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                  <text>Eastem Eagles fall 34-11

first round of playoffs
Coverage begins on Bl

Highs: 50s Lows: 30s
Details on Pep AI

•

tmes

s1.25
(

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 5, 1000

MEIGS

Gallia
voters

Sheriffs
race one
to watch

to pick
sheriff
BY KEVIN KEUY
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

. GALLIPOLIS Out of
thre e co ntested races on the
local ballot Tuesday, attention is
'expected to focus on th e outcom e of the race for Gallia
County sheriff.
Dennis Salisbury. who's
served as chief deputy under
Sheriff James D. Taylor since
1993, is running under the
Rep~blican banner against former deputy Oave Martin, a 10·ye ar sheriff 's. offic t' veteran
app earing on the Democratic
ti cket.
Salisbury served a single
term as sh eriff from 1989 until
1993.
•
Th e other co ntested ra ces
are for th e county\ Board o f
Co n1missioners.
For the Jan . 2 term, Republican incumbent Shirley Angel
is Seeking a second term . He
fac" oppoi ition from Huntington Tow n ~ h i p Trustee and
busin essman Jess ie Collins, a
Dcmonat, and ind ependent
David M c Ke nzie, a fo rm er
G allipo lis Township truste e
and past R epubli can primary
candidate for commissio ner.
The Jan. 3 term has be en
held fo r the pasr two terms by
R epllblic an Harold Saunders,
who opted against re-e lection
this year. Vyin g for th e post are
th e G OP's Lawren ce Tawney. a
longnme Am eri tech employee,
and D emo crat Hill Dav1s. a form er Gallipolis city commisstoner.
All o th er county offi ceholders appeari ng o n the ballot are
un o pp osed.
Re ceiving . complim entary
vote s on Tuesday will be Hre nt

Elect Expariii1C8
MBGS COUNTY REPIIIIJCAN StAlE OF CANIIIAlfS

Saunders, prosec utor; Molly
Plymal e, re corde r; Nore en
Saund ers, cle rk of co urts;
Glenn Smi t h. engin eer; Steve
M cG he e, treasurer; and Dr.
Daniel H. Wbitd e}; coro ner.
All except Brent Saunde rs
are R epubli cans.

C8lllty Cenlllllllll. .l

)(

JOHN FISHER

)(

JIM SHEETS

42 years with Ohio Valley Electric Corporatio~ - 20 years as plant office supetvisor, 2 years as purchasing agent, 3 years as
foreman. 20 years as president of Kyger Creek Credit Union. Generous contributor to local organizations.
Local businessman and former Ohio State Highway Patrolman. 24 years of law enforcement, 4 years of military, 10 years
successfully self employed . Proven skills in management, supetvision, budgets, grant proposals, communications and record keeping .

Please see Gallla, Page A&amp;

Vol. JS, No. l7

BY BRIAN J. REED
TIM ES-S ENTIN EL STAFF

POM EROY - A full slate of local candidates ,
co mbined with th e presidential el ection. w ill 'make .
fo r a closcly-\vatched and cxc inn g El ectio n Day in
Mei!l.' County. , ·
Voters will also determine the fa te of a countywide levy pro posal fo r th e M eigs C ounty Board of
M,·ntal R etardati on and Devel opmental D isabilitie... , a tax levy renewal in the So uth ern Local

i
NEW SCHOOL -"(his photo taken from the roof of Southern · structure under construction. Installation of the roof and win-

High School, capturing only a small portion of the. new elementary building, emphasizes the enormous size of the

.

dows is expected to be completed by Thanksgiving. (Tony M.
!-each .p~otosl '

Good weath~r-·speeds project
Massive Southern
school will be ready
for next year
BY TONY

M. LEACH

TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

RAC INE - "We've been getting
numerous ph o ne calls fro-m individu als
around th e county commentin g o n j ust
how huge this structure actually is."
The structure th at Southern Local
Superintendent Jam es Lawrence was
referring to is the new Southern Local
Elementary Schoo l now und er con struction next to th e high school in INTERIOR CONSTRUCTION - The view
R acine.
'
,from inside the first floor hall of the new ·
T he $9.8 million K-8 elementary elementary school currently under con·
sc hool, expected to be completed ne xt struction in Racine. The school wil l
.M ay and full y o perational at the be gin- · house more tha~ 20 cla ssrooms, gymning of the 2001-02 sc hool year, has nasium, library, and several laborato·
b e ~n continuing o n schedul e and is ries. (Tony M. lepch photo)
starting to loo k more like a shoppin g
attention o n th e e:xt~ri or work that
mall than a sc hool.
Lawrence said the sch ool's rapid pace needs to bl: done to th C' building," h e
of co nstruc ti o n can be attri buted 'to ~a id .
1
"We antic ipate th ar chc structu re w ill
good weather.
"The te rrific weathe r has allowed be under roof with all windows in pl ace
the workers to focus most of their by th e Th ank sgivin g ho lida y, w hi ch is

ac tualh- rhn.·c- WL-ek:-.' l'arlier thar1
cxpl'L"t t:,l,'' addt·d L;t wrenc~·.
Th e new clemcnrary school will
re pl ace the o ld j unior hi~h sc hool 111
R acint". a~ well a !'J dem~ ntary o;c hoolli
located in Lda rt. Portl .m d an d Syr;Ku&lt;:.e.
Lawrl'nn· l..,1i d thl' f. tte of the cxi.., ting
school buil d ing' art• 't ill being dec ided
by th e· sc hoo l bo,Jrd, and that ,l 'olutton
\-viii he prese nted ~on H. tim~· in th~.;· th.'Jr
tU tun:.
T hl' elc m,cntary ~clwol will be an

Scho ol Di11trl ct, and a numb t: r of od1er tow nship
and village issu e~.
Candidates ·
Two four-way races. ,one for a seat on the Meigs
Co un ty Board of County ComnUssioners and
ano tht·r fo r M.t·ib~(Js h eriff, h ave drawn th e mo~ t
ancntiun from th ~ local clecwrate.
Inc umbent Jdf -Th o rntbn, a Democrat. is challe nged in the race for the term commencing j an. 2,
2001 by R epublica n J ohn Fisher, and indepe ndent&lt; .
C harles H. Knight of C hester and Clarence E.
Evans of Dexter.
In t he race fo r sher ifl~ two wti te-in cand idates,
James M . Soulsby. the incu mbent, and R obert E.
!Jeq;kjoin D emocrat Jeffrey Mille r and Republi c m R alph Tru ssell on the baUot .

Please see Meigs. Page Al

Funding to help
clean up ;river -

80, 0 00 '~l)UJ rt' fuot,'gyu -~ rory .,tr ucttirt'

th at wil l ho use 111orc tll.1n ~() &lt;..:I.l.,Sroo ms, a gymnalil lll11, a. li b r~t r y and ~L·v­
eral labo rato ri es.
Th e new school is fu mk d thro ugh
th e O hio l'"Jepartm c1H of Educ:1tio n \
Building l3u ilding A~..,ist~l lll't' Progra111,
m atched locally by S.J,IJ.J2,111111 ti·01n a
23-year, $5.3Y nnlhon bond/levy im~e· d
approved in May 11!'!H.
Constru ctio n on th e lll'W dc me n rary
&lt;:.ch o ol is bein g pafun ncd by ,t n urnht'r
of co ntractors fl·o111 rh t.· tri-~t ,t t L' an·a.
Meanwh ile. llL'W .H.Iditions and f L' II Ovati ons to Sou thern H igh Sc hool,
including a n L'\'-.' llll' di:-~ ce nter. eom puter laboratory .md ~cicncc t'b~~room ~, is

H U N ll N G T O N, W.Va. (AI') - Cong ress has
.tpprovcd a $3117 mil1i o n plan by the U.S. Army
Corps of Engi neer\ to resto re th e O hio R ive r\
L"rmy~tc m to what ir Wa'i befo re 100 years of dam
buil di n~ and land m e _
J estroyed the habitats of

Please see Southern, Pace A6

Please see River, Page Al

~omc ;.~.qua o r

&lt;ii pecics.
l'hc fu nding was in cluded in a watn resoun.:c..·s

br ll ,tpproved by th e U.S. House of R epresentatives 0 11 Fr iJ:1y. T ht' m eao; urc, \vhich now goe.;; to
Prt•'~ i t.k lll C limun fur hi~ .,ignatu re, ;-llso a uthorizcs thL· corps' Hll nti nt-,rton District ro wo rk with
the IVI:mh.tl l Umversity Ce nter for Enviromn ental. Gc·ot,·,·hnical :llld Applied Sciences to develop
n.l'W tedwo l ogi t·~ for l' lw iro!"llnental clea nu p.
]);tm~ hu ilt hy t h L· t:o r p~ ovtT th e past t:t"ntu ry
to prD\·idL: in dmtrlt:''&gt; w ith J continuo u ~ supply o(

CODity Praalatlr

)(

PAT STORY

Sixth generation Meigs Countian . Married 25 years to Liz Story, teacher at Middleport Elementary. Two Children, lan 17 and Emily
15. BA and MBA from Ohio State University. Law degree from Capital University lavl School, graduating Gtt. out of 184, Nine years successful criminal
and civil trial experience.

eutyRD"dll
)( JUDY KING

Libertarian adds bite
to Ohio Senate debate

•Currently setving as your Meigs County Recorder. Chief Deputy Recorder for 18 years. Wife o"f Jean Paul King and mother of Kevin

BY JOHN AFFLECK
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

and Kristen.

CDI!IIfY , , . •
)(

HOWARD FRANK

County Treasurer for the 'past 10 years .

Experie~ced as County Auditor a~d County Sheriff.
\

Deputy Sheriff for .15 years, resigning in 1999 with rank of leutinent. Has held a valid Ohio Police Officer Training
Association Certificale ofT raining for 15 years. Life long resident of Meigs County and former Kaiser Aluminum supetvisor.

CGIIIty Clll'k If Clrtl

X

MARLENE HARRISON

Currently setving ·as your Meigs County Clerk of Courts. 25 years of experience working in the Clerk of Courts office.
Wife of Dale Harrison, retired Meigs High School teacher.

..

C lyE) IF
EUGENE TRIPLETT

X

Licensed Professional Engineer and Sutveyor. Gr(lduate of Pomeroy High School and Ohio University. 7 years with Ohio
Department of Transportation, 10 years with Crown City Mining and 12 years Triplett Engineering Services.

lilldJCII

X

DOUGW HUNTER, MD

Good Morning!

levy to finance ·expanded· EMS

Celeste said he is a candidate
w ho su pports aborti o n rights
whn woulJ be stru ng on wo men's

C LEVEL AND A min or
party cand idate pur &lt;om e bite issUes and camp aign fin ance
ih to a bland U .S. Senate debare relor m . He acc used De Wine of ·
'
Friday. nlling the two maJOr par" voting ·for th e in terests of his
ti es by one nam e - the R cpubl- ca mp aign contributo rs.
icrats - becau se th t' ir poli Cies are
De W ine said he's proud of his
so similar.
'anti-abortio n sta nce and cou nAs camp aign 20\111 headed into tered Celeste's statemems by sayits fina l wee kend, firefi ghte rs also ing th ~ Democrat h :~d been disstumped for AI Gore, th e govcr- torting hi~ rt'Cord for 1'10 11th&lt;:..
i10r pushed for a local schoo l levy
M ost of the ti me. however, the
an d th e O hio Electiom C ommi s- incum ben t trie d to ignore
sio n fi elded anoth er co mpla int Ccl,•ste. He chose instead to list
about i he state Suprem e Court accumphs hme nts from his first
r ace.
wrm 1~ o ffi ce, and draw 'attention
O utspent by R epubli can U.S. to th; possibility he could move
Sen. Mike De Wine and trailir1g in onto the powerfu l Senate Approthe polh, D cmocratrc chall enger pnatio ns Commi ttee if re-electTed Celc&lt;te tned to use ·a t~le­ ed.
viseJ debate .lt Clevela nd's C ity
But neither maJo r party can diCl ub· fon1111 to drJ.w distinctions datt" created the audie nce reaction
bl·twccn h i m~el f and th e incmu' Please see Ohio, Page Al
bcnt.

POINT PLEASANT

•• •

BY MICHELE CARTER
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

C~mlcs

Dl·7

Insert

Edltorlal1
MonQ:
Obituaries

A4
Dl
A6

S~rts

Bl-10

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Ttmeo
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2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
I

M""''·'

POINT P LEASANT. W.V;t. - When
County voter.;; hl·ad tn thL' pulls on TuL'&lt;:.lLty, not nnly
will th&lt;.:y be Lkcidlllg on cmd~&gt;...l.ttL'~ to kaJ the

A Po int Pleasant man is
stuck on political badges.
See Tempo, C1

'lesslfleds

.111 .tmhubnct· 'ILTVin.' ofn)luntL't'r~.

n.Hion, ·~t.ltL' .md lotll lly. thl'Y will also hl· dt..'L'ldmg
on what kind of ;~mhul.ilh.T ~r:rvic~ thl.'y \\·am.
"Thi.. i~ nut .1 L.t\ que .. tll)n." o.;,ud M.ltt Mm~r.WL'.
chrcctor of rhc M:t'&gt;on l:olllltv ArnhuLmL'L' Authonry. ".I his 1" a quc~nnn of ,lv:n.b hiliry tn m.1h· a di(tlTL'IlCc in . . o ntr..·onc\ hfl':·
, T he AmbuLmn.: Autlwnry "' .1s!...tng \'Otl'f" to
support a thrct:-YL\lr .unhlll.mc-.· kvy \\'lth a yc.•Jrly
revenue of $5 I fl.llllli ..
A breakdown of the $5!11.01\llrnducb $360.01111
for llt'W stafling. which will includt: piKing a p.lr.lm ec;iic in L':tch l'nd ofthl' Count'), :1ml wi\! .. t.1fT;1 llC\\
scation on U.S. 35; $6ti,OOO will rl'plalL' .u1 .nnlm
Janet.: a year: $51,fl()fl \\'t il Lll!'JC ., ,lbnt'" of L'XJ\ting
personnel to he commcmur,ltt' \Vith kwh ol~ '&gt;llrmundmg coun"rie.;: S2'J.IIOil f~) I!H.TC,l"L' h(·ndlb "tll"h
a' health ;l!1d ro .uid rctlrCilh.'nt : .u11..l f.J(),{l(]( ) t•l purchase ll t'\V L'quip nwnt.
Accnrdin~ In Mmg-r.l\L'. when tht' nn111r~ 'IUrt(!'d

p,lrt ti-Uln

'~l'l'd

c.m1e 111

\t.m.· &lt;11H.I county.
Now. lngh(•r rr.llllmg rcqulrt'liH!nt-.. and orher
obligauon' ll ;lVC ltnmcd the numbc..:r of pt'oplc wah
tnf1e to ,·ol\lllt'-'t'r With the ~unhllLIIlCl' ~nvil·e. This
dcnl' .l~t·d numbt:r of \'Olunt\.:'cn. have f01n.:d the ~cr­
' 'ice to hl'p;lll p.ry ing nwmht'r"'. Muo;~ra\e .,,lid.
'' I~.Jghr nnw, thl'rt' ,1rc Jrl'.l'~ of M,l.,oll County
\VhtLh do not h. t\'L' :::!4-hour panmn.· dic protection,''

·
\Vnh p.uJm~o·dtL&lt;:. :md Enll"'rgL·ncy Mt·dic.ll Tl'chni~' i;l!l\ (EMT..,) in surroundmg cmmtics maki ng $5
or mor~.· dolbr" ,1\l hour over the rates paid he re1
Mu .. ~r.l\"c ...1id it i" very tough to keep employees.
lie ,lC],Jed that ~e·vera l of the 24 employees of the
.lllthority nnw \ray hl'rt' bt'C.IllliL' the~ have fanU iy
.md til''~ to here.
Musgr&lt;~.Vl' 'l.lldH i.; also ;.:cr~ lurd ro recruit parallll'dh I .llld r~ M 1\ at the p.l\" rate·. Thll year is the Ia;t
n'.H nf .1 \tllc-ye.lr p.ir.mH:dtl.' program . lleginni ng
lll'\ t H ',l r , .1 two ~L'&lt;ll" ,p,.,nn.ttl' progrJm \\'ill begin.
"lt i..., g:omg to ht• h.ml to try and n·_cruit empl oyL'L'' "Hh th~o• w.J~l'' &lt;)trcrl'd nmv." Musgrave sa id.
Mmgr.l\"l'

..,,1id.

Appointed Coroner in 1990. Local physician specializing in family medicine.

,,

funchng

Jlloncy from the tl_.&gt;dn&lt;tl govt'rnmenr.

._,

�•

P-sll A2 • 6an'Dap 11:iii!H -6entintl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

VALLEY
BRIEFS
.
'

replace Eriunogene Hamilton,
who retired from office, will face
A. Tom Lowery, a Democrat.
Treasurer Howard Frank, a
fNm
A1
Republinn, is challenged by
Democrat Soulsby and Republi- Democrat Ron P. Casci, and Proscan Beegle were both disquali6ed ecutor John Lentes, a Democrat, is
from the Man:h primary because challenged by Republican Pat
of qualifications issues, afierTrussell "tory.
In the race for Counry Court
challenged their petitions of candijudge,
the incumbent, Patrick H.
dacy.
Soulsby and Beegle sought the O'Brien, faces competition from
necessary training, and were veri- Steven L Story. The judge's post is
fied by the board of elections as a non-partisan office.
Common Pie~ Judge Fred W.
write-in candidates in late sumCrow Ill is unopposed in the non'
met.
In the race for the conmlissioner partisan election for that office.
term conunencing Jan. 3, 2001, Also unopposed are Coroner
Janet Howard, the Democratic Douglas Hunter and Engineer
incumbent, is challenged by candidate Eugene Triplett, who
defeated Engineer Robert Eason
Republican Jim Sheel!i.
·
For the first time in nearly 30 in the March primary. Both
years, Meigo County will elect a Hunter' and Triplett are Republicans.
new clerk of courts.
In other races, U.S. Rep. Ted
Marlene Harrison, a RepubliStrickland,
D-Lucasville, is chalcan, who was appointed to the
office earlier this year upon the lenged by Republican Mike
retirell)ent of Larry E. Spencer, Azinger of Marietta.
Voters will also choose between
seeks election to the office. She is
U.S. Sen. Mike
Republican
challenged by Democrat Betsy
DeWine and Democrat Ted
·Herald Nicodemus.
Celeste.
State Rep. John Carey, RMeig; will also deer a counry
recorder. Republican Judy King, Wellston, is unopposed in his final
who was appointed in 1999 to bid for the 94th District seat in the

Meigs

Veterans Day proa•••

Pap

GALLIPOLIS - Final preparations have been made for this year's
Veterans Day activities in Gallipolis by the Gallia County Veterans Service Conunission.
Activities will begin with a parade starting at Second Avenue and
Spruce Street at 10:30 a.m. The parade will proceed down Second to
Court Street, and lefi to First Avenue, where the par.~de will disperse.
A ceremony will follow at the Doughboy Monument in the park at
II a.m. Guest speaker will be Korean War veteran Robert Fleshnun.
Any individuals or groups wanting to participate in the parade
should contact the Vetetans Servic~ Office at ·446-2005.

Clinic slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Health Department has
received a partial shipment of influenza vaccine, and has scheduled a
special flu clinic for Monday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-5:30 p.m.
The clinic will be held at the health deparm1ent offices in Suite D
of the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The flu vaccine will also be available at the health deparm1ent on
Tuesday from 8-11 :30 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. For more information,
contact the health department at 441-2950.

Rides available
GALLiPOLIS -Voters needing a ride to the polls on Tuesday can
get transportation by contacting Gallia Counl)' Republican headquarte" at 446-7552, Counry Chairman Roger Watson announced.

Ohio House of Representatives. that the levy would be used for
Term limits prohibit Carey' from what is conunonly known as "d.Jt·
.
seeking a fifth consecutive term in conttQI" on township q,ads.
o
Middlepoh
Village,
renewal
Of
office.
Although it has traditionally one mill for current expenses for
been considered a Republican five years, for operating expenses,
: ·:
&gt;tronghold, Meigo helped elect specifically for street lights.
Rutland
Township,
renewal
o£
•
•
President Bill Clinton in both
one mill f~r fire protection for five
1992 and 1996.
years.
•
Issues
• Rutland Townsh1p, renewal of·
The Meigo County Board of
MR/DD seeks approval of an one mill for fire protection for five ,
additional 1.6-rnill permanent levy years.
• Lebanon Township, renewal of •
for operating expenses and capital
improvements. The levy is making one mill for maintaining and oper~ :
its sixth appearance on Meigs ating cemeteries for five years. · ·•
• Salem Township. renewal of
County ballots, and, if passed,
one
mill for five years for fire prowould generate an additional
$384,589 for the Carleton School tecnon.
• Pomeroy Village, renewal of .
and Meigo Industries.
The Southern Local School Dis- two mills for fire protection for five ·
trict proposes the renewal of a years.
• Pomeroy Village, renewal of
four~mill. three-year levy for operone
mill for current expenses for
ating expenses.
Voters in Racine Village will five years.
• Alexander Local School Disvote on a carryout beer option.
tri~t, 4.56 mill bond issue, one half
Other local issues include:
mill
levy issue, for 23 years.
• Alexander Local School District, a 4.56-mill bond issue, and a
• Racine Village, replacement &lt;:&gt;f
half-mill tax levy, both for 23 years. three mills for current' eKpenses f&lt;?I
• Olive Township, additional one five yea".
mi~, prevention, control, and
• Syracuse Village, replaceme!ll .
abatement of air pollution for three of one mill for fire protection for •
years. Clerk Martha Durst reported five years.

Date change
GALLIPOLIS -Arbors of Gallipolis announced that the chili fest
11 's sponsoring at the Gallia County Senior ~esource Center has been
postponed until Nov. 9.
Tlie event is a fund-raiser, with all proceeds donated to the senior
center's Meals on Wheels and congregate meals programs.
The menu includes hot dogs, chili, cornbread, cottage cheese on lettuce, assorted homemade pies an'd beverages. The cost. is S4 per person, with serving in the center's dining room fiom 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Individual. items can be ordered from the menu, and carryout service \viii be available.
·

Board to meet

Board releases list

of Gallia County polling places

Hall.
Huntington Township - American
Legion Hall at Ewington Academy.
· Morgan Township - Morgan Townhouse.
Ohio Township - Ohio Townhouse..
Perry Tovmship - Perry Townhouse.
Raccoon Township - Rio Grande Ele-

Gallipolis 1 - St. Petar's Episcopal
Church.
Gallipolis 2 - Grace United Methodist

mentary School.
Rio Grande Preeinet - Rio Grande
Elementary School.
Centerville Precinct - Old Centerville
Elementary School.
Springfield 1 - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Springfield 2- Rodney Pike Church of

God.
Springfield 3 - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Bidwell Precinct - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Walnut Township - Cadmus Community Center.

Church.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande Board of Public Affairs' regular
monthly meeting Jill be Monday at 7 p.m. in the ·Rio Gr.~nde
Municipal Building.

Meets Monday
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande Planning Board meers Monday- at
4:30 p.m. in the Rio Grande Municipal Building.

Seminar slated
GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Valley Bank will hold a free public smoking
c.essation seminar on Nov. 16 at 6 p.m. in the bank's annex at 143Third
Ave., Gallipolis.
Dr. Arnold Sattler will present information and facts on the smoker
as \vell as the person who lives with a smoker.

Assembly Nov. 10

Gallipolis 3 - First Church of the
Nazarene.
GaUipolis 4 - First Church of the
Nazarene.
Gallipolis 5 - Water Treatment Plant
Gallipolis Township - Gallla County
Senior Resource Center.
Kanauga Precinct - DAV/AMVCTS
Building.
Addison Township - Addaville Ele·
mentary School.
Addison Precinct - Addaville Elementary School.
Cheshire Township - Cheshire Townhouse in Kyger.
Cheshire Precinct - Cheshire Un~ed
Methodist Church.
Clay Township - Head Start (former
Clay Elementary Scllool).
Clay Precinct - Head S1art ~ormer
Clay Elementary School).
Guyan Township - Guyan Townhouse.
Guyan Precinct - Crown City Village
Hell.
Green 1 - Rodney Community Build-

RE-ELECT

PATRICK H. "PAT" O'BRIEN
COUNTY COURT JUDGE
*

*
*
*

Green 2- C. H. McKenzie Agrlcu~ural
Center.
Green 3 - Rodney Community Build-

*

Ing.

Green 4 - Gallipolis Chril11an Church.
Grttn 5- Grttn Elementary School.
Green 6 - Grttn Elementary School.
Greenfield Townehlp - Greenfield Volum.tr Flrt Dtl*l"'tnt, Gallla.
Hal'rlaon TQwnlhlp - Harrlaon Townhoutt.
Huntington Prtelnol - Vinton VMIIQI

*

by the Ohio Supreme Court in every }!ear that the award
.was given.
MEMBER of the Ohio Judicial College.
FIRST Meigs County Court Judge to establish a
probation and community corrections department from
state grants at no cost to the county.
TOUGH but consistent on criminal and civil decisions.
COLLECTED and deposited with the Meigs County
Auditor over $118,000.00 earmarked for new jail
construction and/or renovation.
ESTABUSHED a County wide Community Service Work
Program.
APPOINTED by Chief Justice Moyer of the Ohio
Supreme Court to aerve aa vi1itlngjudge in the counties
of Lawrence, Gallia, Morgan and Fayette.

8/«e
Bill

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County EMS l«:&gt;gged 328 runs during
October, con,•isting of 203 ba.,ic life support runs and 125 advanced
,
hfe support qlk
' There were 199 errierg&lt;1icy calls, 14 cancellations and 112 refusals,
according to the EMS.
The breakdown by township included Addison, 13 runs; Cheshire,
five ; Clay, five; Galhpolis, 127; Green, 31; Greenfield, six; Guyan, 11;
Harmon, eight: Huntington, 16;
Morgan. 10; Ohio, 12; Peri-y, five;
ltaccoon, 30; Springfield, 42; and
Walnut, three. There were four runs
in the "other" category.

'

David·

Martin

Davis

for

GaUia County
Commissioner

Gallia County
· Sheriff

Retired from GDC after 30 Years.
EXPERIENCED· 7 Years as a City

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories is to be
accuralr. If )OU know or an trror In a
story, call lbr nrwsroom a1 (740) 446·
2342 or Pomeroy: (T40l 992-2155. We will
check ) 'OUr Information and make a
rorrectlon if warranted .

Departments
Galli polio
oumber Is 446-2342.

NIWI

The main
Depanment utentlons a~:
Managing Edltor ........................ Ext. 118
City Editor............................:..... Ext. lll

Uleslyle .......................................Ext. t20
122

Sporn .......................................... Ext.

rr.ews ................... ............... .......... Ext. I19

To Sfnd E-Mail
galtribunr-@' eurekanet.com

News Department
Pomeroy
I he main numher is 9Y 2·Z l 5e.
Dl'p3M ntr nl e'densiono; art':
Gt nerul Managrr ..................... Ext . 1101
'Jew! .......................................... Ext. 1102 ·

............................................ .... or Ext

It06

.

En ttr ~ d

Commissioner worked with all
government entities. on a
bipartisan level.

(liSPS 113·l60t

Comm ... llJ Ntwlp.ptr Hoi4J. ., IrK:.
Published ever y Sund•y. 825 fhird Ave .,
Gtllipolis, Ohio. by the Ohio Vlllcy Publishlna
Com p~t~ y s~cond elm poiiiJC paid II Galhpoli1,
Ohio.

Will work to expand youth
programs •.

Ponxro y. Ohto POll office.

Newspaper Associati on.

POSTMASTER: Send 1ddress ooutc~ions to The
Sunday·Timu Sentinel , 825 Th i rd Ave.,

Gall iPolis,Dt11o 4~611 .

SUNDAY ONLY

Will listen to,your eoneerns and
respond in a timely manner

SUBSCRJmON RATES
By C•rrkr or Motor ReNte

.... ~1.~

OM Week....

OntYear ...

S'INGliCiJ'P\i.PRiCi ...... S6s.oo

. ~~~~l~y~·i~~'h)'"~·.·i·i·j;;;·ii·i~~i"i~-~~-,~-!~~~
home urrler ~ervice is available.
The Sunday TJrnu-Stntinel will noc be responsible

for 1dvtnct pa~ments made to carrten.
Pub lish~r rtKrves the riaht tO adjull rates durina
t h~ subscti pl lan period . Subsc:rtp! ion rate ehanan
mt y be implemented by chanainl tilt durat ion of
the sub!ICf!pi!On
Daily ud S•ltday
~WL

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside Gallla Cot~•ty

.. 1 27.30

::'6 Wedi.\
SSl82
"'2 Weeks
.
.SJOS..56
' lUtes Ouuldt G alli&amp; Counly
13 We e k~
.. S29. 2.~

26 W c~k.s

s-z Weeki...

S.56.68

. .......·....... St09.n

I am eoneerned about litter
eontrol.
Put progressive experienee
to work for you
Elect Bill Da,vis your County
Commissioner November 7th.

1"

opment, the counry's budget and
the county Jail, Story said, arc the
county's three greate~t priorities
and those issues are interrelated.
''Me1gs County has high rates
of unemployment and poverry
due to its isolation and lack of
development. It has ever expanding demands on the courts and
the county budget, with a previously stagnant, perhap&gt; shrinking

served ,on the Chamber of Comnlcrce Board of Directors for six
yeJr&gt; and I am completing my
second year as pres(dent."
" I believe economic development and jobs will have a twofold effect on the problems of ihe
budget and county j ail," Story

economic base."

o.; ;ud .

"For the past 10 years, I haw
been actively involved with the

straints whi c h exist in the:: county."
The isSues of t'Conomic devd•

1.,p.lCC .

will be rcduct'd due to the com -

practices

law

In

Pomeroy with his father, Jim
O'Brien, and has served as Judge
of the County Court since ! 980.
He is a 1970 graduate of Meigs
High School and a 1974 graduate
of Ohio Wesleyan University. He
graduated from the Ohio North-

Crow runs
unopposed

Crow

POMEROY
- Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill
did not respond
to The Daily
Sentinel's questionnaire.
He
lS
un opposed m
his bid for reelection
·as
Common

Pleas

Court judge.

ern Umvns1ty
Law Schoo! in
I 977.

"My

goals
are to contmuL·
ro provide service to Meigs
County
as
judge," O'Bnen
said, "and to
O'Brien
treat people with
faimess, clignity
and respect, to be tough but con-

free ."

O'Brien '"id that his 20 'ye.m
o( cxpcriL"'Kl' on the bcnrh qu nl
ifics him for n:-dcction, ;:md slid
that the housing of pri&lt;;oners, cniIL·ctioll uf unl_hlid fin~: s and court
cost~

and mJbng the conmmmty
";1fcr are h1s prmnt1es.
'' I h:1\-\: collL'dt::J Jnd dcpo~Jt-

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
Bob Taft is betting that Ohioans
will embrace his idea to clean
up polluted plant sites for redevelopment and set aside farmland and other green space for
parks, bike paths and other
recreation.

It's a deal that will spruce up
his image as an environmentali st
as \vel!.
With images of sparklin g
streams, lu sh parks :t.nd new
construction where abandoned
buildings once stood, the mt:dia
campaign promises a beautiful
voter~

:~pprove

state

" It's h.ud to understand why
anyont' would oppos~..· it," Taft.
said afte_r J recl!nt rally .1t a local

park.
A few groups - including
· the Sierra Club ai1d Oh10 Citizei1 Action luve lined up
ag,nnst the S41JO million bond
issue on Tuesday's ballot. In
· :1ddition, some conservJtives are
wOrned &lt;1bout communities
givmg up comrnl ro the state

and about the pncc tag. An
analysis by the nonparti~an Legislative Budget Office found the
interest p,1id over the life of the
'bonds could reach $100 nulliun.
Support has come from an
unlikely coalition of manufacturers, envir'onmcntal groups ~
the farming industry and o•
majority of Ohio's legislators.
The issue has allowed Taft, a
Jl..cpublican midway through-his
f1&gt;ur-ycar term, to keep his face
before vott:r~ - at r~llies and q n

$600,000 worth of tdevi~ion
ads.
"I am delighted that pohtl -

ch &lt;mgcd to ,dlow
J n · exp.mding

to run

Loun t i L'!:&gt;

th e ir own j :uk If l'iL'CtL•d , l would

of the Ohio Environmental
co·uncil, which backs Issue I.
" It's good policy Jnd tt's good
politiCS."
Taft in:"~lStS thnc is political
risk bL' C:lUSL' it is :1 prionty nfht~
ad111inistr,1tiL)ll .
· "WL' are not do111 g L'llough
right nnw to ck.m up tht.· .lh.ln doh eJ ltH.iustri.tl ~lli.'" · Wt.· h ,J \ 'i.'
~ome g llt.)l..i proje ct s, bur we ,t l ~ n
. havL' rhou!-..111d~ ul ,tb.mdon cd

( ~ oumy\

Ma~garet

tht•

lllOilL')'

to

.Ht"LI U

lllOI'L'

from other !-.Duree ~. ;..ur h ~1s locll
and fcdL'r;tl gr.11lts .
"WL' would like to do lllOI"L'
than thJt, hut th ;l t\ wlut \\" L' c:tn

atlord within thL" lumLltlOil'i of
stJte rl'vcnucs. Thi s not .l tax
irt(TL',hL' ,"l~tft \,tid .

j:1il arc.! inmH.:Ji:ttdy incarcerJ tt:d
and don't

h tl\'C

to

\VJJt

un J.lil

space."

ELECT

DENNIS R. SALISBURY
FOR
GALLIA COUNTY

SHERIFF

Rev. Wm. Middleswarlh 949-3047
June Ashley 949-4000

·Elect
~--

SHIRLEY ANGEL

'

for.
~

\

pb nning .....1id tilL' "
Ckvcl.HJd .HL'.l .tlnnc Ius .thout

USC

Jll

ind1\·idu3b thaL delie-rve rn be m

Parker 992-2264

ronmL'llt.ll

the S201 ) uulilllll set ,J&gt;ide to
n.:d~:velop the ~it L' &lt;; Ldl ~ (;Jr ... hon
of ;1 total ckanup. T;~ft's go.tl1~ to

~n

EXTENDED:

nun .tgL'r of l'll\"1 ...:

1 fmm :tb.Jn 14 ' ()()() '&gt;HL' " T.uwin~
~
t't
doncd dry -c h: .tnin g -., rorL'" . tn
former ~ted 111ilk
E,·cn ~ upportcr" .Jg rcl' tl1Jt

a bt·ttn j .ul facili ty

IIL' L'lh

Meigs Co. History
Book, Vol. Ill
Deadline

site s where thL·rL' .trL·n't rhL'
n: sourn~!-. to tllfll them .tround."
Ju~t ho\\" l!LlllY ;..Jtl'-.,. Ito l111L'
know~ . VIrgini.J An:- 111, Cuy.t -

hog,t

tlu t my court

\\"ho would be cligtblc for communitv '&gt;LT\' JL L" .a ~ .111 .tltL'rnaovc to
pil,'' O'Bncn said.

Write:
Meigs Co. History Book, Ill
P. 0. Box 145
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Or Call:

environment,"' said Jack Shaner.,

t~ c l

lllllllJty ~crvil· c..· progr.1m for those:

delighted we're not hearing the
tired, old, · hollow rhetoric of,
'Take · your pick, Jobs or the

November 7 is set aside to participate in the greatest privilege we haw in this country and that is the
right to vote. Please take time to vote. Please vote YES for the Gallipolis Fire Levy.

Paid for by Supporters of Gallipolis Fire Levy
Bob Poling, Treasurer

.. A~, J lH..lg~ . I

l111Iid ,J Jail."
'·It is importJnt to maint:11n a
pmdunJ\'L' probJtion .md com-

JAN. 12, 2001

Ir'you have any questions, please s1op in the Fire Department or call 446-9533.

TO PROTECT AND SERVE

wdl con tinue t.o grow u11JCr my
tcnurl' .l"'judgc,tJnri l soon we t.:an

'

Gallia County
Commissioner

Shirley Angel is seeking a second term as Gallia County commissioner. Angel resicj~s on a farm at 2126
Hazel Ridge Road, Crown City, Ohio in Clay Township and is a lifelong resident of Gall1a County._ He marned
Lin Angel and has 3 grown children; Tammy (Kenny) Barcus, Larry Angel and T1mmy AngeL He IS a Veteran
of the United States Marine Corp. Angel was first' elected as a County CommiSSioner 111 1997. He worked for
Gallia Cou·nty Rural Water Association from 1961 thru 1996 and retired in the position of District Supervisor.
Prior to this from 1976 thru 1981 he worked for an Excava1ing Business and from 1967 thru 1976 worked_ at
the Goodyear plant. Angel serves on the Issue 2. District Integrating Comm1ttee and the Galha·Me1gs
Community Action Agency board. Presently, he is. the Vice-president of the commiSSIOn and feels the
following are the positive accomplishments the commiSSIOn has seen 1n h1s tenure and h1s goals. for the future
of Gallia County include:
.
.
• Construction of new Gallia County Service Center- housing the Galli a County Health Dept, Galha County
Clerk of Courts Title Office, L1cense Bureau, Driver's Examination and GJM Tasc Off1ce
• Fully supporting the Gallia County Senior Citizens Center and 1t's operations
• worked with the Gallia County Chamber of r;ommerce, CIC and the City of Gallipolis to bring lnfocision
Telemarketing 250 jobs to Gallia County.
• Implementation of 9-1·1 System
.
.
• IndUstrial Park Project- $2.2 Million Project
• workshops for TownshipsNillages to receive Capital Improvement Grants- S1nce 1997 Grants total
' $2,658,758
'
.
'
'
.
• Purchasing of 4 new Sheriff Cruisers in 1997, another 4 1n 1998 and 41~ . 1999
• Worked to resolve flooding issues throughout Gallia County
.
.
• Working with Gallia County Agricultural Society and Fair Board lor Improvement to the Fa1r Grounds and for
relocation of the fair Grounds out of the flood Plain
• Emergency management Agency for Gallia County . .
..
• Porter/Bidwell Sewer Project- Grants/Loans Exceed1ng $5.4 million
• 56% 1ncrease in Veterans Service Budget Appropriations since 1997
• Stockyard Facility for Galli a County
.
.
..
• Grants for county, Townships, Vil lages and the_c1ty smce 1997 1otal1ng $6 .8 milliOn.
.
"I feel the residents of Gallia County have much to look forward to m the areas of Econom1 c Development,
Emergency Serv 1ces, and Public Infrastructure Development and _the county as a whole has a bright future _I
am confident that the programs and efforts we have mstJtuted dunng my_tenure as County CommiSSioner Will
provide many needed services to the people of Gallia County. I have made every effort to make essential
upgrades for the health and safety of the_residents of Gallia County. I have been Instrum ental m the
purchasing of 12 new cruisers for the Sheriff's Dept. and 4 new ambulances for EMS. 1_have bee~ support1ve
of the senior 'citizens Center and their programs bring1ng over 200 meals dally to s en~o rs of Galha County I
have also fully supported the Gall ia County Agricultural Soc1ety and Falf Board and th elf plans to better the
Gallia County Junior Fair Grounds 1am committed lo continue to be available for each and _every res1dent as
a full -time county commiss 1oner. As a former United Stales Manne. I am very concerned w1t~ the needs of the
Veterans of Gallia county, and pledge to continue my support to them. I have also made the grant programs
th~t are managed through the County -Commissioners Office user friendl_y for the TownshipS, V1 llages, C11y
and County. During my tenure as Commiss1oner more than $2.6 m11110n 1n CDBG an d Issue 2 grants have
been received by various townships , Villages and the C1ty of Gall1pol1s The Coun ty has al so been the
recipient of over !lit .3 million in CDBG Emergency Shelter and Housmg Rehab grants lor l ow-1 n c~me persons
du ri ng my t?nure. My main concern IS bringing Gal li a County 1ntothe 21st centu ry on a progress1ve note and
cont1nuing to h ~lp those that are less fortunate and unable to help themselves."
Paid for by Shirley Angel , 2t26 Hazel R1dge Rd , Crown City, Ohio

•

I'

(
I

November 7. 2000

\

•

L'C O~

cians have figured out the enviromnent is a winner. We are

You are now under a one (I) mill fire levy. If the levy passes in November, the currenllevy will
terminate January I, 200 I.

Paid for by tiHI C11lldldatc, BW D..,l.. 419 FOI&gt;rtb~1C111111,0aUipolis, OH 4S631.

beyond the mean ~ of the county
thi s time."
" I believe the law anJ .ldnunistr.ltivc rcb'lllations 111...· ed to be

Jt

all criminal rulinb"' · .md n l \Yith thL'" Mc..·igs County AuJJto everything- within my pc&gt;WL'r · tor 0\'L'r S 11 H.OOO for rlw c on to bllliJ a lll'\V Jtlll m uur county ..,trw: tion o f .1 new j.1il or n.:nova;md to nuke this county Cfllll L' th)ll of the cnwHy j.til. Thi~ fimd

The remaining $26,350 will be used to start a building fund to relocate our Fire Department t ~ a
more suitable location. We urge the citizens to stop in and lpok at our F1re Departm ent faciliti es and
see for yourself why a new location is needed.

'

'' h1rthcr,

become acuvely mvolved with
revenue for the county _to ass1st in the County Court and MumClpal
meettng the ever 1ncreaS1ng Judges Association to attempt to '
demands put on the courts and bring about such a change of
mandates unposed by the state those ,1drnimstrattvt! n:gulacions."
and federal governmem.
"I bave been very acnve wnh ·
" L1kcwise, the counry jail is a the State Bar Assocmion and
tremendous problem that has to Wl[h other anorney organiza- 1•
be dealt with at all levels, both law twns. I bchew that with the
enforcement , the court.;,. as well a" proper amount ofac [l vity m the
legisbture . While the c: ap1tal cost judgt.''l ,t ..,~Q C! Jtion th.tt the probof a new jail could be met pn lem c ould be ~olved in a c reative
mari)y by state g rant ntoncy, th e
way."
operating costs of a new jail arc
nom1c base will prov1dc more

011

Taft betting on Issue 1

Ohio if
Issue T.

Death ruled
a suicide

~I S (L'Ilt

The Fire Department has two old pumper trucks that arc in need of replacement. $3 3.6 50 of1h e
remaining revenue will be used to start a plan to replace our existing trucks one every 7 years .

RESPONSIBLE
Responsible to the needs' of
the people of Gallia County.

"First, most people who find

time and very o;oon thl' isoLuinn

This 2 mill levy willgenerate approximately $ 120,000 a year in revenue for the Fire Departmont.
1 mill of this revenue ($60,000) will be set aside for the paydown of our Ladder Truck which was
purchased in 1997. The paydown will be completed inthe year 20 II.

DEDICATED
Dedicated to serving all the
citizens oi Gallia County.

"Likewise, as a volunteer, I have

chaired the Route 33 Corridor
CommHlL'L' for that period uf

chan1ber of cummt.•ret: and eco nomic development issul'S , I have

Why we are asking for a two (2) mill Fire Levy for the City of Gallipolis:

QUALIFIED
Exceeds state requirements~

pkuon of Route 33, scheduled to
commence constructiOn 111 2001.

thcmsclvt.'S in County Court and
111 Jaal HL' poor and unemployed .
With _1ob5., they will be seen less
frequently in the c ourt, thu ~
rcduc111g the demand for ]Jil

TO: Citizens of Gallipolis

as second cllu mailina mauer at

Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohlo

POMEROY Patrick H .
O'Brien seeks rc-dectlon to the
Meigs County Court bench.
The office of County Court
Judge is a non-partisan position.

~~id.

EXPERIENCED
Over 12 years in law
enforeement • 8 years in
• •
supervision
••

Story said lm experience as a
trial judge and a former pros&lt;eutor serve as qualifications for the
bench.
"I have 21 years prac~cing law
both in the civil and criminal
area Story said: "I ant a for'mcr
prosecutor for Meigs County and,
a village solicitor.
"This court handles thy highest
volume of cases of all three courts
in the counry and I am very
familiar with its operation. My
goals are to promote efficiency in
the court and provide equal
administration of justice under
the law within the budget con-

Judge O'Brien makes re-election bid

COLUMBUS (AP) -AuthorItic~ say a man who died· in an
explosion and fire in a shed
behind hts house intentionally set
;he fire to kill himself.
Raymond Straley. 53, died
Thursday of smoke inhalation and
severe burns in the 12- by 14-foot
shed, Franklin County Coroner
Brad Lewis ruled. He tentatively
ruled the death a suicide.
F~rcfighrers found Straley,'s
body in the shed after extinguishing flames that had engulfed the
structure by the time they arrived.
He had been living in the shed
fer the past week, family members

HMC notes

&amp;unbap-tlttmel &amp;enttnel

'
"
coun.

* EXPERIENCED: 20 Years as judge. _
* EARNED and received superior judicial service awards

EMS runs

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 2 - Mrs.
Robert Jewell and daughter.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy
Powell, daughter, Bidwell.
(Published with permission)

POMEROY
- , Steven L.
Story,
a
Pomeroy attorney, has filed as
a candidate for
Meigs County
Court judge.
The
judge's
position IS a
· Story
non-partisan
office.
"As an attorney, I believe that
public service as a judge is an
honorable and noble pursuit,"
Story said: "My goal, if elected
judge, would be to maintain the
dignity and honor of the office
and to promote efficiency m the

QUALIFICATIONS ·

Ing.

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills Career Center's annual Veterans
Day assembly will be Nov. I0 in the cafeteria.
Patriotic hymns will be presented as the national-, Ohio and POWMIA' colo" are escorted in by the Securiry Services-Law Enforcement
honor guard. ·
Smderits will be inrroducing special guests and sharing two selections of' 'The Origins nfVeterans Day" and "What is aVet?"The guest
speaker will be US. Navy local recruiterYNI (SW) Randy Harmon.
Included in his presentation will be the formal indu~tion of a loc;U
University of Rio Grande nudent into the Navy.

SteVen L. Story. runs for County Court judge

O'Brien

GALLIPOLIS,- The following are voting locations in Gallia
County for Tuesday, as released by
the Board of Elections.

:i!ounbap lltlmrll -~rnllnrl • Page A3

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

Sunday, November 5, 2000

•••
•0

••

•

.•

'

�•

P-sll A2 • 6an'Dap 11:iii!H -6entintl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

VALLEY
BRIEFS
.
'

replace Eriunogene Hamilton,
who retired from office, will face
A. Tom Lowery, a Democrat.
Treasurer Howard Frank, a
fNm
A1
Republinn, is challenged by
Democrat Soulsby and Republi- Democrat Ron P. Casci, and Proscan Beegle were both disquali6ed ecutor John Lentes, a Democrat, is
from the Man:h primary because challenged by Republican Pat
of qualifications issues, afierTrussell "tory.
In the race for Counry Court
challenged their petitions of candijudge,
the incumbent, Patrick H.
dacy.
Soulsby and Beegle sought the O'Brien, faces competition from
necessary training, and were veri- Steven L Story. The judge's post is
fied by the board of elections as a non-partisan office.
Common Pie~ Judge Fred W.
write-in candidates in late sumCrow Ill is unopposed in the non'
met.
In the race for the conmlissioner partisan election for that office.
term conunencing Jan. 3, 2001, Also unopposed are Coroner
Janet Howard, the Democratic Douglas Hunter and Engineer
incumbent, is challenged by candidate Eugene Triplett, who
defeated Engineer Robert Eason
Republican Jim Sheel!i.
·
For the first time in nearly 30 in the March primary. Both
years, Meigo County will elect a Hunter' and Triplett are Republicans.
new clerk of courts.
In other races, U.S. Rep. Ted
Marlene Harrison, a RepubliStrickland,
D-Lucasville, is chalcan, who was appointed to the
office earlier this year upon the lenged by Republican Mike
retirell)ent of Larry E. Spencer, Azinger of Marietta.
Voters will also choose between
seeks election to the office. She is
U.S. Sen. Mike
Republican
challenged by Democrat Betsy
DeWine and Democrat Ted
·Herald Nicodemus.
Celeste.
State Rep. John Carey, RMeig; will also deer a counry
recorder. Republican Judy King, Wellston, is unopposed in his final
who was appointed in 1999 to bid for the 94th District seat in the

Meigs

Veterans Day proa•••

Pap

GALLIPOLIS - Final preparations have been made for this year's
Veterans Day activities in Gallipolis by the Gallia County Veterans Service Conunission.
Activities will begin with a parade starting at Second Avenue and
Spruce Street at 10:30 a.m. The parade will proceed down Second to
Court Street, and lefi to First Avenue, where the par.~de will disperse.
A ceremony will follow at the Doughboy Monument in the park at
II a.m. Guest speaker will be Korean War veteran Robert Fleshnun.
Any individuals or groups wanting to participate in the parade
should contact the Vetetans Servic~ Office at ·446-2005.

Clinic slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Health Department has
received a partial shipment of influenza vaccine, and has scheduled a
special flu clinic for Monday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-5:30 p.m.
The clinic will be held at the health deparm1ent offices in Suite D
of the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The flu vaccine will also be available at the health deparm1ent on
Tuesday from 8-11 :30 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. For more information,
contact the health department at 441-2950.

Rides available
GALLiPOLIS -Voters needing a ride to the polls on Tuesday can
get transportation by contacting Gallia Counl)' Republican headquarte" at 446-7552, Counry Chairman Roger Watson announced.

Ohio House of Representatives. that the levy would be used for
Term limits prohibit Carey' from what is conunonly known as "d.Jt·
.
seeking a fifth consecutive term in conttQI" on township q,ads.
o
Middlepoh
Village,
renewal
Of
office.
Although it has traditionally one mill for current expenses for
been considered a Republican five years, for operating expenses,
: ·:
&gt;tronghold, Meigo helped elect specifically for street lights.
Rutland
Township,
renewal
o£
•
•
President Bill Clinton in both
one mill f~r fire protection for five
1992 and 1996.
years.
•
Issues
• Rutland Townsh1p, renewal of·
The Meigo County Board of
MR/DD seeks approval of an one mill for fire protection for five ,
additional 1.6-rnill permanent levy years.
• Lebanon Township, renewal of •
for operating expenses and capital
improvements. The levy is making one mill for maintaining and oper~ :
its sixth appearance on Meigs ating cemeteries for five years. · ·•
• Salem Township. renewal of
County ballots, and, if passed,
one
mill for five years for fire prowould generate an additional
$384,589 for the Carleton School tecnon.
• Pomeroy Village, renewal of .
and Meigo Industries.
The Southern Local School Dis- two mills for fire protection for five ·
trict proposes the renewal of a years.
• Pomeroy Village, renewal of
four~mill. three-year levy for operone
mill for current expenses for
ating expenses.
Voters in Racine Village will five years.
• Alexander Local School Disvote on a carryout beer option.
tri~t, 4.56 mill bond issue, one half
Other local issues include:
mill
levy issue, for 23 years.
• Alexander Local School District, a 4.56-mill bond issue, and a
• Racine Village, replacement &lt;:&gt;f
half-mill tax levy, both for 23 years. three mills for current' eKpenses f&lt;?I
• Olive Township, additional one five yea".
mi~, prevention, control, and
• Syracuse Village, replaceme!ll .
abatement of air pollution for three of one mill for fire protection for •
years. Clerk Martha Durst reported five years.

Date change
GALLIPOLIS -Arbors of Gallipolis announced that the chili fest
11 's sponsoring at the Gallia County Senior ~esource Center has been
postponed until Nov. 9.
Tlie event is a fund-raiser, with all proceeds donated to the senior
center's Meals on Wheels and congregate meals programs.
The menu includes hot dogs, chili, cornbread, cottage cheese on lettuce, assorted homemade pies an'd beverages. The cost. is S4 per person, with serving in the center's dining room fiom 4:30-6:30 p.m.
Individual. items can be ordered from the menu, and carryout service \viii be available.
·

Board to meet

Board releases list

of Gallia County polling places

Hall.
Huntington Township - American
Legion Hall at Ewington Academy.
· Morgan Township - Morgan Townhouse.
Ohio Township - Ohio Townhouse..
Perry Tovmship - Perry Townhouse.
Raccoon Township - Rio Grande Ele-

Gallipolis 1 - St. Petar's Episcopal
Church.
Gallipolis 2 - Grace United Methodist

mentary School.
Rio Grande Preeinet - Rio Grande
Elementary School.
Centerville Precinct - Old Centerville
Elementary School.
Springfield 1 - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Springfield 2- Rodney Pike Church of

God.
Springfield 3 - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Bidwell Precinct - Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
Walnut Township - Cadmus Community Center.

Church.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande Board of Public Affairs' regular
monthly meeting Jill be Monday at 7 p.m. in the ·Rio Gr.~nde
Municipal Building.

Meets Monday
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande Planning Board meers Monday- at
4:30 p.m. in the Rio Grande Municipal Building.

Seminar slated
GALLIPOLIS- Ohio Valley Bank will hold a free public smoking
c.essation seminar on Nov. 16 at 6 p.m. in the bank's annex at 143Third
Ave., Gallipolis.
Dr. Arnold Sattler will present information and facts on the smoker
as \vell as the person who lives with a smoker.

Assembly Nov. 10

Gallipolis 3 - First Church of the
Nazarene.
GaUipolis 4 - First Church of the
Nazarene.
Gallipolis 5 - Water Treatment Plant
Gallipolis Township - Gallla County
Senior Resource Center.
Kanauga Precinct - DAV/AMVCTS
Building.
Addison Township - Addaville Ele·
mentary School.
Addison Precinct - Addaville Elementary School.
Cheshire Township - Cheshire Townhouse in Kyger.
Cheshire Precinct - Cheshire Un~ed
Methodist Church.
Clay Township - Head Start (former
Clay Elementary Scllool).
Clay Precinct - Head S1art ~ormer
Clay Elementary School).
Guyan Township - Guyan Townhouse.
Guyan Precinct - Crown City Village
Hell.
Green 1 - Rodney Community Build-

RE-ELECT

PATRICK H. "PAT" O'BRIEN
COUNTY COURT JUDGE
*

*
*
*

Green 2- C. H. McKenzie Agrlcu~ural
Center.
Green 3 - Rodney Community Build-

*

Ing.

Green 4 - Gallipolis Chril11an Church.
Grttn 5- Grttn Elementary School.
Green 6 - Grttn Elementary School.
Greenfield Townehlp - Greenfield Volum.tr Flrt Dtl*l"'tnt, Gallla.
Hal'rlaon TQwnlhlp - Harrlaon Townhoutt.
Huntington Prtelnol - Vinton VMIIQI

*

by the Ohio Supreme Court in every }!ear that the award
.was given.
MEMBER of the Ohio Judicial College.
FIRST Meigs County Court Judge to establish a
probation and community corrections department from
state grants at no cost to the county.
TOUGH but consistent on criminal and civil decisions.
COLLECTED and deposited with the Meigs County
Auditor over $118,000.00 earmarked for new jail
construction and/or renovation.
ESTABUSHED a County wide Community Service Work
Program.
APPOINTED by Chief Justice Moyer of the Ohio
Supreme Court to aerve aa vi1itlngjudge in the counties
of Lawrence, Gallia, Morgan and Fayette.

8/«e
Bill

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County EMS l«:&gt;gged 328 runs during
October, con,•isting of 203 ba.,ic life support runs and 125 advanced
,
hfe support qlk
' There were 199 errierg&lt;1icy calls, 14 cancellations and 112 refusals,
according to the EMS.
The breakdown by township included Addison, 13 runs; Cheshire,
five ; Clay, five; Galhpolis, 127; Green, 31; Greenfield, six; Guyan, 11;
Harmon, eight: Huntington, 16;
Morgan. 10; Ohio, 12; Peri-y, five;
ltaccoon, 30; Springfield, 42; and
Walnut, three. There were four runs
in the "other" category.

'

David·

Martin

Davis

for

GaUia County
Commissioner

Gallia County
· Sheriff

Retired from GDC after 30 Years.
EXPERIENCED· 7 Years as a City

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories is to be
accuralr. If )OU know or an trror In a
story, call lbr nrwsroom a1 (740) 446·
2342 or Pomeroy: (T40l 992-2155. We will
check ) 'OUr Information and make a
rorrectlon if warranted .

Departments
Galli polio
oumber Is 446-2342.

NIWI

The main
Depanment utentlons a~:
Managing Edltor ........................ Ext. 118
City Editor............................:..... Ext. lll

Uleslyle .......................................Ext. t20
122

Sporn .......................................... Ext.

rr.ews ................... ............... .......... Ext. I19

To Sfnd E-Mail
galtribunr-@' eurekanet.com

News Department
Pomeroy
I he main numher is 9Y 2·Z l 5e.
Dl'p3M ntr nl e'densiono; art':
Gt nerul Managrr ..................... Ext . 1101
'Jew! .......................................... Ext. 1102 ·

............................................ .... or Ext

It06

.

En ttr ~ d

Commissioner worked with all
government entities. on a
bipartisan level.

(liSPS 113·l60t

Comm ... llJ Ntwlp.ptr Hoi4J. ., IrK:.
Published ever y Sund•y. 825 fhird Ave .,
Gtllipolis, Ohio. by the Ohio Vlllcy Publishlna
Com p~t~ y s~cond elm poiiiJC paid II Galhpoli1,
Ohio.

Will work to expand youth
programs •.

Ponxro y. Ohto POll office.

Newspaper Associati on.

POSTMASTER: Send 1ddress ooutc~ions to The
Sunday·Timu Sentinel , 825 Th i rd Ave.,

Gall iPolis,Dt11o 4~611 .

SUNDAY ONLY

Will listen to,your eoneerns and
respond in a timely manner

SUBSCRJmON RATES
By C•rrkr or Motor ReNte

.... ~1.~

OM Week....

OntYear ...

S'INGliCiJ'P\i.PRiCi ...... S6s.oo

. ~~~~l~y~·i~~'h)'"~·.·i·i·j;;;·ii·i~~i"i~-~~-,~-!~~~
home urrler ~ervice is available.
The Sunday TJrnu-Stntinel will noc be responsible

for 1dvtnct pa~ments made to carrten.
Pub lish~r rtKrves the riaht tO adjull rates durina
t h~ subscti pl lan period . Subsc:rtp! ion rate ehanan
mt y be implemented by chanainl tilt durat ion of
the sub!ICf!pi!On
Daily ud S•ltday
~WL

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside Gallla Cot~•ty

.. 1 27.30

::'6 Wedi.\
SSl82
"'2 Weeks
.
.SJOS..56
' lUtes Ouuldt G alli&amp; Counly
13 We e k~
.. S29. 2.~

26 W c~k.s

s-z Weeki...

S.56.68

. .......·....... St09.n

I am eoneerned about litter
eontrol.
Put progressive experienee
to work for you
Elect Bill Da,vis your County
Commissioner November 7th.

1"

opment, the counry's budget and
the county Jail, Story said, arc the
county's three greate~t priorities
and those issues are interrelated.
''Me1gs County has high rates
of unemployment and poverry
due to its isolation and lack of
development. It has ever expanding demands on the courts and
the county budget, with a previously stagnant, perhap&gt; shrinking

served ,on the Chamber of Comnlcrce Board of Directors for six
yeJr&gt; and I am completing my
second year as pres(dent."
" I believe economic development and jobs will have a twofold effect on the problems of ihe
budget and county j ail," Story

economic base."

o.; ;ud .

"For the past 10 years, I haw
been actively involved with the

straints whi c h exist in the:: county."
The isSues of t'Conomic devd•

1.,p.lCC .

will be rcduct'd due to the com -

practices

law

In

Pomeroy with his father, Jim
O'Brien, and has served as Judge
of the County Court since ! 980.
He is a 1970 graduate of Meigs
High School and a 1974 graduate
of Ohio Wesleyan University. He
graduated from the Ohio North-

Crow runs
unopposed

Crow

POMEROY
- Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill
did not respond
to The Daily
Sentinel's questionnaire.
He
lS
un opposed m
his bid for reelection
·as
Common

Pleas

Court judge.

ern Umvns1ty
Law Schoo! in
I 977.

"My

goals
are to contmuL·
ro provide service to Meigs
County
as
judge," O'Bnen
said, "and to
O'Brien
treat people with
faimess, clignity
and respect, to be tough but con-

free ."

O'Brien '"id that his 20 'ye.m
o( cxpcriL"'Kl' on the bcnrh qu nl
ifics him for n:-dcction, ;:md slid
that the housing of pri&lt;;oners, cniIL·ctioll uf unl_hlid fin~: s and court
cost~

and mJbng the conmmmty
";1fcr are h1s prmnt1es.
'' I h:1\-\: collL'dt::J Jnd dcpo~Jt-

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
Bob Taft is betting that Ohioans
will embrace his idea to clean
up polluted plant sites for redevelopment and set aside farmland and other green space for
parks, bike paths and other
recreation.

It's a deal that will spruce up
his image as an environmentali st
as \vel!.
With images of sparklin g
streams, lu sh parks :t.nd new
construction where abandoned
buildings once stood, the mt:dia
campaign promises a beautiful
voter~

:~pprove

state

" It's h.ud to understand why
anyont' would oppos~..· it," Taft.
said afte_r J recl!nt rally .1t a local

park.
A few groups - including
· the Sierra Club ai1d Oh10 Citizei1 Action luve lined up
ag,nnst the S41JO million bond
issue on Tuesday's ballot. In
· :1ddition, some conservJtives are
wOrned &lt;1bout communities
givmg up comrnl ro the state

and about the pncc tag. An
analysis by the nonparti~an Legislative Budget Office found the
interest p,1id over the life of the
'bonds could reach $100 nulliun.
Support has come from an
unlikely coalition of manufacturers, envir'onmcntal groups ~
the farming industry and o•
majority of Ohio's legislators.
The issue has allowed Taft, a
Jl..cpublican midway through-his
f1&gt;ur-ycar term, to keep his face
before vott:r~ - at r~llies and q n

$600,000 worth of tdevi~ion
ads.
"I am delighted that pohtl -

ch &lt;mgcd to ,dlow
J n · exp.mding

to run

Loun t i L'!:&gt;

th e ir own j :uk If l'iL'CtL•d , l would

of the Ohio Environmental
co·uncil, which backs Issue I.
" It's good policy Jnd tt's good
politiCS."
Taft in:"~lStS thnc is political
risk bL' C:lUSL' it is :1 prionty nfht~
ad111inistr,1tiL)ll .
· "WL' are not do111 g L'llough
right nnw to ck.m up tht.· .lh.ln doh eJ ltH.iustri.tl ~lli.'" · Wt.· h ,J \ 'i.'
~ome g llt.)l..i proje ct s, bur we ,t l ~ n
. havL' rhou!-..111d~ ul ,tb.mdon cd

( ~ oumy\

Ma~garet

tht•

lllOilL')'

to

.Ht"LI U

lllOI'L'

from other !-.Duree ~. ;..ur h ~1s locll
and fcdL'r;tl gr.11lts .
"WL' would like to do lllOI"L'
than thJt, hut th ;l t\ wlut \\" L' c:tn

atlord within thL" lumLltlOil'i of
stJte rl'vcnucs. Thi s not .l tax
irt(TL',hL' ,"l~tft \,tid .

j:1il arc.! inmH.:Ji:ttdy incarcerJ tt:d
and don't

h tl\'C

to

\VJJt

un J.lil

space."

ELECT

DENNIS R. SALISBURY
FOR
GALLIA COUNTY

SHERIFF

Rev. Wm. Middleswarlh 949-3047
June Ashley 949-4000

·Elect
~--

SHIRLEY ANGEL

'

for.
~

\

pb nning .....1id tilL' "
Ckvcl.HJd .HL'.l .tlnnc Ius .thout

USC

Jll

ind1\·idu3b thaL delie-rve rn be m

Parker 992-2264

ronmL'llt.ll

the S201 ) uulilllll set ,J&gt;ide to
n.:d~:velop the ~it L' &lt;; Ldl ~ (;Jr ... hon
of ;1 total ckanup. T;~ft's go.tl1~ to

~n

EXTENDED:

nun .tgL'r of l'll\"1 ...:

1 fmm :tb.Jn 14 ' ()()() '&gt;HL' " T.uwin~
~
t't
doncd dry -c h: .tnin g -., rorL'" . tn
former ~ted 111ilk
E,·cn ~ upportcr" .Jg rcl' tl1Jt

a bt·ttn j .ul facili ty

IIL' L'lh

Meigs Co. History
Book, Vol. Ill
Deadline

site s where thL·rL' .trL·n't rhL'
n: sourn~!-. to tllfll them .tround."
Ju~t ho\\" l!LlllY ;..Jtl'-.,. Ito l111L'
know~ . VIrgini.J An:- 111, Cuy.t -

hog,t

tlu t my court

\\"ho would be cligtblc for communitv '&gt;LT\' JL L" .a ~ .111 .tltL'rnaovc to
pil,'' O'Bncn said.

Write:
Meigs Co. History Book, Ill
P. 0. Box 145
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Or Call:

environment,"' said Jack Shaner.,

t~ c l

lllllllJty ~crvil· c..· progr.1m for those:

delighted we're not hearing the
tired, old, · hollow rhetoric of,
'Take · your pick, Jobs or the

November 7 is set aside to participate in the greatest privilege we haw in this country and that is the
right to vote. Please take time to vote. Please vote YES for the Gallipolis Fire Levy.

Paid for by Supporters of Gallipolis Fire Levy
Bob Poling, Treasurer

.. A~, J lH..lg~ . I

l111Iid ,J Jail."
'·It is importJnt to maint:11n a
pmdunJ\'L' probJtion .md com-

JAN. 12, 2001

Ir'you have any questions, please s1op in the Fire Department or call 446-9533.

TO PROTECT AND SERVE

wdl con tinue t.o grow u11JCr my
tcnurl' .l"'judgc,tJnri l soon we t.:an

'

Gallia County
Commissioner

Shirley Angel is seeking a second term as Gallia County commissioner. Angel resicj~s on a farm at 2126
Hazel Ridge Road, Crown City, Ohio in Clay Township and is a lifelong resident of Gall1a County._ He marned
Lin Angel and has 3 grown children; Tammy (Kenny) Barcus, Larry Angel and T1mmy AngeL He IS a Veteran
of the United States Marine Corp. Angel was first' elected as a County CommiSSioner 111 1997. He worked for
Gallia Cou·nty Rural Water Association from 1961 thru 1996 and retired in the position of District Supervisor.
Prior to this from 1976 thru 1981 he worked for an Excava1ing Business and from 1967 thru 1976 worked_ at
the Goodyear plant. Angel serves on the Issue 2. District Integrating Comm1ttee and the Galha·Me1gs
Community Action Agency board. Presently, he is. the Vice-president of the commiSSIOn and feels the
following are the positive accomplishments the commiSSIOn has seen 1n h1s tenure and h1s goals. for the future
of Gallia County include:
.
.
• Construction of new Gallia County Service Center- housing the Galli a County Health Dept, Galha County
Clerk of Courts Title Office, L1cense Bureau, Driver's Examination and GJM Tasc Off1ce
• Fully supporting the Gallia County Senior Citizens Center and 1t's operations
• worked with the Gallia County Chamber of r;ommerce, CIC and the City of Gallipolis to bring lnfocision
Telemarketing 250 jobs to Gallia County.
• Implementation of 9-1·1 System
.
.
• IndUstrial Park Project- $2.2 Million Project
• workshops for TownshipsNillages to receive Capital Improvement Grants- S1nce 1997 Grants total
' $2,658,758
'
.
'
'
.
• Purchasing of 4 new Sheriff Cruisers in 1997, another 4 1n 1998 and 41~ . 1999
• Worked to resolve flooding issues throughout Gallia County
.
.
• Working with Gallia County Agricultural Society and Fair Board lor Improvement to the Fa1r Grounds and for
relocation of the fair Grounds out of the flood Plain
• Emergency management Agency for Gallia County . .
..
• Porter/Bidwell Sewer Project- Grants/Loans Exceed1ng $5.4 million
• 56% 1ncrease in Veterans Service Budget Appropriations since 1997
• Stockyard Facility for Galli a County
.
.
..
• Grants for county, Townships, Vil lages and the_c1ty smce 1997 1otal1ng $6 .8 milliOn.
.
"I feel the residents of Gallia County have much to look forward to m the areas of Econom1 c Development,
Emergency Serv 1ces, and Public Infrastructure Development and _the county as a whole has a bright future _I
am confident that the programs and efforts we have mstJtuted dunng my_tenure as County CommiSSioner Will
provide many needed services to the people of Gallia County. I have made every effort to make essential
upgrades for the health and safety of the_residents of Gallia County. I have been Instrum ental m the
purchasing of 12 new cruisers for the Sheriff's Dept. and 4 new ambulances for EMS. 1_have bee~ support1ve
of the senior 'citizens Center and their programs bring1ng over 200 meals dally to s en~o rs of Galha County I
have also fully supported the Gall ia County Agricultural Soc1ety and Falf Board and th elf plans to better the
Gallia County Junior Fair Grounds 1am committed lo continue to be available for each and _every res1dent as
a full -time county commiss 1oner. As a former United Stales Manne. I am very concerned w1t~ the needs of the
Veterans of Gallia county, and pledge to continue my support to them. I have also made the grant programs
th~t are managed through the County -Commissioners Office user friendl_y for the TownshipS, V1 llages, C11y
and County. During my tenure as Commiss1oner more than $2.6 m11110n 1n CDBG an d Issue 2 grants have
been received by various townships , Villages and the C1ty of Gall1pol1s The Coun ty has al so been the
recipient of over !lit .3 million in CDBG Emergency Shelter and Housmg Rehab grants lor l ow-1 n c~me persons
du ri ng my t?nure. My main concern IS bringing Gal li a County 1ntothe 21st centu ry on a progress1ve note and
cont1nuing to h ~lp those that are less fortunate and unable to help themselves."
Paid for by Shirley Angel , 2t26 Hazel R1dge Rd , Crown City, Ohio

•

I'

(
I

November 7. 2000

\

•

L'C O~

cians have figured out the enviromnent is a winner. We are

You are now under a one (I) mill fire levy. If the levy passes in November, the currenllevy will
terminate January I, 200 I.

Paid for by tiHI C11lldldatc, BW D..,l.. 419 FOI&gt;rtb~1C111111,0aUipolis, OH 4S631.

beyond the mean ~ of the county
thi s time."
" I believe the law anJ .ldnunistr.ltivc rcb'lllations 111...· ed to be

Jt

all criminal rulinb"' · .md n l \Yith thL'" Mc..·igs County AuJJto everything- within my pc&gt;WL'r · tor 0\'L'r S 11 H.OOO for rlw c on to bllliJ a lll'\V Jtlll m uur county ..,trw: tion o f .1 new j.1il or n.:nova;md to nuke this county Cfllll L' th)ll of the cnwHy j.til. Thi~ fimd

The remaining $26,350 will be used to start a building fund to relocate our Fire Department t ~ a
more suitable location. We urge the citizens to stop in and lpok at our F1re Departm ent faciliti es and
see for yourself why a new location is needed.

'

'' h1rthcr,

become acuvely mvolved with
revenue for the county _to ass1st in the County Court and MumClpal
meettng the ever 1ncreaS1ng Judges Association to attempt to '
demands put on the courts and bring about such a change of
mandates unposed by the state those ,1drnimstrattvt! n:gulacions."
and federal governmem.
"I bave been very acnve wnh ·
" L1kcwise, the counry jail is a the State Bar Assocmion and
tremendous problem that has to Wl[h other anorney organiza- 1•
be dealt with at all levels, both law twns. I bchew that with the
enforcement , the court.;,. as well a" proper amount ofac [l vity m the
legisbture . While the c: ap1tal cost judgt.''l ,t ..,~Q C! Jtion th.tt the probof a new jail could be met pn lem c ould be ~olved in a c reative
mari)y by state g rant ntoncy, th e
way."
operating costs of a new jail arc
nom1c base will prov1dc more

011

Taft betting on Issue 1

Ohio if
Issue T.

Death ruled
a suicide

~I S (L'Ilt

The Fire Department has two old pumper trucks that arc in need of replacement. $3 3.6 50 of1h e
remaining revenue will be used to start a plan to replace our existing trucks one every 7 years .

RESPONSIBLE
Responsible to the needs' of
the people of Gallia County.

"First, most people who find

time and very o;oon thl' isoLuinn

This 2 mill levy willgenerate approximately $ 120,000 a year in revenue for the Fire Departmont.
1 mill of this revenue ($60,000) will be set aside for the paydown of our Ladder Truck which was
purchased in 1997. The paydown will be completed inthe year 20 II.

DEDICATED
Dedicated to serving all the
citizens oi Gallia County.

"Likewise, as a volunteer, I have

chaired the Route 33 Corridor
CommHlL'L' for that period uf

chan1ber of cummt.•ret: and eco nomic development issul'S , I have

Why we are asking for a two (2) mill Fire Levy for the City of Gallipolis:

QUALIFIED
Exceeds state requirements~

pkuon of Route 33, scheduled to
commence constructiOn 111 2001.

thcmsclvt.'S in County Court and
111 Jaal HL' poor and unemployed .
With _1ob5., they will be seen less
frequently in the c ourt, thu ~
rcduc111g the demand for ]Jil

TO: Citizens of Gallipolis

as second cllu mailina mauer at

Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohlo

POMEROY Patrick H .
O'Brien seeks rc-dectlon to the
Meigs County Court bench.
The office of County Court
Judge is a non-partisan position.

~~id.

EXPERIENCED
Over 12 years in law
enforeement • 8 years in
• •
supervision
••

Story said lm experience as a
trial judge and a former pros&lt;eutor serve as qualifications for the
bench.
"I have 21 years prac~cing law
both in the civil and criminal
area Story said: "I ant a for'mcr
prosecutor for Meigs County and,
a village solicitor.
"This court handles thy highest
volume of cases of all three courts
in the counry and I am very
familiar with its operation. My
goals are to promote efficiency in
the court and provide equal
administration of justice under
the law within the budget con-

Judge O'Brien makes re-election bid

COLUMBUS (AP) -AuthorItic~ say a man who died· in an
explosion and fire in a shed
behind hts house intentionally set
;he fire to kill himself.
Raymond Straley. 53, died
Thursday of smoke inhalation and
severe burns in the 12- by 14-foot
shed, Franklin County Coroner
Brad Lewis ruled. He tentatively
ruled the death a suicide.
F~rcfighrers found Straley,'s
body in the shed after extinguishing flames that had engulfed the
structure by the time they arrived.
He had been living in the shed
fer the past week, family members

HMC notes

&amp;unbap-tlttmel &amp;enttnel

'
"
coun.

* EXPERIENCED: 20 Years as judge. _
* EARNED and received superior judicial service awards

EMS runs

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 2 - Mrs.
Robert Jewell and daughter.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy
Powell, daughter, Bidwell.
(Published with permission)

POMEROY
- , Steven L.
Story,
a
Pomeroy attorney, has filed as
a candidate for
Meigs County
Court judge.
The
judge's
position IS a
· Story
non-partisan
office.
"As an attorney, I believe that
public service as a judge is an
honorable and noble pursuit,"
Story said: "My goal, if elected
judge, would be to maintain the
dignity and honor of the office
and to promote efficiency m the

QUALIFICATIONS ·

Ing.

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills Career Center's annual Veterans
Day assembly will be Nov. I0 in the cafeteria.
Patriotic hymns will be presented as the national-, Ohio and POWMIA' colo" are escorted in by the Securiry Services-Law Enforcement
honor guard. ·
Smderits will be inrroducing special guests and sharing two selections of' 'The Origins nfVeterans Day" and "What is aVet?"The guest
speaker will be US. Navy local recruiterYNI (SW) Randy Harmon.
Included in his presentation will be the formal indu~tion of a loc;U
University of Rio Grande nudent into the Navy.

SteVen L. Story. runs for County Court judge

O'Brien

GALLIPOLIS,- The following are voting locations in Gallia
County for Tuesday, as released by
the Board of Elections.

:i!ounbap lltlmrll -~rnllnrl • Page A3

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

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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_ _:__av'~im_d_-il_e._ath_w_ _ _ __
i unbaJI

~imts- itntintl

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Sunday, November 5, 2000

P-inion

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Page A4

Replacements
named

£Tri~'&lt;&lt;!JUtO fO'IIr WORM&lt;tfNZ·"fi!LI!:;&lt;I&amp;J:;.pozt.oA"'"""'- - -

HI.IU I\e

'Esttz6asnd In l!U8
1125 Third ....... Golllpolla, Ohio
7......23'2 • F•x· 44&amp;-3008

COLUMBUS (AP) - Democrane Sens Don Brady of Clcvelond and Anthony La tell of Girard
will replace two lawmakers who
qmt a spectallegislaovc commtttcc
stUd}'lng school funding. Mmomy
Leader Rhme McLif\ s;nd Fnday.
Brady and Latcll are replacmg
DemocratiC Sens MKhael Shoemaker of 13ournevillc and Robert
Hagan of Youngstown , who
reSigned tins week &amp;om the Jomt
Commlttee on Educaoon Fundmg ami Accountab1liry.
The conmuttce was formed
after the Ohio Supreme Court
mlcd m May that Ohio·, schoolfunding formula rcmamed unconsonltlona.l, 111 brgt= parr bcc;tusc It
n:hd too he-avtly on ]neal prop'-'rty t.txe&lt;; The lOUrt 1\:jt:dl'd pk·as
fron1,ltepL1blican 1.1wm,1kl'r.. that
they had fixed thL· problem smct·

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohlo
7~892·2156 · Fax· W2·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

l.1n"s w tlr.r rditor

ro

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
lll't

,..,.lrolfK. Tlr.l'\' sltollld lw kurlum JOO .,.orris AU ku"'.,., ndiJrd
\ 'o JHUIXIttJi l.ttttN KJill

ua;,,, attJ lfUIIt M 111ttlJ uJ llldud.t ~u rmd rtltphmlt ,.,.,.. ~,

k pvb/Uittd. LtUtn lhOIIIIJ j, Ill ftHJd liUif, iJJdnlUiff USJI.tl, lfOI ptNIJtt&amp;/rtws
~
Till' opt11WIIS upnned m lilt C'riiiiiiUI 1Jtlow4n the COIIStiiJIU II/ fhr Ohw rllllt] Pllbli~hlnl
Co 'f tdirtwiiiJ ~rrl, u..Uu mfrlrwi.~t l'll)lbi..

OUR VIEW

Vote

the lOUrt ongtn.allv ruled on the
matter 111 191J7
Shocm.tka .mJ ll.1g.) n ~.11d til&lt;.'~
1\.'Sl!;llCd bL'LlmC dlL' COillllllttL'l'
w:t~n 't gctung ,1 11\ dung dotw
They ..,,ud ' tilL' I() Republicans on
the 10-mt·mbcr co mnuttcc wert:
puttmg ofF m.11ur lq:l'l.,btl\'C tkostons on school fundmg until .tfi-er
Tuesday's clccnon rusttcc Alice
Robte Re~mtk ..l Dcmocr:u who
wrote the emu t m.~onty'~ May

Going to polls critical for
future cif area) nation
As everv tll.lJor o;;.·]cl non Llr.l\\ nt'.trs.

ne\'.'~

columm JnJ lhe atr-

OUR READ E R S' VI E WS

.: wavt'S art" u~u.tlly ti.dl or" gloomy pn·du. ttum Jbout votlT apathy.
• f)e~pltt' J}] l'fll_)r(S to e'lll'fgJZt' thc- pub!Jc to go to tht• poJI..,, turnout
: wtll bt· lO\\, we ,u~..: told
•
That's roo b,td. he&lt;..tll'it' tfthac IS cv'-·r .1 nmc for CVL'ryonc to cxcr-

:: ust' tht:tr nglH to vote:, Tut''i{bv \\Ill be the J,ty t&lt;i do so.

: Polls mtl);n1 m 111 tht~ finJI \~'t'ekend pnor to till' pn:stdclltt.ll dec: tlon th:n tht• Bu . . h-(;orr- r.lCt:' \\Ill be ttght_ Wtth o;ome thud party
. cand1d.ltt'IO expcctt•d to dr.1w otT some vote,. thl' possJbtht';' of the
~ elet nou bem~ til'd h.t'- bn·u r.me J
:
Dectdtng .1 ~pre.., Idem due to .t ned vote 111 the electoral college to;
·• a sttuatiOII thl'i tOuntry h.1sn'r f.tced smce IX77. Nobody's kec:n to
: see tt h,tpp~..=n Jg:_un
• In one po]IIa,t week, Uush had a 4 percent lt".ld oH·r the: Vile pres.: tdent Wt·'re nor \Urt:' tf that's countmg the mJrgtn of error Any way
:· you look at it, and 1f those numbers are to be belteved. the choiCe
: for our new prt'stdent 1~ tuo dose to call
:~
That\ why every vntt' tht-. year v.illlOUtH Aq;ument;; to th~ cnn~: trary a'itdc. "''-' urgt' people to g~t out to th'-' poll.., n~xt week A
: handful of bJllors c.m make rhe d1ffcrcncc 111 Oh10 and Wc,t V~r­
: gmt a Why eJ.,~..: would Uu ;;h and Gor~ h.1ve "~P&lt;.'llt "0 Illlll h ttti~e m
-: both "tJtc.,?
•. Tht.• bndn "Pm 111 ,1ll of thl'lil' Vott•r pr'-·dJt:tiOlh J'i rhar loc.JI races
: tend rn d~,m the btg~t:r number') (n Meti...,T'o ,1ml M,NJII tountles
:. there ar~.:- a number ~f dccl~iom to bt: m.1d~ t()r lnt .1l ofllu: wh1le
:; Calha Counry has a closely watched race for shcnff ,,;,d LOtmry
• comll1t'i\HJller

If for nothtng d~e, folb who care .1bout who reprc&lt;;ent~ them on

:

• the local level wall nuke the turnout hagh.
A freyucntl y cttcd reason for low 'lormg totals t~ that polmcs has
become a 11llJOr turn-otf &lt;;HKt' the dayli ofVtt·tn,nll ami WatL·r~~Ht'.
: Recent Wao;hmgton ;;candals h.tve donL~ httle to persuade people that
! govcrnmL:nt ha'i any nnpan m their hves anJ that they are pmverle~'i
! to affect change:
: Thme who Jtu•pt those theotit'S .1re wrong. Whether 1t·~ the
: Whue House or the '-nurthou-.e, voter10 h:lVe tlw power to bnng
: about chang~.: or lll&lt;llnt.llt1 the St.ltUS quo. rhc Jt:CI~10Tl5 lll;~.dc ;tt cJe.c• non tmpa ct us f:1 r mor'-' than th~· UJH.:armg wtll have you beilcve
; On Tut&gt;-.day, r.un ur ~Inn e. plt·.tst· vote. It's .t nght Amen cans foughr
•
:and
JtcJ to pre ~crw, ,md 1t should nor be taken hghtl y, or wotst',
• agnored.

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TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,
Tod•y" Sunday. Nm. o. the .llllth day of21illll.Thcre arc ol&gt; d.1y&lt;
· left 111 the yc,lr
IOd.w\ lltghll ghr 111 Ht..ror)
On Nm 5 l(lfiJ, tltc "Cftlllpm\deJ Plot'' t~1li&lt;.d .h Gu) F,mh·.,
wa~ :..cllcd lx·forc he (Olll d blm\&lt; up the Engh~h P.1rh .1111t:llt
On th1" J,,tc
In 1H72, -.ufft.l~l~t Su..,,lll B Anthony \'lul~ lined S 100 for dttl' lllpt: mg to vote t(Jr Prnltknt CrdiH (Sht· never p,ud the tlJH:)
..
In J&lt;JII. C.dbr.mh I' RodgL'r'i .1rnH·d Ill 1),1\.Hkn ,J, (',tltf. co m: plct111g the tir\t tr.llli,COilttnl'llf,tl .urpb.n~..: trtp m ..j.l) &lt;.byo;
In 1912. WooJro\\ Wthon \\,1~ clencd preo;ldt•nt, dcfc.ltlng Prob grciO'!ve Rt·puhht,111 I"heodorc Rome\lelt and lllLUJ11btut Republican W!llt.llll 1--fm\.1rd l .1rt
In )fJ41l_ Pn.:~ilkm h.mldtu P..o1h&lt;.'\dt \\Oil .111 Jlllpn._·tedented
•
: thtrd t~tlll 111 otlite .110 he dd-.'.Hcd 1\. cpubhran lh.lllengL'r Wt.·n&lt;.kll L.
: Wdlkie
In 1()4(,_ Rl·puhltUih l .tptutL·d tontrol ofho th tit~.· Sctt.ltl' ,111d the
Hom'-' 111 ltlldtt'rlll t·l~..:ctmm
In I1)j(,, Bnr.tlll md I r.mn· ~Lirt~..:d L111dlll!,!: t(m &lt;.'" 111 Eg)'lu dttrHJg fi~ht111g het\\ecn Egyptt.lll ,1nd l,r,1ch t()rce~ around d1t: Sur.:z
, C;uul (A tl',l\t: - tllt \\1,,~ dt·lLued t\\o d,l\\ I.JtlT.)
" In l 1 Hl~{. Rtrhtlrd M Nixon \\1111 the p1c~idemy, ddC.Hmg:Vitl'
: Prco;tdent Hubat H !-lumphtn .1111.i th1rJ-p.1rty cllldtdate c;enrgc
: C W.all.llc'
,
In JC)74,l:.ll.t ( (,J,\~~o \\ ,1\ ek·l tL·d gmt•nwr ofCnnnecnnn. tl'lt'
_ tlr.,t wonl.lll rn '' 111 .1 guhn n.ltOJJ,tl offill' \\ 1thout \LilLL'l'thn~ her
: hu,b.md
In l(&gt;l'N. d~.~rh cl.tillH:d pi,llll'otVI.ItiJJlllr ll unmtt; 111 Nn\ Ymk It
: ag'-' X) .m.J ~lllgt-r-•mng-wl ltt'r B.n n S.hlkr'm M urfn:c . . boro~ knn .

:.)J

• ,It .Jgl' -1-IJ
In 11) 1)-1-, t(lttntl l&gt;lt''&gt;ldcnt P.x,J~,In dt~• lt"t'd he lud PdLhUlllLT\
dt~eJ~t.'-

ren

yeMi; .1~0 l\..1hbl fVktr K JIJ,Jnt:. th&lt;.' lhooklvn-horn l ~r,ll'll
: ~xtremio;t who t.lmp .tq..:;tll'd to llnvc Ar1h., ti-om 1\r,H.:l. \V,l~ .,hor to
: t.k,Jth 1ftt.'t ,1 "Pl't:l h dl .1 '-It'\\ Yot k hotL'I (l· gypn 111 lt.ltl\L' El ~ayycci
• Nm,11r WJ~ H (jliHtnl ot murdL·t .111d tom ILil'd ut \\l',IJl"ll" durgc~
• 111 'ot.ltt uwrt. he \\,1~ l.it1..1 t um It tl'd 111 t onnu lion "1th rht -,],,)111~

fcdn.tl court )
_
F-1\'L' H'.lr\ .1go: An '-'ndk~'! proL· t.:~\1011 of hr.ll !J.., fikd p.1~1 thr ~itll­
plt· \\tJotkn ~otlln ol ['r liTH' f'v\inJ\tL'l Ya;h,lk 1\..lblll, who'd hecn
1'1~.~~~11l.Jted tlte n1d1t hdnlL'
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C.. )nc \t'.\1 1,n.! 1l._ U)
I )I., tnt t judf!;t..' lltnn11~ Pt·ntJlltl J.lt k~on
I
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: dt·tl.lrul Mit ro\nlt ( orp . .t 1110110pol) ~.l~tng tltt· .. nttw.Ht' gJ.Jllt\
· .1ggn:~"IH' ,l&lt;.rtolh wac '\ntln1g 111110\,ltJon " md hurrmg toihllllln~
Popt' John l',llll II bcg. 111 h1~ flr~t \I 'lit Hl lndt:l 111 I~ \l'.lr'111

1

Endangered
(Edrtor~ 11tlfl'

It&gt;

Ohw G•••.

T7r,• fullorl'in,g letter was ~rdm11ttcd
IM• 1.1jr)
.

We are wnting to yuu as cmpluyet:s of the

rrpfllu',. h1111 pmmptly

Is

11

posSible that the Galila Counry CIHI-

dreu', St·rvKes Bureau ha~ not read tlu:tr U1ble
or the ComtltuttOII of the Untted States nf
Amcnca' If we as good God-fl:anng Chn~tJ;Jns
.m.: not abk to pracncc our rchg1ous be!td;,

Oh10 Department of Mental Retardation and
Developmental D1sab1lltles. members of the then maybe the Gallia County Chddren SerOhm League for the Mentally Retarded. and vtees Burea~t t.:an t'xplam why the. Anmh ,Ire
allowed to practiCe their r..::hg1ous bdH:tS and Wt'
member; of the Parent VoiUJ1teet Assouation
We are members of these org.tmzattons as B~pt1st or non-dt:nonuna(lon.ll Ch tt!-ltians .ue
because of the mutual mterest care giVers and not
In the dtcttonary, 'the word cho;npltnc IS
famtly membe11 share in the future of the mchdefined and a system or method of pracnce: as
vtduals we ~~:rve.
We note that the nms10n of the Oh10 of a church, and ,tbuse ts detlnt·d anJ to me
Department of M R / Dil1s "To serve imllVIdu- Improperly or mjunously I am not 10,1y111g tlut
als who requJrl' co mprd1cnstve programs, med- Galha County Chtldrcns S~..:n K\..' Btuc:m dot'~
tcaJ and re~tdentt&lt;ll ~ervJCt's Wlth d cuntmuum of not h.1ve a plate 111 tht~ world m this d.ty .md
chotce-dnven opportunttH._:s; tnsurmg that .time (JUSt think that thq· would be of ntOJe
competent personnd a~"lSt 111 the development usc where the children they arc deahng wtth :1rc
of sktlls and tdattons_hips; protcctmg pt•rsonal actually checked on befutt' they step 111
In so many c:tses, tht'lr· ttme to; ht:.'ll1g \V;J~tL'd
lntcgnty so that each may expenence :t ht~ of
by spmlcd lmle ch1ldrcn whose mom .md dad
me re.mng t:apabthttes and independence"
As 'iuch, tht· sta te of Oh10 has a compt:llmg got a dt\'Ort:l' and they ate playmg one patcm
at,r.t111'&gt;t the other in any cao;e of ahml' or
ob~gatlon to prov1de appropnate servaces for
the molit vulnerable and forgotten rm:mbcrs of tk'giect, the home that 1s betng .1ccu~ed ot ~;uch
a hornd .md unspcabbk erullL' should at leaq
our sont'ty
The famtlte~. work force, and other con- be vtsitecl to sec 1f thls 1.., Jmt tht' d1tld not hksumers bdtcvc the pohc1es endangered under mg the parents ru les
And to these ch1!dren that make thL·se thmgo;
the gutse uf''choi(c uf -.df-dc:termtnanon'' and
propaf,':lted by mandated advocacy g10ups do up JUSt because you thmk your p:ucm;; arc too
hard Oli you and tht: uthet p.Hl'llt tmght not bt.•
not meet the ncecls of tillS ~opu l at1on.
In fact, aging parents. Slbhngs, and other stake as h.ml God\ Word &lt;.1ys to cl11ldren Ill Ephe\1.111\
holder&lt; hold fund -r,aiscrs. b.ake sale, and c.ash 111 6 I: Clufdn·11 of1C}" }'!1111 pattiH.., 111 tlrr Lord /•ll Ilw.
tmurance pohctes to prcsef\ie the developmen - 1 ~ r~l!fll: 2: Hollcll ytJur (iuhcr and mtJFhcr 11 llldl '' tile
tal centers that . provade homes for the pro- .JIM Ctl/1111/a/Uimertt wrtlr f'T0/11/~C. It ,tl'io savs Ill
Coloso;Iam 3 2() Cluldrr11 oill'y yolll pmmt~ i11 all
foumlly d"abled population.
,
The thrc.lt~ to nt•eded dr-velopmental center rhwes, /Or tl11' 1:, ll'rflpfeasm~ 10 rile Lrrd
Thl'
C.1ll1a
Comity
Children
Sen
ru·~
Bw'-·au
based c&lt;1rc smmd:i hkc a good soluuon, tht' Jevtl
ts m the details. Our chi!nts, even tho-.c who bdtL'Vt'~ tb.tt 1f .1 ~ htiJ l'i not hJppy, th.tt tiR'Y
appeal to function at a level whtt:h would .1Uow 'ihould he ,1hlc to go hvc \onh'whcre eh~..· \\lth ...
mdepcndent hvmg, samply do not h.we the om even Lht.:c kmg to sec why the (_htld m
.
cap.1uty for thts population serves to showcase unhappy.
Fna .111 tlw they know, the chald wu ld be
the unraveling the :..ystcm wtll cxpenl·nu· with
unhappy do to the bet that the mc.m parent
tl1rther pnvatizatton
WJII
not let tiam1 stay out all mght, w11l not let
\'1./t• urge you, as the pmnc poltcy-makt.·r 111
Oh10, to recons1'-kr thL· positton taken by your thl'lll IOII)Oke, w11l JJOt let thL'IIl do Utuh"'· will
admmJstrauon. tndudmg tht Oh10 Leg;1 l not let thl'\11 dnnk \\'tllnot l o11Jnn~..: rhcm havR1ght'i ScrvKt', the lmganon of Martm vs. the mg ~~.:x, \'-'til not let tht:m go anywh'-·rc wtthout
Dep.artment of MR/DD A full-servace 1ystem thr- parent kno\\lllg wh'-·re rh'-'Y arc ,tnJ h.IVI: J
,mchorcd tlmdcd developn1cnt1l ct&gt;nrers ;md numbL'l whcrc thev Gill lw tl'&lt;uhed
I\ tht~ !lOLl rc.1lly illL\111 par'-'nt' Wh,lt d11IJ in
HUemll:d1ate car'-' f.1ct ht1cs wlth tramed Gtre
g1vcr' w1l1 be..,t ..,ervl' tlm popul.1tion and make tht•Jr tc~..=n .tgl' yc,ns w.mt~ ,I p,trcm hkc tim'
T lll'y m.l\ not w.mt dm paR'm, hut tf there
bc~t U'it.: of .tv.ul.lbit.:' fitnd1ng
Wl..'fl' more p.1rcnt;; that \YelL hkc th,H , eithl'l the
Pk.1~c IMt:tl to the letters .md pleas of L0111

"u mer~ . do not di.,p!a(e thctr loved ones.

C:dh.1 Coumv C:htldrem SerVICL' Burc.tu \\otlid

We, through the Oh1o Leab'llc of Metal
Retmbntin, would hke th e opporttunry to
.meet wtth you to dts&lt;.m"i t!H:se Issue~ more fully. ·
W~..: \\ill call tOt an Jppomtment tn the ne.lf
future.
Th"nk ;~u t(}r yo~1r &lt;~ttt.·nuon to the con ~&lt;.crns
and th.li!t· ngl'.., ra1 ~ed hy th110 letret
Monty Blanton
Dan Frazier
Sharon Brown
Calha County

be real busy \\ltth JLmk or we would h.wc a
lower rate ot d1 u~ .Jddtct" cm d tecn,lgt.: wotlll'l",
btlt WI.: c,illllot be that k111d ot p.ltcnt hcc,tU~L' .1~
'ioon ,,., we· .Irt:.', hc1c com'-'' the C .dlu Cot111ty
ChtldJL'm Snv1cc Burt·,m to t&lt;1ke out poor
unh.1ppy ch lldl'en "to :t hn111e th 1t wtll It-t tht'lll
do the thmg\ \\'l' do not \\'.111~ them to do
bet.l u~t· Wt' love them
I !;-.'lll'~\ th,tt the people .It till' c.~Jh,t Cou11ty
Chtldr&lt;.'ll" Snv1cc Uurt·au hJw not t'\'tT hc,ud
of that &lt;.onccpt 111 dtild rL".Irmg. ( 0\'l', what .1
trrnhl c w.1y tn r;-Jt\t; a t.hlld
If they would check out tht: l,m' ot rht· ~t,ltt'
of Ohto they nught find out th.tt dll·y .1re
br1..'.lkmg c~ fcV·/ ot-thcm thL'IJ\cl\l'\ Slllh ,\\contltct of tntcrc.;;t, not piJCtng. .1 L htld out of the

Read the law

Dear Editor:
A" .iUHHCnll·d ctttzt· n ofC,tiJt&lt;l County, I :1111
uynlg to ~igurc out why rhc (;alha ( ounty sl,ltl' of 0\no.
Chddtl'll Scrvtll'~ Burl\IU h,1s not re.H.l tht:
ihL·tc 1~ al"o " few tlnn'-'r... th.!t thl')' -,JJOu]d
Coll\tltUtiOll of the Unltl'd St,ltL'.., of AnlL'I IC,l ' t.hl'ck Oil bd()fc l l'lllOVJ II g ,ll !JJid fi11111 .I hont('
th,tt gu.trantl'l'\ .1 \Cp.lrJtlon of the chun.~ h ;md t.llk to the child\ rt'.ICht·r~. p.liL'nt~ .l!lJ ncJgho;t,ltc
hoJ'i to \l'L' tfthcn: 1s .my nuth 111 wh.lr rill' Lh1ld
In known m~t,mcc . . , the (;.lilt~ County Clul- 1., 'aytng, lwl.lU\L' ,1 tal . . c atLll'odtUlll l,ltl tutn
dren\ ~crviCe~ lhm:.w \,\yo; th,H you should not ~oltlt.:onc\ hft· bt'L',Ill'oe you Jl"t' thu .tlly lOll~Jd
puni~h ,l Lhdd hy r.miug your vmce or by cort•rcd to be h"-lllty unnl you prove vour. . L·lf Itlllop~lr,tl pun1shmc11t.
t"t'llt, winch h .tho .tg.tiu~t nur Commutton
I do not know 1lhout o;omt: of tht:'ie peopk.
' 11m rould kad to !,IW\tut~ .t~.llll"t thl' (,,1llt.t
hut I'm ~ure th ,tt tny fdlov.· Baptl~t and non- ( :ount)' ( :hJidtl'!l~ :-,crvrtL' Utln.',l\t, the lotlllt\'
dcnomlll,ltlotul C:hrt~tl.lll.., know that 111
u . . d( thL·l.l\\ )LT~ \\ lw ( umc up ro rcll tlw dltlI kllrl'TOJlO!ll'y x_s . ) (lll sfltl!lfd know Ill yell/( lu·llrf drcn th.lt 1t y&lt;)l]'IL' nnt h.1ppv \\l' \vrlll ll'lp ~ou,
tlrttf 11.1 //Iilii rha~rw1 fn, ,1011, ~tl d1c L1rd }'(l/IY { ;od
rht: jlldgl''- who do nor chc1 k t1) "L'l' 11 tht· u~t·
cltil,'fr'IJ' yo11 ,md 111 I'Jovct bs 13 24
fie 1141(1
h.1~ bctn pmpl'tly tllW"ittg.ltl d.
IJlcl/1'$ {f/1 rcld flclfc 1 /11.1 'Oif,llllf he 114/tl low:-. l11m d11r lmpL' th,lt tim lcttt•r IM\ opL'IlL'd dw eye . . ot
c

.._

· opuuon, faces a tough re-d~Ctton
fight agamsr Rcpubhcan Tc1 renee
O'Donneli, a Cleveland appeals
Judge.
Rcpub~can leaders demcd the

all you parems out there. If you do not want the
CSll to .come \'1\tt you. ,111 you h.we to do Js let
yoU! thildrt'n do any~hmgthey want to no f!1atter tf It ts nor s.ttC or nor because as parents we
.Ire supposed to . ra1se our chddrcn to be good
l.1w-abllimg adults
Tluo; j., not nec.:e~IOJI)' a popu l.tr JO.b at ttmes,
but would you r.athcr be a popular parent of a
ch1ld at Mansfidd, Ohio, or of a ch1ld who
obt'ys the l.1w and can take care of thentSelves as
an adult If the CSI3 wa)lt&lt; to be popular, they
need to bmld more pnsons
Dianna L. Sweeney

Democrats' atcusatiuns

Man dies fleeing
trooper
WEST JEFFERSON (AP) Troopers from the West Jefferson
post of the State H1ghway Patrol
satd one man died and another
was InJured late Fmi1y wlk~n the1r
car left the road after attcmptmg to

Patriot

flee a truopt:r
The dnver, BradJey Rvtht.·rford,
20, of London, was pronounced
dead at the scene A pa.10sengcr,
Samuel Patt..::rson, 23, who~e
homc~town was nut listed, was 111
fmr condmon ,1t Gqnt Medical

Right decisions
Dear Editor:
I wntc rhts rc~pomc to" A Prayer" not as gener,llm.uuger of tit'-' G:wm Plant, but as a tCIIOW
hdiever 111 the ~;amc Gnd that l feel the wnter
has :tlCl'pted as bcr God.
I wnre as one who has prayed that the nght
detistom h&lt;~H' been nude and rh.n H..:: wtll
m.1ke n~ht whate\er dcnsmn ts made_ It lS evtdem to me tlut the art1clr- was wntten tn regard
ro the comrovcr~y over the usc of the ammoma
,tt the Gavm Plant
It d1sturb" me gteatly that the wnter wntes an
open letter 3"i a pr,iyer ;"tskmg; that her team wm,
as ;, sports tl',llll may often pray to wm, rather
tl1.111 both te.11m look to Cud for the nght deCI\Ion I Lwhcve th.n wh.ltL'Vel dcuston ts cvcntu·•lly made. God con and wdl '"' kc 1t nght.
To judge others on the baSis of h~r opmion
.md then to a'\k Gud to forgive on the basts of
th,lt optmon ts not what God has asked us to
do. WL· 'hould only be .1skmg that God b"-llde
,IJld dtrct t ,!11 LOIKL't ned rhar H1s w11l be done
m,.tll thm~rs ,~nd not on tlu: b,1~1s of our human
hell d-.,.
If declSlons I,avc been mack wtthout askmg
fm gultLntte tiom God first, then that 1~ wrong
;md lito; t,'11ld,mce need., to bt.• !iought before any
deciSion IS nude. I knov.• th,u t'i bemg done by '
m,my of m .md pr.1y that the wntcr and the
l011111HI1Jtty .1s .t whok do the same.
Duane Phlegar
Chesh1re

About a half-hour e~rher,
Rubmson forced a fremont bartender to fi.U a bag Wlth money
'"'l then shot him m the face,
pollee ~11d The bartender wa1
treoted at a hosp1tal and released.
Rob1mon fled the state and w.t&lt;
arrested days later m Houston. He
has pleaded mnocem and faGes the .
death penalty 1f conviCted of several charges, mcluding aggravated

Trial date set in

slayings
FREMON f (AP) - A mon
charged wtrl1 ktllmg derb :tt two
norrhwt:st Oh1o CHT)Olll" wtll go
to tn.u M.HL h 19 m Sandusky
C:ountv Common Pkas Court
l'oh cc '·'Y John Mi&lt;:;had Robmson, 20. of SandL"ky, shot Crystal
PtL'T~oll 11 1 the back of he:td :~t the
Two Z'o; I )nve-Thru our..qdc.: of
Ook Harbor dunng a robbery on
April 21
He then allegedly robbed and
killed Demsc Clmk. owner of
Gene's Carryout, on Apnl 24 .H
her stort.· 111 Clyde

Dear Editor:
vou wd.1y not ou t of ang~r or
Jrr.ltmn,tltt), hut nu t of utter s,Jdnc~~
I h.wc been J I'L'o;Jdent of Cheslnn:, Oh1o, all
\\rtttng to

SANDUSKY (AP)- Perplexed by the pn:sidentaal polls? So
the people who pore over
numbers m daily racmg guides and know how
to foUow a horse race.
" It's up one week, down the next week," said
Laura Arhelt, Sitting among the regulars at an
off-track bemng parlor this week. 'These polls
that are up and down so much don't do anythmg for me,'tlther than make me SICk about, '':;.
'They make the people, not care," sa1d

are

Common Pleas Judge Harvey
Sargeant on fnday scheduled a
Nov. 20 hearing to rule on several
motions that RobulSOn 's attorneys

have filed

Longtime coroner

dies
DAYTON (l'\P) - Former
Momgomcry County Coronc-r ·
ltobcrt E Zapf died WednesdJ)' at
Mwmi Vall~..:y Hmpttal H~ wao; R7
Z1pf was county coron..::r from
1'15~ to l'.lf:O. H1s Ol1t'-Cl1ll' asststam and suc'-cssor, Dr James H
D:lvts, l rt•thtt&gt;d Z1pf w1th modern-

mng the county's office, mtmduLIllg tht· usc of toxicology and l1Lo;-

tology l.abs ond the use of field
illVt:sttg,ltors
Ztpf haJ been .t t11ght ~urgeon
m World War II and later was
chtector of nuclear mcdtcme and
director of research at Mianu Val-

Icy Hosp1t1l, where he established
the hosp1tal's first blood bank. He
conducted research mto cancer
and worked wtth Monsanto
Mound Lob m studies of the tOXIclry of rad10acuve elements
released m a nuclear explosiOn
Z1pf also operated Zipf Diagnostic L1boratones m suburban
Kettering

SurviVors mclude a daughter,
three sons, eaght grandchtldren
and two great grandcha ldren.
Funeral sc::rvtces were
not
announced.

Man convicted in
killing

COLUMBUS (AP) -A suspected pursesnatcher who led pohce on a n•~rh-sp ecd chase
ran down and scvcrdy lllJUred an officer who
was spreadmg road spakes to stop hts rjr,
authorities sat d.
Officer Stewart "Sam" M11ler, 35, :i fl'&lt;'eway
patrol officer with 10 yt:ars' expenencc. was 111
crittcar condmon Fnday mght 111 Gram Mt.•dtcal Ccntt!r
l,fvllller had multiple fractures 111 both legs, a
'broken arm .•md cuts on h1S face ~md heJd, SJul
pohce spokesman Sgt. Earl Sm1th
Pohce 1dent1ficd the dnver as Ray Wetthng.
.H, of Columbus He 1s ch.arged wath attempt-

SR S:1-t 111 rlm town, you could tind my f:tm1ly
opclllng pll..'~l'IH'- e,trly on Chno;trnas mormngs
I tlnd It he.w1ly dt.,turbm~ that It .til cou ld end
Ill .1 Jll.lttLT of .1 fl_.w lllllllltL'IO
I hm l ,111 ,I brg'-· cnmp.my, S\lch ,ts AEI~ be so
In\\' ,1\ tn t&lt;tke ,, Lh.nKt' lll dc;;rroyJng the haven
ot Ill\' bnul) ·~ lllt'lllnl ll'"' Where .Ill' thctr moral
pr!lll..'lpk~? 1'111 UJllVllKt'd they lle'll..'l Jc,lf!led
.uiy 1f they thdn 't grow up 111 ,\ town hke mme

Megan Harrison
Chcshare

•

largl"Sf

ruUcr coasccr.
B1.,ed 011 lnl&lt;:tYil'\\~ H the.! hctung parlor,
~ven those who arc .1h\ an lookmg for something to wager · on s.1y they wouldn't touch
pidcin~ rhe \Vtfmct of th(.' ran· hctwt·cn Gore
and Georg~ W Bw.h Some ~pt:(u latc..·d that
g'ynt10ns

II\

the pre..,H.il'llll.ll pnll~ .:11~ a Te!i&lt;Uit of

tbe mcdta mampubtm~ r'-·~ult~ to generate

ed murdt:r. ass.llllt on a pohcc officer, t1c:cmg
.md roLbtTy. He will be arr.ngnt:d S.tturJay
"Tiu'i wa'i a delthL•t&lt;Hl' cnm inal act," Smtth
&lt;Old
fv1111L'T was struck :lt the l~ltd of ::1 htgh-spced
purstnt .tbrough rt'!..tdennal ~t1't't'l~ and on tluet'
htghway~ that bcg:tn w1th .Ill ,lttc.·mptcd pursestutchmg Thursday mght on th.: northwest
sido of the CJry
Wnncsst"S told pohcl' a nun 111 a C.:H h:td
dragged a \Voman \\'lulc trymg to steal bcr
purse .lS he drovt· llt'.lr IJL·r. Sm1th s,ud
The car sped ofr The woman, whose name
\\'asn't gtven, wasn't senous)y InJU red .

Congress gives govemors
authority over water sales
WASHINGTON (AP)- LegISlation approved Fnday would
g•ve governors of the e1gh t Great
Lakes states power over w hether
their water can be exported
A bill covenng restoration of
the Everglades and other water
pmJCCts across the country VJas
approved by the H ouse on a vote
of 312-2. The bill now goes to
President Olmton for has expected stgnature
T he Water Resou rces Development Act also urged the Great
Lakes states to dev1se a common
standard to use w h en making
dccJston about withdrawing
water from the Grea t Lakes Basm.
There arc no current proposals
for sh1pping Great Lakes water to
th1rsty customers tn o ther pa rts of
the world, but many offiCials got
nen ous about th at possibtltty
after an !Insuccessful effort "ro
export Lake Supenor water from
Canada
Thl' exportation language was
oddcd to the ball at the request of
Sen Spencer Abraham. R-MKh
SL'n G~orge Vo m ov1ch, R Ohtn, was the plnllary author of
the bill, .:md tt mcluded a v.trJl'lY
of ~pc:c 1 a l provt ~Jons f01 lwi h ome

of poll that can be vohnle because IllS deSigned
to track day-to-day changes
R.ather than taking a snapshot of~p1mon at
a parocular time, these tracking poUs take a new
sample every day and average 1t with the prevlou&lt; couple of days of polhng, creattng a fever
cha11 of opmion

Ofllccrs spotted the cai- and began pursuing

on Interstate 71 south at speeds of up to IOU
mph
Poll ee pohcy dtctate~ that lug-h-~peed chases be lmutcd to CJS~s of Violent cnmes Snuth
s:ud thl ~ dust· was JU Stlfi'-·d because offic~.:rs
tl1ought that the man had tnc:d to kidnap th e
woman
After tt wa~ determmt.•d th,u no one h.1d

11

been abducted, officers ended the: l11gh-spced

chase. Sm1rh sa1d.
Cnm~rs and a hehcopter rontm ued to follow from a d1stJncc as the car sped rhrou!;;h thl'
east stde.

GETIING TO KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE

LAWRENCE TAWNEY

and local governments will have

to pay for a flood control proJeCt
that started out expenstve and has
expanded substa ntially.
T he bill says the non-federal
share of the Duck Creek proJect
m southeast Ohio cannot exceed
$4.2 111Jil10n
T he proJeCt has been delayed
for years wh1le the village of Fanfax negottated with a lando\vner
over access to an aband oned
bridge and wh1le CmC!nnatl
negotiated With other landowners
for the nght to get access to one
acre of vacant land.
Meanwhtle, the proJe cted
pnce tag grew ti-om an onguul
esmnate of $14 milhon to the
current $34 malhon .
T he water ball, also coli&lt; for the
government to stud)' the fc.:l~I bll­
•ty of developmg a pubhc port 111
Steubenville, Oh10

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
COMMISSIONER
•
•

Galli a County Native; Grew up on a form In Green Towns hlp
Graduate of Galli a Academy High School and allended Rio
Grande Colle~,~e.
• 33 year employee of Amerltech having spent many years In
the engineering department.
Married to Edna Mahon Tawney, also a Golllo County native;
We are the parents of two children, Michael ond Llso, and
grandparents of two.
• Member of Golllpolls Christian Church
• Hove been adlve In management of budgets and funds for
organizations
• During years aiAmer ltech hove been occounlabte for protect
costs, budgets ond deadlines

WHY DO I WANTTO REPRESENTTHE COUNTY AS A
COMMISSIONER?
•
•
•

Help raise the liv ing standards for our county residents
Work to bring qood paying jobs to the county
Have fiscal responsibility In the Commissioner's office
Creole an open dialogue with the residents oflhe county.

st.H.:
On~.:

l nmt~

how much state

Clay Township

Fire Levy

Renewal Only
Please vote YES for the
Renewal of the Fire Levy
Thank You,
Clay 1\vp. Trustees
Wanda H.. Waugh, Clerk
Hello Folks,
,
I am Bi ll Davis, Cand idate f or Gall ia Coun ty
Commissioner. Pictured here with me is my wj fe of thirty
years, the former Susan Markley. We have three chi ldren,
Anna, SO?m, and Ssth.
I retired from the Gall ipolis Developmental Center after
thirty years of service, the last fourteen working w1 th the
Senior population.
With seven years as a Gallipolis C.ity Commiss•oner, I
have the experience of working with Co unty, State, and
Federal entities to engage in a bi-partisan fashion to gain
pos1t1ve results 1 have a listening ear that will enable me to

I "'ppmc I 'l10uld be .1ggr.woted that aU my
hfc I h.ave 111 hakJ l1.1t mful pollutants JUSt wlulc
..,pcmbng tllllt' workmg or pl.tymg m my own
yard
No. I am not .at all pe&lt;tmbed I am only disht'.lrtcncd by thll\ &lt;.'XpenL·nr&lt;.'. 1-. the world now
.1 pl.1u· wh'-·re the hum.m hfe lli ot no more
v,1lue th,m an c'itllll.lted (Ost' Arc ~ma ll towns
now ..,omcthmg ro he ~..:xptTtm~:tttt.:d w1th
b~:.·t.nl~e 1f \Cml.:thmg \Vl'rt: to go wrong. not as
m.111y de,tth~ would ouut'
•
It ts 111 ( : hc~h11·e th.H I .u n enjoying the acnvJttt·~ ,111d opporttlllltlt'' of Ill) jlllllOr year at
RJVct V:tllev Htglt S&lt;. hool. It IS hl'rc th,lt my 'ilStet, Lau1 .l ;1nd I lc.1r ned ttl ndc our b1kcs At 2() I

town known for llJvm~ the Jtatton 's

_
In fJct. mcd1a outlet~ thts year have more
thJn usual been ~pomonng or carrymg a type

mt~~st.

Car involved in police chase hits officer

II\ ye.lr&lt; of my hfe I do not hate AEP for
Jmt.Jihng anhydrum Jillll.l Oill,1 111 my backyard .
I .1111 not even ,\llgry th.lt 011 any grvcn 111ght I
nuy \\o.lkl' up to rt\llt7e th .1t I have only a few
lllllltltL'" to s.t'll..' my hfi:.

Arhc1t. an AI Gore supporter m dus Like Em

'

murder.

LIMA (AP) -A man was convicted Fnday of killing the man.agcr of .1dry cleaner dunng a robbery attempt
Center Til Columbus, nursmg
Cory HoUand was found guilty
st.:pc:rvisor Holly Sluo~hock sa1d of aggr.tvJt~d murder and ;1ggraSaum'\Jy mormng
v.1ted robbery 111 th,· April 9, 19Y9,
The patrol s.ud .1 trooper ~tg­ &lt;tobbmg death of [)orothy Miller.
tlJleJ RuthcrfiJTd\ c u tn 'tnp nn who m;m:tgcd the Home 5'-•rvJCl'
St..1EL' Rnute 5(,, jll\[ ~mtth of U S
Laundry Dry Clc·.mers &amp; C•qwt
40 111 M.ldtson Cmmrv. bt.'l._ .1us~..: of Clc,ml't" 1n tim nty 70 11Hics
a tr,lffit: vtol.ltHm .lt .tbmll 11 ..\-() ~omh ofToledn
pm
Dunng l loll.md's tnol 111 Allen
1 h'-· car slmwd. th~..=n . . p~..·d ofT .1~ Count\' Common Pk.ls Cout t,
the rroopc1 pulkd 111 bd1md It four p~opk t~stttlt.·d th ,lt thl'y saw
Thl· troopt'l bcg.u1 Lh.l~lllg tht• Ho\Lmd at the sLt'llC of the Ull llt',
c,11, lost o;1ght ot It, IOUIJdcd .1 cur\'c mduchng ,t m.tn who mtettttptL'd
and s.t\\' tht• c.u lud ~trutk .1 tree
the IL)hbcry.

l11lzat pri11ciples?
I &lt;1m

Racing fan~ say presidential polls aren't a sure bef

BU CKEYE BRI E FS

Sunday, November 5, 2000

6unbap tl:im,. -•rntintl • Page AS

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

understand and comprehend s1tualions as times change, and input 1s needed.
1 want to promote Gallia County for Economic Development with equitable wages.
1 want to clean up our County by ensuring current litter laws are enforced to KEEP
GALLIA BEAUTIFUL.
We need pos•l•vf! programs for our youth to build for our future.
1 feel Fiscal Responsibility is a must. I want Civil Serv1ce Compliance when hiring County
Positions.
ELECT ME, BILL DAVIS, FOR YOUR GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSJONER.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT,

Candidate for
Meigs County

Clerk of
Courts
COMMITMENT
• Longer Hours
• Easier Accessibility
• Courteous Service "With A S11Jile"
As your clerk of Courts~ I will be committed to
maintaining a friendly, courteous office. I understand that
as an officeholder I am a public servant, here to serve
you.
You will be greeted with a friendly smile and receive the
quality customer service ''OU should ~xpect from your
elected official.
:

I

I '

Paid for
Paid for by the commauee to elect B•ll Dav1s, Manlyn Kuhn, Treasurer
.

I

�,
•

•
•

·· _,unb
_ _:__av'~im_d_-il_e._ath_w_ _ _ __
i unbaJI

~imts- itntintl

0-=-

_

Sunday, November 5, 2000

P-inion

'•

Page A4

Replacements
named

£Tri~'&lt;&lt;!JUtO fO'IIr WORM&lt;tfNZ·"fi!LI!:;&lt;I&amp;J:;.pozt.oA"'"""'- - -

HI.IU I\e

'Esttz6asnd In l!U8
1125 Third ....... Golllpolla, Ohio
7......23'2 • F•x· 44&amp;-3008

COLUMBUS (AP) - Democrane Sens Don Brady of Clcvelond and Anthony La tell of Girard
will replace two lawmakers who
qmt a spectallegislaovc commtttcc
stUd}'lng school funding. Mmomy
Leader Rhme McLif\ s;nd Fnday.
Brady and Latcll are replacmg
DemocratiC Sens MKhael Shoemaker of 13ournevillc and Robert
Hagan of Youngstown , who
reSigned tins week &amp;om the Jomt
Commlttee on Educaoon Fundmg ami Accountab1liry.
The conmuttce was formed
after the Ohio Supreme Court
mlcd m May that Ohio·, schoolfunding formula rcmamed unconsonltlona.l, 111 brgt= parr bcc;tusc It
n:hd too he-avtly on ]neal prop'-'rty t.txe&lt;; The lOUrt 1\:jt:dl'd pk·as
fron1,ltepL1blican 1.1wm,1kl'r.. that
they had fixed thL· problem smct·

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohlo
7~892·2156 · Fax· W2·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

l.1n"s w tlr.r rditor

ro

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
lll't

,..,.lrolfK. Tlr.l'\' sltollld lw kurlum JOO .,.orris AU ku"'.,., ndiJrd
\ 'o JHUIXIttJi l.ttttN KJill

ua;,,, attJ lfUIIt M 111ttlJ uJ llldud.t ~u rmd rtltphmlt ,.,.,.. ~,

k pvb/Uittd. LtUtn lhOIIIIJ j, Ill ftHJd liUif, iJJdnlUiff USJI.tl, lfOI ptNIJtt&amp;/rtws
~
Till' opt11WIIS upnned m lilt C'riiiiiiUI 1Jtlow4n the COIIStiiJIU II/ fhr Ohw rllllt] Pllbli~hlnl
Co 'f tdirtwiiiJ ~rrl, u..Uu mfrlrwi.~t l'll)lbi..

OUR VIEW

Vote

the lOUrt ongtn.allv ruled on the
matter 111 191J7
Shocm.tka .mJ ll.1g.) n ~.11d til&lt;.'~
1\.'Sl!;llCd bL'LlmC dlL' COillllllttL'l'
w:t~n 't gctung ,1 11\ dung dotw
They ..,,ud ' tilL' I() Republicans on
the 10-mt·mbcr co mnuttcc wert:
puttmg ofF m.11ur lq:l'l.,btl\'C tkostons on school fundmg until .tfi-er
Tuesday's clccnon rusttcc Alice
Robte Re~mtk ..l Dcmocr:u who
wrote the emu t m.~onty'~ May

Going to polls critical for
future cif area) nation
As everv tll.lJor o;;.·]cl non Llr.l\\ nt'.trs.

ne\'.'~

columm JnJ lhe atr-

OUR READ E R S' VI E WS

.: wavt'S art" u~u.tlly ti.dl or" gloomy pn·du. ttum Jbout votlT apathy.
• f)e~pltt' J}] l'fll_)r(S to e'lll'fgJZt' thc- pub!Jc to go to tht• poJI..,, turnout
: wtll bt· lO\\, we ,u~..: told
•
That's roo b,td. he&lt;..tll'it' tfthac IS cv'-·r .1 nmc for CVL'ryonc to cxcr-

:: ust' tht:tr nglH to vote:, Tut''i{bv \\Ill be the J,ty t&lt;i do so.

: Polls mtl);n1 m 111 tht~ finJI \~'t'ekend pnor to till' pn:stdclltt.ll dec: tlon th:n tht• Bu . . h-(;orr- r.lCt:' \\Ill be ttght_ Wtth o;ome thud party
. cand1d.ltt'IO expcctt•d to dr.1w otT some vote,. thl' possJbtht';' of the
~ elet nou bem~ til'd h.t'- bn·u r.me J
:
Dectdtng .1 ~pre.., Idem due to .t ned vote 111 the electoral college to;
·• a sttuatiOII thl'i tOuntry h.1sn'r f.tced smce IX77. Nobody's kec:n to
: see tt h,tpp~..=n Jg:_un
• In one po]IIa,t week, Uush had a 4 percent lt".ld oH·r the: Vile pres.: tdent Wt·'re nor \Urt:' tf that's countmg the mJrgtn of error Any way
:· you look at it, and 1f those numbers are to be belteved. the choiCe
: for our new prt'stdent 1~ tuo dose to call
:~
That\ why every vntt' tht-. year v.illlOUtH Aq;ument;; to th~ cnn~: trary a'itdc. "''-' urgt' people to g~t out to th'-' poll.., n~xt week A
: handful of bJllors c.m make rhe d1ffcrcncc 111 Oh10 and Wc,t V~r­
: gmt a Why eJ.,~..: would Uu ;;h and Gor~ h.1ve "~P&lt;.'llt "0 Illlll h ttti~e m
-: both "tJtc.,?
•. Tht.• bndn "Pm 111 ,1ll of thl'lil' Vott•r pr'-·dJt:tiOlh J'i rhar loc.JI races
: tend rn d~,m the btg~t:r number') (n Meti...,T'o ,1ml M,NJII tountles
:. there ar~.:- a number ~f dccl~iom to bt: m.1d~ t()r lnt .1l ofllu: wh1le
:; Calha Counry has a closely watched race for shcnff ,,;,d LOtmry
• comll1t'i\HJller

If for nothtng d~e, folb who care .1bout who reprc&lt;;ent~ them on

:

• the local level wall nuke the turnout hagh.
A freyucntl y cttcd reason for low 'lormg totals t~ that polmcs has
become a 11llJOr turn-otf &lt;;HKt' the dayli ofVtt·tn,nll ami WatL·r~~Ht'.
: Recent Wao;hmgton ;;candals h.tve donL~ httle to persuade people that
! govcrnmL:nt ha'i any nnpan m their hves anJ that they are pmverle~'i
! to affect change:
: Thme who Jtu•pt those theotit'S .1re wrong. Whether 1t·~ the
: Whue House or the '-nurthou-.e, voter10 h:lVe tlw power to bnng
: about chang~.: or lll&lt;llnt.llt1 the St.ltUS quo. rhc Jt:CI~10Tl5 lll;~.dc ;tt cJe.c• non tmpa ct us f:1 r mor'-' than th~· UJH.:armg wtll have you beilcve
; On Tut&gt;-.day, r.un ur ~Inn e. plt·.tst· vote. It's .t nght Amen cans foughr
•
:and
JtcJ to pre ~crw, ,md 1t should nor be taken hghtl y, or wotst',
• agnored.

!

•

·--------------------~-----------

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,
Tod•y" Sunday. Nm. o. the .llllth day of21illll.Thcre arc ol&gt; d.1y&lt;
· left 111 the yc,lr
IOd.w\ lltghll ghr 111 Ht..ror)
On Nm 5 l(lfiJ, tltc "Cftlllpm\deJ Plot'' t~1li&lt;.d .h Gu) F,mh·.,
wa~ :..cllcd lx·forc he (Olll d blm\&lt; up the Engh~h P.1rh .1111t:llt
On th1" J,,tc
In 1H72, -.ufft.l~l~t Su..,,lll B Anthony \'lul~ lined S 100 for dttl' lllpt: mg to vote t(Jr Prnltknt CrdiH (Sht· never p,ud the tlJH:)
..
In J&lt;JII. C.dbr.mh I' RodgL'r'i .1rnH·d Ill 1),1\.Hkn ,J, (',tltf. co m: plct111g the tir\t tr.llli,COilttnl'llf,tl .urpb.n~..: trtp m ..j.l) &lt;.byo;
In 1912. WooJro\\ Wthon \\,1~ clencd preo;ldt•nt, dcfc.ltlng Prob grciO'!ve Rt·puhht,111 I"heodorc Rome\lelt and lllLUJ11btut Republican W!llt.llll 1--fm\.1rd l .1rt
In )fJ41l_ Pn.:~ilkm h.mldtu P..o1h&lt;.'\dt \\Oil .111 Jlllpn._·tedented
•
: thtrd t~tlll 111 otlite .110 he dd-.'.Hcd 1\. cpubhran lh.lllengL'r Wt.·n&lt;.kll L.
: Wdlkie
In 1()4(,_ Rl·puhltUih l .tptutL·d tontrol ofho th tit~.· Sctt.ltl' ,111d the
Hom'-' 111 ltlldtt'rlll t·l~..:ctmm
In I1)j(,, Bnr.tlll md I r.mn· ~Lirt~..:d L111dlll!,!: t(m &lt;.'" 111 Eg)'lu dttrHJg fi~ht111g het\\ecn Egyptt.lll ,1nd l,r,1ch t()rce~ around d1t: Sur.:z
, C;uul (A tl',l\t: - tllt \\1,,~ dt·lLued t\\o d,l\\ I.JtlT.)
" In l 1 Hl~{. Rtrhtlrd M Nixon \\1111 the p1c~idemy, ddC.Hmg:Vitl'
: Prco;tdent Hubat H !-lumphtn .1111.i th1rJ-p.1rty cllldtdate c;enrgc
: C W.all.llc'
,
In JC)74,l:.ll.t ( (,J,\~~o \\ ,1\ ek·l tL·d gmt•nwr ofCnnnecnnn. tl'lt'
_ tlr.,t wonl.lll rn '' 111 .1 guhn n.ltOJJ,tl offill' \\ 1thout \LilLL'l'thn~ her
: hu,b.md
In l(&gt;l'N. d~.~rh cl.tillH:d pi,llll'otVI.ItiJJlllr ll unmtt; 111 Nn\ Ymk It
: ag'-' X) .m.J ~lllgt-r-•mng-wl ltt'r B.n n S.hlkr'm M urfn:c . . boro~ knn .

:.)J

• ,It .Jgl' -1-IJ
In 11) 1)-1-, t(lttntl l&gt;lt''&gt;ldcnt P.x,J~,In dt~• lt"t'd he lud PdLhUlllLT\
dt~eJ~t.'-

ren

yeMi; .1~0 l\..1hbl fVktr K JIJ,Jnt:. th&lt;.' lhooklvn-horn l ~r,ll'll
: ~xtremio;t who t.lmp .tq..:;tll'd to llnvc Ar1h., ti-om 1\r,H.:l. \V,l~ .,hor to
: t.k,Jth 1ftt.'t ,1 "Pl't:l h dl .1 '-It'\\ Yot k hotL'I (l· gypn 111 lt.ltl\L' El ~ayycci
• Nm,11r WJ~ H (jliHtnl ot murdL·t .111d tom ILil'd ut \\l',IJl"ll" durgc~
• 111 'ot.ltt uwrt. he \\,1~ l.it1..1 t um It tl'd 111 t onnu lion "1th rht -,],,)111~

fcdn.tl court )
_
F-1\'L' H'.lr\ .1go: An '-'ndk~'! proL· t.:~\1011 of hr.ll !J.., fikd p.1~1 thr ~itll­
plt· \\tJotkn ~otlln ol ['r liTH' f'v\inJ\tL'l Ya;h,lk 1\..lblll, who'd hecn
1'1~.~~~11l.Jted tlte n1d1t hdnlL'
•
C.. )nc \t'.\1 1,n.! 1l._ U)
I )I., tnt t judf!;t..' lltnn11~ Pt·ntJlltl J.lt k~on
I
'
•
•
: dt·tl.lrul Mit ro\nlt ( orp . .t 1110110pol) ~.l~tng tltt· .. nttw.Ht' gJ.Jllt\
· .1ggn:~"IH' ,l&lt;.rtolh wac '\ntln1g 111110\,ltJon " md hurrmg toihllllln~
Popt' John l',llll II bcg. 111 h1~ flr~t \I 'lit Hl lndt:l 111 I~ \l'.lr'111

1

Endangered
(Edrtor~ 11tlfl'

It&gt;

Ohw G•••.

T7r,• fullorl'in,g letter was ~rdm11ttcd
IM• 1.1jr)
.

We are wnting to yuu as cmpluyet:s of the

rrpfllu',. h1111 pmmptly

Is

11

posSible that the Galila Counry CIHI-

dreu', St·rvKes Bureau ha~ not read tlu:tr U1ble
or the ComtltuttOII of the Untted States nf
Amcnca' If we as good God-fl:anng Chn~tJ;Jns
.m.: not abk to pracncc our rchg1ous be!td;,

Oh10 Department of Mental Retardation and
Developmental D1sab1lltles. members of the then maybe the Gallia County Chddren SerOhm League for the Mentally Retarded. and vtees Burea~t t.:an t'xplam why the. Anmh ,Ire
allowed to practiCe their r..::hg1ous bdH:tS and Wt'
member; of the Parent VoiUJ1teet Assouation
We are members of these org.tmzattons as B~pt1st or non-dt:nonuna(lon.ll Ch tt!-ltians .ue
because of the mutual mterest care giVers and not
In the dtcttonary, 'the word cho;npltnc IS
famtly membe11 share in the future of the mchdefined and a system or method of pracnce: as
vtduals we ~~:rve.
We note that the nms10n of the Oh10 of a church, and ,tbuse ts detlnt·d anJ to me
Department of M R / Dil1s "To serve imllVIdu- Improperly or mjunously I am not 10,1y111g tlut
als who requJrl' co mprd1cnstve programs, med- Galha County Chtldrcns S~..:n K\..' Btuc:m dot'~
tcaJ and re~tdentt&lt;ll ~ervJCt's Wlth d cuntmuum of not h.1ve a plate 111 tht~ world m this d.ty .md
chotce-dnven opportunttH._:s; tnsurmg that .time (JUSt think that thq· would be of ntOJe
competent personnd a~"lSt 111 the development usc where the children they arc deahng wtth :1rc
of sktlls and tdattons_hips; protcctmg pt•rsonal actually checked on befutt' they step 111
In so many c:tses, tht'lr· ttme to; ht:.'ll1g \V;J~tL'd
lntcgnty so that each may expenence :t ht~ of
by spmlcd lmle ch1ldrcn whose mom .md dad
me re.mng t:apabthttes and independence"
As 'iuch, tht· sta te of Oh10 has a compt:llmg got a dt\'Ort:l' and they ate playmg one patcm
at,r.t111'&gt;t the other in any cao;e of ahml' or
ob~gatlon to prov1de appropnate servaces for
the molit vulnerable and forgotten rm:mbcrs of tk'giect, the home that 1s betng .1ccu~ed ot ~;uch
a hornd .md unspcabbk erullL' should at leaq
our sont'ty
The famtlte~. work force, and other con- be vtsitecl to sec 1f thls 1.., Jmt tht' d1tld not hksumers bdtcvc the pohc1es endangered under mg the parents ru les
And to these ch1!dren that make thL·se thmgo;
the gutse uf''choi(c uf -.df-dc:termtnanon'' and
propaf,':lted by mandated advocacy g10ups do up JUSt because you thmk your p:ucm;; arc too
hard Oli you and tht: uthet p.Hl'llt tmght not bt.•
not meet the ncecls of tillS ~opu l at1on.
In fact, aging parents. Slbhngs, and other stake as h.ml God\ Word &lt;.1ys to cl11ldren Ill Ephe\1.111\
holder&lt; hold fund -r,aiscrs. b.ake sale, and c.ash 111 6 I: Clufdn·11 of1C}" }'!1111 pattiH.., 111 tlrr Lord /•ll Ilw.
tmurance pohctes to prcsef\ie the developmen - 1 ~ r~l!fll: 2: Hollcll ytJur (iuhcr and mtJFhcr 11 llldl '' tile
tal centers that . provade homes for the pro- .JIM Ctl/1111/a/Uimertt wrtlr f'T0/11/~C. It ,tl'io savs Ill
Coloso;Iam 3 2() Cluldrr11 oill'y yolll pmmt~ i11 all
foumlly d"abled population.
,
The thrc.lt~ to nt•eded dr-velopmental center rhwes, /Or tl11' 1:, ll'rflpfeasm~ 10 rile Lrrd
Thl'
C.1ll1a
Comity
Children
Sen
ru·~
Bw'-·au
based c&lt;1rc smmd:i hkc a good soluuon, tht' Jevtl
ts m the details. Our chi!nts, even tho-.c who bdtL'Vt'~ tb.tt 1f .1 ~ htiJ l'i not hJppy, th.tt tiR'Y
appeal to function at a level whtt:h would .1Uow 'ihould he ,1hlc to go hvc \onh'whcre eh~..· \\lth ...
mdepcndent hvmg, samply do not h.we the om even Lht.:c kmg to sec why the (_htld m
.
cap.1uty for thts population serves to showcase unhappy.
Fna .111 tlw they know, the chald wu ld be
the unraveling the :..ystcm wtll cxpenl·nu· with
unhappy do to the bet that the mc.m parent
tl1rther pnvatizatton
WJII
not let tiam1 stay out all mght, w11l not let
\'1./t• urge you, as the pmnc poltcy-makt.·r 111
Oh10, to recons1'-kr thL· positton taken by your thl'lll IOII)Oke, w11l JJOt let thL'IIl do Utuh"'· will
admmJstrauon. tndudmg tht Oh10 Leg;1 l not let thl'\11 dnnk \\'tllnot l o11Jnn~..: rhcm havR1ght'i ScrvKt', the lmganon of Martm vs. the mg ~~.:x, \'-'til not let tht:m go anywh'-·rc wtthout
Dep.artment of MR/DD A full-servace 1ystem thr- parent kno\\lllg wh'-·re rh'-'Y arc ,tnJ h.IVI: J
,mchorcd tlmdcd developn1cnt1l ct&gt;nrers ;md numbL'l whcrc thev Gill lw tl'&lt;uhed
I\ tht~ !lOLl rc.1lly illL\111 par'-'nt' Wh,lt d11IJ in
HUemll:d1ate car'-' f.1ct ht1cs wlth tramed Gtre
g1vcr' w1l1 be..,t ..,ervl' tlm popul.1tion and make tht•Jr tc~..=n .tgl' yc,ns w.mt~ ,I p,trcm hkc tim'
T lll'y m.l\ not w.mt dm paR'm, hut tf there
bc~t U'it.: of .tv.ul.lbit.:' fitnd1ng
Wl..'fl' more p.1rcnt;; that \YelL hkc th,H , eithl'l the
Pk.1~c IMt:tl to the letters .md pleas of L0111

"u mer~ . do not di.,p!a(e thctr loved ones.

C:dh.1 Coumv C:htldrem SerVICL' Burc.tu \\otlid

We, through the Oh1o Leab'llc of Metal
Retmbntin, would hke th e opporttunry to
.meet wtth you to dts&lt;.m"i t!H:se Issue~ more fully. ·
W~..: \\ill call tOt an Jppomtment tn the ne.lf
future.
Th"nk ;~u t(}r yo~1r &lt;~ttt.·nuon to the con ~&lt;.crns
and th.li!t· ngl'.., ra1 ~ed hy th110 letret
Monty Blanton
Dan Frazier
Sharon Brown
Calha County

be real busy \\ltth JLmk or we would h.wc a
lower rate ot d1 u~ .Jddtct" cm d tecn,lgt.: wotlll'l",
btlt WI.: c,illllot be that k111d ot p.ltcnt hcc,tU~L' .1~
'ioon ,,., we· .Irt:.', hc1c com'-'' the C .dlu Cot111ty
ChtldJL'm Snv1cc Burt·,m to t&lt;1ke out poor
unh.1ppy ch lldl'en "to :t hn111e th 1t wtll It-t tht'lll
do the thmg\ \\'l' do not \\'.111~ them to do
bet.l u~t· Wt' love them
I !;-.'lll'~\ th,tt the people .It till' c.~Jh,t Cou11ty
Chtldr&lt;.'ll" Snv1cc Uurt·au hJw not t'\'tT hc,ud
of that &lt;.onccpt 111 dtild rL".Irmg. ( 0\'l', what .1
trrnhl c w.1y tn r;-Jt\t; a t.hlld
If they would check out tht: l,m' ot rht· ~t,ltt'
of Ohto they nught find out th.tt dll·y .1re
br1..'.lkmg c~ fcV·/ ot-thcm thL'IJ\cl\l'\ Slllh ,\\contltct of tntcrc.;;t, not piJCtng. .1 L htld out of the

Read the law

Dear Editor:
A" .iUHHCnll·d ctttzt· n ofC,tiJt&lt;l County, I :1111
uynlg to ~igurc out why rhc (;alha ( ounty sl,ltl' of 0\no.
Chddtl'll Scrvtll'~ Burl\IU h,1s not re.H.l tht:
ihL·tc 1~ al"o " few tlnn'-'r... th.!t thl')' -,JJOu]d
Coll\tltUtiOll of the Unltl'd St,ltL'.., of AnlL'I IC,l ' t.hl'ck Oil bd()fc l l'lllOVJ II g ,ll !JJid fi11111 .I hont('
th,tt gu.trantl'l'\ .1 \Cp.lrJtlon of the chun.~ h ;md t.llk to the child\ rt'.ICht·r~. p.liL'nt~ .l!lJ ncJgho;t,ltc
hoJ'i to \l'L' tfthcn: 1s .my nuth 111 wh.lr rill' Lh1ld
In known m~t,mcc . . , the (;.lilt~ County Clul- 1., 'aytng, lwl.lU\L' ,1 tal . . c atLll'odtUlll l,ltl tutn
dren\ ~crviCe~ lhm:.w \,\yo; th,H you should not ~oltlt.:onc\ hft· bt'L',Ill'oe you Jl"t' thu .tlly lOll~Jd
puni~h ,l Lhdd hy r.miug your vmce or by cort•rcd to be h"-lllty unnl you prove vour. . L·lf Itlllop~lr,tl pun1shmc11t.
t"t'llt, winch h .tho .tg.tiu~t nur Commutton
I do not know 1lhout o;omt: of tht:'ie peopk.
' 11m rould kad to !,IW\tut~ .t~.llll"t thl' (,,1llt.t
hut I'm ~ure th ,tt tny fdlov.· Baptl~t and non- ( :ount)' ( :hJidtl'!l~ :-,crvrtL' Utln.',l\t, the lotlllt\'
dcnomlll,ltlotul C:hrt~tl.lll.., know that 111
u . . d( thL·l.l\\ )LT~ \\ lw ( umc up ro rcll tlw dltlI kllrl'TOJlO!ll'y x_s . ) (lll sfltl!lfd know Ill yell/( lu·llrf drcn th.lt 1t y&lt;)l]'IL' nnt h.1ppv \\l' \vrlll ll'lp ~ou,
tlrttf 11.1 //Iilii rha~rw1 fn, ,1011, ~tl d1c L1rd }'(l/IY { ;od
rht: jlldgl''- who do nor chc1 k t1) "L'l' 11 tht· u~t·
cltil,'fr'IJ' yo11 ,md 111 I'Jovct bs 13 24
fie 1141(1
h.1~ bctn pmpl'tly tllW"ittg.ltl d.
IJlcl/1'$ {f/1 rcld flclfc 1 /11.1 'Oif,llllf he 114/tl low:-. l11m d11r lmpL' th,lt tim lcttt•r IM\ opL'IlL'd dw eye . . ot
c

.._

· opuuon, faces a tough re-d~Ctton
fight agamsr Rcpubhcan Tc1 renee
O'Donneli, a Cleveland appeals
Judge.
Rcpub~can leaders demcd the

all you parems out there. If you do not want the
CSll to .come \'1\tt you. ,111 you h.we to do Js let
yoU! thildrt'n do any~hmgthey want to no f!1atter tf It ts nor s.ttC or nor because as parents we
.Ire supposed to . ra1se our chddrcn to be good
l.1w-abllimg adults
Tluo; j., not nec.:e~IOJI)' a popu l.tr JO.b at ttmes,
but would you r.athcr be a popular parent of a
ch1ld at Mansfidd, Ohio, or of a ch1ld who
obt'ys the l.1w and can take care of thentSelves as
an adult If the CSI3 wa)lt&lt; to be popular, they
need to bmld more pnsons
Dianna L. Sweeney

Democrats' atcusatiuns

Man dies fleeing
trooper
WEST JEFFERSON (AP) Troopers from the West Jefferson
post of the State H1ghway Patrol
satd one man died and another
was InJured late Fmi1y wlk~n the1r
car left the road after attcmptmg to

Patriot

flee a truopt:r
The dnver, BradJey Rvtht.·rford,
20, of London, was pronounced
dead at the scene A pa.10sengcr,
Samuel Patt..::rson, 23, who~e
homc~town was nut listed, was 111
fmr condmon ,1t Gqnt Medical

Right decisions
Dear Editor:
I wntc rhts rc~pomc to" A Prayer" not as gener,llm.uuger of tit'-' G:wm Plant, but as a tCIIOW
hdiever 111 the ~;amc Gnd that l feel the wnter
has :tlCl'pted as bcr God.
I wnre as one who has prayed that the nght
detistom h&lt;~H' been nude and rh.n H..:: wtll
m.1ke n~ht whate\er dcnsmn ts made_ It lS evtdem to me tlut the art1clr- was wntten tn regard
ro the comrovcr~y over the usc of the ammoma
,tt the Gavm Plant
It d1sturb" me gteatly that the wnter wntes an
open letter 3"i a pr,iyer ;"tskmg; that her team wm,
as ;, sports tl',llll may often pray to wm, rather
tl1.111 both te.11m look to Cud for the nght deCI\Ion I Lwhcve th.n wh.ltL'Vel dcuston ts cvcntu·•lly made. God con and wdl '"' kc 1t nght.
To judge others on the baSis of h~r opmion
.md then to a'\k Gud to forgive on the basts of
th,lt optmon ts not what God has asked us to
do. WL· 'hould only be .1skmg that God b"-llde
,IJld dtrct t ,!11 LOIKL't ned rhar H1s w11l be done
m,.tll thm~rs ,~nd not on tlu: b,1~1s of our human
hell d-.,.
If declSlons I,avc been mack wtthout askmg
fm gultLntte tiom God first, then that 1~ wrong
;md lito; t,'11ld,mce need., to bt.• !iought before any
deciSion IS nude. I knov.• th,u t'i bemg done by '
m,my of m .md pr.1y that the wntcr and the
l011111HI1Jtty .1s .t whok do the same.
Duane Phlegar
Chesh1re

About a half-hour e~rher,
Rubmson forced a fremont bartender to fi.U a bag Wlth money
'"'l then shot him m the face,
pollee ~11d The bartender wa1
treoted at a hosp1tal and released.
Rob1mon fled the state and w.t&lt;
arrested days later m Houston. He
has pleaded mnocem and faGes the .
death penalty 1f conviCted of several charges, mcluding aggravated

Trial date set in

slayings
FREMON f (AP) - A mon
charged wtrl1 ktllmg derb :tt two
norrhwt:st Oh1o CHT)Olll" wtll go
to tn.u M.HL h 19 m Sandusky
C:ountv Common Pkas Court
l'oh cc '·'Y John Mi&lt;:;had Robmson, 20. of SandL"ky, shot Crystal
PtL'T~oll 11 1 the back of he:td :~t the
Two Z'o; I )nve-Thru our..qdc.: of
Ook Harbor dunng a robbery on
April 21
He then allegedly robbed and
killed Demsc Clmk. owner of
Gene's Carryout, on Apnl 24 .H
her stort.· 111 Clyde

Dear Editor:
vou wd.1y not ou t of ang~r or
Jrr.ltmn,tltt), hut nu t of utter s,Jdnc~~
I h.wc been J I'L'o;Jdent of Cheslnn:, Oh1o, all
\\rtttng to

SANDUSKY (AP)- Perplexed by the pn:sidentaal polls? So
the people who pore over
numbers m daily racmg guides and know how
to foUow a horse race.
" It's up one week, down the next week," said
Laura Arhelt, Sitting among the regulars at an
off-track bemng parlor this week. 'These polls
that are up and down so much don't do anythmg for me,'tlther than make me SICk about, '':;.
'They make the people, not care," sa1d

are

Common Pleas Judge Harvey
Sargeant on fnday scheduled a
Nov. 20 hearing to rule on several
motions that RobulSOn 's attorneys

have filed

Longtime coroner

dies
DAYTON (l'\P) - Former
Momgomcry County Coronc-r ·
ltobcrt E Zapf died WednesdJ)' at
Mwmi Vall~..:y Hmpttal H~ wao; R7
Z1pf was county coron..::r from
1'15~ to l'.lf:O. H1s Ol1t'-Cl1ll' asststam and suc'-cssor, Dr James H
D:lvts, l rt•thtt&gt;d Z1pf w1th modern-

mng the county's office, mtmduLIllg tht· usc of toxicology and l1Lo;-

tology l.abs ond the use of field
illVt:sttg,ltors
Ztpf haJ been .t t11ght ~urgeon
m World War II and later was
chtector of nuclear mcdtcme and
director of research at Mianu Val-

Icy Hosp1t1l, where he established
the hosp1tal's first blood bank. He
conducted research mto cancer
and worked wtth Monsanto
Mound Lob m studies of the tOXIclry of rad10acuve elements
released m a nuclear explosiOn
Z1pf also operated Zipf Diagnostic L1boratones m suburban
Kettering

SurviVors mclude a daughter,
three sons, eaght grandchtldren
and two great grandcha ldren.
Funeral sc::rvtces were
not
announced.

Man convicted in
killing

COLUMBUS (AP) -A suspected pursesnatcher who led pohce on a n•~rh-sp ecd chase
ran down and scvcrdy lllJUred an officer who
was spreadmg road spakes to stop hts rjr,
authorities sat d.
Officer Stewart "Sam" M11ler, 35, :i fl'&lt;'eway
patrol officer with 10 yt:ars' expenencc. was 111
crittcar condmon Fnday mght 111 Gram Mt.•dtcal Ccntt!r
l,fvllller had multiple fractures 111 both legs, a
'broken arm .•md cuts on h1S face ~md heJd, SJul
pohce spokesman Sgt. Earl Sm1th
Pohce 1dent1ficd the dnver as Ray Wetthng.
.H, of Columbus He 1s ch.arged wath attempt-

SR S:1-t 111 rlm town, you could tind my f:tm1ly
opclllng pll..'~l'IH'- e,trly on Chno;trnas mormngs
I tlnd It he.w1ly dt.,turbm~ that It .til cou ld end
Ill .1 Jll.lttLT of .1 fl_.w lllllllltL'IO
I hm l ,111 ,I brg'-· cnmp.my, S\lch ,ts AEI~ be so
In\\' ,1\ tn t&lt;tke ,, Lh.nKt' lll dc;;rroyJng the haven
ot Ill\' bnul) ·~ lllt'lllnl ll'"' Where .Ill' thctr moral
pr!lll..'lpk~? 1'111 UJllVllKt'd they lle'll..'l Jc,lf!led
.uiy 1f they thdn 't grow up 111 ,\ town hke mme

Megan Harrison
Chcshare

•

largl"Sf

ruUcr coasccr.
B1.,ed 011 lnl&lt;:tYil'\\~ H the.! hctung parlor,
~ven those who arc .1h\ an lookmg for something to wager · on s.1y they wouldn't touch
pidcin~ rhe \Vtfmct of th(.' ran· hctwt·cn Gore
and Georg~ W Bw.h Some ~pt:(u latc..·d that
g'ynt10ns

II\

the pre..,H.il'llll.ll pnll~ .:11~ a Te!i&lt;Uit of

tbe mcdta mampubtm~ r'-·~ult~ to generate

ed murdt:r. ass.llllt on a pohcc officer, t1c:cmg
.md roLbtTy. He will be arr.ngnt:d S.tturJay
"Tiu'i wa'i a delthL•t&lt;Hl' cnm inal act," Smtth
&lt;Old
fv1111L'T was struck :lt the l~ltd of ::1 htgh-spced
purstnt .tbrough rt'!..tdennal ~t1't't'l~ and on tluet'
htghway~ that bcg:tn w1th .Ill ,lttc.·mptcd pursestutchmg Thursday mght on th.: northwest
sido of the CJry
Wnncsst"S told pohcl' a nun 111 a C.:H h:td
dragged a \Voman \\'lulc trymg to steal bcr
purse .lS he drovt· llt'.lr IJL·r. Sm1th s,ud
The car sped ofr The woman, whose name
\\'asn't gtven, wasn't senous)y InJU red .

Congress gives govemors
authority over water sales
WASHINGTON (AP)- LegISlation approved Fnday would
g•ve governors of the e1gh t Great
Lakes states power over w hether
their water can be exported
A bill covenng restoration of
the Everglades and other water
pmJCCts across the country VJas
approved by the H ouse on a vote
of 312-2. The bill now goes to
President Olmton for has expected stgnature
T he Water Resou rces Development Act also urged the Great
Lakes states to dev1se a common
standard to use w h en making
dccJston about withdrawing
water from the Grea t Lakes Basm.
There arc no current proposals
for sh1pping Great Lakes water to
th1rsty customers tn o ther pa rts of
the world, but many offiCials got
nen ous about th at possibtltty
after an !Insuccessful effort "ro
export Lake Supenor water from
Canada
Thl' exportation language was
oddcd to the ball at the request of
Sen Spencer Abraham. R-MKh
SL'n G~orge Vo m ov1ch, R Ohtn, was the plnllary author of
the bill, .:md tt mcluded a v.trJl'lY
of ~pc:c 1 a l provt ~Jons f01 lwi h ome

of poll that can be vohnle because IllS deSigned
to track day-to-day changes
R.ather than taking a snapshot of~p1mon at
a parocular time, these tracking poUs take a new
sample every day and average 1t with the prevlou&lt; couple of days of polhng, creattng a fever
cha11 of opmion

Ofllccrs spotted the cai- and began pursuing

on Interstate 71 south at speeds of up to IOU
mph
Poll ee pohcy dtctate~ that lug-h-~peed chases be lmutcd to CJS~s of Violent cnmes Snuth
s:ud thl ~ dust· was JU Stlfi'-·d because offic~.:rs
tl1ought that the man had tnc:d to kidnap th e
woman
After tt wa~ determmt.•d th,u no one h.1d

11

been abducted, officers ended the: l11gh-spced

chase. Sm1rh sa1d.
Cnm~rs and a hehcopter rontm ued to follow from a d1stJncc as the car sped rhrou!;;h thl'
east stde.

GETIING TO KNOW YOUR
CANDIDATE

LAWRENCE TAWNEY

and local governments will have

to pay for a flood control proJeCt
that started out expenstve and has
expanded substa ntially.
T he bill says the non-federal
share of the Duck Creek proJect
m southeast Ohio cannot exceed
$4.2 111Jil10n
T he proJeCt has been delayed
for years wh1le the village of Fanfax negottated with a lando\vner
over access to an aband oned
bridge and wh1le CmC!nnatl
negotiated With other landowners
for the nght to get access to one
acre of vacant land.
Meanwhtle, the proJe cted
pnce tag grew ti-om an onguul
esmnate of $14 milhon to the
current $34 malhon .
T he water ball, also coli&lt; for the
government to stud)' the fc.:l~I bll­
•ty of developmg a pubhc port 111
Steubenville, Oh10

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
COMMISSIONER
•
•

Galli a County Native; Grew up on a form In Green Towns hlp
Graduate of Galli a Academy High School and allended Rio
Grande Colle~,~e.
• 33 year employee of Amerltech having spent many years In
the engineering department.
Married to Edna Mahon Tawney, also a Golllo County native;
We are the parents of two children, Michael ond Llso, and
grandparents of two.
• Member of Golllpolls Christian Church
• Hove been adlve In management of budgets and funds for
organizations
• During years aiAmer ltech hove been occounlabte for protect
costs, budgets ond deadlines

WHY DO I WANTTO REPRESENTTHE COUNTY AS A
COMMISSIONER?
•
•
•

Help raise the liv ing standards for our county residents
Work to bring qood paying jobs to the county
Have fiscal responsibility In the Commissioner's office
Creole an open dialogue with the residents oflhe county.

st.H.:
On~.:

l nmt~

how much state

Clay Township

Fire Levy

Renewal Only
Please vote YES for the
Renewal of the Fire Levy
Thank You,
Clay 1\vp. Trustees
Wanda H.. Waugh, Clerk
Hello Folks,
,
I am Bi ll Davis, Cand idate f or Gall ia Coun ty
Commissioner. Pictured here with me is my wj fe of thirty
years, the former Susan Markley. We have three chi ldren,
Anna, SO?m, and Ssth.
I retired from the Gall ipolis Developmental Center after
thirty years of service, the last fourteen working w1 th the
Senior population.
With seven years as a Gallipolis C.ity Commiss•oner, I
have the experience of working with Co unty, State, and
Federal entities to engage in a bi-partisan fashion to gain
pos1t1ve results 1 have a listening ear that will enable me to

I "'ppmc I 'l10uld be .1ggr.woted that aU my
hfc I h.ave 111 hakJ l1.1t mful pollutants JUSt wlulc
..,pcmbng tllllt' workmg or pl.tymg m my own
yard
No. I am not .at all pe&lt;tmbed I am only disht'.lrtcncd by thll\ &lt;.'XpenL·nr&lt;.'. 1-. the world now
.1 pl.1u· wh'-·re the hum.m hfe lli ot no more
v,1lue th,m an c'itllll.lted (Ost' Arc ~ma ll towns
now ..,omcthmg ro he ~..:xptTtm~:tttt.:d w1th
b~:.·t.nl~e 1f \Cml.:thmg \Vl'rt: to go wrong. not as
m.111y de,tth~ would ouut'
•
It ts 111 ( : hc~h11·e th.H I .u n enjoying the acnvJttt·~ ,111d opporttlllltlt'' of Ill) jlllllOr year at
RJVct V:tllev Htglt S&lt;. hool. It IS hl'rc th,lt my 'ilStet, Lau1 .l ;1nd I lc.1r ned ttl ndc our b1kcs At 2() I

town known for llJvm~ the Jtatton 's

_
In fJct. mcd1a outlet~ thts year have more
thJn usual been ~pomonng or carrymg a type

mt~~st.

Car involved in police chase hits officer

II\ ye.lr&lt; of my hfe I do not hate AEP for
Jmt.Jihng anhydrum Jillll.l Oill,1 111 my backyard .
I .1111 not even ,\llgry th.lt 011 any grvcn 111ght I
nuy \\o.lkl' up to rt\llt7e th .1t I have only a few
lllllltltL'" to s.t'll..' my hfi:.

Arhc1t. an AI Gore supporter m dus Like Em

'

murder.

LIMA (AP) -A man was convicted Fnday of killing the man.agcr of .1dry cleaner dunng a robbery attempt
Center Til Columbus, nursmg
Cory HoUand was found guilty
st.:pc:rvisor Holly Sluo~hock sa1d of aggr.tvJt~d murder and ;1ggraSaum'\Jy mormng
v.1ted robbery 111 th,· April 9, 19Y9,
The patrol s.ud .1 trooper ~tg­ &lt;tobbmg death of [)orothy Miller.
tlJleJ RuthcrfiJTd\ c u tn 'tnp nn who m;m:tgcd the Home 5'-•rvJCl'
St..1EL' Rnute 5(,, jll\[ ~mtth of U S
Laundry Dry Clc·.mers &amp; C•qwt
40 111 M.ldtson Cmmrv. bt.'l._ .1us~..: of Clc,ml't" 1n tim nty 70 11Hics
a tr,lffit: vtol.ltHm .lt .tbmll 11 ..\-() ~omh ofToledn
pm
Dunng l loll.md's tnol 111 Allen
1 h'-· car slmwd. th~..=n . . p~..·d ofT .1~ Count\' Common Pk.ls Cout t,
the rroopc1 pulkd 111 bd1md It four p~opk t~stttlt.·d th ,lt thl'y saw
Thl· troopt'l bcg.u1 Lh.l~lllg tht• Ho\Lmd at the sLt'llC of the Ull llt',
c,11, lost o;1ght ot It, IOUIJdcd .1 cur\'c mduchng ,t m.tn who mtettttptL'd
and s.t\\' tht• c.u lud ~trutk .1 tree
the IL)hbcry.

l11lzat pri11ciples?
I &lt;1m

Racing fan~ say presidential polls aren't a sure bef

BU CKEYE BRI E FS

Sunday, November 5, 2000

6unbap tl:im,. -•rntintl • Page AS

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

understand and comprehend s1tualions as times change, and input 1s needed.
1 want to promote Gallia County for Economic Development with equitable wages.
1 want to clean up our County by ensuring current litter laws are enforced to KEEP
GALLIA BEAUTIFUL.
We need pos•l•vf! programs for our youth to build for our future.
1 feel Fiscal Responsibility is a must. I want Civil Serv1ce Compliance when hiring County
Positions.
ELECT ME, BILL DAVIS, FOR YOUR GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSJONER.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT,

Candidate for
Meigs County

Clerk of
Courts
COMMITMENT
• Longer Hours
• Easier Accessibility
• Courteous Service "With A S11Jile"
As your clerk of Courts~ I will be committed to
maintaining a friendly, courteous office. I understand that
as an officeholder I am a public servant, here to serve
you.
You will be greeted with a friendly smile and receive the
quality customer service ''OU should ~xpect from your
elected official.
:

I

I '

Paid for
Paid for by the commauee to elect B•ll Dav1s, Manlyn Kuhn, Treasurer
.

I

�~unday, November 5, 2000

P8ge A8 • •unba~ Ql:tmrll ·•rnllnrl

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

Arville "Pee Wee' Harber

•

Ohio

PROCTORVILLE - Arvtlle "'Pee Wee" Harber, 80, Clyde, N.C.,
formerly of Proctorville, died Thu"day, Nov. 2, 2000 at his res1dcnce.
Born Sept. 13, 1920, he was the son of the late Arvtlle E and Ruth
Pinkerman Harber.
that Libertar!Jn candidate John
Surviving are h!S wife, Dorothy Hines Harber: four sons, Arville McAlister d1d. Both McAlister
REEDSVILLE ~ Gladys B. Hill, 9fo, of Columbus. foniterly of Leslie Harber, Danny Harber and Donny Harber, all of Florida, and and Natural Law c;md1date John
James Leland Harber of Ohio; two daughters. Sue Ellen Johnson of Eastman joined in the 90-minute
Reedsville, died on Friday, November 3, 2000 at her res1dence.
She was born on April 16, 1904 111 Reedsville, daughter of thr late Florida, and Cheryl Novak of Indiana; and a brother, Jack Harber of debate.
Proctorville.
"This nanny state that's been
George Reed and Narsisus Biles Reed.
He
was
also
preceded
Ill
death
by
three
brothers.
Joe
Har~er,
John
created
by the Republicans and
She W:.S a homemaker, and a member of &lt;he Eden Umtcd Brethren
W.
Harber
and
James
0.
Harber;
and
a
si1ter,
Kathleen
Harber.
Den1ocrats is out of control:'
Church.
Memorial
services
will
be
held
at
•
later
date.
Local
arrangements
are
McAlister said in a booming
She is survived by a son, Terry Elwood Hill of Columbus; a brother,
by
Hall
Funeral
Home.
Proctorville.
voice to a mix of applause and
Webster Reed, and t\vo sisters, Susie Kerwin and Virgmi:i Hosdton,
murmurs fium the crowd.
both of Reedsville; three grandchildren, Andy. Mathew and Chrisry;
As a Libertarian, McAliste&lt;
and several nieces a11.d nephews.
believes
in a tninimum amount of
Besides her· parents, she was preceded m death by her husband,
government intervention in peoCharles Hill; and a brother and a sister.
ple's lives. He referred to the par- ·
Services will be held on'Monday, November o, ~tlOO at Eden Umtties as "Repubhcrats" and said
ed Brethren Cnurch in"Reedsville. Burial will iollow at Eden Cemethey both are too intrusive.
tery. Friends may calL at the White Funeral Home 1n Coolv11le on SunIn answer to a question about a
day, November 5, 2000 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Village Council has moved its regular prescription drug ' benefit for
monthly meeting fium Monday to Nov. 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the village seniors - which both Celeste
•
and De Wine said they favored in
hall, Clerk .Jennifer Harrison announced.
some form - M cAlister got the
room buzzing again.
:·Most of this is just a way of
getting votes. You know, 'Vote for
POMEROY -An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in
me, I'll take care of your prescripMeigs County Conunon Pleas Coun by Leanna Rae Little, Pomeroy, .
tion drugs. Vote for me, I'll take
and Dennis Gene Little, Middleport.
care of your old age,"' he said .
•
GALLIPOLIS
FERRY, WVa. -James Lee Brown. 69, Gallipolis
An action for divorce has been filed hy Cynthia M. Capehart, Middle"T-his has gotten so old and
Ferry, died Friday, Nov. 3, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
port, against William H.. Capehart Jr., Rutland.
tired that l think the young peoBorn Aug. 7, 1931 in Mason County. WVa., son of the late Gideon
ple are seeing right through it.
and Minnie Brown. he was retired from Wemnghouse Co. in ColumWe're going to have to suffer
bus.
through it probably for the next
: He was also preceded in death by his wiie; Betty Mayes Brown; a
POMEROY - A foreclosure suit has been filed in Meigs County 20 yc:ars until the World War II
4:iaughter, Darlene Brown: a granddaughrer. Teonna Brown; a s1ster, '
Conmton Pleas Court by Beneficial Mortgage Co. of Ohio, Ehnhu"t, generation dies ofT, and then
Mary Brown Stover; and a brother, Robert Brown.
t here 's a new breed of people
. · Surviving are a son, Danny ~Sharon) Brown of Gallipolis Ferry; five lll., against Francis A. Case, Middleport, and others, alleging def.1Ult on a
coming on board that will allow ·
promissory note with an alleged balance of$49,271.74.
grandchildren ; and three brothers. Gwinn Brown of Rome, Ohio,
you to get what you want with
Harold Brown of Peebles, and Clarence "'Hooker" Brown oiDelaware,
your own money."
Ohio.
In the presidential race, there
anticipated, but the excitement
• Services will be l. p.m. Monday in Moore"s Chapd Church, Ashton,
were no major party candidates in
WVa .. with the Rev. Max Spurlock and the Rev. Lue Wroten officiatlevel has not diminished in the
' sight, but about 150 firefighters
ing. Burial will be tn Moore's Chapel Church Cemetery. Friends may
least."
stumped for Gore at a Friday
call at Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., from 5-8 p.m. SunIndividuals interested in tourAI
day, and at the church on Monday, one hour prior to services.
ing the first floor of the new ele- afternoon rally at ·Bicentennial
Park in Columbus.
ongoing and should be complet- mentary school 10an do so today
The International Association
ed sometin1e soon, said Lawrence. when th e Southern Junior High
of Fire Fighters "left Washington
"We can see the li ght at the holds a turkey/ham dinner at th e
Renewals of fire protection
on Thursday for a four-state tour
high school from II a.m. until 2
levies are on the ballot tn five end of the tunnel," h e added.
in buses, that,read, "Yo u trust fire"'It's been a slower process than p.m.
townships - Clay, seven-tenths of
fighters. We trust AI Gore," on the
a mill; Hunrinb&gt;ton, 1 mill: Morside.
gan, 1 mill; Raccoon, four-tenths
The IAFF tour will end in
placing boulders at three places in
of
a
mill;
and
Walnut,
1
mill.
Nashville, Tenn., on Election Day,
State Rep. John A. Carey, Rthe river downstream of the dam
· Ohio Township is looking for
WeUston, whose 94th House Disbut is spending the majority of its
to diversifY the habitat. ·The
trict includes Gal~a. Meigs,Jackson pa~s.1ge of a 1-mill replacement ·
mouth
of a creek would be umc in Ohio, visiting six cities in
AI
and eastern Lawrerice counties, is levy and an ·increase of l mill, also
dredged to improve the habitat three days.
for
6re
protection.
.
also running unopposed for ~
" We really consider it still one
A section of Walnut Township water have converted rhc Ohio for iish.
of the battleground states," generfourth term.
"That's .a rypical· habitat feature
. al president Harold Schaitl)erger
Levies will appear oil tlie ballots will vote for extension of a half, from a shallow, free-flowing river
that
can be put below every lock
into a series oflong, slow-moving
said. ''We don't believe the polls.
in a number of Calha's precincts. nl!ll levy for tl1e Synm1es Valley
lakes, destroying some. wildlife and dam," Dodgion said
Schools.
We think if labor turns out Tuesbut there are no countywide issues
Other demonstration projects
·
A change in polling sttes has species' habitat.
day that Ohio will surprise everyto be decided.
Sedimentation from land usc . are being proposed in Ohio, KenIn 'Gallipolis, voters will be asked been made in Addison Township,
practices also contributed to . the tucky, lllinoi s and Indi ana .
to approve a !-mill replacement Elections Director Jeff Halley said.
destruction of habitat, the corps
levy and an intrease of I mill for Voters m Addison Township and
fire protection. If approved, ·a five- Addison Prcctnct will cast ballots at said.
" When you take a free-flowyear levy approved in 1996 will · Addaville Elementary School.
Gallia County has 21 ,506 people ing river and turn it into a series
expire next year. •
of lakes, it changes the biota. lf
Funds from the 2 mills, if registered to vote this year, the
approved, will help pay for the board of elections reported to Sec- they're able to spend some money
and recreate so me habitat types
Gallipolis Volunteer' Flre Depart- retary of State J. Kenneth Black"
that were destroyed by the dams,
ment's new ladder truck and assist well. Blackwell predicted local
it's a worthy effort;' said Ralph
with other improvements sought voter turnout will be 49 percent.
Although th ' bulk of voting will Taylor, a salamander expert and
by the GVFD.
professor of biological sc ienc es at
Ciry voters will also decide a occur Tuesday in Gallia's 36
charter amendment on the selec- precincts, absentee ballonng at the Marshall.
'The other side of that IS, do
board office was on the upswmg
tion of a city solicitor.
you want to pay $4 for a pound of .
· The village ofVinton is aslung last week, Halley ~11d.
salt
and $4 or $5 ror a loaf of
"'We've had a steady Oow of
for renewal of a 2.7 mill levy for
Current opcraong expenses, for a ab'fntees and we're at about 1,300, bread, because all the wheat in
which is up from ]a.;;t year," he said. this country is moved by barge."
three-year period.
The plan includes building
dikes and new islands, reforesting
bottomland and dredging back-·.
waters. RestOration is ~:xpected ro
take 15 years to complete.
"The Ohio River is intriguing
because of its size. We have no
clue what speci.:s are in that rive r
as far as amphibians and rep tiles,"
SundaJL .. Mostly sunny. High in Taylor said.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
"Some parts of the river arc
The National Weather Service the upper 5(11.
snll in pretty good shape. Some
1122 Jackson Pike • Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy."
says pleasant weather will continue
parts of the river need work," said
·
Sunday, with. highs in the 50s and Low 35 to 40.
Pete Dodgion, an ecologist with
Extended forecast:
lows between 30 and 35.
the corps' Huntington District.
t
MunJ~1y... A chanc~. of rain in the
Unsettled Weather will return
Five dernonstration proJects are
for the first part of the week JS a aliernoon. Htgh ncar 60.
Appointments~!
being con~idered, including oneseries of upper level disturbances , Tuesday.. Considerable cloudiat New Martinsville in Wetzel
1•
and a surface low pressure systl'm ness \'v'Jth ;1 ch~JIICL' of showers.
County.
The
corps
has
proposed
approach "the Oh10 Valley and the Mornmg low 111 the upper 40s.
Great Lakes. Highs will be in .the High in the mid 60s.
Wcc.lne'&gt;t 1'1Y·· ·A clunct: of &lt;;howmid to upper 50s with lows frum
crs dunng the day, othcrwi.;;c partthe mid 30s to the low 411s.
A large area of high pressure and ly cloudy. Mormng low in the
a drier and cooler a1r mass moved upper 41k. High in the mid 50s.
Thursday.. Partly cloudy. Morninto the tri-county area Fnday.Thc
,high will remam an mfluence on ing low 35 to . 411. Htgh m the
the weather throughout the week- upper 50s.
Friday... Constderable cloudiness
end.
with
chann· of shower~ . Mormng
Sunrise Sunday will be at 7:05
\0 w near 40. High 111 the upper
a.m.
so,·
.,
Weather forecast:

faom,.A1

Gladys B. Hill

body and go Gore."
Recent state polls show
. Republican George W. Bush with
a slight lead over Gore, the
Democratic nominee.
Gov. Bob Taft was on the stump
Friday, too, but not for Bush,
whose campaign he chairs in
Ohio.
The governor was urging voters to approve a S19 million bond
issue for the River Valley School
District about 50 miles north of
Columbus in Marion, where
concerns over ground contamination led offkials to decide to
build four new schools.

VALLEY BRIEFS
Meets Nov. 13

Actions filed

James.Lee Brown

Foreclosure sought

Southem
from Page

Gallia

from PageAl

·River

from Page

Heart Matter•···
With Dr. Robert Holley
QUESTION · My cholesterol is
over 200 and my LDL is 185 . My
doctor says it 's .n ot too bad and .
hasn't done anything. My brother
had similar numbers and his
doctor started him on medication
for high cholesterol. Who is right
and should I be concerned?
jANSWER · Although everyone
is different, it sounds like your
brother 's doctor is correct. It is
not uncommon at all to find
patients that are under treated or
not being treated at all for
abnormal cholesterol levels, even
though this is now a well
established risk factor for a heart
attack or stroke. According to
recent studies. approximately
90% of patients who regularly see
a physician, are being under
treate.d for abnormal ehol"esteroi
levels. This is quire discouraging,
because we now know that if you
get your cholesterol and LDL al,
or below, established guidelines,
you can significantly reduce your
risk or having a heart auaek or
stroke. There are at least 25
established risk factors for a heart
atJaek or stroke and it sounds to
me that you should be examined
more completely to help reduce
your risk.

!Doctor Robert Holley is the
!areas only cholesterol specialist,
(or Atherothrombotic Disease
!specialist, which means he has
had special training, and is an
expert in identifying and
r!eating all (he . Yarious risk
!Factors that lead to a heart
laitack or stroke. Doctor Holley
operates the Robert M. Holley
Cholesterol Center, located in

IPoint Pleasant.
For an~wers to your medical
questions about heart attacks and
strokes. mail them to the RObert M.
Holley Cholesterol Center at the
address below.

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

"R~du.d"ll

your rb·k of th-e

un•x~HcFH"

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 ·

304-675-1675
paid ad vertis ing

Wednesday., November 8th

VALLEY WEATHER

Sunny skies rule on Sunday

you can buy a hearing aid
for half off the retail price!

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GALLIA • MEIGS • MASON

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MOUNTAIN BRIEFS
Word to get out
on CHIP
/,

CHARLESTON (AP)
The state Supreme Court has
llirected aU family law masters
to get the word out ' about the
Children's Health In surance
Program.
" Law masters and their staffi
are being required to give parents an application and information packet for the program
when they first appear before a
law master or family case coor. dinator.
Chief Ju stice Elliott Maynard
fiid CHIP packets aud applications will be distributed in
tvcry case filed or pending
~hroughout the state.
: "Huge numb~rs of West VirJsinia f.-unilies, who . may not
lcnow about the (CHIP) prokranl are involved in f.1mily
~ourt disputes . This is a wontJL'rful opportunity to get this
fmportant mformation to their
l1anJs," Maynard Said.
: Maynard said he has appointod the Supreme Court Child
H t·a lth Care Commission to
~VL'rsc~ the C HIP initi a6vc. Jusiin· Robin navis will serve as
chairwo man. Delegate Rusty
Webb, R-Kanawha, is vice
'
chairman.
·
: Others
appointed
were
Kana\.vha
Cou nty
Circu it
~ou rt Judge !rene Berger;
Kanawha County law master
~vltke Kelly; Barbara Baxton,
Qeputy director of Family
tourt Services; Jane Moran, a
Williamson attorney; and Kathy
~rown, a law student at West
Virginia University College of
Law.

Administrator
takes post
AUBURN. Ala. (AP) - .'\
West
Vtrgmta
Umverstty
administr.itor has been named
vic~ president for student affam
at Auburn Univer.iry, officia1s
said.
Wesley Williams, WVU's amstant vice president for student
affairs and enrollment, was
named to the position effective
Jan. 1, md Auburn President
William Muse in a written
statement Thursday.
Williams, who holds a doctorate 111 hlgher cducanon
.1dministration, has 25 yL"an
expcnenc~..· m financial aid.
admi'f.sJrms and student aff.1irs
positions.

Race heard in
Washington

Edgell SJid JCCess to the lab is
restri cted arid sec-urity concerns
•at the lab will be put to rest
:when the FBI releases its report.
:No date was given for when the
:report
might be fimshed.
1

MORGANTOWN (AP) Repubhcan
preSidential nominee George W. Bu&lt;h. standmg in ;I hot, crowded gym Fnd.lv ntght,
declared he would win heavily Democratic
West V1rgmia on Election Day.
"Who would have thought five days ago
that the Republican candidate was going to
be able to say this: I'm gonna carry West Virginia." he said to the deafening roar of some
3,000 people packed inside Morgantown
High School. " ... People a_ren't going to
believe it when that map shows Bush."
In a speech that lasted almost 40 minutes
and was trequently interrupted by applause
and chanting, Bt!Sh covered the standard
polittcal tssues that resonate \vith WestVirguuans - military readiness, coal-related jobs,
Social Security, Medicare, education and

taxes.
While those mSJde cheered Bush on, several thousand others were turned away at the
door. Organizers of the rally distnbuted 5,000
rickets but fire marshals a_llowed only about
3,000 into the gym, which has a scaring
capacity of 1,800. Most people stood on the
playing floor.
Ju~t before the rally, Bush tossed the coin at
the Class AAA high school football playoff
game between Morgantown and Fatrmont
Senior. Bush shook hands with the "players
before bemg ushered into the gym. Fairmont
won tht! toss and ·elected to receive but was
losit)g 35-0 at halftime.
.
Bush urged suppo rters to go out during
the campaign's final days and persuade undecided vot~rs to go Republican. In W~st Vir-

McCain campaigns for Capito;
Kennedy for Humphreys

TRE'A s. URER
Meigs County

CAPABLE- EXPERIENCED - QUALIFIED
Paid For By The Candidate Howard E. Frank -

··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~3~6~76~0~S~t~an~e~a§rt~R~d~.P~o~m~e~m~~·~O~H
ATTENTION VOTERS:

i•
~

•••
••
:•

Many times we in Southeastern O~io are .not well informed about issues in
Columbus. Unless we have cable television most of our news comes from West
Virginia stations. We who live in Meigs County and Southeast Ohio need to view
one race with our fullest attention . Eastern Local, Meigs Local and Southern
Local have been blessed with· communities who support education. All of us will
have new and renovated buildings for our students in the near future. But the
issue doesn't stop there.
Again there is a very important election fast!y approaching next Tuesday. The
Ohio Coalition on Equity and Adequacy has been persevering for the past ten
years working for all Ohio children. Thft Supreme Court race is one in which all
people should be informed. Justice Alice· Robie Resnick's seal is one thai is to be
filled. She wrote the majority opinion on both DeRolph cases in 1997 and 2000.
The State has been given until June 15, 2001 to remedy the heavily reliance on
'
real property tax to support schools. Thus far the Slate has provided an air of
'
remedy, but nothing has
been established by the legislature.
If Judge Resnick is defeated and Tim Black is not elected, there is a
' tremendous opportunity for the legislature to do nothing for remedying the
, disparity that exists in Southeastern Ohio. Ten years of h~ardwork will be down
fuelub~
.
,
·
Please keep our students in mind when you go to ~
" f7 '"'7 /
the polls November 7!
Pd /iAL/

,,,.
•

ginia, Democrats outnumbt·r Repubhcam; 2to-1, but Bush and Vtce President AI Gore are
running neck-and-neck.
"Make sure you .,talk to $ome open-nunded Democrats here m chJs ~tate and some
independents," he said ··DL·mouats in thii.
state know thts country needs h·adership.
.. .
"The good folks of thiS ~rate. n.&gt; mand
what your polttical parry, underst~nd what ~
understand : The importance of ~.:oal , that coaf
is going to help energ1ze Ame n ca."
In his appeal to miners. sted workers
other blue-c oll;~r vot~rs. !:lush tou1ed his pro -.
posed investm~nt 111 clean cu,Jl technolog)r
and faulted the Democratic .1dmi nisnauon.;
dcclarmg Gore " ask·ep at tho ~ witc h when If
came to energy poliCy.''
""' )

an~ ·

.J

--ELECT-HOWARD .E. FRANK
·

'

.

"I t.ln g:uHantL'L' you I
would not be standing bert•
wday 1f it w:tsn 't for West Vtrginia." P.urick Kennedy said,
r,dl ing on tin· sdte to aid tbe
Democr:ltiC Party by electing
I lumphreys·to Congress.

Signitt/'i::)'r7&gt;"'"'~ /'..:;1: ••:..

ei&amp;c:ied:,
i
IMPARTIALLY serve ALL the citizens as I Have done
the past 31 1/2 years. I have the EXPERIENCE in all
aspects of the office operations. I will be a
CONSERVATIVE In dealing with the BUDGET
Since I was prevented from being on the primary ballot:
(On the inside .flap of the Grey envelope that contains
your ballot:)
,

"WRITE IN" BEEGLE FOR SHERIFF
Paid

.....
·'·,VOTE

\Vith 2 11 se:lts in t h e Hou se
uf · · RL·prcsentatives to the
Republicans' 222, the Democrats are six seats away from a
majority. There ure two Ind e_pendents in the H ouse.
Humph reys and Captto face
Libertanan Ju
own or we
2nd Dtstnct cat 111
catcd
by Democrdtic gubernatorial
nominee Rep. Bob Wise.

the

•?"-

~~~[~ ~@~~~~~:·

the New

century
with

Year

: Drug lab probe
nears end

•iistrativc leave

-

Bush hits'W.Va. again in final days befo~ vote

CHARLESTON (AP)
N.nionJ!
Rcpublic:ln
and
CHARLESTON (!) !')
Democratic leaders .1re m:tkmg
West Virginia's 2nd Congn.·sLlstm1nute plays for West VirSlOn.ll Dl;triCt T.lCC: has hi; tl~e
gini,t 's 2nd Congressional OisWa~hington a i rwa\'~Stnc t seat thts \Veekcnd, sendt n g
Dcmocrat Ju n Humphn..·ys
111 the big brass- Rep. Patrick
Jnd the National Rcpublic.tn
Kennedy
anJ
St•n. John
Congressional Campaign are
McCain.
airin g tdevi~ion ads in tbe
K ennedy, o . . R..I., was in
expensive Washington medta
Charle&gt;ton
for
a
Friday
market th~t serves counties in
evening rally for Democrat Jim
the Eastern Panhandle.
Humphreys. Tlut even t was to
Television airtime in tht:'
be followed on ly hours later by
nation's capital is "among the
a viSit by McC1in, R-Ariz.,
most costly 111 the country and
.md Rep. Tum Davis, R - Va.,
is about ) 0 times the to~t of
ch airman of the" Naoonal
co mparable
;ur
time
m
R epublican
Congressional
Charleston.
Com mitte~: Chairman, in sup West Virginia
c:mdida.tes
port of H.epublican Shelley
rarely run commercials on
Moo re Ca pito .
Washington televi sion stations,
· '"This sta te wt\1 play a very
pivotal role in what kind" of
preferring to buy airtime on
leadersh ip we will hav e,"
cable television in the E~stern
Kennedy told a crowd of
Panhandle.
Democratic Party supporters,
Until this week. Humphreys
who stood. cheered, · chanted
and his Republican opponent,
C HARLESTON (A P)
and booed whenever
Shelley Moore Capito. had
State Poli ce sa id Friday that a stuck to cable.
Republicans were mentioned.
federal investigation into the
"The last six years, we've
Despite adding SSO,OOO of
::igency's drug lab should prove her own money to the c ,lmbeen 111 the minority. In footthe lab is a secu re department.
ball, it's li ke we've been playmg
paign in the final days, Capito
! Scare Poli ce have yet 'to sec doesn't have the cash for Wash- ~ defensive for four quarters in a
rmv_ People 3sk \vhy we have
the Ffll report, but Superinten- ington television, sa id c 1111 paig-n
dent Gary Edgell sai d secu rity is
not pass~d the HMO refonn ...
' .. utmost unp ortance" at the manager Jonatlun Po e.
of
Well, we never got the. footHumphn:,ys began .11 r1n g
ball."
loh.
commt.'rcials on WJshtngton ·
: The drug sectio n of the Stat\!'
KL'IlllL'dy, · who ls chairman
television Thursday.
•
llohcc Forcnstcs L:tboratory was
of t he Democratic CongresHumprhreys ~amp;1ign m an•
dmed
Sept. 7 and five employsion:ll C:1mpaign Com mittee,
ager Ke\'111 Geary said the deci~t's, including three troopers,
preached, joked and touteJ
sion tn purrhJ~t.: W:b hington
were suspended with pay as the
Democr.Hic plans for p:~ymg:
.llrtllllt..' l..':li11L' after the 11&lt;1tional
Jn\\'n the: n.Htonal debt, .1ddmg
F.BI Llllnched .111 mvestigation
i(1to trrcgubrities an d the possi- Republic.tl1'1 beg:111 running
:1 pre3CriJ.HIUil drug b enefit to
their
:1ds
on
d1mL' tl'lL'\'i..;.ion \LI ,\lle(hc.u-..: .1nd cnh:lllc ing pub11)lity th:lt t!'Vi Jcnc..: may h:wc ·
tiom t:";uliL'r th1s \\'L't"k.
lic L·ducatio11 .
bc~n t.un tud.
'· Todd Owen ~1cDanid, .1 1,
" ( think when you h.wc t!JL·
H t.• ,dso t.:c!JOL'd l11s f:Hher.
national
Rcpublic;ms distorting
SL'n.. Edward 1:&lt;-L'niH:dy, D pleaded ~uilty la st month to a
M.l'IS .. 111 r ompHin g the c:losefederal mail fraud charge. Jim Humphreys" record .md
tll";..;.. o( rhL' l":lC.L'S thl;o. )'L';ll" \\'ith
fytcDanid adnuttcd rhat h~ sent pbns, we h:n·c LO t;Ct the rL·.d
n:l..'ord
out."
(;c.Jry
~.lid.
Pn.:;..idL'Ilt John F Kenned y\
o ut " report in the 199 H case
Humphreys. Capitu ,,nd Li hn.Hrnw
victory
111 ·t9 60.
~tJt falsdy impli ed that he conEd\\'.1rd KL·nnL'dy was also in
:ducted Jl! three tests then cruri:m joh11 Urown :ln: fightmg
fi)r
an
open
~c.tt
vJcHcd
by
We,tVirginia
on Fnd.1y to pro:n.'l}Lllred for mJrijua1u ev tRep. Bob Wise. D-W.Vl.. who
mntL' the D emocr.ttic ti cket.
:dencc.'
·
· C McD:mid, who resigned Oct. is running for governor.
C20, is co be sentenced on Jan 4
; An other employee, Mills Dil;tard, rc~igncd on Sept. 24 to
:pursue ano thi:r job Thre e

~troopers rcm~in on paid admin-

, &amp;unbap Ql:lmt• -&amp;tnltntl • Page A7

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

Sunda~Novemblr5,2000

;;woo

''Toget~er

Eagles
. .... ~

:·We Can Make
!., A Difference"

n~'::~~$895
....u" ....
E•t'!ll

For 1 llmlttd lime only, lilwnry Jtwdry is offe rina
the llt'W•)'Ur 2000 Amcrinn Silver !!.ales. TlJf
pur;hue price ls $8.115 per coin fot minimum of

•

ooin1. Each coin i5 Orilliam Uocirculaled and
1i
One 0.. or hre Slh•rr
Fine.
1bl1 olkr expire~ No.-ember JOdl,lOOO

.m

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 SECOND AVE

GALLIPOLIS

-t"":

,.,.

.-

1

I

740-446-1615
----------------------

£\ect

Pat
Prosecutor

- I will follow the law while enforcing the law. I will conduct the public's
business in public.
- I will work with local law enforcement officers in investigating crimes to
insure.that all those guilty of crimes are brought to trial and convicted.

.

.

- As an attorney certified by the Supreme Court of Ohio for trial and
appeals in death penalty cases, I will seek that penally where appropriate.
- I will enforce existing gun laws which punish convicted criminals who
possess guns and enforce forfeiture laws which punish criminals by taking
away their ill-gotten gain.
- I will assist and work with county and township officials to help them do
their jobs as efficiently as possible.
- I will file foreclosure actions to collect delinquent real estate taxes.
- I will run the office courteously and professionally.
- I will exercise the considerable trust and discretion vested in the
Prosecuting Attorney's office fairly, honestly and professionally.
- I will be the public's servant, not its master.

For o change in the Prosecutor's office,
vote for Pot Story for Prosecutor
•

.'

Pa1d for by candidate

·.

'

�~unday, November 5, 2000

P8ge A8 • •unba~ Ql:tmrll ·•rnllnrl

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

Arville "Pee Wee' Harber

•

Ohio

PROCTORVILLE - Arvtlle "'Pee Wee" Harber, 80, Clyde, N.C.,
formerly of Proctorville, died Thu"day, Nov. 2, 2000 at his res1dcnce.
Born Sept. 13, 1920, he was the son of the late Arvtlle E and Ruth
Pinkerman Harber.
that Libertar!Jn candidate John
Surviving are h!S wife, Dorothy Hines Harber: four sons, Arville McAlister d1d. Both McAlister
REEDSVILLE ~ Gladys B. Hill, 9fo, of Columbus. foniterly of Leslie Harber, Danny Harber and Donny Harber, all of Florida, and and Natural Law c;md1date John
James Leland Harber of Ohio; two daughters. Sue Ellen Johnson of Eastman joined in the 90-minute
Reedsville, died on Friday, November 3, 2000 at her res1dence.
She was born on April 16, 1904 111 Reedsville, daughter of thr late Florida, and Cheryl Novak of Indiana; and a brother, Jack Harber of debate.
Proctorville.
"This nanny state that's been
George Reed and Narsisus Biles Reed.
He
was
also
preceded
Ill
death
by
three
brothers.
Joe
Har~er,
John
created
by the Republicans and
She W:.S a homemaker, and a member of &lt;he Eden Umtcd Brethren
W.
Harber
and
James
0.
Harber;
and
a
si1ter,
Kathleen
Harber.
Den1ocrats is out of control:'
Church.
Memorial
services
will
be
held
at
•
later
date.
Local
arrangements
are
McAlister said in a booming
She is survived by a son, Terry Elwood Hill of Columbus; a brother,
by
Hall
Funeral
Home.
Proctorville.
voice to a mix of applause and
Webster Reed, and t\vo sisters, Susie Kerwin and Virgmi:i Hosdton,
murmurs fium the crowd.
both of Reedsville; three grandchildren, Andy. Mathew and Chrisry;
As a Libertarian, McAliste&lt;
and several nieces a11.d nephews.
believes
in a tninimum amount of
Besides her· parents, she was preceded m death by her husband,
government intervention in peoCharles Hill; and a brother and a sister.
ple's lives. He referred to the par- ·
Services will be held on'Monday, November o, ~tlOO at Eden Umtties as "Repubhcrats" and said
ed Brethren Cnurch in"Reedsville. Burial will iollow at Eden Cemethey both are too intrusive.
tery. Friends may calL at the White Funeral Home 1n Coolv11le on SunIn answer to a question about a
day, November 5, 2000 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Village Council has moved its regular prescription drug ' benefit for
monthly meeting fium Monday to Nov. 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the village seniors - which both Celeste
•
and De Wine said they favored in
hall, Clerk .Jennifer Harrison announced.
some form - M cAlister got the
room buzzing again.
:·Most of this is just a way of
getting votes. You know, 'Vote for
POMEROY -An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in
me, I'll take care of your prescripMeigs County Conunon Pleas Coun by Leanna Rae Little, Pomeroy, .
tion drugs. Vote for me, I'll take
and Dennis Gene Little, Middleport.
care of your old age,"' he said .
•
GALLIPOLIS
FERRY, WVa. -James Lee Brown. 69, Gallipolis
An action for divorce has been filed hy Cynthia M. Capehart, Middle"T-his has gotten so old and
Ferry, died Friday, Nov. 3, 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
port, against William H.. Capehart Jr., Rutland.
tired that l think the young peoBorn Aug. 7, 1931 in Mason County. WVa., son of the late Gideon
ple are seeing right through it.
and Minnie Brown. he was retired from Wemnghouse Co. in ColumWe're going to have to suffer
bus.
through it probably for the next
: He was also preceded in death by his wiie; Betty Mayes Brown; a
POMEROY - A foreclosure suit has been filed in Meigs County 20 yc:ars until the World War II
4:iaughter, Darlene Brown: a granddaughrer. Teonna Brown; a s1ster, '
Conmton Pleas Court by Beneficial Mortgage Co. of Ohio, Ehnhu"t, generation dies ofT, and then
Mary Brown Stover; and a brother, Robert Brown.
t here 's a new breed of people
. · Surviving are a son, Danny ~Sharon) Brown of Gallipolis Ferry; five lll., against Francis A. Case, Middleport, and others, alleging def.1Ult on a
coming on board that will allow ·
promissory note with an alleged balance of$49,271.74.
grandchildren ; and three brothers. Gwinn Brown of Rome, Ohio,
you to get what you want with
Harold Brown of Peebles, and Clarence "'Hooker" Brown oiDelaware,
your own money."
Ohio.
In the presidential race, there
anticipated, but the excitement
• Services will be l. p.m. Monday in Moore"s Chapd Church, Ashton,
were no major party candidates in
WVa .. with the Rev. Max Spurlock and the Rev. Lue Wroten officiatlevel has not diminished in the
' sight, but about 150 firefighters
ing. Burial will be tn Moore's Chapel Church Cemetery. Friends may
least."
stumped for Gore at a Friday
call at Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., from 5-8 p.m. SunIndividuals interested in tourAI
day, and at the church on Monday, one hour prior to services.
ing the first floor of the new ele- afternoon rally at ·Bicentennial
Park in Columbus.
ongoing and should be complet- mentary school 10an do so today
The International Association
ed sometin1e soon, said Lawrence. when th e Southern Junior High
of Fire Fighters "left Washington
"We can see the li ght at the holds a turkey/ham dinner at th e
Renewals of fire protection
on Thursday for a four-state tour
high school from II a.m. until 2
levies are on the ballot tn five end of the tunnel," h e added.
in buses, that,read, "Yo u trust fire"'It's been a slower process than p.m.
townships - Clay, seven-tenths of
fighters. We trust AI Gore," on the
a mill; Hunrinb&gt;ton, 1 mill: Morside.
gan, 1 mill; Raccoon, four-tenths
The IAFF tour will end in
placing boulders at three places in
of
a
mill;
and
Walnut,
1
mill.
Nashville, Tenn., on Election Day,
State Rep. John A. Carey, Rthe river downstream of the dam
· Ohio Township is looking for
WeUston, whose 94th House Disbut is spending the majority of its
to diversifY the habitat. ·The
trict includes Gal~a. Meigs,Jackson pa~s.1ge of a 1-mill replacement ·
mouth
of a creek would be umc in Ohio, visiting six cities in
AI
and eastern Lawrerice counties, is levy and an ·increase of l mill, also
dredged to improve the habitat three days.
for
6re
protection.
.
also running unopposed for ~
" We really consider it still one
A section of Walnut Township water have converted rhc Ohio for iish.
of the battleground states," generfourth term.
"That's .a rypical· habitat feature
. al president Harold Schaitl)erger
Levies will appear oil tlie ballots will vote for extension of a half, from a shallow, free-flowing river
that
can be put below every lock
into a series oflong, slow-moving
said. ''We don't believe the polls.
in a number of Calha's precincts. nl!ll levy for tl1e Synm1es Valley
lakes, destroying some. wildlife and dam," Dodgion said
Schools.
We think if labor turns out Tuesbut there are no countywide issues
Other demonstration projects
·
A change in polling sttes has species' habitat.
day that Ohio will surprise everyto be decided.
Sedimentation from land usc . are being proposed in Ohio, KenIn 'Gallipolis, voters will be asked been made in Addison Township,
practices also contributed to . the tucky, lllinoi s and Indi ana .
to approve a !-mill replacement Elections Director Jeff Halley said.
destruction of habitat, the corps
levy and an intrease of I mill for Voters m Addison Township and
fire protection. If approved, ·a five- Addison Prcctnct will cast ballots at said.
" When you take a free-flowyear levy approved in 1996 will · Addaville Elementary School.
Gallia County has 21 ,506 people ing river and turn it into a series
expire next year. •
of lakes, it changes the biota. lf
Funds from the 2 mills, if registered to vote this year, the
approved, will help pay for the board of elections reported to Sec- they're able to spend some money
and recreate so me habitat types
Gallipolis Volunteer' Flre Depart- retary of State J. Kenneth Black"
that were destroyed by the dams,
ment's new ladder truck and assist well. Blackwell predicted local
it's a worthy effort;' said Ralph
with other improvements sought voter turnout will be 49 percent.
Although th ' bulk of voting will Taylor, a salamander expert and
by the GVFD.
professor of biological sc ienc es at
Ciry voters will also decide a occur Tuesday in Gallia's 36
charter amendment on the selec- precincts, absentee ballonng at the Marshall.
'The other side of that IS, do
board office was on the upswmg
tion of a city solicitor.
you want to pay $4 for a pound of .
· The village ofVinton is aslung last week, Halley ~11d.
salt
and $4 or $5 ror a loaf of
"'We've had a steady Oow of
for renewal of a 2.7 mill levy for
Current opcraong expenses, for a ab'fntees and we're at about 1,300, bread, because all the wheat in
which is up from ]a.;;t year," he said. this country is moved by barge."
three-year period.
The plan includes building
dikes and new islands, reforesting
bottomland and dredging back-·.
waters. RestOration is ~:xpected ro
take 15 years to complete.
"The Ohio River is intriguing
because of its size. We have no
clue what speci.:s are in that rive r
as far as amphibians and rep tiles,"
SundaJL .. Mostly sunny. High in Taylor said.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
"Some parts of the river arc
The National Weather Service the upper 5(11.
snll in pretty good shape. Some
1122 Jackson Pike • Spring Valley Plaza • Gallipolis
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy."
says pleasant weather will continue
parts of the river need work," said
·
Sunday, with. highs in the 50s and Low 35 to 40.
Pete Dodgion, an ecologist with
Extended forecast:
lows between 30 and 35.
the corps' Huntington District.
t
MunJ~1y... A chanc~. of rain in the
Unsettled Weather will return
Five dernonstration proJects are
for the first part of the week JS a aliernoon. Htgh ncar 60.
Appointments~!
being con~idered, including oneseries of upper level disturbances , Tuesday.. Considerable cloudiat New Martinsville in Wetzel
1•
and a surface low pressure systl'm ness \'v'Jth ;1 ch~JIICL' of showers.
County.
The
corps
has
proposed
approach "the Oh10 Valley and the Mornmg low 111 the upper 40s.
Great Lakes. Highs will be in .the High in the mid 60s.
Wcc.lne'&gt;t 1'1Y·· ·A clunct: of &lt;;howmid to upper 50s with lows frum
crs dunng the day, othcrwi.;;c partthe mid 30s to the low 411s.
A large area of high pressure and ly cloudy. Mormng low in the
a drier and cooler a1r mass moved upper 41k. High in the mid 50s.
Thursday.. Partly cloudy. Morninto the tri-county area Fnday.Thc
,high will remam an mfluence on ing low 35 to . 411. Htgh m the
the weather throughout the week- upper 50s.
Friday... Constderable cloudiness
end.
with
chann· of shower~ . Mormng
Sunrise Sunday will be at 7:05
\0 w near 40. High 111 the upper
a.m.
so,·
.,
Weather forecast:

faom,.A1

Gladys B. Hill

body and go Gore."
Recent state polls show
. Republican George W. Bush with
a slight lead over Gore, the
Democratic nominee.
Gov. Bob Taft was on the stump
Friday, too, but not for Bush,
whose campaign he chairs in
Ohio.
The governor was urging voters to approve a S19 million bond
issue for the River Valley School
District about 50 miles north of
Columbus in Marion, where
concerns over ground contamination led offkials to decide to
build four new schools.

VALLEY BRIEFS
Meets Nov. 13

Actions filed

James.Lee Brown

Foreclosure sought

Southem
from Page

Gallia

from PageAl

·River

from Page

Heart Matter•···
With Dr. Robert Holley
QUESTION · My cholesterol is
over 200 and my LDL is 185 . My
doctor says it 's .n ot too bad and .
hasn't done anything. My brother
had similar numbers and his
doctor started him on medication
for high cholesterol. Who is right
and should I be concerned?
jANSWER · Although everyone
is different, it sounds like your
brother 's doctor is correct. It is
not uncommon at all to find
patients that are under treated or
not being treated at all for
abnormal cholesterol levels, even
though this is now a well
established risk factor for a heart
attack or stroke. According to
recent studies. approximately
90% of patients who regularly see
a physician, are being under
treate.d for abnormal ehol"esteroi
levels. This is quire discouraging,
because we now know that if you
get your cholesterol and LDL al,
or below, established guidelines,
you can significantly reduce your
risk or having a heart auaek or
stroke. There are at least 25
established risk factors for a heart
atJaek or stroke and it sounds to
me that you should be examined
more completely to help reduce
your risk.

!Doctor Robert Holley is the
!areas only cholesterol specialist,
(or Atherothrombotic Disease
!specialist, which means he has
had special training, and is an
expert in identifying and
r!eating all (he . Yarious risk
!Factors that lead to a heart
laitack or stroke. Doctor Holley
operates the Robert M. Holley
Cholesterol Center, located in

IPoint Pleasant.
For an~wers to your medical
questions about heart attacks and
strokes. mail them to the RObert M.
Holley Cholesterol Center at the
address below.

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

"R~du.d"ll

your rb·k of th-e

un•x~HcFH"

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 ·

304-675-1675
paid ad vertis ing

Wednesday., November 8th

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MOUNTAIN BRIEFS
Word to get out
on CHIP
/,

CHARLESTON (AP)
The state Supreme Court has
llirected aU family law masters
to get the word out ' about the
Children's Health In surance
Program.
" Law masters and their staffi
are being required to give parents an application and information packet for the program
when they first appear before a
law master or family case coor. dinator.
Chief Ju stice Elliott Maynard
fiid CHIP packets aud applications will be distributed in
tvcry case filed or pending
~hroughout the state.
: "Huge numb~rs of West VirJsinia f.-unilies, who . may not
lcnow about the (CHIP) prokranl are involved in f.1mily
~ourt disputes . This is a wontJL'rful opportunity to get this
fmportant mformation to their
l1anJs," Maynard Said.
: Maynard said he has appointod the Supreme Court Child
H t·a lth Care Commission to
~VL'rsc~ the C HIP initi a6vc. Jusiin· Robin navis will serve as
chairwo man. Delegate Rusty
Webb, R-Kanawha, is vice
'
chairman.
·
: Others
appointed
were
Kana\.vha
Cou nty
Circu it
~ou rt Judge !rene Berger;
Kanawha County law master
~vltke Kelly; Barbara Baxton,
Qeputy director of Family
tourt Services; Jane Moran, a
Williamson attorney; and Kathy
~rown, a law student at West
Virginia University College of
Law.

Administrator
takes post
AUBURN. Ala. (AP) - .'\
West
Vtrgmta
Umverstty
administr.itor has been named
vic~ president for student affam
at Auburn Univer.iry, officia1s
said.
Wesley Williams, WVU's amstant vice president for student
affairs and enrollment, was
named to the position effective
Jan. 1, md Auburn President
William Muse in a written
statement Thursday.
Williams, who holds a doctorate 111 hlgher cducanon
.1dministration, has 25 yL"an
expcnenc~..· m financial aid.
admi'f.sJrms and student aff.1irs
positions.

Race heard in
Washington

Edgell SJid JCCess to the lab is
restri cted arid sec-urity concerns
•at the lab will be put to rest
:when the FBI releases its report.
:No date was given for when the
:report
might be fimshed.
1

MORGANTOWN (AP) Repubhcan
preSidential nominee George W. Bu&lt;h. standmg in ;I hot, crowded gym Fnd.lv ntght,
declared he would win heavily Democratic
West V1rgmia on Election Day.
"Who would have thought five days ago
that the Republican candidate was going to
be able to say this: I'm gonna carry West Virginia." he said to the deafening roar of some
3,000 people packed inside Morgantown
High School. " ... People a_ren't going to
believe it when that map shows Bush."
In a speech that lasted almost 40 minutes
and was trequently interrupted by applause
and chanting, Bt!Sh covered the standard
polittcal tssues that resonate \vith WestVirguuans - military readiness, coal-related jobs,
Social Security, Medicare, education and

taxes.
While those mSJde cheered Bush on, several thousand others were turned away at the
door. Organizers of the rally distnbuted 5,000
rickets but fire marshals a_llowed only about
3,000 into the gym, which has a scaring
capacity of 1,800. Most people stood on the
playing floor.
Ju~t before the rally, Bush tossed the coin at
the Class AAA high school football playoff
game between Morgantown and Fatrmont
Senior. Bush shook hands with the "players
before bemg ushered into the gym. Fairmont
won tht! toss and ·elected to receive but was
losit)g 35-0 at halftime.
.
Bush urged suppo rters to go out during
the campaign's final days and persuade undecided vot~rs to go Republican. In W~st Vir-

McCain campaigns for Capito;
Kennedy for Humphreys

TRE'A s. URER
Meigs County

CAPABLE- EXPERIENCED - QUALIFIED
Paid For By The Candidate Howard E. Frank -

··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~3~6~76~0~S~t~an~e~a§rt~R~d~.P~o~m~e~m~~·~O~H
ATTENTION VOTERS:

i•
~

•••
••
:•

Many times we in Southeastern O~io are .not well informed about issues in
Columbus. Unless we have cable television most of our news comes from West
Virginia stations. We who live in Meigs County and Southeast Ohio need to view
one race with our fullest attention . Eastern Local, Meigs Local and Southern
Local have been blessed with· communities who support education. All of us will
have new and renovated buildings for our students in the near future. But the
issue doesn't stop there.
Again there is a very important election fast!y approaching next Tuesday. The
Ohio Coalition on Equity and Adequacy has been persevering for the past ten
years working for all Ohio children. Thft Supreme Court race is one in which all
people should be informed. Justice Alice· Robie Resnick's seal is one thai is to be
filled. She wrote the majority opinion on both DeRolph cases in 1997 and 2000.
The State has been given until June 15, 2001 to remedy the heavily reliance on
'
real property tax to support schools. Thus far the Slate has provided an air of
'
remedy, but nothing has
been established by the legislature.
If Judge Resnick is defeated and Tim Black is not elected, there is a
' tremendous opportunity for the legislature to do nothing for remedying the
, disparity that exists in Southeastern Ohio. Ten years of h~ardwork will be down
fuelub~
.
,
·
Please keep our students in mind when you go to ~
" f7 '"'7 /
the polls November 7!
Pd /iAL/

,,,.
•

ginia, Democrats outnumbt·r Repubhcam; 2to-1, but Bush and Vtce President AI Gore are
running neck-and-neck.
"Make sure you .,talk to $ome open-nunded Democrats here m chJs ~tate and some
independents," he said ··DL·mouats in thii.
state know thts country needs h·adership.
.. .
"The good folks of thiS ~rate. n.&gt; mand
what your polttical parry, underst~nd what ~
understand : The importance of ~.:oal , that coaf
is going to help energ1ze Ame n ca."
In his appeal to miners. sted workers
other blue-c oll;~r vot~rs. !:lush tou1ed his pro -.
posed investm~nt 111 clean cu,Jl technolog)r
and faulted the Democratic .1dmi nisnauon.;
dcclarmg Gore " ask·ep at tho ~ witc h when If
came to energy poliCy.''
""' )

an~ ·

.J

--ELECT-HOWARD .E. FRANK
·

'

.

"I t.ln g:uHantL'L' you I
would not be standing bert•
wday 1f it w:tsn 't for West Vtrginia." P.urick Kennedy said,
r,dl ing on tin· sdte to aid tbe
Democr:ltiC Party by electing
I lumphreys·to Congress.

Signitt/'i::)'r7&gt;"'"'~ /'..:;1: ••:..

ei&amp;c:ied:,
i
IMPARTIALLY serve ALL the citizens as I Have done
the past 31 1/2 years. I have the EXPERIENCE in all
aspects of the office operations. I will be a
CONSERVATIVE In dealing with the BUDGET
Since I was prevented from being on the primary ballot:
(On the inside .flap of the Grey envelope that contains
your ballot:)
,

"WRITE IN" BEEGLE FOR SHERIFF
Paid

.....
·'·,VOTE

\Vith 2 11 se:lts in t h e Hou se
uf · · RL·prcsentatives to the
Republicans' 222, the Democrats are six seats away from a
majority. There ure two Ind e_pendents in the H ouse.
Humph reys and Captto face
Libertanan Ju
own or we
2nd Dtstnct cat 111
catcd
by Democrdtic gubernatorial
nominee Rep. Bob Wise.

the

•?"-

~~~[~ ~@~~~~~:·

the New

century
with

Year

: Drug lab probe
nears end

•iistrativc leave

-

Bush hits'W.Va. again in final days befo~ vote

CHARLESTON (AP)
N.nionJ!
Rcpublic:ln
and
CHARLESTON (!) !')
Democratic leaders .1re m:tkmg
West Virginia's 2nd Congn.·sLlstm1nute plays for West VirSlOn.ll Dl;triCt T.lCC: has hi; tl~e
gini,t 's 2nd Congressional OisWa~hington a i rwa\'~Stnc t seat thts \Veekcnd, sendt n g
Dcmocrat Ju n Humphn..·ys
111 the big brass- Rep. Patrick
Jnd the National Rcpublic.tn
Kennedy
anJ
St•n. John
Congressional Campaign are
McCain.
airin g tdevi~ion ads in tbe
K ennedy, o . . R..I., was in
expensive Washington medta
Charle&gt;ton
for
a
Friday
market th~t serves counties in
evening rally for Democrat Jim
the Eastern Panhandle.
Humphreys. Tlut even t was to
Television airtime in tht:'
be followed on ly hours later by
nation's capital is "among the
a viSit by McC1in, R-Ariz.,
most costly 111 the country and
.md Rep. Tum Davis, R - Va.,
is about ) 0 times the to~t of
ch airman of the" Naoonal
co mparable
;ur
time
m
R epublican
Congressional
Charleston.
Com mitte~: Chairman, in sup West Virginia
c:mdida.tes
port of H.epublican Shelley
rarely run commercials on
Moo re Ca pito .
Washington televi sion stations,
· '"This sta te wt\1 play a very
pivotal role in what kind" of
preferring to buy airtime on
leadersh ip we will hav e,"
cable television in the E~stern
Kennedy told a crowd of
Panhandle.
Democratic Party supporters,
Until this week. Humphreys
who stood. cheered, · chanted
and his Republican opponent,
C HARLESTON (A P)
and booed whenever
Shelley Moore Capito. had
State Poli ce sa id Friday that a stuck to cable.
Republicans were mentioned.
federal investigation into the
"The last six years, we've
Despite adding SSO,OOO of
::igency's drug lab should prove her own money to the c ,lmbeen 111 the minority. In footthe lab is a secu re department.
ball, it's li ke we've been playmg
paign in the final days, Capito
! Scare Poli ce have yet 'to sec doesn't have the cash for Wash- ~ defensive for four quarters in a
rmv_ People 3sk \vhy we have
the Ffll report, but Superinten- ington television, sa id c 1111 paig-n
dent Gary Edgell sai d secu rity is
not pass~d the HMO refonn ...
' .. utmost unp ortance" at the manager Jonatlun Po e.
of
Well, we never got the. footHumphn:,ys began .11 r1n g
ball."
loh.
commt.'rcials on WJshtngton ·
: The drug sectio n of the Stat\!'
KL'IlllL'dy, · who ls chairman
television Thursday.
•
llohcc Forcnstcs L:tboratory was
of t he Democratic CongresHumprhreys ~amp;1ign m an•
dmed
Sept. 7 and five employsion:ll C:1mpaign Com mittee,
ager Ke\'111 Geary said the deci~t's, including three troopers,
preached, joked and touteJ
sion tn purrhJ~t.: W:b hington
were suspended with pay as the
Democr.Hic plans for p:~ymg:
.llrtllllt..' l..':li11L' after the 11&lt;1tional
Jn\\'n the: n.Htonal debt, .1ddmg
F.BI Llllnched .111 mvestigation
i(1to trrcgubrities an d the possi- Republic.tl1'1 beg:111 running
:1 pre3CriJ.HIUil drug b enefit to
their
:1ds
on
d1mL' tl'lL'\'i..;.ion \LI ,\lle(hc.u-..: .1nd cnh:lllc ing pub11)lity th:lt t!'Vi Jcnc..: may h:wc ·
tiom t:";uliL'r th1s \\'L't"k.
lic L·ducatio11 .
bc~n t.un tud.
'· Todd Owen ~1cDanid, .1 1,
" ( think when you h.wc t!JL·
H t.• ,dso t.:c!JOL'd l11s f:Hher.
national
Rcpublic;ms distorting
SL'n.. Edward 1:&lt;-L'niH:dy, D pleaded ~uilty la st month to a
M.l'IS .. 111 r ompHin g the c:losefederal mail fraud charge. Jim Humphreys" record .md
tll";..;.. o( rhL' l":lC.L'S thl;o. )'L';ll" \\'ith
fytcDanid adnuttcd rhat h~ sent pbns, we h:n·c LO t;Ct the rL·.d
n:l..'ord
out."
(;c.Jry
~.lid.
Pn.:;..idL'Ilt John F Kenned y\
o ut " report in the 199 H case
Humphreys. Capitu ,,nd Li hn.Hrnw
victory
111 ·t9 60.
~tJt falsdy impli ed that he conEd\\'.1rd KL·nnL'dy was also in
:ducted Jl! three tests then cruri:m joh11 Urown :ln: fightmg
fi)r
an
open
~c.tt
vJcHcd
by
We,tVirginia
on Fnd.1y to pro:n.'l}Lllred for mJrijua1u ev tRep. Bob Wise. D-W.Vl.. who
mntL' the D emocr.ttic ti cket.
:dencc.'
·
· C McD:mid, who resigned Oct. is running for governor.
C20, is co be sentenced on Jan 4
; An other employee, Mills Dil;tard, rc~igncd on Sept. 24 to
:pursue ano thi:r job Thre e

~troopers rcm~in on paid admin-

, &amp;unbap Ql:lmt• -&amp;tnltntl • Page A7

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

Sunda~Novemblr5,2000

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the llt'W•)'Ur 2000 Amcrinn Silver !!.ales. TlJf
pur;hue price ls $8.115 per coin fot minimum of

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One 0.. or hre Slh•rr
Fine.
1bl1 olkr expire~ No.-ember JOdl,lOOO

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TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 SECOND AVE

GALLIPOLIS

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740-446-1615
----------------------

£\ect

Pat
Prosecutor

- I will follow the law while enforcing the law. I will conduct the public's
business in public.
- I will work with local law enforcement officers in investigating crimes to
insure.that all those guilty of crimes are brought to trial and convicted.

.

.

- As an attorney certified by the Supreme Court of Ohio for trial and
appeals in death penalty cases, I will seek that penally where appropriate.
- I will enforce existing gun laws which punish convicted criminals who
possess guns and enforce forfeiture laws which punish criminals by taking
away their ill-gotten gain.
- I will assist and work with county and township officials to help them do
their jobs as efficiently as possible.
- I will file foreclosure actions to collect delinquent real estate taxes.
- I will run the office courteously and professionally.
- I will exercise the considerable trust and discretion vested in the
Prosecuting Attorney's office fairly, honestly and professionally.
- I will be the public's servant, not its master.

For o change in the Prosecutor's office,
vote for Pot Story for Prosecutor
•

.'

Pa1d for by candidate

·.

'

�(

'
• Page A8 • ••nllal' 1Jimr•·6rntillrl

NATIONAL BRIEFS
No subsidy cuts planned
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agricultu"" Secretary Dan Glickman
says he has no plans to cut federal crop subsidies next year, which
would decrease if he followed a formula established in the 1996
farm law.
The government guarantees farmers a minimum price, known as
a "'loan rate,'" for crops such as corn, wheat, soybeans, rice and corton. When market prices are below rhe lo•n rate, as they are now,
farmers are paid tl)e clifference between che loan rate ~nd the marker pnre.
The 1996 formula calculates the subsidy rate b.sed on fluctuatiOn&lt; in market prices. The rate for corn would fall from $1.89 per"
bu shd to $1 .76, the wheat rate would drop from $2.58 to $2.43,
and the soybean rate would drop from $5.26 to $4.92 . .
.. U nics&lt; market conditions improve dramatically in the coming
week&lt; .md commoduy prices go up, I intend to use my full statutory authonty to koep loan rates at their maximun\ levels," Glickman
'a1d m a letter to Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D -S. D., that
USDA released Fndav.
Farm&lt;rs are cxpe,·t~d to rec~ive S7.6 billion in such subsiclies this
year, up from $) .'1 bilhon in 1999 and SUI billion in 1998.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Two marble-jack cheese stick produce.
th ,lt m~lY bl" contaminate-d wtth listeria n10nocytogenes bactr:ria
\Wre rec.11led FridJy.
Th&lt;re haw bem no reportS of illness related to the products,
wh1ch were diSlnbuted in 33 states, said Crystal Farms Refrig&lt;'rated Dtstnbutlon Co. Inc.. a subsidiary of Michael Foods Inc.
The recalled products are:
- !- ounce, ,ingle-serve Crystal Farms Marble-Jack Cheese Stick.&lt;
(UPC 075925-30168) with expiration da&lt;es of 12/24/00,
12/25/ llll, 12/ 2R / OO, 12/30/00, 1/7/01, 1/9/01, 3/ 3/0 I, 3 / II /01
and 3/ 12 / 01.
- 10-ounce bag of individually wrapped Cheezoids Marble-Jack
Cheese Sticks (UPC 075925-30166) with expiration dat~s of
12 / 28 / 00. 1/ 5/ 0 1, 3/3/01. 3/12/01, 3/13/01, 3/15/01, 3/20/01
and 3/ 2 1/ 01.
Customers were asked to return the products to the place of purchase for a full refund.
Ltstena 'monocytogenes can cause listeriosis, a nre but potentially fata l disease that can also cause miscarriages and stillbirths. Symptoms mdude neck stiffress, fever, severe headache and nausea . It
affects mostly those with weakened immune systems.
The products were made with cheese from Wisconsin Hill &amp;Valley Cheese Co-op of Cashton, Wis., which notified Crystal Farms
of the possible contamination.
Consumers with questions can call 1-800-268-4709 or contact
the company via ir. Web site.

Firefighters battle blaze; bum~ nearly 47,000 acres
WHITLEY CITY, Ky. (AP) - Across the
parched southern AppalachiJns, firefighters
batded wildfires Friday that have burned nearly 47,000 acres and have cast such a heavy
blue haze that drivers are turning on their
headlights in the daytime.
No significant rain has fallen in the area for
more than a month, transforming the oncebeautiful fall foliage into tinder. Nearly all the
blazes have been blamed on careless campers

or arsonists.
.!'
"It's a scary time for a lot of people,'' said
Alfred Jones, who could only watch as fire-

Teen gets life for slaying
DENVER (AP) - A 15-yeor-old boy was convicted of murder
Fnd.ty .md se nten ced to life in prison for the New Year's Day death
of .1 re.1c her .11legedly beaten for the keys to her Lexus.
l.orenw Montoya, who was charged as an adult, was acquitted of
first -degree murder in the slaying of 29-year-old Emily Johnson.
But the• I)envcr District Court jury convicted him of felony murd~r. aggtJvated robbery, firSt-degree burglary and aggravated motor
veh1clc thdt.
' ))de nse attorney Kurt Metsger said he plans to appeal the verdict.
Johmun. who taue;hr special education and coached basketball at.
Sk111ncr M1ddlc School. was beaten unconscious with a rock and
shoe. She d1cd the next day.
Montova , a student at Johnson's school at the time, told police he
and two others. 16-year-old co usins Nicholas Martinez and Lloyd
Martinez, went to Johnson's hom~ in northwestern Denver to steal
her 1994 car.
N1cholas Martinez,.whose trial is set for February, told police he
stole the Lexus bu t has denied any involvement in the beating.
Charges against Llo~d Martinez were dropped after stat~ments by
MontoVJ \vcrc ruled inadmissible because his mother waSn't present
wht:n police Interrogated him.
""This IS as sad for me as it is for the kid who j11st got put away,"
'""' Johns0n ·s mter Marcy Johnson . "It's not easy seeing another life
destroyed."

•

'

1\/orth Carolina Friday where .1bout 7,oo0
acres were burning. The biggest blaze was ill
the Pisgah National Forest, where abom 4,000
acres burned inside a gorge near the scenic
Linville Falls.
Smoke from the fires spread over Charlon:e
and Winston-Sale~l and prompted health offi"
cials w issue air-quality warnings ,more com ....
mon during summer's smog~iays.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - AI
Gore courted home-state voters by

reminding thenl )'0U know me" as
44

he fought a challenge from presidential rival George W. Bush, who
was busy conceding "I've made
mistakes" and apologizing for a
1976 drunken-driving arrest.
At the same time, Republican
Bush mounted a new, aggressive
challenge on traditional Democrat-

ic turf even as he came under fire Gen. Colin Po,vell to underscore
for his knowledge of how govern- his argument the vice preSident has
· ment works.
contnbured to a decline m military
As the campaign's final weekend &lt; morale and readiness.
began, Gore was attencling a pmyer
Bush was headed later to Pennbreakfast Saturday in his native Ten- sylvania and New Jersey, . but also
ucssee, before _flying to West Vir- had Florida on his mind, where he
and the vice president are in a tight
ginia and Pennsylvania.
Meanwhile, Bush was beginning race.
the campaign day in battleground
Polls nationally give the slightest
Michigan, appearing with retired of edges to Bush in Tuesday's elec-

..• Hastert supports his troops but;
.
General~ cleared of rape Stocks end session mixed.~... . unlike Gingrich, shows little animosity
investors mull election,
and murder charges

fighters hartled ' 20-foot flames jhooti11g

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

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AI') - Two former Salvadoran
generals living comfortably in
retirement 111 FloriJ.1 wen.·
cleared of responsibility by a jmy
Friday for the de.nhs of four
Amencan church woml'n \vho
were raped and killed by soldi ers
in El Salvador in 1980.
The women's f.1tmlies had sued
tht" former military men for at
least $100 million, hoping to disrupt their retirement and perhaps ·
persuade the U.S. government to
deport them ·tq the Ce ntral
Ame ric~n country.
The federal jury in the wrongfu l-death case said It was unclear
the two were responsible for the
slayings, even though the men
admitted knowing that thousands
of innocent people were being
killed by death squads and uthers
during the country's 12-year civil

!J,vyer for the women's f.unilics .
"We didn't have an order frnm
the genetJis ... We didn't have
.1nything but circuJnst.Inri."ll evi-

dence ."
former Sal\'ador.m 11dt·n~l'
Mmistcr Jose Cllllkrmo G,uci,l.
and Carlos Eugenio V1des

Casa.nov.1, tOr mer he:~d of the Salvadoran Nattonal G u ard , wen:
not in the cou rt room fl)r the verdict.
'" I am satisfied,'' Garcia, 67, sa1d
by telephone from his . Plantation·
home. '"T he U.S. judicial system
does function well. This was why
we responded and I think we had
enough valor to present ourselves
to respond for everything that
was thrown at us."
. '~
Vides Casanova, 62, sa.d ho has
great respect for the falllJhes and
feels tremendous pain for the
loved ones they lost. But he said
both men did everything they
war.
"We didn't have the smoking· co uld do amid the overall viogun," said Robert Montgomery, a lence.

NEW YOitK (AI') - Stock
inv~;~tor~ , · a·framing from JHY
major nn)\'L':-i bdt)n.• EJection
!Jay. traded g1ngerly Frid.1y,
giving W.dl str~·~t .I mtx~d and
l:tcklustcr pcrform:tncc.
· No ~o,ectur~ ~o,W&lt;n1 out

.. cssion

, r"lnL.T.
IMPARTIALLY serve ALL the citizens as I Have done
the past 31 1/2 years. I have the EXPERIENCE in all
aspects of the office operations. I will be a
CONSERVATIVE in dealing with the BUDGET.
Since I was prevented from being on the primary ballot:
(On the inside flap of the Grey envelope that contains
your ballot:)

.1

tlllr\.'11l.1rk.1bk that,
the Dow Jonl.'s mdu..,tn.d aver,lgt: H;h.l.cd within .1 11.1rrow
126-point range .1nd the hightec h fiKu~l'd N&lt;~..,dJq composite index moved within .111
\.;\'ell tighter tW-pomt span .
"Thl.' mood u( t he market
sce m,s to be somnvhat trend!IO

.1t

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rurnnb JllOIIL'Y W
work today ahc..~.td t)f the..· dcx :J.f('

tion on Tue ~ d;~y."
··The Dow c..· nd cd down
(&gt;2.)6 or I O,X 17 'J'i . np 227 .31
or .2 . I perCL'I1t for the week .
The Nasdaq rme 22 .55 tu
3.45 l.'iH. up 173 .22 or 5.1
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"WRITE IN" BEEGI,.E FOR SHERIFF

Dennis Salisbury
Shirley Angel
LaYtTence Tawney
Noreen Saunders
Molly Plymale
Steve McGhee
Glenn Smith
Daniel Whiteley
Mike Azinger
Jolm A. Carey, Jr.
Roger L. Kline
William H. Harsha
Deborah Cook
Terrence O'Donnell

111

less. Wc..· 'rc 111 .1 cll.l!lc..:uging di·
nl.lt\.' 111 wlliLb it ~ ~ tough tu
m.tkL· JmHH'Y; · .... ud Al.m Ac k. .·r·
lll.lll, \..'XC CUti\'L'

·----

&amp;unbap QI:ime• ·&amp;rntinel • Page A9

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

Gore _
defends home turf as Bush concedes ·mistakes'

•••

Carolina and Virginia. Smaller fires also
burned in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi ~ ·'
Outdoor burning was bann ed throu ghout. '

toward his home deep in Kentucky's Daniel
Boone National Forest.
At least four homes have been destroyed by
fires in Kentucky that sent a plume of thick
smoke drifting as far north as Cincinnati, 150
miles away.
Visibility was so bad in some areas that tWO
Kentucky school districts ca nceled classes, drivers were asked to turn on their heacUights
and people with breathing problems were
warned to stay indoors.
Kentucky, with nearly 18,000 acres burned
this week, and Tennessee, with about 15,000 •
acres, were the hardest hit , followed by North

Prindpars killer executed
CO LUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - A man twice sentenced to dle for
rob):&gt;ing and killing a principal on the steps of an elementary school
was executed by lethal injectio n Friday after the governor and the
U.S. Supreme Court turned down last-ditch appeals.
Kevin Dean Young, 32, and two other men were convicted of taking $6 7 from Dennis Hepler, 35, as he walked out of school in ·
August 1988.
Young's lawyers conceded he shot Helper, but said another man
may have fired the fatal shot. Youn g said he feU backward and shot
Hepler after the principal threw his wallet and swung at him.
Gov. Jim Hodges refused Friday to commute the death sentence.
Later 1n the day, the Supreme Court, unanimously and without
comment, dc:nied a stay of execution.
Young's attorney read a final statement: "' If I said I was sorry, few
1f any would believe me, so I am no• going dwell o n that issue. I
•sked God, Allah, to forgive me, not man ."
Young was com·icted in 1989 and se ntenced to death, but the
.,t~ttt.· . Supremt: Court returned the c.ase ro trial courr for new se ntl'ncing. In 1993, anothe r jury se ntenced him to dit:'.
In hi, latest .1ppeai.Yo ung said among other things that his lawyers
,hould haw challenged the makeup of the secon d jury pool, w hich
was 91 percent white. Young is black; Hepler was white.
Co-ddi:nd.tnt William Henry Bell, who also faces execution, has
.111 Jppe.tl pendmg before the stare Supreme Co urt . The third man,
fohn Clcnn. was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to 25
.yc:.~r.., in pll&lt;iOn . Ht&gt; was d~nied parole last month.
The t:xcc uoon was South Carolina's first this year.

•Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

'
WASH INGTON (A P)
and coach who had his JOb ship whos.~
alkgianc~: to special
Like his predecessor, Ho use thrust upon him when Gingrich inccr~s rs was greater than rhe-ir
Speaker Dennis Hastert leads a ' stepped down 22 month s •go, a ll eg1a n c~ tO the Ameri ca n peo,Jc nder R epublican majority ip Hastert has made a po.i nt of try- ple."
.111 erJ of fierce partisanship, trav- • ing to lower the decibel k"vd in
. By. D enwcrati c tally, Hasten
els the country for GOP can di - the House. "'I'm probably not as and the GOP leade rship thwartllates and raises millions for their strident as a lot of people w ho
ed final pas"sage of a patients' bill
campaigns.
spe nt ~heir whole life in poliof rights, prescripti o n drug covUnlike
Newt
Gingrich, tics," he s&lt;Iid in a recen t tntererage under M edican:. gun con'hough, he does it with a mini- Vlew.
trol measures, ari overhaul of the
mum of animosity.
His legislative record is anothSo tnuch so that Democratic er n1atter, a subj e-ct of in tense camp;1igu financ~~ laws, ;1. hate
Wh ip David 1:\onior, Gingrich's attacks from Bonior and other crim es bw, cduc.:Hion legi slation
longtime
ncmt'sis- i n-chtef,. Democrats w ho say he caters to and more.
In the run-up to the election,
videotaped a testi monial to corporate sf&gt;ecial interests, and to
Hastert last sprin g.
quieter criticisn1 from Senate Gephardt contends, the GOP
'
"We share very liitle in co m- Republicans who say 1\e fails to retreated on a two-year effort to
sla sh taxes beca,use th e publi c
•
politically, but what I want- chatt a steady cou rse .
to say about the· speaker is
While a lame-duck session opposes it, and tried to gain
he has been kind and he has looms, Haste rt and other political cover by passing a precourteous to me and I have Republicans take credit for bal- scription drug bill that even the
to show the same respect to ancing the budget three years in insurance industry said was
said the Michigan Democ- a row, reducing the debt by $354 unworkable.
billion and placing the Social
To that, Hastert replies that he
S~curity surplus off-limits to
started his term hoping. to work
that civility is imp ortant spencling on regular government across party li nes.
coming together .and work- programs. They also note . they
Then, he said,"! started readtogether in the end is impor- · worked with the White House
ing the articles that quoted him
. Because in the end, we are to pass legislation providing for
(Gep hardt) as saying !'heir goal
on the same team.''
normalized trade relations with
was to block everything here so
: Next Tuesday's election ·will China .
determine whether the 57-yearDemocrats take a harsher wed be tabeled as a 'do- nothing'
1
Congress.
',
&lt;tld Illinois lawmaker presides for vtew.
" It kinds of takes the incenlf.l1ioth&lt;" two years or winds up a
"There's been a pattern at
tive
away," he said.
o ne-term speaker who held work h ere throughout this Con- .
Given that calcuh rion and a
office between the voluble G in- g ress," Minority Leader Dick
grich and the restoration of a Gep hardt, D-Mo., said recently. majority . of only a lulf- dozen
Democratic majority.
"Bipartisan efforts were held seats o r so, Hast ert maneuvers
~
A former high sc hool teacher , hostage by a Republican leader- carefully on legislation.

uon, though Gore is running
stronget in some big battleground
states, leaving the contest an electoral chess match.
Gore was defencling Tennessee,
where"11 electoral votes are up for
grabs and Bush is running strong.
''I'm getting the message," Gore
told 4,000 backers at an airport
rally on arrival Friday. "The message I'm getting from you is on

Tuesday, we're going to carry Tennessee."
For his part, Bush was explaining away his drunken-driving arrest
in Kennebunkport, M:une, saying
he has long conceded personal turmoil earlier in his life.
"Jt's becmne clear to America
over the course of this campaign
that I've made mistakes in my life,"
the TeXas governor said. "But I'm

proud to tell you I've learned frum
my Tl1.1Stakes."
"Most Americans are conung to
the conclus10n this is dirty pohllls,"
he said.
Gore's campaign d~med any
involveme!lt with the disclo&lt;ure. •
"We categorically deny :Illy ,.
involvement," sa.td Gore duuman •
William Daley. "Charges to the
contrary are irn.~ponsiblc."

Lieberman: ''Not thinking about
not winning, but I'm a realisf
FT !AUDERDii.LE, Fla. (AP) know, I'm just very grateful for
-Win or lme.]oseph Li eberman thiS opportunity."
sa id Friday ·he is glad he. has.had
" I feel inside mysdf that w~'rt&gt;
oppprrunity
to
run
for
vtce
rhc
going
to win on Tuesday and I
0
preSid,•nt He made clea rhe 's sti ll understand it's real close, but I just
thinking ··win," but he added , . rhi11k in the end that the Am eri" I'm a r\.·alist:' ..
can people usuall y do what's sen Asked ,1bout the possibility of a sible and right," Lieberman said.
loss, L1 ebe rman , the first Jew on a
"That's kind of a gut feeling,''
national polincal ti cket, said, " I he said in an interview w1rh The
know it's a po~sibil 1ty and you Associa ted Press abuJ rd hi s cam-

paign plant.' as h~ shuttkd to
Florida, a sta re that could be t tu Cia l to the outcome .
''The numbcr!i , thl.' inex .1t t . . Lien ee of polling suggests th.u \ \'l'
arc ahead in enough state~; to w 1n
an Electoral CollegL' votl'." ' h e

said .
''I'm not thinking about not
wmmng, but I'm .1 reaho;t .''

Internet absentee voting an .
attempt to help Americans overseas
SALT LAKE C ITY (AP) When you're on· the front lines,
your vote back home may not
cou nt.
In past elections, absentee ballots cast overseas dawdled in the
mail so that by the time clerks got
them, votes had been tallied and
winners decided.
'But an o nlin e vo,ting program
being tested Tuesday may keep
O'!erseas voiers from being left
out.

".For our military people, I
think this is wonqerful,". said Pat
Hollarn, elections supervisor · for
Okaloosa Coun ry, Fla., one of five
areas in the trial.

Also taking part are Weber
Cou nty, Utah; Dallas County,
Texas; Orange County, Fla .; and
the state of South Carolina.
Organizers won't know how
many people participatt'd in the
project for several more· days;
applications were taken for as
many as 200 volunteers.
In Dallas County, only two
people stationed in Turkey will be
voti ng because Texas law only le ts
military personnel in combat
hazard zones cast electronic ballots. •
But in Okaloosa, which is
home w several nulitary installations, about 150 people applied

for the trial and Hollarn expect&gt;
about 45 ballots to be cast.
"My husbond · is a renred
colonel and 1 was ,an abscm~'l'
voter, too, so we take sp e~ial e m:
of our military absentee voters."
she said.
Weber County C lerk L1ml.1
Lun ceford said her office h."
received eight of her distr ict's ·1~
expected ballots.
The Pentagon is respon,blc
for coordinating abs,cntee votm g
for as many as 6 million ovcrsl'.l-.
voters. both military and ci\"lli.tn .
said Susan Han sl'·n, a spnke . . woman for the Secrf"ta ry nt
Defense.

••
'
'

Galba County Sheriff
Gallia County Commissioner
Gallia County Commissioner
Gallia County Clerk of Courts
Gallia County Recorder
Gallia County Treasurer
Gallia County Engineer
.Gallia County Coron'-:r
61" District Con!,'fcss
94u 1 Ohio House District
Court of Appeals
Court of Appeals
Justice Ohio Supreme Court
Justice Ohio Supreme Court

Qualifications and Volunteer Work:
• 21 years of practicing law in Meigs County
•
• Fonner Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney ·
• Former member of the Ohio State Bar Association Committee on Criminal Justice
• 10 years of volunteer work as Chai'r man of Rt. 33 Corridor Committee
• 6 y~ars of volunteer work as a Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Board of Director
• ·Two time member of the Committee to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme Court Candidates
• Former member of the Ohio State Bar Association Legal Ethics and Responsibilty Col)lmittee
• 6 years of volunteer work for Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation (CIC)
• 2 years of volunteer work as· Meigs County Chamber-of Comme~ce President .

Elect

Astronomers track space object
I.
I

LOS ANCELES (AP) - Scientists have .s potted a small asteroid
or .1 P""' nf spJ ce junk that they say has a 1-in-500 chance ofhitnng the E.trtb m 30 years.
Jf 1t '" .111 a&lt;;,tcrOJd and it hit~ th~ planet, "it \vould bt: equivalent to
.1 furlv '&gt;tz.lhll' nucle,u bla~t." s:tid Donald Yeomans, 111anager of the
Nco~r-.l:.trth ObjeCt Pr&lt;&gt;gram Office ar NASA's Jet Propulsion bbou tnry. For now. though, th.H is ''f:~irly low in t~..·rms of C011Ct' fll ," he
..,,J]ll
ll w object. Je&lt;~gnated 2000 sc;)H. " bdic·ved to be 98 to 230
tl'L' l ln tl ~ lr W.l~ discov~rcd s~...- pt . 2') through ;t tc.·kscopt• 111 HawaiJ.

1ht·

: h ,llh.t.'

of

.1 coi!J\1011 ''

.tbout a rhnus;md

nnH.'S

g:re.ltcr than

-1 m· ot her .lStL'rmd- ltkc objcLt yet dJscovcrcll. UH.i P:llll Chodas,
p !ll llt j-,.11 c ng u1ccr o f the NASA offic L' .
( urrl'n t pro.J cr ttom ,m.' th.1t 1t wdl made 1t rlost:st .1ppro.1ch to
l·.nt h •In \ cp r 21 , 20.30 , bllt 1111"1\ thL· pi.111L't by 15 tlllH~S th~ d1st.mu·
h·.·tw~..·c1 1 the Luth .md moon Sul.'nti~t s .lrL' llllCl"rtam .tbout thL'
t''\.H 1 o rhH.. md c wnor n!k out th\.• pm!iibthty of a collision .

fq t

Our Republican Candidates
. Vote!! November 71h

\

.I I

If you need a ride to the polls, please call Republican Headquarters at 446-7552
_,.-,CaJJiaGOP.tom
.

)

Paul for by Gilllia \uun~y Republican r2recutlv~ C'ommlllte,
Tht&gt;IIUI.\" S. Moulton, Jr., Treasurer

County Court Judge
Paid by the committee to elect Steve Story, James Mouming, Treasurer, 600 Grant St. Mi&lt;Heport, OH 45760

1

�(

'
• Page A8 • ••nllal' 1Jimr•·6rntillrl

NATIONAL BRIEFS
No subsidy cuts planned
WASHINGTON (AP) - Agricultu"" Secretary Dan Glickman
says he has no plans to cut federal crop subsidies next year, which
would decrease if he followed a formula established in the 1996
farm law.
The government guarantees farmers a minimum price, known as
a "'loan rate,'" for crops such as corn, wheat, soybeans, rice and corton. When market prices are below rhe lo•n rate, as they are now,
farmers are paid tl)e clifference between che loan rate ~nd the marker pnre.
The 1996 formula calculates the subsidy rate b.sed on fluctuatiOn&lt; in market prices. The rate for corn would fall from $1.89 per"
bu shd to $1 .76, the wheat rate would drop from $2.58 to $2.43,
and the soybean rate would drop from $5.26 to $4.92 . .
.. U nics&lt; market conditions improve dramatically in the coming
week&lt; .md commoduy prices go up, I intend to use my full statutory authonty to koep loan rates at their maximun\ levels," Glickman
'a1d m a letter to Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D -S. D., that
USDA released Fndav.
Farm&lt;rs are cxpe,·t~d to rec~ive S7.6 billion in such subsiclies this
year, up from $) .'1 bilhon in 1999 and SUI billion in 1998.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Two marble-jack cheese stick produce.
th ,lt m~lY bl" contaminate-d wtth listeria n10nocytogenes bactr:ria
\Wre rec.11led FridJy.
Th&lt;re haw bem no reportS of illness related to the products,
wh1ch were diSlnbuted in 33 states, said Crystal Farms Refrig&lt;'rated Dtstnbutlon Co. Inc.. a subsidiary of Michael Foods Inc.
The recalled products are:
- !- ounce, ,ingle-serve Crystal Farms Marble-Jack Cheese Stick.&lt;
(UPC 075925-30168) with expiration da&lt;es of 12/24/00,
12/25/ llll, 12/ 2R / OO, 12/30/00, 1/7/01, 1/9/01, 3/ 3/0 I, 3 / II /01
and 3/ 12 / 01.
- 10-ounce bag of individually wrapped Cheezoids Marble-Jack
Cheese Sticks (UPC 075925-30166) with expiration dat~s of
12 / 28 / 00. 1/ 5/ 0 1, 3/3/01. 3/12/01, 3/13/01, 3/15/01, 3/20/01
and 3/ 2 1/ 01.
Customers were asked to return the products to the place of purchase for a full refund.
Ltstena 'monocytogenes can cause listeriosis, a nre but potentially fata l disease that can also cause miscarriages and stillbirths. Symptoms mdude neck stiffress, fever, severe headache and nausea . It
affects mostly those with weakened immune systems.
The products were made with cheese from Wisconsin Hill &amp;Valley Cheese Co-op of Cashton, Wis., which notified Crystal Farms
of the possible contamination.
Consumers with questions can call 1-800-268-4709 or contact
the company via ir. Web site.

Firefighters battle blaze; bum~ nearly 47,000 acres
WHITLEY CITY, Ky. (AP) - Across the
parched southern AppalachiJns, firefighters
batded wildfires Friday that have burned nearly 47,000 acres and have cast such a heavy
blue haze that drivers are turning on their
headlights in the daytime.
No significant rain has fallen in the area for
more than a month, transforming the oncebeautiful fall foliage into tinder. Nearly all the
blazes have been blamed on careless campers

or arsonists.
.!'
"It's a scary time for a lot of people,'' said
Alfred Jones, who could only watch as fire-

Teen gets life for slaying
DENVER (AP) - A 15-yeor-old boy was convicted of murder
Fnd.ty .md se nten ced to life in prison for the New Year's Day death
of .1 re.1c her .11legedly beaten for the keys to her Lexus.
l.orenw Montoya, who was charged as an adult, was acquitted of
first -degree murder in the slaying of 29-year-old Emily Johnson.
But the• I)envcr District Court jury convicted him of felony murd~r. aggtJvated robbery, firSt-degree burglary and aggravated motor
veh1clc thdt.
' ))de nse attorney Kurt Metsger said he plans to appeal the verdict.
Johmun. who taue;hr special education and coached basketball at.
Sk111ncr M1ddlc School. was beaten unconscious with a rock and
shoe. She d1cd the next day.
Montova , a student at Johnson's school at the time, told police he
and two others. 16-year-old co usins Nicholas Martinez and Lloyd
Martinez, went to Johnson's hom~ in northwestern Denver to steal
her 1994 car.
N1cholas Martinez,.whose trial is set for February, told police he
stole the Lexus bu t has denied any involvement in the beating.
Charges against Llo~d Martinez were dropped after stat~ments by
MontoVJ \vcrc ruled inadmissible because his mother waSn't present
wht:n police Interrogated him.
""This IS as sad for me as it is for the kid who j11st got put away,"
'""' Johns0n ·s mter Marcy Johnson . "It's not easy seeing another life
destroyed."

•

'

1\/orth Carolina Friday where .1bout 7,oo0
acres were burning. The biggest blaze was ill
the Pisgah National Forest, where abom 4,000
acres burned inside a gorge near the scenic
Linville Falls.
Smoke from the fires spread over Charlon:e
and Winston-Sale~l and prompted health offi"
cials w issue air-quality warnings ,more com ....
mon during summer's smog~iays.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - AI
Gore courted home-state voters by

reminding thenl )'0U know me" as
44

he fought a challenge from presidential rival George W. Bush, who
was busy conceding "I've made
mistakes" and apologizing for a
1976 drunken-driving arrest.
At the same time, Republican
Bush mounted a new, aggressive
challenge on traditional Democrat-

ic turf even as he came under fire Gen. Colin Po,vell to underscore
for his knowledge of how govern- his argument the vice preSident has
· ment works.
contnbured to a decline m military
As the campaign's final weekend &lt; morale and readiness.
began, Gore was attencling a pmyer
Bush was headed later to Pennbreakfast Saturday in his native Ten- sylvania and New Jersey, . but also
ucssee, before _flying to West Vir- had Florida on his mind, where he
and the vice president are in a tight
ginia and Pennsylvania.
Meanwhile, Bush was beginning race.
the campaign day in battleground
Polls nationally give the slightest
Michigan, appearing with retired of edges to Bush in Tuesday's elec-

..• Hastert supports his troops but;
.
General~ cleared of rape Stocks end session mixed.~... . unlike Gingrich, shows little animosity
investors mull election,
and murder charges

fighters hartled ' 20-foot flames jhooti11g

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

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AI') - Two former Salvadoran
generals living comfortably in
retirement 111 FloriJ.1 wen.·
cleared of responsibility by a jmy
Friday for the de.nhs of four
Amencan church woml'n \vho
were raped and killed by soldi ers
in El Salvador in 1980.
The women's f.1tmlies had sued
tht" former military men for at
least $100 million, hoping to disrupt their retirement and perhaps ·
persuade the U.S. government to
deport them ·tq the Ce ntral
Ame ric~n country.
The federal jury in the wrongfu l-death case said It was unclear
the two were responsible for the
slayings, even though the men
admitted knowing that thousands
of innocent people were being
killed by death squads and uthers
during the country's 12-year civil

!J,vyer for the women's f.unilics .
"We didn't have an order frnm
the genetJis ... We didn't have
.1nything but circuJnst.Inri."ll evi-

dence ."
former Sal\'ador.m 11dt·n~l'
Mmistcr Jose Cllllkrmo G,uci,l.
and Carlos Eugenio V1des

Casa.nov.1, tOr mer he:~d of the Salvadoran Nattonal G u ard , wen:
not in the cou rt room fl)r the verdict.
'" I am satisfied,'' Garcia, 67, sa1d
by telephone from his . Plantation·
home. '"T he U.S. judicial system
does function well. This was why
we responded and I think we had
enough valor to present ourselves
to respond for everything that
was thrown at us."
. '~
Vides Casanova, 62, sa.d ho has
great respect for the falllJhes and
feels tremendous pain for the
loved ones they lost. But he said
both men did everything they
war.
"We didn't have the smoking· co uld do amid the overall viogun," said Robert Montgomery, a lence.

NEW YOitK (AI') - Stock
inv~;~tor~ , · a·framing from JHY
major nn)\'L':-i bdt)n.• EJection
!Jay. traded g1ngerly Frid.1y,
giving W.dl str~·~t .I mtx~d and
l:tcklustcr pcrform:tncc.
· No ~o,ectur~ ~o,W&lt;n1 out

.. cssion

, r"lnL.T.
IMPARTIALLY serve ALL the citizens as I Have done
the past 31 1/2 years. I have the EXPERIENCE in all
aspects of the office operations. I will be a
CONSERVATIVE in dealing with the BUDGET.
Since I was prevented from being on the primary ballot:
(On the inside flap of the Grey envelope that contains
your ballot:)

.1

tlllr\.'11l.1rk.1bk that,
the Dow Jonl.'s mdu..,tn.d aver,lgt: H;h.l.cd within .1 11.1rrow
126-point range .1nd the hightec h fiKu~l'd N&lt;~..,dJq composite index moved within .111
\.;\'ell tighter tW-pomt span .
"Thl.' mood u( t he market
sce m,s to be somnvhat trend!IO

.1t

Falmt·..,lo c k

pJ.1ycrs

\ ' kl'

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pi'L'"Idl'llt

Co. " 1-t·w

rurnnb JllOIIL'Y W
work today ahc..~.td t)f the..· dcx :J.f('

tion on Tue ~ d;~y."
··The Dow c..· nd cd down
(&gt;2.)6 or I O,X 17 'J'i . np 227 .31
or .2 . I perCL'I1t for the week .
The Nasdaq rme 22 .55 tu
3.45 l.'iH. up 173 .22 or 5.1
pnccm for thl' wel'k.

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"WRITE IN" BEEGI,.E FOR SHERIFF

Dennis Salisbury
Shirley Angel
LaYtTence Tawney
Noreen Saunders
Molly Plymale
Steve McGhee
Glenn Smith
Daniel Whiteley
Mike Azinger
Jolm A. Carey, Jr.
Roger L. Kline
William H. Harsha
Deborah Cook
Terrence O'Donnell

111

less. Wc..· 'rc 111 .1 cll.l!lc..:uging di·
nl.lt\.' 111 wlliLb it ~ ~ tough tu
m.tkL· JmHH'Y; · .... ud Al.m Ac k. .·r·
lll.lll, \..'XC CUti\'L'

·----

&amp;unbap QI:ime• ·&amp;rntinel • Page A9

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

Gore _
defends home turf as Bush concedes ·mistakes'

•••

Carolina and Virginia. Smaller fires also
burned in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi ~ ·'
Outdoor burning was bann ed throu ghout. '

toward his home deep in Kentucky's Daniel
Boone National Forest.
At least four homes have been destroyed by
fires in Kentucky that sent a plume of thick
smoke drifting as far north as Cincinnati, 150
miles away.
Visibility was so bad in some areas that tWO
Kentucky school districts ca nceled classes, drivers were asked to turn on their heacUights
and people with breathing problems were
warned to stay indoors.
Kentucky, with nearly 18,000 acres burned
this week, and Tennessee, with about 15,000 •
acres, were the hardest hit , followed by North

Prindpars killer executed
CO LUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - A man twice sentenced to dle for
rob):&gt;ing and killing a principal on the steps of an elementary school
was executed by lethal injectio n Friday after the governor and the
U.S. Supreme Court turned down last-ditch appeals.
Kevin Dean Young, 32, and two other men were convicted of taking $6 7 from Dennis Hepler, 35, as he walked out of school in ·
August 1988.
Young's lawyers conceded he shot Helper, but said another man
may have fired the fatal shot. Youn g said he feU backward and shot
Hepler after the principal threw his wallet and swung at him.
Gov. Jim Hodges refused Friday to commute the death sentence.
Later 1n the day, the Supreme Court, unanimously and without
comment, dc:nied a stay of execution.
Young's attorney read a final statement: "' If I said I was sorry, few
1f any would believe me, so I am no• going dwell o n that issue. I
•sked God, Allah, to forgive me, not man ."
Young was com·icted in 1989 and se ntenced to death, but the
.,t~ttt.· . Supremt: Court returned the c.ase ro trial courr for new se ntl'ncing. In 1993, anothe r jury se ntenced him to dit:'.
In hi, latest .1ppeai.Yo ung said among other things that his lawyers
,hould haw challenged the makeup of the secon d jury pool, w hich
was 91 percent white. Young is black; Hepler was white.
Co-ddi:nd.tnt William Henry Bell, who also faces execution, has
.111 Jppe.tl pendmg before the stare Supreme Co urt . The third man,
fohn Clcnn. was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to 25
.yc:.~r.., in pll&lt;iOn . Ht&gt; was d~nied parole last month.
The t:xcc uoon was South Carolina's first this year.

•Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

'
WASH INGTON (A P)
and coach who had his JOb ship whos.~
alkgianc~: to special
Like his predecessor, Ho use thrust upon him when Gingrich inccr~s rs was greater than rhe-ir
Speaker Dennis Hastert leads a ' stepped down 22 month s •go, a ll eg1a n c~ tO the Ameri ca n peo,Jc nder R epublican majority ip Hastert has made a po.i nt of try- ple."
.111 erJ of fierce partisanship, trav- • ing to lower the decibel k"vd in
. By. D enwcrati c tally, Hasten
els the country for GOP can di - the House. "'I'm probably not as and the GOP leade rship thwartllates and raises millions for their strident as a lot of people w ho
ed final pas"sage of a patients' bill
campaigns.
spe nt ~heir whole life in poliof rights, prescripti o n drug covUnlike
Newt
Gingrich, tics," he s&lt;Iid in a recen t tntererage under M edican:. gun con'hough, he does it with a mini- Vlew.
trol measures, ari overhaul of the
mum of animosity.
His legislative record is anothSo tnuch so that Democratic er n1atter, a subj e-ct of in tense camp;1igu financ~~ laws, ;1. hate
Wh ip David 1:\onior, Gingrich's attacks from Bonior and other crim es bw, cduc.:Hion legi slation
longtime
ncmt'sis- i n-chtef,. Democrats w ho say he caters to and more.
In the run-up to the election,
videotaped a testi monial to corporate sf&gt;ecial interests, and to
Hastert last sprin g.
quieter criticisn1 from Senate Gephardt contends, the GOP
'
"We share very liitle in co m- Republicans who say 1\e fails to retreated on a two-year effort to
sla sh taxes beca,use th e publi c
•
politically, but what I want- chatt a steady cou rse .
to say about the· speaker is
While a lame-duck session opposes it, and tried to gain
he has been kind and he has looms, Haste rt and other political cover by passing a precourteous to me and I have Republicans take credit for bal- scription drug bill that even the
to show the same respect to ancing the budget three years in insurance industry said was
said the Michigan Democ- a row, reducing the debt by $354 unworkable.
billion and placing the Social
To that, Hastert replies that he
S~curity surplus off-limits to
started his term hoping. to work
that civility is imp ortant spencling on regular government across party li nes.
coming together .and work- programs. They also note . they
Then, he said,"! started readtogether in the end is impor- · worked with the White House
ing the articles that quoted him
. Because in the end, we are to pass legislation providing for
(Gep hardt) as saying !'heir goal
on the same team.''
normalized trade relations with
was to block everything here so
: Next Tuesday's election ·will China .
determine whether the 57-yearDemocrats take a harsher wed be tabeled as a 'do- nothing'
1
Congress.
',
&lt;tld Illinois lawmaker presides for vtew.
" It kinds of takes the incenlf.l1ioth&lt;" two years or winds up a
"There's been a pattern at
tive
away," he said.
o ne-term speaker who held work h ere throughout this Con- .
Given that calcuh rion and a
office between the voluble G in- g ress," Minority Leader Dick
grich and the restoration of a Gep hardt, D-Mo., said recently. majority . of only a lulf- dozen
Democratic majority.
"Bipartisan efforts were held seats o r so, Hast ert maneuvers
~
A former high sc hool teacher , hostage by a Republican leader- carefully on legislation.

uon, though Gore is running
stronget in some big battleground
states, leaving the contest an electoral chess match.
Gore was defencling Tennessee,
where"11 electoral votes are up for
grabs and Bush is running strong.
''I'm getting the message," Gore
told 4,000 backers at an airport
rally on arrival Friday. "The message I'm getting from you is on

Tuesday, we're going to carry Tennessee."
For his part, Bush was explaining away his drunken-driving arrest
in Kennebunkport, M:une, saying
he has long conceded personal turmoil earlier in his life.
"Jt's becmne clear to America
over the course of this campaign
that I've made mistakes in my life,"
the TeXas governor said. "But I'm

proud to tell you I've learned frum
my Tl1.1Stakes."
"Most Americans are conung to
the conclus10n this is dirty pohllls,"
he said.
Gore's campaign d~med any
involveme!lt with the disclo&lt;ure. •
"We categorically deny :Illy ,.
involvement," sa.td Gore duuman •
William Daley. "Charges to the
contrary are irn.~ponsiblc."

Lieberman: ''Not thinking about
not winning, but I'm a realisf
FT !AUDERDii.LE, Fla. (AP) know, I'm just very grateful for
-Win or lme.]oseph Li eberman thiS opportunity."
sa id Friday ·he is glad he. has.had
" I feel inside mysdf that w~'rt&gt;
oppprrunity
to
run
for
vtce
rhc
going
to win on Tuesday and I
0
preSid,•nt He made clea rhe 's sti ll understand it's real close, but I just
thinking ··win," but he added , . rhi11k in the end that the Am eri" I'm a r\.·alist:' ..
can people usuall y do what's sen Asked ,1bout the possibility of a sible and right," Lieberman said.
loss, L1 ebe rman , the first Jew on a
"That's kind of a gut feeling,''
national polincal ti cket, said, " I he said in an interview w1rh The
know it's a po~sibil 1ty and you Associa ted Press abuJ rd hi s cam-

paign plant.' as h~ shuttkd to
Florida, a sta re that could be t tu Cia l to the outcome .
''The numbcr!i , thl.' inex .1t t . . Lien ee of polling suggests th.u \ \'l'
arc ahead in enough state~; to w 1n
an Electoral CollegL' votl'." ' h e

said .
''I'm not thinking about not
wmmng, but I'm .1 reaho;t .''

Internet absentee voting an .
attempt to help Americans overseas
SALT LAKE C ITY (AP) When you're on· the front lines,
your vote back home may not
cou nt.
In past elections, absentee ballots cast overseas dawdled in the
mail so that by the time clerks got
them, votes had been tallied and
winners decided.
'But an o nlin e vo,ting program
being tested Tuesday may keep
O'!erseas voiers from being left
out.

".For our military people, I
think this is wonqerful,". said Pat
Hollarn, elections supervisor · for
Okaloosa Coun ry, Fla., one of five
areas in the trial.

Also taking part are Weber
Cou nty, Utah; Dallas County,
Texas; Orange County, Fla .; and
the state of South Carolina.
Organizers won't know how
many people participatt'd in the
project for several more· days;
applications were taken for as
many as 200 volunteers.
In Dallas County, only two
people stationed in Turkey will be
voti ng because Texas law only le ts
military personnel in combat
hazard zones cast electronic ballots. •
But in Okaloosa, which is
home w several nulitary installations, about 150 people applied

for the trial and Hollarn expect&gt;
about 45 ballots to be cast.
"My husbond · is a renred
colonel and 1 was ,an abscm~'l'
voter, too, so we take sp e~ial e m:
of our military absentee voters."
she said.
Weber County C lerk L1ml.1
Lun ceford said her office h."
received eight of her distr ict's ·1~
expected ballots.
The Pentagon is respon,blc
for coordinating abs,cntee votm g
for as many as 6 million ovcrsl'.l-.
voters. both military and ci\"lli.tn .
said Susan Han sl'·n, a spnke . . woman for the Secrf"ta ry nt
Defense.

••
'
'

Galba County Sheriff
Gallia County Commissioner
Gallia County Commissioner
Gallia County Clerk of Courts
Gallia County Recorder
Gallia County Treasurer
Gallia County Engineer
.Gallia County Coron'-:r
61" District Con!,'fcss
94u 1 Ohio House District
Court of Appeals
Court of Appeals
Justice Ohio Supreme Court
Justice Ohio Supreme Court

Qualifications and Volunteer Work:
• 21 years of practicing law in Meigs County
•
• Fonner Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney ·
• Former member of the Ohio State Bar Association Committee on Criminal Justice
• 10 years of volunteer work as Chai'r man of Rt. 33 Corridor Committee
• 6 y~ars of volunteer work as a Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Board of Director
• ·Two time member of the Committee to Evaluate Ohio State Supreme Court Candidates
• Former member of the Ohio State Bar Association Legal Ethics and Responsibilty Col)lmittee
• 6 years of volunteer work for Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation (CIC)
• 2 years of volunteer work as· Meigs County Chamber-of Comme~ce President .

Elect

Astronomers track space object
I.
I

LOS ANCELES (AP) - Scientists have .s potted a small asteroid
or .1 P""' nf spJ ce junk that they say has a 1-in-500 chance ofhitnng the E.trtb m 30 years.
Jf 1t '" .111 a&lt;;,tcrOJd and it hit~ th~ planet, "it \vould bt: equivalent to
.1 furlv '&gt;tz.lhll' nucle,u bla~t." s:tid Donald Yeomans, 111anager of the
Nco~r-.l:.trth ObjeCt Pr&lt;&gt;gram Office ar NASA's Jet Propulsion bbou tnry. For now. though, th.H is ''f:~irly low in t~..·rms of C011Ct' fll ," he
..,,J]ll
ll w object. Je&lt;~gnated 2000 sc;)H. " bdic·ved to be 98 to 230
tl'L' l ln tl ~ lr W.l~ discov~rcd s~...- pt . 2') through ;t tc.·kscopt• 111 HawaiJ.

1ht·

: h ,llh.t.'

of

.1 coi!J\1011 ''

.tbout a rhnus;md

nnH.'S

g:re.ltcr than

-1 m· ot her .lStL'rmd- ltkc objcLt yet dJscovcrcll. UH.i P:llll Chodas,
p !ll llt j-,.11 c ng u1ccr o f the NASA offic L' .
( urrl'n t pro.J cr ttom ,m.' th.1t 1t wdl made 1t rlost:st .1ppro.1ch to
l·.nt h •In \ cp r 21 , 20.30 , bllt 1111"1\ thL· pi.111L't by 15 tlllH~S th~ d1st.mu·
h·.·tw~..·c1 1 the Luth .md moon Sul.'nti~t s .lrL' llllCl"rtam .tbout thL'
t''\.H 1 o rhH.. md c wnor n!k out th\.• pm!iibthty of a collision .

fq t

Our Republican Candidates
. Vote!! November 71h

\

.I I

If you need a ride to the polls, please call Republican Headquarters at 446-7552
_,.-,CaJJiaGOP.tom
.

)

Paul for by Gilllia \uun~y Republican r2recutlv~ C'ommlllte,
Tht&gt;IIUI.\" S. Moulton, Jr., Treasurer

County Court Judge
Paid by the committee to elect Steve Story, James Mouming, Treasurer, 600 Grant St. Mi&lt;Heport, OH 45760

1

�Page A10 • iounbap ~imrll-iotntinrl

WORLD BRIEFS
Accused spy's hearing delayed
MOSCOW (AP)- Americ&gt;n Edmond Pope on of'ttwy suffered
his second hout of back and JOlllt pain m a week. causmg his espionage tnal to be mterrupt~d so pnson doctors could examine him,
his defens'e lawvn said.
.
.
The doctors · determmed Pope was fit to continue trial, Pope's
lawyer Pavel Astakhov s;ud, and the trtal was to resume Saturday.
Astakhov said the pain signaled the return of Pope's bone cancer,
whtch h.td been Ill renusston . Presiding Judge Nina Barkina
adjourn~d Friday's hearing and asked pnso!l doctors w ex~~ine
Pope, but she lgam refused to allow access to U.S. cancer spectahsts .
Pop&lt;, 54. a retired U.S. Navy officer from State College, Pa._, suffered stmilaf symptoms Tuesday, prompting Bark.ina to adJourn
hearings for two days. Pope at1fnded a court hearing Thursday. .
"Now we a~ completely sure ·that this 1s conne-ctt:d wuh h1s pn·mary tllness (of cancer)," Amkhov satd Fnday.
Prtson doctor~ diJgtlosed Pope's e-aches as osteochondrosi~, a. form
of arthnm. and rheumatic inflammation of the back and htp JOmts,
Astaklwv ....ud . He maintained they lacked the equipment Or expernsc: to nuke: Jll .tccu rate dtagnosis.
A~t.tkho\' -.,ud thl" Juthnntie~· tre.Hment of Pope amounted tutortllrt.', .md \Jh1 th't• ~.:o urt's· rdUsJ! to provtdc him treatment VIOlated
h.tsl c hum .mit,uun prinripks.
Ru:-,~u·~ f cder.1l SC.ruritv Sen·tee arrested Pope on April 3 on suspt CHlll ot· trym~ to llkg::~lly buy pl.ws for :1 secret htgh-spt.·ed torpe.do thcd b\' the Ru:-.si:m na\·y. Pope hJs pk.tdt•d Innocent, and h1s
. . upportl"f'·· -..1y. the pl.tm wcrl' fu r 10-)'l.',lr-olJ technology that h.ts
.llrt• .tdv h~,.·~;· n :&lt;~old Jbro.1d.

Rail service headaches rise.
LONDON (AP) - Rush hour Jt London's Victom Station and
n's ,1 t:Huili.tr sct•ne: R.atl passe ngers stare in disbdief at cancellations
.wd Jd.tys , trying to work out an alternate route homt.".
.
The public .H.idrt'ss system announces that a tram ht'adt~g south 1s
finJilv re.1dY tOr de p,trture, tri_g_gt&gt;ring a stampt:dt.&gt; of SUits across a
concourse made treache"rou~ by a leaking roof.
The shorte-r-chan-usual train then stands for 30 minutes at the
platform, packed. Another announcement follows: Nobody can find
the driver. Midway through the journey. it appears the rear braking
mechanism is falhng off. Further delay.
Rail commuters in Britain have long suffered in silence, paying
ior a high-priced and wildly unpredicuble service.
They thought 11 couldn't get worse. But it has.
The network has been in disarray since Oct. 17 when iour people died in a demlment m Hatfield, north of London, the latest in
an ala rming spate of crashes. InvestigatOrs believe the cause was a
broken ratl at a curve. Network-wtde safety checks and slowdowns
have left rail travel in chaos.
Then it started ra in ing.
Widespread flooding - the worst in Britain in 50 years - has
hit the railways particularly hard in the past few weeks, causing
some stretches co subside.
Passengers have bee,~ warned to avoid train travel this weekend or
nsk maJor dtsruption.
"I'm not risking it," lawyer Debbie Peters said Friday evening at
Victoria Station. "By the time ( get to work, I'm often a nervous
\vre ck and frequently mtss meetings . When l get home I'm exhausted. so th1s weekend I'm staying home."
The Hat6eld derailment was the third fatal train crash in Britain
tn c~rec years. In October 1999, 31 people died and more than 200
were inJured neJr London's Paddington Stati.on when one train ·
JUmped a red llght an cNut another.

Su~ay,

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

Inside:

NovemberS, 2000

Eagles playoff images, Page 82 &amp; 84
Prep Football Scoreboard, Page 83
Mason County cheerleading, Page 85
Miami difeats Vii. Tech, Page B6

Israeli and Palestinian leaden ready for separate meetings
JERUSALEM (A P) - Israeli and Palestinian leaders satd they were wtlhng to meet
with Prestdent Clinton m \\'ashmgton for
cruetal negottanons a1med at breaking the
vicious circle of violence that has shattered
hopes for peace tn the Mtdd.le l:.ast. .
.
The Palestinlan ctreas were far from qUJet
on Friday, meanwnile, despite calls for
;estraint issued by both sides in an attempt to
implement their latest cease-fire and stop five
weeks of bloodshed .
Two Palemnians were sho t dead and

Palestinian leaders, who have des1gnated
dozens injured in a series of dashes with
Israeli troops in the West Bank and G~za Strip, · the past several Fridays a "day of rage ," also
hospital doctors said. Four Israeli soldiers were took on a more subdued tone, saying events
also hurt, according to the army. Numerous Friday and Saturday would . determine
firefights,-some involving machine-guns, were whether the truce agreement re'ached earher
;eported late Friwy.
in the wee!, was taking hold.
Still. Israeli leader Ehud Barak pledged to
On the political front, aides to Pales~nian
"persevere in our efforts for peace."
"We are strong enough to stand on both leader Yasser Arafat said he was ready to meet
fronts: the battle for peace and the struggle with Clinton in Washington. No definite date
against violence and terror,'' tWe prime minis- was set, said Arafat's spokesman Marwan
ter said.
Kanafani.

Puerto Rican 'lndependentistas'
prefer 'dignity' to prosperity
SAN JUAN . Puerto Rico (AP) "&lt;he sa me language'" Is Spanish at
Books, old m·,npapt'rs and odds wah Amcrica nness? And
crates filled wah .l lifeumt' of id~JS does , or docs not Puerto RiCo,
cram the small concrete hmist• under the 48-year:..o}d .. commonwealth" deal, dectde its "own' deswh~re Glom AIJona spends her
days amid lu sh Ca ribb~.m g~l' n ­ tiny?"
cry. s1pping passiOn fnut JlllCt: .md
Thl.· lw.:-.u11ng of l.'onunondreaming of indcpc:ndencc for wealtb var.ies in the t.-yes of many.
Put.•rto Ri co.
Congress and many constitu. Thcn~·s an eb.:t1on coming up ti6n.t l e·xpcrt~ s.1y it means federal
next \Vcek - SJillt' d.ty as m the law n:tgns "uprcme and Washingmainl.md Unittd St.Hes - ;md as ton ha s ultimate say on the island.
usu .tl Pu erto R1co's new gover no r
But supporters of the status quo
will be either a Stlpporte"r of U.S. - partly backed by some U.S .
statehood o r a proponent of the court' decisions - see the arrangesenti amono mous status quo.
mem as a ·• compact" between the
But Arj o na has li tde time fo r United States and soinething closth eir debate over the pros and cons er to a sovereign nation.
of the link with the United States .
Under the commonwealth -federal funds, welfare programs, w hose designer, legenwry Puerto
constitutional rights and ways of Rican Gov. Luis Munoz Marin,
exercising U.S. citizenship. She has was Arja~o's fath er-in-law - the
a Simpler position.
4 million islanders don't pay feder"We cannot forever continue co al taxes but do receive soine $13
be ruled by another people," says billion in federal funds, do send a
Arjona , a former Spanish literature non-voting delegate t,; CQTlgress
professor, waving her arms. "We but don't vote in U.S. presidential
must learn to begin deciding our elections.
own destiny. We cannot be both
A debate over the last point was
Puerto Rican and American. We ignited this year when a San Juan"
do not even speak the same lan- based feder;U JUdge ruled Puerto
guage."
' Ricans should have the right to
She has been saying this all her vote for U.S. president. The decilife - deeply felt words. that con- sion was overturned by the 1st
tain the seeds of a political, cultur- Circuit Court of App eals in
al, and semantic debate that has Boston .
raged here since U.S. troops seized
But it was hardly. a boost for the
the island in the Spanish-Am.eri- status quo: Chief Appellate Ju"dge
can war in 1898.
Juan R. Torruclla urged change,·
Are the Americans "another blasting what he termed a "nationpeople'" After all, note statehood al disenfranchisement" and · a
supporters. Puerto Ricans have "colonial condition (that) runs
been U.S. citi zens since 1917. The against th e very principles upon
United States is a collection of which (the United States) was
peoples, they say; do they all speak founded."

l-Viuds gtostiug

to

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.

011

,.

MEI•sc•••n
s•ERIFF
C zU..A.LIFI:.E:-0

.EXPERIENCED
DEDICATED TO lAW ENFORCEMENT

ef
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•

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BILL DAVIS

• Open Door Polley
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• Focus on our youth

..,;~t:lln

ALCOHOL HURTS, NEVER HELPS!
KEEP RACINE DRY!
, REMEMBER TO VOTE

DAVE MARTIN

BRENT SAUNDERS

• Equal Due Process of Law
• Integrity and Trust

• A safe Drug Free County

OHIO SUPREME CO-U RT
. Alice Robie Resnick
Tim Black

Need

Wiseman places
63rd in state meet

risk beingjc.rkc-d about on tcthc~
lcadmg to "thl'ir mothc-r ship,
R.ega_lia .
Earlier Friday. Russian and
Norwegian divers moved tht·ir
search for bodies toward le ss
Jam.agl·d art'aS of the vessel after
f.11 li ng to enter a shattered forward cmnpartme nt.

FIIR

a Ride to the Polls?? Call 446-1739
Paid for by the Gallia Democralic Party, Gallipolis, Ohiu

WVa. rid

Eagles fall to Green Wave

playa s

BY BuTCH COOPER

.

f'ffl , .•., ('4fllliiSSI4t,l·:lt,.·

Sponsored by: First Baptist Church of Racine, Morningstar United Methodist Church, Racine Un1tad Methodist
church, East Letart United Methodist Church, Bethany United Methodist Church. Garmel _Sutton United
Methodist Church, Antiquity Baptist Church, Fellowship Church of the Lord Jesus Christ, Racone Pentecostal
Church

HIGHLIGHTS

Arctic CirdC m,rde cMttiu11ed
ope rJl; mrs t#l.lUJlrrmH.

LTR.SSELL

.

ELECTION DAY* NOV.?

SUNDAY's

tloc Barmts Sea ab1we tloc

CAST
BALL_
OT

DOES RACINE NEED
ALCOHOL?.
_15% of Ohio's Bthgrade students reported
being drunk, and 62o/o of 12 graders
reported using alcohol ~n the last 30 days!
30.6% of all traffic fatalities itt the USA are
alcohol related. Alc~hol abuse and related
expenses cost taxpayers 148 BILLI0 N
dollars annually. 110,000 deaths each year
are alcohol·related

Sunday, November 5, 1000

Divers shift search for
bodies in submarine
MOSCOW (AP) Divers
tried to cut their way into ijving
quarters of the sunken Kursk
nuclear submarint= Friday, but rising winds and snow forced a
temporary halt to thei r efforts tu
recover bodies, a navy official
said .
Winds gusting to 45 mph on
the Barents Sea above the Arctic
Circle made continued operations dangerous, said , Igor
· Babenko, head of the North ern
Fleet's press center. He said divers

Page 81

COLUMBUS- Gallia Academy freshman Sarah Wiseman 6n. ished 63rd at the OHSAA Division 11 cross country championships held Saturday at Scioto
Downs in Columbus.
Wiseman, a
'tookie on th e
13lu e
Angels
varsity
team
this year, posted a time of
20:16, which
set a new perso nal record.
H er previous
best was a time
Wiseman
of
20:17,
which sh e set
at the Rio Grande Invitational.
· ;'She ran a solid race," GAHS
head coa ch Penny Roush said.
"She went out and did what she
need ed to do. It was a great race
for a ,fre shman."
Wiseman will be among the
athletes honored Wednesday at
the All-Southeast District awards
banquet, w hich will be held at the
University of Rio Gr-ande beginning at 6 p.m.

Woodward NCAC
defensive player
of the week
CLEVELAND - O hi o Wesleyan linebacker Rob Woodward
was named North Coast Athletic
Conference defensive player of
the week followiilg his standout
pt;:rformaric e against Kenyon a
week ago Saturday. ·
. ·
Woodward, a
Gallia Academy
alumnus
and
co-captain for
the
13attlin g
Bishops,.
recorded
18
tackles, incl udmg 13 solo
stops, in O hio
Wes leyan's 35Woodward
27 victory over
Kenyon.
. Woodward. w ho won the
defen&lt;ive player of the wee k
a\Vard for the second time this
season. rank~ e igh th in the
NCAC in tackles ave raging 7.9
per game. He is the leading tackler for OWU with 79 total. ·
Woodward had 14 tack les
against Wittenb t!rg .the prey1ous
week.

Swisher finishes ·
28th at MAC meet
KALAMAZOO, Mi ch. M arsha ll University fres hman
Craig Swisher finished 28tli in
the Mid-American C:onfer~nc~
cross cou.~ury chan1pion ship s last
weekend.
Swis h er, an
alum nus
of
Ga lli a Acad emy, posted a
time of 25:08
as the Herd
men fini shed
ninth in the
team
standlllgs.
Swis he r ha s
Swisher
b~en
M arshall 's top nn1ne r all season.
H e finis h ed second at the
Ohi o University Bobcat lnv itation ,d with a time of 25:50, and
pbced 20th at the Lakefront
Invirational in Ch icago.
Swr1h 1:r )vas named MidAuu:rican Conf.ert' nce runner of
the week following hi s firstplaCL· fini sh at ·the Ohio University R.cbys earl il·r in the st·a~on.
Hio:; time ;tt tht.: OU nkct was
19:39.
Swisher fini,hed ! 2th · Jt the
1
Pre- MAC Tuunlalllt'llt With &lt;1
time of 25:5I.
Mae~hall will compete at the
NCAA District 11 meet Novcm-

OVP SPoRTS STAFF

underway

EAST MEIGS Eastern
footbaU has come a long way
this season.
Winning the TVC Hocking
Division and b~ing the first
Meigs County team to ever
make the OHSAA playoffs, the
Eagles rallied an .entire county
behind them going into th e
first round of the Division VI
tournament.
Unfortunately, that run
ca me to an end on Friday
when Newark Catholic handed Eastern a 34-12 loss at East
Shade River Stadium.
An estimated crowd of
3,000 was in attendance .
"The whole county got
behind us," said Eastern coach
Scott Ch ristman. "We. appre ciate that. It's unbelievable. The
write-ups in the (news)pap er
and things they've done .... the
signs and the cards.
" We got cards from Waham a
and a big sign from Meigs just
congratulating us," Chr istman
said .- " It 's a great atmosphere
here. Probably the biggest
crowd that has ever been here .
" It's probably safe to say i"t
was the biggest crowd. The
majority was - from Meigs
County, and that's a great feel•
"
"f
mg.
Newark Catholi c (7 - 4)
actuaUy made it to the tield
on ly an hour before kickoff
and had to rush to prepare for
the game.

Plene see Eagles, Pace Bl

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Adam Cantoni rushed for 212
ya rds and two touchdowns to
lead No. 10 University to a 40-14
vic tory over No. 7 Hurri cane in
· th e first round of the Class AAA
high school playoffi Friday night.
Cantoni 1 who had 27 ca rries,
scored on runs of 12 and 4 yards
in th e seco nd quarter a.o; Univer'iity (9-2)jumped to a 34-14 halftime lead.
Host Hurricane (8- 3) man aged just 14 yards rushing and
153 yards in total offense.
. University will play next week
at N o.2 Woodrow Wil son, a 28-0
winner over No. IS Philip 13arbour.
No. 3 Parkersburg 69,

No. 14 Hampshire 0

ROLLING OUT- Eastern quarterback Garrett Karr rolls out to his left to throw a pass during Friday's
OHSAA Divis io n VI, Region 23 playoff game against Newark Catholic . (Bryan Long photo)

River VaU,ey cross couf)try a work in progress
BY BUTCH Ccii!PER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

C H ESH IH..E - It might not have been
th e best season ever for River Valley cross
co untry, but great strides wne made this
year.
Despite difficu lty in fielding a boys squad,
the Raiders competed we ll agatnst mff
competition. In fact, the gi rls team was very
competitive, w ith strong performan ces at
several meets.
River Valley al so saw two of its runners
advance to the regional cross country meet
in Lancaster.
Seni ors Megan Godwin andTR. Edwards
. qualified in the district meet a~ Rio Grande
to advance to the regional m.e et.
It can be consid ered a good end in a se-ason that started out rough and had its bumps
along the way.
·
'"Startin g out 1 we were very low on mm1 bers and we struggled alJ season with numbers," said River Valley coach Ea Sayre. "The
kids progressed very wdl. T,R. Edwards'

Hines' late :

heroics ·lift

ended up getting three of th e top IS times
in school history. Godwin did th e same.
Th ey did a real good job as far as cu1ning
o ut running. They didn't break any schoo l
records, but they were in to p."
litiuril:'s, aml the t he transfer of junior
Step hani Joh·n s?n to Gallia Academy, effect ed th ~:: Raiders cross country team towards
the end of, the season
Johnson wa~ the No. 2 runner for the
l~iver Valley gi rls team.
•
ln o rder for R.iver Valley to be competi c
rive in the upcoming. years, th e ~choo l will
have to field a experienc ed s4uaJ.
That goes without say ing.
ft wm1 ld st•ern that the runnns a~t· tak in~
m3ttcrs in their own hands to acha~ve th1s
goal.
"Our underclassmen want to recruit fO r
next yea r," said Sayre. "They're already loo king forward to next year."
T he Raid ers will have one more yt'ar ·i n
the hi!;hly chall enging SEOAL bctorc rnov-

mg mtu the Ohto Valley Conference on
2002.
The change of conferen ce· is so mething
Savrc is loo k in~ .the ad to.
:'With us going into a new league in two
yc:trs, it's gomg to be a goa l of mine ;md a
goal to these kich to sm-cecd in th e m·w
league." sai d Sayre. "The returning let te rmen .trc gui11g ro go out Jnd try to rl'cruit
so ch ar we can usc lll.'Xt year :t'i a building
year.
·
"We want to build with this fr&lt;•s hman and
'ophomore clc1o;,. ;111d fllture eighth gradns,"
Sayn· added. "Wiwn we go Into OVC. we
will h.IVl! a varo;ity and maybe a junior var,.ity team on both sJ&lt;.k~ ;t!ld maybe a ju111or
high contin gl"nt. It \Votdd be ni~e to ~o into
that league with expt·ti t·nn·, hvc. SIX Jnd
sc·ve n runnn\.
River Valley wt ll be looking to freshman
Em1ly L1wson to k•aJ the girls team f(Jr thL'
next three )'l'.lr....

Please see Raiders, Page 89

No.9 Keyser 0
R o bert C. l:lyrd's Moo ki e
M ayer rushed fo r 77 yards,
in cluding scores of 2 and I ya rds.
Keyser (9-2) was held to 143
vards of tota l offense. Quarterback Troy Ravenscroft left the
g:amt: with a broke n col larb on~ in
th e second quarter Gerald Mayhew gained just 48 yards on 1J
c;~ rrt e'i.

Robert C. Byrd (10-1) totaled
149 yards of offense.
No. 4 Cabell Midland 20,
No. 13 G. Washington 15
Cabell Midland. which had
jmt 121 yards in total offt'me,
won o n quarterb ack Jo sh Querry's 13-yard run with 1:114
n:m am mg.

Please see Grid, Page 84

Ohio State humbles Michigan State
Buckeyes gain a measure if revenge
on Spartam with 2 7-13 victory

Marshall
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio
- Maurice Hines returned a
punt 60 yards for a tou chdbwn
with 2:45 left in the game to
give Marshall a 20-13 com efrom ~ behind
victory over
Bowling Green Saturday.
The Thunde-r ing Herd (5 - 4,
4-0 MAC East) trailed 13-6
with 4:03 to play in the game,
but Franklin Wallace raced 23
yards for ,a touchdown to tie the game at 13- 13.
·
JR.. Jenkins kicked two field
goa ls, from 29 and 30 yards
out, to help the Herd post its
comeback.
Bowling Green (2-7, 1-4
MAC East) took a 13-0 halftime lead thanks to a 22-yard
touchdown pm ti-om Andy
Sahm to David Bautista in the
. first period and two tield goals
by M ike Knapp in the second
quarter.
Marshall can cl in ch the
MAC Ea;t title with a win
against Miami this week. The
ltedHawks defeatod Ohiu 2724 Saturday to put a dent in·
the 13obcats' title hopes.
Ohio plays Uowling Green
th i' week.

Defending champion Parkersburg scored a touchdown on
eve ry possession. J os h R.omeo
had five of them while gaining 83
vards rushing and 74 receiving.
. . Romeo\ five touchdowns tieJ
a playoff record. Parkersburg's 30
first do\vns also tied a record o:;et
by DuPont in 1978.
Fu llback Joe Carthens led the
13ig R~ds (10-1) with 127 yards
on 14 carries and one tou chdown .
Marc Kimes completed 10-of12 passes for 171 yards. H e kirked
l'ight extra points.
Hamp shire's l:lryan Wright
entered the game with I ,700
yards during the regular season
but was held to just 36 yards on
21 carries.
Hampshire (8-3) was ou tgained 475 - 126. Parkersburg
rem,oved its starters near the end
of th e third quarter.
No. 8 Robert C. Byrd 14,

WRAPPED UP- Ohio State cornerback Jason Harmon)25) wraps up
Michigan State running back Little John Flowers during the Buckeyes
victory Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

C OLUMBUS. Ohio (AI') Derek Combs r.tn fin I oJ y.trds
and ;1 touchdmVn and. N o. I(\
Ohio State'~ d~,.·tl·n:&lt;~c shilt down

dri\·L; ~urted dt the 17 aftt·r N.n~·
Ckml.'tTtli returned CrJJg J.urttt\ punt .2() yard~ and 1S y~tnh
\\'l.'rC rackt·d on \vhcn Clem.:r1t:-.

Mich1gan St.ttc in tlw ~crond
lul f for a 27- Ll nctory ~ .tmr ­
ILty.
.
'
Michael Dos'i r,\ll'd 7J )\trds
with .1 fumhlt· re tu rn to gL·t thL·
Bu c h·w~ b,lC k Ill the g.um· ,di:n
th ev t~ll behind I~ -.&gt; in the tim
13 lllinutl..''l .
Michigan St.tte (4-5, 1-S llig
Ten) .tctu.1lly r,m rnorc pl.tys in
Ohio Statl.' te rritory than it"
ow11, 411-]5. ln th~ first half
alolll", 3."\ of the Spartan&lt; 44
~rD p -. tot~~ pl.1 cc in tht' Buckl'Vl.'.,· half nf rhc fil'ld .
But . Jfr~..·r Mll-hJg,ln ~t.Ht'
t~t ill'd · to c.tpit.llilc o\1 ~L·~·LT,Il

hit after hl' ~tcppeJ Ollt uf
bounds.
The te&lt;~m:-. trad L'd punt:-., bllt
Mi chig.m
St,ltt''li
Zil.·hl
J(;l\",lllaght muffcJ the kil'k .n

prime "co nn g op port unm c.s.
Oh1o St.ttc'li dd~n;;;e turnt.:d up
the prl' ...... ure ti.)rciu~ four
turnOVL'rS Jlld rq_!;l:\( l'ri ng 'il'VL' ll
~.1Ch . .
The llu ckcye·s (7-2. 4-2) .. rtter
~iv in ~ up 115 &gt;·,trd. . lll the tir"t
t]U ,l rtL' r, pnmlttt·d only Y6 y.1rd:-.
in the tin.d thrL'l.' pnind-..
ficd .It 1.1 ,It !t.tlliune·. th t·
Bu L" k cw~ tnn~ tht.:Jr tlr-.t IL·.td on
Ste·w lkllis.m\ 1-s-:rni dive. Th e

\\ 'd"

ht-. own 15 aud Ohio St,l tl.·\
Rohat Reyno ld~ tc.·cm·t'n~d.
Combs, who C.lrrii!d J 1
illnt'S, then (0\'l'rcJ th(.' d1~tan cc
1n two ca rriL'-. , inc luding the la-.t
'l yards on the next- to-l.t.st pl.ry

uf the third quarter

end the

After bui ld ing the I 0-pomt
k.td on to uch d:m 11 rum of 1
y.1rd hy Lmk John f-lowers and
(, yards by quM!nb:tck Jc-tf
Sm;)J.a~r. the Sp .trun~ lud tir..,t
down " at the ( )hin St;ttc .19, 22,
42 .l!H.l 46 Ill the ~ccond quJrtcr,
but didn't -;corL' n11 any o f them .
EarlY in the t~n1rth qu,trter,
Mi chcg.rn St.tte\ j.1cc Sayfcr
rl'CO\T;Td .t fumb1~·J "ndp hy
lkllt~MI ,It the· Bu ckeyes' :!Y.
Afto .1. tltl,t dm\'n ai d ed by a
f.lCt'llla . . k pl'll.l~ry. thl.· Sparrano;

Please see Buckeyes, Pap Bl

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to

1\(0rlllg-.

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�Page A10 • iounbap ~imrll-iotntinrl

WORLD BRIEFS
Accused spy's hearing delayed
MOSCOW (AP)- Americ&gt;n Edmond Pope on of'ttwy suffered
his second hout of back and JOlllt pain m a week. causmg his espionage tnal to be mterrupt~d so pnson doctors could examine him,
his defens'e lawvn said.
.
.
The doctors · determmed Pope was fit to continue trial, Pope's
lawyer Pavel Astakhov s;ud, and the trtal was to resume Saturday.
Astakhov said the pain signaled the return of Pope's bone cancer,
whtch h.td been Ill renusston . Presiding Judge Nina Barkina
adjourn~d Friday's hearing and asked pnso!l doctors w ex~~ine
Pope, but she lgam refused to allow access to U.S. cancer spectahsts .
Pop&lt;, 54. a retired U.S. Navy officer from State College, Pa._, suffered stmilaf symptoms Tuesday, prompting Bark.ina to adJourn
hearings for two days. Pope at1fnded a court hearing Thursday. .
"Now we a~ completely sure ·that this 1s conne-ctt:d wuh h1s pn·mary tllness (of cancer)," Amkhov satd Fnday.
Prtson doctor~ diJgtlosed Pope's e-aches as osteochondrosi~, a. form
of arthnm. and rheumatic inflammation of the back and htp JOmts,
Astaklwv ....ud . He maintained they lacked the equipment Or expernsc: to nuke: Jll .tccu rate dtagnosis.
A~t.tkho\' -.,ud thl" Juthnntie~· tre.Hment of Pope amounted tutortllrt.', .md \Jh1 th't• ~.:o urt's· rdUsJ! to provtdc him treatment VIOlated
h.tsl c hum .mit,uun prinripks.
Ru:-,~u·~ f cder.1l SC.ruritv Sen·tee arrested Pope on April 3 on suspt CHlll ot· trym~ to llkg::~lly buy pl.ws for :1 secret htgh-spt.·ed torpe.do thcd b\' the Ru:-.si:m na\·y. Pope hJs pk.tdt•d Innocent, and h1s
. . upportl"f'·· -..1y. the pl.tm wcrl' fu r 10-)'l.',lr-olJ technology that h.ts
.llrt• .tdv h~,.·~;· n :&lt;~old Jbro.1d.

Rail service headaches rise.
LONDON (AP) - Rush hour Jt London's Victom Station and
n's ,1 t:Huili.tr sct•ne: R.atl passe ngers stare in disbdief at cancellations
.wd Jd.tys , trying to work out an alternate route homt.".
.
The public .H.idrt'ss system announces that a tram ht'adt~g south 1s
finJilv re.1dY tOr de p,trture, tri_g_gt&gt;ring a stampt:dt.&gt; of SUits across a
concourse made treache"rou~ by a leaking roof.
The shorte-r-chan-usual train then stands for 30 minutes at the
platform, packed. Another announcement follows: Nobody can find
the driver. Midway through the journey. it appears the rear braking
mechanism is falhng off. Further delay.
Rail commuters in Britain have long suffered in silence, paying
ior a high-priced and wildly unpredicuble service.
They thought 11 couldn't get worse. But it has.
The network has been in disarray since Oct. 17 when iour people died in a demlment m Hatfield, north of London, the latest in
an ala rming spate of crashes. InvestigatOrs believe the cause was a
broken ratl at a curve. Network-wtde safety checks and slowdowns
have left rail travel in chaos.
Then it started ra in ing.
Widespread flooding - the worst in Britain in 50 years - has
hit the railways particularly hard in the past few weeks, causing
some stretches co subside.
Passengers have bee,~ warned to avoid train travel this weekend or
nsk maJor dtsruption.
"I'm not risking it," lawyer Debbie Peters said Friday evening at
Victoria Station. "By the time ( get to work, I'm often a nervous
\vre ck and frequently mtss meetings . When l get home I'm exhausted. so th1s weekend I'm staying home."
The Hat6eld derailment was the third fatal train crash in Britain
tn c~rec years. In October 1999, 31 people died and more than 200
were inJured neJr London's Paddington Stati.on when one train ·
JUmped a red llght an cNut another.

Su~ay,

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

Inside:

NovemberS, 2000

Eagles playoff images, Page 82 &amp; 84
Prep Football Scoreboard, Page 83
Mason County cheerleading, Page 85
Miami difeats Vii. Tech, Page B6

Israeli and Palestinian leaden ready for separate meetings
JERUSALEM (A P) - Israeli and Palestinian leaders satd they were wtlhng to meet
with Prestdent Clinton m \\'ashmgton for
cruetal negottanons a1med at breaking the
vicious circle of violence that has shattered
hopes for peace tn the Mtdd.le l:.ast. .
.
The Palestinlan ctreas were far from qUJet
on Friday, meanwnile, despite calls for
;estraint issued by both sides in an attempt to
implement their latest cease-fire and stop five
weeks of bloodshed .
Two Palemnians were sho t dead and

Palestinian leaders, who have des1gnated
dozens injured in a series of dashes with
Israeli troops in the West Bank and G~za Strip, · the past several Fridays a "day of rage ," also
hospital doctors said. Four Israeli soldiers were took on a more subdued tone, saying events
also hurt, according to the army. Numerous Friday and Saturday would . determine
firefights,-some involving machine-guns, were whether the truce agreement re'ached earher
;eported late Friwy.
in the wee!, was taking hold.
Still. Israeli leader Ehud Barak pledged to
On the political front, aides to Pales~nian
"persevere in our efforts for peace."
"We are strong enough to stand on both leader Yasser Arafat said he was ready to meet
fronts: the battle for peace and the struggle with Clinton in Washington. No definite date
against violence and terror,'' tWe prime minis- was set, said Arafat's spokesman Marwan
ter said.
Kanafani.

Puerto Rican 'lndependentistas'
prefer 'dignity' to prosperity
SAN JUAN . Puerto Rico (AP) "&lt;he sa me language'" Is Spanish at
Books, old m·,npapt'rs and odds wah Amcrica nness? And
crates filled wah .l lifeumt' of id~JS does , or docs not Puerto RiCo,
cram the small concrete hmist• under the 48-year:..o}d .. commonwealth" deal, dectde its "own' deswh~re Glom AIJona spends her
days amid lu sh Ca ribb~.m g~l' n ­ tiny?"
cry. s1pping passiOn fnut JlllCt: .md
Thl.· lw.:-.u11ng of l.'onunondreaming of indcpc:ndencc for wealtb var.ies in the t.-yes of many.
Put.•rto Ri co.
Congress and many constitu. Thcn~·s an eb.:t1on coming up ti6n.t l e·xpcrt~ s.1y it means federal
next \Vcek - SJillt' d.ty as m the law n:tgns "uprcme and Washingmainl.md Unittd St.Hes - ;md as ton ha s ultimate say on the island.
usu .tl Pu erto R1co's new gover no r
But supporters of the status quo
will be either a Stlpporte"r of U.S. - partly backed by some U.S .
statehood o r a proponent of the court' decisions - see the arrangesenti amono mous status quo.
mem as a ·• compact" between the
But Arj o na has li tde time fo r United States and soinething closth eir debate over the pros and cons er to a sovereign nation.
of the link with the United States .
Under the commonwealth -federal funds, welfare programs, w hose designer, legenwry Puerto
constitutional rights and ways of Rican Gov. Luis Munoz Marin,
exercising U.S. citizenship. She has was Arja~o's fath er-in-law - the
a Simpler position.
4 million islanders don't pay feder"We cannot forever continue co al taxes but do receive soine $13
be ruled by another people," says billion in federal funds, do send a
Arjona , a former Spanish literature non-voting delegate t,; CQTlgress
professor, waving her arms. "We but don't vote in U.S. presidential
must learn to begin deciding our elections.
own destiny. We cannot be both
A debate over the last point was
Puerto Rican and American. We ignited this year when a San Juan"
do not even speak the same lan- based feder;U JUdge ruled Puerto
guage."
' Ricans should have the right to
She has been saying this all her vote for U.S. president. The decilife - deeply felt words. that con- sion was overturned by the 1st
tain the seeds of a political, cultur- Circuit Court of App eals in
al, and semantic debate that has Boston .
raged here since U.S. troops seized
But it was hardly. a boost for the
the island in the Spanish-Am.eri- status quo: Chief Appellate Ju"dge
can war in 1898.
Juan R. Torruclla urged change,·
Are the Americans "another blasting what he termed a "nationpeople'" After all, note statehood al disenfranchisement" and · a
supporters. Puerto Ricans have "colonial condition (that) runs
been U.S. citi zens since 1917. The against th e very principles upon
United States is a collection of which (the United States) was
peoples, they say; do they all speak founded."

l-Viuds gtostiug

to

4J mph

.

011

,.

MEI•sc•••n
s•ERIFF
C zU..A.LIFI:.E:-0

.EXPERIENCED
DEDICATED TO lAW ENFORCEMENT

ef
~I
"'-~~-~

•

JESSIE COLLINS

BILL DAVIS

• Open Door Polley
• Economic Development

• Experienced
• Focus on our youth

..,;~t:lln

ALCOHOL HURTS, NEVER HELPS!
KEEP RACINE DRY!
, REMEMBER TO VOTE

DAVE MARTIN

BRENT SAUNDERS

• Equal Due Process of Law
• Integrity and Trust

• A safe Drug Free County

OHIO SUPREME CO-U RT
. Alice Robie Resnick
Tim Black

Need

Wiseman places
63rd in state meet

risk beingjc.rkc-d about on tcthc~
lcadmg to "thl'ir mothc-r ship,
R.ega_lia .
Earlier Friday. Russian and
Norwegian divers moved tht·ir
search for bodies toward le ss
Jam.agl·d art'aS of the vessel after
f.11 li ng to enter a shattered forward cmnpartme nt.

FIIR

a Ride to the Polls?? Call 446-1739
Paid for by the Gallia Democralic Party, Gallipolis, Ohiu

WVa. rid

Eagles fall to Green Wave

playa s

BY BuTCH COOPER

.

f'ffl , .•., ('4fllliiSSI4t,l·:lt,.·

Sponsored by: First Baptist Church of Racine, Morningstar United Methodist Church, Racine Un1tad Methodist
church, East Letart United Methodist Church, Bethany United Methodist Church. Garmel _Sutton United
Methodist Church, Antiquity Baptist Church, Fellowship Church of the Lord Jesus Christ, Racone Pentecostal
Church

HIGHLIGHTS

Arctic CirdC m,rde cMttiu11ed
ope rJl; mrs t#l.lUJlrrmH.

LTR.SSELL

.

ELECTION DAY* NOV.?

SUNDAY's

tloc Barmts Sea ab1we tloc

CAST
BALL_
OT

DOES RACINE NEED
ALCOHOL?.
_15% of Ohio's Bthgrade students reported
being drunk, and 62o/o of 12 graders
reported using alcohol ~n the last 30 days!
30.6% of all traffic fatalities itt the USA are
alcohol related. Alc~hol abuse and related
expenses cost taxpayers 148 BILLI0 N
dollars annually. 110,000 deaths each year
are alcohol·related

Sunday, November 5, 1000

Divers shift search for
bodies in submarine
MOSCOW (AP) Divers
tried to cut their way into ijving
quarters of the sunken Kursk
nuclear submarint= Friday, but rising winds and snow forced a
temporary halt to thei r efforts tu
recover bodies, a navy official
said .
Winds gusting to 45 mph on
the Barents Sea above the Arctic
Circle made continued operations dangerous, said , Igor
· Babenko, head of the North ern
Fleet's press center. He said divers

Page 81

COLUMBUS- Gallia Academy freshman Sarah Wiseman 6n. ished 63rd at the OHSAA Division 11 cross country championships held Saturday at Scioto
Downs in Columbus.
Wiseman, a
'tookie on th e
13lu e
Angels
varsity
team
this year, posted a time of
20:16, which
set a new perso nal record.
H er previous
best was a time
Wiseman
of
20:17,
which sh e set
at the Rio Grande Invitational.
· ;'She ran a solid race," GAHS
head coa ch Penny Roush said.
"She went out and did what she
need ed to do. It was a great race
for a ,fre shman."
Wiseman will be among the
athletes honored Wednesday at
the All-Southeast District awards
banquet, w hich will be held at the
University of Rio Gr-ande beginning at 6 p.m.

Woodward NCAC
defensive player
of the week
CLEVELAND - O hi o Wesleyan linebacker Rob Woodward
was named North Coast Athletic
Conference defensive player of
the week followiilg his standout
pt;:rformaric e against Kenyon a
week ago Saturday. ·
. ·
Woodward, a
Gallia Academy
alumnus
and
co-captain for
the
13attlin g
Bishops,.
recorded
18
tackles, incl udmg 13 solo
stops, in O hio
Wes leyan's 35Woodward
27 victory over
Kenyon.
. Woodward. w ho won the
defen&lt;ive player of the wee k
a\Vard for the second time this
season. rank~ e igh th in the
NCAC in tackles ave raging 7.9
per game. He is the leading tackler for OWU with 79 total. ·
Woodward had 14 tack les
against Wittenb t!rg .the prey1ous
week.

Swisher finishes ·
28th at MAC meet
KALAMAZOO, Mi ch. M arsha ll University fres hman
Craig Swisher finished 28tli in
the Mid-American C:onfer~nc~
cross cou.~ury chan1pion ship s last
weekend.
Swis h er, an
alum nus
of
Ga lli a Acad emy, posted a
time of 25:08
as the Herd
men fini shed
ninth in the
team
standlllgs.
Swis he r ha s
Swisher
b~en
M arshall 's top nn1ne r all season.
H e finis h ed second at the
Ohi o University Bobcat lnv itation ,d with a time of 25:50, and
pbced 20th at the Lakefront
Invirational in Ch icago.
Swr1h 1:r )vas named MidAuu:rican Conf.ert' nce runner of
the week following hi s firstplaCL· fini sh at ·the Ohio University R.cbys earl il·r in the st·a~on.
Hio:; time ;tt tht.: OU nkct was
19:39.
Swisher fini,hed ! 2th · Jt the
1
Pre- MAC Tuunlalllt'llt With &lt;1
time of 25:5I.
Mae~hall will compete at the
NCAA District 11 meet Novcm-

OVP SPoRTS STAFF

underway

EAST MEIGS Eastern
footbaU has come a long way
this season.
Winning the TVC Hocking
Division and b~ing the first
Meigs County team to ever
make the OHSAA playoffs, the
Eagles rallied an .entire county
behind them going into th e
first round of the Division VI
tournament.
Unfortunately, that run
ca me to an end on Friday
when Newark Catholic handed Eastern a 34-12 loss at East
Shade River Stadium.
An estimated crowd of
3,000 was in attendance .
"The whole county got
behind us," said Eastern coach
Scott Ch ristman. "We. appre ciate that. It's unbelievable. The
write-ups in the (news)pap er
and things they've done .... the
signs and the cards.
" We got cards from Waham a
and a big sign from Meigs just
congratulating us," Chr istman
said .- " It 's a great atmosphere
here. Probably the biggest
crowd that has ever been here .
" It's probably safe to say i"t
was the biggest crowd. The
majority was - from Meigs
County, and that's a great feel•
"
"f
mg.
Newark Catholi c (7 - 4)
actuaUy made it to the tield
on ly an hour before kickoff
and had to rush to prepare for
the game.

Plene see Eagles, Pace Bl

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Adam Cantoni rushed for 212
ya rds and two touchdowns to
lead No. 10 University to a 40-14
vic tory over No. 7 Hurri cane in
· th e first round of the Class AAA
high school playoffi Friday night.
Cantoni 1 who had 27 ca rries,
scored on runs of 12 and 4 yards
in th e seco nd quarter a.o; Univer'iity (9-2)jumped to a 34-14 halftime lead.
Host Hurricane (8- 3) man aged just 14 yards rushing and
153 yards in total offense.
. University will play next week
at N o.2 Woodrow Wil son, a 28-0
winner over No. IS Philip 13arbour.
No. 3 Parkersburg 69,

No. 14 Hampshire 0

ROLLING OUT- Eastern quarterback Garrett Karr rolls out to his left to throw a pass during Friday's
OHSAA Divis io n VI, Region 23 playoff game against Newark Catholic . (Bryan Long photo)

River VaU,ey cross couf)try a work in progress
BY BUTCH Ccii!PER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

C H ESH IH..E - It might not have been
th e best season ever for River Valley cross
co untry, but great strides wne made this
year.
Despite difficu lty in fielding a boys squad,
the Raiders competed we ll agatnst mff
competition. In fact, the gi rls team was very
competitive, w ith strong performan ces at
several meets.
River Valley al so saw two of its runners
advance to the regional cross country meet
in Lancaster.
Seni ors Megan Godwin andTR. Edwards
. qualified in the district meet a~ Rio Grande
to advance to the regional m.e et.
It can be consid ered a good end in a se-ason that started out rough and had its bumps
along the way.
·
'"Startin g out 1 we were very low on mm1 bers and we struggled alJ season with numbers," said River Valley coach Ea Sayre. "The
kids progressed very wdl. T,R. Edwards'

Hines' late :

heroics ·lift

ended up getting three of th e top IS times
in school history. Godwin did th e same.
Th ey did a real good job as far as cu1ning
o ut running. They didn't break any schoo l
records, but they were in to p."
litiuril:'s, aml the t he transfer of junior
Step hani Joh·n s?n to Gallia Academy, effect ed th ~:: Raiders cross country team towards
the end of, the season
Johnson wa~ the No. 2 runner for the
l~iver Valley gi rls team.
•
ln o rder for R.iver Valley to be competi c
rive in the upcoming. years, th e ~choo l will
have to field a experienc ed s4uaJ.
That goes without say ing.
ft wm1 ld st•ern that the runnns a~t· tak in~
m3ttcrs in their own hands to acha~ve th1s
goal.
"Our underclassmen want to recruit fO r
next yea r," said Sayre. "They're already loo king forward to next year."
T he Raid ers will have one more yt'ar ·i n
the hi!;hly chall enging SEOAL bctorc rnov-

mg mtu the Ohto Valley Conference on
2002.
The change of conferen ce· is so mething
Savrc is loo k in~ .the ad to.
:'With us going into a new league in two
yc:trs, it's gomg to be a goa l of mine ;md a
goal to these kich to sm-cecd in th e m·w
league." sai d Sayre. "The returning let te rmen .trc gui11g ro go out Jnd try to rl'cruit
so ch ar we can usc lll.'Xt year :t'i a building
year.
·
"We want to build with this fr&lt;•s hman and
'ophomore clc1o;,. ;111d fllture eighth gradns,"
Sayn· added. "Wiwn we go Into OVC. we
will h.IVl! a varo;ity and maybe a junior var,.ity team on both sJ&lt;.k~ ;t!ld maybe a ju111or
high contin gl"nt. It \Votdd be ni~e to ~o into
that league with expt·ti t·nn·, hvc. SIX Jnd
sc·ve n runnn\.
River Valley wt ll be looking to freshman
Em1ly L1wson to k•aJ the girls team f(Jr thL'
next three )'l'.lr....

Please see Raiders, Page 89

No.9 Keyser 0
R o bert C. l:lyrd's Moo ki e
M ayer rushed fo r 77 yards,
in cluding scores of 2 and I ya rds.
Keyser (9-2) was held to 143
vards of tota l offense. Quarterback Troy Ravenscroft left the
g:amt: with a broke n col larb on~ in
th e second quarter Gerald Mayhew gained just 48 yards on 1J
c;~ rrt e'i.

Robert C. Byrd (10-1) totaled
149 yards of offense.
No. 4 Cabell Midland 20,
No. 13 G. Washington 15
Cabell Midland. which had
jmt 121 yards in total offt'me,
won o n quarterb ack Jo sh Querry's 13-yard run with 1:114
n:m am mg.

Please see Grid, Page 84

Ohio State humbles Michigan State
Buckeyes gain a measure if revenge
on Spartam with 2 7-13 victory

Marshall
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio
- Maurice Hines returned a
punt 60 yards for a tou chdbwn
with 2:45 left in the game to
give Marshall a 20-13 com efrom ~ behind
victory over
Bowling Green Saturday.
The Thunde-r ing Herd (5 - 4,
4-0 MAC East) trailed 13-6
with 4:03 to play in the game,
but Franklin Wallace raced 23
yards for ,a touchdown to tie the game at 13- 13.
·
JR.. Jenkins kicked two field
goa ls, from 29 and 30 yards
out, to help the Herd post its
comeback.
Bowling Green (2-7, 1-4
MAC East) took a 13-0 halftime lead thanks to a 22-yard
touchdown pm ti-om Andy
Sahm to David Bautista in the
. first period and two tield goals
by M ike Knapp in the second
quarter.
Marshall can cl in ch the
MAC Ea;t title with a win
against Miami this week. The
ltedHawks defeatod Ohiu 2724 Saturday to put a dent in·
the 13obcats' title hopes.
Ohio plays Uowling Green
th i' week.

Defending champion Parkersburg scored a touchdown on
eve ry possession. J os h R.omeo
had five of them while gaining 83
vards rushing and 74 receiving.
. . Romeo\ five touchdowns tieJ
a playoff record. Parkersburg's 30
first do\vns also tied a record o:;et
by DuPont in 1978.
Fu llback Joe Carthens led the
13ig R~ds (10-1) with 127 yards
on 14 carries and one tou chdown .
Marc Kimes completed 10-of12 passes for 171 yards. H e kirked
l'ight extra points.
Hamp shire's l:lryan Wright
entered the game with I ,700
yards during the regular season
but was held to just 36 yards on
21 carries.
Hampshire (8-3) was ou tgained 475 - 126. Parkersburg
rem,oved its starters near the end
of th e third quarter.
No. 8 Robert C. Byrd 14,

WRAPPED UP- Ohio State cornerback Jason Harmon)25) wraps up
Michigan State running back Little John Flowers during the Buckeyes
victory Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

C OLUMBUS. Ohio (AI') Derek Combs r.tn fin I oJ y.trds
and ;1 touchdmVn and. N o. I(\
Ohio State'~ d~,.·tl·n:&lt;~c shilt down

dri\·L; ~urted dt the 17 aftt·r N.n~·
Ckml.'tTtli returned CrJJg J.urttt\ punt .2() yard~ and 1S y~tnh
\\'l.'rC rackt·d on \vhcn Clem.:r1t:-.

Mich1gan St.ttc in tlw ~crond
lul f for a 27- Ll nctory ~ .tmr ­
ILty.
.
'
Michael Dos'i r,\ll'd 7J )\trds
with .1 fumhlt· re tu rn to gL·t thL·
Bu c h·w~ b,lC k Ill the g.um· ,di:n
th ev t~ll behind I~ -.&gt; in the tim
13 lllinutl..''l .
Michigan St.tte (4-5, 1-S llig
Ten) .tctu.1lly r,m rnorc pl.tys in
Ohio Statl.' te rritory than it"
ow11, 411-]5. ln th~ first half
alolll", 3."\ of the Spartan&lt; 44
~rD p -. tot~~ pl.1 cc in tht' Buckl'Vl.'.,· half nf rhc fil'ld .
But . Jfr~..·r Mll-hJg,ln ~t.Ht'
t~t ill'd · to c.tpit.llilc o\1 ~L·~·LT,Il

hit after hl' ~tcppeJ Ollt uf
bounds.
The te&lt;~m:-. trad L'd punt:-., bllt
Mi chig.m
St,ltt''li
Zil.·hl
J(;l\",lllaght muffcJ the kil'k .n

prime "co nn g op port unm c.s.
Oh1o St.ttc'li dd~n;;;e turnt.:d up
the prl' ...... ure ti.)rciu~ four
turnOVL'rS Jlld rq_!;l:\( l'ri ng 'il'VL' ll
~.1Ch . .
The llu ckcye·s (7-2. 4-2) .. rtter
~iv in ~ up 115 &gt;·,trd. . lll the tir"t
t]U ,l rtL' r, pnmlttt·d only Y6 y.1rd:-.
in the tin.d thrL'l.' pnind-..
ficd .It 1.1 ,It !t.tlliune·. th t·
Bu L" k cw~ tnn~ tht.:Jr tlr-.t IL·.td on
Ste·w lkllis.m\ 1-s-:rni dive. Th e

\\ 'd"

ht-. own 15 aud Ohio St,l tl.·\
Rohat Reyno ld~ tc.·cm·t'n~d.
Combs, who C.lrrii!d J 1
illnt'S, then (0\'l'rcJ th(.' d1~tan cc
1n two ca rriL'-. , inc luding the la-.t
'l yards on the next- to-l.t.st pl.ry

uf the third quarter

end the

After bui ld ing the I 0-pomt
k.td on to uch d:m 11 rum of 1
y.1rd hy Lmk John f-lowers and
(, yards by quM!nb:tck Jc-tf
Sm;)J.a~r. the Sp .trun~ lud tir..,t
down " at the ( )hin St;ttc .19, 22,
42 .l!H.l 46 Ill the ~ccond quJrtcr,
but didn't -;corL' n11 any o f them .
EarlY in the t~n1rth qu,trter,
Mi chcg.rn St.tte\ j.1cc Sayfcr
rl'CO\T;Td .t fumb1~·J "ndp hy
lkllt~MI ,It the· Bu ckeyes' :!Y.
Afto .1. tltl,t dm\'n ai d ed by a
f.lCt'llla . . k pl'll.l~ry. thl.· Sparrano;

Please see Buckeyes, Pap Bl

•

'

to

1\(0rlllg-.

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�•

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

Sunda~November5,2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

EASTERN PLAYOFF IMAGES

eunboJ&gt; t!:tmrt -il&gt;tntintl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

PREP FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
OHS.V. Prop Footbotl Ployoffo
Dlvlolon VI, Region 23
Ousrterlinat Round

18

Utica 35, Bellaire 28, OT
Region 16

Now•rk Catholic 34, E01tern 12
Newar1&lt; Catholic 6 8 6 14 - 34
Eastem
6
o 6 o - 12

Blanchester 8, HamiHon Badin 3

Cln. Wyoming 23, Cin. Indian Hill 20,
OT

Scoring oummory
Flrot 0Uirtor
NC-Kyle WNIIamson 5 run, kick failed

Germantown Valley View 53, Cin .

Madeira 7
Minford 28, Wheelersburg 0

(8:48)
E-Andy Reed 97 tumble return, kick

DIVISION VI
Region 21
Cte. Cuyahoga Hts. 33, Tiffin CalvM

failed (4: 10)
· Steond Quarter

26

Nc-t&lt;yle Williamson 18 run, Williamson

McDonald 28, Gibsonburg t 0

run (3:11)

Mogadore 48 , Lucas 20

Third Quarter

Norwalk Sl. Paul 20. Ole. Hts. Luther-

NC-Kevin Dolan 19 run, kick failed . an E. 1e
.
(9:04)
Region 22
E-Brad Willford 3 pass from Garrett
Antwerp 21 , Defiance Ayersville 17

Karr, pass tailed (1 :32)

Columbus Grove 21 , Carey 12

NC-Kyle Williamson 26 ""'·Andy Fackler kick (6:201
NC-Kyle Williamson 3 run, Fackler kick

(1: 12)
NC
20
35-290
39
329
2-5-t
2·1
6-35
1-36.0

First Downs

Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-an-int
Fumbles-lost
Penaltie~- yards

Punts-avg.

Newark Cath . 34, Reedsville Eastern

(8) Hamler Patrick Henry (7-3) at (1)
Uberty Center (I 0·0)
(5) Bluffton (9-1) at (4) Delphos Jefferson (9-t )

PortsmQuth Notre Dame 21, Leetonia

(7) Sycamore Mohawk .:~· 2 ) at (2) MariOn Pleasant (9 -1)

Shadyside 31, Strasburg-Franklin 14

(6) Morral Ridgedale (8-2) al (3) Creslltne (9-1)

12

Team Stalistlcs
E

0

15
43-117
70
187
6-14-t

Toronto 32, Beallsville 26
Region 24

(8 ) Nelsonville York
land Crestview (9· 1)

( 1)

No. B Robart C. Byrd (1 0-1) at No. 1
Morgantown (11-0)
No. 10 University (9-2) at No. 2

Woodrow Wilson (10·0)
No. 6 Rivers ide a1 No. 3 Parkersburg
(10-1)
No. 12 Princeton (9-2) at No. 4 Cabell
Midland (9-2)
CtasaAA
First round
Friday

Bridgeport 48, Sherman 8
Oak Hill 27 , Independence 7
Tyler Consolidated 32, Williamstown 6

Result s from the first round of West
Virginia high school football playoffs . Saturday games are at 1:30 p.m . unless otherwise noted:

CtassAAA

Ash·

Saturday

No. 15 Frankfort (6-4) at No . 2 Wayne
(1 0-0)
No. 14 Wintie ld (7-3) vs . No. 3 Clay
County (tO-O) , at Nicholas County Memorial Field, 7:30 p.m.

No. 13 Magnolia (7-31vs. No. 4 Shady

First round
Friday
Cabell Midland 20 1 George Washington 15
Morgantown 48. Fairmont Senior 7
Parkersburg 69 , Hampshire 0
Princeton 32 . Whe'eling Park 28
Riverside 30 , Martinsburg 7
Robert C. Byrd 14, Key ser 0
University 40 , Hurricane 14
Woodrow Wilson 28, Philip Barbour 0

(5) Smithville (9 ·1) at (4) Hemlock

Day 13
Covington 35, Tipp City Bethel 0

4-20
2-275

(8-2) al

•
Nov. 10 or 11

W. Virginia Prep Football Playoffs

Region 19

Ansonia 42 , Anna 13 ·
Cedarville 41 , Cin. SUmmit Country

t -1

Region 20

Milford Ctr. Fairbanks (8-2) at (1)
Cols. Ready (8·1)
(5) Gahanna Cols. Academy (9-l) at
(4) Reading (8-2)
(71 Sidney Lehman Oath. (7-3) at (2)
Brookville (9-1)
(6) Springfield Northeastern (6-4) at (3)
Bainbridge Paint Valley (9-1)
(8)

sillon Tuslaw (9· 1)
Region 18

Delphos St. John's 49, Tol. Ottawa
Hills 10
McComb 28. Pandora-Gilboa 7
Region 23

,

Fourth Quarter

M1ller (9-1)
(7) Johnstown Northridge (8-2) at (2)
Beverty Fort Frye (9- t)
(6) Newcomerstown (8-2) at (3) Amanda-Ciearcreek (7-3)

(7) Canfield (7-3) at (2) Louisville (8-2)
(6) Millersburg W Holmes (9-1) at (3)
McConnellsville Morgan (10-0)
Region 12
(8] Jackson (8-2) at (1) Portsmouth
(1 0-0)
(5) Cin. Purcell Marian (7-3) at (4) Gallipolis Gallia (8-2)
(7) Eaton (7·3) at (2) Day. Chammade·
Julienne (8·2)
(6) Circleville Loyan Elm (8-2) at New
Richmond (1 0·0)
DIVISION V
Region 17
(8) tndependance (8-2) at ( t) Bedford
Chanet (9- t)
(51 Columbiana Cresfview (8 -2) at (4)
Gates Mills Hawken (9-1) , 1 p.m.
(7) Windham (8-2) at (2) New Middle·
· town Springtield (1 0-0)
(6) N. LimaS. Range (7-2 ) at (3) Mas-

Ironton 43, Martins Ferry 7
Newall&lt; Ucl&lt;ing Valley 33, loudonville

Ritchie- .-

Winfield-Clay County winner
Iaeger-Greenbrier West winner

V$ . ~:

Cla11A

Firat round

Bridgeport (11·0)
Magnolia-Shady Spnng winner vs. No

Banner Season for the Eagles
Eastern played host to the first-ever prep playoff football game in Meigs County Friday night. The Eagles
dropped a 34-12 decision to Newark Catholic in the first round of the Division VI, R egion 23 playoffs,
which ended the season for Eastern.
The Eagles enjoyed the best season in school history, winning the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division championship, its first since 1995, and earning the school's first playoff berth.
In the upper left photo, head coach Scott Christman talks with players, including Cacy Faulk (41) and
Andy Reed (61), during a timeout Friday.
·
In the upper right photo; the Eastern fans salute their heroes prior to the game.
(Bryan Long photos)
.

scored on a touchdown run for
the Green Wave.
"Kevin came in and ran things
efTec 1iveiy,"
said
Buchanan.
from
81
"Obviously, we've reduced what
" We're happy to stiU be in it," we were doing a litde bit . I give
md Newark Cathohc head coach our backs, our line and Kevin .a
Jeff Buchanan. "We're happy our great deal of credi t for stepping
team evcnwally found their \vay up and getting things done.
"I also want to commend
here. I don't think we had Magellan gmdin~ the bus driver on his (Eas tern)," · Bu chanan added .
\\·,ry.
"That.'s a pretty good football
··I ·give our guys credit huw team . There were tim es when
they responded, to rush in and get they were handling our defensive
d ressed. head out and get ready to front consistently. (Brad Willford)
is a good a back as we played
go.
Nt:wark Cath oli c junior tail- against this year. He reminds me a
b.lck Kyk Wdhamson was nearly awful lost of a young fellow
(Justin Roush) we played ag;inst
U ll ~ t o pp.lblc .
Wilh;Hn sun, who repl.tc l..'d an (Me1p) two years ago.
"Same· build, same toughness ,
l tlJUrcd Jo n .tth :m Barbour ~;,.•arher
this s c ,t s ~HI. rushL'd tOr 235 yards they're wdl coached. We're happy
o n ?.7 carrie ~ and ~cc..m.~d four tn win . I'm not surt' the score is a
tou c hdowm for th~: Gn:('n W :lVe . good indicator of how the close
"( W dli .1 mson 's the) best back the game Jctu:tlly was.".
l\:e ever seen , qukke~t anyway''
With Newark Catholic up 20liJid C:hnstman , "1-k just runs 6 early m the thltd quarter, it was
ha rd . v~r y dwavc. Wc 'J have him Willford, a scmor, :~nd junior
~ topped gomg on'e way and he'd
quarterback Garrett Karr that got
cut It back J.nd go tht• mh er way. things going, on a 17 -play drive
·I k Lhdn 't brc.:tk any HO or 90 that took 7:32 off the do c k
\ ,Jrdcr ~. but SO iliL'tllll l'S It's \VO TSL'
Two plays after a 32-yard pass
\vhen they have those long drives from Karr to Willford that put the
and hlln running 12 and 14 Eagles on the Green Wave 4-yard
va.rds ."
line, Karr hooked up with WillWilliamson d_1dn 't take long to ford on a 3-yard screen to make it
&gt;COte his first touchdown of the a 20-12 game.
night.
Willford finished with 19 carAt the 8 :48 mark of the first ries for 57 yards rushing and three
yuartcr, WJ!Ii'amson sc ored on a receptions for 51 yards . Karr was
j-yarJ run to put the first poults 6-for-14 passing for 70 yards and
o n the board .
an interceptlon. Karr also had 54
" H e really stepp ed It up and rllS.hing yards on 20 carries.
, howed w hat kind o f back he
The sc o ring play was made
was," ~ atd Hu chanan. " I know we possible mu ch earlier in the drive,
d.,idn 't mix it up very well . He's a though .
th reat and m akes a lot of folks
On fourth down and two from
Ill ISS.
the their own 48 - yard lin e, EastE a'itcrn tied the gam e as 6-aU ern was reJdy to punt the ball
o n the Green Wave's next drive in back to the Green Wave with
d1c ope ning quarter.
Karr, th e Eagles punter, in posi . It o cc urred on a
rare tion .
W ilh :unso n m tstake.
But jumo r fullba ck R .J . Gibbs
With first down and .gn al o n t oo k th e short snap and carried
the Eras tern 5- yard lme , N ewark the ball five ya rd' for th e first
Cat holi c b ac kup qu arte rba c k down .
An inte rce ption on Newark
Kc\'in D o lan pitc hed the ball
h,1c k to William so n. who mishan- C.lth o li c\ fo llo win g dnve by
dled the ball ;md lost cont ro l
Willford o n a pass tipped by
E.1,.,;b h nebacker A11 dy R eed sentor Ja son W arner, gave th e
then 'iLn np'-·J up th'-' lome b,1ll Eagle s th e ball back o n their o\vn
.tml . c.t nt ed H b ~1 c k (J7 p rd., fi: Jr ]1-y.ud hn ~ euly 111 the fom th
the tntK h d ow n .
q u.1rtc r.
Ea q ern lnd r h ~ ball nt o\' Hi g
" lt\ :t . Ill..'\\' b;l ll g.li11 C .111 of the ·
-., uddt·t J." ....nd C hn stm .m ··ou r and L'\'L' I1 com·L·rted o rt ,mo th t:r
ki d.., ,ll"l' d 1r n k ' We c.m play \\' Ith f!l urth - d nw n pl.t \'
W 1th th 1nl do\\'n .111d t' lg hr .lt
clll' "'l' gtl\'\ ...
D nl .1n \\',t.., brought 111 to the th t• EJgk s 41-y.nd ilnc ..1 pHch
h.1c k hv K.m t&lt;: ll be hind Wil lford
g.l lll t' .1ftct "'t. r l t l'l" An J v F.u kl er
,111d
,,:,,._ n ·cmT rl' d by NL·w;nk
tll l tlrnl h t'i h ,umtnn~ 011 Nt'w.uk
( ·.tthoht ·~ tint d r l\:c of th L· g;un(' . C.nhohL\I },Jmn n Bw.: hil ll.lll
" f t '~
nn t
htillHHOtl~ ."
S.ll d
" lt was Jll &lt;t .1 pi.ly we call ed."
Buc h.m ,1n. ;,We get ~ Pillt'niH' clw -., ,lid C hn ~t111.1 11 '' It\ ,111 o pt1n 11 .
t. W dl fim.l) t. IIJ l11 t till.· t1ght end o r
illlllfL'J '-'\'t'ty wc~·k .tm \ a\ .tl\\.. ,tY'
1m th t.• tl.m.· o ut . Of t o u n c: , th l'
~l ll ll l'OllC.: t h.lt 1' kL•y."
'\t ill , I ), ! l.l n c,ni l t' 11 1 .tnd '-'Vt' ll t.l llbac k w.l ~n' t 111 pm it1 011 to

Eastem
Page

make the play.
11
We thought we were moving
the ball there," he added. "That
was a big play. They picked it up
and went in and scored. It didn't
break our backs, but it kind of let_
the air out of us for a little while,
so it was definitely a turning
point."
Three plays later, William~on
scored his third touchdown of the
night from 26 yards out as
Newark Cathohc took a 27-12
lead.
Eastern had a difficult time getting through
a disciplined
Newark Catholi c defense.
Josh Hill , Andrew Wagner and
Stephen Wagner ea ch sacked
Karr, while the Eagles runmng
game was unable to make tht'ir
usual big plays.
' 'We're use w gl'tung across the
line, we brCak the ·line ;md \Vc 'rc
gone," -;aid Chn!:&gt;tll!an . '"Th ;1t d idn 't happen to night. We told our
kids that's the way it was goin g to
be. We had tu sustain drives I
think we d1d that three or fo ur
times tonight . We didn't get in
(the end zo ne) ·' coupk o ( times ,
but we drove It down there.
"We told our kids we're going
to have to be patient," Christma n
said. "I think our power game
gave them a httle bit of probl ems.
Anytitne we break something otT,
they cou ld run us down from
behind. Instead of.1 .'\()or 40 yard
gain, it was a s1x or seven yard
gam ."
Jonathan Barbour led the
Newark Catholic defense with 12
tackles.
For E astern , Brad Willford and
Trav1s W1llford eac h had fi ve
tackles , while Karr and Warn er
each collected four tac kles.
Newark Catholi c will · meet
Shadyside this weeke nd 111
regional semifinal play.
Shadyside defeated StrasburgFranklin
31-14
Fr iday
to
advanc e .
"(Newark C atho li c) is a well
coach e d and a great defensive
footb all team ," said C hristman.
·' It's not an ex: c u~e. bu t J n: .1 son
that th ey've bee n {to the plavoff&lt;)
seve ral tim es J lld o ur k1 d s luvc.:
new r bee n 111 thi s 'il tu ;'lt lon .
" I think we 've provc.:n th ,lt ' \Vt.'
c ~n co mp c t l' :l t th t:- .~ ta cc.!' kve l." he
~ :la.i . " I to ld t he kid ~ b efore the
game tlu t thi &lt;i w,t ~ t\\'t J o f tlw b~.:'&gt; t
t L',\111 "1 111

the

:,t,l tl'

of OhJ ~),

Dl \ '1-

?10 11 IV pbymg ,lg.umt '-' ,lC h
othe r. I th111k o ur kilh kl lO\V nnw
we e;m com pL" tl' wah tl w~L' kl nd,
of team s. W e've ~n t to unpmve.
We've got to get ~ t ro11ga ' .md
qluc kc:r."
The E agl e~ fini shed th L· ".:-.1~n n
\V Ith .1 ~J-2 rL"lonl

4·10, Seth Elliott t -6. Eastern-Brad Willlord 19-57, Garrett Karr 20-54, A.J. Gibbs
2-1_, Brad Parker 1-2, Chris Lyons 1·3~

ror a research study at Ohio University
Aphasia Is a loll or lanpge ability due to stroke, brain lf\lury, or other
neurological Incident

Paaslng : Newark Catholic-Kevin Dolan

Persons with aphasia (any age) will be paid $45.00.
Persons without aphasia (over 30 or between 10 'and 12 years)
will be paid $10.00
Contact:
Dr. Brooke Hallowell at (740) 593·1356 or hallowel@ohlou.edu

2-5· t -39-0. Eastem-Garrett Karr 6·14·
1-70-t .
Receiving: Newark Catholic-Josh Hill
2-39. Eastern-Brad Willford 3-51 -1, Ben
Ho~er

1-10. R.J. Gibbs t-9, Chris Lyons

1-0.

lon Jackson 18-21

The
Joint Implant
Center

First Round
Friday's Games

DIVISION II
Region 5
Avon Lake 14, Cle. East 6

Bracksvillo·Broadview
Amherst Steele t 9

Niles McKinfey 2 1, Youngs. Chaney

(5)

ny Wayne ,2

Pendleton (7-3), at Moorehe!d

No. 12 Burch (7-3) at No. 5 Matewan
(8-21. 7:30 p.m.
No. 10 Parkersburg Catholic _(8 ·2) vs.
No . 7 Williamson (8 -2). at Burch
No. 14 Madonna (7-2) vs. No. 3 BuHalo (9·1), at Latdley Field, Charleston , 7:30
Second round

Nov. 10 or II
, Valley Wetzel-Wheeling Central wtnner

Catholic-Wil liamson winner
M adonn a-Buffalo winner vs. No . 6

Moorelield (8-3)

Cols. Brookhaven 29, Cols . Indepen-

Loveland 24, Cin . McNicholas 21
Piqua 54, Oxtord Tatawanda 33

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

Trenton Edgewood 32, Gin. Glen Este

13
Vandalia Buller 55, Wapakoneta 9

Cle . VASJ 34, Youngs. Uberty 18
Perry 25, Chagrin Falls 13
Youngs. Ursuline 40, Aurora 7

Region 14

WALNUT PLACE SUBDIVISION

·

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Cent. C.atholic (9-1)
·
(5) Carroll ton (8-21 at (4) li sbon
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PREP FOOTBALL
, J

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St John's extends .

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to record 55 games

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presented by

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Region 11

Sandusky Perkins 50, Dena 6
Wellington 28. Castalia Margaretta 0

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Coldwaler 37, Tontogany Otsego 8
Huron 20. Millbul)' Lake 13

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(8) Van Wert (6-4) at 111 Sunbury Big
Walnul (9-1 )
(.5) St. Marys Memorial (7-3) at (4)
Bellevue (8-2)
(7) Elelletontaine (7-3) at (2) Cols . Watterson (7-3)
(6) Ottawa-Glandorf (7-3) at (3) Fostoria (8-2)

Region 13
Akr. Manchester , 3, Wickli ffe 0

8

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Region ·10

DIVISION tV

for an appointment.

AT

(7) Cin. Anderson (8-2) at (2) C1n. Colerain(10·0)
.
(6) Cin. Western Hills (9-1) at (J) C1n.
St. Xavier (7·3)
DIVISION tit
Region 9
(8) Chagrin Falls Kenston (5-5) at (1)
Hubbard (7-2)
(5) Medina Highland (7-3) at (4) Menton Lake Catholic (7-3)
(7) Fairview Park Fairview (5-5) at (2)
Copley (8·2)
(6) Cortland Lakeview (6-4) at (3) Akr.
Hoban (8-2)

dence 12
Cols. DeSales 30, Dover 10
Marysville 17, Cols. Sl. Charles 6
Spring. S. 20, Cols. Beechcroft 7
Region 8

NEW
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Defiance t4, To~. St. Francis 13
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CARS

.

1)

Bowling Green 14, Whitehouse Antho-

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
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20,

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Specialized Care for Total Knee
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Our next clinic Is
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Hts.

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(7) Marion Harding (8-21 at (2) Massillon Washingtotl (8·2)
(6) Can. GlenOak (8-2) at (3) Mansfield (9-1)
Region 3
(8) Hilliard Davidson (7-2) at (I) Pickerington (1 0-0)
(5) Logan (10-0) at (4) Westervilla
South (8-2)
.
(7) Huber Hts. Wayne (6-4) at (2)
Upper Arlington (1 0-01
(6) Miamisburg (8·2) at (3) Troy (9-1)
Region 4
(8) Fairfield (7-J) at (I ) Cin. Moeller (9-

OHSAA Prep Football Playoffs

2001 Chevy Cavalier

DELPHOS , O hi o (AP) Delphos St. John's beat Toledo
Ottawa Hills 49-10 Friday night,
opening the state football playoffs
with its state - record 55th consecutive victor ies.
Zac Web'e r rushed for 183 yards
and five touchdowns for the Blue
Jays (l 1-0),-going for their fourth
straight Divis1on VI crown.
Weber scored o n a 4-yard run
m the first gua ~ter to give St.·
John's a 7-J lead. Ottawa Hill s'
Rick Shugan11an opened the
scoring with a 43 -yard field goal
with' 6: -17 remaining in the first.

1992 Ford Taurus

Weber added first-halfTD rmis
of I , 42 and 61 ya rds as St. Joh n 's
took a 35-3 ha lftime lead. He
sc ored on a 54-yard run in the
second half.
The Blue Jays haven 't lost smce
1996, 30-0 to Minster. They tied
Versailles' record of 54 strai ght
wins with a 42- 14 victory over
C o ld\vater in l:t st wc.ek's re gular
seaso n finak· .
Vcrs:nlle s won 54 in a row fro m
1993- 96. lts streak ended with a
2.6- 14 loss to Marion Pl e a s~ml in
th e '96 Div1S!Ol1 V c hamp1o mhip

1994 Toyota Camry

1997 Chevy Lumina

Auto Trans, Air Cond., Pwr Windows &amp; Pwr Locks

3.1 V6 Engine, Auto Trans, Air Cond, Local Owner

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Thursday, November 9
6:30p.m.
lloliday Inn
(;allipolis. Ohio

Flllelily

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740-992·7707

I ro nto n
IRONTON
rush e d fo r 332 yard s on u s WJ)'
to ,l 43-7 victo ry ov~r M :u tim
rn rv in ~he.: fi rst ro und of th eDI\'I~ ion IV, RL·gion 15 st,ltc
rl.iyo trs Fnd.1y
[ro n to n (9- 1) w ill
m cl't
t ~ o:-. h oc to n ( 11 - 0) in t h ~ sec o nd
ro und .
C n ,h n cton
J cL· at l' d
llloo m-C.uroll ~ 1- t-1 Ftt d.w.
Ju n io r lultb :tc k M .n.li"J l"L' Mu rphy kd th e Ft g htulg Ti gn~ w ith

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1

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fl , tlft i lll ~

,1

.1 0 -0

lc.:.Jd .

Juniol'
qu.lltcrb ;l lk
DrL"\\' .
M .1 im compktl·d ~· u f _7 P ·~'~ L·~
ti.H 12(1 y.tr d ~ .1nd :1 tou chdm\'JI
M ,ullm FerrY ~co re d 1t s ll)!l e
rou cb d m \- ll

111

Ilt c fourth qu .ut..: r

\\'hc.: n ( ' h n~ ·Mt•ekc r c.lllght

.111

J] -\',lrd lOUL h d o\ \" 11 p .l \\.

·r'J ll' r1 ghn ng r 1g..: r~ CIH.klf the
n1 ght \\" lt h -1- ~X toed \",lnk wh1k
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pl -., t 1 1 K \".trd-.,.

C.ll'l'l i:\.

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-·---

,
'"·

..

vs . Valley Fayette- Pendle tonwmner
No. 4 Fayette vtlle (9· 2) vs. Burch·
Matewan winner
No. 2 Cameron (10· 1) vs . Parkersburg

Nov. 10 or 11

~

Island Stadtum, 7:30 p.m.
•,
No. 9 Valley Fayette (8-2) vs. No. 8 '

Wyoming East (8·2). at Mullens High .
7:30p.m.
No: 8 Tyler Consolidat ed (9-2) 'at No. 1

_,;

No . 16 Valley Wetzel (6-4) vs. No . 1 '•

p.m.

Second round

"~

Whe eling Central (9- 1). at Wheeling "·

Saturday's Games

DIVISION t
Region I
(8) lakewood St. Edward (6-3) at (1)
Solon (10-0)
(5) Ole. Glenville (9·1) at (4) Shaker
Hts. (1 0-01. 1 pm
(7) Middleburg His. Midpark (6-4) at (2)
Cle. St. Ignatius (9-0)
(6) Painesville Riverside' (9- t) at (3)
Strongsville (9-1)
Region 2
· (8) Tol. Whitmer (7-3) at (1) Massillon
Perry (9-1)
(5) N. Can. Hoover (8-2) at (4) Massil-

·~

••

Friday

Maria Stein Miuion Local 48 , Meehan·

Individual Statistics
Rushing:
Newark
Catholic- Kyle
Williamson 27·235-4, Kevin Dolan 2-251, Andy Fackler 1-14, Jonathan Barbour

•.
•

Cameron 52, Gilbert 22
Faye"eville 42, 10ceana 6
Moorefield 28 , East Hardy 18
·
SatUrday

icsburg 6

SEEKING PARTICIPANTS WITH AND
WITHOUT APHASIA

::

County -Wyom1ng East winner

Spring (8-1 ), ·at Woodrow Wi lson
No. 11 Iaeger (8·2) v s No . 6 Greenbrier West (9· 1), at Greenbrier East
No . 10 Ritchie County (8'·2) V!:J No 7

5 Oak Hill (9 -21

Second round

Frankfort-Wayne winner vs

�•

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

Sunda~November5,2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

EASTERN PLAYOFF IMAGES

eunboJ&gt; t!:tmrt -il&gt;tntintl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

PREP FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
OHS.V. Prop Footbotl Ployoffo
Dlvlolon VI, Region 23
Ousrterlinat Round

18

Utica 35, Bellaire 28, OT
Region 16

Now•rk Catholic 34, E01tern 12
Newar1&lt; Catholic 6 8 6 14 - 34
Eastem
6
o 6 o - 12

Blanchester 8, HamiHon Badin 3

Cln. Wyoming 23, Cin. Indian Hill 20,
OT

Scoring oummory
Flrot 0Uirtor
NC-Kyle WNIIamson 5 run, kick failed

Germantown Valley View 53, Cin .

Madeira 7
Minford 28, Wheelersburg 0

(8:48)
E-Andy Reed 97 tumble return, kick

DIVISION VI
Region 21
Cte. Cuyahoga Hts. 33, Tiffin CalvM

failed (4: 10)
· Steond Quarter

26

Nc-t&lt;yle Williamson 18 run, Williamson

McDonald 28, Gibsonburg t 0

run (3:11)

Mogadore 48 , Lucas 20

Third Quarter

Norwalk Sl. Paul 20. Ole. Hts. Luther-

NC-Kevin Dolan 19 run, kick failed . an E. 1e
.
(9:04)
Region 22
E-Brad Willford 3 pass from Garrett
Antwerp 21 , Defiance Ayersville 17

Karr, pass tailed (1 :32)

Columbus Grove 21 , Carey 12

NC-Kyle Williamson 26 ""'·Andy Fackler kick (6:201
NC-Kyle Williamson 3 run, Fackler kick

(1: 12)
NC
20
35-290
39
329
2-5-t
2·1
6-35
1-36.0

First Downs

Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-an-int
Fumbles-lost
Penaltie~- yards

Punts-avg.

Newark Cath . 34, Reedsville Eastern

(8) Hamler Patrick Henry (7-3) at (1)
Uberty Center (I 0·0)
(5) Bluffton (9-1) at (4) Delphos Jefferson (9-t )

PortsmQuth Notre Dame 21, Leetonia

(7) Sycamore Mohawk .:~· 2 ) at (2) MariOn Pleasant (9 -1)

Shadyside 31, Strasburg-Franklin 14

(6) Morral Ridgedale (8-2) al (3) Creslltne (9-1)

12

Team Stalistlcs
E

0

15
43-117
70
187
6-14-t

Toronto 32, Beallsville 26
Region 24

(8 ) Nelsonville York
land Crestview (9· 1)

( 1)

No. B Robart C. Byrd (1 0-1) at No. 1
Morgantown (11-0)
No. 10 University (9-2) at No. 2

Woodrow Wilson (10·0)
No. 6 Rivers ide a1 No. 3 Parkersburg
(10-1)
No. 12 Princeton (9-2) at No. 4 Cabell
Midland (9-2)
CtasaAA
First round
Friday

Bridgeport 48, Sherman 8
Oak Hill 27 , Independence 7
Tyler Consolidated 32, Williamstown 6

Result s from the first round of West
Virginia high school football playoffs . Saturday games are at 1:30 p.m . unless otherwise noted:

CtassAAA

Ash·

Saturday

No. 15 Frankfort (6-4) at No . 2 Wayne
(1 0-0)
No. 14 Wintie ld (7-3) vs . No. 3 Clay
County (tO-O) , at Nicholas County Memorial Field, 7:30 p.m.

No. 13 Magnolia (7-31vs. No. 4 Shady

First round
Friday
Cabell Midland 20 1 George Washington 15
Morgantown 48. Fairmont Senior 7
Parkersburg 69 , Hampshire 0
Princeton 32 . Whe'eling Park 28
Riverside 30 , Martinsburg 7
Robert C. Byrd 14, Key ser 0
University 40 , Hurricane 14
Woodrow Wilson 28, Philip Barbour 0

(5) Smithville (9 ·1) at (4) Hemlock

Day 13
Covington 35, Tipp City Bethel 0

4-20
2-275

(8-2) al

•
Nov. 10 or 11

W. Virginia Prep Football Playoffs

Region 19

Ansonia 42 , Anna 13 ·
Cedarville 41 , Cin. SUmmit Country

t -1

Region 20

Milford Ctr. Fairbanks (8-2) at (1)
Cols. Ready (8·1)
(5) Gahanna Cols. Academy (9-l) at
(4) Reading (8-2)
(71 Sidney Lehman Oath. (7-3) at (2)
Brookville (9-1)
(6) Springfield Northeastern (6-4) at (3)
Bainbridge Paint Valley (9-1)
(8)

sillon Tuslaw (9· 1)
Region 18

Delphos St. John's 49, Tol. Ottawa
Hills 10
McComb 28. Pandora-Gilboa 7
Region 23

,

Fourth Quarter

M1ller (9-1)
(7) Johnstown Northridge (8-2) at (2)
Beverty Fort Frye (9- t)
(6) Newcomerstown (8-2) at (3) Amanda-Ciearcreek (7-3)

(7) Canfield (7-3) at (2) Louisville (8-2)
(6) Millersburg W Holmes (9-1) at (3)
McConnellsville Morgan (10-0)
Region 12
(8] Jackson (8-2) at (1) Portsmouth
(1 0-0)
(5) Cin. Purcell Marian (7-3) at (4) Gallipolis Gallia (8-2)
(7) Eaton (7·3) at (2) Day. Chammade·
Julienne (8·2)
(6) Circleville Loyan Elm (8-2) at New
Richmond (1 0·0)
DIVISION V
Region 17
(8) tndependance (8-2) at ( t) Bedford
Chanet (9- t)
(51 Columbiana Cresfview (8 -2) at (4)
Gates Mills Hawken (9-1) , 1 p.m.
(7) Windham (8-2) at (2) New Middle·
· town Springtield (1 0-0)
(6) N. LimaS. Range (7-2 ) at (3) Mas-

Ironton 43, Martins Ferry 7
Newall&lt; Ucl&lt;ing Valley 33, loudonville

Ritchie- .-

Winfield-Clay County winner
Iaeger-Greenbrier West winner

V$ . ~:

Cla11A

Firat round

Bridgeport (11·0)
Magnolia-Shady Spnng winner vs. No

Banner Season for the Eagles
Eastern played host to the first-ever prep playoff football game in Meigs County Friday night. The Eagles
dropped a 34-12 decision to Newark Catholic in the first round of the Division VI, R egion 23 playoffs,
which ended the season for Eastern.
The Eagles enjoyed the best season in school history, winning the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division championship, its first since 1995, and earning the school's first playoff berth.
In the upper left photo, head coach Scott Christman talks with players, including Cacy Faulk (41) and
Andy Reed (61), during a timeout Friday.
·
In the upper right photo; the Eastern fans salute their heroes prior to the game.
(Bryan Long photos)
.

scored on a touchdown run for
the Green Wave.
"Kevin came in and ran things
efTec 1iveiy,"
said
Buchanan.
from
81
"Obviously, we've reduced what
" We're happy to stiU be in it," we were doing a litde bit . I give
md Newark Cathohc head coach our backs, our line and Kevin .a
Jeff Buchanan. "We're happy our great deal of credi t for stepping
team evcnwally found their \vay up and getting things done.
"I also want to commend
here. I don't think we had Magellan gmdin~ the bus driver on his (Eas tern)," · Bu chanan added .
\\·,ry.
"That.'s a pretty good football
··I ·give our guys credit huw team . There were tim es when
they responded, to rush in and get they were handling our defensive
d ressed. head out and get ready to front consistently. (Brad Willford)
is a good a back as we played
go.
Nt:wark Cath oli c junior tail- against this year. He reminds me a
b.lck Kyk Wdhamson was nearly awful lost of a young fellow
(Justin Roush) we played ag;inst
U ll ~ t o pp.lblc .
Wilh;Hn sun, who repl.tc l..'d an (Me1p) two years ago.
"Same· build, same toughness ,
l tlJUrcd Jo n .tth :m Barbour ~;,.•arher
this s c ,t s ~HI. rushL'd tOr 235 yards they're wdl coached. We're happy
o n ?.7 carrie ~ and ~cc..m.~d four tn win . I'm not surt' the score is a
tou c hdowm for th~: Gn:('n W :lVe . good indicator of how the close
"( W dli .1 mson 's the) best back the game Jctu:tlly was.".
l\:e ever seen , qukke~t anyway''
With Newark Catholic up 20liJid C:hnstman , "1-k just runs 6 early m the thltd quarter, it was
ha rd . v~r y dwavc. Wc 'J have him Willford, a scmor, :~nd junior
~ topped gomg on'e way and he'd
quarterback Garrett Karr that got
cut It back J.nd go tht• mh er way. things going, on a 17 -play drive
·I k Lhdn 't brc.:tk any HO or 90 that took 7:32 off the do c k
\ ,Jrdcr ~. but SO iliL'tllll l'S It's \VO TSL'
Two plays after a 32-yard pass
\vhen they have those long drives from Karr to Willford that put the
and hlln running 12 and 14 Eagles on the Green Wave 4-yard
va.rds ."
line, Karr hooked up with WillWilliamson d_1dn 't take long to ford on a 3-yard screen to make it
&gt;COte his first touchdown of the a 20-12 game.
night.
Willford finished with 19 carAt the 8 :48 mark of the first ries for 57 yards rushing and three
yuartcr, WJ!Ii'amson sc ored on a receptions for 51 yards . Karr was
j-yarJ run to put the first poults 6-for-14 passing for 70 yards and
o n the board .
an interceptlon. Karr also had 54
" H e really stepp ed It up and rllS.hing yards on 20 carries.
, howed w hat kind o f back he
The sc o ring play was made
was," ~ atd Hu chanan. " I know we possible mu ch earlier in the drive,
d.,idn 't mix it up very well . He's a though .
th reat and m akes a lot of folks
On fourth down and two from
Ill ISS.
the their own 48 - yard lin e, EastE a'itcrn tied the gam e as 6-aU ern was reJdy to punt the ball
o n the Green Wave's next drive in back to the Green Wave with
d1c ope ning quarter.
Karr, th e Eagles punter, in posi . It o cc urred on a
rare tion .
W ilh :unso n m tstake.
But jumo r fullba ck R .J . Gibbs
With first down and .gn al o n t oo k th e short snap and carried
the Eras tern 5- yard lme , N ewark the ball five ya rd' for th e first
Cat holi c b ac kup qu arte rba c k down .
An inte rce ption on Newark
Kc\'in D o lan pitc hed the ball
h,1c k to William so n. who mishan- C.lth o li c\ fo llo win g dnve by
dled the ball ;md lost cont ro l
Willford o n a pass tipped by
E.1,.,;b h nebacker A11 dy R eed sentor Ja son W arner, gave th e
then 'iLn np'-·J up th'-' lome b,1ll Eagle s th e ball back o n their o\vn
.tml . c.t nt ed H b ~1 c k (J7 p rd., fi: Jr ]1-y.ud hn ~ euly 111 the fom th
the tntK h d ow n .
q u.1rtc r.
Ea q ern lnd r h ~ ball nt o\' Hi g
" lt\ :t . Ill..'\\' b;l ll g.li11 C .111 of the ·
-., uddt·t J." ....nd C hn stm .m ··ou r and L'\'L' I1 com·L·rted o rt ,mo th t:r
ki d.., ,ll"l' d 1r n k ' We c.m play \\' Ith f!l urth - d nw n pl.t \'
W 1th th 1nl do\\'n .111d t' lg hr .lt
clll' "'l' gtl\'\ ...
D nl .1n \\',t.., brought 111 to the th t• EJgk s 41-y.nd ilnc ..1 pHch
h.1c k hv K.m t&lt;: ll be hind Wil lford
g.l lll t' .1ftct "'t. r l t l'l" An J v F.u kl er
,111d
,,:,,._ n ·cmT rl' d by NL·w;nk
tll l tlrnl h t'i h ,umtnn~ 011 Nt'w.uk
( ·.tthoht ·~ tint d r l\:c of th L· g;un(' . C.nhohL\I },Jmn n Bw.: hil ll.lll
" f t '~
nn t
htillHHOtl~ ."
S.ll d
" lt was Jll &lt;t .1 pi.ly we call ed."
Buc h.m ,1n. ;,We get ~ Pillt'niH' clw -., ,lid C hn ~t111.1 11 '' It\ ,111 o pt1n 11 .
t. W dl fim.l) t. IIJ l11 t till.· t1ght end o r
illlllfL'J '-'\'t'ty wc~·k .tm \ a\ .tl\\.. ,tY'
1m th t.• tl.m.· o ut . Of t o u n c: , th l'
~l ll ll l'OllC.: t h.lt 1' kL•y."
'\t ill , I ), ! l.l n c,ni l t' 11 1 .tnd '-'Vt' ll t.l llbac k w.l ~n' t 111 pm it1 011 to

Eastem
Page

make the play.
11
We thought we were moving
the ball there," he added. "That
was a big play. They picked it up
and went in and scored. It didn't
break our backs, but it kind of let_
the air out of us for a little while,
so it was definitely a turning
point."
Three plays later, William~on
scored his third touchdown of the
night from 26 yards out as
Newark Cathohc took a 27-12
lead.
Eastern had a difficult time getting through
a disciplined
Newark Catholi c defense.
Josh Hill , Andrew Wagner and
Stephen Wagner ea ch sacked
Karr, while the Eagles runmng
game was unable to make tht'ir
usual big plays.
' 'We're use w gl'tung across the
line, we brCak the ·line ;md \Vc 'rc
gone," -;aid Chn!:&gt;tll!an . '"Th ;1t d idn 't happen to night. We told our
kids that's the way it was goin g to
be. We had tu sustain drives I
think we d1d that three or fo ur
times tonight . We didn't get in
(the end zo ne) ·' coupk o ( times ,
but we drove It down there.
"We told our kids we're going
to have to be patient," Christma n
said. "I think our power game
gave them a httle bit of probl ems.
Anytitne we break something otT,
they cou ld run us down from
behind. Instead of.1 .'\()or 40 yard
gain, it was a s1x or seven yard
gam ."
Jonathan Barbour led the
Newark Catholic defense with 12
tackles.
For E astern , Brad Willford and
Trav1s W1llford eac h had fi ve
tackles , while Karr and Warn er
each collected four tac kles.
Newark Catholi c will · meet
Shadyside this weeke nd 111
regional semifinal play.
Shadyside defeated StrasburgFranklin
31-14
Fr iday
to
advanc e .
"(Newark C atho li c) is a well
coach e d and a great defensive
footb all team ," said C hristman.
·' It's not an ex: c u~e. bu t J n: .1 son
that th ey've bee n {to the plavoff&lt;)
seve ral tim es J lld o ur k1 d s luvc.:
new r bee n 111 thi s 'il tu ;'lt lon .
" I think we 've provc.:n th ,lt ' \Vt.'
c ~n co mp c t l' :l t th t:- .~ ta cc.!' kve l." he
~ :la.i . " I to ld t he kid ~ b efore the
game tlu t thi &lt;i w,t ~ t\\'t J o f tlw b~.:'&gt; t
t L',\111 "1 111

the

:,t,l tl'

of OhJ ~),

Dl \ '1-

?10 11 IV pbymg ,lg.umt '-' ,lC h
othe r. I th111k o ur kilh kl lO\V nnw
we e;m com pL" tl' wah tl w~L' kl nd,
of team s. W e've ~n t to unpmve.
We've got to get ~ t ro11ga ' .md
qluc kc:r."
The E agl e~ fini shed th L· ".:-.1~n n
\V Ith .1 ~J-2 rL"lonl

4·10, Seth Elliott t -6. Eastern-Brad Willlord 19-57, Garrett Karr 20-54, A.J. Gibbs
2-1_, Brad Parker 1-2, Chris Lyons 1·3~

ror a research study at Ohio University
Aphasia Is a loll or lanpge ability due to stroke, brain lf\lury, or other
neurological Incident

Paaslng : Newark Catholic-Kevin Dolan

Persons with aphasia (any age) will be paid $45.00.
Persons without aphasia (over 30 or between 10 'and 12 years)
will be paid $10.00
Contact:
Dr. Brooke Hallowell at (740) 593·1356 or hallowel@ohlou.edu

2-5· t -39-0. Eastem-Garrett Karr 6·14·
1-70-t .
Receiving: Newark Catholic-Josh Hill
2-39. Eastern-Brad Willford 3-51 -1, Ben
Ho~er

1-10. R.J. Gibbs t-9, Chris Lyons

1-0.

lon Jackson 18-21

The
Joint Implant
Center

First Round
Friday's Games

DIVISION II
Region 5
Avon Lake 14, Cle. East 6

Bracksvillo·Broadview
Amherst Steele t 9

Niles McKinfey 2 1, Youngs. Chaney

(5)

ny Wayne ,2

Pendleton (7-3), at Moorehe!d

No. 12 Burch (7-3) at No. 5 Matewan
(8-21. 7:30 p.m.
No. 10 Parkersburg Catholic _(8 ·2) vs.
No . 7 Williamson (8 -2). at Burch
No. 14 Madonna (7-2) vs. No. 3 BuHalo (9·1), at Latdley Field, Charleston , 7:30
Second round

Nov. 10 or II
, Valley Wetzel-Wheeling Central wtnner

Catholic-Wil liamson winner
M adonn a-Buffalo winner vs. No . 6

Moorelield (8-3)

Cols. Brookhaven 29, Cols . Indepen-

Loveland 24, Cin . McNicholas 21
Piqua 54, Oxtord Tatawanda 33

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

Trenton Edgewood 32, Gin. Glen Este

13
Vandalia Buller 55, Wapakoneta 9

Cle . VASJ 34, Youngs. Uberty 18
Perry 25, Chagrin Falls 13
Youngs. Ursuline 40, Aurora 7

Region 14

WALNUT PLACE SUBDIVISION

·

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PREP FOOTBALL
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St John's extends .

winning streak
to record 55 games

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presented by

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Region 11

Sandusky Perkins 50, Dena 6
Wellington 28. Castalia Margaretta 0

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Huron 20. Millbul)' Lake 13

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(8) Van Wert (6-4) at 111 Sunbury Big
Walnul (9-1 )
(.5) St. Marys Memorial (7-3) at (4)
Bellevue (8-2)
(7) Elelletontaine (7-3) at (2) Cols . Watterson (7-3)
(6) Ottawa-Glandorf (7-3) at (3) Fostoria (8-2)

Region 13
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(7) Cin. Anderson (8-2) at (2) C1n. Colerain(10·0)
.
(6) Cin. Western Hills (9-1) at (J) C1n.
St. Xavier (7·3)
DIVISION tit
Region 9
(8) Chagrin Falls Kenston (5-5) at (1)
Hubbard (7-2)
(5) Medina Highland (7-3) at (4) Menton Lake Catholic (7-3)
(7) Fairview Park Fairview (5-5) at (2)
Copley (8·2)
(6) Cortland Lakeview (6-4) at (3) Akr.
Hoban (8-2)

dence 12
Cols. DeSales 30, Dover 10
Marysville 17, Cols. Sl. Charles 6
Spring. S. 20, Cols. Beechcroft 7
Region 8

NEW
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(7) Marion Harding (8-21 at (2) Massillon Washingtotl (8·2)
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Region 3
(8) Hilliard Davidson (7-2) at (I) Pickerington (1 0-0)
(5) Logan (10-0) at (4) Westervilla
South (8-2)
.
(7) Huber Hts. Wayne (6-4) at (2)
Upper Arlington (1 0-01
(6) Miamisburg (8·2) at (3) Troy (9-1)
Region 4
(8) Fairfield (7-J) at (I ) Cin. Moeller (9-

OHSAA Prep Football Playoffs

2001 Chevy Cavalier

DELPHOS , O hi o (AP) Delphos St. John's beat Toledo
Ottawa Hills 49-10 Friday night,
opening the state football playoffs
with its state - record 55th consecutive victor ies.
Zac Web'e r rushed for 183 yards
and five touchdowns for the Blue
Jays (l 1-0),-going for their fourth
straight Divis1on VI crown.
Weber scored o n a 4-yard run
m the first gua ~ter to give St.·
John's a 7-J lead. Ottawa Hill s'
Rick Shugan11an opened the
scoring with a 43 -yard field goal
with' 6: -17 remaining in the first.

1992 Ford Taurus

Weber added first-halfTD rmis
of I , 42 and 61 ya rds as St. Joh n 's
took a 35-3 ha lftime lead. He
sc ored on a 54-yard run in the
second half.
The Blue Jays haven 't lost smce
1996, 30-0 to Minster. They tied
Versailles' record of 54 strai ght
wins with a 42- 14 victory over
C o ld\vater in l:t st wc.ek's re gular
seaso n finak· .
Vcrs:nlle s won 54 in a row fro m
1993- 96. lts streak ended with a
2.6- 14 loss to Marion Pl e a s~ml in
th e '96 Div1S!Ol1 V c hamp1o mhip

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Thursday, November 9
6:30p.m.
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(;allipolis. Ohio

Flllelily

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I ro nto n
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rush e d fo r 332 yard s on u s WJ)'
to ,l 43-7 victo ry ov~r M :u tim
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rl.iyo trs Fnd.1y
[ro n to n (9- 1) w ill
m cl't
t ~ o:-. h oc to n ( 11 - 0) in t h ~ sec o nd
ro und .
C n ,h n cton
J cL· at l' d
llloo m-C.uroll ~ 1- t-1 Ftt d.w.
Ju n io r lultb :tc k M .n.li"J l"L' Mu rphy kd th e Ft g htulg Ti gn~ w ith

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,1

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lc.:.Jd .

Juniol'
qu.lltcrb ;l lk
DrL"\\' .
M .1 im compktl·d ~· u f _7 P ·~'~ L·~
ti.H 12(1 y.tr d ~ .1nd :1 tou chdm\'JI
M ,ullm FerrY ~co re d 1t s ll)!l e
rou cb d m \- ll

111

Ilt c fourth qu .ut..: r

\\'hc.: n ( ' h n~ ·Mt•ekc r c.lllght

.111

J] -\',lrd lOUL h d o\ \" 11 p .l \\.

·r'J ll' r1 ghn ng r 1g..: r~ CIH.klf the
n1 ght \\" lt h -1- ~X toed \",lnk wh1k
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pl -., t 1 1 K \".trd-.,.

C.ll'l'l i:\.

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. (7 40) 446-3672
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-·---

,
'"·

..

vs . Valley Fayette- Pendle tonwmner
No. 4 Fayette vtlle (9· 2) vs. Burch·
Matewan winner
No. 2 Cameron (10· 1) vs . Parkersburg

Nov. 10 or 11

~

Island Stadtum, 7:30 p.m.
•,
No. 9 Valley Fayette (8-2) vs. No. 8 '

Wyoming East (8·2). at Mullens High .
7:30p.m.
No: 8 Tyler Consolidat ed (9-2) 'at No. 1

_,;

No . 16 Valley Wetzel (6-4) vs. No . 1 '•

p.m.

Second round

"~

Whe eling Central (9- 1). at Wheeling "·

Saturday's Games

DIVISION t
Region I
(8) lakewood St. Edward (6-3) at (1)
Solon (10-0)
(5) Ole. Glenville (9·1) at (4) Shaker
Hts. (1 0-01. 1 pm
(7) Middleburg His. Midpark (6-4) at (2)
Cle. St. Ignatius (9-0)
(6) Painesville Riverside' (9- t) at (3)
Strongsville (9-1)
Region 2
· (8) Tol. Whitmer (7-3) at (1) Massillon
Perry (9-1)
(5) N. Can. Hoover (8-2) at (4) Massil-

·~

••

Friday

Maria Stein Miuion Local 48 , Meehan·

Individual Statistics
Rushing:
Newark
Catholic- Kyle
Williamson 27·235-4, Kevin Dolan 2-251, Andy Fackler 1-14, Jonathan Barbour

•.
•

Cameron 52, Gilbert 22
Faye"eville 42, 10ceana 6
Moorefield 28 , East Hardy 18
·
SatUrday

icsburg 6

SEEKING PARTICIPANTS WITH AND
WITHOUT APHASIA

::

County -Wyom1ng East winner

Spring (8-1 ), ·at Woodrow Wi lson
No. 11 Iaeger (8·2) v s No . 6 Greenbrier West (9· 1), at Greenbrier East
No . 10 Ritchie County (8'·2) V!:J No 7

5 Oak Hill (9 -21

Second round

Frankfort-Wayne winner vs

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv

.: . Page 84 • &amp;unba!' 1!ttmts ·&amp; t nltntl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

i;&gt;unbnv 1tnnrs-&amp;rnltntl • Page

85

MASON COUNTY -CHEERL,E ADING EXHIBITI .ON

EASTERN PLAYOFF IMAGES

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

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•
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•.•
..••-·

•••

I

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·'

'

••

--...-

'

•
•

-' .

-

--

-

-

/I ••

t .

~~~

~

.

A Playoff
Atmosphere
at East Shade
River Stadium

'

T he Ea:-.rr..T II Eagk·s 11l,uc hi ng
b:md_(t op pl~) to) JS sho wn pn for mi ng t he Star Spangled B.111- ·
nl'r .prio r w tho.. · stJrt of FricLw's
pl.tyotT g.tmc agai nst Ncw.1~·k

C:,\1-holic.

.

E agles se ni o r runmn g ba ck
Brad W illford (ri ght pho to) hea ds
off the field du ri ng .1 timeout in
the actio n Fnday.

R•wrSJde 's N.1t Moles had two

Grid ·

interce p tions,
anc re.asmg
h is
scsaon total to a state-best L4.
Karl Booke r returned a p11nt 5 1
ya rds for a tuuc h do}vns.

from Page 81
George Washington recovered
a Tyler Jarrell fun1ble with 3:42
left . Four plays later, Jarpell"forced
a fu m ble by the Patnots' Cortez
Lacy and Cabell Midland recovered at the Ccorge Washington
16 to set up the wlnmng score.
. Cabell
ivh dland's
D,l\'Id
.. Ntchols rccm·cred a fumb le in the
: . end zone ,111 d te,IT1111Utl' Dan iel
:: Spo~r scored on :1. 66-v:ud inter~·
.
'
• ceptton return
•.. Lacv scored on runs of l and
:~ 10 VJrd~
and Ben A Jams ktcked a
.
: · 26-yJrJ tide! goal for George
• W.1shmgton (7--t). L1cv rmhed
:~for H2 \:;lrd&lt;i on 2-l. ctrn~· ....

.

::

· N o. 12 Princ eton 32,
No. 5 Wheeling Park 28
•
..
At Wht:d1ng J-..LJ11d St:~dlllm.
:~ O;IY!d l ).1\' ru~liL·d J 1 lllllL'~ for
: JUS v;nds.'Jth.·ludlllg tolh.:hdown~
: o f I j ..md J2 \·.mk Rut PrmLL'ton

:: (9- 2) nec·ded" Rhvnoll C:o.\tnc\'.1

: 5-yard run \\'tth :-..: l 5

rL'lll ..lltll ;lg

-... to Tyle-r Ftkc rhrL'''. TD p.tsw~ ·uf
Jd\".lllCL'.

.

7 65, 5 .mJ ~l) y.w.k l b.· completed
• 15-of-2(l p.ls~c~ fnr 1JJ \'.nd.;; fur
:Wheel"'~ P.uk ('l-~ ) .
Pnnreron\ Will Alb1n .tJJod
• 121 nrd~
on 1 1 ctrnc~
.
PnnccHl!l (Ompdc:d -tr,:-; vards
:rush ang .md ,lttr..·mpt.:-d Jmt , two

.

passe-s.

.•

N o. 6 River sid e 30,
· No. ! ! Ma rti nsburg 7
Tern&lt;; B,) ldwtn rit~hnl 15

•wne" for 1(JJ \':lHh
f()r Rt\'CTSadc
'

: (9-2) He '&gt;COrt:d on
·and 3LJ v.1rd,

r~n"i

of 66

Class AA
No. 1 Bridgeport 48,
No. 16 Sherman 8
Jeremy H incznun lnd Bri an
Berry each rush ed for two to uchdOwns as top- rated Bridgeport
bear No. 16 Sherman -+H-H in the
ti rst round ·of the Clm AA h1gh
sc hool playo tTs Friday ni ght.
l3erry rushed for 97 vards on
15 ca rries, mcluding two 7-Y:t td
T O runs.' I li nezm.m rushed 1 1
ti mes fo r :J') )'ilrJ s w1th scores o(2
and 17 yards. Mt ke Honce added
a 45-\";Itd T O run.
Br.mdnn H n-.~.1in led Shnm.m
{7--l) with :10 y;uds rmhmg on
f1\'l..' t..'Jrnl's .
No. 8 Tyler C onsolidated
32 , No. 9 Williamstown 6
Jo-.h R()t: chto rushed 27 ttme~
fo r 172 yards. tlll:ludutg .1 4-vJrJ
TD run, .111d ti.1ur odll'r pl.1ycrs
, snm..•d t()r Tyk r Comobd.ttl'd (02).
CJ-.cy Fox c.Htgill ,1 9-y;ml T D
p.1~:- from Josh J-kadky 111 rho...· first
quJrter t(n the only pomts fnr
W illi,mhtnwn (H -J) .
No. 5 Oak Hill 27 ,
No. 12 Independence 7
Acbm Bn\\'Llnd thre\\' for rwo
scores .1nd ran for ;mocha tOr
C.hk Hill (Y-2).

74 ya rds fo r Ind epende nce (7- -t).

Class A
No. 2 Cameron 52,
No. 15 Gilbert 22
Wyatt O'Ne il rushed for 25 4
yards ;~nd sco red five w uch dowm
as No. 2 Ca m eron beat N o. 15
G tlbert 52-22 in the first round
of the Class A high sc hool playoffs
Friday ni ght.
O'Nei l, w ho had 33 ca rries ,
scored on ru ns of 1. 14. 1, 2 and J
ya rds. Te:t mn u te To by Brow n
sc ore d u n a 67,.-yard punt return
and a 3~-y:J rd n in. Brown fin ished wi th I 08 ya rds o n 12 ca r-

..- - 'L

Th e Easte rn defense (kft
ph oto)
swa rm s aro u nd
;~n
u nide ntifi ed NC \\'ark Cath o li c
ball pbyer d urin g Frid ay's D ivi·sion VI , R egio n 13 playoff gam e
"t East Shade River Stadiu m.

--

- --

-.. _,.

•

.....

-··~

COMPETITION

READY

Members of four Mason Coun·
ty
cheerleading
squads
demons trated the ir competion
shows for a crowd of aver 300
at Thur sday's Chee r Exhibi·
tion . Clock wise (from be low ):
Po int Plea s ant' s JV squad
begm-s th eir rout ine ; Point 's
Leig h Ann John son is lifted by
sever al
squad -mates;
Wahama 's
Br itney Lathey
dance s as part of Wahama's
rout ine ; Point's vars ity pre·

Brad WiU fo rd (26) m ade the
tackl e whil e rea m mcst Jeremy
Connolly (12) and Wes Crow (72)
close d in to help out ur1 the pb y.
(Brya n Lo ng pho tos)

•

pares to energize the crowd;
Wahama 's varsity unit sets for
its demonstration; the Falcon
cheerleaders perform a stunt
f rom their competition shaw;
the Mason County 'Youth Foot·
ball League cheerleaders per·
form part of their award-win·
ning dance routine; the MCYFL
cheerleaders perform a stunt
. (Dan Polcyn photos)

fit'S .

No. 6 Moorefield 28,
No. 11 East Hardy 18

Four-ti m e dcfc nd ing ch am ptClll Mc&gt;ordidd (8-J) got thrc.c
touchdow n p:~~sc~ from AJ :J m
Fisher ,md :t 50-ya rJTf) fUll rmm
Jacob Pt·try.
F1sh cr (On nectcJ \\'tth R icky
B.1ke r on TD to''"' uf 30 and 14
yard~ .m d w ith l hn icl B.1 rb on a
13.-yardcr f&lt; lr a 21-11 lead.
Fisher co mpkt c· d I 1-nf-17
pJ-;scs for 15-l yard~. PL'lrv r ush ed
17 nmes fo r 160 yords . l-l ;s to uchd()\\' n CH H C on thL· fi rst dr ive of
the .;;;cco1ul half,
No. 4 Fayetteville 42,
No. 13 O ceana 6
I ()U JL' ca~si::. rushc.:d for 143 .
y.1rds and t hn;c tou~hdowns. Josh
O'Neal. J oey Milam and A;mm
Lcw1s al~n scored for th e Pi rJces
Bn..:vbnd w;1~ J -of- J for 1 I Y (9-2).
ya rds. He threw TIJ tosses of 45
Ryan Spaulding comple ted 7y.nds to James !li cks .1nd 31 yards of- 19 passe&gt; lc&gt;r 92 yards for
to Nathan Fcl\. Bowland &lt;cored Oceana (7- 4). He score d o n a.&gt;on a 1-y.trd run :md Chri&lt;.; Nelson yard run.
scored on .1 2-v:Jrd run .
Kyle Acord rushed 20 times for

I
'

· .L

\

rncHll~rn mil rnfflmB9 utrnJBllih'l ffirnUJ Wff'ffi0 omtiTlJrn ffim

..

·--

825,750* 822,95 820,850*
• V·6 Power/ CD &amp; Cass. Sys.
• Fully Power Equipped
Totally Loaded!

• V-B Power/ Automatic .
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt, Cruise, CD Syslem

.

2000 Chevy
Blazer LS 4 Door 4x4

2000 Olds Bravada
4 Door All Wheel Drive

2000 Chevy Silverado
LS Ext. Cab 4x4

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
.446-2342

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Alum . Wheels/ CD Sy~!le~n)

2000 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

2000 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN NOW IS THE TIME .

Office hours 8:00A.M. to 5: 00P.M.
Monday - Friday·
J;:ven ing Appointments
Available upon request

• Power Seat, Windows &amp; Locks
• AMIFM CD &amp; Cassette
Remote Keyless Entry

West Virgini a's " 1 Cb,evy, Ponl iac , Bu ic k, Old s,
And Custom Van Dealer.
.: ..... ., .our

~

'

.. ..

90 Jatkson

Pike, Gallipolii,

OH

45631

• 740 .446 .5137 • www.holzerdinic.com

c;:,_:. Oldsmobrle

-

..... ......... .... ""''

• ld~a :; Tag :. Trile Fee!&gt; exlrd

•

~~~~~~~:;~::; trajeetor:

j:

Auto-Owners Insurance

WIU II fHI •I

Holzer Cl inic

I•S)mthetic stock &amp; barrel
peep sight, front pin
I'LL.f \ .u . string _&amp; cable system
I"I.L.r\.U. aluminum wheels

.,

•

Flush System -Refill With Anti
10·35 Dex Cool Extra

P nc ~: s

"00000~

ro
brr1J~ - /
CharleiiOII /

L___:c=:..c
AL 21 Church

Slr~~t~t

---. ~

Life Home Car Business

7k ""' 'P1~ 'Pu;de"

, :! __/

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm • B pm

INSURANC E PLUS
AGENC IES, IN(!.

~----------------~
GoodliJo•embe r Jra Tllr ough fiJ m·ember 5th Not responSible for typograptucal errors

114 Court Pomeroy

TOLL FREE 1-800·822·0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com
'

\

-~::.:.d=-=&amp;~

Labor

$1895

JYukon SL Package

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

Glenn A. Fisher, MD

5 Qts. Oil &amp; Filter .Lube Chassis
Some Car &amp; Trucks Extra

Tire Rotation

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

'

•.

•

2000 Chevrolet
Gav·alier Coupe Or Sedan

~8,950* ~5,450* ~0,950*
• Power SeaU CD System
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Tilt &amp; Cruise

To schedule an appointmenl
please call (740) 446-5137

_$6995

S6995
Over Drive 57995

New PATIENTS

YOU HAVE NOT ALREADY ESTABLISHED YOUR

$1695

Non Overdrive

-I

IF

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Servi.c e

HoLZER CLINIC FAMILY PRACTICE
PHYSICIANS AccEPTING

I

992-6677

_

$225°~

split limb
ncludes: Bow, quiver, 4 arrows, See Ue For ·AU Your HunJins
field points
Clothe• And Acceuorie•
l•llrra.- Weight: 150# CB1 51
We Are A Deer ·Checking Srfllwn
•Hunting Clothes .
.
•Shotguns and Barrels
•Slugs by Reminglon , Federal, Winchester and Benn~ke

BAU

St. 'Rt. 248 ·

4 - 5 62 95 6 -. 5 7295
8- $82 95
Part &amp; Labor
Platinum
Extra

njector
Service

Clean Injector &amp; Throttle Body
Save$ Gain Economy

Rotate &amp; Correct

SPECIAL
'

•Hunting License

ine Tune

,

MBER
Chester

**All Prices Are Subject To Sales Tax**
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT, 992·6614 ·HOURS 8:00AM to 5:00PM MON-FRI

DON TATE MOTORS, INC~
308 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO 45769
(740) 992-6~14 •1-800-837·1094

[I] @
BUICK '

" " Oldsmobile.
•

PON TIAC•

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv

.: . Page 84 • &amp;unba!' 1!ttmts ·&amp; t nltntl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

i;&gt;unbnv 1tnnrs-&amp;rnltntl • Page

85

MASON COUNTY -CHEERL,E ADING EXHIBITI .ON

EASTERN PLAYOFF IMAGES

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

••
•
'

•.•
..••-·

•••

I

-·

·'

'

••

--...-

'

•
•

-' .

-

--

-

-

/I ••

t .

~~~

~

.

A Playoff
Atmosphere
at East Shade
River Stadium

'

T he Ea:-.rr..T II Eagk·s 11l,uc hi ng
b:md_(t op pl~) to) JS sho wn pn for mi ng t he Star Spangled B.111- ·
nl'r .prio r w tho.. · stJrt of FricLw's
pl.tyotT g.tmc agai nst Ncw.1~·k

C:,\1-holic.

.

E agles se ni o r runmn g ba ck
Brad W illford (ri ght pho to) hea ds
off the field du ri ng .1 timeout in
the actio n Fnday.

R•wrSJde 's N.1t Moles had two

Grid ·

interce p tions,
anc re.asmg
h is
scsaon total to a state-best L4.
Karl Booke r returned a p11nt 5 1
ya rds for a tuuc h do}vns.

from Page 81
George Washington recovered
a Tyler Jarrell fun1ble with 3:42
left . Four plays later, Jarpell"forced
a fu m ble by the Patnots' Cortez
Lacy and Cabell Midland recovered at the Ccorge Washington
16 to set up the wlnmng score.
. Cabell
ivh dland's
D,l\'Id
.. Ntchols rccm·cred a fumb le in the
: . end zone ,111 d te,IT1111Utl' Dan iel
:: Spo~r scored on :1. 66-v:ud inter~·
.
'
• ceptton return
•.. Lacv scored on runs of l and
:~ 10 VJrd~
and Ben A Jams ktcked a
.
: · 26-yJrJ tide! goal for George
• W.1shmgton (7--t). L1cv rmhed
:~for H2 \:;lrd&lt;i on 2-l. ctrn~· ....

.

::

· N o. 12 Princ eton 32,
No. 5 Wheeling Park 28
•
..
At Wht:d1ng J-..LJ11d St:~dlllm.
:~ O;IY!d l ).1\' ru~liL·d J 1 lllllL'~ for
: JUS v;nds.'Jth.·ludlllg tolh.:hdown~
: o f I j ..md J2 \·.mk Rut PrmLL'ton

:: (9- 2) nec·ded" Rhvnoll C:o.\tnc\'.1

: 5-yard run \\'tth :-..: l 5

rL'lll ..lltll ;lg

-... to Tyle-r Ftkc rhrL'''. TD p.tsw~ ·uf
Jd\".lllCL'.

.

7 65, 5 .mJ ~l) y.w.k l b.· completed
• 15-of-2(l p.ls~c~ fnr 1JJ \'.nd.;; fur
:Wheel"'~ P.uk ('l-~ ) .
Pnnreron\ Will Alb1n .tJJod
• 121 nrd~
on 1 1 ctrnc~
.
PnnccHl!l (Ompdc:d -tr,:-; vards
:rush ang .md ,lttr..·mpt.:-d Jmt , two

.

passe-s.

.•

N o. 6 River sid e 30,
· No. ! ! Ma rti nsburg 7
Tern&lt;; B,) ldwtn rit~hnl 15

•wne" for 1(JJ \':lHh
f()r Rt\'CTSadc
'

: (9-2) He '&gt;COrt:d on
·and 3LJ v.1rd,

r~n"i

of 66

Class AA
No. 1 Bridgeport 48,
No. 16 Sherman 8
Jeremy H incznun lnd Bri an
Berry each rush ed for two to uchdOwns as top- rated Bridgeport
bear No. 16 Sherman -+H-H in the
ti rst round ·of the Clm AA h1gh
sc hool playo tTs Friday ni ght.
l3erry rushed for 97 vards on
15 ca rries, mcluding two 7-Y:t td
T O runs.' I li nezm.m rushed 1 1
ti mes fo r :J') )'ilrJ s w1th scores o(2
and 17 yards. Mt ke Honce added
a 45-\";Itd T O run.
Br.mdnn H n-.~.1in led Shnm.m
{7--l) with :10 y;uds rmhmg on
f1\'l..' t..'Jrnl's .
No. 8 Tyler C onsolidated
32 , No. 9 Williamstown 6
Jo-.h R()t: chto rushed 27 ttme~
fo r 172 yards. tlll:ludutg .1 4-vJrJ
TD run, .111d ti.1ur odll'r pl.1ycrs
, snm..•d t()r Tyk r Comobd.ttl'd (02).
CJ-.cy Fox c.Htgill ,1 9-y;ml T D
p.1~:- from Josh J-kadky 111 rho...· first
quJrter t(n the only pomts fnr
W illi,mhtnwn (H -J) .
No. 5 Oak Hill 27 ,
No. 12 Independence 7
Acbm Bn\\'Llnd thre\\' for rwo
scores .1nd ran for ;mocha tOr
C.hk Hill (Y-2).

74 ya rds fo r Ind epende nce (7- -t).

Class A
No. 2 Cameron 52,
No. 15 Gilbert 22
Wyatt O'Ne il rushed for 25 4
yards ;~nd sco red five w uch dowm
as No. 2 Ca m eron beat N o. 15
G tlbert 52-22 in the first round
of the Class A high sc hool playoffs
Friday ni ght.
O'Nei l, w ho had 33 ca rries ,
scored on ru ns of 1. 14. 1, 2 and J
ya rds. Te:t mn u te To by Brow n
sc ore d u n a 67,.-yard punt return
and a 3~-y:J rd n in. Brown fin ished wi th I 08 ya rds o n 12 ca r-

..- - 'L

Th e Easte rn defense (kft
ph oto)
swa rm s aro u nd
;~n
u nide ntifi ed NC \\'ark Cath o li c
ball pbyer d urin g Frid ay's D ivi·sion VI , R egio n 13 playoff gam e
"t East Shade River Stadiu m.

--

- --

-.. _,.

•

.....

-··~

COMPETITION

READY

Members of four Mason Coun·
ty
cheerleading
squads
demons trated the ir competion
shows for a crowd of aver 300
at Thur sday's Chee r Exhibi·
tion . Clock wise (from be low ):
Po int Plea s ant' s JV squad
begm-s th eir rout ine ; Point 's
Leig h Ann John son is lifted by
sever al
squad -mates;
Wahama 's
Br itney Lathey
dance s as part of Wahama's
rout ine ; Point's vars ity pre·

Brad WiU fo rd (26) m ade the
tackl e whil e rea m mcst Jeremy
Connolly (12) and Wes Crow (72)
close d in to help out ur1 the pb y.
(Brya n Lo ng pho tos)

•

pares to energize the crowd;
Wahama 's varsity unit sets for
its demonstration; the Falcon
cheerleaders perform a stunt
f rom their competition shaw;
the Mason County 'Youth Foot·
ball League cheerleaders per·
form part of their award-win·
ning dance routine; the MCYFL
cheerleaders perform a stunt
. (Dan Polcyn photos)

fit'S .

No. 6 Moorefield 28,
No. 11 East Hardy 18

Four-ti m e dcfc nd ing ch am ptClll Mc&gt;ordidd (8-J) got thrc.c
touchdow n p:~~sc~ from AJ :J m
Fisher ,md :t 50-ya rJTf) fUll rmm
Jacob Pt·try.
F1sh cr (On nectcJ \\'tth R icky
B.1ke r on TD to''"' uf 30 and 14
yard~ .m d w ith l hn icl B.1 rb on a
13.-yardcr f&lt; lr a 21-11 lead.
Fisher co mpkt c· d I 1-nf-17
pJ-;scs for 15-l yard~. PL'lrv r ush ed
17 nmes fo r 160 yords . l-l ;s to uchd()\\' n CH H C on thL· fi rst dr ive of
the .;;;cco1ul half,
No. 4 Fayetteville 42,
No. 13 O ceana 6
I ()U JL' ca~si::. rushc.:d for 143 .
y.1rds and t hn;c tou~hdowns. Josh
O'Neal. J oey Milam and A;mm
Lcw1s al~n scored for th e Pi rJces
Bn..:vbnd w;1~ J -of- J for 1 I Y (9-2).
ya rds. He threw TIJ tosses of 45
Ryan Spaulding comple ted 7y.nds to James !li cks .1nd 31 yards of- 19 passe&gt; lc&gt;r 92 yards for
to Nathan Fcl\. Bowland &lt;cored Oceana (7- 4). He score d o n a.&gt;on a 1-y.trd run :md Chri&lt;.; Nelson yard run.
scored on .1 2-v:Jrd run .
Kyle Acord rushed 20 times for

I
'

· .L

\

rncHll~rn mil rnfflmB9 utrnJBllih'l ffirnUJ Wff'ffi0 omtiTlJrn ffim

..

·--

825,750* 822,95 820,850*
• V·6 Power/ CD &amp; Cass. Sys.
• Fully Power Equipped
Totally Loaded!

• V-B Power/ Automatic .
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt, Cruise, CD Syslem

.

2000 Chevy
Blazer LS 4 Door 4x4

2000 Olds Bravada
4 Door All Wheel Drive

2000 Chevy Silverado
LS Ext. Cab 4x4

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
.446-2342

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise
Alum . Wheels/ CD Sy~!le~n)

2000 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

2000 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN NOW IS THE TIME .

Office hours 8:00A.M. to 5: 00P.M.
Monday - Friday·
J;:ven ing Appointments
Available upon request

• Power Seat, Windows &amp; Locks
• AMIFM CD &amp; Cassette
Remote Keyless Entry

West Virgini a's " 1 Cb,evy, Ponl iac , Bu ic k, Old s,
And Custom Van Dealer.
.: ..... ., .our

~

'

.. ..

90 Jatkson

Pike, Gallipolii,

OH

45631

• 740 .446 .5137 • www.holzerdinic.com

c;:,_:. Oldsmobrle

-

..... ......... .... ""''

• ld~a :; Tag :. Trile Fee!&gt; exlrd

•

~~~~~~~:;~::; trajeetor:

j:

Auto-Owners Insurance

WIU II fHI •I

Holzer Cl inic

I•S)mthetic stock &amp; barrel
peep sight, front pin
I'LL.f \ .u . string _&amp; cable system
I"I.L.r\.U. aluminum wheels

.,

•

Flush System -Refill With Anti
10·35 Dex Cool Extra

P nc ~: s

"00000~

ro
brr1J~ - /
CharleiiOII /

L___:c=:..c
AL 21 Church

Slr~~t~t

---. ~

Life Home Car Business

7k ""' 'P1~ 'Pu;de"

, :! __/

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm • B pm

INSURANC E PLUS
AGENC IES, IN(!.

~----------------~
GoodliJo•embe r Jra Tllr ough fiJ m·ember 5th Not responSible for typograptucal errors

114 Court Pomeroy

TOLL FREE 1-800·822·0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com
'

\

-~::.:.d=-=&amp;~

Labor

$1895

JYukon SL Package

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

Glenn A. Fisher, MD

5 Qts. Oil &amp; Filter .Lube Chassis
Some Car &amp; Trucks Extra

Tire Rotation

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cruise

'

•.

•

2000 Chevrolet
Gav·alier Coupe Or Sedan

~8,950* ~5,450* ~0,950*
• Power SeaU CD System
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Tilt &amp; Cruise

To schedule an appointmenl
please call (740) 446-5137

_$6995

S6995
Over Drive 57995

New PATIENTS

YOU HAVE NOT ALREADY ESTABLISHED YOUR

$1695

Non Overdrive

-I

IF

Oil Lube &amp; Filter Cooling System Rush

Auto- rans
Servi.c e

HoLZER CLINIC FAMILY PRACTICE
PHYSICIANS AccEPTING

I

992-6677

_

$225°~

split limb
ncludes: Bow, quiver, 4 arrows, See Ue For ·AU Your HunJins
field points
Clothe• And Acceuorie•
l•llrra.- Weight: 150# CB1 51
We Are A Deer ·Checking Srfllwn
•Hunting Clothes .
.
•Shotguns and Barrels
•Slugs by Reminglon , Federal, Winchester and Benn~ke

BAU

St. 'Rt. 248 ·

4 - 5 62 95 6 -. 5 7295
8- $82 95
Part &amp; Labor
Platinum
Extra

njector
Service

Clean Injector &amp; Throttle Body
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'

Sunday, November 5, 2000
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,' WV

'Page 86 • ll&gt;unbav i!J:unts ·ll&gt;tnhntl

ll&gt;unba!' a&gt;tmrlt ·&amp;tnllntl • Page 87

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

.

TODAY' .S SCOREBOARD

·COLLEGE FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK

•

No. 3 Miami hammers
No•.] Va. Tech, 41-21
MIAMI (AP) - With MichJd
Vido barely able to walk. No. J
Mian1i took a giant l,(t'p rnw.1rd
playing for the nauon.1l ch.llllfiionship.
· Ken Dorsey thr,•w thrc,· ion!;
touchdown passes .1nd J:tmt·s
Jackson ran fo~ 145 varth .111d .1

RedHawks upend Bobaits
OXFORD. Oh1o (AP) Mike Bath connected on a 37yard touc hdown p.1ss to Jason
Branch W![h JUS[ OVL'r a minme
remaining to giv,e Miami (Ohw)
a 27 -24 victory over Ohio Saturday.
Bath also hit tlranch on a S4 yard tou chdown pass to pull
Miami to '''lthm 17-D in the
third .
Aftt"r going- wHh .t co mp lt: timJ

'

score .s the 1--Jurn l".:m~~· b~.H No.
2Virgima Tec li 41-2 1 on SmmlJy
Vick, who ; pra111cU lm nght
ankle in bst Wl'e-k 's Will m·cr
Pittsburgh .• d1d ll~)t ~;.t.ut .utJ
played all of IH 111111Ute&gt; . lfi:cr
replacing DJw M cyc i !.Ill' Il1 the
first perrod.
Dorsey, di\,lppmntt.'d \.nrh
'•
hitusdf alter three Jnt ~.Tccptil) ll\
in last we-c:k's \\'lll . (Jn,:r l t)li J\ I,lll,l
Tech •• completed I I of 1.1 pJ~'JL'!I
for 283 yard,, 111clu ,h n~ I'D p.mes of -+2 and SO y:m.is to S.1m.uu
Moss and -+4 y:trd . . to · ught e nd
J~:remy Shockey
Jackson 's 17-y.&lt;rd TD n1n )'"'
Miami ahead 14-0 .111d Dors~,.·,
44-yarder to Shockev nude 1t 21 0 at halftune. N.•Jch D.11·e11port THE MOSS MAN RUNNETH - . Miami w1de receiver Santana Moss
ran 50 yards for a tou chdown .to · heads for the end zon·e with one of his two touchdown receptions
put Mia mi ahe,u_i :2H-O w1Ch ~:52 against Virginia Tech Saturday as the Hurricanes defeated the Hokies,.
left m the third quarter.
41·21. (AP)

Syracuse rallies to beat WVU, 31-27
MORGANTOWN.
W. V.t.
CAP) - A redshirt fres hman with
the .moves and Petermination of
Do~ovan McNabb has resuscitated Syracuse's bowl chances.
R.J. Anderson, pbying with . o
sore knee injured earlier m the
~me, threw for two tou chdowns
and ran for another in his first
srait. His 13-yard tou chdown pa ss
to Malik Campbell with I0 seconds left· lifted Ss;rJcme to J J 127 vic['fY over WL· ~t Virg111u on
Saturday.
After the game, West V~rgini a
coach Don Nehlen, who is one
win spy of his 2cl0th career VICtorY~ announ ced ht s rcnrcmcnt after
21 seasons. e-ffeC[iVe ar the end of
the year.
The news was . J. su rp n!&gt;c .
Nehlen , who turns.(,) 111 ~c\ic tl
weeks, had not hmtcd tlut lw
would be m.ovmg on. T he dL':In of
Big East coac h es h.1&lt; a I ~'1 - 127 - ~
record at WVU.
•trying to a\'~JJ rh t.• tr fir~l lo~­
mg season stn ct' 1&lt;JH(,, d1c
Orangem en (4-4 , ]-" LII~; E·a st)
suddenly have a nni ch bn ghtcr

outlook W I[h games rcmauung . on a 16-yard run with I 0:0 I left
against Temple, Rutgers and No. in the game for a 24-20 lead.
3 MiJtili.
West Virgima needed JUSt I :45
West VIrginia (4-4, 2-.'l) lost m to retake the lead. Cobo urne
third straight after starting the raced up the middle tor 47 yards,
season 4-1 . With games left then scored from 2\J yarcls out on
ag;.i·insc Rutgers, Ea::.t Carolina a pitch with H: 16 remaining.
and Pittsburgh , the Mountam ee rs
Syra cuse got one last shot
must wm [WO of their remaining when Will Allen intercepted West
three to beco me bowl eligible.
V~rgima 's Scott McBrien with
Ande rso n was 18-o f-33 p;m- four minutes left.
~ng to r 20J \mus Jn place ofTroy
On third-a nd-4. Anderson hit
Nu'ne ~. who rhrew eighr i1HerDavid Tyree in double cova:1ge
c~ pnon 5 in consec utive los"ses to
for a 30-yard gain to the West VirBoston College and Virgini a gin ia 36. Six phys I..tn, Ander&gt;on
Tech.
hit Campbell i11 the left corne r of
A stockier versio n of M cNa bb. the end zone pa st 13ri:ln King for
Andcr;;on showed d1c same qui c k the winning sc ore.
fel't that M cN.tbb terrorized the·
In the fin.[ qu.1rtcr, Anderson
Mount .1 ii1L'crs \Vith for ye~us. hit Brown on a 5-yard TD wss
Amk' Pin n turned scn: r.1l Ul',tr- ami five mintHc";; hter Andcr'\on
\JL~~ ,,Il l&gt; IDn g g.utl \, fin1 .. hmg rhl'
.;;cored from -t \':uds out on :m
d,l\" \\"l[h ,h.t \',lrd~;, nn l --1- C Hri L'"·
op tion keeper for :1 14-11 le.1d .
I k left thL· g:.Hll L' With .1 knL'I.'
M cBnL'Il, m aking hi~ tlr~ t ~tJ.rt
IllJUry btc 111 tHe thtrd qu.Htl:r but i11 pl Jce o f the 111Jllrl'll Br.1d
rL·turned w it h .1 b1 .ll'l' two \c rH.'..,
L L'w l ~, \\',1~ K-nf-:::! 1 for 1~(l y.1rds.
i.Hn.
A,·on Cobnurnc ru ~hc d t: lr 1( J(,
Afi:~..or -;cor ing on It\ first two
y.m.ls on 23 .:,\'!TI L'~.
poSSl'!.SIO;l:.. Sy ;.lL' ll :-.1.'

bfdc ~~

until halfway through the third Jackson rushed for 211 yards on
quarter. Bath finished the game 41 carries. Joe Sherrill ran for 91
completing 9- of- 19 passes for yards on 16 carries as the Bobcats
213 yards. Branch caught five had 399 total rushing yards.
J ackson completed . 3-of-6
passes for a career-high 143 yards.
Steve Little ran for 133 yards . passes including a 6-yard touch011 25 carries, including a 34 down pass ·to Chris Knaack to
touchdown run no pull the Red- give the Bobcats (5-4, 2-2) a 14H awks (S-4, 3-1 in the Mid- 7 halftime lead. Jac kson didn't
American Conference) to within comp lete a pass in the second half
24-20 in the fourth.
and was intercepted once.
Ohio qu arterback Dontrell

Illinois outduels Indiana
CHAMI'Atc;N. Ill. (AI') . -

Kurt

-.u n ·i\'cd ,\ qu .Ht L' I"b.tt:k dud \\"irh Amw.l!l 1-l.tndlc
El. i~Lor ing 0 11 .1 1-yJrd '- !ll' .lk
With

Kitt11L'r

:2:) .. l"UHH.b

1101 ...1

kft

Jlb (ndi -

to g &amp;H.'

--~-~ -J :) \"ll'tOI"\ " 0\ "L'I'

nn S:trunb\'
RJIHilL· El r.u1 l~n ~0 1) y.u·d~
c~m.l fi.mr to uchdm,·n,, .md Ktt ftlL'I' tiHl" \\ for '2.77 ,-,u d, ,tml
[hree TD s.

Jll.l

El · topk .1 l.1:&gt;t

R ,lllCHI!

~\\' ing

with a 51-y.ml bn1nb th .ll llli n01s' Walter Young; batted down
1n the end zone :~s time ran out.
The llliti i (5-4, 2-4 l:lig len)
couldn't stop Randle El, or any
other Indian a runner.
The HooSiers rushed for 447
yards. including 161 by Levron
Williams.
lll inni&lt; .. tru c k first
freshman Christian Morton
returned a pun~ ~~~ yards' for a
touchdO\s n.
But th e Hoosie r&lt; (3-6 . 2-4)
put together SC&lt;)I'lllg dnves of 72
and 58 yarcb to ,;o up 14 -7.
Bod1 touchdowns ca me on 4yard runs by 1'\..andlc El. who
threw o nly one plss durin~ the
two driv~:s .

Illinoi s tied it when A:~ron
Moorehead caught ,1 short Kittner pass at the I0. broke a tack-

It• ,1 nd dove into the end zone.

wa·s to be another touchdown
llut l n&lt;hma just kept running. late in the third quarter. But
Th t.· 1-loosit:rs dro\'L' 75 yards, Robert Fm\klin stripped the ball
rhn)\\·ingju:-it onl· p .1ss to co nvert and the lll ini's Terrell Washington
' "' .1 tlurd-.md -S, and IJo ' Wayne · re covered at thl' 1.
Hng;ltl fin1 ~ hed ir with J 5-yard
Randle El tied it at 28 with a
wuchdo\\"n run up the tniddlc .
12-yard run with 13:26 left in
Illinoi s .mswc-n:d on it~ llt'Xl thl' gJmt=.
drin·. whl'n Ktttncr hn Moort? But Kittner responded wah a
he.•J w11h a 5 ! -yard pass. This 49-yard pass to Greg Lewis, who
rime. howcn;r, Indiana stopped landed at the -l. Antoinco Harris
hnu at tl\e I .
ran it in with 10:59 left.
On the next pia)', Ca rey D,vis
The llli.ni seemed to finally
&lt;cored on a pass from Kittner.
come up with a defensive stop
Eugene Wilson stopped Indi- with eight minutes left.
ana's ne-xt drive with an acrobat- ·
On fourth-and-14, Randle El
ic lllterceptlon at the Illinois 25. stayed in as the punte( and co mThe lllini could not move the pleted a long pass for an apparent
ball, and gave it back to In diana first down.
near midfield with 21 seco nds
The Hoosiers, however, had
ldt m [he second qu aner.
an ineligible receiver downfield.
Randle El broke away on a Randle El did kick the second
scnmb le to set up a 50-yard field time, but st"veral seconds after his
goa l attempt for Andy Payne, but ki c k, Illinois' Brandon Moore
Fred Wakefield blocked it as time knocked him five yards back.
expired 1n the first half.
The resulting penalty gave the.
Indiana kept running, and HooSiers a first down, and severKittner kept throw1ng deep in al plays later, Randle El spun off.
the second half.
three different tacklers for a 5The lllin i went up 28-21 on yard touchdown to tie it at 35:
Kittner's 17-ya rd lob to Moore- with 5:08 left.
head in the crowded end zone.
Kittner drove the Illini 78
The Hoosiers then drove to yards for the final score.
th e Illinois 5, where Randle El
syu trted past dll· line for what
•

'--'pao
"----,;;;;;;;;;;;-;
FiiiiTBAu.
=::n-:i~
=·:---~ •__]I I Plio HOCKEY ]
National Footb1tl L11gue

National Hoek•y L.,gu•

AFC
East
WLTPt•.PFPA
Indianapolis ..................6 2 0.750 232 Hl
Miami ........................6 2 o 750 177 11t ·
N.Y. Jets ...........
..6 2 0 .750185 163
Buftalo .......................... .4 4 0.500 163 H3
New England ...............2 6 0.250 143 171
·
Central
Tennessee ........ ..........1 1 0 .675 172 118
Pittsburgh .................. s 3 0.625 130 84
Bal1imore -· ................ 5 4 0 .556 140 98
Jacksonv1he .................. 3 6 0 .333 '65 207
Cincinnati .. . ... ..
2 6 0 .250 80 167
Clevelancl .
. ···· ~· ... 2 7 0.222 98 209
Wast
Oakland .............
7 1 0 .875 207 141
Kansas C•ty ..............5 3 0 .625 212 166
Denver . .....
..... .. . .4 4 o 500 238 178
Seattle ...............
.2 'l 0 .222 140 224
. San 01ego .......
..0 8 0 000 130 219
NFC

E1a1em Conference
AUantle Division
.
W l T Ol Pta. GF GA
New Jersey ......... 6 3 3 o 15 49 34
.. 6 5 1 o 13 37 38
Pinsburgh

Eoot
N.Y Giants
Wash1ng1on
Philadelphia
Dallas .. ,....
Arizona ···'·····

WLTPciPFPA
6 2 0 .750 144
......... 6 3 0.667170
.....•.. 5 4 0 .556 188
;......... 3 5 0.375 191
2 6 0 .250 131

112

142

134
197
231

Cenlral
Minnesota
Detroit .....•...
Tampa Bay
Green Bay .
Chicago ..... .
St. Louis ...........
New Orl~ans
Carolina .
Atlanta ......
San Franc1sco

..... 7 1 0.875
5 3 0 .625
.4 4 0 .500
.3 5 0 .375

197 17B
161 164

205 138
168 167

I 7 0 125 110 202
West
. .7 1

s

3

o 875 330
o 625

252

152 127

J 'S 0.375 156 129
. .. 3 6 0 .333 162 250
2 7 0 .222 238 292

Sunday's Games
M1ami at De troit. 1 p.m.
Buffalo at New England. 1 p m.
lndiana!XIils at Chicago , 1 p.m.
Tafllla Bay at Atlanta. 1 p.m.
Dalla s at Phi ladelphia . 1 p.m ·
Battlmore at Cincinnati , 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at TonnesseB", 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at New Orleans. 1 p .m.
Washmgton at Arizona , 4:05 p m
Denver at N.Y. Jets, 4 :15 p.m.
San Diego at Seattle. 4:15p.m.
Kansas City at Oakland, 4:15 p.m
Carolina at St. Louis, 8:20p.m.
Open. Jacksonville
Monday's Game
M1nnesota at Green Bay, 9 p m.

N .Y. lsianders ..... ,.. S

3

2

1

N.Yi Rangers ......... s

7
6

o
4

o
0

13 31
10 41
10 32

Philadelphia ........ 3
Northeast Division
Ottawa ................B 1 3
19 49
Toronto ............... 7 5
0 14 31
Buftalo .~ ...............6 3 1 1 14 34
Boston ................ 5 6 1 1 12 34
Mootreal .............. 4 7 2 0 10 37

o

o

27
40
43

29
27

Sund1y'1 GamH
Los Angeles at N .Y. islanders, 1 p.m .
Was 11ngton at Tampa Bay, 6 p m
Edmonton at Columbus , 7 p.m
Boston at Toronto , 7:30p.m.
Anaheim at Chcago, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Sari Jose at Vancouver.. 10 p.m.

PRO.HOOPS

30
44
42

South.east Division

o

Carolina ............... 3 6 3
9 32 40
Washington · .... 2 6 4 1
9 29 38
Tampa Bay ......... 3 7 1 1
8 36 54
Fk&gt;nda ................. 1 4 3 3
a 21 32
145072633
Atlanta ..
Western Conference ·
Central Divisi on

WLTOLPisGFGA
St. LOUIS10
....... 2 1 0 21 43 22
Detroit .: ...... ........ 8 5 a 1 17 40 37
NaShvttle .
5 3 3 1 14 28 27
ChiCago . .
. .. .4 8 0 1
9 30 40
Columb,us .. ....... 3 9 0 1
7 22 44
Northwest Olvisiorl
Colorado 10. .... 2 2 0 22 44 26
Ed~onton
... 8 5 2 0 1B 43 38
Vancouver
. 7 3 2 1 17 45 JB
Calga"ry
3 9 1 0
7 28 38
.2 8 3 0
7 23 40
Minnesot a ..
Pacific Division
Phoen1x
9 I 4 0 22 45 26
Dallas ..
..7 4 2 1 17 39 33
Anaheim
6 4 2 2 16 41 46
SanJose
7 2 1 0 t5 28 20
Los Angeles
6 6 2 0 14 51 44
Two pOints lor a w1n. one po1nt for a lie and
overt1me toss
Thursday's Games
Onawa 6. N.Y. Rangers 5
NastMIIe 3 Philad elph1a 1
Boston 5. Chicago 4
Los Angeles 5. Atlanta 2
Toronto 5, New Jersey 3
St. Louis 2, Washington 0
Friday's Games
Buttalo 5, fv'ontreal 4
Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Islanders 3. OT
Chicago 6, Detm11 1
Edmonton 3, M1nnesota 0
Dallas 2 . Phoenh&lt; 2. tie
Colorado 5 , Ca rolina 3
Pittsburgh 4 , Vancouver 2
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at New Jersey. 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Baston. 7 p.m.
NY Rangers at Montreal. 7 p m

Vanrouver 99, LA Cltppers 91
Frlday's Gamet
New Yorll; 80, Washington 76
Boston 93, Toronto 91
Char1one 83, Miaml79

Columbus at onawa, 7 p .m
Buftalo at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Toronto at St. LouiS. 7 p.m.
Wastungton at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Anaheim at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Calgary, ~0 p.m.
Carolina at San Jose, W:30 p.m.

National Basketball Association

Eaalern Conference
Atlantic Division

W L Pet.

GB

1.00
t .OO

112

Phdadelph1a .....
3 0
Boston ........................... 2 0
New Yor.k. .. ............
..2 1
Miami
.1
1
New Jersey . ..... ... . .. ...
1
1
Orlando ···'·· .. .......
.. 1 2
Washington
..... . 1 2
Central Division
......... 2 0
Cleveland ..
........ 2
1
Charlotte
1 2
DetrOit ~···· ·
Atlanta ..
······ .... 0 2

.... 0

C~ago

lnd1ana
Milwau kee .
Toronto ...

0

....... 0

.. .... b

667
1
500 1 112
500 1 1!2

333
333

2
2

1.00
.. 667

112

.333 1 112
2
.000
2 .000
2
2 .000

2

2 .000
2
3 .000 2 1/2

Western Conference
Midwest Olvision

W

L

Dallas .
2 0
San Anton1o ..
..... 2 0
Utah .... ~....
......... 2 0
Vancouver ....
. .. ··-·- 2
0
Denve r . ...................... 1
1
Houston
...... 1
1
Mmnesota .
1
1
Pacific Division
Sacramento
.............. 2
1
Golden State. .
........... 1
1
LA Lakers ...
. ....... 1
1
Phoen1x .
...... ,...... 1
1
Seattle .
....... 1
1
2
L.A. Clippers .. ....... ......... ... 0
Portland . .
. .....
2
Thursday's Games
New York 94, Atlanta 69
Dallas 94. tncllana 88
San Antonio t03 , Minnesota 91
Houston 115. Milwaukee 93
Denver t01 , Golden State 97
Phoenix 108. Portland 82

o

Pel

GB

100
1.00

1.00
1 00
.500
.500
.500
.667
500
.500
.500

112

112
112
.500
112
.000 1 1/2
.000 1 1/2

Pholadelptlla 87. O~ando eo
Sacramento 100, Detroit 93
New Jersey 92, Chicago 82
Saturday's Games
L.A. Lakers at Vancouver, 3:30 p.m
Chk:ago at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Washington at Toronto, 7 p .m
Or1anOO at Atlanta, 7:30p.m .
Boston at Cleveland, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 7:30p.m
Utah at Dallas. 8 p.m.
Sacramento at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Charlone at New Jersey, 8 p m.
Detroit at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Phoenix at Denver, 9 p.m.
Portland at Seanle. 10 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers , 10:30 p.m
San Anton1o at Golden Stale, 10:30 p.m
Sunday's Games
Houston at PhOenix, 8 p m
L.A. Cl1ppers at L.A. Lakers, 9:.;10 p.m.

AutO RACING
NASCAR Winston Cup Series
The NASCAR Wins!On Cup schedule. winners In pa renlheses , and driver point standings:
Feb 20 - Daytona 500. Daytona Beach ,
Fla (Dale Jarrett)
Feb 27 - Dura Lube!Kmart 400, Rocking ham, N.C. {Bobby labO!lte)
March 5 - Carsd1rect.com 400. Las Vegas .
(Jelf Burton1
March 12 :..... Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,
Ga (Dale Earnhardt)
March t9 - Mall. com 400 , Darlington, S .C
(Ward Burton)
March 26 - Food C1ty 500, Bnstol, Tenn .
{Rusty Wallace)
April 2 - DirecTV 500. Fan Wonh . Texas .
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
April 9 - Good~ 's 500 . Martinsville , Va .
(Mark Martm)
April 16- DieHard 500 , Talladega , Ala .
(Jeff Gordon)
' April 30- NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana.
Calif. (J eremy Mayfield)
May 6 - Pont1ac Excite ment 400. Rich mond, Va. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) ·
May 28- Coca -Cola 600, Concord. N.C.
(Matt kenseth)
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400. Dover, Del.
(Tony Stewart)
June 11 - Kman 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
(Tony Stewart)
June 19 - Pocono 500. Long Pond , ~a .
(Jeremy Mayt1eld)

•

· Phone
7 40-992-2196

.LI

Badgers bury inconsistent·Gophers

"-3

Buckeyes
. from Page B1
netted J y:1n b on

t\\O

runo, .md

an if-tcomplction. DJ.vHI I\{ li.lctl-r,

,On tlllrd-.md-4 fmmthe C)hio
Sene 1() llll d\\',IY rhrough t h t.: "ecnnd pcrtnd, Smnkt..·r .. m t."t lll l'd a
bl11 1d~lt..lc

from Bu . . kcyc
ddL-m i\'l' L· nd lhL' lll Johmon. The
b.tll poppl'd loo~c .1nd I )o~~
htt

ptLked tt up .111d

r.ut the :J

\'Jrd~

who earlier mJs .. ed ,l ll"I..'Xtr,l-pmnt fi.1r tht..· tnnchdo\\ 11
\Xinh .1 InlnutL' ktt tn th~..· 1ulf,
·kick, then c.1m c ~)11 .md mt~r..cd
the 20-yard f•dd -go.J! dltempt.
. ( )h!O \UtL' \\",l\ l;llll'lj tu pullt
Both ofit·nsc&lt;, lookL'd tndkc ... but rht..· ~n.tp ,.,,1kd UH'J ~ ~umu
rive afrer each c~ .l m put [(\ ~l:t h cr D.tn "[ult;".... hL·Jd hY .n IL'.h[ I
fl'L' (
l~:ngthy dn vcs thL· tirst t\\ cl t ll llL'"
I k ,·\···nn1:dh J'h k;.·J up thL·
they touc hed t he b.11l
Belhsart , whu \\'il~ 'J- t(l·r ~11 1\ll h.t!l .Jiid {1'"'1..·d .l p.1" to lllll'1J2 y.ul~ p.l.,~ln ~. \\'h ltHt..'l"ltTrcd h.tt h·1 _lt\l' ( \HII)l'l \\]HI drDppnJ
twice .1nd o,l'\'t'r.tl oth L'I p.l\\L'~ II
,\ \ 1 h1~.111 ~!.lt~· tonk O\'l'l .It
could h.n ·c bl't.'ll p1~ h·~l Dlt • 11
WCrL'

nmv ht.· ,-c

llL",Ir .111 ( )h 111 \t.tll'

rece1vc r.
Sn10kcr. whn (tllnpll'tL'd 111of-18 pa o;;:-.l'' l~&gt;r 7' y.n~h wtth .111
incerception , .d~ u tur tll'd {1\1..'1 th~
ball . on t \\'O k~.:y pL1,·.., dut kL·pt
the Bu ckevl'" 111 th~..: ;~.tlllt.'

th~· l

)htn \t.lh: ..J.t1 .llhl on tirq
lll\\11, \nud,vJ·, p.1" 111 the IL'f{
1l1t \Uo, lrHl'n qitt•d
lw ( 'tHlp
tt lk h111d H~..llt,,lll." -til \ trd

l~·~Hnlo t11 Kv11- Yt-•ll ICunhn. th~·
Hu L h_,,.l:~ drn\ t. ' tu fhL' tvl rL hl~!;.lll
\r.frl' 1' nn rlmt! d(l\\'!1 trnnl rhc

rini.L'S

for

va rch :md

:?11

Brand New 2001
Chevrolet Cavalier Sedan

Brand New 2001 Chevy
S-Series LS Ext Cab Third Door

Brand New 2001 .Chevy
Silverado Sportside 4x4

~2,850* ~5,950* ~8,950*
• 4 Speed Automatic Trans.
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

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Tilt &amp;Cr.uise

• Air Conditioning
• Tilt, Delay Wipers
• AMIFM Stereo

down for Minnesota. H i, 1-y.mi
score followed .1 79-varJ p.m play
from Cole to R o n johmo11
This was the II Oth meeting
between thl' sc hoob , more than
;m y other 111 Di v1r..10 n 1-A

I H, the)' r.1n a play up the middle
,l!H.l c;.~..·ttl cd for Stultz\ 'leco nd
tidd goa l, a 3H-y.lrd cr.
, Th e S p:1rt.111\ LJII llltl l' and 12
pl.ty~ 011 t hc1r fir ~! 1\\'0 po~~l''\­

&lt;, tom , bur lud JH l more tlun ~eve n
pl.l';o"i .1n y of r-lw l.1o,t 11 tlllle' th ey

their lumh on the b.tll.
!Vll dug.uJ t.;t. ttl.." lud dt:,dt thl.'

t;nt

Bu L'h'YL'~ llll'llHn.Ibk lmw\ L'.ll h

or

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On selected models . Not respons1ble lor typogra phical errors. Pnces Good November 3rd Through November 5th.
·

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00000 O&lt;&gt;CJOOOOOe

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

t-:~-:---=-~~--:-----1

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

(Jeff Burton)

July 9 -

New England 300, Loudon. N tt

(Tony Stewan)

July 23 - Pennsytvama 500, Long Pond
(Rusty Wallace)
A.ug 5 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis

!Bobby Lal!oote)
Aug 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen.
Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Steve Parle )
Aug 20 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, M1Ch.
(Rusty Wallace)
Aug. 2.6 - goracing.com 500, Bristol, Tenn
(Rusty Wallace)
Sept. 3 - Southern 500. Darlington. S C

I

BASEBALL

(Bobby Labonle)
Sept. 9 - Chevrolet Monte Car1o 400
Rlchmqnd . Va. (Jeff Gordon)

:

I (

) '

S l,l

.J
•

4

American League
,J
BO STON RED
SOX-Named Tom
Mooney Na110nat League scout. Ben Chering·
ton coordinator ol scoutmg 1n Latm Amenc~j
a.nd Galen Carr advancr scouting admrn1stra- 1
tor
·
· ~
CLEVELAND INDIANS-ACtivated RHP
Jaret Wrtght_ RHP Chartes ~agy RHP Sear';·
DePa ula. RHP Ja1me Brown OF Jacob Cn.1~
and RHP Jacob Westbrook !rom the 60-day
diSabled list Wa1ved INF Bill Selby and RHP
Jam1e' 8rew1ogton .
';:
NEW YORK YANKEES· F1red Ch11? f
Chambliss , ba llmg coach
TORONTO BLUE JAYS...:...Named Markt
Connor p1 tch1ng coach Garth lorg lust base~
coach and Cook1e R oJaS bPnch coach
•

Sept 17 - DuraLube 300. Loudon. N H
(Jeff Burton)
Sept. 24 - MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del
(Tony Stewart)
Oct. 1 ~ NAPAAutoCare 500, Martinsville,
va (Tony Stewan)
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quality 500 . Concord ,
N.C . (Bobby Labonte)
Oct 15 - Winston 500. Talladega. Ala
(Dale Earnhardt)
Oct 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,
Rockingham , N .C (Dale Jarrett)
Nov, 5 ..... Checker Auto Par1s/Oura Lube
500k , Avondal e, Ariz .
Nov. 12 - Pennzoil 400, Homestead. Fla
Nov 19 - NAPA 500. Hampton. Ga
Driver Standings
t . Bobby Labonte. 4,645.
2. Date Earnhardt. 4.444 .
3. Jelf Burton. 4.,394
4 . Dale Jarrett. 4 ,3 15.
5. Ricky Rudd , 4.272
6. Tony Stewart. 4,21 0.
7 . Rusty Wallace. 4,t 15.
8 Mark Mart1n, 4,042
9. Jeff Gordon. 3,904.
10. We.ra Burton 3,B09 .
11. Mike Skinne r, 3,514.
12. Ste'w'e Park . 3.512.
13. Ma" Kenseth , 3,436
14 . Johnny Benson, 3,389.
15. Joe Nemechek, 3.246.
16. Dale Earnhardt Jr., a,207.
17. Ken Schrader. 3.203.
18.. Terry Labon1e, 3, 121 .
19. Sterling Marlin, 3,018.
20. Bill ElliOt!. 2.955.
21. John Andret11, 2,932
22 . J&amp;rry Nadeau, 2,862.
23 Jimmy Spencer. 2,840
24 Jeremy Mayfield, 2,761
25 Aobert Pressley, 2,741.
26 Chad Lillie, 2,634.
27 Michael Waltrtlp, 2,623.
28 Kev1n Lepage, 2,613

.~.

'

TRANSACTIONS

.it

National L.eague
CINCINN ATI RED S- Narred Bob Boone
manager
,!
FLORIDA MARLINS S1gncO INF Ryao
McGuire. RHP Joe Strong and RIIP Doug.·
!
Walls to mmor league conl!al.:t~
NEW YORK MET S·-S1gned INF-OF
Lenny Ha 111s to a two-year contract
~
SAN DIEGO PADRES Announced H~n·,
sh1n ot the Japanese Central League hav~ J
purct:lased 1he nghls to AHP Buddy Carlyle I.

'

FOOTBALL
',l
Nalional Football League
NFL- Fmed Jacksonv11te Jaguars· 0~ "
Tony Bra cke ns $15,000 tor the hll th at''
knocked CowbO'IS 08 Tro~ A1kman out of a:
game on Oct 29
()

COLLEGE
.1:1
RUTGERS - Ann ounced t11e res1g·
nat1 o n of Terry Shea. toolbatt coach,
the end of the season
·: ;[

a1q

SOUTHEAST MI SSOURI

STATE

Suspended basketball G Ar.1on10 Short
lor lhe first th ree games ol the seasonfor Violatmg team rules

(

) \

&lt;

461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport

\\".1~ nc.nly

field goal and an extra point.
Nystrom's attempt
barely
reached tho end zone, and the
bumblii1g Badgers. pl.!yi11g without inJured Mich :1e l Bennett, th e
n:ttion 's fourth-k.1ding ru,hr.=r.
had new li fe.
Bollinger h1t N1 ck Dav11 with
a 45-y:t.rd tou chdown pJss th;lt
pulled Wi sco nSi n to 12- 10 . at
hal ftime and sparked .11 7 -II run.
Telli&lt; Redmon ru shed 30

29 Kenny Wallace, 2.578
30. Elliott Sadler,·2,568
31 Bobby Hamillon, 2,496
32 . Dave Blaney. 2.267
33. A1ck Mast, 2, 186
34 Wally 1ttenbachJr . 2.t13
35 Stacy CL opton. 1 .842
36. Brett Sodlne, 1 ,808
37 Darrell Waltnp. 1 _801.
38 Scou Pruett, 1,717
39. M1ke Bliss. 1.656.
40 Ted Musgrave_ 1.52t

Save Mart!Kragen 350k, Sono-

June 25 -

ma, CalK (Jeff Goroon)
July 1 - Pepsi 400. Daytona Beach, Aa

' ) )_.5

unnl 'I k~..· Bro,,·n sLornl

MADISON . w., (AI') - Wi&gt;- uLtr-s(' ,l \n n g.llllL' w bccvmc
consin recovered frum .1 !;low !;tJ.n
bowl chgible m comcctttive years
with the h elp rlf a cvnous call by for the first tulle' )in ce I '!60-6 1.
Minnesota coach Glen Mason.
Just t hree weeks .tgo, the
and the Badg~rs scored three. Gophers were talk! ng Rme Bowl
touchdowns in the fourth quarter after hold1ng Oh1n St.ue to ~00
to beat the Gopher~ .J 1-20 orJ tm:ll y:~nk But sin CL' then, they've:
Saturday.
surrendered 1.57-1 y;nd.s and 133
The Badgers (6-4. 3-4lligten) poirrt~ in lo s~c~ to Indtana ,N orth snapped a thre e-ga me home los- \\'C'Stl'rtl :md Wi ~com111.
ing ~creak, th eir long-est ~ tn ce
Mnlll e&gt;ota led I
with I :20
1990, thanks to the play of left in the tlr&gt; t h,,]f when Mason 's
Brooks Bollmge r. who threw for P''culiar ca ll h.1 cktlred
204 yards arid two touchdown s·
On fo urt h-.1n d-H fro m the
and ran for a CJrcer-lugh 127 '!J.,Jgers' 40. M.1son o pted to try a
yards and a sco re.
•
tidd goa l even thou t;h he has the
The" Gopher&lt; ('i-'i, 3-.J B1 g n;mo n ·s le:t di ng punter in Presto n
Ten) lost their third m.1ight and G ru cn in g, ;md kicke r D:m Nysmust beat Iowa m thc_I r final n.:g- trom lud ,1lrc.1dy mi~-.cd a short

•

-

Sunda~November5,2000

�•

'

Sunday, November 5, 2000
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,' WV

'Page 86 • ll&gt;unbav i!J:unts ·ll&gt;tnhntl

ll&gt;unba!' a&gt;tmrlt ·&amp;tnllntl • Page 87

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

.

TODAY' .S SCOREBOARD

·COLLEGE FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK

•

No. 3 Miami hammers
No•.] Va. Tech, 41-21
MIAMI (AP) - With MichJd
Vido barely able to walk. No. J
Mian1i took a giant l,(t'p rnw.1rd
playing for the nauon.1l ch.llllfiionship.
· Ken Dorsey thr,•w thrc,· ion!;
touchdown passes .1nd J:tmt·s
Jackson ran fo~ 145 varth .111d .1

RedHawks upend Bobaits
OXFORD. Oh1o (AP) Mike Bath connected on a 37yard touc hdown p.1ss to Jason
Branch W![h JUS[ OVL'r a minme
remaining to giv,e Miami (Ohw)
a 27 -24 victory over Ohio Saturday.
Bath also hit tlranch on a S4 yard tou chdown pass to pull
Miami to '''lthm 17-D in the
third .
Aftt"r going- wHh .t co mp lt: timJ

'

score .s the 1--Jurn l".:m~~· b~.H No.
2Virgima Tec li 41-2 1 on SmmlJy
Vick, who ; pra111cU lm nght
ankle in bst Wl'e-k 's Will m·cr
Pittsburgh .• d1d ll~)t ~;.t.ut .utJ
played all of IH 111111Ute&gt; . lfi:cr
replacing DJw M cyc i !.Ill' Il1 the
first perrod.
Dorsey, di\,lppmntt.'d \.nrh
'•
hitusdf alter three Jnt ~.Tccptil) ll\
in last we-c:k's \\'lll . (Jn,:r l t)li J\ I,lll,l
Tech •• completed I I of 1.1 pJ~'JL'!I
for 283 yard,, 111clu ,h n~ I'D p.mes of -+2 and SO y:m.is to S.1m.uu
Moss and -+4 y:trd . . to · ught e nd
J~:remy Shockey
Jackson 's 17-y.&lt;rd TD n1n )'"'
Miami ahead 14-0 .111d Dors~,.·,
44-yarder to Shockev nude 1t 21 0 at halftune. N.•Jch D.11·e11port THE MOSS MAN RUNNETH - . Miami w1de receiver Santana Moss
ran 50 yards for a tou chdown .to · heads for the end zon·e with one of his two touchdown receptions
put Mia mi ahe,u_i :2H-O w1Ch ~:52 against Virginia Tech Saturday as the Hurricanes defeated the Hokies,.
left m the third quarter.
41·21. (AP)

Syracuse rallies to beat WVU, 31-27
MORGANTOWN.
W. V.t.
CAP) - A redshirt fres hman with
the .moves and Petermination of
Do~ovan McNabb has resuscitated Syracuse's bowl chances.
R.J. Anderson, pbying with . o
sore knee injured earlier m the
~me, threw for two tou chdowns
and ran for another in his first
srait. His 13-yard tou chdown pa ss
to Malik Campbell with I0 seconds left· lifted Ss;rJcme to J J 127 vic['fY over WL· ~t Virg111u on
Saturday.
After the game, West V~rgini a
coach Don Nehlen, who is one
win spy of his 2cl0th career VICtorY~ announ ced ht s rcnrcmcnt after
21 seasons. e-ffeC[iVe ar the end of
the year.
The news was . J. su rp n!&gt;c .
Nehlen , who turns.(,) 111 ~c\ic tl
weeks, had not hmtcd tlut lw
would be m.ovmg on. T he dL':In of
Big East coac h es h.1&lt; a I ~'1 - 127 - ~
record at WVU.
•trying to a\'~JJ rh t.• tr fir~l lo~­
mg season stn ct' 1&lt;JH(,, d1c
Orangem en (4-4 , ]-" LII~; E·a st)
suddenly have a nni ch bn ghtcr

outlook W I[h games rcmauung . on a 16-yard run with I 0:0 I left
against Temple, Rutgers and No. in the game for a 24-20 lead.
3 MiJtili.
West Virgima needed JUSt I :45
West VIrginia (4-4, 2-.'l) lost m to retake the lead. Cobo urne
third straight after starting the raced up the middle tor 47 yards,
season 4-1 . With games left then scored from 2\J yarcls out on
ag;.i·insc Rutgers, Ea::.t Carolina a pitch with H: 16 remaining.
and Pittsburgh , the Mountam ee rs
Syra cuse got one last shot
must wm [WO of their remaining when Will Allen intercepted West
three to beco me bowl eligible.
V~rgima 's Scott McBrien with
Ande rso n was 18-o f-33 p;m- four minutes left.
~ng to r 20J \mus Jn place ofTroy
On third-a nd-4. Anderson hit
Nu'ne ~. who rhrew eighr i1HerDavid Tyree in double cova:1ge
c~ pnon 5 in consec utive los"ses to
for a 30-yard gain to the West VirBoston College and Virgini a gin ia 36. Six phys I..tn, Ander&gt;on
Tech.
hit Campbell i11 the left corne r of
A stockier versio n of M cNa bb. the end zone pa st 13ri:ln King for
Andcr;;on showed d1c same qui c k the winning sc ore.
fel't that M cN.tbb terrorized the·
In the fin.[ qu.1rtcr, Anderson
Mount .1 ii1L'crs \Vith for ye~us. hit Brown on a 5-yard TD wss
Amk' Pin n turned scn: r.1l Ul',tr- ami five mintHc";; hter Andcr'\on
\JL~~ ,,Il l&gt; IDn g g.utl \, fin1 .. hmg rhl'
.;;cored from -t \':uds out on :m
d,l\" \\"l[h ,h.t \',lrd~;, nn l --1- C Hri L'"·
op tion keeper for :1 14-11 le.1d .
I k left thL· g:.Hll L' With .1 knL'I.'
M cBnL'Il, m aking hi~ tlr~ t ~tJ.rt
IllJUry btc 111 tHe thtrd qu.Htl:r but i11 pl Jce o f the 111Jllrl'll Br.1d
rL·turned w it h .1 b1 .ll'l' two \c rH.'..,
L L'w l ~, \\',1~ K-nf-:::! 1 for 1~(l y.1rds.
i.Hn.
A,·on Cobnurnc ru ~hc d t: lr 1( J(,
Afi:~..or -;cor ing on It\ first two
y.m.ls on 23 .:,\'!TI L'~.
poSSl'!.SIO;l:.. Sy ;.lL' ll :-.1.'

bfdc ~~

until halfway through the third Jackson rushed for 211 yards on
quarter. Bath finished the game 41 carries. Joe Sherrill ran for 91
completing 9- of- 19 passes for yards on 16 carries as the Bobcats
213 yards. Branch caught five had 399 total rushing yards.
J ackson completed . 3-of-6
passes for a career-high 143 yards.
Steve Little ran for 133 yards . passes including a 6-yard touch011 25 carries, including a 34 down pass ·to Chris Knaack to
touchdown run no pull the Red- give the Bobcats (5-4, 2-2) a 14H awks (S-4, 3-1 in the Mid- 7 halftime lead. Jac kson didn't
American Conference) to within comp lete a pass in the second half
24-20 in the fourth.
and was intercepted once.
Ohio qu arterback Dontrell

Illinois outduels Indiana
CHAMI'Atc;N. Ill. (AI') . -

Kurt

-.u n ·i\'cd ,\ qu .Ht L' I"b.tt:k dud \\"irh Amw.l!l 1-l.tndlc
El. i~Lor ing 0 11 .1 1-yJrd '- !ll' .lk
With

Kitt11L'r

:2:) .. l"UHH.b

1101 ...1

kft

Jlb (ndi -

to g &amp;H.'

--~-~ -J :) \"ll'tOI"\ " 0\ "L'I'

nn S:trunb\'
RJIHilL· El r.u1 l~n ~0 1) y.u·d~
c~m.l fi.mr to uchdm,·n,, .md Ktt ftlL'I' tiHl" \\ for '2.77 ,-,u d, ,tml
[hree TD s.

Jll.l

El · topk .1 l.1:&gt;t

R ,lllCHI!

~\\' ing

with a 51-y.ml bn1nb th .ll llli n01s' Walter Young; batted down
1n the end zone :~s time ran out.
The llliti i (5-4, 2-4 l:lig len)
couldn't stop Randle El, or any
other Indian a runner.
The HooSiers rushed for 447
yards. including 161 by Levron
Williams.
lll inni&lt; .. tru c k first
freshman Christian Morton
returned a pun~ ~~~ yards' for a
touchdO\s n.
But th e Hoosie r&lt; (3-6 . 2-4)
put together SC&lt;)I'lllg dnves of 72
and 58 yarcb to ,;o up 14 -7.
Bod1 touchdowns ca me on 4yard runs by 1'\..andlc El. who
threw o nly one plss durin~ the
two driv~:s .

Illinoi s tied it when A:~ron
Moorehead caught ,1 short Kittner pass at the I0. broke a tack-

It• ,1 nd dove into the end zone.

wa·s to be another touchdown
llut l n&lt;hma just kept running. late in the third quarter. But
Th t.· 1-loosit:rs dro\'L' 75 yards, Robert Fm\klin stripped the ball
rhn)\\·ingju:-it onl· p .1ss to co nvert and the lll ini's Terrell Washington
' "' .1 tlurd-.md -S, and IJo ' Wayne · re covered at thl' 1.
Hng;ltl fin1 ~ hed ir with J 5-yard
Randle El tied it at 28 with a
wuchdo\\"n run up the tniddlc .
12-yard run with 13:26 left in
Illinoi s .mswc-n:d on it~ llt'Xl thl' gJmt=.
drin·. whl'n Ktttncr hn Moort? But Kittner responded wah a
he.•J w11h a 5 ! -yard pass. This 49-yard pass to Greg Lewis, who
rime. howcn;r, Indiana stopped landed at the -l. Antoinco Harris
hnu at tl\e I .
ran it in with 10:59 left.
On the next pia)', Ca rey D,vis
The llli.ni seemed to finally
&lt;cored on a pass from Kittner.
come up with a defensive stop
Eugene Wilson stopped Indi- with eight minutes left.
ana's ne-xt drive with an acrobat- ·
On fourth-and-14, Randle El
ic lllterceptlon at the Illinois 25. stayed in as the punte( and co mThe lllini could not move the pleted a long pass for an apparent
ball, and gave it back to In diana first down.
near midfield with 21 seco nds
The Hoosiers, however, had
ldt m [he second qu aner.
an ineligible receiver downfield.
Randle El broke away on a Randle El did kick the second
scnmb le to set up a 50-yard field time, but st"veral seconds after his
goa l attempt for Andy Payne, but ki c k, Illinois' Brandon Moore
Fred Wakefield blocked it as time knocked him five yards back.
expired 1n the first half.
The resulting penalty gave the.
Indiana kept running, and HooSiers a first down, and severKittner kept throw1ng deep in al plays later, Randle El spun off.
the second half.
three different tacklers for a 5The lllin i went up 28-21 on yard touchdown to tie it at 35:
Kittner's 17-ya rd lob to Moore- with 5:08 left.
head in the crowded end zone.
Kittner drove the Illini 78
The Hoosiers then drove to yards for the final score.
th e Illinois 5, where Randle El
syu trted past dll· line for what
•

'--'pao
"----,;;;;;;;;;;;-;
FiiiiTBAu.
=::n-:i~
=·:---~ •__]I I Plio HOCKEY ]
National Footb1tl L11gue

National Hoek•y L.,gu•

AFC
East
WLTPt•.PFPA
Indianapolis ..................6 2 0.750 232 Hl
Miami ........................6 2 o 750 177 11t ·
N.Y. Jets ...........
..6 2 0 .750185 163
Buftalo .......................... .4 4 0.500 163 H3
New England ...............2 6 0.250 143 171
·
Central
Tennessee ........ ..........1 1 0 .675 172 118
Pittsburgh .................. s 3 0.625 130 84
Bal1imore -· ................ 5 4 0 .556 140 98
Jacksonv1he .................. 3 6 0 .333 '65 207
Cincinnati .. . ... ..
2 6 0 .250 80 167
Clevelancl .
. ···· ~· ... 2 7 0.222 98 209
Wast
Oakland .............
7 1 0 .875 207 141
Kansas C•ty ..............5 3 0 .625 212 166
Denver . .....
..... .. . .4 4 o 500 238 178
Seattle ...............
.2 'l 0 .222 140 224
. San 01ego .......
..0 8 0 000 130 219
NFC

E1a1em Conference
AUantle Division
.
W l T Ol Pta. GF GA
New Jersey ......... 6 3 3 o 15 49 34
.. 6 5 1 o 13 37 38
Pinsburgh

Eoot
N.Y Giants
Wash1ng1on
Philadelphia
Dallas .. ,....
Arizona ···'·····

WLTPciPFPA
6 2 0 .750 144
......... 6 3 0.667170
.....•.. 5 4 0 .556 188
;......... 3 5 0.375 191
2 6 0 .250 131

112

142

134
197
231

Cenlral
Minnesota
Detroit .....•...
Tampa Bay
Green Bay .
Chicago ..... .
St. Louis ...........
New Orl~ans
Carolina .
Atlanta ......
San Franc1sco

..... 7 1 0.875
5 3 0 .625
.4 4 0 .500
.3 5 0 .375

197 17B
161 164

205 138
168 167

I 7 0 125 110 202
West
. .7 1

s

3

o 875 330
o 625

252

152 127

J 'S 0.375 156 129
. .. 3 6 0 .333 162 250
2 7 0 .222 238 292

Sunday's Games
M1ami at De troit. 1 p.m.
Buffalo at New England. 1 p m.
lndiana!XIils at Chicago , 1 p.m.
Tafllla Bay at Atlanta. 1 p.m.
Dalla s at Phi ladelphia . 1 p.m ·
Battlmore at Cincinnati , 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at TonnesseB", 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at New Orleans. 1 p .m.
Washmgton at Arizona , 4:05 p m
Denver at N.Y. Jets, 4 :15 p.m.
San Diego at Seattle. 4:15p.m.
Kansas City at Oakland, 4:15 p.m
Carolina at St. Louis, 8:20p.m.
Open. Jacksonville
Monday's Game
M1nnesota at Green Bay, 9 p m.

N .Y. lsianders ..... ,.. S

3

2

1

N.Yi Rangers ......... s

7
6

o
4

o
0

13 31
10 41
10 32

Philadelphia ........ 3
Northeast Division
Ottawa ................B 1 3
19 49
Toronto ............... 7 5
0 14 31
Buftalo .~ ...............6 3 1 1 14 34
Boston ................ 5 6 1 1 12 34
Mootreal .............. 4 7 2 0 10 37

o

o

27
40
43

29
27

Sund1y'1 GamH
Los Angeles at N .Y. islanders, 1 p.m .
Was 11ngton at Tampa Bay, 6 p m
Edmonton at Columbus , 7 p.m
Boston at Toronto , 7:30p.m.
Anaheim at Chcago, 8 p.m.
Minnesota at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Sari Jose at Vancouver.. 10 p.m.

PRO.HOOPS

30
44
42

South.east Division

o

Carolina ............... 3 6 3
9 32 40
Washington · .... 2 6 4 1
9 29 38
Tampa Bay ......... 3 7 1 1
8 36 54
Fk&gt;nda ................. 1 4 3 3
a 21 32
145072633
Atlanta ..
Western Conference ·
Central Divisi on

WLTOLPisGFGA
St. LOUIS10
....... 2 1 0 21 43 22
Detroit .: ...... ........ 8 5 a 1 17 40 37
NaShvttle .
5 3 3 1 14 28 27
ChiCago . .
. .. .4 8 0 1
9 30 40
Columb,us .. ....... 3 9 0 1
7 22 44
Northwest Olvisiorl
Colorado 10. .... 2 2 0 22 44 26
Ed~onton
... 8 5 2 0 1B 43 38
Vancouver
. 7 3 2 1 17 45 JB
Calga"ry
3 9 1 0
7 28 38
.2 8 3 0
7 23 40
Minnesot a ..
Pacific Division
Phoen1x
9 I 4 0 22 45 26
Dallas ..
..7 4 2 1 17 39 33
Anaheim
6 4 2 2 16 41 46
SanJose
7 2 1 0 t5 28 20
Los Angeles
6 6 2 0 14 51 44
Two pOints lor a w1n. one po1nt for a lie and
overt1me toss
Thursday's Games
Onawa 6. N.Y. Rangers 5
NastMIIe 3 Philad elph1a 1
Boston 5. Chicago 4
Los Angeles 5. Atlanta 2
Toronto 5, New Jersey 3
St. Louis 2, Washington 0
Friday's Games
Buttalo 5, fv'ontreal 4
Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Islanders 3. OT
Chicago 6, Detm11 1
Edmonton 3, M1nnesota 0
Dallas 2 . Phoenh&lt; 2. tie
Colorado 5 , Ca rolina 3
Pittsburgh 4 , Vancouver 2
Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at New Jersey. 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Baston. 7 p.m.
NY Rangers at Montreal. 7 p m

Vanrouver 99, LA Cltppers 91
Frlday's Gamet
New Yorll; 80, Washington 76
Boston 93, Toronto 91
Char1one 83, Miaml79

Columbus at onawa, 7 p .m
Buftalo at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Toronto at St. LouiS. 7 p.m.
Wastungton at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Anaheim at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Calgary, ~0 p.m.
Carolina at San Jose, W:30 p.m.

National Basketball Association

Eaalern Conference
Atlantic Division

W L Pet.

GB

1.00
t .OO

112

Phdadelph1a .....
3 0
Boston ........................... 2 0
New Yor.k. .. ............
..2 1
Miami
.1
1
New Jersey . ..... ... . .. ...
1
1
Orlando ···'·· .. .......
.. 1 2
Washington
..... . 1 2
Central Division
......... 2 0
Cleveland ..
........ 2
1
Charlotte
1 2
DetrOit ~···· ·
Atlanta ..
······ .... 0 2

.... 0

C~ago

lnd1ana
Milwau kee .
Toronto ...

0

....... 0

.. .... b

667
1
500 1 112
500 1 1!2

333
333

2
2

1.00
.. 667

112

.333 1 112
2
.000
2 .000
2
2 .000

2

2 .000
2
3 .000 2 1/2

Western Conference
Midwest Olvision

W

L

Dallas .
2 0
San Anton1o ..
..... 2 0
Utah .... ~....
......... 2 0
Vancouver ....
. .. ··-·- 2
0
Denve r . ...................... 1
1
Houston
...... 1
1
Mmnesota .
1
1
Pacific Division
Sacramento
.............. 2
1
Golden State. .
........... 1
1
LA Lakers ...
. ....... 1
1
Phoen1x .
...... ,...... 1
1
Seattle .
....... 1
1
2
L.A. Clippers .. ....... ......... ... 0
Portland . .
. .....
2
Thursday's Games
New York 94, Atlanta 69
Dallas 94. tncllana 88
San Antonio t03 , Minnesota 91
Houston 115. Milwaukee 93
Denver t01 , Golden State 97
Phoenix 108. Portland 82

o

Pel

GB

100
1.00

1.00
1 00
.500
.500
.500
.667
500
.500
.500

112

112
112
.500
112
.000 1 1/2
.000 1 1/2

Pholadelptlla 87. O~ando eo
Sacramento 100, Detroit 93
New Jersey 92, Chicago 82
Saturday's Games
L.A. Lakers at Vancouver, 3:30 p.m
Chk:ago at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Washington at Toronto, 7 p .m
Or1anOO at Atlanta, 7:30p.m .
Boston at Cleveland, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 7:30p.m
Utah at Dallas. 8 p.m.
Sacramento at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Charlone at New Jersey, 8 p m.
Detroit at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Phoenix at Denver, 9 p.m.
Portland at Seanle. 10 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippers , 10:30 p.m
San Anton1o at Golden Stale, 10:30 p.m
Sunday's Games
Houston at PhOenix, 8 p m
L.A. Cl1ppers at L.A. Lakers, 9:.;10 p.m.

AutO RACING
NASCAR Winston Cup Series
The NASCAR Wins!On Cup schedule. winners In pa renlheses , and driver point standings:
Feb 20 - Daytona 500. Daytona Beach ,
Fla (Dale Jarrett)
Feb 27 - Dura Lube!Kmart 400, Rocking ham, N.C. {Bobby labO!lte)
March 5 - Carsd1rect.com 400. Las Vegas .
(Jelf Burton1
March 12 :..... Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton,
Ga (Dale Earnhardt)
March t9 - Mall. com 400 , Darlington, S .C
(Ward Burton)
March 26 - Food C1ty 500, Bnstol, Tenn .
{Rusty Wallace)
April 2 - DirecTV 500. Fan Wonh . Texas .
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.)
April 9 - Good~ 's 500 . Martinsville , Va .
(Mark Martm)
April 16- DieHard 500 , Talladega , Ala .
(Jeff Gordon)
' April 30- NAPA Auto Parts 500, Fontana.
Calif. (J eremy Mayfield)
May 6 - Pont1ac Excite ment 400. Rich mond, Va. (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) ·
May 28- Coca -Cola 600, Concord. N.C.
(Matt kenseth)
June 4 - MBNA Platinum 400. Dover, Del.
(Tony Stewart)
June 11 - Kman 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
(Tony Stewart)
June 19 - Pocono 500. Long Pond , ~a .
(Jeremy Mayt1eld)

•

· Phone
7 40-992-2196

.LI

Badgers bury inconsistent·Gophers

"-3

Buckeyes
. from Page B1
netted J y:1n b on

t\\O

runo, .md

an if-tcomplction. DJ.vHI I\{ li.lctl-r,

,On tlllrd-.md-4 fmmthe C)hio
Sene 1() llll d\\',IY rhrough t h t.: "ecnnd pcrtnd, Smnkt..·r .. m t."t lll l'd a
bl11 1d~lt..lc

from Bu . . kcyc
ddL-m i\'l' L· nd lhL' lll Johmon. The
b.tll poppl'd loo~c .1nd I )o~~
htt

ptLked tt up .111d

r.ut the :J

\'Jrd~

who earlier mJs .. ed ,l ll"I..'Xtr,l-pmnt fi.1r tht..· tnnchdo\\ 11
\Xinh .1 InlnutL' ktt tn th~..· 1ulf,
·kick, then c.1m c ~)11 .md mt~r..cd
the 20-yard f•dd -go.J! dltempt.
. ( )h!O \UtL' \\",l\ l;llll'lj tu pullt
Both ofit·nsc&lt;, lookL'd tndkc ... but rht..· ~n.tp ,.,,1kd UH'J ~ ~umu
rive afrer each c~ .l m put [(\ ~l:t h cr D.tn "[ult;".... hL·Jd hY .n IL'.h[ I
fl'L' (
l~:ngthy dn vcs thL· tirst t\\ cl t ll llL'"
I k ,·\···nn1:dh J'h k;.·J up thL·
they touc hed t he b.11l
Belhsart , whu \\'il~ 'J- t(l·r ~11 1\ll h.t!l .Jiid {1'"'1..·d .l p.1" to lllll'1J2 y.ul~ p.l.,~ln ~. \\'h ltHt..'l"ltTrcd h.tt h·1 _lt\l' ( \HII)l'l \\]HI drDppnJ
twice .1nd o,l'\'t'r.tl oth L'I p.l\\L'~ II
,\ \ 1 h1~.111 ~!.lt~· tonk O\'l'l .It
could h.n ·c bl't.'ll p1~ h·~l Dlt • 11
WCrL'

nmv ht.· ,-c

llL",Ir .111 ( )h 111 \t.tll'

rece1vc r.
Sn10kcr. whn (tllnpll'tL'd 111of-18 pa o;;:-.l'' l~&gt;r 7' y.n~h wtth .111
incerception , .d~ u tur tll'd {1\1..'1 th~
ball . on t \\'O k~.:y pL1,·.., dut kL·pt
the Bu ckevl'" 111 th~..: ;~.tlllt.'

th~· l

)htn \t.lh: ..J.t1 .llhl on tirq
lll\\11, \nud,vJ·, p.1" 111 the IL'f{
1l1t \Uo, lrHl'n qitt•d
lw ( 'tHlp
tt lk h111d H~..llt,,lll." -til \ trd

l~·~Hnlo t11 Kv11- Yt-•ll ICunhn. th~·
Hu L h_,,.l:~ drn\ t. ' tu fhL' tvl rL hl~!;.lll
\r.frl' 1' nn rlmt! d(l\\'!1 trnnl rhc

rini.L'S

for

va rch :md

:?11

Brand New 2001
Chevrolet Cavalier Sedan

Brand New 2001 Chevy
S-Series LS Ext Cab Third Door

Brand New 2001 .Chevy
Silverado Sportside 4x4

~2,850* ~5,950* ~8,950*
• 4 Speed Automatic Trans.
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

• Air Conditioning
• CD System/ Alum. Wheels
Tilt &amp;Cr.uise

• Air Conditioning
• Tilt, Delay Wipers
• AMIFM Stereo

down for Minnesota. H i, 1-y.mi
score followed .1 79-varJ p.m play
from Cole to R o n johmo11
This was the II Oth meeting
between thl' sc hoob , more than
;m y other 111 Di v1r..10 n 1-A

I H, the)' r.1n a play up the middle
,l!H.l c;.~..·ttl cd for Stultz\ 'leco nd
tidd goa l, a 3H-y.lrd cr.
, Th e S p:1rt.111\ LJII llltl l' and 12
pl.ty~ 011 t hc1r fir ~! 1\\'0 po~~l''\­

&lt;, tom , bur lud JH l more tlun ~eve n
pl.l';o"i .1n y of r-lw l.1o,t 11 tlllle' th ey

their lumh on the b.tll.
!Vll dug.uJ t.;t. ttl.." lud dt:,dt thl.'

t;nt

Bu L'h'YL'~ llll'llHn.Ibk lmw\ L'.ll h

or

L1~t

t!Jl'

T\\'o

t\\'u

yc.1r~

,.c.n~.

Brand New 2001 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Coupe

~9,950*
• Ram Air V-6, Sunroof
• Power Windows, locks, Mirrors
• CD System, Keyless

All New 2001
Ponliac Aztek SRV

All New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LS 4 Door 4x4

122,750* 134,950*

• Ultimate Recreational
• V·6 Power, Automatic
• Keyless Entry/CO System

• Third Seat, Keyless Entry
• Full Power/CO System
Front &amp; Rear Air/Heat

· Ta)(es . Tags. Title Fees extra Rebate mcluded 1n sale pnce of new vehicle listed where applicable. ·;on approved credit.
On selected models . Not respons1ble lor typogra phical errors. Pnces Good November 3rd Through November 5th.
·

.1gn. ( )]llo \t.it l' \\' .\ ~
111 . the ll.l llon .111d
L. llll l" Into ( )Jl\1 1 St.l-

Llllkcd NLl. 1
thL· Sp.1rt. 1m
dniill .1~

dnp.

four-tt lll l hd11\\ 11

l1 u t

ond-h 111

m·L'!t.niH.'

ddi.Ltl

undL' I -

.1 ~ ~- 1 J -~l'L­

tn ")ll lll g .1 1K-2-I

ti\)O,l'{

. A yt'.ll' .t"go. tilL· r....p. 1 rt.11l~ t hrottled the ( 1lllo '-.r.ttc otl(:no,l·.l tnll l
1ng It to /l'W nt~hlilg \',Hd~ op 2'1
lttL'IlliH"
( ) hJO

th1., t llll l',

\ur~.· tlH.tkd ~WJ

ru,h111g J{li

)I) ~HIL' !l1fHo,

y.11-d,
I 17 Y.m.l" \In

GUARANTERED
CREDIT APPROVAL

****************
CALL 992-2196
ASK FOR FREDA

:t tou ch-

&lt;:H5Vt0Lil

c;;:_.;

WI U.ll Tl-tiRI

'

...... ........ ,., .,... "'
~

C2) O ldSmObile
00000 O&lt;&gt;CJOOOOOe

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

t-:~-:---=-~~--:-----1

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

(Jeff Burton)

July 9 -

New England 300, Loudon. N tt

(Tony Stewan)

July 23 - Pennsytvama 500, Long Pond
(Rusty Wallace)
A.ug 5 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis

!Bobby Lal!oote)
Aug 13 - Global Crossing at The Glen.
Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Steve Parle )
Aug 20 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, M1Ch.
(Rusty Wallace)
Aug. 2.6 - goracing.com 500, Bristol, Tenn
(Rusty Wallace)
Sept. 3 - Southern 500. Darlington. S C

I

BASEBALL

(Bobby Labonle)
Sept. 9 - Chevrolet Monte Car1o 400
Rlchmqnd . Va. (Jeff Gordon)

:

I (

) '

S l,l

.J
•

4

American League
,J
BO STON RED
SOX-Named Tom
Mooney Na110nat League scout. Ben Chering·
ton coordinator ol scoutmg 1n Latm Amenc~j
a.nd Galen Carr advancr scouting admrn1stra- 1
tor
·
· ~
CLEVELAND INDIANS-ACtivated RHP
Jaret Wrtght_ RHP Chartes ~agy RHP Sear';·
DePa ula. RHP Ja1me Brown OF Jacob Cn.1~
and RHP Jacob Westbrook !rom the 60-day
diSabled list Wa1ved INF Bill Selby and RHP
Jam1e' 8rew1ogton .
';:
NEW YORK YANKEES· F1red Ch11? f
Chambliss , ba llmg coach
TORONTO BLUE JAYS...:...Named Markt
Connor p1 tch1ng coach Garth lorg lust base~
coach and Cook1e R oJaS bPnch coach
•

Sept 17 - DuraLube 300. Loudon. N H
(Jeff Burton)
Sept. 24 - MBNA.com 400, Dover, Del
(Tony Stewart)
Oct. 1 ~ NAPAAutoCare 500, Martinsville,
va (Tony Stewan)
Oct. 8 - UAW·GM Quality 500 . Concord ,
N.C . (Bobby Labonte)
Oct 15 - Winston 500. Talladega. Ala
(Dale Earnhardt)
Oct 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,
Rockingham , N .C (Dale Jarrett)
Nov, 5 ..... Checker Auto Par1s/Oura Lube
500k , Avondal e, Ariz .
Nov. 12 - Pennzoil 400, Homestead. Fla
Nov 19 - NAPA 500. Hampton. Ga
Driver Standings
t . Bobby Labonte. 4,645.
2. Date Earnhardt. 4.444 .
3. Jelf Burton. 4.,394
4 . Dale Jarrett. 4 ,3 15.
5. Ricky Rudd , 4.272
6. Tony Stewart. 4,21 0.
7 . Rusty Wallace. 4,t 15.
8 Mark Mart1n, 4,042
9. Jeff Gordon. 3,904.
10. We.ra Burton 3,B09 .
11. Mike Skinne r, 3,514.
12. Ste'w'e Park . 3.512.
13. Ma" Kenseth , 3,436
14 . Johnny Benson, 3,389.
15. Joe Nemechek, 3.246.
16. Dale Earnhardt Jr., a,207.
17. Ken Schrader. 3.203.
18.. Terry Labon1e, 3, 121 .
19. Sterling Marlin, 3,018.
20. Bill ElliOt!. 2.955.
21. John Andret11, 2,932
22 . J&amp;rry Nadeau, 2,862.
23 Jimmy Spencer. 2,840
24 Jeremy Mayfield, 2,761
25 Aobert Pressley, 2,741.
26 Chad Lillie, 2,634.
27 Michael Waltrtlp, 2,623.
28 Kev1n Lepage, 2,613

.~.

'

TRANSACTIONS

.it

National L.eague
CINCINN ATI RED S- Narred Bob Boone
manager
,!
FLORIDA MARLINS S1gncO INF Ryao
McGuire. RHP Joe Strong and RIIP Doug.·
!
Walls to mmor league conl!al.:t~
NEW YORK MET S·-S1gned INF-OF
Lenny Ha 111s to a two-year contract
~
SAN DIEGO PADRES Announced H~n·,
sh1n ot the Japanese Central League hav~ J
purct:lased 1he nghls to AHP Buddy Carlyle I.

'

FOOTBALL
',l
Nalional Football League
NFL- Fmed Jacksonv11te Jaguars· 0~ "
Tony Bra cke ns $15,000 tor the hll th at''
knocked CowbO'IS 08 Tro~ A1kman out of a:
game on Oct 29
()

COLLEGE
.1:1
RUTGERS - Ann ounced t11e res1g·
nat1 o n of Terry Shea. toolbatt coach,
the end of the season
·: ;[

a1q

SOUTHEAST MI SSOURI

STATE

Suspended basketball G Ar.1on10 Short
lor lhe first th ree games ol the seasonfor Violatmg team rules

(

) \

&lt;

461 S. Third Ave.
Middleport

\\".1~ nc.nly

field goal and an extra point.
Nystrom's attempt
barely
reached tho end zone, and the
bumblii1g Badgers. pl.!yi11g without inJured Mich :1e l Bennett, th e
n:ttion 's fourth-k.1ding ru,hr.=r.
had new li fe.
Bollinger h1t N1 ck Dav11 with
a 45-y:t.rd tou chdown pJss th;lt
pulled Wi sco nSi n to 12- 10 . at
hal ftime and sparked .11 7 -II run.
Telli&lt; Redmon ru shed 30

29 Kenny Wallace, 2.578
30. Elliott Sadler,·2,568
31 Bobby Hamillon, 2,496
32 . Dave Blaney. 2.267
33. A1ck Mast, 2, 186
34 Wally 1ttenbachJr . 2.t13
35 Stacy CL opton. 1 .842
36. Brett Sodlne, 1 ,808
37 Darrell Waltnp. 1 _801.
38 Scou Pruett, 1,717
39. M1ke Bliss. 1.656.
40 Ted Musgrave_ 1.52t

Save Mart!Kragen 350k, Sono-

June 25 -

ma, CalK (Jeff Goroon)
July 1 - Pepsi 400. Daytona Beach, Aa

' ) )_.5

unnl 'I k~..· Bro,,·n sLornl

MADISON . w., (AI') - Wi&gt;- uLtr-s(' ,l \n n g.llllL' w bccvmc
consin recovered frum .1 !;low !;tJ.n
bowl chgible m comcctttive years
with the h elp rlf a cvnous call by for the first tulle' )in ce I '!60-6 1.
Minnesota coach Glen Mason.
Just t hree weeks .tgo, the
and the Badg~rs scored three. Gophers were talk! ng Rme Bowl
touchdowns in the fourth quarter after hold1ng Oh1n St.ue to ~00
to beat the Gopher~ .J 1-20 orJ tm:ll y:~nk But sin CL' then, they've:
Saturday.
surrendered 1.57-1 y;nd.s and 133
The Badgers (6-4. 3-4lligten) poirrt~ in lo s~c~ to Indtana ,N orth snapped a thre e-ga me home los- \\'C'Stl'rtl :md Wi ~com111.
ing ~creak, th eir long-est ~ tn ce
Mnlll e&gt;ota led I
with I :20
1990, thanks to the play of left in the tlr&gt; t h,,]f when Mason 's
Brooks Bollmge r. who threw for P''culiar ca ll h.1 cktlred
204 yards arid two touchdown s·
On fo urt h-.1n d-H fro m the
and ran for a CJrcer-lugh 127 '!J.,Jgers' 40. M.1son o pted to try a
yards and a sco re.
•
tidd goa l even thou t;h he has the
The" Gopher&lt; ('i-'i, 3-.J B1 g n;mo n ·s le:t di ng punter in Presto n
Ten) lost their third m.1ight and G ru cn in g, ;md kicke r D:m Nysmust beat Iowa m thc_I r final n.:g- trom lud ,1lrc.1dy mi~-.cd a short

•

-

Sunda~November5,2000

�...
Page B8 • imnbap Q:imtt ·iiofnhnrl

...•:•••

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Animos·

Is B

CLEVELAND (A P) - Those throwback " ny" helmets the New
York Gtants are weanng this season have brought back speC!almemones for Cleveland Browns coach C hns Palmer.
Palmer grew up m the shadow of N ew York City, and vividly
remembers summer afternoons Wlth h1s dad and brothers watchmg
Y A. Ti!tle, Sam Huff and Frank Giffonl swea t through trainmg camp.
Th1s Sunday, though, the Palmer boys w ill put the war m, fuzzy feelmgs on hold for at least three hours.
"My father has had (G.ants) season nc kets smce 1956," Palmer sa1d.
"He's not conung to this game"
Family. ti u~ nd5hips, mistrust and loyalttes ha~e been common
themes 111 Ckvdand thiS week as the Browns (2-7), w ho have lo&gt;t six
&lt;tr.nght aikr a pronusmg start, prepa re to play the G 1ants (6-2).
ThrL'~ of Ck,·dand's start~rs- off~nstv~ tackle R o man Obc-n, safet~ P~rcv F.l!,wnrth and wide- rece1ver Davtd Patten all ca me to th e
Bro\vm .ts unrcstracted free- agC"nts thas past offseason after playtng ln
Nt'\\ York AnJ each of them has talked abou t wanting to show their
form~..·r tL..'.lllt It 111Ji.k .1 mtsta ke m lettmg t hem leave.
'Tv~ been w,1 Itmg for th1s bra nu..• fht a lu ng: tu11e:• s:ud O bcn. " It 's .1
( l.tssu. pbymg:-.tg:Jmst-your-old- tca m gamC". rn be charged up ..
Ells\\orth h.1, )t't tu 111.1ke ,1 btg play fo r the Browns aftt:r makmg l H
uuerc~..·puons l1l t(mr st•asons wlth N~w York , and h e'~ sut e th r: G i an ts
wtll tn· ro emh.1rra~s hnn
"I know tht·y'd love to beat me on o ne long on e pass," he ,satd,
" becouse of .1ll the ta lking I do" "
I):Htt'n wams tO show the Gtants th ~y made a mistake 111 no t stg nmg hmt
"Let me put It thiS wJy." Patten sa id, " I left the re and I haven't
looked back smet·"
· And then there's the ex-Browns factor. Giants o ffe n11ve tackle
Lom.1s Brown spent a tumultuous 1999 expansion season m Cleveland
before bemg rdeJSed and Stgnmg w1 th N ew Yo rk .

•'

Ravens hope to snap scoring slump against Bengals

of

:steelers v. Titanssomething's gotta
:give in Nashville
NASHVILLE,Tenn. (AP) - At • the race," he md. "The Seed ers
least one streak ends today
are back"
The Pittsburgh Steelers have
Pittsburgh wou ld be muc h
played thc~r way back mto the happ1er 1f thiS game were at Three
playotT chase With five straight Rivers Stadium.
v1ctone,, and they feel ready to
T he
Steelers'
turna round
end a s1x-game losmg skid to the almost sta rted there on Sept. 24
Tennessee Tttans, a team they u nti l Steve McNa~r came ofT the
used to dommate
bench wlth a brUised chest' and
But th~ T1tans are the NFL's needed only four plays 111 the final
hottest team, wmners of the1r last 2:35 to pu~ out a 23-20 VIctory.
seven, and they w11l be playmg m
Don't expect a h1gh-scoring
Adelph13 Coliseum on Sunday
game thanks to two of the NFL's
They have yet to lose at home best defenses
when 1t cou nts , and they Jren't
The Steelers (No. 3 overall)
ready to swp JUSt yet
haven't allowed a touchdown m
"W~,.· kno\\- we're gmng to lose
16 quarters, have mne Jntcrcepa game at home:," Titan!\ tackle uons the past five games and lead
John Th o rnton sa~d " Let's JUSt the NFL w1th the fewest touch,
not lc&lt; It be (Sunday)"
downs allowed ulSide the 20
Th.11 atlltude ha s g1vcn the
The Titans (No. 5) have
TH.ll1 !-. (7- 1) 1 potem homcfidd return~d an lntt"rc~ptloll for .1 TO
,H_
i v.l nt:lgL', .md the AFC cbamptm t:ach of theu bst C\\'0 gan1cs
Oil!,· winmng strc.1k Ius sto ked the
Jnd already hav~:.· 1(1 sacks
f.l!l..,· L'nthmi.1 ~I n L~\L'Il h1 gher
Tbt' kl'y will be \Vhol'VL'r stops
I( the THam \\:Ill, riKv wtll gr.tb the run
,1 rlHL'L' -g.llllL' k.1J me1 Pm..,bLirgh
Bl'tt!S has provided most of
(o-.l) 111 thl' AFC: l e11tral w1th
Pittsburgh's ofli:nsc· \lith three
Sl'\L'll g. lllll''\ lt'lli,HIIl ng
100-y.ad ru~lung g.mJL·~ the p.tst
TL'Il!H.'' 'l'L' to.tch Je-ff Ftsht:r month
J oe.;,;n'£ rl1mk It \\Ill be rh:n e.l'o\'
The Ttt:ms h.we struggled smce
" Pl.'opk thought rhts wou ld be Edd1e (icnrgc- spr:uncd .1 kn~e
'
'
.1 t wo -tc.11n LH L' \\ 1th m .w d R1l ligament .It thr: bq~;:mning of their
ttmoll'
(S-4) Pltttiiburgh h.1 s ga mt· .lg:.llmt the B.1 ltnnon:
\\&gt;01 ked l1.1rd ,md Jl'"t'n't"' to be In
R.:wcns on Ocr. 21

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
J tmmy ended up with four of our
T he ever- escalating costs of tires· on the car w hen they won
racing in NASCAR's top sen es th e race."
have led to many changes smce
Dodson 's advtce to M akar on
Barry Dodso n helped Rusty Wal- how to approac h the final three
lace w m the 1989 cha mp10nsh1p. races of the season while le&gt;dmg
Dodson , now crew chi ef for th e points'
rookie M1ke Bliss, said tea ms are
" I'd say, 'Keep domg what
usmg a lot more tec hnology for yo u're doin g Do the best you can
cngmeenng these days. Mu ch of wtth you r preparation. H ave a
1t was n't eve n avai lable back 10 backup plan for every pa rt on that
the 1980s and early '90s.
car that cou ld fat!, but go out
" It fo rces you to have m ore th ere and race th e way you have
personnel, a bigger database, m ore all year."'
wstmg, all the wind-tunnel ume
TOUGH LAYOUT: The 1you car&gt; take advantage of," he nule
Ph oen ix
Internationa l
said "All that adds up to muc h, Race way oval looks sun ple
much greater costs."
enough'.
Among th ose costly Items are
But Dale Jarrett says the dn vers
the hard-card credentials ISSued 111 Sunday's race wtll be facmg
by NASCAR and hangmg by a one of the more dlfEc ult puzzles
'"'P from th e necks of every tn their long seJson of stock car
f\!',1 111 employee on race weekend_
racmg
'Our pnce for hard cards for
"We always talk abou t Darhngour peop le now ts w hat a D over ton havm g one end so totally dJfnrc btU used to be;· Dodson satd
ft: rl! nt from the other, and
So me of the people Dodson has Phoemx 1S that way, too," sa1d the
tramed or worked with have gone defendmg sent!'s cham pion, who
on co su ccessful caree rs of their fimshed s1xth last year at PIR.
own Am o ng then1 is Junmy
" It's a challenge to get the car
Ma kar, crew ch1ef for sen es leader nght for both ends. You really·
Dobby Labonte
can 't co mp romis~ one end fo r the
,; " I'm dated," D o dson said of oth er. You have to be good at
: Ma kar's success.
bo th ends."
: Do dson sa1d that after Bliss
GOOD PLAC E· Tough or not,
·cras hed o ut early at C harlotte last Bobby Hamilton h as a warm spot
' mon th , h e sent every set nf ti res m hts heart for Phoemx lmernahe had over to M akar.
uonal R aceway.
,, " I want to help that program as
The dnver for Morgan:much as I can m their champi- M cClure R acmg started hiS fi rst
!onshlp run/' Dodson said uAnd Wmston C up race at the subu r-

T he R ave ns threw 10 tln}eS o n fi rst down
m the seco nd half and c hallenged a call With
2 minutes left, when B1ll1ek argued that Travis
Taylor got mto the end zone on a recepuon.
Taylor was ruled down at the 1, the R avens
se ttled for a fi eld goal and the Bengals seethed
- Cosl et ran off the fi eld w1tho u t shakm g
Bill1ck 's hand.
" I thmk they were trymg to embarrass us,"
defe nsive l meman John Copeland md. "That's
always stuck 111 the back of o ur m mds. I thmk
what th ey dtd was unp rofessiOnal. There's no
place for that 111 thJS ga m e."
B1llJCk msists he challenged the call w!th 2
mmures left beCausJ he was unhappy w1 th
how the offiCJ;"lls were handlin g the ga m e, not
because he WJ Htt.:'d to rub It m
No matter how It was mtended , tha t's h ow
It was Interpreted
"If they want to take umbrage at that or
w~nt to u~l..' that as mottva tt on on .chCu part,
there's not really mu ch I c.ln do .1bout tlut,"
B1llick s.nd.
It w:~s the favontt- topiL 11 1 the lkng.1ltii
drcssmg room Llst wc.:L!k
"EH.'fvbody's t.1 lkmg rev~..·nge." Sm1th s.nd
ld~h·.u 1 sidestL'pped rhc quesno n of
whether Bti !J ck ra n up th t: SU) I C l nstt_\l d , h e's
tnL·d to get h t ~ team to focus on som~th111 g
d se
"My .mswc.:r to tlut o ne ts: Don't get
IK hmd," LeBeau s.11d "Wiu t the ntht:I guy"
does, h1s r~'.Isons for domg 1t, you h.\\'L:" no
conttol n\'~1 The buttQ lll hue thL're IS for us
not w g;cr behmd 111 that situation"

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grudges onto the field Howev~r, he docs feel he was unfatrly cntJCIZed
for hav111g a subpar season. because he played the whole year with ton)·
knee carubgc.
" It's different when you get cut from a team and you're playing your
old ceam and you want to prove to thct)l that you dctiicrve to be there
I thmk thcv w.mted me back, but what they offered, Jnd what I
thought WJS. fair .md tht' cunmutrnt.'llt for me bt_•ing thr ldt tackle re~~
ly wasn't \\'h,tt I wafii look1ng fur."
Brown, who got a gamt: b.dl f(.)llowin~ Nl'\" York\ WII1 over
Pht~:~th::lphu, SJtd he dllin't want to "snr tlh: pot' ' or g!VL' the Brown!'!
any chalkboard materul this WL'l'k
Then he tr.tshl..'d Palmer
He cl auncJ P:~lmer lied when he told Hll)\\ n hL· \V,\, hemg released
fOr s.tbry c:~p lt'.I~ons Brm\in :~lso s.1a.i thc1c.: \\L'Ie phtlu..,ophtt.lllh,Ot:r:~
emes l..u:tween Clevdand\ front officl' .111d uucl1111g ,ut1.1nd rh;n \'t't;
~..·r.m pl.l\'a~ \\t'rL' nuskd IIlto s1g-mng \\ Ith Lhc.: Bh 1\\'m
AuJ Bmwn s;ud he

lliiC)'

Jh'lll\

1 ~ 11·t Jolll' ulklll~ Il L·

,Jbnut the Brm.vns

111

thl· ltKkl..'r

prom l..,l'l ho dL·Ii\L'I mnrr
HWtll

t{)ll m\ I!l g

Suntl.iy'~

~lllll'

' It .,L't'llh r,_• ponc1" .n~..·n 't th~..· only Dill'S Intt:IL'-.tl'd Ill Ill' 11111g \\ h.lt l1e
h.1.. to ,,1\
"Tdl Lolll;l.\, I'll\ go1ng to sec h1111 on Sund.1y. tllO" ,,!ld Bnn\'ll\' tOt'llL'tlurk &lt;:n i L') Fu lk-1

Congratulations,
Bob Turner
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Bob Turner
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
October.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Po!nt Pleaaent, WV

..
'

Raiders

~

·from Pap B1
•

~ "W e did p1 ck up a very good

1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
446-3672

:No. 2 runn er 111 Emily Lawson , a
fres hma n comin g out w ho baS!~a Uy answered our call for a fifth
1:unner," said Sayre. "Sh e came ou t
•1md 1t was a very pleasant sur~nse She's proba bly the best canj:hdate we 've got comm g back of
h e g1rls returmng.
~ ~'S he has a very flm d r unnm g
:l;tyle. It doesn't hke she's puttmg a
~ot of effort into her runmng,
~ ! tho u gh the efforts there It's not
:!1 pamful look"
'
Lawson had track expen e nce,
but no ne on the m o re d1ffi cult
,.1;ro.ss country courses
She n ot onl y compe ted 111
wnJ&lt;&gt;r h1 gh track, she was also on
he R1ver Va ll ey freshman volleysqmd tim past season .
" O ur volleyball coac hes were
us thlt thiS g ul co uld run,"
d Sayre " Th ey ran a nule every
..,. ........ k fo t ume thro ugho ut the
preseason and durmg the season
, · nd they kept saying th1s g1rl
could run . We fin ally got her In
her fi r5t raLe, she fimshes In thi!
top 50, even wtth a fall. There was
Wi!t grass, and she went to turn
. &gt;nd shpped and fe ll and got up
· She bJ ttled n gh t 111 to. She
coul d've gave up, but she d1dn 't."
Stephanie C u cle w tll be an other key runner expected to co me
back next season.
W tth the lac k of runners
returm ng, the key for the future IS
sttll the abtll ty to recrmt youn ger
ru nners
" l'vt talked to a couple of parents of gtrls wh o w1ll be fres hmen
• next year They are lookin g for. wa rd to commg on and run ning,"
sa.d Sayre
One pomt Sayre makes IS that
R1ver Valley IS 111 a w1desp read
distn ct cover mg most of no rt hern Gallta County w here travel IS
~omet1 mes extensive fro m home
to sc hool
"We've got a couple of sophomores t hat are saym g thetr go mg
to come out next year," sa td
Sayre. "They JUSt couldn't because
of the travel comnutment The
_dtstnct IS so spread out and they
have thetr own vehtcles now So
they do n't luve to walt for the
shuttl e bus for the long tnp
home''
W 1th the graduatiOn of GodWin and Edwards, RIVer Valley
~.)Yill be bUIJdmg WJthout 1t's two
~host successful runners
~ Dutmg h1s sophomore season,
~dw.1rds stl uggled w 1th tunes m
::Q,c low twenties :1[ best H 1s
"· ~nprovcment can be b;~~~:.·J 11l Ius
' ,IS a rlllllll'T
iirts:"k.iJis
"He re;,lly w01 ked l1,1rd." sa1d
'"" Sayre "I Ie's probably my most
~~l!rcbl.l1 1 unner. You can bn:.1k
"""ilown h1s race 1 can t;tlk to hm1
; f about p.Kc and show It to h11n un
:.,..paper. We dtd a lot of preg.une
~'!'!'ilna l yst!\ befm·c a r:1 cc"
,
=~Shawn Taylor currently has the

i

hot would moke
er!
your

iounbap 1J1mtll -llornlintl • Page B9

New technology equals more cost for NASCAR in the 21st Century

san Giants·

E.ulitr thiS week, Brown spent neari)' .me-half hour on a teleconference with C leveland reporters nppmg the Browns and coach Chns
Palmer, w ho he says IS too inOextble and unwtlling to listen to hts players.
" It can't be 'Me, me, me,"' Brown ~atd "There's a pomt where it ha s
to be 'We. Not n1c. We."'
Can you feel the love , or what'
G tants coach Jun Fasscl mll h&gt;S h1g:h regard for IllS former player&gt;,
and now says he was so1 ry to see tlu;m go
" I liked every one of thost' guy,," ~assd s.ud.
Fassel was .:speCially fOnd of P.ttrL~ n, the Browm · ~econd- lt"ad111g
receiver and best dt•t•p thre.lt
" It kt lh."d llll' \ hen I lost l11m," Et!~.scl 1,a1d ''I've ,l h\ ,JV~ hkcd I hv•d.
but we Wt"re so tight wtth thl· s.tl.u v c.1p.''
.
Patten was confint•d to hemg .1 mn,tly a . . penal tL':tm'i pla~er wah
the G i.uns In thret.• se,li,O!Is. he l.Higln J3 p.l'i\1..'~ t(,r 4(10 ya1d~ Hl' Ins
.1lmost mJtcht"d those tot.ll!&lt;t 111 JU~t !line garlic w1th thl' Uro\-.:m
'"The Gt:lllt!'t ~aH· lllL' an oppo1runHy to pl.ty Ill rh1s J~,.·,lglll-; P.ntcn
satd." B ut t hcTi.·'s no lt.WL' lost the re It w.h ,, clt.u1gc of~Lcncty .md ,thL
opportumty to phy he~e· l'tl be ly111g 1f 1 ,,ud I thdn't h1ghh);ht the
br.t mt: when the schcduk!&lt;t caml' out I'm L'XLitL'd to pb) ag.tJmt gun I
was w tth for three yt.:,m, ..
Pa tt~:n h:ts b~:cn slowed by tud- roe the p.1\t few Wl-eks , but s,11d
t h ~re 's no way he'll slt o ut Sund.ty.
"The-y'll have to na my leg ofr to h·l'p me from pl.1ymg," hl' tii:tid.
In esst•nct", fret• :tgem:y a ll ow~..·d the B rowns ,w d Gums to !-.wap left
tac kles, Wtth the d1 sgruntkd, 37-yc.u-old Bwwn gmng to New York
for thl' 28-year-old Oben, a three-year st:~.rtc-r 111 New York
The G1ants attempted to keep ()ben, but dec1dcd th.Jt they cou ldn't match the three-yc:~ r. $10.8 nu lhon contract Cleveland w.1s ofT&lt;..· rmg
O ben mststs he 1sn't bitter about the break-up and won't take any

C INC IN NAT I (AP) - As they rolled up
"Ui&gt; won that game cotu•incingly, but
and down the field on that overcast Septemit was tlte .•tart of sonutlring. W.• h.td 10
ber afternoon , the Baltimore R avens had no
penalties. Once we got in the red .::one,
sense that d1saste r was one fhp of the calendar
away.
111e had illegal proud11re, the fumble, the
M aybe they should have seen it coming
holding, the nrissed assigmnents. We /tad
Looking back on the 11 37-0 VICtory over
a lot tlliugs tl1atwere the sta rt of
the Cmcmnao Bengals on Sept. 24, the
sometlling we did11'tjoresu,''
Ravens now sec the warmng Signs of one of
the worst offenSive slumps m modern NFL
Sllennon Sho,.,., Rovono tight end
history.
"We won that game convmcmgly, but It touchdowns.
' was the sta rt of some thmg," ught end ShanHe was benched last week m favo r of D•lnon Sharpe satd "We had 10 penalties. On ce fer, wh o will face a much differe nt Bengals
· we got m the red zone, we had illegal proce- te.m o n Sunday.
dure, the fumble, the holdi ng, the nussed
T he ~avens ' domination o n Sept. 14 was
aSSignments We , had a lot ofthmgs that we re so tho rough that coach .ll ru ce Coslet q ult the
the start of so methmg we dtdn 't fo resee."
next day,leavmg Dick LeB eau m charge.
The Ravens (5-4) haven 't reac hed th e end
The defensive coordinato r has decided to
~ zan~ sulCe, gmng 0-for-October
put the game 111 the hands of ru nnmg back
: Headmg tnto the1 r rematch wuh the Ben- Co rey D1llon mstead of the me xpen enced
: ga ls {2-(&gt;). the Ravens have a strea k of ftve Smith, and C mcmnatl has wo n m la st two
games ,md ~0 quarters wtthom a touchdown.
The Benga ls se~ the re m atc h as a measu re
That's the Jongt!'st st rea k w itho ut a touch- of how far they've come. In the first g.une,
. duwn Slllll' tht' Coles went 21 quarte rs w tth- ' Dillo n m anaged o nly 9 yards on 12 car ne:-;
: out one.: 111 1991. No ot her team has gont• and the Bengals fi niShed With 4 ya nls rushing
: longer "II Ill' tiR· NFL ntcrgL'r 111 1970.
o n 16 attempts
• "ll1.1t's unbdlt'vabli!." Bengals q uar tt!'rb:tc k
Is the Bengals' resurgence o flu ke? ThJS
· Ak oh Snutb s.ud "I thought connng 111to the ga m e w 11l tdl
year that (coat h) Bnan B1 lilck w.1s tillS offen" I know th ey're dym g to get a touchdcmn,
SIVe gemus, wh.acver the N FL had labeled but thls tea m 's hun ger ts greater than ~vcr
: hmt :~s.
befo re," hn ebackcr Takeo ·Sp1kes sJid emphat• "They're strugglmg on offense. Tony Banks Ica lly "Our desi re IS burmng to show that thts
' IS not pl.tymg \\odl, Jnd I guess Trent D1lfe r IS no t the same team "
Jtdn 't play real wdl last week, &lt;lther."'
There's another m ouva u o n. T he Bcngals
Banks h.1d a b1g game agamst the Bengals, arc convmccd tha t BtUJck ra n up the score tilL'
completmg 20-of-36 for 196 yards and two b st ttm l' .1rou nd

,Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunda~November5 , 2000

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

....
l

...

-

'

-

..

school record on th e' boys s1de,
I 8:1 2 that he sat at the distncts
last year.Thts was a mark Edwards
w as shnvmg for H e really wanted
to get our sc hool reco rd, bu t h1s
goal was to make reg10nals"
The dtfference w as that Taylor
had fellow semor Keith Stout
runnmg close with him E dwards
was alone dunng most of the
m eets

"That's one thin g about T.R 's
accomphshments thi s year was
that h e had no body to run With
o n the team," sa1d Sayre. " A lot of
the trammg was on h1s own"
O n the o the r Side, Godw111 had
Lawson
to
co m pe te
wtth
throughout most o f the season
"For us to get (to the reg10 nals)
as a team. we nt!'ed five girls wtth
Megan Godwm 's cahber or bette r," said Sayre " There's potenttal
at thJS sc hool to have th at."
Jessica R oberts, w it h a ttm e of
21 06, still has the gtrls' record,
w h1ch she set 111 1996
Eve n with a rec rumn g effort
among th e student body, the ma111
road block w11l be 111 the spor t
1tself
Cross countt y 1s m ll cons1dered
a sport that draws h ttlc mtercst
among htgh school and JUn ior
h1 gh ki ds compared to that other
fall spo rt - foot ball . C roll countty, though , co uld be more than
JUSt a co mpcuove sport.
" It seems that a lot of kids here
111 sc hool are saym g m aybe I
shoul d h ave ran," sa1d Sayre.
" EspeCi ally the kids w ho have
gone throu gh basketball preseaso n cond1t10m ng. Seem g that
th ey co ul d've b enefite d from
wnn\ng. Th ere's other kids who
d1dn't eve n know anything about
cross country as juni or ht ghers,
wh1 ch is partly my fault for not
gmng out and exp lamm g"
The need fo r success. though,
can scare away pote ntial run ners
"Kids commg to thJS sciJool
thm k they have to ru n 1mmcd1ately to be as good as the n umber
one runn er the fi rst day, but H
takes ume to bu dd up," satd Sayre.
"Edwards' has taken th ree years to
get where he's at. You J USt don't
co me m as a natural runner. You
see very few of those people who
come 111 that can natu rally run
and have no problems"
But hke most other md1v1dual
sports, success ts bm1t on pe rsonal
achievements The responSJbiiJty
un also dnve away potenttal runners
''Cross country 1s not that hard
of a sport," said Sayre "It's b:mc:J.lly puttmg the left foot 111 front of
the.: nght foot ~wd JUSt rcpeanng
It It\ a sport a lot of ktds now a
d.1ys don't w.mt to be 111 b~c.wse
It's .1ll on the i r shoulders
"Once the gun goes off. I h,l\'C
no colltr~l ofch~..· r:u::e, whnl" as 1n
football and basketball yoll have a
little bJt comrol," Savre added "If
a player JS dmpg bad: you can Jerk
htm out :md try ~umebody else
You c;m't do that 111 .1 the nuddk·
of a nos-; country race No tuncnuts

ban Phoemx track 1n October
1989, dnving a moVIe car for
"Days ofThunder."
H e earn ed hts first Winston
Cup wm at PI R m 1996 and earher th1s year at the track, he
rec,1ved hiS first trophy as an

owner in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Senes race.
H am,ilton, who's looking for a
new nde m 2001, would love to
fimsh the season on a h1gh note.
Phoemx 1S a good place to do
that.

"It is a pretty neat deal to have
accomplished so much
at
Phoemx," he S31d. "I'm lookmg
forward to racing there Our team
had a great run going at Talladega
a few weeks ago and then a top10 at Rockingha m. It feels good

to have th1s team in contention
agam. I feel confident we can wm
one ofthese last three race's."
STAT OF THE WEEK:
Mark Ma rtin leads all dnver~
wnh 10 top-10 fimshes at
Phoenix.

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2000 Chevy CavallorZ241943819,000 m1les, Red , Bal of Fact
Warranty, AT, AC, 111t, Cru ise, PW&amp;L. Sporlwhoels ........... .. .$14,275.
2000 Ford Muotang 19440· 13,000 miles, Groen, AT, AC, 1111. Crulse,Bal
of Fact Warranty, AC , AM/FM/CD , Sportwheals ........................ $16,695.
2000 Ford Touruo SES 19434· 28,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Crulsa,Bal of
Fact Warranty, AC, AT, Sportwheels ... .. ... .. .. ...... ... .... ...$15,540
2000 Dodgolnlropld 19418- 29,000 m11es, AT, AC, 111t, Crulse,Bal of
Fact Warranty, AC, PW&amp;L,Sportwheels ...... ,., .,, ... .,, ..... $16,195
2000 Chevy lmpalal9400·19,000 miles, "Loaded" .......... ,.$17, 995
1999 Chevy Covollor.Z2419417· 6,000 miles, Sunroof, AT, AC. 1111,
PW&amp;L, Bal of Fact Warranty, Sunroof, Sporlwheels .. .,., . .... .. .,., $15,195
1999 Pontiac Orand Prix OT N9398 • AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L ... ... .
"""' "' "'" " ' ""' "' .......... " "' " " """" ................ $14,420
1999 Mercury Sable OS 119401 . 22,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Crulse,Bal of
Fact Warranty, Sporlwheels ............................, .... $13,350
1999 Chevy Malibu 19402· 30,000 miles, AT, AC , 111t, CrUise,Bal or Fact
Warranty, PW&amp;L. ............. ,., ........................ $12,270
1999 Mercury Myotlquoll9397· AT, AC , 111t, Cruise,PW&amp;L .. ., .. $11 ,910
19WPonllacGrondAmSEI93n· ........... . ... ., .... $12,995
1m Morcury Cougar 119360- Rod ........ ., .. .. .........$15,495
19$9 Chevy Prlzm 119287 · 10,000 Miles , Sal of Fact. Warr.. AT, AC,
PW&amp;L. 111t, CrUise .................... ., .............. ..... ... .............. .. $12,495.
19$9 Ponlloc OrondAm 119312· AT, AC, 11~. Cruise, PW&amp;L,
.. ., ................ ., .............. ... .... . ...................................... $13,,, 6~•5.
Chevy Mlllbu 119441· 25,000 miles. V-6, AT, AC, 1111, I , I
Fact Warranty, AC, PW&amp;L., ................ ........ .. ... .. ............ $13,575
1998 Ford Contour 119390 SE· AT, AC, 111t, Crulse,PW&amp;L Sportwhoels
'' "' "'" " " " " ' ' " """" ... """" ""' "' """""" , $12.915
1998 Mercury Grend Marqulo f9307 · V·8 Eng, AT, AC, 1111, CrUise,
Windows &amp;seat., ., . .. ......... .,, ............. .. .,., ...$15,795.
1998 Pontiac Sunllroll9385· AT, AC, 111t, Cruise, Rear Defrost,
Cassette.. .. ... .. .. .. .. . .. . .. ... .. . .. .. ...... .... $10,995
1998 Ford Muotang QT 19327 • AC, PW&amp;L, Pwr Seal, 1111, Cruise,
Cassette, Sportwheels ............. .. .... ........ ., ....... ,.,., .. ., .......... $16, 595
1998 Pontiac Grand Am GT 19443-5 Speed; AC,AM/FM/CD$10.995
1998 Nlooan Sonlra N9322 . Bal of Fact Warr, AC, Cassette, Rear
Oefrosl... .. ... .. .. ... ... ... ... ... . .. .. .. ,. .. ....... ....... $11 ,695
1997 OldoAurora 19314· While, AT, AC , 1111, Cru1se,PW&amp;L, PS, V8
Sporlwheels ............. ., ... .................................... $1 5,995
1997 Buick Skylark 119383 ·AT, AC , 111t, Cru ise, PW&amp;L, Cassette, Alloy
Wheels ... .. ., .................................... ......................... $10,600
1997 Dodgelnlropld 119177· AT, AC, 1111, Crulse,PW&amp;L, Cass. $9,995
1997 Ford Escort LX S/W 119378 · AT, AC , 1111, CrUise, Keyless Entry ..
"""" """' " ""'"" "' "" ... ", " ' " '
' " " .... " ... $8,995
1997 Chevy Camara Convortfblo19368 • AT. AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L
" " ' ... "' " " ... ""' """""' "' "' """"""' ...... "' " .. $14995
1997 Olda Arora Nfl355 • AT, AC , Tilt, Cru1se, AM/FM/CO, Power Seats,
Power Sunroof, "LOADED" .. . . . ................ ., .........1.... $15,295
1997 Dodgolntrepld 119177· While, AT, AC, Till, CrUise , PW&amp;L .......... ..
"""" "' "' " " ' "'
' " ' ... ' " " ... " ... " .. $9,995.
1997 Chevy Lumina LS 119239· Green, AC , AT, 1111, Crwse, PW&amp;L. Pwr
Leather Seats, Sportwhoels ... . .. .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... . .. $10,920.
1997 Buick Park Avonuoll9235' · Green. AT, AC, Lealher Power Seats,
PW&amp;L, 111t, CrUise ........................................... ,..... $14,325.
1996 Ford Contour 119301 ·AT, AC, 111t, Cruise ..... ... ......... $7,595.
1996 Dodge Intrepid 119365 · AT, AC , 1111, CrUise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Cass
"' " " "' ' ' ' " ' " ' ' '
" " ' " " "' .......... $7,995.
1996 Dodge Neon 119362· 4 Door, Red, AT, AC , ................ $6,495
1996 Dodge Intrepid 19437· AT, AC, 111t, CrUise, V6, PW&amp;L,
AM/FM/cassette .. .. ... ..... ... .... . ... .. ... . ............ $8,995
1996 Toyota Corolla 119412· 1 AT, AC, , AM/FM/CD, Rear Del..$8,995
1996 Saturn SC2119367-AT, AC , TiH, CrUise, PW&amp;L, .......... $9,995
1995 Ford T·blrd 19375· 53,000 m1ies, AT, AC, Tilt, CrUise, Power Seat
... " " "
' ' " "' ' " " ' ' ' "' " ""' """"""' .... $8,995
1995 Plymouth Neon 19415 • AT, AC, AM/FM{Cass ...... ... ..$4,995
1995 Ford Muetang Convarllblell9336 · AT, AC, PW&amp;L, Sportwheels ,
Power Seats ...... ... .. . ... ... .. . ... .. ... . . . .. ... .. ..... $10,995

1996 Ford Contour 119112· AM/FM/Cass. AC, Till, Cru1se PW&amp;L$7, 995
1994 Ford T·Bird Super Coupel9408· V-6, Supercharged, AT, AC, Till ,
Cru1se, Leather Seats, Sportwheels.. .... .. ..... ... .. .. ... .. . $8,995
1994 Pontiac Sunblrd 19413· AC , 5 Speed &amp; more .... .... .. .. $4,995
1994 Eagle Vl,lon 19422· , AT, AC, 1111, CrUise, Cassetta, PW&amp;L
"' " " "' " " " " ' ' ' ' "' ' "' ' " " ................. $7,995
1994 Chevy Cornaro 19436·5 speed, AM/FM/CD, Sportwhee ls, PW&amp;L,
Tilt, CrUise ... ......... .... . . . . . .. . . , ................ $6,595
1994 Lincoln Mark VIII I 9344 • AT, AC, 1111, CrUISe, PW&amp;L, Lealher
Seals, Power Sun Roof .... . .. .. .. . ... .. .. ... .. . . .. $10,695
1994 Old a BB N9374- Lealher Power Seats, AT, AC, Till, CrUise, PW&amp; L,
"' " "' " " ' ' " " ' ""' " ... " "' """" " " "' " " ' $6,695
1993 Mercury Sablell9151 ·AT, AC. 111t, CrUise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Cass
""' "' " " "" ". ' " ' "" "' "" '" """"' .......... " ... $2.995.

4x4, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, Spcrlwheels., ...................... ... $17,995
2000 Suzuki Grond Vlloro4x4111334 • 5,000 Milas · Bal of Fact Warr.,

4x4, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, Sportwheels ...... ., ... ... ......... ... $17,995
1998 Jaep Chorokae Spor1182117· 4x4, PW&amp;L, Till, Cruise, Spl Whl,
Roof Rack .. ........ ., .... ., ............... .......... ............ .............. $16,595
1998 Chevy Troclcor 4x4 19211· Bal of Fact Warranly, Convertible,
Sportwheela .................................. ............. ., ....................... $10.995
1998 Ford Explorer XLT 4x411348 • AT, AC , Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Sportwheels, AM/FM/CO .................................. ,.... ,................... $1 8,825
1997 Jaep ChorokH 4x4 1192118-Ciasslc, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Sport
Wheels ...... ., ......... ., ... . ... '...... .,, ............................ $14,600
1998 Dodge Durongo4x419413· AT, AC, Till, C•u ise, VS Eng,
Sportwheels ................... ..... ... .............................$21 ,995
1997 JHp Wronglor 4x419329 · 28,000 miles , Sportwheels,
Convertible &amp; More..................... .. ., ... .................... .....$14,695.
1997 Ford Explorer 4x4193li4·Rad/Silver, AWO , PW&amp;L, Pwr Seal,
Sportwheels, 111t, Cruise ............................ ., ............................... $1 8,925
1996 OMC Jimmy 4x411282· AT, AC, 111t, Cruise, Power Leather Seats,
Sportwheels . ........... .............. ............................. , .. $15,995.
1996 Ford Exploror 4x4119407· XLT, AT, AC , 1111, PW&amp;L.. ....... $14,59~
19911 Chevy Blozor 4x418220- Groen, AT, AC , 1111, CrUISe, PW&amp;L, Pwr
Seals, Sport Wheels. ... .... .. .. ... ... ... .. .... .. .... ..
..$13,800.
1995 Hondo Ponport LX 4X4 N9281 ·4Dr, PW&amp;L, 111t, Cruise, Sport
wheels, Cassette .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... ... .. .... .. ... ... . .$t3,595
1996 Chevy Blozor 4x419303· AT. AC, 1111, CrUise, Alloy Wheels, Rool
Rack ..................... ........ .... . .. .. .. .... ., ... ....... .. . .$14,995
1994 Ford Exploror 111242 · 4x4 · Red. XLT.Sport, AT, AC, 111t, Cruise,
Sportwheals ............................ ., .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ., ... .... . .. .. .... .. .. ..$7,995

19$9 Ford F·2504x4 Suporcab N9236- AC, Quad Doors, Tow Pkg,
Sportwheels.. .. ....... ... ..... ..... ., . .., ........................ ., .. $24,350.
1998 Ford Rongor 4x4 XLT 19296 · v6 Eng , Supercab, 111t, Cruise, AC,
Sportwheels.. ............. .............. ... ... ........................$16,495
1998 Chevy K·1500 1192i2 · Z71 Off Road · V·8 eng., Sportwheels, Pwr
Locks, Trailer Pkg, AM/FM/CD. ... .... ... .. .. ... .. ... .. .. $17,995.
1996 Ford F150 4x419184· V8 Eng., AT,AC, 8' lied, Spt Wh .$t3,800.
1998 Ford Rongor 4x4119060- 011 Road , V6 Eng .. 111t, Cruise,
AM/FM/CD ,
Wheels ........ ., .. ., ................ ............. .... ..... $t8,995.

1998 Chevy 510 Extra Cab 119293 • LS , AC, Cassette, Alloy Wheels,
Rear Slider ................................. ., ... ... .. .... .. .. . .. $13,695
1999 Dodge Rom 1500 SLT 119371· 28,000 Miles, Bal of Faclory
Warranty ....................... .. ..... ........... ., ............. $16,875
1997 Ford Rengor Splash 11921)6. AT, AC , V6 Eng., 111t, Cru1se,
Sporlwheels.. .. .... . . .. . ... .. .. .... ... . . . ... ... .. . .$10,595
1998 Ford Rongor 19444· 22,000 m1les, Bal of Fact Warranty
' ""' """" "' .... """""""' ... ' " "' ' ' ' " ' """ " $11 ,695
1997 Ford Ft50 Suporcab 119055 ·Red AC , AT, Cassette, PW&amp;L, Spa~
Wheels, Bedllner....... .... .... ........... .... ..
... .. . .. . $13,995
1996 Chevy SID Suporcab 119231 • V-6 Engine, Spt Whls
$8,995
1995 F150 119044· 2 Tone pa1n1, AC, XLT, Sportwheels, 1111, Cruise.
... "' "... ' " ' ... ... " .: ' ... "' " "' " "' "" '" .$6,995
1994 Nlnan Truck 119276· 48,000 M1ies, K1ng Cab, AC, Sportwheels .
""""""' " ' " '" ... "' " .. "'' ...
'' "' ........ "' .$1 0,500
1994 Ford Ft5019319· XLT, AT, AC, V-8 Eng , Tin, Cru1se, Sportwhaels
"' "" ... """"' "" "' ... ' "' " " ' " " '" ' " "' " $9,995
1993 Chevy S1DII9300 · V6 Engine, 5 Speed, AC , Sport Wheels .. .
"' "' ' .... "' "' ... "' "" ""'""" """"""' ............ '"
$6,595
1993 Ford Ranger 119367 ·. ... ........ .... ....................... .. .. $4,995
1993 Ford F150 19409· XL, 6 Cyl, AC, Topper ..................... $7,695

1992 Plymoulh Voyager Van N!IOII5. .. ..................... .. ...$3,995
1991 Ford Ft50. 4x4 oupercab 19425 • Lanat, AT. AC, 8' Bed, PW&amp;L,
Sportwheels ... ... ... .... .. ... , .. . .................. $7.995
1992 Dodge Ram 1500 19406 . 2 Tone pa1nt, V8 eng1 ne, AT, AC, Tilt ,
CrUise .. .,... .... ... ... .... ..
.$7,995
1991 Toyota Truck 119445 ·. .. . ..
... $2500
1985 Ford F·t5019432 ·One owner, AT.. ...

1998 Ford Wlndotor 119376· 26,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Cru1se,Bal of
Fact Warranty, PW&amp;L .... ...... ........ .. .. .. ... .
$16,925
1998 Ford Wlndotar 119376 · 26,000 M1ies, Bal ol Fact Warr .. $15,995
1998 Ford Wlndotor 119392·, AT, AC. Ti lt, Cruise, PW&amp;L ...
$t4 230
1998 Dodge Caravan *9349 · 3t ,000 miles, Bal of Facl Warr, AT, AC.
1111, CrUise , Sportwheels, PW&amp;L . . . .. . . .. ... . .. $16,995
1997 Ford Econollne Van Conv ersion 19229 - 4 Captam charrs , AT,

AC, 111t, Cruise.... .... .. .. ... .,.
. .. . .. .. . .. $t5,995
1997 Dodge Rom 15 Pou ongor 1360 · V·8 Eng., A), AC, Till, Cru1se,
PW&amp;L ................... :.... ., ... . . . .
. . ..
.. $11,995
1997 Ford Extended Corgo Van . E250 AT, AC, Work Rack $9,995
1997 Chryelor Town &amp;Country Van 119275· Quad sealing, AT, AC, Rear
AC, Tilt, CrUise, PW&amp;L, Power Seat.............................. $18,228
1997 Chev Vonluro Van 119272 · LS, AT. AC. ,Quad Sealing. $t4,995
1997 Plymouth Voyager Van 19321 ·Grand Rally E ·Rear AC , 4 Dr, AT,
1111 CrUise. Sportw~eels ... . . ..
$14,995
1996 Ford Wlndstorii9381-.AT, AC. Tift , Cruise . PW&amp;L ..... $11,695
1995 Plymouth Voyagerl9389· AT, AC. 7 Passenger. V6 eng .. $4,995
1995 P.lymouth Voyagerl9369 ·AT, AC, 111t, CrUise, . ,., , ... $4,995
1994 Plymouth Voyager SENII278 -, AC, AT, AM/FM, Cass, Tilt, CrUise
' ' ' ' " ' " ' ' ' ' '' ' ' ' ' " "" " ' $4,995
1994 Ch evy Aatro Van Conv. l9337- AT, AC, Tilt, CrUise , Pwr Windows

&amp;Locks. .
1993 Ford Aatro Van eNII363· AC, AT, T1it, Cru&gt;se, PW&amp;L

$6,695
. $4,595

NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL
FEBRUARY 2001

�...
Page B8 • imnbap Q:imtt ·iiofnhnrl

...•:•••

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Animos·

Is B

CLEVELAND (A P) - Those throwback " ny" helmets the New
York Gtants are weanng this season have brought back speC!almemones for Cleveland Browns coach C hns Palmer.
Palmer grew up m the shadow of N ew York City, and vividly
remembers summer afternoons Wlth h1s dad and brothers watchmg
Y A. Ti!tle, Sam Huff and Frank Giffonl swea t through trainmg camp.
Th1s Sunday, though, the Palmer boys w ill put the war m, fuzzy feelmgs on hold for at least three hours.
"My father has had (G.ants) season nc kets smce 1956," Palmer sa1d.
"He's not conung to this game"
Family. ti u~ nd5hips, mistrust and loyalttes ha~e been common
themes 111 Ckvdand thiS week as the Browns (2-7), w ho have lo&gt;t six
&lt;tr.nght aikr a pronusmg start, prepa re to play the G 1ants (6-2).
ThrL'~ of Ck,·dand's start~rs- off~nstv~ tackle R o man Obc-n, safet~ P~rcv F.l!,wnrth and wide- rece1ver Davtd Patten all ca me to th e
Bro\vm .ts unrcstracted free- agC"nts thas past offseason after playtng ln
Nt'\\ York AnJ each of them has talked abou t wanting to show their
form~..·r tL..'.lllt It 111Ji.k .1 mtsta ke m lettmg t hem leave.
'Tv~ been w,1 Itmg for th1s bra nu..• fht a lu ng: tu11e:• s:ud O bcn. " It 's .1
( l.tssu. pbymg:-.tg:Jmst-your-old- tca m gamC". rn be charged up ..
Ells\\orth h.1, )t't tu 111.1ke ,1 btg play fo r the Browns aftt:r makmg l H
uuerc~..·puons l1l t(mr st•asons wlth N~w York , and h e'~ sut e th r: G i an ts
wtll tn· ro emh.1rra~s hnn
"I know tht·y'd love to beat me on o ne long on e pass," he ,satd,
" becouse of .1ll the ta lking I do" "
I):Htt'n wams tO show the Gtants th ~y made a mistake 111 no t stg nmg hmt
"Let me put It thiS wJy." Patten sa id, " I left the re and I haven't
looked back smet·"
· And then there's the ex-Browns factor. Giants o ffe n11ve tackle
Lom.1s Brown spent a tumultuous 1999 expansion season m Cleveland
before bemg rdeJSed and Stgnmg w1 th N ew Yo rk .

•'

Ravens hope to snap scoring slump against Bengals

of

:steelers v. Titanssomething's gotta
:give in Nashville
NASHVILLE,Tenn. (AP) - At • the race," he md. "The Seed ers
least one streak ends today
are back"
The Pittsburgh Steelers have
Pittsburgh wou ld be muc h
played thc~r way back mto the happ1er 1f thiS game were at Three
playotT chase With five straight Rivers Stadium.
v1ctone,, and they feel ready to
T he
Steelers'
turna round
end a s1x-game losmg skid to the almost sta rted there on Sept. 24
Tennessee Tttans, a team they u nti l Steve McNa~r came ofT the
used to dommate
bench wlth a brUised chest' and
But th~ T1tans are the NFL's needed only four plays 111 the final
hottest team, wmners of the1r last 2:35 to pu~ out a 23-20 VIctory.
seven, and they w11l be playmg m
Don't expect a h1gh-scoring
Adelph13 Coliseum on Sunday
game thanks to two of the NFL's
They have yet to lose at home best defenses
when 1t cou nts , and they Jren't
The Steelers (No. 3 overall)
ready to swp JUSt yet
haven't allowed a touchdown m
"W~,.· kno\\- we're gmng to lose
16 quarters, have mne Jntcrcepa game at home:," Titan!\ tackle uons the past five games and lead
John Th o rnton sa~d " Let's JUSt the NFL w1th the fewest touch,
not lc&lt; It be (Sunday)"
downs allowed ulSide the 20
Th.11 atlltude ha s g1vcn the
The Titans (No. 5) have
TH.ll1 !-. (7- 1) 1 potem homcfidd return~d an lntt"rc~ptloll for .1 TO
,H_
i v.l nt:lgL', .md the AFC cbamptm t:ach of theu bst C\\'0 gan1cs
Oil!,· winmng strc.1k Ius sto ked the
Jnd already hav~:.· 1(1 sacks
f.l!l..,· L'nthmi.1 ~I n L~\L'Il h1 gher
Tbt' kl'y will be \Vhol'VL'r stops
I( the THam \\:Ill, riKv wtll gr.tb the run
,1 rlHL'L' -g.llllL' k.1J me1 Pm..,bLirgh
Bl'tt!S has provided most of
(o-.l) 111 thl' AFC: l e11tral w1th
Pittsburgh's ofli:nsc· \lith three
Sl'\L'll g. lllll''\ lt'lli,HIIl ng
100-y.ad ru~lung g.mJL·~ the p.tst
TL'Il!H.'' 'l'L' to.tch Je-ff Ftsht:r month
J oe.;,;n'£ rl1mk It \\Ill be rh:n e.l'o\'
The Ttt:ms h.we struggled smce
" Pl.'opk thought rhts wou ld be Edd1e (icnrgc- spr:uncd .1 kn~e
'
'
.1 t wo -tc.11n LH L' \\ 1th m .w d R1l ligament .It thr: bq~;:mning of their
ttmoll'
(S-4) Pltttiiburgh h.1 s ga mt· .lg:.llmt the B.1 ltnnon:
\\&gt;01 ked l1.1rd ,md Jl'"t'n't"' to be In
R.:wcns on Ocr. 21

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
J tmmy ended up with four of our
T he ever- escalating costs of tires· on the car w hen they won
racing in NASCAR's top sen es th e race."
have led to many changes smce
Dodson 's advtce to M akar on
Barry Dodso n helped Rusty Wal- how to approac h the final three
lace w m the 1989 cha mp10nsh1p. races of the season while le&gt;dmg
Dodson , now crew chi ef for th e points'
rookie M1ke Bliss, said tea ms are
" I'd say, 'Keep domg what
usmg a lot more tec hnology for yo u're doin g Do the best you can
cngmeenng these days. Mu ch of wtth you r preparation. H ave a
1t was n't eve n avai lable back 10 backup plan for every pa rt on that
the 1980s and early '90s.
car that cou ld fat!, but go out
" It fo rces you to have m ore th ere and race th e way you have
personnel, a bigger database, m ore all year."'
wstmg, all the wind-tunnel ume
TOUGH LAYOUT: The 1you car&gt; take advantage of," he nule
Ph oen ix
Internationa l
said "All that adds up to muc h, Race way oval looks sun ple
much greater costs."
enough'.
Among th ose costly Items are
But Dale Jarrett says the dn vers
the hard-card credentials ISSued 111 Sunday's race wtll be facmg
by NASCAR and hangmg by a one of the more dlfEc ult puzzles
'"'P from th e necks of every tn their long seJson of stock car
f\!',1 111 employee on race weekend_
racmg
'Our pnce for hard cards for
"We always talk abou t Darhngour peop le now ts w hat a D over ton havm g one end so totally dJfnrc btU used to be;· Dodson satd
ft: rl! nt from the other, and
So me of the people Dodson has Phoemx 1S that way, too," sa1d the
tramed or worked with have gone defendmg sent!'s cham pion, who
on co su ccessful caree rs of their fimshed s1xth last year at PIR.
own Am o ng then1 is Junmy
" It's a challenge to get the car
Ma kar, crew ch1ef for sen es leader nght for both ends. You really·
Dobby Labonte
can 't co mp romis~ one end fo r the
,; " I'm dated," D o dson said of oth er. You have to be good at
: Ma kar's success.
bo th ends."
: Do dson sa1d that after Bliss
GOOD PLAC E· Tough or not,
·cras hed o ut early at C harlotte last Bobby Hamilton h as a warm spot
' mon th , h e sent every set nf ti res m hts heart for Phoemx lmernahe had over to M akar.
uonal R aceway.
,, " I want to help that program as
The dnver for Morgan:much as I can m their champi- M cClure R acmg started hiS fi rst
!onshlp run/' Dodson said uAnd Wmston C up race at the subu r-

T he R ave ns threw 10 tln}eS o n fi rst down
m the seco nd half and c hallenged a call With
2 minutes left, when B1ll1ek argued that Travis
Taylor got mto the end zone on a recepuon.
Taylor was ruled down at the 1, the R avens
se ttled for a fi eld goal and the Bengals seethed
- Cosl et ran off the fi eld w1tho u t shakm g
Bill1ck 's hand.
" I thmk they were trymg to embarrass us,"
defe nsive l meman John Copeland md. "That's
always stuck 111 the back of o ur m mds. I thmk
what th ey dtd was unp rofessiOnal. There's no
place for that 111 thJS ga m e."
B1llJCk msists he challenged the call w!th 2
mmures left beCausJ he was unhappy w1 th
how the offiCJ;"lls were handlin g the ga m e, not
because he WJ Htt.:'d to rub It m
No matter how It was mtended , tha t's h ow
It was Interpreted
"If they want to take umbrage at that or
w~nt to u~l..' that as mottva tt on on .chCu part,
there's not really mu ch I c.ln do .1bout tlut,"
B1llick s.nd.
It w:~s the favontt- topiL 11 1 the lkng.1ltii
drcssmg room Llst wc.:L!k
"EH.'fvbody's t.1 lkmg rev~..·nge." Sm1th s.nd
ld~h·.u 1 sidestL'pped rhc quesno n of
whether Bti !J ck ra n up th t: SU) I C l nstt_\l d , h e's
tnL·d to get h t ~ team to focus on som~th111 g
d se
"My .mswc.:r to tlut o ne ts: Don't get
IK hmd," LeBeau s.11d "Wiu t the ntht:I guy"
does, h1s r~'.Isons for domg 1t, you h.\\'L:" no
conttol n\'~1 The buttQ lll hue thL're IS for us
not w g;cr behmd 111 that situation"

per month
for 60 months•

- MF 271XYou'll have a hard time try ;ng to top the va lu e of
a 59 PTO hp MF 271 X tractor. And right now,
we have an 1ncred1ble offer · like special
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so stop in soon for a test drive

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2150 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631
Phone: 7 40-446-9777
www.jimsfarm.com

grudges onto the field Howev~r, he docs feel he was unfatrly cntJCIZed
for hav111g a subpar season. because he played the whole year with ton)·
knee carubgc.
" It's different when you get cut from a team and you're playing your
old ceam and you want to prove to thct)l that you dctiicrve to be there
I thmk thcv w.mted me back, but what they offered, Jnd what I
thought WJS. fair .md tht' cunmutrnt.'llt for me bt_•ing thr ldt tackle re~~
ly wasn't \\'h,tt I wafii look1ng fur."
Brown, who got a gamt: b.dl f(.)llowin~ Nl'\" York\ WII1 over
Pht~:~th::lphu, SJtd he dllin't want to "snr tlh: pot' ' or g!VL' the Brown!'!
any chalkboard materul this WL'l'k
Then he tr.tshl..'d Palmer
He cl auncJ P:~lmer lied when he told Hll)\\ n hL· \V,\, hemg released
fOr s.tbry c:~p lt'.I~ons Brm\in :~lso s.1a.i thc1c.: \\L'Ie phtlu..,ophtt.lllh,Ot:r:~
emes l..u:tween Clevdand\ front officl' .111d uucl1111g ,ut1.1nd rh;n \'t't;
~..·r.m pl.l\'a~ \\t'rL' nuskd IIlto s1g-mng \\ Ith Lhc.: Bh 1\\'m
AuJ Bmwn s;ud he

lliiC)'

Jh'lll\

1 ~ 11·t Jolll' ulklll~ Il L·

,Jbnut the Brm.vns

111

thl· ltKkl..'r

prom l..,l'l ho dL·Ii\L'I mnrr
HWtll

t{)ll m\ I!l g

Suntl.iy'~

~lllll'

' It .,L't'llh r,_• ponc1" .n~..·n 't th~..· only Dill'S Intt:IL'-.tl'd Ill Ill' 11111g \\ h.lt l1e
h.1.. to ,,1\
"Tdl Lolll;l.\, I'll\ go1ng to sec h1111 on Sund.1y. tllO" ,,!ld Bnn\'ll\' tOt'llL'tlurk &lt;:n i L') Fu lk-1

Congratulations,
Bob Turner
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy-Oids
has announced
that Bob Turner
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
October.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Po!nt Pleaaent, WV

..
'

Raiders

~

·from Pap B1
•

~ "W e did p1 ck up a very good

1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
446-3672

:No. 2 runn er 111 Emily Lawson , a
fres hma n comin g out w ho baS!~a Uy answered our call for a fifth
1:unner," said Sayre. "Sh e came ou t
•1md 1t was a very pleasant sur~nse She's proba bly the best canj:hdate we 've got comm g back of
h e g1rls returmng.
~ ~'S he has a very flm d r unnm g
:l;tyle. It doesn't hke she's puttmg a
~ot of effort into her runmng,
~ ! tho u gh the efforts there It's not
:!1 pamful look"
'
Lawson had track expen e nce,
but no ne on the m o re d1ffi cult
,.1;ro.ss country courses
She n ot onl y compe ted 111
wnJ&lt;&gt;r h1 gh track, she was also on
he R1ver Va ll ey freshman volleysqmd tim past season .
" O ur volleyball coac hes were
us thlt thiS g ul co uld run,"
d Sayre " Th ey ran a nule every
..,. ........ k fo t ume thro ugho ut the
preseason and durmg the season
, · nd they kept saying th1s g1rl
could run . We fin ally got her In
her fi r5t raLe, she fimshes In thi!
top 50, even wtth a fall. There was
Wi!t grass, and she went to turn
. &gt;nd shpped and fe ll and got up
· She bJ ttled n gh t 111 to. She
coul d've gave up, but she d1dn 't."
Stephanie C u cle w tll be an other key runner expected to co me
back next season.
W tth the lac k of runners
returm ng, the key for the future IS
sttll the abtll ty to recrmt youn ger
ru nners
" l'vt talked to a couple of parents of gtrls wh o w1ll be fres hmen
• next year They are lookin g for. wa rd to commg on and run ning,"
sa.d Sayre
One pomt Sayre makes IS that
R1ver Valley IS 111 a w1desp read
distn ct cover mg most of no rt hern Gallta County w here travel IS
~omet1 mes extensive fro m home
to sc hool
"We've got a couple of sophomores t hat are saym g thetr go mg
to come out next year," sa td
Sayre. "They JUSt couldn't because
of the travel comnutment The
_dtstnct IS so spread out and they
have thetr own vehtcles now So
they do n't luve to walt for the
shuttl e bus for the long tnp
home''
W 1th the graduatiOn of GodWin and Edwards, RIVer Valley
~.)Yill be bUIJdmg WJthout 1t's two
~host successful runners
~ Dutmg h1s sophomore season,
~dw.1rds stl uggled w 1th tunes m
::Q,c low twenties :1[ best H 1s
"· ~nprovcment can be b;~~~:.·J 11l Ius
' ,IS a rlllllll'T
iirts:"k.iJis
"He re;,lly w01 ked l1,1rd." sa1d
'"" Sayre "I Ie's probably my most
~~l!rcbl.l1 1 unner. You can bn:.1k
"""ilown h1s race 1 can t;tlk to hm1
; f about p.Kc and show It to h11n un
:.,..paper. We dtd a lot of preg.une
~'!'!'ilna l yst!\ befm·c a r:1 cc"
,
=~Shawn Taylor currently has the

i

hot would moke
er!
your

iounbap 1J1mtll -llornlintl • Page B9

New technology equals more cost for NASCAR in the 21st Century

san Giants·

E.ulitr thiS week, Brown spent neari)' .me-half hour on a teleconference with C leveland reporters nppmg the Browns and coach Chns
Palmer, w ho he says IS too inOextble and unwtlling to listen to hts players.
" It can't be 'Me, me, me,"' Brown ~atd "There's a pomt where it ha s
to be 'We. Not n1c. We."'
Can you feel the love , or what'
G tants coach Jun Fasscl mll h&gt;S h1g:h regard for IllS former player&gt;,
and now says he was so1 ry to see tlu;m go
" I liked every one of thost' guy,," ~assd s.ud.
Fassel was .:speCially fOnd of P.ttrL~ n, the Browm · ~econd- lt"ad111g
receiver and best dt•t•p thre.lt
" It kt lh."d llll' \ hen I lost l11m," Et!~.scl 1,a1d ''I've ,l h\ ,JV~ hkcd I hv•d.
but we Wt"re so tight wtth thl· s.tl.u v c.1p.''
.
Patten was confint•d to hemg .1 mn,tly a . . penal tL':tm'i pla~er wah
the G i.uns In thret.• se,li,O!Is. he l.Higln J3 p.l'i\1..'~ t(,r 4(10 ya1d~ Hl' Ins
.1lmost mJtcht"d those tot.ll!&lt;t 111 JU~t !line garlic w1th thl' Uro\-.:m
'"The Gt:lllt!'t ~aH· lllL' an oppo1runHy to pl.ty Ill rh1s J~,.·,lglll-; P.ntcn
satd." B ut t hcTi.·'s no lt.WL' lost the re It w.h ,, clt.u1gc of~Lcncty .md ,thL
opportumty to phy he~e· l'tl be ly111g 1f 1 ,,ud I thdn't h1ghh);ht the
br.t mt: when the schcduk!&lt;t caml' out I'm L'XLitL'd to pb) ag.tJmt gun I
was w tth for three yt.:,m, ..
Pa tt~:n h:ts b~:cn slowed by tud- roe the p.1\t few Wl-eks , but s,11d
t h ~re 's no way he'll slt o ut Sund.ty.
"The-y'll have to na my leg ofr to h·l'p me from pl.1ymg," hl' tii:tid.
In esst•nct", fret• :tgem:y a ll ow~..·d the B rowns ,w d Gums to !-.wap left
tac kles, Wtth the d1 sgruntkd, 37-yc.u-old Bwwn gmng to New York
for thl' 28-year-old Oben, a three-year st:~.rtc-r 111 New York
The G1ants attempted to keep ()ben, but dec1dcd th.Jt they cou ldn't match the three-yc:~ r. $10.8 nu lhon contract Cleveland w.1s ofT&lt;..· rmg
O ben mststs he 1sn't bitter about the break-up and won't take any

C INC IN NAT I (AP) - As they rolled up
"Ui&gt; won that game cotu•incingly, but
and down the field on that overcast Septemit was tlte .•tart of sonutlring. W.• h.td 10
ber afternoon , the Baltimore R avens had no
penalties. Once we got in the red .::one,
sense that d1saste r was one fhp of the calendar
away.
111e had illegal proud11re, the fumble, the
M aybe they should have seen it coming
holding, the nrissed assigmnents. We /tad
Looking back on the 11 37-0 VICtory over
a lot tlliugs tl1atwere the sta rt of
the Cmcmnao Bengals on Sept. 24, the
sometlling we did11'tjoresu,''
Ravens now sec the warmng Signs of one of
the worst offenSive slumps m modern NFL
Sllennon Sho,.,., Rovono tight end
history.
"We won that game convmcmgly, but It touchdowns.
' was the sta rt of some thmg," ught end ShanHe was benched last week m favo r of D•lnon Sharpe satd "We had 10 penalties. On ce fer, wh o will face a much differe nt Bengals
· we got m the red zone, we had illegal proce- te.m o n Sunday.
dure, the fumble, the holdi ng, the nussed
T he ~avens ' domination o n Sept. 14 was
aSSignments We , had a lot ofthmgs that we re so tho rough that coach .ll ru ce Coslet q ult the
the start of so methmg we dtdn 't fo resee."
next day,leavmg Dick LeB eau m charge.
The Ravens (5-4) haven 't reac hed th e end
The defensive coordinato r has decided to
~ zan~ sulCe, gmng 0-for-October
put the game 111 the hands of ru nnmg back
: Headmg tnto the1 r rematch wuh the Ben- Co rey D1llon mstead of the me xpen enced
: ga ls {2-(&gt;). the Ravens have a strea k of ftve Smith, and C mcmnatl has wo n m la st two
games ,md ~0 quarters wtthom a touchdown.
The Benga ls se~ the re m atc h as a measu re
That's the Jongt!'st st rea k w itho ut a touch- of how far they've come. In the first g.une,
. duwn Slllll' tht' Coles went 21 quarte rs w tth- ' Dillo n m anaged o nly 9 yards on 12 car ne:-;
: out one.: 111 1991. No ot her team has gont• and the Bengals fi niShed With 4 ya nls rushing
: longer "II Ill' tiR· NFL ntcrgL'r 111 1970.
o n 16 attempts
• "ll1.1t's unbdlt'vabli!." Bengals q uar tt!'rb:tc k
Is the Bengals' resurgence o flu ke? ThJS
· Ak oh Snutb s.ud "I thought connng 111to the ga m e w 11l tdl
year that (coat h) Bnan B1 lilck w.1s tillS offen" I know th ey're dym g to get a touchdcmn,
SIVe gemus, wh.acver the N FL had labeled but thls tea m 's hun ger ts greater than ~vcr
: hmt :~s.
befo re," hn ebackcr Takeo ·Sp1kes sJid emphat• "They're strugglmg on offense. Tony Banks Ica lly "Our desi re IS burmng to show that thts
' IS not pl.tymg \\odl, Jnd I guess Trent D1lfe r IS no t the same team "
Jtdn 't play real wdl last week, &lt;lther."'
There's another m ouva u o n. T he Bcngals
Banks h.1d a b1g game agamst the Bengals, arc convmccd tha t BtUJck ra n up the score tilL'
completmg 20-of-36 for 196 yards and two b st ttm l' .1rou nd

,Sunday, November 5, 2000

Sunda~November5 , 2000

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

....
l

...

-

'

-

..

school record on th e' boys s1de,
I 8:1 2 that he sat at the distncts
last year.Thts was a mark Edwards
w as shnvmg for H e really wanted
to get our sc hool reco rd, bu t h1s
goal was to make reg10nals"
The dtfference w as that Taylor
had fellow semor Keith Stout
runnmg close with him E dwards
was alone dunng most of the
m eets

"That's one thin g about T.R 's
accomphshments thi s year was
that h e had no body to run With
o n the team," sa1d Sayre. " A lot of
the trammg was on h1s own"
O n the o the r Side, Godw111 had
Lawson
to
co m pe te
wtth
throughout most o f the season
"For us to get (to the reg10 nals)
as a team. we nt!'ed five girls wtth
Megan Godwm 's cahber or bette r," said Sayre " There's potenttal
at thJS sc hool to have th at."
Jessica R oberts, w it h a ttm e of
21 06, still has the gtrls' record,
w h1ch she set 111 1996
Eve n with a rec rumn g effort
among th e student body, the ma111
road block w11l be 111 the spor t
1tself
Cross countt y 1s m ll cons1dered
a sport that draws h ttlc mtercst
among htgh school and JUn ior
h1 gh ki ds compared to that other
fall spo rt - foot ball . C roll countty, though , co uld be more than
JUSt a co mpcuove sport.
" It seems that a lot of kids here
111 sc hool are saym g m aybe I
shoul d h ave ran," sa1d Sayre.
" EspeCi ally the kids w ho have
gone throu gh basketball preseaso n cond1t10m ng. Seem g that
th ey co ul d've b enefite d from
wnn\ng. Th ere's other kids who
d1dn't eve n know anything about
cross country as juni or ht ghers,
wh1 ch is partly my fault for not
gmng out and exp lamm g"
The need fo r success. though,
can scare away pote ntial run ners
"Kids commg to thJS sciJool
thm k they have to ru n 1mmcd1ately to be as good as the n umber
one runn er the fi rst day, but H
takes ume to bu dd up," satd Sayre.
"Edwards' has taken th ree years to
get where he's at. You J USt don't
co me m as a natural runner. You
see very few of those people who
come 111 that can natu rally run
and have no problems"
But hke most other md1v1dual
sports, success ts bm1t on pe rsonal
achievements The responSJbiiJty
un also dnve away potenttal runners
''Cross country 1s not that hard
of a sport," said Sayre "It's b:mc:J.lly puttmg the left foot 111 front of
the.: nght foot ~wd JUSt rcpeanng
It It\ a sport a lot of ktds now a
d.1ys don't w.mt to be 111 b~c.wse
It's .1ll on the i r shoulders
"Once the gun goes off. I h,l\'C
no colltr~l ofch~..· r:u::e, whnl" as 1n
football and basketball yoll have a
little bJt comrol," Savre added "If
a player JS dmpg bad: you can Jerk
htm out :md try ~umebody else
You c;m't do that 111 .1 the nuddk·
of a nos-; country race No tuncnuts

ban Phoemx track 1n October
1989, dnving a moVIe car for
"Days ofThunder."
H e earn ed hts first Winston
Cup wm at PI R m 1996 and earher th1s year at the track, he
rec,1ved hiS first trophy as an

owner in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Senes race.
H am,ilton, who's looking for a
new nde m 2001, would love to
fimsh the season on a h1gh note.
Phoemx 1S a good place to do
that.

"It is a pretty neat deal to have
accomplished so much
at
Phoemx," he S31d. "I'm lookmg
forward to racing there Our team
had a great run going at Talladega
a few weeks ago and then a top10 at Rockingha m. It feels good

to have th1s team in contention
agam. I feel confident we can wm
one ofthese last three race's."
STAT OF THE WEEK:
Mark Ma rtin leads all dnver~
wnh 10 top-10 fimshes at
Phoenix.

EBUCK T PS HERE!

from Over SI,OO .000 ollars In Inventory
Money Down -Then Just Make Payments ... It's That Easy!
These veh1cles have been acqwed at 1ncred1ble savings from lease and rental compan1es
Bank repos , Cred ~ Unions, as well as , other clealers liquidated 1nventones l
MANY LATE MODELS WITH REMAINDER PF FACTORY WARRANTIES!
THEIR LOSS WILL BE YOUR GAIN

2000 Plymouth 8rHzo mt5- 21,000 Milas, Bal of Fac. War$14,595.
2000 Ponlloc Orond Prix OT 112114 • 17,000 Milas, Bal of Fact War., AT.

AC, 111t, Cruise, PW&amp;L.. .................................................... $19,395.
2000 Pontloc Sunllro 19439· 9,000 miles, Bal of Fact Warranty, AC, AT,
Sportwheels, 1111, CrUise ............................... .. ... ......$13,495
2000 Ford Focuo 2x319135- 13,000 miles, Bal of Fact Warranty, AC,
AM/FM/CO, Sportwheels ........................................... $12,495
2000 Chevy CavallorZ241943819,000 m1les, Red , Bal of Fact
Warranty, AT, AC, 111t, Cru ise, PW&amp;L. Sporlwhoels ........... .. .$14,275.
2000 Ford Muotang 19440· 13,000 miles, Groen, AT, AC, 1111. Crulse,Bal
of Fact Warranty, AC , AM/FM/CD , Sportwheals ........................ $16,695.
2000 Ford Touruo SES 19434· 28,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Crulsa,Bal of
Fact Warranty, AC, AT, Sportwheels ... .. ... .. .. ...... ... .... ...$15,540
2000 Dodgolnlropld 19418- 29,000 m11es, AT, AC, 111t, Crulse,Bal of
Fact Warranty, AC, PW&amp;L,Sportwheels ...... ,., .,, ... .,, ..... $16,195
2000 Chevy lmpalal9400·19,000 miles, "Loaded" .......... ,.$17, 995
1999 Chevy Covollor.Z2419417· 6,000 miles, Sunroof, AT, AC. 1111,
PW&amp;L, Bal of Fact Warranty, Sunroof, Sporlwheels .. .,., . .... .. .,., $15,195
1999 Pontiac Orand Prix OT N9398 • AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L ... ... .
"""' "' "'" " ' ""' "' .......... " "' " " """" ................ $14,420
1999 Mercury Sable OS 119401 . 22,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Crulse,Bal of
Fact Warranty, Sporlwheels ............................, .... $13,350
1999 Chevy Malibu 19402· 30,000 miles, AT, AC , 111t, CrUise,Bal or Fact
Warranty, PW&amp;L. ............. ,., ........................ $12,270
1999 Mercury Myotlquoll9397· AT, AC , 111t, Cruise,PW&amp;L .. ., .. $11 ,910
19WPonllacGrondAmSEI93n· ........... . ... ., .... $12,995
1m Morcury Cougar 119360- Rod ........ ., .. .. .........$15,495
19$9 Chevy Prlzm 119287 · 10,000 Miles , Sal of Fact. Warr.. AT, AC,
PW&amp;L. 111t, CrUise .................... ., .............. ..... ... .............. .. $12,495.
19$9 Ponlloc OrondAm 119312· AT, AC, 11~. Cruise, PW&amp;L,
.. ., ................ ., .............. ... .... . ...................................... $13,,, 6~•5.
Chevy Mlllbu 119441· 25,000 miles. V-6, AT, AC, 1111, I , I
Fact Warranty, AC, PW&amp;L., ................ ........ .. ... .. ............ $13,575
1998 Ford Contour 119390 SE· AT, AC, 111t, Crulse,PW&amp;L Sportwhoels
'' "' "'" " " " " ' ' " """" ... """" ""' "' """""" , $12.915
1998 Mercury Grend Marqulo f9307 · V·8 Eng, AT, AC, 1111, CrUise,
Windows &amp;seat., ., . .. ......... .,, ............. .. .,., ...$15,795.
1998 Pontiac Sunllroll9385· AT, AC, 111t, Cruise, Rear Defrost,
Cassette.. .. ... .. .. .. .. . .. . .. ... .. . .. .. ...... .... $10,995
1998 Ford Muotang QT 19327 • AC, PW&amp;L, Pwr Seal, 1111, Cruise,
Cassette, Sportwheels ............. .. .... ........ ., ....... ,.,., .. ., .......... $16, 595
1998 Pontiac Grand Am GT 19443-5 Speed; AC,AM/FM/CD$10.995
1998 Nlooan Sonlra N9322 . Bal of Fact Warr, AC, Cassette, Rear
Oefrosl... .. ... .. .. ... ... ... ... ... . .. .. .. ,. .. ....... ....... $11 ,695
1997 OldoAurora 19314· While, AT, AC , 1111, Cru1se,PW&amp;L, PS, V8
Sporlwheels ............. ., ... .................................... $1 5,995
1997 Buick Skylark 119383 ·AT, AC , 111t, Cru ise, PW&amp;L, Cassette, Alloy
Wheels ... .. ., .................................... ......................... $10,600
1997 Dodgelnlropld 119177· AT, AC, 1111, Crulse,PW&amp;L, Cass. $9,995
1997 Ford Escort LX S/W 119378 · AT, AC , 1111, CrUise, Keyless Entry ..
"""" """' " ""'"" "' "" ... ", " ' " '
' " " .... " ... $8,995
1997 Chevy Camara Convortfblo19368 • AT. AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L
" " ' ... "' " " ... ""' """""' "' "' """"""' ...... "' " .. $14995
1997 Olda Arora Nfl355 • AT, AC , Tilt, Cru1se, AM/FM/CO, Power Seats,
Power Sunroof, "LOADED" .. . . . ................ ., .........1.... $15,295
1997 Dodgolntrepld 119177· While, AT, AC, Till, CrUise , PW&amp;L .......... ..
"""" "' "' " " ' "'
' " ' ... ' " " ... " ... " .. $9,995.
1997 Chevy Lumina LS 119239· Green, AC , AT, 1111, Crwse, PW&amp;L. Pwr
Leather Seats, Sportwhoels ... . .. .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... . .. $10,920.
1997 Buick Park Avonuoll9235' · Green. AT, AC, Lealher Power Seats,
PW&amp;L, 111t, CrUise ........................................... ,..... $14,325.
1996 Ford Contour 119301 ·AT, AC, 111t, Cruise ..... ... ......... $7,595.
1996 Dodge Intrepid 119365 · AT, AC , 1111, CrUise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Cass
"' " " "' ' ' ' " ' " ' ' '
" " ' " " "' .......... $7,995.
1996 Dodge Neon 119362· 4 Door, Red, AT, AC , ................ $6,495
1996 Dodge Intrepid 19437· AT, AC, 111t, CrUise, V6, PW&amp;L,
AM/FM/cassette .. .. ... ..... ... .... . ... .. ... . ............ $8,995
1996 Toyota Corolla 119412· 1 AT, AC, , AM/FM/CD, Rear Del..$8,995
1996 Saturn SC2119367-AT, AC , TiH, CrUise, PW&amp;L, .......... $9,995
1995 Ford T·blrd 19375· 53,000 m1ies, AT, AC, Tilt, CrUise, Power Seat
... " " "
' ' " "' ' " " ' ' ' "' " ""' """"""' .... $8,995
1995 Plymouth Neon 19415 • AT, AC, AM/FM{Cass ...... ... ..$4,995
1995 Ford Muetang Convarllblell9336 · AT, AC, PW&amp;L, Sportwheels ,
Power Seats ...... ... .. . ... ... .. . ... .. ... . . . .. ... .. ..... $10,995

1996 Ford Contour 119112· AM/FM/Cass. AC, Till, Cru1se PW&amp;L$7, 995
1994 Ford T·Bird Super Coupel9408· V-6, Supercharged, AT, AC, Till ,
Cru1se, Leather Seats, Sportwheels.. .... .. ..... ... .. .. ... .. . $8,995
1994 Pontiac Sunblrd 19413· AC , 5 Speed &amp; more .... .... .. .. $4,995
1994 Eagle Vl,lon 19422· , AT, AC, 1111, CrUise, Cassetta, PW&amp;L
"' " " "' " " " " ' ' ' ' "' ' "' ' " " ................. $7,995
1994 Chevy Cornaro 19436·5 speed, AM/FM/CD, Sportwhee ls, PW&amp;L,
Tilt, CrUise ... ......... .... . . . . . .. . . , ................ $6,595
1994 Lincoln Mark VIII I 9344 • AT, AC, 1111, CrUISe, PW&amp;L, Lealher
Seals, Power Sun Roof .... . .. .. .. . ... .. .. ... .. . . .. $10,695
1994 Old a BB N9374- Lealher Power Seats, AT, AC, Till, CrUise, PW&amp; L,
"' " "' " " ' ' " " ' ""' " ... " "' """" " " "' " " ' $6,695
1993 Mercury Sablell9151 ·AT, AC. 111t, CrUise, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Cass
""' "' " " "" ". ' " ' "" "' "" '" """"' .......... " ... $2.995.

4x4, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, Spcrlwheels., ...................... ... $17,995
2000 Suzuki Grond Vlloro4x4111334 • 5,000 Milas · Bal of Fact Warr.,

4x4, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, Sportwheels ...... ., ... ... ......... ... $17,995
1998 Jaep Chorokae Spor1182117· 4x4, PW&amp;L, Till, Cruise, Spl Whl,
Roof Rack .. ........ ., .... ., ............... .......... ............ .............. $16,595
1998 Chevy Troclcor 4x4 19211· Bal of Fact Warranly, Convertible,
Sportwheela .................................. ............. ., ....................... $10.995
1998 Ford Explorer XLT 4x411348 • AT, AC , Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Sportwheels, AM/FM/CO .................................. ,.... ,................... $1 8,825
1997 Jaep ChorokH 4x4 1192118-Ciasslc, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Sport
Wheels ...... ., ......... ., ... . ... '...... .,, ............................ $14,600
1998 Dodge Durongo4x419413· AT, AC, Till, C•u ise, VS Eng,
Sportwheels ................... ..... ... .............................$21 ,995
1997 JHp Wronglor 4x419329 · 28,000 miles , Sportwheels,
Convertible &amp; More..................... .. ., ... .................... .....$14,695.
1997 Ford Explorer 4x4193li4·Rad/Silver, AWO , PW&amp;L, Pwr Seal,
Sportwheels, 111t, Cruise ............................ ., ............................... $1 8,925
1996 OMC Jimmy 4x411282· AT, AC, 111t, Cruise, Power Leather Seats,
Sportwheels . ........... .............. ............................. , .. $15,995.
1996 Ford Exploror 4x4119407· XLT, AT, AC , 1111, PW&amp;L.. ....... $14,59~
19911 Chevy Blozor 4x418220- Groen, AT, AC , 1111, CrUISe, PW&amp;L, Pwr
Seals, Sport Wheels. ... .... .. .. ... ... ... .. .... .. .... ..
..$13,800.
1995 Hondo Ponport LX 4X4 N9281 ·4Dr, PW&amp;L, 111t, Cruise, Sport
wheels, Cassette .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... ... .. .... .. ... ... . .$t3,595
1996 Chevy Blozor 4x419303· AT. AC, 1111, CrUise, Alloy Wheels, Rool
Rack ..................... ........ .... . .. .. .. .... ., ... ....... .. . .$14,995
1994 Ford Exploror 111242 · 4x4 · Red. XLT.Sport, AT, AC, 111t, Cruise,
Sportwheals ............................ ., .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ., ... .... . .. .. .... .. .. ..$7,995

19$9 Ford F·2504x4 Suporcab N9236- AC, Quad Doors, Tow Pkg,
Sportwheels.. .. ....... ... ..... ..... ., . .., ........................ ., .. $24,350.
1998 Ford Rongor 4x4 XLT 19296 · v6 Eng , Supercab, 111t, Cruise, AC,
Sportwheels.. ............. .............. ... ... ........................$16,495
1998 Chevy K·1500 1192i2 · Z71 Off Road · V·8 eng., Sportwheels, Pwr
Locks, Trailer Pkg, AM/FM/CD. ... .... ... .. .. ... .. ... .. .. $17,995.
1996 Ford F150 4x419184· V8 Eng., AT,AC, 8' lied, Spt Wh .$t3,800.
1998 Ford Rongor 4x4119060- 011 Road , V6 Eng .. 111t, Cruise,
AM/FM/CD ,
Wheels ........ ., .. ., ................ ............. .... ..... $t8,995.

1998 Chevy 510 Extra Cab 119293 • LS , AC, Cassette, Alloy Wheels,
Rear Slider ................................. ., ... ... .. .... .. .. . .. $13,695
1999 Dodge Rom 1500 SLT 119371· 28,000 Miles, Bal of Faclory
Warranty ....................... .. ..... ........... ., ............. $16,875
1997 Ford Rengor Splash 11921)6. AT, AC , V6 Eng., 111t, Cru1se,
Sporlwheels.. .. .... . . .. . ... .. .. .... ... . . . ... ... .. . .$10,595
1998 Ford Rongor 19444· 22,000 m1les, Bal of Fact Warranty
' ""' """" "' .... """""""' ... ' " "' ' ' ' " ' """ " $11 ,695
1997 Ford Ft50 Suporcab 119055 ·Red AC , AT, Cassette, PW&amp;L, Spa~
Wheels, Bedllner....... .... .... ........... .... ..
... .. . .. . $13,995
1996 Chevy SID Suporcab 119231 • V-6 Engine, Spt Whls
$8,995
1995 F150 119044· 2 Tone pa1n1, AC, XLT, Sportwheels, 1111, Cruise.
... "' "... ' " ' ... ... " .: ' ... "' " "' " "' "" '" .$6,995
1994 Nlnan Truck 119276· 48,000 M1ies, K1ng Cab, AC, Sportwheels .
""""""' " ' " '" ... "' " .. "'' ...
'' "' ........ "' .$1 0,500
1994 Ford Ft5019319· XLT, AT, AC, V-8 Eng , Tin, Cru1se, Sportwhaels
"' "" ... """"' "" "' ... ' "' " " ' " " '" ' " "' " $9,995
1993 Chevy S1DII9300 · V6 Engine, 5 Speed, AC , Sport Wheels .. .
"' "' ' .... "' "' ... "' "" ""'""" """"""' ............ '"
$6,595
1993 Ford Ranger 119367 ·. ... ........ .... ....................... .. .. $4,995
1993 Ford F150 19409· XL, 6 Cyl, AC, Topper ..................... $7,695

1992 Plymoulh Voyager Van N!IOII5. .. ..................... .. ...$3,995
1991 Ford Ft50. 4x4 oupercab 19425 • Lanat, AT. AC, 8' Bed, PW&amp;L,
Sportwheels ... ... ... .... .. ... , .. . .................. $7.995
1992 Dodge Ram 1500 19406 . 2 Tone pa1nt, V8 eng1 ne, AT, AC, Tilt ,
CrUise .. .,... .... ... ... .... ..
.$7,995
1991 Toyota Truck 119445 ·. .. . ..
... $2500
1985 Ford F·t5019432 ·One owner, AT.. ...

1998 Ford Wlndotor 119376· 26,000 miles, AT, AC, 1111, Cru1se,Bal of
Fact Warranty, PW&amp;L .... ...... ........ .. .. .. ... .
$16,925
1998 Ford Wlndotar 119376 · 26,000 M1ies, Bal ol Fact Warr .. $15,995
1998 Ford Wlndotor 119392·, AT, AC. Ti lt, Cruise, PW&amp;L ...
$t4 230
1998 Dodge Caravan *9349 · 3t ,000 miles, Bal of Facl Warr, AT, AC.
1111, CrUise , Sportwheels, PW&amp;L . . . .. . . .. ... . .. $16,995
1997 Ford Econollne Van Conv ersion 19229 - 4 Captam charrs , AT,

AC, 111t, Cruise.... .... .. .. ... .,.
. .. . .. .. . .. $t5,995
1997 Dodge Rom 15 Pou ongor 1360 · V·8 Eng., A), AC, Till, Cru1se,
PW&amp;L ................... :.... ., ... . . . .
. . ..
.. $11,995
1997 Ford Extended Corgo Van . E250 AT, AC, Work Rack $9,995
1997 Chryelor Town &amp;Country Van 119275· Quad sealing, AT, AC, Rear
AC, Tilt, CrUise, PW&amp;L, Power Seat.............................. $18,228
1997 Chev Vonluro Van 119272 · LS, AT. AC. ,Quad Sealing. $t4,995
1997 Plymouth Voyager Van 19321 ·Grand Rally E ·Rear AC , 4 Dr, AT,
1111 CrUise. Sportw~eels ... . . ..
$14,995
1996 Ford Wlndstorii9381-.AT, AC. Tift , Cruise . PW&amp;L ..... $11,695
1995 Plymouth Voyagerl9389· AT, AC. 7 Passenger. V6 eng .. $4,995
1995 P.lymouth Voyagerl9369 ·AT, AC, 111t, CrUise, . ,., , ... $4,995
1994 Plymouth Voyager SENII278 -, AC, AT, AM/FM, Cass, Tilt, CrUise
' ' ' ' " ' " ' ' ' ' '' ' ' ' ' " "" " ' $4,995
1994 Ch evy Aatro Van Conv. l9337- AT, AC, Tilt, CrUise , Pwr Windows

&amp;Locks. .
1993 Ford Aatro Van eNII363· AC, AT, T1it, Cru&gt;se, PW&amp;L

$6,695
. $4,595

NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL
FEBRUARY 2001

�.

'

Inside:

Outdoors
Walleye·aplenty in Huron area and anglers like it

Page 810

~elebratiorrs

bcgiu 011 Page C2
Cfzarleue Hoejliclr column, C5
]irn Sands column, C 6
Becky Collirrs colutml, C6

Sunday, November 5, 2000

SANDUSKY Lake Ene walleye to the Huron area to uke advantage of
anglers are finllly gettmg thelf wish for thiS umque fishery. Johnson explained. A
some fantastic fishmg the-y can finally large school of fish nugraung 'westward
from the Central
wnte h01uc Jbuut.
Basin hangs off shore in an area that
Charter gmd~' .md Jnglas are converging on the Huron area which lS div1des the Western and Central basins. It
where the best .lcuon is taking place, 1s a bowl- hke area where these fish seem
act ording to the Ohio Department of to stage in preparatmn for tile - winter
months. large schools of gizzand shad,a
Natural R esources. DIVISIOn of Wildlife.
"Anglers .1re h,l\'Ing a banner fall fish- walleye's preferred food. also are plentiful
ing sc;;ason on LJh· Ene, as long as the in this area that creltes a walleye feeding
weather coopc•r.lle-.'' mJ Doug Johnson, fre nzy.
tisht:.'rlt'" b1olug1~t w1th the Dtv1sion's . Since the bst few days of Septemb&lt;r,
lake Enl' Rc..,t:.',lnh Una 111 Sandusky. the buzzword on L1ke Erie has been
"ThiS " the i.lt&lt;' t:tll w.II Ieve
b1te of \'erv. .. HtlfOTI ... However. somt: anglers are fol-·
.
Luge tl~h rlut t:\'cr\'ont:.• h,l.., bt•t•n wainng lo\vmg tish .ts thr:y movJ: westward and
for. .md thl· llu wu .ln..'.l ,., ddinHdy· tht~ fi &lt;hing from Hurun to east of Kelleys
Isl.111d.
hot .;;;pot nght llil\\'."
Sot11l.' walkyc C:ltc h t!' .ue· :1\so belng
L1kc Enl' cluncr bo.H r.l pr;uns disco\·-

thl' l..uc-.,c.J-.on \\'.1\kyt.· bou u ~ .1bout
.10· yr..' .Irs .tg~.~ ..mJ m.my mm·t.• rhea boats
erc"d

rt&gt; port~o.· d l':"tSt

of Huron to the Vermil-

ton / Lur.tin .uc-.1. Many hmit catc hes Jnd

very large fish m the 5 to 14-pound
range are being reported .
Anglers are trolhng spoons and
crankbJlts, drifting worm harness with
gold blades, working bottom bouncers
with worm harnesses, and casting mayfly
rigs or weight-forward sptnners. Anglers
are reminded there is a daily bag limit of
10 wallt•yes per angler.
"Many anglers targeted yellow perch
and smallmouth bass this summer
because the walleye fishing was challenging." Johnson said. "Now this fall walleye
bonanza lS the be&gt;t walleye fishing of the
L'ntire )'L':tr. It's the perfect way to end the
fishing seJSnn."
Shoreline a nglers may also get a p1ece
of thiS Jction, ,.nd Johnson . A cold
weather snap cou!J drive the gizzard
shad imo warmer \\'aters near shorelines.
This would hopdi1lly lure walk-yes 111

LOGAN - L,··'""' .u~ fall•ng
to the ground. the tree"S Jrc
beconuug b.ue, Jnd H i ~ su re
much easier to St"L' the o;;qtlirrels.
For hunters that's a good thing
and sqmrrd season is often at its
best in No\·ember.
Squirrel hunting offc.s a lot of
hunting action for rdatiyely so
httle dTort. One does not need to
set out decoys, e re n 1t tree stand,
or trudge through brushlanc\s to
pursue squmds. long a fa\'orite of
m any boys of yesteryear.
"Squi rrel
hunting
teac hes
woodsmanship along with good
shooting sk1Us, p:me)1ce, expenence, hunter ethics and safety,"
said Mike Budzik, Division of
Wildlife chief. "It's an underutilized resource and provides a
great opportunity to introduce
new hunters to the sport of hlll1ting:.''
Access to hunung lands continues to sh rink in urban :treas and
that appears to be o ne: reason why
~oung hunters rardy take the

opportunity to go squirrel huntmg after school, during a holiday
or on a weekend .
However, tho good news is that
woodlands now ·cover nearly 113
of Ohio's landscapes and squirreis
are generally abundant in many
woodland areas, especially those
in die eastern 213 of the state.
Squirrels are most often found
near mature stands of nut-bearing
hardwood trees such as oaks,
hickory, walimt, beech and buckeye trees. Acorns are the most
widespread food ·sourcc for squirrels, which happen to prefer those
nuts produced by red, white and
black oaks.
It's viully important to accurately identify your quarry while
hunting and squirrels are far more
visible after trees bare their leaves.
Fox and gray squirrels dominate Ohio's squirrel population
and are n1ost active during first
light and near sunset. Fox squirrels are slightly lawr than gray
squirrels and are more likely to be

Further e.st, many limits of big perch
close enough to piers and breakwalls in
pursuit of the baitfish, to create a shore are being taken offVermilion to Lorain,
off Cleveland, Fairport Harbor and
fishery.
If anglers are successful at this fishery, Ashtabula.
Perch anglers are fishing with minnows
"Huron" will still be a buzzwond as the
near
bottom . If perch are not hitting at
Huron ~ier is traditionally one of the hot
one location , anglers should continue to
spots for this walleye pier fishery.
Other good locatiOns are generally the move around to other locations until
Catawba/ ~arblehead· area, such as better numbers of fish are caught. The
Catawba Sute Park dock, Mazurik fish- daily bag limit is 30 perch per angler.
Anglers can get a recorded Lake Eric
ing access, and Lakeside Pier; as well as
fishing
report by calling toll-free 1-SBSalong the Sandusky shoreline at the Jackson Street Pier and break wall behind the HOOK FISH (1-HKX-466-5347). In the
local Sandusky exchange call 625-31 H7.
city police station .
Weather conditions are always a big
Perch anglers also connnuc to be very
factor
for Lake Erie fi's hmg and fall is no
successful with many limits of good-size
perch being taken. Best locations include excepnon. Anglers should get a Lake
the Huron P~Cr, off Huron, northeast of Erie marine · fort'ClSt befilfe traveling to
Kelleys Island area, Marble /C atawba the rcgton and again bcfort• \lenturing
area, (especially off Marblehead Light- out on the \V.ltC'T.
house), and off Cedar Point.

II you, the people, put your trust in me, Jessie
Collins, on November 7th, I do promlse·that you will
have one ol the hardest workll\11 Commissioners ever
elected In G&amp;llla Count)'.

Thank You.

Hunting season is the
best time for....fishing7

to bJits .md lure !~.
Trout fi"'hmg r.m .1 lso be excel-

_lc nt 111 the fall. Many. of the popular waters rece ive special stoc kings, wh1ch ca n lead to some
excellent fi shmg opportunities,
and. with so many people focused
on hunting. the fall trout waters
.Ire almost always less crowded
than in the spn ng.
Many bass an~lers talk uf
"turnover" 111 the fall, or w1ll say
that the lak~ 1s turnmg over. and
specula te on h ow it w1ll affect
fishing.
Many anglers believe that fishing will be poor durmg turnover,
but will improve \\'hen turnover
is completed.
The concept of turnover is
based on the f.1ct that most lakes
and impoundments have several
layers of \Vater of diffncnt tl'mperature~.

The co iJ L'~t water 1~ .H the bortnm of the lake, bec.tmc cold
\.V;ltt'r.jU\t hb.: cold JJr, 1\ he.lVJl'r.
Cold w,ucr 'till b. WJrlll Welter
stay~ dt the top c&gt;fthl' l.1kl' .
This Lit r 1.., one of rhe fl'~l.,OI'l'i
that t.ulw;ttcn bd(\\V d.11ll.., .lrc
~uch ·good truut tJ,hcnn . The
w.ltL' r' rck-.l-,~,,_.d frb111 thl' lwctom

llkt• ,HL', L!llltL' cold
. throughom rl'lL' \'t'.ll" .utd !"It h
with ~)xygcn. In nthr..-r \l.'ord~. pnof

the

fL'Ct lub1t.H t(Jt trnut.
The b,1\IC ph\'\ll.., of rhc ..,ltll.luon LcllhL'" g-rc.n r.: h.m~t'' Junng
. rhe f.tl! l he ~·old n1ght.., 1lf
Non·mbn d11ll thl· ~ud.ltl'
watl'r .... \\1m h hl'l 01 11e he.t\ ' IL'r a..,
thcy ger cnltk·r I he w.tters ,1 ft'
nuxcd by \\,\\'L' ,tnd w1nd .Ktlon,

and over a pcnoJ of cold fall
nights, the water of rhL' top and
bottom actually trade places until
the tem.peratLu\: become fairly
uniform throughout the water
co lumn .
Turnover is just one of the
cha nges OCCUrring during the: fail,
but many believe it is the most
nnportant. The underwater vcgeration is also dying off, and the
o:\.-yg~n levd of thl' waters IS
becoming more uniform as the
temperature be co me more umform in the lake.
. · When you mix all the factors
together, you have the basis for
some exciting · fishing. Bass often
move into fairly predictable feedmg areas in the fall. If you find the'
right patterns, you can enjoy
excellent action.
In m any of the lakes of our
region, a productive fall pattern is
to fish rocky flats and points with
jigs. Crayfish are one of the most
Important fall forage items, and a
jig and pig or tube lure can do a
· great job of imitating crayfish
moving across the .bottom.
Anoth e r great pattern in the fall
is to bou11.:e· a deep-running
crankbait across the rocky bottom' '
of a lake. The most successful
approach seems ro include using-a
lure that ?ives deep enough to
make frequent co nta ct with the
bottom.
River snlJllmollth act1on IS also
Jt 1ts best 111 the fa ll. Any number
nfparterns c1n be cffecuve-.
Tube lures :-~re hot m most ,Hcas
:l!ld do a good JOb . of llmtatmg
cr.1yfish, wh1ch .m: proh.1bly t he
111mt 1111pnrt.1nt fnod tor 1"1\'l'r

~lll.ll llll OUdl"i 111 diL' r.lll.
1\.1,my of the..· . . r.ne\ mo~t popu-

trout \\',Hr..·ro; \\ 1ll rL'll' I\'L' fi:o.h
th1s t~ll. F.11l ti~hmg: em be \'cry
prnducU\'L' ll\lllg .1 v,lrt('ty oflun:s
.tnd b.tlt\.
Spm .mgkr\ -.hould 1h\'.tys
Jnclm.lc .1 few m- hnl' ~ptnncr.., 111
.tlw t,ll kk p.icb, Jlld the ..;vntht•ttl Po\\'nBJJt ts hard to b~· .1t .lt .1ny
tJme of the ye.lr.
l.1r

-

~

4-

- -

-

_ _ ..,

Abigail
Van
Buren

J

Grieving
nurse had
reason for
attitude
'

•

.,

tered nurse employed in a hospitaL My daughter passed away in
December from breast cancer. I
• worked up until two weeks prior
to my daughter's death.
During rhat time, I made 90
mention to my co-workers about
my daughter's grave condition. It
was just too sad. Three weeks
before my daughter Jied, my
supervisor called me into her
office and told me I had a "bad
attitude."
I admit that I had kept my feelings to mysel f, and of course my
demeanor reflected a sa d expresSion, but my attitude was never
"bad." I quickly responJed to my
supervisor, in my defense, that my
daughter was dying and asked her
how I was supposed to act. She
told me there wt:re other nurses
who had gravely ill children, but
they didn't bcha\'e the way I did .
I replied thJ.t she &lt;hould walk a
mile in m v ~hoes. She reiterateJ
that I had' a "bad attitude." I
responded thJt since she Slecmcd
to be such an authoritv on behavIor and dying childr~n. perhaps
she• could enlighten me on how
to "oct"- because I really didn 't
know.
I have sinrt' *returned to ~ork.
and I now have a strong dislike
for this person. I 1ce her daily, and
she has the nerve to speak to me
after that unpleasant encounter.
Abby, how do I get past this' She
has apologiz~d for her comments,
but the damage has already been
dnnc. - FURIOUS R.N. IN

tunate that your behavior was
misunderstood , but since your
co!l,·aguc' had no way of knowing what you were going through
at the time, your supervisor was
only doing her job.
Please accept her apology and
find it in your heart to forgive
her. If you cannot. professional
coUllleling to help you rechannel
your grief and anger may be in
order. Life is too precious to harbor reSC IIllllC'Jlt~.

Nokia 252C

DEAR ABBY: I' m writing
about your response to "Disappoillted in Seattle" regarding
security m marriabe.You above all
should know rhat m a rria~e does
not nr.:.·ces:-.arily mean sccuricy.You
have printed enough letters from

~:

FAMILY TRADITION - Collectmg po litica 1
paraphernalia is
a tradition with
the Billings family of Ppint
Pleasant. Pictured above
are, from left ,
Brian, Josh and
Jared Billings
displaying a par- .
tion of Brian's
400-plus political badge collection. In addition to the
badges, he also
has numerous
bumper stickers, matches.
brochures. and
hand-held fans.
(Michele Carter
photo)

DEAR ABBY: I am a regis-

THE NORTHEAST
DEAR FURIOUS: It's unfor-

to the

'

'

ADVICE

Novembe~~!be~ !!makeC!~~d!s~!tjJ!

On
here to ask for your support when you 110 to vote.
I am 50 years old, my wife Is CArrie Collills, We live at 4600 ML Thbor Road in Vinton,
Ohio. We currenUy own 180 nrea lor nearly twency years.
. I have been a Huntll\llton Township trustee lor the past 7 years. I am currently nanning
lor the omce ol Count)' Commissiollet'.
I believe with my BucJCet MIU\allement. Job Skills, Employee Relations and Proven
Leadership qualities, I can AND will make a. dlllerence as Count)' Commissioner.
· By workil\11 with the Veterans, Senior Citizens, Our Youth, Townships, Villages, EMS,
and Chamber ol Commerce, we can make Gallla Count)' a saler, more prosperous place to
live and raise our childftl\.
I do not plan to just sit ill the Courthouse and Collect a check.
I would like to make penonal contact with busiMSS and industry in major cities to
bril\11 good paylflll jobs. fbr every 50 jobs we can bril\ll to this county, 50 more young
people will be able to stay here and make &amp; decent
Jiving. It &amp;lao means a broader tax base for our
schools, villa,Ces and townships. That Is 50 more
lamilles that can bond closer tollether.
Our pollee departments, Fire departments, and
Emer~&amp;ency Manallement Services need more
enhancement.
My plans are to be a flail-time Commissioner .
with public participation and Input In their count)'.
I am not llOinll to make "' Jot ol promises I ca.nnot
keep.

lCtive during midday.
Hunters generally p~ck a ~om­
fortable resting place at the base
of a tree in areas with preferred
habitat so they are . in the best
position to observe and shoot
squirrels. During the early part of
the season when leaves remain on
trees. hunters generally use a
shotgun with No. 7 1/ 2 or No. 6
shot to effectively compensate for
the dense foliage. But in November and throughout the winter,
many hunters switch to a scoped
.22 caliber rifle that provides
more of a shooting c hallenge
while at the same time extends
the effective range for bagging a
bushytail.
The squirrel hunting season
began August 19 and remains
open through January 31, except
during the week deer gun season
that begms Novembe r 27.
Hunters may take·a daily !unit of
four squ irrels and also hum nn
Sundays.

MOUNTAIN STATE

MOR(;ANTOWN, W.Va. Most of th l' nurdoors acti\'ity is
no\v . CL'lltcn:: d on thr..· various
huntin g ~c.1..,om.
Th1s 1~ .1 gTL',\l tnhc of the yeJr
tOr hunrt•r.,, but you ctn nuke the
.\rgt1ment th,H this 1.., .llso one of
the \"l'r)" hl'~t tllllCS f~)r tJ:-iht.:rmcn.
Vl"tcran b.w; .m~:;ler~ know that
thl' fir'\t frmty mglus of the f.!ll
~CL'tn to 11'1\'tgor,Hl' rht' bas'\, triggenng som'-" .1ggn::..~iv.: reaLtions

Sunday, November 5, 1000

r;::::::::;--=c~o~
- ~L~I~s~

Squirrel hunting best in November

PageC1

an
a son
oun

on

--

Point Pleasant resident
stuck on political badges
BY MICHELE CARTER
REGISTER NEWS STAFF

OINT PLEASANT Politics,
politics, politics. That is all everyone
is hearing these days as the 2000
campaign closes i11 on Election Day.
Beginning Tuc.sday evening, badges ,
signs, brochures and other political
paraphernalia will begin to disappear until the next go~around.
Dut, to a Point Pleasant man, politics arc always in
the back of his mind and on display at his home as he
continues to add to an increasmg collection of political items.
Brian Billinb"· advertising manager for the Point

.Pleasant Register, is proud of the collection he
has been establishing since the tender age of 13.
"I have always been interested in politics," llillinb" said. "This is my collection."
llillings has collected more than
400 political buttons over the
years as well as blllnpc·r suc kers ,
lapel stickers, brochures, rulers
and other materials about politics.
Looking over thret' large shadow boxes filled to the· brim with
badges featuring numerous candidates ti·om n:-ttional , statl' J nd local
races, the shape~ ;m d sizes of the
badges vary as much a'i the nam~"llillings said hi &lt; fim b&gt;dge wa&lt; RichJrd
Nixon's "Nixon Now More Th.m En·r." which
he purchased at the local Republi r.tll HL'.Idyu.ll'll'fs.
The latest badge hl' received wa..; Olll' nf Pl"l'~1dcnr
Ronald R eagan ;md !'resident George· llLl'h. which he

purch.t\l'd fi·oi11 a man
111

.A.iab,lln.l

the

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In ternet.

ln tfw; c:tllljl:llg'll

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I }L·h,ttl..'. hut prinr &lt;c tht• ( kt. .l dr..·b.Ht". •'
1\.l'\' Tc:\ fr\ \' ,\,t·· Ylq t111g Centreville
Cnlkgt· .l!l d h.q"~]1L'Ill ,l upnn .1 dt:bar~..·
b;ldl!;t'. I t ~· hroug-ht H h:tck. tl:1r Billmg~.

''It! .dl 111\' n'.ln (l( l'~) l kctlll~. J c.m 1t
rL~lJ1L'Illlwr .1 \ ,t;llp.ugn th.lt had ~ltldudl'd
,{) 111,\llY ddt"L-rl'llt h.ldf:L'~·· lillllll~~ -..Jill.
l'ht· ~-l)lkltloll bn.J~t . . t\\n h,lll~t'" "htl'h ,\l"L'
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lllttTC\1111~

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Please see Buttons. Page C7

Please see Abby, Pa&amp;e C7

FAC welcomes 'Impressions by Ritchie'

900 West Emmit Avenue

ALL! POLIS - The French Art
Colony galleries, 530 Fim Ave.,
will be filled with the artworks
of Annette Ritchie in "Impressions by Ritchtt·." The exhibit.
sponsored by H oskins-Tanner and I )r. Edward
J. Sheridan, runs through Nov. 2'l.
Annette Ritchie of South Point started
painting in 1971i, as a hobby, Upon retiring
in 1&lt;J92, R.itc)1ic decided to pursue painting
as a profe"inn.
11
Now, ( paint whenl'vcr I can outdoors or
from photogrJphs in my studio. I use mostly acrylics Or ml"i in my worb. '' RitL·hic

(740)947-0069

S,lid.

Chillicothe

Jackson

Portsmouth

U.S. Cellular
750 Western Ave .
(740)701-4811

Classic Plaza

Hilltop Center

408 E. Huron
(-740) 188-0016

(7 401355-0058

Chillicothe

2736 Scioto Trail

In-Touch Wireless &amp; More

NJwBoaton

34 East Weter

U.S. Cellular
New Boston. Shopping Center
4010 Rhodes Ave.
(740!456-8711'

(7401779-6999

GallipoUo

'"

1USCC Wai-Mart K10sk
2145 Eastern Avenue
(7401441-1066

Waverly ·
USCC Wai-Man Kiosk

Al10, come and viait on1 of our Wa~Mart locations: New Boston, Jackson.
For your con'venit~c• we htvt over 80 authorized ageot locations.
Outside consultants ere evai!able upon request.

--·--·-~-

_..

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

DuTing tht· ~ummtT of 199-t. Rirchi~ ~rud-·
inl in Engl.mrl at Regent\ (~o \lq.!c under
John and M.,dylyn Addyman 1i·01n W.1ks.
EXHIBITION THIS MONTK- Saundra Koby, French Art Colony cura.md Judith 1\•ck of New 1York. 1',11 nting the
tor and board member, and artist Annette Ritchie are seen with exam-·
ros~.:s til Qut•cn Mary's Gardt~ll. R itch iL'
pies of Ritchie's work, on display through November at the FAC.

•

G,i//£'1')' hours tll'C flus,/,,)'
''"'ou.f.?h Fridar' 10 1. "'.
to ~ p. Ill

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tllY't'\t .111 111\l'l"t'"ll'lll-.t ll'lil~I.IJ'ld .,f!'Dl..C\
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be closed Nol'. 23-26 /ilf' the
fh;mksgil'ill,t.: lwlid,,)'.

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Inside:

Outdoors
Walleye·aplenty in Huron area and anglers like it

Page 810

~elebratiorrs

bcgiu 011 Page C2
Cfzarleue Hoejliclr column, C5
]irn Sands column, C 6
Becky Collirrs colutml, C6

Sunday, November 5, 2000

SANDUSKY Lake Ene walleye to the Huron area to uke advantage of
anglers are finllly gettmg thelf wish for thiS umque fishery. Johnson explained. A
some fantastic fishmg the-y can finally large school of fish nugraung 'westward
from the Central
wnte h01uc Jbuut.
Basin hangs off shore in an area that
Charter gmd~' .md Jnglas are converging on the Huron area which lS div1des the Western and Central basins. It
where the best .lcuon is taking place, 1s a bowl- hke area where these fish seem
act ording to the Ohio Department of to stage in preparatmn for tile - winter
months. large schools of gizzand shad,a
Natural R esources. DIVISIOn of Wildlife.
"Anglers .1re h,l\'Ing a banner fall fish- walleye's preferred food. also are plentiful
ing sc;;ason on LJh· Ene, as long as the in this area that creltes a walleye feeding
weather coopc•r.lle-.'' mJ Doug Johnson, fre nzy.
tisht:.'rlt'" b1olug1~t w1th the Dtv1sion's . Since the bst few days of Septemb&lt;r,
lake Enl' Rc..,t:.',lnh Una 111 Sandusky. the buzzword on L1ke Erie has been
"ThiS " the i.lt&lt;' t:tll w.II Ieve
b1te of \'erv. .. HtlfOTI ... However. somt: anglers are fol-·
.
Luge tl~h rlut t:\'cr\'ont:.• h,l.., bt•t•n wainng lo\vmg tish .ts thr:y movJ: westward and
for. .md thl· llu wu .ln..'.l ,., ddinHdy· tht~ fi &lt;hing from Hurun to east of Kelleys
Isl.111d.
hot .;;;pot nght llil\\'."
Sot11l.' walkyc C:ltc h t!' .ue· :1\so belng
L1kc Enl' cluncr bo.H r.l pr;uns disco\·-

thl' l..uc-.,c.J-.on \\'.1\kyt.· bou u ~ .1bout
.10· yr..' .Irs .tg~.~ ..mJ m.my mm·t.• rhea boats
erc"d

rt&gt; port~o.· d l':"tSt

of Huron to the Vermil-

ton / Lur.tin .uc-.1. Many hmit catc hes Jnd

very large fish m the 5 to 14-pound
range are being reported .
Anglers are trolhng spoons and
crankbJlts, drifting worm harness with
gold blades, working bottom bouncers
with worm harnesses, and casting mayfly
rigs or weight-forward sptnners. Anglers
are reminded there is a daily bag limit of
10 wallt•yes per angler.
"Many anglers targeted yellow perch
and smallmouth bass this summer
because the walleye fishing was challenging." Johnson said. "Now this fall walleye
bonanza lS the be&gt;t walleye fishing of the
L'ntire )'L':tr. It's the perfect way to end the
fishing seJSnn."
Shoreline a nglers may also get a p1ece
of thiS Jction, ,.nd Johnson . A cold
weather snap cou!J drive the gizzard
shad imo warmer \\'aters near shorelines.
This would hopdi1lly lure walk-yes 111

LOGAN - L,··'""' .u~ fall•ng
to the ground. the tree"S Jrc
beconuug b.ue, Jnd H i ~ su re
much easier to St"L' the o;;qtlirrels.
For hunters that's a good thing
and sqmrrd season is often at its
best in No\·ember.
Squirrel hunting offc.s a lot of
hunting action for rdatiyely so
httle dTort. One does not need to
set out decoys, e re n 1t tree stand,
or trudge through brushlanc\s to
pursue squmds. long a fa\'orite of
m any boys of yesteryear.
"Squi rrel
hunting
teac hes
woodsmanship along with good
shooting sk1Us, p:me)1ce, expenence, hunter ethics and safety,"
said Mike Budzik, Division of
Wildlife chief. "It's an underutilized resource and provides a
great opportunity to introduce
new hunters to the sport of hlll1ting:.''
Access to hunung lands continues to sh rink in urban :treas and
that appears to be o ne: reason why
~oung hunters rardy take the

opportunity to go squirrel huntmg after school, during a holiday
or on a weekend .
However, tho good news is that
woodlands now ·cover nearly 113
of Ohio's landscapes and squirreis
are generally abundant in many
woodland areas, especially those
in die eastern 213 of the state.
Squirrels are most often found
near mature stands of nut-bearing
hardwood trees such as oaks,
hickory, walimt, beech and buckeye trees. Acorns are the most
widespread food ·sourcc for squirrels, which happen to prefer those
nuts produced by red, white and
black oaks.
It's viully important to accurately identify your quarry while
hunting and squirrels are far more
visible after trees bare their leaves.
Fox and gray squirrels dominate Ohio's squirrel population
and are n1ost active during first
light and near sunset. Fox squirrels are slightly lawr than gray
squirrels and are more likely to be

Further e.st, many limits of big perch
close enough to piers and breakwalls in
pursuit of the baitfish, to create a shore are being taken offVermilion to Lorain,
off Cleveland, Fairport Harbor and
fishery.
If anglers are successful at this fishery, Ashtabula.
Perch anglers are fishing with minnows
"Huron" will still be a buzzwond as the
near
bottom . If perch are not hitting at
Huron ~ier is traditionally one of the hot
one location , anglers should continue to
spots for this walleye pier fishery.
Other good locatiOns are generally the move around to other locations until
Catawba/ ~arblehead· area, such as better numbers of fish are caught. The
Catawba Sute Park dock, Mazurik fish- daily bag limit is 30 perch per angler.
Anglers can get a recorded Lake Eric
ing access, and Lakeside Pier; as well as
fishing
report by calling toll-free 1-SBSalong the Sandusky shoreline at the Jackson Street Pier and break wall behind the HOOK FISH (1-HKX-466-5347). In the
local Sandusky exchange call 625-31 H7.
city police station .
Weather conditions are always a big
Perch anglers also connnuc to be very
factor
for Lake Erie fi's hmg and fall is no
successful with many limits of good-size
perch being taken. Best locations include excepnon. Anglers should get a Lake
the Huron P~Cr, off Huron, northeast of Erie marine · fort'ClSt befilfe traveling to
Kelleys Island area, Marble /C atawba the rcgton and again bcfort• \lenturing
area, (especially off Marblehead Light- out on the \V.ltC'T.
house), and off Cedar Point.

II you, the people, put your trust in me, Jessie
Collins, on November 7th, I do promlse·that you will
have one ol the hardest workll\11 Commissioners ever
elected In G&amp;llla Count)'.

Thank You.

Hunting season is the
best time for....fishing7

to bJits .md lure !~.
Trout fi"'hmg r.m .1 lso be excel-

_lc nt 111 the fall. Many. of the popular waters rece ive special stoc kings, wh1ch ca n lead to some
excellent fi shmg opportunities,
and. with so many people focused
on hunting. the fall trout waters
.Ire almost always less crowded
than in the spn ng.
Many bass an~lers talk uf
"turnover" 111 the fall, or w1ll say
that the lak~ 1s turnmg over. and
specula te on h ow it w1ll affect
fishing.
Many anglers believe that fishing will be poor durmg turnover,
but will improve \\'hen turnover
is completed.
The concept of turnover is
based on the f.1ct that most lakes
and impoundments have several
layers of \Vater of diffncnt tl'mperature~.

The co iJ L'~t water 1~ .H the bortnm of the lake, bec.tmc cold
\.V;ltt'r.jU\t hb.: cold JJr, 1\ he.lVJl'r.
Cold w,ucr 'till b. WJrlll Welter
stay~ dt the top c&gt;fthl' l.1kl' .
This Lit r 1.., one of rhe fl'~l.,OI'l'i
that t.ulw;ttcn bd(\\V d.11ll.., .lrc
~uch ·good truut tJ,hcnn . The
w.ltL' r' rck-.l-,~,,_.d frb111 thl' lwctom

llkt• ,HL', L!llltL' cold
. throughom rl'lL' \'t'.ll" .utd !"It h
with ~)xygcn. In nthr..-r \l.'ord~. pnof

the

fL'Ct lub1t.H t(Jt trnut.
The b,1\IC ph\'\ll.., of rhc ..,ltll.luon LcllhL'" g-rc.n r.: h.m~t'' Junng
. rhe f.tl! l he ~·old n1ght.., 1lf
Non·mbn d11ll thl· ~ud.ltl'
watl'r .... \\1m h hl'l 01 11e he.t\ ' IL'r a..,
thcy ger cnltk·r I he w.tters ,1 ft'
nuxcd by \\,\\'L' ,tnd w1nd .Ktlon,

and over a pcnoJ of cold fall
nights, the water of rhL' top and
bottom actually trade places until
the tem.peratLu\: become fairly
uniform throughout the water
co lumn .
Turnover is just one of the
cha nges OCCUrring during the: fail,
but many believe it is the most
nnportant. The underwater vcgeration is also dying off, and the
o:\.-yg~n levd of thl' waters IS
becoming more uniform as the
temperature be co me more umform in the lake.
. · When you mix all the factors
together, you have the basis for
some exciting · fishing. Bass often
move into fairly predictable feedmg areas in the fall. If you find the'
right patterns, you can enjoy
excellent action.
In m any of the lakes of our
region, a productive fall pattern is
to fish rocky flats and points with
jigs. Crayfish are one of the most
Important fall forage items, and a
jig and pig or tube lure can do a
· great job of imitating crayfish
moving across the .bottom.
Anoth e r great pattern in the fall
is to bou11.:e· a deep-running
crankbait across the rocky bottom' '
of a lake. The most successful
approach seems ro include using-a
lure that ?ives deep enough to
make frequent co nta ct with the
bottom.
River snlJllmollth act1on IS also
Jt 1ts best 111 the fa ll. Any number
nfparterns c1n be cffecuve-.
Tube lures :-~re hot m most ,Hcas
:l!ld do a good JOb . of llmtatmg
cr.1yfish, wh1ch .m: proh.1bly t he
111mt 1111pnrt.1nt fnod tor 1"1\'l'r

~lll.ll llll OUdl"i 111 diL' r.lll.
1\.1,my of the..· . . r.ne\ mo~t popu-

trout \\',Hr..·ro; \\ 1ll rL'll' I\'L' fi:o.h
th1s t~ll. F.11l ti~hmg: em be \'cry
prnducU\'L' ll\lllg .1 v,lrt('ty oflun:s
.tnd b.tlt\.
Spm .mgkr\ -.hould 1h\'.tys
Jnclm.lc .1 few m- hnl' ~ptnncr.., 111
.tlw t,ll kk p.icb, Jlld the ..;vntht•ttl Po\\'nBJJt ts hard to b~· .1t .lt .1ny
tJme of the ye.lr.
l.1r

-

~

4-

- -

-

_ _ ..,

Abigail
Van
Buren

J

Grieving
nurse had
reason for
attitude
'

•

.,

tered nurse employed in a hospitaL My daughter passed away in
December from breast cancer. I
• worked up until two weeks prior
to my daughter's death.
During rhat time, I made 90
mention to my co-workers about
my daughter's grave condition. It
was just too sad. Three weeks
before my daughter Jied, my
supervisor called me into her
office and told me I had a "bad
attitude."
I admit that I had kept my feelings to mysel f, and of course my
demeanor reflected a sa d expresSion, but my attitude was never
"bad." I quickly responJed to my
supervisor, in my defense, that my
daughter was dying and asked her
how I was supposed to act. She
told me there wt:re other nurses
who had gravely ill children, but
they didn't bcha\'e the way I did .
I replied thJ.t she &lt;hould walk a
mile in m v ~hoes. She reiterateJ
that I had' a "bad attitude." I
responded thJt since she Slecmcd
to be such an authoritv on behavIor and dying childr~n. perhaps
she• could enlighten me on how
to "oct"- because I really didn 't
know.
I have sinrt' *returned to ~ork.
and I now have a strong dislike
for this person. I 1ce her daily, and
she has the nerve to speak to me
after that unpleasant encounter.
Abby, how do I get past this' She
has apologiz~d for her comments,
but the damage has already been
dnnc. - FURIOUS R.N. IN

tunate that your behavior was
misunderstood , but since your
co!l,·aguc' had no way of knowing what you were going through
at the time, your supervisor was
only doing her job.
Please accept her apology and
find it in your heart to forgive
her. If you cannot. professional
coUllleling to help you rechannel
your grief and anger may be in
order. Life is too precious to harbor reSC IIllllC'Jlt~.

Nokia 252C

DEAR ABBY: I' m writing
about your response to "Disappoillted in Seattle" regarding
security m marriabe.You above all
should know rhat m a rria~e does
not nr.:.·ces:-.arily mean sccuricy.You
have printed enough letters from

~:

FAMILY TRADITION - Collectmg po litica 1
paraphernalia is
a tradition with
the Billings family of Ppint
Pleasant. Pictured above
are, from left ,
Brian, Josh and
Jared Billings
displaying a par- .
tion of Brian's
400-plus political badge collection. In addition to the
badges, he also
has numerous
bumper stickers, matches.
brochures. and
hand-held fans.
(Michele Carter
photo)

DEAR ABBY: I am a regis-

THE NORTHEAST
DEAR FURIOUS: It's unfor-

to the

'

'

ADVICE

Novembe~~!be~ !!makeC!~~d!s~!tjJ!

On
here to ask for your support when you 110 to vote.
I am 50 years old, my wife Is CArrie Collills, We live at 4600 ML Thbor Road in Vinton,
Ohio. We currenUy own 180 nrea lor nearly twency years.
. I have been a Huntll\llton Township trustee lor the past 7 years. I am currently nanning
lor the omce ol Count)' Commissiollet'.
I believe with my BucJCet MIU\allement. Job Skills, Employee Relations and Proven
Leadership qualities, I can AND will make a. dlllerence as Count)' Commissioner.
· By workil\11 with the Veterans, Senior Citizens, Our Youth, Townships, Villages, EMS,
and Chamber ol Commerce, we can make Gallla Count)' a saler, more prosperous place to
live and raise our childftl\.
I do not plan to just sit ill the Courthouse and Collect a check.
I would like to make penonal contact with busiMSS and industry in major cities to
bril\11 good paylflll jobs. fbr every 50 jobs we can bril\ll to this county, 50 more young
people will be able to stay here and make &amp; decent
Jiving. It &amp;lao means a broader tax base for our
schools, villa,Ces and townships. That Is 50 more
lamilles that can bond closer tollether.
Our pollee departments, Fire departments, and
Emer~&amp;ency Manallement Services need more
enhancement.
My plans are to be a flail-time Commissioner .
with public participation and Input In their count)'.
I am not llOinll to make "' Jot ol promises I ca.nnot
keep.

lCtive during midday.
Hunters generally p~ck a ~om­
fortable resting place at the base
of a tree in areas with preferred
habitat so they are . in the best
position to observe and shoot
squirrels. During the early part of
the season when leaves remain on
trees. hunters generally use a
shotgun with No. 7 1/ 2 or No. 6
shot to effectively compensate for
the dense foliage. But in November and throughout the winter,
many hunters switch to a scoped
.22 caliber rifle that provides
more of a shooting c hallenge
while at the same time extends
the effective range for bagging a
bushytail.
The squirrel hunting season
began August 19 and remains
open through January 31, except
during the week deer gun season
that begms Novembe r 27.
Hunters may take·a daily !unit of
four squ irrels and also hum nn
Sundays.

MOUNTAIN STATE

MOR(;ANTOWN, W.Va. Most of th l' nurdoors acti\'ity is
no\v . CL'lltcn:: d on thr..· various
huntin g ~c.1..,om.
Th1s 1~ .1 gTL',\l tnhc of the yeJr
tOr hunrt•r.,, but you ctn nuke the
.\rgt1ment th,H this 1.., .llso one of
the \"l'r)" hl'~t tllllCS f~)r tJ:-iht.:rmcn.
Vl"tcran b.w; .m~:;ler~ know that
thl' fir'\t frmty mglus of the f.!ll
~CL'tn to 11'1\'tgor,Hl' rht' bas'\, triggenng som'-" .1ggn::..~iv.: reaLtions

Sunday, November 5, 1000

r;::::::::;--=c~o~
- ~L~I~s~

Squirrel hunting best in November

PageC1

an
a son
oun

on

--

Point Pleasant resident
stuck on political badges
BY MICHELE CARTER
REGISTER NEWS STAFF

OINT PLEASANT Politics,
politics, politics. That is all everyone
is hearing these days as the 2000
campaign closes i11 on Election Day.
Beginning Tuc.sday evening, badges ,
signs, brochures and other political
paraphernalia will begin to disappear until the next go~around.
Dut, to a Point Pleasant man, politics arc always in
the back of his mind and on display at his home as he
continues to add to an increasmg collection of political items.
Brian Billinb"· advertising manager for the Point

.Pleasant Register, is proud of the collection he
has been establishing since the tender age of 13.
"I have always been interested in politics," llillinb" said. "This is my collection."
llillings has collected more than
400 political buttons over the
years as well as blllnpc·r suc kers ,
lapel stickers, brochures, rulers
and other materials about politics.
Looking over thret' large shadow boxes filled to the· brim with
badges featuring numerous candidates ti·om n:-ttional , statl' J nd local
races, the shape~ ;m d sizes of the
badges vary as much a'i the nam~"llillings said hi &lt; fim b&gt;dge wa&lt; RichJrd
Nixon's "Nixon Now More Th.m En·r." which
he purchased at the local Republi r.tll HL'.Idyu.ll'll'fs.
The latest badge hl' received wa..; Olll' nf Pl"l'~1dcnr
Ronald R eagan ;md !'resident George· llLl'h. which he

purch.t\l'd fi·oi11 a man
111

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ln tfw; c:tllljl:llg'll

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I }L·h,ttl..'. hut prinr &lt;c tht• ( kt. .l dr..·b.Ht". •'
1\.l'\' Tc:\ fr\ \' ,\,t·· Ylq t111g Centreville
Cnlkgt· .l!l d h.q"~]1L'Ill ,l upnn .1 dt:bar~..·
b;ldl!;t'. I t ~· hroug-ht H h:tck. tl:1r Billmg~.

''It! .dl 111\' n'.ln (l( l'~) l kctlll~. J c.m 1t
rL~lJ1L'Illlwr .1 \ ,t;llp.ugn th.lt had ~ltldudl'd
,{) 111,\llY ddt"L-rl'llt h.ldf:L'~·· lillllll~~ -..Jill.
l'ht· ~-l)lkltloll bn.J~t . . t\\n h,lll~t'" "htl'h ,\l"L'
I]! e ()hk~t of the hunch: Fin t H_pn-.c\·l·lt .111d

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.tbout (ilt'"c

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lllttTC\1111~

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Please see Buttons. Page C7

Please see Abby, Pa&amp;e C7

FAC welcomes 'Impressions by Ritchie'

900 West Emmit Avenue

ALL! POLIS - The French Art
Colony galleries, 530 Fim Ave.,
will be filled with the artworks
of Annette Ritchie in "Impressions by Ritchtt·." The exhibit.
sponsored by H oskins-Tanner and I )r. Edward
J. Sheridan, runs through Nov. 2'l.
Annette Ritchie of South Point started
painting in 1971i, as a hobby, Upon retiring
in 1&lt;J92, R.itc)1ic decided to pursue painting
as a profe"inn.
11
Now, ( paint whenl'vcr I can outdoors or
from photogrJphs in my studio. I use mostly acrylics Or ml"i in my worb. '' RitL·hic

(740)947-0069

S,lid.

Chillicothe

Jackson

Portsmouth

U.S. Cellular
750 Western Ave .
(740)701-4811

Classic Plaza

Hilltop Center

408 E. Huron
(-740) 188-0016

(7 401355-0058

Chillicothe

2736 Scioto Trail

In-Touch Wireless &amp; More

NJwBoaton

34 East Weter

U.S. Cellular
New Boston. Shopping Center
4010 Rhodes Ave.
(740!456-8711'

(7401779-6999

GallipoUo

'"

1USCC Wai-Mart K10sk
2145 Eastern Avenue
(7401441-1066

Waverly ·
USCC Wai-Man Kiosk

Al10, come and viait on1 of our Wa~Mart locations: New Boston, Jackson.
For your con'venit~c• we htvt over 80 authorized ageot locations.
Outside consultants ere evai!able upon request.

--·--·-~-

_..

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

DuTing tht· ~ummtT of 199-t. Rirchi~ ~rud-·
inl in Engl.mrl at Regent\ (~o \lq.!c under
John and M.,dylyn Addyman 1i·01n W.1ks.
EXHIBITION THIS MONTK- Saundra Koby, French Art Colony cura.md Judith 1\•ck of New 1York. 1',11 nting the
tor and board member, and artist Annette Ritchie are seen with exam-·
ros~.:s til Qut•cn Mary's Gardt~ll. R itch iL'
pies of Ritchie's work, on display through November at the FAC.

•

G,i//£'1')' hours tll'C flus,/,,)'
''"'ou.f.?h Fridar' 10 1. "'.
to ~ p. Ill

&lt;IIIII

tllY't'\t .111 111\l'l"t'"ll'lll-.t ll'lil~I.IJ'ld .,f!'Dl..C\
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IIL'I \\ill-k lt.l" l1n'll d~..·.,t nhu.l .1-. rxlnbltlll!-!:
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Suudtl)'

Sttlthlll~
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f,l\-Ol'llt'~

t-5 p.m. l'lrc .~allcrics u•ill
be closed Nol'. 23-26 /ilf' the
fh;mksgil'ill,t.: lwlid,,)'.

Rl.'lli'Jir·

~Ollll' ot ht'l

tl'\ hrnqll1.'
Rn~ hH' lu~ \ILI\ilcd \'t'lll' .111d pi.tJto ,lfld
ha-. bcl'll .pt.'dilrlll\11~ llltl'-! tlllh't"!Jte Jl·o\\'-

refer~ to thi'i time ,t'i ,1 ~.!,T(;}\\ ttl~ pent Hi.
Wh~ther ltitchil' 1'1 \\'orkllll!: wnh .len hl-~.

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m.unly .1 l.md~~..·.lpt· JttJ't. dtlH~ugh I
do p.11t1t ~till lift· ,111d '&gt;l".hl .IJ1t'..., I rn11~1~k~
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Page C2 • iounbap OJ: ame• ·iotnlmtl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Sunda~Novtfnber5,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

itunbap l!!:amts-itentmtl • Page C3

WEDDING POLICIES
[n an effort to provide our readership with
current news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will
not accept weddings after 90 days from the date
of the event.
Weddings submitted after the 90-day deadline
will appear during the week in The Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register and the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune.
Weddings will not be published prior to the cer.emony.
All material submitted for publication ts subject
to editing.

•

(2) Big AI, Little Joe. and Fuzzy Teddy remind ua of the
Three Stoogea: Curly, Larry. and Moe. While their goofy
antlca might be fun to -tcb, we woulctn•t want 'em to
be leaders In our nation! Phooey!
Go to the church of your chofce next Sunday and uote

"Pro-Life I Pro-Family" on November 7.
Frlenda of Cbriat

·

Paid Ad bll Bqb Murpllu 13461 SIR 160, VInton, Ohio 4-5686

I
I

.;:

.

••
~r

I

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Chad Angel

Sally Sue Brown

Wilson.:. Angel wedding

Garris-Brown wedding

:• c;ALLIPOLIS- Mtchell&lt; Dawn Wilson and Ronald Chad Angel
~ \verc umtcd m marri:l.ge on Oct. 7, 2000 at Fa~rviev..· Baptist Church
111 Wtl~us. with Carl H olderby. grJndf.uhcr of the bride. otftC!ating.
&gt; I'arents of the cuuple Jre Don and Carla Wilson ofWil low Wood.
,•"Jnd Ronmc .md Joanna An~;d of c;a!lipoli&lt;.
::; Music was prov1ded by S~ndra Holdc·rby, pianist, and vocalist Amy
, Holderbv.
W~dd1,ng :tttt•nd:mtS C011'i l'iteci of the p;uent~ .of ho th the bride

t

·~room.

._ A fl'Ct'ption \Va\ "held tiJl!owmg tht· ceremony in the church fe llow. ,htp hall.
l"hc couple IS no\v n:stdmg 111 Cmcmnaci, wh~rc she IS employed as
nurst' and he is employed a.;; a machim: op&lt;:rator.

Mr. and Mrs, Ray Saunders

GALLIPOLIS - Sally. Sue Gar_ris of Columbia, S.C., and Brandon
Enr Brown ofWinston-Salem,N.C., were united in marriage Sept. 2,
2000 at Shandon United Methodist Church.
Dr. Michael Guffee Sr. performed the 3 p.m. ceremony. A reception
followed at Forest Lake Club.
The bride, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Calhoun Garris of
Columbia, is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scenus Derry Garris
of Georgetown, S.C., Mrs. Vivian Martin Ri chardson of Pendleton,
S.C., and the late Robert Henry Richardson.
She earned a B.A. in history from Wofford College and an M .A. in
governm ent from the University ofVirginia.
The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs.James Daniel Brown ofSinipsonvjlle , S.C., 1s the grandson Mr. and Mrs. James Young of Gallipolis,
and the late Mr. and Mrs. Everett Lawrence Brabham. He is the grandson. of the late John Rutherford Brown of Gallipolis.
He earned a B.S. fro m Wofford College, a M.D. from University of
South Caroli na School of M edicine, and is a resident physi cian at Wake
Forest Un iver"sity Baptist M edical Center.
Ma!d of honor was Elizabeth Anne Brown, groom's sister. Attendant'
were Jcnifer Duckworth Cope land, Stacey Overstreet Ferrelle, Margaret Frances Key, Mary Elizabeth Knight, Tara · Elizabeth Niccum,
Claudia Lynn Parks and Jayna Lauren Wall ace.
Junior bridesmaid was Nena Kathryn Shoemaker. Flower girl was
Emlynn Lee Shoemaker.
•·
Best man was James Daniel Brown, groom's father. Groomsmen
were Andrew James Brown , Robert Berry Garris, Jason Lee Hawn,
Andrew Witt H edgepath, Walter R o bert Long, Matthew Vinson Mas·ten, Nathan Joshua Miller, Robert Toole Usry and Kenneth William
Winter. Scripture reader was Ray Lee Thompson II.
Out of town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
JR. Sauer and Brody, &gt;nd Bonnie Tabor and Nick Tabor, all of Galhpolis.
The couple took a wedding trip to N antucket, Mass.
&lt;

Food recalls announced
POMEROY The Meig1
County
Health Department
announced two food recalls which
were reported by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture and
Ohio Deparm1ent of Health.

Steak recall

Shannon Smith and Brian Hendrickson

Smith-Hendrickson engagement
MASO~. W.VL

:-·J.~n l

.111d C.trolyn Smith of Mason arc announc- ·
mg the cngJ.gemen! .md .1ppm.tching marriage of their daL1glitcr,
Slunn :-111 D.lwn. to Bnan James 1 -kndnck~on. ~on of 1\ruct.: and It eta
I kncincbon of f\ib&lt;.on .

Ttn· bnde l.'lecr wdl ~r.,du,ltl' frum Wah.una H1gh School in June
.111d pl.tm ttl .lttl'nd ,-ol lq.!e Ill Lou t'\l:ltLt, where '\he \.\'dl n,I-lJOf in
Jll .W• lg~..· therapy. J lr·r tl .uH l' · h .1 l !){)H graduate of\~lahanu Htgh School
tnd ~~ UlTrCJllly '\l .Jttnn L·d ;n l·ort Polk. La .. ,.,.·tth the U.S. Arrny.
Tlll' \n·ddmg \\ dl b ~,.· lll' ld .1 t 7:JO p.m on Dt'c. 21 .H the Fanvtcw
!\1bk Cln1rt h 111 (;,b\ t,,&lt;, \\'11 , V./.V.1. The custom of .m open church
wrddtn~ wtll hl· ob'n\'cd. I he ~ ouplc wtll rcs1dc :a Fnn l'olk tOUQ\vmg tlu.· brtdl.' L"il·rt\ gndu .ltHlll 111 Junt'.
~(101

Omaha Steaks Intern ational
Inc., Omaha, Neb., is voluntarily
recalling approximately 22,000
pounds of frozen ground beef
product' that i11ay be. contaminated with E. Coli 0157:H 7, according to the USDA's Food Safety and

11

658."

• Omaha Steaks Angu1 Ground
Beef Chuck Patties in 12.5 lb.
boxe! of 25 burgen, 8 oz. each.
E•ch box i! marked with item
number "3611080."
• Ground BeefBurgen (Omaha
Steaks Burgers) in 24 oz. boxes of
six burgers, 4 oz. each. Each box is

·Saunders 5Oth .

Mr. and Mrs. Brian Charles Bean

Zielinski._ Bean wedding
CHESTER - Anita Eilee n Ziehnski and llnan C h;irlcs Uem
exchanged wedding vows Aug. 12.
The bride is the daughter of Patricia ll &gt;h r of Athens md M3rk
Zielinski of Pomeroy. Her husban d is the &lt;on of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bean of St. Clairsville.
The 5:30_p.m . garden wedding was held at the home o( the bride''
gT&gt;ndparents, Henry and Eileen Dahr o( C h e&lt;tcr. The hndal party
arrived at the ceremony by horse and ~arr i:1 ge. The bndc W:l' e"corted to the altar in stages by her grandfather, father and llHJthcr
Margi Lenz of Columbus was m aid of hOn or. l:hidc.;;maid, w~rt' Jc&lt;.,sica ·Dawson of Brandon, Fla ., col~&lt;in of the bride: Bec ky llc"' of
Columbus, sister of the br idegroom, a11d A11gda Ht'll\vood of
Zanesville.
Marcus Lloyd oi Columbus was best man. U"~her~ were Mc1rk He an
of Columbus, broth er of the bridegroom; Toby Booth of· M.mh.mm
Beach, Calif., cousin of th e bridegroom; and Scott Ztclmskl of Nelsonville, brother of the bride.
.
Flower girls were !so bel Hutchinson of Athens.Jessica Clay of Nelsonville, and cousins of the bride, Kendra and Kristin Ftck of lla,kms.
and Mary Ellen Hardin of Wilmington. Ring bearer "·" Matthc·w
Bahr of Blue Bell, Pa., also a cousin of the bride.
Nuptial music was sung by Alliso n R me ofChe..rer.A reception followed the ceremony at the Belpre Shrine C lub.
The bride has a bachel or's degree in P'ych o l o~y and '&gt;ori,l l work
from Ohio University and is a social worker at H tckory Creek Nursing . Center, The Plains. Sht• i!' enroll ed in the.: Kradu.ltt' prugr;Lin for
social work at Ohio University.
Her husband is an inbound agent for Towne ALr FrL'lgln. L111C:lstcr.
They are making their home in L&gt;nca~ter.

~I

""

&lt;J¥- '§~""

.59 Ohio '}/I&lt;XIr "PioM • Qalllpohs
CIAMONO ~NNl\IERSARV ,RlNG

(740) 446-3484

Pl1111 111 RICIII, P111 C:S

Inspection Service. ·
T he ground beef products being
recalled bear the establishment
nmnbcr" 11 98A" inside the USDA
seal of inspection, and a production
code beginning w ith "07 180" and
.
. 1 " ....J 1,n "?2
en d111g
w1t1
_ ,'' ur "2-"
:&gt;.
Products ~u bject to recall are:
• Ground BeefBurgers (Omaha
Steaks Burgers) in 48 oz. boxes of
12 burgers, fOur oz. each. Each box
1~ marked w ith item numbe r

BOLZll MtDtCAt Ct"'lltJJ

.

Accidents Happen!!
And.after it's all over,
questions come up. Call the
Holzer Health Hotline for
ansv,crs to your health
concerns. A Holzer
Medical Center RN is ond11ty

Partial·
.
.birth abortion:
you wouldn't do it to a puppy.
so why do it to a baby?
.

Recall
fromPageQ
marked with item number
"0710004."
• Horizon brand Ground Beef
Chuck Patties (Arigus) in 10 lb.
boxes of 32 burgers, five oz. each.
Each box is marked with item
numbcr"401 1050."
The ground beef was produced
on July 18 and distributed via mail
order, door-to-door sales, retail
establishments,
internet and
institutional sales nationwide.
The problem was discovered'
when Connecticut officials contacted FSlS about suspected illnesses. FSlS samples' of the product
tested positive for E. Coli
0157:H7. A link between the illnesses and the product has not
been confirmed.
E. Coli 01057 :H7 is a potentially deadly bacteria that can cause
bloody diarrhea and dehydration.
The very young, the elderly, and
persons
with
compromised
immune systems are the most susceptible to food-borne illness.

Customers with questions may
contact the toll-free Omaha Steaks
product safety information line at
(877) 789-7117,7 a.m. to 10 p.m .,
CST, Monday through Friday, 8
a.m. to 5 p.m . Sarundays and noon
to 5 p.m. on Sundays.

Chicken tender recall
Simmons Foods, Inc., a Van
Duren, Ark ., firm, has voluntarily
recalled approximately 716,000
pounds of cooked, frozen chicken
tenders that may co ntain milk
products undeclared on the label,
according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's Food Safety and
Inspection Service.
Milk products are a known allergen, and persom with an allergy or

E-mail your weddings, anniversaries and engagements
. to the Sunday Tinies-Sentinel.
galtrib~trre@e11rekanet.com

OR
ppregister@eurekanet.com

s~vcre sensitivity to milk product-;
run the risk of possibl e serious
allergic reactions 1f the product is
consumed.
The produ cts being recalled arc
2.5 pound bags of Sunmons
Breaded C hi cken Brcas\ Tenders.
Imide the USDA seal of inspection, "P-202~7" appears.
Th e product was produced
between April 7 and Oct. 25. O n
the side of each package is an identifying code. The first four dtgi ts of
the code date on each package
subject to recall are between 0091)
and 0029, inclusive. The product
was distributed to retail stores
nationwide.
ConsumerS with food product

ELECT
BILL DAVIS
County Commissioner
Put Experience to work ...
Experience Positive Change.

S ORY
Prosecutor

KNOW
, WHERE THE CANDIDATES STAND:
GEORGE W. BUSH
· George W. Bush wants to
stop partial-birth abortion.

AL GORE *
AI Gore wants to keep
partial-birth abortion.

*The Clinton/Gore administration twice vetoed a ban on
partial birth abortion.

6 am until 2 am,
7 days a wee)\

· 1-800~~462-5255

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Bill C. (Marianne Boggs) Campbell
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 21, 2000 at the
Greenbrier in White Sulphur Spring;, WVa.
They were married Oct. 21, 1950 in Grace Uni ted Methodi&lt;t
Church in Gallipolis by the Rev. L.A. Donnally.
She is the daughteroflate William 0. and AristaHarrington Boggs.
She is director of community relations at H~lzer Medkal Center. and
executive vice presiderll of the Holzer Foundation for Tri-State H ealth
Care.
He is the son of the late J ohn C. and Belva Waugh Campbell, and
retired .from the JJ Blazer Construction Co.

LECTA - Ray and Doris Saunders of Lccta were joined in m arriage on Nov. 4, 1')50 at N orthup, with the Rev. Earl C remeans officiating.
·
The couple will cel ebrate their 50th weddmg anmversary with a celebration on Nov. II from 3 to 6 p.m. ar the home of their son, Donald Saunders.
They have three so ns. five gT&gt;ndchildren and one great-grandchild.
Anyone wishing to se nd a card or a le tter may do so at 8972 County
Road 37, Scottown, Ohio 45678. •

Pat

I

HMG Holzer Health Hotline

Campbell 5Oth

the

Cfor CJ/our CT&gt;t~.Jf.
CJ/our CT&gt;1YI.Jt~nl,
11nd CJ/our 'F"ufui'Q.

THE TH REE-STONE

. Mr. and Mra. Bill C. Campbell

Ask your physician about
medication concerns

Partial birth abortion, does this seem right to you?
Don't leave your conscience at the door of the
voting booth.
·'
Meigs &amp; Gallia Count)' Right to Life

Successful criminal and civil trial experience ... 6th
in graduating class from Capital Law SchooL.
BA and Masters of Business Administration from
Ohio State University... 6th generation Meigs
. Countian... married... 2 children.
Paid For By The Candidate

safety qucsnons may phone the
US DA M eat and Poultry Hotline
Jt (800) 535-4555, from I 0 a.m.
until4 p.m., EST, M onday through
Fnday. Recorded food safety messages are available 24 hour&lt; ' cby·

Yf Sweet 'I'weet
JVevermore my sweetheart,
'Those thoughtless talf.s
OJ your first kiss,
Or your first love,
Shatter tfie fort of my thoughts,
:As tfie hunter's merciless arrows,
'Tearing apart a docile deer's fieaTt.
In tfie bitter cold silence
Ojyour missed presence,
·r fiave learnt to smell tfie lilies
rtfie freezing river breeze; seen
a rainbow through tfie teardrops;
'Rejoiced the unison of love tunes ,
ln a blue jay's sweet tweet.
Well, my darling,
Tt is not that first f.iss,
Or tfie first love,
'{fiat is all that precious ,
'fruly precious is the kiss
Of a lasting love,
'that lives tfirougfi tfie cfiills ,
Ofa winterv lye's to rments,
Of the frostbitten nights.
~Jfalesfi
Co111plw1cllts of
I

' Darr &amp; :.'lficfielle 'B icfiimer
: -/{{,irers ofpactl')'

'Patel

~-

..

�t

Page C2 • iounbap OJ: ame• ·iotnlmtl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Sunda~Novtfnber5,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

itunbap l!!:amts-itentmtl • Page C3

WEDDING POLICIES
[n an effort to provide our readership with
current news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will
not accept weddings after 90 days from the date
of the event.
Weddings submitted after the 90-day deadline
will appear during the week in The Daily Sentinel, Point Pleasant Register and the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune.
Weddings will not be published prior to the cer.emony.
All material submitted for publication ts subject
to editing.

•

(2) Big AI, Little Joe. and Fuzzy Teddy remind ua of the
Three Stoogea: Curly, Larry. and Moe. While their goofy
antlca might be fun to -tcb, we woulctn•t want 'em to
be leaders In our nation! Phooey!
Go to the church of your chofce next Sunday and uote

"Pro-Life I Pro-Family" on November 7.
Frlenda of Cbriat

·

Paid Ad bll Bqb Murpllu 13461 SIR 160, VInton, Ohio 4-5686

I
I

.;:

.

••
~r

I

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Chad Angel

Sally Sue Brown

Wilson.:. Angel wedding

Garris-Brown wedding

:• c;ALLIPOLIS- Mtchell&lt; Dawn Wilson and Ronald Chad Angel
~ \verc umtcd m marri:l.ge on Oct. 7, 2000 at Fa~rviev..· Baptist Church
111 Wtl~us. with Carl H olderby. grJndf.uhcr of the bride. otftC!ating.
&gt; I'arents of the cuuple Jre Don and Carla Wilson ofWil low Wood.
,•"Jnd Ronmc .md Joanna An~;d of c;a!lipoli&lt;.
::; Music was prov1ded by S~ndra Holdc·rby, pianist, and vocalist Amy
, Holderbv.
W~dd1,ng :tttt•nd:mtS C011'i l'iteci of the p;uent~ .of ho th the bride

t

·~room.

._ A fl'Ct'ption \Va\ "held tiJl!owmg tht· ceremony in the church fe llow. ,htp hall.
l"hc couple IS no\v n:stdmg 111 Cmcmnaci, wh~rc she IS employed as
nurst' and he is employed a.;; a machim: op&lt;:rator.

Mr. and Mrs, Ray Saunders

GALLIPOLIS - Sally. Sue Gar_ris of Columbia, S.C., and Brandon
Enr Brown ofWinston-Salem,N.C., were united in marriage Sept. 2,
2000 at Shandon United Methodist Church.
Dr. Michael Guffee Sr. performed the 3 p.m. ceremony. A reception
followed at Forest Lake Club.
The bride, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Calhoun Garris of
Columbia, is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scenus Derry Garris
of Georgetown, S.C., Mrs. Vivian Martin Ri chardson of Pendleton,
S.C., and the late Robert Henry Richardson.
She earned a B.A. in history from Wofford College and an M .A. in
governm ent from the University ofVirginia.
The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs.James Daniel Brown ofSinipsonvjlle , S.C., 1s the grandson Mr. and Mrs. James Young of Gallipolis,
and the late Mr. and Mrs. Everett Lawrence Brabham. He is the grandson. of the late John Rutherford Brown of Gallipolis.
He earned a B.S. fro m Wofford College, a M.D. from University of
South Caroli na School of M edicine, and is a resident physi cian at Wake
Forest Un iver"sity Baptist M edical Center.
Ma!d of honor was Elizabeth Anne Brown, groom's sister. Attendant'
were Jcnifer Duckworth Cope land, Stacey Overstreet Ferrelle, Margaret Frances Key, Mary Elizabeth Knight, Tara · Elizabeth Niccum,
Claudia Lynn Parks and Jayna Lauren Wall ace.
Junior bridesmaid was Nena Kathryn Shoemaker. Flower girl was
Emlynn Lee Shoemaker.
•·
Best man was James Daniel Brown, groom's father. Groomsmen
were Andrew James Brown , Robert Berry Garris, Jason Lee Hawn,
Andrew Witt H edgepath, Walter R o bert Long, Matthew Vinson Mas·ten, Nathan Joshua Miller, Robert Toole Usry and Kenneth William
Winter. Scripture reader was Ray Lee Thompson II.
Out of town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
JR. Sauer and Brody, &gt;nd Bonnie Tabor and Nick Tabor, all of Galhpolis.
The couple took a wedding trip to N antucket, Mass.
&lt;

Food recalls announced
POMEROY The Meig1
County
Health Department
announced two food recalls which
were reported by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture and
Ohio Deparm1ent of Health.

Steak recall

Shannon Smith and Brian Hendrickson

Smith-Hendrickson engagement
MASO~. W.VL

:-·J.~n l

.111d C.trolyn Smith of Mason arc announc- ·
mg the cngJ.gemen! .md .1ppm.tching marriage of their daL1glitcr,
Slunn :-111 D.lwn. to Bnan James 1 -kndnck~on. ~on of 1\ruct.: and It eta
I kncincbon of f\ib&lt;.on .

Ttn· bnde l.'lecr wdl ~r.,du,ltl' frum Wah.una H1gh School in June
.111d pl.tm ttl .lttl'nd ,-ol lq.!e Ill Lou t'\l:ltLt, where '\he \.\'dl n,I-lJOf in
Jll .W• lg~..· therapy. J lr·r tl .uH l' · h .1 l !){)H graduate of\~lahanu Htgh School
tnd ~~ UlTrCJllly '\l .Jttnn L·d ;n l·ort Polk. La .. ,.,.·tth the U.S. Arrny.
Tlll' \n·ddmg \\ dl b ~,.· lll' ld .1 t 7:JO p.m on Dt'c. 21 .H the Fanvtcw
!\1bk Cln1rt h 111 (;,b\ t,,&lt;, \\'11 , V./.V.1. The custom of .m open church
wrddtn~ wtll hl· ob'n\'cd. I he ~ ouplc wtll rcs1dc :a Fnn l'olk tOUQ\vmg tlu.· brtdl.' L"il·rt\ gndu .ltHlll 111 Junt'.
~(101

Omaha Steaks Intern ational
Inc., Omaha, Neb., is voluntarily
recalling approximately 22,000
pounds of frozen ground beef
product' that i11ay be. contaminated with E. Coli 0157:H 7, according to the USDA's Food Safety and

11

658."

• Omaha Steaks Angu1 Ground
Beef Chuck Patties in 12.5 lb.
boxe! of 25 burgen, 8 oz. each.
E•ch box i! marked with item
number "3611080."
• Ground BeefBurgen (Omaha
Steaks Burgers) in 24 oz. boxes of
six burgers, 4 oz. each. Each box is

·Saunders 5Oth .

Mr. and Mrs. Brian Charles Bean

Zielinski._ Bean wedding
CHESTER - Anita Eilee n Ziehnski and llnan C h;irlcs Uem
exchanged wedding vows Aug. 12.
The bride is the daughter of Patricia ll &gt;h r of Athens md M3rk
Zielinski of Pomeroy. Her husban d is the &lt;on of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Bean of St. Clairsville.
The 5:30_p.m . garden wedding was held at the home o( the bride''
gT&gt;ndparents, Henry and Eileen Dahr o( C h e&lt;tcr. The hndal party
arrived at the ceremony by horse and ~arr i:1 ge. The bndc W:l' e"corted to the altar in stages by her grandfather, father and llHJthcr
Margi Lenz of Columbus was m aid of hOn or. l:hidc.;;maid, w~rt' Jc&lt;.,sica ·Dawson of Brandon, Fla ., col~&lt;in of the bride: Bec ky llc"' of
Columbus, sister of the br idegroom, a11d A11gda Ht'll\vood of
Zanesville.
Marcus Lloyd oi Columbus was best man. U"~her~ were Mc1rk He an
of Columbus, broth er of the bridegroom; Toby Booth of· M.mh.mm
Beach, Calif., cousin of th e bridegroom; and Scott Ztclmskl of Nelsonville, brother of the bride.
.
Flower girls were !so bel Hutchinson of Athens.Jessica Clay of Nelsonville, and cousins of the bride, Kendra and Kristin Ftck of lla,kms.
and Mary Ellen Hardin of Wilmington. Ring bearer "·" Matthc·w
Bahr of Blue Bell, Pa., also a cousin of the bride.
Nuptial music was sung by Alliso n R me ofChe..rer.A reception followed the ceremony at the Belpre Shrine C lub.
The bride has a bachel or's degree in P'ych o l o~y and '&gt;ori,l l work
from Ohio University and is a social worker at H tckory Creek Nursing . Center, The Plains. Sht• i!' enroll ed in the.: Kradu.ltt' prugr;Lin for
social work at Ohio University.
Her husband is an inbound agent for Towne ALr FrL'lgln. L111C:lstcr.
They are making their home in L&gt;nca~ter.

~I

""

&lt;J¥- '§~""

.59 Ohio '}/I&lt;XIr "PioM • Qalllpohs
CIAMONO ~NNl\IERSARV ,RlNG

(740) 446-3484

Pl1111 111 RICIII, P111 C:S

Inspection Service. ·
T he ground beef products being
recalled bear the establishment
nmnbcr" 11 98A" inside the USDA
seal of inspection, and a production
code beginning w ith "07 180" and
.
. 1 " ....J 1,n "?2
en d111g
w1t1
_ ,'' ur "2-"
:&gt;.
Products ~u bject to recall are:
• Ground BeefBurgers (Omaha
Steaks Burgers) in 48 oz. boxes of
12 burgers, fOur oz. each. Each box
1~ marked w ith item numbe r

BOLZll MtDtCAt Ct"'lltJJ

.

Accidents Happen!!
And.after it's all over,
questions come up. Call the
Holzer Health Hotline for
ansv,crs to your health
concerns. A Holzer
Medical Center RN is ond11ty

Partial·
.
.birth abortion:
you wouldn't do it to a puppy.
so why do it to a baby?
.

Recall
fromPageQ
marked with item number
"0710004."
• Horizon brand Ground Beef
Chuck Patties (Arigus) in 10 lb.
boxes of 32 burgers, five oz. each.
Each box is marked with item
numbcr"401 1050."
The ground beef was produced
on July 18 and distributed via mail
order, door-to-door sales, retail
establishments,
internet and
institutional sales nationwide.
The problem was discovered'
when Connecticut officials contacted FSlS about suspected illnesses. FSlS samples' of the product
tested positive for E. Coli
0157:H7. A link between the illnesses and the product has not
been confirmed.
E. Coli 01057 :H7 is a potentially deadly bacteria that can cause
bloody diarrhea and dehydration.
The very young, the elderly, and
persons
with
compromised
immune systems are the most susceptible to food-borne illness.

Customers with questions may
contact the toll-free Omaha Steaks
product safety information line at
(877) 789-7117,7 a.m. to 10 p.m .,
CST, Monday through Friday, 8
a.m. to 5 p.m . Sarundays and noon
to 5 p.m. on Sundays.

Chicken tender recall
Simmons Foods, Inc., a Van
Duren, Ark ., firm, has voluntarily
recalled approximately 716,000
pounds of cooked, frozen chicken
tenders that may co ntain milk
products undeclared on the label,
according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's Food Safety and
Inspection Service.
Milk products are a known allergen, and persom with an allergy or

E-mail your weddings, anniversaries and engagements
. to the Sunday Tinies-Sentinel.
galtrib~trre@e11rekanet.com

OR
ppregister@eurekanet.com

s~vcre sensitivity to milk product-;
run the risk of possibl e serious
allergic reactions 1f the product is
consumed.
The produ cts being recalled arc
2.5 pound bags of Sunmons
Breaded C hi cken Brcas\ Tenders.
Imide the USDA seal of inspection, "P-202~7" appears.
Th e product was produced
between April 7 and Oct. 25. O n
the side of each package is an identifying code. The first four dtgi ts of
the code date on each package
subject to recall are between 0091)
and 0029, inclusive. The product
was distributed to retail stores
nationwide.
ConsumerS with food product

ELECT
BILL DAVIS
County Commissioner
Put Experience to work ...
Experience Positive Change.

S ORY
Prosecutor

KNOW
, WHERE THE CANDIDATES STAND:
GEORGE W. BUSH
· George W. Bush wants to
stop partial-birth abortion.

AL GORE *
AI Gore wants to keep
partial-birth abortion.

*The Clinton/Gore administration twice vetoed a ban on
partial birth abortion.

6 am until 2 am,
7 days a wee)\

· 1-800~~462-5255

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Bill C. (Marianne Boggs) Campbell
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on Oct. 21, 2000 at the
Greenbrier in White Sulphur Spring;, WVa.
They were married Oct. 21, 1950 in Grace Uni ted Methodi&lt;t
Church in Gallipolis by the Rev. L.A. Donnally.
She is the daughteroflate William 0. and AristaHarrington Boggs.
She is director of community relations at H~lzer Medkal Center. and
executive vice presiderll of the Holzer Foundation for Tri-State H ealth
Care.
He is the son of the late J ohn C. and Belva Waugh Campbell, and
retired .from the JJ Blazer Construction Co.

LECTA - Ray and Doris Saunders of Lccta were joined in m arriage on Nov. 4, 1')50 at N orthup, with the Rev. Earl C remeans officiating.
·
The couple will cel ebrate their 50th weddmg anmversary with a celebration on Nov. II from 3 to 6 p.m. ar the home of their son, Donald Saunders.
They have three so ns. five gT&gt;ndchildren and one great-grandchild.
Anyone wishing to se nd a card or a le tter may do so at 8972 County
Road 37, Scottown, Ohio 45678. •

Pat

I

HMG Holzer Health Hotline

Campbell 5Oth

the

Cfor CJ/our CT&gt;t~.Jf.
CJ/our CT&gt;1YI.Jt~nl,
11nd CJ/our 'F"ufui'Q.

THE TH REE-STONE

. Mr. and Mra. Bill C. Campbell

Ask your physician about
medication concerns

Partial birth abortion, does this seem right to you?
Don't leave your conscience at the door of the
voting booth.
·'
Meigs &amp; Gallia Count)' Right to Life

Successful criminal and civil trial experience ... 6th
in graduating class from Capital Law SchooL.
BA and Masters of Business Administration from
Ohio State University... 6th generation Meigs
. Countian... married... 2 children.
Paid For By The Candidate

safety qucsnons may phone the
US DA M eat and Poultry Hotline
Jt (800) 535-4555, from I 0 a.m.
until4 p.m., EST, M onday through
Fnday. Recorded food safety messages are available 24 hour&lt; ' cby·

Yf Sweet 'I'weet
JVevermore my sweetheart,
'Those thoughtless talf.s
OJ your first kiss,
Or your first love,
Shatter tfie fort of my thoughts,
:As tfie hunter's merciless arrows,
'Tearing apart a docile deer's fieaTt.
In tfie bitter cold silence
Ojyour missed presence,
·r fiave learnt to smell tfie lilies
rtfie freezing river breeze; seen
a rainbow through tfie teardrops;
'Rejoiced the unison of love tunes ,
ln a blue jay's sweet tweet.
Well, my darling,
Tt is not that first f.iss,
Or tfie first love,
'{fiat is all that precious ,
'fruly precious is the kiss
Of a lasting love,
'that lives tfirougfi tfie cfiills ,
Ofa winterv lye's to rments,
Of the frostbitten nights.
~Jfalesfi
Co111plw1cllts of
I

' Darr &amp; :.'lficfielle 'B icfiimer
: -/{{,irers ofpactl')'

'Patel

~-

..

�Page C4 • &amp;imbap ltimrli -6rntinrl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Sunda~Nov.mber5,2000

6unba!' .1 ltmrs -6rn1mt! • Page CS

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

Residents still have time to choose Pomeroy bridge design .
POMEROY .-It's not too late
to luve your say in the PomeroyMason bridge design and possible
approach eriliancements.
Severa! local residents are circulating petitions in an effort to get
additional support for the cable
bridge design .
They believe the cable lighting,
which Bill Childs describes as
"spectacular," would contribute
· to the aesthetics of the entire
BendArea.
·
That combined with bridge
approach enhancements, like
extensive landscaping and perhaps
even a mini-park or lookout
•
•
could make the new bridge more
than a bridge across the Ohio
River, it could be a bridge to
attracting to~ists with dollars to
spend, says Childs.
You'll find the petitions at all
the banks, in post offices, and in
several businesses.

•••

After all these years, the bond-

Hollywood, Fla.,to visit her sister,
Esther Daruels, at the home of her
granddaugher, Shannon Wilson,
before returning to Pomeroy.

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY
mg that took pla ce between
fighting men of the 85th Division
in World War 11 has not diminished. Last week Harry and Margaret Bailey traveled to Myrtle
Beach for the biennial reunion.
About 200 attended, some with
canes, others on crutches, and
even a couple ip wheelchairs, but
there they were, a group of elderly men reminiscing about experiences shared more than a halfcentury ago. The impact on those
who fight battles for their country is apparently lifelong.
To make their trip real vacation, the Baileys drove down to

a

•••

A trail ride to benefit St. Jude's
Hospital will take place Saturday
at the Lone Oak Riding Stable.
Riders, mostly kids and 4-H
club members, will be collecting
money for St. Jude's and then will
participate in a I 0 a.m. to noon
ride. Prizes, like T-shirts and
badges, will be awanded to the
participants based on how much
money they collect. Riders are
still be accepted so if you're interested in more details, just give
Terry Carsey a call, 992-2800.

•••

Richard Crow' of Columbusthat 's the son of Richard Crow of
Syracuse - was pictured in the
U.S. News and World Report
Career Guide for 2001 behind a
table of food being distributed to

the needy.
decided to ask area businesses and
Crow, according to the article, friends for donations for new
finds time to doJUte 15 to 20 equipment. The boosters assure
hours a month to distribute food contributors tlut everything
at a food bank or to volunteer given will go directly into
with old folks at a community rebuilding the band.
Donations can be sent to the
center.
,d
The senior consultant with a Southern Band Boosters, in care
6rm in Columbus, according to of Jeanete Oldaker, band directhe article, turned down a higher- tor, Southern High School, P.O.
paying job for what he calls Box 98, Elm Street, Racine, Ohio
"quality of life" reasons - "like 45771.
community service projects
arranged by the company and
sometimes carried out on compaJust rwo more days and it's his,
ny time.".
tory. The campaigns with all their.
promises and pledges will finally
come to an end. The voters will
The Southern High School have had their say.
marching band has had a hard
And hopefully both the wintime surviving these past few
' years, but is now in the process of
trying to rebuild itself.
A, new director is in place, the
students are enthusiastic, but the
equipment is so old it can't even
be repaired.
So the Band Boosters have

Elizabeth Anne McCulty and D.R. Keeton

Gillespie-Blackford engagement

· McCulty-Keeton engagement

GALLIPOLIS - Mick and Jody Blackford of Gallipolis, and John
and Teresa Gillespie of JaGkson are announcing the engagement and
upcoming marriage of their children, Jonathan and Christy.
The groom-to-be is a 1995 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. H e served four years in the U.S. Navy as a storekeeper, and is
currently in the process of re-enlisting.
He 1s the grandson of Oscar E Pauley of Gallipolis and Yvonne Cardaras of Glouster, and the late Mick Blackford of Trimble. He is the
great-grandson of Harry Sharp ofTrimble.
The bride-to-be is a 1999 graduate ofWellston High School. She
has attended Hocking College and is currently employed at the WalMart Pharmacy in Jackson.
.
She is the granddaughter of Holly and Lois Gillespie ofJackson, and
Tom and Thelma Post of Ray. She is the great-granddaughter of Evelyn Whiting, and the late Carl Whiting ofWellston.
·
The wedding w1ll be Dec. 30, 2000 at 2:30 p.m. at the Fellowship
Umted Methodist Church in Coalton. Officiating at the ceremony
w!ll be Pastor Everett Ward, assisted by Pastor Jim Snyder. A reception
will follo~ at the James A. Rhodes Community Center in Coalton.

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED - Kathy and Roy Willis of Chester celebrated their 16th wedding anniversary on Oct 11.

GALLIPOLIS - Announcement is being made of the engagement
and upcom.img marriage of Elizabeth Anne McCulty of Galhpolis and
Donald Robert (D.R .) Keeton of Ewingron.
The. bride-to-be is the daughter of Bob annd Cathy McCulty of
Gallipolis. The groom-to-be is the son of Donald and Loretta Keeton
of Ewington.
The wedding will be Nov. 25 at Trinity United Methodist Church
at Bidwell . A reception follows at the Gallipolis Shdne Club.
The groom-to-be is a 1991 graduate of North Gallia High School.
He is currently employed at Auto Zone as the manager of commercial
accounts. He also works at United Producers Livestock Association.
The groom-to-be is a 1997 graduate of River Valley High School.
She is currently earning a bachelor's degree in business management,
with an emphasis in information technology at the University of Rio
Grande. She also works at Ai'ea Agency on Aging District 7 and United Producers Livestock Association.

Have a celebration question?
Give us a call.
740:.446-2342
740-992-2156
304-67 5-1333

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REEDSVILLE George
Hall at the organ, Reedsville
United Methodist Church, 6:30
p.m.

POMEROY
Bradford
Church of Christ, to host a Concert of Prayer, Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
sponsored by the Middleport
Ministerial Association. "The Persecuted Church", theme. for the

servtce.

MONDAY
LETART FALLS Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., office
building.
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees, Monday, 6
p.m. at the township hall on
Rocksprings Road.
RACINE Racine Village
Council, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.

ALFRED The Orange
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osie Fallrod.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern

,

3554 State Rt. 160

Rev. Robert Blevins.
African MissionarY/Evaneelist. is SPeakine

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WE SHIP UPS

The City Commission of the City ofGall·ipolis, Ohio, proposed the following changes 10 Section 20
of.the City Charter that will be on the ballot November 7, 2000. The change in the date of the ·
appointment-of the Solicitor allows newly elected commissioners who don't take office until
January and who will be working with the Solicitor, the opportunity to have a say in the
appointment. Changing the requirement that the Solicitor live in the City, to living in Galli a
County with an active. law practice in Gallipolis, provides the City with other choices of attorneys
to name as Solicitor.
The City Charter currently reads:
Section 20. CITY SOLICITOR
There shall be a City Solicitor, who shall be appointed to said oflicc by a majority vote of the City
Commission and whose term of office shall be four years and shall begin on the first day of
January next after his election, unless the election or appointment is to fill an unexpired term,
when it shall be for the unexpired term. The City Solicitor sha ll be a practicing attorney at law,
and shall be a resident of the City of Gallipolis, Ohio, and shall have the qualifications of an elector
the rein. In case of a vacancy caused by death, resignation, removal or from any other cause, the
Ci ty Commission shall appoint a City Solicitor to serve for the unexpired term.

P.m.

The proposed changes are as follows :
Section 20. CITY SOLICITOR.
There shall be a City Solicitor, who shall be appointed to said office by a majbrity vote of the City
Co mmi ssion and whose term of office shall be four years and shal l begin on the first day of
JanHar) April next after his election in February, unless the election or appointment is to fill an
unexp ired term, when it shall be for the unexpired term. The C1ty Solicitor shall be a practicing
attorney at law with an active practice in the City of Gallipolis, and shall be a resident of the City of
Gollipeli~ Gallia County, Ohio, and shall have the qualificatio~ an elecior therein. In case of a
vacancy caused by death, resignation, removal or fro m any other cause, the City Commission shall
appoint a City Solicitor to serve for the unexpired term.

CHESHIRE
TOPS
OH\383, Cheshire, meets at
Cheshire
United • Methodist
Church, 10-11 a.m. For information, call Ann Mitchell at 3880004.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist, 6
p.m. with Rick Barcus preaching.
GALLIPOLIS
Bul~ville
Church Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
· worship service I 0:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. with Rev. Bob flood.

GALLIPOLIS - TOPS Club
meets at th e First N azart=ne
Church, Second Avenue, 5:30 p.m.
Call Marilyn, Lee for information,
446-045\..
Miracles in
GALLI PO LIS Recovery
Group
Narcotics
Anonymous meeting, 7:30 p.m .,
St. Peter's Episcopal Church.

THURMAN The New
Blackfork Church, a ministry of
. Trinity Parish UMC, has a new
· Sunday schedule. Swtday school
GALLIPOLIS John Gee
· will be held at 9:30 a.m. Sunday
worship will be held at 6:30 p.m. Black Historical Center open 10
Rev. Russell Butti will lead the a.m. until 2 p.m.
worship service. For information, ·
'IUesday, November 7
call 1-877-540-11 00.
,

LECTA- Larry Haley .will be
guest speaker at \lhJ.nut Ridge
Church for the worship service at
I 0:30 a.m. Sunday School is at
' 9:30a.m.
·
McARTHUR- 14th annual
Engle Construction reunion,
noon-4 p.m., Vinton County
Community Building, .Ohio 93
North.
PORTER - Services at Clark
Clupel Church are at 6 p.m.
,

GALLIPOLIS Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS Choose to
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m., Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information, call256-1535.
GALLIPOLIS . AI-Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS ·. New Life
Lutheran Church 12-Step Spirjru-

al Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Lions Club,
6:30 p.m., Holiday Inn.

Wednesday. November 8

•••

lhursclay, November 10
GALLIPOLIS John Gee
Black Historical Center open, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.

Revival

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus
speaking.
CROWN CITY Charles
. .Connors will preach at Liberty
Chapel Church, 7 p.m. The Connors F:u,nily will sing. .

c?z/ c&amp;.~Cl.

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. Revival at Salem Communiry
Church, Nov. 8-11, 7 p.m. nightly.
Sunday service at 6 p.m. Special
speakers are· the Rev. Bob Thompson and the Rev. Charles Curry.

'{IV

ead 4e'Wiee.

CENTENARY A Holy
Ghost Revolution will be held at
Centenary United Methodist
&lt;:;hurch Nov. 6-10, 7 p.m., with
Pastor Dan Freeman fiom Living

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

(1) Big AI claims "he invented the ·
Internet." Yeah sure! And, if you believe
him, I've got a bridge in Vinton I'd like to
sell rat Whew!
Go to the church of your choice next
Sunday and vote "Pro-Life I Pro-Family"
on November 7.
Friends of Christ

Holzer Clinic of West Virginia
Get your flu vaccine before the flu season begins.

5:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M:

•'

'

irritahili1y, as wl'll as at I itiC'I'l'&lt;lst·tlrisk ot'so1ne t'i lll Ct'I'S.
·\n:v derision that you lllilkt· allnut honnont· lht'l'ii[IJ' is nol final. You Cilll
slart or !'ntllh&lt;' ll't•atmt•nt illl~ tiltH', hut if' you slop il, Uw protecliVl' d'kcts
of!lwse llll'nlpit·H will sto[J as well. )otJI' derision &lt;thou! hm'rnont• thl'l'ii[JY
shou ld I)(' l'l'Vit'\ll'U t•ach ~l'ill' 11ilh )·our tloctor at :-our anmr;rl dJl'C'IIup.
\fkr nu•nopaust· , il is in1purlant Itt t'lllllitllll' )'t'ill'l) lm·ast ami vaginal
l'\illtls, f'ap ll'sts antl mammo~nnns, &lt;IS wl'll as a gt•nt• r·a l phvsical exam.
."imm ·1': 'f/11• \;1/iwm/
ill'i/ililll' t/11 !f!ill;! ,. ,
11 \ \11 . 111/I.;!IJ I

M10ENESIS
Hospital System

.Cabell Huntington Hospital
Pleasant Valley Hospital
St. Mary's Hospital

(740) 446-7619

GALLIPOLIS Revival at
French City Baptist Church, 3554
State Route 160, Nov. 10-12.
African missionary and evangelost
Robert Blevins will speak at 7 p.m.
on Nov. 10 and 11, and on Nov. 12
at II a.m. and 6 p.m. Special music
planned.

435 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

.l!....dJu.s 11

IJO""' ~
Now taklne reservations for H.61~ij~~~ ! '
Get-Toeethers rOffice Parties. ' urch ·
eatherine. Private PartiesJ
SPace available for your sP~clal event
No time to bakef
,

IIJtJuiJ li/u.

Gallia County Health Department

~~
e~
to.

I

Prenatal Clinic

to. a.JJ 8Qde

&lt;.

To Ohio
Residents.
Call 4M&gt;-85a8{
ForAn

Now takin2 orders for Pies. cakes &amp; PumPkin rolls
~

105 Butternut Pomeroy, OH

992·6566

,,,,,992·6316
......_,....,,, .

VINTON -A youth preaching
revival will be held at Vinton Full
Gospel Church Nov. 4 at I p.m.
and Nov. 5 at 6 p.m. Ages of
preachers are between 13 and 18.
Refreshments will be available.

FLU VACCINE CLINIC
NOVEMBER 6, 2000

E. V. C larke, Jr.
Gallipo lis City Manager

Fear of falling: Many
people stop exercises or
activities because they're
afraid of falling. Extra concern
can help you take reasonable
precautions, but fear can stclo 1
you from doing things that
keep you active, strong and
healthy.
Recommendations: Think
at:toul ways that fear has
changed your activities . Start
slowly to build confidence in
l .exerrcii!;e and daily activities.
Consider joining an exercise
group or class.
For More Information Call. ..

InHearing

Prenatal

GALLIPOLIS -Terry Call will

' preach at Bell Chapel, 7 p.m.

Water Church. Speci.al music features DJ and Nichole Stewart on
Monday; Trinity Trio on Tuesday;
and Living Water Praise Team on
Thursday and Friday. Special
singing by Teresa Price.

With
Lisa Koch, M.S .
Licensed Clinical
Audiologist

1-800-967-3277

GALLIPOLIS - Salute to all
veterans and those celebrating
November birthdays at Gallia
County Senior Resource Center,
11 a.m. Patriotic program. Make
reservations by calling 446-7000.

Sincerely,

This (fllt'SI ion is ht'st iiiiS\1 t'I'I'U ;Ill t•r talking with )Oll r dol'lol· (a ~··nen d
prat•l it iolu·r, ililt' I'll isl Ill' ~ nt·t·ologisl ). )ou shou ld discus.~ )otll" medical
ltislon, .1'0111' risk of Iwart UiSt'aSt', OSi('II IJIII'IlSis am]IJI'I•:rsl l'i!ltl'l'l' anu ,\Olll'
ll1n1il.l nwdiral hisiOI). l&gt;isruss I Itt· ntt·nopi111Sl' symplo1ns !hal )Oll ill'l'
I'X[)t'l'it'ltt'illll; &lt;IIIII h1111 Sl'l'illll.'il\1111'.1 i&gt;lllltt'l' lOll.
Takin~ honnom· lht'l'a[J.I fi1r a 'ihorllinlt' ( pl'rhaps liu· il li•\\ war') lllil~
hl'lpn·lit'll' lilt• illlllll)illl-( S)lllfliOIIIS. sueh as hoi flaslws, lhai.IOU filii.\ lJt•
h m i Ill-( d uri ng IIH · nop; 1u" ·. T; d, i ng hol'ltlt HI&lt;' su pp lt'lllt'll ts li II' il IDll!(l'l' t i me
ttta) hdp dl'la.l "'lt•opom,i;,. prolt T I ill!&lt;'in'l ht'&lt;lrl dist'il"'• improll' ~our
dlolt•,lt-n d lt ~ll ' l'i and I !Iii\ ilbo lwlp \IIIII ' 111!'111111'~· llmwlt'l', hot'ltliiiH'
lht 'l'il[ll IIii:-&gt; ilt'l'll lillkt•d In Ullflll'il'iillll .'iidt• d 'f(T!S, SUI'h iiS hloi~lillg Ill'

~ I

POINT PLEASANT - TriCounty Group Nareotics Anonymous meeting, 7:30 p.m. , 611
Viand Street. Use side entrance.

TO: Citizens of Gallipolis

Is Hormone Replacement Therapy For Me?

(\

Monday, November 6

Paid Ad by Bob Murohv 13467 S/R 160 VInton, Ohio 45686

French City
Baptist Church

Spedat ~

TUESDAY

NELSONVILLE
The
Athens-M eigs Educational Service Center, Thursday, 7 p.m. at

REVIVAL

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees. regular meeting,
7:30 p.m ., Monday, Syracuse village Hall .

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, regular session, Monday. 7 :30p.m at the fire
department.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Neighborhood Watch group,
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Family
, Life Center, Middleport Church
of Chmt. Educational materials
and window stickers will be avail·
able.

..

REEDSVILLE
Ohve
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 6:30p.m., to\vnship office on
Joppa Road.

RACINE - Regular meeting, Racine Chapter 134, Order
of Eastern Star, Monday, 7:30
p.m. Refreshments follow meetmg.

Star, Wednesday. installation of
officers. Installing officer, Worthy
Grand Matron of the Grand
Chapter of the Ohio Carol Jones.

lNGROUND

Antifreeze $3.99

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY

~

Sunday, November 5

Evaluate your '
personal risk,
consider
recommendations

•••

kEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Jonathan Blackford and Christy Gillespie

ners and losers will finish one
order of business - takmg down
their polit1cal signs. Let's hope it
happens quickly.

The flu vaccine will be given on a first come first serve basis.
No appointments will be made just walk-in.

Holzer Clinic of West Virginia
2605 Jackson Ave
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4498

l'l•dophiliJ: erotil· desirl' of .111 .1dull for

.1

child . (I)

In an apparent effort to legitimize pedophilia the
American Psychological Association published an
article, which concluded that, "sexual relations .
between an adult and a willing child may not be
harmful to the child."
·
·
Our Congress was so outraged by this APA article
192 Republicans and 162 Democrats voted to co11demn
it! (None voted in favor of this article.)
However, a handful of Con~ressmen voted "present",
a tactic used by clever politicians to avoid taking a
position on a bill. Among these were the not.e d
homosexual activists and openly gay Representative
from Massachusetts Barney Frank and ... our own 6th
Congressional District Representative Ted Strickland.
This is the same Ted Strickland who "chooses" to
support abortion... including the taxpayer funding of
176.5 millions of dollars to finance Planned
Parenthood ... the largest abortion provider in the
nation ... the same Planned Parenthood who profitably
and ghoulishly "harvests" aborted bo9-y parts and .
markets them to research centers around the globe.
Apparently our Representative (psychologi&amp;t)
Stnckland "chooses" to pursue his own amoral views
rather than reflect the moral values of the Christian
constituency in the 6th district.
We would encourage all citizens particularly
Christians to embrace their citizenship not merely as
duty and a privilege but as an opportunity,
meaningfully, to take an active roll in reforming our
moral and political culture by voting Pro-Life I Pro- ·
Family on Tuesday, November 7, 2000.
Friends of Christ
•
Note: Additional information on the APA report can be obtained by calling the Family
Research Council at 202-393-2100.
·
(1) Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.

Paid for by Bob Murphy, 13f67 St Rt . 160, Vinton, 011

•

�Page C4 • &amp;imbap ltimrli -6rntinrl

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Sunda~Nov.mber5,2000

6unba!' .1 ltmrs -6rn1mt! • Page CS

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

Residents still have time to choose Pomeroy bridge design .
POMEROY .-It's not too late
to luve your say in the PomeroyMason bridge design and possible
approach eriliancements.
Severa! local residents are circulating petitions in an effort to get
additional support for the cable
bridge design .
They believe the cable lighting,
which Bill Childs describes as
"spectacular," would contribute
· to the aesthetics of the entire
BendArea.
·
That combined with bridge
approach enhancements, like
extensive landscaping and perhaps
even a mini-park or lookout
•
•
could make the new bridge more
than a bridge across the Ohio
River, it could be a bridge to
attracting to~ists with dollars to
spend, says Childs.
You'll find the petitions at all
the banks, in post offices, and in
several businesses.

•••

After all these years, the bond-

Hollywood, Fla.,to visit her sister,
Esther Daruels, at the home of her
granddaugher, Shannon Wilson,
before returning to Pomeroy.

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY
mg that took pla ce between
fighting men of the 85th Division
in World War 11 has not diminished. Last week Harry and Margaret Bailey traveled to Myrtle
Beach for the biennial reunion.
About 200 attended, some with
canes, others on crutches, and
even a couple ip wheelchairs, but
there they were, a group of elderly men reminiscing about experiences shared more than a halfcentury ago. The impact on those
who fight battles for their country is apparently lifelong.
To make their trip real vacation, the Baileys drove down to

a

•••

A trail ride to benefit St. Jude's
Hospital will take place Saturday
at the Lone Oak Riding Stable.
Riders, mostly kids and 4-H
club members, will be collecting
money for St. Jude's and then will
participate in a I 0 a.m. to noon
ride. Prizes, like T-shirts and
badges, will be awanded to the
participants based on how much
money they collect. Riders are
still be accepted so if you're interested in more details, just give
Terry Carsey a call, 992-2800.

•••

Richard Crow' of Columbusthat 's the son of Richard Crow of
Syracuse - was pictured in the
U.S. News and World Report
Career Guide for 2001 behind a
table of food being distributed to

the needy.
decided to ask area businesses and
Crow, according to the article, friends for donations for new
finds time to doJUte 15 to 20 equipment. The boosters assure
hours a month to distribute food contributors tlut everything
at a food bank or to volunteer given will go directly into
with old folks at a community rebuilding the band.
Donations can be sent to the
center.
,d
The senior consultant with a Southern Band Boosters, in care
6rm in Columbus, according to of Jeanete Oldaker, band directhe article, turned down a higher- tor, Southern High School, P.O.
paying job for what he calls Box 98, Elm Street, Racine, Ohio
"quality of life" reasons - "like 45771.
community service projects
arranged by the company and
sometimes carried out on compaJust rwo more days and it's his,
ny time.".
tory. The campaigns with all their.
promises and pledges will finally
come to an end. The voters will
The Southern High School have had their say.
marching band has had a hard
And hopefully both the wintime surviving these past few
' years, but is now in the process of
trying to rebuild itself.
A, new director is in place, the
students are enthusiastic, but the
equipment is so old it can't even
be repaired.
So the Band Boosters have

Elizabeth Anne McCulty and D.R. Keeton

Gillespie-Blackford engagement

· McCulty-Keeton engagement

GALLIPOLIS - Mick and Jody Blackford of Gallipolis, and John
and Teresa Gillespie of JaGkson are announcing the engagement and
upcoming marriage of their children, Jonathan and Christy.
The groom-to-be is a 1995 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. H e served four years in the U.S. Navy as a storekeeper, and is
currently in the process of re-enlisting.
He 1s the grandson of Oscar E Pauley of Gallipolis and Yvonne Cardaras of Glouster, and the late Mick Blackford of Trimble. He is the
great-grandson of Harry Sharp ofTrimble.
The bride-to-be is a 1999 graduate ofWellston High School. She
has attended Hocking College and is currently employed at the WalMart Pharmacy in Jackson.
.
She is the granddaughter of Holly and Lois Gillespie ofJackson, and
Tom and Thelma Post of Ray. She is the great-granddaughter of Evelyn Whiting, and the late Carl Whiting ofWellston.
·
The wedding w1ll be Dec. 30, 2000 at 2:30 p.m. at the Fellowship
Umted Methodist Church in Coalton. Officiating at the ceremony
w!ll be Pastor Everett Ward, assisted by Pastor Jim Snyder. A reception
will follo~ at the James A. Rhodes Community Center in Coalton.

ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED - Kathy and Roy Willis of Chester celebrated their 16th wedding anniversary on Oct 11.

GALLIPOLIS - Announcement is being made of the engagement
and upcom.img marriage of Elizabeth Anne McCulty of Galhpolis and
Donald Robert (D.R .) Keeton of Ewingron.
The. bride-to-be is the daughter of Bob annd Cathy McCulty of
Gallipolis. The groom-to-be is the son of Donald and Loretta Keeton
of Ewington.
The wedding will be Nov. 25 at Trinity United Methodist Church
at Bidwell . A reception follows at the Gallipolis Shdne Club.
The groom-to-be is a 1991 graduate of North Gallia High School.
He is currently employed at Auto Zone as the manager of commercial
accounts. He also works at United Producers Livestock Association.
The groom-to-be is a 1997 graduate of River Valley High School.
She is currently earning a bachelor's degree in business management,
with an emphasis in information technology at the University of Rio
Grande. She also works at Ai'ea Agency on Aging District 7 and United Producers Livestock Association.

Have a celebration question?
Give us a call.
740:.446-2342
740-992-2156
304-67 5-1333

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REEDSVILLE George
Hall at the organ, Reedsville
United Methodist Church, 6:30
p.m.

POMEROY
Bradford
Church of Christ, to host a Concert of Prayer, Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
sponsored by the Middleport
Ministerial Association. "The Persecuted Church", theme. for the

servtce.

MONDAY
LETART FALLS Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., office
building.
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township Trustees, Monday, 6
p.m. at the township hall on
Rocksprings Road.
RACINE Racine Village
Council, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
municipal building.

ALFRED The Orange
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the home of Clerk Osie Fallrod.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern

,

3554 State Rt. 160

Rev. Robert Blevins.
African MissionarY/Evaneelist. is SPeakine

FridaY. Nov. 1o. 7:00 P.M.
SaturdaY. Nov. 11. 1:00 P.m.

Sun •• Nov. 12. II :OO am &amp; 6:00

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WE SHIP UPS

The City Commission of the City ofGall·ipolis, Ohio, proposed the following changes 10 Section 20
of.the City Charter that will be on the ballot November 7, 2000. The change in the date of the ·
appointment-of the Solicitor allows newly elected commissioners who don't take office until
January and who will be working with the Solicitor, the opportunity to have a say in the
appointment. Changing the requirement that the Solicitor live in the City, to living in Galli a
County with an active. law practice in Gallipolis, provides the City with other choices of attorneys
to name as Solicitor.
The City Charter currently reads:
Section 20. CITY SOLICITOR
There shall be a City Solicitor, who shall be appointed to said oflicc by a majority vote of the City
Commission and whose term of office shall be four years and shall begin on the first day of
January next after his election, unless the election or appointment is to fill an unexpired term,
when it shall be for the unexpired term. The City Solicitor sha ll be a practicing attorney at law,
and shall be a resident of the City of Gallipolis, Ohio, and shall have the qualifications of an elector
the rein. In case of a vacancy caused by death, resignation, removal or from any other cause, the
Ci ty Commission shall appoint a City Solicitor to serve for the unexpired term.

P.m.

The proposed changes are as follows :
Section 20. CITY SOLICITOR.
There shall be a City Solicitor, who shall be appointed to said office by a majbrity vote of the City
Co mmi ssion and whose term of office shall be four years and shal l begin on the first day of
JanHar) April next after his election in February, unless the election or appointment is to fill an
unexp ired term, when it shall be for the unexpired term. The C1ty Solicitor shall be a practicing
attorney at law with an active practice in the City of Gallipolis, and shall be a resident of the City of
Gollipeli~ Gallia County, Ohio, and shall have the qualificatio~ an elecior therein. In case of a
vacancy caused by death, resignation, removal or fro m any other cause, the City Commission shall
appoint a City Solicitor to serve for the unexpired term.

CHESHIRE
TOPS
OH\383, Cheshire, meets at
Cheshire
United • Methodist
Church, 10-11 a.m. For information, call Ann Mitchell at 3880004.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist, 6
p.m. with Rick Barcus preaching.
GALLIPOLIS
Bul~ville
Church Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
· worship service I 0:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. with Rev. Bob flood.

GALLIPOLIS - TOPS Club
meets at th e First N azart=ne
Church, Second Avenue, 5:30 p.m.
Call Marilyn, Lee for information,
446-045\..
Miracles in
GALLI PO LIS Recovery
Group
Narcotics
Anonymous meeting, 7:30 p.m .,
St. Peter's Episcopal Church.

THURMAN The New
Blackfork Church, a ministry of
. Trinity Parish UMC, has a new
· Sunday schedule. Swtday school
GALLIPOLIS John Gee
· will be held at 9:30 a.m. Sunday
worship will be held at 6:30 p.m. Black Historical Center open 10
Rev. Russell Butti will lead the a.m. until 2 p.m.
worship service. For information, ·
'IUesday, November 7
call 1-877-540-11 00.
,

LECTA- Larry Haley .will be
guest speaker at \lhJ.nut Ridge
Church for the worship service at
I 0:30 a.m. Sunday School is at
' 9:30a.m.
·
McARTHUR- 14th annual
Engle Construction reunion,
noon-4 p.m., Vinton County
Community Building, .Ohio 93
North.
PORTER - Services at Clark
Clupel Church are at 6 p.m.
,

GALLIPOLIS Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS Choose to
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m., Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information, call256-1535.
GALLIPOLIS . AI-Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS ·. New Life
Lutheran Church 12-Step Spirjru-

al Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Lions Club,
6:30 p.m., Holiday Inn.

Wednesday. November 8

•••

lhursclay, November 10
GALLIPOLIS John Gee
Black Historical Center open, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.

Revival

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus
speaking.
CROWN CITY Charles
. .Connors will preach at Liberty
Chapel Church, 7 p.m. The Connors F:u,nily will sing. .

c?z/ c&amp;.~Cl.

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. Revival at Salem Communiry
Church, Nov. 8-11, 7 p.m. nightly.
Sunday service at 6 p.m. Special
speakers are· the Rev. Bob Thompson and the Rev. Charles Curry.

'{IV

ead 4e'Wiee.

CENTENARY A Holy
Ghost Revolution will be held at
Centenary United Methodist
&lt;:;hurch Nov. 6-10, 7 p.m., with
Pastor Dan Freeman fiom Living

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .

(1) Big AI claims "he invented the ·
Internet." Yeah sure! And, if you believe
him, I've got a bridge in Vinton I'd like to
sell rat Whew!
Go to the church of your choice next
Sunday and vote "Pro-Life I Pro-Family"
on November 7.
Friends of Christ

Holzer Clinic of West Virginia
Get your flu vaccine before the flu season begins.

5:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M:

•'

'

irritahili1y, as wl'll as at I itiC'I'l'&lt;lst·tlrisk ot'so1ne t'i lll Ct'I'S.
·\n:v derision that you lllilkt· allnut honnont· lht'l'ii[IJ' is nol final. You Cilll
slart or !'ntllh&lt;' ll't•atmt•nt illl~ tiltH', hut if' you slop il, Uw protecliVl' d'kcts
of!lwse llll'nlpit·H will sto[J as well. )otJI' derision &lt;thou! hm'rnont• thl'l'ii[JY
shou ld I)(' l'l'Vit'\ll'U t•ach ~l'ill' 11ilh )·our tloctor at :-our anmr;rl dJl'C'IIup.
\fkr nu•nopaust· , il is in1purlant Itt t'lllllitllll' )'t'ill'l) lm·ast ami vaginal
l'\illtls, f'ap ll'sts antl mammo~nnns, &lt;IS wl'll as a gt•nt• r·a l phvsical exam.
."imm ·1': 'f/11• \;1/iwm/
ill'i/ililll' t/11 !f!ill;! ,. ,
11 \ \11 . 111/I.;!IJ I

M10ENESIS
Hospital System

.Cabell Huntington Hospital
Pleasant Valley Hospital
St. Mary's Hospital

(740) 446-7619

GALLIPOLIS Revival at
French City Baptist Church, 3554
State Route 160, Nov. 10-12.
African missionary and evangelost
Robert Blevins will speak at 7 p.m.
on Nov. 10 and 11, and on Nov. 12
at II a.m. and 6 p.m. Special music
planned.

435 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

.l!....dJu.s 11

IJO""' ~
Now taklne reservations for H.61~ij~~~ ! '
Get-Toeethers rOffice Parties. ' urch ·
eatherine. Private PartiesJ
SPace available for your sP~clal event
No time to bakef
,

IIJtJuiJ li/u.

Gallia County Health Department

~~
e~
to.

I

Prenatal Clinic

to. a.JJ 8Qde

&lt;.

To Ohio
Residents.
Call 4M&gt;-85a8{
ForAn

Now takin2 orders for Pies. cakes &amp; PumPkin rolls
~

105 Butternut Pomeroy, OH

992·6566

,,,,,992·6316
......_,....,,, .

VINTON -A youth preaching
revival will be held at Vinton Full
Gospel Church Nov. 4 at I p.m.
and Nov. 5 at 6 p.m. Ages of
preachers are between 13 and 18.
Refreshments will be available.

FLU VACCINE CLINIC
NOVEMBER 6, 2000

E. V. C larke, Jr.
Gallipo lis City Manager

Fear of falling: Many
people stop exercises or
activities because they're
afraid of falling. Extra concern
can help you take reasonable
precautions, but fear can stclo 1
you from doing things that
keep you active, strong and
healthy.
Recommendations: Think
at:toul ways that fear has
changed your activities . Start
slowly to build confidence in
l .exerrcii!;e and daily activities.
Consider joining an exercise
group or class.
For More Information Call. ..

InHearing

Prenatal

GALLIPOLIS -Terry Call will

' preach at Bell Chapel, 7 p.m.

Water Church. Speci.al music features DJ and Nichole Stewart on
Monday; Trinity Trio on Tuesday;
and Living Water Praise Team on
Thursday and Friday. Special
singing by Teresa Price.

With
Lisa Koch, M.S .
Licensed Clinical
Audiologist

1-800-967-3277

GALLIPOLIS - Salute to all
veterans and those celebrating
November birthdays at Gallia
County Senior Resource Center,
11 a.m. Patriotic program. Make
reservations by calling 446-7000.

Sincerely,

This (fllt'SI ion is ht'st iiiiS\1 t'I'I'U ;Ill t•r talking with )Oll r dol'lol· (a ~··nen d
prat•l it iolu·r, ililt' I'll isl Ill' ~ nt·t·ologisl ). )ou shou ld discus.~ )otll" medical
ltislon, .1'0111' risk of Iwart UiSt'aSt', OSi('II IJIII'IlSis am]IJI'I•:rsl l'i!ltl'l'l' anu ,\Olll'
ll1n1il.l nwdiral hisiOI). l&gt;isruss I Itt· ntt·nopi111Sl' symplo1ns !hal )Oll ill'l'
I'X[)t'l'it'ltt'illll; &lt;IIIII h1111 Sl'l'illll.'il\1111'.1 i&gt;lllltt'l' lOll.
Takin~ honnom· lht'l'a[J.I fi1r a 'ihorllinlt' ( pl'rhaps liu· il li•\\ war') lllil~
hl'lpn·lit'll' lilt• illlllll)illl-( S)lllfliOIIIS. sueh as hoi flaslws, lhai.IOU filii.\ lJt•
h m i Ill-( d uri ng IIH · nop; 1u" ·. T; d, i ng hol'ltlt HI&lt;' su pp lt'lllt'll ts li II' il IDll!(l'l' t i me
ttta) hdp dl'la.l "'lt•opom,i;,. prolt T I ill!&lt;'in'l ht'&lt;lrl dist'il"'• improll' ~our
dlolt•,lt-n d lt ~ll ' l'i and I !Iii\ ilbo lwlp \IIIII ' 111!'111111'~· llmwlt'l', hot'ltliiiH'
lht 'l'il[ll IIii:-&gt; ilt'l'll lillkt•d In Ullflll'il'iillll .'iidt• d 'f(T!S, SUI'h iiS hloi~lillg Ill'

~ I

POINT PLEASANT - TriCounty Group Nareotics Anonymous meeting, 7:30 p.m. , 611
Viand Street. Use side entrance.

TO: Citizens of Gallipolis

Is Hormone Replacement Therapy For Me?

(\

Monday, November 6

Paid Ad by Bob Murohv 13467 S/R 160 VInton, Ohio 45686

French City
Baptist Church

Spedat ~

TUESDAY

NELSONVILLE
The
Athens-M eigs Educational Service Center, Thursday, 7 p.m. at

REVIVAL

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees. regular meeting,
7:30 p.m ., Monday, Syracuse village Hall .

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, regular session, Monday. 7 :30p.m at the fire
department.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Neighborhood Watch group,
Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Family
, Life Center, Middleport Church
of Chmt. Educational materials
and window stickers will be avail·
able.

..

REEDSVILLE
Ohve
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 6:30p.m., to\vnship office on
Joppa Road.

RACINE - Regular meeting, Racine Chapter 134, Order
of Eastern Star, Monday, 7:30
p.m. Refreshments follow meetmg.

Star, Wednesday. installation of
officers. Installing officer, Worthy
Grand Matron of the Grand
Chapter of the Ohio Carol Jones.

lNGROUND

Antifreeze $3.99

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY

~

Sunday, November 5

Evaluate your '
personal risk,
consider
recommendations

•••

kEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Jonathan Blackford and Christy Gillespie

ners and losers will finish one
order of business - takmg down
their polit1cal signs. Let's hope it
happens quickly.

The flu vaccine will be given on a first come first serve basis.
No appointments will be made just walk-in.

Holzer Clinic of West Virginia
2605 Jackson Ave
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4498

l'l•dophiliJ: erotil· desirl' of .111 .1dull for

.1

child . (I)

In an apparent effort to legitimize pedophilia the
American Psychological Association published an
article, which concluded that, "sexual relations .
between an adult and a willing child may not be
harmful to the child."
·
·
Our Congress was so outraged by this APA article
192 Republicans and 162 Democrats voted to co11demn
it! (None voted in favor of this article.)
However, a handful of Con~ressmen voted "present",
a tactic used by clever politicians to avoid taking a
position on a bill. Among these were the not.e d
homosexual activists and openly gay Representative
from Massachusetts Barney Frank and ... our own 6th
Congressional District Representative Ted Strickland.
This is the same Ted Strickland who "chooses" to
support abortion... including the taxpayer funding of
176.5 millions of dollars to finance Planned
Parenthood ... the largest abortion provider in the
nation ... the same Planned Parenthood who profitably
and ghoulishly "harvests" aborted bo9-y parts and .
markets them to research centers around the globe.
Apparently our Representative (psychologi&amp;t)
Stnckland "chooses" to pursue his own amoral views
rather than reflect the moral values of the Christian
constituency in the 6th district.
We would encourage all citizens particularly
Christians to embrace their citizenship not merely as
duty and a privilege but as an opportunity,
meaningfully, to take an active roll in reforming our
moral and political culture by voting Pro-Life I Pro- ·
Family on Tuesday, November 7, 2000.
Friends of Christ
•
Note: Additional information on the APA report can be obtained by calling the Family
Research Council at 202-393-2100.
·
(1) Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.

Paid for by Bob Murphy, 13f67 St Rt . 160, Vinton, 011

•

�•

•
Page C6 • itunbap tltmtll-itt'nttnrl

J

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

Sunday, November 5,

2000 ,

Food

Jim

Sands
GUEST VIEW

ly afier they played Gallipolis that
year. a big fight broke out amotig
the male elephants, resulting in
much destruction. In due course
most circuses sold aU of their male
elephants.
That 1904 Sells C~rcus had
trained seals, barrel jumpers, acrobats, tight wirewalkers, equestrians,
and a Pontiac Zouave precision
drill team. By 1910, Sells was the
third largest circus behind Barnum
&amp; Bailey and Ringling Brothers.
In 1896, it took 45 train cars to
bring here the John R.obinson
Circus. That circus had some
unusual acts, like sea lions that rode
on horseback, an iron jaw aerialist
and a strong man named Warren

Travis who allowed heavy wagons
and later cars to be run over him.
The famous lion tamer Clyde
Beatty came to Gallipolis in 1929
with the Hagenback-Wallace Circus.

~ticks 'to

UNDER THE BIG TOP - This
Sells Brothers Circus poster from
1891 features bareback rider
Polly Lee. Sells Brothers Circus
came to Gallipolis many times in
history. Barnum &amp; Bailey played
here twice, bringing with them, In
1883, the famous Jumbo.
A few years later. he had his own
circus, appropriately named the
Clyde Beatty Circus. In 1915,
Howe's Great London Circus was
here. Howe's was noted tor its
clowns. In fact, Emmett Kelly started with Howe's.
But the management said KellY's
"Weary Willie" character wasn't

funny and suggested Kelly try the
high Wire instead. Kelly got back
into clowning when he joined the
Clyde Be&gt;tty Circus.
Circuses were still big even into
the late 1920.. The AI G. Barnes
Circu.&lt; brought here 1,050 circus
employees, 550 horses, 65 clowns,
six bands, three calliopes and four
rings instead of three.
This circus had an dephant that
weighed more than 20,000
pounds. The Sun Brothen Circus
that played here in the 1910s and
1920s featured Boche the ski
jumper. He skied down a wooden
ski hill made over several elephants.
The Christy Brothers Circus
that came here in 1927 pertormed
a 1 ,000 . character rendition of
Noah and the Ark. In 1949, the
Rodgen Brothers Circus featured
two elephants named Shirley Temple and Suzie Q .
The Carson and Barnes circus
which played here in 1986, 1988
and again in the next decade was
the last traditional circus. They
traveled in an SO-vehicle fleet, had
five rings, two stages, a hippodrome
track and a steel area, all under the
big top which stretched a city
block wide.
In the early part of the 20th century, Wild West type circuses were
very popular here. Buffalo Bill

never came here, but Pawnee Bill
was here in 1899,1902 and 1906.
Also •ppearing in Gallipolis were
101 Wild West Show and The
Rhoda R.oyal and Old But121o
Wild West Show. The latter featured more than 1,000 cowboys
and Indians. They even threw in
Professor White's trained monkeYs
for good measure.
The star of the I 01 Wild West
Show used a saddle that had 247
diamonds, 120 sapphires, four garnets, 16 rubi&lt;:S and 15 pounds of
gold and silver.
This show allowed audience

GALLIPOLIS How long
does it take for the body to digest
food' That depends on a lot of

'

things. 13ut sometimc:s it can take

more than three days for the food
that enters your mouth to be
completely digested and the mdigestible portion to (pardon the
phrase) go out the other end.
Firsr. the food you eat tnoves
from the mouth, through the
esophagus and mto the stonllch.
On .lVerage, the -.;tomach holds
about four cups of toad and continues the digestive process that
:st.trted in the mouth and that
continued in the esophagus on

the way down . .ifhe stomach's
· secrettons of acid and enzymes

makes a sort of soupy substance,
called chyme. The stomach starts
digesung protein, and absorbs
some fats and alcohol.
Chyme that contain&gt; a lot of fat
usually stays in the stomach
longer than chyme that has a lot
of carbohydrate. That's why a
h\gh fat meal seems to satisfY your
appetite longer than a high carbohydrate one (for example, eggs
· and bacon versus cereal for breakfast). Generally, chyme leaves the
stomach about rwo to four hours
after food IS first eaten.
But that's not the end of your
dinner's travels. When chyme
leaves the stomach, it enters the
nearly 10-foot-long coil called
the small intesune. This is actually
where most dige~tion takes place,
absorbing nutrients wah the help
of enzymes that arc made by the
intestine, the liver and the pancreas. It can take as few as three

-.-...
Buttons
••

•

Certai

''

Our Holiday Layaway
is FREE.
A small deposit holds
your selection till
Christmas.

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICEI·· I

Rt. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Holiday Progralll will offer up decorating and gift giving ideas
lots of great ffiod, decormng and and a guaranteed good time.
gift giving ideas, 'strategies to
Call the Extension Office at
manage money and stress, and 446-7007 by Nov. 9 to reserve
good dose of fun.
your spot (space is limited).
The program will be Nov. 14 at
(Becky Collins is Callia Cormty\
7 p.m. at the C.H. McKenzte Extemiorr agent for family and collAgricultural Building on Jackson srmur scie11ces, Ohio Stare Uuivers~'­
Pike. The cost is S5 per person ty.)
GUEST VIEW · and will include a recipe booklet,
six foods to taste, two creative
hours and as many as I 0 hours for projects to take hom e, loads of
chyme to pass through the small
intestine.
Next comes the large intestine.
or colon. The large intestine
absorbs water and minerals for
November 6·1 Oth at7:00 PM
the body to use, but by this point,
almost all digestion has already
Centenary United Methodist Church
taken place.
with Pastor Dan Freeman from the Living Water Church Special Music!
Still, this is where the food
Monday
you've eaten hours beforehand
D.J. &amp; Nichole Stewart from the New Life Victory Center, Huntington
resides the longest. It takes about
Saturday, 10 am - 5 pm
24 to 72 hours for food to work
Tuesday
Sunday, Noon- 5 pm
its way through the 3.5-foot-long
Trinity
Trio
from
the
Trinity
U.M.C.
Porter
NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
tube called the large intestine
Wednesday Special Singing byTeresa Price
before your body excretes it.
Rt. 62 North, Point Pleasant, WV
Add up all the numbers and
Thursday and Friday
Sponsored by:
you'll find that the food you eat at
Mason
County
Community
Educational Outreach Service
Living Water Praise Team from Bidwell
breakfast one day can take as few
Mason County Vo-Tech Food Service
as 29 hours, or until yoU're
~e-&amp;~'&amp;1~As~~
GFWC-Polnt Pleasant Junior Woman's Club
approaching lunchtime the following day, to work its way
through your system .
Sometimes, though, it can take.
as long as 86 hours, or more than
3-1/2 days, for a meal to finally
say good-bye to your gastrointestinal tract. Holiday Program
Planned
Are you looking for creative
My name is Mike Azinger and I am the Republican candidate
hohday food ideas? How about
for the United States House of Representatives. Throughout my
fun and easy decorative prQ_Jects'
campaign, it has been my goal to accurately contrast my positions
This year's annual Fast &amp; Festiv~
with my opponents voting record. The differences are clear. If you
believe my convictions more closely represent yours, I would
appreciate your vote on November the 7' 11 •

REVIVAL
AHOLY GHOST REVOLUTION!

-·

NOVEMBER 1 8l. 12, 2000

MIKE AZINGER
for U.S. Congress

For Freedom First,

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Headaches
Nearly all of us have had headaches at one tlmc'ln our lives.
Most studies find that about 90 percent a,· Amerlc'lns report
headaehes. The most common type Is the "tension headache'·.
Migraines and cluster headaches affect a slgnlrlcant portion of
the population as well.
Headarhes are one of the most common reasons proplr give
for visiting their eye doctor . !\ child may Jwve a headache after
reading . t\ computer user may experience tired eyes with a dull
headaclle rver~· afternoon . !\truck driver may have a headache
from always needing to squint to see through the sun better.
fl&lt;•n the s ymptoms of a hc~dachc can be lessened or
cllmln ;Jied with a good set or glasses. It mav be as simple as
getting your prescription updated or a&lt;l&lt;llng a lint to keep out
the sun . An e~·e clnrtnr· ean rll'lermlnc whether a vision problem
might he causing the h•·arlachr or 1\hether furthel' t'onsullatlon
with another doctor Is n!'rri&lt;'d . In eltll('r case , seek treatment for
cllrnnlr ht'aria c ill'S . Your ht•;dtll and happiness rlrprnd on it.
,I

Or. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.
'224 E. :-.1a1n St. l'ornero:v. Ohio 45769
092-3279 Toll Free I
433

675-1371

HANDMADE
HOLIDAY TREASURES
FALL CRAFT SHOW

Azinger
Supports local control of education by parents,
local boards and states.
·
·
Supports voluntary school prayer.
Supports posting the tO' commandments in
classrooms.
100% Pro Life
'

Supports Parental Notification for minors.
Opposes Taxpayer funded abortions.
Endorsed by Gun Owners of America, "A" rating
from NRA. Will not endorse anti·gun candidates.
Opposes l!!! Tax Increases and supports across the
board tax cuts.
Supports tax breaks for educational and medical
savings accounts.
.
WoLiid vote to repeal the gas tax.
Supported H.R. I 07, which condemned child
molestation.
Opposes special rights for Homosexuals.
Supports a lock box 011 social security. Wants to
'"save" tl1e trust fund.

from PageC1

•'•

To Be·
Under The Trpe.

Strickland
Supports Washington mandates over parental and
state control (vote 320).
Opposes voluntary school prayer (Vote 201)
Opposed posting the l 0 commandments in
· classrooms (Vote 221).
Pro-Abortion through a119 months of. pregnancy
including saline abortions which b1.1rn the skin off the
unborn child while still alive.
Opposed a bill requiring Parental Notification(# 106)
Voted 19 times for Taxpayer funded Abortions.
Votes pro-gun BUT Endorses gun grabber AI Gore.
Voted for the Largest Tax increase in History (Vote
406).
Opposed any tax breaks for educational and medical
savings accounts.
Voted for a 6. S-cent gas tax increase on gasoline
(Vote 406).
Refused to condemn child Molestation by voting
"present" on H.R.l 07 along with Barney Frank.
Voted 5 times to give special rights for homosexuals.
Voted to sp~nd the money in the social security trust
fund. (Vote 464)

:rhan a penny.
: In addition to presidential
"
:badges,
Billings enjoys collecting
•badges from governors and may:ors from across America. Some o(
•
:his governor:S badges include
:Cecil Underwood, George W.
:Bush (Texas), Christie Whitmore
:(New Jersey) and Ed Koch (New
:York). He also has mayor badges
:of the late Sonny Bono (Palm
'Spnngs, Calif.), and Mario
Cuomo and R.udy Guihani (New
'York City). Badge&lt; from the Jar.
Pennsylvama Sen. John H ei nz and
S.en. !lob Packwood are members ·
of the collection. 13illings also has
badges from this year's New York
Senate race invo lving Hillary
• Rodham Clmton and .Guliani,
' who had to drop out of the race
·~ due to cancer.
: Billings has more than 75
badges from ele ctions held in
· Mason County, Gallia County
and Meigs County 111 addition to
, other areas itil West Virginia and
Ohio.
Over the years, Billings has
acquired a knack at finding
badges. He visits Democrat and
: Republican Hcadquariers and

'" flea markets.
"Even when we-'re ori family
7vat..ation. if 1t is an election year.
· I'll stop had the headquarters and
; take a look around," Billings said.
In the Ia" couple of years, the
•lmernct has proven· a successful
~ink to items. He has paid more
: than $60 for five badges featuring
:'Robert 'Kennedy. One of these is
:'..! unique mcmonal tribute circu~ated following his death in 1968.
: "I admired Robert Kennedy a
~at," Billings said.
~ llillings also writes to candi;,lotc• seeking badges and inforrnation. Friends and family have
1 given him badges they have or
&lt;t they fmd s()mewhere.
:
Although badges ore the main: stay of Billings' collection, he also
: has counties&lt; bumper stickers,
,·.t

..

111 ikeazi nger@aol.com

Authorized and

for by Azinger for Congress 256 Front St., Marietta, OH 45750, David Dilley, Treasurer.

lapel stickers, wqoden nickels.
matches· and other paraphernalia .
"I could not begin to tell you
how many hand-held fans I
have," Billings said .
Billings is extremely proud of
materials he was given from the
1976 R.epublican N ational Convention in Kansas City and the
1980 Democrat N ational Convention in New York. The '76 ·
Republican ticket was for former
President Gerald Ford and Vice
President nommee R.obert Dole.
The '80 Democrat nominees
were Jimmy Carter and Walter
Mondale.
A fan of George' H. Bush,
Billings has an autogr.tphed 8-x10 photo of him and a photo of
the f1ve living presidents at the
time of the Ronald Reagan
Library opening including Presi "
dent Bush, President Ford, President Reagan, President Carter
and President Nixon.
Billings, his wife, Shirley, and
sons, Josh and Jared even have a
registered Shih Tzu named
George Herbert Walker.
With a tradition of such a
unique collection, Billings has
passed his interest along to his
sons, each of whom are developing their own col1ection.
"When I buy badges, I try to
buy them in groups of three !io
the boys can have one also."

Billings said.
As th e final days wind down to
Tuesday's ,. lection, Billings will
continue to follow his interest in
politics and his collection will
keep growing long after Nov. 7.

TAMPA, Fla - Afier a lifeume
of workmg m dn~ resraurant business, banking, toy sal&lt;:S and hotel
operations, Garry Froid finally
retired si.x years ago.
He played poker, cruised the
high seas with his wife and traveled across the country to visit his
grandchildren. But 11. wasn't
enough.
"I got bored," he said. "'I just
made up my mind I had to do
something.''
So at age 82, Freid renred 6om
retirement and opened his own
deli, serving up overo;~uffed sandwiches of corned beef, pastrami
and salanu.
Freid i.s typical of a .growing
number of retirees whd are
"turnmg to the work force for
more than just a paycheck. ·
Researchers say more studies are
needed to find out why seniors
are rejoining the. rankS of the
working.
University of Florida sociologist
Amy Pienta analyzed limited data
on returning workers in the 1990s
and found many of them missed
their friends and their work - as

U.S. Departllltrtl of
LA&amp;or s/atistics iudicc!U
tlrat smiors ctre makinR
11p ''.~roll'ill.~ segment of
the work .force. Tl1ere !l'ere
3.8 mi/liou people elVer 65
employed ill 1999, 2.9
Jll!rcmt of ,tf/.workers.

work came to hun last fall, when
he read a newspaper story about a
New York delicatessen. It carried a
picture of a corne-d beef sandwi&lt;h
- steamed, stacked, thinly sliced,
smothering the rye bread it sat
atop.
"It made my mouth water;'
Freid said. "When I saw that, I JUSt
had to do the same thing."
,:rhat clipping from The New
York Times is now pinned to a
message board above his desk in a ·
tiny office at the back of his 120seat ~taurant. He dishes out his
home-cooked. Kosher-style sandwiches to a busding lunch crowd
in a trendy, fast growing section of
Tampa.
"If seniors still have their mind
intact and they're mobile, they
should insist on doing somt"well as the extra monf.Jf.
thing," Freid said. "They've got to
U.S. Department of Labor sta- get up in the morning to go
. here...
tistics indicate that seniors are somew
making up a growing segment of
. Loms Davis, 79, and John H..
the work force. There WL'rc 3.H Stephen, 78, agree. They, too, grew
million people· over r.s employed weary of retirement. But they
in 19\19, 2.\1 percent of all work- didn't have the capital to become
er&gt;. That\ up h-om 3.(, lnilliou &lt;elf-employed.
semOrs in the work force m 1«J95.
Davis and Stephen, both
For Fretd. the idc.t to go back 10 T..1mpa relildent.;;, arc greeters at

·Abby
from Page Cl
victims ·of marnagc.;; to have
responded di ffercntly.
Abby, thert• .trl' 'c un- mcn, gamblers, alcohoh cs, abusers, and people who just abandon mates and
children. Finding '\Ccurity in marriage is like catchmg a feather in
the wind -

'&gt;Oillt'

c.u ch

Jt ,

most

don't, no matter how hard tht..·y
try.
Want sccunty? C;cl your . own
job, open a b.mk ,\ccuunt. aml
earn so~nc sdf-c:~(ccm :1nd confidence. Don't rdy on someonL'
else for your se curity. - JOAN
C. IN BAY SHORE, N.Y.
DEAR JOAN: While I agrc·e
that a m;~rriagr certificate i!&gt;. not a

i

I•..•
••
•••

••
:.
••
"·
••
••

Wal-Mart. Each works about 35
hours a weelc..
"Lonehness. That's why I went
back to work," sa1d DaVIS, a former fork lifi oper:~tor who retired
m 1985. He went back to work at
Wal-Mart when the store opened
eight years ago. He enjoys meeting the shoppers an&lt;J especially;
helping disabled people in and
out of the store.
"Also for health - because
when you sit down. you begin to
think about everything," he
added.
Social Security brings in about
S1 ,200 a month for Davis and his
wife. His paycheck helps out. "If[
didn't work it would be kind of
rough;' he admits.
Stephen, a retired U.S. Army
sergeant with 20 years service,
looked forward to retirement, but
found it disappointing.
He's been a greeter for six
years.
"I was going to sit around and
fish," Stephen said. "I did a little
bit. But I needed something else
to do. I tried sitting around home,
domg nothing. It just didn't
work."
Bendey Lipscomb, state director of the AAR.P aod former
Florida Secretary of Elder Affairs,
said there are few opportunities
fqr active middle- or upperincome seniors who want to gt?l

one-way tiCker to easy street, the
bnd of -;ecurity to which I was
referring were rights of inht:ritance and, ,hou ld illn ess strike, the
authority to instruct dOctors
about each o~her's ,,:ishcs.
DEAR ABBY: Thts is just for
you: Do you know the difference
between a sewing machine and a

'

Go

lOX OIFKE WIU OftlllT
6:30 1'11101 MIIIIIG SltOWS
1:30 1'11101 lUES

BOOK OF SHADOWS: BLAIR
WITCH2 (A)
7:00 &amp; 8:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:

BEDAZZLED (PGt3)
. 7:10 U:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

CHAAUE'S ANGELS (PG13)
7:20 &amp; 8:20 DAILY

MEET THE PARENTS (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT UN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

ntE UTTLE VAMPIRE (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT N 1:00 &amp; 3:15

REMEMBER THE mANS (PG)
7:00 l 8:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

LUCKY NUMBERS {R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

•

Alexander Bond Issue/Levy

Vote
For
Issue

AI.Xander
Schools

"Pro-L(fe I Pro-Family" on November 7.

Friend• of Chrlat
Paid Ad by Bob Murphy 134671 /g 160, VInton, Ohio 456S6

Dottie Boggs a resident of
Oak Hill, Ohio extends
the following Thank You
to .the staff at H.S.C.C.

7

IPRIIIG VAtlf~ CUIIMA...
446·4524
'"- " \jll&gt;l
FRitt/3100 • THURS 11/9/011

Show ~ Thursday November 9th
Time - 8:00 - 11:00 p.m.
Call - 740-446-4801

to the church of your choice next Sunday and vote

IN THE LNES OF SO MANY"

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Upper Route 7 · Kanauga, Ohio

(3) Clearly, Bllil AI hal a coanltlv.c dylfunctlon, which

render~ him Incapable or telllnlil the truth. Poor Fellal
He, undoubtedly, neede treatment! (For 21 of hl1
m~or lice, lolil on to www.JOOile.com, type In Gore'•
21 Lice, then double cllck on cache.) Aw, Gee!

back to work.
"I don't see any effort to reach
out to these people," Lipscomb
said. "We have not adjusted to the
facr that we are keeping peopk
:alive and healthier longer. We luw
not turned the corner."

City Limits

ki ss? A sc,ving machine sews nice
o,;e ,uno,; , bur &lt;~ kiss seems so nice!
You can creda my sweet, late
mother, Tillie M. Brchl, with that
one. - ILENE R., BEXLEY,
OHIO
DEAR ILENE: Many thanks
for the witty ditty. Your mother
was a S\Vet·theart, and so are you.

'18

Ii .YO
.
NT
. "MAKING THE DIFFERENCE

.

.

.

5 Important Reasons to Vote For Issue 18
The State of Ohio will contribute $19.7 million (73%
of the total cost) towards replacement of the pre-k
through eighth grade buildings and renovation of the
existing high school
.1

.t Voting for Issue 18 for

new school facilities' will return
our own State tax dollars to our community.

••
•

••
•v

9 '

l.
••
••

•...

....
...

•"=
•
•
·•

..
.

Thank you all for being so good to
me. Everything you did was
wonderful. I feel that because of
the exceptional care you gave, I
was obi~ to return to my home. I wish everyone who needed care could
experience what I did at Holzer Senior Care Center. I appreciate your
friendliness, concern, and support•
Sincerely,
Dottie Boggs

~

If you would like to be o PQrt of a teom dedicated to providing the highest standard of
care, please apply at Holzer Senior Care Center, 380 Colonlol Drive, Bidwell, Ohio.
(Approximately one quarter mHe west of Holzer Medical Center on Jocks on Pike) or

•

call (740) 446-5001 for more Information.

~

I'or more info. please visit MikeAzinger.com, or call (740) 374-8007,

PAT LEISNER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A BADGE - Brian Billings adds a badge to one of three large
shadow box displays he has hanging In his hotlle. (Michele
photo)

FLAIR

Becky
Collins

8Y

memben to try to get a 520 gold
piece off of the u.il of a Brahma
bull. The ei&lt;pression "bulldogging"
carne 6om this show. They used
bulldogs to chase steers and nip
them in the leg. The steer would
then try to bite the dog, whereupon the bulldog would nip the
• nose of the steer.
This was such • sensttJve area
that the steer would usually flip
over on iq side in severe pain. The
I 01 show also had 95-year-old
Oregon scout Ezra Meeker. .

Is

'

'

Seniors disillusioned.with retirement, opt to work

The Gift You
Reserve Now

ribs' longer than you think

l!:tmu-itrntmtl • Page C7

.

Big circuses made Gallipolis a regular stop in days past
GALLIPOLIS- Between 1875
and 1929, no less than 25 different
circuses played at Gallipolis. Some
yean three or four CU"Cuses would
conte here.
Barnum &amp; Bailey was in the Old '
French City in 1875 and ag:un in
1883.ln t~t latter year, the famous
Jumbo the elephant was here.
The renowned Jwnbo was 12
feet high at the shoulders and
wetghed more than 14,000
pounds. Jwnbo was killed in 1885
when she collided with a train.
Jumbo was trying to save a baby
elepham that had become stuck on
the track. The srutfed Jwnbo was
later taken to Tufts University,
where the school's athletic teams
became known as the Tufu Jumbos.
One of the circuses that carne
here in the 1880. advertised an
.tlbino elephant. Noi to be outdone. the Forepaugh circus whitewashed an elephant and advertised
their elephant as the largest albino
elephant.
The circuses with the n1ost
appearances here would include
the Sell Brothers Circus and the
John Robinson Circus. I
In 1904, the Sells Brothers Circus, whose headquarters were in
Columbus, began having rroublr
with male elephants. In fact, short-

itunba~

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

... sunday, November 5, 2000

••
••

.t Voting for Issue 18 will

bring our school buildings into
compliance with state standards and greatly improve
accessibility for the physically impaired.

.t 20 years of study have proven that school

facilities do
make a difference in the quality of education.
·

.t Voting for Issue 18 will give 40'Yo more school
the least cost, with the largest State
contribution in the history of our school
district.

space at ·

Our
Share
27l.

Paid for by Alexander Bond Issue/Levy Comm ittee, D1ane Paulsen . Treasurer, 2114 Clara Ave , Albany, Ohro 45710

(

�•

•
Page C6 • itunbap tltmtll-itt'nttnrl

J

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

Sunday, November 5,

2000 ,

Food

Jim

Sands
GUEST VIEW

ly afier they played Gallipolis that
year. a big fight broke out amotig
the male elephants, resulting in
much destruction. In due course
most circuses sold aU of their male
elephants.
That 1904 Sells C~rcus had
trained seals, barrel jumpers, acrobats, tight wirewalkers, equestrians,
and a Pontiac Zouave precision
drill team. By 1910, Sells was the
third largest circus behind Barnum
&amp; Bailey and Ringling Brothers.
In 1896, it took 45 train cars to
bring here the John R.obinson
Circus. That circus had some
unusual acts, like sea lions that rode
on horseback, an iron jaw aerialist
and a strong man named Warren

Travis who allowed heavy wagons
and later cars to be run over him.
The famous lion tamer Clyde
Beatty came to Gallipolis in 1929
with the Hagenback-Wallace Circus.

~ticks 'to

UNDER THE BIG TOP - This
Sells Brothers Circus poster from
1891 features bareback rider
Polly Lee. Sells Brothers Circus
came to Gallipolis many times in
history. Barnum &amp; Bailey played
here twice, bringing with them, In
1883, the famous Jumbo.
A few years later. he had his own
circus, appropriately named the
Clyde Beatty Circus. In 1915,
Howe's Great London Circus was
here. Howe's was noted tor its
clowns. In fact, Emmett Kelly started with Howe's.
But the management said KellY's
"Weary Willie" character wasn't

funny and suggested Kelly try the
high Wire instead. Kelly got back
into clowning when he joined the
Clyde Be&gt;tty Circus.
Circuses were still big even into
the late 1920.. The AI G. Barnes
Circu.&lt; brought here 1,050 circus
employees, 550 horses, 65 clowns,
six bands, three calliopes and four
rings instead of three.
This circus had an dephant that
weighed more than 20,000
pounds. The Sun Brothen Circus
that played here in the 1910s and
1920s featured Boche the ski
jumper. He skied down a wooden
ski hill made over several elephants.
The Christy Brothers Circus
that came here in 1927 pertormed
a 1 ,000 . character rendition of
Noah and the Ark. In 1949, the
Rodgen Brothers Circus featured
two elephants named Shirley Temple and Suzie Q .
The Carson and Barnes circus
which played here in 1986, 1988
and again in the next decade was
the last traditional circus. They
traveled in an SO-vehicle fleet, had
five rings, two stages, a hippodrome
track and a steel area, all under the
big top which stretched a city
block wide.
In the early part of the 20th century, Wild West type circuses were
very popular here. Buffalo Bill

never came here, but Pawnee Bill
was here in 1899,1902 and 1906.
Also •ppearing in Gallipolis were
101 Wild West Show and The
Rhoda R.oyal and Old But121o
Wild West Show. The latter featured more than 1,000 cowboys
and Indians. They even threw in
Professor White's trained monkeYs
for good measure.
The star of the I 01 Wild West
Show used a saddle that had 247
diamonds, 120 sapphires, four garnets, 16 rubi&lt;:S and 15 pounds of
gold and silver.
This show allowed audience

GALLIPOLIS How long
does it take for the body to digest
food' That depends on a lot of

'

things. 13ut sometimc:s it can take

more than three days for the food
that enters your mouth to be
completely digested and the mdigestible portion to (pardon the
phrase) go out the other end.
Firsr. the food you eat tnoves
from the mouth, through the
esophagus and mto the stonllch.
On .lVerage, the -.;tomach holds
about four cups of toad and continues the digestive process that
:st.trted in the mouth and that
continued in the esophagus on

the way down . .ifhe stomach's
· secrettons of acid and enzymes

makes a sort of soupy substance,
called chyme. The stomach starts
digesung protein, and absorbs
some fats and alcohol.
Chyme that contain&gt; a lot of fat
usually stays in the stomach
longer than chyme that has a lot
of carbohydrate. That's why a
h\gh fat meal seems to satisfY your
appetite longer than a high carbohydrate one (for example, eggs
· and bacon versus cereal for breakfast). Generally, chyme leaves the
stomach about rwo to four hours
after food IS first eaten.
But that's not the end of your
dinner's travels. When chyme
leaves the stomach, it enters the
nearly 10-foot-long coil called
the small intesune. This is actually
where most dige~tion takes place,
absorbing nutrients wah the help
of enzymes that arc made by the
intestine, the liver and the pancreas. It can take as few as three

-.-...
Buttons
••

•

Certai

''

Our Holiday Layaway
is FREE.
A small deposit holds
your selection till
Christmas.

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICEI·· I

Rt. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Holiday Progralll will offer up decorating and gift giving ideas
lots of great ffiod, decormng and and a guaranteed good time.
gift giving ideas, 'strategies to
Call the Extension Office at
manage money and stress, and 446-7007 by Nov. 9 to reserve
good dose of fun.
your spot (space is limited).
The program will be Nov. 14 at
(Becky Collins is Callia Cormty\
7 p.m. at the C.H. McKenzte Extemiorr agent for family and collAgricultural Building on Jackson srmur scie11ces, Ohio Stare Uuivers~'­
Pike. The cost is S5 per person ty.)
GUEST VIEW · and will include a recipe booklet,
six foods to taste, two creative
hours and as many as I 0 hours for projects to take hom e, loads of
chyme to pass through the small
intestine.
Next comes the large intestine.
or colon. The large intestine
absorbs water and minerals for
November 6·1 Oth at7:00 PM
the body to use, but by this point,
almost all digestion has already
Centenary United Methodist Church
taken place.
with Pastor Dan Freeman from the Living Water Church Special Music!
Still, this is where the food
Monday
you've eaten hours beforehand
D.J. &amp; Nichole Stewart from the New Life Victory Center, Huntington
resides the longest. It takes about
Saturday, 10 am - 5 pm
24 to 72 hours for food to work
Tuesday
Sunday, Noon- 5 pm
its way through the 3.5-foot-long
Trinity
Trio
from
the
Trinity
U.M.C.
Porter
NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
tube called the large intestine
Wednesday Special Singing byTeresa Price
before your body excretes it.
Rt. 62 North, Point Pleasant, WV
Add up all the numbers and
Thursday and Friday
Sponsored by:
you'll find that the food you eat at
Mason
County
Community
Educational Outreach Service
Living Water Praise Team from Bidwell
breakfast one day can take as few
Mason County Vo-Tech Food Service
as 29 hours, or until yoU're
~e-&amp;~'&amp;1~As~~
GFWC-Polnt Pleasant Junior Woman's Club
approaching lunchtime the following day, to work its way
through your system .
Sometimes, though, it can take.
as long as 86 hours, or more than
3-1/2 days, for a meal to finally
say good-bye to your gastrointestinal tract. Holiday Program
Planned
Are you looking for creative
My name is Mike Azinger and I am the Republican candidate
hohday food ideas? How about
for the United States House of Representatives. Throughout my
fun and easy decorative prQ_Jects'
campaign, it has been my goal to accurately contrast my positions
This year's annual Fast &amp; Festiv~
with my opponents voting record. The differences are clear. If you
believe my convictions more closely represent yours, I would
appreciate your vote on November the 7' 11 •

REVIVAL
AHOLY GHOST REVOLUTION!

-·

NOVEMBER 1 8l. 12, 2000

MIKE AZINGER
for U.S. Congress

For Freedom First,

Dr. A. Jackson Balles O.D.

Headaches
Nearly all of us have had headaches at one tlmc'ln our lives.
Most studies find that about 90 percent a,· Amerlc'lns report
headaehes. The most common type Is the "tension headache'·.
Migraines and cluster headaches affect a slgnlrlcant portion of
the population as well.
Headarhes are one of the most common reasons proplr give
for visiting their eye doctor . !\ child may Jwve a headache after
reading . t\ computer user may experience tired eyes with a dull
headaclle rver~· afternoon . !\truck driver may have a headache
from always needing to squint to see through the sun better.
fl&lt;•n the s ymptoms of a hc~dachc can be lessened or
cllmln ;Jied with a good set or glasses. It mav be as simple as
getting your prescription updated or a&lt;l&lt;llng a lint to keep out
the sun . An e~·e clnrtnr· ean rll'lermlnc whether a vision problem
might he causing the h•·arlachr or 1\hether furthel' t'onsullatlon
with another doctor Is n!'rri&lt;'d . In eltll('r case , seek treatment for
cllrnnlr ht'aria c ill'S . Your ht•;dtll and happiness rlrprnd on it.
,I

Or. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.
'224 E. :-.1a1n St. l'ornero:v. Ohio 45769
092-3279 Toll Free I
433

675-1371

HANDMADE
HOLIDAY TREASURES
FALL CRAFT SHOW

Azinger
Supports local control of education by parents,
local boards and states.
·
·
Supports voluntary school prayer.
Supports posting the tO' commandments in
classrooms.
100% Pro Life
'

Supports Parental Notification for minors.
Opposes Taxpayer funded abortions.
Endorsed by Gun Owners of America, "A" rating
from NRA. Will not endorse anti·gun candidates.
Opposes l!!! Tax Increases and supports across the
board tax cuts.
Supports tax breaks for educational and medical
savings accounts.
.
WoLiid vote to repeal the gas tax.
Supported H.R. I 07, which condemned child
molestation.
Opposes special rights for Homosexuals.
Supports a lock box 011 social security. Wants to
'"save" tl1e trust fund.

from PageC1

•'•

To Be·
Under The Trpe.

Strickland
Supports Washington mandates over parental and
state control (vote 320).
Opposes voluntary school prayer (Vote 201)
Opposed posting the l 0 commandments in
· classrooms (Vote 221).
Pro-Abortion through a119 months of. pregnancy
including saline abortions which b1.1rn the skin off the
unborn child while still alive.
Opposed a bill requiring Parental Notification(# 106)
Voted 19 times for Taxpayer funded Abortions.
Votes pro-gun BUT Endorses gun grabber AI Gore.
Voted for the Largest Tax increase in History (Vote
406).
Opposed any tax breaks for educational and medical
savings accounts.
Voted for a 6. S-cent gas tax increase on gasoline
(Vote 406).
Refused to condemn child Molestation by voting
"present" on H.R.l 07 along with Barney Frank.
Voted 5 times to give special rights for homosexuals.
Voted to sp~nd the money in the social security trust
fund. (Vote 464)

:rhan a penny.
: In addition to presidential
"
:badges,
Billings enjoys collecting
•badges from governors and may:ors from across America. Some o(
•
:his governor:S badges include
:Cecil Underwood, George W.
:Bush (Texas), Christie Whitmore
:(New Jersey) and Ed Koch (New
:York). He also has mayor badges
:of the late Sonny Bono (Palm
'Spnngs, Calif.), and Mario
Cuomo and R.udy Guihani (New
'York City). Badge&lt; from the Jar.
Pennsylvama Sen. John H ei nz and
S.en. !lob Packwood are members ·
of the collection. 13illings also has
badges from this year's New York
Senate race invo lving Hillary
• Rodham Clmton and .Guliani,
' who had to drop out of the race
·~ due to cancer.
: Billings has more than 75
badges from ele ctions held in
· Mason County, Gallia County
and Meigs County 111 addition to
, other areas itil West Virginia and
Ohio.
Over the years, Billings has
acquired a knack at finding
badges. He visits Democrat and
: Republican Hcadquariers and

'" flea markets.
"Even when we-'re ori family
7vat..ation. if 1t is an election year.
· I'll stop had the headquarters and
; take a look around," Billings said.
In the Ia" couple of years, the
•lmernct has proven· a successful
~ink to items. He has paid more
: than $60 for five badges featuring
:'Robert 'Kennedy. One of these is
:'..! unique mcmonal tribute circu~ated following his death in 1968.
: "I admired Robert Kennedy a
~at," Billings said.
~ llillings also writes to candi;,lotc• seeking badges and inforrnation. Friends and family have
1 given him badges they have or
&lt;t they fmd s()mewhere.
:
Although badges ore the main: stay of Billings' collection, he also
: has counties&lt; bumper stickers,
,·.t

..

111 ikeazi nger@aol.com

Authorized and

for by Azinger for Congress 256 Front St., Marietta, OH 45750, David Dilley, Treasurer.

lapel stickers, wqoden nickels.
matches· and other paraphernalia .
"I could not begin to tell you
how many hand-held fans I
have," Billings said .
Billings is extremely proud of
materials he was given from the
1976 R.epublican N ational Convention in Kansas City and the
1980 Democrat N ational Convention in New York. The '76 ·
Republican ticket was for former
President Gerald Ford and Vice
President nommee R.obert Dole.
The '80 Democrat nominees
were Jimmy Carter and Walter
Mondale.
A fan of George' H. Bush,
Billings has an autogr.tphed 8-x10 photo of him and a photo of
the f1ve living presidents at the
time of the Ronald Reagan
Library opening including Presi "
dent Bush, President Ford, President Reagan, President Carter
and President Nixon.
Billings, his wife, Shirley, and
sons, Josh and Jared even have a
registered Shih Tzu named
George Herbert Walker.
With a tradition of such a
unique collection, Billings has
passed his interest along to his
sons, each of whom are developing their own col1ection.
"When I buy badges, I try to
buy them in groups of three !io
the boys can have one also."

Billings said.
As th e final days wind down to
Tuesday's ,. lection, Billings will
continue to follow his interest in
politics and his collection will
keep growing long after Nov. 7.

TAMPA, Fla - Afier a lifeume
of workmg m dn~ resraurant business, banking, toy sal&lt;:S and hotel
operations, Garry Froid finally
retired si.x years ago.
He played poker, cruised the
high seas with his wife and traveled across the country to visit his
grandchildren. But 11. wasn't
enough.
"I got bored," he said. "'I just
made up my mind I had to do
something.''
So at age 82, Freid renred 6om
retirement and opened his own
deli, serving up overo;~uffed sandwiches of corned beef, pastrami
and salanu.
Freid i.s typical of a .growing
number of retirees whd are
"turnmg to the work force for
more than just a paycheck. ·
Researchers say more studies are
needed to find out why seniors
are rejoining the. rankS of the
working.
University of Florida sociologist
Amy Pienta analyzed limited data
on returning workers in the 1990s
and found many of them missed
their friends and their work - as

U.S. Departllltrtl of
LA&amp;or s/atistics iudicc!U
tlrat smiors ctre makinR
11p ''.~roll'ill.~ segment of
the work .force. Tl1ere !l'ere
3.8 mi/liou people elVer 65
employed ill 1999, 2.9
Jll!rcmt of ,tf/.workers.

work came to hun last fall, when
he read a newspaper story about a
New York delicatessen. It carried a
picture of a corne-d beef sandwi&lt;h
- steamed, stacked, thinly sliced,
smothering the rye bread it sat
atop.
"It made my mouth water;'
Freid said. "When I saw that, I JUSt
had to do the same thing."
,:rhat clipping from The New
York Times is now pinned to a
message board above his desk in a ·
tiny office at the back of his 120seat ~taurant. He dishes out his
home-cooked. Kosher-style sandwiches to a busding lunch crowd
in a trendy, fast growing section of
Tampa.
"If seniors still have their mind
intact and they're mobile, they
should insist on doing somt"well as the extra monf.Jf.
thing," Freid said. "They've got to
U.S. Department of Labor sta- get up in the morning to go
. here...
tistics indicate that seniors are somew
making up a growing segment of
. Loms Davis, 79, and John H..
the work force. There WL'rc 3.H Stephen, 78, agree. They, too, grew
million people· over r.s employed weary of retirement. But they
in 19\19, 2.\1 percent of all work- didn't have the capital to become
er&gt;. That\ up h-om 3.(, lnilliou &lt;elf-employed.
semOrs in the work force m 1«J95.
Davis and Stephen, both
For Fretd. the idc.t to go back 10 T..1mpa relildent.;;, arc greeters at

·Abby
from Page Cl
victims ·of marnagc.;; to have
responded di ffercntly.
Abby, thert• .trl' 'c un- mcn, gamblers, alcohoh cs, abusers, and people who just abandon mates and
children. Finding '\Ccurity in marriage is like catchmg a feather in
the wind -

'&gt;Oillt'

c.u ch

Jt ,

most

don't, no matter how hard tht..·y
try.
Want sccunty? C;cl your . own
job, open a b.mk ,\ccuunt. aml
earn so~nc sdf-c:~(ccm :1nd confidence. Don't rdy on someonL'
else for your se curity. - JOAN
C. IN BAY SHORE, N.Y.
DEAR JOAN: While I agrc·e
that a m;~rriagr certificate i!&gt;. not a

i

I•..•
••
•••

••
:.
••
"·
••
••

Wal-Mart. Each works about 35
hours a weelc..
"Lonehness. That's why I went
back to work," sa1d DaVIS, a former fork lifi oper:~tor who retired
m 1985. He went back to work at
Wal-Mart when the store opened
eight years ago. He enjoys meeting the shoppers an&lt;J especially;
helping disabled people in and
out of the store.
"Also for health - because
when you sit down. you begin to
think about everything," he
added.
Social Security brings in about
S1 ,200 a month for Davis and his
wife. His paycheck helps out. "If[
didn't work it would be kind of
rough;' he admits.
Stephen, a retired U.S. Army
sergeant with 20 years service,
looked forward to retirement, but
found it disappointing.
He's been a greeter for six
years.
"I was going to sit around and
fish," Stephen said. "I did a little
bit. But I needed something else
to do. I tried sitting around home,
domg nothing. It just didn't
work."
Bendey Lipscomb, state director of the AAR.P aod former
Florida Secretary of Elder Affairs,
said there are few opportunities
fqr active middle- or upperincome seniors who want to gt?l

one-way tiCker to easy street, the
bnd of -;ecurity to which I was
referring were rights of inht:ritance and, ,hou ld illn ess strike, the
authority to instruct dOctors
about each o~her's ,,:ishcs.
DEAR ABBY: Thts is just for
you: Do you know the difference
between a sewing machine and a

'

Go

lOX OIFKE WIU OftlllT
6:30 1'11101 MIIIIIG SltOWS
1:30 1'11101 lUES

BOOK OF SHADOWS: BLAIR
WITCH2 (A)
7:00 &amp; 8:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:

BEDAZZLED (PGt3)
. 7:10 U:10 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

CHAAUE'S ANGELS (PG13)
7:20 &amp; 8:20 DAILY

MEET THE PARENTS (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT UN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

ntE UTTLE VAMPIRE (PG)
7:00 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT N 1:00 &amp; 3:15

REMEMBER THE mANS (PG)
7:00 l 8:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

LUCKY NUMBERS {R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30

•

Alexander Bond Issue/Levy

Vote
For
Issue

AI.Xander
Schools

"Pro-L(fe I Pro-Family" on November 7.

Friend• of Chrlat
Paid Ad by Bob Murphy 134671 /g 160, VInton, Ohio 456S6

Dottie Boggs a resident of
Oak Hill, Ohio extends
the following Thank You
to .the staff at H.S.C.C.

7

IPRIIIG VAtlf~ CUIIMA...
446·4524
'"- " \jll&gt;l
FRitt/3100 • THURS 11/9/011

Show ~ Thursday November 9th
Time - 8:00 - 11:00 p.m.
Call - 740-446-4801

to the church of your choice next Sunday and vote

IN THE LNES OF SO MANY"

MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Upper Route 7 · Kanauga, Ohio

(3) Clearly, Bllil AI hal a coanltlv.c dylfunctlon, which

render~ him Incapable or telllnlil the truth. Poor Fellal
He, undoubtedly, neede treatment! (For 21 of hl1
m~or lice, lolil on to www.JOOile.com, type In Gore'•
21 Lice, then double cllck on cache.) Aw, Gee!

back to work.
"I don't see any effort to reach
out to these people," Lipscomb
said. "We have not adjusted to the
facr that we are keeping peopk
:alive and healthier longer. We luw
not turned the corner."

City Limits

ki ss? A sc,ving machine sews nice
o,;e ,uno,; , bur &lt;~ kiss seems so nice!
You can creda my sweet, late
mother, Tillie M. Brchl, with that
one. - ILENE R., BEXLEY,
OHIO
DEAR ILENE: Many thanks
for the witty ditty. Your mother
was a S\Vet·theart, and so are you.

'18

Ii .YO
.
NT
. "MAKING THE DIFFERENCE

.

.

.

5 Important Reasons to Vote For Issue 18
The State of Ohio will contribute $19.7 million (73%
of the total cost) towards replacement of the pre-k
through eighth grade buildings and renovation of the
existing high school
.1

.t Voting for Issue 18 for

new school facilities' will return
our own State tax dollars to our community.

••
•

••
•v

9 '

l.
••
••

•...

....
...

•"=
•
•
·•

..
.

Thank you all for being so good to
me. Everything you did was
wonderful. I feel that because of
the exceptional care you gave, I
was obi~ to return to my home. I wish everyone who needed care could
experience what I did at Holzer Senior Care Center. I appreciate your
friendliness, concern, and support•
Sincerely,
Dottie Boggs

~

If you would like to be o PQrt of a teom dedicated to providing the highest standard of
care, please apply at Holzer Senior Care Center, 380 Colonlol Drive, Bidwell, Ohio.
(Approximately one quarter mHe west of Holzer Medical Center on Jocks on Pike) or

•

call (740) 446-5001 for more Information.

~

I'or more info. please visit MikeAzinger.com, or call (740) 374-8007,

PAT LEISNER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A BADGE - Brian Billings adds a badge to one of three large
shadow box displays he has hanging In his hotlle. (Michele
photo)

FLAIR

Becky
Collins

8Y

memben to try to get a 520 gold
piece off of the u.il of a Brahma
bull. The ei&lt;pression "bulldogging"
carne 6om this show. They used
bulldogs to chase steers and nip
them in the leg. The steer would
then try to bite the dog, whereupon the bulldog would nip the
• nose of the steer.
This was such • sensttJve area
that the steer would usually flip
over on iq side in severe pain. The
I 01 show also had 95-year-old
Oregon scout Ezra Meeker. .

Is

'

'

Seniors disillusioned.with retirement, opt to work

The Gift You
Reserve Now

ribs' longer than you think

l!:tmu-itrntmtl • Page C7

.

Big circuses made Gallipolis a regular stop in days past
GALLIPOLIS- Between 1875
and 1929, no less than 25 different
circuses played at Gallipolis. Some
yean three or four CU"Cuses would
conte here.
Barnum &amp; Bailey was in the Old '
French City in 1875 and ag:un in
1883.ln t~t latter year, the famous
Jumbo the elephant was here.
The renowned Jwnbo was 12
feet high at the shoulders and
wetghed more than 14,000
pounds. Jwnbo was killed in 1885
when she collided with a train.
Jumbo was trying to save a baby
elepham that had become stuck on
the track. The srutfed Jwnbo was
later taken to Tufts University,
where the school's athletic teams
became known as the Tufu Jumbos.
One of the circuses that carne
here in the 1880. advertised an
.tlbino elephant. Noi to be outdone. the Forepaugh circus whitewashed an elephant and advertised
their elephant as the largest albino
elephant.
The circuses with the n1ost
appearances here would include
the Sell Brothers Circus and the
John Robinson Circus. I
In 1904, the Sells Brothers Circus, whose headquarters were in
Columbus, began having rroublr
with male elephants. In fact, short-

itunba~

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

... sunday, November 5, 2000

••
••

.t Voting for Issue 18 will

bring our school buildings into
compliance with state standards and greatly improve
accessibility for the physically impaired.

.t 20 years of study have proven that school

facilities do
make a difference in the quality of education.
·

.t Voting for Issue 18 will give 40'Yo more school
the least cost, with the largest State
contribution in the history of our school
district.

space at ·

Our
Share
27l.

Paid for by Alexander Bond Issue/Levy Comm ittee, D1ane Paulsen . Treasurer, 2114 Clara Ave , Albany, Ohro 45710

(

�...•
C8 • &amp;unbap tl• mtt· &amp;tnll nd

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-D7

01
Sunday, November 5, 1000

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
Tlris chart shows lww local stocks of interest perfonned last week.
&amp;1clr days closing figures are pravided by Advest of Gallipolis.

What's going on at your community hospitals?

Hospital System

MON.
41 ~.

TUE.
41 '!.

45

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A~P

AmTech/SBC

+

4

Aahland Inc.
AT&amp;T

y

+

BankOne
Bob Evans

Champion

Charming Shopa

+

City Holding

Federel Mogul

+

Firstar

+

Gannett ; ·

. 57).

+

General Electric

*

St. Mary's Hospital

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL
l'erinatali.Jlllll
Support Group
Tuesday, November 7,
6-7:30 p.m.
A support group for those who
have experienced a miscarria'ge
or ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth
or infant death. Meets the first ·
Tuesday of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0405 off the atrium
(3M) 52600-W

Sibling Cle es

Tuesday, November 7,
5:30-7:30 p.m.
Future big brothers and
sisters tour the maternity
floor, watch a videotape
about sibling rivalry and
learn to care for the new
baby. Bring a baby doll to
pral;tice holding, feeding
and diapering.
(504) 526-BABY

Sharing Support Group
Monday, November 6, 5 p.m.
Sharing is for Tri-State
women who have been
diagnosed with gynecologic
cancers. Meets the first
Monday of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0403 off the atrium

let's Talk.About Menopauae

(3M) 526-2297

(304)526-2270 or

A discussion with
Joseph Assaley, MD
Tuesday, November 14, lh'l p.m.
Best Western Gateway Inn's
JOB Conference Room Main Hotel
$6 for general admission or
$3 for RCWH members.
1-80041~.

Parenting Prbemles
Support Group
Every 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 6:30 to 8 p.m., an
infant CPR class is
provided for those parents
whose infants are being
discharged from the NICU.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Third Floor Conference Room
Call (504) 529-7146 end 88k
for c.,staJ Welch.
Diabetic Topics
Tuesday, November 28,
5:30p.m.
A support group for people
with diabetes and their
family members.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Private Dining Room One

(3M) 52&amp;-2286
Breastfeedlng Class
Tuesday, November 28, lh'l p.m.
Certified lactation
consultants teach our
breastfecding class.

Baby Care Claas
Tuesday, November 14, lh'l p.m.
General baby care, feeding,
bathing and safety tips for
parents-ro-be and
grandparents-to-be.
(3M) 526BABY

Infant CPR Claas
Tuesday, lWNember 21, 6 p.m.
Parents/ grandparents-to-be
are welcome and will receive
a certificate of attendance.
(304) 52&amp;.BABY

For a tour of Cabell
Huntington Hospital's
ModlerjBaby Suites
end NUJ'IIeiY, please call
(304) 52&amp;.BABY.
PJ:e.Di.alysls Education
For those who have been
diagnosed with kidney
disease requiring dialysis,
CHH's Dialysis Center offers
a pre&lt;iialysis education
program.
.
Call (504) 526-2000,
Cllt. 3()!J3 and ask for

Denlee BoUdreau.

Artbri1is Support Group
Thursday, November 9, I! p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Rooml!109

(304) 52&amp;-1216

Transitioll8 Grief
Support Group
Every other Friday.
Call for specific meeting dates.
(304) 52&amp;-1810

Refkl Claaa .
Thursday, November 16, 6 p.m. Depression Suppolt Group
$10 per person
Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 1!101 . St. Mary's Hospital Room 2101

(304) 757-0775

(304) 521H1001

Great American Smokeout

"~~Cancer

Smoking Cessation
Orientation Class
Thursday, 1\ovember 16, 5:30p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Rooml!101
(304) 526-1253

Support Group
Every Second and Fourth
Tuesday, 5 J1'm.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 6144

(304) 526-1057

9Pieasant Valley Hospital
Aerobics
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
$2 for members or
$3 for non-members

Arthritis Support Group

(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group
Thursday, ~ovcmbe1· 16, 6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hartley Conference Boom
(504) 675-5256

YOf!ll C!a ses
Wednesdays, 7p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room

(304) 675-7222
Tal Chi

Mondays, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
$5 a session
(504) 675-7222

Diabetes SUpport Group
Power Lin~
.
Pre-recorded insplralional
Tuesday, November 1!1, 6 p.m.
Topic: "What's New in Diabetes IIlC8IIII@e ( chan@es ~
Products and Research~
24 houm). Sponsored by
Smoki.ng Cessation Program
Combined Type 1 and Type 2
St. Mm:y's Pastoral Care Semce. Monday, November 1, 6 p.m.
Group Meeting
(304) 526-81100.
· Pleasant Valley Wellness
St. Mary's Hospital Room 1!109
Center Work
(304) 52&amp;-1216
Conditioning Room
(504) 675-7222

Diabetes Management
];'rogram Health Fair
Tuesday, November 7,
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
(3M) 6754540, Ell. 2004
Cameo 1Ad1es Breast Cancer

Support Group
Monday, November 27, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(504) 675-7997

Thursday, !\ovcmber 9, 3 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness
Center Multi-Purpose Roorn
(504) 675-8639

Harley Davidson

Aphasia Association &amp;

Stroke Support Group
Tuesday, November 1!1, 1 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
·Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road .
Point Pleasant
(304) 675-5250
Alzheimer's Support Group
Tuesday, November 21, 7 p.m.
Pleasant VaUey·Nursing &amp;
Hehabililation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(504) 675- 5236

+ 47"1..

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41 %

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+

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+

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+

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Oak Hill Fin.
OVB

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Blood Drive
Thursday, November 16,
Noon-6 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Welln(,!ss
Center Mulli·l'urpost• l{oom
(504) 675-7222

54

WED. · THU.
41 "7.
42'·

..

BB&amp;T

+

+

+

Peoples

y

Premier

+
Rocky Boot
+
Rockwell

j

RD Shell
Sears

+

Shoney•a
Wai-Mart
Wendy's

.. .

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13

Would wm lik1• ro see a srock of local interest listed? ·If so, contact
New.&gt; Editor Ke. •in Kelly at (740) 446 ~2342, ext. 23.

LIVESTOCK
Umted Producers Inc. market
report fixm1 G:lllipol is for sales
conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Steady
2011-100# St. $100-$11 H Hf

$90-$105, 325-450# St. $86$1 IIH Hf. $H4-$9&lt;1 475-(o25# St.
$HII-$94 Hf. $77-SHR 6511- HOO#
St. $74-$HA Hf $70-$82.
Cows-Steady
Wdl Muscl ed/ Fl eshed $4 1MH: Medium / Le.m $37-$44;
Thin/ Light $32-$37; Bulls

$43-548.
Uack To The Farm :
Cow / Calf P:tirs $525-S 1,150;
Bred Cows $475-$6HO; Baby
Calves $20-$280; Goats $20$95.
Upcomin~ specials:
There will be 75 good quality
bred cows to sell Dec. 6 at noon .
Herd bull leasing program
available. High qu ality An!,'ll S
bulls. ·
Call the office at 446-9&amp;96.

~~ '

.

All~bddatM!Y.flo«~~C.~~~~
'

'

'"'

vaughan.tradition enters fifth generation
Bv BRIAN J. REED
TlMES.SENTINEL STAFF

MIDDLEPORT The fifth
generation of the Vaughan family
has begun to enter the t;rocery
business, continuing a · tradition
that began in 191(),
It was around the turn of the
century that Walter Vaughan began

driving a horse-drawn grocery

Supn·- H1111 market ;,
c,,l/ipolis
Dick, a/on,~ IIIith Iris u•!fi·, Rubj•, Jl'l'l'l'
appro,lt'hcd alwut assJ1111i11g tl1c Oll'lll'rsllip &lt;J( 1111
est.lhli.-lrcd lwt slnlJ~j;:lill.l! market 011 the wrner of Pc,IYI
Strct't J111d Gnu·r,l/ J-l,lrtill!!rY P.li·kll'il)'.
Tt

II'IIS ll•lrih· JI'OI'hill,',! at ,,

,,,,,1

meat counter at Evans'. Learning JS
he grew, "by osmosis," he o;.ays, he

later we nt to work. for the Great
wagon for the Ewing Grocery Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
Co., located on Main Street in
Dick beg-an at tl1 e A &amp; I' in MidPomeroy.
dleport, and moved with tile comWalter's son, th e late Richard pany to a new building - the· curVaughan, co ntinued that fam ily rent location of Fruth Pharmacy.
tradition , working for the Evans
He ultimately worke d for A &amp; I'
Grocery Co. on Pomeroy's Second for 21 years, until the co mpany
Street, as a meat ciittcr. H e began closed its local stores.
his work during the darkest days of
It was while working at a Superthe Great Depression, and contin- Valu m arket in Gallipoli s that
ued working in the grocery i;&gt;u si- Dick, along with his wife. Ruby.
ness for rnany years after th:H at were approached about assuming
Pennyfarc market in Point Pkas- the o~nership of an established but
ant, WVa .. and Gallipolis, and, ulti- strugghng market on th e corner of
mately. at his family's Vaughan's· Pearl Street and Gc·ner:1l Ha1tinger
Supermarket.
Parkway.
His son, Dick '1.1ughan, began hJS
The Meigs Devdopmcllt Corcareer as an 11 year-old, behind the . poration, a loc al investmeot group

INVESTING

The case for
value ·investing
BY BRYCE

l.

SMITH

c;ALLIPOLIS - Wa nt to
illvest ill sto c k s. but ~o n ­
ccr ne d about h ig h valua tions? If ~o, con sider value
stoc k s for yo ur portfolio.
These sec uriti es otTer ca pital
.1pp recia t io n p oten tial an d
GUEST
m,1y have less risk than th e
VIEW
;lVL'r age stoc k .
A value stoc k refer s t o the
sec uri ty of a co mpan y whose l owt:r- th a n ~t'x pe c t e d earn c u rre nt stock pn cc may not m~s.
reflect t h e value of it s underOne rea so n to invest in a
lyi ng busi n ess. Such a co m - value stock is its apprec iation
pany is co nsidered to be potential. Once a n underval "u ndervalu ed'' or "our-of- · u e d comp any ex hib its good
prospects of recovering, its
favo r" with investorli.
·
stoc
k price co uld deli ve r
So me va lue cu mpan1 e"
o p erate in indu litrie s going superi or investm ent rc'iu lts
throu gh a downturn. Others co mpare d to the m ark et .
Another reason to ow n
are form er growth co mpa these
sec ur ities ts their
nies du t h ave rxpf n en ccd a
se_tb ack. suc h as an un cxp cc t -

Bryce

t·d

t~tJnagcrial

dungc o r

Please see Money. Pace DB

made up of Jrca bu~ lll l'\"&gt;lllt'Tl. \\'~~..,
looking for &lt;\ huyt=r tC.1r thl' "ton.',
once known as Tiny\ Fuodl.md.
A management , hal-eup h.1d lett
the group \\'lth .1 grort'ry ~tort•

they d1dn_·t kno\.\· hmv ro nut and,
for thdt matter, didn't w.ltlt ro run .
It \V&lt;-l'i a n "&gt;k to bl' \ Un.: ti1r thL'
Vaughath, \\'ith J young t:1tnily :It
home. but it \\'.1' ,d,o .1 ~oldt·n
" \Ve dtdn 'r h.IVl'

Hal

Kneen

Reports from local h1rme1&gt; lnw

been coming inro m y office concerning near- record yields due to

tht' amp!.: moisture and long gmwing- seaso n. ()m· Mcih"' Coumy
t:1rmer who gmv~·s e lf cor n has t&lt;:'ited out more than 2(.)lJ bushels pe-r

acre.
Ohio D epartmeut uf Agricu lture
just announced an cstimatl'd avl'ragc yield for corn at !52 bushel s per
acre in the yc•ar 211llfl. up from a Illyear average uf 124.2 bushels per
acre.
While the U.S. is sti ll expcctin~; .1
record year f&lt;Jr corn, with Ill. 19 bil-

lion bmhel'i to be harvc\tc-d. t(lTL'lb"l l
gro\vn corh pmjl'Ction rontinue'i to'
de clin e due to poor h.nvt·~t:-..
accorrling to Allan I in l's, Ohio St.ttt'

'

termina.l Il Jarkct'i.
, Locally g mwn rahb~,l gl' may L~c
t(mnd :lt ou r loc.1 1 gmrl't)' srort."li
and f.1rm m,.trkcts, m.tkt· sure to
n·qucst it.

•••

Po in &lt;.;t'rti as arc colonn g up ~n
l oc~1l gn·c nhoust'\ in prcp:1rarinn t(1r
the upcoming holid.1y \t\tson .
Make littrc yo u nurk your c;den-

dars lt)r th e annual M c·it,~ Couury
Holiday Flower Show Nov. I X fiu111

I to 5 p.m. :md Nov: J l) ri·om noou
to 4 p.m . at the M eit-" County

Senior Citizens Center. locatt'd .lt
Memorial n rivc.:, Pon tc:roy, )ll'Xt (()
Vetaan Mcmorl.tl I lospital.
Thi" year\ theme 1, "Santa CJ.tu,
i-: Coming to Town.'' Se\'t'r."llL·dur.ttiml.ll rxhib1t' wi ll iw Oi l h.111d - .1

potll'il'trl.l collcctton

~1y

!oc.d

~row -

jiiCkl'h

to

lltY \)\\ 11 gnKc..:ry

0\\'11 illg

bu si nc: ~s.''

With the

loan fn,)t11

i11Vt"\ t~

of rlw

b ;ll"k111g

mcnt group ;md

,tdvcntumus

.111

In rhe \'t':lro., '\lllCl' tbc V.lllglun
t:un il y ha' ,\\\ lllll ('d thL· bu"iliL'"'·
t\\O t11.1JOr t·:xp.lll'lion\ of tbt \llll"l'
lun· r,tkcn pl.tcc. ,tnd thl'ir .Jtli h,ttinm wtth CardinJJ Food' .md
!(;A howe ll l&lt;lt k wav t(lr the
R.nundy\ com pan y. \\'hirh uh1
ln.Jtl'ly bought rhc ( ~. mlin:ll npL'LInoi L

Please see Vaughan, Page DB

N.JtiuJt,11 n.lllk,

C: itJ 7L'!IS

Nows the time
to assess cow condition
BY JENNIFER

POMEROY Be on the
lookout for t:u·m equipme nt on the
n1ad as the harvesting of field crops
continues this f.1ilseason.
The return to E,lstern Standard
Tim e last week puts many of our
farmers at a disadvantage .They nll"t
now combine bean"i J nd corn after ,
GUEST VIEW
they work their regular H to S JObs.
Note the siOIV-f)lOviog .vehicle
sibms (reflective orange triangles) on Univer;ity ngriculttn";"t[ cconoml\t.
R oy Pi erce of Pi erce Bll1tlwr.'
the back of tractors ami ~; rain bins.
Farm, Leta rt, O hio. i' till' b &gt;t of the ·
Rdlective orange tape should be on
the sides and back corners of trail- vegetabk growns harv~st111 ~ crop\
ers. Remember that tractors pulling this hi I. He ha s just begun harwstgrain bins cannot stop qui ck ly and ing ftll cabbage with several truck need more rime when crossing loads already on th eir \V.lY to di st.mt

high,~ays, so allow th e nnmple distance and tim~.

t\\'0

rub togethn.' ' Pick ,,~d. not111g
tha t hl' .md 1m wlfl· h,1d JU~t put
thetr eldest in coltL'ge, "bur rhL'y
h:td karned th ,1t I \\',1, intl'rc-&lt;.&gt;tcd m
'iOillL'Cby

Vauglun's (~ardt nal supt..' nnarket
wa,·born. Through the yc\Jrs, ll!ck
c~nd Ruby, "Cr&gt;nclpa"Va ugha u , an d
Dick and Ruby\ son and daughtc'r,
llon :mJ Bc•th , h.we all helped
m.1ke .1 go of thl' \tort·. a11d now,
the g;rJ.ndch il dren arl' hq?;inmng ro
\\'ork thl'q.: a' \\'l'll . '
··we're workin~ on .:!3 ,.t'.lr' on
thi~ CDl"llLT.''ViiUgJ;all 'lciJd. :.,md \\"L'
h:we learned cl"&gt; we do ."
Thl' bw;ine""· now l,.'mployinp; 44
pc..:opk ,:md .1 t\111 -timt' m.m,lgt·r,
l!..irh.ml Hil l. is"" ,mc hor of Middlep{)rt\ - ;.m d Mc1h"' Co u nty\;
l"L'tail \.:conon1 ~. providing qu .dity pn)d lli,."t" ,1 11d t\·it'nd J). CO llllllll lliLV-JllillJt'd \tT\'tc.:t'.

~, ,pportunity.

Drivers, be on lookout
for form equipment
Bv HAL KNEEN

Smith

(3M)5~

GREETING
CUSTOMERS
- Dick Vaugh~
an, second from
left . is sti ll a
common sight
in the meat
department at
Vaughan·s
Supermarket in
Middleport. The.
6J)era·
begun in
,,tne late 1970s,
is a carryover of
a
century-olc;J
tradit ion in the
bus i·
grocery
ness. (Brian J .
Reed photo)

l.

BYRNES

GAl l.ll'&lt;l !I S

\'Vc·

.1 1c·

rll.tt t1tlH' pf YL' ~tr \\ lwn
pmducn" an: mot-...' l .trdtdly
wcighin ~ thl'JT hmlgvl\ .1g.umt

L' llf L'l"l tl g

Jennifer
Byrnes

thl' llU[rltlnll.lilll'L'd\ tlttht• ~'11\\ . .,_

.md

tryn1g

teo tind

h.d.nh·t·
prod\11.'

tllt'

[x:tWL'l' ll L'CUJJ0111ll\ ,11Hi

ttvtty
Ud( JrL' "" lllg111g tun l~1r tn the

low -mpll( end. I"L'I1111ld \·ouro.,c] f
t!Llt tllltl"ltl~l1l 1'- OIIL' llf thv 11111\t
cntiLll L"Ot11pn11L'1lt' n( Yt'llt 111.111
1~L'l11L'Itt prn gr~u11 \'\/n hnut propl'l" nutntio11. ~..-~),,., dP llllt rc.1Lh
Lill·ir rqnodut un· \)r ~l"11L"!tt
potential. Jlllr do rilL'' 11U:'\111lilv
i.Ktltion.
1() lind ,t tlllH"l' t'~ tlllil l t1H \l.d ,lllCL', prnducer' llL'L'd u 1 kn~ l\\ 1ilL'
l'Olldlt10Jl o( thl'JJ l't)\\' .\Ill ~ thl•

qua!Jry ot'rhctJ tl·cd . I ht· be''

\\,t\

t(1 d~_•fL'rtlllllL' t"(l\\' (OIIlllth'l1 1\ f\1

me tht· Hod? ( ~HHhtlllll ~l·on1 1~
(B&lt; :\ ) lllL'rhnd. \\ llll·h L ilt'' CP\\
L'ollditHH1

nn

\Yith I bcJng
hL'111 M ohL'~e.

.I \l·.dl"

l'I1J.lt

1-iJ,

IPlld

J.ltnl

(tl

,II hi

Cow' l·.1ting l'ltltLT L'lld dt" the
sc.1k 'imply lO't tnu 11Hi t h. I h111
CO\\"\ h,IVt' [t"l)LJbJe h t"l'l'dlti)-!; h.Jt\..:..
often \\ ith cOlh't'p(llm r.ltt'"
J"t'thtl'l'd ,}\ tllltl

cent.
Thtn

h

.1~ ~(I ._fll Pl'l

GUEST VIEW
prq_,rJI.tllt"ll'"- ·nf 1 ,hl''t' en\\' oftl·n
l"t'"ll]t 111 ,\ lllllCh JightL'I \\"L'.IIll'li

1 .11~--

dt'"Pilt'

JtJt,d\l'

\\"dl J],,, hv

IJHllt"

grc.ltt'r

ft'L'd

l'm\.

U,tng .111 ( )~L (tl"t ,],l't.'l' on
Hndy Cond1t1011 Suntn~. ,\ tl)
prodnnT r.1n t'Ll'1th le.un w ,\,~1gn
llit' 11" CO\\'\

llllllll'l"l\,1) \"~ illll'\

( 1-iJ)

h.l\t'd i..lll [],L'\l' \l'\\'1) dt'\l T1pt10t1\:
I 1) phy\1(.111~
\\t'.1k: l2J 1JH1\(k
.ltr(lph~. (J) tHllllllr tlt 'PI Ill'\ 1'1
hie: (4) outl111c &lt;~I 11l" ""bk: (.1)
t~tr 111 bn,kct .Jnd tl ,l tlk\: ((1) out!Jnt· of htp .llltl ptt1 htHIL' ~ \'t'lhk;
111d (7) t:11 uddtt .111d p.u~· hy t:tt
.mn111d t.nl h~.·.1d. ld c.-.111\. nl\\.,
~lwuld he .1 l,l\hh cnndltton \COt\'
nt =:.-h h' tlw tltne th..:y rc.k h ( 1( 1
d,t\"' pnor to t .1\ving ,111d ..,]wuld
rl'111,111l 111 th.l\ cntJdJtwn tlmH!~h
dw hrL'l'lhng \t'.!\&lt;ltl.
,A,

CO\\

..,ho\\'
L"U\\"'

till'

of the m'lT \\'t'1glit

lil''"

,\11'

nr

\t'Ori11J.!; =)-(1 \\'UUJd 110(

\1~11\

lllU\L

k·

of phy .. 1t.t!

\\t'.tl

&lt;llroph\. lwWL'\ t't.

( hn "ondllhlltl'lt

rhc nurl111c of rlw 'J11tll'. htp .. 111~l
p111 blmt'\. ,1-. wdl ,l, I 2 rdo, '' 1ll
,1!1 bt· ,.,,1hk. I urthnmo1t' ..1 l.D\\

.trl' .d\n It·" lt~t·h !l1 i.llll
lt't\l'. I urthL'lt1HH\.', 'ucn·.,,lu]

Please see Bymes. Page DB

\ll~Ct"t'ttblt· [{) d1 "ol',l\l' . 111~i 1111\l
l",lh·IT1g

(l1111plh ,l[ IL)!l-..

pnl' UlliUIIJ.t

\lh'iJ

,[\

\ O\\\

Please see Kneen, Page DB

,,

I

�...•
C8 • &amp;unbap tl• mtt· &amp;tnll nd

Sunday, November 5, 2000

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

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages D2-D7

01
Sunday, November 5, 1000

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
Tlris chart shows lww local stocks of interest perfonned last week.
&amp;1clr days closing figures are pravided by Advest of Gallipolis.

What's going on at your community hospitals?

Hospital System

MON.
41 ~.

TUE.
41 '!.

45

45'1.

46~

46'Y.

~7"1.

58 ~

57"f..

56i.

56

57~..

31'k

32t.

32'"

33

33,..

22'1.

23, ..

22

21 '·

22~..

35;.

36'1.

36~

37

36i.

y

18,,.

18"1..

1St,.

18'1.

17'~..

BorgWamer;

37i.

37'l'.

37\

38'!.

36'!.

y

2"i,.

2"1..

. 2'),.

2,,.

2, ..

+ sr.

6l

~.

. 6'-i

6'1.

5~~,.

5%

6~.

6'1.

6 '\o

3},

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3'!.

3\

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19'·

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19'·

58

57~..

57\

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54~1.

54'!.

53'Y,.

53'!..

48}..

48~.

48

48"/,.

y
.Akzo t'
A~P

AmTech/SBC

+

4

Aahland Inc.
AT&amp;T

y

+

BankOne
Bob Evans

Champion

Charming Shopa

+

City Holding

Federel Mogul

+

Firstar

+

Gannett ; ·

. 57).

+

General Electric

*

St. Mary's Hospital

CABELL HUNTINGTON HOSPITAL
l'erinatali.Jlllll
Support Group
Tuesday, November 7,
6-7:30 p.m.
A support group for those who
have experienced a miscarria'ge
or ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth
or infant death. Meets the first ·
Tuesday of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0405 off the atrium
(3M) 52600-W

Sibling Cle es

Tuesday, November 7,
5:30-7:30 p.m.
Future big brothers and
sisters tour the maternity
floor, watch a videotape
about sibling rivalry and
learn to care for the new
baby. Bring a baby doll to
pral;tice holding, feeding
and diapering.
(504) 526-BABY

Sharing Support Group
Monday, November 6, 5 p.m.
Sharing is for Tri-State
women who have been
diagnosed with gynecologic
cancers. Meets the first
Monday of each month.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room 0403 off the atrium

let's Talk.About Menopauae

(3M) 526-2297

(304)526-2270 or

A discussion with
Joseph Assaley, MD
Tuesday, November 14, lh'l p.m.
Best Western Gateway Inn's
JOB Conference Room Main Hotel
$6 for general admission or
$3 for RCWH members.
1-80041~.

Parenting Prbemles
Support Group
Every 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 6:30 to 8 p.m., an
infant CPR class is
provided for those parents
whose infants are being
discharged from the NICU.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Third Floor Conference Room
Call (504) 529-7146 end 88k
for c.,staJ Welch.
Diabetic Topics
Tuesday, November 28,
5:30p.m.
A support group for people
with diabetes and their
family members.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Private Dining Room One

(3M) 52&amp;-2286
Breastfeedlng Class
Tuesday, November 28, lh'l p.m.
Certified lactation
consultants teach our
breastfecding class.

Baby Care Claas
Tuesday, November 14, lh'l p.m.
General baby care, feeding,
bathing and safety tips for
parents-ro-be and
grandparents-to-be.
(3M) 526BABY

Infant CPR Claas
Tuesday, lWNember 21, 6 p.m.
Parents/ grandparents-to-be
are welcome and will receive
a certificate of attendance.
(304) 52&amp;.BABY

For a tour of Cabell
Huntington Hospital's
ModlerjBaby Suites
end NUJ'IIeiY, please call
(304) 52&amp;.BABY.
PJ:e.Di.alysls Education
For those who have been
diagnosed with kidney
disease requiring dialysis,
CHH's Dialysis Center offers
a pre&lt;iialysis education
program.
.
Call (504) 526-2000,
Cllt. 3()!J3 and ask for

Denlee BoUdreau.

Artbri1is Support Group
Thursday, November 9, I! p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Rooml!109

(304) 52&amp;-1216

Transitioll8 Grief
Support Group
Every other Friday.
Call for specific meeting dates.
(304) 52&amp;-1810

Refkl Claaa .
Thursday, November 16, 6 p.m. Depression Suppolt Group
$10 per person
Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 1!101 . St. Mary's Hospital Room 2101

(304) 757-0775

(304) 521H1001

Great American Smokeout

"~~Cancer

Smoking Cessation
Orientation Class
Thursday, 1\ovember 16, 5:30p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Rooml!101
(304) 526-1253

Support Group
Every Second and Fourth
Tuesday, 5 J1'm.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 6144

(304) 526-1057

9Pieasant Valley Hospital
Aerobics
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
$2 for members or
$3 for non-members

Arthritis Support Group

(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group
Thursday, ~ovcmbe1· 16, 6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Hartley Conference Boom
(504) 675-5256

YOf!ll C!a ses
Wednesdays, 7p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room

(304) 675-7222
Tal Chi

Mondays, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
$5 a session
(504) 675-7222

Diabetes SUpport Group
Power Lin~
.
Pre-recorded insplralional
Tuesday, November 1!1, 6 p.m.
Topic: "What's New in Diabetes IIlC8IIII@e ( chan@es ~
Products and Research~
24 houm). Sponsored by
Smoki.ng Cessation Program
Combined Type 1 and Type 2
St. Mm:y's Pastoral Care Semce. Monday, November 1, 6 p.m.
Group Meeting
(304) 526-81100.
· Pleasant Valley Wellness
St. Mary's Hospital Room 1!109
Center Work
(304) 52&amp;-1216
Conditioning Room
(504) 675-7222

Diabetes Management
];'rogram Health Fair
Tuesday, November 7,
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center Multi-Purpose Room
(3M) 6754540, Ell. 2004
Cameo 1Ad1es Breast Cancer

Support Group
Monday, November 27, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(504) 675-7997

Thursday, !\ovcmber 9, 3 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness
Center Multi-Purpose Roorn
(504) 675-8639

Harley Davidson

Aphasia Association &amp;

Stroke Support Group
Tuesday, November 1!1, 1 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
·Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road .
Point Pleasant
(304) 675-5250
Alzheimer's Support Group
Tuesday, November 21, 7 p.m.
Pleasant VaUey·Nursing &amp;
Hehabililation Center
Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant
(504) 675- 5236

+ 47"1..

FRI.
41 %

Kmart

+

5'~..

5'~.

6 Y..

6 7..

6 ).

Kroger

4

22

22,.

22"/,

22"1..

22"1..

24 '1.

25),

25 :0

27

26'/,

24'1.

24Y.

24'k

26"1..

27

14io

14i.

14i.

14i.

14i.

26

26Y,

26

26

26

3, },.

31 '!.

31 'k

32'/,.

32~\

Lands End

+

Ltd.

+

.

Oak Hill Fin.
OVB

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Blood Drive
Thursday, November 16,
Noon-6 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Welln(,!ss
Center Mulli·l'urpost• l{oom
(504) 675-7222

54

WED. · THU.
41 "7.
42'·

..

BB&amp;T

+

+

+

Peoples

y

Premier

+
Rocky Boot
+
Rockwell

j

RD Shell
Sears

+

Shoney•a
Wai-Mart
Wendy's

.. .

Worthin g ton

13'Y..

13'Y..

13'Y.

13'·

5,,.

5,16

5%

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5'k

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5

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5

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61 '1..

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43i.

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21 ' ·

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+

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+

+

13

Would wm lik1• ro see a srock of local interest listed? ·If so, contact
New.&gt; Editor Ke. •in Kelly at (740) 446 ~2342, ext. 23.

LIVESTOCK
Umted Producers Inc. market
report fixm1 G:lllipol is for sales
conducted on Wednesday.
Feeder Cattle-Steady
2011-100# St. $100-$11 H Hf

$90-$105, 325-450# St. $86$1 IIH Hf. $H4-$9&lt;1 475-(o25# St.
$HII-$94 Hf. $77-SHR 6511- HOO#
St. $74-$HA Hf $70-$82.
Cows-Steady
Wdl Muscl ed/ Fl eshed $4 1MH: Medium / Le.m $37-$44;
Thin/ Light $32-$37; Bulls

$43-548.
Uack To The Farm :
Cow / Calf P:tirs $525-S 1,150;
Bred Cows $475-$6HO; Baby
Calves $20-$280; Goats $20$95.
Upcomin~ specials:
There will be 75 good quality
bred cows to sell Dec. 6 at noon .
Herd bull leasing program
available. High qu ality An!,'ll S
bulls. ·
Call the office at 446-9&amp;96.

~~ '

.

All~bddatM!Y.flo«~~C.~~~~
'

'

'"'

vaughan.tradition enters fifth generation
Bv BRIAN J. REED
TlMES.SENTINEL STAFF

MIDDLEPORT The fifth
generation of the Vaughan family
has begun to enter the t;rocery
business, continuing a · tradition
that began in 191(),
It was around the turn of the
century that Walter Vaughan began

driving a horse-drawn grocery

Supn·- H1111 market ;,
c,,l/ipolis
Dick, a/on,~ IIIith Iris u•!fi·, Rubj•, Jl'l'l'l'
appro,lt'hcd alwut assJ1111i11g tl1c Oll'lll'rsllip &lt;J( 1111
est.lhli.-lrcd lwt slnlJ~j;:lill.l! market 011 the wrner of Pc,IYI
Strct't J111d Gnu·r,l/ J-l,lrtill!!rY P.li·kll'il)'.
Tt

II'IIS ll•lrih· JI'OI'hill,',! at ,,

,,,,,1

meat counter at Evans'. Learning JS
he grew, "by osmosis," he o;.ays, he

later we nt to work. for the Great
wagon for the Ewing Grocery Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co.
Co., located on Main Street in
Dick beg-an at tl1 e A &amp; I' in MidPomeroy.
dleport, and moved with tile comWalter's son, th e late Richard pany to a new building - the· curVaughan, co ntinued that fam ily rent location of Fruth Pharmacy.
tradition , working for the Evans
He ultimately worke d for A &amp; I'
Grocery Co. on Pomeroy's Second for 21 years, until the co mpany
Street, as a meat ciittcr. H e began closed its local stores.
his work during the darkest days of
It was while working at a Superthe Great Depression, and contin- Valu m arket in Gallipoli s that
ued working in the grocery i;&gt;u si- Dick, along with his wife. Ruby.
ness for rnany years after th:H at were approached about assuming
Pennyfarc market in Point Pkas- the o~nership of an established but
ant, WVa .. and Gallipolis, and, ulti- strugghng market on th e corner of
mately. at his family's Vaughan's· Pearl Street and Gc·ner:1l Ha1tinger
Supermarket.
Parkway.
His son, Dick '1.1ughan, began hJS
The Meigs Devdopmcllt Corcareer as an 11 year-old, behind the . poration, a loc al investmeot group

INVESTING

The case for
value ·investing
BY BRYCE

l.

SMITH

c;ALLIPOLIS - Wa nt to
illvest ill sto c k s. but ~o n ­
ccr ne d about h ig h valua tions? If ~o, con sider value
stoc k s for yo ur portfolio.
These sec uriti es otTer ca pital
.1pp recia t io n p oten tial an d
GUEST
m,1y have less risk than th e
VIEW
;lVL'r age stoc k .
A value stoc k refer s t o the
sec uri ty of a co mpan y whose l owt:r- th a n ~t'x pe c t e d earn c u rre nt stock pn cc may not m~s.
reflect t h e value of it s underOne rea so n to invest in a
lyi ng busi n ess. Such a co m - value stock is its apprec iation
pany is co nsidered to be potential. Once a n underval "u ndervalu ed'' or "our-of- · u e d comp any ex hib its good
prospects of recovering, its
favo r" with investorli.
·
stoc
k price co uld deli ve r
So me va lue cu mpan1 e"
o p erate in indu litrie s going superi or investm ent rc'iu lts
throu gh a downturn. Others co mpare d to the m ark et .
Another reason to ow n
are form er growth co mpa these
sec ur ities ts their
nies du t h ave rxpf n en ccd a
se_tb ack. suc h as an un cxp cc t -

Bryce

t·d

t~tJnagcrial

dungc o r

Please see Money. Pace DB

made up of Jrca bu~ lll l'\"&gt;lllt'Tl. \\'~~..,
looking for &lt;\ huyt=r tC.1r thl' "ton.',
once known as Tiny\ Fuodl.md.
A management , hal-eup h.1d lett
the group \\'lth .1 grort'ry ~tort•

they d1dn_·t kno\.\· hmv ro nut and,
for thdt matter, didn't w.ltlt ro run .
It \V&lt;-l'i a n "&gt;k to bl' \ Un.: ti1r thL'
Vaughath, \\'ith J young t:1tnily :It
home. but it \\'.1' ,d,o .1 ~oldt·n
" \Ve dtdn 'r h.IVl'

Hal

Kneen

Reports from local h1rme1&gt; lnw

been coming inro m y office concerning near- record yields due to

tht' amp!.: moisture and long gmwing- seaso n. ()m· Mcih"' Coumy
t:1rmer who gmv~·s e lf cor n has t&lt;:'ited out more than 2(.)lJ bushels pe-r

acre.
Ohio D epartmeut uf Agricu lture
just announced an cstimatl'd avl'ragc yield for corn at !52 bushel s per
acre in the yc•ar 211llfl. up from a Illyear average uf 124.2 bushels per
acre.
While the U.S. is sti ll expcctin~; .1
record year f&lt;Jr corn, with Ill. 19 bil-

lion bmhel'i to be harvc\tc-d. t(lTL'lb"l l
gro\vn corh pmjl'Ction rontinue'i to'
de clin e due to poor h.nvt·~t:-..
accorrling to Allan I in l's, Ohio St.ttt'

'

termina.l Il Jarkct'i.
, Locally g mwn rahb~,l gl' may L~c
t(mnd :lt ou r loc.1 1 gmrl't)' srort."li
and f.1rm m,.trkcts, m.tkt· sure to
n·qucst it.

•••

Po in &lt;.;t'rti as arc colonn g up ~n
l oc~1l gn·c nhoust'\ in prcp:1rarinn t(1r
the upcoming holid.1y \t\tson .
Make littrc yo u nurk your c;den-

dars lt)r th e annual M c·it,~ Couury
Holiday Flower Show Nov. I X fiu111

I to 5 p.m. :md Nov: J l) ri·om noou
to 4 p.m . at the M eit-" County

Senior Citizens Center. locatt'd .lt
Memorial n rivc.:, Pon tc:roy, )ll'Xt (()
Vetaan Mcmorl.tl I lospital.
Thi" year\ theme 1, "Santa CJ.tu,
i-: Coming to Town.'' Se\'t'r."llL·dur.ttiml.ll rxhib1t' wi ll iw Oi l h.111d - .1

potll'il'trl.l collcctton

~1y

!oc.d

~row -

jiiCkl'h

to

lltY \)\\ 11 gnKc..:ry

0\\'11 illg

bu si nc: ~s.''

With the

loan fn,)t11

i11Vt"\ t~

of rlw

b ;ll"k111g

mcnt group ;md

,tdvcntumus

.111

In rhe \'t':lro., '\lllCl' tbc V.lllglun
t:un il y ha' ,\\\ lllll ('d thL· bu"iliL'"'·
t\\O t11.1JOr t·:xp.lll'lion\ of tbt \llll"l'
lun· r,tkcn pl.tcc. ,tnd thl'ir .Jtli h,ttinm wtth CardinJJ Food' .md
!(;A howe ll l&lt;lt k wav t(lr the
R.nundy\ com pan y. \\'hirh uh1
ln.Jtl'ly bought rhc ( ~. mlin:ll npL'LInoi L

Please see Vaughan, Page DB

N.JtiuJt,11 n.lllk,

C: itJ 7L'!IS

Nows the time
to assess cow condition
BY JENNIFER

POMEROY Be on the
lookout for t:u·m equipme nt on the
n1ad as the harvesting of field crops
continues this f.1ilseason.
The return to E,lstern Standard
Tim e last week puts many of our
farmers at a disadvantage .They nll"t
now combine bean"i J nd corn after ,
GUEST VIEW
they work their regular H to S JObs.
Note the siOIV-f)lOviog .vehicle
sibms (reflective orange triangles) on Univer;ity ngriculttn";"t[ cconoml\t.
R oy Pi erce of Pi erce Bll1tlwr.'
the back of tractors ami ~; rain bins.
Farm, Leta rt, O hio. i' till' b &gt;t of the ·
Rdlective orange tape should be on
the sides and back corners of trail- vegetabk growns harv~st111 ~ crop\
ers. Remember that tractors pulling this hi I. He ha s just begun harwstgrain bins cannot stop qui ck ly and ing ftll cabbage with several truck need more rime when crossing loads already on th eir \V.lY to di st.mt

high,~ays, so allow th e nnmple distance and tim~.

t\\'0

rub togethn.' ' Pick ,,~d. not111g
tha t hl' .md 1m wlfl· h,1d JU~t put
thetr eldest in coltL'ge, "bur rhL'y
h:td karned th ,1t I \\',1, intl'rc-&lt;.&gt;tcd m
'iOillL'Cby

Vauglun's (~ardt nal supt..' nnarket
wa,·born. Through the yc\Jrs, ll!ck
c~nd Ruby, "Cr&gt;nclpa"Va ugha u , an d
Dick and Ruby\ son and daughtc'r,
llon :mJ Bc•th , h.we all helped
m.1ke .1 go of thl' \tort·. a11d now,
the g;rJ.ndch il dren arl' hq?;inmng ro
\\'ork thl'q.: a' \\'l'll . '
··we're workin~ on .:!3 ,.t'.lr' on
thi~ CDl"llLT.''ViiUgJ;all 'lciJd. :.,md \\"L'
h:we learned cl"&gt; we do ."
Thl' bw;ine""· now l,.'mployinp; 44
pc..:opk ,:md .1 t\111 -timt' m.m,lgt·r,
l!..irh.ml Hil l. is"" ,mc hor of Middlep{)rt\ - ;.m d Mc1h"' Co u nty\;
l"L'tail \.:conon1 ~. providing qu .dity pn)d lli,."t" ,1 11d t\·it'nd J). CO llllllll lliLV-JllillJt'd \tT\'tc.:t'.

~, ,pportunity.

Drivers, be on lookout
for form equipment
Bv HAL KNEEN

Smith

(3M)5~

GREETING
CUSTOMERS
- Dick Vaugh~
an, second from
left . is sti ll a
common sight
in the meat
department at
Vaughan·s
Supermarket in
Middleport. The.
6J)era·
begun in
,,tne late 1970s,
is a carryover of
a
century-olc;J
tradit ion in the
bus i·
grocery
ness. (Brian J .
Reed photo)

l.

BYRNES

GAl l.ll'&lt;l !I S

\'Vc·

.1 1c·

rll.tt t1tlH' pf YL' ~tr \\ lwn
pmducn" an: mot-...' l .trdtdly
wcighin ~ thl'JT hmlgvl\ .1g.umt

L' llf L'l"l tl g

Jennifer
Byrnes

thl' llU[rltlnll.lilll'L'd\ tlttht• ~'11\\ . .,_

.md

tryn1g

teo tind

h.d.nh·t·
prod\11.'

tllt'

[x:tWL'l' ll L'CUJJ0111ll\ ,11Hi

ttvtty
Ud( JrL' "" lllg111g tun l~1r tn the

low -mpll( end. I"L'I1111ld \·ouro.,c] f
t!Llt tllltl"ltl~l1l 1'- OIIL' llf thv 11111\t
cntiLll L"Ot11pn11L'1lt' n( Yt'llt 111.111
1~L'l11L'Itt prn gr~u11 \'\/n hnut propl'l" nutntio11. ~..-~),,., dP llllt rc.1Lh
Lill·ir rqnodut un· \)r ~l"11L"!tt
potential. Jlllr do rilL'' 11U:'\111lilv
i.Ktltion.
1() lind ,t tlllH"l' t'~ tlllil l t1H \l.d ,lllCL', prnducer' llL'L'd u 1 kn~ l\\ 1ilL'
l'Olldlt10Jl o( thl'JJ l't)\\' .\Ill ~ thl•

qua!Jry ot'rhctJ tl·cd . I ht· be''

\\,t\

t(1 d~_•fL'rtlllllL' t"(l\\' (OIIlllth'l1 1\ f\1

me tht· Hod? ( ~HHhtlllll ~l·on1 1~
(B&lt; :\ ) lllL'rhnd. \\ llll·h L ilt'' CP\\
L'ollditHH1

nn

\Yith I bcJng
hL'111 M ohL'~e.

.I \l·.dl"

l'I1J.lt

1-iJ,

IPlld

J.ltnl

(tl

,II hi

Cow' l·.1ting l'ltltLT L'lld dt" the
sc.1k 'imply lO't tnu 11Hi t h. I h111
CO\\"\ h,IVt' [t"l)LJbJe h t"l'l'dlti)-!; h.Jt\..:..
often \\ ith cOlh't'p(llm r.ltt'"
J"t'thtl'l'd ,}\ tllltl

cent.
Thtn

h

.1~ ~(I ._fll Pl'l

GUEST VIEW
prq_,rJI.tllt"ll'"- ·nf 1 ,hl''t' en\\' oftl·n
l"t'"ll]t 111 ,\ lllllCh JightL'I \\"L'.IIll'li

1 .11~--

dt'"Pilt'

JtJt,d\l'

\\"dl J],,, hv

IJHllt"

grc.ltt'r

ft'L'd

l'm\.

U,tng .111 ( )~L (tl"t ,],l't.'l' on
Hndy Cond1t1011 Suntn~. ,\ tl)
prodnnT r.1n t'Ll'1th le.un w ,\,~1gn
llit' 11" CO\\'\

llllllll'l"l\,1) \"~ illll'\

( 1-iJ)

h.l\t'd i..lll [],L'\l' \l'\\'1) dt'\l T1pt10t1\:
I 1) phy\1(.111~
\\t'.1k: l2J 1JH1\(k
.ltr(lph~. (J) tHllllllr tlt 'PI Ill'\ 1'1
hie: (4) outl111c &lt;~I 11l" ""bk: (.1)
t~tr 111 bn,kct .Jnd tl ,l tlk\: ((1) out!Jnt· of htp .llltl ptt1 htHIL' ~ \'t'lhk;
111d (7) t:11 uddtt .111d p.u~· hy t:tt
.mn111d t.nl h~.·.1d. ld c.-.111\. nl\\.,
~lwuld he .1 l,l\hh cnndltton \COt\'
nt =:.-h h' tlw tltne th..:y rc.k h ( 1( 1
d,t\"' pnor to t .1\ving ,111d ..,]wuld
rl'111,111l 111 th.l\ cntJdJtwn tlmH!~h
dw hrL'l'lhng \t'.!\&lt;ltl.
,A,

CO\\

..,ho\\'
L"U\\"'

till'

of the m'lT \\'t'1glit

lil''"

,\11'

nr

\t'Ori11J.!; =)-(1 \\'UUJd 110(

\1~11\

lllU\L

k·

of phy .. 1t.t!

\\t'.tl

&lt;llroph\. lwWL'\ t't.

( hn "ondllhlltl'lt

rhc nurl111c of rlw 'J11tll'. htp .. 111~l
p111 blmt'\. ,1-. wdl ,l, I 2 rdo, '' 1ll
,1!1 bt· ,.,,1hk. I urthnmo1t' ..1 l.D\\

.trl' .d\n It·" lt~t·h !l1 i.llll
lt't\l'. I urthL'lt1HH\.', 'ucn·.,,lu]

Please see Bymes. Page DB

\ll~Ct"t'ttblt· [{) d1 "ol',l\l' . 111~i 1111\l
l",lh·IT1g

(l1111plh ,l[ IL)!l-..

pnl' UlliUIIJ.t

\lh'iJ

,[\

\ O\\\

Please see Kneen, Page DB

,,

I

�'
Sunday, November 5, 2000

Pomeroy,

110

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Auctlon
and Flea Market

BO
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Personals

005

60
&lt;:;at oat ng nn gh Pia~ the Oh o
Oat ng Gdmf! Ca fa I free 800
AOMA'\iCE &amp;KI 1621

HU: E: DATING
llllf'llh ~ nq es com
START
DAT NG
TON GHT
Ha e run meeung 4&gt; g be s nale s
~ J a ed Cd
u
o e fo
i
n I 800 t:l011.1 A.N C E

$100 00 ewa r1 lo tl'le etu nor a
red blood hound m ss ng I om
81Jd Ct'lat n AD Wear ng a 1 ur
p e co a answe s to Mattlda
304 674 2119 0 304 675 2855

New To You Thrrh Shoppe

Clarence
"Buzz"
Burns
11 vear~
November 5, 2000

Sadly mtssed
by hts
cluldren.

Engmeenng

CLASSIFIEDS!

most valued global source of mdustnal automation

applicants for the pos1t1on of Tax Clerk
Th1s 1s a responsible pos11lon ass1stmg the Tax
Adm1mstrator 111 the Mumc1pal Income Tax program for
the C ty Candidates should possess Knowledge of
public tax laws good commun1cat1on skills the ab1hty

Blue nee e to good home good
w th k ds good watchOog nas al
sno ~ 40 992 5907

to nteract w th the publ1c 1n a positive manner and the
des re to ass1st the Tax Admlntstrator 111 bUildmg upon a
successful tax program A knowledge of bas1c
accounlmg taxat on computers and general office
equ pment along w~h an Assoc1ate Degree 111

Pupp es to g veaway Mottle uti
blooded lab excellen w th ch (l
en 6 wks olo 304 675 8195

accountrng IS destred

Bondmg

requ~red

for banktng depoSitS

Send resume to

EOE

- - \OU
--

hl'r 80th
blrlhda'!

/11 lor 1 rg '' t rwry of
Fm 1k[ May&lt;c

i\otntler4
take 1 o h s Ia t l trtlulay
}e hn i w N lu fa " ly
Aft hough Ire ru a 11' rr
01 r) wrt rmtri Wt cot c

--------

ho ne to be u.1th h n a rrl
I aby daughter &amp; s :,fer
[rom W fe

Card of Thanks

Holzer Semor Care Center has a few selact
part t1me and full t1me pos1t10ns available If
mterested m workmg 1n an evn1ronmant
whar eyouare respected for the JOb you
perform contact Jean Lambert, D1rector of
Nurs1ng to schedule an mterv1ew or come
to 380 Color~~al Dnve 81dwell, Oh10

products based on apphcahon analysts and customer

00 Jackson P ke Gall pol s Oh10 45631
Phone (740J 446 5105
FaxffOD (740) 446 5106

requuements gathenng mformatlon through commumcatlon
wtth customer and field sales reps and fonnulatmg a solutton
requtrements Addttlonally wtll prov1de techmcal support t o
manufactunng and other departments as needed

Safety
Must h ave a 4 year Mechantcal or Electncal Engmeenng
degree wtth 3 years of related expenence

Prefer candtdale

}uuwette Duff)
o ld ilkl' to t} o k

gra 1dclullre

Ira •Pnt
j1 1u&gt;n 1r h a ui
fi I r L'l tf•ll us dun tg
r loH 1fl nf) ou
r m 1-'n I I $1/f' orr II I
r •Ji r1 ''! 1t nr i!J t erp
grp If/) 'I prt&gt;rl h&gt; I

foundati ons on whtch they are bmlt A t Rockwell

envuonment

AutomatiOn ourfoundatton ts rooted m our people

IndJvtdual should have excellent verbal and

be proficient

1n the use of

strong management and problem

solvmg sktlls as well as the abilny to create good workmg

I

1/e

a 1 l ~!"'~" 1i

~

I '

PI'/

vm w

'ht- It Iff bt&gt; HI l/\

mt.t.'lt

j

' I

1 he Umvers t) ot Rto Grande nvnes appltcauons for the
posit on of Secretary 11! for the Y 1ce Prestdenl for
lnst tutto 1al Ad\ ancement and Enro llment Management

suppliers Pnor expencnce wtth PrQ E and Medusa sortware

110

Help Wanted

84\.UMBER
MANAGER TRAINEE
The gro'Nth o1 84 Lumber tne
nat on s argest p vately owned
reta I
bu ld ng
mater als
nas created an
company
excellent opportun ty for ca eer
m nded mdiv duals for our
Manager Tra nee program
Manager
Tra nees
ea n
between $26 000 to $30 000
f you en oy a comb natiOn of
wok ng w ttl people hands on
work and sa es you may
quahfy Advancement rs rap1d.
as we are one of ttle nat on s
fastest grow ng com panes and
promote from w thm
Co
Managers
earn
between

$40 000

and

Managers

make

$80 COO

No &lt;nowledge of

Respo s bItes ofth s 40 hour per week posit on mclude
but arc not m ted to p roHd ng secretanal ass stance to the
V ce Pres tden !or l nst tut anal Advancement and
Enroll ncm Management Planmng o rgam zm g and
nrle c • t ng 1 ffi~.:e oper 11 ens procedl res and records
rc~;e pt ng con nbut ons to the Untverslty rna1nta n ng
compt ten?ed co 1tnbu tton ecords and prepanng
~ssoc1atcd reports man tonng financ ta l and fi sc al records
1c ludmg budgets mcome and expendttures and gathenng
nfonnat on comp 1l ng typmg and preparmg and
process ng bulk rna I ngs and ot her dut es as necessary for
th e office Also wlll asstst ExecutJ\oe Ass sl ant to the
Prc srdent for Public AtTars and Ath lettcs w tth clencal
(.h lies and n ewsletters
Must I av e h gh school d ploma or equ valent Prefer two
year sccretanal sc1ence degree Three to live years
prev OL s o!lte~: cxpcncn cc rcqutrcd Good oral and wnnen
co 1111u 11cat on sk lis reqmred Mu st v.ork well w th tl e
pl b l c Mu st ha\.e demonstrated comp uter sk1 1ls rnclud ng
th..: usc ofth~.: I nternet

SAFETY FACILITATOR
Galllpohs, OH

tmplementmg and mamtatnmg all safe!) related programs to

the correspondmg code 00 0002493 on th e top of your

assure compliance wtth all apphcablc laws

Please forward your resume to

Rockwell

Automation Depl 7748, ro Box 2086 Milwaukee WI
53201 2086 E mall (no attachments, text format only
please) resumes@hr ra rockwell com An Equal
Opportunny Employer Suppor11ng D1versny m 1hc
Workplace

Help Wanted

110

M!LLENNUJM

Return To Work program play a l ead rol e in admmtstermg
and Ergonomtcs program as
needed £or ISO

14000

well

as p ro\Jde support as

Furthermore thts candtdat~ w1ll

A I llPJ I crt t s 1 Jst subm t a letter of 11cr est und resume

the Grand Openmg of

Quahftcd

mdiV1dua J must

h we

a Bachelors degree u a

r el ated area Nursmg degree preferred but

w II

al so cons1der

Needed Immediately

compensau on IS a plus

tts Pomeroy call center
We are now settmg up
mtervtew appomtments

Should have excellent \Crbal tnd

for outbound

POSITION Public Heath Nurse I
TYPE OF POSITION Full lime permanent
e p oyee 35 hours per week
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS Bachelors degree n
u rs ng from an accred ted schoo of nu s ng o an
A s soc ate s / D ploma R N w1th two years nurs1ng

e)o're re11ce and cu rently l1censed 1n the Sta te of
0 110 as an R N Must hold a val1d Oh o dnver s
I cense
DATE AVAILABLE November 13 2000
RATE OF PAY AND BENEFITS Nurse I pay as per
Gall a County Heath Department salary structure
adopled January 2000 See F1scal Off cer for start1ng
rates and benelts
DUTIES Coord nat on of the Prenatal Chmc Grant
the

Publ1c Hea Ill Nurs1ng sect on
DATE OF POSTING Novemhe 3 2000
DEADLINE FOR ACCEPTANCE OF
APPLICATIONS WlfH RESUME C ose of bus ness
~l ov A~ ber 13 ?000 Sul&gt;m I o
Jlldy Linder A N B 5 N Director of Nurs ng
fhe Gall a COL r ly Heallt Department san equal
opportun ty amp oyer and serv ce prov1der

930am to600pm

resume

An Eqltal

OpportunU) Emp !O)Cr Supportrng DJvcrsny nthc
W o rkplac e

11 0 Help Wanted

$15/hr With quarterl y

GENERAL MERCHANDISE &amp; FOOD MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

salary rcvtews

Full and part lime

We are lookmg for bnght energetic 1nd Vlduals who are nterested 111 a Management
career w1th the nat1ons largest employer We offer compet1t1ve salanes excellenl
benef1ts prof t shanng a 401 (k) sav1ngs plan assoc1ate merchandiSe d scount and
an assoc1ate stock purchase program If you are oo k1n~ for a strong grow ng
company w1th tremendous opportun t1es for career m1nded people and hava the
des~re to excel we want to talk to you'
MUST BE WILLING TO RELOCATE

postttons 3\atlable

3 Shdts daily With
llex1ble schedulmg
Management
Opportunities

Available
Med1cal I Dental I
40 I K I Pa1d Vac atiOns

r-------------~----~

full I me employees
S tart yo ur new
career w1th ust

WAL*MARie
OUR Pf.OPLI MAKE THI PIPPI!RINCE.

~:

meetmg youtt

ployer

110 Help Wanted

~ 1 tl~.; I~.; 1 -.tructures 11 the world arc on I y as strong as

ems on

A
\t

nat

At Rockwell

lll foundatiOn ts rooted 1 ) r peop l e

t1

rk \\ h 1"

H

wh~ they arc bu rl

te tn It

o:;

To

11 further ) ou .,elf a 1ll Y' ur career So JOm

J y

1d become p trt o f the reasons we rc the

a part of something special

m lllftclunng qu I tv tnd on ttmc dcl1 .. ery of products

f v mcct c 1.,1n1 er req m:mcnts 11 the most effect1ve
1U ccc t 1 c tn mner p 1.':&gt;1.11 tc Yot wtll m mage the

h t

lc 1 r n em tl r 11 gh en ploycc 1nvolvcn ent tld adhere to

We

care about

our people and our no send home policy
proves it.

We offer
• $7/hour n ghts and $6 25/hour

., h: ' l n&lt;.i 1 "IT nmcnt tl programs /g tdcl ncs 1 hts
p&lt;

ould you like to have a JOb that you enjoy

earn competitive wages and also make a
dtfference' lnfoCtston IS the recogmzed

leader 1n the Call Center mdustry-come be

( tnd rJ tc w II he rcsponstble for enst r mg the

days wtth

full benefits for f ull t tm e employees

1 111 s rco,p n ... h c for scc mtl.':&gt;h ft

• Part t me sh fts ava lable
r-.h

I \C

I c\ It U!-. "t per" !-.
k ttl

tl c 1 lt\o t
!unl:

I(

v cxpcrrcncc .., preferred

Shlu ld h&lt;.~vc

nUt rg n zen hers nd work wnh

cross

tal grou1.., 1 S"iCS cxcclle1 1 vcrhal und wr ttcn

C mm
M c

• Patd vacat on every srx months

1 \..,., t.: tc dcgr e 11 t tcchn ca l nrc 1

1C I 1 1 !!k lis ba\IC prt f CtCnCy tn the I SC 0£

t ~oft

pnllcm

'it

1 ognmo.; a well

"h tvc

good at l yt tca l tnd

v ng sk II., A( DC nu !1 r ntl mach tnc shop

r,

cr ~ h: c( no:;tdcr 11 on for th1s posttton you must mdtcutc

I he u r C\jX nt mg code 00 000247() on the tnp of your

r ~.:o.;t 1 c

I k ..,c f1 rw ml y(l r resume to

Rockwell

ll&lt;pl 774~ I' 0 Box 2086, Mllwouk«
&lt;1201 20H6 E moll (no nllachments text rormat

\ul!lmollon

WI

on I'" pilus:&lt; I tes:urncs~thrra rockwell com

t
'i I I
\1.,- rkp cc

Uti

r1 l)Cr s ppnrl

• Seven pad 1'\ol days

• 40 I(k) plan w•th company match
• Monthly ncentlve programs

Come m and see for yourse111

Calll-866-475.. 7223 1

cxpcncncc w H ld be 1 ph;;

Jg Dtvcrs

ty

An Equl!
111 the

Ext. 1904

545 000/YR potent al Drs need
people 10 p rocess cia ms Must
own computer/modem We tra n
Call 1 888 567 4886 ext 695

GET PAID WEEKLY 1 P ocess
lng mall at home Easy no expert
ence 1 800 382 2198 ext 539
(24 hours)

$450 DO $1 000 DO WEEKLY
MalltnQ Lette rs From Home No
expenen ce necBSsary FT /PT
He lp Needed Immediately Call
Sundance Distri butors 1 BOO
889 3449 EXTENSION 22 (24
nrs )

GOVT POSTAl, JOBS to $1B 35
hr benefits &amp; pension lo r appl
e:cam nlo 888 72B 9083 ext
1100
Oovernmenl Joba St t 00
$33 00 per hour potentia Pa1d
tra n ngl full benelts For more n
lormat on call 1 888 674 9t50
ext 32 5

$50S WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
M ENT FROM fi.OME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIAED 1 BOO 748 5716 ext
x10t

GOVT POSTAL JOBS Up 10
$1B 35 hour Full benahts No ex
parlance requ red For appllcat on
and exam lntormat on 1 888 726
9083 ext 1701 7am 7pm CST

$925 WEEKLY ! Make Money
Help ng Pe ople Aece ve Govern
meol Refunds Free Deta s (24
hr recort:le::l message
BOO
449 4625 Ext 5700

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI work I om home Ma or
der!E Com me ce $522+/week
Part T me $ t 000 S4000/week Fu11
T me www worldw de income com
0 1 (614)2651702

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUD FHA Mortgage Rel unds No
EJCpe ence Aequ red For FREE
I nformal on cal 1 600 501 6832
ex! 300

MIF/DN

110

tnfoClslon Management Corpora
lion Is Seek ing A Full l1mt Rt
ceptlon ttl Personnel Secretarv
For Our Gat! pohs location Oua
11 callons Include Good Phone
Skills And Office Etiquette and
Basic Knowh11dge Of Microsoft
Word And Excel Individual Mu st
be H~hly MoliValed
lnloC•&amp; on Is An Establlshe&lt;l
Rapidly Growing Company Look
lng For lnd v duals Wanting To
Take On Respontlb Illy We Ort.r
A Competitive Salary And Bene
Ills II You Are looking For A
Challtngtng Career An&lt;l Ttunk
You Have Whal tt Takes to Con
tribute To Our Success ca~
lnfOC s10n Management Corp
1 888 237 5340
Ask For Pat
Orema llo
HRDuector O lnloCision com
Vtsil Our Web Site AI
lnJoC•slon com
IO
Now Accepting App lcahons For
Certll ed Nurse Aide Tra ining
Classes Classes To Beg n 1St
Week In December E~~: cellent
Way To Beg n Career In Healtn
car e F etd Stop By And Ptck Up
Apphcatto n For A Person al Inter
vtew Scenic Ht11s 311 Buckndge
Ad (Beh nd Spnng Valley Cme
rna ) An EOE
Now hiring ule drtvers
Dom~n o s P zza n Pt Pleasant
flexable hours apply In person
304 675 5858

Part t me apartment rna ntenance
person wanted some knowledge
ot electric plumb ng and carpen
lry helpful mall response s to The
Oa ly Sentme P 0 Box 729 96
Pomeroy on 45769
Plea sant Va ey Hosp s current
accep t ng
app! cat ons/
y
e5ume s for full time even ng
Med cal Transcnpt onrst Med ca
lranscr pt on ex.par ence p e
!erred Bas c know edge of medl
ca l te rm nology requi ed M nl
mum typ ng speed of 6Q wpm
Send re sume to Pe sonnel at
Pleasant Valley Hosp tat 2520
Valley Or Pt Pleasant WV
25550 or fax to 304 675 6975
AAIEOE

RN I you have OR EA CC I.IIP
er call us today make top pay&amp;
your own schedule Cap tat Nurs
lng Agency 1 800 576-6348
Sitter Needed For E derl~ lady In
Nursing Home Weekend Cover
age As Well As Other H&lt;.urs

(740\446-&lt;993
The Athens Meigs Educall0na1
Serv1ct Centtr Is seektng a Lan
guage Arts/L te acy Ins ructo to
teach lull! me (12 mos } at the
Hock ng Valley Commun ly Res
denllal Center in Nelsonvil le
Oh•o Bachelors degree In Educa
Uon wilh a current cerll cate I
censa requ ed Strong back
ground 1n remed al Language
Arts fnstructton s benefiC dl ~ub
m11 letter of application resume
copies of curren t cert 1 cates/11
censes and 3 letters of rete ence
lo lar y Kamody HVCAC t1t
West 29 Dr ve Ne sonv lie Ohio
45764 Dead! ne IS November 10
2000 The AMESC s an Equa
Opportunity Employer/PrOVIder
The Wa Mart SuperCenter Lo
cated In Gall pohs Is Search ng
For Del Frozen Oa ry And Dry
Grocery Assoctares Cand dates
Mu s! Be Energet c IndiVIduals
Who Are Interested In A Chat
ttnging And Rt&gt;wardmg Career
W th The Wo rld s largest Reta I
er As A member Of The Waf
Ma rt Team You Would Re ce1ve
A Compel tlve Wage And EnJOY
Bene! ts Inc udtng Mercnand se
DisCounts 401 (K) Stock Pur
cnase Plan Profit Shanng Health
Benefits and Ca ree r Advance
ment Opportun•t es WE W II Pay
for Exper ence Please Come By
Store 12605 Located At 2145
Eastern Avenue Galhpo s Oh o
To P dr. Up An Apphcat on
Tra ner needed to work w th MR/
DO 1n home/commun ty sen ng n
Cabell Mason l ncoln and
Wayne Counttes Days even
ngs overntghts Tra n dat1y I v
ng skIs and commumty soc a
skills HS d ploma/GED requ red
Val d drtve s t cense ca 800
998 7596
URGENTLY NEEDED plasm a
aonors earn $35 to $45 or 2 o 3
hOurs weekly Call Sera Tee 740
592 6651

PSYCHICS AND TAROT READ
[RS UP TO $ 3 OG HOUA NOW
H1R NG FOR MAJOR TV PSY
CH C l NE
WORK FROM
MAKE YOUR OWN
HOME
HOURSI EXPERIENCE ONLYI t
(800) 3t0 8645 E:c 33

Bustness

140

Ga111polls Career College
(Ca ee 5 C osa To Home)
Ca I Today! 740 4.46 4367
t BOO 214..()452
RP.Q i90 05 12748

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QU ICKLY Bachelo s Masle s
Doc1ora e by co esponde ce
base a upon p o eoucat on and
sho study cou SB For FREE n
fo mat on book let phone CAM
BR DGE STATE UNIVERSITY t
BOO 964 83 6

OuiP8tlent Rehab Matton
Oepa lment Ga hpol s Jackson
And Pomeroy Oh o
100-t Phys can Mu 11 Spectat t'j
G oup Seeking PHYSICAL
THERAPISTS.. On o License Re
qulred Compe l live Salary Great
Reti ement Plan And Excepttonal
Fr nge Bene! t Package
Only Quailed Appl cants Need
Apply To Holzer Cl nlc Human
Relat ons Departmenf 90 Jack
son P ke Gall•polls Ohio 45631
1562 Fa11T0 (740)446-5532 Or
Call {740)446 5 89 Equa Op
portuntty Employer

Cerpet I Upholstery Cleaning
Gua anteed Work W rh Fabulous
Res ults! For a Free Esllmale
Ca (304)675 4040 Today!
D&amp;J Construcllon Roof ng S1d
lng Pa nt ng Decks 0 Remold
ng Free Est mates Work Guar
anteed Call Dave {740)441 1186
o 1 BB8 822 2900
G&amp;S cleaning
bus ness &amp;
household c ean ng Light &amp;
heavy clean ng pr ces to It eve
ry budget No JOb oo Ia ge or
small State and cuy 1 censed
304 675-447t or 304 882 3754
Georges Portable Sawm II don t
hau your logs to the m 1 JUst call
304 675 t957
Htllarct s Profess onal Tree Sa v
ce Shaping Removal Etc F1re
Wood $35 Per P•ckup Load

17401446-7939
Honest and dependable week y
!lOuseclean ng reasonab1e rates
free est mates 304-675 2692
Ouahty house clean ng s Best
Bonded Pro less ona1 Re i able
For nte v ew appomtment call
even ngs (740)256 1131 or 1
888 781 2412
ema•t
dou
bled@eurekanet com

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportumty

$$t 000 s WEEKLY! .oMA 1LIN G
b ochu es FREE Postaget Start
mmed alely
Rush se I ad
d essed s amped envelope to
HSE Inc Depa I 20 PO Box 573
Amsterdam NY 120 0
$400 $500 a day! Homewo ke s
needed Large advert s•ng I rm
needs voce ma 1 et evers l m
lted space CALL NOW ! BBB
567 3949 E)(t 60
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBL SHING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough lhe
ma I untl you have nves •gated
he offer ng

220 Money to Loan

Business
Opportunity

EARN EXTRA INCOMEI Wofk at
hOme arour ~ your schedule Set
your own hou S: Excellent ncoiN
pa 1t me or tun 1ma Full Support
, -800-81 3-5694

HOME eASEO BUSINESS PIT
OR FIT Work on or off yow compute wtth an mlernabonal compa
ny Set your own hours Excellent
ncome Full support www Ba
SossF eecom

FREE LONG DISTANCE SEAV
ICE III Freedom to speall!ll No
LONG DISTANCE BILL$111 Ae
catv&amp; FREE long d stance serv
ice I Go to www slxf gureln
come comll ee ?94724 27

Homeworkers neede&lt;l! Ma I cellu
ta r phone product brochures!
Brochures provided! WI mail
paychecks weekly! No e:cperl
ence needed Honest opportunity!
1 800 462 5781

FRITO LAY/P EPSI/HERSHEY
SNACK AND SOOA VENDING
ROUTE 1$$ ALL CASH BUS!
NESSISi BUILDING A BUSI
NESS THAT IS ALL YOURS
SMALL INVESTMENTi EXCEL
LENT PROFITS t 800 73t 7233
EXT 4403

MEDICAL BILLING Un11ml!td n
come po ental No e .. pa tence
ne cessary F ee nlormauon &amp;
CD ROM nves1ment fro S2495
F nanc ng ava•lable (800) 322
1 139 EXT 050 www bus ness
startup com

A+ M &amp; M MARS/NESTLE
establ shed vending route W1ll
sell by 1t/20 Un&lt;ler $9K min mum
nvestment equ red Excellent
monthly profit potent al Flnai'\Ce
available/ Good credit
IBBB\270 2168
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE I Notn
lng down M n mum 1nve stmenl
$6200 Estab ls hed York Mlnrs
route w lh 22 loca t ons Ill your
area EZ work 6 8 hours weekly

230

Professional
Services

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE PI\'

cash for rtmatn ng payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages' AnntJuesl Senlemenrst lmmedla(e
Ouotesm NObody beats our prlc
Nat onal Contract Buyers
es
(800) 490 0731 e:ct 101 www
ttonalcontractbuy9rs.oom

"*

SFREE CASH NOW$ from
wealthy larrHI es unload ng m !!tons
ol dollars to help m nlmize their
taxes Wnte lmmed ate y Wind
falls 4542 EAST TROPIC ANA
AVE t 207 LAS VEGAS NE
VAOA89121
'NEED CASH'
$2 500-&amp;50 000
low Monthly Pymts
t day $erv1CH
No lee just Good SVS
For Appointment
1-877-7411-BILL 12455)

NO JOKE A WINNER
How ro
become lllhy sl nk ng rich not
MLM For lnformat on ca11 1 800
3226t69e:ct 1815(24hrs)

s

••

S2 500- 175 000
Fftei!WNOFM
1-871-7411-:1455

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS Stay
home Lose we ght Make money
Calli 8D0-31D-6908

Gel nvotved In the most exciting
fastest growing and ucrat ve
bus ness ont ne INTERNET CA
Nos~ Call toll t ree 866 688
2310

•

"IIIMEDIATE CASH'

HALLMARK St~le
Greeting
Card Aoule 80 Proven Lac 1
(Local) Great Income Free Info
80CJ.277 9424

EARN $90 000 YEARLY epa ir)ng
NOT replacing tong cracks m
w ndsh•etds Fret v deo 1 800
828 8523 US/Canada wwwglass
mechen • com

&amp;rnltnrl • Page 03

,

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHElMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can
con sol date your b !Is Into o ne
monthly payment Reduce nter
esl Avo d ate charges &amp; Stop
narass me nt licensed/Bonded
Non Profit 800 288 633t Ext 15
www goldcoastcc com
~

Star ! Your Bus ness Today
Pnme Shepp ng Center Space
Ava fable At Alf orelab te Rate
Spring Va ley Plaza Cal 740 446
010t

CREDIT REPAIR• AS SEEN Oft
TV! Erase bad cred 1 lega ly Frtt
info. 1·877 660 5229

i---------------------

nose hng Net $52K yearly 1
866250 261024h0urs
I'
All CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
you earn SSOO!day? 30 machmes
and candy $9 995 1 800 998
VEND
Fl
AIN2000 033/
SC Reg664
ALREADY HAILED AS THE
MOST
EXPLOSIVE
HOME
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IN
HISTORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EA1:1LY I NCOME PAl O
WEEKLY 13091875 3356
DEEREFXA@W NCO NET
AMAZING LIKE NEW 7 up Peps
mach nes Inc ed bte $S make s
Be ow manufacturers cosl!l Um r
ed supp y Esrabllshed locations
Leas ng w tt A o B credll Exce
!em pml r potenl at
(800) 20B t 974
AT&amp;T MCI PAY PHONE ROUTES
60 Great Local ons (Local) Prov
en Income 800 BOO 34 70

I1-,=:;::;:;;~~~~~:i~~~~~==:::;;;:::,

PUBLIC

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773·5785 or 773·5447
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH ID

Having sold property and moved will sell
the following Items Located on St Rt 7 In
Tuppers Plains, Ohio Large building next
to Cltoo gas station
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Carnival glass Pitcher &amp; glasses,
Carnival punch bawl &amp; cups, Pink, Red,
Amber and China dishes, McCoy Stove
cookie lar, Watches, Jewelry, (2} wood
buggy wheels, Coo-coo Clock, Lead &amp;:
Iron pots, Copper kettle &amp; stand, Lorge
fish skillet, Wood choirs, Garden plow,
Organ stool, Wood chest, War ration
stamps, Tools &amp; Lots of Glassware
"TOOLS"
Craftsman table saw, 55# Anvtl, B&amp;D 12"
Band saw, 5 Speed drltt press, Lawn Boy
&amp; Snapper mowers, Yord cart &amp; fertilizer
spreader, String trimmers, Grtnder,
Work bench, Mise toots, 3 ton JOCk, Cham
saw, Wheelbarrow, Electrical tools,
Wood step ladder, &amp; Slip scraper
"HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS"
Corner cabinet, 30" gas range, TV
w/remote, Lamps, Mtsc electrical kitchen
appliances, Metal lawn chair &amp; glider,
Silverware, Fans, Barbecue grill, Wash
tubs, Bicycle, Cones &amp; walker
OWNER - LOIS J MUG RAGE
Dan Smith - Auctioneer Ohio #1344
#515
CASH/POSITIVE 10 • REFRESHMENTS
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR
LOSS OF PROPERTY"

wva

Internet use 5 nee ded $25 to
$75 per hou I www lheworld
plan com
LABORERS NEEOED IMME
OIATELY Day Shift Kelly s Serv
Ices eoo 295 9470
Local Home Hea th Agency H rin g
Part T me LPN and C N A Com
pelt ve Salary With Benefits Ap
ply At 750 Flret Avenue Gall po
lis

Moodbpaugh Aucllontering ServiCil•&amp;
Bill Moodl11paugh Auctioneer Ohlo Lie 417693 W Va Lie 411388
For lnfof'Uialion please call (740)989 1613
licensed. a11d bonded in favor of State of Oh10

Mikes Auto Parts is Looking for
someone EXPERIENCED In auto
part salvage Se lous tnqu res
On y
16
Aacc oo n
Road
(740)446 2900 ask tor Krlslt

Avon Earn 40o/. For Ch stmas
Orders (740)446-3358
CLA MS PROCESSOR ! $20 $40/
nr po entia Process ng cia ms Is
easy! Tra n ng prov ded MUST
own PC CALL NOWI 1 888 565
5197 ext 642

30 Announcements

30 Announcements

FALL SPECIAL

""""""""·-·

by Colonel's •usgoo

,OntStop
'
•
Shopping
For AU Your Adv•rtlalng

Bf:DIJNERS

All major h1lches

1

II

n:ce1vers

Van Bl. Truck &amp; Car Accessones
Sun. visors &amp;1. Vent visors
»u~ Shields &amp;. Aluminum Tool boxes
Runn.ln,t Boards lll Tonnea.u Coven

I The..-:~rlly .I
.
I• or.!~~: ~obst=., J

-

DENTAL MEDICAL BILLER $15
$45 HR Dental B lllng solt wa e
company needs people to pro
cess med cal c a ms I om home
Trai ning provided Mus t own
compute t 800 797 75t 1 u.t
303

Custom Wheels &amp;. 1ires
~atterles 81 Radlaton

~-tng

248 Maddy Cemetery Road
Gallipolis Ohio • Owner Paul Robons

Contact Us At
•
1 800 821 8139

740 446·91l7

I

-,

30 Announcement"

I----------~=========:::..!..---------,

2353
TRAIN
FREE 1 FOR
888 645
8505 ING TOLL r

DRIVERS/ COL. Af OTR El\.pe
enced D ve s cno ce Home
week v o Long Hau Solos To
$ 36 Teams To $ 46 0 / 0 S 8B
BIG M les BIG $$ BtG Benefits
Cai1BgLoU1e t BBB 747 3447

Wanted To Do

180

210

Business
Opportunity

Round oak table &amp; 6 chatrs Plus other furmture.
12. amoun tof 2lassware vases. salt &amp; PePPer
shakers. m1lk 21ass. Punch bowl set, blue camn~
Jars. Pitcher. bowls. Plates &amp; etc.. kitchen
utenclls old records. com1c books. toYs. old
radio's. 2ames. PICtures. 12 amount of books.
1ewelrY Box lots &amp; much more

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or Sell
Shl ley Spears 304 675 1429

0 ve s Ex.per enced OTR
S!art Up To $ 34 m1 e
Ave age 2600/m les week
Home Eve y B 10 Days
Ozark Moto l nes nc
1(800)264 2033
www oza k com

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRIC
ULUM Approved home study
A!lord able S nee 1890 FREE
CATALOG (t 800 826 9228. or
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF
LAW PO Box 701449 Depan
ment AM Oal as TX 75370..1449

210

Located at the Auct1on Center of
At 33 1n Mason, WV

Call today tlart tomorrow!
Clv c DBVelopment Groupl
Mil enn um Teleservtces

Dr vers Flatbed
Med cal Coverage
From Day One!
$2 000 S gn On eonus
Qua ty Home T me
Lato Mode Equ pment
CDLA&amp; 3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
B006t 1 6636
www eckm Iter com

Schools
Instruction

TUESDAY NOVEMBER 7, 2000
5:30P.M.

Admlnlatratlve Anlatant Gal
1ia Ja ckson Meigs Treatm enl
Aller nat ves To Steel Cr me
(TASC) Competitive Sa ary Ac
cc d ng To Expenence And Edu
cat on Full T me Post on/ County
Employe e Bene! ts As soc a es
Degree Or Equ va ent Plus 3 To 4
Years Of Re lated Exper en ceJ
Gallla County Res dence/ Valid
Drivers L cense knowledge 01
Off1 ce/ Clencal Acco unttng
Word Exce And Word Perfect
Ab llty To Type 50 Words Per
M nute Experience n A Soc1al
Se vice Setttng Prefer ed Re
spons bill ies Conduct All Cler
cal Aspects Of The Ott ce Cllenl
Data Entry Prepare Statts! cal
And D eel Serv ce Repor s And
Vouchers Appt cations Must be
received By Novpmller 20 2000
Applications Are Ava at! e At
499 Jackson P ke Room 213
Gall pols Oh o Or Fax At (140)
449-7894 EOE Employe

Dr ver 372 DRIVERS NEEDED
No E~per ence Necessary 4
Day COLT am ng No cost tu I on
1 Qua l I ed Start at S35k/$40k
Ftrst Yea Call odav 800 958

150

Tratntng

Posta JObs $48 323 00 y Now
hrng no P.xpe ence pad an
lng great benelts call 7 days
BOO 429 3660 e.11t J 365
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 yr Now
h ng No expe ence pa d I a
ng great banal s call 7 days
BOO 429 3660 Bill J 566 FREE
INFORMATION

Help Wanted

AUCTION

AnENTION Own a PC? Put I lo
work $500 $5000 per montn po
lent a www earn t 23 com

"·c·~II
Ill

Help Wanted

"FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up to $t8 24 hour H ring lor
2000 r ee can lor appl cat on/ex
am natiOn tnformal on Fede ral
Htre Fu t aenef IS t 800 598
4504 extension t 5 6 (Sam 6pm
CST !

12504 U S Rl 60
ASHLAI\D KY4110i
l (606) 921l 676()
NO PIIONE CALLS PLEASE

110 Help Wanted

m '&gt;t v lucd glob I source o f 1 dt strt al 11 tomauo n

real

FULLER BRUSH CO Is looking for
people who would like to start
tnatr own business work ng from
nome NO INVESTMENT needed
Umiled time only Call eoo 882
7270 emalllullereUeOaol com
Gallipoli s Dairy Queen ts Look ng
For A Fu I T me Cake Decorator
Qualifications E11pene nce Re
qulred Fr endly Able To Work
Weekands
Cal Us Today
(740)446-3278 Ask For Jessica
Or Fa11 Us Your
Re su me
{140)446--4317

ATIENTION ALL STUDENTS
we nave ova
200 jobs ava !able Immediate y
Fu 1alld part t me avaltab e
EARN up to 515/hour
plus referral bonuses
If you need work rl ~nt away

Join Our Team
W

FIVE STAR •t 4 day COL A tra1n
ng progrpm •No exper ence
needed •Must bt 21 •S3Bk 1st
year •Benellt s •Tu liOn ass1stan ce
•Lifetime job p lacement 1 eoo
448 6669 Exper enCe dnvers call
800 956 2353

12 000 WEEKLVI Ma iling 400
brochures! Sat sfac tlon Guar
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies pro
v1ded l Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope G!CO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Start I!TIO'It(tfately

ASSEMBLY AT HOME Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sewml)
Typ ing Great Pay! CALL 800
79~ 0380 Ext 201 (241'lrs)

\\'\\'\\ .i nt(,dsiun.cn•n
h~ h u1 Jat

Expenenctd rooter/ carpenler/ Ia
borer needed 740 378 6349

Help Wanted

Send resume~ lo
""AL M&lt;\RT DISTRI C I OI'Fl( I
ATTENTION DEIIHA M H s

WAL MART IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

110 Help Wanted

l

Absolute Top Dollar U S S1lver
Gold Coins Proolsets Diamonds
Go ld R ngs
U S Currency
M TS Co in Shop 151 Se cond
,t.vanue GaMIPOiis 740-446 2842

Calif 800.9211-5753

Amcnca 5 Bcr;t Buy In EducatiOn

C.alltpnh') OH

NOTICE OF POSITION VACANCY

please) resumes @h~ ra rockwell t:om

We look forward to

MANU ACl URING SUPER\ ISOR
Second Sh1rt

11 o Help Wanted

the eorrespondmg code 00 0002512 on the top or )OUr

Call mmed1ately

NECESSARY
to ea rn up to

for an appomtment

Drug Free Environment

To ensure cons1derat to n for th1s pos1tton you nust mdu.:a e

Monday Nov 6th

Potenttal

Ca ll I 800 929 5753

Equal Opportunity Employer
M/F/DN

pnor expencncc trammg others

NO EXPERIENCE

D rector of Human Resources
R o Grande Ohto 45674
E mail pmason@r o edu

V1slt our webstte at
www 84lumber com

Mrcrosoft programs ab t!J ty to create good worktng
relauonshtps wtth both mternal and ext_£!nal personnel and

Please forw ard your resume to Rockwell
Automation· Dept 774S, ro Box 2086 Milwaukee, WI
53201 2086 E ma1l (no atlachments, text format only

740 593 8370

telescrvrces poslttons

ln add ton you II enJOY one of
ttle ndust ry s t nest Denef t
packages
mclud ng heallll

EEO .. A En

Wanted to Buy

asstsl w1th environmental compl tance

Safety/envuonmental expcn enee mcludmg workers

No ex per ence necessary
Pr omot on5,., th n 90 day s
Excellent tra n ng program
lmmed ate pos11 ons ava tln ble
Athens County

TELESERVICES

Ms Phy ll s Masu 1 SPHR

ror

provtde on sll e fust atd trammg ts ncetled tdmtn ster the

Apprentice Tramees

15 neal appear ng men and
w(lmen to fill vacanc es due to
expans10ns and promot ons

Help Wanted

nc:lt dt ~ tht 1 an es and addresses of three references on or
be to c '\me 1her I '"~000

oqrarr and some genera l nurs ng duties

You wil l also

phvst cai /OCl:upa tton al th erapt~l s Wit h t M steP~ degree

CIJJI:.SSUIFUIEDSI

bu d ng mater als necessal)'
College degrees p eferred but
s not requ1red T an ng wdl be
p ovded

CAREER5@84LUMBER COM

P

most valued global source of mdustnal automalron

avat !ablc lor

$40 000

We w1sh to thank
dental I fe p of 1 shar ng and
you all our fnends
401 K
App y n person
and ne1ghbors and
Monday Fr day Bam 11 am or
espeCially the llo·~.~er~ 2pm 6pm at
84 LUMBER
for the1r kmdness m
Routet
Galhpohs Ferry WV
the death of our
loved one
Fax resume to 724 225 2588
M1chael Buck Potter
E marl

The Potter Fam1ly

work WJth LL" ts to further yourself and ) our career So JOin
our team today and become part uf the re tsons we rc the

To ensure constderatlon for thts pos1hon you must md1ca te

IS pleased to announce

$30 000

God Bless
Reda Cooper

To

relat1onsh1ps wtth both mtemal and external customers and

11 o

110 Help Wanted

t

e11 n une

)

Even the best structures m the world are only 11s strong as th

with 2 years of producl des1gn expenence m a manufactunng

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

EXPANDING
COMPANY
NEEDS PEOPLE
Work from
home!
Mall order II nternet
$1500+mo PT 53000 $7000+
mo FT FREE lrtlormatlon 1 414
290-6900 or www home business
systems com

OWN A COMPUTER ? PUT IT
TO WORK! $25 $75thour PT/ FT
CALL
1 888 321 7083
WWWEZPCNET

110 Help Wanted

wntten commumcauon sktlls proftct cncy m the usc of

CIHldre11 Larry Brmda
Sh rley Tun my &amp; Cm1111
gra tddl fdre1 a rd Great

90

110

based on analys1s of the application data and the desared

resume

Easy Te lephone Work No Sell
lng No E~~:perlence Necessary
Full Or Pan Time S7 S12 /hr
Call 1 800-572 3361

Licensed

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

IIO LZER MEDICAL CENTER

Office" programs

service

166 Ohio &amp; West Vlrg nia 304

V1ce Pres den of Hu)llan Resourtes

You wall be respons1ble for destgmng and developmg motor

Alma GemlduJC
lhFul~

auction

( 740 )2~~9

STAFF ACCOUNTANT
Holzer Medtca1 Ctnler s seek ng a fult me SlafT Accuu Ia 11 Dul es
nclude~ prepare month I) Journal c1 tr es p cparc and d s r1b e
the Budget Con panson Report Monthl} Sen •ce Repor and I ACT
Repon reconc lc bank accounts a 1d 11cneral ledger accou ts
Rcqu ren c s for the pos 11on Bachelors degree n Accoun mg or
Bus ness Adm n s rallon One vear prrv1uus healt care accountmg
e11pcncnce preferred

In thts role you will be rcsponstb lc for supporlm!;

STillE TESTED HURSIRG IISSISTIIHTS

Rick Pearson AuctioM Company
full time auctioneer complete

Ros e Ward

Macrosoft

Nowt t 1100-291 ~883 Dopl • 109

Riverside Au c tion Barn Sale
Every Saturday Night a t ep m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

requtrcd

HOlZER SEniOR CHRE CEnTER

and Insider advice• tvtf)'One can
prollt from Antiques? Collectl
bees? Same rules! Exclusive new
book 522 liS '-871 785-&amp;444

If nlerested pluse contact

would be a plus Must be able to travel ovemtght when

110 Help Wanted

liiAL~K

DEVELOPMENT ENGINEER
Gallipolis, OH

wnttcn commumcatlon sk1lls

Office of the City Manager
518 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
or FAX to 740-441·2070 by November 10 2000

reeehed for

To

our team today and become part of the reasons we re the

The H stone C ty of Gall polls Is seek•ng qual1f1ed

In Memory

Kale Dunl'an
"ishes to sa'
fhunks for
the man~
birthda,
l'ards she

Even the best structures m the world are only as strong as the
foundatiOns on wh1ch they are buJII At Rockwell

EARN $25 000 TO 150 000/YR
Medic al insurance Billing Assls
lance Needed Immediately! Use
your Home computer gel FREE
Internet FREE LONG DIS
TANCE Wtblltt E Mail Ca ll

MAKE MONEY SELLING art at
auction! Reveal ng trade stcrets

773-5785 Or 304- na-~1

11 o Help Wanted

Automahon our foundation IS rooted m our people

THKCLERK
lmmEDIHTE OPEDIRG

Giveaway

40

In ttw

work wtlh us IS to further yourself .and your career So JOin

9()().530

November 3 5 9am 5prn 5 M les
Oul State Route 21B Fon Route
7 Baby Ch ldren Clo hes New
Jeans Tapes Adu t &amp; Mo e
M sc Etc

11 o Help Wanted

Buy, Sell or Trade

110 Help Wanted

9 West 5 mson A nens
74Q-S92 1842
Qua lity c oth ng ana household
te s Sl DO bag sal e eve y
Tl'lu sday Monday hru Sa u dqy

Check the ctassineas!

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlcmtty

3256

LOST It 01 00 2 Yea Old Fe
male Aotwe 1e 65 70 Lbs Spade
Los In A ea Of L ncoln P kef
H&lt;:~1,1nan T ace Road Reward
(740 )256 9112

' Jo

!11 Memory

Lost black/ wn te ratt terr er one
week ago Aockspr ngs Ad near
ehab cente
ewa d 740 992

Galltpolts
&amp; Vicmlly

11 o

Help Wanted

Orl~t P.A M Transport 2 wttlc
paid truck driver tra ining No tx
per1tnct nttdtd Great payt
$34 0001 1st year wlful1 bentflta
Drivers based all across Midwest
1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9am
Spm Mond~ay 7am 7pm Tue Frl
7am 5pm Vis it our webl te at
www Olra'rvers IXItn

Tuef(lay Nov 7th 11 30 7 Da~ ts
rllldtnct Rose Hlll McDonald
collectibles Avon Barblts coa
lumt ,llwllry plaure hmes furnf.
IUrt miiC

&amp;unba~ 111:tmrs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Raccoon Township
Fire Levy
Renewal Only
Please vote YES for the Renewal
of the Fire Levy for
Raccoon Township
Thank You,
Raccoon Twp. Trustees 8L Clerk
Ruth Ann Millhone, Clerk

LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580STRT 588(0LDRT35)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
• ' THIS IS JUST A PARTIAL LISTfHGJr LOTS OFVERYGOOD
ITEMS FOR HOME, SHOP, OR IHTERHET." ' '

Good Pie cupboard (tin In sides), pointed Rat
wall cabinet, Oak flat wall cupboard (painted),
3 Chimney cupboards, Child's VIctorian style
bed (complete), Ice Cream table &amp; chair,
Variety of small end lables, Porcelain top
kitchen table, Porch setlee, Old Iron bed,
Wicker stand, Wood carpenter'~ box, Larqe
wooden box w/lld, Exc. Wood sled In orlolnal
finish (metal rod runners), Old bollol box,
Small wood box (printers), Brass slenclls, Old
feed scales, Counter Iron scales, I gal Glass
churn, Early framed tinted tin type, Old tin
clown bank, Old kitchen llems, Metal 1923Jar
opener, Wood mortar &amp; pestle, 2 Sels
service for 6 community plate sliver plate
sliver pes, Horse clock, Numerous pottery pes,
Scarce Rosev1lle "Donnetello" 1ard1nl~re (no
stand), Old Christmas llems, Old toys &amp;
games, Grantleware, Ruo bealers, Chenille
spreads, Old books Including Lincoln &amp;
Wallace nutttng ( 1948), Old purses and
1ewelry, Glass to mclude Fenton, Imperial,
Blenko, CambndQe, Calif, Vaseline &amp; Others,
45 Pes , MISSISSippi Mmnow buckel, Some old
lools, Many, Many more nice smalls
AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY
740 388-0823 (HOME) OR 740-245-9866 (BARN)
LICENSED &amp; BONOED BY STATE OF OHIO
CASH/APPROVED CHECk ONLY
FOOD
'NOT RESPONSIBLE FORACCIDEHTSOR LOST
PROPERTY''

***Sale
ofthe personal
John lllllson and also Items from the old lllllson
Electric Company.***

10" heauy duty table saw, 4" Power Craft
planer/joiner, Craftsman 10" radial arm
saw, Bench grinders, 1/7." Black 6 Decker
drill, Porter cable router, 2 Uentless gas
heaters, Older Craftsman scroll saw, Black 6
Decker workmate, Wood ulse, Bench ulse,
Electric Drills, Small drill press, Drill bits,
metal Shelulng, Seu. Sets of sawhorses,
Electric motors [new In box), work benches
and storage cabinets, Tool boxes, Tool
pouches, ftll types of gluing clamps,
wrenches, Pipe cutters, Bolt cutters, Large
amount of hand tools, ftppllance cords,
Hntlque tools, Appliance repair manuals,
Lawn Boy roto tiller [2 hpJ, Jacobson push
mower, Coleman heater, Wooden shutters,
Jacobson riding mower, 8" Turning plow
for garden tractor, Garden sprayers, Ext.
cords, Lawn spreader, Seu. Hangmg light
fixtures, large amount of misc. lnuentory
from Hillson Electric Company...
Ructloneer: lesley R. Lemley
740-388-0823[home)or740-2459866 [barn)
"Licensed and Bonded by State of Ohio"
CHSH/HPPROUED CHECK OULyn
fOOD
"UOT RESPOUSIIILE fOR HCCIDEUTS OR lOST
PROPERTY"
***limiTED SEHTinG - IIRinG YOUR lHWn CHRIRSII

•••

•

�'
Sunday, November 5, 2000

Pomeroy,

110

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Auctlon
and Flea Market

BO
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Personals

005

60
&lt;:;at oat ng nn gh Pia~ the Oh o
Oat ng Gdmf! Ca fa I free 800
AOMA'\iCE &amp;KI 1621

HU: E: DATING
llllf'llh ~ nq es com
START
DAT NG
TON GHT
Ha e run meeung 4&gt; g be s nale s
~ J a ed Cd
u
o e fo
i
n I 800 t:l011.1 A.N C E

$100 00 ewa r1 lo tl'le etu nor a
red blood hound m ss ng I om
81Jd Ct'lat n AD Wear ng a 1 ur
p e co a answe s to Mattlda
304 674 2119 0 304 675 2855

New To You Thrrh Shoppe

Clarence
"Buzz"
Burns
11 vear~
November 5, 2000

Sadly mtssed
by hts
cluldren.

Engmeenng

CLASSIFIEDS!

most valued global source of mdustnal automation

applicants for the pos1t1on of Tax Clerk
Th1s 1s a responsible pos11lon ass1stmg the Tax
Adm1mstrator 111 the Mumc1pal Income Tax program for
the C ty Candidates should possess Knowledge of
public tax laws good commun1cat1on skills the ab1hty

Blue nee e to good home good
w th k ds good watchOog nas al
sno ~ 40 992 5907

to nteract w th the publ1c 1n a positive manner and the
des re to ass1st the Tax Admlntstrator 111 bUildmg upon a
successful tax program A knowledge of bas1c
accounlmg taxat on computers and general office
equ pment along w~h an Assoc1ate Degree 111

Pupp es to g veaway Mottle uti
blooded lab excellen w th ch (l
en 6 wks olo 304 675 8195

accountrng IS destred

Bondmg

requ~red

for banktng depoSitS

Send resume to

EOE

- - \OU
--

hl'r 80th
blrlhda'!

/11 lor 1 rg '' t rwry of
Fm 1k[ May&lt;c

i\otntler4
take 1 o h s Ia t l trtlulay
}e hn i w N lu fa " ly
Aft hough Ire ru a 11' rr
01 r) wrt rmtri Wt cot c

--------

ho ne to be u.1th h n a rrl
I aby daughter &amp; s :,fer
[rom W fe

Card of Thanks

Holzer Semor Care Center has a few selact
part t1me and full t1me pos1t10ns available If
mterested m workmg 1n an evn1ronmant
whar eyouare respected for the JOb you
perform contact Jean Lambert, D1rector of
Nurs1ng to schedule an mterv1ew or come
to 380 Color~~al Dnve 81dwell, Oh10

products based on apphcahon analysts and customer

00 Jackson P ke Gall pol s Oh10 45631
Phone (740J 446 5105
FaxffOD (740) 446 5106

requuements gathenng mformatlon through commumcatlon
wtth customer and field sales reps and fonnulatmg a solutton
requtrements Addttlonally wtll prov1de techmcal support t o
manufactunng and other departments as needed

Safety
Must h ave a 4 year Mechantcal or Electncal Engmeenng
degree wtth 3 years of related expenence

Prefer candtdale

}uuwette Duff)
o ld ilkl' to t} o k

gra 1dclullre

Ira •Pnt
j1 1u&gt;n 1r h a ui
fi I r L'l tf•ll us dun tg
r loH 1fl nf) ou
r m 1-'n I I $1/f' orr II I
r •Ji r1 ''! 1t nr i!J t erp
grp If/) 'I prt&gt;rl h&gt; I

foundati ons on whtch they are bmlt A t Rockwell

envuonment

AutomatiOn ourfoundatton ts rooted m our people

IndJvtdual should have excellent verbal and

be proficient

1n the use of

strong management and problem

solvmg sktlls as well as the abilny to create good workmg

I

1/e

a 1 l ~!"'~" 1i

~

I '

PI'/

vm w

'ht- It Iff bt&gt; HI l/\

mt.t.'lt

j

' I

1 he Umvers t) ot Rto Grande nvnes appltcauons for the
posit on of Secretary 11! for the Y 1ce Prestdenl for
lnst tutto 1al Ad\ ancement and Enro llment Management

suppliers Pnor expencnce wtth PrQ E and Medusa sortware

110

Help Wanted

84\.UMBER
MANAGER TRAINEE
The gro'Nth o1 84 Lumber tne
nat on s argest p vately owned
reta I
bu ld ng
mater als
nas created an
company
excellent opportun ty for ca eer
m nded mdiv duals for our
Manager Tra nee program
Manager
Tra nees
ea n
between $26 000 to $30 000
f you en oy a comb natiOn of
wok ng w ttl people hands on
work and sa es you may
quahfy Advancement rs rap1d.
as we are one of ttle nat on s
fastest grow ng com panes and
promote from w thm
Co
Managers
earn
between

$40 000

and

Managers

make

$80 COO

No &lt;nowledge of

Respo s bItes ofth s 40 hour per week posit on mclude
but arc not m ted to p roHd ng secretanal ass stance to the
V ce Pres tden !or l nst tut anal Advancement and
Enroll ncm Management Planmng o rgam zm g and
nrle c • t ng 1 ffi~.:e oper 11 ens procedl res and records
rc~;e pt ng con nbut ons to the Untverslty rna1nta n ng
compt ten?ed co 1tnbu tton ecords and prepanng
~ssoc1atcd reports man tonng financ ta l and fi sc al records
1c ludmg budgets mcome and expendttures and gathenng
nfonnat on comp 1l ng typmg and preparmg and
process ng bulk rna I ngs and ot her dut es as necessary for
th e office Also wlll asstst ExecutJ\oe Ass sl ant to the
Prc srdent for Public AtTars and Ath lettcs w tth clencal
(.h lies and n ewsletters
Must I av e h gh school d ploma or equ valent Prefer two
year sccretanal sc1ence degree Three to live years
prev OL s o!lte~: cxpcncn cc rcqutrcd Good oral and wnnen
co 1111u 11cat on sk lis reqmred Mu st v.ork well w th tl e
pl b l c Mu st ha\.e demonstrated comp uter sk1 1ls rnclud ng
th..: usc ofth~.: I nternet

SAFETY FACILITATOR
Galllpohs, OH

tmplementmg and mamtatnmg all safe!) related programs to

the correspondmg code 00 0002493 on th e top of your

assure compliance wtth all apphcablc laws

Please forward your resume to

Rockwell

Automation Depl 7748, ro Box 2086 Milwaukee WI
53201 2086 E mall (no attachments, text format only
please) resumes@hr ra rockwell com An Equal
Opportunny Employer Suppor11ng D1versny m 1hc
Workplace

Help Wanted

110

M!LLENNUJM

Return To Work program play a l ead rol e in admmtstermg
and Ergonomtcs program as
needed £or ISO

14000

well

as p ro\Jde support as

Furthermore thts candtdat~ w1ll

A I llPJ I crt t s 1 Jst subm t a letter of 11cr est und resume

the Grand Openmg of

Quahftcd

mdiV1dua J must

h we

a Bachelors degree u a

r el ated area Nursmg degree preferred but

w II

al so cons1der

Needed Immediately

compensau on IS a plus

tts Pomeroy call center
We are now settmg up
mtervtew appomtments

Should have excellent \Crbal tnd

for outbound

POSITION Public Heath Nurse I
TYPE OF POSITION Full lime permanent
e p oyee 35 hours per week
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS Bachelors degree n
u rs ng from an accred ted schoo of nu s ng o an
A s soc ate s / D ploma R N w1th two years nurs1ng

e)o're re11ce and cu rently l1censed 1n the Sta te of
0 110 as an R N Must hold a val1d Oh o dnver s
I cense
DATE AVAILABLE November 13 2000
RATE OF PAY AND BENEFITS Nurse I pay as per
Gall a County Heath Department salary structure
adopled January 2000 See F1scal Off cer for start1ng
rates and benelts
DUTIES Coord nat on of the Prenatal Chmc Grant
the

Publ1c Hea Ill Nurs1ng sect on
DATE OF POSTING Novemhe 3 2000
DEADLINE FOR ACCEPTANCE OF
APPLICATIONS WlfH RESUME C ose of bus ness
~l ov A~ ber 13 ?000 Sul&gt;m I o
Jlldy Linder A N B 5 N Director of Nurs ng
fhe Gall a COL r ly Heallt Department san equal
opportun ty amp oyer and serv ce prov1der

930am to600pm

resume

An Eqltal

OpportunU) Emp !O)Cr Supportrng DJvcrsny nthc
W o rkplac e

11 0 Help Wanted

$15/hr With quarterl y

GENERAL MERCHANDISE &amp; FOOD MANAGEMENT TRAINEES

salary rcvtews

Full and part lime

We are lookmg for bnght energetic 1nd Vlduals who are nterested 111 a Management
career w1th the nat1ons largest employer We offer compet1t1ve salanes excellenl
benef1ts prof t shanng a 401 (k) sav1ngs plan assoc1ate merchandiSe d scount and
an assoc1ate stock purchase program If you are oo k1n~ for a strong grow ng
company w1th tremendous opportun t1es for career m1nded people and hava the
des~re to excel we want to talk to you'
MUST BE WILLING TO RELOCATE

postttons 3\atlable

3 Shdts daily With
llex1ble schedulmg
Management
Opportunities

Available
Med1cal I Dental I
40 I K I Pa1d Vac atiOns

r-------------~----~

full I me employees
S tart yo ur new
career w1th ust

WAL*MARie
OUR Pf.OPLI MAKE THI PIPPI!RINCE.

~:

meetmg youtt

ployer

110 Help Wanted

~ 1 tl~.; I~.; 1 -.tructures 11 the world arc on I y as strong as

ems on

A
\t

nat

At Rockwell

lll foundatiOn ts rooted 1 ) r peop l e

t1

rk \\ h 1"

H

wh~ they arc bu rl

te tn It

o:;

To

11 further ) ou .,elf a 1ll Y' ur career So JOm

J y

1d become p trt o f the reasons we rc the

a part of something special

m lllftclunng qu I tv tnd on ttmc dcl1 .. ery of products

f v mcct c 1.,1n1 er req m:mcnts 11 the most effect1ve
1U ccc t 1 c tn mner p 1.':&gt;1.11 tc Yot wtll m mage the

h t

lc 1 r n em tl r 11 gh en ploycc 1nvolvcn ent tld adhere to

We

care about

our people and our no send home policy
proves it.

We offer
• $7/hour n ghts and $6 25/hour

., h: ' l n&lt;.i 1 "IT nmcnt tl programs /g tdcl ncs 1 hts
p&lt;

ould you like to have a JOb that you enjoy

earn competitive wages and also make a
dtfference' lnfoCtston IS the recogmzed

leader 1n the Call Center mdustry-come be

( tnd rJ tc w II he rcsponstble for enst r mg the

days wtth

full benefits for f ull t tm e employees

1 111 s rco,p n ... h c for scc mtl.':&gt;h ft

• Part t me sh fts ava lable
r-.h

I \C

I c\ It U!-. "t per" !-.
k ttl

tl c 1 lt\o t
!unl:

I(

v cxpcrrcncc .., preferred

Shlu ld h&lt;.~vc

nUt rg n zen hers nd work wnh

cross

tal grou1.., 1 S"iCS cxcclle1 1 vcrhal und wr ttcn

C mm
M c

• Patd vacat on every srx months

1 \..,., t.: tc dcgr e 11 t tcchn ca l nrc 1

1C I 1 1 !!k lis ba\IC prt f CtCnCy tn the I SC 0£

t ~oft

pnllcm

'it

1 ognmo.; a well

"h tvc

good at l yt tca l tnd

v ng sk II., A( DC nu !1 r ntl mach tnc shop

r,

cr ~ h: c( no:;tdcr 11 on for th1s posttton you must mdtcutc

I he u r C\jX nt mg code 00 000247() on the tnp of your

r ~.:o.;t 1 c

I k ..,c f1 rw ml y(l r resume to

Rockwell

ll&lt;pl 774~ I' 0 Box 2086, Mllwouk«
&lt;1201 20H6 E moll (no nllachments text rormat

\ul!lmollon

WI

on I'" pilus:&lt; I tes:urncs~thrra rockwell com

t
'i I I
\1.,- rkp cc

Uti

r1 l)Cr s ppnrl

• Seven pad 1'\ol days

• 40 I(k) plan w•th company match
• Monthly ncentlve programs

Come m and see for yourse111

Calll-866-475.. 7223 1

cxpcncncc w H ld be 1 ph;;

Jg Dtvcrs

ty

An Equl!
111 the

Ext. 1904

545 000/YR potent al Drs need
people 10 p rocess cia ms Must
own computer/modem We tra n
Call 1 888 567 4886 ext 695

GET PAID WEEKLY 1 P ocess
lng mall at home Easy no expert
ence 1 800 382 2198 ext 539
(24 hours)

$450 DO $1 000 DO WEEKLY
MalltnQ Lette rs From Home No
expenen ce necBSsary FT /PT
He lp Needed Immediately Call
Sundance Distri butors 1 BOO
889 3449 EXTENSION 22 (24
nrs )

GOVT POSTAl, JOBS to $1B 35
hr benefits &amp; pension lo r appl
e:cam nlo 888 72B 9083 ext
1100
Oovernmenl Joba St t 00
$33 00 per hour potentia Pa1d
tra n ngl full benelts For more n
lormat on call 1 888 674 9t50
ext 32 5

$50S WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
M ENT FROM fi.OME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIAED 1 BOO 748 5716 ext
x10t

GOVT POSTAL JOBS Up 10
$1B 35 hour Full benahts No ex
parlance requ red For appllcat on
and exam lntormat on 1 888 726
9083 ext 1701 7am 7pm CST

$925 WEEKLY ! Make Money
Help ng Pe ople Aece ve Govern
meol Refunds Free Deta s (24
hr recort:le::l message
BOO
449 4625 Ext 5700

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI work I om home Ma or
der!E Com me ce $522+/week
Part T me $ t 000 S4000/week Fu11
T me www worldw de income com
0 1 (614)2651702

$987 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUD FHA Mortgage Rel unds No
EJCpe ence Aequ red For FREE
I nformal on cal 1 600 501 6832
ex! 300

MIF/DN

110

tnfoClslon Management Corpora
lion Is Seek ing A Full l1mt Rt
ceptlon ttl Personnel Secretarv
For Our Gat! pohs location Oua
11 callons Include Good Phone
Skills And Office Etiquette and
Basic Knowh11dge Of Microsoft
Word And Excel Individual Mu st
be H~hly MoliValed
lnloC•&amp; on Is An Establlshe&lt;l
Rapidly Growing Company Look
lng For lnd v duals Wanting To
Take On Respontlb Illy We Ort.r
A Competitive Salary And Bene
Ills II You Are looking For A
Challtngtng Career An&lt;l Ttunk
You Have Whal tt Takes to Con
tribute To Our Success ca~
lnfOC s10n Management Corp
1 888 237 5340
Ask For Pat
Orema llo
HRDuector O lnloCision com
Vtsil Our Web Site AI
lnJoC•slon com
IO
Now Accepting App lcahons For
Certll ed Nurse Aide Tra ining
Classes Classes To Beg n 1St
Week In December E~~: cellent
Way To Beg n Career In Healtn
car e F etd Stop By And Ptck Up
Apphcatto n For A Person al Inter
vtew Scenic Ht11s 311 Buckndge
Ad (Beh nd Spnng Valley Cme
rna ) An EOE
Now hiring ule drtvers
Dom~n o s P zza n Pt Pleasant
flexable hours apply In person
304 675 5858

Part t me apartment rna ntenance
person wanted some knowledge
ot electric plumb ng and carpen
lry helpful mall response s to The
Oa ly Sentme P 0 Box 729 96
Pomeroy on 45769
Plea sant Va ey Hosp s current
accep t ng
app! cat ons/
y
e5ume s for full time even ng
Med cal Transcnpt onrst Med ca
lranscr pt on ex.par ence p e
!erred Bas c know edge of medl
ca l te rm nology requi ed M nl
mum typ ng speed of 6Q wpm
Send re sume to Pe sonnel at
Pleasant Valley Hosp tat 2520
Valley Or Pt Pleasant WV
25550 or fax to 304 675 6975
AAIEOE

RN I you have OR EA CC I.IIP
er call us today make top pay&amp;
your own schedule Cap tat Nurs
lng Agency 1 800 576-6348
Sitter Needed For E derl~ lady In
Nursing Home Weekend Cover
age As Well As Other H&lt;.urs

(740\446-&lt;993
The Athens Meigs Educall0na1
Serv1ct Centtr Is seektng a Lan
guage Arts/L te acy Ins ructo to
teach lull! me (12 mos } at the
Hock ng Valley Commun ly Res
denllal Center in Nelsonvil le
Oh•o Bachelors degree In Educa
Uon wilh a current cerll cate I
censa requ ed Strong back
ground 1n remed al Language
Arts fnstructton s benefiC dl ~ub
m11 letter of application resume
copies of curren t cert 1 cates/11
censes and 3 letters of rete ence
lo lar y Kamody HVCAC t1t
West 29 Dr ve Ne sonv lie Ohio
45764 Dead! ne IS November 10
2000 The AMESC s an Equa
Opportunity Employer/PrOVIder
The Wa Mart SuperCenter Lo
cated In Gall pohs Is Search ng
For Del Frozen Oa ry And Dry
Grocery Assoctares Cand dates
Mu s! Be Energet c IndiVIduals
Who Are Interested In A Chat
ttnging And Rt&gt;wardmg Career
W th The Wo rld s largest Reta I
er As A member Of The Waf
Ma rt Team You Would Re ce1ve
A Compel tlve Wage And EnJOY
Bene! ts Inc udtng Mercnand se
DisCounts 401 (K) Stock Pur
cnase Plan Profit Shanng Health
Benefits and Ca ree r Advance
ment Opportun•t es WE W II Pay
for Exper ence Please Come By
Store 12605 Located At 2145
Eastern Avenue Galhpo s Oh o
To P dr. Up An Apphcat on
Tra ner needed to work w th MR/
DO 1n home/commun ty sen ng n
Cabell Mason l ncoln and
Wayne Counttes Days even
ngs overntghts Tra n dat1y I v
ng skIs and commumty soc a
skills HS d ploma/GED requ red
Val d drtve s t cense ca 800
998 7596
URGENTLY NEEDED plasm a
aonors earn $35 to $45 or 2 o 3
hOurs weekly Call Sera Tee 740
592 6651

PSYCHICS AND TAROT READ
[RS UP TO $ 3 OG HOUA NOW
H1R NG FOR MAJOR TV PSY
CH C l NE
WORK FROM
MAKE YOUR OWN
HOME
HOURSI EXPERIENCE ONLYI t
(800) 3t0 8645 E:c 33

Bustness

140

Ga111polls Career College
(Ca ee 5 C osa To Home)
Ca I Today! 740 4.46 4367
t BOO 214..()452
RP.Q i90 05 12748

150

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QU ICKLY Bachelo s Masle s
Doc1ora e by co esponde ce
base a upon p o eoucat on and
sho study cou SB For FREE n
fo mat on book let phone CAM
BR DGE STATE UNIVERSITY t
BOO 964 83 6

OuiP8tlent Rehab Matton
Oepa lment Ga hpol s Jackson
And Pomeroy Oh o
100-t Phys can Mu 11 Spectat t'j
G oup Seeking PHYSICAL
THERAPISTS.. On o License Re
qulred Compe l live Salary Great
Reti ement Plan And Excepttonal
Fr nge Bene! t Package
Only Quailed Appl cants Need
Apply To Holzer Cl nlc Human
Relat ons Departmenf 90 Jack
son P ke Gall•polls Ohio 45631
1562 Fa11T0 (740)446-5532 Or
Call {740)446 5 89 Equa Op
portuntty Employer

Cerpet I Upholstery Cleaning
Gua anteed Work W rh Fabulous
Res ults! For a Free Esllmale
Ca (304)675 4040 Today!
D&amp;J Construcllon Roof ng S1d
lng Pa nt ng Decks 0 Remold
ng Free Est mates Work Guar
anteed Call Dave {740)441 1186
o 1 BB8 822 2900
G&amp;S cleaning
bus ness &amp;
household c ean ng Light &amp;
heavy clean ng pr ces to It eve
ry budget No JOb oo Ia ge or
small State and cuy 1 censed
304 675-447t or 304 882 3754
Georges Portable Sawm II don t
hau your logs to the m 1 JUst call
304 675 t957
Htllarct s Profess onal Tree Sa v
ce Shaping Removal Etc F1re
Wood $35 Per P•ckup Load

17401446-7939
Honest and dependable week y
!lOuseclean ng reasonab1e rates
free est mates 304-675 2692
Ouahty house clean ng s Best
Bonded Pro less ona1 Re i able
For nte v ew appomtment call
even ngs (740)256 1131 or 1
888 781 2412
ema•t
dou
bled@eurekanet com

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportumty

$$t 000 s WEEKLY! .oMA 1LIN G
b ochu es FREE Postaget Start
mmed alely
Rush se I ad
d essed s amped envelope to
HSE Inc Depa I 20 PO Box 573
Amsterdam NY 120 0
$400 $500 a day! Homewo ke s
needed Large advert s•ng I rm
needs voce ma 1 et evers l m
lted space CALL NOW ! BBB
567 3949 E)(t 60
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBL SHING CO
recommends that you do bus
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough lhe
ma I untl you have nves •gated
he offer ng

220 Money to Loan

Business
Opportunity

EARN EXTRA INCOMEI Wofk at
hOme arour ~ your schedule Set
your own hou S: Excellent ncoiN
pa 1t me or tun 1ma Full Support
, -800-81 3-5694

HOME eASEO BUSINESS PIT
OR FIT Work on or off yow compute wtth an mlernabonal compa
ny Set your own hours Excellent
ncome Full support www Ba
SossF eecom

FREE LONG DISTANCE SEAV
ICE III Freedom to speall!ll No
LONG DISTANCE BILL$111 Ae
catv&amp; FREE long d stance serv
ice I Go to www slxf gureln
come comll ee ?94724 27

Homeworkers neede&lt;l! Ma I cellu
ta r phone product brochures!
Brochures provided! WI mail
paychecks weekly! No e:cperl
ence needed Honest opportunity!
1 800 462 5781

FRITO LAY/P EPSI/HERSHEY
SNACK AND SOOA VENDING
ROUTE 1$$ ALL CASH BUS!
NESSISi BUILDING A BUSI
NESS THAT IS ALL YOURS
SMALL INVESTMENTi EXCEL
LENT PROFITS t 800 73t 7233
EXT 4403

MEDICAL BILLING Un11ml!td n
come po ental No e .. pa tence
ne cessary F ee nlormauon &amp;
CD ROM nves1ment fro S2495
F nanc ng ava•lable (800) 322
1 139 EXT 050 www bus ness
startup com

A+ M &amp; M MARS/NESTLE
establ shed vending route W1ll
sell by 1t/20 Un&lt;ler $9K min mum
nvestment equ red Excellent
monthly profit potent al Flnai'\Ce
available/ Good credit
IBBB\270 2168
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE I Notn
lng down M n mum 1nve stmenl
$6200 Estab ls hed York Mlnrs
route w lh 22 loca t ons Ill your
area EZ work 6 8 hours weekly

230

Professional
Services

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE PI\'

cash for rtmatn ng payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages' AnntJuesl Senlemenrst lmmedla(e
Ouotesm NObody beats our prlc
Nat onal Contract Buyers
es
(800) 490 0731 e:ct 101 www
ttonalcontractbuy9rs.oom

"*

SFREE CASH NOW$ from
wealthy larrHI es unload ng m !!tons
ol dollars to help m nlmize their
taxes Wnte lmmed ate y Wind
falls 4542 EAST TROPIC ANA
AVE t 207 LAS VEGAS NE
VAOA89121
'NEED CASH'
$2 500-&amp;50 000
low Monthly Pymts
t day $erv1CH
No lee just Good SVS
For Appointment
1-877-7411-BILL 12455)

NO JOKE A WINNER
How ro
become lllhy sl nk ng rich not
MLM For lnformat on ca11 1 800
3226t69e:ct 1815(24hrs)

s

••

S2 500- 175 000
Fftei!WNOFM
1-871-7411-:1455

MOTHERS &amp; OTHERS Stay
home Lose we ght Make money
Calli 8D0-31D-6908

Gel nvotved In the most exciting
fastest growing and ucrat ve
bus ness ont ne INTERNET CA
Nos~ Call toll t ree 866 688
2310

•

"IIIMEDIATE CASH'

HALLMARK St~le
Greeting
Card Aoule 80 Proven Lac 1
(Local) Great Income Free Info
80CJ.277 9424

EARN $90 000 YEARLY epa ir)ng
NOT replacing tong cracks m
w ndsh•etds Fret v deo 1 800
828 8523 US/Canada wwwglass
mechen • com

&amp;rnltnrl • Page 03

,

ARE YOUR CREDIT CARD BILLS
OVERWHElMING YOU?? FREE
DEBT CONSOLIDATION can
con sol date your b !Is Into o ne
monthly payment Reduce nter
esl Avo d ate charges &amp; Stop
narass me nt licensed/Bonded
Non Profit 800 288 633t Ext 15
www goldcoastcc com
~

Star ! Your Bus ness Today
Pnme Shepp ng Center Space
Ava fable At Alf orelab te Rate
Spring Va ley Plaza Cal 740 446
010t

CREDIT REPAIR• AS SEEN Oft
TV! Erase bad cred 1 lega ly Frtt
info. 1·877 660 5229

i---------------------

nose hng Net $52K yearly 1
866250 261024h0urs
I'
All CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
you earn SSOO!day? 30 machmes
and candy $9 995 1 800 998
VEND
Fl
AIN2000 033/
SC Reg664
ALREADY HAILED AS THE
MOST
EXPLOSIVE
HOME
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IN
HISTORY GET N AT THE TOP
FAST EA1:1LY I NCOME PAl O
WEEKLY 13091875 3356
DEEREFXA@W NCO NET
AMAZING LIKE NEW 7 up Peps
mach nes Inc ed bte $S make s
Be ow manufacturers cosl!l Um r
ed supp y Esrabllshed locations
Leas ng w tt A o B credll Exce
!em pml r potenl at
(800) 20B t 974
AT&amp;T MCI PAY PHONE ROUTES
60 Great Local ons (Local) Prov
en Income 800 BOO 34 70

I1-,=:;::;:;;~~~~~:i~~~~~==:::;;;:::,

PUBLIC

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
773·5785 or 773·5447
TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH ID

Having sold property and moved will sell
the following Items Located on St Rt 7 In
Tuppers Plains, Ohio Large building next
to Cltoo gas station
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Carnival glass Pitcher &amp; glasses,
Carnival punch bawl &amp; cups, Pink, Red,
Amber and China dishes, McCoy Stove
cookie lar, Watches, Jewelry, (2} wood
buggy wheels, Coo-coo Clock, Lead &amp;:
Iron pots, Copper kettle &amp; stand, Lorge
fish skillet, Wood choirs, Garden plow,
Organ stool, Wood chest, War ration
stamps, Tools &amp; Lots of Glassware
"TOOLS"
Craftsman table saw, 55# Anvtl, B&amp;D 12"
Band saw, 5 Speed drltt press, Lawn Boy
&amp; Snapper mowers, Yord cart &amp; fertilizer
spreader, String trimmers, Grtnder,
Work bench, Mise toots, 3 ton JOCk, Cham
saw, Wheelbarrow, Electrical tools,
Wood step ladder, &amp; Slip scraper
"HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISCELLANEOUS"
Corner cabinet, 30" gas range, TV
w/remote, Lamps, Mtsc electrical kitchen
appliances, Metal lawn chair &amp; glider,
Silverware, Fans, Barbecue grill, Wash
tubs, Bicycle, Cones &amp; walker
OWNER - LOIS J MUG RAGE
Dan Smith - Auctioneer Ohio #1344
#515
CASH/POSITIVE 10 • REFRESHMENTS
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR
LOSS OF PROPERTY"

wva

Internet use 5 nee ded $25 to
$75 per hou I www lheworld
plan com
LABORERS NEEOED IMME
OIATELY Day Shift Kelly s Serv
Ices eoo 295 9470
Local Home Hea th Agency H rin g
Part T me LPN and C N A Com
pelt ve Salary With Benefits Ap
ply At 750 Flret Avenue Gall po
lis

Moodbpaugh Aucllontering ServiCil•&amp;
Bill Moodl11paugh Auctioneer Ohlo Lie 417693 W Va Lie 411388
For lnfof'Uialion please call (740)989 1613
licensed. a11d bonded in favor of State of Oh10

Mikes Auto Parts is Looking for
someone EXPERIENCED In auto
part salvage Se lous tnqu res
On y
16
Aacc oo n
Road
(740)446 2900 ask tor Krlslt

Avon Earn 40o/. For Ch stmas
Orders (740)446-3358
CLA MS PROCESSOR ! $20 $40/
nr po entia Process ng cia ms Is
easy! Tra n ng prov ded MUST
own PC CALL NOWI 1 888 565
5197 ext 642

30 Announcements

30 Announcements

FALL SPECIAL

""""""""·-·

by Colonel's •usgoo

,OntStop
'
•
Shopping
For AU Your Adv•rtlalng

Bf:DIJNERS

All major h1lches

1

II

n:ce1vers

Van Bl. Truck &amp; Car Accessones
Sun. visors &amp;1. Vent visors
»u~ Shields &amp;. Aluminum Tool boxes
Runn.ln,t Boards lll Tonnea.u Coven

I The..-:~rlly .I
.
I• or.!~~: ~obst=., J

-

DENTAL MEDICAL BILLER $15
$45 HR Dental B lllng solt wa e
company needs people to pro
cess med cal c a ms I om home
Trai ning provided Mus t own
compute t 800 797 75t 1 u.t
303

Custom Wheels &amp;. 1ires
~atterles 81 Radlaton

~-tng

248 Maddy Cemetery Road
Gallipolis Ohio • Owner Paul Robons

Contact Us At
•
1 800 821 8139

740 446·91l7

I

-,

30 Announcement"

I----------~=========:::..!..---------,

2353
TRAIN
FREE 1 FOR
888 645
8505 ING TOLL r

DRIVERS/ COL. Af OTR El\.pe
enced D ve s cno ce Home
week v o Long Hau Solos To
$ 36 Teams To $ 46 0 / 0 S 8B
BIG M les BIG $$ BtG Benefits
Cai1BgLoU1e t BBB 747 3447

Wanted To Do

180

210

Business
Opportunity

Round oak table &amp; 6 chatrs Plus other furmture.
12. amoun tof 2lassware vases. salt &amp; PePPer
shakers. m1lk 21ass. Punch bowl set, blue camn~
Jars. Pitcher. bowls. Plates &amp; etc.. kitchen
utenclls old records. com1c books. toYs. old
radio's. 2ames. PICtures. 12 amount of books.
1ewelrY Box lots &amp; much more

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or Sell
Shl ley Spears 304 675 1429

0 ve s Ex.per enced OTR
S!art Up To $ 34 m1 e
Ave age 2600/m les week
Home Eve y B 10 Days
Ozark Moto l nes nc
1(800)264 2033
www oza k com

PARALEGAL GRADED CURRIC
ULUM Approved home study
A!lord able S nee 1890 FREE
CATALOG (t 800 826 9228. or
BLACKSTONE SCHOOL OF
LAW PO Box 701449 Depan
ment AM Oal as TX 75370..1449

210

Located at the Auct1on Center of
At 33 1n Mason, WV

Call today tlart tomorrow!
Clv c DBVelopment Groupl
Mil enn um Teleservtces

Dr vers Flatbed
Med cal Coverage
From Day One!
$2 000 S gn On eonus
Qua ty Home T me
Lato Mode Equ pment
CDLA&amp; 3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
B006t 1 6636
www eckm Iter com

Schools
Instruction

TUESDAY NOVEMBER 7, 2000
5:30P.M.

Admlnlatratlve Anlatant Gal
1ia Ja ckson Meigs Treatm enl
Aller nat ves To Steel Cr me
(TASC) Competitive Sa ary Ac
cc d ng To Expenence And Edu
cat on Full T me Post on/ County
Employe e Bene! ts As soc a es
Degree Or Equ va ent Plus 3 To 4
Years Of Re lated Exper en ceJ
Gallla County Res dence/ Valid
Drivers L cense knowledge 01
Off1 ce/ Clencal Acco unttng
Word Exce And Word Perfect
Ab llty To Type 50 Words Per
M nute Experience n A Soc1al
Se vice Setttng Prefer ed Re
spons bill ies Conduct All Cler
cal Aspects Of The Ott ce Cllenl
Data Entry Prepare Statts! cal
And D eel Serv ce Repor s And
Vouchers Appt cations Must be
received By Novpmller 20 2000
Applications Are Ava at! e At
499 Jackson P ke Room 213
Gall pols Oh o Or Fax At (140)
449-7894 EOE Employe

Dr ver 372 DRIVERS NEEDED
No E~per ence Necessary 4
Day COLT am ng No cost tu I on
1 Qua l I ed Start at S35k/$40k
Ftrst Yea Call odav 800 958

150

Tratntng

Posta JObs $48 323 00 y Now
hrng no P.xpe ence pad an
lng great benelts call 7 days
BOO 429 3660 e.11t J 365
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 yr Now
h ng No expe ence pa d I a
ng great banal s call 7 days
BOO 429 3660 Bill J 566 FREE
INFORMATION

Help Wanted

AUCTION

AnENTION Own a PC? Put I lo
work $500 $5000 per montn po
lent a www earn t 23 com

"·c·~II
Ill

Help Wanted

"FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS
Up to $t8 24 hour H ring lor
2000 r ee can lor appl cat on/ex
am natiOn tnformal on Fede ral
Htre Fu t aenef IS t 800 598
4504 extension t 5 6 (Sam 6pm
CST !

12504 U S Rl 60
ASHLAI\D KY4110i
l (606) 921l 676()
NO PIIONE CALLS PLEASE

110 Help Wanted

m '&gt;t v lucd glob I source o f 1 dt strt al 11 tomauo n

real

FULLER BRUSH CO Is looking for
people who would like to start
tnatr own business work ng from
nome NO INVESTMENT needed
Umiled time only Call eoo 882
7270 emalllullereUeOaol com
Gallipoli s Dairy Queen ts Look ng
For A Fu I T me Cake Decorator
Qualifications E11pene nce Re
qulred Fr endly Able To Work
Weekands
Cal Us Today
(740)446-3278 Ask For Jessica
Or Fa11 Us Your
Re su me
{140)446--4317

ATIENTION ALL STUDENTS
we nave ova
200 jobs ava !able Immediate y
Fu 1alld part t me avaltab e
EARN up to 515/hour
plus referral bonuses
If you need work rl ~nt away

Join Our Team
W

FIVE STAR •t 4 day COL A tra1n
ng progrpm •No exper ence
needed •Must bt 21 •S3Bk 1st
year •Benellt s •Tu liOn ass1stan ce
•Lifetime job p lacement 1 eoo
448 6669 Exper enCe dnvers call
800 956 2353

12 000 WEEKLVI Ma iling 400
brochures! Sat sfac tlon Guar
anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies pro
v1ded l Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope G!CO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Start I!TIO'It(tfately

ASSEMBLY AT HOME Crafts
Toys Jewelry Wood Sewml)
Typ ing Great Pay! CALL 800
79~ 0380 Ext 201 (241'lrs)

\\'\\'\\ .i nt(,dsiun.cn•n
h~ h u1 Jat

Expenenctd rooter/ carpenler/ Ia
borer needed 740 378 6349

Help Wanted

Send resume~ lo
""AL M&lt;\RT DISTRI C I OI'Fl( I
ATTENTION DEIIHA M H s

WAL MART IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

110 Help Wanted

l

Absolute Top Dollar U S S1lver
Gold Coins Proolsets Diamonds
Go ld R ngs
U S Currency
M TS Co in Shop 151 Se cond
,t.vanue GaMIPOiis 740-446 2842

Calif 800.9211-5753

Amcnca 5 Bcr;t Buy In EducatiOn

C.alltpnh') OH

NOTICE OF POSITION VACANCY

please) resumes @h~ ra rockwell t:om

We look forward to

MANU ACl URING SUPER\ ISOR
Second Sh1rt

11 o Help Wanted

the eorrespondmg code 00 0002512 on the top or )OUr

Call mmed1ately

NECESSARY
to ea rn up to

for an appomtment

Drug Free Environment

To ensure cons1derat to n for th1s pos1tton you nust mdu.:a e

Monday Nov 6th

Potenttal

Ca ll I 800 929 5753

Equal Opportunity Employer
M/F/DN

pnor expencncc trammg others

NO EXPERIENCE

D rector of Human Resources
R o Grande Ohto 45674
E mail pmason@r o edu

V1slt our webstte at
www 84lumber com

Mrcrosoft programs ab t!J ty to create good worktng
relauonshtps wtth both mternal and ext_£!nal personnel and

Please forw ard your resume to Rockwell
Automation· Dept 774S, ro Box 2086 Milwaukee, WI
53201 2086 E ma1l (no atlachments, text format only

740 593 8370

telescrvrces poslttons

ln add ton you II enJOY one of
ttle ndust ry s t nest Denef t
packages
mclud ng heallll

EEO .. A En

Wanted to Buy

asstsl w1th environmental compl tance

Safety/envuonmental expcn enee mcludmg workers

No ex per ence necessary
Pr omot on5,., th n 90 day s
Excellent tra n ng program
lmmed ate pos11 ons ava tln ble
Athens County

TELESERVICES

Ms Phy ll s Masu 1 SPHR

ror

provtde on sll e fust atd trammg ts ncetled tdmtn ster the

Apprentice Tramees

15 neal appear ng men and
w(lmen to fill vacanc es due to
expans10ns and promot ons

Help Wanted

nc:lt dt ~ tht 1 an es and addresses of three references on or
be to c '\me 1her I '"~000

oqrarr and some genera l nurs ng duties

You wil l also

phvst cai /OCl:upa tton al th erapt~l s Wit h t M steP~ degree

CIJJI:.SSUIFUIEDSI

bu d ng mater als necessal)'
College degrees p eferred but
s not requ1red T an ng wdl be
p ovded

CAREER5@84LUMBER COM

P

most valued global source of mdustnal automalron

avat !ablc lor

$40 000

We w1sh to thank
dental I fe p of 1 shar ng and
you all our fnends
401 K
App y n person
and ne1ghbors and
Monday Fr day Bam 11 am or
espeCially the llo·~.~er~ 2pm 6pm at
84 LUMBER
for the1r kmdness m
Routet
Galhpohs Ferry WV
the death of our
loved one
Fax resume to 724 225 2588
M1chael Buck Potter
E marl

The Potter Fam1ly

work WJth LL" ts to further yourself and ) our career So JOin
our team today and become part uf the re tsons we rc the

To ensure constderatlon for thts pos1hon you must md1ca te

IS pleased to announce

$30 000

God Bless
Reda Cooper

To

relat1onsh1ps wtth both mtemal and external customers and

11 o

110 Help Wanted

t

e11 n une

)

Even the best structures m the world are only 11s strong as th

with 2 years of producl des1gn expenence m a manufactunng

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

EXPANDING
COMPANY
NEEDS PEOPLE
Work from
home!
Mall order II nternet
$1500+mo PT 53000 $7000+
mo FT FREE lrtlormatlon 1 414
290-6900 or www home business
systems com

OWN A COMPUTER ? PUT IT
TO WORK! $25 $75thour PT/ FT
CALL
1 888 321 7083
WWWEZPCNET

110 Help Wanted

wntten commumcauon sktlls proftct cncy m the usc of

CIHldre11 Larry Brmda
Sh rley Tun my &amp; Cm1111
gra tddl fdre1 a rd Great

90

110

based on analys1s of the application data and the desared

resume

Easy Te lephone Work No Sell
lng No E~~:perlence Necessary
Full Or Pan Time S7 S12 /hr
Call 1 800-572 3361

Licensed

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

IIO LZER MEDICAL CENTER

Office" programs

service

166 Ohio &amp; West Vlrg nia 304

V1ce Pres den of Hu)llan Resourtes

You wall be respons1ble for destgmng and developmg motor

Alma GemlduJC
lhFul~

auction

( 740 )2~~9

STAFF ACCOUNTANT
Holzer Medtca1 Ctnler s seek ng a fult me SlafT Accuu Ia 11 Dul es
nclude~ prepare month I) Journal c1 tr es p cparc and d s r1b e
the Budget Con panson Report Monthl} Sen •ce Repor and I ACT
Repon reconc lc bank accounts a 1d 11cneral ledger accou ts
Rcqu ren c s for the pos 11on Bachelors degree n Accoun mg or
Bus ness Adm n s rallon One vear prrv1uus healt care accountmg
e11pcncnce preferred

In thts role you will be rcsponstb lc for supporlm!;

STillE TESTED HURSIRG IISSISTIIHTS

Rick Pearson AuctioM Company
full time auctioneer complete

Ros e Ward

Macrosoft

Nowt t 1100-291 ~883 Dopl • 109

Riverside Au c tion Barn Sale
Every Saturday Night a t ep m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

requtrcd

HOlZER SEniOR CHRE CEnTER

and Insider advice• tvtf)'One can
prollt from Antiques? Collectl
bees? Same rules! Exclusive new
book 522 liS '-871 785-&amp;444

If nlerested pluse contact

would be a plus Must be able to travel ovemtght when

110 Help Wanted

liiAL~K

DEVELOPMENT ENGINEER
Gallipolis, OH

wnttcn commumcatlon sk1lls

Office of the City Manager
518 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
or FAX to 740-441·2070 by November 10 2000

reeehed for

To

our team today and become part of the reasons we re the

The H stone C ty of Gall polls Is seek•ng qual1f1ed

In Memory

Kale Dunl'an
"ishes to sa'
fhunks for
the man~
birthda,
l'ards she

Even the best structures m the world are only as strong as the
foundatiOns on wh1ch they are buJII At Rockwell

EARN $25 000 TO 150 000/YR
Medic al insurance Billing Assls
lance Needed Immediately! Use
your Home computer gel FREE
Internet FREE LONG DIS
TANCE Wtblltt E Mail Ca ll

MAKE MONEY SELLING art at
auction! Reveal ng trade stcrets

773-5785 Or 304- na-~1

11 o Help Wanted

Automahon our foundation IS rooted m our people

THKCLERK
lmmEDIHTE OPEDIRG

Giveaway

40

In ttw

work wtlh us IS to further yourself .and your career So JOin

9()().530

November 3 5 9am 5prn 5 M les
Oul State Route 21B Fon Route
7 Baby Ch ldren Clo hes New
Jeans Tapes Adu t &amp; Mo e
M sc Etc

11 o Help Wanted

Buy, Sell or Trade

110 Help Wanted

9 West 5 mson A nens
74Q-S92 1842
Qua lity c oth ng ana household
te s Sl DO bag sal e eve y
Tl'lu sday Monday hru Sa u dqy

Check the ctassineas!

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlcmtty

3256

LOST It 01 00 2 Yea Old Fe
male Aotwe 1e 65 70 Lbs Spade
Los In A ea Of L ncoln P kef
H&lt;:~1,1nan T ace Road Reward
(740 )256 9112

' Jo

!11 Memory

Lost black/ wn te ratt terr er one
week ago Aockspr ngs Ad near
ehab cente
ewa d 740 992

Galltpolts
&amp; Vicmlly

11 o

Help Wanted

Orl~t P.A M Transport 2 wttlc
paid truck driver tra ining No tx
per1tnct nttdtd Great payt
$34 0001 1st year wlful1 bentflta
Drivers based all across Midwest
1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9am
Spm Mond~ay 7am 7pm Tue Frl
7am 5pm Vis it our webl te at
www Olra'rvers IXItn

Tuef(lay Nov 7th 11 30 7 Da~ ts
rllldtnct Rose Hlll McDonald
collectibles Avon Barblts coa
lumt ,llwllry plaure hmes furnf.
IUrt miiC

&amp;unba~ 111:tmrs

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Raccoon Township
Fire Levy
Renewal Only
Please vote YES for the Renewal
of the Fire Levy for
Raccoon Township
Thank You,
Raccoon Twp. Trustees 8L Clerk
Ruth Ann Millhone, Clerk

LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580STRT 588(0LDRT35)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
• ' THIS IS JUST A PARTIAL LISTfHGJr LOTS OFVERYGOOD
ITEMS FOR HOME, SHOP, OR IHTERHET." ' '

Good Pie cupboard (tin In sides), pointed Rat
wall cabinet, Oak flat wall cupboard (painted),
3 Chimney cupboards, Child's VIctorian style
bed (complete), Ice Cream table &amp; chair,
Variety of small end lables, Porcelain top
kitchen table, Porch setlee, Old Iron bed,
Wicker stand, Wood carpenter'~ box, Larqe
wooden box w/lld, Exc. Wood sled In orlolnal
finish (metal rod runners), Old bollol box,
Small wood box (printers), Brass slenclls, Old
feed scales, Counter Iron scales, I gal Glass
churn, Early framed tinted tin type, Old tin
clown bank, Old kitchen llems, Metal 1923Jar
opener, Wood mortar &amp; pestle, 2 Sels
service for 6 community plate sliver plate
sliver pes, Horse clock, Numerous pottery pes,
Scarce Rosev1lle "Donnetello" 1ard1nl~re (no
stand), Old Christmas llems, Old toys &amp;
games, Grantleware, Ruo bealers, Chenille
spreads, Old books Including Lincoln &amp;
Wallace nutttng ( 1948), Old purses and
1ewelry, Glass to mclude Fenton, Imperial,
Blenko, CambndQe, Calif, Vaseline &amp; Others,
45 Pes , MISSISSippi Mmnow buckel, Some old
lools, Many, Many more nice smalls
AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY
740 388-0823 (HOME) OR 740-245-9866 (BARN)
LICENSED &amp; BONOED BY STATE OF OHIO
CASH/APPROVED CHECk ONLY
FOOD
'NOT RESPONSIBLE FORACCIDEHTSOR LOST
PROPERTY''

***Sale
ofthe personal
John lllllson and also Items from the old lllllson
Electric Company.***

10" heauy duty table saw, 4" Power Craft
planer/joiner, Craftsman 10" radial arm
saw, Bench grinders, 1/7." Black 6 Decker
drill, Porter cable router, 2 Uentless gas
heaters, Older Craftsman scroll saw, Black 6
Decker workmate, Wood ulse, Bench ulse,
Electric Drills, Small drill press, Drill bits,
metal Shelulng, Seu. Sets of sawhorses,
Electric motors [new In box), work benches
and storage cabinets, Tool boxes, Tool
pouches, ftll types of gluing clamps,
wrenches, Pipe cutters, Bolt cutters, Large
amount of hand tools, ftppllance cords,
Hntlque tools, Appliance repair manuals,
Lawn Boy roto tiller [2 hpJ, Jacobson push
mower, Coleman heater, Wooden shutters,
Jacobson riding mower, 8" Turning plow
for garden tractor, Garden sprayers, Ext.
cords, Lawn spreader, Seu. Hangmg light
fixtures, large amount of misc. lnuentory
from Hillson Electric Company...
Ructloneer: lesley R. Lemley
740-388-0823[home)or740-2459866 [barn)
"Licensed and Bonded by State of Ohio"
CHSH/HPPROUED CHECK OULyn
fOOD
"UOT RESPOUSIIILE fOR HCCIDEUTS OR lOST
PROPERTY"
***limiTED SEHTinG - IIRinG YOUR lHWn CHRIRSII

•••

•

�•

•
Page

D4 • 6unbap ll1mrt -6rnnntl

230

Professional
Services

310 Homes for Sale
3 br ranch style house

320

CENTIVE

OFFERII

LIVE

AMA.ZING

loa"" . . . _
32 1 acres wJ house several out
bullcflngs 1/2 m le trom town lor

PSVCHIC

more

READINGS LET OUR PHYSICS
ANSWER YOUR OUESTIONSII
' •oo 950 2209 ' ass 297 S239
18. $3 99/Mm www astroruo

$2000 $5000

Buy A Ne~o~; Home Wtth No Down
Payment? We F nance land
Sept•c Water And Electric Call

(740)446-3583

Doub es S ngtes Repo s A.nd
used Homes Buy Today And B
In Bv The Weekend (7 40 )446 -

Commerc all Rental Property For
Sale Two Propert es On Eastern
Avenue Nea Wal Mart &amp; One
Property Near Eastern Avenue
W1lr Sell Toge ther Or Separate
Two Un ts Currently Rented &amp;
One Needs Work S35 000 &amp;Up
Se110us lnqu res Only {740)4415118 leave Messagt!

L4WSU1TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA R4TING 90 1SO DAYS 1
688 8 11 0902

3218

DRIVE A UTILE SAVE A LOTI
E Z F nanc1ng
Smgle Wldes Double W des
Hurry
(304)722 7148
F1nal Day s Nat10nw1de Inventory
Reduchon (3041 736-3409

For Sate By Owner 4 Bearoom In
Cadmus 2 Stones Pond All Ap
pl ances 40 Acres New In t 993
W•U Separate (7 40) 256-9 186

FREE GRANT MONEY!!! Never
Repay Business Eelucahon Home
Purchase/Repaus DetHS Travel
Research Wr ters/Art sts Medl
cal ana Mo fe 1 800 242 0363
E:..t
9037
www grants dol
oom com

For Sale or Re nl 3 bedroom 2
Bath lR DR Utlly Room W th
Aop l ances 5 rru tes from A o
$350 mo {7 40)24~966 7

1304 )633 7238
Ho use For Sale Need:; Some
WorK (740)245-5662

Homeowners w th Cred t Wornes
may now qu ck y qual ty lor oans
Stonecas11e s a Cltrect teMer that
can tell you over th e phone aM
w thout obllgat onl Call 1 800 700
1242 Ext 658

From Rent To Own low Oown
Payment low Monthly Paym ent
Catt t 800 948 5678

N•c:e 3 br 2 ba ranch style
nome on 2/3 acre 20 m n lrom
Tovota Plant on Greer Ad
S55 000 304 675-2864

Need Well And Sephc? No Down
Payment ReqUired large Selec
ton 01 Homes Call t 800 948

NORTH CAROLINA Where the
Blue A Clge meets the Smokes
Homes cabms acreage ots
!arms creek &amp; laketront CAROLI
NA MOUNTAIN HOMES Rea
Estate 1 aoo 747 7322 E~tt 8
cmhteam com

lOWEST

RATE CHECK OUT THE REST"
Up to $500 INSTANTLY! 1 117
EARL'I' PAY licfcc70036
NEED CASH? Have an annUity or
structu red sel!lement? We pur
chase them and pay las t De
pendable Oldest m the business
Call Seltlement Cap tal 1 800

320

567S

PH 0 T 0 G RAP H-Y
Man St Photogfaphy
51 ManSI
Now open lor busmess
Wedd ngs
Senors
Fam ly Portrarts
Call lor an appo ntment
304 675 7279

736 3409

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

N•ce 95 Skylme 3 br 2 ba VI
nyl s d ng sh ngled roof 6
wa ll s Velec relr g rang e 304
675 6055
14x70 3 bedroom Used Homes
Available Call 740 385 9621
14~70 three bedroom/ two bath
$236 65 pe r month w th only
$1100 down Ca ll 1800837

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

3238

No Fee Unless We W nr
1 888 582 3345

t 971 W ndsor 3 Bedroom De
luxe 12x65 Good Shape Bath
roomNeeds Work $2000 As Is
Must Be Moveel (740)446-25 17
1979 Fa rmon l Bayv ew 141170 3
Bed oom 1 112 Bath Open LA
AM KitChen Appl ances lnctud
ed Cent ral Arr AI Electr c

$7000 (740)256-6165
AU real estate advertising m
this newspaper IS sublect to
the Federal Fair Housrng Ac1
of 1968 which makes It 1llegal
to advertrse any preference
UmltaMn or dlscnm nation
based on race cOlor religion
se~~: lam llal status or national
origin or anv Intention to
make any such pre19fence
bm1tatfon or discrrmlnatlon
This newspaper w 11 not
knowingly accep!
adven sements tor real estate
wh Ch s In vlolallon of the
aw Our readers are hereby
mlormed that all dwellings
adver!1sed 1n this newspaper
are ava table on an equal
opportunity basis

Lookmg To Buy A New Home '
Don t Have Land? We Do u Hurry
Only 10 Lots Lett 304 736 7295

PreverH foreclOsure w thOu!
bankruptcy Why move? PriVate
Realty Fund ng recorded 1nklrma
liOn 1 888 809 2580 or
www Clarkl nk com 'heiiJ
Tw o acre lot lor sale w th water
and sewer on Cremeans Rd 740.
742 2803

Oepos 1
(740)441-0!58 3
(740)256-6718 In Country

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent

MILL ENN IU M 2001 Rent Buster
16.00 3 Oedroom 2 bath re
duceel to $21 900 As low as
$195 a month nctudes del very
block and level ng sk 11 ng and
more Check us out were daal
ng Coles MObile Homes US Ao
ute SOE Athens OH 4570t 740
592 1972 0 1 800 466 4687
Murdock s Factory Outlet 01
Homes INC
I 64 E~tll 47 Cross lanes WV
Cal to tree 1 866 881 885
On y 6 model homes tell (28x80
$49 888 (2 8x64
$48 926)
(28x60
47 843 ) (28x56
$44 766 ) ( 14x8 Q
25 772 J
(14x80
$25 772) (14x80
26 880) all pr ces I ee de se
up skHI ng ale rJStaHed and
concrete foote s
New 14 f ~ de $499 down only
$199 per mon call now 1 800
691 6777
New 16 It w de $4 99 per mon
only $270 per men call now 1
800 691 6777

1980 Bay V1ew 14x70 3 Bed
room 1 12 Bath F rep ace 2 New
Decks Oul Build ng On 3f10 Of
An Acre G aham School Ad
$22 000 {7'40)44 1-0868

New double w1de 3 br 2 ba
$998 00 down on y $295 per
mon call now 1 800 691 6777

1993 Brandywme t4x70 Mob te
Home 2 Bed oom 2 Ful Baths
Newly Remolded Master Ba th
La ge liv ng And O.n ng Areas
K•tc:hen Appliances Are Included
All Electr c W th Central A r New
Carpet Throughout home Front
And Rear Steps Are Also nclud
ad Ready For Immed iate Pos
sess on Ask ng $16 500 OBO
Cal {740)446-4548

$499 Down low Monthly
Payments
Cal Now (304)722 7140

S1ng e W de Blow Out•

HURRY

3 Beoroom Home In Centenary
On Route 141 $500 Month Rei
e ences &amp; Oepos 1 Requ re d
(7 40) 446-6566
3 Bedroom House Close to Town
{7401441 1519

4 br 2 112 ba fam1ly room w th
I eplace I vmg room &amp; 2 ca r ga
rage $700 00 rent plus depos 1
3 tl
2 ba lvng room and uth
ty room $400 00 rent plus dep
For more mlorma11on ca ll ERA
Town &amp; Country Rea Estate
Broker 304 675 5548 and ask for
Beckte
5 roo m ho-t.~se wi d hook up no
pets 304 675 5162

Wau d You l ke To Owl"' Your
Own Home Instead Of Rent ng?
Spec al F nanc ng AJa lab e Ca
(740)446-3570

14s 1Rs Wldet Sl25fmo $100
446--&lt;1175

t
Oll1ce space In Pomeroy bust
ness district 740 992 6556 or

740 992 5827

Three bedroom house 164 1 lin
coin He ghts basement garage &amp;
sun room lease and depos 1 re
Qu red 7'40 667 3966

Mobile Homes
for Rent

(304)675-6679
Co on1a1 Park Apartments (lor
marly VIl lage Green A.parments)
2 bedrooms total electric ap
pi ances turn shed Jaund y room
faCilitieS and close to schoo ap
pi catrons available at ofhce 740

Henry E Cleland Jr . . . . . .

...... ,, .., . . . ..

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms For ee osed
Homes From $199 /Mo 4°o Down
For L st ngs &amp; Pa yment Oeta Is
800 319 3323 Ext 1709

Sherrl L Hart

l 1/2 story house on 5 acres on
Sanclh I Ad
3 br 2 ba tlanel I n1sh&amp;C cathe
dral ce I ng n great room must
see to apprec ate Opt ons add1
t1onal 37 5 acres w th house Re
a ty 304 576 3056

Kathleen

t!l'

--

vtew

the

bedroom 1 112 balh home
loday #186
B'!~''!llt~l Cape Cod home
3 bedrooms 2 balhs

two

basement

G}

--

• 992·2259
• 742·2357

..... 992·2259

mtl G tve Allen a call

one check lh1s outl ThiS
lwo story bnck bU1ld1ng has
several one and two
bedroom apartmenls
rental

mcome

stluated on almost one acre

Pnced to sell Ask for #182
Make this house your

3 bedroom ranch 1 ac e corner
prope ty great toea on may con
s der tand cont act 740 992
6833

OF

CHESTER·

"move tn home!

Absolulely

up and move m All appliances
I~~::;:~~·~,

I

electnc wtth C/A one story
1 vmyl s1d1ng huge kttchen w th
sooo many cabtnets large rear decking off

d1nmg room 3 bedrooms 2 full balhs Large
utility room Spactous closets Full basement
that is part fimshed and would make excellent
fam ily room Property has an attached two
car garage and a separate garage/workst1op

I lhese amemltes and

IS THE ONE

Everythtng I ke

Ou1et settmg ranch type home 3 bedrooms
bath equ1pped k tchen hardwood floors ntce
hvtng room front stttmg porch all 1n good
New kttchen cab nets satelhte
condttlon
dish washer &amp; dryer 1 77 acres of nearly

level ground

ASKING $55,000

approx1mately t 2

acres of Iandi Very ntce yard all mowed and

Located

ASKING $20,000
NEW LISTING • POMEROY· Here IS a cule
llltle 3 bedroom home Jncludmg equ•pped
kttchen full basement wtth Aec room ca rpet
and hardwood rl oo rs throughout
1 Car

l

garage &amp; off s1ree1 park1ng ASKING $35 000
NEW LISTING

POMEROY

frame home on H gh Street

f

wrap around decking

P1ct up dt1 f1r.1tl)'

j 1nd pt IWI)' ..,
~""'~
,f )'0\lf YCI) 0\lilft, 101 •11

-, c1bln Or lfvt In I

wv 2ll71

Just m1nu1es from

REPUCED TO $23,900

1c•,ur1try, 65

Farm m the

acres of ground

Approxtma1e y

tn hay land fenctng ready for your cattle
ponds 2 barns shed and olher butldtngs
gas to house plus small royal! es from otl
gas wells Older 1 1/2 story v1nyl Sided
house Wlthtlots of remodeling

1 1/2 slory slone/bnck home 3

bedrooms bath modern k1tchen d n ng area
separate aundry ortg tnal wood work new
garage porches shed garden area &amp; many

olher fealures

ASKING $39 900

OAK GROvE ROAD • Approx malely 17 064
acres

Real Estate General _ _

Florida

beaut1ful country s1de getung ready to put the1r coats

color on and watch the hsh JUmpmg tn the pond
tn and vtew the hvmg room damng room and a
beautifully custom designed kitchen w/lots of Smtih
cabmets Ceramic tiled floor A pnvate bedroom su1te &amp;

bath on the marn floor 2 more bedrooms on the
level There could be a 4th bedroom 3 full

basement

Pr ced

tn

You Can Nol Bulll ThtS Home for lhe ASKING PRI CE
Shown by appmntmenr
NEW LISTIN(] Cozy 3 Bedroom ranch Am1ds1 a
wooded 1 03 acre m/1 Secluded &amp; pnvale Ltvmg

room,eat m k ttchen

Buy 11 rental property or from town are 35 acres
Home

has

2 more

Several ntce bulldtng Slles on stte

ASKING $24,000

or

less

tn

Clay

1 bath llvtng Townsh1p Ca I and ask for
kitchen Ask lor #2027
Broker owned

NEW LISTING· Vaciljlj
Twp w1th a be~iiW

res m / 1 Green
er y near the newest home

developm ent Pnced to sell

We have aav8"ral 5

Corner of FAIRFIELD
CHURCH ROAD, AND
PLEASANT HILL
ROAD
2 81 acres m/1

Green

each

wllh 2 bedrooms and 2 lrontage
comforts Holzer

lot

Some Restncltons NO 22

2?ed ~~, 1~ee,

Hosplta

IMPROVEMENTS GALORE!
roomy 3 bedroom 2
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED outl Sparldtng raised rancn Neat
bath home Situated on large
Brick/VInyl sided
bt level w•th lois ol updates L1v1ng
1 079 acre lreed lol Ltvlng
overstzed hvtng room &amp; formal room .famrly room kitchen room kttchen famtly room
d1ntng area eat tn kitchen wllh newer oak cablnels &amp; laundry double car attached
fam1ly room wtth ftreplace ceram•c 111e floor1ng deck off garage and morel Pr cacy
extra storage space 1 car d•mng area 2 full baths fence
surrounds
above
bullt·tn garage; mce lreed attached 1 car garage t6 x ground
pool
Nicely
concrete dnve Asktng 32
swlmm•ng
pool
&amp; landscaped Lei us show 11 lo
&gt;."'~,v~•v and requestng offers! detached 30 x 30 garage so you ll2082
1
much morel
You II
be

ASKING $130 00

I !mn1~~L~I!'~~

halp

SKI WHISTLER BIG WH ITE
Fernie Stlverstar Sunpeall:s
Ape~ Kimberly Ski BC features
the ltnest sk condos chalets &amp;
hotels 1n BC Ae&amp;arva t ons 1 688
676-9977 or \IISI1 www ildbc com
CLAIM DENIED') We sptctahze
In Appeals and Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Serv ces Inc Toll free 1 888

S36-4052

WANT A COMPUTER? But no
cash? No creCit bK• Slow crecm
OK• 0 Down laptops available
Reestablish your cred II Call
now!• 1 888 247 38t8

WAREHOUSE FIXTURES Pallel
Radung Badtroom Shelvtng
Mezzan.ne Corweyor (Powered
Gravrty And Belted) Call 800

939 3233

deck

Your
own
here qutck

PRIVATELY
LOCATED
CONTEMPORARY
Home

Immaculate bl level consiSting
of livtng room d1ntng area ~'""' '
A
G
kttchen 3 bedrooms ntce
PRICE
ask1ng
$18 000 00 2
famtly room and large laundry
room and garage Rear deck bedrooms mobile home w1th
and fenced tn lawn Lots of ntce s1zed screened m porch
updales on th1s home Expect situated on mce lot Storage
shed w tth covered pat10 area
a big price I Not a b•l 112073
overlooktng Raccoon Creek
N1ce place to come to on
weekends or JUSt s1mply li ve

Sitting on over 2 acres Lots of
roorn on the tnstde tool large

hv1ng room 20 x 25 wllh 16
master bedroom &amp;
balh 1n loft area 3 add111onal
bedrooms &amp; 2 baths family

cethng

room

8 24 x 70 upstairs concrete

block and baked enamel
melal siding use for slorage
commerctel or convert Into
apartmenls The polenl1al 1s
unlimited Building sites Give
us a lelephone call loday for
more delalls 12087
1 1/2 slory
151588 SR 14 ,
homo
complete
wllh
3
bedrooms living room kilchen
covered front porch blacktop
drive delached garage 12034

looking to purchase a home bedrooms

lhal has quahly lhroughout
Low ma•nlenance brick ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeled
formal living room step saving
kllchen family room with
fireplace Over 2 000 sqft
living space Allached 2 car
garage 2 acres lnground
pool barn &amp; shed 12050

lvtng

laundry

2

level

deck1ng attached garage
Shed barn and more' #2096

all year around 11209Bc
2 LOTS ONE PRICE $14 500
Each Jol be&gt;ng approx
x 66x 166
water
elactnc &amp;
70 mob1le home with 2 sewage
ava1lable
N1ce
bedrooms and bath SIOrage build1ng lois llal easy to mow
bul\dtng with covered pallo &amp; 12079
d ec k o verlook 'n g Raccoon PRICE DROPPED
TO
THE HARD To
c
k
Asking
$19 000
4
fenced roll1ng acres Road
ree
'
$4 ,900 00
Jusl nol your
frontage along lwo roads 50 ll208 9b
1yp1cal ranch Try this cule a
x 70 multiple use bU&lt;id 1ng Wllh LOOK NO FURTHER n your frame on lor S1Z9
3

LETS
HAVE
YOUR
ATTENTION PLESEI Owner
has JUSt dropped the pnce on

lhls home to $34 900 001 And
wanls your offer 1mmed1telyl
Neat charm1ng home tn town
3 bedrooms fam tly room
•
d f
1tv1ng rovm
covere
rant
porch and more 12059
100

room

Cherry Rd

1 1/2

story v1nyl s1ded home at the

kllchen bath large detached
2 car garage 12075
GREAT RETREAT all year
rund Quiet country setting
wllh frontage along Raccoon
1994 Home wllh relaJ&lt;tng
overs1zed screened In deck 3
Bedrooms 2 full baths living
room &amp; dln1ng room nloe lot
delached shed &amp; sheller area
with balh &amp; deck overlooking
Raccoon Creek #2089

edge of Gallipolis w1lh an
excellent v1ew Uvtng room
k11Chen 2 bedrooms and
morel #2084
INCOME
PRODUCING
PROPERlY Lei the rent
lrom the 2 mobile homes lhat
are Included with lhe sale of
lhls 4 bedroom home pay the
mortgage payments Nics
s1zed lol Call tor complela
liSting $84,900 00 N2D78

MEIGS COUNTY
C~e~l Lemley 742·3171

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per tOO 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fmlngs In StOCk

acres with a stocked pond

More call lor complele 11 s11ngl
112078

lawn furn ture 5 cushioned
cha•rs wrth glass top table &amp; um
brella $100 00 call 304 675 6887
leave message

Jackson OhiO 1 800 537 9528

550

•

Fun Blooded Rat Tamer Pups
Has HaC! First ShOtS Ver~ Nice

(740)256-1997

LOWER HEATING COSTI
HEATING
COST SA ID TO
DOUBLE THIS WINTER\ Re
place Olel Gas GuZ.ZIE!r w th
Ama na s 95% Hrghest EUtc1ency
Gas Furna ces And Heat Pumps
Free Est mates II 'r'ou Oon 1 Call
Us We Both Lose 1 (7 40 )446

6308 ' 800 29 ' 0098
New And Used Steel Steel
Beams P pe Flebar For Concrete
A I S•zes &amp; lengths l&amp;l Scrap
Metals
(7 40 )446-7300
Or

(740)446-3368

Steel Buildings New Must Sell
40x60~; 12 was $17 500 now
$10 971 50x100x16 was $31 500
now $19 990 70x150x16 was
S59 990 now $42 990 80lt200xl6
was $94 500 now S59 990
t 800 4065126

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg rabb t Beagles sue s
grand rabbit champion shots I
wo rmed ready $150 00 hrm 740
446 3615

STEEL BUI LDING SI Forced to
I Qu date three 25x30 30~40
45xt40 Sttll crated / factor y d
rect•t 1 800 462 7930 x 34

2806
Now reelevlng tobacca 111 1ale

Nov 2oth New Farmers Tobacco
Warehoust ~ pley Oh o cat! 1
888 844 4365 ask for floor man
ager Orv Ita Whalen or Tim Trapp
or phone Ed•son Mayes 304
675 1858

630

Poodles 2 vears standard le
male stlver {ttlle toy pupp1as 7
w~s AKC 74D-667 3404

Hor~es boarded 150 lull board
stalled 100 pastured gram led
twtee daly H O 388 8806 anyt1me
weekends after 6 00 weekdays

Walker Coor Dog Pups 8 W~ks
Old $ 100 Each (740)446 4261
Ask Jor Derek

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Pumpktn&amp; Corn Maze Puzzle at
Taylors Berry Patch 2864 Kerr
Ad Open Saturdays Noon 7 00

PM (740) 245 9047

Livestock

1 112 Vear Old Colt Belg1um
Mate $500 (740)256-9306

RegtSiered Pu rebred 3 Year Old
Umous•n 81,111 Double Black &amp;
Double Polled (740)256-651 0
S x Month Old Po ll ed Hereford
He~te r For Sale parants Reg is
terM $500 (7A.0~446-1282

640

Hay

&amp;Grain

Straw Bright W1re T1e Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume D1s
count Ava ilable Hentage Farm

(304)675 sn•
TRANSPORTATION

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lmtels etc Claude Winters
A o Grande OH Call 1•0 245
5121

560

New ld . . 325 two row nanow
corn p1cket $3500 740 7•2

Mystic Poms Reopemng an~
Dreeo dog groom ng ava1lab le
Also show quality ano pet Poms
avatlable tor ~ale 740 949 3416

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Building
Supplies

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems w1th
your dnvmg record, DUI's
speed1ng tickets etc
Same Day SA-22's 1ssued
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960

SPAS
SALE SALE SALE
Pnce Reduction On All
Spas In Stock F1ve

Public Welcome
Gall1aCo
Conservation Club
meetmg
Nov 8, 2000
Dmner served at
Palom1no Appaloosa
quarter horse
7 yr old mare
Excellent tra1l horse
Call
245-0610
Sacred Heart Church
Bazaar Pomeroy
Thur Nov 9th
D1nner starts at 4 30
Creamed baked chtcken or
ham w1th homemade
noodles, dessert Included
Adults $6 00 Ch1ldreen
$3 00 Fancy stand cake
stand, raffle, ch1ldren s
games door pnzes

610 Farm Equipment
CAT 04H $42 000 45 Foot Tool
Traile r $1500 65 Foot E.11tended
Tra ler $3500 M sc CAT 215
Hoe Buckets Plate Temp That
F IS 416 Hoe $3500 MISC Steel
Beams 2000 Gallon Fuel Tank
W th ElectriC Pump $1200 550
Fuel Tank W th Gas Pump 2000
Gallon Water Tank $550 Jack
hammers A r&lt;lt Its Mise hand
Tools Concrele Buckets Con
crete Blanke ts Cable Sling &amp;
ChOkers (740)643-2916
John Deere model 50 1954 new
rear I res runs good $1 800 00
304-895 3364 or 304 895 3441

and shrubs
Sells
$55 000 00 #209t

lor

HOME more

Benefit for

J1m

K1ng a v1ctlm

of termmal cancer Benefit·
Bob

&amp; Margaret

'

room kttchen and laundry
Nice
soltd
home
w th
character
To
make
an

than

meets the eye here! G~at
room consist ng of kitchen
wtth custom made ca~rnets

llvtng roomand dining 2 full
rear deck large delached
pole garage &amp; m1Sc sheds
Thts ts JUst for starters
come and see the rest

#2086

Medicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other
breathing med1ca110n b1lled
to Med1care Save money
Free Home Delivery Call

710

Autos for Sale

SO DOWN CARS' As low as $29/
mo Pollee mpounds aM repos
sess1ons 24 mos 019 9 % For
I stmgs call 800 719 300 t e11t
A010
~ ~
1968 Camara Ra ly Super Sport
Runs Good $6 000 Serous In
qures Only (740)256-6422
198? Chevaue runs gooct $350
740 992 2217
1986 Cavalie r 2 Door AutomatiC
30 To 35 t.·111es per Gallon Ttres
Exce llent Good Work Ca r

$750 00 (740)3SS 8133 No Sun

Ch1cken noodle dinner,
dnnks etc Donat1ons
apprec1ted 949-2828 or
843 -5349

M&amp;D PAVING
Dnveways, Parkmg Lots,
Res1dent1al

Contact Enc Blackburn

(740) 339-0194 or
•
•
(740) 446-2422
•
•
'i=====:::=::r~""JII "

PURPLE TURTLE

Children's clothes

&amp;

g1fts

Now Open

740-446-7283

Lafayette Mall Gallipolis

Day Dreams
&amp; Night
Things
Celebrating
4 great
years &amp;
Many more
to come!
CHII DINNER
November 7 al the Mtddleport
Masbmc Temple from
11 00amto600pm
Sponsored by Masomc BU1Id1ng
Commtttee $3 00 per meal

Community Not1ce
The GallipoliS Ferry Akzo
Notiel Community Act1on
Panel (C A P) W1llhold the1r
monthly meet1ng at

6

Gallia County
Gun Club Annual
Turkey Shoot
Sunday,
Nov. 5, 2000
10:00 am-??

Stationary &amp;Trap
Food &amp; Prizes
Open to the
public
New Location

on
Monday 11/6/00

Insurance Plus
Agencies
w1ll be convemently
located at

6 00

p m on Monday November

1086 Jackson

Interested part1es are
anv1ted to attend

Turkey-Ham D1nner Sunday
Nov 5 11 00·2 00 at
Southern H1gh School

Spnng Valley Plaza
(Next to Fam1ly Dollar)

Ladles VFW Aux

VOTE

Students $3 00
Mashed Potatoes Green
Beverages
Take out orders available

65 and Over
II you are currently pay1ng for
Albuterol puffers etc call us
to f1nd out how to get your
med1ca11on covered by
1nsurance

4464

Urges you to

Adults $5 00
Turkey, Ham, Noodles

P1ke

1n the

2000 At the GallipOlis

Ferry CommunJty Center all

Help Peoples
Bank help others
Now through
November 17th tmng
1n non penshable
food for area fam1iles
m need

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE

For Sale

740-446-7283

Roller Hockey Skates

Jor Jtore Dnforrnation 44o-l14l or ~n-ll~~

•

&amp; Commerc1al

Bowman's Homecare

Spencer's

party and Dance Barn SA

baths covered front porch

one won I last long
3
Bedrooms formal hvlng room
w11h gas ftleplace fam•ly

Seremty House
serves v1ct1ms of domestiC
VIOlence
call 446 6752 or
1 800 942 9577

Beans, Slaw, Roll, Dessert ,

5 00 pm MUSIC auCtiOn

Equ1pped LOG

kttchen 3 bedrooms large
level lot w1th apple trees

appo1n1men1 call todayl #2090

•

Delong s Groom ShOp Groom1ng
All Cog Bleeds 7 40 441 t602

RON EVANS ENTERPR1SES

338· Letart Falls Nov 10

2807 SR 124 $94 900 00
Bl Level home thai consists of
4 bedrooms 3 baths hvmg
room formal d1n1ng kitchen
and mor on lho Inside
Outside lhere Ia approx S 94

closel space galore Back porch Dclached garage
15x25 lg back yard 44x 174 Need some exira
mcome Th1s home has a o ne bedroom apartment
ups l aHS w1th ou l s rde e ntrance
Shown by
auoomtmeot Only!! NO. 226

AKC Reg s.tered 4 Month 010
Pomerarvan Pup S 100 (740}2566444

www llxtureconnecttOO com

Models To Choose From

Vory wall malntalnocl 25 yr

room, modern kitchen pantry Laundry room on the
mam leve l Unfmtshed basement w/out-s td e entrance
DcautJful ongmal woodwork and doors Horne has

l

$200 Lt1ar1 WV(304)S95 3319

740-441-9896

throughoul

Ask

Give ua a call, we can

PLEASANT
HILL
ROAD.
2 00 m/1 acres
more or less Gree n
Elemen1ary Schools Some
Restnct10ns NO. 223

4TH AVENUE Need a home close 10 the schools'
Lovely 2 Slory Home 2 bedroom on lhe mam level &amp;
a Jrd on the 2n d level Home has ltvmg room dmmg

has

SKI CANADA WHISTlER BIG
WHITE Fern ie Silverstar Sun
Peaks Kimberly Sk1 BC features
the I nest sk• condos chalets &amp;
hotels •n BC ReservationS 1 888
d76 9977 Of v•sh www lk•tx: com

Top S01l Fill D1rt Bank Run
Del1vered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1 740 446-1142
Monday - Saturday

old ranch home Nice carpet

Restncted

11nc:Judle a slroll through the #2028
shopp•ng or go•ng 10
moves and the schools We are alwaye glad to
help you sell or buy
Wllh ln walktng d1stance
•
property
more tnformalton on thts
property
Ia
alao
Rental
Allen a call Ask
available

E lementary School s

Walnut lumber Kiln Dr ed Ap
proxtmately 200 Board Feet

old $250 00 10x10 cage $175 00
304-675-86' 0 "' 304-875- ' 000

BULLETIN BOARD

181Kl SECTIONAL JUST LIKE NEW Living room lully eqUipped kllchen 3 bedroome 2 balhs Cenlal alrl 112061
Approx 5 acres wllh road fronlage along Raccoon Creek and SR 325 Public waler available Nice rolling/level acreage
$t5 500 00 112071

IEniOY lhe many comfort• plua tracla available
convenloncoa of living building thai dream
town 10 lhlS 1 1/2 story All your utlitltes are ava.ilab•le
Some

Covered back

Give Allen a call •2023

you need Just a few mnes
In

Laundry room Lg

palio Slorage bu1ldmg Several fru11 lrees KIDS
YOU LL LOVE THIS LG SIDE YARD TREE
HOUSE VERY AFFORDABLE $59 900 00 shown by
appt no 290

the Are you looking for vacant

owned
live

balh"s'cF,~u''uu

b&lt;tsement w/poured walls 2 car garage All settmg on 4
acres m/l m a custom bmlt home Green Elementary

home has 2 bedrooms more or less PubliC water
(upstatrs) 1 bath hv &amp; dm available
Dnveways and
kt tchen
and culverts already present
rooms

20 s Ask lor t176 Broker land? We may have whal

rear

l .possessionll #2060

533 ARBUCKLE ROAD lnve~l tn your fulure wtth
lovely home plus plenly of room lo roam and enJOY
BEST OF BOTH From your front porch v1ew

home ~ owners

Full city lot In Galllllpalll~;
lnleresled? Give us a call
Llsllng
112026 Broker
owned

room

huntmg
areal
private retreat

Counly waler avatlable Call
and ask for #2022
lnvottmont
property Homeolloo In Guyon Twp
priced to oolll Two s1ory Ava lable In 5 acre lracls

basemen! Ask for #177
Broker owned
Affordable
rental
lnvottment
This home
offers 2 bedrooms t balh
Jiving room kllchen and full

_ __

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618

delached 24 x 24 garage plus
delached workshop &amp; shed
Walking d1s1ance to public

bedrooms 2 balh! FA K Vacant Land JUSt m1nutes
LA DR and a 2 1/2 car from lhe hosp1tal &amp; town
nganage, Calllo v.ew 1178
Approx 9 acres M/L Call
for lhe loca11on &amp; pnce
112020
Lotol Lolal Lotal From 2

and

RACINE

1-800-4!8-11990

A"
DPALACH1AN
~~ IJIUt;T..i;

2 3 Bedrooms

town 3 bedrooms newer v nyl sldtng and
shmgle roof
Aerator sept1c publiC water
Cute home tmmed1ate possesston

lus:ury lot home )'etr round Call
for our rfiC brochure or UM Pll•
Ill color CllaiOI with noor ,,.....
fot' over 60 model homa
llttp:!/www •pploa cum
' mill •pploiiJc~tynl'l nM

Umque style

ASKING $22 500

ENTERPRISE ROAD

(740)446--630S 1-SOO 291 009S

e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendraalty@dragonbbs.com

combin ation 2 alhs laundry

GalhpoUs Some restr etlan

Call today

Tappa n HI Elf clancy 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; A~r Cond t onmg
Sys te ms Free 8 Year Warranty
Sen neus Heatmg &amp; Cooling t
aoo 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

Give one of our Agents a call Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ~

MUST SELL TO SETTLE
ESTATE! privately situated
ranch slyle home close to Rto
Grande 3 bedrooms greal

bestde

M/L Just a lew m1Jes from

septtc well and electnc on s1te
and make your appointment

WYI1M •
WICk bchbt~ 7'U"

"

Work $300 Cal (740)«6-7943

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

room effect k1tchen d1nlng
area and large llv1ng room

Holzer Cl1n1c Ask for 15010
Broker Owned
Commercial property In a
prime location call for
details Ask for #5011
Thla commercial building
Ia looking for a new
business to ftll 1ts 1760 sq
ft Localed on the edge ol
town
Call
for
more

mobile

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

New &amp; Used Electric And Gas
Furnaces For Sale Cal For SiZ·
InstallatiOn
Avatlable ,
es

Sears 10 Rad at Saw W1th C&amp;bt
net &amp; Extra Blades Motor Needs

ROCCHI'S POOL
SERVICES

Can Your Believe???
$163, 000· With 2 Acres $145,

acre tracts to 6 acre tracts

SR t24 SILVER CREEK SUBDIVISION •
LOT #12· 4 50 acres wllh a pond Needs

1Th• Momen'
~ !

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS
Display Homes Wanteel for VI nyl
S•ding Rep lacemen t Windows Enclosures No Payment Until
2001 Payments Star ttng
$89 00 per month All Creel t
Qualities Caii1-800-251-Q843

tn1orma1ton

m/1 Call for your , 2018
jvieowir1g loday Ask &gt;r 1181
Room for tho whc t family Attanllon builders or

ready for lhe kids GOTTA SEE THIS HOME
TO APPRECIATEI
ASKING $112 500

llv• For

t-800-7t1-0158

VleW

2 nformatton Ask for #5012
bath full basemer and an tn For Sale
S1x lots 1n
pool to ket &gt;you cool Walters H ill Subdtvtslon
summer Re tng on 3 Call today and ask for

1n thts home that Jffers 5

Renowtion Sale
30" shower vanity top com
mode windows hOI water heater
good cond. 304-675 1865

Huge Inventory DISCount Pr ces
On Vmy l Skirtmg Doors W1nd
ows Anchors Water Heaters.
Plumbmg &amp; Electrrca l Parts Fur·
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply 740 4469416 www orvb comfbennett

tmpressed

home wnh 4 bedrooms

ILLAGE

MOe1LE HOME OWNERS

Buy Factory Otrecl
Excellent Service
Ftexlt:Me F nancmg Avatlable
Home /CommerCial Units
FREE Color Catalos

m

delalls A must see' #5007
Calling all Investors We
Cllt18l1C one story framed have a four umt apar1ment
w lh 2 bedrooms 1 bu1ldmg for sale Each
kttchen and living room apartment has 2 br s 1
a level lot Aj&gt;prox 1100 bath hvtng room &amp; eat tn
ft of ltvmg space Call k11chen Generales good
your showmg of #183

Home In Crown City lhat
has 2 bedrooms and 1 balh

1774 Cneslnut By Owner BUilt In
1997 3 Beelroom Tax Abatement
T I 2013 $69 500 00 {7 40)44629 4

the

Printer Panasonte KX 2123 COl
or $25 Zane Grey Paperback
Books 25 Books $25 (304)
895-3319

Goat m&lt;lker S25 00 OBO 304·
937 2705 or 304 937 334S

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

This ,. the place you oughl to
bel Take a peek Inside and
you II agree Roomy 1 1/2
alory home wHh fonnal hvmg &amp;
d1nlng rooms eat 1n knchen
open to large fam•Jy room wllh
fireplace 3 4 bedrooms 2 5
belhs 2 car attached garage
and
morel Immediate
possession herell2024

real

car located on F rst Ave

Grubb's Plano- Tunrng &amp; Reparrs
Problems? Need Tuned' Call The
Plano Or 740-446·452!5

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Russell D. Wood, Broker
510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH
740) 446-7101 or 1-800-585-""'•

3 mvestor or want to become

OFFICE 992-2259

LENDER

1092 Sunset Or ve Newly Ae
moleled 3 Bedroom Bnck E11cel
ent Conel t on Ca (7 40 )4 46d1t6 01 (740)446 0432

to

s ·~oo 304-675-SJS~

For FREE i.smpfe ma11 name acJ
dress ptus phone number to K1w1
Management 493 E G tmore Ad
Grove C1ty PA 16t27

SOC1Al SECUR1TY 01SAeiUTY

Power PC MacPerforma 5200CO
Computer With 2400 Color Stylewriter Printer Internet Ready/ Bu1H
In Microphone; System 7 s 11
16148t( Memory Same Kind
Used In Schools SSOO lncludrng
Programs (7.a)t-.0-2151

Gas heating stove $200 00 sega

and a shop all on 3 Gall1pohs Ask Allen for all

M Cleland 992·6191

Office

Call

$15000

so system
cos.:_order nowm 800-263-2540.
$49 for mstallation

hsh

STOP JOINT PAIN Wam rehel?

1363 EXT 200-U

ehd U4- ~ut At

FALLEN $10,000 NOW $69,000 00 (Me1gs
Co) 33441
Bashan Road
lmmed•ate
Possess1onl 1 1/2 Story home that offers
more than what meats the eyel Newer roof 4
Bedrooms dlnlnQ room k•tchen den 2
balhs hoi tub newer roof and loads morel
12069

th s home localed on Second
Ave

Old kitchen ca binet glass stan·
c•led doors 30 mches w1de 15
tnches deep great condition

DIRECT TV

(740)&lt;141 -1 982

~'9

Be ween Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob e homes
$260 $300 7'40 992 2167

Listing I Are you look1ng

DISCOVER Brochures 1 80 0•
928-7253

2217

2~~

610 Farm Equipment

AK C reo Siberian H usk~ 1 yr

Sototu e•trc se machme w1th
bUnartty and 1aQ attachment haw
vtdeo and book 1300 7A.O 992

Sonw1H Ouve Bultalo NY 1A.225
FREE InformatiOn 1 800 578

Pets for Sale

05

day Sales

Wedge Apt at 506 Burdette St
has 1 &amp; 2 br apartmen ts ava 1
able no pets 304 675 3450

32 LOCUSTSTREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446-0971
Jeanette Moore 256 1745
Patnc•a Ross
740-446·1066

men1S&lt; 1-1!00·617·3476 ext 330,

letll Checl&lt;s C 0 D VIIMCIAMXI

Real Estate General

992 371 1 TOO 1 S88 233 6694

WOOD HEALTl', INC

ERS Almos t everyone approved
With SO down\ low monthly pay-

malty $1 800 Sacr I ctng $39~ .
(FREE stockpol OR eltCIIIC Ski!·

nen

Equal Housmg ()ppOftun ty

Estate

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·

LIFETIME GUARANTEED! Nor·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

~aiiTodsy

Entertamment stand !'las lots ol
.space $100 00 3G4 773-6198

HEA\IIEST
Surg cat 5!8111
NEW" 7 PlY waterless nts .

AMAZ1NO METABILISM Break

New &amp; Used Furnnure
New 2 Piece Lwlngroom SUites ,

$100 00

AMERICA'S

COOKWARE

Trough'll lose 10..200 lbs Easy
Quick Fast Ora mat c Resu lt~:
100% Natural Doctor Recom menced
Free
Sample&amp;,

51 5 Main Street Point Pleasant

DROPPED
$4,900 00
MUST
OFFERS
IMMEDIATELVI ALL
REQUESTED Bnck ranch resllng on over 6
acre lot Ltv1ng room cozy w1th f.replace
k1tchen &amp; formal d1mng area w1th French
doors open to rear pat1o 3 bedrooms, 2
baths 2 car garage S1tualed on low traffic
no outlet street /12081

Available Now
Twm Towers now accept ng
appl cat1ons lor 1 BR
HUO subsidized apt for elderly
and handicapped EOH

r•

1Bnk Sland $1~ 304-882·2436

(304)875 1422

Computer Packard Bell CP~ :
monitor keyboard IBM prrntlr
$100 00
L shaped corner work canter

Computer System Includes Prmt·
er Scanner &amp; Programs
tO )
256-t68B

3 fish tanks with lights &amp; gravel

Mam Street Furnhure

New and Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn t&lt;anagua New
4 Piece Bedroom Suite $43~ .
New Couches $315 New Daybeds $t3S Good Useel Dress ers
And Chest 01 Drawers We S~JII
Grawt Monument~~

12x65 tra ler for rent $200 a
month &amp; $150 for depos t no
pets 740 742 2714

Real Estate General

El' h Alter 5 OQpm (74014!89068

$30000080

glass 36k4S $50 oo 304 773·
5452

Buy or sell ~i verln e AntiqUe~ ,
1124 East Man on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 or 740 992·.
1539 Russ Moore OW~l!:._

$399 Buy,_ Se_",_Trade

Tara Tow nhou se Apartments
Ve y Spac1ous 2 Bed ooms 2
Floors CA. 1 112 Bath Fully Car
pa led Adult Po ol &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo surr $365 /Mo No Pets
Lease Plus SectHity Deposit Re
Qu~red
Days 740 446 3481
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
446 0101

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
n shed aM unlurn1shed secur ty
depos t requ red no pets 740
9922.218

Maytag GE Roper Late model
Washers $75 00 Each 2 Whlfl·
pool 2 Hotpolnt Dryers $65 00

Antiques

&amp; all equipment $40 00

Maple full s ze bed mauress &amp;
hex springs chest ol dutwe••
n ghi stand desk &amp; Chair

Computer monitor 15" Ptckard
Bell $50 00 D 1 11ny1 w1ndow~~
white grids between panes of

560

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

Sa'Nmlll $3 79!5 New Suptr Lum
bermate 2000 larger capiCIIItl
more O:lt•on• manufacturer of
uwm111s ecgers and sll:ldders.

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES

$150 00 304-1195-3190

dial $25 828-438 8637

540

Calt Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

Compaq color pr nter never used

i&gt;unba~ l!:1mrt 6rnund • Page

WV

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rto.,.ed New &amp; R-h In Slocl.

740 742-2648

818-0128

Antique hand st•tched qu111 w/co~ton stuff1ng Circa 1900 t 92~ :
$350 080 o&amp;d Japanese jewelry
box &amp; other Japanese Items cnca 19A.O 1950 make oller 1500
smart page messages vo•ce &amp;

110 000 BTU

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

Combust10neer stoker coal stov!·
$500 OBO wrnter upnght ptano ;

S1rH1 (740)446 739S Or 1 888·

For Sale Rec or '"' tloned wash·
ers drye rs anc ' clgera to rs
Thompsons Appliance 3•07

Heavy duty Speed Queen dryer
S75 00 IVIIIIhrow In washer for
free needs some work 304 675·
505~

One bedroom apartment m Mid
dleport call 740 446 3091

Apartments
for Rent

Waaher S95 Dryer $95 Electric
Range S95 Freezer $95 Rel ng·
erator $95 Small Chesl Freezer
$150 Washer 4nd Dryer Set
$300 All Appl iances Guaranteed
Skaggs Appliances 76 v ne

1-888·81 B-012S

446.0008

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

F&lt;rm, (740)245-5208

washers dryers retrlgerator~,:
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Street Call 740 446 7398 ,

PRICE FELL $15,000 DO- New price $99 900
At th1s pnce this home will not LAST to LONG
Hurry &amp; call for an appotntment to v1ew th1s
attractive neat &amp; clean bnck Conveniently
located to grocery hospital school etc Lerge
s1zed hv1ng room open to formal d1mng &amp;
kitchen area laundry room, 3 bedrooms , 1 1/2
baths plus s1ze 2 car attached garage Level
easy to mamta1n lot #2053

Household
Goods

530

CIOOD USED APPLIANCES

Now Tak ng Apphcallons- 35
West 2 Bedro om Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash S3251Mo 740

Two &amp; th ee bedroom mobile
homes no pets 740 992 5858

ExceUent Condition Sola {7') &amp;
Matching Chair Plose
Alao
Matching Window Valance $175

Good Shope $100 suu In us~ :
(740)446-7874

tunity (740)446-3344

Two bedroom mob le home tn
MIClCIIeport all elect c cenlral n
S350 month 740-992 3194

Atcondllloned
Wllhert D~ra Flangts t:ltfrl·
gratora Up To 90 Oaya Gueranteedl We Sell New Mayt~g Apphancu French City Maytag ,
740-.WS· 7795

Gas Furnace

affordtbthty and location? property In 8 great
Well we have them both 1n location If you are an

REAL ESTATE

2 Un 1 Rental Prope1 ~ nco me
$575 Monthly Reduced Pr ce
Great Buy 1 $36 000 Land Con
tract (74(}]388 9946

$60 00 OBO 2 bicycles exc
cond $65 oo each 30A. 675 8888
or 843 682 2428

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

510

Houaehold
Gooda

510

Jacl&lt;son •¥OOUe· (304)&amp;75-7388_:_

P o program renters needed 1
304 736 7295
Plot Program Ren ters Needed
304 736 7295

wood burning llove

[:======~!!li!i!~:g!n~!L======

Honeysuckle Hills Apar tm ents
Located On Colonial Onve Be
hind Highway Patrol Post 1&amp;2
Bedrooms Now Availab e Rent
Starts $235/mo Low &amp; Macerate
Income Equal Housmg Opper

N1ce Clean 3 Bed room Mobile
Home lor Rent m Country
(740)256--6574

2 br garage apt 4th St Mason
$300 00 a mon $GOO 00 dep
senous 1nqu res 304 675 1911

Free

S • SO 00 OBO 1 cord of wood

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V Uage Manor and
A vers•de APartments In Middle
port From $273 $336 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun lies

For Rent (740)

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Appl lancea

Household
Goods

(740)446-1519

For Sate! Rent 2 Bed ooms Pr1
vate lor Near Graham Schoo
Road $200/mo Deposnl Refer
ence (740) 446-7754

Bed com Modern Apartment
No Pe ts Wa ter Fu mshed $225/
mo $100 Oepos t (740)446
3617

510

Oepos•t Need References (7&lt;40}

Furmsh$0 2 3 or 4 Rooms
Clean No Pets No Smok1ngl Ret
ere nee/ Oeposll
Requ red

Beaut1lul River V1ew Ideal For 1
Or 2 People References Depos t
No Pets Foster Tra11er Park 740
441 0181

440

MER CHANDI SE

Etll c ency apl 1 br ret &amp; dep
no pets 304 675 5162

3 BeCroom 14x70 Trailer $275/
Month Deposit Lease And Ref
erences Aequ1red Located On
Uncoln P1ke No Pets (740) 4464993

Moo e Home
446 1279

5, 2000

Mobtla Home Space Take S 12 I

Dr•ve
SON lrom
ESTATES
$289 to52
$370
WeS1wood
Walk to
snop &amp; mo\1 es Call 740 446
2568 Equal Hous.ng Opportuntty

~ BeCroom 2 Baths Remolded
fl.:o Pet&amp; JnsiCe $350/mo $350

large 5 bedroom two bath house
lo rent or sale on la nd contract n
M ddteport call 740 992 7872 af
ter6 OOpm

420

Spac ous 3BR / 2BA Doublew de
Only 4 Lett $296/mo WAC Cal
Now 1 888 736 3332

460 Space for Rent

3 rms 1 ba small apt water I
neat tu rn1shed you pay etec
S225 00 a rnon-+- $225 00 dep. no
::-::-:----:---:---::-- 1po1S 30+675 1:ISS
2 Bedroom Large ltvmg Room
And Omette All Electrc A.nd Air 5 br upstairs apt 1/2 mile !rom
Verv Ntce No Pets ~740)446- Century Alum In Ravenswood
2003 (740)446--1409
$375 00 a mon + cep 304 273
3115
2 BR Tra11er Appro~; mately 10
Miles From Gall pols Route 7 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
South $300/mo Reference De
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK

Gle'lwtod $300 a mon •$300
dep has new washer &amp; dryer
slove &amp; relrl(lg 304 576 9991

WVALANO

Apartments
for Rent

2 Bedroom In Town $300 Oe
pas 1 $300 Month (740).461151 Or (740)446-1293

posil No Pets (740)256-1568
Mobile home lor rent 2 br 1 ba at

R•tchte Co wva
Recreation laM
Getaway From Tne Huslle Ana
Bustle And En1oy The Feel1ng
like You re Gomg Back In T me
Roughmg It ltke The P1oneers
W th Natul8 5 Tracts Avatlable
Rang ng From 27ac 97ac As
LOI'I As $600 An Acre NO Ae
st r ct ons Cal Us Today For
FREE MAPS
Anthony Land Company ltd
1 800-213-8365
www ak:land com

Sunday, November

440

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

lot spaces available Call 740
365 2434

2 houses n Mtddleport 1 &amp; 2
bedroom ca 1740 992 5231

l m ted Or No Cred f? Govern
rnenl Bank F nan~;.e Only At Oak
wooel In Barboursv l!e wv 304

7t 14x70 mobile home remo
deled all electr c 2 bedroom 2
bath stove &amp; lr 1g must move
must see 740 367 0119 day
740 992 6677 evenmg

959 0006

3 91 Acr es W th Beauhlul Homro
S le Restncted level With Road
Fr on tage And Great Ne•ghbor
hood Green! C ty Sch C'I?Is
{740]245-9007

(740)&lt;146-3093

$125 000 304 743 0719

BANKRUPTCY

!&lt;' 000 (740)S33-1275

Don 1 Pay 8 g C ry PriCes Star By
oakwood Homes In uall1pol s
01'1 o For The Best Deals

C1vll war era home completely
restorec on 32 acres Asht on
area 180 additional 145 acres for

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LIC ENSED/
BONDED COR RECT/REMOVE

CASH

7295

740 992 5043

303

INSTANT

call 304 882 3656

p11ances cia gas heat w w car
pet dr veway large !lat lot 929
Hysell St M ddleport $38 000

Con sol dat on to S200 000 Bad
Cred t No Credit OK Cred•t
Cards Mortgages Etc Global
F nanc1al Servtces Toll Free tor
lnlormat on 1 888 604 1444 Ext

BAD CREDIT

3 br 2 ba on choiCe lot 304 7:l6

8 rooms new storm wmdows ap

erne1

CASH LOANS

~fo

2 112 Corner lots In Waterloo
Etectr1c Pule &amp; Watlll Tap

1997 Skyhne l•x70 2 br 1 ba
all e1ec lut appl ances 1nclud
ed 2 112 ton Inner thetm heal
pump ...,, ale shmg ed root &amp; un
Oer pinning 304 675-6678

Oliver Rd off Lucus Lane m Pt
Pleasant cell 304 895 3781

www debtc:cs; org Call 1 800.328
851 0 8lCt 29

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Mobile Homes
for Sale

lull

FREE OEeT CONSOLI04TION basement 11 Ox 138 corner lot
Appl calion w/serv1ce Reduce
payments to 65, !!C ASH IN

WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

K2

Mach One S1ze

446-1215

6

�•

•
Page

D4 • 6unbap ll1mrt -6rnnntl

230

Professional
Services

310 Homes for Sale
3 br ranch style house

320

CENTIVE

OFFERII

LIVE

AMA.ZING

loa"" . . . _
32 1 acres wJ house several out
bullcflngs 1/2 m le trom town lor

PSVCHIC

more

READINGS LET OUR PHYSICS
ANSWER YOUR OUESTIONSII
' •oo 950 2209 ' ass 297 S239
18. $3 99/Mm www astroruo

$2000 $5000

Buy A Ne~o~; Home Wtth No Down
Payment? We F nance land
Sept•c Water And Electric Call

(740)446-3583

Doub es S ngtes Repo s A.nd
used Homes Buy Today And B
In Bv The Weekend (7 40 )446 -

Commerc all Rental Property For
Sale Two Propert es On Eastern
Avenue Nea Wal Mart &amp; One
Property Near Eastern Avenue
W1lr Sell Toge ther Or Separate
Two Un ts Currently Rented &amp;
One Needs Work S35 000 &amp;Up
Se110us lnqu res Only {740)4415118 leave Messagt!

L4WSU1TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA R4TING 90 1SO DAYS 1
688 8 11 0902

3218

DRIVE A UTILE SAVE A LOTI
E Z F nanc1ng
Smgle Wldes Double W des
Hurry
(304)722 7148
F1nal Day s Nat10nw1de Inventory
Reduchon (3041 736-3409

For Sate By Owner 4 Bearoom In
Cadmus 2 Stones Pond All Ap
pl ances 40 Acres New In t 993
W•U Separate (7 40) 256-9 186

FREE GRANT MONEY!!! Never
Repay Business Eelucahon Home
Purchase/Repaus DetHS Travel
Research Wr ters/Art sts Medl
cal ana Mo fe 1 800 242 0363
E:..t
9037
www grants dol
oom com

For Sale or Re nl 3 bedroom 2
Bath lR DR Utlly Room W th
Aop l ances 5 rru tes from A o
$350 mo {7 40)24~966 7

1304 )633 7238
Ho use For Sale Need:; Some
WorK (740)245-5662

Homeowners w th Cred t Wornes
may now qu ck y qual ty lor oans
Stonecas11e s a Cltrect teMer that
can tell you over th e phone aM
w thout obllgat onl Call 1 800 700
1242 Ext 658

From Rent To Own low Oown
Payment low Monthly Paym ent
Catt t 800 948 5678

N•c:e 3 br 2 ba ranch style
nome on 2/3 acre 20 m n lrom
Tovota Plant on Greer Ad
S55 000 304 675-2864

Need Well And Sephc? No Down
Payment ReqUired large Selec
ton 01 Homes Call t 800 948

NORTH CAROLINA Where the
Blue A Clge meets the Smokes
Homes cabms acreage ots
!arms creek &amp; laketront CAROLI
NA MOUNTAIN HOMES Rea
Estate 1 aoo 747 7322 E~tt 8
cmhteam com

lOWEST

RATE CHECK OUT THE REST"
Up to $500 INSTANTLY! 1 117
EARL'I' PAY licfcc70036
NEED CASH? Have an annUity or
structu red sel!lement? We pur
chase them and pay las t De
pendable Oldest m the business
Call Seltlement Cap tal 1 800

320

567S

PH 0 T 0 G RAP H-Y
Man St Photogfaphy
51 ManSI
Now open lor busmess
Wedd ngs
Senors
Fam ly Portrarts
Call lor an appo ntment
304 675 7279

736 3409

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

N•ce 95 Skylme 3 br 2 ba VI
nyl s d ng sh ngled roof 6
wa ll s Velec relr g rang e 304
675 6055
14x70 3 bedroom Used Homes
Available Call 740 385 9621
14~70 three bedroom/ two bath
$236 65 pe r month w th only
$1100 down Ca ll 1800837

TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

3238

No Fee Unless We W nr
1 888 582 3345

t 971 W ndsor 3 Bedroom De
luxe 12x65 Good Shape Bath
roomNeeds Work $2000 As Is
Must Be Moveel (740)446-25 17
1979 Fa rmon l Bayv ew 141170 3
Bed oom 1 112 Bath Open LA
AM KitChen Appl ances lnctud
ed Cent ral Arr AI Electr c

$7000 (740)256-6165
AU real estate advertising m
this newspaper IS sublect to
the Federal Fair Housrng Ac1
of 1968 which makes It 1llegal
to advertrse any preference
UmltaMn or dlscnm nation
based on race cOlor religion
se~~: lam llal status or national
origin or anv Intention to
make any such pre19fence
bm1tatfon or discrrmlnatlon
This newspaper w 11 not
knowingly accep!
adven sements tor real estate
wh Ch s In vlolallon of the
aw Our readers are hereby
mlormed that all dwellings
adver!1sed 1n this newspaper
are ava table on an equal
opportunity basis

Lookmg To Buy A New Home '
Don t Have Land? We Do u Hurry
Only 10 Lots Lett 304 736 7295

PreverH foreclOsure w thOu!
bankruptcy Why move? PriVate
Realty Fund ng recorded 1nklrma
liOn 1 888 809 2580 or
www Clarkl nk com 'heiiJ
Tw o acre lot lor sale w th water
and sewer on Cremeans Rd 740.
742 2803

Oepos 1
(740)441-0!58 3
(740)256-6718 In Country

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent

MILL ENN IU M 2001 Rent Buster
16.00 3 Oedroom 2 bath re
duceel to $21 900 As low as
$195 a month nctudes del very
block and level ng sk 11 ng and
more Check us out were daal
ng Coles MObile Homes US Ao
ute SOE Athens OH 4570t 740
592 1972 0 1 800 466 4687
Murdock s Factory Outlet 01
Homes INC
I 64 E~tll 47 Cross lanes WV
Cal to tree 1 866 881 885
On y 6 model homes tell (28x80
$49 888 (2 8x64
$48 926)
(28x60
47 843 ) (28x56
$44 766 ) ( 14x8 Q
25 772 J
(14x80
$25 772) (14x80
26 880) all pr ces I ee de se
up skHI ng ale rJStaHed and
concrete foote s
New 14 f ~ de $499 down only
$199 per mon call now 1 800
691 6777
New 16 It w de $4 99 per mon
only $270 per men call now 1
800 691 6777

1980 Bay V1ew 14x70 3 Bed
room 1 12 Bath F rep ace 2 New
Decks Oul Build ng On 3f10 Of
An Acre G aham School Ad
$22 000 {7'40)44 1-0868

New double w1de 3 br 2 ba
$998 00 down on y $295 per
mon call now 1 800 691 6777

1993 Brandywme t4x70 Mob te
Home 2 Bed oom 2 Ful Baths
Newly Remolded Master Ba th
La ge liv ng And O.n ng Areas
K•tc:hen Appliances Are Included
All Electr c W th Central A r New
Carpet Throughout home Front
And Rear Steps Are Also nclud
ad Ready For Immed iate Pos
sess on Ask ng $16 500 OBO
Cal {740)446-4548

$499 Down low Monthly
Payments
Cal Now (304)722 7140

S1ng e W de Blow Out•

HURRY

3 Beoroom Home In Centenary
On Route 141 $500 Month Rei
e ences &amp; Oepos 1 Requ re d
(7 40) 446-6566
3 Bedroom House Close to Town
{7401441 1519

4 br 2 112 ba fam1ly room w th
I eplace I vmg room &amp; 2 ca r ga
rage $700 00 rent plus depos 1
3 tl
2 ba lvng room and uth
ty room $400 00 rent plus dep
For more mlorma11on ca ll ERA
Town &amp; Country Rea Estate
Broker 304 675 5548 and ask for
Beckte
5 roo m ho-t.~se wi d hook up no
pets 304 675 5162

Wau d You l ke To Owl"' Your
Own Home Instead Of Rent ng?
Spec al F nanc ng AJa lab e Ca
(740)446-3570

14s 1Rs Wldet Sl25fmo $100
446--&lt;1175

t
Oll1ce space In Pomeroy bust
ness district 740 992 6556 or

740 992 5827

Three bedroom house 164 1 lin
coin He ghts basement garage &amp;
sun room lease and depos 1 re
Qu red 7'40 667 3966

Mobile Homes
for Rent

(304)675-6679
Co on1a1 Park Apartments (lor
marly VIl lage Green A.parments)
2 bedrooms total electric ap
pi ances turn shed Jaund y room
faCilitieS and close to schoo ap
pi catrons available at ofhce 740

Henry E Cleland Jr . . . . . .

...... ,, .., . . . ..

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms For ee osed
Homes From $199 /Mo 4°o Down
For L st ngs &amp; Pa yment Oeta Is
800 319 3323 Ext 1709

Sherrl L Hart

l 1/2 story house on 5 acres on
Sanclh I Ad
3 br 2 ba tlanel I n1sh&amp;C cathe
dral ce I ng n great room must
see to apprec ate Opt ons add1
t1onal 37 5 acres w th house Re
a ty 304 576 3056

Kathleen

t!l'

--

vtew

the

bedroom 1 112 balh home
loday #186
B'!~''!llt~l Cape Cod home
3 bedrooms 2 balhs

two

basement

G}

--

• 992·2259
• 742·2357

..... 992·2259

mtl G tve Allen a call

one check lh1s outl ThiS
lwo story bnck bU1ld1ng has
several one and two
bedroom apartmenls
rental

mcome

stluated on almost one acre

Pnced to sell Ask for #182
Make this house your

3 bedroom ranch 1 ac e corner
prope ty great toea on may con
s der tand cont act 740 992
6833

OF

CHESTER·

"move tn home!

Absolulely

up and move m All appliances
I~~::;:~~·~,

I

electnc wtth C/A one story
1 vmyl s1d1ng huge kttchen w th
sooo many cabtnets large rear decking off

d1nmg room 3 bedrooms 2 full balhs Large
utility room Spactous closets Full basement
that is part fimshed and would make excellent
fam ily room Property has an attached two
car garage and a separate garage/workst1op

I lhese amemltes and

IS THE ONE

Everythtng I ke

Ou1et settmg ranch type home 3 bedrooms
bath equ1pped k tchen hardwood floors ntce
hvtng room front stttmg porch all 1n good
New kttchen cab nets satelhte
condttlon
dish washer &amp; dryer 1 77 acres of nearly

level ground

ASKING $55,000

approx1mately t 2

acres of Iandi Very ntce yard all mowed and

Located

ASKING $20,000
NEW LISTING • POMEROY· Here IS a cule
llltle 3 bedroom home Jncludmg equ•pped
kttchen full basement wtth Aec room ca rpet
and hardwood rl oo rs throughout
1 Car

l

garage &amp; off s1ree1 park1ng ASKING $35 000
NEW LISTING

POMEROY

frame home on H gh Street

f

wrap around decking

P1ct up dt1 f1r.1tl)'

j 1nd pt IWI)' ..,
~""'~
,f )'0\lf YCI) 0\lilft, 101 •11

-, c1bln Or lfvt In I

wv 2ll71

Just m1nu1es from

REPUCED TO $23,900

1c•,ur1try, 65

Farm m the

acres of ground

Approxtma1e y

tn hay land fenctng ready for your cattle
ponds 2 barns shed and olher butldtngs
gas to house plus small royal! es from otl
gas wells Older 1 1/2 story v1nyl Sided
house Wlthtlots of remodeling

1 1/2 slory slone/bnck home 3

bedrooms bath modern k1tchen d n ng area
separate aundry ortg tnal wood work new
garage porches shed garden area &amp; many

olher fealures

ASKING $39 900

OAK GROvE ROAD • Approx malely 17 064
acres

Real Estate General _ _

Florida

beaut1ful country s1de getung ready to put the1r coats

color on and watch the hsh JUmpmg tn the pond
tn and vtew the hvmg room damng room and a
beautifully custom designed kitchen w/lots of Smtih
cabmets Ceramic tiled floor A pnvate bedroom su1te &amp;

bath on the marn floor 2 more bedrooms on the
level There could be a 4th bedroom 3 full

basement

Pr ced

tn

You Can Nol Bulll ThtS Home for lhe ASKING PRI CE
Shown by appmntmenr
NEW LISTIN(] Cozy 3 Bedroom ranch Am1ds1 a
wooded 1 03 acre m/1 Secluded &amp; pnvale Ltvmg

room,eat m k ttchen

Buy 11 rental property or from town are 35 acres
Home

has

2 more

Several ntce bulldtng Slles on stte

ASKING $24,000

or

less

tn

Clay

1 bath llvtng Townsh1p Ca I and ask for
kitchen Ask lor #2027
Broker owned

NEW LISTING· Vaciljlj
Twp w1th a be~iiW

res m / 1 Green
er y near the newest home

developm ent Pnced to sell

We have aav8"ral 5

Corner of FAIRFIELD
CHURCH ROAD, AND
PLEASANT HILL
ROAD
2 81 acres m/1

Green

each

wllh 2 bedrooms and 2 lrontage
comforts Holzer

lot

Some Restncltons NO 22

2?ed ~~, 1~ee,

Hosplta

IMPROVEMENTS GALORE!
roomy 3 bedroom 2
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED outl Sparldtng raised rancn Neat
bath home Situated on large
Brick/VInyl sided
bt level w•th lois ol updates L1v1ng
1 079 acre lreed lol Ltvlng
overstzed hvtng room &amp; formal room .famrly room kitchen room kttchen famtly room
d1ntng area eat tn kitchen wllh newer oak cablnels &amp; laundry double car attached
fam1ly room wtth ftreplace ceram•c 111e floor1ng deck off garage and morel Pr cacy
extra storage space 1 car d•mng area 2 full baths fence
surrounds
above
bullt·tn garage; mce lreed attached 1 car garage t6 x ground
pool
Nicely
concrete dnve Asktng 32
swlmm•ng
pool
&amp; landscaped Lei us show 11 lo
&gt;."'~,v~•v and requestng offers! detached 30 x 30 garage so you ll2082
1
much morel
You II
be

ASKING $130 00

I !mn1~~L~I!'~~

halp

SKI WHISTLER BIG WH ITE
Fernie Stlverstar Sunpeall:s
Ape~ Kimberly Ski BC features
the ltnest sk condos chalets &amp;
hotels 1n BC Ae&amp;arva t ons 1 688
676-9977 or \IISI1 www ildbc com
CLAIM DENIED') We sptctahze
In Appeals and Hearings FREE
CONSULTATION Benefit Team
Serv ces Inc Toll free 1 888

S36-4052

WANT A COMPUTER? But no
cash? No creCit bK• Slow crecm
OK• 0 Down laptops available
Reestablish your cred II Call
now!• 1 888 247 38t8

WAREHOUSE FIXTURES Pallel
Radung Badtroom Shelvtng
Mezzan.ne Corweyor (Powered
Gravrty And Belted) Call 800

939 3233

deck

Your
own
here qutck

PRIVATELY
LOCATED
CONTEMPORARY
Home

Immaculate bl level consiSting
of livtng room d1ntng area ~'""' '
A
G
kttchen 3 bedrooms ntce
PRICE
ask1ng
$18 000 00 2
famtly room and large laundry
room and garage Rear deck bedrooms mobile home w1th
and fenced tn lawn Lots of ntce s1zed screened m porch
updales on th1s home Expect situated on mce lot Storage
shed w tth covered pat10 area
a big price I Not a b•l 112073
overlooktng Raccoon Creek
N1ce place to come to on
weekends or JUSt s1mply li ve

Sitting on over 2 acres Lots of
roorn on the tnstde tool large

hv1ng room 20 x 25 wllh 16
master bedroom &amp;
balh 1n loft area 3 add111onal
bedrooms &amp; 2 baths family

cethng

room

8 24 x 70 upstairs concrete

block and baked enamel
melal siding use for slorage
commerctel or convert Into
apartmenls The polenl1al 1s
unlimited Building sites Give
us a lelephone call loday for
more delalls 12087
1 1/2 slory
151588 SR 14 ,
homo
complete
wllh
3
bedrooms living room kilchen
covered front porch blacktop
drive delached garage 12034

looking to purchase a home bedrooms

lhal has quahly lhroughout
Low ma•nlenance brick ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeled
formal living room step saving
kllchen family room with
fireplace Over 2 000 sqft
living space Allached 2 car
garage 2 acres lnground
pool barn &amp; shed 12050

lvtng

laundry

2

level

deck1ng attached garage
Shed barn and more' #2096

all year around 11209Bc
2 LOTS ONE PRICE $14 500
Each Jol be&gt;ng approx
x 66x 166
water
elactnc &amp;
70 mob1le home with 2 sewage
ava1lable
N1ce
bedrooms and bath SIOrage build1ng lois llal easy to mow
bul\dtng with covered pallo &amp; 12079
d ec k o verlook 'n g Raccoon PRICE DROPPED
TO
THE HARD To
c
k
Asking
$19 000
4
fenced roll1ng acres Road
ree
'
$4 ,900 00
Jusl nol your
frontage along lwo roads 50 ll208 9b
1yp1cal ranch Try this cule a
x 70 multiple use bU&lt;id 1ng Wllh LOOK NO FURTHER n your frame on lor S1Z9
3

LETS
HAVE
YOUR
ATTENTION PLESEI Owner
has JUSt dropped the pnce on

lhls home to $34 900 001 And
wanls your offer 1mmed1telyl
Neat charm1ng home tn town
3 bedrooms fam tly room
•
d f
1tv1ng rovm
covere
rant
porch and more 12059
100

room

Cherry Rd

1 1/2

story v1nyl s1ded home at the

kllchen bath large detached
2 car garage 12075
GREAT RETREAT all year
rund Quiet country setting
wllh frontage along Raccoon
1994 Home wllh relaJ&lt;tng
overs1zed screened In deck 3
Bedrooms 2 full baths living
room &amp; dln1ng room nloe lot
delached shed &amp; sheller area
with balh &amp; deck overlooking
Raccoon Creek #2089

edge of Gallipolis w1lh an
excellent v1ew Uvtng room
k11Chen 2 bedrooms and
morel #2084
INCOME
PRODUCING
PROPERlY Lei the rent
lrom the 2 mobile homes lhat
are Included with lhe sale of
lhls 4 bedroom home pay the
mortgage payments Nics
s1zed lol Call tor complela
liSting $84,900 00 N2D78

MEIGS COUNTY
C~e~l Lemley 742·3171

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per tOO 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fmlngs In StOCk

acres with a stocked pond

More call lor complele 11 s11ngl
112078

lawn furn ture 5 cushioned
cha•rs wrth glass top table &amp; um
brella $100 00 call 304 675 6887
leave message

Jackson OhiO 1 800 537 9528

550

•

Fun Blooded Rat Tamer Pups
Has HaC! First ShOtS Ver~ Nice

(740)256-1997

LOWER HEATING COSTI
HEATING
COST SA ID TO
DOUBLE THIS WINTER\ Re
place Olel Gas GuZ.ZIE!r w th
Ama na s 95% Hrghest EUtc1ency
Gas Furna ces And Heat Pumps
Free Est mates II 'r'ou Oon 1 Call
Us We Both Lose 1 (7 40 )446

6308 ' 800 29 ' 0098
New And Used Steel Steel
Beams P pe Flebar For Concrete
A I S•zes &amp; lengths l&amp;l Scrap
Metals
(7 40 )446-7300
Or

(740)446-3368

Steel Buildings New Must Sell
40x60~; 12 was $17 500 now
$10 971 50x100x16 was $31 500
now $19 990 70x150x16 was
S59 990 now $42 990 80lt200xl6
was $94 500 now S59 990
t 800 4065126

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg rabb t Beagles sue s
grand rabbit champion shots I
wo rmed ready $150 00 hrm 740
446 3615

STEEL BUI LDING SI Forced to
I Qu date three 25x30 30~40
45xt40 Sttll crated / factor y d
rect•t 1 800 462 7930 x 34

2806
Now reelevlng tobacca 111 1ale

Nov 2oth New Farmers Tobacco
Warehoust ~ pley Oh o cat! 1
888 844 4365 ask for floor man
ager Orv Ita Whalen or Tim Trapp
or phone Ed•son Mayes 304
675 1858

630

Poodles 2 vears standard le
male stlver {ttlle toy pupp1as 7
w~s AKC 74D-667 3404

Hor~es boarded 150 lull board
stalled 100 pastured gram led
twtee daly H O 388 8806 anyt1me
weekends after 6 00 weekdays

Walker Coor Dog Pups 8 W~ks
Old $ 100 Each (740)446 4261
Ask Jor Derek

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Pumpktn&amp; Corn Maze Puzzle at
Taylors Berry Patch 2864 Kerr
Ad Open Saturdays Noon 7 00

PM (740) 245 9047

Livestock

1 112 Vear Old Colt Belg1um
Mate $500 (740)256-9306

RegtSiered Pu rebred 3 Year Old
Umous•n 81,111 Double Black &amp;
Double Polled (740)256-651 0
S x Month Old Po ll ed Hereford
He~te r For Sale parants Reg is
terM $500 (7A.0~446-1282

640

Hay

&amp;Grain

Straw Bright W1re T1e Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume D1s
count Ava ilable Hentage Farm

(304)675 sn•
TRANSPORTATION

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lmtels etc Claude Winters
A o Grande OH Call 1•0 245
5121

560

New ld . . 325 two row nanow
corn p1cket $3500 740 7•2

Mystic Poms Reopemng an~
Dreeo dog groom ng ava1lab le
Also show quality ano pet Poms
avatlable tor ~ale 740 949 3416

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Building
Supplies

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems w1th
your dnvmg record, DUI's
speed1ng tickets etc
Same Day SA-22's 1ssued
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960

SPAS
SALE SALE SALE
Pnce Reduction On All
Spas In Stock F1ve

Public Welcome
Gall1aCo
Conservation Club
meetmg
Nov 8, 2000
Dmner served at
Palom1no Appaloosa
quarter horse
7 yr old mare
Excellent tra1l horse
Call
245-0610
Sacred Heart Church
Bazaar Pomeroy
Thur Nov 9th
D1nner starts at 4 30
Creamed baked chtcken or
ham w1th homemade
noodles, dessert Included
Adults $6 00 Ch1ldreen
$3 00 Fancy stand cake
stand, raffle, ch1ldren s
games door pnzes

610 Farm Equipment
CAT 04H $42 000 45 Foot Tool
Traile r $1500 65 Foot E.11tended
Tra ler $3500 M sc CAT 215
Hoe Buckets Plate Temp That
F IS 416 Hoe $3500 MISC Steel
Beams 2000 Gallon Fuel Tank
W th ElectriC Pump $1200 550
Fuel Tank W th Gas Pump 2000
Gallon Water Tank $550 Jack
hammers A r&lt;lt Its Mise hand
Tools Concrele Buckets Con
crete Blanke ts Cable Sling &amp;
ChOkers (740)643-2916
John Deere model 50 1954 new
rear I res runs good $1 800 00
304-895 3364 or 304 895 3441

and shrubs
Sells
$55 000 00 #209t

lor

HOME more

Benefit for

J1m

K1ng a v1ctlm

of termmal cancer Benefit·
Bob

&amp; Margaret

'

room kttchen and laundry
Nice
soltd
home
w th
character
To
make
an

than

meets the eye here! G~at
room consist ng of kitchen
wtth custom made ca~rnets

llvtng roomand dining 2 full
rear deck large delached
pole garage &amp; m1Sc sheds
Thts ts JUst for starters
come and see the rest

#2086

Medicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other
breathing med1ca110n b1lled
to Med1care Save money
Free Home Delivery Call

710

Autos for Sale

SO DOWN CARS' As low as $29/
mo Pollee mpounds aM repos
sess1ons 24 mos 019 9 % For
I stmgs call 800 719 300 t e11t
A010
~ ~
1968 Camara Ra ly Super Sport
Runs Good $6 000 Serous In
qures Only (740)256-6422
198? Chevaue runs gooct $350
740 992 2217
1986 Cavalie r 2 Door AutomatiC
30 To 35 t.·111es per Gallon Ttres
Exce llent Good Work Ca r

$750 00 (740)3SS 8133 No Sun

Ch1cken noodle dinner,
dnnks etc Donat1ons
apprec1ted 949-2828 or
843 -5349

M&amp;D PAVING
Dnveways, Parkmg Lots,
Res1dent1al

Contact Enc Blackburn

(740) 339-0194 or
•
•
(740) 446-2422
•
•
'i=====:::=::r~""JII "

PURPLE TURTLE

Children's clothes

&amp;

g1fts

Now Open

740-446-7283

Lafayette Mall Gallipolis

Day Dreams
&amp; Night
Things
Celebrating
4 great
years &amp;
Many more
to come!
CHII DINNER
November 7 al the Mtddleport
Masbmc Temple from
11 00amto600pm
Sponsored by Masomc BU1Id1ng
Commtttee $3 00 per meal

Community Not1ce
The GallipoliS Ferry Akzo
Notiel Community Act1on
Panel (C A P) W1llhold the1r
monthly meet1ng at

6

Gallia County
Gun Club Annual
Turkey Shoot
Sunday,
Nov. 5, 2000
10:00 am-??

Stationary &amp;Trap
Food &amp; Prizes
Open to the
public
New Location

on
Monday 11/6/00

Insurance Plus
Agencies
w1ll be convemently
located at

6 00

p m on Monday November

1086 Jackson

Interested part1es are
anv1ted to attend

Turkey-Ham D1nner Sunday
Nov 5 11 00·2 00 at
Southern H1gh School

Spnng Valley Plaza
(Next to Fam1ly Dollar)

Ladles VFW Aux

VOTE

Students $3 00
Mashed Potatoes Green
Beverages
Take out orders available

65 and Over
II you are currently pay1ng for
Albuterol puffers etc call us
to f1nd out how to get your
med1ca11on covered by
1nsurance

4464

Urges you to

Adults $5 00
Turkey, Ham, Noodles

P1ke

1n the

2000 At the GallipOlis

Ferry CommunJty Center all

Help Peoples
Bank help others
Now through
November 17th tmng
1n non penshable
food for area fam1iles
m need

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE

For Sale

740-446-7283

Roller Hockey Skates

Jor Jtore Dnforrnation 44o-l14l or ~n-ll~~

•

&amp; Commerc1al

Bowman's Homecare

Spencer's

party and Dance Barn SA

baths covered front porch

one won I last long
3
Bedrooms formal hvlng room
w11h gas ftleplace fam•ly

Seremty House
serves v1ct1ms of domestiC
VIOlence
call 446 6752 or
1 800 942 9577

Beans, Slaw, Roll, Dessert ,

5 00 pm MUSIC auCtiOn

Equ1pped LOG

kttchen 3 bedrooms large
level lot w1th apple trees

appo1n1men1 call todayl #2090

•

Delong s Groom ShOp Groom1ng
All Cog Bleeds 7 40 441 t602

RON EVANS ENTERPR1SES

338· Letart Falls Nov 10

2807 SR 124 $94 900 00
Bl Level home thai consists of
4 bedrooms 3 baths hvmg
room formal d1n1ng kitchen
and mor on lho Inside
Outside lhere Ia approx S 94

closel space galore Back porch Dclached garage
15x25 lg back yard 44x 174 Need some exira
mcome Th1s home has a o ne bedroom apartment
ups l aHS w1th ou l s rde e ntrance
Shown by
auoomtmeot Only!! NO. 226

AKC Reg s.tered 4 Month 010
Pomerarvan Pup S 100 (740}2566444

www llxtureconnecttOO com

Models To Choose From

Vory wall malntalnocl 25 yr

room, modern kitchen pantry Laundry room on the
mam leve l Unfmtshed basement w/out-s td e entrance
DcautJful ongmal woodwork and doors Horne has

l

$200 Lt1ar1 WV(304)S95 3319

740-441-9896

throughoul

Ask

Give ua a call, we can

PLEASANT
HILL
ROAD.
2 00 m/1 acres
more or less Gree n
Elemen1ary Schools Some
Restnct10ns NO. 223

4TH AVENUE Need a home close 10 the schools'
Lovely 2 Slory Home 2 bedroom on lhe mam level &amp;
a Jrd on the 2n d level Home has ltvmg room dmmg

has

SKI CANADA WHISTlER BIG
WHITE Fern ie Silverstar Sun
Peaks Kimberly Sk1 BC features
the I nest sk• condos chalets &amp;
hotels •n BC ReservationS 1 888
d76 9977 Of v•sh www lk•tx: com

Top S01l Fill D1rt Bank Run
Del1vered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1 740 446-1142
Monday - Saturday

old ranch home Nice carpet

Restncted

11nc:Judle a slroll through the #2028
shopp•ng or go•ng 10
moves and the schools We are alwaye glad to
help you sell or buy
Wllh ln walktng d1stance
•
property
more tnformalton on thts
property
Ia
alao
Rental
Allen a call Ask
available

E lementary School s

Walnut lumber Kiln Dr ed Ap
proxtmately 200 Board Feet

old $250 00 10x10 cage $175 00
304-675-86' 0 "' 304-875- ' 000

BULLETIN BOARD

181Kl SECTIONAL JUST LIKE NEW Living room lully eqUipped kllchen 3 bedroome 2 balhs Cenlal alrl 112061
Approx 5 acres wllh road fronlage along Raccoon Creek and SR 325 Public waler available Nice rolling/level acreage
$t5 500 00 112071

IEniOY lhe many comfort• plua tracla available
convenloncoa of living building thai dream
town 10 lhlS 1 1/2 story All your utlitltes are ava.ilab•le
Some

Covered back

Give Allen a call •2023

you need Just a few mnes
In

Laundry room Lg

palio Slorage bu1ldmg Several fru11 lrees KIDS
YOU LL LOVE THIS LG SIDE YARD TREE
HOUSE VERY AFFORDABLE $59 900 00 shown by
appt no 290

the Are you looking for vacant

owned
live

balh"s'cF,~u''uu

b&lt;tsement w/poured walls 2 car garage All settmg on 4
acres m/l m a custom bmlt home Green Elementary

home has 2 bedrooms more or less PubliC water
(upstatrs) 1 bath hv &amp; dm available
Dnveways and
kt tchen
and culverts already present
rooms

20 s Ask lor t176 Broker land? We may have whal

rear

l .possessionll #2060

533 ARBUCKLE ROAD lnve~l tn your fulure wtth
lovely home plus plenly of room lo roam and enJOY
BEST OF BOTH From your front porch v1ew

home ~ owners

Full city lot In Galllllpalll~;
lnleresled? Give us a call
Llsllng
112026 Broker
owned

room

huntmg
areal
private retreat

Counly waler avatlable Call
and ask for #2022
lnvottmont
property Homeolloo In Guyon Twp
priced to oolll Two s1ory Ava lable In 5 acre lracls

basemen! Ask for #177
Broker owned
Affordable
rental
lnvottment
This home
offers 2 bedrooms t balh
Jiving room kllchen and full

_ __

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618

delached 24 x 24 garage plus
delached workshop &amp; shed
Walking d1s1ance to public

bedrooms 2 balh! FA K Vacant Land JUSt m1nutes
LA DR and a 2 1/2 car from lhe hosp1tal &amp; town
nganage, Calllo v.ew 1178
Approx 9 acres M/L Call
for lhe loca11on &amp; pnce
112020
Lotol Lolal Lotal From 2

and

RACINE

1-800-4!8-11990

A"
DPALACH1AN
~~ IJIUt;T..i;

2 3 Bedrooms

town 3 bedrooms newer v nyl sldtng and
shmgle roof
Aerator sept1c publiC water
Cute home tmmed1ate possesston

lus:ury lot home )'etr round Call
for our rfiC brochure or UM Pll•
Ill color CllaiOI with noor ,,.....
fot' over 60 model homa
llttp:!/www •pploa cum
' mill •pploiiJc~tynl'l nM

Umque style

ASKING $22 500

ENTERPRISE ROAD

(740)446--630S 1-SOO 291 009S

e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendraalty@dragonbbs.com

combin ation 2 alhs laundry

GalhpoUs Some restr etlan

Call today

Tappa n HI Elf clancy 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; A~r Cond t onmg
Sys te ms Free 8 Year Warranty
Sen neus Heatmg &amp; Cooling t
aoo 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

Give one of our Agents a call Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ~

MUST SELL TO SETTLE
ESTATE! privately situated
ranch slyle home close to Rto
Grande 3 bedrooms greal

bestde

M/L Just a lew m1Jes from

septtc well and electnc on s1te
and make your appointment

WYI1M •
WICk bchbt~ 7'U"

"

Work $300 Cal (740)«6-7943

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

room effect k1tchen d1nlng
area and large llv1ng room

Holzer Cl1n1c Ask for 15010
Broker Owned
Commercial property In a
prime location call for
details Ask for #5011
Thla commercial building
Ia looking for a new
business to ftll 1ts 1760 sq
ft Localed on the edge ol
town
Call
for
more

mobile

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

New &amp; Used Electric And Gas
Furnaces For Sale Cal For SiZ·
InstallatiOn
Avatlable ,
es

Sears 10 Rad at Saw W1th C&amp;bt
net &amp; Extra Blades Motor Needs

ROCCHI'S POOL
SERVICES

Can Your Believe???
$163, 000· With 2 Acres $145,

acre tracts to 6 acre tracts

SR t24 SILVER CREEK SUBDIVISION •
LOT #12· 4 50 acres wllh a pond Needs

1Th• Momen'
~ !

ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS
Display Homes Wanteel for VI nyl
S•ding Rep lacemen t Windows Enclosures No Payment Until
2001 Payments Star ttng
$89 00 per month All Creel t
Qualities Caii1-800-251-Q843

tn1orma1ton

m/1 Call for your , 2018
jvieowir1g loday Ask &gt;r 1181
Room for tho whc t family Attanllon builders or

ready for lhe kids GOTTA SEE THIS HOME
TO APPRECIATEI
ASKING $112 500

llv• For

t-800-7t1-0158

VleW

2 nformatton Ask for #5012
bath full basemer and an tn For Sale
S1x lots 1n
pool to ket &gt;you cool Walters H ill Subdtvtslon
summer Re tng on 3 Call today and ask for

1n thts home that Jffers 5

Renowtion Sale
30" shower vanity top com
mode windows hOI water heater
good cond. 304-675 1865

Huge Inventory DISCount Pr ces
On Vmy l Skirtmg Doors W1nd
ows Anchors Water Heaters.
Plumbmg &amp; Electrrca l Parts Fur·
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply 740 4469416 www orvb comfbennett

tmpressed

home wnh 4 bedrooms

ILLAGE

MOe1LE HOME OWNERS

Buy Factory Otrecl
Excellent Service
Ftexlt:Me F nancmg Avatlable
Home /CommerCial Units
FREE Color Catalos

m

delalls A must see' #5007
Calling all Investors We
Cllt18l1C one story framed have a four umt apar1ment
w lh 2 bedrooms 1 bu1ldmg for sale Each
kttchen and living room apartment has 2 br s 1
a level lot Aj&gt;prox 1100 bath hvtng room &amp; eat tn
ft of ltvmg space Call k11chen Generales good
your showmg of #183

Home In Crown City lhat
has 2 bedrooms and 1 balh

1774 Cneslnut By Owner BUilt In
1997 3 Beelroom Tax Abatement
T I 2013 $69 500 00 {7 40)44629 4

the

Printer Panasonte KX 2123 COl
or $25 Zane Grey Paperback
Books 25 Books $25 (304)
895-3319

Goat m&lt;lker S25 00 OBO 304·
937 2705 or 304 937 334S

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS

This ,. the place you oughl to
bel Take a peek Inside and
you II agree Roomy 1 1/2
alory home wHh fonnal hvmg &amp;
d1nlng rooms eat 1n knchen
open to large fam•Jy room wllh
fireplace 3 4 bedrooms 2 5
belhs 2 car attached garage
and
morel Immediate
possession herell2024

real

car located on F rst Ave

Grubb's Plano- Tunrng &amp; Reparrs
Problems? Need Tuned' Call The
Plano Or 740-446·452!5

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Russell D. Wood, Broker
510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH
740) 446-7101 or 1-800-585-""'•

3 mvestor or want to become

OFFICE 992-2259

LENDER

1092 Sunset Or ve Newly Ae
moleled 3 Bedroom Bnck E11cel
ent Conel t on Ca (7 40 )4 46d1t6 01 (740)446 0432

to

s ·~oo 304-675-SJS~

For FREE i.smpfe ma11 name acJ
dress ptus phone number to K1w1
Management 493 E G tmore Ad
Grove C1ty PA 16t27

SOC1Al SECUR1TY 01SAeiUTY

Power PC MacPerforma 5200CO
Computer With 2400 Color Stylewriter Printer Internet Ready/ Bu1H
In Microphone; System 7 s 11
16148t( Memory Same Kind
Used In Schools SSOO lncludrng
Programs (7.a)t-.0-2151

Gas heating stove $200 00 sega

and a shop all on 3 Gall1pohs Ask Allen for all

M Cleland 992·6191

Office

Call

$15000

so system
cos.:_order nowm 800-263-2540.
$49 for mstallation

hsh

STOP JOINT PAIN Wam rehel?

1363 EXT 200-U

ehd U4- ~ut At

FALLEN $10,000 NOW $69,000 00 (Me1gs
Co) 33441
Bashan Road
lmmed•ate
Possess1onl 1 1/2 Story home that offers
more than what meats the eyel Newer roof 4
Bedrooms dlnlnQ room k•tchen den 2
balhs hoi tub newer roof and loads morel
12069

th s home localed on Second
Ave

Old kitchen ca binet glass stan·
c•led doors 30 mches w1de 15
tnches deep great condition

DIRECT TV

(740)&lt;141 -1 982

~'9

Be ween Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob e homes
$260 $300 7'40 992 2167

Listing I Are you look1ng

DISCOVER Brochures 1 80 0•
928-7253

2217

2~~

610 Farm Equipment

AK C reo Siberian H usk~ 1 yr

Sototu e•trc se machme w1th
bUnartty and 1aQ attachment haw
vtdeo and book 1300 7A.O 992

Sonw1H Ouve Bultalo NY 1A.225
FREE InformatiOn 1 800 578

Pets for Sale

05

day Sales

Wedge Apt at 506 Burdette St
has 1 &amp; 2 br apartmen ts ava 1
able no pets 304 675 3450

32 LOCUSTSTREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446-0971
Jeanette Moore 256 1745
Patnc•a Ross
740-446·1066

men1S&lt; 1-1!00·617·3476 ext 330,

letll Checl&lt;s C 0 D VIIMCIAMXI

Real Estate General

992 371 1 TOO 1 S88 233 6694

WOOD HEALTl', INC

ERS Almos t everyone approved
With SO down\ low monthly pay-

malty $1 800 Sacr I ctng $39~ .
(FREE stockpol OR eltCIIIC Ski!·

nen

Equal Housmg ()ppOftun ty

Estate

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·

LIFETIME GUARANTEED! Nor·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

~aiiTodsy

Entertamment stand !'las lots ol
.space $100 00 3G4 773-6198

HEA\IIEST
Surg cat 5!8111
NEW" 7 PlY waterless nts .

AMAZ1NO METABILISM Break

New &amp; Used Furnnure
New 2 Piece Lwlngroom SUites ,

$100 00

AMERICA'S

COOKWARE

Trough'll lose 10..200 lbs Easy
Quick Fast Ora mat c Resu lt~:
100% Natural Doctor Recom menced
Free
Sample&amp;,

51 5 Main Street Point Pleasant

DROPPED
$4,900 00
MUST
OFFERS
IMMEDIATELVI ALL
REQUESTED Bnck ranch resllng on over 6
acre lot Ltv1ng room cozy w1th f.replace
k1tchen &amp; formal d1mng area w1th French
doors open to rear pat1o 3 bedrooms, 2
baths 2 car garage S1tualed on low traffic
no outlet street /12081

Available Now
Twm Towers now accept ng
appl cat1ons lor 1 BR
HUO subsidized apt for elderly
and handicapped EOH

r•

1Bnk Sland $1~ 304-882·2436

(304)875 1422

Computer Packard Bell CP~ :
monitor keyboard IBM prrntlr
$100 00
L shaped corner work canter

Computer System Includes Prmt·
er Scanner &amp; Programs
tO )
256-t68B

3 fish tanks with lights &amp; gravel

Mam Street Furnhure

New and Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn t&lt;anagua New
4 Piece Bedroom Suite $43~ .
New Couches $315 New Daybeds $t3S Good Useel Dress ers
And Chest 01 Drawers We S~JII
Grawt Monument~~

12x65 tra ler for rent $200 a
month &amp; $150 for depos t no
pets 740 742 2714

Real Estate General

El' h Alter 5 OQpm (74014!89068

$30000080

glass 36k4S $50 oo 304 773·
5452

Buy or sell ~i verln e AntiqUe~ ,
1124 East Man on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 or 740 992·.
1539 Russ Moore OW~l!:._

$399 Buy,_ Se_",_Trade

Tara Tow nhou se Apartments
Ve y Spac1ous 2 Bed ooms 2
Floors CA. 1 112 Bath Fully Car
pa led Adult Po ol &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo surr $365 /Mo No Pets
Lease Plus SectHity Deposit Re
Qu~red
Days 740 446 3481
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
446 0101

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
n shed aM unlurn1shed secur ty
depos t requ red no pets 740
9922.218

Maytag GE Roper Late model
Washers $75 00 Each 2 Whlfl·
pool 2 Hotpolnt Dryers $65 00

Antiques

&amp; all equipment $40 00

Maple full s ze bed mauress &amp;
hex springs chest ol dutwe••
n ghi stand desk &amp; Chair

Computer monitor 15" Ptckard
Bell $50 00 D 1 11ny1 w1ndow~~
white grids between panes of

560

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

Sa'Nmlll $3 79!5 New Suptr Lum
bermate 2000 larger capiCIIItl
more O:lt•on• manufacturer of
uwm111s ecgers and sll:ldders.

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES

$150 00 304-1195-3190

dial $25 828-438 8637

540

Calt Ron Evans 1-800-537 9528

Compaq color pr nter never used

i&gt;unba~ l!:1mrt 6rnund • Page

WV

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rto.,.ed New &amp; R-h In Slocl.

740 742-2648

818-0128

Antique hand st•tched qu111 w/co~ton stuff1ng Circa 1900 t 92~ :
$350 080 o&amp;d Japanese jewelry
box &amp; other Japanese Items cnca 19A.O 1950 make oller 1500
smart page messages vo•ce &amp;

110 000 BTU

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

Combust10neer stoker coal stov!·
$500 OBO wrnter upnght ptano ;

S1rH1 (740)446 739S Or 1 888·

For Sale Rec or '"' tloned wash·
ers drye rs anc ' clgera to rs
Thompsons Appliance 3•07

Heavy duty Speed Queen dryer
S75 00 IVIIIIhrow In washer for
free needs some work 304 675·
505~

One bedroom apartment m Mid
dleport call 740 446 3091

Apartments
for Rent

Waaher S95 Dryer $95 Electric
Range S95 Freezer $95 Rel ng·
erator $95 Small Chesl Freezer
$150 Washer 4nd Dryer Set
$300 All Appl iances Guaranteed
Skaggs Appliances 76 v ne

1-888·81 B-012S

446.0008

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

F&lt;rm, (740)245-5208

washers dryers retrlgerator~,:
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Street Call 740 446 7398 ,

PRICE FELL $15,000 DO- New price $99 900
At th1s pnce this home will not LAST to LONG
Hurry &amp; call for an appotntment to v1ew th1s
attractive neat &amp; clean bnck Conveniently
located to grocery hospital school etc Lerge
s1zed hv1ng room open to formal d1mng &amp;
kitchen area laundry room, 3 bedrooms , 1 1/2
baths plus s1ze 2 car attached garage Level
easy to mamta1n lot #2053

Household
Goods

530

CIOOD USED APPLIANCES

Now Tak ng Apphcallons- 35
West 2 Bedro om Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash S3251Mo 740

Two &amp; th ee bedroom mobile
homes no pets 740 992 5858

ExceUent Condition Sola {7') &amp;
Matching Chair Plose
Alao
Matching Window Valance $175

Good Shope $100 suu In us~ :
(740)446-7874

tunity (740)446-3344

Two bedroom mob le home tn
MIClCIIeport all elect c cenlral n
S350 month 740-992 3194

Atcondllloned
Wllhert D~ra Flangts t:ltfrl·
gratora Up To 90 Oaya Gueranteedl We Sell New Mayt~g Apphancu French City Maytag ,
740-.WS· 7795

Gas Furnace

affordtbthty and location? property In 8 great
Well we have them both 1n location If you are an

REAL ESTATE

2 Un 1 Rental Prope1 ~ nco me
$575 Monthly Reduced Pr ce
Great Buy 1 $36 000 Land Con
tract (74(}]388 9946

$60 00 OBO 2 bicycles exc
cond $65 oo each 30A. 675 8888
or 843 682 2428

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

510

Houaehold
Gooda

510

Jacl&lt;son •¥OOUe· (304)&amp;75-7388_:_

P o program renters needed 1
304 736 7295
Plot Program Ren ters Needed
304 736 7295

wood burning llove

[:======~!!li!i!~:g!n~!L======

Honeysuckle Hills Apar tm ents
Located On Colonial Onve Be
hind Highway Patrol Post 1&amp;2
Bedrooms Now Availab e Rent
Starts $235/mo Low &amp; Macerate
Income Equal Housmg Opper

N1ce Clean 3 Bed room Mobile
Home lor Rent m Country
(740)256--6574

2 br garage apt 4th St Mason
$300 00 a mon $GOO 00 dep
senous 1nqu res 304 675 1911

Free

S • SO 00 OBO 1 cord of wood

Grac1ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V Uage Manor and
A vers•de APartments In Middle
port From $273 $336 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun lies

For Rent (740)

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Appl lancea

Household
Goods

(740)446-1519

For Sate! Rent 2 Bed ooms Pr1
vate lor Near Graham Schoo
Road $200/mo Deposnl Refer
ence (740) 446-7754

Bed com Modern Apartment
No Pe ts Wa ter Fu mshed $225/
mo $100 Oepos t (740)446
3617

510

Oepos•t Need References (7&lt;40}

Furmsh$0 2 3 or 4 Rooms
Clean No Pets No Smok1ngl Ret
ere nee/ Oeposll
Requ red

Beaut1lul River V1ew Ideal For 1
Or 2 People References Depos t
No Pets Foster Tra11er Park 740
441 0181

440

MER CHANDI SE

Etll c ency apl 1 br ret &amp; dep
no pets 304 675 5162

3 BeCroom 14x70 Trailer $275/
Month Deposit Lease And Ref
erences Aequ1red Located On
Uncoln P1ke No Pets (740) 4464993

Moo e Home
446 1279

5, 2000

Mobtla Home Space Take S 12 I

Dr•ve
SON lrom
ESTATES
$289 to52
$370
WeS1wood
Walk to
snop &amp; mo\1 es Call 740 446
2568 Equal Hous.ng Opportuntty

~ BeCroom 2 Baths Remolded
fl.:o Pet&amp; JnsiCe $350/mo $350

large 5 bedroom two bath house
lo rent or sale on la nd contract n
M ddteport call 740 992 7872 af
ter6 OOpm

420

Spac ous 3BR / 2BA Doublew de
Only 4 Lett $296/mo WAC Cal
Now 1 888 736 3332

460 Space for Rent

3 rms 1 ba small apt water I
neat tu rn1shed you pay etec
S225 00 a rnon-+- $225 00 dep. no
::-::-:----:---:---::-- 1po1S 30+675 1:ISS
2 Bedroom Large ltvmg Room
And Omette All Electrc A.nd Air 5 br upstairs apt 1/2 mile !rom
Verv Ntce No Pets ~740)446- Century Alum In Ravenswood
2003 (740)446--1409
$375 00 a mon + cep 304 273
3115
2 BR Tra11er Appro~; mately 10
Miles From Gall pols Route 7 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
South $300/mo Reference De
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK

Gle'lwtod $300 a mon •$300
dep has new washer &amp; dryer
slove &amp; relrl(lg 304 576 9991

WVALANO

Apartments
for Rent

2 Bedroom In Town $300 Oe
pas 1 $300 Month (740).461151 Or (740)446-1293

posil No Pets (740)256-1568
Mobile home lor rent 2 br 1 ba at

R•tchte Co wva
Recreation laM
Getaway From Tne Huslle Ana
Bustle And En1oy The Feel1ng
like You re Gomg Back In T me
Roughmg It ltke The P1oneers
W th Natul8 5 Tracts Avatlable
Rang ng From 27ac 97ac As
LOI'I As $600 An Acre NO Ae
st r ct ons Cal Us Today For
FREE MAPS
Anthony Land Company ltd
1 800-213-8365
www ak:land com

Sunday, November

440

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

lot spaces available Call 740
365 2434

2 houses n Mtddleport 1 &amp; 2
bedroom ca 1740 992 5231

l m ted Or No Cred f? Govern
rnenl Bank F nan~;.e Only At Oak
wooel In Barboursv l!e wv 304

7t 14x70 mobile home remo
deled all electr c 2 bedroom 2
bath stove &amp; lr 1g must move
must see 740 367 0119 day
740 992 6677 evenmg

959 0006

3 91 Acr es W th Beauhlul Homro
S le Restncted level With Road
Fr on tage And Great Ne•ghbor
hood Green! C ty Sch C'I?Is
{740]245-9007

(740)&lt;146-3093

$125 000 304 743 0719

BANKRUPTCY

!&lt;' 000 (740)S33-1275

Don 1 Pay 8 g C ry PriCes Star By
oakwood Homes In uall1pol s
01'1 o For The Best Deals

C1vll war era home completely
restorec on 32 acres Asht on
area 180 additional 145 acres for

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LIC ENSED/
BONDED COR RECT/REMOVE

CASH

7295

740 992 5043

303

INSTANT

call 304 882 3656

p11ances cia gas heat w w car
pet dr veway large !lat lot 929
Hysell St M ddleport $38 000

Con sol dat on to S200 000 Bad
Cred t No Credit OK Cred•t
Cards Mortgages Etc Global
F nanc1al Servtces Toll Free tor
lnlormat on 1 888 604 1444 Ext

BAD CREDIT

3 br 2 ba on choiCe lot 304 7:l6

8 rooms new storm wmdows ap

erne1

CASH LOANS

~fo

2 112 Corner lots In Waterloo
Etectr1c Pule &amp; Watlll Tap

1997 Skyhne l•x70 2 br 1 ba
all e1ec lut appl ances 1nclud
ed 2 112 ton Inner thetm heal
pump ...,, ale shmg ed root &amp; un
Oer pinning 304 675-6678

Oliver Rd off Lucus Lane m Pt
Pleasant cell 304 895 3781

www debtc:cs; org Call 1 800.328
851 0 8lCt 29

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Mobile Homes
for Sale

lull

FREE OEeT CONSOLI04TION basement 11 Ox 138 corner lot
Appl calion w/serv1ce Reduce
payments to 65, !!C ASH IN

WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

K2

Mach One S1ze

446-1215

6

�..
Page 06 • •unbap l!:tmtt -•rnlinrl
710 Autos lor Sale

740

Motorcycles

2000 .Arttc Cal 300CC. 4 whetl

1989 CAdiii!IC. 4 Ooof F!MtWOOd,

4 5 ltler. V-8 loaded, Aslung
13200 090 1140)4416-1151 or
(7001"06-1293
1991 Cl'te\ly Cavaher, Soorty 2
Ooor W11h Rear SpOillf Black
Runs Good
$2275 080
(7001379-2732

1991 Chevy Lum1na 98,000
t.hles, •skmg $2.500. {740)3792293 Of (7&lt;0137!1-2798
1992 Otefsmob tl e Cutlass Supreme
Convertible
Fully
EqutppeCI Good Car Needs
Some Work . $3695 00. (740)
4146-1 155
1994 Plymoulh Acclaim , 'V-6,
$2200 OBO. t 993 Honda 300EX
•·Wheeler. Runs Good $2000 ,
( 740}446-8568
1999 Ford Countour, 4 Cyhnder, 5
Speed Manual TransmiSSIOn. Low

Miles .
A!C ,
(740}446-1 151

AM IFM ,

40r.

(740~1151

1999 Mnsubtsru Eclipse , 52.000
M11es .
Loaded
$16 ,800.
(740)446-7637

cu , 5 sp wrn :::"- &amp; many tlltrU

304-J; 75-&lt;080

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

87 FordTempo2dr Sid 117500

b' pans 304-61$-2046
Are You looking For Eng1nes Or
TransmiSSIOns? G1v1 Me A Call
At 740-«6-0519
Budget Prlceel Trensmlulona
All Types Access To Over
tO 000. TransmiSSIOnS
eve
Jorn ts. 740 ·245·5677. Cell 339·
3765
Set ol 4 Lull or 80 spoke rims,
t3x7 deep d•sh . unrversal 4 lu g
pat tern wl 60 ser~es t1res 304 675-3469 aher 4 pm

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

19 camper {pull type). Stvlerltner.
sleeps 4. $1200, 740-8&amp;3-5460
1973 W1nnebago motor hom~~. fa1r
co ndt!lon , 47,700 mrles . $3500 ,
74D--9a5-431 1

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
790

1--

_: Sunday, November 5, 2000

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Sell or

1990 Wtnneoago Motor Home .
low M1leage . 38,000 Milts, Self
Contamed Sletps 8 EliCtltent
ConditiOn Sl :J.SJQ {740)4 46-

trade
•
1n
the

9256
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondtt]onal hletJme guarantee
Local references furn1Shtd . EstabliShed 497S Call 24 Hrs (7-40)
446·0870. t-800-287-0576 Rogers Waterproofing

Electrical and
Refrigeration

ELECTION DAY* NOV.7

•..

Aestdentlal or commerc1al wiring,
new servrce or repairs. Master lt· .
censed eleCiriCian . Rrdenour
Electr tcal , WV000306 , 304-675 1786

92 Olds Cutlass Supreme 3 1 V6, 4 dr , loaded $3,000 OBO 304882-1106

®.
446-6806 ~~M

94 Dodge Spmt. 4 Door 4 Cylmder Automauc. Crurse Control.
Very Dependable. Great Gas
M1teage SttOO 080. {740)44t-

958 Clark Chapel Ad
BtdweU, O~io 45614

0584
95 Saturn SL2, Loa ded 96 .000.
$490 0
P 40}379-23 64
or
(740)256-1084

POMEROY· Great Viawl Great MIDDLEPORT- House , garage,
Housel Great Locat•onl What pool. ~rivacy. Must see to
more could you ask? Price just apprectate. Great Buy at only
reduced $10 ,000
$169,000
RACINE- One acre w/small cottage. ~As IS~ Any reasonable
$35.000
Great bustnqss locatiOn nght on SR 7. Reduced

1986 Ford F250, 6 cytmder au tomatiC good body. runs &amp; looks
goOd. S1200 740 -247-4292

St~t-te 1943· -

ranch
style home located on a quiet dead end
street close to shopptng and the
hospital is ready to move into. Features
include 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, open
kitchen to dining area and livtng room.
t car garage and carport. Fenced yard ,
flat lot,
low maintenance. Very
reasonably priced at $78,900. 1401

DelightlultrH&lt;IVel.
3 bedrooms, 2
remodeled eat-in kitchen and family
room with fireplace Brick extenor
means no wasted weekends palnltng.
Nice yard with patiO. proch and 111ew.
Oversized one car garage 1214

Affordable lot m the Btctwell area
approx. 1 acre priced at $4,900. No
restricttons Call today 1810

1989 Ford Tru Ck F-150 . VB 5
Sped, Very Good Condt!IOn.
(740)38!1- 872 1

'
Home

-

92 Chevy Silverado Short Bed
V-6 , Auto Air . Ttlt/ Crutse AM I
FM Cassene, Alummum Wheels,
60140 Seats Factory Tac Eng1ne
Otl Cooler Charcoal G1ey. $7495,
(740)682-7512
93 Chevy 2500. 6 5 Turbo D1ese1.
4x4 . Automat iC· Ex tended Cab.
Loaded $13.000 (740 )379-2915
94 Chevy Blazer LT Ta hoe All
Power Leather lntert b r (740)
245-5753
98 Ford Ranger XLT, 35,000
Mtles $5Bg5 , 97 Chevy 5 · 10 ,
67 000 Mrles $4495. B&amp;D Auto
Sales Htghway 160N (7 40)446-

6865

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDs
1980 Chevy 4WD V 8 $4 000,
080 (740)367-5047
19 85 (:hevy 510 81a.zer,4•4 4
wheet dr exc cond S2 000 304·
675-3769
198 7 Conversron Van 305 AutomatiC Equtpp ed Wtth Whee l
Chatr Lift Good COnd11ron $6,000.
[740)367-7093
t992 Ford F150 4x4 . fi cylinder 5
sp eed. $6500 080. ~a ll 740-742
2648

1994 Grand Cherokee Lid Jeep
leather Package, TON
Package V-6. 52 Liter. PS, PB .
Power Wrndows Power DoO! Iocks, AM IFM CD 11n1mny Gotd
Sound Sys te m1 Sunrooll Moon·
roo! Crwse Tilt Trnted Wrnoows
Key less Entry 5 New Tues.
Clrrnate ContPJl 101K Mrtes
$14 000 Call (740l446---3860
Oelu~e

1995 Chevrolet Se"'uvrlle Van 15
passenger I ton long wheFI
bBSe 350 'J 8, from a1d ret~r hM t
and arr power Wtfldo.vs locks and
mtrrors t•ntPcl w•nr!O'I'I&lt;; r&gt;~rpl,ent
ccnrlt!ton, QIJOd ceople ha._rler,
115K mr ~s iSqoo 1740J379
29'15
87 SdO Blale' ,h..f .-:tppro~
')S 000 mriPS on naw 2 8 enQrne
nPwer Ssp transm1ssron 'ranster
cas, &amp; rad a tor r.o1y has rrrrnu
ru~t .uouwl tollom $2 BOO 104
802 2396

15

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51

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·;

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ttme (74011-tb 44&gt;3
1740!256 -92-l&lt;\

MIDDLEPORT
• A tan
bnck home that has 2
sto ries, an aHtc, and a 3/4
basement.
There ts 4
bedrooms, ntce cabtnets
in kitchen , din1ng room
and 1 1/2 baths. 3 really
pretty fireplaces, a pretty
stairway and a front and
side porch . $74,900.00

E·1P11 r]

~~
­
Eaay..•Ea•y

to
afforcl...easy
10
maintatn ...easy to get to lown . Vinyl
sided ranch on thecrty's edge is easy to
own. 2 bedrooms, livfng room , kitchen
and bath. large side yard . 1207

SOUTH SECOND AVE· Sils lac1ng the Ohio River and has
beautiful view. A one story home with 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
an outbuilding, and a front stttmg porch to watch the Ohio
River go by. Has parktng off the alley.
$29,900.00
STEWART HOLLOW RD • A home w ith 2 bedrooms. and 1
1/2 baths up and the same downstairs. Could be a stngle
family or Hve in one and rent the other. Home is about 16
years old and has stucco sheeting and brtck on the exterior
$75,000.00
LEADING CREEK RD •
Here's a 46.6 acre
parcel of land w ith many
butldlng sites on both
sides of the road 1 both
sides of the railroad, and
borders
the
creek.
Beautiful laying home
sites.
There is also
woods for hunting.
$60,000.00
RAINBOW RIDGE· Always wanted a farm ? Here Is approx
95 acres of mostly woods, but lays nice Has about15 acres
ttllable, Has a septtc wtth leach, TPC water avatlable, Has a
a road through the mtddle of the property. Has some caves ,
and a 40&gt;c56 foundatton already poured with some s1de walls
up far enough to be underptnntng for a mobtle home. A must
seel
$68,000.00
HAMILTON STREET· A 1 1/2 story home with 3 bedrooms, a
dining room, living room, 2 enclosed parches that could be
used for anything, and 2 half baths Has its own drt llEKl well,
newer central a1r, and a big fenced stde yard.
$45,00.00
MAIN STREET· A two story tlome w1th a large foyer, dining
room. 1tv1ng room. k1tchen, and a bath downstairs, and 3
bedrooms upsta1rs. Has a full basement with a newer
furnace and hot water heater. A beauttful vtew of the Ohio
River.
$25,00.00

5 yr old lovely
brick ranch offers L.A. DR, FA wtth gas
log fireplace , 3 BAs and baths, nice
slze lot with fenced in back yard located
on a dead-and street tn a family
oriented
$79,500

CROUSER AD - Approx 1 8 acres wtth a ranch style home
that has 3 bedrooms, 1. bath, large eat-1n k1tchen, liv1ng
room, alld a btg famtly room. Has a partly fenced ntce back
yard , a storage bulldtng, rear deck, and newer w1ndows
Ntce appearirg home
NOW $55,000.00
MAIN STREET· a 1 1/2 story home w ith alummum s1ding.
and has 2 bedrooms, ltving room,' kitchen, bath, and laundry
room downsta1rs. and has 2 small bedrooms upstairs ... Has a
$18,00.00
ntce vtew of the OhtO Atver

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker .......................... 992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING .... ..... .................... ..... 949·2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING ............ ...............949·2131
BETl)' JO COLLINS ....: ............................. 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ...................... ,.............. 992·1~44
OFFICE ........................................................ 992-2886

Ranch wilh lots of
and
space.
Beautiful
woodwork, outstanding flagstone and
hardwood noors. 4 BAs, 3 baths, large
LA with fireplace, formal DR, eat-in
kitchen , FA with lots of bookshafves
and 'lidtng doors to partially c011ered
porch. 2
car garage. Beautiful
landscaPing. Close to town. Bargain
priced at $1,9,900. 1202
Commercial lot located next to Ohio
River Plaza with epprox. 140 ft. ot
ro1d trontaQt on E•etlrn Avenue.
Prlcod at $100,000. Coli for dotollo.

11621

any
reasonable
beautifully restored
gorgeous
original
woOOwork
throughout. Located at the edge of
town. Boasting approx. 2500 sq. ft. of
living area with formal LA, formal DR
with bwlt-ln corner hutch, FR. all with
lovely hardwood floors, 4 BAs, 2 baths,
eat-m
·
sun room , large
room, enclosed front
detached garage and
Situated on a maturely
11111. lot. Priced at

River Aroundll This immaculate 2
story offers lt all .. .fantasttc view from
the cozy, glass front LA 'or the mam BR,
2-3 more BAs, 2 1/2. baths, large dining
area open to kitchen, 1 car garage att.
plus 8 24 X 32 det. garage 8nd 8 28 X
52 deck with built-in planters. $155,000

110211

with good acce11 to_llohlr1Q'
Ohio River aaund'JI
tne property located
Street, Crown City, has to offer, plus
qUiet, peace ful setting, LA, eat-In
kitchen, 2 BAs, 1 bath and priced at
only $23,000 ~

RAINBOW RIDGE- A 2 1/2 story home With 4 bedrooms, 8
rooms , including a large family room , dtning room-kttchen
area, 3 half baths and 1 full bath. Has a large deck and a
back porch. Has a tall 2 car garage .that is attached. All
stttlng on .DB acres ot nice laytng land
$76,00.00

.. P

IJ 1 I' '

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ..... ,,,_.,, 441-6808
QAIL9ELVILLE.................................. 44&amp;-9209
TAISH SNYOER ...................................441·9458
Branch Offlce
JOHNNIE RUSSELL. .......................... 387·D323
23 Locust St. DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441 ·94!iB
GallipoiJs, Ohio
OUR WEB PAGE IS.www.vtsm1th.com
45631
e-m ail vlsmlth.com

Nice
with Elbow Room
acres of elbow room. Great place to
hun I, take walks, butld a pond,· or JUSt
enjoy your privacy Beautiful cedar
home has a wonderful Hoar' plan with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ltvtng room with a
stone frreplaca, large eal-in kitchen wtth
breakfas t nook, step down fam1ly room
wtth huge window waU and vaulted
ceilmg and rec. room. Extras tnclude inground pool, outbuildtng and sunset
view. If you're looking for a very nice
house w1th some land, call u~ today!
Green Township 1205

Affordablllty
owners have matntamed and tmproved
this 3 bedroom br1ck . Nestled at the
end of a dead end street in the qUiet
vtllage of Northup. th ts home feat,cHes a
remodeled kitchen , large lamily room
with vaulled cetlmg and pellet stove, 2
baths and more. The ktds wtll love the
swtmmmg pool and Mom &amp; Dad will
love the con11ement locatiOn. Green
Schools. Pnced at an affordable
,$78,500 1123

Be Dont... go
I
a
piece of ground In town, or even close
to town , and built a 4700 sq. ft . block
building with over 6400 sq. ft. of noor
space for less than $60,000. Can't Be
Oonell So don't pass up this
opportunity to buy th is bargain with
multiple uses for o~y $42,500.' High
garage door wtll accommodte boats,
campers, RVs and just about anything
else you can thtnk of Or -open up a
bustness. Or rent some or all of the
space out Do what you want, but don't
let thts great opportunity pass you byl
Call Dave for more tnfo.l125

Cal

~!?l!!'ll

a
•
•
vtewtn

Comarclal Ground for Salt
Located along one of the busiest
highways 1n Southeastern Ohio. Close
to McDonald's. Several tracts to
constder. Some wtth gOOd road
frontage along Eastern Ave (SA 7) and
some with frontBga on side slreets
Pnces and lots sizes vary, so call for
more infbrmation Ml124

I

Log Home on an .?u~sllm~lng
Sening. Over 3900 sq ft. ol living
space inside and nearly 2000 sq. ft. of
deck/porch/patio space outside. 4 BAs,
3 baths, FA with stone fireplace,
modern kitchen Wlth oak cabinets, full
basement with 2nd kitchen. $269,000.

ffil6

the Family...
w ill
space this home offers.
With over 3,500 sq . ft., 5 BRs and 3 1/2
b~ths, there's room for everyone.
Features Include a large, comfortable
knotty plne FA with woodbumlng
flreplace, fully equipped kitchen with
large breakfast area plus formal DA
and a beautiful 3 zonta LA. Also,
there's an extra room oft the FA !hat's
perfect for a play room and a screened
tn pord1. In-ground pool (fenced),
decks and 2 car garage. Panoramic
vtew of the Ohto River. $159,9001211

i
home has been very well cared for
Three levels allow you to have your
own space. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
mce kttchen wtth d~ntng area, large
l1v1ng room wtth fireplace and family
room . 1 car garage attached This is a
very
nice home 1n outstandtng
cond1lton Spring Valley Subdivision .
1121
520 Paxton Road- Mostly redecorated
2. bodroom home offers new bath, new
kttchen cbmets inthe eat-tn kitchen, 2
car attached garage Priced at $29,900.
1131

I

•

www.wisemanrealestate.com
446-2707
446-9555

J
fullest, Large rms, through out·
ftreplaca m LA, sky hghts, beautiful
k~chen. Sun porch wtwlndow walls.
Gas &amp; elec. heat, central air &amp;
lo11ely carpet Green Schools This
one was worth waiting for, just a
phone call away. VLS 446·6806
..3384
BEAUTIFUL
"'CANT
•LAND 1 •·
h
11 '"7
or ruture orne s e; acres
MIL. on State Route 554 l mile
from freeway at Rio Grande; level
to rolling terrain; restricted; $17,500
per acre: drtve by and view this
vv

•

_____
'

,

IB6
"'""" §
(740) 446-3644
OPPORTUNITY

livi ng In-town AND spacious
living accommodaUona? Then
thiS tS tbe house tor youl With
almost 4,000 square feel of li11ing
space, whtch tncludes 6
bedrooms and 4 baths, this llome
rests on an oversized corner lot
located In Gallipolis near schools,
shopping, churches and the city
park. $Hl9,aoD.

BEAUTY SPOT Roomy In level
home 2 miles from Rio Grande &amp;
SA 35· 3 bedrms., 2 1/2 baths,
eat-in ktl , LA, DR, laundry rm .,
Family rm wtwoodburner, 2 car
attached garage, newer
patnt, eidlng, heat pump &amp;
system . 5 beautiful acres, 2
pond, .2 story garage bulldtng,
fenced lot w/barn. Owner wants
action. This Is something spec1al·
see It now VIrginia 446-6806.

t1051 The enawer to all our
clrumt and wf1hln your
mean11 Many possibilities with
.thls beaul!tul 2 story home It
otters 3 BR 1 BA. LA wtflreplace,
DR ,
hardwood
flooring ,
temode led kitchen , en closed
back porch $58,000

101 AC , .
••3341 LARGE F'RM
"

N--r
.......... 1 112 story home. 4/5
bedroom. home. 2 baths. lovely
LR, wood burning fireplace Kit.
w/oak cabinet, dining area. Level
Ia rolling land Some wooded &amp;

~~:~;,en~aarn .

Call for
VLS 4460-6806

a

an

12003 If elbow
you want In a
sett!ng .. Look
3BA
half

~-~­

I •

~

'

13377 GREAT STARTER HOME
or Investment property. This lovely
two bedroom one and one hall
bath cottage would be JUSt right
as a starter or rettrement home.
W1th an eat in kitchen ~nd livtng
room tt is iust enough space .
Rriced to sell st S:J7,500 can
today thts one won't last long
12918 CHARMING VICTORIAN
HOME . 4-5 Bedrms, 3 baths, ktt,
format
DR &amp;
LR
Crystal
chandeliers throughout Full bsmt
wtth complete ktt.. stone WBFP.
BR w/gas
fireplace.
Garage.
Landscaped lol. exclustve vtewlng
w 1th Vlrglnla L Smith 446-6606

112
VIllage of Thurman. N1ce 2 br.,
bath rm . ln basement.
1
cottage, bath, kitchen/dtntng room
Rec rm , CA, natural gas heat, 2
and
utility
room.
Insulated
1(2 car attached garage, pond IO
wlndows, steel doors with sto rm
m. 3 112 acres ol beautiful lawn.
doors Nice lot with outbu!ldtng coo:a"'" on SA t60 1ust 5 mtnutes
Publrc water and soon 'to be public
Holzer Hospital &amp; Shopping.
like thiS are scarce. Call
oiv''"'"'"
' 446-6806
FAMILY DELIGHT
2128
:J sq.M home Lovely LA, FA w/FP,
1 kttchen , formal DR, 3 DRs, 2
alec heat pump wlgas
large deck, front por~h ,
cab1nets, sky lights, cetltng
bldg. 32x48 garage. 24
,3367 Large home In town, new
above ground pool &amp; deck.
rool 1999, 4 BA, 2 5 BA, 2 car
1 home sens ttself all you need to
garage, vtnyl sldmg, ntce
is look. 1 ac m/1
neighborhood. Needs some TLC
CARAVOLlT BUSINESS
but prqtd nght at $78 1900
nnd
CONVENIENCE
STORE
13388 CITY LOT on VIne St. Call
FOR SALE. New alarm system.
VLS 446-6806
Bulldmg butlt to state code.
Contrnuous operatron srnce t986
bath ranch over full
Prtce ,ncludes ln11e nto~. Ca ll Bedroom
basement wtth 2 car garage and
Johnnie 367 -0323 or 446-6806
fmtshed tam1 1r room. Home stts
on 2 Ac . mt tn Hannan Trace
Schools. Just m1nutes !rom
downtown GaltfPOhS. Thts home
features a beaut1ful landscaped
lawn, wood pellet stove and
central air Located just off Rock
Ltck Ad on Mabie Dr in ntce 13391
~R
M RJIIWILY
St Rt
1n
Have a garden
Centenary. Located the road from
SP~~
~ry,
flowers but make
,
room,
cc·o:.:,,: c; this Call Johnnie 1lv1n
Green School th1s 3 BA, 1 bath
1 1
baths, \some hardwood
home with full bath,
car
today lor an floors, naw roo covered porch
basement &amp; garage Reduced
detached g~a&amp;fo'i"'
door
opd-.ati
UMrMway and
$69,000
ntc~ orne has ltle tn bath
,3344 COMMERCIAL LOT &amp;
and k.ttchen wtth hardwood Hoors
BUSINESS, Located on Eastern
In dining .room and i1 111ng room
Ave. Great Opportunity! Purchase
livtng room has fireplace with
the corner lot wrth or wtthout the
plower Home has newer forced air
bustness.
natural
gas
lurnace. Great
-~7
REDUCED
I
Locattonl
PERFECT FOR THE FAMILY.
INVESTMENT OR MOVE
Also
convement
to
most
··~---- ··Mob1le Home 60' )( 12', 2
everything • Stores, Schools,
~ t&gt;e di•OOI~S., 1 bath, furniture, range
Custom
built,
3
Hospttal.
pump. centra atr,
bedrooms, 3 baths, llvtng room.
:tL~~ge. ~•ldu~g 70' x 14 also 20' ll:
dtntng
room
&amp;
kitchen .3390
'lot Hysell &amp;
w/appltances, basement wlan Br1ck &amp; VInyl 6 BR , 2 BA
;J011ver, M1dc!lepcort. $15,000 00
apartment kitchen , livtng room, private 1 acre lot Family
bath. Front &amp; rear deck, 2 car hving room wlfireplace, DR,
attached garage. Almost 4 acres large utility room In this one
of park like' grounds wl1h stocked full basement Attached 2
garage and detached 2 car
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
as well could be used tor
1873 REDUCED PRICE-117 Pnced for a qutck sale.
,
acres close to new Fwy, hospital, 13349
IMMEDIATE
shop ctr Water, gas, sewer
POSSESSION.
Split ievI 3
AdJoining
Pinecrest
~urstng
lET
bedrms .• ~.&gt;.w~l
LOdftO\;UI~\R-,'ttti e gas
Home.
turnl~e~ 'linyl, garage &amp; buildings.
1

~

•u

'FOlK VICTORIAN $160,000.00,
N3398 NEW HOME WITH OlD
FASHION
CHARM.
Offe(lng
Prlvacy-tocated In a wooc:l9d area
3 bedrms , 1 t /2 ba.ths up &amp; 1 2
bath - down, ltvlnQ rm , with
rirsplace
formal
equipped kitchen
wood Cabln111 By
Ca!~lnlll~
9
ceUinliJI
Pine FloortnliJ,
Full basement,
porch &amp; ·rear
deck 3 .Acre wooded lot and circle
driveway Thll propany may t&gt;e
1n1pected by an appointment only.
Vlrglnl• L Smith 1448-esoe.

133H LO&lt;:Ited 2i08 SA 7711. 1 I
Ac Lot S12,eOO
114000. 1 71 Edoma Trill· Tycoon
Lake :i! Lola $12,500 eacll. Mobllt
home. bulldmg &amp; lot SHI,OOO all tor
$33,000

13311 lpllt level Hom•· on a
HILL. CIOit to town. 15 btdrOOml, .
2 bathl. Thia home 11 lor a Mr.
"Fix It" Call for an appointment.

AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. If you lrke
lndtYiduallty--here 11 lsi 3,029 SQ
ft more or less, 3 bedrms, 2 11:2
baths, Ktt., LAm. Orttce 1m .. and
much more Wrap porch from &amp; 2
aides 187 Acres m(l
1
Pasture and 3 Large Barns
Feed lot sites, 2 nice ponds
land Ia meal all clean &amp; haa aome
fencing . Electric &amp; 1rolt tree water
In lhe barn Feed lot s: ites
Former'ly uaed for Veal call
operation
Located nesr ~lo
Oranda. Appointment Only, Call
Vlrglnll L. Smith ?40·446·6806
U35,000

13313

I

I

I
I
from this scentc
1
property -wtule en)oymg
' peaceful allure arou11d
you Watch the sunrtse O\ler lhe
foothtlls JOrmng the Ohro R1v_er !rom
the expansive wc'IIL of wrndows
alignrng the East siM of tile home
aliOVftng the beautifully landscaped
surroundings to flow through
Custom tile &amp; slate . plush noor
covenngs and tasteful hardwood
flooring a.re all extras that add lo
formal appeal of thts peaceful
located )US! mrnules from
doownoiO•'n. $169,900

"'."~

1n1n~;J

..1

Galllpolts Almost new !1
home in town This home offers
bedroom, 2 full baths, kitchen
wrth dming area and hv1ng room.
French doors extt out back to
large brick patiO Flat lot for easy
lawn care- Concret pad for car.
This home IS burl! to government
spes and orters tax abalment unttl
2013.
Ttier-pane ·
windows,
electric heat pump &amp; cooling (avg
0111 90·, 00/mGnth)
Close to
ballfltlds and shoipping Take a
look Call Johnnie at 367 -0323 or

a.n~~:.~~~;,h~~~;~

most of the over 1
of li111ng area and an attached
carport with enclosed storage
Don't mrss thrs rare Chesh1re
community hs!lngl REDUCED TO
$54,900

..

$58,000

Before looking for your New Address. Check out ours at ...
David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch 441-1007
Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 446-0621
Rita Wiseman

13394
DELUXE
COUNTRY
LIVING b
b h
4 edrms, 2 at s, garage
&amp; 2
• 1
11
ndll'
ac m,, mmacu ~ e co
ton
20~ so •11 &amp; lo en oy family llle to

10\lely property. GB

~

1995 Ford Ft50 XL , Kmg cao.
70.000 mrles 58 ,500 304-5762251

75 International Stngle All:le,
200HP, Dteset 89 000 Ongtnal
Miles , $2250, Runs Great,
{740)388-941 8 Leave Message,
Wtll Return Call.

Fhorme0rthy,;;o~i-~B~LFa~c~k~b~u:r~II~R!e~a~l~ty~~~~~:
"=~·~~~J~
or ver
" " oo' - =""j

"S ervmg
. S out em

*

BRICK
HOME
under
construction .
Located tn a
presttgious area In Green Twp. 5
m1n from Holzer Hospital. 5
bedrms, 4 baths. Formal entry
w!skyllght &amp; cathedral . ceiling,
dtmng rm ., liv1n,g rm ., convenient
k1t., oak cabinets, 1st floor
laundry, Master suite on 1st floor
tnclud1ng a super bath rm. &amp;
closet. 4 Bedrms , 2 baths on 2nd
noor 24'x24' family rm approx.
4,000 sq. ft Beautiful 3 acre MIL
It
rav1ned lol and Itve stream
would be my pIeasure I o s how
you. Virginia 446-6806
----.

REAL ESTATE

New Usllng! Gel Into the Movie
Business!! Opportunity
Knocks!
Excellent business opportunity tn
Gallipolis
Long
standing Colony
Theater IS for sale. Buildmg theater and
equtpment m great conditon. Creat1ve
financing avtlable. Wtll cons1der lease
also.Can Dave for more infomat•on.
1218

t964 Cheyy C-10. short step.s1de
bed siiC\( ltt tle truck $5.500 304·
675-3824

71 Chevy 3/4 Ton V-8. 4Sp.,
$2000 , 68 GMC Half Ton, V-6.
3Sp, $1000 , Both $2500,
(740)245-Q370

www"evans-moore.com

evansrnoo®zoonmet.net

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

1103:2 Want the Convenience of

Corner Beech &amp; Park St. Very mce house

1999 S- 10 4•4 . 14.000 Mtles .
$11 ,950 t994 5·10 , Enellent
Condttton, $3 495. 199t S- 10. low
M1les . $2 .695 CQQ'I( MOTORS
{740}446-Q103

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
7 40-446-0008
I
7 40-441-1111

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER I Green Townlhlpl Nice sectional home on 'l/4
mil of te11ellandl Thla hOme otfets 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large li11mg room kitchen
family room combo wilh f1replace , rear deck and attached 2 car garage. $76,aOO

97 Bu1 ck Regal LS. Pa cJirc Blue
Wi1t1 Dark Btue ln te nor, l oad ed.
One Owner. Garage Kept. 33.000
Mrles.
E•ce11ent CondrtiOn .
17 40)446-6491

3323~2156

(

A ~ Moore-Broker
rah L. Evans-Moore
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 ~
IC:a1ra Caaey- 245-9430
_

C)/~ (}!. (/mid

wwwcomlcs.com

'

· Real

•

"There's nothing wrong with him. He just
doeathlll to make me look stupid."

e~-~~~
floe ?~toMe ~

VETERANS
Remembrance Day is November 11th

91 Shadow , 120 000 M11es . AutomatiC , $1 ,000 080 (740)2561233
'

CARS FROM S29 MO Impounds /
repo5 Fee SU Down 2 4 mos
@ 19 9°o For hstrngs t-800-319·

classi(ieas!

~
HONOUR OUR

C&amp;C General Home Marntenence- Patnttng . v1ny l Sldtng ,
carpentry doors. w1ndows. oaths,
mob1le home repa1r and mora Far
free estrmate call Chat, 740-992
6323

84 Toyota Tercel, 4 Door Hatchback, 5 Speect Standard , t30K,
Run s Well $650, (7 40)446-2151
leave Message.

t;unbn!' tD:tmrs - 6rnttnrl • Page 07

Buy~

t979 Hohdav Rambler, luuv
tQutDped e•e eond S5 .500
060 304-675·8958

83 Otds Cutlass Supreme 2 dr.
350, $1000 OBO 304-il82·1 106

99 Hugger Orange Camaro , T·
Tops, Loaded Excellent Condrhon Call (740)256 6889

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

Locatlonlt 09 feet
of frontage on 2nd Avenue Large
2 story br~ck house, two mobile
home rentals. and a mobjle home
wtth a frame addition that is
currently bemg used as a beauty
salon. Call for more detatls

11070
NEEDS
ANXIOUS
OFFER! Known the world over
as l he Silver Dollar Auction
House, this historic landmark
orters retail space, rental 1ncome
and storage. Includes 2 BR
house next door Call tor deta11s.
11060 FURTHER REOUCTIONI PRICE REOUCEOI
A lOT blguar than It lookll
Vacant land tn town IS hard to find
so take a look at this lot located
JUSt a couple blOcks from the C1ty
Park w1th over 8,000 square feet
of level land UUhtles already
on the
. $24,900
11076 Escape the
buetle In thll dream homel This
home offers 3 BR, 2 SA, LR, eatIn kttchen. ftnished basement and
2 car garage all on a 2.723 acre
corner lot 1n the r1o Grande area.
Ready and wa1ttng for you at
$100 ,000
'
11081 Attention all handymen!I
If you are a Mr Ftxit this could be
Beautiful country setting elate the home for you. A 3 bedroom, 2
to town! 2 5 Beres of plush bath secttonal home with central
counlry meadows and a stocked heat and atr AND 2 acres m/1 of
pond surround thiS J BR ranch land for onl~ $56,000.
' home . $69,000
Addtttonal
acreage available. -Total 17
Acres for $89,000
12005 Immaculate Brick Ranch
wtth 2 bedrooms, one bath, large
living ll dining room, eat -in
k1tchen. overstzed one car 12006 Bllutlful Sr Immaculate! 4
attached garage, one car Bedroom, 4 Bath ranch home
detached garage AND add1t1onal w111't finished basement Converled
ln-la'w quarters with 2 bedrooms garage can be a mce fa mily room
one bath, kitchen , llvtng room wtth or an efflcrency apartment for a
carport Reduced-to $79,000
parent needmg to move m w1th
1201 &amp; The beneFits of the you Lovely remodeled kttchen
clty... ln a neighborhood telling. w1th loads of cabinet space and
Let thiS 3 bedro
i \2 bath ranch pantry Royal surte has walk-m
located m~-~
alley be your close t, garden tu b bath, ftreplace
last ~lop ~ i W , rdwood &amp; entry to patio In backyard Uv1ng
floortnW\!
e and room with fireplace Gas heat.
comfo g.
Attached ce ntral a1r, AEP crty schools
to tho 0
parage IS a 14 X 8 Owner wants thts sold now!.
K snap designed wlththe $t19,900
wor
.
handy man m mrnd $ 79,000 ·
#2024 Overlook rolling country
meadows from this peaceful hill
top settrng wh1le bask tng tn the
sun bestde your own prtvate pool
In addtllan to the 4 Bedrooms and
3 Baths, the home offer s a
spactous great room. overloOking
the 20x40 In-ground pool and
24x36 pool house grea t for
entertainmg An oversized
anached two-c ar garage and
storage building located on 1 7 AC
M/L rounds th1s showplace out
$159,900

1
OWNER WANTS' AN
AI STOP AND READ THIS
wtll have a hard time
liindi''' a mcer ho r11e Tllrs 2 story
features 3 bedroom, 1 5
llvmg room with frreplace,
, large famtly room , 2
garages 24•28, 30x2B
&amp; pr1ce 130,000.
TO SEE

3
raised rancl1 with 4 car basement
garaQe. Perfect for mvestmenl
property or an auto rep&amp;r servrce.
Reduced to $35,000

$59.000
12016 The t&gt;tntfltl ol the
cttv.. .ln • ntlghborhood settlrtu.
Let th 1s 3
bath ranch'
located
I
last stop.
I

11097 Commercial Property!
Great development potential;
easy access to SA 35; 145 A C
M/l levelto rolling 1opog1apl~y

;/

t1088 Elegent In-town living
can bt found tn this 4 BA 2 1/2
BA two story coloma! style home.
Outside a beautifully landscaped
entry leads to a tastefu l ly
decorated formal ll11lng room and
dtmng room. Just ott the dmtng
room IS an equ1pped kitchen and
fam1ly room comblnatton w1th a
cozy fireplace complementing its
homey feeling . With a one caP
detached garage and the e;o;tra
storage space of the full basement
1n lawn lrvtng 15 just a phone call
away

12008 Price Reduced - Spring
Valley Arul ThtS 2 Story Colo mal lor 11 Elegant Home, Luxunous
has 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, Backyard Pnvacy and
spaCIOUS family room and lots of
hardwood floortng New Siding,
new roof and new msulaled
wtndows added m 1996 help keep
matntenance costs low. A private
back yard offers the perfect place
for quiet relaxatton Don t let thrs
one pass you byl $98,000

1:202!5 Nice home eltu on must see thts Mme. R"''"''t"
Prospect Road! Owner has $87,0001
leveled tl1e land &amp; added
dnveways Doublewides permitted
11
Call lor delatls

~~­

N2027 Located In O.OviiiOtiiii
totally renovated 1 1/2 story offers
3 bedrooms and a bath W1t h a
brrght new kitChen wood rtoortng,
new windows, s tding and a
roof.. all you'll need to do IS mo11e
lnl Call for add ttronal detatls and
locatton. $59,000

N-2030 Immaculate home,
well
groomed
lawn ,
beautiful backyard view,
In-town
living
and
waterfront property all
rolled Into ONE! Thts well cared-for 3 bedroom 1 full
bath and 2 half bath h ome
has hardwood floors and
maple wood throughout, 2
wo od burntng fr replaces
hand c rafted statned glass
designed doors, and a filii
dry basement. Hard to
believe , but th1s home IS
pr1 ced at only $89,900
12049 Acreagel 24 acres m/1
and free natural gas I You can 't N2046 New Listing !
beat thla d1al! Nice 3 bedroom 2 sectional home In a cou
bath home, garage , 32 :x 48 setting w1t h 3 bedrooms, :2
me111 pole building , 1 mobile cathedral cer!lng and '"•~:~:~~~,~~
home and free natural gas from fam 1ly room lots of
your own gas wells! You could surrounds above ground pool
save 1 101 of money In heating :28 x 28 barn/garage on 1 2
mil Call for details
~-~~ bUll thll winter! Call today I
Want ,11 nice 4·5 BR home
,---------.,----------:-;--,
In a ll . . py' little community.
Look no further. Locted between
Galllpblls and Proctorville on Matn
Street In Crown Cit,- this ranch
ofters an over sized fenced lot
wtlh a t wo car attached and a 1
t/2 detached ~arage ontha utalde
and large living room kitchen and
family room on the lnstde. With
NEW stdlng, wtndowa, roof. rtoor
cov arlnga, healln~ and cooling thts
one
11 ready to
mo11e
ta050 Beautiful aec11on11 h6inl on an acre mil w1th a nice 32 )( 48
Into .11Di,VOO
metal bulldlng/garage comfortable home wtth many extras mcludtng
above ground pool, conven\ently loc ated abolit 7 mrnutet !rom
Holzer Check on thlll onetodayt

'

12051 Nice unrestricted Jot
located about 5 mmutss lrorn
Holzer $8,000 Call today. I( mrght
be sold tomorrow

12047 New Llttlngl Lovely home on 2 8 woodael acre1 m/1 In
b•autlful ChlrOIIII •Likt eubdlvlslon 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
w1th veultect C:01hrga lamlly room with flr&amp;pi Ace. solid 6 panel
doors oak cabme ts. !lky lights, hot tub or back deck 3 CRr
at!Bched t;tarage and an aadttiC)I1al one car detAched garage Plus
become part Ow'ler ollhll Lake! $t69,900 Thts Ofle won I tast
1or1g call today!

www.Evans-Moore.com
/

I

Convemences alltn ONE c~~:~~i:
Beautlful hardwood
custom draper 1es and
man tles adorn the rnstde
outside lovely flowers surround
sparklmg waters of the 11n -a•our1o 1
sw 1mmmg pool . If
1
convemence of living

�..
Page 06 • •unbap l!:tmtt -•rnlinrl
710 Autos lor Sale

740

Motorcycles

2000 .Arttc Cal 300CC. 4 whetl

1989 CAdiii!IC. 4 Ooof F!MtWOOd,

4 5 ltler. V-8 loaded, Aslung
13200 090 1140)4416-1151 or
(7001"06-1293
1991 Cl'te\ly Cavaher, Soorty 2
Ooor W11h Rear SpOillf Black
Runs Good
$2275 080
(7001379-2732

1991 Chevy Lum1na 98,000
t.hles, •skmg $2.500. {740)3792293 Of (7&lt;0137!1-2798
1992 Otefsmob tl e Cutlass Supreme
Convertible
Fully
EqutppeCI Good Car Needs
Some Work . $3695 00. (740)
4146-1 155
1994 Plymoulh Acclaim , 'V-6,
$2200 OBO. t 993 Honda 300EX
•·Wheeler. Runs Good $2000 ,
( 740}446-8568
1999 Ford Countour, 4 Cyhnder, 5
Speed Manual TransmiSSIOn. Low

Miles .
A!C ,
(740}446-1 151

AM IFM ,

40r.

(740~1151

1999 Mnsubtsru Eclipse , 52.000
M11es .
Loaded
$16 ,800.
(740)446-7637

cu , 5 sp wrn :::"- &amp; many tlltrU

304-J; 75-&lt;080

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

87 FordTempo2dr Sid 117500

b' pans 304-61$-2046
Are You looking For Eng1nes Or
TransmiSSIOns? G1v1 Me A Call
At 740-«6-0519
Budget Prlceel Trensmlulona
All Types Access To Over
tO 000. TransmiSSIOnS
eve
Jorn ts. 740 ·245·5677. Cell 339·
3765
Set ol 4 Lull or 80 spoke rims,
t3x7 deep d•sh . unrversal 4 lu g
pat tern wl 60 ser~es t1res 304 675-3469 aher 4 pm

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

19 camper {pull type). Stvlerltner.
sleeps 4. $1200, 740-8&amp;3-5460
1973 W1nnebago motor hom~~. fa1r
co ndt!lon , 47,700 mrles . $3500 ,
74D--9a5-431 1

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
790

1--

_: Sunday, November 5, 2000

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Sell or

1990 Wtnneoago Motor Home .
low M1leage . 38,000 Milts, Self
Contamed Sletps 8 EliCtltent
ConditiOn Sl :J.SJQ {740)4 46-

trade
•
1n
the

9256
SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondtt]onal hletJme guarantee
Local references furn1Shtd . EstabliShed 497S Call 24 Hrs (7-40)
446·0870. t-800-287-0576 Rogers Waterproofing

Electrical and
Refrigeration

ELECTION DAY* NOV.7

•..

Aestdentlal or commerc1al wiring,
new servrce or repairs. Master lt· .
censed eleCiriCian . Rrdenour
Electr tcal , WV000306 , 304-675 1786

92 Olds Cutlass Supreme 3 1 V6, 4 dr , loaded $3,000 OBO 304882-1106

®.
446-6806 ~~M

94 Dodge Spmt. 4 Door 4 Cylmder Automauc. Crurse Control.
Very Dependable. Great Gas
M1teage SttOO 080. {740)44t-

958 Clark Chapel Ad
BtdweU, O~io 45614

0584
95 Saturn SL2, Loa ded 96 .000.
$490 0
P 40}379-23 64
or
(740)256-1084

POMEROY· Great Viawl Great MIDDLEPORT- House , garage,
Housel Great Locat•onl What pool. ~rivacy. Must see to
more could you ask? Price just apprectate. Great Buy at only
reduced $10 ,000
$169,000
RACINE- One acre w/small cottage. ~As IS~ Any reasonable
$35.000
Great bustnqss locatiOn nght on SR 7. Reduced

1986 Ford F250, 6 cytmder au tomatiC good body. runs &amp; looks
goOd. S1200 740 -247-4292

St~t-te 1943· -

ranch
style home located on a quiet dead end
street close to shopptng and the
hospital is ready to move into. Features
include 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, open
kitchen to dining area and livtng room.
t car garage and carport. Fenced yard ,
flat lot,
low maintenance. Very
reasonably priced at $78,900. 1401

DelightlultrH&lt;IVel.
3 bedrooms, 2
remodeled eat-in kitchen and family
room with fireplace Brick extenor
means no wasted weekends palnltng.
Nice yard with patiO. proch and 111ew.
Oversized one car garage 1214

Affordable lot m the Btctwell area
approx. 1 acre priced at $4,900. No
restricttons Call today 1810

1989 Ford Tru Ck F-150 . VB 5
Sped, Very Good Condt!IOn.
(740)38!1- 872 1

'
Home

-

92 Chevy Silverado Short Bed
V-6 , Auto Air . Ttlt/ Crutse AM I
FM Cassene, Alummum Wheels,
60140 Seats Factory Tac Eng1ne
Otl Cooler Charcoal G1ey. $7495,
(740)682-7512
93 Chevy 2500. 6 5 Turbo D1ese1.
4x4 . Automat iC· Ex tended Cab.
Loaded $13.000 (740 )379-2915
94 Chevy Blazer LT Ta hoe All
Power Leather lntert b r (740)
245-5753
98 Ford Ranger XLT, 35,000
Mtles $5Bg5 , 97 Chevy 5 · 10 ,
67 000 Mrles $4495. B&amp;D Auto
Sales Htghway 160N (7 40)446-

6865

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDs
1980 Chevy 4WD V 8 $4 000,
080 (740)367-5047
19 85 (:hevy 510 81a.zer,4•4 4
wheet dr exc cond S2 000 304·
675-3769
198 7 Conversron Van 305 AutomatiC Equtpp ed Wtth Whee l
Chatr Lift Good COnd11ron $6,000.
[740)367-7093
t992 Ford F150 4x4 . fi cylinder 5
sp eed. $6500 080. ~a ll 740-742
2648

1994 Grand Cherokee Lid Jeep
leather Package, TON
Package V-6. 52 Liter. PS, PB .
Power Wrndows Power DoO! Iocks, AM IFM CD 11n1mny Gotd
Sound Sys te m1 Sunrooll Moon·
roo! Crwse Tilt Trnted Wrnoows
Key less Entry 5 New Tues.
Clrrnate ContPJl 101K Mrtes
$14 000 Call (740l446---3860
Oelu~e

1995 Chevrolet Se"'uvrlle Van 15
passenger I ton long wheFI
bBSe 350 'J 8, from a1d ret~r hM t
and arr power Wtfldo.vs locks and
mtrrors t•ntPcl w•nr!O'I'I&lt;; r&gt;~rpl,ent
ccnrlt!ton, QIJOd ceople ha._rler,
115K mr ~s iSqoo 1740J379
29'15
87 SdO Blale' ,h..f .-:tppro~
')S 000 mriPS on naw 2 8 enQrne
nPwer Ssp transm1ssron 'ranster
cas, &amp; rad a tor r.o1y has rrrrnu
ru~t .uouwl tollom $2 BOO 104
802 2396

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1740!256 -92-l&lt;\

MIDDLEPORT
• A tan
bnck home that has 2
sto ries, an aHtc, and a 3/4
basement.
There ts 4
bedrooms, ntce cabtnets
in kitchen , din1ng room
and 1 1/2 baths. 3 really
pretty fireplaces, a pretty
stairway and a front and
side porch . $74,900.00

E·1P11 r]

~~
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Eaay..•Ea•y

to
afforcl...easy
10
maintatn ...easy to get to lown . Vinyl
sided ranch on thecrty's edge is easy to
own. 2 bedrooms, livfng room , kitchen
and bath. large side yard . 1207

SOUTH SECOND AVE· Sils lac1ng the Ohio River and has
beautiful view. A one story home with 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
an outbuilding, and a front stttmg porch to watch the Ohio
River go by. Has parktng off the alley.
$29,900.00
STEWART HOLLOW RD • A home w ith 2 bedrooms. and 1
1/2 baths up and the same downstairs. Could be a stngle
family or Hve in one and rent the other. Home is about 16
years old and has stucco sheeting and brtck on the exterior
$75,000.00
LEADING CREEK RD •
Here's a 46.6 acre
parcel of land w ith many
butldlng sites on both
sides of the road 1 both
sides of the railroad, and
borders
the
creek.
Beautiful laying home
sites.
There is also
woods for hunting.
$60,000.00
RAINBOW RIDGE· Always wanted a farm ? Here Is approx
95 acres of mostly woods, but lays nice Has about15 acres
ttllable, Has a septtc wtth leach, TPC water avatlable, Has a
a road through the mtddle of the property. Has some caves ,
and a 40&gt;c56 foundatton already poured with some s1de walls
up far enough to be underptnntng for a mobtle home. A must
seel
$68,000.00
HAMILTON STREET· A 1 1/2 story home with 3 bedrooms, a
dining room, living room, 2 enclosed parches that could be
used for anything, and 2 half baths Has its own drt llEKl well,
newer central a1r, and a big fenced stde yard.
$45,00.00
MAIN STREET· A two story tlome w1th a large foyer, dining
room. 1tv1ng room. k1tchen, and a bath downstairs, and 3
bedrooms upsta1rs. Has a full basement with a newer
furnace and hot water heater. A beauttful vtew of the Ohio
River.
$25,00.00

5 yr old lovely
brick ranch offers L.A. DR, FA wtth gas
log fireplace , 3 BAs and baths, nice
slze lot with fenced in back yard located
on a dead-and street tn a family
oriented
$79,500

CROUSER AD - Approx 1 8 acres wtth a ranch style home
that has 3 bedrooms, 1. bath, large eat-1n k1tchen, liv1ng
room, alld a btg famtly room. Has a partly fenced ntce back
yard , a storage bulldtng, rear deck, and newer w1ndows
Ntce appearirg home
NOW $55,000.00
MAIN STREET· a 1 1/2 story home w ith alummum s1ding.
and has 2 bedrooms, ltving room,' kitchen, bath, and laundry
room downsta1rs. and has 2 small bedrooms upstairs ... Has a
$18,00.00
ntce vtew of the OhtO Atver

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker .......................... 992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING .... ..... .................... ..... 949·2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING ............ ...............949·2131
BETl)' JO COLLINS ....: ............................. 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ...................... ,.............. 992·1~44
OFFICE ........................................................ 992-2886

Ranch wilh lots of
and
space.
Beautiful
woodwork, outstanding flagstone and
hardwood noors. 4 BAs, 3 baths, large
LA with fireplace, formal DR, eat-in
kitchen , FA with lots of bookshafves
and 'lidtng doors to partially c011ered
porch. 2
car garage. Beautiful
landscaPing. Close to town. Bargain
priced at $1,9,900. 1202
Commercial lot located next to Ohio
River Plaza with epprox. 140 ft. ot
ro1d trontaQt on E•etlrn Avenue.
Prlcod at $100,000. Coli for dotollo.

11621

any
reasonable
beautifully restored
gorgeous
original
woOOwork
throughout. Located at the edge of
town. Boasting approx. 2500 sq. ft. of
living area with formal LA, formal DR
with bwlt-ln corner hutch, FR. all with
lovely hardwood floors, 4 BAs, 2 baths,
eat-m
·
sun room , large
room, enclosed front
detached garage and
Situated on a maturely
11111. lot. Priced at

River Aroundll This immaculate 2
story offers lt all .. .fantasttc view from
the cozy, glass front LA 'or the mam BR,
2-3 more BAs, 2 1/2. baths, large dining
area open to kitchen, 1 car garage att.
plus 8 24 X 32 det. garage 8nd 8 28 X
52 deck with built-in planters. $155,000

110211

with good acce11 to_llohlr1Q'
Ohio River aaund'JI
tne property located
Street, Crown City, has to offer, plus
qUiet, peace ful setting, LA, eat-In
kitchen, 2 BAs, 1 bath and priced at
only $23,000 ~

RAINBOW RIDGE- A 2 1/2 story home With 4 bedrooms, 8
rooms , including a large family room , dtning room-kttchen
area, 3 half baths and 1 full bath. Has a large deck and a
back porch. Has a tall 2 car garage .that is attached. All
stttlng on .DB acres ot nice laytng land
$76,00.00

.. P

IJ 1 I' '

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ..... ,,,_.,, 441-6808
QAIL9ELVILLE.................................. 44&amp;-9209
TAISH SNYOER ...................................441·9458
Branch Offlce
JOHNNIE RUSSELL. .......................... 387·D323
23 Locust St. DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441 ·94!iB
GallipoiJs, Ohio
OUR WEB PAGE IS.www.vtsm1th.com
45631
e-m ail vlsmlth.com

Nice
with Elbow Room
acres of elbow room. Great place to
hun I, take walks, butld a pond,· or JUSt
enjoy your privacy Beautiful cedar
home has a wonderful Hoar' plan with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ltvtng room with a
stone frreplaca, large eal-in kitchen wtth
breakfas t nook, step down fam1ly room
wtth huge window waU and vaulted
ceilmg and rec. room. Extras tnclude inground pool, outbuildtng and sunset
view. If you're looking for a very nice
house w1th some land, call u~ today!
Green Township 1205

Affordablllty
owners have matntamed and tmproved
this 3 bedroom br1ck . Nestled at the
end of a dead end street in the qUiet
vtllage of Northup. th ts home feat,cHes a
remodeled kitchen , large lamily room
with vaulled cetlmg and pellet stove, 2
baths and more. The ktds wtll love the
swtmmmg pool and Mom &amp; Dad will
love the con11ement locatiOn. Green
Schools. Pnced at an affordable
,$78,500 1123

Be Dont... go
I
a
piece of ground In town, or even close
to town , and built a 4700 sq. ft . block
building with over 6400 sq. ft. of noor
space for less than $60,000. Can't Be
Oonell So don't pass up this
opportunity to buy th is bargain with
multiple uses for o~y $42,500.' High
garage door wtll accommodte boats,
campers, RVs and just about anything
else you can thtnk of Or -open up a
bustness. Or rent some or all of the
space out Do what you want, but don't
let thts great opportunity pass you byl
Call Dave for more tnfo.l125

Cal

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•
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vtewtn

Comarclal Ground for Salt
Located along one of the busiest
highways 1n Southeastern Ohio. Close
to McDonald's. Several tracts to
constder. Some wtth gOOd road
frontage along Eastern Ave (SA 7) and
some with frontBga on side slreets
Pnces and lots sizes vary, so call for
more infbrmation Ml124

I

Log Home on an .?u~sllm~lng
Sening. Over 3900 sq ft. ol living
space inside and nearly 2000 sq. ft. of
deck/porch/patio space outside. 4 BAs,
3 baths, FA with stone fireplace,
modern kitchen Wlth oak cabinets, full
basement with 2nd kitchen. $269,000.

ffil6

the Family...
w ill
space this home offers.
With over 3,500 sq . ft., 5 BRs and 3 1/2
b~ths, there's room for everyone.
Features Include a large, comfortable
knotty plne FA with woodbumlng
flreplace, fully equipped kitchen with
large breakfast area plus formal DA
and a beautiful 3 zonta LA. Also,
there's an extra room oft the FA !hat's
perfect for a play room and a screened
tn pord1. In-ground pool (fenced),
decks and 2 car garage. Panoramic
vtew of the Ohto River. $159,9001211

i
home has been very well cared for
Three levels allow you to have your
own space. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
mce kttchen wtth d~ntng area, large
l1v1ng room wtth fireplace and family
room . 1 car garage attached This is a
very
nice home 1n outstandtng
cond1lton Spring Valley Subdivision .
1121
520 Paxton Road- Mostly redecorated
2. bodroom home offers new bath, new
kttchen cbmets inthe eat-tn kitchen, 2
car attached garage Priced at $29,900.
1131

I

•

www.wisemanrealestate.com
446-2707
446-9555

J
fullest, Large rms, through out·
ftreplaca m LA, sky hghts, beautiful
k~chen. Sun porch wtwlndow walls.
Gas &amp; elec. heat, central air &amp;
lo11ely carpet Green Schools This
one was worth waiting for, just a
phone call away. VLS 446·6806
..3384
BEAUTIFUL
"'CANT
•LAND 1 •·
h
11 '"7
or ruture orne s e; acres
MIL. on State Route 554 l mile
from freeway at Rio Grande; level
to rolling terrain; restricted; $17,500
per acre: drtve by and view this
vv

•

_____
'

,

IB6
"'""" §
(740) 446-3644
OPPORTUNITY

livi ng In-town AND spacious
living accommodaUona? Then
thiS tS tbe house tor youl With
almost 4,000 square feel of li11ing
space, whtch tncludes 6
bedrooms and 4 baths, this llome
rests on an oversized corner lot
located In Gallipolis near schools,
shopping, churches and the city
park. $Hl9,aoD.

BEAUTY SPOT Roomy In level
home 2 miles from Rio Grande &amp;
SA 35· 3 bedrms., 2 1/2 baths,
eat-in ktl , LA, DR, laundry rm .,
Family rm wtwoodburner, 2 car
attached garage, newer
patnt, eidlng, heat pump &amp;
system . 5 beautiful acres, 2
pond, .2 story garage bulldtng,
fenced lot w/barn. Owner wants
action. This Is something spec1al·
see It now VIrginia 446-6806.

t1051 The enawer to all our
clrumt and wf1hln your
mean11 Many possibilities with
.thls beaul!tul 2 story home It
otters 3 BR 1 BA. LA wtflreplace,
DR ,
hardwood
flooring ,
temode led kitchen , en closed
back porch $58,000

101 AC , .
••3341 LARGE F'RM
"

N--r
.......... 1 112 story home. 4/5
bedroom. home. 2 baths. lovely
LR, wood burning fireplace Kit.
w/oak cabinet, dining area. Level
Ia rolling land Some wooded &amp;

~~:~;,en~aarn .

Call for
VLS 4460-6806

a

an

12003 If elbow
you want In a
sett!ng .. Look
3BA
half

~-~­

I •

~

'

13377 GREAT STARTER HOME
or Investment property. This lovely
two bedroom one and one hall
bath cottage would be JUSt right
as a starter or rettrement home.
W1th an eat in kitchen ~nd livtng
room tt is iust enough space .
Rriced to sell st S:J7,500 can
today thts one won't last long
12918 CHARMING VICTORIAN
HOME . 4-5 Bedrms, 3 baths, ktt,
format
DR &amp;
LR
Crystal
chandeliers throughout Full bsmt
wtth complete ktt.. stone WBFP.
BR w/gas
fireplace.
Garage.
Landscaped lol. exclustve vtewlng
w 1th Vlrglnla L Smith 446-6606

112
VIllage of Thurman. N1ce 2 br.,
bath rm . ln basement.
1
cottage, bath, kitchen/dtntng room
Rec rm , CA, natural gas heat, 2
and
utility
room.
Insulated
1(2 car attached garage, pond IO
wlndows, steel doors with sto rm
m. 3 112 acres ol beautiful lawn.
doors Nice lot with outbu!ldtng coo:a"'" on SA t60 1ust 5 mtnutes
Publrc water and soon 'to be public
Holzer Hospital &amp; Shopping.
like thiS are scarce. Call
oiv''"'"'"
' 446-6806
FAMILY DELIGHT
2128
:J sq.M home Lovely LA, FA w/FP,
1 kttchen , formal DR, 3 DRs, 2
alec heat pump wlgas
large deck, front por~h ,
cab1nets, sky lights, cetltng
bldg. 32x48 garage. 24
,3367 Large home In town, new
above ground pool &amp; deck.
rool 1999, 4 BA, 2 5 BA, 2 car
1 home sens ttself all you need to
garage, vtnyl sldmg, ntce
is look. 1 ac m/1
neighborhood. Needs some TLC
CARAVOLlT BUSINESS
but prqtd nght at $78 1900
nnd
CONVENIENCE
STORE
13388 CITY LOT on VIne St. Call
FOR SALE. New alarm system.
VLS 446-6806
Bulldmg butlt to state code.
Contrnuous operatron srnce t986
bath ranch over full
Prtce ,ncludes ln11e nto~. Ca ll Bedroom
basement wtth 2 car garage and
Johnnie 367 -0323 or 446-6806
fmtshed tam1 1r room. Home stts
on 2 Ac . mt tn Hannan Trace
Schools. Just m1nutes !rom
downtown GaltfPOhS. Thts home
features a beaut1ful landscaped
lawn, wood pellet stove and
central air Located just off Rock
Ltck Ad on Mabie Dr in ntce 13391
~R
M RJIIWILY
St Rt
1n
Have a garden
Centenary. Located the road from
SP~~
~ry,
flowers but make
,
room,
cc·o:.:,,: c; this Call Johnnie 1lv1n
Green School th1s 3 BA, 1 bath
1 1
baths, \some hardwood
home with full bath,
car
today lor an floors, naw roo covered porch
basement &amp; garage Reduced
detached g~a&amp;fo'i"'
door
opd-.ati
UMrMway and
$69,000
ntc~ orne has ltle tn bath
,3344 COMMERCIAL LOT &amp;
and k.ttchen wtth hardwood Hoors
BUSINESS, Located on Eastern
In dining .room and i1 111ng room
Ave. Great Opportunity! Purchase
livtng room has fireplace with
the corner lot wrth or wtthout the
plower Home has newer forced air
bustness.
natural
gas
lurnace. Great
-~7
REDUCED
I
Locattonl
PERFECT FOR THE FAMILY.
INVESTMENT OR MOVE
Also
convement
to
most
··~---- ··Mob1le Home 60' )( 12', 2
everything • Stores, Schools,
~ t&gt;e di•OOI~S., 1 bath, furniture, range
Custom
built,
3
Hospttal.
pump. centra atr,
bedrooms, 3 baths, llvtng room.
:tL~~ge. ~•ldu~g 70' x 14 also 20' ll:
dtntng
room
&amp;
kitchen .3390
'lot Hysell &amp;
w/appltances, basement wlan Br1ck &amp; VInyl 6 BR , 2 BA
;J011ver, M1dc!lepcort. $15,000 00
apartment kitchen , livtng room, private 1 acre lot Family
bath. Front &amp; rear deck, 2 car hving room wlfireplace, DR,
attached garage. Almost 4 acres large utility room In this one
of park like' grounds wl1h stocked full basement Attached 2
garage and detached 2 car
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
as well could be used tor
1873 REDUCED PRICE-117 Pnced for a qutck sale.
,
acres close to new Fwy, hospital, 13349
IMMEDIATE
shop ctr Water, gas, sewer
POSSESSION.
Split ievI 3
AdJoining
Pinecrest
~urstng
lET
bedrms .• ~.&gt;.w~l
LOdftO\;UI~\R-,'ttti e gas
Home.
turnl~e~ 'linyl, garage &amp; buildings.
1

~

•u

'FOlK VICTORIAN $160,000.00,
N3398 NEW HOME WITH OlD
FASHION
CHARM.
Offe(lng
Prlvacy-tocated In a wooc:l9d area
3 bedrms , 1 t /2 ba.ths up &amp; 1 2
bath - down, ltvlnQ rm , with
rirsplace
formal
equipped kitchen
wood Cabln111 By
Ca!~lnlll~
9
ceUinliJI
Pine FloortnliJ,
Full basement,
porch &amp; ·rear
deck 3 .Acre wooded lot and circle
driveway Thll propany may t&gt;e
1n1pected by an appointment only.
Vlrglnl• L Smith 1448-esoe.

133H LO&lt;:Ited 2i08 SA 7711. 1 I
Ac Lot S12,eOO
114000. 1 71 Edoma Trill· Tycoon
Lake :i! Lola $12,500 eacll. Mobllt
home. bulldmg &amp; lot SHI,OOO all tor
$33,000

13311 lpllt level Hom•· on a
HILL. CIOit to town. 15 btdrOOml, .
2 bathl. Thia home 11 lor a Mr.
"Fix It" Call for an appointment.

AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. If you lrke
lndtYiduallty--here 11 lsi 3,029 SQ
ft more or less, 3 bedrms, 2 11:2
baths, Ktt., LAm. Orttce 1m .. and
much more Wrap porch from &amp; 2
aides 187 Acres m(l
1
Pasture and 3 Large Barns
Feed lot sites, 2 nice ponds
land Ia meal all clean &amp; haa aome
fencing . Electric &amp; 1rolt tree water
In lhe barn Feed lot s: ites
Former'ly uaed for Veal call
operation
Located nesr ~lo
Oranda. Appointment Only, Call
Vlrglnll L. Smith ?40·446·6806
U35,000

13313

I

I

I
I
from this scentc
1
property -wtule en)oymg
' peaceful allure arou11d
you Watch the sunrtse O\ler lhe
foothtlls JOrmng the Ohro R1v_er !rom
the expansive wc'IIL of wrndows
alignrng the East siM of tile home
aliOVftng the beautifully landscaped
surroundings to flow through
Custom tile &amp; slate . plush noor
covenngs and tasteful hardwood
flooring a.re all extras that add lo
formal appeal of thts peaceful
located )US! mrnules from
doownoiO•'n. $169,900

"'."~

1n1n~;J

..1

Galllpolts Almost new !1
home in town This home offers
bedroom, 2 full baths, kitchen
wrth dming area and hv1ng room.
French doors extt out back to
large brick patiO Flat lot for easy
lawn care- Concret pad for car.
This home IS burl! to government
spes and orters tax abalment unttl
2013.
Ttier-pane ·
windows,
electric heat pump &amp; cooling (avg
0111 90·, 00/mGnth)
Close to
ballfltlds and shoipping Take a
look Call Johnnie at 367 -0323 or

a.n~~:.~~~;,h~~~;~

most of the over 1
of li111ng area and an attached
carport with enclosed storage
Don't mrss thrs rare Chesh1re
community hs!lngl REDUCED TO
$54,900

..

$58,000

Before looking for your New Address. Check out ours at ...
David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Wasch 441-1007
Sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 446-0621
Rita Wiseman

13394
DELUXE
COUNTRY
LIVING b
b h
4 edrms, 2 at s, garage
&amp; 2
• 1
11
ndll'
ac m,, mmacu ~ e co
ton
20~ so •11 &amp; lo en oy family llle to

10\lely property. GB

~

1995 Ford Ft50 XL , Kmg cao.
70.000 mrles 58 ,500 304-5762251

75 International Stngle All:le,
200HP, Dteset 89 000 Ongtnal
Miles , $2250, Runs Great,
{740)388-941 8 Leave Message,
Wtll Return Call.

Fhorme0rthy,;;o~i-~B~LFa~c~k~b~u:r~II~R!e~a~l~ty~~~~~:
"=~·~~~J~
or ver
" " oo' - =""j

"S ervmg
. S out em

*

BRICK
HOME
under
construction .
Located tn a
presttgious area In Green Twp. 5
m1n from Holzer Hospital. 5
bedrms, 4 baths. Formal entry
w!skyllght &amp; cathedral . ceiling,
dtmng rm ., liv1n,g rm ., convenient
k1t., oak cabinets, 1st floor
laundry, Master suite on 1st floor
tnclud1ng a super bath rm. &amp;
closet. 4 Bedrms , 2 baths on 2nd
noor 24'x24' family rm approx.
4,000 sq. ft Beautiful 3 acre MIL
It
rav1ned lol and Itve stream
would be my pIeasure I o s how
you. Virginia 446-6806
----.

REAL ESTATE

New Usllng! Gel Into the Movie
Business!! Opportunity
Knocks!
Excellent business opportunity tn
Gallipolis
Long
standing Colony
Theater IS for sale. Buildmg theater and
equtpment m great conditon. Creat1ve
financing avtlable. Wtll cons1der lease
also.Can Dave for more infomat•on.
1218

t964 Cheyy C-10. short step.s1de
bed siiC\( ltt tle truck $5.500 304·
675-3824

71 Chevy 3/4 Ton V-8. 4Sp.,
$2000 , 68 GMC Half Ton, V-6.
3Sp, $1000 , Both $2500,
(740)245-Q370

www"evans-moore.com

evansrnoo®zoonmet.net

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

1103:2 Want the Convenience of

Corner Beech &amp; Park St. Very mce house

1999 S- 10 4•4 . 14.000 Mtles .
$11 ,950 t994 5·10 , Enellent
Condttton, $3 495. 199t S- 10. low
M1les . $2 .695 CQQ'I( MOTORS
{740}446-Q103

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
7 40-446-0008
I
7 40-441-1111

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER I Green Townlhlpl Nice sectional home on 'l/4
mil of te11ellandl Thla hOme otfets 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large li11mg room kitchen
family room combo wilh f1replace , rear deck and attached 2 car garage. $76,aOO

97 Bu1 ck Regal LS. Pa cJirc Blue
Wi1t1 Dark Btue ln te nor, l oad ed.
One Owner. Garage Kept. 33.000
Mrles.
E•ce11ent CondrtiOn .
17 40)446-6491

3323~2156

(

A ~ Moore-Broker
rah L. Evans-Moore
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 ~
IC:a1ra Caaey- 245-9430
_

C)/~ (}!. (/mid

wwwcomlcs.com

'

· Real

•

"There's nothing wrong with him. He just
doeathlll to make me look stupid."

e~-~~~
floe ?~toMe ~

VETERANS
Remembrance Day is November 11th

91 Shadow , 120 000 M11es . AutomatiC , $1 ,000 080 (740)2561233
'

CARS FROM S29 MO Impounds /
repo5 Fee SU Down 2 4 mos
@ 19 9°o For hstrngs t-800-319·

classi(ieas!

~
HONOUR OUR

C&amp;C General Home Marntenence- Patnttng . v1ny l Sldtng ,
carpentry doors. w1ndows. oaths,
mob1le home repa1r and mora Far
free estrmate call Chat, 740-992
6323

84 Toyota Tercel, 4 Door Hatchback, 5 Speect Standard , t30K,
Run s Well $650, (7 40)446-2151
leave Message.

t;unbn!' tD:tmrs - 6rnttnrl • Page 07

Buy~

t979 Hohdav Rambler, luuv
tQutDped e•e eond S5 .500
060 304-675·8958

83 Otds Cutlass Supreme 2 dr.
350, $1000 OBO 304-il82·1 106

99 Hugger Orange Camaro , T·
Tops, Loaded Excellent Condrhon Call (740)256 6889

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

Locatlonlt 09 feet
of frontage on 2nd Avenue Large
2 story br~ck house, two mobile
home rentals. and a mobjle home
wtth a frame addition that is
currently bemg used as a beauty
salon. Call for more detatls

11070
NEEDS
ANXIOUS
OFFER! Known the world over
as l he Silver Dollar Auction
House, this historic landmark
orters retail space, rental 1ncome
and storage. Includes 2 BR
house next door Call tor deta11s.
11060 FURTHER REOUCTIONI PRICE REOUCEOI
A lOT blguar than It lookll
Vacant land tn town IS hard to find
so take a look at this lot located
JUSt a couple blOcks from the C1ty
Park w1th over 8,000 square feet
of level land UUhtles already
on the
. $24,900
11076 Escape the
buetle In thll dream homel This
home offers 3 BR, 2 SA, LR, eatIn kttchen. ftnished basement and
2 car garage all on a 2.723 acre
corner lot 1n the r1o Grande area.
Ready and wa1ttng for you at
$100 ,000
'
11081 Attention all handymen!I
If you are a Mr Ftxit this could be
Beautiful country setting elate the home for you. A 3 bedroom, 2
to town! 2 5 Beres of plush bath secttonal home with central
counlry meadows and a stocked heat and atr AND 2 acres m/1 of
pond surround thiS J BR ranch land for onl~ $56,000.
' home . $69,000
Addtttonal
acreage available. -Total 17
Acres for $89,000
12005 Immaculate Brick Ranch
wtth 2 bedrooms, one bath, large
living ll dining room, eat -in
k1tchen. overstzed one car 12006 Bllutlful Sr Immaculate! 4
attached garage, one car Bedroom, 4 Bath ranch home
detached garage AND add1t1onal w111't finished basement Converled
ln-la'w quarters with 2 bedrooms garage can be a mce fa mily room
one bath, kitchen , llvtng room wtth or an efflcrency apartment for a
carport Reduced-to $79,000
parent needmg to move m w1th
1201 &amp; The beneFits of the you Lovely remodeled kttchen
clty... ln a neighborhood telling. w1th loads of cabinet space and
Let thiS 3 bedro
i \2 bath ranch pantry Royal surte has walk-m
located m~-~
alley be your close t, garden tu b bath, ftreplace
last ~lop ~ i W , rdwood &amp; entry to patio In backyard Uv1ng
floortnW\!
e and room with fireplace Gas heat.
comfo g.
Attached ce ntral a1r, AEP crty schools
to tho 0
parage IS a 14 X 8 Owner wants thts sold now!.
K snap designed wlththe $t19,900
wor
.
handy man m mrnd $ 79,000 ·
#2024 Overlook rolling country
meadows from this peaceful hill
top settrng wh1le bask tng tn the
sun bestde your own prtvate pool
In addtllan to the 4 Bedrooms and
3 Baths, the home offer s a
spactous great room. overloOking
the 20x40 In-ground pool and
24x36 pool house grea t for
entertainmg An oversized
anached two-c ar garage and
storage building located on 1 7 AC
M/L rounds th1s showplace out
$159,900

1
OWNER WANTS' AN
AI STOP AND READ THIS
wtll have a hard time
liindi''' a mcer ho r11e Tllrs 2 story
features 3 bedroom, 1 5
llvmg room with frreplace,
, large famtly room , 2
garages 24•28, 30x2B
&amp; pr1ce 130,000.
TO SEE

3
raised rancl1 with 4 car basement
garaQe. Perfect for mvestmenl
property or an auto rep&amp;r servrce.
Reduced to $35,000

$59.000
12016 The t&gt;tntfltl ol the
cttv.. .ln • ntlghborhood settlrtu.
Let th 1s 3
bath ranch'
located
I
last stop.
I

11097 Commercial Property!
Great development potential;
easy access to SA 35; 145 A C
M/l levelto rolling 1opog1apl~y

;/

t1088 Elegent In-town living
can bt found tn this 4 BA 2 1/2
BA two story coloma! style home.
Outside a beautifully landscaped
entry leads to a tastefu l ly
decorated formal ll11lng room and
dtmng room. Just ott the dmtng
room IS an equ1pped kitchen and
fam1ly room comblnatton w1th a
cozy fireplace complementing its
homey feeling . With a one caP
detached garage and the e;o;tra
storage space of the full basement
1n lawn lrvtng 15 just a phone call
away

12008 Price Reduced - Spring
Valley Arul ThtS 2 Story Colo mal lor 11 Elegant Home, Luxunous
has 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, Backyard Pnvacy and
spaCIOUS family room and lots of
hardwood floortng New Siding,
new roof and new msulaled
wtndows added m 1996 help keep
matntenance costs low. A private
back yard offers the perfect place
for quiet relaxatton Don t let thrs
one pass you byl $98,000

1:202!5 Nice home eltu on must see thts Mme. R"''"''t"
Prospect Road! Owner has $87,0001
leveled tl1e land &amp; added
dnveways Doublewides permitted
11
Call lor delatls

~~­

N2027 Located In O.OviiiOtiiii
totally renovated 1 1/2 story offers
3 bedrooms and a bath W1t h a
brrght new kitChen wood rtoortng,
new windows, s tding and a
roof.. all you'll need to do IS mo11e
lnl Call for add ttronal detatls and
locatton. $59,000

N-2030 Immaculate home,
well
groomed
lawn ,
beautiful backyard view,
In-town
living
and
waterfront property all
rolled Into ONE! Thts well cared-for 3 bedroom 1 full
bath and 2 half bath h ome
has hardwood floors and
maple wood throughout, 2
wo od burntng fr replaces
hand c rafted statned glass
designed doors, and a filii
dry basement. Hard to
believe , but th1s home IS
pr1 ced at only $89,900
12049 Acreagel 24 acres m/1
and free natural gas I You can 't N2046 New Listing !
beat thla d1al! Nice 3 bedroom 2 sectional home In a cou
bath home, garage , 32 :x 48 setting w1t h 3 bedrooms, :2
me111 pole building , 1 mobile cathedral cer!lng and '"•~:~:~~~,~~
home and free natural gas from fam 1ly room lots of
your own gas wells! You could surrounds above ground pool
save 1 101 of money In heating :28 x 28 barn/garage on 1 2
mil Call for details
~-~~ bUll thll winter! Call today I
Want ,11 nice 4·5 BR home
,---------.,----------:-;--,
In a ll . . py' little community.
Look no further. Locted between
Galllpblls and Proctorville on Matn
Street In Crown Cit,- this ranch
ofters an over sized fenced lot
wtlh a t wo car attached and a 1
t/2 detached ~arage ontha utalde
and large living room kitchen and
family room on the lnstde. With
NEW stdlng, wtndowa, roof. rtoor
cov arlnga, healln~ and cooling thts
one
11 ready to
mo11e
ta050 Beautiful aec11on11 h6inl on an acre mil w1th a nice 32 )( 48
Into .11Di,VOO
metal bulldlng/garage comfortable home wtth many extras mcludtng
above ground pool, conven\ently loc ated abolit 7 mrnutet !rom
Holzer Check on thlll onetodayt

'

12051 Nice unrestricted Jot
located about 5 mmutss lrorn
Holzer $8,000 Call today. I( mrght
be sold tomorrow

12047 New Llttlngl Lovely home on 2 8 woodael acre1 m/1 In
b•autlful ChlrOIIII •Likt eubdlvlslon 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
w1th veultect C:01hrga lamlly room with flr&amp;pi Ace. solid 6 panel
doors oak cabme ts. !lky lights, hot tub or back deck 3 CRr
at!Bched t;tarage and an aadttiC)I1al one car detAched garage Plus
become part Ow'ler ollhll Lake! $t69,900 Thts Ofle won I tast
1or1g call today!

www.Evans-Moore.com
/

I

Convemences alltn ONE c~~:~~i:
Beautlful hardwood
custom draper 1es and
man tles adorn the rnstde
outside lovely flowers surround
sparklmg waters of the 11n -a•our1o 1
sw 1mmmg pool . If
1
convemence of living

�.,

Page D8 • &amp;unlla!' ltimrtl·i&gt;rnlintl

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

Sunday, November 5, 2000

Money
fnn A1J1 Dl

attractive valuations. Given the
market's strong performance in
recent years, many popular
stocks sport price-to-earnings
ratios well above the market
average.

(PIE rano equals the market
price of a stotk divided by its
annual earnings per share. For
example, a stock that sells at
$100 per share and earns $5 is
selling at 20 rimes its earnings.
Currently the average PIE ratio
for the market is around 28.)
Value stocks have PI E ratios
below the market average, ;,.,aking them inexpensively priced
compared to most other stocks.
Bu[ there 's an even more
compelling reason to own value
stoc ks now. Value stocks and
growth stoc ks (securities of
companies with . above-average
grow~h prosper ts and higher
PI E ratios compared to the
market) go through periods
whereby one outperforms the
other.
Those periods typkally last a
couple of years.
Though past performance
does not , guarantee future
results, growth stocks have outperformed value stocks for
about the last four years, suggesting a potential change in
leadership.
Some
market
observers·
believe that shift has already
begun . Since April , value stocks
have been performing better
than
their
growth-stock
brethren .
How do you look fo r a good
value stock. or as some investment professionals say, good

Vaughan
from Page Dl

Vaughan's is perhaps best known
for the fresh, quality meats sold
there. It's a dying ttadition, Vaughan said, in an industry now selling
frozen meats which are prepackaged and shipped from distant
plants.

Bymes
from Page Dl
scoring 5-6 will have some fat present in the brisket and flanks however, udder fat and patch fat around
the tail head, would not be visible.
Once the condition of the cows
is deternuned, the next step is to
qetermine the nutritional value of
your feed.
.
Obviously, it is not necessary or ·
practical to test everything the
cows eat, however, forage testing at
critical times h.as merit. The most
important forage to rest is the hay
that will be fed in late gestation
and after calving.
In addition to the hay, producers
should also consider testing winter-fee! stockpiled fescue as well as
the July and August pa.1ture. The
feed analysis can reduce the feed
bill by allowing producers to supplement only nutrients that are
lacking.

.

.

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE

long-term companies that are
on sale?
Look for depressed industries
with good prospects of attracting investors in the nen future.
Casr in point: energy. ThiS sector has been m the doldrums
for several years, but, with ' the
recent rise in oil prices, it has
. experienced a rebound of sorts

lbree bankers
promoted

in recent months.
Target fundamentally sound
companies currently under
pressure due to events . that
could change in the future. A
few years ago, IBM
one
such stock, but soon after it
made key management changes,
the company recovered and is
now one of the most admired
stocks among investors today.
Regardless of ·how optimistic
you become about' the potenti~l
of value stocks -· or growth
stocks for that matter - never

was

invest all of your assets in either
type.
Maintain a diversified portfoIio at all times. This will give
your portfolio the necessary
balance to help achieve your
long-term goals.
Finally, before investing in
value stocks, consult with your
investment advisor. He o r she
can identify the percentage of
your portfolio that should be
. invested in value stocks and
help you determine the most

appropriate securities for your
personal financial needs.

(Bryce L. Smith i&lt; an investment
executive with Smith Partners at
Admt Inc., Gallipolis.)

Dick Vaughan and his staff are
still grinding fresh ground beef
every day, cutting pork chops and
offering other fresh meats from
their well-stocked coolers.
Vaughans' loyal customers are
also drawn into the store by its deli,
which offers deli meats, cheeses,
and mostly homemade salads and
daily lunch specials, and which
now offers full catering services as
well.

For example, hay often lacks sufficient energy for lactating cows,
but typically meets protein
requirements. Therefore, supplementing protein such as soybean
meal would not solve the deficiency, and would only add to the feed
bill, when in this C:l5e, an energy
supplement such as corn is needed.
For producers with cow herds
calving March to May O&lt; even January to March, now is an excellent

GALLIPOLIS Oak Hill
Banks h:15 announced the promotion of three area bankers.
John Cornett
has
been
named senior
vice president.
while George
Woodward and
Connie Freeman have been
· nan1ed :15Sistant
vice presidents.
':John.
Cornett
George
and
.Connie are conmUtted to the area
and are dedicated to customer Service," said President and CEO
Richard P. LeGrand. "Th eir teamwork means success for the bank
and the community."
An experienced
commercial lender,
Cornett joined
Oak
Hill
Banks in 1998.
A graduate of
Ga llia Academy
High
School, he has
a
bachelor's
Woodward degree from St.
Louis Universi ty and an MBA from Washington
University. .
Cornett and his wife, Marty,
have two children. They reside m
Gallipolis.
Woodward, a Gallipolis native, is
the bank's business development
officer for Gallia County. A graduate of GAHS, he chaired cl1e
"Takin' the Farm to the City"
event held in .rhe Gallipolis City

The catering van carries the
Vaughan's logo · - a rendering of
Walter Vaughan's grocery wagon,
and the grocery bags carry a picture of"Grandpa''Vaughan at work
at the Evans' .store. The Vaughans
. also proudly ride in a replica of the
wagon in area parades.
They are symbols of a family ttadition that appears to be getting
stronger with each generation.
time to assess the condition of the
cows and the nutritional value ·o f
the feeds and find an appropriate
feed program. For a fac t sheet on
Body Condition Scoring, or information on forage testing, call the
OSU . Extension office at 446- ·
7007.
(]e.mif" L. Byrnes i&lt; Gal/ia Cowt· .

Park in September.
He is a pm
president
of
Galhpohs Area
Jaycees
and
donates
his
rime to various
CIVIC Of~~za­

tions throughFreeman
out
Calha
County. Woodward has two sons, and makes his
home in Gallipolis.
A 31-year banking veteran,
Freeman is manager of Oak Hill
Banks' Gallipolis office. She ·is
chairman of the Economic
Restructuring Committee and
serves on the· board of directors of
Main Street Gallipolis, the city's
downtown restoration project.
A graduate of Symmes Valley
High School in Willow Wood, she
has earned a bachelor's degree
from Marshall University. Freeman and her husband, Johnnie,
reside in Proctorville. The couple ·
has one son.

Promoted at
Kyger Cleek
CHESHIRE - . Thomas C.
Staats has been promoted from

senior performance engi neer to
instrument maintenance supervisor, effeqive Oct. 28, at Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek
Plant.
The promotion was aru10unced
by Plant Manager Ralph E.
Amburgey
Staats joined OVEC in 1995 as
an associate engineer in the Performance Department, and in
1996 was promoted to perforc
mance engineer. In March 2000,

he advanced to
senior perfor-

nunce

engi-

neer.
Staats is a
graduate
of
West Virginia
University
with a nuster
of
science
Staat.
degree
1n
mechanical
engineering. He and his wif~
Angela are the parents of a son
and reside in Point Plea5ant,WVa.

Agent honored
by Grange
POMEROY -Michael Warner 'of Brogan-Warner Insurance
Service Inc., Was recently honored
for achieving Challenger's Club
Status in the Grange Life Insurance Co.
Challenger's Club membership
is limited to those agents who Me
top life insurance producers in
Grange Insurance's Six-state area.
"Grange Insurance C hallenger's
Club members work hard to serve
their customers and maintain a
successful
relationship
with
Grange," said Martin Dinehart,
vice president of Grange Insurance Life Operations. "We are
pleased to honor them for their
efforts in protecting the financial
security of their policyholders."
Grange Life Insurance is a
member of the Grange Mutual
Insurance Companies based m
Columbus.

Winner of
scholarship
GALLIPOLIS

Morgan

Details, A3
Woodward of Gall1pohs " ' cl1e
recipient of the 2000 Gallia
County Cattleman's association
BeefScholarship Award. She is the
daughter of Tombo and Jackie
Woodward, and is a graduate of
Galli:i Academy H1gh School. ·
Woodward bas been an active
member of 4-H for II years,
where she wa.o; lnvolvcd in variety

ofjunior fair beef proJects, including steers, beef breeding and feed-

H er involvement in showing

beef cattle has encouraged her
membership in several state and
national beef organizations, such

as the Ohio Jumor Angus A.'sociation, where sh e served as a dele-

gate for the National Juni or Angus
Board of Directors election.
She is currently pursuing a
ba chelor of science degree in
nursing at Ouerbem College's
School of Nursing. Following
graduation, she plans to pursu e a
nuster's program in anesthesiology, while maintaining hC'r CO I.n mitment to the ;:atti c industry.

YouR UsED CAR SuPERSTORE • NEXT DooR To WAL·MART
2000 Regal GS

2000 Montana
Ext. 4 Door

ty.)
Never Been 11tled • FaW.ry
$,000 Low Miles, Suaroof Heated Lealher

4.3 V•8, 8 Passenger, Front &amp; Rear 1VC,
Rear wheel drive, Power Windows, ·co
Player, Only I 8,000 Miles.

WASS34,035
'NOW

WAS $26,669

1997 Bolek Park Avenu

NOW ONLY

17900
1999 S-10 EXT

I ,\niiUie

• ••

Do you have old appliances,
metal equipment or siding needing
to be disposed of? Don't bury it in
the back 40. B!'ing it to th~ Meigs
County Appliance Recycling Day,
Nov. II from 9 a.m. to I p.m. at the
parking lot behind the Meigs
County Aimex· between Holzer
Clinic and the old Veterans Memorial Hospit.il.
Get rid of old appliances, bicycles, lawn mowers, furnaces or
stoves at no cost to you. This pickup is being sponsored by the Meigs
County Recycling and Litter Control Office. For further informaoon,
call the Litter Control Office at
992-1;360.
(Hal Knmt ;, Meigs Cowtty s

ExtmsiorJ agent for agrimltttre and narl'ral re&lt;ourre&lt;, Ohio Star. Umversity.)

One Owner, Lease Turn· In, White with
Blue Leather Interior, CD Plus Cassette,
Memory Seats, Low miles.
ONLY

~--

$16,900
1999 Grand Am 4 Dr.

I
I
CHEROKEE
TRUCKS
r\.1,1.
MOUt;J,S
$:l,OOO
R•:Hr\.'1' 1-: !
JIJU //like our quality way ofdoing busine.~s!

3.9%

No~~~. .

·
.

MONEY FOR
PROGRAMSHoward Parker.
costumed as Ush
Waters, an eccentric school teacher
born in 1825. and
D lxi~ Sayre, who
portrays Rhoda ·
Knight, a Civil War
spinster in "Tales
of Chester
Shade," join Rep.
John Carey and
Holly Marvin of.
the Oh io Attorney
General's office to
display a $5,000
ceremonial check.
The money will be
used for
Appalachian programming at the
Chester Court·
house. (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)

mon.~ rigorous'' than ·the currl!nt ninth;-grade protidcncy
test ..which thl' new exam will
replace, department representative Pat[i G rey said.

VORTEC 4300 V•6, 4 Speed Automullc, 3rd
Door, Reellnlng Bueket Seats, Lo~klng
Differential, AJC, Cassette

J.Vilma Parker of rhe Clrester-Sh.rde
Society said the rrro.~?rcurtruirrg marrey
will lte used to l'llllllrra and &lt;'XJ~&lt;IItd
eduottitmal and culwral JII'OJII'LIIIIS
·,.Jrich aJ'i' .1fl·,•,ul)' itt placl'.

2!12 Upper River Rd.
Galllpolla, Olilo 4!1631

J&lt;.ACINE - The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency w1 1l hold a public information session and public hearing Thursd&lt;lY tu answer que:;-tions and accept comments on an application from the Ohio
Department ofTransportatiun, relating to
water LJUal ity impacts of the relocation of
about 16 miles ofS.R. 124 and U.S. 33.

While- the discharges from the relo cation
activit i ~s wou ld not be allowed to excL·cd
state water qua lity s~1ndard' for the pmtection ofhuman heal th and aquatic life, Ohio
EPA believes that the project would result

T he informational seo:;sion wi ll begin at

in limited degradation to the existing water

ldO p.m. , followc·d by the public hearing.
!3oth will be held in the cafeteria ofSourhern High School in Racine.

quality of Kerr Run, Straight H ollow
Creek, Nease Creek. Bowman Run, Ycllowbush Creek, O ldtown Creek, Gronny

.

.

Subj~t

1997 Blazer 4 Dr.

Straw donated

GJt~~~G~u· -~(J

Creek, their unnJnh.' d rributaric~. &lt;-1 11
unnamed Ohio R.iver tributary .md 1..1(,
acres of ac~acent \Wtl.mds. Therefore, the
:1gcncy is requtrcd to solicit and L'VJiuatt'
CO illJllent ~ regarding th ~ tc(hni cal, soci;II,
ecouomic and l'Jwironlllent,l l irnpJct of the
proposal and i\'illl'" n:-a lt ed to \own w;ltl'r
quality. ()hiu E PA will cull\idt:r thl' COI !l ·lllents bd(XL' making it'\ tina! dL·CJ~IOil.

ship, marh and sc ience - are
the \lame as the current test.
Students who don't pass all
fwe '&gt;ec.:tions in the spring of
their sophomore yt·ar will have
o:;ev.eral chance.:; to re-take it,
including after the rest of their

class

graduates

from

high

school.
Studt=nts who are juniors
and seniors m 2003 but still
need to pass one or more parts

TO compensate t()r the l .J() acrt.:s of
1111pacted \Wtlancb. 01 lOT proposes to
(1\'.ltl:'. t:nh.111CL' ;ltld pll' ~L'I'VC :lb0llt ~ . ...J

acre~

of \\\.·tl.mds m:ar thl· l~ ocksprint,"'i
Fairgmuncb northe:tlt of the U.S ..1.1/ S.R.
7 imerchmgt.' nc1r Po111L'roy. The 2.4 acn·-.
\\ould he part ofJ L1rger \\'L't\,ind L'Oli1Jlll'x
cnmi . . ting nf ,1huut 20 Krl''i.

· T he public also

111ay n)lllllH.'nt

nn the

propo..,al and/ or request to be placed on an
mtcrnted partic·s mailing list by writing to
Ohi o EPA, DSW, Attn: Permits Processing
Unit. 1'0. Box I 049: Columbus. Ohio
4.1216-11\4'!. Comments will be· accepted
through Nov. 1;,.

I he certifi ution application and related
1.1\ •.Jte:ialm,ty

be n.·vicwed and/ or copied at

Oh1o EPA'~ I)jyj..,ion of Surface Water in
Columbus by .calling (6 14) 644-2001 for
:111 appointlllt'nt. Arr.1ngement'i 111ay also be
m:1dc to n.·vtt•w the Jpplication at the EPA's
l.ngan otlirc. hy calling (740) .'lKS-HSlll.

l

41N STOCK!
4 Wheel Drive, Well Equipped, Low
Good Color Seleellon.
FROM

Charter schools forming statewide organization

Today's

Sentinel
Sections -

16 Pages

Calendar
Glassifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S(!orts
Weather

~Iiles,

A5

D4-6
B7
A4
A3
BI-3,5C6,8
A3

Lotteries

..

o;t'hool~

l&lt;.cpresctitatives ot' llhio\
,,1y thi...'ll' moVL'IIH.'Il! h.1-. ~mwn

"trong enough to -.upport 3 lobbying ctl(wt in the
Lcg1 o.;Jaru l'l'.

C h.1rt n

o.;chnol

~t dvor.ltl'\

held. rht•Jr fir'\t

o.;t.ttewiJc l·n nf\.TL'nc~..· thi . . \\L'l'kend in thi -; Tnkdo
o.;uburb, dr.m 111g .1bout 150 J1 L'11J~k.
Clint ~.1row. t'Xl'L"Utivc.: dirLTW r of the Oh 10
Co mnn1nitv Sdl~&gt;ol Cclltcr 111 Columbu"i. SJ·id ,m
;J\\Ol'iatinn of dl.trtn '&gt; Llwn l-. w.1-. b emg f~Jn ncd to
gJVL' the JJJO VL' Iill'!lt a pc.: r\ll,lllL'lll vo ice in the ~t.ltL'

c1pital.
" An :l'iSoJ..' i,I ti()ll

rt'pl't''&gt;L'llt~

,
thr nt:xt \ogJcl l mde-

stone in th e llc\'l'lnp111cnt of clurter \Chou I-.

111 ·

W,VA,
Daily 3: 7-.i-.1 Daily 4: K-1-X-4

pnlp;Lllll ..

Pick 3: H-&lt;J-2 ; Pick 4:

Free straw for animal beds was given away Saturday by the Meigs
County Humane Society. It is the first of several t1mes the straw will
be made available for the coming winter. Donations are accepted for
the s traw, but the .Humane Society's main coneern. officials say, is
the family pet have a warm bed this winter. (Brian J. Reed photo)

ROSS~UH..Il (A I') -

ch;)rta

Ohto," he 1.1id.
S.ltO\\.' .;.,wi ch,u·rcr ~chool .td,·oc:ltt.'' b\t \'L',\1'
helpL·d dl'IL~.u .1 hill th.u \HHiill lu\'e l11nited . the
numhcr,of.;.uch \Clh)nl... i11 l)hw , .md he prt·dirtcd
furthc.T dforr . . \v!ll .ll'l"L' ro wcll..L'll or n1ppk th L·

OHIO

(740) 446 0842 or
Toll Free 1-800-446-0842
to Appr_o'llllend length or Ttrm Cho.. n,

rt'ading, writing, citizen-

Equipped Just Right

Or Email uoll: ouperllodgeCivoyager.net
RtbltH And Fln1nee R11e1

Mary Powell. active in secur ing ftinding for
the re"omion,sa id the $15,001) will be used to
finish and install imcrior woodwork and do
some pai n.ting along with completing some

-

'"If they're. talkin g with
teacher-; now, and a child. i-. uf the ninth-grade test will
having a problem, parents take the new test.
ought to be finding out w hat
About one-fourth of the
intervention ls availa ble now test questions requi·re students
from
their
to
explain
schoo ls."
how
they
Students who arc jrmiors
People
a
and seniors i11 2003 but solved
with Internet
math probstill need to pass •me or lem or to
access can get
more parts of the
an early loo k
write
an
at the- t•xant. uintlr-grade test will take answer fur a
The departgovernment
the
llt'll' test.
ment has put
or snence
a
practice
question.
version, complete with answer
Stu dents also will have to
key, on its Web site.
perform more advanced tasks
Crey o;aid more than I 0,-tnll than on the ninth-grade test
people do\.vnloaded the new - analyzi ng portions of pl ays
test in the two \\'ccks after Jts and poems. making predictions
polling on Oct. 23.
based on data and showing
The Ll'gislature vo ted to they unJer~tanJ basic eroe~bo li sh the Ill-yea r-o ld mnth1101111\..' S.
g rade test, a requirement for
Students from several Ohio
high
schoo l
grad uatio n , ~chou l s wen: given prat:tin·
because it J ocs not rdlecr versions of the new res[ to
what a 'high-school student determine whether the quesshou ld learn.
tiOJ'ls Wt'Tl' too easy or ditlicult .
One of th em. Sann Touch. a
"From the outs'i!J many
educators believed the ninth- junior at Co lu mbus l3ri ggs
grade test. ... was a rath er mud- Hi gh School, said those taking
est bottom-line standard," said the new exam will haw to read
Roger Trent, director of a..se~&lt;­ mort' J.nd practice writing.
mt'nt and eval uation for the
"On the ninth-grade test,
Edu cation Department.
you can JUSt guess," ~he said.
About 140,11(10 sophomore1
are expected to takt· the tt•st
Please see Test. Pase Al

Tltr it!form.rtional sl'ssioll will /J,·giJt at 6:JO p.m.,ji&gt;llorl'ed I&gt;)' tlwptil&gt;lic heanJt.~. Borl1 will
be ltcld ilt tltc &lt;•!fi!tcri,r of' SorJtltl'r&gt;r H(f!/r Sc!rool ill Radllt'.

Jeep

0

ety m emlwrs in schools and at special events .

necessary exteri or work.
charitable funds, Ma'rvin said.
She said th e grant c riteria specifles improveWilma Parker of the Cheste~-Shade Society
ments
must be tangible, "like to the building.
said the programming money will be used to
en hance and expand educational and cultural not for salar ie s or utility payment," and that the
programs w hich are alre ady in place. She said money be used to enhance not just the comnew money allows the Society to con tinue mumty and ito; econo mi c clnn:lte but serve as an
. mu sical instrument classes, folk dancing ami arts attraction to others around the state .
f&gt;lan s, according to l'owl'll , call f9r local art iand craft programs, along with the mock trial .
sans
to be a part of the heritage progrom disschool activities and the taping of interv iews
playing thei r wa res at the courthouse and doing
with sen ior citizens on local folklore :
d1.·monscrations
thlT&lt;..' on w&lt;.·ekt:nds.
She said it also gives th e group money to

$15,900

lftC.W

continue the "Tale' of Che1ter Shade," which is
a portrayal of historical (·haractcrs by local Soci-

when its gtven for the first
time ' in 2003. Its subject areas

Ohio EPA slates public hearing for lbursday
FROM STAFF REPORTS

CONCORD

er Mitch Meadows, decorations by
Frances Flori.lt and an educational
·plant display by Meigs County
Master Gardeners, a volunteer
group part of Ohio State University. Hope to see you there!

COLUMBUS (1\ P) . - A
state Edu cation Department
spokeo;~vonun o;aid parellts uf
eighth-graders sho uld start
asking tor help now if th ey fed
their chi ldren may have trouble passing Ohio', new 1Othgradc proficiency test in 2003.
"The test is challen gi ng and

Carey was ac~ompanied by Holly Marvin,
Southeast O hi o field representative for the
office of Attorney General lletty D. MontgomL'Ty. The money came from that officc 1 s

agent for agriculture mtd
riatr-1ral resourres, Olrio State Universi-

$26,900

from Page Dl

to be tougher

courthouse.

ty~ Extension

0%

test expected

CHESTE R -Two grants, one for continuing restoration of the Chester co urthouse and
the other for Appalachian cu ltural programming there , have been awarded to the. Chester
Shade Htstoncal Society.
Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston, met with society members Friday to present a $5,000 check
lor ed ucational programs, and announce a
S15,0110 grant awarded through th e Ohio Capital Improvements Program for use in continuing restoration work on Ohio's oldest standing

2000 Bonneville SSEi

V·6

50 Cents

Proficiency .

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Interior, Superehai'Jied 3800
Engine, &lt;:D Plus
Cassette, Truak 'Moaated 12 Dloe tluutger

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 51, Number 115

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

De••

Kneen

Meigs County's

Chester courthouse receives grants

Only 900 miles! Le11tbt!r IJoterlo•r,
Sunroof, CD plus Cassette, Heated
Seats, Touring Suspeaslon, Monsoon
Speakers, Save a Bundle on this .
"Like New" car.

November 6, 1000

•

er calves.

Her conunitment to these projects earned her two grand champion market steer awards, grand
champion feeder calf, out&lt;tanding
beef exhibitor and first place
senior beef showmanship.
In addition to beef projects at
the fai r, Woodward also exh1bits
c~ttle at Ohio Preview shows and
at open shows all over the country, including the Junior National
Angus Show
and
Eastern
Regionals.

Monday

.Don't forget to vote Tuesday
Gallipolis falls in prep playoffs, B1

'IUesclay

Hlch: &amp;Os; Lenir: 40s

S·l-7~2.

I' ~fMHil Hun\.tlln l'uhl"h ll l)l. t"

Ch.lrtl'r \chooh eire puhhrly funded ,cJwoJ..,
opc.·r.ttcd hy JlldL'PL'lllknt bo:ll'Lh . l'l1 L'Y .11'l' .Hlthoritcd !HHkr -.r.ltl' l.nv-., hut .1rc c:\c.lllrl frn1n n1.1nv

,I

regul.ttiom that gon·rn tr:-~ditiun,Jl Public 'i(hools.

l he· Lcwslaturc approvc·d a charter-school p1lor
for luc·.l\ Co unty in 1997 ..111d th e tim &lt;uch school&lt;
OJ1L'Ill'd 111 199R. Therl' !lO\V .li'L' (19 char tn schnob

.H:rm\ the sta re. with rota) t:nrollmem of mort' than

17.11110 m Hknts.
In Oh10, the 'it.lte

p;~yo;

&lt;·h,Jrtcr -.chon!-; about

$4.JO!) .1 yea r for t:ach pupil Th.1t m ont·y is deducted from the ~t.Hl' fundo; gt\'l' ll w the \C hool d1strit't
i11 which each child J't•si de~.
·
The funding has ht'i:.' Jl ~ \OLH"l."t' uf ti-ictiun
hL'fWL'cn chanl'l' "chooJ..; ,1 nJ n aditional sc hool
board'&gt;, which say they ,\l'C t\.)rCL'd to ~ubsidlze c harter -.chool-. nut of' loc,Jl fund., appruvl:d by local tax-

p.lycro;.
( 'l1.1rtt'r \chno\.~ -..1y thL' fundmg 1~ nnt L' nough to
~u .n.llltl'l' qu.thty nluc.llmn for ti lL' llittm:'.
"Our hit_!;gc'r cntKL'rlt I\ there :lrc not enough
I'L'\ollrc,t.:\ for t~ll' thtlC'I
md tln.II1Cc.'," ~.1id Taner
Lrtekin, v in• pn,.,ident· ot' H n ri 7nn Sricnee Act~dl' ­
my, whKh ha~ cHnpu ~L'" 111 l ~l l!vl'bnd ,md Colum hu, .

"

Please see Charter, Pase Al

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