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Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

1

~

I

f!·

"dille port (".alllpolls,

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
average value of farm real estate
edged up 1 percent in 1991, the
-

~·..
-'~ '-

·~

GALLIANS HONORED - Larry Shong, left
and Bob Powell, left, membership cpmpaign
chairmen for the Gallia County Farm Bureau,
are recognized for membership achievement by
Glenn Pirtle, Ohio Farm Bureau vice president,
field services. Sboog and Powell were honored

during tbe Farm Bureaa's
-"nnlip
award trip to Oglebly ill W' s £ W.VL Gallia County Farm Bureau's -"cnnl.ip CHI·
paign was successful dlis ,_-. c 5 's -buship currently stands 81417, u d f
lliP-

'Our Treasured Trees' theme of
Soil and Water Stewardship Week
cal and tjnwrial
• c to belp
fore~ aDd laadoww:n manage
and pro1«1 liD- biStJ b a wide
variely of uses. '"We aeed to be
good Sleiiack dlis ~ IDII r:very
wect if M: -llrMIIy fCIIeSU fa

vide lumber and fuel for our
homes . They not only produce
fruit, but also help stabilize the soil
that produces other foods we eat,"
Dyer says. Trees improve our environment and make the world a better place to live.
Every individual can make a difference by planting a seedling,
recycling paper products, or caring
for already malUre trees. Federal,
state, and local foresters can also
help. They can provide new techni -

the futiR.- ~ SIJS.
For ~ iilafa ;. • 0111 1992
Soil and w~ s.. addlip Week.
oc for atlcf«i " ·
cootacl
your local Soil 0
Wllioo Service and Galia 0
....... District at 446-8687.

Nicaragua may be restored to list
to export meat products to U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department has pro ~
posed that N1caragua be restored to
the list of co untrie s eli gible to
export meat products to the United
StateS.
Nicaragua was removed from
the list in 1989 because USDA's
Food Safety and lnspecuon Serv~ce
employees were unabl e to make

release.
In April 1990, Nicaragua
requested that it be restored 10 the
list of eligible beef-exporting coun·
tries.
"Since then, we have conducted
a thorough review of the country's
inspection system and believe it to
be at least equal to the U.S. system," said Dr. Donald L. White,
associate administrall:l' of the food
safety service.
The proposal to relist Nicar•gua

on-site reviews there ''since their

perso nal safety could not be
assured," accord1ng to a news

fifth consecutive increase since the
downward slide ended in 1987, the
Al!f!Culture Dcparunent reports.
o o

Accordmg to USDA. the value
of farmland and buildin~s ~~~ed
$685 per acre on Jan. • upf
14 percent from the I 987 1ow o

USDA's Agricultural Research
Service.
Most of the herbicides were
deteCted in the upper 12 inches of
soil, he said.
In the second study, researchers
applied the herbicides atrazine and
metolachlor in the springtime while
planting grain sorghum. Atrazine is
commonly used against broadleaf
weeds in can and sorghum. Metalachlor is used agamst grasses 1n
corn, soybeans and other crops.
"These compounds las! longer
in the soil before they break down,
so there's more opportunity to
move down through the soil 10ward
groundwater," said Dennis W.
Hoffman, a Texas Agricultural
Experiment St.a!ion scientist at
Temple, Texas.

Increases in tbe value of farm
real estate have leveled off in
recent yeaN. averaging only I lltr·
cent to 2 pcrcenl annually dunng
1990 to 1992, USDA ecooomtsts
'd.
S8l But the economists said that if
an inflation rate of 3.6 percent is
taken inw account, the value of
U.S. farm real estate was actually
down 3 percent on Jan. I, 1992,
COOl pared to a year earlier.
Real land values have trended
lower since 1981, USDA said, and
are currently 49 percent below the
1981 peak.
USDA said sluggish national
and regional economies lessened
the demand for farmland for nonagricultural uses, particularly near
urban centers. Some areas expcnenced severe drought, particularly
portions of California and other
Wesu:m StateS.

Tests of herbiCide water
pollution encouragi_ng

'\

GALLIPOLIS - Nauonal Soil
and Water Stewardship Week is
Aprii26-May 3, 1992.
According to Patty Dyer, District Conservationist for the Soil
Conservation Service in Gallia
County, the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District is encouraging recognition of this year's
theme, "Our Treasued Trees."
America's trees should be treasured by all of us. " They help
clean our air and water, and pro-

April 26, 1992

Pleasant, WV

Farm real estate value
up one percent in 1991

.,

•

O~olnt

was pnbJjsbcd lall ~ iD die Federal Regicsn-. l'llblic crmmen" oo
the proposal sboolld be sent 10
USDA by May 11.
If NiCMilpa's eli&amp;ibilily is
resuncl. lba'" ty WOIId apan
an esrima'Cd 23.3 •jlljnp pounds
of beef prodacu 10 IK United
Swes. Thll•qaueats alloua O.ll6
pat:m1 o( 6e 1Diill u.s. pr&lt;&gt;duction, Wllite said. md would
have lillle if . , ••• • oa domestic produccn.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Agriculture Department scientists say
they are encouraged by two studies
of herbicide movement toward
groundwater supplies on the Blackland Prairie of Texas.
The studies of two commonly
used herbicides found the chemicals generally move no lower than
12 inches into the soil, well above
undeq~round w~te~ supplies,
according to the sctenllsts.
And al leas! 90 percent of the
two herbicides were no longer
detectable in the soil within 90
days of their application, the scientists said.
Bul similar studies need to be
done on other herbicides commonly used oo the heavy clay soils of
the Blackland Prairie, said Rodney
W. Bovey, one of the researchers.
In the first study, scientists
ex.mtined clopyralid, wllich is sold
com mercially as Reclaim and is
used to combal weeds and honey
mesquite on rangeland, and picloram, sold commen:ially as Grazon
PC and used against woody plants
and broadleaf weeds.
A half-pound of each herbicide
was al_llllied 10 each acne.
" Nmety days after treatment,
more than 99 percent of the clopyralid and more truro 92 percent of
the pic lor am was gone," said
Bovey, a researcb ai!J'OliOIIIist witb

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Kicker:521615

IPage 5

Vol. 42, No . 254

Copyrighted

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- A session this week between
repr ese ntatives of Rav enswood
Aluminum's new management and
the United Steelworkers "will be a
historic meeting ," a umon official
says.
" Th ey' re willing to sil down
and talk and they weren't before,"
said union Vice President George
Becker. "They want an agree ment"

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GOING FISIDNG - Under sunny skies and
with vans filled witb fishing equipment, food
and other supplies, 16 Royal Ambassadors or
Hope Baptist Church, Middleport, and their
advisors set oul for Huttonsville, W. Va. on
Cheat Mountain Friday afternoon for a weekend of riShing and fun. They were guests in a
cabin provided by Tom Henson. Here as they
prepared for the trip are from the left front,

Nick Michael, Jared Bryan, Chad Dailey, and B.
J. Kennedy, and back, Advisor Bob Mills, and
Mathew Justice. Others making the trip were
Tim Coleman, Jeremy Coleman, Ashley Miller,
Lee Reynolds, Jason Riley, Josh Simpson, John
Stewart, Cliff Thomas, Randy Tompkins, Adam
Williams and Nathan Halfhill, and adults, Sonny
McClure, Mark Michael, Jimmy Grueser, John
Pat Riley, Charley Flowers, and David Bryan .

Real estate groups predict
housing will spur recovery
WASHINGTON {AP) - The
nation 's major real estate trade
groups say the housing industry
will continue to lead the economy
out of recession this year despite
the failure of the government to
provide any new stimulus.
"We believe that as long as
interest rates remain affordable ,
we'll sec housing do its part" in
advancing the economic rebound,
Dorcas T. Helfant, president of the
National Association of Realtors,
said 'n an interview on the eve of
theNAR midyear meeting hen: this
week.
The housing industry has led the
economy out of most recessions
since W&lt;l'ld War II .
Although home building represents less than 5 percent of the

nation 's economic activity, it spills
over into other industries.
For instance, materials companies provide the lumber and bricks
needed to build the homes. Transportation firms haul the nails and
concrete. Newspapers sell ads. And
builders and buyers outfit their
homes with products such as appliances and carpets and furniture .
In 1he final quarter of 1991,
while the overall economy
advanced at an anemic annual mte
of JUS! 0.4 percent, residential con struction posted a 12.3 percent
gam .

Hou si ng starts and new and
ex isting home sales have bolh
in creased thus far this year, but
both the Realtors and Home

Builders proJect the industry recovery w1ll be well below the rebounds
following previous recessions.
David F. Seiders, chief
economist for the National Association of Home Builders, told an
NAHB forecast conference here
last week that housing wiU continue to improve but "not at ... the
level s of activity of the mld 1930s."
The Home Builders are forecast ing a 26 percent increase in hous ing slarts this year, to 1.28 million,
wh1le the Realtors project new
home consLruction to advance 24
percenL
Both forecasts are considerably
below the 60 percent jump in housing starts during 1983, the year
after the last recession.

Ohio University
College of Business Administration

Executive MBA
PI·ogi·a 111
C o llt- ~r· r &gt;I fl11S 1ness Administration of OhiO Uru1·erstTY IS
cu1Tr1Hl1 n-cn 1itm~ the sixteenth ;voup for its verv succ-esslui
wePkend Exrcu live \-! .B.A. Proilf&lt;liTl at ils Lancaster Campus..

More than I ,700 Steelworkers
have been off the job at
Ravenswood Aluminum since Nov.
I, 1990, when their contract
expired. The union said its mem bers were locked out, while man agement contended the union was
on strike.
That managemem was ous1ed
last week in a boardroom shake-up,
however. A new board of directors
voted to remove R. Emmeu Boyle,
who had served as chairman and
clllef e•ecutive officer or
Ravenswood.
The new board of directors also
relained Peter Nash, fanner general
counsel of the National Labor
Relations Board, to approach the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich will meel
with Republican lawmakers tl11 s
week to outline his proposal for a
tax increase and possible budget
cuts for higher educaoon.
Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cineinnati, invited the
Republican governor 10 the sess1on
after Voinovich threatened to cam paign against legislators, regardless
of political pany, who fall to back
his $200 million revenue-boosung
idea.
Yomovich meets with GOP senators on Wednesday at the Columbus Athletic Club.
AI the Statehouse, the Senate
meets in solo session this week
while the House, with the exception of some committee hearings,
contmues an indefinite recess.
Voinovich has ra1sed the
prospec t of a 15 percent cut in state
aid to higher educauon unless h1s
revenu e proposal, which includes
an increase in alcohol and cigarette
taxes, is enacted.
The Oh1o Board of Regents contends universities and colleges carried a diSproportionate share of previous reductions, a conclusion with
wh1ch Aronoff agrees.
"They've taken a pretty good
lickmg ," he said.
Aronofl declined to speculate
about chances of Scnale endorsement for any revenue package.
Senators previO usly approved
Voinovich's plan to convert state
liquor stores mto private operations, a b1ll that IS stalled m th e
Democrat-conrrolled House.
"I just have never taken a position in stone,'' Aronoff saJd.

U.S. urges talks
to commence

'. nil bcl(lfl 1n Seplember 1992 .

OhiO { .flll'l'r\({I J

action

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For details, call 614-593-2028 or 614-593-2029.
or complete the coupon and mail it to:
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Arabs
and Israelis returned tod ay for a
new round of peace talks with the
Sunday. A 6.9 earthquake that sbook the tiny
MAKING A QUAKE CALL - April Santia·
Bush administralion urging the partown on Saturday left her family's horne inhabgo, 16, makes a phone call from outside her
tics to confront the war -and-peace
itable, but the phone still worked. (A P)
urtbquake-damaged home in Ferndale, Calif.,
issues that have defied solution for
deca&lt;les.
Pale stinian spokeswoman
Hanan Ashrawi told reponers as
she entered the State Depanm ent
on a bright, sunny day, "We're
absolutely determined this time.
"ObviOusly, the fear of after- We are going to achieve somethmg
SCOTIA, Calif. {AP) - Resi· erful aftershocks Sunday shook
dents .are cleaning up after a power- houses and buildings off their foun- shocks does ex is! here," said Hum· substantive."
The Israelis made no statement
ful earthquake and strong after- dations and touched off ftres in this boldt County Sheriff David Renentering the t.alks, the 5th round
shocks !hat caused $43 million in sparsely populated region 250 ner.
In Scotia, a contractor gave since negotiations opened in
damage, but Hillori Carley won - miles north of San Francisco. Hardaway
plywood to cover broken Madrid last October. The two
ders if it's going to be wasted est hit was the lumber town of Scowindows,
shopkeepers swept up sides' task is to consider what to do
tia, where fire destroyed a small
effort.
glass
and
people
shared colfee and for 1.7 million Palestinian Arabs
"If I knew there wasn't going to shopping center.
doughnuts
outside
tents on front who live under Israeli control on
be another earthquake, I would
Throughout the area on Sunday,
lawns.
the West Bank and in Gaza.
work my butt off and clean every- people boarded up broken windows
"It's a very pragmatic commu·
On other fronts, Israel is talking
thing up. But you don't know," and hauled belongings out of damnity
here,"
said
Jerry
Carley,
who
10 Syrian, Lebanese and Jordanian
said Carley, owner of the Scotia aged homes. Some slept in shelters
or camped out to avoid falling has owned the 104-year-old Scotia delegations about prospects for
Inn.
Inn with his wife for eight years. peace and Arab recognition.
A quake Saturday and two pow· debris.

Scotia residents unsure if cleanup
following quake will be wasted effort

.

Power seats, power windows, power
door locka, AMIFMI'cuaette, air bag,

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Co pe land Hall. Oh10 Ln ivers1tv
Athens OH -1570 I 2979
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Depent!a,le
ServKe

April 26 - is the result of heanngs
talks, wh1ch last were held m July he lei la't year in which the Na~onal
Labor Relations BoJrd accused
1991.
Becker satd he .will meet with Ravenswood Aluminum of violatNash on Wednesdax "10 see what ing fedcrnllabor law.
The company 1s accused of
the issues are and ~ow we' ll pro ~
locking out union wakers, refusing
cecd."
Becker said he ~id not know to bargain in good faith and illegalhow long it wi II, be before both ly hiring permanent replacement
sides are ready f9r full-scale nego- workers.
The company decided to ask for
tiations but said 'he is "cautiously
op timi suc" that a prompt resolu - a delay in the judge's ruling "orobtion of me dispute is possible.
ahly because there's a new board,"'
··Everything we've done in 1hc Becker srud.
la st 18 months was de signed to
Ries could not be reached Saturhring us to this point," Becker day to ctJnfirm wheth er he had
sa id. "Why they didn't do this five been asked to delay his dwSion. A
months ago, I don't know . Bu1 I woman who answered th e tele don't look a gift horse in 1he phone at hi s Wa shing ton, D.C.,
mouth."
home said he was not Jvw lable and
Also Saturday, Becker said that hung up when she was asked lO
Ravenswood management is seck- tal&lt; e a message.
ing 10 postpone a JUdge's ruling on
Ravenswood spokesman Pal
charges that the company illegally Ga ll aghe r sa id the company has
locked out the I ,700 members of asked for a delay until June I.
Local 5668.
"Our number one aim is to get
He sa id the union opposes lhe negotiations going," Gallagher
nCLion.
said. "If a ruling came down in the
The ruling by Administrative m1dst of negotiations, il wouldn't
Law Judge Ilemard Ries - which do them any good at all."
was expected to be relea sed by
un1on ahout resum ing co ntract

Governor, Senate GOP
meet on budget cuts, taxes

TI1~

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A Multimedia Inc. Newaoaoer

Meeting will be historic,
RAC union official says

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Low tonight in upper 30s..
Chance of rain 50 ptrr~nt.
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1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Monday, Aprll27, 1992

1992

COMING SOON

See What s1 000° Down
Plus, Low Monthly
Payments Will Get You!

Obio Valley l'liblislliJI&amp; Co. Law,_--,
address and telepltoH • ' II' wida )WI' ani
or Jetter. No trJepb._ calls . . k • 1 i' 1 AI
coatest entries 5booild lie I&amp; ' ia Ia
paper ofllce by 4 p.a. l!adl W '
P ; . .. caw
of a tie, tbr winner will k
Poany.
Next week, a Meip Conly,__ ..;;; lie rntured by tbr Meigs Soil ud Wlll!r C
taliiM
District.

Quarterback
Ben gals top
1
i draft pick

~:Sb'~ f98~ent below the

0

MYSTERY FARM • This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate in tbe weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a SS pnze from the

Ohio Lotterv•

''

'Tve always sa1d mat I want to
monitor the budget on a month by
month basis, because it's the most
erratic budget that I've ever witnessed m the past 32 years in the
Gcnernl Assembly. Therefore. I am
not encouraging, but neither am I
foreclosing, anything, .. he said.
State taJ&lt; collections have turned
in a roller coaster performance for
months, alternately exceeding or
falling below the estimates on
which budget projections are based .
"I'm a vole counler, however, "

Aronoff said.
"And when the speaker of the
House says no, and when the
Republican s say no even louder in
the House, when (Senate Minotity
Leader) Bob Iloggs says no, when

the governor IS a little w1shy-washy
sometimes on it, 1t doesn't look like
U1e exact scenano a1 th1s ume," he
said.
In other acuon, lhe Senate Enerb'Y· Naiural Resources and Environment Commiuee opens hearings
Wednesday on a b1ll the House
approved to 1mpose a three -year
moratorium on construction of
commercial hazardous waste incinerators.
Heading for a f1rs1 hearing in the
Senate Ways and Means CommitI.CC on Tuesday is a House biU that
would mtse the salanes of coroners
in the state's eight largest counties
if they work full time in the elected
job and give up thCif private pracoces.

Newspaper says Quayle
owes back taxes in Indiana
C LEVELAN D (AP) - Vi ce
President Dan Quayle apparently
owes hi s home slate of Indiana
aboul $1,100 in 1ncomc !axes
because of an error on his tax
returns, the Cleveland Plam~ Dcalcr
had reported.
Quayle under-reported mor e
than $34,000 in speaking fees for
1986and 1~87, when he was a U.S.
se nator, th e newspaper reported
Saturday.
Quayle spokes man David Beckwith said he did not believe 1hcre
was an error .

"I can 'Hrnaginc lh:ll there's any
b1gproblem here," Beckwi th s:ud.
Quayle reported $104,931 in
speaking fees those two years. li e
paid state taxes on $62,05 t after
deducting charitable contnbut1ons.
travel and other expenses.
Although they would no! discuss Quayle's taxes on the record,
Indiana officials said the type of
charitable deduc110ns claimed by
Quayle were not permilted under
state or fed eral tax rules.
Indiana ta.cs arc based on the

taxpayer' s federal adjusted gross
mcome .
Quayle properly mcluded all of
hi s speaking fees as outside income
on his 1933 Indiana ta&lt; return,
when private accountants prepared
hi s returns, according to Indiana
lax officials who examined his
state and federal relums.
Quayle's records show he and
hi s wife, Marilyn, f11led out their
state and federal ta• returns for
1986 and 1987, when Quayle was
an Indiana senator. They stumbled
over an IRS rule that prohibi1s
deductions for charitable con tribu tions from busmesscs thai arc sole
proprietorships. the new spaper
said.
Quayle se t up a separate buSI ness to collect $104,931 '" spealr:ing fees in 1936 and 1987 . As
required by Senate rules, he donated $34,214 of the fees 10 charities.
He !h en wrote them off as an
expense of running the business.
Although state and IRS officials
said the Quayles deducted chari table donations on the wrong place
on their tax form

Racine woman hurt in wreck
A Racine woman was treated for sa1cl.
mmor injuries a1 Veterans Memon Both vehicles were heavily
al Hospital following an accident damaged, disabled and IOwerl.
Carolyn Casto, Butternut Ave. ,
on East Main Street, Pomeroy, late
Sunday afternoon.
Pomeroy, was clterl for improper
Pomeroy police reported that backing following an accident on
Oretha Snider, 61, Racine, was Court Street, Pomeroy, at 12:15
taken to Veterans by the Pomeroy a.m. Saturday.
Emergency Squad. She was treated
Police reported that Casto
and released . According to the backed her 1989 Chevrolet truck
report, Snider had stopped in . in10 the right rear quaner panel and
preparation for making a lefl !urn back of a 1982 Nissan driven by
into Krogers parking lot when her Tara Clark, 20, Langsville. There
1988 Chevrolet was struck in the was light damage to the Oark car,
rear by a vehicle driven by Denise and moderate damage to the back
Tawrosza, 16, Grove City. quarter panel, and driver's side and
Tawrosza was not citerl because the door area of the track driven by
wet pavement was slick, police Casto.
'.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OP THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant PubUaber/Controllor

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Manager

LElTERS OF OPINION ..., welcome They •bould be less tban 300
words. All letlcn IIRI oubject to editing IDd must be ugned witb name,
· addro111Dd teltpbone number. No llllllgaed lttton will be pubiLSbed Letlcn
sbould be m good taste, lddresliltg isiiUOI. oot penoo&amp;liues

Legislator wants
student aid saved
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - When Sam Speck was a state lcgtslawr, college prcstdents came to him wtth their financtal wornes. Now. the roles arc
reversed.
Speck, president of Muskingum College for the last four years, found
htmself back in the Statehouse at a meeting of public and pnvatc school
prestdents concerned about the possibtlity of sharp cuts m state atd to
htgher educauon.
Publtc insututions stand to lose the most if Gov. George Vomovtch
must reduce stare funding to help offset a proJeCred $576 million dcftcll m
the state budget
''The private institutions get very little assistance from the state. vtrtu
ally none, directly," Speck said.
But privare schools could be affected if the cuts are applted to the Ohto
Instructional Grant and Ch01ce Grant student financial aid programs
Financial aid was exempt from cutbacks tmposed in December, but
there IS no assurance they will conunue to be prorecred.
lnstrucnonal grants are awarded to students, based on financial need
who attend either public or private colleges. The smaller Choice Gran~
go to Ohto high school students, regardless of fmancial need, who enroll
at tndcpendent schools.
"Our pnmary concern IS the Chotec Grants, and the continued suppon
of the Ohto lnstrucuonal Grant Program," Speck srud.
"Insofar as the mstitutions dtrcctly are concerned, !hey really aren't
substdlled. They've been paymg thelf own way, and m the process educattng the young people of Ohto mx h more cheaply msofar as the lllxpayers are concerned," he sa1d

Monday, April 27, 1992
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, April 27, 1992

,

wetghller, leadmg Wright to tntone
darkly about Reagan bemg a
"frightening man."

Jack Anderson,
Michael Einstein
In Marth 1982, Wnght recounts
a small group meeting of Democratic leadership with Reagan after
he presented hts budget. Wnght
records that he told Reagan the
Democrats had strived for a bipartisan approach, including an agreement that the deftcit was too high,
and then suggested that Reagan
curtail some of the w cuts ladled
out the previous year
Reagan replied that ta&gt; cuts
were required to stimulate the
revtval of the economy.
''This is hiS belief, hts glib, stmpltsuc belief," Wnght wrote bter.
"I guess out of good manners, I

Someumes Wnght bshed out at
members of his own party, whom
he accused of cavmg m too easily
Back on Aug. I, 1981, when the
Democrats were gettmg rolled,
Wright penned: "! am stunned at
the manipulative skill and at the
weakness of my colleagues. Like
tall reeds, they blow and sway with
the sbghtest breeze.' '
Wright thought the Democrats
were at times outmatched by th e
actor president. But he adds that
he's nor denounctng actors. "AU of
us are actors to some degree or
other in lhts busmess. He (Reagan)
learned in those days (Hollywood)
what lines get applause."
Initially, Wnght wrote Reagan
off as a "slick, glib salesman." But
he later revised hts opmwn, believmg that Reagan had for so long
repeated hts lines that he had come
to beheve them "It ts like a cate-

ST~Ie

FUNDiNG iS
$4-30 MiL~iaN S~oRT FoR
510, DOD STUDeNT$, HoW FaR
WiLL 'reST sco~e;. FaLL?

if

didn't say, 'M r. Prestdent, the
damn thmg has been 10 effect now
for over a year and hasn 't produced
the results you churned.' I dtdn 't
say that. You don't talk that way to
a president. .. "

UMM ... WHo C~f?eS,
We'Re. 'aLL GoiNG To

Be. FooD ,SeR'VIC.e
WoRI(€R$?
~iGHT.

iT'S
~ iRiCK
qUeSTioN.

Letters to the editor
Service impressive
Dear eduor
We wtsh to thank Rev Wesley
Thatcher for the spmtually upliftmg serv1ccs he held for the Syracuse Charge during Holy Week .
The Com munion servtce at the Forest Run Church was especially
tmprcsstve We were taken back 10
ume to the msutunon of the Lord's
Supper , as we gathered around the
common-table.
The Good Frtday servtce at
Mtncrsvtlle was an tmpresstvc serviCe focusmg on the SIOS of all men
whiC h were pl;tced upon the smless
&gt;on of God
The cli max of Holy Week came
al (J a m on the nver bank at the
Syrocu" Park where nmcty people

JOIOed together m pra1smg the nsen
Lord. Music by the charge choir
added much to the JOY of the servtce . Breakfast followed at the
Asbury Church
The Sunday mornmg serviCes 10
all three churches were also a
blesstng . The churches were
packed wtth church members, relauves, and fnends. Rev. Thatcher's
message, as always, ftlled the worshtpe¥5 wtth new hope and e&gt;pectations. Again we say thanks Rev
Thatcher and we lrnow we are bet·
1cr people through your mmtstry.
The Syracuse Charge
Asbury, Forest Run &amp; Minersvtlle
by R(,lse Ann Jenkins

Lower than snakes
Dear Su-,

I am very diSgusted about people stealtng flowers from the
graves.
On Thursday we went to Pratts
fork Cemetery to decorate for
!: aster. What do you think we
found? Someone had stolen every
nower off all the graves.
Putttng flowers on my hus band's grave IS the orily way that I

can show how much I care for htm
Can't people leave th e dead
alone? If you have to ptck on
someone, ptck on th e lmng So
they can fight back.
One more thmg , whoever siDle
the flowers arc lower than a snakes
belly
Thank you
Ruth Sm tth

Responds to article
Dear E&lt;htor:
Th ts ts 10 answer to an arucle ,
placed 10 the paper tttlcd "Has
Problem with Board", Tuesday .
April 21, 1992, Letters to the Edttor.

~

I wen! to the board meetin g and
stated my opmton about the tnp to
Washtngton D.C and the roles the
two 6th grade teachers have se t up
for Pomeroy Elementary school I
stated that tf all students parttc tpate
tn selling projects for the tnp, tn
order to earn money. they shoulll
be on that bus when It pulls out I
also heard there are a few studenls
that couldn't afford the $25
depostt, at the begtnntng of th e
year, to be eligtble to sell the tlrms,
so they are not going on the lnp
etther As the article stated "We
already have enough poverty tn
Metgs County" I feel these sl u
dents who cannot afford the $25 00
deposit should also he tncluded '"
the sellmg and the tnp
As for as the rules made up hy
the two teachers for ihJS lrtp I
think these rules are dtscrunmaung
to some students.
As for my son tn the 6th gmde,
my son in the lith grade, a daugh ter in the 9th, a daughter m 3rd and
4 more daughters at home . Any
decisions I make for my kid's wcll bemg are made with my heart and
my head! The arucle stated hts
"Dad only made a dectsion wtth his
heart mstead of his head".
My son m the 6th grade lacked
4 points in one sub)CCt to make the
tnp, passmg all other subjects. My
other son m I I th grade was m the
same situauon. Shon a few points
to make lhe tnp he sold for all year,
yet grades good enough to pa.~~ him

on to 7th grade
Do ;ou parcnls rcadmg thts, feel
thts ts fatr to our k.idi' I don't feel
my son got what he de se rv ed 5
years ago. (The same teachers were
111 dtargc ) Every year there arc a
few stude nts left behtnd on thts
tnp.
I wonder what thiS does to their
self-esteem' Every chtld IS untque
wtth thw own abiltUes, no two arc
alike' The arucle also Slated, "they
need dreams to succeed!" and
"Rules provtde mcenuve to e&gt;ecllent" anti mottvates the students.
Aren't we planung failure m the
mtnds of some of these chtldren,
tnstead of mottvatl[Jn? As a parent
of 8 ch tldren, I don't want my children mot1vated thiS way 1
Also the article staled "thts
year's tnp ts m Jeopardy and there
will he no tnp nc.t year." When I
met wtlh the board, this was one
thtng I stressed to them, that I
dtdn't want to stop this tnp or any
tnps "' U1e future, but that the rules
need lool&lt;ed at. The board assured
me U1at would be no problem, the
tnp was a good learning experience
for the ktds.
I feel the board ts fatr, when a
parent has a problem to dtscuss
wtth them. I don' 1 thmk the board
has sent a message to students that
grades don't count as the arttcle
stated. Instead "Do the best to your
ab1hty m school work and grades,
take pan m the selling, and when
the bus pulls out for lhe !our of our
nation's capitol, all students wtU be
rewarded for their effon put mto
the trip.
"Parent of Student menuooed m
Article"
Vtctur Young Ill
Pomeroy

Death penalty process is cruel game
As children, we toy wtth bugs
Tormentmg says It better We play
by usmg a stiCk or a fool to prod
and J'lb , forcmg the bug to go tht s
way and that way, unul we ure of
lhe ga me. Then we squash tt.
As we grow up, some of us see
lim not as fun and games, but as
cruel and unusual puniShment of a
bug - so we don't play It anymore

1he rest of us become lawyers.
Antl so me of them go nght on
plav mg the game, as they d1d m
C.t ltforma when they toyed with
1lonnemed says it better) a bug of a
nt.ln named Roben Alton Harris
~ho committed hemous murders.
Perhaps he deserved to be summarily squashed, but that ts not what
happened, as his punishment wa s
ilr.tgged out by lawyers (some wtth
blcedmg hearts, others with hard
hearts ) who played together nt cc ly
for 13 years of appeals after the
death sentence verdtct, usin~ thetr
legal sticks called "stays ' and
legal foomotes. to block an exec utton
It culminared m a htdeous final
ntght, in which they prodded and
Jabbed with thetr stays and their
footnotes - four ttmes between

mtdnight and dawn. Their fax
machines whtrred and their telephones rang, as their arguments ricocheted bet ween the calaboose and
the courts. One appeal was that to

Martin Schram
strap Robert Alton Harns mto a
chatr and then pump pellets of
cyantde $as mto his sealed chamber consututes a "cruel and unusual punishment" because it is a
slower and more difftcult death
than modern lethal inJecltons. A
htgh court satd tt wasn'~ then they
strapped htm mto the chatr, as outSide the chamber an audience of
wnncs ses watched through tht ck
glass for the fmal twioches. But at
3 51 a.m., PST, the fax whirred and
th e phone rang and the lawyers lifted thCtr sucks and stays and let the
bug wllh three names go once
more. later, even the sister of one
of th e tee n-aged boys he'd mur dered, who was there to witness
Jusuce bemg done, opined that thts
had been cruel and unusual treat ment of a man she very much
wanted to see dte; Marilyn
Maye sky Clark's words were "!

dtiln' t think 11 was latr to htm."
Ftnally at 5:45 a.m., PST, the
long arm of the law had grown
short on patience. The U S.
Supreme Court ordered that there
shall be "no further stays of Robert
Alton Harris' execu!JOn " And so
Hams was brought yet agatn mto
the gas chamber , rcsat, res trapped
And squashed
So tt went - a Day at the Gas
Chamber, a judt ctal productiOn,
that played like the Man Brothers
wllhout thetr sophtsttcated scnptmg . To do ll Jusuce, call it "Dead
at the lmprov .' '
No doubt, we'll hear lots more
about capnal puntshm cnl m tht s
clccuon year. Prestdent Bush wtll
ctte capital puntshment as th e
answer whenever we ask about the
cnme cnsts m our c1tics and suburbs , as gangs co mmit drtve-hy
murders w1th assault weapons that
they buy wnh case and usc wtth
tmpunny. Bill Clinton wtll talk of
It, too, he's a Democrat who
prestded over three executions even new home to do J( in person,
whtch may have been good cam paign polittcs but, as Cltnton
knows, dtdn't solve our cnme

problem.
A word of advtce to our politiCians who talk about capttal puntshmcnt: "SHUDDUP!" We know
tt doesn't deter cnmmals; we keep
executing them, cnme keeps ri stng.
We know tt ts pure retribuuon . Part
of me wtll always agree wtth Mario
Cuo mo, who opposes capital punIshment but says lock up the murderers ard throw away the key no parole. He hsts the people who
were executed by New York state
and then found mnocent - too
late.
But pan of me ts enraged every
ttme Sirhan Suhan comes up f~r
parole . Why must we hold our
breath to see tf Rohert Kennedy's
assass10 wtll be freed by a mushheaded judge? Why wasn't he executed years ago? (So, too, Charles
Manson, who was JUst dented
parole; and John Hmckley, who
deserves no men:y after trying but
failing to assassmate a prestdent)
But all of me knows that George
Bush mvokes capt tal puntshment
not as a debate but as a dtverston . It
IS hJS stick, hts foot, applied to
divert our poliucal path It is hts
cruel and unusual puntshment for
us all.

Will Americans take back democracy?
We live tn a co untry who se
pohucal mstttutwn s and government do not seem to he wockmg for
the benefit of most of tts cttizcns,
and we can't figure out why As of
next month, when Wtlltam Grct dcr's new hook, " Who Will Tell
the People: The Betrayal of Amen can Democracy," ts released, no
one wtll have an excuse for not
lc.nowtng Grctdcr ts a veteran
newsman wtth a young man 's tdc alism and a mature one's under standmg . What he has crammed
Into 448 pages IS part tough -mmded reportage, pan cleanly rea«med
mdtctment and, from begmmng to
end, a clarton call to the Amencan
people to take back Uterr democra cy
If you heltcve that the "mess m
Washmgton" ts the fault of one
poliucal party or the other, tl11s ts
not the book for you. But tf you
believe the slluation requtres a
thundering jeremtad thai calls the
entire governing elite to account Republicans, Democrats, the press,
mdustry, lalxr and special interests
of all stripes - this tS your
moment.
Or, at least, tl ts so long as
you're willing to accept that you
sbare m the responSibility for wbat
ts rotten tn the system - which
means most of the system. Gretder
systematically lays waste to what
he descnbes in order to lay the

groundwork for restonng what he
loves, a funclloning system of
democracy, which remembers that
the people - all the people - are

" party of average working people " The Democrats "m1ght more
accurately be descnbed now as the
the party of Washmgton lawyers.''
The Republicans hav e crafted a
somewhat dtfferent approach, "a
hegemony of momed Interest s
based on the altenatwn of powerthe potnl of the e&gt;erctsc. But he less CitiZens " Republicans know
never lets us forget that we, the how to tap into the ''corporate culpeople, must exert ourselves over ture of mass commumcatJons,''
ttme tf we are to clean out the from ratsmg the big money to craftmuck he rnkes into such a towenng mg the Bt~ Message. It is a "rancid
ptle
populism, ' Greider says, wtth the
These are among Grctdcr's raw matenals of success drawn
observauons:
from "enduring soctal aggravations - wounds of race, class and
The Amencan people know that religwn, even sex." At the end of
"electoral politics 1n the age of day, however, the Republican Party
mass communicauons serves as an ts st'ltiwhat it has always been, a
elaborate mask - concealing what "pany of conservauve clients."
goes on in government from the
If government isn't working for
untutored mass of voters." Behtnd the people, does it work very well
the mask is a process that is dys - for anyone? I! is to laugh, Gretdcr
functional in democrabc terms and, would answer, parucularly if you
wbat is worse, "neilher Democrats are General Electric. The chapter
nor Republicans nor their allied on "Ctttzen GE" alone is worth
interests has any incentive to the price of admission. Corporaremove the mask (and perhaps tiOns have "seized the political
much to lose if they did). "
ground left vacant by ciuzens, the
"Who OwflS The Democrats"? political parties and other mediatasks one chapter. The answer : mg institutions," and GE sits on
"economic interests that are most the tallest mountain of them all. All
hostile to the party's main con- corporations are ideally suited to
slituenctes.'' There is no party "the permtsstve culture of the
organizauon on the national, state grand bazaar." GE, with its
or local level worthy of the name in "wingspan ... almost as broad as
what was once described as the the government's," is ruthless in

Hodding Carter III

Tuesday, April 28
MICH

dusm someth mg that you repeal
every Sunday tn church unttl you
can rcctte It by heart and to questiOn any of that ar(Jcle of fatth
would be to commtl blasphemy"
But Reagan the actor could also
spnng to life and spar wuh the best
of them. On April 29, 19~2. Wnghl
recounted a closed-door sesston on
Capitol Htll wtth Democrauc leaders, Reagan and a knot of atdes.
Once aga in, the negotiations
bogged down over taxes and what
was seen as Reagan's obsunacy to
stay the course on the economy.
" It wasn't a shouung maoch, but
n was a very vociferous and heated
di sc ussion between the prestdent
and Speaker {Ttp) O'Neill. Speaker
O'Neill made it clear m the very
begmnmg that he wasn't mtimidated by the president's presence in
lhc room ....
"And it was a gtve-and-take
scss wn. It was a no-holds-barred
session. The president on one occaswn turned to me and said, 'ltm,
put down that pencil and stop
thmking about what you are gomg
to say, and listen to what I am try·
tng to !ell you.' lt was that kind of
a session."
Wright reponed that lhe meeung
lasted for 3 l/2 hours Wtlhout
resolving anythmg except an agreemen! thai the yawning defictts must
be addressed.
Democrats and even some
Republicans were incredulous,
Wnght said, that Reagan was
defending the entire tax cut and
further budget cutung.
''The president satd on one
occasion, 'Tip, you just don't
understand. I have read all that
newspaper crap about people bemg
hurt, but nobody's betng hurt by
my economic program "'
Wnght always gave Reagan
very htgh marks for bemg a "good
performer" who showed "grace
under ftre" tn the way he conducted htmself after an auempted as.&lt;;assmation.
Bui Wnght was unforgivmg of
Reagan's aversiOn to accepting any
accountabthty. He wrote on Oct 3,
1982:
"Thts man Reagan, of all the
presidents I have known, has been
so totally prone to blame all the
fatlmg of hts admmtstrauon on hJS
predecessors "

•

I I

[Toledo 57'

•

[ Mansf1eld

If Greider is too honest to try to

pretend that there is a while hat
party and a black hat party, he ts
also too honest to gloss over the
fatlures and slippery rationalizations of his own profession. Washington's journalists repeatedly fail
to tell the people that their interests
arc being subverted by a government supposedly elected to serve
them Generally, the capital press •
corps "operates in an 10cestuous
climate" where symbwttc
schmoozmg with the powerful and
famous ts taken as a nght. Long
forgotten ts Walter Lippmann's
decades -old warning that "the
most important fonns of corruption
in the modem journaltsts' world
are the many gutses of soctal
climbing on the pyramtds of

lJX&gt;WCr."

Dcsptte everythmg, Greider has
a guarded fwth m the possibility of
democratic renewal. Examming the
way some Citizens have rediscovered that effective "politics begins
in personal relationships," he
offers examples of partictpatory
democracy 10 Texas as models for
w1dcr emulation.

'

PA

I 57• I•

tND

., Columbus I 58°

•

I

Page--3

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pr Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Aocu·Wealher Inc

-----Weather
South-Central Ohio
To ntght , mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers early. The low
tn the upper 30s. The chance of
ram ts 50 percent. Tuesday, partly
sunny wtth the htgh m the mtd-50s.
Extended rorecast.

Wednesday through Friday:
Wednesday, lows 35 to 45,
lughs mostly in the 60s. Thursday,
lows m the 40s, htghs 55 to 65. Fnday , lows 35 to 45, htghs tn th e
50s. Chance of showers each day.

--Area deaths-Mark Beegle
Mark Alan Beegle, 41, of Lelllrl
Falls, dted on Sunday, Apnl 26,
1992 at St. Ann's Hospital in Westerville followmg an extended ill-

ness.
He was born on September 27,
1951 '"Parks, W.Va., son of Paul
and E1leen Shtelds Beegle
Bestdes hts parents, he ts sur&gt;~ved by hts twin sister, Mrs. Bruce
(Mclante) Hann of Athens ; a
daughter, Ntcole ("Nickie") Beegle
of Letart Falls; several aunts,
uncles, great-aunts and greatuncles; and a mecc
He was preceded in death by his
grandparents, Claude and Edna
Shuler Shtelds, and Charles
("Whttey") and Mae Beegle
He was a member and elder of
the Pratse Cathedral Church m
Ravenswood, W Va.
Funeral sernces w1ll be held on
Thursday at I p.m . at Ewmg Funeral Home wJth Rev. James Dale
offiCiating. Burial will be m Lelllrl
Falls Cemetery.
Fnends may call at the funeral
home from 7 p.m . to 9 p.m . on
Tuesday and from 2 p m. to 4 p.m.
and 7 p m to 9 p m. on Wednes day.

Garnet Drenner
Garnet Mae Drenner, 85, of 995
Lovely Lane , North Ft. Myers, F1a ,
dted on Fnday, Apnl 24, 1992 at
her restdence. She was a hou scwtfe.
Born on September 25, 1906 m
Wayne, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late John W. and Rebecca
Jane Clark Sellards.
Survivmg are a daughter, Nelda
Mackey, N. Ft. Myers; three sons:
Avery Drenner of Ft. Myers, Fla.,
Darrell Drenner of South Ft.
Myers, Dan Drenner, Pipersville,
Fla ; 12 grandchildren and IS
great-grandchildren.
Bestdes her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband,
Lee Drenncr.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewtng
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with
bunal to follow in Miles Cemetery.
Fnends may call a! the funeral
home on Tuesday from 6 p.m. to 9
pm
T. l.ar&gt;on Fultz, 89, a nauve of
Mtddl cpon, dted Fnday, Apnl 24,
1992 m Vemce, Fla
He tS su rvtved by hts wtfe, Marc
E (McDorman) Fultz, whom he
marned on Oct. 7, 1977 Several
ntcccs and nephews survive.
He wa' born October 12, 1902,
so n of the late Frederick L. and
Martha Petty Fultz.
Mr. Fultz moved to Flonda 12
years ago from Xenta, Ohto. He
was supenntendenl of the Boys
lndustnal School for the State of
Oh10 Juvemle Correcuonal Institutions. He was a member of the
Church United Methodtst Chun:h
of Vemce, a reured heutenanl
colonel wtth the U. S. Army. havmg served m both World War II
and the Korean Wars.
He was a member of American
Legwn Post No. 159 of Venice,
Gtdcon International, Masonic
Lodge No 301 of Venice and a
memher of the Shrine Club.
Friends may call at the Farley
Funeral Home, Venice Chapel,
from 2 until 4 and 6 unttl 8 p.m.
Wednesday. Servtces will be held
10.30 a.m . Thursday in the funeral
home cbapel. Burial will follow at
Vemce Memorial Gardens.

Larry Gleason
Larry Franli:lin ''RoHo" Gleason,

40 of Point Pleasant, died Satur·
day, Apri125, 1992, at Pleasant Val-

ley Hospital foUowing a long illness.
He was a pilot and engineer for
17 years with the G&amp;C Towing
Company, and was a U.S . Army
veteran and a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.
Born June 8, 1951, m Pomt
Pleasant, he was a son of Frank and
Marclyn (Ramey) Gleason of Pomt
Pleasant.
Surviving, in addiuon to hts
parents, are a sister, Pamela Holcomb of Point Pleasant; four
brothers and sisters-in -law, Herman
and Donna Gleason, John and
Teresa A. Gleason, Rick and Mary
Gleason, and Michael and Teresa
R. Gleason, all of Point Plcasan~
five meccs and four nephews.
The funeral wtll be Tuesday, II
a.m., at !he Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home with the Rev. Herman H.
Jordan and Brother Isaiah Crump
officiatin$.. Burial will be m the
Beech HtU Cemetery at Southside,
where military graveside rites will
be held by the American Legwn,
Mason County Post 23.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Monday), 5 to 9 p m.

James Miller

By The Associated Press
It wtll be partly to mostly
cloudy across Ohto tomght, and
there is a chance for showers over
southern regwns.
Sktes wtll clear over western
Ohto, and temperatures wtll drop 10
30 to 35 degrees.
Lows across the rest of the state
are expected lO be m the mtddlc 10
upper 30s
Sunshine ts expected Tuesday
wuh high temperature s from the
mtd-50s to around 60.
Skies were mostly cloudy
overnight Showers were scattered
over much of western and southern
counties.

The record high temperature for
this date at lhe Columbus weather
station was 88 in 1990. The record
low was 28 m I971.
Sunset today wtll be at 8·22
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday wtll be at
6:35a.m.
Around the nation
Skies were fair today over much
of the nation 's southern and central
regions Rain dampened parts of
the Midwest and Pacific Northwest
and clouds shrouded much of the
Northeast
In the West, more than a mi!Uon
people sought rehef at Los Angel"'~
County beaches over the weekend

as inland temperatures soared mto
lhe 90s. The heat wave was expected to continue through Tuesday.
The Northwest was lilcely w be
cooler today, espeCially along the
coast Thundcrstonns were posstblc
over Texas later m the day, wtth
the risk of simms mcrcastng m tlhe
southwestern Plams on Tuesday.
Cool ram was ltkely over the
mJd-AtlaniJC and Southern states
today. w11h more than a quarter
mch posstble m some areas.
Sunruer skJCs and milder weath er were predtcted for the Nonheast,
although temperatures were sttll
expected to rematn abou t I 0

degrees below normal for thts ume
of year. Snow was a posstbtllly
over the ht gher elevatiOns of the
Appalach•ans
Htghs today are expected w be
m 40s m northernmost New Eng -

land and around the Great Lal:es, tn
the 50s tn much of the Northeast
and th e Mtdwest; tn the 60s tn
much of the South and across the
Pl;tms. m the 70s tn Texas, and tn
the 80s and 90s across the Southwest
The htgh temperature lor the
nauon Sunday was !07 at Borrego
Spnngs, Calif.

Ohio officials say it's too early to
tell effects of United Way controversy

W VA

T. Larson Fultz

pursuit of its own 10tcrests, diverse
m its reach and incredtbly skillful
m its manipulauon of lhe government that supposedly regulates its
behavtor.

The Dally Sentinel

Skies remain cloudy; temperatures to drop

01110 Wr:atlwr
Accu- Weather" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperaturca

Journals reflect Wright's respect, ridicule
FORT WORTH, Texas - The
pnvate JOurnals of former House
Speaker ltm Wnght reflect, m very
human terms, the kind of tttantc
struggl es that regularly go on
behind th e scenes between a
Dcmocrauc Congress and a Republican prestdent.
Somettmes ll can be reduced to
a dinner mvttaUon.
In his Journals, which our assoCiate Dale Van Ana had unprece dented access to, Wright accuses
former President Reag~n of being
"parusan m the peuiest of ways,"
even though he cut a different pubhe persona. Wnght wrote on Nov.
2, 1981 :
"He wants to punish tn pe tty
ways. He wants 10 punish those
who d1dn't vote wnh him. He
wants to - well, little bitty ways
like mvtting people to state dinners
that they have for visiting heads of
state The last two of them ha ;en' t
had a smgle Democrat invited .
S tnce Margaret Thatcher was here
- they haven't invtred any of the
Dcmocrauc leaders of the House or
Senate to any of these dinners at
the Whtte House."
More often, the struggles were

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By DEB MARTIN
Associated Press Writer
Untted Way offtctals tn Ohto
say tt's toO early to tclltf the scandal that ousted the organtzattOn's
nattonal prestdem wtll cut mto contributions when fund -rat smg cam patgns begtn later th1s year
Wtlham Aramony reSJgned the
organization's prestdcncy m February after publicity ahout hJS lavJSh
hfestylc and salary of more than
$460,000.
hecut1ves of several Ohto
Umtcd Way organ11a11ons satd last
week that the worst of the Aramony flap ts behtnd them, but they
won't know the extent of the fallout unul fund-ratstng begtns.
Dan Mttzlga, sc mor vtcc pres tdent of the Cleveland chapter, satd
us campaign takes place m th e fall.
'' I think tt depends on what we
do between now and the fall," he
Sa td . "Right now , TRW In c ts
paymg for some marlc.el research
to g1ve us a true baseline about
what's on people's mmds "
Joel Dav1s, prestdent of Dayton's Untted Way, smd donauon s
haven't declmcd The agency ha s
been tnformtng people that 1t controls tts own spendtng and ts toe al ly based, he smd
Glen R1chter. prcstdcnl of Toledo's Untted Way, satd cont rtbu
uons have de chned , although no
speCJftc ftgures are ava•lable yet
'" It's hard to read thts ttmc of
the year Our fund-ratstng campalgn goes on tn the fall, and
what's happenlng now IS people are
fulf1lhng pledges that they made
last fall," he srud.
Surveys done by the Columbus
Area chapter of the AmetJCan Red

Cross show the Umted Way's ercdtbthty has been damaged, but not to
a stgntftcant degree, satd Dean
Dugger, chtef e.ecuuve offtcer of
Ute chapter.
Some Untted Way agenctes are
wuhholdtng or reductng thetr
nauonal dues tn response to the
controversy over Aramony
" We feel that the tssue that's
being ratsed ts the tssue of trust ,"
Rtchter srud.
" We feel that our best strategy
10 terms of restonng and rebmldmg
trust IS to ma~e sure all of th e
fmanctal and other mformatwn
about our Untied Way ts out there
and open for people to see," he
smd.
OfTictals say people have asked
how lhctr Unncd Way contnbu tions arc betng used or complained
about the natiOnal organization.
"Cen:unly there's concern anti
anger about what they're rcad111g
abou t the Un11ed Way of Amenca." sa td Cmc1nnatt Untied Way
spokeswoman Carol AqUJno. "We
Itslen 10 th en concerns and talk
about the fact that thts ts a separJie
local organmllton nun by local volunlccrs "
L"a Antolino, a vtce president
of the Frankltn County Unued
Way, finds people arc knowledgc,tblc about the organJZauon
"Most have a fatrly good understandtn g that thetr contnbultons
wtll stay m Franklm County," she
satd. "I thtnk they real1ze that by
nol glvtng locally, they're only
hurtmg local people.''
The chapter last year had a goal
of $32.9 mtlhon and ra1sed $33
mtlhon ThiS year's goal hasn't
been set.

Final plans made
for May 1 field day

lames E. Mtller, 63, of 26676
West Belpre Pike in Coolville, dtcd
Fmal plans were made for the
on Sunday morning, April 26, 1992 Conservatio n Fteld Day to be held
a1 Camden-Clark Memorial Hospl- on May I at Southern Htgh School
tal tn Parkersburg, W.Va. follow- at I p.m. when the Meigs Sot! and
tng an extended illness.
Water Conservauon Dtstnct Board
He was born on November I R, 0 f supervJsors met recent! y
1928, 10 Jackson County, W.Va.
The event will begm wtth the
son of the late Ballard and Reda release of the Metgs County GenerBraham Mtller. He had reurcd afl er al Sotl Survey Map followed by
35 years of serv1ce at the P10neer dtscusston on cqutpment avatlablc
Ctty Casting Company in Belpre, from the Mctgs Sot! aod Water
and was a member of the loc al Conservauon Dtstrtcl and a no-tJII
labor umon.
demonstration on the football field
Surviving are hts wtfc of 40 at Southern Htgh School
years, Betty Mae Yates Miller, two
Other busmess dtscusscd was
sons, Davtd Miller of Coolville and the Dry Fne Hydrant Program
Roger Miller of Sandyvtlle; iltrcc mee ung was held and posstblc
daughters. Pat Roseberry, Martetla ,
and Judy Roseberry and Patncta
"Stss y" Mtller both of Coolvtlle,
two brothers, Ronald Miller of
Veterans Memorial
Parkersburg and Esler Mtller of
SATURDAY
ADMISS!O)';S Sandyvtlle; two sisters, Opal
Rtcky
Johnson,
Mtddlepon.
Bumem of Sandyville and Pauline
SA TIJRDA Y DISCHARGES McCoy of Belleville, W.Va.; three
grandchtlren and several meces and Meltssa Leac h, Watd Spencer ,
nephews.
Yvonne Selle", auJ Charles Bla'c
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Funeral servtces wtll be held on
Tuesday at II a.m. at While-Blow- Margaret Hutlon , Pom eroy, and
er Funeral Home m Coolvtlle wtth Mane Duddmg, Mtddlepon
Rev Robert Markley offtctaung.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ·
Burial will be tn Coolvtlle Ceme- Fran ces Eskew and Burton
tery.
DeWeese.
Fnends may call at the funeral
!IOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
April 24 discharges - Ltnda
Monday.
Baker. Jenntfcr Carpenter, Ttffante
Patricia Wood
Deem. Mrs. Wtlltam Eilts and son.
Donald Folmer, Joshua Heck, Mar
Pauicia Marie Wood, 61 , of garel Ingalls, Mrs. James Mtlls and
Point Pleasan~ died Saturday even- d.•ughtcr, and Mrs. Charles
ing, April 25, 1992, at the Holzer Schoepr.ncr and daughter
Medical Center tn Gallipolis.
Apnl 24 birth - Mr and Mr&gt;
She was a former employee of lose ph Duncan, daughter, Jackson
Fruth Pltarmacy in Pomt Pleasant
April 25 discharges - Mrs
and a member of lhe Heights
United Methodist Church and the
Order of the Eastern Star, Chapter
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
75 of Point Pleasant
was
one ucket sold namtng all SIX
Born March 24, 1931, in Point
numbers
drawn m Saturday mght's
Pleasant, she was a daughter of
Super
Lotto
drawmg , and the winMarie (Rodgers) Harden Byus of
nmg
uck
et
ts
worth $26 mtlhon,
Point Pleasant, and the late Rody
M. Harden, Sr. In addition to her the Oluo Lottery said.
When the wmnmg ticket ts valtfather, she was also preceded in
dealh by her stepfather, Kenneth dalccl, tt will res ult m $1 mtlhoo a
year for 26 years before wcs
Byus.
Survivors, in addition to her
mother, are her husband, Roben L.
"Bobby" Wood; a daughter, Connie Home with the Rev. Mtchael S.
Spurlock of Huntington; a son, Chapman and Rev. LoutS A. HusDavid M. Bias of Pomt Plcasan~ seU officiating. Graveside rites and
SISter, Ann Durfee Of Point burial will follow in Kirkland
Pleasant; two brothers, R.M. HarMemorial Gardens
den, Jr. and Harry Harden, both of
Friends may call at the funeral
Pmnt
Pleasant;
and
three home today (Monday) from 5 to 9
grandchildren.
p.m. An Easrem Sw memorial serThe funeral wiD be Tuesday, 2 vice will be held at the funeral
p.m., at the Crow-HusseU Funeral
home tonight, 7 p.m.

pond loca tions to tnstall the
hydranLs was dtscussed.
Tom Thetss and Jo e Bolin
reponed on a meeting they ancndcd recently m Chtlhcothe conccmtn g HB 88
Those attending were Supervtsors Tom Thctss, Charles Yost, Joe
Bnltn, Marco Jeffers and Davtd
GI()C(kner
Olhe rs attcndtng "'ere Dtstncl
Cnnse natlonist Mtkc Duhl, DtS IItcl TechniCian Blatr Wmdon and
Dtslrte l Program Admlnt strat or
Opal Dyer.
1 he next regular meeung wil l he
held on May 27 at 8 p m

-----Hospital news----

Lottery numbers

Tlllllll hy Dunn and son, Kenneth
Guy, Derek Harold, Mrs. Edtltc
Lew11 and son, and James Ray
&lt;l.pril 25 birth - Mr. and Mrs
l11n Pterce, daughter, Wellston
April 26 discharges - Mrs
Dav td Ballard and daughter, Mr s
Jdse ph Duncan and daughter, Mrs
Ruben Lambert and son, Andrea
LewiS and Eva McCoy
April 26 births - Mr and Mrs
ltnnnte Home, daughter, Btdwell
Mr and Mrs. MarYJn Ross, son,
Robensburg, W Va_

Divorce granted
A dtvorcc acuon has been granted Ill Met gs County Common Pleas
Court to Manlyn S Burke from
MiChael T Burke

Stocks
Am Elc Power
31 3/4
Ashland Oil .
31 5/8
AT&amp;T .
43 1/8
Banlc. One .
44 7/8
Bob Evmts .
. 17 3/4
Charnung Shop
26 5/8
Ctty llolthn g
.. .. 19
Federal Mogul
18 1/8
GoodyearT&amp;R
. 72 5/8
Key Ccntunon
19
Lands End
34 Ifl.
Limtted Inc
. 23 5/8
Mulumedta Inc
27 1{1.
Rax Resta urant.
I 7/ 16
Robbms&amp; Myers
16
Shoney's Inc... ..
21 5/8
Star Bank .... . ..
37 1(2
Wendy lnt'l
12 1/8
Worthmg1on lnd
23 1(2
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by lllunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.

There is a posutve stde 10 the
sttuauon, one olfJCtal satd.
"I thtnk ,, ., opened some
eyes," smtl Gregory Love, director
of fmanCJ al development for the

Ctnctnnatt YMCA. "I thlnk tn
some ways tt' s good. that the general pubhc ts gmng to become a ltt~e more self-educated about "here
tl1ey gtve their dollars."

Squads have busy weekend
On Sa turday a1 10 54 a.m. Mtd dlcport sq uad wc nl to Vtllag c
Manor Apanmcnts. RICk Johnson
was taken 10 Veterans Mcmortal
llospttal
AI 12 45 p m , Ractnc squad
went to El mwood TcrrJcc Ap.~rl
nH.'rH S 'ilcklc Bosu wa" t,tkl'n t o
Veterans. At 2· 16 p m Rutland
sq uad went to State Rmuc 1:4 lo r
Dorothy Barrell, who was ljkcn to
Veterans. At 4 3Y p rn. RuliJnd
untt went to Std e Htll Road lor
Peggy Hatfteld , "ho was wken to
Pleasant Valley Hospt wl At II 29
p.m ., Syracuse untt wem 10 SIXth
Sireel and took Margaret Huuon to

Veterans
On Sunday at 2·22 am ,
Pomeroy unu went 10 the polllc
department for Patnck Cleland He
was taken 10 Veterans. At I~ 2~
p 111 ., Mtddlcport untt was sen t to
Lmcoln Street. Dallas Blevtns WJ.s
wkcn to Hoi7.Cr MediCal Center At
5 51 p.m., Pomeroy squad went w
East Mam Street. Oretha Sntder
was taken to Veterans At 6 19
p.m., Mtddlcporl squad went to
Ove rbrook Center for Marte Dudding, who was taken lo Veterans
At 2:28 a.m., M1ddlepon squad
went to Park Street Paul Batley
was taken to Vcrcru ns

-Meigs announcements __
Hog roast planned
The Sc tpto Ftrc Deparlmcnl will
hold a hog roast Sunday at U1e ftrc
dep.1rtm em on Route (,S4 '" Ha_r
n sonv!ll c. 1-!omcm.Hl c 1cc cream
wtll be avatl,thl c Cosl ")4 lor
acl ulls and S2 lor ch ildren I here
wtll also he .t trallor pull wnh
wcJgh-Jn

r

Ill

Jt

no o11 at llasse s at I

C IJ S5CS Will

be

the SJillC a s

l. l "it yc.u

Trustees to meet
I he Board of Tru slecs of
Columbta Townshtp wtll meet May
4 al 7·30 p m. at the fu-e statton
Sortballlournamenl
!he men' s softball lOumamcot.
sponsored hy the Bradbury El c
mcmary PTO, planned lor Saturday
and Sunday, has hee n rcsc hctlule&lt;J
for May 16 at 10 am and Ma; 17
at I p rn at th e MHidlcpon Ball
Park Cos t IS S60 plu s lwo h.tl ls
Cal l 992-74~4. Y92-5 J2 X or'~''='
530310 regiSter or for lurtl1Citnlor
mat1on

Dance plannrd
The Ga llt a Twtr lcrs W"iern
Square Dance Club wtll hold a
dance Saturday Irom ~ - I I p m at
the Hend erson Communtty Cnlln
'"Henderson, W.Va Herb Shcli&lt;&gt;n
wtll be lhc ca ll er. The dance "
open to all western style " l'w c·
dancers
rrom ~cttvities plannl'd
L&lt;x:al bust ncs"c" and JU ntor ,md

&lt;en tor parctlls of Metg s lltch
School students wtll sponsor alter
prom acltvtttes Sat urday at Ro ). tl
Oak Reson from mtdntghl to 5 a "'
Acttvtltcs tncludc sw tmnttrH!
mow tcs on b1g screen, a havrttk a
dt sc JOckey, games, pme;, P"'·'
drHI more Parent s mtcrcstctl tr:
hc lp tng may LUfl tc to the mcrttn ~
I ucsday at 7 p m at Mrs kunn~·
Taylor's room al ihe ht, lt sLillMtl

Slone lo perform
Ilruce Stone wil l perfor m at
Fatth full Go spe l Church 111 Long
Botwm on Thursday at 7 p m !'aslor Steve Reed tnvttcs the publt c
and fellowshtp wtll lollov,
Preaching and singing
Fatth Full Gospel Church tn
Long Bouom wtll have preachtng
and SJ ngmg Fnday at 7 p m Pa"or
Steve Reed tnvttes the publiC and
fellowshtp wtll follow

Regtstrauon wtll be held May 4
at Pomeroy Elementary from 9-11
a.m and 1-3:30 p.m. for students m
ihc Pomeroy and Salisbury areas.
Regtstralton w1ll he held May 5
at Mtddlcpon Elementary from HII 30 a m and noon to 2:30 p m
fur studcnll m the Mtddlcpon and
Bradbury areas
RcgJStratt Gn will he held May 6
at Ru tla nd Elementary from 81I 10 " m and noon to 2·30 p m.
lll r si utlcms m the Rutland, Har fl'&gt;lmvi\lc and Salem Center areas.

Coptes of tmmun12auon records,
htrth ceruftcate and Social Secunty
nurnhcr mu s t~ prov1ded.
Hummage sale
I he Elc.•nor Cncle of Heath
Unttcd Mcthodtst Church wtll
sponsor a rummage sale at the
ch urch Thursday and Fnday from 9
.1m to

3 p rn

(;otf scramble
The Southern High School Golf
Team w11l spo nsor a four-person
golf sc ramble Saturday at the
Mctgs County Golf Course. Entry
fcc ts $35 for mcmhers and $40 for
non-members . Fee mcludes golf,
,an, lunch and pnzes Those interested may regJStcr at the course or
hy ca lltng 9'12-6312.
Club to meet
lltc Mctgs Cou nty Better Ltveslm k D.ury 4-H Club wtll meet
\lctlnesday at 7 p.m at the Metgs
( '""HY Public Ltbrary m Pomeroy.
.\n)onc age 9-18 or tn the lhtrd
1r.Hlc hy Jan. I, 1992 ts eltgtble.
Anyone tntercsted tn showmg a
rc~tStcred datry ammal at the 1992
Mctgs County Faur ts mvltcd
Founder's Dav
I he Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter. Beta Stgma Phi Soronty, wtll
lll tsitllc 61st Founder's Day Thurstl.ty at the Sportsman tn Athens at
(l 10 p m. Other chapters to anend
Drc X t Gamma Mu, Xt Gamma
Epsil on and Oh to Eta Pht

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 2U-11410)
Pubhahed every afternoon, Monday
throua:h F'lid..ay, Ill Court St, Pomeroy
Oh1o by tht. Oh 1o Vallt~y Publuh1nl
Company1Multtme d11 lnr , Pomeroy,
Oh1o 45769 Ph ~ 2156 Sec:ond daa
~lafJe p&amp;ld •t Pomeroy, Ohio

M,moo Tht Allaoqal«&lt;, Pre.a and the
Oh io New1p.e.~r A.1ooahon , National
Adverli•mi Repreaent.atJYe Branham
Nt,up•pllr Salu , 733 Third ATenue
New Vort N- Yl'YT"k 1001 7

K inder~~•rtt' n

rt&gt;~1strat

mn

POSTMAST'Eil Sf.nd ad~s ch.anp. to

Kindergart en rcgi'.. UJliOn 111 the

Metgs Local Sc hool Dtslml wtll
hegm next week

T he Da1ly Senlinel
Pomt!mly OH to Ui 76Q

6tRDlRTOR
I 00,9 10 ~Ill

!&gt;.U / SUN JUT I 00 l 00 I ~)

THE

RRB!

~Al!WM "'-' 1 l 00,) 10 (Pt; )

SrtPHEN liNG'S SUEPWRlliRS
I JC.~ 30 MI LT !J. lt!.UN 1'\AT I lO,J

)l)

11

DOllY PRRTDN In STRRIGHT TRIK
~ Al , ~l M !&gt;V. l 1 20.1 lQ IP ~ )

I 10,120 OA! lf
1 oo. ~ 10 DAil'

BEEIHOUEN

iAt , ~ ~ ,...,. , 1

WHITE MEN
1 IS 9

]Q

OAflT

~Al

CRN"I

oo

Court St

-- .26 Centa

Subacrib«l not dM1n"' to pay the can; .

WliAIM "''TIMHS ~TUROIT I 'IIJN(IIl
!.Uif.AIM NI!Oifl ntr~O.h

JOHN GOODMRN In

I ll

8UB8CRIPllON IIATU
fly CUTler or Mo tor Ro.te
One WeU
lt60
Ond•l on U.
16 ~
One"'ear
-~~ .. &amp;83 -~
20
8lNGI.Jt COPY
PRJCE
l)a~J y

J OCJ,i 00 tlll.llf

'

J 10 P~

JUMP

&gt;L N "1/1 1 1 J~. J JO IR

BRII[ INSIIN[J
' 10,9 JO M JLI SAf t SUII "1.'. 1 l IO,J lO IRI
Girt Cllflll CAf[S AV.I.! !ABL! AI BOW ffiU

~r may rerrut m advance direct to T'he
Datly Seftbnel on • thn:e , .it or 12
mont.h ba111 Cr&amp;d1t 1nll be 11ven e&amp;ft"MMT
each week

No aub.aipttona by m.ail permiU.ed, tn
whet~ home c.mer aem~ ll
IVIJiable
lrt!!ll

�Monday, April 27, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, April 27, 1992

run.
In the second game, Lofton got
Cleveland star!ed by stealing home
in the tim inning. With two outs
and a 1-1 count on Mark Whiten,
Lofton broke for home just as
Jaime Navarro (1-2) started his full
windup. Navarro's pitch barely
beat Lofton to the plate, but Lofton
slid under Andy Allanson's tag.
"I knew I had a chance. I felt
preuy confident when I took off,"
Lofton said. "It was just a case
where the opponunity was there
and I went ahead and took the
chance. He (Navarro) was kind of
corn ing slow to the plate. That kind
of keyed it off. That gave me the
opportunity to think about it.''
The Brewers knew full well that
suc h a play was possible. Twelve
days earlier, Milwaukee's Paul
Molitor stole home against Minnesota left-bander John Smiley.
"In Kenny's situation today, we
were aware of it," Molitor said. "I
was a little disappointed that we
didn't have Jaime go into his
stretch. It turned out to be a very

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

leadlll:rlm 2-0
Golden S1.1a.e 115, Sunle 101, acnca

liod 1· 1

1\ATIONAL LEAGLE
F.uttrn Dh l11o n

Tnm

w I.

Pltt~burgh

14

New YorJ. . .

4

m

9
8 10

444

. 10

St l.nHJ
M~l
Plul&amp;dd~llo

•'

.

Cluu gQ ..

GB

Pet.

"' '

II
II

421

7 10

41l

65
65
65

411

10

•' ·"' ·'l
.500
.9
"
'
10
..9

Stn frlllcuco
r...o. Angde. ..

Alianu ..

Ouc.~go

120, Mi&amp;mi !){), Ch1c1go ludr.

2--0
Do:troit 89, New YoU 88,

1ena

ICI"let~

ued 1-

Utah 103, LA. Chppers 92. Ut.ah leaW
aene~~Hl

516

Clnd nnatl ----1 1

Stn Diego

Sunday's scores

&lt;5

Wtttern Dhlslon
llounm

, C lnrland Ill , Nf• Jrn ry 96,
Llnelnd leadl Mrlft l-It

9
9
iO

474

II

411

Phocnll 119, San Anton1n 107.
rhomi.o.Jeadlaena 2-t!

521\

Tonight's game

I

Ik&gt;rlorlat lndia.na, 8 p.m.

25

Tuesday's ~arne '\

Salurda)"s S4:ores
Pltubllrgh I , Oitctgo 0
to. Ange.lea 7. Stn FriDClllm b. 10m
omgo
Ailint1 l, Houstm 0
New Yod ), Philtdclplua 2
SL l..oWJ 2, Mootre1l I, 17 lilllmgt

Clndnnallll, San DitKO 5

Cine land It Ntw JerH), 7:)0 p.m .
~cw Yur:kal Dw-r-.1, 8 p m
Golden Sl..lt.e ll Sc.au..le, I 0 JO pIT'.
lJ1..1!, al L.A . Oippen. 10 30 p.m

Stanley Cup

divisional semifinals

Sunday's scores

Saturday's scores

Philiddphia5, New Yod o4

N. Y. Ranac:n 3, New .Ieney o. •cnea

MoniJ'Cil 6, St l.ooll 0
Al.lailU 3, ~~~llll 2
Ouclao 5, PlU&amp;bw-g.h 4, I 0 uuung1

t~oe.:Jn
Lilli

San Okao 1, Clnclnnalll
Sw Fun.;aco 5, La. Aneela 4, 11

lll ·

W.. hin(Wn 7, ~ 2. Wuhina
lead&amp; ICntll ).J
il&amp;li.fonl 1, Ml"f1tta.l. I, -a~ e. uN 2-2
&amp;.!.on 5, Buffalo 4, ar. 11o1wn IGIW

ler!CI ).]

""''
Tonl~ht's games

Sunday's scores

3-0) 11 At1a c to

Ch 1e~gn (Hn1k1~-

(Glnllll'2 -l), 74(Jpm.

Montrea l

(~bli.ul U.

2
Ouugo 6, SL Low.a 4.
l tna J-1
le1dt

1-)) 11 Sa11 I :1n

o.lto (Dwt.. 0--2). 9 )5 r m
S1. Uluu; (Ck.horr.t 1-0) 11 L.DII A:-tgtl ct
(Groll 0- 2), l 0·)5 p m
Ptu.lailclphu (Mulholland 0 1} 11 San
Diego (1-IWJt 1-J), JO.D p .m

3, Minn eaol l 0. ~ l nnet ol l

Det roJ I

Kf\CI ] -

V•nc.o-uv~ 8, Wmmreg 2. Wulll i[&gt;c g
ku.ll ICJiet 3-1
Edmontoo ~- Lol Ang..Je~ 1. Edmm ·

ton le1da

K:na }- 2

Future ~ames

Tuesday's games
ri!Ubureh (Drabfk J -1} al l"l nrln natl (Brown Ina l - 1), 7:35 p.m.
Chic• go (Cu11]lo 0 -1 ) 11 At l .n !a
(Lc:~tw.nd•l IJ , 7:4Qrm
J[ oullon (1/en ry0-1 ) ll :\c ..- Y1H1
(Cone l - 1),740p .m
Phtlad dph i• (Gre-ene 2 - 1) ol ~ . n
n~~sn (bll!ld 0-1 ). 1o m p m
SL lou.u; rTcwlilirry 2-0) 11 l.£&gt;!1 An
ada (Mlrtmez 0--i }. 10 JS p m
Montreal (Gudner l - 1) 11 Sl!l h•"'-' 1'
co (DoW!"II 0- :Z). I Q 35 p.m

Tonlaht - Ne w Jcn~y at r-.,· Y
Ra n a~n. 1 )5 p .m . ?iusbo.uR[I u Wuh ·
lrlJilllO, 7·35 p.m .; 8uff1lo al f101ton , 7. 3.S
fl m . l!trtfo nlat Montrul, 7 3~ p.m
Tuetd.ay - Dctmtt 11 M!nneao~..~, H ~
2-m., (tf I1Cli;CN1ty), Ouca11o It Sl. Lwis,
~ 35 p .m.; Vancouver at Winnipe, . 8. 35.
rom . L:c Anadea at Edmoruon, 9 5 p.m
(J!n~ry )

Wedni'SdaJ -

[atltm Ol~ldon

Tum

w

Tororno

ll
17

I.

P&lt;L

r. s

'
Ualtunc:n
'8 '"lOO
' ,,,
______ 7 '
Nt-* Yt.rl

750

2

M7

7

II

J

tvWwuU.«:

5

7

ll illlm

IJ

f'lt~rland

I.Jel.ruil

'

6

•

. )~·

11

We~~!rrn

'"

1f necea.u.ry )

l'rlda y - New lcr'q at i\ Y
R1n11en. 7 35 p m. Pnuburgh 11 Wnh
111gton, 7 35 p m . lla rdurd I t Mon 1ru l.
1 55 fl r'r1 . lluffa ]o II IJ tlll\UO. 7 ..\5 rIll .
(1 lJ lf OI.XCII.If y)

Transactions

l
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500
"
500
"'
9
...,
' 10
ll
9l
"
S11turday's scores
10

reau

~Sfl

II

s~ tt.lc

10

Cdlforrua
:vhnrx:.ot.a

2l
Ll

8
l

Kan u1 Cuy

Ill

Tnu lt Bu.ttun . ppd. mn
MllwiUk~

all"lrvt-blmt, ppd.. rain

O uuaa 11 Dttroll,

f'Pd., run

Od.Un.:! 8, Mumaou 4
Jhlt1morr. 9. N~w Ynd 2
Toruno fo, K1n111 Cuy 4

Se-.ttlc 10. Cahforru.a6

Sunday's scores

rCUI ). BOltOil I' 151 game

TeAu 4, lMt.oo 2. Ul.:! sa me
Mll.-aukH 9, Clndand 4, ht Rlmt
Cltrtland J, Mllw-.uk u I, Znd llJIM
Sew Yolk 3, Baltirn&lt;n I
Cm:1go 7, Detro, I 6
M:nncwta 8, OU.Iand 4
('.ahfnmia7, Sr.Jttlt S
K~ruu( " uy'i,

JnrontnO

Tor.lght's gam es
Te~ n

Ml nnc..ioll 11 DctJmt.

7 35 p .m ; St. l.outr 11 Chicago. 8 )5
p m, Wllllllf'CII 11 Vanco1.1~cr, 10 3~ p m .
Edmonton u Lot. AngeJet . I U l'J p m ( all

85

Dhillon
12 7
6ll

O.Ulmd
Duca.11 o

NY . Ran1en u New

Jetrey, 7 :15 p.m., WuhinrtUI'I 11 Pius
h•Jra,h. 7:)5 p m., Monlfel 11 Hartford.
7 35 p.m.: Botton at Bu.!Talo, 7.35 p.m
( dJ if noceuary)
T hunda y -

LEAGLE

A\1ERICA~

C~ir180 l~__.,u,

(llolllrl Ofl 0 -0) 11 New York

[Leary 2-0). 7.]0 p m.
lhlhmore (Sl1tchffc J.-1) 11 Minne.ann
(Krueger J--0), 8 :/li p m

Tuesday's games

lla.'iehall
Amrr lnn I.""II(Uf
OAKLAND ATIII.Fl1 r~

Arhvot

N Terry Sternbach. ~atchr.r. from 1l-e ! 1
day diSabled list I}punne d Henry \tn
cedca. cato;:her. to T• ~ rm1• of the- l'.rtf"

Cuul Le.gue
Na!lonal lA•a.:ul'
C IU CA(iOCLll.~

l'l.~et.d lou

Vtt

n1no. Infielder. on the 1~ - Joy d1Hhlcd
liJ~ rcuoac\ive to Arnl ~() J.l. ti alle-.1 l&lt;i)"
Son~hrl. sh•liU top. fr&lt;1m ! .. ...-. n ( the
Amen can Anncu u nn

HO U:-iTO)'.,' AS TRO S
R n~l l r.J
llclllly D11\dl!lfl, uofotl dcr. f1 r•11 Tucl&lt;&gt;n
uf the Pacific Coul Lugue Opttunc.J
Karl Rhoda, ootftrldl:l", toT l1!-l: ()n
LOS ANG I: LI:S

DO DUHIS

Named Jon DehUI mana&amp;er of :.h~ Grt:&gt;.Jl
I'till Doo.lj!Cn of (he Plo-1eer League
NEW YORK METS - Placc&lt;l DIV e
Gallaghu, r&gt;t~tfioel \ln , m the ' S-dly lh5
able-d il111 . Pl1rrhur.d thr crantra ct n( ldf
McK ntght , mf1 f ld r r nt~ tf ·. r.lder. fr om
Ttdewller of the lnt.en1U.IIn ll Lugue
PHIL ADEI.PI IIA PI!ILI . IU
Placed An,j)· !Hhhy. p11 chet. on tit~ 15
,j1y duabkd \itL RccalJN Dam n Ch1r m.
p11 chr.r , from S('ran 1on -W1ikeJ lhrr c n f
the: lo1Un1li1.111iJ League

SAN DIEGO l'ADRES
Actlvllcd
Mike M1ddul , pitcl!CJ. from 15 -dty duabled lilt. Oplioncd Jercm)· llemande-1.,
pitcher,t&lt;J Laa Vcgu .

Tuu (B rown ) -1) at New Yo rk
(Sanduaon 2-l ), 1.)() p.m

Chic1110 (McC ukill l -2) 11 Bouon
(Ocmen• 2-2). 7JS r,·m
C1lifomi• (Fin ey 0 - 1) 1t Toronto
(Stieb 0--J), 7:3~ p.m.
Oakland (Moorr l ·D) 11 Clut la nd
{NIJY J -lh 7;J5 p.m.

Se.ttle (Swan 2-2) 11 Dc:trOt (Ch.Jlhcir. •on 2-2), 7:35p.m.
Kuwu City (Appicr 0--2) at Milw•u·
koe (Wegman 2· 1), &amp;:OS p.m.
H1ltimoill (Muuinl 2--0) at Mtnnaou

(EriWoo D-2), &amp;:05 p.m.

NBA playoffs
Saturday's scores
8ot1.on 119, Indiana 112, OT, BollllO
lead~

teriell-0
Ponlllld IOI,I~ A- t..U.- ?9, PortltOO

•

Football
N1llon1 1 Footh•III.AII(Ut

DA LI. AS CO WII OYS -

Trailed 1

aocond· round . th1rd-ruund . lllth -roun d.
ei ghth -round and 12th· round dr~t choice
to the Ocvebnd llrowna for 1 lttond mund 1nd 1 lifth -mund draft ch01cr, aU in

1992.
INDIAN AI'OUS CO LTS - Tr1ded
Eric Dickc:non, runnin1 back, t&lt;J the U.
AnaeJcs Ra ider~: for I rou:th and eighthround dr11\ ch01~ m 1992
MIN N[SOTA VIKI!'&lt;GS - Tr1ded
Keith M !!.rd. defenaive ta ck.le. to th e
Swtle Suh1wU. for a secon.:! -round .U.rt
chotec m l99l
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Tr1dcd
Reuben MI)'Cll, runnin&amp; hick. 10 lbc Set! ·
lie SC41hl*lll (or I rounh ·round draft
ehoioec in 1991

SIXth.

In the first game, Chris Bosio
(1-1) ~ot the win, givin$ up one run
and s1x h1ts m seven mnings. He
walked none and struck out six,
bcuncm~ back from a bad outing at
Califorma a week earlier in which
he surrendered eight runs in four
innings.
Bosio has been bcthered by a
plantar's wart on his right foot.
Medication helped deaden the pain

MetrOdome.
Mahomes (2-0) allowed live hits
and walked three.
Edens went 2 2/3 innings and
Aguilera finished his fourth save.
Dave Stewart (1-2) gave up II hits
and four earned runs in 6 1/3

innings.
Yankees 3, Orioles I
Robeno KeUy doubled home the
tie-breaking run in the eighth
inning and New York beat Baltimore at Yankee Stadiwn.
Andy Stankiewicz opened the

By BARRY WILNER
NEW YORK (AP) - A falling
star rises from the bcuom, while a
callege sensation gets to start at the
top.
On a busy day of banering, with
the Dallas Cowbcys making alimost
as many swaps as picks and the
Atlanta Falcons trading for a pick
they owned when things began, the
biggest moves might have mvolved
Eric Dickerson and Desmond
Howard
The Indianapolis Colts, who
added significantly to their defense
with the top two picks - Steve
Emtman and Quentin Coryatt also added to their offense by subtraction when they dealt Dickerson
to the Los Angeles Raiders for two
mid-round choices.
Dickerson was suspended for
refusing to practice last season and
11 was clear for weeks that the Colts
wanted to get rid of the NFL 's No.
3 career rusher. On Sunday, they
reached agreement with the
Raiders, a haven for disgruntled
talents, sending Dickerson to Los
Angeles for a fourth- and an eightround choice.
The team that won the Super
Bowl in January, the Washington
Redskins, added to their arsenal in
style. GM Charley Casserly traded
up two spots on the first round,
switching with Cincinnati. lO take
Howard, the Heisman Trophy wmncr from Michigan.
Howard, one of II underclassmen taken on the first round including four of the first five was the only receiver to go in the
top 30. He joins Art Monk, Gary
Clark and Ricky Sanders, the best
receiving trio in the league.
The draft was an auwonecr' s
dream, thanks to Dallas coach
ltmmy Johnson and Atlanta coach

eighth with a single off Jose Mesa
(1·2) and scored on Kelly's double
to center. Kelly continued to third
on a wild relay and scored on Mel
Hall's sacrifice fly off Mike Flanagan.
Steve Howe (3-0) pitched I 2/3
innings for the victory.

Sunday ~

"The biggest part of it is men tal," Bosio said. "When you stan
worrying about liule aches and
pains in your body, it's a problem.
Today it was line. I'm not feeling it
at all, and that was a big step."
He lost his shutout bid when
Whiten homered in the seventh
tnning, breaking a string of 22
scoreless innings by Milwaukee
pitchers. The Indians added three
unearned runs against Ricky Bones
m the eighth.
Milwaukee took a 1-0 lead in
the third when Scott Fletcher doubled and scored on Hamilton's single, The Brewers broke it open
agamst Scou Scudder (1-2) in the
fourth. Franklin Stubbs, Scott
Fletcher and Paul Molitnr hit RBI
singles before Hamilton hit his rust
home run.
Five of the six runs in the inning
were unearned because of an error
by se&lt;ond baseman Carlos Baerga.
In oth er games, Kansas City
blanked Toronto 9-0, Texas swept
a doubleheader from Boston 3-1
and 4-2. California defeated Seaule
7-5, Minnesota topped Oakland 84, New York beat Baltimore 3-1
and Chicago downed Detroit 7-6.
Royals 9, Blue Jays 0
The Toronto Blue Jays were !54 and threatening 10 run away with
the AL EasL The Kansas City Royals were 1-16 and seemingly ready
to fall through the bcuom of the
AL West.
For one night, though , they
completely reversed roles.
The Royals, who had lost nine
10 a row and entered the game with
a team bauing average of .202,
routed World Series hero Jack
Morris and the Blue Jays 9-0 Sunday night.
"Hopefully the guys will realize
how much fun it is to win a game
and come in here 10 listen to some
music instead of being quiet," said
pitc her Mark GubiCl.a (1-2). who
!united the Blue Jays to three hits
in seven innings.
"We fi nally got some pitchmg
and offense on the same day,"
Royals manager Hal McRae said.
Brian McRae hit a tw o-run
homer off Morris (3 -1) in the first
mnmg after Keith Miller' s double,
l11 s first of four hits. Jim Eisenreich
hit a sacrifice fly 10 the founh and
d1c Royals made it 5-0 1n the fifth
on Wally Joyner's two-run double.
Consecutive doubles by Miller
and McRae off Bob MacDonald
and Gregg Jefferies' RBI stngle
mad e it 7-0 in the stx th, and
George Brett htt a run ~scoring double in the eighth. Miller added a
solo homer m the ninth.
Angels 7, Mariners 5
Pinch-runner Chad Curtis tum ~
bled home ahead of catcher Dave
Valle's hard tag wtth the tt e ~ break~
ing run, tow..:hing off a bench-clear ·
ing brawl during a si~- nn1 r:llly m
the ctg hth innin g as Caltfom ia beat
VLIIting Seattle.
Scott Balles ( 1-0) was winner
and Bryan Har vey got his fifth
save. Jeff Nelson (0~ I) was the
loser.
Rangers 3, Red Sox I
Rangers 4, Red Sox 2
Pinc h-hitter John Cangelosi sin ~
gled hom e the tie-breaking run in
the ninth inning and Texas completed a doubleheader sweep at
Fen way Park.
Brian Downinfs two -run
homer in the eighth ued it at 2. and
lhe Rangers won when Cange lOSI
and Ivan Rodriguez hit RBI s10gles
off Jeff Reardon.
Terry Mathews (I~ I) was the
winner and Jeff Russell pitched the
ni11lh for his second save of the day
and fiftlt of the season. Greg Harris
( 1~1), who began the ninth with
two walks. took the loss.
In the opener. lloston stranded
13 runners, nine in scoring pos itiOn . Bobby Will (2-2) allow ed
seven hiLs, walked four and struck
ou l seven in seven innings.
Juan Gon1.alez hit a solo home
run against Matt Young (0 ~ 2) in the
first inning.
White Sox 7, Tigers 6

Detroit fe ll to 0-8 at home as
Robin Ventura had three hits for
Chicago.
Greg Hibbard (4-0) won despite
giving up six runs in 5 2(3 mnings.
Bobby Thigpen closed for his fifth
save. Eric King (1-3) was chased
after 2 1/3 innings as the White
Sox built a 7-0 lead.
Ventura hit an RBI double during a fourth-run third inning and a
solo home run in the fifth against
Les Lancaster. Dan Gladden and
Mickey Tet~eton homered for the
Tigers.
Twins 8, Athletics 4
Rookie Pat Mahomes struck out
10 in live innings and Tom Edens
and Rick Aguilera shut out Oakland the rest of the way at th e

;;'"'"-"""""

· ~-' . . ~

\ ......IlL:..

·:~._~

RECORDS OUT- Milwaukee catcher Andy
Allanson (right) pu1s lbe lag on Clevelond's
Mark Lewis at tbe plate in the fourth inning of
the second game of Sunday's doubleheader in

Cleveland, wbicb the Indians won
tried to score from second base on Felix Fermin's hit lo right r.etd. (AP)

drew a two-out walk, went to thlfd
on Tony Gwynn's singled and continued home on a throwing error by
center fielder Reggie Sanders.
whose toss short-hopped second
baseman Bip Robens.
Hammond invited further trou ble by walking Gary Sheffield and
Fred McGriff lO load the bases, but
he then fanned Darrin Jackson for
the third out.
A goof cost Hammond in the
fourth when he threw a wild pitch
that allowed Kun Stillwell to score.
It came on the second pitch after
Stillwell hit a one-out triple that
bounced down the left field line
and th en around the Padres ·
bullpen.
Lefferts came short of h1 s
longest stint this sca:mn when he
went seven innings in his second
start_ a 5-3 victory in San Francis-

co.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was San
Francisco 5, Los Angeles 4;
Ph.iladclphia 5, New York 4; Mon treal 6, St. Louis 0; Atlanta 3,
Houston 2; and Chicago 5, Pittsburgh 4 in 10 innings.
Giants 5, Dodgers 4
Even in April, a Dodgers-Giants
series is played like it's the last day
of the season with a title on the
line.
Los Angeles en tered Sunday's
game at Candlestick Park looking
for a three-game sweep. San Frnncisco countered with new -found
ace Bill SwifL
When it was all over, the Giants
survived Darryl Strawberry's threerun homer off Swift in the eighth
mning and beat tltc Dodgers 5-4 in
II innings.
"It was a big win because we
hadn't won in extra innings or a
one-run game," Will Clark said,
referring to the Giants' 0-2 record
in each category priO&lt; to the victory.
Willie McGee singled wi~1 two
down tn the lith and Clark fol lowed with a bloop single to left.
Kevin Bass then hned a singl e to
center off reliever Steve Wilscn (02) and Brett Butler's throw home
was wide.
"It was a good fastbaU situation
and I jumped at the pitch," Bass
satd of the 1-0 fastball from Wil son.
Gil Heredia (2-0) pttched one
inning for the victory as the Giants
snapped a three-game losing streak
and avoided the sweep.
Swift, seeking to become the
major leagues' flfstlive-garne winncr, carried a two -hiuer and a

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

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

By The Associated Press
The Detroit Pistons, despite losing the physical baUie, arc in good
position to win the war.
The Pisoons, routed 109-75 in
the opener of the best-&lt;&gt;f-live series
wuh New York and outrcbeunded
99-60 in the first two games, rnllied
from another poor stan offensively
to beat the Knicks 89-88 Sunday.
lsiah Thomas and Joe Dumars
saved the day at the offensive end
after Detroit scored 40 points in the
fte;t 28 minutes and fell behind by
12.
Dumars sco red all of his 21
pomts in the second half, keying a
rally from a 55-43 deficit, before
Thomas, who missed 14 of his first
20 shots in the series, calm ly
swished a 16-footcr with 7.6 seconds left.
"We said we were never going
to quit," Thomas said.
''We have been m a lot of situation s like this before where we
needed a big shot to win," said
Dumars, who missed his first shots
before scoring 10 points in the third
quarter and II in the fourth.
The Pistons, who have reached
at least the second round of the
playoffs every year since 1986. can
win th e series with victories at
home on Tuesday and Friday.
In other playoff games Sunday,
Chicago, Utah and Phoenix took 20 leads in their series. The Bulls
beat Miami 120-90, the Jazz
defeated the Los Angeles Clippers
103-92 and the Suns beat San
Antonio 119-107.
The lead changed hands nine
times in the final seven minutes of
the Knicks-Pistons game, which

three -run lead into the eighth
inning . But Strawberry hit his
three -run homer, a 460-foot shot
into the upper deck in right.
Stnwberry's one-out, first-pitch
homer was the first allowed by
Swift in 92 innings. The last homer
Swift surrendered was hit by Milwaukee outfielder Greg Vaughn on
June 23 . 1991 , when Swift was
wtth Seattle.
"It would have been nice if we
had won the game," said Strawberry, who has four homers and 16
RBis . "Yo u've got to be very
paucnt with Swift If he doesn't get
the ball up. he's going to be very
successful."
Cubs 5, Pirates 4 (10)
At Wrigley Field, Joe Girardi's
bases-loaded single with one out in
the lOth inning lifted Chicago past
Pittsburgh.
Loser Roger Mason (1-1)
walked Mark Grace leading off tltc
lOth, Rync Sandberg followed with
a bunt single and, after a sacrifice,
Luis Salazar was walked intentionally w load the bases for Girardi.
Chuck McElroy (1 -0) pitched I
'1/3 innings for the victory.
Braves J, Aslros 2
Terry Pendleton and Damon
Berryhill hit solo home runs and
Otis Nixon. in his third game back
from a drug suspension, knocked in
the ~o-ahead run as Atlanta beat
visit.mg Houstm.
Nixon capped a two-run fourth
inning witll a run-scoring single off
Pete Harnisch (1 -3) to give the
Brnves thw second straig ht victory.
Marvin Freeman (2-1) picked up
the victory with I 2/3 innings on
shutout relief and Alejandro Pena
got the last three outs for his second save.
Expos 6, Cardinals 0
At Busch Stadium, Chris Haney
pitched a five-hitter for his first
major league shutout and added a
two-run single as Montreal dcfeat(See NL on Page 5)

Wisconsin.
A pair of Stanford players went
next. Atlanta, in a pick acquired
moments earlier from New England, got All-American taekle Bob
Whitfield, another underclassman.
Cleveland opted for fullback
Tommy VardeU.
Tackles Ray Robens of Virginia
and Leon Searcy of Miami then
went to Seattle and Pittsburgh,
respectively, and Miami further
helped its defense with linebacker
Marco Coleman.
The Patriots made tackle
Eugene Chung of Virginl8 Tech the
highest Asian-American sele&lt;tion
ever. Then things got tight- as in
tight ends- in New York . The
G1ants drafted Derek Brown of
Notre Dame and the Jets followed
with sophomore Johnny Mitchell of
Nebraska.
Wide-body
DT Chester
McGiockton of Clemson went to
the Raiders; Dallas took DB Kevin
Smith of Texas A&amp;M; San Francisco also got a defensive back, Dana
Hall of Washington; Atlanta took
Tony Smith; Kansas City grabbed
safety Dale Carter of Tennessee;
and New Orleans was stunn ed to
find Vaughn Dunbar, generally
rated the best running back in the
draft, available at No. 21.
The rest of the first round saw
Chicago take DE Alonzo Spellman
of Ohio State; San Diego draft DE
Chris Mims of Tennessee; Dallas
further upgrade the defense with
linebacker Robert Jones of East
Carolina; Denver gamble on scphomore quanerback Tommy Maddox
of UCLA; Detroit go for DL
Robert Porcher of South Carolina
State; Buffalo draft Arizona tackle
John Fina; and Cinci nnati pick
Darryl Williams, a big-play DB
from Miami.

was interrupted a half-dozen times
by shoving incidents.
The Knicks' 49-37 rebounding
ad-\ntage was overcome as Detroit
outshot them 48 .6 percent to 38.5
percent, including 5-for-20 shooting by Patrick Ewing.
Dumars, the Pistons' leading
scorer in Game I with just 13
pomts. made eight of hi s last 12
shots.
Dumars' th;ce-pointcr put the
Pistons ahead 87-86 with 1:21 left
after Charles Oakley gave the
Knicks an 86~ 84 lead with a layup
22 seconds earlier.
Oakley, who scored 13 points
and outrebounded NBA rebounding champion Dennis Rodman 187, tipped in Mark Jackson's miss
for an 88-87 Knicks lead wtth 23
seconds lD go.
Then came Thomas' game-winncr.
Wilkins and Xavier McDaniel,
who had 24 points and 10
rcbcunds. mtssed potential winning
shots on New York's final possession.
Dulls 120, lleat90
Michael Jordan, who blit7.cd
Miami for 46 points in th e fir st
game of the NBA playoffs, had 33
and Scotue Pippen adde&lt;l 30 "~' the
host Bulls improved to 16.0 against
the Heat since Miami joined tl1c
league four years ago.
Rony Scikaly led the Heat wah
26 points and Glen Rice had 15
Pippen broke the last of three
early ties with a basket that made it
10-8 and started a 12-0 run. The
Heat went scoreless for 3 l/2 minutes.
Pippen went on anoth er tear

By JOHN KREISER
AP Sports Writer
Tim Cheveldae finall y solved
the Minnesota North Stars. The
Vancouver Canucks finally figured
out the key to beating Ri ck
Tabaracci.
Cheveldae, whose goaltending
led Detroit to the Norris Division
title, had been ordinary in three
playoff losses to the North Stars.
Tabaracci, a rookie goaltender for
the Winnipeg Jets, was threatening
to put a premature end to the
Canucks' best season ever.
But on Sunday night . things
looked more normal.
In Detroit, Cheveldae stopped
all 22 shots he faced and the Red
Wings prolonged their season with
a J-0 victory, cu tting the North

EU-NOSE·THROAT
ALLERGY
BOARD QRTIFIED
SPECIAUZING IN
•Ad~t &amp; Pediatric Allergy

•H..tngAids
•RtcUmllt Ear lnfldlons
In &lt;hlldren
•Asth••
•HHdaches
•Runny Nose

NL games ...
(Conti nued from Page 4)
ed SL Louis.
Rhea! Cormier feU to 0-3.
PhiiUes 5, Mets 4
At Veterans Stadium, John
Kruk's RBI single off Wally
Whitehurst (0-2) capped a two-run
rally in the seventh inning.
Barry Jones pitched two score~
less innings to even his record at I ~

•Snoring

•Management of Skin &amp;
Fadal lesions
llfDIWl ASSIGIIlUNlS ACQPIID

675·1244
i

II

I.

Stars' lead in th eir best- of~ se vcn
division semifinal series to 3-2 .
And in Van couver, the Smy the
Division -champion Canucks
shelled Tabaracci for live goa ls in
less than 10 minutes and stayed
alive by beating the Jets 8-2.
In the other Norris Division
series, Chicago beat St. Louis 6-4
to take a 3-2 lead. In the Smythe
Division, Edmonton downed Los
Angeles 5-2 to take a 3-2 lead in
lhat series.
Game 5 in the four Wales Conference series will be played
tonight. In the Adams DivisiOn,
Hartford is at Montreal after
evening the series with two wins at
home, and Boston can close out
Buffalo with a victory at Boston
Garden. In the Patrick Division, the
New York Rangers play host to
New Jersey after a series-tying win
in Game 4 at the Meadowlands.
and Washington can end Pills burgh's reign as Stanley Cup
champion by winning at home.
Red Wings J, North Stllrs 0
Cheveldae, the NHL's busiest
goaltender (72 games) and one of
the best (38 wins , tied for the
league lead) during the regular season, looked like his All-Star self
for the rust time in the series after
being tagged with three losses.

TOP PICK -Steve Emtman holds up his
new Indianapolis Colts jersey shortly after
arriving in Indianapolis at the team's headquar-

ters Sunday night. Emtman was 1he r.rst player
selected in the NFL draft (AP)

Spellman 'best left in draft' - Ditka
By The Associated Press
Holly, N.J .. played outside
Howard was the flfst offensive
Some football experts thought linebacker his freshman and jun10r player chosen in the draft and is the
Ohio State defensive lineman years and defensive end in h1 s highest pick ever by a defending
Alonzo SpeUman would be chosen sophomore season.
Super Bowl champion.
before the 22nd pick of the NFL
The first-round pick said he
Like Howard, Klingler won't
draJl.
would be in Chicago on Thursday feel the pressure to produce in the
But Chicago Bears coach Mike for the start of the Bears' mini - NFL right away because he will be
Ditka knew he was the best player camp.
the backup to someone more expeleft in the fust round Sunday.
"I'l l definitely be there,'' he rienced. Boomer Esiason is
"We're trying to pick the best said from Columbus. "I want to be entrenched as Cincinnati's quanerplayer available." Ditka said. "We involved right away."
back and Ben~als officials made it
piCked the best football player on
The Bcngals helped the Red ' clear that won l change.
the board - by far. He's a strong. skins get Howard by swapping
"It's great to know that the
aggressive young man. who is only draft positions with Washington . team's not going to throw you to
go ing to get betu:r."
The deal also gave Cincinnati the the lions." Klingler said. "I'm
In other NFL draft picks, Heis- final pte&lt; in the draft's first round, going to get myself ready to play
man Trophy winner Desmond which was the 28th pick overnll.
right away. I've got lots to learn."
Howard of Michigan, a Cleveland
Howard will join veterans Art
Darren Anderson, a University
St. Joseph High School graduate. Monk, Gary Clark and Ricky Toledo defensive back, was chosen
was picked fourth by the Washing- Sanders at w1de receiver for Wash- by the New England Patriots in the
ton Redskins while University of mgton and said he's glad he will founh round. The 5-11, 192-pound
Houston quarterback David Klin- have them teaching him the differ- Anderson also played at Walnut
gler, a Lima native, went to the ence between coUege and pro foat- Hills High School in Cmcinnati. He
Cincinnati Ben gals two picks later. ball.
was the 92nd pick overnll.
Spellman. like Howard, declared
"I feel as thou~h I can learn a
lumself available for the draft with lot from them, whtch will help my
one year of college eligibility game go up another level for the
rerruunmg.
NFL. It's great to be drafted by a
Members of the New Jersey legisIn three ye.m. he had 153 taCk- traditionally rich team. They're lature receive $25,000 per year, e.J:les. including 27 1/2 for losses. and always winning, and I've been cept lor the president of the Senate
10 quarterback sacks. The Moot-6, affiliated with that type of ballclub and speaker of the Assembly , whoreceive one· third more
·
285 -pound Spellman, of Mount wherever I've gone," he said

early in the second half, pacing an
11-3 surge for a 43-23 lead.
Jazz 103, Clippers 92
Karl Malone scored 32 points
and John Stockton had 21 points
and 19 asststs as Utah beat the
Clippers at the Delta Center.
Jeff Malone added 24 pomts for
the Jazz. Danny Manmng had 22
points and Ron Harper 20 for the
Clippers, in the playoffs for th e
first time Since 1976, when the
franchise was located in Buffalo.
Down by 10 points early in the
fourth quarter, Los Angeles pulled
even at S4-84 with 5:23 left in the
game before Karl Malone responded with a layup and eight foul
The University of Rio Grande
shots, keying a 19-8 stretch run by
men's track team placed sixth and
tltc Jau.
th e women's team fourth at the
Suns 119, Spurs 107
DIStrict
22 Championships SaturJeff Hornacek and Tim Perry
each scored 31 points as tl1e Suns day at Cedarville CoUege.
Renee Peck, Rio Grande's leadmoved Within 3 game O[ eliminJ.ling distance runner. placed first in
tng viSaing San Antonio.
The Suns took advantage of Ute the 1500 meter run wtth a time of
absence of center David Robinson, 4:4R.02. She also placed sa:ood in
who's recovering from thumb 1hc distri ct in the 3000 meter at
surgery, w domtnate on the boards 10 25.25 to highlight the teams'
until Ute final minutes and lead by performances.
Team sconng at lhe mccl, tn
as many as 17 points.
whtch Malone College forfcucd tl&lt;
San Antonio cut into the lc:Jd
hold on the di stri c t
trJdltional
behind Terry Cummin gs, who
went
as follow s for the
crown
.
scored 21 of his 31 points in the
F1ndlay,
143 points;
men:
seco nd half. Cumming s sco red
Cedarville,
132;
Malone.
123; Ccn ~
three straight baskets in a 74 ~ scc ­
1ral
State.
100;
Walsh
.
83: Rio
ond span midway through the final
37;
Urbana,
I.
In
women's
Grande.
quarter as the Spurs got within I 03sconng , Findlay was first with 20 1
93.
Another basket by Cumming s pomt s. followed by Malone, 156;
with 3:13 to play cut the marg in to Cedar ville, I 05; Rio Grande. 60;
Urbana , 21: Walsh, 19; and Central
107-100. But the Suns then went
on a 6-0 run, with Perry hitting two State, 18.
field goals and Hornacek one. to
Results or the men 's evems'"for
put the game away.

Rio track teams place in district meet

Detroit, Vancouver post victories
in Stanley Cup first-round action

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.

Wte 112, Ylley Dr. Pl. Plm•

Jerry Glanville and personnel
director Ken Herock.
Johnson was involved in six
deals and made eight selections in
the live rounds conducted Sunday.
Those deals involved 27 choices.
The Falcons couldn't quite keep
up with that pace. llut they did
manage to send the 19th pick on
the first round to New England,
which then traded it to, of course.
Dallas. The Cowboys, naturally,
didn't hold on to it and sent it to,
yes, Atlanta.
Glanville got the versatile kind
of running back he sought with that
pick. taking Tony Smith of Southem Mississippi.
The Colts weren't interested in
dealing the top two picks and they
became the first team since the
Chicago Cardinals in 1958 to start
off with a double dip. And they
immediately upgrndcd a mediocre
defense with Emunan and CorvatL
The Los Angeles Ram s took DE
Scan Gilbert of Pittsburgh, another
junior, before Washington swapped
with Cincin nati to get Howard.
Green Bay, which wanted Howard,
went for hard~hitting Terrell Buckley. a big -play safety and ktck
returner from florida State.
Then the Bengals, who needed
loL&lt; of defensive aid, looked to the
future by selecting quarterback
David Klingler of Houston . He will
be a backup to Boomer [Stascn for
a while.
" It 's great to know that th e
ream's not going to throw you to
the lions," said Klingler, who se t
51 NCAA offensive records.
The Dolphins, coached by Don
Shu la , father of Bcngals coac h
David Shula. benefitted when
Klinger went to Ciocinnali. Miami
wanted a top cover man and got the
best in the field in Troy Vince nt of

Detroit, Boston among NBA's
final weekend playoff winners

Myers' relief helps San Diego
notch 2-1 win over Cincinnati
SAN DIEGO (AP) - San
Diego Padres pitcher Randy Myers
saw plenty of his former teammates
on the Cincin nati Reds over the
weekend - right on the basepaths.
While the Reds caused Myers to
blow a four -run lead Friday night
en route a 7-6 viciDry in 16 innings,
he answered back Sunday by surviving a ninth -inning jam to preserve a 2-1 victory for the San
Diego Padres.
Myers, acquired in an off-season
trade for Bip Roberts and a minor
leag ue player, hugged catcher
Dann Bilardello aflet' the fmal out.
"I JUSt tried to learr from the
otltcr night," Myers said. "You try
to figure it out and hope 11 doesn't
happen again."
Myers entered the game in the
eighth and set the Reds down in
order. But in the ninth. Chns Sabo
and Btll Doran hit consecutive singles. Paul O'Neill. who had si.r. hits
1n hi s last eig ht at-bats, then put
down a sacrifice bunt to tnove the
runners tn se&lt;ond and third, bringing up Joe Oliver.
After fouling off a series of
pitches. Oliver was then caught
looking at a called third strike.
"If foul-out's counted, I'd be
hiuing about .800," Oliver said "I
should have won that game . Our
guys pitched well but we couldn't
get score any runs for them ."
Myers, who fanned Oliver with
a low slider on the outside edge of
the plate, then got Freddie ltencvides on a grounder to end the game.
"I'm not happy because I let
two guys on in the ninlh," Myers
said. "If I get three up and three
down, then I'm in the right
groove."
It wa s the fifth save tn etght
opportunities for Myers, who had
also let a four-run lead slip away tn
a 5-4 victory April 12 over the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
The vi ctory went to Craig Lefferts (2-2), who allowed one run
and six hits over 6 l/3 innings
before yielding to Jose Melendez.
Lefferts, a converted reliever,
secured his first victory at home
after giving up 10 runs , six earned,
over a combined 4 I(J innings at
home .
"I think I had a little beuer zip
today and my screwball was much
better. I feel like I'm getting better,' Lefferts said. "A lot of the
media wanted to put this as my last
start but nobody told me anything
like that."
Billy Hatcher led off the sixth
with the Reds' first home run in 10
games to account for all of their
scoring. It also marked the first
homer by Hatcher since July 19.
"We don't need home runs 10
win," Hatcher said. "Here, we get
one and we lose."
Chris Hammond (2-1) allowed
two runs and five hils in six
innings, strilcing outlive and walking four, in takin~ the defeat.
"It's tough,' Hammond said.
" When I think abcut how tlley got
their runs, it makes me mad."
The Padres went ahead 1-0 in
the third when Tony Fernandez

Page-5

Colts choose Emtman first;
Bengals acquire Klingler

Lofton's steal of home helps Tribe split pair with Brewers
btg run for them."
"We yelled at Jaime w look at
the runner," Milwaukee manager
Phil Garner sat d. ··He did on the
next pitch. but on the one after that,
he dtdn't look at the runner. That's
when he stole."
Lofton is perfect tn mne steals
this season. Before starting Sun day's se&lt;ond game, he had missed
five games because of a strained
harnstnng.
"When he came into the
dugout, I looked at the tra10ers and
said, 'Kenny's legs must be OK."'
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
said.
Actually , Lofton was limpin g
after the game - not because of
the harnstnng. but because he had
banged his shin against Albnson' s
shinguard on the steal.
It was Cleveland's fi rst stratg ht
steal of home since Toby Harrah
did it Aug . 16. 198 1, aga in st
Kansas City. Brook Jacohy had the
Indians' last steal of home m 19g9,
as part of a double steal.
The Indians added a run m the
third on an RBI single by Thomas
Howard, and another m the eig hth
on Paul Sorrento's sacrifice ny
Dennis Cook (1-2) got the wm.
allowing one run and five hiLo;; in 5
2/3 innings. Ted Power pitched 3
l/3 scoreless innings for hi~ second
save, working out of a hascs-loaded
jam in the eighth by getting Dante
Bicheue to hit into a double play .
Robin Yount drove in the Drew~
ers' run with a sacrifice fl y 1n Lhc

The Dally Sentinel

In NFL draft,

Page-4

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- Stealing
bases is routine for Kenny Lofton.
Stealing home is anolher mauer.
Lofton pulled off Cleveland's
first straight steal of home in II
years Sunday, helping the Indians
beat the Milwaukee Brewers 3-1 in
the second game of a doubleheader.
Mil waukee won the first game
9-4 behind Darryl Harniloon 's four
RBIS, including a three-run home

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

"I didn't change my game,''
Chcvcldae said. "That's not a good
idea in the playoffs. But thi s was a
ni ce thrill. And it'll be a bigger
thri ll if we can win this series . I
hope thiS wiU carry into Game 6."
Steve Y1.erman scored short handed in the first period. RookiC
Mike Sillinger and Jimmy Carson
added third -period goals for the
Red Wings, who outshot Minnesota 24-22.
Canucks 8, Jets 2
Tabaracci, who allowed just
eig ht goals on 128 shots in helping
the Jets win three of the first four
games, was beaten live times on 26
shots before being lifted 7:20 into
the second perind.
Pavel Bure star!ed the scoring at
17:30 of the first period and Jim
Sandlak made it2-0 at 19;56 as tltc
Canucks outshot Winnipeg 19-7 in
the opening period.
Dave Babych followed his own
shot and put the puck between
Tabaracci's legs 35 seconds into
the second period for a 3-0 lead .
Jyrki Lumme added a power-play
goal at 2;28 and Petr Nedved sent
Tabaracci to the bench when he
connected rrom the right circle at
7:20.

R10 Grande athletes were as

fol ~

Mil e relay - Rio Grande'
founh. 4:57.1 I
~
400 meter hurdk&lt; - Tim Mur. I 0,000 meter - Debbie Gray~
phy, fourth, 57.16 seconds.
tlurd, 43:18.45.
·
400 meter relay - Rio Grande.
Sprin t medley - Rio Grande
ftfth, 45.11 seconds.
founh, 2:11 .57.
'
800 meter da&lt;h- Marc Micht ~
5000 meter - Bonnie Evans
gan , fourth . c '"' nJ
second , 18:45.05.
'
Mile rela y. K. o Grande, fourth,
400 meter reilly - Rio Grande·
335 .57.
lounh, 1:01.46.
~
3000 met er steeplechase Tr ip le jum8 - Ktm Sowers;
Chad Benson, third, 9 55.09.
flfth ,3 1 feet,! mchcs.
·
110 meter high hurdles - Ti m
Long Jump - Kim Sower.;, sec:
Murphy, third, 15.53 seconds.
nnd. Hi feet, 7-1/2 inches.
·
Discus - James Johnson. Sl&gt;th.
Javclm - Melissa Carpenter,
117 feel, four inches.
fifth, 62 feet, 4-3/4 inches.
.
Shotput - John Mill er. sixth ,
The teams return to action Sat:
36 feet. five mcbes.
urday, May 2 m the Twilight Invi:
High jump- Tim Murph y. ~cc · 1 ~1 tiona l at Marshall University.
·
and, six feet, four inches.
Pole vault- Scott Sc ha ar.
s1xth. II feel, six inches.
NOW OPEN FOR
Other women's events rc.suhs
mcluded:
SliNG SEASON
3000 meter - Bonnie Evans,
Caplelt line ol ltddlng and
fourth, 11 :07.83 .
lows:

Meigs boys track team posts
victories in two recent meets
The Metgs beys tra:k team conllllued its good start by picking up
two wins in recent track meets. In
one meet. the Marauders defeated
Vmton County and Eastern, while
111 another meet the Marauder s
dow ned Vinton, Federal Hoc king
and Tnmblc.
In the win over Vmton County
and Eastern, the Marauders took.
home first place in the 3,200-mctcr
relay , the 400-meter relay' and the
I ,600 -meter relays . The 3,200mr tcr team consists of Chadwell,
Baloy. Roush and Toundas. the
400~meter team is Huason. Wyatt.
Blake and Musser, while running
the 1,600-meter relay are Little,
Musser, BaJoy and Musser.
Jndivtduals taking home first
place for Meigs were Chadwell in
the 1,600-meters with a time of
5:06 and the 3200-meters with a
tim e of 10:42, Liule in tho 300meter hurdles with a time of 43.7 .
Al so winning for the Marauders
was Baloy in the 800-rnetee; with a
time of2:16.
In the wm over VinlOII, Federal
llocking and Trimble the Maraud"' won the 3,200-meter relay and
the 1,600-meter relay . The relay
team for the 3,200-meters were
Chadwell, Baloy, Swanson and
Roush, while the 160-meter team
was Little, Musser. Baloy and Hudson.

Winning individual events were
Little in the 110-meterhigh hurdles
with a ume of 16.7 and the 300mcter hurdles with a time of 45.1.
Baloy won the 800~meter s wuh a
time of 2: II and Chadwell the
3,200 with a time of 10.26.

Y•getalllt Plants, lloo111lng
and Foliage Hanging
laskeh, large Selection of
Shrultbtry
•1141 TI-lt ..
0,. Dally 9 LlL to Sp.IL

iiUiiliii:S
GREENHOUSE
Syrac•se 992-5776

MORTOfl

VALLEY LUMBER and
SUPPLY CO/-:::.~
555 Park St.

- Middleport
992·6611

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 27, 1992

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Bus·ness Services

Monday, April 27, 1992

Page-6

more Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baslolta, Etc.

as I ha'le.

ANN LASIIERS
"1991, IAK Aa~:el..ia
Thnfllll Syndlcue and

Lhakln Syndlcatr_"

everyone else. There are many more
of us in the closet than au~ bul it's
becoming much cas~er to be open.
thank the good Lord who made us
all.
Santa Fe: Usually yoo are prcuy
sensoble, AM, but asking your gay
readers to tell you if they wish they
were suaight was over the top.
Would you lor a minule ask yoor
readers if they are glad they're
Slraight? Poople know only how it
is to be whalthey are. For ""'. being
gay is as nalural as being Slraight is
for you. Would you want to change?
Well, neither would l
Royal Oak. Mich.: Yes, I'm gay,
now 73 years old. and it's been a
difficult life. I knew that being gay
was beyond my control from the
beginning. I prayed about il and
fmaUy aocepled iL I figwed if God
made me this way he must have had
a reason. I never felt romfortable
wilh a woman. It was impossible to
think of a woman in a sexual way. I
tried a few times when I was in the
army during World War U and JUSI
couldn't So when they now say it's
in our genes, I know it's the truth.
I'm glad I'm nor married because 1
wouldn't want to bring a son into
the world who might have 10 struggle

Den.a: I've toowu sinct I was 4
1bat I was "differenL • Alrt:c a few
years of tbcnpy for dcprasion and
anxiely •ttw'b, I K• ! J*id the £act
lbat I'm a ~ sbi., If I ooulcl rake a
pill tbll woald mU:e me SllliiJbl. I
wouldnl do iL I love lbc sensitivity
and boot:oty tba have and
mea lai Aabally, the wont part
or being gay a lbc prejudice and
balred ~ from Suppos·
edly "Cbrisaim" ptqJie
Oticaao: Aie gay people happy?
Actually. same rl us are, despile the
fact tba ~ live in a !liDCiely that
calls us "sick.· "depraved" and
"evil.· With those labels il's oot easy
to mainllliD !df-a fDI . If SlraiiJbt
people have a problem wilh my
being gay, &amp;bat's lhelr hang-up,
not miDc. I also lind it falcinaling
that SIOOie of the vicKJus gay·
bashers are close! pys themselves.
Pwple who are SIR or lbcit own
sexuality are willing 1o live and let
live_
And now, dear readers, this is
Ann: It is my firm conviction
that homosexuality is 1101 learned
hehavior, it is genetic. It can be
suppo essed but oot altered.
Is thai Ann f.mttkrl COIIUIIII yo•
cuwd yt!aTS ago yt!//ow with ag~'
For a copy of litr most freq!U!nlly
reqiU!st~d pomu &lt;WI asays, send a
Y!lf;;ddr&lt;SMd, loog, bllSiMSHiU

envdopt 111111 a clrLd or mo.U,y
ordtr for $4 .85 (tliis i•cl•d~s
postag~ 111111 lraNlliJog) to : Gtms,
clo Ann l.mttkrs. P.O . Bo~ 11562.
Ch1cago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada. send 15.87.)

,..,,Ill

leattt!l ..
....., Mlw- Depol

MON.·SAT. 9to 5

Call 992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5r.M.- SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

FILL llASKETS • Brent Eastman, (rronl), or
Fcw&gt;dland, along with Henry G. Thrapp, (.center)
7-Up regional manager, provided goud.es and
asSl•mbled the F:aster baskets rar the children

Foodland and 7-Up provide Easter
baskets for HMC's pediatric patients
~n11 at

ny of A!hens, ail contr1buted to the
holiday event.

llol !cr Medico] Cenlcr dunng tl1e
wee kend, rccctvcd special
h sacr basket.&lt;. made posSible by
area businesses .
Ohi o Valley Supermarkets, Inc..
ow ners of area Food land stores,
:111d 7-Up. through PepsiDistributlllg of Ches h1rc, local distributors
for the Pepsi Cola Bouling Campa·

Making the arrangemenls woth
Nancy Casaeel of HMC. were Erena
Eastman, director of Sales and Pro~
motions, Ohio Valley Supermarkets, and Henry G. Thrapp , area
manager for the 7 ~ Up(PcpS1 Cola
Bouling Company of Athen s. Both
Eas tman and Thrapp vis11cd 1hc

1\ll of 11ic children wh o were
]l JI JC' nl ~ 1n

the pcdi1.1tric s

~~~ 1 s tcr

Your Social Security
By ED PETF:RSON

Social Security
Managers in Athens
If you con 1inuc to work full ·

time past age 65, you may increase
yo ur basiC Social Secumy _retire moot benefit 10 two ways . Fust. for
each month that you do no receive
a benefit - unlil tbe month in
which you reach age 70 - your
benefit amount will automatJcally

mcrcase.
Second, yo u may be add ing
yea rs of high earnings to yo ur
Soc ial Security record, and these
earnings may result in higher benefits.
Under the delayed retirement
credit provisions, if you will be 65
this year or in 1993 and you continue to work, your benefit amount
will increase four percent per year.
By age 70, your Social Sec_urily
benefit will be 20 percent h•gher
that it would have been if you
• began receiving monllily benefits at
age65.
If you're li ke many people who
continue to work af~er age 65, your
most recent earnings are your high·
est earnings and continuing 10 work
addS them to your Social Security
record. Because benefits are based
'

o n earnings averaged over most ol

your working career, h1gher life.
111 hi gher bene-

tim e earnings result
fits.

One important pmnt 10 remem ber is that if you decide to delay
retirement, you should be sure to
Sign up for Med•care a1 age 65 .
You need to con/act SoCial Securi ~
ty about three months before our
65lli birthday to sign up for Medi·
care hospital insurance (Pan A).
And, you also need to let Social
Security know 1f you want 10 apply
for medical insurance (Part B) .
Medical insurance may cost more
if you delay applying for it. If you
or your spouse are covered under
an employer health plan , check
with Social Security to discuss
your options for Med~eare enrollment You do n01 need to be retired
to enroll for either part of Medi ·
care, hut you do need to let Social
Security know if you want to
enroll.
For more information aboul
your retirement benefit op tions ,
call Social Security's toll-free tele·
phone number, 1 - 800 ~ 772 ~ 1213,
any business day from 7 a.m. to 7
p.m. Or visit lhc local Soc•al Secu·
rity Office at 22 1 1(2. North Colum·
bus Road.

hospital, bnngmg the baskets f1Ued
"'lth good1es mcluding a variety
pack of candy and cans of 7-Up.
"We are so fortunate to have the
support of people like Bren1 East·
man and Henry Thrapp," said Cas·
tttl. ''"They Lal:c so much interest in
our children who are hospilalized,
and always want to do something
special for them at holiday time.
That's when !hey need !he most
auention to make the time pass JUSI
a little fastu."
"Children want 10 be home for
the holidays, so we try to make it
as comforuble as possible for them
when they are confin ed, " she
added.

1:00p.m. Tuesday

Thursday Paper

1:0) p .m. Wednesd ay

Friday Paper

100 p.m. Thunday
t:OO p.m. Friday

• Ad• ouUide the co unty your Bd run• 111w:t he prepaid
• Recr:iYe di.&lt;:ounl for ad. paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad. under IS wonl1 wlll he
run

DAY BEIDRE PUBLICA TlON
1:00 p.m. Salurda y
1:00 p.m. Monday

Sunday Paper

POI.ICIES

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling

St~fEtEf,~:J:::e
985·4473
667·6,179

675-Pt. Pleaunt
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-Ne-w linen
895-Letar1
937-Ruffalo

1

SOUTHERN ROYALTY· Renee Russell and
Ronnie Wa~ner were crowned 1992 Prom
Queen and Kmg at Southern High School Saturday night. Crowning ceremonies were carried
out by 1991 Prom Queen Christy Comns. Others
in the court were Tammy Buckley escorted by
Scott Lyle, Amber Cummins escorted by Ronnie

Wagner, Sarah Duhl escorted by Andy Hill,
Jody Hayes escorted by Todd Harrison, Michael
Hill who escorted Renee Russell, and Dawn
Shuler escorted by Shane Circle. Tbe 1991
Queen was escorted by Superintendent Bobby
Ord.

3
6
10
Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$130/day

$ .20
$ .30

$ .42
$ .60

charged for each day as S&lt;paratc ads.

Doug White's aide Martha Tonn
fi lied th e roll of House Members
at~ending the Lunchoon.
The board accepted, willi rcgre~
the resignation of Extension Ser·
vice, Librarian Leah Griffith who
will be leaving May I to assume
the duties of director of the New·
ocrg Public Library, in Newberg,
Oregon. The board approved a CCJ·
olution rel:ognizing Grifith's efflft
demons/rated by a 22 percent
increase in Books By Mail citcula·
lions and a 35 percent increase in
bookmobile users during her
tenure.
The board also regre1fully
accepted the resignation of Kelly
Landrum, of Jackson , from the
Extension Semccs Clerk 3 posi·
1ion. She is pursing her SIUdies and
1h e schedule conflicts forced her
resignation.
Resolulions were approved for
1he adverusing and hiring of Grif~
lith's position. Terry Torkelson
was appoin1ed to fill Landrum's
posiuon. Terry has worked for 2
l/2 years as a part~tim e temporary
in 1he Books By Mail program .

A clarificauon was approved in
the personnel policies and proce·
dures to handle th e si 1uat10n of
marriage of current employee. A
contract with Litho International ,
of Columbus, was approved for lhe
printing of the Uni on Serials List
and changes in the Library Services
and Construction Act (LSCA) TiDe
I grant application requested by the
State Library were approved.
Es1ablishcd in 1973 as the first
stale·funded regional public hbrary
system in Ohio, today OVAL
administers through local public
libraries a variety of programs
designed to improve and extend
services to local residents. OVAL
is made up of public libraries in the
counties of Alhens. Hocking , Jackson, Lawrence, Mei gs, Pickaway,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton. The
OVAL Board of Truslccs, which
consists of one trustee from each
member publ1c library board. deter·
mines pohcy, controls finances ,
and makes final decision on what
se rvices will be offered .
Patricia Holter serves on the
OV AI. Board and repre sen ts th e
Meigs County Public Library.

Martha Bible Class discusses May 9 banquet
The Manha Bible Class met
recenDy at the Bradbury Church of
Christ.
Itcnjc, discussed were the
upcomil,g MoDocr's Day banquet to
be held at lhe chun:h May 9 at6:30
p.m. All ladies of the church, their
mothers, daughiCrs and female rel atives arc invited.
!1 was decided to begin addiuonal missionary support 1n May to
mlSsiuns and projects which had

been decided upon previously .
Members were reminded that
Bradbury is hosting the area-wide
Fifth Sunday Hymn Sing May 31
and the public is inviled.
Daily Vacation Bible School
will be held at the church the first
week in June and plans for !his

were discussed.
After the business meeting,
devotions were given by Gary
Bates and refreshments were
served by Linda and Gary Bates.
The next meeting will be May
27 and all church members are
invited.

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 cal·
endar.

ments. New membcl's welcome.
REEDS VILLE · OAPSE Chapler 448 of Eastern Local School
District will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at lhe high school.

MONDAY
CHESTER. Revival at Mt. Her·
man United Brethren Church will
be held Monday through Ma~ 3 al
7:30 p.m. nigh~y with Rev. Donald
Bender, Fayetteville, Pa.

Harrisonville
community news

TUESDAY
POMEROY · Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi Sorority,
will hold a progressive dinner
Tuesday beginning at Becky
Triplett's at 6:30 p.m. From there
members will go to Kalliy Haley's
STORY'S RUN • Crusade for and then to Julie Dillon's . All
C hrist will be held at the Old members attend.
Bethe l Church on Route 7 and
Story's Run Road Monday through
POMEROY · American Legion
Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly . Speak· Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at
~ rs and singers nightly.
7:30 p.m. at the post home in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY · The Meigs Coun·
ty Veterans Service Commission
HARRISONVILLE · Har·
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m . in rison viDe Senior Citizens will meet
1he Veterans Service Office in Tuesday at the townhouse with
Pomeroy.
potluck dinner at noon.

Recent visiaoo; of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Mahr were Laurn Krebs, Car~
HANNAH HYSELL
pentec, Ardis Waggoner, Albany.
and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Foley and
family , Syracuse, and Francis
Foley, Columbus.
Dave and Alberta (Schultz)
RACINE · The Racine United
Mr. and Mrs. Babe Whaley. Hysell announce the birth of their
Melliodist
Women will meet Man·
Clearwater, Fla.. visited Mr. and daughter, Hannah Jean, on March 5
day
at
7:30
p.m. at the church. All
Mrs. Bob Alkire and Mrs. Lola at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
women
of
the
church invited.
Clark recently.
Athens.
Mr. and ~- John B1ll, Michi She weighed seven pounds and
RUTLAND - The Rutland Gargan. spent the past week with Mr. was 20 inches long.
den
Club will meet Monday at 7:30
and Mr. Bill Foley and family.
Maternal grandparents are p.m. at the home of Mrs. Robert
~. Ed Dill and children, SyraAlbert and Fay Schultz, Cherry Canaday. Hysell Run Road. The
cuse, spent Eastt:&gt;" Sunday wilh Mr. Ridge Road, Pomeroy.
program will be on lilies and plant·
and ~- Sallt Soounentt.
Paternal grandparents are Mil- ings to attract butterflies. A po~uck
Mr. and MB. Allan Gibson and
ford and Polly Hysell, Brownell
sons, Colwnbus. spent a weekend Avenune , Middleport. Paternal w•ll follow llie meeting.
with Virginia Gibson and Mrs. great -grand mother is Stella
MIDDLEPORT · OH KAN
Pwl Kennedy.
Coin
Club will meet Monday at
Mrs. Jetlie Arix spent a few Thomas, Middleport.
Burkett
Barber Shop in Middlepon.
days wilh her llOil and daughter-inThe couple has two other chil·
Social
hour
and trading sessio nat 7
law, Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Ari•, dren, Andy, age seven; and Belli,
p.m. Election of officers. RefreshProctorville.
age two-and-one-half.

New arrival

PORTLAND · The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the town ship building.
CHESHIRE . The Gallia Meigs
Community Action Agency will
hold a free clothing day Wed nesday from 9 a.m. to noon

22- Moaey to Lo.n
23- Prolauional Servlce.s

1-

· CLASSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS - FAST!

47-

3--- Announcemenla
4--- Giveaway
5--- Happy Ad•

Lo.t and Found
7- Lo.t and Found

6---

R- Public Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wantto;d lo Buy

11- Help Wut.ed
12- Situatiobl Wanted
13- ln•urance
14-- Bwineu Traini...,;
J!)_. School• &amp; ltulruchon
16-- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- MiaccdlaoeoUI
18-- Wante&lt;l To Do

4&amp;-49-

Au\oll

f~&gt;r

54- Mi1c. Men: handile
55- Buildin,; Suppliet

RESOLU1101Ut7.82
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Council of tho Vllloge of
Pomeroy, all member•
lherolo concurring.

Thol WI ore IMklng
lhrough lhe Board of
Building Stan- to hove
our Corlltlcellon Rulo
4101:2-S-21 repealed.
Upon review end public
hoorlng, pormlta will be
Iaoued through the Olflce of
Foclory 6 Bulldlnga, 2323
W. Filth Avenue, PO Box
825, Columbue. Ohio 43216.
Thla Raaolution ,.,,_,

April 20, ttm.
Bronda L llofrie, Clerk

Bruce J. Rood, 118yor
lorry Wehrung, Pr•ldenl
(4) 27; (5) 4, 2tc

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 420.82
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Council ot the Vllloge ol
Pomeroy,

all

mambara

lheralo concuntng:
Thet the Clerk/TrNeiWor
of the Village ol Pomeroy
tranafer the aum of
$60,000.00 (Sixty ThoUNnd

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 41(.12

Thol tho Clork/T,_.,.,
of the Village ol Pomeroy
lronolerlhe MJm ol $4110.S2
from SlrMI Fund; S2881i.42
from Fire Fund and
$2832.37 from Wow Fund
to roimburH General Fund
for the deduction ol
Workmon'a Compen..tion
chargu by the lhlga
County Aucllor In Fabniory,
1tl92 Tu Dlelributioll.
Thla R..otullon p111oed

4-9-tfn

HOWARD

Home lmpone111eat1
Plumhin~ &amp; Heatinl!

EXCAVATING

84-- EIN.tMc:al &amp; R.f•.,;••ot&gt;o ~
85--- General JIJUiins
86--- Mobil e !l ome Hepa. ir
87- lJph ol.te.- y

BUU.DOZER , BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

peoaed

HOMESITESond

L.ANDCL£ARIHG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TIIUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

to accept or reJect any or all 46686 Gulli no Road Coolvtl~.

992·3838

t Viait...... $3.00
C·Fw~l

992·2487 or
992·7884

4-7-92-t mo.

.I'

FREE SPRING DANCE
W~h George Hall
at the Hammond Organ
MONDAY, APR. 27-6-10 p.m.
Pt. Pleasanl Moose Lodge

HRS : Mon.-Sat. 10 am-S pm
SUnday 1-S pm
For Mo..., mto Call

614-992-2549
411519211 mo.

204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
997·3184

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS and
EVERlASnNGS
52100 u. 331, . . . . ow.
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING
Pints, H.ns, P-nlals,
Enrlasflttg

NEW usnNG- Granl Si.· lllddlopol1· 2 story lrame

3 Announcements
AI: of thla dal• 4125JV2 I will not
be re.ponslble for any Mhtt
o4her lhlln

my

own , lllgned

G1t0rge J. Robinson.
GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRlS
HOMEI'S
C.ll Today, ..... Toni!•

'XJltliryn
%uuf.ows
"SPECIII.UZlNG IN SLAIT
OR CANVAS"
398t5 Gold Ridge Road

ft'IO . , .

Pomeroy , Ohio -457&amp;9

Welcome Slates
$20.00

1-900-773-1006, 12.95 Min. 1B •
Milteta4, Costa Mn,a, Calltomla .

LIVE! UVE! LIVE!

,.........._! 111

Ort. Fl $3.15/U n.
A~ue~~ :

ute

Got.u
Dlu,.tic,

available

&amp;
lahl.,s

Pharrnaey
&amp;

•I SSTEL
tut with
&amp;
E·Yop

•I

Reduee :

ult

Gobau

rabtels
&amp;
avallat»e al

lui

Fruth •
with

E·V.p

Whl'le Cal . (Short Haired Peta!tn) 614-446-3~51 .

-Roofing

6

CLRSSfiED RDS
5

Happy Ads

Cut tom Paintings

614-992-2242
412/92Jifn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

PETE SIMPSON
Evening•
1-614-764·2101

Addlliono

4ntorior • Ext.riO&lt;
P•inting
(FREE ESniiAITS)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

MICROWAVE OVEN
anti YCR REPAIR

Diuretic,
Pttarm.cy

Fruth

REDUCE; Bum Otl Fat WhU•
You SIMp, T.lke OPAL Available
AI Fruth Phlrmac:y

4

Giveaway

21 w ecMored console TV, f\Mds
so,. rep.tdr, 614-985-4316
To A Good HOfM: Pregn.1n1

Lost &amp; Found

Found : Cottle dOQ tound April

21st, Darwin •rea, 61.4-992-6073

7

Yard Sale

Pomeroy, Olio

AU MAliS
lrlatll 11 Or Wo
Pick U!!·

3·13 ·92-lfn

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERYICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
'""' , _ ,_,, Offho
m 1. s-... 11.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnlty
All Y•rd Sales Must Be Paid In
A.dv•ne•. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m

oUG nI '(

Stone Co.
110
L-..-P0-•_ _Y,.;: :~ : : .~19: .:;:,21 fn: :.:.~ SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

lhe day before lha ad ft to run.
Sunday adhloo · 2 :00 p.m
Friday. Monday .ciiHon - :2 :00
p.m. Saturdly.
G•rao- Sale : May 1, 2. Bidwell
Rodney Pike. Hill &amp; Nu l. AYon ,
o.eor, a.daprudl, Clolt'" Ele

1

.TROY-BI£r·

PLEASANT RIDGE· A very nice home lex couple starting

s.-v.

o..
SLipiiMIII 01
Tt_,.JI.I.h 1lllen ~ ...... .s.O(:" ...

out Of anyone lookmg tor an affordable hornell 112 slory
with 3 bedrooms . on fiNo lots of 50 x 100 each Includes
patio. ASKING $18.900

r.~iilflfni~"

1

Call 614-997·6631
St. Rt.7
Cheshire, OH.

· It l0Wos1,A""'-Oiio•l!3-llll

Jay Orin Community Yard S.ltl,
1S-20 """'"· Aprll 30. May 1

a

2, D-6. Due To WCW"k Schedutes,
Olftw.nt Hom" Op.n Dltt.r.nt
O..ys. All Opln Saturct.yl RU!
1 Mila WHt Of Hollers .

Watdt Sian• In Eureka : lola
B1by CloihH I Aceeasorl .. ,
Mise. Something For Everyone !
May I, 2, l, 41h.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

AUTO
PARTS

4

bedrooms, 2 112 bath s, equ1pt ki tchen, fireplace , bay win -

HENRY E.CLELAND ........................... ................ 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ...... ............... .... .................. .949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL.. ............................................ 949-2660
OFFICE............................................................... II92·2259

Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trlnvnlng &amp; Removal
RHidonllol&amp;

Announcements

-Gu-WO&lt;k
-Ea.otrlcel end Plumbing

ranch style home in Riggs Crest Subdvision . 3 bedrooms.
2 baths , art. gamge, elec FA heat ASKING $39,900
make an otferT

WANTED AT ONCE: HOMES &amp; PROPERnES, LARGE
SMALL. FARM &amp; CITY! WE ARE GETIING RE·
QUESTS EVERYOAYI FOR ALL TYPES OF HOliES &amp;
PROPERTY. IF YOUR THINKING OF SELLING ... lltiNK
OF USI BETIER YET ... PlCK UP THE PHONE AND GIVE
US ACALLI

12-5- tln

ltlO Wos!, ~Olio •l!3-llll
'li20I!nJ'J mo.

Ravenswood.

story

&amp;

PH. 614·992-5591

ffimttD 'lj"'

r•••

NOW TAKING ORDERS

very nice home ltlat should be seen to appreciate! $45,900

dows, ~ine walls. basement 3 1/2 acres . Beautiful setting!
$104,900 ownet w1U accepl reasonable offer.

licensed and Bonded

TROY-B/£1

~oom

VERY BEAUTIFUL· well mainta1ned home in Racine wllh

contemporary home willi

OW" Sprin@: Sldprnftll Of
Tror-Bih 1\lJen N.w In S.oek.

Middleport and

4 becl"ooms, I 1/2 bath, 2 car garage, large front porch . A

2 Slory

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
8ULLDOZING

Racine, Pomeroy,

home with appro:-:_. 1 acre 3 bedrooms. fireplace, naw gas
lurnance. new pamtm and out Nice locanon! $39,000

FLATWOODS RD.·

3·15·'92·1 mo. pd.

BonqiUitt

Read the Best Seier
Read the

POMEROY, OHIO

742-2138

Madt.r!Dm~Jor

...leportof92-6302

992-2259

LIME
REASONABLE RATES

1 mo. pd. 4/t 6182

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

OPEN
WED. ·SUN. 1O..S p.11.

41211'1:1 . I

4-21-92- l ..... pd.

Perfecr For Molh•r'.
' D11y anJ.

FLATWOODS RD.· Bncl&lt; ranch sl)lle home with 3 bedrooms , 2 balhs , larg e glassed in family~ with fireplace
Home in good condiuon m A greallocabonl $49 ,900

SENIOR CITIZENS 55 &amp; CNer

BUY-SELL-TRADE

KING'S TV HAULING
ZENITH COAL
LIMESTONE
SERVICE AGRICULTURAL

APR . 28. 6:00 pm Baoket Claos

pd

If It's Chocolat

cemeterlaa lo be mowed 2
llmea 1 monlh or •• deemed
naoeaaary by the trueteee.

CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
OLD BETHEL CHURCH
Rt. 7 and Story's Run Road
APRIL 27·MAY 2-7:00 p.m.
Tonight (Monday) hear
Rev. M1les Trout and
Pany Si!Tl'kins will present music

539 Bryan Place

Middleport, Ohio
11114/tfn

APRIL 13-18
blended Easter h011rs.
Open will 7:30pm

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 186 t ·1929.
Especially National
Bank Currency from
any state. Paying
$300.00 and up lor
specific pieces from

The Orange Township

REEDSVILLE· OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL! One

JAMES KEESEE

Hrs. 9to 5
MoL th Saf.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

992·2772 or
742·2097

"'" Eollmi&gt;IH

Rose Suckers

608 £AST MAIN

NOW OPEN

•Roofin~

41151'i12 1 mo. P&lt;l-

Comm•clal

Mother's Day
Candy Cards and
Gilt Boll8a.
long Stem Candy

Real Estate General

April 20, 1082.
Brenda llofrie, Clorll Bldo wltl bo opened lloy 4,
Bruco J. Rood, 118yor 1992 7:30p.m. 11 ihe homo ot
lorry Wehrung, Prealdanl lhe clerk Palrlcto Colaway.
(4) 27; (5) 4, 211:
Thttrullooo roaorvotho rlghl

134 • 51./'itlrpn, 11.

Window

614-949-2627

, 2 lliloa on Hveotl Run R,d.
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
t 2 Viaits ...... $25.00
t 6 Viaito ...... $30.00

Bruce J. Rood, 118yor
Lorry Wohtung, Pr•ldont
(4) 27; (5) 4, 2tc

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

141-2118

IIYII'S I.AWI
MAINTENANCE

SUMMER
IMAGES

ORANGE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
PATRICIA CALAWAY,
CLERK
4- GUTHRIE ROAD
COOLVILLE, OHIO 45723
PUBLIC NOTICE

SHOP

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

4·71-92·181. pL

NEW OPENING

Pub lie Notice

MIDDLEPORT GUN

INSULATION

Patricia Calaway, Clerk

April20, 11112.
Bronda Monte, Clorll

BULLETIN BOARD

J&amp;L

247-4035

SEPTIC SYS'IEUS,

Public Notice

Trualeea will be occopllnr
Dollora) from tho Genorol aootod blda lor iho 1tl92
Fund to tho Slrolit Fund lor cemetery mowing eeaeon
the operation ol currant unlllllay 2, 1992. Atotal of 5

•xpena•.
Thle Roaolution

NEW-REPAIR
GUTTERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

All CLASSES

304·273-SSSS

BE IT RESOLVED by the blda. Low bid may nol lnllu· Ohio 45723
Council of the VIII~• · imce the trustees decision. (41 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30
Pomeroy. all mambare Send bid• to ;
(5J1, 4, 5, 6 10TC
dwlto concurring:

L.

MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR

Millwood, W.Va.

Public Notice

l_~~!!..!..!=

10 Dle-411., MW4to,.,t

TliAILER st'IES,

Pub lie Notice

4/'D/'tl/1-

Agriculture
Rt. 2

l::.:cavaLing

53-- Antique.

Co1ditioaers, Heat
fgnaces &amp;Now
Water Heaters.

614·949·2202

CRAFTS

INC.

.r,..•

51- Hou.eboad Goodt
52- Sportin~ Good.

Oto~ty Hi Efficie•cy Air

a...M,

FOR SALE

Sale

Truck• for SaLe
Vaoa &amp; 4 WD'•

\11·:1!1:11 \ \lli~E

Hoosi11 Prool.ct1.

RACINE, OHIO

TROLLEY nATION

lime
1-

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Aflplontl 1-luctund

•Insulation

Live.tod.
Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; FertiiUer

Hou.et for Rent
Mobile Home. for Rent
F'
for Rent
~partment for Rent
F' um ilb.ed Room•
Space lor Rent
Want.ed to Renl
~uipment lor Rent
F'or ~..Mae

ATTENTION

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSnRY

E~'l'OCI\

Farm Equipment

E.wte Wanled

I! 1·. \ T\ 1.~

46-

4-4·97-tln

Wanled to Bu y

33--- Far... lor Sak
U- B111ineu BuiJdlnRI
35,- loll &amp; Ac~e

4.1424.3-44-4.5---

USED RAILROAD TIES

~ll'l'l.ll.~

1-' \ll\1
,\ 1.1\

1~-----=:--cc-=-=====-----1 ~ Re.~l

RACINE · Racine Ruritan Club
will have a dinner meeting at the
Sw Mill Park at 6 p.m. All mem bcl's urged to attend.
POMEROY - Meigs Countv
·Head Start Center will hold open
house Tuesday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.

ButlnMI Opportunity

$.05/day

Rates are for consecutive ru m, broken up days will be

OVAL holds monthly meeting

21 -

BILL SLACK
992-2269

MUitcallnllrumenll
Fruill &amp; VegetahW
For Sale or Trade

2112192

\ ll&gt;hilt· ,'i, ll"uhlt'" ick lll&gt;llll' ( )lltll'r'

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•FIREWOOD

Words

INo Sunday Calls)

r•• ,,._,_,.,"

•LIGHT HAULING

Days

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

~

"B•/jNq r- 1•

2·7-Q?.. Jioi'

667 -Coolville

COMMillCIAl and 1\ESWENTIAI.
t'REE ESTIMATI'S

INTERIOI &amp; EXTERIOR

o

:t:;P~:;e

Gallia Counly Meigo Counoy MilliOn Co., WV
Area Code 614- Area Code 614 Area Code 304
992-Middleportl
Pomeroy
985-Cbe.t.er
843- Portland
247-Letart FaDs
949- Racine
742-Hulland

OJ! 01 , . . ,
ftt ,.....

•Hew Homes

Classifwd pages cover rhe
following lelephone exchanges ...

446-G.t.lipolis
367-0vMUre
388-Vinl.un
245-Rio Gnnde
256-tuyan Oi.t.
643-Arabia OUit.
379-Walnul

-r•.n.,.
-"' u. Do,,

1--------_-_._,. ~~~. . . . -----...,.-------.....t

614·742·2772

3 day• at no charge.

• Price o( ad for all capital lette rs ia douhk prtce of ad c01t
• 7 point line typ~ only u.1ed.
• Sentinel i.l not re~ponaihle for erron aft.er farll day (chec~
fnr el"'ron flnl day ad I"'UDI in paper). Ca ll hefore 2:00p .m.
day aft.er public ation to make correction
• Ad. that mUll be paid in advance are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Salea
• A cla.11ifted a.dYerli~ment plaebd in the Gallipo\U Daily
Tribune (except Clueifled DUplay. 8U1inea1 Cud or lep.l
Noticea) willal.o appear in the P6int Plea.eant Regi.tur and
the Daily Sen tinel , reaching ove r 18,000 hvma

The Board of Trustees of the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL) held thw monlhly meetmg at System Headquarters 1n
Wells/On on Thursday, Aprill6.
Direc1or Eric S. Anderson
reponed !hat more than 30 member
library Truslees and Directors
attended the fll'st OVAL Caucus in
Columbus on March 3""This luncheon was held in conjunction wilh
the Ohio Library Association's
annual Legislative Day.
Marion Livingston and Doug
Talbot! represented Governor
Voinovich's office. Ann Spicer
represented Speaker Riffe's Office.
Saate Libm.ry Board member Mar·
garet Clayton, Ohio Library Association Executive Duector Bonme
Belh Mitchell, and Wellston Mayor
John Carey were also guests.
Senator Jan Michael Long and
aide Pat Lambert joined Senator
Cooper Snyder and his wife
Dorothy. Senator S~even Williams
completed the list of honored
guests from the Ohio SenaiC.
Representative Mary Abel,
M1chael Shoemaker and his aide
Kathy Cortez, and Representative
hospitalized on tbe pediatrict unit at Holler
Medical Center. Looking on is Nancy Casteel,
unit nurse manager.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoda y Paper
Wednesday Pap&lt;r

Hew Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages * Replacement Windows
· Roo• Additions • Roofing

&amp;CO.

1111 ISliiiAlES
HAVE lmROOS
..,•• ,,... tow. ......
Ahw ,,.._ 614-915-4180

IIRitl.ti.HRt.S54

To place an ad

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

tJ' PAIIIniiG

Perennials &amp;
Annuals,
Strawflowers and

Issue generates large response
Ann
Landers

~LINDA'S

ANGIE'S

.

DEAR READERS: I am devot·
igg two consecutive days to the
same topic because lhis issue has
generaled more mail than almost any
oiher since I started writing the
cC&gt;lumn nearly 37 years ago.
·I asked my homosexual readers
to respond to the question, "Aie you
glad you are gay or would you ra!her
be suaight?" More than 75,000
~wrote and told me how they
feel about their sexual orientation.
Ir was 30-to-1, "Yes. rm glad I'm
gay." Here are more excerpts from
the most fascinating and revealing
lettt:rs I've read in a long time:
From Louisville: Yes, Ann, I'm
glad I'm gay. Thank you for asking.
But being gay is a very small part
of who I am. I'm a teacher and a
football coach. I play classical
music and a good game of tennis.
I'm a gourmet cook. I can ski and I
can sew. I am active in my church
and a vohmteer at our local shelter
for the homeless. I don't believe in
labels. Let's just say I am human.
Boston: I'm 32 years old, the
chairman of a multimillion dollar,
high -tech company. And yes, I'm
gay. Several weeks ago, I anended
a meeting of a group called "The
Greater Boston Business Council."
I walked into the ballroom of a
Hilton hotel and couldn't believe my
eyes .. more than 200 professional
gay men and women. If I hadn't
known where I was I would have
sworn it was a meeting of the
Chamber of Commerce. We are your
doctors, lawyers, shopkeepers, bus
dO vers, waitt:rs and florists. But best
a( aU, we look. walk and lalk like

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

1
Amber, I want to
wish you a very
Happy Birthday, and
tell you I'm very
proud of you and
that I love you mo111

than anything.

From Your Mom,

L118Ch

All Y1rd S.t. Mu.t Ba Pakt In
A.dnnce. O..dllne : 1:OOpm the

In Custom
Frame
NEW &amp; USED
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 Or
992·5553
OR TOLL FREE

1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
713t

daly

DALLAS K. WEBER · Owntor

All SCAUS - VlNIAGl ..I
COLUOAIU
•Ridtrs Av..W.•
DtSPUTIDll

HI QUALITY PRINT SHOP
MIDOUPOIT, OH.
992-lltH:lO ..-.:OO ..
74l-307Hii• 1:00 ..

4-2-92 · 1...

~fOfW

tM .d .. lo rvn,

Sunday odhfon. HIDpm Friday,
Mond.ly
lldiUon
10:00a.m.
Satunloy.
Huge yard ..... a..tw,Ott,
Uoy 1 &amp;2, tom till ?, tum on
road oppoe~~,
Fin

a......

Dopo., inc! 001 ~Qht .
weleh tor ligna. Railn canceta.

Ruotlc Hlllt ..._ 24/18 LM

Clrclo, 9yr.._, 011. llanday,
T~adly,
W.ctne.dliy, 81~

UOpm

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel
8

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

u.,..-

...-_

JM,a.

&amp; West Vii~. 304-

Wanted lo Buy

Bur:

Wan1:• To

Junk Auloa

FOf Ph~CIII Therapy
O.pn1m•nl Wtlh Some G.neral
HMIIh Clunlng Dutln. 15-24

AJd

Houn WMkly. R•fw~ R•
qulr..t Pt.... lndudt Wlth
A..u.,;._ R.,- To: CLA 113, cJo

Help Wanted

....,.

Galllpo41s O.Wy Tribun., 825
Third AVW!ue, O..lllpolls, Ohio

Pro .. nional Orummar, Want s
To Form Country And Rock
Group. Serious lnqulriet Only
6l4-446-1648.

$35MJAY PAOCESS&amp;HG

ORDERS! PEOPU:
C.W.. YOU.

NO EXPERIENCE NEC£SSARY.

14

t.. b

service baUI to worll at Llkln
Hoopllol, ~ W'l. 1-2 ...,.
.,... - - ~lng !Mthlan
~ lor lMin Hospital,
Ukin, WY. .... e,. ,.,..m:aredl

· liolif'IMd cl.l:liln. s.mc.. to
be ......... 2 dap J*' month.

"Consuffina labcntory Mnkes

f04" Laldn lbpbl, Laldn, WV.
Lab to bill rMditald'Medkare
and/or any 1-*d ptrty eompam.s. Senluw Ia indud.

........... -..-con....

ng

pharmKY ..0:. tor lakin

-~W'I. PIIannacy
mua:l be compuWtzed &amp; lntw-

tace wtth 1811 AS400 compul•r

syttem I aknl softwaN pKk·
..._ lnt-..t ........
l64~n.3230 ut. 20 Of 24, llanFri-, lam 4pm tar bid lorm.
o..dHnt tor a~ .. May 15,
19&lt;2_

Attn. l.adM
W..nl tul tW.. pay lot' put time

Yan... nwot lntervtewing 4130t'92, fof 11Pf104ntmett 614wor'&amp;?

94 g·2360

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
U:oMieN
Pliy,
Benefits,
lransparlation,
407-29:2-411117,

511.

£rt

ll .m.-lOp.m.

Toll

Refunded
.I.YOH I AI Ataraa • Shirtey
Splfars, 304-615- M2'1.

-- - -........-

Babysidw
neect.d
bite,.
sc hool and .ome ennings.
Mar. hcurl on sulnn* tnolll

"""

6~13CI bakw.1:00 PIL

8 ARTENOE AS I C A SIN 0
WOAKERS t OECK
HANCJS.IHolll-,
Etc.
Po8ltiana AhoMd Cndu Ship&amp;.

S300t$tOO Wktr. Fre~ ltavtl.
C.ribbNn, ..._.1, Bahamas.
No Eq&gt;. N
"l'· l-206--Tl6-

7000 bt. .-H2.

RMnln

Now!I!Soulheallf•m
BuoiiNOI Coiiogo, ~r!'J
ptaza. Call Todly, 6

V•ll:-r.

-4367.!

R.qlstwatlon 190-05-l'VIB.

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home. Rodnay ArN. Ret•~• Avallal»e.

Call 614-24~5887.

Gardens: Ullad • rMdy tc plant ,
Large or small, UM 1100 Ford

Traclot, 61-4-992-6903

Georgn Portab.. Sawmill, don 't
haul yoUf loa• IO the mill just
call 304-675-tl57.

Wls• Paula's O.r C.. c.nter.
S.tll, aHordabla, childeaN. 111-F
II a.m. · 5:JO p..m. A!IJIS 2"'"10.
Before, al'llf' .chool. Dfot&gt;ins
wekome. 614-446-8224, New lnlant Toddlef CaN, 514-446-6227.
Mow Lawn Any Slz•,
Daytime; 6t4-446-i901.

Call

Wallpapering, (Erlaricr, Interior)
Paint ing:
Commwt::ial,
RHidlnce. 20 Yurs
Elpat\eMe. Pat Spanc1r, 614-441lOll , Or 6U-4C1-l464.

Will Ca ,_ For EldMty In Th.r•
Home, S5 Tc $6 An Hour, c.n
6t4-388-9218 .
Will Do Babyattllng In My Home.
Cartllt.d Nura AKI , Good t..oc.
tk&gt;n And Rat.Nne~~S. 1114-4462652.
Will Do Bab~lng In My Home,
l.oc.aled Near Clay School . lll4&gt;S6-&lt;i861.
Will Do Houuk•plng: Gllllla
Coun!J And lmmadlall Surrounding Aru.. 614-3nt-Z734 b11

For O.bbM.

'*
....._ .....,_._. caU
»&amp;-C15-321D Ul :ZO cw 24, Monpweon

Frt I :OOAII • 4:00PM lor bMt
torm . Dudllne tor applying II
.... , l5, 1tt:2.

Co,jjlod

Nunlng ......
~oitlng .-y 14.70, •I'!"Y ..
P.-noy Nunlng Rohobil,.tlon
CMRr. )8759 Rocbpringl Rd.,
p....,... ~ •• Ohio. No phone calla.

eomblnallon., kltch.n, uUiity
mom, all one '-viii, covertd
p.tlo 6n back, privacy t.nee,
gang., shown by appolnlment
only 304-4i7S..I238 .
3 Bedroom Homa On 1 Acr. Will
Cons!Mr Land Coni ract. Call
614-256-1526.

FOf u'e by ownet", In Henderton

May•. 304-'15-4M2.
Gallipolis: 3 B~room Brick
HorM Comer Lot, O.rwr Laavlfl9 ArM . Acflacent Lots And

Rentals Alto Avtllabl.. Call 614797-4345 (Aft., 8:00 P.M.J For inlonnation And Appointmanc.
HouM And 2.2 At,_ land : 3
s.dfOOfJlS, 2 Batt., living
Room, Dining Room, Kitchen

And

o.n. $46,000. 114-388-i491.

In town, two •Of'Y, thrM bedrooms, full baMINIII, 1·112 blth,
anacn.d 1-112 c.r gar~ga.
c.ntral heal and air. E..nlngt
Call fK.-4.46-8707.

HouM cleaning, WHkly or
spring ctNning Aop.. Grove,
Pl. Aeuanl, ~l~polla ana .
Hllft relerenees, 304-51'6-4052.

BNI.II~IV...._

on fM fof
Mrvice baa to 1III'Crl at U.llin
Hospll... L..ldn, wv. 1 a.. 2 cays

2021 Uarqu.n. Avt1, 5 yrs old,
all brick ,..lnt•Mnn lrle
home, 4 bedrooms, small Uwlng
room, dinlngroomlfamlly room

above fllllroad tree~ 7 room
twuae. 4 BadtODml &amp; bllth, Lot
aln 11101:100. lrruntldl.t• pos...,lon. ft7,DOO. finn . C.U Htlen

Business
Training

1-100-2:55-0242.
·e.a~ on

Will tak• ca,. of -'deny man or
woman In your homa, 23 yurs
•xpar~ . ,.,.~ , pl•as•
caii1114-9J9.2l15 uk 104' F~
Would UM Tc Babysit In Wy
Home, CfoN To Hilla And Kllart . 614..C46-1362.

Financial

~

EoE.

Business
Opportunity
!NOnCE!
OHK&gt; VALLEY PUSLJSHING CO
...eommtnda thin you de bus•nMS with people you know, and
NOllo send money throuc;~h the
mail unhl you l'l n• invest1gatt&lt;l
thll offaring
Homa Worhrs Nuded By 1~

Flnnt, To p Pay, S:SJ9 WMk Or
More_ Rush SlOO S.II-Add resMd Slamped Envalope 110 D&amp;A
Suppllu. Box 1443, Fa1rborn,
OHUJ24.
Pa, P~ Route For So~l e . FCC
Approved Ca!l 1-800--749-2600 .

--

-- · -;:::-:--~

VENDING ROUTE : Gat 11ich
Qu id' No W;~-, 1 But We Hav• A
Good. Stao1dv , AH o rdo~bll , Buslnlss. Wor1 "t lo~s t_ t.S00-2 54·
8363.

ConsuMing ~6eal . ..
vk.. lnc k.tding e'tlllu.tlons,
,.,. m rnMtlfttp, ...tt consuitatlons, ~ m.an~~gMMnt ifltomMtkln.
fof ~. ol
Lakin Hosphl'a ICf Unll to
I'Minlaln ICf certlfludon. Must
M•n cUffllf'IC WV Ke•nse. lntll·
ast.ci J*'OM contkt ~
l230 u t. 20 Of 24, Won-Frt a:oo
...... 4:00 Pll tor bid tonn.
DeitdliM lot apptyina llay 13,
t992. Av.,.p of 12 ltovrs ~r

•c..

.....

Caotuttiog ~chologial ...,.
vic• including •uluations,
t ... m maetingl, stan consu._
tatkms, ~ marwg.meot lntormaUon, M e.., for rMkt«JJa ol
Lakin Hospilal's ICf unft to
rn.intaln ICF c.rtlfiCatkln. Wm

l'lava a curnnl WV lieenu, ln~

contad 3046 i"S-3230 eKI. 20 Df :N, Mon-Fri ,
bm-4pm tor bkf tom., ~adl lrw
tor ~ .. ..., 15, 19!12.
Aw.,..;g. Dr f2hn . ,., -....k.

Easy Woritl EJ:cellotnt Pay! Aa..mtw. Products AI Homa . C.U

loll F,.., 1.-JO..illl7-6566, E.rt.
313.

Two erpatitneed Herbot Pilola,
40 10 60 houn ,... ........ must
live within commulllng &lt;lslenc;::8
of Martetta, Ohio. s.nd r..,..m11
to P. 0 . Boa: 5J7S, Vienna, WV
26105.

Mulbeny tb., Pomeroy, spa-

""'"' 2 ..,,.,_ ....... lg. living

2 11~1,
dining
room,
kJtcMn
wlelbinMt, Nil bath wfvanily, 1
room,

clotllts.

112 bath WIS..._.,, downsbllrs
CA, gal hNt, ftnlshad tan.
ment, privat• lan., ,...r saniof
cltb:.,.
hosl)ital•duJFc'*achoot, 114-1112-3424 lor ap~ntiMflt.

3 bdrm.

S500 Oft PurehaN Prlc. 01 Any
tWw Homa At El ... Home Clnler, GfMI s.lecllon, F,.• S.t·Up
And o.tlwwyl Call IIM-m-1220.

==ng
L

apPI~tions
lor
-.....c
be 18 ,...,.

Vendir1g Route : l ocal. We Ha't'l
l l'l• Ne-st llilachines. Mo~klng A
Nlc• St~-o~d-, Cash lncom1 . 1800 -2l4-2fi51

W• Are looking For Peopla Who
Ar. lnllll"n tad In Opening lo
Ousineu Or Erp,anding .l Buslneaa. O.v~ Vour Interest Info
A S..hstying ArKI Rewardlllg
E1perl1nce. No Utility Cl'l .argn
Overhead Cost Or Bonding
l.Ns• Involved . Con tilct Tl'le
UIRii&lt;Jif At : G C. Murphy 's AI
ti14-446.2lS:S

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
1 And 71'10 Acr- Wit h Nke J
e.droom House, Close To City

Limits. On 588 G.lllipo!ls.
R.asonabl1. 614-446-.U.U.
2 &amp;.drooms, Hous., W'IIM 1 Acrt

Land, 2'6 Chillicothe Road , GatHpolis, 17,000. 614--4~6-161 5, fl14446-t2U

Bedrooms And Full Siz•
S.Mment, 814--446-8699.
3

3 lllln. From Town, 9 Acnos,
Houw I Gara~ , 114 Ui111 From
Rt. 141. On Neighborhood Road ,
114-441-0516.
A~rame

C.bln 16'137~ War11nWV Williams UI'Mbriar
Rlwr N•arby; lllononga hallli Natlorwl Forest; Nut To Handley
Publle Hunllng Ar.a; Graat

ton.

Pt....,.

..

*"

eon....Nion

74

Motorcycles

3 bedroom unfurrWt.d hous•.
507 Second St. ,._ Hav.n, 304&amp;75-3C&amp;I.

4 hdrooms, Unfumlthtd, City
Water, Patl1ot.Cadmut A,.l.
SlOO O.pooh, $200 Month. 614379-2930, 0.. 614-11'5-4014.

Furnished 38r HouN, 1 Aoor,
WO +Utlllt'-. Upper Fourth
Av•nu.. Gallipolis, Raler.ncu,
S.C:urtty Daposlt. 614-446-4416
Aft•r 7p.m.

DINETTES: Wood

2 bdrm. mobile horna ktr rent
RKina ana, 114-il2-5858

t.droom furnlahad, Apple
Crov• araa , rat.~ req..MM,
304-576-.2466.
2 Blldrooma, 1 Bath, State
Route 218, GIUipolle. 514-2561008.
2

Mobl .. Homa Unfurnlan.d, CIA,
14x55, 322 Third Avenua, GaiUPQ~Ia. 114-446-371t8, 614·2561io3 Aft•r 8 P.M.

44

Apartment
for Renl

1bdrm. apt. In Mk:lcltpQrt, wat•r,
. . . . . tr111h paid, you pay
.-:trlclgu, 1150/mo., 614-9492217
S225mo.,

lnclud"

utH.IM, M&lt;Urfty dllf&gt;OIIt ,._
quiNd, nc pels, 614-lm·221 B

2 BR apartmenls In Middleport,
MWiy rMIOdailed, low utliltl ...
no ~1, $220 par month,
ct.posh required, 614-892-238'1

...,.

fumlshed apt,
Point Pl•asanl , v~ clean , no

Ona t.droom

pt)"Mnt ahsr 5 yu rs, 304-755.StiU

JMIIS. 304-fi75-1386.

Homes, Wlldaao Apt1, 508 Burden• St,
GrN1 S.lec11on, Si ngln , $500 Poinl" PIMsant, no pats, t and 2
Down And DoutM•a St,OOO bedrooms, )C)4..175-20T2 after
Oown. Wrth Appro
. w.d Credit! 5:00.
Calli 1-800-38i-5'T10_
45
UobiLe

Furnished
Rooms

print• KN. 3 t.droom~_ !rtrl
room wlwoodOOmer, maror lp-

pllancea, $15,500. or tU.. over Rooms fOf rani ·week or montlh.
payrnants wfaom.. hing down. ~=~IJ1 111 $120/mo. Gallla HOle!.
I

1580.

SIMptng rooms wlth c~lng .
Also ll"lllilr tpac• - All hook-ups.
Call atter 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Mason WV.

HofM. 3 B.ctrooma, 2 Baths,
Lt.rga Bam, SltVeral Buildings, 46 Space for Rent
Ctllar, S.ll With OJ Withcut
Farm EqulprNnt And Canle. Country Mobil• Home Park, At.
6)4.367-0&amp;10.
33N., under n"' m.an•m•nl.
Farm ,..ar Glenwood , 100 ac:r•

Loti , $85; home r.nllil , $235;

+/nice rancher, good road, Iota IM-9!12-21117
lrt'.vtllllbla tancf, S79,i00. Kath- Otftc. s.p.c.; Modlf'n Ottlc•
IMn Law 304-JIIl-5206, Ullom Sub Aw1llab.. In Buslnan And
Rutty, BH&amp;G, RNHor, 304-716- Pt-oleAional
Bulldlrtg
414
0155
S.Cond AvaniMI, GaUipclf•. Worrte Huklna, 111-4-441-2U1, 814·

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

448·2"2.

25 acr .. In WllkHvllt. ana,
bNuliful -'ght tor home &amp; par-

47 Wanted to Rent

Ua»y woodad arM,
or 614-.,.2-2536

Pra .. ulonal Couple W®ld Uka

1514-669-~02

BEAUTIFUL Horn• Sh• Fot 9.111.
22 kr.. Or Will Olwlde Approxlmatef' 2 Mit. From Ric
Grande Naar Olhar BNutlful
HomM.
614--24~
Day
Phon.; 1114-245-9575 Ev.nlnga.
Lots tor .....~i..,. accapta~e. 304-f1S.;,r.u.

lots In GaHipoU1 Ferry - 100'r.
C~W~Wr tm.nctng It &amp;~.64 par
month , any OM of tour lots
avallabla, 304-e75-2722.
Lots In Nlw Hawn • 100%
CWNI' flnandna at 110t.46 par

-

LIVING R()()M : Sola And Chllr
1179 And Up ; Cotl" And End
Tabln $7i And Up; Swivel
Rockers $79.

42 Mobile Homes

N. . 14 wlda only $.599. down no

83 l,c,. fallll Wtlh 2 YNr (Hd

...,. ollhtoo ..... •304-

m-2722.

Lola joining Poinl - 1CIK - r
fiMndna .. tt0'1.41 per monlh

:=..~:t .'\:"\..·~

~ •« ·- --

Drl-.

C:O...'l

"'Her1
0 R.arrange
scrambled
four

PEANUTS
'' FOR LO, THE WINTER
15 PAST.. THE RAIN
15 OVER AND GONE .."

'' .THE VOICE OF
THE TURTLEDOVE
IS HEARD IN
OUR LAND ''

HUIUt't' UP. ANO PITCH,
VOU I'LOCKHeAP!

[ DON'T Ti-11NK
THAT WAS A

TUI&lt;JLEDOVE

~

I

$14.96 (26~)
Chairs $129.

Bar Stoolt
T1ble And 4 P•dded

OPEN: 7 Oayt A We•k, II A.M.- 6
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon - 5 P.M.
Rl. 141 4 Mil" Ott R1. 7 In C.n-

lanary.

Water btd, padntai, palddad
tide ralls, liner, matt,.aa, $65.
304
_
_ .._7_5-_134
_ 9_· - - - - - -

53

Antiques

Big Rtvar Antiques, SIO Main Sl,
Polnt PINHnl, WV.
Buy 01 ull. Rl.,.,lna Antlq~•.
1124 £. Main Strs .. , Pom~roy.
Hours: W.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., SuncMy 1 ;OO to 8:00 p.m.
8t4-992-2528.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
10 HPM Murray Riding Mow11r,
30" Cut, 2 Years, $400, hc11ll1nl
Condltlon! 614·256-6338 Ahar
7P.M.

16 Channel Scannar, $50; VCR
$125, Seth Llk• Naw, 614-4462879 s .. : 531 Fourth Avanue
(Galilpoill) .
1984 Ford am all LTO tlallon
wagon. tow miles , v-e. $1250:

o+dM' type air llr. changer tor
1mall botl pattarn, fancy whMia,
uta Ford,l5t4-992·7B4"1
19ltl Wlurd riding lawn mower,
1Bhp, $900. Garden lawn mow11r
18hp $1,200. 270 ft chain link
fiMl&lt;:e $185. 304-89S..307B .
21!2 lon central AJC, ul of twin

bacia, 614-992-5934
3 Fuel Oil T1nka. Make An otf1r;
100 Amp S.rvlca Oiscoonecl
S40. 614-388-9306.
For S.l1: Old Slyl• Bedroom
Suit•J. Four Pl.c• And Manrus
S.t, Heuonabl• Price . Call 614245-9441.
Air Condition.,- For Sa... 5,000
BTU. 614-441-1028 .
Aluminum Window• 3x3, 2x2
M•tal Otflee Desk, 5r3 12 S.rlng
Fender Guitar, N•w Condlllon;
Weight B•nch, Welghls, 240 lbl,
And Accnaorin; 30 Circular
Saw Blada1, 5"·12"; 750 Hollay
Carburator, 114-446-7'\28 .
BBO gu grill $25 , lar9" upright
frHZat

$111. 3()4-875-42411.

B•auty Salon a.qulpmtnl 3Q4..
TTl-lt169 after 4:30

otud ..,,,.. $100. or choico
j&gt;UPf&gt;Y. ,.... 75-1272.

Plaatlc And M•dal Cuiverl 6 Inch
Ttiru 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
Evans, Jack.on, Ot'tlo. 1-800S37-9528.
Racondltlon.ct
washers
&amp;
dryars, ..ch hOO and up. Wa
Mrvlc• all mlikft. Th• Washer &amp;
Dryer SMoppe. 614-446-2944.

• Full HouH Q
[J Smurta Q
1221 Checke~ Flog
World Today
Qll Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. Q
6:05 (}) Beverly Hlllbllloo
6:301lJG 01 NBC Newo Q
l!l Sowed by lite Bell
(lJ Q (I) G ABC Newt ll_
IIl Wild Amertcl Stereo. Q
Square One TV Stereo.

DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES
$31,995 &amp; Up. Built On Your Lol.
S.e Our Models, 814~&amp;-7311.

CoJof T.V.'a Portabl• And Contoll, $60 Eaeh. Mlcrowav• O...•n
SVO; Electric Cl~h.. Dryer, $65;
814-2.56-1238 .
Concrete &amp; Pial11c 9•ptlc
Tanke, Jet Aaratlon Tanke. Ron
Evane Enl•fJM'IMI, Jackeon, OH
1..aoo-537-132a.

Elvis Pop Up Book, $30;
Magllllnn $15 Each; Elvia
Figurine $.4!5 ; Baalla Albums,
$10. 614-682-7894.
FOR SALE FROM PERSONAL
COLLECTION - Copenhagan
Porc•laln Bing and Grondahl
p4a1" In original 11hlpplng

box.. from Cbpenhag•n. O.nmaril, with Clr11tlcatn of
authantlclty : Chril1mas, 1971,
tm. and 1913 : and MoH"r's
Oay, 11172 and 19")1, $40 11th.
Cl'lari•na Hoeflich, 614-~2-5292
aw•nlnga
FREE;:-;;ciN;;;S~TA~l::l-;A:;
T;::;
ION ,
SWIMMING POOLS
Only S62.9VWo. • For 12 Montht.
19l31l4 Pool lncludts Filler,

Ladd•ra, Huge Deck Ete.
(' Baaed On S.lllng Prlc• 01
$890. $14.45 APR, Tot• I O.l•rred
Prk:• : $754.92) Don't B•lleYa n?
Call BPI

,._,_

For Lease

BITLAR

~

Sola hd, BIN Boen:l HNiera,
Wlndowa, Boys Slze10 Wh•ls,
Vacuum Clean.r, Riding Mow•r,
Blcyc..., 614-368-HSS.

Tandy cOlor computer 3, printar,
racordar, and othw ntres1 a•·
king 1200, 614-992·5710, 1111 tor
Brenda
WHITE'S METAL OETECTORS
Ron Alllton, 1210 Second
Avenue, Galllpolll, Ohio, 814·
446-4336.

t..tunng Amino A&lt;ld Body
Building weloht lou lnd fat

burner formLlH. Available •x·
s.cond Aoor ApaorirMnl For clullvltly at All• Akl Pharmacy.
l.uM: LA., Ona B.A., B.rh, Th• Nfl way to d'-t.
KHctMn WI Stow &amp; Rafrig.
Water Fuml.t.d. No Ptlta. Cor- Glrta 10 Spa.ct 24 Inc h Huffy
nor Socond I Plno, Goitlpollo. Bk:ycltl, Llk• H. ., Rode Onca,
$230. Pw Month; LMpoelt R• Stored, 175. 61-4-388-8507.
qulnld. Call 114-C41-4241, 114·
R:XlO WMdNitr, iltwn lrlmmer,
44&amp;-232&amp;, Or 114-441-&lt;024.
good shape. 201b tiller, culilvator. C.n Mandt. your gardenIng, yard wort, ..wn eara. 304111-2'132.

Merchandise

Building
Supplies

55

Block, brk:k, ...., plpe.s, wtndows, llnt•l•, •tc. Claud• Winters, Ric Grand•, OH Call 614245-5t2t

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and 9Ypply Sho~

Grooming. All tnedt, lfytea.
lima Pel Food o.. ..r. Julie
Wtbb. C.IIIM-4464231.

2 AKC Ragletw.d Yorklhlre TerMrs {Yort.l.) t Male, 1 F-.nela,
All Shott And Papers, s-450
Each, Firm. 8*31'9-2101.
AKC Cockllll" 9~nl.t pupp-., 2
mal•, 1 t.male, black, ttOO, 614-

867-3869

AI&lt;.C
MlnlatuN
Scfmeuz..r
Femaa. Ona v..r Old, Wonc:Mt·
ful Pel, 614-446-08011, 1114-4460910 11A.M.-8P.M . Slr10UI Inquiries Only.

AKC reg'-tared O.lmatlon puppiM, 114-992·5n4 or &amp;14-992·
&amp;794

AKC ,_glst•Nd minlatu111 O.Chshund puPfJI•. 1 Nod dapp~.
mal• &amp; t.nt., 1 red mala, 614·

00

Wanttd To I..Nat: Tobecco BaH
In U.ta• County, 614--388-11252
PINH l.aav1 M.... ga.

14ft . llahlng boat, 20hp Man:wy
trolling motor, ftpth finder,
trailer, $1095, IM· Ii'2-35911

\ltD Mon10d ... WIItl Chlldtwn

Hay &amp; Grain

16 Ft. Bats Boat, 81 HP Wllh All
Extras! Call Aftwlp.m. IIM-2451152t

7::=--:;:i;:-7.;::--:;--::::;
Approx. 300 bola&gt; of good
mlxH hay tor Nil, 111Hii85-35a3

Transportation

1· 1 1. 1 "

I
.

.

.

.

.

11

AutOS

fOr Sale

otds Cullan Suprem•,
good condition, 6"\ot-Qa2-5828

Oocf9a Magnum, V8, auto.,
good condition, ••king S550 I
cuh talks, 614-941-28113
1878

1979 Chevalt. Malibu, 56,000 IC·
lual Ml, $1000, 1980 AMC Concord, $200, 614-992-5848
1980 Honda C!vlc 2-door, 4 cyl,
$350. after 8.00 PM, 304-713-

""'"·

1081 Pontlae T·1000, 4ap., rMW
ckrtch 1-..m~y. 8! mod•l 4cyl.
motor, runs I looks good, ~.
614-992-JI21
19&amp;2 Buick Atgel Excalt.nt
Body, NMds Englna Work, $250.
814-44&amp;-41311.
1983 Buick CM'IIury Llmitlad,
loaded,
mutt
••·
1885
Pl~h R•llant, 30,000 mllal,
nloa, :11)4...875-8247.
1983 Ford F-150XL. 1918 Corvette, 25th Annlwer11ry. Twa 10ft
glfl!ll door llnt•la. 304-6752290.
1984 Oodge Arlu, 4 door, black,
AMIFM, ciQina, 4 cyl, auto,
614-992-7236, •wenlnga
1984 ~Baron, candy mact'llnaa,
1 pop machine, 35 f'l. 5th
wh..lw, 304-m-56!1
1985 Camaro, load•d. S320o.
1987 Dodge AII'M, PS, Auto.
52100. 1987 HorlzOn, AC. Sl-400.
304~75-2440 .

1965 Dodga Art.., 47,000 Mlt.a,
PS, PB, Titl, Air, 614-4-46-9552.

BOATERS
Gulnna Mercury Marin. Servlc•.
M•reury, Marin«, MercruiMr
specialist. M•reury ctrtlntd.
Mobile, W• com• to you. 614259-697'11.

76

400 Pontile motor &amp; transml&amp;lion, $250,81-4-992-6106
Bud~et lr~nsmlsalona, Uud

19M M•rcury Grand Marquis,

I

79

•

19TI ~ Champion Bantam
Mini Hom• SIMpt Four, Air,
Hut Pump, Fully Equlppad,
15,000. 614-388-1235.

1!ml Holliday Rsmbl..- Excef.
lent Condition, Naw P•lnt, N•w
nr.., Mlcrow1we $6,400. 114-

NUMBERED LE11!R S IN
THESE SQUAR£S

i6

lew m IMQI, 307 V-8, J.UUV, 6141112-6111

RNIOnlbll.
4464)16.

Farm Supplies
&amp;Liveslock
61 Fann Equipment
19, John 0... Modal B, Allis

Chalmers, H.D. e Doz., Hvat•r
EIICtrlc Forti Lltl . 61-4--441-2159.
450-C JO Oot•r NMda Som•

Repatlr, S9,500·b800 Ford -Tractor
$2,950; 2020 J 16,950. 814-288-

8522.

1186 Oodgt Charg.r, 2a Air,
Sunroof Louvn. Can T1k1
Ower Paymenta. 614-441-1033
Can laav• M•asaga.

- - · ---:::-'----:c:-:;:-1986 Dodge Charger, 2.2 Iller,
Sap., amltm st•~ . QOOd cond.,
$1650 OBO, tit4-141-:f585

1986 Oodga VIsta S2,!M)(). 1987
Olds Cullan $2,700. 1Niil Chevy
C.wali.r alation wagon $3.200.
1V83 Ford Rang• 4x4 $2,fi00.
11184 Bronco II fan $2,100. 1185
Ford
F-150 12,300. 1985

Ply...... h Voy- 12,700. 19...

Fiero 110,000 mn. $2 500. 19114

T Bird $1,&amp;00. 1181 l'.;rd UP
$700. 118! Fifth Aven1.111 $3,000.
1884 Ford F-100 34J.DOO mil•

Allla Chalmer 4 row com planter
SSOO. PTO corn shellw $"100.
304-458-111&amp;2.
Cub lrtet:or w/5ft woods moww,
plow, d~ blodll &amp; olck"' bor
571-2328.
~...

Utlmy Bldg. Sp.clal: 30'x40'xV',
H5'x8' strdlng Door, 1-3' WaUt
Pllntad St.. l Siding I
Roof ng. $5180. Iran HorM
Sidra. 1-aoo-352-,04!1

Ooorl

FARIII TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ohio
Vall.y S.rvk:a C.nter. Buy, Sell,
Trad•. 614·258-8040.

Ford Dllc, 1ft., J point, good
cond., Nil or trade tor 12 Of 1411.
whNI diK, 814-UI-2765

JO ue Ha, BallerL JO 1n Grain
Grill; JO 4 Roll l'tM CuiUvalor,
Excelllnl Condition! 614-25611011.

Now Holtond 711 hoyblnd. Now
Holland 9ft hoyblnd, Now Hoi-

S1,995. 1(181 Foprd tlronco full
alr• $4,800. 1985 Olda o.na 18
12,395. 11l88 Buick Sky H•wto
Sport $1,895. 1M CMda Clara
Brougham S2,500. Seottyt liNd
Cart, New H11w1n, 304-882-3752,
t9116 OkS1 Flrtnu, 5 SpHd, air,
1m/ tm staNc1_ tilt whMI, 1114·
~2-1529 callanw 6pm

mila&gt;,

p,aoo "'

tnd•.

114-25Ul!l.
111'1

Otda

Culteu

C.ll..,

63

order $1V,300. n1w. Ha,.. cppor.
lunily, mult 1efl $"13,300. :Jo-4.
&amp;75-2332.

--,:-:-;-::;::-::;-:;::-:::-:-;:;::::-;;;;:

l.QHA Big Sof~l Brood Mar•, 4
Hoi'M COOMMCk lrallar. 614-

286~522..

2 Y.. r11ng Suftolk Rams. 1
reotst•M Shropahlta Ram. 304451-1H2.
•
4-fi I FFA IMdar plga lol ula,
45 to 7! lba, wormed, detailed,

tootlwd, all lhola_ Hemp, Y«k,

0uf'X, Crou.
werVnga.

304-2'13-2246

Anguo And Chi-Anguo B"'ck

SuA•, R•sonebly Prk:..-1. Sleta
RUn Farms, Jack.on, Ohio, 114288~31!1.

Good 4-H I FFA Ciul&gt; Plao FO&lt;
Stt"' Two s.Mcooblo - ..

&amp;14-3&amp;i-11033 Allor I P.M.

LllnOUIIn bul..1 reai ... Nd, 11
- - old, ...., • Sl:lilo, 21U
SlnwMntel Buill. 1ye~r old •nd

2 yoor -

· --3216 O.nny

Diwhursl or 301112 2242.

Bllthrooma, Kitchens, Rooftng,
EIKtrieal
Sldl"9,
M. .onry,
Orvwall, Framing Room Additions, Plumbing, Expan.nc.ct;
FrH Eatlm11111 304-67'5-2440.
Curtla Home lmproYWMnls:
Y.ars Erparlenee On OtdM" I
N. .., Hom••· Room Addhlona,
Foundalion Work,
RoollnQ,
Kltch•ns And Balha. FrM E..
tlmatul Aalerencaa, No Job
Too Big Or SmaM! 1114-367-05111.

,11'1 Z-28, blu•, aut:oL.5.7, apeclal

J.W. Construction. Room Ad-

Ylddlapor1, Ohio.

1I'JII Ford 314 lon. $500. Chevy
INCk 6 lug Rally wheal• on
O.vton• 275-60-15. 304-175-2n4,

304-t7s-tsn

S.W-Vac

~1•,

pkkup, and d.IIYWJ. 11444U1294.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

a

jHolowachuk
Gil ~ Ill Major Ood
calls an

Adopt-a-Marine hotline when
he misses his parents.

lOLl
MAKING IN

WE 1REALL

MR. HOR6Y 60f A axJ0 euY

N.AI&lt;IN6:

MR. HOR6Y"5

ON A TRUCKLOAD OF 6A.ND.

HOLJR6LA55E5.

~TARE

TH!e&gt;~~

jiD
~~~~Murphy Brown
Eldin agrees to anend

Lamaze class with Murphy .

Stereo. C
1!J WWF l&gt;rtmo nmo

WreatUng WWF Champion
Title Match: Macho Man
Randy Savage vs. I.R.S.

BARNEY
WOULD TAT ER LIK E
TO HEL P MOMMY
CLEAN HOUSE
TODAY?

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Rid....., Elodrlcot, WV000301,
304-671-1711.

85 General Hauling

lrrl 91~ Ch.vy h4

379-2278 Anyllme.

G.nwal Warlt , Any Klndl 1114-

87

Upholstery

Mowrty'l Uphoiltaring

..mc-

lng trl comty arM 21 yaari. TM

belli in fumllu,.. u~.nng.
C.ll :J04.f75-4154 fol lrM -tlmat ...

NORTH

BRIDGE

-~~~ I

i 1--0

H 'U 1

+AI06 l
• 10 7.
t AK6
• 7. 2

PHILLIP

WEST

ALDER

EAST

+K 9 8

+7

.KQ 9865
• J 92

• A2
tQI0 7l

+10

+J 98513

SO liTH
+QJ 512

Lose early,
win later

.J l
t8 5 .
+AKQ

Vulnerable · Nortb-South
Dealer West

By Phillip Alder
There is an old sayinR that a begmner playing in three no-trump wins the

Nortlt

Ettll

Pass

Pass

••

first eight tricks and loses the last
five , whereas an expert loses the fi rst

All pass

Open ing lead. 'P K
four and wins the last nine. You unders tand the 1dea . It tsn't necessarily t he
person who is quickest at the start who
gelS to the fimsh line m front.
prunovuun .
On today's hand, co ver the East His play r eahzed boUt goals East's
West cards. Against your contract of ruff did stop th e heart 10 from winning
four spades, West leads the heart king. a tnck, and . when South overrufled
East overtakes with the ace and r e- the spade seven with his jack, West
turns the heart two to West's queen was in tbe happy position of being able
West plays a third heart, East ruffing to collect a trump trick. Eventually
dummy'5 10 with the spade seven South couldn 't avoid losing a diamond
Which 10 tricks do you hope to win ?
trick as well: one down.
West opened with a classic weak
If only South had been willmg lo
two-bid, showing a good six-card suit trade a loser for a loser. He should

and some 6-10 high-eard pomts. South have thrown a low diamond under
balanced with a bid in his five-card East 's spade seven. Then he would
major, and North made an aggressive have been able to pick up West's
raise to game .
trumps without loss to make hi.s
West led a third heart with two aims

in mind: first. to stop South from ob-

t.aining a dtscard on the heart 10: then,
possibly, to arra nge f or a trump

contract.
Ruden '"' mvrled to ~ carri-pJ1y qw.
ro/'IJ.illlp AI~. UJ CAll! (1{ Uus ~rnpll~
77ley ('•n ~ •m_,-H mly l.brofAP 1M roiwnn

!JOII!

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

35 Lone

Ranger'•

1 Huddy
4 Seed
9 Small

companion
36 Uaeful
37 Main COUTI81

cushion

4(1

12 Harem

Resortt

43 Roman

apartment

«

13 Rope flber
14 Blzarr•
15 Lumberman 's

bronze
Poetic fiction

48 Equallly
49 Money back

bool
16 Llyouts

saUtfled

17 Garden plant
18 Sea pheatanl

51 - culp1
52 Gran! rklg•

20 BelitYer in an
1om
21 Veto
22 Humlllly
25 llilh turname
21 Ordain

53 Florida clly
~La.

Ume

55 -

-

laull

(overmuch)
56 Whltena
57 Consum•d

31 Mart or

lood

Venus
32 Actor Peter

4 •ney 5 GIYIIIgll

DOWN

33 Drainage

Ioree to

6 Ollk:lol

1 E•plo&lt;leo

waste
34 Contlructed

proclamation
7 Theatrical
couple
8 Printer's

2 Actor Wetl

3 Window cur·

anew

lain material

12!1 Naohvlllo Now Stereo
I

'I - I ~

Vacant - Order - Chirp - League - CHARGE
My husband, who is not very romantic. sent me H red
roses. When I asked why the odd number he SBid Simply
that il was the minimum amount he could CHARGE .

a

laiTJ King Uvel
Q11 Fallter Oowllng Mysteries
Stereo . Q
9:30 ®) Qil ~ 18 Doolgnlng
Woman Julia learns she may
need a hysterectomy, so she
enters the hospital. S lereo.

1;1

IO:OO IIl (f) M o d 2
Jonathan MUlot
®liD~-

Expoture Holling ventures
1nto the wilderness after

ASTRO--GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'blr
'Birthday

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgeratlon

Steleo 1;1
~ Acrooo Amerlce Willi
Leny Woodo (0:30)
Qll Block Stillion Slareo 1;1
9:00 (2)11 11J MOVIE: 'In lite
Shotlow ot 1 Killer' NBC
Mondoy Nlghl II lite llovleo
(2 00) Stereo. []
ClJ
(I) 111 •siitr 1110 Nlghl
(PI 2 o1 2)' ABC _ ,
Night Movie (2:00)
II) (f) Machine TNtt
Changed tha Wortd Stereo.

a

€&gt;HOP CLA66

fi1~N888

W• Oo Houfinl Ar!Jitmo,
An-. No Job T~ Big Or
Too ltnte. ea... ,lilnt C...ntng,

1987 Chevy PU, Good eon.t•
lion, 350 Engl,.. &amp;
Ttanaml:u4on, 114-446-7515.

EEKANDMEEK

Oolllpoll_o, Ohio

84

8:00 Ill II 01 Freoh Pnnce ot
Bai-Air Ashley begins asking

~ til Evonlng Shotle
Taylor holds a garage sale
so he can buy a new car.
Stereo . C
l!lJ II MOlliE: Tltt
f"ormltmoriR I (2:00)
[J Murder, Silo Wrote Q
Croolt and ChoN
8 PrimeNtwl D
Qll Prince Valilnf Steroo Q
8:30 (2) 11 01 81oooom Joeys
job is threatened by an
t 8-year-old video store
manager . Stereo. I;J
ClJ Q (I) II AmertCen
Oeloetlve Florida pol oce
wage a fight to stem the flow
ot illegal drugs . IPI 11 Stereo.

\

C..rtw'a Plumbing
Fourth and Pine

at Atlanta

®l Gil

245~!12.

82

Ch1cago Cubs
Braves (L)

Will embarrassing ~stions
about sex . Stereo._L,I
(lJ Q (I) Ill FBI: TIM Untold
Storie• The skyjacking ol a
jet airliner by Richard Ro
. 11_d
McCoy In 1972._2tereo t;1
IIl (f) Trevtlo Q

Will build peUc cown, chdla,
.creen.d roorna, put . . Ylnyt
aiding or trail..- skirting. IM-

Ford F-150 Super cab,
wortt, $;300. 11 Ia, call attw 5:00PM :104-f15-&amp;729.

&amp;-3-4132.

BACK TH ERE!

Jesse dies . Stereo . 1;1
I]] 11 Huntor []
at Dwight Yolhm Starea
World Nawt
Q11700 Club With Pol

a

hrvle•,

o~ .. CrMk Ad. Parts, eup-

nMda

10,000 Ill .... f Inch Uh,
IS Inch Tlroo.L Alum k1o1•. Looko
And Ru,. !Milt, 12,500. Cell

SEND HIM

lf*l.lai!:!'J

1m

4

LOG!

JET

Rnldlnllel
or
corown.rclll
wiring, nno ..me. .,.. ,.,.....
Ma81•r Ucen.d ltlectridan.

72 Trucks lor Sale

YI)LJ OUGHT.&amp;.

TIED T0 A

Mrltlon Mccors, repaiNd. N.w
&amp; ra-bullt m~o11 In stock, RON
EVANS, JACI(SON, OH. 1-800&amp;37-1528.

For A Good Cl .. n UMd Car:
K•na~Autc c.nter, Up.,.. Rlv.r
, O.lllpcUa, 1114~-

THE"" I THlNk.

CAM E CNE ~

And All Typaa or Extllrior Ancl
lntlliof" Painting. Will Give Low
LlclnN Bid. 114-245-5011.

snop

Many can $3000 I und.,, war·
rant:y ewallabla, aM O.nt
Ooodwln, Wart's Auto Salee,

.. . I HE.tU:fJ HE

dhlono, R-. Oocko, Siding

O.v\1

1NI Dodga Shedow ES, Air,
PSIPB, Elte. Wlndowe, 33,000
Mlioo, Cloocl Condition, IC,700;
1987 Dodao D-&amp;0 PU, $2,800.

AMIFU Ca1Ht11 Aulomallc, Air,
PS, PI, a14-146-M15 Ahw o P.M.

1990 AOHA Big Gray Filly; 1m

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional Ut.lirM guarantN. local r1terene11 fuml-'*1.
F,.. M11mltH. Cafl eol-.t 1514-237-&lt;1481, day or night .
Rog1r. HaMman! Wat~
ling.

1887 Trans-Am bfeck on black,
350 1ul0 00 GTA fllllhMis,

rn,ooo

ALLEYOOP

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Stt .. k T•nk Pumping $10, OotM•
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPAISiS,
Jeckson, OH 1-800-6374521.

a11 Ul 0381 all:w II P.M.

Stereo . Q
(I) 0 Mamo'o Family
®l Gil Wheel ol Fortune Q
~Ill Family Feud
12!1 Be a Star Stereo
1221 NASCAR Racing Henes
500 from Martinsville, Va . (T)
acrooonre
7:35 1IJ Major Leag,.. Ba-H

Ellperi~,
814-44~, 1114-

Ron's TV Servlc.,
In Ztnllh alto Mnicing
ott.r brands. Houu calla, also
aome appliance 11palrs. WV
304-571·23ml Ohio 114-4~24$4 .

[)odga

t.nd Supar T11lor9 hlrvwtlll".
O..hl 1!1 grlndar mlxtr. 304-2734215.

Livestock

Roofing.

Charg..-, Good
Condhlon, 5 SP"'!t Air, 63,000
MIIH, $2,400; 198o Ford l TO,
Runs Good, 113,000 Milas,
fl,660 . 114-2.5H25t.
11111

Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Braves {l)
(lJ Q Entertolnmonl Tonight

Home
Improvements

Bar011t1 Homa lmprovMt«~ta.
Additions, Garav-s, Painting,

cond, JUot-e75-48a3.

u·,{------,__,.,

Services

ti85 Olda Dena 18 Ro,alol, 2dr.,

111185
Oldamobl~
Cutlu•
Supre~1 &amp;7,000 mlt.a, nlca

•

- " " · 18,700. 300-UI-10&amp;&amp;.

Flah Tank, 2413 Jac:keon Ava.
Poln1 PI..Nnl , 3CH..fi7S-2063,
full line Tropical lith, birds,
small animals and aupplln .

coupo/ jUIC llkt newJ.~l..-~Mr,

"-~- j

JfEN CHA/l6ED WITH COI'IfLIC'f'
OF IN'Tf/lf'.fT AND usrNG
,
iAXPA Yl:! fUNP.f jQ~ yoi..Jfl
OWN /NV£-.J'T'/VIFNT.fWHA'r /ciND of
CAMPAIGN 5L-OGAN

Coachman 24ft Mini mot01
homtt, 480 Ford .nglna, root air,

Custom

IIIIII

UNSCRAMIILE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

U

a

446..01M13.

81

Complete 1Me chuck le quored
by ldlmg 1r1 the moumg word1
you d~ elop from 11ep No 3 below

&amp; PRINI

!:J

Campars &amp;
Motor Homes

Tilt Wh• ... PS, PS, Pow., S•ata,

Goldin Retri•ver
puppj•s.,
6wke. old, champion blood tin•.
$200, 614-M-WS

...,...... ""'

YOV 1Vf li-EN INVOL-Vfl&gt; lf'l Tl'it .S ANt&gt; L fCANf&gt;ALAIVP ifff CHh:.f': goVfVCING FtA,fCO. yoU'VE

Chayenna't Truck Auto, AI. 110
McArthur, Oh~. New Prwnlum
Ouallly
Replac.mem
Cruh
Pant AI Wholaahl Prien. No
H111t. Ratuma. F,.. o.ltv.ry
To Aru And Route Body Shoctl.
Cell For Dettill. 1-800-2&amp;3-6»6.

992-6824

Flw1 AKC Doberman Tall
Dockad, Dew Claw Ramovtd,
Wormlld . 1114-256~320 .

~

Nb&amp;.nll, atartl~ 11 $19; front
whMI driw llartl~ at 1141.00
614-245-!617, 1114-at:Z-6293.

1965 Oodge Shelby Charger
Turbo, ! apalld, radlsllv•~ good
mpg I sharp, akalng J2,850.
304-675-5308.

Pow.,
Wlndowt,
Whe-'e. 614-446·nt5.

The NeX1
a-nUott[]
Dill Entertirnment Tonlgllt
Stereo.
[J MacGyvar
1221 SporloConter
Moneyllna
Qll Tlto Wanono
7:05 (}) Addama Family
7:301lJO 01 Jeopardy![]
l!l Major League BaMbell

CAN yov v.rE?

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.

911!1 Jecpatdyl []

qulpmont w•h Trol.,r, S1,500

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

.

I]]. Star Trolt:

11 Ft. Rink BuiH Boat1 Walk Thru
Tri-HaUI, 100 HP
Man:ury Motor, All Sat.tr E-

BOATERS
J.S. Marine Serwltl, Sarvlng All
Your Boating NNC11, Pana, kcnaor1n, Two Cycle Oil And
S.rvlu. 1114-:z!ie.t160.

I0

~s&lt;-Tj.:...;llrllr-TI--=-TI--i

NewaHourQ

Wlndahl~1

Firm. 114-388-lil2l5,

=

complaining about the long
wM Our un~ secretary told
r---::---:----, me that someone had called in
KUT BE C
a9t1 fTomour ----- 1

98!1 ~IICBSNewtQ
I]] II Andy lltltfttlt

The Jefferaona Q_
(lJ Q lnoldo Edition 1;1
IIl (f) MecNollflelni

64

be

word1

'----'--.1.-- L
- -L--' ,

a

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

~m

Bedroom Furniture (E~penslwa).
AnUqua Gat Ra ng•. F1rm
Gasolln• Tank &amp; Stand. AntlqLM
VW Par1s. 1114-256-685!

To LNM For t Year: Very Nita 3
Badroom, 2 Bath Hem• With
Ga11g1 in Or Near Gallipolis.
1-800-M8-1Q23
N..O Ponnafon By June 1at.
Wls•man RMI Eatat•. 1114..C48- - -· ---:c---::;---;:--c,-:-Gennla Nutrttlon Produe11

49

:~impla

--rWc-YrO-rD_D.---ilf. ~ ~ 1~

Reeding Rainbow Stereo

7:00 jaj II 01 Whlel ol Fortune

Nlntendo laplls, mlcrowa.,.
stand S20. Mala Shih· Tlu lor

IAMI

ol

words

low to form four

•

1221 Up Close
Qll New Zorro Stereo Q
6:35 1IJ Andy Grtfflth

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALOREI
1114-446-3158

WQID

- - - - - - l~lto~ ~y CLU I .

6:00 Ill II (lJ . . (I). ®lll!l
~· 01 Newt
I!) VIdeo Power
Square Ona TV Stereo

Twtn badroom lUIIe with
drnMr and night 81and, 614·
HS-3523.

Nk:e aHiclency collag•, unlqu•
and bMutlful, :J04-.t7S-6042

for Rent

'0©\\g{}~-~f..~Ss

[J Scooby Doo

BEDROOM: Bunk Bsda $99
{2x8); 4 Drawer Chn1 Of
Drlwera $44.96; Twin Mattreat
I99Sot.

mobil• One
and
two
bedroom
lor _ rent. 304-675home loan? C.ll us •• can Metp . apartm•nls
or
_..
2053
675 100
304-755-nil axt 11.

33 F anns for Sale

PI IIlii

EVENING

lion, $8,400. C.ll 114-44$.7371,
After 5 P.M.

1189 Ford AllrOStar Mini nn,
auto., ov..-drlwe, amttmlcauan•
c•aNit•. till,
air, cruise,
41,000MI, ere. cond., 614-9127189 att« 7pm.

TIIAT t.\IIT

,ASIDE .

V•n Automallc Ov.rdrtvll, Air,
Tilt, ' Crutu, Very Good Cond~

I um.::l down fOJ

)04 o616·2113.

MON., APRIL 27

•

~I&gt;'ETHI

pha cMpOI:Il, lndudla wetw,
NW&amp;ge. and traah, 1114-i41-221J

,,..

A~sud

PIJTTIHU

191H Chl:r 4 Wheel OriYI,
Short WhM a.... 305, 4 Speed,
4" Uft, Alum WhMia. Call
675-7123, Or 114-441-40111 .

1989 Ford AerHtltr

Television
Viewing

·w~ OFTE~

ADti'OOI51ltD
/IE N300T

&amp;75-71123, Or a..--41115.

Dou.,_ wide In Raclna,

1967 M~ 12165 3bdrm., 2 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
bath, unfumlthad, S4300 cuh, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, S3e Jackacn Pike
614-11112-3033
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
1975 mobile home 12"1:60, new mow'-. CaiiiJM-446-2568. EOH .
eorpot, good cond, J04-i112EHk: .. ncy apartment. Ratww.ce
and depoeU Nqulrlld. No pets.
1985 Windsor 2br, Fully Fur- 304-67r.-5112.
nlshad , ~shwuh« Dlspcul,
T.V., St.,eo Syst.., Throughout, Fumlahed Apanmant 1 BadWasher I Dfyw 2 a.drooma 0t room Utllll._ Paid, $260/lno.
Fumitwa And l.Mng Room Fur· 820 Fourth Avenu., Galll~la
nhuraJ.. Mlcrowa .... , ll•lrtrm"' DNa, 814-44.......-. After 7p.m.
And :stow•. 614-446--354 , 304- FumlatMd Apai11Mnt, tbt, nell
"3--t356 .
to Ubrary, pe.f'kjng, tanlrll hut,
HUM Clayton w..twind 14rM 1lr, Nler~ ll-4-4411-0338,
Two Badroom-. AC, NatLWal Refers 7p.m.
a.-, A-t Condillon, $8,800 . Grteloua tMng. , and 2 badPhoN: 614-992·11CH Ahllf" 6:30
room ap~rtmentt: at Vlllag•
P.M.
Manor
•nd
Rlv•ralde
1989 Redman Danville, 14•n. Apartments In Middleport. From
Total Electric, ErceU•nt Coodl- $1111. C..IIIIM-VV:Z-7781. EOH.
tlon, Prlc~ To sem 614-367-0139 Laltystte Mall: Nkoe 2 Room•
Ah•r 5p.m.
.lnd Bath, $17!!5/mo. lncludn
l9920oubl• w4dl R~!Nevar Utltlllea, O.po.lt Requlr9d. 114lived In! lfrMw Homa War- 446-7733, 114-446-4222.
ranty'!$0_ down lo qliiiUiied Now ICCitt)tlnQ lpplicatlons fOf
buyers. 304-7M-58&amp;5
Y..on AJN~rtmenta. Equal Hou•
2 BR, 12160 HoUyperk.. New car· lng Opp., air cond ., laundry
pM &amp; wlnyt throughout . Ercal- room, trM trash pk:kup. tloM
llnt condiUon. Priced upon In- to atcru &amp; achools. 304-Trl.sll.
spect~ . 304-173-5840.

a..n

' FIIW.LY, [ OEO.IJt:ATH TO II.Y
t&lt;EPHEW, aRUM ...

ntce M6ghbortl : J, $3001mo.

1bdrm.,

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

r

ARLO AND JANIS

Sa"' Sorrwrvlll•'• Arm, Surplua,
II mlt.s Ea1t 1-n Ravan~ 1
Household
Df otcNr.
k:atton. t. .... to be
304-tlS- 5I
by S•nctvviU. Polll Oftlce. Wl1a
tn by lby ~ . Town of IW11onf, Hunllng, Flohlng (Turtc.y, o-.
Turby 9..eon Soon, " - f\ttl
Goods
P.O. Box t, Karttord, WV 25247.
a..r) llod.m Cabin For 8-10; O.J. Whh• A"'!!'&lt;. 11 Acroo,
range ol liz... Woocland or
S..utlful Mount1ln S.rtlng , -tyWoodlld,wnftAS..ul~
TrHbert Camftauge, anny ,_,.
NURSE AID£$
LAYNE'S
FIIRNITURE
$19,900. 614-379-2JIIa .
lui Bulking Site Thol Hoo A
tern c:~hlf19, arnall equlpmanl,
~~ Manor, A 201-Bed
Vlow FO&lt; YIIM. Nbo l.nol eomp.~e home tuml~~·~c· renlal IUrplua clothing, Fri, Sal,
BNutlfut
Brlcll
Wllh
Many
EJ
Nu... ng FIICIIIty, to .......
Houro:S ~ &amp; Rd. Sun Noon-1:00 PM. (){hw dsye,
lng Applcollono Fa&gt; -ng Irnl Prked 8ekiW Apptalaal EloctolcMy, AndA- · 0322,
mi ... ·
oU ..
Buiovlllo
" - Sonlco
houri 304-213-51a5. Bualn..a
UniU May '-' · Call Qulckfy. U4Fl'lll DeUv.ry.
Avol- , ...... """" lmprinttd
adv.rtlslng
- · - ~.. On ThO lt2-5f11.
Haepltal, $31,DOO. ~~epec:lallill up to 25'1. dltcounl.
PICKENS FIIRNITURE
~ ArM, Pom.ay, Ut;a o- 2 ...... 01 Good lulldlna
Nowi\Jood
~~~ Appfk:.eUon Or
Signs: Portabl• changaable t.tHonw, Haw KHchlin, Sltw 0 . . To ~~ Ill Ana Houwhold tumlahlng. t/2 mi.
In Person At PMa.lnl
iI
Cotpotlna. t.. 130'o, ~·'- 114 Ul K Or 114- "-rieho Ad. Pt. Ptuunt, WV, ltr algna and ~~~·~· FrM
Manor, nn u.s . Rout• 23, Both
dMiv•ry. AAA Signa, 1-800.533call ~75-1450.
CluoNn.d Buyoo. a-2351.
South, PillMan, OH 45861. EO£.
UIII!I.
3453.
How
lawn

1984 Ct\ll:r 4 Whlai OriYI,
Short WhM Bau, )0$, 4 SpMd,
4M Lift Alum WhMia. C.ll 304-

BORN LOSER

\11

v..,. me. l4x7'0 mobi .. home en

1..-.slad

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Rentals

Employmenl Services

PHONE

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

c.u

With Or Wll.............
loiTJ l..lwly. " ' 318 ! :103.

11

Monday, April 27, 1992

2 Door Refrigatator F~t Fr.•,
Harvest
Gokf Waa 1150 Cut To
M4a.
$95; A•frtgerator Whhl, F~
Fr.a Wu S150, Cui To S125;
36 Real Estate
Sida' By Slda Harvnt Gold, Uk•
New, Wu: $265, Cut To $185· 30
Wanted
lneh Et.ctric Range, Whha, Wu
2 Aduha 'Nanling Country $125 Cut To $95; 30 Inch Eleoc:lric
Houu, Privacy, In Gallla Rang•, Avacado, Wu $150, Cut
County. 114-441-oaot, 614-446- Tc 1125· WasMr And Orpr S..
.Wn b45 Cut To $190;
0SOt
Whirlpool Wathar And Dry•r
Would Ulw To Rent A Housa S.t, ~arvtlt ~d, Wu $300 Cut
With S 0.. 4 a.dtooms, Would To $245; G.E. Dry•r Wu fl25
-uu To Haw HouM In Bidwell Cut To $75; Hotpolnt Wlst.r
School Dlltrict Ar•. 614-367- Wu $150 Cut To $93; Maytag
Dryer, Whila, Llh N.w, $150.
1733.
Skaggs Appllanc.., 614--4461398.

113-5715.

9

Household
Goods

51

Two, Threa And FN• kre Par·
cell, 112,000 To S16,000 AT 35
Rodnoy IUnr..,rlctod) 614-245-

Riel&lt; Poo-. ......... Compony,
ful ....- . . ...........
oudlon

Monday, April 27, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

April 21, 1112
You could be extremely lortunal e in 1he
year ahead through relationships you'll
establish . The enorts ot these friends
will matle your lot in life better.

TAURUS (April20-llly 20) Yoor mond
is likely to operate more eff ecttvely on:
philosophical levels today. You should ;
be able to percetve things tor the true j
benefits or disadvantages they offer . I
Know where 10 took for romance and
you'll find il . The Astro-Graph Match. maker Ins tantly reveal s which signs are

romanttcally pertect lor you Mall $2
pius a tong. self-addressed. stamped
anvelape t o Matchmaker. clo this
newspaper, P.O. BoK g 142 e . C lev~a nd ,
OH 441 1. 3 4 2e

o

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno

20)

bl'
A stum mg

block that has been veKing you where
your career is concerned can be c trcumvented loday. Your best asset is
your ability to bypass obslacles .
CANCEA (Jun. 21-July 22) Vou are
now in a favorable cycle. 'Nhere your

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) An mvolvemenl whtch •ncludes several ol your
peers can best be managed by you today , and not by one of them . They' !Irealize this and not make any bid s fo r au thority rokts

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) A to nancial matter you ' ve been viewing
negat ively could work out today in a
manner contrary to how you've been
thinking . An important lesson can be
learned from this experience.

CAPRICORN IO.C. 22-Jon. 1B) A role

~!~i:~~:.~~~;ll~~~~:~~~.iss~~~~~J~; ~~:e;r:~~!n';~•::.r~~"is ;~;~~~~u~t~~

coul d be your student . because you
thmgs.
LEO (July ~Aug . 22) Don· t be afraid have valuable information to impart.
to Improvise your way out of dtlemmas AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Ftb. 11) A pleas·
otters that ,..
~rla•n
lad aymm
.... ,
10 yoor ant surprise could be in the offing towork . What you conceive could be quite day _There's a chance you might receive
ingenious or. at the very least , awfully a material reward and nol be able toreresourcetul.
ca ll what you did to earn it
YIAOO IAUII. 23-Sopl. 22) Constructive PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Yoo migh1
measures can be taken today 10 instill not be that lucky on your own today or
harmony in the several areas of your life . : in a partnership arrangement . but you
that have been 8 bit tempe stu ous lately. could be more fortunate than usual
where there are two or more people
S moo lher sa1.,.1ng 1·s ahead .
Involved
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Financial as. peels continue to look encouraging. so AAI£8 (Mareh 21 -April 11) Wishful
your think ing may not be a frivolous pastime
1
I lloda y lor w • ~
be aer
rw to ·ncrease
earnings or add to your resources You for you today. The influences indicate
should be able to do one. or bolh
there's a strong possibility you can
translorm your lan tasy into reality .

Roborllon

10:30 I!)

NOWI

Q

1221 Mojor Laogue BaHb.oll

Ill
10:35 (}) MOYIE: Virginia Cl1y

12:30)
11 :00 Ill II (lJ. (I). ®llll
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a-yllne
QIIIIOYIE: Brolton Lance
(2:00)
11 :35 Ill II 01 Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Coroon
Stereo .

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()) D Clteeto []
1D Aroenlo ~II Stereo .

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Get someone else to blow your hom and the
sound will carry twk:e as far ." - Wl11 Rogers

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monda~Aprll27,1992

Southern honor roll announced
The honor roll for the fifth
sixth-week grading period of the
Southern Local School District has
been announced.
Racine Elementary
First grade - Adam Ball, Jennifer Harris, Jordan Hill and Jennifer Walker, all A's; Brigelle
Barnes, Shane Butler, Rachel
Chapman, Jeri Hill, Amy Lee,
Tiffaney Pauerson, Tommy Theiss.
Second grade - Sheri Cummins,
Tyler Lillie, Rachel Marshall ,
Jason Miller, Macy Rees, all A's;
Joe Adkins, Amber Duffy, Mall
Johnson, Joey Manuel, Jill Matson,
Tiffany Williams.
Third grade - Macyn Ervin,
Jonathan Evans, all A's; Michael
Ball, Kati Cummins, Courtney Hill,
Shauna Manuel, Erin Roach, Jami
Stemple, Erin Struble.
Fourth grade - J.B. Boso, Sarah
Brauer, Kyle Norris, Brandon
Wolfe, all A's; Willie Collins,
Carly Crow, Kim Ihle, Stacy
Lyons, Amber Maynard, Chris
Randolph, Tara Rose, Bobbie Scarberry, Jared Smith, Derek Warden,
Lena Yoa:ham.
Fifth grade - Phillip Harris, all
A's; Jennifer Carleton, Joshua
Ervin, Karll King, Jesse Little, Jessica Theiss.
Sixth grade - Nikki Robinson,
all A's; Nicole Hill, John Matson,
Jessica Roush.
Syracuse Elementary
First grade - Mindy Chancey,
Justin Connolly, Mariam EI-Daba-

ja, Jennifer Stepp, Crystal Cottrill,
all A's; Justin Allen, Jenny Larsen,
Cory VanReeth.
Second grade - Matthew Ash,
Mary Schultz, all A's; Nathan Martin, Aaron Ohlinger, Kevm Slater,
Lindsey Smith.
Third grade - Cara Ash, Sarnh
Ball, Jeremy Fisher, Josh Larsen,
all A's; Jason Cundiff, Mall Marshall, Stephanie Pullins, Matthew
Warner, Christopher Yeauger.
Fourth grnde - Heather Dialey,
Josh Davis, Jonathan Smith, Steve
Ta:ket~ Autumn Thomas.
Fifth grade - Kim Sayre, all A's;
Erron Aldridge, Bridget Cross,
Ashli Davis, Zach DeBolt, Jess1ca
Smith.
Sixth grade - Cynthia CaW well,
Evan Struble, all A's; Valerie Cundiff, Jenny Friend, Billy Young.
Letart Elementary
First grade - Travis Childress,
Eva Kiser, Brandi Lane, Ashley
Hiller, Stephanie Wilson, Stacy
Wood.
Second grade - Jessica McCany,
Joy Rose, Lori Sayre, Crystal
South, Ian Wise.
Third grade - Nicole Blumenauer, Holly Hannah, Garret Kiser,
Jennifer Norman, Matthew Shain.
Fourth grade - Jessica Alley.
Jock Rose, Mandy Spaun.
Fifth grade - Daniel Hannah,
Janey Hill, Jennifer Morris, Jody
Wolfe, Rebecca Wolfe.
Sixth grade - Jennifer Roush.
Hillary Turley, Ranetta Wheeler.

Portland Elementary
First grade - Rebecca Lawrence,
Alan Moore, Brandon Smith, all
A's; Jessica Burris, Brittany Davis,
Andrea Long, Megan Moore and
Donald Bush.
Second grade - Anthony Barber,
Amanda Huddleston, Travanna
Moore, all A's; Melissa Black,
Tyler Johnson, Russell Krider,
Amy Wilson.
Third grade - Brnndi Codner, all
A's; Justin Burris, Nick Bolin,
Kayla Pullins, Janice Richard,
Maggie Wallbrown.
Fourth grade - Erin Bolin, all
A's; Anita Holter, Rebekah
Collins, Becky Davis.
Fifth grade - Jasoo Roush, Pauy
Lawrence.
Sixth grade- Jenny Sellers.
L.D. - David Wolfe.
D.H. - Darlena Flowers, all A's;
Jeremy Watson.
Junior high
Seventh grade - Brian Allen,
Jessica Counts, Jason Lawrence,
Amy Northup, Amy Rizer, Zack
Couch, Josh Roush, Amber
Thomas, Gres McKinney, Adam
Roush, JesSica Sayre, Bobby
Writesel.
Eighth grade - Paul !hie,
Rochell Jenkins, Rayan Young,
Jasoo Barnell, Jennifer Lawrence,
all A's; BJ. Ervin, Janna Manual,
Jay McKelvey, Jason Shuler, John
Card. Sammi Sisson, Nick Smith,
Robby Crow, C.J. Harris, Craig
KnighL

NHL

available on the grounds and there
arc to be no alcoholic beverages of
carry-ons.
Beginning at 4 p.m. the "Off
Season" from Glouster and "Bockwords" from Athens will perform
old time rock 'n' roll.
In addiuon there wtll be a car
bash, siuing duck sponge loss and
new car corral .

The cost of tickets are $4 in
advance or $5 at the gate. Those
showing cars (driver only) wtll be

admiued free of charge.
Tickets may be purchased in
advance at Bob's Supermarket,
School Kid's Records, Zides' Span
Shop, Magic Video-Albany, The
Panlry Slore-Albany, Carrington'sMcArthur, J.B. Spans Shop-Wellston, and Fir&gt;! National Bank of
NeIson vi lle-GIouster.
The event is sponsored by the
Alexander Spartan Athletic Boosters and further information may be
obtained by calling 698 -3045,
eveni ngs.

Meigs students named to honor roll
The honor roll for Meigs High
Sc hool for the fourth grnding period has been announced.
Twelfth grade - Barbie Anderson, Love Batey, Frnnk Blake, Juli
Buck, Jill Chichester, Ryan Cowan,
Melinda Dailey, Heather Davenport, Jennifer Deem, Angela Dill,
Jason Dowell, Tiffany Gardner,
Tara Gerlach, Jon Harrison, Robin
Imboden, Betty Lake, Sheila Lattimer, Joseph McElroy, Tammy
Miller, Hather Mitchell , John
Moore, Stefan Muller, Miranda
Nicholson , Becky Ockerman.
Melanie Qualls, Michelle Scott,
Mary Stein, Darcy Stone, Marjorita
Tromm, Bobby Vance, Christina
Weaver. Valene Wilson, Kelly
Winter, Robby Wyau.

Eleventh grade - Debbie Alkire,
Charles Bryant, Paul Chadwell,
Linda Chapman, Wendy Clark,
David Curfman, Allison Ganaway,
Mary Grueser, Robin Hall, Randall
Johnston, Lori Kelly. Kevin Lambert, Lorena Oiler, Stepharlie Price,
Jennifer Proffitt, Amy Reynolds,
Sherry Seddon, Katrina Turner,
Mike Welsh, Michelle Young.
Tenth grade - Brnd Anderson,
Lorri Burnem, Mallhew Clark,
James Conde, Danielle Crow. Paul
Davis, Arnie Elliou, Lisa Fackler,
Tracy Fife, Phillip Green, Joan
Hart, Dawn Hockman, Andrea
McDonald, Jason Miller, Joy
O'Brien, Ann Riffle, Michael
Sloan, Jeff Tracy, Angie White,
Marlene Williams. Sarinea Winner,

HBC members attend clinic
Several members from Hope
Baptist Church, Middleport, attended the Scioto Valley Bapust Association Vacation Bible School Clmic held recently at Emmanuel Baptist Church in Jackson.
The clinic was lead by former
Middleport residen ts. Rev. and
Mrs. Clifford Coleman. Rev. Coleman is director of missions in the
association.
The church will conduct an
evening bible school. July 12-IX,
under the dHCCtion of Donna

Grueser wilh her daughter, Tracy,
acting as "cruise assistanL" The
church will offer classes for nurs·
cry age through adults.
Involved in preparation for the
Bible school are David Bryan, pastor; Donna Grueser, daector; Mary
Bryan, Tracy Grueser, Mark
Michael , Demse Michael. Jeannte

Owen, Jim Grucser, Missy Rainey,
Lee Williams, Bron Williams,
Susan Coleman, Jackie Justice,
Emma Ashley, Judy Rtley, Sonny
McClure and RhoJean McClure.

Jason Witherell.
Ninth grade - Sarah Anderson,
Ben Ewing, David Felly, Keuh
Friend, Misty Frum, Kelley
Grueser, Heidi Huffman, Kimberly
Janey, Mandy Jo Jones, Rebecca
Meier, Lisa Montgomery, Shtlo
Moore, Adam Sheets, Brian Snuth,
Brent Smith, Kelly Smith, Jason
Taylor, Stephanie Thomas, David
Toundas, Crystal Vaughan.

Here comes the sun
When sunlight is analyzed with
a spectroscope, it is found to consist of a continuous spectrum com·
posed of all the colors of the rnmbow 10 order, crossed by many
dark lines. The "absorption lines"
are produced by gaseous materials
in the atmosphere of the sun. More
than 60 of the natural terrestrial
cleme nts have been identified in
the sun, all in gaseous form
because of the intense heat of the

Trustees to meet
PORTLAND -The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet
Wcdneday at 7 p.m. at the town shtp building.
Softball tournament
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a men's softball tournament Satur ·
day at 10 a.m . and Sunday at I p.m.
at the Middlepon Ball Park. Regtstration is $60 plus two balls and the

COLIN PIERCE

New arrival
Randy and Beth Pierce
announce the birth of their son,
Colin Randall Pierce, on March 21
at O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
He weighed seven pounds and
II ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Elton
and Joyce Ritchie, Tuppers Plains.
Paternal grandparents are Paul
Pierce, Mason. W.Va., and Janel
Broadwater, New Haven, W.Va.

'

Low tonlgllr in mid -JOs.
S&lt;:i!.nertd frost. Wt.&gt;dnt-sda}', hl)!;h
Jn uppt'r 6lk.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, April 28, 1992

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

A Mulllmedla Inc. Newsoaoer

Planning commission discusses success strategies
COLORING CONTEST WINNERS - Piclured are winners in tbe Easter coloring contest
sponsored by The Daily Sentinel and other local
businesses. Winners in the rour to eight year old
category were Kanndies Lee, age eight; Joel
Clelland, age six; and Jake Venoy, age rour.
Winners in the nine to 12 year old category were

Evan Struble, age I I; Tina Diakomis, a~e 10;
and Angela Chaney, age ll. Fint plact WJDners
received SIS; second plact, $10; and third place,
$5. Front, l-r, are Jake Venoy and Kanndies
Lee. Back, 1-r, are Tina Diakomis and E~ao
Struble. Nol pictured arr Jort Clelland and
Angela Chaney.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was
Barbra Streisand's 50th birthday
pany, but the people doing much of
the celebrating were the 100 or so
kids of her friends.
Producer Jon Peters turned his
12-acre estate into an enchanted
castle Saturday for his former girlfriend's birthday, which was lhe
day before.
Among those who visited "Barbra's Magic Castle" were Tom
Hanks, Goldie Hawn, Nick Nolte,
Meryl Stteep and George Hamilton. Warren Beauy and his wife,
Annette Bening, brought their haby
daughter.
It was the I00 or so youngsters,
offspring of some of Miss
Streisand's not-so-rich -and-famous
friends, who took advantage of the
day.
They roamed the bucolic
grounds, munching on hot dogs,
popcorn and hamburgers . Many
lined up for elephant rides. Others
marveled at Peters' private
menagerie of pigs, horses, goats
and peacocks.

--

OGDEN, Utah (AP) - Actor

Edward James Olmos told hundreds of Hispanic teen-agers to
shun violence and stay in school if
they want to make a difference.
"He's lived our lives and knows
what he's talking abouL Everything
he said is true," Eric Ramirez said
after Olmos received a standing
ovation.
Olmos. who starred in "Miami

Vice" and the movies "Stand and
Deliver" and "American Me,"
spoke at the Ulab Hispanic Unity
and Youth Leadership Confetence
on Saturday.
He said young people in gangs
must have the coornge to drop out
and pursue edlnrioo to end a cycle
of violence !hat has "children
killing childrm for no reason."

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News SlaiT
Secrets lo successful planning
commissions were presented by an
expert in the field during Monday's
quarterly meeting of the Meigs
County Regional Planning Com-

aid prcparnlion for businesses and
collaborative efforu with chambers
of commerce, educaaion and economic development organizations.
The center was initially funded
10 1989 through a line item in the
Ohio Legislature, under the sponffilSSIOn.
sors hip of State Senator Cooper
Dan Cowdry, Director of the Snyder (R-Hillsboro) and former
Alternative Agri-Enterprise Center State Representative Harry Mallot
tn Hillsboro, discussed that com- (D-Mt. Orab), both of whom repremunity's development successes. sented Highland County and the
many of which transpired as a city of Hillsboro.
result of the newly-established cenThe center was designed as a
ter.
collaborntive public/privatc innovaThe center focuses its attention tive program to beco111e self-supon supporting e.isting businesses, porting from financial resources
developing new small businesses, genernted by clientele, industry and
alternatives in agriculture, fmancial business. Operated by the Ohio

Cooperative Extenston Servtce, the
center serves Adams, Brown and

Highland Counties, which Cowdry
described yesterday as being a
"high uncmploymen~ low income"
area
Cowdry stressed that one important step taken by Highland County
was the conversion of the Hillsboro-Area Chamber nf Commerce
to a county-wide group, irx:reasing
membership in three year:; from 80
to 375. (The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce was formed in
1990, combining Middleport and
Pomeroy chambers.)
"The chamber of commerce can
be a very viable entity to economic
dcvelopmen~" Cowdry said. "Col-

An application for membership the Chester United Methodist
was read by Dorothy Ritchte at the ChUJ'Ch on May 8 a1 7:30p.m.
recent meeting of the Chester
"Somebody Else" was read by
Council No. 323, Daughters of Erma Cleland and the meeting
America, held at the hall with closed in regular form. A silent
aa:Lion was held.
Helen Wolf, councilor.
Attending were Betty Roush,
The meelinJ opened in regular
form and the district meeting 01 the Laura Nice, Mary Barringer, Faye
Kirthan, lnzy Newell, Ethel Orr.
Chester Hall was discussed.
It was announced !hal Goldie Elizabeth Hayes, Jean Welsh,
Krnckenburget was home from the E'!P&lt;'ll GraJ11, Erma Cltland, Kathhospital and that Opal Hollon's eryn Baum, Olarloue Grant, Opal
uncle died.
Hollon, Lora Damewood, Doris
Zana Gainer fell and broke ber Grueser, Dorothy Ritchie, Mary
wrist and her grnndson's wife was Holter. Thelma White, Sandy
killed in aceidenL
White, Man:ia Keller, Helen Wolf
A bridal shower will be held at and Manila Dint.

Waiting For The Holiday
Season To Excite Your
Customers?

Why wait? The average amount spenl on gills for moiTL'i on Moeller's
Day and dad~ on Father's Day is higher than the amount spent on their
Christmas gifts. Mother's Day, May 10, and Father's Day, june 21, ll'present
combined retail sales of $16 to $17 billion nationwide. That's a median of $70
being spent for every mom ; $60 spent for every dad.
Newspapers reach adults wil h buying power. Eighl of every ten U.S.
adults, with household incomes of $50,000+, read an average day's
newspaper. Adverlise for Mother's Day and Falher's Day, when· your ads

create excitement, ILWl generate sales: The Daily Sentinel. Call your
advertising account executive today for details, 992-2156.

The Daily Sentinel

RIBBON CUTTING • The Meigs County
Young Democrats have begun selling bedding
plants and banging baskets at 204 East Main
Strett in Pomeroy. A ribbon culling ceremony
on Sunday kicked oiT the rundraiser, and several
candidates and party officials were present. Pictured, 1-r, are Democratic county chairwoman
Mary Hunter; Ian James, representing U.S.

Congress candidate Ted Strickland; County
Treasurer candidate Maureen Hennessy; Slate
Representative Mark Malone; SberiiT James M.
Soulsby; Michelle Jenkins, representing State
Treasurer Mary Ellen Withrow; Caitlin Jenkins; County Commissioner candidate Janet
Howard and YDC President JeiT Thornton. The
shop will remain open through May 10.

GOP chief sees record turnover in House
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The US. House of Representatives
this year will probably record ils
biggest member turnover in the his tory of the modern Congress,
Republican National Cha~rman
Richard Bond said.
Bond offered that assessment as
he JOined Gov. George Voinovich
and Ohio GOP Chairman Robert
Benneu on Monday in opening the
BushQuayle state campaign headquarters.
"The larges t turnover was 1n
1948 when Harry Truman ran
against the Congress, and 118 new
members of Coogress were elected
that year," Bond told a news conference.
He said 54 representatives were
retiring this year, compared wuh a
previOus high of 49 in 1978.
Eleven stales still must draw
new congressiona l districts as a
result of population chan ges
refia:ted m the federal census.
"Wnh a state like New York,
my home state, going to lose three
seats, and a state like Rorida going
to gain four seaLS, it is likely that

r---

we may have another lU or so
member retirements, and upwards
of 80 open seats in the House of
Represcntauves," Bond sai&lt;l.
He said Bush had recci•ed no
coopcra lion from maJority
Democrats . There arc 26X

Democrats 1n the House, 166
Republicans, an&lt;l one 10dependent.
"They have been in control of
Congrc.~s. in the House, for the last
38 years, longer than Fidel Castro
has been in control of Cuba, JUSt 10
gtve you a lillie perspective ,"
Bond said.
Bush travels to Columbus on
Thursday to auend a Council on
Physical Fitness and Spans event,
1o address the Oluo As soc tall on of
Broadcasters, and to auen&lt;l a fund ·
ratsmg dinner for the BushQuayle
campaign and the state )IDly .

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Plans for removmg diseased and
dy10g trees along Pearl Street so
that the sidewalks can be repatred
or replaced were dt scussed at Mon day night's meeting of Middlcpon
Village Council.
Council authorized Mayor Fred
Hoffman to include this are pan of
the application to the Ohio Depanment of Development for funding
of the work under the 1992 Com munity Development Block Grant
Comprehensive Housing/Neighborhood Revitalization Progrnm. The
coS! estimate is $2.500, the mayor
reported.
Adopted at last night's meeting
were two ordinances, both after the
third reading. One pertained to
renewing the contract with Columbus Southern Power for village

Attracting and retaining small
businesses is lhe key to community
development, according to
Cowdry. The center has assisted
two small agriculture-related businesses in lhe area. and is now
investigating the posstbilily of
establishing an aqua-culture mdustry there, which would mass·produce trouL
Community plan
ViJay Gadde, a planning special
1st with Buckeye Hills/Hocktng
Valley Regional Development District, presented information to the
commission concerning the development of a long-term community
plan. The last lime such a plan was
developed was in 1972, and thai

plan "cxptred" m 19'!0.
Gadde brieOy e&gt;plamed the difference between short-term and
long·term plans and the informa uon rC&lt;~uired for ea:h. He also presented cost estimates for long-term
plan preparation.
According to his estimate, such
a document could cosl up to
$25,000. John Lentes, the commission's vice president. suggested
that some of the information and
inventories required for the plan
could be obtained from public uulitics and ol11er sources. as opposed
to a private consultant as suggested
by BH/HVRDD.
The commission 's executive
Continued on pa~t' J

RICHARD BOND

Local briefs-------.

Golf tournament planned
The Big Bend Stemwheeler Association will hold thCJr second
annual sternwheel golf lournament on Thursd;~y at the Meos Coumy
Golf Course.
The fonnat will be a four -person scram ble, wtth prizes for first,
second and third place teams. Entry fcc 1s $45 per person, which
includes lunch, dmner. green fees and cart fee s. Sign·up is 12 noon
on Thursday with a shotgun start at I p.m. Anyone interested m
playmg may contact Joe Clark at 992·2054 or John Thomas at 99266 11.

Class of '67 to assemble
The Eastern High School Class of 1967 will hold a picnic at
Forked Run State Park in Reedsville on June 13 at 12 noon, prior to
the school's alumni banquet and dance.
Those attending should bring a co¥Cred dtsh, a beverage and
their own table service.

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency wtll hold its free
clothing day for low-income persons on April 29 from 9 a.m. to
noon. The agency clothing bank is located in the old schoolhOJL&lt;e
building in Cheshire.

I

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va . (AP)
- A Na ttonal Labor Relatwns
Board Judge has given the Uno ted
Steelworkers and Ravenswood
Alum10um Corp. until June I to
negollate an en&lt;l to their bitter labor
dtsputc before he rules on the case.
Administrative Law Judge
Bernard Ries had been sc heduled
this week to release his ruling on
whether the company engaged in
an unfair labor pl'liCtice by locking
I ,700 union members out of the
Jackson County plant and hmng
more than 1,000 permanent
replacement worl:crs.
The NLRB sided With the union,
and the company appealed. The
NLRB ruling, if upheld, cou ld
force the company to rehire the
unioo worke~.
Ries said Monday he agreed to
the company's request that he delay
his ruling because "the issuance at
this point mi~ht upset the balance
in the bargain mg."
Talks are scheduled to resume
Wednesday in Pittsburgh.
"We're disappointed," said
Charlie McDowell, chairman of
United Steelworl:crs Local 5668 in
/ackson County. "We've waited
strx:c September for this ruling.'·
The Steelworl:crs have been off
the job at Ravenswood Aluminum
smce Nov. I, 1990, when their con-

street lighting. It provides for continuance of the current rate to be in
effect unul such time as the PUCO
grants the company a rate increase.
At that lime the new rate will go
into effect for the remrunder of the
five year contract. Councilman
Paul Gerard again voted "no" on
the basis of the proposed rate
mcrease.
The other ordinance adopted by
council calls for canceling a huild mg permit contract wllh Washmg·
ton County .
A second reading was g1ven to a
village pay ordinance. lt proposed
an increase m the amoont paid to
employees who do not hav e Village-paid insurance from 60 cents
to $ 1 an hour.
Mayor Hoffman reported on the
recen1 funding of projects through
Issue 2. Department of Public

Works . Awarded 1o the vtllage was
a S26,l 00 grant for pavtng on
Pearl, Beech, and part of Hudson
Streel.s. The local share of thai proJCCt is $2,901 Also funded was the
Wheelers Run sewer project the
total cost of which has been set at
$154,784. The grant was for
$139,304, the balance 1o be paJd by
the vtllagc.
Council dtscu ssed the publtc
hearing to be held Monday night at
Cheshtrc regarding the proposed
construcuon of lime barge unloadmg docks and assoc mtcd environmental issues relating to the scrubber mstallation. Mayor Halfman
and several members of council
will attend the heanng.
Mayor Hoffman reponed the
work on the Mtddlcport levee IS
c;.; pee ted to begin wmorrow . that
Cnntinurd on

pa~t'

3

Bush, Clinton heavy favorites today
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Pennsyl•ania's primary today ga•c
lltll Clmton a chance to cement h&lt;S
gnp on the Democratic prcsidcntml
nomination. The front -runner aban doned hJS fight with Jerry Brown to
shape hts !all message in that Crill·
cal general -elecuon bat~eground .
Brown cam paigned aggrc~mcl y
in Pennsylvania bUI never regained
his momentum after a poor show ing in New York three weeks ago.
Polls showed Clm~m was likely to
reap the bulk of the state's 169 con·
vcntion delegates.
Presiden1 Bush was the overwhelming favorite against lagging
challenger Patnck Buchanan 10 the
Republican primary
The White House billed Penn ·

NLRB judge postpones
Ravenswood ruling

CAA free clothing day scheduled
Source 1992 Planln:)k , Newspaper Ad-ver!tsmg Bureau. Inc

laboraiive efforts with planning
commissions and other entities can
bnng success 1o a community."
Nine county chambers of commerce in that area are now involved
in a_f!lulli-c?unty collaborative
coahuon, whtch Cowdry said has
proven to be very beneficial to each
chamber that is involved.
Cowdry outlined the importance
of developing a long-term community development plan, including
land-usc and transportation plans, a
redevelopment area plan (focusing
on industrial sites), and a commuDily service and facility plan, whtch
evaluates community services such
as schools and recreational facilities.

Middleport council seeks grant
for project; adopts two ordinances

D of A to hold bridal shower

CLARIFlCATION
POMEROY - The Suste Abbott
of Shade, cited for DUl 10 Mctgs
County Coun by Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien is not Mrs. Roger (Susie
Soulsby) Abbott of High Street in
Pomeroy.

"Lent, Touchstones of Faith" bers of UMW District team will
was the program studied by mem- present a program at Alfred later
bers of the Alfred United this year.
Gertrude Robinson will purMethodist Women when the group
chase
a can opener for the group to
met recently at the chun;h.
give
to
the chun;h kitchen.
The program was chosen by
The
collection
at the May meetThelma Henderson who was unable
1o attend because of family illness. ing will be given to Sine-Cern.
Mrs. Parker reviewed a
All members present took part in
reading and discussion. Each Response nrticle, "South African
received a stone as a symbol of Children in Crisis." There many
faith and recounted an experience bla:k children tive in poverty with
little chance for educauon.
of prayer answered.
During the social hour Mrs.
The business meeting opened
with prayer by Char lotte Van Parker served ice cream, strawberMeter and group s10g10g of "Rock ries, cookies and soft drinks 1o Aoof Ages." Florence Spencer was rence Spencer, Osie Follrod, Nina
pianisl Officers repons were given Robinson, Martha Poole, Sarah
Caldwell, Gertrude Robinson and
and 42 sick calls were reported.
Charloue
Van Meter.
Nellie Parker presided and read
The next meeting will be May
a letter from Bernice Carpenter,
UMW District Shepherdess for 19 at the church with Mrs. Van
Alfred UMW. She and other mem- Meter as hostess and Mrs. Poole as
program leader.

'

5-S

Vol. 42, No. 255

deadline is Thursday. Register by
cal ling 992-7424, 992-5328 or 9925303. The event is sponsored by
the Bradbury Elementary PTO.

Alfred UM Women meet

'

Copyrlghled 1992

sun.

Support meeting
HUNTINGTON - There will be
a meeting of stroke survivors and
their families on May 12 at4JO
p.m. at the American Hospital for
Rehabilitation 6900 W. Country
Club Drive in Huntington, W.Va.
Call (304) 733-1060 for further
information.

Cards:
4-H- 7-C· 7-D ·

Page 6

Meigs announcements
Fishing derby planned
RACINE - The Racine Gun
Club is having a fishing derby May
3 beginning in the morning and
lasting until I p.m. Members may
hring family and guest and prizes
will be passed out lo the children.
Further mformation may be
obtained by contaCting James Ferrell.

Pick 3: 997

Pick 4: 3704

playoffs
continue

----Names
in
the
news--Spartan Spring Fling slated May 16
The Third Annual Spartan
Spnng Fling at Alexander High
School in Albany will be May 16.
The event will feature the music
of The Fabulous Flashba:ks.
The gate will open at 4 p.m. for
a fifties and sixties style cruise-in
w1th feature entertainment to begin
at 7:30 p.m. Dash plaques will be
presented to the first 50 cars and
People's ChoiCe Award wtll be
presented.
Food and beverages will be

Ohio Lottery•

tract c.xpircd . The union says Its
members were locked out, while
the company contends the umon 1s
on srrikc.
The union and company a,;reed
to resume negoual.ions after a new
Ravenswood Aluminum board of
dlreclors voted last week to remove
R. Em mell Boyle as chairman and
Chief CXCCUtJVe officer.
On Monday. the company
named 40-year Industry veteran
William R. Hampshire as presidenL
He replaces Don Worllcdge, who
last week announced his retirement
effective this Thursday.
Hampshire is an Ohio State Uni versity graduate who worked at
Ravenswood, when it was owned
by Kaiser Aluminum Corp., from
196110 1964.
He was president and chief
executive officer of Howmet Aluminum Corp. from 1982 to 1984,
wben he retired. He previously was
Howmet's vice president in charge
of rolling and fabrication operalions from 197llo 1982.
He also has managed aluminum
facilities for Martin Marietta Corp.
in Lewispon, Ky., and for Howmet
in Lancaster, Pa.
Ravenswood Aluminum ranks
ninth among the nauon's 13th alu minum producers.

sylvanta as the event that would
secure Bush's renomination, even
though he won't have the 1.105
required delegates until afler state
conventions this weekend in Maine
an&lt;l Wyoming.
A low turnout was predtcted ,
dcsptte heated Senate and congres ·
sional primanes that would show
the depth of voter frustrauon wuh
Washington . The Clarence
Thomas-Anita Hill showdown
loomed large over the re -election
campaign of Republican Sen. Arlen
Specter, a member of the Senate
Judiciary Commmee that oversaw
heanngs on Thomas' nomtnauon to
the Supreme Coun.
Underdog Lynn Yeakel was m a
surpris in gly light ra ce wnh Lt
Gov. Mark Singcl for !he Demo·
cra lic senatonal oommation . She
focused less on Singe! than on
Spc.cter and hts confrontations with
Hill during the Thomas hearings.
Specter. a supporter of abonmn
nghiS, faced a pnmary challenge
from an abortion opponent, state
Rep. Steve Frcind, but was lavorcd
tO Win .

Heading into today's vo11ng,
Clinton had 1,388 of the 2,145 dcl cg:ucs he needs to secure Ule nomJ nauon . Brown had 271, accordmg
to The Associated Pre.o;s tally.
Clinton ignored Brown and tried
out hts fall themes, uymg to tap the
economi c anxiety in the strugglmg
Sleet and coal towns. He promised
a plan to mcrease U.S. competitiveness and a national heallh care

plan. He painted Bush as a laJSSczfaire leader out of touch with ordi nary Americans but eager 1o do the
biddmg of hts wealthy fnends.
''We have lost the econom 1c
leadership that when I was a chtld
was taken fur granted." Clin10n
told a rally outstde Philadelphia
Coty Hall on Monday.
· 'Thc1r narrow, narrow version
of what a president should do will
nm prevail," Clinton sa id of
RepubhG~n s. "I do not prumtse 1o
solve all the problems of thts coun try in four years because they did
not de¥Ciop m foor yeom .... But I
wtll g"c you what l had as a lit~e
boy : the courngc 10 believe tomor ·
row will be better than loday. That
IS the hea rt of the American
dream.··
As Clinton focused on Bush, a
n&lt;' w poll showed the prestdenJ
alic:Kl, and likely mdepcndent can dodate Ro" Perot drawmg equally
from hoth candidates.
The ABC News-Washington
Post poll showed Hu sh leadtng
Cltnton. 49 percent 10 42 percent
with a ].5 percentage pomt margm
of error. Wuh Pcrol m the mix
Bush had 3X percent, to Clinton·;
31 perc em and Per01 's 27 percent,
accordmg to the Apnl 22-26 survey
of 1,003 adults.
A separate Los Angeles Times
poll showed that Perot and Bush
would run a dead heat m Caltfornia
1f the general electwn were held
loday, w1th Chnton close behmd.

Miller urges engineers
to approve permits
Saying that the future of both
the Gavin Power Plant and the jobs
of I ,200 Ohio coal miners is his
first priority, Congressman
Clarence Miller (R-Lancaster) has
urged the U.S. Army Corps of
Engi neers lo approve permits
essential to the installation of a
scrubber at Gavin "without delay."
"It IS imperative," Miller said in
a letter to the Corps, "that the per.
mits bemg sought by Ohio Power
for the scrubber option a1 Gavin be
given the favorable attention they
need and the miners deserve."
Ohio Power has applied to the

Corps for perrnots 1o locate a barge
unloading dock at Gav10 to develop
an environmentally-safe waste disposal site.
Miller said the May 4 public
hearing on the permits "is obviOusly tmportant to the scrubber option
and the future of the planL" Miller
urged the Corps to focus on the
permit applications and put their
approval on "a fast track."
The Corps hearing will begin at
7 p.m. on May 4 and will be held at
the Cheshire-Kyger Elementary
School in Cheshire.

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