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                  <text>Mineral Wels, WV

April II. 199!

STOCK. STEERS:
75.00-llO.OO

JOIHmlb
)()0.500
S00-100

7~ . 00-90.00

TJ00-82.50
56- ~ -00

~

STOCK HEIFERS:

62.00-93.00
W.00-81.00
65.00-75.00
5200-61.50

JOO.mdt.r
300-500
S00-100
lm-&lt;JYel

STOCK BULLS:
JOO.mdt.r
300-500
500-100

65 .Q0-94 .00
69.5~84 . 00

05 .()().. 71.50
52.50-67.50
•5000-865.00

Slaogbta Bulls
Coon &amp; Calvt:S B H

~2. 00-53 00

BmiCowsBy•
BmiCcwsBH
Shqb!r:r Cows:
Hip Dressing

1&lt;0JJ0-765.00
~7

50-53 .75
-10 OO-U.50
Y2 00--ll 00

Utility
Cmner&amp; Cuner
VEAL

75 Q0-95 00

Choice

--o Q0-80.00

Mediwn

65.00-7750

Good
LAMBS :

58 Q0-64 00
52 00-0()_00
-!.(]_ 00-2 10.00
35 Q0-64.00
:!:5 .oo-58.00

Blue
FccdrJs
IWiy Calves B H
HORSES cwt
l'bnies

HOGS:
200-250
300-500

35 ()()..4() 00
28 Q0-35 00
:::2.75-25.00
1200- 28 00

Male Hogs

BH

1\J~reerl Producuon Sale Fnda, , Ma' 8. ~-(~&gt; P_\!
JA CKSON CO. LIYESTOCI' \l-\IUUT
Ri pk&gt;~ . W\'

April 9.

199 ~

SLAUG ifiTR STEERS

62. ~.00

Good .t: OIO!ce
S••twd

54.00-62.00

SLAUGifiTR HEIFERS
Good &amp; Cboice

66-~7 .00

StweWd

58.00-62.00

SLAUGifiTR COWS
O•••WJci.ol

46.00-48.00

IJiilay

~00-47 .00

BuDs ova l,(XXl lb.
VEAL:
&lt;::lrice .t: rrnne 190- 22 ~
226-265 lb

90 00-99.00
85 1)}97.00

c..cr .t: Cuuer

35.00-41.00
5200-59 75

HOGS:
190-240
240-260
Sows 300-500
BoiiSID500

32.00-35.50
lO.00-35.00
28.00-32.00
25.00-28.00
22.00-]() 00

Pip(byil&lt;3!)

YEARLING STEERS
Good .t: choice 500-600

75 Q0-86.50
72.00-79.00
65 Q0-7400
5200-6500

(Jffi 100

100 .t: up
FccDr Bulls 700-ICXXJ
YEARLING HEIFERS.

70 Q0-79 00
65 .oo-n.so

Otoicc &amp; good 500-600
(Jffi 750

SlEEk CALVES

'JC.OO-lO 1.00
85.00- 104.00
!10.00-95 .00
n. 00-81.00

Good &amp; choice under 300
~

400-500
5ro{JOO

BUlL CALVES

8~. 00-91. 00
T) Q0-8200

Good .t choice '00-4(¥'
400-500
5ro{JOO

05 Q0-75.00

HEIFER CAL YES ·
Good &amp; dlotce l! ndcr 300 1h

70.00-9100

n.oo-noo

~

65.00-79.00
.L 5U00-320.00
}25.00-700.00

400-500
Cows &amp; Calves (by head r
Coon (by head)
BABY CALVES (by head !

J5.oo.m.oo

Dairy

Official outraged
by firm's action
CHARL ESTO S . W\'a . (AP r
Th&lt; ctwrwoman of the Hou se
Health and Human Rrsourc es
ComJII!IICe says she· s an gered b)
Moun~rn State Blue Cross and
Dlue Sh re ld 's dec rsron to can cel
oovuag&lt;: lor 400 famtlres.
Delegale Pat Wbtte. chauwomu o( dre heallh eommtllee . '"'d
some peopk \osmg the msurance
~ban subscnbm more than '0
yean

S o-.. !U llo&lt;y ' re no longer
rot.a l:tn llhr CnJr!3 •311£1 ID dump
lhcm · Dclrom&lt; P.lfl Wbiu:. D-1'111nam saJ.l. ---If s &lt;lll!lolutely uncon" oona tll' filn onD lla:ome part
o: 001 ~ ptpii;Hion. wluch
1~ : ~ pe-a-ec111u b•gfla than the

nau om] lr&gt;'CJZ@t 010'11 .
· Thr ' o•h want to Insure
health' ~-- •!~Jell defeats the
·.o. ho. r ;'L~ of Ul3aran ce to
'X'pTI -. ·J!l- - \\h!r: md..

M.arc l

magazine. That has permitted Chile
to supply fresh fruit for the Nonhem HemiSphere during the wrnter.
The United States buys more
than half of !he grape exporu from
Chile, wh1ch may soon surpass
even Italy to lead !he world in such
expons.
Chile' s second largest fruit
export is app les. It surpassed the
United States in the late 19&amp;0s as

the largest apple exporter outside
Europe.
Wine expons from Chile tnpled
from 1980 to 1990, reaching $52
million, wrth the biggest markets
being oilier Latin American coun tries and !he United States.

COLUMBUS - The state's
27 th annual spring wild turkey
hunting season opens Mond ay,
April 27 in 38 Ohio counties
mcluding Gallia and Meigs counties, according to !he Ohio Depanment of Natural Resource 's Div isiOn of Wildlife.
Legal shooting hours are onehalf hour before sunrise until noon.
Hunters must possess a valid huntmg license and turkey permit to
hunt. The season remains open,
except Sundays, from April 27
lhrough May 16.
Last year, hunters took a record
5, 009 turkeys, a 20-percent
mcreasc over !he 1990 harvest fig ure of 4.096. Top counties in which
turkeys were harvested last year
mclude Vinton - 486; Meigs - 237;
Ross- 189; Pike- 185; and Perry180.
Noti ng very few wild turkeys
were present in Ohio 50 years ago,
the Division of Wildlife began a
relocatio n project to improve
turkey numbers. Relocation effons
m !he 1950s and 60s were limited
10 heavi ly forested counties in
southeas t Ohio, but in 1970, the
division's turkey relocation project
was expanded into counties which
contained less forested habital
Since the relocation project
bega n in 1956, the Division of
Wildlife has trapped and relocated
more than 2,CXXJ wild turkeys. The
birds inhabit about 400 townships
tn more than half of Ohio 's 88
counties. The division estimates
Ohio' s wild turkey populati on
between 40,CXXJ and 50,CXXJ birds.
The DivisiOn of Wildlife sold
28.974 n. -key permits this year and
issued 36,88 1 free penmits. About
one-third of those receiving permits
actua lly hunt. The division esti·
mates about 42,000 hunter s will
parUcipate in this year's turkey season.

Most successful turkey hunters
(953 percent) report using a caller
10 lure turkeys within shootin g
range, according 10 a Division of
Wildlife study . One of the mos t
cautious of all woodland creatures,
the wi ld IUrkey gobbler is often

attracted to the sounds of a yelping
hen. Oilier hunters, however, may
also be alented and drawn towards
!he yelps and clucks lhinking perhaps a gobbler mi ght be nearby,
instead of another turkey hunter.

"The value of Chile's agricultural expo rts is mor e than four
trmes as great as its im ports of
about $280 mtllron annually," th e
report sard . " In its agricultural
tra de with the United State s, the
value of Ch ile 's exports is more
than eight-fold thai of tts impons.' ·

7aylor
s
Sale Going On
NOW! See Ywo of tile Best Hometown Salespeople

See Dalas Sayre at Taylor Motors 11 Atbeas for tkis great car equipped witk avtomatit trans., V-6
e.giae, tit, a.ise, cassette, gold wkeels, stripes allll receive $

"New
Office-

~t:.1

See Dave Crow at Taylor Moton 11 Athm for this great
casieHe,tlt, rear defrost, ..U more Clld receive $

CCI'

eq1ipped with S·speed, AM/FM

AT SMITH'S, THE SERVICE IS GOOD
AND THE PRICES ARE FAIR.

LET US PROVE IT!
1992 SUNBIRD 2 DR.
ONLY

s19311 =;:am~

c.s11 Downt

lraad 11w car witii air coaditioaiag a1d AMIFM/casstltt!
SALE PRICE $10,150, $9,600 Ami. Fi1a1ctd, 1.75% APR.

UROU

Gollpol ~ Ola.

~

ClH-t.A'Sol! . .'\..ur:nan sa ta .
Th ~ 1mm~ ~ w-as removed
Irom th' .. ~- •lRI and tnserted
1nto ncm--ihileall&lt;-&lt;an.mlg !owl pox
' 'IrU&lt;. ul'O&lt;l "' • am..- w 1!"1 the
lv\arcl: ·; ~!U IICll!l k c!rictm

111UW14N(I

I '. .

l
'

.

·-.
....
·'

6 Park Avenues :::~ s1 000 Rebate!

I. IJ1Jtl!\1 . ~1

9. J!d'
Rod of AgRs oftwl you • choice of 6 different colored
U'anita. Wlal¥- your requirementl may be, complete
wt id• m
· •• il _,IWd with Aoclc of Agea.
Open Mon .• Tues. . Thurs. &amp; Fri. 9 :00 a.m . "t111:00 p.m.
0~ Noun by AppointiiiMit-ti93-1151111 or"" -~,j;L1

DAEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
lSI'IIttinll.._

PfL 446-IJ27

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme Court today appeared to
rein state for !his year 's elections an
Oh io legis lative remapping plan
adopted by a Republican-controlled
board.
The court indi cated rn a brief
ord er that the GOP plan for new
di stn cts co uld be used while the
justices stud y !he case funher and
dete rmin e whe ther the plan can
remain in effect for the rest of the
decade.
Today's order appeared 10 allow
Ohio 10 hold all primaries on June

2.
But the JU Stices drd not say
whe ther they would grant full
review of a ruling !hat invalidated
!h e Republican -drawn plan and
ordered a new map drawn .
Ev en if the high court granted
such review, a ruling on the meri ts
woul d not be c. pee ted until sometime in 1993.
Gov . George Voinov ich and
other Republicans on the state
Apportionment Board asked the
JUSUCCS for help.

Gullpals, ON.

A three-judge federal court in
Ohro , voting 2-1 on Marc h 10 ,
ruled th at !he Republican plan rll cgally diluted mrnonty votin g
power
Th e lhrec-Judge court said the
plan packed big -c ity distn cls wuh
m1 nori1 y volcrs 1n a manne r th at

drlutoo thetr mflue ncc m adJOtnm g
suburban districts.
Th e lower court then appo tnled
a specral master 10 draw a new map
and ordered !he state' s legrsl at.v c
pnmary elec tions bumped fr om

1 Section, 10 Psget25 cenlt
A Mullimedia Inc. Newspaper

COLUMBUS . Ohto (AP ) The internat iona l flow er show

Am cnFlora '92 opened today ,
beg inning the natio n's offrcra l
commcmora lJOil of Chn stophcr
Columbus voyage to the Amcncas
500 years ago.
Ou tsrdc the gates to !he R8 -acrc
park where !he exhrb1Uon is being
held, about 1SO people demonstrated agam sl President Bush's poli crcs and oppos ing !he celebration
of Columbus' arriva l in th e New
World .
Presrdent and Mrs. Bush were 10
attend openmg ccremonres later m
the momi ng_
"Bush repre sents 500 years of
1mpcri ali sm. That IS part of wh at
Amc riFlora repre sents," sa id
Sleven Kanner, 32, of Columbus.
"Th&lt;S land had crvilized people
and culture s es tablished hundred s

COLUMBUS . Ohro (AP) - A
fonmcr assiStant state school superintendent says real reform in !he
melhod of paymg for schools wrl l
oc cur only rf Ohio spe nds a lot
more on education.
William Plullis srud the fonm ula
for d&lt;Stributing state aid to local
school s hasn't changed conceptually since 1935. It requ ires the LegislaJure to set a level of funding .
He said !he current amount of
aid is insuffic ient to al low all the
state's 612 school disoicts 10 operate quality programs.
"To correc t th e problem you
have to ratse !he foundati on lc vel
Where do you get !he money" You
C!lhcr tak e it from somebody or
yo u put it in from the state ," he
~

"Now there isn 't anyone in this
state who believes !hal sc hool dis tricts arc going to give up massive
amounts of local revenue. Therefore, the on ly conclusion is that
more mone y will have to be generated at the state level . I doubt that
that's going 10 happen ," Phillis
said.
The fo rm er tccc her. principal
and superintendent left the Ohio
Depanment of Education last week
after a 16-year career in which his
duties included being !he agency ·s
lobbyrst in !he Legislature.
Phillis appltcd fo r th e state
superintendent's JOb last year, but
the State Board of Education htred

May 5 to June 2. Subscquen~y. !he
prrmary for the state Legt slaturc
was pushed back to Sepl. 8.
The state 's presrdentral and con~ rcs Siona l pflmary elections al so
were reschedul ed from May 5 10
Jun e 2 beca use of d&lt;Sput cs over
congressional redistricting .
Now, all primanes could be he ld
Ju ne 2.
Th e three-judge US . Dr stf! Ct
Coun panel had reJected argumcnLs
hy Voinovich an d olhers that ov erturnin g th e Republtcan plan violat -

cd pnn ct plc s cs Jabli shed by th e
Supreme Court tn 1986.
The high court that year made it
c.as1cr for blacks and olhcr mmon ues to chall enge remapping plans
!hat may dilut e th eir vottng
strength. The JUSUccs struck down
mos t of a North Carolrna lc gi slauvc rcdt stn ctmg plan, rul ing !here
wa s suffici ent evidenc e it hun !he
chances for electin g black s 10 !he

wa..;

~11

v. ork th ere The co urt

~a 1J

the Rcpuhlt can plan rn Ohto co uld
ca use ra CJ al pola r!J at ton b y
dc:. Lroyn1g ' '&lt;;oaJ 1LJorml voting" m

which ~l ac k candidat es ge t the suppan of white s
'· Subs tan t1al cuallliOll 3l voun g

swtc Lcg1slaturc.

between the races exr sts tn OhiO,"
the three -Judge court sa id. And the
issue " " whe ther the (GOP-controlled) board shou ld be penmuted
to destroy what is right rn Ohio."

13 ut the three·JUd'c court tn Jh c
Ohto case sa rd a ddfcrcm process

tc·r, 91-lo lK.

Th e case ~~ V oinm' ICh vs Qutl -

AmeriFlora '92 opens

Ohio school

POT HEADS -A pair of costumed employres strolled through
1he AmeriFlora '92 grounds Sunday in Columbus as last-minute
preparations for the international no.-alexposition were completed
for toda)"s grand opening that included a visi t by President and
Mrs. Rush. The exposition tbat ,.ill run into October has been met
with opposition by neighbo". (APl
Ted Sanders, a candidate backed by
Gov . George Yomovich.
Phillis didn't display bmcmcss
upon his dcpanure last week.
'"If 1 h•d any regrets, it' s that
we as a board and me as thctr chrcf
lobbyist . have not been able to
convi nce enoug h people that we

need to treat every ch tld w!lh a faJr
and equitabl e program .· · Phd Irs
'-11d

He al so vo1ccd regret at bcmg

rcqutred

10

spend so much ume on

1 s~ u cs of governan ce. s uch as
whether the state board 1.., elec ted

or appomtcd.

Activists pledge to refrain from
violence during abortion protests
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Abortton -right s acti vr st s shouted
obsceni ties and chanted '"Opera uon Rescue Go Away '" in a con fronta tion today with !he leader of

showed up at !he clmic . he was surrounded by opponents who vilifr ed
hrm and chanted "Operauon Res cue Go Away'"
Police led Tucci across the street

strators pracueed drrlls to escort
women seeking abortiOns IntO the
c l•nrcs. About 25 olhcrs rail icd out sr de a thutl clinic .
Opcratton Re scue spoke sman

an anti -abortion group atmmg to

whil e a woman screamed al h1m,

shut down abortron clinics in [)uffalo .
About 300 abortion -fl gh ls
demonsJra tors ga the red befor e
dawn outSide one of the clini cs that
Operati on Rescue ha s targeted rn
protests planned 10 last two to four
week s.
When Kerlh Tuccr , leader of the
natio nal anti-abort io n group,

"Nazi. Nazi!" No vrolence was
reponed
Leade rs on bOJh srde s of th e
abortron debate have said the y
would avoid violence duf!n g the
prote sts, but one women ·s group
threat ened to usc an y mean s to
keep the cl inics open .
At one clinic thi s mormn g,
ahout 100 abortron -ri ghls demon -

J e rry Retter s a1d ant1 -ahorti on
ac tivi sts were •n...-olv ed in a 24 -

A Racme m ~~ was treated Saturday e veni ng for inJun cs sustamed rn moJOh 1 cle awdcnt on Ohio 124 near Rau nc SaJUrda y

UIGE SILECnON

r .'

70,.

Ohio may have one primary election date

'"o;, urance Coml)an •e s.

H Qm P O l' •l .,., Bloomongton i lt.f"\Oos

.

,....," near 60 . C hanct' of ra in 70
percen t. Tu e-.d aJ, hlgh in mid -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, April 20, 1992

Motorcyclist injured in wreck

•

'-&gt;'.-J! P '~,...,.

Vol. 42, No. 249
1992

Copyrighted

.--Local briefs

tl4fl ,.. ••

~

Page 4

sa id.

SNOWillM
J42 s-.1 lvt.

""-m-mo

Super Lollo :
5-11!-25-27-33-40
Kicker: 757366

be costly

"My new off1ce

means I can better
se rve your family
rns urance needs
C all or drop m
an y lime

2-11 ; 6- C; 2-D :
A-S

reform will

Hired farm workers total
up from February mark
WASHINGTON (AP) - There
were 286.000 hired workers on
farms and ranches in Califomra,
Florida. Texas and New Mexico
during the week of March 8-14, !he
Agriculture Department say&amp;. That
compared with 254,000 workers
during !he February survey week.
Average March wage rat es
received by hired workers in the
four surve yed states ranged from
S5 .13 an hour in Texas 10 $6.80 in
California. Wages were higher
when co mpared with February
except in New Mexico.

Pick 3: 513
Pick 4 : 1!731
Cards :

Fre sh peach export s climbed
from $10 mrllion to $55 mtllion .
The largest buyers were !he United
States, Saudi Arabia and Sweden.

H.o44t-4Sll.
•
L rl&lt;e a good neoghbor .
S tate Farm rs there

Progress cited in fight
against poultry disease
WASHINGTON (AP I - ".f!Tl ·
caiDDt Dqmtment screnusts hav'
cJUilld the fltSt geneucalh r.ngrncmd vaccinre agatnst the hrghl )
OOOiaJiouS Marek ·s dr sease tha t
strikes poullry .
· 'lllis vaocin&lt; has already been
...,.., in lab ~ to rroteet chiCk r:as apinsl Maid' s dlseas&lt; ." sard
Kryvan Nazenan. a USDA veten ~ medical officer who works at
the Avian Dtsease and Oncolog)
I..Jiixnlor}' in East Lansmg, Mx:h
·"Now tt"s b&lt;mg eval uated for rts
c:flica:y cornpasro to other exrsung
va• a• •.
Vaccines have kept c hr cken
llods relalivel y free of Marek· s
•i
C1Ytt the last 20 yan. The
•'i• •p c.. till lar~ numbers of
birds if they are not vaccmated at
OK day ol age. It pre viously cost
U.S. poultry producers S200 mrllioa lltllually.
Bul cum:ntly used vaccme.s use
the ..t1o1e VICUS, and some mcludc
aaoes that may cau se dr sea" as
wdl•ll"""' thai Jrolllpl unmunt ty.,thedi..,...,
111e new vaccine coowns only
the F*' that~ immunuy 10

for markets, according- to John B.
Parker Jr. of USDA" s Economic
Research Service.
The United States is Chile ' s
largest market receiving roughly
40 percent of it s agri cultur al
ex pons.
"Ex ports of excellent quality
fresh grapes skyrocketed because
of the reverse season," Parker said
in a recent issue of ERS' Farmlme

Turkey season starts April 27

85.00- 175.00

Bttl

-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Chile
has become !he leading exponter of
agricultural produ cts in South
America, jumping from less than
S400 million m 1980 to about $1 .3
billion in 1990.
That spectacular growlh is due
to such factors as economic poli cies that encourage agricultural
production, modernization of fruit
marketin~ and an enet'l(etic search

Ohio Lottcn·
•

Giants
sweep
Reds 8-2

Chile's farm exports are booming

PARKERSBURG UVESTOCii JolAilKET.INC.

PI

April 19, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Pal!! D8 Sunday Times Seutlnd

around 8:30p.m.
According to a report from !he Gallia -Meigs Post of the SJ;JJe
Highway Patrol, Ronald E. Freeman, 38, was eastbound on Oh ro
124 and struck a dog !hat was attemptin g to cross the road . Freeman
was thrown from the motorcycle, which slrd off the left srdc of the
road.
The dog was k.iUed, !he report indicated. The owner of the dog "
unk nown; it had no collar and an area resident s.aid it wa s a stray ,
Jhe report srud.
Freeman was transported by the Meigs County Emergency Mcdtcal Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated
and released. Freeman was wcanng a fuU -facc helmet at the ume of
the accrdent, the report said.
Damage to !he left side of Freeman 's 1986 Kawasaki ZG-lCXXJ
Concours was hsted as light and disabling .

Dividend announced
The Bob Evans Farms board of directors declared Friday a quar terly dividend of $.0525 per share on the corporation's outstanding
common stock $.01 par value. The dividend is payable June I to
stockholders of record a tthe close of business on May 8.
Bob Evans Farms owns and operates 269 full -service . family
re staurants in 16 states, including two in Gallta County.

hour prayer vigd and probabl y
would not bcgrn their protesls un ti l
Tuesda y.
Ope ratt on Re sc ue said th e
protes ts ar c pancrned afte r las t
~ u mm c r 's

siege out std e cllmcs 1n

Wr chila , Kan , that res ult ed rn
2.600 arrestS.
Organizers on both srdes sa rd
they e'pect thousands of people 10
tak e pan rn the protesLs
The Nauonal Women 's Ri ght s
Organizing Coalition, a group thai
dcsc nbc s ns m e mber~ a~ militant

feminiSt S, vowed Sunday to do
whatever is nece ssary to keep clm tCS open .
" We ar c her e to mrltt arit y
defeat Opcrauon Re.sc uc and show
them !hey are not welcome tn th e
strccJs of Buffal o." satd Tani a
Kappner

to the

~ 1tc.

two miles to tllc cast.

With thc1r ve hi cle light s on

ll ob llop e. Gov. Geor~c
Vo rn o v. c h and Mayor Gr eg
Lasilutk a we re amo ng sc hedul ed
~ p c ak c r s dur1ng opcn1ng ccr crnonJ cs.
Amcri Fi ora 1s the prcmtcrc of

cv enJ s endorsed by th e U S.
Christopher Columbus Qurncentenary Juhil ee Comm&lt;Ssron.

The srx-month exhibit is expec ted to aJtracl as many as 6 million
peopl e to the lar gest city tn th e
country named for !he explorer. It
ends Oc t. 12.
TWenty -two nations arc repre SCII ted aJ e'htbt ts that include gardens and dru ly cntertamment. Vtsr tor s from many of those nation s
;wend ed open in g day .
The SY S mrllron botanteal theme
p:trk is !he frrst rntemauonal floral
and gard en fest ival in the UnJicd
Sta tes sancuoncd by th e lnl erna -

tJonal Association of HoruculJurc
Pr od uce rs, which se ts indu stry
standard s.
Th e Paris- based group conducted its annual indoor ho rticultural
dc s1gn compc lltlon Fnday . The

des igns wil l remarn on di spla y
through May 3.

Appeals court overturns
stay of execution for killer
SAN FRANCISCO (i\PJ - A
tedcral appeals court lifted an order
hloc ktn g the execu tion of doub le

murd ere r Robert Alt on Harn s,
open1n g the wa y for Ca ltfornta' s
lt r\l execution 1n 25 years.
Th e 9th U.S. Circu rl Co urt of
Appeal s late Sunday ove numcd a
temporary rcstra1mng order ISS ued
Sa turday by L: .S. DIStri ct Judge
M:rn lyn Hall Patel.
Th e decrsron. annou nced tn a
st atement
read
by court
, pokeswo man Guen llap" s Jc ,
mea ns Harris cou ld OC c,;ccutcd a~

planned ear ly Tuesday for th e J9n
mu rde rs of two San Dtc go tcc na ):!.cr~ - Cali forn1a 's ga s chamb er
hasn' J hec n use d srncc 196 7
The oppea ls court on Sunda y
a ho 1.1 g rcc d to hcJ~ a se para te
:rp pc al by defense auomey s The)
had :rppcal ed a San Diego lcderal
JUd ~c's

rulin g reJecting a reques t 10

bl oc k IIam s' c&gt;rcuuon based on
con tcntJ ons that prosccutOr"i with ·
he ld cvtd cncc that Harras' brother

Dan ny may have shol one of th e
boys
No men tion was mad e of tha t
appeal Sunda y nigh!
State auomcys appealed rmmcd&lt;Jtcly after Patel rss ued the tem por ary rc st1a tn1n g order barring
California from usmg gas for executi ons until an Apn l 28 hcarmg.
In rc spon .;c to a class -acti on
lawsua fi led by J11 c Amencan Civil
Ltbcnie s Unwn on heha tf of Hams

Stat e and federa l court s ha ve
e'pirccl Tu es day. 11 would have
effeclrv cly clc layect hrs excc ul!on cl en red numerou s oilier appeals for
unlil al least ear ly Jun e. The state Jb rn s, 39, whl l was conYJCLCd 1n
would have to grv c 10 day s' noli ce Februa ry 1979 of kll lmg 16-ye arfor another death warran l hearin g, o lci fri e nds Jo hn Mayeski and
:rnd an cxccu l! on coulrln 't be held Mi chael Haker so he cou ld usc
unul at least 30 day s alter th at.
thw car for a bank robbery.

Wilkinson reacts
to prison rumors
In respnnso to comm ents from Slate Senat&lt;&gt;r Robert Ney (R·
llarnesville), Reginald A. Wilkin ~t on , ll irrrtor of the Ohio
Department ol Reh abilitation and Corrertion . has responded to
n&gt;t:rnt rrportt; thai M e i~s Count)' i.'- no lon~t·r heing considered
a ~ a potential state prison 'iih•.
. .
.
\\'ilkinson 's office transmiHM a faro..,1mdr lrttrr lo th e Mr1gs
Cou nty C hamber
Commrrrc ()II Monda~· morn in~. drnying

or

~n· \

remarks.
have not yet recei\'rd &lt;1 rHomm1·ndation from lhl' prison
o..,ilt' se lection commit1('{'. The rommittt•t• is rnnlinuin~ In l'valuate th e proposed sites, and all three counties indudin~ Meigs
Cou nty are st ill under eonsidrrat icm.' ' \\' i lki n..,nn · ~ ltltrr said.
" It is my understanding thai Fn·d Forbi'S. rhairman of the site
. ; t'fr rli on rommith.'{', has also communicntcd this position to omria ls in your county, and ha."'i stat rd lh.at pres~ rrport'l infrrrin~
t h all\1e i~s County has br{'n eliminat rd v.err uroneou~. · ·
~'I

Two Meigs Junior High
pupils advance to state event

:.111cl other death -row inmates, Patel

sa1d there was enough evidence for
the court to consider wh ether death
hy gas co mti tutcs cruel and unusual pun rs hm cnl
If the orde r hadn ' t hccn overtumcd he fore Harri s' death warrant

Two Mc1gs Jun1or H1gh Schoo l
'\luclcnt s will Lak e thc1r av.ard w J!l ·
n1n g su cncc proje c ts tnto stat e

eompeuuon aJ Ohw Wes leyan l lnr,·ersil y on Saturday .
An gtc M. Hall and Teresa D.
S1 rnpsun wdl be amon g ROO JUil tor

sheriff' s departm ent reported .
McKenzie was nown by LtfcFl rght to Grant Medical Cent er
when: he dred a few hours later.
McKe nzie 's body wa s th en
token to !he Franklin Cou nt y Coroner' s offr ce, th e shenff's depart ment reponed.
The incident rs under tnve suga uon . SaliSbury sard Monday mom -

and se nio r hr gh sc hoo l studenJ .s
co mpetin g for top honors tn the
Ohro Acedcmy of Science 's 44th
:r nnual State Suencc Day .
Hall who rc .s rdes at Dexter wrll
show her proJeCt, "Do Plants Produ ce Mor e Oxygen in SJr ongcr
Sunl 1gh t. whdc Simpson's proJecl
rs "How Docs Water Temperature
Affcc t th e Re sprratron of a Gold fi sh".
The scvenlh through 12th grade
sJUde nt s qua lrficd for state-level
competition by carnr ng s upcrror
ratrngs al 16 drstrict sc ience days
throughout Ohio. Their prOJeC ts
will he judged by more than 600
r rofeS&lt; ional s in medicine, cduea -

mg.

tJ On, mdu st.r)', and scJCnc c.

People arc being questioned and
stat ements arc being taken , he concluded.

At Ohro Wesleyan for the I Slh
con sec ut ive year, Sta te Science
Day is spon sored annually by the

Gallia County man dies
after gunshot wound
Another Gal ha County mrur died
Sunday as a result of an apparcm
gunshot wound .
Dead rs Larry R. Mc Kennc, 21,
of Dry Rrdg c Road , Gree nft eld
Townshrp.
Th e Gallra Count y S he riff' s
Department rcccived a call around
II a m. Sunday mornin g in reference to a gun shot wound, Sheriff
Dennis SaliSbury said . It was Gal liJ 's third shooting fatality thi s
month, and second in four days.
Depuues found McKenzrc with

of years be tore Columbus so-called
' tJI Sl o vcr cd ' Amcr 1Ca . He took
the m as sla ve s and sJolc thelf
land," said Richard Boylan. 21. an
Ant ioc h College student.
The demonstrJtors mcluded resId e nt s ncar Frank lr n Park who
opposed th e park' s closin g for !he
cxhibit1on
Prot es ter s ~!so demon strated
Sunday by driving from downtown

a gunshm wound to the head, the

Otll n Acad em y o f S u L~ ncc. a not -

I\H·pro fJt mrmt'tcrshlp organ t:t..atJon
!oumkd 111 I X() 1 to advance sc tencr

tn Ohto.
Spcu:r l :rwarth provrded by 81
colle ges a nd twt vcr sittcs. profcso..: ton al S(X"J(' ttc". corporal1on s, and
gm: cmmr nt.a l unt t_&lt;.; w11! tx: prcscml'd Im ludcd m the spec tal award s
;He C L\h, sav mg s honds, (flps, and
~ctwi:H s lltr s worth mor e th an
)2W.WO rn cludrng th e opponumty
10 parll c ip;-tlC m the InternatiOnal
Sc tc ncc and Englllcrnng Fatr tn

Nashvill e. Tenn ., dunng May.
Al l studenls with entrr es m State
Sc ien ce Day wt ll rec eive superior.

excellent, or good certificates from
the Ohio Academy of Science, and
rncdaiiJon s from Frey Scientific of

Man sfield .
The competition wi ll be in !he
llran ch Ric key Cent er on Ohro
Wesleyan 's campu s, where studcnls will hegin arriving at 7 a.m
Jud ging wi ll run from l'i:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Public viewing will be
from t2:30 p.m. to 1:10 p.m. when
the awards ceremony wr ll begrn .

�,.
Monday, Apr11 20, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, April 20, 1992

Rain forecast for most of the week

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, April21
Accu -Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel

Sammy Davis Jr. piqued FBI's curiosity

Pomeroy. Ohio

WASHINGTON - Before his
death In 1990, Sammy Davi s Jr.
had a large and loyal following of

DEVOTED TO THE Il'ITI:RESTS OF no; MEIGS-MASON AREA

fans who knew h1m as a great

111 Court Street

cnle: rtamer and humanitarian. But
perhaps the most unusual
"groupie
of
the
smge r/dance r/co med•an was J.
Edgar Hoover, whose Davis collet:-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publbhor/Cootrollor

CHARLENE HOEfliCH
Geaoral Manogtr

LETTERS OF OPINION an welcome. They obould be leu lhon JOO
words All )elt.en are subject to ed.itinJ IIJd mw;t be 1i1oed witb name,
address ond t&lt;lepbooe number. No umipecl leu.n will be publabed. L&lt;ttcn
sbould be in good lute. addressilll issues, 001 pononalili..

Term limits aren't
directed just at people
Bv WALTER R. MEARS

AP Special Corrrspondent
WASHINGTON - The laces of Congress are gomg 10 be changmg 10
what may be the grca!Csl House upheaval in more than 40 years, but the
people who wan! terms limited by law say I! won '! be enough.
They're oul 10 change the system, not JUS! the people.
"Turnover JSn'! the Jssue," said Cleta Ml!Chcll , direc!Or of the new
Tcnn Limi!S Legal lnsU!ute. " l! isn 't JUS! a question of new face s. l! 's
Insti tutional.··
Bul there IS a chance that !he prospect of woolesale change in Coogrcss
will take the edge off a movement that has drawn lopsided support in public opm 10n polls.
So far th1 s year, more than 40 members of the House have said they
will not n.m for new terms, some to seek other offices, most to reure .
\&lt;!any of them are saddled with records of bad checks at the House bank. a
pro blem that widened Thursday with disclosure of all the names of the
-.: heck !1st.
F1ve House members hav e been defeated in primary elections, and !hal
season has barely begun.
Reapportionment stufted 19 seats among the slales. RediS!ncting with In the states confronts some congressmen with reelection trouble.
Seven scna10rs have announced they will oot seek new terms, and an
~n; hth was upset for re nomination.
~ House Speaker Thomas S. Foley, who led a successful campaign
ag31 nst a !Cnn limits measure at home in Washing!On , said the whole idea
1s "a yery b1g m1stak.e."
" l!' s sort of !hough! that somehow by term limitations you 're gomg 10
get a rtl{ation m Congress," Foley said in a CNN interView. "The rotauon
already emts.'' He S3Jd about two-thirds of the people now in Congress
weren't there 12 years ago, even before the turnover coming this year.
Given the sour mood in and about Congress, some challengers for Senate and House sealS are supporting tenn limits in advaoce, telling vO!Crs
how long they'll stay if they win.
In Colorado, Terry Considine, a leader in the national term limiiS campargn. seeks the Republican nomination 10 snccero Democratic Sen. Tim
W1 rth , who 1sn' t running for a second lenn.
Wmh sa1d voters are angry , disiUusioned, and correct in being so. He
sa1d he is. too. " Much of the system is gridlocked," Wirth said after
announcing he's leaving. "It is a system right now thai. just needs to be
blown out ... "
A House GOP leader said there w1ll be a! least 100 new members ne&gt;l
scar, probably more. '' !think it could eaSily gel up 10 every third member
of the Hou se," said Rep. New! Gingrich. who had more than 20 bank
()\ r rdrJ..fts.
lie said 11 will be a product of the Lhree Rs: "reuremcn~ reapporuon mcnt and revulsiOn.''
The mJsco nducl, scandals and abuses that g1ve rise to the lancr are
utcd by tenns hmi1 advocates as further evidence for the1r cause. Shan
LewiS, dHcctor of the Nauonal Tenn Limits Campaign, said it will add to
the anger ove r "a system gone bad ."

Letters to the editor
Event a great success
I wan! 10 take th iS opponunny lO
thank the Mc1gs Assoc1aUon for
Re tard ed CJuzc ns (MARC) for
&gt;po nso rin g the Carleton School/
\1 c l g~ lndustn es Open House on
I ucsday Apnl 7.
fhc even!, held a! the facility in
Sym use 10 support the programs'
1 X mill levy on the June 2 ballo~
~as a great success. Nearly 120
peo ple attended, mcluding politi , 1an\. ~ lill cal candidates, business
tJwnc rs. pare nt s, neighbors and
ln cnd s fro m all over the county .
The attendance and expressions of
c, uppon was ce rtainly appreciated
hy sw ff and enrollees.
Both enrollees and staff have
'"fkred from the nearly 45% bud gel cuts In 199 1 as a result of previ ous laJied levy anempts. EnroUees
ha ..-e IO') t se rvi ces ranging from
Phy 'I JCal and Occupational Thera 1'''' 111 Job Placement and Training
'll~rvllC\ St.aff lost income through
laynfh and salary cuts . Both
g r o up ~ had come lO believe thai
nobody real ly cared. Tue sday 's
~ how of mtcrcst has revived hope.
The county los! nearly S500.000

a year in additional tncomc generated by the Inve stmen t of local
funds 10 this agency (Mc1gs County
Board MR,/DD) Thousands of dol lars in pnvately ra.tscd fund s have
been spent to educate the voung
public of the soc 1al and cconomJC
value of these programs Meig s
County has los t nauonal and state
notori ery as an e:..emplary \c r..·tee
provider 10 people wllh developmenial dJsabtl!Ues.
MAR C . lar ge ly compmcd of
parenlS, ha"' an obv10us Inte rest 1n
Lhe success of the agency and lht s
levy attempt. Wtlh out 1L&lt;; passage
we bcgtn ne,;t year wtth a de fi cu
that can onl y resul t tn additiOn al
program cuL&lt;;
The efforts put forth for 1h1 s
event by clicnLs, parcnL"i, staff and
lhose who took the ume to aucnd
was JUSI the Initiative needed to
make our county sec that it is final ly time to make th e little mvest ·
men! that pays OI G div idends
Thank you'
Dav1d Milliken.
Aumg AdminiStrator

When will they be satisfied?
When w1JI Lhe env1ronmenta.Jislc;
be sa u s f1 ed' Will it be enough
when the air IS pnstine and wet land s arc abundant' I. for one ,
doubt Jl! Furthermore , 1 am begin nmg to doubt thai lhe term environ ·
mentali st !July applies in the first
place, for if ll did, why would they
be concerned wuh one area of wetla nds being replaced by another
larger, beuer quality, area of wet lands? If they !JUly want cleaner
air, why do they engage in nui sance activities designed 10 delay
the installation of the very scrubbers whiCh will provide !hal cleaner 31I?
Could the answer to all of the
above questions be that these folks
aren't really who they say they are
and !hal their agenda has nothing a!
all 10 do with the environment?
Could I! be thai what !hey really
arc against IS the right of one of

Ameri ca's hardest work.mg Jalxners, th e coal min er, to make an
hones! livmg'
Do th ey equate clean er a1r to
mean no Ohio coa l burn t at the
Gavm plant' Or, do they JUS! enJOY
the sense of bemg a celelxity they
gel by endangenng other people's
JObs? My job in !hiS case'
Please join me on May 4 at the
public hearing being conducted by
the U. S. Ann y Corps of Eng~neers
as requested by these same "environmenLalists." There we can let
everyone know that the option we
want is to bum our Ohio coal at a
scrubbed Gavin plan~ thus getting
cleaner air, enhancing we!lands ,
and, more importan~ y, the jobs of
the men and women mining the
coal for the Gavin plan!.
Gary D. Evans
V1ce Pre siden~ L. U. 1857
Racine

m !raCking everything from Davis'

''b lack nauonalist" activities 10 his
da1ing of wh1te women to his utterances aOOut the Vietnam Wai .
We obratncd Dav1s' files under
the Freedom of In formauon Acl .

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

tion was shon on songs and long
on persona l and political gossip.
T he FB I kep t a meti c ulou s
record of DaviS' poliucal benefi!
appearances and financial dona li Ons. Judg1ng from !he bulk of Large pon10ns were blacked out on
en tm s made In Davis' FBI file privacy groun ds, while anoth er
between 1957 and 1972, he wore large chunk was removed foll owthe bureau 's scarlet lener of po!Cn - mg a 1977 federal coun order that
ual subversive.
placed the deleted notauons under
For example, on Oc!. 15, 1967 , th e custody of !he Nauonal Securi Dav is attracted bureau attention for ty Arch1ves unt1l the year 2027.
his ope ning remarks at a benefit
These entnes dcscnbc conversaperfo rmance for the Southern tions between Dav is and Manm
Christian Leadership Conference Luther King Jr ., which were
when he was quoted m his fil e as obtained by the FBI during a SI&gt;stau ng that ·'all races must learn to year wir e-tapp ~n g operauo n of
li ve IOge th cr m a peaceful man - King 's residences. hotel room s and
ncr. ··
the offi ces of Jhe So uthern Chns ·
The FBI showed a keen mterest uan Leadership Confere nce

Enough can be p1eced !Ogether
to show !hal many of the conversations berwecn Dav1s and Klng ccnlercd on requests for Da\"JS 10 CW"ganize and partiCtpate 111 cc lebr ny
benefus for the SCLC The FBI
saw it anmhcr wa'l'. Da'·is" humaru r.arian efforts. we~c perceived as a
collaborauon of an mnuential fig ure wtth an orgamz.ation believed
to be innuenced and mfiltrated by
l:nown communtSlS
Dav1s never go1 tagged as an
actual commums1. Rather he was
pmpomted for " qucsuonable acuv 1Ues
The fact th at the FBI kept a
secre1 fik on DaVLs puts htm m the
company of other celebrities such
as Lucille Ball. James Cagney,
Carey Gran! and Rock Hud so n.
Hoover believed rhat "rhere was
somet hin g addi cting about a
sec re t .'· Based on th e range of
sec ret files he maintained. Hoover
was nothing short of a Junkie in h1s
appetit e for pohucal and personal
gossip.
F BI files reviewed by our

tu')reh1 ,.,

""""" ......

1001.0 1· - ·

reporter Mil:e Sharon also show an
interest m Davis' personal affairs
One senes of cn tnes relate to h1s
1960 marriage to white actre ss
May Bnu, an even! that wppcd off
public controve rsy.
Follow ing th e tabloids' lead ,
Hoover made a personal entry mto
the Davis file noun g !hal CBS
a.&lt;ked DaVIs to panl Clpale m a spec 1al program utled "Soc ial Problems of Our Time ," bu! subse quenlly wtthdrew the mvitation CJtmg DaVIs' "questionab le morals."
Wllh DaVIS the obJeCt of such
mtense mterest, the bureau cunously d1splaycd lillie intere st when
ge numc threats were made on h1s
life . The FBI was mtngu cd by a
press report in the early '60s suting
that Davis had been kidnapped
years earlier by Chi cago gangsters
who threatened h1m wirh se riou s
bodily hann should he con unue hi s
rclauonShlp with white actress Kim
Novak. flowever, the bureau softpedaled the story - even tossing
ou t the theory that it was invented
as " an aucmpt by Davis to obtam
publiCJ!y."
Included in some of the 311 reference s to Da v1s in FBI file s arc
these :
''N ewark leiter, da ted
2n4/64. made references to Mil waukee leiter to bureau dated
1/31/64, w11h lead to Newark 10
a.scertain whether Sammy Davis Jr.
had been in contac t with Marun
Luther King."
- "The foll owmg references in
the mam file on Raben F. Kennedy
... contain mformation of a critical
nature concerning the friendly relationship that existed between Mr.
Kennedy and Sammy Davis Jr....
Regarding a musical entcrtamment
show wherein Mr. Kennedy was
interviewed by Sammy Davis."
- " ... m co nnecuon wilJl the
Ra lly for Freed om in Support of
the Brrmingham, Ala., movem en t
which was held on 5{26/63 .. . under
the sponsorship of the NAACP ..
Sammy Dav1 s Jr made a n
announcement conce rning the
o ffenng that was taken. Davis was
reported 10 have pledged $20.000.
which was sa1d to represent one
wee k' s earning s In Las Vegas,
Nev."

We have a right not to know it all
Llke spectators at a marathon .
we watched uncomfortably as the
new s mcdrn staggered to the finish
of yet another Week of Bad Call s,
the 15th week of what has become
a Year of Bad Calls.
First, we saw some of the folk s
who make the JOurnalisuc Jud gment calls do unconscionable, liTevcrsible hann to one of our nauon' s
tinc sl role models: Anhur Ashe
Then \lt e sa w other new s dec id e rs acco mpli sh th e ni g hImposs ibl e - they managed to
damage the rcpu!ation of one of our
na tion' s most sham eless dema gogues: Jerry Brown.
And after each event. we heard
cd i!ors and producers JUSU fy these
decision~ With a s ingl e refrain .
tnvokcd wuh such revere nce 1hat
you'd think they 'd hf!Cd I! fro m a
Good Book left In thw desks by
G1dcons . " The publi c has a n ght lo
know."
But. forgoucn in lhw hOI purSUI! of b1g -s plash stories IS another
rig ht : Th e publi c ha s a ri ght 10
no
That' s NO ' - as In the publi c's
nght to JUSt say " no" to the news
about Ashe having AIDS. "No. we
don ' t need to know every pn vate

fact ahout Lhc private life of a pri vate person who was once (or may
s!J ll be) a cc lcbnty ."
And " no" to th e nc.. .,. s about
Brown · "No. we don' t nee d to
have eve ry allegallon by anony mous sources pushed breathlessly
at us before 1hc facts have been
thoro ughly chcckell and document..
ed .

Martin Schram
Ther e is no prtzc g1 vc n for
Media-forced Revelation, but that' s
what happ ened wh en Ashe
announced that he has AIDS, contracted m a hlood transfusiOn dur mg a heart operation Jnumaltsts at
USA Today , who arc otherw1 se
re spected, had vowed to repon on
the story dcsp1te Ashe's no -com ment It wac; a deCIS IOn Lhat could
be JUStified 1f he were a public offiCial, not JUSt a pnvate person who
was once a tcnn1s sta.r and is now
warned about prmcct mg Lhc pn va·
c y o f hi s famil y So, a trapp ed
Ashe went public.
Had USA Today taken one of J!S
ow n polls fir st, tts editors mi ght
have hea rd us answe r: ·'No. we

don' t want to innicr UfXXl tllis pri vate persnn the pain of forcing lum
10 tell h1s 5-ycar-old daughter the
trag1c news out of fear that she 'II
learn of it in the worst way, from a
TV newscaster or a taunung chdd.
who knows oo better. "
But USA Today' s misgu1d ed
dete rmination 10 inves ugatc fur lh er, m search o r confirmation .
looks like Pullller stu IT when compared to AB C New s' ru sh to th e
airwaves with th e Sl:OOp that four
faceless cops oow aUcge that mari juana and coca ine was use d a
decade or two ago at " part ies "
hosted by !h en-Ca liforn ia Gov
Jerry Brown.
These anonymous cops on
Brown 's secunty de!a.LI broke whar
llunler Thompson might call the
Silence of th e p1gs. sayi ng the y'd
found pot seeds and as he s and a
whnc powder that was cocaine m a
hou se Brown used outs1de Los
Angeles. But they never said the y
sa w him tn the room while drugs
were used, never saw h1m usc
drugs and had no proof Brown eve r
knew drugs were use d (If they
were).
By th e ume 1t go t to anchor
Peter Jennings' sen pt. however. the

above holes see med to vanish ·
" We beg1n wnighl wuh senou s
c harge s made again st ... Jerry
Brown. They go dire ctly to th e
question of h1 s honesty. integ rity
and judgmenL ... The allcgauons arc
that Jerry Brown tolerated the usc
of drugs at his pnvate home dunng
the period when he was governor
of California... "
Then came correspondent Jack
M cWethy 's report - done in
ubloid TV style , w1lh the no-name
cops speaking out of !he shadows.
Indeed , one of the cops was heard
tellin g us he'd see n through the
windows what appeared to be
"coke parties." Bu1 he never said
- and wa s neve r heard bein g
as ked - wh e th e r he eve r saw
Brown in the room while that wac;
happening . McWeth y said even
'' knowing " dru gs arc tn one's
home is a violation of law - then
again, for cops to suppress evidence of a crime IS a violauon. too .
In th1 s year, when even small
peccadiUos seem like big game, we
ge t thi s unc omfortable feel1n g
every ume we pid up a newspaper
or Oick on our TV . My fellow journalists arc rca d1n g us our la st
ri ghLs

Spring behavior mars public spaces
Forge! about the presidential
campaign, the nauonal debt. blood shed in Yugo•:lav1a and htJmk s m
Washmgton . 1;' ·, spnng, so go out
for a walk in the park - any park,
1n JUSl about any part of the country Or jog along the river, ln:.a f tn
the town square or stro ll along a
res idential street.
Tak e a good look around . No.
no t at :h e fl ower s , or the green
buds on the trees or th e tulips and
daffodil s or whateve r e lse of
Na ture's largesse may strike you.
Do n' 1 pay attention 10 the hirds,
squirrels, dogs and bugs.
Look at !he two-legged an1mals
1nstead . Observe thear behav ior.
Cr~ngc. Qu1 ckly suppr ess the
1nsunc1 to ''do some thin g,''
re mcmbenng that people erupt 1n1o
v1o lcnce at the slightest provoca un n these days . Look around some
rnore, and start keeping a mental
lis t. After you do , lei's compare

notes.
I'U offer my half of the exercise
right now. A weekend ago here in
Northern Virginia, my wife and I
took a Sunday afternoon hike along
the Potomac at Ale.andria. Literally millions of dollars have been
spent by local, federal and stale
agencies to make the river front
both accessible and lovely. Other
millions have been spent by private
developers who, guided by local
requirements but exceeding the
minimum repeatedly, have built
paved paths, provided benches and
extensive planting and even, in one

1nsLa nce, a terra ced collec tiOn of
ma ss tvc sculp tur es and artfully
plo cc d marhl c hooldcrs that arc a
unique contrth1J1ion 1D lhe public's
enjoyment

Hodding Carter Ill
The resu lt IS an mterl oc km g,
much-used pedes1nan th oroughfare
that mak es good on the propos!Uon
th at the people de se rve and will
make usc of open access to Lhc natural br.auucs of their environment.
It was an almosr hcrcucal notion
jus! a few years ago. WatcrfroniS
were for com mer c ial use o nl y
Parks along the water were a waste
of valuab le real estate. Corporan ons' on ly reason for c:ustcnce
was to ma :.. imizc prof1t s. Good
deeds need not apply.
That's all changed for the beuer.
but 11 turn s out there L'i a problem,
and it can be found in what has
been left out of thiS accounl. Too
of!Cn whco my wife and 1 stopped
looking at the river or !he sculpture
or the flowers and shrubs, we had
w see what some of our fellow
two-legged animals were dotng .
What they were doing, consciously
or unconsc iously, was competing
to see who could best spoil or
destroy the setting through wh1ch
Lhey were moving.
Take the teen-ager m th e S 150
sneak ers, the billed cap se t on
backward, who was practicing w1lh

h1 s ska teboard . As he saw tt, tll c
suffcst challenge to hiS dcrring-do
was offered by the wooden benches
Just off th e path . Repeatedly. he
would come nymg toward them . do
a reverse leap and land squarely on
lop of the seal , !Carmg long gouges
in the wood eac h lime. When we
returned 20 minutes larer, he wac;
gone. apparently ohausted by h1 s
labors or bored by the repeuuve
vandalism The gouges were nor
gone. ugl y slashes plainly vi sible m
three of the four benches In that
general vicinity .
F1ve minutes later. three young
men carne ambling along, chawng
aimlessly aboU! lh1 s or !hal. Sud denl y, one of them decided 10 take
a sho rt cut up and out of h1s surroundings, so he sprinted straight
thro ugh and on top of 30 feel of
low -lying, fr ag ile plan!S , !caring
d1 vo!S from the s01 l and branches
from th e plants . I! was a sharp
uph11l climb. and hi s mates whistled and applauded their approval
of hi s athleticism.
An old er man, ca rrying h1 s
young son behind him on his bike,
came speeding down the winding
trail from the adJacent hill shortly
th erea fter. AI lea st one couple
JUmped out of hi s way. fie had
already proved he had poor eyesight when he ignore d the " no
bicycles" s1gn at the lOp of the hill.
There's more to what we saw in
our two-hour walk than that, but a
capsule summary will do: five people individually lhrnwing paper and

cans on the ground, two more biC yclists treating the sign as though H
didn't exist and a clu!Ch of holiday
fishermen on th e bank who had
created enough garbage for a new
landfill. Al so graffiti sc rawled
across an obelisk. counUcss empt y
bo!!les bobbmg m the water and
101Ual s cut deep mto a tree.
Ju st •o there IS no mi sunderstanding,1thi s was in a m1ddle -class
an:a. All ,but two of the groups we
saw ass.a'ult..ing the cnvlfonment or
breaking the rules were obv1ously
not JXIOf, if that maucrs to anyone.
And every la st one of them was
o perating on the Simple principle
that whatever he wanted to do, he
would do , and 10 hell w1lh every one else.
We hear much these days about
mushrooming governmental Cnli tlem e nl programs , but the com plaint misses an important point.
What we ought 10 be worried about
is not just expensive dependency ,
but e;(cessive, self-centered indi vidualism. The prevailing ethos is,
' 'I'm Entitled. " I'm entit led to
treat public space li~e a public
dump. I'm enllllcd to vandaliZe
casually , pick and choose which
laws of public conduct 10 obey, and
ignore the general good for th e
sake of tran sienl gratifi cation or
convcmencc.
AI least. that's wll'd! my wife
and I sa w on a fme spri ng afternoon. Look around . What do you

sec'

MICH

•
ITotedol71 ' 1

IMansfield I 73' I•
•I Columbus I 75' I

•

W VA
KY

' ' ' ' '
Showets T-sb'ms Rain Flumes

Snow

lev

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

------Weather-----Soutb-Cenlnol Obio
Tonight, showers likely and
thunderstorms possible . The rain
may be heavy at times. Low around
60. C han ce of rain 70 per ce nl.
Tuesday. occasional showers and
thunderstorms. High in the mid 70s. Chance of rain 80 percent

Extended forecast:
Wednesday lbrough Friday:
A chance of showers or thundcrsiOnn s Wednesday and Friday and
mostly fair Thursday. Highs in the
60s. Lows in the 50s Wednesday
and in th e 40s Thursday and Fri day .

--Area deaths-Willian Duncan
Wilham S. Duncan, 61, of Point
Pleasant, died Saturday, April 18,
1992. in Pltasanl Valley HospitaL
Born !WlC J, 1930, in Gallipolis
Ferry, he was a son of the late Gilbert v. and Marcellean (Niben)
Duncan. He was also preceded in
death by a sister.
A member of the Rodney Pike
Church of God of Rodney, Ohio. he
was self-employed as an implement
salesman .
Surviving are Ius wife, Savannah
(Bright) Duncan; a son and
daugh!Cr-in-law, Ralph Sumley and
MiUic Duncan, Middleport, Ohio;
daughter and son-in-law, Janey and
Dale CoUins of Point Pleasant; and
four gran&lt;k:hildren, Stacey and
Chad Stanley Duncan, and Amy
and Jason Collins.
The fWlellll will be Tuesday,
1:30 p.m., at the W1koxen Funeral
flame with the Rev. Ricky LawwiU
officiating. Burial will be in the
Suncres1 Cemetery, Point Pleasan~
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Monday), 7 10 9 p.m.

Ted B. Perry
Ted B. Perry, 66, of 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, died Saturday.
April 18, 1992. at Ius residence.
He was born on Jan. 12, 1926 in
Logan, W.Va., son of the late Ted
B. Perry Sr., and Garnet While
Perry.
He owned and operated a TV
and appliance repair business in
Gallipolis s ince 1953, anended
First Bapust Church and coached
hnl e league baseball for several
years. He was a veteran of World
War 11. rcce1ved the Purple Hearl
m France m 1944, and wa'i a member of VFW Post 4464 and
Lafayette American Leg1on Post
27.
Surv1vors include hi S second
wife, De mm ie Green , whom he
marued in 1973: two so ns. J1m
Perry of Columbus. and Stan ley
Perry of Cheshire; one daughter,
Nina Perry of Columbus; two s!Cpdaughter s. Connie Saunders and
Rebecca Jones. both of Gallipolis;
one step -son. Michael Green of
Gallipolis; four grandchildren; one
Sister, Celia White of Tex Mill,
W.Va.; and two half-sisters, Edna
Mac Thompson of Harts, W.Va ..
and June Davis of Indianapolis,
lnd.
He was preceded m death by h1s

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS llS-960)
Published every ar\emoon , Mond11y
throuch flid.ay . I U Court St ., Pomrto)".
Oh10 by the Oh10 Vall ey PublishHlJI
Comp~ny/Multlmtdla Inc . Pome roy.
Ohio 45169. Ptt.. 992-2 156. Second clus

pc.tqt; paid al Pomeroy. Ohio..
Mt-~

The AHociated Pteu. and thf'

Association . Nat1ona l
Ad.-ertis inc ~prenntatJVe , nranham
Newtpaprr Sales , 733 nmd Avoenuc,
Nrtt Ycril . N- 'roril 100 17

Ohio

Nt•tpa~r

FQSTMA..'ITER &amp;ond addrrss changc11 Lo

Tht Ua1ly S..nltnel, Il l Cour t St ..
fomr,uy _O H lO 4&amp;769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Ca.rrier or Motor Rou.te
()rw:\\'Mk ......................... $160

Ooe Mooth...... .
. ...... .... . $6 95
One Yur............ ......... ..........•.. $83 .20

SINGLE COPY
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Da.~ly

SuMcriben not desinnclo pay the urn f.f may ~nut in ..han ce dirc&lt;:l l.o The
D•ily 54!n ti nel on • thru, sa or t2
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No a~phona by ma1l pcorm1tlt d 1n
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l'fllil•bh.
Mall8•t.«iptioN
lndde Melp Coa.nty

ll WeekL ....... ......... .... .

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26 Weeb...................................... '-43 16

5.2: Week................. ...............
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26 Wctb . .
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The Dally Sentlnei- Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

......... 123 40

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. ..... $38 .40

firs t wife, Vema Hunter in 1967,
whom he married in 1949; on e
infant daughter, Anna Marie; one
brother; one half-brother; and two
half-sis!Crs.
Services will be held 1 p.m.
Wednesday at First Baptist Church,
w1!h the Rev . Archie Conn and the
Rev . Alvi s Pollard officJating .
Burial will be in Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens.
Military graveside rues will be
conducted by YFW Post 44M and
American Legion Post27 .
Friends may call at Waugh -Hal lcy-Wood Funeral Home on Tues day from 2-4 p.m . and 7-9 p.m.
The body will be tak en 10 th e
church one hour prior to se rvices
on Wedncsday.
Pallbearers will be Mike
Marchi, Mlke Sickels, Jim Niday,
Mike Watson, Wins!On Saunders,
Kenny Hunter, Darrell Cox, and
Johnny Hood. Honorary pallbearers
will be Henry Keisling, Mike Zir ille, Bob Hennesey, and Bob
March1.

Okey VanMeter
Okey "Hooter" VanMeter, Jr.. 64,
of Mason, died Sarurday, April 18,
1992, in Pleasant Valley flospital.
A retined U.S . Anny vc!Cran of
23 years, he served during both the
Korean and Vietnam conHicts. He
also worked at Soothcm Ohio Coal
Co. A member of the SL Joseph
Catholic Church of Mason, he was
a life member of V.F.W. StewartJohnson Post 9926 of Mason,
American Legion Smith-Capehan
Post 140 of New Haven, Disabled
American Veterans, and Point
Pleasant Moose Lodge No. 731.
Born May 1, 1927, in Plymouth ,
W.Va._, he was a son of Katie (Nollcgc) VanMeter of Mason , and the
late Okey VanMeter, Sr.
Survivors, in addition 10 hi s
mother, are his wife, Dottie Ann
(Young) VanMeter; lwO daughters ,
Mrs. Ronald (Cynthia Ann)
Laudcnnil! of Northup, Ohio, Mrs .
Todd (Atishia Dawn} Russell of
Addison, Ohio; a son, Mark S.
VanMeter, Mason; three sisters,
Mrs. Arnold (Eva) Gibbs of Gibbs!Own, Mrs. Harold (Rosa lea)
Roush of Mason, Mrs. Jesse (R0r.1
Mae} Brewster of Logan, W.Va.;
five brothers, Winfield VanMeter of
Mason, John L. VanMeter of
Mason, James Edward VanMeter of
BasiOn, W.Va., George Henry
VanMeter of Mason, Jackie L
VanMeter of Clif!On; and 10
grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by
a son, Allen, and brother, Wilham
F.
The service wiU be Wednesday ,
II a.m., at the SL Joseph Catholic
Church with Father Andrew Hohman officiating. Burial will be in
the SL Joscpb Catholic Cemetery,
where full military ri!Cs will be
held.
Friends may caU at the
Foglesong Funeral Home Tocsday,
2 10 4 and 7 10 9 p.m. Rosary will
be Tuesday, 6:30 p.m., al the
funeral home.
In lieu of Howers, contributions
may be made lO the Ronald Mc Donald Houses in Morgantown,
Hunting!On, oc Columbus, Ohio.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS
Dorsa Parsons, Racine.
SA TIJRDA Y DISCHARGES None.
SUND AY ADMISSION S Charles Re mme, Rutland; Clara
Phillips, Rutland; Carol Ramsburg,
Middleport and Audne McQua~d ,
Pom eroy .
SUNDAY DISCHARGES None.

By The Associated Press
The National Weather Semcc IS
forocasung a soggy week for Ohio,
w1lh Thursday the only day likely
to he ram-free.
Showers ar1d thundcrstonns w11l
spread ove r the entire state tonight
and continue on Tuesday, forecas ters sa1d.
Lo ws tomght will be 60-65
wh1le highs on Tuesday will range
from the low 10 mid -70s.
Mor e showers and thunder S!Onns are prediCted for Wednesday and Friday, w1th mo stly fair
skies on Thursday.
The record h1gh temperature for
lh1s date at the Columbus weather
station was 85 degrees m 1896. lbc
record low was 22 in 1904.
Sunset !Onight will be a! 6:4 5
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be a!
8:15 a_m _
Showers were sc attered today
from the Plains through the Great
Lakes re gion and into the Mid Atlantic sUles.
Severe lhunders!orms developed
ahead of a large cold front m the
Plains states.
Rain fell early today In S!.
Louis, Cleveland, New York City ,
Washington and Richmond, Va.
On Sunday, a tornado !Ouchcd
down in Trinity , Texas, north of
Houston, damaging several homes
and the roof of a high school gym nasium and knocking out power for
about three hours In the community
of 2.600. police sa~d . No InJuries
were rcponcd.
Base ball -me hail fe ll outs1de

Stocks
Am Fie Powe r
.32
Ashland 0 11 .
. . 32 1/X
AT&amp;T..
.... .. ... ...... 42 5(1l
Bank One.
..42 3/8
BOb Eva11s .
. .... 2H S/8
Charming Shop..
. .... .. 2~ 1{2
Ci!v Holding .
.. 19
federal Mogul.
......... 17 1/4
Good yearT&amp; K
. . n 7/8
Key Ce ntun on .
. ... . IR 1{2
Lands End ....
.J4 1{2
L1ml!cd Inc..
. . 24 l/4
Mulurncd1a Inc.
..... 27
Rax Rcstauranl..
. .. I 7/1!\
Robbms&amp;Mycrs .
17
Shoney's Inc
21]/4
S!ar Bank .
lR 3/4
Wend y lnt'l ................. 12 l/8
W orlh~n g t o n In d. .. .
. .... 23 3/4
Stock reports arc !hr 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by 1\lunl.
Ellis and LOI'wi of Gallipolis.

Ausun, the Nauonal Weather Service said. Thunderstorm wind gusts
up to 60 mph were reponed in pariS
of central Tc&gt;as.
A cold wmd brought snow into
U1e northern Plains. Snow fell early
today m BISmark, N.D., Rapid
Cny, S.D., and Casper, Wyo . On
Sunday , up to 15 inches of snow
fe ll in the Black Hills of South

.

Hospital news
llolzer M•dical Center
April 17 discharges
Mrs. Enc NIChols and daughter;
Mallory Rodgers and Paul Sayre.
April 17 births
Mr. and Mrs. Ste ve n Ohlmgcr.
daughter. Long Bouom .
April 18 discharges
Shawn Dresbach. Mrs . Roher!
Langley and son and Juani!JI Mur phy.
April 18 births
Mr. and Mrs . Mlchael BurgC!l.
Well ston , son and Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Pomeroy, tlaugh!Cr.
April 19 discharges
Cassandra Hac~er, Mrs. Steven
Ohlinger and daughter; Linda Russell and Andrea Taylor.

nali Sunday afternoon . Temperatures reached
!he 70s just in time for the Easler w&lt;•&lt;•kend. (AP)

Revco could exit from Chapter 11
TWINSBURG , Oh1o (AP) Rcvco D S Inc . sa1d today 11 had
fil ed a req ue st 1n lJ .S. Bankruptcy
Coun seekin g the withdrawal of all
appeals of its reorganuation plan
If th e reque st JS granted by
Judge Harold Whnc, U1e drugstore
cham could c. it Chapter 11 proteettOn from credit ors by th e end of
May, the compan y srud m a news
rc\ ea;;;c
Tw o former officers of Lhe company - whic h so ught bankruptcy
coun protection alter a failed lever aged buyout in July 1988 - had
filed appeals of the plan, approved
by a vo te of credit ors earlier th iS
year.

defiCit bJ.Ianccs we re the cemetery
fund $7,793.68 wuh rec e qlls of
S I ,405.32 and disbursem ent s of
55 181.83; the Arts Council with a
dcfJCJ ! of $1.254.27 w1lh receipts
of $354 07 and dJSbursemenLs of
S37 4 33; and the Iss ue 2 fund
show1n g a deficit of $28, 120 .90
with rcCCJ pls of $2,946.20 and no
dt sbursemcnL'i.
Balances in oth er fund s. were
fir e equipment, $7090.67, fif e
tr uck, Sti ,833.25; ODNR wa Je r
$2,108 .60: economiC development ,
S 128 . 17; publi c transporta ti on.
51 ~.908.69, water sys!Cm impm ve mcn l, $2,200.55; water, $4,3 22. 12,
sanitary se we r. $7,183 57, water
rnct er tru sl'i, $2 1.864.47; rev olving
!o:m fund , $4,52] .12: refu se fund,
S\122 .72: a nd liner co ntro l .
S-1.704

EMS units answer 14 calls
UniLs of Mei gs Emergency Services answered 14 call s over th e
Easter weekend.
On Saturday at 5:29 p.m., Rut land squad went to Sale m Street.
Linda Ba1lcy was taken to Pleasant
Va lley Hos p1tal. AI 5: 48p .m.,
Syracuse unit was sent 10 Fourth
and Crook Stree ts . Tond a Barry
was tran sported to Veteran s Memo rial Hospiul. At 6:58p.m , Racine
umt went to Cross Street for Man lana Jarrell, who refused trcalmenl.
A! 7'43 p.m.. Middleport unit went
to Y1lla ge Manor Apartm cnl s.
Gabnel f11ll was taken to Vc!Cran s.
At 7:58 p m . Middleport squad
took Ed11h Reed from Ov erbrook
Center to Veterans. AI 8:30p.m ,
Racine unt L"i we m to Stale Route
124 and took Ron Freeman 1o Vet erans

Valley and Flonda and 111 the 50s
and 60s 111 '&lt;ew Eng land. Temperalures were forecast 10 be m th e 30s
and 40s in Lhc northern Plains, in
the 50s an d 60s 1n the ce ntral
Plain s; m th e 70s and 80s in the
southern Plams : in UJC 80s and 90s
m so uthern Ari:r.ona and Southern
California, and in the 50s and 60s
m the PacJfic NorthwesL

'

,EASTER FUN • Andy and Kelly Ouerhcin
enjoy a patch or tulips with their 9-month -old
son John, in Eden Park, near downtown Cincin-

Conde releases report
on Middleport finances
A balance of $45.4 72.20 m all
Middleport funds as of March 31
wa.s reported by Brian Conde, vil lage clerl&lt; -trcasurcr.
Recc 1pls for the month Jotalcd
$87.434 65 whil e diSbu rse ments
to!alcd 5 11 5,795 OR.
In th e genera l fund , rece 1pt s
wta led $29,584.03 , with diSbursements of S 15,676.52. The safety
fund showed no rece1pts but dishursemcn !s of $ 17,796.94, whil e
the in co me tax fund showed disburse ments of $2.673 25.
In the stree t main tenance fund
there was a dcfiCII of 5 13,2014 3
after rc ce 1pts for the month of
$4, 710 .62 and disburs ements of
515,255 .7 1 The min1 -go lf fund
also show ed a defic11 of $983. 10
with no receipts and d1sbursc mcnL'i
of $339.62. Other fund s with

Dakota. Wmd gusts up lO b6 mph
were rec orded at the airport in
Rap1d Cny, S.D.
Th e h1gh tem peratu re for the
nation Sunday was 97 a! McAl len,
Tc.as.
Temperatures today were fore cast 10 be m the 70s across most of
the nation cast of the M1ssiss ipp1
RIVer, in the 80s in the cen!Ial Ohio

On Sunday 31 12.30 a.m.. S) ra cu:-.c un itS we n! 10 a washdown at
M1n crsvt!lc. fol lowtng an au to
:.H.:c idc nt At J·4"2 a.m .. Rutland un11
we nt to Beec h Grove Roa d and
took Chn s Ra yburn to Pleasan t
Valley At 5 28 a .p1., Rutland
squad wen\ 10 Union Street. Clara
Phillips wa&lt;.; taken to Ye1cran s. Al
5"39 am , Syrac use squad respond ed to Stal e Ro ute 7. William
Grueser was treated but not transponed.
AI I :45 p.m., Syracuse squad
was sent 10 State Route 681. Jam1c
Brannon refused !Iea!rncnL AI 2: 19
p.m.. Sy ra c use squad wa s diS patched to Reedsv ille. Curus Ca uth orn was taken 10 SL Jose ph flospl!al AI 4:56 p.m., Syracuse uni!
went to Th1rd Street. Hel e n
Will1am s was Lak.cn 10 Veterans. At
6:34 p.m., Racine unil was sc m to
Troub le Cree k Roa d for Jame s
H10kl cy. He wa_s taken to Holze r
Med1cal Ce nt er. A! 10:08 p m ,
Middleport unit re spond ed 10
Drowncll Avenue for El101sc Ehlm.
Eblm was taken lO Holzer

The offiC ers. former Cha1nnan
S1dncy Dworkm and former President Wilham Edw ards, had ObJCC !cd to a scul cmcm between Rcvco
and Salomon Brothers, ant! had
also obJ eC ted to a co urt den s ion
st nkin g down thelf claims for
mdemmf1cauon by Revcu .
Both form e r offiCer s have
agreed to drop lhw claJms. Revco
said toda y.
"We're pleased that thi s agreement ha s been reach ed ," Rcv co
Cha~nnan Boake Sells sa1d m the
news re lease. · · ll removes the last
roadbl oc k w Revco's emergence
from Chapter 11. "
Under the la test am endment 10
the plan, Rcvco w11l pay $3.5 mil lion to uadc creditors The money
1s 10 be rai se d throu ~ h a stoc k

offer ing of about 467,(X)() share:-. at
S7.47 a share .
The rc..' vts1 on wtll not rcqu nc a
new vote hy crc.d1tors.
The lates t o ll cri ng bring s th e
tau! numOCr ol R.cvco shares lD be
o! lcred under th e reorganization
plan to ncar!) 1.5 million, ol wh1 ch
about 1.4 milll on arc 10 be oflered
IIrs! 10 subord10a tcd debt holders,
and about 36 mtllton share s outs!anding overall. the company sa1d .
Th e ChJCago 10vcstment group
ZcllChilmark has sa1d 11 will buy
any shar es no1 purcha sed hr st by
subordmaJed debt holders.
Rev co has about 1,150 drug s1orcs in mnc eastern states The
pnvately held company had sales
of Sl 9 billion m 199 1

-Meigs announcements-Auxiliary to me-et
Women' s Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hosp1tal w11l meet Tuesday at th e conference room of tl1 e
hospital.
Prom mreting plannt'd
A mce t1ng o f paren ts to help
w1!h Jhc 1992 prom at Meigs H1gh
School w1 1l be held Tuesday at 7
p m. a! th e h1gh sc hool.
Oinm·r planned
There will he a smorgas horcl
d1nner ~ ~ th e Wdkcsv JIIc Pyilnan
11311 Sa turday a! 4 p.m. Cm t" S5
ad ul LS ant! $2.50 for chli1lrcn. PubliC ul v! tcd . Pr occct ls go to th e
huildm,e funcl .
Sorority lo meet
Prece ptor Rcta Beta C hapt er .
Beta S1~ma Ph1 Soronty wtll m c~ l
Thur -.: d:.ly :! I th e Ep i SCO p ~!l r:nt.~ h
II OU\1..'

Dance planned
Th ere wdl he :1 dan ce f."ncl a}
!rom 7- 11 p m al the M1ddk por1
A111 cncan Lcg10 n Anno. Rc!re.... h·
mt: nl" avatlahl e Puh lic invltLAI
Library board to meet
Th e floard of Directors nf the
Mctg..:: County Public Ltbrary will
ml'e l Th ursday at I p m at th e
ltbrary 1n Pom eroy
Dance pl&lt;~nned
A rouncl and ~q uare dance o.; pnn ·
sorc&lt;l hy the Tuppers Plam s Vf·W
Post Nn 9053 and Lad1c s Au.d mv will he he ld Friday from 811 '10 p.m. Mu siC wi ll he hy th e
l! app y llnllow Boy-; Publi c 1nv1 tcd
Joint meeting planned
Th e Tu ppers Plams VFW Post
No. ~0'\ 1 and Lad1es Aux 1l1ary wil l
mcc l Th ursd ay at the post home .
D~nncr will he -a 7 p.m. followed hy
m cc 11n ~ All member s ur ge d to
attend .

\\'omen 's fellowship
The Women' s Fe llows hip wJI I
mee t Thurs day at the M1ddl epo n
Church ol Chml. A program will
he p rc~c nt c d by 1h c lad1 cs of th e
hoq church
AM VETS lo meet
Ther e will be a n AMVETS
mc ct tn~ Su nday at '2 p.m at th e
D A.V. llall 20 1 Mulherry Avenue.
Pomeroy . Off1 cc rs w1ll be elected .
D of A to meet
Ches ter · Co un cil No 321,
Daughlcrc; of Amenca. wdl mec 1
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m at the hall.
Tl1c rc wt!l be a sllcm aucuon hy
the Good of the Order Comm J!!CC .
Rclrcshments served.

License granted
l1 ce n&lt;.;c ha s bee n
gr:m1c &lt;l m Mc1gs Cou nt y Probate
Cou n 10 D(111ald Wayne Hoscha r,
~4. Pu111croy. an d JaniCe Faye Juslilt" , 2h. R,Jv&lt;:rh wood , W.Va.
r\ m:trfl:l \!1'

NOW OPEN FOR
IRING SEASON
Complete liae of
Biddlag and Vegetable
Plants, Bloomi•J and
Foliage Han11ag
Baslltts, large
Selectioa of Sllrullbery
aad Trees.
Ope• Daly 9 a.m. Ia 5 p.m.

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Syracuse 992·5776

FHEE I :\SPEt:TIOI\

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All Brands)

DOWNING CHILDS

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Samt Day Servkl
All Parts blra
Includes: Cltaalng, Odlng,
Adjustments, Greasing.

TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 4:00 to 7:00P.M.

FRUTH PHARMACY·
786 N. Second Ave. • Middleport, Ohio

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday,Aprll20, 1992

Page-4

Giants, Astros on top in NL West
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Two teams will be playing for ftrst
place in the National League West
tonight at the Astrodome, and
they're not the Braves. the Reds or
the Dodgers.
No, it 's the San FranCisco
GianL~ against the Houston Astros.
two teams which used weekend
sweeps to tic for the diviSion lead
with identical 7-5 records.
"I told aU of you guys in spring
training that nobody was gomg to
run away with thiS divisiOn," Will
Clark crowed Sunday after th e
GiantS downed the Cmcinnau Reds
8-2 for a three-game sweep.
Clark, who collectCJJ his I ,OOOth
maJOr league hll in a 7-3 v~etory
Satu rda y. added two RBl s and
ra1sed his batting average to .l95 m
the Giants' fourth strmg ht win
The G1ants, who were nev er
above .500 in l '191. batted .34 7 1n
the sweep, outscored Cmc innat1
22-8 and lnn 1tCd the injury -battered
Reds to a . lH9 average and one
cwa-base hn.
"We ca ught the Reds at ihe
nght time," Clark said. "They're
all banged up and we were able to
beat their top three starters We
took advantage of misUikes."
Tom Browmng was chased in a
SJx -run fir st Saturday . One day
later. T1m Belcher (l-2) gave up
four runs 1n the first inning and
trailed 7-0 alter the th1rd.
··You get into that and it' s like a
flrcstorm." Belcher said. "When
you get your startcrs blown out two
&lt;lays 1n a row. n's tough to recovcr. "

Singles by Darren Lew1s and
Willie McGee got the Giants going
1n a firSt mning that included Chris
James' run-scoring double and RBI
si ngles by Robby Thompson and
rookie J•m McNamara.
Thompson's double, rookie
Royce Clayton's run-scoring triple
and RBI smgles by McNamara and
LewiS d1d the big damage in the
third ~nmng, enabling John Burkett
(1 -l) to coast to his fust victory.
Burkctt retired the flfst 12 Reds,
y1e ld ed a run on two hits in the
fifth and f~nished with eight slfOng
~nnings. givmg up five hits and one
c:lfTled run .
The Giants played wuhout ailIng third baseman Matt Williams
(tonsilitis), but the Reds were without four-fifths of the1r infield Barry Larkin, Chris Sabo, Hal
Morris and Joe Oliver.
"O ur pitching will straighten
out. but I'm sUirung to be concer ned about our hitting," sa1d
manager Lou Piniella, whose Reds
begm a three-game senes torught at
Los Angeles.
Larkin. who has a sprained left
knee, is expected to mtSs the enure
scncs. Right-hander Jose Rijo will
ht~ve

his sore clhow examined

today and could mtss hi s scheduled
slart Wednesday.
Elsewhere in the NL. n wa s
Pittsburgh II, Philadelphta 0: New
York ll , Montreal 6: St. Louis 4,
Chicago 3: Los Angeles 4, Atlanlll
2: and Houston l. San D1cgo 0 m
II innmgs.
Pirates II, PhiUies 0
Pittsburgh manager Jim Leyland
is doing just fine wnhout Bobby

Scoreboard
NBA final standings

In the majors .. NATIONAL LEAGLE

EASTER:\ CO,FERENCE

[ulrrn IMvlllon

Tum
Puubutgh
Monuu.J
St. lam
New Yorl

L

Pct.

9

l

6
6
6

6
6

"'
,.,
lOO
lOO

7

f*\11

Tr1m

, """""

\\

l - ~ew York
l ·:--.'e...- k~y
t · M1arru
flhLI•ddplua
Wuh!llgton

)j

'

'' ' ""'
m
""
Westrrn Dhillon
7
7
7

''

C lndnn1tl - - - - · •

1
7

HI)UII.OI\

AtlanUc

r.ll

6

Chic~

Phlla

w

.

Stll Fnn&lt;:UCo
Sw Dlcso
Lot Mgclet

6

Atlanu. .

l

m

l
I. I

~)\,

"'

II

621

'"
427

21

ll
16
l6

46)

""

'};,

)(]l

61

10

'Db

"' "
" "'"'461 "
"""II
"
]4

t · [kltO! l

• '" ""
462

40 42

l lndiar\1

/Hianu
r n.r101!c

Saturday's scores.
Ch!CI!rJ 5,

GB

J8 44
]\

z-C.ll•c•go

.461

P&lt;L

]I
]1

Ct ntrtl Dlrislon
6'1 I\
l -( 'lt-Yt-land _........ 57 H
.•9~

l8l

'

L

51
\I

40 42

Orlandu

58]

Oh-~lon

w

27
29

1711
178

11

ll

]I

M:l wtu.lr.oc

]6

Low. 4

M~X~tru.l R, New York 6
PltUburgh 9, PhU•dcljil1• 2

San FnndKo 7, Clndn nail J
Houllon 4, San [hego 2, 10 1nrung1
Lo. An~~oelr.~: 7, Atlantl)

WESTERN CONFERE:\CE
Mld"'t"JLI DI~Utlon

Sunday's scores
Pnu~

I\, Ptuladdptu..a 0

Ouctgo

w

L

P&lt;L

)' IJu.h

ll 27

San Antomo
llourton

"

671
l7l

1

New Yo!t I!, Mmtrea.l 6
SL [.ouLJ4,

Tum

3

Mmot$011

Purtbr&gt;d
• ·loold cn Stile

2·0), 8 O~_p m

Sill hancu.co (Hurt. • 0-1 ) ll I lou!1on
Stn D1eRn

11

]I

1:1 (,{1

"''"

"
" " "'
ll
rn

40

"'
]41

12
14

67

l1

j}J\

r

~ame!'i
Jl!mburs,h (fomlm 2- 0 ) at Moruul
(I IJI 1· 1), I 35 p m
Pl'. lladelph.ll (Abbott 0-2) tt Chtogo

(l-'ortugal\.{1), 8 )5 p m
Atltntl (Lctbnndt l I)

1.1

291

Parln.; Dlvhlun

Today's

{M addu~

lll

"

Dill ••

'

40
\i

42

Dawa

HOUAOn I. San Otego 0, I I ln!Uil81
San FrandKo I, Clntlnn.all 2
Lo. Mgcla 4, Atlanll 2

]l

CB

(1..e1Yeru 1-1), IO~pm
Clnclnnall (Swtndt:ll 0-t) II l...M An
arltt (OJ~ a t-Z ), lO :J~ p.m.

ll 27

~

1'hocrlu
, Sc.tnle

4 '/

• L !\ Cl.J ppt'"rl

4\

• LA Wen

41

2

"' ""'
1\
17

"' "

4

10

)2-l

\1
Sa enmcnto
l clmc hiOd pltynff bert~
y chnchiOd diY\.Ii&lt;ll 1.1\J~
1 chn rhed cnnferen~ utlt

"

Tuesday's

~ames
PhJadclph11 (Aahh~ 1-0) tL Chtctgo

Pltttburgh r"/ca&amp;le 0-01 11 Mon treal
Otancy 1-0), 7 15 p m
St Lw-1.1 (Cotm!Ct 0 I) 11 New Yo rk
(Goodat I I). 7 40 p.m
San Frt.l1cti(;O (S...-Jt J - 0) 11 llnu non
(Do¥o"cn 0.1 ), K J5 pm

Su nda;'s o;;cores
~1mt1&lt;'-ll • ~ I '10. ( 'hu1ottc 107
I Llh 101 \ tn i\ntr~nJO QO

(;olden \l-l ~t :nil . SutLie 106
l'h rx:n ll ] 1 ~ 1 llnwllon Q7
I 'l (~fl•n 'l Ill. Mlanta 10"
;o.t lk'rver CJ2
I ;\ l•l:r" l){l I A r-:1 ppcrx !OX

n.u.,

(J I

AMERICAN LEAGLE
•:utern Di vision
w I. P(L
Team
10 J 7(,9
Toronto
~c...-

York
Aalumare
n~""

MUwaukeL

f, II

•'

667

1\

6

\

'&gt;4\

I

l
l

\

lOO
4l\

",,

6

10• ''"
&gt;11

Ckwt land.------4
J
Devoll.

'

Stan it•_,. Cup
di"ision srrnifinals
\:Hurdot) · ., ...cores
\f ,rnr, .. :. -:

Wum j'&lt;',l( \ V• no n u ~er ~- Wrnn1pcg

I hi• ·~"I \ : l.o&gt;ur.1 : f111u go leads

•' '' '"'
""'
'"'

c . W'omu
Scau.lc

MinnQoO

7

\

6

)

·11&gt;7

4

7

Y.l

Sulurday's
Bdwnn~ b, lktm~t
01kl•nd ~.Tu n l

, ,~,

'

\u nda\ ·.,~cores
\rfifl,

n~

Tofmlll 2, Rc.::m 1
N,.. \'rwk 14., n~ul.tnr1 n
Suttle 5. Mllwtuk-tt 1
C..hfoml-l 5. K•n•u Cny 1. 10 1nn:nll1
0\KISO 4 , M umc.nu )

J\.,cm

~.

V. .-h ,n j(.• lrl '· I ~ILir.t~rfVl I. Wu ~. mg
.r.;Loh 1r11N. : I)
-.., v H" ' ,l("~' .' . " c"" lt:nq I, ... Y
K~n~rr" lrad 1rnu I II

\t

Today's eam~s
Toromo (Key 1-ln
0-0), II u~ • m

11

Bostnn (H~I.~ ;h

Clutland (Scuddu 0 I) 11 'ljt"'
York (l"trttl-1), I p .m.
Detroit (K.wg l -1)

l)of,ald \ -0), 7

3~

ll

lltlrim nrr

r~c

pm

Cah fom11 (Gnhe I - I) 11 Od.!1nd

(Siu11ralu 1·0), !Oirlpm
MmneJotl (Ttplnl 1- 0 )

11

[_.tll,J IJ If ! ' hJU~O,

Seatt lr

(Johnaoo 1-0), I 0·05 p m

l~

8 )~

1' m

rm

I dmonton ac lAIII An(telcs, 10 ]) p m

~ames
ll&lt;~rtford •t ~fun tre.~l. 7 ]~ p m
lluff aln lt Horton, 7 3~ p m
New le~J.c y•tr-.· '{ K•ngtn , 7 J~ pm
P1111hurgh al Wuhmg\&lt;m, 7 33 p m
( All pl1yorf malchupa art bu i·Of-

Tuesday's

~WYtfl

wrlu)

Transactions
11~-. ball
Amtrlc.an tea11LH'
BAI TIMOR[ OKI01 £S - Signed
f1m Lay1n1 . pllchCT , lO 1 eontnct W1lh

Rochutc:r of Lhe

Tuesday's games
Botton (Gudirrer I -0) 11 Md wlulee

(Doou 0-0), 7 05 p.m
Clt•tland (Coo lt 0·1) 11 Toronto
('Mnrr\.11-0), 7:35p.m.

n:XAS

(McCukill 1· 1), IJ :O"i p m
OalumDI"e (Meu 0- I) tl K1nsu Cuy
(Gublcu f}.1), R-35 p.m
Detrott (Gu!Ldsa1 1·2) 11 lcxu (W1tt
l -1),835p.m
c.LiomL• (Rohlni(Jn 1-0) at Otk.Und

(Stewart 1·0), 10:0S p.m
MiMNOll (Mahome. 0-0) at Seaule

ln~.enuuooa1lc..IKUC-.

RANGERS -

Acu~1Led

Julio

Fran.;o, s.eeond bateman , from the 15·d•y
d1Jahled lu t. Opr.tmcd W1ync ROIC'Ithtl.
pt tcher . lO Oklthoml Ctly of the Arnrn r •n Auo.cttllon

NaHonal Lea;ue
mTSBURGJI Plli.A TES

New York (leary 1· 0) at ChJctgo

(Dd_,ucia 1-1), 10.3.5 p m.

7

WIMr pcp, al VarxouYer , \0 )) p m

Nrw Vor k ~. Clu~tl1nd'
Halumo~ }. fktrott 2
ChlCI8n 4 . .""'.LnniSOLI I
Seattle I 2. M1lW1uk« 9
CaW'omLI 11 K.tNII Cu y, JlPd . nfLn
Tuu 6, OU.l•nd .'1

Rec1Ucd

Dertn11 Lamp, pitcher. 1nd Don Sl.tuJht,
Cllchcr, rrom Bufhl o of Lhe Amcf1 Cin
A.uocJIUOil

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS l'l• ccd Mttk Leonard. outficlder, on the
15 d•y druhled liu AclivatedKevtn
llau. outficlder, fron (})e 15-day di..ubled

'"'

(!.l~~ I N Nl ~l

\UlSDII

OPEH HOUSE

ALL UNITRON
PRODUCTS DURING
THIS EVENT

Tonli::hl's gamK
'-l in nr.s'~"" ot Dc:tn ~t .

scores

EI.Ur.,I.I N IOJ.T]N[{~ \ATU8[)AT &amp; ~UNI)IT

20%oFF

!luffa1o luds le

j ,.

: •ll

Rou.on 5. Torooto 4

with an off-speed pitch, it really
messes the hitters up."
The curve ball is so mething
B1chle added to his rcpertolfe last
season and it' s made him much
harder to h1L
"I've alway s had a lillie curve
ball, but nothing like I can throw
now," said Biehle, who was 3-5
w1th a 2.5 1 ERA and 101 strikeouts
in 1991. "I was mainly just a fastball pitcher. When I was a fresh man, coach Schearing put me in
suualions where it wasn't going to
des troy my confidence and it
would help me along ."
Biehl e, who ranks 22nd in his
class with a 3.69 grade-point average, has rece ived a scholarship to
attend Oh1o SUite.
He also was recruited by Aorida
SUite, Indiana, Kentucky, Miami of
Ohio, Southern California and
UCLA.
Biehle could have an important
decision to make this summer.
Some maJOr league scouts behevc
he has a chance to be selected in
the June free-agent draft.
"I 've heard a lot of stuff about
ge tting drafted. but I'll JUSt have to
wait and sec," sai d Biehle "I
thmk 1f I keep puching the way I
am now. I'll have a good chance."

II

IL -~' • ·" t.

SCf1re'l

Biehle's fastball burns
even in cold weather

APRIL 22 THRU 24
8:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.

\1 , n: rr•• ,' II M~.Jnnl 0. ~rtltrt.illud.l

1

Sunday'~

the flfsttwo innings to hand Southem a 12-2 non-league baseball loss.
Batey picked up the win for
Wahama with rcltcf from Ross m
the fifth innmg. They combined to
fan one and walk two.
Jeremy Dill suffered the loss for
Sou th ern with one stnkeout and
four walks.
Wahama had eleven hits, led by
King with three smgles and a hom e
run: I. John son a doubl e, Mayes
two stngle s. Roush a double and
single, and T. Johnson a single.
Southern hitters were Billy
Jones w1th a sin gle , Ky le Wiel:.line
a single, and a double and single by
Andy Grucser.

I '

'"'

I

I

K.tnuJ C11~

8y SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Another star in the four -man .
Sou thern pitching roUition began to
shine Saturday afternoon when VIS lUn g Southern avenged a 2-1 defeat
from earlier in the week by defeating Eastern by the same score in
area h1gh sc hool baseball action .
Andy Grueser, who was ncar perfect, was the star on the mound and
at tl1c plate.
Although this game took on th e
sa me grueling fashiOn of la st
Wednesday's game, 11 did not take
as long to complete. Grueser not
only won pitching laurels, but also
was the batting hero as well .
In the top of the seventh mnin g

I r1m.,r:"n 1 I "' ,, n ~ cla 1, Ed m onlr.., ,:, &lt;rr:&lt;::~ I I I

({, 1

HE'S OUT, UMP!- Cincinnati Red~ shortstop Freddie Benavides (len) yells to the umpire that San Francisco's Darren Lewis is
out at second base during a steal attempt in tbe lirst inning of Sunday's National League game in San Francisco, which tbe Giants
won 8-2. The umpire disagreed and declared Lewis safe. (AP)

CINCINNATI (AP)- The
chilly spring temperatures have
affected the velocity of Mike
Biehle's fastball. K1ngs High
School coach Gary Schearing say s
it isn't quite up to speed yet.
That ISn't good news for future
opponents.
"Right now, Mike's fastball is
averaging anywhere from 80 to 90
miles per hour," said Schcaring .
"But he will throw harder once it
gets warmer. His first two games
were in 30-degree weather. He' s
simply going to get better and better as lime goes on ."
Biehle hasn 't exactly struggled.
Jocy Hensler walked and stole sec- The 6-foot-1, 190-pound left-han ond base. Grueser worked Terry der, considered one of the nation 's
McGUire to a 2-2 count, then si n- top 50 high school pro spects by
gled home Hensler wtth the win - Baseball America, allowed five hits
ning run for a 2-l Southern win.
and one earned run in his ftrst four
Southern had hut two hits : two appearances this season.
smgles by Grucser, who went 2-3
In three starts and a relief
appearance. B•ehle recorded 53
on the day.
st rikeout s in 22 innings, for an
In the f~rst inning, Eastern had average of 16.9 whiffs per game
taken a 1-0 lead. when McGuire and 2.4 per mning . He wa s 2-l
doubled and advanced on a ground with an 0.31 earned run average
out by T1m Btssell . He then came and his only defeat came in perhaps
home on a Jeff Durst single .
his best ouung.
All was quiet on both offenses,
Facing Little Miami, Biehle
as Durst and Grueser went through struck out 18 in seven innings and
the re spec tive batting orders with tossed th e second no-hiller of hi s
ease. A great pitching baule, simi- high school career. But he lost th e
lar to last week 's McGuire -Jon es game 2-0 as his teammates com battle in Racine had developed.
mitt ed five errors. Biehle also
threw a no-hitter last season. strikDurst ran out of innings after in g out 17 in a 2-1 viCtory again st
three nawless frames in which he Maso n.
fanned SIX and walked just one.
Biehle struck out a season-high
McGuire came on in relief to fan 19 in hi s !992 debut, a 5-2 triumph
four and walk two. while suffering aga1 nst Goshen. He also fann ed 13
the loss.
in the Knights' 6-2 victory in the
In the r,fth inning Grueser si n- fir st game of a doubleh ead e r
gled, went 10 second on a sacrifice agai nst Lebanon. B1ehle re!Jcved in
bunt and scored on a passed ball th e second game , giving King s a
from the catcher to ti c the score.
sweep by striking out th e side to
That set the stage for Gruescr's save a 6-5 victory.
heroics later in the game.
"I've got more co ntrol thi s
On the mound, Grueser fanned year,'' said B1ehle, who struck out
ll Eastern batters and walked none 34 in games agamst Spnngboro
while g1ving up JUS! four hits.
and Ma~on in one week last season.
Those hits went to McGuire a "During the summer ... I worked
double and single (2 -3), and smglcs on my curve ball and change-up. If
each by Durst and Randy Kaylor.
l throw my fastball and come back
Eastern is now 7 - I overall and
6-l in the league, while Southern is
6-3 overall and 5-1 in the league.
Eastern will host Symmes ValIcy today.

lrtlr_, ' IJ

I

9

l. M1nnrt nta

,q, U; l&lt;'rLt&lt; • II

Wetttrn 01¥\slon

Oa.kland
Oucaso
TuN

lktli&gt;~L

.r.. (h 1n.n ' I)

Johnson , hitting .163 entenng the
game. put New Y&lt;rl ahead with a
three -run double in the seventh
inning.
Anthony Young (2-0) was the
winner in relief of Sid Fernandez.
Young pitched 3 1/3 innings,
allowmg two runs. Marquis Grissom's two-run homer in the sixth
off Fernandez gave the Expos a 4-3
lead. but reliev er Jeff Fa~sero (0-1)
was roughed up for the second
straight day.
Cardinals 4, Cubs 3
At Busch Stadmm, Jose DeLeon
ended a long dry spell, winning his
first game since last July as St.
Louis defeated Chicago.
DeLeon (l-1) gave up a run in
five innings to win for the first time
since last July 28 DeLeon benefited from a four -run fifth against
another pitcher with a long time
between viclones, Danny Jackson.
Jackson (0-3) hasn't won in his last
12 slarts dating back to last June 14
and has only one victory in the last
two seasons.
Lee Smith, the fifth St. Louis
pitcher, pitched l I /3 innings for
h1s founh save .
Astros I, Padres 0
At the Astrodome, Pete lncav lgha's run-scoring single with two
out in the II th inning lifted Houston past San Diego for a three game sweep.
The Padres failed to take advantage of another strong effort by
Andy Benes. Benes pitched nine
mnings , allowing five hits while
walking one and striking out II.
Dodgers 4, Braves 2
At Dodger Stadium. Juan
Samuel's two -run smgle in the
fourth inning - his ftrSt hit in 20
lifetime at-bats against AtlanUI 's
Steve Avery - put Los Angeles
ahead for good.
Tom Candiotti (3-0), making his
first appearance at Dodger SUidi um . scattered seven hits for his second complete game.
Av ery pitched SIX inning s.
allowing six hits and four run s
while walking one and stnlci ng out
none.

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Lakers' win over Clippers
completes NBA playoff picture
8y The Associated Press
The Los Angeles Clippers' fran chise will be in the NBA playoffs
for the first tim e Si nce 1976 .
Thanks to an unlikely se t of cir cumsUinccs, the Los Angeles Lak ers will be there too, for the 16th
consecutive year since they last
missed the postseason in 1976.
The Lakers took advantage of a
season -ending, thre e-game losin g
streak by Houston and their own
upset of Portland on Saturday to
get in position to make the playoffs
with a fmal -game v1ctory over the
Clippers.
Although thre e other teams,
including the Rockets . lost thclf
final games while needing a victory
to clinch a playoff berth, the Lakers
carne through, winn~ng 109-IOR in

Southern edges Eastern 2-1

Wahama scored se ven runs in

ll•!! U&gt;n II)Q, .\ lum r 01
( hK agn I fll. IN:tnnt K"J

Alhnt• (H•cleckt I 1) II San D•rgn
(hland 0- \ ). 10 05 p.m
Cln dnnatl ( lhmmond 2-f) at L01
An11t'ltt (r. rOIII 0-1), 10:.15 p.m.

The Pirates· three-game sweep
extended their winning streak to six
games. If this is the route to the
best record in baseball. then maybe
every team should lose a $29 million free agent and trade away a
20-game winner.
Again, the Pirates got a big contribution from the benc h. Gary
Varsho, f1lting in for Barry Bonds,
hit an mside-the-park home run .
Bonds was out with a sore
e lbow sustained when Mitch
Wtlliams hit him with a pitch Saturday, so Leyland plugged Varsho
1nto the No. 4 spot in the batt~ng
order.
Bonds has had an excellent
April - he 's hitting .281 with five
homers and eight RBis. But utility men Lloyd McClendon (.778, one
homer, five RBls) and Cec1l Espy
(.727, no homers. seven RBis) arc
nearly as responsibl e for the
Pirate s' best start in Leyland 's
se ven seasons as manager.
The Pirates did get a bit of bad
news as starter Bob Walk left after
3 2{3 innings with a strained right
groin. Bob Patterson (1 -0) got the
victory with 3 1{3 scoreless innings
and Roger Mason finished up to
complete the three-hit shutout.
Mets II, Expos 6
AI Olympic SUidtum, Howard

~ ll&lt;l

Se...- York 114. \t .! w1W:u 101

(,'w1org•n 0.2). 2 20 p m

you.''

Wahama hands
Southern 12-2 loss

Salurday'11 scores
I II \.aiL C':n , 09 , 1\m.Jand ', 01
~· ~.,.. Je~~ y 127 Orlando I ll
l'hliadclph11 \II , Wo .&lt;tl!lljjlon

Bonilla and John Smiley.
Eve ry move Leyland mak es
seems to be turning out just right as
the Pirates (9-2) are off to their best
slart smce 1966.
On Sunday, Steve Buechele
went 3 for 4 with three RBis and
Andy Van Slyke went 3 for 3 and
scored three runs as the Pirates
routed the Philadelphia Phillies 11 0 at Three Rivers SUidium. The
Pirates outscored the PhiUies 27-6
while sweeping the three-gam e
series and have won 23 of their last
30 agamst Philadelphia.
" It was one of those days where
everything you hit hard falls in and
everything you hit soft falls in,"
Leyland said. "Those days arc
great .when you have them and
frustrating when they go against

Monday, April 20, 1992

Making Aroc'lican DreaJru AReality

435 Second Ave.

446-7619

Eastern Conference have Indiana at
Chi cago and New Jersey at Cleveland on Thursday mght anti Detroil
at New York and Miami at Chtcago
on Friday night.
The Lakers lost to Sacrarnento
and Denver, with a combin ed 53110 record, last week to fall to the
brink of elimination from playoff
cons ideration. Their last two wins
were against Portland and th e Clippers, a combined 102-62.
The Lakers edged Houston by
one game for the la~t Western Conference berth. The Rockets had tl1e
tiebreaker advantage if they had
finished with the same record.
Threatt scored 24 points and
Byron Scott 27 for the Lakers .
Danny Manning led the Clippers
with 34 pomts.
Suns 100, Rockets 97
overtime.
"We went against all the odds,''
Hous ton ended its streak of
veteran forward A.C. Green sa.d. seven straight years in the playoffs,
"We looked dead, but now we're losing at home to Phoenix despite
alive. No one expe cted us to be 39 points, 16 rebounds and seven
here.''
blocked shots from Hakeem OlajuSedate Threatt hit a 12 -foot won.
The Rockets could have scaiCJJ a
jumper with 4.5 seconds left m th e
postseason
spol with a victory in
extra period to give the Lakcrs the
any
of
their
last three games, but
lead, then the Clippers' Doc R1vers
lost
all
three.
missed an off-balance shot at the
Celtics 109, Heat 93
buuer.
Boston
tcm poranly dera~ed vi sIn other final games Sunday. it
Miami's playoff hopes, com was Boston 109, Miami 93; Chica go 103 , DelfOit 85; Minnesota 130. plctmg a sweep of it s final eight
Charlotte 107; UUih 101 , San Anto - games and ca rnm g the seco nd
nio 90; Golden SUite 108, Seattle scc du1g po sitio n in the Eastern
106; Phoenix 100, Hou sto n 97; Conference.
Robert Parish had 22 pomLs and
Cleveland 112, Atlanta 108 : and
19 rebound s whtle Reggtc LewiS
Dallas 104, Denver 92.
The Lakers' victory completed scored 22 points for the Cellics.
Cavaliers 112, Hawks lOR
the first-round playoff pairings.
Atlanla was kept out of th e
In the West, it 's the Lak ers at
Portland and Seattl e at Golden NBA playoffs for the first time in
State on Thursday night, while the seven years when Cleveland bcal
Clippers are at UU!hand San Anto- the Hawks on Mark Price's f1ve
nio at Phoenix on Fnday mgh t.
point s '" the final 9.6 seconds .
First-round matchups 1n the Price sank a go-ahead thrcc-pomter

'""&amp;

with 9.6 seconds left and two
clinching free throws m the final
second.
Pnce scored 22 pomts.
Dulls 103, Pistons 8S
Michael Jordan scored 32 points
and won his six th consecutive scorin g titl e with a 30.1 average. Jordan, who was treated after the
game for a lower back strain,
helped the Bulls finish a team record 67-15, including 36-5 at
home .
lsia h Thomas led the Pistons
with 28 points.
Jazz 10 I, Spurs 90
Karl Malone scored 34 points
and UU!h won at San Antonio by
lim iting the Spurs to a season-low
14 points in the fourth quaner. The
Jazz clinched homecourt advantage
through two rounds of the Western
Conference playoffs with the VICtory.
Warriors 108, Sanies 106
Tim Hardaway scored 29 points
in Golden State's v1ctory over
Seattle , setting up a rematch
between the two teams'" the opening round of the playoffs.
Playing without Chris Mull in,
who wa s injured late in the thlfd
quarter. the Warnors held off the
Sanies in the final minute, ensuring
tl•e two teams w~l meet in the first
rou nd.
Timberwolves 130, Hornets 107
Tony Campbell scO&lt;ed 23 points
as Minnesota shot a franchi serecord 57 percent, snapping a
seven-game losmg streak and fin IShing a troubled season with a VICtory againsl Charloue.
Mavericks 104, Nuggets 92
Mike luzzolino scored 21 points
and Rolando Blackman 17 a~ Dal las at Denver. Dallas, which fm ished the season 7-34 on the road.
outscored the NuggeL~ 51-31 in th e
final 19:28 of the game.

Tartabull's clutch single gives
New York S-3 win over Cleveland
8y RONALD 8LUM
NEW YORK (AP) - W1tll tl1e
game on the line, the Cleveland
Ind ians decided they 'd rather pitch
to Danny Tartabu ll than Matt
Nokes.
Big misUike .
Tartabull hit a two -run sing le
that gave the Yankees the lead, aod
New York held on Sunday for a 53 VICtory over the Cleveland Indi ans.
Cleveland took a 2-l lead in the
mth on Carlos Bacrga 's run -scoring single and Albert Belle 's RBI
groundout, but Jack Arm strong (02) couldn't hold it in the bottom of
th e inning .
Don Mattmgl y and Roberto
Kelly sin gled, and Mel Hall
ad\lanced the runner s wit h a
groundout. Wnh first base ope n
and Nokes on deck, Cleveland
manager M1ke Hargrove viSited the
mo und and elected to pit ch to
Tarlllbull. He lined a single to nght
on a 2-0 pitch for a 3-2 lead.
"It was in the back of my mind
whether they were gomg to walk
me,'' TarUibull said. ''I was a lntle
surprised by it. But it wa s wel come . l hit a fastball on the mner
half. I had no guess, really. They
had struck me out the last time with
sliders away . It was more a reac tion thing ."
Noke s . a left -handed hitter.
began th e day with a .208 average.
Tartabull . a right -hander, was hit ting against the right -handed Anm strong. But he won the battle and
increased his RBI IOUJl 10, second
on the Yankee s beh1nd Hall 's
league-leading 16.
"The pitch was supposed to be
down and in," Hargrove sa id .
"The key 10 him is to stay down on
him."
Jeff Johnson, chased after three
outs against Toronto on Tuesday.
gave the Yankees their second
straight strong SUift, allowing two
runs and six hits in 6 '1/3 innings.
"I wanted to get the ball up and
out of the strike wne when l was
ahead in the count," said Johnson,
a 25- year-o ld left-handcr. "Change

Eichinger to take
football coaching
job at Otterbein
Charles Henry Eiching er of
Pickerington and formerl y of
Meigs County has accepted a football coaching position at Ou.crbcm
Coll ege.
Etchingcr has been th e he ad
football coach at Mtfn1n H1gh
School in Columhus, where he will
resign as a coach. Eichinger
recently led Mifflin to the Division
II state football playoffs.
He will continue to teach at Mifnin , where he has been a teacher
for 18 years.
Eichinger was a standout foot ball and basketball player at Eastern High School, from where he
graduated.
Eichinger resides in Pickerington with his wife Susan. His daughte r Suzannah will be a senior at
Ohio Dominican College. He IS the
son of Mrs . Opal Eichinger of
Chester and th e late Henry
Eichinger.

1heir eye level."
lt was the second straight strong
gam e by a Yankees stancr. On Saturday. Greg Cadaret ended New
York's strc&lt;Jk of 91 games w1thout
a complete game wilh a nine-hitter.
" I knew l was going to pitch
well eve n before the game start ed,'' Jo hnson said. " l didn't try to
overt hrow everything . I threw
seven or eight curve balls - for
me that 's a lot. All the work is
starting to pay off."
New York increased 1t's lead to
4-2 on p1nch-h1tter Rantly
Velarde's Rill Single off Derek
Lill1quist int he seventh. Baerga hit
a run -scon ng sin gle in lhc e1ghth
off John Habyan after a throwing
ermr hv catcher Nokes. but Nokes
atoned by hi ttmg hi s r1rst hom e run
in the bouum of the innin g off Rod
N1chols.
''After I threw th e ball down t!1 c
nght -field line, it was a good t1m e
to hit one," Nokes swd .
In other games. Boston edged
Tc.as 5-4, Texas tripped Oakland
6-4. Ch1 cago stopped M~nnesota 41, Balumorc beat Detroit 3-2 and
Scaule defeated Milwauk ee 12-9.
The California at Kansas Ci ty
game was ramcd out.
Red Sox 5, Blue Jays 4
The lloston Red Sox won th e
rubber game, so to speak .
Sea l! Cooper's two -o ut
grounder 1n the hottom of the ninth
mnin g sk ipped off the pitching mh her for a smgle. scon ng the w1n n1ng run and capping a four -run
rally that hft ed Bosto n over the
Toronto Blue Jay s 5-4.
" Wh en I hit il , l thought for
sure il was going up th e middle and
that! would be abl e to mak e a n1 cc
tum around fir st and be congratu lat ed,' · Cooper sa1d.
Instead, the ball h1t th e rubbe r
and popped high in the air. All-Star
second baseman Roberto Alomar
caught it behind th e bag, and his
snap throw was just an insUint late
as Cooper dove 1n headfirst.
Cooper got into th e game after
Jack Clark was ejecled for arg UJng
a called third strike . In th e fifth,
Cooper struck out w1th the bases
loaded to end the inning, but he
came through with runners on second and third in th e ninth.
Tom Henke, in hi s first save Sllualion of the season. rel1cv ed to
start the ninth with a 4-l lead . A
single by pinch-hitter Herm Winningham, a double by Wade Boggs
and a walk to J ody Reed loaded t!1e
bases with one out.
Phil Planuer foll owed with a
ground er to first ba se man John
Olerud, who had not made an error
m 78 games and had been inserted
1n the ninth inning as a defensiv e
repla ce ment. But Olerud muffed
the ball, allowing a run to score and
leavmg the bases loaded.
Henke (0-1) struck out Elli s
Burks, but M1ke Greenwell hit a
tymg . two-run single. Plantier took
third on the hit. and Greenwell
scampered to second with Cooper
at the plate.
Cooper ran the count full before
getting his winning hit.
Danny Darwin (1 -0) got the victory despite giving up RBI singles
to Alomar and Joe Carter m th e
ninth .
Man Young, who pitched eight

'

HEATING THE HEAT -the Miami Ilealwith 22 points and 19 rebounds was Boslon center Robert Parish's way of helping push the

----

-

Ccltics to the second seed in the Easlern Conference in Sunday's season finale at !he Roston
Garden. (AP)

hitl ess inmngs last Sunday m 2- l
loss at Cleveland, gave up a smgle
to Devon White on the ftrst pitch of
th e game.
Mariners 12, Brewers 9
Ken Griffey drove m a careerhigh five runs and Seattle won at
Milwaukee as both team s got 15
hits.
The Marmers scored four 11mes
in th e seco nd inmng, mcludm g
Griffey's RBI grounder. Milwaukee got fiv e runs in 1ts half of th e
second. mcluding an RBI doubl e
by Dante B1chettc. who had four
hiL&lt;;

Calvm Jones ( 1-0) was the win ner and M1kc Schooler got Ins tlurd
save . Bruce R uffm (l-1) was the
loser.
White Sox 4, Twins I
Greg Hibb ard stretched hiS
scoreless streak to 20 l/3 innings
before gcllmg help from Bobby
Thigpen.
Hibbard (3-0 ) ti ed hi s career
h1gh with his thlfd straight victory .
The ho st Wh1te Sox helped him
with four double plays m 7 2/J
1nnings, and Thigpen relieved after
a run 1n th e c1ghth for hi s fourth
~IVC .

John Sm il ey (0-2) sh ut out
Ch1c ago until the six th George
Bell 's sacrifiCe ny. Mike Huff's
doubl e and Lance Johnson's single
made it 3-0.
Rangers 6, Athletics 4

DOUBLE PLAY PREVENTION is what
Cleveland's Carlos Raerga (9) is executing
against New Yurk Yankee St'cond baseman Pat

.

Kclh· in the sixth inning of Sunday's American ,
League ~arne in Ne" York, "hirh the Yank~s
111m 5-.1.1,\PI

'-

Kevin Reimer 's firsl home run

of th e season. a two-run shot '" the
seventh mning , sen t Texa s oYer
visiting Oakland.
Dick1e Thon singled with one
oul in the seventh, finJShmg starter
Ron Darling. Rick Honeycuu (l -2)
relieved and Re1mer met h1m with
a home run for a 5-4 lead . Bri an
Downing add ed an RBI double in
the eighth.
Barry Manuel {l -0) pitched two
scorele ss 10ning s. Jeff Ru ssel l
worked the nmth for his third save .
Orioles 3, Tigers 2
Baltimore improved to 5- 1 at
Camden Yards.
Bob Milacki ( l -1) became the
latest Onoles pitcher to do well at
home , holding Detroit to four hits
1n eight innings. and Gregg Olson
finished for his second save.
Chris Hailes homered off Walt
Te rrell (0-2). Mickey Tet~eton and
Travi s Fryman hom e red for
Detroit

WRAPPED UP- Chicago's Chris Chelios
(left) puts the wraps on the St. Louis Rlues '
8relt Hull before slamming him to the ice. as
81ackhawk goalie Ed Belfour fighl for the loose

puck, durin~ the first penod or ~alurday ni~hl's
NHL Norris Division playoff game in Chicago,
which the lllarkhawks won 3-1. (API

Goalies key players to NHL playoff victors
Bv KEN RAPPOPORT
-AP Hockey Writer
Who was that masked man?
It was John Vanbiesbrouck ....
Don Beaupre ... and Patrick Roy,
among olhcrs.
As usual, the SU!nlcy Cup playoffs featured a number of top-notch
goa lt endmg pe rforman ces with
Vanbi esbrouck, Beaupre and Roy
the key players for their teams on
Sunday night
Vanbicsbrouck led the New
York Rangers to a 2-1 victory over
the New Jersey Dev1ls. Beaupre
backstopped Washington 's 3-l triumph over Piusburgh . And Roy
helped Montreal beat Hanford 2-0.
Buffalo beat Boston 3-2 in
another low -scoring game that featured strong play by rookie goaltender Tom Draper.

"That's baSically what playoff
hockev is all about, a hot goa ltender: · sa1 d New Jersey's Bruce
Dr1vcr, whose teammate , Chri s

Tcrren. also played well '" the
Wale s Conferences playoffs on
Sunday mght.
The Campbell Conference play offs co ntinu e tonight with Mm ncsota al Detroit and St. Louis at
Chicago in the Norris Division and
Winnipeg at Vancouver and
Ed monton at Los Angel es in the
Smythe. Minnesota, Chicago, Win nipeg and Edmonton all won opening -rou nd games on Saturday
n1ght.
Patrick Divi.~ion
Rangers 2, Devils 1
The Rangers got another strong
performance from Vanbiesbrouck
and their defense .

Darren Turcotte and M1ke Gart ne r sc ored a goal each for the
Rangers .
Vanbicsbrouck, th e NHL's
holiest goaltender at the end of the

reg ula r se ason w1th a nwc -g ame

unhcat en streak (R-0-1 ), made 26.
&lt;:;avr-. ancl was at h1 s bcstln the sec ...

ond pcnod w1th the Rangers cling Ing to a l -0 lead.

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
Quality Care For Your Family

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Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignment Accepted
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�Monday,

By The Bend

Ap~l

20, 1 992

The Daily Sentinel
Monda~Ap~l20,

Business Services

1992

r---------------,

Page--6

Your Social Security Lyme Disease causes suffering
By ED PETERSON
Social Securily
Manager in Athens
Social Security recogni zes that
HIV - the virus that causes AIDS
- can develop dtffercntly in
women and children than in men.
Our agency has published proposed
regulatiOns and also issued new
operating guidelines that we are
now using to assess all H1V cases,
including those for women and
duldren with HIV infection.
The new criteria list certain gen·
der-specific manifestations of HJV
infection - such as gynecologtcal
cancers and infections - that we
consider in evaluating a women 's
disability claim. In additton, the
new guidelines note that the course
of HIV disease m chtldren ts also
different from that in adults, and
contain a specific li st of cr iteria
severe enough to preve nt a child
from functioning the way that a
healthy child of the same age
would.
This ts the first ume that we
. have provided suc h a list for 1-UV ·
: infected children. Our cvaluauon of
· claims filed by women and chtl·
dren wtth HIV is not limited to the
criteria on the list. All claims are
afforded the appropriate steps m
the disability decision-making pro. cess. We consider all evidence rele ·
: vant to a woman's or child's clatm,
· not just evidence of 1-UV -infection
we have included in our guidelines.
This ts important because 11
-means that all Social Secunty dts ability claimants w1th HIV mfection are evaluated under the most
up-to-date medical criteria. And
their claims can be approved faster,
and payments made more quickly.
once all other eligtbility factors are
met.
Latest statistics show that
approximately 10 percent of Social
Security claimants wtth HIV mfec·
tjon are wom en - and thiS per-

centage is expected to nse in the
furure.
More than 2,000 cases of AIDS
have been reported in children
under 13 years old. Most of these
ch ildren acquired the di sease
before htrth from their mothers,
who were infected with HIV. The
number uf children with HlV infection 1S, unfonunately. also expected
to rise.
Social Security administers two
se parate programs that pay benefits
to people disabled as a result of
HIV infection- the Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) program. and the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. Under
both programs, applicants must
meet the definition of disability in
Social Security law - basically,
fo r adults, th e inability to work
because of medical tmpairments
that arc expected to last at least one
year or to result in death. FOr children to be found disabled, th ey
must have an 1mpa~rm e nt( s ) of
comparable severity.
SSI makes monthly payments to
people with disabilities, includmg
children, whose income and asset\
are below a certain level. In our
sta te, SSI eligibtlity usually means
entitlement to Medicaid benefiL1.
Social Securily's proposed rul es
also significantly expand the
authority of SSA field officers to
presume a person is disabled and
make immediate payments to SSI
claimants when it is con finned that
the impairment due to HJV infection is severe enough to keep the
person from working. These payments can continue for up 10 six
months while the formal disability
dctennination process takes place.
If you would like more information about what Social Security can
do to help HIV -infected individuals
- and how specific changes are
bemg made regarding women and
children with HIV infection contact our office. The number is
592-4448 or 1-800-772-1213.

Students named to HC dean's list
Students nam ed to the dean 's
list at Hocking Col'"ge for the winter quarter have been announced .
They have achtcved at least a 3.3
quarterly grade point average and
completed 12 or more cnedil hours.
Rita Bwley, Todd Dow, Paula
Haynes, Qebra Honaker, Jeffery
Hood, Angela Kelly, Thomas Kelly
Jr., Kathy Phalin, Esther Shuler and
Delmar Lark.in, all of Mlddlcport.
Stephen Donahue, Rob ert
Fields, Sharon Johnston, Beuy D1ll,
Jean Durst, Donald Fitch, Diana
Hlanrison, Donald Lewis, Lon Maynard, Linda Priddy. Melody Ram sburg, Paul Riggs, Amanda Sisson.
Hazel Six, Gary Snouffer. Rebecca
Steele, Rtchard Van ce, Brenda
(Zirlde) Warth, Sherry Wilcox and
Lucy Winebrenner, all of Pomeroy.
D1ana Kime s. Jeffrey K1mes.

Scan Kimes. L1sa (Driggs) Barringer, Karen Carter, Ruth Foley,
Crystal Kaylor and Diane R1cc, all
of Reedsville.
Derek Cremeans, Rutland.
Dana Fick, Pamela Honaker and
Chrisune Lambert, all of Long Bottom.
Ammy Roush . A1mc e Pyles
(Wolfe), Lori RitchiC, Arthur
Rou s h, Brian Shuler, Fredcnck
Thompson and Sarah Wiles, all of
Racine.
Ralph Harbour, Apple Grove.
Cynth1a Ncutzl1ng, Tem
(Roush) Patterson, Sandra Ph1lson
and Angela Spangler, all of Syracuse.
Gatha Richards, Shade; Terrt
Roush, Athens; Rodney Sandy,
Bremen; and Denise Mcgahey,
Athens.

RSG holds election of delegates
.Olection of delegates wa s held
and contributiOns were made to

several organizauons at the regular
meeting of Rock Springs Grange
held recently at the grange hall .
Barbara Fry, CWA chairman,
remmded members of the various
co ntest s being held this year.
Porms to enter the contests arc
available from her.
William Radfond, master. read a
communication from th e Meigs
County Park District.

Grange inspection will be held
July 2 with practice June 30.
Rock Springs grange will VISit
Star Grange on June 6.
Several members from Racine
Grange v1sllcd and lecturer Emma
Adams presented the program
"Remembe r When'" Readings
included "Grandma's Apron" by
Dorothy Smith; ··Mama's MIXing
Bowl" by Emma Adams; "One
Room School Hou se" by Mary
Easterday," "Marble Ga mes, An
Old f'ash1oncd Car. Old Time Religion, llow to Succeed" by Emma
Adams; and a contest by all members with Roy Holter the wmncr.
Me mb ers reported ill were
Bunny Kuhl and Frederick Goeglcin.
Refreshm ents of homemade ice
cream and cake were served by
Opal and Roy Gru escr.

Meeting planned
The Athens Distri c t United
MethodiSt Women w1ll be coming
together May I and 2 at Camp
Francis Asbury, R1o Grande, for
the annual spring retreat.

· RODERICK NEWSOME

Awarded grant
Rodenck F. Newsome, a scn10r
at Eastern Local High School, has
been awarded a University Challenge Grant from Capital University.
f h
This grant is awarded to res ·
men and transfer students on the
basis of scholastic achievement
and/or standardized test scores. .
Newsome intends to maJor '"
criminology.
He is the son of Frank and
JoAnn Newsome and the grandson
of Lowell Perry.
.
Capital University , funded tn
1830 by the Lutheran Church, is
·the oldest instirution of higher edu:cation in Central Ohio.

Mrs . Lmda Bales, Dayton, will
he retreat leader. She is a member
of the West Ohio Conference
Board of Church and Society, servIn g on th e Political and Human
R1ghts Commillce, and ts a mem ber of the editorial hoard for the
Peace Advocate, the quarterly
news letter of th e Department of
Peace and World Order of the conference board of Church and Society. Through her work as a human
services planned, she interacts with
community leaders to address
social issucs such as homelessness.
drug and alcohol abuse, AIDS and
welfare reform. Her theme for the
retreat wtll be "Fmdmg God in the
Midst of Chaos."
RegiStration is from 4-6 p.m. on
Friday with a carry- m meal at 6:30
p.m. follow ed by evening sess ion
at 7:30 p.m. Breakfast Saturday
morning ts at 7:30 a.m. and dismissal is at2 p.m.

Dear Ann Landers: I have had
Lyme disease for 10 years. Only this
year was I finally diagnosed. I went
to 13 doctors and spent over $44 ,o:xl
trymg to gel well. I lost my job and
suffered years of pain. Two others
in my hiking group have Lyme
disease, and there are several more
cases in town.
I cannot believe that not a single
doctor knew enough to diagnose me
sooner. I had many symptoms that
have been written up in dozens of
newspapers and magazines. Please
publicize this disease in your
column. It needs the visibility that
you can provide ... ELAINE
BROWN, WILTON, CONN
DEAR ELAINE: I did write about
Lyme dtsease in 1989 and received
a tremendous response from readers
saying, "That must be what I have.
I'm taking your column to my
doctor." And they did.
The letter that follows may send
moct readers to their doctors witlt
tlus column. If that's the case. so be
IL Help is where you find iL
Dear Ann Landers: I understand
that in one of your earlter columns.
you wrote about Lyme disease. I'm
addlng my comments to give you
an idea of the magnitude of thiS
tenible illness.
In the spnng of 1989. I diSCovered a hull' s eye rash on my
nght armp11. A month later, I
be;;ame extremely fatigued and
then developed stomach pain .
burning skin, headaches, sleep·
pattern disturbances and on and on
and on .
My doctor told me I was gomg
through a period of depression and
wtth proper medication I would be

Ann
Landers
;\!'ON

LANDERS

"1991. Lo!i :\a«f"'e
1\me!l Syndl(."a&amp;f and

C'reat.or8 Syndlcatf" "

fme in a few weeks. Meanwhile, I
became sicker and sicker. After
going to several other doctors, I was
put m the hospital for a complete
battery of tests. When the results
proved negative, psychological help
was recommended. After a few
sessions, the psychologist gave me
an article on Lyme disease. I then
found a doctor who knew something
about the illness and started on a
program that included heavy 00ses
of antibiotics.
I'm feeling much better now, but
I went through two years of hell.
My w1fe later carne down with
symptoms of Lyme disease and also
is being treated. We uve in the midMichigan area and many doctors
here look baffled when yoo mention
Lyme disease because they don't
have any idea what it is or how to
treat it.
I hope the medical professiOn geL&lt;
up to speed on this disease and soon.
Their pauents desezve better.- H.L,
MIDLAND, MICH .
DEAR READERS A letter from
Mary J. Persons in Unioo City, Pa.,
contained a great deal of practical
informalion worth noting. Mrs.
Persons came down with Lyme
diseao;e four years ago, has spent
more than $4 5,&lt;XX&gt; on doctors and
is still not completely well. Here anc

some facts that she feels may prove
useful :
Lyme disease ts caused by a
sp irochetal bactena wh1ch, if
delected early and treated with
proper antib10Ucs. may be cured.
The disease is now found in all 48
cootinental Untied States, in both
urban and rural areas. This bacteria
can be b'allsmioed by the bite of a
hor-sle fly , deer fly and the common
flea. Ticks and fleas are vectors,
carried by animals such as deer,
rodents, birds. cattle and horses.
Blood contact between hunters and
slain deer can transmit the
disease if the deer IS infected. The
initial symptoms are like a recurring
bout with the flu .
If your physician doesn't blow
anything about Lyme disease,
he should call th e local health
department. A free booklet on
Lyme disease is available by
writing: Arthrills Foundation,
Department LYME, P.O. Box
1900l. Atlanta. Ga 30326.

Whar can you Rive the person wha
has t~erythlng' Ann Landtrs'
book/fl. "Gems, " JJ ufeal for a
nzglusrillld or coffee table. "Gems"
1s a colltctwn of Ann /.AiuUrs' mosr
requtsrtd poems and es5llys. Stnd a
u:lf·adtl.rtssed. long . busi~ttss-Si'u
(nvrlo~ and a check or money
ordtr for $4 .85 (this inc/udts
posragr and handling) ro: Gtms.
c/o Ann Lan&lt;Urs. P.O Box /1562.
Ch1cago. Ill. 60611-0562 . (In
Canada. u:nd $5 87)

KAYLAJOHNSON

Second birthday

Becky Amberger gave the secretary's repon and funds of the trea sury were also given.
Final plans for the motherdaughter banquet to be held May R
at 6:30p.m. at the church were diS·
cussed. Mrs. Vema Brewer will oc
guest speake r. She is from the
Farm Dale Church of Christ in Bar·
hoursville. W.Va.
The Lydia Counc1l cookbooks
arc in and anyone wishing to pur·

MONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS · A meeting
to form a Chapter for the Vietnam
Veterans of Amenca will be held
Monday at 7 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW Hall . V.N. era veterans encouraged to attend. Call 8435286 for informauon.
POMEROY - Monday Night
LadiCs Golf League at the Meig s
County Golf Course will have an
organizational meeting Monday at
7 p.m . at the golf course. Team s
must be registered by Apnl 27.

cha se one can co ntact Karl11a
Stump. The COS! IS $4 per boolc:.
Several projects were planned
Kayla Lyshec Johnson celcbrat·
tncluding replcmshing the flfst-aid
ed her second birthday Sawrday at
supplies, having a food shower for
a missiooary farmly on thetr return her home with a Mickey and Minnie Mouse theme carried out. The
to the states.
party was hosted by her moth er,
Evcryone was reminded to bring
Kool-aid for camp and visitors Kelly Johnson.
Ice cream, chips and pop were
cards were distributed.
served
to her grandmother, V. Kay
The su nshine basket for April
Burney, lack and Kathy Young,
w11l be g1ven to Sam and Em1ly
Floyd Burney, Tara Clark., David
Pickens.
The Bradford revi&lt;al JS tn Farr, Reesa Harris, Donna Boyd,
grandfather, Harry D. Garnes, Barprogress until Friday with Kevin
bara Klein, Bill and Beth Rice.
Yeager, evangelist.
It was decided the May meeting Everell, Sue, Jerrod and Charlie
would be changed from to May 4. Gilmore, Regina, Rob, Eric and
sc hool.
Hostesses will be Janice Fetty and StefTanie.
A barbecue followed the party.
Bncnda Bolm at the home of Mrs.
POMEROY · Drew Wehster
Feuy.
Post No. 39 will meet Tuesday at
Cherie Williamson will have
Sly map
the post home. Dinner at 7 p.m. and
commumon m May.
meeting at R p.m.
Unlil the 1920s, astrooomers used
Anending were Jamce Felly, curved boundaries for the coostellaPOMEROY · Women 's Auxil - Karlita and Andrew Stump, Becky tioo areas . .u these ~rere ralber arbi·
Iary of Veterans Memorial Hospital and Bethany Amberger, Diane trary at best. the lnlenlatiooal Astrowtll meet Tuesday at the confer- Bmg. Brenda Boltn, Carolyn nomical Unioo adopted boundaries
ence room of the hosp1tal.
Snowden, Jacbe Reed. Gerry that ran due north-south and eastLightfoot, Suzie and Christi Will, west, filling the sky much as the conPOMEROY . A meeting of par- Jane Hysell, Charlotte Hanning and tiguous states fill up the area of the
'lower 48" Umled States
ents to help w1th the 1992 prom at Nancy Morris.
Meigs High School wtll be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the high
school.

TUESDAY
RAClNE . The Southern Local
Board of Educatwn w1ll me e t
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the hi gh

WEDNESDAY
PINE GROVE · Revival at
Pmegrove Hohness Church will he
held Wednesday through Sunday at
7 p.m. ni ghtly. Rev. Steve Manley
and family, Summersville, N.C..
will be evangelist. Special singin g
nightly. Rev. Odell Manley mvilcs
the public .

Meigs golf club to
hold open house;
sign-ups underway
Officers for the 1992 season
were nominated at Thursday's
mccong of the Me1gs County Golf
Club Association.
A memhcrshtp meeung for Sunday was announced.
An open hou se will also be
observed with a scra mble and
potluck d1nner. All members and
non -member golfers are invited to
come and sec the improvements in
the course and clubhouse.
A meeting was held to organize
the Tuesday and Wednesday
evening men's leagues . Applica tions for teams are still bemg taken
for each league whiCh will be limited to 20 two-man teams each. Last
vcar's teams will have first choice
;.,ith a membership fee of $12 per
man . Interested golfers should
apply as soon as possible because it
is planed to start the first week tn
May and finish by the m1ddle of
August.
Sign-ups are also underway for
a Friday evening couples league
featuring scrambles and potluck
dinners afterwards with members
bringing a covered dish.
A meeting of the Tuesday morning ladies league will be held at the
course April 28 at 9 a.m.
An over 60 seniors league is
also being considered if an adequate number of senior golfers
show interest. Exact starting times
will he announced.

"""'.Wmiiit'·
Call 992-2156

Wednesday Paper
Thursda y Paper
Fnday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8ut .-5P.M.- SAT.S-12
CLOSED SuNDAY

Sunday Paper

POLICIES
• free Ad.: Gawea-y and fuuod ad. under IS word• wdl be
run 3 daY' .a no claarwe .
• PrM:e of ad fw aU eapitallelll=n i.. double prlc;e of ad COil

• 7 poial IU. type oaly uaed
• TrihUDe i1 Dol re~po... i.hle for

error~ after fint

day (cMck

Apri13, 1992
Conln&lt;tS..
l..ogol Copy No. !12-370

446-&lt;:.thpoUo
367-Che.hirc
388-Vinlon

C...l .r Thaalu
Ia MtBOria •

Happ) Ad.
Yarc:J Salts
• A cl...if..ed ..lwertieetnerat placed m lhe Gallipoli. Daily
T rihu.oe (ezcept Cla.uif.d Oi.play, BUiint.a~ Card or Legal
Nobce.) wili.J.o appear in ttM: Poinl P\eau..nl Regiatt:r and
the Daily Sentioel, reacbift@: over 18,000 home~;

992 - M;ddleporli

67:;._Pt,_ Plea..nl

Pomeroy

45-8--Leon
576--Apple Grv"r

985-Che.ter

24~Rio Grande
256-Guyan Oi.L
643-Arailia Old.
379-\\'alnul

until 10:00 A.M., Ohio

-.,o County, Ohio lor

895-letatl
93-; -RufTalo

State Route

143,

by

L_

resurfacing with asphall

667-CoolriUe

Pra;.ct .,d Work Length:

Public Notice

Public Notice

mille.
The dale
set
for
completion of thia work

Public Notice

Public Notice

tho or oil bida and/or any part Toll!l........................ 18,348.oo
Exponditureo...........5,986.oo
Courlhou•e in Pomeroy, thertoOI.
Meigo County Bal. 12/31191.. ........ 12,362.00
Ohio, Wltil 12 noon on April
Commiuionera STATE FUNDS:
29, 1112, and opened . .d
Mory
Hobotelter,
Clotk 111191-................... 42, 199.00
real aloud II 1 p.m. on that
Rocelplo ............... 236, 167.00
date lor the following )4) 13, 20, 211:
Total-.................... 278,366.00
- - County wort:
Expondituroa.......228,rJT7.00
Furnlah all materlala,
Bal. 12131/Vl.. ........S0,289.00
lobor, and appllaneea
Public Notice
TOTALS:
..-oary to complolo in a --~=----------­ All Balanc:es
aotialoctory manner: •lf MEIGS COUNTY GENERAL
111191 .................. n,7&amp;t.oo
acraping or wire bruahing,
HEAl.TH DISTRICT
Roceiplo
............... 472, 144.00
painting, reglazlng when CASH RECONCILIATION
Tolllla
....................
549,905.00
needed, caulk between
AS OF
Expenditurea
.......
465,638.00
lrameo and brick, apply one
DECEMBER 31, 1991
Balancea u ol
(1) coal acrylic mooonry Totol Depoail
12131191 .............. 84,267.00
whito paint (Sherwin Balanc:es.............. $84,808.00
Jon 0. Jacobs,
William• or equal) to lht Totol Oulalonding BatDeputy Health
lollowing exterior ol the aneeo &amp; Chec:b a ol
Commissioner
Meiga County Courlhou-:
Dec. 31, 1991... ........ 541.00
(4i 20, lie
All exterior areas or the Total of all Balanc• •• of
Courthou•e ercept the
north aide (rear of building).
All metal areas of roof to
receive 2 coat&amp; of rual
resi&amp;lant bbck painl Also

Expenditurea and Balances
for Fiscal Year Ending
12131191

to be included in this
projec:t ia one coal ol Gold
paint to 1M applied to lhe
Dome of the Courthou•e.
Two (2) coalll ol banleship
gray paint ahafl be applied
to the outside alailways and
balconies and two coats of

BOARD OF HEALTH:
1/1/91 ..- ................ $21,756.00
Receiplll.-........... .226,883.00
Tolat-....................248,639.00
Eirpenditurea.......230,550.00
Bal. 12/31191 .......... 18,089.00
TRAILER PARKS &amp;
CAMPGROUNDS:

black rust-reaistant enamel

111191 ........................ 3,082.00

Dec;. 31, 1891 ...... 84,267.00

Public Notice

Summrt ol Rec:eipla,

cloaing - weekends and

holidays;
$50.00 cremation grave.
$100.00 infant grave.

$65.00 lnlnoler of lot plus
corner marker&amp;, ordered
and ina tailed by the Village:
$10.00 annual maintenanc:e care per grave ,
payable by May 1 ol each
year;
$25.oo deed transt...
SECTION II: A vault is not
mandatory at Beech Grove
Cemetery. The \&lt;iltage
require• at least three daya
notice to dig a grave. exoepl
in emergencies.
Lot purchase• andlo1
grave digging may be
placed at lhe Pomeroy
Municipot Building, 320 East
Main Stree~ Pome1oy, OhK&gt;.

c"l'""

Council of the Village ol
Pomeroy, Ohio:

dinance shall be eHective

May 1, 1992.
SECTION 1: $175.00 lo1 PASSED: April1, 1992
first grave space including
ATTES~:.~~enda L Morns,
mandatory
4
corner
markers,

ordered

and

-Oiding of contraclancl be
completed within
30
calendar days, w.. ther

permitting. Penalty beyond

specified time ahall

be

sso.oo per day.
All propoaalt muet be
accompanied by a Bond
eigned by two Sureties

approved by tho County
Commieaionefl

the

in

omounl ol 12,000.00 lor the
faithful performance ol this
contract Bond refmed to is
a Bidder' • bond 1ccom·
panying
bid, which
becomea a performance
bond to Contrac:tor re·
ceiving award . All other
bondo will be returned to
biddera

alter aw1rd

of

Contract

All em ployeea shall be

O'B1:t,

than wolde c:an

up-.
WHe, a.thl; Brothel"'

by Ihe

Ohio

Andreu, Mllrlltno and

Wofiuw'a

Compensation

Eliu Alvarado; atepchlldron and
grlllldc:hildren

risk

253 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY

2.75 lb. Container Chlorine.-----14.50
7 lb. Container Chlorine.--·---·34.74
16 lb. Container Chlorine.---·"-.76.15
26 lb. Container Chlorine.--""--154.00

10.95
26.95
54.95
89.95

DHAN SOULSBY

ABOVE
GROUND
POOLS
Pt!Uase a paald.rt...
..e saJe ad rectiYI I
FREE Solar Bla1kel alii

Start Up Gelllkals.
DELIYIRY TO DESIGNATED UEAS

VISIT 011 4 LOCAnOIIS
253 W.IIAII ST.-fiOIIEIOY, OH.-614-992-5724
329 PilE n.:..tAI.UPOUS, OH.-614-446-3051
407 CORU DI.-IIRIEISIURI, W.-204-422-5400
367 W. Mil ST.-IIPLEY, WY.-304-372-1127

POMEROY, OHIO

NEW USTING- Ranch s1yle home w1th 3 bedrooms. carport. app•ances, cable tloc* -up Locatod in Syraruse.

$34.900

POMEROY· t ftoo1 frame homo with 2-3 bedrooms. lull
basement and garnge on pa&gt;Od street $28,000
POMEROY· l..algo building that has tile potential lor 3
X 100 paJ!&lt;ng fol Good

bsmt carpot. shed. fenced folarea. IMMEDIATE POS·
SESSION' $34 .900 Make an offer'
MIDDLEPORT· Beautiful largo home w1tli rare woodwork.
fintshed allic.la'VO porch. level lot and 2 car garage. Avery
UOIQUO home for $45,000 Owoor will aCCXJpt masonabfe
offer.

A UTILE AltER-UPPER· 1 Hoor h001e 2 boO'ooms. 1
batf1 , oulbuidng oo pawd strnet close to town $8,000
IT'S SPRING! THE BEE'S ARE BUZZING AND THE
HOllE BUYER IS SHOPPING! THIS IS THE TIME TO
UST THAT HOllE YOU'VE BEEN TlltNKlNG Of SELL·
INGI WE NEED USllNGS TO ALL lHE DEMANDS OF
OUR BUYERS! GIVE USA CALL TOOAYIWFLLSTAAT
WORKING ON ASALE FOR YOU!
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGEA.. ~ ........................................9411-24ag
JEAN TRUSSELL............................................MII-2660
OFFlCE..............-...... _....................................... 992·2259

•

•

apal1ment units OOudes 50
1nv-estmenl property $29.500

new sh1ngle roof. N G tumanc&amp; &amp; hot water heater Full

V. C. YOUNG Ill

99H215
3·t3-92·lln

•

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

:l lin)~ . :l '" ,." spnp«'rs · :l l.l11rs
Un til t:l.t\SSitU:I• t\1'

II. _____ _
12. _ _ __ ___
I!!. _ _ __ _ __
I~

II. _ _ __

G. _ _ _ __

I
I
I
I

~&lt;"rd in rn r h ~parr .1,,.,. t:.. ~ h 1nolual or ~~:rour flf fte:urr• roun h
f)r...tlm~

011,j Rol&lt;trrn nr rt-.nnr numhf" r 1f U!lf"d

l rHMF:

I
I

_

_

(•II ...t.

i or tJMi\

•rr~-·

In

c .. n.l""l'oll··'· T•• t... n ..

I'•

nr 1\ll

,\ rrll Y• .

_____

l 'lr•••nl

304·273-SSSS

1~~~

4-9-tftt

I'

TROY-B/£T
Our Spri..,.; Shlpmen! Of

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861 -1929.
Espec~ally National

HAULING

y""' Wi'tcf'ili~'Drr'"
II SOw... ilhell!, 0\;a •593-381S

•• •

..,.,.,t I ... nt namr

I~

I'IIO'•

__

n..,.... ..... ·'"""' r~-· ~ · ,, ...,..-.,..,_, ,

Bank Currency from

MESTONE
GRICULTURAL
LIME

•

any state. Paying
S300.00 and up lor
speciftc pieces from
Racine, Pomeroy,

REASONABLE RATES

Middleport and

742-2138

PETE SIMPSON

Ravenswood.
Evenings

3·1 S-'92-t mo. pd.

1-614-764-2101

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes e Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions ' Roofing
fOitlltft:ll{'l,\1. and RK'iWI::Vfl.\1.
t'REt: F.STIMt\'I'K'i

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(Na Sunday Calls)
2112ft.l2 tfn
-

ATTENTION

•
• • •

\lohile

~

Douhlc" ide !lome (),, twr'
OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Approved M111Uiocturad
Housing Produ&lt;ls.
·

lf1TDTUrDIIII

1111:n 1nr=nm.

Ill! rr R nv f1f

~r.N

'

Ouohly Hi Efficiency Air
(onclitioaers, Heal Puqs,
Furnaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.

•

I~

Bennelts Mohile Home leuting &amp; Looting
1391 Safford School Rd.
Gollipoll1, Ohio
(aU (614) 446·9416 or 1-800-872-5967

•

••

BISSELL &amp; BURKE - ~JAYMAR
CONSTRUCTION

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

)()l l DON 'T' M0\1-: )()I'll
MF\J('II •\NDISIO: L\ S \1· 11
l\\ .\'1 ~IH CAN C' \\
"AniiA(AllABHA!"
\\ 1'111 AI'&lt; AD 11' Till·.
TilE II~II.Y
~F.NTINF.I. U.ASSIFIEilS.
Till-:\ WOUK 11~1·:

Quality
Stone Co.

FIIH ESTIMA'TES

(oil b1H92-6b31

985·4473
667·6179

St. Rl . 7
Cheshire, OH.

KEYIII'S LIWII
MIIIITEIIIICE
614-94~2627

Lawn Mowing,
Fortllizfng, Woedlng,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming I Romoval
Rooldendoll

I I I COli nT ST UEET
I'OMF.IIOY, Oil - 1 ~7 h9

12

Commerela4
frM EtUmalet

I

L-----------------------------------------------

4flll'l2 ' 1

rnD

P4

..
~

~

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

2·7·92-tfn

,~tJH!N tl

Cnii ; J-.16-2~

I

I

~~
T.

• • •
• •• •• •
•
•

Tilt IlAIJ.Y

CASlliiNI.l M.\ ll . ilfl I'! .Art: H iii'Fl&lt;T

l'rinl onr

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

L1censed and Bonded

15.

10. _ _ _ _ _ __

VALLEY INC.

L.----------..1 11___________
PH. 614·992-5591

11. _ _ _ _ _ __

1· - - - - - - ~- -----,~~..

_ __

.. ____ ___ "· - -- - - - t!. _ _ __

1.

Agriculture .
Lime

Dirt , Gravel and Coal

.

I

FOR SALE

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING : limestone,

----------------------------- ----r..--;-,~);-;j:;- Sj.:f: lr. I'&lt; I)I\
I
I
I
I
I

4-2-92- ••.

2fl01'92n mo.

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

r:

992·339H:30 •-4:00 ,_
141·3011)-Ahor 5;00

Pometoy, Ohio

4·4 ·92-tfn

•
•
• •

MIDDLEPORT- Grant St. 2 stol'j homo wtth 3 bedrooms,

(FREE ~TIMATES)

USED RAILROAD TIES

(4) 13, 20, 2lc

CAll 1-800.552-1990
FUll SERVICE POOL OPENINGS
CALl FOR AI APPOIITMEIT.
(614) 992·6402 OR 1·100·552·1990

608 ~ST MAIN

All SCAlES- VINTAGE ..,d
COllECTABlE
'Riders AYII1aLio'
DliP!jTIO M
.
THE QUAliTY PRINT SHOP
MIDDUPORT, OH.

Painti

992-2269

(614)992-5724

SUGGESRD SAU
RETAIL PIKE

DALLAS K. WEBER -OW ner

-Interior &amp; Exterior

•

997·2259

.

-Roofing

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

The Family of
[)()MNGO ALVARADO
would llkie to thank
everyone who oent
flo-ra and glflllto
axprwothelr
ay,.,...hy at our lou.
We especl..lly
appraclalo Putor
LaMar
the
SoUIMm
tiat
Chun:h, Management
andet.wof
McDonald'• of
Pomeroy. Your
kind111111 !Mini more

·'•:

Work
-Eleolrical and Plumbing

-{iutter

Tr&lt;&gt;y-8il11lll..-n Now In .'itodl.

(U\55f1ED RDS

Bruce Reed, Mayor

.
t&gt;

CARPENTER SERVKE

BILL SLACK

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

Card ol Thanks

covered

Read the

DK's FARM TOYS

-Room Addiliona

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

bids.

614-992-2242
412192/Un

YOUNG'S

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

roservoo the
1ighl lo 1eje&lt;:l any and all

$20.00
Custom Paintings

For More Info Call

DARWIN, OHIO
7131(91/l!n

Slates

Welcome

614-992-2549
411519211 mo.

4-7-92-1 mo. pd

1-800-848-0070

Dinlclor.
Tho Dinletor

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

HAS. Mon.·S.I. 10 am-5 pm
Sunday 1-5 pm

OR TOLL fliEE

qualif'ICation at to.. t ton
.-,. prior to the dote aet lor
.,._.;ng- in accordance
with Chapter 5525 Ohio
Reo al~
1'1-. and op&lt;JCifieationo
are on file in lhe Deparbnenl
ol Transportation and the
ollice ollhe Dialrict Deputy

"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
3981S Gold Ridge Road

ALL CLASSES

992·7013 or
992-5553

JERRY WRAY.
,at Thoma, Cemetery Oerit;
Director ot Transportation
ORDINANCE 606
(614) 992-2246 weekdayo. (4) 13, 20, 2tc
An ORDINANCE to
Weekends and holidays. 1 - - - - - - - - - 1
provide fee increase&amp; for
contact the Pomaoy Pollee
the Beech Grove Cemetery. Oepartmenlf614) 992-64tt .
EM~("'- D.v(
BE IT ORDAINED by lhe
SECTION !!1 : This Or 1\nlll lit' IX.) .n:' ~

ahafl be applied to tho Receiplll ................... 1,470.00 inotallod by the Village;
railingo. All painl ahall be Tolllt-........................ 4,552.00
applial by bruah only.
Expondilur............. I,025.00
Work ohall bogln not

more than 10 day• after

c.a.hier'a c:h.ck for an
amount equal to five
percent or hia bid, but in no
event more than fifly
lhouaand dolan, or a bond
fot ten per cent of his bid,
,_.- .. the Director.
8i*lef must apply, on the
proper
forms,
for

·Meadows

MUST PRE -REGISTER FOR

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

43,772 linear feet or 8 .29

'J(atfiryn

APR. 28 . 6:00 pm Basket Class

tofiCI .....

L__

omes-Pels-Wildll1•
Motorcyclea-Eic.

APRIL 13·18
blended Easter hours.
Open unlil7:30 pm

992-2487 or
992·7184

improving IIEG-143-0 .00,

3/23192/tln

CRAFTS

. ··

.,._toin:

882-i'_. Hur:n

POMEROY, OHIO

10 Dle-4 St., IIW41oport

2 Mileo on Hyaoll Run Ad
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Visits ...... $25.00
16 Visits ...... $30.00
1 Visit... ... $3.00
,.~.-~

Ohio

St.ndard Time, Tuesday,
Apri l 28, 1992 lor lm-

773-M-.on

843---Portland
247- Letart FaUa
949-Ruine
742-Rutland

the

Department of TrM'I•
pottatioft, ColumbUII, Ohio,

Jr. . Peal OHice

217 E. Secootl St.

TROLLEY STATIOH

SUMMER
IMAGES

rec 1 iYild at ... office of the

ltrOII

Place
Middleport, Ohio
539 Bryan

NEW OPENING

lNT PRICE CONTRACT
SeoHd , _... will be

Director ol

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

1 mo. pd. ~6/112

Real Estate General

3' TRICHLORO TABUT5

Devan Mariah Soulsby celebrated her ftrsl birthday reccnUy with a
party at the home of her parents,
Jim mer and Connie Soulsby.
Attending were her sister, Shan·
non, grandparents,Jim and Susie
Soulsby and Jim and Dorothy
Stou~ great-grandparents, Virginta
Will , Carl and Hazel Barnhill,
Cindy and Joe Fields, Casey and
Emily, Terri Soulsby.
Sending cards and gifts were
Jerrenna. Tim Ebersbach. Trey
Haley and Justin , Glen, Grace and
Keith Stout, Eleanor Logan, Margaret Burkhammer, Roger , Susie,
Carrie, Grant and Travis AbboU.

STATE OF OliO
DEPA11111ENT OF
mANSPORTATlON
Colum-. Ohio

Gallia County Meigs Counly Maoon Co., W\'
1\r•a Cod• 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

for errore (nt day ad ruu in paper}. C.U before 2:00p.m.
day afrn- puWte.tion to make correctio n
• Ad. that MUll be paid in .dnnce are:

program . Bidder's

APRIL 23, 24 and 25, 1992

First birthday

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Classified pages &lt;·over the
following telephone exchanges ...

•Insulation

204 N. Set. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992·3184

Public Notice

·- - - - -

• Ad.1 o ubide G.UU., Maeon or Me.g.t~ coliDtlell mlUt be prepaid
• Recei-d»counl for- ad,, pa1d 10 ad•alke.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

•Roolin~

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATIO'I
1.00 p m :&gt;atuidav
1 00 p m Monday
I·OO p m Tuesda y
1 00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m Thur.d•)
1·00 pm . Fnday

DEADLINE

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

ALL MAKES
Bring II In Or Wo
Pick U~.

•Replacement
Window

It II ... """ (iio •l!).JI IS

SECOND CHANCE
SALE
--

,_..No.. Ia Stoc...

Specializing In Cullom
$125.00 for second grave ahaU be . ., forth in the
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS number must be furnished Bal. 12131/V1.. .......... 3,527.00
Frame Rep a it
FOOD SERVICE
apace and any -..Iter;
bidding 1Jft1P0U1."
Notice io heraby given in bid.
NEW
&amp; USED PARTS
FUND:
The
Meiga
County
$200.00
opening
and
Eoeh
bidder
ahall
be
that aealed propoulo will
111181
......................
1o,n4.oo
reoerve
lhe
FOR
ALL MAKES
Commlaolon.,.
closingweelcdiJyo;
.
_
lo
file
with
hie
bid
be ..eeived at tho olllce ol
$250 .00 op1tning and a cartiHad check or '
&amp; MODELS
the Board of lleigo County right to aoc:epl or rejoet any Roceiplo ...................7,624.00

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

.. or

COPY

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

KING'S TV
INSULATION
ZENITH
•Vinyl Siding
SERVICE

o.~sw,..

"'i...,-8ib

Commlaalonera at

Lydia Council plans for May 8 banquet
The Bradford Church of Christ
Lydia Council met recently at the
church with Charlotte Hanning and
Jane Hysell as hostesses.
The hostesses gave devouons
"Because He Lives" from II
Corinthians . Scripture reading s
were from Jud e, II Timothy,
Proverbs and Philippians . Nanc y
Morris had prayer.
Jan1ce Felly presided and
opened the meeting with prayer.

f'IIIJY-B&amp;T'

Actor Chevy Chase
wants some respect
NEW YORK (AP) - Chevy
Chase says he's growing up.
"Now, for the ftrst time, I want
10 wtn credibihty and respect for
my acung," the former "Saturday
N1ght Live" star said in Sunday's
Parade magazine .
Over the years. Chase has experienced two failed marriages, a bat·
tie with drugs and a mm career that
has mcluded hox office successes
and failures.
Chase, 48, attributes much of
hiS current happiness to his wife.
Jayni. whom he married in 1982,
and htS quiuting drugs in 1986.
''I'm a very lucky guy . Jaym
and I have been in the same house
for 10 years, have three wonderful
kinds . Very middle-class. Very
white bread. And we 're very
happy," he said. "Come to think
of i~ I've becane the very thing I
used to parody'"
Chase's films include th e
"V acatioo" movies, " Flw:h" and
"Foul Play."

Sentinel- Page-7

The

Ohio

11?/tln

BOWARD L.
WHITESEL
RDDnNG
NEW - REPAIR
GUTIERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANING
PAINtiNG
Free Estimates

941-2181
4115/t3 1 mo . !Mjl.

�a

Page

The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
33 Farms tor Sale

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beanie

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by larry Wright

46 Space tor Rent

,,... Che¥y 4 WMel Oriv•.
ShcH1 Whool Suo, :IDS, • Spood,
4· Uft Alum WhNtt; , Call 30487'5-7'623, Or6~015 .

Farm Wanted : On Ohio RI'Hr
For Vegatabll•. Mlnon H.
R•nlck , RNI E.atlde Brohr. 614-

47 Wanted to Rent

1114 CMo¥y 4 WhHI Drive,
ShcH1 Wholl
:IDS, ' Spood,
4'" Uft, Alum WhNis. CIIH 304175-7123, Or&amp;~-4015.

1-90o-713-1006, S2.95 Min. 18 •
Matetal, Costa MQa, California

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Young t:oupll ••nting Ia ,..,,
small
or 1n~Uar, wUh hind
lor dog1, WUI pey $200mo., need
by M•y tst, 614-992-71160

LIVE! UYE! LIVE!
1-900-4M-9800i (18 •l SSTEL

25 acru In Wllknvilla ar11
bM.utltul -'ghl for home &amp; par:
!Ialiy wooded .,.., 614-669-3402
or 614-7112-2536

Circle Motel: Haw Man.gement,
Rlln'ICidtiled Aooma, CtbM, Dl•

9955,

couniS
For
Funerals,
&amp;
Reunions,
l.ocltion:
1380

Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-

Euttm

446-2501.

983-2134.

GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRlS

HOMEt'S

Orl , FL $3.95/M

Reduce
Gob.ae

n.

sale I
tabtalt

fas t

&amp;

Olura11e, available
Pharmacy

wi1h

32

14170 !railer
wldeck, encklsad porch &amp; ear·
port, 3 outbuildings, gas . . 11.
nu.r R•clne, asklng $30 DOQ

E-V•p
Fr~h

at

V2

ICriS,

Altduce: ule &amp; fast with
Gobtse
t8blets
&amp; E-Vop
OiutOtlc, available at Frl.llh
Ph1rmacy

614-2-47-2622

REDUCE; Bum Oft Fat While
You Sleep, Tiike OPAL Available
At : Fruth Pharmacy.

Lots In Galllpoll• Ferry .- 100%
OWMr llnanelng at $98 64 per
month, 811Y 01"'111 of tour lol•

- -- -

sJnglesr===========l'-::=========::1

Through
Our MHI
Singles
AruNewsle!Unaltachl'td?
ler. Wrlle : Singles PO. Boa

1043, Gol11polls, Ohl~ ,.;;,..
Giveaway

4

__

11 Help Wanted
_:_:_______:__::____:___:

City of Point Pleaunt Is acceptIng appllc..tllons lor certiii.O

2 Indoor Cats, 12 Montt'lt Old, lifeguards for 11'"18 1992 swimSpada . Fftmala IS Month Old ming Mason. Apply : City Hall .
Neutered, Mil8 To Good Homa 1 400 V'illld 51, Point Pleasant ,
614-~46- 2338
WV 2S5SO . thyor RusMit V. Holland.

6mos . old, long

hair~.

black

cat , li1t11r tralntd, cornu with tittar box, 614·992-2508

Home Wortc•~ Ne8ded By ISO
Firms, Top Pay, $339 WHk Or
Mor11. Rutfl $1.00 s.tt-Addr. .
Bicycle Frames. girlt &amp; boys ,
sad Stamped Env1lope 110 D&amp;A
614-992 -sno
Supplies, Box 1443, Fairborn ,
Fema le Australian Shepllald, OH45~
32~4~
. ------------614 -J79-V98
LJadsl
l.Nds!
Laads!
No
- -Fu l l blooded while
female proposition ever etvoll Union
Pekingese, has been spade, in- M•mb4rs Suppl•ment In your
area. Insurance license pretlr·
sida dog. 304-~76-2364.
red but will train 2 hard woril.ing
Pup pi~~os . To Good Home. Call coosclous people k»&gt;tlnt tor
514-446 -7157 After 4 P.M .
parnment 1\111 time poaiHon
Company banelh, compte~•
training pro¥1&lt;*1. C•ll pt&gt;rson6 Lost &amp; Found
nel 30.-342-4349, confidenll•t
Found Ring Gaurd . AI Clt1io Val· inlenrie•.
ley Ba nk. (Jackson Pike, Gal·
lipolls) Parking Lol. Call To Mid Ohio Velley H-lth Oepan ldanl ify · BatwHn The HouN 9 m•nl ...king eontract&lt;a~l RN to
work
c:aH
management
o\ M &amp; '.l P.M. 614- 446~747
program Jacbon Countr,, WV.
Found
Short
H•ir,
Sm•ll Must have curr.nt WV' I c•nM
Homesick Beagle. legs, ~hi and be allglble tor WV Ch11i Ser hn 'llrown And A lillie Wh1te vice. Must han minimum of
Wa Afe Trying To Get Her To thrH y.. rs nurelng a1perienca.
Eat . 614 ·368· 9092'.
Position requirH knowledgl of
nursing ....••menta. Mu-'
LDST near Comstalk
iURa ,
have
vehicle.
Salary
plus
Sybtrlan Huskty, darkish riKI &amp; miiNge. PINM Nnd WRITTEN
whha, 6 monlt"ts old. rew;ud, resume to : Dlxl• Showatter, RN,
104~75-2452
Director C11nlneal
S.rvlc...
211-8th
St,
Lost . Canisl•r Vacuum Cleaner MOVHO ,
Fell From Van, R1.7 Nonh, Bet- Parkertburg, WV 26101.
oNeen
Addison,
Cheshire NMded: Someone To Run Hot
l hiJrsday Reward! 614-j67-7123
Dosl Concu•ion Stand. Appomlmfln! Only. 614-367-0689.

7

Yard Sale

OLAN MILLS , lhe wor ld's lar·
$JISt portrait sludio has several
1mmediatt openings lor lolaphone sa las work . No ex -

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Vard Sale• Must 8• P.a1d In
Advance . DEADLINE : 2:00 p m.
I he day be tore !he illd Is to run
Sun day editioo
2:00 p.m
Friday Monda. y edllio11
2 00
p m . Salurday

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pailrson Auclion Company ,
lull lime auclion&amp;er, complela

auclion

sef'lica.

licensed

16Ei,Oh lo &amp; West Virginia , 304·

m-5785 .

9

Wanted to Buy

Oon"l J1Jnk It! Sell Us Your Non·

Working
Major Appliancn
Color TV"s, VCR "s Microwa~es
El c . 614·256-1238 .
Warned To Buy· Junk Au1os
With Or WilhoUI Motors Call
Larrt Lively. 6H -388-9303
Top Prices Pillid : All Old US

Coi ns, Gold Rings , Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Secood Avenua , Galllpolia

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

Want ltd a Mllure reposible Per·
son who lnjoyt Coo king . Apply
in

Person

here

1111

f"ronti1r

Farms Rest.auranl. No Ptwne
Ca lls. Monday
Friday 7· t o
tl ·l01 to 5: PM -

$2,500 C REDIT CARD 1
Gua rante8d Sarna Day
roval! Also OU4llity For
eposU VJSAIMC And Cash
1 - 80()-264~789
vances
2524

g

ApNO

Ad El"1 .

-~---

$35(1 OO:Oily Procnslng Phone

Ordarsl People C.U YOY. No Ex periancl N-.:eaury I-800-2S50242

perience necessary, we !rain.
Mornin9 &amp; ev1t11ing shifts availablt. Al so na&amp;d someone lor
lig~t d111very work . Apply lo
Tom Goodall • Lowe! Motor Inn,
Pt Pienanl, WV. Starling Mon·
daw. Apnl 20tfl, 5:00-9 :00 PM
and Tuesday thru Friday 9·00AM
- 1.00 PM &amp; .5 :00 - 9:00 PM
Matl.lgament
opportuniliBS
anilabia tor those tree lo travel!
E OE MIF
"Av0r1' 111 areas The sky is the
limit with new earning striJcture
l.a00-992-6356

P.atienl S1rvice Assistant, A.pproJimaluly 20-25 Hours Per
Week ; Must Be Energa11c And
Abla To Work. FlltJibla Schodulu
Incl ud ing Day, E ven1ng And
Saturda~ Hou~ . Med ical Ollica
E•perience He lpful : Will Train
Mature , Responsible Pe rson
Who Is Sansitive To Birth Con
trol And Reproduct1vll He&lt;JIIh
NHds 01 Clients. MIJst Be Wall
Organiltd;
Aceura 1e
Wilh
Flgur111 And Rec ord KHplng,
Have Supenor Commun 1ca t1on
Skills. Musl Be Able To Wo1k
Under Guidelines Wilt&gt; Mmimal
SuP9rvislon. Require! Rtliabla
Transporlation , Ab1 l1ty To W01k
In Meigs. Galliil . Lawrence
Co1Jnliu And Olher S119s It
Needed. Time And Out ot
County Treval Pa1d Start S5 50
Send
Rasume
And
Two
Employment
Releronces To
Ptannrad
Paranth ood
01
Southeast Oh1o, 396 R1 cntan d
Avenua. Athens, Oh 1o 457 0 t By
AprlllO . 1992, EOE.E SP
To Work. In Ha~dware
Slore As Cle rk. Apply CL A Be•
112, clo Gallipolis Oa1l~ Tribune,
825 Third Avenue Gall,pol1s.
Pe~n

Ohio 45631
= ___:::_:_::_ _ _ _ · - Wanted . Sales po!.illon t01 local
arM
buain•ss
Othmng
b.nelila. musl be aggross1~8
and sble to work. w11h publ 1c
Send complele resiJme Bo x a .
18 Cltl Pt Pleasan1 Rn!JISIRr .
200 Main Sl . po o 11 . WV 2'1'1"i0

12

1 S.cn~laty 1 Receptionists For
Growlf"IQ Otllce Word Pr ocess·
ing
{WP5 .1),
Transcriplion ,
Pl aasanl Pllone Ptt$onalhy. Ins
Billing E1p., Will Train On Varl·
aus
Computer
Programs
Flexible Oty .And
Evening
Hours. Resume To
Calhy
Cooper, PO. 8oa !tlO, Gallipolis .
OH 456 31

Mas t

AVON ! All Araa1 ! Shirley
sp_
••_
.-.~04-675-c".::'c.'_ _
8•bytlt1tr in my home, 5 d.a~s 1
WMk,

8u5mess

Specia lizin g
Upgrad~tt .

..

Wanted to Do

O.Orgu Portable Sawmill, doo'
flaul your loqs lo the mill jusl
CIIJ 3().4~75-1~57.
House Cleaning For Pa11 1ea,
Showing Or Any Occasion: Also
Clean WMkly Or Monlflly!
Reterencu. 614-446 -3681, 614446-3388 lu¥e Messege .
Mist Paula 's Day Care C.nler.
Sat., affordable , chlldca,... M-F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2'111-10.
Before, after Khool. Drop-Ins
welcome. 614-446-8224. New Infant Toddler Cart, 614-446-6227.
Odd Jobs, Ausonabl• Ratas,
614 - ~9"1 .

Will Do Babysltling In My Home.
Certified Nurses Ald . Good
Location . 614-446-2652 .
Will Do Babysitting In My Homa,
Located Near Clay SchooL 6t4256-6869.
Will Do Housecleaning In Gallipolis Area . $4 . ~ Per Aour. 614·

446-6406.
Will do yard work (mow &amp; trim)
and till gardens. 304-675-7595

evenings.

Sottwlue

!lve Malnlanance Anrl Prohlem
Solving C W Clark 614 · 379·

,,

21

R•tram
Now! 1!Southea stern
Buamess College , Spring V-'ller,
Plaza C.all Today, 5t4+t&amp;-4167 1
Reg 1stt1 1tion t90-0S- 1n'1B

Monday -Friday, 614 -992·

3257

- - - -- - - -

8•byslt1er, 3-!'i Day• Per Week.
Varied Schldl.lle
References
nequlr•d
614·245-9415
Btl·
we•11 RPM . &amp; 10PM.

BARTENOERS i CASINO
WORKERS / DECK
HANOS!Hos1nu.,
Etc
Posi tions Abo.,d CruiH Ships
$3001$900 Wkly. Free WorM
T1avel. No Exp. NeenNry I·
706 -136-1000 Ert . l!O•H8

17 Miscellaneous
Plaslic Drums lO Gal &amp; SO Gal
$3 00 And s.fi tiC 614 -367-7802
Would You like To See Whal"s
New Wltfl Amwa~ Or Rest oc k.
Your Supplies Call 514 · 446·
3303

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babyalt In My Home Rod ·
ney ArN. Ral•rencel Available
C.. I! 614- 24~S387

HERE'~ A~ALE

"fORE" YOU
IN THE
ClA~flflfO AD~

2722.

0

t~=;:========lr:==========i

W•nt to buy lot suhable tor
mobile homa, will pay cash
304~75~984 .

W•nted : Residential Building
Lot Or Acreage For Quality
Hom11. Must Be Within 5 Milas
01 Holler Hcnplt•l On Blacklop
Road . 1-304-2T.J..2940.
Would Uk1 To Rent A House
With 3 Or 4 Bedrooms, Would
like To Have Houu In Bidwell
Sc~ Dlslrict Area. 6M -367-

Tobie Exo:oit Condhlon 1 ,._..._

!NOTICE !
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO
recommends that you do busi·
ness wilh p,aople you know , and
NOT to send money throu9h the
ma ll un111 you hava invesllgal ed
the oflering.

Whirlpool Washer And Orytr
S.t, Harvest Gold, Wu S300 Cut
To f,245; G.E. Dryer WI• $125
Cut To $1!5 ; Hotpolnt Washer
Was $15Q Cut To $95: llaytaa
Dryer, White, Uke N-, t156.
Sk•gg•

m•.-

Raslau1anl Equipment For Salu
3 T.aylor Soft Serve Freezers : 2
Door Frunr: Slap In Cooltr;
Display Freazer; Menu Board;
Table And Chairs . Mi!&gt;e Equip·
mant . 614-245-!Klll
:_::_::_c:c___ _
Vending Route : local. We Hava
Tha Hawes! Machine s, Maki119 A
N1ce Steady Cash lncomlt. 1·
800-955-0354

Real Estate

Furnished lBr Hou11, 1 Floor,

nso .. utmu... upper

Fourth

Av1nue, Gallipolis, References,

Security O.poslt. 614-446-4416
After 7p.m.
Nice 1tflelency couaga, unique
and beautiful, 304-675.0042

Iohan Carpttl, 114-446-11144.

A-Frama Cabin 16 "xl7" ; Marlint on, WI/ Williams GJeebrlar
River Naarby ; Monongah al ia Nat ional Forni: Nn"l To Handllty
Public Hunting Arn; Great
Hunling, fishing (Turkey, Deer,
8e.ar~ ~od11rn Cabin For 8-1tl;
Mountain
Setting,
Beautiful
$19,900. 614·379·2~8
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

Historical Area Corner Lot • 816
Main Sl Pt Pleasanl, W. Va .
Completely Renolialed : 2 Full
Baths, 3 Lar9e Bedrooms , Naw
HVAC . New Ca rpel Av.ailabla
June 15 614 -446-2205
Erlrgm~;~ l y l\lilill , r~;~ady to movll
mlo. 2brlrm , heal -pump, g real
st.Jrt91 homa o r lor couple.
FMHA approv&amp;d. Syracuse , 614·

Hide-A-Bed Sola, Queen, $150;
Complete 5 Pc:. Bedroom Suitl,
$250: Uwn Mow.rs, Raltlan
Olnnene Tab._ Gina Top It Rattan Bacu, Wether 1
Eadt Compa.t:e Living
S.t. 614-446-9325.

OrywAr:

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Complete home fumllhlngt.
Hou": Uon-5111 , f.-5. 6~
0322, l mila out Bulaville&gt; Rd .
FrM Delivery.

PICKENS AJRNiTURE
Nlaw/Usld
Household furnishing. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd . Pt Pleasant, WV,
call J04-67S-1450.

'14-446-3150

son 11"111. $200. month $150.
deposit, 304 · 77'6~0!19 or »t-

768-5252.
2br

Unl\lrnlsh.O, Air, Cable,
Beautltul River Vlaw, Relet11ACe,
O.potth Required . Fosler's
Mobil• Home Park. 614-446·1602

Mobll• Home unJum. C.l , 322
Third Ave 614-446-3748 Of 614 256·1903 Bafot11 9 . PU

44

Apanment
for Rent

liMirm . apt . In Middleport , waler,
Mwaqe, truh paid, you pay
alectnelgu, S1501mo , 614-949-

2217

Flat wood Ar&amp;a , Pomeroy, L.ar91t
Cou nlry Home . New Kil chflll ,
9ath , &amp; Carpe11f19. Low S30 "a.
Oua1i!1ed Buyer. 614-446-235U

tbdrm .,
$225mo ,
inc ludu
utilitln, tecurfly deposit ,....
qulrlld . no pets, 614-992·2218

Spli l·enlf'i,
3
bed10oms ,
l1¥1ngroom. dlnlngroom. tamil)
room wl1irapiiC8, 3 MIMI,
covered dKk, pallo, doubt•
gar8Q4'1, Sand Hili Rd, 304 -675 ·
12 5tl

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

2 Batha, Den Spec:ial
Low Pric• . Fn~nch Cily Mobila
Homes, 614 -446 -!illAO

$S.OO Oft Purchase Pric• Of Anw
New Hom• At Elsea Home Cen·
101. Great Selecllon, Frea Set-Up
And Deliv•ry' Ca ll 614 -n2 -1720
14a74 Govarnor, 3bdr., deluu
batn. ITont k.ilchen, h18 porch,
v1n'r' l underpinning , a•c condi ·
!ion. $1 5.000, 614·9~2 -7410

1978 C&amp;G Baron,

14~70.

all

2bdrm ,
pump.

electric ,
he.al
screena&lt;l porch . carpon, all
kitch en appliances . 1nclllding
dishwaahar, vary good cond1·
tion, 2 acrn loc:atad on Rod.

spring•

Ro:~d,

614 -992-n83

1983 Nashua , 3 bedroom , 14x70
with 7x12 expando, CA. Queen
wallrbed, gardNI tub , all appliances, 10•20 d&amp;ek , $14 ,500
Musl move. 304..fi7S-7 1i60 Of 675·
3594

UVlNG ROOM : Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up; Cotf11 And End
TabiH $79 And Up; Swivel

Bedrooms,
Stove
And
R1frigerator Furnished. 614-4463940.
:Z

2br Gt111ge Apartmenl loealed
106 Locust StrHt, G.a:illpoll•.
$22~0 . $100 O.posi1 , Waler
Fum1•hed. 614-«6-3870.

AT

8E.t.liTIFUL APARTMENTS
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
lrom $192/mo . Welk. to lhop &amp;
movies . C.ll 6"-U6-2568. EOH

Fumlshed lpartment

1 a.d-

tOom , Ulillllu P11id , $260/mo

920 Fourth Av•nu• , G.llipolla
Ohio, 6t4-44S-441fi Aftet 7p.m .
Furnlsh.c:l Apar1menl, 4 Rooms
And Bath, Centrally located ,
R•f•r•nce And O.po1it R•
quirad. No Pet a 614-446-0444
Furnished Apartment , 1 br, nut
IO Ubtary, partl.ing, central Ileal,
air, references
614-446-0038 ,
Belor• 7p.m

'---

- --

Gracious living 1 1nd 2 bed·
room apanments 1t Village
Manor
1od
Riverside
Apartmenllln Middleport . From
$196 . C..ll 614-992-m7 EOH.
Completly Furnished mobile
home , 1 mila below town , oYer·
looking rlvtr. No Pttl , CA. 614·
446-0338
and

two

apartments for rent

bedroom
304-6TS-

2Cl53 or ~75-4100

bedroom fumlstlld tpl ,
Point Piusant, very clean, no
1985 Windaor 2br, Fully Fur- pets. 304-ti75-1386
nished, Dl1hwash•!.t Dlspoeal,
T4!ra Townhouse Apanments, 2
T.V . Slereo Sy~•m 1fuoughoul,
Washer &amp; Dryer, 2 Bedrooms Of Bedroom• , 2 Floors , 1166 Sq. Ft
1 112 Bath I, C.l, OW, OiepoMI, 2
Fumitura And Uvlng Room FurPoolt, U'tliltt.. Paid Except
niture, Mlcrowne , Retri'(rator Electlic , No
614-367-7850
One

BEDROOM
Bunk Bads $99
(2a61 ; 4 On~wer Chasl ot
brawtt$ $44.a5 ; Twin MIRt11U
$99 Set.
OINETIES· Wood ~r Stoots
$1 • .95 (26") Table And 4 Padded
Chalrt $129
OPEN : 1 Oayt A WHit, 9 A.M. • 6

P.M. Sundor 12 Noon · 5 PM.
Rt 141 4 M lee ott Rt. 7 In C....

~":._";:";:'Y::_·--------·I
Anti es
53

""""='"_,,.....,-q.:.u--:-:-:.,..,.-:-1
B'G RIYtr Antiques, 510 Main S.,

Point Plusanl, WV.

Buy or nil. Riverine Anllques,

1124 E. Main Sl,.et, Pomeroy.
Hou" M.T.W. 10 :00 a.m. to 8:00
p m., Sunday t :QO to 6:00 p.m.
614-992-2526.

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise
1 Black I Gold Prom Oms,
Size 11, Worn Once, $50. IK.. ,-00011

And Stov e 614-446-354 , J04.

~~·3~~~----~~~~ 45

11192 Brnzewood J'•60 2 Bed·
rooms. Sill! Under a.anulacturera War111ny. 614·379-22513 Attar 6 PM

Furnished
Rooms

2 Salt-d11Toatlng relrtgeraton., 1
while, I brown , $100 each,

l&lt;.enmMI wathlfldryer tift, a~
mond
co4or,
$.200 ,
GE
washar ldryer, wtllt•. $150, fi~

Concrete &amp; Plastic S1pt:lc
T.ank•. hi Ae1111lon Tanlls . Aon
Evans Enterprt ... , Jackson. OH
1.300-537-9528

Schult HomHtud t9i2 1411D 2
Or 3 Bedrooms, 2 B1tht Vinyl
Siding , Shlngl• Root, Spacial
Prk•: $19,995 FfSinch City
Mobile Homu. 614-4&lt;16-9340

MotMt. Home Lot, 112 .t.c,.s,

PrtvateJ. ~ - 2 Honh, I Mil•

From t'Oint P*Mnt , 'NV 614·
U&amp;-9340.

COitl 4D-40M u,.. ......... l yr.
okl $'1000; 1 coMa bubble
balancer tt50. AN tlr• In !llodl.
will leU II co.t you pay In,

cash 'n earry. Ev..-ythlna can be
...n at Atvwrstde llalt I Ttektt

at Rl . 7 lind Rl . :ttl, Gal-

jet.

hpotll.. 114-441-0101 or 37'1-:ziOt

WH1TE·s IIETAL DETECTORS
Ron

All'-on,

1210

Second

Annltl, GIIUipolit, Ohio, 114-

~anna. JKk~an, Ohio, 114-

281-.1315.

Follnlory 1981 AQHA Sorrell
Mare, June 1HO Ftntlttle Paint
CaH, 19112 12 A. Stock T111llef,
tt;m. &amp;14-286-1522.

Good 4-H • FFA Club Plat FOf
Sat.. 1'14-388-i033Aft• ll'.M.

eo.

Her•tonl
wtth
Cllf, 304-451-11f1.

55

u~

Poated l ... efofd Built 1·1 Yra.
Okt. Top 8laodllnas. T•ytor I
Toylo&lt;l~.

llppo DIU P..,.,_, Chtltnut
mara, lyn. old, $150G, 814-6982111

Transportation
71

Autos lor Sale

(I) Ill

Colo..My.
2.1l-FOOO
Loaded. $2,400. 114-:1151-0122 ....
,.,. 5:00 Pll.

~

5:00PM.

1969 Mustq $3,500. 1131 0te&lt;v
$850. 1085 Honda St.doll
70Ck:c, 2,400 ml, 12,000. :J04....6~

....
1171

a..v.n.

lUper &amp;pori, 350

hlah porlonnanc:o onalno, Cowt
lnilucllon hood, eatr 304-882·

1981 Sublru 4dr Wegon, 4WO,
4apd , Good CondHkln, $1 ,500.
Take Guns On Trade. &amp;M-38819B:l Chevy

c.wu.-. •

doof, 4

cyt, auto, run1 good., body ltttll
rough, 1650 . ........,,.,.,_
1183 Pontiac Bonnavtlll, 9QOd
304773-5284 or 77"J-~7':10 •fief 5:0CI

Pll.

EASTER. $400. 304-776-6710.

AKC

Reglller.d

Uiniatw•

1184

~nt Pleaunt, l04-1~2013,
full Woe Troplcllll fish 1 blrdt,
small animals and

•"PPf•.

mott.r·

Puppin.:

rag

A.KC

A..1ttwod Pood1o Puppy, 1200

1184 ~An... 4 door, btM:k,
AIM=M, c....a., 4 cyl, aUla,
IJ.C....H2-723S, wenlnge

1984 Pont*:: SIMian Wagon,
FuH 91za, PSLPB, PW, 3 SNI1,

-a-,......,

Good

614-44'-1822

Ewanings

•lr.

1986 Olcla RttnU, 5 &amp;pled,
1m/ tm stw.o, till whMI, 114112-1521 call aft ... 6pm
mi..., PS,
•xc cond,
$4,200. Ot tr.dl tor aU1o pick up,
304 -175-1221.

Loaded! Excellenl Condhlon
$5,000. 1~225, Att8f &amp;p.m.

57

1987 Pontiac: Fireblrd, Y-11, T·
Top, S3,00Q rntiM., AM.fM ca.
ult, 5!,500. 304-~~2311 ......
6 :00PM

$2.800. Of taa.t oftlr, 304-t7'55332eor IM-IW-3481.

--

1N8 . Ford Eeeort,

Chlltmen, H.D. 6 Goat, Hnter
Electric Fon. u•. 114-446-2:15t.

Formal Gown Tu length, Burgunc:l~ Size: 22-24, $45 614-256-

MOI Ev.nlnge.

6830

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOlS
Only $62.9VMo. • For t2 Months.
11h31x4 Pool lncludM Aner,
laddert., Huge Oeek
£1c.
('Bntd On Selling Prk:sl Of
Sti~t .

2 Row Cofn Pa.nt.,., 114-245-

l

$14 .45 APR, Total O.fll"r-.d

Price ·

$154J~2~

Don'1 Betilv• H7

C1ll BPI

1-800-548-1923
G1n11.is
fnlurlng

Nutrtt lon
Product a
A.mlno Ac.ld Body
....tght: lou and f•t

Building
burner fOfmufM . Available ••·
elusively at Rite Aid Pharmacy.

The Nfe w1y to dial.
IBW PS1 Hard Dfi'H Cob
Monitor And Printlf, Oltk.
$1,400. 6t4-256- t026 BIIC»n~ 1

used trunn $8.
eoch; kldo lp!l'!!l lwH II"'"':
klde t61n sttrt8f bib; 18ft alumn
hard lop boel, 15hp ndor; 1011
alumn Jon Boat· Patlun 3 man
paddle bollt; tift •lumn V bot·
tom tllhllng bolt; Ford 7ft Filii
mower 3pt ; Engln~ ovwhlul kit

tor AC WD 45 tr.clor; Ft&gt;f'QutOn
row cultivator lpt; one row

~

a

lnlarNI~I

tnelor, 114-185--3373

a

R . Draa Dille:, J Pohtt Dtrt
Scoopar fueuc, 18 Ft Ettctrle
Hoy Elom«, Bunl&lt; · 114311-nN.

U.llnr BldG. Spaelat 30'x40'xl',
1-15"al' SITdina Door, 1-3' Walk

o.o.,

PolntM Slooi Sldlnv I

Aoonng. $5190. 1n&gt;n
Blclfll. f-800-352-1045

Hono

s.mc. C.ntar.

Buy, Sell ,

LivestOCk

cutttvetor 3pt; ~pole . 304 -77"35680

Slw,

roo7t

Mercwy Marin• Servic1.

Guinn.

Mere~,

MercrviMr

MariMI',

76

ALLEY OOP
THI"''K YOUR D.A.YS
ARE NUMBER:Ef',

BIJSTERI

B~ Transmluk»nn, Usad &amp;

EEK AND MEEK

79

n

e

WATERPROOFING

llflftlme guarantlll. local ralannces tumished.
FrM H11matn. Call collect 1114-237-0488, d•y or nlghl
B8Semant

Wat..-proo-

'lnv-

MY KID BROT1-1ER
A LJ.IoCOT 60r KIL-LE'D

HE WAS LCXJKJNG lJt.CJER

AND /lAY FAT

THE SOFA CLBHICJI.I5 FGR

YE5TERDA.Y.

LlXl6E Q--\ANqE . -

UNC.UO D-lE5TE=R
5ATO&gt;-JHIM.

Hom.

Cu11lt

lmp.-ovemenfe
YNre Experience On OkliM I

(J) M•}or League Beaeball
Philadelpt1ia Phill1es at

Ch1cago Cu bs {LJ
(l) 11!1

JET

Motora, repaired. ,.....
I ,....iN motors In slock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1-800IUJ.1628.

Ohkl Valley Wttllfl)f'ootmg, 111-4
Viand St, Pojnt Pteaani, WV
2M50, 304~7~304!il. FrM . .
Um.t . ..

Dum!&gt;

Galll~lt. Ohio

COME OUT
WITH YORE
HANOS

YOU
CHICKEN STEALIN'
VARMINT U

117

Klndl

e...._:

Uphol$tery

........ ., Upholotoring log tri COWlty .,.. 21 ,...... Tha
IMtlt in tumttun uphotstering
Call :104-675-41!4 tOf' he ...:
llma!H.

Amoricon

Aian ·s li te flashes bel01e h1m
during a crucial basketball
game Stereo .

[;1

In Black Slalllon Ste•oo Q

9:00 Cllll 0 MOVIE; 'Lady

Slereo []

&lt;IJ a MOv•e:

Mu'Jlhy Brown

One of the world's best bndge wnt·
ers is Hugh Kelsey of Scotland He SPf"·

0

Norlb

East

2•
3•
3 NT

+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

P.1s.s

Pas.s

J

Upemn12, lead

R

Two more were published la~l year.
the ftrst bemg " Test Your Card Play
3" (Goltancz. 18.95. 212-866-5860)
There are mne defens1ve and 27 de-

tf East has th e hearl kmg However. tf
West wtn s w1th the k1ng and the etght
doesn 't appear on th1 s round or the
ne xt, you will have no dummy entry in
clarer-play problems Though tough. trumps . You will then need to fmd a
all the hands ca n be solved by careful singleloo spade kmg.
analys1s
A better line is to f i nesse the s pade
Cover the East -West ca rds m thts queen first If tt loses. you can use the
hand from the book Agam~t your stx · spade Jack as a dummy entry for the
he art contract , Wl'st ·lf'ads the club heart finesse . Uowever. if the spade ltJack . Plan the play
nesse wms. you lead the heart que€n
After winmn~ the ftrst lnck wtth from hand. happy to lose one heart
dummy 's du b kmg . you mtght be tnck Afrer unblockmg lt11' A -K of d iatempted to fmesse the heart 10. un - monds, you w il l draw tru mps cndinJi:
blocktng thr seven I rom hand As long tn the dumm y and dls&lt;·ard your spade
as the hearts aren' i 4-0. you are home four o n th e diamond Qllf'f'n

The World Almanac ~ Crossword Puzzle
Answer lo PreYiout Puz.r.l•

ACROSS

29 Fib
31 language
suffix
32 Harper Valley

1 Name in print

7 Circumvent
13 tnebrialed
(sl.j
14 Actrea&amp; Pipe r

33 Neighbor of
Yd .

34 Strengthens

15 Came to

37 Entertainer

terms

-

16 Easygoing

McEntire

40 Center ot sail

walker

41 Joyful
uclamation

17 Woolwashing

43 Trial

residue
18 Electrically

45 Uncle
46 Unplayed

charged

golf hote
47 Beerllke

particle
20 Adam 's male
21 Source of
limber
23 And to on
(abbr.)
24 Unusuat

drink
48 At the tip
51 Honored
54 Staid

1 Elploalon

55 Processed
56 Swap•

peraon

(sl.)
25 long journey

2

27 london 's

fish

DOWN

river

Murphy
7 Whitened
8 Sweet polato
9 Ta¥ern
10 Actren Dahl

Dairy product

3 Supply room
4 Freshwater

57 Drowsy

5 By birth
6 Comedian -

t 1 Strainers

12 Drier
t9 Bastball
ptaylf Mel 22 Fish trap
.......,,....,.......,.,.......,,...,.,.,,., 24 BreakJaat
food
215 Outfit'&amp;
28 Jacob's son
30 Food
34 Bar at back
of car

lorry King Uvol
Folher Oowllllfl Mroterieo

S1oreo. t:;J

ffi Cil

35 New York

lake
36 Express

38 Church

Modnollln

Jonathan

officer

39 Snoozing

Mil~

40 Wlkl animal
42 Ships' wheels

1!11 II!) 11211D No

ASTRO-GRAPH

ctrcle in the year ahead . AI l1r st. you
may teet you don't lit in . But w1th time.
this could turn out to be one ol your

warmest arrangements.
TAURUS (April :ZO..Mer 20) tf someone
goes out of the way to be helpful today .
be appreciative and acknowledge th1s
ind i vidual's efforts. A lack. of gratitude
w1n discourage luture assistance . Know
wnere to look tor romance and you 'll

lind it. The Astra-Graph Mat chmaker
mstantly reveals which signs are roman -

Exposure Chris dec1des to
t1cally perlect lor you Ma11 $2 plus a
long, self-addressed, stamped enyelope to Matchmakew- . eta thts newspa pet, P .O Box 91428. Cleveland. OH

44101 -3428
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20) You mtghl
have to deal with someone today whose
tactics you find disturbing Th1ngs wrll
WOfk out OK. though . provided your 1m·
pat.ance doesn 't tmpel you to opera te
on I his tndiv1dua l's wa¥etength
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) You may
have to work m close pro11m1ly w1th an
tndi vtdua l today under rather uncerta1n
conditions But you 're a good team . and
you should be able 10 accomplish your
miSSion
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A co--worker
mighl be instrumental in helping you
achteve a signmcant objective today tt
thi s individual Shares the efforts. be
sure you share the rewards

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Vou can 1M! a

successful promoter today, provided
you're forthright with your prospect.
Potnt out the limitations. as well as the
advantages, ol what you're selling
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Instead of assuming that somelhmg IS tactual just
because a tnend says it 1S. c heck thtngs
out tor yoursell Your eva1ua11ons could
be more on target than your pars.
SCORPIO I Oct. 2(-Nov. 22) lntt!ally. 1t

may appear that someone you ·re allied
wtth today doesn't have your best1nter
ests at heart later , ho wever , you ·u diS cover you we re wr ong
SAGITIARIUS (Now. 23-0ec. 21) You
could be rather torlunale today 1n add ing to your resources . However . you
might also be a trifle extravaganl Luck ·
liy. the former w1ll be the more domi nant charactenst1c
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 -Jin . 19) t! you
have a. m1sunderstandmg w1lh a tnend
today . make every effort to rect1fy the
matter 1mmedia te ly Unanended 11
m1ghl be d1fficull to re solve down lhe
road
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20--Feb. 19) An Imp or tant matter can be finalized to your sa t Isfaction tOday, even though yoll may
encounter a few obstacles . Keep visual IZing tl'le end result you des1re and work
toward it .
PISCES (F•b. 20-M•rch 20) A friend in
business lor him sell migt11 try to sell you
something loday that you know you can
purchase a bit cheaper elsewhere. But
it' s worth the exira cost 10 help a pal
ARIES (Miirch 21·April19) It looks l ik e
you·n be able to accomplish your material objectives today . even though . m
the process. you m1ght ruHie !he teat h ers ol those w1lh whom you 'll be
IOVOIYed

«-Kennedy

move to Africa when he geis
a check from his dad . {A)

Sweo. t:;l

+J

ans wer overleaf.

Wreattlng

a

Wi'!lit

Pass
Pass
!'ass
Pass
Pas,•&gt;

nal1zes m ca refully analyzed deals
that range from rhal\engmg to very t
difftcull Some years ago. he tnlroduced mmt -qu iz books Wllh titles
starting ~rest Your
He selS 36
card -play problems tn cad!. wi th the
question on a nght -hand page and the

®I Huhvllle Now Stereo

(A)

You mtght be invited into a new soc 1al

C...n+na.

Dealer South

10:00 I]) Major looguo Benbcltt
Atlanta Braves at San Diego
Padres (L)

April21, 11192

Do
HlluHng
AnyiiT;Mt,
~. No Job T~. Big Or

t ·' K

+·' 5

Women Skip makes plans to
rake Quint on B hunting trip.

'-Your
'Birthday

General Hauling

.AQJ 914

Sweo Q
9:30 1!11 ID 1121111 Deolijnlng

11on, .,.....,_,.,.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Tricky deals
from Scotland

1!J WWF Prime Time

UP U

614-446-3888

Any

[;1

Miles breaks up with hiS
g1r1tnend. who is Mur.p_!!y's
secretary . (A) Stereo L,J

BARNEY

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Heating

a

5lm 11211D

24~-9t52 .

379-2:278 Anytime.

of a

·s~a.
Trek Ill: The Seerth for
Spock' ABC ~y Night
Movle tPGI (2:00)_L,l
(ll (!I Madllne Ttiet
Changed the World Stereo

ol_,

Plumbing &amp;

11!1 (I)

o

J.W. Construction. Room Ad·
dltlona, Roots , O.Cils, Siding
And AU Typas Of EJ1Mlof And
lntllior Painting. Wlll Give Low
Uc:eo.. Btd . 6M-446-JS5l.

General Work,

m~Jrder

Murdo•, She Wrolo t:;l

(2 00)
(l)

e.

Too Uttie. B•••m.lt

Clllll FBI: The Untold

Ag•ln•t the Odds' NBC
Monday Night at the MoYiea

Newt Homas. Room Addttlons,
FOI.ndalkm
Work.,
Roofing,
Kitchens And Beths. frH
tlmll•l Ret•.nc:H, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 614-367-0511.

Trock, -

Ul F"'oh Prince of

Bel -Air Uncle Phil rocru1ts
Will to help with a
lund-raismg event {R)

Detective Portland poliCB
conduct B ma}or cocaine bust
at a manna . (R) Stereo . C
1!11 0!1 ~ til Brool&lt;tyn Brfdge

Uncondttfon.sl

n.-.
Good Condlt1on, "'"
Amp. On W.tder, Goad Condl-

••n

6;00 CD

SOl iTH
+A Q 4

By Phillip Alder

13 Croa•flre
7:35 I]) Sonford &amp; Son

(I)

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

. J 9 76l

+Q ll

Vulnerable NetLher

Stereo

questiOn s Blossom and S1x
when he finds a man~na
c1gBrene .(R) Stereo. L,J

BASEMENT

Carter'1 Plumbing
Fourth and Pine

lilt Plymouth Yay~
ioeded, tlbleL_~wsi61e tNtS
...... bod, u ..... 3114475-2088.

®I Be a Ster

8:30 (]) 1J I]) Blonom Ntc k

Home
Improvements

Rogera

t:;J

®II!) Wheel of Fonune
~til Fomily Feud

and Chile
@ llo)o• League Baoobalt
(L)
Q! PrimeNews C
0 Prince Votlonl S1eroo t:;J
8:051]) MOVIE Tho lklmlng Bed
1155)

Services
B1

Maniod ...With Children

121 Crook

1979 Tropkll\l T111v11 T111Uer 27
Fl. Wilh Root Air, $3,800. 6l4-

Trucks tor Sale

1918 Chivy han lon pickup 304175-5332 Of 114-M24488.

\lj a

t:;J

stranded in the woods (Pt 2
2) (R) S1e•eo []

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.5

!!l Bulls PloyoH Specfal
[J) II Entertainment Tonight

1!)

82

Door, Excellent CondiUon, N. .
nrw, $2,500. C.lll,.......-4638.

7:30 rne 01 Jeopardy! C

o1

lngo

EAST

• K982

2
+Jl0 96

I!] Ql Concon fo&lt; Ufe Elton
John, David Bowie, George
Mict1mel, Guns N" Roses,
Metallica and others perlorm
live in a tribute to Freddie
Mercury . Host: Cindy
C•aw1md (2 001
~., Evening 511- Wood.
Harland and Herma n become

Chly•nne'• Truck AUI:o, R't. 50.·

WEST
• 10 7 3
• K82
• \0 ~

ffi Cil T&lt;avola C
1!11 II!) 24 Hours ((1:30)

rabutn, stanlng M $99; front
whNI drive ttartlng at St4t.oo
614-245-5677, IM-992~2!il3.

For Sale: Oocl9' 318 engine with
lip. •1..llo. trans.; lransler CIM
' troot llle, $200, 614-i92·:Z478
weMdays, 6M-t92-3l49 • ....,....

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:05 I]) Addomo Fomlly

Stereo.

t-%1 -JZ

• Q8 5

t:;J

black officer by KKK
members leads to a
landmark case . Stereo.

Accesso~s

1\0RTH
• J fi5

" 10 6 J

Moneyllne

Stories The

Auto Parts &amp;

Henle RIMurna. FrM Delivery
To Area And Route Body Shoot.
C..ll For o.talls. 1-800-2~3-USI .

BRIDGE

+K 8 42

Stereo . t:;J

I

For Site: 1-~ Ford T1mpo, 4

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
~~- Lb. Hot.teln
o.t.ol118d. 114 Ul 0373.

..

tl

'MM build patio eov..-., decks,
ecreened rooma, pul up vlnyt
Udlf'l9 ot lreU• Pirltng. 614-

'"'-114-3417-72M.

2

I
\---

Tttfy WAN'r THAT,

441~294.

Truck Topper 1Ft L.aar Topper.

63

(

Your Boallng NMd .. Parts, AcCycle Oil And

u,..,

baMr, exc concl, $1,100. 304-451191!

~f'vt

ouf poqcfT.), AND ;

- ..... ""'""""with·-·.

124 eqll.lra

THAT'J M'-

BOATERS
J.S. W.&lt;ino S...1co, S...lnv A11

84
1tn QIIC 314 ton H.O., 350,
1H 10 Pull-TYPI Comblnt, Mo., pllpb, till:, sUdlng wlnckM ,
V.,. Good Concftlion, $900. roe.. hitch, lopplr. $1.500. 114Teyklf Fenn 114143 22" .
245-f414.
lnlemettonal 51, 4-fow com
IW.Mt-2178 ar :J04-U.2- WO, prioo $800. 300475-1150 "'
178-4515.
JD 1530 Dtaei Tt11etor, JSL..~;
11113 Dodvo pickup LWB
100 Ford With Plow I LAIC, wtlh
lopptr, palpb, ,......
Blaclo And Buoh lioi, $3,1&amp;0. e:xt111 aood. 12500. After UIO 85
6M-2811 efl22.
.... lilf..tni.
We

... ..., Fefvueon

,

w

(JOT l-EfT IN

TrHe. 114-251-1040.

=-·

fAY

Bo.t. bder 7 112 hp motor I
other extru, 304-173-5838.

1181 Dodge Shodow ES, AI•,
PSJPB, EJac. Wlntta.r., 38,000
Mil•, Good Conclt:ion, $4,700;
1117 OodQe 0-50 PU, $2.100.
614-2SU251.

11112 Dodgo

FARII TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ohio
V•tllr

ALL T/1f poL !TICAL. CAN/)If&gt;ATfj'
/
jt/fy WAN1' CHANGE.

, _.,

Unbind- Value- Mince -Demean - INEDIBLE
Two men were talking over the fence. The first guy
says, "My wife is on a new cooking show.""lhat's greal,"
says the second guy, "whal's i1 called?" Grinning !he firs1
guy says, "Thal's INEDIBLE'"

t1ll The Wahons

Roo'• TV Service, apeclallrlng
,. in Z.ntth also NrVtdna rnoe1
bnnda. HouN caiTe, at.o
1181
Olchmoblie
Cutl. .a
Broughom, 3117, V-8, 1oodod, tome appliance repalre. WV
newt darn11a-d, un~aW. 304-51'8-2jga Ohio 614-446-2454.
condition, hig11 mliMoe, priced
Tank Pumping $90, O.llia
ac:conHngly, 114-7112· 2"9tl. 114- S.pllc
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
11112-.uoc
JtcQon, OH 1-too-537-1521.
1NI C...brity Euroeport, Air O.wie
Sew-Vee
Service,
Conditioning, C&gt;uloo Con1rol,
CrMk Rd. Ptrts, •upH,ooa u-. ,._ n,.... $6,200. ClcrgM
ptlae, pkkup, and delivery. 114·~2015.

Fuel .. ,... 2- lpokatherd

.,..act.ra,

auto. 4 cyt,

41,300 mu.., oood cond,
M,IOD. lirm. 304-41""-786l

61 Farm Equipment
I~Si John o..r. llodat B, Allie

a

-nlnp

Mr81~

1117 Tr..,..Am, 1-Tops., k&gt;lded,

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

1!) MecGyve• Stereo
@ SportsConlo•

tNt 1811. Pontoon , 11i1 tohp.
Evlnrude motor, fuM ClrNU
covw, flah finder, $1400, 614!ill2-8841
days, 114-992-2627

&amp;75-1171:1.

Firat Shote. ·s..u.Jtul Loving
Ft.ts, $200. 114-643-2215.

Musical
Instruments

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

a

S1o•oo. g

0

m1~~mg words
trom sTep No 3 below

t:;J

NewaHour C
Candl4 Came&lt;O
i!1J ID Current AHotr []
I!] 1D Sla• T"'k' The Nex1
Generation C
t12lmt Enltrtlinment Tonlgtlt

N

de~elop

you

Square One TV Stereo

7:00 ~ 1J @ Wheel of Fortune

1985 Chackmat• boat, 29ft, 235
JohMon OB, Raker S.S. prop,
cut1om hlui trallar, $7,800. 304675-:MJa

The chuckle qLfoted

by hlhng m the

Q

6:351]) Andy GriHith

06311.

good moiOf,
pow~~~r trine - ;.;t..~•. $400. 304-

Schnauz•. r.t•·"'I, wry cut•. 1H7 Gnnd AM, low
W, 6M-112-5M9
PB, A~ cnllltll,

·~t

Pt.AC~'

388-1115.

cnw.tt.

Now a.nory,
l"1r-.s.
AltJ T•nk. 2413 JacUon Ava .

;:-:-:;--:--=-:-:--:----:-

WoiRD

Trolling M~Of, $2,100. 614-446-

Oechthuncfa. IM-381-a7'M.
1984 lA Baron, ca~ mac:hl,...,
Aus~.raJian ~. 1 ' e.tr.e. 1 pop machine. 35 tt 51 n
~......... ~&gt;.ding, 1,._..,._ whMiaf, 304-773-56!1
O.IINIIIons For S.le, 114-448fiSI.

51'01(, YOUR Dl!l!l~R
WITH AIMlCU Of JU!JK !

McArthur, Ohio. New Premium ·
Quality AeplaCMMnt Cr1sh. ..
P•rts At Whofasall Pricu. No

.nas-, new lira, $"1,700.

AKC Labrador Retrl..,.,. pup~-. &amp;1,. I darn, OSA eertllild
' on pnm-.. READY FOR

DO~l

1175 16ft. Starcraft Bau ao.t
Wlth 65 hp Mercury Ua:or &amp;

Wanted: Small HP Outboatrd
Mol01 Under 10 HP. 614-256-1526.

8934 EV1111"90-

o....

Q

L --'---'----'·--'----'---'

In Zom&gt; Ste•eo t:;J

Ill I'&gt; I~ AV~RY

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

.-., lnmo wllfk, $900. 3114173-5284 or 1"r3-513a. both att.r

56

lamt Pill Food
r. JuNe
Webb. Call 614-441-0231.

ABC News

Running low on gas I pulled
into a gas station and told the
attendant 10 give me $2 worth,
s1nce that was all the cash I
had. He began pumping and
as~~· __:ts? "1his to go or to

18 O Co mpleie

?

®II!) U) til CBS News
I!] 1D Andy Grltllth
1!) Soooby Ooo
!D Up Close

Cll

ru..-.

1g&amp;i Mustang, good body,
grwtt wat uMa tor llhow car,

$800. 6\ot.......t .

Supply Sllop Pet
Q....,l~ .. " ' - · oty1n.

I I I I

t:;J

00 The JeHenons a_

apec:lahst . Mercury certified .
~le, We come to you. eM25t-5i1'!il.

11TI Fon:l LTD Good Condition,

.~

(() a

ffi Wild Amorlca

•ft.., 5:00PM.

-R--,1

r~-Y---A-:'R-P-E

6:051]) Beverly HiltbliiiOI

!!l Sevod by tho Belt

BOATERS

'86

brklr., plpas, windows, llntlllt, etc. daUda Winlen, Rio Grana, OH Cali 114245-!1n

Pets for Sale

t:;J

t:;J

Sweo

61~

I

BRAOH

6

0

6:30 Cllll Ul NBC Nowo

S.rvk•. 614·~160.

Building
Supplies

Block.

Gl Nlaht Coun

aWoridTodoy
In Rln nn nn, K-9 Cop

1982 Hondl CXSOO Cualom
Shaft Orlnn, Water Cool.d,

II

2

1

---11 ~· ;
5~---;.V.::_:.;ArS=-;;E__:,E
I
I_ I_ 1
_ _

Reading Rainbow Stereo

1!) Smurfo

6RAPE JELLY IN YOUR
DESK, DO YOU. MA'AM 1

ce&amp;~orln, Two

2215

Crafttmtn 6hp rota IIIler, JD4..
67S-36Q3

lhrM 22ft

614-385-&amp;227

nr. lhap equipment tor ....: 1

Color T.V." a Portabl• And Console, $60 Each. Microwa'H Oltan
$90; Elactric Clothes Oryar, $65.
614-256-1238

5651 , Mason WV.

1 -800-58~5710.

~~ •• - . . - -. 114-

4pm

aAusey Harris Ferguson Pony;
71t BLllh Hoa dltc 3pt· 8hp
Brlgg• &amp; Slr~~tfon motor; i'wentr

Call

9e&amp;ni smoot!h lop MOW!, $125;
bllldl ..... coum .. tope, tiOO;

very good eonditloo , $200 lirm,
614-992~929aher

Naw mobiM home whh e1ntrs1
air, garage, lot, priced to Mil,
304-895&lt;1876 or 895-35&amp;4 .

Country Mobile Home Parll, At .
33N ., under new manag•mant.
Lots, $8!; home rentals, $23~ ;

&amp;

Run

.... ct..., Colo..lty, .........

SIHplng room• with eoo«Jng

R•posstsMd Mob41e Hornet,
Great S.leeUon, SlnglH, $500
Oown And Ooubtt• $1,000
Down, Wllh Approved Cr.dltt

ANY

I I

Square One TV Stereo

ffi Cil MacNell/loh"''

Anauo And Chi-Anauo Black
Built Aauonably Prlced. Stat•

9mm umi ·•utomatk handqun.

614-446-1615, 614~1243 .

46 Space tor Rent

~AVE

TUNDIC

I

(l) Q Inside Edlllon 1;J

304 -175-31'18.

Ma1aey FlfgUIIOfl 50; AC W[).OS
3pt hitch ; CaN Vac 3pl Ntch;

Also trailer lpiCI . All ~k-upe .
Call after 2:00 p m , 304 -773-

TO

EASIER QUESTIONS

446·1&amp;44.

8 prom drassu, ailtt 7J8 1o
1912(), under $40, 614-247-271'

P.M.

6,.-4~~580

~APPEN

1N7 Honda 2501 4 Whlllar, EI·
celt.nl CondHtonl $2,300. 614-

Sun high etfldeney alt-cond,
zs,ooo bfu, Nkl new, UMd 0011
.,m!Mt, 30+451-ttt?.

~2-235.2

Rooms lor rent- week or month.
St•nlng at f1.201mo. Gallle ~lilt .

2 B.droom HouN, 26 Chllllcol he Road, Gallipdlt. $8,500.

~

MAYBE SHE LIKES

Motorcycles

or m.sno bolh

Shih l'zu PuPIMH AKC Reg. 1987 Otdl Oelt• II, Ylnyt Topj

~-­

p.,,_

wa•hers

rw&gt;nlal IUrphlll d&lt;Jtt.Jrtg. r:ri, Sal,
9un Noon-1:00 Pll. OlMr days,
hof.n 304-773-51!5. Buahwu
lmp!lnlod
odverllltng
IPidll'- up to 25% c:tt.couN.

Groom

Roch" $1'9

: : - - ----c'---c----,--,-- 1

2 bedroom apt, utlllll" paid,
Hud approved, 304-675-V22

One

62

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!

2 bedroom, I blltl, privale IOGIIIon on Radman Rldg• Hander·

Aec:ondiUaned

d,..,., NCh $1)0 and up. We
tarflcll til mak.._ The Washer I
DryorShoppo. ~~-

~336 .

Olive St ., Galllpotlt . New I UMd
tumhur1, Maten, Western &amp;
won: boot•. 6l4-446-l150.

992 -74%

Garag• apartment Crab Cree~
Rd S11.500. 304-!'i76-2ti15

Aoollancoa,

On11 Bedroom HouN, Fur·
nlshed, Deposit And Reftrence

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

ointment! anliwpllc, utv•.
spklH. DOWI cluner, pi• m1lngl, 114-912-2200

Tunoy S..... Soon, H.. 11111
r1nge of .u-. Woocllnd or
Big Snlngs On All Carpat In Tf"Mblft; C.mfllual, .my pet·
Stock. Caah And Carry, IW- tern claft'llng, 1mall equipment,

675-3030 or 304-675-34l1.

Pets. 614-446-

Rawttlah
produet•.
sle•k
-tonlng, nnllla, medle•lld

614...o44&amp;-396~ .

SWAIN
AUCTION I
AJRNITUAE .

Nle• home lor rent. Call 304·

537-8521.
Prom d,.. ..., elza 315, 2 call
lonith. blk l whlto, 125. I $50.
Ona king-tun btus-whtt• Nlln
$120. One tong..flounce black
taq~.~ins 1200. 364-175-1691.

e..

1-BOC)-4!19-349~.

2br HouM Furnished , Daposil
And Relertnce Required. No
Pt~• . 614--446-4879.

Required, No

J Bed rooms , 2 Baths, 2 Car
Garage . $45,000. 614 -4&lt;16-6325

114-446-

Upper RIV« Ail . Bl'llde Stone
Creel Uot.J . Call 114..,.46-Tlta,

1365.

QUESTIONS

~AVE

O..uod, 11.:100. 01&lt;-&gt;67-7296.
1986 Honda 250. tour . . . . . ..
runs great, $1.600. 304-773-5214

~atlc And lladl.l Cutv.n 1 Inch
ThN 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
Evana, J.Uaon, Ohio. 1-100-

Btsutt 2 Pc. Sectional SIMper,
6'3 M Othar s.etlon rr uunJ..
strlps ........ belli'-"!: Cord- S..m Sometvllil't Army Surplus,
t J.77 Aann~ 1
lion., 1.800. Antique O.k Oreaer 5 rnN"*
$150; Arnan.1 wi"nda. Alr Cond. by ~ndrvm• POIII Oftlel. Who

2543.

31 Homes lor Sale

Appil8ncM,

Slulggo

Livestock

63

Merchandise
Frott F,..,

USED APPUANCES
Wash1r11, dry1r1, tltriger11ote,

2 bedroom house, ki1chln, bal~ .
livlngroom, no pels, 104~75 -

54 Miscellaneous

!il205 or 304-675-7575

GOOD

4t Houses lor Rent

A MUFFIN ~ERE
FOR MY LUNCH ..YOU DON 'T
[

bad,
Mat'**
Boa King
S
--=-::'-:__Miles,
__ $1,250.
1 Quality
tolld I MapM
sfda p r t n p . 8 2 5
3,000
Couch ' Love Seat, ch.lr •
R.ctainer 2 end Tibiae 1 Cott.r
1983 Kllwuakl 750 CC, Full

Harvnl Golcf W.. $150 Cut To
$95 ; Retrl~ator White, Frost
F,..., Wu $150, Cut To $125;
View For Miles. Nice lAve! Side By S1M Hllrvat Gokt, UU
Drivawey,
Rural
Waler, - · Wu: $205, Cui Tol105.i.3D
Electricity, And Phone Service Inch Ea.etrte Ranoa, Whna, .,..,
Available. 3 Mil• From Holur $125 Cut To $15; illneh EJ.ctric
Range, Avacedo, Wa1 $150, Cut
Hosphal, $3~,000 . 614-446-4127.
1o $125..i. Washaf And Dryer Set:
Was ~245
Cut To
ftgl);

Real Estate
Wanted

YES

KNOW 11' THE&lt;E MA'AM
ARE ANY

19811 Ford Mrottar Vsn XL,
am/fmleaellltte. tltt, •lr, cn.He,
46,500Mt, $8800, 614-992-7169

74

O.J . Whh• Road, 18 Acres,
Mostly Wooded, Wltfl A BMutlful Building Site That Ha• A

36

SHE wAN75 TJ

P.ll.

Household
Goods

I

~.,
Ul Power
-·
(J)
Video

11189 fof'd Atra.t•r Convers6on
Van. Aulomttlc Overdrive, Air,
nn, Cnli. . , v...., Good Condition, ea.n 614-446--nn. Aher s

•

lenars of
four
words
low to lorm l our 5imple

&lt;1J Ill 1!11 II!)

6:00 CD II CI1 Q

61........al10.

Merchandise

O ll:eorrange
KraMbled

EVENING

~

WOlD
lAM I

TIIAT DI.ILT
PI IIIII

MON., APRIL 20 •

~

1!il89 Chevy 4x4, Air, AYIFM
Cauatte, Century Topper, P5,
PB, Hitch, 5 Spd, And Mora!
52,000 uu... Vary Nice! tiO ,SOO.

0.-

S1

•

....

'

Second FkMM Apartment Fol'
l.Nte: LR., One I .A.. Blth,
Kltchan WI StOVI &amp; Rettig.
Water Fumlahad. No Pala. Cor·
""' Socond I l'tno, Go111poliL
$230. ........h;
Roqulrtd. Call 114-446-4241, 114446-2325, Or 814-44&amp;-4425.

2 Door Aetrtoerator

Rentals

Business
Opportunity

1967 M~;~lody 12x65, 3bdrm. ~
biilh. unlurnisned , $4)00 cash.

Business
Training

Lots joining Point • 100% owner
financing at $101.46 par monlh
buys afl thrH late . 304-675-

2

1NI Ford ...,.oltlr Ylln, one
owMr,
4
cylinder,
5sp.
tr~~n&amp;mlsalon, 61of.74:Z-2421 ener

For Lease

49

""9"S ·

614-742-3033

14

3~2722 .

Lobi In New Haven - 100'Wo
owner flrwmclng at $10'1.46 ptr
month buy• alllhrw Iota •304·
675-2122.
'

Financial

B~drooms,

111
S!!c ur1ty,
Tralllillg. Preventa.

'

m3 .

Sl.OOO J:tebat a Schull 14x76 2

Compu1er Consullan l W1lh In
diJstry Expe!i&amp;ollCI C dn Pr o~ 1 d11
Suppo_r1 To Yo ur Com~an~ Or
Organ 1tal1on ExptHI!Ince W1th
CP,M DOS, UNIX Ne1w o1 ks And

Alcohol Or Drug Counsa!Of To
Provide CounMiing Educali o11
Presenlatlon• In Out Pat1tnl
Setting, B A. Degree Preferred
Eap~rfiHlCI
Desirabll. Ser1&lt;1
Res ume By May 111 To FACTS .
Rl 2 Box 2n-A, Bidw.,ll, Ohm
45614, M!FIH E O.E
AUSTRALil WANTS YOU
Eactlllnt
Pay.
Banahts
Trans por1allon,
407 291 4~7.
Ext 5~ 9a m· lOp m Toll
Rehmded

Si1uation
Wanted

18

available,

'

Television
Viewing

V[ WISH OlD VWU~ rESW:tOO A
.¥00TH TJUS Bt&amp; 1

a-.

nov..

Call Today, MH1 Tonlta

&gt;JAAT'5 m,r,
BRUTUS

The Dally Senllnei--Page--9

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

BORN LOSER

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Farm near CMtnwood, 100 acr..
+lnlel raoehet", good r01d Iota
lllv.utlllablllan&lt;f. f79,900. kathIMn Lave 304-lll3-6206, Ullom
ANity, BH&amp;G, R..ltor, 304-136-

3 Announcements

I 20, 1992

Monda~Ap~l20,1992

49 Ottplcable
one
50 Consumed

Q

I!] Gl Hunlor
121 Ralph Emory: On tho
Record Ralpt1 Emery reveals
the personal and sometimes
painlul s1de ol h1s lite {1 :001

food

.,..-+---1--f

52 Be Ill
53 Aubter tree

Stereo

t3 World Hewa
In 700 Club With
R-n.on
1 1:00 CD II !!l CII III

Pot

&lt;IJ a

~ til ~ Nowo
(l) Newawatch
~ Cl Araenk) Hall Stereo

i!1J 0!1

OMocGyver []
121 Crook ond Chon
@ llooobatt Tonight
a 5por1a Ton!Qhl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
ooa.,.·,

CMabnty (.aptw rryplflOIWM - awet.cl lrom lfU()IItiOn• by IIIIIIOUA peopil PUI lnd ~~
Eacl1 ~ 1n lhl c:1pt111 11.,.,. r., anortw r
au. w eqtMb l

' V

v

P V G X

0 Bordortown Sle•oo. t:;J
11:30 !!l Kojak 0
(!) Euiopejn Journal
(I) • NtghUina []

~•

·s-Ung llulieto'

Crime nmo Allor Primo

nme Stereo. C

=

SporlaC.nttr

aMOMyltne
0 MOVIE: Chlel Crazy
Horn f2 :00)

11;35 CD II Ul Tonlght Show

G A N 0

8 G

X 8 S R

BKMJXVKL

aN o

Z R

LONRSI

F Z A 9 I

a

G

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Z R
G Z C 0

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OEONMJXVKL
TINWRK

'

PREVIOUS SO LUTION '" The Gospel is essentially a me5S81Jf! ot spiritual
redempllon , not ot soclel relorm · - William lnge.

�..

Pag~10-The

Dally Sentinel

~

'

Mon~ay,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

April 20, 1992

Teen recovering from surgery to
reattach arms copes with healing
grafts.
B} JOHN MacDONALD
Swift changes of emotiOn are
Associated Press Writer
dally
weather for Thompso n.
HARVEY, N.D. - At fust, he
Tedious
physical therapy to help
jokes with his physical thernpist as
the
arms
heal and strengthen takes
they stretch and move h1s reat cnomnous
amounts of time. Three
tached arms . But it's not long
umes
a
week
, he drives 20 miles in
before John Thompson shows the
a
spec
ially
equipped
car to Har wear and frustration of constant
vey's
St.
Aloisius
Hospital
for twotherapy and prolonged uncertainty .
A single tear falls down his face. hour sessions. He undergoes si m• lar daily therapy at home
A nurse wipes it away.
Thompson, who favors sweat0
"Just one of those days. huh "
su
its
and a baseball cap w1th a
therapist Kelly Christenson asks as
heavy
metal ~and insig nia , also
he stretches the farm worker's limp
goes
to sc hool, though usually no
hand.
''I'm just really tired," the 18- more than a few hours each day,
and accommodates reque sts for
year-o ld from Hurdsfield repties.
Laconic, shy, edgy and am•able. interviews wilh news media
Everything he docs remmds tum
tile tall blond teen-ager lost we1gh1
of
hiS
mJuries.
from his already slender frame
He
even sang a solo recenLiy at a
after a Jan. II accident at the fami dlstnc
t
chorus compeution. But he
1y farm 1n which hiS arms were tom
wasn't
happy.
off at the sho ulders. A surgeon
" People came to look at me,
reattached them
they
didn't come to listen to me,"
MoSI of the time, h1s arms stay
bandaged and in splints. Bared for he said. "I got nervous ... I forgot
therapy, a visitor sees his nght arm tile words to the song."
Thompson was working alone
is sull swollen below the elbow and
on
the farm when he became entanh1s arms are a patchwork of skin
gled 1n power maehmery that
ripped off his arms. He staggered
400 feel to his house, opening
door s w1th hiS mouth and using a
penCil to punch bunons on the tele phone to summon help.
HIS story has touched people
around the world.
He 's got a growmg collection of
v1dcotapes and newspaper clip pings from all the news he's made.
Gift s cards and banners fill the
Thompson basement

One woman stopped by unan nounced with a homemade ointment she srud would help his arms.
A faith healer cal led several times
from California.
At an April II boxing match in
Bismarck, his fust big outing since
the accident, so many people wanted 10 speak lO h1m , he said, "I
barely even golto sec the fight."
The sudden inability to perform
the most mundane tasks frustrates
him, sa•d hiS mother, Karen.
" John's able to do a lot, but I
thml he sull gelS frustrated at what
he ca n't do by himself," Mrs .
1 hompson said.
Doctors outfitted h1m with spec 1al ea ting utensils that can be
attached to his sp lints , but they
don ' t work well, she said. He's
practically given up using them.
He recently bought a new car
equipped with a speCial steering
wheel, igmtion and shifter. Thompson said he can drive it fine, but
can't open the doors. Now he' s
wa1ung for the car dealer to mstall
push-bunon openers.
Thompson said he keeps up h•s
s pirits knowing he ' s making
progress and gening better.
His shou lder mobllty is good,
said Christenson, tile therapist. and
hiS pain has receded.
Thompson sti ll can't move hi s
hand.s or fingers on his own, but the
d•glls contract when elcctriclly is
placed again st a nerve or muse lc in
his ann.

"That's a really good s•gn ,"
Chnstenson sa1d.

Adoption agency seeks
qualified pet guardians
GENEV.&lt;\ MCELROY

McElroy to graduate
Geneva Km g McElroy wdl
re ceive 1hc bachelor of sc ien ce
degree m accounting from Olivet
Nazare ne Umverslly, Kankak ee.
Ill, i the 79th annual commence ment May 9
Dr. John Bowling , preSident of
Olivet, will giVe the baccalaureate
scnmon on May R at 7:30p.m. Dr
Herbcn McGom gle , preSiden t of
Nazarene Theological College ,
Manchesta, England, will speak a1
commencemcnl
Her futur e career plans arc to
acquire an accounting position at a
co rporation in Lake Cou nty , Ill.
She is a 1974 graduate of Me1gs
High School and the dau gh ter of
Mr . and Mrs. VH g li Kmg.
Pomeroy .

AKRON . Ohio (AP) - An ani mal shelter which places I ,000
dogs and cats '" adopuve homes
eac h year scrutmizes applicants
carefully before they can go home
w1th a peL
Robert Tumey, 41, founder and
owner of the Pet-Guards Shelter
am mal adopuon agency, tries to
ensure that people are suitable to
handle pelS they want to adopt.
Pote ntial owners are asked to
fill out an application before they
sec an animaL A key question :
Why do you wish to adopt a pet
and wha1 qual1tics are you looking
for •n a pet'

Deadline set for farmers
Farmers have until May I to
sign -up for 1992 annual commodity acreage reductiOn programs
administered by the U.S. Dcpanmcnt of Agriculture's Agricultural
Stabilu.auon and Conservation SerVJCC .

The announcement extends the

Madonna in $60 million
deal with Time Warner
NEW YORK (AP) - \&gt;ladonna
has s•gned a contract w1th Time
Warner for as much as 560 million
1n one of the most lucrauve deals
ever ncgouated by a pop entertain er, a newspaper reponed loday
The partnership with T1me
Warner, to be announced today,
Will allow the 33-year-old pop icon
to form her own Mavenek entertamment company, The New York
Times reponed .
The deal is comparable 10 a $50
milliOn -plus agrccmenl M1cha el
Jackson was reponed to have made
last year wit.h Sony Corp.
Under terms described hy th e

Applicants are asked whether
the pel will be housed during the
day and where it will sleep at mght.
Turney said the applicant
answers tell them a lot about what
type of owners the appl1canlS will
make.
Once a pet IS selected , adoption
papers are written.
New ow ners have to agree not
10 use the animal for breeding, get
1he pel spayed or neutered within
six months and never let tile animal
be used for medical research .
The adopter also must agree not
to chain dogs outside for a lon g
time or let them to run free m their
nei ghborhoods.

year contract w11h an op110n to

ex tend to II years
Time Warner cxeculivcs would
no t conf1rm the exact term s, but the
Ttmcs said the S60 milliOn figure
was saJd to mclude a renegotiated
recordmg contniCt givmg Madonna
a 55 million advance for each of
her nexl seven albums and royalues
of 20 pereem .
Madonna SaJd her new company
would bean " arusuc thmk tank."
"T here's a group of writers,
photographers . dircclors and edi lors t!Jat I've met along the way m
my career "'ho I want to take with
me wherever I go." she told lhc
T1mcs.
" I want ro mcorporare them
Times. Madonna would rccc 1vc up
to $60 million dunn g th e &lt;even - 1n1o my lnLi e factory of ideas."

sig n-up period two weeks beyong
the original deadline.
"Fanmcrs 1n a variety of special
circ umstances have told us it would
be helpful to have a little more time
for sign-up, " sa•d Edward Madi gan. secretary of agriculture. ''This
ex te nsion is co nsislent with the
President's instrucuons to accomodate our programs to producers'
needs whenever possible."
"The ex ten sion will not delay
receipt of advance deficiency payments," Madigan said.

~

Pick 3: 60 I
Pick 4: JS07
Cards:
7-H ,· 2-c·-, 1.0
....
'3-S

mid -Mh,_

PageS

Vol. 42, No. 250

Copyrighted

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Appointment, parks development council topic
MERCURY TRIBUTE - Thr three members
of the pop ~roup Queen, from left, John Deacon,
Rrian May and Roger Taylor, are seen with
singer Da&gt;·id Bowie, Friday night in London.
Rowie and stars from the music world will be

appearing at London's Wrmbley stadium on
Monday in a tribute concert to Queen's lead
si nger Freddie Mercury who died last year from
AIDS. (AP)

---Names in the news--NEW YORK (AP) - Ellzabetll
Taylor's publicist, Chen Sam, is
SUi ng The S1ar for $7 m•llion over
an article that saJd the spokeswom an has cancc r.
"I uncqui vocally swear thai I do
not have ca ncer,'' Sam sa1d in
coun papers made public Fnday 10
state Supreme Coun. " I have never
had cancer; I was never d•agnosed
with cancer and have never bee n
treated for cancer."
A jud ge is sc heduled to rule
April 29 on whether she must tum
over her medical records to the
supenmarkct tabloid.
The ar!Jcle, headlined "Double
Tragedy Devastates Bnde-To -Be
Liz Taylor," was published a few
weeks before Mlss Taylor's October wedding to Larry Foncnsky. It
said that Fortcnsly 's mother had
di ed of cancer two weeks earlier
and th ai Sam also had the discao;c.
A call Sunday n1ght to 1h c
tablo•d 's New York office went

work~··

unanswered .
NEW YORK (AP) - Ac tor
P~erc c Brosnan says copmg with
hi s wife's death from ovarian cancer has been d1fficult.
"S he has made me th e man I
am, the actor I am, the father I
am ," the 39-year-old " Remington
Steele" star smd 10 the April 27
•ssuc of People magazine. "S he 's
foreve r embedded 10 every fiber of
my be•ng ."
Brosnan's wife of 14 years, Cassandra H&lt;UTIS, died 1n December al
39.
Brosmm sa1d he , the couple's Hyear-old son Sean and Ms. Hams'
two children from a prcv1ous marriage arc holding together.
" I don't want this to sound
depressing,'' he said. ''There is
still laughter in the house, believe 11
or nol , and ·a great spint of l1 fe. I
have wonder ful children and

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) Olympic gold medalist Bonme
Blan got a standing ovation when
she rciUrncd 10 the high school
where she was a cheerleader before
becoming a champion spcedskater.
Abou 1 300 people greeted Rlair
upon her return Saturday to Ccn lennial High School. where she
graduated 10 !982.
AI a news conference. Bla1r
reca lled being on Cente nnial 's
track 1e.1m and bemg a cheerleader.
but spending most winter weekends
out of town at skating events.
Blair, 29, said she missed gomg
out with friends and complcu ng
college. but has no regrets. "I just
love 1he sport of speedskatmg,"
she sa1d.
Blair won one go ld medal in
spcedskaling 10 the 1988 W10tcr
Olymp1cs and two more in the
1992 Games.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
The appointment of Kathy
Hysell of Pomeroy as v1llagc clerk
was announced by Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce J. Reed when Pomeroy Vil lage Council met m regular o;css ton
Monday evening.
Last month , Brenda Moms submitted her res ignatiOn as clerk.,
effec tive in May. No date for
Hy sell's assumption of tile clerk 's
position has been determined .
Parks development
Mary Powell, Director of the
Mc1gs County Parks D1stric1

appealed to counci I for suppon of gram. He urged !he development of
the district's upcoming tax levy . a working relationship between tl1c
According to Powell, the dis1ric1 village and the parks district.
Councilman John Blaettnar,
will usc any levy monies for development of new recrealional area s - who serves as chamnru1 of the vil especially riverfront parks - and for lage's new parks committee , wa s
improvcment..s on existing parks in named to represent Pomeroy on a
county-wide parks district adv1sory
the county.
If the one-mill , county -wide committee, which will aid in planlevy passes, eac h of the county' s ning long -tenm park development.
Councilmen Scott D1llon and
five v1llagcs will al so benefit.
Bill
Young will also serve on th e
Mayor Reed indicated to Powell
that the v1llage would be especially village's parks co mmitlee , along
mtcrested in receiving s uch levy w1~1 members of tile community.
Last week, Reed announ ced that
fund s, since the village rece ntly
began a park improvement pro- a park improvement program

Racine man dies 1\:londay
in motorcycle acciUenf
.A Racine lllan becalne Meigs Colmty's lii'st highway
fatality of the year Monday In a motorcyd~'!feck~n Bald
Knob-Stiversville.
near
atollnd 640 p;m.
Johnle
31, BaShail Road, was eastboUIId on
KnQb-iStlver$•itJII~
•nd loSJ.tontrol or 11;s 1981
Yafilllba
tun1e. the 9allla-Mejgs Pi}sfDt the State

Road

Porthuld
Roal,l

lfigltm~y l''am~l r'l1Jl!lt~tecl. Themotorcycle~idofftlle left side

::::~:~~!~ov:m~·· :.:::~·~:·~:~o~ml~ne;8~e$~!~ ~~~ or his

speed as the amtributing

1i1~~~:~J~~U:~~=~~d~ea~.d~· 111
scene
by Meig,s
whothe.
l:lled
multiple
cheSI

Co~thty C

Retired officer heads west on horseback
WILLOUGHBY HILLS, Oh10
(AP) - If you want a good conversalion piece or the Lim e to waLCh a
turtl e cross the road, a rellrcd
Cleveland mounted police office r
rec ommends going cross-co untry
on hor;cback
" I think 1t 's amazing the way
people have a ccnain rcspccl for a
man on a horse ," SaJd B1ll Payne,
63, who rode his horse. Mr. Lin coln . to California in five months.

''There IS someth1ng aboul hors es that draw peopl e to wan1 to
make convcrs.ati on_II was the s.amc
way in th e mounted patrol.· ·

lion for the same quadrennmm Clnd
to have in spimtion and fcUow sh1p.
The theme for the meetin g was
" Mtssion, A Timeless Journey ."
Music wa s led by Dr. Carlto n ({ .
Young , a teacher, editor, compo'f r
and conductor. He has served as
cdno r of two rev isions o f
Mcthod iSLS hymnal s. Bishop Edw tn
C Boulton, EaSI Oh10 Conference ,
led the scripture lesson and communion service at the closing wor sh•p on Sunday
There were 14 workshops and
1ntcrcst groups which cha llenged
all m attendance to get Involved
and help mak e the world a better
place in which 10 li ve

The slow-paced l•festy lc was a
welcome change from tile fasllane.
he s..1 1d .
"Once. I act uall y spen 1 t1me
watch 1ng a turtle cross the road .
He' d start to cross, turn around ,
and st:lfl up agam." Payne sa1d.
The rellrcd Cleveland police
offtcer s:ud 1hc hardest th~ng aboul
1he trip was the loneliness.
" If I dcc•de 10 do it again . I'll
hnng company," Payne sa 1d .
"Even 1hough I met a lot of won
derful peopl e, 11 gets lonesome out
there .''
Tile trip, which began last June
and ended 10 December when the
horse go t siCk, was his second. The
forme r motor cycle anct mounted

offiCer made hiS first trip aboard a
motorcyc le, which he sold when he
t;nt to Calt fomia.
The 1np led the palf lhrough
dese rts and mountains and along
1he h1slonc Roule 611 from Okla hom a 10 Cal•fomm. Payne and his
horse slept 1n barn s and sc hool yards and once tn a state trooper
barracks.
Trave l1ng 1n extreme lempera lu res had 11S drawba cks. Payne
sa1d.
Mr . Lincoln developed sores
because of the heaL
Pa ync a Iso sa1d he gm so fed up
by 1h e li ck-mfcsted countrys id e
thai he bough I a car and a !railer fOf
~31~1 ;md returned horne 10 August.

Woman accused of burning
husband says she's sorry
SANT A ANA, Cal1f. (AP) - A
woman accused of sc111ng her can-

NeW arrival
E3 Donald H. Max son II and
w1fe, Sarcna Andrea, resid1ng at
the Naval Dase in Groton, Conn.,
anno un ce the b1rth of their first
ch•ld , Andrc.1 Dawn . on April 7.
She wc1 ghed five pounds and
seven ounces and was 19 and onehalf mchcs long.

ccr-ndden husband ablaze m a dis-

pu le ove r some candy says she only
meant to scare htm.
June Carter, 69, wa s arrested
Fnday for mvesugauon of attempt ed murder. Police said she splashed
ruhh1ng alcohol on her hu shand,
Paul, and set lwn on fuc .
"I took a teaspoonful and threw
11 on him ." she ~id m a Jatl -housc
lll! CrVICW Ill Sunday's orange
Co unty Register. " I wa s scaring
him. I had matches '" my hand . It
JUSI went up.

Gallia County woman
charged with murder
A Ga llla Co unty woman wa s
A $40,000 cash bond. w1th no
c har ged with murd er Monday I0 percent allowed, was co nunued
morning in th e fatal shooung of her by Jud ge Cain in spite of defense
altorncy Ri chard Roderick's
husband Thursday mght.
Meche lie Rena Gilmore , I&amp;, request that Gilmore be fre ed on
Georges Creel Road, sobbed as she her own recognizance or thai bond
was charged with murder in the be set at $25.000 with 10 percent
shoot ing death of her husband , allowed.
Murder is punishable by a maxi Raben Gilmore. 20, in an arra•gn mum
penalty of life imprisonment
mcnt hearin g in the Gallipoli s
and
a
$15
,000 fin e, Judge Cain said
Mun1c1pal Court of Judg e Joseph
at the arraignment.
L Caio.
A plea wa1 not entered by the
family members from each side
defense who mstcad requ es ted a attended the arraignment. Earlier,
about 25 people walled outs1de th e
preliminary hcanng .
Judge Cain scheduled a prclim• - municipal bu1lding for th e arraign nary heanng for Thursday at 2 p.m. ment to begin.
Gilmore is being held m 1h e
m 1hc Gallipolis Munic•pal CounGallia County Jail
room .

fl~-

wh1ch he had mstalled some yea" responsible for rcprunng 1he wall.
Robert s agreed to conta c t
ago.
Graves
and further d1scuo;;s Lh c situ Upon examination by the vil ation
lage, and by Robert&gt;, it IS believed
A slip ncar th e Barbara Arnold
1hat th e wall may be sl•p p•n g,
rc
s•dencc
on Willis Hill wa1 also
although the degree of sl •ppage IS
di
sc
ussed
by Roberts and co uncil
no1 known at this stage.
members
.
The slip was rcpalfed
" ll's going to be a problem ."
once
before
by !he state. hut now
Robert s told coun c il . " bul II
council
believes
!hat Lh e v tll:.~ gc IS
depends on the dramagc at ~·e s•te
re
sponSible
for
mak~ng 1he roa d
as to how b•g the problem is g01ng
passa
ble
in
light
of
the lates t sltp .
to be ."
To what degree th e Arn old resi Although Graves' only request
of the VIllage was that the wall be dence IS threatened is not known at
painted, th e village IS now faced lhiS ume. Robens suggested a pile w1th the question of whether it IS
Continued on page J

Country superstar Lionel Cartwright
will perform at 1992 Meigs County fair
lly BRIAN J. REF:D
Sentinel News Staff
When country mus1c su persta r
Lionel Cartwnght performs at the
1992 Meigs County Fwr, you can
be sure thai two oi hi s local rela tives will be among the crowd of
spectators.
The 32-year old Cartwright, a
Mason County, W.Va. nauv e, will
be among the headlin ers at th e
Rock Springs grandstand during
tile fair , to be held Aug us t 17-22.
LIOnel's maternal grandmother ,
Bertha Johnson of Racme , and h1 s
aunt, Marcella Chapman. a resident
of Middlcpon, seem mighty proud
of their famous grandson and
nephew, and both say they'll be at
the fair to bear his perfonmance.
Lionel Cartwright was born in
Gall ipolis, the son of the late Glenn
Cartwright and of Racine natiVe
Eileen Lois Johnson Cartwright.
The future smger spent a part of h•s
fonmidable years in Mason , where
he atlend ed Mason Elementary
School. Later, he and his family
moved to Glendale, W.Va.
Musica l talent was present on

both s1des of the farmly, accordmg
to Mrs . John son. Lionel's dad.
Glen n. sang m a barhershop quartet, and ll was Glenn who was indirect ly re spon sible for getting
Cartwright mtcrested in music . Dad
Cartwright purchased a banJO for
h1m self. but 11 was Lionel who
learned to play •t' That banjo was
later followed by the pmno, gUitar,
fiddle. harmonica and tile dobra.
But il was during h1 s career at
Wheeling College that Lion el
became a perfonmcr. A place in the
"New GeneratiOn E•press" at the
Wheeling Jamboree in th e Hill s
made Lionel a local star, and he
qu1ckly became a popular commodity in the country music industry. Other country artists - Charlie
Pndc, Buck Owens and Barbara
Mandrell among them - wanted
Lionel to jom tllw band.s. Lionel's
father, on the other hand, urged Ius
son to complete hiS college program. Finish ll he did, with a 3.35
grade point avcmge.
After graduating from college in
1982, with a degree in business
admmistrat10n, Cartwnght headed

for Nas hvill e to fmd fame. While
working as a produ ce r on the set of
tile Nashville Network program 140 Paradise, Lionel mel th e
woman he would later marry (Earlier this year, he and Cindv had
the1r l1rst son, Ma son G-lenn,
named after Lionel 's hom etown
and his late father).
'
Lionel IS now on the rccord111g
roster at MCA Records 1n
Nashvil le and his latest LP
"Chasin' the Sun , h'" proven popu~
lar with country mus1c fans, as has
hiS latest smgle, "Family Tree" .
Sadly, L1oncl 's mus. cal career
doesn ' t allow Lwnel to vJSll hiS
Meigs County relatives as he did
many years ago, but Lionel ' s
"Grandma Johnson" bas v•s•ted
h1m at his Nashville home.
Not only dtd she enJOY vts11mg
w1th her gr3lld son, but she also
Iiles to tell friends and neighbors
about mee ting other country mus1 c
greats like R1cky Skaggs and Charli e Pndc . She sa 1d she most
enJO yed mec rtng (and rece1ving a
hug from ) Ralph Emery, host of the
Nas hvil le Network's Nashville

Foul play was ruled out by tlt e Gai!Ja County Sheriff's Dcpanmcnt in the shooting death of Larry R. McKenZie, 21, of Dry R1dgc
Road, Patriot, Sunday .
The Gai!Ja County Sheriff's Department rcce1ved a cal l around
I I a.m. Sunday 1n referen ce to a gun shot wound, Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury said. It was Galha' s third shooting fatality thi s month, and
second 1n four davs.
Salisbury said ·Tuesday morning the shooung appeared to be selfinOicted.
Deputies at the scene found McKcn;.ie w1th a .22-caliber semi automall c nOe laymg across h1s chest and gunshot wound to the
head, a sheriff' s dcparunent repon indicated .
McKenne was Oown by LifeFiight to Grant Medical Ccnlcr
where he dted a few hours later.
McKenzie's body was then taken to the Franklin County Coro
ncr's office, the sheriff' s department reponed.

Minor damage was 1ncurred to two vehicles on the Dairy Valley
parking lot , West Main Street, Pomeroy, at2:53 p.m. Monday.
Pomeroy police reponed that the parked 1989 Oldsmobile owned
by Brenda Roush, 40, Pomeroy, was struck in the rear left side by a
1985 Ford driven by Vera Harmon, 27, Zanesville, as she backed
from a parking space. There was light damage to the driver's side
rear on both vehicles, police said. There were no citations.

f'

~ ­

\

,I

UONAL CARTWRIGHT
Now. Through her satcl111 e d1.sk.

tltat vare1y and mterview pro~'Tam
now prov1dcs Mrs. Johnson with a
chanc e to sec her grandson perform
regularly.
Otherw 1sc. Mrs John son keeps
up with her famous ~ rand so n
throug h hiS m01h er. Eile en. wl•o
lives m Cookvil le, Tcnn . where
she and Glenn moved pnor 10 h11
death in !990.
Eileen allo keeps L•on e l '.s
Con tinu ed on f'GRC. 3

Harris executed
in California
early today

No foul play ruled in man's death

Damage minor in Pomeroy wreck

C&gt;'&lt;LV lOU CAN PRlVENl FORlSl

would get underway thiS summer.
Interested rc11denLs of Pomeroy arc
be1ng ur ged to part•cipatc in the
plann1ng and 1mplcm entallon of
park s development. Specifically,
1hc group wdl target the v1llage's
three community parks , located at
Sugar Run. Monkey Run and Nay lor's Run.
En2ineering issues
County Eng•necr Phil1p M.
Roberts met with council to discu ss
J retaining wall maintenan ce
request. Ralph Graves of Lincoln
Terrace had requested that the village paint a steel reiaining wall,

r--Local briefs--------

The Athcns-Galha-Hock ing-laclson-Meigs -Vinton Joint Solid
Waste District re cently reported 1hat recycling activities have
increased in the six county district by 66 percent over the last two
years, aceordmg to a release from the district office.
Surveys were se nt to recyc ling centers located in the dl stnct and
f1gures were compiled from totals of recycled materials processed
through tllcse centers. Matenals included were aluminum, glass, bimetals, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, plastics, all types of papers,
waste tires and appliances, the repon stated.
The results of the survey were submitted to tile Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, and complete copies of th e survey
resu lts arc on file 10 the AGHJMV Solid Waste Districl Office,
Wellston.

store, situated only a few hundred meters from
Tiananmen Square, will bt officially opened on
April 2J, employing almost 1,000 people. (AP)

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 ceols

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April21, 1992

I 992

Solid waste district releases report

A TASTE OF HOME • U.S. Ambassador to
China Roy Stapleton picks up his order or bamburgers at an embassy preview party for tbe
new McDonald's store in Beijing Sunday. Tbe

Low tonight in mid 50&lt;. .
C loud~ . \\ 't·d nt'\da~ . hi g h in

Carpenter attends meeting
SIX wom en from the Athen s
District attended the Un il ed
Mcthodi sl Women 's North Central
Jurisdiction Quadrennial meeting at
the Independence Holiday Inn Conference Center in Cleveland ear lier
th1s month .
Bernice Ca rpenter, Pomeroy ,
along with Faye Copen, L111le
Hocking; V1vtan. Robmsoo, Wilma
Lehman and Pauleta Fuller, all of
Logan. and Mary Hampton , Junelion City, attended.
The purpose of th e meeting wa.s
lO nominate women to serve on t.he
women 's dms10n for th e 19 9219% quadrennium , to elect leader ship for tile Jurisdiction organi1.a-

Ohio Lotterv

Kenya
•
runner wtns
Boston event

LIONEL'S GRANDMA· Hertha Johnson
of Racine may very weU claim Meigs County's
most famous grandson, country music star
Lionel Cartwright. Here, Mrs. Johnson and Fair

Doard president Dan Smith look over a quilt
that Mrs. Johnson made recently. Quilting is
one of Mrs. Johnson 's favorite pastimrs.

Ravenswood's Boyle
says he's been fired
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- Raven swood Aluminum Corp .
Chairman R. Emmett Boyle sa id
tod.1y he has been fired by the company's new board of directors in
th e midst of a 17-month labor dispule.

"Although I have opposed th ese
actions, I do not believe a shareholder battle is in the best interests
of Rav enswood," Boyle said .
"Therefore, I have no alternative. I
have to accept the deci sion of the
new board of direc tors."
Boyle said ORALCO Manag ement Services Inc. will co ntinue
d~rccting Rav enswood Aluminum
for the next two months while a
new management team is pul into
place.

More lhan I ,700 United Steel workers have been off the JOb at
1he Jackson County alum•num
plant since Nov. I , 1990 . The
union and company haven't negoti ated since July 1991.
Last week, an administrative
law judge said he would rule soon
on un10n charges tllat Ravenswood
violated labor laws by locking out
union workers, refusing to barga10
in good faith and hiring penmancnt
replacement workers.
The company says tile un10n is
on strik e.
"The people of Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp . have endured
tremendous adversity to earn a living, to support their famil1es,"

Boy le sa1 d. " They arc good work ers and good people and I regret
that I have been forced to leave
1hcm, but I know they will contmuc
to do a good JOb."
Boyle said the more than I ,000
rep lacements workers have broken
records for productiOn , efficie ncy
and quality.
"It must be remembered that
employees of Ravenswood Alu minum Corp. have faced violence
on a daily basis ," Boyle said. "To
those who have never driven over a
jackrock, il docs not sound like a
frightening experience, hut it is.
Shooting and bombings and other
cowa rdly acts occurred far too
often to be attributed 10 chance ."

SAN QUENTIN. Calif (APl Do uble murd e rer Robert Allon
Hams wcnl lO h1 s death 111 the ga.'i
chamher today 1n Caltfomta' s fi rs t
oecut10n in 2) years. afte r a ctr ~l ­
matJ C lasl -llllnulc '\lay wa&lt;, ov l' rtumed .
In an extraord1nary move, the
Surrcmr Court overturn ed a fourth
and lma l stay, ISs ued hy the U.S
qth C ~rc un Co urt of Appeal s. and
ordered lower cow1 s nollo fik any
more sLays w 1Lhou t the htgh co un '&lt;..:
p c rnii SSIOn. The foun h stay wa ~
ISS ued after Harri s was alread y
strapped 1n 1hc gas chamber.
Aflcr the Sup reme Court's rul •n g. he was hastily relumcd 10 1h c
chamber, looking somber bu1 wmk mg at one guard. He mouthed , "all
ri ght" The ga.s was •ntrodlllc d a1
ahout (110 a.m., sa1d T1p Kcnd:1ll. "
spokesman for 1h c state Drp;Ht
ment of Corrcclions.
Harr1s. 3£) _ wa\ prnnoun n' d
dead II mmut es later.

Glenwood man
dies after being
struck by vehicle
A Glenwood man d1cd Mond:1v
afternoon after bemg struck by an
automobile on S.R. 2 1n Glenwood,
accord•ng to a spokesman lor the
Mason County Sheriff's Dcpan
mcnt.
Ern1e Lee "S hon" Deal. 66, of
Glenwood died at St. Mary 's
Hospital after being struck by a car
at 11:35 a.m. Deal was transponed
from the scene by HealthNct.
Deal apparenLiy walked from the
cast side of S .R. 2 into the path of a
!989 Pontiac, driven by James E.
Stewart, 50, of Poim Plea.~ant.
Su:wan's vehicle was traveling
south on S.R. 2. Damage to the
vehicle was estimated at $600.
There were no citations issued.

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