:at a shelter talking to workers who
Organizing in , the real world
' sleep there. "Some get up at 4 or 5 proved more complex.
and sit around for hours,'' ·not
Hadley and Kessler approached
. knowing if they will get work, he local clergy people to try to enlist
: ~ys .
their support. Some offered their
_: In ~rkansas, Jenkins is meeting signatures but others we re hesitant
· ;vith poultry workers while enlist- to sib'll, worried about offendmg
· ing the Sltpport of religious leaders . congregants who worked for
tJe has attended Latino, Afri can Goldman Sachs.

'

..

Clergy

.

AME Zion Church.
A merger committee proposed
that the name of the new denomination
be
the
Christian
M ethodist
Episcopal
Zion
Church. Delegates to the AME
Zion meeting objected, saying
that "African" must be in the
n ame.
Merger would create a denomination of more than 2 million
members. The two denocninations are theologically close and
have worked together for years,
The AME Zion Church was
formed in ~ 796 and has more
than 1.2 million members, making it the coun try's second-larg-est
body of black Methodists, after
the African Methodist Episcopal
Church. Members attend 3,100
churches, most o( them in North
Carolina .
The CME Church, with about
800,000 members, was formed in
1870.

Remavlngzonlng
obstades churches

they. tried to build a mosque.
They eventuaUy built it and
to
opened the doors last year - but
not before making many. concesWASHINGTON (AP) - A
sions.
coalition of more than 80 reli.. As religious communities, we
gious and legal advocacy groups,
do encounter situations, not
from liberal to conservative, supimposed by cities themselves but
port legislation that would make by people who reside in the area.
it harder to use zoning rules to They have certain prejudices and
prevent building houses of wor- they bring these issues up to give
ship.
the ciry a headache,'' said Usman
Zoning regulations cannot Madha, community liaison for
"place a substantial burden on the mosque.
exercise of reHgion" unless local
The law "will give leverage to
officials show a compelling gov- tehgious groups which we never
ernmental objective, according to had before,': he said.
the Relig io us Land Use and
Institutionalized Persons Act ,
which was passed by. both houses
of Congress on July 27. It is
expected to be signed into law by
GREENSBORO, N .C. (AP)
President Clinton.
Delegates to the African
The bill also seeks to ensure Methodist
Episcopal
Zion
that people in institutions like Church convention have delayed
. mental hospitals an'd prisons can plans to merge with another hispractice their faith freely.
torically black denomination
Supporters include the Ameri- until at least 2008 ·
can Jewish Congress, the Christ- · Leaders of the AME Zion
ian Legal Society, the Baptist Joint Church and the Christian
Committee, Amer icans United Methodist Episcopal Church had
for Separation of Church and hoped delegates to the AME
State, the Family Research Coun- Zion meeting last week in
cil and the American Civil Liber- Greensboro would approve a plan
ties Union.
that calls for the denominations
Zoning conflicts involving to merge in 2004.
houses of worship have become
But delegates voted to delay a
contentious across the nation in merger to give leaders time to
the past decade.
work out details, including what
Muslim leaders in Culver City, the name of the unified denocniCalif., for exam~le, ran into com- nation would be.
"The name is a problem,'' said
' ~aints about everything from the
possibility of tiaffic congestion to Bishop Cecil Bishop of Charsun · glare off the marble when lotte, the senior bishop of the

T~N YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Alan Stockmeister, Idee Chairman , Holz~r Hospital Foundation, Dencil Reynolds, Paul Hilderbrant,

Sherry Saunders, Janet Jones, Jay Mershon, Ann Elliott and LaMar
Wyse. President and Chief Executive Officer, Holzer Medical Center.

plan In Wis. county

lWENTY·FIVE YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stockmeister, Marianne Campbell, Ron Saunders, Rev. Art Lund , Marie Clay and Mr.
Wyse. Not pictured: Keith Bond, Richard Manley, Denise Null; Nancy
Ohlinger and Bessie Robinson .

When you pla.c:e
your yard/ga.rage
sale advertisement
in the cla.ssifiedsl

•Mueagor•
•oothe
body.

Cherrytime and any of the Ace
series (such as Ace Hybrid and
Ace itself). Hot peppers generally
grow and bear better under a
wider range of conditions than
do sweet peppers. Any vanery
billed as an All-America Selection
winner, such as Blushing Beauty,
is generally adapted for planting
everywhere.

~-,

J
$200 Coupon good
toward the purchaaa

I
I
I
I
I

INGROUND AND
ABOVE GROUND
POOLS IN STOCK

Il reaches
lleigs Resident.s"
Place ycur a.d today!

L-~!'!~!!!~!_!~~-j
FLAIR
t

The Daily
Tribune

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

"IPtANO NAil! PUitHI'TUM: AT DISC® NT PAIC:II'o

Rt. Z, G•lllpollo ferry, WV

675·137!

FOR A}OB WELL DONE.

&lt;h.

I I

I
•

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company salutes
the many wonderful people who have put a lot of
time and hard work in making the 13 7th Annual
Meigs County Fair such a great success.
Your support toward this six day event shows our
community spirit and warmth when so many
people work toward the same goal.
We take pride in our community by supporting
the many dedicated individuals and groups that
have given so much to make all of Meigs County ·

A WIRED

Yo11r Bankln41t···
Bank
Fs · &amp;Farmers
Savings Company

WORLD COMPANY

To better serve our Pt. Pleasant customers
Charter Communications will now have

Member FDIC

•

New Office Hours

667·3161
992·2136
211 West Second Street 42120 State Route 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio

Monday - Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
This change will take affect Monday Aug. 14, 2000

.-

446·2265
164 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio

••

olzer Medical Center recendy honored their emplo'ees at tile 27th Annual Service Award Ceremqny
which was held in the Hospital Cafeteria. Awards w~re
presented to those employees who had surpassed the
lWENTY
AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stoekmeister, Lynne Grif10, 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40 year marks.
·
fin, Sherry Ritchie, Shirley Coburn, Theresa Shaddeau, Bobbi Hill, Louise
After
an
invocation
by
Reverend
Arthur
C.
Lund,
Director
of
ChapNickels and Mr. Wyse. Not pictured: Debbie Evans, Gary King, Linda Lau- ·
laincy Services at the Hospital, and dinner. LaMar Wyse, President and
dermilt, Peggy _Ramey, Renee Smith, Carolyn Taylor and Kathy Thomas.
Chief Executive Officer of Holzer Medical Center, welcomed tile
awardees and their guests.
Congratulatory remarks were given by Tom Tope, Chairman, co·nsolidated Health Systems, Inc.,
and Alan Stockmeister, Vice
Chairman, Holzer
Hospital
Foundation Board ofTrustees.
Two special 40 year pins were
presented to Rosie Ward, Director of Human Resources and
Harold George, Director of Purchasing, who was not present.

Clergy battle casino

Peppers can be finicky
about .producing well
Pepper plants sometimes grow
well but produce poorly because
they are fussy about their environment. This is hardly the
behavior you'd expect from a
plant that over 2,000 years ago
was cultivated in both North and
South America.
The plants grow best with
temperatures in the 70s. When
_Jemperatl.lres- --•ue- -- not - ideal-,-though, no great harm is done as
the plants just sit for awhile without growing.
Peppers are more finicky about
temperatures when it comes to
yielding well. If night temperatures go below bO degrees
Fahrenheit or above 75 degrees
(or the average daily temperature
goes below 60 degrees or above
90 degrees) , the flowers drop off.
No flowers means no peppers.
The flowers have a greater tendency to drop in drier w~ather.
Peppers need a couple of
months or tnore to mature after
fl owerlng, so temperatures earlier'
in the season could be what are
responsible for poor yield now.
The outlook for pepper growing is not all that bleak, tho ugh ,
because certain varieties produce
well under a wider range of conditions than do others. One particularly adaptable variety is.Jtalian Sweet, so metimes called
Sweet Italian or ltalia . Not as tasty
according to many gardeners, but
nonethel ess a lso reliable, are

THIRTY YEAR AWARDS - Left to right: Mr. Stockmeister, M~ty
Fields. Florence Watson, Bill Gouckenour and Mr. Wyse . Not pictur~tJ :
Penny Moore, Eve Smeltzer and Marlin Wedemeyer.
··:
•

from

Bv l£E REtCH
FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

...

Holzer honors
long-time employees

·'

AME Zion church
delays CME merger

. Mit's A Jungle Out There" presented by Ron and Debbie Mason of Mason
Jar Ministries will be in our area on August 18, 19, 20 at the Rodney Pike
Church of God. Located at 440 State Route 850. This presentation is not
Vacation Bible School as usual. It is a high energy, action packed revival
experience for children all the way up to adults. The church sanctuary will
be trans-formed into a virtual jungle. Jesus is presented as the Great Daktari, our healer. Bible stories are drama presentations that bring the characters to life. The Mason's incorporate .music, puppets, scripture, and
games into a most memorable experience. Ron and Debbie Mason are the
Children's Pastors at the Milford Church of God, Milford, Ohio. One of the
fastest grcwing churches in Southern Ohio. They know all too well the dan; ;gers, challenges, and conflict that children of today face. In response to
: :this, the Mason's have developed the program "It's A Jungle Out There".
:·The lessons and sermons will give insightful instruction to encourage chil: :dren to rise to the.challenge before them. They will learn to trust Jesus like
::never before.The kids revival will begin August 18th at 6:30p.m. There will
; be snack and activities following each evenings program. To pre-register
·:,call 245-9518 or 446-94 71.

..

itunbnr 11timrf -itentinrl • Page Q7

Rate plans $20.95 and higher incl~e;
• Call forwarding
• Call waiting
• 3-way conferencing

f&lt; US. Cellular

The way people talk around here:

Visit us on the web!
www.fbsc.com
r requires a ntw one·yHr \rrvke agn!tment. Roamn'll}

chiJr~es ,

laxu, network surcharges and tolls not

,wa rlabll' on

~l'lf'ct

rare

self'ct phones while suppli@~ last Other restrrctions and cha rges may apply. See

~tore

fo r detail s. OHe r e~~:prrei Au gu~t 3 I. 2000.

'

�••

•

. . ..

.

IP'IIU'* C8 • 6unb«p ~imfll- 6cntinrl ·

Sunday, August 13, 2000

• Ualllpolls, Ohio • Point PINNnt, WY

Inside:

.

·

'classified ads, Pages D2-D7
Business Briefcase, DB

1

\.lv
Page Dl
Sunday. Aupst J:J, 1000

THE

EKINSTOCKS

. I

This charr slww.. how local srocks of inreresr performed lasr week.
Each day:, dosing figuresare provided by Advesr of Gallipolis.

+
Akzo t
AEP

AmTech/SBC
Ashland Inc.

+
+

+

AT&amp;T

to care for the new baby.

Bring a baby doll to

practice holding, feeding
and diapering.
(504) 526-&amp;BY
Baby Care Class
Tuesday, September 12, 6-8 p.m.
General baby care, feeding,
bathing and safety tips'for
parenlll-tobe and
grandparents-to-be.
(504) 526-&amp;BY

Sbarin« Support Group
Monday, September 11, 5 p.m.
Sharing is for Tri.State
women who have been diagnosed with gynecologic
cancers. Meets first Monday
of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0403 off the atrium
(504) 526-2297
Parenling Preemie8
Support Group
Each Friday, 6 p.m.
· Parents who have a
- premature infant in the
Neonatal intensive Care
{NICU) are asked to take
part in a support group.
From 6:50 to 8 p.m., an infant
CPR class is provided for those
parents whose infants are being
discharged from the MCU.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
3rd Floor Conference Room
Call (504) 52t-7146 and ask

for er,staJ Welch.

Infant CPR Cla88

Tuesday, August 15,6 p.m. or
Tuesday, September 19, 6 p.m.
Parents-tlffie and grandparents-lobe are welcome to
attend and will receive a
certificate of attendance.
(504) 526-BABY

·FOra tour of Cabell Huntington Hospltal'8
Mother/Baby Suile8 and
Nunery, pleaae
aill (SCK) 528-BABY.
~ FAiuC'lltion

For those who have been
diaglosed with kidney diseiiSC
requiring dialysis, CHH's
Dialysis Center offers a
pl'C{jialysis education
program.
Call (!504) 526-2000, ed. !50115
and ask for Denlae Boudreau.
CIHl's llegUmal Center for

Womeu's Heelth Education
Serle8:

Diabetic Topics .
Tuesday, August 29, 5:30 p.m. . • Cosmetic Surgery: AMore
Asupport group for people
Youthful You
with diabetes and their
Monday, September 25,
family members.
6-7:50 p.m.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Featuring Elaine Young, MD
Private Dining Room One
• Stress and Stress Management
(504) 526-2286
Tuesday, September 26,
6 -7:30 p.m.
Cblldblrth EduMtion
Featuring Sam
CJa!J81l8
Januszkiewicz, MD
Next 5-week series begins
Monday, August 21, ~ p.m.
• Women and Wellness
- or all-ilay class is Saturday,
Wednesday, September 27,
October 2, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
6 -7:30 p.m.
Parents-lobe learn about the
Featuring Unda Savory, MD
childbirth process,
Lamaze techniques, comfort
All programs take place
measures, hospital proceoff the Cabell Huntington
dures, etc. There is a $25 fee. Hospital atrium in the
(504) 526-2238
Harless Auditorium of the
Joan C. Edwards School
Brea8tfeedin« Cl888
of Medicine.
Tuesday, August 22, 6-8 p.m.
Call (304)526-2270 or
or Tuesday, September 26, 6-8 p.m. 1-800-41WOMEN.
Certified lactation consultanis
teach our breastfeeding class.
(304) 526-2238

Jo!llin Dlabetm Center's

S&amp;arPropam
Monday, August 14,
2-~:~0 p.m. or 6-7:~0 p.m.
(choose one)
This program will introduce
you to the Joslin Diabetes
Center and its five key points
of diabetes management:
monitoring, meal planning,
medications, exercise and
risk reduction.~5 per person.
Open to the public. Physician
referral not necessary.
Class size is limited.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 1024 (Joslin
Diabetes Center)
(504) 526-856!5
~Cancer

Support Group
Tuesday, August 22, 5-p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room6144
(!504) 526-10!57
Boy Sooul8 of AmeriM
Medical Explorers'
Post#860
Every second and last
Monday, 7 p.m.
Free and open to any male or
female aged 14-21 interested
in learning more about the
medical field
St. Mary's School of
Nursing Building
Room 110
(504) 526-1228

Cancer Lending library
Monday -Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
St. Mary's.Hospital
Room6145
Offers the latest cancer
information through Internet
access, books and video tapes.
Free and open to the public.
Self-Referral

Mammography
Monday -Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
(504) 526-1492 to schedule
a mammOf!l'lllll

Diabeti~

Foot Clini~
Every Tuesday, 1 - 5 p.m.
by appointment only
Foot assessments by
Jeffrey Shook, D.P.M.
St. Mary's Clinic
(!504) 526-8906 to
schedule appointment
Yoga for ~ners
Every Tuesday, 6-7:30 p:m.
St. Mary'~ SctJool of
Nursing Gym
Free and open to the public.
(504) 52~182

.+pberle AModalion &amp;
Slrolie Support Group
August 15, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation DepartmentPleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(304)675-~

1

Diabetes Support Group
Every thin! Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Meets Sept. through Nov. &amp;
Jan. through May.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room2109
(504) 526-1216

.IIJ,bebner'll Support

GnJap
·August 15, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
. Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(504) 675- 5256

Arthritis Support Group
Every second ThUrsday, 2 p.m. ·
St. Mary's Hospital
Room2109
(504) 526-1216

Transitions Grief
Support Group
Every other Friday. Call for
specific meeting dates.
(504) 526-1810
Lupus Support Group
Every third Sunday, 3 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 2109
(740) 867-4877

PcmerUne
Pre-recorded inspirational
message. New message
every 24 hours.
(504) 526-81100

Wlnp,!Grter Support
Group
August 17, 6:~0 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Hartley Conference Room
Point Pleasant
(304) 675-7400
Relay For ure
August 18 -19
Mason County Fair GroWlds
Ohio River Road
Point Pleasant
r
Alzbelmer,'s Support
Group
September 19, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
SandHill Road
Point Pleasant, WV
(504) 675-5256

(!504)5~70

10''·

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ltd. •
Oak Hill Fin.
QVB

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BB&amp;T

+
Peoples +
Premier +
Rockwell +
Rocky Boot
RDShell
Sears

+

+

Shoney's

~

Wai·Mart
--

t

Wendy's

+

.

f

Worthln g ton

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condu cted on Wedn t'sday.
Feeder Cattle- Steady
2110-100# St. $1 15-$ 140 Hf
$\14-$ 120. .125-450# St. $97$ 130. Hf $93-$ 11 8 475-625#
St. $'!2-$ 11 5 Hf SHH-S I 08 6511HIIII# St. S77-S'J6 Hf $73-$87.
Fed Cattl e (seco nd WedJK~­
day of e·:Jrb mon th)
Stee rs C hoice, $63 S!\5.75; sdcct, SSH-$611; Hoi -

UneDancing
Every Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
$2/members or
$3/non-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

11 ·~..

steins, $57-$59.
Heife rs - Choice, $62-$6 4:
select. $57-$59.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/ Fleshed $40$46 ; Medium/Lean $37-$41 ;
Thin / Light $32- $37; Bulls
$49-$56,
Uar k To T he Farm:
Cow/C alf Pairs $525-SL 150;
Bn.•d Cows $475-$675 Baby
Calves $40-$185; Goats $20SHO

INVESTING

Building afinancial
blueprint for the future
GALLIPOLIS - Have yo u
evt"r ~al' down and th ought·
ha rJ .1bo ut yo ur financia l
goals? In m any cast·s. when we
are as ked to put pen to paper
and write tht·m o m, we find
th at they're not as clear as we
might believe they are.
This la ck of clarity is no
acc1dent . In th e book " Th e
Exce llent I nvestntent Advisor,"

author Nick Murray says
tinam:ial goals arcn 't only
about s:w111g: :1 specified
amount of mo ney.
Accord ing to Murray. m mt
peop le\ tln;II H.:i.l l go&lt;ll ~ rcprl' sc m their III O'i( primal emu.· tiona! needs, such as l' nsuring a
. : long. co JnfUrrabl e n:ti~cme~t,
bein~ ab le to help thetr ch!ldren, t·du cating their gran d·
children, providing qualiry care
to their a~ing part' nts or le aving a legacy for the ir loved

WIGGLE YOUR TOES, PLEASE -A Kipling Shoe Co. sales representative checks the fit on a customer's
new tennis shoe. (Kris Dotson photo)

thing we do, but ore p arti cularly
glad to fill tbe shoe need in this
community with great custom~r
service," he said. ,
Kipling is also active in the
co mmunity,_ joining the Retail
Merchants Assu~ iation and pro_'l_iQi!lg_S!lJ'l!Ort t 0 local schools _

It also repainted and comple tely renovated the store, making it
brighter and custome r friendly.
where ihe shoes and si2es are easy
to find.
Unique to thi s new store is the
largest se lection of branded shoes
i n Gallia Co unty.

"Customer satisfaction is our
goal and if that includes special
ordering something for Someone,
then we're more than happy to do
it," he sa id.
"We plan to make positive contributions in Calha County for
yeo1r~ to come," Smith said .

19'1.

LIVESTOCK
United Producers In c. market
report frum Gallipolis fo r sales

TIMEs/SENTINEL STAFF

s,.,.,

.2g'l,

11 '"

35'1..
. 43'),.

New., Editor Kevin Kelly ar (740) 446-2342, exr. 23,

Aerobics
Mondays, Wednesdays &amp;
Fridays, 9 a.m.
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
5:30p.m.
Tuesdays &amp; Thursdays
6:30p.m.
$2/members or
$3fnon-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

• Crohn's Disease SupJXirt
Group, (304) 736-9888.

System

2'%s

35i.

FRI.

Woulti you like to see a stock of local illlerest hsted? If so, cuntact

data and t1mes:
• A.W.A.K.E. (Alert, Well and
Keeping Energetic) Sleep
Disorders Support Group,
(304) 526-1880.

CA~xu Huntington Hos~Jtwl. P~~~~;~~- Hospital

29}.

9'·

Lands End

-·

Siblin« 0a!J81l8
Tuesday, August 15,
5:30-7:30 p.m. or Tuesday,
September 5, 5:50-7:30 p.m.
Future big brothers and
sisters tour the maternity
floor, watch a videotape
about sibling rivalry and learn

30~..

7"1.,

Kroger

Call for these m«&lt;fo8
Tal Chi for Beginners
Mondays and Thursdays,
6:30-7:30 p.m.
St. Mary's School of
Nursing Gym
$1 per class

33~.

7i,

Kmart

KiddJoxing
Every Saturday, 10 a.m.
$3/members or
$4/non-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

33'!.

5

Harley Davidson

Winp/Grlef
Support Group
September 21, 6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Hartley Conference Room
Point Pleasan~ WV
(504) 675-7400

42i.

5i.

+

General Electric

Aphasia Association &amp;
Slrolie Support Group
September 19, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation DepartmentPleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant, WV
(504) 675- 5250

44'1.

36i.

+
Gannett +
Melp County Fair
August 14 - AuguBt 19
PVH Booth Offering
Free Health Screenings
Jcl Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. ~~
Pomeroy,OH
(740) 9l&amp;et54

43Yw

35'·
2"1:.

+

Flrstar

Depl'e88ion
Support Group
Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 2101
(!504)526«)01

44~.

ALLIPOUS Kipling Shoe Co. is .
celebrating
A
43%
43~.
grand
opening
41 % 42~. 42i.
after launching its
fifth store at Gallipolis' Lafayette
33"· 34'}.. 35'1.
MaU.
30}. 30'1. 30'~.
Kipling started in 1901 in
f-luntington
, W.Va ., primarily as a
34.,•. 34~
34'1.
wholesaler in footwear. It moved
to
Milton, W.Va., in 1971.
17,,.
16'~..
16'~..
Several years later, Kipling
35}. 35~'
37
· moved into the retail business.
Its Point Pleasant location was
2'/o
3
2'1• '
opened in 1982. Elkins, W.Va.,
5~~ ·
followed in 1991, Lavalette, W.Va.,
~~1.
in 1995 then on to Gallipolis in
7),
7'Y,s
2000.
Why Gallipolis?
107/o 10"1..
t1~
Manager
Butch Smith sa id,
'
24~.
23'~.
24i.
" There was a need here after the
Shoe Cafe closed and we thought
55% 55.,.. ~
we would fit well into the community."
55"1,.
57
56'"
What can you find at Kipling's?
44'1. .
' 44"1.
"High
quality
branded
footwear at affordable prices," said
7),
7'!..
7'1.
Smith.
Kipling carries recogniz able
20"1,.
21
21.~
' names like Reebok, Adidas,
30'l.
28t.
29~.
Rockport, Birkenstock, Natur.ilizer, Keds, Hush Puppy, K Swiss,
20'4 20'1. 20'l'.
· Redwing, Rocky boots, Wolver16),
ine and Justin, to name a few.
16i.
15 ~.
HWe carry shoes for men,
26i. 26'~ 26%
· women and children - athletic
to work and school." said Smith.
26"1. 27'1..
27'1,
The store also carries insoles,
14~.
14'i.
15
polish , laces, shoe care products,
purses and socks.
511IM·
51.
5'1.
' The future holds much promise
for Kipling. The busin ess plans to
37'1.
37i.
37'1.
bring hats and clothing to their
5 i.
5~.
s'r..
Gallipolis store soon.
"We're always looking for a
59'1. .&gt;c69!~' ' , • . "~N"·
,,,, , 'g'lod .iiiJiines0; 1 ,opPp~:nwiqr. and
'
· for future expansion possibilities,"
30"1.. 30; .. ' 31'·
said Smith.
1.
What does Smith take pride in ?
___
"WelJ.
we're pro,ud of every.li3Yo_ 50'1. 5.1_}. _

BorgWarnar

Federal Mogul

Perinatal l.cJ88
Support Group
Tuesday, September 5, 6-7:3().p.m.
Asupport group for those
who qave experienced a
miscarriage or ectopic
pregnancy, stillbirth or infant
death. Meets first Tuesday
of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0405 off the atrium
(504) 526-2049

35i.

17\B

City Holding

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL

35i..

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Charming Shope

Marys H~ital

WED.

34,. 34,.

Champion

*:

TUE.

THU.

polis

Bv KRIS DoTSON

MON.

+
Bob Evans +

BankOne

ing Shoe cOmes to

Bryce ·,
Smith
GUEST
VIEW
ones.
It"s · no wo nd er we fe e l
un co mfortable qu a ntifYi n~ o ur
goals. It's h ard to be o bjective
when it cornes ro pursuing o ur
dreams .
That's why creati ng .n1

investm.:nt policy is us~ful. An
invc..•stmcnt policy is a written
statement that spell s out your
finan cial goals- and the best
ntethods for achit·vin g them .

Pluse see Money. Pip Dl

, Get ready, Meigs County!
It's fair time
POMEROY - Meet you at
the fair 1
Come join the fun and attend
this we ek's events at the 13 7th
Meigs County Fair. Pre- fair activities include the Junior Fair
Parade which begins today at
5:30 p.m , at the Grandstand, fol lowed by the crowning of the
Me1gs Co unty Junior Fair's King
af)d Queen, and the rest of the
court.
Plan to stay at the grandstands
for the Ministerial Association 's
Co umywide Hymn Sing th at
begins at 7 p.m .. Once again. the
R ev. Bob Robin son and his wife
J q Ann have arranged fur Meigs
Co unty talent to be interspe rsed
with an "old. fas hioned" hymn
stng.
The M eigs Co unty Fair has
so mething to o ffer everyone.
Livestock shows, youth booth displays, vegerable and fruit displ ays,
flower .displays, local -businesses,
election year candidates, tract or
di splays, tractor pulls, entertainn1ent , horse races, amusement
, rid es and food.
.
Season passes are $12, member' ship passes are S15 and individual

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW
daily passes are S6.

• • Ill
M eigs Coun ty Master Gardeners, an Extension-sponsored prog ram. will be on hand at the fair
to answe r gardening questi o ns on
Monday and Thursday from 4-7
p.m .
Their booth is located in the
Sen ior Fair Building next to th e
Flower Show. These individuals
have varymg experi ences in gard ening, but were willing to take a
50-hour course to learn what
gardening resources art ava ilable
thro ugh O hio State University
and to volunteer thei r time ro
assist fellow Me igs co untians w ith
thei r gardening questi o ns.

Please see Kneen, Page D7

Tobacco and pepper
twilight tour slated
GAL LIPOLIS
OSU
Extensio n is ho lding the annual
To bacco and Pepper Twilight
Tour o n Wednesday beginning
at 6 p.m. at Triple F Farms in
Gage.
Operated by Larry. Cheryl
and R achel Fallon , the far m is
loca ted o n Gage R oad, less than
a quartt•r- mil e from the in tersection of Ohio 141 .
Th e tnm "'ill include a va ri ety of rcse&lt;1rch and demon strati on plots. A research plot of 10
commo n toba cco varieties w ill
be discllSsed, including the n ew
variety, KT 2ll0, as well as th e
res ults of the 1999 variety trials.
There will also be one replicatio n of 1n p·cppcr va rietks.
Three additio nal repli cation s of
th ese peppt..·r vanetics arc located at Riverview Farms in Eureka and are E'as ily accessibl e to
inttTt'sted prudurers.
Demonstratio ns incl ude the
latl'St in sucker con tro l in tobacco. induJing the new produ ct.
Stifl e. which is :1 prem1 x of
Uutralin .and MH . In addition tlO
St ille, the sucker co ntrol
dem onsrratio ns compare M H

r

~

~ ~~

Jennifer
Byrnes

L.... ..... -

GUEST VIEW

al one with mixtures of MI-l and
Pnm e Plu s, a nd M H and
Butralin, at different rates .
Furthe r
demonstrations
includ e a weed co ntrol trial
with Spartan (incorporated and
not mcorpo rat ed), Command
and Prowl. including ditferent
rates &lt;~. nd tank mixes, as well as
an Acrobat d en1onstration fof
control of blue mold. Due to the
lo cation of the Acrobat plots,
vi ewin g this demonstrati o n wi,IJ
be only as weatht·r and condi -·
tions permit. Tht' re will also bt&gt; a
tobacco setter o n si te that has
been mo ditied to set no-till
tobacco.
Pepper de monstra tions will

Please su Bymes, Pap D7

Lingering Ala. drought raises worries of 'dust bowl'
MONTGOMERY. Ala. (AP) - Farmers in
so utheast Alabama are no longer hoping for
n1 ore rain that will miraculou sly save thi s
year's crops aft er a yearlon g drought.
T hey are wondering if they will be able to
plant a crop next year - o r if their regio n will
be tmning into a new "d ust bowl."
_" It's down to farmers losing th eir land."
said Jim Kelly, who farms cotton , peanu ts and
o th er goods on about 3,000 acres near H artford in Geneva County.
''I've never in rny life heard m ore farmers
say that th ey aren't going to farm next year.
I've never see n farmers so down . They just
do n't say anything now. T hey mope in and
th ey mope o ut. T hey arc just sad," said Kell y.

who· also runs a w ho lesale o;;eed busmt'\~ .
Kell y said some C1rmers who burrowed

mont..·y to plant tin s year's mostly ruincJ nnp,
wo n't be able to rome up with the r.:ash to
plant IH.· x t yea r.
Even with thunder-~turrn s rt•portcd in most
areas over the past week, rainfall lt'w ls an•
down consi derably since Augus t 19Y9, and
be·low average rainfall has been reported four
out of live years in muc h of southeast Alaln m;l . Agric ulture and meteorological experts
say the effects of the curre nt drou!(ht coulct
reach int o next year or beyond.
"There's no doubt that si nce 1995 we have
been plagued by more droughts." said William
Birdson, re~io nal coun ty agen r in southeast

Alabama.
Uirdsong 1aid mu ch of the rain that has faiiL' Il since 1995 has come m &lt;.'Xtr c m t· doses,
such as Hurric anes Opal and Georges and the
deluge in Ft·bruary 199H that caused massive
tlood ing in Elba and other parts of southeast
Al abama .
13irdsong 1a id t he current drought started
in Aub'llst 1999 . So far this year. most areas of
Alabama arc reporting hu~e rainfall deficits.
Headland in H enry County in southeast
Alabama 11 almost 24 inches below normal for
thi" time of yt'ar. M ontg:om ery is more than
14 inrhe" below nor mal.

Please see Drousfrt,. Page Dl

�••

•

. . ..

.

IP'IIU'* C8 • 6unb«p ~imfll- 6cntinrl ·

Sunday, August 13, 2000

• Ualllpolls, Ohio • Point PINNnt, WY

Inside:

.

·

'classified ads, Pages D2-D7
Business Briefcase, DB

1

\.lv
Page Dl
Sunday. Aupst J:J, 1000

THE

EKINSTOCKS

. I

This charr slww.. how local srocks of inreresr performed lasr week.
Each day:, dosing figuresare provided by Advesr of Gallipolis.

+
Akzo t
AEP

AmTech/SBC
Ashland Inc.

+
+

+

AT&amp;T

to care for the new baby.

Bring a baby doll to

practice holding, feeding
and diapering.
(504) 526-&amp;BY
Baby Care Class
Tuesday, September 12, 6-8 p.m.
General baby care, feeding,
bathing and safety tips'for
parenlll-tobe and
grandparents-to-be.
(504) 526-&amp;BY

Sbarin« Support Group
Monday, September 11, 5 p.m.
Sharing is for Tri.State
women who have been diagnosed with gynecologic
cancers. Meets first Monday
of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0403 off the atrium
(504) 526-2297
Parenling Preemie8
Support Group
Each Friday, 6 p.m.
· Parents who have a
- premature infant in the
Neonatal intensive Care
{NICU) are asked to take
part in a support group.
From 6:50 to 8 p.m., an infant
CPR class is provided for those
parents whose infants are being
discharged from the MCU.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
3rd Floor Conference Room
Call (504) 52t-7146 and ask

for er,staJ Welch.

Infant CPR Cla88

Tuesday, August 15,6 p.m. or
Tuesday, September 19, 6 p.m.
Parents-tlffie and grandparents-lobe are welcome to
attend and will receive a
certificate of attendance.
(504) 526-BABY

·FOra tour of Cabell Huntington Hospltal'8
Mother/Baby Suile8 and
Nunery, pleaae
aill (SCK) 528-BABY.
~ FAiuC'lltion

For those who have been
diaglosed with kidney diseiiSC
requiring dialysis, CHH's
Dialysis Center offers a
pl'C{jialysis education
program.
Call (!504) 526-2000, ed. !50115
and ask for Denlae Boudreau.
CIHl's llegUmal Center for

Womeu's Heelth Education
Serle8:

Diabetic Topics .
Tuesday, August 29, 5:30 p.m. . • Cosmetic Surgery: AMore
Asupport group for people
Youthful You
with diabetes and their
Monday, September 25,
family members.
6-7:50 p.m.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Featuring Elaine Young, MD
Private Dining Room One
• Stress and Stress Management
(504) 526-2286
Tuesday, September 26,
6 -7:30 p.m.
Cblldblrth EduMtion
Featuring Sam
CJa!J81l8
Januszkiewicz, MD
Next 5-week series begins
Monday, August 21, ~ p.m.
• Women and Wellness
- or all-ilay class is Saturday,
Wednesday, September 27,
October 2, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
6 -7:30 p.m.
Parents-lobe learn about the
Featuring Unda Savory, MD
childbirth process,
Lamaze techniques, comfort
All programs take place
measures, hospital proceoff the Cabell Huntington
dures, etc. There is a $25 fee. Hospital atrium in the
(504) 526-2238
Harless Auditorium of the
Joan C. Edwards School
Brea8tfeedin« Cl888
of Medicine.
Tuesday, August 22, 6-8 p.m.
Call (304)526-2270 or
or Tuesday, September 26, 6-8 p.m. 1-800-41WOMEN.
Certified lactation consultanis
teach our breastfeeding class.
(304) 526-2238

Jo!llin Dlabetm Center's

S&amp;arPropam
Monday, August 14,
2-~:~0 p.m. or 6-7:~0 p.m.
(choose one)
This program will introduce
you to the Joslin Diabetes
Center and its five key points
of diabetes management:
monitoring, meal planning,
medications, exercise and
risk reduction.~5 per person.
Open to the public. Physician
referral not necessary.
Class size is limited.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 1024 (Joslin
Diabetes Center)
(504) 526-856!5
~Cancer

Support Group
Tuesday, August 22, 5-p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room6144
(!504) 526-10!57
Boy Sooul8 of AmeriM
Medical Explorers'
Post#860
Every second and last
Monday, 7 p.m.
Free and open to any male or
female aged 14-21 interested
in learning more about the
medical field
St. Mary's School of
Nursing Building
Room 110
(504) 526-1228

Cancer Lending library
Monday -Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
St. Mary's.Hospital
Room6145
Offers the latest cancer
information through Internet
access, books and video tapes.
Free and open to the public.
Self-Referral

Mammography
Monday -Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
(504) 526-1492 to schedule
a mammOf!l'lllll

Diabeti~

Foot Clini~
Every Tuesday, 1 - 5 p.m.
by appointment only
Foot assessments by
Jeffrey Shook, D.P.M.
St. Mary's Clinic
(!504) 526-8906 to
schedule appointment
Yoga for ~ners
Every Tuesday, 6-7:30 p:m.
St. Mary'~ SctJool of
Nursing Gym
Free and open to the public.
(504) 52~182

.+pberle AModalion &amp;
Slrolie Support Group
August 15, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation DepartmentPleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(304)675-~

1

Diabetes Support Group
Every thin! Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Meets Sept. through Nov. &amp;
Jan. through May.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room2109
(504) 526-1216

.IIJ,bebner'll Support

GnJap
·August 15, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
. Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(504) 675- 5256

Arthritis Support Group
Every second ThUrsday, 2 p.m. ·
St. Mary's Hospital
Room2109
(504) 526-1216

Transitions Grief
Support Group
Every other Friday. Call for
specific meeting dates.
(504) 526-1810
Lupus Support Group
Every third Sunday, 3 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 2109
(740) 867-4877

PcmerUne
Pre-recorded inspirational
message. New message
every 24 hours.
(504) 526-81100

Wlnp,!Grter Support
Group
August 17, 6:~0 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Hartley Conference Room
Point Pleasant
(304) 675-7400
Relay For ure
August 18 -19
Mason County Fair GroWlds
Ohio River Road
Point Pleasant
r
Alzbelmer,'s Support
Group
September 19, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
SandHill Road
Point Pleasant, WV
(504) 675-5256

(!504)5~70

10''·

23'·

24'1.

55i.
53'1..

55'·
53}.

+ 44',,.

45"1•

+

•f .

+

t

+

ltd. •
Oak Hill Fin.
QVB

t

+

BB&amp;T

+
Peoples +
Premier +
Rockwell +
Rocky Boot
RDShell
Sears

+

+

Shoney's

~

Wai·Mart
--

t

Wendy's

+

.

f

Worthln g ton

+

+

7).

7'1..

20'~.

21 ~M

33'1~

33~M

19'1.

21

16i,

16'/,

26~.

26).

27

26''r,.

14~.

14.,-.

5''lffi

5'k

36~.

37'l..

5'1.

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597..

58'"

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11'1'16

11 31.

19,..
11 '"

condu cted on Wedn t'sday.
Feeder Cattle- Steady
2110-100# St. $1 15-$ 140 Hf
$\14-$ 120. .125-450# St. $97$ 130. Hf $93-$ 11 8 475-625#
St. $'!2-$ 11 5 Hf SHH-S I 08 6511HIIII# St. S77-S'J6 Hf $73-$87.
Fed Cattl e (seco nd WedJK~­
day of e·:Jrb mon th)
Stee rs C hoice, $63 S!\5.75; sdcct, SSH-$611; Hoi -

UneDancing
Every Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
$2/members or
$3/non-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

11 ·~..

steins, $57-$59.
Heife rs - Choice, $62-$6 4:
select. $57-$59.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/ Fleshed $40$46 ; Medium/Lean $37-$41 ;
Thin / Light $32- $37; Bulls
$49-$56,
Uar k To T he Farm:
Cow/C alf Pairs $525-SL 150;
Bn.•d Cows $475-$675 Baby
Calves $40-$185; Goats $20SHO

INVESTING

Building afinancial
blueprint for the future
GALLIPOLIS - Have yo u
evt"r ~al' down and th ought·
ha rJ .1bo ut yo ur financia l
goals? In m any cast·s. when we
are as ked to put pen to paper
and write tht·m o m, we find
th at they're not as clear as we
might believe they are.
This la ck of clarity is no
acc1dent . In th e book " Th e
Exce llent I nvestntent Advisor,"

author Nick Murray says
tinam:ial goals arcn 't only
about s:w111g: :1 specified
amount of mo ney.
Accord ing to Murray. m mt
peop le\ tln;II H.:i.l l go&lt;ll ~ rcprl' sc m their III O'i( primal emu.· tiona! needs, such as l' nsuring a
. : long. co JnfUrrabl e n:ti~cme~t,
bein~ ab le to help thetr ch!ldren, t·du cating their gran d·
children, providing qualiry care
to their a~ing part' nts or le aving a legacy for the ir loved

WIGGLE YOUR TOES, PLEASE -A Kipling Shoe Co. sales representative checks the fit on a customer's
new tennis shoe. (Kris Dotson photo)

thing we do, but ore p arti cularly
glad to fill tbe shoe need in this
community with great custom~r
service," he said. ,
Kipling is also active in the
co mmunity,_ joining the Retail
Merchants Assu~ iation and pro_'l_iQi!lg_S!lJ'l!Ort t 0 local schools _

It also repainted and comple tely renovated the store, making it
brighter and custome r friendly.
where ihe shoes and si2es are easy
to find.
Unique to thi s new store is the
largest se lection of branded shoes
i n Gallia Co unty.

"Customer satisfaction is our
goal and if that includes special
ordering something for Someone,
then we're more than happy to do
it," he sa id.
"We plan to make positive contributions in Calha County for
yeo1r~ to come," Smith said .

19'1.

LIVESTOCK
United Producers In c. market
report frum Gallipolis fo r sales

TIMEs/SENTINEL STAFF

s,.,.,

.2g'l,

11 '"

35'1..
. 43'),.

New., Editor Kevin Kelly ar (740) 446-2342, exr. 23,

Aerobics
Mondays, Wednesdays &amp;
Fridays, 9 a.m.
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
5:30p.m.
Tuesdays &amp; Thursdays
6:30p.m.
$2/members or
$3fnon-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

• Crohn's Disease SupJXirt
Group, (304) 736-9888.

System

2'%s

35i.

FRI.

Woulti you like to see a stock of local illlerest hsted? If so, cuntact

data and t1mes:
• A.W.A.K.E. (Alert, Well and
Keeping Energetic) Sleep
Disorders Support Group,
(304) 526-1880.

CA~xu Huntington Hos~Jtwl. P~~~~;~~- Hospital

29}.

9'·

Lands End

-·

Siblin« 0a!J81l8
Tuesday, August 15,
5:30-7:30 p.m. or Tuesday,
September 5, 5:50-7:30 p.m.
Future big brothers and
sisters tour the maternity
floor, watch a videotape
about sibling rivalry and learn

30~..

7"1.,

Kroger

Call for these m«&lt;fo8
Tal Chi for Beginners
Mondays and Thursdays,
6:30-7:30 p.m.
St. Mary's School of
Nursing Gym
$1 per class

33~.

7i,

Kmart

KiddJoxing
Every Saturday, 10 a.m.
$3/members or
$4/non-members
Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center
(504) 675-7222

33'!.

5

Harley Davidson

Winp/Grlef
Support Group
September 21, 6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Hartley Conference Room
Point Pleasan~ WV
(504) 675-7400

42i.

5i.

+

General Electric

Aphasia Association &amp;
Slrolie Support Group
September 19, 1 p.m.
Rehabilitation DepartmentPleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant, WV
(504) 675- 5250

44'1.

36i.

+
Gannett +
Melp County Fair
August 14 - AuguBt 19
PVH Booth Offering
Free Health Screenings
Jcl Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. ~~
Pomeroy,OH
(740) 9l&amp;et54

43Yw

35'·
2"1:.

+

Flrstar

Depl'e88ion
Support Group
Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital
Room 2101
(!504)526«)01

44~.

ALLIPOUS Kipling Shoe Co. is .
celebrating
A
43%
43~.
grand
opening
41 % 42~. 42i.
after launching its
fifth store at Gallipolis' Lafayette
33"· 34'}.. 35'1.
MaU.
30}. 30'1. 30'~.
Kipling started in 1901 in
f-luntington
, W.Va ., primarily as a
34.,•. 34~
34'1.
wholesaler in footwear. It moved
to
Milton, W.Va., in 1971.
17,,.
16'~..
16'~..
Several years later, Kipling
35}. 35~'
37
· moved into the retail business.
Its Point Pleasant location was
2'/o
3
2'1• '
opened in 1982. Elkins, W.Va.,
5~~ ·
followed in 1991, Lavalette, W.Va.,
~~1.
in 1995 then on to Gallipolis in
7),
7'Y,s
2000.
Why Gallipolis?
107/o 10"1..
t1~
Manager
Butch Smith sa id,
'
24~.
23'~.
24i.
" There was a need here after the
Shoe Cafe closed and we thought
55% 55.,.. ~
we would fit well into the community."
55"1,.
57
56'"
What can you find at Kipling's?
44'1. .
' 44"1.
"High
quality
branded
footwear at affordable prices," said
7),
7'!..
7'1.
Smith.
Kipling carries recogniz able
20"1,.
21
21.~
' names like Reebok, Adidas,
30'l.
28t.
29~.
Rockport, Birkenstock, Natur.ilizer, Keds, Hush Puppy, K Swiss,
20'4 20'1. 20'l'.
· Redwing, Rocky boots, Wolver16),
ine and Justin, to name a few.
16i.
15 ~.
HWe carry shoes for men,
26i. 26'~ 26%
· women and children - athletic
to work and school." said Smith.
26"1. 27'1..
27'1,
The store also carries insoles,
14~.
14'i.
15
polish , laces, shoe care products,
purses and socks.
511IM·
51.
5'1.
' The future holds much promise
for Kipling. The busin ess plans to
37'1.
37i.
37'1.
bring hats and clothing to their
5 i.
5~.
s'r..
Gallipolis store soon.
"We're always looking for a
59'1. .&gt;c69!~' ' , • . "~N"·
,,,, , 'g'lod .iiiJiines0; 1 ,opPp~:nwiqr. and
'
· for future expansion possibilities,"
30"1.. 30; .. ' 31'·
said Smith.
1.
What does Smith take pride in ?
___
"WelJ.
we're pro,ud of every.li3Yo_ 50'1. 5.1_}. _

BorgWarnar

Federal Mogul

Perinatal l.cJ88
Support Group
Tuesday, September 5, 6-7:3().p.m.
Asupport group for those
who qave experienced a
miscarriage or ectopic
pregnancy, stillbirth or infant
death. Meets first Tuesday
of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0405 off the atrium
(504) 526-2049

35i.

17\B

City Holding

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL

35i..

17),

Charming Shope

Marys H~ital

WED.

34,. 34,.

Champion

*:

TUE.

THU.

polis

Bv KRIS DoTSON

MON.

+
Bob Evans +

BankOne

ing Shoe cOmes to

Bryce ·,
Smith
GUEST
VIEW
ones.
It"s · no wo nd er we fe e l
un co mfortable qu a ntifYi n~ o ur
goals. It's h ard to be o bjective
when it cornes ro pursuing o ur
dreams .
That's why creati ng .n1

investm.:nt policy is us~ful. An
invc..•stmcnt policy is a written
statement that spell s out your
finan cial goals- and the best
ntethods for achit·vin g them .

Pluse see Money. Pip Dl

, Get ready, Meigs County!
It's fair time
POMEROY - Meet you at
the fair 1
Come join the fun and attend
this we ek's events at the 13 7th
Meigs County Fair. Pre- fair activities include the Junior Fair
Parade which begins today at
5:30 p.m , at the Grandstand, fol lowed by the crowning of the
Me1gs Co unty Junior Fair's King
af)d Queen, and the rest of the
court.
Plan to stay at the grandstands
for the Ministerial Association 's
Co umywide Hymn Sing th at
begins at 7 p.m .. Once again. the
R ev. Bob Robin son and his wife
J q Ann have arranged fur Meigs
Co unty talent to be interspe rsed
with an "old. fas hioned" hymn
stng.
The M eigs Co unty Fair has
so mething to o ffer everyone.
Livestock shows, youth booth displays, vegerable and fruit displ ays,
flower .displays, local -businesses,
election year candidates, tract or
di splays, tractor pulls, entertainn1ent , horse races, amusement
, rid es and food.
.
Season passes are $12, member' ship passes are S15 and individual

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW
daily passes are S6.

• • Ill
M eigs Coun ty Master Gardeners, an Extension-sponsored prog ram. will be on hand at the fair
to answe r gardening questi o ns on
Monday and Thursday from 4-7
p.m .
Their booth is located in the
Sen ior Fair Building next to th e
Flower Show. These individuals
have varymg experi ences in gard ening, but were willing to take a
50-hour course to learn what
gardening resources art ava ilable
thro ugh O hio State University
and to volunteer thei r time ro
assist fellow Me igs co untians w ith
thei r gardening questi o ns.

Please see Kneen, Page D7

Tobacco and pepper
twilight tour slated
GAL LIPOLIS
OSU
Extensio n is ho lding the annual
To bacco and Pepper Twilight
Tour o n Wednesday beginning
at 6 p.m. at Triple F Farms in
Gage.
Operated by Larry. Cheryl
and R achel Fallon , the far m is
loca ted o n Gage R oad, less than
a quartt•r- mil e from the in tersection of Ohio 141 .
Th e tnm "'ill include a va ri ety of rcse&lt;1rch and demon strati on plots. A research plot of 10
commo n toba cco varieties w ill
be discllSsed, including the n ew
variety, KT 2ll0, as well as th e
res ults of the 1999 variety trials.
There will also be one replicatio n of 1n p·cppcr va rietks.
Three additio nal repli cation s of
th ese peppt..·r vanetics arc located at Riverview Farms in Eureka and are E'as ily accessibl e to
inttTt'sted prudurers.
Demonstratio ns incl ude the
latl'St in sucker con tro l in tobacco. induJing the new produ ct.
Stifl e. which is :1 prem1 x of
Uutralin .and MH . In addition tlO
St ille, the sucker co ntrol
dem onsrratio ns compare M H

r

~

~ ~~

Jennifer
Byrnes

L.... ..... -

GUEST VIEW

al one with mixtures of MI-l and
Pnm e Plu s, a nd M H and
Butralin, at different rates .
Furthe r
demonstrations
includ e a weed co ntrol trial
with Spartan (incorporated and
not mcorpo rat ed), Command
and Prowl. including ditferent
rates &lt;~. nd tank mixes, as well as
an Acrobat d en1onstration fof
control of blue mold. Due to the
lo cation of the Acrobat plots,
vi ewin g this demonstrati o n wi,IJ
be only as weatht·r and condi -·
tions permit. Tht' re will also bt&gt; a
tobacco setter o n si te that has
been mo ditied to set no-till
tobacco.
Pepper de monstra tions will

Please su Bymes, Pap D7

Lingering Ala. drought raises worries of 'dust bowl'
MONTGOMERY. Ala. (AP) - Farmers in
so utheast Alabama are no longer hoping for
n1 ore rain that will miraculou sly save thi s
year's crops aft er a yearlon g drought.
T hey are wondering if they will be able to
plant a crop next year - o r if their regio n will
be tmning into a new "d ust bowl."
_" It's down to farmers losing th eir land."
said Jim Kelly, who farms cotton , peanu ts and
o th er goods on about 3,000 acres near H artford in Geneva County.
''I've never in rny life heard m ore farmers
say that th ey aren't going to farm next year.
I've never see n farmers so down . They just
do n't say anything now. T hey mope in and
th ey mope o ut. T hey arc just sad," said Kell y.

who· also runs a w ho lesale o;;eed busmt'\~ .
Kell y said some C1rmers who burrowed

mont..·y to plant tin s year's mostly ruincJ nnp,
wo n't be able to rome up with the r.:ash to
plant IH.· x t yea r.
Even with thunder-~turrn s rt•portcd in most
areas over the past week, rainfall lt'w ls an•
down consi derably since Augus t 19Y9, and
be·low average rainfall has been reported four
out of live years in muc h of southeast Alaln m;l . Agric ulture and meteorological experts
say the effects of the curre nt drou!(ht coulct
reach int o next year or beyond.
"There's no doubt that si nce 1995 we have
been plagued by more droughts." said William
Birdson, re~io nal coun ty agen r in southeast

Alabama.
Uirdsong 1aid mu ch of the rain that has faiiL' Il since 1995 has come m &lt;.'Xtr c m t· doses,
such as Hurric anes Opal and Georges and the
deluge in Ft·bruary 199H that caused massive
tlood ing in Elba and other parts of southeast
Al abama .
13irdsong 1a id t he current drought started
in Aub'llst 1999 . So far this year. most areas of
Alabama arc reporting hu~e rainfall deficits.
Headland in H enry County in southeast
Alabama 11 almost 24 inches below normal for
thi" time of yt'ar. M ontg:om ery is more than
14 inrhe" below nor mal.

Please see Drousfrt,. Page Dl

�-

~unba~ «ime~-~entind

: ' Cisssifieds
•

All PereoNtl,
Announcement,

,

Olwawoy, Loet I Founct,'\
Yorcl 5aln, ond Wantod
ToDoAde
Muat h Paid In Advance.

..

TRIBUNE DEAQLINE j

2:00 p.m. the dar before
the ad 11 to run.
Sundly • Monday edition
- 2:00 p.m. Friday.

..

SEftDN~fADUNE :

1:00 p.m.

day beloro

the ad 11 to run.

Sunday I Monday edition
1:00 p.m. Friday.

••

REGISTER QEAQUNE;

2 dayo belorw the ad lo
to Nn by 4:30p.m.
saturday I Mondey
edllton- 4:30 Thursday.
"Delld/1. . . .ub}ecl to
t:IHJnp due to holldoyo"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Pensonals

IS HE CHEATING??? Top ·Rated
, Psychics Can Tell Voul S 1.93 +I
i • Min. 1·800·472 ·2103. All Credit
1 Cerda &amp; Checks OR 1·900·820·
' 0020 $3.99 /Min "2 MINUTES
t FREEl" (24 HRS.) 18 +.

'

'

I

LOSE 3 TO 5 LBS WEEKLVI AS
SEEN ON TV FAT TRAPPER
111.95. METABOLrrE 1000 $9 95
BACKED BV THE NATIONAL
: .DIABETES RESEARCH COUNCIL. t ·800-tl04-o438 COO MCI
~ISA , _ loHwelgiM nu

9 Wesl Strmson, Athens

80

Yard Sale

Truckloads Of
New &amp; Used llems
From Sewral Stales

Selhng To The Public 5 Dealers
t Piece. Oozena &amp; Case LOIS
Bowen Auction Servl"
O.ry Bowen, Auctioneer
Proctorvllta, Ohto
Flu Market
Just Across
Huntinglon. WV
31SI Bridge
740-8111-2211
304~53-2587

We will be filling this position In Central
Ohio before the end of September.
For a personal Interview
Call
1-800-917-9084

•
I
I

I

t

''

!:

Help Wanted

Valley
Hospital

Pllaunt Vallty HaapHJI currently haa the following
full·llmt opportunity lvJIIable

STAFF RADIOLOGY TECHNOLOGIST

• · TM.ust have satisfactorily completed an AMIA-a•DDt'ovotd-1
••
Radiology program . ARRT with WV Ucense •
Excellent:
Sala ry
Holidays
•
Vacation
HospttaiiZat•on
Dental
Long-te rm d•sabillly
l
Ltfe
Insurance
Ret.reme n!
••

•

'

r

,• .

3449E" 22 (2&gt;&amp;Hrsl

Help Wanted

Akzo Nobel is one of the world's leadln&amp; companies In

Akzo Nobel Functional Chemicals LLC In Galllpolis
Ferry, West Virginia (40 miles north of Huntington,
WV) has an excellent career posllion .. anable
lmmedlalely.

Minimum of an associates de&amp;n!e In accounting or
equlvalenl experience, plus 1·5 years experience In
accounting. Pn!vlous experience with payroWac:counll
payoble/automated accounting systems a plus,
lncludlna willingness to work overtime In a fut potc:ed
en•lronment. Must possess proftclency with Microsoft
Word/Excel, good typlnl skills, data entry and 10·key
pad by touch.
We offer a competitive wage,lbeneftl5 package.
Please send resume to:

MINI MALL
PUBLIC WELCOME

NOW OPEN

Natl' onal Wl' ld

"CATCHOFTHEOAY"
Name Brand Clotlies al Discount Prir:.-. 1

Turkey Ba nquet
AUgUSt 26,
Dinner

JOin our famrly of profssstonals to be the re source for
communtty health serv.ce ne eds
Please submi! resume's to:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550

6:30

Held at Gallipolis
Sh •
Cl b
nne
U

Or

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
Fa' Complete PmfeSSIOnallndiVIdual
and Bus•ness Tax Preparation
ASK US ABOUT

11

o

Help Wanted

GASEJ:,~
TRANSPORTATION

Bowman ' s Homecare

Boys Tap, Preschool

Modern and More!

or to register fo r the cla ss

Saturda y, S e pt 2, 9-7

Fal l Registration on

Featunng .

August 31st, 4 - 7pm at the

M&amp;D PAVING

Ol e Car Club of Galltpolts ,

Art School, 1271 Eastern

Driveways , Parking Lots,

Natto na lly Accla•med Gospel ,

Ave ., Gallipolis, OH

Group • The Perry S rsters

Please Call

Contact Eric Blackburn

(7 40) 441 - 1 988 for more

(740) 339-0194 or
(740) 446-2422

Sh

Call 740-379-9000 to rent

Are You Receiving

crafters space or to become a

THANK YOU

7.75%

concert s ponsor

Elks Lodge #1 07

or a deposit of

For Purchasing My

$2000?

Market Lamb

Interest is deferred

2000

until withdrawal.

THANK YOU
South e aste rn Equipment
Co . inc .
for purchastng my
~-'-'
Market Lamb_
at the 2000 Galli a
County Jr Fair
Laure n l':IAii ~ t&gt; P.rl

at the

Gallia

County~Jr. Fair

ieLynch

The Lynch Agency

Rachael Sau"r~'"" 1
Pairs and

8"""'"'" 1 336 Second Avenue

buying my last

Tired of Waiting For Service
On Your Home Appliances?

Market Steer and for

Call?40-446-7795

Bernadine's for

446-8235
Lo s t Tan Change Purse
8 /2 /00 wtth Jewelry a nd
Money, S e nti menta l Val u e
REWARD
C a ll675 -4135 or 6 75- 10 4 7

supporting the Gallia

New &amp;Used Appliances
Parts For All Major Brands

county Junior Fair

Jodi~

McCall
Raccoon R o wdie's 4 -H Club

THANK
'

Furniture and

1704 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

Cabinets
Fo r Pu rchas tn g My

li== ========ll
THANK YOU

Kyger Dental
Associates
For Purchasing My

Market Hog
at the

2000

YOU

Gallia

County Jr. Fair
Christy

M a rket Hog
at th e 2 000 G a ll1a C o unt y
J r. F a 1r
Luke

THANK YOU

Firstar Bank
For

Purchas in g My

Market Lamb
at th e

Triangl

2000

Gallia

Cou n ty Jr. F a ir

across from Gallia C o .

THANK YOU

Erin

Fair Grounds

Sta t e Farm Insurance

Anoth er Gen e ration

Coke P r oducts

$5.75

Full Case No L 1mit
Con c r e t e Y a rd
Ornam e nts 2 0 % OFF
W e Sto c k

A

Fu ll V a ri e ty

o f Co n cessi o n Stand
Cand y Ba rs
P u bl ic W elco m e

&amp; Gli dd ers
Grill

Cook

Need e d

for purc h asing my
2000 Marke t H o g
a t t h e Gal ha C o . Junior Fair
Bethaney

B

R 1ver Valley

To anyone wh o pl edges
$ 100 00 toward t he "Ah c 1a
H alley F u n d " during t he
Gallia Co. J r. Fatr Mar ket

THANK YOU

chec ks to P :O . Box 359

Nor r is Northup Dodg e

Gallipolis. Oh1 o 45631 -

for purchastn g m y

Made P ayabl e to Alicta

2000 Market Steer

Hal ley... May God

at t h e Gallia Co . Jun 1or Fa1r
B eth a n e y B
R iver Valley
Ractne Ptzza E xp ress
Will Be Closed Mon 14th Thurs . 17th For Fair Week

J1ore Dnformation '--R-eo_p_en_F_~-~=_:4_~a_o~_h

a_t_4_p_m_J

I

For Sale .
1982 Venture Mobtle Hom e
2 Bedroom , All Ele ctric,
IAp,pro•xl rroately 14&gt;1 5 , $4 ,000 F1rm
Call Afte r 6 00 Senous
Callers On ly 446 -93 79

110 Help Wanted
POSTAl JOBS S4e ,323 CO VA
Now Hiring ·No Experience ·Paid
Trelning ·Oreal Benefits. Call 7
Days 800-429-3660 Ext J·365

o

Help Wanted

De ntal Asststant Needed Send
Resume To CLA 505 c/o Gall1·
polls Dally Tnbune 825 Third
Ave . Gall1polis. Ohio 4563 1, or
call {740)446-2409

Help Wanted

Communication
Madia.

Drillers
40 Years and Growmg Slrongl
H &amp; W Trucking Co

"Great Pay Packages
"Ins Plans, f ull Benellts &amp; Holl·
day Pay
' Home 90% ol Weekends
'Direct·OepoSII. Week ly Pay
"Stgn·On BoouSIOnentat1on Pay
Se 21 yrs Clean MVA ACOL
Hazmal
Weicom1ng Co Drivers 010
and Or1v1ng School Graduates
800 826 3560

Talk To Randy'
www hwtruch com

=::..::_~

110

EASY WORKI EXC ELLENT PAY!
Assemble Products Ca ll To ll
Free 1·800·467·5566 Eat 11577

Snap- on
Career Seminar
Snap-on has a limited number of
Sales openings
In Your Local Area .
Now there are two ways to beg•n a rewa1d1ng caree r With a solid
proven loader 1n professional tools and eqUipment
1
Franchllt Dealer · 11 you are ready to make a solid Investment 1n
your future, consider the flextb11!1y and aarmngs potentialof a Snap on
franchiSe

2 Employed Salsa Representative II you prefer 10 ~ es t d11ve the
franchiSe opportunity for a llm1ted 11me wh1le you rece1ve a salary,
commiSSion on vour sales and full health benel1ts consider th1s unique
appren11ce program Solid performance as a Sales Rep may also lead
to eas1er down payment and f1 nancmg lerms should you successlullv
apply to purchase the franchise laTer

7 : 00p.m.
Holiday Inn
Bridgeport,

WV

Tuesday, August 15th
7 :00 p . m. Holiday Inn
Parkersburg,

WV

•

• You e nJ OY helprng peopl e deve lop lh etr g tfb •• tnd
•
You keep up wit h dc vc lopmenl s 111 th e
tech nology .~re n a

Allen C Wood , Broker · 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker - 446·0971
Jeanette Moore, · 256·1745
Patneta Ross
740-446-1066

This as a scmor pos Jltu n w1lh e:: xce ll enl bc ncf1 ts,
fl ex time and a competit ive salary 111 a dy nam1c,
n.t t wna II y -a ee la 11n cd no np ro fit o rga mzal ion
Please send re sume ,1nd three rc lcrcn ces by
Septemb er 1st to the att entiO n o l Lee Wood ,
AC Enel, 94 Co lumb us Road, AI he ns, Oh10 4570 I
No p hone culls plcnsc .

ACE net
11

POSITIONS
IMM E DIATE

o

Help Wanted
AVAILABLE

FOR

HIRE . Now h tnng dtrect care

worke rs fo r comm un1ty group h o m e s for people

expe rie n ce S e ve ra l s h tfts a nd hours avai la ble
Starting rate · $6 00/ho ur F or an application call
1-B00-53 1·2302 Buckeye C o mmun tty Serv1ces is
an e qual o pportu ntty e,mp loyer

Help Wanted

Ckncal
Amc:m•u ( , ~ .,.,~1 I '""ncr un~ uf lh~
lc:ndln&amp; con;unlfl fin Qr&gt; cc: " ll:n•urllh""'

~ota!

lht (QIIO\'ollll; pOS IIIOil S o pen Ill \l UI

Cralhpoll su m c~

!JR.\ 'IIl ii MANAGE ~ II NT
I RA!tiJII
Our \~a nagtmc:nt Tra1nees Jllllll~tpil lt 1n
an e ~len"\f on lhc·JOb tremHij! r r n~mm
dutllnrd to prepare you for bnnd1
manager rcsf&gt;tlnsoboli llc:s Ihe: 18 mtmth
modular 1r1mmg prollram mmw.;b you n•
~r UptCtl t•f manPI!'"II ~;red1 1 o ten su111
IIC~Oomt adJ U!Im ~ nt hliSirn' i~ dodopuu·nl

HIL L
Lou k w g fo r ,1
new ROOST to c.ll l home' 1

A t1me to butld
8 1 acres more or less
Green Element.,
ols
So m e
N0.22

111&lt;-UPW .

V1cw Th 1s l uu nlry 2 00
lacrcs nwrc ur less Hy
ISlHVCV Grcc 11 Ek mcnt.uy
Snmc
!S c h oo l s
Rcs tnCIIons NO. 223
1

man•~rr111l rt'~pt•n&lt;&gt;ho htld

r~~~~~~EE~ ~~~~~~~

NEW LISTING .- Need a home

rio-;;~ toliu::

sc-hools.,

Lovely 2 Story Home. 2 hc(lroom llll the ma1 n level &amp; a

naOOic •u•1omc• '"~""es
nNI
• rrro• ab and aHoum aJ1u•tm~nn and •~
sup~nt bu • nc&gt;J devdrpmtnl el'rNI! on 111•

on the 2nd leve l Ho me has \1 vmg ruu m. J 111 rng
I3rd
I
room, mode rn kit chen, panlry Lau ndry rnum on t lC

bnnc:h
(,luahrkJ apphcanH o;houiJ hJit • h•11 ~
nc)c•• " &lt;l'b 1P.: 1 rncc

matn level. Unfrn ished bd~c
m enl w/outs1dc cnlrancc
~
Bcauttful origm al woodwork t~nd doo rs Hnmc. has
close t space ga lore. Back porch Detadl cU g..ragc
I5x25, lg back y.~rd 44xl 74 Need somr C}(!n mn nnc
ThiS I10111C has a one bei.l room apartiT1Cil T upslaJrs Wil h
outside entrance Shown by oppol nt ment O nly l! NO.

I'' '"Pfll"'

iCIIrold•plomll"''h

prdmcJ clfe"•~t •«b•l '""'muno~a h ~"
I)PII1K 1 ~ t)lo.utd aNI mJII&gt;rmal.;al ' ~ II• ""'
rtqu•rril
11

Aonrn.an Gcnr.,l I noncr " ~ ' ~
~ omj)&lt;loiiH hcnclol~ packl!l&lt; "''"J n ~
1•"
meC•ul Jcnt•l """a ~0111.1 ~lan
lmmtdlllf u&gt;nlld~!all&lt;lR pic••• 1tnd ~~ur
11
"' "'•P\ul.('
ro
rc\umt
Boo
7H1"Ootlol"ol" Oluo ·~ 6JHI?H
III II rwr "tbl • l~ 11 ~""IGIIO~ntC til m
I 'tu~l ~oolt) I mpl&lt;l)&lt;t

Amcr~•n (j~nl:'faiJ

1

I NEED HELP!!! I Retuse To l et
You Fall $3K· $6K/ Month 24
Hrs 1·888·643·1 366 or 1·888·
322·6169 Ext 3244 (Toll Free)

.,., ,

l~...,.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!J

Lotst From 2 Attenti on builder s or

tracts to 6 acre lracts
Just a lew m11es from
ll r&gt;ollll; poliS Some restnctton
I&lt;.;C&gt;un·ty water ava•lable Call
for N2022
Homealtea In Guyan Twp.

Ava•labl e 1n 5 acre lracts
more or less Pu bi1C water
available Dr1veways and
culverts alrea dy present
G1ve Allen a call #:2023

mobile ho me owner s.
Vacan t Land JUSt mrnutes
!rom the hOspttal &amp; town
Approx 9 acres MIL Call
lor the locat• on &amp; pr1ce
#2020
Farm In Green Township.
ThiS fa rm has toads ol

potential w1th •I s 80 acre s
or less Make your dreams
come 1rue Maybe butld a
new home J us t let yo ur
1magmatton go You better
call now • It may nol lasl
long Ask for #2025

We have several 5
look ing for a plu s tractl avail a ble
lvac:anl land ? We may have building lhat draam
you need J ust a lew All ypur utrllt•es a re
I
miles from town are 35 and each lot has
acres more or less •n Clay fron tSge Aes lncted Near
I T~~~~_";h i p . Ca ll and ask lor Holzer Hosp1ta l Ask for
#2027.
N202B.
a re always glad to help you sell or buy property.
Renta l pro perty Is also available. Give ua a call i
we can hel p.

Help Wan~ed

110

MANAGER'S POSITION
Local Pizza Shop Is looking For
A Manager W1th 5 to Year&amp; EK·
perltnce. Et~.ce ll ent Salary And
Bentllls, Send As sume To 269
TheiSS Road. Vlnlon, 0H 45686

Rocksprings Aehabllltlon 'Center
is accep ting application&amp; Wr a
pan lime position lor a LPt- 1 W e
are a 1OO·bed skilled reh ablllta·
lion ce nter that has tecetved 2
yeatS of def•cl ency free sut'\levs
Work !rom hOme $500/mo + PT I We have an excelle nt st 4H ot
S2k-6kt F T www worklro many- dedlcaled team workers a~ are
looking 101 a new member to jom
where com Call t-8()0-727·94 15
our team Part lime emphfye es
Nlghl time ma nager lor Mason are eligible lor ali benefits i~c lud ·
Mote . call 304 773 9000 lor In· lng Insurance New gtaduates are
terv1ew
welcome to apply Call Caro l
Gree ntng , 0 0 N 740·992·6606
Owner! Operator Seeking Driver Jar an 1nterv.ew EOE
:
To Team W•th,l740l256-1021

We have many Items , 3,..
partial estates. Anice variety of
household Items, kltcheqlttmsi
household appUances, Unes, :-

. g~assware, cOOkware, small ~:.
items, small antique.··

I NEED HELPIII I Refuse To l et
You Fall $2K· $4K/ Mont h 24
Hrs 1·888·643· 1366 or 1·888·
547 B216(Totl Foeol
Local Compa ny seek mg Dat a
Entry Cle rk wllh knowledge ol
basic accounll ng procedure s,
compuler skills, olt lce mach ine
elllc1ency &amp; enjoys working with
others Send resume cfo Polnl
Ple asal'l t Register, ML 34, 20 0
Ma1n Streel PI Pleasanl. WV
25550

~UE~Y.AUCTIONUR

740-388-0823 OR 740-245-9866

make $1,736 WEE KLY mailing
Letters !rom home• Foll ow ~ y
Easy D~re ctlon s Begm Recetvlng
Mon e ~ In as little as 10 day51
Fully Gaurenteedl Kevslone Boll
951 ·PW. Joplin, MO B4802

I..JCENSED AND BoNDED

NOT REsPONSIBLE

fOR

BY OHIO

ACCIDENTS

OR Losr PROPERlY.
Real Eatate General
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE•'
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE:
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER
u e &amp;Bo4
GAIL BELVILLE . .
. 44S.a2ot
TRtSH SNYDER.
. . .. 441 -- .
Branch Off1ce JOHNNIE RUSSELL
. .. .. 367.0323'
23 Locust St OA~IO SNYDER ...... .. ...... .. ... . 441 ·945Q
Galhpolts, Ohro
OU R W EB PAGE IS www vlsm1th com
45631
e-ma1l vlsmlth com

q!, Q/md(

WOOD
HEJILTI', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4563 1

wtth me nta l re ta rdation 1n Galha and Metgs
Cou nttes. Mu st ha ve h1g h sch ool d tploma/GED .
va lid dri ver's ltcense and three yea rs good drtv1ng

Our"" the 1 ,,~ traonmg .. ,tlrqu•p ,nu 1"

tn Oh1o $14 TO to $21 80thr Ben·
ellis &amp; Pd Tralmng For Job lnlor·
malton, 1·81 8· 94 2· 0200, ext
4780

446-6806

• You express yo urscll we lim wnltng,

ACE net IS an equal Opportun•ly Employer
committed to quality JOb creatiOn 1n the regton

Apphc...nl'l for 11l1s rml) lr&lt;tl 1•pponunoty
s ho ul~ lw1t fu ur l car~ I" • I lu11h sCh(}l)l
educ&amp;loon lrlllnl llil 01 "'"!~ npo:rocncr
(Uiu c•pt t ~ e n c r pr.fr rr ed) ~ Jr o n~t
"'tllltn and commt•n l~ al l o n ~ ~ ' II ' 1mcl 1
1alld dm er ~ hte t.-c Must t&gt;e 11pcn m
r.I•'Uium ~nd ha1c lhf dn r~ h• """'"t

Gov'l &amp; Postel J ob• · Now H1nng

958 Clark Chapel Ad.
Bidwell, Oh10 45614

Co nsider this poSi tion tf
• You enJ OY spcaktng lo lhc publi c,
• You arc concerned about the d1g1t al d lvJdr ,

Help Wanted

GOV'T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour Full Bene! tis No E1·
perlence Reqwed Free App llca
tton And E ~ta m lnlormatlon 1·888·
126· 9083 Ex tensiO n 1701 (7
AM -7PM CS TI

Grant

Part of CNHI

and persoMd ,liltlms

Electrical! Maintenance
Personnel
A well established corporation IS
desuous IO employ two tndtvldU·
ats w1th electrical eKpe r!ance ,
and one with genera l main
tenance expenence Patd vacaIIOns hOsp!laltza rlon. and life In·
surance ava 1table Please send
resume to P 0 Box 547, Athens,
OH 45701

nat ional fundcrs and local orgamzattons. lc admg

Appalachian Center fo r Economic Natworks

POSITIONS
AVAILABLE FOR
IMMEDIAT E HIRE
Now htnng d.rect care
workers for communtty
group homes for people
wtth menta l re!ardalton
tn Gall 1a a nd Me tgs
Counties
Must ha ve
h1gh
school
val1d
dtploma/GE D,
driver's license and three
years
good
dnvtng
exP.ert ence
Several
shtfts
and
hou rs
a va1lable S tarttng rate ,
$6 00/hour
For an ap phcalton call
1-800·531 -2302
Buckeye
Commu ntly
SetV1ces 1s an equal
o pportun tl y employe r

EARN 125.000 TO $50,000 IYR
Medical Insura nce Btlllng Assls·
lance Needed lmmedtaletyt Use
Your Home Co mputer For Graal
Pote ntial Annual Income Cal l
Now! 1·800·291·4683 Deplt 109

sl rateg1c planmng processes and determuu og staff

priori ties m a fa st.. paced e nvironm ent
w nlin g and bus mess expenence a plus

110

Help Wanted

Drivers 2 Week Pa1d Truck Drlv·
er Tralmng No Expenence Need·
ad Earn Up To $32 ,QOO/ I &amp;I Yr
Wl Futl Benellts Call Today 1·
877 ·230·6002 Sunday -Friday 9
A M To 5 PM P A M Transport
wW'III olrdrlvers com

Snap- on Tools Company
Kenosha, WI
Snap--on Is an equal opportunity employer m/1/dfV

c apable of fo rm tng work ing part ne rs hip s· w a h

OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.

Help Wanted

110

Attendance 1s hm1ted For reseNatlons caii B00-926-5544 x2545 today
Sealing may be ava1labte at the door II unable to attend el1her of
lhese sem1nars, pleas call the# above tor tnlormallon on Snap-on
Tools

Ap ph canls shoul d be a pc rs uas 1ve nelwo rke r,

For tnletView
cons ideration send
resume and cover letter to
Publisher
Ohio Valley Pubhshtng Co
825 Third Ave
Gall1pol1s, Ohto 45631

DRIVERS $T000 Stgn mg Bonus.
$40 000 + Ann ually Aeg1onal
Carrier Excellent Benehts Em·
ployee Stock Ownership COL AI
Tank &amp; Haz Aero Bulk Carrier 1
800·456·6012

Monday, August 14th

p rogra m in a re a hi gh sc hoo ls . co mp u te r
tec hno logy c e nte rs o pe n to lhc p ubl ic , a
tec hnology business 1ncuba1io n and tcc hn tcal
assistance program , and polu..:y Jmt taltve::s rt:l tt lt.!d to
the drgtlal dovtde

SALES &amp; MARKETING
POSmON
(Inside and Outstde work)
: Full and part·lime position.
We are e xpandtng our
sales staff Must have
good commumcation
sktlls, enjoy meeting and
working wtth the public,
be crealtve Must have
dependable transportation. Full-ttme
_QQsition offers salary pJus
commisston and company
benefits .

Dnvers wanted· team runs Must
have class a COL s lwo years
verll1a ble e~tperlence . and no
more tha n three movmg viola
1tons Call Ron at 1·800·887·3970.

Help W.anted

&amp; unbar tn:1mr • · ior nt mel • Page 03

WV

Help Wanted

Sales

tmple mentalion of a compu ter entr epreneurship

OFFICE CLERK
Full-ttme position in
Gallipolis office. Must
have good communtcatton
skills, enJOY meettng and
worktng with the public.
Company benef•ts.

110

Don't m1ss thts opportumty to hear more aboul these aml other career
apportumtles available w1th thiS1ndustry leader 1n profess iOnal tools
and equtpmenl Please make your plans now to attend our recepllon
an ~ semrnar

The D irector o f Tec h Ve ntures wtll wur~ wtt h a
sla ff of SIX and commun1ty pa rtners to bud d a
stro ng technology sec to r tn sou1 heas1e rn O hro
The D 1rector w tl l be responsib le tor suc.cess ful

SPORTS WRITER
If you have a love for
sports, we would ltke to
talk to you . Experience
preferred. Must have
dependable transportation Must have
computer skills. Full -ttme
position with company
benefits .

110

Help Wanted

App alachwn Cente r for Eco nom1 c Net wo rk s
(ACEnet) ts seeking a results-orte ntcd leade r fo r
rts Tech Ven tures Program

be yours with the

110

110

PROGRAM DIRECTOR

PART-TIME

#1

11

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing, Drivers · Flatbed
Typtng Great Payl CALL I 800
Medical Coverage
795 0380 Ell •201 (24 Hrs)
From Dew Onel
• 52.000 Stgn On Bonus
ATTENTION Put Your Compuler
• Ouahtv Home Ttme
To Wor k! Earn $850·$7,000 1·
' l ate MOOel Equ1pmenr
800·934 T3 12 Free Boo klet
CDLA&amp;3 Mos OTR
www choosesuccessathome com
ECK MILLER
800 61 1·6636
ATTENTION : We'll Pav You To
www edl:mlller com
Lose Up To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed Immediately' Offer
DRIVERS • Quahly Carriers. Inc
E1p11es 7/28 Call 740 441 1982
The Nauon s Largest Bulk Carrier
AV0Nt An Areas! To Buv or Sell Has IMM ED IATE OPENI NGS
For Owner Operators Long Haul
Shirtev Spears. :ll4-675-1429
&amp; ijeglonal Runs Available Must
Ba bv·stller Needed, Aller Sep· Have 2 Yn OTA Expe re lnc e
!ember 29 , 20 Hours Morel Less CALL NOW 1·800· 15U·e870
Weekly, Occasiona l Salur day In 1t21QHI
Our Home For 1 And 2 Year Olds
Dr~vers
Aelrences Required {740)441 40 Years and Grow1ng Strong'
9667
H &amp; WTrucking Co.
"Great Pay Packages
Chalrs1d e ass1stant for oral sur
gerv ofltce m Middleport Salur
' Ins Plans. Full Benei1Ts &amp; Holl
day s only Non smoking offi ce
day Pay
•Home 90% ol Weekends
Fax resume to 6T4 89().7507
"Dtrect Oeposll Weekly Pay
CLAIMS PROCESSOR! $20 ·$40
'Sign-On BonustOrlenlatlon Pay
IHr Potential Processing ClaimS
Be 21 vrs Clean M\IR, A CDL
Is Easy! Tra lntng Provided
Hazmat
MUST Own PC CALL NOWl T
Welcom109 Co D11vers 010,
888·565·5T97 EXT 642
and DriVIng School Graduales
800·826·3560
Computer Internet Person Wanl·
Talk
To Randy I
edl $75·$125/ ho ur Va cation s
www
hwtruck
com
Bonuses FREE E·Book.
www cash4u2day com
or 1--800·204 7048

FULL-TIME and

hu

I==""'::::=:=:======:'~-~ ~ H og Sale P lease send your

Apply In 'P erson
Craw's Steak Hou s e

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio POint Pleasant,

110

Streiter 's Custom

I ~=TH=AN=K=vo=u==il FRENCH CITY

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE

Tribune
Sentinel
Register

Gallipolis, Ohio

Thanks to

Trace El em . Sch ool
Bn ng C ove re d Dish

•

CD Owners

Leotards, Ballet, Tap

crafts &amp; more l

Au g ·1 3th - 1 2 N oon
At Mercervt ll e, Hannan

For More Information Call
Immediately
1-888-237-5647- EXT. 985

&amp; Commercial

our new store with

furn ttu re , qutlts, cand les ,

""nrl'"'

Company offers a fixed work schedule, weekly
pay and weekly bonus program, full health
benefits, 401-K plan after 1 month (50%
company match). 1 week paid vacation every 6
months anq 7 paid holidays.

Residential

information . Come see

Treasurers - locally ma de

B a rry· M o ore R e u nion

Immediate
Opening for
Full-Time
Employment _
Competitive
Benefits
And
Bonus

FRENCH 500 ROOM

100 Hannan Trac e Ad · In Patriot

J r. Fa1r
C HRI STO PHER R0!3EFtT S I
Temperature R isi nal

As a call center communicator, one will work for
conservative political organizations. "NO Cold
Calling and you will Not Be Sent Home For Low
Results!"

6:30 • 8'30 PM
Call446-5030 for more information

Marke t Hog
At th e 2000 G all1a County

The Gallipo lis loca tion would employ th ose
in d1v1duals interested m working in a career
orien ted environment.

TUESDAY AUGUST 15, 2000

&amp;

Jazz, Pointe,

FARMERS BANK
for purc has ing my

Established in 1982, the company has
accomplished tremendous growth and now
employs 1500 people in Ohio and West Virginia.

Cheryl Fraz1er and De bb1e Perroud

Parent, Ballet, Tap,

LOIS of Food a nd Fun &amp; Hay RtdBs

COME
GROW
WITH US .. .

With HMC Lactalion Consultants

740-446-7283

Scott S h radet
Ti ·Angle 4 -H

Attention Experienced Drivers

"Professional Pay For Prolesslonal Performance"

BREASTFEEDING
CLASSES

to Medicare . Save money.
Free Home Delivery. Call

Thank You Rtver Band
lve·le,irtaN Hosptlal for buy•ng my
2000 Market Hog and dona !•ng
tlto the Outreach Center

POSTA L JOBS 148 323 00 YA
Now Hiring ·No EKpe1lence Pa id
Training ·Great Benel11s Call 7
Days 800·429-3660 Ext J-566

Opportunities could

brealhtng med1catton b1lled

A Marietta Ohio Based Company
"New· Top of the Industry Pay Packate"
• Start lnt pay - • 38 • • liB CPM
· Home Weekends
· Premium Benefits
· 1999-2000 Conv. Models
· Assiped Dispatch
· Paid Vacations
· 99% " No Touch" Frelllht
· Good Miles
Also Openintslor Part Tine Ill Casuals
Contact Safety II. RecrullinJI: BOO-llll3-6479

. S e re ntly House
serve s victt ms of domjlslic
vtole nce
call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9 577

edicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other

ELECTRONIC FILING
736 Second Ave 446·86 77

New Load of QVC a nd
C h t l dr~ n ·s Clothing
NOW ACCE PTING VOUCH ERS

MOLLOHAN CARPET
446-7444 - 6.6 Mtles N 160
Past Ho lzer Hosprtal
Clark Chape l Road

&amp; Supply, Co .
1 -740-446- 1142
Monday - Saturday

256-1651 -

: ""FEOERA L PO STAL JOB S"
• Up To $1 8 24 Hour H111ng For
• 2000. Fre e Call For ApplicaTion 1
1 : E11ammat1o n lnlormatlon Federal
Hire ·FUll Beneflls 1·800·598·
4504 Extension 1516 (8 AM -6
PM C S Tl

Berber Carpet
$5.99 Per Yd

Delivered or P•cked Up
Min Loader
CHG $35.oo
Call
Cremeans Concrete

Call Bob Don nett

407 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

,

• " CA REER OPPORTUN ITY "
· MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
: $45K fVrl Full Traln111g IPC R&amp;q d ,
• 888·660-6693. E111 4402

NEW SHIPMENT

Top Soil Fill Dirt Bank Run

For Banquet Tickets

An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/DIV

Ext . Ill, 112, 113 Local740-li73-B479

OR FAX TO (304) 675-6973

Victoria Secrel, Limited, Express,
&amp;F h d
Struclure, Abercrombie
tiC • an
morel! Women's, Men's, and Kids
Clolhes
Come See Us At
326 SecondAvenue - IIi I

Grand Opening of Tradtn' Pos(

Akzo Nobel Functional Chemicals LLC
Attn: Blll Stricklen, HR Dept.
State Rl. 2, PO Box 1721
Gallipolis Ferry, WV 25515·1721
(fa. 304.675.4657)

Ext 1300

6 :00 - 10:00 p .m.

AKZONOBEL
selected areas of chemicals, coatlnas, healthcare
producls and fibers. Mon! lhlll 87,000 I'""Pie In over
60 countries make up the Alao Nobel workforce.

M

Monday, August 14th

Mike Connet

bjll.stricklep@akz;onohel.c;:om

~Pleasant

v

U ,OOO WEEK LV I Ma11ing 400
Brochures! Satisfaclton Guar·
anteed' Postage &amp; Supphes Pro·
vldedl Rush Self Add res sed
Stamped Envelope' Gtco DEPT
5 - 80 ' 143e , ANTIOC H. TN
37011 ·1438 Stan Immediately
$45,0001 yr potonliat Or's need
poopte to p,ocess Claims. Must
Own compute'/ modem We Ttaon
catrt-see-ss7-4896 exts95
$450 DO-S I000 00 Week~ mailing
Lotte'"necessary
hom HomeFT/PT
No Expe
d·
enca
Help
needed lmmedia lely Call Sun·
dance o ls t,lbuto rs t -soo-889-

$987 85 WEEK LY! Processing
HUD IFHA Morlgage Refunds No
E~~:penance Req uired For FREE
lnlormallon Call 1·800·501·6832

oose
Sen 1'or Dance
45 &amp; Ove r w ith George Hall

CALL MON .· FR I t-900-449·
4625 EXT 5600

Help Wanted

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
· WORKING FOR THE GO~EAN­
IIENT FROII HOllE PARTTIIlE NO EXPERI ENCE RE ·
QUtREO 1·800-757·0753

~~~~;~~~=~

ID.~I•••Pieasant

FULl BEN EF'ITS

ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT II

$1 00,000+ Potential First Year.
Best Prodi!Jots In the business .
Fantasttc Lead Program.
Highest Commissions &amp; Bonuses
Excellent Management Support

1

•

BULLETIN BOARD

388-9436

AUCTION
2 Big Sal&amp; Days
Every Sat 6 PM
Eve ')' lUes 6 PM

•u•IIIIIR-DE

I

110

TRA.I NIN G

Auction
and Flea Market

DATING TONIGHT!
Hlvt Fun Mttllng Eligible Sin·
git l In Your Area Call For More
fntormatlon. 1•IOO· ROMANC E,
Eld 9735.

110

Barn . 740 . 388 •0823 , 740 . 245.

740-592· 1842
9e66, Full so,vtco Rote,encos
Ouahty clo lhmo and ho usehold Aii!Uiable. Licensed &amp; Bonded
Items St 00 bag sale every 'Ou'PiaceCKlf&gt;vrs"
Thursday Monday thru Salurday
9 00530
Rtck Pearson Auction Company
lull trme auctlonee ,, complete
auction service
lice nsed
40
Giveaway
16S.Ohoo &amp; Westvl,glnla. 304·
tree To good home Female kit· 773·5785 Or 304·773-5447
ten, 4 mo 2 ve" otd White Male 90 Wanted to Buy
Cat Neutered &amp; Oeclawed 1 ,..,......,.-,..-~.,.......,.,.,..~­
{740)256-9240
Absolute Top Dollar U S Sll11er
Gold
Coins, Prootsels. Diamonds,
Used Concrete Blocks Redmo nd
Anllque Jewelry Gold Flings. U S
Ridge Area (304)875-3647
Currency, Sterling , ·M T S Coin
Shop, 151 Second AIJenue, Galli·
60 Lost and Found
polls. 740-446-2842
Found labrador Ae1re1ver Dog
Near Intersection Ot State Route
1Ei0 And McCorm ick Ad Call To
Identify (740)&lt;46-1420

' STAAT

•
•
•
•
•

1

8111 Moodtspaugh
buy/sell
esl ates Aucltoneerlng
consi gnment
aucllon- Thursdays 6pm, Middle
port. Ohio &amp; wv li cense. 740·

273-0766 tea,. message lOam110 Help Wanted
tapm Ptea5&amp;
992-9707 740-989-=•3
.c.y..
$11 $33 HOURI! GOVERNMENT
NewToYouTMhShOppe
Leslie Lemley, Le mley's Auction JOB St HIRIN G NOW! PAID

Amazing live Psychic Readmgi
~: loiJe, Health, and Su ccess 1· 70
888·763·384Ei 18+ For Enterlaln·
Mini Only. $3119/mln
Oomlnatrl•• Female . Seeking
Male's To Summit Thetrse lf To
My Dungeon You Can Call At
(7&gt;10)388--9347

~~~~'!!!.~

.
.............
30 Announ;ce:;m;e~n~ts~~B=o=====A~u=c~tl~o=n====~~~~~~~~~;==================t==================.~,==========~==~=t~====~~~==~
Dlelaoy ·~UQplement helps you
and Flea Market
Call Today 9 Place Your Classified Ad
lose
pounds
plus
makes unwanled
you feel much
more aner
getic, call Tracy or Howard 304

.

Sunda~Auguat13, 2000
110

.

·~

~~~

*

113352

NEW LUXURY

HOII~
undo'
construction
Located In a COLONIAL
Quality bUilt All
prest1gtous area 1n Green Twp 5 Estate 4 Bedrooms, 3
min from Holzer Hospital 5
Master Bedroom w~~~~~~~
bedrms . 4 baths, Formal entry ce111ng fa ns, coppef ~
w/skyhght &amp; catl1edral ceiling. walk·ln closets, Formal
d1n1ng rm , lilltng rm , conver11ent room, family room Wllh
ktl , oak cab1nets 1st floor burn1ng fireplace enclosed
laundry, Master su1te on 1sl floor pat1o, Cherry cab1nets 1
_"lnclud1119 1_ s u PJ;~ r bath rm. &amp; - -kllchen, also -a bar and penl'lf, l
closet 4 Bedrms 2 baths on 2nd chef'l)l woodwork
floor 24 x24' lam1ly rm approK C1ty SchOols 2 Utllt1 y
4,000 sq rt Beaulitul 3 acre M/l basement wllh ,_;~~k;;:,t~; ~
ravtned lot and five stream 11 Anderson Windows, 2 car
would be my pleasure to show w/8' lnsulaled doors 2 acres
you V1rgtnta 446·6806
pius more acreage available l I
13374 BEAUTIFUL 3 112 YEAR super construCIIOn plus 1
OLD COUNTRY HOME ON I + beautifully planned home
ACRES Large LA with-stone wall spacious
rooms
and wood burner First flodr BR reasonable tS appealing to
and full bath. Ut1l Am Sunroom, please do not delay 1n mak1ng ,
Large Kitchen/D1n1ng wtth Cherry appointment w1th V~rg 1n1a ~
Cabmets and a pantry Upstatrs Sm1lh 446·49021446-6806
another large oedroom and full 13367 Large home 1n town, Mw
oath with potential for third roof 1999 4 SA 2 5 BA, 2 c~r
bedroom Has screened back garage
VInyl stdlng nlc.e
porch and a forty loot front sitting ne1gnborhood Needs some TLC
porch Home has 2201&gt;+ sq 11 , a
$
,
heat pump and cenlral air Natural but prtced nght aL 79,900
wood s1d1ng on the ouls1de and 13377 GREAT STARTER HOMe
beaul1ful wood/wallpaper on the or Investment property ThiS lOvely
LOT &amp; 1ns 1de Property mcludes a cute lOg two bedroom one and one h~f
Located on Easlern cab1n w1th full balh gazebo, 2 balh cotlage would be 1ust nglill
three otner as a starter or reTirement hom~
Oreal Opportun1tyl Purchase garages, and
ngs all 1n excellent w1tn an eat 1n kitChen and hvt~
corner lol With or without the outbu1ld1
cond1!10n For an excluSIVe
sh0w1ng call Dave
room 11 IS JUSI enough space
QUAINT 2 BR COTTAGE 13365 FAMILY DELI GHT 2!28 Pnced lo sell at $37 500 C~l
on 2 e acres Eat 1n sq ft home Lovely LA, FA w/FP Ieday thts one won tlast long
I kii1Che1n LA and full bath Only 6 eat m kttchen fofrma l DR. 3 DRs 13380 CORNEA LOTS )
old ana setllng on 2 6 acres 2 baths elec heal pump wrgas Water Elect &amp; Sewer A'ililat&gt;l• I
backup Large deck front porch Only1 Hurry tne pr~ce 1S
country
• Garage/Tow1ng Busmess beautiful cabtne1s sky lights $ti 500 1 acre m/1
attached 5 br IBSidence · cethng fans out bldg 32x48 #33Ei9 6 68 acres M/L 1n
garage 24' round above ground Twp All ut1ht1es on I
at 2134 Chathan Ave '" pool &amp; deck Thts home sells 1tself compleTed drtveway
, 11 Comes w11h extra lots al l you need to do 1s look 1 ac Home currently an lot and
has equipment (Nr m/1
purchased 24x24 barn
L1fts, Elc.) Owner 13383 St. Rt 218 4 SA, 1 bath for horses and cows GalliP,!!i
10 move thiS salel So call home wtth detached 1 car garage C1ty Schools Don't let lh1s
on 1 ac. m/1 Owner says seo,ooo shp away calt today
13378 LOCATED IN THE
BEAUTIFUL MAKE AN OFFERt
LOTS located 1n 13375 LOOK AT THIS!! II 3 554 3rd Ave '2 bedrooms, 2
Ct . Charolats lake Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full d1n1ng room basement , gas
basement wtth 2 car garage and goad roof furnace &amp; hot
1 2 remain 2 348 ac
lmmed1ate '""'""'roO
and 5 ac m/1 $25,900 fmlshed fam•lr roam Home s11s tank
on 2 Ac m/ 1n Hannan Trace $50,000
•
3T2 iNVESTME,IT OR MOVE Sc
hools
Just
mmutes
from
13389
VACANT
LOT
.
Ly ia p~
1t Home SO'x 12' 2 downtown GallipOliS Th1s home Chesh1re OH $75,000
. .. •
ll bE&gt;d,ooms I bath furntture, range features
a
beauttful
landscaped
CARRYOUT
au
~~,;;::;l
1
3362
, Heat pump, central air lawn, wood pellet stove and and CONVENIENCEbutl d1ng 70'x14' atso central a~r Located JUSt oft Rock FOR SALE New alarm syste'l' I
lb ,,-; , a· bldg , Corner lot Hysell &amp; L1ck Ad on Mable Dr 1n n1ce
ne1ghborhood Have a garden Butld1ng bu111 to stale
IJUIIIVe,, Middleport, $1 5,000.00
and ra1se some !lowers but make Cont1nuous operahon s1nce 1
LOTS, LANO
sure to look at lhls Call Johnnie Pnce 1ncludes tnventory
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
at 367 0323 today for an Jo11nnle 36 7 0323 or 446·6806 ,
N2918 CHARMING VICTORIAN
REDU CED PRICE-117 appotnlmenl
close 10 new Fwy hospttal 13384 BEAUTIFUL VACANT HOME 4 5 Bedrms 3 bathS'
ctr Waler gas, sewer LAN D lor future home s1te 7 11.11 forma! DR &amp; LA Cryst~ l
Fu ll
l " djoining P1necrest Nurstng acres M/L on State Reul e 554 I chandeliers through0u1
m11e from freeway at R1o Grande bsml "''lh complete ktt, stone
LAR GE FARM 1()1 AC
level lo rolltng terram r.estr~cted. WBFP Bl;t w/gas f1replace'
1 1/2 story home 4/5 $17 500 per acre dnve by and Garage
Landscaped lot.
home 2 balhs lovely LA v1ew th 1s lovely property GB
exclus1ve v1ew1ng w1th V1rgm1a L
13373 Don't let th1s one sltp away Sm11h 446 6806
~~:;:
w/oak
1 ~':: ',~?, f ~replace
area K1t
Level
to
rolling
&amp; 1998 Noms T6x80 manufactured 13JS5 AUTHENTIC LOG
home Stt on a I acre lot M/l on WITH CHARACTER II you I
pasture
II
Allee Ad 1 mde off 160 Th1s home 1nd1vtdualrty here 11 1sl 3 029
appomlment VLS 4460 6806
has ell the upgrades Solid oak t1 more or less 3 bedrms 2
w:J3B2 520 State At 279 In the cabmets carpel Master Bedroom baths K1t LAm Off1cG rm
VIllage Of Thurman NICe 2 br has Garden Tub and Shower much more Wrap porch front
11
cottage, bath kttcherJd•nmg room Comes w1lh 3 bedrooms. ut11ity s1des 167 Acres m/1
and
ut1l1ty roo m Insulated room eal tn k1 tchen and huge Pasture and 3 Large
&gt;Nlndows, steel doors w1th s1orm 11vmg room lawn IS landscaped Feed lot sttes 2 n1ce
has
doors N1ce 101 w1lh outbu1ld1ng · wtth chlldrens p1ay-sw1ng and 1s most all clean
Pubhc water and soon to be clubhouse Also has 10x60 lenc1ng Eleclrtc &amp; frost free
outbutld1ng Call today 11 may be 1n the barn Feed tot
public sewage $45,000
Formertv used for Veal ~
13387
PERFECT FOR THE gone lomorrow S58,000
FAMILY Also convemenllo most 13017 LARGE FLOOR PLAN . • operat1on Located near
Located In the clly on a qutet Grande Appolntme.c"i'c,.44,{6I!Ji I
everythmg · Stores Schools, street
4 BAs,* 2 1/2 balhs 8 V1rg1n1a L Sm1th ,,
Hosp11a1
Cuslom bu111. 3 rooms.
thiS
home
can $335,000
bedrooms 3 baths hv1ng room
accommodate
lwo
fam1hes
13349
~~ ·~ ~~~~!!
di ning
room
&amp;
k1tchen V!rg1n1a 446·6606
POSSESSION
Spltl I
w/app!1ances. basement wtan ltlll58· 36D EVERGREEN RD 3 bedrms , 1 bath 5 Ac
apartment !~.lichen li111ng room
bath Front &amp; rear deck, 2 car bedrm Broadmort~ Mob1le Home LUCATION central a1r ~~~~: I
anached garage Almost 4 acres &amp; Lots Range Aelng Washer &amp; furnace, vmvl. garage &amp; b1
ol park like grounds wl1h stoc~ed Dryer , Elec Heat S. CA Deck &amp;
CITY LOT on
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
Outbu1!d1ng $28,000
Call VLS 446 6806
REMARKABLYSPACIOUS 4 bedrooms, 2 story llv1ng room 18x30 01nmg '~~•&lt; I
"--=: . c_OISTINCTJVE
. some har~ood floors new roof covered ~rcn basement &amp; garage Reduced $89,000

BRICK

I

1=

�-

~unba~ «ime~-~entind

: ' Cisssifieds
•

All PereoNtl,
Announcement,

,

Olwawoy, Loet I Founct,'\
Yorcl 5aln, ond Wantod
ToDoAde
Muat h Paid In Advance.

..

TRIBUNE DEAQLINE j

2:00 p.m. the dar before
the ad 11 to run.
Sundly • Monday edition
- 2:00 p.m. Friday.

..

SEftDN~fADUNE :

1:00 p.m.

day beloro

the ad 11 to run.

Sunday I Monday edition
1:00 p.m. Friday.

••

REGISTER QEAQUNE;

2 dayo belorw the ad lo
to Nn by 4:30p.m.
saturday I Mondey
edllton- 4:30 Thursday.
"Delld/1. . . .ub}ecl to
t:IHJnp due to holldoyo"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Pensonals

IS HE CHEATING??? Top ·Rated
, Psychics Can Tell Voul S 1.93 +I
i • Min. 1·800·472 ·2103. All Credit
1 Cerda &amp; Checks OR 1·900·820·
' 0020 $3.99 /Min "2 MINUTES
t FREEl" (24 HRS.) 18 +.

'

'

I

LOSE 3 TO 5 LBS WEEKLVI AS
SEEN ON TV FAT TRAPPER
111.95. METABOLrrE 1000 $9 95
BACKED BV THE NATIONAL
: .DIABETES RESEARCH COUNCIL. t ·800-tl04-o438 COO MCI
~ISA , _ loHwelgiM nu

9 Wesl Strmson, Athens

80

Yard Sale

Truckloads Of
New &amp; Used llems
From Sewral Stales

Selhng To The Public 5 Dealers
t Piece. Oozena &amp; Case LOIS
Bowen Auction Servl"
O.ry Bowen, Auctioneer
Proctorvllta, Ohto
Flu Market
Just Across
Huntinglon. WV
31SI Bridge
740-8111-2211
304~53-2587

We will be filling this position In Central
Ohio before the end of September.
For a personal Interview
Call
1-800-917-9084

•
I
I

I

t

''

!:

Help Wanted

Valley
Hospital

Pllaunt Vallty HaapHJI currently haa the following
full·llmt opportunity lvJIIable

STAFF RADIOLOGY TECHNOLOGIST

• · TM.ust have satisfactorily completed an AMIA-a•DDt'ovotd-1
••
Radiology program . ARRT with WV Ucense •
Excellent:
Sala ry
Holidays
•
Vacation
HospttaiiZat•on
Dental
Long-te rm d•sabillly
l
Ltfe
Insurance
Ret.reme n!
••

•

'

r

,• .

3449E" 22 (2&gt;&amp;Hrsl

Help Wanted

Akzo Nobel is one of the world's leadln&amp; companies In

Akzo Nobel Functional Chemicals LLC In Galllpolis
Ferry, West Virginia (40 miles north of Huntington,
WV) has an excellent career posllion .. anable
lmmedlalely.

Minimum of an associates de&amp;n!e In accounting or
equlvalenl experience, plus 1·5 years experience In
accounting. Pn!vlous experience with payroWac:counll
payoble/automated accounting systems a plus,
lncludlna willingness to work overtime In a fut potc:ed
en•lronment. Must possess proftclency with Microsoft
Word/Excel, good typlnl skills, data entry and 10·key
pad by touch.
We offer a competitive wage,lbeneftl5 package.
Please send resume to:

MINI MALL
PUBLIC WELCOME

NOW OPEN

Natl' onal Wl' ld

"CATCHOFTHEOAY"
Name Brand Clotlies al Discount Prir:.-. 1

Turkey Ba nquet
AUgUSt 26,
Dinner

JOin our famrly of profssstonals to be the re source for
communtty health serv.ce ne eds
Please submi! resume's to:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550

6:30

Held at Gallipolis
Sh •
Cl b
nne
U

Or

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
Fa' Complete PmfeSSIOnallndiVIdual
and Bus•ness Tax Preparation
ASK US ABOUT

11

o

Help Wanted

GASEJ:,~
TRANSPORTATION

Bowman ' s Homecare

Boys Tap, Preschool

Modern and More!

or to register fo r the cla ss

Saturda y, S e pt 2, 9-7

Fal l Registration on

Featunng .

August 31st, 4 - 7pm at the

M&amp;D PAVING

Ol e Car Club of Galltpolts ,

Art School, 1271 Eastern

Driveways , Parking Lots,

Natto na lly Accla•med Gospel ,

Ave ., Gallipolis, OH

Group • The Perry S rsters

Please Call

Contact Eric Blackburn

(7 40) 441 - 1 988 for more

(740) 339-0194 or
(740) 446-2422

Sh

Call 740-379-9000 to rent

Are You Receiving

crafters space or to become a

THANK YOU

7.75%

concert s ponsor

Elks Lodge #1 07

or a deposit of

For Purchasing My

$2000?

Market Lamb

Interest is deferred

2000

until withdrawal.

THANK YOU
South e aste rn Equipment
Co . inc .
for purchastng my
~-'-'
Market Lamb_
at the 2000 Galli a
County Jr Fair
Laure n l':IAii ~ t&gt; P.rl

at the

Gallia

County~Jr. Fair

ieLynch

The Lynch Agency

Rachael Sau"r~'"" 1
Pairs and

8"""'"'" 1 336 Second Avenue

buying my last

Tired of Waiting For Service
On Your Home Appliances?

Market Steer and for

Call?40-446-7795

Bernadine's for

446-8235
Lo s t Tan Change Purse
8 /2 /00 wtth Jewelry a nd
Money, S e nti menta l Val u e
REWARD
C a ll675 -4135 or 6 75- 10 4 7

supporting the Gallia

New &amp;Used Appliances
Parts For All Major Brands

county Junior Fair

Jodi~

McCall
Raccoon R o wdie's 4 -H Club

THANK
'

Furniture and

1704 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

Cabinets
Fo r Pu rchas tn g My

li== ========ll
THANK YOU

Kyger Dental
Associates
For Purchasing My

Market Hog
at the

2000

YOU

Gallia

County Jr. Fair
Christy

M a rket Hog
at th e 2 000 G a ll1a C o unt y
J r. F a 1r
Luke

THANK YOU

Firstar Bank
For

Purchas in g My

Market Lamb
at th e

Triangl

2000

Gallia

Cou n ty Jr. F a ir

across from Gallia C o .

THANK YOU

Erin

Fair Grounds

Sta t e Farm Insurance

Anoth er Gen e ration

Coke P r oducts

$5.75

Full Case No L 1mit
Con c r e t e Y a rd
Ornam e nts 2 0 % OFF
W e Sto c k

A

Fu ll V a ri e ty

o f Co n cessi o n Stand
Cand y Ba rs
P u bl ic W elco m e

&amp; Gli dd ers
Grill

Cook

Need e d

for purc h asing my
2000 Marke t H o g
a t t h e Gal ha C o . Junior Fair
Bethaney

B

R 1ver Valley

To anyone wh o pl edges
$ 100 00 toward t he "Ah c 1a
H alley F u n d " during t he
Gallia Co. J r. Fatr Mar ket

THANK YOU

chec ks to P :O . Box 359

Nor r is Northup Dodg e

Gallipolis. Oh1 o 45631 -

for purchastn g m y

Made P ayabl e to Alicta

2000 Market Steer

Hal ley... May God

at t h e Gallia Co . Jun 1or Fa1r
B eth a n e y B
R iver Valley
Ractne Ptzza E xp ress
Will Be Closed Mon 14th Thurs . 17th For Fair Week

J1ore Dnformation '--R-eo_p_en_F_~-~=_:4_~a_o~_h

a_t_4_p_m_J

I

For Sale .
1982 Venture Mobtle Hom e
2 Bedroom , All Ele ctric,
IAp,pro•xl rroately 14&gt;1 5 , $4 ,000 F1rm
Call Afte r 6 00 Senous
Callers On ly 446 -93 79

110 Help Wanted
POSTAl JOBS S4e ,323 CO VA
Now Hiring ·No Experience ·Paid
Trelning ·Oreal Benefits. Call 7
Days 800-429-3660 Ext J·365

o

Help Wanted

De ntal Asststant Needed Send
Resume To CLA 505 c/o Gall1·
polls Dally Tnbune 825 Third
Ave . Gall1polis. Ohio 4563 1, or
call {740)446-2409

Help Wanted

Communication
Madia.

Drillers
40 Years and Growmg Slrongl
H &amp; W Trucking Co

"Great Pay Packages
"Ins Plans, f ull Benellts &amp; Holl·
day Pay
' Home 90% ol Weekends
'Direct·OepoSII. Week ly Pay
"Stgn·On BoouSIOnentat1on Pay
Se 21 yrs Clean MVA ACOL
Hazmal
Weicom1ng Co Drivers 010
and Or1v1ng School Graduates
800 826 3560

Talk To Randy'
www hwtruch com

=::..::_~

110

EASY WORKI EXC ELLENT PAY!
Assemble Products Ca ll To ll
Free 1·800·467·5566 Eat 11577

Snap- on
Career Seminar
Snap-on has a limited number of
Sales openings
In Your Local Area .
Now there are two ways to beg•n a rewa1d1ng caree r With a solid
proven loader 1n professional tools and eqUipment
1
Franchllt Dealer · 11 you are ready to make a solid Investment 1n
your future, consider the flextb11!1y and aarmngs potentialof a Snap on
franchiSe

2 Employed Salsa Representative II you prefer 10 ~ es t d11ve the
franchiSe opportunity for a llm1ted 11me wh1le you rece1ve a salary,
commiSSion on vour sales and full health benel1ts consider th1s unique
appren11ce program Solid performance as a Sales Rep may also lead
to eas1er down payment and f1 nancmg lerms should you successlullv
apply to purchase the franchise laTer

7 : 00p.m.
Holiday Inn
Bridgeport,

WV

Tuesday, August 15th
7 :00 p . m. Holiday Inn
Parkersburg,

WV

•

• You e nJ OY helprng peopl e deve lop lh etr g tfb •• tnd
•
You keep up wit h dc vc lopmenl s 111 th e
tech nology .~re n a

Allen C Wood , Broker · 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker - 446·0971
Jeanette Moore, · 256·1745
Patneta Ross
740-446-1066

This as a scmor pos Jltu n w1lh e:: xce ll enl bc ncf1 ts,
fl ex time and a competit ive salary 111 a dy nam1c,
n.t t wna II y -a ee la 11n cd no np ro fit o rga mzal ion
Please send re sume ,1nd three rc lcrcn ces by
Septemb er 1st to the att entiO n o l Lee Wood ,
AC Enel, 94 Co lumb us Road, AI he ns, Oh10 4570 I
No p hone culls plcnsc .

ACE net
11

POSITIONS
IMM E DIATE

o

Help Wanted
AVAILABLE

FOR

HIRE . Now h tnng dtrect care

worke rs fo r comm un1ty group h o m e s for people

expe rie n ce S e ve ra l s h tfts a nd hours avai la ble
Starting rate · $6 00/ho ur F or an application call
1-B00-53 1·2302 Buckeye C o mmun tty Serv1ces is
an e qual o pportu ntty e,mp loyer

Help Wanted

Ckncal
Amc:m•u ( , ~ .,.,~1 I '""ncr un~ uf lh~
lc:ndln&amp; con;unlfl fin Qr&gt; cc: " ll:n•urllh""'

~ota!

lht (QIIO\'ollll; pOS IIIOil S o pen Ill \l UI

Cralhpoll su m c~

!JR.\ 'IIl ii MANAGE ~ II NT
I RA!tiJII
Our \~a nagtmc:nt Tra1nees Jllllll~tpil lt 1n
an e ~len"\f on lhc·JOb tremHij! r r n~mm
dutllnrd to prepare you for bnnd1
manager rcsf&gt;tlnsoboli llc:s Ihe: 18 mtmth
modular 1r1mmg prollram mmw.;b you n•
~r UptCtl t•f manPI!'"II ~;red1 1 o ten su111
IIC~Oomt adJ U!Im ~ nt hliSirn' i~ dodopuu·nl

HIL L
Lou k w g fo r ,1
new ROOST to c.ll l home' 1

A t1me to butld
8 1 acres more or less
Green Element.,
ols
So m e
N0.22

111&lt;-UPW .

V1cw Th 1s l uu nlry 2 00
lacrcs nwrc ur less Hy
ISlHVCV Grcc 11 Ek mcnt.uy
Snmc
!S c h oo l s
Rcs tnCIIons NO. 223
1

man•~rr111l rt'~pt•n&lt;&gt;ho htld

r~~~~~~EE~ ~~~~~~~

NEW LISTING .- Need a home

rio-;;~ toliu::

sc-hools.,

Lovely 2 Story Home. 2 hc(lroom llll the ma1 n level &amp; a

naOOic •u•1omc• '"~""es
nNI
• rrro• ab and aHoum aJ1u•tm~nn and •~
sup~nt bu • nc&gt;J devdrpmtnl el'rNI! on 111•

on the 2nd leve l Ho me has \1 vmg ruu m. J 111 rng
I3rd
I
room, mode rn kit chen, panlry Lau ndry rnum on t lC

bnnc:h
(,luahrkJ apphcanH o;houiJ hJit • h•11 ~
nc)c•• " &lt;l'b 1P.: 1 rncc

matn level. Unfrn ished bd~c
m enl w/outs1dc cnlrancc
~
Bcauttful origm al woodwork t~nd doo rs Hnmc. has
close t space ga lore. Back porch Detadl cU g..ragc
I5x25, lg back y.~rd 44xl 74 Need somr C}(!n mn nnc
ThiS I10111C has a one bei.l room apartiT1Cil T upslaJrs Wil h
outside entrance Shown by oppol nt ment O nly l! NO.

I'' '"Pfll"'

iCIIrold•plomll"''h

prdmcJ clfe"•~t •«b•l '""'muno~a h ~"
I)PII1K 1 ~ t)lo.utd aNI mJII&gt;rmal.;al ' ~ II• ""'
rtqu•rril
11

Aonrn.an Gcnr.,l I noncr " ~ ' ~
~ omj)&lt;loiiH hcnclol~ packl!l&lt; "''"J n ~
1•"
meC•ul Jcnt•l """a ~0111.1 ~lan
lmmtdlllf u&gt;nlld~!all&lt;lR pic••• 1tnd ~~ur
11
"' "'•P\ul.('
ro
rc\umt
Boo
7H1"Ootlol"ol" Oluo ·~ 6JHI?H
III II rwr "tbl • l~ 11 ~""IGIIO~ntC til m
I 'tu~l ~oolt) I mpl&lt;l)&lt;t

Amcr~•n (j~nl:'faiJ

1

I NEED HELP!!! I Retuse To l et
You Fall $3K· $6K/ Month 24
Hrs 1·888·643·1 366 or 1·888·
322·6169 Ext 3244 (Toll Free)

.,., ,

l~...,.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!J

Lotst From 2 Attenti on builder s or

tracts to 6 acre lracts
Just a lew m11es from
ll r&gt;ollll; poliS Some restnctton
I&lt;.;C&gt;un·ty water ava•lable Call
for N2022
Homealtea In Guyan Twp.

Ava•labl e 1n 5 acre lracts
more or less Pu bi1C water
available Dr1veways and
culverts alrea dy present
G1ve Allen a call #:2023

mobile ho me owner s.
Vacan t Land JUSt mrnutes
!rom the hOspttal &amp; town
Approx 9 acres MIL Call
lor the locat• on &amp; pr1ce
#2020
Farm In Green Township.
ThiS fa rm has toads ol

potential w1th •I s 80 acre s
or less Make your dreams
come 1rue Maybe butld a
new home J us t let yo ur
1magmatton go You better
call now • It may nol lasl
long Ask for #2025

We have several 5
look ing for a plu s tractl avail a ble
lvac:anl land ? We may have building lhat draam
you need J ust a lew All ypur utrllt•es a re
I
miles from town are 35 and each lot has
acres more or less •n Clay fron tSge Aes lncted Near
I T~~~~_";h i p . Ca ll and ask lor Holzer Hosp1ta l Ask for
#2027.
N202B.
a re always glad to help you sell or buy property.
Renta l pro perty Is also available. Give ua a call i
we can hel p.

Help Wan~ed

110

MANAGER'S POSITION
Local Pizza Shop Is looking For
A Manager W1th 5 to Year&amp; EK·
perltnce. Et~.ce ll ent Salary And
Bentllls, Send As sume To 269
TheiSS Road. Vlnlon, 0H 45686

Rocksprings Aehabllltlon 'Center
is accep ting application&amp; Wr a
pan lime position lor a LPt- 1 W e
are a 1OO·bed skilled reh ablllta·
lion ce nter that has tecetved 2
yeatS of def•cl ency free sut'\levs
Work !rom hOme $500/mo + PT I We have an excelle nt st 4H ot
S2k-6kt F T www worklro many- dedlcaled team workers a~ are
looking 101 a new member to jom
where com Call t-8()0-727·94 15
our team Part lime emphfye es
Nlghl time ma nager lor Mason are eligible lor ali benefits i~c lud ·
Mote . call 304 773 9000 lor In· lng Insurance New gtaduates are
terv1ew
welcome to apply Call Caro l
Gree ntng , 0 0 N 740·992·6606
Owner! Operator Seeking Driver Jar an 1nterv.ew EOE
:
To Team W•th,l740l256-1021

We have many Items , 3,..
partial estates. Anice variety of
household Items, kltcheqlttmsi
household appUances, Unes, :-

. g~assware, cOOkware, small ~:.
items, small antique.··

I NEED HELPIII I Refuse To l et
You Fall $2K· $4K/ Mont h 24
Hrs 1·888·643· 1366 or 1·888·
547 B216(Totl Foeol
Local Compa ny seek mg Dat a
Entry Cle rk wllh knowledge ol
basic accounll ng procedure s,
compuler skills, olt lce mach ine
elllc1ency &amp; enjoys working with
others Send resume cfo Polnl
Ple asal'l t Register, ML 34, 20 0
Ma1n Streel PI Pleasanl. WV
25550

~UE~Y.AUCTIONUR

740-388-0823 OR 740-245-9866

make $1,736 WEE KLY mailing
Letters !rom home• Foll ow ~ y
Easy D~re ctlon s Begm Recetvlng
Mon e ~ In as little as 10 day51
Fully Gaurenteedl Kevslone Boll
951 ·PW. Joplin, MO B4802

I..JCENSED AND BoNDED

NOT REsPONSIBLE

fOR

BY OHIO

ACCIDENTS

OR Losr PROPERlY.
Real Eatate General
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE•'
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE:
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER
u e &amp;Bo4
GAIL BELVILLE . .
. 44S.a2ot
TRtSH SNYDER.
. . .. 441 -- .
Branch Off1ce JOHNNIE RUSSELL
. .. .. 367.0323'
23 Locust St OA~IO SNYDER ...... .. ...... .. ... . 441 ·945Q
Galhpolts, Ohro
OU R W EB PAGE IS www vlsm1th com
45631
e-ma1l vlsmlth com

q!, Q/md(

WOOD
HEJILTI', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4563 1

wtth me nta l re ta rdation 1n Galha and Metgs
Cou nttes. Mu st ha ve h1g h sch ool d tploma/GED .
va lid dri ver's ltcense and three yea rs good drtv1ng

Our"" the 1 ,,~ traonmg .. ,tlrqu•p ,nu 1"

tn Oh1o $14 TO to $21 80thr Ben·
ellis &amp; Pd Tralmng For Job lnlor·
malton, 1·81 8· 94 2· 0200, ext
4780

446-6806

• You express yo urscll we lim wnltng,

ACE net IS an equal Opportun•ly Employer
committed to quality JOb creatiOn 1n the regton

Apphc...nl'l for 11l1s rml) lr&lt;tl 1•pponunoty
s ho ul~ lw1t fu ur l car~ I" • I lu11h sCh(}l)l
educ&amp;loon lrlllnl llil 01 "'"!~ npo:rocncr
(Uiu c•pt t ~ e n c r pr.fr rr ed) ~ Jr o n~t
"'tllltn and commt•n l~ al l o n ~ ~ ' II ' 1mcl 1
1alld dm er ~ hte t.-c Must t&gt;e 11pcn m
r.I•'Uium ~nd ha1c lhf dn r~ h• """'"t

Gov'l &amp; Postel J ob• · Now H1nng

958 Clark Chapel Ad.
Bidwell, Oh10 45614

Co nsider this poSi tion tf
• You enJ OY spcaktng lo lhc publi c,
• You arc concerned about the d1g1t al d lvJdr ,

Help Wanted

GOV'T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour Full Bene! tis No E1·
perlence Reqwed Free App llca
tton And E ~ta m lnlormatlon 1·888·
126· 9083 Ex tensiO n 1701 (7
AM -7PM CS TI

Grant

Part of CNHI

and persoMd ,liltlms

Electrical! Maintenance
Personnel
A well established corporation IS
desuous IO employ two tndtvldU·
ats w1th electrical eKpe r!ance ,
and one with genera l main
tenance expenence Patd vacaIIOns hOsp!laltza rlon. and life In·
surance ava 1table Please send
resume to P 0 Box 547, Athens,
OH 45701

nat ional fundcrs and local orgamzattons. lc admg

Appalachian Center fo r Economic Natworks

POSITIONS
AVAILABLE FOR
IMMEDIAT E HIRE
Now htnng d.rect care
workers for communtty
group homes for people
wtth menta l re!ardalton
tn Gall 1a a nd Me tgs
Counties
Must ha ve
h1gh
school
val1d
dtploma/GE D,
driver's license and three
years
good
dnvtng
exP.ert ence
Several
shtfts
and
hou rs
a va1lable S tarttng rate ,
$6 00/hour
For an ap phcalton call
1-800·531 -2302
Buckeye
Commu ntly
SetV1ces 1s an equal
o pportun tl y employe r

EARN 125.000 TO $50,000 IYR
Medical Insura nce Btlllng Assls·
lance Needed lmmedtaletyt Use
Your Home Co mputer For Graal
Pote ntial Annual Income Cal l
Now! 1·800·291·4683 Deplt 109

sl rateg1c planmng processes and determuu og staff

priori ties m a fa st.. paced e nvironm ent
w nlin g and bus mess expenence a plus

110

Help Wanted

Drivers 2 Week Pa1d Truck Drlv·
er Tralmng No Expenence Need·
ad Earn Up To $32 ,QOO/ I &amp;I Yr
Wl Futl Benellts Call Today 1·
877 ·230·6002 Sunday -Friday 9
A M To 5 PM P A M Transport
wW'III olrdrlvers com

Snap- on Tools Company
Kenosha, WI
Snap--on Is an equal opportunity employer m/1/dfV

c apable of fo rm tng work ing part ne rs hip s· w a h

OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.

Help Wanted

110

Attendance 1s hm1ted For reseNatlons caii B00-926-5544 x2545 today
Sealing may be ava1labte at the door II unable to attend el1her of
lhese sem1nars, pleas call the# above tor tnlormallon on Snap-on
Tools

Ap ph canls shoul d be a pc rs uas 1ve nelwo rke r,

For tnletView
cons ideration send
resume and cover letter to
Publisher
Ohio Valley Pubhshtng Co
825 Third Ave
Gall1pol1s, Ohto 45631

DRIVERS $T000 Stgn mg Bonus.
$40 000 + Ann ually Aeg1onal
Carrier Excellent Benehts Em·
ployee Stock Ownership COL AI
Tank &amp; Haz Aero Bulk Carrier 1
800·456·6012

Monday, August 14th

p rogra m in a re a hi gh sc hoo ls . co mp u te r
tec hno logy c e nte rs o pe n to lhc p ubl ic , a
tec hnology business 1ncuba1io n and tcc hn tcal
assistance program , and polu..:y Jmt taltve::s rt:l tt lt.!d to
the drgtlal dovtde

SALES &amp; MARKETING
POSmON
(Inside and Outstde work)
: Full and part·lime position.
We are e xpandtng our
sales staff Must have
good commumcation
sktlls, enjoy meeting and
working wtth the public,
be crealtve Must have
dependable transportation. Full-ttme
_QQsition offers salary pJus
commisston and company
benefits .

Dnvers wanted· team runs Must
have class a COL s lwo years
verll1a ble e~tperlence . and no
more tha n three movmg viola
1tons Call Ron at 1·800·887·3970.

Help W.anted

&amp; unbar tn:1mr • · ior nt mel • Page 03

WV

Help Wanted

Sales

tmple mentalion of a compu ter entr epreneurship

OFFICE CLERK
Full-ttme position in
Gallipolis office. Must
have good communtcatton
skills, enJOY meettng and
worktng with the public.
Company benef•ts.

110

Don't m1ss thts opportumty to hear more aboul these aml other career
apportumtles available w1th thiS1ndustry leader 1n profess iOnal tools
and equtpmenl Please make your plans now to attend our recepllon
an ~ semrnar

The D irector o f Tec h Ve ntures wtll wur~ wtt h a
sla ff of SIX and commun1ty pa rtners to bud d a
stro ng technology sec to r tn sou1 heas1e rn O hro
The D 1rector w tl l be responsib le tor suc.cess ful

SPORTS WRITER
If you have a love for
sports, we would ltke to
talk to you . Experience
preferred. Must have
dependable transportation Must have
computer skills. Full -ttme
position with company
benefits .

110

Help Wanted

App alachwn Cente r for Eco nom1 c Net wo rk s
(ACEnet) ts seeking a results-orte ntcd leade r fo r
rts Tech Ven tures Program

be yours with the

110

110

PROGRAM DIRECTOR

PART-TIME

#1

11

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing, Drivers · Flatbed
Typtng Great Payl CALL I 800
Medical Coverage
795 0380 Ell •201 (24 Hrs)
From Dew Onel
• 52.000 Stgn On Bonus
ATTENTION Put Your Compuler
• Ouahtv Home Ttme
To Wor k! Earn $850·$7,000 1·
' l ate MOOel Equ1pmenr
800·934 T3 12 Free Boo klet
CDLA&amp;3 Mos OTR
www choosesuccessathome com
ECK MILLER
800 61 1·6636
ATTENTION : We'll Pav You To
www edl:mlller com
Lose Up To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed Immediately' Offer
DRIVERS • Quahly Carriers. Inc
E1p11es 7/28 Call 740 441 1982
The Nauon s Largest Bulk Carrier
AV0Nt An Areas! To Buv or Sell Has IMM ED IATE OPENI NGS
For Owner Operators Long Haul
Shirtev Spears. :ll4-675-1429
&amp; ijeglonal Runs Available Must
Ba bv·stller Needed, Aller Sep· Have 2 Yn OTA Expe re lnc e
!ember 29 , 20 Hours Morel Less CALL NOW 1·800· 15U·e870
Weekly, Occasiona l Salur day In 1t21QHI
Our Home For 1 And 2 Year Olds
Dr~vers
Aelrences Required {740)441 40 Years and Grow1ng Strong'
9667
H &amp; WTrucking Co.
"Great Pay Packages
Chalrs1d e ass1stant for oral sur
gerv ofltce m Middleport Salur
' Ins Plans. Full Benei1Ts &amp; Holl
day s only Non smoking offi ce
day Pay
•Home 90% ol Weekends
Fax resume to 6T4 89().7507
"Dtrect Oeposll Weekly Pay
CLAIMS PROCESSOR! $20 ·$40
'Sign-On BonustOrlenlatlon Pay
IHr Potential Processing ClaimS
Be 21 vrs Clean M\IR, A CDL
Is Easy! Tra lntng Provided
Hazmat
MUST Own PC CALL NOWl T
Welcom109 Co D11vers 010,
888·565·5T97 EXT 642
and DriVIng School Graduales
800·826·3560
Computer Internet Person Wanl·
Talk
To Randy I
edl $75·$125/ ho ur Va cation s
www
hwtruck
com
Bonuses FREE E·Book.
www cash4u2day com
or 1--800·204 7048

FULL-TIME and

hu

I==""'::::=:=:======:'~-~ ~ H og Sale P lease send your

Apply In 'P erson
Craw's Steak Hou s e

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio POint Pleasant,

110

Streiter 's Custom

I ~=TH=AN=K=vo=u==il FRENCH CITY

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE

Tribune
Sentinel
Register

Gallipolis, Ohio

Thanks to

Trace El em . Sch ool
Bn ng C ove re d Dish

•

CD Owners

Leotards, Ballet, Tap

crafts &amp; more l

Au g ·1 3th - 1 2 N oon
At Mercervt ll e, Hannan

For More Information Call
Immediately
1-888-237-5647- EXT. 985

&amp; Commercial

our new store with

furn ttu re , qutlts, cand les ,

""nrl'"'

Company offers a fixed work schedule, weekly
pay and weekly bonus program, full health
benefits, 401-K plan after 1 month (50%
company match). 1 week paid vacation every 6
months anq 7 paid holidays.

Residential

information . Come see

Treasurers - locally ma de

B a rry· M o ore R e u nion

Immediate
Opening for
Full-Time
Employment _
Competitive
Benefits
And
Bonus

FRENCH 500 ROOM

100 Hannan Trac e Ad · In Patriot

J r. Fa1r
C HRI STO PHER R0!3EFtT S I
Temperature R isi nal

As a call center communicator, one will work for
conservative political organizations. "NO Cold
Calling and you will Not Be Sent Home For Low
Results!"

6:30 • 8'30 PM
Call446-5030 for more information

Marke t Hog
At th e 2000 G all1a County

The Gallipo lis loca tion would employ th ose
in d1v1duals interested m working in a career
orien ted environment.

TUESDAY AUGUST 15, 2000

&amp;

Jazz, Pointe,

FARMERS BANK
for purc has ing my

Established in 1982, the company has
accomplished tremendous growth and now
employs 1500 people in Ohio and West Virginia.

Cheryl Fraz1er and De bb1e Perroud

Parent, Ballet, Tap,

LOIS of Food a nd Fun &amp; Hay RtdBs

COME
GROW
WITH US .. .

With HMC Lactalion Consultants

740-446-7283

Scott S h radet
Ti ·Angle 4 -H

Attention Experienced Drivers

"Professional Pay For Prolesslonal Performance"

BREASTFEEDING
CLASSES

to Medicare . Save money.
Free Home Delivery. Call

Thank You Rtver Band
lve·le,irtaN Hosptlal for buy•ng my
2000 Market Hog and dona !•ng
tlto the Outreach Center

POSTA L JOBS 148 323 00 YA
Now Hiring ·No EKpe1lence Pa id
Training ·Great Benel11s Call 7
Days 800·429-3660 Ext J-566

Opportunities could

brealhtng med1catton b1lled

A Marietta Ohio Based Company
"New· Top of the Industry Pay Packate"
• Start lnt pay - • 38 • • liB CPM
· Home Weekends
· Premium Benefits
· 1999-2000 Conv. Models
· Assiped Dispatch
· Paid Vacations
· 99% " No Touch" Frelllht
· Good Miles
Also Openintslor Part Tine Ill Casuals
Contact Safety II. RecrullinJI: BOO-llll3-6479

. S e re ntly House
serve s victt ms of domjlslic
vtole nce
call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9 577

edicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other

ELECTRONIC FILING
736 Second Ave 446·86 77

New Load of QVC a nd
C h t l dr~ n ·s Clothing
NOW ACCE PTING VOUCH ERS

MOLLOHAN CARPET
446-7444 - 6.6 Mtles N 160
Past Ho lzer Hosprtal
Clark Chape l Road

&amp; Supply, Co .
1 -740-446- 1142
Monday - Saturday

256-1651 -

: ""FEOERA L PO STAL JOB S"
• Up To $1 8 24 Hour H111ng For
• 2000. Fre e Call For ApplicaTion 1
1 : E11ammat1o n lnlormatlon Federal
Hire ·FUll Beneflls 1·800·598·
4504 Extension 1516 (8 AM -6
PM C S Tl

Berber Carpet
$5.99 Per Yd

Delivered or P•cked Up
Min Loader
CHG $35.oo
Call
Cremeans Concrete

Call Bob Don nett

407 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT

,

• " CA REER OPPORTUN ITY "
· MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
: $45K fVrl Full Traln111g IPC R&amp;q d ,
• 888·660-6693. E111 4402

NEW SHIPMENT

Top Soil Fill Dirt Bank Run

For Banquet Tickets

An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/DIV

Ext . Ill, 112, 113 Local740-li73-B479

OR FAX TO (304) 675-6973

Victoria Secrel, Limited, Express,
&amp;F h d
Struclure, Abercrombie
tiC • an
morel! Women's, Men's, and Kids
Clolhes
Come See Us At
326 SecondAvenue - IIi I

Grand Opening of Tradtn' Pos(

Akzo Nobel Functional Chemicals LLC
Attn: Blll Stricklen, HR Dept.
State Rl. 2, PO Box 1721
Gallipolis Ferry, WV 25515·1721
(fa. 304.675.4657)

Ext 1300

6 :00 - 10:00 p .m.

AKZONOBEL
selected areas of chemicals, coatlnas, healthcare
producls and fibers. Mon! lhlll 87,000 I'""Pie In over
60 countries make up the Alao Nobel workforce.

M

Monday, August 14th

Mike Connet

bjll.stricklep@akz;onohel.c;:om

~Pleasant

v

U ,OOO WEEK LV I Ma11ing 400
Brochures! Satisfaclton Guar·
anteed' Postage &amp; Supphes Pro·
vldedl Rush Self Add res sed
Stamped Envelope' Gtco DEPT
5 - 80 ' 143e , ANTIOC H. TN
37011 ·1438 Stan Immediately
$45,0001 yr potonliat Or's need
poopte to p,ocess Claims. Must
Own compute'/ modem We Ttaon
catrt-see-ss7-4896 exts95
$450 DO-S I000 00 Week~ mailing
Lotte'"necessary
hom HomeFT/PT
No Expe
d·
enca
Help
needed lmmedia lely Call Sun·
dance o ls t,lbuto rs t -soo-889-

$987 85 WEEK LY! Processing
HUD IFHA Morlgage Refunds No
E~~:penance Req uired For FREE
lnlormallon Call 1·800·501·6832

oose
Sen 1'or Dance
45 &amp; Ove r w ith George Hall

CALL MON .· FR I t-900-449·
4625 EXT 5600

Help Wanted

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
· WORKING FOR THE GO~EAN­
IIENT FROII HOllE PARTTIIlE NO EXPERI ENCE RE ·
QUtREO 1·800-757·0753

~~~~;~~~=~

ID.~I•••Pieasant

FULl BEN EF'ITS

ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT II

$1 00,000+ Potential First Year.
Best Prodi!Jots In the business .
Fantasttc Lead Program.
Highest Commissions &amp; Bonuses
Excellent Management Support

1

•

BULLETIN BOARD

388-9436

AUCTION
2 Big Sal&amp; Days
Every Sat 6 PM
Eve ')' lUes 6 PM

•u•IIIIIR-DE

I

110

TRA.I NIN G

Auction
and Flea Market

DATING TONIGHT!
Hlvt Fun Mttllng Eligible Sin·
git l In Your Area Call For More
fntormatlon. 1•IOO· ROMANC E,
Eld 9735.

110

Barn . 740 . 388 •0823 , 740 . 245.

740-592· 1842
9e66, Full so,vtco Rote,encos
Ouahty clo lhmo and ho usehold Aii!Uiable. Licensed &amp; Bonded
Items St 00 bag sale every 'Ou'PiaceCKlf&gt;vrs"
Thursday Monday thru Salurday
9 00530
Rtck Pearson Auction Company
lull trme auctlonee ,, complete
auction service
lice nsed
40
Giveaway
16S.Ohoo &amp; Westvl,glnla. 304·
tree To good home Female kit· 773·5785 Or 304·773-5447
ten, 4 mo 2 ve" otd White Male 90 Wanted to Buy
Cat Neutered &amp; Oeclawed 1 ,..,......,.-,..-~.,.......,.,.,..~­
{740)256-9240
Absolute Top Dollar U S Sll11er
Gold
Coins, Prootsels. Diamonds,
Used Concrete Blocks Redmo nd
Anllque Jewelry Gold Flings. U S
Ridge Area (304)875-3647
Currency, Sterling , ·M T S Coin
Shop, 151 Second AIJenue, Galli·
60 Lost and Found
polls. 740-446-2842
Found labrador Ae1re1ver Dog
Near Intersection Ot State Route
1Ei0 And McCorm ick Ad Call To
Identify (740)&lt;46-1420

' STAAT

•
•
•
•
•

1

8111 Moodtspaugh
buy/sell
esl ates Aucltoneerlng
consi gnment
aucllon- Thursdays 6pm, Middle
port. Ohio &amp; wv li cense. 740·

273-0766 tea,. message lOam110 Help Wanted
tapm Ptea5&amp;
992-9707 740-989-=•3
.c.y..
$11 $33 HOURI! GOVERNMENT
NewToYouTMhShOppe
Leslie Lemley, Le mley's Auction JOB St HIRIN G NOW! PAID

Amazing live Psychic Readmgi
~: loiJe, Health, and Su ccess 1· 70
888·763·384Ei 18+ For Enterlaln·
Mini Only. $3119/mln
Oomlnatrl•• Female . Seeking
Male's To Summit Thetrse lf To
My Dungeon You Can Call At
(7&gt;10)388--9347

~~~~'!!!.~

.
.............
30 Announ;ce:;m;e~n~ts~~B=o=====A~u=c~tl~o=n====~~~~~~~~~;==================t==================.~,==========~==~=t~====~~~==~
Dlelaoy ·~UQplement helps you
and Flea Market
Call Today 9 Place Your Classified Ad
lose
pounds
plus
makes unwanled
you feel much
more aner
getic, call Tracy or Howard 304

.

Sunda~Auguat13, 2000
110

.

·~

~~~

*

113352

NEW LUXURY

HOII~
undo'
construction
Located In a COLONIAL
Quality bUilt All
prest1gtous area 1n Green Twp 5 Estate 4 Bedrooms, 3
min from Holzer Hospital 5
Master Bedroom w~~~~~~~
bedrms . 4 baths, Formal entry ce111ng fa ns, coppef ~
w/skyhght &amp; catl1edral ceiling. walk·ln closets, Formal
d1n1ng rm , lilltng rm , conver11ent room, family room Wllh
ktl , oak cab1nets 1st floor burn1ng fireplace enclosed
laundry, Master su1te on 1sl floor pat1o, Cherry cab1nets 1
_"lnclud1119 1_ s u PJ;~ r bath rm. &amp; - -kllchen, also -a bar and penl'lf, l
closet 4 Bedrms 2 baths on 2nd chef'l)l woodwork
floor 24 x24' lam1ly rm approK C1ty SchOols 2 Utllt1 y
4,000 sq rt Beaulitul 3 acre M/l basement wllh ,_;~~k;;:,t~; ~
ravtned lot and five stream 11 Anderson Windows, 2 car
would be my pleasure to show w/8' lnsulaled doors 2 acres
you V1rgtnta 446·6806
pius more acreage available l I
13374 BEAUTIFUL 3 112 YEAR super construCIIOn plus 1
OLD COUNTRY HOME ON I + beautifully planned home
ACRES Large LA with-stone wall spacious
rooms
and wood burner First flodr BR reasonable tS appealing to
and full bath. Ut1l Am Sunroom, please do not delay 1n mak1ng ,
Large Kitchen/D1n1ng wtth Cherry appointment w1th V~rg 1n1a ~
Cabmets and a pantry Upstatrs Sm1lh 446·49021446-6806
another large oedroom and full 13367 Large home 1n town, Mw
oath with potential for third roof 1999 4 SA 2 5 BA, 2 c~r
bedroom Has screened back garage
VInyl stdlng nlc.e
porch and a forty loot front sitting ne1gnborhood Needs some TLC
porch Home has 2201&gt;+ sq 11 , a
$
,
heat pump and cenlral air Natural but prtced nght aL 79,900
wood s1d1ng on the ouls1de and 13377 GREAT STARTER HOMe
beaul1ful wood/wallpaper on the or Investment property ThiS lOvely
LOT &amp; 1ns 1de Property mcludes a cute lOg two bedroom one and one h~f
Located on Easlern cab1n w1th full balh gazebo, 2 balh cotlage would be 1ust nglill
three otner as a starter or reTirement hom~
Oreal Opportun1tyl Purchase garages, and
ngs all 1n excellent w1tn an eat 1n kitChen and hvt~
corner lol With or without the outbu1ld1
cond1!10n For an excluSIVe
sh0w1ng call Dave
room 11 IS JUSI enough space
QUAINT 2 BR COTTAGE 13365 FAMILY DELI GHT 2!28 Pnced lo sell at $37 500 C~l
on 2 e acres Eat 1n sq ft home Lovely LA, FA w/FP Ieday thts one won tlast long
I kii1Che1n LA and full bath Only 6 eat m kttchen fofrma l DR. 3 DRs 13380 CORNEA LOTS )
old ana setllng on 2 6 acres 2 baths elec heal pump wrgas Water Elect &amp; Sewer A'ililat&gt;l• I
backup Large deck front porch Only1 Hurry tne pr~ce 1S
country
• Garage/Tow1ng Busmess beautiful cabtne1s sky lights $ti 500 1 acre m/1
attached 5 br IBSidence · cethng fans out bldg 32x48 #33Ei9 6 68 acres M/L 1n
garage 24' round above ground Twp All ut1ht1es on I
at 2134 Chathan Ave '" pool &amp; deck Thts home sells 1tself compleTed drtveway
, 11 Comes w11h extra lots al l you need to do 1s look 1 ac Home currently an lot and
has equipment (Nr m/1
purchased 24x24 barn
L1fts, Elc.) Owner 13383 St. Rt 218 4 SA, 1 bath for horses and cows GalliP,!!i
10 move thiS salel So call home wtth detached 1 car garage C1ty Schools Don't let lh1s
on 1 ac. m/1 Owner says seo,ooo shp away calt today
13378 LOCATED IN THE
BEAUTIFUL MAKE AN OFFERt
LOTS located 1n 13375 LOOK AT THIS!! II 3 554 3rd Ave '2 bedrooms, 2
Ct . Charolats lake Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full d1n1ng room basement , gas
basement wtth 2 car garage and goad roof furnace &amp; hot
1 2 remain 2 348 ac
lmmed1ate '""'""'roO
and 5 ac m/1 $25,900 fmlshed fam•lr roam Home s11s tank
on 2 Ac m/ 1n Hannan Trace $50,000
•
3T2 iNVESTME,IT OR MOVE Sc
hools
Just
mmutes
from
13389
VACANT
LOT
.
Ly ia p~
1t Home SO'x 12' 2 downtown GallipOliS Th1s home Chesh1re OH $75,000
. .. •
ll bE&gt;d,ooms I bath furntture, range features
a
beauttful
landscaped
CARRYOUT
au
~~,;;::;l
1
3362
, Heat pump, central air lawn, wood pellet stove and and CONVENIENCEbutl d1ng 70'x14' atso central a~r Located JUSt oft Rock FOR SALE New alarm syste'l' I
lb ,,-; , a· bldg , Corner lot Hysell &amp; L1ck Ad on Mable Dr 1n n1ce
ne1ghborhood Have a garden Butld1ng bu111 to stale
IJUIIIVe,, Middleport, $1 5,000.00
and ra1se some !lowers but make Cont1nuous operahon s1nce 1
LOTS, LANO
sure to look at lhls Call Johnnie Pnce 1ncludes tnventory
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
at 367 0323 today for an Jo11nnle 36 7 0323 or 446·6806 ,
N2918 CHARMING VICTORIAN
REDU CED PRICE-117 appotnlmenl
close 10 new Fwy hospttal 13384 BEAUTIFUL VACANT HOME 4 5 Bedrms 3 bathS'
ctr Waler gas, sewer LAN D lor future home s1te 7 11.11 forma! DR &amp; LA Cryst~ l
Fu ll
l " djoining P1necrest Nurstng acres M/L on State Reul e 554 I chandeliers through0u1
m11e from freeway at R1o Grande bsml "''lh complete ktt, stone
LAR GE FARM 1()1 AC
level lo rolltng terram r.estr~cted. WBFP Bl;t w/gas f1replace'
1 1/2 story home 4/5 $17 500 per acre dnve by and Garage
Landscaped lot.
home 2 balhs lovely LA v1ew th 1s lovely property GB
exclus1ve v1ew1ng w1th V1rgm1a L
13373 Don't let th1s one sltp away Sm11h 446 6806
~~:;:
w/oak
1 ~':: ',~?, f ~replace
area K1t
Level
to
rolling
&amp; 1998 Noms T6x80 manufactured 13JS5 AUTHENTIC LOG
home Stt on a I acre lot M/l on WITH CHARACTER II you I
pasture
II
Allee Ad 1 mde off 160 Th1s home 1nd1vtdualrty here 11 1sl 3 029
appomlment VLS 4460 6806
has ell the upgrades Solid oak t1 more or less 3 bedrms 2
w:J3B2 520 State At 279 In the cabmets carpel Master Bedroom baths K1t LAm Off1cG rm
VIllage Of Thurman NICe 2 br has Garden Tub and Shower much more Wrap porch front
11
cottage, bath kttcherJd•nmg room Comes w1lh 3 bedrooms. ut11ity s1des 167 Acres m/1
and
ut1l1ty roo m Insulated room eal tn k1 tchen and huge Pasture and 3 Large
&gt;Nlndows, steel doors w1th s1orm 11vmg room lawn IS landscaped Feed lot sttes 2 n1ce
has
doors N1ce 101 w1lh outbu1ld1ng · wtth chlldrens p1ay-sw1ng and 1s most all clean
Pubhc water and soon to be clubhouse Also has 10x60 lenc1ng Eleclrtc &amp; frost free
outbutld1ng Call today 11 may be 1n the barn Feed tot
public sewage $45,000
Formertv used for Veal ~
13387
PERFECT FOR THE gone lomorrow S58,000
FAMILY Also convemenllo most 13017 LARGE FLOOR PLAN . • operat1on Located near
Located In the clly on a qutet Grande Appolntme.c"i'c,.44,{6I!Ji I
everythmg · Stores Schools, street
4 BAs,* 2 1/2 balhs 8 V1rg1n1a L Sm1th ,,
Hosp11a1
Cuslom bu111. 3 rooms.
thiS
home
can $335,000
bedrooms 3 baths hv1ng room
accommodate
lwo
fam1hes
13349
~~ ·~ ~~~~!!
di ning
room
&amp;
k1tchen V!rg1n1a 446·6606
POSSESSION
Spltl I
w/app!1ances. basement wtan ltlll58· 36D EVERGREEN RD 3 bedrms , 1 bath 5 Ac
apartment !~.lichen li111ng room
bath Front &amp; rear deck, 2 car bedrm Broadmort~ Mob1le Home LUCATION central a1r ~~~~: I
anached garage Almost 4 acres &amp; Lots Range Aelng Washer &amp; furnace, vmvl. garage &amp; b1
ol park like grounds wl1h stoc~ed Dryer , Elec Heat S. CA Deck &amp;
CITY LOT on
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
Outbu1!d1ng $28,000
Call VLS 446 6806
REMARKABLYSPACIOUS 4 bedrooms, 2 story llv1ng room 18x30 01nmg '~~•&lt; I
"--=: . c_OISTINCTJVE
. some har~ood floors new roof covered ~rcn basement &amp; garage Reduced $89,000

BRICK

I

1=

�Page

D4 • &amp;unbap lltlmt!l &amp;tntl nrl
110

Part Ume ma ntenance pe son

flexit:M I'IOul1 Contact Tim at 740.
992 371 1 or Apa tmenl 17 Colo
n al Park Apartments (lo mer
V 1t1Qe GrMn ~rtmlnll )
Po~me

v

AJ 1onct Zone S..ks

"'soclate Director
Tht Polyme A !lance Zone
lttkl a mot vated lndlvldull
w 111 U'le high"! degree of J)l'Oitl
1 ona tm to serve as Itt lui I me
Au oel att 0 ecto Genera 'i
!hit ndlv dua wut bl IIWO vt d n
nea ly every aspect of the Pot
ymer A 1 anct Zone 1 markel ng
st ategles economic rtsurch
tunc tons tnd IJ)tclal events To
be cons dtred appllcentt mutt
nave an Auoclate Degree In
Bus nes1 Adm nlstrat on or rt 11
td lie d 1 Bachelors dtQ 11 Is
prtltrrtd Add t on• y a m n
mum ol one 'ill of adm nlslra
t ve experltnct 1 rqu red 2 3
years expe lance In an admlnls
trallve Cllptc ty at a junto exec
ullve level s preferred App c
ant.J must a so have tl'll! ab lily to
wrlle techn cal grant app ca

ton&amp; be abe to competently use
spreadsheet and databalt man
agement soltwart and be w lllng
to tu ther p olesslonal growth
though cont nulng educallon and
s~H s 1 aln ng Compelll ve sal
a y_ and benelts wit be p ovlded
a nil w be commensu ate with
e~tpe fence Oua 1 ed app cants
wel;ln August 8 2000 and August
m
submit
their
resumeol bel
25ay2000
to the
attention
Ex
ecul ve Director Polyme At
ance Zone 104 M ler Orlve

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh1o • Point Pleasant,
110

Help Wanted

RESPITE CARE WORKERIS)

Help Wanted

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors ea n S35 to 5-45 tor 2 o 3
hou s weekly Call Sera Tee 740
592 6651

NEED Wou d you be w ng to
care for an ndlvldua {S) wllh

learning lim tat ons In their own
horne tor a lew hours each month
H gh school degree equtred 11
Interested cont act Ctu sty at 1
(800 83 1 2302 ~qual Opportunity

Voce P ano And Ins! ument In
s uctors Wa n ed To C eete Edu
cat ona Prog ams Fo Youth And
Adult lnd v dua s A Ou New y
Expanded Facl ~ Pease Ca
The A I Schoo A (740)441 1988
To Schedule An In e v ew

f"'''loyer
S E Oh o Truck ng company op
e at ng ate mode Mack dumps
Mack raetors and &lt;lump Ira ers
ocated near Jackson Oh o s

•

ook ng lor qual fled c ass A and
c au COL d vera Oua Ilea
!Ions nclude be ng a east 22
yea 1 of age wt\h a clean d v ng
eeord Wt ofte a competitive
wage lor qualf ed dr ve s Com"a
ny btneflho nclude Health Oenta
VIsion Llle 401(K ) Pad vaca
t on pa d holidays to qualifying
tmp oyeea We a so have a sate
ty award prog am for d vers whO
ma nllln a sate driving re co d
Pert t me work etso ava able
please cat Scott at ~ 7401286

e

110

Help Wanted

110

Wood and Came s Inc ts Now
Ac cept ng App ca ons Fo The
Follow ng Pos 110n Open ngs
Bache o s De
g ee In Soc a WorK Psycho ogy
0 Othe Soc al Se v ce D sc
pine LSW P ele rid The Sue
cessfu Cand da e W P ov de
0 res Se v ce To The Seve e y
Mentally 0 sab ed Seve e y Emo
ton a y D sabled Popu at on In
Gall a Coun y Must Be Ab e to
Be An lnsu able 0 ~• On The
Agency s Feel tnsu ance P an
Case Manage

Help Wanted

-co lege Sluden s
•H l)h Schoo G ads
H.gh School Servo s
Anyone look nQ o ea n S$
Earn up to ttsntou'
~xce ent expe ~nee to
you esume
Fun and I end'Y wo lip ace
B ng you 1 ends and

earn ext aSS
CALL TODAVI
t-800-9211-5753
Clv c Dave opment G oupl
M lennlum Teletet'.IICIS

Oh o H gh School G adua e
Equ va en Sh wo k Va d Drlv
e s l cense CPA And F Sl Ad
Aequ ed Res der'll a Expe ence
W th Em ot ona y 0 stu bed
Adu s Pee ed $667Pe Hou
C n cal Ass s an For C s s n
e ven on Un Ga lpo s H gh

Schoo GJaduate Equ valen
Sh I Wo '"k Va d Or ve s l
ce nse CPR And Firs Aid Re
Qu ed Res dent a E•pe ence
W th Emo ona y D s urbed
Adu ts P eterred $6 67 Pe Hou

4t72
Teach ng Position tea cher at
Carleton Schoo Mus have cu
rent OhiO Oepa tment o Educa
I on Ce t I ca l on or license and

have or be at g ble to obta n mull
hsncl capped ce Ill cat on Send
WAnted so meone o c ean hou se
resume by August 15th to
one day eve y wo weeks n
Carleton Set ooi
A edTuppe s Pansae a 740
t310 Carleton St ee
662 3007
PO Box 307

r;~~Sy~ac~u~se~O~H~4~5~77~9~~~~~~~~;;;~;~

Eqn Opportun ty Employe and

Appi can s May P ck up App ca
I ons At Any Of The Woodland
Centers nc Loca ons Monday
F day 8 OOam to 5 OOp m
Re sumes Can Be Se TO The
Ma nage 01 Human esou cas
Wood and Cente s nc 3086
S a e Aou e 60 Ga I po s Oh o
4563 EOE AA Employe

140

naUonal orlg n ancestry gender
veteran status handrcap o dis
ab I ty or any other status or
condition protected by fade a or
state law

Located at the Auction Center on Rl 33
In Mason, WV.

r ort 01 Secretary II In The ScMo
Aesp ons bItes Include But A e
Not lim ted To Providing Genera

Secreraria

AI o dab e

Reeords And Recepllonist Out es
For"The Departments

Glassware Tupperware
case books toys new
I
table saw metal lathe
motorlift weedeaters lawn mowers Murray 12 5
HP 40 rid1ng lawn mower F1esta gas gnll wheel
barrow &amp; much more

s Close To Home)

Cal Today 740 446 4367
800 2 4 0452
Reg M90 05 1274 8

150

ln clud ng The Names And Ad
d eases 01 Three Refefences On
Or Before August 1B 2000 To

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773 5785 or 773 5447
Auctioneer Rick Pearson
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH 10

Ms Phy Is Mason SPHA
l!lrecto 01 Hl.lllan Resources

Unlve Sity 01Rio Grande
Box 27
Ao G ande OH 45674
ema pmasonOr o edu

Fax 1740)245 4909
EEO AA Employer

FIN Supervisor Needed Fo Home
Health Agency Private Care Ot
pa tment Must Bt Able To Su
pe VIse Act v t es And Schedul
ng -Of -Home Heath A des Pro
..,. de Staff T alnlng And Coor
d nate Care Of The Homebound
ant Previous Supe vtsory EK
pe ence Or Home Heath Expe
ence Pete red Apply At 4t2
Second !wenue Ga I pol s Ohio
Or PhOne 740-44 779

c

AMVETS POST 23
KANAUGA OHIO
Building Fund Auction
"Thursday Sept 17

ATIENTION HOMEBUYERS
Been dreammg of ownmg your own
home? Let F1ve "Star Mortgage help make
that dream become a reality No down
payment? Don t let that stand m your way
If you have good credit but JUSt haven t
been able to save up a down payment one
of our LOW or NO DOWN payment
programs may work for you
F1ve Star Mortgage has been vour local
mortgage company for 15 years with
compehhve rates and customized loan
programs Give us a call today for all your
mortgage needs

700PM
Pes Cakes
baskels Middleton Oolls
and other M sc nems
/Ill Proceeds go lo lhe
burld ng lund
Any nterested person
who would hke to donate
teme to thla auction
should call
Cave McCoy 446 8519

F1ve Star Mortgage
10 Myrtle Avenue
Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631
(740) 446-4042 or
(800) 479-9018

992 0040 0 740 992 4286
W t hau ash away $40 a p ck
up oad 1304)675 8158 o 304

w Haul Junk o Trash S35 a
klad 1304)675 B950

MOODISPAUGH AUCTION HOUSE
We Decided To Cancel The Auction
For August 17, 2000 Due To The
Meigs County Fair Gomg On. Our
Next Auction Will Be August 24,
2000 at 6:00p.m. Hope To See You
All Then. Thanks, Bill

www BeBossF ee com

cess Med cal C aims F om Home
Tra n ng Prov ded Must Own
Computer 1 BOO 797 75t 1 E1tt

MEDICAL/ Denla BILLER $15
$"5 fH Medica B I ng Software
Company Needs People To Pro
cess Medica Claims From Home
Tra nlng P ovlded Must Own
Computer t 800 434 5S t 8 Ext

e mall us for Information on our listings

MEO CAL BILL NG Unhmlled In
come Potent a No Exper ence
Necessary Free Info ma t on &amp;

4618

Jutl) DeW t1

J Mcrr II Carter
~ n n 1e

CO ROM
ftlvestment F om
$2 495 F nanclng Ava_ abe 800
322 1139 Ext 050
www business sta tup com

R1 h Bar
Chery l Len lev
D m Ath
Kenneth A nsbar~

DeWit

a

DEPOT STREET A 2 sto y home w th 2 bedrooms d n ng
com I v ng room k chen and I ba h Has a Ia ge at w lh a

REAL E S TATE

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE

Acres New Fu nace New Carpet
UpSIJirl 38R 2BA Uplta rl Ex
tra Guestroom and Ba th Down
111 rs $1.C~ 000 By Appointment
Serious lnqulrtl On y (740}.C48-

www gotdcoaltcc com

CREO T EXPERTS LICENSED J
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE

BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 OAVS 1

pat o L v ng roan 2
bed ooms and
oaf and f u nace
ca
and
bu ld ng

Homes lor Sale

2900 SQF Aa lid Ranch on 4 5

sess on
9672

CRED IT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI

e ase

Bad Cred 1 Legally
Free Info 1 800 768 4008

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

Appllcauon w /Service Reduce
Payments To 65% !!CASH IN

CENTIVE OFFERII Ca I I BOO
328-8510 Ext 29

St39 900

9 Room House 2 Kitchens 2
Baths C A &amp; Heal 2 Ca Garage
se Land Cont act 0 Rent Ta a

FREE GRANT MONEYIII Never
Repay Bus ness Educaliol'l
home Purchase/ Repairs Oebls
I avei Research Wr ters Ar
t sts Med ca and mo e 1 800
242 0363 E•t 9037
www grants dot com com

fa

personal

992 2259
742 2357

992-2259

992-2259

o
P ce
$44 900
Kanauge ua a C\1 g u SR
7 2 Bu d ngs Cou d be used o
mu ude 0
ngs o one o e
r a nd 0 e o o k cu ol Some
ece emoele g dnne W p
ICI1UFIT ST RAC NE ace w sn pub
v &lt;t e P C educed
&amp; bock ga age P ced o $28 500

WE HAVE MANY MORE LISTINGS CALL US
TODAY OR STOP IN &amp; LOOK AT OUR MLS BOOK

CCCLV LLE AD App ox 2 a c e o f and w h ~ uno 5o y
home Has 2 bed ooms
2 ba hs
ge v ng oo
d ng
oom a d ut ty oom A so
po ch and ea deck

D9TTIE TUA NER Broker
JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLI NG
BETTY JO COLLINS
BRENDA JEFFERS
OFFICE

as a de ached ga age
o t
$55 000 (lQ

992
949
949
949
992
992

5692
2131
2131
2049
1444
2886

Bu d ng oom fo ma d n ng k !chen
and
e ns de
eq u pment and mo e on
y u se d as a gas 0 ts de th e e s app ox ~ 94
camp ete c es w th a stocked pond
Ca
fa
Mo e ca lo camp ete st ng
#'2058

COMMERCIAL
and
P ev ous
stat on
s ngs

Affordable and conven onuy

w th so much to aHa A one acre at

#2078

DON 'T SEE WIIAf YOU'HE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; let Us H

Fmd It!

bedrooms 1 12 baths or g nal woodwork landscaped L ke new cond t on ASKING
hardwood fl oors 2 f replaces full att c w th $65 000
wtdow s watch tower and lull basement
uarage and 2
andscaped yar d ALl. MIDDLEPORT Close to own on B adbu y
Road Rea y good cond ton 3 bedrooms 2
baths v ng oom equ pped bu 11 n k tchen
wet ba aundry Ia ge bock 2 car ga age 1
wo ks hop
Sheds t o
/) to age
G o od
tandscap ng a n ce home eady o move n o
17 years o d on a a ge at w th oom to oam
Ca I fa you show ng ASKING $74 900

LONG BOTTOM

SA 248

203 75 ac e

fa m 2 story house w h larue ba n Located 5
m es f om Fo ked Run State Park 2 gas
wei s w th oya y checks t mbe and pastu e
SR 124 MAPLE GROVE SUBDIVISION
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE App ox malely 2 w dl fe pen fu S )( com 3 bed ooms f o t
ac e ots 10 to choose f om G eat ~mp ng po ches enclosed back porch eel c:.r CALL
Ia s Cal today lo more de a Is MAKE FOR MORE OETAILS

• •

OFFER!

LINCOLN TERRACE
t t 2
w h tu bas emen L v ng oom k tch e 1

1
POMEROY Bea ut fu v ew of th e r ve out 0
2 bed ooms some em ocle ng f a nt
po ch Lot 43x24 5 Cwne may
h gh wale Two sto Y old e hom e emode ed
and landscaped
Off str ee
pa k ng
a land cant ac
MAKE OFFER
basen en garage !re nt s tl ng po ch Rock $t8900
ga den even a f sh pond 3 bed oo ns ba h
ma ny newe r ea u e s App o ntment on Y

leo'"'""'''

Cull Jor JlppOLntment

I

www evans moore com

Over A

LENDER

Qu£1rter

c~~,lury u

11058 Pr me Locetlon 109 ee
of frontage on 2nd Avenue Large
2 s ory b cK house two mob e
home en a s and a mob e home
w h a frame add 1 on that s
cur ently be ng used as a beau y
sa on Ca I lo mo e de a s
Reduced I om
$219 000 to
$150000
PRICE REDUCED

A

LOT b gger than It ooksl
Vacan and n town s ha d to I nd
so ake a ook at th s ol loca ed
JUS a couple bocks f om the C y
Pa k w th ove 6 000 squa e ee
o eve land U es a aady
p esen on the p operty

e ement
ssg goo

wold over as
Auct on House

a sed
anch
ove ooks
th s h sto c beatJtfu Oho Ave la ge lvng
andma k o e s eta I space room w th wa k ou en ance a he
enta
ncome and so age a ge w ap a ound deck tha faces
nc udes 2 BR house next doo
he
ve
EQu pped t&lt; tchen
Ca
fo
de a s
PRICE Sepa a a u y oom What a
REDUCED!
beaut tu s te 2 Ca ga age
AFFORDABLE!
Mt07!i Escape the huatle &amp; N1097 Commercial Property!
bust a In th s dream hamal Th s G ea
deve opment paten a
hOme ofters 3 BR 2 BA LR eat easy access o SR 35 145 AC
n k tchen f n shed baSement and
M L Leve to o ng topog aphy
2ca gaagealona272Jace
ot n R o G ande a ea
and wa t ng 1o you at
$tOO,ilOO

can be found n
BA wo sory coon a sye home
Outs de a beau fu y andscaped
en !)I
eads
o a
aseu y
deco ated to ma
ng oom and
dnng oom Jus off he dnng
oom s an equ pped k !chen and
lam ~ oom comb na on w h a
coz~
ep ace comp emen ng s
homey eeng Wh a oe ca
detached ga age and he ex a
sto ~ge S~iilo;:Q gf hw lu ba,emen
n own v g s us! a phone ca
e:twa~

SPECIALS

rt055 Bright shiny and new
looking! Th s b ck &amp; v ny anch
offe s NEW ca pe w ndows
sdng nsuaton cen ala and
u nace Mo e han 16000 sq ft o
v ng space and a 28x40
de acned bock shop Ca oday
o f nd out add ton a de a s
$76 900
N20D8 Spring Valley Area
Th s 2 Story Colon a has 4
bod ooms
~2
baths
spac ou~ ~lil
m and o s
of ha d ~i\M New
siding~
new
nsu
1 996

dded n
p ma ntenance

cos s

w A pr vate back ya d

--~¥..:~~,,

REDUCED
RACINE
Very charm ng &amp;
affordab e e egan ce f ull ol space Th s CH~STER A og home pus 2 acres on SR
b eauty located on Ma n St eat n Racine On 7 nea Chester Eastern Schoo D1str ct Th s
a double lot own tom st eel to street A one cou d be com me c a a great location to r
grow ng area w th new schoo and soon a a bus ness Lots of pa k ng and yard space
new h ghway n he a ea Step back n t me as ; 2 Sto y og &gt;all n wood nte lor 2
we wa k thro ugh th s home N ne rooms 4 bed ooms oft a ea Front s 1 ng porch and

w apo

{304)675 6355 May Leave Mes

sage

F~nnu3 rly Blackburu. ll.eolty
Serv~ng Southe•u Oluo For

·--

to ell our
drt@lm.s artd with n yowr
means Many poss b es w h
th s beau lui 2 s ory home
offe s 3 BA 1BA LA w/1 replace
DR
hardwood
I oo ng
emode ed k chen enclosed
back porch SSB 000

..

and a ranch style brick hOme wllh t288 sq II
and run basement 6 rooms 3 bedrooms w th
large c a sets spac ous 11-J ng oom d nmg &amp;
kitchen a ha dwood tloo s and new w n
dews Central a
Move n or purchase to
re nl ONLY $37 5DO

NEW LISTING! 2807 SR
124 594 900 00
8 Level
hone tha
co ns s s ot 4
bedr oom s 3 baths
v ng

~

Krsty D ve Naua gaa s
ave abe Bu d you d eam hOme
on th s beaut fu ot ove ook ng
beaut ful g een pastu es of
Ga a Co Prced osa

POMEROY

on a g e s zed o1 3
bed 00 s v g uC'rn d n ng
oo n and k !chen Deta ched
f' ::j r"f Rf]P #:?068

B eeztwood 3BA

1987 Shu z two bedr oo m two
batns good cond tion gas he a
$10 ooo negot able 740 7"2

ona pass you tly $104 900
12011 Look ng lor greener
paaturea? 90 xt 72 IIBCant to on

on mob le home ihat

s t uated

14~t70

112 ooo Neg 1740)"2 7723

offe s the perlec1 pace fo
qu et e axa on Don I e h s

FA N G heal w lh CIA Add two bedrooms
n the upsta s AI tn great
cond t onl ASKING $139 000

660
H I G H STREET
559 000 00 2 Story home

990

Ve y gooo co not on 11 2 ooo

t986 Cayton 14x:70 3 BA t 112
Sa h New Floors anel Ca pe

evansmoo@zoomnet net

Moore-Broker

Sarah L Evans-Moore
Patricia Haya- 446- 3884
Cara

11051 The answe

and a bath

U ty An Hea Pump Add
6 ~ 40 opens on bo h
h s o ce needed o show
$74 500

POMEROY Mu be y He gh s
Ve ~ we bu t home has LR 2
BA s ba h ea n ~ chen age
ut ty m hat cou d be ano he
BA Lo s o c os ets A ga age &amp;
2 acJdt b dgs

.Joe A

11032 Wanllht Convenience of
lvlng In town AND spacious
lvlng accommodations? Then
h s s he hOuse 1o you W h
a most 4 000 square tee o v ng
space
wh ch
ncludes 6
bed ooms and 4 ba hs th s home
esls on an aves zed co ne ot
oca ed n Ga I pol s nea schOo s
shopp ng chu ches and the c ty
pa k Th s home haS beaut fu
o gnat ha dwood f oo ng
accented w h cus om c ailed
manta p ece&amp; ln the Ia ge ooms
As a bonus enJoy the spac ous
sun oom o com on yea around
St09900

rear s tt ng porches Th s s the country close
to town L v ng room d n ng area equ pped
k tchen 2 bedrooms 2 ba ths laundry

POMEROY
oc a ed on 9
m on bake Rd hs hone
3 BA 2 ba hs LR DR K

13041675 7t23

t 983 Trallt 14x51 2 BR New
Ca pet Good Condition $8 500
(740)367 7015

514 Second Ave , Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631 0994
740 446 0008
740 441 - 1111

11060

I "'

$117000

1989 Oakwood 1411.70 3BR t
on entad ot ne w heal
pump A maJo app ances a
b g tall ce po ch &amp; ca po
E11.
certent Cond Uon S 400 0 fl m
2BA

f/oe~2?~

11011 Commercial Property
1 6 acres m/1 ocated at the
JUilC on of SR 35 and SA 325
near A o Grande
11012 Four Lola In Downtown
Gal polls? Call for mora
detail a

LISTING FOREST RUN AREA
Yos
Road 5 Acres of g ound and th s 3 yea o d
new home Wh a a v ew f om the front and

bSmt many add! ext as Ca us

( 740)367

bedroom
carport ter1CE&gt;C
roof new
now $129 900

S II ng alop R ve v ew D ve s h s

rght away Wa an ed PR CE
ORASTCALLY REDUCED

sao

mllee

•

one s ory home hat has a s unken v ng oom w th a b g
beaut fu wh te stone ep ace and g ass a t e t.ay o the
op of the ca ed a ce ng Has 5 bed o oms 3 b a t s tam y
oom d n ng area and a bea 1tu k chen The e s Ia s of
s orage a 2 ca ga age a d a se cu ty system

Cove ngs $13

025

Happy Ad

vi€,Wirlg.l

A a ge 2 so y home v th 3 be d oo ms 2
oon I v ng oom k !chen and a luI
front po ch and uppe balco ny to wa ch the
Make us an oHe
$42 900 00

1988 P est ge lo4x70 3BR 2BA

CIA New Water Hea e W Mow

Bea tru 0 dar 4 SA Home 2 Story
b lck Fllve VIew Large 0 n ng
Room LA Fu I Basement 10
M nutes f om Gallipolis Route 7
S $98 500 Appo ntment Ontvt
I740)251H1172

Henry..E Cleland Jr .............

OFFICE

1981 L be ty 14X60 Mob 8 Home
2 SA 1 Ba h Flem otded l v ng
Floom New Carpet New Gas Fu
nance W 0 8 112x20 It deck on
Aen ed Lot fr ce Neg01 able Ca I
(740)44 OB96 or (740)446 245 I

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Eva~ed--- ?HDa~ ~~

3 Bedrooms t I 2Bath Fu
Basement n ground poot ext a
at fenced n yard Excel ent o
cat on In PI P easanl (304)675
4847 attar SPM

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Real

Estates 17401367 7Qt5

LOCATION! 3 4
1 2 bath home
Ia ge
room
fam y room w th
f replace arge br ght k;t&lt;oh•· o~o l
ca
attached ga age
man cured
awn
Gr.oorll
Elem GAHS
m nutes
Has p lal &amp; shopp ng Call

M ddltport Beaut fu V cto an
y~e hOme wtn 12 ac as m/1 3 4 POMEROY
BA t I 2 battl!l For DR k
w app FA w fp Fo Pa o LA

The Mo111ent

05

2486

740 992 4560 IMtn ngs

740 .C46

SOUTH SECOND An ode home w lh 3 bed cams I balh
fu I basemen t and an att c that cou d be that fou h bed c ams
or sto age Has a f ont &amp; rea po ch an d needs an owne
NOW $30 000 00

Live For

Kitchen Covered pat o On Corn
a Lot (740)388-0593

Cle ed c ean Must see 740 367
Ott9 even ngs

a e Condit on mmadlate Pos

You d never lmow
an lhls June Blh
madelhe BIG 6·0 II

I~IUIIISIII

o

Area Immediate Occu
pancr 3 BA L~ OR Equ pped

s anding gas llreplace remo

Ranch aty e house 6 yea s o d 3
acre• 3 bed ooms 2 baths I ving
room &amp; lam ly room din ng oom 2
car garage swlmm ng pool m
maculate condll on $129 900
new Crew Ad Pome oy Oh o

OtO t

LENDER

A 1988 Ca

~utland

71 Vtndale 14K70 a ele c lc
t2•30 6K12 porch81 rtl Ql &amp;lOt
&amp; stove slid ng glass door tree

Lakewood OH 44 07
MB 679 I 027 t 600 &amp;45 0036

Star Your Business Today
P me snopp ng Center Space
Ava able AI At o dab e Rate
Spring Va ley P aza Ca 1 740.446

G:t
UNBELIEVABLE VIEW

740 7.2 2t!l5

320

310 Homes for Sale

son

3 Bedrooms 2 t!2 Baths LA OR
FA W th Fireplace New Oak

Cleland 99:!-6'1911

RUTLAND ST
ba hs a d n ng
basemen Has a
Oh o R ve go by

For aale by owner a two sto y 3
bedroom homt on Short 4th Ave
nue In Mldd epo t Nice P:\Z&amp; l]vlng
room dtntng room and ~c'h tn
House wl nc udl llv ng oom au
te washer drye and stove At1o
haa detached garage Ask ng
125 000 Fo mo 1 Informal on call

9tB5

$65 000 00

$48 90000
ce on th s 1
12
story
complete y
emodeled home Ma n !eve
cons sts of I v ng room d n ng
k tchen lam y room bed oom
and bath upsla s nc udes 3
bed ooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 ga age s de deck and
conc rete pat o N ce Ieve lot
De ng approx 11 6 x
60
#2065

ground Pool Edge 01 Ga pots
$tB7 500 740-44&amp;-792B

Kitchen 2 Car Garage lmmacu

located

P0Box614

t B88 582 3305

PATENT YOUR IDEAl r ee
l:l ochu e expla ns new aw tor
sma invest o s Have Patent
Pen~ng In 60 days Plttent of
I ce Researcn t 888 513 5073
or emal
patentyourfdeaCaol com

s neat and c ean Has 2 bed cams a newe detached 2 ca
carport and a arge sto age bu ld ng or wo kshop

h p -w 1pploa cum
~ m• 1pploa®c ~ne ne

Fet Unl"l We Win!

shed G eat

liNCOLN STREET A 2 story b ck orne w 1h a b g stone
accen ls Th ee a e 3 bedrooms d n ng room k tchen 1 2
baths and a sun oom A fu basement and a arge ga age
w th an a !ached ca port
$74 000 00

MOBILE HOME ONLY

1 800·458·9990

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV 1881?

310

OR 2 Fu I Bath&amp; Basement n

130'1675 5t62

Own a Internet Bus ness' No Ex
JJe lance M n mal nvestment
Huge Returns Featured on Na
tiona Rad o 1 8()-85 6314
wwwtheloca41t com

I
Br ck ranch
overs zed lot Spac ous kritct1eri
w h formal d n ng area
maste bed oom With fu I
&amp; french doors le::~~~~o,,~1

POMEROY !'IKE On he co ne of Sene ca D ve s h s one
s o y home ha has been co n p etely em ode ed and has 3
bed ooms t bath and a d n ng a orr A so has an enc osed
front po ch newe detached ca port and storag~ bu ld ng AI
of th s s 1 ng on app ox 1 ac e n ce at
NOW 548 000 00

Amv111 Pott 23 BoK 908
Gal po 1 OH•~31

''t'

130&lt;1675 7472
130&lt;1675 7279

I ----..,...,.~--,,....----

OWN A DOLLAR STORE I BOO

NOW REDUCEO A MUST SEE AT $t89 900 00

Monetary donat on• can bt
ma ed to

Juxu )' oah&lt;Jme yee round C1ll
rot ou fee h ochu eo 104 piJf:
S 2 colo
oa w h noor pl1n1
fot ovc 6Cl model home.

Cozy 29A Basement New Roof
S d ng Tilt Windows Much
More Great Location Mid 130 s

Reasonable rat11
Cal tor appointment

consolidate your b a Into one

Slory
home w l h ct a m 3 bedrooms
fam y
oom
hvtng room
cove ed I ant po ch and morel
N2059

205 North Second Ave
OH
M

pho

HOMES FROM St5 000 11 41
Bed oom Aeppos &amp; Fo ec osu as
Three bedroom anch hOme w th
~ondos Vacat1on p ope t es &amp;
full Msemenl a tached one ca
Mo e Low o zero Down F nanc
ga age a so entad t4~t70 thee
ng Ava able Fo lstlng call To
be&lt;t oom mobile home a I s tuated
Fee 1(800)815 8221 Ext J16 01
on
2 ac es Loop Ad Au
ll,and Ask ng S75 900 Fo moe
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
Info rna! on ca 740 742 4301 at
No Oown Pavment Aequ ed w
ter 6pm o leave message
Gave nment Spons ored Loa n
Good Cred t Steady Income Re
320 Mobile Homea
qu red Call Today Mo e Info ma
for Sale
lion To Oualty lndtoendenct
Mo tgaoe Sery ces 12611 Mad

month y payment Reduce Inter
eat Avo d ll tt cha ges &amp; Stop
Haraument LletnaedJ Bonded
Non-Profit t BOO 288 633tEx:l 1~

227 5314

acres Cus om made oak
ca b nets and t oor ng or mal
d n ng 5 bed ooms master
l siJrr&lt;lUnldS above ground poOl balh w h wh r poo tub and
N ce y landscaped
Let us
walk n coset 3 fu baths
show 1to
*2082
rock ng cha f ant po ch I v ng
room w th stone f eplace
attached 2 ca garage
ake
Lots rnore w th n
of Ho ze Hasp ta

Cape Cod W th Oh o Rver View
4 Bedr.oom s Fo mal LR Fo mal

No

~7

blgbendrealty@dragonbbs com

lam ly room aundry
ca
attached garage
I ~~~~~~~·morel
Pr vacy l ence

new 40 )( 50 me al bu ld ng hal s mostly I
workshop or sto age bu d ng

303

--·

Professional
Services

PH Q.lQ-0-R A P K-Y
Weddings
Pols
Sports Teams
P olen ona Ce 111ied Photogra

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can

888 81 0902

Gtve one of our Agents a call Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-710~
44~

il&gt;unba!' Q!:tmti l!&gt;entmd • Page

310 Homes for Sale

101)17

MEDIC AU Dent a BillER S t 5
S45 IHr Med cal B I ng Software
Company Needs People To P o

Real Estate General

RUSS ELL D WOOD BROKER

WV

310 Homes for Sale

W ndla 1 B'7 A SECONO AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK

5590

HOllE BASED BUSINESS On
o 011 your Computer Partltme or
Fu lime Train ng PrDV ded

www g assmechan • com

LISTING'
li~IPROVI•III ENTS GALORE I
HAS
oomy 3 bedroom 2 bath BOTH IMMACULATE
s tuated on Ia ge 1 079 Qua ty
ccnst ucted
teed lo
Lvng oom
home PLUS beaut fully ro ng

Real Estate General

69~

baCk

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair
lng NOT Aeplac ng Long Cracks
In W ndsh elds ~ ee VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US JCanada

Leave Message

88B

math lo coni actors I cense
t11.am law&amp; bus ness resldental
elec teal
maybe
p umbing
com mer ca
emodtllng 1 AIIO
teache 1 &amp; mldd uchoolers w
parent homemaking dl motors
eel testers tele microscope1
drom melltfl boome eng pop
cans dime balance mort~ ca 1
soon A Austin 6t5 292 213B
7am will ca 1
between 7pm

AT&amp;T MC PAYPHONE
ROUTES
50 Loc s Loca And Es $uper
Income Fee Info 800-BOO 3470

675 6591

o st

Frtt workshops samp a teal

INOT1CEI

Muses house epa rs ca 740

lnter!or!EX1erlor pg!ntlnq. mobile
nome roglt barns oylbul!dlnqs
and lin rggft E)(pe enced F ee
Es ma es Rete en ces (304)895
396t

can nd

230

SSS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On P ope 1y So dl Mongagest
Annuli esl Settlements! lmme
dlate Quotes! It Nobo dy Beals
Our Prices Nat onal Contrar;t
Buyers 800-490 0731 Ext 101
www naUonalcontaclbuye s com

EARN TO SS OO Per Week PTJ
FT!Serv ce New NAd Estab &amp;had SFREE CASH NOWS From
Fu e Brush Customers In Local Wea thy Families Unloading Mil
Area No Door To Ooor Required lions or Collars To He p M n m za
Their Tues Write Immediately
FREE Starter Supples Ava ab 1

OH 0 IIALLEV PUBL SHING CO
ecommenos that yo u do bus
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money h ough the
ma un you have nvestlgated
theoeng

c ean ng

220 Money to Loan

CaH ln&lt;l Dist 800 B92 2987

~~,1~ee,

An., W tten Commun callons

All Applicants Must Sul:lmlt A

w

Business
Opportunity

EARN TO $5 00 Per Week PTJ
FT!Servtce New and Estab !shed
Ful e Brush Customers In Loca
Area No Door To Door Required
FREE Starter Supplies Ava abe

$t OO Hour y La ge Advert stng
Company pays Homewo ltera $4
Fo E11t y Voce mall Aetr tYtd
L m ted Space 1 888 405 4428
E•t 300 (24 httl

Wan eo To Do Mounts Tee
Se v ce Bucke Truck Se vice
Top T m Remova Stump G nd
ing Ful y nsured Free Estl
mates B dwel Oh o t BOO 838
9568 Or 740 388 9648

372 D

Sk Ws Required

Leite 01 Interest And Flesume

Wanted To Do

Schools
Instruction

TRUCK

Must Have High Schoo 0 p oma
Or Equ valent Associate Oegrea
Des rab e Must Have Know edge
of Compute s Including AS 400
Wwd P ocess ng E mall And In
te net Usage P evtous Office Ex
parlance P efle ed Good 0 al

BOO 964 8316

Carpet &amp; Uphol1tery C ttnlng
Gua R Pad Wo k W th Fabu ous
Resul q Fo a F ee Est ma 1
Ca 130"'l~'l'!i 4040TOdav

Business
Opportunity

$ 000 WEEKLY! I MAILING
B och u es Fee Postage! Sta t
lmmedtalel~ Rush .se I add essed
s amped enve ope to. H SE
Dept 20 P 0 Box 573 AmSit
cam NY 12010

BR DGE STATE UN VERS ITY I

LAW PO BoK '1'014 49 Dep
AM Oal as h 75370 449
Carae

210

EAAN VQUR COLLEGE DEGREE

CATALOG I BOO B26 9228) o
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF

Ga pot11 Career Co ege

Wanted To Do

QUICKLY Bachelo s Maste s
Ooc to ale By C o espondence
Ba sed Upon P o Educat on And
Sho S udy Couse Fo FREE n
to mat on Booklet Phone CAM

180

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio ~ Point Pleasant,

FINANCIAL
210

S ince 1890 FREE

cat Ass stance For The Facully
Af!~ ster ng StudflniS Schedu ng
C asses
Maintain ng F seal

180

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRIC
Ul UM Approved home s udy

C e ca And Tecnn

Of The Schoo Of Math/ Science

Schools
lnstructiOI\

Business
Training

Public Sale and Auction

do•s not disc lmlnate on the ba
s s of race age rei g on color

or Math/ Science

Sunda~Augual13,2000

Ass Slants For ((a r
St ee Apa ments In Jackson

Tht Polymer AI ance Zone Is an

The University Of A o Grandij n
v as Appllca o11s For The Pos

150

Sunday, August13,2000

Res den

Ripley WV 25271

SECRETARY II
SCHOOL OF
MATH/ SCIENCE

WV

". '
~

N2018 Tht btnafltl of the
city In a neighborhood attllng
Let h 1 3 bedroom 2 bath ancn
ocateel n Sp ng va ey be you
111 11op Enr cheel w tn nardwood
ltoortng a cozy 1 ep ace and
comfol1aO t tv ng space
h1
conven entty gcated home offt ,
somath ng fo 1 memba 1 of the
I foomll' Attached o the two car
g&amp;rage 1 a 14x28 work shop
des gned w th the handy men n
mnel Oont et hs pass wtMute

oo&lt; .c ..III&amp;,IOO

M2017 To 11• I• to
me ow 3 bed oom
home
hal been beautlu y kept and has
a gh and a ry 0 ick sty ng LR
eat n k chen 2 car ga age A
REAL F NO PR CEO at Ia&amp; 000
CALL QU CKLY BEFORE T S
ClONE

Find E egan! County
Lvng n hs 3 beooom 2 bah
a sed anch on ~5 ac es of
en cheO ftD1
oas ng a
boun fu o ~ft~
a
app e
ches nut Bl'1~
ees
Come aC1
cus om
move che ry . . .
n he k chen
aoi"'Q wlh he had wood oo ng
n
he
spac ous
v ng
accommoda ons
En o~
he
outdoo a
bv
he
beau fu y
landscaped poo a ea Th s s a
mus see a St52 000
N2023 NEW i
l J T01 100 aces
mo e ass •
ANT lANOI
e m come
Tns sa . i !
t ue Most y w
pes1u e
&amp; abeftll
p ce of
S!i1 QOO ;;II
ect ons

I"

N109J What a g eat place to
start Cue and affo dab e 3 BR 2
BA Locaed ony 6 mnues tom
Ho ze
Newe
k !chen
and
app ances some ha dwood t oars
and 2 sto age bu d ngs $57 000
N1094 Investors 3 BR 1 2 BA
a sed anch w h 4 ca basement
ga age Perfect to nves ment
propert~ o an au o epa
serv ce
Reduced o $35 000

�Page

D4 • &amp;unbap lltlmt!l &amp;tntl nrl
110

Part Ume ma ntenance pe son

flexit:M I'IOul1 Contact Tim at 740.
992 371 1 or Apa tmenl 17 Colo
n al Park Apartments (lo mer
V 1t1Qe GrMn ~rtmlnll )
Po~me

v

AJ 1onct Zone S..ks

"'soclate Director
Tht Polyme A !lance Zone
lttkl a mot vated lndlvldull
w 111 U'le high"! degree of J)l'Oitl
1 ona tm to serve as Itt lui I me
Au oel att 0 ecto Genera 'i
!hit ndlv dua wut bl IIWO vt d n
nea ly every aspect of the Pot
ymer A 1 anct Zone 1 markel ng
st ategles economic rtsurch
tunc tons tnd IJ)tclal events To
be cons dtred appllcentt mutt
nave an Auoclate Degree In
Bus nes1 Adm nlstrat on or rt 11
td lie d 1 Bachelors dtQ 11 Is
prtltrrtd Add t on• y a m n
mum ol one 'ill of adm nlslra
t ve experltnct 1 rqu red 2 3
years expe lance In an admlnls
trallve Cllptc ty at a junto exec
ullve level s preferred App c
ant.J must a so have tl'll! ab lily to
wrlle techn cal grant app ca

ton&amp; be abe to competently use
spreadsheet and databalt man
agement soltwart and be w lllng
to tu ther p olesslonal growth
though cont nulng educallon and
s~H s 1 aln ng Compelll ve sal
a y_ and benelts wit be p ovlded
a nil w be commensu ate with
e~tpe fence Oua 1 ed app cants
wel;ln August 8 2000 and August
m
submit
their
resumeol bel
25ay2000
to the
attention
Ex
ecul ve Director Polyme At
ance Zone 104 M ler Orlve

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh1o • Point Pleasant,
110

Help Wanted

RESPITE CARE WORKERIS)

Help Wanted

URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors ea n S35 to 5-45 tor 2 o 3
hou s weekly Call Sera Tee 740
592 6651

NEED Wou d you be w ng to
care for an ndlvldua {S) wllh

learning lim tat ons In their own
horne tor a lew hours each month
H gh school degree equtred 11
Interested cont act Ctu sty at 1
(800 83 1 2302 ~qual Opportunity

Voce P ano And Ins! ument In
s uctors Wa n ed To C eete Edu
cat ona Prog ams Fo Youth And
Adult lnd v dua s A Ou New y
Expanded Facl ~ Pease Ca
The A I Schoo A (740)441 1988
To Schedule An In e v ew

f"'''loyer
S E Oh o Truck ng company op
e at ng ate mode Mack dumps
Mack raetors and &lt;lump Ira ers
ocated near Jackson Oh o s

•

ook ng lor qual fled c ass A and
c au COL d vera Oua Ilea
!Ions nclude be ng a east 22
yea 1 of age wt\h a clean d v ng
eeord Wt ofte a competitive
wage lor qualf ed dr ve s Com"a
ny btneflho nclude Health Oenta
VIsion Llle 401(K ) Pad vaca
t on pa d holidays to qualifying
tmp oyeea We a so have a sate
ty award prog am for d vers whO
ma nllln a sate driving re co d
Pert t me work etso ava able
please cat Scott at ~ 7401286

e

110

Help Wanted

110

Wood and Came s Inc ts Now
Ac cept ng App ca ons Fo The
Follow ng Pos 110n Open ngs
Bache o s De
g ee In Soc a WorK Psycho ogy
0 Othe Soc al Se v ce D sc
pine LSW P ele rid The Sue
cessfu Cand da e W P ov de
0 res Se v ce To The Seve e y
Mentally 0 sab ed Seve e y Emo
ton a y D sabled Popu at on In
Gall a Coun y Must Be Ab e to
Be An lnsu able 0 ~• On The
Agency s Feel tnsu ance P an
Case Manage

Help Wanted

-co lege Sluden s
•H l)h Schoo G ads
H.gh School Servo s
Anyone look nQ o ea n S$
Earn up to ttsntou'
~xce ent expe ~nee to
you esume
Fun and I end'Y wo lip ace
B ng you 1 ends and

earn ext aSS
CALL TODAVI
t-800-9211-5753
Clv c Dave opment G oupl
M lennlum Teletet'.IICIS

Oh o H gh School G adua e
Equ va en Sh wo k Va d Drlv
e s l cense CPA And F Sl Ad
Aequ ed Res der'll a Expe ence
W th Em ot ona y 0 stu bed
Adu s Pee ed $667Pe Hou
C n cal Ass s an For C s s n
e ven on Un Ga lpo s H gh

Schoo GJaduate Equ valen
Sh I Wo '"k Va d Or ve s l
ce nse CPR And Firs Aid Re
Qu ed Res dent a E•pe ence
W th Emo ona y D s urbed
Adu ts P eterred $6 67 Pe Hou

4t72
Teach ng Position tea cher at
Carleton Schoo Mus have cu
rent OhiO Oepa tment o Educa
I on Ce t I ca l on or license and

have or be at g ble to obta n mull
hsncl capped ce Ill cat on Send
WAnted so meone o c ean hou se
resume by August 15th to
one day eve y wo weeks n
Carleton Set ooi
A edTuppe s Pansae a 740
t310 Carleton St ee
662 3007
PO Box 307

r;~~Sy~ac~u~se~O~H~4~5~77~9~~~~~~~~;;;~;~

Eqn Opportun ty Employe and

Appi can s May P ck up App ca
I ons At Any Of The Woodland
Centers nc Loca ons Monday
F day 8 OOam to 5 OOp m
Re sumes Can Be Se TO The
Ma nage 01 Human esou cas
Wood and Cente s nc 3086
S a e Aou e 60 Ga I po s Oh o
4563 EOE AA Employe

140

naUonal orlg n ancestry gender
veteran status handrcap o dis
ab I ty or any other status or
condition protected by fade a or
state law

Located at the Auction Center on Rl 33
In Mason, WV.

r ort 01 Secretary II In The ScMo
Aesp ons bItes Include But A e
Not lim ted To Providing Genera

Secreraria

AI o dab e

Reeords And Recepllonist Out es
For"The Departments

Glassware Tupperware
case books toys new
I
table saw metal lathe
motorlift weedeaters lawn mowers Murray 12 5
HP 40 rid1ng lawn mower F1esta gas gnll wheel
barrow &amp; much more

s Close To Home)

Cal Today 740 446 4367
800 2 4 0452
Reg M90 05 1274 8

150

ln clud ng The Names And Ad
d eases 01 Three Refefences On
Or Before August 1B 2000 To

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773 5785 or 773 5447
Auctioneer Rick Pearson
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH 10

Ms Phy Is Mason SPHA
l!lrecto 01 Hl.lllan Resources

Unlve Sity 01Rio Grande
Box 27
Ao G ande OH 45674
ema pmasonOr o edu

Fax 1740)245 4909
EEO AA Employer

FIN Supervisor Needed Fo Home
Health Agency Private Care Ot
pa tment Must Bt Able To Su
pe VIse Act v t es And Schedul
ng -Of -Home Heath A des Pro
..,. de Staff T alnlng And Coor
d nate Care Of The Homebound
ant Previous Supe vtsory EK
pe ence Or Home Heath Expe
ence Pete red Apply At 4t2
Second !wenue Ga I pol s Ohio
Or PhOne 740-44 779

c

AMVETS POST 23
KANAUGA OHIO
Building Fund Auction
"Thursday Sept 17

ATIENTION HOMEBUYERS
Been dreammg of ownmg your own
home? Let F1ve "Star Mortgage help make
that dream become a reality No down
payment? Don t let that stand m your way
If you have good credit but JUSt haven t
been able to save up a down payment one
of our LOW or NO DOWN payment
programs may work for you
F1ve Star Mortgage has been vour local
mortgage company for 15 years with
compehhve rates and customized loan
programs Give us a call today for all your
mortgage needs

700PM
Pes Cakes
baskels Middleton Oolls
and other M sc nems
/Ill Proceeds go lo lhe
burld ng lund
Any nterested person
who would hke to donate
teme to thla auction
should call
Cave McCoy 446 8519

F1ve Star Mortgage
10 Myrtle Avenue
Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631
(740) 446-4042 or
(800) 479-9018

992 0040 0 740 992 4286
W t hau ash away $40 a p ck
up oad 1304)675 8158 o 304

w Haul Junk o Trash S35 a
klad 1304)675 B950

MOODISPAUGH AUCTION HOUSE
We Decided To Cancel The Auction
For August 17, 2000 Due To The
Meigs County Fair Gomg On. Our
Next Auction Will Be August 24,
2000 at 6:00p.m. Hope To See You
All Then. Thanks, Bill

www BeBossF ee com

cess Med cal C aims F om Home
Tra n ng Prov ded Must Own
Computer 1 BOO 797 75t 1 E1tt

MEDICAL/ Denla BILLER $15
$"5 fH Medica B I ng Software
Company Needs People To Pro
cess Medica Claims From Home
Tra nlng P ovlded Must Own
Computer t 800 434 5S t 8 Ext

e mall us for Information on our listings

MEO CAL BILL NG Unhmlled In
come Potent a No Exper ence
Necessary Free Info ma t on &amp;

4618

Jutl) DeW t1

J Mcrr II Carter
~ n n 1e

CO ROM
ftlvestment F om
$2 495 F nanclng Ava_ abe 800
322 1139 Ext 050
www business sta tup com

R1 h Bar
Chery l Len lev
D m Ath
Kenneth A nsbar~

DeWit

a

DEPOT STREET A 2 sto y home w th 2 bedrooms d n ng
com I v ng room k chen and I ba h Has a Ia ge at w lh a

REAL E S TATE

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE

Acres New Fu nace New Carpet
UpSIJirl 38R 2BA Uplta rl Ex
tra Guestroom and Ba th Down
111 rs $1.C~ 000 By Appointment
Serious lnqulrtl On y (740}.C48-

www gotdcoaltcc com

CREO T EXPERTS LICENSED J
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE

BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 OAVS 1

pat o L v ng roan 2
bed ooms and
oaf and f u nace
ca
and
bu ld ng

Homes lor Sale

2900 SQF Aa lid Ranch on 4 5

sess on
9672

CRED IT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI

e ase

Bad Cred 1 Legally
Free Info 1 800 768 4008

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

Appllcauon w /Service Reduce
Payments To 65% !!CASH IN

CENTIVE OFFERII Ca I I BOO
328-8510 Ext 29

St39 900

9 Room House 2 Kitchens 2
Baths C A &amp; Heal 2 Ca Garage
se Land Cont act 0 Rent Ta a

FREE GRANT MONEYIII Never
Repay Bus ness Educaliol'l
home Purchase/ Repairs Oebls
I avei Research Wr ters Ar
t sts Med ca and mo e 1 800
242 0363 E•t 9037
www grants dot com com

fa

personal

992 2259
742 2357

992-2259

992-2259

o
P ce
$44 900
Kanauge ua a C\1 g u SR
7 2 Bu d ngs Cou d be used o
mu ude 0
ngs o one o e
r a nd 0 e o o k cu ol Some
ece emoele g dnne W p
ICI1UFIT ST RAC NE ace w sn pub
v &lt;t e P C educed
&amp; bock ga age P ced o $28 500

WE HAVE MANY MORE LISTINGS CALL US
TODAY OR STOP IN &amp; LOOK AT OUR MLS BOOK

CCCLV LLE AD App ox 2 a c e o f and w h ~ uno 5o y
home Has 2 bed ooms
2 ba hs
ge v ng oo
d ng
oom a d ut ty oom A so
po ch and ea deck

D9TTIE TUA NER Broker
JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLI NG
BETTY JO COLLINS
BRENDA JEFFERS
OFFICE

as a de ached ga age
o t
$55 000 (lQ

992
949
949
949
992
992

5692
2131
2131
2049
1444
2886

Bu d ng oom fo ma d n ng k !chen
and
e ns de
eq u pment and mo e on
y u se d as a gas 0 ts de th e e s app ox ~ 94
camp ete c es w th a stocked pond
Ca
fa
Mo e ca lo camp ete st ng
#'2058

COMMERCIAL
and
P ev ous
stat on
s ngs

Affordable and conven onuy

w th so much to aHa A one acre at

#2078

DON 'T SEE WIIAf YOU'HE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; let Us H

Fmd It!

bedrooms 1 12 baths or g nal woodwork landscaped L ke new cond t on ASKING
hardwood fl oors 2 f replaces full att c w th $65 000
wtdow s watch tower and lull basement
uarage and 2
andscaped yar d ALl. MIDDLEPORT Close to own on B adbu y
Road Rea y good cond ton 3 bedrooms 2
baths v ng oom equ pped bu 11 n k tchen
wet ba aundry Ia ge bock 2 car ga age 1
wo ks hop
Sheds t o
/) to age
G o od
tandscap ng a n ce home eady o move n o
17 years o d on a a ge at w th oom to oam
Ca I fa you show ng ASKING $74 900

LONG BOTTOM

SA 248

203 75 ac e

fa m 2 story house w h larue ba n Located 5
m es f om Fo ked Run State Park 2 gas
wei s w th oya y checks t mbe and pastu e
SR 124 MAPLE GROVE SUBDIVISION
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE App ox malely 2 w dl fe pen fu S )( com 3 bed ooms f o t
ac e ots 10 to choose f om G eat ~mp ng po ches enclosed back porch eel c:.r CALL
Ia s Cal today lo more de a Is MAKE FOR MORE OETAILS

• •

OFFER!

LINCOLN TERRACE
t t 2
w h tu bas emen L v ng oom k tch e 1

1
POMEROY Bea ut fu v ew of th e r ve out 0
2 bed ooms some em ocle ng f a nt
po ch Lot 43x24 5 Cwne may
h gh wale Two sto Y old e hom e emode ed
and landscaped
Off str ee
pa k ng
a land cant ac
MAKE OFFER
basen en garage !re nt s tl ng po ch Rock $t8900
ga den even a f sh pond 3 bed oo ns ba h
ma ny newe r ea u e s App o ntment on Y

leo'"'""'''

Cull Jor JlppOLntment

I

www evans moore com

Over A

LENDER

Qu£1rter

c~~,lury u

11058 Pr me Locetlon 109 ee
of frontage on 2nd Avenue Large
2 s ory b cK house two mob e
home en a s and a mob e home
w h a frame add 1 on that s
cur ently be ng used as a beau y
sa on Ca I lo mo e de a s
Reduced I om
$219 000 to
$150000
PRICE REDUCED

A

LOT b gger than It ooksl
Vacan and n town s ha d to I nd
so ake a ook at th s ol loca ed
JUS a couple bocks f om the C y
Pa k w th ove 6 000 squa e ee
o eve land U es a aady
p esen on the p operty

e ement
ssg goo

wold over as
Auct on House

a sed
anch
ove ooks
th s h sto c beatJtfu Oho Ave la ge lvng
andma k o e s eta I space room w th wa k ou en ance a he
enta
ncome and so age a ge w ap a ound deck tha faces
nc udes 2 BR house next doo
he
ve
EQu pped t&lt; tchen
Ca
fo
de a s
PRICE Sepa a a u y oom What a
REDUCED!
beaut tu s te 2 Ca ga age
AFFORDABLE!
Mt07!i Escape the huatle &amp; N1097 Commercial Property!
bust a In th s dream hamal Th s G ea
deve opment paten a
hOme ofters 3 BR 2 BA LR eat easy access o SR 35 145 AC
n k tchen f n shed baSement and
M L Leve to o ng topog aphy
2ca gaagealona272Jace
ot n R o G ande a ea
and wa t ng 1o you at
$tOO,ilOO

can be found n
BA wo sory coon a sye home
Outs de a beau fu y andscaped
en !)I
eads
o a
aseu y
deco ated to ma
ng oom and
dnng oom Jus off he dnng
oom s an equ pped k !chen and
lam ~ oom comb na on w h a
coz~
ep ace comp emen ng s
homey eeng Wh a oe ca
detached ga age and he ex a
sto ~ge S~iilo;:Q gf hw lu ba,emen
n own v g s us! a phone ca
e:twa~

SPECIALS

rt055 Bright shiny and new
looking! Th s b ck &amp; v ny anch
offe s NEW ca pe w ndows
sdng nsuaton cen ala and
u nace Mo e han 16000 sq ft o
v ng space and a 28x40
de acned bock shop Ca oday
o f nd out add ton a de a s
$76 900
N20D8 Spring Valley Area
Th s 2 Story Colon a has 4
bod ooms
~2
baths
spac ou~ ~lil
m and o s
of ha d ~i\M New
siding~
new
nsu
1 996

dded n
p ma ntenance

cos s

w A pr vate back ya d

--~¥..:~~,,

REDUCED
RACINE
Very charm ng &amp;
affordab e e egan ce f ull ol space Th s CH~STER A og home pus 2 acres on SR
b eauty located on Ma n St eat n Racine On 7 nea Chester Eastern Schoo D1str ct Th s
a double lot own tom st eel to street A one cou d be com me c a a great location to r
grow ng area w th new schoo and soon a a bus ness Lots of pa k ng and yard space
new h ghway n he a ea Step back n t me as ; 2 Sto y og &gt;all n wood nte lor 2
we wa k thro ugh th s home N ne rooms 4 bed ooms oft a ea Front s 1 ng porch and

w apo

{304)675 6355 May Leave Mes

sage

F~nnu3 rly Blackburu. ll.eolty
Serv~ng Southe•u Oluo For

·--

to ell our
drt@lm.s artd with n yowr
means Many poss b es w h
th s beau lui 2 s ory home
offe s 3 BA 1BA LA w/1 replace
DR
hardwood
I oo ng
emode ed k chen enclosed
back porch SSB 000

..

and a ranch style brick hOme wllh t288 sq II
and run basement 6 rooms 3 bedrooms w th
large c a sets spac ous 11-J ng oom d nmg &amp;
kitchen a ha dwood tloo s and new w n
dews Central a
Move n or purchase to
re nl ONLY $37 5DO

NEW LISTING! 2807 SR
124 594 900 00
8 Level
hone tha
co ns s s ot 4
bedr oom s 3 baths
v ng

~

Krsty D ve Naua gaa s
ave abe Bu d you d eam hOme
on th s beaut fu ot ove ook ng
beaut ful g een pastu es of
Ga a Co Prced osa

POMEROY

on a g e s zed o1 3
bed 00 s v g uC'rn d n ng
oo n and k !chen Deta ched
f' ::j r"f Rf]P #:?068

B eeztwood 3BA

1987 Shu z two bedr oo m two
batns good cond tion gas he a
$10 ooo negot able 740 7"2

ona pass you tly $104 900
12011 Look ng lor greener
paaturea? 90 xt 72 IIBCant to on

on mob le home ihat

s t uated

14~t70

112 ooo Neg 1740)"2 7723

offe s the perlec1 pace fo
qu et e axa on Don I e h s

FA N G heal w lh CIA Add two bedrooms
n the upsta s AI tn great
cond t onl ASKING $139 000

660
H I G H STREET
559 000 00 2 Story home

990

Ve y gooo co not on 11 2 ooo

t986 Cayton 14x:70 3 BA t 112
Sa h New Floors anel Ca pe

evansmoo@zoomnet net

Moore-Broker

Sarah L Evans-Moore
Patricia Haya- 446- 3884
Cara

11051 The answe

and a bath

U ty An Hea Pump Add
6 ~ 40 opens on bo h
h s o ce needed o show
$74 500

POMEROY Mu be y He gh s
Ve ~ we bu t home has LR 2
BA s ba h ea n ~ chen age
ut ty m hat cou d be ano he
BA Lo s o c os ets A ga age &amp;
2 acJdt b dgs

.Joe A

11032 Wanllht Convenience of
lvlng In town AND spacious
lvlng accommodations? Then
h s s he hOuse 1o you W h
a most 4 000 square tee o v ng
space
wh ch
ncludes 6
bed ooms and 4 ba hs th s home
esls on an aves zed co ne ot
oca ed n Ga I pol s nea schOo s
shopp ng chu ches and the c ty
pa k Th s home haS beaut fu
o gnat ha dwood f oo ng
accented w h cus om c ailed
manta p ece&amp; ln the Ia ge ooms
As a bonus enJoy the spac ous
sun oom o com on yea around
St09900

rear s tt ng porches Th s s the country close
to town L v ng room d n ng area equ pped
k tchen 2 bedrooms 2 ba ths laundry

POMEROY
oc a ed on 9
m on bake Rd hs hone
3 BA 2 ba hs LR DR K

13041675 7t23

t 983 Trallt 14x51 2 BR New
Ca pet Good Condition $8 500
(740)367 7015

514 Second Ave , Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631 0994
740 446 0008
740 441 - 1111

11060

I "'

$117000

1989 Oakwood 1411.70 3BR t
on entad ot ne w heal
pump A maJo app ances a
b g tall ce po ch &amp; ca po
E11.
certent Cond Uon S 400 0 fl m
2BA

f/oe~2?~

11011 Commercial Property
1 6 acres m/1 ocated at the
JUilC on of SR 35 and SA 325
near A o Grande
11012 Four Lola In Downtown
Gal polls? Call for mora
detail a

LISTING FOREST RUN AREA
Yos
Road 5 Acres of g ound and th s 3 yea o d
new home Wh a a v ew f om the front and

bSmt many add! ext as Ca us

( 740)367

bedroom
carport ter1CE&gt;C
roof new
now $129 900

S II ng alop R ve v ew D ve s h s

rght away Wa an ed PR CE
ORASTCALLY REDUCED

sao

mllee

•

one s ory home hat has a s unken v ng oom w th a b g
beaut fu wh te stone ep ace and g ass a t e t.ay o the
op of the ca ed a ce ng Has 5 bed o oms 3 b a t s tam y
oom d n ng area and a bea 1tu k chen The e s Ia s of
s orage a 2 ca ga age a d a se cu ty system

Cove ngs $13

025

Happy Ad

vi€,Wirlg.l

A a ge 2 so y home v th 3 be d oo ms 2
oon I v ng oom k !chen and a luI
front po ch and uppe balco ny to wa ch the
Make us an oHe
$42 900 00

1988 P est ge lo4x70 3BR 2BA

CIA New Water Hea e W Mow

Bea tru 0 dar 4 SA Home 2 Story
b lck Fllve VIew Large 0 n ng
Room LA Fu I Basement 10
M nutes f om Gallipolis Route 7
S $98 500 Appo ntment Ontvt
I740)251H1172

Henry..E Cleland Jr .............

OFFICE

1981 L be ty 14X60 Mob 8 Home
2 SA 1 Ba h Flem otded l v ng
Floom New Carpet New Gas Fu
nance W 0 8 112x20 It deck on
Aen ed Lot fr ce Neg01 able Ca I
(740)44 OB96 or (740)446 245 I

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Eva~ed--- ?HDa~ ~~

3 Bedrooms t I 2Bath Fu
Basement n ground poot ext a
at fenced n yard Excel ent o
cat on In PI P easanl (304)675
4847 attar SPM

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Real

Estates 17401367 7Qt5

LOCATION! 3 4
1 2 bath home
Ia ge
room
fam y room w th
f replace arge br ght k;t&lt;oh•· o~o l
ca
attached ga age
man cured
awn
Gr.oorll
Elem GAHS
m nutes
Has p lal &amp; shopp ng Call

M ddltport Beaut fu V cto an
y~e hOme wtn 12 ac as m/1 3 4 POMEROY
BA t I 2 battl!l For DR k
w app FA w fp Fo Pa o LA

The Mo111ent

05

2486

740 992 4560 IMtn ngs

740 .C46

SOUTH SECOND An ode home w lh 3 bed cams I balh
fu I basemen t and an att c that cou d be that fou h bed c ams
or sto age Has a f ont &amp; rea po ch an d needs an owne
NOW $30 000 00

Live For

Kitchen Covered pat o On Corn
a Lot (740)388-0593

Cle ed c ean Must see 740 367
Ott9 even ngs

a e Condit on mmadlate Pos

You d never lmow
an lhls June Blh
madelhe BIG 6·0 II

I~IUIIISIII

o

Area Immediate Occu
pancr 3 BA L~ OR Equ pped

s anding gas llreplace remo

Ranch aty e house 6 yea s o d 3
acre• 3 bed ooms 2 baths I ving
room &amp; lam ly room din ng oom 2
car garage swlmm ng pool m
maculate condll on $129 900
new Crew Ad Pome oy Oh o

OtO t

LENDER

A 1988 Ca

~utland

71 Vtndale 14K70 a ele c lc
t2•30 6K12 porch81 rtl Ql &amp;lOt
&amp; stove slid ng glass door tree

Lakewood OH 44 07
MB 679 I 027 t 600 &amp;45 0036

Star Your Business Today
P me snopp ng Center Space
Ava able AI At o dab e Rate
Spring Va ley P aza Ca 1 740.446

G:t
UNBELIEVABLE VIEW

740 7.2 2t!l5

320

310 Homes for Sale

son

3 Bedrooms 2 t!2 Baths LA OR
FA W th Fireplace New Oak

Cleland 99:!-6'1911

RUTLAND ST
ba hs a d n ng
basemen Has a
Oh o R ve go by

For aale by owner a two sto y 3
bedroom homt on Short 4th Ave
nue In Mldd epo t Nice P:\Z&amp; l]vlng
room dtntng room and ~c'h tn
House wl nc udl llv ng oom au
te washer drye and stove At1o
haa detached garage Ask ng
125 000 Fo mo 1 Informal on call

9tB5

$65 000 00

$48 90000
ce on th s 1
12
story
complete y
emodeled home Ma n !eve
cons sts of I v ng room d n ng
k tchen lam y room bed oom
and bath upsla s nc udes 3
bed ooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 ga age s de deck and
conc rete pat o N ce Ieve lot
De ng approx 11 6 x
60
#2065

ground Pool Edge 01 Ga pots
$tB7 500 740-44&amp;-792B

Kitchen 2 Car Garage lmmacu

located

P0Box614

t B88 582 3305

PATENT YOUR IDEAl r ee
l:l ochu e expla ns new aw tor
sma invest o s Have Patent
Pen~ng In 60 days Plttent of
I ce Researcn t 888 513 5073
or emal
patentyourfdeaCaol com

s neat and c ean Has 2 bed cams a newe detached 2 ca
carport and a arge sto age bu ld ng or wo kshop

h p -w 1pploa cum
~ m• 1pploa®c ~ne ne

Fet Unl"l We Win!

shed G eat

liNCOLN STREET A 2 story b ck orne w 1h a b g stone
accen ls Th ee a e 3 bedrooms d n ng room k tchen 1 2
baths and a sun oom A fu basement and a arge ga age
w th an a !ached ca port
$74 000 00

MOBILE HOME ONLY

1 800·458·9990

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV 1881?

310

OR 2 Fu I Bath&amp; Basement n

130'1675 5t62

Own a Internet Bus ness' No Ex
JJe lance M n mal nvestment
Huge Returns Featured on Na
tiona Rad o 1 8()-85 6314
wwwtheloca41t com

I
Br ck ranch
overs zed lot Spac ous kritct1eri
w h formal d n ng area
maste bed oom With fu I
&amp; french doors le::~~~~o,,~1

POMEROY !'IKE On he co ne of Sene ca D ve s h s one
s o y home ha has been co n p etely em ode ed and has 3
bed ooms t bath and a d n ng a orr A so has an enc osed
front po ch newe detached ca port and storag~ bu ld ng AI
of th s s 1 ng on app ox 1 ac e n ce at
NOW 548 000 00

Amv111 Pott 23 BoK 908
Gal po 1 OH•~31

''t'

130&lt;1675 7472
130&lt;1675 7279

I ----..,...,.~--,,....----

OWN A DOLLAR STORE I BOO

NOW REDUCEO A MUST SEE AT $t89 900 00

Monetary donat on• can bt
ma ed to

Juxu )' oah&lt;Jme yee round C1ll
rot ou fee h ochu eo 104 piJf:
S 2 colo
oa w h noor pl1n1
fot ovc 6Cl model home.

Cozy 29A Basement New Roof
S d ng Tilt Windows Much
More Great Location Mid 130 s

Reasonable rat11
Cal tor appointment

consolidate your b a Into one

Slory
home w l h ct a m 3 bedrooms
fam y
oom
hvtng room
cove ed I ant po ch and morel
N2059

205 North Second Ave
OH
M

pho

HOMES FROM St5 000 11 41
Bed oom Aeppos &amp; Fo ec osu as
Three bedroom anch hOme w th
~ondos Vacat1on p ope t es &amp;
full Msemenl a tached one ca
Mo e Low o zero Down F nanc
ga age a so entad t4~t70 thee
ng Ava able Fo lstlng call To
be&lt;t oom mobile home a I s tuated
Fee 1(800)815 8221 Ext J16 01
on
2 ac es Loop Ad Au
ll,and Ask ng S75 900 Fo moe
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
Info rna! on ca 740 742 4301 at
No Oown Pavment Aequ ed w
ter 6pm o leave message
Gave nment Spons ored Loa n
Good Cred t Steady Income Re
320 Mobile Homea
qu red Call Today Mo e Info ma
for Sale
lion To Oualty lndtoendenct
Mo tgaoe Sery ces 12611 Mad

month y payment Reduce Inter
eat Avo d ll tt cha ges &amp; Stop
Haraument LletnaedJ Bonded
Non-Profit t BOO 288 633tEx:l 1~

227 5314

acres Cus om made oak
ca b nets and t oor ng or mal
d n ng 5 bed ooms master
l siJrr&lt;lUnldS above ground poOl balh w h wh r poo tub and
N ce y landscaped
Let us
walk n coset 3 fu baths
show 1to
*2082
rock ng cha f ant po ch I v ng
room w th stone f eplace
attached 2 ca garage
ake
Lots rnore w th n
of Ho ze Hasp ta

Cape Cod W th Oh o Rver View
4 Bedr.oom s Fo mal LR Fo mal

No

~7

blgbendrealty@dragonbbs com

lam ly room aundry
ca
attached garage
I ~~~~~~~·morel
Pr vacy l ence

new 40 )( 50 me al bu ld ng hal s mostly I
workshop or sto age bu d ng

303

--·

Professional
Services

PH Q.lQ-0-R A P K-Y
Weddings
Pols
Sports Teams
P olen ona Ce 111ied Photogra

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHELMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can

888 81 0902

Gtve one of our Agents a call Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-710~
44~

il&gt;unba!' Q!:tmti l!&gt;entmd • Page

310 Homes for Sale

101)17

MEDIC AU Dent a BillER S t 5
S45 IHr Med cal B I ng Software
Company Needs People To P o

Real Estate General

RUSS ELL D WOOD BROKER

WV

310 Homes for Sale

W ndla 1 B'7 A SECONO AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK

5590

HOllE BASED BUSINESS On
o 011 your Computer Partltme or
Fu lime Train ng PrDV ded

www g assmechan • com

LISTING'
li~IPROVI•III ENTS GALORE I
HAS
oomy 3 bedroom 2 bath BOTH IMMACULATE
s tuated on Ia ge 1 079 Qua ty
ccnst ucted
teed lo
Lvng oom
home PLUS beaut fully ro ng

Real Estate General

69~

baCk

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Repair
lng NOT Aeplac ng Long Cracks
In W ndsh elds ~ ee VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US JCanada

Leave Message

88B

math lo coni actors I cense
t11.am law&amp; bus ness resldental
elec teal
maybe
p umbing
com mer ca
emodtllng 1 AIIO
teache 1 &amp; mldd uchoolers w
parent homemaking dl motors
eel testers tele microscope1
drom melltfl boome eng pop
cans dime balance mort~ ca 1
soon A Austin 6t5 292 213B
7am will ca 1
between 7pm

AT&amp;T MC PAYPHONE
ROUTES
50 Loc s Loca And Es $uper
Income Fee Info 800-BOO 3470

675 6591

o st

Frtt workshops samp a teal

INOT1CEI

Muses house epa rs ca 740

lnter!or!EX1erlor pg!ntlnq. mobile
nome roglt barns oylbul!dlnqs
and lin rggft E)(pe enced F ee
Es ma es Rete en ces (304)895
396t

can nd

230

SSS NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payments
On P ope 1y So dl Mongagest
Annuli esl Settlements! lmme
dlate Quotes! It Nobo dy Beals
Our Prices Nat onal Contrar;t
Buyers 800-490 0731 Ext 101
www naUonalcontaclbuye s com

EARN TO SS OO Per Week PTJ
FT!Serv ce New NAd Estab &amp;had SFREE CASH NOWS From
Fu e Brush Customers In Local Wea thy Families Unloading Mil
Area No Door To Ooor Required lions or Collars To He p M n m za
Their Tues Write Immediately
FREE Starter Supples Ava ab 1

OH 0 IIALLEV PUBL SHING CO
ecommenos that yo u do bus
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money h ough the
ma un you have nvestlgated
theoeng

c ean ng

220 Money to Loan

CaH ln&lt;l Dist 800 B92 2987

~~,1~ee,

An., W tten Commun callons

All Applicants Must Sul:lmlt A

w

Business
Opportunity

EARN TO $5 00 Per Week PTJ
FT!Servtce New and Estab !shed
Ful e Brush Customers In Loca
Area No Door To Door Required
FREE Starter Supplies Ava abe

$t OO Hour y La ge Advert stng
Company pays Homewo ltera $4
Fo E11t y Voce mall Aetr tYtd
L m ted Space 1 888 405 4428
E•t 300 (24 httl

Wan eo To Do Mounts Tee
Se v ce Bucke Truck Se vice
Top T m Remova Stump G nd
ing Ful y nsured Free Estl
mates B dwel Oh o t BOO 838
9568 Or 740 388 9648

372 D

Sk Ws Required

Leite 01 Interest And Flesume

Wanted To Do

Schools
Instruction

TRUCK

Must Have High Schoo 0 p oma
Or Equ valent Associate Oegrea
Des rab e Must Have Know edge
of Compute s Including AS 400
Wwd P ocess ng E mall And In
te net Usage P evtous Office Ex
parlance P efle ed Good 0 al

BOO 964 8316

Carpet &amp; Uphol1tery C ttnlng
Gua R Pad Wo k W th Fabu ous
Resul q Fo a F ee Est ma 1
Ca 130"'l~'l'!i 4040TOdav

Business
Opportunity

$ 000 WEEKLY! I MAILING
B och u es Fee Postage! Sta t
lmmedtalel~ Rush .se I add essed
s amped enve ope to. H SE
Dept 20 P 0 Box 573 AmSit
cam NY 12010

BR DGE STATE UN VERS ITY I

LAW PO BoK '1'014 49 Dep
AM Oal as h 75370 449
Carae

210

EAAN VQUR COLLEGE DEGREE

CATALOG I BOO B26 9228) o
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF

Ga pot11 Career Co ege

Wanted To Do

QUICKLY Bachelo s Maste s
Ooc to ale By C o espondence
Ba sed Upon P o Educat on And
Sho S udy Couse Fo FREE n
to mat on Booklet Phone CAM

180

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio ~ Point Pleasant,

FINANCIAL
210

S ince 1890 FREE

cat Ass stance For The Facully
Af!~ ster ng StudflniS Schedu ng
C asses
Maintain ng F seal

180

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRIC
Ul UM Approved home s udy

C e ca And Tecnn

Of The Schoo Of Math/ Science

Schools
lnstructiOI\

Business
Training

Public Sale and Auction

do•s not disc lmlnate on the ba
s s of race age rei g on color

or Math/ Science

Sunda~Augual13,2000

Ass Slants For ((a r
St ee Apa ments In Jackson

Tht Polymer AI ance Zone Is an

The University Of A o Grandij n
v as Appllca o11s For The Pos

150

Sunday, August13,2000

Res den

Ripley WV 25271

SECRETARY II
SCHOOL OF
MATH/ SCIENCE

WV

". '
~

N2018 Tht btnafltl of the
city In a neighborhood attllng
Let h 1 3 bedroom 2 bath ancn
ocateel n Sp ng va ey be you
111 11op Enr cheel w tn nardwood
ltoortng a cozy 1 ep ace and
comfol1aO t tv ng space
h1
conven entty gcated home offt ,
somath ng fo 1 memba 1 of the
I foomll' Attached o the two car
g&amp;rage 1 a 14x28 work shop
des gned w th the handy men n
mnel Oont et hs pass wtMute

oo&lt; .c ..III&amp;,IOO

M2017 To 11• I• to
me ow 3 bed oom
home
hal been beautlu y kept and has
a gh and a ry 0 ick sty ng LR
eat n k chen 2 car ga age A
REAL F NO PR CEO at Ia&amp; 000
CALL QU CKLY BEFORE T S
ClONE

Find E egan! County
Lvng n hs 3 beooom 2 bah
a sed anch on ~5 ac es of
en cheO ftD1
oas ng a
boun fu o ~ft~
a
app e
ches nut Bl'1~
ees
Come aC1
cus om
move che ry . . .
n he k chen
aoi"'Q wlh he had wood oo ng
n
he
spac ous
v ng
accommoda ons
En o~
he
outdoo a
bv
he
beau fu y
landscaped poo a ea Th s s a
mus see a St52 000
N2023 NEW i
l J T01 100 aces
mo e ass •
ANT lANOI
e m come
Tns sa . i !
t ue Most y w
pes1u e
&amp; abeftll
p ce of
S!i1 QOO ;;II
ect ons

I"

N109J What a g eat place to
start Cue and affo dab e 3 BR 2
BA Locaed ony 6 mnues tom
Ho ze
Newe
k !chen
and
app ances some ha dwood t oars
and 2 sto age bu d ngs $57 000
N1094 Investors 3 BR 1 2 BA
a sed anch w h 4 ca basement
ga age Perfect to nves ment
propert~ o an au o epa
serv ce
Reduced o $35 000

�•
Page D6 • &amp;unba!' ~nnt~ lil&gt;rntmtl
320 Mobile Homes

BRUNER lAND

MOVING OUT OF THE STATE
MUST SELL 996 4x70 BRI
Batl\s G• den Tub laund y
Room S ave Rei ige ato 0 sh
washe Hea Pump Tota E ec

2

2

tr c S 8 500 May Be left On
La ge ~en ea lo C ose To Town
741)

446 7935 Leave Message

AJ eal estate adverts ng n
h s newspape s subject to
the Federa Fa Hous ngAct
o 968 wh ch makes
ega
to advert se any pre erence

m a ono diSC mnaKm
based on ace colo e g on
sex am a s atus o nationa
o gn o any nen onto
make any such p efe ence
m a ton o d scnm na 10n

Th s newspape w not
koowtngly accept
advemsemeniS 1o ea 8Sia e
wtlk:h s nvoa on of he
law Ou eaders are he eby
n o med ,hat a dwe ngs
ad\len sed n h s newspape
a e 8\/ailab e on an aqua
opportun ty bas s

996 Oakwood 4K80 3 b

ca

440

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

for Sale

2 ba

on en ed o 304 675 7430

ale 5pm

Sunday August 13, 2000

___l&gt;mner.oy -..Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Polnt-Pieaunt, WV
Apartments
for Rent

440

440

Apartment•
for Rent

r•o..w11492

Apartments
for Rent

New Haven -one bed oom

n shed apa men
Melgl Co II You ve A ways
Wan ed 14. N ee Fa m Home Ttl s
4 Bed oom W h Ha dwood
Floc s Mas e Su e n Rea
Count y Set ng Is Just $89 000
Add La ge Red Ba ns And
See a Ou Bu dngs On 6 Ac
es $3 000 Cash Co
Wei wa
e Jus 20 M nu es F om OU n
A hens Dan v e N ce 5 Ac es
$ 6 000 Or 7 A.c es S 3 000
Galli• Co A o G ande 4 M es
s 0 Un ve sly 9 Ac es $23 500
o o Ac es w h Pond 126 soo
N 0 SR 35 I 0 Ac es S 2 500
Cash Chesh e Jesse c eek
Ad 6 Ac es S 2 000 8 Ac es
$20 000 0 28 Ac es $30 000
Cay Twp Ma abe Ad
Aces
$20 000 0 31 Aces Wth Ban
S37 000 F endty A dge 5 Ac es

440

no pets de

post &amp; ele enc11 740 992

0 65

Apartment•
for Rent

N ce One Bedroom Unfu n shecJ
Apa tmen Range} Rei ge a o
P ov d8d Wa e &amp; Garbage Pa d
Depos ReQu ed Call 740 446
4345 Arter 6 00 PM

440

Apartment•
for Rent

Now
Wes

--Sunday August13,2000
440

35

Apartment•
for Rent

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s
Ve 'I Spa c ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Bath Fu y Ca
~eted Adu t Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $365 Mo No Pe s

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

.,....----

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Kneen

lease P us Secu y Oepos Re

Real Estate General

Real Eatate General

446

A~•

lable Now

applica IOflS for 1 BA
Sma

HUO subsk:t zed apl fo e de
and hand capped EOH

house $275 00 a mon ab

I '::":":::·~~~~""::.!P":::::''~:l04:::::.:.":.:3:::9::.:.::9:;2' - -

tv

304)675 6679

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

REAL ESTATE

Many Mo e Pa ce s To See
Now Fo Maps F nanc ng
10% OFF Cash Buys

NEW PROPERTY
V NTON CO Mu J)tlv Ad 16 Ac
5 Ac Trac s Wllh 4 Ponds On
The P ope ty S a nng As Low As
$ 675
AS GOOD AS NEW
GALL A CO Hun ng P ope 1y
ONLY lWO li acts left 23 Ac
and 34 Ac

St~t-ee

1943

Smithers
Sl
Cozy
and
Conven ent
s how you w I desc be
th s 3 BA 1 ba h anch w th large and
very workable eal n k chen 2 sto age
bu d ngs and ave y landscaped ot

P teed al S56 900 1614

296 H dden Valley Drive Beau ful
Log Home on an Ou stand ng 5 ac e
Sett ng Ova 3900 sq ft of I v ng
space ns de and nea ly 2000 sq ft of
deck/po ch/pat o space ou s de 4 BRs
3 baths FA w th stone f ep ace
modem k chen with oak cab nets u

e y good
new es

12500 cal740.742 209
199 1 Chevy S 10 4 3 Longbed
Au oma c CO Playe Bed ne 2
New
es PW 14. C Ask ng
$2500 (740)669-0200 Ew ng on

560

1992 CheYy Lum na Z 34 Exce
ent Cond on $5200 304)882
2732
993 Dodge Daytona oc Turbo
AfT 28 000 m es m no dam
age uns. $3500 OBO 7AO 992
506 or 740 949 2644 even ngs

Pets for Sale

Household
Goods

10 W low Drive

Conven ence
Good Va ue s found on the edge of
town w h h s 3 4 BR home Offers
l vab lty w h a LA ea n k chen and
fu basemen w h FA Spark ng n
g ound pool w h p vacy fence

Huge tn11en o y 0 scoun Pnees
On V ny Sk t ng Ooo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Heale s
Pumbng &amp; Eec ca Pats Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Bennelts
Mob e Home Supply 740 446
94 6 www orvb c:omlbennen

Bymes

NEW BRAND NAME C01.1PUT

from Page Dl

ERS
A mas Eve yone Ap
p oved W h SO Down low
Mon h y Payments
800 617
3476 Eltt 330

SS4 900 #235

t&gt;M,em&lt;!nl w lh 2nd k 1chen $269 000

1-11()0.213-8365

www counrrytyrne com

740)368-0485

RENTALS

SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS DOUBLE WIDE A C
Sk t ng Complete Se Up Pay
men s $259 Mo WA.C Ca Now

and a
you on the
you must see the ns de of
mmacula e home Fea u ng 4
BAs o 3 BAs and a s udy 2 baths
eat n country" k chen and beaut fu
ha dwood floo s The sunny LA w h
bay w ndow opens on to a g gantic
deck th ough F ench doors Centra a r
and hea h oughou ful basement w h
huge FA sew ng o c aft Qomloffice
and a ge laondry oom A so has a
pe e stove fo cozy even ngs a doub e
ga age w h opene and ove y wooded
lot n back Supe tam y home n g eat
cond on $ 27 500 1232

886 736 3332

f om Aen To Own Low Down
Paymen l ow Man h y Payment
Ca I 800 948 5678

New 4 W de $250 Down S 49
Pe Mon h F ee A F ee Sk

ng

698 929 3426

New 16 Wde 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Dcwn $245 pe Month F ee
Aw &amp; Sk rt 888 928 3426

~

The Fam ly ofMoudmt Wolford
~
WUhu to Th4nk mryont for tht flowm food earth
and the krndnm oflovrng suppo t that was shown
~ dunnt tht Grtat Homttommg of our Btlovod Mothn ~

'~ Sht w II bt grratly r umd by nH h" famtly nndfrllnili ,,
~know tht Earths loss ,s HtavtFJI g11m
Tht Nurm and A th at PltOJant Vallty Hosprtal wm
so good to her and also tvtryont It OIMC HosprtaL
Wo wrsh to Thank R,. Tom Prnmngton
R-. Damn S111nbaugh and R"' Dan Btnnttt

WOW

....

Sawm II $3 795 Saw Logs n a
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac ty Bes Sawm va ue An
ywhe e FREE n o rna on
800

578 1363

$300 Down

$245 Pe

698 928 3426

SAW

0 ve Bu ao

~~~------------I:.:N~Y~4=22=5~----------­
Sporting

NEED CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 $500 lmmed a e y Tans
fe ad n a You Check ng Ac
count We Wan You Bus ness
Ca Anytme
www cash eserve na
0 Ca Cash Aese ve 1 888 9 3

Goods

REDUCTION! One of he best v ews
ot he Oh o Rrve a ound ust go mo e
atfo dab e lmmacu ate 2 s Ol)l offe s
a fan1ast c v ew from the g ass fron
LA as we I as the man BR wth
pnva e balcony 2 3 mo e BAs 2 1 2
baths Ia ge ct n ng ~uea open to
k tCh e'n 1 car anached ga age p us a
24 x 32 detached garage a 28 x 52
deck W1 h bu n planters perfect fo
enterta n ng Now p ced a S 55 000
T h s property u y does offe t a I

356

•

Th s tour IS also sponsored by
Gall a County Pnde In Tobacco
Assoc1at10n and the Burley Co
op For more mformat on please
call the OS U Extens on Office at
446 7007

mclude diScuss ons about proper
fertilization cu lt vatlon and the
Importance of stde dress ng w th
Ag news
calcmm 1 trate One stop wtU also
The fau IS over and real ty
mcltde a discussiOn of fol ar ca l
ha re emerged for loyal faugoers
c u 11 sprays In weed control tra
mcludmg myself As our backs
dmonal herb c1des Trefla 1 and we e turned w th fa~r festivities
Devnnol are compared With blue mold h t tobacco producers
Dual an effective product when hard as usual
used alone
An unhkely atta k durmg the
Also on the farm are two fair th1s year was to peppers by
European corn borer traps which what appears to be a bactenal
have been momtored all sununer mfectmn Also affect ng peppers IS
for moth populations The loca
phytophthora fr111t rot character
non and 1 nportance of these 1zed by a wh te fuzzy growth
traps will be d scussed on the covenng the outs de of peppers
tour as well as the proper spray Pepper producers should cons1der
schedules for European corn scout ng their fields thoroughly
borer and late season pests such as for Signs of leaf spot and defoha
corn ear worm and army worm
tton and report any problems to
At the concluSion of the pro
the ExtensiOn Office Some d1s
gram there w II be a short update cases can be treated wtth certam
on the status of the Pepper Sta
fung ctdes
tlon as well as the Phase 11 Tobac
co Settlement program and the
European corn borer trap
Phase I Foundation
counts were up agam th1s week
As always refreshments of ho vever only along the nver
hamburgers hot dogs and s1des Although tIS too early for a thud
Will be served follow ng the tour generation of corn borers there IS
OSU ExtensiOn extends smcere obv10usly a surge 1 egg lay ng
thanks to Larry Cheryl and posSibly part of the second gener
Rachel Fallon for host ng the atlon
?QOO Tw hght Tour and all the r
ThiS muat on s one example
ass stance thiS summer - -&lt;&gt;fwhy nse~t c :!e sprays are ret

weed seed gernunatiOn Seed ng
recornmendat ons are ava lal
from your local Ohio State U1
vers ty ExtenSion office Rake
seed lightly to achieve good
SOl) !0 seed COntact
K,c f
ground evenly mmst especially~ r
new lawn areas until seed gcrnu
nates and new seedlmgs beco
established

•••

EnJOY these tdyllic days m t1 e
yard and g:trden Sha e your sur
plus flowers vegetables and tru ts
With your ne1ghbors and fi end
Think about d1ggmg up tho e
new g:trdenmg areas that need
be created this fall for next spt ng
plantmg See yo at the Me gs
County Fa~rl
(Ha l Krrem &lt; Mergs Cor ty
Extms orr agmt for agr c rlt re a d
ar ral reso rces 01 JO Stat U u..v,-r:
ty)

ommended every seven to 14
days fro n the end ofJuly through
harvest It IS suggested that pro
ducers w thm five m1les of the
rver be espcctaiJy COnSCientiOUS
about sppymg th s week
SoutHern Produce needs
green peppers tmmed1ateiy
and they are askmg pepper pro
ducers w th whom they have
contracted n southern Oh10 to
supply them Frutt harvested
should be what IS called the
crown fruit or the first set pep
pers measunng four to SIX mches
111 dtameter
Taking the largest green pep
pers off the vmes now will allow
the smaller fru1t to develop fa s1er
and promote more fru t set For
thts spectal order nterested pro
duce" should call j1m Baughman
at 256 6535 pr or to harvestmg
Call of the week was from a
tobacco prod 1cer w11h bactenal
hollow stalk a d1sease character
IZed by blackenmg of the stalk
from the pomt of topp ng down
ward hollowmg the nSJde of the
stalk ln these cases t 1s necessary
to cut as early as posSible to avo d
mfectw 1 contmu ng n the barn

(fer nifer L

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

7 40

Byr cs

Gall a

Cor y s &amp;tms ot a~ert for agr1 I
t re and nat raf res r r. t 01 o S ate

U wermy)

760

New :J BA 2 BA. Ooub ew de
F ee 0e VO'Y

NORWOOD

M LLS 252 Sonw

1603

WHAT

083

Fruits &amp;
Vegetabll' s

Tappan H E c ency 90%. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Systems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Bennetts Heat ng &amp; Cool ng
BOO 872 5967 www o 11b comfoen

v

Card of Thanks

YOUR CHOICE 3 OR 4 BED

Runs Good $650 1740)«

space 4 BRs 2 ba hs forma LA DR
w.h come huch and FA a w h
ove wOOd floo s eat n k tchen sun
oom
a ge
mud/ aundrv
oom
enc osed front porch &amp; de
1 ca
garage &amp; workshop a ea $145 000

5678

ROOMS SINGLE 1U80 A C
Sk ng Comp ete Se Up Pay
men $275 WAC Ca Fo P e
Approva -888 736 3332

86 Mazda 626 2 Ooo Au o
E ect c w ndows &amp; Sun oor

Located on the edge of town h s
beau fu y rna n a ned and eslo act 2
stol)l offe s app o~~: 2500 sq ft of I v ng

Mod e n 1 Bed oom Apa tment
740 44lH&gt;390

Need We AM Sep c No Down
Payment Requ ed large Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca 1 800 948

One Badge A M nu a pad $60
w1 seu or $35 740 992 7&amp;42

Ranch w h lots of
and
space
Beautifu
woodwo k outstand ng lags one and
ha dwood floo s 4 BAs 3 ba hs Ia ge
LA w th f rep ace o mal DR eat n
k chen FA w h ots of bookshe ves
and s d ng doo s o part a y cove ed
po ch
2
ca
ga age
Beau fu
landscap ng C ose o town Ba ga n
p ced al $1 9 900 11202

•••

Plannmg to reseed a lawn or
pastl re'
Now IS an excellent t1me to sec:J
that bare spot or to establish a new
hay field Seedmgs co npleted m
late sununer and early fall are able
to become well established Grass
root systems are able to grow
deeply Into the soil and avo d the
frost heavmg problems of late fa ll
SOWI seed ngs
For best seedmg results follow
Spread a starter fert I zer charge
these establishment gu del ne s JUSt b fore seeding Plant sufficient
offered by Ohio State Umve"1ty seed to help n con petmg with

New &amp; Usd Fu n tu e (740)446
8275 Or (740}446 004

Anthony lend ComPJny Ltd

1997 Oakwood S ngle W cte 3
Bed oom 2 bath AJC Loca ed n
V nton V c n ty $24 000 080

If you are mterested m becom
mg a Master Gardener speak With
on of the reprcsentat ves nan
mng the booth

Eh nmate perenn al weeds such
as quackgrass tall f. sc ue thistle
Ironweed and Johnso 1 grass Take
a soil test of the area to find out
the nutnent definenC1 es of the
soil Soil san pies 1 ay be take 1 to
the local ExtenSt &gt;n office where
for a fee they will be sent to a so I
lab for proper anal'ym
The sotl pH 1eeds to be
between 6 0 and 6 5 for best root
an I see d develop 11ent The soil
t VI g v you th e amounts of
ferul zer and I n e needed to
1mprovc rhc s01l nutnent level
Ehnunatc stones plant debns and
any low areas before seedmg espe
c1ally when seedmg a new Ia\\ n
Allow the soil to settle

•••

AKC Boxe Pups Fawn Back

Mask A.,ady 8 10 00 Sma De
poso SJOO 740 256 6260

~ads

Apartments
for Rent

cond on new pa n

800 29 0098

S ee bu d ngs New Mus
40x60x 2 was S 17 500 now
$ 0 97 50x1001l 6 was $27 850
now S19 990 BOx 35x 6 was
$79 850
now
$44 990
OOx 751C20 was $ 29 650 now
$64990 I 600 406 5126 Ex 52

MERCHANDISE

440

6308

1393 Ewington Road Comfortab e
sp 1 eve offe s 4 BA s
2 bath s LR
w h sene f epfl e dnng aea w h
pa q e ffoo open o k chen FA Ia ~e
u 1ty oom 2 ca ga age al s tuated
on 40 ac es m/1 w h g ea
oact
on age 46 x 366 ba n G ea coun ry
v ng a S 20 000 W se house and
t 2 a ac e to $85 000 N631

!AE1GS CO Back On The Ma
ke B a A dge One Wooded w
MeadOw 9 9 Ac li ac Perfect Fo
HuntngO HomeS 8
NOBLE CO R~gh 01 Wo Run
Sta 8 Pa k 5 Ac Homelflec

no

JANITROL HEAT NG AND
COOLING EOUIPMENT
INSTALLED
You Don Ca Us We Bo h
Lose F ee Esl ma es 740 446
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu In S ock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

1---,-.,.,:,.:..:,....:..:....:..::--:--:-

rf grass spec ahsts

from Page Dl

0101

Tw n Towe s now accepting

iounba!' ~1mr~ iPtnllnrl • Page 07

710 1 Autos for Sale

qu ed Days 740 446 348 t
Even ngs 7-40 367 0502 740

I o000 Cash

HOCKNGCO SAc 6Ac
Tracts WOOded With Meadows
MORE Prope 1y To Choose
F om In A hens Adams Ga a
JackSon SciOto Me gs hoct ng
V nton and Noble Count es Ca
Us Today Fo FREE MAPS And
l S ng Of A Th s land

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

Motorcycles

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ot 0 3 d and Court th s mcnmacci'l
bu d ng offe s a to a of 9 060 sq
poten1 a P ced a $8 500 N620

Man h

26x52 Daub eW de $500 Oown
Take o11e paymen s 600 69
6777

2 Pea ey T300 PA Speake s
$300 bo 11 e y good cond on

New Bank Aep os Make 2 Pay
ments &amp; Mo e n No Payments
A e Fou Yea s Oakwod Ga
po s 740)446-3093

(304)456 086

STEEl BU LD NGS New Mus
Se 30x40x12 was $ 0 200 now
$6 990 40K60 x 2 was $16 400
now $ 0 971 5011. 100• 6 was

127 590 now $19990 60x200x 6
was $58 760 now $39 990 800
406 5 26 Ex 149

S NGLEWIDE 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS A C Sk I ng Comp e e
Se Up P ce $ 9 866 Pay mens
$ 99 Mo WAC Ca Fo P e Ap
p ova 1 888 736-3332

ALBERT STEVEN EHMAN

SERVICES

7/3/54 - 8/2/00
How Does a Llnte Get Away Place
with good access o f sh ng n the
Oh o Rver sound? Tha s JUS wha
he p operty ocated a 35 Hanove
S eet C own C y has o offe pus
que
pea eu set1ng LA eat n
k chen 2 BAs
ba h and p ced a

40 A es w h ew Ranch s y e
home T bbe Road A bu k
e WV ERA Town &amp; Coun v
Rea Es a e B o ke
304 675
5548 Ke h Sh n As soc a e
304)675 3708

340

S2J ooo

Business and
Buildings

•soa

Home
Improvements
A. NEW OOK FOR MEN AND
WOMEN Cosme
Su ge Y SO
Down $38 pe week Ha B eas
., L po Nose To Fee 877 64 2

_.._ 8566

FOR RENT 3 400 sQ
bu d ng
6 Ce ng Tw o a age ga
age doo s aea o wa eho se
o Bus ness loca ed o McCo
m ck Road ac oss om Thomas
Do (740 446 8 s

w h

COMMERC AL
PROPERTY FOR SALE
3 lo s Ad acent To One A no he
On Busy H gh G ow h Sou 11
Pennsy van a A en e We son
Oh o 7 F F on age 20 F
Oeep Ready To Bu d On Con ac
H N W n a s 238 Sou h New
Yo k A enue We son Ce I 740364 2654

Wth appreaa on the Ehman lam y ~ou dIke 10 hanktheRe;
lack Be ry .md WIs fune a) home o he g ac ous asss ance
Ti&lt;lnk you 1~ Cancer Hosp al Docto s and Nu s ng St.lff fo
the r know~ge to ai dect U\OOn and Tl C
We exp ess ttidnks to al those who v1 ted us b ough food sen
!lowe s and rna ed sympa hy U\ ds
Spe&lt;al thanks o Steves cowo kers and dea I ends a Sou hem
Oh o Cod Company lo you ove conce nand compass 011
Thank you Bob Ev.ms farm Managerrent and stalllo aI you
empa hy
We a e espec a yg a elulto ou loca chu chel o keep~ng Ste;e n
you payers Thank you o those we know and those we do not
AlfJ o Rl'l Jack Be ry Rl'l B wng and ral o Rili\la wbib
LJij lo you vsts and words of encou agerrent
Steve was a wonde u pe son and geatly app ec ated e;eryth ng
that was done for hm Some~mes 1s hard 10 le1 peope do fo you
1x1 f you Cdn accept h~p t makes them feel ery needed and that
slfJ mportan 5e.~e ea zed th s
To allhose nou aea h.mk you lfJ much I
small pa tof such a hea rv.a mng commun ry
W hlove and Respect
The EhfNn fam1~
Monca Suldn Aun Do Geo'.~e Cha es
john m ~ancy .md Ou fam Ies

Tobacco Pans
Now akng o des lo hs Sp ng
F s Odesw GuaaneeBes&amp;
Ea es
P an s
Oewhu s
Fa ms (304 895 37401895 3789

735 Beech Street
Middleport
lnves men
p operty
consst ng of a 4 pex wlh each un
have
bed oom and , ba
$45 000

.130

NEW LIST NG 825 Beech Stree1
Middleport 3 bed oom home offfe ng
app ox 600 sq fl nc udes 20 x 24
v ng oom k chen part a basemen

PUbliC Notice

TRANSPORTATION

and 2 !fa ca port $8 9 900 _, 27

710

Before look1ng for your New Address, Ch~ck out ours at

Autos for Sale

93 Bu c k LeSeb t Cu1tom
8.4 000 mUes n ce ca $4500
740 9o49 2877 0 740 949 2700

www.wisemanrealestate.com
Dav1d Wiseman GRI CRS Broker 446 9555
Carolyn Wasch 441 1007
Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 446 0621
Rita' Wiseman

446 2702
446 9555

llJ G.l
QPPOR UN

(7 40) 446-3644

Wh e day btd w h IP Ud &amp;
shams $ 00 m c owlvt o 11n
$50 Quttn 1 It WI t btd I 00
140 gg2 569-t 0 7.40 992 3886

83 Yahama 2 1 oke 75 cc 0
B lte $600 98 250 T mbe wo f
Yahtma ~ Whet t $2 000 Cl
A a 4pm (740 388 887

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho City ol Golllpo o WI
bo occoptlng blda on tho
lnlot'eot roto lor e Vohlclo
llond Antlclpo11on Nolo In
tho omounl ol $270 000 lor
tho porlod ol Auguot 25
2000 ond moturlng Auguot
21 2001
Wrlnon quotoo muot bo
rootlvod by 12 00 noon on
Tuoldoy Auguot 15 2000
Bldt con bo molltd to 518
&amp;ooond Avonuo Qolllpollo
OH 45031 loxod to 740-411
2070 or hond dollvorod to
tho ollontlon of tho
lnvotlmonl CommlttH
Aug uti t 13 2000

�•
Page D6 • &amp;unba!' ~nnt~ lil&gt;rntmtl
320 Mobile Homes

BRUNER lAND

MOVING OUT OF THE STATE
MUST SELL 996 4x70 BRI
Batl\s G• den Tub laund y
Room S ave Rei ige ato 0 sh
washe Hea Pump Tota E ec

2

2

tr c S 8 500 May Be left On
La ge ~en ea lo C ose To Town
741)

446 7935 Leave Message

AJ eal estate adverts ng n
h s newspape s subject to
the Federa Fa Hous ngAct
o 968 wh ch makes
ega
to advert se any pre erence

m a ono diSC mnaKm
based on ace colo e g on
sex am a s atus o nationa
o gn o any nen onto
make any such p efe ence
m a ton o d scnm na 10n

Th s newspape w not
koowtngly accept
advemsemeniS 1o ea 8Sia e
wtlk:h s nvoa on of he
law Ou eaders are he eby
n o med ,hat a dwe ngs
ad\len sed n h s newspape
a e 8\/ailab e on an aqua
opportun ty bas s

996 Oakwood 4K80 3 b

ca

440

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

for Sale

2 ba

on en ed o 304 675 7430

ale 5pm

Sunday August 13, 2000

___l&gt;mner.oy -..Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Polnt-Pieaunt, WV
Apartments
for Rent

440

440

Apartment•
for Rent

r•o..w11492

Apartments
for Rent

New Haven -one bed oom

n shed apa men
Melgl Co II You ve A ways
Wan ed 14. N ee Fa m Home Ttl s
4 Bed oom W h Ha dwood
Floc s Mas e Su e n Rea
Count y Set ng Is Just $89 000
Add La ge Red Ba ns And
See a Ou Bu dngs On 6 Ac
es $3 000 Cash Co
Wei wa
e Jus 20 M nu es F om OU n
A hens Dan v e N ce 5 Ac es
$ 6 000 Or 7 A.c es S 3 000
Galli• Co A o G ande 4 M es
s 0 Un ve sly 9 Ac es $23 500
o o Ac es w h Pond 126 soo
N 0 SR 35 I 0 Ac es S 2 500
Cash Chesh e Jesse c eek
Ad 6 Ac es S 2 000 8 Ac es
$20 000 0 28 Ac es $30 000
Cay Twp Ma abe Ad
Aces
$20 000 0 31 Aces Wth Ban
S37 000 F endty A dge 5 Ac es

440

no pets de

post &amp; ele enc11 740 992

0 65

Apartment•
for Rent

N ce One Bedroom Unfu n shecJ
Apa tmen Range} Rei ge a o
P ov d8d Wa e &amp; Garbage Pa d
Depos ReQu ed Call 740 446
4345 Arter 6 00 PM

440

Apartment•
for Rent

Now
Wes

--Sunday August13,2000
440

35

Apartment•
for Rent

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s
Ve 'I Spa c ous 2 Bed ooms 2
F oo s CA
2 Bath Fu y Ca
~eted Adu t Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o S a t $365 Mo No Pe s

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

.,....----

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Kneen

lease P us Secu y Oepos Re

Real Estate General

Real Eatate General

446

A~•

lable Now

applica IOflS for 1 BA
Sma

HUO subsk:t zed apl fo e de
and hand capped EOH

house $275 00 a mon ab

I '::":":::·~~~~""::.!P":::::''~:l04:::::.:.":.:3:::9::.:.::9:;2' - -

tv

304)675 6679

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

REAL ESTATE

Many Mo e Pa ce s To See
Now Fo Maps F nanc ng
10% OFF Cash Buys

NEW PROPERTY
V NTON CO Mu J)tlv Ad 16 Ac
5 Ac Trac s Wllh 4 Ponds On
The P ope ty S a nng As Low As
$ 675
AS GOOD AS NEW
GALL A CO Hun ng P ope 1y
ONLY lWO li acts left 23 Ac
and 34 Ac

St~t-ee

1943

Smithers
Sl
Cozy
and
Conven ent
s how you w I desc be
th s 3 BA 1 ba h anch w th large and
very workable eal n k chen 2 sto age
bu d ngs and ave y landscaped ot

P teed al S56 900 1614

296 H dden Valley Drive Beau ful
Log Home on an Ou stand ng 5 ac e
Sett ng Ova 3900 sq ft of I v ng
space ns de and nea ly 2000 sq ft of
deck/po ch/pat o space ou s de 4 BRs
3 baths FA w th stone f ep ace
modem k chen with oak cab nets u

e y good
new es

12500 cal740.742 209
199 1 Chevy S 10 4 3 Longbed
Au oma c CO Playe Bed ne 2
New
es PW 14. C Ask ng
$2500 (740)669-0200 Ew ng on

560

1992 CheYy Lum na Z 34 Exce
ent Cond on $5200 304)882
2732
993 Dodge Daytona oc Turbo
AfT 28 000 m es m no dam
age uns. $3500 OBO 7AO 992
506 or 740 949 2644 even ngs

Pets for Sale

Household
Goods

10 W low Drive

Conven ence
Good Va ue s found on the edge of
town w h h s 3 4 BR home Offers
l vab lty w h a LA ea n k chen and
fu basemen w h FA Spark ng n
g ound pool w h p vacy fence

Huge tn11en o y 0 scoun Pnees
On V ny Sk t ng Ooo s W nd
ows Ancho s Wa e Heale s
Pumbng &amp; Eec ca Pats Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Bennelts
Mob e Home Supply 740 446
94 6 www orvb c:omlbennen

Bymes

NEW BRAND NAME C01.1PUT

from Page Dl

ERS
A mas Eve yone Ap
p oved W h SO Down low
Mon h y Payments
800 617
3476 Eltt 330

SS4 900 #235

t&gt;M,em&lt;!nl w lh 2nd k 1chen $269 000

1-11()0.213-8365

www counrrytyrne com

740)368-0485

RENTALS

SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS DOUBLE WIDE A C
Sk t ng Complete Se Up Pay
men s $259 Mo WA.C Ca Now

and a
you on the
you must see the ns de of
mmacula e home Fea u ng 4
BAs o 3 BAs and a s udy 2 baths
eat n country" k chen and beaut fu
ha dwood floo s The sunny LA w h
bay w ndow opens on to a g gantic
deck th ough F ench doors Centra a r
and hea h oughou ful basement w h
huge FA sew ng o c aft Qomloffice
and a ge laondry oom A so has a
pe e stove fo cozy even ngs a doub e
ga age w h opene and ove y wooded
lot n back Supe tam y home n g eat
cond on $ 27 500 1232

886 736 3332

f om Aen To Own Low Down
Paymen l ow Man h y Payment
Ca I 800 948 5678

New 4 W de $250 Down S 49
Pe Mon h F ee A F ee Sk

ng

698 929 3426

New 16 Wde 3 o 4 Bed oom
$800 Dcwn $245 pe Month F ee
Aw &amp; Sk rt 888 928 3426

~

The Fam ly ofMoudmt Wolford
~
WUhu to Th4nk mryont for tht flowm food earth
and the krndnm oflovrng suppo t that was shown
~ dunnt tht Grtat Homttommg of our Btlovod Mothn ~

'~ Sht w II bt grratly r umd by nH h" famtly nndfrllnili ,,
~know tht Earths loss ,s HtavtFJI g11m
Tht Nurm and A th at PltOJant Vallty Hosprtal wm
so good to her and also tvtryont It OIMC HosprtaL
Wo wrsh to Thank R,. Tom Prnmngton
R-. Damn S111nbaugh and R"' Dan Btnnttt

WOW

....

Sawm II $3 795 Saw Logs n a
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac ty Bes Sawm va ue An
ywhe e FREE n o rna on
800

578 1363

$300 Down

$245 Pe

698 928 3426

SAW

0 ve Bu ao

~~~------------I:.:N~Y~4=22=5~----------­
Sporting

NEED CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 $500 lmmed a e y Tans
fe ad n a You Check ng Ac
count We Wan You Bus ness
Ca Anytme
www cash eserve na
0 Ca Cash Aese ve 1 888 9 3

Goods

REDUCTION! One of he best v ews
ot he Oh o Rrve a ound ust go mo e
atfo dab e lmmacu ate 2 s Ol)l offe s
a fan1ast c v ew from the g ass fron
LA as we I as the man BR wth
pnva e balcony 2 3 mo e BAs 2 1 2
baths Ia ge ct n ng ~uea open to
k tCh e'n 1 car anached ga age p us a
24 x 32 detached garage a 28 x 52
deck W1 h bu n planters perfect fo
enterta n ng Now p ced a S 55 000
T h s property u y does offe t a I

356

•

Th s tour IS also sponsored by
Gall a County Pnde In Tobacco
Assoc1at10n and the Burley Co
op For more mformat on please
call the OS U Extens on Office at
446 7007

mclude diScuss ons about proper
fertilization cu lt vatlon and the
Importance of stde dress ng w th
Ag news
calcmm 1 trate One stop wtU also
The fau IS over and real ty
mcltde a discussiOn of fol ar ca l
ha re emerged for loyal faugoers
c u 11 sprays In weed control tra
mcludmg myself As our backs
dmonal herb c1des Trefla 1 and we e turned w th fa~r festivities
Devnnol are compared With blue mold h t tobacco producers
Dual an effective product when hard as usual
used alone
An unhkely atta k durmg the
Also on the farm are two fair th1s year was to peppers by
European corn borer traps which what appears to be a bactenal
have been momtored all sununer mfectmn Also affect ng peppers IS
for moth populations The loca
phytophthora fr111t rot character
non and 1 nportance of these 1zed by a wh te fuzzy growth
traps will be d scussed on the covenng the outs de of peppers
tour as well as the proper spray Pepper producers should cons1der
schedules for European corn scout ng their fields thoroughly
borer and late season pests such as for Signs of leaf spot and defoha
corn ear worm and army worm
tton and report any problems to
At the concluSion of the pro
the ExtensiOn Office Some d1s
gram there w II be a short update cases can be treated wtth certam
on the status of the Pepper Sta
fung ctdes
tlon as well as the Phase 11 Tobac
co Settlement program and the
European corn borer trap
Phase I Foundation
counts were up agam th1s week
As always refreshments of ho vever only along the nver
hamburgers hot dogs and s1des Although tIS too early for a thud
Will be served follow ng the tour generation of corn borers there IS
OSU ExtensiOn extends smcere obv10usly a surge 1 egg lay ng
thanks to Larry Cheryl and posSibly part of the second gener
Rachel Fallon for host ng the atlon
?QOO Tw hght Tour and all the r
ThiS muat on s one example
ass stance thiS summer - -&lt;&gt;fwhy nse~t c :!e sprays are ret

weed seed gernunatiOn Seed ng
recornmendat ons are ava lal
from your local Ohio State U1
vers ty ExtenSion office Rake
seed lightly to achieve good
SOl) !0 seed COntact
K,c f
ground evenly mmst especially~ r
new lawn areas until seed gcrnu
nates and new seedlmgs beco
established

•••

EnJOY these tdyllic days m t1 e
yard and g:trden Sha e your sur
plus flowers vegetables and tru ts
With your ne1ghbors and fi end
Think about d1ggmg up tho e
new g:trdenmg areas that need
be created this fall for next spt ng
plantmg See yo at the Me gs
County Fa~rl
(Ha l Krrem &lt; Mergs Cor ty
Extms orr agmt for agr c rlt re a d
ar ral reso rces 01 JO Stat U u..v,-r:
ty)

ommended every seven to 14
days fro n the end ofJuly through
harvest It IS suggested that pro
ducers w thm five m1les of the
rver be espcctaiJy COnSCientiOUS
about sppymg th s week
SoutHern Produce needs
green peppers tmmed1ateiy
and they are askmg pepper pro
ducers w th whom they have
contracted n southern Oh10 to
supply them Frutt harvested
should be what IS called the
crown fruit or the first set pep
pers measunng four to SIX mches
111 dtameter
Taking the largest green pep
pers off the vmes now will allow
the smaller fru1t to develop fa s1er
and promote more fru t set For
thts spectal order nterested pro
duce" should call j1m Baughman
at 256 6535 pr or to harvestmg
Call of the week was from a
tobacco prod 1cer w11h bactenal
hollow stalk a d1sease character
IZed by blackenmg of the stalk
from the pomt of topp ng down
ward hollowmg the nSJde of the
stalk ln these cases t 1s necessary
to cut as early as posSible to avo d
mfectw 1 contmu ng n the barn

(fer nifer L

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

7 40

Byr cs

Gall a

Cor y s &amp;tms ot a~ert for agr1 I
t re and nat raf res r r. t 01 o S ate

U wermy)

760

New :J BA 2 BA. Ooub ew de
F ee 0e VO'Y

NORWOOD

M LLS 252 Sonw

1603

WHAT

083

Fruits &amp;
Vegetabll' s

Tappan H E c ency 90%. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Systems F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Bennetts Heat ng &amp; Cool ng
BOO 872 5967 www o 11b comfoen

v

Card of Thanks

YOUR CHOICE 3 OR 4 BED

Runs Good $650 1740)«

space 4 BRs 2 ba hs forma LA DR
w.h come huch and FA a w h
ove wOOd floo s eat n k tchen sun
oom
a ge
mud/ aundrv
oom
enc osed front porch &amp; de
1 ca
garage &amp; workshop a ea $145 000

5678

ROOMS SINGLE 1U80 A C
Sk ng Comp ete Se Up Pay
men $275 WAC Ca Fo P e
Approva -888 736 3332

86 Mazda 626 2 Ooo Au o
E ect c w ndows &amp; Sun oor

Located on the edge of town h s
beau fu y rna n a ned and eslo act 2
stol)l offe s app o~~: 2500 sq ft of I v ng

Mod e n 1 Bed oom Apa tment
740 44lH&gt;390

Need We AM Sep c No Down
Payment Requ ed large Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca 1 800 948

One Badge A M nu a pad $60
w1 seu or $35 740 992 7&amp;42

Ranch w h lots of
and
space
Beautifu
woodwo k outstand ng lags one and
ha dwood floo s 4 BAs 3 ba hs Ia ge
LA w th f rep ace o mal DR eat n
k chen FA w h ots of bookshe ves
and s d ng doo s o part a y cove ed
po ch
2
ca
ga age
Beau fu
landscap ng C ose o town Ba ga n
p ced al $1 9 900 11202

•••

Plannmg to reseed a lawn or
pastl re'
Now IS an excellent t1me to sec:J
that bare spot or to establish a new
hay field Seedmgs co npleted m
late sununer and early fall are able
to become well established Grass
root systems are able to grow
deeply Into the soil and avo d the
frost heavmg problems of late fa ll
SOWI seed ngs
For best seedmg results follow
Spread a starter fert I zer charge
these establishment gu del ne s JUSt b fore seeding Plant sufficient
offered by Ohio State Umve"1ty seed to help n con petmg with

New &amp; Usd Fu n tu e (740)446
8275 Or (740}446 004

Anthony lend ComPJny Ltd

1997 Oakwood S ngle W cte 3
Bed oom 2 bath AJC Loca ed n
V nton V c n ty $24 000 080

If you are mterested m becom
mg a Master Gardener speak With
on of the reprcsentat ves nan
mng the booth

Eh nmate perenn al weeds such
as quackgrass tall f. sc ue thistle
Ironweed and Johnso 1 grass Take
a soil test of the area to find out
the nutnent definenC1 es of the
soil Soil san pies 1 ay be take 1 to
the local ExtenSt &gt;n office where
for a fee they will be sent to a so I
lab for proper anal'ym
The sotl pH 1eeds to be
between 6 0 and 6 5 for best root
an I see d develop 11ent The soil
t VI g v you th e amounts of
ferul zer and I n e needed to
1mprovc rhc s01l nutnent level
Ehnunatc stones plant debns and
any low areas before seedmg espe
c1ally when seedmg a new Ia\\ n
Allow the soil to settle

•••

AKC Boxe Pups Fawn Back

Mask A.,ady 8 10 00 Sma De
poso SJOO 740 256 6260

~ads

Apartments
for Rent

cond on new pa n

800 29 0098

S ee bu d ngs New Mus
40x60x 2 was S 17 500 now
$ 0 97 50x1001l 6 was $27 850
now S19 990 BOx 35x 6 was
$79 850
now
$44 990
OOx 751C20 was $ 29 650 now
$64990 I 600 406 5126 Ex 52

MERCHANDISE

440

6308

1393 Ewington Road Comfortab e
sp 1 eve offe s 4 BA s
2 bath s LR
w h sene f epfl e dnng aea w h
pa q e ffoo open o k chen FA Ia ~e
u 1ty oom 2 ca ga age al s tuated
on 40 ac es m/1 w h g ea
oact
on age 46 x 366 ba n G ea coun ry
v ng a S 20 000 W se house and
t 2 a ac e to $85 000 N631

!AE1GS CO Back On The Ma
ke B a A dge One Wooded w
MeadOw 9 9 Ac li ac Perfect Fo
HuntngO HomeS 8
NOBLE CO R~gh 01 Wo Run
Sta 8 Pa k 5 Ac Homelflec

no

JANITROL HEAT NG AND
COOLING EOUIPMENT
INSTALLED
You Don Ca Us We Bo h
Lose F ee Esl ma es 740 446
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepa ed New &amp; Aebu In S ock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528

1---,-.,.,:,.:..:,....:..:....:..::--:--:-

rf grass spec ahsts

from Page Dl

0101

Tw n Towe s now accepting

iounba!' ~1mr~ iPtnllnrl • Page 07

710 1 Autos for Sale

qu ed Days 740 446 348 t
Even ngs 7-40 367 0502 740

I o000 Cash

HOCKNGCO SAc 6Ac
Tracts WOOded With Meadows
MORE Prope 1y To Choose
F om In A hens Adams Ga a
JackSon SciOto Me gs hoct ng
V nton and Noble Count es Ca
Us Today Fo FREE MAPS And
l S ng Of A Th s land

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

Motorcycles

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ot 0 3 d and Court th s mcnmacci'l
bu d ng offe s a to a of 9 060 sq
poten1 a P ced a $8 500 N620

Man h

26x52 Daub eW de $500 Oown
Take o11e paymen s 600 69
6777

2 Pea ey T300 PA Speake s
$300 bo 11 e y good cond on

New Bank Aep os Make 2 Pay
ments &amp; Mo e n No Payments
A e Fou Yea s Oakwod Ga
po s 740)446-3093

(304)456 086

STEEl BU LD NGS New Mus
Se 30x40x12 was $ 0 200 now
$6 990 40K60 x 2 was $16 400
now $ 0 971 5011. 100• 6 was

127 590 now $19990 60x200x 6
was $58 760 now $39 990 800
406 5 26 Ex 149

S NGLEWIDE 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS A C Sk I ng Comp e e
Se Up P ce $ 9 866 Pay mens
$ 99 Mo WAC Ca Fo P e Ap
p ova 1 888 736-3332

ALBERT STEVEN EHMAN

SERVICES

7/3/54 - 8/2/00
How Does a Llnte Get Away Place
with good access o f sh ng n the
Oh o Rver sound? Tha s JUS wha
he p operty ocated a 35 Hanove
S eet C own C y has o offe pus
que
pea eu set1ng LA eat n
k chen 2 BAs
ba h and p ced a

40 A es w h ew Ranch s y e
home T bbe Road A bu k
e WV ERA Town &amp; Coun v
Rea Es a e B o ke
304 675
5548 Ke h Sh n As soc a e
304)675 3708

340

S2J ooo

Business and
Buildings

•soa

Home
Improvements
A. NEW OOK FOR MEN AND
WOMEN Cosme
Su ge Y SO
Down $38 pe week Ha B eas
., L po Nose To Fee 877 64 2

_.._ 8566

FOR RENT 3 400 sQ
bu d ng
6 Ce ng Tw o a age ga
age doo s aea o wa eho se
o Bus ness loca ed o McCo
m ck Road ac oss om Thomas
Do (740 446 8 s

w h

COMMERC AL
PROPERTY FOR SALE
3 lo s Ad acent To One A no he
On Busy H gh G ow h Sou 11
Pennsy van a A en e We son
Oh o 7 F F on age 20 F
Oeep Ready To Bu d On Con ac
H N W n a s 238 Sou h New
Yo k A enue We son Ce I 740364 2654

Wth appreaa on the Ehman lam y ~ou dIke 10 hanktheRe;
lack Be ry .md WIs fune a) home o he g ac ous asss ance
Ti&lt;lnk you 1~ Cancer Hosp al Docto s and Nu s ng St.lff fo
the r know~ge to ai dect U\OOn and Tl C
We exp ess ttidnks to al those who v1 ted us b ough food sen
!lowe s and rna ed sympa hy U\ ds
Spe&lt;al thanks o Steves cowo kers and dea I ends a Sou hem
Oh o Cod Company lo you ove conce nand compass 011
Thank you Bob Ev.ms farm Managerrent and stalllo aI you
empa hy
We a e espec a yg a elulto ou loca chu chel o keep~ng Ste;e n
you payers Thank you o those we know and those we do not
AlfJ o Rl'l Jack Be ry Rl'l B wng and ral o Rili\la wbib
LJij lo you vsts and words of encou agerrent
Steve was a wonde u pe son and geatly app ec ated e;eryth ng
that was done for hm Some~mes 1s hard 10 le1 peope do fo you
1x1 f you Cdn accept h~p t makes them feel ery needed and that
slfJ mportan 5e.~e ea zed th s
To allhose nou aea h.mk you lfJ much I
small pa tof such a hea rv.a mng commun ry
W hlove and Respect
The EhfNn fam1~
Monca Suldn Aun Do Geo'.~e Cha es
john m ~ancy .md Ou fam Ies

Tobacco Pans
Now akng o des lo hs Sp ng
F s Odesw GuaaneeBes&amp;
Ea es
P an s
Oewhu s
Fa ms (304 895 37401895 3789

735 Beech Street
Middleport
lnves men
p operty
consst ng of a 4 pex wlh each un
have
bed oom and , ba
$45 000

.130

NEW LIST NG 825 Beech Stree1
Middleport 3 bed oom home offfe ng
app ox 600 sq fl nc udes 20 x 24
v ng oom k chen part a basemen

PUbliC Notice

TRANSPORTATION

and 2 !fa ca port $8 9 900 _, 27

710

Before look1ng for your New Address, Ch~ck out ours at

Autos for Sale

93 Bu c k LeSeb t Cu1tom
8.4 000 mUes n ce ca $4500
740 9o49 2877 0 740 949 2700

www.wisemanrealestate.com
Dav1d Wiseman GRI CRS Broker 446 9555
Carolyn Wasch 441 1007
Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 446 0621
Rita' Wiseman

446 2702
446 9555

llJ G.l
QPPOR UN

(7 40) 446-3644

Wh e day btd w h IP Ud &amp;
shams $ 00 m c owlvt o 11n
$50 Quttn 1 It WI t btd I 00
140 gg2 569-t 0 7.40 992 3886

83 Yahama 2 1 oke 75 cc 0
B lte $600 98 250 T mbe wo f
Yahtma ~ Whet t $2 000 Cl
A a 4pm (740 388 887

LEGAL NOTICE
Tho City ol Golllpo o WI
bo occoptlng blda on tho
lnlot'eot roto lor e Vohlclo
llond Antlclpo11on Nolo In
tho omounl ol $270 000 lor
tho porlod ol Auguot 25
2000 ond moturlng Auguot
21 2001
Wrlnon quotoo muot bo
rootlvod by 12 00 noon on
Tuoldoy Auguot 15 2000
Bldt con bo molltd to 518
&amp;ooond Avonuo Qolllpollo
OH 45031 loxod to 740-411
2070 or hond dollvorod to
tho ollontlon of tho
lnvotlmonl CommlttH
Aug uti t 13 2000

�..-

..... .
. -.'

...

•

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

-'""-

Sunda~August13,2000

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE

•••

-·

. Details, A3

-

Kuhn

grams focusing on the practice of
radiology and the delivery of comprehensive health services. The
ACR Corrunittee on MRI accreditation evaluates and accredits MRI
practices in hospitals and in private
offices across the U.S.
The ACR awards accreditation
POMEROY Wendi R .
Miller and James G. Combee have to an MRI practice for the
recently joined Teaford Real Estate achievement of high practice standards after a voluntary ev;Uuation
in Pomeroy
They have both completed of its practice.
Evaluations are conducted by
Hondros CoUege and the Ohio
radiologists and physicists who are
state sales exam for real estate.
members
of the ACR with special
Miller is a 1993 graduate of
Southern High School and is a expertise in MRI. They assess the
third generation of sales agents for quality of the work being performed as weU as the qualifications
Teaford Real Estate.
Miller and Combee had resided of the personnel involved.
The reviewers report their findin Key West, Aa., until last year.
Combee is originaUy from cen- ings to the ACR's MRI Accreditation Committee which subsetral Aorida.
quently provides the practice with
a comprehensive repon;.

T\vo join
Teaford staff

::t984.

;:April.
;: AU three audiologists are avail·p ble for appointments at 740-592:;::_2863. Karr, Audiology\; offices are
: : :at 108 Richbnd Ave. and at the
::;Medical Arts Building in Logan. It
::: .offers complete audiology services,
:;: :.U weU as hearing aid dispensing.

-··
....
.r Exploring foreign
.:::
maiket · ·

-.

~:;.. .MIDDLEPORT -

Facemyer
• ·Lumber Co. of Middleport is one
: of four Ohio lumber, woodwork:: :ing and furniture supply compa: · nies to attend the International
-: ·woodworking Machinery and
:: Furniture Supply Fair in Atlanta,
:• Ga., next week.
:: The company operates a dry kiln
; : and distrib11tion facility. three
:: sawmiUs and a paUet manufactur:: ing facility, processing red oak,
:: white oak and poplar. It offers sur-

Money

.... ... .
•

- ._,!n
~

fromPqeDI
The process

many ways, an investment
policy statement is like a "blueprint" for your wealth-building.
with the investment executive in
the role of the financial "architect." By working together, you
anfl your investment professional
w~ ~e able to id~ntit¥ your risk
parameters and set realistic goals.
Your investment executive will
asl!; you a series of questions to
le~rn more about y(,ur attitudes
tO}"ard risk, your current and
fu~ure income needs, how much
liquidity you 'II need, your expectations for performance and rate
of return, and the source of your
assets.
Your current investment mix
will also be reviewed to ensure
th~t you have enough diversification in order to develop a personalized model for asset allocation.
The benefits of asset aUocation
are clear. According to an article

Combee
computer literacy, measures proficiency and improves productivity,
and identifies opportunities for
skills enhancement.
The exams are not a written test
Instead, they feature ·real-world
assignments based on the ways
computers are actuaUy used.
For information about the
MOUS program, contact David
House. computer services director
at bee, at 446-4367, toll-free' it
1-800- 214-0452 or visit our web
site at www.gallipoliscarecrcql!;
lege.com.
'

"I think f.armers believe that
conditions wiU get better and that
we wiU get more rainfall. We will
eventually get out of this pattern. I
just don't know when;' Birdsong
said.
There are obvious sigos in
Alabama of the dry times. More
farmers are irrigating their crops
rather than depending on Mother
Nature to do the job, Birdsong
said But this ye:ir, even irrigation
has not always been the answer as
the drought has dried up ma;,y
ittiption ponds.

llrf

Dr. Jim Hairston , professor of
agronomy and soils at Auburn
University, said it's possible Alabama and the Southeast are entering
a long-term drought cycle, similar
to what the state experienced in
the 1950s or the "dust bowl"
drought in the midwest in the
1930s.
"It's kind of scary," he said.

/

Mor~

Meigs ·county Fair scenes, AJ
Reds sw·eep Cubs; Park wins 1st race, 81

Meigs County's

acaeclitation
PARKERSBURG, W.Va .
The magnetic resonance imaging
practice at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital has . been awarded a
three-year term of accreditation in
MRI as a result of a recent survey
by the American CoUege of Radiology.
The ACR is a national organization servicing more than 30,000
radiologists, radiation oncologists
and medical physicists, with pro-

50 Cents

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
(740) '192·2156

CROWNED KING &amp; QUEEN - 1999 Meigs County Fair Queen Kristi·
na Kennedy, right, crowns Tara Rose as 2000 Meigs County Fair
Queen. David Rankin, left, will serve as 2000 Fair King. The crowning
took place during opening ceremonies at the Meigs County Fair on
Sunday evening. (Brian J. Reed photo)

ROC K SPR.INGS - Tara Rose was named
2000 Meigs Co unty Fair Queen and David
Rankin 2000 Fair King during ceremonies
Sunday at the grandstand of the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The crowning of the king and queen was the
finale of opening ceremonies. Rose and Rankin
will reign over all Junior Fair events during the
!37th M eigs Coun·ty Fair, which runs through
Saturday night.
Rose was crowned by 1999 Fair Queen
Kristina Kenn edy. Rose is the daughter of Maxine Rose of Ra'dne and the late C hester Rose.
She is a member of the God's Country Teens 4-

H Club, Southern High School's FCC LA club, dates for the Fair Queen honor.
and is active in her church . She also is a volunThe ce"'Jllony also gave Kennedy an opporteer for the Meigs United Methodist Coopera- tunity to bid the Fair and her court farewell, and
tive Par ish.
she presented this year's royalty candidates and
Rankin, son of John and Connie Rankin of her 1999 court with flowers .
Tuppers Plains, represents the Klassy Klovers 4Also crowned during last nigh~s ceremony
H Club. He is a member of the Meigs County were Amanda Windon , beef princess; Al}"sa
Junior Fair Board, and has been an active 4- Her Holter, dairy princess; Keshia Norman, horse
for nine years.
princess; Robbie Weddle, horse prince; Zach
Tara Rizer, daughter of Will1am Rizer of Burns. poultry prince; Autumn Hauber, rabbit
Syracuse, w a.'i named first- runner up in the princ ess; Kay1a Gibb~. ~wine prin cess; and
'
queen competition and Joseph McCaU , son of Meghan Haynes , wool princess.
Greg and Debra M cCall of Rutland, was
Linda Montgomery was hostess for the
named first -runn er up in the king·co mpetition . crowning ceremony. Prizes from a number Q..f
Whitn ey Ashley, Theresa Baker, M endy loca l busine::~scs were presented to . Rose ~Qp
••
Guess, and Amanda V.:auger were also candic Rankin .

Gil Beebower, asset allocation
accounts for more than 90 peocent
of your portfolio's performance.
However, the authors also point
out that making the key decisions
necessary to create the right asset
allocation model for your investment program is not easy. It
requires teamwork between an
investor and a financial profession:rl.
Alter~ all the-information gathering is complete, your investment
professional will be weU prepared
to recommend specific investment
strategies for achieving your goals.

The advantages
How can having an investment
policy statement help you? First,
by putting tour objectives in writing, you are given the opportunity to clarify your goals.
Documenting your investment
policy puts everything "on the
record;' and your goals become
more reaJ once they1re in writing.
Be sure to be specific as possible
in terms of time horizon and dollar amounts.

DOMESTIC ARTS ...• .
..

Continues as
testing center
GALLIPOLIS GaUipolis
Career College has renewed its
certification as a Microsoft Office
User Specialist Authorized Testing
Center.
The M OUS program is the only
comprehensive certification program designed to validate desktop
oomputer skills using Microsoft
Office applications. MOUS proves

tough and your emotions want to
take over. Your investment policy
can help you stay disciplined in a
market downturn because it provides a visual reminder of your
program. Even if your emotions
are getting the best of you, sticking with your plan is the best way
to keep moving toward your
goals.
FinaUy, you can use your investment policy to rnl!lsure your programs. Since your goals. are summarized for you, it makes it much
easier to measure performance
and rates of return, a~ weU a~ make
adjustments if needed.
By putting your objectives in
writing, you'D have a working
financial blueprint for building
your dreams. Contact your investment professional today to set up
an appointment to develop a personal investment policy for finan -

...
·-'

Judges award 8 .:~~
best-of-show honors.

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Maxine Dyer of Bidwell, scarf::
• Crocheted Items Belt)'
POMEROY From th e Edw•rds of Rutland , crochete"
nearly 140 entries in th e domes- toy and potholder; Marily(l
ti c arts department judged Sat- Deemer of Syracuse, doily t~
urday at the 137th Meigs Coun- inch or under; Dorothy Brow.,
ty Fair, nine proJects were select- of Racine. doily over 14 inches;
ed as oumanding and awarded Linda Rathburn, other ceorosettes and extra premiums.
cheted item;
_
Creativity and workmanship
• Knit items Marilyn
were. evaluated by the judges in Spencer, adult sweater;
making the "best of show"
• Afghans - Maxine Dyer,
awards in the various catego ries crocheted ripple, crocheted baby
which featured everything from afghan, and mile a minute; Betty
stitchery to shawls, from dolls to Edwards, afghan sti tch with
doilies, from clothing to ceram- embroidery;
and
Marilyn
res.
-· Ueerrier oilier afghan·
AU of th e entries wi ll be on
• Quiits - Marily~ Spencer,
display .in the senior fair building patchwork ; Dorothy Brown, waD
this week for fairgo ers to view hanging; Alice Thompson of
and enjoy.
Pomeroy. quilt made by a group.
Taking those top awards were
• Rugs - Samantha Brown of
Joanne Vaughan of Pomeroy for Racin e, in any other rug.
a dress she made in th e golden
• N eedlecraft - Kim Roush
nee dle
category;
Merril ee of Racine, smaU counted cross
Bryant of Long Bottom, a child's stitch; Kim Roush, counted cross
lay outfit; Linda Rathburn of stitch; M eli ssa Coleman, painted
Middleport, a croc heted iteni; needlecra ft; Maxine
Dyer,
Marilyn Spencer of Long Bot- embroidered pillowcase; Betty
tom, a knitted sweater and a Edwards, croc heted cushion.;
patchwork
quilt;
Marilyn Dorothy Brown, preprinted
Deemer of Syracuse, an afghan cushion, patchwork cushion, and
and a handmade ornament; Kim stuffed am mal under 12 inches
Rou sh of Racine . for co unt ed and pot holder.
cross stitch; Betty Edwards of
• Dolls - Merrile~ Bryafll,
Rutl and. a dressed doll.
cloth d oll; Betty Edwards,
Judging was based o n appea r- dressed doll.
ance, workmansl1ip, style and
• Holiday crafts - Marilyn
materials.
De emer, homemade ornaments,
Other blue ri bbo n winners in tre e skirt, holiday wall decorador~es tic arts judged by Bunny
tion : D eborah Mohler, holiday
Kuhl , Kathy Keiter. and Maxine door decoration .
Harner were as fo llows:
• Other crafts Marilyn
• C bildrc n s clothing - Mer- De t: mer. plastic ca nvas.
rilee Bryant. m dress, sleepwear,
• Cerami c - Lula Toban of ·
and playout;
Pomeroy, n on ~fired dry bru sh
• Adult clothing Carrie ce ramic pieces; M elissa ColeMorris of Rutland. in d ress;
man. multipieces.
• Golden ne edle awards • Woodworking Marilyn
Joa nne Vau ghan of Pom eroy, Deemer, und er 12 inches;
dress;
Pamela Hager of Coo lville, a
• Accessones - Mdi ssa C ole- piece over 24 inches, and wood
man of Lo ng Oottom, collar ; art.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Hutomatlc,. Spoiler,.
CD Player

ut To s14 998°0*
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cial s'uccess.
(Bryce Smith is an investment exec~
utive witlr Ad..,st lru. in its Gallipolis

office.)

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ucas and Eli Hunter, twin sons
of Dr. and Mrs. Doug Hunter of
Racine, toured the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Sunday not
only in style but real comfort.
The 2-year-olds seemed to enjoy the
action as workers erected the midway
rides. At right, a clean animal is a necessity
for showtime and here Jessica Karr washes
down her Red Angus steer. The Meigs
High School student is in FFA and this is
her third year to take part in the steer show.

1

Charlene Hoeflich photos

Bees and bears make
for Saturday festival

Today's

Sentinel
Sections- Pages

l

FROM STAFF REPORTS

OAK HILL

BANKS

Banking In Your Best Interest

500 3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
201 S. Front St., Oak Hill, 682 ~ 7733
$2 ,500 minimum d~potit for COs. APY Is accurate as of the date

of thil l1sue but It tubjert to change. Penalty for early withdrawal.

~

August 14, 1000

Rose, Rankin to rule fair

tunbav ~imes .. jentintl
(740) 446·2342

Monday

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Number 56

BY BRIIIN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

(304) 675-1333

I

Hometown Newspaper

Receives

.
..··: --------------------------------------------------------------------------in Financial Analysts' Journal by
Second, your can refer to .your
.·.
Gary Brinson, Randy Hood and trusty blueprint when times get

.·

oiiVious .•igm in
Alabama "J the dry times.
M&lt;IYe farmers are i rr(Jitlting tlreir crops rather than
'depending oi1 Mother
Nature to do tile job, Birdsong said.

fiiNII . . . . DI

training

;: : Kuhn graduated with an MA in
•:;audiology from Ohio State Uni: ~rsity and joined the staff in 1993.
: :;: Groff is an Ohio , University
::~duate with an MA in audiolOgy
-: .and joined the staff at Karr in

Tlu•re

Drought

·-~- lhree complete

facing, straightline
ripping,
export
packlg·~
ing, customized
::; ATHENS - Jane Ann Karr packaging and
:-.Aanestad, Roxanne Groff and container load::, Sa,rah Kuhn •. audiologists from mg services.
~ ;Karr Audiology and Hearing Aids
Next week's
: ) n Athens. have recently received show provides
. 'lr.lining in the Claro digital hear- opportunities
ing system at the headquarters of for the compaAanestacl
·.Phonak in Chicago. ill.
nies involved to
Claro uses a digital noise reduc- expand existing markets and build
. tion system that provides superior new. international contacts.
. • h~aring in background noise.
· : Aanestad received an MA in
·~udiology from Ohio University
.:~nd started Karr Audiology in

l'Uesd~

Hlch:tOs;totr:&amp;Ol
•

MIDDLEP O RT - Bees, bears, and music were
the attraCtio ns Sawrday at Middlep ort's second anmr al Honey Bear Festival.
Sponsored by th e Middl eport Community Association, the Riverbe nd Arcs Co uncil, the Villa~c of M id dleport and a number o f business sponsors, the fes ti \'&lt;11 highlighted the Ohi o River l.!ear Co, and mcorporated bees and hon ey tO make for a day of entertainment and comests.
Those attendm g the festival were asked to cast th eir
votes for their favorite br:1r" as entered by members
of the publi c. C hri s White won Best of Show for a
bear she displayed. Nancy Cale's bear wa.s awarded th e
cutest awa rd, Joan May. bear which traveled the fa rthest, R egina Simpson, ol dest bear. and Ralph Gibbs,
most unusual b ear.
Dennis Norris. Kimbn ly C astor and Brian C astor
received ca~ h prizes a~ winners of a spelling bee spon-

Calen!!ar
Clauifi~ds

Comics
Editorials
Obit11aries
S11orts
W~ather

AJ
BH
B5

A4
AJ

lU. 6
AJ

Lotteries
OHIO

NATIVE JUGGLER- T.J . King of Middleport enter·
tained the crowd at the Second Annual Honey
Bear Festival with a juggling act. using balls,
1
apples, pins and swords to amaze the crowd.
(Brian J. Reed photo)

Please see Festival, Pille Al

LENDER

11

Pick 3: R-7-2; Pick 4: 0-5-7-6
Super Lotto: 11 -23-2+-32-H-45
Kicker: (}.7..[)..(, 2- I

W:YA,
Daily 3: 6- Y-6 Daily 4: I~.&gt;~H~ 7

CUSHIONS GALORE - Maxine Harne r and Kathy Keiter of Albany
looked over lots of pillows to co me up with blue ribbon winners dur•
ing judging of the 140 domestic art projects entered in open judg~
ing Saturday. The judging team awarded eight "best of show"
awards in the wide range of ait exhibits. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

I

•

•

'

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