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                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 10, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

It's for the birds:·Year-round feeding won't change migration patterns
.By CATHERINE HAMM
OVP News Staff
The lady who called the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune office had a
concerned tone in her voice. She
asked if we could do something
about an issue she cared deeply
about - remind the public of the
need for removal of hummingbird
fe~rs from backyard gardens.
S_he was afraid if feeders were left
up too long, the hummingbirds
would become dependent on the
food source and refuse to Oy south,
risking the chance of freezing to
death during our cold winters.
After lengthy research and a conversation · with a spokesperson for

the National Bird Feeding Society.
the lady can stop worrying. Not only
should hummingbird. feeders be left
up - ·they are a necessi ty.

According the spokesperson, "I
wish I cq~ ld tell you the number .of
calls we get about this. It. is absolutely not true that hummingbirds will
stay around if you feed them.
l:'lumans like to eivc them selves
more credit than thecy deserve. 1-h·e
lnstinct birds have to migfate work s

'every time. Feeders should be left up
to help them make thf! trip south.
The trip is long and they need the
energy."
,According to the Kaytcc Bird
web site. feeding year-round does
nm adversely ~ffect migration pat tern s for any bird . For in stance .

.

··~·

research has shown the Black·
capped Chickadee tncreased in number. surviving cold winters better
because of supplementary feeding.
Songbirds will wait until the last
of autumn to migrate and birds that
travel from more northern regions
will often come to feeders in search
of food. However, feeders are not
the only source of food for birds.
Another myth is feeders reduce a
bird's natural instinct to hunt. Birds
do not spend their entire day at feed ~
ers - they. still hunt for wild food

flooding. Young babies are learning
to eat and search for food. M o ltin~
(replacing feathers) also occur&gt; at
this time and energy is needed h&gt;r
the process.
Autumn brings preparation for
migration. Food is needed to build
up needed fat for the journey.
Winter is the most diiTicult ume
for birds. The preferred food sources
of insects, berries and seeds are

sources and insects . Nest building

and suet are good sources for rnergy.
Hummingbirds eat nectar, hut he

and care of babies take up their time
too.
Birds do eat- the phrase "eating
like a bird" doesn 't do justice to their

gone , but tht: need for c n ergy ~ ru.: h

food is strong and helps maintain
body heat. Black oil sunflower seeds

cating us about nature. While some
people •·iew birding as beautification of their yard, others sec it a!'l an
cxtenston of landscaping.
According to the Sue Wells. executive dircrtor of the National Bird
Fecdmg Sucoety, "More than 50 million Americans feed backyard songbirds, Thcv make a big difference to
the health and even existence of wild

So. to the lady who called the Tribune - 20 ahead and feed yearrou nd. EnToy bird watching and help

have to cons ume 285 pounds of

hamburg·er or 340 pounds of potatoes in a single day .. Magnolia warblers feed their babies a lieakful of

water source . Make sure the \Vater i~
clean . Consider multiple birdbaths

inseCt$ every four rpinutc:s .- that is
thousands of insects a day. And, a

placed at different .Jc,•cls for hathing
a nd drinking .· Movin g watcr also

single sparrow hawk consumes nearly 300 mice a ye'ar. ·
The need for year-round feeding
need to build Ill! their bodies for
mating. breeding and feeding babies.
Summer can bring uncertain weath-

The National Bird Feeding
Society's address is Post Office
Do&lt; 23. Northbrook, Ill. 60065. Its
FOFfTHE BIRDS - Area resl.d ents need to feed wild birds yearbirds like to lly thruug:h a mi st nf phone number is 414·348-0541; round. "rhls concerned bird lover is shown restocking a backyard
and its web .site is www.birdfeed· feeder.
\yatcr.
Bird watching and feeding ·iri_g.org. .
(known as birding) is qu ic kly

er conditions. such as droughts or

becoming

so urces varies . In the spnng , birds

The Community Calendar is pub- the even t of rain, performance to be
lished as a free service to non-profit moved to Pomeroy Church. 112 East
groups wishing to announce meet - ' Second St. Hotdogs and other
ings and special events. The calcn· refreshments.
dar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any t:Ype. hems are SUNDAY
RUTLAND Homecoming
printed only as space permits and
can nGt be guaranteed to be printed a Sunday. Rutland Free Will Bapti,_
speci fic number of days.
Church. Potluck dinner at noon.
preaching a1 I p.m. by John Elswick.
Revival service, Sept. 12-18 with
FRIDAY
POMEROY- Fun, food and fe l- special singing.
lowship at God ·s Net Friday, and
MEADOW CREEK, W.VA. Saturday. ,6 p,ni. to I0:30p.m. Nutri·
tional foods free of chard for snack- Herbert and Esther King family
ing while teens are .at · the center .. reunion will be .held Sunday at the
Non-violent games, computer .pro- · Gary King residence in Meadow
gtams. cards. and a game room. The Creek, W.Va. Directions are avail- center ts located o n Main Street in able by calling 992-5533 or (304)
882-3267.
.
Pomeroy:
RACINE- Harvest Festival, St.
SATI.JRDAY .
Modern' John Lutheran Church, 33441 Pine
BURLINGHAMWoodmen of Amenca, Saturday Grove Road , Racine, Sunday, ' wornight, hall. 5:30p.m. potluck dinner ship at II a.m., noon potluck · lunwith members to take covered dish. cheon and fellowship.
Meat, rolls. beverages to be served.
Di1Strlct manager to speak. ·
CHESTER Homecoming,

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~very

mytl:l you hear. And ,

Jlln't even ask if hummingbirds
really ll y south on the backs of
Ca nada scesc.

most popular hohby in

'

'·

.New Shipment Of
Pat Richter Pictures
And Paper

Chester Nazarene Church, ·The Dun- ·
can Family from Orient, special
singers, at I :30 p.m. Public invited.
RACINE - Annual harvest fe stival. St. John .Lutheran Church.
33441 Pine Grove Road , Racine.
Sunday, worship at I a.m., noon
potluck lunch and fellowship.

CANDLES
• Pumpkin •Apple Spice
•Cinnamon •Coffee

CATS MEOW HOUSES

MIDDLEPORT
01\PSE, ·
Local 17. Thursday. Meigs Middle
School, 7 p.'m. ·
MONDAY
CHESHIRE - DAY picnic at
Cheshire Park Monday, 6 p.m. for
Disabled' American Veterans .

"It's No Mystery"

HAND CRAFTED
FURNITURE
•End Tables •Sofa Tables
• Cabinets • Benches

Soon ...

'"Millennium Clock"

.•

POMEROY - Right to Life
meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.

w,.:Js'- .

dftlP&gt;.~ ~-;;. 41.,_,
~,-j,

2400 Eastern Ava.
RACINE - Chapman, Myrta,
Kerwood and• Hill reunion. I p.m.
Sunday, Star Mill Park , Racine.

LONG BOTTOM - Hymn si ng
at the Faith Full Gospel Church at·
Long Bottom , Saturday. 7. p.m.
Singers will be Davod and Debbie
Dailey.

)

Gallipolis
(740) 446-1711
Open 7 Days A Week

)
)

)
)

CHESHIRE - Family reunion
for the descendants of William and
Maggie Wise, Saturday. at the
Cheshire Park . Lunch wi ll be se rved
at 12:30. Those atte.nding should

.: '

.

•

)

•

bring a covcre.d dish .

POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. DA", Saturday
noon luncheon at Crows; meeting to
fo llow ·at I :30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Library.
'

)

)

)

.

DEXTER - Homecoming at the
old Dexter Church. Saturday. starting at noon. Everyone welcome.

)

•

POMEROY - A "gathering at
the river" sponsored by the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. with the
Carmel-Sutton Bluegrass Band, 6 to
8 p.m. on the parking lot stage. In

)

)

Statistical scholars

l

debunk "Bible code"
NEW YORK (AP) - An international team of stati sticians is
debunking the controversial " Bible
code," which ·claims the Old Testament has hidden references to 20th
century events that can be r evealed
by a computer.
Proponents of the code claim that
names and events were hidden in the
Bible as written thousands of years
ago and can be found through computer searches of the Hebrew text.
Television documentaries, fast-sellirtg books ;Ind numerous articles
have popularized the theory, · first
published in the academic journal
Statistical Science.
Now the same journal. published
by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics based in Hayward, Calif.. is
offering an article challenging the
technique it rep&lt;&gt;rted in 1994. The
article will be published in the quarterly next week.
· Believers in the " Bible code"
theory treat the Hebrew _Bible as a
string of letters without spaces,
looking for words formed by
equidistant letter sequences. For
instance,. comp uters might se lect

every ninth Hebrew letter and register a "hit" when a "coded word "
'
intersects with a Bible verse
contai'ning related words. ·

r

•

•

)
)

)

%

%

pageA2

Inside page A6

•

lttt

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • September 12, 1999

Vol. 34, No. 30

APY

City National Bank i...ving a celebration and you are in~i~d' )~in us for a special, one.-day only"Customer Appreciation
Celebration" to mark the O'ear Anniversary ofou')Pomeroy office.
)
. • Friday, September 10
• City National Bank Pomeroy Office
)
• 236 EaSt Main Street, Pomeroy
.
• FREE hotdogs, popcorn, soft drinks &amp; balloons!
• PRIZE DRAWING for a $500 COl
• GIVEAWAYS .Include City mint-zipper bags (some with cash I)

.

. One-Day Only Specials: In addition lo our 12-Month Anniversary CD as outlined above, City National will
offer the following special for one day only! 8.99% APR on Personal Loans, with no appliCation fee**

NATIONAL

N&lt;

All the bank you need
Member FDIC

www.citynational-bank.com
Serving West Virginia and Ohio with 59 locations .

complete 21 credits with specif·
ic course requirements in ordei
to receive their high' school
diplomas. ·
S.B. 55 requires that students
take four English credits instead
of three, three math instead of
two', three science instead of
one, and t~ree social ·studies
instead of two.
As a result of this new require- .
ment, many smaller school districts must
consider the hiring of additional teachers,
and in many cases, .modification of classroom space to meet the requirements, all
sure to cost districts additional funds: with
no further linitncial assistance pledged from
the state, which mandated the changes in the
first place,
"Schools that do not already meet the
requirements will have to hire new teachers
and find new classroom space for additional

classes," Strickland's brief said. "Science ·new graduation requirements have been in_
labs, which are some of the most expensive place at Eastern already.
classrooms to be built, will need to be
For instance, the district for many years .
added. Math and science tea~hers, who are has required that students graduating com:
among the most difficult to attract and there- plete four credits of English, and a variety of
, fore expensive to hire, will have to be elective social studies courses are already iti
hired."
place to provide for the additional social
These changes, along with the "fourth studies credits required under S.B. 55 . .
grade guarantee," which requires that a stuThe district has been required to upgrade
dent pass the fourth-grad~ proficiency test its math and ·science programs, expanding
before being promoted to the fifth grade, its integrated .malh and science curricula for
and requires that the district provide remedi- students for whom college preparatory sci·
al assistance to students in passing the test, ence courses, such as chemistry and physics,
place .a further financial hardship on dis- might be inappropriate.
tricts, Strickland said.
In the Meigs Local District, an adqition"Ultimately, these school districts will. be al English teacher has been hired to help
forced to rely on the property t3&gt;t even more, meet the additional graduation requireas they attempt to prov"icle more teachers, ments, accordi-ng to Superintendent Bill
more classrooms, additional science labs Buckley, and extensive changes have been
and remediation," Strickland said in his made to the math and science course offerbrief. Rick Edwards, principal of Eastern ing$ so that those requirements can be met,
High School; said Thursday that some of the
,
Continued on page A2

a
unty
mm
oners
OU medical student
expected tO 8Ct On renOVatiOn bidS l~arns about medical
ey
practice in Pomeroy

KEVIN KELLY
Tlmei-Sentlnel St8ff ·
GALLIPOLis - Gallia eounCommissioners may act as soon
their next meeting Thursday on
awarding bids ·for the renovation
of the former Ohio Depart_ment of
Transportation garage into the
new base for the county health

·

Muthig, a consultant in the" Ohio
Depanment of 'Education's testing
division: "We are testing in a vacuum
in that we have nothing to compare to
in ·other states."
'
The test is given every two years. In
199S,Ohiowa.oneof!Ostatesthatdid.
n't participate.
Educators say the unwiUingness of
local school districts to join has a lot to
do with Ohio's own proficiency test
demands. Many school superintendents
thought it .would be 100 .much to ask
their teachers and students to do another
.test when they were foc!L5ing on prepar;

knew about tear gas projectiles but didn't tell Congress
By LAURIE KELLMAN
Aaaoclated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP)- Justice
Department officials acknowledge
thai an FBI_ document the agency
had failed to turn over to Congress
will become a key part of an indopendent probe into whether the governm~nt killed people during the
Branch Davidian standoff in Waco,
Texas, and tried to cover il up, The
Associated Press has learned.
Justice spokesman Myron Marlin
said Friday night that former Republican Sen. John Danforth, who is
· ing for the state's proficiency ·leSIS in heading the independent · inquiry,
March, Mu\hig said.
Ohio requires students to take profi- will have to examine why the cruciency tests at fourth, sixth and ninth · cial page of the report did not reach
grades. Passage of the ninth-grade test is Congress earlier than this w~ek.
required for graduation. Most districts
Marlin noted, however, that the
have ndjusted their puniculum to meel page was properly turned over to
the inaeasing demands of the proljcien- lawyers in criminal and civil cases
involving Waco survivors.
.
cy tests.
"Whether it was an administraThe national tests could help confinn tive error is something that the spewhether Ohio's proficiency exlll)lS have cial counsel will have to look at,"
value, said Tom Mooney, president of
the Cincinnati Federation ofTeachers.
Marlin said. "But we know that the
plaintiff and qefendants counsel
received it."
The key final page from a 49Good Morning
page FBI lab rC:pof\ was turned over
to the House Governmertt Reform
Today'• tit
.Committee this week, along with an
11 Sections • 148 Pages
internal Justice · Department memo
C6&amp;7
Calendars
acknowledging the document "was
Classjfieds
Dl-7
nol produced to Congress" during
Comics
Insert
the 1995 investigations into the
tragedy,
A4
Editorials
The first 48 pages .of the Iab
Along tlie River C1-8
report, dated Dec. 6,.1993, had been
AS
Obituaries
turned over to lawmakers yearN ago,
Sports
81-6
absent· the mention of the military0 199fl Ohio Valley Puhlis~ing Co.

Jlacthad

,
("'Offer ava1Jable at Pomeroy OhiO ofllu only APR avall&lt;tblt Sttptemllf!r 10 1999 only Ofl~r avallaDie tor ""~ncmg ol up lo $5000 alid lor lerms or up to 48 momns.J.oans sui!JeCt to credit apprOWII. APR stlawn 1s llaSftd on a48-month
loan of 15.000 Such a 16an would lla'ot 48 month~ payments oll24 38 p1rr month Tilt s1mplt mre,~sr rale IS t1xed IO! Ihe lerm at ltle loan Curren! C"Y Nalionil Bank lOins are flO! lllglbl..elo1 thi&amp; otter. OUltr nllli and terms ;r;ailllble.)

legislature has failed to .comply with a
Coutt-mandated ·order to revamp
Ohio's system of funding public
schools, and calls on the Supreme
Court to take appropriate action to
force the legislature to "treat all
schools fairly."
·
"(The court) ordered the state to
improve its system of funding schools
by relieving school districts' reliance
on the local property tax," Strickland's brief reads. "But the state has instead
increased standards without providing
school districts with adequate help financially."
Strickland refers specifically to provisions in senate Bill 55, which increase the
academic credit.requirement for high school
graduation, beginning, with this year's
sophomore class. Juniors and seniors are
now required to complete IS credits, but
their underclassmen will be required to

CINCINNATI (AP) - Lack of
POMEROY - Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine (OUparticipation · by school districts ·
COM) stu~nt Troy Diehl recently completed a six-week fellowship in Stu·
' around the stale caused Ohio to drop
dent/Resi~nt Experiences and Rotations in Community Health (SEARCH)
out of a national student testing pro'
this summer. During his fellowship, Diehl completed a four-week rotation .a t
gram in I 992.
·
Veterans Memorial Hospital Outpatient Oinic and the Holzer Meig$ Branch in
Now, the state says it will rejoin
Pomeroy.
the program - even if it means departm~nt.
Pomeroy is designated a. a Health Pro•t pricl~ted ·ln thl•.
requiring districts' participation.
A bid opening was held Sept. 2
fessionals Shortage Area. Ten first-year program l»ca.'NI Wllnl· '·
. Th5 National Assessment of Edu- · for general, mechanical.• electrical
medical students participated in the H to II«~ of • c//nicalionlll Progress, authorized by Con- and plumbing and quotes have
SEARCH fellowship this summer. Major ~I outloolc orr rm.t liN
gress, has tested .students on a naliontabulated by Bill Morgan, .the
components of , the fellowship included .INtrl«/ In our ffm·YM'
al basis in major subject areas since i~~::~ architect ret~ned for the
community and clinical experience, meo- cltla• .,.,. C011fM ,nh
1969. In 1990 it began a series of h
by the county.
. !Dring and trainin3 programs, networking , .• • 1 J ry h~,. .
slate level tests that are now schedMal Inc., Bidwell, was the
and faculty development.
to - 'Whlll rilfrlt ffll. ' i
Diehl experienced the duties and c/nJ Wll•llkJ. •
uled through 2010.
,
bidder with a complete
ARCHITECT'S VISION -An 'archltect'a rendering show.. what the ·
- OtJ-COM atudJnt .
of $1,~,228, while the former Ohio Department of Traneportatlon 'garaga on J•ckaon Pike . responsibilities of health professionals · ·
Ohio education officials are about
who
practice
in
a
rural,
community-based
Troy Diehl
to invite school districts statewide lo
lowest btd package totaled , nNr Gllllpllll will look like follo.wlng Its renovation Iillo the .n ew
partic,ipate iri the February 2000 test
·. ba.. for the Ollila County H..lth Department.
·
primary care facility firsthand ·from - - - - - - - - - - - of fourth- and eighth-graders in math
'That included $584,000 from
·
Khawaja Rahman, M.D.; Satwyan
.
and science, The Cincinnati Post
Construction for general both the local ODOT and State architect's fees and starting ex1tens•·l Olhabria, M.D.; James Witherell, M.D.; and Pat Smith, R.N.C.-F.N.P., while
reported Friday. ,
work, Certified Mechanical with Highway Patrol headquarterS, was es, _Sprague said. To build son1e-l on rounds with them. He learned how to perform physical exams and take
Stale school Superintendent Susan $221,840 for mechanical work, the only office area, it and the thing that size would cost more than
patient histories. Diehl also wrote a newsletter on obesity, which he chose "!'d
Tave Zelman hopes enough districts Welsh Electric with $127,510 for garage space will be renovated to fit S! million," she noted.
,
researched.
will participate this time. But if no~ electric and Pioneer Pipe wilh the department's needs.
The county exchanged a rightThe SEARCH program is designed to build interest in providing primary
the Legislature has given her aulhori- $99,635 on plumbing.
Sprague said the' work will of-way on State Route 160 to the
care for un~er-served people and help students to become community responty to require participalion.
A completion date for the project require gutting the interior, raising . state or the garage in October 1998
sive clinicians and culturally competent members. of a health-care . team.
·
· ·
b ·
the floors and reconditioning the with an eye toward -moving the
S1JA,RCH is administered py the Primary Care and Rural Health Program in the
,
health department~ which has the
The program requtres parttctpa- will e mcluded into the Contract, b. 'ld' f 115
tion of at least 70 percent ofthe invit- and Karen Sprague, the commisut. ong or new purpose.
Ohio Department of Health and funded by the National Health Service Corps.
ed districts. Enough districts are sioners' administrator, said' a 150_
Commissioners met at the garage · largest volume of contact ~Yith the
. "I participated in this program because I wanted toget more of a clinical out·
invited to give a stalistically accurale day limit has been set. Since the Thursday with Morg~n and AEP public among all county offices -,look on what we learned in our first-year classes," Diehl said. "The contact with
health department .still has office representative Bob Drummond to to the building following renovasample.
·
patients really helped me to see what rural medicine was like."
States us,e lest r.Sults to compare space in the courthouse basement, discuss the. structure 's electrical lion.
ACcording to Rahman, Diehl made a good impression with doctor.; and
their students' achievement levels to no time frame has been set for a needs. At this week's meeting, the
Opened in 1955, the garage was
patients. "Troy was very hardworking and eager to learn,','"Rahman said. "And
other states, which helps states judge move to the former ODQT structure commissioners arc expected to at-on used by ODOT unlit last year, when
he was very knowledgeable for his level of medical education.
Purchasing bonds for $160,000 it moved tots new base further west
their educational programs. And the
the renovation is done.
His perfonnance was above average." "For me, it was a great experience/'
natiol)al assessments offer a glimpse
The work calls for coversion of from each of the live banks operat- on Jackson Pike. The patrol's Galsaid Diehl. 'The doctors were very helpful and enlightening -- they were so
at how students stack up against other
building at 499 Jackson Pike ·· ing in the county to finance the pro- lia-Meigs Post shared the building
willing to teach me and allowed me to talk to patients. lleamed a ton and got
oountries.
offices. Because the front of the ject. The county's 1999 budget with ODOT for over four decades
a good introduCiion to rural medicine and primary care."
lding, which at one time housed already •has $300,000 earmarked fn until moving into its new headquar. "What we Jose is the ability to
"He had a very good rapport with patients,'' Rahman said. "We really
capital improvem.ents to cover ters.at 396 Jackson Pike in 1996: ,
'
have a common measure to see how L.,.==-=---::----'------::-_;,___:..______________:---~-::-:::--...J enjoyed having him here."

~:~~~~~~~~::~f.:~:ii~~i:

)

12-Moiat11 Amilbrsary CD*

By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Rep. Ted Strickland, 0Lucasville, has filed a brief in the DeRolph
school funding lawsuit outlining the faults
of unfunded state mandates for school districts, and local school administrators agree
with his arguments.
Strickland filed the "friend of the court"
brief with the Ohio Supreme Coun. The
state, w~ich was ordered in the Perry County_Common Pleas Court to change the way
.that schools are · funded, has appealed the
decision,to the state's high coun.
In Strickland's brief, he says that the slate
legislature has violated the Perry County
court's decision by·dncreasing, rather than
decreasing, the ·local districts' dependence
on local , property taxes, and by making
inequities worse through new unfunded aca. demic requirements.
Strickland's brief argues that the state

Ohio to get back
Into national student
testing program

-~~&lt;

"A tmapo l'u Ch nstnms
.
Senes
· "
Comit~g

Details on

Local scho'ol administrators echo Strickland's concerns on funding

nature as you do it. Ju st don't

attracts birds. Hose anachments or a
recirculating pump can, help hring
birds to the backyard . Hummin g-

~he

Inside page 84

tmts

remove from heat and add one cup
of sugar. Stir until di:~solvcJ and
cool th oroughly before adding 1&lt;1 a
reeder.

hL·Iicvc

s2

Eastern defeats Wahama

hin.ls nali&lt;'lnwide.

start reversing that trend but in our
own hacky:.uds?" she asked.

Birds also need a year-round

lnslc» page

Clinton halts
weapons sales
to Indonesia

•

A sugar water syrup can he made at
home by boiling 4 cups of water:

food habits. Some b1rds can con-

Meigs downs River Valley

Feature on Page C1

"The loss of habitat is threatening
the conlinuation of many plant and
wildlif&lt; species. What better place to

._ CoJ!lm~f::l:ily.:~~.al· ~tn~~~·!· .·

.. ,

and provides enjoyment wh1le edu-

careful of mixing red d):es to their
fooq . Flower nectar is clear - il's
the red fl owe rs they arc attrai:t,·d to.

sume their weight in food datly.
According to the Kaytee site, if a
170-pound man ate as much food as
a ruby -throated hummmgbird, he'd

Preserving
an old home
skill

the U.S. - nght behind gardening .
Nearly 50 percent of all households
feed &lt;&gt;r watch birds. Birding is a
rcla.tng pastime that os easy to do

..

style tear gas that government officials for years had denied using.
The · 49th page, Obtained •Friday
by the AP, discloses that FBI investigators who examined the scene at
Waco found a "fired US military
40mm shell casing which originally
contained a CS gas round," and two
"expended 40mm tear gas projec. tiles." '
The report, is likely to become a
key piece of evidence in the independent inquiry ordeied by Attorney
General Janet Reno and separate
congressional investigations into·
whether government officials tried
,to cover up the us~ of potentially
incendiary tear gas on the final day
, of the siege.
Justice Department and FBI officials denied· for years that flammable tear gas grenades were used on
Apri119, 1993, the day the Davidian
compound went up in names. They
abruptly reversed course earlie.r this
month and acknowledged a "very
limited number" of such devices
were fired hours before the fatal fire.
The. govern,ment continues to
maintain that religious sect members set the fire, and federal agents
did not contribute to it. They have
said the tear gas canisters bounced
off a roof of a concrete bunker and
into a field. Sect leader David .Koresh and some 80 followers perished
during a later plaze in a wooden
structure away frol" the bunker.
Meanwhile, the physician who
headed the team that performed
autopsies on the people Who perished in the Davidian compound,

'

s~id he would welcome an opportunity to reopen his investigation into
the deaths of the 23 cult members
who died of bullet wounds.
"There .is a feeling that one
should go back and re-evaluate," Dr.
Nizam Peerwani, the Tarrant County medical examiner told the Waco
Tribune-Herald in an interview pub- •
lished today. ''The focus at the time
was not whether the FBI was doing
the shooting."
The FBI lab report does not
specifically state whether the gas in
the shells was incendiary or when
they had been fired. B~r the potentially flammable M651 lear gas canisters that the FBI belatedly
acknowledged using on the final day
of the siege are 40mm military
MAKING A POINT -'- Former U.S. Sen. John Danforth snappad
shells like those described in the lab
hla
lingers to make 1 polnt aa he deacrlbed hll new rOle sa head of
report. The FBI has always
the
Investigation Into the 19113 lncldenta at Waco, Texaa, during 1
acknowledged firing one other type
press
conference Friday at his St. Louie, Mo., law office. Looking
of 40mm round that contained non Is
.
his hie deputy In the Investigation, U.S. Attorney Edward
on
n~mmable tear gas.
Dowd.
(AP)
A Sept. 2, 1999, Justice Depanment memo ~n the history of the lab umenl' tti the Justice Department, . last week ~y the House Government
document notes that the depart' which would then produce the d&lt;)Cu- Refomi Committee and included a
previously unreleased Rangers
ment's document database "con- ments to lawmakers.
tains multiple c~P.ies ·of this docuDanforth, ·a former Missouri report on ordnance used by the FBI
ment, most of which contain all 49 attorney general, was named Thurs· in the final hours of the siege, a conpages." It said only four copies of day to oversee the independent gressional aide said.
Texas Department of Public
!he report were missing the last inquiry. He promised to investigate .
whether government officials were Safety spokesman Tom Yinger,
page.
"It appears that the page on resJ10nsible for the fatal
lire,. and whose agency oversees the Rangers,
.
which mention is made of a shell tried to cover it up.
·
said the report represents "an
casing for a military CS round and
Also Friday, congressional aides extremely exhaustive look ' al some
the expended tear gas projectiles sifted through documents subpoe- of the controv-ersial evidence." ,
was not produced to Congress," trial naed fr om th e Texas Rangers deal'.' When you get right down to it,
attorney James G. Touhey Jr. wrote. ;ng with the fiery end of the 51-day it is very narrow in focus ," Yinger
During congressional probes, the siege.
said. He declined to be more specifFBI would typically forward its docThe documents were subpoenaed ic.

---------

�Sun~y. September 12, 1999

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

Page A2 • ,,, ' 1 G!t.n-JJ

Sunday, September 12, 1999

-Tri-County Briefs:

Wholesale inflation rises 0.5 percent
'

IIIIMefte~c~

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - lnflallnn at
the whole&lt;ale lcl'd leaped 0.5 pen:ent
in August, retlectmg sharp!) higher
energy and fO!&gt;d prices,
·. : d·d ·
. • ,. . h
.
But economtsts
• n t qua.c ill t e
news , believing that lame core prices
excluding these two volatile scchw;;
h F u IR
.
may J 1scouragc t e e era cscrw
from. r.tising intercsl rates again in tl'k:
1- 11

la•,wl • .

--

• [p.lumbul 154·.- I

••

3 .

The Labor Department smd Fn o.ty
,lma m un.t h's ovrrai l increase in Its
Produccr Pric..: ltu..l..:x. - which mcJ-

W. VA.

0
;v·~
•s.my

Pt Cloody

•*'
~

Showets

~1ft.• ~· ~~
Snow
T·storms

Ran

Flmies

lee

s un:s inflation prt:sSures before tht'y
rca~: h t hc l·on-.umcr ___;;, I.o II (Jwc d a
modest 0. ~ percent rise in July. Many
analyst.s had been expcpmg prices to
rise 0 .3 pcrcc'nt 1n August.
While economists weren't heart-.
ened by the 0.5 percent increa.sc. they
tended tu focus on the gorld pcrformancc of the "core" inllation rate.
~.~ l os~..~ l y wah.:hed by the Federal
Reserve and Wall Street.
Excluding the I'Oiat ile energy and
food categories. the core ralc of
inflation at the wholesale level fell
0.1 percent last month. after being lht
in July. Many ana lys ts forecast a 0. 1
pcn:cnt in crease in the c0rc r:ih: and
vic11'cu the hctter·t han -c., pccted per-

So far th" l car. the c·ore tnllauon
rate ha' declmed at an annual rate of
llA percent. compared "uh a 2.5 per,·entgam for all of 19\18
• . '.
.
. Fm ..me~al markdo; unmcdla~
reac11&lt; 1n was HI hoThne•m"nndthe gok~cl
i.'{)rc ntll.! news .
. : n•..ln mar
h'
. ld . 3().
g._unc...l.ground. hpu!&lt;. Jln~d) le s un6_04
)l':u lrc:II'&gt;IUr}N
' :J'~ ~ . o\\n ~~t'· r.l "
pcn. ·...'nt lc a-, aq Lompu~ t L l sl:
_
·
_ . • , u 7 0 ~ .. _
~ :"1 .01 pmnt:-.to ~. .1OS~,; at-: 8o . :1 · i.' .•l~
tl\ surra'''"" us pr('VIOU!'I .,; o~mg

iices and a 5.3 rcenl gain tn heat
p
'I ices tef.he me'" Augu't''
tng 01 pr.
·
energy
pnces.
Residential electric power msc 1.1
rcent the bigges1 gain since M&gt;t\
1~95 .
r995. ~nd reside.ntiaJ natural g.i,
.. There is a l.:~c to be made rhat
.
.
prices went up by. 1.1 percent, 111e
(lJ~IJnc in naltnn prcs~urc~ aiT' build- biggest jump since Dct·ember 199S
ing," .said Ke n Mayla'fld. an ccono- . Economists said last rntmlh ' "
. mi .. t for KcyCorp
·
·
~uigc 10 asolinc prices rdlt"ch proThe Feder.a I Reserve nn Aug . 24 ducti c~tt l uts &lt;1 pH:: kup in . demand
hu111pcd up ,·nterc st rates ~or tile sec·
:
.
·
· ·
t
·
·
frn tn fl'(;Ovenng cl·onom•e' 111 A~1an
high of ~.864.48. set July 16. ·lllc ond time this year. l&gt;ut s ignaled that an~ Latin America and increa,eJ
Na~·daq·~ stre ngth came frhm hefty additional rate incrua.o.;es thi s year cncrgy .demand!'l cau~Cd b) unu su.ti gai ns by some Internet companies may not be needt!d unle ss rhc cconJy hot weather in nwny part-. of tl1c
and sofl\,~are makers. But the Dow omy shows signs of overheating or if countrv. But they CXJX'&lt;."l ga ...ol nK~
· 1average. m1t1a
· · 11 y 1·r
.Junes in d uslna
1 t- inllation narc&gt;.
(!rices - to moderate in s~ptcm ha ·"
c·u by the news, dosed down 50.97
So far this year, overa ll wholesale report.
.
points at 11 ..028.43 .
prices have been rising at an annual
Food prices posted a OA perce nt
Given l~c core rate's decline. said rate _o f 2.3 percent, compared w.ith no increase i11 Augu~t. a ftc~ ha\'ing Iall R~ssell Sheldon. chief economist for change for all of 1998. The pickup in en 0.9 pc ·cent drop in July. Augusl ' ,
MCM Money Watch. " the odds are this year's wholesale prices is com- muease was led by a !Jdty 7. 1 per·
, heavily in favor of no tightening ing from .big increases in energy cent rise in pofk prices
move by the Fed in Octobe('
costs. which had been falling for
However. beef price·, fell 0.7 pcrPaul Kasric l. chief economist for much of 1998.
cent in AUgu~t . and vcgctal~lc pril'c o.;
Northern Trust Co., agreed: "Thil
For August, energy costs rose 3.7 dropped 5.3 percent. rcllccllng h1 ~
' doqn't give the Fed any ammunition percent. the biggest one'mpnth gain decreases in the price of celery. ury
to raise rales at its Oct. 5 ineeting ." · since· 3 5.5 percent rise in April. That onions 1 russet potawcs and carrot~.
Still. economists said that the big April spike had put the Fed on inlla- Fresh fruit prices declined :1.2 perincrease in overall wholesale prices. lion alert. and on June 30 the central cent, with the price of nectarines.
i'f matched al the consumer level, bank raised interest rates for the firsl Valencia oranges. raspbernL:s and
could slill stoke concerns ar the Fed- · time in two years.
avocados all falling. .
era! Reserve about a potential breakA 9 .1 percent rise in gasoline

fom1ance as a si1!n that mt1ation is out of inflation.
' undCr control. • .
Some economists were concerned

in August. "'hlle the pric_e of in termeJiate gocxb - semtproces.cd
material"uch as ply"ood and tcxllle
f b
g percent. the
a ncs. rose a' h arp 0...
htggest Olll'·munthgam )o,IOL'C January

l-:=::::::;;:;:;=:;::::=::==;:::;=~~;;~;;:;;;;:;;:;;i;;;==::il

the ri se in the price of materials
Grand jury nears that
used in the early phases of production
end of first year · could be signforof inllation
to come .
crude goods in Ramsey probe . orocessed matl.!rials such as ~oa l
BOULDER. Colo. (AP)- Nearly a year after a grand jury began
looking into the murder of JonBcnct
Ramsey. there's no indication it's any
closer to resolurion of the case. frus trating both residents and city leaders.
.
.. They're at the point where they
either have 10 say they have something or they don 't." said Brian
(Continued from A1)
Greenman. a shopkeeper who lives
near the Boulder County Justice Cenas welL
However, Buckley said, the Meigs Local District is as concerned with ter.
The 12:member jury, which began
space constraints as with the additional cost of hiring teachers and purchasi.ts
work on Sept. 15, 1998, has heard
ing textbooks and materials for the newly-added classes.
testimony
from police officers ,
. "Space is a critical issue for us, now," Buckley said. "At the high school ,
friends
and
relatives
of the Ramsey
··
we're pretty much maxed out."
family. and technicians' who examSpace is less · of an issue in Eastern . Local, since the district included
ined thousands of pieces of forensic
e&lt;panded science laboratories in its renovations at the high school last year,
.evidence.
but the school board has discussed the impending need for additional class· But the panel , whose tenn expires
rooms to accommodate the .additional teachers in other depanments.
next
month, has nol met since May
·James Lawrence, Superintendent of the Southern Local School District,
25.
said Friday that the. district's upcoming building program , which will see to
Denver attorney Scott Robinson ,
tlle construction of a-new elementary school and renovate the high school,
who
has followed 'the case, said
will provide for needed classroom space, including a new science laboratojurors
may be awaiting forensic test
ry, and that no additional staffing will be necessary.
results,
still following leads or waitIn fact, Lawrence said that, rather than provide extensive integrated course
ing
for
attorneys
ro work out a deal
work in high school math and science. the district plans to prepare its stufor
JonBenet's
parenls
to testify.
dents in the junior high classes for more adv'IJlced work, 'ather that comA spokeswo~nan. for Districl Atlorpromise the district's academi~ standards by offer,ing less challenging coursney
Alex Hunter declined comm,cnt.
es to meet the state's requirements.
..
.
citing
a slate Jaw' tha_t requires grand
"We feel that if we hit them. with an integrated science course in eighth
juries
to
operate in sec ret.
grade, they will be better prepared for advanced science work in high sc hool ,
ln
fini
shing
its tem1. the grand jury
and will be ready tq face the lOth grade proficiency test"
may
issue
indictments.
drah a report
(The state plans io move the high school proficiency test, which must be
or si'mply adjourn without so much as
passed in order to graduate. to lOth grade .) .
a recommcndatlun . ll will then be up
Strickland addressed the need for faci lities in his brief, sayi ng that the
to Hunter to decide whether to purext~nsive testing and hi gher standards will not, alone, i111prove education in
sue any jury recommendation or
the region.
empane
l another. group to s·tart anew,
"Raising standards alone does not improve pubhc education," Strick! arid's
JonBenet, 6. was found beaten and
brief said. "Schools in southern Ohio need assista nc e to rehabilitate buildin the basement of the fam ·
strangled
ings. build new classrooms , hire new teachers, and, yes, increase academic
ily's
home
un Dec. 26. IY96 .
quality."
·
· .
··
J9hn
Ramsey
found his daughter's
"Unfort'unately, passing laws that tefJ districts to do things will not make
body
about'
eight
hours after his
them happen unless the State also provides districts with the means to accomwife , Patsy Ram sey. l\1ld police she
·
plish these tasks ."
had di scovered a ranso m nole seeking money in exchange for JonBenet's safe return .
Police have said th e Ramsey~ arc
under
suspicion. but the couple has
NEW YORK (AP) - Rain and fqg frustrated efforts Friday td battle a
deadly encephalitis outbreak,' caused by disease-carrying mosquitoes. that has
repeatedly proclaimed innocence.
killed three people and for the first time may have moved into Manhattan .
The family left Boulder two years
ago and moved to the Atlanta area
The bad weather grounded an airplane and two of three helicopters prepared to douse sections of the city with insectic1de.
with their 12-ycar·old sun.
Its plans for a massive aerial spray ing blocked, the city resorted to ground
Now, almost three years after the
spr.aying in areas of Brooklyn and limited helicopter spraying in Queens·on
slaying, the only arrests have result·
Friday.
ed from evidence leaks to the news
media.
"The planes and helicopters will be coming Saturday and will be ready
to go up Saturday eveni ng." said Jerome Hauer, the director of the city's
City spokeswoman'Jennifcr Bray
Office of Emergency Mapagement.
said the end of the grand jury's work
There have been nine confirmed cases of the disease in the city. Eight are
won't come quickly enough for city
in northeast Queens and one is in Brooklyn . ·
·
officials. who believe the case has
given Boulder a black eye.
.
Additionally. health officials have identified 62 other possible cases of
the Sl. Louis encephalitis strain- including one in Manhattan.
.
Boulder residents also want some
The three fatalities were. all senior citizens, who are particularly vulner- . ·closure, Ms. Bray said .
.
. abl&lt;; to the virus.
'' In Octoper, the grand jury has
'
got to end. They expect some resolution at that point. whether that's the
ending pomt or not." she sai d.

.

Reader Services

Published every Sunday, 825 Third Avt.., Gallipolis, Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company.
01r . . . . tOIK'erll In Ill &amp;Ioria ill to be Second clAM postage p1id at Gallipolis, Oh10
lctlnte. Jj JOW bow of 18 error IR • -45631. Entered u second claM mailing nutter 1t
l'omeroy, Ohio Post Office.
·
siWy, call th HWiroo• It: Galllpel\1: Memblr. 'fhe Associ11ed Preu and the Ohio
(740) 444-1341; or PoMeroy: (740) 99Z- · Newspaper Associatton.
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makt 1 correttton If warranted.
Sunday Times-Senlinel, 82.5 Third Ave., Glllipolis. Ohio 4~63 I.

Correctlon PoUqf

Newa Department
Gallipolis
Tbc l(laln number Is '446-2342. Dtpan-

IDcat cxtc1sion1 iln't:
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Nawa Department
.Pomeroy
,Tile m•ln aumbcr Is 992-21!5. Dcp•nmcnt exteasktns lrt:

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or ElL 1106

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Dill)' at~d Sunday
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Manager named
BIDWELL - Robert Smith has
been ~amed the manager of the 84
Lumber Store in Lebanon. Ohio.
A 1990 graouatc of North Gallia
High School , he is the son of \{obert
and' Nella Smith of BidwelL
Smith started with the 84 chain in
June 1998 as its Louisville , Ky.l·ston:.
He and his wife, Katrini a, reside in
Indianapolis, Ind .
. .
As manager of the ~tore , Smith IS
responsible for stor.c operations,
including sales and inventory control

'J • FOR" ITO RE

.

(iD·fi"D OPE"I"G .
~

turing 9reat 'Buys On
Quality .7'/ew 'Furniture 'By:
•England •Broyhill
Action •Mater ut::~•
•Bassett

from Gold Lance

$7.9

Pr1ce&amp; StarttnQ 11t

962 Brick School Rd. Gallipolis, OH
Across from Addaville School
On·The Hill

AlA CONDITIONING,

automatic,
&lt;;:0, rear spoiler

CASSETTE

List .. .' .. ' ,. ' ,. $13,301
GM Rebate . . , .... -$2,000
Schey DiscOunt .....-$302

~rulse,

List .... ... ... , $15,296
GM Rebate · .... , .·$1,500
Schey Discount ..... -$797

SALE ... •1 0,999 SAI,.E ....s12,999

2000 CHEVY

locks, tltt, cruise, cassette, ·side air bag.

"'

.

;;-

~

-

r,
'

•!I - -

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LT, leather, ~ear air,
CO, trailer tow,
every luKury option,
8 passenger

l?io Grondej-

Ohio, W.Va. lottery selections .
aulorn81ic. air. crllise. chr ome
wheels. while let1ered lire~. casscllc·

List ..... . ..... $19.375
Schey Discount . .. ·$1 ,37.6

SALE ....*17, 999
LS, 4 door, autOmatic, air, power wiindo•".:;
&amp; locks, traWer tow, locking differential.

custom power seal, power windows &amp;

I

Stock 117179

Stock#4835
21n Stock

Taz Ma•'&amp;tbola·rave Poi11t1.
$9.99ABag
Saturday·llth, tK pm
.

Dear Residents: ·

1
CHEVY 2000 CHEVY
SUBURBAN 4X4 SILVERADO

Two at this price. ..!"~:-." 1

One-car accident leaves two injured

Program for Adults

Just follow tile sig11s off Rt. 7 o11to Addisort Pike

1999 CHEVY
S-10 PICK-UP

Free immunizations on tap this wef!k .

ttst Forward

(740) 367·7237

422 2nd St.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 446-1615

Veterans Service Commission to meet

Vinton County Air Show set Sept 19

"Featuring !/frtist :Melanie Osbome

Tawney Jewelers ·

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley outage throughout the bank's computer network. Tile m1mbank ATM
Bank's Administrative Services
also passed the test wJth tlymg col Group boslelj the recent meeting of
ors. A customer. unaware of lhe test.
the Gallia County Safely Council at
drove up to the ATM and made a
lhe bank annex on Third Avenue in
transaction with no problems.
Gallipolis:
The test proved that OVB's pow- .
Tile program featured at the meeler failure contingency plan worked.
ing was "Are You Ready for Y2K?"
The Y2K task force has al&gt;o made
Bryan Manin, OVB vice president,
introduced the guest speaker, Larry contingency plans to cover all other
Miller. senior vice president. Miller uncontrollable probl~ms, such as
stressed the imponance of business- telephone service disruption.
es becoming Y2K ready. He used
Nat.ionwide. the FDIC. Office of
OVB 's s1eps toward readiness as an
the ·Comptroller of the Currency,
example of what c~'\ be done in any Office of Thrift Supervision and the
. business.
Board of Governors of the Federal
Since May. 1997, the Ohio Valley Reserve are supervising Year 2000
SAFETY COUNCIL: SPEAKER - Larry Miller, senior vice pres. GALLIPOLIS- The regular monthly meeting of the Galli a County VetBank Co. h.S been addressing the preparations for FDIC- insured banks,
ident of Ohio Valley S.nk, addressed the topic of "Are You Ready
erans Service Commission will be Tuesday at 9 a.m. at the Veterans Ser.. ice
possible Year 2000 impact on the · such as OVB. Even with the date
for Y2K?" during 1 recant meeting of. the ~allia County Safety
Office on Jackson Pike.
barik. At that time a six-member com- . change rapidly approaching. the
Council at the OVB Annex in Gallipolis.
.
mittee . of which Miller is the chair- FDIC ·is confident and will continue .
man . was formed and charged with to insure accounts up io $100,000 at
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations wit) be prov1ded by the Gallta
member banks.
·
the responsibility of ensuring that the
County Healih Department at the following locations lhis week :
company would he ready for the Year
All banks are required to maintain ,
.
• Wednesday. Sept. 15- Gallia Metropolitan Estat~s .. 2-3 p .m.
2000 transition .
backup records in case of emergency.
• Saturday, Sept 18- Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memonal L1brary, 12:30Miller reported that the committee
If transactions are lost or erroneous'
·
,
·
· . ·
" I :30 p.m.
has conducted extensive inventories
Iy recorded due to the date change.
Children in need of immunizalions musl be accompanied by a parent or
of the bank's computer hardware and .they can easily be restored. The
legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record with them.
software, as well as other equipment banking industry has been comptethat may be microchip-dependent. mented on its .readiness and recognized as a leader in Y2K prepared BIDWELL - A one-car accident Friday on County Road 19 (White Oak) The vendors associated with this
hardware and software were contactness . For most banks, the worsr case
injured two persons, the Gallia-Meigs 'Po~l of the State Highway Patrol reponcd to determine the product's Year
Y2K scenario is minor inconveniences, such as tUrning a· machine
c.d.Driver Nicholas A. Mulholand, 16, 277 1\1, Clay St, Vinton, and his pas-· 2000 readiness. .
Miller
told
the
group
that
OVB
's
back on after a glitch in power shuts
senger, Brandon M. George, 18. Vinton. were not treated at the scene of the
core
software
applications.
which
it
off.
4:20 p.m. accident. according to the patroL
. .
·
·
process loans and deposits, . were
"Ohio Valley Bank has been a sueTroopers said Mulholand was westbound, 1.1 m1les east of State Route
554 when he lost control of the pickup truck he drove. went off the left stde developed with the Year 2000 in cessful company for O\'er 12'5 years,"
Miller said. "During that time the
of the road a~ continued on into dry creekbed. where ihe vehicle came to mind . The vendor from whom the
bank
purchased
the
software
has
bank has endured two world wars. the
. a stop.
.
.
. ·. '·
..
guaranteed
that
their
software
is
Year,·
Great
Depre::;sion, as well as ma.ny
The pickup was severely damaged; and·Mulholand was cued for fwlure
2000 compliant and will perform
other challenges. We are confident
to controL
. .
that Ohio Valley Bank is well-posiTroopers ticketed Julie A. Armstead . .18, 1350 Patriot Road, Gallipolis , without error relating to date data prior
to.
during
and
after
the
Year
2000.
tinned for the challenges ~nd opporfor unsafe speed following a one'car acc1dent early Fnday on CR 40 (Patriguarantee
in
hand,
tunitics
that lie in the Year 2000 and
Even
with
a
.
ot). ..
OVB
indep.fndently
tested
this
sysbeyond
...
Armstead was eastbound. one mile west of SR 775, at 6:39 a:m. when.
she failed to navigate a right-hand curve, went off the left side of t,he road tern to confirm compliance. The fol lowing dates were tested: 12131/99,
a nd struck a sign, according to the. report.
l/1/2000. 1/3/2000, 2/29/2000.
The car was slighlly damaged.
3/1/2000 and 3/31/lOOO. After testing.
was completed, ihe team spent ihe
MIDDLEPORT - Head Stan classes in Meigs County will not begin next several weeks n:viewing the outTuesday as scheduled. but will begin on Oct. 5.
pul from ihe tests. No Year 2000
·
·problems were found.
After much research and a little
McARTHUR .,- The Vinton County Pilots and Boosters will have their • preparation. OVB was ready to conannual air show. fly-In and safety seminar Suqday, Sept. 19, Starting at II duct its final test. 1be test was a dress
a·.m. The 1999 Air Show will feature the Appalachian Air Force Acrobattc rehearsal for the worst case 5ceri3rlo.
Flying Team. commanded by Norm Crabtree.
.
.
Miller presented photographs taken
There will be over 200 general aircraft on display and the general pubhc during the test. OVB's Y2K task
is 'invited to walli ihe flight line and look at these small aircraft As in past fon;e would s&lt;;e if the bank could
years, the radio control aircraft will be on hand with ·both static displays and maintain full services during a pow. !lying demonstrations.
.
. .
.
. . .
er o utage .
This year's show will feature a sky-d1vmg team that w11l JUmp once at
On a Sunday afternoon in January,
the beginning of the show and again at the end ~f the. show..
,
·.
bank officers and employees met a1
The main attraction will be stunt and acrobatic flymg, Wtth ptlots flytng the main office and mini bank in Gal .
both modem and vintage aircraft.
lipolis. They turned on all equipment
A pilot safety seminar will also be offered. The seminar is offered by the · and computers. When everything
Federal Aviation Administration and will be conducted by Martha Lunken, was up and running. a signal was givI've always believed you can get ahead with some
Accident Prevention Program manager for the FAA. Panicipants will be eli- ' en and the power was ·cut. ,
.gible for points in the current "Wings" Program. .
hard work, a plan and an education. Here's your
\Yit'hin seconds, the office's genThe Vinton Air Show is the largest free atr show. m the state, although the erator automatically powered up the
chance.
Boosters do ask for a donation when you park.
main offic~. operations center and
·The Vinton County Airport is located five miles nonh of McAnhur. just minibank. All critical areas were
off SR 93.
.
. working, including loan, teller, comThe University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
The schedule of events is as follows:
.,. mercia!, trust and operations departCommunity College has the plan for your education. ·'
I i a.m , Chicken Bar-B-Q
ments. ·
II a.m., FAA Seminar
It's called the ~·Fast Forward Program for Adults."
Officfals said the generator kicked
1 p.m .• Sky-Diver&amp;, (runway closes ar I p.m.)
o n so smoothly that the SuperBanks,
I ' 10 p.m .• Radio Control Aircraft
which were open at. the time of the
No m~re excuses, folks, don't make it complicated.
I :30 p.m .• Acrobatic Flying·
'test. did not even notice the power
3:40p. m. , Sky-Divers
For more information , contact Nick Rupert at 384-2649. or 1-800-458C . KARATE
Get started this fall with Rio Grande's Portfolio Development class.
6144.

Head Start classes begin on Oct. 5

Super Savings on Bea1ru.nrg
Picture and Art,. Gallery

SAVE now on Class Rings

GAU.li'OLIS - Each year, Oct. 23-31, millions of young people and
adults celebrnte their drug-free lifestyle choice by wearing a red ribbon.
This symbolizes a commitment to not tolerating drugs in schools. communities and homes. Tile Red Ribbon Committee of Gallia County is inviting everyone to come and show his or her suppon for the red ribbon cause
on Oc1. 2 at I p.m. in the Gallipolis Cily Park , when a red ribbon celebra. tion will begin.
·
.
There will be perfonnances by local PRIDE learns and dance groups. aild
informational displays/exhibits. Tile event is free and open to anyone who
would like to come and show their suppon. For more information. contact
the Gatlia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol. Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services at 446-3022.
Groups and individuals. high school seniors or younger. may enter the
competition for cheerleaders. dancers and twirlers. Presentations must promote a substance-free lifestyle. Trophies will be awarded to first .place in each
category. Entries must be received by Sept. 24. Contact Jan Coen at 2455595 or Melissa Norman 446-7866 for details.

Safety Council eyes
readiness for Y2K

a

Sept. 13-18 9 am to 5 pm

Rain stymies efforts to eradicate
New York encephalitis outbreak ··

(IJSPS 525-100)
Commu nily· New1p1pcr Holdlnp, INC.·

Red Ribbon celebration slated in park

J

By JEANNINE AVERSA

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

"List

List ........ ... . $21 .023
Schey Discount ...-$1,024

GM Rebates , .. . .·$1 ,500
Schey Discount . ..-$1 .701

SALE ....s19,999

. SALE ....s25,999

~-~l=~~·, ; · ·;
...... ...s3995 1997 FO~c2.~~.~2~~~ XLT .. .. . s9995
CIERA
.. .$3995 1996

CLEVELAND(AP) - NoBuck·
eye 5 game ticket had the right com·
bination 'for the drawing Friday. so no
one . can claim the Ohio Lottery
,
· ..
f $lOO 000
game s lop pnze o
,
.
The lottery night drawings:
Buc keye 5 ·. 2-·5-.13 - 16 -27
Ptck 3 Numbers: 3-0-7
Ptf:k 4 Numbers. 6-5-1-8
The day drawmgs:
Pick 3. Numbers: 9-6-0
Pick 4 Numbers" 0-4'6-0
Buckeye 5 sales amounted to
$319,508. Wi'nners will share
$111.942.
There were 140 Buckeye 5 tickets
with four of the numbers. and each is
worth $250. The 3,864 tickets showing· three of 1he numbers are each
worth $10, .and the 38,302 tiCkets
showing two of the numbers are each
· worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out pay
out $299,122.50 to winners in Friday
night'.s Pick J , Numbers daily game ,
and sales totaled $1,106,733. The
wipners' pool in the day game was
$68 , 133, and 1he lottery sold
$350,038 worth of game tickets. In
the Pick 4 Numbers
game. play·
ers wi II share
and the sales

were $368,480; the day game wtnners gel to spht up $23.000, and the
sales w~re $11I.733.
,
The Jackpot for Saturday s Super
Lotto drawmg was $4 n11lhon.
v · · F ·d ·
In West ~rgtnla , " ay .s numhers were:
Daily 3: 9-0- 1
Daily 4 : 2_1_3 _4
.
Cash 25: 2-3-7-10-11-23
-

CLUB

That's right. ..get credit for work and other 'experiences by preparing
documented materials abOI,tt your life experience. You can receiVe up to 25
percent of the credit hours required for an associate or bachelor's degree
in Business Management.

Will Start lis Fall Quarter
for Beginners,
Starting Monday, Sept. 13
at 6:00PM
at Carleton School ·
in Syracuse.
Class will be held
Mon. &amp; Wed.
For More Info.
Call9 2·6

Or, find out how to get your PC to talk to your printer in .the Computer
Operations curriculum. Bring your best fnend and fmd out how.much fun
learning can be.
Keep your day job and enroll in th~ FAST FORWARD program this fall '
and. begin classes toward a degree m wmter quarter wtth credit for ltfe
experience·. Make that call toqay to find out more: 1-800-282-7201.
ext. 7206.

WINDOWS/SIDING/DECK BLOWOUT
*FREE Entry Door With Any Purchase!
*FREE Low-E and Kryton Gas I
*FREE Gutters With Siding Purchase! ·
*FREE Railing Wlth_Deck Purchase!
lfetiiiTie Glass

You won't be sorry.

R~IIJiac~eme~t

Sincerely,

Bob Evans

Call Toll Free TODAY For a FREE E$TIMATEIII

1-BBB·670-3035

J

u.s.A.

.

Holzer Medical Center Celebrates Women's Health Month- September 1999
'~Changing Health

Needs Throughout a Woman's Lifetime"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~--lr~~~T~u~e~s~da~yi.~s~ep~t;em~b~er;2~1~~~lf~~=1s~u;nd~a~y~,SSe~prtte~m~b~e;r~~----~~~F.~o~r~Jn~o~r;e~l~n~if4~o;r~~~thio;.n~,~c~a~lil~~~~~~ii~~
Tuesday, September 14
1
if

Promotion made

Holzer Medical Center
French 500 Room

CHESHIRE - Steven E. Ferro
has been promoted from associated
human resources assistant to the·
human resources assistant l}.t Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek
plant, Plant Manager Ralph E .
Amburgey said.
He joined OVEC in 1998 as an
associate human re"sourccs assistaht.
He is a graduate. of Ohio University
with a degree in business admin istration. He and his wife, Carrie. live
in Albany. ·

. 7pm- 9 pm
"The

Menopause Years"

•Heart Attacks In Women"

Approved
Auto Repair

\

•

'·

u l
u d'
C t
nor zer me
rca
h 500 R en er
rrenc
oom
2 pm _ 4 pm

First Church oifthe Nazarene
Gallipolis, Ohio
· 7 pm - 9 pm

"Osteoporosis: The Silent !hief"

"Developlnc H&lt;llthy Lifestyt&lt;t During Transition
from Girl to W9mon"

~Reversing the E lfeds of Gravity"

~--~·entlni Hurt AHocko in women (Su rting in

"Tbe lmportaoce of Nutrition wttb Respect to •
Woman'! Lifetime"

lmportaoceofNutrltion with Respectto a
Wotnan's Lifetime"

Free ·lu!alrh screenings will be offered 5 - 7 pm

health

will be

.

.-7pm

Yura Throughout • Woman'• Lifetime)

"The Teen Yura and the Need for Good Nutrition"
Fitnea and

Bonnie McFarland, Director 0
the Wei/ness Departrnent
446 5679
at
r l ' A I'll

-

In collaboration with Access Head Start, University ofRio Grtlllu
Nursing Program and Heart Health of Gallla Counry. Programs fundtd
In par/through a grantirom tht Ohio Department of Health, Burtau of
Health Promotion and Risk (leduc(ion, Women's Htalrh Section, AHEC
Consortium/or Health Education In Appalachia Ohio, lllld lht Gallla
County Medical Soc/tty.
·

•

..

�Commentary
.iun:bq:_ 1t'imes- .ientinel
'£stUUslid ill 1966

By JM:k "'"*-'

As the controversy beats up about lies

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ChlriM w. aov.y
Publisher

~Hill

Control...

Tentatively, cautiously, some
small evidence of a New Era
By JOHN CUNNIFF

AP BuaiMH Analyst

NEW YORK (AP)- Once upon a time in a more well-ordered economy, we
sought to measure everyllung by the num~rs, the better to get a quick read on
what olherwise QOUid be vdy confusing.
We were oenain thai inflation would follow if the jobless rate feU below 5 per·
cent And thai when the F&lt;deral Reserve raised interest ralfS a quarter point it
would slow the econonuc works.
But, hey, it doesn 'I seem to work that way anymore. The job~ rate is do_wn
I'! 4.2 peroent but inflation isn't in sighl find the Fed has been r.usong ralfS WithOM! observable results.
; But that"s only the beginrung The world is changong, not on the '""!"'"""tal
ntanner of the old days but in such rapid order it has left many of the reliable old
n.mbers back there in the past.
: Nothing underswres the change more emphatically than t~ U S ~vemment."s
otm recognition this week that some of the old numbers JUSt don I add up on
describing economic growth and procklctivity.
: lbe omplications are huge, including a Jlf!'Sible new perspectove on the ho':""'hQid savings rate, whao;e negative balance has been a n'laJor source of wony1on a
generally ebullient economy.
: For the first time in decades·, that rate has fallen below zero, measured traditiOnally, meaning housj:holds have been spending more than their incomes - m
s1pt, borrowing to maintain lifestyles,
• The pattern, developmg at a time of relative well-bemg, has been VIewed as dry
nit in the base of prospenty and a weakness that could greatly compound damage
ir( any future =nomic downturn. .
.
.
· Under the ncw measumnents, on which government pensiOns Will b,e counted
iO:bouscholll savingo;- as they are now for private-sector pensoons -the overall rate will move higher, changing not just economic perspectJVes but hypotheses
IJI!ilt upon them.
.
.. .
.
· Technological change also is finally gettmggreater recogoubon mlowenng prodUction cosls, at least on service industnes, which now account for more of the
e&lt;onomy than the old industrial sector.
Oitics have long suggested that productivity measurements were distorted by
the failure to adequately account for improvemenls on output made )lCfiStble by
cdmputers and other electronic devices.
.
· A hint of this was even contained in the past musmgs of Federal Reserve Olair·
,;, Alan Greenspan, who all but conceded being puzzled by the inflation's
ali.ence when, by exosbng measurements, it should at least have been Sighted on

lhi: horizon.

· Private-sector analysts, freer to express their hunches, have been more O"!SP"ken about an old economic world vs. a new, especially as old slatishcal rules seem
txilken with impunity.
: In stocks, for example, investors were advised for years to question why the
~ of any stock should exceed the old standard of 12 to 20 b mes annual eaminils: Many stocks in today's market trade at multiples to the old s~ard, and
sane high-tech stocks with little or even oo earnings are popular woth onvestoi'S.
· Still, a popular admonitoon among stock market Jetter wnters os that you
shoukln't declare a new era just yet You don't dismiss the old rules and estimates
uojtilthey're dead and buried, they say.
~ Old bears might seem dead, they explain, but sometimes they aren't, and they
an rear up and give you a good old-fashioned bite.

Today In History
By The Auoclatlld Praaa

.
.
- Today is Sunday, Sept. 12, the 255th day of 1999. There are 110 days left m

thi: year.
; Today's•Highlight in History:
· On Sept. )2, 1609, Enghsh explorer Henry Hudson sailed onto the river that
n9w bears his name.
: On this date .
; In 1880, author and journalist H.L. Mencken was born in Baltimore.
· In 1918, during World War I in France, US. forces led by Army Gen. John J
Ptrshing launched an attack on the German-occupied St. Mohiel north of Verdun.
; In 1938, Adolf Holler demanded self-determination for the Sudeten Germans
itrCzechoslovakia.
: In 1944, U.S. Army troops entered Germany for the first time in World War
near Trier
,
.
In 1974, the start of court-ordered busing to achieve racial integration in
Boston's public schools was marred by violence in South Boston.
In 1974, Emperor Haile Selassie, ruler for 58 years, was deposed by
Ethiopia's military.
.
In 1977, South African black student leader Steven Boko doed m pohce CUS·
tody, triggering an international outcry.
.
.
.
. In 1986, Joseph Cicoppio, acting comptroller at the Ametocan Urioversoty on
Beirut, was kidnapped; he was released in December I 991.
,
: Ten years ago: David Dinkins, Manhattan bprough president, won New York
City's Democratic mayoral primary, defeahng incumbent Mayor Ed Koch and
two other candidates on his way to becoming the coty's first black mayor.
· Five years ago: A stolen, single-engine Cessna crashed into the South Lawn
of the White House, commg to rest agamsl the executive mansoon; the polot,
F.rank Corder, was killed.
,
· One year ago· Sammy Sosa of the Chicago Cubs became the fourth major
league baseball player to hit60 home runs in a single se~n. L!~ay Davenport
the US. Open, defeatmg defending champoon Martona Hmgrs, 6-3,7-5.
: Today's Birthdays· Actress Irene Dailey is 79 Act&lt;;&gt;r Dockie Moore os 7~.
Actor Freddie Jones is 72. Country singer George Jones os 68. Actor Ian Holm os
611. Actress Linda Gray is 59. Songer Maria Muldaur os 56. Singer Barry ~i!e
ii 55. Actor Joe Pantoliano is 48. Singer-musician Gerry Beckley (Ameroca) os
47. Rock musician Neil Peart (Rush) is .p!'l\ctor Peter Scolari os 45. Actress
Rai:hel Ward is 42. Rock musicoan Norwood Fisher (fishbone) os 34. Actor DarE. Burrows is 33. Rock singer-musician Ben Folds (Ben Fol~s Five) is 33.
lock musicoan Larry LaLonde (Pnmus) os 31 Rock smger L.iam Gallagher
OJasis) is 27.
'

n;

.ton

rel)

~hought for Today:
: "In politics, an absurdity is not a
handicap."
-Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821).
i

use

of pyrotechnic devices during the FBI's
1993 siege of Branch Davidians at
Waco, Texas, otloer information has surfaced.
fiBI, the background: The cult was
begun in the mid-1950s by Benjamm
Rhoden and his wife, Lois. Benjamin
d~ed in the late 70s and Lois led the group for
another decade. Upon her death, Koresh and the
Rhoden's son shared JOtnl leadership until
rumors surfaced that Koresh had raped Lois
before her death.
Rhoden booted Koresh and a few followers
from the cult compound and a shoot-out with
the local sheriff's department resulted.
When the dust senled, Koresh was the sole
l~ader of the cull and Rhoden was incarcerated
~here he stoll is) for murder.
As early as March, 1992. the FBI was alerted

beB of the cult that Koresh planned a investigation in July 1992 for lack of corrobora·
mass suicode event and that many people tion thouch Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
were being held in the compound against (ATi:) .provided the FBI with information t~at
their will. However, the CPS representa- Koresh was slockpihng weapons and eonvertong
bve told the FBI that the children in the semi-automatic rifles to aulomatic ones ·•
Koresh compound did not appear to be weapons that would later be turned on the FBI
.
kidnap victims. Th• children told the and ATF agents.
FBI headquarters revisited the maner on
chold welfare staff that everything was
October 1992. but the San Antonio office sta·
fine, and the case was closed.
Later evidence indicates Koresh hand- pled the July interview with the CPS officoal on
selected the children he would let speak the new memo and sent it back: Case (still )
' ci()Sl'd.
to the CPS officials.
But on February 1993, before l·he February 28
After the fiery end of the cgmpound, many of
the surviving cult members saod that Koresh FBI raid on the compound that turned into a 51·
sometimes severely wh1pped children as young day stalemate, the FBI did do a little more back·
as 8 months old and had sex with girls as young gl"und research on Koresh and his cult.
Included in the file is a two-page back·
as II.
grounder
and Koresh 's busoness card, which
Also, evidence gathered by Teus reporters
"Messiah
Productions," an&lt;!" has an
reads.
months after the Waco fire reveals thai the CPS
telephoned ahead on at least two of their vosots e1ght-pointed star over the 'I' and a dagger
through the double'S' 10 Messoah. The card lists
to Jet Koresh know they were coming.
' With the CPS inlervoew standing alone as a Southern Californoan addres~ and under Kore·
evidence, the FBI closed their Branch Dav1d1an sh's name are the words, .. Guitars, vocals"

to the possibility of nefarious activitoes in r----------~-~-------~------::::=::::;:;;;;;::-:-::---:=-:=~
the Branch Davidian compound, accord- ,
ing to an FBI file we have recenlly
obtai nell.
According to the file of Vernon Howell
( a.k.a. Branch Davidoan leader David
Koresh), the FBI investigated allegations,
set forth in two sets of accusatory letters
from mem~rs of Congress, that Koresh
was planning a mass suicide for the members of his religious sect at his group's
Waco headquarters. The letters contained
an 11-page affidavit from a former cult
member and a two-page Jetter from a relative of a cull member.
The letters alleged that Koresh had
kidnapped some of his "followers" and
held them as slaves -- particularly the
choldren Mostreatment, perhaps sexual,
was alluded to on the letters, as well as
il:idnapping, tax evasion and "reports of
possoble mass self-destruction" that were
to take place during Passover.
The San Antonio office of the FBI con'
ducted an investigation.
But rather than going to the compound,
the FBI relied on interviews from Waco
locals and a Texas Child Protective Services (CPS) official.
The interviewees reported that thc;y
had heard allegations from former mem-

How does AmL.:___er--=-ic-:-.a-a-rr--.-iv_e_..:..,a-t;-;.i..-ts--T-'w~o:-:-r--=-1d-::i"v~-i!:e-=-=w-:-i'ft?

By ROBERT WEEDY

. ·

How is 1t, when we all have the same evodence
· •
,.oon, that
presented to us, the same on~orma
. we
arrive at a different conclusoon? Does 11 not
depend upon the lens througb which we viel(o' the
matter? Do we not focus in that manner because
of the type of lens we are looking through?
When it comes to matters 1&gt;f social or political
structure, to matters ofbehavior, we call this our
worldview.
Having recenllyjViewed surgery done on the
eyes, 1 could not escape the great importance of
the lens. A clear, normal lens is focused onto the
retona. However, as a result of the natural aging
process, the lens gradually becomes cloudy. The
catao;act or cloudy lens blocks the passage of light
through the eye and causes distorted or blurred
vision. Vision is 1estored by removing the cloudy
cataract and replacing it with a plastic lens
1mplant.
Some lens can not focus on the retina. A
myopic eye allowS the light to focus in front of
the retina and results in nearsightedness. The
hyperoplic eye allows the rays to focus behind
the retina and we call this farsightedness. These
problems result commonly because the cornea is
either too steep or too shallow for proper focusing. Laser assisted surgery is used to correct the
difficulloes of the shape of the cornea.
We voew life through a lens. We view our
world through a lens. 1l1is is aur worldvoew.
There are differing worldviews besides our' own.
However, we nave the bent that our worldview is
reality and other worldvoews are not. We may
start with the same information, but arrive at dofferent results as we process that information
through our lens.
No one ever set us down and said, "Now this
is the American worldview." No, we arrived at
our worldview by what has been formed in us by
our parenls, teachers, te~thooks, friends, media

'

and the like. We think this is the way things are,
and contmue to do s.o until we meet someone
w·oth a dofferent worldvo·ew.
Spending signoficant time in Europe and
South America gave evodence that matters of top
priority to Americans were not on the same order
to those folks. Family was very impqrtant. You
could always gel another job, but nqt another
family. They were not so fanatic ~bout time,
building relationships were more important than
getting the meeting started on time. This was a
different worldvoew.
'
This was exposed in this country during the
0 J Simpson troal. We found that Afncan Americans and Caucasian whites did not think ahke
That a racist police department could' have biased
the evidence against O.J was not hard for the
black community to believe. The white communoty1 trusting in the justice system, could not
understand why anyone could not see th at he was
guilty. The information was processed through a
different lens. If one has experienced bias, that
one is likely to see bias in similar situations.
On a grander scale we see a reversal of world·
view in America today. The traditi&lt;)nal view has
been that homosexual practices arc inJurious to
our way of life and should not be encouraged.
The Boy Scouts of Ameroca is a private organizaloon wolh the right to set membershop and leadership standards. This is a good poont, butthos isnil
America anymore. The New Jersey Supreme
Court says that the ancoenlle~ching of Orthodox
Judaism and Christianity, where the Scouts standards ongmate, is nothmg but "bogolry." Why?
Because "social science data" have revealed that
homosexuals may act "responsibly" and "posilovely." So tradotionalteachongs, as well as free·
dom of religoon, speech and association, must ,be
subordinated to "social science data." This is a
departure of major proportions. What consid~r~lion was given to the fact that most Scout actoyo-

ties are supported in America by Christian
churches? When immutable standards are set
aso·de on favor of cultural pressures by specoal
interest groups, is it any wonder that t~e young
think that all lofestyles are created equal?
In this intellectual quagmire words appear to
have lost their truemeaning. In recent days Mrs.
Clinton has described her philandering husband
as a "good husband and father" LucoanaMorad,
the mother of rock singer Mick Jagger is late&gt;l
illegotimate child, told Hello magazme that, even
though Jagger has yet to meet his 4-monlh-old
son, he is "a very lovong father." Good and nongood (what we used to call evil) allappear. to be
the same m thos worldview.
What kind of vi soon is this? Blurred, distorted
or cloudy could be the doagnosis. Myopia or
nearsoghtedness may be an·even better diagnosos
for it is focused on the short term, the here and
now When om mediate gratofication os the focus
the long-term cause and effect are ignored to the
detriment of society at large. This type of vision
leads to big trouble unless it is treated ommediately.
·
When a maJority today say the Good Book os
irrelevant ta their loves we can understand why ,
the worldview change has occurred. If this find ing is combined with the widespread Boble olloteracy we have a sad commentary on American,
life. Even though Boble sales are up as much as
50 percent over the last few years, actual lome
spent readmg it, studying it and applyong it is a
thing of the past, according to researcher George
Barna.
When the "cornerstone of Western civilizalion" isn't even given the time of day, treatment
of our vision problems seems remote ondeed.
Many fee) that the worldvoew of the government
is hostile to views in the Bible .
(Robart Weedy Ia a columnist 1\)r the Sun·
day Times-Sentinel.)

Veteran pollster scopes Beatty's·chances
By Chris MsllltiWI
Patrick Caddell was the brilliant young pullsler
who guided George McGovern to the Democratic
nomination in 1972 and Jimmy Oirter all the way
to the White House in 1976.
A quarter century later he senses the same undercurrent of voter "alienation" driving the presidentoal prospects of his Jongtome friend, famed actor·
producer Warren Beatty.
'
,"The people are being told that the two parties
have decided," he said of the two probable 2000
candidates, George W. Bush and AI Gore, " and
they're saying this isn't enough of a choice. There's
an argument that a vacuum exisls."
Caddell, 49, blames party insiders for that "vacuum," for collapsing the selection process into a
dense pack of March pnmanes -- includong the
blockbuster states of Cahfomoa, Florida, New York
and Texas --that only a few well-funded candidates
can afford to contest. ·
"This front-loading of the system, a premedotated act by the establishmen~ is goi~g to backfire,"
he warned in an interview. "It's a httle pre-cooked
for people. II tells the American people they ' re irrelevant to the process"
What sets the early 2000 race apart from those of
prevoous years, Caddell argues, os the speed with
which Americans have learned how puny a role
they mil}' get to play in pocking the next president
He says people are dismayed at the prospect of a
two-candidate contest -- Republican George W.
Bush vs. Democrat AI Gore-- they had no hand in
creating.
"We don't have to accept thos," Caddell hears
voters saying this September. "We don't have to

buy this."
Whether or not Beatty, who master-&lt;:rafted such
epics as "Bonnie _and Clyde," "Reds," "Heaven
Can WaJt," plus hos more recent electoral send-up
"Bulworth," mounts a full-fledged campaign for
the Democratic nomination next summer, the man
who helped steer both McGovern and Carter to voctory sees a similar openong thos autumn
Caddell arg~es that~ the vice president'~ all -out
defense of Presodent Clinton last y~ar lays hom open
to challenge, and b. Boll Bradley s 18 years as an
unoomplaming Capitol Holl insid~r makes the former New Jersey lawmaker an unltkely claomantto
the outsider's role in 2000. .
Caddell knows from expenence, moreover, how
quickly such front-running candidacies can be toppled. At the tender age of 21, barely out of Harvard,
h.e spotted anlo·Vietnam War crusader George
McGovern's chance to knock off Edmund Muskie,
then a daunting favonte to wrap up the Democratic
nominatoon early.
"There were a great n~mber _of people who were
not happy woth the Muskoe chooce, blue-collar peopie," Caddell recalls "I knew McGovern could
speak to the liberal ehte, but also to the facro~y
workers." He remembers what a "shocker" it was
for the country to wake up after the New Hampshore
pnmary that year and reahze how well McGovern
had done.
Four years later Caddell saw a
rgoa farmer·
tumed-pohllcoan prepared to plow t e same fertole
ground: the voter's growong sense of do stance from
the politocal establishment.
"When I first sat down woth Jommy Carter, he'd
just spent two years campaignong on people's

t.

Sunday, September 12, 1999

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

Sap..,nber 12, 10011

The David ·Koresh FBI files
and misinformation over authorized

740 4411 2342 • Fax: Ull 3001
111 Court StiNt,~. Ohio
740 Slla2·215e • Fax: W:Z-2157

/

~.

and Doug._ Cohn

8251lllnl A - , GeiUpolls, Ohio

l..lnyE.mQ
"
;lrlil i!dltor

P8geA

homes. He was the only one who understood the
alienatoon from Watergate.
"People don't understand what that gave hun ,
those two years of staymg and livong on people's
homes. He had a feel for the country."
Starting in the early I·980s, the pollster who p1U·
neered the numbers for McGovern and Carter saw
professionals of both parties erect bamers to such
long-shot challenges He watched insurgents such
as Gary Hart, Joe Biden and Jerry Brown fall one
after another to better-financed candidates lvho
were more amenable to the insider's game.
Today, an older, wiser Patnck Caddell. having
gotten involved on the movie ltu~jness himself, worries that his friend Warren Beatty, whom he met on
that early, ever-hopeful '72 McGovern campaign,
may suffer a somilar fate should he choose lo enter
today's big casino politics: getting beaten b)' the
house.
"I have very mixed emotoons"
Though he fears the personal risks to h1s fnend ,
Caddell wonders who else can fill the vood on year
2000 polo tics: a Dt;mocrat untamted by either the
bog-money polo tics or the Clinton scandals them·
selves.
"The Repubhcans were dosastrous on presenting
ot," he says of the still-smoldering impeachment
fight. "But if you're sayong with great enthusia&lt;m
thatot's all right to he of you vote nght on aborto on,
that character has nothing to do with the While
House, the Democratic party is going to reap the
whirlwind."
(Chris Matthews, chief of the San Francisco
Examiner's Washington B11reau, is ho•1 of
"Hanl~U" on CNBC cable channels.)

ary-'-'-"----'1

Notices
Louis Andrew Hussell Sr.
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Loons Andrew Hussell Sr., 69, Pomt Pleas·
ant. doed Thursday. Sept. 9. 1999 in Holzer Medical Center, following a brief
·oil ness
Born June 16. 1930 on Poont Pleasant , son of Andrew J ... Andy" Hussell
and the late Sylvia J. Love Hussell, he was the owner and president of the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
He was a hcensed funeral director and embalmer on West gonoa and Ohio
f0r o'er 50 years He was a 1948 graduate of Pomt Plea&gt;• •II H1gh School
and a 1954 graduate of the Pottsburgh lnshtute of Mortuary Scoence He was
an ordamcd minister w1th the Independent Gospel Messengers, preaching in
vanou&gt; churches on Mason County and the Old Log Church at the West Vor·
gon oa State Farm Museum
He was a member of Heoghts Unned MethodiSt Church 1n Point Pleasant. where he had held various offices. He was also a member of the West
Vorgmoa Funeral Dorectors Assocoatoon; the West Vtrginia Southwestern Dts·
lrlct Funeral Dorectors Assocoation: the National Funeral Directors Ass~o­
allon, the Assocoated Funeral Dorectors Internabonal; the Point Pleasant Lodge
JJ. IOOF. the Poono Plea.ant Kiwams Club; the National Federation of lode·
pendent Busmess. the Poont Pleasant High School Alumno Associatton; and
v. as act1ve m assJsUng vanous chantable organizauons.
He was also preceded on death by h1s wtfe, Hazel E. Tucker Hussell , who
d1cd Dec 11 1994, a brother, Robert W. Hussell Sr.; an mfant soster, Edna
Wu.mna Hu.sell . and three brothers-in- Jaw, Harold R. '"Poke'" Tucker, William
"Boll " Tucker and J11nmy G Tucker.
Survov111g m adduoon to hos father are a daughter, Lu Ann Hussell of Poont
Pleas:mt , a so n. Louos A "Andy" (Debra Jane "DebJ"") Hussell Jr of Poont
Pleasant. two grandch1ldren, a soster, Ruth Y. Hussell of Point Pleasant; three
brothers. M Boone (Lynn) Hussell of Pr&lt;Urie Grove, Ark., Edward J "Ed"
!Conm e) Husscll and Warren K. Hussell, both of Pomt Pleasan{; brothersm-1.\w and sos ters- m-law, Mary K. Tucker of Poont Pleasant, Margaret June
Tucker nf N1cev olle, Fla, Jessee A. and Jewel Tucker of Venoce, Aa , Denver "Denny" and Ella Mae Tucker of Buffalo, W.Va., Dale T "Tom" and Ruth
Tucker of Lexmgton. N C., and BQbby L. and Max me Tucker of Alexandna,
Ohoo, and many noeces and nephews.
Sen occs will be held at 2 p m. Sunday on the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
wu h the Rev Ben Stevens and Herman H Jordan officiating. Bunal will be
on the Korkland Memonal Gardens. VJSUation was held in the funeral home

a ;oster.
of Parma Park. Ohoo
Memo·rial ser.ices woll be 7 p.m Monday at 8c08 Carla Dnve at Mod dleton Estates. Gallopnlos. &gt;&lt;olh the Re v Johnny Hayman officoatmg Bunal
woll be m the Brooklyn He1ghl&gt; Cemetery. Cle\ eland Arrangements are by
the Cremeens Funeral Chapel

Garland lee Aleshire Jr.
WILMER. Ala - Garland Lee Alcshorc Jr . II&gt; I "084 MolTat Road.
\Volmer, doed Wedne&lt;day Sept R l'JIIY on Wolmcr
Born May I 8. 1983 on Great Lakes. Ill.. son of Garland Lee Aleshore Sr.
of Wolmer, and Sharon Coe While of Wm , lll , he was a hogh school student
and attended the Big Creek Baptist Church.
Survovong on addotoon to ho~ parents are a brqlher Clayton James Alc&gt;htre
of Wm; grandparents Avo ne ll and Paul Evans of Racone. a grandmother. Ula
Coe of Jacksonvolle. Aa . and several aunts. uncles and cousons
He was preceded on death by two grandfathers Howard Alesh ore and
Harold Coc
Servoces woll be I p m Monday m the Ew mg Funeral Home.l&gt;omeroy
Bunal w11l be on the Beech Grove Cemetery, Pome roy Fncnds may call at
the funeral home lroon 7-9 p m. Sunday
·

Osby Alphonse Martin
POMEROY- Osby Alphonse Martm, 71. Pomeroy. doed Fnday. Sept
10, 1999 on the Veterans Memonal Hosp11 al Extended Care, Pomeroy

Born June 24, 192 8 on Monersvolle. son of the late Edward and Frances
Blankenshop Marton. he was a self-employed anuque dealer and appraiSer.
and a member of the Oh-Kan Coon Club
Survovmg are hos wofc of 40 years, Mary Ahce Reapp Marun: three sons.
Robert (Debboe) Martm of Alhance, Adam Marton of Pomeroy, and Frank
(Breeda) Kelton of Houston, Texas: two daughters. Patncoa Manon of
Amesville. and Lmda (Bob) Jones ofGalhpohs , five grandcholdren and three
great-grandchildren, two sosters, Edna Mae Marun of Moddl cporl, and Sylvoa
George of Columbus, two half-sosters. Carolyn Rummell and Connoe DeVore.
two brothers-on-law. Ben Reapp of flonda , and Harry Reap p of Gallopoh&gt; ,
and several mec:cs and nephews
_
He was also preceded m death by seven brothers. Vonson. Herbert. Ralph .
Albert, Eddoe, Robert and Thearon Murton: and by two sosters, Jaret Werry
and Louos~ Motchell
GraveSide servoces woll be II am Tuesday on th e Ohoo Valley Memory
Gardens. Galhpohs, wnh Pastors Paul Voss and Doug Shambhn officiatmg
Friends may call at the Fosher Funeo:al Home, Moddleport, from 7-9 p m. Mon·
day
In lieu of flowers , memonal contnbuuons may be made to the Umted Fund
for Meogs County. PO Box 424, Moddleport, Ohoo 45760
·•

on Salurday •

In Joeu of flowers, donations may be made to any of the following organll.Jtoons to assiSt m the contmumg e~ucatoon of our youth, which was Mr
Hmscl r s request Heoghts Unued Methodist Church Scholarship Fund, 2016
N Ma on S.. Pomt Pleasant, W Va 25550 or the Pomt Pleasant Hogh School
Alumno Assocoatoon, on care ofll9 Park Drove, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
or the West Vorgmoa Funeral Dorectors Assocoatoon Scholarshop Fund, 179
Summers So. Suue 305. Charleston, WVa. 25301

Howard F. Thivener
GALLIPOLIS - Howard Frankhn Thivener, 79, Galhpohs, doed Thursday, Sept 9, 1999 at hos resodence
Born June 28, 1920 in Gallipolts, son of the late Harry and Ada Boggs
Th ovener, he was a rellred asSistant sales manager for Galhpolts Motor Co
He was a member of the Forst Baptist Chun:h for over 50 years and served
as an usher for many years. He was aU S. Navy veteran of World War II. a
· member of Amencan Legion Lafayette Pt&gt;St27, Morning Dawn Lodge 7 and
the Scouosh Rote Valley of Columbus, and a former chaner member of the
Gallipolis Lions Club.
.
.
.
Surviving are his wofe, Rulh West Thivener, whom he mamed Apnl 5,
I941 on Pomeroy; two daughters, Sharon (Jerry) Neal of Grove City, and Candle (Johnny) Hood of Orlando. Fla., and seven grandchildren and four greatgrandcholdren
He was also preceded on death by an onfant sister; and two brothers, Gordon and Cecol Tho vener
• Servoces woll be 2 30 p m. Sunday on the Ftrsl Bapbst Church, woth Pastors Archie Conn. Alvos Pollard and Jerry Neal officiating. Burial will be in
the Oh10 Valley Memory Gardens Vosotation was held in the Waugh-Hallc y· Wood Funeral Home on Saturday, and fnends may call at the church one
hour pro or to the servoces on .Sunday.
Masonoc servoces were conducted on the funeral home Saturday by Mom·
mg Dawn Lodge 7.
A mllotary flag presentatoon woll be conducted at the cemetery by VFW
Post 4464 an&lt;i Amencan Legoon Lafayette Post 27.

Francis Richard Nostadt
GALLIPOLIS- Francos Rtchard Nostadt, 72, Gallipolis, died Saturday,
Sept. I I. 1999 at hos residence.
• Born Dec 30, I926 m Cleveland, he was the son of the late John and Elizabeth Nostadt.
He v.as also preceded on death by a stster, Ehzabeth Lonk, and two brothcrs, John P Nostadt and Wolham Nostadt.

Nettie K. Hemsley
MASON, WVa. - Netue K. Hemsley. 91 , Mason, d1ed Saturday, Sept
I I, 1999 on Pleasant Valley Hospotal
Born Sept 10, 1908 on Hartford, W Va., daughter of the late Ramoe and
Mary Rebecca Roach Edwards, she was a homemaker
Sh~ was also preceded m death by her husband, Albert Douglas Hemsley; four sisters, Edith Ohhnger, Bessoe M. Ohlinger, Nelhe Schools and Ruby
Smith; and three brothers. Ted, EarlE and Wolhe E. Edwards
' Survoving are a son, Dennos Brook&gt; (Peggy L) Edwards of Mason; one
gnindchold and three great-grandcholdren; two sosters, Mona G1bbs and Mary
Zerkle, both of Letart , W Va , and several noeccs, nephew s, aunts and uncles.
Gravesode servoces woll be I p m. Tuesday on the Golmore Cemetery, woth
the Rev. Rankm Roach officoatmg Fnends may call at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason , from 6-9 p m Monday.

Thomas A. Oldaker
HARTFORD. W Va -Thomas A. Oldaker, 66, Hartford, doed Saturday,
Sept. II, 1999 on Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born July 19, 1933 on Hanford. son of the late Alben Clayton and Agnes
V Cunmngham Oldaker. he was a retired carpenter. and a' member of Carpenters Unoon Lq.cal 1159 on Pmnt Pleasdnt , W Va He was aU S Army veteran
Survovong are ho s wofe. Rose Lyons, Oldaker, three suns, John Mo chael
Oldaker and BenJ3mm Allen Oldaker, both ol Hartford , and Thomas A
Oldaker Jr of Pomeroy , four brothers. Johnnoe L Oldaker of New Haven .
W.Va, Otho C. Oldaker of Hartford, Adam F Old&lt;1ker of Mason , W Va , and
Douglas T Oldaker of West Columboa, W. Va , a SISter, Ruby V. Gre¢ne of
Hanford , and several noeces, nephews, aunts and uncles
He was al so preceded on death by a daugh\er, Vorgonoa A Oldaker. and
two brothers, Eugene and Frankhn L Oldaker
Graveside servoces woll be 1 p m Monday on the Unoon Cemetery, wnh
the Rev. Gregory Bl aor off1CJUtmg Fnends may call at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 6-9 p m Sunday.
Graveside mohtary servoces woll be conducted by the Smnh -Capehart Post
140 of the Amencan Legoon New Haven. and VFW Stewart-John son Post
9926, Mason.

Ob~uaries are paid announcements arranged by local funeralllomaa.
Obituaries ate published as requested to acCommodate those clnlrlrlg
mora lnformauon than is provideclon the accompanying Death Notoces.

Garland Lee Aleshire Jr.

'
••

WI LMER. Alahama - Garland Lee Abhore Jr. 16 of 12084 Moffat:
;
Road. Wolmer. docd Wednesday September K. 1999 m Wolmer
• &lt;\ hogh ,chool student. he wa, b"rn Ma&gt; 18. 1983 on Great Lakes, lllo-:
Mll.., lhc 'nn 11f (i ,t rl ,md ( ce Ale . . turL' ~r r1! ,,,., ,,...,l•'r Jnt! Shar~m C. nc Whne •
of Witt. J11mo1~ He Jth!nt.h.:J tn~ Bt g lr~1.. ...... _,
,un.h
!
In adduwn 10 h1 ~ parent~ . he ~~ ~un tvcd b~ tJ brothl:'f CIa) tun James:

Alc&lt;hore of Wm . grandparents. A' ondl and Paul Evan&gt; of Rae me a grand·:
mother. Ula Coe of Jacksom olle. Flonda an uncle and aunt. Rock and Cathy :
Al e~ htrc of Brook lvn Hc1ghts an aunt and uncle Tiln) n Ak,hm.-. and James,.
Ltddy of BrunsWH.: k, and ~.:ou~m~ . Dlilna an{J LoU!~ Rl! ~:,k r ol PJrma, Jason;
Alcsh trc and Rcb~ c'a Alc~htre uf Broo~hn Hctght-.. ,uuJ A..,hle) Repmsk1.1
I
Joshua Repmsko , Amber Enc and Ke11h l1dd~ of Bru ns" od,
,
o
He ""'preceded on death h) t" o grandlather' H&lt;m,Jrd i\bhore and : •
Haro ld Cue , and h) Lou~ms Damcl .md Da' HJ Alc ~:.h m~
:
Scrv~ecs woll he held at I p m Mond,l) Scptemhcr I 1 I ~99 on the Ewong :

Funeral Home 111 Pomerov. woth bunal folio" mg on the Becc h Grm e Ceme- •
tcry, Pom eroy Fnl'nd~. m~ay t.:all at the lunl'rallmmc: !nun 7-4 p m. Sunday. :
Septembe r ) 2. 1999
·
'
;

Middleport mayor's court
MIDDLEPORT - Moddleport
Mayor Sandra lan narcllo finccl c1gh1
defendants whtl e two others forte !led bonds on Moddlcpon·s Mayor\
Court on Sept 7
Fmcd we re Okcy Slurttgl'r
Chcshore, Sl 1 and costs speed, $25

Darrell G Mochael. M1dd lcport S I00
and costs pnssess tonro l mariJUa na

$ 100 posscssoon of drug mstru·
mcnts. Stephanie Connoll}. Moddlcport. $100 and cosls pub he ontO XI·
cauon, Ru sse ll E Me adows. Mod·

Meigs EMS runs

dlcpurt. $1 00 and cu-.,. pub he 1nooiJCall on $100 l.ltlurc to comp ly Pr~­
clous Mu&lt;He Middleport $100 and
cu~ts (allure ln compl). Gary RosC:
Ml&lt;i&lt;ikport s~oo ,\\ld C!J"'· fiV\'.J
da)s on pd .t\Sault Km1bcrly Ann'
ElluHI Nc"" Ha, cn WVa $100and
co~t!l , rcck l e~~

lreat~d

I

I

I

npcr . llt on Mary Tood -

Middlepo!l $ I lXI ,md ul&gt;l' laolure to ·
compl:
Forfcil Jnl! hom!.., \\Crc Dchorab
Hatfield. B;d"ell Sill speed. and :
Mon~e a Sue M~tchdl Letart. WVa .
560 ex pmd 1.1g1

POMEROY - Unot s of the Mc1 gs
County Emergency Med1cal Servocc
recorded seven call s for ass ostance
Fnd~y Unots respondmg 1ncluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I 2 21 am , South Second Avenue,
Mtddleport. Anne Ddvt s Veteran s
Memonal Hospital
5 49 am .. Rockspnngs Rehab iiJ.
tat1on Center. Pomeroy. Gl adys
Reeves VMH :
2 15 p m . Selle rs R1dge Road
Portland. lda Mae Gray, Holzer Mcd·
ocal Center; ·
6 43 p m , Crouser Road . Rutland,
Kenny Bartlett. HMC,
8 55 p m . Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy. Rhonda Stover

!.

Our Memorials
are Easy to
appreciate. Now
they~re also
easier to afford!

at

the scene , Pomeroy squad assos ted .
10.33 p m . State Route 124. Rut
land Orpha Rouse. VMH
RACINE
6:.52 p 111 . vol unt ct!'r ftrc dcp.trtmcnl and &gt;q uad to SR 124. motor
vehocle accodent Chns Rand olph

•,

treated at the sce ne

Men's Women's &amp;
Childrf!n 's

•

Pomeroy OHice
992-2588
McCoy Moore funeral Home
Gallipolis 446·0852
Vinton 388·8603

THE SHOE CAFE

Cases concluded in Meigs County Court
'
B
p
ed
POMEROY - The followong
Jerry L. entley, omeroy, e~trf
cases were settled recently in the tags,$15pluscosts,DavodG25 ole,
Mco gs County Gourt ol Judge Patnck Portland, open con taoner. $
pdus
.
·
costs Robert L 8 o1mg. Racme, osH 0 Bncn
•
'
d $30 I
e Mid- orderly whole ontoxocate ,
pus
Fone d were Roc k''J N Slo
. n '
.
be
S Ahlefeld
dleport, dnvlllg under the tnfluence, costs, . Re cca
.
'
$850 plus costs, 30 daY.s JRII sus- Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus coSts,
Kevm R Roush Racme wrongful
pendcd to three days. 90-day operaSHio I ·
tor's hcensc suspensoon, one year pro- entrustm:nt, 10 d pus ~osts. o~e
h,Jt;on dnvmg under suspensoon, y~arlro ato~,
a~s suw~ $200 plus costs, 30 days jail sus- e ; ke~~
ewos,
a O,
a'
pcndcd to seve n days, one year pro- mfar e anells,dcostbs ot n y: p$ols00sessolons
Osls. left o a contra e su s ance,
pu
$25 I
pus c
,
costs JO da s aol suspended to five
hat oon &gt;eat be It.
of center costs on ly, Israel L. d
•
Y J
b
K tt E
Phdilps Rutland. operaung a motor- Rays, oneCyear prollauoWn; V' y t
d
mpt1on
amsey. ollagevo e,
a' sea
\cluclc a f ter un erage consu
• belt $25 plus costs; expored regostra·
$500 plu&gt; costs, 10 days Jail sus- loon' $20 plus costs,
pended to l~ree days, .Jatl and fine
Gary R. Reolmore, Porperoy,
suspcnded ol resodenllal treatment underage consumption $200 plus
program completed wothm 90 days, costs 10 days Jaol suspe~ded, probaOL smpended unto I restdenual treat- ·110n ~ntol 21 years of age, open con·
ment program completed, seat belt,
A 0
$25 plus costs. unsale vehocle, costs tainer, 530 dp1~s. costs,d sa fi ravesj
on ly possessoon of drug parapherna- Ewongton, nvong un er man_coa
on $50 respons1bt111y actwn suspensoon,
' - 1
ha. $)0 p us costs, possesst •
wl Ius
Jilus co&gt;ts
$150 plus costs, three days J P
Public ee ng
Residents of the VIllage of Cheshire

rh:'t

and Immediate Surrounding Area
Cheshire Wastewater Improvement Project
Project Status and Discussion
Date: September 27, 1999 at 7:00pm
Place Guoding Hand School
Please plan to allend this meeting in order to become informed of the sta111 , ·of the Project. Engoneers from URS Gr~iner W~dyard C:lyde,
Co lumbus, Ohoo will be presenting recommendattons and woll be avadable
10 answer questions concerning the Cheshire Wastewater facohttes
Improvement ProJect
Lea rn About and Comment on:
• Facolities Plannmg Recommendations
• Treatment and Collection System Allematives
• Fund~ng and Financong Opltons
• AntiCipated Costs
• Implementation Schedule
The mee ting os open to the public and all residents, property owners and
husmcss ow ners are requested to attend.
M,t yor ,mel Council

Vol !age of Cheshorc, Ohoo

.

-

-·------

~----

$75 suspended of valod OL presented
wothin 90 da s one year probauon
Weldon W YR~agor Pomcrov n~
OL $ISO plus costs' three day'; jatl
•
'
plus $75 suspended of &gt;alod OL pre ·
sented withon 90 day s, one year pro·
bapon seat belt $25 plus costs
W'd M ' p
d.
en y oore, omeroy, osor
d~rly afterwammg costs 30daysJaol
suspended one , year. probatoon
restraonmg. order ISSUed· Kate Hub:
bard Pomeroy dosorderl; after warn·
mg ~osts 30 d~ysJml suspended one
'
'
,
year probation, rcstraonmg order
ossued Randy L Stewall Pomcrov
resosu~g arrest costs 10 days Jnoi
'
'
'
suspended to three days. one year
probatoon, diSorderly conduct. $50
suspended, costs, one year proboltlon ,
Shannon Moller. Lot!le Hoc kong,
speed, $23 plus costs, N1cholas D
Molls, Athens, DUI, $850 plus costs
10 days Jatl suspended to three d.1ys
90-day 01 suspun"on. one year pro·
bation Jatl and $550 suspe nded upon
· .
completion of rcstdcnttal trc atnwnl

Adelson, Parker&gt;hurg. W Va, drl\ mg
under FRA suspen wm. $201J ·plus
costs love days Jatl and $ 100 sus·
pcndcd upon p11&gt;ol ol a valod OL
,
h
wnhm 90 days one yco~r Pill all on
H Ad'
s
.
,
"d
J,lhnn;
'"" . yl.~eusc. spec ,
H4 plu&gt; costs
Johnny Reeves t;loJd kpon. flee
b
'" "· $100 plus costs. one year pro atl &lt;;n 30 days JGII suspended ro 10
days, reSJSUng arrest , $1oo· plus costs
one ye.lf pro ball on 30 days Jail SUS·
pen Jed 10 I0 day s co ncurrent . Jason
Wh I
Ch h
lrovmg under
o lle y.
cs ore '
suspcnsoon $250 plus costs. 30 days
J.ul suspended lo three d.ws one year
bt
Max W Wol son Shade
pro awn,
.
underage consumptiOn , $200 plu&gt;
co&gt;ts, I 0 days Jatl suspended, probaloon unt•l 21 years ol ,lgc. open co ntaon er, $30 plus costs fomothy W1ck·
crsham. Pome roy, underage consumptl on $200 plus cmls. I 0 days
Jail suspended probation until 2 1
years of age open contaoner. $30 plus
·
costs

1p~r,::o:,gr::•::;m.:,:w.;:tt::;h::,:'":;.90:_:d::,a):.;'s:.;,:~~11;::c,.h~ac:-·l_R-:::--7"--'7-:::";.;::-:;:-::--,

r

Grandpa died 0 f a heart attack;.
Mom died of a heart attack. .
Chances are you will tool'

Dr. Robert Holley has re~eived special
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Clinton suspends U.S. arms sales to Indonesia
By GEOI-"F SPENCER
Aaaoc!Med Prwa Wrltar
· DILl, Indonesia (AP)- Indonesian army commander Gen. Wiranto said
he would be willing to accept international peacekeepers to help quell the
violence in East Timor, U.N. officials said today.
However, hours later, Wiranto appeared to backtrack, speaking only of
" security cooperation" and omitting the crucial reference to peacekeepers.
It was unclear how the matter would be resolved. Jakarta has come under
a barrage of criticism for failing to halt the killing, looting and forced depor·
tation in East Timor. Previously, lndqnesia had ruled out allowing foreign
troops into the province to restor~ order.
·
'
In the ,prov~
· nc · al capital of DiJi, entire neighborhoods were bui'T1ed to toe
ground and no pr -independence supporters appeared to be left. Numerous
soldiers patroll the streets, and some militiamen could be seen roaming
about carrying automatic weapons.
,
.
East Timorese gave horrific accounts of the last week, during which
machete-wielding militias aided by Indonesian troops went on a rampage
after a U .N."'rgani~ed referendum showed a huge majority of East Timor's
800,000 people favored breaking from Indonesia.
In one of the most shocking reports, Australian lsa Bradridge said in an
interview in the Sydney Morning Herald that his wife saw "thousands of
bodies" piled in a large jail cell in the police station in Dili.
" Stacks of bodies up to the roof," Bradridge was quoted as saying. "I
khow it is hard to believe, but it is absolutely true. My wife saw arms and
legs dripping blood."
Aid agencies estimate that anywhere between 600 and 7,000 people have
been killed, 100,000 driven into West Timor or to other islands, and 200,000
more chased from their homes.
carlos Bela, East Timor's Roman catholic Bishop and joint winner Of the
1996 Nobel Peace Prize, urged pro-independence supporters to use arms to
defend themselves against the violence, a Portuguese newspaper said today.
Be los said a decision by East Timor 's separatist guerrillas not to respond
to attacks by the militia was "too benevolent," according to daily paper Pub·
lico.
.
" If other&lt;' kill with weapons, why can't pe!'lple defend themselves with
weapons? There is self-defense, which even morals allow, ",said· Belo, who
is considered East· Timor's spiritual leader.
Hopes for an end to the violence rose earlier today when Gen. Wiranto
told a delegation of five ambassadors from the U.N. Security Council who
were touring Dili that he would inform President B.J . Habibie thatlndone·

sia should consider allowi,ng a peacekeeping mission soon.
Reached in Darwin, Australia. David Wimhurst, the spokesman for the
U.N. team that ran East Timor 's independence referendum last month said:
"We're beginning to see the intense pressure showing some result."
He noted that pressure included the U.S. decision .to cut off vital arms
sales to Indonesia, and blunt criticism from U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan.
However, Wimhurst added that ·· 1 want to be cautious" because the
Indonesians have not always followed through on previous Commitments.
Within houn;, Wiranto had indeed retreated. reading an amended state·
ment to reporters before departing from Dili airport. II only said "The offer
of security cooperation must be considered as an option by the Indonesian
government, " without the reference to accelerated deploymeni of peacekeepe(S.
There was speculation that Annan might close the U.N. mission in the
city. where some 1,000 refugees arc sheltered, raising questions about the
world body 's ability to shepherd East Timor to nationhood.
" If UNAMET does not stay; the militias will kill us all. So we hope
UNAMET will not leave us," said Joao Jeronimo, 31 , a translator inside the
compound.
Pat B~rgess. a U.N. official, estimated that up to 200,000 people have
taken refuge in the mountains. Thirty thousand others were in a.camp at
Dare, some 10

south nf Pili.

He said these people were reduced to living off root plants, as there was
little else available at the height of the dry season.
"Unless there is urgent and widespread humanitarian aid there will be a
disasler. This cannot happen unless security situation is under control,"
Burgess said.
Hundreds of refugees were assembled in makeshift camps throughout the
city, including one at the main police station and at Dili museum, which had
been used as the main ballot counting center in the U.N. supervised referen·
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Puerto Rican nationalists freed from prison
By DOUGLAS J ..ROWE
Associated Presa Writer
Eleven Puerto Rican nationalists granted clemency by President Clinton
were freed from prison Friday amid a political furor over their release, and
most of them were headed for Puerto Rico for a big welcome home.
Ricardo Jimenez left the federal penitentiary near Terre Haute, Ind., in
style, riding through the gates in a gpld Mercedes-Benz.
'
, "I'm elated that I'm free, here with my family," he said.
Most of the nationalists were members of FALN, the Puerto Rican independence group responsible for 130 bombingS in the late 1970s and early
1980s tharleft six people dead and scores wounded.
They were serving sentences of up to 90 years in prisons from Cali(or·
nia to Connecticut on·charges of seditious conspiracy and possession of
weapons and explosives.
None of those offered clemency was directly responsible for deaths or
injuries, and they were required to renounce violence and stay away from
each other as a condition for receiving clemency.
Ointon's offer outraged Jaw enforcement officials and victims of FALN
violence, and complicated his wife's bid to win a Senate seal from New Yoik,
which has a large Puerto Rican population.
,
On Thursday, the U.S. House condemned the clemency offer on a 311-41
vote that was little mere than symbolic, since Clinton holds exclusive power
over clemency.

.

ered international statesmen ...

. Eight others who received clemency hoped to reach Puerto Rico sometime
Saturday, while two others were going to their families in the Chicago area.
· Ointon has said his offer was not intended to help his wife's campaign for
the Senate. He said his decision was influenced by several leaders, including
South African Archbishop Desmond Thtu and former President Carter.
Mrs. Clinton ended up opposing the clemency offer, saying the FALN
members look too long to decide whether to renounce violence.
·
But on Friday, she said she may have been hasty in ma)ting that decision.
"I have a number of Hispanic advisers and ... I have to admit that the con·
sultation process was not what it should have been," she said.
Clinton offered clemency to 16 nationalists in ·all. U.S. Bureau of Prisons
spokesman Dan Dunne said two of them received a reduction in their sen· '
tences instead of immediate release, two were already out of prison before
Friday, and one had not yet signed the clemency offer and remained in
prison.
·
Dunne said all nine who said they wanted to live in Puerto Rico were
given permission by the Federal Parole Commission.
Without it, they would have been forced to return to the cities where they
1
lived at the time of their arrests, New York and Chicago. .
The priSoners' spokesman in San Juan, Luis Nieves Falcon, and the pris·
oners' families said they planned a huge party to celebrate the return- or
even nine huge parties, because under the parole conditions they cannot associate with convicted felons, including each other.

California moves to expand gay rights
By JENNIFER KERR .
.
Aeioclat8!f Press Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - The California legislature passed
major gay-rights 'legislation in the closing hours of its 1999-sess{on Friday,
including a bill that would prohibit discrimination of gay students and
teachers.
·
Assemblywoman Sheila Ku,hl, who is openly lesbian, said the legisla·
tion is necessary to curb violence aimed at gay teens and teens who are
picked on because others think they are gay.
, ·
"There are thous~nds of students in this state who are suffering every
day from harassment in sc;hool ... because they are different or people
think they are gay or lesbian," Kuehl said.
Another bill passed Friday would create a stale domestic' partners r.e g·
istry for gay couples and let state and local government workers get health
benefits for their partners.
.
·
A third bill would move state ·laws probibiting discrimination against
gays in employment and housing, into the stat&lt;o's main civil rights law.
California Gov. Gray Davis plans to sign the domestic registry bill, but
he docs not yet have a position on the others, spokeswoman Hilary
McLean said.
Kuehl's bill would add sexualjorienlation to a state education·law that
already bars discrimination in public schools and colleges based on race,
eJhnicity, gender or disability.
The bill doesn ' t prescribe a punishment, but by adding sexual orienta·
tion to state law, it make it easier for parents or students to sue harassers
oc schools where harassment occurs.
. Massachusetts has a similar law, and Kuehl said about half of Cali for·
nia's public school districts have similar policies.
A Centers for Disease Control .study of more than 8,000 high school
students found one in 13 were targets of violence because other students
thought they were homos.exual, Kuehl said.
.
"When society allows harassment and discrimination to go unchecked
in our educational institutions, we create a climate in which incidents of ·
, hale violence can flourish," said James Wagoner, presidelll of Advocates
' for Youth, a Washington, D.C,based group supportinglhe bill.
1
Opponents said the bill would fdrce schools to advocate a homosexual
ltfestyle.
"Moms and dads don't send their children to school to learn from
homosexual role models," said Randy Thomasson of capitol Resource
Institute, a conservative religious-oriented group opposing the bill.

(

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URNPIKE

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Section

B

Sundey, September 12, 11111

enn tate tops Pitt 20-17;
Michigan, Wisconsin also win
The star was Davis, a sophomore receiver and kick
returner who racked up 227 yards on kick returns , pass
receptions and rushes . Davis, who had a 76-yard touch:
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) _ Maybe Pitt-Penn down punt retu.rn last week against Murray Stat~ , made
State is a rivalry after all. .
a beauuful 77-yard touc~down run on .the free ktck folPittsburgh, 34-point underdogs, gave No. 2 Penn lowmg ,• .second-quarter safety. .
,
. .
State a scare on Saturday.· The Ni!tany Lions needed a . Davts a,lso started at wtde recetver m place of InJUred
· 24-yard field goal from Travis Forney and a blocked · JUniOr Chns Chambers and had four catches for91 ya~d~.
field goal from LaVar Arrington with four seconds left 10
Dayne carljed mne Urnes for .57 yards on Wtsco~sm s
defeat the Panthers 20-17 .
.
. ·
opemng dnve. but saw the ball JUSt II more times m the
Eric McCoo had a seven-yard touchdown run and first half for ,a total of 98 yards. He sat out t~e fourth
Mike Cerimele caught an 11 'yard touchdown pass for quarter and needs 321 yards to pa~s Oh10 State s Archte
Penn State (3-0).
·
Gnffin as the Btg Ten Conferences leadmg career rush.
.
Following Forney's field goal with 1:20 left; Hank er.
Poteat ran the kickoff to the 50 and Thrman found Latef . Dayne, wllo was 14th on the NCAA s career rushmg
Grim for a 25-yard gain, but David Aeishhauer sacked hst entenng the game, moved ,to I I th wnh 4,85~ yards.
Thrrnan and Nick Lotz's 52-yard field goal attempt was He passed Ed Mannaro of Cornell . Nebraska s M1ke
blocked by Arrington.
Rozter and Steve .Banalo of Colorado State.
,
The Badgers offenstve .Performanc&lt;; wasn 1 as
Pmsburgh (I-I) lost to Penn State for the seventh
straight time, but thanks to great defensive line play, s~ooth as· the final score m1ght suggest. W1sconsm didstuck w!th the Lions for· t~e second year in a row.
n I ~core an offenstve touchdown m the first half despne
No.6 Michigan 37, Rice 3 _At Ann Arbor. Mich .. . havmg more than 20 m1~utes of possesston, twtce
()rew Henson may have gained 3 step in Michigan's stalhng 1ns1de the Cardmals 20, . ·
quarterback race Saturday as he scored one touchdown
Thanks m part to two penalti.cs., the Cardi~al s (0-2)
and passed for another in the No, 6 Wolverines' 37-3 win lost 20 yards m three plays on thetr ftrst possesSion oft he
over Rice.
·
game. Nose tackle Enc Mahhk and several Badgers
Anthony Thomas ran for two touchdowns and Jeff swarmed Quavis Tate m the end zone for a safety.
De; I Verne . a walk-on who received a scholarship earlier
On the ensumg kickoff. Dav1s dazzl ed the Camp
in the week. ki cked three field goals for Michigan (2 -0), Randall Stadmm crowd wtth a grace! ul kickoff return,
Rice (0·.2), giving away nearly 40 pounds per man. three ttmcs dodgmg potenttal trouhle and o~l~unnm g the
never had the ball in Michigan territory until late in the field mto the end zone . It was the Badger.s lirst ktckoff
fourth quarter when the Owls drove 56 yards for Derek return for a touchdown smce 1995 . .
,
Crabtree's 33-yard field goal with 30 seconds remaining.
Sen1or lmebacker Chm Gh1dorz1. returned a ltpped
Michigan rolled up 356 yards, while holding the Owls pass 25 .yards for a touchdown early m the secQnd quar.
ter, staking Wasconsm to a 19-0 lead .
to 157.
Henson , a gifted sophomore who spends his summers
Shortly .after halftime, Scutt Kavanagh hit fullback
playing thin! base in the Ne·w York Yankees' farm sys· .. Chad Kuhns With a 6-yard touchdown pass: Wisconsin's
tern, has battled fifth-year senior Tom Brady for the job last touc~down came on a two-yard run b~ Mi chael
all season. Brady, who started and played three quaners Bennett wnh e1ght seconds to play.
in the opener against Notre Dame, started against the
Wisconsin's two-headed quarterback strategy again
Owls, too,
had mixed results, with starter Kavanagh and freshman
Brady completed 10 of 15 passes for 115 yards, while Brooks Bollinger making mist~kes, Kavanagh overthrew
Henson was 8-of-14 for 109 yards. But it was Henson Davis late in the first quarter when Davis was open .
who got the Wolverines in the end zone.
prompting a crutch-throwing tantrum by Barry Alvarez.
No.9 Wisconsin 50, Ball St. 10-At Madison, Wis. ,
Wisconsin's coach watched the game on crutches
Ron Dayne moved 158 yards closer to a national rushing because of a persistent knee injury.
record and Nick Davis returned a kickoff for a touch·
Bollinger erred as well. wildly tossing a pitch past
down as No. 9 Wisconsin rolled over. Ball State 50-10 Dayne on an option play. The fumble was returned 23
Saturday.
.
yards by Marion Llewellyn, and Ball State then went on
Th~ best offensive weapon for the Badgers (2-0) was- a 59-yard drive capped by Brian Conn's five-yard touch- ·
n~t Dayne, who needs 1.424. in Wisconsin 's nine remain· down pass to Billy Lynch with 2: 15 left in .the first haff.
ing games to beat the NCAA major-college mark set last
Bollinger had a 32-yard keeper two plays later to set
year by Texas' Ricky Williams. He fdnished with 31 car- up Vitaly Pisetsky's 53-yard field goal, third·longcst in
BLOCKS FIELD GOAL - Penn State's LaVar utes of Saturday's Keystone State battle at State'
.nes that mcluded a two-yard rush for a touchdown, his Wisconsin history, 34 seconds before halftime. Pisetsky Arrington (11) goes high to block the field goal of College, Pl., where the host Nittany Uons won 20·
fourth of the season, in the third quarter.
missed a 27-yarder earlier in the half.
Pittsburgh's Nick Lotz (lower right) In the Jail min- 1~(A~
·

Top 25 college football

West .Virginia tames Miami RedHawks; Mount Union, OWU win
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
- Marc Bulger threw for three
tpuchdowns and redshirt fresh.man
AvonCol)ourne rushed for 142 yards
in his second start as West Virginia
beat Miami of Ohio 43-27 Saturday.
A week after surrendering 327
rushing yards to East Carolina, West
Virginia ( l-1) registered six sacks
and forced Miami's Mike Bath to
throw four interceptions.
Miami, which held Northwestern

.

Edwin Cortes, 44, left the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa., Friday
afternoon, and was scheduled to arrive in San Juan hours later. He had been
behind bars for 16 1/2 years.
f'l'm sure that we'll be received as patriots in our country, not the crimi·
nals we 've been
labeled
\
. . as in the United. States," he said at the Harrisburg.air·
port.
" I hope to follow the examples, if I could say, ofNelson Mandela, Gerry
Adams and Yasser Arafat, who are also labeled as criminals and terrorists but
in the.minds of their people were patriOCS," he said. "Today, they ate consid·

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Ohio college
football

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Eric
Milton pitched a no-hitter for the
Minnesota Twins on Saturday, overpowering ·an Anaheim lineup full of
late-season callups in a 7-0 victory
against the Angels.
Milton struck out ·a career-high
13 , . fanning rookie Jeff DaVanon
with a 3-2 fastball for the final out.
Milton, acquired in February
1998 from the New York Yankees in
a trade for Chuck Knoblauch. walked
two. He retired the final 18 batters.
The 24-year-old lcft·hander was
in complete command in pitching the
, majors' third no-hitter of the season.
Milton (7·ll)joined St. Louis rookie
Jose Jimenez and the Yankees ' David
Cone, who threw a perfect game .
Anaheim hegan the game last in
the AL with a team batting average of
.257, and Saturday's lineup was
missing most of its stars. Mo
Vaughn, Tim Salmon, Jim Edmonds,
Darin Erstad, Garret Anderson and
Gary DiSarcina all did not play for
the Angels, last in the AL West.
The depleted lineup was mostly
the result of an early-morning start at
the Metrodome. The first pitch came
at II :06 a.m , COT because stadium
workers needed time to get the frcld
ready for a night college football
game between Minnesota and
LouiSiana-Monroe at the park.
The Angels started four players
called up September and one promated in
. DaVanon , the last

out, made his first 1major league start.
and does not have a major league hit.
Troy Glaus was the only An!'Peim
starter who was in the lineup friday
night when the Angels beat
Minnesota 4-2 for . their fourth
straight victory. The . Twins had lost
four in a row.
Milton allowed only one hard-hit
ball. In the first inning, Todd ·Greene
hit a line drive to left field that Torii
Hunter temporarily lost in the lights.
but he recovered in time to make the
catch.
,
The Angels managed 0nly three
balls out of the infield in the first five
mnmgs.
Milton got a standing ovation
from the crowd of ·about I 0,000
when he.took the mound to start the
ninth, and he quickly closed out his
gem.
Rookie Trent Durrington popped
up to first baseman Doug
Mientkiewicz on a 3- I pitch and
Andy Sheets hit a routine grounder to
second baseman Cleatus Davidson.
That brought up DaVanon, and
Milton ran the count full before getting the rookie to swing through a
fastball . Of the 13 strikeouts, I0 were
swinging.
Milton's teammates rush ed out of
the dugout for a celebration on the
mound .
It was the first no-hitter by a
Twins ·pitcher since Scott Ericks0n
shut out Milwaukee 6-0 on
27.

740·446·9800 800-272-5179

minutes.
The Bishops ( 1-0) opened the
scoring with a 17-yard touchdown
run by Chip Woods with 12 minute s
left in the first half.
The Wolveri'nes (0-2) tied the
game on a four-yard run by R.J
Bowers with II :42 left in the third
quarter.
Ohio We sleyan punter C.J.
Plymale intentionally ran out of the
end zone with II seconds to play to
give Grove City a safety.

Bowers recorded hi s 18th consec- down with 6:59 left in the third put
utive game with 100 yards or more the Oilers ahead for good.
by rushing for 121 yard s on 34 carRamsey scored aga in late in the
ries. He is one game short of tying third and early in the fourth, both qn
the NCAA Division III record of 19 passes from Hieber. Chri s Sharp
consecutive I00-yard games. which topped off the scoring with a 43-yard
was set by Brandon Steinheim of run in thc .fourth.
Wesley College in 1996. ,
Findlay rushed for 2 18 yards, led
Findlay 39; Wayne, Mich. IS- by Bret Swaney with 87, Wayne
At Detroit, Mich., Darrell Ramsey State finished with 82 rushing yards.
scored three · touchdowns 10 lead
Adrian 22, Heidelberg 15
Findlay to a 39-15 win over Wayne
At Adrian. Mich .. Joe Davis threw
State on Saturday.
for 227 yards and two touchd owns.
Mike Hirschfeld opened the scor· leading Adrian to a 22- 15 victory
ing for Findlay (1-0 overall and Saturday over Heidelberg,
GLIAC) with a touchdown early in
Da v1s 22cyard sconng strike to
the second quarter. Ramsey scored . Matt Wonders came with 30 seto nds
on a 71 -yard pass frnm Bryan Hiehet left in the ftrst half. helping the
to give the Oilers a 12-7 halftime Butldogscloseto within ·l2·7 athalflead.
time. Davis' 34-yard pass to Chris
Wayne State (0- 2. 0·2) took the Cook with 1:44 left in the third qu areafly lead on a Pierre Brown touch- ter put Adrian ( J. I ) ahead' to stay. 14down in the first quarter. The 12 ,·
Warriors took the lead again in the
. Jeff Brock gained 185 yard s on 44
third when Derek Ginyard caught a carries for Heidelberg , including a
35-yard pass from Jason Charron.
two-yard touchdow n run earl y in the
But another Hirschfeld touch· second quarter.

p;,,.

them with a
feet gam e 4-0 on
,July 28, 1994.
Other Twin s
· pitcher to throw
no, hitters

1994. It was first
time the Angels
had been no-hit
since
Kenny
Rogers ,
then
with Texas,

Jaclc Kralick in 1962 and Dean sac rifi ce fl y. cuning H nu~t&lt;1 n' s lc ud
[0 5-3.
Chance m 1967.
Milton walked Orlandi) Palmciro
Lim a was rc mcn ~d w11 h Sos&lt;l
in the first innmg and DaVunon in the- ~,.' omm g to the plat e. Li ma nll owc d
third. DaVanon was ca ught stealing. s~v en hits and struck out ~eve n wuh ~
Milton's prc\'ious low-hit game out wa !kirlg a batte r.
was a three -hitter. which he has done
Jav PO\\'CII stu ck. nut Sns.L wafk cJ
twh.: c, iric:ludin~ in an 8-0 win over Rodrl !! uc t. and 1!01 G k na ll cn Hill f0 r
'
the Angel s o n July 3 !. Hi s pn.~v itlUS ihC lhii·d O UI. "
c ar~e r high for strikcoUI ., v.:1~ 12
Micah Bowie ( 1-6) pitched 4'•
agamst Toro nw on Au g. II .
innin gs. allowin g six hits and five
Denny Hoc king drove: in three 'earned runs . tie struck out five .
Red Sox II, Yankees I 0
runs with a si ngle an d hi s seventh
At New 1 York . the Boston Red
home run or the year for the Twins.
Angel s starter Ramon Ort i7 1t ·2) Sox. one day afte r heali ng the Nc"
was eJeCted in th e. hott om of the fifth York Yank ees behind P~drn
for hitting Matt Lawton wi th a pit ch Martinez's fastball. used Nomar
aft er Hocking' s two- run homer l! an:- Garciaparra s longhall s.
Minncso ta a 6-0 k ad.
Troy O' Leary. Trot Nm• n an d
Astros 5, Cubs 3
Butch Huske y al so homered.
At Housto n. Jose Lima becam e
Garc iaparra homered in the tl11rd.
the fir.' \ 20- gahlc' winner in th e of( Allen Wat sorl {and hll a 1hrc~ - run .
Nati ~ na\ League , pit ching seven hackbreaker in the si xlh off Ratmro
stron g innin gs Saturda y as th e Mendoza making 11 9-4 .
Houston Astros won their seasonIn the c1ghth. Jim Leyritz hit an .
hi gh nmlh straighl with 5-3 victory RBI sing le. Jose Offerman's error
ove r the Chicago Cubs.
allowed two runs to score and Jeter
Lima (20-7) struck ou1 the side in had an RBI £roundout. cutt ing the
the first and retired I0 of the first II lead to 9-8.
batters he faced before Mark Grace
With two on. Derek Lowe gnl
si ngl ed in the fourth.
Bernie William:.. to groundout. e nd ~
Samm y Sosa re mained at 59 ing the threat.
hnmc runs .
Ri ch . Garces ('i - 1) got the " m,
BIII J Wagner pitched the save .
Rod lkc k. BDstnn \ sixih pil ~.: h rr. gn t
I LOVE YOU, MAN! - Minnesota pitcher Eric Milton gets a hug
Lima ruled until th e ei ghth when the save.
from .catcher Terry Steinbach after throwing a no-hitter in Saturday's singles by Llmce Johnson, Roosevelt
The Red Sox scored three runs in
American League game against the visiting Anaheim Angels, who Brown and Mickey Morandini . the f11st off Hidck( Jrabu ( I0·6).
lost 7·0 In part bec11use Milton strutk out 13 hitters. (AP)
loaded the bases. Grace then hi t a

Inside· today's sports:
195 UP~ER RIVER RD. .

time in 130 games.
Mount Union (1-0) has now won
43 consecutive games.
·
Ohio Wesleyan 14, Grove City 9
At Grove City. Pa .. Phil Heyn ran
five yards for a touchdown with 8:23
left in the fourth quarter Saturday to
give Ohio Wesleyan a 14-9 victory
over Grove City,
Heyn's
run
completed a ISplay, , 80-yard
drive which .took
more than seven

Milton's no-hitter drives Twins past An·gels; Astros, BoSox win

99 CHIVY (·1500 Z71 4X4 . 95 fORD fl SO 4X2
$

97CHEVY WMIER 2DR

allowed the most points in five seasons and saw its eight-game winning
streak snapped.
.
·
Miami (I· I) also lost for the first
time in I 2 games when Travis
Prentice exceeded 150 yards rushing.
He had 163 on 29 carries, most of it
after halftime.
West Virginia countered with
Bulger, the Big East's top quarterback who wore a brace on a·sore left
knee. The career 62 percent passer
started slowly . but hit 12-of-17 for
I 75 yards after halftime to stave off a

Miami comeback. He finished 19-ofAI Alliance, Ohio, Adam Marino
35 for 226 yard$.
·caught three touchdown passes,
Bulger .threw for first-quarter , including two for mo(e than 50
scores . of two . yards to Anthony yards, as Mount Union beat Albion
Green and 14 to Khori Ivy. He also 38-0 Saturday.
found wide-open Antonio Brown
Marino scored from 16-yards and
from 26 yards in the fourth quarter.
52-yards out 'to put the Purple
Cobourne capped a IQ.play drive Raiders up 24-0 in the first quarter.
with a one-yard touchdown run late
Marino p4lled
in the third quarter for a 29-14 lead, in a 59-yard pass
and Miami got no closer than eight from
Gary
points thereafter.
Smeck , in the·
Prentice scored on a three-yard third quarter .to
run and an 81-yard option-pass play put Mount Union
in the fourth quarter to mpve past up 31-0. Smeck finished 15-for-23
Pitt's Tony Dorsett into fourth place for 270 yards with three touchdowns
in NCAA major-college career scor· and no interceptions .
ing with 366 points.
Chuck Moore opened the scoring
Bath finished 16-of-38 for 312 with a 16-yard touchdown run and
yards, including first-half scores of Dan Pugh scored on a, 13-yard run to
55 and 62 yards past blown cover- make it.38-0.
age.
'
Albion quarterback Jason Whalen
West Virginia, which hasn't los.t to. went 16-for-29 for 157 yards and no
a Mid-American Conference school interceptions.
·
since 1945, avoided its first 0-2 start · The Britons (0-2), which did not
since 1979.
get closer than Mount Union's 25Mount Union 38, Albion 0
yard line, were shut out for the first

-

Ironton rolls over Gallia Academy

44~6.

Storv on B-5

Elsewhere in sports:

t-

CIIIHT st)WfiONS
e.~urtlill

UK FOR
MR. fORD

High school football action:
- Meigs defeats River Valley 42-30. Story on 8-2
- Eastern shut~ out Wahama 22-U. Story on ll-4

, • Ohio Valley Christian 's ·varsity ' 'olleyball team sweeps tri-match. Story on B-5
• OVC's soccer learn blanks Elk Valky C'hristi&lt;1n ...fl. Story on B-6
• Sam Wilsnn in w•·•·kly l'ttlumn

•I

'

'

�I

'
Sunday, September 12, 1999

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

Area sports in brief

8oush gains 202 yards &amp; five TDs

Marauders outlast
River Valley 42-30
-

South Gsll/s varsity sextet
bests Rock Hill, Federal Hocking

·
Vinton junior high volleyball
crew downs Symmes Valley, OVC

MERCERVILLE - South Gallia's varsity volleyball
team knocked off visiting Rock Hill Tuesday night before
beating Federal Hocking
Wednesday
night
at
Stewan. according to
releases submitted Friday
and Satunday.
.
Against Rock Hill, the
Rebels, who won 15 -4, 1513, were led by Ashley
Cardwell's seven service
points, which included
three first-game aces.
· RACHEL WAUGH ,
' Behind here were Stacy
White with six, Rachel
Waugh with fiye , Tanya Haner and Robyn Harrison with
four each, Valerie Delaney and Nikki Wolford with two
each and Ashley Cardwell with one.
AI the net, the Rebels
.were led by Waugh's 11 for-12 effort, which yielded
'two kills. Delaney, Haner
and Harrison each' went I
for I.
Haner had three blocks.
Waugh an&lt;) White had two
each.
Agairist
Federal
Hocking. the Rebels won
STACY WHITE
15-9. 15-6 behind White's
10 . points (includes four
six
aces),
Cardwell's
I includes one ace). four-point efforts by Delancy and
Haner (she had two aces). Waugh's three, Harrison's two
and Adkins' one.
'
At the net, South Gallia was led by Cardwell (8-8 &amp;
nne kill, Waugh (7-9 &amp; one kill). White (5-5), Haner (3~). Harrison ( 1- 1) and Delancy (1-2).
Haner, Harrison and Waugh had one block each.

GALLIPOLIS - Vinton's volleyball team knocked
off Symmes Valley and the host Ohio Valley Christian
Defenders in Thursday's tri-match at the First Baptist
Church's activities building.
The Tigers beat Symmes Valley 9-15, 15-7, 15-5
behind Latasha Ousley's 14 service points and Leah
·
Stout's six.
Against OVC, Vinton won 3- 15, 15-10, 15-1 behind
Stout's 17 points and Ousley"s seven.
No statistics were available for OVC or Symmes
Valley.

'

S.,. G. SPE!'ICER OSBORNE
·Raiders, who in the first half crossed
llmea-S4intlnel Steff
the 50 twice after scoring their first
• POMEROY - Senior tailback touchdown, got no closer than the
Justin Roush used his 202-yard, five- Marauders' 35 .
tl)uchdown perfonnance to lead the
For the first half of the third quarMeigs Marauders to a 42·30 victory ter, both teams failed to scored on
OO..er tlie visiting River . Valley their first two possessions. Roush's
R;aiders Friday night at Bob Roberts two fumbles and immediate recoverField.
.
ies by Taylor and teammate Eric
: "We didn't hold him under 200 Baker killed those Meigs drives.
Y)lrds," said Raider boss Larry Carter River Valley's first drive sputtered
of Roush's breakaway runs that inside its own 10 and watched the .
l¢1ped th~ Marauders erase a first' second end on an errant snap over'the
&lt;J!Iar!er deficit.
·
end of punter Ben Bacon. Bacon
• The Raiders, who got the game's dove on the ball and was downed by
first offensive series, held the foot- defensive end Matt Stewart at the
b!lll for nearly 6 112 minutes while Raiders ' five .
driving_64 yards in II plays. The
Roush 's fourth touchdown and his
run-dominated drive, aided by senior" two-point conversion run stretched
,
~arterback Jeff Gardner .passes to the Marauders' lead to 36-6, which
BREAKAWAY BULLBACK - Meigs running back Justin Roush
split ends Joey Cornelius (16 yards was the game's widest margin.
(24) gets away from River Valley defensive back Michael Shaw (left) ·
f~r a first down deep in the red zone)
On the following kickoff, one one of his breakaway runs during Friday night'!l game at Sob
aRd Michael Shaw ( 12 yards to the Gardner's 60-yard return p~t Ri ver Roberts Field. Roush's 202-yard, five-touchdown effort led the
Meigs one-yard line). ·ended with Valley at the Meigs 24 . From there. Marauders to a 42·30 win. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris) ·
jQnior tailba~k Jared Taylor's one- Taylor ga.incd seven yar~s on two run foll&lt;wving hi s fl~covery of pl ~u:e k 1 ckin~ Jutll'S .... Thc buSiest
GARDNER THROWS - River Valley quarterback Jeff Gardner
yard ' touchd~wn run behind j uni or rushes b~tore Gardner. ta.k mg adv~m- ~ Tavlor' s fumhlc . Trailin1! .the play. night rnr Ri~cr V:\llcy's kickoff team,
cl:nter Chris Watts.
1age o f th c '1
• t1ng• Gardner
·
1"' arau dcrs· exp c1:
~ot the bounrc • he wanted rt·~ u!tcJ in the Raider~ ' C'(ccutin g (right), shown getting a pass away before being hit by Meigs nose
: Meigs, sett ing up' shop at its ow n Taylor or fullb~ck Clark Walker to amongst lhc fore st of maroon'-clad rive l..ick oiTs . cquilling tl~~.:ir total far guard Billy Souls by (71) and an unidentified teammate, executed a
34. needed scveil plays and 2: 10 to ge t the ball. broke away on a keeper MaraUder~ hcforc using his speed w the prn iou&lt;., tw o gamcs .... Thc 40% completion rate in Friday night's game. But the Maraude~s
cbver 66 yards. The first of Roush 's and a 17-yard touchdown run w11h outrace his upponcms to the nort h Raidrr..;· ::!09 y:mJ rushing dlort overcame that and Gardner's 106-yard, two-touchdown effort to wm
three 'first-half touchdown s came 4·20
1
their second slraig!ll game. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
· left ·
. .. .
end zone.
111:1rkcd the third straig ht wcck 11e1r
f~om one y.1id .out to tie. the game.
Aft er Ro us h SL·or c.. d h1. s· f1fth
' Notest Rh~... r Valley and Meigs ~ ruund anach. in cn:m~cd production
11Jnior tight end/linebacker. Adam to uchdown 29 seconds tnto th e. crossed mid!icld 011 the first play Or fro m the prev ious wee k's ou tBullington's ex tra-point kick put the fourth quarter and .was pulled out of their fir:st offcnsi\'C possessions. On put ..... Of I he Raiders' two turnovers
Marauders ~head 7-6.
the game, the Ra1ders sen t Taylor the game's first scrimmage play. !Tavlnr's fu mhlc and Gardner's
: Roush .'s II !-yard, three-touch- and Gardn.er mto .the. prom1sed land Gardncr's- 17-yard run put the · in tc~·ccp tilm). Mc1gs ('Hshcd m t_tn
down first half helped l\.1eigs score to ehd dnves _covcnng 59 ~nd 61 Raiders at ·thc Meigs 47. In lhc mid· on ly &lt;me . Scniur ctdeiNve lineman
&lt;ill all but the last of iis five pre-half- yards. respectively. · Gardners sec- die third of llW first quarter, se nior Nathan Eskew. who recovered
ttme ppssessions. Meanwhile,. the and touchdown came on a 35-yard quarterbai:k Grant Abbou's 34-yard Taylor's seto nd ' quartor futilbk. saw
pa.' S to split end Jonmhan Haggerty the Maraud ers usc it to send Roush
put the Marauders at River Valley's on hiS "ay for a 4~ -y ard touchdown ,
.JUST AIUUVED
.JUST ARRIVED
32 .... River Valley· fullbaciJcorncr- which was hi s third of the night.
1998 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER
1994 TOYOTA
back Nick George. who also serve.s .
This week's agenda: The Raiders
•
as
hi
s
club's
placekicker.
was
on
wi
ll
host
Athens
l'rid
ay.
The
:guarter totals
crutches resting hi s slrained ankle. Marauders \viii hos t Newark
;River Valley (0·3) .............6
0
8
16 =
30
;Meigs (2·1) ___ ___________________ 7
Hi s absence forced senior guard/line- Catholic Saturday at 7 p.m.
21
8
42
6=
backer Mike Conkle to take up the
~coring summary

•

' fliver Villey: Taylor 1-yd. run (run short)-5:33 1st qtr.
• Malgs: Justin Roush 1-yd. run (Bullington kick)-3:16 1sl
Meigs: Justin Roush 1-yd. run (Bullington kick)-10:54 2nd
• Meigs: Justin Roush 44-yd. run (Bullington kick)-7:11 2nd
: Meigs: Haggerty 65-yd. pass from Abbott (Bullington kick)-0:41
'2nd
: Meigs: Justin Roush 5-yd. run (Juslin Roush run)-5:50 3rd
: River Valley: Gardner 17-yd. run (Taylor run)-4:20 3rd
; Meigs: J!Jstin Roush 1-yd. run (kick failed)-11:31 4th
• River Valley: Taylor 9-yd. run (Taylor run)-5:17 4th
: • River Valley: Gardner 35-yd. run (walk!!r run)-1 :38 4lh
•

;ream statistics
•

:categorv .
..
BY
;Passing yards .................. :.... :................................... 10
·Completions &amp; attempled passes .......................... 4-10
:Interceptions thrown ......................... :.'................. :...... 1
.
~R-ushing attempts &amp; yards ......... _........................ 44·209
::Total fumbles &amp; number losL ....................... , ......... S-1

37·243
3·2

~Total first downs ........ .. ........ ..... ................................ . 10
:total yards ........................................ :.... .. .._. ............ 251
;Penalties: number &amp; yards .................................... 5-40
;Punting: number &amp; yards ..... ... ................. , ... ,, ..... 2-64

12
342
5-25
1-12

Meigs
12
2-7
0

.
•

'

:Individual statistics .
••

Wellston outduels Meigs
in Ohio Division golf match
Midkiff' s 38.. ''Zach
WEI.:LSTON - Wellston won Carson
another TVC golf- match Thursday Meadows' 40. 42s by Nick Dellwiller
evening played at The Elm Golf and Andy Davis .and Thad
Course. Wellston had a team score of Bumgardner 's 48.
150, foJiowed by Meigs with a 157.
Next came Belpre ( 170), Alexander Ohio Division
(174), Vinton County (176) and
standings
Nelson'villc- York (226).
Jon . McDonald of Wellston ano
l!IL
Sean McManus of Vinton County fum
were co-medalists with 36s. Tommy Wellston ....................................... .2 7
Roush of Meigs birdied three out of Meigs ..................................... :..... :21
last four ·holes to fini sh wilh a 2- Belpre ...................... ,..,.................. 21
Alexander ............ ,..............
... 12
over-par 37.
Other Meigs scores inducted Vinton County ,.. .................
.8
Nelsonville-York..................
.I

..

Meigs Marauders
four points and one kill.
.
Defense
Other Meigs scorers include
Fumble recove.-ies: Eskew 1·0
Shannon Price with eight for ' eight
Interceptions: Vanlnwagen 1-9 .
serving. three points and two assists,
Offense
'Amy Hysell six for seven with six
Passing: Abbott 2·7, 99 yds. &amp; 1 TD ·
~ills, o·ne ass is1 and one block.
Receiving: Haggerty 2-99 &amp; 1 TD
.
Marissa
\Vha!Cy one for one and one
Rushing: Justin Roush 24-202 &amp; 5 TDs; Hooten 1-1 2; Kennedy ·
p9ints
ar:td
Margie Bratton one l'1&gt;r
Lee 5-7; Bullington 2-5; Jeffers 1-5; Jeremy Roush 2-3;
one
with
four
kill s.
I'·C·olw1elll 1·0

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WI'Jkrn Division

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Seault ......
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Oakland ......

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' Central Division
Houslon
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CINCINNATI. .................... 83 l8
Pillsburgh .
.. .......... 69 72
St Louis ..
. .... 68 74

MilWaukee ........................... 61 79
Chicago ..
..... ~6 SS
Ari.tnna _,_,. ........................ 84
San Fr.mcis~;o ...'... .-.. - ........... 76
San Otego.; .... ·-· .......,....... 67
Los Angeles ....................... 66
Colorado ............................... 6-t

They played Saturday

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Oakland (Heredia 11 ·7) 111 Tampct ~ay (Wheeler
0-1). US p.m.
·
CLEVEI.AND (Wright 7 · 7~ at Chicago (Sirotka
8- 12). 2:05 p.m.
AnllheJm (Wnihbum I ·~) at Minnesota (Mays 5.
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Te!las (Sele 16·7) at Kansm Cuy (Wita~ick 6. 1J },
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·''

New England at New York Jets. I p.m.
·Oakland at Green Bay, I p.m
Dt:rroit at Seattle, 4 ~15 p.m.
Minnesota at Atlanta,1:15 p.m.
New·,Yort Giani! at Tampa Bay. 4: 15 p.m. ,
San Francisco 111 Jacksonville. 4: IS p.m.
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Milwaukee (Woodard I t-7} at Colorado {Kile 8·
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Pittsburgh {Ritchie 12·9) at St.louis (Oliver 7·9).
2: tO p.m.
Chi~;ago (Trachse16·1 61 al Houston (Holt 3-13),
2: .~5 p.m.
·
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Montreal (Hermanson 7- 12) at San Diego
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t-.tilwnukee !Eldred 2;1l ~ • CotoradoiAStJcio 1510), 11:05 p.m.
Phi ladelphia (Grace 1· 1J 'st Ari zonn IStoulemyre

Eastern Conference
Jam

1\C t.SOWPb,GI GA

x·D.C...... ......... ............... .. :ZI 7
x·COlUMBUS .... ...... 16 10
Tampa Bay .................. ... .. 13 15
Miami .. ............. ....... .. ... -1017
New"!:ngland ................... .IO 17
NY-NJ ................................. 5 22

5
S

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4
J

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59

37

311 40
29 41
22 J_~
22 34

29
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49
49
51

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Western Conference
x·lol AngeleJ ............... 17
Chicago ........... :...... :........ 15
Colorado .................... .... 11
Dallas ............................. 14

9 3

11 I
9 4
13 2

Sllll Jose .. ......................... .IS II 10

46
37
45

22
28
32
30

37

46

45 40

43
43
38
25
20

Knnsas City ......... ............8 20 2
32 50
· ,;.dinched playoff berthi.
NOTE: Thrte poinu for victory, one point for
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(SOW) is a subset of wins.

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Friday's scores
DC United 2. Tampa Bay, I
Colorado I, K.atlsas Cit)'O-SO

They played Saturday
New England 111 Miami, 7:]0 p.m.
$an Jose nr Dallas. 8:30p.m.
Chkago a1 Los Angeles, IO:JO p.m.

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1999 ESCORT LX
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with lots of Options

Locally owned and clean with 4.3 V6,
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Toro•. Wheel Horse" Classic 312-8 Tractor

Toro" Wheel Horse• Classic 314-8 Tractor
l Com mand'" engine
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from 36" to 46" cut

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snowthrower or li!ler

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• 12.5 hp OHV Kohler Command· engine
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\'

CHEVROLET
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'
.

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•Add car , snowhladc or. bagger .

...

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•

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(740) 446-3672

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Buffalo at Indianapolis. I p.m.

Chicago (Bowie 1-5) nt Hou!ton (Lima 19·7).

0

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308 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO
45769
.

$2 2 900 ·

Carolina at New Orte~. 1 p.m.
Cincinnati nt Tennessee. I p.m.

r.-

Toronto (Es~;obur 11 · 10) at Detroit (Wea,·er 8·
10). 1:05 p.m.
'
Boston rMercker 1-0) at New York (Oemens 12·

':,~':~~ved credit

w'

WINDSTAR
WAGON

CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT, 992-6614 • HOURS 8:00AM TO 5:00 PM MON-FRI

24 \

J 97

J
11
l8 '·t

FALL SALE ·YEAR END CLOSEOUT

1999

**All Prices Are Subject to Sales Tax**

608
.l89
.489
.479
.436

Today 's 1ames

1999 F150 4X4
All COMD., AIIIFM STEREO
ll" TIRES, AfRO MIRROR$ GAUOI PU
MlRP IOI~l BlfOR! DISCOUNt$

~16

$1 9900

GEO TRACKER 414

Sunday's gam..

Colorado 15, Milwaukee 3
St. Louis II, PiUsbur11h 5 ·
HouSton 6, Chicago 4 ( I~ )
· Arizona •], Philadelphia I
los Angele~ ], New York I
San Diego 10, Mum~al 3
Atlanta 4, San Francisco 2

O:lkland 7, Tampa Bay 2
Detroit 7, Toronto 6
Boston 1, New York I
Anaheim 4, ~inDC'wta 2
BaltiJMre 1i· Sea"le4 (1 2)

.

Addit=~~=
Wnham
As Their Ne..;c

57
65
75

season openers

Arizona 1t Philadelphia, I p.m.
Baltimott at S1. Louis , I p.m.

Western Division ·

15

The

NFL

. t· ·)
IJ h 4.))
Atlanta(Glavine ii · IO~atSanFrandsco (Ruecer
. arcta ...,7 at 81
a tunorr: o ns
. 13·8), 4:0.5 ~. m .
·
98
~- ·
.
) · · Flonda(
uoez(,..7)atCINCINNAll(Gulman5··
oronto ("-- .,..nter · ) at vai"Oit 181 atr 2• 10 • 2), 1:05 p.m.
5:05p.m. Ot'
ll tO) T
B !R
Pittsburgh (Pelen 4-1) a1 St. Loui 5 (Stephenson
Oakland ( t\'ares . •
at ampn ay upe 8 · 5·1), 8:1Up.m.
8), 6:3E5 p'=mL. ND (B ~~
~(P
Philadelphia {Wolf 5·1) at A'rilona (Benes 10· 11 ).
CL v.,. A
urm~ 13 • 7I at '-u1cago
arque 10:05 p.m.
,
q. J2). 7:05 p.m.
.
Montrenl {Thunnan 6· 11) ar San Diego (Ashby
Tuas (Helling 1.\·1) at ftansa.s Oty (Suppan g.
14.7), 10:05 p.m.
·
9f. 8:05p.m. ·
New York !Yoshii 10·8) at Los Angeles (Valdes 9·
13). 10: 10 pc.m.

~ow

$25 950°

.
New York (Rogers 4·0) a1 Los Angeles (Gagne 00), 8:05p.m.

Friday's scores

ClEVELAND 14, Chicngo6

AIR COU., CRIISE, TILT
PW, PL, Ct PLAYER
AUTOIIATIC
M!RP IOI~L BEFORE DISCOUNTS

Re.creation Dcpanment is offering: free tennis clinics dur-

C INCINNATI 4 , Aorida 2

Friday's scores

Car &amp; Light Duty Trucks

.

..... 87
.... 6J
.. ......... l8
.. ...... .... ~.. 58
..... :........ ll

Chka,o .. .__ ..
Drc:trmt,.. .. ..
Minnr=so1a ..~ .... ..
K_ansas Cily .....

S

0
950°

$34,950°

24

607
.567

Gl

,Central Dlvldon

r:att"'
.S·JOpm.
. T .

w

TIRE BAI,ANCE
·S ROTATE

85 55
...... 80 61
........ 74 68
........ 6l 16
........... 6l ·19

Bos1on ......

2
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The Gallipolis City ·Parks and

Trans., AC, local owner
Payments as low as

ing the week o(Sept: 20-23. Two sessions will be held
each evening at Haskins Park.
The sessions will last from 7 p.m. 10 8 p.m. and form
8 p.m. to 9 p.tn. each day. All partic1panls must bring their
'
own racquets.
To reg ister for the free tennis dinics , ('Ontact the
Gallipolis Parks and Retreation Department at 441 -6022.
The registration deadline. i's Friday.

Allanta _..

1\C L 1'&lt;1.

t :055 P~~(FG

SPORT PMO., V6 EMOIME
CAST AlUM WHEELS
AUTOIIAIIC, AIR COMI.
MSRP IOTAL BEFORE DtSCOUNIS
120 340 00 .
NOW · '

GALLIPOLIS . -

Easttm

Kansas City 7. Te"as 3

1999 RANGER SC 4X4 1999 F150

Super nice liehlcle just In lim~ for .Winter
Payments as low as

Gallipolis P&amp;R tennis camp set

Jum

Eastern Div!Jion'

New York

• • ,........._..,................~.-.....;;.........._ .., . $9,861
J994.OLDS CUJWS CIIU-4 DR, 111, Qui!~, Air;
Cassent, Blue
$4,999
414 ID,
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.
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$8,978
F•250 SUPIR CD tll2 JLJ.7:3llliesel, 5 Spd., A/C,
REDUCED

serving with four po int s. Brooke
Williams was seven for nine with

.,4• .·

--

Meigs varsity
spikers roll
past Belpre

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs ran its
varsity volley.ball record to 4-0 with a
•
River Valley Raiders
15-10, 15-6 win over Belpre in l:VC
Defense
action Thursday evening.
·
volleyball
Fumble recoveries: Baker 1-0; Taylor 1-0
For Meigs. Tiffany Halfl1illled the
·
Offense
way with 14 for 14 serving wilh nine
Passing: Gardner 4-10, 42 ygs. &amp; 1 int.
Receiving: Cornelius 1-16; Shaw 1·12; Northup 1·10; Taylor 1- points and two kills and one block.
Tangy Laudermilt was II for II serving with six points and nine assists ,
Rushing: Gardner 17 · 106 &amp; 2 TOs; Taylor 22·92 &amp; 2 TOs;
.
Tawny Jon es was Seven for seve n
klfolalker 3-7 &amp; 1 conv.; B. Bacon 2-4

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

AL standings

BetMYW..ti7,MO"""'"'-"""""",.._"'"''IIOW
$1~,487
.
I
'
• 994 FORD FISO llJ• V-8, Aulo, Air, &lt;ruiw, llli, Nke Trude

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy's junior high volleyballteams swept Wellston in a Thursday night doubleheader.
The eighth-grade Blue Angels won 15-6. 7-15, 15-7
behind team-leading offense of Kari Adkins and Carrie
Mink. No point totals were reponed.
The seventh-grade Blue Angels won 15-10. 17-15
behind Brittany Palter's II service points and seven-point
efforts by Ashley iones and Karli St. Ongc.
These GAHS teams will head to Maricna Tuesday:

NL standings

1997 CliVI liO 414-Gnen, 4.3 Y-6, S~ 26,000 Mh!, ,
-hiklleiJII,tOO:,__""-"'""";"'"'fiOW $10,499
~~~~ fetiD IIOMCO ILT W, Lqaded pl1h 0p114ns &amp;.fxlras, AReal

SC 4X4 1999 EXPLORER XLT

Gsllla Academy junior high
spikers sweep Wellston In twinbfll

5·2). 8:05 p.m.

River Valley-Meigs statistics

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaa~n~~~W~V~~~~~~~~~JJ~-~tmv~~~~2"5,._.~J)=a:d~hui=•=P=a=ge=B=3·.

Sunday, September 12,1999

I .

.,
\

'

�Eagles notch 22-0
win over Wahama
By GARY CLARK
T-5 Corre~ndent
EAST MEIGS ·- Coac h Scott
Ouistman's Eastern Eagles were presented with a challenge by the Eagle
coaching staff prior to Fnday ni ght's
foo1ball encounte r with visiting
Wahama and the Meigs Count y
eleven answered the undertaking in a
big way with a 22-0 shutout win over
the White Falcons.
Sparked by a huge effon from its
intenor· lioe and a stellar defertstve
showing Eastern racked up 2~ards
on the ground to capture its first wi n
over its Mason County opponents•.
since the 1994 grid season. The
Eagles improved to 2- 1 with the vt~tory while Wahama dropped us thtrd
straight decision on the 1999 football
season.
,
"We challe nged our offensive line
to play well this week and that would
be the difference in this game ." Eagle

•'

coach Scott C hri stn1an said . "Our
hne came out and got after them and
ourbacks fed ofT ofthalandranhard .
Wahama knew we were going to run
the foo thall hecausc we lost our
quanerhack In&gt; I ,wed and we proved
a poinl that " c L·an h;Jvc success running the ball," Christman added.
Eastern totaled 272 yards on the
ground with Brad Willford leading
the way wtth 92 yards m 17 carnes.
Matt Bissell pic ked up 79 yards in 14
tries while Brad Parker added 66 and
Aaron Schaekel 43 yards for the
Eagles.
Eastern built · a 16-0 fi rst half
advantage ~m a 20 yard first peri od
run by Brad Parker and a 28 yard
pass from Chri s Lyons to Ben Bo lter
in the second canto. Matt Bossell
concluded the scoring for the host
team with a 16 yard gallop midway
through the final stam.a to· seal the
win for the. Eag I cs. L~o n s also

Area gridiron standings
Overall ,

SEOAL

w
:rum
Jackson ...... ........ .O

L fE
0

0

Point Pleasant ... 0
Marietta .. ,..... .......0
Warren Local .... ..0
Logan ..... ....... .. .... o
Galllpolis ............ o
Athens .. ..... .......... O
River Valley ....... 0

0

0

0

0
0
0

0
0
0

0

0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0

0

0

0

fA

0

'!f.

I.

3
3
3
2
2
2
0

0

106

0

101 .

0
1
•1

101
77
72

1
3

69

0

3

fA

f.E

13
32

62

38
40
45
58
97

, SQ

109

· · Seaected non-league teams

IHm

w

.

Eastern ..................... .... ..... .,.. ,................... 2

1

~:~~~~ : ::::· ::: ·:::: :: : ::::::::::::::~ ::: :::~

~

Wahama .... ................................ ... ... ... .. ..... 0
South Gallia ..................................... .... ..... 0
Southern ..........,... ........... ................. :........ ..0

I'

I

.1.

PF
62
76
27
21
. 16
15

3
2
2

fA
42
65
I

75
69
56

'Friday's scores
,,
SEOAL
Ironton 44, Gallia Academy6
Point Pleasant 43, Man 19
Meigs 42, River Valley 30
Alexander 34, Athens 31
Jackson 46, Vinton County 13
Logan 20, Zanesville 14-0T
Marietta 40, St. Mary's 6
Warren ,Local 35, Parkersburg
South 12

This week's agenda
Friday - SEOAL
Warren at Gallia Academy
Athens at River Valley
Logan at Point Pleasant .
Jackson at Manetta

Others
Eastern 22, Wahama 0

Saturday-others
Newark Catholic at Meigs
Symmes Valley at South Gallia
Ravenswood at Waharna

Ihu plaved Saturday

'

Friday-others
Eastern at Wirt County
Hanoan at Marsh Fork
Alexander at Southern •

Hannan
at
Parkersburg
Catholic
.
Southern at South Gallia

:

Sunday, September 12, 1999

Wahama-Eastern statistics
O.I"W'totalt

0
8

Wahama (Q-3) ..................0
Eastern (2-1) .................... 8

0
0

0
22

0=
6=

Scoring summary
Eastern: Parker 20 -yd . run Willford pass from ~yons)
Eastern: Holter 28 -yd. pass from Lyo ns (Bissell pass from
Lyons)
.
:
Eastern: Bissell16 -yd . run (ktc k fa tle d )

8-60
5-27.2

Offensive statistics

C&amp;ttaorv

Rushing attempts &amp; yards ............ , ....... ...... ....... 31,105
Total fumbles &amp; number lost ........ ......... ......... ........ 10-4

Eastern Eagles
li'88slng: Chris Lyons 2-6, 47 yds. &amp; 1 T0-1i.nt.
·
Receiving: Ben Holter 2-46- &amp; TO .
.
_
Rushing: Brad Willford 17-9,2; Matt Btssell 14-79; Brad. Parker 7
56; Aaron Schaekel 11 -43; Chns Lyons 7-2

wahama Eastern
46
Passing yards .................................. .........................61
2-6
Completions &amp; attempted passes ..................... ....... 4-8
1
lnterceptipns thrown .,............... .................................. 1
56-272
4-0

tossed a pair of two-point conversion gling with its offense throughout
strikes to Willford and Bisse ll fol- most of th~ fi rst half, came back durlowin g the first two ·Eastern touch- ing second ha lf aclion to move t.he
football but fumbles and penalttcs
downs.
!loth teams came up with big pl ag ued the Bend . Area ·team
plays defensi,1ely to halt potenti.al throughoul the cvc"tung. Wahama
1 5l:oring dri ves bul m the e nd ll· was
fumbl ed the hall 10 times on the
the Eagles who made a couple of key night with Easlern .recoVering four
pi •· o tum the tide in Eastems' Falcon mi slakes. The Mason Co unl y
vor. lbc
t came late tn the ftrst ream also was guihy of II infracti ons
half when Ly ns found Holter in the which Se ve rely hampered the Bend
end zone f a 28 yard touchdown Area offcnsi \'e possihilities.
Eastern piled up 31 8 yards in total
wss with j st :06 seconds remaining
offc
n s~ and recorded 16 first downs
in the half
'
Wahama total ed 166 yards
while
"That uchdown just be fore the
offensively
while njnv in g: the: chai ns
half ende ' was a really big play for
on
six
occasions.
them." W. ama coach Ed Cromley
stated. "W had the receiver defended pretty well but he . went up and
made a super· catc h for the touchdown to give them a two .touchdown
lead at the half." ·
Christman al so menti ond the
score just he fore the half as · one of

By ANDREW CARTER
The Tigers tacked on another
Times-Sentinel Staff
touchdown in the third quarter. Henry
GALLIPOLIS- Galli a Academy capped off an 80 yard drive with
, dropped it&gt; fi rst game of the 1999 another one yard plunge to push the
&lt;eason Friday. losing 44 -6 to Ironton Ironton lead to 16~.
at Memorial Field. The Blue Devils
Gallia Academy was unable to
hdd the Fighung Tige~ in check for mount any _offense of its own in the
much of the fi rst balf. but fell victim third quaner. The Blue Devils had
to a ferocious second half perf&lt;lr'- only two possessions and gained just
mance hy Ironton that saw the visi- seven yards during the third period.
tors gam 234 yards of total offense
Ironton scored four touchdowns in
o,·er the fi nal two quaners.
, the fourth quarter, mounting three
·· 1 .thought we played some real drives of 46, 62 and 51 yards.
good dC fe nse in the first half," said Quarterback Jim Peyton completed
Blue Devil head coach Brent · the firsttwo marclies with runs of one
Sa~nders. ·w e had some awful big yard and. 10 yards for touchdowns.
plays. We fe lt like the two field goals Halfback B.J . Kerns pushed his way
that we made would be ve ry impor- into the end zone from a yard out to
tant in the outcome of the game."
culminate.the last scoring drive.
Gallia Academy (2-1) took the
Ironton's fourth score of the final
opening kickoff and marched 62 period came on a 44 yard fumble
yards lo the Ironton II yard line recovery and return by backup midbefore the dri ve bogged down. · die guard Tyler Scior.
Jcreniy Payton connected on a 28
"We went out the second half
yard. field goal and the Blue Devils knowing we' d have to stop them
led 3-0.
after kicking off to them, ,but they
Ironton placeki cker Clark Cooper just got that old offense going and we
tted the score at 3-3 with his soccer- couldn't move the ball o(Tensively.''
.style drive from '36 yards out with Saunders added. "I was proud of the
9: 15 to play in . the seco nd quarter. way we hit a11d played with them for
Coop~r's ki ck came at the end of a at least a half. I was disappointed
nine-p lay. 53 yard drive .
with ·.oe second half. The missed
Pay ton gave Galli a Academy a tack! ; we had ·and the inability to
, hortl ivcd 6-3 lead wi.. t hi s second mo' the ball, we just didn ' t have
lield goal, His boot from 3 1 ya. • ao· ting in the second half."
a\\"' came at the. 3:36 mark of the
. tenry led all rushers with 112
&lt;ec,{nd qu arter.
yards on 19 carries. Jason Harmon
, lron tnn C2- l ) wasted no lime cap- carried the ball 14 times for 79 yards.
· turing the lead on its next possess.ion. Kerns finished the night with 60
!"he Figh li ng·Ttgers took the ensuing yards on 10 carries.
,
kockuff and drove 62 yards on 10
Peyton completed 6-of-9 passes
plci)'· Brui sing fullba ck Mike Henry for 128 yards. He connected on key
bull eJ 111 from one yard away with · plays to Erique Bacon and Reggie
JUSI fo'ur seconds left to give Ironton Arden on two seeond half scoring
a 10-6 lead heading to halftime.
drives : He hit Bacon with a 34 yard

15
318

.
Wahama White Falcons
Passing: Beau Gerlach 2-3, 55 yds. ; Eran Branch .2 -4, 6 yds. &amp;
1 ir t · Bradford Clark 0-1
G r1 h
.ri~eiving: Eran Branch 1-29; Adam Rickard 1-26: Beau e ac
2
-6Rushing: Johnny MacKnight 12-97; Brandon Hankinson 7-13;
Beau Gerlach 3-10; Robert Brinker 4-(-2) ; Eran Branch 5-(-13)

Team statistics

Johnny MacKni ght led a rejuvenated WH_S ollensc in the fi nal two
q ~ancrs by picking up 73 yards on
the ground to fini sh with 97 rushing
yards , on 12 c arri~ s . Brandon
Hankinson adileB 13 yards 111 seve n

tries while Beau Gerlach gained 10
y~rds in thtee attempts for the Wlutc
Falcon,.
. Gerlach co~plete: tw.~ · ~f ~ r~c
passes l ur 6 yar s " tt e . r.m
(See EAGLES on B·S)

Congratulations,
Louie Bush
Gene Johnson Of
·~Gene Johnson
~ Chevy-Oids
has announced that
Louie Bush
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for August

score j~st he fore the half ended was a ,
big boost for our kids." Christman
said. "It not. only gave us a ltnle
breathing room on the scoreboard
but· pumped us up and that was a btg
lift once second half .action began."
· Eastern also came up with the big
play· defensively to halt a potential
WBS scoring dnve. The While
Falcons got a 36 yard run from
Johnny MacKnight to pick up some
momentum and moved the pigskin
insldCI'the Eastern five yard line but
the Eagle defense st.i ffened and kept '
Wahama out of the end zone on four
consecutive plays to preserve the
shutout and the 22, 0 uiul"ph.
"Our kids played really well,"
said Christman. "I commend our
defensive effon because they "clime
to play this week. We didn't tackle
very well last week but .against
Wahama we did the .things we needed to do and as a result we were able
to come away with·a big victory,'' ,
The White Falco~s. after strug-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gailipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Second-half breakaway helps Ironton beat Blue Devils 44-6:

Total first downs ......................................... ··· ..... ......... 6
Total yards .................................. ... .................... ..... 166
Penalties: number &amp; yards .................................. 11 -85
Punts: number &amp; average ...... ............................. 3-32.0

the kev fac tors ·in the contest. "The

34

..

Sunday, September 12, 1999

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

strike that moved the ball to the Blue

·yards. Alex Saundcn. caught one pasS:
»econd touchdo"' n
Arde n caught a 36 yard p.l" that for 10 )ards. llnan Mnchell made
gave lmnton a fir\l and goal at the one prah tor tour ~ ar~ .
...
Gallia Aca&lt;Jcrn) 10 )ard ltnc JU'I
Th is " eek's agenda : The Blue
pnor to Pqton·, \Ct:und luudxJoY.n D~\ 1b' ...:ontmue fhe1r four-game
M..ampcr.
humc ... land Fndd\ "hl'n Warren
Arden caugtH lv. u pa..,..,c.., lm 65 Local \,,·it s Me rn nr-1al Field \Varrenyard\. Bacon\ GHch wa . , h1s June l oca l 1~-1) dl'feated P ar~cr\hurg
grah of the mglu Hannnn l·;m ght one South 35-12 ~nda~ ntgh t
ha ll lor 19 'l!llHh S11C'.., hall u ..,1\ \ard
ri!ccption a~nd Hcnr:. mad~ one £rah
for four yard; .
Gallia CCC to hold
Ironton rushed lor 263 yards nn 49
carries aild ~cored all li\ c offen!!tivc l.a ndowners' awards
touchdov.n s on the ground The dinner Saturday
Fighting Tiger&gt; ftnished \qth 3'1 I
total yards .
RIO GRANDE ~ The Gallia
Ga lli a Academ~ rolled up 134 Count\" Con;cn atton C"luh v.ill hold
yard, m the fir&gt; I hal f. but managed · 11 ~ anr1u.ll LanJo'"- nC: r'l Apprc'-:tatl on
j ust 48 yards o' r.:r th e final two quar- D1nner un Saturd&lt;t) at h p rn . at the
ters . ' Ike Simmon&gt; led the · Bl ue Bub E'ana~ FaFm :-. Sh~o.·ltahnu'le .
D cv1IS on thl.! ground '.l.lth ~t} )ard~
·Club mcmhcr ... \\Ill pr~o.·rarc: and.
on c1ght ..:arric-!1. Bobhy Jonc-.. lh!! :-.~o.' f\ 1:' thl' J mrh:r
replacement fur the InJUred T.R.
Th!! Lluh \~Ill rrl' 'l.." nl '&gt;C\Cra!
Rogers . p t c~cd up 20 )3fd., nn fout . .i\\Jfd!&gt; to -+-H ..:luh .....tnJ mJ!'; tJual \
carrie:-.. Pa' ton ~..::trncd three time~ for for \.llnt ri huu,m . . tn thl' ~..u mmuhrt) m
18 yard, . Cod~ !.Joe und Nick Reed th e la... t )C ..tr. Thl· Oht ll Ucp.u1nicnt of
each pi&lt;"kcJ ·ur 17 ~ard, ru,htng. ]&lt;ld 1\;.~tur..tl Rt: ... ourLc..., \\ill .h0 rt:p n: . . cntEll iott hud• · 12 ) ard• anJ AI len cJ' h: Lli ... tnct· .mt.l ,r&gt;.ltt.: nl ft~..· w!..., '~ h(\
Ski nner (.1rricJ OOL'C r~) r ~~~ 0 \-Jn..l ~ .
\\ill updJt..: thl.' .tUJtl..' lllL' un n~,·,~ pro·.
Pa~·t nn t.'llfllrkt...·d 6-of- ! i p~t..,...,r . . JCd..., anJ f1r\f1~'"'-'d ~..h.tn~~..·.., ui hunt·:
WE GOTCHA! - Gallla. Academy defenders Alex Saunders, cen- for 77 varJ~ Lanl' ( au !.!ht fpur l"li.l!l-, Ill~ .tnJ l.t.'-h i'n~ r\·~ul;ill\lfh lllth~ pa ... t
ter, and Henry Sloan, right, close in on Ironton running back John a nd gatned 42 Jard, ·Jet l Mulltn &gt; ycJr.
Sites during Friday night's contest at Memorial Field. While grahncd (\\ 0 pa . . ~ c~ anJ rli,.' ~~J ur 21
Saunders and Sloan stuffed Sites on this play, Sites and his Fighting
Tiger teammates went on to win, 44-6. Gallia Academy hosts Warren
Local this Friday night at Memorial Field. (Photo by Bryan Long)
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lronton-Gallia Academy statistics
Quarter totals
Ironton (2-1) ...... ..... ..... .....0
Gallia Academy (2 -1) ..... ..3

10

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44

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Jeff Gordon
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Scoring summary

White
Gray

First quarter
GAHS: Payton 28-yaro FG; .9 :16

Brown
Green

Red
Tan

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IHS: Cooper 36-yard FG ; 9:15
GAHS: Payton 31-yard FG; 3:36
IHS: Henry 1-yard run (Cooper kick); :04

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IHS: Henry 1-yard run (kick failed); 8:27

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Fourth quarter
IHS: Peyton 1-yard run (Cooper kick); 9:12
IHS: Peyton 10-yard run (Cooper kick); 6:38
IHS: Kerns 1-yard run (Lutz); 2:36
IHS: Scior 44-yard fumble return (Lutz kick); :24

.

)ERRY BIBBEE

Team statistics
•

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Category
frpnton
Passing yards ............. ........... ..... ............ ;............... 12B
Completions &amp; attempted passes .................... ........ G-9
Interceptions thrown ................ ............... . :..................0

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GA LLIPOLI S - Ohio Valley
Chris lian rattl ed off two more victories 10 remai n undefeated in high
;choo l vo lley ball ac tion. The Lady
tJcfe ndcrs (6-0) posted sweeps of
Teays
Valley
Christian
and
Parkersburg Chri stian Friday at the
OVCS gy m.
· Ohto Vall ey Christian dispatched
Teays Vall ey 15-5 and 15-2 in the

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B nch connected o n two of four
fur six ards for Wahama.
~":~~~~ caught o~e pass for 29 yards
with Adam Ric kard collectin g one
reception for 26 yards for Wahama:
"Lyons connected on two of SIX
. c · f~ r 46 yards and one touch~;~~n'wi th !len Holter on the receiv- ·
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19

first match.
Chrissy Zirille led the Lady
Defenders with 17 points on 19-of19 serving. She recorded a team-high
II service aces.
Abby Meyn was 6-far-6 serving
and tallied four points. Meyn had one ·
kill on l -of-3 hitting opponunities. ·
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Eagles beat Wahama ...
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•••

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Defenders whip Teays ·
Valley~ Parkersburg·
Christian in tri-match

''

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~--~~

Gallla Academy Blue Devils
Defense
·
Fumble recoveries: none
·Interceptions: none
Offense
Passing: Jeremy Payton 6-17-0-77, David Brodeur 0-1-0-0 ·
Receiving: Cody Lane 2-42, Jeff Mullins 2-21. Alex Saunders 11o. Brian Mitchell' 1-4
Rushing: Ike Simmons 8-2!;1, Bobby Jones 4-20, Jeremy Payton,
3-16 , Cody Lane 3-17, Nick Reed 2-17, Joel Elliott 1·12, Allen
Skinner 1-2 , David Brodeur 3-(-10)

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Total first downs ....... ... ...... ... .... ,....... ......................... 27
Total yards .... ..... ...... ... ............................................ 391
Penalties: number &amp; yards ... ............. ,................... 2-13

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•

'

-

25-105
. 2-1

Ironton Fighting Tigers
·
Defense
Fumble recoveries: Tyler ~cior
Interceptions: none
Offense
Passing: Jim Peyton 6-9-0-128
.
Receiving: Reggie Arden 2-65, Erique Bacon 1-34, Jason
Harmon 1-19, John Sites 1-6, Mjke Henry 1-4
Rushing: Mike Henry 19·112-2, Jason Harmon 14-79, B.J . .
Kerns 10-60-1 , -Jim Peyton 4-10·2, John Sites 2-2

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Rushing attempts &amp; yards .... .... ............ ............. 49-263
Total fumbles &amp; number losL ..• .. ....... ... ................... 0-0

.••

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(Continued from 8 :4) .

interception wtth Bankmson ptckmg
otf a Ly ons toss wtth Lyons returnmg
the favor by mterceptm g
otfermg to set up the secon
s
tou~own , k' slate· Wahama will
IS wee s
·
...
return home to host v ts ttt~g
Ravel)swood . Eastern ,travels to Wtrt
County for 1ts next gnd ouun g.

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Middle port

Phone
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www.jerrybibbee.com
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•
•
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�· Page 86 •¥~•

Power changes
the AFC for this
football season

\ \

Sunday, September 12; 1999

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

r

to

·OVCS soccer crew blanks Elk Valley 4-0

By SAM WILSON
nmM-SantiiMI Corrnponct.nt
I guess we can say fall is officially here. The
NFL starts today with the new Browns playing the
Steele~ tonight. The Beligals. however, are anoth·
cr story. If someone can figure out their draft picks,
please call me. Cincinnati should be looking for a
new coach by week eight. I just don't know how they are going to score!
The best division in football is the American Conference East. They put
four teams in the playoffs last year. Look for more of the same. The Jets,
Patriots, Dolphins and Bills will be battling for the top spot in the East; but
•
don't count out -the IndianapOlis Colts.
Indianapolis should be a .SOO team this year. The management has a plan
in place. It began last year with Payton Manning. Does anyone remember
Ryan Leaf and his $35 million contract? Edgerrin James is the next piece of
the puzzle for the Colts. He is my pick for rookie of the year award.
Genet;~! Manager Bill Polian knew James would be an excellent complement to Manning. James is bigger and faster than former runni11g back Mar·
shall Faulk. Look for the Colts to surprise many teams. Next year will be
when the Colts make their move to the status of an elite team.
With the retirement of John Elway, the Jets become the team to beat in
the AFC.It'sjust difficult to go against a teaE~hed by Bill Parcells. New
York was 12-4 last year and 2hll under P
lis telage .
I really like the addition of Steve Atwa fro Denver. Pa{Cells bas a
knack of taking discarded 'Players and reviving th tr caree~. Not that Atwa·
ter's career needed revitillization, but when Denver said he was no Ianser
needed, he wanted to play for Parcells in New York. When all -pro ball players want to play for a coach,. you know ~e·s special.
I'll go with the Vikings in the NFC. They should be quite hungry after
blowing it last year in the conference finals against the Falcons. They won't
go 15-1, but they st ill have the best learn in the conference.
Look at the effect of Randy Moss has had on the league! Green Bay draft·
ed bigger dtfensive backs in the hope of containing Moss. Nice try, but no
cigar. Moss is only going to ge.t better. II also doesn't hurt 10 hayefuture hall
of farner Chris Carter on the other side.
·
Green Bay will still be competitive. San Francisco spent enough money
to make the playoffs. And New Orleans will be a bust, even with Heisman
Trophy winner .Ricky Williams. The p&lt;iwer has just shifted to the AFC 'after
.15 years of I'!IFC dominance. The Jets are my pick for Super Bowl. champs.

Brian Gordon gave the Defenders the hall pasl Defender ~oalkeeper
high ·"'hool soccer action at Rio
By ANDREW CARTER
Ohio Valley Christian ran its Grande. Ohl't! Valley Christian (5-0) a 1-0 lead just nine minutes into the Chris Burnett. 'Holdren shd on from
unbeaten streak to five straight swrcd three times in the fi~t half match . Josh Sanders assisted on the left s1de and knocked the ball to
safety..
matches as the Defenders shut out and l' rusicd to the win in a highly Gordon 's tally.
Brad Bowman netted the first of
OVCS outshot Elk Valley
Ell.: Valley Christian 4-0 Friday m phy&gt;ical match.
hi$ two goal against Elk Valley in Christian (3- 1-2), 34-15. Elk Valley
the 24th minute. Josh Simmons pro- keeper Palla Wesley made 20 saves.
vided the assist on Bowman's tally. Burnell recorded 10 saves for
lonathan Taylor gave OVCS a 3- OVCS.
0 lead heading 10 the intennission
Ohio Valley Christian hopes to
when he found the net in the 25th make it six consecutive wins
minute. Gordon assisted on the goal Tuesday when the Defenders Wood
by Taylor.
County Christian . Match time is 4
Bowman rounded out the scoring p.IJI . at Rio Grande.
in the 48th minute with Cody Smith Match summary
assisting on the goal. It's the t hird· Elk Valley Christian .:......... , .0·0=0
time this season that Bowman has Ohio Valley Christian ........... 3-t=4
scored two goals in a match.
Scoring: EVC · none . OVCS ·
According to Defenders' head Gordon (Sanders) 9:00, Bowman
coach Bill Burleson, left fullback (Simmons) 24:00, Taylor (Gordon)
Jason Holdren made what Burleson 25:00, Bowman (Smith) 48:00.
termed "the defensive · stop of the
Shots: EVC-15. OVCS-34.
Saves: EVC-20 (Wesley-20).
game" when he cleared a ball off the .
. .
.
f
h
OVCS-10 (Burnett-10).
goal lone m the forst hal . OVCS ad
Corner kicks: EVC-4. QVCS-4.
faded to clear the ball out of tis own .
Records: EVC (3-t-2), OVCS
~ox and an E lk Valley player slopped (S-O).

DIAR PRIMISTAR CUSTOMER,

,, . · . . ·

TAICI ADYAIITAOI OP

GREAT
REWARDS
.
NOWI

SMOOTH OPERATOR _;_ Ohio Valley Christian striker Jonathan ·
Taylor (9) snakes his way through the Elk Valley Christian defense
during Friday's soccer match at Rio Grande. Taylor had a goal In the
Defenders' 4·0 victory over Elk Valley Christian. OVCS kept Its
unbeaten streak intact at five consecutive matches with the win. The
Defenders will host Woad County Christian Tuesday at 4 p.m. at Rio
Grande. (Photo by Penny Burleson)

Give us your PRIIMEST-"•R
bill and we' ll 1ive you a

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DIGITAL SATELLITE TV SYSTEM.
INSTAWD•

•

.Defenders ... (Continued from.· B-5J

Valerie Taylor nencd four scrvic·o
points, goi ng 4-for-5 on serve.
Miranda ·si mmons was 3-of,6 hit Cynthia Cooper and the Houston Comets won their third consecutive ting with 'two kills. Hannah Beaver
WNBA crown last week. Houston won its third title and Cooper won the went 4-for-6 hitting with one kill.
league 's MVP for the third consecutive year. Unfortunately, most people Tessa Haggerty and Chelsea Gooch
· played out of season. It's a shame since also recorded one kill apiece.
don 't care because the sport is beong
Zirille and Meyn led the charge
the second game of the finals was quite memorable. The New York Liberty against · Parkersburg Chri siian. The
had a miracle comeback with Teresa Weatherspoon hitting a 52-foot shot to Lady Defe nders- knocked ou o
turn a two-point defeat into a one-point victory.
'
Parkersburg Christian 15-9 and 15· 7.
The WNBA needs to realize that basketball needs to be played in the win·
Zirill e and Meyn each accounted
ter. People are not going to pay attention in the summer. They should skip for 10 points. Zirolle was 12-of- 14 on
next summer and begin in the fall with the NBA. After all, i' worked for the . serve with six aces . while Meyn was
a perfect 12-of-12. Meyn also had
ABL before they went belly-up. .
five kills 9n 9-of, II anack c hances.,
I got a phone call asking me my opinion in how Braves catcher Greg
Courtney Gooch went 13-for- 13
Maddux l~med. his season around. It 's simple: the umpires are once again on the atJack .and recorde&lt;;l eight kill s.
giving him pitch es a foot' off the inside comer.
She fini sl)ed ·with four points on 6Three months ago, when he was struggling, he wasn't getting those calls. of-7 serve opportunities .. ...
If you hit that pitch, it just rolls off the end of your bat for a ground out. If
Chelsea Gooch .was 12-of- 18.hityo u watch him pitch, you'll see he's getting it again. Maddux, for all his sue- ting with three kills. Taylor added
cess, is quite human when he's not given that pitch. The question is whether ·two kills on 3-of-6 hilling.
Miranda Simmons was. 5-of-7 on
he' ll get that pitch in the playoffs. We know he won't get it if the Braves
make it to the fall classic.
serve with three points. She had a
team-high eight assists and knocked
Sam Wll....,, Ph.D. Is an anactota PIC!I • 'of hiiiiDrr at the Unlwrally of down one kill while connecting on 3RID Grando. An ovid tan of all lparW- and a,_ "*11 I fatf 3 hi
bioll- hels a native of Glory, Incl. and a g - . at t...,. Untua:olll&gt;-whlch O · ·rung chances. ·
ehould toll reedora oom«lhl'!llabDut wto- llle lleldland -terlleaft) IL
Nichole Valencia went 4- for-6
serving ar\d had three points.
Ohio Valley Christian hosts
another tri -match Monday. South
Galli a and Federal Hocking visit the
OVCS gym for the 5 p.m. contest.

Gooch 6-7 . Zirille 12-14, Simmons
5-7, Meyn 12-12, Valencia ' 4·6, ·
P&lt;;&gt;llard 2-3,
.
·
.
Aces: PC · N/A. aves · Co.
Gooch-2, Zirille-6, Simmons-1,
Meyn-2, Valencia~ 1 .
Total points: PC · N/A. OVCS ·
Co. Gooch-4, Zirille-1 0, Simmons·
3, Meyn-10, Valencia-3. ·
Assists~ PC • N/A. aVCS ·
Simmons-8, Pollard-5.
Attacks: PC • NJA. aves • eo.
Gooch 13-13, Zirille 2·4, Simmons
3·3. Meyn 9· 11 , Taylor 3-6, Ch.
Gooch 12-18, Beaver H.
Kills: PC • N/A. OVCS • Co.
Gooch-8 , Simmons-1, Meyn-5,
Taylor~2. Ch. Gooch-3.
Blocks: PC • NIA. OVCS •

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Along the River
Ma zng roo.ms} t e old asfiioned way
Section

Sunday, September 12, 1e98

•

•

Lru• .. LENE

.,

Times-Sentinel Staff
'
POMERO_Y - The rest of the world may be
barreling down the information highway into
cyberspace, but Denise Arnold of Hemlock Grove
is happily content to stay behind and enjoy pioneer arts and crafls.
~roommaking, - a family art - is her latest
She plans to use it to complement Fragrant Fields, a cotta~e industry of creative arts·
with herbs and everlastings which she has operated for several years. These things she does while
caring f0r her husband, Brent, and two children,
and attending college in preparation for becoming
a teacher.
For Denise continuing the family tradition of
making brooms is another link in preserving the
past for her children, of teaching them the impor·
lance of roots - .where they .came from and the',
interests of their ancestors. Her father, Marvin ·
White, has joined her in learning the skill making ·
the family one ofthree generations ofbroommak·
ers in Meigs County.
While Denise described broommaking as a
"neat craft" for her it holds special significance
because her grandfather, the late · Clyde White,
made brooms for many years.
'There's so much technology ..... kids . today
think brooms come from WaiMa,rt. I' want them to
know where things actually come from . I guess I
have a fear that if I don't pass things down, like
creative arts and crafts and family history, they

tng the craft. His broommaking equipment is
still in the family although .it is not that which is
used by either Denise or her father.
Marvin, a retired UPS employee, purchased hi s
broommaker from Frank Addy, broomsquire
Coshocton, following his death last spring. In
fact, Addy taught both Marvin and Denise the art
of broommaking, and last fall came to Meigs
County to join Denise in a broommaking demon·
'
straJion at EXPO on the Rock Springs
Fai"r·
grounds . .
·Denise's br'oommaking equipment dates. back 10

'

. CENTURY OLD BROOMMAKER - Blrcjle Ridenour
was •n ~arly Meigs County broommaker and It Is his
handmade equlpm!Jnt on which Denlae Arnold malces
brooms. She purchased the ~ulpment, described by
Broomsqulre Frank Addy as a "museum ·piece" and·
made her first broom on It at last. year's Meigs County
Town and Country EXPO. Addy was there to Instruct
Arnold In the art. '

of........_

River Valley harriers take
seventh, eighth at
. meet
.

.

oyCs-ryc symmarv
.
Teays Valley .......................... .. 5·2
Ohio Valley Christian .... ...... 15-15
Serving: TV • N/A. aves .
Zirille 19·19, Meyn 6-6 , Taylor 4·5,
Ch. Gooch 3-4, Haggerty 1-1, Co.
Gooch 1-1, Simmons 3-3, Beaver
1·2:
Aces: TV · N/A. OVCS • Zirille11, Meyn· 2, Haggerty-1, Taylor-2,
Beaver-1 , Ch. Gooch-2 .
Total points: TV · N/A. OVCS ·
Zirille-17, Simmons-1, Meyn-4,
Haggerty -1, Taylor-4, Beaver-1,
Ch. Gooch-2.
Assists: TV • IIIiA. OVCS •
Simmons-1. Meyn -1, Pollard-1 ,
Ch. Gooch-1.
Attacks: TV - N/A. OVCS ·
Zirille 1-1 , Simmons 3-6, Meyn 23, Haggerty 1·1, Beaver 4-6, Ch.
Gooch 2-4.
Kills: TV · N/A. OVCS Simmons-2, Meyn-1 , Haggerty-1,
.
.
Beaver-1, Ch. Gooch-1 . .
Munn
(Ga llia year caree r with the Lady Bears
Blocks: TV • N/A. OVCS .Brandi
Academy'95), a 1999 g raduate of that . culminated in a · NAJA Meyn-2:
.
Shawnee Stille University in national crown in the 1998-99
Records: TV (N/A), OVCS (5·
Portsmouth, did mo.re than split a sea son.
0).
·
four-year basketball career with
As t.he sette r for both school s'
the Jack so n Iron ladies a nd the varsity volleyba ll teams, · Munn OVCS·PCS -summary
Parkersburg Christian ............ .9·7
Ga lli a Academy Blue Angels as a . was the leadin g assist anist for
Ohio Valley Christian .......... 15·15
starting g uard en rou t.e to a four· four years.
Servln'g : PC · N/A. OVCS - Co.

HURRICANE, W.Va. - In the
Hurricane In vitati onal Saturday,
River Valley's girls' cross country
team finished seventh out of eigh
teams. whik the Raider boys finished eight out of 13 teams.
In th e g irl s' race. Charleston
. Cath olic won with 3 1 po ints. Behind
t»em were Scon (93), Winfield (96),
Huntin gton High ( 105.), Russell
. County, Ky. ( 140), Brax ton County
( 158), River Valley (164) and
'
Hurricane ( 191 ).
· In a race that had 7 1 finishers.
RVHS
sophomore
Stephani
John son's 19:45 finish earned her
13th place and a medal. which is
give n to alltop- 15 fini shers . Behind
her were teammates Megan God"Cil:J
(3 1st-2 1:39). Christen Baird (42n1r
22:23). Mandy Wedd in gton (54th-

23: 17). Julia Mollohan (62nd-24:53)
apd Amanda Wears (64th-2S:27).
In the boys' race, Charleston
Capital won with 56 points. Behind .
them were Huntington (83), Ripley
(84),
Rave nswood
(121),
Chesapeake ( 153 ), . · Charleston
Catholic (!58), Winfield (187), River
Valley ( 191 ), Braxton County (23 I),
Scon (241), Hurrican (243), Spring
Valley (27 1). and · Russell County
(362).
In a . race with 121 finishers .
Shawn Taylor, who came in 21st,
was the first Raider to cross. His time
was 19:27.'· Behind him were teammates Keith Stout (26th-20:03), T.R.
Edwards (34th-20: 19), Jon Mollohan
(64th -2 1:50) ·and Wesley· DeLong
( 104th-25: 13)

1898 BROOMMAKER- Thla century-old broommaker Ia Marvin Whlta'a equipment. He purchaaed It (rom the estate of ·
Broomsqulre Frank Addy of Coshoct!)n who taught the skill to
both Marvin and hla daughter.

Remembering the legends

·.

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CONGRATULATES
Shane Overby and Amy Carter

Ov~7SUsed

for their outstanding sales
performance in August
Overby and Carter
AMY CARTER
SHANE OVERBY
Soteo Conoultanl
Soleo Conauhont
have ShOW/J eXCeptional perSOnal
effort and professionalism in their automotive ·
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many loyal customers and the Turnpike family.
•

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' To

Gallipolis OH
(740) 446-2282
TOLL FREE:
1-877-446-2282
i

will be lost."
During the several years Denise· has been involved in
ONE OF THE LAST - Clyde White began making brooms In
a'"'""' and preserving flowers and herbs for use -in dec· 1917 and. continued for more than 50 years. J:lere his son, MarWhite, and his granddaughter;· Denise Arnold, both novice
ve pieces, she and her husband have also been busy vin
broommakera, look at one of the last brooms made by Clyda
restoring a one:room school house loca~ed a few hun· White and aold In hie general store at Rora.
feet from their counlry home.
, Quite appropriately it .is in that century·old 'school
building in which Denise has her broommaking equip·
ment - also well over a hundred years old. To enter the ·
structure is a step back in time· where one senses life
l
lived at a slower pace in a quieter place.
Denise's grandfather, made his first broom in 1917.
Brooms were hard to come by because of material shm:.t·
ages during World War I. His father had planted some
broom corn and it was on a dare from t!le elder White to
his son that Clyde made his first broom.
He looked at some broomm'aking equipment of a ,
. ,.._.. .,.
neighbor, · tore a broom apart to see how it was made,
gathered up what he needed to make a broom, and pro ·
•,
ceded from there. His first efforl was a success and fro.m ·
then on making brooms became a chore for the winter
'·"''""'hs when bad weather kept him inside and away
from farming activities. In the height of his broommak·
ing days, he was making 400 in a season.
He sold his brooms in White's Store at Flora which
the family operated for many years at a price of slightly
'·
ov.er a dollar.
. White continued making broonis on the side porch of
his home until the early 70's, but the hundreds ~e made
in his younger days dwindled down to a few dozen in
later years, and those just for friends and neighbors in
Bedford Township.
.
MANY KINDS. come In many styles. There are
Clyde White died in 1976 when Denise was 12 years
tall round atylea called aplder chasers, hearth brooms,
old. But she remembers her grandfather making brooms whl•k brc10rrts and sweepero. The sweeper pictured here with
decorative paper on the handle was made by Clyde White, father
and it is that memory which triggered her interest in o~ Mawln White and grandfather of Denise Arnold.
..

BROOM CLAMP - This ·1 878 all·metal broom clamp was
restored by Marvin White. Once the broom corn Is attached to
the handle, It Is then placed In 4he clamp where a long needle
Is used to put the rows of stitching In place. A cuff with a metal
piece In the center Is used to push the heavy needle through
the broom corn.

the 1880s and had belonged to the late Birdie Ridenou r.
When she purchased it from Betty Milhoan several
years ago it was still in working condition.
It differs from her falher 's eq uipment which is •a factory -made piece from th e 1890s where . I he wheel is
turned by the foot.
On Denise's equipmenl, ihe wheel haslo be turn ed by
hand making it almost a. two·person operation.
Marvin also purchased a nd restored a broom clamp
daling back to 1878.
The .clarilp had been exposed to the weather and all of
the wood had Jo be reslored.
The two credit their skill i~ broommaking to Addy
who they met severa l years ago at the Ceda r Lakes Arts
and Craft Show. They later visited several times at his
home in Coshoclon .
.
I
A real incentive to learning the art of broom making
for Denise, however, came fro m a Kentucky broom·
maker at lhe Bob Evans Farm Festival a few years back.
He emphatically told her that a "woman" didn't have the
strength to make brooms.
"That gave me one more reason to take up broom·
making," quipped Denise ,

' '

�Sunday, September 12, 1999
Page C2 • jhnb; Gttmt.-.-l'ldbwl

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

Misty Newell and Charles Bissell

NEWELL-BISSELl:-

LONG BOTTOM - John a~d
Mary Newe ll of Long . Bottom
~nnounce the approaching marriage
of their daughter, Misty Dawn, to
Charles Robert Bissell , son of
' ~ obett and Sally Bissell of Chester.
• The bride-elect is a 1993 gra.du:ite of Eastern High School and a
1997 graduate of Hocking College
~choo l of Nursin g. She is employed
as a registe red nurse in the emerge ncy department of O' Bieness
fl'lem orial Hospital in Athens . ·
I

•

POl :-IT PL EASANT. W. VA The &gt;e&lt;ond annuJ I Tn -C,,unt)
Camp m~e tm g \\ 1th ll1c Duncan
l'amil! w1ll be he ld Monday. Sept.
27 through Frida). Oct. I at 7 p.m.
ca1."h cv~nin £ 1 ut tht.~ P ll Jnt Plca~ant
Nat mnal Guard Annory. two m1 lcs
north of Poi nt Pleasant on State
Route 2.,
(
E\ ange lisl foi- the camp mcc! ing
wi 11 be the Rev. Roger Duncan and
special singers will be featured each .
night. On M ond~y. the Rev. Billy
Field &gt; v.ill he preac hin g and
singmg. nn Tu ~stLt) and Wednesday
special mus ic wi ll be presented by
the DuncJn Fam ily. and on Thurs ~
day and Fri&lt;Ja&gt; h y the Dunc·an Boys.
grandchiidrcn o r the Dun L·ans.
· The camp meeting is bein g dcdi cat~d to thl.! tnr.:'mon•. of Bonnie and
Bllt'cn Duncan. nali ~·es of West Vir~
gi nl a, who w cr~ . conve rt ed in 1938
during an cighr wee k rc\' i\'~ll at the
Mt. Carmel Church at 'Apple Grove .
The couple Ocdi ~· mcd th~ ir li\' ~S 10
singing the go~ pcl. Th~,· l\1.' 0 stated
out as a du ~-? t and then in the ~,~ arl y
IIJ50~ wt·rc j omed hy D~lu g Cin.·lc
and h~c am c known as the Carmel
Trio.
Tht·y· wen.' 1n ser\·iecJO \\ ith ma ny
. area pastors int· luJ ing the Rc,·.
Edward Griffith . fath er nf Gary
Grifll.th . Rutland . who pmmotc"' the
Tri -Stat e Cam·p Meetin g. They haJ a
radio mini stry and ~tppc:.m:d · alm os t
every. night in meetings around ·the

' DEDI~ATED IN MEMO.RY -:This second annual Tri-County
Camp Meeting to be held Sept.
27-Oct. 1 with The Duncan Family is dedicated to the memory of
Bonnie · and Buren Duncan
whose ministry spanned about a
halfCcentury. Their son, Roger
Duncan, will be the evangelist.
t r i ~s tat t;. .

,
.
. . .
Bonni e and Buren Duncan were
th!: parents of si x ~:hildrcn who con'
tinue to foll ow in their foot steps
THE DUNCAN FAMILY -:: Singers at the Camp meeting will be The
~ in g in g ant..! prca~.:hin g God 's word .
Duncan Family, children of the late Bonnie and Buren Duncan, and
In later years the rouple moved to
. The Dunc·an Boys, grandchildren of the couple who were ministers
Florida .where their youngest son , In music In the tri-county area.. ·
·
Roger was their pastor unti l they
the tradition by forming The Duncan ll.son of the Rc1·. Rog&lt;r and Di ane
di ed in the 1990s.
Boys.
They . are Ron and Jeff Dun- Duncan. Their p1anist i ~ Kim \\'rig hi
In l~llK their children formed a
can
,
sons
of Ronald and Patty Dun- and drumm er is Chu ck B ~.:au c hamp .
group called The Duncan Family,
and traveled in a full-time ministry can , Will and Shawn Beau'champ, a · cousin to Will and Shawn
son of of Susie and Wi II ic Beauchamp.
·
for 12 years.
B·
e
auchamp,
and
Roger
Duncan
Now, thc1 r children have continued

, The prospective groom is a 1995
graduate of Eastern High School and ·
is emp loyed as a machinist at TherRODNEY - Pictured above is the ·
maform Plastics in Little Hocking .
award winning bluegrass gospel
The open church wcddmg will be group, ldletymes. They will be preheld on Saturday, Sept. 18, at 6:30 sen ting the gospel in concert at Rodp.m. at the Fellowship Ch urch of the ney United Methodist Church
Nazarene in Reedsville. Music will Homecoming on Sunday, Scptem~r
begin · at 6 p.m. A buffet reception 1-9,· beginning at 10 a.m. ldlctymes
and dan.cc w1ll immediately follow has a new gospel album out, and it is
Massage&lt;s
the ceremony at the · home of the f1tled "Seell)s I Hear the Spirit". The
soothe
hridc "s parents .
your body.
,group placed 12th in 1993 and 14th
in 1998 in the annual International
Society for the Preservation of Blue'
grass Music Competition m
Nashville.
Idletymes was staned 16 years
ago by Chris Long of Apple Grove.
5
W.Va., and Danny Bonecutter of
lives," Castle said.
Most of the volunteers in the pro- Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Chris sings
gram, which operates in Franklin lead and plays mandolin, guitar and
and Fairfield counties, are young dobro: Danny · sings baritone and
and have families and'full-time jobs, plays guitar and dobro: : Roy Mayes
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., sings tenor
director Julia Nack said.
"It's very interesting to me that and plays fidd le and mandolin: Don
they would offer this time,'" she · Titus of Ravenswood, W. V.1., plays .
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN '
championship banjo: and Markel
said.
·
Nack said guardians make a com- Fertig of Eleanor, W.Va. , sings bass
ldlety~es
Ferry, WV 675-1371
mitment to visi r their ward at least· and plays upright bass.
Because of their tighl harmony
twice a month to spend time with
12: 15 p.m .,ldlctymes singing and
Jesus Is My Rock
and
musical skill. ldlctymcs has former
·
them and talk with their doctor.
Pastor Charles W. Hill of t
'a
I'~~
~
&amp;
·
i
!
Vol.unlcers undergo police back- hecomc a favorite amon g gospel SpringfiC!d as guest speaker. He and ~
~
~
'
~
;::
music fan s in thi s arc.a . They have
g ro~ nd checks and attend quarterly
his wife , Betty. pastorcd the church
~...~
My Name Is On The Roll
·. ~....~
training sessions. They 'a lso must played fr0m Minnesota to Sout h in the late lifiies/early sixties. AI I
All
ladies
are
irwited
to
atlend
the
4th
annual
Salad
Supper
til rite.
write quarterly reports on their Carolina·.
p.m. there will be a carry -in dinner G IIi 1 Cl
"
""'C'
·
a "po iA •ri•!iart "'.' hurch 011 Saturday September IBtll al 6 p.m,
·pastor Arland Kin g aOd the con ~ in the fellowship room.
involvement with the ward and write
and at 2 p.m.
' other year for the Pro- g~e gatio n of Rodney Church invi tes the re will be an informal songfest,
There wUl be •ingingfrom the Sweet A.delirae•, the She :Bop• and
a repon every
all
to
share
the
day
with
them
.
The
testim ony. and time of rC;miniscing. ·
an appearance from Dwight lcen/,owi!r "" Elvil.
bate Court.
Bring your favorire talad in a d~poaable conrainer.
The program was established sc hedule is as fol lows: 10 a . m . ~
afler several requests from courts for
Pleaae brins a friend artd join u• for a fun evening Of Cltri1tia11
guardians to make legal and medical
Fellotc•laip. You . ar~ lvelcont.e ·t o drel1s "50• style ..
decisions for · people wit h severe
STATE COLLEGE. Pa. (AP) Quellion•? CaU.(740) 446-IBM
says fa lling off a balcony is such a
dementia, Nack·said .
It may be advcrt ist:d in sonle of bad thing '' And what's an occasional
"We had one ladyin her late 80s toda y' s largest newspapers, but riot'! Or even a little assault between
who needed cataract surgery or don't expect to find a bottle of friCnds? ''
would lose her sight ," Nack said. .. Binge Beer .. at your local store.
The National Association of State
"The doctors weren't comfortable
The full-page ad s \~' ith a .t;Jf'l'astic Uni versities and Land-Gran.t Coldoing the surgery on just her OK."
10nc arc a~.:tu u ll y a tongue,- in -c hcck
leges sponsored the ~.:ampaign . and
".Without a volun teer will ing to allcmpt to c urh hinge dri nki ng 113 co ll ege . presidents Signed the
step forward , she would have lost among ..:ullcgc stu dent s. Th ey ad!-. .
her sight," she said. " If she went appef1r in ed itions of The New York
The ads. coordinated hy Penn
blind, s.he cou ld no longer do Times. The Wal l Street Journal. State-:... appear at a. tirnc of high-proembroidery - one her few remain- USA Today and more limn IOU other file drinking deaths, drunken riots,
ing pleasures in life."
papers.
and ri~ing drinking-related· cmerNash said many of the program 's
The ads feature a beer boule gcncy -room visils.
volunteers work in Social services or under a Deadline that n::pnrt:., "Hit ~
" While drinking in college has ·
medical serv ices and have seen the ting &lt;.:ollcgc Cf.llll[1U ~ es th ~s fall .''
always been with us, the difference
isolation and the illness of these
" It 's tough being a coll ege kid today is that more · yqung people
people fir'sthand and want to CJo today. ·· the tex t reads. " That's why binge drink, and those who engage
something about 11.
wc· \·c t.le vc lopcd Binge Bee r. At in high-risk drinking do so more
Jeanne Porreca . 4 7, of Gro ve Binge, we understand that some- often,'' Penn State President GraCity, said shes kepl so busy at the times you j ust need five or six drinks ham B. Spanier.
hospi\al where she work s. she can "t tile ni ght before that big test. ... Who
spend the time she want s to with
every patient
." The nursing staff is great, but
' they can 't he a fri end ilke a guardian
can be," Porreca said . " I sec people
that never get visitors. Kn owing
those people arc dyin g there all
alone makes me want to cry."
Peggy McDaniel , 40, of Columbus. said s.he v0luntecrs because she
doesri ' t have mu ch famil y li vin g in
Ohio and \va n t~ he r three daughters
to have an older 'pcrso n in I heir li vr.:s.
··They need to unpc r.-. land that
life doesn't n:vol vc ar11u nd them and
t ~at th ere is a process 1n lifL! and we
do ge t older." sho &gt;aid .
Mc Daniel said she ~~ rcmin dc J
how lucky she is when her famil y
helps her ward cc lchratc the hPli days and hi s bi rthd ay.
OFFERING

ldletymes to perform at Rodney UMC's homecoming

I

•

'

Volunteers become· court-appointed
guardians for vulnerable adults
' By CHARLEY GILLESPIE

~ssodated PreSs Writer
• COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Cinda Castle, a nurse wh.ci has been
t~ught w keep her composure in
JlUblic, broke down during a visit to
fun·eral home after- recognizing a
r}a.me on a crematory chamber.
: " I saw· the name of one of my
wards ··'· Selma,'· she said . ''My
tiCart just sank to my feet. I had to
l~aye and go outside .. . they get to be
ju&lt;t like family."
: Few others mourned Selma 's
death.
: She was one of thousands of
adults with mental di sabilities under
the care of the state hecause they do
Jfnt· have family or fnends caring for
them: Castle became her court ,ippointed guardian as part of a pro!ll·am sponsored by the' Central Ohio
~gcncy 'on Aging.
• The agency has about 60 vol untocrs who arc placed with people in
&lt;( nursing home setting who have no
f~mily, no money and can ' t maki!
decision s for themse lves.
: The volunteers decide on where
tbcir wards live, help make medic al
decision s aild even decide on what
ta do after they die.
·
: Castk, 54, of Columbu s. has
t(een the legal guardian for six
senior cit·ize ns the past five years.
Fjve of her wards have died.
~ ': Being a volunteer guardian is
nOt w1thdut 1ts cost .emotionally,"
she said. '.'There comes a time if.
tllcy arc deteri oratin g tile do\:tur
a$k s how aggress ive yo,u want 10
treat this person ....
; One of her ward s. Li nda. 9~ . hadn: t had a VJSJ!ur for more than · 30
)'J'ars.
• "We were planning her IOOth
birthday party when she went into
atrest and I had 10 make the choice
not to keep her allvc with
nlachi nes," 'she said .
: Castle said she volunteers
b!:cause she · enjoys making thmgs
r~;ght fur ·peop.lc who ca ~ ' t ask for
help.
·
: '" lt".s worth it td sec a smile on
tl,eir face or make sure th ey arc ge t ~
tifig proper medi ca l care." she sa id.
: Castl e rc rn e m hc r~ a tim e when
o ~c of her wards was droolin g lik e
an infant She as k1cd the nursin g
hOme staff to do a dru g test a nd
f&lt;) und he needed detox ific ati on.
', " They 're nut go in g to be able lu
l&lt;iok up and say ' thank you ,' but yo u
kh ow y(1u ha ve impro ved the ir

a

200 Coupon good
toward the purchase on
any adjustable bed

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Anti-drinking ads pitch 'Binge Beer'

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"~ Gt-.-.-adind • Page C3 _
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sunday, September 12, 1999

Tri - County Camp meeting slat~d for September 27 October 1 at Point Pleasant's National Guard Armory

Engagement

Middleport • Gallipoll-, OH • ~fnt Pleasant, WV

Pick lip your phone and dial ·
toll-free to speak to a
RN about health co~cerns
7 days a week,' 6 am to 2 am.

l-800-462·-52 55
7 days a week
6 a.m. until 2 a.m.

A.•k your p/rysiriau
a bow
tnedication coucerus

For traveling comL-6-L...
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . (AP)After Miss America 1999 Nicole
Johnson relinquishes her rhinestone
crown lalet lhis month , she gets to
go home.
For Bonnie Sirgany lhe reign
never slops. il only pauses long
enough .for her to catch up on her
own personal life before resuming
her responsib'ilities as aide, confidante, road manager, molhe[ and 24hour advi.ser to the world-famous
beauty queen.
She is one of two women who
alternate each month as Miss America's official travel companion.
"It's the best job," said former
eempanion Ellie Taylor, 72, who ·
held the job for 17 years. "You get
paid 10 see tbe world and go to all
these wonderful places and meet all
these celebrities. But it 's a hecti c
month. You . need a month off to
recuperate _··
Ms. Sirgany - who temporarily
gives up her dutie s to Michele Brennan next mpnt,h - s?~le.times logs
as many as 20,000 m1les m a month
accompanying Miss America on her
yearlong national speaking tour.
While Miss Anlerica g1ves
speeches , poses (or pictures and
sig ns autographs , Ms. Sirgany tips
the porters, writes expense reports ,
runs interfcre~ce and provides a
·shoulder to cry on when Miss America gets homesick .
"A lot of tears have been shed on
these shoulders,'' she said. "She
gives the speeches, I handle the
problems. If someone has to be a
bad guy, ·it has to be .the traveling
companion: 'I'm sorry, but there
Will be no more autographs.' She

with whom. And the tmvelmg companion waits up for her.
"You worry more about them
than you do about your own kids,"
Ms. Sirgany sa1d. " lt"s somebody
else's child and you' re re sponsible
for them 24 hours a day."'
Ms .~ Sirgany. who is di vorced,

"ith tll[pag eant as
S~gan travMiss Ameri
10 years
her tluu children all were

1111972.

kecpt her personal life simthat thri •·e on neglect,
tuld _yucca, and no pets-

erica reign never ends:
her ma1l, pa} her
and keep an
v. hen -. he 1S out of

eye on

111wn
" It', ~ a
for a marned
woman:· Ms. · Jn) 'a1d.
Heqobhal en hcrciCl) v.here
from damoom , 'tatl' ~:ap 11 oh a nd

I

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Cher goes shopping by proxie
STATE COLLEGIO; Pa. (AP) There was something a li ttle funny
about the attemrted credit card purchase at the Mr. "charles boutique .
The buyer couldn't produce a
photo lD &gt;-- and for good re ason :
The credit caro belonged toCher.
It turned 'out the sin ger was in
town for a show 'and had sent her
personal ass istant to d9 a l'ittle shoppmg .
Charlene Ro sen, owner of Mr.
Charles. ,said the assistant returned
with cash for the purcha ses. then
came back a few more tim es. .
c'her herself vi sited the store
Tuesda y. She bought blouses and
sweaters and gave the staff th ree
concert. tickets.

c

P,-RODUCTS'-==-=--==--=-=~~_:__-~

KIDNEY BEANS

GALLIPOLIS - An ope n house
will be held at Saint Louis Catholic
· Church on Tuesday, September 14,
i999, at7 p.m. in the church sanctuary.
Anyone interested in knowing
more about the church is invited to
attend this meeting. Members of the
church are encouraged to bring rela-.
tives or friends ·tO the open house.
Everyone is welcome and need not
· have a member with the111 in order to
attend.
. The open house is an opportunity
to see the newly renovated church,
ask questions about the Externals,
the Ritu al and' Theology of th e
Catholic Faith. There will be
refreshments and informal discussion following the "presentation in
the church hall for' all attending.
This exchange is inlended to be educational. and is encouraged for any one .contemp latin g becoming a
Catholic: There will be members of
the church council on . hand to greet
guests. l11e church is located on the
comer of State Street and Fo urth
Avenue:

Carter. Bu&gt;h and Clinton And !
"ent to Clmton's inaugural," she
sa1d " I've been to the Super Bowl
four umes, the World Series once,
the Rose Bowl. the Grand Prix, ~
Belmont Stakes and the America'"
C up."
•

I

a

Saint Louis Catholic
Church plans open
·house, September 14

amu se ment park s to home less shelt~rs, AIDS ho&gt;pltCs and juvenile
detention centers.
" Once, "'e were loc ked on death
row with fi ve mm ates who killed
their hu&gt;bands, .. sbe said.
And the perks''
" I' ve met four pres1dcnts: Ford .

EASTMA

Can't say that."

Ms. Sirgany will take another
·winner under her .wing Sepl. 18,
when a new Miss America is
crowned. Contestants for the 79th
annual pageant begin arriving in
Atlantic Cily today.
Typically, Miss America make s
one or two appearances a day, but .
the travel never ends .. In July, Miss
Johnson visited 14 slates - some
twice.
The sponsoring group that
requests Miss America's appearance
is ·responsible for providing two
first-class airline tickets, a two-bed. room hote l "suite, three meals day
for two people and transportation in
a vehicle with $1 million worth of
msurance .
Sometimes the accommod'ations
are posh, but not always.
" I've slept everywhere from a
S15,000-a-night suite at the Plaza
Hotel in New York to a .cardboard
bo• at a college campus in
Oskaloosa; Iowa, and everywhere in
between," Ms. Sir.gany said.
After eac h appearance, Ms. Sirgany reports to pageant officials on
how Mi~s America performed and
how well she '\las prepared. .
There's also a touch pf mothenng
involved , such as when Miss America wants to go on a.date . Miss America can go out without her traveling
companion, but only if the companion knows where she 's goin g and

'

Miss

~get) 99
·~

CYP SMULCH
Large

'2999
"'·

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BOY·AR·DEE
PASTAS ,
MAN'S •••Locally Owned
Community Minded

OODLAND
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SUPERMARKETS,

�Page C4.,

It

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Anniversary

Couple

to note golden
~nniversary at fam,ily reunion

· ; PARTIOT - Charles and Jewel · · reunion to be he ld at Raccoon Crock
(S(epher\s) Parke r of Patriot will County Park shelter house #4. •A
cete brate the ir 50th weddin g carry in din ner ' wi ll be shared at
ap~iversary Sat urday, Septe mber noon. Famil y a nd friends are invi ted
1 ~ ; 1999. at the Stephens famil y
to attend.

Annual 'Salad Supper' planned
al Gallipolis Christian Church
· :{}ALLIPOLIS · The Sisters in Dwight EienhoWer of Pomeroy v.:i ll
S~tvice of the Gallipolis Christian be singing several spirituals and fun
Orurch, ·State Route 588 wi ll have filled song&gt; by Elvis. This ye~r we
it$: Fa urth annual 'Salad Supper ' Sat- will have the pleasure of hearing the
Urday, September I 8 at 6 p.m. All "Sweet· Adelines" of Gallipolis in
\.k!ies of the area churc hes and com- so ng . In addition we will have our
own She/Bops helping us enjoy thi s
munity are invited to attend . '
:; ~is year's theme will be "Jesus fun filled eve ning. As usual lots of
Is 'the Rock. My Name Is on the door prizes will be given away.
We hope the ladies of the comROLL " There will be a short devotional by M eli ssa Martin of Pt. . munity and area churches will join
Pl easant and the salad supper will us in a .fun-filled evening of fellow.'
foOow. All ladies are requested to ship and praise to the Lord. Be sure
bring a ·salad or dessert or finger to call the church office to preregister at 740446- 1863 or reg ister at the
fa~ in a disposable container. Table
sdvice and beverages will be pro- door when you- arrive so you' ll be
vided.
eligible for a door prize.
:For enj oy ment and pleasure

.

'

lridictment: Investors swindled out of $115 million

agents arrested Brandau at Miami
Iniernationa l Airport following hi s
faO e.d att e mpt to enter Bogota,
Cqlombia, according to the F~l.
•" For two years; the defendants

prU:yed upon . investors who were
naive ,' unsophisticated and in many
instances senior c it izens who' d
in ; ested their life sav in gs," ' FBI
agent Alan Sadowski said.
;Federal prosecutors pl anned to
write letters to between 5,000 to
6.6oo investors who are potential
victims of the · all eged sc heme, .

which ran from 1996 to August of
thi s year. Many of them may not
know they've lost money because
-they didn 't expect to see a return fo r
three years.

GALLIPOLIS • The campaogning has begun' In addotion to the
political races, Ohio Valley ciuzens
wi II have the opportunity to cast
their votes for this year's Maestro for
a Moment , a fund-rai'ser for the Ohio
Valley Symphony.
So nee 1992. two or three community leaders ha.·e been chosen by a
l:Omrnittce of past maestroS, tO help
raise money for the OVS in tile form
of a friendly competition.
Each candidate is ctiallengcd to
be 1he one to mise the most money
by tile lirst concen of the UJlComipg
season. this year taking place Oct&lt;!·
ber 2 . The person who collects the
most money wms the opportunity to .
conduct the OVS in playing "The
Stars and Stripes Forever" at the
Andy Jabbarpour
co nclusion of the concert.
Th1s year's candidates BohbJC St. Louis Catholic Church in Gal Holzer. Msgr. William Myers. and lipohs for nearly 20 years. Pope
Andy Jabbarpour tnet with commit- John Paul II named him a Mon signtee ~o:hair and pa!!t Maestro for a or in 1990. Originally from Da)'lon .
Mo~ncnt Carol O'Ro urke and her
Fat her Bill . actively participates in
1
&lt;.'OilltnlliCIJ at the Ariel The ~nrc Sep;
many church fUnc tions as well as
· tcmber 2 'to kick offthc race. Each being a member • of th~ Mi nisterial
rc(ci\'ed a practict: baton. a cassette Association, the ..Outreach Board of
uf the Sousa dassic. and a hearty DireclOrs, and servi ng as Cat holic
"thanks and good luck ." The candi- Chap lain at Gall ipolis De&gt;•elopmendates will also be given a private' tal Ccn1er.
condul.·ting lesSon close to the con·
Asadollah Azim· "Andy" Jabbarccrt hy OVS Maestro Ray Fowler.
puu r was born in Kennan. Iran , and
Bobbie
HolLer.
comm uni ty came 10 the Un ited States in 1959 in
activist and wife of the late Charles - search of higber e9ucation. Andy
Holt.er. was born in Point Pleasant. resides 'in Poi nt Pleasant and works
\V. Va .. :Htc ndcd De nison Univers ity. at AKZO Nobel in Gall ipolis Ferry.
and later setiled in Gallipolis after
He and his wife Sondra liave two
her oi1arriage to Charles in . 1940. .c hildre n and two grandchildren.
T here she became ac ti ve in church Andy's many civ ic inv olvements
and ci\•ic affa irs, a nd he lped raise inCl ude. in part Rotary Club, Boy
the ir live children. The year their and Girl Scouts. PTNPTO, Band
yo ungest child fi ni shed high school Boosters, Red Cross, and Toast MasBohbic. at age 57. graduated summa ters.
cum laude from Ohio Universit y.
Eve n though the candidates will
Bobbie says what gives h er the turn in moneys to the Maestro Comgreatest joy are her c hildren. I I mittee the Thursday e vening before
grandchildren, two great grandc hil - _the· event for the first tabulation,
dre n. friends, church , community, donati on's can be made through
nature and the art s. .
. . intermi ss ion the e~ening of the con "Father Bill" Mye rs has been at

Crown prince to wed
. BRUSSELS. Be lgium (Af') Belgiup1's crown prince has fo und a
princess in his own back yard .
The palace. announced Friday tnat
39-yeai-old Crown Prince Philippe
will marry Mathilde d ' Udekem d' Acoz, 26, a member of the local aristocracy. on Dec 4.
She could someday become the
fi rst Belgian-born queen in the
nation 's history.
Philippe is the eldest son of King
Al bert II and his Itali an-born wife,
Paola.
Rumors of an impending engagement were ·front-page news in many
papers Friday. " The Futur.e
Princess: speech therapist with the
charm of Q uee n Astrid ," was the
headline in. Het Laatsle Nieuw s,
re ferring to the beloved Swedi shborn Queen, Philippe's grandm oth~r. who die d in a car ccash in 1935.

We, Richard and Georgia Nogle, Owners of
Arnold's Food Mart, Furniture Store, and Betsy
Ross Eatery at 24866 St. Rt. 7 S., Crown City
would like to inform their friends, who have
supported them for over 20 years that on 9-1-99,
Mark and Carla Owsley, of Southers Road, Crown
City, became the New Owners.

:,c'&lt;

Monsignor William Myers

knows until the lasr minute who.will
conduct."'
Maestro 1999 wi.ll be announced
by Maestro Fowler and escorted 10
the sragc h)' last year's maestro Dr.
Sigismund Harder. Followi ng tile
concert there will be a recaption for
conc~rl trumpe t solms l Vim.:c nt
DiMani no and the three candidates
at . the home of Tom and Nancy

I

for.the

PROCLAIMS WEEK· City Commissioner Dow Saunders (seated),
proclaims lite ~k of September 12·18, 1999, National Rehapllitation Week. Standing behind are members of the Holzer Medical
Center Rehab Unit, Including, first row, left to right, Kay Rulttertord,
AN, CRRN, Director of Nursing Services for the Rehab Unit; Ellen
Gibson, MSW, LSW, Medical Social Worker; Beth Slone, MA, CCCS, Speech-Language Pathologist; Laura Hayes , LPTA, Physical
Therapist Assistant, and Pam Short, AN , CRRN, Rehab Nurse. Sec·
. ond row; \eft to right, Malissa Collins, OTRIL, Occupational Thera·
pist; and .Daniel Black, DO, Medical Director on the Rehab Unit.

'

Childs.
"Maestro for a Moment" is a
source of signifocanl fu nding fonhe
QVS. Parlial funding for the 19992000 OVS season i.s received from
the OhioAns Cou nciL
Ohio Valley Symphony tickets
arc a,::..11 lah le at Haskins Tann'er.
Uncommon Scen.ts and hy call ing
Bob and Shei la Oehler. arter 5 p.m.
at 379-9445. Maestro for a Moment
d onatio n ~ can he sent in care of the
candidates to ohe Ariel Theatre P.O .
Box 424. Gallipolis. 4563 I.

'"PJese1decl~ Michael F•.,

Conley
Owner and Operator of
Trapper's Leather
Crafts and More

September I9, I999

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Acl·redit atH.m of Rchah allt Jtlon • .
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PROSTATE SCREENING SCHEDULED· A free prostate screening
will be held in Urgent .Care at the Holzer Clinic on Saturday, September 18, 1999, from 8:30am until noon. The screening is a joint
effort of the Holzer Clinic, Holzer Medical Center Wellness Depart- ·
ment and the Hillcrest Urological Clinic to provide free prostate
cancer screening. Pictured above, left to right, are Shel Dawson,
BSN, CURN, of Holzer Clinic; Urologists Nicolette M. Jones, MD; and
R.H. Alonzo, MD; and Bonnie M~Farland, AN, BSN, Wellness
Department Director at Holzer Medical Center, who are reviewing
, plans for the upcoming screening. Advance reglstratl~n Is required,
and certain criteria must be met, including age and rtskfactors. To
register, call 446-5311 between 9 a.m'. and 4:30 pm., Monday
through Friday. Registration will be open for up to 100 men. For
more Information, call McFarland at 446-5679.

Parents bury toddler sickened by E. coli at county fair
MALTA , N.Y (AP ) - Standing
in the chilly drizzle, Wayne and Lori · ·
Aldrich re leased colored balloons
Friday as they buried their 3.yearold daughte r Rache l .- the first' victim of one of the wor st E. coli outb_reaks in U .S. history. '
Then they headed back to the
hospital to stand vigil over their 2.
year-old d a ughter Kaylea; who was
struggling with kidney failure after
· sipping a g lass of water with her sis- ·
ter on . Aug. 28 at the Washington
County Fair.
Nearly 500 suspected cases of
contamination have been re ported
ftom the fair, held 30 miles north of
Albany. making it Ne w York state's
·
larges t E. coli outbreak ever.
Eight other child ren from the fair .

1WEEK.ONLY
STARTING SATURDAY, 9:00A.M.

•.

'

..•-

were on dialysis Friday at Albany .
Medical Center Hospital as doctors
tried to filter toxins from their
blood. Two other children and two
adults al so remained hospitaiized.
· Rain runoff is. beli eved to have
washed the potentially deadly . E.
coli bacteria from cow manure at a
nearby caule barn into the fair 's
underg'round water suppl y.
After a gravesi de memorial service underneath a canopy of pine
trees, Ms. Aldrich described Rachel
as " happy, vivacious, full of fun and
compassion. "
" When we were at the fair, there
were balloons released ," the girl 's
father said . " Rachel asked why and
at the time I didn ' t know, but today
I was in spired . Sometimes things
you Jove j ust slip away from yo u."

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The HMC Rehabolot atoon Unii ;;
1!\ a 23 bed J C Utc rehab &lt;u.:crt.'d! ted ~~
b~ CARF, ohc Cumm"&gt;ton o ~ ; ·

"

See A Shriner For Tickets or Call Scott @ 446-9800
With Special Thanks To These Donor~
Carlos Wood

I

10

mobility. self-care. and oommuno cation .
M os1 of the ume. 1hese limlla tions are a re sul! of one of the fol-

a

·r

Pm

VOTO

with funclional limitations

ra~t'\ .

and Language lherapht. a Soual
v.·orker. a Rencallonal Therap1S1. ••
and of couT&gt;c. ohe pauen1 Fa mil~ -•
members arc ab o an ontcgral paJl;:
of the team . Th&lt;) partl&lt;tpate m;·
educatiOn. d1..,~har~e pl..1nn10~::
and the rap) . preparong the pauen( ·:

Deeds Family Vision Care

. NO MONEY DOWN

•ALL SALES FINAL· NO RETURNS

STILLWATER

The Holler Medo cal Center
Rehabilitati o n Unu treats patJenls

and Oc~.:upauon.tl Thcr.-t

BUT IDXQ~7 rBrRa~G

Library.

(LAMPS, PIOURES, EO.)

Featuring

posl.

moisture that damages pi ll s.
in hollies.
Mochael Ross of the Cente r for
"' II was somethong. you opened
Proper Medicatioh Use in Phi ladel, the bon le and you fe lt comfy
phia. said sturdier pi lls left .no rea- ·about." Ross said. " ) don' t think
son heyond tradition 10 keep colton I'm going to miss it. "

fB3rr~wu~ T~~

50% OFF REG. ROAIL ·

At The GalUpoUs Shrine Club

door pnzes. prov1des an opportu -

SOUTH

pm

Switzer Room.
Bossard Memorial

For

prO&gt;IhetiC&gt; Paruc opant&gt; onclude
Hanger Prootheuc, and Orthollc&gt;.
a ph) &gt;teal therapO&gt;L occ upall onal
therapisl. ph) Siuan~. :,oc 1al ser' 1ces. and a recreational rhera -

Thi s reunoon . v. oth a pocnoc
lunch. Ji,e entertaonment. and

nity for former patients and &gt;taff
to get reacquainted .
In co'njunction wllh M1ss
Paula'; Da~ ca re and Bossa rd
Memorial Library, a rehab
patient -c hild story time will be
held on Wedn~sda) . September
15 at 10:30 a .m.
The rehabilitati on unit will
and renewing th~ir commitment also sponsor cdu~ational events
to fulfill the unmet needs of peo- for the HC&gt;Izer Medical Center
ple with disabilities.
staff and the general puhlot;.
To mark the week , the HMC Wednesday . September 15 . and
Rehabilitation Unit will host sev- T hursday, September 16. people
eral even ts. A poster con test will may stop hy th~ Fifth Floor
be held for the Wellston Sc hool Classroom atthe hospital anytime
Distrkt sevent h grade rs a nd . between noon and I pm . WednesJudged hy ohc patients on 'the day, information woll be provided
Re hab Uni o uti lizing the the me by a physi cal therapo s t , occupa' "Through' Rehabi litation There 's tional
therapi s t.
phy s ician s.
No Limit to What You Can social sen·ice s. rcc:reational therAchi~\c "
apist and ~pcech therapist dunng
The
_
e.ighth
An-nual
Rehabilitaan informal session cnlitlcd.
•
tion Reunion wi ll be hdd Tues- "Brai n Anack! Next St o p Rehab ".
day. • Se ptember 14 from II a.m.
Th ursday, an inform~l . s~:ss!OIJ
unti l 2 p.m. on the patio' adjacent enti tled .. "A Step to In depend ence·
to the French 500 Ruum al Ho lz- wit h Rehab " wil l cmpha sitc
er Med ical Cen ter.
info rmation .on amputations and

By TODD S PANGLE R '
it 'would hold up without padding.
AP Business Writer
St ill. the &lt;:otlon wads remained.
PmS B URGH (AP) Bayer even as Bristol-Myers Squi bb Co.
· has cured a headache of its making. - the maker of Excedr in. Buffe rin
gettin g rid of •that little hard- to- and Nupri n - abandoned them in
re~ove wad ,of con o n in hs aspirin the m id-90s . .
bottles.
Bayer had to test the integrity of
Without fanfi\l'e. B ayer Corp. in couonless bottles: making sU&lt;e the
Piusburgh s tarted shipping Genuine tablets would hold up, and run mar· Bayer bottles witho ut cou on early keting surveys to determine if the
this year. The change went largely change would hurt sales.
unn oticed ; T he Wa ll Street Journal '
" We concluded there really waslirsl reported it Friday.
n't any reason to keep the cotton in
The practice of pulling colton except tradition," Chris Allen. vice
wads into aspirin hollies d ates to president of technical operations for
around 19 14 or 19 15. about the time Bayer. said Friday. " It's hard to . get
Bayer began compress ing aspirin out:·"
powder into table ts , said Ann e
Early this year, Bayer introduced
Coiley, a sp okeswoma n.
its Gelcaps product sans cotton, and
The cotton served a vital purpose. slatted shipping Genuine Bayer the
l'n the old d ays, aspirin tablets. could same way.
' pul ve rize themselve s by rallling
A fe"-: Bayer products , such as
around in a bottle ..The colton helped fragile chewable tablets, still come
hold tl&gt;em st ill. ;
· with cotton. All en said the wads
In 1980 , Genuine Bayer, 'howev- should .be taken out once the boule
. er. became a coated ta blet. me aning is opened because eolian can absorb

st century

z:~o

GALLIPOLIS - Tho Holzer
Medical Centre Rehabilitation
Unit is pleased to be on••olved on
the celebratoon of Nauonal Rehabilitation Week. September 1218. 1999.
During the week . the unit will
focus on the powers and possibilities of rehabilitation, saluting the
determination of people with disabilities . applauding the efforts
of rehabilitation professtonals,

With no -fanfare, ·cotton taken from aspirin bottle for good·

MRY ITEM IN THE STORE

Saturday, Sept. 18, 1999

•

.\~,..

Bobbi Holzer
cen and will be included in ohe final
tally. O'Rourke says that several
donati()ns are turned in the. night of
lhc l~Oncert and therefore . " no one

.

Jhabu a!t--Jjadbul • Page CS _

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

.. t•-

will be expanding to a full line Hardware Store,
larger grocery ~election, and offering several new
services-The Owsley's will be accepting WIC, ·
Food Stamps and Offering the same delivery
service as Arnold's.
This was a difficult, but necessary decision for
us. We not only appreciated your business, but we
grew to love you. You were not just a customer at
Arnold's, You became our family!

1~

Holzer Medical Center Rehab Unit to celebrate National RehabiHtation Week

"OWSLEY'S GENERAL STORE"

HIL.LBILLY HOG ROAST

llilt6utv

• Sunday. September 12,

Three seek to be 'Maestro for a Moment'

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parker

:W EST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) .
~ ln ~estment companies that
promi sed lucrative life- insurance
po)ic ies sw ind led hundreds of peopie out of $ 11 5 ljl ill io n that was
spent on lavish lifestyles, according
to) fe deral indictment un sealed Friday. .
·
.
,Just $6 mill ion of the $ 11 5 mol licill give to the companies was used
to ; buy legotimate policies, court
reeords shbw. Much -of the rest was
spent o n two d dze n ·homes , 34 cars
an!! two he li copters. the indi ctment
alleged.
: Frede rick Branda u, 54 , of Davie;
an: in-house attorney : a nurse and
twp of Brandau 's c'ompanies Financial Federated Tit le &amp; Trust
I no. and Asset Security Corp . were charged wi th 4~ counts of wire
an!l mai l fraud, money lau ndering .
and conspiracy.
::The indictment, returned Aug .
I 3; was unsea led ho urs after federal

Sunday, September 12, 1999

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

~~a~~~~·~F'-;i1.so
1 EDDIEiiiluE:Fi .
164-29,000 miles, AT. AC,
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�•

..
Sunday, September 12,1999

Pomerof• Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleuant, WV

Gallia Community Calendar

...
•••

"'
•

Suacby, September 12

• · POfi':IT PLEASANT, W.VA . Jllarcotics Anonymous Tri - .
County group meeting . 611 Viand
Street, 7:30 p.m .

•••

ADDISON - Preaching s~vice
ill Addison FWB .Church, 6 p .m..
.with Rick Barcus.

•

.

...

-

~

CHESHIRE · TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) meeting.
Cheshire United Methodist
Church, 10 - II a.m . Call Ann
Mitchell at 388 - 8004 for information.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy High School Band Boosters .
7 p.m ., band room .

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
chapter TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) meeting , First Church
of the Naz¥enc . 5:30 - 6 : 3G p.m.
Call Shirley Boster 446 - 1260.

Wednesday, September IS

•••

· ; KANAUGA- Worship service '
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
:iit Silver Memorial FWB Church, Senior Citizens' Old Tyme Cho"
rus wip meet at ·1 p .m. at the
· })-p .m., with Rev. Miles Trout.
••
•••
G:illia County Seni o r Re source
:. BIDWEU - Prospect Baptist
Center.
Church homecoming se rvi ce
:beginning with Sunday Sc hoo l at
GALLIPOLIS - Walnut Town 10 a .m ., basket dinner at noo n.
s hip Crime Watch. 7 p.m.: Gallia
Rev. Larry Haley preaching at
County 911 Center.
afternoon service. s inging by·
White Oak Church Trio. Re,-_
Carl Basham pastor.
Tuesday. September 14
. ***
_ ,, LECTA- ·Homec o ming at Wal JUJt Ridge Church , featuring speGALLIPOLIS - Alco holics
~ia l speakers and s ingers. Sunday
AnonyiDou~ m~eting . St. Peter ' s
Solwol at 9 :30a.m .; morning ser- Episcopal Church. 8 p .m .
vice is 10:30 a.m.' with Bill Hall
preaching. Lunch at noon . GarGALLIPOLIS - Choose To
land Montgomery speaking afterLose Diet Group . 9 a.m. at Grace
noon service, special singing .
United Methodist Church. For
-Larry Hall pastor.
information ca ll 256 - 1156.

•••

•••
•••

•••

•••

NORTHUP- Rocky leiTers
will preach at I p.m. during the
Macedonia Community th urch
homecoming . Special singing
Hilda Sanders and family.

by

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Harber Fam-ily
to sing at Bell Chapel Church , 1
p .m .

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medical Center Diabeti c Support
Group, 2 - 4 p.m .. French 500
Room . Free. For information call
~46- 5080.

•••

BIDWELL- The Rev. Danny
Boggs of Oak Hill will preach at
Clark Chapel Church. 7 p.m .

'

***

GALLIPOLIS - Youth Sunday
at Gallipolis First Church of the

Nazarene.·

'

GALLIPOLIS - AI -Anon
meeting at ,St. Pctt!r's Episcopal
Church. 8 p.m.

•••

......

GALLIPOLIS - New Life
Lutheran Churc h ' 12 Step Spiri tual Growth Program ', 6 :45p .m.

•••

HENDERSON . W.VA.- Western square dancing, 7:30 - 10
p.m .. Henderson Recreation
'Building .

•••

***

ENO- Eno _Grange 2080, 7:30
p.m. Pot luck to follow.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - GAHS Choir
•
. , 6 p.m . AI I parBoosters
meettng
ents irivited .

POMEROY - Narcotics
Anonymous Living In The Solution Group. Sacred Heart
Catho lic Church . 7 p.m.

•••

VINTON - Vinton Bapti st
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching series o_n " Nehemiah·s
Project --. each Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Nurser} provided.

...

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Fred MacDowell from Texas will speak ,
and share his cx.periences at the
First Church of ttie Nazarene.
7.
'
p .m.

...

_, ***

Monday, September 13

•••

GALLIPOLIS- Narcotics
Anonymous Mirac le s in Recovecy Group, St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 7:30p.m.

•••

•••

•••
REUNIONS
•••
GALLIPOLIS • Descendants
, of Pete and Margie Parsons to
meet Oct. 3, at Raccoon Creek
Park . shelter house Ill , 10 a.m. to
dark .

•••

GAL,LlPOLIS - Harry Drummond family reu~ion , September
12. ' 12 :30 p.m. at American
Legion Post.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Descendants
of S i Ias Cole Straight to hold
family reunion. September 26, 10
a.m. to 3 p .m. at Raccoon Creek
Park shelter house #6 cardinal.

•••

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA .Narcotics Anonymous. meeting
Tri - County meeting. 61 I Viand
Street ( use side entrance ), 7:30
p .m .

•••

QALLIPOLIS · VFW Ladies
Auxiliary 4464 meet ing at post
home . 7:30p.m.
·,

•••

Friday, September 17

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m. St.
Peters Episcopal Church .

NORTHUP- Elliou family
reunion at Northup Baptist
Church , September 18, 4 p .m .

EVERGREEN - Springfield
Townhouse church service, 7 .
p .m .

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Parkin sons Support Group meeting. 2 p.m. at
Grace United Methodist Church
library. Speaker Michael Phillips,
financial advisor from American
,Express. For information call 446
- 0808 .

...

Revival

•••

WILKESVILLE
Gospel
meeting with Benton Cochran .
Sept . 12-17. WilkesviHe Church
of Christ. Services at I 0 a.m. and
6 p .m. Sunday, and 7: JO p .m. ·
Monday through Frid'ay.

•••

MIDDLEPORT - Revival cru-sade with Rev. Dr. David Rahan . mut, evangelist from Trinidad , at
Ash Street Baptist Church. Sep-

........
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~

•MICE b&amp;bl

a" n 11111111

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rilunlion?

Ltam fiow ID !Jtl firlp by altlnding an
mfonnahona/ program tnhtltd:

......tic,...., ...

11

lelp A FriHtl ... llll'h•
·Jirst Clturclt of ~~a-•
in tfrt 'Family I.ifr Crntrr. ijallipol~

Thun., September 23, 1999,
6:00PM

For ~or. U.formtJlion colllo.cllh•
GnUia County Health o~porf~MIII

........

•1111 Ullllec 111

•NIILetlle

"' 7411-4~MI2,·E%1. 294
'J',cjrum fonJnl &amp;,· tlir 0~111 •btpartmtnt of
Jfrollli m Jupport OJ'Womm '$ J{tcdtli .:\font6·
Stpttmba 1~~9

•IV 7 ?' Ill ••• I

IIIII C1111 C 1111

Dr. Robyn Stout
to his Optometry Practice which offers:
Adult, Children and Infant eye exams
New Acuvue Bifocal' Contact Lenses
Vision Therapy
Vision Rehabilitation
Treatment of Eye Injuries and"Disease
Laser Vision Correction
.. Atrdiate
Large Selection of Laiest Eyewear
· · And Much More

•••

-··

Willard Woodruff will be cele- ·
brating his 88th birthday on Saturday, Sept. II. C,a rds may be .
sent to him at Room 118; Holzer
Senior Care Center, Colonial
Drive, Bidwell 45~14.

Call for an appointment today
Evenings available

***·

Nellie Clary will turn 90 on
September 18. Cards may be sent

740-446-2236

Pain in lower legs could indicate a serious problem
WASHINGTON (A P) ·Do
your lower legs hun after you walk a
few -blocks ? Are . they sonieu mes
numb. tingly or cold'
If the answer is yes, doctors say
you need a check up - you may
have a problem that could threaten
not just your ability to walk. but
your life.
· It's called peripheral vascular dis~
- ease. a lono name that simpl y means
'arteries ine your legs arc bl.ocked.
preventing proper bluod circ ulation .
It can be c,xtremC'Iy painful ;-some patients can't even walk
· through -their house without stopping to rest. Left untreated. pans of
the leg or foot can ' become gangreno us and have to he amputated.
Worse, if your leg arteries are
clogged., arteries aro und the heart
and· brain are- likely to he clogged.
tQO, putting you· 'a t risk for a heart
attack or stroke.
The good news: There arc ways
10 control peripheral vascular dis·
CllSe, or PVD, and the earlier it's
diagnosed. the easier the treatment.
: Yet'few of the 8 million Anieri dms believed to have PVD know
that painful legs are something to
worry about . Many assume they ' re
just out of shape or getting older. so
they don't even mention symptoms
to -their doctors . said Dr. Rodney
Raabe, a PVD specialist of Spokane,
Wash.
: So Raabe is spearheading a
nationwide program next week that
aims to test - for free - u·p . to
75,000 people for PVD .
: Organized by the· Society of Cardiovascular and lnterventional Radi·
ology, the "Legs for Life" screen. ir\gs will beoffered at over 500 hospitals and clinics . .The campaign ·
isn 't aimed j~st at leg pain sufferers,
b~t also at people at risk who 'don 't
yet have symptoms,
Who 's at risk? Anyone can get
PVD, which is why doctors wanllo
eurrii ne 'people with lower leg pain
during walking or exerc ise that unlike pain from arthriti s o r inj ury
' - s1,1bsjJcs after a few minutes of
rest: Other symp toms: numbness,
tingling or coldness in the lowe r legs
or feet , or sores there that don ' t heal.
But PVD occ u·rs most often in .
people over 50 and smokers . Other
risk factors include diabetes ; high
blood pressure, high cholesterol or
other heart disease ; obesity; and rei. atives with PVD.
.
It 's a quick , painless test- doctors just measure your blood pressure at the ankle and the arm . Further from the heart; leg pressure is

supposed to be higher or at least
eq ual to ami pressure. If it 's not ,
you· rc developin g PVp. Raabe
explained.
Dmd put off getting tested.
advis~ s. a' patient who ignored his
o wn symptoms lo ng enough that he
ultimately had a toe amputated.
Dr. Zhad Korduba is -a New York
anGsthesiologist who admits, with
all hi s medical training.- he should
have known he had a proble_m. ·
' "If a patient had come up to me
and told me Lhcsc sy mptoms', I
would have jumped all over it," said
Korduba. · 59 . . Instead. "I kind of
chucked it off to gettin g older and
being out of shape."
Korduba enj oyed hiking. but a
few years ago noticed his legs got
unusually tired while walkmg uphilL
Later, he had severe le g cramps after
tenms.
He knew a change in health like, '
that should prompt a doctor visit. but
ignored ~he sy mptoms unti\ they
suddenly worsened a, few months
ago. He ' d walk a mere I 1/2 blocks
before having to·- stop from sharp
pain.
1

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'

an
to nrr•v;ltP
crship with current news , the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept
weddings aFter 60 days from the
date of the event.
. Weddings . submitted after ·the
60 -day dead line will appear durin g the week in The DailySentinel
and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune .
All cl ub meetings and other
news art icl es in the society section
must be submilled wi'thin 60 days
of ocL:urrcnce.

·, Vortec 350 V·B Power
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Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
_Sunday 1 pm- 8 pm

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Fri. &amp; Sat. 5-lO ill Sunday 10-3

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits,
we offer monthly office hours.

7:15, tao

POMEROY -

Gl'nc alogJCal Soc iet y wql me e1
Tuesday. 5 p.m. at the Me•g&gt; County Mu se um . Buuernu t Avenue. Open
meet ing for membe r!&gt; and n on · mem~
bers. For more inl'orrnat 1on , call
Patty Cook at 992-2447.

.:ustomized

1~1 Ma fl:tl&lt;li IWTJ Gele,Ha:b Elzcr6J. M1 CtW

1'1

Chester To wnship
Trust C ~!\. regul ar monthly me eting.
Tue sd:Jy. 7 p.m ., Chester Town Hall.

gourmet cuisine to satisfY
meat lovers and vegetarians
at affordable prices .

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Heallh D e partm~nt immunization n:cord For more information u 1ll
clinic Tuesday. 9- 11 a. m. and _1-3 _ the health dep artment at 992-6626.
p.m . at the Meigs Mult-ipurp ose
POMEROY
Catho li c
Center. 112 E. Memorial Drive.
Chi.ldren must be ""c-ompa ni ed by Women' s Cl~b meeting Tue sday fol lowing mass at 7 p.m.
·
gu~rdian 'Or J)arcnt. Bring shot

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce monthly
luncheon meeting Tuesday, noon at
Carleton School in Syracuse . Speaker will be Suzie Childs. senior vice
president of Junior Achievement Of
Central Ohio.

a!le group experiences

Pomeroy

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Member, Ohio Orthopaedic lnstitule

\

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Meigs Community CalendaF:____________

RACINE Racine Chapter,
Order o(Eastern Star. Monday, 7:30

Insurance Company, we11 save.

992-6677

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~ 111111 "'

the Ohio har in I !:&lt;5~ . H ~ wa~ art i\1e
tn many eq ual right!-t o rganinti~ ::;
l lnll llk r Do ugla~~ hclpcJ n:..:ruh .
hlack ~o ldi ~ r . . during 1hc C1-\ li Wa r.
In I R76 Langsh&gt;n had ju, t resigned
hi.~ r ust ~!'! pn.:~tdent of Howard Un~­
,·crsi tJ a!td was stumping the colin·
try fm Rcpuhl ica.n camlida'teS.
.•
includin g Hayes for rrc~idCJ11.
Dougb ss di~d in !895 and
L an g~ton in ! 897 .

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs meeting Monday ,
I 0:30a.m. at the municipal building.

yrnir home with us,

roJay for a

there '~a ... no f..:-~,.· lin g of \~'carin e~s.
He ~rfonn..:J hi !\ " 'nrk well. and
acc um[Jlt . . h ~ d great gopd."
John fo.h.• rccr Lang-...wn wa . . thl' ·
~on- ~) r Ralph Quarles . a V1rgima
plan tati1lll owner ~
an d Lury
Lan gstl)n , a free .hlack. At the age of
5. L: tn gs t o n .wa~ SL..'nt to ChilliuHhL·.
tu !iH "ith fr k• nd \ of hil&gt; fani ily ·
· In I K.t9 Lang!•ilo n graduated from
Ohcrlin Cn llcg..: . He- wa s admitt ed H~

CHESHIRE - DAV picnic at
Cheshire Park Monday, 6. p.m . for
Di sabled American Veterans.
·

hen you insure

on to you.
, Contact our agency

The Gallia County Court House, seen in this 1 870s lithogra'p h,
was the site of a great speech given in 1876 by the orator J.N( •
Langston. Ttle speech was given"a week after a great EmancipatiOn ·
Day celebration in town where the speaker did not show up.
.':

POMEROY - Right to Life
meeting , Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Pomeroy .Library
.

.older, you're,. ]~1-. the money!

~ur

to our ~11 0\\h.:dgL"'t hc re al frcdcrll.~
Doug. Ia.'.\ ne\ r:r found Gal hpo\1.. ,
HnwC\L'r 1he \Cry next week the
same l·omm 1ttee that had orga nu.ed
the EnlJncipJllun Day hruughl tu
Galhpoli'. J.M Lang,ton \lhu wa.
h11led "' "The Great Colored Orator." Lang~tnn ' s ~pccc h wa~ to he
given nn the ground -. o f the Galh;t
CtlUOt\ Courl Hnu:,c .
During the time that this coun
hou se was .here 1850s to I X70s. the
lawn of the ~..:o un hnm.c with i t~
man y tree s was given ove r to po liti ~
cal ra lli es and such thin gs . In 1876
the tree ~ in the Ci ty Park were not
yet matu re eno ugh t!'J rmviJc mut:h
'hade . By th e late IS?Ih the parlhccamc the pi :.H.:c of sw.: h ra lli ~.!s.
LangslOn. ironicall y. w as a bi tter
ri \'al of Frede rid. Duu g la~s. The t'' n
nt"tcn &lt;.: ompctcd for the sa me poilu cal j ohs anJ, aucnti on. Th e ri, a lr~
w ~IS so int ense that in I K8B Dougla ss
~\en a&lt;.:livcly campaigned against
Lanp tun \ L'llllgn:~s luna l bid .
f Du e to some thrcatt:rpng weather.
Lang:s10n spoke in th e t:oUrt house.
A..:...:ording l&lt;) the Ga llipolis Journal :
"The !tl. pd~~.:h v. as one of great pU\\ cr
and d o4ucm:e . Mr. Lan~ sllm -; puke
for -tw n hours and a half, and yet

~ION DAY

FROM!!

DVIR 200

;!(you're 50 or

\'

A\ n turn~ ou t. Dougla~~ d1d not
. . hnw up at th~ Emancipallon da)
meeung . A•·cordmg to the Gallipoli&gt;
Sands
Bullclln : "It Y. a . . !tl.anJ that a d1 ~pat c h
had hccn n:cC I\ CJ a nnounc mg O ou ~
·glass' J cparturc and th aL he would
numhcr 1l f newspapers,
makr: his ap~arJ.n~o:c aild a ddr\.' ~~ the
Douglass hclpt•d rn·ruit Negro people the next day at. So on Saturtroops during lhl' Ct' il War and later day 1hcy a~am V.l.'rc on hand but
s~rv~J in th ~· aJmi
rations of Lin· Doug !"as!\ J 1d nm ~•rrh·~ ."
One of the more intere sting of the .. coin. Grant. Hayc, and Garfield.
There w:is much fmger pointing
Emancipation Proclamati on celchra- Douglass had al«• hecn the last pres- as to wh u was 10 ·bl ame. Some
·ii qns held in Gallipolis over the idem of the conttover~ial Freed· · dairncd that the organilch of the
y\:ars was the o ne held in 1876. The man's Bank.
Jay. whi~.:h mdudcd JS Jllany white s
Gallipoli s Journal o f the next w~:ck
That hank' sdcmi.sc hrought great "' hlack ' in 1876. had .know n that
hardship to many Afric ~m-Amcn - Duu~ l ;i!l.s wa!l. not go mg to !~.how up .
rcL·ordcd the day: \
"O n Frid ay the colored ciu.rens cans who had their life ~av ings ti ed 'lln~y just wanted to sl.' ll mcn.:h;_m ~
Of Gallipolis celebrated their Ernan- up in the hank . ·
Ji~ c to th..: large nowds anJ get
ci pation Proclamation by raising a
Ironi(ally the h~mk. ' s 1.kmisc them h ) ~upfHlrt Rcpuhli can candi ~
tlag . r ead in g the Proc lamation and came from too hcol\'ily in v~:sting in 'date~ tbat fall. all tlf wlmm gave
an cxplan&lt;"ttory letter fr om President ~cl:uritics underwritin g thl' railroad~. slmrt spc ~..·c hl.'S .
Linl·oln . hy Mi s~ Gee. and sWches and its many greedy mogul s.
Th ..· Gallipol is Jtlurn al in
hy Capt,_ Re ynold ' and Phelps of
The bank's future was already ;.ln:-.wcrinl! to the Bulletin (a Democ ~
Pt. Ple asant. There were over 1200 bleak when Douglass hl~)k it o\'CL rati..: pap; r) !'iaid : "The story in the
persons present The po le is a beau· but he did come in fur cu n.'lidcrahk Bulktin ah4ut FrcJ . Duug:lass. thC
tiful one . and will do credit to any blame .
(cntral C, mlmillc"L·.·and tlu: mimcy.
class or p:lrt y tn th~ world. It stands
The failure of the Freedman 's is a lie.. " ·
at the upp.;r end of the city. Much · Bank was pointed to hy some southOne rep~;rt said.tl&gt;:lt durin¥ 1.876
credit i!\ due th e ITI O\'crs.in this. "
.. ern politicians as proof that hl:l~o:k s th~.:rl.! were plwny Dlluglass :-; trav~
The planned , peaker for-the 1876 were not yet capable of performing cling ar·(Juml the ~..:nu n tr·y am.l that
Emancipation day was Frederick
in some part s of the Amc.rknn !!con· perhaps Gallipolis had gotten a hold
Doug la ss. wllo at that time was omy.
·
·
of~~ "phony" Douglass. At any rate
probably the he&gt;t knuwn AfncanAmcrjcan in the United State&gt;. Douglass. born a &gt;lave in Maryland .
hcgan h1s puhlic rarccr m 1841 as ~n
agent of the · Massm:husclts Anti ·
Slavery Sncioty. He later edited a

By :
James

CHESTER Hqmecoming,
C he ster Nazarene Church. The DunPOMEROY
Meigs County
con Family from _Qrient, special smg crs, at I :JO p.m·. Public invited.
Board of Elections regular meeting
Tues&lt;lay, 9 a.m . at the electimis
RACINE ~ Chapman: Myna. office in Pomeroy.
Kerwood and Hill reunion , I p.m.
Sunday, Star Mill Park, Racine,
·
Meig s County
POMEROY

When PVD · is diagnosed early.
the preferred treatment is walking. It
may hurt at first - you may have to
rest while pain fades and then walk a
little more. But many people graduaHy walk further and further 1pain·
free, as new blood vessels grow
around their blocked arteries. Raabe
said.
'"The ideal is to walk about 3
miles a day, five dars a week, if you
really want good vascular health,"
he said.
Doctors also · may prescribe
aspirin or other blood thinners. ,
For worse cases. an angiopl.Sty
threading a balloon into the
blocked leg anery ~ can clear the
clog. The most severe. patients get· a
leg bypass - just like with hean
bypass surgery, doctors sew a new
around the
one.

·•

Frederick Douglass a no show at 1876 Emancipation Day celebration

RACINE- Harvest Festival , St.
John Lutheran Church, 33441 Pine
Grove Road , Raci ne, Sunday, worship at II a.m .. noon potluck lun. cheon and fellow ship .

•••

.-...d,.; atimn-.-ontbu!• Page ct._.

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

The Community Calendar is pub- p.m .
]i s h~d as .a free service to non ·profit
POMEROY - !jig Bend _Farm
_groups wishing to announce meet·
1ngs and spc&lt;.:ial event s. The eaten· Antique Club meeting Monday. 7:30
:Oar i~ . 1mt de signed to promote sales p .m. at the Meigs County Fair·
:or fund misers of any type. Items are ·grounds .
:printed only as space pennits and
t:annot be guaranteed to be printed a TUESDAY
i&gt;pcci fic number of days .
RACINE - CHOICE 's home
_
school support group will meet at
SUNDAY
Star Mill Park Tuesday. from I to 3
RUTLAND
Homecoming .. p.m . For more information residents
Sunday. Rutland Free Will Baptist may call Nita Yost. 949-2579.
Church . Potluc~ dinner at noon,
SYRACUSE The Meigs ·
preaching at I p .m. by John Elswick.
R evival service. Sept. 12-18 with County Chamber of Commerce will
special s ingin g.
hold a free semin.ar "Co mpeting
with Wai-Man" Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. at
· MEADOW CREEK. W.VA .
Carleton School in Syracuse. SpeakHerbert and Esther King family . ers will be Perry Varnadoe , Meigs
reunion will be held Sunday at the . County ·Economic Development
Gary King residence in Meadow 'Director; Debra McBride, Small
Creek. W.Va . Directions are avail- Busioess Development Center; and
able by calling 992 -5533 or (304) a panel of business owners affected
X82-3267 .
by Wai-Man. RSVP at 992-5005. .

Welcomes

Cud Shower

Sunday, September 12, 1999

1·100-Jll-6440

Dr. Todd Ragan

RIO GRANDE - Reunion for
fprmer employees and friends of
Evans I Penny fare Supermarkets·,
September 26. at Bob Evans
shelter house. Covered dish lunch
at 12 :30 p .m.

·.

A.N! you or •omeone you
knOUJ in a do....,olk .;;.,leru:e

."rfargarit 'Eva11s, .'il~omry
'Dr. 'Et~ljm Xir~liart, rrsycliol"!!rst
'Dr. J. Craig Stntjford
J{i/da StoNs, Serr11i~· Jioust. .
'Domtstic ·1'iolence SunritJOr

• Til frM TICII

•"

EWINGTON - Revival at
Ewington Church of Christ in
Christian Union, September 13 18, 7:30 p .m. nightly. with Rev.
Rob Ervin preaching and Troy
and Liz Ervin singi ng.

·speakers:

•FM.._

', *** .

•••

•••

There is a card shower
planned for Louise Mynster. Her
address is Mill Run Care Center.
Room 208, Mill Run Drive.
'Hillards, 43025 .

GALLIPOLIS - Tenth reunion
of all former physicians and _
emp loyees of the old Gallipolis
Clinic and Medical, Center Hos pi tal , September 18, at Golden
Corral Restaurant , 6 p.m.

PORTER - Bible study at
Clark Chapel Church. 7 p.m.

•••

•••

E
T.

...

tember 15 - 19. 7 p .m. nightly.

to her at 18525 Hannan Trace
Road. Crown City. 45623.

KANAUGA • Hoe Down at
AMVETS, 7:30 • I 0 :30p. m ..
with the Rocky Mountain Boys.

Thursday, September 16

' ***
GALLIPOLIS - Open house at
Saint Louis Catholi c Church, 7
p.m. in ~ hurc h sanctrary. Open
house is opportunity to learn
more about the faith and see
newly renovated church. Refreshments and informal discussion
session to follow.

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Galli a County
District Library Board of
Trustees meetin.g, 5 p.m . at
library.
GALLIPOLIS - Galli a Academy High School Choir Boosters.
6 p .m. , choir room.

Salllrday, September II
GALliPOliS - Miracles in
Recovery Group Narcotics
Anonymous meeting. 9 p .m .. St.
Peters Episcopal Church .

...
...

•••

•••

......

.'

''

. /&lt;_ _
~-~ ---

RadioShack~
You've ~ot questions. We've got answers!"

tNo dtalml.OQI blld!:out rules apply. Offer not •ialid in the limited areas sen~ed by the Nationtll Rur&lt;}l Tele&lt;ommun ications Cooperative, o'r its affiliates. tim1ted·t1me Jffe1 fo1 nN.~ resrdentralsub!oenbers who
purchase a OlRECTV 5)'5tem between 8/S/99 and 10/10/99, and ~ubserbe to '99. NFt SUNOI\YT!CKEl .. l\159 OOm:ogu:ar IPOVJn' .11')~1 DI~£(T\' Total Cho•ce~ PLATINUM 1\80 99trnol by 10· 24199 In the fourth month, ~our Total ChoiCe
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Page C8 • ~ ~=--JI tbial

•

Sunday, September 12, 1999

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

A half-century of Emmys brings TV, society into focus
By LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES {AP) - In
1949. the Emmy Awards honored a
Lucky Strike commerctal and the
best kinescope . Ftfty years later,
ctgarette ads have been baniShed

egones alone spoke 'olumes.
There was "Best live show" (w 1th
"Pantomime Qull" among the
nommees ) and " Best ktnescope
show" ("Texaco Star Theater."
··stud to One" and others v1ed)

from the tube and kmcscopes are

we' re ~...: h oos mg to tell our stones ,

means of recording shows. were
made by a•ming a 16 mm ftlm camera at a st udto televiSIOn momtor
WJthm a few years, f1lm and vtdeotape had made the techntque obsolete.
The commercial category was
qu1ckly dropped from the pnmeume Emmys (only to be revtved
three years ago) Lucky Stnke was

and they're bcmg accepted m the

J.

'(V 's hJStoncal equtvalent of a cave
pamung

'

Glance ovet a list of Emmy contenders at the end of each decade
and a c hangmg mediUm come~ mto

locus
' Tht s IS ho" we · re choosmg to
talk about ourseh es Thts JS how
most main of m.un strcam outlets ..

Kmescopes, televtsJOn 's ftrst

wmner m '49. but Cigarettes
hccamc one of TV 's b1g losers In

mamstay. pmgrams ltke

house QO," were fadmg but Uom1 ·
natcd the best drama catq!&lt;lr\
because of voter .scnumcnt
Y1cwers. however, were ~lhllll
ored of the senes genr~ . \\tth

"Gunsmoke." " Wagon Tram .. and
" The Danny Thomas Sho" ..
among the I 0 top-rated shows
"Father Knows Be!&lt;.t' ' wa!&lt;. the
qumtessenual 50s sn~:om OlJOll·
nee h represented the h eartw~\rn1 ·

mg best of postwar Amenc.1. With
11s .llflucnt, st.thle family .md
ordered suburban ex ist e nce

As the diSorderly 1960s un lold ed , tc-le\'hi On at fmst a\crtcd 1ts
eyes Vietnam. uv 1\ n ghto,; fcml ·
msm - all could ha v:e het' l1 hap

1971 Cigarette ads were banned
By 1959. the live televiSIO n category had 'an1&gt;hcd The anthology

pcnm~

Flash h.tck to 49. when the c.tl - • ~ hows that once were televJ sum's

bef ore

:-&gt;aJd Rohcrt Thompson dm.!clor ul

the Center for the Study ol Popul ar
Tc lcvJ~Jon

ar Syracuse Un1verslly

' Pia) -

on Mars for the l.wk ol
1mpac1 they had nn TV sell&lt;s
' TV wa1ts a good long tllllt'
11 gu~s

1nto co ntrovclsJ,il

\\ J tl~rs." Thompson sa1d.
(on,llicr some of the 1969 nom -

In«' the spy spoof "Get Sman"
.111d
the
fantasy
sttcoms
.. Bcwnchcd · .md "The Ghost and
M" Mu1r " Onlv " Julia." the ltrst
..a1es to fc:aturc ·a lead black char.Kh.: r. wa~ a groundbreaker.
By 197'1, TV senes and Emmy
\ nters w~rc w11ling 10 go " mlo
d a r~ place' ol the soul." sa1d
ThL&gt;mas O' Netl : author of "The
Emmy!&lt;. "
Among: {he nmmnecs was ' MA-S- H .. a c·omedy set dunng the
Kt,re.ln War that was a thmly
'cllcd met.tph or tor the VJCtnam
expcr 1 cm: ~ .•md the s!h.:Om that
D,l\'Jd Marc .•t Vlsltmg professor of
TV .tnd 111m at Syrawse. sa td
dunged lhe genre from total nuff
All 1n thc Fanul; "
- It op~ncd up the agenda of the

sttcom to all the thmgs that hap· Emmy awards
"We've gone from ' Father
pened m the ' 60s but were never
Knows Best' m the 1950s to Daddy
dealt wnh," he satd
The 1989 conte nders demon- Is an Idtot 1n 19'Kls Sitcoms. Dad IS
strated that by the time TV catc hes · th e central butt of the Jokes,"
up, a movement 1s truly mam - O ' Neil sa1d
Another key '99 comedy nomt·
meam Decades after femm•sm
took root, strong female characters nee IS ''Sex and the Ctty "Its frank
were the rage. With " Destgmng handling of sexual JSsues 1s a sign
Women" and " Murphy Brown " of how Amencan attnudes have
sh1f1ed. Thompson suggests
among the nommees
That HBO sttcom also "Snals
Old-fash•oned guls. however.
how the splintered. multichannel
were potsed for a '90s comeback
The dllsy lltle character of best TV un1 verse caters to aud1encc s of
comedy nommee "Ally McBeal " vary mg tustes
The Emmys come full c11cle
recalls the scatterbramed housewith
the reinstated commerctal &lt;atwtfe created by, Lucille Ball.
egory. wh1 ch tht s year reflects
0 Netl sa1d
Men aren't necessanl y l::tnng

Arnc n co:t s rap1dl y changmg tech·

better. as illuslrated by " Everybody Loves Raymond ... one of the
contenders at Sunday's 51st annual

announ ced wmner 1s snap com. an
Internet scrvJ cc

nology

TillS

year 's

already -

Minority groups launch TV viewers boycott to protest Latinos' visibility
8y FRAZIER MOORE

•

.\ P Television Writer
NEW YORK (APl - A co.tll t10n
nl lllllll)fl t} (lig. lll JZa tl on~ 1 ~ ca liln g
lor J ho) l:Otl o l the tour maJor nct\\,uks dunng the IJro,;t two \\~Ch of
th ~: l'V ,~.!.\sOn to protest
the l'Ontlnucd 111\'b lhliHy o f L.1t1nos o n
tc h~\ 1 ~ 1 0 11 ·
The brownout' ol ABC CBS
Fox and NBC bcgms Sunday an d
~.: n ntmu c~ through Sept 21
·
T he N.i tJOna l Council ol La
R.v .t \\ lw:h 1s coord1nallng the
boycott. cou nts just one Htsp.ln ll: Mart1n Sheen. on NBC s 'The Wc, t
\V1n g · - ,unung the lea d characters
111 d1c 3S ll!:W sc ncs prcmlcnng thi s
Ia II
At a nC\\s ctmfere nce tud.ty. the
,!:! TOUp s.ucl It ~camcd wnh other
mm ont y groups m a push to forl:e
the cntertamment 1ndustrv to
aJdress the MUe They fonncd a
negouaung team made up of former
Cal1forma cong res~me n Norman
Mmetta and Esteba n Torres.
NAAC P prcs tdent Kwetst Mfume.
and the founder of Amencan lnd1 -

an' tn F1lm. Son ny Sky hawk
Torres satd at a ne ws conference
1

th.H the tea m ho pes to ge t · a longli.ls tJng, vcn l1 ahle agreemenl that
\\Ill crea te: a ra p1d mclus10n of
mmlmllcs 1n programnung as well
a:-, O \\ ncrsh1p

John Wh1te. an NAACP
spokesman. s&lt;11d on ly 52 ol the 854
staff wntcrs on maJOr netw ork

shows arc black · The public mter~st Is nOl se rved well by a mo no hthll', all - white' presentati on of the

world " he sa1d
Wh 1le H1 spantcs constitute II
pet cen t of the U S populatiOn, they
make up less than 2 percent of all
charac ters on pnme-ume shows.
accord111g to L1sa Navarrete a
spokeswoman for La Raza
In addmon to Sheen. the group
('Ounts three Hispamcs conumung
on rc rurmng senes Bruno Campos

(NBC's "Jesse"). and, on CBS.
Hector Elizondo ("Ch1cago Hope")
and Cheech
Mann
("Nash
Bndgcs")The res ults of the boycott wtll
not be measured by ratings , she

sa1d · If we ~,.an ed ucate a l.1rgc propOll! On ot the ~.:onlmunlty and ot h·
crs who J IC mt crc~ t cd 111 thas Issue
then v. c \t! o,;u~.:c-cc deJ ,'' N.lvdrrctL'

satd
Rcspond1ng to the pl anned hoy~.: o tt . CBS smd 10 a statement th.ll•ll
' n:ma ms

~.:o mnutred

'' tlrb had mm orH1cs m a leadmg

" 'le .utd lew h.td tl1em m supportIn k!

1 nl~s

But more than a dozen
been
.addcd to new 3nd retu rnmg senes,
1nduJ1n
woman 1n

m1 ~n ontv dMJ.tc tcrs have

to tht: llk·a th.H

our programmmg , and mdecd op r
organiZati on. shoy ld rene ct the
divers ity of our soc1ety We agrec
that much progress m our mdustr)
rcma ms to be made "

Sa•d ABC . "We are making
1mprovements and understand th.11
we need to do more Th1s IS an

If This Is Wh~t You Think
About Hearing Aids ....

li~

~~ ~~I

6:30 PM FOIIVINING SHOWS
7:30 PM FOR SAT &amp; SUN MAJINIIS

Too

Poor
Sound!

Expensive!

'

)
Un&lt;tttrilctlvel

I Have Good News For You!

Fox declined to comme nt on the

boycott, and NBC had no tmmed•ate comment
Some networks ha\ e already

My name is Mel Mock and
I owh the Advanced Hearing
Center. Our hearing aids
are affordable, comfortable,
and they really sound great.

made cast changes lor upcommg
shows. though execut1 ves JnSJSted
they were

In

the works even before

the outcry
In thetr ongmal form . none of
the 27 new comedtes and dramas set

No one will give you the
service and selection I can.
I guarantee itl1 OOo/o Call this
week for a free hearing test

to pre,mJere on the top tour net-

Public tele~ision donor list swapping
more widespread than suspected

ADVANCED HEARING CENTER

By MELISSA B. ROBINSON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The practice of swappmg member and donor
l 1~ ts wtth pohtlcal organizatiO ns was more w1despread at pubhc televt slon

1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis • Spring Valley Plaza

Call (740) ~1-1971 or (800) 434-4194
Ask about our free hearing aid report, it will seve you money'

•

.md radao statwns than hrst thought, accordmg to an tnvesugauve report

The Corporallon lor Publ1c Broadcasting's ) nspcctor general. Kenneth
Konl '"'dIll a rerort released late Thursday that 53 statiOns engaged '" llst-

lb. government sub s1dy

rhe IG \ report lound that 29 public te leVIS IOn and 24 public radiO staII Oll~

ext;; hanged and/or rented the n.1mes ol the IT membe rs or comnbuwrs to
puiHic,ll orga mzatl(ln s part ies or cand1dates
[he lOla! number IS abou t 9 perce nt Of the 59 1 Stati OnS that receiVe fundIn g from lhc corporn.uon

Ab out 85 ot 177 puhilc televiS ion stations acqUired names from political
r~nted

When stauo tts rented or exchanged names, they dealt mostly wtth DemoeratH: g1oups. the report sa1d. When the){ acq u1rcd names , Republicans were

'

telephone Jnle rVICW

U. S. Cellular'm has calling plans

Dy DAVID GERMA IN
AP Business Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - At a time when the Internet. v1deo rentals and
cable and satelhte telcv1st on offer plenty of diverswns. movte theaters were
'It Ill as popular as ever th1s summer
~
From Memona l D.ty weekend to Labor Day, the take al US theaters was
cs tunatcd at JUst b s than $3 btll•on, shattenng the previOus htgh of $2 6 btlliOn a yem .ago
The slrong summer showing has helped push ticket sales for the year up
6 percent over last year
"We are a cu ltur~ thai l1kes to ge t out of the house." sa•d Tom Sherak.
head ol dJStnbuuon lor 20th Centu ry Fox " We like to get away from our
probl ems MoVIes g1ve us the opportumly for two hou rs to get out and gel
away and Just let go"
A record I I mov1es have taken m more than $100 m1lllon each. and a
t 2th " expected to JOin the club.
Tim summer's film s also have had stay mg power In summer 1998,

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Gallipolis

Menal.:c '' opened Mi.iy 19 :md bcci.imc the faslest mov1e ever to gross $100

usee Wat-Mart KIOSk

mtll1 on lutun g that m f1 vc days The 20th Ce ntury Fox release has taken m
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IHOI441-1066

Two weeks bel ore " Phantom Menace," aud1ences got a preseason
\VtUmur w1th U n1ve rs~tl 's "The Mummy," an unexpected horror smash And

Jackson
Class1c Pfaza

tl\ CT Mcmollal Day wee kend , Un1ve rsal slipped 1n " Nottmg Htll, " the Julia

the real estate bu smess

"I worked for a butlder, who also
had hts own real estate company I
knew I'd found my mce ," she satd
Busy wnh home rcpaJrs at her
ow n home. she and her husband.
John have two clnldren Rebecca and
fyrel They we nt to Vtrgmta m 1987

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GALLIPOLIS - ''To call Wendell Thomas an mst• tution ts to nsk
bod1ly harm , ' clauned James L Da! ley, d~ttmnan and ch1cf executive

oflicer of Ohto Vallcv Bank "B ut not
to call someone who served Oh1d
Valley Bank and thts com munny for
43 years an msmuu on would be a
travesty ..
Those words were spoken dunng
Wenuell B Thomas's rece nt surpnse
retJrement pany at the' bank ann ex m
Ga llipolis The celebratiOn was
atte nded by nearl y 80 fam1ly members, co-workers and customers.
Pt ctures ol Thomas throughout Ius

Veteran
utilities
_
,worker
retires
POMEROY - John Henry Russell, manager of productiOn operaliOns at Sunflower ElectriC Corp 's
Holcomb Statlpn m Kansas, ret11ed
recently after 17 years wnh the uulity
He ts the son of Cathenne and
Lester Russell. former restdents of

The former sentor vKc prcs1dcnt .md
current member ot th e hljJ ard ot
directors . w&lt;ts .J member o l the Gal-

lla Academy H1gh School class of
1952 He IS a graduate of the Oh1 o
School of Bankmg at Ohto Umve1 Sl -

John Henry Russell
serviCe and
operate them

t r&lt;~ m 1ng

Russell moved to Wyonung 111
1974, workmg lor Pac1f1c Power &amp;
Ltght Co 's Dave John S&lt;&gt;n plant at
Glenrock for 3- 1/2 years. and at the
J1m Bndger plant 1n Roc k Sptmgs lor
3- 1/2 years
He JOmed Sunllowcr Electnc m
1982 at 1ts new coal-fJrcd plant 111
Holcomb. Kan Through the years he
was promoted to ass1stam opernt1ons
supc1 mtendent. mamtcnance super·

mtendent and manager. productton
operations.

Holstadter could not unmediatel y
be reached to comment today There
· IS no phone llstmg for B csw~e k
Adams Corp m the Dallas area A
tel ephone message was kh at a
Beswtek Adams sem a lett er on
March 14 to Gordqn F Tater.
Wendy's pres tdent and dllc l cxecuuve ollicer. as k1ng the company to
buy the Web names
W1thout co urt mtcrvcn tl on.
Wendy's fears Hol stadlcr o~ n d hts
company could sell the Web names lo
Dallas company tmght establis h Web
sttes on the Intemet u'lder the four
addresses
That "could greatly harm Wendy's
and ns reputation ," the su1t says
The Wendy 's sun says Bcswtck
Adams also has regts tered Web sncs
m the names of M1ller Brewmg, Taco
Bell , State Farm Insurance. CocaCola, Pepst-Co la. McDonald 's,
Amen tech, Sony Corp .. Subway
restaurants and Burger Km g

Other compames have been suecessfu l tn &gt;l mtlar dtsputcs

uter Appl 1cauons Tech nology

'

Dnvtd House. ducctor o f computer servtccs for the co ll ege, said the nldJUr

1ill provtdc career opportunltles for those seekmg pos!lwns m help desk,
omputer rcpatr and other techmcal suppon posnwns.The program combme s
vanety of software apphcallon s (M• crosoft Otlicc) with se ve~al spec1al
&lt;ed iechmcal courses
New courses cre ated for the maJor mclude PC mamtcnance/nctworkmg,
oubleshootmg operatmg systems. sy-stems analySis and Jcstgn. adv.mccd
~ tworkmg . and help desk/techn •c&lt;~l support
.
The new maJor was created vta 1nput from needs ana lys iS leners .tunJTY comnuttccs and area empl oyment trends Gall1poiJ s C.trccr College has
een mcrcasmg tts mformat1on lechnology offcnng!&lt;. ~l n Lc last M.m: ll whcn

was approved as a Mtcrosoft Office User Spcc1allst iMOUS) Authmt~cu
estmg Center
O~.:t

BankcrsAssoc tatlon Crcdn Commi ttee He was also the f 11 st chall llhln ol
the Officer s Lo::~ n Commlltet' a nd
sec retary of the bank 's excc uiJvc
Cf)mmlUCC

"Wendell helped gel a lot ol people ~tarted m bus mess bec a use of h1 s
behef m thelf ablluy and the1r mtegnty that yo u proba~ly couldn't support
wuh a cash now statement. " Da1ley
conlmented He p1esented Thomas

w1th a mantle clock as a gtft of apprecmllon from OVB

'

•

•

C·.

•

I

•

•

•

•

4 F01 more mformallon about the co ll ege 01 II :-,
1 - ~00-2 14 - 045 2

HONORED UPON RETIREMENT- Wendell B. Thomas posed with the cake presented at his recent surprise retirement
party at Ohio Valley Bank. An OVB employ·

ee since 1956, Thomas is a former senior
vice president of the Gallipolis-based
banking facilily and a current member of
its board of directors.

fa thers faJthfulness to hts fam tly and Ca lli . and four granddu ldren
10 hts church. as we ll as to In s work
I know thai I ' ll Jm o,;o,; m y mnn:
In tlu s communit y, Thomas spe nt cn-v.mkcr.., , hUI I'm thnl led to h.t,c
several years voluntcen ng h1 s t1me as

treas urer for the Ga lli polis Area
Chamber of Commerce He was also
a~.: t1v e m the Cvmmum ty Jmproverpcnt Corporation He 1s a member of

the F1rs1 Baptist Chu rch serv mg 40

c.: hanu: to sp(.·nd more lim e \\ nh
Lms and my t:muly ··he o,; .Hd
Dunng h1 s c.arcL: I he ha.., don e
about eve ry JOh dl the bank. from
te ller to a scnwr \ ICC president anJ
the . hank s ~cc rc t.try.' ami c1 lo1 111
be tween Dade: s.ud · We \.'.11'1 st1fl
d1 aw un lu . . cx pcrt1o,;c "hen 11Ct' dcd "
Thomas was clcc tcd to the hoard
c1

years on the board of tru stees Many
o l t ho~e years were spent as c hairman
Tho mas anu hiS Wife . LOis res Jdt:
The htghhght Qf the afternoon
m Galhp&lt;~ lis They have two sons
retirement part)1 was a prese ntn!Hl n
Do.v1d Thonl.ls nf Co lumbus and made by Thomas s so n. Da' 111
G1e gnry Thoma s o f L 1 v ~rmorc Thomas He 1s the ~.: hm.f ex&lt;~m mer !or

the OhiO Departmen t of Commen:e
Dn'Jston of BanJ... , The Oh1o Dl\ I·

s1 o11 of Fm&lt;~m J.tlln s,tnu!JO!h honm t:d
1homas \\Jth u ce rtil ll.lh.: ol rt ul~
mt1 0n fo r h1s :c.u., of dcti J ~o:ctl l t l ll lo
the bankmg mduslr}
After the pn:se nt.ttl on. Th\)Jll.t!&lt;. .,
o! her son Gregory stL'Jlrl'J 10 the
pod1um H!.: trJH: Ictl from L1'enn orl'
Calif ao,; a "llfPTI '\C ror hh lather He
o,;po ke .tbout Tho ma~ not .b .1 h.mJ...~J
hut as a l.llhcr H 1~ speec h Jim(' lht'
guco,;ts to te.Jr... Vvhcn he o.;ro~~' of hi-.

ol dlfcctors
Ct) ntmuc

h1~

Apnl 1999 .md "Ill
wnrk on the hP.lld

111

Volunteerism alive and well in rural Am-erica
By JILL SMITH
GALLIPOLIS - Talk to JU St
abo ut anyone and you' ll fmd a k1nd
of um versal feeli ng that we ' re all gettmg bus1er There 's iTiore work More
family funcuons More dem ands on
our t1me than ever belore That's why
a recent eve nt m Columbus was not hmg short of amazmg Fl\ c hundred

people voluntanly spent two lull
day s learnmg how to spend more
lime voluntcenng.

Fam1 Bureau 's "Leadersh•p Conference" 1s an annual aCtiVIty

Ill

wh1ch folks from all ove r Oh1o parti Cipa te m two days ol scssmns
sc m1na1 ~ . dJscuso,; Hms, de hates. co nsultations and confclcnccs T he n,

they take that tratmng home and pul

It tv usc pcrfom11ng li undreds ol
hours o f unpaid communqy scrvtcC

at;;u1mpl! sh a grcat dc.1l more th,111
tnJJ.\ idU ,l l ~ \\ O Tktn~ .liOllt.' l he SO()

h&lt;l\ e IOL'ai -.tate .md n.JtH\J'Ij1 l llll]ldl. 1
l\lli11UI.lt c
r oi!CY and ,,\lry Ou l thCif pian&gt; ol

The} 'I I seck co no,;L' n "'u~

Why wou ld these ot herwise &lt;ane

people .11 the 19'1'1 lc adersl11p Co n-

ptoplc subJec t t hc m ~c h cs to yet one
more llll pos Jt mn Of} the1r prec 1ous
tunc, Wl1il c e very one of them certamly has the1r own mouvatlon s. a
~.:ommo n th1c ad throughout Ihe grour
w c~ o,; ~1 :-.h.ucd sen se Dl rc .. pons Jb!IJty
rcspon•,ah tllt) to thc1r commumlles,
to ag n cu lt urL~ to th en fanHii cs. and
to thc1r k ll ow Fann Bu iCclU mcmhc l ~ P1 Lk .1 diLhc , hut the undcJ
st. mdlllg tiMt vo u ~houl d gl\ c a hale
m th,Ulb lot gtttmg .t litt le 1s o,; tlll
,tll 'l' anJ \~L'I I1n lllr.tl Amc 11i..'J
E1,ght ) yca1~ .tgu the Oh1o Farm
Bu rL'.lU
horn of thl..' 1dt:.t th.u farm
l,ulJII! cs. workmg togethcl Cl)Uid

lelcJKt: LOntlnued th.H hehcl AnJ
what s truly rc n1.trk.ahk 1~ th,H tm
C\ cr) onc ol thnsc \ olunt l'C I ~ \\ hn
attended the umlcrcnu~ thc1c .m.:
Jo1ens more bad: home. p 1t ~ h 1 n g 111
on county bo.trds .md ach 1snt y Louncils and uml lll l llec ~ L1tcr.!l l\ lhou-

ac;tton

faml ec onom\. looJ safety rubhc

dJrector for the Gallia County Farm
Bureau.)

w,,,

Somel!mc ... thl' ll

up 'on the iront

p~1gc

~~ o r!...\\

il l

-.ht,\~

,,1 th e ne\hpa -

pc r Other 11mes th e1r cllllrt~ \~ 11 1 ~~ l
totil ll ) un ..,cc n But \\.t' t'.\0 he .b~ur~.:J
t h c~t m e\ery commu nlt\ 1)n e\C'J\
IS"iUC of Sign lfl LJJlLC th~.: .lllC lllhL'I" 1l!
sands ol people throughout Oh1o take the Farm Burc.1u \\Il l hL' ln' L'"IIIl~ 1he
tunc lrom thc1r farm~. f.umhc s and . hnurs v. c~ h .md month-. nc~'lk7d h1
lll 3 kC 3 p 0S JI]\ C d ilf CrCllU: ~ \1 1[
hu~mc~ses In don.ttc thc1r t.tlcnt~ lot
hccause !hq rl' hc111g p.11d hH tilLII
the hen'clll ul us all
Farm Bureau lc.Jdcts \\Ill spend tun c hut hctause !11 \ Ill . :! the it 11111 .. ''
the n \\,1\ n t r.t\ll;g h,t~~
the yea! addrcssmg o,; ud1 \ .1ncd top(Jill Smith •s the orgamzat1onal
Ics .1s !,tnJ u . . e o,;r. : hoo l lundi!H!. the
rclat!Oil s .•md

hundred ot hcro,; th.ll

.l

Valuable lessons to be found in vah.le funds
By DIAN VUJOVICH
Newspaper Enterprise Association

Atte nti on bargmn hunters li val ue shoppmg ts m you r blood . here's
&lt;1

news llt sh -- nut all v.tlue lund port -

folio managers thmk ali ke So. Just ·"
the buyers for Kmart and Target don l
carry a ll the same hrand

or huy
lund
pot1lol1o managers don'!. either
Compctitmn Jo,; really wh.lt m a kes
any mdustry tic k Fromm~ l ~o: h..tndJs ·
mg to mutual fund s wh o~h' r ,., m
~.: hargc olthc huynl g ~: an !Cally have
an 1111pdcl on the ~.~Jc ~ - ot pcrhn mance - tC'sults l .akc value lund ~
lor msta nct There was a tnne whL:n
the: not1 on behtnd value mvestmg wa'
a pretty cu1-.1nd dncd one PtJ rU ol10
m.ma gc rs typl c . illy sclcct~.:d thClr
stocks from a unJ\ crsc o l ou t - of~
la\ 01 ~hlLkS that sc ]l at dlsCOLIOit'J
pnn.'"' ToJay. however. thin gs .Ut.!ll t
th:.ll hlad .mJ wh1tc
T Rowe Pncc for mst.tnl'l' otkr.,
111\ c:.. tnrs .1 du m.:c of t Wt' dil k fc nt
\.tlu~ !unds O ne , ~.:~tl kd thc T Rt\\\l'
Pm.: c V.iluc Fund. mvcst!&lt;. ml.ugc -l .tp
:-til H..' I.. '&gt; 1 he othcl ti1C r Rmvc Prll'l'
TldlllC!'!

all the same merchandi se,

3CC announces new major

Fall quarter hcg1ns

ty dnd the Oh 1o School of Consumer
Cred1t at Ke nt St"te Ulll vc rs ll y
Thumds wns a rne mbc1 of the OhiO

operators tO

levrsed a sche me to ex tort payment s someone else. the s u1 t sa1d A lso the

rograms , ca11446-4367 or

•

p1clure lrom 1961
Thomas JOI~ ed OVB m 1956

home li stin g m Hofstadter's name
based tn subu rban
The company say&gt; .m olfiLe r ol

rom Wendy's and at least I 0 other
najor U.S, compame:s.
Hofstadter allegedly regtstered the
.ames of Web sncs wnh Network
.olutwns, a VJrginia company that
nul recently held the sole license to
:gister domam names
Wendy' s clanns Holstadtcr regtsJred Web sites under the names
IWW Wendys or~. www Wendys
lcstaurant co m,
www Wepdy s~estaur a nt s com,
,wd Wc ndySntllnc com
Wendy 's ilas •e g~&gt;t e 1 ed It s Web

••

caree r were displayed Co-workers
served a cake w ith the words. "Now
&amp; Then 43 Years of Ded•cated SerVIce" mscn bcd tn Jctng On oppo.s lte
s1dcs of the ~,.:ake we1e h1s 199R annu al report p1cturc ami :m annual report

The new maJor IS part of the college 's assm.:mle degree progrnm In Ctn JI-

Chillicothe

a lr-co ndilloncd theaters

The seaso n started with a bang "S tar Wars : Ep1&gt;ode I - The Phantom

mspects propcrues and dec tdcs what
work needs to be done 1n order to get
the home sold
Dmmgan works closely w1th contractors and selli ng agents on each
hou se. and does so from her home
She told the lrade magazme th.ll she
believes her JOb JS part of the future
of her busmess. where age nts w1ll
work from thlm homes. company

Then they spe nt two years 10 Germany, then went to Alaska. and
Olymp1a, Wash , where she entered

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Career College 1s announcmg the oiTenng of
new maJOT entllled Techn 1cal Suppmt Spec•alJSt

""d Way ne Lewe llen

Wendell
Thomas
hailed by
co-workers

She rece1ved an .Jssocwte's degree
m uraltmg before she marned her
husband. John He &gt;vas •n the mil nary

HC at www Wondys co m

mov1cs on .average too k 1-n 27 pcrccnt o f their lotal gross m the opcnmg

longa 111 theaters
Not o nl y v..cre the l1lm s good enough to keep mov1egoers gomg back for

have a narrower f1cld of spccJah Zau on

and dtd h1s ba~1c tr.unm g m Kentucky then was stationed m M1ssoun

properties, and as a part of her work,

Wendy's,
)nbhn, ftled the suit thts week m
J S 01stnct Coutt.
The lawsuit asks the coun to prqubit Brenan Hofstadter and hts comiany, Bes wtck Adams Corp , from
tsmg any Wendy 's trademark names
oti the Internet
•
The suit allege s Hofstadter

Record summer for movies despite
other available diversions for public

diSlllhuuon prestdent for Paramount Th1s
summc1 , I hat avcuge was down to 24 perce nt , mdt catm g fi lms are lastmg

olll ces wdl be smaller, and agents

As a staff agent for her realty company. Domtgan deal s wtth corporateowned propcnies. mostly foreclosure

H o r~c o v. ncr..,' A fiC\\ p.unphlct ' l .:o:dmg Ht Jr. . c ... l l\ 111g .1 I uJa_gt
An.th ~~s und Comp.mng Ft.! cd-., ha "' bc('n \I..TltiL'n b\ C hi L1ttiL' Gu~rn ~n
Ctlllnl\ cuen"' 10n agen t It \\,t... \~lltt c n ltl J,.,l...,t \ uu thl' lw r..,l.' ttV.nl'T \\hL'n
you arc ~l! lcl t1ng ration ~ l or 1nu1 hor!&lt;.c lndl\ idu .ti Lop1C.., ttrt' :1\ .u lahll' tr om
the extcmJt~nol fH:c hy ca lling lJ9 2- 6ti96 or . . wrrm~ h~ :mJ p!L~Ill~ ,lldf''

Me1gs County Master Gardeners wil l be there lu asstst you wuh your home
and garden questt ons
Flower and garden entnes can be taken to the Semor. Fa11 Bu,ldmg on FTIday, Sept. I ~ fr om noon to 7 30 p m . and from 7 10 am to 9 a m Satur- UJl
day. Allnems must remam m place unul 5 p m on Sunday Gardeners from
(Hal Kneen is Metgs co'unty 's extenSIOn agent for agnculture and natboth stdcs o l the Oh10 R1 ver arc asked to partiCipate Remember there are ural resources. Ohto State Un1vers1ty.)

Catherine Domigan

company.

:ham

I

Although shanng membershtp lists ts a rouu ne busmess practiCe done
&lt;.huly by countless organ izati ons, the corporatiOn IS a pnvate, nonprofit enti ty that ts co ns1dered a chanty for tax purposes As such, 1t ts barred from
direct or md1rcct mtcn entlons m pohucal campaigns
The corpurauon dts tnbutes federal money to public radio ~nd ,te l evts ton
stauons. Nauonal Publ 1c Rad1o and the Pubhc Broadcastmg Semce

weckcnu

that you have rm sed whether u IS produce , fl owe rs or unusual greenery Tile

In a recent trade publlcauon".
Domtgan was profiled for her work
In repatnng homes offered by he,r

COLUMBUS (AP) - Wendy 's
nternau onalts sumg a Dallas comtany for regJStenng Web Sites m 1ts
13111e and then allegedly try mg to sell
hem back to the fast -food restaurant

Vntu.li ly all of the tran sacuon s occ urred through thlfd-pany hst brokers.
the repon sa1d
I thmk that the rcpoll s fmdmgs m cOnJunction w1th the prohtblllons
thai we put hn these' kmd s of transactions in the future . ought to put an end
10 Jht s controversy ... Robe rt T Coonrod. the corporatiOn 's prestdent. satd m
3

ol corn , largcs1 pum pkm. tallest stalk of corn or most unusual produce
Remember last year's 400-plus pound gtant pumpkm " Bnng m garden 11ems

Wendy's sues Texas firm
3ver trademark name use

lnlor-

nMtJon \\ llh the mte nl nr he\pmg a pohllca\ orgamzaUon

alsll tnvo h cd. 1t satd

no entry fees . thts C\entls J U ~ t to ..,how \loiMI can he gro"n m nur reg1on
New for tim, )t:ar I!&lt;. an opponumty tor \OU w dtspla~ )OUT o\\n "'lJTI?'
CTU\\ de!&lt;.lgn We hnpe to ha\ (' ~0·40 cn tTit:' \ V.lth a rt.! o pk . . dWIC"C .mart!
was stancd 1u cmphas1lC our quality ofhfc. famil y\ alu c~ cntrcpn:ncur adJ\- (an on gmal H ome~pu n Tn:a~urc pmmtl\ e scarccrov. ..... nod lk'&gt;lg'n ~ fl'.1tcJ
1t1cs. agncullural pursmts and our rcg10n's hcn tage Admttlanl:c I!&lt;. fret:'
hy Heat her LC\.'d~) going to the m&lt;h l rorular Vollllg v.lll (Kl UT thnJugllllUI
Expect IO Imp atllVllJCS lor both youHg and old Ed ucal tnnal utsplays. Saturday and unt1l -~ 30 p m Sum.li.i\ You hrm~ thl' lnm g"' fm 1hc "'!.:.l ll'UO V.
anuque tractors , new car and truck models. quilt&gt; Iarm produce. ch1ldren s and Expo will pnw1dt.! the .,lullin g (.,tr.tv. ) Ram or .,1110~ thl..' ~. : rt:at lon ot tbc
games, hvc:-;t&lt;x:k . crafts and entertamment are but a few ol tht: planned event~ . !&lt;.l.:a l cnoy,:~ w1ll he held a1 I I .1m qut""dc the ScnH1f Fau Bu!IJm ~ R~m~m ­
Opportumties for your parllqpauon arc sull ava1lab le. Bnng m )our farm bcr th e ..c sc.:a re~.:rov.• ~.o arc tt 1 tX- J1 splaycJ out....Jdc i.h.mng th\' [-..r~~ .tnd L.m ~·
produce lor dt splay whether ns the largest sunfl ower seed head, longest car ru, ked up after 5 rIll nn S u nJJ~ hy thei r 0\~ nerl,

carvmg her own mche m the real

placmg new(fielll-crected b01l ers m

gro ups o,; .ud the IG l' lllni! a separate survey by the Assoc1aUon of Amenca's
'
'
Puhhc TclcvJslon St,ltiuns

Sunday, September 12, 1999

_ POMEROY - The Founh Annual Btg Dend Re ~"'" Town &amp; Cou ntry
Expo IS be!ng held Sept 18· 19 at the Me1g s County Fa11ground&gt; TillS e'cnt

estate busmcss in ,V11gtma.
Cathenne Domtgan, of Wood
bndge, Va , daughter ol Raymond
Cottenll, Pomeroy. ts a realtor w1th
the Avery Hess Realtors firm, and has
been named to the Pnnce William
Assoctatlon of Realtors' Mtlhon Dol·
lar Sales Club for the past stx years
In 1998. she was named a Top Pro-

5tartup and scrv1ce rep1 ehentat i ve,

D

By HALKNEEN

Pomeroy, who now hvc m New

The '" ue came to light m May when Boston stat1on WGBH-TV admllt'.!J gn 1ng a I1st ol donors ' names to the Democratac Natlonal Committee
So me Republican lawmakers res ponded to the Inlllal news of the sharmg
ol member and donor li sts by renew mg calls to stnp pubhc broadcastmg of

Section

Annual expo slated Sept. 18-19

POMEROY - A Metgs County
nattve has made a name for hersel f

Haven. W.Va He ts a Pomeroy Htgh
School graduate
Hts career spans 43 years m the
generatton of electrical power, begmnm g wtth Ohto Vall ey Electnc
Corp's Kyger Creek plant m
Cheshtre m 1956. He t0 ok employment wtlh Southern Indt ana Gas &amp;
Electnc Co at ns Warrtck Stauon tn
1960, and spent a year wtth Btg
Rivers Rural Electn c Corp m 197 1
He then worked w1th McBurney
Stoker &amp; EqUipme nt Co . Atlanta,
Ga for three years. serv mg as field

swappmg w1th poh tH..:al organ1zat1ons.
At :.1 congrcss 1onat hearing m July. public broadcasti ng execuuves sa1d an
tmtl,.tl survey had uncovered l!st- swappmg at 26 stations

The 1eport dtd not l1nd that any of the statiOns swapped or

Ex-Meigs
resident a
success
in realty

ducer

FRI 8/10 ·SUN 9/12/VV
lOX OfiiQ WILL OPIN AT

ongomg process and ABC 1s deep ly
committed to 1t ··

Farm/Business

v~1l uc

Sm.ti i·C.tp Va lue Fund ill is _Its poll -

!oliO r10111 tile sma JI -~ IOC.:k UI1 1VCro,;c
Ju st., ~ t h~ t\ pc.' of comp.tn !co.; sck·t: t·
cd dJit e1 .. o do th e numhc1 ll l :-.IPlk-hc iJ 111 e.u.: h pmlloho £1~ \~cl l .ls th'.!ll
pcrlor.m.1n cc s
~n r RO\\C Pl!~o: l'\ lc\ lgl'-l·lP \,11 LIL' ptu tlol m there .Ire .tll'Utt&lt;.l YO
~tolb 'I he l n~.tl\ rc lulll IPI th.lllund .
tlu oul! h tht' ~nd ol Au~u ~t ".1~ up
"cJI ,;\~.: 1 l :! pc1Ct": l11 Th:•, m,dlcl -~o: ctp
\.1luc pnrtl ohn hcmc,er du..ln 1 t.m
,1., \\l'll lh ptlrthl]I\J ~~11h .tp p l tl\1 ~
m.uc l) 140 .. ~nd,., \\ , 1 ~ up ~~n l ) 1 / ~
pc1Lc nt Sn Leo,;o.;\111 N11 \ 1(1] lhl' \,ll
Ue· lllllldCJ 111\ C,tor It ) lt'111C I11ht:l ,..,
Ntl m.ttt~.:r \~ twl 111\t.!-.tlll~nt , ,, , 11 e~ '
I'\ emph l) Cd ~1/C n 1,l tt CI~
,
Lc ~sn n No 2 WIH.:n \,111\lUS -.]It'd

J..:OillJ1311 1CS ,lrC

OUt l1f

r.lVOr

10

the

m~ukrt. hu) mg. \ .tl ue ~:a n b~ ;1 moot

pD! nt
An thnn\ M .u.tmar~,.· ~~ pnnlnliu
nWJMget oi thl' B.ah!&lt;.t1 n \.tluc Fund.
th1nh ..1hout , ,,luc Ill rcl.i\lH' lcnn ..
\\hen ..,c l e~.:t nu! h1-. "' toL ~ pll'b H1"
. . cre~.:n,· u... e h~l\ h gnm ih .md ':lluc
lllC.lSU r\.'S
rhcn• ,UC 40 sl01.. k!'l Ill 111!'1 fund :. ,
pC1t11 olhl and e-tc h llll l' ' "' C\L'Il l ~
\\l'!¥htctl C\lll..,CLJUCntl~ 11 one lund

MUTUAL FUNDS

DIAN
VUJOVICH

hold1ng h.as a pdrllcularl\ good - or
b.td - run . lht": cnt1rc porttolw 1 ~11 t
dram.lllcall\ 1mpactrd hy n S o f.u
thl '&gt; yc.11 the Bahson V,iluc Fund ' '
up near\ ) t:t percent
Lc .. ~on ~ o 3 V.tlul.! 1s n t lmu tl!d
unly to 'aluc ~ toL: ks - It \.an be ,
!nu nd m growth L0111pantcs too
B1ll Fncs '" tlw poltf()!Jo mana ger o l the Tlwrn hl.lrg Value J.. und It \
up \~e ll over 1'\ percent '0 l:.tr thJ;.,
\C,lr .mtlhc ..,l'e..,valuc.tlmn .. tc\CI \ '' he!(':
\Vith ,\ pnlll&lt;lllu lll.ltk up !I I .!hOUI
~~ d1Jh:rt·n 1 ..,Ind.... th1 . . lund -. .l..,,t'l"
.trc lll't'"lcd m three l.l!lki CJ\1 .1rt.!.t ..
fhe rt' ,lfC th t' b.l . . l~' \ .ll UCUIJ11p.l111C S,
\\hllh !ll.li...C Up ,lilJIUt (1() pe lLC nl Il l
lh c lund.., )1\JJ t!illin lhl' tPnsH; telll

•
I

!;!r&lt;)\\'Ch \\hi lh ,\1~; h]lll ~ .lll]l u'111
p.llllC ' \\ illl hm ~-lt' flll ' \1 kl... ll, tl ld~
(IJI...c Pcp'i1Ull th~r l.'l lll . . lllllt~ ,lh\l,lt ~~ J
JlL'IL'Cllt PI the Jltllll \diP .111J lhl
t' J111.j]~lll~ lt . llltil l'\~ It
l.ijlltll\
~ l t1\\ l llg -. m.i\1 lnmp.ln l l' ~ ''llllli
ll'JliL'-.t: nl the rell hlll1 11l~ ~il pcll\.lll
Tht' tic tlu t h1nd~ lilt lh l ~t dJ!ILI
t.!lll l\ )lC" 11 l ~~ l111Jl .ll ll l'' 1~ llt.ll fil L'
II J...t·-.. to hll\ "'"ll " ' 1w111 L.tlh ~.Ill'
gnr\ \~ lll' 1l 1h~' .lit' ~Ill! 11! 1.1\111 l·k
\\Ill hll\\ C\t'r J1.t\ up lo1 L~lmp.tlllt' "
II hL fcc )., th \I !llC\ .1dd di\1..1'11\ l 11
the lund
\\'c \\ 1111 \t l hm ~tJnd ~(l111p.11Ht.'~
.mJ h.I H' .1 di\C I, Ifk d J'Dfl! tllh' And
\\C thlll~ th,ll tl i H'I~J! I Ld(Hlll ..,IHnlld
mcl udc some h1g h qu~1 i11 y u1 mp,uuc ~
Jnd . . Oil lt' rapHilv ~ l l l\\l ll !; cn mpa
n1 e~
he s.ws.
Th ,ll h111;~~ u~ tu Le ~ !&lt;.Oll Nn ~
Scqnetllll~" thlnl...llll! llll t''IJL' tht• hn'\
pa) ~ nH ·
..

(Dian VuJOV!ch's mos1 recent
books mclude "101 Mutual Fund
FAOs" (Chandler House) and "10·
Minute Guide to 1he Stock Market"
(Macmillan). To learn more about
mutual funds , visit her Web s•te at
www d!ansfundfreebies.com.)

�'

Sunday, September 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Poant Pleasant, WV

Turn up the heat when
leftovers
make
for
another
meal
1
By BECKY COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS -

Some people

datm thert: s nothmg like cold P'''_a

Here ar&lt; some ~u•ddtnc'
rc heating Itqutds l1le
- ~o;am;cs

\1

h&lt; n

"..1up~

md gra') bnng them to ~ hl)tl F~.•r

(or breakfast but most lefto,erstaste other lefto,er' heat thorough!\ to
bcucr when reheared Of cour:;c {\ ou 165 drgrees F3hrenh~!H u~~ a ntt.: at
kno\\ where) m gomg wtth thl!-1 _

food safety) there are guldchnes tor
reheaung food:; to keep them .as ~afc
as posstble

The reason' Its posstblc that han
dhng the food after It \\a:s ongmally
(.jQOked ~.:auscd some t:&lt;mtanun.ttlun
Putting rhe food m a rclngerawr
iJ,Iterv.ards slows the gro~th of any
bactena butdoesn tk11l1t Vvhenthe
food rem.: hcs the danger Lone het\\C'l'n -tO tO 140 d~.:grecs - ha .. h.:
11a mulupl) rap1dh That s wh\ It~
rmportant to thorough\) rch~.:at H

\

I

s
I

1

'.

J

themuJmda to kc..:r an~\~.: nn It h
It~~ heatmg At that ll.:mpcratul~.: . m\
hac.:telld 01\-.lht food fnlln \\h~.:n II y, 1..,
h.mdled .1lter hcmg cooked l.'~lrll...1

should be ktlled oft

11 vo u r~.hc:u k·ho\t.r' 111 tlk
rnll:ro\\ J\c 1 ''~ 11 111 tkt.: "ure 1111 "''ld
~rot~ n:manl m th~,: food CD\t.:llng
the loud hclp~ ~110 1 Stir up IIQUid' 1)r
ClnnhlnHHm ftll)d ... llh ~lsscntlt.:-;
om;(' or 1'' !1.. 1.. ' ' hllc r~ht.: Hml! HJ clam
mall th~.: l..llld "P(•t ... It tht.:n: . . "~'
turntabk Hh.l \uu r~.: t~.:ht.: Hlng 1 "' 0 1
1J looJ wtall.: the Jl',h onu l.'f t'' I C~
b\ htnddu1m~tlu.: h~..allm! pro~..:~..: ss

lund named HMC's
top staffer in August
GALLIPOLIS - The Rev Arthur
C Lund dlfec!Or of chaplaJnC) ser
vtces at Holzer Med1cal Center was
·named August employee of the
month sa1d Charles I Adkms Jr

Qualm Gu1dance Te,\m

After a one

y~ 1r

mrernsh1p H Sl

uhlet!r

~.:h tpl ~un

1' HMC whtlc at St

-

: raul Luthcrm Church Alter ka\l ng
;that post he , nrnll ed tn the Chmcal
' Pastoral Education lnt"nsH1p Pro
g1am at Falls\1"' Mental Health

F

: cenlt.:r

r

•

a

a
I
s

~

'

(

l

ng to th~ hospttal tor care
Lund und h~:t wtfc Cornnc were
rn.mtcd June 4 1966 Mrs Lund for
mcrlv work~J m tht.:: GallipoliS City
Schools

.ls

s he enJOYs \,\;Orkmg

111 th e

c
s
c

I

p
a

n
\1

Sl
fc
n

at
IV
11'

at
w
&lt;1
R

thnrou.,hl\ "'"

mak~..: 11 ~.:nrnph:h.:l' ,tfe J~1 ... 1 1-.~.:cp
s t\ mg (and J om\!) \\hen m Jouht
thro\\. . 11 out
..
Mo-.t ldtm t~r-, shftuiJ he u... c.:d
\\llhln~4ro4~htlurs lf) llUaRpl 3n
nrng to kct.:p rht.: fO&lt;XIIon~~..:r th.m th 1t
v.rap I( or rut IIllO :1 tr~.~clcr ~.- on r.t fn
\\1th thar JllmnunJ h)od .. ltd\
t.:\pt.:!h .... n tlli l tP ht.:'ll \t~.: thm'' In!.!
11u1 k!lm~..:r..., llr 1m tooJ 11 , 0 uhl\t
d~)Uhh th&lt;.l Ut lh ... lid\

F\~..:11

If \llU

Nurs1ng Home m Pomt Pleasant
W Va and was a pari of the HM C
staff !rom IY74 until 1976 unttl she
dec1ded to stan a fam1ly ol her uv.n
Born 10 Pmnt Pleasant she grad
uated from Pomt Pleasant H1 gh
School and had two years of secrc
tanal tramtng at the Mason Cou nty

ll!,;Jr
son

""Even thl! better growers

rather

, rttah purchase (new) the) re rebu1ld
mg

tJI 1zcr s,tles aulo dealers departmen t
~tares , cvcrytlun g
A nt:w cnmb1nc costs at l !!&lt;~st
$ 150 000 md low mtcrcsi rates
qrcn t enough lo enw.:c budget con

Lund ~;; hobbit: ' mdudc.: walktnt!
hoattn\! fl...,htn!! and sktlll" Lun~d
... a, ... h~. . IJ.\ ur lll.. th1ng 11boutHMC ~ ~
lht. Jkuplt.:
\, ~.:llljlltnt.:.._ o! 1hc monlh Lund
tt.:Lli\Lda$100US sm m.; . . bond 1
H.:..,~.:nLd puk n~ "Ph. c.: dc~tgn a ted tn
Ius n.m~~.: 1 ~ \l lllphm~,::ntar) tnc~1l 111
lh~,: hO!iplt.tl Gi ld~.:! I\ Ius ptd UIC 111
thl: ho . . pnal lobht md lu"' n.nne
t.:ngll\nl un lh fi 11)1)9 EmpiG)CC ot

tile Month pl aq ue .1bo d1spla)cd
the lnbhy

1

CLEAN HOUSE

WITH THE
rCfl.A!!J!JJIFOf:DSi

Sm llh s store to kave v-ol unt anl )
t]lcludwg a sales ~ssoc t atc on co 1n
m Tss1011 ~md a mcc hamc looking fnr

d1otc hows
~

The family bust ness has surVt\cd
othl:r Jean years when t.:ommod tty
~nt.:~,;s nose d1 ved But u ~ ually 1t s
~n l y one nr twn com modtltcs not
~ the

whole spectrum

Bul anyt lu ng d~&gt;crcuonar) '" f.~r

• Wheat giO\o\Crs have been par:ttt

ds

cqu 1 pm~.,;n l

goes

Wl: It:

L: Utltng

tllatly hatd htt 'The soft wh1!C wheat back Mackav satd We need 10 be
IVp!Cally gnlwn tn Ihe Nort hiO eSI fru gal wtt h "crv unll.u

........................... 73,247 23

Class Materials &amp; Fees
........... c·c•••••.• •••• ••12,647 50

Mloc Recelpto
106,974 64

Grants

In

Aid

Granll

Smte Sources 2T,260.03

AGENCY FUND
OPERATING RECEIPTS
Extrecurrlcular Activities
...75,771 94
Mloc R-'pts 309 00
total
Receipts·
(Operating) 76,080 94
OPERATING
DISBURSEMEKTS
Employees Salaries &amp;
Wages
1,035 87
Employees Retlromont
llenonta
62 75
Purchased Servlc:eo
.,....,"'"'"'''"'"··:29,951 35
SUp'jJiiea &amp; Materials
.
56,255 67
Capilli! Outlay 617 49
Other Objects 5,275 00
Tqtal Dlaburaemonta(Oper)
93,218 13
Exc Rcpts Over/(Under)
Dlab
(17,13719)
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(biSI!URSEMENTS)
Contributions
&amp;
Donatlono
20,475 09
TOTALS
OPERATING RECEIPTS
Taxes.
2,755.131 28
Tuition
48,784 60
Earnings on lnvatments

·..........................149.877 74
Food Sarvlctl Salta
.......................243,100 88
Extracurricular Actlvltlea

..........................149.01919

In

aid

lntormod18ta Sourc:eo
............................4,000 00

Stitt Sources

.
10,387,509 13
F-rat Sources
................ ~. :.......949.131 18
Total
Recelpl ll
(Operating)
................... 16,949,894 73
OPERATING
DISI!URSEMENTS
Instruction. 7,997,62690
Supporting Services
..................... 5, 110,395 54
Community Services
.. ;............21 ,809 00
Extracurricular Acttvlttea

.....................,.. 175,516 69
Facilities Acquisition
.
. 1,503,386 69
Debt Sarvlcea 73,560 31

Employees Salaries &amp;

Wages
256,089 07
Employees Retirement
l!enellls
185,094 04
Purchased Services

...... ;................ 1,754,295 51
Supplies &amp; Materials
" ...,..............,:., . .393,124 65
Capilli! Outlay 1,419 49
Othar Objects 6,472 00
Total Disbursements

(Oper)
17,480,789 89
Exc Rcpta. Over/(Under)
Dlsb
(530,895 16)
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
Contributions
&amp;
Donations
31 ,877 07

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
uaukhoe
Dozer Work
20

Yrs Exp
L1cense &amp; Bonded

740-388-9515
388-8030
Holcomb-Shaw Reumon

For purchas1ng my
Market Steer at the
1999 Gallta County Jr Fa1r
Jacob Clagg

~OVING

1999 Empl oyee ol

Clau Mltarlala &amp; FHo
.............................:31,617 09
Mloc Receipts
·:"··-~ .... ,....... .2,229,723 64

(Oper.) ......2,505,276 63
Exc Rcpts Over/(Under)
Dllb •
.(118,76616)
NON-OPERAnNG
RECEIPTS

BULLETIN BOARD

KYOU
SMITHS CUSTOM
CABINETS

SALE

Saunders Home
Next door to Btdwell Post Offtce
Sept 16 17, 18
15058 St At 554
Begtnners Clogg~ng Class
Rutland Ctvtc Center
Tues Sept 14th 6 30 7 30
Dance to Oldtes 7 30 B 30
$2 00 One $5 00 Famtly
Call Vtvtan May
992 7853
THANK YOU
FIRSTAR
For Buy 1ng My
1999 Market Hog
LJ Hood

Cars, Trucks (Any Stze),
Farm Tractors,
Horse Tratlers, Boat Tratlers
FREE Estimates
Call for appt

446-3100

CHILDCARE
Chnstlan woman wtll provtde ch1ld
tn my home $12 oo Day for 1
chtld $20 for 2, etc
CPR Certtfied E MT and
Daycare Management Impending
Expenenced References
Several opentngs Call 245 9582
Meals prov1ded

94 Ponttac
condttton Color Red new t~res
baH!!ry alternator &amp; water pump
H1gh miles all highway
Executtv!l dnver
11 740 446 1969 Pnce $4 995

MEDICAR
SUPPLEMENT
Call for a quote
Ronote Lynch

The Lynch Agency
336 Second Avenue
Galltpolts Ohto

446-8235

THANK YOU
JAYMAR

THANK YOU
JAY MAR

For purchas1ng my
Market Hog at the
1999 Gallta County
Jr Fa1r

For purchastng my
' Market Hog at the
1999 Gallta County Jr
Fa1r

THANK YOU
P Patch Farm
For Buytng My
1999 Market Hog
AmyHodd
4H
Stars

Ludwrg Snare
Drum Set
Pad , Stand, Case
Terry R Sheets

Sheets promoted
at Kyger Creek
CHESHIRE -

Terry R Sheets

has been prnmotcd fr:oni mamtc
nance mcchamC A tO ma tntcn.mcc
superviSOr m the mamtenam:c depart

men I ol Oluo Valley EJect\-1, Corp s
Kyger Creek pl.mt Pl.ml M mager
Ralph E Amhurgcy sa1d
SheetsJOtncd OvEC tn 1976 as a
Jahorcr m the J.Jbor department In
1979 he tnnskrr~ d to thL: mamll:
nam:e department a~ .:1 mamtcn mcc
1
helper and adv.-tnc.: cd to mam tcn ancc
meLhanlc B th e s.-tmc )Car
In 199'i he wos promoted to
mamtcn mcc mcch ;-HIJL A
He IS thed athcr ol three ch tldr~n

and ll\e S 1n G.tlilp&lt;i il s

First to stick on
The first adhestve stamps went on
sale 1n the US on July I I 847 A
likeness ol Bcnj clllllll Fr:mklm was on

the 5 cen t stamp and ot George
Woshtngton on the I() cent stamp

446-9555

$350.00

Harley Owners Group
Galltpohs Chapter
3rd Annual Classtc
BIKE SHOW
Sunday Sept 12 1999
Galltpohs H 0 G Clubhouse
$5 00 Reg1stratton
12 00 noon-2 00 p m
Food &amp; Beverage Ava1lable
No Coolers Allowed
$5 00 General Adm1sston
Raffle of 1999 Fat Boy
Wtnntng Ticket Drawn
lmmedtately alter awards
Ltve Band
Dtrec1or Tony Beck
446 3096

Proc. Fm. Sllle &amp; ~ of
Aaeeta ............10,300.00

Prac-

Jacob
Carpet and Vtnyl
Installation and Repa1r
Also Restretch
Twenty Years Exp
Free Est1mates
Bill Pnce

37 ·2164

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems wtth
your dnv1ng record, DUI s
speeding ttckets etc
Same Day SA 22's 1ssued
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960

French Ctty Twirlers
Baton &amp; Flag Corps
'taktng new members
through September
Call Mtsty 441 1354
K II 446 8268

serentty House
serves v1Ct1ms of domest1c
VIOlence
call 446·6752 or
1-800-942-9577

ATIENTION

MOJ-LOHAN CARPETS

OSU Alumn1 &amp; Fnends
The Annual Gallta County
OSU Alumnt Banquet wtll be held
on Thursday September 16th
at 6 00 PM at the Holiday Inn
Dr Erven wtll be the featured
speaker Cost ts $15 00/person
lor the buffet dtnn.er Send RSVP
to Dr Gary Clarke 308 Silver
Bndge Plaza, Gallipolis OH 45631
740 446 2525

1/2 Pnced Remnanl Sale
p
OH

Fnday 9-3-99 at 6 pm
If you saw the acctdent at the

entrance ramp to the S1lver
Bndge on At 7 please call
/'.rlil\

675-2527

Orter
446-7 444 or 388-0173

Now hrring tor new
fast food chatn located tn the
Galltpohs Market Place
Full and Part ttme shtlts
ava1lable Appltcalians are
bemg taken al Fnendly Mart
1n Rio Grande
77 St R1 325 North
(Bestde McDonalds)
Fast Food expenence
but not necessary

lram

Sale of

...... .. - 412.1140 45
. . . . ~..27,2e0.03

GOYERMENTAJ:. FUNDS
Opea.U.. T,...,_rln
..;;;;;;~·
4t
Advet
en In :·: ·~122,SU
57,416.88

Refund of Prior v-.
Expend .. - ....14,1811.62

Opllretlng lr8r1"'-0ul

·-

... (178, 137.841

Mve.....out

.....; ........,•.• (1 08.864.23)

Refund of Prior YMre
Racolpts ..--(11,27547)
Total O!her Fin
Bourceo(U-)

-·

•.373,414 86

ex-

Recelpto,Sourcao
Overt(Under)
D'-burHmanto &amp; Other
USM/Nel
(82.202 84)
Beginning Fund Caoh
llelance... 1,524,199 82
Ending Fund Cooh
BaS.nce
1,524,19982
Reoervad
For
Encumbrllncee

............. 263,14774

Unreaerved

Fund
1,281 ,052 08

BaS. nee
EXPENDAI!LE TRUST
FUNDS
DlltlurHmenta &amp; Other
••• ~.625.89

USM/Nel

B41tlnnlng Fund Caoh
B e -..- ..... 111 ,254.38
Ending Fund Cooh
lle18nca ... 151,1180.48
Unreoervad
Fund
llelance . ..... 151.18Q:48
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
Faders! Sourcea
................

392,426.28

Operlling Trsnofera-ln
...... • • ......

• 55,594.35

Advancn·ln. 51,447.37
Total Other Fin
Bources(U•o)
........ .... ...... .528,~ 03
Excaa
Receipts/Sources

Over/(Undar)
Dloburtementa &amp; Other
UHI/Hel
407,961 87
Beginning Fund Caoh
Balance
560,731 64
Ending Fund Cuh
lleS.nce ...... ..118,668 71
R••erved

tor

Encumbrance• 280 00
Unretarved
Fund
Balance...... 968,413 71
AGENCY FUND
Refund ol Prior Ynra
Expend .
41 34
Total Other Fin Sources
.20,516 43
(U•o)....
Exceu
Recelpti/Sourcea
Over/(Under)
Dloburtamonta &amp; Othor
UHI/NOI .
3,379 24
l!aglnnlng Fund Caoh
llelance...... . ..49,480 06
Ending Fund Caoh
52,839 30
llelanca...
Reoerved
For
Encumbrencaa ..t,590 71
Unr•••rved

Fund

Balance.
48,248 59
TOTALS
F-ral Source•
.,...............
992,426 28
Operlling Tre,.lera-ln)
........... 178,137 84
AdvonCH-In. 108,864.23
Refund of Prior Years
Expend
.. 14,230 96
Operlling Tranafera-Out
........

ll~c=========R='v=e='=='===FF~A ~====o:r:e:y:=::·~~==~~================~~

than the pnct.: lour )Cars ago

Smtth sa1d

..........................38,230 14

Extracurricular Activities

Ruffed Grouse Shelter House

the Month pJ.1quc also d1 splayed m
the lobb)

Idaho and 111 Montana
rom Mdc.:kay chtet fmanctal opcr
ator f01 Kcnn cwtc k b.tst.:d Agrt
Northwest smU the large pn,atdv
own~,;d larmmg op~,; r atwn 1s ~ ttl!
r~,;pl.lung v1tal wwn out ~qu 1pm cnt
and 1s contmu m g mtnor dc\e lor rncnt
proJC&lt;.:ts started mme than l yc tr .tgn

Earnings on Investments

Sept. 19

~:: n gra\ed on th~

consumer sciences, Ohio State

Public Notice

Notoa
462,840.45
EXPENDABLE TRUST
FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Earnings on lnvn1monts
............................ 61 ,647 60
Total
Rtcelpto (Operallng) 61,647 60
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS
Facltltioa ~uloltlon
.............
21,021 71
Total Dlaburoomonta·
(Oper)
21,021 71
Exc Rcpta Ovori(Undor)
Dlsb
40,625 89
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
OPERAnNO RECEIPTS
Food Sorvlcoa Solos
..........,.............:245,1 00 68
Clall Moterlala &amp; Foes
.......... :.. ·t8,969 59
Mlsc.Recelpla
...................:.2 122,440 00
Total
Rocolpto (Operatlng) 2,386,510 47
OPERAnNG
DISBURSEMENTS
Employees Salaries &amp;
wages
255,053 20
Employees Retirement
l!onaftla
185,011 29
Purchased Sarvlcos
..................... :1 724,344 16
Supplies &amp; Mllorlolo
386,868.118
Clip Ita I Outlay .... 802.00
Other Objects I , 197 00
Total Dloburoemento-

Mcintyre Park

rt:scncd parkmg !&gt;~p3l:t.: dt'slg nated 111
her name 1 '-.:Omp hmcn ltr) mea l tn
the hosp1tal c.tlctcna her p1t.:tun.: tn

sctous Ianners
tor oF a Walla Wall1 Pord de.Jiersh tp
, Smith satd several of hts 1cgtonal
We rc scll mg about hall ol what
~o mpc t 1to t s art.: laymg ufl Y.orkcrs ur we d1d thi s last year Tone s,ud
£t s
have closed branches And th e slump down down all over tn Eas tern Ore
~as prompted a fc" employees at gon Eastern w.,htngton Northern

48,764 60

...........•............,949,131 19
Receipts
Total
(Operating)
.....,··:·::":"::.·.14,425,653 72
DISBURSEMENTS
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS
lnstrucllon 7 997,626 90
Supporting Services
.•................... 3,110,395 54
Community Servlcea
21,80900
!'xlracurt:lcular Activities
.......................... 175,516.69
Fecllltles Acqulslllon
..................... 1,482,864 98
Debt Sorvlc:es 73,560 31
Tolal Disbursements·
(Opor)
14,861 27342
Exc Rcpts Ovar/(Undar)
Dlsb
(435 617 70)

Sue Ann Blam
the hospllal Johby and her name

P1ckup truck .md c; .tr sales h,wc
slowed dramatically as regtonal agn
culture based Cl.:Onomtcs struggle and
farmers rem m dtsc.:retwnary spend
111g sa td \Vy att Tone fmance dm:c

2 733, 131 28

Federal Sources

Jackson
A~ cmphlye\! \) t lh~.: m\mth B1a1n
teC&lt;tved aS 100 lJ S savtngs hond .1

from the growers Hawley sa td
itlroughout the rur.1l economy
We have to wau for thetr harvest
' I don t care how far down the Hopefully we re up htgh on thw hst
(c9d cham you arc tn thiS 1lll hu fer to get patd when the) get pa td

Tuition

•

.................... 10,387 509 13

O h10 Her -..uungcst
J am~s ._: ndu~lttd Irom PPHS m
1YY6 u1Li t s 0rnplo)t.:d h) Gt.:no s 111

of money out that s yet to come tn

Tax••

Public Notice
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Contrlbutlona
&amp;
Oonatlont
11.~1 11
Proc Fm Salt &amp; LoM ol
Assets , .. . 10,300.00
Proceeds from Sal• of

4,000 00

Farm dealers, suppliers
~eathering tough times
Sales are down at farm tm plemcnt
dealershtps ~ prompltng layoffs and
~ranch dosmgs for some and
growers are beoomtng s1tng1er when
rt comes to applymg fann chemtcals
Industry offlcwls s~y
: We re pretty much the first on
tjlc food cham satd Ktrk Smllh of
Smllh Truck &amp; Tractor '" Pasco

YoorEnded
June 30. 1999
SOURCE
DESCRIPTlON
GOVERNMENTAL
FUNDS

State sources

D~.: la\\;.Ut:

Other crops - mdudmg apples
are expc n ene~ng Si mil arly
depressed rnces due (0 a r.tngc of
factors tnc ludm g overproduclion ami
the slow recovery of the As~a n ccon
ornv
In Othello Larry Hawley of B&amp;H
Ag Chem sa.d sales have slowed .md
prof1t margu" ha\e shrunk as grow
crs upt for !ewer apphcattons of ter
trhzcrs hcrbtcrde s and pcst tc1d~:s
Thts lime of year \&gt;e have a lot

Education For the Fiscal

Intermediate Sources

She calls herse lf an outstde gut
and finds the people she works 'wllh
.dud cxc~..:utlve oft tcer
• Blam began w01kmg at HMC on the mo!'lt rc\"ard1ng part of bt.:1ng at
• No\ 14 1994 as a nursmg a\siSta nt HMC
••m pcdtatncs and became full time on
' two sons rcs1dc m
Blun and her
Ga
lil
polts
Fc~r)
Greg a 1995 grad
• March I 1998 Prevtousl} she ~&gt;as
· a clerk cash ter lor Harr) Stders Jew uate of P01nt Pleasant H1gh Sc hoo l
elry Store 10 Galhpohs Ferry W Va ~,;urrt:nt l v \\ Orb at St0\1.'! 1 lndu ~tnes

: He Warnes th e elfecls wtll spread

h

11

garden

over mtu other sectors of the econo
01Y

)

hope that l&gt;&lt;~lln "

such as hasebull md vollcy hall and

•

I

r... fng~..~ r H~.:d pr'll~rl' h' ~gtn '' tt h
\ilU rc talmu a bil ~ 1 1 an .. ~ II ,,,u

Her hobble.;::. Jncl udc 1110!'11 ::.por b

s

(

h "'· h;IJJ

Vocattonal School

KENNEWICK Wash ( II.P) costs about $1 per busl1el to produce
Jhe slu)llp m crop pnces hunmg ' bu t pnccs ha~c been 1umu ng .1bout
Pauf1c North10es1 fa11ners ts splll mg $2 73 per bushel - about $2 less

c

tU'l.: ... nm~.

t.&gt;Xtns th 11 "' n t runmeJ twm the 1__..:.P..:u:.:b:.:l:.:lc:..:.:N:.:o:.:tl:.:c:..:e~fooJ e' c:n 11 thr.: nn k!tnJtlnl! ha~ lt:na
STATEMENTS
Combined Financial
1~ k.illcJ "'''11 1 tho~nu~h ;ch\: 11111~
Report of lho Board of
It Ihe f,,._xl ''J"n L. . o~i'-.t:d hlndk J \Jr

;July's HMC employee
~of the month named

a nurs1 ng asststant at Carc}1aven

(

sene a:s ,m ::ude to the health heal
mg and com lort of the persons com

lO

Sll)'

Co c hatr ol the Organ rz.nw nal
tnd P ltlt.:nt R1ght... T~.: ~m1 .\t

GII.L Lif'OLIS- Sue Ann Blatn
' nursmg asS istant m ped1atncs at
Hol zer Mcd~eal Ce nter was named
:Jul) employee ol the month satd
•Charles I Adktns Jr prestdent and

I

Department of Chaplamcy St:n u.;~.:~

HMC he sen es on the hospllal '

;u ntil 197-1

That"" tx:~.

(Becky Collins Is GalUs Coun-

110

l:':•:tc=r~~~~~~==jj::::;:~t;y·:•;•~o~en~~:on::•:~~t=f=o=r~~~m~l~ly~e~nd~~U~n:•v:e:rs:lt~y~)~~~~~~~~
p!llt.ll~&gt;.r.:
Public Notice

Team and tht: Volunteer
C luplam~ A..sMH.:I H10n Ex~..:cuu'c
Cnnnmttt;e H~.:: ~~ :1 b\) ud m~..mherot

E ll11~.;~

Cuv3hna a Fall~ !rom !Y:.o7 ~

1t

"'"' ,. 1'"'" lut n ' " 1 , er .mJ I'"P tt mto 1he freeter to enJO\
ll u .,\Ill nudll lhll hi: ,,It,;

H o~ pK~..:

an an 1nstrm:tur and as
currently work1ng 1n the field of ere
atl\e art~ and wd lnt.:ss The1r daugh
te r Ra~.:hael a graduate of the Um
\Orstty ol R10 Grandt.: \'\- Ill bt:glf\
graduate st:hool thi S t.1ll stud y m6
student a ffmrs at Oh 1o St.He Un rve r

111

,~"'

HMC s

the Gal ita Cnunt\ United Way .md a
member o t the G tlll1 Count\ Mm1!'.
pn.{Sident and ch1 ef ex.ecuttve officer
Lund became full lime chaplain at ten a I Assoc 1a11on
Lund de&lt;elopcJ the ,oJuntecr
HMC on July &amp; 1974 and was
chapla1nc)
prog1am at HMC 1\t(h a
Installed as d~rector of ehaplamcv ser
presen t membershtp of approXImate
'tees on Sept 15 1974
Jy
45 clergy He was recogn11ed for
.A nallVC or Dawson Mmn he
25
years as a chap lam and member ot
graduated !rom Concordm College m
Moorhead Mtnn m 1965 v.tth a the Assoctatton of ProlesS1onal Chapl)achelor of arts m math and b10lo~y lams on March I 1999 at tis annual
and recetvcd h1 s master of dt\inttv mecung
Lund IS proud ot the You Are
~egree from Wartburg Theologtcal
Never
Alone de' ottonal senes
Semmary m Dubuque lo"a m 1969
Dunng the summer of 1967 was a " htch can be seen da~ly on the hos
st udent chap lam 1n the Clmtcal Pas pual s closed L 1rcu n te le\ 1s10n chan
ncl Th ts co llecuon of sp tntual tncs
toral EducatiOn Program at Mas:-,a
sages \\3~ re~..:entl v produ~..:ed by the
Lhusells Genvrall-lospttal1n Bo..,lnn
Peter s Lutheran Church tn Balli
more Md Lund was pastor at St
Paul Lutheran Church m Pomcto\
hom 1969 until 1973 He "as a'" '

put
re111.:

'

0 ..

•

(1 78,137 84)

Advanceo-Out
' (1 08,864 28)
Refund of Prior Years
R...ipts • (18,275 47)
Total Other Fin Source•
(UHo).. ..
.920,659 32
Excess
R...lpls/Sourc:es
Over/(under)
Dlabur1amenta &amp; Other
UuaJNet. . 389,764 16
Beginning Fund Cosh
llelanc:e
2,307,649 15
Ending Fund Caah
llelonc:e..... 2,897,613 31
R•earved

for

Encumbrances

..............
273.018 45
Unreaorved
Fund
Balance •

2,424,594 86

Caeh In l!anko (Nil)
2,547,379 63
Invaotmonto. 150,233 48
Toto! Fund l!alanco
.
2,697,613 31
MEMORANDA DATA
AOHIIed Valuation
..
124,058,230
tnslde10 Mill
3 8000
Outoldt10 Mill 21,2000
ADM...
2,26410
Number of Non-Carl

Emplo~Me.....

Cart

114 00

LONG &amp; SHORT TERM

lO'It Smatt all ~~ M1ntatort
""''ltlarlan Sh..,..-d Oog on

Period -

-

752.500 00

RedUrned-Durlng Fiscal

Balance 6/3011999
.. 702.500 00
(9) 12 lTC

-

BID ADVERTISEMENT
SiteWorl&lt;
SEPTA Correctional
Fecllity
7 Weal 29 Prlv•
Nelloonvllle, Ohio
Panlch, Noel, Dawoon +
Aasoctateo
Archltecta &amp; Englnoofs
507 Richland Avenue
Atheno, Ohio 45701
(7~) 592-2420
SEPTA Correctional
Feciilty, will rocolvo
oeated bldo on tho
following C&lt;;~ntracta '
Site Work Cost
Eatimate $60,000.00
Alternate 1 Cost
Eatimata $48,000.00
Silo "fOrk Includes

,.moving soli malarial at

tUr of alto and placing it
In exlattng pond area on
1111 Mlocelloneouo alto
otorm drstnage Included
In project.
Bids shell be on a
lump sum baals with an

aitomate for Interlocking
retaining wall
SEPTA correctional
Facility will receive bids
until 2 30 p m local limo
on September 15, 1999
at 7 Weot 29 Drlvo,
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764
Bide received after this

time will not be
accepled l!lda will be
opened and publicly
read aloud lmmodlatoly
alter tho spoclliod
closing time
Coplao olthe Bidding
Oocum•nta

may

be

examined and obtained

at the office ol Panlch

ANNOUNCEU EN :;

1

Cc_.,...

Gonnoman Seoktng
shtQ from NICe Female

Lost White Faced Cow Berween
Wf'lit• Aoad &amp; Bufav11te Po' ler

Rootl.7--4
Y1rd Sale

For li

Wal ks &amp; Fnendsl"up St
plies To cu. 339 clo G
Dally Tr•bune 825 ltiird
Galipofu; OH 45631

Engineers, 507 Richland
Athens

OH,

45701 upon payment ol
depoolt of $40 00 lor
each set ol documents
Any bidder returning tho
documents

In

good

condition within ten
days ol the bid opening
will be refunded the lull
doposlt, minus any
ohlpplng charges Any
non-bidder returning the
documents within ten

days will be refunded
half of tho deposit
The alto mey be
Inspected by l!ldders at
9.00 a.m. September 8,
1999

Bids lor the above
described work must be
accompanied by a l!id
Guaranty meollng the

Meet Beauhlul E•ciling W
Worldwide• 26 000 tfaPpy C. .

TRAINEE

DATING

TONtGiftt
Have Fun Meeting Ehglble~
gtes In Your Area Call For
t.nforma!IOn 1 800 ROMANC
Ed 9735

message

lndlv•ctuats W1tl PartiCt pate In A.n
lmenstve On The Job Traming
Pfogram Oes•gned To Prepare
You For Bra nch Manager Re
sp ons1btltt1es The 18 Month
Modu lar Trammg Program In
slructs You In All Aspe cts Of
Managmg Credtt E•tensto n Ac
cOunt Ad1ustment Busmess De
velopmenl And Pers onnel Staff

•RQA.pp heants For Th s Entry Level
OpJX)rtumty ShOu ld Have Four
Yea rs Post H1gh School l;duca
tlon Tra1mng Or Work Expen
en ce (Sales Expenenee Pre
terred) Strong Wnnen And Ver
bal Commumcatlon Skt!ls And A

ture Small Appl•ances Clocks

Comrortets Lamps 1 Much Morel

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

96t1t

30 Announcementi

AU Yard Salea Nuat Be Paid In
Adunce Deadline 1 OOpm 11\e
day Defore the ad Ia to ~un
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1 DOpm Friday

New To You Thrift Shoppl_

9 West Sllmson A~
740-592 1842
Ouahly ctolhmg and housitlold
tlems S 1 00 bag sa!e htfy
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday:
9005;30

AACO yard sale

Star Milt Park

Rac1ne Sept 16 17 9am 4pm
Old Silverware plcmc b'askets
toys curtams clothmg dtshes
lamps Christmas decorations
exercise equJpment m1rro1s

Petra FaShiOOS Designer llfr
te Pnced Under $40 00 Slz
4X Same Gowns SX Boa
Show Or A Gh ost
Tell You

11nens bl[nds chest of drawers
hollow core mterlor doors 6 ft

$1

closet door kntok knacks mtsc

$700

All proceeds for SHS 5cholar
ships Oonat•ons appr~ctated
CaM 740 949 2031 740 949 2011
or 7.40-949-2656 l hanks for your

Gtveaway

1 Long Hatred Caltco Cat &amp; K'l
tens 740 446 1062 Call After 5

support Speci al pnc es second

day

PM

PI Pleasant
&amp; Vlclntty
4 Fam 1~y Yard Sate 2nd Streel
Pomt PJeasant Friday September
101h Saturday september 111h &amp;
Sunday September 12th Somelh
1ng For Everyone!

Ful l S tooded

Shepherd To A Good
Plenty Of Room To Run

9061

Frt &amp; Sat

t

COin Avenue

80

Auction
and Flea Market

2623

Two all wh1te and one_"io':$,;S:
, tens lo good hOme :J{
3777

POTENTIAL

Val d Onver s ltcense Mus1 Be

t:orm s AI Home ~o Exper ience
Necessary CALl TOLL FREE
1-800-966 3599 Ekt, 260 1 $34 00
Re luMab~

"

fee.

DRIVE THE

'" Reg

0 T

FJ

Amencan General F1nance Offers
A. Compet1ttve Benef1ts Package
lncludmg Medtcal Dental And A
40 1(k) Plan For tmmedale Con
Slderalton Please Send Your Re
sum e To Amertc an General
Fmance PO Box 702 Jackson
OH 45640 0702 Please Vtslt Our
Web Stte AI www agfmance com
EQual Opportun ty I:IT"(lloyet"

BIG RI GGS'
Tru ck 0 1vmg

na m ng No--EMter Necessary •
21 8o Over 1 8ef-;;213 1303 (Toll
Free)

ACCOUNTING CLERK We
Have A Full Tmle Qlllent ~ In Our
Acc ount ng _peparttne nt For An
lnd v dual f~at Has A Strong
Computer a.kllls And An Ac
cbunl1ng Baic:ltDround Or Deg ree
If! Accoun.hi\g Or Related F teld
Expene nce In M1croso11 Olftce

Thanks to all the
kind expressions
of sympathy durmg
the loss of our
beloved sister.
It helps knowing
others care.
A special thanks
to the Pbys1cans,
Nurses, and other
Staff of Holzer
Medical Ctmter,
Urgent Care and
/ntenszve Care
who showed such
kindness and
compassion dunng
her brief illness.
May God Bless A
Luella Ht:nry
Vada Mao

Woul a Be V1ry H4ttpful Succ:ess
ful Ca nd1 dal&amp; Must Have Good
CommuniCation SIIJIIS And EnJOY
Work in g W1tn Peopla ln A Team
Health Dental Vtslon &amp; L1re tn
sura. nce 40tl; And Vacatton
We Are A l.,.., E'slabhshed Gat
llpo s Area 8ush\ess For Inter
v1ew Const&lt;:Mrlfio!"' Please Send
Your Resuft'tf ~th ~ Cover Let
ter Sta1 ng Why Vou Are The
Person For thts Pottl!on To Bo,;
OH 24 c / o q,alhpol:fp; Oa ly Tr1b
une 825 T~ Avenue Galllpohs

ptf45631 •

t

(I'TENtK!N
Ha"" A Coiillbuter ?

Pill fi'!l;.l'iilik•
S2 S $75hit RTIFT
wwWpcl~com

Attn LPNs 'tNt( E-MTs And Par
lmediCSI 88Cqq'le An AN Or BSN
Gradua1e .a:t,.~f'~rease Your In
come Wtth out Going Back To
School• To Schedule Your Inter
v ew In Hunlmgtan Call Ange a
Copeland By Oct 7 1 800 737
2222

Rtck Pearson AuciiOn Company
full ume auctioneer complete
auction
serv1ce
Licensed
166 Ohio &amp; Wesl Vtrg1n 1a 304
173-5785 Or 304 773 5447

Lost and

Found female Coli e mhl

Wedemeyer s Au chon Serv•ce
~liS OhiO 7.t(}-379 2720

lar AI 62 above Mastm
leglloot 740-992 65 78

contract

Found on At 62 near
Pan Collle m )( Cream
Red Collar Can call

coil'eEI'

(740)992 6578

124 Wellston, Oh to
740 384 621 2
I·ttt••• AND STOKER COAL

Found Very Tame While ~abtt
near 22 &amp; Jackson Ave. Wed
ovemng (9 e 99) (304)675 2901

N.E.A.P. YOICHERS

ACCEPfED
IELIYERY AVAILABLE
7amtHRU 4pm
MONDAY•FRIDAY
7amTONOON

Lost boys
port Jumor 1
lound caJIUn.oo•&gt;. "'"'

The projecl ahall be
completed within 10

Card Shower
Sept. 20th

consecutive weeks

In Memory

I" LD'flina Memory

of OUr Motlier
U~O!.t!lt

Anitn Buckley Hajlfl
Anrta, pari of us
t~ent wtt h you 1
when God called!JJ

39790 Sumner Rd.

'WI'J{Jj'E!PT
9111116 to .3116197

110

Stuffy !Mfssd 6!J
'Bill, rBo6 &amp; 1(Jltft
110

~omeroy, OH

3 Mi{es-'rlqrtli of Vmton on St :J&lt;j 160

Help Wanted

45769

740-388-8184

Help Wanted

Arbors at Gallipolis

170 Pinecrest Drive
Ga11ipolis, Ohio 4!'i631
Phone: (740) 446-7112
Fax: (740) 446-9088
EOE

one-part lime pOSition

10:00

hour$ per week) for a Case
M.m 1ger m the CrossroaCII Program Th1s temporary partlime pos1t10n IS avallab11 OCtober 1, 1999 through June 30

2000 The nff1ce will be located m Galh a County
Reportmg to the !(.l~tor of Crossroads and Doan of
Students

the successful

c•~tdate

for fh1s pos1110n Will he

responstble for deftvery of JiJ SCCVICCS IO and fOr pariiCipanls
of the progri:lm FunctJOfi!f'wJII mclude provldtng necessary
onenhmon scrccmng assessment and enrollmt.:nt of the pro
gram parftctpants, workmg ~nh staff/facultvJsc r\ICC
prov1dcrs to msurc .1cccss ta all Crossro.-1ds Program "'ompo

OCTltS and COill!ll UOity setvu.~es, provide adVISing/SUppOriiVt.'
serv1ces; •ppllcat1on referrals 10 enrolled partiCipants m un
tammg c. nrollm~nt and foJiby, llP records of vach asstgned
part1c1p mt "orkmg wHh supcrv1sors 10 dci Jvcr pwgr.1mm1ng
to each parllctpa nt 111 an effective cffi~..:J~:nt lllclllllcr con"'ISicnt
w1th pos1t1vc procedures and requaremcnts wenllmg mt et
mgs or tra1n1ng scsstons M necessary and other admuustr Ill\ c

dut1es as .1ss1gncd

""

Mu~t h.IVe 1 vahd

htcnsc l!Dd

t1on Degree m

reiUl~le transporta

Psydhology, 'Edocahonal or

rcl ned field preferred
year of expcncncc in pr&lt;)\ 1d111 g
duect S~.:T\ lt:t.:S to cconomtqlly vulnerable vouth and or Jdults
prcft.:rrcd No be nef1t s avatlablc w1th th1 s po~~nt10n

Interested c.md1datcs should send a letter of mtcrcst aml
rcsumt: bt:lon: the deadlineoot September 20, 1999 Rc ~umcs
\~ Ill bt TCVIC\\ Ld aS TCCCtVetJ I

tono,,mg Items
FUR,~iTl)RE A HOUSEHOLD 182 cu h GF. Refngera10r l JTS old
JK

lm 1ng rm

sutte 5 pc bedroom s.unc rechner

wa14;

craflllt.:m.!J

and lots of m1sc

COLLECT18L£S 1tn r.antl r1e safe Porcdam 2 burner y,uuJ tronwJrt

(\\a~nn md GNwOiiJ)

I~

•ron kettlel barn lanterns stone Iars &amp; Jugs

(6 &amp; 8;; 11} blue 1ars '' 11m hds ole msuhnors corn she lt.'r aJwTe
geelt r h-abv doll cradlt old sleds coppc:.:r fire cxtmgwshcr chJcJ(en
fel:de~ hlc 5moker cro~ ~ ~.: ut ~aw \\Ooden pullqs shacklei &amp; sur
rups R)JssWite crystal tkpr("'~•on Cape COd b) A\On Frmon and
mf1t&gt;r 'lint' idass"ar~ ami dun~ \tatkms collec!lbi~~A LOnAAberger
Basht\ old"'books W10d\ \\S olo piCtures (I dau~d 1~1 ) qmlt pes

al:ld

lm~

or lniSC

MISC lr/)t bi.:&lt;lffi ba!Jnc~.: ~LJ.ics (wc1ghs m grams) Cannon 3, mm
Cafll,l'ru ugga2e doors pn:s~ urc cooker (nev. ) 21 v.omans iO

spt(d b1~e 'ColUmbia ~ \\htd b1qclc Chddrens mrs la"n furmturc
01rpt1 mokrs CB eq01pmuu blmd~ screen bouse: car CO\c:rs and
earners left handed golf clubs flshmg eqUip wmc malong kit ammo

hom and lqtol . . .

TOOLS

.'t.NB.OThEitS

Cnftsman table saw, Craftsman ~noll saw

Craft~man rQUICt and rahlt I meral workrallle Homehre 16 super
ex c ha.n~a¢ HOirle:l.ite l 2 hp vetdeater shop vac cha1n sav. ca:-;e
gas c 1ns Vi(l'Qr roci-h &amp; Kaugcs table damps &amp; hook.~ 'anous h
toob \ :trd -and g1fd~n t0•)ls (11..: \\) garba~t.: cans yard dump cart 4 x
~ 1r11lu 11rc ch:Uns, dn l mJI syppl1es &amp;as and wo~tn p1pc: d~.,~rt

md

lumht r' ' llve$,,uges b'drauh( !Tu1d ancrlots of m&amp;S{

Mood1spaug11 Auctloneenng Sen tee~
1
Btll MOO&lt;)l~augh
Aucttot)eer
Ohto Ltc #"\~) · WY Lt( # 1118

~

Phom ( -tO) 982 262'1

limHrs11y of R1o Grande

Cash P&lt;Nill( llJ Refreshments
\ot respons1biL for lCCidents or loss of propu11

Announu mcnts d;v of ~Jlt takt prccedtnce p\er pnmtd 111 lt{nat

ltcensed and Bonded tn Fa\Or af State of Ohto

,
(

M1cmwaves 4

loveseat drysmk; co1Jee and end tables blllcher block table console
stereo stnger.port sewtng mach~ne color TV student desk and chour
Fngu.iarc
dl)cr Electrolux sweeper and shampooer d1sh
washt r Deh~P~l i.qer, charcoal gnU pauo table w/2 cha1rs \\ lumbreUa
h\lsc tlblcs ·tn Sttrids sm appharlces kerosene hearer gun rack

Ph)lhs M.1son PH'R, Oh"cctor of Human Rcsou1ces
llH N. College Avenuf
R10 Grande, OH 45675
fox 740 HS 4!109 e·matl

AM

Locl11un 55498 4lh AH: Rtcdsnlle Oh10 Fo llow s1gns Due to rna'
IJ1R rom fann msmallt:r home v,e ha\t.: been commiSSIOn(.'d to sell the

2 ea

.

......•

Clenca.l Postuon
Candidates must have M1crosoll
Word &amp; Lotus Knowladge Data
Entry an~ bas c ot11ce dut1es
T1'1 1s 1s a lull lime posliJOI"' wtth
beflef1tl:i a"a table Starttflg pay
IS S6 a11 hou( Please send re
sume or appt)' 1n person oetween
10 00 4 00 at Genera l Refuse
Serv1ce 97 Hubba rd Avenue
Oalltpohs Ohto 4 5631
No
phOne

calls please

Computer Users Needed Wor k
Owl' Hrs $25K $8 0~ Yr 1 80.0
536-()486 )( 7777 W'NW 1Cwp com

11 o

223--1149 Ext 460

100 bed nurstng center w1th 28
bed drstlnct part tocos.ng on vent•lator ancl resptratory care need~;
an experien~ed D1rector Of Mar
keung/Adm t5Stons Candidate
should be self starter and h~fy
motiVated Southern Otuo bcaUOp
wtlh phys1ca1 planr and strong
management team .-.place

Compet111ve compensation pa~
age wtlh ncenttve bOnus program
ava1laDie lor the nghl candidate
RelocatiOrl aSSistance avaltable

;

Send res ume salary expectatp
anc1 referef1ces to
08VId Snyder Admintstratcr

..

Overbrook Genlef
J33Page Stteet
Moddtooort Ohio 45760
1'40-992-6472

..

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTING CLERK
A long established Galhpohs area busmess has a
full-lime opemng m the accountmg department for
an mdtv1dual wnh strong computer sktlls and an
accountmg background or degree m accountmg or
related fteld Expenence m M1crosoft office would
be very helpful Successful candtdate must have
good commumcattOn skillS and enJOY workmg
wnh people m a team atmosphere Benefits mclude
health, dental, viSion &amp; hfe msurance, 401 K, and
vacattOn For mtervtew constderattOn, please seni.l
you resume wtth a cover letler s1atmg why you are
the person for thts posttton to

BOX DH-24 c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Announcements

Cox Bottle Gas
St. Rt. 93 North
Oakhill, Ohio
740-682-9955

Meeting all your Propane needs
Residential • Commerical •
Agriculture

For All Your Propane Needs

Call: 740·742·2271

George Grate
An Independent Sales Representative
11 o

Help Wanted

Major Retailer
Coming To Mason, WV
In December of 1999%
Hiring Early
For Loss Pre,ention tssoolates
Send Resumes or Work History To!
P.O.Bo~ 247

Thursday, September 16 6:30 P.M.

PUBLIC AUCTION

{30

CLEFUCAL $12 St6 /HFt Fu ll
8eneh1s No Expenence Neces
sary Call 8 A fJI 8 PM 1 800
637 523, Ext 1300 Fee

DENTAL BILLER Up to S20 $40
tHr Dental Btt11 ng Softwate Com-pany Needs People To Process
Uedtcar Clatms Tram•ng Provid
ed Musl Own Computer 1 800.

ANTIQUE AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER tl, 1999

The Un1vcrsny of R1q,1:ilrande announces an opcnmg fnr

7PM -ef':M 740-446 9219

251 7475

Public Sale and Auct1on

Public Safe and Auction

I

$3,000 WEEKLYI Malltng
400 brochures AT HOME'
Guaranteed FREE supplies
Slart tmmedtately Rush Sell·
Addressed Envelope MOl
2472 Broadway, SUite #388
AP New York NY 10025
1 877-689 4109 toll ~ee

Chnstmas Aro uM The world &amp;
GJfls Now Hlnng Sales Aepresentauves All A1ea s Also Bookmg
Parbn Cal1 Mon day Fn.Ciay

No E•pef..ncf'

West Milford, Wl' 26451

'Turn ngfit on 'Ewwgton '1?.J{.

POSITION
NO NCEMENT
PART-TIME CASE MANAGER
CROSSROADS PROGRAM

Bab'jsmer needed for two ct»ldren
~ Mlddlepoc1 area 7..0.992..0149

PC Requ1red

9:00AM- 5 PM
Closed Sunday

'TtoJJ &amp; Lt.Z 'Ervm - Smgmg

HaJp Wanted

Needed W II Tra1n Clll 1 888

BINGO
AMERICAN LEGION

't.wmgton Cliurcfi of Clinst
tn Cfinstr'an 'l1 rnon
137 'Ewmgton 'fl.!{, &lt;Vmton, Ofiw
September 13 18 7 30 nrg_fitfy
, ~v 'R._o6 'Ermn - Preach.mg

Barbara Sargent

AVON' All Areas1 To Buy 01 SeD
StwSev Spears :XW-675- "29

Open Daily

Announcements

Jn

DATA ENTRY Nahonal BlHiftQ
See11;s A Full IPart TIIN!!I Medical
8 11ter Salary At S-461&lt; Per Year

Announcements

POST 467
RUTUND, OHIO
GUARANTEED 60 A
GAME, OVER 80
PEOPLE 80 A
GAME, OVER 90
PEOPLE 99.00 A
GAME PROGRES·
SIVE STARBURST
AND COVERALL
MON &amp; WED.
DOORS OPEN AT
4:30 GAMES START
AT 6:30

requirements of Section

153 54 ol the Ohio
Revtsod Code
No bidder may
withdraw hla bid within
sixty days alter the
actual data ol the
opening
Bidders shall note that
tho Prevailing Wage
Rates published by the
Department ol Industrial
Relations are to be
, complied
with
througho~t this projocl
Bidders shall also nota
that the Rules and
Regulations on Equal
Employment
Opportunity (Execullve
Order 11246) shalf be
made a part of lhts

Toys Jeweby Wood Sew1ng
Typtng Grtal Payl CALL t 80()795-0380 E.d 1201 (24 Hrs}

Open To Relo cat ton And Have
The Oesue To Assume Manage
nal Aespor15ibihty

1 868 tl90-ll48,

Street Middleport Th ursdays
Ohio Ltcens e H693 740 989

shOts Very pretty all hght brown
(304)937 2705 or (3041937 33&lt;18

WE EKLY

9 to SPM 2429 Ltn

Bill Mood1spaugh Au cltOneenng
Complete AuciiOneenng Serv tc:
es Cons 1gnment at,~cl•on Mill

To good home Small Come ~pa
Dog 3 yrs old spayed goOd
w1th k1ds Has had her t st yr

$800

Comp lete S1mp1e Go ... ernment

Alm ospher'- lenef1l s Include

Wednesday Sepr 15 at Roger
Roush residence m Aacme OH
SA 124 past Southern H1gh
School left at Ractne 1Lodge
8 ooam to 5 OOpm

7 Month Old White Long H*lrfd
K11ten Fema le Has Had fsl
Shots lnch.Jdmg Rabies llellne
Leuke rnta Very Loveablti.,.lfO
Good Horne 740 245--9100

60

leave

Huge Sate 1 71h &amp; 181h 578
Shoestring Atdge Otshes Furnt-

Start Oatmg TomghU MIYtlun
ptaymg lhe Oh&lt;&gt; Dating Gamt.
800 ROMANCE erteMkln

K11tens lo g veaway
Shots 1 yr old &amp; up
colors [304)882 3880

8~3 15

it to Nn Sunday
.. , _ 2 till p.m
F1iclay lllo!ldiY eclhton
• 10:01,1..,. -.nlay

wau 96755

40

-Dsh Call '40

. . Pilei In - M•QLJHE
2;00 p m
... day bolonl1he ••

~267 E•t 158 Cherry 81011011&amp;
PO Box 190 1158 Kapaau. H*

START

Wan teo RCA Olreet TV older
:mooets W11h II:::C:85s cu d W1 1l pay

Help Wanted .

110

1 888-561 2866

A.mencan Genera l F tn a nce A
Leader In Tl'le Ftnanetal Sentas
Industry Wfln Owtr $ 11 Bllhon In
Asse t6 ""d Mo re Than 1 300
Branches N~Wide Has All lm
mMtate Need For A Branch
Management Tramee I" Our
Jad&lt;soo Office

&amp;IJ. Yard s.tM Must

Mamages Smce 197• Fret.CdiiJ

Magaz1net
WllfW cherry b~~
soms comf?adHi-158 BOO 322

'BirtlitftJy

flowers , gifts or helped
many way during my
recent hospitalization and
recuperation Your prayers
and kind words of
encouragement will never
be forgotten,
Elmai. Lo

8RAHCH IIAHAGEMENT

GaiUpoJJs
&amp; VJolnHy

Dawson

Avenue,

Help Wanted

Awon Prooucls Start yoor own In
Home Busmess Work Fle.llble
Hours Eopy UnllrMed Earnmgs

1571

9513

011 !J{u tqrtl

I d like to say THANKS to
everyone who sent cards,

(304)'158

+
Asaoclaloa, Archllacts &amp;
Noel,

S.hend The Wheel" Cau

473-~

lost Stfoller Out Of Van In
Front Ot Dr Sk•Mer s Olllce
Would Penon Wtto P•ckect u p
PIMM Return Reward• 740 446-

Period ........... 50,000 00

~_;P:..:;u.:.b::.:ll::c..;N:.:o.:.t::;l.:.
c.:.e_ _

You

Free 1 881 292 2002 &amp; 1 888

Leol'l-a.den Floa(J ~eward Of

Balance Beginning of

CNA's

\

Put

INDEI!Tf!DNESS NOTES

The Arbors at Galhpohs 1s seckmg
dependable, energe tic, curmg mdtvtdtwls
for full -ttme and part tune posttwns ,
all shtfts. Must be a team playet
Premtere wages mcluding pay f&lt;11
experience B•meftts mclude health
msurance, dental ihsm ance, tuWton
rennbursement, 401K, and pa1d
vacation. $500 00 stgn-on bonus
Please apply m pet son '

For More Information
446-2342 or 992·2156

&gt;&gt;DAIV EA PLACEMENT&lt;&lt; &lt;
EXPERIENCED OR NOT We n

SUIIIIARY

Card of Thanks

110

of

, 11 o

ASSEMBLY AT HOME It Crafts

Empto) I 11 -············:11 00

Number

Help Wanted

Oak F1le Cab net Sev Pes wtcker Rocker Swtng
Floor lamps 1 Art Noveau Dtner stools Ptctures
Patnltngs Frames Iron &amp; Ttn Art Neveau Ftreplace
tnset Aladdtn lamp/shade other lam ps Mtrror Box
of 5 early Barbtes/clothes &amp; shoes Chtldrens
Books &amp; Dtshes Baby Plates Dolls Ea M1ckey
Mouse T n House Cl Motorcycle Scooter Sled
Ptg &amp; Mammy CJs Kennedy Memo Cups &amp; S
MaJOitca H P Plates Dep Glass Ftsh plate
Covered Compote Fostorta Fenton Ptlgnm
Dresser set
Silver Match Safe
Stgned
paperwetgh1s Mtlk Glass Derby Glass Rosevtlle
Ptne Cone &amp; Ash Tray Hull Corky Ptg Large
Weller Vases McCoy Crocks FrUit Jars M1lk
bottles tnc A Jackson Tractor Seat Pulleys Coal
Hod Tools earn Chalk Gr &amp; Wh Grantte &amp; Grey
Watt S &amp; P Tea &amp; Sugar Canntsters RR Time
Tables Copper Bo1lers 81 Wtse Carver Vase
Co1ns Comm Halves 1910s 5 Dollar lndtan Gold
Lrg Cent Barber Qt Seated 01/Rays &amp; Arrows
Mere Dtmes Vtntage Car Parts 1937 39 Globe
for
Chevy/Piy/Chry/Dodge/Desota
wtndows
Screens for 57 BuiCk/Ford Door Handle guard
plates 48 54 Hudsons &amp; 53 Stude Chevy &amp; Caddy
Hub Caps Muffler 57 58 Caddy 63 64 Chevy 55·
60 CorveHe 55 56 Chevy

JACKSON AUCTION CENTER
52 E. BROADWAY
JACKSON, OHIO 45640
740-286-0675 .
740-286-4817 EVE.

AUCTIONEER: MICKEY MCDONALD
[, ru' II&lt;Pd

&amp; Bortded 111 Stare of 0/no
Doors Open 4 30
'
Refreshments Served

•

�Page 04 • ,......._._........

180 Wanted To Do
110

Help Wanted

110

Pu-.........,-

flelii:M hours A.dvancement op
ponuruties Apply t'l persor.

800 4 H 0246 Or www wtve
4u.c::onw'I081

OrNera 2 Weft Paid COL Tra nng Cld7
No Ell&gt; No
- _,
NoEam
Mooo-,
Nor
1)11

a.n.

To $32..000 11st Yr W IFIJll
f rs P A M Transport Call To ll
Free 1 877 230.6002 www otr

d"""".com

25 !Hour W

t.n

Eom$15

Route Sa es Pos1t10n Ava table

Elcpenencad roo1tng and std ng
pe son wanted ca ll 740 378

6349
hpertanced Serv ce Tech B cy
cle &amp; Lawnmower Assembly
Great Pay &amp; Beneftts

APPLY TOOAY.
STAll TOMOIIIIOW
eau 1.-.esz 2453
Fast Mo.ney No sell ng Not fw'LM
f!arn $1 250 per day 1 800 882

S044 Df272692 PPR
up lo $3

400 o

month proce11lng medlcel
etalms No experience nee:..
aary PC required (800)9.C5

7981

Local Company now acceptmg
appltc at ons for Fu T1me Data
Entry C er~ &amp; Fu I T me P~yroll
Clerk Repty c/o Po n1 Pea sant
Reg ster M l 01 200 Matn
Stree t Pont P easanl WV
25550

Secretary w~nted expenenct
needed '" general bOOkkeepmg
Oh o &amp; WV payrol taxes send
resume to PO Boa 271 Rutland
SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN

COUNTRY Cal Now ToU Free 1
800-~204 0&lt; 1 eoo-&lt;OH164
For A.ppo ntment To Com e To
Nasnv tie Tennessee And Aud
tiOn For MiJJDf Record Producefi

Tha Soard Ot D1recfors Of
Planned Parenthood 01 South
east OhiO iPPSEOl lnvttH API)!
cateons fol' A Fun- J wne Chief E•
acut Vlll Othcer To Lead A Oyna
miC Not For Proftt Oroamzanoo
W th An Annual 8udge1 Of Just
eve One M 11 on Dollars Serv.c
ng E~ght RI.Wal Counues. PPSEO
Pr omotes Aeprodutt ve A gins
And Aespons b I t1es As We I As
Health Of Area Res dents
Through Educat on Advocacy
And Access tile Servtces M n
mum F ve Years E1per enc e In
Health Servtees Or Related F.eld
Wtlh E11perhse In Fu ndril s ng
And Ma ket ng Bachelors De
g ee W tf'l Masr,rs Prete rre d
Compet t1ve Salary Requests FOf
Appllcat on To Char CEO
Sea ch Comm nee PPSEO 39:6
R chland All'tnue Athens OH
45701 o E M a 11 &lt;ppseoOf og
net net&gt; Dead ne For Appltca
1 ens Octobe 8 1999 Start ng
Date As Soon As Search And lnteMew Process C0f'11)1ete But No
later Tnan January 1 2000

EEOIESP

WANTED
63 people to lose 30 bs tn 30
days &amp; earn $$$$$ wh 1e surf ng
1t1e net 1-888 229 5427 www ev

1ali1y ne111oekjood

Wanted dnvers to transport ca s

to &amp; from auctiOns ca I 740 992
6088 between 1oam &amp; 6pm

OffiCe seek ng Med ca Data entry
eps tor Entry Level Pos 1 on FT/
PT Ea:celent Pay PC Reg Call 1

warehouse Ana Delivery Person
Apply In Person No P.hone Calls
F' ease L lestyle Furn tu e 856
Third Ave Gallipolis

8()().540-6333 Exc 2301

8()().298 8506
Models Needed Va ous AS$ gn
ments Contests Ed Send Photo
Request App cat on DEIZ 1209
H II Ad North fPmb t 1 Pldl:&amp;" ngton Otuo 0147

MOTHERS A OTHERS WORK
FROM HOME ! Ma I Older Pa 1
T me &amp; Fu T me $650 $3 600
Month Full Tra mng Prov ded
For FREE Booklet Ca 1 888 234
9897 wwwcash-91 f convhorne
Need Babys ner In My Home To
Watch A 3 Year Old Need Reier
ences 74Q-«t--o867

Need He p In Tobacco Cutters &amp;
Hangers Pay By St ck 0( Hou
740-256-6573

NUCLEAR POWER
PLANT TRAINEES

OTR flatbed tractor trailer drhr

en needed 1 yea

e11pe ence
gooel pay home most weekends
plus ca 740 949 2203 or 740
441 1334
Part t (1"18 ecepttOn sl/ b t1ng clerk
for ocal ph~s ctan s OffiCe Expe
ence w th co mpu)er coding and
mediCal bill ng preferred Send re
sume to P 0 Box 458 Rac:me OH

45771
Part Time HEtiP Needed For Loca
Aelatt Sto e Send Resumes To
P 0 801 141 Ga polls OH

45631

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FDA APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 BOO 813 3585
DAYS Ids Inc Fee

DENS
SECURITY MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CAll 1 BOO 813
3585 EXT 1.. 211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS tds InC Fee

WORK FROM HDMEI
Earn $500 S1500 PIT or $2000
$4000 FIT per month. Ca 1
(888)957 3206 or VIS I WWW a
waysthebeslcom

Business
Tratnlng

GooUipolla ea. .,

H gh School Grads Ages 24 0
Under W th One Yea 01 A gebra
Excellent Program Includes 2
Yea s Fo mal T a n ng Sa a y
Benet ts Fo owed By ASSIQnment
To Nuclear Power Fac tty Re o
cat on Expenses nc Uded Ca 1
BOO 533 1657

9 PM

W LOLIFE JOBS To $21 60 HR
INC BENEF TS GAME WAR

140

We do tra ler damott on&amp; some
homes&amp; uasf'l p ck up 30.C 773

6167

Wll PalnJ HouHI {lntenorlt:wt•
nor) Blm• , Tin Hpob. EJ:peu
.-need Rete ences
Free Est

....... (304)895-39111

Jackson General Hosp ta A p
ley wv as open ngs fo FT RNs
fol CCU ED &amp; MEDfSu g Curren!
state cense requ red and prev
ous relevant exper ence pre
ferred Reply to JGH HR D ec
l Or PO BoK 107 A pley WV
25271 (304)372 273 1 Ext 313
or 314 EOE

MEDICAL BILliNG Unkmned tnPotenhal No E Q)eltenc.
Necessary F •• tnlormat on &amp;
CO ROM Investment S.&amp; 995
$8 995 Ftnlilne no Ava La~ IS
land Automated Med!QI Servte:
es Inc 800-322 1139 Eat 050
VoK; tn KY IN CT

210

Business

SS HOME INSPECTION SS

Bilton
&amp; Growth Industry Protected Ter
r tor es Low Ove tlead C.ash
Bus ness Tra rung Provtded tow

ln'll'8slman1

STAAT YOUR OWN VENDING

1-800-5(16-40.46

' NOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSH";G CO
recommends tha t you do bus
ness w tl'\ people you know ana
NOT to send money rn.rough the
ma I unt l you nave nvestlgated

""' oltenng
2 9 Cents / Mi n PHONE CARD
Rte EASY S$ MONEY l FEW
Hou s 1 Ea n 5500 $5 00() !Wk

CASH! FREE S1es 1 800 997
9888 24 Hrs

W n Ou Beaut lu i Income Pro
due ng Bu ld ng In Mi ne l For
Free Con test AultS fBu ld1ng
p DSpeCIUS V S t www un corn
conteit com Or Send SASE Untcorn Essay Contest PO 801.
1-403 Bethel tq~ ne o.t217 $200

Entry """ AacJwed.
220 Money to Loan
$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Re m~ n ng Payments
On Property Sold Mortgage5
Annu t es Selllements lmme
date Quo tes ' NoDody Beats
Ou P ces Nat ona t Conl ract
Buyers BOO 49 0 0731 Ext 101
lto'WW

narJonak:orlttadbuyers com

CASHI FREE Srtes

, -800-99 7 9888 24 Hrs
ARE U LAZY? Am AM Ea rn
1 1 000 A Day NoSe I ng Not
MlM Compu \e And Sollware
0 stribulo shtp For F ee Into ma
t on Package Cat 1 BOO 78E
8S49 24 Hrs XT 27

AVAILABLE

~EN D ING

ROUTE

10 20 Local ons S•K S OK
$4 000 + Mo Income
All
CASH 100a. F nance Ava lable
1.800-380-2615 24 Hrs

SFREE CASH NOW$ From
Wealthy Fam I es Unloadang M1l
lions Of Dollars To Help M nm&amp;l8
The r lues Wr le lmmed•ately
W1rt0fa Is 8.47 A SECOND AVE
SUITE f350 NEW YORK NEW

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGA~ COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bachelors
Masters Doctorate By Corre
spondence Basad Upon Pr or Ed
ucat on And Short Study Course
For FREE Informal on Booklet
Phone GAMBA DGE STATE
1-80(}.964 8316

180 Wanted To Do
Carpet A.nd V nyl lntal at on Re
pair And Restretch 20 Years E1
per.ence F ee Estimates Cal B I

Pnoe 740-379 21 6&lt;

E &amp; S lawn Ser'llt&lt;:e Des gn lm
p ementat on
and Serv ce
Ava laDle lor Spr ng C ean up
lertl zing and planting F ee est
mates Sat sfact on guaranteed
Greg Mi hoan 3041'675-4628

RECEIVIP(G PAYMENTS? In
veSIOf Pays C ASH NOW For
Your S.ller F nancad Uortgage
Real Eslate Contract Insurance
Annu ty Htghut Pr ces Free
Ouoles Wl"ty Wa f? Ca I R.ch 1
800 888'6450

Prolesstonal

230

Services
.p
"M'"ou-n-,"'s-:T,-re-e-:S:-e-rv-:oc-e-="T::-h-e-:T,-re...:e

1-888-582 3345

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
ft YoUf Hearts In The Country
We ve Got The Farm House For
You W thOUI TI'Ht Farm! Lots Of
Counlry Charm WhH8 PrcktJt
FelltJ8 Included
67 Acre Leve lot 3 Bedrooms
2 112 Baths Ut lity &amp; Pa n try
Ra•sed K tchen &amp; Om ng Room
Kttchen Has Wh te New Cabinets
Eleclr c Stove Frtg washer &amp;
Dryer Included 11 a:28 Front
Porch Overlooking The Valley
11xt4 Back Porch 1376 Patnot
Road Pr ced In Low $70s New
Wh te Ce•ltng Fans l ghls
Plumbing &amp; Carpet Throughout
(Hardwood F oors Under Carpel)
F replace &amp; Lots 01 Sto age Call

6228)

CONSOl DATE DEBT Reduced
Monttltv Paymenls 20 50% Save
ThOusands 01 Dol ars In lnte est
Non-Profn TCC ec»-758 3844

740 379-9000 Or 740 379 9BB7

No land COntracls

Oeb l

TORY Hundreds 01 Le g t mate
Compan es W lh Oeser pt on
Che ck Money Ordel $30 00
Mac s Bus ness. Direct a y P 0
Bo~e 1464 launnburg NC 28352

Consil dal on Need He p Pay ng
You B s' Make One S ng e
lower Montn y Payment Free
Quo e No ObligatiOn Call 1 800
844 8293 OrE Ma ulsOun onf
nanctalsei'VICes com

Know about compu1e 1s? Want to
make money at home? Get ~ou
own onl ne computer storet
bus ness by ntar net

CREDIT PROBlEMS Stop Here
We Can He p loans A\la able
$3 000 And Up No Fee 1 877
663 9269 EXI 221

Truck

No Fee Unless We W n

689 1556

CREDIT COUNSILING

Buckel

TURNED 00WN ON

$0 DOWN HOMES NO CREDIT
NEEDED
GO~ T
FORE
CLOSURES CALL NOW FOR
REGISTRATION
2434 EXT 3205

AI nYI esta11 ~ wt"'
1hiS 1118• pap-' 1$ .$dlf8CIID
1t1e Federal Far~ Act

o! , 96&amp;"""" -... 6oQol

......., . ....,..,.,.,.

-...cllhat.,. -.g.
advatised '" hs newspap9{
am availabae on an equal
"'JJll'!!JJ1" ,....
3 Bedroom House Wf3 Acres
land Few Fruit Trees 2 Bed
rooms Bath Wstan 1 Bec*-oom
Fronl Room 0 n ng Room Ulthty
Room Knchen Bath Oownsta rs
Sits On Storys Alii Road. Ott Route 7 Informal on (140 ) 367
7576 Aller Noon $49 500 00
000

9 Bedrooms 1/1 /2 Bath Ra ncn
Styte HGme Excellent Cond tton
On The Corner Of K neon &amp; Teo
oora In GaiiiPOI•s OhiO 740-446
7928 Even~ngs
Buy Homes From $10 000
1 3 Bedr oom local Government

I Bank Foree osu•es F nanc ng
Poss be Fol" l •sttngs Call 800
319-3323 Ea:t 1709

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down ' Gov I And Bank Rep o s
Be ng Sold NOW F nancmg
Avat ab e Ca ll Now 1 800 730

1n2 Ext 8040

HOME FORECLOS URES NO
MONEY DOWN NO CAE01T
NEEDED! TAKE OVER VERY
LOW PAYMENTS! 1 800 916
9191 E&gt;cT H5023
House and lot lor sale 4 bed
rooms two baths located '" Ca
penter $ 1000 down WAC easy
terms contact David t BOO 333

6910

House located m M nersll' 1e lou
IJedroom LA FF.I u ty room
IJalh basement w th bath a r wa
ter soHener newer roof beaut ful
v.ew of the nve 740-992 9012 to
appo~ntmen

t 800 434

~

fJ
fJ

&lt;§?

*~
~
~
~

:

greatl} apprecwtes the overwhelmm8
kmdne" and sympathy extended to our
Januly durtng our bereavement
R e abo wuh to extend our than~s to
Dr Stone Holzer HospuaL and th e nurse.t
and nurse aids of HoL:er Senwr Care Center

for aU thetr lOve prayers and support
du•mg our ume of need A •pecwl thank
you to Rev Allman and Fam1ly
Rev Alfred Holley and Mr. Opal Lloyd

J ms Drywall &amp; Construct on
New Const uct on &amp; Remodel
D ywau s d ng Roofs Addi
tons Pant ng etc (30.C)674

4623 or (30ol)674.0155

Iassc 1s J1Luction
!Jlouse
15241 St. Rt 160
Vinton, Ohio
Sat. Sept. 18, 1999
7:00 p,m.
Partial List

C,L. Baker mUk bottles, old carnival pitcher 8t goblets, #8 sad iron,
counter scales, coffee grinder, 2
martin bird houses, oak rocker,
composition doll, other dolls,
dinette tables, hutch, beds, sewing
machine, coffee table, desk, bed
w/box spring 8t mattress, vanity
w.mirror, lamps, fire king, hull old
recipes, cook books, more coming
in ...

Finis .. Ike" Isaac (fludionnr)
Licensed and Bonded Favon
State of Ohio #3728
For more information call Vtrgll
at Isaac s Feed Store 388-8880
or Reanie at 388-8741

m

fl

Portland, Ohio
Will Take Consignments at
7:30 on Sat, 18th,

c£&gt;

Dan Smith • Auctioneer

~
~

fJ
fJ

~
~
~

Public Sale and Auctton

~

*Antiques and Collectibles Sale
1st Sat of Month.

for Sale
1

-Lot

1999 Fieetwood 1•1.12 2BR

2BA. "" Sl.nng ""

A&gt;ailallle

(30CI67S~

1.&amp;.65 Electnc two bedroom twO
bams new atr cond.'toner under
p nn ng cu tans S8500 leave

message

(304

-

ltQhts Oak Trun GE Apphancei
o.u s11,500 ""- s 7 40-256New 3BR 2 S.th U WJde 1500

00wn. $210 ptr

....

0A1&lt;W000 HOMES

1.CJ:70 two b8rJ oom tVIi'Q ful balf'1s
cafpel a r COndit oned cal 740992 n61 Of 7~992 2213.

1100-383-61162
Brand New 80s 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths Just $239 /Monlh Free
Delrotery and Set Up! only one at
... Pnce HUrry! oakwOOd Galli-

Pats

OhiO Valley Bank Will Olfer For
Sa1e By Public Auct•on A 1992
Palm Harbor 1.c110 2 Bedrooms
t Bath M/ H 1119639 AI 10 00

Modern cabin on large tarrn AI
bany area must have good relef
ences no nstde pets 740 691

A lA On 9125/99, f'l The

Pomeroy rnree bedroom hOuse
two bedroom apanment relerenc
OS. S8C\.011y par1ly t..nished 740-

prlllll 1 54 _.
.... Hama ..... a lacal •
IIW W wile Ia

--.n

•••er

.xo=oo AM· SEPi'EMHiiA U1, 1999
47S DECKARD ROAD

BWWEJI,omo

Sale IS located a~pn&gt;x1motely halfwa! between Vmton and
Rio GrandeJ. Oh10 on State Route 325 Thrn on Woodsm1ll
Rd at the Hndge. Declwnl Road IS lhe lsi road on the
nght. S1gns wdl be posted
Partial L1s1

Sat,, Sept, 18, I 0:00AM
1815 St, Rt. 7 North,
Gallipolis, Ohio

pc

Secuonal Couch w1th queens ze bed and two recliners

stze

bed Twm bed 4 Drawer Chest 9 Drawer Dresser

5

Dmene Set and 4 chatrs Kenmore washer and dryer Quee n

Commercial Ro_yal Addmg Mach1nt: and Cash Register com
bmauon Safe Combmatlon wuh Keys 2 Sets Coffee tables
and end lables 2 4 drawer File Cabtnels Beds1de S1and
Wmchester Battery Clock and other mi scellaneous C l ocks
Over lhe smk Wall K11chen Cabmel 50 Gallon Aqtlarrum 10
Gallon Aquanum and Stand Rock ng C ha1r lO gt Ivory
Granctc Kettle Reel mer 5 Gallon Brown and While Stone Jar
Round 2 T1er Small T able Brass F1rcstd e Set B sscll Ca rpet
C leaner Laundry Stove Lamp , Bookcase Book Shci YeS
W ood Shelves Book R ack E leclnc Heater Fan Floor
Osc1llatmg Fan Fcghtmg Rooster P1cture Stage Coach and
Three Hitch Team ol Horses Stamped on Copper
Miscellaneous Glassware Some K1tchen W are Mushroom
Camster Set Frasherware 36 Cup Coffee Pot Kenmore
Vacuum Cleaner Push Broom lronmg Board
Guns R Gun Cabmet Hard Shell Case Deer Feet Gun Rack
50 Caillier K 1 Muzzle Loader Brass Pad Box Model 336
Marlm 30 30 Lever Aclion w11h Kasner 4x Scope Mod el SBI
New England Farearms 20 ga Shotgu n Marlm Glenf1eld
Model 70 22 Au1oma11c Marhn Mocfel iJ90L 22 Aulomalic
w11h Golden An11er Tasco Scope
Form and M1scellaneous 1998 Murry Bnggs &amp; Slrauon 17
hp 42 Cut Mower Sears Co ldspot Wmd ow Aar Condtl oner
Propane Gull 4 Lawn Chaus Dusk to Dawn Street L!ght
Wl!d Boar He ad (moun led) Ad ve rusmg~ Ball Caps
Coll cctJOn Budweiser S1gns Bfack &amp; Decker 7 l/4 Ctrcufar
Saw Hand Cham Saw Sharpener MDG Bundy Cnmper
Lar,se Canvas Tarp HB Bench Gnndcr 329 Suhl Craflsman
16 log Cha ms Hack Saws 150 fl Extcns10n Cord
Extens 1o n Cord Tool Pouch Craftsm m Cordless Dnll Acr
Hose A ssortment Cabmet Ht1nd Saws and Cross Cut Saws
Tool Box Roller Cabme1 and Chcs1 Angle Head Gr ndcr Car
Vacuum 6 amp and 10 amp Battery Chargers 6 and 8
Alum mum Ladders 100 ft Tape Measure M scellaneous
Bolls nuiS and scre ws SRray Gun F586 Suhl Weedealer
Ryan Weedeater A1r Tank Pressure SRrayer Au Compre ssor
3 1 2 horsepower Crafl sman1 2 I 4 Ton Floor Jack 2 hp
Bnggs M otor Sump Pump F1re Extmguasher Parmak Fence
Charger 6 fl 2x4 Ch1cken W re Parual Roll Barb W re
Cyclone Seeder 8 fl Bunk Feeder Darry Scale Wheel
Barrow Draw bars 3 Wh eel Gates (Iron gales m ade of whee ls
off farm tmplements) Frost Free Sp1got Sawhorses. Sway
B ar Yard POo l R o ll of Insulation Furrmg Stnps Automatic
Dog Feeder Pet age Traps Hooks Stmger Sinker Floats
Calf1Sh Bau Rods and Ree ls SMV Emblem No 2 Wash Tub
Zcbco F1sh Reel and Rods Mmnow Trap Top Lmk Bush
Beer S1gns Rooster Weather Vane Axe Rake S~uare
Grease Mtscellancous Tools Mattock Sledge Hoe Stiovcl
Forks Post Dnver Grease Gun Fuel Cans Level ;;cy1he
h6 Oak Lumber Approxm1 alely 130 boards 10 fl
Refreshments and Food will be ava1lable
Porta Polly will be a&gt;adable
Cosh or Approved Check
Nor Responsible For Acctdents or Lost Items
Owner John R Hutchmso n
Auchoneer Flms "Ike" I saac
Phone 388 8741 or 388 8880
Our next ou1 s1dc aucu on wil l be September 2S r 10 00 AM
out by Wilkcsv lie Oh1o If you trc ntcrestcd n h tv ng a
public sale o r tn bnng ng tcms lo 11 c Aucllt n H l sc don 1

rest area In Kanauga, Oljio)

TOOLS, Hydrauhc Jacks, Black &amp; Decker
hand gnnder, Craftsman rectprocatmg saw,
bench vtses 110 Amp welder, over 40 tool
boxes with mtsc tools, Machm1st tool box
w/tools all types Craftsman Proto &amp;
Challenger and other name brand tools, ladder, Jacks chams gas cans, crow bars btts
lead lattel levels fire hose, commerctal au
staple gun ctrcular saw electnc cords trouble
hghts ladders, cham saws clamps nuts &amp;
bolts, natls 350 gal fuel tank steel ptpe
wheel barrow plus a very very large assort
ment of Mtsc hand tools
BUILDING MATERIALS &amp; MISC.; Clay
Fteld Ptpe concrete blocks, 10 shower enclo
sures (free standmg) 10 t01lets 10 bathroom
smks, 4 garage door &amp; hardware (7 6 x8
wtde ), mtsc Items
ANtiQUES &amp; MISC.; Horse drawn wagon
w/stenc1led stdes (mce) old dtshes old tools
small dresser, more not hsted yet
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC.. Off1ce desks
chatr kttchen cha1rs, electnc heater Mtsc
kttchen supphes desk lamp baby bed b1kes,
au hockey table refngerator freezer, G E
mJCrowave commerc1al clothes dryer, dtshes,
sweepers lamps, bed frames, dressers mtrror,
kitchen table &amp; cha1r car stereo, mght stand,
electnc weed eater, m1sc pots &amp; pans JUSt loo
many other tlems to hst

Auctioneer: Leslie A, Lemley
748-388-8823 (Home) or
748-245-9866 (Barn)
"Licensed and Bonded by St, of Oh?O"
[ash/Approued Check: Only!!
Food
"Not responsible For Rcc;dent
or Lost Property"
'

forget lo c til us

I
&lt;

c

2219

Estate

We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 800 213 B36.5
An1h0ny Land Co

Midd epon 740 992 2524

Two 2 Bedroom Tra Iars In Small
Tra e Park Rete encas &amp; De
poSH Aequued 740-446-1104

Apartments
lor Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nis~ed and unfurnished secur ty
depos t requ red no pets
992 2218

41 Q Houses lor Rent

7~0

t bedroom apartment m M1ddl..,.

1 Bdrm Su table for 1 Or 2 Per
sons 1 Mtla North
Add ison

port all ut I t es pa d $27 0 per
month $100 depos 1 740 992
7806

or

1200 00 Per Month S200 00 De
post Tenanl Pays Utillt es 1•0
367-0 156

1 Bedroom AJC WID Hook Up
Near Arboni Nurs ng Home No
Pets OU1et locations $279/Mo
+ Utlmes 740-446 2957

1 Bedroom House No Pets! 2B
Ltncoln Ave $325 00 month
1740)~9342

2 bedroom full basement S300
per month .. Ullhtles + depos t

Public Sale and Auction

(304)675- 651

2bdrm apts total electr c ap
pliances futrr shed laundry room
lac 1 es c ose to schoo n town
Appl cat ons all'a table at v age
G een Apls t49 or ca ll 7~0 992
3711 EOH

3 Bed ooms $250 Mo S150 De
posit 27 Ann Street Pomeroy 3
Bedroom $250/Mo $150 Capos
It 11 2 Cond or St eel Pomer oy

74G-388-8591 304 633-8937

AUCTION

Ideal For
f irSt F oor

PERSONS

ALSO MOBIL£
HOME FOR RENT In Galhpohs

For An Appomtment To Vtew
pttONE 740 ttl 153t
For Lease Ont Bedroom AC
Apt Corner 01 5econd And Pine
$250/t.to Ptus Utcl tses Secunty
And Key Deposn References A..
QUH"ed No Pet&amp; 740 446 4425
GraciOUs Nv ng t and 2 beclroom
apartments at V1 llage Manor and
A vers de Apartments In M dd e
pon From S2o49 S373 Call 740
992 506-t Equal Hous ng Oppor
New one bedroom apartmeni
also one bedroom house c all

740-992 9191

(JOC)67S.5t62

N ce One Bedroom Unfurnished
Apartment Range &amp; Refr ge ator
Provided Water &amp; Garbage Paid
Oepos t Requued Call 740 446
4345 ArtM 6:00Pm
Small Fu nashed Apartment 3
Rooms/Kitchen Bedroom l v
lngroom UUIII es pad e~ocept
e ectnc
S225 per month

l30oii67S.1365

&lt;MiO Space lor Rent
Home Lot at Santa s For
est on Fit 17 Wo~t•r~Sewer pnvo~te
references
requtred

Pomeroy SR 12-4 600 ~Quare n
customtf part( ng caf'P8l air eon-

- month
.-.g
... deposit
$350
per
1350
740
949-2()93

MERCHAN DISE
Household

App l an ces
Re co nd1t1oned
Washers Dryer$ Flanges Retr
grators 90 Day Guarantee
French. C•ty Maytag 7~0 ,.46

779S

Couch &amp; l ov eseat EKcelle nt
Condi.l on Wfl te background w/
Burgundy/Mauve Roses w/Hunter

P..,... (3041675

For Sale Reconditioned wash
e rs dryers and relr gerators
Thompsons Appl ance 3.C07

Jad&lt;son A""""" 1304)675-7388
GOOD USED APP~IANCES
Washers dryers upfngerators
ranges Skaggs App ances 76
Ycne Slreet Call 7~0 U6 7398
1 88&amp;-81B--0128
Kmg Stze Waterbad bookcase
headboard Double pedastot t2
drawers A 1 cond lion wavetess
mattress w! balllu (30•) 675
1595

OUICK CASH
Furmture
Who~

Tara TownhOuse .Apartments
Very Spac1ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA I 1/2 Bath Fu ly Ca
pe ted Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PatiO Start $350/MO No Pets
lease Plus Secur ty DepoSit Re
qu red After 5 740 446 0101
Before 5 740.446-3481

R&amp; D s Used

Buy ng Pa t1a l Or

Es1ale 740-36H1280

Washer $95 01ye $95 Electr c
Range $95 Aelnge rator S 150
Wasl'!.er l ke New $205 (Has I
Year War anly) Freezer L ke
New $300 Skaggs App ances
76 V1ne St eet Ga pols 7~0

24 foot round pool S 1000 00 also
1rampol ne lor S 100 00 740 256

16Sl

29 Ga llon F sh Acquaf um
Accessor es No Stand

leaks SSQ 130Ci773-SOS1
2t PEOPLE NEEDED
TO LOSE WEIGHT

Two one bedroom untts ava table
1rnmedlatety new y remodaled
HU 0 approved no pets $250 a
month plus secunty depos t ca

614-449-9469

Upstair&amp; Furmshed 3 Rooms
Bath Clean No Pets! Aelerences
&amp; Deposit ~equ red 740 ~46
1519
Va ley VIew Apa tments A o
Grande Oh Now Accept ng ap
pi ca11ons lor lmmed ate occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apts A
Cond lion ng K tcflen app ances
Fenced n P ayg ound Laundry
On S gl'lt Ma nagement Wate
Sewage and Trash Pad Fu I lime
Students must meel Oh o Hous
lng F nance Agency Qua f ca
uons Sen o C ttzen s Welcome
EHO For more Informal on ca I
(740) 24!5 9170 Monday thru

(30oli67S 5693

Wh rlpool Elect c Flange &amp; Fie
tr gerator Freezer Combtnat on
Good Cond lion S175 Both Cal
After 6 30 PM 74()..44 1 t506
Wh te Metill Casco Babybed wf
out ma tt ess $30 OBO 1 set ol
woOd OunkMds k~ new w /ma t
tress &amp; 2 rallS pd $3.50 w II take
S t50 Both can be seen at t 099
Evergreen Or Pleasant Valley
Apt Pt Pleasant

520

Col ector$ Item German 35 MM
Plate Camera Wor d War ~I
Uoyo E Esque PMna ao.c 77J..
5479 Mason WI/

Sporting

Parts &amp; &amp;wlY
Huge nvernory
V nyl Sk rtlng Kl!s $299 95 5 Ga
km Alum num Fibe ed Roof Pant
$25 21 5 Ga wn. te Roof Pant
$57 69 AnchOrs SS Doors &amp;
Wtnd ows Gas &amp; Electr c Wa e
Heaters Plumb ng &amp; E ect leal
Parts lntertherm M ller &amp; Cole
man A r Cond toners &amp; Heat
Pumps Ben nell s Mob te Home
Supp y 740 4~6 9~ 1 6 Gal po Is

New Mathews MO 1 bOw w/ new
qu ve s ghts peep s ght elbow
resl &amp; stab 1ze 304-675-6348

MStchandise

NSFord

Dog Kenna 6 Months 0 d
2 Dog Bo~res Lauer Jacks New
Brand 1993 lanDau Flat Bot
tom Boat L•ke New Wit h Tr o I ng
Motor Simmons Rltte Scope 3
91132 New Cem 1us A mer can
Wildlife Series Knife Brand New
Chtclutn Or Pheasant Incubator 6
Months Old Heat lamp And

6~o8~:4

WANT A COMPUTER ?.,.,? BUT

NO CASH " IAMX TEC&gt;iNOLO
G"V We F nance 0 Covm Past
Creo t P o b ems OK Even II
Tu neO Down Belo e Aeestabitsn
'fbur Cradn 1 SOO.SS9-Q359

AK C Lao Pupp es Fo Sale 5
Cnoco a e 3 S ack $200 E ac~

740-3819398
AKC Lao
8 OOd

ne

P~.:pp

es C amp on

P 0 E!r1 Hunt ng StOCk

9Jactl CriOCOl;ue Coia s Ma es &amp;

WARIIUP
92'. Gu Furnaces Heat Pumps
Duct Syslems Fee Es t ma es If
'rbu Don I Calf US We 8orff L0 '$8
740 4~6 fi308 1 800 291-0098

Females 740-643-22BS

Washe r and drye one yea o d
trampo l ne Sears Jungle gym
sw ng set 55 ga ion ftSn tank 13
coto1 TV rwo new eel nets one
yea old 740-992 9723
Wate I ne SpeC al l/ 4 200 PSI
$2 95 Per 100
200 PSI
S37 00 Per 100 All B aS $ Com
pre$5101l ~1t1n:gs In StOCk

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Jackson Oh10

Dobetman pupp es 1a 5 docked
I st sho s and wormed pa ents
on p e m ses $ 1 JO eacn one
t1 ack aM 1an fema e two eo
males r .c o-992 555

.atJ0.537 9528

Wheet cna r 1 ke new usM 'ole y
t itle 7• 0 9.C9 2926 o 740 949

2692

Wh le Kanm o e Wa sh e $90
Wh ce kenmo e Drye S8 5 wn e
G E Washer S90 Aimone t&lt;e n
more Dryer S90 30 Day Wa anty
Ca Alter S 30 PM 74 0 446

9066

Reg 5 e eel Reel Bone pups lo
s a e S 00 ea cn con ac TO
Stewart 740-742 242t

Wolff System SunQuest Ta nn ng
Bed P o 24 20 M nute Bed W tn
Face Tanner Ask ng P ce
$2 500 7&lt;10-388 9862

550

We a

Building
Supplies

e

baby Pussyca ~

Come

&amp; Gef Ls
Ou names a e
He she y Bo den S e ng an d

Ma o ana we neea goo a hO mes
Ou Caddy got s c11. anc o ed amJ
Mom s ~ s 1ne e a e peop e out
the e l¥hO w ove ~o~s We a e 8
~Neek s OICI anCl ve y swee and
cud d y Ca 1 ou1 Mom Raoecca
at (304 675 4803

t•

94!)-4000

560

For Sa e Pa t o Coo Replace
men I W Mows Wh ttle d Pellet
Stove Inter or Ooo s Ca alter

2 Ch huanua 1 Has Pape s Both
For $100 740-379-2989

5PIA (304)675-7652

Pets for Sale

Ak C Germ an Snepn era Pups
Wn e Or S 'lie Sacl e Snow
Cloud l.ne 740-245-9213

Estate sale
C F Kenmore e
fr geralor $150 gas range LP o
natu a $75 both a mond no
cnecks 740 247 234.C or 740

Pets lor Sale

570

AKC Basset Hound Pupp es
Red &amp; wn te T Color 1st Snots
&amp; Wormed $200 740-:256 1686

Musical
Instruments

Cage Cal 740-44a-3409

Adluslable Electric Bed &amp; B ass
HeadbOard Pad $1200 w sel
for $500 (304)675-2353

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFFTANNING BEDS
Flex tile F nanong Ava able
Home /Commeroa Unns
FREE Color Catalog
Call Today 1-100.711-0158
Ant Que Oak Sla

rs 740 441

0941
laptop Computer Pentium 133
MIAX 1 6glg HD Floppy CO
Touchpad 32 Meg RAM l thlum
1on Battery De uxa Nylon Cary ng
Case Canon BJC 70 Portable
Printer W lh Cable $1 000 DO
Frm 74044119719AmSPm
Mon To Fr

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; Rebu II In S ock
Ca Ron Ell'ans 1 BOO 537 9528

AKC Boxe Pupp es Ta Is &amp; Dew
C aws ~emoved 1 s Snots &amp;
Wo med Both Pa ems On P em
ses $225 74()..256- 686

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

:-::----=--"---

Jol'ln Dee e 1010 T acto $3300
1998 Po ars 4Wheal T a
Bass $2200 Set of 3 01 ver t2
p ows $135 Craflsman Trot ng
Moto 121b th ush new $1 20
Ca
after 4PM May Trade

140

Bus1ness
Tramlng

(304)576-2667

K1tc hen Ra n.ge $75 740 245
5464 Call Before 8 30 PM

N ce used Appliances furn lure
freezers Bedroom Suiles Dt
nettes lois More (740) 446
t004 (740) 446 4039 any lime
Pop Cooler Double Door S de
Chesl WPe $300 (304)675
7388
PRIMESTAR

tree
C recTV Summer PromotiOn Ca I

BOTTLEQ WILLPOWER LOSE

Goods

560

Ml~cellaneous

Oh"'

Or recommended 100% nalu a
Guaranteed 11 pr ogram n Eu
ope R ta at 1 (888) 449 3759 or
v s t www members 1 pod com/

Buy Factory 0 reel
Excellent Serv ce

2 Dryers lor sate 31 /2 to 4 yrs
old

Collecnbles P cture Framn
Meat Gr nder5 Butter Uold
Washboards 0 1 Lamps rons
C1gare re l gruers Furn t ure
MUCh More 7..0 446..Q639

o.scount

wanrooo (JOCJ675-4153

Goods

Green Slrippod
7585

Merchandlte

18 DlrKTV S.t•IIIW Syatema
Sfi9 00 3 month free program ng 1--~------wifh. NFL Teket Pun:hase L mrtecl
COMPUTERS
time otter calt-80().779-8194
accessor es sohwa e suppl es
Oeltverea to you door at super
197• 1 Ton Chevrol et Bundy store pnces
Clar net 16&amp;20 Butldtng (You
~~nlernet
Taar Down) P onee Truck
SpeaQn 7-40-446---7992
COMPUTERS SO Down Low
Month y Payments Y2K Comp
1998 Fairmont Commander Ser ant A most Ell'eryone Approved
les 14X7D JSR nl(e cen leave Can Ft~OCOM Adll'a.ncea Tech
on lot Ful s ze Couch Flora -~~173476
Dea gn Mauve&amp; Eggshell Has
Mobile Home
not been used $~00 Ant Que

For Lease

510

S.O Mlscellaneout

18 Ft F 11 Tra ler Dual Wheels
Malle Cifeat Car Hauler $45 0
Good Tif'H 74()..UG-9853

Mobile Home Space Green
School o smca • Mtles From
Holzer Hospttal Some Re51r c
liOn$ AQply 740 446 4053

490

--

BTC Compute• w/ 11 Mon 10 &amp;
Eta on Pflnte
S 1 000 080
ISc r Fr eeze
Flel t ger~tor
(30A)675-34S7

112 Carat Otarnond Solitatre ~11"10
vs-2 Clartty 1.-K 'fttii()W Gold 6
P"'""f T~ Band Appq...O AI
$2 000 Len Than One Vear Old
$ 1100080740 U6 '548

~

540

Merchandise

Buy Of sell R•••' ne Ant que1
1124 E llalft StrMt on Rt 12.C 1 - : - - - - - - - - - Pom.roy Hours M T W 10 00 '
a.m lO SOO om ~ t 00 10
II 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

446 7398

now 1 888 265 2123

Mtd·Ohlo Valley Truck Dnver Tramtng
Weekdoy !lasses 8to 5Mf Also evemngs &amp;weekends
• Classes !01 bolh dass A ond Bl 1ense
• f nonong and lundmg avotlable basedon ehg1b hty
' 98%p1a!emenl an Class Atrammg
U1ensetl by lhe Ohto Department ol H•gnway Solely
Manetta Oh10 457 50
(onloct Ed Adoms 1 BOO 648 3695 or 17401373 6283 ul 338

Up To 30 lbs 30 CAY MONEY
BACK GUARANTEE Natural 0
Recommende d 740 ~41 1982
Free samples

Canaday
Realty

Henry E Cleland Jr .............. .

Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon

446~3636

............... 992-2259

Real Estate General

Sherrl L Hart ......... 742 2357

OPEN HOUSE

Kathleen M Cleland 992-61

COME VIEW THESE LOVELY msTORICAL HOMES
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS
'

Now Tailing App l cat ons
~
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apanmenll
Include• W.a1er
Sewage Truh SJIS/Mo UO
U6Moe

tumishad&amp;-

TODAY, SEPTEMBER I2, I999
z:oo • 4:00 P.M.

}

Fl S37511Ao Ui'&gt;O l&gt;e!&gt;o!d

counl"" ......

PelS

440

RENTALS

ESTATES 5'2 Westwood Dt~ve
from S279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mov•es Call 740 U6 25.68
Equal Hclus01g Opponuni1y

Neatly F.ur shed 2 Bedrooms
Waler Sewe1 Pad $375 /Mo +
Depos t Refe rences &amp; No Pets

Tw o trailers fo1 ent 12:1165 two
bedroom $22 5/ mo 101155 three
bedroom $2001 mo SR 7 south ot

80• Sites (Occupied) National
Company Pavs Cash /Closes
Futll To ll Free 888 653 2244
,, 3

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT S AT
BUDGET PRICE S AT JACKSON

256-6574

949-2093

Pets t L•rge Badroom 175

(30CI675-4138

N c e Ground Floor 2BA WI D
Hook up Reference DepoSit No

Furnished two bedroom air con
dll oned no pets S 150 depostt
S325 fmo als o spaces tor rent
$90/mo $90 depos t R ver Park
Pomeroy (formerty Browns) 7.CQ-

740-245-5789

WANTED MOBILE
HOME PARKS

2127

1uMies

740-441--07n

Minutes From Rio Grande $120
Per Month Plus Rural Water De

11111111, glunnrl, mlac, 11111111,,

AUCTIONEER Rick Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer Greg Blain #A 177
Executnx Carolyn Ftchtner
304 773 5785 or 304 773 5447
Terms Cash or
ID

A two BR Mobile Home With new
f onl porch $300 Also 2 tratlor
lot s near school S75 ea ch per
month n Ne:w Haven (30.C)882

N ce Tra ler Space For Rent 5

"Licuud ud loaded by 11. of lldof
Cult/Approve~ Ch•e• Only!l Foo4
Not respons1~le for eec1duts or lut prop11tyf"
**Wa wW 1111 lunrlag a sale at lbe •cllaa
bara Friday S.,t, 17 ID addlllllll to 1111
llle lablrUy, hpt, lllbf llelaa to 1111
sold lncluda some uU.aes. 11081111...

Auctton Conducted by
R1ck Pearson Auct1on Co

Area. 740-388-9162

21 3-8365

(ltenl

Located 15 miles north of Point Pleasant W.'ll,
off Rl 2 turn on 10 mila Creak Rd or 16 mllas
south of Ripley WV, off Rt 2 !urn on 10 mile
Creek Rd and follow signs Will be selling the
estate of~~~~~!:-:c:-::-==~
ITEMS QF SPECIAL INTEREST
t0x12 Onental Ru
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
Fancy 3 pc Parlor Su1te one of the best Cherry
Cannon Ball Rope Poster Bed must see Match1ng
V1ct Marble top dresser &amp; Washstand Walnut V1ct
Marble top dresser Walnul Viet Marble top
washstand sp1nmng whee l Tn fold dresstng table
carved oak plantatton desk Lg early p ne blanket
chest oak dresser Queen Anne Wtng Back cha~r &amp;
stool w1cker chair oak desk Chair G1nny Lynn H1gh
Cha~r set of spl t bottom cha~rs drop leaf table Rose
Back Rocker Oak Twtn beds trunk Iron bed 1920 s
sewmg machtne sewtng cab net &amp;more
MODERN FURNITURE
2 pc Early Amer can LR su1te Maple LR su te Coffee
table &amp; end tables Hosprtal I ft bed TV stands metal
cab met metal glider &amp;porch sw ng &amp; more
GLASSWARE
Assortment of Glassware blue 1ars ntce old lamps
stam glass lamp beauttful hang1ng lamp w/glass
shade
JEWELRY
3 pc Sterl ng s lver
R1ng Bracelet &amp; brouch
w/match ng earnngs gold cha1ns lades Bulova watch
w/d1amonds hand craftetj Jewelry Tr Colored gold
necklace &amp; more
COLLECTIBLE &amp; MISC
Hand talored Vtntage cloth ng costume cloth ng art &amp;
craft malenal good I nens cream separator baskets
tins wood carved lnd1an Horse Bear &amp; Owl old
games New Haven 0 G we ght clock toys
educat onal toy computer p1cture frames rugs
camp ng gear Coleman cook sto~e Compound Bow
&amp; Arrow Hum d1fler &amp; Dehum1d f1er Sm kitchen
appliances carvtng hand lools cha•n saw &amp; more
GUNS
Model 183 Mossburg 410 Bolt Act1on A1g er MK II
22 LA Auto like new
ANIMALS
2 M mature Donkeys Male &amp; Female
"TRAILER•
TRAILE:R WILL BE SOLD AT 12 00 NOON W/RESERVE
1973 Castle Tra11er 2 BR 2 balhs New gas furnace
new appl ances Holpo nt washer &amp; dryer bay
w ndows good carpet &amp; 2 porches
Tra let s localed 1 m le from Auct1on site &amp; wtll be sold
at Auct1on stte on Sat You musl v1ew the tra lar
before auctton day to view the tratler
Call 304 895 3679

2" Bedroom Mobile Home You
Pay Util hiS &amp; Deposit In Por1er

Mobtle Home N1ce Clear 3 Bed
rooms 1n Mercef\llle Ar94 1740)

Wanted

2BR Apt .. Muon s-~
eratorfUt t hes lurn11hed A C
laundry Room Cell nv Fans
Gon&gt;ago [J;sposal Very Na No
Pa11 (3o.)773 53521 ( 30~ ) 882

-

23ACRES
2 IAies Otl SR 7 &amp; SR 218 Soum

Real

Fur
Are•

UIX7S Tra ler AJC 3 Bedrooms
2 Ba tf'ls Ready Sepl 6th ac
caplln g Hud
l'.tle ghborhood
Clean Reference Plus Deposit!

BO Acr es
6837

360

Hawn

Chnsly s Faintly l tvtng apart
ments home &amp; tra ler rentals
7.CO 992 ,.5,,. ~rtments 811'8 I

Mobtle home lor rant n Pomeroy
area no pets 7.C0.992 5858

pooil S100

New

420 Mobtle Homes
lor Rent

2 •• Acres Homes te Green

01 Gall;poils Smglewides Allowed
Rough Mostly WoodeQ Road AI
eady Cut In land Contract
Ava labia Only $2 1 000 1 BOO

Tom &amp; Jerry puah ~owlut (f111 •I•J lnterJ, p11• &amp;
~reen depression glus, Ger•••Y &amp; Beve1111 hll4
punted d1shes mntvel 5l1ss, 35 40 pet ~111 rldt•
ch1u, Dep water ut, el~ pep cratn, sl111 Jill, •U
~uhtl Adv hm &amp; cta, old tools, lu?eru, Mtse
ch1111, leMe w/glm top &amp; 2 eh111s, 2 old wood tttl
boxes, nd tron, gmwold ~11 nder wuh herds, epplt
butter st11ppers, aulk bottles, stone churn, elr eDftl·
pressor flatwm grentte &amp; porcele1n tte111s, pletfor111
sules, mueh more not hsted

Sto.e~Retorgerator

992-1;886ohe&lt;Spm

Between Athens and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom moD te hOmes atr
co('ld t oned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash tncluded 740
992 2167

on

Sofe, u~ te~ln , h~room satte, racltter, stertt &amp;
stud, speed •ueu wuher/4ryll, Kt1111D11 21 n. ft
refrtgentor wlice
(lm thu 1 f' ti4J, te~lt &amp;
6 ch111s, 5u renge, metll stonge Cl~tu? tl4 ta.lt
tep redto w/woe4 u~tut, •nte• heeh, other 11110
ttems plus

depos t
ntShed

lent. $275 • momh+

Beautiful unturmshed lua:ury 2nd
flo01' apartment w1th Chalf lilt
Over 2000 Sq A . . - Ci1y Pa"
OhiO R v&amp;r $600 00/monm 01s
740-446-9636

(740~ 38&amp;-9770

30 acres t~dge top hall trees
hall pasture l1eld w th waler and
electric ava ll~ble 25 m nutes to
Ga 1 a or Athens $1-400/ acre
rrtJst sell a•
143 &amp; K ngsbury
Rd. Meogs CouniY 740-992 5264

*"'1'1111 .... ca• ' IS cd -

7-4(J...MI.Om

Spoc al

Ou et Close To Gatl po Is Some
Res....... 740-245-5776

JSI

29A - - lor

S.O MIICellaneous

S30

740-441 . . CIIBMwe2PM

7244

0~8

Townstup Gall11. County Seen

30 , . I

St Rt S88 101~ Rt
Gelhpths, Ohto

691_.m

O~n
';'X &amp; SO!up 1 800-691-677]

~.Pubic
AucUon-G Q
n
G
lues ' Sept 14, 6
'-'
• LeMley s A1cho1 81r1
•
8S80

lbJse For Rerc.l3041675-6720

28•80 3 or 48R S1000
1349 per mo Free Delrv

Public Sale and Auction

SQ

(30ot)773-55T7 l.NI4 ..., .

.cBR Two Story House lulchen
turniSI'Itd Latge r•rd w 11'1. oul
butkhng was.herlctryar ncluded
2605 lincoln Av• (304)675
3402.

Terms 01 Sale CASH OR CEA
TIFIED CHECK.

po&gt;s (740)~3093

-~

4 B.idCGII Houle In ..JIIcQon C0
On Old 35 Call AllOr 1 30

Annex 143 Thwd A... Gaflipohs
OH SOld To Htghest Biddet As
Is Where Is W11hout Expres.sed
Or lmphed Wananry &amp; Mav Be
Seen By Calhng The Collect1on
Dept At 740-441 1038 OVB Re
se-rves The Rtght To Accept /Re
ject Any &amp; All 8tds &amp; W thdraw
1ems From Sale Pr.or To Sale

.-!RAY HURRY HURRY!

No

~ C31MI675-1978

leau Or Rent W1th Opt on 2
Bedrooms Basement F n shed
Alb&lt; G a - Good Aroa $4001
Mo &amp; Deoosil Relerences I No

New 4BR 16 wide SSOO Down
$245 per mo Free Atr 1 800

OoublewacMts Free Oecoi &amp; Furni

SAR80URS111LLE. WV

1M. FfH Aff 1

8CX).t;91 ~177

5064

1ft ~

""'-740-28&amp;-1122

~UIWinclowsSky

1993 Flemm ng ••x1o 28R 1
bath Central Aw COvered Porct\
10x16 818 Deck 112 500

740-~9-2453

16.;80 1996 Clayton Loud on
A C 3BR 2Ba Take Over Pay
ments L.W.e NeW (304)675-8165

309'J

PVBUCAUC110N

Public Sale and Auction

••Thts w1ll be an all day sale w1th
many many tools and a good
vancty of M1sc ttems
Come spend the d'ly w1th us"'

Bun L1kt House li95 t h 70
Duldl. Yr¥ Siding Slqto Root

Otter won I last! Only 11 Oalll
wood GIIOpollo Oh (740)-«6-

Auctioneer: leslie A. LemleY

Public Sale and Auctton

The Famlly of Belly Boone:
*~*~~~~~~~*~~**

~'-{A&lt;:ross from

t91i New ~ 1•a10 ..,_.
bdt liotn.t 2 Bedt()(Mn$ 1 Ball\
All Eleetnc AppUnce Wdn CIA.
Gas Furnace SrwngtN Roof V1
nyl Sldtng 11S 000 7..0 )111990 Danvilt 1.Cx70 2 Btdlooms.
2 BathS 2 Porcnes And Heat
P~ E•ceDent Conation 740446-lm

3 1996 Aectmona t6x70 3BR
2BA 6 wa lls N•ce t F nanc ng

law&lt;Aw"'""""are-

$300 . .

320 Mobile Homes

lllts ••• paper wil not

"'-v1Y """""

"ffoo
'"'"'DoM&lt;y
2 Bamlond""'V
-~
SoH~

1601

2 1995 Skyl na I.Ca:70 38A
28A Y f' YI S1d ng Shmgles
Roof 6 walls

adveftlsemern lor real estate
~ tS '" 'oiiOlaDOn of me

1912 Wtn.dsor 2 &amp;drtM 2 FwU
htnl Wen Add On 112 Acre o1
L~nd
Nelghb0rt\oo4
Rd
S28 om oo 74l)...446-.0185.

a118S

make any'Suchp.$e...e
lmilabon or dlst:munabon.

'----::c-:-a-rd-=-o-:1:-::T=h-a-:nk:-a-'--

*

740-992-1176

HOliES FAOII $10 0001 1
S 8eOJ oom local Repos I Font
etosures fee F•nancmg Po5s1
b6e For l~tngS 1-100-719-3001

tq acM!Irtl5e any pela'dla;:e
baSed M race c:dor r&amp;1tgtOn.
sex tamUl status or natloNal
Ot'Qifl. or any REiftJon to

3-hd•wm House

740 388 0823 (Home) or 740 24S 9866

ublic Ruction

Public Sale and Auction

I

Need A Loan? Try Oebl Consoli
dahOn $5 000 $200 000 Bad
Cred• 0 K Fee 1 800-77()-0()92
Ext. 2t5

SOCIAL SECUAITV ISSI?

GUARANTEED APPROVAL
Bank Card No Credit Check No
Up Front Cash Secur ty Oepostt
FleQu red
Must Be 18+ And
Hall'e Val d Check ng Accoum
P e App Oll'al By Phone 1 800

CASH Or lOAN Fa m Cap tal
W II Pu chase Or loan Aga nst
Your Gove 1tnenl Farm Pay
menrs (C AP PFC) Call Fa m
Cap ta l t 888 FARM ACT (3 27

HOMe EMPLOYMENT 0 REC

Need a Loan ? Home Auto &amp;
Debt Consol.aa.too Good or Bad
Credn Ca tt toiL free 877 658
0551

'IQRK 10017

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepatr
ng NOT Replac ng long Cradl.s
In W ndsh elds F ee V deo 1
800 826 8523 US
Canada
www gtassrned\anur: com
Send Us A One Page Fo1m We
Do The Rest No D eel Sell ng
Compute &amp; E Commerce D st b
UIOISI'!. ps Free Into Pkg 1 800
8J 1 2385 24 Hrs Ext 63

Ga.l••••rt

Servtce Top Tnm Removal
Stump Grind ng Free Estmates
Fully Insured Works Comp B dwell OH Call And Save 1 800
838 9568 740 388 ~8 Owner
Rod&lt; IAoonl

G eat Income Oppo tu n ty W
Compule s low lnii'&amp;Stment 1
80()-.W9-2969 Code 03

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR

GET YOUR CASH NOW• Olde51
11uyot&gt; Ql S1Nellnd Sen,.,_...
Annume10 And
Farm
PayrMn s A150 Purc:Nstng lot
te l es And Puvate Mortgages
Ca 1 Senlement Cap tal 1 800.
959 0006 """'"' senl ementcapt
lill"'"'

sol date Debts' Same Day Approval NO APPLICATION FEESII 1

FAEE MONEY' Its True Never
Repay Gua anteed $500
$50 000 For Debt ConsolidatiOn
Pers on a Needs Med cat B lis
Educat on &amp; Bus ness Call Toll
Free 1 &amp;oo-724-6047 (24 Hrs)

EARN $500 $1 200 IWK IN
\'OUR BATHROBE &amp; SUPPERS

CAll TOLL FREE 1 877--E63
926iE.d 231

gatage 18 1 2 acru p •n••

UP

Proless•onats•

pay-llilscom

daond---~

RNt' ~

A~D

B 1nd Nt• Do~tde 3 hd
~

ner l atgt w n.dows tw o baths
basemen1 e o~ered dM:tl t.arge

S3 000

i~~~.~~~~~~~~~m;.;.==~.1~0~~~=•=•n~hw~~~;t~~============~~
~~
?or S.le
rt'IO Apilrlmenll
lor Rent

310 Homes for Sale

CREDIT PROBLEMS
STOP
HER£ WE CAN HELP" LOANS
·~AILABLE

POI'I1fWoy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Potnl Pleasant, WV

for Rent

SSS OVERDUE BILLS! SSS Coo80()..86J..9006 Eld 936 www '*P-

2..'ie lllln PHONE CARD A1t
EASY S$ MONEY Few Hrs
Earn S500 S5 000 fW'r.

310 Home• for Sale

'TlvM beclloom 1 4 1 ~ 51ory

~ W11h war'""" rega rd 10 IJtllu Funeral Hom e ~
~
and staff, the Family of Betty Boone
~

7

REGISTER NURSE

S\5

Buslnfts
Opportunity

~~*~~*~~~~~~*~**~

Reg 190-&lt;l5-12748

UNIVER~TY

to

Bustness For A$ llttte As $5001
All CASH BUS NESS 1 800
220-298§ 24 HI'S

FINANC IAL

College

(Cateers Close To Home)
Cal TOday17~7
, 800-214-0452

150

MEDICAl SILLER (Jp

210

CO!n4t

MEDICAl BilliNG Earn Exce
ent Income Fu 1 Tra n ng Com
puler Aequned Call Toll Free

EXT U210 8 AM

(JOC-3319

Opportunity

In E eclronics Computers Ma
ch.,. Aepoi' HS G - u.- 34
Aetocahon Provided Patd Tra•n
ng W th Full Benefits. Call t 8QO..
53J.1657

Flexible Sohedu1e

-

Please ca (740)4 46 9"92

Internet: www WCW\ 1C

E1octJon;a;
GET A GOOD JOB

wun

Team 7&lt;&amp;Q-.256--6016 Setore

220 Money to Loan

S45 IHr Me&lt;tk:at 8111 no Scttwar•
I DMm 01- I"OOom
Co~ Needs Peopie To ProJenny Greene Cen htd L nil cas Meckal Cl.itm~ From Hmw
Ch ki C.re Provide~ tn New Ha Tra n n; P ov•ded Mus1 Own
ven Area now 1'111 t\&lt;en no Computes 1 !00-434 5518 Ed
open ngs lmk o Self Pay iiC 667

Your Compute

Oh~sns

EARN $50K A Year Camp U
Med Seeks Full /Par1 T me Medi
ea Proces.sors PC ReQulfad No
Expenence Necessary Wil t
Tran Callt-800-4.58...-135

Husbarws &amp; Wdt WmdOw
~ng

Oom no 1 P1u.a ot Polnl Pl. .s
ant No• H nng Salt Dnvers
(30CI6~

I

Help Wanted

Sunday, Sephtmber 12, 1999

Sunday, September 12,1999

Pomeroy • Mtddleport • Galhpohs, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV

--

G)
LENDER

992-2259

Olllca

OFFICE

~
0

l

"'

[B

992-2259
Audrey F Canaday, Broker
Ronald K Canaday, Broker
Mary P Floyd, Associate
$55 000 THREE BEDROOM BRICK SPA CIOUS
LAWN GARAGE CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN
THE VILLAGE OF RODNEY NEW ON THE
MARKET

'

PRICE REDUCED RACINE Th1s s an
absolutely lovely 2 Slory Frame Home 9 Jga.rde'n
rooms 4 5 bedrooms full an•c 1 t/2 balhs
and open foyer
Authent c staircase w th
hardwood floonng throughout home w th

LOTS APPROXIMATELY 110 X 400 LOCATED
ON ROUTE 160 PLEASE CALL FOR MOR E
DETAILS NEW LISTING!

some carpetcng Enclosed sun room back
porch k1tchen hv1ng and d n ng room Full
basement w th 3 rooms cement wa lks
paved parking area block garage w1th 2

attached carports Large double lol No h gh
water
I
PRICE REDUCED TO

227 THIRD AVENUE
$101,500,00
•Formal L1vmg Room

&amp; Dmmg R oom

*Famtly Room

FOUR UNIT APARTMENT HOUSE ONE UNIT
FRAME DWELLING PLUS MOBILE HOME ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED LOCATE D IN TH E
VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE NEXT DOO R TO THE
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE IF YOU HAVE
INVESTMENT IN MIND BETIER LOOK AT THI S
THE PRICE IS RIGHT

*2 Full Bath•

*3 Bedrooms
* Beauuful Hardwood Floors

* Fmtshed Atttc Room
*Lovel) Screened In Porch

*Pool
*Deep Lot wtth Pnvacy

* Tastefully Redecora ted

""'"• THIRD
$169,000.00
*Formal LIVmg Room &amp; Dnnng Room

* Huge Fam1ly Room

•3 Baths , 2 Half Baths

'3 Bedrooms
*Beautiful Woodwork

*Boastmg approx 5440 sq ft

*Pool
*Corner Lot

*2 Car Garage
* Eye Appeahng 3 Story Turret
OFFEREDBY

~

--

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC, U!I
(740) 446-3644

~~~~~~~~~~~~G~:g~:n~~~
S
LA I~D ING WOI
s an
execut ve subdiVISIOn des gned for horse
You won t behave the feature s
Access to the beautiful Oh o for boat lovers
r ng p1cmc shelter r d ng tra Is and
more Certain restr ct ons apply Call
today for more mformat on Lot pr ces and
acreage vary accord ng 10 the part cular
amemlles

CALL FOR VIEWING!

jP•DMIERIO~'·Tvvo Story Frame 4 5 bed ooms
2 wood burnmg stoves pus FANG
carpet/wood floo ng Basement has 1 2
and 2 exira rooms
One ca r ga age
1 make a good rental
MMEDIATE

ASKING $27 500
Story Frame apa trne 1t
Hcl.s 4 apa tments one s 3
and th e othe( 3 apartments a re 2
Monthly nco me s $1 945 00
foo rs wth N G H W heat S de
deck and f oe1 t porch also has a

lhR!,Am,enl ASKING $62 0900

ONCE
IN
A LIFETIME INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY EIGHT RENTAL UNITS ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIES ON SIX PARTIALLY
WOODED ACRES CONVENI ENT LOCATION
NEAR THE CITY LIST PRICE JUST REDUCED
TO THE UNBELIEVABLE LOW PRIC E OF
$238 000
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A COMFORTABLE
TWO STORY HOME IN A BEAUT FUL COUNTRY
SETIING WE JUST LI STED ONE 3 BEDROOM S
2 BATHS FORMAL DIN ING ROOM SCREENED
PORCH BETIER CALL SOON THE PR ICE IS
$59 0001'
TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE IN THE CITY OF
GALLI POLIS EACH LOT IS 40 X 150 $10 000
~ACH OR PURCHASE BOTH LOTS FOR
$19 500 00

�PageD&amp;•, ,
FM1'.1 •;iiPPLIES
,, LIVE::.TOCK

710 Aut08 for Sale

Ji1b f8nn Equipment
-t 9H Adam Horse goo~enKk
'1' aller S anuoad
ont d eu
\aar tack ubber mats paddtd
.-a 1 (304)875 6132 day &amp;

.(740-)441 10 !!I"'""'"'J

710 Aut01 lor Slle

710 Aut08 for Slle

11169 Chevy Bela r 2 Ooo s 327
Motor 2 Spead Powe G dt
T ansm sslon Second Owne
87 000 M es Mu1 Sell! S3 200
oeo 7C0-379-26E6

Cyt Me Automahe 2nd Owne
Well Ma nta ntd $1 700 740

983 Foni LTD 6 Cyt A Or Auto
119 7-« M las. G ifi wiAecl lnterl

1990 Daylona Hatchback 1740)
446 0670 or 1740) 379 2303 ol

or $400 1304)882 3236

983 Jag 4 door XJ6 looks ndos
and d lvet nice S2m 740 992
S55t

'llassey Fe guson 50 Gas w h
loader John Deere 820 0 ese
674 lnterna tona A e 6 00 740
· ~6 5808

379-9885

Otl

1990 Mode Lum na Chevy 4
Door 1304)895-3830

740 388-9878

1998 Chevy Caval 1

Thunderblfd wo doo PW
PO uns &amp; loOks good 740 949
2926 01 74().94~2692

~ Wanted to Buy

Au oma IC

AM/ FM Cauette Powe Moon
Roor Gfatn a soo M es Ask no
$8~ 060740-256-10t1

1~2

1998 Pan ac Ti ans Am 350 v a

!(ant To Buy 1988 Oua Whee
Cab &amp; Cllass5 74().446-9370

LS 1 Corvette Eng ne Au oma 1c

Livestock

T Tops Mannon S t eo w h
2 0 sc CD Change In T unk
Oa k ~avy Meta c W lh G ey
Leath&amp; lntanor W tl Take Pay Oft
0 Reasonable Olfe 740 446

• AM
t993 G anu
2 0 op s V 6
Auloma c Loaded $4 395 1992
Lum na 4 Doo s V 6 Au oma c
Loaded $3 295 Cook Moto s
740-44&amp;0103
1994 F1 eb rd V 6 loaDed Excel
en Cond 1 on 38 000 M les
$10 500 Afte 6 PM 740 446

' Cha ola s Bull Calt We gh ng
.App ox 350 Pounds EK ra N ce
of40-446-4053

•v Banlc w n Offe

For

Si I By Pub c Auc:t Oft A 111..

199~ Fo d Musrang 8 ack w th
G tY lnter10 Spo ta Around El
tectt Headlight Cove 1 Ve y
Sllarpl ...... SOl 740-24.. 9239

1991 Buck Regal Automallc
AM FM PW POL AIC C use V
6 Wh It 4 Doo s Best Olter

o va

Chevy NOYI fi4171SO At tO 60

1994 Ptymoum Aceta m 3 o Lrer
Good Cond ton $2 700 990
Dodge D-150 Pck Up Good Condibon $2 500 740-406--98 8

e 5oopm

720 'lhlck1 for Sale

710 Aut01 for Slle

1994 Honaa Aceq,rd I..X A 0p
10n1 8-t 000 M lea Gooo Condl
tiOn S10 000 Or T1ke Ov't Pay
IT'IIC'U 74()-.3~2213.

1990 C'*'Y Cavalttr 4 Doofs 4

1992 Cnevy 8 ena 5 Speed
76 000 M les S3 800 OBO 140
256-6573

630

4548

FACTORY WHEELS
Alloy
see Rat 'i Word s '-401 Com
plete lnv.nto y 01 OEM Whee s
Sh p
Nat onw de
1 800
9WHEELS Stock Wheels {And
00

A M On 112:i&lt;ft At Tho 0\IB An
nu 43 Th d A~ Galllpol '
OH Soh:J To Highest Bk:Kit A.
ts Where Is w thout Exprtased
0 lmpt td War anry &amp; Uay Ba
Seen By t:a hng The Col ac on
Dopl At 7•0441 1038 0\IB Ro
serves Tht A ~ht To A~t Ae
Jecl Any &amp; AU 9 dl &amp; Wilhdraw
I ems From Salt Pr or To Sa 1
Te ms 01 Salt CASH OR CEA
TIFIED CHECK

PB Pej Bid L ne
740--.9315

8739
1993 Fo d Range V e AJC Ta
1\ot Ccwlf D tctlona Alum num
Rims Excellent Condttlon 47 000
Miles $S &amp;lO 740-256 9323

~~

ifay

(Q/mi/,1

A rata

.0 Cha d G IS!I $3 25 pe ba e

!ohn 01111ngor 1304)81l2-2422

Live For
The Moment

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale

*

.Po ce Impounds &amp; Aepos Fee
"CALL NOW Fo L &amp;I ngs I 800
3 9-3323 x2156

C~

1 800 458

MPOUNDS Honoa s Toyota s
Chevy&amp; Jeeps And Spa Ut
.t es Call Now 800 772 7470
-EXT 7832

9990

GAIL BELVIUE

-..

2

8ap1 st Chu ch

f

basement

24x28 A exe c se oom 3x
Mos y a ha dwood foo s n
the home B eezeway oom
w same des gn as lhe sun o
Flonda Room Ga age Top o
the g ound poo 2 Sto age
Bu dngs Th s homes on 4
o s WhiCh makes ols of
pnvacy and vard No 215

B ck2St0f)' eau esa21 x13 l
New IV ng oom w lots of
Glass and a WB F apace
1hls s a beau tu oom Fo rna
Entry 2 bed ooms on ma n
leva
Comple e
Kitchen
DnngAoomandfom heea
large sun oom Second evel 2
Ia ge bed ooms 18x 7 &amp;
19x14
Fu
finshed

~~~
VACANt LAND 52 AC
Mil Lo11e y Loca on Land Land
s wooded and may be some
C ose to f eeway VLS
RANCH HOME Loca ed
Af ca Rd 3 bed ms 2
LA K wd nng area
added to ne ea

~

...-"'

-~

II

I
I
I

~~~~~~ l r&gt;gs . 1 ac e M L

7~ 3171
37'1 9209
245 5855

...,.

198 Honda CXSOQ Custom Mo
o cycle N..e..w T e5 Ba te v
P ugs &amp; B akes Mi1.ugg 21 700
JSOO nc udes 2 Fu Face Hel
me s Ca 304 773 5723 Ask Fo
Rusty

Auto Part• &amp;
Accea~orle1

•

12887
OWNER
AUTHORIZED A PRICE
REDUI;TION EXQUISITE
QUALITY
IN
THIS
SPACIOUS
14
RM
MASTERPIECE Offer ng a
formal entry

I v ng room

w/gas log I replace also
tam ly and game rm w/open
gas log f replaces Gourmet
k tchen wth Sm th s custom
bu t oak cab nels plus work
EnJOY
stand &amp; pantr es
nature from the Sola urn
Fo mal d n ng rm has a grea1
vtew G ass enc osed back
porch F st floor aundry 4
bedrms 3 baths More I v ng
area n a fin shed basement
2 car anached garage w th
overhead storage
Newly
nstalled Sa1ell te system
Art st1cally landscaped lawn
w 1h many trees and Rock
Gardens
5 ACRES MIL
the

#3340
ADVENTURE Peek n on th s
un que bu ld ng
Pu chase
bu d ng and 2 lo1s Newly
remodeled all b ck bu ld ng
on a corner lot w1th 2 lots An
apartment or office space etc
on 1he second floor 2 baths
separate utll ties new oof
centra a r 2 furnaces make
an appo ntmenl w/V rg n a
446 6806
WI 085 DO

YOU HAVE
BUILDING IN MIND? Don 1
overlook these great lots at a
surp sngy ow prce fo a
SPA NG SALE located on
Lakev ew Orlve off Charola s
lake Or
2 3 Ac m/1
$19 900 00 Alao 5 AC lor
$25 900 00 VLS

s:: ._

NEW LISTING!
LOTI
G een Elementary/GAHS
n ce and evel w th pub c
water ava able Conven ent

#3029 OWNER ANXIOUS
TO SELL Home 7 5 acres
moeo less $t5000000or
w lh all 1he adjo nlng land
be ng 57 acres more or ess
Wooded and lovely with 1ralls
MAKE OFFER Oelogh1ful 4
bedroom home 2 baths
24 x2B lam y rm lnground
pool Blacktop driveway A so
extra lot w th new sept c
system wale tap &amp; electr c
Cal VLS 446-6806
~

.

.

"

.

.

~ 1i:J

#3342 CHARMING RANCH
HOME SITUATED ON 2
LOVELY AC M/L 3 Bedrm
2 ba1hs k !chen w/u counter
&amp; ba &amp; s n~ area Pantry
laundry rm Lg lov1ng rm
w/f replace Formal d n ng rm
Ce ar house barn Ca for
appomtment VLS $58 500
#3343 PRIVATE NEAT &amp;
CLEAN COTTAGE
2
Bed m 1 bath LA Family
rm w/woodbu ner Some

La ge 2 sty home 3 bed ms
new fu nace &amp;
nsua on Lo 50x195 Beautful
ower ga den Pome oy a ea
$45000

1 2 baths

12885 YOU MIGHT BE
OVERLOOKING THE BEST AJ
b ck anch 3 4 bed ms 2 1 2
baths fo rna LA &amp; OA am m
2 g w ndows Loads of cabine s
&amp; s o age Fu I d v dad basemen
2 woodbu n ng ep aces fenced
yard ga &amp; ca port attiC 5 o age
1 Ac m/1 on no on he beau lfut
Oh o A ve C 1y schOols &amp; very
c ose to town VLS 446 6806

new carpet th oughout 2 car

detached garage Space lor a
n ce garden 2 acres m/ 1
$55 00000

12918
CHARMING
VICTORIAN HOME
4 5
Bed ms 3 baths k1t formal
OR &amp; LA cryslal chande oers
throughout Fu I bsmt w1th
comp ete k 1 stone WB FP
BR w/gas IJreploce Garage
Landscaped lot Exc us ve
v ew ng wth Virg n a L Smth
446 6806

Call For
'

room for the grow ng lam ly
3 Bedroom ranch home
Replacement w ndows A
newer roof

Enc osed porch

N ce lawn w th good garden
spot
mmed ate possess on
w th th1s home Must see to
apprec ate 11099

country v ew

Hurry

BEST throughout
th1s elegant 2 story home
Fo mal ent y FA
DR
k tchen w/custom made
cab nets 3 BR 2 5 BA 2
car at1ached garage
Con e ete d ve
Nice
at1ract1ve landscaped lawn
Ideal ocatlon w thtn m nutes
of shopp ng &amp; hasp tal
Nt098

l!i -....-~

-

-

LIKE YOUR
Then th s s a
1 nd approx 25 ac es come
w th 1h s b 1ck 1 1/2 story
home wtth fu basement wnh
ex1ra space 2 Fu baths 3
4 bedrooms large detached
ga age plus m sc sheds
Pasture land that

today N1 083

Ca

s

fenced

71 acres of

mos1 y all pasture &amp; t able
land oad frontage along 2
roads Too much to menton
n th s ad ca 1 for deta Is
be the 1rst to iva n

~

..

3043 BULAVILLE PIKE Act
qu ckly on th1s neat 3
bedrooms 2 bath home w th
arge open I v ng room to
d n ng area
Equipped
k tchen o1s of landscap ng
with th s n ce approx 1/2
ac

'

$19 900 00 112025
"

N

"'~

MOTIVATION
MEANS
ALO"J: and the seller that
ves In this almost band new
home s serous Br ght and
cheery 3 4 bedroom cape
cod w th 3 baths ceramic tie
en1ry den &amp; d n ng wrth ranch
doors that open to rear patio
Neut a co ors throughout
WarrantieS
low
ma ntenance
T uly an
except ana home 12003

e

lawn

w th

basement

Large

d n ng and I v ng
room
fam ly room
3
ave s zed bedrooms fam y
room
spac1ous eat n
k Iehan w th real y n ce
forma

3

cab nets

Ca

carport

au ck possession
112018

n ture

nvento

y

here

etc

Plus add 110nal app ox 1 120
sf Tenta space P only of
park ng road frontage along
SR 160 Great nves1ment
p operty 112006
HERE S A CUTlEt LOG
HOME $10 70D 00 Only a
few years young Must be
moved to own lot
N1ce
k 1chen w th oak cab nets
d1n ng
and
k tchen
comb nat on

elect

c

heat

Possess on 1mmed at ely
upon clos1ng 112011
PLENTY OF SPACE INSIDE
&amp; OUT HERE n th s
ella m ng o dar 2 s1ory home
L v ng oom d n ng oom
k tc hen fam ly room 2
baths above ground pool

w th

pool house complete

with bath
Lo t s of
emodel ng
Large corner
lots Call 10 v ew th s stylish
#2017

790

Campera &amp;
Motor Homes

1987 Tioga Moo Home 35 000
m as New M che an T as New
Shocks New ba te y al gnmenl
[3041662 2478
I 041 Surround yourMK n thl
ch wamh of ou
narve
hadwoods nths4BA 2BA3

elegant g ea room to a custom
des gned oak k tchen

NICE &amp; DIFFERENT bes1
desc bas th s livable 3
bedroom 2 bath home v ng
room d n ng k !chen Ia ge
w ap around deck All this
and more

s tuated

at 278

Debb e Dr ve
C ose &amp;
conven ent to shopp ng &amp;
schools! Let us show t to
you $89,800 00 It Clli6
ROONE¥ RIO GRANDE
AREAl t 1/2 S1ory home
w th 5 bed ooms 3 baths
1h nk ng a b g p ce nopel
$79 900 00
Be1ween 7 8
acres I v ng oom tam y
room part basement Let us
show t to you HOOO
LOTS ACREAGE RIO
GRANDE/RODNEY
AREA lots sta 1 from 5 6
acres to 14 15 acres
(ac eage w I be determined
by survey) and a 48 acre
tract $19 900 00 &amp; up Call
for complete I s1 ng #2001
RETIRING?
STARTING
OUT ON YOUR OWN?
Check out th s neat home
tha1 s JUS I the r ght s ze to
you
N ce oak cab nets n
k tchen
V nt]
JJO m
2

bedrooms &amp; bath Decorated
La ge easy to
n cely
ma nta n tot Low ut I ty b lis
OWNER W LL CONSIDER
DOING FINANCING Large
storage bu ld ng
Edge of
town locatton 12006

36115 SA 143 POMERO"':
Plann ng on bu ld ng a new
home waste no t me he el
Pick your own colors n th s
new y constructed home 4
Bed ooms 2 1 2 ba1hs den
lov ng
oom
equ pped
k tchen
2 car attached
ga age
mmed ate
possess on #201 0
35051 BALL RUN ROAD
Supe n ce ranch home that
s 2 years young
3
Bedrooms 2 fu ba1hs full
basement 2 ca a«ached
ga age secunty system 9
acres more or ess of and

Nt 070

825 PAGE STREET n
Th s ranch
M dd aport
home features 3 bedrooms
bath
v ng room d n ng
room k !chen and attached

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
Rf;DUCEO $85 000 00 IS
THE NEW PRICE FOR
THIS NEAT HOUSE that s
full of h slory
Lots of
updat ng foyer I v ng oom
d n ng k tchen den
8
bed ooms 2 fu I ba1hs A
ceda I ned c asets
2 ca
garage &amp; loads mo e
#t049
THIS
RANCH
HOME
SITUATED ON APPROX
6 75 ACRES has hao lots of
ca e and s ready to move
nto
The home has a
ca port as we as a a ge

h bun n

REDUC~O

BASEMENT
WATERPfiDOFIIIG
Uncond ona 1tat me gua antee
Local ele encea lu n shed Es
tablshed 1975 Cal 24 Hrs {140)
446 0870 800 287-0576 Rog

era Waterproof ng

C&amp;C Gene at Home Man
enence Paint no v ny siding
ca pent v doors wndow5 baths
mob le hOme repalf and more For
I ee est ma e call Chat 740 992
6323

• ---·-·
~

L11 ngston s Basement Wa e
P oof ng a I bas1men repairs
done I ee est mates
fatima
gua antee 12y s on job e~~;pe
ence 1304)695 3887

..

11035 A IS THE GRADE 4
bd m
5 bah Lvng rm Onng
m cenl a a
a ge cove ed
bac~ po ch tha
s g ea o
cookou s
enced hackya d
Pr ceel at $58 500 DO CAll
NOW

t1036~L
&amp; bo de s

w""''

L SHAPED RANCH
LOTS OF. APPEAL iN~!~!\
&amp; OUT! Large LR &amp; F
d n ng area exposed to
pal o th ough arge set

I

LOT LISTING I $14 900 00
N ce bu ld ng ot clea ed &amp;
has dr veway electr c &amp;
w•ter Paved road 12005
LIKE MONEY? Let th s 2
story bnck bu d ng make you
some Good rental mcome
Commerc al ease n tact on
downstatrs &amp;
renta up Aemode ed C ty
u1 t es
Call tor more
nformat on N1095

ee,;.._.un House

epo tS d~ab e 20
pas u e U
Ac
loca ed nea
Ew ng on
SH900

Real Estate General

WOOD BELILT1', INC

33 AC

J2LOCUST STREET GALUPOUS OHIO 45631

.bJien C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446 0971
Jeanene Moore 256 1745
PatriCia Ross
740-446-1068 or 1eo 884 1086
11046 Exper ence rolling
country meadowl n h s 3 SA
BA anch sty e home s tuated on 11037 A G tit Locat on Low
own 2 Ac es M L
Loca ed us Me ntenance and a Man cured
m nu es om Ho ze Med ca
Sett ng a camp men h s 3 BR
Cente h s we rna n a ned home
2 BA b ck anch Loca ed on.
has open po ches and a one ca
a
eve
co ne o us m nu eg.
ga age Roducod Mt 900 00
fomHoze Medea Gene Ths
Marne oHe s a que coun y
sett ng c ose o wo k shopp ng
schoo &amp; p ay
s a mus see a

Wonderful vltw of tho
Ohio River from the I v ng
room of th s rased ranch
Very neat &amp; clean home
has 3 BAs 1 ba1h full
bsmt FP &amp; 2 ca garage
Lots of extras that are too
many to men on Call to
take a look for you self
for N171

$92 000
Ca to
de a s and ocat on

LOTS!
CLOSE
TO
HOLZER HOSPITA~ Paved
road Lots are 5 acres &amp; up
County wa1er n gas &amp;
e ec t r c
ava able
Rest ct onsl *2007

~C~RMENORIVE-Brol&lt;erl

owned More than mo·tivated
to sell th s mmaculate buck
ranch that offe s ots at
comfort 3 Bed ooms 2 tu I
baths a ge I v ng room
k tchen w th forma d n ng
area ear covered pat o and
front po ch attached 2 ca
ga age
concrete dr ve
mmed ate possess on! You
w I realy Ike th s one Make
Ru sse an offe and you may
be au pr sed whal t w II take
to buy 1h s home #001

PRICE REDUCED! WHAT
A HOUSE FOR THIS
PRICE $t19 900 00 Large
roomy ranch w th the lam y
oom forma d n ng and
v ng rooms 3 bedrooms 2

full ba1hs

ful

basemen1

Ill V nyl
1 5 story w 1h 2 BAs
upsta rs &amp; 1 BA 1 bath LA
DR &amp; k 1chen downsta s
Loca ed on St At 554
Pr ced n the h gh 20 s Let
th s home be you first
Ask for ,169

to relet a
Fve
year old home with 3
bed corns
2
baths
f ep ace Ya d s approx
5 9 ac es fo lots of fun!
Located n Cay Twp Call &amp;
request a showing for M15a

that Is Priced 19
In the 30 s home has
bedrooms 1 bath full
basement &amp; central a
Gall pols C ty Schoo s
home cou d be you sl
for N167

A t 99t Palm Harbour
mobile homo w t~ 2
and 2 baths Tra ler onlyl
Cal and request for
show ng ol 14006

11053 Fant11t c 3 bedroom
SA A w/f ep ace DR &amp; k chen
comb nat on N ce eve o Back
deck on cove ed po ch 2 ca
ga age at ached
de ached
ga age 2 so age ou bu d ngs
CAU FOR VOUR SHOWING
TODAY $65 900 00

Need city convenlencea?
Let th s remodeled two
home g ve them to
putt ng you with n
d stance of schools

Home has 3
1 5 balhs full
basement ng ound poo
and s equ pped w th cent al
a r Located n Gall po s Need 1 rooldtntlal lot(o) n
Call for your show ng today Ga pols?
We have
Mt66
something lot you 1120t 7
Broker OWned

to app ec ate #1 096
825 PAGE STREEl Come
&amp; see th s neat 3 bed oom
home
L v ng room (j n ng
com
k tchen
attached
ca port easy eve lawn to

manta n
be ng
app o~ #2215

Solo

S x lots

n

Subd v son

Ca I today and ask for
112018

see th s one today l #1086

ca

garage

App ox 83 ac e ot #2019

IB
REA

90x150

347t0 WHITES HILL ROAD
$49 900 A um B ck anch
wth 3 bedooms lvng
oom d n ng a ea k tchen
attached

For

Walters H

story hOmt w n
s n
eady to move n ~
cond ton Th s 6 BR 4 bat"
home has p e y of oom fo YOUI
g ow ng la m v
Sepa a e
quarte s o you ag ng pa en s
LA FA a ge k chens DR ec
m
n shed baseme
w fu
bah 2 ca gaage 3 Aces
Much Moe

Call
for
appointment

Ove s zed 2 ca ga age and
ots of s 0 age
au ck
possess on here Must see

make a g eat
comme cal s te Owner w
cons der you offe
Ca to

The co ner

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Home
Improvements

Aaccoo

ocat on would

pole ga age

on o Va ey B&amp;nk W Otte Fo
Sa e By Publ c Auc on A 1999
Honda
TAX
400EX
ATV
1000 47 A 1983 Haley M C
1 0798 &amp; A 1998 Honda
TAX300FWW ATV *926171 At
0 00 A M On 9 25 99 At The
OVB Ann ex 43Th d Avenue
Ga po s OH Sod To H g hest
B dde As s Whe e s w thout
~xp essed 0
mp ed Wa anty
~ May Be Seen Bv Ca ng The
Colee on Dep A 740 44 1038
OVB Rese vas The A gh To Ac
eep Ae ec Any 11 A 8 ds &amp;
~ thd aw ems F o"' Sa e P o
To Sa e Te ms 0 Sa e CASH
OR CERTIFIED CHECK

WI

co ne cab nets lha est on
pol shed -ha d wood floor ng
na u e su ounds you You wiU
e~~~:pe ence accen s of na 1\fE!
oak g oomed hroughout each of
the overs zed
ooms wh le
Glt out ol that ranted wander ng on o e 7 ac es on
lptr1ment and g1t Into lhll this h~ op h deaway Ca oday
Sta
bu d ng eQu y n h s torapnvae vewng
att aciTVe we rna n a ned 4 BA
home
A cove eo pa o and
enced ba ck ya d a e g ea o
am y ge to9elhe s
Wha a
g eat p ace to &amp; art
PRICE

fran ag

MEIGS COUNTY

Very n ce

740 441 1111

New Rep acement Gas Tank&amp; D
&amp; R Aulo R ploy WV 304 )372
3933 Ot 1 800-273-9329

La ge covered

atr um doors newef k tchen

NEW ON
FEEL
LIKE COUNTRY LIVING tN
THE CITY Overs zed anch
home

0994

Coro

Budget P Iced T ansmltslona
aM Eng nes All Types Access
To Over 10 000 T11n!lm 111ons
eve Joftll 740-2.ts-!i6n

deck on rear
N ce for
ba becu ng and nice 2
detached garage Let us
you an appo ntment to
this one nowl #20011

FA 3 BAs
1/2 baths on
man evel p us bsmt w th
bath &amp; fam y/ ec room 2
ca garage 16x32 nground
poo Over 4 5 acres all ess
than 5 m es of town #2013

Fu

LL --·

#3348 Lovely nlnet .. nth
century VIctor 1n home ocated
n a ve y n ce commun ty
Beaut fu o nate woodwo k Very
roomy w th 3 bed ooms 2 baths
2 k cMens dnng oom l vng
oom and den
nc udes 6
ep aces W ap a ound f on
po ch and a back deck Very
c ean and we ma nla ned Ca
Oday fo an appo ntment o see
th s beautifu home GB

w th

I vlng room k tchen barn
tobacco a otment and lots
more And at an affo dab e
p ce of $65 000 #2023

bus ness that seats

~ .. •

•

NEW LISTING! THIS IS
ONE
OF
THOSE
PROPERTIES THAT IS
GETTING HARD TO
FIND
Home w th a sma I
1ract of land be ng approx 24

COMMERCIAL! Aeslauranl
30
Incudes
equ pment

•~

BRAND SPANKING NEWt
Do a few 1n sh ng touches
and move n tome row 1 1/2
story cape cod that has a I
the extras 4 Efedrooms
baths foyer I v ng room
k tchen plus full basement
w th ouls de entry 40 x72
newer pole bu d ng
sett ng w1th a spectacular

12024

Loxury

.
•
.

Oh10 4a631

car proi8S5 onal masterpieCe
W h an
enormous custom
enterta nmen su ound tn the

~uno LOCATION
i:o(iAiiloN: LOCATION! 3
4 Bed oom 2 1/2 bath home
that features Ia ge rooms
nv ud ng argo lam y room
w th attract ve firep ace large
bnght k tchen 2 car at1ached
garage n ce man c ured
lawn Green Elem /GAHS
m nutes f om Hosp ta &amp;
shopp ng
Call 1oday for
you
persona vtew ng

locaton

Galhpohs

-

acres 3 bedroom ranch

Broltol Owttu

evansmoo@zoomnet net

S1r1h L Evans-Moor~
Potrlclo Hoya 446-3884

411 1101

'

rniDCioR'S
located In lhl LIFAYE'n'E
MALL
Own an estab shed
bus ness Buy a I the inventory &amp;
equ pment Owne w II p ov de
he 1 anng &amp; buyng skIs
WORTH
THE
T ME TO
NVESTIGATE MOVE FAST ON
TH SONE
LOTS LAND
COMMERCIA~ PROPERTIES
1873 REDUC~D PRICE 117
ac as c ose to new Fwy hosp a
Wate gas sewe
shop c
Ad1o n ng P nacres Nu s ng
Home
13304 COMMERCIAL LOT &amp;
BUSINESS Located on easte n
Ava
G eat
Oppo un ly
o wth or

Calf For More Lilting Information

e 740-388-8304

Ave

740 446 0008

.................... , ....... .....112011

ence

11291J1 RARE OPPORTUNITY o
own an mmaculate home wth
many amen t es 3 Bed oom t
eva 2 1 2 baths LA DA eat n
k F ep ace nsen n the tam y
m 2 ca attached ga age
La ge bu ld ng w th an apartment
Sa n stocked ake
a ea
Freeway c ose by C ty Schoo s
13027 NATURE S PARADISE
A e you search ng to T anqu ty
and ac eage? Then h s s Fo
You 5 ac es mJI w th alec c and
u at waste on P operty 112 acre
stocked pond P enty of oad
f ontage S22 500 00
11085 WHITE AD Lot•Aeduced
fa Sprno Sae
68 Ac m
ol ng countrys de to bu d a new
home w th a G ea v ew
$~2.QI~ VLS 4460 6806

tl,,

994 GMC 414 P ell Up Truck
G50 Eng ne Au1oma c TIt
C u st Powe W ndoWs And
Ooo lock A
Cond ontJ
75 000 M tes $12 500 One Own

/Moor~

A

514 s~rond

USTINGI THIS
WlLL GO
Property we sedom find! 31 Acres more or
an older home tn good cond tion w th heat pump central a r and spnng water Uke
tor sl1ow horses Mobile home wtth extra lam 1y room Th s Is al surrounded by
NatiOnal Forest don t wa1t call now 12022

OUA VVEB PAGE S www.vlsm h com

133"1 Lerga Farm 101 Ac
F' ce Reduced fo qu ck sa e o
make an offe NewBf 1 1 2 story
nome • 5 be m home 2 bath&amp;..
ovety LA woodbu n ng f eplace
Kt woak cab nets dnng a ea
Level o ol ng and some
wooded &amp; pastu e Bam Call to
an appointment VLS 448.SSOO

117 TEODORA AVE
CITY PROPERTY Thla home
hal gmt cu b tide appeal
actml•t
trHd driveway
and ta
t mbers
n
ne
backg ound makes a state y
sett ng Th a home s a coup e
blocks
om
the
Ho ze
Sycamore B anch and The

99 D11kota lE .cu Too Box
Runn ng B'oa ds Fa a F•nde 1
Lo s Ext as Exce en Cond on
$1 500 74()..379-2768

441 1919

Tamm1e DeWut

i .' t··•..

Blackburn Realty

1990 F250 XLT 4a4 ! Spaeel
S8 000 080 740-256-6573.

1994 Toyota 4x4 A
PS 5
'Speed 27 ooo M Its .$8 200
~4().386.. 932

Judy DeW It
J Me mil Carter

_l ~-

vtROINlA SMJTH BROKER

~

COLONIAL
SUBDNISION

3044

446 4618

288

.. .. -

'"

1987 S 10 8 IU 414 V 8 AT
AC loaded ExoeHenC Cond !JOn
1 2 000 M t1 $4 500 Atlt e
PM 740 44e 9404 740 us

Must See 1980 Chevy
Ton
Facto y Fltb 350 Eng nt New
Tkes S3 ooo OBO 740-256- 122

750 BOlla &amp; Motota
lor Slle

Jo~

RUSSELL 0 WOOD BROKER

1982 Cllt!Yy S tO $200 740-949

o-rna

•

C.....,

1995
Tohoe ••• • Doors
35Q Au1omauc loaded leather
8 ack &amp; S ve A&amp;klng $15 000
OBO 740-256- 011

a-mall us for Information on our llatlngs
big bend@eureklnet com

720 Truck• for Sale

~

0

1877 Chtwy Blazlf 414 I lug
Ton Ru Ends 45$ Gears New
3t 5 Swamp• s Rebu It Motor
Many New Pa ts MUit Sell
$2 800 OBO 740-319-2666

c..-

-------1

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galltpolts, OH • Po1nt Pleasant, WV

ue

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

RuttondCorSoiH
C ean newt used ca &amp; good
va t y aasonab e a es 740
742 33 1 orr.ao-7421400

.r

•.

t995C.....,StOS- 211.
4 Cyl ndlr A.MIFM Aadto Good
$6 000 74().441 135&lt;

Sunday, September 12, 1999

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

13353
PRESENTING
A
tr-- :f ,, - _;
PICTURESQUE HOME WITH
HIGH
QUALITY
&amp;
LOW
MAINTENANCE
LOCATED
ATOP OF HILL.
Featunng 5
bed ms
4 baths
AI oak
... ,
wooctwo k &amp; cab ne s La ge eat
n kitchen ce am c tie floors 113352 NEW LUXURY WHITE
o ma vmg m Maste su te on BRICK HOME Under construction
fi s
loo
Basement w{k t located n a prest g oua area n
Beclrms
ba h
fam y
m G een Twp S m n from Hozl!f
5 bed ms 4 ba hs
WOOdbu n ng fi eplace A so wa k Hosp ta
en rv
w sky! ght
&amp;
ou o a beaut ftJ andscaped awn Fa ma
Cove ed pa o attached ga age cahedacengdnngm vng
Outbu ld ngs ba n and g eat m conven ant kit oak cab ne s
wo ksflop w e ec c wale &amp; heat s I oo aundry Mas e su e on
s floo nc udlng a supe bath rm
2 mob le hOme padS fo ncome
4 Bed ms 2 batns on
26.58 Ac es M L Take a seen c &amp; clOse
24 IC24 fam y m
st o th ough p c u esque woods 2nd OOl
An outs and ng p operty fo peop e app ox 4 000 sq ft Beaut ful 3
wMo app ec a e peac:ef'..J
v ng ac e MIL av ned lot and ve
s earn It would be my p easu e
VLS
o Show you Vi g n a 44&amp;6806
~

;S!OO CARS FROM $500tll Buy

'CARS $tOO $500 &amp; UP POL

Ma n Off ce 388 8826
Ca kChape Rd
Oho 45614

Branch OffiCe
23 Locust Si
Gall'ipol&gt;is, Oh o

saso oo ceo

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

~ ~s!!:'!!.%:'1 ~!

446-6806~~k4

Hay&amp; Grsln
Second Cut ng

'lt.

Uak:t U• An On.rt 1177 CheVy
414 350 4 Se&gt;ted Aougr.
740
fi'8152

Real Eltate General

Real Estate General

M n ature Male Donkey
245-5249

N Cl

15 000 M to II 700 7&lt;0 311

POLICE IMPOUNDS FROM
$5001 Repo I All Make5 I Mod
ets Fee Cal For L st nos 1 800
7 ~3001 lA010

968 Chevy
2 Ton V 8 3
Speed •3 762 Ml es AI Orlg nal
One Owne L kt New Inside And
Out Ask ng $15 2!50 740 379
260

$3 toO 00

1991 Silverado loaded

730 VIIM l 4-WDs

720 Ttuck1 lor Slle

t9et Fotd F 150 1/2 Ton XLT
LWB 4 Spd G Cyl AIC PW

9404 7~3044~~------~==================~~~~~~
~

Sunday, September 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

NEW LISTING! Attention bulldero or mobllo homo
owners Vacant Land JUSt m nlues from the hospital &amp;
own App ox 9 ac es M L Ca I for the location &amp; price
N2020

0

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC
(740) 446-3644
E Ma 1Address w seman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Garnes 446 2707

Robert Bruce 446 0621

Carolyn Wnsch 441 1007
R1ta Woseman 446 9555

Call for vrewmg 1

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Monday

Sunday, September 12, 1999

Southern defeats South Gallia, Page 4
Not ready for ~arriage, Page 6
Computing retirement benefits, Page 10

Today: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Ton1011ow: P. Sunny
Hlgh: 70s; Low: 50s

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper
Single Copy. 35 Cents

~

By ANJETTA McQUEEN

The Clinton adminiSlrauon. "once a pnme advocate of &gt;landards-based

AP Education WrHer
WASHINGTON- The Clinton admmistration i's not enforcmg a federallaw designed to make sure poor students gehhe same challengmg schoolwork as other children, a repon by a civtl rights group says.
States have been allowed too much latnude m adoplmg umform standards
of learning for all children, resulting m a system of educauonal apanbeid
with "disturbing echoes of the old racially dual systems of educat1on" that
existed before school segregation ended, the Citizens' CommiSsion on Civil Rights concluded in a repon on Title I to be released today
Title I, created over 30 years ago to narrow the gap m academic achievement between low-income students and their peers. was revised in 1995 to
make sure states gelling federal mone.y adopted uniformly h1gh standards for
all children.

at 31 Ohio River Plaza
.·(Just 1 mile from the Silver Bridge)

~

Kroger Gift Certificate

to. the first 300 customers
onThursda

revision, the repon concludes.
The Educauon Department tnsJSts 1hat
).

IllS

uph oldmg the miSSIOn ofTttle

' ; rate believes all chtldren should know and.
Standards spell out what the

be able to do m each subject. States can de.: ide v. h11:h sUbJects tu wnte stan dards fQr, but they must have reading and math standards to comply 'oAtith the
law.
Under the $8 billion federal program. the dcpar1mcnt gwcs state:-. m o nc~
to ra1se the hi:..toncally low achievement levels of roor and other di 5&gt;advantaged ch1ldrcn For ~ears, many sc hools had ··dumbed-down· · the curncu -

lum for poor ch1ldren over the misgutded heltef that such children couldn't
he expected to do the sam e schoo lwork as peers who dtdn ' t t:ome to school

Jnternet
Effectl\c programs were nominated h! the g overn or~ of 13

lens.

missi on as an "Ideas Thai Work' pro-

Laraine Lawson. daughter of M1ke and Marg1e Lawson of Racme. was
named 1999 Fall Festival Queen and was crowned by last year's queen , Jody
Hupp.
First runner up was Stacy Lyons, daughter of Jack and Rhonda Lyons of
Racine, while Dena Sayre, daughter of Dan and Donna Sayre of Racme.
received the Judges Award.
.
Other queen candidates were Lena Yoacharn. daughter'Nancy Pedtgo and
Mark Yoacham of Racine, and Autumn Hill, daughter of Lori Hill of Apple
Grove and Dean Hill of Racme.
In the pumpkin growing contest. firsi place in the senior divi~ion went to
Guy Bing with his 230-pound entry. Second place was won by !Jrn Kmg. In
the junior division, Jenmfer Larsen won first place with a 160-pound pu'fp·
kin whde the jomt entry of Wesley and Wh1tney Riffle received second place
followed by Kyle Pierce.
In the k1ddie tractor pull conducted by Dan and Donna Jean Smith, win""" m the 35-55·pound class were Bobbie Riffle, Breeanna Manuel and Benjamin Foreman Winners m the 56-75-pound class were Jonathan Allbaugh,
Samuel Evans and Daniel Lawson. Prizes were sponsored by Wayne \l,oush
and D&amp;M Pizza.
. . Musical entenainrnent was provided by the Larkm Family from Churchill.
Tenn:, Randall Hylton from Nashvtlle. Tenn .. the McClam Brothers Band
With M1ke Stevens of Ontano, Canada. and the Bu1lders Quartet from Rip·
ley. W.Va.
The Fall Fesltval Committee compns~d of Dave and Ann Zirkle, Larry
Wolfe. Terry Coe, Allen Graham and Dale and Kathryn Hart presented
plaques to long-time fest1val sponsors Howard Frank. Clarence Bradford and
Jean Alktre .

gram during the ARC's "Ideas That

Appalach1an &gt;late&gt; All of the programs will be featured tn a publication to be dJ stnbuted at the confer-

Study finds water polluters slow ·
in paying the costs for cleanup
. COLUMBUS (AP)-;-Industries polluting Ohio's water supplies have
been slow to pay for cleaning them up and the state Environmental Protection Agency is reluctant to force them to do so, a study by two envi ronmental advocacy groups says.
The study, released today, found that of the 54 public water systems
the EPA had designated as prionties in 1998, the polluti'ng mdustries m
only three cases helped to pay for their cleanup
EPA spokeswoman Heidi Griesmer said she was did not know the
source of the 54 cases.

ll.....-

She said that of the 89 cases cited in an EPA draft memo that accompanied the study, orders to help pay for the cleanup from either the Oh10
EPA or U.S. EPA had been issued in 18 of them.
The report was compiled by Ohio Citizen Action, an envtronrnental
and political advocacy group, and the Washmgton-based Envtronrnental
· working Group. It investigated cases reponed from 1993 through November 1998.
.
·
The total cost of cleaning up the pollution " not known. Jane Houhhan, senior analyst for the EWG, said Friday. But ciues such a ~ Dayton,
Middletown and Wooster have spent more 1han $1 rn1lhon each cleanmg
their water supplies, the report said.
Industries may have cleaned up their own propeny, but that doesn 't
help surroundi ng cities and villages that may not know the source of the
pollution, Ms . Houlihan said. The polluters h~ve an,obligal ton to pay for
cleaning up the water suppltes. she sa1d.
"The law doesn't care about the property hne. These commumt1es subSidize these pollunng mdu stnes," Ms. Houilhan smd.

\iWi\\l\t V.\11-\\

JU'''

{ ?t·.. -·
in Galli

I

lo

•

At Your Gallipolis
Kroger Only
No ptln:hase nectwry.
Su slorr for dtluus.

Free Month
of Groceries
Win four $100 /(rOger

Rhodes notes
Good Afternoon 90th ·birthday.

Gift Certificates

Drawmg Sarurday. Ocr. 2nd

Sentinel

Fly Away Holiday
Vacation Package
Multiple Destinations;

3 Days/2 Nights;

Acc:Ommodalions and

Round TripAilfate for two.

Drawmg Saturday, Ocr. 9th

19" Color TV

Register to win a 19n Color 7V

Drawing SalurJay, Sept. 25rh

•'

The Educatum Department ln~J:..l !-1. that \11:-. uphold.n g that mi;;;siL'n Fort; ·
e1ght state., plus the District of Columh1a and Puerto R1 co ha\'e laws or regulation" on upifonn sta ndard ~ for lcam1ng . ur fwm JUSt a handful fi ve yean.
ago . '~.:tid Mar- hal Smith . Y.ho hc :1d .. the d\?partment"~ K-12 pr ogram ~
The com mi ~si on 1nsJs ts that some ~ t ate-. that let local !-C h~XJ I dl !&gt;tm:t:-. delJde
the1r own standard~ have not establbhcd m1mmum lc\ch that mu~ tl:le met
to meet the ~tate:..· law s
T1tle I. an $S billi on federal program ~e n 1ng: 10 5 mlll1 on ch•ldren m 90
pcrl·cnt of school dt~lnct s. has been under anuck h! edm:al~tm re:-.c.:m.:hcrs
and GOP prcsJdcnual candidate George \\" Bu!&gt;h
·
Bm.h ha:-. lalled for -\ carl\. tc:-.1'1 Of' ' chi ldren at ...chL)Ob rcCCJ\ tnl!... federal
funds .

The Ohio Appalachian Center for
Higher Education will be rcc ogntzed
by the Appalachian Reg10nal ComWork " conference in Wheeling ,

W.Va .. on Oct. 13.
The Portsmouth-based OACHE is
a consortium of 10 public colleges

Plck3: 7-7-0, Plck4: 1-6-4-9
Super Lotto: 14-22-34-35-41-44
Kicker. 9-5-2-3-8·5
W.VA,
Daily 3:4-2-7, Daily 4: 4·2·1·0
0 1999 Ohio Valley

Publ1~h.ng

Co.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Former
Gov. James A. Rhodes turns 90
today but the celebration started a
day early in a building named for
him.
An estimated 700 people auended a binhday tribute Sunday night
in the Rhodes Center at the slate
fairground s.
"Everybody's been very good
to me." Rhodes told The Columbus
Dispatch in an mtcrv1ew pubh shed
Sunday. "It's been a good hfc and
I want to show 'ern how much I
apprec1 ate it. "
The party was orgamzed by former Rhodes cab•netmembcr Ph1l1p

S. Hamilton.
"It's nonpart1san, " Hamiilon
said. "We're inviting cvcryhody

When you g~t to be 90. part of the
problem IS that the people you
knew arc no longer here.··

ence. as well as th rougho ut the

and uni\ersJIJes'serving the 29-co un-

Appalachtan regwn. A small numher.
mclud1ng the OACHE program . were
chosen by the ARC for ,discussiOn at

ty Appalachian Ohio regwn that

the co nference.

K-12 schools and member instllU·
tions. The panner-school proJects

learnmg network to hnk OACHE

The OACHE has worked with the
works to increase the ,college-gomg
.ARC
before. receiving more than
rate among the pubhc
$126.000
m funds over two years to
The consortmm sponsors statefunded access projects wjth partner lay the groundwork for a di stance
member mstituuon s As a re~uh of lhe

ARC's support. the OACHE was able
college-gomg rate s of 20 percent for to secure more than $500.000 from
the firsl year of theu two-year grants. state and privale sources to Impleand 34 percent for the•f1rst two years ment the network, to be launched early in 2000.
combmed.
OACHE also operates an EducaJoy Padgett, director of the Governor's Office of Appalachta said tional Opponunuy Center. a U.S.
that OACHE Exccuuve Dtrector Department of Educallon TRIO proWayne While will present htghltghts gram to help adults re -e nter college
of the OACHE's efforts at next In ~ugusl. OACHE received anothmonth's conference, wh1ch \\&gt;I ll er federal grant wort h more than $2
have averaged an mcreasc m theh·

FALL FESTIVAL QUEEN - Southern High School senior
Laraine Lawson, left, daughter of Mike and Margie Lawson of
Racine, was named tha 1999 Fall Festival queen at Sar Mill Park
in Racine Saturday. She is shown here being crowned by last
year's queen, Jody Hupp.

define~

showcase
··what
work s"'
1n
Appalachta's most econonm:ally dlsliCSscd .m~as The co nference is to be
broadca:-.1 li ve hy satellite and on the

million uver five years to work wilh
selected public sc hool s to Increase
preparatiOn for college. startm g in the
seventh grade

turf in Waco investigation

By JIM ABRAMS

';'\. '

fl•r all chtldren .

A flawless September afternoon no doubt &lt;;ontrtbuted to a successful annual Fall Festival at Star Mill Park in Racine Saturday.
1lte day kicked off wnh a parade at 10 am. Parade wmners were. in order:
Ohio Valley Bank. Southern High School Cheerleaders and Howard Mul-

'

Danforth

~\"1\U ~ f •l'\';~~\\\1,"\\\'

hungry. in poor health or othcrw1 sc unread) lO learn
In 1994 . the law "'jas chan ged t l\ ens ure that ..rates &lt;.~dopted high ... tandards

ARC to recognize
area consortium

'

'

SEPTEMBER

reform , has smce had a masst\'c failun:o.f 1Wtll antl nerve ... m enforcmg: the

Racine
celebrates
.
annual fall festival
'

11-

-Pages

Report claims poor children not held to standards

of your NEW Gallipolis Krog~r:

'

Pittsburgh squelches
81 owns 43-0 In game
played at Cleveland

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Number 67

FREE 85.00

Sports

Septembotr 13,· 199t

Weather

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGToN - New spec tal counsel John Danfonh and co ngressiOnal
·Republicans are defrnmg thc-1r turf m com1ng \Va~ o mvcsugauon s. with Dan-

forth saymg he 'll keep narrowly focu sed on cover-ups and lawmakers promIS·
mg broader, more poltl!cal inqutrics
Danforth. a former RepubiiCaJl se1Mtor from Massour1. smd Sunday that
he was interested m whether there was a cover-up of fat:ts about the 1993
s1ege of the Branch Dav1dmn compound ncar Waco, Texas. and whether government officJals. contrary to thctr clauns. shot at members of the reltgtous

cult.
" It 's not gmng to be sort uf a general sweepmg mvestJgation 11110 whether
or not good or bad JUdgment was used,.. he &gt;&lt;nd Danforth, appotnted by Auorney General Janft Rc11o la"it week to head the mdcpcndcnt probe IntO the
events at Waco appeared on all five Sunday n~ws programs.
Asked what he had learned from mdepc ndcnt counse l Kenneth Starr's
invesugaltons of PreSident Chntun , he so11d. "thi, ca nn ot ho absolute ly openended where one 1ssue sort ur mot phs mto .mother ISSue."
House Government Rc!orm Comm1tt~c Chamnan Dan Burton. R-Ind ..
meanwhile. Promised a hroadcr look in h1s panel's probe . " We need to fmd
out whu 's responsible It may not be an Illegal ~cllv1ty. but 11 ll was lni.:omp~tencc , we don't want r cllple in charge n t th1ngs hkc Waco II they're m.ll
doang the1r JOb prnpealy... he ... 01id on ·Fox News Sunda; ."
Sen Patnck Lcahv. ' D-Vt s.uJ 11 would hf hcttcr lO wmt untd .1fter Dan~

forth lim shes h1s mqutry before Jaunchmg congressJnnal invest1gat10Tls wh1th
"become very parti san. very no1 sy... But he acknowledged OJ;! ABC's ''Thb
\'leek" that ''that's not going to happen··
Burton made public a letter he ~cnt to Reno ahout documents on \\'ac o
the Justi ce Dcpartmcnt suhmlltcd to Congress several ycc.r~ ago that omitted one page menlionmg the usc of mllllary·style tear gas rou nd .;
He s,lld the m1ssmg la~t page of th e -+9 -pagc FBI lab re port '"r~use.., morequestion~ ahout whether thl~ co rnmmce \\U~ mtcnllon &lt;.Iil! ITII..,Jed dunng th('
m 1emal Waco mve sugauon ..
Hesatd hL: wanted to Jnter\ICW tim. \\t't:k thaec Ju ~t1 u: Dep. lrtmcnt staffer~
who were lll\'Oivcd 1n the di,CO lC rJ that . . nmc cop1c'\ nf !he bh rr.:pori. did n' t comatn the !mal page
·n,e Jusuce Dcpartm~:nt and the FBI tor vc-ar ~ dr.:nJed th 0 u~r.: ll f .. u ~..h mccndlar\' rtiUn&lt;.Js allllll \\&lt;.l~ the- ICCCnt di ~L" h1 ~UI(' that ~e\Cr,l ] S(ll..'h ~clllh ll'l"' Ht.:rC
Itred at d ... wrm h!Jnkc:r m thc B1 anch [},,, 1d1an cPmpound that .. p.ub: d the
new 1uo.k .11 the 1993 trJ.ged y
·
A Just1cc ·~rokc s m.m ~a1d the ma..; .. m~ page was tncludcd tn .d; ,,:um ...·nh
tuTncd ove1 tn l..tw ycrs m l..'rimmal and CJ\ tl cases mvolv t n~ \Val·o ~ur' I\ l'l'i
.uH.lthc :.pcLi . il coun se l \\Ill have to lllOI... mto why II 11C\C I n:m:hcJ c~ llll~TL'""'
Th~ adnlltllstrauon also conllnuc" to ~trC ss that there 1~ nD C\ JJ1..·n~c to
cnntr.ldtct past hndmg s thatl ollowcrs ol Dav id1 an leade r David Kt,tc, h :-el
the tire that dc,twyed tht: compound Some RO cult' member" pl' fl" hed 1n the
!Ire \) f . the government say~. were :-. hot h~ other mt·mhcl..,

Crude oil
price hike
hits pumps
CAMARILLO. Caht (AP)
Prices at the gas pumps JUmped lc:-.s
than a Plnny in the past three week~ .
due largely to an increase m uude o il
pnccs. an indu stry analy st ~.ud Su n-

day.
The na110nal wc1ghtcd

~wcr.I£C'

Friday.·mcludmg all grades and tax·
cs. was $1 3178. up I ~&lt;'Ill $1 31 1n the
previous survey Au ~ 20. ~a1d Tnlhy
Lundberg . who puh Ji,hcs tho Lund·
herg Survey of I O.tl(IO ga' stat tons
nauon'w1de.
However, the upward trend !hat
marked gas pn ces in the summer may
be l':·oming to an end
'' With va cations cnd tnf! and
schools beginning. 1r'.s crud~.· ·a d
pnces callmg the shots atthl.· 'pumr.··
she sa1d . " lf crude o il pric e~ ~ t .l~
arountl the $2J -a-b01J rei rant'c th:..~ n
fuel gasoline cut' ca n he ex pcru:J . The ~light ri se rctlccted a ' $2
incn:;tsc m the pri&lt;..·c per h.HTL'i 11f
Lrudc &lt;lil to $2~ . 55. Lum.lkn~ ~. ud
Ga$Llhnc pn cc:. wcrL' l..cpl 111 ~ chcd,
nall &lt;'m\ldc llu\llb to a fmn -t.: ~..·n t - .!f
l!all nn Lhp 111 lhc W'est

SPONSORS NAMED - The Meigs County
American Heart Association will conduct Its
seventh annual American Heart Walk on Sept.
28. Sponsors lor the event are Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Co., Holzer Meigs Clinic, Kroger,
Home National Bank and City National Bank.
The walk will honor Bob Ho!!flich, long-time
member olthe association's board. Sponsor

chairman ScoH Dillon, secbnd from left, is pictured with sponsor representatives, Paul Kloes
of Farmers Bank, Patty Weaver of Holzer
Meigs Clinic, and Carolyn Ohlinger, Kroger.
Those interested in participating in the walk
should contact Alice Wolle at 949·2286 or ScoH
Dillon at 992·2161 ,

'

I

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