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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, April 14, 1992

•

Page--10

'

Meigs honor rolls are announced
Honor rolls for the third nineweek grading period in the Meigs
Local School District have been
announced.
Bradbury Elemtntary
Fifth grade - Austin Carr, John
Davidson, Becky Johnon, T.J.
King, Patrick Martin, Josh Price,
Melissa Holman, Jennie Howerton,
Jessica Johnson, Sarah Larkins.
Joshua Lynch, Rusty Stewan.
Sixth grade . Rachel Ashley ,
Chad Hanson. Jenny Hayman ,
Nancy Marlow, Dandia Young.
D.H . . Ginger Darst, Jeff
Fowler, Collin Roush, Nancy Whaley, Matt Williams, Kim Bush,
Brooke Han, Tasha Jude, Ztnnta
Spears, Lora Ward, Georgtana
Spears.
L.D .. John Moore, Andrew
Kiu:hen, Jason Roush.
Harrio;onviUe Elementary
First grade - Joshua Althouse.
Wesley Call, Roger Chadwell, Der:
rtck Fackler, Jay Green, Jam•
Hayes, Crystal Jacks. Jessica King,
Ryan King, Christopher McDamcl,
Danny Morgan, Jessica Prcast
Second grade - Ashley Burbridge, Samuel Can10rbury, Jcrreu
Fields. Ben Haley, Amber Hanmg,
Jennifer Reeves, Sohn Stanley,
Daryl Walker, Rees Wyant
Third grade - Adam Bullmgton,
BcnJ • Call, Chri stopher Dodson,
Michael Lambert, Jonathan Maue.
Alben StCMIIS.
Fo urth grade - Jason Miller,
Kyle Smiddi e. James Stanley,
Adam Walker.
Fifth grade . Clinton Hendricks.
Jason Prcast. Franco Romuno.
Six th grade - Mtchelle Bissell.
Melissa Reeves, Jennifer Sigmon.
Middleport Elementary
First grade - Zachary Gilkey,
Cole Haggerty, Lucy Howerton,
Andy Hysell, Brooks Johnson.
Pe10r Jones. Wtlham Kauff, Alicia
Ord, Misty Painter. Abram Sayre,
Keith Taylor, Beth Wilfong.
Matthew Yonker, Carrie Darst,
Kanndies Lee, Amanda Lash bough. Tony Martinez, Nikkle
Phtllips. Heather Phalm, Stephamc
Schwab, Joshua Simpson. Jtmmy
Smith. Angel Stone, Emi ly Story.
Hannah Woolard. Brad Morrisoo.
Second grade - Andrew Baker,
Michael Dorst, Dclana Etchmgcr,
Erin Hartsoo, Joshua Lynch, Nickolas McLaughlin, Richard Mtchacl,
Sarah Reynolds, Rebecca Smtth.
Tyler Stewart, Brandon Werry.
Trevor Buck, Charles Eabns.
Heather Felly, Andy France.
Michelle French, Heather Fry, Cor·
ric Hoover. Tyson Lee. Monica
Moon, Erica Ralston, Jacob Smtth.
Tara Wyau.
Third grade - Jessica Chapman,
Bryan Cowdery. Chasity Fowl er.
Zackery Krautter, Amy Sarver.
Brooke Smith, ian Story, Rache l
Taylor, Amber Vining, Apn I Sun.
Whitney Ashley. Abby Hams. Carric Lightfoot, Brandi Smull. Cass1c
Vaughan .
f'ourth grade - Seth Bak er.
Stacey Brewer, Mindy Halley.
Scott Johnson, Seth Rawson, Candace Werry, Ashley Burton. Brant
Dixon, Bridget Johnson. Nicholas
Michael, Tommy Roush and Renee
SIC wart.
Salem Center Elementary
First grade- Ashley Colw ell .
Shawn Crisp. Austin Cross . Kell y
Johnston, Jcnni Priddy, Amanda
Smith
Second grade - Josh Ba" . Ryan
Bates. Nicole Black. Jam eso n
Johnson. Chelsea Montgomer y.
Josh Napper, Jarrod Ogdin. Kry stal
Pennington. Knsty Puckett . M1'i y
Puckett, Jessica Schuler . Jam es
Thomas
Third grade - Kendra Cleland .
Robert Johnson. Enc Mont gomery.
Carl Rickard.
f'ourth grade - Onnn Barr ett .
Amber Gardner, Tawn y lon e&lt;.
Stephanie Kopec , Enk Metheney.
Laura Payne, Jeremiah Smilh . Jeremy Smith.
Fifth grade - Andrea Dunfee.
Lori Kmnison, JessiCa Priddy, Km1
Rttterbeek, Rebekah Smull. Bndgct
Vaughan.
Sixth grad e - Lcanna Dav iS ,
Leigh-Ann QlniOrbury, J.R . Kmnl ·
son, Amy McCoy, Amanda Nap per, Sheila Neace and Larry Ogdm
Salisbury Elementary
First grade - Marc Barr . Ben
Bookman. Dawna Brumfield. AshIcy Eblin, Juicy Eblin. Ashl ey
Fields. Jon Halar, Chns Han10g,
Bubby Hayc. Mcghan Hayn es.
KfiSti Lambert. Taylor McGraw ,
Jason Rosier, Lois Still . Heather
Rifne.
Second grade - Bobbte Rurson ,
C.J. Estep. Levi Gillette, Ashley
Hoschar. Justin Hoschar, Mtndy
O'Dell, Amber Pnaff,tt, Matt Snyder.
Third grade - Sarah Clifford.
Sandi Gilkey, Brandy Graham,
Abby Hubbard, Robert Johnson.
Grace Kitchen, Carson Mtdktff,
Heather Whaley.
Fourth grade- Beverly Burdette.
Kim Conde, Marjorie Halar.
Tiffany Harder, Morgan Malhcws.
Kim Peavley, Anna Story, Ryan
Well.
..
Fifth grade - Locy Banks, TnCJa
Davis, Tamra O'Dell, Ryan Ramsburg.
.
Sixth grade - Mick Barr, Bllll
Bentley, Carly Chasteen , Brad

Community calendar

Davenport, Chad Folmer, Jason O'Brien, Lisa Snodgrass.
Frecker, Myca Haynes , Heidi
D.H. - Jason Litchfield, Mike
Legar, Michael Leifheit, Tara Norville.
Michael, Melissa Ramsburg, SabriL.D.- Wayne Capehart.
na Smith, Jared Warner.
Junior Higb
Pomeroy Elementary
Seventh grade- Jodie Sisson, all
First grade - Kayle Davis, Maria A's; Chad Bartrum, Casey Bootlle,
Drcnner, Michelle Drcnner, Robyn Amy Clonch, Taryn Doidge, Jenny
Freeman, Katie Jeffers, Jason Mur- Cli!Tord, Shawn Fife, Tara Grueser,
dock. Mathew O'Brien, Ben Sec, Jared King, Libby King, Erin
Jennifer Zielinski, Misty Clay, Krawsczyn, Jessica McElroy,
Brandon Ramsburg, all A's; Melis- Mitchell Miller, Tim Peavley,
sa Hemsley. Andy White, Corey Stacy Price, Stacie Reed, Ashley
Woods, Andrea Burdette, Chrissy Roach, Cynthia Sandy, Amber
Day, Jessica Hooten, Heather Slaven, Beverly Stewart, Melissa
Hysell. Raymond Klein, Strauder Whaley, Adam White. Jamie
Little. Amber Mahlman, David Williamson.
McClure, Chris Pickens, Tamiko
Eighth grade - Nikki Bentley,
Riffle, Jeremy Roush, Michele Megan Clark, Phyllis Clark,
Runyon , Cody Smtih.
Bethany Cohee, Cynthia Cotterill,
Second grade - Marvin Day. Carrie Counls, Ryan Crisp. Ricky
Ashley Hamdton, Nicholc Runyon, Curtis, Tern Ftfe, Angte Hale,
Jonalhan Wilson. nil A's; Carolyn Todd Hawley, Allison Gerlach,
Bentz. Garnett Bonecutter, Raben April Halley, Angela Fisher,
Bush. Caleb Ellis, Kns Jenkins. Dorothy Lctfheit, Dtane Hook,
Derek Michael, Jessica Roush. Car- Nick Mills, Tanya Phalin. Tracy
ne Abbot~ Jess1ca Hysell, Ktmbcr- Shaffer, James White.
ly McDaniel , Sara Moon, Clara
Sanders, Matthew Wtlhamson .
Th~rd grade . Chns Pi ckens ,
Emily Stivers. all A's; Andy Davis,
Nick Dettwillcr. Ash Icy Hannahs.
A spring carnival will be held at
Curt•s Hanstine. Aja McG iothJO, the Portland Elementary School,
Shannon Price. Adam Shank. Alex Portland, May 2, from noon to 6
Shuler, Brenna Sisson, Brandy p.m. There will be kiddie tractor
Smtih, Terra Barton, Kelly Canan, pulls, a pet show, stage acts, Clf'Cus
Brcydcn Haptonstall. Julte costume contest. and children's
Kennedy, Andrea Krawsczyn, games as well as displays of crafts.
Michael Stacy, Ashley Thomas. Space is available for craft vendors
Christopher Ward.
and those interested may call 949Founh grade - Wesley Thoene. 2950, 843-5131, or 842-5240.
all A' s; C.D . Eilts, Ryan Pratt,
Misty Pugh. Jennifer Shnmplin.
Whttncy Thomas, Jackie Buck .
Melissa Davis. Julie Spaun. Adam
Thomas, Christian Welker.
Fifth grade- Misty Hart, Jen nifer Heck, Stefan• Pickens, DavJCI
Rusche!, B.J. Smith, Kristina
Kennedy, Melissa Darnell, Jennifer
Lambert, Kasey Wtlliams.
Sixth grade - David Anderson.
Wendi Daniels, Dantellc Grucscr.
Amy Smilh. all A's; Lauren Anderson, Steven McCullough. Lisa Russell, Scott Sellers, Jessica Wright.
Jason Ncigler, Ronnie Hirth.
MIChelle Ramsburg. Wendy Shrim ·
plin, Adam Thomas.
D.H. I - Dustin Fellurc. Mcagan
Given s, Meli ssa Johnson, Kathy
Jones . Charlie Richards. Randall
Salyers. Ryan Terzopplous.
D.H . II - Brian Klem. Chnstophcr Smith, Liza Zahran.
L.D. - SIOphanie BurdctiO .
Rutland El•m•ntary
First grade- Ashley Bartrum.
Brook Bolin, Melissa Cremeans.
Hollie Ferrell, Jessica Justice, Mal lory K10g. Allison Williamson. all
A's; Brandon Black, Joshua
Fowler. J.R. Hawk, Rachel Morris,
Steven McDaniel, Amanda Rich mond, Josh Stanley. Corey Vaugh an. Kenny Zuspan.
Second grade · Bradley Baylor,
Amber Snowden. all A's; Enn
Bush. Amber Ellis, Gabriel Jenk Ins. Darrick Knapp. John Lc ntcs.
Melissa Richmond, J.P. Varian .
Th1rd grade - Derrick Boltn,
Alison Hayes. Billy Kennedy.
Bethany McMtllan, Tiffany Priddy,
all A' s; Zachary Bolin, Jusun Clc !Jnd, Sktp Dodson. Aaroo Krauncr.
Bcatncc Morgan, F. li wbetll Smith,
,\1atthew Stewart, Zachary
Wtlliams.
Fourth grad e - Amanda Miller.
al l A's; Tiffany Halfhill, Sarah
lh le. Ashley Mtller, Josh Sordcn .
Ftfth grade . Robert Diddl e .
\1anhew Ju stice. Clayton Tromm.
all A's; Kn slcn Brown , BcnjJmin
Fo wler. Jusun Jeffers. Alyson Pat -

Plan carnival

Community Calendar items
appear two days btrore an event
and the day of tbat event. Items
must bt receivtd well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will meet Tuesday. 7 p.m., at the
senior citizens center m Pomeroy.
All members urged to auend. Officers will be elected.
LONG BOTIOM - Evangelist
Dave Carpenter will be the spealcer
for the Christian Fellowship Outreach program at Faith Full Gospel
Church io Long Bottom on Tuesday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve_ Reed
mvites the public. Fellowsh•p follows.
MIDDLEPORT- Revival service at Middleport Church of the
Na1.arcne through Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly and 10:30 a.m . Sunday .
Rev . and Mrs. Billy D. Crane,
Parkersburg. W.Va .. special workers. Public invited.

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Alumni Band will meet at 7 p.m.
on Tuesday at Dairy Queen in Mid dleport. All former Middleport
High School band members mtercsu:d in playing at the Alumni Banquet arc encouraged to atiOnd.

tee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.

I

TRUCK UNVEILED - A new Ford L-8000
liretruck was unveiled when the Racine Volunteer Fire Department beld an op•n bouse on
Sunday. The truck has a 500 gallon per minute
pump and a 1,500 gallon tank, and was purchased with runds rrom lbe lire levy in Lebanon,
Letart and Sutton Townships and Racine Village at a cost or $76,000. Pictured at the open

•,

I

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I ,

State Aula's already
low prern•urns can be
reduced even more by
tnsunn&lt;J bolh your car
and home wtlh I he Slate
Auto Compames
lei us tell you IUSI
how much your savmgs
can be .

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

1t:J
Insurance Comp•nies
_____ _...
Slate Auto

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A welfare
refonn proposal being prepared for
· Gov . George Voinovich IS unlikely
to target a scheduled increase in
Aid to Dependent Children bene fits, State Budget Director Gregory
Browning said.
But several options arc bctng
considered in an auempt to cut
long-terrn growth in spending for
Medicaid, a state-federal program
that provides health and nursing
home care for the poor and elderly.
ADC recipients received no
boost in their monthly benefits this
year. Checks are to increase 2 percent on Jan. I, 1993.
" We haven't made any dec JSton
about eliminating that increase. It's
in current law. Without any change
it goes into effec~ and we'll pay for
i~" Browning said.
"S hould we stop that from
going into effect' Some peopl e
may raise that question as a way to
balance the budget. The governor

'----~ -

-

F-ew loan opuons arc
as po pular as home cqu!ly
loan s In fact . on e tn ftvc
homeovmcrs ha s one Do
they know S0mcthmg you
don't l Could be Here arc
some pomt s to cons tdcr
fust. and probably mosl tmportanl , is
the way Uncle Sam favors home equity loans.
Changes in lax laws tn recen t years mean
you can no longer clatm tnterc sl on mos1
tnstalment loans as a laX dcductton .
Bul home equny loans arc dtffercnt If
yqur loan is for $100,000 or less. you can
~usually deduct all the tnt ercs t yo u pay
•rdrt

"Pr'•'•~l C

1'11.' RM•Ji Ill'&lt; I ,1

'R I~ !IVI 1101'1

has not given me any dirccuon that
... we ought to propose changing
the language. That's not something
that we're pushing right now ," he
said.
Brownmg insisted no decisions
have been made about contents of
the rcfOIJD package to be subm itted
to the General Assembly next
month to help erase a prOJected
$576 million state budget deficit
Under consideration for possible
inclusion IS a freeze on the number
of nursmg home beds and a reduc uon in the nu'flber of elderly eligible for nursmg homes under Medicaid.
The possibility of reducing nursing home eligibility drew fire from
Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna. chatrman of the Legislature 's Medt caid
Oversight CommitiOC.
"What are we as a state gomg to
do , dump Lhcsc elderly people out
oo the street.s? I'm getting tlfed of
watching thi s governor know on ly
one form of ~overnancc - slash

and cut and stash. What we need

JS

a strong and creative leader with
compass•oo." Jones said in a news
release.
Later on Tuesday, Vomovich
snapped at report ers trying to
extract detai Is of Medtcaid cuts
under considcrauon .
"I have not see n any reports
from any of our people. We put
together a team to look at recommendations in the area of Medicaid
and welfare reform I haven't even
been made privy to any of them ,"
Voinovich said. "I have no com ment about 1L ''
About $180 million of the projected dcfic it 10 the budget year
starting July I is a result of higherthan -expec ted spending leve ls,
most of 11in programs adminis10red
by the Oh10 Department of Human
Services .
Browntng said MediCaid has
grown at doublc-dtgit rates for
yea rs. Nursin~ homes make un
about 43 percent of the state's S1.7
billion annual Med•caid budget

De Wine late in seeking reforms: Glenn

106

1992

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Edwards returned to county

B&amp;E's, theft reported

-

...

BANKEONE
\Vhal.e\cr ~ lllhes.

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.....

But Glenn campaign spokesman
Dale Butland 531d De Wine showed
no cnth11siasm for reforms when he
se rved in Congress
He said Glenn introduced a pro·
posal in 197R that already extends
civil nghts protections to Senat e
employees. !lutland S3ld the Senate
has no say over the House m .such

Local briefs----,

(Of course. consult a lax ad,~ sor 10 sec how this c01.1pon and mail tl m to Bank One or JUSt
calltoll -frer 1-800-372-8888. We'll help you
speetftc condn tons may affect you )
What s more . yo u can spend the develop your home Into a shelter from taxes.
m o ney you burruw on any1hmg you lt kc [ - To ~f~)l~rr~o;o1fb~On6 1lom;-[qwty!~J;~
And smce equtly loans arc very secure. Bank 1 GuKic. &lt;;fnd tht'&gt; (. t\Ur:m 11 ~ RAN( ONL CORPORATION, 1
One ts able to offer lower intercsl rates than 4041 Nmh Htgh '&gt; .l"Jumbu., OH 4)214 linn MONF'i I
I M!INACEMFNl (,UtDECENTER
on other fonns of cTCdtt
_ I
We'll do wha1evcr tt takes to help you I Nam&lt; __
I
take advamage of benefiiS hkc these So we've I hldrcss _
I
developed rwo cliffmnt kmcls of home equuy I Cny)our.z,r
loans. lndudtng one that was s p ecia lly
dcstgned for recenl homebuyers who haven'!
had ttme to butld much equtl y
!'or detatl s, get your free copy of the
Bank One Home Equtt y Loan Gutdt-. )uslclip

he sa id he wo uld propose some
I&lt;J tcr.
DcWinc earlier dtsc loscd that
wh ile serving from 1983 to 1991.
he wrote as many as 31 checks on
the House bank wttllout sufftc tcnt
funds. But he said he did so madvcrtcntly and later made them
good.
.
DcWinc proposed cutttng con matlcrs.
Outland also said Glenn has grcss tonal staff by 50 percent and
been fighting to reduce staff and making Congress subje ct 10 laws
has returned $325,000 of his staff that apply to otllcrs but not its own
members. He also said Lhcrc should
appropriations si nce 1985 .
"Quite simply, the system in be fewer committees.
Congress is broken. My proposal s
He said congresSional staff
arc designed to fix it, " DcWine tota led 4,072 tn 1950. It had grown
10 about 10,000 in 1970 and today
said at his news conference.
None of hi s reform s dealt wuh to~1ls more than 40,000. he said .
He listed the number of commit speCial membership privileges. but
tee s and subcommittees at 280 and
said the average senator serves on
12. Many have overlapping meet ing sc hedules, meaning all cannot
be at10nded and senators lack time
to study issues.
"It IS lillie wonder that 111 the
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed Wednesday
la st Congress, 6,973 bills were
Lhat 20 year-old Donald Edwards of Xenia was returned to Meigs
Introduced and only 3 percent
County on Tuesday. He had been picked up there on a bench warrant from Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
became law." he said.
DcWinc said Congress enacts
He is charged wilh failure to appear for sentencing on a Lhcft
laws that affect individuals, compaoffense. His sentencing is pending.
mes and government agencies, but
not its own members.
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department has re&lt;eivcd reports of
As examp les, he cited civil
two tllefts and an auempiOd forced entry.
rights laws tllat do not protect conErnest Trippleu of Syracuse reponed on Saturday that a Murray
gressio nal employees, law s on
22- in ch mower had been stolen from his outbuilding somctJme
wages, hours and overtime , age
within tile past two weeks.
dtscnmination, privacy and statu tes
Jeff Nottingham of Pomeroy reponed that his residence had been
that ban connicts of interest.
entered and guns had been taken.
·'These arc fundamental
Brenda Harper of Minersville reponed a possible attempted entry
changes Lhat I am calling for. This
at her residence yesterday.
is not nibbling at the edges," he
said.
DeW me said that while he was
Meigs County Emergency Services units answered the following
in the House, staff reductions were
calls on Tuesday: 10:47 a.m., Middleport squad to Park Street for
proposed unsuccessfully "and I
Naomi Hoschar, to Veterans Memorial Hospital; At I :06 p.m ., Mid voted for th em time and ttmc
dleport unit went to South Third, Ashley Roach to Veterans; at I :07
again."
. .
p.m ., Pomeroy unit to Peacock Avenue, Carl Roach to Vc10rans; at
The difference today, he satd , IS
2:28 p.m., Racine squad to Main Street, Ronnie Eakins was taken to
publi c di senchantment with
Veterans; At 4:06 p.m., Middleport squad to Pearl Street. Carl
Congress.
.
Stewart to Holzer Medical Center.
"There is really a wmdow of
On Wednesday at 12;31 a.m .. Pomeroy unit to Butternut Avenue ,
opportunity . I have never seen
Ariel Kline treated at the scene; 4 :06a.m., Pomeroy squad to
things so ripe for change. We have
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitatioo Center. Mary Jones to Veterto sc i1.c that opportumty 111 1992
ans; 8:38a.m., Middleport squad to Pearl Street, Lincoln W. Smith
and in 1993 with a new Congress,"
to Holzer.
he said.

COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) - A
spokesman for Sen. John Glenn
sa id Lt. Gov. Mike De Wine. a former congressman. 1S late in makmg
proposals to reform Congress.
At a new s conference Tuesday,
DcW111c, who is seeking the
Republican nomination on June 2
to oppose Glenn in Lhe November
election, made a series of reform
proposals.
They included a cal l for
Congress to extend civil righls protections to congressional employ ees and to cut its numbers of comminces . DcWine said civil rights
laws are among a number of feder al laws that Congress enacted for
the public but did not app ly to
lhrmselves.

There are lots ofretiSOIJS
are today's most •
than you
One is

~ l •&gt;&lt;l"'·,~/&gt;or, · ''

house are, 1-r, Hank Johnson, president or the
fire department ; Meigs County Auditor William
R. Wickline; John Holman, fire chid; Delbert
Smith, Otis Knopp and Grover Salser, Jr., Sutton Township trustees; Chris Wolre, Letart
Township trustee; and Duke Rentz and Scott
llill, Racine Village Councilmen. (Sentinel Photo
by Dennis M. Wolre)

Reform won't target ADC benefit boost

Stull grade · Emily Fow ler.
Dante! Peckham, A.J. Vaughan,
MeliSsa Williams. all A's; Brandcc
Gilmore. Brianna Gilmore. Nathan
llalft11ll . Jill Lemley, Scan

H

...

A car wash, sponsored by the
Southern Future Homemakers of
America, will be held at Eber's
Station in Racine on Friday from 8
a.m. until 2 p.m. Recommended
donation is $3 for cars and small
trucks and $4 for vans and full -size
trucks.

tc r-;nnl

AUTO

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EMS units answer calls

A

llulllmodlo

Inc. Newopoper

Parents, Meigs board
discuss school issues

~ ~~-~.' .

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2 Sec lion a, 16 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

RACINE - The Racine Church
THURSDAY
of the Nazarene will have revival
RACINE
- Racine American
Tuesday through April 19 at 7 p.m.
nightly. Sunday services will be Legion Post 602 will meet ThursI 0:30a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev. JoeJor- day at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
There are 55 counties. 24,119
dan will be evangelisl and there
will be special mus•c. Rev.Thomas
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- square miles and t.793.477 people in
L. Gates II invi10s the public.
ty Democratic Exec utive Commtt- the state of West Virginia.

Wednesday
April

ptr -

nnt. High in mid-70s.

Vol. 42, No. 248

Car wash slated

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Wednesday
at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Calholic
Church.

Low tonight in mid 50s.
Thursda)', chance of rain 70

Copyrighted t 992

SYRACUSE - The First Church
of God in Syracuse wtll observe Lhc
ordinance of the church and have a
feet washing ceremony on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. David Russell ,
pastor, invites the public.

SYRACUSE - Third Wednesday Homemakers Club will meet
Wednesday, 10 a.m. , at the Syracuse Municipal BUJidJOg. Craft in
the morning. Bring a brush for cole
painting.

Pick 3: 706
Pick 4: 2479
Cards:
8-H · 8-C· 9-D·
' 10-S'
'

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MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at the home of
Helen Blackston. Jerry Davis of
Project Lift-off wtll be the guest
speaker.

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at Lhe
fire station. All members urged to
attend.

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Page 4

POMEROY - Ohio Young
Democrats of America, Meigs
County, will meet at the Carpenters
Hall in Pomeroy on Thursday at
6:30p.m. All Democrats aged 1840 arc inviiOd to atiOnd.

PORTLAND - Portland Elementary PTO will meet Tuesday at
7 p.m. Plans will be fi"alizcd for
the spring carnival.

Ohio Lotterv

Reds win
third straight
game 5-4

lly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Sta/T
Questions on how teachers arc
evaluated, how disciplinary repri mands arc handled when a charge
is brought against a teacher, and
what the alternatives arc to "boarding" were brought to the Meigs
Local Board of Education Tuesday
night.
About 30 parents attended the
regular school board meeting held
at the Harrisonville Elementary
School. While one student issue

student had been "showing orr· in
fron t of the otller k.ids, and that as
he walked the boy to the office , the
student kept trying to stop, and he
pushed him along.
Carpenter said that stncc Hud son had suggested he would take
the incident to Chtldrcn 's Services.
he perhaps should do that to sec if
the agency after inv estiga tiOn
makes a recommendation 10 the
Board for further action.
The reprimand has been includ ed in Lhc teacher's permanent fil e.
was addressed m c.-.ecutive session, the superintendent reponed.
a second issue about an mcident at
Teacher Evaluation
the Bradbury school was prescn10d
Bob Smitty, parent of Har tn open SCSStOn.
nsonvillc studen ts. asked the board
Jim Hudson whose son, James, about t£achcr evalua tion and what
attends the Bradbury schoo l procedures mu st be followed by the
c harg ed that his son had been pri nc•pal. The superintendent
"assaulted" by a teacher there in explamcd that the pnncipal can
January and that he had been wait- c,·alualc a teacher anyt1me and as
ing for some disciplinary action to many times as he or she wants. He
be taken against the teacher. He contended tllat n IS "not true" that a
satd that he had talk ed wuh both teacher has to be advised 1n
the schoo l principal and Sup t. advance of an evaluation or that
James CarpcniOr about tile incident. there is a time limitatiOn on the
Hudson alleged that his son was evaluation period.
"shoved out of a room and into the
To the question of getting t£ach wa ll " as th e teacher "pushed" him cr changes in a school, Carpenter
toward the office. He said Lhat Lhe said a principal can get changes.
principal told him that the teacher "In fact there have been more rechad been give n a verbal warning. ommendations for change in thi s
Hudson contended before the board bmlding Lhis year Lhan m Lhe past
th at a "verbal reprimand is not five years," the supenntcndcnt smd .
enough punishment for assaulting a John Lisle. longtime princi pal at
child".
Pomeroy Elementary, transferred to
In reporting to the board on the Harrisonvtlle-Salcm Cen ter .schools
incident, the supenntcndcnt satd this year.
there were "diScrepancies in lhc
Boh Barton. board pres ident .
swry", and that the teacher said tile

asked that the parenls "give Lis le
time 10 do something out here give tum orne."
As for releasing teachers, Carpenter said that after three years
teachers can be released only for
gross insubordination, gross ineffi Ciency, or gross immorality.
Smitty then asked about the
practice of "boarding" kids, and an
alternative for parents who do not
believe '" boarding . Carpenter said
that a parent need only to send a
letter to tile principal stating a posit,on aga10st corporal punishment
and some suitable disciplinary
alternative will be used.
In the matter which went to a
lengthy exec utiv e session, the
board on retumung to open session,
upheld an appeal by Victor Young.
As th e board president explained
Umt means the board grant.s permisSIOn for Young's son to go on tile
safety patrol tr1p to Washington. D.

c

Other Business
ARA food service personnel
appeared before the board to prescm food service management procedures geared to bring expenses
more m line wtlh costs. This year
there will be a deficit of $72,714
ARA proposed ways of reducing
costs, one being that main items of
food be prepared at the high school
and trucked to the other schools.
Sincc labor is the major cost in
food scrv tce, a reduction of 47
hours per day would result from the
proposed new method of handlin~
Con tinued on page 3

Economic development topic
of Peoples Bank president
Oy ORlAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Robert Evan s, CEO of Peoples
Bank of Ohio was tile guest speaker at Tuesday's regular meeting of
the Mctgs Cou nty Chamb er of
Comm erce. Evans spoke to the
group about several principle s
relat in g

10

com munity economic

development.
Evans outlined Lhc history of tile
Peoples Bank, which was cstab hshed m Marietta '" 1902. DUilng
the Great Depression. the insutu tion e&gt;panded to tncludc offices m
Oclpre and Lowell . In the early
t 980's. offices were opened in
Chesterhill, McConncllsvillc. Nel sonvi ll e and Athens. The Middle port office, opened earlier this year,
is the newest branch office for Peoples RancCorp, although Lhc com p.1ny has also taken over two sav mgs and loan offices rcccnUy .
After thanking the chamber for
the welcome that Meigs Coun ty
had extended to the new bank .
Evan s discussed several poinl s
1111portant to economic develop ment 1n Ohio's small nvcr communiUcs.

Important issues
The four most tmponant issues
fa cing communttics ltk e Me ig s
Cou nty. according to Evan s, arc
proviston of sewer and water servic es, changes in the Oood plain
laws, and immving educational scrvtccs.
Evans told the chamber yest erday that while road improvements
arc very importan t, they arc not
complete ly effective unless they
arc accompanied by expansmn of
cmting sewer and water system s.
or construction of new systems .
"W hen roads arc built or
tmproved," Evans sa id , "you
should put sewer and water line s
right next to them ."

ROBERT EVANS
(Addres.ws chamber)
In order w provHJe those important mfrastru ctorc facilities, Evans
stre ssed the importance of soli c11 l11g Issue Two and other grant
so urces .

Flood plain
Evan .s' seco nd poinl was needed

modoft catwn s of the 100 -ycar
flood plam reg ulations, which regulat e con struction and lmpro Yc rn cnL" tn I hal Oood 7.onc .

Evans pointed out that many
buil clings in that zone cannot be
modifict1 or improved to any cxt cnl
wllhout 1h c owner incurring pro -

hibitiVe cost.
The ulttmate effect of these rcg ularllons will he a decrease 111 value
and appeal hecausc th e properties
cannot he rehabil1tatcd or
tmproved .

Education
"In our nv cr communities. it

seems that the willingness to pay
for cducauon has changed," Evans
said . "Nobody knows what we
want . or how we're going to pay
for 11. !lut n's going to be a process
of pay now. or pay later."
h ans expla10ed that if adequate
educationa l opportunities are not
provid ed by commu nllt es. prob lem s will ensue as Citizens enter the
JOb market.
"We have to he like the pioneers
who put us here in Lhe flfSt place,"
Evans satd . "We have to be
•nvolved 111 th e community . We
mu st find and execute the solutiOns, and we must be a part of
tho.~

sol u Lions ...

Libyan diplomats asked to leave
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -

Atr -

1ines canceled flights and countries

asked Libyan diplomats to leave
today as U.N. sanctions took effect
to pressure Col. Moarnmar Gadhafi
to hand over suspects in the born bingofPan Am Flight 103.
Gad hafi 's government satd
Arabs would "kneel to no one"
but Allah .

Travelers booked in advan ce
went to Tripoli' s airpon. hoping for
a way out. "We're waiting for
someone to tell us if we will fly or
not," said Timothy Akamimbo.
one of about 80 Ghanaian workers.
But other foreigners said they
wou ld remain.
An American employee of the

Panamanian D and G Oil Field Services Co . ncar Ajdabta, 700 miles
cast of Tnpoli. said he and about .
50 other American co-workers
were on the JOb as usual and
pllmned to keep working. The man,
who is from Louisiana. spoke on
conditi on that his name not be
used .

�Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

·commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS

~TKE

MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A.-istJmt Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETfER S OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
addre ss and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

Perot's style might begin to
wear thin on campaign trail

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Out-of-town seminar draws Labor execs
WASHINGTON - Last Jan uary, the Labor Department tried to
scare up a dozen of its top executives to take a course on managing
a culturally diverse work force. The
class would have been close to
home rn Washington . No out-oftown hotel, no c'pense account
dinners ~ jus t doughnuts, coffee
and information.
The response was a resounding,
"Thanks. but no thank s." The
department canceled the class when
it couldn't get at least 12 warm
bodies. And it canceled five similar
classes scheduled in other cities
throughout thi s year that would
have taught employees on their
home turf.
But the same class, more attractively packaged as part of a Labor
Department conference at the San
Francisco Hilton last month. drew
R5 Labor Department executives
from Wa shin gton and 15 field
orllccs across the country . Why sit
through a droning speaker in a confe rence room rn Wa shington in
Janu ary when you can ny to San

Francisco, endure the speaker, have
dinner at Fisherman's Wharf and
bill the whole trip to the taxpayers?
How much was the bill? The
Labor Department said it couldn · t
possibly figure out the total cost for

everyone got $34 a day for meals.
(It's important to note that the
federal government did save the
taxpayers some money on this conferen ce. The room s at th e Hilton
normally go for $170 to $225 a
night.)
The people who attended the
conference were from the Labor
Departtnent's Pension and Welfare
Benefits Admini stration, which
normally spends its time chasing
down the crooks who plunder the
pensions of American workers.
Apparently, the tax money of those
us without wasting taxpayers' same American workers is not considered to be as sacred.
money doing the calculations.
A spokesma n for the Labor
This much we know. The class
on cu ltural diversity was not free . Deparuncnt told our associate Ed
A consulting firm was hired for Henry that the seminar on cultural
SI 8,000 to present the co urse in diversity demonstrates the agency's
San Francisco. Two Labor Depart- commiunentto taking "'the leading
ment executives new to Chicago to edge on work force diversity."
che ck out the cons ultants before And, he sard, there was no time for
hiring them . The taxpayers paid sightseeing, which is too bad
round-trip air fare for about 100 because the San Francisco Hilton is
Labor Department bureaucrats to JUSt two blocks from a cable car
attend the four-day confere nc e. station that whisks vi sitors off to
Hotel rooms were $88 a ni .~ht and Fishenman' s Wharf.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Einstein

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Ross Perot might not wear very well as a pres idcnual candidate. A style that now comes acmss as co lorfully can ~1nk cr ­
ous cou ld look imperious and evasive later on.
Perot hasn't said he'll nun. but that he expects to know by early June
whether his volunteer supporters can get his name on all 50 state ballots
for the Nov. 3 electton .
The. billionaire businessman from Texas set the 50-state test as his
standard for ba:ommg an independent candidate for a job he keeps s.1ying
he doesn't really wanL
That professed immuttity from White House ambition is part of Perot 's
·defense against critical questions that evidently irk him . "We've gone
: right to liule grtty personal stuff," he complained the other day. "Okay,
: temflc, but it has nothing to do with the real problems of our country.
"I don't want the job. Let's start right there. That makes me weird ,
right, because everybody else out there would kill hts mother to get the
. b"

JO That stance is advantageous in a time of rcsenttnent against Washington and poltticians in general. But nobody who doesn't want the job is
. pushc&lt;l into competition for the White House. Modem campaigns arc too
·demandmg, and sometimes demeaning, for an unwilling draftee to tol er:atc. That may be wrong, bu t it's so.
"I'm not driven to do thts," Perot told the American Society of Newspaper Edttors last Friday . " Matter of fa ct, the more I'm in it , the less
interesting it becomes."
Perot said he'd run for what he described as his millions of volunteers.
:if they can get his name on all ballots. 'Til do it for them, and I'll lake
:the heat that goes with it."
Other politicians think the heat will ge t to him .
Paul Tsongas said Perot was sounding an economic alarm not dissi mi lar from hi s ow n. But Tsongas said Perot's appeal will diminish because
he won't be able to adapt to month after month alter month of campaignmg.
"People who arc CEOs do not suffer fools gladly," Tsongas said as he
announced he wouldn 't renew an active campaign for the DcmocraLic
nomination. "Can you imagine Ross Perot dealing with this press?"
In the laughter that followed, Tsongas said any slight was unintended.
"What you have is a very good CEO who's very good at having pco'plc who say, 'Yes. sir,' or 'I quit,' " said Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.
forccastm g an eventual blowup.
: Prcs1dent Bush said he wasn't going to rate Perot 's prospectiVe chal lenge.
"Let hrm do what the rest of us do. take our case to the American pco:pl c," Bush said. "Let htm enjoy the same scruuny that I' ve had for what ,
:12 years?"
· Perot has been speaki ng on national issues for years, alwa ys rejecting
the idea of candidacy until now . He opened the prospect of an independent bid for the While House two month s ago, saying in a te levision Int erview that he 'd do it if volunteers got him on every ballot. So the heat has
not been intense. He complamcd to one persistent edttor that tire questions
·were rude and adversariaL
t;agg ing qucsuon s go with the campaign territory . But Perot doesn't
:show muc h patience with them. He promises results, wtth few specifics as
to how he proposes to attain them. Perot sugge sts that the cam paign
should be a discussion of problems that need to be solved, with itemized
~n s wer s to come later , after "you'r e in , you've got access to th e
ilcw ils.. ."
Wou ld he seck a tax increase'
"I don't have the numbers. When I know I'll tell you."
Where would he cut wasteful federal spending to curb the defic it'
"If I ever get stuck up there, give me 30 days and I will have access to
:th e numbers and I can tell you."
· He supports abortron rights , but what about fed eral fundin g of abortions for poor women?
· " !haven't spettl 10 mmutes th1nking abou t it. I wi ll , when I become a
candida te."
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum nist (or The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
:national politics ror more than 25 years.

Berris World

r~

V; r------.

·'My significant other doesn 't under-

stand me. "

"Where are all the customers?"

The hotel also features a heated
swimming pool. saunas . a health
club and four fine restaurants ,
including the elegan t "Crtyscape."
on the 46th floor with a breathtaking view of th e Golden Gate
Bridge. Presumably , the conference
attendee.• didn't have time for any
of those ameniti es either, wh1ch
begs the question, why didn't they
stay in their own offices and lcann
about cultural diversity in the
worlcplace'
Cultural diversity is government
Jargon for learnin g how to get
along when not everyone on your
staff is a youn g, able-bodied, white
male. While the information is
valuable, we wonder why the fed eral Labor Dcparuncnt, the agency
that is supposed to provide the
expertise for the rest of the country,
has to hire outside expertS to prep
its executives on this subject . And
if the bureaucrats have the need to
know, why did it take a free trip to
San Francisco to gel them to bite?
PROFIT SHARING - Productive workers at the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing will be lakin g home an extra $560.50 each in
therr April 27 paychecks. That's
because the bureau, a federal government agency, has borrowed an
idea from the private sector profit sharing. Officials at the
bureau believe that the employees
should be rewarded for a 3.8 percent increase in productivity at the
agency in 1991. No one thought to
share the profits with the stock holders, in this case, the taxpayers.
Bureau officials told us that
"numerous other agencies" in the
government are c.penmenting with
this public-sector version of profit
shanng, and all of those ex periments arc "full y embraced" by the
Office of Personnel Management.
But the OPM may not know
exactly what it is putting its arms
around. A spokeswoman for OPM
told us that no one there had heard
of a productivity-sharing bonus at
the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, or anywhere else. for that matter. "We don't know anything
about it. We don't have oversight
into their programs," she said. But
she was qui ck to add that OPM
isn't completely in the dark. ''I'm
not sayrng we don 't know thrs rs
going on; we don't not know
eit.her."
Copyrighl, 1992, United Fea ture Syndicate, Inc.

Sexcapades by politicians do matter
Warning: The following is yet
another column about politicians
and sex. If you absolutely cannot
bear to read one more word about
the issue, please go on to the next
item .
However, this column wrll not
mention any names. point any finge rs or bypass th e candidates'
stands on issues in favor of what
some journalists think you are
more interested in and more likely
to read abou t, namely namrng
nam es and potnting fing ers. (Oth ers might want to proceed precisely
for that reason.)
What thi s co lumn will do is
attempt to answer a couple of questions a lot of you have been asking:
Why IS the media so rntcrested in a
polrtrcian's ex tr&lt;~&lt;marital affairs'
And when, a Ia Htllary Clinton , is
the media gon na get off a certain
politician' s back and onto some of
his co ll eagues'?
(Forgive me, men . for using
only the masc uline pronoun here. 1
would usc my standard " hi s or
her,'' so help me, if I'd ever heard
a fe male politicran's sexual misad-

ventures mcn tton ed. So far. I
haven "t. But take heart. I'm sure as
more women are elected to public
offrce. full equality is fast on the
way.)
The last of many di sc ussions
I've had on the form er question

Sarah Overstreet
was JUSt yes terday when a male
sc hool superintendent, a fine man
who I admire . seemed incredulous
that 1 should care about a ca ndi date' s se xcapade s. " Alii ca re
about is what he stand s for and
what he can get done," the superintendent told me. ·'A wise man
once said all great men are flawed
- look al our other presidents."
1 ftrst demanded the superintendent apologize to Jimmy Carter's
entire Sunday school class. Next I
assured hrm I'm not a Puntan who
sits home nights cross-stttching red
A's for suit lapels. Good people
sometimes commit adultery for a
varicly of reasons thal stem, purel y

and simply , fro m bemg human .
Egomaniacal womanizing. on the
other hand , is as much an abuse of
power and as indicative of flawed
character as someone who can't
leave a race track unti~he' s lost
every penny he has. It' s the kind of
womanizing John F. Kennedy did,
the power trip that nud ges a leader
toward foolhardy risks.
And in some cases, 11 is also
symbolic of a leader"s basic atti ·
tude toward women . 1 have read
about and known personally
women reponcrs and professionals
working in government who, in the
course of JU S! trying to do th eir
jobs. have been propositioned by
male politicians.
I told the sc hool superintendent
of a woman reporter I know who
was "hit on" by a prominent
politician, and I tried to put it in a
conte't he would understand:
··What would you think of a
candidate who would do that to one
of those bright women students
you've worked so hard to educate'
What kind of representation do you

think he would give all those other
women student s you work ed so
hard for""
Now, for question number two,
one that was put ID me most recently at a partisan gathering by an
trate woman who got right in my
face and demanded. "W hen are
you people in the media going to
ge t off (a certarn unnamed politi.
cian' s) case and talk abowt the
affatrs (another unnamed politi cian) has had' "
"What (the second politician) IS
doing has never been my bea~" I
told her wearily . "All I know is
that if in the case of doing my job I
learn infonmation 1 feel compelled
to follow up on, I will, and you can
be sun: if a candidate propositions
me you 'II read about it now and not·
20 years later in my memoirs. ' •
What we owe you is the whole
portrait of a candidate as best we :
can detenminc it, because the person you elect will enact policy that
will alfect your life.
(C) I992
NEWSPAPER '
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

SI&lt;Ji c mun1cipal wa ste has been

approved by a House subeomm it tee
and is expected to reach the full
Hou se some trme this sprrng. The
meas ure - reauthomation of the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act - has been carefully crafted to respond to the natron s growing concern about landfills, recy cling and waste management and
disposaL
Interestingly, the subcommittee
which has approved the bill considered nearly 40 amendments in the
process of trying to finalize a compromise which met both environmental and industry goals without
radical, out-of-reach statutory
demands. Forging such a measure
was a tall order. Perhaps that fact,
alone, accounts for the long time
and lengthy debate invested in the
bill. The original Act expired in
1988.
The broad measure is intended
to promote recycling, ensure sale
di sposal of solid wastes and case
the ongoing controversy over interstale municipal waste shipme nts.
The bill would require the paper
industry to recycle 40 percent of
waste paper by the end of 1995. It
wou ld also require packaging to

•

mee t standards for recyc ling, reuse
or waste reduction . States would be
required to develop comprehensive
solid waste management plans and
state penmits would become neces sary for landfill s, incinerators and
other waste facilities.
Other key provisions in the bill

Cong. Clarence
Miller
- which was approved by a House
Energy and Commerce subcommittee by a 16-1 vote - would set
standards to prevent misleading or
ambiguous marketi ng claims about
the environmental benefits of products. However, it appears that the
driving force behind the movement
of thi s bill out of subcommittee
was citizen outcry and opposition
to the disposal of out -of-state
garbage and solid waste without
local input rx authority.
From the contact our office has
had with local leaders, environ mental groups and concerned citizens, it rs clear that this issue is of
paramount importance and concern. Giving local governments
expanded , meaningful control over
waste brought in from other sites
and jurisdictions wa.• a topic which

cons1stently arose 111 conversations

and five grandchtldren.
Besides her paren ts, she wa s
Marie Dailey, Pomeroy, died preceded in death by her husband
Wed nesday morning, April 15 , Frederick A. Drxon, and two broth:
!992, at the Extended Care Facilitv crs, James and Raben Clark.
of Veterans Memor ia l Hospttai.
Fun eral serv rc es will be held
Fun era l arrange ments are be ing Friday at 10:30 a.m. at the Ewing
handled by Ewing Funeral Hom e.
Funeral Hom e. The Rev. Wayne
Clark wtll officiate and burial will
be in Wells Cemetery. Friends may
Michael Hindy
call at the funeral home Thursday 6
The names of additional sur - to 9 p.m.
vivors of Michael David Hindy,
Mrddleport, who died in a car - Mary Overturf
Mary Virginia (Ginny) Overturf,
pedestrian accident in Gallia County Saturday, have been provided by 79, of Gallipolis. fomnerly of Midhrs mother, Patricia Muncy Hindy, tllcpon, died Wednesday , April IS,
1992, at the Holzer Medi cal CenMidtllepon .
ter.
Th ey include Calvin Mayle.
Born in Mtddleport, March 10.
Chester, a brother-in-law; Amanda
Rou sh, Florida, a half-si ster; and I913, she was the daughter of the
Ja y Whittington, Middlepon. a spe- late Callahan and Martha Massie
cial frie nd . Funeral services were Viti toe. She was a homemaker.
She is survived by two daughheld Monday at the Fisher Funeral
Home. Burial wa s 1n Riv ervi e w ters and sons-rn-law , Naomi and
Ralph Durst of Gallipolis, and Judy
Cemetery. Middleport.
and lames Dowling of Bay Village,
Ohio; and one son and daughter-in law, Paul and Sharon Overturf of
Louise Dixon
Louise V. Dixon , 76, 201 Mul · Middleport ; nine grandchildren,
berry Ave., Pomeroy, di ed Tues- and six great-grandsons.
Beside s her parents , she was
day , April 14, 1992, at the Holzer
precedoo
m death by her husband.
Medical Center.
Francis
Overturf
in 1969, a daughBorn on May I I, 191S tn Meigs
ter
,
Dorothy
Harman.
a grandson ,
County, she wa s th e daughter of
frv
e sisters,
Pa
ul
Overturf,
Jr.,
th e late John L. and Weltha M.
Nel son Clark . She had worked at Donna Jone s. Esta Dralce. Clara
the Athens Colonial Shop, and was Ashbrook, Carrie Knopp . and Nola
a member of the Richland United Amott; and throe brothers, Hom er,
Methodrst Church, Athens. and the Elisha, and Richard Vititoc.
Funeral servic es will he held
DAY Auxiliary, Pomeroy.
Friday
at I p.m. at th e Fisher
She is survived by a daughter
Funeral
Home tn Middleport. The
and son-rn -Jaw, Lrnda and Robert
Whitlatch. Pataskala; a son and Rev . Keith Curd will officiate and
daughter-in -law, Robert L. and hurial will be in Riverview CemeEllen Dixon, Columbus; a brother. tery. Friends may call at the funeral
Mark Clark, Albany; a spe c ial home Thursday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
frr end , Denv er Curti s, Pom eroy ; p.m . Memori al co ntributions may
be made to the Amcncan Cancer
Society.

Marie Dailey

I've had with residents of southeastern _and southern Ohio. All too
ofJen, dumps and landfills have
hccn established over local opposition. leavrng citizens as the potential victims of the environmental
damage and the significant health
risks that could result from such
sites.
Under the bill, greater say is
given local governments. In fact,
the bill headmg for the Hou se
would prohibit waste disposal facil ities from accepting muni cipal
solid waste from out of state unless
granted pcnmrsston to do so by the
local government involved. Waste
facility expansions would generally
require prior approval locally as
well. State environmental agencies
have expressed considerable concern about this provision, citing the
possibility of jurisdictional combat
between state and local ~overn ­
ments. They make the potbt that
drastic inconsistencies between
various governments in imposing

Thought for Today
Thought for Today: "Pattnottsm is your conviction that this country is ;
supenor to all other countnes because you were born in it." - George ·
Bernard Shaw, Irish-born playwright (1856-I950).
•

parents •, •

Meeting postponed
Church will present th e cantata.
The meeting of Syracuse Vil - "Come See the Place" by Joe E.
lage Council has been postponed Parks on Easter Sunday at 10:30
from Thursday to April 23 .
a.m. The cantaw is under the direc Pancake breakrast
tron of Anita Sayre. Pastor William
The men of the Heath United R. Williams invites the public.
Methodist Church, 349 South Third
Services~~
Avenue, Middlepon. will have a
Faith Fu ll Gospel Church in
pancake breakfast Apnl 25 from 7- Long Bottom will hold Good Fri11 a. m. at the church . A free -w11l day communion 11nt1 foot washing
offenng will be collected.
services at 7 p.tlf. Sunrise serv1ces
Revival
Eas ter Sunday 1\iill be a 6 a.m. PasRevival at the Pinegrove Holi - tor Steve Reed invites the public .
ness Church will be held April 22- Fellowship will follow both events.
26 at 7 p.m. nightly with Rev .
Ste ve Manley and family , Sum mersville, N.C., evangelists. The
church is loca ted five mile s off
Route 124 on Rout e 32S on
Rowl sv tlle Road. Special singrn g
nightly . Rev. Odell Manl ey invites
th e public.
Golr League to meet
The Monday Night Ladies Golf
League at th e Meigs County Golf
Course will mee t Monday at 7 p.m.
for an organizational meeting at the
golf course . Teams must be registered by April 27 wrth Becky or
Rita, 992-5485 or 992 -3710.
Cantata planned
The Laurel Cliff Free Methodrst

Stocks

Cootiautd

load. Thts would save $75,739 i
year. ARA reponed. No acuon oo
change was taken by the board ltl
the meetin g
Arran gements were made for
Supt. Carpenter. Roger Abbot! and
Barton , board members.

w

mert

with Pomero y Mayor Brur~ Ree&lt;l
and a committee of Pomeroy Vrllage Coun cil to drscu ss the vrl
!age 's purc ha se of th e Pomem'
J untor High School bwlding.
A contract was awarded 10 kffers Trucling, Pomeroy to tn&gt;'Lall •
grease trap at the Rutland Elemootary School. Also awarded were
contracts to Haclett Roofmg for
repair of the roof at Sah&gt;bury 31 a
cost of $7.272 and the roof at Rutland . $1 ,745, with both JOb&gt; to
carry 10 year warranues.
The resignation of Kim Oltpham

Weather

from~ 1
"' • reacher was accepted, and the
l!&lt;md voted to hrre Karen Lvons
md kff Baker for tutonng handr ~ students not more th an five
IJ.oms a ~~oeek at SII 72 an hour.
JLOtJt Camalran was htred to transrem&lt; a srudent to severe behav roral
!uOOKapp.:d classes at Athens at
::_; ~emts a mLle, and S1dnev Puckett
'ii:.%6 h..rre:d as a subsutute bUs driver
Do..: ~ d..1;.s were grJntcd to
K~llt.:rroe Deskrn&lt; . March 24 to
.-\vrd I ~ . and Den rsc Wtlliam l,
-\prol :9-Mav I . Wt!lrams wtll
211:c.Jmpany her daughter. Kat hy to
• m~&lt;Onal BPO" con test.
..\ ledtie for a gas ltnc rn Salrs ~ Town.;!up was extended for
:X.~~ at S I SO a year.
l.J.uren Schmoll was accepted as
l Undcrgarten studenJ 1n 1hc disna. and Yea Ping Amanda Kong
.:6 a furergn exchange student
Ao:&lt;&gt;1dmg were Supt. Carpenter
l«.Hu rer Jane Fry, "nd hoard
tltitmlters.
Abbott .
Randy
H""'pltreys. John Hood. and Bar-

"""
Police report
A "'lXlft of March acovity was
r_•~,.,nt~d

to Midd leport Vrl lage
C""""d Monday rught by the Mid~ Pollee Department
-\ ootal of 67 arrests were made
Jw-mg lhe mon th with nin e acc i bas !r.:mg rnvestigated. Merchant
!""he&lt; collec u ons totaled $86
r.v~mg meter collections totaled
)64_'0 and parlmg uckets rssued
IIJitabt

m.

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS 2t3-9GO)

Publ u h ed every Afh:r n oo n. Monday
through ~~n d.iiy . 111 Court St . Pomeroy.
Oh10 by the Ohw Valley Publish in g
CompanyiMultnne dut Inc ., Pomero y
Oh10 45769 . Ph 992-2 156 SL'I.:I.!n d class
poet.age paid at Pom~roy, Ohw

Me mbe r · T he Assocuatcd J}rf'_~s. and the
Ulno 1\j c wsJ»&gt;p!)f Ass ocJahon . Na lt onal
Advert1 s1 nJo( Rtp rcsen tatlv c. Bra nh a m
Ntwspaper Sa les, 7:JJ Th1rd Aven u e
Nrw York , New York 10017

Fire report
The Mtddleport Fire De part ment answered a total of 54 calls
during March. Four were ftre calls
with two being fal se alarms and
two being mutual aid responses,
Jeff Darst, chief reported.

POST MASTER: Send addrl'.~ .'l cha nges to
The Dally Sen tm cl. Il l Cour t St.,

••••••••••

Pomeroy, O Hio 45769.

SUBSCKIPTION RATES
By Can-ier or Mofol'" Route
..... $1 60
$6 .9&amp;

One Wet!k ...

One Month ..
One Year..

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FURN

"r may r e mit in advann1 d~recl to The
Daily Se nti M I on a three, ~ ~• ur 12
month b8..'iiS . Crtd 1l Wl~l he gwrn ramer
each week
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SubSCTi bers not de~J iriTJK to pay the carri -

' lO "' :.J.IL '

; 00

SAT )L N '\-\1 I

:j /)

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:o

~ru

lO.) 10

Rl

GULL¥
~0 .)

00

C)

NIWIIU

DI&lt;NEY'!

No s ub scri ption ~ hy m ail permitted m
IHtas wh ere home carnrr scrv1ce IS

~T ;

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OO.l ZO

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OO.J

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available

Mail Suhllcrl ptloni
Inside Mel~ County
13 Weeks
26 Wef'k !J
52 Weelu ...

l

S2 i.S.4
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; 20.1 10 OAL l"

26 Weelu .

12340
1&lt;5 50

52 Weelu

$8/l 40

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'&gt;AI ' SL"J

l 10.) 10 I ~ )

WHITE MIN [RN 'T JUMP
' :S.9 JO OAIL •

Mciltl' Count)'

IJ Week.s

~A l ~ U~

""' r : J~.l

10 " t )

MY [DUliN UINNY
J JO

~

DAi t •

'«1

: OI" IHG
'~ ICHAlL ~l AI

ou r: ~u s

11

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" '9 ASJ •:

•••••••••••

To Great Savings At

CH CITY AftRESSE

: ~ ST:IIIC''

Domino's Knows
You'll Love Our
Pan
How You Uke Pizza AI Home.
Pizzas

811 West Main, Pomeroy-992-2124

TWO 12" PEPPERONI
PAN PIZZAS

Thursday, Friday, Saturday

$999
...

landfill rcgulauons could defeat the:
overall intent of this effort. I'm
sure this conccm will be further
debated as this measure moves up :
through th e legislative process.
:
Managers of the bill expect it to :
pa~s the House for two major rca-:
sons: there is a critical need to ·
reduce the growing mountain o(
trash headed for the nation's dwin- ,
tiling number of landfills. The '
Environmental Protection Agency ·
(EPA) estimates that 80 percent of:
the landfills now open will be :
closed by the year 2008. Secondly, :
Congress wants to finish with the ·
reauthorization of this Act before ·
turtting its auention to the rcautho- ,
rization of the s uperfund toxic ·
waste law, whose financing mecha-:
nisms. expire in 1994. Clearly, such .
pressmg envrronmental issues as ,
waste management are finally to
get the focus here in Washington
that they deserve. Hopefully the ·
Congress will soon be able to say:
" the muck stopped here."

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

--Area deaths-- Meigs announcements

The muck stopped here
Important leg islation which
gives local governme nts a much
stronger voice in rcjccting-out-of-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

1

ONLY

F'HIUAY
APRIL 17
10-7

STOP BY TO SEE OUR WIDE SELEGION OF
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GOOD NEWS · SCENIC AND BLACK BACKGROUND IN YOUR PACKAGE

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REG . S13 90

30DAY

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IN HOME

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PEOPlE SAY.

"/ w4,,

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GROUP PICTURE $1.00 PER SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TAKEN .
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY

FOODLAND ·POMEROY

241 3rd Avenue

(614) 446·6226

Gallipolis, OH.

�Wednesday, April 15, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Page-4

O'Neill's ninth-inning homer helps Cincy beat Atlanta 5-4
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
:Allan La Braves thouglltlhey caught

a break when Glenn Braggs got
himself thrown out or the ~arne .
Five
later, it turned mto a

OOPS!- Ciacillaali illl'ldder Freddie Benavides (top) bobbles a
pickoff throw at S«&lt;Dd base IS Atlanta's Deioa Sanders gets back
in tim• in tbrtbinl illnillg oi'Tuesday night's National League game
in CinciDnati, which tbr Reds won S-4. (AP)

bad break.
Paul O'Nctlltook over for Braggs and deli vered a game-wi nning
homer m the ninth mning Tuesday
night as the Cincinnati Reds beat
the Braves 5-4. It was the second
time this season that someone has
come off the Reds· bench in mldgame and produced a game-wmning hit.
BiU Doran got back '" the lineup last Tu esday when Chris Sabo
sprained an ankle and delivered a
homer and two-run smglc for a 4-2
victory over San Diego.
"It 's unbel ievablc," mana ger
Lou Piniclla said. 'I t' s almost
uncanny."
So were a lot of the twi sts in
Tuesday's game.
Atlanta sta rt e r Steve Avery.
pitching on hi s 22nd binhday. was
handed a 2-0 lead m the fourth .
Deion Sanders scored on Joe Oliver's passed ball in the second, and
Brian Hunter hit his second solo
homer - only hi s'sccond hit in 16
at-bats.
That's when the unusual crept
in. Barry Larkin sin gled home a
run in th e fourth , and Freddie
Benavides pulled a full-count piu;h
over the left -field wall for his first
major-leagu e homer in the fifth .
The two -run homer was the rookie's flfst in 66 major-league at-bats.
It's hard to tell who was more
stunned, Benavides or Avery.
"I just made that one pitch to
Benavides,'' Avery said. "I'm not
going to say it was a bad pitch. But
with a 3-2 co unt you're trying to
get the ball over to the No. 8 hitter."

Scoreboard
~ATIO~AL LEAGUE
tulon ......

W l

T~

Pu~

Montreal
PtuWdpha
Sd..om

Chactto
New Yori

GB

~

j
~

2

'714

J

625

4

4

500

4
J
3

S

444

2

4

419

2

6

133

3

5
1J

Wc.UnOI.WO.

2

~0

C~Uill d

4

.!56

A\l.anUI ·----·-· .. 4
s.:n fuocDoo __ J

4.

500

Sonllqa -

.. .

____

I~

•

)~

Lo.~

5

)

M Idwflll DITI&amp;Ion
Team
"'t' L
PeL
y-Ul.lh ...
.. ..52 T1
658
a-San Ant.onio . . . 46 ))
~X1
HOUSIOn ..
...-41 31 .S31
[)mver .
. ....... 23 56
.291
O..Uu..........
.. .. 20 59
253

m

D
J
)

.37S
J15

• -Seattle...
LA . C1ippen
LA . Ukn
S&amp;QaiTIIZILO
• -clindlcd pll yoff benh
y-cllnthed dlvuian uUc:

CladauU S. A.da•U 4
St- Louu l. ~ I

Lm Anpa 6.. ficuAorl 2
Sm Dqo 4. SUI ft-curo 0

Today's games

Ptn!e4dphu (Abboa. 0.1 ) " ."\ew Yod
~ (ldTc:ru IJ.I) at S.n Fnn (B,n. 0. 1). 1005 pm

nursday 's games

T""""•
~ ...

1

I
I

••

Ycrl.

)
)

8loLl~
''""""'
.....

•
•'1

.,........, _ _ J

1
I

·~~
O.U..c

•29

429
J1l

l1l
1'-l

l
)l

"•
'6

w IIIII Iff" II [)hbioft

•

a.c.,.
""""'

1l0

••' ' "'
m
' '"'
115

Ta•

...........

h61
\00

4

c.w~

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KMu,u C1t•

)
)

4

I

1

l
I

l
ll
)

l

N1mcd

P1ul Ph1pp• dLJector of hroad c••ung
S1gned Guy Petti•. outf1elde1 Tr,ded
Thomas Ho-wud , ooutfiddcr, lO the Cleve land lndillU for Juon lhrdtlt. mf1elder .
and a playa 10 be named l&amp;Ler .

Baakttba\1 Auoclalinn
Pbcod hue A utllil.
lCnter, on the Injured h~l s ,gned Hob
fhomtoo, forward

Eastern· s offense was powered
by Terry McGuire (3 -4, RBI).

Durst (I -2, RBl). Rod Newsome
(I 3, double, RBI), Mike Smith (I·
3, RBI), Wes Holter (1-3) and Tim
B1 ssc ll (1-4).
Eastern is scheduled to play
Southern at Racine today and head
to Cheshire to play Kyger Creek
Thursday. Nonh Gal~a is slated to
play a doubleheader at Point Pleasam today.

Hockey
l'oiltiORal tlcxkty L~•aur
BL"FFAW SABRE.'-i - S.1gne.d Scou
Thcw-n.u. forward.
MINN ESOT A ." O!Hil STARS
Stgned M.J..ke T orchil, goalie. t nd Mart

Lawn:ncc.. nll,ht wmg .
SAN JOSE SHARKS - S1 1tncd Ri)
Wh.ttney . teniCf.

tO 1

mu1u-yeu

con Ullrl

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

Pvi'IJ&amp;nd at DaUlt, 8 JO p m
LA. La.kcn It Denver. 9 p m

Thursday's games

San Dlqo (Ealand (C)-0) 11 San FrvtaKO (SW11'1 2-0). J 35 p m.
AU&amp;nu (Bda:tt 0..0} 11 U. AnrcJ.a
(Xr-nn Grou 1).0). 1015 p m

Gl

~•Uonal Lu"u t
SAN OU:: GO PADRE S -

~aUnn•l

Houa.on at L"u h. 9 30 p.m

....m
'"

Co.ut lealf\le

liT All J!VZ -

Bollnn It Dc:lro1L 8 p.m

San

L

The Eagles (4-0) scored twice in
the founh and si•th inrungs, while
Durst Sll'UCk out seven, surrendered
three hits - to Dave Dobbins (2 -3)
and Dann Smith (1-3)- and
walked no one in a complete-game
effort . Junior Rob Canady, who
also went the distance, struck out
three, walked four and hit one bat·
tcr in absorbing the loss for the
PorJtC.&lt; (3 -1).

/'oiew Yoli; I t Allt.nl.l. 1 JO p.m
Clot•Nnd at Ch«klltt, ? :JI p.m.
~ddpi'ul 11 Orl1ndo. 7 10 p m

(r-:.dcn 0 I). 7 40 p m.

F..Mkn~IM•.._

AC\tvated
M.J.:e ~$buulo, lhird bUOT11n. fllli'T'l lhc
15 -dl)' daabled lisL San Lu" Qwnona ,
tnficlde:r, autrilht to l\:.rt1111d nf Lhe PacJ
MINNESOTA TWINS -

u:

Milwaukee 11 Mlm-u. 1 lO p.m
lrv:!~~n~~ at New Jtney. 7:30pm
Orlando 11 Wntunr-an , 7 .30 p m
Munmou 1t LA . ~- 10 30 p .m
s.n Antoruo 1t PbOO"UJ , I Q-.lO p.m
LA Wr:n at Sacnmento.. 10 lOp m

In the NHL ...
WALES CO:"&lt;FERE:"'CE
T""'
'! •..; '(

P1lrkk Dhlliofl
W L T PU. GFGA

4924 5 103)112-41

Ran gr:n

45 26 R

98 lZ9 211
K7 2XQ 2'i2

t -PnuNrgh
s y l'lllndl':nl

Ji 30 11
)S )I ~
n 35 11

rtul1ddpi"ua ...

3611

WuhmgLOO
Sew Jeney

t
1

n

85

41 28 I0
Jon 1:
11 J6 12
25 41 l)
19 4&amp; 12

y-\oloolTelll
• H-t:el!lfl

Auff1lo
• H1nford
~
1

74 286 295
6) 24J 280
SO ~I 31~

NAILS

VINYL SIDING

'WW1•37'5*
SQ.

Ooly

PANELS
SENTINEL

MASON. WV.

Tu m

Today' s camn

yl "'""''
OIICIIO

J. OUlmd !

Cahf~

159
PlCUGE

Meeta apan table ratinga.
Rail Kita Available.

3"

A/)IIIIIWCI 0 p,qAJNAGt

8alumCft (Nc::Ooruld 1 01 u B.:.l(Wl
(Gatdaner I -0). I 0'1 p m
New Ylllli. (PDa 1-111 11 Tomm.o (Key
0-0). 1 Jl p.m.
DICroll ~._I) .. f"lt"biWI (RoPII

t-1). 7~ ,.. .
Sc:dk (Acmina 0-1l • Chauco r ~c
C.aill 1-0),I:OSpm
Wil ......cc (Bene$ 0-0) II Mmna.ot1

(T.-peni

I..(J), I~ p.m

OUllnd (SJ...nka 1 0) 11 Lt.u Cuy

(M O.YII 0-1). 115 p m
CahfOINI (Valcn 0-0) II Tuu (Wm
0-1). I JS P-"'

Tbund•y"s .:amn
"'e• York (l.eny ! -0)
(Menu 2-0), 12.J5 p m

U

Toronto

Jnlroll (G•IIklu• ._2) •I C l~•" ·

la.-d (Coalt-f). l:.J!li ,._.._
Baltunorc ( fi,4u.aunl 0-0) I t 801ton
S,c.anJC (R . JohnJ.M 1-0) It Cluc110
(l'&lt;m....., J&gt; I~ I 05 p.m
Oakland (Ste"WU~ 0-0) II l(.,.u C 1ty

(A,.-1&gt;11.1 J&gt;rm
c.Idoaul (D Amw.on l

0)

It

T I'LII

419

DRAINAGE

·--

w....._

OoW&gt;do

95281246
~4 287 296
81 295 297
79 2A6 241

: :--- -fiT! ---- ...
""I"~-

L
lO
31

Pd.

Gl

.r.lS

CaJpry u.Vancuuver-, 10 )5 p m

6\J

I

41
4J

,...

11

46

461

I}~

.411

....

20 l'l

JJJO
2l l

26
29 I

&gt;&lt; ,.

CdlniiM.._
-:-----·-65 IS
IIJ
1-CirwAuli __n 2A ....
1 -()uap

1-Da&amp;:roll ------... ll
&amp;~b~JMJ ______ )9 -41
_
___ ,___ ]7 4l
Mi),..._____ JI &lt;ll!il

.600

a...-------:10 ...

.:110

....
....
.lU

Transactions

n...ball
A.mtrk•n taaue

BA LTIMORE ORIOLES - P1aced
GIQ"Dl Otvis, full huanan, on the 15-day
9..!
11
26

,.

V3

]4.3

dis•bled liat. I"CUUOCihe 10 April 7. Rocalle4 Luit Merce-d•. outfielder, (rom
Roc:bcatr lhe lrM'n!tbonlll Leape.
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Op -

La....

WEATHE RALl
flAT
HOUSE PAINT

~-~ ~·~~· ..~·1"'~

~-------~

12,98 GAL

4'18'

OVER 50 PANELS IN STOCK
TO MEET EVERY NEED.

ing·R·Slide

FIBER ED
ROOF COATI

EAGLE'S NEST CLUBHOUSE
.II

J

\ I
I
I

I

I

Price
Ia dudes
Treated

''

Lumber

''

-

j~ i---.

2

C

i ll

-_,
Fibered to fill amall
and cracks. Easy
to apply.

holes

GREEN THUMB LAWN &lt;ARE

19.99 36"150"
24.99 48"150"
• 0111110
TI~t• ~a.'&gt;l 1!\0ijltlll .\ 11!

tit•· h:1f ,, l 1 u nllll'"- r·hl(

k~ 01.nd rluc k." \Olhn

an-

)(l••·n .1..... [A--.tf'r

d\j ' wtlhlll a fn., ... ,., . ~-. , ·nlf•_
., an· IIT'qtwrHI! rlw \ wwn . . nl IHIHllf•nu nnal
m•glf'{'t and ("nlf'li .\ ](l'(jUtnn,lo( ' IM"'"Ial fl '+'1!t n~ • :uv ;u1d t·on,t anl tP mp•Prdrun·'
thesf" f"X t rf'm(•ly 'u ln•·rnhlf' h!!k a rum al.-. an· po•1r l\ ..,UI If'd a_, pt·h.
~Cfl."

Small ctu.ldren oft en hrT'ak thf'tr frap;l.Jf' lx•n~ " and C".dU-" "' othf&gt;r fatal lf\IUrw-.. Many
baby bu~ d uck.., and du&lt;·k.-.. an' killN.J m mauw-'d '" nf't~hhurhool.l dt.,:. and
caL'&gt;- And . thOSf' arumalo; who do 'iUr"\-1\"t ' 1h• · flf"'l fp"" wf'f'h art' oftrn rt'' if'a..;#'(j
1o aruma! can:• and f'()n! rnl a~Pnc· u•"- wh1•r1· man_
\ mlhl II(• f'Ut han.IZf'd hf'(·a u'&gt;f'
no pennarwnl hom('., (""&lt;111 ht· fnund
m~ .\ n1n1 ral"1

Mduionally pt•oplf'

nf the

gastroint~tmaltrafl

..almonf'!Ja ,.,., hwh cau.""" '01'\f'n • mflamma\)lm

1 fmm thf'"" rturk.., aOO rtu('k.'&gt;

TillS E:aqer. VOU ran llf'Jp pn'\."l' r11 l"nWll _\ h\ ~\Ul~ your hlllt ' flf\f", 'iiUffNt
aruq'als And afrN I hi' hohc1a~ tf _
vnu r farm]_, L'- wad~ fur a tll'"' (1(' 1. c"ti!Ndf'r
an 3dorablf' adoptahh· d••J!: • •r cat fn•m -~· · •ur loc: aJ ammal stwl l er

«

tJonetl Dne Rhode, l•nekter, to Colvrado Sprt•IP of lh• Patine Coati

1

GALVANIZED
DIAMONDGARD
FENCING

\\II i/1 ,I··

at Moouul. 1 35 r m
Hartford 11 Ptu!ldelfll · ") 35 p m

NY ~JC". 7 . 3~ p m.
Miltnclnta 1t SL lAIIt, 8 JS p m
Wimipe111 Slll J01e, 10.35 p m.

! 899

LJt!J

~

8~Lon

Plt~ 11

IIO"-,rlt

PANEL

COOL WAVE SLIDE .................99.95
FIREMAN'S POLE •••••••••••••••••• 29.95

Quebec J. Aulhlo}
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Tuesday's sco r~

QudJa: 11 Buffalo, , 3~ p m.
Ntw lr:nq at 1\ Y l1hnd~u. 7 JS

20 95 100' roll

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) Q 213]50

Thursday's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE

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fust homer of the season, a threerun shot in the sixth orr staner Jack
Armstrong . Baerga's error with
two outs allowed Milt Cuyler to
reach base and brought up Glad den.
Lou Whitaker hit a solo shot for
Detroit in the third, his first home
run this season.
In other games, it was Kansas
City 3, Oakland I; Milwaukee II,
Minnesota I; and California 8,
Texas I.
Royals win, Yanks lose
Victory atlasL
Defeat atlasl
The Kansas City Royals used
one of the blandest aJtd bizarre rallies imaginable for a 3-1 victory
over the Oakland Athletics Tuesday nighL It was the Royals' fJrSl
win after Setting a club record with
their worst stan, 0-7 .
"It is a sense of relief to fmally
get a win," manager Hal McRae
said. " Now people will stop tallcing to us about the 1988 Orioles
and their 0-21 start."
Nobody will be talking about an
undefeated April for the New York
Yankees. Trying to equal th eir
19 33 club mark of seven straight
victories to open a season, the Yan kees were humbl ed 12-6 by the
Toronto Blue Jays.
Dave Winfield knocked in four
run s with a two -run homer and a
pair of singles as Toronto pounded
out 14 htts.
"We'[e not ~oing to make a big
deal out of it,' said New York's
Jesse Barfield . "We came here to
win the series and we can still do
that."
Royals 3, Alhletics 1
Kansas City's eighth-inntng
rally after being no-hit for seven
innings by Ron Darling was not
exactly inspiring. It was effective
enough.
The host Royals scratched out
future. If I was (in the dog house
last year), then I was, but I'm not their runs in the eighth on three
sacrifices, two wi ld pitches, an
dealing with that anymore.''
His idea going into spring prac- error aJtd their only hit of the night.
"It was suange, but we'll take
tice was to regain attention. To
show that as a 6-foot-2, 220-pound it," Hal McRae said .
Keith Miller grounded to deep
junior-ID-be, he still should be seen
shonstop
and beat Mike Bordick·s
as the promising, big -time back
that came out of Lorain three years
ago.
"My approach is every time I
touch the ball, I have gol to - l
have got to, most definitely break it for a touchdown," Harris
said. "I want to do everything it
takes when it comes to blocking.
Catching the ball, I don't want to
drop a one.
"I want tD be the most complete
running back ever scm in this pan
of the world.
"I want to be a dominant force.
"What I really want is after,
practice, I want dudes .-om the
defensive side and players from the
offensive side as well as the coaches, while they're eating at the dinner table, I want them saying, ·Did
you see Raymonl today? Did you
.see the Storm?"'
It's that anitude that's gouen
him this far, Harris said. Even with
his limited playing time last year.
he said he still knows people
noticed that every time he carried
the baU he ran hard, broke tackles,
and kept leaning forward.
"I can never see myself going
unnoticed," Harris said. "There fore, I can't sec myseU getting lost
tn the cro wd. I'm not a brick in the
wall."

CLEVELAND (AP) - Mike
Th e Indians were led by Brook
Hargrove was grateful to his Cleve- Jacoby, who had a three-run homer
land Indians for their effons. He 'd in the second and drove in the golike to see more of it, though.
ahea d run with a single in the
" It seems like every time we've eighth.
made a mi stake it 's hun us, " the
"I expected to see Jake drive
rookie manager said after the Indi - the ball," Hargrove said. "We've
ans overcame a costly si•th-mning seen it the lasl couple of days.''
error and four Detroit hom ers to
Jacoby is four for seven with six
beat the Tigers 8-7 on Tu esda y RBis in the last two games.
night.
Alomar, Mark Whiten, Jacoby
"Things aren't running smooth- and Kenny Lof!Dn had run-scoring
ly right now- we' ve been incon - singles as the Indians batted around
sistent but we started to move in against three Detroit pitchers in the
the right direction," said Hargrove, eighth.
who held a team meeting after Carlos Baerga led orr with a sinwards and compl imented his club gle, chasing starter Walt Terrell .
on the rally .
Les Lancaster (0-1) gave up a sinThe Indians needed a four -run gle to Albert Belle and a fielder's
eighth inning to win in front of a choice by Paul Sorrento. Alomar
crowd of 4,083 who endured 41- singled in Bacrga and Whiten sindcgrcc temperatures.
gled in Sorrento.
Sandy Alomar Jr., who had an
Baerga had singled horne Lofton
RBI single, said improved hitting in the fifth for a 4- 1 Cleveland
wtll help the team's pitchers.
lead.
"It just takes a lot of pressure
Ted Power ( 1-0) pitched two
off th e pitc hing staff," he said . innings for the win . Steve Olin
"Eventually, we're going to hit. recorded the final two outs for his
Everything is going 10 be aU right. ftrst save.
We need to score some more runs
Rob Deer hit his third home run
so the p&lt;tchcrs can relax a little bit of the season in the ninth to draw
more ."
Detroit within 8-7.
For Detroit, which won its first
The Tigers were up 6-4 in the
game of the season against Cleve - seventh after Ceci l Fielder's tie land on Monday, designated hitler breaking two-run homer. his fourth
Mickey Teuleton saw some hope - of the year.
ful signs in the loss.
Fielder's home run to center off
"There's no quit in this team," reliever Brad Arnsberg drove in
Tcttlcton said. "There hasn't been Tony Phillips, who walked to open
any quit in the team as long as I've the inning. Arnsberg faced four
been here. They put nine innings bauers. walking three in addition to
up there and we're going to go out Fielder's home run.
there and play them ."
Detroit's Dan Gladden had his

OS U's Harris plans to start
fresh in battle for backfield
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) back appears to be a loaded posiuon for Ohio State.
Quarterback Kirk Herbstreit
took stock, and offered his opinion.
"The guy you' vc got to look out
-for is Rayment Harris," Hcrbstrett
:said.
Wtth Roben Smith returning to
th e team and Butler By'not'e, Jeff
Cothran, Dante Lee and freshmen
Eddie George and Travis McGuire
all in the fold, Harris still provides
·an inlrigumg possibility .
Harris, th e sc If -dcsc ri bed
"Quiet Storm,'' saw only limited
playin~ time last year in then offenstvc coordinator Elliot
Uzelac's conservative game plan.
Some theorized Hams was paying for having stuck up for Smith
when Smith left the team the fust
week or preseason practice. Hams
got to play in 10 games, and he carried 76 times for 323 yards. But he
never really got a shot at being
" the guy you've got to look out
for."
It was, Harris said. a season best
forgotten.
" It 's definitely a brand new
day; it's like startJng all over."
Harris said. "I've got a brand new
coach (Frank Falks), a new offensive coordinator (Joe Hollis), and
the offense is more similar lO the
one we ran a couple of years ago
when coach (Jim ) Colleno was
here, more a pro-style offense.
"The past is past, and I'm going
to leave it like thal Now, I'm deal ing strictly with the present and the
Runnin~

I'll 0' DECK

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Year

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APRIL25, 1992

~~~~~

HORSESHOE

while Sabo finishes his stay on the
15-day disabled list.
"He's capable," Piniclla sa id .
"Now that Sabo ·s not in the lineup, he's our power source. He hit
28 last year, and he's capable of
duplicating that."
Elsewhere in the NL it was Los
Angeles 6, Houston 2; St. Louis 3,
Monueal I; Pittsburgh 3, Chicago
2; New York 8, Philadelphia 5; and
(See Nl on Page 5)

O'DELLS JiaiYalia

HORSESHOES

Opea Daily, 9 a.m. to S p.m.
Sunday, 1 to 5/..m.

)~8
2&amp;&lt;~

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83 1M VI

JUST ARRIVED!

Complete hne bedding ond
vegetable plants Blooming
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Baskets Large selection
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300
299
7S 2492M

n

Bad move . That's O'Neill's
power wne.
"I was trying to keep everything
away from him," Freeman said. " I
just got a pitch over the inside pan
of the plate."
O'Neill pulled it for his second
home run. Another irony: hts other
homer also was solo. accounting
for his only other RBI.
Piniella wants to sec more of
that out of O'Neill, particularly

noon.

SOCI IUOO

Tonight's games

pm

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s.erunmi.O 10), L.A OJ~ 91
Phoow. In. Suttle 100 .

(lLD 1-0). 7:35p.-m

T-

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HOUI1tm 108. Portland 96
I::lc:uu1 91, Mil ... ~~~ . OT
San AalmlO 120.
1&lt;M

S&lt;l-(T-~·~

A\tERICA~

10

557
526
)50

Golden SLIKC 122, Minnelou 100
lndw\1 I 2.3. Oarltnc 96

Atlulll (Ldllnltdt 1-t) al Cl.cin uO (H•
1 1-1),. ll;.J5 p.a
U. A.qcla. (O,cd • I).J) •t IJQUSton
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New Josey I &lt;B. Manu 100
NewYori;93, WuhinJ:too 90
Bolton ~, Ptub:dr.lptu.. ~

ScwYc:d:l.~~

7~

.6JS

Tuesday's scores

-~o..c...,,

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.... 51 'N
.. .. 46 }4
... 44 JS
41 J7
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1-dmchcd confeftOX.lli.le

Tuesday's scorn

Oueqo (MOI'Jin

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1-Poruind ......
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a-Go6dm St.atc .. .. SJ T1
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lu.u A9uino. p1tcha. on !he 15 day dis-

GB

Eastern beats
North Gallia 4-0
Senior Jeff Durst tossed a threchmer and was pan of an attack that
gave Eastern a 4-D victory over vis iting North Gallia Tuesday after-

KANSAS OTY ROYALS - Pbcod

WESTERN CONFERENCE

In the majors ...

"The ftrst one. fmally'" Benavides s.aid.
Momentum jumped back and
fonh. Ron Gant his a sacrifice Oy
m the sixth ID tie it at 3, and Bena·
vtdes - who had a total of three
career RBls - put the Reds ahead
again in the seventh with a suicide
sgueezc bunt on a 2-2 piu:h from
Avery.
"The pressure was on there , in
th e bottom of the seventh, game
tied and a two-strike coun~" Benavides said.
It caught Avery by SU!fPrisc.
"W1th a 2-2 count, I didn' t even
have a chance to think aboot it," he
said. "It was a good move on their
part."
But the lead didn't last long.
Francisco Cabrera, called up Sunday to replace the injured ))avid
Justice, led orr the eighth with a
pmch-hit homer off Greg Swindell
to tic it at4.
While all thi s was going on.
Braggs was in tte clubhouse. He
got thrown out for disputing a
thtrd -st nke call by home plate
umptrc Charlie Reliford in the
founh inning.
It seemed a huge brcalc for the
Braves: Braggs· .529 career batting
average against Avery was the best
on the team.
But Avery was gone, too, when
O'Ncillled off the ninth with the
game still tied. Marvin Freeman (01) feU behind m the count 2-1, then
left a change-up over the inside
pan of the plate

Cleveland overcomes errors,
Detroit homers to post 8-7 win

NL games.,,

GOOD POKE, BROOK! - The Cleveland
Indians' Brook Jacoby (26) gets congrationations from leammate Mark Whiten (left) afler
throw to the bag for the only
Kansas City hilA's manager Tony
LaRussa then brought in RJCk Honeycut~ who threw wildly to fust on
Chris Gwynn's sacrifice bunt.
Terry Shumpert then laid down
another sacrifice, but Honeycutt's
throw to third was late, loadmg the
bases.
Miller and Gwynn then sped
across the plate on co nsec utJv c
wild pttches. The Royals finally got
the ball out of the infield when
Gregg Jefferies scored Shumpert
with a sacnflce Oy .
Blu• Jays 12, Yankees 6
Former Yankees star Dave Wm field dtd much or th e damage for
Toronto, off to its bcsntan ever 01
7-1.
Rookie Jeff Kent doubled in his
fust major league RBI and alw hot
his flfSt home run.
Yankees starter Jeff Joh nso n
lasted one inning, giving up eight

homering in the second inning of Tuesday
night's American League game in Clevrland
againsl Detroit, which lh• Tribt won 8-7. (AP).

runs on fovc hilS and three walks.
He faced six bauers in the second
and didn't register an out.
Brewers 11, Twins I

At Minneapolis , Darryl Hamil ton and Paul Molitor combined lor
six stolen bases. Hamilton , who
also drove m three runs with a pacr
of singles. tied Molitor' s singl egame record of three stole n bases.
whtch Molitor ha s accomplished
six limes.
One of Moil tor's thefts was his
seventh care er stea l of home,
sparking a seve n-run thJrd innin g.
He scored eas ily against Twi ns
staner John Smiley (0-1) on a t -1
ptlch with two outs.
Angels 8. Rangers I
Huhie Brooks had a three- run
horner and ftvc RBls for visitong
Calofomia, which won its fourth
straight. The Angels got a big loft
[rom unhernlded pitcher Joe Grahc.
With ace Chuck Finley on th e

disabled li st and another key
starter. Mark langston , slowed by
a htp mJury , Grabe limited the most
potent lineup m the major leagues
to four hits over 6 2{3 innings. The
24 -ycar-old Grahe entered the
game with a 12.60 ERA in his only
stan and was 3-7 with a 4.81 ERA
last season

DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second S1., P011eroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

(ContinuedfromPage4)

San Diego 4, San Francisco 0.
Dodgers 6, Astros 2
. National League batters beware:
Tom Candiottt's knuckleball is on
the loose.
Candioui pitched a six-hitter
and Eric Davis hit a long three-run
homer as the Los Angeles Dodgers
beat Houston Asuos 6-2 Tuesday
night at the Asuodomc.
Candiotti (2-0) won hi s second
NL game in as many stans , walk ing three and striking out seven.
The right-hander also had his first
major league hit - an RBI single.
"It was fun running down to
first base, touching the bag and not
~aving to go back to the dugou~"
Candiotti said. " It's satisfying to
get the hit because I spent hours in
the batting cage tllis spring.'·
The Astros spent a 101 of time in
the bauer's box mtssing Candioui 's
as.&lt;;Oruncnt or Jcnucklers .
· "He changes his speeds so well
on aU his pitches," Astros manager
An Howe said. "He throws slower
than slow and really tantalizes you.
He can really make you look bad at
times."
The Dodgers signed Candiotti as
a free agent after losing right-han der Mike Morgan 10 Chicago and
trading Tim Belcher ID Cincinnati.
· "It was not an easy game, not a
three-up, three-down game," Candiotti said. ""J;he comP.lete game
will help because 11 wtll gtve the
bullpen a rest. I was really happy to
go nine innings."
Brett Butler led off the third
with a walk off loser Butl:h Henry
(0-1) and advaJtced to second on an
infield single by Mike Sharperson.
Two outs later, Davis hit his third
homer as a Dodger, a 420-foot shot
into the fourth -seating level of the
Asuodomc.
C1rdinals 3, Expos I
At Olympic Stadium, pinch-hit-

ter Rex Hudler's solo homer in the
eighth inning orr Chris Nabholz (I·
I) broke a tie.
Rookie Donovan Osborne gave
up six hi ts and struck out three in
seven innings before Hudler pinch
hit for him.
Pirates 3, Cubs 2
At Three Riv ers Stadium,
Cht cago, the only team in the
major s without an error entering
the game, commiued four in the
fust six innings.
Bob Walk (1 -1) improved to 12 3 lifetime agatnst Chicago by
allowing three hits over seven
innings and Tom Prince drove in
two runs following errors as the
Pirates won despite managing only
three hits off slari.Cr Danny Jackson
(0-2).
Mets 8, Pbillies S
At Shea Sladium, the Mets won
their firsl home game of the season
as Dave Gallagher's two-run dou·
ble off Cliff Brantley (0-1) snapped
a seventh-inning tie.
After blowing a 4-0 lead, the
Mets scored three runs in the seventh inning to snap a 5-5 tie. Gal lagher had the key hit off loser
Cliff Brantley (0 -1) and Eddie
Mwray added an RBI double.
John Franco (1 -0), who pitched
I '}f3 innings of hitless relief, was
the winner.
Padres 4, Giaats 0
AI Candlestick Park, Andy
Benes pitched three-hit ball for 7
1/3 innings and Gary Sheffield hit a
two-run homer off John Burlcetl (02) as San Die~ defeated San Francisco in the Grants' home opener.
Benes (2-0) struck out six and
walked one. He gave up a walk and
an infield single in the eighlb and
was replaced by larry Andersen.
Jose Melendez got the last lhrec
outs.

GET UP
TOA

rye 50
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BY MA1l

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�Paga 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Borg loses
in Nice Open

By The Associated Press
Indiana is in and Philadelphta is
out of the NBA playolls.
The Pacers clinched a playoff
; berth by beating Charloue 123-96
· Tuesday n igh~ while Boston elirnt- nated Philadelphia from the postseason picture with a 99-94 victory.
Indiana' s vi ctory , combined
· wtlh Miami's loss to New Jersey,
gave the Pacers a third consecutive
' trip to the playoffs for the ftrsl time
since joining the NBA in 1976.
"I think we 're playing good
basketball and we don't fear any -body," said Chuck Person . who
had a season-high 14 rebounds for
Indiana.
Indiana used a 19-2 spun to lake
a 34- 21 lead, and the Hornets never
drew closer than 10 points again.
Larry Johnson led Charloue with
22 pmnts and Kendall Gill added

a killer.
For the second straight year,
Borg, once rank ed No . I in the
world, was soundly thrashed in the
opening round of a tennis tournament on the French Riviera.
"It's going to lake a few more
tournaments before I wtll be 100
percent confident again ," Borg
said last year after being crushed
by Jordi Arrese of Spain at Moote
Carlo. "I'm sure if I play more
maJChes, I'm going 10 improve my
game. I'm preny confident about
lhaL"

21

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Reggie Lewis scored 27 poinL,,
. including a cru cial jumper wllh
15.9 seconds left, as Boston elimi nated Philadelphia from the playoff
· picture for th e ftrsl time since the
· 1987-88 season.
"I didn ' tthink it would be a
real big shock to anybody, "
Charles Barkley said of missing the
playoffs.
Kevin McHale had 20 points
and 12 rebound s for Boston .
. Hersey Hawkins scored 20 poin ts
· for the 76crs.
In other games, it was Cleveland
115, Chicago 100; New Jersey 105.
Miami 100; New York 93, Wash tngton 90; Golden State 122, Min nesota I00; Houston I08, Portland
96 ; Detroit 98 , Milwaukee 94 in
overtime; San Antonio 120, Dallas
. 108: Sacramento 103, Los Angeles
' Clippers 97 ; and Phoenix 122,

Scat~ e

100.
Cavaliers 115, Bulls 100
At Ri chfield, Michael Jordan
didn ' t play and Chicago suffered
its worst loss of the season. Jordan
stayed in Chicago because of ten dinitis in his left knee and mi ssed
only his third game in siA seasons.
Brad Daugheny scored 21 points
for Cleveland, which stopped the
Bull s' four-game winning streak.
The Cavaliers never trailed.
NelS 105, Heat 100
At Miami , New Jersey
outscored the Heat 17-4 in the final
4:29 to beat the Heat in a crucial
game for both teams. Derrick Coleman sal out the ftnal minutes, but
ftni shcd with 24 points and 13
rebounds for th e Nets. Miami 's
Glen Rice scored 36 points, but hts
learn missed nine of its last 10
shots.
Knicks 93, Bullets 90
At New York, Patrick Ewing
and John Starks woke up a slumbering New York offense in the
fourth quarter and th e Knick s
sta yed in fust place in the A~antic
Divis ion. The Knicks got II poinL'
from Starks and 10 from Ewing in
the final period . Ewmg fini shed
with 23 points an d 21 rebound s.
Ledcll Eackles sco red 38 poin ts for
the Bullets.
Warriors 122, Timberwolves 100
Tim Hardaway scored 25 poin ts
as the Warriors routed the Ttmberwol ves in Minneapolis.
Pooh Richardson had 22 poin ts
for the Timberwolvcs.
Rockets 108, Trail Blazers 96
AI Houston , Otis Thorpe made
II of 12 shots and scored 24 points
as the Rock ets kept th eir playoff
hope s aliv e . Vernon Maxwell

scored 10 sll1Ught Houston points,
keeping the Rockets ahead 81 -75
going into the ftnal period.
Pistons 98, Bucks 94 OT
At Milwaukee, Joe Dumars
scored nine of his 26 points in
overtime as Detroit won its sixth
straight. Dumar 's three-potnter
gave the Pistons a 91 -89 lead in the
extra period, and his two free
throws with I :04 left stretched the
advanlage to 93-89. Dennis Rod man had 19 points and 18 rebounds
for the Pistons. Dale Ellis had 22
points for Milwaukee.
Spurs 120, Mavericks 108
At San Antonio , Sean Ellion
scored 26 points and San Antonio
used a 59-40 rebounding advantage
to beat Dallas.
The Spurs got 23 points from
Terry Cummings. The Mavs were
led by Rolando Blackman with 20
points.
Kings 103, Clippers 97
At Los Ang eles, Wayman Tisdale scored 24 points and Sacramento capilalized on Danny Manning's ejection to beat the Clippers.
The Kings pulled away with a 17-6
run at the start of the fourth quarter.
Mannin g scored 20 points before
referee Luis Grillo called two tech ni cal foul s on him tn th e fourth
quaner.
Suns 122, SuperSonics 100
AI PhoeniJ&lt; , Dan Majerle scored
14 of his 23 points in the second
quarter as th e Suns broke open a
tight game against Seattle . Majcrle
was ejected with I: 18 left in the
game for a flagrant foul against
Ban Kofoed. The play was typical
of the physical game, in which 33
fouls were called on the Suns and
32 on the Sanies.

land Cavaliers' Mike Sanders in the first quar ter of Tuesday night's NBA game in Richfield,
Ohio, which the Cavs wont 15-100. (AP)

LOSING HIS GRIP is what Chicago forward
Scollie Pippen (right) finds himself doing when
faced with the defensive pressure or the Cleve-

Winnipeg beats Edmonton to deny
Oilers early home-ice advantage

SIXTH IN NATION - Rolland's Rick
Williamson recently traveled to Champaign, Ill~
where he received this trophy for placing sixtb
in the nation for U.M .P. (United Midwestern
Promoters) Econo-modified points. Points are
tallied al various tracks from across the nation,
where each week the local promotor's call the
UMP off'tce in Champaign lo report the we~kly

point total~. Williamson, thus placed sixth of an
estimated I 500 entries nationwide. Williamson
also drove this car to victory last Sunday at
West Virginia Motor Speedway . WVMS will
switch to Saturday this week with the STARSnorlhern opener, while Skyline Speedway in
Stewart will open Friday evening.

·Williamson captures victory at WVMS
!i~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By SCOTI' WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Rutland 's Ri ck Williamson
drove hi s #21 Dayton Racing
Enterpri ses modified chassis to a
big win at West Virginia Motor
Speedway Sunday afternoon over a
field of 20 cars.
Williamson al so set fa st time
with a 24 :88 clocking on the 5/8 milc clay oval , placing second in
the helmet dash.

A) You' II surely enjoy
the luxury, as well as our
low price, of this quality constructed
neatly tailored recliner. Styled with plump
pillow back, generously padded seat and arms
that offer sink-into comfort for total relaxation .

Williamson's car is powered by
a 35 5 cubic -inch small block
Chevy and is aspirated by methanol
1hrough a Dave Shain -butlt Holly
alcohol carburetor.
Rece ntly, Williamson travel ed
10 Champaign, Ill. to receiv e
national honors in the UMP Modi fted Division. where he received a
trophy and accompanying honors
for sixth place in the natioo .
In onl y hi s first full yea r of

OSU's unfinished business
with Cooper's contract remains

OSU-bound
Macon to lead
Indiana stars
INDIANAPOLI S (AP )
Charles Macoo of Mi chi gan Cit y
Elston will take the ti~ c of Indi ana
Mr. Basketball with him when he
heads to Ohio State next season for
the slart of his college career.
"II hasn ' t hit me yet. and 11
probably won 't until the All -Star
Game," Macon said. " I know a lot
of great players hav e wor n that
(No. I) .JCfSCY ."
Macon will lead the lndtana All Star'S against a team from Kentuc ky
on June 20 in Louisv ille and June
27 in Indianapolis.
In his senior year. Macon averaged 24.9 points , 12 8 rebound s,
5.2 blocked shots and 2.4 ass ists
He averaged 55.6 percent tn fi eldgoal shooting and 81.3 percen t
from the tine.
The 6-8 power forw ard has a
busy exhibition sc hedule ahead of
him. Besides the lndtana All -Star
series, he ' ll be the only In diana
player in the McDonald 's All American game Aprol 19 tn
Atlanta. He will al so play in the
Derby Classic in Loui sv ill e on
April. 26.
Perceived as a good playe r on
an average team , Macon helped
cacry lhe Red Devils 10 the champt onship game of lhe semistate where
they Iosito eventual slate runnerup Lafayeue Jeff.
"We surprised a 101 of people,"
Macon said. " We were so young;
we Qllly had one slartcr back. No
one thought we'd be any good.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Indiana beats Charlotte 123-96
~to enter NBA playoff picture

NICE , France (AP) - For
Bjorn Borg, it's that forst step that's

On Tuesday, he offered lillie
resistance as Ohvier Delaitre of
France ripped off a 7-5, 6-2 firstround vicwry in the Nice Open.
"I didn't feellOO percent confi dent out there," Borg said Tuesday. "I need 10 play more matches,
more points in front of people. I
still enjoy it and have fun, but I
need to play matches agnin.''
Delaiue, ranked 4 3rd in he
world, needed 78 minutes to beat
Borg, who got many of his points
on errors by the Frenchman.
Last year, Borg launched hi s
comeback using a wooden racket.
This time. he has a mod ern
graphite model. And he appeared
s ligh~y more competitive against
Delaiue than he had m ht s loss to
Arrese.
His shots on Tuesday , though ,
often lacked power and depth .
"I can go with my serve much,
much harder if I want to. My forehand can also be much harder. But
it lakes matches, it lakes points to
do that," Borg said. " And in six ,
seven months I will feel mu ch
more comfonable and confident. ' '
Delaitre, though , said he could
have beaten Borg more convincingly.
' 'I'm sorry it wasn't a spectacular match," the Frenchman said. " I
wasn '1 at my best because I had the
flu earlier this week . I made some
mistakes a beginner would make ,
but he wasn't giving me anything
that caused me trouble.' ·
Delaitrc pounced on short balls
and approached the net 10 put away
easy winners. He took the fiJSt se1
in 49 minutes, breakin g Borg at
love m the 12th game.
The second se t went qut ckly ,
with Delaiue winning the final four
games.
A crowd of aboul 4,000 gave
Borg a warm reception, though
there was lit~e of the excitement
thai surrounded his appearance in
Monte Carlo last year - his fim
sanctioned toumamem match since
19&amp;4.
Borg has accepted wild -card
invitations to play in Monte Carlo
and Munich thi s sprin g. He ha s
said he plans to play in seven or
eight ATP Tour tournaments thi s
year, but ruled out cntcrtn g an y
Grand Slam events.
In other matches Tuesda y, Guy
Forget topped Libor Nemecek of
Czechoslovakia 6-4. 6-3: Argenu na' s Gabriel Markus heat Arresc 64 ·6-2· Marc Rosse! of Swiucrland
d~fea'ted Arg enltn e Chri s1ian
Miniussi 7-5, 7-5; JaVIer Sanchez
of Spain ousted Mark Kocvc rrnans
of the Netherlands 2-6, 6-4, 6 -2;
and Frenchman Hcnrt Leco nt e
elimtnatcd qualifier Bart Wu yLI ol
Bclgiurn6- 1. 2-t&gt;, 6-0.
Arn encan Pete Samprns. the top
seed and the fourth -ranked player
in the world, needed nearly three
hours before knocking o ff the
defending champion . Martin Jai1e
of Argentina, 2-6. 7-5, 6-3. Sampras next meets form er French
Open champion Andres Gomez of
Ecuador. a 6- 1, 3-6.7 -6 winn er
over Frenchman Frederic Fontang

Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Wednesday, April 15, 1992

..
_1.£1
,
-:~

'.~

W.C( ......,,,..,

· COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) Almost five months after Ohio
Stale's administration offered head
football coach John Cooper a threecontract extension, the university has yet to open negollallons.
Cooper's fiv e -year contract
expires Jan. 3, 1993.
. ''I've got a lot of things on my
plate," Jones said in an interview
m The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer. "I
~on't have a timetable . Coach
Cooper still has one year !eft on his
old contract, so we didn 1 deem tt
or ultimate importance that it he
done right after the announ ce -

year

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Jone s announced just before
Ohio State' s regular-season finale
with Michi gan on Nov . 24 that
Cooper would be offered an extension. Ohio St1te lost that game 31 -

a minimum of $240,000 annually
for television and radio shows. It
also includes a provision paying
Cooper a one-month bonus for get1ing the Buckeyes inw a bowl game
and a two-month bonu s if it is a
Jan. I game.
" We 're trying 10 clean up what ever is in the contracl that we like
or dislike," Jones said. " Eventual ly, we ' ll give coach Cooper th e
same opportunity."
Cooper said in the interview
published Sunday, " To me, you
deal with il very simply. If you're
going to extend a guy's contract,
you say, ' Hey, instead of having
one year, you've got four years.'
To me, that would be the minimum
thatlthink I would ask for.''

compC!ttion, he finish ed fifth in
point s at Skylin e Speedway in
Stewart, second in West Virginta
and si xlh in the nation.
Williamson can be seen racin g
locally at Skyline Speedway, West
Vtrginia Motor Speedway in Min eral Well s, W.Va., and Southern
Ohio Raceway in Portsmouth.
He is sponsored by Baum Lum ber of Chester, Vaughan's Cardinal
of Middleport; Fisher Funeral
Hom e of Middleport; Downing
Childs Mullen Musser Insurance of
Pomeroy; Auto Body Services of
Hartford, W.Va., Sorden Tool &amp;
Ma chine of Pomeroy and Big K
Cola from )&lt;roger in Pomeroy.
Williamson will be competmg
in the season opener Friday night at
Skylin e Speedway in Stewart ,
when the tra ck opens with four
classes of cars beginning at 8:30
p.m. Warm -up s arc at 6:30 and
time trial s at 7:30.
Skyline is located betwe en
Athens and Coolville off U.S . 50
on County Road 53.

Dy KEN RAPPOPORT
Loui s 5, Chicago 3.
AP Hockey Writer
The Jets blew open a scoreless
The Winnipe g Jets arc doing ga me with fo ur scco nd -pcrtod
their share of damage on the wa y to goals.
the Stanley Cup playoffs.
A goaltender s' du e l betw een
Sunday night, they knocked the Winn tpcg's Bob Essc nsa and
Calgary Flames out of the NHL's Edmont on's Bill Ranford turned
postsea son tourn ament. Th en on into a game of Otlcr defensive lapsTuesday nigh~ they made sure that cs in Edm on ton' s regular season
Edmonton wouldn't fmt sh highe r final e.
than third in the Smythe Division.
Igor Ulanov's goal at 1:29 of the
It cost the Oilers hom e-tee advan - second period started th e Jets on
tage in the rorst round.
their way to a second consecutive
"That game was very tmponant win since the NHL season resumed
to us , and everybody in the rink Sunday followin g a 10-&lt;:lay slrikc .
knew how important it was. They
Doug Evans, Aaron Broten.
JUSt beat us." smd Oilers asst stant Luciano Borsa10, Evgcny Davydov
coach Ron Low af1er a 6-2 loss to and Mik e Eagles al so scored for the
the Jets.
Jets. Vince Damphoussc and Ana •• Look at them in the last seven to li Semcnov scored for Edmonton.
or ei ght games. They're the hottest
Canucks 3, Kings 2
team in the league. ''
Doug Ltdster had a goal and an
The Jets, 5-1-3 in their last nm e ass ist as th e Canucks scored all
gam es, wind up the regular season their goals on the power play.
at San Jose Thursday night As the
Va ncouver, which lost 6-1 10 the
fourth -place team in the Smythe, Kin gs on Sund ay nt ghl , broke a
the Jets will play Vancouver in the four-gamc' losing streak . Emering
fi rst round of the playoffs, starting 1he gam e, th e Canucks had won
Saturday . Edmonton will play at ·only once tn their last seven gam es.
second -place Los Angele s in the .
Down 3-0 in the second period,
other Smythe opener.
th ~ Kings came back to mak e it 3-2
Elsewhere , tt was Vancouver 3, on Corey Mill en's goal wtth 2:07
Los Angeles 2; Detroit 7, Minncso- rc matnm g.
ta 4; Quebec 7, Buffalo 3; and SL
Red Win~s 7, North Stars 4

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TAMP A, Fla. (AP) ~ Secondseeded Andre Agasst defeat ed
Karsten Braasch 6-3, 6-3 and thirdseeded MaliVai Washtngton beat
Jan Apell 6-2, 6-3 in the fiJSt round
of the USTA Men's Clay Courts of
Tampa.

Steve Yzerman scored thr ee
ttme s and reached the 100-point
mark for the fifth consec utive seaso n as the Red Wings tuned up for
the playo ffs by beaung the North
Stars. their fi rst v1ctory at Mtnncsota in 2 1/2 yeaiS.
Yze rman. who al so became the
44 th NHL nlaver wi1h 900 caree r
poin ts . he lped 1h e Red Wtn gs
cli nc h home-icc ad vantage
throughout the Campbell Conference playoffs. They fmished 43-2511 - the fust time they' ve been 18
game s over .500 smcc Marc h 18 ,
1970.
Nordiques 7, Sabres 3
Rlues 5, Rlackhawks 3

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3.

" They wid me the night before
the Michigan game, 'We're going
to give you a three-year contract
extension,"' said Cooper. "I have
not lalked to a soul. Not one word
has been said since then."
Cooper is 27-18-2 in four years
with the Buckeyes.
Jones said he is sure the maucr
involving the cootrael will be final ized before Ohio Stale opens tiS
season Sept. 5 against Louisville.
He said he is not so sure the contract will be extended or if il will
be rewriliCII.
"We are looking at the contract
to see how we want the next contract to read what it should say,
what it should n01 say and so on,"
Jones said . "We aren't ready to
negotiate yet I don 'I know if there
will be any negotiating."
Cooper's S114,264 salary ranks
sixth among Big Ten foot~all
coaches. His contract also prov1des

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�Wednesday, April 15, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3rd Week 18th Anniversar)J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel Page-9

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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Oh1o University
College of Osll'opillh iC Ml'd io ne

Wednesday, Aprl115, 1992

Family
Medicine

Pa~10

Mother feels TV gives teens
the wrong message about sex
Dear Ann Landers: Our !?-yearold daughter told us she was
spending the night of the Valentine
Ball at her girlfriend's house, but we
have since learned she and two of
her girlfriends spent the night
with three boys at a motel. I was
disappointed but not SU!Jlrised.
I have read that producers of
prime-time TV have chosen to
portray their teen -age role models
as having sex when they turn 18.
One show featured a high school girl
losing her virginity on prom night
No wonder one of my daughter's
friends said, "What do you think
prom night is for, anyway?"
The message our kids get from
TV is that teens feel there is
something wrong with them if they
haven't had sex by the time they're
18. What if the producers decide
next year that sex at 16 IS OK'
Maybe the next year it will be 12.
I'm tired of television be1ng a
co-conspirator in lowering the code
of ethics in this counii)' .
When my klds were liulc , I didn't

Ann

Landers
ANN LA!'IDERS
" 1!11. LoA Aaidm
n.n..s,...-~

er..un Syodl-.""
like the viOlence on cartoons so I
made sure they had more ~-onh wlule
things to do on S;uunda y mom mgs.
Most klds dld "' ateh that stufL and
I'm sure it lS no comctdencc lhat
dnve-by shoo 110gs arc not hmg
unusual these days.
The only suggest1on 1\·e e' er seen
for mfluencmg TV programming
is w write the shows' sponsors.
But few parents have the ume to
momwr all the shows on TV, eYeD
if they could Slalld the steady diet of
garbage. Is there any way to get a
list of offendmg shows and lheir
sponsors, so parents who care can
make the" feelings known'
FIGHTING MAD IN IOWA

Community calendar
Community Caltndar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
mu.st be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

There wiU be an egg hunt Satunlay
at4 p.m.
RUTI..AND - Good Friday allnight gospel smg at the Rutland
CiviC Center begmnmg 7 p.m. Fnx
admission. Refreshments available.
Public invued.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Revival service at Middleport Church of the
SYRACUSE - Good Friday serNazarene through Sunday at 7 p.m. vtces at First Bapust Church Syranightly and 10:30 a.m. Sunday . cuse will be al 7:30 p.m. Pubhc
Rev. and Mrs . Billy D. Crane, invited.
Parkersburg. W.Va., special work ers. Public invited.
RACINE - Car wash sponsored
by the Southern Funm: HomernakRACINE - The Racine Church ers of America will be held at
of the Nazarene will have revival Eber's Station Friday 8 a.m. to 2
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. p.m. Recommended donatioo is S3
Sunday services will be 10:30 a.m. for cars and small trucks and S4 for
and 6 p m. Rev. Joe Jordan will be vans and full -size uucks.
evangelist and there will be ;-pccial
music. Rev. Thomas L. Gates II
REEDSVILLE - The Unuy
10 vites the public.
Smgers, under the direction of Sue
Matheny, will perform Friday at 7
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire p.m. at the South Bethel New TesDepanment Ladies Auxiliary will tament Church on Silver Ridge.
meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m ., at the
fire station. All members urged to
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleauend.
pen Community Good Friday scrvice will be held at the Heath UnuPOMEROY - The Pomeroy ed Methodist Chun:h at 7:30 p.m.
Group of AA will meet Wednesday Rev. AI Hartson will preach. The
at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic community choir wiU perform "We
Church.
Saw Lave" and 'The Greatres:s of
God."
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Garden Club will
SATURDAY
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
RACINE - Racme American
Middleport Presbyterian Church.
Legion Post 602 will have its annu al Easter Egg Hunt Saturday at
THURSDAY
noon at the post home. All chil~n
RACINE - Racine American arc invited
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.
COOLVILLE - An Easter egg
hunt is planned al I p.m. for ages
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- 0-11 at the Coolville Unued
ty Democratic Executive Commit- Methodisl Church . Each child
ICC will meet Thursday al 7:30p.m
bnng a container.
al the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
CHESTER - Chester Volunteer
POMEROY - Oh10 Young F~re Department will have a fish
Democrats of Ameri ca. Meigs fry Saturday 2-8 p.m. at the fire
County, w1ll meet al the Carpenters house.
llall in Pomeroy on Thursday at
t• 30 p.m. All DcmocraLI aged IRMASON, W.VA.- The Bend
~0 arc 1nvi1ed lD allcnd.
Area Gospel Smg will be Satwday
at 6 p.m. at Faith BapllSI OlUn:h m
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- Mason. W.Va. Public invited.
port Ch ild Conservalion League
wil l meet Thursday at the home of
REEDS VILLE - Forked Run
Helen Blackston . Jerry Davis of Sponsman Club woll hold an Easier
ProJect Lift-off will be the gue st egg hum Saturday at I p.m. at the
speaker.
club. All children welcome. Call
667 -6859 for further informatioo
: SYRACUSE - The First Church
Of God in Syracuse will observe the
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
mdinaoce of the churc h and have a Western Square Dance Club will
feel washing ceremony on Thurs - sponsor an open dance at the scruor
day at 7:30p.m . Dav1d Ru ssell.
citizens center in Pomeroy on Fnpastor, 1nvi!Cs the publoc .
day from 8-11 p.m. Kent Hall .
Williamstown , W.Va. woll be the
COOL VILLE - Holy Thursday
caller. Public mv1led Refreshments
services will be held 7:30 p.m. at
available.
the Bethel Un1ted Methodosl
Church . A reading of !he ''Las!
POMEROY - The South Betbel
Hours of Chris! " by Jim Boshop
New Testament Olurch Youth will
will be read by Pastor Harold and
present ''To See and Miracle" at _the
Kathie Alloway -Priddy and Rev .
Pomeroy Nursing and RcllabohtaSeldon Johnson. Special music by
tion Cenlcr Sarurday at 2 p.m. and
John Coen. Holy Commumon cele- at the church on Sunday at 10 a.m.
brated. Public mvited.
niPPERS PLAINS - The Will POMEROY - Episcopal Church
ing Workers of St. Paul United
Women will mcel Thursday at
Methodist Church in Tuppers
!2:'30 p.m . at the parish house.
Plains will hold a bake sale Saturday beginning at 9 a.m._at the
FRIDAY
church. Pies, cakes, cookoes and
COOL VILLE - Good Friday candy will be available.
iervices will be 7 P: m. at St.
Mart ·s United Methodost Church.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Bob Lyons. Porterfield Bapusl Grange wtU hold a potluck supper
Youth Minister, woU be speaker.
and fun night Sarun:lay at6:30 pm.
at the grange hall near Salem O:nRl.J11.AND • Annual hymn sing ler. All members and potenloal
of Rutland Freewill Bapust Church
members urged lD attend.
~ill be Friday at 7 p.m: at th_
e RutRUTLAND - There will be a
land Civic Center. Public mv1ted.
dance at the Rutland Americ1n
. HOCKINGPORT • Good F~day
Legion Hall Friday and S~y. ,8
program at Hockingport Untted p.m. to midnighL Musoc by Whttc s
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. Hill Band. Public invited.
I

I

John C \Voli. D.O.
Associale Professor
of Family Medicine

DEAR lOW A: Action for
Choldren's Televi sion and the
National Coalition Against TV
Violence used to have such a
list, but it no longer exists. The
suggeslioo you mention is still the
best Parents who wish to register
cm~plaints about the TV fare that
is offered should write to the
producers and sponsors of the
shows they fmd offensive.
What can be seen on dayume TV
os emlnrrassingly provocative these
days. and the stuff on at night is
shoclung. Your best bet is Public
Broadcasting It's clean, educational
and COnSLIUC ti ve.
Dear Ann Landers: Recenlly
we went to our granddaughter's
weddmg. After the dlrmer, the guests
look 1ums dancmg with the bride
and groom. While they danced, each
guest slipped money in 10 the groom's
coat pocket or shoved some bills
down the front of the bnde's dress.
My husband and I walched with
astonishment but we sa1d nothing,
as good grandparents should. I hadn't
thought much more about this
•·ulgar spectacle unul I saw one of
those reality -based counroom TV
shows. A paor of newlyweds sued a
for ruining their roo:ption by
removing the: food too soon. which
caused the guestS to leave prematurely. The couple filed the suit
lwrat"'" the: early departure of the
guests, they said, deprived them of
some serious loot.
The newlyweds oo TV aoempted
to justify their disappomtment by
bemoaning the loss of a "uadition."
What uadition' Wbose tradition? In
a pig's eye! Does a mountain of
beautiful gifts no longer suffice? Is
this yet another manifestation of the
unabashed, shameless greed thai
seems endemic with the current
gmeratioo? Or am I -- REALLY
OlJf OF IT IN l.ITI1.E ROCK
DEAR UTILE ROCK: There
are a variety of ethnic customs
mvolvmg collecting money at
weddings. It has lD do with tradltion. not greed. If the gueslS want to
do this, I see no reason to object
Do you havt qut:stioiiS abow sex.
bw 110 oM 10 tal.lc 10 7 Ann Lillldtrs'
boollt1. "Sa and IM Tun -Ager."
u frmo! and to IM point. Stna a
R/f-addrtsud. long, busiMss-siu
tnYtlofX tllld a chtck or monty
order for $3 .65 (this oncludp
p&lt;wag&lt; and htllldiing) to : Tuios .

=

c:o AM l.mukrs. P.O. Box 11562.

Chicago . Ill . 6061/ -0562 . (In
Conadil. stna S4 .45 J

Poet's comer
Dear Robin Redbreast. as I
watch you in my tree
My thoughts go to a lonely
place
Called Mount Calvary .
And in my mmd's eye I sec a
savior hanging there,
Beaten , bleeding, dymg
Rlr a world that didn'l care.
Then a brown lit~e robin
C=e to attest its grief and sorrow
To a savior's bleeding breast
Oh Robin Redbreast , Robin
Redbreast
You arc welcome as can be
To make and raose your babies
in my maple tree.
And th e c nm son badge of
honor.
lllat you wear so very weU
To a world of unbelievers, ilS
noble story 1e II.
Alpha L. Douglas
115 Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'

'
SPEAKER ·JoAnn Ingram, Ohio State
Grange Flora, second rrom left, was speaker al
the annual Meigs County Pomona Grange ban·
quel held Friday at Salisbury Elementary

School She is pictured with Patty Dyer, deputy,
lel't Howard CaldweU, Ohio State Grange Mas·
ter; and his wire, Marie, and Rosalie Story,
Meigs County Pomona Grange Lecturer, nght.

Grange holds annual banquet
Jo Ann Ingram, Ohio State
Grange Flora, was rhe speaker at
the annual Meigs County Pomona
Gra ng e banquel held Friday
evening at the Salisbury Elementary School.
Ingram commen!ed on the history of the Grange which is now_125
years old and of the opportumltcs 11
offers to members. She congratu laled Howard Caldwell, Stale master, on hi s leadership in developing
Camp Frie ndly Hills describing il
as a "labor of love" for grange
members.
Palty Dyer. Pomona master,
inltoduced Ingram and Caldwell,
along with his wife, Marie Caldwell. Mr. and Mrs. Caldwell commented on Lhe theme or the year'
"People Working with People" and
the JOY which comes from working
with together for other people.
Dyer noted th ai Meigs County
has gained in grunge membership.
Wesuna Crabtree, chaplai n, had the

Deadline set

Rachel Ashley, the Stale Grange
wmncr, sang "When I Met Jesus"
accompanied by her father, Ke1th,
pianist
Dorothy Cray of Star Grange
won the quilt and Vada Hazelton,
Hemlock Grange, the wall hanging.
Numerous other door prizes, donated by Super 10, B1g Wheel. Montgomery Sales, Swisher and Lohse.
V1deo Touch, Fabric Shop, Baum
Lumber, K and C. Jewelry, Andersons, Krogcrs, Chapman Shoes.
Francis Florist, Pomeroy Flower
Shop, and Star Junior Grange.

invocation and gmce preceding the
dinner served by the PTO of Salisbury, Rosalie S!ory, lecturer, rec ognized candidates auending. Jen nifer Walker sang "Pussy Willow"
and "God Bless America" along
with several other selections. Lee
Lee was pianist for her.
The slate yo uth co ntestants ,
Whitney and Rachel Ashley
Chelsea and Eric Montgomery
emenamcd following the dinner.
Whitney played a piano solo ,
"Swans on the Lake", Olelsea and
Eric danced to "Hillbilly Walk",

Read the Best Seier
Read the

CLRSSIFED RDS
MONEY SAVING COUPONS

l.llr~ lhe sunflower Group

study and compliance with require ·
ments, with consideration of extra
curncular and co-curri cular activi ·
tics and career objectives.
Mail to:
Rutland High School Alumm
Scholarship Commi ucc
Box 125
Rutland , Oh1o 45775 .

REVIVAL • Rtv. and Mrs.
Billy D. Crane, Parke_rshurg,
w. va., will conduct reviVal services at tbt Middleport Church
or tht N:uartnt Tursday through
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly and at
10:30 a.m. Sunday. Rtv. flC!yd D.
Grimm Jr. invitrs tbt public.

: Barbara J. Anderson, daughter
of Don and Bernadene Anderson,
was one of 682 academically talerued higb school seniors who have
aAJ!icd to Obio State University to
be awarded S 1,000 University
scholarsbips.
· About 500 or those students,
including Anderson, a senior at
Meigs, chose to compete for 50
more valuable awards.
Those who are competing for
P=idenli.al and Medalist Scholarships came to the Columbus cam -

Elizabeth Ann Ewm g ha s been
named to !he Dean' s Li st in th e
Coll ege of Nursing for the WIOicr
quarter al Ohio State Univcrs11y.
One hundred years ago, '" 1892. the
Geary Chinese Exclusion Act was
passed by Congress, ertending for 10
more years laws requiring Chinese laborers to register. and deporting
those nol specifically allowed to slay
in the United States.

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1~liS. Phases ::Ess--_-_-_-_-_-_~_-_-_--1.
We Have Selection, Quality &amp; Price
OFFER EXPIRES 5124192
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Plat~!
WALLPAPER AND BLIND SHOP ILuvs Phases $1.25 Refundto011er
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We are the wallpaper specialists
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MEcH.WcAUv REPRJOucEo AND 1.4 usr ACCOMP.t.Nv v~
REFUNO REQUEST 3 ¥0111 alter f!QMIS l'l'lif 1'101 b!l h.sogoed 0'

rta

Sun. t ·l PM

Answer: II is unwise lO have

either human saliva or dog saliva
mixed into any wound . This allows
the bacteria from the mouth to have
direct access to the blood and skin
without the steri lizmg benefit' of
the digestive system.
Because the human defense system is relatively dficicnl , moSI
people survive !he minor injuries
we receive, including the added
burden of bacteria in!roduced into
the wound by sticking an inJured
fmger into the mouth. Just as you
shou ld never lick your own
wounds, you should never have a
dog lick them either' Use soap and
water w cleanse a wound, not spi1 1
"Family Medicine" is a weeltly
column. To submit questions, wnte
10 John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University Colle ge of Osleopal111c
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens.
45701.

The Soulh Bethel New Testa ment Church Youth will presenl an
Easler musical, "To See a Miracle," at the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center on Saturday
at2 p.m.
They will also perform at the
church Sunday morning at 10 a.m.
Members of the cast arc Andy
Bater, Kristen Chevalier, V.I . Van Meter, Leah Well, Amanda Upton ,
Chasatie Hollon, R1ckic Hollon,
Jessica Baker, Lcs!Cr Parker, Adam
Wolfe and Jason Foley .
Members of the choir are Dawn
Foley, Heather Well, Meli ssa
Dempsey, Leslie Parker, Ginger
Nuuer, Stephanie Baker. Ashton
Well, Alyssa Hoffman, Ty Swartz,
Jessica Chevalier, Ja son Sheel s,
Andrew Upton.
Prompters are Jeanne Baker and
Mary Dempsey. Linda Well IS
accompanist
and
Norma
Hawthorne is coach.

Student applies for OSU scholarship

On dean's list

**Wall
Mayfair
*
Warner * Imperial * Village
Trends *Sanitas * Teflon * Waverly

they have been in a dog's mouth or
another human's moulh . Mouth
"genns" - including mouth bacteria from dogs or other humans usually do not cause an infection
when they are swallowed with food
or drink because the digestive system does a wonderful job of steril izing the things we consume.
The key word here is "usually,"
because at limes we can con tract
illnesses from gcnns on the things
that we put in our mouths. One of
the most common examples of this
is the herpes virus that causes cold
sores. It is easily passed in this
manner from one person to another.
Because it 1s possible to pass
infection through saliva, il seems
prudent to thoroughly cleanse any
10y that has been in the mouth of
another human or another animal
willl soap and water before you lei
your toddler play with il. Your toddler's dlgestivc system will probably provide adequate proteclion
agrunst most bacterial contaminants
that arc present on his or her lays,
but why suhject him lo an avoidable risk'
Question: We have also heard
from our friend thai if a person has
a wound, it is beucr to let a dog
lick il clean than to put the wound
in one's own mouth. Is this !rue'

Program planned

on grade: point avcrngc, cour se of

Just Arrived ...Hundreds of
Rolls of Wallpaper and Borders
In ALarge Selection of Patterns
BRAND NAMES

IlliDGE AVE.
&amp;J r J a.aCII 011 GARFIELD

Qurstion: We have a quesuon
concerning our dog . A friend of
ours insists that a dog's mouth is
cleaner (meaning il has less genns)
than a human· s mouth. She insists
1t's bellt;r for us to allow our toddler to play with and chew on our
dog 's tOys than for the child w put
obJeCts in his mouth that other
humans ' mouths have 10uched.
Considering where dogs'
mouths go, this would seem illogical . Is there any scientific backing
to the old wives ' laic about a dog's
mouth?
Answer: I reviewed the literature on thi s subject in order to
make a knowledgeable response to
your quesuon . I found out that,
Indeed. the wound from a human
bite has a somewhat higher likelihood of developing an infection
and other complications than does
a wound from the bite of a dog.
Unfonunately , statistics about bites
do not answer your question . A few
more facts will be helpful.
The mouths of both humans and
mher animals contain numerous
spec ies of bacteria and viruses commonly called germs - and
because of this, none are "clean."
The saliva in a dog's mouth is a bit
more effeetive at killing bacteria
than is human saliva, but dogs still
have suffic1ent numbers and types
of bacteria 10 consider !heir
mouths' "dirty."
The mouth bacteria of all animals can produce serious or lifethreatening illness in humans, or in
other animals for that matter, when
they arc present in siles other than
the mouth . When these mouth bacteria are inJected into the skm or
the bloodstream by way of a bite,
serious infection can result.
The particular strains of bactena
that are present in a dog's mouth
arc different than the mixture of
bactcria~nl in a human mouth,
but in oo way are they more or less
hanmful than human bacteria.
Central to your question is llle
ossue of what care is necessary to
cleanse your toddler's toys after

The deadline for the Rutland
High School Alumni Scholarship
applications 1s May I.
Applicants must be a 1992 grad uate; a child or grandchild of a Rut ·
land alumni.
Applications must in clu de a
high school co urse tran script ; a
resume of activitie s and career
objectives; a current ph olograph for
publicny; the name and graduauon
year of alumni parent or grandparen t; and the nam e of intended higher educauonal msutuuon.
All applicants will be evaluated

ATTENTION!

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Stock

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''

ARIEL KLEIN

New arrival
· Tammy Klein and Brian Nitz,
Pomeroy, announce the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Ariel
l)3tieiJe Klein. oo Jan. 18.
: The infant weighed six pounds
and 13 ounces and was 21 inches

!On .

~randparents are Donna Klein,

P,omeroy. and Russell Cundiff,
Ma!oo, W.Va: and Nora Nitz, and
the late Coy Nitz. Libcny, N.C.

pus for a day m early March to take
an essay exam inalion and visit
areas or interest A commi ucc of
Ohio State facuhy members is now
reviewing the essays, along with a
portfolio of other information for
eac h student - including high
school grades and activities, standardized test scores and a personal
statement.
Ten studenls w11l be offered
Presidential Scholarships, which
include full in-state tuition , room
and board, book allowance and
miscellaneous expenses - valued
at $8,835 Lhis year. An additional
40 students will be offered Medal·
ist Scholarships, which cover the
cost of in-state tuition - this year
valued al $2.568.
The Presidential and Medalist
Scholarships incorporate the
S1,000 University Scholarship. All
three awards are renewabl e for
three additional years if the student
maintains a 3.2 or better grade
point average and satisfactory academic progress.
Students were selected for the
University Scholarships from
among those who have applied for
freshman admission to Obio State's
Columbus campus for autumn
quancr, 1992. In general they rank
among the top three pen:ent of their
high school classes and have ACT
scores of 28 or higher or SAT
scores of 1250 or higher.

Gardeners to meet
The Riverview Garden Club
will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
"Flowers by Craig" greenhouses
near Coolville. FoDowing the tour,
the group will return to the: bomc of
EUa Osboole ftY the monthly meeting. Members are to bring fruit for
fruit baskets.

State historian
speaks to DAR
The Return Jona1han Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution met recently
a1 the Heath United Melhodist
Church in Middleport with 17
members and one guest presenl
The meeting in ritualistic fonn
by Anna Circle Cleland, regent,
followed by prayer by Eileen Buck,
chaplain. Mary Kay Yost led the
nag salute. Officers reports were
given.
Eleanor Smith read the report of
president gcn~ral in which the
national convention was menuoncd
as meeting in April. Mrs. Cleland
announced she wiD be going Mon day through April24.
Rae Reynolds read the comments in the national defense
report.
It was noted that since the last
mccung, one of the last two World
War I velcrans has doed. That bemg
Alben Hoffner.
II was decided !hat Mrs .
Reynolds would be reimbursed $75
for all her contributions 10 the
chapter and cookie&lt; for the stale
convention. This also includes the
history awards and good citizen
awards.
Mrs. Gordon W. Knight, former
southeast dislrict director and now
state historian, was the speaker.
She talked of the Galopogas
Islands, the location of Charle s
Darwin's works on !he Ongin of
the Species ." She showed slides or
the birds and animals.
The Galapogas Islands arc made
up of 13 main ones and many small
ones all volcanic in nature and very
difficuh for walking. The islands
lie 600 miles due wesl from
Ecuador, South America.
Galapogas is th e Spanish word
for tortoise, bolh land and sea
species . Iguanas. seal lion s. sea
gu lls, albaltoss . fri gat e bircl s ancl
the three booby birds - ~1c blue, the
read and the hood ed or ma sked
lypc.
A1 the conc lusion the chapla1n

gave a prayer with Lord' s Prayer 1n
unison.
The hostesse s scrv1ng rcfrcsh mcnls were Bernice Carpenter.
Phyllis Hackel!, Nan Moore, Alice
Sltuble, Jcaneue Thomas and Mary
Wise.

Dedication slated
Dedication Services for Phase II
of ReJoi cing Life Chun:h will be
Apn l 29 at 7 p.m.
The new saociUary will seal 400
people.
Rev. John Akins of Broadway,
Va., will be the key note speaker.
He currently oversees pioneered
churches in several nCighboring
states.
The Rejoicing Life Youth
Church, which currently meets in
the lunchroom of the Rejoicing
Life Chrislian School, will move
into the Phase I sanctuary providIOg them with ne eded room for
growth and activities .
Michael Pangia, paSior of the
churc h, invites the public to ai!Cnd
the dedication ceremony .

CONTEST WrNNER - Ray Williams, right,
of Pomeroy is the local winner or a Magnavox
videocassette recorder in the Big Bend Foodland's "Food and Treasure" promotion. The last

two prizes lo be given away in the two-monlh
promotion will be $500 and a new car. Here,
Chuck nlakr, store manager, left, presents the
VCR lo Williams .

Eastern honor rolls announced

The honor roll for the fourth SIX week grading period has been
announc ed for !he Eastern Local
School DiSltict
Chester Elemenlary
Sixth grade - Kclli Bailey, Stefani Bearhs, Brandon Buckley ,
Bd lee Pooler, all A's; Samuel Pulver, overal l; Jamie Drake and April
Foreman, academi c.
F1fth grade - Dustin Huffman,
Valcne Karr, Brynn Moss. Jennifer
Starcher, Aaron Will, overaU; Wesley Karr and Jessica Marcum , academic .
Fourth grad e - Molly Heines,
Joshua Will, all A's; Chasat ie Hol lon, Chris Krawsczyn, overall;
Joshua Brodenck, Amanda Coa tes
and Jes sica Pore, academic.
Third grade - Juli Bailey, all
A's ; Joshua Clark, Cinda Clifford,
Wcs Crow, Dustin Marcinko, overall
Riverview Elementary
Fifth grade . Christa Clfclc,
Julie Hayman, M1ke Sobieski.
overall; Heath Proffiu, academic.
Founh grade - Cassie Rose, aca dem ic.
Third grade - Amber Baker ,
Amber Church, all A's; Brandon
Brownmg, Jeffrey, Circle , Nathan
Marcinko, Mal Putman , Chrissy
Smith and Donnie Smith, overall;

Renee Barringer, Kelly Kofnc . aca - Lau ren Young , ov erall . Robert
demi c.
Laughery. academic .
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Seventh grad e- Meredith Crow,
Sixth grade - Michelle Caldwell , Marra Frcc kcr, all A' c. ; Angela
al l A' s; Vicki Adams, Bdlen a Chan cy , Trae~ Hc;uc•:. Manha
Buchanan, Chri stopher Bu chanan , Hol ter, Scan Maxcy. Amanda Mil Jeremy Kehl , Betsy Sheets, Joey hoa n, Erin Sexwn . Lisa S!ethcm,
Weeks, overall; Lamar Lyons. aca- overJII; David Baker, Eric D11lard ,
demic.
Lcsltc Parker, academic.
Fiflh grade - Stephanie Evans,
High School
all A's; Jessica Brannon. Lacey
Twelfth grade - Krisuna ConRun1 1n g, Joshua Hager, Sarah nolly, Came Gillilan, Lee Gill ilan,
Householder, Sari Putman , Al1 sha Tony Grate. Dav1d G umpf, Danny
Rojas, J.T White , Ann W1ggin s. Lawrenc e , Tony Maxcy, Lorre
overall; Greg Burke , academi c.
Osborne, Am y Well. all A' s; Steve
Fourth grade - Mc ghan Avi s, Barnell , Tim Bi sse ll, Jennifer
Mallhew Bissell, Matthew Ca ld- Brooko ver , Lis a Golden, M1ke
we ll, Carne Sheets, Steven Weeks, Hoffman , Eluabeth Lawson . James
overall; Andrew Rollins. academic . McDan1 el, Tabby PhillipS, Jenni fer
Thlfd grade - Joey Brown, Rou sh. Dan ny Short, Keith
Mall hc w Gru bb , Jo shu a Ke hl. Spencer . Cri ss y SummctS, overal l.
Wesley Shafer, Dan1ellc Spencer.
Eleventh grade - Jeremy BuckGary Vierling, ov erall ; Kevin Icy, K1m Michael. all A's; Nancy
Keaton, academ iC.
Gaddis, Chad Gnffith, L1sa HoffJunior High
man, Malt Mtchael, Tracy Murphy ,
Eigh1h grade - Rebecca Evans. Bobb1c While , overall.
Jennifer Mora, Connie Pooler ,
Tenth grade - Samantha Ayers,
Brandi Reeves, all A's; Mike Oar- Amanda Barnngcr, Kathy Bernard ,
nell, Brian Bowen . Jeanette Clmc. Charlene llailcy, Randy Kaylor,
Melissa Dempsey, Jessi ca Freder- Tyson Ros e, Ani~;~ Thomas, Jaime
ick. Eric Hill, Brian Hoffman, Jes- Wilso n, Andy Wolf, overall.
Sica Karr, Robert Murphy, Nicole
N1n1h grade - Charles Bi ssell,
Nelson, Rachacl Norman , Ginger Jam ie Ord and Jess ica Radford ,
No ller, Kyle Ord, Mi cah Olio, overa ll.
Jason Sheets, Clifford Stev er.s,

Dance scheduled
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will sponsor an
open dance a1 the Meigs County
Senior CiLizens Center on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. Kent Hal,
Williamstown, W.Va., wtll be the
caller. Public invited . Refreshments
provided.

Sunrise services set
The Racine Baptist Church will
have sunrise services Easter morn ing at6:30 a.m. Sunday school will
be held at 9:30a.m. and worship
service at 10:40 a.m. The children's Easter program will be prcsen!Cd Sunday evening at 7:30p.m.
under the dlra:tin of Debbie Bradfort and Sheila ProffitL

.._lllill v..,.
Junior High
School was the recipient of a schtool trophy for
achieving the highest percentage or superior
projects in District 12 at the science competition
held Saturday at Ohio University. Or the six
parlicipants who took projects, three received
superior ratings, and the other three excellent

ralings. Those receiving superior ratings will
romprlr ror stale honors at Ohio Wesleyan on
.~pri l 25. Rrcfi•'ing superior ralings wue lertto
righl, front, Angie Hale, Teresa Simpson, and
Jake Gan naway. Excellent ratings were received
by Matt O'llryant, lefl, and Ry•n Smit h. second
row, and Dorothy Leifllril, back .

�..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

15, 1992

Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

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3
6

OPEN EASTER
SUNDAY
8an:-8pm

we Glaaw

Accept Your
Federal Fooa

Stamps

Words
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15
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15
IS

10
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$4 00
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DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

COPYRIGHT

1892

~IMd Item~~ • rtQUiftd to bl ,.;ty
~ !Of _.. iiiiCtl Kf'DIIt Srcw.,
11 tpedf~ noted In thil eel. tf

PRICES 0000 SUir!IO"Y.
APAILI2, THROUGH SATURDAY, A.PRIL18, 1912, IN

~ the ....,. u.lngl 01 • rain-

LIMIT OUA.NTrTIES. NONE

c'-11 ...ttidl Mil ent1t11 'J'O'j 10 ~

lhll tdvilnllled ltwn 1\ lhl ~-­
price within 30 ....._ ON, ont wndtH
c~pon will be kCtlptld
lt~m

...

'*

~....,

COOK'S WHOLE 114-111-LB. AVG.I

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams
Pound

UAW, Caterpillar
strike is settled
HINSDALE, Ill. (AP) - The
United Auto Workers agreed to end
their 5-month-old strike against
Caterpillar Inc. while contrncttalks
cootinue. But it was not immediate·
Iy clear how many of their jobs
would still be waiting for them.
A dispute also developed over
c.ac tly when the employees were
to repon to work at Caterpillar, tile
wo rld' s largest mak er of earth ·
moving equipment.
Caterpillar - which says tt can
run its plants witll up to 15 percent
fewe r employees - said it needs
abou t a week to decide how many
to call back.
But tile union told tile more than
12.000 workers to repon today to
their JobS in Illinois .
"They are telling us to go in
groups of four or five," said Pat
Diaz. "The company may tum us

away, and the union wants us to
document it."
The strike drew wide attention
because of Caterpillar's ultimatum
to workers April 6 to return to
work or risk losing their jobs 10
non -union replacements. The
showdown represented the first
time a major industrial company
has tried to break a union of the
size and strengtll of the 900.000·
memberUAW.
UA W bargainers voted unam·
mously Tuesday to return to work
without conditions at the recom ·
mcndation of Bernard DcLury of
. [he Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. satd UAW secretary ·
treasurer Bill Casstevens.
The union Int erpreted the rec .ommendation to mean worker s
should be on the job today ,
Casstevens satd .
Caterpillar agreed to slop trying
to hire rep lace men ts but will be
allowed to put mto efrect its last
contract offer, wh1ch rai ses top
.mimmum pay from $35,318 a year
ro $39.915 in September 1994. The
union wants $40,458 by then .
"For now it is over," DeLury
sa id 1n announcing the break ·
through after two days of mcctin~ s

at the mediation agency's suburban
Chicago offices. "And it took a lot
of guts and a lot of courage on botll
sides."
Negotiations under federal
medlallon will continue.
" The war is not over," said
Jerry Baker, bargaining chairman
for an East Peoria local. "Caterpil·
Jar's final contract offer i s not
acceptable."
Caterpillar cla•med v1ctory
because n withstood the union· s
insistence on a contract patterned
after one wnh farm -eq uipment
manufacturer Deere &amp; Co. Cater·
pillar claimed it couldn't afrord
pattern bargaining.
"Strikes and pattern bargaining
arc antiquated principl es, and we
hope we have just demonstrated to
tile UAW and ourselves thai thi s is
not a very effective way to resolve
a dispute ," said Jerry Brust. director of labor relations.
The walkout began with a lim1l·
ed strike Nov. 4 and spread, 1dling
12,600 workers at plants in East
Peoria, Aurora, MossviUe, Decatw-,
Ponuac and Mapleton. Caterpillar.
witll more than 56,000 employees
worldwide, also has plants in York,
Pa.; DenvC&lt;; and Memphis, Tenn.
Brust said strikers who hadn 't
crossed picket lines before Tuesday
won't be allowed back 10 work
before next week, at the earliesL
He said workers who rcrurned in
the flfSt few days after the ultima ·
tum were guarante«&lt; a job. Those
who don't get jobs will go on a pre ·
ferred hiring lisL
Brust est imat ed that I ,000
UAW members crossed picket
lines. Union officials said the num ·
ber was much lower.
Professor Harley Shaikcn , a
labor open at the University of
Caltfomta at San D1ego, s31d nei ·
thcr side won .
"For tile company , their strong
point is tllat tllcy implemented tlleir
final offer," he said. "But they
have a disgruntled work force.
which IS no basis for building for
tile future."

Yeltsin wins another round
MOSCOW (AP) - Rus sian
President Boris YelLs in has fought
off an attempt by Russl3's ex -Com·
mumsr lawmakers to slow his market -ori en ted reform s, but he still
faced more hurdles tn tile raucous

parliament session.
YeltSin 's min1 sters joyously
clapped each other's shoolders and
his parl,amenrary supporters
applauded Tue sday after the
Congress of People's Deputies nar·
. rawly approved a compromtse dec·
Iaration supponing his reforms.
"This eliminates the need for
our resignation ," said Yeltsin's
right-hand man , State Secretary
Gennady Burbulis. The Cabinet
had tllreatened Monday to resign,
althoogh Yclts1n asked them to stay
on for a few days.
Bur th e victory could prove
short -lived, becau se lawmakers
. were to have a chance to change
&gt;: their minds and amend the docu ·
:. ment today.
The Congress also was scheduled to vote on a new Russian Con sl!lution, a process that is likely to
include more bitter debate over
Yeltsin's powers.
The declaration approved Tues·
day preserves Yeltsin's powCI' to
rule by decree and directs tile gov·
ernment to continue the painful
reforms that have driven prices up
400 percent so far this year.
Passage or the declaration carne
. after U.S. Treasury Secretary
· Nicholas Brady wid reporters in
: . Moscow the Russian Conpess was
: jeopardizing a $2A billion aid pack·
• age by taking "steps backwards in
• ... world confidence."

•

For more than a week, Yeltsin ·s
backers and opponents had been
trading insults and tcctenng on the
edge of the most serious political
crisis ID tile former Soviet Union
si nce its collapse last December.
Most of tile lawmakers, elected
before the Soviet collapse last year.
are former Communists hostile to
economic reform. Yeltsin's supporters applted pressure on his
opponents by saying tile president
could order new elections for parIiamenl, which would threaten the
ouster of lhe ex-Communists.
The "Deciaration on Support of
Eco nomic Reform" approved
Tuesday tempers a resoluuon that
the Congress passed Saturday
demanding the government lower
taxes and raise wages to case the
pain of tile reforms.
The declaration said tile Cabinet
should carry out the will of the
Congress "taking into account real,
evolvin~ economic and social con ditions. '
That provides a loophole for
Vice Premier Yegor Gaidar, the
archit.ect or the reforms. Gaidar has
argued that lowering taxes while
raising expenditures would destroy
tile reforms and alarm tile West
The declaration also reaffmns a
decision by the Congress last year
to give Yeltsin power to issue economic decrees and appoint Cabinet
ministers without legislative
approval.
It also allows YeliSin to remain
prime minister unlil at leas&amp; Dec. I,
said Economics Minister Andrei
Nechayev.
I

In Memory

2

In memory of

YOLAN J.
SATTERFIELD

•
Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

WATER
AOOEO

COOK'S ClASSIC SEMI-BONELISS HAll
PORTIONS (1-WI. AYG.Il8... 11•

A year has gone by
now since you lett
us for another land
Though you may be
gone from us here
your memories still

linger In our hearts.
Seldom a day goes by
that we don 't think
of you and mention

Read the Best Seller ·
Read the

CLRSSIFIED RDS

8

OFFICE 992-2886

Large Eggs

ear

18-Ct
~IT I IN:r. WIUIIIIIII COUPOit t
11UI~~
UMIT ONIE COUfi'ON Pffl CUSTOMfR

C...----liMl ..

lllWII

GREEN BEANS, SWEET PEAS OR CORN

All PURPOSE OR SELF-RISING

Stokely's Vegetables

Gold Medal Flour

14.25-ISlk.

s.IL

PEPSI

CROW'S SUBDIVISION·Five Po1nts -A n1oo one aero lol
w1th water and electric ava1lable A groat bulding lot w1th
priCO you c.an't beat
ONLY $5,000

POMEROY·Bunernut·Thls cou ld be a 9reat rental property Th1s home has one bedroom and s1ts on two lots

lam1ly

NOW $13,500

POMEORV PIKE-A one story home Wltli new s 1ding, newer
roof, newer double pane w1ndows. newer winng , and
plu mb1ng Has 5 room s. 2 bdrms. and one car garage on
approx 1/2 acre ol ground
$25,900

~

• • •
• • •

I

FROZEN KROGER

FAT

FREE DESSERT,

$239

4

Shampoo ... ~&amp;-oz.
!SAVE U, TO 11.1101

~~UC~eam .....

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker .............................992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ......... .. ...... .. ....................992·3056
DAR UNE STEWART......... .................. . ...........992-6365
SANDY BUTCHER................... ......................... .. 992-537t
SHERYL WALT~. Cheshire............. ............. .. 367-o42t

0-0-B
0-0-D

2-Utar

'.

"IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE"

4115~1
4123~ 1

We
ware
looking
forward to having you

• •

Fresh Baked Apple Pie
8-lnch 24-oL

NEW LISTING· Longbottom-Approx 9 acres ol noce

He let me feet you move

NEW LISTING-Middleport· I 112 story lrame homo w11h

w•• •

FOREVERI
We love you Baby Girl

Easter
•

friendly folks at Kroger

You •n alway• on
•nd

Sodly mlotod by
Momma ond Doddy,
Grandparenta, Unci••
ond your uodparonla,
Alan &amp;Angie

2171.1ocoa4 11.
POMEROY, OHIO
3/23192Mn

HAULING
COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742-2138
3·15-'92-1 mo. pd.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

FOR SAlE

Beat Pricea &amp; Service for
Po•t Frame Garage• &amp;
Barna
Choice ol12 colora •
or rollup doora

T&amp; TLAWN SlRVICI
IWI1 M•lntMMnc.

plolo londsoaplng

a.

Agriculture
lime

ls~~rld~rd to unlimited

Top SoU Muk:hlng
ommerdall R--'Mntlal
"FRnDnM.u n--o _ _..-..~

VALLEY INC.

&amp; Slyleo

30xso «octod

&lt;all372-8697•

for

Rt. 2

inapection

1-800·538·1440

Moteriaf I LobO&lt;
Guaranteed

Millwood, W.Va.

Pb. Lo&lt;al Salesma•
742·2072

304-273-SSSS
4-9-lfn

3·16-t mo

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

NEW OPENING

SUMMER
IMAGES

2 Milot on Hytell Run Rd.

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
t2 Visits ...... $25.DO
t6 Vlsits ...... $30.00
t Visil... .. .$3 .00

DARWIN, OHIO
7/311'91/lln

' Tah Tho Pt&gt;n 0u1 01 Painlillg
- hi Us Do II For y,.·

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
37632 West Shade Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
614·985-4180 t.........,.
Alter 6 p.m.
Call985·4192
J-16-1 mo

pd

f

gas tumance &amp; central air, WBFP, new roof , new deck, 1

:

car garage. lull bsmt. 2. 13 aaos wlgarden area. $31,900

NEW UMA RD.· Ranch s~la hoine wilt13 bedrooms, I 1/
2 balf1. haal pump, CIA. patiO garage, outbuildings, app&lt;ox
6acres. $39,500 OWNER SAYS 'MAKE AN OFFER!"
WANTED AT ONCE t
usnNG FOR HOMES &amp; PROPERTIES IN TliE MEIGS
COUNTY AREA. IF YOU WANT TO SELL ... CALL US
TODAY I WE HAVE BUYERS WAinNG I
HENRY E. CLELAND................ ........... ...... .......... ~92.0191
TRACY BRINAGER.................................... ........949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL ...................................... ........949-2660
n&lt;FICE ...............................................................992·2259

(No Sunday Calls)
2112192

Ill IN ' I
~Ill\ I· i 11 1' 111
W ·. ll 1 II ,\ r\' 111 I.:. I- I· \ " I I· II I

•.

1:1 .
II.

1I

I "'IIII

I

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

l ll\ 1\j \111 ' 1\N .'-' ":
. AI\IW"'Aillt ,\! .. 1!

-- •

1" \ " II'•NI .\

II IF. Hr\IU:
" t·:N I INI· I f l,.\0:0."'11 11"11 " . 1

11 11-\"0ill\.1 1"-1 . 1
i\1\L it .

___
~nil

• ~-

nlti ' I .,\II:Ainl1t•.r

r.,(,(.,lo, o i M I' ""'r " 11 •t•"' -~•••·•·• ~·" · ''h'"" """"

,.l.,,,,, h, r"r"l'""
on. I o.l.lo• •• '" r ~·n• ""'" '"'II ,_,j
I"I I ' M r; "l

1111 4/ltn

COMMERCIAl. and RESIDENTIAl.
FRIJF. I:STIMATF.S

1

i I Il l

n . ____ --

I

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

----N~I:~ ~~ ~~ -~ ~ ~~~~~\\:

1·

lj·,,.,.,..., .

USED RAILROAD TIES

ATTENTION

I'·

_______ I".

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

Hew Ho..-es • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additians • Roofing

\\ l I II ,\ N All IN 11 11·.

1,

•ln sulallon

•
• •

!ii:J.:J:I

t'· --

Window
•Roolin~

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•

UI"U ,,

---- -

•Rep lacement

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

• • •
• •
•

c - - - - - - 11 ·

h.

•Vmyl Siding

4·4-92-lln

• • • •

:r.
I

•FIREWOOD

• • •

:11tn~411 . :t: Nt'\\!'il)tPIW~"!ll · :ll .lue·•
\Oi lII U .i\S~IUBI 1\lt

:

I

•LIGHT HAULING

J&amp;L
INSULATION

\ lohilt· &amp; Dmthlt'll idt· llullll' 0'1 llt'r'

----- -------------------- --

POMEROY· 111oor lrame home with 3 bedrooms, naluarl

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•

rontly occup1ed by Beauty shop &amp; Tattoo shop, Includes 2

heart. and thought.

momma's
daddy'• mlndo.

•

900

bedroom remodeled apiS Good monlf11y rental income
$53.000

But you will live on
FOREVER in our

from the

3 bedrooms. hreplace, CIA . full basement. new plumb1ng 8
w1nng , front &amp; back porches, fenced back yard ASKIN G

beautiful face.

ful
llltiUIAIIU • • • fUI IACII

NEW USTING· Longbonom· 1 acre w1th Oh1o R111er
Frontnge an excellent camp1ng SilO $8.000

$29,

WAKEfiElD'S

lO w..t, 1aom, olio •m.Je ll

• •
•
• • • • • •
• • • • • • •
• •
• •
• •
• • •
• •
• • • •
• •
• • • • •
• • •
• • • •

tav1ng land . CMner will split _S1B ,OOO

NEW USTING·Middlepor1· Commerdal/aparrment. Cur·

It
very 1hort viait
You came and left 10

Far

992-22S9
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO.:

Wo had ovorythlng
ready
But linlo did wo know,
God had bolter plant.
around and kJek
He let Ul hear your tiny
linlo hoortboat
He even •t Ul IM your

~-

• • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
•
• • •
•
• •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• •

A'\.
MEGAN RAE
WilliS

Diet Pepsa
Cola

lno11 Fr. . PHt Office

4-7·92·1 mo. pd

79

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PE~SI OR

992·5335 or
985-3561

HOME OR A MOBILE HOME SITE Close to town
JUST $6,500

SUGAR

h-Gar$1

1\-0J ·Blh 1\Uen Nowln Sto(i ,
You.r Loc-al 'n~ - 81!1 D~tr

•

FREE OR NATURAL FLAVORS

Vibrance

SERVICE

l/11.1'9211 mo.

992-2487 or
992-7884

Real Estate General

. Why Shop Anywhar1 EIM7

KEN'S APPLIANCE

46387 Scout Camp Rood
Chetter, Oh.

Our Sprin@ Sb.Jpm~l Of

773-5785

For

IWith Prien like nus

•New
(qiS-..'4.00
•Ou's lepoilof
. . ..Jialori&lt;ed
'
"'
11J!•Ioskolball
l
1
_,
.. . _ .. S..twlr.,.os

Ctll Far.l~t••t

POMEROY-A 2 acre parco I ol9round that did ha11e an older
house Water and electnc ava1lable GREAT FOR BUILD -

ING

•

TROY-BJ£r·

TERMS · Cul'l or Check wrlh 1.0
~01 R86POOiible 101' ac;aden11 or kJu o1 pr!JPifrt~
LUnud and Bonded fl Ohio, Ktntl.OCky, A W•l llwgll'lilll66

bile home sining on 126X200 lot It has a nice porch and

WAS $15.000

614-992-2242
412192/tfn

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

MIDDLEPORT-Rutland St·A n1ce 2 bedroom 12X60 mo·
small outbu1lclng .

MASON, WV

1«'60

Custom Paintings

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.
LUNCH

oGoll lmons
1
12.50 ... "6

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW a. USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
'
&amp; MODUS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL ll!EI
1·800·848·0070

$76,900

ALl MAlES
Bring If In Or Wo
Pl•k u~.

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB

Welcome Slates
$20.00

AUCTION CONDUCTED BT

8

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONIO-TRUCKING
rllf.E [STIMATES

"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS ..
396t5 Gold Ridge Road

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

POMEROY PIKE-Gorgeous 1s the.word! I Th1s 3 bedrooms
1. 1/2 bath homo has hardi.'oOO m the bedrooms , and
g1gantic fam1ly room in the basement. It has central a1r and
natural gas with a two car garage w1th automatiC door
opener It oven has a satellite dish This house needs a b1g

112/tfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

'Meadows

AUCTIONEER NOTE: 71iltlu pMtltllltllng o/ a'ftf lOp/f&lt;ft li
FtJJtorl• Amtrlcan~ttlm ro bf told, plJ1 motti\'en.: not l1ttd.

ONLY $7,500

Ohio

'1(p. th. ryn

Sha100. Patnaan Spoke. ~"' Amencan . Cherry Blossom 1umblel&gt;,
Fos\Jna. Amencan Pattern : round txJtler d1sh, round cake plate,
~teller. SherbelS. dou!;e car&lt;klst&lt;l:s. dN~ed d'Shes. berry t&lt;lwls.
salad ~ates, looled cenlerpeece. ICE! bucket cream. sugar. salt&amp;
pepper. footed glasses . one-handled d1shes, Green Oepress1011
shertle~. JJ,mc:tl bow! &amp; cups , egg teskel qu111s and qu11t ~.
MtSsiOn Oak grandfather clock, J9WOiers wall clock, mantle c:1oct.
keywind kllehen doc~. old Elg1n and Bulova WIISI watches. woma1
wrist watd'tes, day marbles . kraut cutter.;, sklne }ar and IUQS. dCMI
ta1led boxes, lru1t tars. rK:lacccl11ns, lamps , stereo lans, aJ! cond1tl0001',
hand tools.lawn mowOI' and much more

be 4 apartments . This house has 15 rooms large hallways
enclosed front porch, one car garage, 4 baths. and 4
kitchens. Has a n&amp;Wet' furnace and root. Was recently
redecorated Possibility of some owner financing . $5,000
down, $400 a month, and to balloon m 3 yrs
$48,000

Call 614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

992·3838

calxne( ~gas lllng&lt;l. dlest~pe •ooze1. ~I ~pesant~uegtasSWIIIIl,
Homef Laughlin Virg1naa Aoso sorw:e lor 910hl Pus serv111g fJBC8&amp;,
~nars, Pnsolla set of m111ng tuwls. Blue W1llowSEtr'VI:a br Sll pjus
'"" mugs. three McCoy cookie 101'. 0ef&gt;'!S"'' g~"'· Camoo.

the beautiful Oh10 River and the greal tish1ng •s you own th •s
3 6 acre camps1te wi!h 786 feel of nver frontage . lt's approlC

One year ago today, Apri115, 1991,
our lives were
diminished when
our husband, lath·
er and grandfather
went to be with his
LORD. Mos1 of his
life, FLOYD L .
HARRISON prepared lor this
event. Our beloved
patriarch is sadly
missed by his family and friends . The
joy of his presence
is gone forever but
nothing can ever
take away the wonderful loving mem·
ories. May GOD
grant him peace.
LOLA HARRISON
&amp; FAMILY

Pomeroy,

2·7-92-lfn

Fancy mahogany h dxl~ loa dod glass door bookcas.e. 8 !)::. OIJOOfl
A.nne d1n1ng room SUII9 oons1s!lng of tabje, 6d1au'3 arl£1 buflot, mape
table and 4 chai~. l1ke naw, 2 ~ · Earty Amencan hv.ng room suite,
coffee table and ood tables. RCA rot"' TV, slands. oa&lt;lad~s drtl!l
1100tdesk.l1bfary table. ~ps~r&lt;s . posOlr bod. dresser. oakcllesl,
1 n~ht stands. o~hen 01000~. oailllat w~l(paonl&amp;d ), otveoware

205 North Second Ave.
Mlddl.eport, OH
JUST BELOW TliE RACINE DAM·Youlllovelf1e ~ew ol

19C

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

985·4473
667·6179

Camden Avenue In Point Pleasant
WIU BE SELLING ITEMS FROM Bl/TTERFIELD
ESTATE ALONG WITH OTHER ESTATES

POMEROY-DO YOU NEED A LARGE HOME-or 11 could

Sweet
Yellow Corn .. ...

212019213 mo.

Located At The Youth center On

t/3 ~eared and has ns own gravel driveway. and electric IS
ava 1l
$10,000

Grade A

Ravenswood.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Suu~ a.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Oulrt

KROGER

P•inting

(FIIEE ESnMATES)

Real Estate General

special friend to us
all.
Deeply missed by all
your friends at
P.N.R.C. who knew
and loved you.

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Middleport and

FIIU ESTIMiTES

FlU THE

CARPENTER SERVICE

~~lcll ond Plumbing
-Roofing
-lnteriot &amp; Exl«iO&lt;

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Our Spring Shipm~nt Of

Troy-DII11Uir:n Now In

·C.JAYMAR

3·13·92 -tfn

TROY-BJ£r

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ClA~~IFIED AD~

person and a very

&amp;8

12·5-tln

Your Lof-cU Tr!!!-8ih Deol~r

You were a special

Pound

Licensed and Bonded

1 !I'D pod.

YOUNG'S
-GutblrWorlt

PETE SIMPSON
Evenings
1-614-764-2101

PH. 614·992·5591

"'22o""2 .

-Aoom Additiono

Racine, Pomeroy,

WAKEFIELD'S

your inspira1ion.

California Strawberries

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861-t929.
Especially National
Bank Currency from
any state. Paying
$300.00 and up lor
specific pieces from

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

Commwc111

FrH Eslim1tes

411 Sli1 1 mo . 1KJ

I ·H'l ·

BULLDOZING

614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Rermval
Reoldontiol &amp;

941-2168

74H01Hit" 5:00 f':

it. lO Wd, lllo.,. Olio •l!J.llt l

We miss your smile,
your laughter and

Fresh Turkey Breast

991-3394-3:30 ....:00 ""

&amp;C EXCAVATING

RITE AID
PHARMACY

your name.

U.S. GRADE A KROGER
14-7-LB. AVG.I

DlSPlAYID AT

614-992-2549
4/tS/92/t

To better meet the
needs of our customers,
we now honor PEl A
prescriptions at our
Pomeroy and Gallipolis
locat1ons.
Terry Spurlin 446·1840
John Guinther 992·2586

owner

THE QUALITY PAINT SHOP
MIDDUPORT, OH.

Sunday 1-5 pm

KEVIN'S UWN
MAINTENANCE

NEW-REPAIR
GUTIERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

All SCALIS- VINTAGE 111d
COLLECIABLE
"Riden Av111able"

HRS: Mon.·Sit , 0 1m-S pm

ATIENTION PEIA
CUSTOMERS:

For return of 14K Yellow Gold 20
Inch Herringbone Chain, made in
Italy. lost in Middleport, perhaps
in front of house, Fruth's or
Cardinal's. Notify Helen Jane
Brown, 992-6732 or stop by.
Thanks $75.00 if returned within 3
days. It was a gift from my hubby.

wll ott., yoo J(IUI' choice of 1
comPirlbte llem , when IYiillble,

DA LL AS K. WEBER -

For Mort Into Ce.ll

65.00 CASH REWARD

••e.pt

SOLO TO DEALERS

RETURN TO WORK • Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service Director Bernard DeLury stands in front of UA W workers
Tuesday as he announces tbattbe UA W strike against Caterpillar,
Inc. in Hindsdale, JU., is over. (AP)

Lost &amp; Found

1

""do rvn OUI of 1nld'Vtn1Md liM\ , -

WE RESf:RVE TliE RIGHT TO

APRIL 13·18
E•tended Easler hours.
Open until7:30 pm
APR. 28. 6:00 pm Basket Claos
MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR
ALL ct.ASSES

International, 60 passenger
bus. meets all standards , new
automatic transmission .
springs &amp; shocks. exc . co nd ,
$2500 . Call 614-992·3200

ADWmiiD rTIII Nl.a-beh of ......

THE

KROGER CO . ITEMS At4D

I D Dlo-· II., IIW&lt;IIo.-1

FOR SALE 1978

charged for each day as SC'parate ad s

BOWARD L.
WHITESEL
ROOFING

TROLLEY STATION
CUFTS

$05/day

Ra tes are for consecuti ve runs, broken up days will be

6

Business Services

BOA~D

$ JO
$ .42
$ .60

13

The Dal

~ ~~

l lo- o~l ln• ,\ r oi l 'Ill 1'1''1
_

1
l l l ll1i\ll~ .~~~I I N II I
Ill

~ . 111 1 111 " 1111.-,1·. 1:

I'OMFittl\ , Oil

1:---,; (,•q

C:nll llh-2 .' "2'

1'11111'1'1

I·" .. ,.• 11 .. ,. , . 11.1.. ' ,,,,, •· ·' ·'"" ,., ~'~· ···-• 1• ,, .... . ....1r -- ·~··· ,,, d,

I
I

&lt;......... ,

1

L---------------------------------------------- J

, lfTrDTUI:DII

111 a:n 1na:nm.

IW"fTrRRYDrmr-1

OtiCibty Hi Efficiency Air
Co.ditioaers, Heat Pu~1s.
Furnaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
Bennet!B Mobile
1391 Salford Sdtool Rd•
Col (614) 446·94

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Approvtd M-ladurtd
Housing Products.

�Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1992

RATES
Days

OPEN EASTER
SUNDAY
8an:-8pm

we Gladly

Accept Your
Federal Fooa

stamps

Words

1
3

'l

15
15
15
15
IS

6

10
Monthly

W.llable lo. . . ._ INCh !(roger Stort,

leftecting thl ....,.

NONE

uwtnQa

Of 1

rlin'

chel:k which wil tntlal you to purchnf
tM ~iud ttem 111 the tdwr11Nd

SOLO TO DEALERS

pra~ wlth~n XI dr;t. 0Ny OM wndrn
coupon will be ~ per item
putcha-1.

COOK'S WHOLE 114-18·LB. AVG.I

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Hams

HINSDALE . Ill. (AP) - The
United AulD Workers agreed to end
their 5-month·old strike against
Caterpillar Inc. while contract talks
continue. But it was not immediate·
ly clearhow many of their jobs
would sull be waiting for them.
A dispute also developed over
exac tly when the employees were
w "'port to work at Caterpillar, the
wor ld 's largest maker of earth·
movmg eqUipment.
Caterptllar - which says ll can
run its plant&lt; with up to 15 percent
fewer employees - said it needs
about a week to decide how many
to call back.
But the union told the more than
12.000 workers to repon today to
their jobs in llltnots .
"They are telling us to go in
groups of four or five." said Pat
D1az. "The company may tum us
away. and the union wants us to
document it."

The strike drew wide attention
because of Caterpillar's ultimatum
to workers Apnl 6 to return to
work or ri sk losing their job s lO
non -union replacements. The
showdown represented the fir st
time a major industrial company
has tried to break a union of the
size and strength of the 900,000mcmberUAW.
UAW bargainers voted unani mously Tuesday to return to work
w1thout condttions at the rccom ·
mcndation of Bernard DeLury of
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, said UA W secretary·
treasurer Bill Casstevens.
The union interpreted the rec ·ommcndation to m ea n workers

should be on the JOb today,
Casstevens S31d.
Caterpii!JI agreed to stop trymg
to hire replacements hut wdl be
allowed to put tnto effect its last
co ntra ct offer. wh1ch raises top
mmimum pay from $35.318 a year
to $39 ,915 tn September 1994. The
umon wants $40,458 by then
"For now it is over." DcLury
sa id tn announcing the break ·
through after two days of mcetmgs

at the medtation agency's suburban
Chicago offices. "And it took a lot
of guts and a lot of courage on both
sides. •'
Negotiation s under federa l
mediation will continue.
"The war is not over," said
Jerry Baker, bargaining chainnan
for an East Peona local. "Caterpil·
Jar' s final contract offer is not
acceptable."
Caterpil lar claimed victory
because it withstood the union's
insistence on a contract patterned
after one with farm·equipment
manufacturer Deere &amp; Co Cater·
ptllar claimed ll couldn't afford
pattern bargaining.
"Strikes and pattern bargaining
arc anuquatcd principles, and we
hope we have just demonstrated to
the UAW and ourselves that this is
not a very effective way to resolve
a dispute ," said Jerry Brust, direc tor of labor relations.
The walkout began w1th a limit·
ed strike Nov. 4 and spread, idling
12,600 workers at plants in East
Peoria. Aurora. Mossville, Decatur,
Pontiac and Mapleton. Caterpill ar,
with more than 56,000 employees
worldwide. also has plants tn York.
Pa.; Denver; and Memphis, Tenn.
Brust said strikers who hadn't
crossed picket lines before Tuesday
won't be allowed back to work
before next week, at the earliest.
He said workers who returned in
the ftrst few days after the ultima·
tum were guaranteed a JOb. Those
who don't get jobs will goon a pre·
ferred hiring list.
Brust es timated that 1,000
U AW memb ers crossed picket
lines. Umon officials said the num~

'

WATER
ADDED

COOK'S CLASSIC

YOLAN J.
SATTERFIELD
A year has gone by

Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

SEMI~BONELESS

HAM
PORTIONS 17·!HB. AVGJ LB... $1.1!1

U.S. GRADE A KROGER
14-HB. AVG.J

Professor Har ley Shaikcn, a
labor expe rt at the Universtty of
California at San Diego, said nei·
thcr side won .
"For the company . their strong
point is that th ey implemented their
final offer," he said. "But they
have a dtsgruntlcd work force.
which IS no basis for building for
the future "

For more than a week, Ycltsin's
hackers and opponents had been
tradmg msuiLs and teetering on the
edge of th e most serious political
cnsis in th e form er Soviet Union
since its collapse last December.
Most of the lawmakers. elected
before the Soviet collapse last year.
arc former Communists hostile to
eco nomic reform. Yeltsin's sup·
porters ap pli ed pressure on his
opponents by saying the president
could order new elections for par·
ltament, which would threaten the
ouster of the ex·Communists.
The "Dcclarntion on Support of
Eco nomic Reform" approved
Tuesday tempers a resoluuon that
the Co ngress passed Saturday
dcmandmg the government lower
Laxes and rai se wages to ease the
pain of the refomns.
The declaration said the Cabinet
should carry out the will of the
Congress ·'taking into account real,
cvolv in ~ economic and social con·
ditions. ·
That provides a loophole for
Vice Premier Yegor Gaidar. the
architect of the refomns. Gaill!u has
argued that lowering taxes while
raising expenditures would destroy
the reforms and alann the WesL
The declaration also reafftrllls a
decision by the Congress last year
to give Ycltsin power to issue eco·
nomic decrees and appoint Cabinet
ministers without legislative
approval.
It also allows Yeltsin to remain
prime minister until at least Dec. I,
said Economics Minister Andrei
Nechayev.

8

'

.

ClA~~IFIED AD~

Fill THE

Grade A ·
Large Eggs

Orange Roughy
Fillets ...

tb

$399

Real Estate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
JUST BELOW THE RACINE DAM· You"ll love the

ear

19C

18-Ct
liM~ 1 !!Cr. CAIITOII WITH CIJUPOII &amp;

111M AIJOITtCHW. PUIICIIASE

liMIT ONE COUPON PEA CUSTOMER
tJUr01 . . . 1111. IUAl AP'M II, IC

GREEN BEANS, SWEET PEAS OR CORN

ALL PURPOSE OR SELF·RISING

Stokely's Vegetables

Gold Medal Flour

14.25-IUkL

5-lb.

c

PEPSI

~ew

ot

t11 e beautiful Ohio River and the great fishing IS you own tt11s
3 6 acre camps1tew1th 786 1eetof nver fronlage .lt's approx .
1!3 deared and has its own gravel driveway, and electric is

$10,000

One year ago today, April 15, 1991,
our lives were
diminished when
our husband, lather and grandfather
went to be with his
LORD. Most of his
life, FLOYD L.
HARRISON prepared for this
event. Our beloved
patriarch is sadly
missed by his family and friends. The
joy of his presence
is gone forever but
nothing can ever
take away the wonderful loving memories. May GOD
grant him peace.
LOLA HARRISON
&amp; FAMILY

HOME-or~tcould

be 4 apartments. This house ha s 15 room s, large hallways,
enclosed front porch, one car garage, 4 baths, and 4
k1tchens Has a newer furnace and roo!. Was recenttv
redecorated . Possibility ol some owner financing . $5,00b
down, $400 a month, and to balloon in 3 yrs
$48,000

CROW'S SUBDIVISION-Five Po1nts ·A moo one acre lol
w1th water and electric available. A great bulding Jot w1th

priCe you can't beat

tam1ly

WAS $15.000

NOW $13,500

~~:~~~~ . ~~oz$2

$20.00
614-992-2242
4121921Un

TROY-BJ£T
Yo"'

were
looking
forward to having you
We had everything

ready
But linle did we know,

God had bettor plano.
He let me feel you move
around and kick
He let ua hear your tiny
little heartbeat
He even let us aea your
beauUiullaco.

II was a very thort viait
You came and left so

fast
But you will live on

FOREVER

in

our

hearla and thoughta

FOREVER I
Wolovo you Baby Girl

Easter
•

•

from the
Jrientffy forks at Kroger

COAL

&gt;Goll lmon1
'12.50 tt. or 6

for'60
•New
··

~s.......'4.DO

LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742-2138
3-15-'92·1 mo. pd.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

FOR SALE
Agriculture
Lime

Best Pricaa &amp; Service lor
Poet Frame Garages &amp;
Barn•

T&amp;T lAWN S!RVIC£

Choice of 12 colort •

IWn Maintenance
plete LaodiCIIJMng
Top Soil I Mulci"Mng

I ~~:~~or rollup do ora
IS

ommerclal &amp; R..ldentlal

to unlimited aizea
&amp; Style•

"fHU flllM.tT£1"-u-..cl61rt-.d

VALLEY INC.

30xSO oroctad f&lt;&gt;&lt;
Inspection
Material &amp; Labor
Guaranteed

Call372-8697 or
1·800-S38·1440

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

Ph. Local Salesman
742-2072

304-273-5555

NEW OPENING

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

4-~tfn

3-16-1 mo

Frame Repair

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553

SUMMER
IMAGES
2 Miles on HyaeU Run Rd.

OR TOLL FliEE

at prr:p:~rty

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Visit•~ ··· ~· $25 .00
t6 Visits ...... $30.00
1 V19it... ... $3.00
(al f« Al'f'!ioi••I

I ·800·848-0070

Ucen&amp;td and Boootcll'l OhiO. K81'11UCky. &amp; WMI Yi"glflla 1t66

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31(91/tfn

POMEORY PIKE· A one story homew1th new s1ding. newer
rool newer double pane windows. newer winng , and
plumbing Has 5 rooms . 2 bdrms. and one car garage on
approx 1/2 acre of ground
$25,900

· rake Tile Poi• Out 01 Pai•lilg
-let Us Ou It for r.. •

992-2487 or
992-7884

POMEROY-A 2 acre parcel of ground that d1d have an older
house . Water and electnc available GREAT FOR BUILD-

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
37632 West Shade Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
61 4&gt;985-4180 L.tn ..,..,.
Aher 6 p.m.
(all

985-4192

4· 7· 92~ 1 mo. pd

ING A HOME OR AMOBILE HOME SITE Close to town
JUST$6,500
DO TilE TURNER, Broker...........
. ......992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ...................................... ..... .992·3056
DARLINE STEWART .............................. .............992-6365
SANDY BUTCHER ........ ~····· ·· ·· · ..........................992-5371
SHERYL WALTERS,Cheshlre.... ..... ............ 367-11421

~

•
e

e
•

e

e
e

e
e

I

•
e

'e

e

•

e

e

t

e
e

e

e

8

e
e

• •
•

•

e

e
I

e
8

8

e

3-16-1 mu

I

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

e

• • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
•
• • •
•
•
• •
•
•

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

pd

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window

•Roof in~
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or

BILL SLACK

992·2269

742-2097
539 Bryan Place
Middlepo1t. Ohio

USED RAILROAD TIES
4·4-92·11n

11 ' 14 /lln

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

We

R£11UWLY ..• lUI EACH

67

•

2-Liter

for

HAULING

iA"k fifi'i.~9f'"

II. SO We&lt;t, Alh01~ Ohio •S9l38! I

•

0-0-8 4115/91
0-0-D 4123191

l-Inch 2'-t»L

31231921tfn

mo.

311 1l92t1 mo

MEGAN RAE
WILliS

Fresh Baked Apple Pie

985·3561
Across frMI Pest Offhe
217 E.IO&lt;ootlll.

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB

Our .Sprifts Shlpn1ent or
1\-oy -RI.h llUer1 Now In Stnrk.

A\.

THE DELI ·PASTRY SHOPPE'"

POMIROY, OHIO

•Ouis lepair..t
... ..rllalcoict4
.~ 1
~"" .'tl'lllkotball . '
•. ~·· Souor Tropli"
46387 Scout Camp Road
Cheater, Oh.

Custom Paintings

I SAVE UP TO tl.IOI

'"IN

992·3838

\ ,

Ice Cream ... .. \Hal.

Diet Pepsa
Cola

All MAliS
Bring It In Or Wo
Pick U~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

~
·..... .

Welcome Slates

$179

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PE~SI OR

MICROWAVE OYEN
and VCR REPAIR

BULLDOZER . BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAR ING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMES TONti-TRUCKING
FICH FSTIMATt:S
1~13 ·' 92' · 1

'"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

FROZEN KROGER FAT FREE DESSERT, SUG4R

D~I~~~TURAL FLAVORS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

'lvleadows

Specializing In Custom

TERMS Caah or dleck llrith lO
NOI RMlpon&amp;lbl&amp;lar ac:Qdftnla 0or 10M

1/21tln

:J(ptfiryn

MASON, WV
773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

Real Estate General

39

~

LUNCH

MIDOLEPORT·Rulland SI·A n1ce 2 bedroom I 2X60 mo·

Call 614-992-6637
St Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Motorcyclet~ - Etc.

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

bile home sining on 126X200 lot . It has a n1ce pOt"dl and

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

992-6215

t1omes-Pel6- Wildlife

AUCTION CONDUCTED BT

$78,900

Quality
Stone Co.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

2-7-92·tln

,..

GslJAYMAR

CARPENTER SERVICE

985·4473
667·6179

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

POMEROV PIKE-Gorgeous IS !he word II Th1s 3 be&lt;Yooms.
1_1/2 bath home ha_s harct.vood in the bedrooms, and a
g1gant1c fam•ly room 1n the basement It has oontral air and
natural gas w1th a two car garage with au tomatic door
opener rr F!VUn has a satellit e dish ThiS house needs a big

small outbu1ld1ng

2nON213 mo.

AUCTIONEER NOTE: Thl•l• 1 psrl/a/1/ollng ol o"ftf SOplocn rrl
F01lorhl Am«lcsn pst11mto 1M JDid,ptl• niJI8 lttnw nol Nstftl.

ONLY $7,500

For

IWith Prices like This ... Why Sllop Anywhere ElM7 J

~A'ifif£1~9t"

ONLY $5,000

POMEROY-Bu1ternut-Th1s could be a ~reat rental prop erly Th1s home has one bedroom and s1ts on rwo lots

4'ltm. 1 ,._

-Room Additiono
-GunerWork
-l:tectricol 1nd Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESnMATES)

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Fancy mahogan~ hi ·boy leaded glass door bookcase, 8 ~·Queen
A.nne dm1ng room sune conSISting of table, 6d1a.rs and bu Net, maple
table and • cha1rs, l1ke new. 2 pc Early Amer 1can li'.,.ing room su1te,
coftee table and end tables. RCA color TV. stands, oak ladies drop
lrontdask.l1br1t~ table. tamps~nds. poster bed. dresser. oakcosst,
1 niQht stands, k1then &lt;al&gt;ne~. oak 1~1 w~l (pa~ntod). oMirware
cat&gt;nel30" Qas range. chest~pe lroozer. ~ I ~pes antqueQiassware.
Homer Laughlin Virgm~a Roseserv\CB lor OIQhl pus servmg piOCOS,
platters . Pnsc1llaset of m1x1ng tllwls, Blue Wtllow serv1ca k&gt;r SIX plus
l1ve mugs, three McCoy cookie jars. Depre&amp;sion gla!&gt;S. Cameo.
Sharon. Patnc:ian S~e. Miss Amencan. Cherry Blossom rumbjers.
Fostona. Amercan Pattern: round buner dish. round cake plate,
pitcher. sherbets , double candlesbcks, divided dtshes, berry bowls,
salad plales, looted cenlerpiece, ice buc~el, cream, sugar, salt 8
pepper, looted glasses, one-handled d1shes, Green Depression
sherbets , I).Jnch bowl &amp; cu~. egg basloo~ qutlls and quill tops,
M•ssl{)n Oalc. grandfather clock, rewelers wafl cloclc., mantle dock,
Keywind k.itchen dock, old Elgm and Bvlo'f'a wnst watches, woman
wrist watches. day marbles. kraut OJ tiers , stone jar and JUQS, dOYe
tatledboKes . lru•ttan. k:lbacco~ns. lamps, stereo fans. a•rcondtlloner.
nand tools. lawn mower and much more

Ouart

58

or

Troy-Hill llUen Now In S1oek..

Located At The Youth Center On
Camden Avenue In Point Pleasant
WIU BE SELLING ITEMS FROM BUTIERFIELD
ESTATE ALONG WITH OTHER ESTATES

OFACE 992-2886

Commerclltl

YOUNG'S

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

TROY-BJ£T
Shlpm~m

949-2168

rreeEtlimaln

3·13·92·1fn

Saturday, April18, 1992 ·1 O:OOa.m.

P.N.R.C. who knew
and loved you .

California Strawberries

Sweet
Yellow Corn .....

PH. 614-992-5591

PUBLIC
AUCTION

POMEROY-DO YOU NEED A LARGE

~I

KROGER

licensed and Bonded

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

your friends at

'

iiOOD FRIDAY SPICIAl ~
U.S DC. INSPECTED FROZEN

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

Our Sprln@:

Lawn Mowing,
Fer1llizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming I Removal
Rntdend•t&amp;

411 !J92 1 mo pd

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861-1929.
Especially National
Bank Currency from
any state. Paying
$300.00 and up for
specific pieces from
Racine, Pomeroy,
Middleport and
Ravenswood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evenings
1-614-764-2101

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

614-94~2627

NEW- REPAIR
GUITERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

4·2-92·

f~f£ ESTIMlTES

.,.,1

------------·-..,
'

614-992-2549
4115/9211 mo.

Ym

special friend to us
all.
Deeply missed by all

c

SUnday 1-5 pm
For More Into Call

itlO We&lt;t, Alhom. Ohio •193-381 S

person and a very

Pound

4LL CU\SSES

HRS: Mon .-S.t. 10 am-~ pm

RITE AID
PHARMACY

CLASSIFIED ADS

your laughter and
your inspiration .
You were a special

Fresh Turkey Breast

MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR

now since you left

us for another land
Though you may be
gone frorn us here
your memories still
linger in our hearts.
Seldom a day goes by
that we don't think
of you and mention

ALL ICALII- VINTAGE Clld
&lt;OLLIOABLI
'Riders Avtilable'
OISPLAYID At
THI QUALITY PRINT IHOP
MIDOliPotrr, OH.
9'12·339H:l0 -4:!HI ,_
142-3021&gt;-Aitor S:OO f':

12-5-lfn

your name_
We miss yoLH smile,

her was much lower.

Yeltsin wins another round
MOSCOW (AP) - Russian
Pres1dent Boris Ycltsin has fought
off an attempt by Russia's cx ·COm ·
monist lawmakers to slow his mar·
ket ·Oricnted reform s, hut he still
faced more hurdles In the raucous
parliament session.
Yclts1n's mini sters JOyou sly
clapped each other's shoulders and
hts parliamentary supporters
applauded Tue sday after the
Congress of People' s Deputies nar ~
. rowly approved.a compromise dec ~
Jarauon supponmg hts rcfonns.
"This eliminates the need for
our resignation," said Yeltsm's
rig ht-hand man. State Sec retary
Gennady Burbulis. The Cabinet
had threatened Monday to resign,
although Ycltsin asked them to stay
on for a few days.
But th e victory co uld prove
short·livcd, beca use lawmakers
. were to have a chance to chan ge
•·: the ir minds and amend the docu·
•· men! today.
· The Congress also was sc hed·
uled to vote on a new Russian Con·
stttution, a process that is likely to
include more bitter debate over
Yeltsin's powers.
The dcclarntion approved Tucs·
day preserves Yeltsin's power to
rule by decree and directs the gov ·
ernmcnt to continue the painful
reforms that have driven prices up
400 percent so far this year.
Passage of the declaration came
after U.S. Treasury Secretary
Ntchalas Brady told reporters in
Moscow the Russian Congress was
jeopardizing a $24 billion aid package by taking "step~. backwards m
· ... world confidence.

In memory of

Read the Best Seller
Read the

DALLAS K. WEBER - Owner

APR. 28. 6:00 pm Basket Class

To better meel the
needs of our customers.
we now honor PEl A
prescriptions at our
Pomeroy and Gallipolts
locations.
Terry Spurlin 446-1840
John Guinther 992-2586

In Memory

2

Pound

Open until7:30 pm

ATIENTION PEIA
CUSTOMERS:

For return of 14K Yellow Gold 20
Inch Herringbone Chain, made in
Italy. Lost in Middleport, perhaps
in front of house, Fruth's or
Cardinal's. Notify Helen Jane
Brown, 992-6732 or stop by.
Thanks $75.00 if returned within 3
days. It was a gift from my hubby.

of!• rou y01.11 choN:• Of 1
comtNreblt lttm, when tnlltbl 1

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO

UAW, Caterpillar
strike is settled

APRIL 13-18

Extended Easler hours.

FOR SALE 1978
lnternal1onal, 60 passenger
bus. meets all standards, new
automatic transmission.
springs &amp; shocks, exc . cond .
$2500. Call 614·992·3200.

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

WHITESEL
ROOnNG

I 0 Dlo-4 Sl., MWtiJ.port

$05/day

65.00 CASH REWARD

wll

BOWARD L.

TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS

1

••upt "19"cltlcely not.d In thllld. ll
we do run out ot lflletto•tlwd lt~n~, we

APRIL 12, THAOUGM SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1111:11 , IN

RETURN TO WORK - Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service Director Bernard Delurv stands in front of UAW workers
Tuesday as he announces that the UAW strike against CaterpiUar,
Inc. in Hindsdale, Ill., is over. (AP)

$ .42
$ 60

Lost &amp; Found

AIMJlliU ITRI IIIII.C1'·&amp;ch ot tn..
ldwn:IMd ,,.,,. II requlrld tc tM r..uy

SUNOA.Y,

LIMIT OUANTJTlES.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Rates are for consecutive run..,, broken up dav s will be
charged for Pdch day as ~c parJI C ads.
.

COPYRIGHT 1t92
T~E
KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
GOOD

$ .20
$ .30

13

Business Services

BULLETIN BOAI~D

Over 15 Words

$4 .00
$6.00
$9 .00
$13.00
$130/dJy

6
PRICES

Rate

The

You are alwayt on
momma'a
and

daddy'o minds.
Sadly mined by
Momma and Daddy,
Grandparonll, Uncloo
and your godparent.,
Alan &amp; Angie

992-7259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO...

•

NEW LISTING- Longbottom·Approx 9 acres of mce
tay1ng land. CM-ner Will split . S18,000
NEW LISTING- Longbottom- I acre w1th Oh1o R1ver
Frontag e an excellent camp1ng site $8.000

I

NEW LISTING- Middleport· 1 112 story frame home w1th
3 bedrooms, fireplace. CIA. full basement, newJ'Iumbmg A
w1nng , front &amp; back porches, fenced back yar ASKING

I

NEW LISTING· Mlddlepor1- Commeroaliapartment Cur
$53 .000
POMEROY~

1 floor frame home with 3 bedrooms. natuar1
gas lurnanoe &amp; central air, WBFP, new roof, new deck. 1
car garage, full bsmt . 2. 13 acres w/garden area. $31,900

NEW LIMA RD.· Ranch siyle hoine w11h 3 bedrooms. I I I
2 bath. heat pump. CIA. patio garage, outbuildings, appro)(

6 acres $39,500 OWNER SAYS "MAKE AN OFFER''
WANTED AT ONCE I
LISTING FOR HOMES &amp; PROPERTIES IN THE MEIGS
COUNTY AREA. IF YOU WANT TO SELL ... CALL US
TODAY ! WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING I
HENRY E. CLELAND ..... ........................... ~ .........992-11191
TRACY BR!NAGER ............................................949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................. ................949-2660
n"FICE ...............................................................992·2259

•
• • •
• •
•
•
•

• • • •

I

•

COMMERCIAL and RI:SlDI:I\TIAI.
FREt: t:STIMU'F.S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)

-

•

$29 900

rently occupied by Beauty shop &amp; Tanoo shop, includes 2
bedroom remodeled apts. Good monthly rental 1ncome.

•

•

• • • • • •
• • • • • • •
• •
• •
•e •
• • • e
•
• •
• • • • •
• • • •
• • • • •

~

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

----------------------------------------------

I
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Quahty Hi EHiciency Air
Conditioaers, Heat Pu~~.
Furnoces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
(_

I I I I :1 tlllll" -,· 111 EF 1· 1

t'tii\IF.ttn\ . Oil

Hoasing Products,

BY DfSIGN

'

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Approved M11111adurod

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~~HIIION'P

Bennetls Mobile
1391 Salford School Rd.

Call (614) 446-94

::IeBIIUIII; &amp;

Cooling

Galllp~~ls,

Ohio

�115, 1992

Plgl 14--The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprll15, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

S~AFU® by Druce Ueattie

21

Business

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE@ by Larry Wright

71

41 Houses for Rent

Opportunhy

3 Annauncements
~GIRLS

VENDING ROUTE : Gal Rich
Oulek? No Way! But Wt Have A
Good, Slaady, AHord1ble Busl-

Tanito
~ G.ll Mlft. 18 •

nna. Won'1 Lut. 1-aOo-284VEND.

COli,..,_,-

-..~ .... C.IIfDmlo_

Real Estate

UIE! lMI LIV£'
81
11J •I SSTEL

1-

...__

. . . . _ . . . aft t.t whi .. you
- - . . . OH.l, avallabla 11
Fllilllllftu
,. 716 H. S.Cand

,

~

...........,_

. . . '2; llwn Oft Fat While
'1111 ~ 1ale OPAL Availab..

4

" First we prepare your t axes . Then we
prepare you for how much you owe."

--..I'M-'KO!

- _ _Sho!&gt;lletd
,...,
..
_ 9:!35

_,,.

p.,_

Pomeroy,

.__..._ ...___..,._

c:.dl &amp; Oair Be• Spring &amp;
- - Carpll I Pad. Pick-Up

.. Clllh ... 09152

~~part ....1• •
~
Read, 514-!192-

....

Lost &amp; Found

...._ Bllldl Base Ball Glove
Jl: lZS CDr:a IIIII R"d. 2112 mis S
ol . . Gandls. 614-24.§-9455 af-

. . S:N

Inside,
W•d./Thurs .,
111'2MI
H'fMII Run, 124, AuHand, alack
wasf'terldryer, new shop vac,
girt's dreuas, boy's clolhes
slz• 4, new quilts, low pressure
ga• regulator, men'&amp;IWomen's
clothes, housewarwe. new hair
bows,
small
retrigttrator,
rusonabl• prices, 614-992-5275

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rk:k Pearwn Auclion Company,
tun t!me 1uctlonMr, complete
UcenMd
auction
service.
t66 ,0hlo &amp; West Virginle, 3G4TT.l-5785

.uea. 9
Wanted IO B
- - ........,, ctartoish rod &amp; ::--,---,-.,..,.,,.....,...,,..u:..y_ _
-.-.., • lftCiftll'tll old, raw•rd. Ooo 'I Junk nI Sail U1 Your Non·
~
Woridng
Major
Appll1ncas,
LOSI' ...._ ~ conlaining Color "l"V's, VCR'e, Microwaves,
1 ....._ IEWAAD, riclnity 1900 Etc. 1114-256-1238.
. . . . al It ..,. Sl. 304-675-- Want.ct To Buy : Junk Au1os
onz.
With Of Without Motors. Call
~rry Uval~ . 614.J88--g303.
Ccmstalll

Top Prices Paid : AU Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings , Silw-er Coin1 ,
Gold Coins. U.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second A~anua, Gallipolis.

Employment Services

lall. Lil'llli 'fliNt• F..-nat. Oog,
Part Poodlia, Ylc1nlty · Plantz
s.a.dllitiHDa, Galll~ls. 614-446-

mo

11

lJIIII:. _.. bCad I br0Wf1 Nor-

....

~

cur1.cf tail,

Cllllllr. Ill Ml. Pclnw-oy ar.a,
~

~- . . .

Black
s,.a......,_ &amp;lad
cal·
W . .... . . . t Hd:mr Hoapital

" ' ••

7

Puppy

·nyton

ri

Yan!Sale

11

Help Wanted

Middleport

aoo.
'""'""·
&amp; VIcinity _ __
000 """', Hmaioyon
Oill !M-255-10261------=-_;_-.:.._

..,

Mobile Homa unfurn. CA , 322
Tkird Ave 614-44~3748 or 614·
256-1903 Before 9: PM

Help Wanted

Wanted a Maturt raposlble Par~on who lnjoys Cooking . Apply
In Parson hera al ~ronlier
Fanna Rntaurant. No Phone
Fridly 7: to
Calls . Monday
11 :301 : 1o5 . P..$35(1 .00/Day Processing Phone
Orders! P.apla Call You. No Ex perience N11C1ssary. 1--8(1Q..25S0242.

- -S35010AY PROCESSING
AU 1'MI saM..,.. Be Paid In PHONE OROE RS!
PEOPLE
..,_aiJUOIM· UO p.m.
CAll YOU .
e. *t' ..._. lt. ad t. to run. NO EII:PEAIENCE NECESSARY
$ladiJ ...._ · 1:00 p.m.
1-800..2SS.0242.
:··~.:= i Milton · l :OO
2 S.c!"ftary t Reeaptionlsls For
Growirtg Offici. Word Process·
ing
(WP5.1),
Transcr iption,
Gallipolis
Pleasant Phone Pe~onalily, Ins.
&amp; Vi:inlly
Billing Exp., Will Tra in On Varlou~
Comput1r
Programs
liB ~ A••·
Wild., Flexible Day And E~en in g
lllln. ~ Fri..
&amp;arrind Johnson Hours. Resume To: Cathy
..... ......_ Rain 01 Shine Cooper, P.O. Bo• 910, Gallipolis,
~
furniture, OH 45631.

r

Applications Are Baing Taken
For lifeguards AI Widdlepor1
' - - ' ~ Ert Househokl Mu~ic1p.af Pool, Appllc111ons
~~ Ex- Av•llabll At: Middleport Village
~
•
y g"
:. Hall
__
- . __ _

Alcohol Or Drug Counselor To
Provide Counseling Education
Prasenlalions In Out Palienl
Se nin~, B.A. Degree Praterred.
E•perumca
Desirabh1. Send
Resume By May hi To FACTS,
AI . 2 Bo• 273· A, Bidwell, Ohio
45614, M!F.'H E.O.E.
AUSTRAliA WANTS YOU
Elcallanl
Pay,
Baneflls,
Transporhtion,
407-2g:2-471l7,
Ext . 571
~ . m . ·10p.m .
Toll
Ratunded.
AVON ! All Areas ! Shirtey
Spea~. 304-675-1429.
- - - . - - - -- -BARTENDEAS I CAS INO
WORKERS / DECK
HANDSIHoslessas ,
E1c.
Positions Aboard Cruiso Ships
1300/$900 Wkly Free World
TraveL No Exp. N~eenary. I·
206-n6·7000 Ext . 1594N8.
Cily of Point Pleaun1 Is acceptIng appllcaHons lor c•rlitied
lifeguard• for lhe 1g92 swimming season. Appty : City Hall,
400 Viand 51, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550 . Mayor RusHII V. Holland.
Eas~ Work! E•callanl Pay! Assemble Pmducls AI Home. Call
Toll Free, 1·600.il67-5566. Ert .

313
Full -l ima RN 32 To 40 Hours Par
Week
Some
Supervisory
Dulles . Differential With Ex perience Equal Opportunil~
Employer, Please Contact : The
Director Ot Nursing, Pin•crasl
Care Center, 170 Pinecresl
Drive, Gall1polis, OH 614 -446-7'112.

3 Unll Apartment A•nlal , E•cellent Condition, Bulaville Pi lle
Road _ Redue~! Call For Appoinlmenl. 614-446·8568.

BEAUTIFUl MOUSE FOR SALE
Mlslorical Area Corner Lot - 816
Main Sl. Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
Complete!~ Renov1tad : 2 Full
Baths, 3 large Bedrooms, New
HVAC, Now Carpal . A11allabla
Jun• 15 614-446-2205.
House In Mason W'V, 3br Ranch
Whh
Family
Room
And
Fl11place, 1 11'2 Balhl, Located
On 2 112 loll On Dead End
SlrMI. 614-446-3934 .

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

$1,000 Rabala Sckult 14r76 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, O.n Special
Low Price. French Cl1y Mobile
Home1, 614~46·9340 .
$500 ott Purchau Price 01 Any
New Home At EINa Hom. Centar, Great Selactlon, Free S.I·Up
And Deli._eryl Call 614 -m·1220.
12x60 Broughman Mobile Home,
2br, Total Electric, $4,MtD. 614·
388-1838 After 5 P.M.
197'3 Forree1 Park Mobile Home,
2 Bedrooms,
12x65, Total
Electric, Very Good Condi1ion!

614-44H878.
1979 Clairmonl, 3 ~rooms,
gas heat &amp; central air, wuhe
_ •&amp;
dryer, se.ooo. 304~75-1294
1980 Buddy 14x70 10111 electric
Concrete porch, 2fll ll Bart's.
WfO
OW, garden balhtub,
CA 15x30 above grourtg pool.
3ml out of Porter. Ca ll 614·388·
8352 - 5:00
1985 Windsor 2br", Fully Fur·
nlsMid, Oithwaaher Disposal,
T.V., Stereo Syttam ThrougMout,
Wnher &amp; Dryer, 2 B.drooma 01
Furniture And Living Room Furnltur•, Microwave, Ratrigerator
And Stow-a. 304-i'13-4lS6

Homa Workers Needed By 150
Firmt, Top Pay, S33g Wtell Or
!.tore . Rush $1.00 S.lf-Addruaed Stamped Enw-elop41ttO D&amp;A
Supplies, Sox ~443, Fairborn,
OH 45324

1989 Ooublewlde 24•6-0, 3 Bed rooms, 2 Baths, New Root, Un·
darplnning, Porchn. Asking
$21,500. Pflona: 814-245--9059.

INSIDE SALES COUNSELORS

Mobile Home 1964 Rlcflcrafl
10x60 2 BR _$2000. 6l4-875-8911

We Are Now Accepting Applicll lont For Sale11 S•rvice
Counselors For The Opening Of
Our Galllpollt lnc:~lion _ OuTgoIng Pa~onality &amp; Neat Appearance A Must , Put Sal11
Experience A +. Must Be Avail·
able To Work M-F 9:00 A.M. 7:00 P.M. &amp; P~slbly Sat . Till
2:00 P.M. Salary + 8onuau
Growth Potential With Thasa
Positions. Please Send Rosume
To l. Bunought Physicians
WEIGHT LOSS Canters 5960 Rt.
60 E. Barbourtvilla, WV 25504.
Maida needed: apply In p11rt0n,
9 to 11 A.M. wtoedkayt - Bast
Wetlarn William Ann Molal, g18
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.
" A~on· all areas The sk"t Is the
limit with new earning struclura.
t.aoo-9g2 -e356

To Mow Lawn . Ap·
pro• 5 Acru _ Mus! Hav•
Mowor. 614 -446-7'310 Evenings
Som~ne

Wa11t9d · Sales pos1tio n lor local
ar ea
business
Offering
benelits, musl be aggressive
and able to work wifh public.
Send co mple!a resume Box B·
18 r.are P1 Pleasant Register,
200 Main St. Pt . P11 , WV 25550

14

Business
Training

New mobile home with cen tril l
air, garage, lot, priced l.o tall,
304-695-3876 or 895-3.584
R•postessed Mobil• Homes,
Great S.iecllon, Singles, $500
Down And Ooubles $1,000
Down, With Approved Credit!
Call 1-800-589-5'710.
Schult Homaste01d 19g2 14170 2
Or 3 Bedrooms, 2 Balht, VInyl
Siding, Shing le Root, SPKial
Prlee : $18,995 French City
Mobile Homes_614-446-9340
Trailer &amp; lol , Pl. Pll. area ,
$15,500. 304-675-5768 attar 5:00
PM

Trailer &amp; lot , P1 . PI!. area.
$15,500. 304·675-5468 attar 5.00
PM .

33

17

Farms lor Sale

34

Business
Buildings
1---,---,-,--:--:-,---:-:-----

Dabbla McKinna~
You are a w!nn•r! Bring a cop~
ollhie ad aloog with 1.0 . to 1ha
Daily Sanllnallo claim your trM
advenlslng. Prize must be
claimed by Apt11 24, 1g92

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Miscellaneous

PlaS ti C Dr um9 30 gal &amp; 50 ga l
SJ and $6 614 -367-7802

1B

Wanted to Do

Will El:tbysit In My Home f1od ·
ney Area . Reterencn Available
Call 614 ·2 45-5887

Wont to

PIN down 1,· .\'flU

s,., ;, ,,,. ,.,,J
"" ,,.,.,1 to

" ...., ... ,,J 1,11""''·

f, •rll "t ' 'out houu ·.

''"'"J!
J,. ,,_ :1 ""J -'·

,.,, ... :_j .. lll .-f, _
,_,jJi··t! rill

I;,

.,.,.,f., ol

J JIIIJII'r .&lt;•.~ (J,(}(/

;! _

---

:1 . - - - - -

'.,,_
~

-

'I .

I II .
I I.
1:!.
II
I I.

· ·-----

1 BR garage apt., large front
porch, rear balcony. No pell.
614-446-2606, 614-446--8538.

BEAU1'1FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackeon Pika
tram $'192/mo, Wtik to ehop I
mow-ln. Call 614..,.46-2568. EOH.
EHiclanl Apartmenl For Rent.
County Si111ng. 614-441H!720.
Furnished Ap.artmenl 1 B~ ­
roomL Utilili•• P1ld , $260/mo.
920 t-ourth Avenue, Galllpollt
Ohio, 614-446-4416 After 7p.m.
Fumiskad Apartment, 4 Rooms
And Bath, Cantrall~ located,
Refer•nce And Deposit ReQ\Jired . No Pets. 614-446--0444 .
Fur~ished Apartment, 1 bf, naxt
lo Library, parttlng, t:tntral hut,
air, 11lerences. 614-446.()338,
Be tore 7p.m.

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom apartments al VIllage
Manor
and
Rl~arslde
Apar1menls In t.llddllpo
. r1 . From
$196 . Call 614-992-778?_EOH.
Complelly Furnished mobile
home, 1 mila below town, ovtr·
looking riw-ar No Pels, CA. 614·
448.0338.
One
and
two
apar1ments for rant
2053 or 675-4100.
Tara Townhouse Apar1ments, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floor1, 1166 Sq. Fl.
1 112 Billhs, CA, OW, Disposal, 2
Pools, Ul ililies Paid Ercept
Elactric, No Pat.! _614·367-7850.

Very nice 1bdrm., beautiful
country selling, tree water/
!rash, AJC, laundry facililias,
Park , Rd. ow-arlook1ng US 33,
Darwm, C.R. PnM , 614 -594 -5322,
$27Slmo.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms lor rent · wuk or month
Starting at $1.20rmo Gallla Hotel
6t4 -446-gs8o
Slaepin9 rooms with cooking.
Also tra1lar space _All hook· upll.
Call aher 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Mason WV.

Country Mobile Home Par11., Rl.
33N ., under new management.
lots, 185; homa romal! , $235;

614-38S-8227
Mobil a Home l04 , 112 Acret,
Pri'.lata Rt _ :2 North 6 Mlln
From Point Pleasant.' WV 814·
446 -9340.
ONice Spaca: Modern OHica
Sui te Available In Business And
Proluslonal
Building,
414
Second Avenue, Gallipolis. Mor·
ris Has~lns , 614-446 -2631, 614·
446-251 2.

49

For Lease

Second Floor Apartment For
laau L.R , One S_R , Bath,
K itchen WI Stove &amp; Ratrlg
Water Furnished. No P11s. Corner Second &amp; Pine, Gallipolis
$230. Per Month; Deposit R..
quirltd _ Call 614-446·4249, 614·
446 -2325, Or 614-446-4425

Lolt In Gallipolis F•rry . 100%
owner financing at $98.64 pet
month, an~ on• of tour tots
available , 304-675-m2

Merchandise

O.J. While Road , IS Acres,
Mostly Wooded, With A Baau11 - Big Saw-ings On All Carpet lt1
tul Building Sita Tkal Has A Slock. Cash And Carry, Mol·
View For Miles Nice Lavel lohan Carpals, 614--446·"M44 .
Dri w-eway,
Rural
Water,
Eleclricily, And Phone Service Champagne Velvet Couch.t Blue,
Available . 3 Milas From Holzer GrMn Velvet Wing Back L:halra,
Hospital, Galllpollt _614-4464127. Walnut End Tables. Jody Fcaldan, 814-446-25n.
Paatura tor rant, 304--675-2991.
Electric Range good Condhlon .
Eurclso Bika 6'14-446-6657
Real Estate
36

Miss Paula 's Da~ Care Canter
Sata , affordable, childcar•. M·F
6 am .. S·JO p.m. Ages 21?--10
Belora, a"ar school . Drop--lnt
wel come 614-446 -8224. New In·
tan! Toddler Care, 614-446-C;227.
Odd Jobs, Reasonable Rain.
614 -388-8491

Wanted
Wanted
R~tldanUal
Building
lot Or Acruge For Quality
Hom•• Must Ba Within 5 Miles
Of Hotz.ar Hotpitl l On Blacktop
Road 1-304-273-2940 .

Rentals

Tu! ori11g By Cef1 11ied Teacher
Grades · 1·8 111 My Home _ Now
Thru
Summer. 614·446·1310
E~enings .

Will Do Housecleaning In Gallipolis Area . 14.50 Per Hour. 614·
446 -MOO.
WHI Do Small, laqJ• Appliance
Rapalr. 614-379-2921.
Will do yard work {mow &amp; trim)
1
and 1111 gardens _ 304-675·759~
avenlng11

,

Financial

41 Houses lor Rent
2 bedroom, 1 bath, pr!va1e location on Radman Ridge Henderson l f t l . $200. monlh $~50 .
deposll, 104-776-6059 or 304 -

788-5252.
2 atory brick home in Mid·
dlaport, 4bdrm., 2V2bath, dining
room , Iron! room , kllchen,
b..amenl, c1rpor1, $3~ plus
d•posll &amp; utilhiat, ratarancat
required, 614 · 927~2297
2br Haute Fumlthed, Deposit
And Rafannce Required. No
Pela. 6'14--448--487'9.

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recomm.nda thlt you do bull·
n111 with~~· you know1 and
NOT to 11nd money througn the
mall until ~ou hna ln~811fg81td
the onerlng.

Furnithed 38r House, 1 Floor,
$350 +UIIIItiH, Upp.t' Four1h
Avenue, Galllpallt, Raf•rances,
Security Dapa•lt . 814-448-4418
Attar 7p.m.
House for rant In S~racu11, 614·

1192-7689

5'1

Household
Goods

1 Quality solid Maple Ki ng sidt
bed, Ma1ess &amp; Bo• Springs.
Couch &amp; l ove Seal, Ckair &amp;
Rec lainer 2 and Tablas 1 CoHer
Tabla Excell. Condition 614-4469205 Of 304-675-7575

LAVNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furn ishings.
Hcaurs : Mon-Sal, ~5 . 614-4460322, 3 mllet oul Bulavllla Rd.
FrH DIUvary.
Mo~ing Sale. Waterbed living
room suite, dlnene. 614.441·1021
or 446-6834.

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Household lurnl1 hing. 1f2 mi.
Jarricho Ad . Pt. Pl•asanl , WV,
call 304-675-1450.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olive St ., Gallipolis . New &amp; Used
lurnitura, haatars, Westarn &amp;
Work boots. 614·446-3159 .

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE !
614-446-1158
LIVING ROOM : Sola And Chair
$17i And Up; Cot1H And End
Tables 179 And Up; Swi~al
Rocllert $79.

Television
Viewing

SN!£, . llRIJTU5.

WIU. YOU U\11.£
Clr Hj£~£ •

our
If':&gt;

Trucks tor Sale

ALOVELY

C»-Y I

•

~-

[,.11!1 1
it!

l'i'}~

by NEA In(;

f-============r=====~~~=~j
51

Household

56

Pets lor Sale

Goods
GOOD

US£0

APPLIANCES

W1share, dry•rt, ratrlgaratars,
rang•• - Skaggs Appliances,
Upp41r River Ad. B"ldrl Slone
Creal Morel. Call 614.C46-1398,

1-800-499-3499.

53

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Plaasa nl, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropical llsh, birds,
small animals and 1upplies
Rabbits tor ta le, 304-675-3526.

TRY

1984 Chelo'y 4 Wheel Drive,
Shol1 Wh"l Base, 305, 4 Speed
4" lilt, Alum WhMit. Call ~
675--7623, Or 614-446.C015

61 Farm Equipment

54

25 Ft . Goca•neck Trailer, Dual
Axles, S2,400. 614-446-0008.

Miscellaneous
Me rcha ndl se

Bhp. Troybuilt Rolollller, also
row marker, poald $1580, will take
$800, 614-992-,.62 aflar 6pm .
Dolen• Garden Tractor, $5&lt;10.
614-388-9082.
Color T.V.'• Ponable And Console, $60 Each. MICfOW.V8 o~en
$90; Electric Clolhes Dryer, $65.
814-256-1238 .
Complele HI of matching bunk
beds, brand new, will'! matching
chast of dnwers, 304-67s..&amp;g29.
Concr•l• &amp; Pintle Seplic
Tanks, Jet Aeration Tanks. Ron
Evans Enterpri.Mt, Jackson, OH
1·800..537-9526
Oraptrl•s, Btdtpr•ads, Cur·
tain1, Tableakirt, Slacks, Ladles
Coat,
Typewriter,
Medicine
Cabin.t, Picture, Ladl•• Sull,
Co tt.. maller, 614-446-3375.
For Sal• : Walk Behind Gravf•y
Eltctrlc Star1 Mow•r, Dual
Wt.ets, Good Condition, 1900.
614 -446-07'61.

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $62.91/Mo . • For 12 Monlhs
19Jl1r4 Pool Includes Filtar,
ladders,
Huge Deck
Elc
{"Based On Selling Price 01
$699. S14 .45 APR, Total Deterred
Price : 1754 92) Don 't Belia'lt 117
Call BPI
1-800-548-1923
Genesis
Nulrition
Products
featuring Amino Acid Body
Building, weight lost and fat
burner formulat . Available ••·
elusively al Rite Aid Pharmacy.
Th• sale way lo di.t .
Gibson retrlgeratar &amp; electric
rang•. llt4 -992-6137
IBM PS 1 Hard Oriv• Coler
Monitor And Prlntttr, Otsk,
~..~- 614-256-1026 Before 1
Ma11ey Fargu~ 50; AC W0..95
3pt hllch; C11a Vac 3pt hllch ;
MaiM)' Hanlt Ferguson Pony;
711 Bush Hog disc:: 3pt· 8kp
Briggs &amp; Slratlon motor; Tw1nty
lt"lrM 22ft UNd lru . .e $8.

oaeh; kids oprlng hOlM good ;

Utlllly Bld$1. Spec::l11: 30'•40'•g·,
1-15'18' Sliding Door, 1·3' Walk
Door, Painted SIMI Siding &amp;
Roofing. S5190. Iron Horu
Bldra. f-800-352-1045

1987 Ford Aarrostar Mini-Van .
Call 614·379-2809 Of 614-367JgS(I or 304--615-6(144

s...1e. c. ..... Buy. Soli,

Livestock

20th Annual Bentley Ptg Sale:
Friday April 241h, 7:30 P.M.
Fayl'tla
Co.
Fairgrounds,
Waakington Cour1houta. Selling
200 htad of Barrowt &amp; glltt For
mor. Information contact Roger
BanUey (513)584-2398 or leroy
Larrick 513-760-4802 .
4-H and FFA Markel lambs, 304882-2886
Angus And Ct-!1 -Angus si\ck
Bunt, Raason1bly Pn c~ . Slale
Run Firms, Jackson, Ot'llo, 614·
286 ·5395.

BOATERS

76

Wanted to buy: 3 head beillype
tHdar cal~••. 4 to 6 hundred
lbl ., 614 - 992~035

Auto Parts

&amp; Grain

Recondilloned
washars
&amp;
dryers, each $100 and up We
ser~lc• all makes. The Washer &amp;
Oryar Shoppe . 6l4-446-2944.
David Gainer- You Are A Win ner!!! Bring copy of !hit ad and
Identification to the Ragls1ar
Otllce to c::lal m your trM 1d~1t ·
!Ising. Prize mU:It be c::lalmad
bato,. April 24. lt92.
S.telll1e disk w!lraeker eya.tem,
receiver &amp; ca~e . R•celvar
needs repair S200. Walnut col·
tM 1able, Early Americ.n aola 6
chair wlcoYntry pauem $150. Or
all tor $300. 304-896-3113.
Satallite dlth wttraekar sy111m,
receiver &amp; cst.l. · Racaiw-ar
needs repairs, $200. Walnul col·
f" table, Earl'fAm.,lcan tota &amp;
chair w/country panam $150. Or
all for SJOO. 304·895-3813.

nra 1hop ~uipmenl ror ule : 1

coat• 40-40sa lira ehangttr, 3 ~r.
old l1000; 1 eoata bubbla
balanc•r S150. AU lir• In lloc:k
will 1111 at cotl you ply tu ,
cath 'n carry. Eiiarylhing can be
... n at Rlvar~idt bal1 &amp; l'aeltla
et. ol Rt . 7 and Rt. 218, Ga~
!polls . 614-441-0101 or 379-2601.

l

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brlc::k, MWtr pip411, windows, lln1ala, ate _ Claude Wintare. Rio Granda, OH Call 1114245-512~.

56

Pets tor Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groominv. AH biNds, atyl...
lame Pet Food Outer. Julie
Webb. Call 614-M&amp;-0231.
Alrdale Pupplft For Sale, Good

Bloodline. 114-~13 .

BEDROOM · Bunk B•ds SW
(2x6); 4 Draw•r Chelf 01
Clrawers $44.95 ; Twin Mltt,.ss
$99 Set .

AKC L.abradcar Allliev• puppin, sir• &amp; dam, OSA certHIN
I on pr.miHt. READY FOR

DINETTES: Wood Bar Stooll
$14.95 (26") Tabla And 4 Padded
Chalrt $129.

AKC regiatared Cotkar Spanl•
puppi11, had .tttMI &amp; wormed,

304-G7W193.

OPEN: 7 Oa~s A W••k. 9 A.M. · 8
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon . 5 P.M.
Rt 141 4 M1les Ot1 Rt . 7 In Cen tenary.

AKC
Reglsl1r-.d
Bugles
malalftmale, ltar1ed, hid shots:
!ilmoe. old, $100.1 ., 614·H2-11162
•"• 6pm.

EASTER. $400. 304-778~710 .

'

'

Campers &amp;

TA~f A
NUM8f~

[~]I

I

.

"' '

llJ

~

&gt; ';;
&lt;( '

1 .
,__

614-J112 -2535

Transportation

ALLEYOOP

Oscar the Grouch, Mark

Russell. Ed Asner, Rod
Steiger, teachers , prison
inmates~d others . (1 ;00)

Stereo.
®liD
Ill Royal Family
Ruth e9.rees to go on a dale

EEK AND MEEK

wtt h Willis

1986 Grand Am, 6 Cylinder,

8;30 (JJ II llliJ Coogle HowNr.
M.D. Doogie and Vinnie
establish apartment ri~s
(Pt 2 ol 2) (A) Stereo . 1.,1
®!liD tl2111l Davia Ruleo
Gunny tries to hide from his
ex -wife Margaret . (R) Stereo

RIll

MOVIE; Tho Mllagro
Beanfleld War IA)(2:30)
ID Major Laaguo BeNblll

L..A6r NIEi'HT I HEARD

EITHER THERE'S A

OOMETHING COLJ6H lNG

MONSTE/2. HIDING

OR ANIOUSE
n--IAT!s ALLER61C

UNDER "THERE ...

TO DU5TM(._L-S

UNDER MY BED-

Oakland Athletics at Kansas

City Royals or California
Angels at Texas Rangers (L_I
Maniac Manaton Stereo

e

Home

1t88 Otdt Fhnza, 5 tpeed, air,
ami fm slarwol. lilt wkNI, 614·
9i2-65~ c111 anttr 6pm
1987 Dodge Ariel. auto, $2,200.
1187 Plymouth Horizon, '0 mpg ,
$1,600, tow mil••. 304~75-2440.
1981 Trtni·Am, T·Tops, loaded,
304~75-3818

1888 Caul!«, 2 door, 5 1peed,

AM-FM e....,,., "king $4,100.

Electrical

&amp;

Rasldlnti1l
or eom~lll
wiring, new urvlct or Npalre.
Master UcenMd •t.c1rtclln.
RicNnour Elactrkal, WV00030e
304~75-1786 .

fa&lt; Two

g
ilDIII!I tl2i Ill

•

Upholstery

304~~981 .

~--~~~~!_____

11Ut1 Barttla GT, .ulo, 111 options , uc cond, low miiH, very
eharp, $11,500. evanlngt 304675-3161

lng trl county .,.. 2t yN,.. The
bast In tumhure upholtt..-lng.
Call ~-675-t154 lor he ...
tlmatn.

_,.,., Upholat.,ng - ·

NORTH

6-1'-t%

.AJ764

•s

t98 S42

+KJ

PHILLIP

•s

WEST

ALDER

EAST
.10
.AQ154 2
• Q to
.AQtoB

• K 96 3

tJ76
+9753 2

SOUTH
.KQ98ll
• J 10
.AKl
• 64

Another lead
leads to success

Vulnerable · East -West
Soulll

Wn1

Nor-lll

opening-lead table . This includes the

I•

2•

4•

t•

standard •top of Louching honors ei -

4•

Pass

Pass

Pow

East

All beginners ' textbooks contain an
cept king from A- K." (II you have
taught tyros, you will know how much
easier it is to recommend ace from A. .
K.) But there are times when 11 is bet ter to make an unorlhodo1 opemng
salvo. Today's deal features a lead
that is well-known in upert circles
North's four hearts was a splinter
bid , showing a high-eard ra..e to four
spades with at most one heart. ThiS
was a slight overstatement. esP""ially
with no honors in his diamond suit.
West led the heart three . East won
with the ace and, knowmg from his
partner's fourth -highest lead that de-

clarer had a second heart, returned
the suit Now declarer exhibited excel lent technique Immediately be led a
low diamond from the dummy 10.
ace, si:1 . Back to dummy with a trump,

and another diamond lead saw the
queen appear from East. South With -

Pass

Opening lead. • 3

held bJ.S ace . The best East could do

was to casb the club ace
'Sorry. partner." said West. 'J
could have done better. If I bad led the
heart king, I could have sw1tcbed to a
club at trick two.·
If you a.-. short of entnes, 11 is of~
a good ule.a to lead an WlSupported
high honor in your Side's suit at tr:ck
one _ You m1ght be able to make ~
telling switch at tnck two.
F=lly , note thai South could draw
trumps before the fir.ll diamond lead
He would have to return to dummy in
spades, giving East a chance to dis.
""rd his diamond queen . But then de'

clarer can make the contract by en·d ~'
playing East '" clubs.

Whe{ About
Me? I'm Only ThrHI Top
performers enswer questions
and focus on the erosion of
the planet in an effort to

BARNEY
UNCLE SNUFFY
SLIPPED OFF

PAW CAN'T
SWIM WORTH

TH' FOOTL06

A HOOT 11

AN'

FELL IN

TH'

CREEK!'

DON'T

RIP THAT

a greater awareness

create

NEW SHIRT,

of the problem . Host:
Ann-Margret. (t 00) S!ereo

OL' BULLET"

The World Almanac 00 Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Reaign

5 'Tobacco

tormed
(2 Wdl.)

chew

g Dawn
goddess
12 Soviet Union
(abbr .)
73 Coleallal
bear

14 Baseball
player Mol 15 Nautical cry

36 Toolh ll11ut
38 01 muolcal
quality
39 Performance
40 Cowboy
movle{at. )
41 Jesl
44 Route

45 H1"g loosely
4 7 Not educated

16 Exceniwe
love or salt

SO Minutes of

t8 Doloreo Rio
19- Haw
20 Attentiongelling
21
23
25
26

An•.., lo Pt-.•kMis Puu..

victory

33 WW!laroa
34 Become

court

51 Consumed
food
52 Diving duck

&amp;ound

(!] FronUine C

Le11 cooked
Doer
Actor Sellers
Lo81l quiet
30 Conatanl
traveler
32 Symbol ol

53 Vice pres.
54 - Klppu•
55 Cuotard
apple
56 Tallies

2 Female

form)

theater

1 Campus area

Sklnn8f

has

ASTRO-GRAPH
envelope

lo

Matchmaker . c/o this newspaper, P.O.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

\

Box 91428, Cle&gt;tetand. OH 44101-3428 .
TAURUS (April 20-lbr 20) Koep pace
with your duties and responsibllihes today, beCause. if yoo fall behlnd,lt will be
difficult to catch up . But It you're on
schedule, tomorrow will be a breeze.
GEMINI (lbJ 21.June 20) Avoid social
ootanglements today whore yoo might

have to deal with someone you dislike .
Select an actlvtty where you're comfort-

April11,1882

place
CANCER (June 21.Jutr 22) Guard
against the Inclination today to get Involved In competitive sltuatlono wllere
the odds aren't att that favorable, especially where your career Is concerned.

Yoor progress in !he year ahead is likely
to be more rapid if you are unencumbered by pannars. Do wilal ..-Is doing t~dentty ol others.
ARIEl (llbrch 21·Apri11t) One-to-ooe
relationships could be a bit touchy today, aspaclally II you'ra more assertive
than cooperative. Be pushy lor mutual
beneftts. not selfish ones. T.ying to
patch up a broken romance? The AstroGrapt\ Matchmaker can help yoo understand what to do to make the retationship work . Mail $2 plus a long. self·

mate's •deas or suggestions today
could be asking for trouble. especially 11
events prove the wisdom of your beller
hall was indeed better than yours .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 221 Lack ol r&amp;spect lor the abilities of co- workers
might cause you to take on more as signments than you can manage today.
Your a858SSment ol their talent s could

be erroneous.
8.\GPTTARIUS

(Now.

23--0.C.

21)

Things have a way ot working out to
your benefit today, provided you don't
Interfere. However.ll you start changing

lhlngs that shouldn 'l be changed. !he
results coulcJ be lousy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) A dlfttcult objective can be achieved today,
but be prepared 10 pu! lorth a second

LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Just beCause effort in case it is not attained on the
you lacl&lt; IU&gt;PI'eciation lor tho source. first try. Chances are you'll have to.
you might tum a deaf oar to some very AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) Yoo could
sound suggestions today . Don't lei your be rather Impatient today with those
whO don't Immediately go along with
bias wort&lt; against you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22111 yoo'te go- your way of thinking. And the harder
Ing window-wishing loday , It's best yoo you seu, the more resistant they may
leave your credit cards at home . You ' re become.
not 8l'l even match tor a salesman who's PISCES (Fob. »March 201 Continue
satttng something yoo want but can't to be the nice person you are, but also
stand up for your rtghts today. Don't let
afford.
LIBRA (s.pL 23-0cl. 23) Ignoring your another ace you out of some thing
you're entitled to

t t P?iotocopy
t 7 lllmlck od
19 Ont with

6 lmpulll
7 Same (comb

i

unorthodo•

bello to
22 Sllin problem
23 Comptetod
24 Romain
lon~er than

ho.-+----jf-+-t

while obsessed with her new

stamped

fO Comella -

4 Sctmplo
5 Strange

;ob. Stareo. C
&lt;Illl Ill Ill ~lba Audia
meets a great guy . bu1 he

addressoo.

8 Sire' 1 mate
9 Lon~ llmes

attendant
3 lonelinets

DOWN

MOVIE ; Drop Dead
~· (2:00) Ste•eo. 1:;1
® ~ahvltle Now Stereo.
a la"'' King Uval
(!)) Fa- Dowling Mratertea
Slereo . 1:;1
9;30 (l) II 0 Dear John Mary
Beth daydreams about John

able with lhe people as well as the

Refrigeration

87

IJ Room

Jill suspects Edie is having
an affair with Ken . Stereo .

Carter's Plumbing
Four1k and Pine
Galllpolia, Ohio
614 -446-3888

84

0

&lt;Illl

Small Plumbing Jobs Oon 1. 614379·2921.

BRIDGE

8:05 (l) MOVIE: Q..,uo tPGi(2 15)

Stereo.

1985 Ford Escort, 4 cyl, 4 tpead , Daw-is
Saw·Vac
Service
lookt &amp; runt good, S850. 304 - G~ rga~ CrNII Rd . Par1s, au~
458 -172ft.
plies, pickup, and deli~ery . 614446.()294 ,
1985 Olds Della 88 Royale , 2dr.,
coupe , just like new, 1 owner, W1ll build patla covers decks
low mllaaga, 307 V-8, $3295, 614· scrMn.d rooms, put ~p vlnyi
99Hn9
lldlng Of tra iler skl111ng. 614245·g152 .
1985
Oldsmobile
Cutlass
Supram• Brougham, 66,500 82
Plumbing &amp;
miles, 4 doo.-, 3.8 V-6, loaded,
Ilk• new, 304-675-4893
Heating

$2,000. 014-440-3040.

Azalea

B

JET

t1750, o1•-m~nv

to the

SOCiety Ball. Stereo. 1:;1
llliiD Family Wortca
11J Murdar, She Wrote 1:;1
® Ctook and Chua
aPrlmeNewaC
Big Bro- .iiike Sweo

Improvements

1985 Plymouth Gran Fury, 4dr.,
udan,
ncellant car, low
mll.aga , all ~ulpmant, 318 V-8,

C

Setnfeld George.
thinking he is having a heart
attack.~s to a healer. (R )

1984 Le Baron, candy machines. Aarallon Motors, repalrt&lt;t . New
1 pop machine, 35 ft . Slh &amp; ra-bulll motort In sloc::k, RON
EVANS, JACKSON , OH . 1-300wh11ler, 304-m -5651
537-9528.
1985 Chryslll LeBaron, Auto,
Turbo, Air, PS, PB, Good Condi· Ron 't TV Sarvlc•. tp.c::lall~ng
lion, $1,850; 1987 Dodge 0-50, In Zenith also ur~iclng moat
PU, 4 Cylinder, 5spd, Good otkor brands. House ca lls, al.o
Condition! $2,700. 614·256-6251. somo appliance repairs. WV
304 -576 -:2398 Ohio 614-446-2454 .
1985 Dod!J• Shelby Charger
Turbo, 5 spatd, red/s i l~erj g&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;O_ Saplic Tank Pumping 190, Gallla
mpg &amp; sharp, akslng 2,900 Co. RON EVANS E.NTERPRISES
304-675-5306.
Jackson , OH 1-800·537·9528.
'

't · l 'f

By Phillip Alder

lam11y. (R) Stereo. r:;1
(!] Uaten Upl Volcao tn
Cetebnitton of Edueatton
Major educational issues are
explored by Fred Rogers ,

9:00 (l) II

BASEMENT
t979 Flrablrd, naw angina, new
WATE RPROOANG
lransmistion. l'l8eds brakas, Unconditional litallma guaran·
$1,000. 304-675-7967.
lee . local references tuml•hl&lt;l
FrM estimates. Call collect 1·
1981 Ford Escort, auto ., SSOO, 614-237-0488, da~ or night .
614-g92·2045
Rogers Basament Waterproo1981 Honda Accord , 5 tpd ., PS , fing.
AC $900. 614-446-&lt;&gt;952 .
CutT is Home lmpro~aments :
1984 Oodg• Aries , 4 door, black, Yaars E•pariance On Older &amp;
AM!fM , cassette, 4 q l, auto, Newer Homes. Room Additions
Foundation
Wolil,
Roofing'
614·992 -7236, avanlngs
Kilchans And Bathe. Fr11 Es~
lima\es ! Ratarenc::ea, Na Job
Too Big Or SmaiH 614 -367-0518.

from step No 3 below

Dealer: East

Jack 's birthday dinner 1s
celebrated by the entire

304-571-297'2.

81

lnternabon8 1Ocean

Challenga (A)
acrounre
7:35 (l) Sanford &amp; Son

(!) MOVil: Wicked
Stepmothar (PG131 (2 ;00)
&lt;Illl Ill Ill Wonder Yea"

Autos lor Sale

1969 Mustang $3 ,500. 1939 Chev
1850. 1985 Honda Shadow
700cc, 2,40(1 mi. $2,000 304-675 3960.

@ Swimming Hawaiian

Stereo.

Services
71

; 11!1 WhHI of Fortune 1:;1
cr2llll Family Feud
® Be 1 Stir Stereo .

8;00 (l) II 0 Unaolved
Myeterlee Eliot Ness 1s
profiled by Raben Stack.
psychics who help pohce (R)

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Motor Homes

Blrght
Cl•an Wkeal Straw
$2.00/Bala . 614-446-9442 .

m.

-'::::omp!ete
chudle quoted
by f1ll ing in the miSSing words

Husband to wile : "I think I'm mov1ng up the success
ladder at work. I've notioed lately lhat I'm being taken
advantage of by more IMPORTANT people •

c

&amp;

Slar Cra ft pup-up camper, SSOO.

Portable changeable latter alg,
1299. Fr•• latlarstdelivary_Plu lk lell•n~ S47.50 box . 1-800-53J.
3453, any1ima.

!

Accessories

79

u

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Anyone - Fatty- Datum- Prenx - IMPORTANT

liZ e

2n6

Hay

!

you de~elop

Genarotton C
EntortO'fnment Tonight
Stereo. !;I
IIJ MIIC&lt;lyver 1:;1
ID SportaC.nter
a Moneyline
(!)) The WaHona
7:05 (l) Addama Family
7;30 (l) IJ 0 Jeopardy!
&lt;Il Now II Con Be To!!
&lt;Illll E'!!!rlalnment Tonight
S"tereo. L,J
~Ill MeiTlecl... With Children

•

Bud~et Transmissions , Used 6
rebu11!, sltrtlng at $99; tronl
llppo 0.11 Plnebar, Chestnut whee l drive slar11ng at $149.00
mara, 6yrs. old, $1500, 614 -698 - 614-245-S&amp;n, 614- 992-&amp;~3.

64

1

NeweHour

Santa-Gertrodls Bull, 304--675- Guinn!l Mercury Marina Service.
Mercury, Manner, MarcruiMr
2970.
spaciahst . M•rcury certified.
Want lo lease tobacca , Mason Mobile, We com• lo you . 614·
Counly;. call Andy Sigler, Mor - 259 -5 979
gan's t-arm, Rl . 15, Pliny, 3.()4 .

937-2018.

!8

1

(I) II C.nd C.mero
®llll -Cu...m Affair C
llliiD Star Trek ; The Next

II!

J.S. Marina Service, Serving All
Polled Hereford Bulls 1-J Yrs. Your Boal1ng NMdt, Parte, AcOld. Top Bloodlines. Ta~lor &amp; cessories , Two Cycle Oil And
Taylor 614--643 ·2285.
S.rvito. 614-25-6-6160
Pony For Sale . 614-446-(1529
BOATERS

r

1

L_J_L_i_._ __(__...)_
_ _ J.__

(JJ lllnatde Edition 1;1
(!] Mac:~II/Lahrer

1985 Radar Bus Soet, 15 1/2 fl,
40 hp Marinat motor, 304-5762553

Trall•r,

STI

II!

1988 16fl Fow-Windl, iOhp
Johnton motor, AM-Fill cusatte, ski tubl &amp; robe, lite jackFabruary 1966 AOHA Sorrell Its, low hours, 17,000. 304--675Mare, June 1990 Fantastic Pain! 76n.

~~:~ 5 _1:~:. 2~6 !~ 2 ~1ock

Q

(D The Jefferson• c._

tor Sale

!om llalllng booi; F«d 711 Alii

537-9528.

Jlf.JT KIOO OF !.It AROOI.lD
AU. ~Y'

&amp; Motors

Complete tow bar assembl~ for
lra~at trailer with chains 304Hay tor ula, never bean wet , m -5846 or 304-862·2303 .

Pintle And Medal Culvar16 Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Ew-ans, Jackson, Ohio. 1-800-

001 fH~ M.l.l.t UOO€&gt;

W1 Bu~. Salt, Trade, U111d Herlays, Parts And Acc.aeorin
Availab~ . 514·01-7055.

Boats

a Wof1d Today
(!)) Rln Ttn Ttn, K-9 Cop
stereo.
6:05 (l) Beverly Htllbllllea

(!)) New Zooo Stereo 1:;1
6:35 (l) Andy Griffith
7;00 &lt;jalll 0 WhHI o? Fortune

Motorcyda1
&amp;
moton::yc~
polf1J, no lilies, 614-992·7106

75

5

121 lnalda 1M PGA TtMlr

o Scoobr Doo
121 Up Clooe

Trade. 614·256-6040.

63

I

P A N0 C

illliiD
Ill liZ Ill CBS News I:;J
Andy Griffith

Motorcycles

:-:::::--,-,---,---,-:---1g78 Honda Gl1000, 10 000
IH Model 80 Puii -Ty~ Combine, miles, Honda line delach~ble
Very Good Cond11fon, $90(1. luggage, like new, 304-773-5584 .
Taylor Farm 614-643-2265.
1990 Yamaha 4 whNier, HI &amp; Lo
JO 1530 Oi...l Tractor, S5 ,9SO; Ranga , Ra&gt;Jersa,llke New, 360
800 Ford Wllk Plow &amp; Disc, ml 614-446-1304
Blade And Bush Hog, $3,850.
614-286-6522.
Honda 250X , 4 wheller, 304-675-5976 attar 4:00 PM.

stopped al a small
roadside cafe lor lunch . 1
1---.;.1,---:..;1.----:--:--.;:.1_:,1•~ :. asked lor a telephond e book to
_
_
_ _ _.
e 1eva1e my youn~ augllter in
. - - - - - - - - - - , h e r seat. The wa1tress looked
puzzled bul handed me a
1-----r--..:..-:-=----rF__:_:,.H,.:E:,.-~phonB book consisting of ---

llliiD Nltphl Court 1:;1
11J Smurfo Q

\11

1989 Ford AtrMllr '•n XL ,
amlfm/cassatta, till, air, cruise ,
46,500MI, $8800, 614·992-776g

74

LARGE£

6;30 (l) II 0 NBC Newo ~
&lt;Il Saved lly the Bel
&lt;Il II IIlii ABC New 1:;J
II! Wild Amartc8 C
Squere One Tv"Stereo.

t989 Ford Aarostar Con~•"ion
Van , Automatic Overdrive Alr
Tilt, Cruise, Very Good ci,ndi~
lion, Call 614·446-7371 , Ah•r 5
P.M.

kldl 16in 11artll' blke; 18fl ilumn
hsrd lop boat, 75kp mulor; 10ft
alumn Jon 8oe1; Pelican 3 man
peddle ~I; 12ft alumn V bol·
mower 3pt ; Enolna overhaul kit
tor AC WO "5 lractor; F•rguson
2 row cultivatOJ 3pt , one row
cul1 1va!CH' 3pt; pig pole. 304-1735880 .

GONE DEAD..

FARM TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ohio

Volioy

llE STAY HOME

IDEA

I CAN'T IlEAl\
YOU .. I THINK
TilE LINE 14A5

&amp; 4 WD's

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Buy or ..u. Rlverin. Anliqu11,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10 :00 a.m. ta 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00p.m.
614-992-2526.

AN~WAY 7 WilY

GOOD

Shalla PrasiCif'l You Ar. A. Wlnn•r! Bring A Copy Of Thla Ad ,
Along With ld•nlifk:atlon To :
Th• Gallipolis Tribune Ottice To
Claim Vour FrH Advartlelng .
Prill Must B• Claimed By Aprll
24, 1992.

1984 Chew-y 4 Whlll Oriv•.
Short Wheal Base, 305, 4 Speed,
4" Uti, Alum WhHis. Call 304·
675·7ti23, Or 614·446-4015 .

BIQ Riv•r Antiques, 510 Main St,
Poml PINaant, WV.

COOKIE ..

BUT WllATSI-&lt;E DOING

THAT'S A

675-5332
or 614·992-3488.
1988 Chevy
hall ton pickup 304·

Shih Tzu Puppies AKC Reg
First Shots. Baaulilul Loving
Pets, S200. 614-64)..2285.

Antiques

GIVING

HIM A

1g97 Chew-y S· 10 Tahoe, 1/-8 en ·
gine , topper, $5,000. 304-675·
_,..
_ _5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Vans

WED., APRIL 15 •

\t! Square One TV Stereo .
/li Reeding Rainbow 1:;1

1g86 S-10 Good Condition, For
Sale Or Take Over Payments,
614·446-4415 .

73

low to form fovr simple

&lt;Illl lllllJ ®I Q!)
liZ Ill 0 Newo
&lt;Il VIdeo Power

1gs4 l/4 Ton 6 C~lindor, 4tpd.,
Transmission Truck, $4,2oo;
1g76 1/2 Ton Ford, $2,800. 614·
446-8536.

1-1)

0 fovr
ll:eorronge lett11rs of
scrambled words

6;00 (l).

1983 Oodga Ram pickup LWB
with loppar, pslpb, naw tires,
ut ra good. 12500. Ah1r 5:00
614-366-Bm.

J Ito~
...

5

EVENING

1981 Ford F-100, 6 cyl , standard,

--

For au your lawns needs, gill'a
us a call Comm•rcial &amp; rnitkln·
tial, lleo estimates , lu ll y in·
su ro d, 614 -992-76n

21

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

2br Gar.ga Apartment, Locat.cl
106 locust StrNt, GalllpoU11,
S22sn.to. $100 Doposlt, Water
Furnished, 614-446·3870.

Lola joining Point · tOO% owner
linancing at $101.46 per month
bu~a all lhraa lots. 304-675·
2n2.

I i.

::.

3940.

Babysit1 in g In my home Mond;~y
thru Friday, across trom Nor1h
Point School. kave reterencas .
304-675-4612

Will car e tor elderly parson In
m~ home , Raclna arn, bed
patient praterred, 614-949-:lm

1.. - - -

2
Bedroom•,
Stove
And
Ratrigarstor Fumlshld. 1114-.t-4&amp;-

lots In New Hav•n . 100"4
owner financing 11 $101.46 per
month buys alllhr" lots, a304·
67S-2n2 .

Georges Portable Sawmill. don'\
haul your logs to the mill jut!
call 304 -675- 1957_

•·o .•d,.

2 bedroom apt, utll11in paid,
Hud approved, 304-67S-m2.

All Types Home Repair, Or
Remodelmg. O.CIIs, Siding,
Roollng, Call Jack Hinchman,
614 -446--3551 .

Gardans l1l lad - ready lo pl1n1 ,
lar ge or small , use 1700 Ford
Tractor, 614 ·99Hi903

, -frdlt ·' "''"

sewa~•·

'S

3 speedov•rdrive, 304·895-357'6.

tor Rent
1 Bedroom Country Setting, 10
Minutas
From
Gallipolis,
$225/mo . Water Paid, Deposit
And 2 Reterences Required.
614-446-7604
1 bdrm. apt. In Middlepor1 , water,
h
eleclriCIQaS
, $150/mo.,
614-949IriS
paid, you
pay
2217

f1'j?_ H£A~£N

1978 Cho11y pick-up, lWB , 3
speed, 6 cyl, kigh miles, body
rough. 134(1. 304-675·1m

Apartment

46 Space lor Rent

';tl acre farm will Hll a\1 or
dlvld• In 25 tcre lots. Trailt cui
to access anywhtra on farm .
304-882-3111.

Retrain
lhaas1ern
Buslnass Collage , Spring Valley
Plal.il . Call Today. 614 -4116-4367(1 35
Regi steration 190--&lt;15-12748.
Now 11 ~ Sou

·1 ;,,. _,'""

44

,..

Autos lor Sale

19n GMC 314 ton 1-t.D. , 350,
au1o., pSipb , 1111 , sliding window,
11ese hilch, topper. 11500. 614 245·9454

Near Good~aar, Lock A Dam
project, referanca raquir•d, 304·
576-2466 attar 5:00 PM

3 BedroorN, 2 Balhl, 2 Car

ca.._ .... ccmes with 111-

lOST

RNtonable. 614-446-4344.

Garage, $45,000. 614-446-6325.

. . _ oii,. tong MiNd, black

6

Baden Rd, 304~75 · 3590 attar
&amp; ;00 PM .

land . Call ti 14· 2S6-1S2fi.

~~---. lyrsold, 1
. - -....... ~1714.

lilll

Bedroom Houu, CIOH To Cltv
Llmtta, On 588 Gllllpolia

3 Bedroom Hom• On 1 Acre Of

Giveaway

-

I And 71'10 Aere~ Whh Nlct 3

3 bedroom mobile home, leon

minutes from Pt. Pttllant ,
$!1,900. 304~75-5306.

r

t

72

lor Rent

Homes tor Sale

1,400 aq ft brick, 3 bedrooms,
large living roomh btlcM patio,
trM walarTMpUc, Nl pump, 5

M.t Area Singlft
~ OUr Sklg... ~.,.,_
• 1lla SnQfes, P.O. Box
Giollrl"'b, ~,. 4"'l'"

Mobile Homes

2br Unfurnished, Air , Cable,
Baautilul Riw-er View , Rel•renc:a ,
Deposit Required . Foster 's
Mobile Home Park. 614-446-16(12

31

OIL FlllJUiin.

42

BORN LOSER

1987 Chis Della 88, VInyl Top,
loaded! Excellent Condhionl
$5,000. 614-446-4225, A.flar 6p.m

Nica atfidency collage, unique
and beautiful, 304-6~--6042

The Dally

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

no

wlolenu,

~ual interest in her.

cloth

...--+-+--1 40 4uthor Joyce
Carol -+----j-~ 41 Pit•
42 Do - olh1r1

43 Article
44 Joyful

••clamation
46 Openings
48 Btlw"n

Can. and
llu
49 UK llmt

regulations of adoption are

SO Actr111

examined. (A) Stereo . 1:;1
® On Stla- Stereo .
8 Wof1d Nowo
(!)) 700 Club With Pat • •

[i)IJ llliJ 911!1

cr2&gt;• 0

Gardner

...

_.

10:20 (I) MOVIE; Satunllr Night
~- {PG) (2 ;30)
10:30 ® Amartcan Mull&lt;: Shop
Stereo.
11;00(1)11

Of two colors
Inland Ma
Fadtd awaw
Parted
Sctaame
Spaak

35 Tropical
37 llulbeHy

Stareo. 1,.7
10:00 (l) II 0 Quantum Laap
Sam leaps into the life of a
policeman who is haunted by
v•slons . (A) Stereo. I:;!
(!) Nowa
&lt;Illll ()) IJ Homelront Anne
and AI complete their
last-minute wedding plans .
Stareo. C
ilDIII!I 111111 41 Hou" The
changing rules and

Roberleon

25
26
27
28
29
3t

Newa

C!1 Night Court I:;J

Cll Nawoweteh

RID ArNnlo Hall Stereo

CELEBRITY
CIPHER
"*""' ,... ••,..,.,....,..;_1;;,
... 01'.-d '"""
try . , . . . pMIIple, ,... _, .......
quomiDnl

e.t1 _.. In tt. dptw ltlndl tor ...,.,_ Todl)"'•

' G F L

w v

8 l

G 0 l

AVWWLAGVS
XLVXWL

xvvs

ASLDGTUR

m...· J . . . . . IJ

OV

Y D U 7

YCOQ
fl ' O

V PI

OMacGr-1;1
all Crooll

lltld ChaM
a Sports Tonight
(!)) Bordlrtown Stereo . 1:;1
11 :30 &lt;Il Kojak C

BDCRFDU
J T W W
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "I lhink my own dosi'" to be loved Is wnat makes

G f l Y - '
me gexually

attrac11ve ." -

Dudley Moore.

..,..

··.
"

,.

' ' ,I

·.·.
..
'.
•'(

. :l

.•
•.

I

�Wednesday, Aprtl 15, 1992

Ohio Lotten• ·

Reds sweep
Braves 3-1;
Morris hurt

Pick 3: 298
Pick 4: 8805
Cards:
10-H ; 8-C; 9-0 :

5-S
Super Lotto:
15-20-28-30-39-46
Kicker: 821133

Page 4

o 1\

1

I

I

Lo"· ronighl neilr 60. Frida .\ ,
chan.::e or rain 60
in m id-60....

pun· nt.ll i ~h

11

I· I\\'~\\~~ fi'\
'

Vol. 42, No. 247
Copyrighted 1992

ONE DOZEN FOODLAND

By BRJAN j. REED
Sentinel News Starr
The Ohio Department of Reha btlitauon has denied a report pnnted on Friday in two Ohio newspapers, stating that Meigs County was
no longer a candidate for a medium -security state prison.
Articles in Friday' s eduwns of
The Times Leader of Marlin's
Ferry and 1he Wheeltng (W .Va.)
News -Register stated that "several

GRADE 11 A"
LARGE EGGS
FREE With Coupoa and SIO.OO Additional Pwmaw- Li11i1 0..
Good Thru Saturday, Aprl 18, 1992

members" of th e seven-member

tor Robert Ney (R -Bamesvtlle) that
Meigs County was no longer being
considered, leaving Belmont and
Noble Counues alone as potential
sties. Belmont and Noble Counues
arc among the 20th Senatorial DIStrin. represented by Ney.
Accordi ng to the Wheeling
newspaper, "Ney said he had been
told that Meigs County has been
dropped from considerati on as a
site for the proposed prison _"
"Ncy said he has not been to ld

the reason for this, but IS assummg
it is because the Meigs County site
ts madequate ," the Ncws -Rcgist&lt;r
said .
Nathan Coffman, a co nsutuent
aide for State Senalor Jan Michael
Long (D -Ctrcleville ) satd late
Wednesday that an official of the
Ohio Depanment of Rehabilttauon
and Corrections that he spoke to
yesterday descnbcd the rcpon as "a
complete rumor."
Tessa
Unwin , a pre s s

si te selection commiuce told Sena-

GOLDEN DELIGHT- 4-7 LB. AVERAGE

Split Chicken Breast........................-.....lb.

(
99

IIMOUI.IT

HOT DOGS or BOLOGNA
BOB EVANS
SAUSAGE
AIID BISCUIT
$249

•C••

...

c

•

12 01.
PIG.

SPRITE • CLASSIC or DIET

COCA·COLA

DEL
VEGETABLES

Cabbage
Plants N..~w I
t~•

Avaaa~

2un1

c

IOTTU

~----~~~----------J

COMMUNITY COLLEGE MONTH Meigs County Commissioners proclaimed April
as Community College Month during lbeir
Wednesday meeting. Tbe month celebrates tbe
achievemenl'l or community and junior coUegts
throughout the country. Signing the proclamation presented by Rio Grande Community College were, seated, rrom left, Commissioners
David Koblentz, Manning Roush and Richard

Jones. Observing were, in back, from len, Dr.
II er man L. Koby, secretary·treasurtr or tbt
RGCC Board or Trustees; Thomas B. Hart, an
RGCC board member from Meigs County; Dr.
Barry M. Dorsey, president of RGCC and tbt
Universit y or Rio Grande; and John T. Wolfr,
anothtr RGCC board member from Meigs
County.

Oliver named
to Meigs post
The appotntmcnt of Susan Oliver as cxec uttv e director of the
Meigs Co unty Coun c il on Aging
was dt scussc d when the Metgs

16·17
OLCIIS

COLA•

24-12 oz.

CAIS

¥IIIII 24 NCIIP•nll
••"~-----111'1

71

Wednesday that a new commiucc

W• R•erv• the Right to Umit Ouantitioo • PrieM Elfoctive Thru Sat, April lB. let2 • USDA Food St•mpa and WIC Coupona Accepted • Not Reaponalltle lol T-rtpltiulor Piclorill Enors.

A May II trial dat&lt;: has been set

NEW DIRECTOR - Susan O~ver bas been hi"'d as tht nrw
cxrcutive director orthe Meigs County Council on Aging.

Grande Prcstdcnt Barry Dorsey.
The board also he ld preliminary
discu.'&gt;.'iions pertaining to the high way dcpartmcnl's summer work

progrnrn for local college studcnls.

Present , in addition to tho se
named, were Commisstoncrs David
Koblcntz , Mannrng Rou sh and
Richard E. Jones , and Clert Mary
Hobstctter.

Committee to review child abuse list
COLUMBUS . Oh ro (AP) Chrisune Cook, one of more than
319,000 Ohioans on a li st of
accused child abusers, says
appoi ntm ent of a co mmittee to
review the list ts a good ftrsl step.
But she hesitated to call it a victory
"II is a posiuve step," she said.
" It is a step in a good drrcction. but
I am still pcssimisuc."
The Department of Human Services, whtch oversees the List. srud
will look at whether the state
should conti nue to keep information about people accused - but
not convicted - of child abuse_
Director Terry Wallace said the
committee also will review who
should be allowed to see the information , and whether the rights of

By JIM FREEMAN
0 \1' News Starr
A fJ\'C-county coaltuon, ori ginall y formed to encourage Ameri can Ek:clflC Power to install flue
gas scrubbe..-s at the General James
\1 . Gav in Electncal Generating
FaCi lit y. met aga1n Wedne sday
aftern0011 tJl an effort 10 help the
sc rubbc• 1ssuc clear yet anoth er
hurdle - envirorunental is ts.
The Sicm! Club might prevent
Ame n cao El ectric Power from
tn sLa lltng sc rubbers at the plant
fon:tng a switch from htgh -sulfur
local coal to out-of-state low -sulfur
coal. jropardizing about I 2 00 arra
coal-mining JOI&gt;sThc li S_ Arm y Corps of Engineers has sc heduled a public hear Ing for May 4 , 7 p m., at th e
Chestme- Kyger FJcmenUUy School
m Chesture..
The folloWlrtg people were presen! at the meeting held at the Holt day Inn in Kanauga : coal1l10n
cha irman Iacl Fowl e r, Gallra
Coun ty C001muni1y lmprovcmcnr
Corporaooo executive vice pres i dent. representing Gallia County ;
Paula Thacker . Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce director,
rcprcs.enung Meigs Counly; Bob
W~IIS , Jacksvn County Commtssioner, and Doug lklrn , represenlmg Jack&gt;on County; Bruce Knox.
exec utive vice president of Uniay
SaY mgs and Loan. repre senti ng
Vtnton County. The Athens County
rc-rrescnlal.J\'t was not presenl
WIII!Jm Oil er. United M1n e

Lanham trial
to start May 11

Cou nty Commi ssiOners met on

Wednesday in regular sess ion.
Oliver's appointment was
anno unced to th e board by letter
from the council's president, Cindy
Oli veri . Oliver's appo intment to
the posttion was cffccuve on Monday. Olt ver succcecds S u.&lt;a~~ Stcwan, who was appointed in 1991 to
rep la ce the retiring Elea nor
Thomas.
The comm issione rs praised
Oliver for her pa st service to the
organization.
The board approved a transfer of
funds within th e budget of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services. Chi ldren's Services division, in th e amounl of
$6,281 .66.
The commissioners approved a
proclamauon pledging participation
tn Com munity College Month, to
be observed nationwide through the
month of April. Present for the
signing were Rio Grande Commu nity College trustees Tom Wolfe
and Thomas Hart, both of Meigs
Cou nt y, Dr . Herman Koby of
RGCC, and Univcrstly of R10

spokeswoman for the corrections statcm crll , and conLinues to " stan d
d'l"'fflll&lt;tt t also dented that Meigs by 11" .
County had been eltmtnatcd from
Meigs County's site proposal JS
the sdecuoo process.
located in Salem Center, on proper "In f..:t: Unwtn satd, "tn fonna - ty now o wn ed hy Ohio Power
uon IS suU bemg collected from all Ohio Power ha .~ offered lO dona te
l.hrtt coc.mocs. The com mince 1s in 1he land rf the site is chose n by the
the mtd&lt;lle of 1he selec tion process, stale.
and Meigs Cou nt y is still being
The co unt y's economi c develcmstd&lt;n"'l_opment team has assembled a fund ,\ s:pok. esman for Se nator Ncy mg package, usmg pnmanly EDA
reported oo Th ursda y momtn g thai fund &lt; thro ugh the US Dcpanment
Senator ~cy had n01 rerracted his of Commerce and a poruon of the

count y's Community Development

Block Grant Funds to finan ce th e
necessary sewage treatm ent plant.
That pl ant woul d also se rve resJdl' nlS m the surround ing area.
The cor rcc ll ons department 's
latest rcquc..'&gt; t for mformauon mu sl
he suhmmcd by the lhrc.e counties
laicr th1s month , and the committee
IS c:w.: pcctccl lO make a site recom mendation to Governor Geo rge
Yoinovich as to where the prison
wil l OC located within a momh.

Coalition calls for support
of AEP lime-barge facility

Turkey Breast.............................................lb.
GOLD N' FRESH

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Papers say Meigs out of the running for prison

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

SUPEIIOII-011

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, April 16, 1992

the acc used and the rcspons1b1lity
to protcc l chrldren arc being protected.
The group, appointed by the
agency, will be made up of state
legt slators , agency staff, county
children services agency represen tatives and others.
The panel's recommcndaLions
arc expected by July L
"The department's aim is to
clean up the system, in compliance
with state law, by protecting the
righl s of individuals and at the
same Lime enabling the system to
do what it was designed to do,"
Wallace said.
Mrs . Cook was put on the lis!
after her 17-year-old son accused
her of sexual abuse . She was nol

charged and has denied wrongdotng. She sa id 1hc accusation c3mc

after she refu sed 10 let 1h e boy
move in with his girlfnend.
Her sOfl has not returned repeal ed phone calls for comment.
The Central Registry on Chtld
Abuse is designed to keep trad of
abusers, help them get proper care
and provide statistics. The s~.a:te
said !he list is open only to social
workers or people w h ~ want to

know if their name IS on 1l.
The American Civil Liberucs
Union and others criticiZed the list
as a violation of due process
be cau se it includes people who
haven't been charged with a crime
They also aren 't sure the list will
remain confidential.
Earlier this month. the agenc y
suspended access to the li st and
sa id it would curb access to it.

for a Mason Coonty man charged
with aggraVal&lt;d murder in SciOto
County. Ohio. acwrding to Scioto
Cowty Prusecuung Attorney Lynn
Grilmllaw.
David L Uutham. 50. of Potnt
Pleasool is scbaluled to be gtn tnal
in fmtll oC Judge BUitOII m SciOto
Cowty Common Pleas Court,
Grilmllaw said Uutham IS charged
in the alleged aggravated murder of
Midlatl Oliver, 40. of Pomt
Pleasant.
Oliva's nude and t!Jsmembered
body was foolld tJl a field m
Franklin Fwoance. Ohto February
15. He bad been reported mtSstn g
tn No&gt;'t111ba'_
l..vlham and Worthy G. S1ders,
Jr.• 47. of Pouu Pleasant were both
arres1ed r-eb_ 15 r(J' u.: alleged
mwder_ Bocb were tal&lt; en for arrngorneo~ in front of MagiSU11te
John S. Reynolds. Lanham waived
extradiuon and went to Scioto
County. Siders refused arraignment
and is being housed in the Mason
COUDiy Jail awaiting exuadition.
Aa:mling to Sheriff Ernie Wat tmOD and Sgt. Gl... am of the
l'llilll Plta5ant Deta&lt;:hment of the
We9. Vvgimo Suu: Pnlice, if Stders
ts not tndictal or extfadlted by May
18. he will he releastd He can only
be bcld r.. 90 clays.
w.auer- and Clark Sla1cd they
"""" olftml as:sis1ance to Scioto
County adltoriti&lt;s. The sheri IT satd
he bas 1101 beard anything from the
Ollio olliciak.
Both Walla&gt;m and Clark have
takm S131CmeiiiS in Mason County
for the Scioco County authorities
aboot the case. These st31tments
wiU be lined over to Mason
County
Prosccuiing Altomey
Damoo Morgan to be sent to Sctoto
Cowty.
""We ba"" done whal we can do
without them caning Uj) here to tell
us whal they oeed," WatleTSOO said.

Workers State Cornpac Representative , ancndcd the meeting .
Th e coa lition discus sed the
approach Lhcy would lake concemmg the public hearing.
It was decided thai coai1Uon representatives would go back. to lhcir
communities to coordinate w1th
local mcd1a and encourage rc sldenLS to become active ly involved
1n suppor ting the lime bar ge
unloading faci lity necessary for the
scrubbe rs, Fowler said .
Fowler also cncour.tged people
and o rgan1 zat ions to writ e th e
Corps of En g1nccrs in support of
1hr. facilitv.
We en-coura ge people to wmc
{lo 1hc Corps of Engmccrs) as lon g
as t.he y suck to !he issue of the cx::onomic impact t.hat failu.n:-: to get l.hc
scrubbers would have 0:1 our area.
Fowler said.
"We have come so far and so
cl ose 10 getting the scrubbers,"
Fowler said. "We can't lei the permit 1ss uc stop us. We have to sec
1hat a pcnn it tSgranted and that the
barge unloading fac 1tity goes in ."
"E "'·c r yo ne knows what th ey
ha..,·c LO do." Fowler commented.
Peopl e at the meeting seemed lo
rese nt outsid ers gettin g mv olvcd
w1th th ey per ce iv ed a s an ar ea
ISSUC.

"We can ' t let outsiders di Ctate
tht futur e of Gall1a Count y,"
Fowler e mpha sized. " We have to
pr cvcnl an envtronmcntal impact
study from h a p~nmg ."
An envLronmcntal impac t stud y
w uld Lake up w two years to complclc. Fowler c&lt;plained. cffcc uvcl y
lu llin g th e effo rt to tn stall th e
scrubbers.

"We think there is an outs1de
fo rce, namelv th e Sierra Club.
coming in and telling us what we
need, or don 't need. and then lcav mg." Oiler satd.
Pwple arc concerned about the
i" ue of sc rubbers. Otler added. We
can ' 1 sit back and be silent.
"We will have peop le !here to
testify (a! !he hcarmg)," Orlcr Silld.
"Most people wil l be 1hcrc to show
support_ "
ALP proposes con struc tmg a
moorin g dcx:.- k In acco mm odate a
l1mc barge unloadcr and a perma nent unloadmg facility for rcceiv mg cnn .'\truction matcnals and for
sh1pptng plant cqurpmcm.
Th e facility ts nec es sary for
operation of nue-gas sc rubbers.
whiCh the Sierra Club s:tys increases carbon dioxide emissions.
"This is the last hurdle," Oiler
commented. We're comin g right
down to !he wire, but I feel confodcm thallhcrc will be scrubbers (at
lhc Gavtn plant) and that !here wtll
he jobs saved tn additi on 10 jobs
added. Oiler concluded .
Accordin g to Corps of Eng tnecrs spokesman Steve Wright, !he
Chcshirc-Kyger School can handle
500 people, counting overfl ow mto
l.he cafeteria 2rca.
A sound system wi! l be set up
so tho se outside th e gymna sium
can lislcn to speakers w1thin ,
wright sai:: .
"We ' re gotng to have a good
mecling where everybody geLS a
chance 10 talk," Wright said.
Ev ery co ncerned organi zation
should have a representat ive to
speak fo r th e m at the mcelil'lg ,
Fowler s.:ud .

r---Local briefs----.
Public urged to attend hearing
Members o r UMW A Local I KS7 , M e l g-..; \111lC \ . •lfl' L' nCourJ ging
att endance at the U. S. Army Corps of Eng1nCC1"'1 puh lh" hr..1ring to
be held May 4 al 7 p.m. al the Chr.&gt;htrc-K"cr l.k mcn my School,
R50 Watson Grove Road. Chcshtrr
The hearing will deal wuh the propm l'cl ron.. , lructLon of lim e
barge unloading docks and a..'\...~ tatc::d cnv1ronnwnt.:.t l 1'\'iucs reg arcl mg the installation of sc rubbers at l.he Ga\·1n Power P l~ t
Fl yers promoting support for sc ruhhc r" and urpn t! attendan ce al
the mcc ling arc be ing d1 stnbutcd m \ k tp. Al!Kn.' . and Gal!Ja 1n
Ohio. and Mason and Jackson CoumJ e\ 1n Wr 'it Vtrt!l nLa

Middleport schedules cleanup week
M1 dd lcport Mayor Fred Hoffman announ ced th :11 the annual
cleanup week 1n l.hc village t.~.dl he Apn l 20 -2-l , 1n conJunction With
the "(kJn Lp Mc: tgs County Wee k·· hcmg ~pon o.;orcd hy the Mc1 gs
C0un1',: L l!tcr Control
Hoffrn:m urged aJI Cl llle ns to talc advantage of the free p1ckup
wh 1ch w1 !1 he provtdcd during that week
"(lc-;uw p week prov1des us all w1th a perfec t oppo rtun 1ty to do
our .; pn ng cl c.amn g and maintenance. wh rch wil l rc.;;ult tn J more
attrJc uvc commumty," Hoffman S-aJ d.
All matcrialiS to be placed at the same loca11on as then rcfular
p1 ckup. Material must be pul in a conta.mer, with smaJI tree limbs
Jnd clippings being bundled _No large 1rcc hmhs. stump' or huild mg matcnals wrll be ptcked up_
Residents arc asked w have theu tra.lih set out hv 7 .1 .m on the
day of therr regularl y 'cheduled pickup_
·

Deer accidents probed
The Mc1gs County Sheriffs Department pmhcd two ck cr JCc identS on Tuesday and early Wednesday.
On Tuesday, Kathy S. McDaniel of Ba, han was travclmg wes t
on Morning Star Road in her 1989 Ford van when a deer ran into
her path. Moderate damage was hsted 10 the van , bul McDaniel was
uninjured .
On Wednesday morning, Gary S_ Dailey, 19 , of Parkersburg,
W.Va_ was eas1bound on State Route 248m Long Bottom'" a I9R5
N1 ssan. A deer wa."i seen in the roadway and Dailey swerved to miss
ll , slid on the wet pavement and struck a tree. Th e car suffe red
heavy damage, and Dailey was uninjured_

Wire theft reported to sheriff
Mcrgs County Shcnff James M. Soulsby reported Thursday thai
Continued on page 3

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