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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 4, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Antique -steam and gas engine show set for May 9, 10

Ohio Lotterv•

Eastern
defeats
North Gallia

What are you doing May 9
and 10'1 Take a stroll down
memory lane at the West Virginia State Farm Museum Antique Steam and Gas Engine
Show.
The museum is located six
miles north of Point Pleasant on
RL 62.

- - - - --

-

Pick 3: 586
Pick 4: 0252

Low tonight in upper 30s.
Par! I)· cloud j . \'\' erlnr '&gt; d aJ , high

Page 4

near- 60.

Just listen close and you can
hear the pun pun of the engines
running - the whistle of the
steam engine and see the puffs
of smoke in the air.
Old timers and not so old
timers will be set up and ready
to demonstnllc their machines
and answer questions for you.
Maybe your grandpa or greatgrandpa used engines such as
these. Bring the lit~e ones and
let them see a pan of history.
Unless the young gcncrauon
slart an interest in this antique
machinery, this could be the end
of something good.
There will he a nea market,
the old shops, such as the blacksmith, printing shop, one-room
schoolhouse, and country store
will all be open for viewing.
LasL but certainly not least...
food. There will be cornbread
and beans, hotdogs, coffee, soft
drinks and desserts.
Church service will be held
Sunday morning at the museum

GRINDING CORN MEAL - Meadows stone bohr grist mill
grinding corn meal, owned and operated by Jennings Blllnkinship.

Vol. 43, No. 2

Copyrighted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 5, 1992

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
1927 ECONOMY ENGINE · This is a 1927 Economy (Sears Roebuck) I cyl B H.P. gasoline engine. It 'll'liS used to grind rom and wheat ror animal reed in the late 20's through the 40's by T?m
Grube's grandratber. II is still used to power an 8-inch steel buhr mill grinding corn at the engme
shows.

Story and photographs by Tom Grube
at 9 a.m. There will also be free
daily drawings both days, as
well as tractor parades. There is
no admission charge.

On dean's list
POMEROY - Four
Meigs
Countians made the dean's list for
th e winter quarter at Ohio State
University.
The undergraduate students
who achieved high academic averages for their quaner's worl&lt; were
Carol Lynn Fisher, Racine, who
made a 4.0, Andrea leigh Cleland,
Lo ng Bottom, Jared Andrew
She ets, Pomeroy, and David
Eugene Rice , Reedsville, who had
a grade point average of at least 3.5
and were enrolled for at least 12
credit hours.

It was unanimous.
The more than 35 speakers at a
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
public hearing last night all supported American Electric Power's
decision to install scrubbers at the
Ge nera l James M. Gavin Electric
Generating Plant and urged th e
U.S. Army Corps of Eng meers to
AEP's permit application to build a
lime-barge unloading facility and a
landfill, both critical to installation
of the flue -gas scrubbers.
More than I ,200 people, including dozens of miners wearing hard
hats and carrying signs. crowded

If You're Thinking
About Improving Your Home,
Here's Some Expert Advice.

into Meigs High School Monday
night to listen to testimony.
Co rrectly anticipating a large
crowd , the Corps Friday moved the
hearing from the Cheshire-Kygcr
Elementary School in Cheshire to
the Meig s High School in
Pomeroy, whi ch fea tures more
parking and a larger capacity gym na~ium.

Environmental groups such as
the Sierra Club, largely responsible
for requiring the public hearing, did
not tesufy at the hearing and are
expected to submit letters of tes ti mony to the Corps. When the letters become available, Ohio Valley
Publishing will publish them.

TO LAN()FLLL

---&lt;•)--SWITCH

COAL

DEAN:

Rock 'n' Roll
was king
when this
txmgalow
was built m
the 50s.

But ito;;
window air

SCRUB8£R
SOliO WASTI

CONV£VOO

conditiooer
isn't so cool
today.

to Carne Kennedy, Jackie Hildebrande, Joann McLain, Brenda
Neutzting, Fran Fry, Sara Collums,
Abbey Stratton, Vinas lee, Mildred Wells, Grace Warner , Edna
Triplett, Libby Fisher, Denver
Rice, Alice Mills, Louise Bearhs,
Shelly Sinclair, Donna Byer ,
Rachel Cundiff. Fannie Ailshire,
Jan Lavender, Helen Hill, Marabel
Frecker, Betty Sayre. Eula Jeffers,
Clara Burris.
Mildred Fry, Alice Wamsley ,
Esther Metcalf, Opal Tyree, Grace
Welch, Marcella Chapman, Helen

gins, social se rvic es dire ctor,
presided at the refreshment table.
Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas presented certificates of
appreciation to the group which
included not only members of the
Women 's Auxiliary of the hospital
but volunteers who work in various
capacities of the Skilled Nursing
Facility. Rhonda Dailey, RN,
BSN, director of nursing, inv!led
all volunteers to become a part of
the Auxiliary group and introduced
lucas.
Cenificates of appreciation went

.•

y~

.

'

I

I

SERVICE PINS - Hospital Administrator
Sco tt Lucas presents se rvice pins to several
members or the Women' s Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital during the observance or

Volunteer Week. From the lcf't are Rose Deem,

500 hours; Sara Cullums and Abbey Stratton,
each 1,000 hours, and Helen Hill, 3,000 hours.

\

Fisher, Mamie Buckley, Virginia
Walton , Josephine Smith, Gamet
Ervine, Willogene Ohlinger, Laura
Cozart, Sue Sanders, Rose Deem,
Bonnie Conde, Mildred Hudson,
Jessie White, Wanda Wolfe, Mae
Weber, Doug Circle, Jo Ann Taylor, Mary Fry, Faye Knapp, _the
Rev. Father Walter Heinz, Vu-gmta
Hendricks, Paul Robinson, Alice
Robinson, Sarah Williamson, Amy
Jones, Jeaneae Lawrence, Marcia
Wells, Juanita Roush, Marcella
Chapman, Eloise Robinson, Sara
Voss, Jane Brown, Eloise Matson
and Geraldine Cleland.
Lucas then presented 50 hour
certificates to Women's Auxiliary
members, Wanda Wolfe and Shelly
Sinclair. Pins for 100 hours of service with the Auxiliary went to
Vinas Lee, Jane Brown and Eloise
Matson . A 500 hour pin was
awarded to Rose Deem w1th I ,000
hour pins going to Auxiliary members, Abbey Straaon and Sara Cullums. Helen Hill was presented her
3,000 hour Auxiliary service pin.
Special plaques were presented
by Lucas to Auxiliary members,
Mara bel Frecker, 4, 932 hours;
Louise Bearhs, a plaque in recognition of her being the only charter
member of the Auxiliary, and to
Jessie White, Auxiliary president,
for 12,000 hours. Mrs. White was
also presented an ann bouquet of
spring flowers and was given a
standing ovation by the volunteers.
She ha-; worked witll the Auxiliary
some 23 years. A plaque for 4,700
hours of Auxiliary service was sent
to Betty Sayre of Racine.
On behalf of the Auxiliary ,
Libby Fisher, Auxiliary vice-presidenL presented a gift certificate to
Bob Hoeflich, the hospit.al' s public
relations director, in appreciation
for his work With the Auxiliary.

Golf league to
hold meeting
The Ladies Golf League of
Riverside Golf Club announces the
beginning of the Ladies Tuesday
Afternoon League starting May 5
at 4:30 p.m . Ladies Day will be
held Wednesday a1 9 a.m. with tee·
off 81 9:30 a.m. AU ladies welcome
Wednesday.
PLAQUES • These three members or the
Auxiliary at Vetenuu Memorial HO&amp;plta.l r~eive
special personalized plaques In apprec1atton or
their work during Volunteer Week at the hospital. Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas p~e­
sents the plaques to: (from the left) Loutse
Bearbs the only Auxiliary charter member;

'

•

•

Marabel Frecker, 4,93l hours
Jessie While, Auxiliary President, 12,000 bours.
Mrs. While wu also presented an arm bouquet
or spring Rowen. A personalized plaque was
sent to Belly Sayre Ia apprecialloa for 4,700
hours or service.

Meeting planned
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the township hall at Rock
Springs.

SUSANNE:

DEAN:

incrca.~

The high-

To

THICKE).tiNG
TANKS

FACILITY
SOLOS

efficiency
clermc heal
pump ts a
rentral31r

thi s home\
value and
comfon.the
mos1energy effiCient

SCRU88E R A8SOR8E:R

, r.

VfSSHS AND STACKS

APRil 1M2

conditioner.

syslcm 1s

Artist's rendition of the Gavin Plant after the installation of scrubbers

betng
mstallcd.

Ohio second in U.S. in use of coal
DEAN:
h also works

with your
exisung
furnace.
making it
more efficient
1fl

SUSANNE:

W!niCr.

DEAN :

So year-round
we'll he
saving money
and resources
together.

Now lhat 's

SMART

CINC INNATI (A P) - A coal
industry trade association says tltat
each year, Ohio produces about 33
million tons of coal worth nearl y
$ 1 billion. But the state spe nds
nearly th ni much to imrort low-sul fur coul to feed lls need for elec tricity.
Ohio is the nation' s secon dlargest consumer of cool, according
to the Am erican Mining Congress.
Ninety perce nt of the electricity
generated tn Ohio come s from
coo l-fired boilers, compared w1th a
national average of 55 percent. ·
That's why clean coal technology is especially important to Ohio,
sa id th e AMC's president , John
Knebe l. The group, whtch includes
130 mine owners and 220 manufacturing and engineering companies, end s its two-day annual con-

vcnl ion lOday in CiJKi nnati .

AMC Chairman Allen Born said
Monday thai 1992 could be a ncarrecord year for the U.S. coal industry, even though American compani es are disadvantaged beca use of
hi gh environmental costs and the
subsidies foretgn governments give
their mines.

sa td.
Born sai d ex pons account for II
percent of U.S. coal production .
Ca nada , Japan and Italy are the
largest foreign mark ets , but he said
Third World countncs and eastern
Europe will increase in importance
as purchasers of U.S. coal.
He cited U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency estimates that
by the year 2000, government regulations could cost U.S . coal compani es and the publ ic $280 billion a
year.

" We expec t production to pick
up luicr this year and we expect to
come close to 1990' s record production level of about I billion
Ions," Bom said.
The demand for electricity will
" Th is explos ion of environmentire the demand for cool throughout tal reg ulations has eroded tile comthe world, he sa id.
petitiveness of U.S. industri es in
"Si nce coal ha s ca ptured so the world marketpl ace," Born sa1d .
much of thi s mark et, this growth "Thi s has been especially true for
alone is expected to increase the U.S. minin g industry , which
demand for about 1.5 percent annu - has con tinuously lost world market
ally during ihe nc.t decade," he share. "
Born said foreign competitors
get unfair support from their govern ments.
' ·A lack of tough environmental
rules in some countries provides a
camouflaged subsidy to their min The contract for a resurfacing project in Meigs Coumy has bee n
ers, a subsidy that's often in addi awarded by the Ohio Deparunent of Transporation .
lion 10 overt subsidies they proTom Mayle &amp; Sons Construction of B~ett and Shelly Co. of
vide," he said.
Thornvill e have received the $177,579 contract for repaving of U.S.
Route 33 through Pomeroy. The project is expected to be com pleted
by the end of Augu st.
The bid award is part of $31.5 million in htghway projects
rccemly awarded by ODOT.

Local briefs----,

ODOT awards repaving project

For year-round comfort, take the advice of
these professionals. A high-efficiency elecbic heat
pump is a central air conditioner in the summer.
Plus, it heats your home so efficiently in the winter
that you may save enough on heating to
practically pay for summer cooling.
That's advice you can feel good about.

Get A Heat Pump. It Cools.

.........
~OHIO

Let's press on." Miller said.
Miller also asked the Corps to
assure that the Meigs High School
heanng will be the only hearin g on
the permits and asked the Corps 10
focus stri ctly on the provisions of
th e permits being sought by AEP.
"Finally, and most important , I
urge you to listen carefully and
co nsideratel y to th e min ers who
work at So uth ern Ohio Coal, "
Miller said. "They wi ll lell you 1ha1
we can bum southem Ohto coal in
Ohw. Drotcc t jobs and clean up the
air. .. and they are right, absolutely
nght. Ltsten to their families... listen to the people who depend uprn
coal .. . listen Ill the smcerny of whai

I hey

arc s.aymg."

Congres sma n Bob McEwen
said , 111 support of 1he sc rubber.;,
"ihc queslion before us tonight is
wd l we have clean air with jobs, or
clea n air without JObs' That is the
dcp sion the Corp s will make."
McE we n ur ged th e Co rps to
4U1ckly issue ihe pcrrnil&lt;.
A reprcscntali ve from Congressman Bob WtSc's (W.V a.) offi ce
read a lcllcr from the congressman
also urging the Corps to approve
the pcrmiL'i .

1\'ancy Hollister, from the Governor's Offic e of Appalachta, said
Oht o Governor George V.
Vo inov ic h be ltc ves the Co rps

granttng th e pcrmtts ts m the best
publtc mtcrcsl.
Other ofkials ask ing tl te Corps
to approve th e permits were State
Senator Jan Michael Long (D-Ctrcl cv tll e) , State Rep rescn 1a1ive
Mary Abel (D-Aih cns) and Mark
A. Malone (D-Sou th Pom1).
Roc ky Black, a srokesman for
the Public U~ lil ies Com mission of
Ohio, drew cheers when he said the
PUCO be lieve s the Corps should
not require an cnvtronmc ntal
impact study - which could lead
to a delay cffccllvcly killin g th e
sc rubbers - and should gran! AEP
the requ ested pcrm ns.
Continued on page 3

Officials describe makeup
of proposed scrubber system

GENERAL JAMES M. GAVIN PLANT
FGD RETROFIT PROJECT

Dean Johmon &amp; Susanne El(li.
hosts nf the HOMETIME' television series.

SUSANNE:

Those who did testify wer e
unanimous in their s upporl for
AEP's permit application and for
AEP' s decision to install the scrubbers. Most of the speakers con demned , or at least criticilcd, the
Sierra Club and other environmental organizations.
Two U.S . congressmen from
Ohio and a sprkesman for Congre ssman Bob Wise from Wes t
Virginia testified at the hearing.
Co ngressman Clarence Miller
urged the Corps to approve the permits without delay, without compromise, without strings attached.
"The application has been under
internal Corps review for months .

VMH volunteers honored; awards presented
POMEROY - Over 60 volunteer
work ers at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and its Skilled Nursing
Fa cil ily were honored in cere mom es held Thlmday as a pan of
Nati onal Volumeer Week.
The event opened with a social
hour during whtch lime a variety of
finger foods were served to the
over 60 volunteer workers. Held in
1hc Skil led Nursing Facility dining
room, members of the facility's
staff, Kathy Varcale, activities
dtre&lt; lor, Sharon Vickers, assistant
acuviucs direc tor, and Lorene Gog-

1 Section , 10 Page5 25 cents
A Multim edia In c. Newsoaoer

Support unanimous for sCrubbers at Gavin

QuestJons can be directed to
Tom Grube, Plcsident of the
West Virginia Antique Steam
and Gas Engine Association,
446-2103.

SAW MILL. Tbis "saw mill" was shown at the AplJie engine show in 1983. Earl Gibson is pictured at the control. Standing behind bim is M.E. Grube, builder, owner, operator. It was powered by
a steam engine.

1992

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
"What's all the fuss about? "
That's a que stion probably
asked by many of the nearly I ,200
people who attended last night 's
U.S. Army Co rp s of Engineers
public hearing in the Meigs High
Schoo l gym at Rock Springs.
Those who tes tified on Ameri can Electric Power's scrubber proposal obviously understood th e
econo mic importance of sc rubber
in stallation - but mo st probably
were not aware of what makes up a
sc rubber system.
Scrubbers e.plained
The flue gas desu lfurization syslcm (FGD) would be in stalled on
1wo existing 1300 megawatt generating units at the plant. What has
caused much of the furor with The
Sierra Club arc two auxiliary facilities - a lime barge unloader/doc k
and a 383-acre landfill to accept
scru bber solid was te from the plant.
Prior to publi c te stimony las t
night, Jim Howard of AEP Serv ice
Corporation outlined the scrubbers
and related fac tltu cs through a slide
presentation.
The project 's river facililics
would cons1st of an up stream

SHOWING SOLIDARITY - Union members, representing
severa l different unions , showed up at la st night's U.S. Army
Corp .&lt; of Engineers public hearing at Mrigs liigh School in
Pomeroy 10 show their support for South1•rn Ohio Coa l Company
miners and for Al!terican Electric Power's quest to inslall scrubbers at the l.avin power plant in C hrshire. More lhan 1,200 people
packed the high school auditorium in what appeared to be unani mous support ror A.EP scrubber proposal. (OVP photo by Jim
Freeman)
'·

extension of the plant' s existing
mooring dock to accommodate a
I nn e barge unloadcr, a permanent
material-unloading faciltty to
receive construcUon materials and
plan! equipment and ten new concrete-ca pped mooring ce ll s to be
placed at the dock to fa cilitate
equipment unloading.
Up to six lime barges could be
moored (two long by three wtde)
up strea m but would not protrude
into the river any more than existing barges at the site.
Construction of an overland
co nveyor for the lime material
would span 880 feet of wetlands.
Concrete foundations for the conveyor supports would permancn~y
till _Q7 acres of wetlands.
Development of the landfill (2 5
miles from the Gavin compl ex )
would entail tilling in 13.8 acres of
juri sdictional waters of th e U.S .
govcmmcnL 13 acres of which arc
classified as wetlands. Those wetland s, according to Howard , arc
located some stx miles from the
Gavin plant.
AEP contends that any w e~ands
to be fuled are either man -made or
influenced by human activities.
SUPPORTINI. SCRUilllERS- Meigs Co unty Chamber of
Some are very acidic strip -mine
Commerce
Di rec tor Paula Thacker te stified last night in su pport
ponds resulting from unreclaim ed
of
sc
rubbers
at the Gavin PlanL Thacker emph as ized the imporstrip mine operations of 30 years
ago. According to Howard, all wet- ta nce of coal-mining j obs to Meigs Co unt y. (Sentinel photo by
llrian Reed)
Continued on page J

Ravenswood on 'brink of financial ruin'

Council to readvertise fuel bids
Members of Pomeroy Village Council met in an abbreviated session on Monday evening prior to attending the public hearing on
scrubbers al the General James M. Gavin PlanL
Council agreed lo readvertise for fuel bids. Bids were received
from BP Oil and Ashland Otl, but the btds dtd not spectfy a pnre
for the higher octane fuel used by the village.
It was announced that Todd Smith was hired as a pan-time dispatcher rill- the police depanm ent and Kathy Hysell , the new village
clerk was introduced.
The mayor's report of fine s co llected was approved in the
amount of $5,579.33.
A roning appeals board meeting was set for Thursday evening.
Present at the meeting were Mayor Bruce J. Reed, Clerk Brenda
Morris, and council members Scott Dillon, John William Blaettnar,
Betty Baronick, Thomas Werry and Larry Wehrung, president.

'

••

I

CHARL ES TON, W.Va. (AP)
- An IS -month campaign by outof-work Steelworkers again st
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. has
brought the company to its knees,
according to maJority owners and
board members.
But company officials said
Monday they remain hopcful.
Ravenswood Aluminum is losing customers and suppliers
because of the campaign, majority
owners and board members said in
docum ents filed in a Delaware
Court.

"Once a healthy and profitable
company is now in default on its
bank credit facility , and will be

unable to pay a $71 million obligation when it comes due on June 5,"
the documents said.
Ravenswood Aluminum , one of
the nation's top 10 alumin urn mak ers, has hired more than 1,000
workers 10 replace I ,700 Steel workers whose contract expired
Nov. I, 1990.
Ravenswood officials say th e
workers, members of United Steelworkers Local 5668, walked out.
The Steelworkers say they were
locked out.
The documcnt1 said the company 's condition "is precarious and
worsening, in significant part as a
result of RAC's ongomg labor dis-

pu tc."
The
documen ts
show
Rave nswood's sa les dropped to
$49 1 mtllion la st year from $701
million in 1989. The company ha.s
no retamed earning s or bank credtt
availab le, according to the documents.
Uni ted Stcelworlcers spokesman
Gary Hubbard said the company's
flnanctal problems helped reopen
negotiations last week. They were
the fi rst talks since July 1991.
"The only way the company
su rvi vcs at thi s point is if we get
our members' JObs back," he said.
" We are still encouraged by the
efforts of the (current) management

to reach an ag reeme nt. "
The papers, whtch were filed
April 14 tn Chancery Court, were
unsealed Frid ay. They sought th e
o uster of R. Emmett Boyle, who
was fired shonl y th erea fter as
chairman and ch ief cxecuuvc officer.
Lmc Monday , the company said
its new management team is opti.
mistJc.
" The curre nt cred it ag reement
remai ns in place and active disr usston s to ex lend it were part of a
meeting last week w!th the company's bank gro up, "
said
Ravenswood spokesman Pat Gallagher

,,

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslsiJmt Publlshor/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genoral M""ager

LETffiRS OF OPINION ""' welcome. They should be less than 300
words All letters are subject to editrng and mu5t be 11gned w1tb name,
addre" and telepbone number. No unSigned !etten will be publi&lt;bed. Lettm

should be m good taste, addresoing i&lt;suea, not personalities .

State school board
gets new look

Tuesday, May s, 1992
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, May 5, 1992

tactiCS, and that he should get on
board or get his own tram.
Dear Curm ud geon Ha ve yo u
heard about that ban dll In Los

Joseph Spear

Angeles who held up stores by
telling clerks he had AID S and
brandishing a syn ngc that he
clmmed was filled wnh h•s blood?
- Catherine in Culver Cily.
Dear CNCC: Yes. It wa s an
ccne coincidence because I was
plannmg to make my fortune by
wnung a cnme novel fcatunng preCisely such a character. Now I'm
thmking of creating a protagonist
who robs health -food stores "' San
FranciSco by threatenin g to stu If
cheese dog s do~~&lt;n hiS VICiims '
that h1s ovcrs11.cd ego dcLracts from throal5.
his otherwise chrum1ng personal1ty ,
Dear Curmudgeon: I can 't ge t
that they arc weary of h1s d1vJ s1vc over the •ncrccliblc story of Sergei

Knkalev, the Sov•ct cosmonaut
who was launched mto spa ce on
May 18 last year. boarded the M1r
space statiOn , and then found him self stranded by the d• ssoluuon of
the empire - mclud•ng the space
agency that was mon•tonng h1 s
mission. He fmally got down, but
he missed the rcvolullon. He went
up a social lSI, came down a democrat.- Dumbfounded in Dallas_
Dear Dumblounded. I thmk you
have just found the an swer to th e
Democrats' dilemma Inv 1te Jesse
Jackson on a space nde and don · t
let him land unlll December - at
wh1ch time, given th e Knkal cv
precedent, he co uld be a real
Democrat.
Dear Curmudgeon : Former
Major League outfielder Amos Ot1s
recently said he should be 111 th e
hall of shame beca use he used a
"corked" bat about half the time
during his 17-ycar career. What do
you think of that? - Pained 1n

MI CH

•

Peo na
Dear Pdtn cd: Put an astcnsk on
his pb) in g card to denote th at h1s

H. ROSS·

hun

of bc1ng

becau se he wouldn't put h• s scat•n
~ n upr1ght poslllOil . Turns ou l he
had been .u1mctl by hiS phy Sician
b cc ~lU SC

ol l11p

Letters to the editor

South-Central Ohio
Tomght, partly cloudy and cold.
Low 1n the upper 30s. Wedn esday,
partly cloudy with a slight chance
of showers. High again ncar 60.
Chance of ram 30 percent.
Extended forecast:

lew \\.L'cks

t~go

thJt Maryl.md Go v

William DonCIItl Sc haci'cr' s black
Lillr,lltor h.1tl rcccr~ · c d S600 worU1
;J[

LlX payc r

ex pense. I he JUStlfi C III Oil ' rh c
L.Hlll lC lull lll'l.' ll lr.llll Cd \J y the S[.llC

puli\.L ;11Hl Wd \ th erefore a state
pul1 cc dl l_L: \\'lu t tr:un1ng lutl the
L.1h IL1d ' S.11d th e rct1rc d oi! Jccr
\\. liU h.Jd dll i iC lhL' jllb ' ' J lau ~ ht
h1rn lhJt 10 pee 111thc ll ou"c " ~
1C i1'!'! 2
NLWSP ,\PER
E~ fERPIHSI : \SSN_

A sincere thanks!

almost word -for-word th e sam e as o rga ni z~ll 1 0n lx: !JC\ CS Vamk r J.1gt 's
the Dcmocral5' ad, just substllulln g polJIJ c;l l dut1 cs arc prcvent1ng lnm
rrom dfCCl i \ Ciy rcprcsc nlln g th e
Gcphardt for Gmgnch.
For mstan cc, the Democ rats' Jd dtstnct He· beli eves th.1t vot ers arc
asks why G mgnch can' t count , not - gro 1\'1n g so res e ntful of Vand er
lllg that lie on g1nally sa1d he had L1 ~ t \ "h yJllllfi"J" th.lt th ey r111 ght
wnltcn only three bad House bank well turn to .1 Dc111 0C r.ll 111 Nu\ CITI checks wh en th e actually number btr
Th e l h.1rgl: nl h y [X llf i'-.Y gm w ~
was 22. The RcpubiJCan ad wonou
t
l l ! V:11 1Lkr J .1 ~t\ LOil l ln ucd ;., up·
ders wh y Gephardt can 't co unt. It
notes th .ll he too or1 g1nally sa1d he port of fellu" ~ I !C ho g'"' GOP Rep
h'lll writ ten onl y three bad chec ks B\lb DJ\ 1\ The. Eth1cs Cnm m lll l'C
rr purt h.1d O;J\ IS a s unc ol th e
when tile actu,il number was 2H.
\\or'&gt; l h.ul-clll'Lk ;tbu scrs, w1t h K7X

devel opments of the post-·' Rubber -

0\Ti l h cl!l\

gJtc" pohtJ C:ti \CC nc hao;; oc c urrcd
111 M1 ch1 g.w, l On cc rnJn g a top

Hop 1s tr ) Ill ); tu bllli LI support
for l&lt; e pu b l ~e :lll ' ta te Se n Wdli.un

R c publ~ean

11ho wa s not a checkboun ce r. Rep. Guy Y-tnclcr Ja gt

Van Rq,:c nlllort c r

f1rst G1mc to Co n g 1 c ~ s 111 1954 , and

Vander Jagt 111 th e GOP pnm.tr)
Nat•on ,II p,lrt ) off•co,ds .trc pl.1ymg

SIOna l Comm1\lcc.

No one ll.ls been more poln•cal
ahont the li on'" bank scand.il

u"'"

V.:md cr J:1gt From the very f1r st, he

l 11 ll ic~ll c n gc

down the- c h,l : icfl )_~l' , but tlh·y havr.:
bc~,.· n concc rned enough to c,1ll Hop
and plc,J d \\ 1th hun to ~lb.Hld o n h1s

clfort
t\h &lt;.,o \ut-:1} :'&lt;uiHHl y 1s ru nnm g
for l iClJh.' ll,lll t gm crno r of th e ~ Lltc

ha s bee n on every teleVI sio n

ot II'.I siHn gton Mr Nobody. who

sc ree n, Jccusmg the DcmocrJLfl of
every co m c J v &lt;~bl c sort of mJ smJn-

.'&gt; .t ys h1s l n c n d ~ call s h1rn "A b,"
w; 1\ kn lh~n d ') U.l\Hl Pnwcr;; until

agc mcnt and unplonng voters to
throw out th e Democr ats and to
govc th l· GOP w ntrol of the House
Mos t Democra ts on th e Hill

he lcg,ill y ch Cin gctl hiS

Dece mbe r 111 prcp.Lrat1on for \ \,lrt ·
111g a poll tiL ell CJr ~,.·cr

What copynght IS posSibly
being infr~n gcd upon '' An ,I nti Newt G mgri ch aiiJck ad produced
by the DemocratiC Congrcs\lon.d

a cc ept tl1.1t V,JrHl c r J:lgt 1s JUSt

ch;1 ngc w.1 s a goocl1dca bc~ .tu sc he

do1ng Ill ' NRCC JOb But

ill S

w1ll be on the ballot as an outlet for

c !!urt s lti' L' :Jn t.:c rL:U a \ Cr y surpn s-

voters who want to vcntthc1r fru s-

•ng group - tl• c loctl GOP leadcr-

Campat gn ComnHllCC and runn1ng
on Gcorg 1a r.1d1o station s.

shl[1 1n V,m!h r l.l g t '-; home dJ stm t.

uation.
(C ) l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

lcucr from hts l awyers warnmg that

if they run a Republican -produced
ant1 -Gephardt comm ercial , th ey
might be subject to l•bcl act •o n 01
they might be guilt) of co pynglit
mfnngcmcnt.

Th e new Repu bli can ad IS

G lenn ll op , ch;1Hrn an ol tb c

Ninth DIS IC!l t

1~1 r c h• g a n )

cor

r~a n • e

last

lie s.1 ys he thou ght th e n,tmc

Ohio coal, Ohio jobs

Berry's World

After months of speculauon and
debate n seems that we m So uthern
Oh1o arc one step doscr to assunng
th :.J l our cco nom1 c future 1s not

traded for forc•gn profits and foreign fueL l ann speak•ng of course
of the decision by Amencan Electri c Power (AEP) to scrub th e

Sen.]an M. Long
uavm Power plant •n Cheshire.
This past week R1chard Dis brow, AEP Chanman , Indi cated
that Amcr1 can Elcctnc Power
wou ld reverse th eir year old paS! -

Today in history

"Remember when being a Washington
insider was considered to be a GOOD thing?"
r

I

By The Associated Press
Today IS Tuesday, May 5, the !26th day of 1992 There are 240 days
lcft1n the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on May 5, 1942, sales of sugar resumed m U•e Umted
States under a rationing program.
On this dale:
In 1494, during his second voyage to the New World. Christopher
Columbus first s•ghted Jamaica_
In 1818, the political philosopher Karl Man was born m Prussia.
In 1821, Napoleon Bonaparte died in exile on the island of St. Helena.
In 1891, Carnegie Hall (then named Music Hall) had its opening mght
in New York City with a concert that included works conducted by Peter
Jl yich Tchaikovsky and Walter Dam rose h.
In 1892, 100 _years a~o. Congress passed the Geary Chinese Exclusion
Ac~ wh~ch reqwred Chmese m the Umted States to be registered, or face
deportaUon.
In 1904, Cy Young pitched the American League's first perfect game
as the Boston Red Sox defeated the Philadelphia Athletics. 3-0.
In 1912, the rrrst issue of the Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda was published.

will con tinu e to hurn Ohio coa l

mmcd at the Sou th ern Oh10 Coal
Company's Mc1g s mm•ng opera
liUII

Late las t year, AEP hJtl ori g•n,illy made commcniS that seemed
to

111d1Catc that they were lcan1ng

towards fu el sw1t chin g 111 th eir
allcmptto comply wuh the Federal
C lea n An Act However it now
seems that bum1ng Ohio based coal
will be th e most cconom•cal and
cff•c•cnt fuel for the Gavin Power
Plant.
With the passage of Senate Bill
14 3 (Oh10's Clean Coal B1ll) in
Apnl of 1991. Ohio based Electric
Ut ilities were given ·~ccntives that
would allow th em to burn OhiO
coaL These 1ncenti vcs, coupled
w•th allowances from the U.S.
E.P.A ., definitely make sc rubbin g
the Gavin Power Plant the lea st
cost option for the utility and it' s
consumers

Although scr ubbing Gavlll is
now all but a certainty, there arc
sllll some obstacles that must be
overcome before the scrubbing
de cision will be completed.
According to AEP those obstacles

Thursday through Saturday:
Fair on Thursday. Chance of
~ howers Friday and Saturday.
H1ghs in the upper 50s or the 60s_
Morning low s mostly in the 30s
Thursday and the 40s Friday and
Saturday.

--Area deaths--

Continued from page 1

lands to be effected are of low
quality.
That opinion has been reinforced by the Wolper consulting
firm, an expert tn environmental
affairs_
'The wetlands do not enhance
aquatic fisheries," an AEP fact
sheet says. "there are no endangered plant or animal species in the
wetlands and they provide no educational. recreational or aesthetic
value."
Further, AEP contends that the
quality of remaining wetlands
would actually Improve. due to the
management and moni10nng of the
nearby landfill.
Fifteen acres of new wetlands
will be created by the projec~ and
five acres of existing wetlands will
be "enhanced". AEP pledges to
conduct a five-year monitoring and
maintenance program. supervised

s0 pp0 ft. ••

Black sa1d the PUCO opposes
the Sierra Club and was critical of
the Corps undertakmg revie\vs of
things in the PUCO domain.
Black said the PUCO will
review AEP's latest fmancing plan
which makes scrubbers the leastcost option for compliance with the
1990Ciean Air Act
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts and Diana Tribe of the
Vinton County Chamber of Commerce both stated their support for
AEP's de{:ision 10 install scrubbers
and encouraged the Corps to
approve the pennits necessary for
their mstallation.
Paula Thacker of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerre and
Economic Development Office ,
and member of the Meigs-GalliaVmton-Jackson-Athens Five-county Coalition, stressed the 1mportance of installing scrubbers at the
Gavin Plant
"Installing scrubbers al Gavin
will create several hundred construcuon jobs as well as saving jobs
al the Southern Ohio Coal Company," Thacker said.

Waid Spencer

Harry Lackey, 81, a retired educator and coach, of Athens, di ed
Monday. May 4, 1992 at Riverside
MethodiSt Hospnalm Columbus.
Born m Russm, he was the son
of the late Joseph and Lillian
(Labovsky) Lackey.
He graduated from Youngstown
East High School Ill 1929 and was
a 1933 graduate of Ohio Univemty, where he earned three letters as
a startmg guard and later earned h1s
master's degree_
He served m the U.S Army Air
Force from 1943 to 1946.
He taught and coac hed athletics
at Smllhficld H1gh School from
1934 to 1938, taught and coached
football and basketball at Athens
High School from 1938 to 1954,
mtroduced the T-fonnau011 to Ohio
high school football in in 1941 and
was principal at Athens Junior
High School from 1954 to 1959.
He co-chaired two successful levy
campaigns for th e Athens C1ly
School Distric L
He wa~ principal at Rufus Putnam School. an Ohio University
elementary trammg school, and a
faculty member at OU's College of
Ed ucation from 1959 until hi s
retirement in 1974.
Mr. Lackey also worked part
tim e at the Student TeJchers Office
an d served as reg•onal sec retary
[rom l972to 1987.
Services w1ll be Thursday. May
7 at I p.m. at the Hughes-Blower
Funeral Home in Athens . The Rev.
Thomas Fisher w•ll officiate. Burial will be at the West Unwn Street
Cemetery in Athens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to 4 p.m .
and from 7 to 9 p m.
In lieu of flowers. the famil y
dcsnes that donation s be made to
Harry Lackey Gymnasium, Athens
Middle School, in care of Mike
Meek. Athletic Director, Athens
Cny Schools, l High School Rd ..
The Pla•n s, Ohio 45780, or the
OhiO Umversily Fund.

Waid L. Spencer, 65, 47725
Scout Camp Road, Chester, died
Monday, May 4 at Grant Hospital
'"Columbus.
Born March I 5. 1927 in Chester
Township, he was a son of the late
Henry Lou1se and Edna Mac McElroy Spencer. He was a telephone
Iineman for AL TEL and an A1r
Force Veteran of the Korean Con"We urge the Corps of Enginie!. He was a member of Shade
neers
to issue the pennits to AEP to
River Masontc Lodge, the
install
the lime -barge unloadmg
Appalachian Horse and Mule Assofacility
and
to approve the filling of
Ciation and the Ohio Valley Draft
approximately
13 acres of wetlands
Horse Association. He also was a
to be used as a landfill disposal
Chester Township Trustees.
site,"
Thacker added.
Mr. Spencer IS survived by his
"We
cannot afford to lose any
wife, Gladys Wright Spencer, a
more
jobs."
Thacker stressed.
daughter, Esther Mays, Chester;
"As
a
member
of the F•ve-counthree sons and daughters -in-Jaw,
ty
Coalition,
we
have
worked w1th
Harry and Avice Spencer. Long
the
United
Mine
Workers
to help
Bottom, Dr. Thomas and Ruth Curpass
legislauon
to
encourage
AEP
tiss Spencer, Pomeroy, and Waid
to
install
scrubbers
at
the
Gavin
Ray Spencer, Manetta; two sisters.
Avis and Lowell Bing, L9ng Bot· Plant. We are dedicated to help
tom, and Mary and Lawrence De save our coal mining jobs in Meigs
Groot, Fountain. Colo.; three broth - County," Thacker concluded.
Jack Fowler representing the
ers and sisters-in-law, Elson and
Gallia
County Chamber of ComDorothy Spencer, Racine, Day10n
merce,
the Gallia County Commu·
and Sarah Spencer, Long Bottom.
nity
Improvement
Corporallon and
and Vance Spencer. Fountam.
the
Five-county
Coalition,
sa1d he
Colo.; a sister and brother-in·law.
toured
the
plant
recently
and
saw
Norma and Gale Cain, Athens:
the
wetlands
the
S1erra
Club
is
conmother-in-law, Esther Wright. The
Plains; two sisters-in-law, Barbara cerned about.
Fowler said the wetlands are of
Adams and Virginia Willie, both of
low·quality
compared to the wetJ
The Plains; and eight grandchillands
AEP
proposes
constructing.
dren.
"Gallm
County
stands
to will in
Bes1dcs his parents, Mr. Spencer
this
situallon,
because
th1s
wetland
was preceded in death by two siswill
be
replaced
with
20
acres
of
ters. one brother-in-law. James
very
h1gh
quality
wetland
for
our
Mays, and a daught er-in -law,
habitat. It's hard for me. after viewCathy Spencer.
Scmces will be Thursday at I I ing that and wall:hing t1 on the slide
a.m . at Ewing Funeral Home with prcscntauon here 10night, to think
Rev. Sharon Hausman offlcJallng. that a permit would be denied in
favor of those wetlands 10 replace
Burial w1ll be in Chester Cemetery.
the
people, the hard-working minFnends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 2-4 p m. ers of this area," Fowler said.
"I just don't think that will hapand 7-9 p.m.
pen," Fowler added "I think the
technology, the analysis have all
been conducted, the documentation
have all been submitted to the
Corps, and I'm sure they will view
th•s application very favorably."
Fowler urged the Corps to
approve the penn•ts.
Frank Lee, executive dife{:IOr of
Eight calls were answered Mon day and early Tuesday mommg by the Mason County Chamber of
un•ts of the Me•gs County Emer - Commerce, flayed the S•erra Club
and other environmental orgamzagency Medical Service.
At II a.m. Monday, the Rutland tions m a rousing condemnation for
squad went to Meigs Mme 2 for their interference on job projects m
Terry Ward who was taken by the Ohio Valley.
"Let's get right to it... the ISSue
Lifenight to a Columbus hospital .
At 11:38 a.m . both the Pomeroy here tonight has got nothmg to do
and Middleport Frre Departments with technicalities and permits, the
were summoned to the State Route issue has got to do with a group of
7 residence or Mike Custer for a poople that are getting pa•d money
10 come in here and slOp yet anothtrailer ftre .
The Syracuse unit was called to er project- and we're tired of it,"
Forest Run Road at 3:59p.m. for a Lee said.
"We've seen these people
motor vehicle accident. Don Bush
was taken from the scene to Veterans Memorial Hospital for treat ment.
Other calls included 6:39 p.m ..
Rutland Squad to Romine Road for
Am Ele Power . .. ........... 31 3/4
Charles Romine. who was taken to
Ashland 0•1 ... .. ...... ... .3 1 1(2
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 8:30
AT&amp;T... ......................... ... .43 3/4
p.m. Racine to Apple Grove-DorBank One............................ 44 1/8
cas Road for Vicky Miller, transBob Evans ................. ....... 18
ported to Veterans Memorial HosCharming Shop....... ........... 27 5!8
pital: 8:59 p.m. Middleport squad
City Holding ..................... 19 7/8
to Brownell Ave. for Alice Koenig
Federal Mogul .................... 20 1/8
who was taken to Veterans; and
Gocdyear T&amp;R ........... ....... 74 l/8
9:46 p.m. Middleport To Cheshire
Key Centurion ................... I9
for Pauline Jones, who was transLands End .............. ...... .... .34
ported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Limited Inc ..... .. ........... ..... 23 5!8
Tuesday 12:20 am . the Rutland
Multimedia Inc .................. 28
Fire Department went to Joe's
Rax Restauranl.. ................l 1/4
Country Markel for a wash down
Robbins&amp; Myers ......... ...... 16 1(2
of an area around the business.
Shoney's lnc......................22 1(2
Star Bank .................... ...... .36
Wendy Int'l................ .. ...... l2
Worthing10n Ind................24 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
Southern FHA car wash has
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
been reseheduled for Saturday from
Ellis and Loewl Gallipolis.
9 a.m. until 3 p.m . at McDonald's
in Po(lleroy.

Correction
Sus1e Green of Pomeroy recently graduated with a Ph.D. from
Oh1o UniVers•iy's College of Educat 10n Green d1d not grad uate
from the College of Fmc Arts, as
was reported . The mform auon was
Incorrectly reported by Oh1o Um -

arc:

The Daily Sentinel

The U.S. EPA m11 st dev11c an
allowanc e system to gn· c the util1ty

(l)BPB 111·110)

crcdrt for comp lyi ng wllh the Federal Clean A1r Act. AEP must get
permits_ from the U S. Army Corp
of Eng •nccrs for then scrubbing
operation s and th e Public Uulitlcs
Commi ssiOn of Ohio must declare
that scrubbing Gavm is a lca_~ t cost
opt ion for compliance with th~
federal Clean Air Act.
•More than l ,OOo commu nity
JObs - and at least I0,000 related
JObs w1ll be saved by this decision
to scrub the Gavin Power Plant.
This announcement is Illdecd a
tribute to the hard work and effort
that was put forth by state and local
leaders' who worked together for.
the benefit of th eir regio n, th eir
communitifs and their neighbors.
Hopefully. we will now move
swiftly through the final s tep s
needed to make sc rubbmg Gavin a
reaiHy.
·
As always, please feel free 10
cal l or write me, State Senator Jan
M. Long. if you have any questions
or co mments about these or any
other ISS ues. My number is (614)466-8156, and my address is th e
State hou se, Columbus Ohio
43215.
.

Publiahed nery an.ernoon, Monday
throuch Friday. t u Cowl St., l'ao&lt;tvy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi•hut.l
Company/Mult.imedia I ftc , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45169, Ph 992·2156. Second clul
pmt.t.p J»id al Pomeroy, Ohio.

Pr••·

Member' The Auociated
and the
Ohio Newapaper Auoctation, National
Advertitlnl ltepreaentat1ve, Branham
Newspaptr Salta, 733 Th1rd Awenue,
New Yurt., New Yon IOC117
POSTMASTER.: Send addru• chi.RfN to
The D11ly Sentinel, Ill Court St,

Pomeroy. OHio 46769.
IUB8CRIPI10N IIATE8

Br c....n- nr Motor W.O.N
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SINGLE COPY
PBICB
Daily .. .. .. .. ...... .................. ~ . .26 Cen..
Subtaiben not dQirl~ to ~y the cam.
er may remil in advuu:e dintt Lo The
Daily Sentinel on • thl'lle lia C1f' 12
month buil Credit will be ,iven carrier
each WHi.
No •ublcripl.iont by mail penmUed in
are.. where home c.rTier 1enice i1
a nil able.
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: : : : : :: :::::::::::::::::l::

13 Weeka ......... .......... ...... ........ ...... -'33.40

~=

EMS squads
answer 8 calls

Stocks

Car wash Saturday

or

by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. to ensure that the new
enhanced wetlands are developed
properly.
"We believe the wetlands in
question are of very poor quality,"
Howard said. "and are to be
replaced by wetlands of a beuer
quality which will provide better
habitat."
"AEP is experienced in developmg wetlands." Howard continued.
"Although wetlands construction is
a young science, we have had some
significant and well-documented

soccesses."
An AEP document distributed
last night outlines wetlands work at
the "Simco Wetland". created in
1985 alan abandoned mine at
AEP' s Conesville Generatins SmtlOn, as well as an urhan wildlife
sanctuary created in Coshocton
County.

Continued from page I

Harry Lackey

vcrs1ty.

lion :md InSL.111 $7\0 million sc rubbers at the Gavm Plant inst,Ill.uiOn
of sc rubbers would mean Gav1 n

C1992 Accu ·Weather, Inc

tress. am ong oth er things. - Just

Ltr to th e stulf that v. as 1n Amos
Oto \ bJt
From the J\o Co mm ent f-Ile :
The \Va slllngton Post reported a

lor the past 17 yc:!fs he has headed
the NJIIon,il RepubliC an Congres-

Assoc1a1ed Pre66 GraphlcsNet

------Weather-----

rumo1 th.J t the. qtlf f bct•,l,o ccn Mr

On e o f th e mo st surpn s1n g

V~e~

now ~ u1n ~: Umtcd, c bin11ng Jnt cntwna l mlliCliOJl of ClllOII Ofl al di S-

Check-kiting aftermath turns bitter

com mittee, attacking th e House
patronage system.
The sm il es carn e b cc.1 u ~c
Roberts IS chJ1rman of the Hcpubli can patro nage committee. a th reemember body that dole s out the
percentage of jobs that arc giV en to
the GOP to fill Th e smil es al so
came because two of Roberts clnl dren have held well-paying sum mer JObs as congressiOnal mterns
How eve r. the most egreg ious
exam ple of hypocmy SO far thi S
year might be Rep . R1 chard
Gcphardt and h•s re -el ec tton corn mmcc.
Radio stauon s 111 Gcplianlt's
M1ssouri distnct have receiV ed a

W VA

uncooperative

IT1-J~~~

Robert]. Wagman

•

Bush.
Dear Curmu dge on: What can
you tell me ahout quirky Rep. llob
Dornan. R-C:ihf. 0 A year ago. he
was kicked olf a Unilcd Alflmcs
pl,1nc a fter an atten dant accu sed

o[ vc tCfln,n y Cdf C

b•g sm il es on Capito l Hill IS Rep.
Pat Roberts, R-Kan .. ra nk•ng
Republican on the Hou, c Adm1n •strati on Personnel and Police Sub-

• IColumbus I 55° I

som ewhere in whi ch hroccoh beat

Dorn.m's cars 1 ~ lllo lccul.trly sum -

-------..1

IMan slield I 54° I•

Dear C urmud ~con: I'm wonderIng whether Presldentll ush's camp,llgn aga•nst broccol i affe cted
sales of the vegetable. l don't em
the ~ tuff hut I CIIll Curious m Klamath Fall s
Dear Cunous 111 KF: I can't say
for sure. but I heard about a poll

Dc,tr \VNW I know n01lun g of
th1 s mm lent, nor do I bchcs·c th e

~e CAN1~ BOU6UTI
..~cruWAAUVW~f

PA

hus ever dune

wondcnn g m Wh1ll1Cr.

Tex4;8fW~
~mgmJr

e

.277 lil ct•me average "a " corked
stati stic' "' Beats me. At lea st he
adm1ts h•s trespass. whiC h IS more
than a corker named Richard Nixon

not lO s tt upr1bhl

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
politics. there IS alway s a thin line
between chutzpah and hypocmy.
but thiS year politicians arc tram pling across U1at line wllh unusual
regularity.
Take, for example, Republican
House Wh1p Newt Gingri ch of
Georgia_ In the wake olthc House
bank scancbl, Ging nch has regularly shown up at the Wh1tc Hou se
and at telev iSIOn stauons and news
bureaus throu ghou t the Washmgton
area decrying congresSional perk s
and the Democratic leadershi p.
It d•d not seem to bother G•n gnch at all that he was arrmng at
these scs~io n s in his congressional
limo, dnven by his personal dnvcr
at $60,000 per year.
When questioned about h• s usc
of th1 s obv•ou~ pe rk. G1n gn ch
quick ly cxplamcd 1t away as necessary for securi ty, and all but plc;ld donated
10
on
a
one
ume
baSIS
and
cd that 1t was som ehow be1n g
Dear Edilor
others
on
a
cont1nu1ng
bas1s.
X1
forced upon hnn
T he Mc1g s County llcalth
Who wc s doin g th e forc •ng'
De pa rt ment nurs1ng staff has JU St Gamma Mu has an active mcmber.c o mpleted ano th er succe ss ful slup of about 25 women; it is a Fo rm er House Se rg eant -A t-Arms
Jack Reuss, the sa rnc m:m th;ll G 1n ·
: ~ l.lJTlmography Screen•n g. '" con- local chapter of the Interna tional
Organiz.auon
of
Beta
Sigma
Ph1.
gnch castigated almos t d,uly as an
JUncuon w1th O.S.U Mobile Imag Th1s
is
the
second
year
this
examp
le of ever) thin g that was
In g Urllt and the County E"cns•on
sororny
has
co
ntributed
to
the
wrong
wtth the Dc moc r.t t-con 1Jffi cc.
Me
igs
County
Mammography
trollcd House.
In the p:~s t all the soronu cs and
Soon. though. G1ngnch reali zed
:.;orne scrv1cc orgarmallons lik e t.hc Succn•ng Clinic. It is truly conthat hts ltrno and dnvcr v. crc not
·L 1ons Club anr1 the l&lt;ntanan s h,1vc cerned with woman's health 1ssucs
and needs in Meigs County. They "economical." When d1d thiS real ' t ontnbu tcd .
Iza tion stnk c0 Short ly alt er IllS
X1 GammJ Mu Soroflty ha s have our smccre thanks!
Nanna Torres. R.N .. B.S N. M.S. GOP pnmJry opponent Ill GcorgiJ
recently made 11 pos s1hlc tn X -ray
Ed. started usmg il as a campa•gn Iss ue.
one woman free. Man y people rn;,sy
Another ex ample tll ,ll has cir;1 wn
Nursing
Director
th1 11k: that soront1 CS arc JU St soc1al
Ph
yll
•s
Bearhs
clubs . but I wo uld l1ke th crn to
Women's Health Care Tcchmc1an
kn o w th e m c mb cr~ l11 p has m,m y
&lt;;.('rv 1cc proJ CCLS. some of wh 1c h arc

Wednesday, May 6
Accu -Weather• forecast for d"ytime conditions and high temperatures

rep lace ment sur ge ry. Dorn an IS
Ry ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Political lines vamshed dunng a debate and passage
of a bill de{:reasing the state Board of Educauon from 21 10 II members
and incrcasmg the size of their ele{: tion d1stncts.
The debate last week was between rural and City lawmakers as the Senale sent Gov. George Voinovich a rewritten versiOn of hiS bill that would
have allowed h1m appomt the members and assume a greater role m education policy-making.
He srud he will si~n it as "an important step " toward educauon rcfonn
although all it does 1s create a smaller board w1th members elected from
state Senate districts instead of congresswnal d!Stncts
One member will be elected. starting th is year, from each of II new ly
created d1stncts that will be made up of three Senate d!Stncts.
Each member w1ll represent about 990.000 Oh1oans. compared with
540.000 presentl y.
Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, the bill's sponsor, predicted the races
will be more visible ~ause school mtcrcst groups w•ll be pushmg friend ly candidates. He also said the news media will provide more coverage_
"The races have hardly been covered at all m the pa.~t." Watts said.
The next board members w1ll su ll have the power to appomt the stale
supenntendent without the mvolvement of the governor.
Voinovich was consulted m the appomtmcnt of Superintendent Ted
Sanders last year, when 11 looked like h1s proposal was m trouble_ He
lauded the choice of Sanders and presumably they work well together.
Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, R-H1IIsboro. who heads the Senate Education
Comm•ttee, deplored the bill. He said it emerged from the House with no
clear purpose after bemg stripped of the governor' s appointive power.
Snyder sa1d the bill will combme rural areas like h1s own w1th b•g
c•ues and "we won't have any representallon at all." He and four other
Republicans jomcd lO Democrats m voung agamst the bill.
Sen. Jeffrey Johnson. D-Cieveland. expressed s•m•lar concerns about
the fate of blacks. saying their ca ndidates will have to run in larger d•stncts as smaller minoriucs and will wmd up wtth no one on the board.
Watts and others discou nted such concerns. He has drawn up some
maps of proposed districts that he sa1d balance representation_ He will
offer one of the maps as a Startin~ pomt for negotmtions. he said.
Under one of the maps, he srud. blacks would be v.nually assured of a
member from Cuyahoga County _ A proposed diStrict in Southern Ohio
would include Snyder's Highland Coun ty and 17 other mostly rural counues.
The b1ll proVIdes that the Legislature must approve the new distncts by
a July 5 deadline. Ifit fruls to act. the governor w1ll draw the dJslllcts.
Candidates. who need not run on partisan ballot.s 10 be nominated m
the June 2 primary , will have unul Aug. 20 to file as mdcpendent cand idates.
Two Democrats JOined Watts and 15 other Republicans to pass the b1ll
IH-15 The Democrat.~ were Se ns. Harry Meshel of Youngstown and Alan
Zaleski of Elyna.

Officials ...

OHIO Weather

The Curmudgeon graciously declines
The Cunnudgeon is profoundly
thankful to the reader in Pawtucket
who wrote in w1th the sugges uon
that yours truly nun for the presidency on a third -party ticket. The
Curmud geon has decided, ho~~&lt;cv ­
er, that he will run only 1f the people demand It by placing Ius name
on the ballot m all 50 states. At last
count there were 50 states to go. so
he will hang on to h1s regular JOb
until he sees how 11 works out.
Coincidentally. to day's fn st
inqmry is on the subjec t of pohucal
demands.
Dear Cunn udgcun: What do you
think of Jesse Jackson's "suggestion" that he be nam ed as Bil l
Clinton's runnm~ mateo - Pete m
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Dear PNPP· I think th.tt mainstream Democrats ought 10 tell the
Rev. Jackson as nic ely as they can

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

before m our valley on both s1des
of the river," Lee said and went on
to list examples of job projects
killed by environmentalists.
"We know about mttigauon
(creation of wetlands), we know all
about mitigation. They took the
industnal park in Mason County,
W.Va., and turned it into a wetland
site for ducks. They took $1 mil han from the Gallipolis Locks and
Dam Project, and did this valley
get a recreational component?" Lee
asked the crowd which responded
"no!".
"No. What we got was they
went down to Cabell County and
built a $1 milhon wetland for
ducks," Lee emphasized.
"We know about mitigation,"
Lee continued_ "We would like to
know where we go to get some
m1tigation for the people of this
valley whose lives are being
ruined."
"We want the Sierra Club to put
up some money for some mitigation 10 the damage to our children,"
Lee said. "They came before to
stop new jobs from coming, now
thetr commg to take away the jobs
you've got.''

Multiple representatives from
Galha, Meigs and Vinton counties
also spoke in support of the scrubbers.
U.S. Anny Corps of Engmeers
Colonel VanEpps sajd that letters
received by the Coqis before 4:45
p.m., May 14, would be constdered
part of the record of the public
hearing.
Interested individuals or organizations cim submit letters to: U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, HuntingiOn Distric~ 502 Eighth Street,
ATTN: ORHOR-F, Huntington.
WV, 25701-2070.
VanEpps indicated that a deci Sion concerning AEP's application
should be made about thirty days
after the May 14 deadline.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Monday night's OhiO Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
5-8-6
(five, eight. SIX)
Pick 4 Numbers
0-2-5 -2
(zero, two, five, two)
Pnnces and prmcesses and other
mdlVIduals of royal blood are to be

addressed as "H1s (or Her) Royal
Highness" and saluled w1lh "May 11
Please Your Royal Highness "

PROBE WRECK - One man was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital arter this one-car wreck on Forest Run Road
Monday arternoon. According to the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Donald Bush, 34, Racine, lost control or his 1979
Ford Fairmont after striking a dog. Damage to the car was listed
as moderate.

-Meigs announcementsClub to meet
The Meigs County Widow s
Club will meet Friday at noon at
!-the Christian Church in Middle port. Bring two sandwiches . Salad
and dessert will be furnished.
Derby Association to meet
The Meigs County Soap Rox
Derby Association will meet Fnday
at 7 p.m. at Pleaser's Restaurant m
Pomeroy.
Revival
Silver Run Baptist Church w1ll
have revival May ll -17 at 7:30
p.m. nightly wtth prcach mg by
Alan Blackwood.
Car wash
Southern FHA will hold a car
wash Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at McDonald' s in Pomeroy.
Walk-a-thon
The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will have a five -mile walka-than from Me1gs H•gh School to
the road side park on Route 33 Saturday between 10 a.m. and noon .
All proceeds w1ll go to the buildmg
fund. Pastor Paul Taylor and adults
and children will be walking . A
picmc will follow at the park. Any
one want to sponsor a walker
should contact the pastor.
Rummage sale
The Carpenter Bapt•st Church
"Busy Bees" will have a bake and
rummage sale May 16 from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at the townhouse on
Route 143 at the juncuon of School
Lot Road near Carpenter.
Country music night
Country music night will be
held at the Lotmdge Community
Center Saturday with bands pcrfonming from 7 p.m . to midni ght.
Refreshments available. Public
mvited.
Preaching and singing
The Faith Full Gospel Church m
Long Bottom will have preaching
and smging Fnday at 7 p.m. featurIng Dav1d Dailey and the Dailey

Hospital news

Family plus other local tal ent Pastor Steve Reed invites the public
and fellowship will follow
1llood pressure checks to
begin
The Harrisonville Senior C•o zens Ce nter will begm having
blood pressure checks May 12
from 10 am. to noon at the townhouse. The clmics will be held the
second Tuesday of each month at
the same orne and place.
The club w1ll hold its mectmgs
beginning May 26 on th e fourth
Tuesd.1y of every month at 7 p m
at tl1e clubhouse.
Bake sale
The Rock Spfl ngs Church
Women w1ll have a bake sale Saturday at Big Wheel begmnmg at lO
a.m.

Alumni banquet
The Racme-Southcrn Alumm
banquet will be May 23 at6 p m at
the Charles W. Hayman Aud•ton um. Tickets may be purchased at
Home Nat•onal Bank and Cross
Grocery by May 16 The cost for
the d1nncr an d dance will be $10.
Band rehearsal scheduled
There w111 be a second rehearsal
of the Middl eport Alumni Dand on
Thursday at 7 p.m at the bandroom
at Me1gs H1gh School. All fanner
Middleport band members arc
urged 10 attend
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Townsh•p Trustees
will meet Thursday at 6·30 p m at
the Rutland Fire Station The pubhe

IS IOVIICd.

Potluck planned
The Modern Woodmen of
Amcnca Camp 7230, Burlingham.
will have a potluck dmncr Saturday
at 7 p m at the Modern Woodmen
Hall "' Burlmgham. "Mother's
N1ght" will be observed and c :~ch
mother will be recogn11 ed Meat,
rolls, coffee and soft dnnks will be
proVIded. Members bnng a covered
diSh Public 1S invited.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admllted: Karen Gilkey. Mid dleport; Bonn•e Ramson, Racmc;
and Ahcc Kocn1g, M•ddlcport.
Discharged: Wayne G1lhand.

B.U CJ. I •

~ lMOII•

S.l.l UII(),I.•.

II IG.I" I

IU[ ~ J)l •

TOM SHLECk In FOLKS
I~~

Holzer Medical Center
Monday, April 4
Discharges

._Till{(~
8.1.~ 1 -

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9 ,'0 [J,I. Jl l

'IA J I 00 .1 .'0 [ N,

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mPHIN KING'! lliiPWILURI
'10

Ruth Carter, Mrs Bnan Obcrholzer and daught er. Kathy Rad cliff, Mr s Michael Roach and
daughter; Hamson Robinson
Shirley SufDer. and Evelyn Valcn:
II TIC.

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DOllY PAAION In SIRAIGIT TRU
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JOHN GOODMAN In THI IRBI

Herman Melville 's "Moby D1ck"
was published 1n t85l

~

10 PM {)A.r • ·,u

) Ulo' &lt;O. ! I ~ IIS

~P I U P I I ~ ll A I J~ ~ V A IL A~ ll

l 10 (' G

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POMEROY NURSING AND
REHABILITATION CENTER
RECOGNIZES

National Nurses' Week May 4-10
The staff and residents of Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center would like to thank our nursing
staff and all nurses working in Pomeroy for their
valuable contributions to the people of community.
'

Their hard work, skill, dedication and compassion
plays a very important role in maintaining the health
and well-being of our community as a whole.
Thank you for your service and the exceptional
quality of care you PfOVide.
In celebration of this event, th~\~urses of PNRC will be treated
to dinner at the Point of View, Parkersburg, WV.
In addition, the residents will host an Ice Cream Social in honor
of their nurses on Friday, May 8.

..------.J

.~----------------------------------~-~

t

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Page-4

Tuesday, May 5, 1992

Pittsburgh erases four-run deficit to beat Cincinnati 12-5
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Cecil
Espy had never seen anything like
it. Lou Piniella hopes he never does
again. And Tom Browning must be
wondering what else possibly can
happen to him in the sixth inning
against Pittsburgh.
.
The Pirates entered the SIXth
inning Monday !failing th.e Cincin·
nati Reds 5·1. They left 11 leadmg
12-5. That's what 16 bauers. II
runs. nine hilS, four walks. a wild
pitch, a stolen base, four !neffectiv.e
pitchers and the btggest mmng thlS

runs in an inning for only the sec·
noon.
ond
time this century; they also did
And they trailed by four runs 10
it
Sept.
7, 1942. against St. Louis.
a pitcher who is traditionally lOugh
In
other
games. Atlanta defeated
on them.
the
Chicago
Cubs 6-1 and the New
"You put everything into the
eq uation, and it doesn't look, Yark Mets beal Houston 5· 1.
Braves 6, Cubs I
promising ," VanSlyke said.
At
Chicago,
the Cubs broke
So go figure. Browning immedi·
through
for
a
run
against Atlanta,
atcly got into trouble in the sixth.
their
first
off
the
Braves
since last
allowing doubles to King and
July
28.
Barry Bonds, and was gone three
It wasn't nearly enough as John
baucrs later after Don Slaught's
Smoltz.
Mike Stanton and Juan
RB I smgle.
Jose Lind , one of three Pirates Bcrenguer combined on a five-hit·
who had two hits in the inning, ter.
The Cubs scored off StaniOn on
made it 5-4 with a double off
pinch-hitter
Jerome Walton's RBI
Dwayne Henry (0·1) and Espy tied
f1elder's
choice
in the eighth. Mark
11 wtth a smgle. his fifth hit in six
Grace
and
Ryne
Sandberg singled
pinch hit at-bats.
and
Walton's
grounder
to shortstop
The Reds were later within one
was
fumbled
by
Rafael
Belliard,
pitch of ending it when Scott
"It was deliberately thrown at stand there and let somebody throw
who got the forcoout at second base
him, just like the left-hander delib· two fastballs at me and not let him Ruskin ran the count 10 0-2 against as the run scored.
erately throwing at my first base· know I'm upset about that," Har- Va~ Slyke. VanSlyke, whose 4 for
But Belliard had a a two-run
5 mght raised his average 10 .34 2,
grove said.
man;' Heaton said.
In other games. Chicago beat fought off the pitch and hit a goHeaton was ejected by home
plate umpire Terry Cooney after Milwaukee 7-0, Minnesota beat ahead, two-run single to right.
"That was the biggest hit of the
the second of the consecutive Boston 6-1, Baltimore beat Texas
inside pitches to Belle. Belle 8-5, Toronto beat Oakland 7-3, game," Pirates manager Jim Ley charged the mound several seconds Detroit beat California 6-2 and land said. "We co uld have caved
Senior Casey Staton tossed a
in when it was 5-1 against a good
after the ejection, both dugouts and New York beat Scat~c 7-5.
-hiller to lead North Gallia's
four
Mike Macfarlane and Keith pitcher. but this club IS very profcs·
bullpens emptied and several play·
baseball team to a 3· 1 win over visers exchanged punches. Belle , who Miller hit two -run homers for stonal. That's the kind of thing a iting Southern Monday at Bidwellgood
club
can
do.
"
refused to comment. also was eject· Kansas City. The Royals banged
At least twice every I()() years Porter Eleme ntary.
out a season-high 15 hits and broke
ed.
After the Tornadoes (9-10)
Indians manager Mike Hargrove double digits in runs for the first or so. Before it was over. the
scored
their run m the first inning,
Pirates had scored a club-record II
said il appeared to him the inside
(See AL on Page 5)
the Pirates (6-6, 6-5) tied it in the
pitches were deliberate.
second before taking the lead for
"It would be hard for me 10
keeps with a two-run rally in the
th ird.
S[;(ton fanned nine and walked
one 1n his complete-game perfor·
mancc. He gave up hits to Billy
Jones
and Robert Kimes (1·2) and
p.m.; Pon1and II PhoenU, ) ,)()p.m.
Scoll Lis le and Kyle Wickline
NOT[: If both Eule:m Conference
(both 1-3). Tornado hurler Jeremy
temifinall •d in •i• a•mn or len, lhe~
Dill, who also went the distance.
Eulem Conf~ fl!l&amp;ia will bclin on
Sund&amp;y, Mt}' 17 IL ) ·)0 p m. If ~th
Slfuck out seven and walked two.
We~l.crn Conference temifinalt end in
The Pirates' offense carne from
l'ivt a•m• or leu, the We~tem Confer·
eoce fintlJ will bqin on Saturdly, Ma}'
Tom Meade (3-3), Bradd Schultz
16at ] :)() p.m
(2·2. double). Chris Toler (1 ·2),
Larry Burris (1-3) and Darin Smith
Stanley Cup playoffs
( 1-4. double. RBI).
Weekend action - Southern
Monday's scores
Oue~ ao l, lk:trcd I , Chieqo l(l.ldt ~
won one of three games played,
nea 2-0
claiming a hard -fought SVAC
Vancou~ 4, &amp;rnon1m 0, lllria ticod
league game agrunst Oak Htll J. I.
1·1
but
losing 5-2 and 15-5 in a double
..
Future gamos
.:...:'.
.
•::
header
to Alexander.
T011l1hl- 8o11.on at Mmueal, 7.30
• . -rf-."1P.:p.m.; Pm•burJh 1t NY R•npn, 1:30
Southern. with Monday's loss to
p.m
· ... --::- -~
North Gallia. drops to 9-10 overall.
Wedusday - Deuoi.t tt Cbic•ao,
I .JO p.m ., 'VII'ICUIJ'Ia at EdmC1111011, ~ : lO
Jeremy Dill pitched a great
pm
game over Oak Hill. fanning four
Tlnand•J- Monuul•t Boo.on. '1 :30
and walking just three to post the
p.m.; N.Y. K•nacn at Pitubur&amp;}l, 7 .)()
pm
win.
Frld•J - Detron at Cbicaao. I . 30
Roger French and Chris French
p.m.; Vancwver 1t Edmonton, 9.30p.m.
S.turdiiJ- Monuealat Boo.on, 7·30
combined for five walks and three
century will do foc a lealll.
couldn't slOp scoring. "
"How many men did they send
. "It was preuy crazy," said Jeff
to the plate? 16 men? My gosh ... " Kmg, who went 3 for 5 with two
said Reds manager Piniella. "And doubles. "We got a lot of walks
there weren't any errors, either. It and balls were flying everywhere.
cenainly wasn't very preuy."
Once we got started. it was like a
II certainly wasn ' t predictable. steamroller."
either.
Some of the Pirates felt beforeThe Pirates had scored just one hand like they'd been run over by
run in 16 innings entering the sixth. one. They were shut out 1-0 Sun ·
Then they got II.
day night by Houston's Butch
"I've never seen anything like Henry and three relievers and
that. Never," said Espy, whcse two didn't get home from a two-week
hilS in the sixth raised his average road 1rip until 4 a.m. Many were
to .458. " We were struggling to working on a few hours sleep when
score runs and, of a sudden, we they got to the park Monday afler·

Kansas City hands Cleveland 11-6
By The Associated Press
Neal Heaton hit Alberte Belle
with a pitch and sounded proud that
he did it.
" No quesuon about it, you've
got to proteCt your own players in
the heat of baule," Heaton said
after the Kansas City Royals beat
the Cleveland Indians 11·6 Monday . "That's the way baseball is
played and th e way it's always
going to be."
Heaton said he threw at Belle
leading off the bottom of the eighth
because Cleveland reliever Eric
Bell hit Royals first baseman Wally
Joyner with a pitch with two outs
in the top of the inning.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaatem Dlvldon
W L
Prt.

Team

1

.108

l'ewYLril ....... 16 10
SLI..wia.
.... 1) 12

.61S
..520

Phllldt.lplu.a
.... 11 IJ
Mon~.re~L . ........ . 9 14

.458
.391

Cluugo ...

.333

Piu•burgh

.... .17

8 16

GB
2
&lt;.l

6
ll
9

Wutrrn Dhillon
S1nfrant:U«J ....... ll l l
. ~2
ClndnnaU ____ )] lZ

.j2t

Atl1n1..1 . .
. .... 13 13
San Diego ............ 13 13

.5QO

Howtcn .............. 12 13

.480

9 1J

409

Loa Anaclea ...

500

"

I
I
l.l
J

Monday's scores
New York 'i. Houalon I

Today's i:ames
Atl•nll {Rtelec.kt 1-2) at Chic&amp; go

(11dl0f\ ()-4), 2:20 p.m.

New Yocl (Fernandez. 1·2) at Hwaton
(Portua•l 2-- 1), 4 . ~ p.m .

S1n Oieao (lhrri1 1-1) u MonU'OII
(DawW

Mettina: 1--4), 7:35p.m.

L01 Ans clca (C• n d tot li 3- 0) 1t
PhiladcJphi• (Mulholland o-3), 7:JS p.m.
Cincinnati (Btlcher 1-3) at Pllll·
burgh (PaladOI 1-t~ 1:)! p.m.
S.n Fnncuco {Down I 0-2) 11 St.
Louia (Olivarm 2-2). 8 : ~ p.m.

Wednesday's games
Hcwton (lbmUd\ 2-J)

OU.:.Jo (0.

II

Mad&amp;u l-2). I :20 p.m.
Nf'lll' York (Youn1 1--f) al CIAclnnaU
(Swlnd~lll· l),

7:35p.m..

S•n Oi.tllo (Benea 2-2) at Montre.ll
(Gardner 2· 1), 7 : 3~ p.m.
Loa Angcln (R. M~rlinc:z 0 - 1) 11
Phu..delptua (Greene 2-1 ). 7.JS p m.
A.thnt• (Avery 1· 2) u Pt111burah
(1' •111M 4-l ), 7:35 p.m.
S•n Fr• n,u co ( llurk.cu 2- l) 11 St
l.AJwJ (Dd_
.D)O 1-2), ~ :rl p m

p.m: N.Y. R•nacn al Pituburah.1 .30
p.m.

Baseball
AtMrkan Wpe
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - AaivaLcd
Clau~ DIYil, (lnt luanan, from the IS ·
day dinblod lul Optioned Lu 11 Mer ce.dol, 01.1lf1Clder, 14 Rochail.a' of lhc ln lanaua~ll Lap

ODCAOO WHm SOX - Opoonod
Ruba\o Kanandcl. piu:her, ta Vancouver
of the PK:ific Cout Lu1ue. Pwthued
the conl.raCt ci Sl\awn Abner, WIJ"LClder,
ffUI'l Vanrouvcr.
SEATil...E MARINERS -

•

GB

9

680
.661
.600

l

ll II

- ~22

4

II II
\0 ll
C l~~tland . ____ ,9
II

lOO

&lt;l
7

M.Jw1ukcc .

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lklmll..

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Wttltrn [)lvUion

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. 12 ])

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400

4.l

~

\9

208

9

OU\1nd
Cruea go

I~

.
Caltfom11
Tc~u

MmnetlU .
Scau.le .
K.aruu C''1

'

MondaJ 's scores
Mmncaou 6, Ro.lCil I
lktrml 6, Ct ltfomta 2
lhlwnun: 8. Tcut ~
Karuou Cily II, (1,.-,]and 6
(."hu: I~O 7, MJ.Jw1uli et: 0
New Yorll7. Scattk 'i
Toru11.o 'J. QU..~as¥j l

Today's games
Tc•u (Rytn fi-l) 11

R1lllm~ {"Me$~

....

Placed Julio

Franco, u~eand b11cman, on lhe IS -day
dilablod lia. Activated Monty Fuia, infielder. Bill Hudman, catcher, and JaM
Bufidd, pitcher, from l.he }j -d1y dil ·
&amp;bled lttt Optioned Hudm1n and
Buftcld to Okl.ahoma G17 of the Amcn' an Auociaum.
N•llonal l..ea&amp;IM
CIOCAGO CU BS - Purchuod lhc

con tract of Jeff D Rob ina on, pitc het ,
frun lowe d lhe Ammcm AIIOCllti.on.
Opuonc.d HuLhcliiT Slocunb, pttchet, to
low•

NEW YORK ME'TS - ActiYIIled Bill

Pecot•. Ulftclder, from the l'i · d•~ dt&amp; ·
•bled L1t OpttonM Jdr McKntght, tn ·
f1ddcr, ID T•dew&amp;Lcr of the lntenu.tionll
In guo.
MOr'ITREAL EXPOS -

Activated
GUba'to Reya , c.~ow:her, from the 15-day
dt.u blc;:j Wt and d•ilfllled nim for u ·
ngnrnent .
PfTISBUKGH PIRATES - Pl• ced
K.irk. Gib&amp;on, outfielder, on wa1vers fo r
lhc purpo~e or Ji~ll'll him hu uncond•uc.~al rele11e. Rca.Ucd Ptu.U Miller, p!ildl·
cr, from Buffa.lo d the Amenc..n Auncil -

""'

Football
N•tlone l FootbaiiiA•IUI!

GREEN UA Y PACKERS - Stgned
1\ry•n W &amp;IJ!cr , pun~ lnd IUdoff re~um

I-2).12:1Spm

lp« llliSL

C.hfumLI (CJnhoe 2·2) II Ikuu11 (AJ·
4n:d 0-2) , \ 3~ r rn
Mmncsot1 (M1 home~ 2-0) II Boaton
(Viola l 2}. 7 ]5 p m
Kentu l"lly (M•ananlt I - ll al
Clrv~ l•nd (Arm1tronj t-J)., 7~! p.m.
Mllw1ukcc (8o1 to 2-1) 11 Chtc tgo
(McOoweU S-0), 8 ~ p.m
Toror1Lo (Ju•n G utman 3-0) It 0 1.k ·
land (Siuur~l.i 2-0), IO.OS p.m.
New Yo1lr.. (Ca duct 2- 1) 11 Suttle
(flcmina 2-1), 10·35 p m

LOS ANGELES RAIDERS - Re ·
Jerry RobinJM, linrb.ld8".
LOS ANGELES RAMS - Si1ned
M11thew Vca\d\, q11111~ck, John Fisher, caller, Dari1n McK.inney,li&amp;hl end;

Wednesday's games

LOS ANGEUS l(INGS - F!Md Tm~
WcbNt, cotciL
MONTR EAL CANADIENS - Rec.~olllld Ed Rew~an , fc.-ward. rrom FreOeric-

M.inncsou (hptru 1-3) at 8altimon:
(McDonaLd J-0), 7 : 3~ p m.
Boll.on (Gardiner 2-0) 11 O!iuao (Hi·

bbard 4- 1). 8·05 P:m
Mil waukee (Nnuro 2-2) at Kantu

us

City (GubLCU 1-2).
p.m.
C lneiAnd (Scu ddl'r 1-1) at Tnu
(WlU 3-1), 8:J! p.m.
Tcwonto (Key 1-1) It Suulc [R. .Johnt~:r!ll) , 10.05 p.m.
~ (ferT"Clll O-J) 11 Oalland (St.cw11'\ l - 2),10.~ p.m.

Now York (Pctel 2·2)

11 Cahfom11

(La"''IM 2· 1), 10:) 5 p.m.

NBA playoffs
Monda y'• scores
Confmnct ttmlnnall
Bolton 1~ Cltvtland N, MJMI Utd
1· 1

F1nt round

U1.1h 91, L.A. Clippm 19. U~ah wint
ICtiel

3·2

Cooltrenc• semlllna!J

Tonlahl- New YOlk •t Chie~ao. I
p.m.; Phoenii ll Portland, IO:lO p.m.

w.......,,_

S..ulo" uw.. 9 p.m.
11tul'lllll1- New YOlk •t auc.ao. I
p.m.; l'hoenilll Poctlmd.10:l0 p.m.
Prfd•J - Cltnland al BNtOI 1 I
, ...1S..W." Ulllh,l0:30 p.m.
S.lUrdiiJ- Chielao • New YtG, I

••

!old l.hc

coolPC:l ol Alaruo Powell, outflClda, to
!he ChinidU Dn&amp;ont of Japu~'• Cuu.n..l
T EXAS RANGERS -

Ht !Umtn .
..... 11
Tomnto . ......... 18
New York .
... IS

Mets 5, Astros 1
At Houston. Bret Saberhagen
allow011 his flfst run in 26 innings.
Still, the MelS cruised.
Saberhagen gave up six hits.
struck out nine and didn't walk a
batter in eight innings.
''I'm throwing pretty good. all
my pitches are working, my fastball, my changeup and curve,"
Saberhagen said. "I only got a cou·
pie of pitches up that I got hurt on.
That's what I was doing early in
the season that got me in trouble."

lca~

Fnc Ruc.kley , 11fllly, 1nd Jea11e Ch1Y11,

dderwiw. back .
MIAMI OOlPI{]NS - Sianed Jeff
Oclb:nbach., offG'111YC linanan.

Hockey
N1UOIUII 1lockry

LOrl

Lf.ap

of lhc American Hoclley lcaaucTORONTO MAPLE LEAFS - Fiftld

Tom Wan, &lt;XW~ch,lltld announoed be

will

.. y with the club 11 director d playc- devdopmern.

College
BALL STATE - N1med Robyn
Muley women'a hulcabi.U coaciL
UAYLOR - N•med footb1ll c01ch
Gr1nt Teart •lhlcl1c direcLOr, effecu~e

M•yll.
l.EJDGH - Named Frederick D. La·
Plan~. lrld and fic.ld 1nd men'• crot1

""""'Y """' .

MANHATTAN Named Pun
fnlehilla mm'a bu,tctball c:o.:h.

MASSACHUSETTS - Announced
the Ntiranent ol Prank Mcl.r.ney, •thkeic direc:\or, and that O.rid Bilchd'f, dean
~ alhiWcs, will Rep down to ui.e the job
ofaupenriiOJ of the univeni ty'l new

"""' rin1L

Mf'Rcv -

AMounee.d the ,.iJn•-

tion of Cuol Leib, womcn'• buketb&amp;U

~"'·
SOt.n'HERN

INDIANA - N1med
8NCC PNd man'• biU.C!lbLLll coech.
TEXAS.AIUJNaJ'ON - Nunod lor·

'Y 0.0...,
" "STATE
' " - ' -.........
WEST '""""'
VIRlllNIA
Named
Robert M.anlllll men'• bl'kc:!beU co.dL

slfikeouts in rccetving the loss.
Each team had only two hits.
Keith Jones doubled for Southern. and Kimes singled.
Chris French doubled and Roger
French singled for OH.
In the opener against Alexander
Andy Gruescr pitched well, but
with three errors Southern lost 5-2.
Gruescr fanned four and walked
two. Mayce picked up the win with
eight strikooulS and no walks.
Southern collected six hilS, two
si ngles by Billy Jones. a Trent Cleland double, and singles each by
Gruescr, Jeremy Northup and Dill.
Elmore. Chapman. Hammond.
Hawk and Maycc each hit safely
for Alex .
Billy Jones got hi s first career
start in the nightcap. but carne up
the loser. He went the distance. but
surfered the loss in Southern's 15-5
loss.
Jones fanned five and walked
seven. while Hawk walked nine
and fanned ftve for Alex .
For Southern. Scott Lisle homered, while Jones, Wickline. Hensler
and Dill each singled.
Kosier and Chapman each had
two singles for Alexander. while
Hawk singled twice and homered.
Southern next plays in the lOur·
nament Friday against the winner
of Wednesday's Millcr-Kygcr
Creek game.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In the NBA playoffs,

Celtics down Cavs 104-98 to even series
Hy The Associated Press
answered questions about Brad
For the Utah Jazz, the success of Daugherty being 100 good for him.
40 victories in 44 home games was Today. he played well and he 'II let
more than enough to balance the others do the talking."
Parish sank 13 of I 8 shots while
disappointmc.nt of four first-round
playoff losses in six years.
helping limit Daugherty to 22
, "I know how we are in thi s points on 7-for-15 shooting.
building. And I knew we'd do it" Daugherty scored only two points
said Jeff Malone, who scored
in the fourth quarter.
"This was a vintage Boston
points as Utah rallied from a 15point deficit for a 98-89 'lictory Celtic win," Cleveland's John Bat·
over the Los Angeles Clippers. It tie said. "They put you away very
gave the Jazz a 3-2 series triumph quie~y. They were very cool, calm
and collected. They shot the ball
Monday night.
For tl1e Boston Celtics, II con- extremely well, and our intensity
sec utive victories was more than went up and down because of it."
''This is much more reminiscent
enough to balance one poor pcrfor·
of
the
way we've been playing U1e
mance aga inst the Cleveland Cavalast
five,
six, seven weeks,"
liers.
Robert Pari sh bounced back McHale said. "I watched the whole
with 27 points as the Celtics beat tape of Saturday's game, and we
Cleveland 104-98. tying their East- didn't play well. Their double ·
ern Conference semifinal series I· teaming and scrambling defense
really botl1cred us. Today, we han I.
dled
it better. We had better spac·
"He answered every question
ing
on
the noor."
after he played bad," Kevin
Reggie
Lewis scored 26 points
McHale satd. "He answered qucs·
lions about being too old. He and McHale finished with 18 for
the Ccltics. Larry Bird has missed

is

all 13 games because of his sore
back.
Boston, wl1ich plays host 10 the
Cavs in the next two games Friday
ntght and Sunday. trailed 76-75
cntenng the fourth quarter before a
16-6 run gave the Celtics a 91-82
lead.
.
Mark Price scored 20 poinlS for
Cleveland.
The Jazz, who trailed 30-15 late
in the ftr'il quarter, avoided another
embarrassing playoff defeat.
The Clippers led 52-40 at half·
lime. but the Jazz pulled to 77-73
after three quarters and then pulled
ahead in the fourth period as Los
Angeles missed nine of its first 10
shots and scored just 12 points in
the final 1~ minutes.

"We hJd our chances," Clippers coach Larry Brown said. "We
learned a lot and extended a great
team to five games."
Karl Malone finished with 19
points for Utah, 15 of th em "' tl1 c
second half after he went I lor 'I
from the field in the first half.

WILSON SCORES- Eastern's Jaime Wilson (left) comes home
alter advancing on a bases-loaded fielder's choice grounder by
teammate Rachel Hawley in lhe third inning of Thursday's SVAC
softball game against North Gallia at the old Bidwell School. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Eastern beats North Gallia 10-2
Eastern's softball team defeated
North Gallia 10-2 Thursday at Bid·
well.
The win boosts Eastern to 9-1
overall and 8-1 in the SVAC.
EHS showed its leag ue- lcadmg
form in the second inning when
L1sa Golden reac hed on an error
anrl stole second. Jess ica Radford
singled. and Amy Well doubled
both home for a 2-0 lead. Carne
Mornsscy th en sin gled home Well
for a 3-0 EHS lead.
Eastern plated three run s in the
third and two each in the fourth and
firth to claim the 10·2 win.
North Ga lli a scored tw runs in
the third ofr EHS SL1rter and win·
ncr Lee Gtllilan.

Gtllilan fanned six and walked
just one. Angie Saunders suffered
the loss with one strikeout and
three walks.
Jaime Wilson had two singles
for Eastern , Tabby Ph ill ips two sin ·
gles and a double, Rachel Hawley a
double, Golden a single, Radford a
si ngle, Well a double, and Morrissey and Becky Dflggs each singles.
North Gallia hillers were led by
Cassie Petri e with two singles.
while Maureen Kelley and Tina
Myers each si ngled.
Eastern was to have played Hnn nan Truce Monday. but did not due
to HT seniors being on the scntor
trip.

Eastern reserves top Alexander 4-3
Eastern's reserve baseball team
posted its fir st win of the season by
defeating Alexand er 4-3.
Eastern scored two runs m the
third innin g when Wes Arbaugh
walked. Jeremy Buckley walked,
and Robert Reed delivered a tworun si ngle to give EHS a 3-0 lead.
Eastern scored a single run 1n
the fourth to go ahead 4 -0. but
Alexander carne back to within one
on an error. fielder's choice, and
two run single by Rice in the fifth .
David Koenig was the winning
pitcher with one walk. three slfike·
outs, and just five hits given up.
Ty son Rose came on in relief to
post the save. He walked none and
fanned four .
Vincent suffered the loss for
Alex with seven walks, nine strike·
outs and live hilS given up.

Omission
The results of the girls shol put
in the Meigs Invitational Tracf
Meet was unintentionally left out
of Monday's article.
Danielle Scou of Meigs won the
event with a throw of 31' 4 3/4 ",
and Rachel Wins ley of Fairfield
Union finished second with a throw
of 29' 9", while Jeni Pierson of
Federal Hocking third with a throw
of28' 5".
The Daily Sentinel regrets the
omission.

Eastern hitters were Pa t New·
land. Robert Reed, Charlie Btsscll ,
Ryan Buckley. and Koenig all with
smglcs.
Rice had two si ngle s for
Alexander, while Waggoner. lor·
dan, Marshall . Mansfield, and
Stewart each singled .
Eastern· s reserves arc now 1-0.

Walking can be hazardous 10
one's health .
Miller's Falcons . and pitchers
Joey Smith and Jason Cain in par·
ticular. learned th1s lesson the hard
way when they walked 19 men in
Monday's Division IV sectional
tournament game against host
Kyger Creek at Cheshire- Kyger Elementary, which the Bobcats won
20-5.
Senior Marc Villanueva struck
out five and walked three in going
the distance. Smith and Cain combined to strike out five.
Also powenng the Bobcats· al·
tack were Phil Bradbury, Chri s
Crace and Adam Denney (a ll 1·2).

Kyger Creek downs Trimble 12-5
Kyger Creek's softba ll team
pounded Tr imble p1tcher Chastity
Antle hard and ofte n 1n the early
tnnings of Monday's non -league
game at Cheshire, which the Bob·
cats won 12 5.
Junior Lu c13na Scou strucked
out fi ve and walked five to collect
the win An tle struck out one and
wa lked two. but her so lid conlfol
was overshadowed by KC's hittin g
and the TomcaLs' errors.
The Gallians' hit co llector'i were
Autumn Burnett (3-4. double). Ali·
c1a Ward (2 -4 , lriple). Jodi Nance.
Bethany Rose and Scott (also 2-4),
and Mtchelle Conkle (1-4, 1riple).
Trimble's offense carne from Molly Mingus (2-4), Angie Lent ((1 ·2).
Brooke Lewis (1 ·3) and Antle (1 -

•

Remember Mom On
Mother's Day!
WITH FLOWERS FROM
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
BEDDING PLANTS FLATS...................................'6.50
BLOOMING a FOUAGE HANGING BASKETS..'S.7S. '6.75

&amp;IN. POITED MUMS .............................
'3.50
&amp;IN. POTTED VARIEGATED GERANIUMS...:•us
.a. . . . . . . . . . .

.

Mall Rhodes and Villanue va (hath
1·5). Miller 's hillers were Chad
Cook (2 ·3). Smith (2-4). Jeremy
Duffy (102). Mike Sexton (1 · 3).
Bruce Lanning and Johnny Warren
(both 1-4).
Kyger Creek (5·10- I). which
may play Symmes Valley in a
makeup game and resume 1ts suspended game with Oak Hill anytime between Ioday and Fnday.
will play Southern Frid ay for the
lower-bracket utle.
Inning totals
Millcr ............. IOI210 0 - 5-8·5
Kygcr Creek .. I06 085 x - 20- 5-3
WP- Villanueva
LP- Smith

OINI.ITAl TREES

BRADFORD PEAR-'111.85
MAGNOUA. ...'US.'1U5

WEEPING CHERRY-.'14.85
FLOWERING PWU...'US
FLOWERING CRAB-.'1.85
NICE SELECTION SHRUBBERY--'1.86 • '1Uii
Eneaded Be•.. 'DDS HDl ONL.... ....,.7 ..-.
o.-M....n8•;riU

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

4).

The Bobcats will host North
Gallia in the D1vis1on IV scctionals
today.
Inning totals
Trimble .........013 000 I - 5- 5-5
Kyger Crcek..l42 302 x - 12· 12-4
WP-Scott
LP- Antle

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"We didn't play that great, so
we just wanted to come out, play
hard and make some thing hap pen," he said.
Danny Manning, who foul ed out
with three mintues left, scored 24
points for the Clippers.
The Jazz advanced to the second
round against Sealtle, starting
Wednesday night at Salt lake City .
The sixth-seeded SuperSonics
defeated Golden State, No. 3 in the
Western Conference, and were the
only lower-seeded team 10 win in
the flfSI round.
Tonight's second-round openers
have New York at Chicago and
Phoenix at Pordand.
The Trail Blazers, top-seeded in
the West. completed a 3-1 victory
over the Los Angeles Lakers Sun·
day after Phoenix swept San Anto·
nio 3-0.
Defending champion Chicago,
3-0 winners over Miami, have
waited since Wednesday for the
Knicks, who defeated Detroit Sunclay for a 3-2 series win.

In the NHL playoffs,

Vancouver, Chicago top Edmonton, Detroit
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
The Vancouver Canucks out·
played the Edmonton Oilers for the
second straight game in the Stanley
Cup playoffs. This time they beat
them.
" It was a great win after a frus·

trating loss,·· Bnan Burke, Van·
cou vcr's dlfcc tor of hockey opera·
tion s, said followin~ Monday's 4-0
v1ctory over the Oilers ."That's a
preny good team to shut out
(because) they score a lot of
goals."
Edmonton won the opener of

the Smythe Div ision finals on Sun·
day 4-3 on an overtime goal by Joe
Murphy afte r being badly outplayed.
In Monday night's other game.
the Chicago Blackhawk s beat the
Dc1roit Red Wtngs 3·1 at Joe Louts
Arena to take a 2-0 lead in their

Kyger Creek pounds Miller 20-5
in Division IV sectional action

Transactions

~n,

1\MF.RICAN LEAGUE
E•••~m 01.-(lloft
w L .,L
Tum

-..-

•.

.

Plttab urah 11, Clnclnn•U 5
Al.lanta 6, Oucago I

him.' '

North Gallia's baseball team
hands Southern 3-1 defeat

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

single and Sid Bream and Dave
Justice homered for the Braves.
"You have 10 hand to itiO John
Smoltz, " Cubs manager Jim
Lefebvre said. "He certainly did a
fine job against us. We had 10
baserunncrs. We had opportunities
early. but he had. such great stuff
we couldn't do anything against

Tuesday, May 5, 1l:l92

-

TRIPPED - Vancouver's Cliff Ronning (7)
is tripped from behind by Edmonton forward
Petr Klime in the first period or Monday night's

NHL game in Vancouver, B.C., which the
Canucks won 4-0. (AP)

Maple Leafs promote Watt to front office
TORONTO (AP) - The music
stopped Monday, leaving the
Toronto Maple Leafs' Tom Walt
out of the coaching chair and sit·
tin g in a front office position.
Watt takes over as director of
player development, a job that has
been held by Floyd Smith smcc
Smith was shunted aside as general

manager last summer wh en Cliff
Fletcher was hlfed as president and
general manager. Smith's title now
is director of professional scouting.
Fletcher denies the reassignment
of Wan has anythmg to do with th e
failure of the team to qualify for
the playoffs during Watt's tenure
as head coach.

AL games ... (Continued from Page 4)
time since last year.
Rusty Mea cham ( 1-0) got the
win for retiring one batter 1n the
sixth . Rod Nichols (0·2) gave up
four runs and th ree hits in 2 1/3
innings.
White Sox 7, Brewers 0
Alex Fernandez pitched a one·
· hitter for his first career shutout.
· allowing a second-inning double to
Dante Bichette at Comiskey Park.
· Fernandez (2-2) slfuck out seven
: and walked one.
Ricky Bones (1·1) gave up four
runs and five hits in two -plus
inmngs, including a two-run single
to George Bell in a four-run third.
Twins 6, Red Sox I
John Smiley (1-2) allowed three
hits in seve n shutout innings
against Roger Clemens at Fenway
Park for his first viciOry with Min·
nesota. Former Pirates teammate
Bob Kipper and Carl Willis fin·
ished with one-hit relief.
Clemens (3·3) lost despite hi s
fourth complete game in six starts,
allowing 12 hits, striking out six
and walking three - two of them
intentional.
Orioles 8, Rangers 5
Chris Hailes hit a grand slam to
cap a five-run seventh innin~ as
Baltimore won 1ts Stxlh stra tght
overall and ninth straight in Cam·
den Yards. The Orioles' 17-8 start
is their best since 1970.
Reliever Alan Mills (2 -0) was
the winner, pitching live scoreless
innings. With the score tied 3-all,
Terry Mathews (1·3) ~alked Devereaux and hil Cal Rtpken wtth a
•

pitch. and Ttm Hu let t hit a go ·
ahead single off Floyd Banni ster.
Todd Bums wa lked Randy Milli ·
ga n and Holi es hit hi s seventh
home run.
Blue Jays 7, Athletics 3
Todd Stot~ emyrc (4-1) won his
fourth Slfaight swrt. allowing three
runs and five hH . , in seven innings,
and Roberto Alamar and Candy
Maldonado drove m two runs each
for visiting Toronto.
Ron Darling ( 1-2) was tagged
for six runs and 10 hil s in 4 2/3
innings. Rickey Henderson hit a
leadoff homer for the A's, hi s first
this season and the 51st of hi s
career, an ongoing rccocd.
Tigers 6, Angels 2
Bill Gullic~son (4-2) won hi s
fourth slfaight start. allowmg seven
hits in 8 J/3 innings at Tiger Stadi·
urn,
Jim Abbott (1 -4) allowed a
three-run homer 10 Dan Gladden in
the fifth and a two-run homer to
Travis Fryman in the sixth and is
winless in four starts.
Yankees 7, Mariners 5
Jim Leyrilz tied a career high by
driving in four runs with a homer
and a double in the Kingdome as
New York sent Seattle 10 ilS sixth
strai~ht loss.
Tim Leary (3·1) allowed five
runs and six hits in seven innings
and Steve Howe got three outs for
his third save. Russ Swan (2·4)
gave up seven runs - four
unearned - and six hits in five
innings.

"This is all part of our attempt
to rebuild the structure of Maple
Lea f Gardens and the on-ice opera·
t1ons," said Fletcher. ''I'm looking
for Tom to be mva luablc."
Wan. 56. said the job change is
"something that isn't exac~y new.
When I signed a new contract (last
summer). I was asked if I wanted to
continue coac hing or take a man·
agement position . I thou ght I
should con tinue coaching (in 1991 92) to maintain some conti nuity
and consistency."
Wan replaced Doug Carpenter
in Oc tober 1990 after serv~ng as
Carpenter's assistant. Smce then.
96 different players have worn the
Leaf uniform. Only Wendel Clark
and Todd Gill remain regulars from
the team Wan took over.
"Tht s team is on the verge of
becoming a preuy decent hockey
team and being able to compete
with the other teams in this divi ·
sion ." said Watt. who was NHL
coac h of the year in 1981 -82 with
the Winnipeg Jets. "I've been
coaching for 33 years and this is a
chance for me to step back and
view the game from a different
standpoint.
"Even in the United Auto
Workers, it's 30 years and ouL "
He was assistant coach of the
Calgary Flames when they won the
Stanley Cup in 1989. and has been
on the coach ing staff for three
Canada Cup triumphs.
Fletcher now flies to Prague,
Czechoslovakia, for the completion
of the world hockey tournament.
He said Dave King, Canada's
coach. is among those he'll interview for the vacant coaching job.
King says he's interested.
Mike Murphy, Wau's assistant
coach who once coached the Kings,
made it clear he·d like a chance at
the head job.
"I haven't talked 10 Cliff," said
Murphy. "We've been playing
phone tag the last couple of days.
"I'm hopeful. Thai's about as
much as I can say."

best-of-7 series.
The playoffs continue tonight
wtth games in th e Patnck and
Adams divi sions. The Pittsburgh
Penguins visit the New York
Rangers in the Patrick and the
Bosto n Bruins arc at Mon1real in
the Adams.
The PengUinS won the opener at
Madison Square Garden 4-2. while
Boston won at the Montreal Forum
6-4.
Norris Division
Black hawks 3, Red Wings I
The Blackhawks won for the
f1rth slfaight time in the playoffs.
First-period goals by Jeremy
Roenick and Greg Gilbert gave
Chicago a 2- 0 lea d and Steve
Larmer mad e it 3-0 in the second
period.
Steve Yz erman scored a thlfd·
period goal for the Red Wtngs .
who also fell behind Minnesota 2-0
in the semifinals before rallying to
eliminate the North Stars in se ven
games.
The Blackhawks' defense held
Dctroil to only three shots on goal
in the second period and Chicago
had a 23-13 edge in shots after two
periods. Chicago finished with a
28-25 edge in shots.
"I think our players are a liule
bn frustrated at this point," Yzcr·
man said . " They play tight
defense. They hold you up a lot.
But we haven't played well. We
should be more concerned with that
than with our fruslfation."
Smythe Division
Canucks 4, Oilers 0
Cliff Ronnmg scored twice and
the Canucks dominated from stan
lo r,nish.
The Canucks. who beat Edmon·
ton for the ilfst time in live lifetime
playoff meetings, did almost every·
thing ri ght. They connected on
thre e straight power plays in the
fi rst period, hit every blue jersey in
stght and shut down the Oilers so
thoroughly that goa lie Kir~
McLean often spent minut es by
himself as Vancouv er outshot
Ed monton 39-14.
The Oilers went nearly 16 min ·
utcs bcrore a 160-font clearing pass
on net was crc dncd as th eir first
shot on goa l. Th ey were out shot
15· 1 in th e fir st penod and 24-R
throu gh tw o.
The Oilers. who won the series
opener 4-3 m overtime on Sunday
and play ho st to Game 3 on
Wednesday, may have lost more
than a game. Goaltender Bill Ran ·
ford. who made 40 saves in the
Game I victory, did not come out
for the second period with what the
Oilers called a bruise 10 the upper
body . He appeared to have been
inJured while making a flfSI·period
Sl:IYC.

"Give the credit to Van cou ·
ver," Oilers coach Ted Green said.
"They took away the passing lanes
and forced us inlo a lot of errors.
We need ed to come out w1th more
speed and execute better. We
d•dn't."

MITCH'S
PRODUCE
MIDDLEPORT

FLATS•••••••••••••••$695

HANGING

BASKETS••••••••••

srs

TIGIH DEFENSE- Roston center Robert Parish (left) pla)·s
ti~ht

defense against the Clcnhmd Cct\':tlit·rs' Mike Sandrrs during

Monday ni~hl 's Nil A playoff game in Richlit'ld, Ohio. which the
Celtics won 10~ · 98toe&gt;rn the best·llf-seven seri&lt;·s at 1-1. (AI')

Ohio State's Jackson to skip
senior season for NBA draft
TOLEDO . Ohw (API - J1m
Jackson wtll pass up hi s fmal sea·
so n of ba.&lt;ketha ll elig ibility at Oh10

news CC1n fcr cnc c ""here Jack sOn

Stal l: ;md rna)...c M1m self a\aJI:tbk

wil l :tnr1 ounn · hr s plans.
Snapp s:ud he spoke w1th Jock son twice l;l ' t week and that Jack -

fo r 1he NBA dralt. a newspaper
reported today.

son had mdt G ll c d he would make
an anrwunccmcnt Wedn esday.

The Blad e quoted :m uni (krlll r,cd source :ts s.;.tyl n g ti! Jt Jack son

ha s dcc"lcd he's ready lor th e
NBA.
" Jun feels

JS 1f

hasketh~ll

he ' s ac co m-

pltshed nc:1rly evcrythmg he set out
to do on the co llege leve l." th e
source told The Blade. " The pro·
fesstonal (N BA) people thmk hi s
game is ready for the next level."
Jac kson' s mother. Sandra Jackson. srud she hoped her son would
conllnuc ht s cducauon at Ohio
State 1n the off season. Jackso n is
from Toledo and is a graduate of

Macomber H1 gh School.
' 'I'd l1kc to sec h1m go bac k in
the summ ers and finiSh. I'm ve ry
proud of hun whatever hi s deci -

SIOn. He did what he wanted to do
1n co llege." she SJid.
Jackson. a fi.foot -6 jun1or
sw in gman. ha s unu l May 10 10
declare his intentions.
Jackson has sa1d he will not discuss hi s (_lcci s10 n un til a formal
announccm~,.·nr

Oh10 S1:11e ass ista nt

coach Paul Bta7cau said the coach·
rng s t~1ff al ~ n CA Jld.:tcd a m1dwcck
annou nccmc nl.

1s rn~H.Ic. Th:.tL m tght

come a1 early as Wednesday.
Ohio StJ!C sports informat10n

dlfCC ior Steve Sn:lpp sa1d Monday
hiS office has tcntJtLvely set aSlllc a
room at tl1e Woody Hayes Athleuc
Center for a Wednesday afternoon

WALLPAPER

STEAMER

Remove old wallpaper.
Easy and quick. Rent
our Electric Steamer.

$1200 24 Hour

WALLPAPER
AND

BLIND SHOP
Memorial Bridge Approach
on Garfield Ave.,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mon. lhru Fri. S-8

Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-5

428-1085

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I
Marl{etplace

Tuesday, May 5, 1992
Page-6

Community calendar

RATES
Days

Communily Ca lendar items 9:30a.m. AllladJcs welcome.
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
must be received well in advance Township Trustees will meet Tuestn assure publicalion in the cal- day at 7:30 p.m. at the state
l'rtd&lt;Jr.
forestry building on Joppa Road.

night at the school. A Mardi Gras theme was
featured in the decorations ror the prom sponsored by the junior class, Jeannie Taylor, advisor. Jennifer Walker was crown bearer and
Amanda Fetty, the nower bearer.

t-----

l

lvl t\r'vll\lOCI&lt;.\1'111
~ROG\\:\M

293·4455

MOB ILL

,;____-1
'

1

•
1

TERRE WOOD

1

Wood to graduate

By law, mdividual citizens can
give only S1,000 to a candidate for
each election while Political A'&lt;tion
Committees are allowed to donate
$5,000 per candidate per election,
primary and general.
Principle manufactured goods of

ENERGY
SAVER
WATER
HEATERS

-·

lrDWI, White,

or Ivory SIIIOI,
lllll~ !IIIII

154.95

!lim

-~

SO GAL IUcrRK

or the mobile im.a~ing unit, OIS Shr ~reelS

Agent, Home Economics, th1s is cancer. It is designed us a screening
th e maximum appomtments that ciJniC for women ...
can be taken in one day. Another
Stat•stics from the National
sc reening is scheduled for July 9
and interested Meigs County resi- Cancer Institute llld•wte that one in
denLS may contact Phyllis Bearhs at ten women w1ll develop breast canthe health department at 992-6626 cer. Early detection through programs such as sclf-c.am and reguto be placed on lhe lisL
The mobile imaging unit uavels lar mammograms arc important to
throughout the state of Ohio to pro- successful treatment of breast canvide mammograms for $55, wh1ch cers
IS much lower than the typical rate
charged for this service. Goals of
For additional mforma tion on
this service are to reach chentele mammograms contac t th e Meigs
who are over 35, have not had a County Health Dcp.1rtment at 992mammogram in the past year, do 6626, the Me1gs County Cooperanot have insurance to cover mam- tive Extension Scmce at 992-6696
mography , and are not currently or the National Cancer Institute at
exhibiting any symptoms of breast 1-800-4-CANCER.

UST
'h 110'........................................._.... .2.39
o/. "xto·.....- ......... _,, ___, ____ ,, _______ ,,4.08

I

develop on air."
JOHANNESBURG, South
Afnca (AI') - It wasn't the wel come Joan Co llins expected . A
me~n ca lled th e actress a "silicone
sex symbol" and another said she
wus a nice. but empty. package.
M1 ss Collins, viSiting South
Africa to raise fund s for charity,
wns invllcd to a television station
where she taped an interview
before a studio audience and
watched a recorded segment about
her career.
The recorded segment included
interviews with South African male
celebrities who were asked about
the sex appeal of Miss Collins,
known for her role as the wealthy,
manipulative
Alexis
on
''Dynasty.''

Actor Clive Scott called her a
"58-year-old silicone sex symboL" Frank Opperman, another
actor, said she was "a nice package
which is empty inside."
Ms. Collins was nonplussed.
"I'm a bit shocked," she said.
"I wish I were in France."
BUFFALO, N.Y (AP) -

Two

firefighters arc burned about Ron
Howard 's "Backdraft," saying the
movie included parts of scripLS they
wrote in 1988 and 1989.
John C. Zoll and Terrence Bums
filed a federal lawsuit aga1nst
Howard's company, Imagine Films
Entertainment, contending th e
movie about the life of a rookie
firefighter included funeral scenes
identical to what they had wntten.
The lawsuit cites other similarities, including a ftrehou sc dog_of a
breed diffcrenl than the trad•ttonal
Dalmatian and scenes in wht ch a
firefighter and a woman arc found
in a compromising position in a
firehouse loft.
"There arc startling similarities
between the plot of the film and
two scripts that were written and
copyrighted by my clients," said
Daniel C. Oliverio, an attorney for
Zoll and Burns, who is a former
firefighter.
The movie, directed by Howard
and starring Kurt Russell and Billy
Baldwin, was released last year and
grossed $147 million. The lawsuit,
filed last week in Buffalo, seeks
unspecified damages.

-· --.

l-IOll
IRIAKU

4• FLEXIBLE DRAIN
&amp; SEWER PIPE

.
IOUO 01 P!lfOliTID, 100'101..1.
AU HTIIt«;lliiiiAIU

WE STOCII ADS QJlVERT IN

'-t"'•• D h•• ond

20JS

~.-.tal

Pump .........
.,_.,....,.

2 Mileo an Hyaoll Run
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE

12 Visits...... $25.00
16 Viaits...... $30.00
1 Visit.. ...$3.00

-

c.llw~··

-=-

•

•

992-2417 or
992-7884

Public Notice

,

ll'MI5--

ESTAJE 110.
andDI 7 5
,..... . . II

NOTlCE OF .APPOINTIIENT
OF FIDUCIARY

of

I

•

Eac&gt;-

On

trlrlxof . . . , _ . . . . . . .

a.•

ahD
ESTATE tm. 11141
I

I

of

-

ta, Pom.-oy,
..... County, Ohio 45761.

will N

R-E.Buc:k,
l'robaRJudga

h

...... .....
..........

p
o,, Ohio, 45711 ..,..
oppolnlod Co-Exacutor• of
c.rollne Warl,

,_--at

-

d1 Ulled, lite
~ ReMit.

Oiido-t• . . . . . . .

In

.,

_...,,........,_...,.
=~c 1

..

..
... _. . ...........
.. ..
----

clat thank• to Ewing
Funar.. Hom•, Rav. Kan
Bak•r Bob Sp•nc•r,
lbrgarat Tuttltl,
lrtenda and tho•• -dIng ftowero, •nd food
during the IHne•• and
of our Mo- •nd
ar.....,othw.
81noeroly,
Th•t.nllyol

.._.lin• RollO

l..aa 1(.
(5)5,
12, 11,31e

Memory

...,lllid
.. ta

,.,. •

,.

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

In lolamory ol

NEVA GRIMM 5151112
Six long ~ hllv•
come and gone
Sines God callad you
to
Hla tt.venly
We know He only takas
lho very beot
Up ther• with Him tor
eternal rut
But ahe didn't go
alone,
Part of uo went wllh

her
The

day

God

Clerk

Altr ,...... s ' ..... 1- - - - - - - -

. . - . E . - . ......

c

' .... c-t
PaP Pili ".

----c

(5) 5, Ill: - -

5

~

Horn..
PllUIIM
wlahooto give ....

Ol 32115

····••oacl

con£' . . _ . _..._.

1

uld

NOTICECIFLI MI&amp;AT
OF FIJIICIIIRY
On . . . . . 1B2, . . .
llalgo Ceultty ,.......
Court. C.. iiiL vas,
8'
n s·r. Box

........ -

Alut.-..~

1057111

...

--·-

m

cornehoma.

1

-

TRUSTEES
PATRICIA CALAWAY,
CLERK
46686 GUTHRIE ROAD
COOLVILLE, OHIO 45n3
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Onngo Township
Trus,_ will be KC&lt;!ptlng
bldo IO&lt; tho 1992
amPery mowing aea•on
..,lllllay 2, 1992. A total ol S
CB'I'IIIIaries to be mowed 2
..._a month or 11 deemed
ID -=c:ept or rejecl any or all

bids. l.clw bid may not lnllu·
ear:e the trustees decision .
Send bids to:
Palricla Calaway, Clerk
-Guthrie Road Coolville,

29.95

HappyAds

--·

2l0' ROLL

.......

Buy

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS 111d
EVERlASnNGS
52100 s.a. w ........ ow.
247-4035

NOW OPEN FOR SPRING
Planh, Her•s, Perentials,
Enrlamtg

OPEN
WED.-SUN. 1D-5 p.m.

o.,,

~.J in.
HlHDr IOl _ _

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BUUDOZE_r:! 1 ~ACKHOE
and TllACrutUE WORK
AVAILABlE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TllAILER SITES,
LANDCIEARING,

DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

~ in. Octattft

goroqt, ll'!or}.,

%eadows
"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

$20.00
Custom Painting•

614-992-2242
412/92/tln

7.79

'IIUJ

Mon.-Fri. 7 •m to 5:30 pm: Sit. 8 am to &amp;pm:

BOWARD L.
WHITESEL
i100FING
NEW -REPAIR

l.1v~ftlork

Bwnnf'.ll~

Rudding.'!
LoLa &amp; Acrr.age

6-1.--- H11y &amp; Gr11in
65-- Seed &amp; Ferlili1Pr

Til I \SI'OIIT \Till\

IIJ-:'-jT \I .S

71- Autoa for Sale
41- u..... ,o, Renl
72 - r,.,k.fo, Sole
42- Mob de
for Rent
Varu &amp; 4 WD'a

Home~

7~

43--- farm• for Ren t
44--- Apartment for fteul
15-- Furni.lihed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
17- WantM to Hent
48--- Equipment for Rent

19--

~'or

74--- Motorcycle•
7S-- lloa ll! &amp; Moton for Sale
76- Auto Parl.IJ &amp; Ae&lt;~'"''"l
77- Auto Rt:ptur
78.-- C..mpmt; Fqu1pment

SEH\ ICES

Lea1e

1\-1 EHCII.\ ~DIS E 81 82-

51- Household Goode
52- Sporting Good.a
53 - An1i quea
;,4--- M1s.c. Me rc handis e
:)'1-- Huil..lin ~ Suppl iCI'

Home lmp orvementa
Plumbing &amp; Heating

83---- Exctnat1ng
84---- Elcctmul &amp; Hef''"""iorl
B;~ G~!ncrulllaulmg

86-- Mob1l•· II&lt;Jmc Rep111r

87 -

Lf,h ul~ tnr

Ices.

DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS ·
BUY-SELL-TRADE
4.2t-92- I mo. pd .

CARPENTER SERVICE
~oom

Addition•

-Gutter Work
-Ciootrlcal and

II lO Wesi,illom, Ohio •l!J-381 l

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
3-tJ-92-lfn

In Custom
Frame
NEW &amp; USED
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992,70I3 or
992·5553
OR TOll FliEE
1·800·848·0070

614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fenllizlng, Weeding,
end Seeding.

Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
Roold.,a.t&amp;
Commercial

Agriculture

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Lime

USED RAILROAD TIES
4·4-97-tt.

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Vo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

304·273·5555

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

4·9-lfn

Window
•Roofin~

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

•Insulation

Perennials &amp;

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742-2097

Annuals,
Strawflowers and
more Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.
local ad 01 Ptdht's Hill
h!Mw.y botw- Dopol St.
1tn RullcM •d Rl. 5S4
MON.-SAT. 9 lo S

539 Bryan Place

Middleport, Ohio

lll t4nfn

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

614·742-2772

EsUrn~~lee
4111112, 1 mo. p4

~

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

FOR SALE

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO
"Help~

''"'ViA'Kliii'L'D~r'"

Plumbing

Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

4f1W 1 mo. pd.

Free

Our Sprin@; Shlprnenl Of
1toy-81lt nllen Now In Stock.

-Interior 6 Exlerior

949:2188

134 AI St..•••IFirlo Cl:

NOW OPEN
Hrs. 91a 5
Moe. 1•1'1 Sat.

YOUNG'S
~oofing

GUTIERS

You To R~o~r

YoW" ,,..,..,._,.,"

204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992-3184

AU MAlliS
Bring II In Or Wo
Pick u~,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
985·3561
lcrou fro• , ... orne.

I mo. pd. 4116m

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

217 I. l~&lt;oo4 St.

614-949-2202

POMIROT, OHIO

3/23!92./tln

4/2l/92/l-

cum

Class

St. Rt. 7

Cheshire, OH.

DK's FARM TOYS

L~

~\7
DALLAS K. WEBER · OWnAr

All I&lt;ALES - VINIAGE ond

Our

.Sprin~

Sh.lpmntt Of

Tror·Hih 1UI.. n Now In S1o ck.

)o"'wA"Icfrii~'D ~r'"
II. SO Weo,ilhtn~ Ooo •193-381 S

21201'9213 mo.

BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limes1one

Dirt, Gravel and Coal'
licensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591

DISPIAY£hl

THE QUALITY PAINT SHOP
MIDDUPORT, OH.
997·339H:30 •-4:00,.
147-307D-Aflor 1:00

r.

4-2-92· ••.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
· •New Homes

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMEilCii\L and RESIDENTii\1.
t'REE ESTIMi\TES

614·949·280 1 or 949·2860

•Garages
•Co111plete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

(Ho Sunday Calls)
2/12192

FlUE UTIM4'US

ATTENTION

985·4473
667·6179

\lullil&lt;· ,'i: lluuhl t• 11idl'

' 2-7·92· tln

n1a:n 1na:n,,,

Moi1Mr'1 D•y

NG

4f1

- . , Birfltd.y

You'll Come Up Aces With

The Classifieds
992-2156

DearM..,.
true.
&amp;n&gt; BWtladoy

,._.,..SO,;.~

»-M...,.

. . . . . . ltan!

yoa..
Your

love

&amp; co.
--w. ,.. ,. o.t 01 ,.lflool
-Ill U1 lit It l'w

r_.

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FRH ESOIIAitS
HAYI llfliDKES
.., ••• p&amp; lolrt '"'''"

'"• ..... 614-915-4110
W7112111M.

candy Cards and
Gift Boxes.
Long Stem Candy

Rose Suckers

P•rf•ct For Mother~
M

Doyond
Dauflil•r

••lt•rl

Be~nquu

NOW TAKING ORDERS!

If It's
llddltport-992-6302

lhlllll' (llllll'r'

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.

IJTCD.,.,rDIII

69'

12-5-tfn

COllECIABLE
'Riders Available'

59'

992·5500

34--

•

SHOP

4115192/t mo.

59'

•JEST UTTU LUMBER YARD IN TOWN•

Pomeroy, Ohio

11- M11eellanwu•
' 18-- W11nted T&lt;J Do

MIDDLEPORT GUN

111111

4 ln. ·~· llftlril•l
11 ' ' - - IOI ...I!t!!1
lm91t PYC
IWit(H 101-

School• &amp; ln.!ilrudion
It- R11d10, TV &amp; Cl3 Repaa.-

DARWIN, OHIO
992-3838
7131(9
~~~0-,~==:::::::::::
KEVIN'S LAWII
'l(p.tfiryn
MAINTENANCE

614-992-2549

HJIH

UIUNG 101-

Help W.. nted
Siluatioru Wanted

\2 -

4·21-92·1 ... pL

Call614-992-6637

]h«i}~@!

634 E~ Main St.

to

How T"""'
FJ;.,• By,
Loolt 1floo u "31 "!

11

SHt ~door/Outdoor
l.ltenslon Cord. 1611

O'DELL

A~o~a:t.JOn

Quality
Hoppy Birthduy
Stone Co.
'-c._
·nd_y_u_mb_e_rt_. • SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Tubu 1old ltpa•ottlr.

b.n,h or hallwaw .

I S-

MUST PRE-REGISTER FOR
All CLASSES
HRS: Mon.-S.t.10am-Spm
sunday 1-5 pm
For More Info Call

.:

1212 ur - .................. 41.95

hanging hotdwort .
D

7-l.oe t and Found
8--- Puhhe S"le &amp;

Basket

SUMP PUMP DISCHARGE HOSl---·-9.99

light up

13-- lnturanc.e
14---- Ruaineu T n1.1mng

I 0 Dlo-4 II., IIW41oporl

. ....

.,.IJI""..,..-........~

..b;-

5--- H11ppy Ads
6--- ~....Gat and Found

APR . 28. 6:00 pm -

250' ROll 8/l W/0 GROUND._, 116
4-0 AlUMINUM
'
£NIRANCI CAll£--- 119

48" SHOP liGHT

F \H~l :o-li'I'I.II-: S
&amp; 1.1\ E:-ITOCI'

(5) 1, 4, S, 5 10TC

5

12/2 NM WITH
GROUND COPPER CABlE

21.99

Gryur Sump Pump

With

ll -

Open until 7:30 pm

'

.,... .....

ln Memory

3-- Announcementl
4-- G1veaway

TROLLEY STATION

Grandchlldran &amp;
Grealilfandchlldran.

-46.9s"""="""

lOP•~

--.,.,~·~
~~-~""~~±·i'T'iSJ
t

f-.,.,...,."'!7'7

Welcome Slates
ORANGE TOWNSHIP

1 • Ollto 45723
(4) 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30

-~

Loved and mlaHd by
Chlklran,

N I __
P_ub_n_c_o_t_c_e

__

• .....,. .-• -- a .... . -

Th• family ol

:n-.

lhiga County Prabato
Caurl, c.. No.
Lalli
Wrigill Brllfto?•ln, 1118
i"'IRy A-, Cleo olalrd, Ohio,
44127 Md Richard Dun
lbnay, 32615 S. A. 143,

n

-c..

..id

llay 1, 1112, In tho

a•, 10", 12", IS"_. 18"

Sump

GET

Mu.1cllllnatrumen ..

JB- Fru1L1 &amp; Vegt:t..ble~~
59- F'o.- S!ile or Trade

33-- F&amp;rm• for Sak
3~

CLASSIFIEDS
RESU • ,.,.._, F.'JlST'

APRIL 13-18
blended Easter hours.

14/2 NM WITH
GROUND COPPER CABl£

21- Bwine.1 Opportumty
22- Money to Loan
23--- Proft.:~~eional Service~

f-----~=--=====-=C"'-----j, 36-- Real Elllate W.antM

4-7-92·1 mo.

llfllltl

.

charged. for each day a5 S('parate ads .

937- Buflalo

21, 21; (5) 5,

SALE
'-i x1 0' Type L ................................................ 6.99
'-i"x10' Type M..... _........ - ..............- ........,_..... 5.18
'!."X 10'Type L ........... - ............................... 14.99

Y,

2

ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

-

l111t '''"· "' •I• dot~
•nobrt _ 11 lht lt••l prkut

COPPER PIPE

54.99
-HP

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF

56 99

"'" ,,,,k ''"n ti"''''""· I no llllll•p•••. and

8115- l..elart

SUMMER
IMAGES

:

of
ll:iWtle,

HeM,D

fiducl•rl• h1111o - . Iliad
In tho Prob... Court, lllliga
Co·tnty, Ohio, for IIJIPFOV..

COMMON PlEAS COURT
PROBATE DtVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

reta-.

3.39
3.39
2.98
4.29
8.59
11.99

$ JO
$ .42
$ .60
$ 05/day

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days w1ll be

9-- Wanted

... m J' e
..
Hlkla . . ., ' l ' ' ? Ia
ol a. &amp;ble .. Euulj&amp;

Public Notice

Accounta and voucher•

SALE

4.58--l..eon
57&amp;--Apple Gnm~
773-Muon
882-:..ew li.ven

NEW OPENING

r.r. T -

....

-•--•
Call 814-992-7104 lor ""'PP'.

of lho following named

•

15

\!';CL\L

Bus in

Jun.,1112.11--

ffUI4

'

1'h"x10' Sch 40................................. 3.69
2"x10' Sch 40..................................- 5.49
3"x10' Sch 40 ..- .........- ..... - ........... 10.49
4"x10' Sch 40...... _ .. ______ ,_,, ....... 13.119
~

Oft•'•·

•

UST
3"x10' S&amp;D.......................................3.99
4"x10' S&amp;D......- ...............................4.79

m;1

lift;. ,... lw..."'I·••

•••llt'lll. HtWt 7t
U tot1l

SEWER AND DRAIN PIPE

---People in the news--NEW YORK (AI') - Jan'"' ·
ophomst Branfurd Mclfsalis sa 1d it
was easy to give up li fe on the mad
for the "Ton1ght" show.
"I think th 1s is a chan ce 10
introduce quJiity mum: to a lot of
peop le," he said m an Interview
published Sunday in The New
York Times Magazine.
· "But more important, I 'll be
stationary. I'll wake up m the same
bed, day after day, somcth ing that I
haven't done si nce college."
· Marsalis, 31, said he looks for w'ard to growing as a music1an
while living in California.
· "I'll be able to practice for the
first time in years ," he said.
"There's a great classical saxophone teacher at the University of
Southern California that I want to
study with."
. On May 25, Marsalis takes over
for Doc Severinsen as band leader
and Jay Leno takes over perma~ently for Johnny Carson as host of
l)le late-night NBC show.
Marsalis said he and Leno
"don't really know each other.
We're going to find out about each
.dlher on the show. It's going to be
interesting to see al(elationship

,.,

3.119

rleaunt

1&gt;47 .(;ool&gt;iU.

B.
...
ESTAJE 110. 211151-and Oidi&amp;diue ' ~
I ol'
UndiiE.CT
n·-onlria C..T.A.. of . .
of Willi.. W ' ~
Waod- a n
0.

boon-

Ill! Ill RTltiiGI

Wilt. - · k"ll" lito

319-•~

0

PRICE REDUCED!

100-AMP LOAD CENTER

SALE
2.29

~r

143--Portlaad
U!~Lttart Fall•
M9-luiae
74:!- Had.ad

Will
And•••-

Tho pfloe his
to SM.IIOO ond
owner ftnardng of up to 10% ot pwchue
lll10Uri may be poul&gt;lt ... CJIIIIIylng pot·
son to buy very rice home on 3"' . , . In
Raclnt. ~ 6R, 3 blllhs, 2 - · lllllod I

899

r,' ,~.

Monthly

2-

67~Pt-

ESTAJEII:l.---

1 Card of Thanks

WATER PIPE

3674' b-rr
.3.88-V"2-4S-Itio ~
.2.i~ Oi.a...
M.\-..A.._._ ....._

I

Public Notice

IIGII COIIIUII

15
15
15

M...,n Co., WV

91f'.l.....Middlepurtl
Pua.-v1

I

u........

lllO AiiiiAIU
~~·,

4~

...

I'1IO" £.tiL•....•....... 121

1"•10' IOltL................ 4Jl
1"11 f IOIIIL ..................I .II

llkip County

Sftaclo Cia: I
F..m.--.c
, "'
' lhtl &amp; - ..
Oliver. •
r p 2 I

irt!0'£.11L .... .. ... Ill
~'1IO' £ML.................. 101

~'llf !Ot«L- ................ l.ll
~'llf 10140.................. Hl

(PVC

one or the clients.

OSU mammography unit makes visit

Wllh ass•stance fmm the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension ScrVICC the research -based arm of The
Oh1~ SUite Uni verS ity. 25 appointments for mammographys were
made wllh the un11. According to
C1nd y Olivcn . Count y ExtensiOn

s

• ___
..
PVC CON DUll

Gallia c-y

U--1
...... .__
••d ...

BA apt P . _ l l ) ' - ~.1100 oq. n. lonn

EUORICAl CONDUIT

3
6

Fl~

.17-

$ 20

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
&gt;$1.30/day

Area Code 614 Ana Code 614 Area Code 304

ola.-d v.

IN THE

159.95

pages ClW&lt;'r lhe
foil~ ldeplaon&lt;&gt; uchanges ...

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
_ _ _--!:P!UB~L~IC~A~TI~O~N_ _ _~,~~~=~~D!r:-:c::_:r. 2!115
POMEROY BOWLING
992-3432 Eve.
Call for Reservations
Open at 6:30p.m .
Tues.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat -Sun.
Other hours by appt

49

INTERRUPTER

Q~

Receive dle:&lt;: ountfor 11.d1 paid in advance.
Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ada under 15 woord• wi:ll be
run 3 day• at no charge.
Price of ad for all capitalletten ia; JouLle pncf': of ad coat
7 point line type only ued
Sentind Ui not re~pouible for erron aher f1nl day (chock
for erron fLrlt day ad runa in paper) . Call bf':fo~ 2:00p.m.
day after publication to make correclton
Adt that mwt be paid in advance are:
Card of Thank.
Happy AcU
In Memoriam
Yard SaiCB
A cluaif'ied advertiacment placed in the Calli polY Daily
Trihune (e•r.ept Claaaified D1aplay, Dwineltl Card or legal
Nolict'.J) willalao appr:ar in I he Point Pleasant Regiater .ud
the Daily Senlinel, reachi~ over 18,000 homca

bldg.

40 GAL IUORIC

breast cance r.

t-

C

40 GAL NAt GAS

County Cooperative Extension Sen·ice, the unit
saw 25 clients, the maximum number that could
be seen. Pictured with Oliveri is Vera Garofalo,

fnday ""~""
Sunday

39c

154.95

----·

1)

Over 15 Words

Rate

1

3-WIRE GROUND
DUPLEX
RECEPTACLE
4119lll,_!!!~!'...GRoUND FAULT
CIRCUIT

144.95

-----------

: The Mobile Mammography
lmagmg Unit from The Ohio State
Un1vcrsity 'ISllcd the Metgs County Heal th Dcp:lflment Wednesday.
Stall sties stale breast cancer •s
the second leading cause of cancer
dwths among women, second only
w lun g cance r. The v1sit by the
mob ile 1magmg umt g•ves women
1nMeigs County the opportunity to
have access 10 early detect ion of

•

QUIET SWITCH

30 GAL NltGlS

director

•

I

the state of Vermont arc machine
tools. furniture, scales, books, com- '
putcr componenLs and fishing rods. ,
There is one television set per '
4.1 people, one mdio per 3.3 pco- ;
pie and one telephone m usc per 16 '
people in Chile.
:

&amp;SLOW lS

IMAGING UNIT VISITS ·The mobile mam. mugram imaging unit or The Ohio State University made une or its three yearly visits to the
Meigs County Hea~lh Department on Wednesday. Assisted by Cmdy Oliver~, lrrt, County
Extension A~ent, llome Economics, or the Meigs

1

Terre Wood, daughter of Robert
and Cathie Wood, Eagle Ridge
Road, Long Bottom, will graduate
May 16 from Cumberland College
in Williamsburg, Ky., with a
degree in communication and
speech.
Miss Wood is a 1984 graduate
of Eastern High School. She has
been accepted at Louisville Baptist
Theological Seminary and will
begin classes there July 16.
·
Her address is P.O. Box 6593, ~
CC Station, Williamsburg. Ky. "
40769.

News briefs

'

Sn.S-12

• Ad, ouUM.Ie tbe co unty your "d run• mu.t be prepaid

O'DELL'S PRICEJhae-r.~
BREAKER SALE

SCREENING L:\IT

I'-

LOO p.m. Tuesday
tOO p.m . Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thur&gt;day
1:00 p.m. Fnday

Wednosd.Jy
Thtll'&lt;lday i ' -

CLOSED SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Members of the Riverside Study Club of
GallipoliS will be guests for the
luncheon and program. Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds will review
POMEROY -Fraternal Order of "Escape Room" by Airey Ncave.
Eagles Lad1cs Auxiliary No. 2171 Roll call response is "an escape for
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for me."
election of officers.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Lodge
POMEROY • The regular meet- 164 F&amp;AM will hold its regular
ing of Drew Webster Post No. 39 monthly meeting on Wednesday at
of the American Legion will be 730 p.m. The EA degree will be
held Tuesday. 111is will be awards conferred.
night and a special dinner will be
held at 7 p.m. w1th mectmg at S
POMEROY - There will be a
p.m.
meeung Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at
Plcascr's Restaurant for discuss
ROCK SPRINGS · The Salis- final plans for the 40th reunion of
bury Township Trustees will meet the 1952 alumni.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the township
hall at Rock Springs.
MASON, W.VA.· The Ladies
Golf Assocwtion of Riverside Golf
Club announces the beginning of
the Ladies Tuesday Afternoon
League beginning Tuesday at 4:30
p.m. Ladies Day will be held
Wednesday at 9 a.m. with tee-off at

p-

M&lt;Jn&lt;by i'Tue!llby i ' -

POLICIES

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of Eastern Star, will
hold regular meeting on Tuesday at
7 p.m. at Chester Masonic Temple,
honoring past matrons and past
patrons and prescnllng 25 year
p•ns.

PROM ROYALTY -Chrissy Weaver, daughter or Bill and Betsy Weaver, Middleport, was
crowned queen and Frank Blake, son or John
and Margie Blake, Middleport, was named king
at the Meigs High School prom held Saturday

FRI. 8A.M.-5r.M.-

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1.00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday

COPY ·~

Call 992-2156
MoN. thru

1

10

an ad

WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY
PAGEVILLE
- The Scipio
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
Athl cllc Boosters will meet on Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the h1gh Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Pagevillc Town Hall.
school cafeteria .

Words

BET TEA 9Y Of SIGN

'

Ouabty Hi EHkie•cy Air
Co1cltloners, Heal P~~
Fnaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
Beunelli Mobile
1391 Safford School Rd.
Cal (614)

Approved M-ladurotl
Hoosing Produch.

LJ

�ruesday, May 5, 1992

.

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

Pomeroy

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

21

44

Business
Opponunlly

3 Announcements

......... Cooto-.

Colllamlo.
UVEI UVEI UYEI
1·1100-4,..._, (11 +I SSTEL
Orl. FlS3.151llln.
Roduco: Bum on tot whllo you

room, 111 one lavel

You SteiP. Take OPAL Available

4

3 Bedrooms And Full Size
hHmant, 614--446-8699.

Giveaway
ShapMrd

pupa- trw to aood homt only.
Make QI'Nt eat&amp; doge. 304-675-

Sprlrtpr Spaniel, Matt, To Good

Cat To

Pomeroy,
Mlcldlepon

4200.

&amp; Vlclnlly

Lost &amp; Found

M1y 8&amp;9, tum first road ltft p11t

Wa.tPO from Mlddltpor1 hill, lots
of ltama.

Monday-Friday, etill'l', 2 112m!.
-klo ~-. SA 248, boby
lama, ....,. alnd ckMhea,

boob,..__

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

Frldoy. llondoy odhlon · 2:00

p.m. Saturdliy.

Rid Purson AucUon Compiny,

full lima auctlan•r, complete
auction
atrvlce.
Uctnsed
t66,0hio I Wnl Vlrglnlt, 304-

Gallipolis
&amp; Vk:lnlly

773-5785.

1 IIIIo Out S'-otrln~ Rid~•· 9 wanted to Buy
Mondoy, T-.y, Wod,.odoy. ::--:--:--:-:--:-:----:_-

3 family Yard Sale: Starta Mon~,..From

Vautt Plant

5/llth

5111,

Only!

Hldobod,

Don't Junk hl Sell U. Vour Non·
WaRing
lblor
Appllaneea
C:O.or TV"a, V~R's, Mlerawaves:
Air Conditioners, Etc. 614·256·
1238.
Wlnled To Buy: Junk Autoa

With Of WhhoiA Mot0f1i. Call
lorry llvoly. 814-3811-11303.

Vacuum
CIMMr, Chlldrena Wanled To Buy: Large Size
Wlwo!sL Toyo, 2nd Righi N. 160, ON .. Mahrt Form. Good Condhlon, Call 614-446-4015 After 5
Attar N(,jHS.

P.ll.

612

Avenu~~,

Fl,.a

lu.aday,

Top Prlcet Paid: All Old U.S.
Comic Boob, Clothing, Some ~na, Gold Rings, Sllv.,. Coins,
Gold Coin&amp; U.T.S. Coin Sllop,
Fumltura.
151 Second Avanua, Gallipolis.
Big VOid Solo: Wod, 5nll2, 440
Ornlr Avenue, NeJd Ta Holliday Yard Wort{, Light land~et~ping,
TIUtr Wort.., Painting And Elc.
Inn, Gelllpollll, Ohla.
614·2SS.1353, Ask For John.
Gar1ge Sale: \.2 lltlel Out 218.
May 4 Thru lth. Lawn Mowen,
F,nc:e Chlrgen, Fant, Ol:har
nemsl
Wadnnday,

Thurldly,

1().41,

Employment Services

Mavlng S.l•: Saturday,

Mlly 9th,

!10 Mognotlo 01'. Behind Flosto 11
Help Wanled
a ..- . Some ~umn .... Boby ::;;:=:-:::-:-'-:-==-:-:::--Hims.
"AVON" All AREAS! Share your
lime with us. You'll klve 1M
Thundoy, Frldoy, 1012 S.Cand company. 1-800-992-8358.
Avenue, Garden, Hand Tools,
AUSTRALIA WlNTS VOU
a-bol Conlo, Records, 8
E•cellant
Pay,
Benefits,
l,...k Topn, Mloc.
Transportation ,
407·292......,.7,
VInton. Furn61UN Orlptry'a Pie· Ert. 571. 9a .m.-10p m_ ToU
hu• aM Nidi. nack's. 2~ Rd. Refunded.
pau Gtnan~l story.
Bartandars/Caslno
W o r k t r a I 0 a c: k

Pl. Pie11an1
&amp; Vlelnlly

t:c:

Four Family. 7th, •tt. &amp; 8th. Rid
bftck hovel bek)W Sklan
Jewelry, Gelllpolil Ferry. Rain or

SWne.

~aide

moving .....
TuN. Wed., Thun. May 5-7. 8:30

All-1 Acrou from Baa..
ScMoL GaMipolls Ferry, WV.
clathn. mostly 16-20,
mfK lt....a. 130 Mill St,
Hll•en. May s-a. 10:~: 00.

fueeday l Wadnaaday. 5th I
..h . 2211 Jett.fiOil Ava. 2 fish
•-a.-p~e~e .
Dolla. Many
- . - -··:
N'hi
hill'"" plonto. ~ clol ng.
ENrythktg must go.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon

&amp; VICinity

Sundar ldltlon- 1:OOpm Fridey,
Mondliy
Millon
10:00a.m.

Solu&lt;dlly.

11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areu I Shlrtty
Spaara, 304-675-1429.
Two ex~rianc:ed Harbor PUota,
40 lo 60 hours par wMk, must
live

within

eammutlng dlatance

ol Marietta, Oklo. Sand rnuma
to P. 0. BOJ 5175, VIenna, WV
26105,

lf lnlern1.c:l In buying or selling
Stanley Products, call vtrglnla

Long, ~75-5960.
LIFEGUARDS WANTED: cer~
1Ill... 111aguards naadlld fof
summer employment, tull and
pan-time posllfone av•Uablt,
cell Of' come In, Royal Oall
Ruort Club, 614-992-64a.&amp;.
Muslc:lans wanted, Drummer
wants lead and bassiS1 1o form
group doing country and rocN,
614..fi98-2083.
Otfic:a Girl Need~ For Local In·
auranca Otfica, Must Sa Able To
Type. Stnd Resume To: ClA
114, clo Galllpolla Oalll Tribuna,
825 Third Avenue, Gall polls, OH

Consulting
X-AayfRadiology
Mrvkll tor Lakin Hospital to

maintain
ICF
certi&amp;allon.
Outl11 to lneluda r.. dlng and
inlarp,..tatlon of X-rays of
realdanta and 11aff of Lakin
Hospital. lntaNsted parsona
c:ontact 304-675-3230 111. 20 or
24, Mon·frl, 8:00AM • 4:00PM
for ~d form . Deadline for applyin~ is May 22, 1992. Must have
ab•llly to bill medk:ar.lnwdicald
and/or any lt'lird party ageo&lt;:lts.
Expertanetd Parts Manager
nMded at a local car dtlltrshlp.

Sand r11suma 10 P.O. Box 72QM,
Po
OH

maroy,
.
EXl'RA INCOME? Free Racor·
ded Mtsuge Ottere Many Full
Or Paf1 Tlma Oppo, unltftt, E•callant Pay, No Exp. Ntadad,

====-':===-:--cc--c--

(24 Hrt) FrM

Work.

Full/Part
Time. Call 1-800.448-7273 Erl .
Homabasad

33-10, 11-F, ~5 CST.

3 Bod

room

Brtclc

Rantala Also Available. Call 614797-4345 (Atler 8:00P.M.} For Information And Appointment .
Houaa And 2.2 Acrn Land : J
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Living
Room, Dining Room, Kllc:,en
And O.n. $46,000 . 614-388·8491.
In townlutwo atory, thraa badII baaament, 1·1.12 bath,
suachtd 1·112 car garage.
Central hut and air. Evenings
Call 614-44 6-8707.
rooms,

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

$500 Otf PurchiSa Price Ot Any
Nlw Home At El ... Home Ctnttr, Grtat Selection, Fret Set-Up

Pari!;

1172 Rlltwood 12x70 3 Bed·

Information Speclalial:
Summar
WHkend Position
June Through August AI The
Raccoon

Creek

County

J)ark

Visi10f'll Information Otftca. For
Appllc:atlon Call 614-446-4612
Ext. 256.
SOCIAl WORKER
Plaasant Hill Uan01, A 201 -Bad
Geriat ric
Facility,
Seeking
Degraed Social Worker To Join

rooms,

Total

Rtfrlgera1or,

E1tctr1c Range,
Good Condition,

$500 Down, $165/mo. 614-m -

1220.

1873 l4x65 lrailarh2bdrm , large
living room, kite en, den, AC ,
8116 porch, $5500, 614-378-6394.
1174,_ 14x64, 2bdrm., eppllancts ,
tumnur•, all tlectr1c 614-992-

5800.

.

Our E.xlstlng Social Servlca
SlaH. DllgrM In Human Sanica
F..ld Nacauary. LSW Or QMRP
And /r MR Exper~nca Ia Halph.IL

117\l GovtnOf 14x70 2 Bedrooms, Total Elte1ric Range ,
Good Condition, Call 614-rn-

Mutt. We Are A Ptopi..Orlanled
Bueineu
Offering Excellent

~981

Dedication To Client Dignity A 1220.

Radman Stvllie 14170 3

Electric,
W.9" And B1n1flt Packftga. 'Vou Range, Refrigerator, Good Coo Mull Take Advantage Of This dttlon, ~ Down Estlmatad
Unlquo OpporlunHy By Roply- Payment l230tmo. 614-m-1220
lng lmmtdlataly To: Jim Undtman,
Admi~Wtrator,
do 1984 14l70 Clayton 3 Bedrooms,
Ptuaant Hill r.bnor, P.O. Bot 1 1r'2 Baths, Set-Up Or lot In
334 , ~k.ton, OH 45661, 114-289- Ouall CrHic, Many Extras! 614-

2394. EOE.

•

Bedrooms,

Exptr1enc:ed

StrMI, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Wanted ·

exparlene.d
floral
dttign" fot part time work.

Sand rnuma to Flonl Bouqu11,

P.O. Bo• 491, Mason, WV. No
phone calls.

Business
Training
Nowii!South..stam

T*r.

Registeratlon 190-05-1274B.

PIN down tTflvt

18

Wanted 10 Do

My Home. Rodnty ArH. Rtler.ncta Avlilabls.

Will Babyelt In

C/\011?!!

Coli 814-24&gt;-581il

8737

Georg11 Portable S4iwml ll, don't
haul your log• to lha mill just
call 304--675-1057.
Lawn mowing and odd jobt,
fully Insured, 8M-992-76n.

'linn your .-lrlltt'r into

,.,_,fo,

it till'""~\' wtry .. . l1y /llto11c,
1

f'

yuur lrolut• ,

Mlas Paula'l Day C.rw Center.

Sat., affordable, chlldcare. M·F

e a.m. -

5;30 p.m. A~s 2~10 .
Before, after achoc:M. Drop-lnt
wttcoma. 814-446-42:24. Nft In-

font

1'/ffO' YUill' .-ftr .&lt;.&lt;i(it•tf 1111 f_ttt/•!.tl
I;, 11'011'11.&lt; ,., . It' .''· } tloy.&lt;,
/lfi/II'I'S , $(1.(/11

., ______
10., _~~~- 1

..,· ----~- "· ~----

1. _ __ _ __ 12. ~------j
/.'1. _~~~~

6"·-----------. _ _ _ _ _ __

H. ~~~~- 11

i,,_ _ _ _ __

I ;, , _______ 11

II.

446-2342 675-1333 :
992-2156

Toddler Cors, S14-44U227.

THAT CALLS FOR
A CELEBRATION ..

Total

21

a

Fumlth6d A~rtment

1 Bedroom.~. UtllhiH Paid, $260/ma.
920 l"ourth Avanua GaltlpaUe
Ohio, 614-446-4416 Afttr 7p.m.

Fumlahed Apartment, 1br, nul
to Ubrary, puiclng, centl'll heat,
air, Nftrences.
Before 7p.m.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 badroom apar1men1s
Manor
and

~ou

Rlvarside
Apartments In Middleport From
$196. Call 614-992-778l EOH.
Middlapor1, Ohio, North 3rd Ava,
2 blldroom furnished apt,
deposll and rafaranca raqulrld
304-682-2~ .
'
On•

n"" with pooplo you know1ond

NOT to atnd money lhrougn thl
mail urt!IU you have Investigated

and

two

apar1mtn1s tor
2053 or &amp;'TS-4100.

45

Rooms for rant- waak or month.
614-446-9580.

w- ""-

1101110
By 1110
Firms, Top Poy, Pll 01
Mo,.. A..., St.OO Sofi·Addrsoood !llompod EIWotopo 110 D&amp;A
Supplloo, Bo• 1443, Folrbom,
OH 45324.
loeol Voncllng Roulo For Solo
Choap, Coll1.fl00.74~1186.
Vsndlng Route: Lacsl. Wa Hne
Tho Nowoot llochl,.., Mokln~ A
Nice St•dy C.h lncoma. 1·

100-f~ .

Dick, Fenee, ladder~,
Don'l Ballavtlt? Call BPI
1.1()0-541-1823

46 Space tor Rent
Counlry Mobile Homt Psrk, R1 .
33N., under new management.
Lots, $85; home ,..ntala, 1235;

614·992·2167

Mobil• homt kit for rent. Bur·
dalla Addition. 304-675-2204 .

For Lease

Second Floor Apa,mtnt For
lease : L.A., One B.R., Balh,
Kitchen WI Stove &amp; Aetrlg.
Wallf Furnished. No Pets. Corner Second S. Pirte, Gallipdl1.

$230. Ptr Month; O.poslt R•
qulrad . Call 614.-446-4249, 61.t·
446-2325, Or 6l4-4.t6-4425.

While Road, 18 Acres ,
Mostly Wooded, Wlth A Beautilul Building Slte l'hat Has A
VIew For Miles. Nice LA11al
Driveway,
Rural
Water
Elec:lricity, And Phone Servic~
Available. 3 Miles From Holzer
Hospital, $311,000. 614-446-4127.

Renlals
41 Houses tor Rent
2 Bedroom Houtt, Unfurnished ,
Eureka, 1275 • O.poslt . 614-2566408, 614-256--6718.
bedroom 2 atory home,
reference &amp; dtposit required,
3

304-675-3278

Bedroom HouH, 2 Balha,
Room, Oinlng Room ,
Kitchen, Wllh Appliances, Hannan Trace Olstrk:t. 614·2~1966 .

l

living

Household
Goods

KILLS flEAS! Buy ENFORCER

yard. Guar1n1tad ett.ctlnl Buy

New Holland hay baler·
Good shape. 304-675-1738.

REPOSSESSED
Never Ertctacf. Ont Ia .t0x50.
Will Sell For Balanee Owed. Call

King slu water bad, good
cond., 6M-9V2·2171

Augu....Cows and Calvll. For
Sale. 614 -446-44 47

Manis 20tb. llllar-cuHlvator. Can
handle your gardening, yard

Canle tor sale, 614-388-8592

won., laWI1 e.re. 304-571-2132.

Motol root ond oldlng. bokod
tnamtl and gaty. TraMar underpenning. 1912 SubaN front
whool drln.l.loob I nons good
1!100. 304-,1n-2011.

~

pumj&gt;, .....

tor

ala. W~l broke Tan-

New/Used
Household furnishing . 112 ml.

Jerncho Rd. Pt. Pteasan1, WV.

SupplieS
1,--.,.-_..:.:.::.:;_:.:..:::_ __

side

refrlgaralor, 3().1..

Block, brk;k, ....., pipes, windowa, llntele, ete. C\auda Wlntlf'l, Rto Gral'lda, OH Call 614-

tumllurt, heaters , Weattm &amp;
Work boolt. 614-44&amp;.3159.
--

VI A FUR NIT RE
BARGAINS GA REI
614-446-315

1.,.---------Groom end Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. AU

&amp;r-ecta, sty&amp;ts.

lama Pat Food Dealer. Jul..
Webb. Call 614-446-0231.
AKC bl•ck, mall Coektr Span'-!
puppl11, 6wks. old, $100, 614-

LIVING ROOM : Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up; CoHH And End l66
0::;;7·:-336tl:::'-l-:--.,.-,.-,-.,.--,l'ables $79 And Up; Swlval A.KC Aeglltartd 6 Weak Old
Rockers 579.
Rottwaller, $.250. &amp;M-388-i254.

BEDROOM : Bunk Beds 599 AKC reglttartd Dllmatkln pup(2•6); 4 Drawer Cha•t ot pial, 1St shots, Bwkl. old, 6'MOrawaf'l $44.95; Twin Manress M-6n4 or &amp;M-W:Z-6794

I:C:'='-..:..:...::...:.::...:=.::.:.::::__

,.. s.t

0PEN : 7 O.ya A Week, i A.M.• 6

P.M. Sunday 12 Noon· 5 P.M.
Rt . 141 4 Mh• Off Rt. 7 In c.n.
tanary.

:::53::-;;;:::~A~n~ll:q~u;;e=S::--:::-.--=­

-;;;;

Big River Antlquee, !10 Main St,
Polnt PIMNnl, WV.

Buy or salt. Riverine Antlquea,
1124 E. Main Slr...t, PorNroy.
Houre: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614·i92·2526.

€)

58
H~

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
bad ewMI potat011 plants,

cabbage &amp;

broc:c:otl; llowors i 10" polo &amp; In

11Hor1 lorgo 1112-2220 or 114-1112-2773.

6x16fl. lraUar, Tandom

ror

Transporlalion

trNitd floor, uc:. lim, 70001b.

Chalmar. H0-4 Tradl;
1973 Oodgt Dump
Truc:k, All New Tim· 325 Amp.
Gat Wadler; Prlead i'o S.llll14-

comtlougo

man s, Junior 11111, amall ..
qulpment, rwntal au~lue cloth-

VIrago

Yamahl

15,000 mllel, shaft drtvan, g;;d
cond, $800. 304-675-201.t .

of 141n. .-.. Dearborn,

450-C JD Dozor -

Some

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

750 Kawasaki For Sal• Of Trade,

U,OOO. 61....256-15~

1987 Honda 250X 4 Whnllf, E•c:ellant Condition! $2,300. 614·
446-76-«.

75 Boats &amp; Molors

Legion- Quilt · Harsh · Edgmg - TOUGH HIDE
I told my elderly aunt I was going to get 1nvolved on
local polrtics She just sighed and said. "I Just hope
you have a tender hean but a TOUGH HIDE ..

_71___,A::ut,..,.o_s_l_o_r_Sa_le_ _
1983 LTD Ford, S800; 197'5 Uncoin l'own car, $1000, both in
axc. running cond., 614-9492804

Guinnt Merc:ury Marina Sarvk:a.
Mtrcury, Mariner, MarcrulMr
specialist. Mareury certified.
Mobile, We come to you _ 614-

251-5i78.

76

Aula Pans &amp;
Accessories

Bud~ Trensmlu~ .

UMd I

rwburn, .tartlng at $99; front
w~ drive 11artlng 11 l149.00

illl D 1121D MOVIE:

'Coming to Amerlcl' CBS

Stereo.

a

EEKANDMEEK
1H£Y SAY 11-\£
tt:.a.x;MY 1'5
Bf.GliJ~IJG 1D
IMP~E.

..

lntpiO'I-nt Stereo. Q_
~to !knvlvll 't:;l
9:00 IIJD I)) D Roo11n..,.
Roseanne becomes O.J.'s
disciplinarian when he
misbehaves at school.

Siereo.

Services
Home
lmprovemenls

Barnett Home lmpronmenta.
Addhlona, Gar-oil, Painting,
Rooting .
E.per1encad,

a

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
THAT WA'5 "ltV~?().~.~ ~ 1 T
IT=i HOW~ HE DIDN'T
e.AY ,6-NY'n-IINEf 10 'rOW~

HE's 601N6 ~ CNE
OF n-i06E PHA~S .. .

WHERE HE' \M:JN'IADMIT
THAT we'REO RELAT~D
lD 6&lt;ICH OTHER .

1985 Bukk LaSabra Llml1ad,
4dr. sedan, bNulltul tamfly car,
like new, all opliontl, 301 V-8,

Aescwng tlla banered
women and children of

Uncondlttonal lffttlma guaran·
tM. local rat.Nnc.. tumlahed.
FrH Hllmatn. Call colltoct 1·

domestic violence . Stereo.

fi D lJl D

614· 237-4488, day or night
Rogerw Battmtnt Watarprooflng.

Curtis Home Improvements :
Yure bparlanct On Older &amp;
1985 Hondli Accord, 4dr., Ssp., Newer Homta. Room Additions,
tllverfgray ve6our inllflor, left FoundaHon Wor*, Roofing,
,.., damage, $1900, 614-949- Kltchanl And Bathe. F,.. E.s-2600, 9--5.
tfrnat•l Rel..-encee, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 814-367-0516.
1985 Oldt O.tta 88 Royale, 2dr.
c:oupe, immaculata eondiUon, Hk:k"• Roofing, Oaekt Pore he~
all opllons, new Urea, 307 V-6, And Painting . Fr11 btimet .. f
$2995, 614·992-6119.
CMap Pric:ae, 10 Yaar E.•portonco, 614-38U964.

William Kennedy Smith trial .
other rape cases in Palm

BARNEY

Beach, Fla., are examined
and questKms are raised
abou! "'!!! and rape. (1 :00)
Stereo .. ~

YO'RE ABOUT
DUE FER A

THAR'S NOTHIN'
WRONG WIT H ME"
CHECK-liP
NOTHIN'
SNUFFY ~~
AT ALL I!

1_3:::,200::-:.;--8-14_47.46_·7523...:.:-:·-;:..,---:- I
•.
19117 Chny Novo1 _Air, 5 Soood,
Good ConclHion, 12.10CI. 814-2586_351=::'.-:::-:c--:--:---:--:-c--:-- l
c.
1987 Areblrd An Original 2
Sal1• Whh Low Miteaga, Sharp!
614-256-1.t10 luw Mauagt

1988 Ford Ranqer XLT. 6 Cylln·
~.
Ira

4•4, Ekcollon1

~ion.

$8,100. 614~41-4330.
Oldsmobile

Cu11au

oorno apptlonco rspolrs. wv
304-f78-2318 Ohio 11~2454.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

16!17 Aft• S P.11.
1NI Oodoo Dynooly lo loodod
!15,415: 1188 Cl1ov Covollor, i
llool, Auto And Air, P.295; 1111
Pont. lollons SE loodod
$2,895· 1M Nil.. n 4 Door'
""!!.b.~ 1Ul' Ford Eacori

Ropolr, U,iiOO•biOO Font Troc:lor Sl-; , .., Cluy. l.oBaron
Nice 2 bedrooma, lg. yd. Corner Ing, Som s..-vmo o I mil• 12,1150; 2020 J !15,150. 114-286- Loodod, 13,215; 1887 Ply. Dust.;
1
ol Rand I, Parch St, Kanauga. Elilll 1-n. Rovsnowooa by s.n- 8522.
S1,415~ 11105 Oldo Cloro $1,8M;
814-448-11173.
dyvll!o Poot Olfloo, Fri, Sot, s..n 5112 ft Bruo h Hoa pulllypo 1300. 1986 tsulek SomarMt, 12,2B5;
Noon.f:OO Pll. Aftor hours • Two JIUII lypo lroclor .....,. 1988 Pont. Grand Am, $'1,1~ ;
44
Doyo JCM..m-M6tl.
BID Auto Soloo, Hwy. 180 H.
Apanment
OI'MI 5300. &amp; Dill $100. Seed '
114 448 1165.
DAKOTA
DREAM HOMES lortllll!O . , _ J125. :104 for Renl
$31,895 I Up. Bulft On Your lot. 3813 oftor 5:00 Pll.
llorcwy Grond llorquio,
So•
Our Modolo,l14-f86-7311. ' CoM Comblno Wllh 2 aroln 1111
302\ll. Aul"'!!"llc1 Ful Power,
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
Good ,..,.Hion, loob
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Conc:roto &amp; Plootlc Septic Hoodo, $1.100• 2 Tobocco
ESTATES, 536 Jacbon Plko Tonko, Jot Aorollon Tonlu!. Ron Soft•, $!17S· John Door• Sharp, 13,100. l'f4..441-7215.
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp; Evans Entarprl-, Jac:bon, OH Mowing MKhin., $450. Call At- 1987 YuQo. 42,000 Actual Mills,
movl11. Call614-446-2568. EOH . 1-800·537-1521.
1011 P.ll. SM-245-5152.
SM5. 8M-24.W1!2.

v...,

Cart ... ·a Plum~ng
Fourth and Pint
Gallipolis, Ohio
614-4.t6-3848

84

EleCirlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

R•ldentlal or commerc:lal
wlrtng, new HrVIe8 or Npalr1.
Mallar Uc:aneH altetriclan.
Ridenour Elactric:al, WV000306
304-87S.1786.
'

::ffl=::::-U~p:-:ho:.I,:SI:..:e.:.:ry~Upl1olotorln~ ..,.lc.
lng trl ~1y arH 2t yaara. Tht

llowny"o

belt In lumttuN UphOistarir19
Call ~75-4154 tor "" 11:

timat• .

+1076 53

SOLITH

+ K J 10 9 5 2

Singularity
is a clue

"8 71

t6l

+AQ

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

By Pblllip Alder

Soutb
WHt
Norli. Eut
Sherlock Holmes once said. "Y01 2t
3t
4•
All pass
mentioned your name as if I shoulo
recilgnize it, but beyond the obviou:
Openmg lead
K
facts that you are a bachelor, a sohc1
tor, a Freemason, and an asthmatic, I L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __J
know nothing whatever about you "
At the bridge table, after a first
glimpse at the cards, you can rarely
discern quite as much as that about
You were hop1ng for a 3-3 beart
the opponents' hands. But even one
break so that you rould obtain a dis- .
clue may be enough to point the way to
canl for your club queen. West's sin- ·
solvmg the problem of how to bring
gleton heart put paid to tbat idea. Now"
b.ome your contract.
it looks as though you will need the
Cover the East-West cards and plan
club finesse to suo:eed. But is the fi·
the play in four spades. West leads the
nesse likely to win' Westowrcallecl at
diamond king: four , 10, three. He conthe three-level vulnerable. Surely be
tinues with the diamond ace: seven,
bas the club king to jusllf y his bid.
queen, six. When West leads a thinl diHowever, you aren't without re-.
amond, East ruffs and you overrufl .
source. U ~t bas tbe club ki.Dg.
You draw trumps. West having a doubcan make the hand by pt.ytDg a club to
leton. You then play off dummy's A-K
your are and exiting witb the club
of hearts, but West discards a diamond
queeo . West wins and mWit return a
on the second round . How do you minor-sutt canl, allowing you to rui!
continue?
in the dummy and discard your beart
Your opening weak two-bid showed
loser from hand .
a good siz-card suit and some 6-tO
©,._IIIWIPAPDIWI
_....._
high-card points.

+

you:

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

39 Cut
41 Uncle

1 Scorch

42 Corny actor
44 Author
Gardner
46 Museum
display
49 Fasten

5 Nor!h Allan·
tic bird
9 - to Joy
12 Container

13 Cheese
coating
14 Wool·

53 Unit of ma11

54 Coerce with

washing

violence

reaidue
15 Having eighl

17
18
19
2t
23

sldat
Bill andWhat thin9
A philosophy
Raced
Undor lho

weather
24 Hebrew
27 Arid
29 Eaclamatlon
of aorrow
32 Paasea (law I
3.( Prisoner

36 llosl tatrlble
37 Microacopic

sea plant

38- o! March

56 Incorrect
(pref.)
57 American
Indian
58 And olhors
(2 wda.t
59 Chemical
aufflx
60 Comedian
Shriner

6 t Village

city
4 Retpond
5 Theater sign

DOWN

(abbr .)

1 Flal·
bottomed

6 Mort

generous
7 Slo!h

boat
2 Every

3 Italian wine

8 Former
candidate

Swln~ bock
and tortll
10 Coupln

11 Enu's
country

16 Spector•
20 Andes anim11
22 Slnpo
tho 25 NoveNot
Bagnold

Wftll BIH Moran Q

a On Slltgo S!ereo.
a Milot Luvuo IIIMbatl
~

Stevenson ~
9

24 Tht Return of

26 Storage
place
Ltr~l 101
duck
30 Something
small

28

7110 Club Wftll Pot

R-.on

31 Ornamental

10:05 CIJ MOVIE: How the Weal
w.. Won IPt 2 of 3) 12:00)
10:309)8 1121D R - : 111 A
child falls Into a swarm of
fire ants and le rushed to the

~ttern

33 labor
Drljfaninr

- Chawez
35 Motol
decoration

~'!et~eg:;,Q.
a ~''slr.ot' ~lion

ASTRO·GRAPH

1-...-+--l-+---l---1---1
1-n--t---l--l

Stereo.

11:00 12JD l!l lllfl lJl a

BERNICE
BEDS OSOL

pU. ., pickup. •M dauv- 614-

Will build patio COY1t11 dtcllil
scraenad rooms, pU1 ~ vlnyi
siding or traUar skirting. 6M·
245...v152.

"Q10963
• Q 10

tAK98 J2
KJ 9 4

1111 Wortd Nowo

O.Yia
S.W-Vac
Sanok:a
Gaa,.,.. Creek Ad. Parta, s...,.:
~·,.

"J

ILl

So,.lc Tonk Pumping 1!10 Gollla
Co. RON EVANS ~NTEAPiiiSES
Joe bon, OH 1-800-537-t52ll. '

448~:N4 .

EAST

+l

(1) !Illlttenlng to Amorica

1986 Olds Cutlass Suprema, V8, 307. 'f'elovr Mals, tlntad win-

Ron's TV Service, speciallll~
In Z.nlth alao Mrvlclng rnoet
ott.r btands. Housa tails, also

Peter Jenning•

R~nglnl~htotthe

$2995, 614-992-6119.

669-4623.

Q

!IJI OotoNne NBC

f 0:110 12JD

WATERPROOFING

1984 Pontiac:: Stalk&gt;n Wagon
Good Condition, S1,200, 614--toti
1822, Evanlngs .

e

is oHered an anchor position
@ BaubiH Tonight

BASEMENT

304-675-1224

Noallvttle Now Stereo.
@ Amerk:l't Cup '92
1111 LAI"Y King Uvel
~ Fllller Dowling Myoterieo
Stereo. Q
9:30 IIJD lJl Cooch Christine
•n New Yort&lt; . Stereo.

446-4316.

PS, PB, AC, ,..., detroater. C..ll

C

l[J MOVIt: Enter the Dragon
IAI (200)

Ru.1onabla. 814-4C6-8568, 614-

1984 Pontl.c 6000. 4 dr. V-6 eng.

Q

WEST

• 86

+

1:30 lllfl lJl II Homo

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

10 ft. s lkte_.n deluxe truck eam·
per. Fully ttlt-eonlalned. $500
080. ~75-3531.

81

(2:30)

She Wrote
Stereo.
CJook Inti Chill
@ W- Siding From
Orlando" Fla. ~
1111 PrtmeNeWI
1D Rln Tin Tin, -9 Cop
Stereo. Q
8:05 (lJ MOVIE: How the Wool
Wot Won IPt 1 ot 3) (2:00)
l[J Mu

614-245-56n. s14-H2-f2113.

79

ALDER

1111 Croufl,.
7:35 CIJ Slnford &amp; Son
1:00 12JD 0 MOVIE: 'Perry

~~or

NORTH
+AQ71
"AK 52
• J 71
+8 2

PHILLIP

7:05 CIJ Addllma Fomlly
7:30 (liD !IJI J-""'YI C
(!I Now ~ Clri lie l"olcl
lila E'!lf"'llntnerrt Tonight
stereo ..LJ .
I)) D Mallll'l Flllltly
illlD- of F011Une Q
0 D Mojor LHgue
IIIMball Cincinnati Reds al
PittSburgh Pirates ILl
1121D Family Feud
1111 lie 1 Slltr S!eteo.
@ Sclllop Title

Tundl~ovle (AI

I

BRIDGE

Q

m
Ill UY8 From Uneoln
Clnt8r Slereo.

BOATERS

, -,

Tonight

M11011: Tho Cl11 of
RICklln Romeo' NBC
of the WMI&lt; 12:00)
Stereo. C
[!) lbjor~ugue IIIMbatl
Mitwaukee Brewers at
Chicago WMe So• (L)
lllfl lJl a Full Houu
Jesse ·s big recordin9
contract hinges on hts
~ncing ablllly [Pt t) Stereo.

1981112 tour w~.r. 300cc, ••·

PS, PB, AM1A1 $4,000. IM-446-

~ lit

'

c:.llonl condHion, S14-1112-25n.

1NI Dodgo Moo, 4dr, 4 Cylinder, AIAomaUc T11na, Alf Concl.,

1
S175, ono 1~. K1ng
Cultor
i&gt;Nthhorl. sm. 114--50511

Mf IN '17'1£MO(ZfJING.

150cc

.l

BOATERS

311 or e14-t12-33i4.

61 Farm Equipment

TwO Afflf!INJ ANI&gt;
PFfTeNP "f'' C.A/...L

6884.

J .S . Mar1ne Slrwka, Serving All
Your Boating Nllds, Parta, Ac·
c:essorill, Two Cycle Oil And
Service. 614-256-1160.

1NI

copocHy, S14-t41-2B04
Allis

1f78 Honda CB750, IXC cond,
6,000 ariQinal mltu , 2 IMlrnMa,
athlr adrae, t1,700. 304-675-

Nlco pigs lor ulo, 6.. -t4~2017

Suprema, v.... high mileage,
Drioe Nducad,miJit ...1, &amp;M-742·

Farm Supplies
&amp; liveslock

axle,

l.aader;

1VT7 Kawa11kl KLR &amp;00. 3046~377'3 .

1986 VW GoU 89,000 Milts, STD
Shift, Air, Good Condition,

Rottwailar,

tlata; ehrubt., pin., purpiiiU.C.
21 lt. above-tround swimming gf1pnlne I ch.tnut trNa, 114lrao•

Motorcycles

tion, 61-t-245-1428.

1982

UN)C RAMBl[ FO R
AN SWER

IIIIMonlyllne
~ Tile Wll1onl

FRANK AND ERNEST

be · ---

PRINT NU MBERED
LEll[ RS IN SQU ARE S

SporiiCenter

=:--:-:---::-:~..:..;_111Je Hal1ey FLH Great Condi-

5 Monlha Old,
Female, No PIJ*'I, 1100. 614388-s12S4.

Filh Tank, 2413 Jackson Ava.

llf'Mka· ptpptl'l

Merchandise

ovlf'drlve,
amltm/cauette, tin, elr, crula-.
47,000MI, axe. cond., 814-e927769 ener7pm.

Point P.._aanl, 304-675-2063,
lull line Tropic.ll tlsh, birds,
small animals and suppiiH.

54
l :::-:
"- "::ft_.,_5_:pm_.- -- - -

whl1elred; 1omat01 plarl:a, 12
kind• Including yaUow wrr.d

54 Miscellaneous

auto.,

J .W. Conalruetton. Room Ad·
dows, vary good c:ond., $3000, dltlona, Roofs, O.Cka, Siding
614·992·3663
And All TyPM Of E11trlor And
lntarior Painting. Will Give low
1986 Otds Flran.u., 5 spttd, air, LktnM Bid. 61 .... 245-50/'e.
amf fm st..a, till wh_., 614·
992-6529 call aftar &amp;pm
JET
Aen~tton Motor., rapai~ . N.1986 Ra~r. 5 Speed, 1985 112 I r... butn moton In stock, RON
EICOft Wagon; 1956 Chevy EVANS. JACKSON, OH . 1-800Balalre, Good Condhion! 614· 53J..W8.

AKC
rwgi•t•rwd
German
DINETTES : Wood Bar Stoola Shepherd. female. 11 months
$14.95 (26") Tabla And 4 Paddld old. 304-182·2419.
Chalra 1129.
Brlnany &amp; 1 puppln. 30-t-615-

l[J MacOr-

1989 Ford broetar Mini van,

tor Sale

B
I
Ulld ng

55

=

Of Equel Value, 114-441-

nessae walkar. 7f:~ old . Call
an.r 7pn 304-57'6-

Belg11 Couch With G1'91n And One tJngll ctmttery tat tor .. 11. -,m=""u.,.o_n:_u_ry_Cou_-. ,- , -0w
- no-r.
9
Yellow Flowers, Grten Chair, Sunernt Cemetery, 13.50. 304- 88,000 ace Mila. ps
pb ac AM &amp;
Bolh $125 ; Coffu Table $100· 2 6n.2623.
FW Radio Good Tlrat Good Ex·
Lamps $25, 614-388-8936.
'
haust Systam $1,250. 614-446PlasUc And Medal Culvar1 6 Inch
Big Savings On All Cupet In Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron 0094
Stoelc. Cuh And Carry, Mol· Evans, Jackaon, Ohio. 1-800- 1979 Jeap Charokt•, V-8 Auto
lohan Carpets, 614-44&amp;:~44 .
537-Wa.
1950. 1982 Eoglo, 6 cvt ..' Aulo.:
S1200. 1985 lJtymouth
Color T.V., S60; Microwave Oven Rainbow
Rtnteil
Wadding air,
$6.5; El&amp;elric Clothes Ory~t,l65, Gowns And Flowers F&lt;or All Oc· Horizon, 4 cyt ., Auto., $450. 1918
Mercury Zephyr, 6 cyt., Aulo.,
614·256-12~ .
caalonl. Flowtrl For Mamorlel 5700. 1980- r...itson king-cab
O.y, 2nd HOuN P..t Exxon
plc:kup, 5 opd., 1oppo&lt;. ISSO.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Station
Rodney. OpM: 10:00 304-676-2818.
Washers, drytrs, rahigar•tors, To 4 P.ll.AtSl.,.24!1-5151.
rang... Skaggs Appllanc:oo,
Upper Rl11 ar Rd. Baaldt Slone Side by akla retnoarator. $150. 1980 Buick Regal. High mileage.
Runs good. $500. 304-882-3615.
Crest Mottl. Call 6M-446-n9s, WIICIMiar, $50. 30ot-67S-1084.
1-800-499-l41j19,
198'1 Cutlasa Crulsar wagon, air,
Sip: Porlabla changaal»t latPS, PB, automatic, lin wheal,
lAYNE'S FURNITURE
ltf signs and IItten. Fraa
Complete home lumishlnge. delivery. AAA Signa, 1-800-533- 1800, 614-1112-2840.
Hours : Moo-Sat, 'i-5 . 614-446- 3453.
1982 Ford Fairmont, Fair Condi·
0322, 3 miles out Bulnlll• Ad .
lion, 1986 Chevy Sptdrum,
Fret Delivery
Good Condhlon; S~580 .

PICKENS FURNITURE

lQ85 Ford Van, 150 Eeonofln., 2
Alr CondHktnerwi, T.V. C8, Eae.
Cond, 17,000, Or T,.do For FuH

m. 74

Bill (8001 548-8671.
II: Baum Trua
Vo!uo Store, 11 Wost lloln 63
Livestock
Sl-. Chostor Oh. &amp; Voll~ ~:::-=-::::-:-:-::::-::--:::--,:=
lumber I Suppty Cor~!., 5
Hl90 AOHA Big Grar Filly; 1979
Perk Strwt, MkldMiport, Oti.
AOHA B~ SOfrell Brood Mara, 4
KILLS FLEAS!
HorN Gooseneck Tf'lllar. 614Buy ENFORCER Floo Kltiors F01 286-6522.
Pals, Horne &amp; Yard. GUII'Inttld
Angus And Chl~ngus Blac:k
EHoc:llvol Buy ENFORCER At: Buns, Reasonably Prked. Slate
Browne Trustworthy Hardware, Run Farms, JM:kson, Ohto, 614·
Slate Rout• 160, Sidwell, Ohio.
286-5395.

unlfl 9pm.

Oldsmobile or Chtvrotll of •
qual value, 614·11f2·2840.

Ohio. 304·773-5828.

e

Doo
Motowortd

Night Court
aD Enlertlol
Slereo. g

1003.

ENFORCER

1111figarator, ltova, 114-,.2-2445

Nlca etilclancy eottaga, unique

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rant, Near Evergr•en, Gallla
County. 614-379-2678.

Sa ..., Parts, Sarvlu

HURST TRACTOR SALES
614-~51

eomp41tt with toot valve, tor
tale or tradl for ellctr"

Afttr7p.m .

Mobile Homes
for Renl

7

RDGCurNnt::Y

11178 F-1110 4 WD Look Shorp,

01'1- Cioodl 814-367-4&amp;5l

Size PU

cluaively at Rlla A6d Pharmacy.
Mul1 Sail 2 Ouonsat Arch Style
The tafa way to dial.
51"1 Buildings. B,..nd New

304-I'IS-13611.
Uyors oholtow-

pool, , _ pump,
deck, $'1500 Of

and beautiful, 304-675-6042

KUBarl

MUITIY
rkMng
mower,
refrtaer-tor In good concMtlan.

Merchandise

675-2n2.

O .J.

Kawanea 16' loki-up disk, $800;
Ntw Holland 68 hay llnarlbalar,
S400; Jnt'l .,..., 420, 1600; postheN~ tMao-, 480; 14mo. old polled Helifonl bull, 614-11t2·2535

Etc. 28 HP 4 WO $6995; 20 HP .t WD
S.S,HS, Aouta 7 North, Mariana.

FIN Killers lor poto, homo I

Sleeping rooms wl1h eooklng.
Also trallar apace. Ail hook-upa.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-?n5651, Mason WV.

51

19xl'lx4 Pool Includes: Flntr,

Nutrhion
Products
taeturlng Amino Acid Body
Building, weloht lou and tat
bumar tormJu. Avslla~ tl·

Star11ng at $'120/mo. Gallla Hotel.

49

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMIIIN&lt;I POOLS
Only 171111.00 8oaldltul Abovo

Gtntsls

Furnished
Rooms

lho oltorlng.
Al1onllonl Slyllng SOlon FOI 2 bedroom mobile home, nice 367-7031.
Solo! Primo LocoDon. Coli S14- lot on Roush La11•, Chashlra, lrmy Surpluo
4-IO.f803, S14-448-f355.

bedroom
rent. 304-675-

446-2848.

SWAIN
~,2_4-5-51...;2.;;1·------AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 ,.
Pels for Sale
Oliv• St., GallipoH1. New I UMd 56

+UIIIillts, Upper Fou,h
Av1nue, Gallipolis, Referanc:11,
Security [Mpotllt. 614-446-4416

do busl·

Village

lois In Galllpoll1 Ferry · 100%
owner llnantlng at $98 .64 per
month, any one ol tour Ioiii

INOTICE I
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO. 42
r.eotTunends that

al

Refrigal'llor,
One
13"
Blac:k!WhH1 T.V., One 21" Color
T.V., All Good CondtUon, 1141

1 I I I I'

NewaHour Q
D Married ...Wftll Children

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

6'M""46-1822 Evenings.

675-5162.

lois joining Point • 100"1Co owner
financing a1 $10'1 .46 per month
buys all lhrN lots. 304-6752722 .

C R0 Z I N

ffi

Pee

Side by

$JSQ

Business
Opponunlty

614-446-0338,

Gym

Aher listening to a lergthy
panel
d1scussion
that
concerned oor natoonal
poi~ICS , I 011erheard one
fellow say, "Even when
the experts agree they may

I~=I:15=16=1~2

Tile Jtftellont Q_
IIJD In- Edlllon 't:;1
(1) Ill MacNeil/leNW

1SOO Vary
Elaborate Exc:arc:iM And Body
Building Machine, New Cond~
lion! Coet: $575 Sail For: $2$0.
DP

I

FETON

~ New Zorro S!ereo. Q
6:35 CIJ Andy Gllfftth
7:110\JID !l)tWheel of Fortune

Lots tor sale, trailers acceptable . 304-675-2722.

lots In New Haven • 100%
ownar financing at $101.46 per
month buys all lhrH loll, a304-

Stereo.

Andy

ca ll304-675-1450.

available, 304-675-m2.

Q

I
@TourOu
1111 Wortd Todly
~ Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo Q
I:OSIJ) lleY811y Hlllblllln
1:30 (liD 0 NBC Newo Q
(!I stveil by the Belt
lllD I)) D ABC N..,. c_
(1) Wild Amettat Stereo t:;1
~ Squar-a One TV Stereo.

BREAK OUT
THE COOKiES'

SKIARE

' I' I I I I

EVE NINO

l[J Scoolly

Furnished 3Br House, 1 Floor,

Financial

I

•

aD
aDCBSNewaQ
0 D
Gllfftth

35 Lois &amp; Acreage

Ctrtilled l.. chlr wanting to
IU1or 11udents, gradH 1-ll, will
tutor In lht •umrner, 614-ti2·

fou r scrambled word! be-

low 10 form lour simp le words

0/1, 60T

GOOD FOR
YOU ..

In

ol Ohio tor IIPOf1• madkine &amp;
CPR. Peraons lnttrnltd should
eantaet Jim Cerpenter, Supoer1ntandan1 of Meigs Local Schoola,
P.O. Boa 272, 320 East Main

TUE., MAY 5

;;;i:;

245-9238.

Someone

14

Wan! lo

L

111 11

a po s :

Horne Comer Lot, Owner Laavlng A,... AdJacent lole And

And Oollvoryl Clll614-m-1220.

Butlneu Collage, Sp~~~ Valley
Plaza . Call
614
-43671!

~-

G

45631 .

Ratr11ln

2 . _ _ __

HVAC, New Carpet Available
June 15 614-W&amp;-2205.

m"' c:ertlllcallon requirement•

EI11617N1

flU TNE Bill

uo rlf'P41 " ' /t'fll

Carnplttaly Aanovatad; 2 Full
Balha, 3 Large Badrooms, New

3500 Ext. 511

Free travel . Caribbean,

Hawaii, Bahamaa. No exp.
,..... .. ry.
1-206-736-1000

ClA~~IFIED AD~

1. ----~-

Cli.U!

304-662-2834.
·
BEAUTIFUl HOUSE FOR SALE
Historical ArH Corner Lot . 816
Moln St Pl. Pioosan1, w. Vo.

Sta" lmmodia1oty. Coli !12-992-

wkly.

Dolallo!
WORK
All Yard S.l11 Muet Be Paid In GUARANTEED
.
- · 0..111,.: 1:00pm 1ho Ereallant AVAILBlE
Pt~
For EASY
ay bltore lht ad II to run,

:J

I

11r2 batM,Iivlngroom

1985 Windsor 2br, Fully FurRtcelvlng Shipping And DI•P'•Y nished, Dishwasher Disposal,
Of Retail Men:t.ndlse. Send l'.V., SltrltO Syetam Throughout,
Rnuma To: CLA 115, c/o Gal- Wuhtr &amp; Oryar, 2 Bedrooms Ot
Upolle Dally Trlbunah825 Third Fumltura And living Room FurAvtnua, GalllptMie, 0 lo 45631.
nltur•, Microwave, Refrigerator
And Stove. 614-446-3541, 30o1The Meigs local School Dls1rict JII3-4l56.
ie currently
Htking applications from ~rUfied ap- · Aeceu To Bank Reclaimed
pllcants fOf an "-'•!ant Varaity MobUa Homes, Graa1 S.ltet ion'
i=ootblll Coach {4 positions), Many AI 1500 Down, And Taka
7th &amp; 81h Grade FOOCball Cotch, Over Payments. Call 1-800-589Boys' VaNity B.. katball Co.eh, 51'11.
Boys' 9th Gr1da Basketball
COich, Boya' Blh grade Bllkat- For Sale: 14r65 Trailer With 1
ball Co.ach, Boys' 71h Grade Acra Land, Stale Route 554 , Call
Basketball Coach, Assistant 614-367·75f7:
High School Treck Coact'!,
Junior Mlgh Track Coaeh Ault- Very nfce 14x70 mobile home on
tant Jr. High Track COich, Haad privata acre. 3 bedroom, u1ra
B11aball
Cole,,
Assistant ~m wi'Woodburner, mi'ljor apBaMba!l Coach, Gir1a' Rturvt pllaneu, 115,500. or takt ovtr
Basketball coach, Gir1s' ReMrvt payments wlsomathing down
Sotlblll Coach, Girls' Jr. High 304-576·2183.
Volleyball Coach, Gir1s' Jr. High
Basketball Coach, (2 positions), 33 Farms tor Sale
High Sc:hool Newspaper Sponsor, High School Cheerleader 83 kra Farm With 2 Year Old
Advisor, Alhlatlc Olt~or, H"d Home, 3 Bldrooms, 2 lhlhs,
l'eachtr 11 Bradbury E~mentary large Bam, Several Buildings
&amp; Manror tor !hi 1'it92·93 tt".:hool Celrar, S.ll With Or Wlthoui
yur. Applicants mull! hold 1 Farm Equipment And Calllt.
vaUd Ohio teaching certificate &amp; 614-367--0610.
tor coaching pwitlona mul1

Hondo/Hostouoo, otc. Poohlono
oboord cruloo ohlpo. $300/IBOCI

Community Sale. r.by ...7, a.
DoriL "Gunvlllo Ridge" ott R1. 87
.niiM, 304""'5&amp;-1875 or 458-

Sell

TO

w:fiE

tamllyroom, underground pool'

Olv..woy Whh Shot•. IM-4411-

doy, 514192 Unlll All Soldl Rt.141

R~JI.RU,

RUN

I'J.ALI( ' "

A Ff'lmt noma, 2.8 1cres, 3 bed·

~-~~·_!S~14-'::36~!:7=~~1.:---::--:-::- 1'==========r----------j rooms,

May 4th, 5th, 61h.
142 Low• Glrfletd, lily 6-7-8. 5
Families, Clolhlng, St--:!'~ Cur·
tllna, Home InteriOr, Lota •tee!

YOJ BIU.XJ6HT
111€ WI t-1~1 N&lt;:.

5 room houaa, 80x100 lot, Clil·
ton, WV. Priced for immediate
aala, mid-luna, 304-773-5079 or
773-5545.

"It's a documentary about miracles. Should 1
call them aOOut your graduating? "

3648.

p.m.

IW£ IT EASY
ON VOU~LF , TAK£ Til(

61\S(S lbM:!€D MD '-.......

T::~:~~, S©~J.l1A-LG£~s·
Edit•d by CI.A 'f l . '&lt;'Ll.A.N
0 Rea rrange letttrs o l ttle

Television
Viewing

n~

(!I VIdeo Powor
(1) Squll,. One TV

covered

At: Frutll Phonnocy.

A.LL Yard Salet Mutt Bt Paid In
Advonco. OEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tt.. ct.r befron lhe ld it to run.

HOT

The Daily

1:00 (II D lil a lJl a IIJJIID
aD D)Newo

Pl11o In back, priva'cy tance,
gal'lga, shown by appointment
only 304-675-1238.

REDUCE; Bum ott Fot Whllo

Yard Sale

THREE: AAD TIJO. mE

THOfW.P!'lf ..

2021 Marquena Ava, 5 yn old,
111 brick melnten~nce tree
home, 4 bedrooms, sma ll living
room, dlnlngfOOfnlfamily room
combination, khchtn, utllily

Pllarmo&lt;y.

Surtdly tdltlon · 2:00

72 Trucks tor Sale

WW.!l&gt;, Tl400W'ftEI
SO YOU Di Dill (,(T A'-....
HIT .. YOU flEK£
STILL TH€
H£110 ~
TH£ w-£1

31 Homes for Sale

Fruih Phonnocy, 7U N. Socond
St.llldd~ .
Reduce: aatt I lui With
E·Vop
~- t.bl.l• I
DI.,..Uc, ualllbtt It FnAh

6

Apanment
tor Rent

BORN LOSER

Real Eslale

Unp! Tall1 OPAL. aullabla It

Young Specie C.llco

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Beds
Ntw commarclaf.Roma units
from 1'199.00, lamps, lotions:
actHIOiin, monthly payments
low •• $18.00, call loday, FREE
~1 color catelog, 1.ab0.228-

C.H Tadoy,- Tonlte
I-II00-17S-100t, $2.111 llln. 11 •

r.mala Au.lrlllan

5, 1992

Wolff Tanning

GIRLSH81:1t~GIRLS

2

Tuesday, May

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

\
ctbur

'Birthday

stamped envelope to Astra-Graph, c/o SCORPIO IOct. :M-Mow. 22) If there's
this newspape~, P 0 Bo• 91428, Clev&amp;- an article of foreign origin you've been
land, OH 44101-3428. Be sure lo stale wanting 10 acquire. your hopes coukl be
fulfilled today . Check all your sources.
your zodiac sign .
GEMINI IMaJ 21-.lune 20) Speculative BAGmAJIIIIS (Now. 23-llec:. 21) Some
slluallons might bo rather "Iffy" !oday, changes which are not ot your making
but you could do extremely well In In· mighl be tolsled upon you allhls lime.
· bevolvements where your earnings are Don'! lol lhis disturb you. predicated upon your abilities ·

cause you could ultimately benefit rrom

CANCER IJune 21-.lui}' 22) Any nlarly If those you're Involved with are as

shifting condllions.
CAPAICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lon. 111 You
mlghlllnd yourself In an awt&lt;ward situation today - . , your llrsl inclination

upbeat and optimistic as you are.
LEO (JIIIJ 23-Auo. 221 You could be

may tempt you to make exruses. Don't ,
because viciOfY will oome from being

vantures you launch today should have
VfKY

good chances lot success. particu-

torthrlg~t and honest.
that alfecl your car- and slluollons AQUARIUS I.Mn. 211-Feb. 111 II somethat attect your lncorM. Make It a red· one with a successful track record
II looks like you will ~ave lots ot Irons In letter day by doing something slgnlft- comes to you wtth an investment proposal today, Iiston caref\JIIy. It could bo
the lira in lhe year ahead, and you'll be oant In both areas.
VIRGO (Auo. 23-hpt. 22) A good lhlng worthy ol further Investigation.
VfKY skillful at keeping all of lhem hot.
you have going can still be Improved PISCES (Feb. - · dl201 You might
Lady luck war11s you to be busy.
TAURUS (April 2D-Mir 201 Something upon today. If you sense you're on a roll, be able lo team up today wtlh an lnd~
vidual, whom you·ve-. searching
In which you're presently Involved can maJ&lt;e the most of your opportunitieS.
olor,
to do something collectiY8iy you've
U8RA
lllpt.
23-0cl.
23)
Lady
Luck
be reorganlzed at this time In order lo
upgrade the quallly ot lhe endeavor. 11 · lands to favor you Ieday, but you migh! been unable to do on your own.
will Increase beneflls tor all concerned. not appreciate It - unless you're sub- ARIES ( - 21·April 11) Your basi
Taurus, treat yourself !o a birthday gift . /acted to some form ot challenge. When enort could be worth more t~an the
Send lor Taurus' Astro-Graph predic- the chips are down. think "win," and do usual reward today, especially II you're
performing worl1 Of a S8fVice for anothtions tor lhe year ahead by mailing 11.
.er. Take pride In whattMW you do.
'$1.25 plus a long, salt-addressed,

llJckler than usual today in situations

..., I, 11182

IIIID 1121D 0 N..,.

46 Woman of
fink

47-- the

(1) Nowawlldl

R•

40 Clo10r
43 Go logothl•
45 Hoving tlops
tor hearing

Mood for

Arwnlo Hall Stereo.

love

QJ MIC(Jyve~ C

48

~ ~wn Stereo.

51 Runian

dl Cruolt lnd &lt;!iao11
1111 Sporll TOllltiM

Q

Peltr Jennings moderates an
open discussion on the
lopiCs ot rape, sexual
aggression and society's
~~toward the problem .

c'i:'fKnight' Crime
Time All!! Prime 1'imo

Stereo. If!.
8McMttllw
~ MOVtl; Tile Dull II
S1Mr CIMII (1 :301
11 :3512JD 0 Ton/gill Show
SUtrring .Johnny Cl1'1011
Stereo.

5•

Mlrried.::Wftll ChHcl ....

1~0D Lo.,.

Connoctton

0 Tho Equollu&lt;

bul

tlav leader
emperor

11:30[!) Kojlk C
(1) To the eontr.ry Stereo.
I)) D ABC Hawa Forum

lllD ChooiiC

Nothln~

50 Former Vugo-

52 lend • hond
55 Confederate
IOidllf

'RKHJVA

J

RDCXVOJVA

c

R

X H M I Y

BSYCXVIIFJHJIC

a

K I Y

XTV

NISCHJXV

II YO

BIXIFS
C X PI

X Z

C
X Z

IUIIYJSVKS.'

VSTPRV.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Wo are here lo add w!\al wo can lo lifo. not lo
get whll we can from II." - William Osier .

8 R I F

5

�Page

1~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 5, 1992

James Brown
wants to hold
festival of peace

!UIInlpllirs

GlRLS OF 1liE YEAR -1'1

Charlotte Hanning of Xi Gamma Mu, Sonya
Wolfe of Xi Gamma Epsilon, Becky Trip leU of
Obio Ela Pbi, and Jane Walton of Preceplor
Bda Beta.

bftnc ••-llt'ftl as i i i -I in&amp;s fll
the Girl fll !be Year A. . . . rr- tmr n:stJ«·
ti .. cbap~rs 11 tbt Beb Sif.a 1'ti F• lrr's

and lifts alta-

Dlly observaKt ill AlMas - .

rr- .- lrfl,

Pirates
rally, down
Reds 5-2

NEW YORK (AP) -Jan~
Brown wants 10 bold an aru fc:gj.
val here this summer to ''make
people feel good" and keep IK
peace after liTe Rodney King verdict.
The Godfather of Soul ma willl
Mayor David Dinkins on Mootby
aflCr calling 10 congrawlaie him for
keeping New York relativel y
peaccf ul while Los Angeles md
other cities erupted in violenoe
aflCr the verdict.
"You would think it wou ld
come out a lot worse here. ll maloe&lt;
me feel good and proud." uid
Brown, whose signature song ii "I
Got Your (I Feel Good)."
The specifics of the ans fes!MI
are being worked out by Browa
and the mayor's offiCe.
"Instead of mating sav~£•
beasts, we'll save the soul of
humanity." the 59-year-old siqgtt
said.
Brown got out of prison ~ year
ago after serving two years for
leading police on a car chase.

or Obio Eta Phi Chapter al Thursday night's
Fouuder's Day observance al the Sportsman in
Atbens.

Beta Sigma Phi Sorority celebrates
61st anniversary~ members honored
POMEROY - The 6Ist mniver-

H-h•. Bmllla Curfman, and Geri

sary celelralion or Beta Sigma Pbi w. . "' Xi Gamma Epsilon.
Sorority QS observed by the (.,...
Meigs County Cbaplos 11 a dinno-

party held at the Sponsmao ••
Athens Thursdly nigiL
Highlights of stM::e and sooaL
acuvines during the past year -.ere
given by chapter represenwiw:s.
Kim DcnL Ohio Eta Pbi, Sue Maison . Xi Gamm1 Epsilon. Mary
Woods, Xi Gamma Mu. and Ann
Rupe. l'rr.cqJtor Bela Beta.
Girls of the Year selected by
their respective c~ were recognized and present trophies ud
gift5. They were Becky Tnplen of
Ohio Eta Pbt, Sooya Wolfe of Xi
Gamma Epsilon, Charlou.e Hanning of Xi Gamma Mu, IDd Jane
Wahoo or Pnxepta' Beat Beta.
Ohio Eta Pbi Olapto-. s Pledg&lt;
ol the Year trqlhy was JttS&lt;flled to
Becky Trent by Kathy Haley .
pledge coadL Othen in the pledge
group, all !Itsented yello"' roses,
were Mary Buldll7. Valerie Hanstine, Mandy Russdl. Cbcryl Facemya. and t eny Neece or Ohio Eu
Pbi. and Debbie Haptoostall, Mary

Vdm Rae, JKSident of Precepilcla llda, C"* ... , the program
&lt;ltD!c wtdl time retiring officers
....., """loiml and new officers
IOr

w•••••ot

Tllq .e: Ohio Eta Pbi, &amp;dy
Tf1l*l1. p d t Kun Dent, vice
p• ••• •II; Becky Trent, recording
&gt;OCJtay, Tammy Bachner, corre-

'f"ldin&amp; liCUelaly; Sheny ChapIIWI, ucaswer: Teresa Kennedy ,
ci1y coaucil. and Susan Clark,
aheraate to city council; X•
Gaauaa Epsilon, Pauy Pickens,
(J~Wokat; CollDie Dodson, vice
prewlnu; Gcri WaiiOn, treasurer:
o.ta s~ recOfding secretary ;
Sue Manoa. Ullltsp •uiing secretary; Soaya Wolfe, city councrl
represealalive. and Kathy Cum mmp.. alb....._
Xt ('..m•a Mu. Mary Woods.
presldcat; Sandy Hanning, vice
presodellt; Maurisha Nelson ,
r0001dill&amp; IICUtUIY: Jackie Hoover.
coiTC5JIIIGCling secretary: Linda
Bales. ueaswer, Cuolyo Grueser,
cny cooncil representative; and

By LARRY McSHAN[

om. m ft~D&lt;SS centers and basket-

Associated Press \o\' riter

Nll .l!l'&lt;mS "'""' fl.m brought from
~lC)d: IX'i:S" the city Streets by

NEW YORK - Once they wm
urban fixtures. letter-luggmg road
warriors flashon g through traiTte oo
two wheels. r&gt;: ow b•cycle messtngers arc becom•ng scarce. unable to
outrace LCChnulogy. onsurance and
the economy.
"There's sttll a few daredevols
out there, but not many." S3ld Bdl
Goodman. cxecuuvc dlfoctor of the
Association of Messenger ServiCeS.
More than 20 percent of New
York City's 305 messenger compa-

But m~oy of the messengers
rrd' no more. left behind in the
·~0; •lib kveraged buyouts and
Dw-m Dur.m. Several services no
~ Ulie boqdists at all- Bullit
Cooncr.wbor:brum 24hoursaday,
.,,.., obf' • week, uses folks on
iooc or m .-.ns.
In I9111.thm: were an estimated

nies wenl out of business dunn g
the past two years. conunuong a

;.. ._,.,. - Remember

decline that began several years
ago with the fa x machint: np lo-

sion. Goodman said.
in the heyday of the Spandexclad kamikazes, bike messengen
were as common as yeUow cabs rn
Manhattan, fiiuing rn and out of
traffic within inches of bumper1
and door handles, 1erronung
pedestrians and defyrng delivery
trueh
A movie glorifted the life of the
bicycle messenger - " Quicksilver, .. in which corrupt options
trader Kevin Bacon found rt:dl:mption on a bicycle seaL ~ or the
thanlclm on the TV !Cries " Civil
Wars·· is a messenger.
A real-life messenger, Nelson
Vails, went on to win a silver
modal as a trad cyclist in the 1984
Olympics.
Bicycle messengers even had an
effect on fashion. The skin-tigbl.
su~mhned bicycle shons seea

w

~

60s.

Page 4

Vol. 43 , No. J
Copyrighted 1992

l'llr ute Karl of Bavana, Gercoosm to Anna Colburn of

""""' . &lt;&gt;

Pooo.:roy, and two friends from
Aaslri.:l, Karin Ebner and Kann
~. :speot several days here this
•ttt .-isni ng the Dale Colburn
tai~Ji·.

Till.: gu-fs are on a swing around
chi· lfmDred Swes usmg plane tick"" •llaidl ~"" them unlimited travel lm a 100nth.
Simttt ~cming to the States last
~ JJII !bne !lave been in Naples,
Fb.. •kn! IIIey worked as nannies
lor llilliirol families. In early April
tlley left their jobs to drive an
dibly c:wwle's car to New York
ami l'mm there began their month
ol u:rw..:ling around lhe country.
lllcy lnlve spent time m Chica~:o. W:ubiDgton. D.C.. New
Ork:as,. S.... Anoonio, Las Vegas,
Lm Allgelc&gt;, and San Francisco,
....t .,.,.., •i3ued Niagara Falls, the
Grud Cuyon. and the Rocky
.....im
T1lrior ct.Jclting and other esscntJals bve been carried in backPJ!b,. tllty'•e c:~ten mostly in fast
iooil ~ts, and slept in youth
liolllm..
The two gi rls from Austria

the United Stales. They got
acquainted with Ulrike through a
mutual friend in Naples, and it was
then that the trip around the country was planned.
Pomeroy was one of their last
stops. Before leaving Columbu.&lt; to
come here they visited there with
another of Ulrikc's cousins, Erika
Bowen.
Ulrike and Karin Konig will be
returmng home later this month,
Ulrike to begin studies at a university, and Karin to an office job .
Karin Ebner plans to stay in Key
West, Fla. with friends for the summer before returning home.

IOWOPBIFOR
SRIIGSUSOI
C•plett IIH olleddlng and
Y~teta•l• Plants, 11-lng
anti Foliage Hanging
laskets, Lara• Selection of
Shn.. Hry
IM TrHS.

0,. Dlly 9 1.11. lo S/'111.

iUii'Aiiili.
GREENHOUSE
Syrawse 992-5116

TRAILER FIRE -This was scene late Monday morning on Route 7 as unils from lhe
Pomeroy and Middleport fire deparlments
responded to a trailer fire there. The name or
owner is unknown as arr the names of the people who lived there. According to Pomeroy Fire
Chief Danny Zirkle the eleclrical fire apparently
slarted behind the rerrigerator. The trailer sustained heavy smoke and water damaRe and two

dogs and a cal
as a resull 01
the fire, according to Zirkle.lt is unknown if tbe
structure was insured. The Pomeroy Fire
Departmenl responded wilh three lrucks and
several fire fighters and lbe Middleport Department responded with one truck and at least four
men. Units were on lhe scene for approximately
two hours.

Manley's trash pick-up permit
is approved for Mason County

b:w cxb other before coming 10

25• DIIG. UMOTE COIITIOl
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• Cluom.ocolor (.(&gt;IO irlll Pll' hil t I uiK lur
e uepuon ~ l COI'I Ir ~~l 1nd m lor fM id ll
('b.,.,,.,.,,~ lf(l'W. M&lt;~d ulu

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t
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IIIO&gt;!f fvnH ~I

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0101

• On· 'io.•ocn o ,.r l•l
• 111i (l,,nroc:l (_~p•b•l•t) ""lu~.n~ 1: •
n bk (1\;;nnd,

$544

land south of the Kanawha River.
operalCs in five counties in West
By Dan Adkins
Accordmg to Glass, the man who Virgmia. including Mason, Putnam,
OVPStaiT
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A orig inally drafted the perm1t often Kanawha, Boone and Roane, wilh
M1ddleport man won a case of sortS doesn' t work in all the details that 40 trucks and 60 employees. Her
Tuesday in a public hearing at the are suppose&lt;~ to be 1ncluded, wh1ch company's pennit covers a three
Mason County Courthouse. as an led to the confusion over Manl ey's air-mile radius around Pomt
Pleasant, she said.
administr.ltive law judge approved penn it.
Manley's
rev•
sed
appliCation
will
Powers and White both stated
his revised application for a permit
that will allow h1m to opcralC h1 s be submitted for ruling and should that they more or less work handgarbage hauling business within tak e a few weeks 't'or the new per- in-hand with their businesses.
mil 10 be granted , according 10 the
Accordin~ to
Manley's lCscertain boundaries.
Roger Manl ey, opemwr of Man- attorney representin g him in the timony, his businesses service a! I of
Icy's Tras h Hauling Services and publ•c hearing, R. Michael Shaw of Middleport and Cheshire, 80 to 90
percent of Pomeroy, and an unRtx:ychng Center in M•ddlcpon. Point PleasanL
Manley made the public hearing detennined amount of area behind
appeared before Judge Raben W
Glao;s, along with several other arc"' appearance followrng a dtspulC Pomeroy. In the garbage haulin g
residents. and A.O. Powers. with Powers, whose businesses business for approximately 32
operator of Sanitation Services and could possibly suffer some inter- years. he said he currently operates
Rural Sanitation Co mpany, before ference once Manley begins operat- with si&gt; employees and three
discovering that h1.s ongin:ll gar- ing in Mason County. Sanitation trucks.
Powers, operating with nine
bage hauhng permrl was not ex - Scrv~ces and Rural Sanitation
employees,
five rear-loader trucks
actly what he had applt cd for in Co mpany operalC north and south
of th e Kanawha River, rcspccti vely. and two roll -off trucks, has been tn
January of ~~~2 .
Judr th A. White. representing the business for about 22 yean;, he
According to th e ongmal penni!
gran ted to Manley, he was li censed Don's Disposable Services, also said. Acc ordrng to his testimony. he
approximately
2.100
10 operate his bu s mess two rnllc s 111 submi lied a brief tes timony before services
res
iden
tial
customers
and
165
from tliC Ohio Riv er lrom Lakin . Gla&gt;S. White. pres•dcnt of the CharW.Va ., tn the Rncinc Lcx: ks aruJ leston . W.Va. -based garbage haul- commercial customers in Mason
in g service, srud she origtnally Coun ty.
Dwm
Manley 's
rrviscd
p&lt;rmrl . thought Manley 's business would
however, g•vcs him the nght to also severe ly interfere with her
operate his busin ess in a twn-mdc operations, but not now with the
rad1us in from the Oh1o Rrver rcviscd penni! applocatron.
According to Wh11C, Don 's
beg•nning at Lakin e&lt;e hrdin g any

Lanham trial
to continue

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I GELS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
o5HOP FRIDAY 'TlL 8
SHOP LOCALLYtf:)(t';

The resignation of Francis
Bcnedum as bus mechanic effective June 30 was accepted. Patsy
Prater was hired as a substitute hos
driver for the remainder of the
year.
The board accepted the highest
bid on shop equipment which had
been advertised for sale, and
approved advertisement for the sale
of a mini-bus.
Supt. Richard Smith discussed
the purchase of elementary and
junior high mathematics textbooks
for next year and updated the board
on the $50 million state equity fund
and possible benefits 10 the disuict
He aJ so ad vised the board that
there is a possibility that a secondary severe behavior handicapped unit for the county will be
housed at the high school next
year. Whether that happens
depends on state funding.
The superintendent also
informed the board that the uiennial asbestos inspection was completed on Man:h 20 and that reportS are
available for public inspection at
each school and in the superintendent's office.
Development of a marching
band pra:tice area behind the softball field was discussed . It was
noted that the concert band
received all superior ratings at the
recent state competition. The only
other school in Ohio to roo:ive all
superior ratings was Gahanna Lincoln High School.
Conlinued on page 3

Ohio to use February remap

plan for primary on June 2
CINCINNATI ( AP) - Obio Th e court had ruled both plan s
Democrats and Republicans bave uncon stnutional because th ey
ac cepted a federal coan panel's plckcd black voters into di stricts
ruling that the June 2 legislative where they already arc able to
primary will be conducted under effectively elect call!lidales.
Democrats had asked the panel
boundaries the State ApportionMonday to delay the primary, if
ment Board drew in February_
But a lawyer for the Republi - nec essary. and to order the use of
can s said they would ask the U.S. the boundaries drawn in October.
Supreme Court today 10 stay tbe Republicans had asked the panel10
panel's decision IIJ give ~ 3ffmn the February plan
The panel Tuesday also created
'" Ohio House and Scrwe districts
more time 10 file nominating pcti - a grace period for cand idates
w~ districts arc affected by the
taons.
The Republican-cootrollcd February plan .
Judge s Nathan1cl Jone s and
board drew up the Fellruary pian
after the court rejected a version John Ped, both Dem ocrati c
appointees. ordered Secretary of
the board tssued in October.
State
Bob Taft to accept new fil Th e three-judge U.S. District
Coun panel said Tuesday it ronsid - rngs until 4 p m. Friday.
Judge Dav1d Dowd Jr., a Repubc rs the February plan less Rawed.

lican appoinlCC, d•ssented lrom that
part of the decision, saying the
panel lacked jurisdiction.
N. Victor Goodman, a lawyer
for the Republicans, said he was
pleased wilh the cotut's decision 10
usc the February plan. But he said
he would ask the U.S. Supreme
Court to stay the pan of the decision granting the grace period.
Goodmln said he agreed with
Dowd's opinion that the U.S. District Coon lost power to create such
a grace period when the case was
appealed to the Supreme Court.
He also said any lawmakers
affected by the redrawn districts
should have filed by now.
Thomas Atkins, a lawyer for the
Democrats, said he accepted the
coon's order.

shaw.

~~-~~~
- .~~

~ -...

Contracts 10 teachers and sup- assistant football coaches; Pam
plemental and non&lt;Citifled per- Douthiu, head volleyball coach;
sonnel were awarded 11 a =ent Don Jackson, assisl.ant volleyball
meeting of the Eastern l.ncal Board coach; Bill Hall , marching band
of Education held at the high director: Jill Holter, high school
cheerleader advisor: Debbie
school.
The board employed Margie Brooks, junior high cheerleader
Bartee on a oontiouing COIIlJ3Ct and advisvr.
Greg Ullman, varsity boys bas gave Naocy Cirde, Lea Ann King,
Randy Churilla. Mary Owens. and ketball coach, Dawn Heideman .
Mildred Wilsoo, two year con- varsity girls basketball coach; Dentracts; David Chadwell, a tbree nis Eichinger, assistant boys bas year conuact; Fred Kessinger and ketball coach: Seou Wolfe, assislallt girls basketball coach; Arch
B~ Windon five yearCODUaciS.
Classified personnel awarded Rose head track coach; Ed Collins.
contracts included Darteoe Bock- head baseball Coach: Pam
ley, two years; Elnora Bcmard and DouthitL head softball coach: Don
Bob White, continuing contracts, Jackson, assistant softball coach;
Jim Huff. senior class advisor ;
and Gary Dill. one )'13 connct.
Given supplemental contracts Donna Wolf, junior class advisor:
were Jim Huff, state and federal Klllhleen PeyiOD, sophomore class
programs coordinator. Mary Price. advisor; Bill Blaine, yearbook
special educatioo coordioallr, An:h advisor; and Brian Windon, 30
Rose, transportation supervisor and days extended service.
The board also voted not to
coordmator; and Carolyn Ritchie .
renew
the contracts of Margaret
lunchroom coordinaiDr.
Cauthorn
and Judy Wolfe, library
Non-renewed were numerous
aides,
because
of the district's
ex tra-cwricular activity and coaching supplemental conuacts. For financial problems.
Pat Shrivers was hired as a
se veral years money to handle
expenses of exn-auricular activi- home instruction tutor for the
ties and coaching positions bas remainder of the current school
been raised by a volunteer group. year. and Bill Hall, retroactive to
Whether those contracts are Man:h 2. was employed as a halfrenewed will depend oo -extm&gt;al time elementary choir instructor. D.
donatioos". it was reponed.
A. Harris was employed as a sut&gt;In the group with contracts stitute bus mechanic for the
which were not reaewed ln Pam remainder of the year on an asDouthiu, athletic dim:tor; Randy needed basis only, and Gary Dill
Churilla, head foodraJI coacb: Ron for temporary extra duties for the
Hill. Dennis Eichinger. Lute lur, duratioo of the year.

The tnal of a Mason County man
scheduled to begin Monday in
Scioto County, Ohio, has been contmued, according 10 Scioto County
Prosecuting Allomey Lynn Grim-

YocR CHOICE

5.000 of ~r e m . llut the bad economy dellated a lot of bicycle tires.
s.. ty- five messe nger companies
have gone out of bus mess since
199 0; only about 1,500 bicycle
messe ng ers still have steady
employ ment. sa1d Goodman.
The best and the boldest could
pull in $1,000 a week by zipping
th rough 40 de liveries a day. A
$400 week IS a good five days in
1992, said br cyclist LeRoy Barker
of the Exodu.s McsSCII~er, S.'::''ce.

AMultlmedlo Inc:. -DI-

Eastern board awards
personnel contracts

Colbums host special guests
111 CIIARU:NE HOEFLICH
Stutinel Nrws StaJT

2 Sections, 16 Pageo 25 cent•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 6, 1992

VISITING POMEROY - Karin Konig and Karin, Ebner, hoth
fll Amnia, and Ulrike Karl of Bavaria, Germany, left to right, , ,,_
iNd dliswedt with Dale and Anna Colburn in. Pomeroy. Ulrike is a
coasia to Mrs. Colburn.

PrecepiOr Beta Beta, Joan Corder,
president; Belly Ohlinger, vice
president: Ann Rupe, recording
secretary; Rose Sisson, corresponding secretary; and Jane Walton,
treasurer.
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter con ·
ducted a candlelight memorial service for Johnanna Shuler, who was
killed in an automobile accident.
Introduced and presented gifts
were sponsors, Pbyllis Hackett of
Xi Gamma Epsilon. and Charlene
Hoeflich, Ohio Eta Phi. A. R.
Knight, envoy for Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, was unable to auend.
Also recognized and presented
yellow roses were Valentine Girls,
Ann Van Matre. Ohio Eta Phi ;
Brenda Curfman. Xi Gamma
Ep silon, and Barb Black . Xi
Gamma Mu.
The message from lnlCrnallonal
was presented by Ann Rupe , and
Maida Mora announced the 199293 theme "Together We Grow." A
wheel of fonun e skit was prescnlCd
by Ohio Eta Phi to conclude the
banquet program

Technology outraces bicycle messengers

Pick 3: 186
Pick 4: 7872
BuckeyeS
2-7-12-17-28
Low lonlghtln upptr 3Gs.
Thursday sunny. High In upptr

Condition upgraded
for boy who lost limbs
in farming accident
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)- A 6year-old boy who lost his ldi arm
and right hand in a fanning lOtident continues to improve afw
reattachment surgery, a bosptw
spokeswoman said Monday.
Michael Conoboy's oonditioo
was upgraded Sunday from sailm
to fair condition, said Lisa
Blomeke, a public relations official
at SL Paul-Ramsey Medical Gmli:r.
"He's been up and waltin1
around and is eating well," sb&lt;
said.
Michael of Chetek. Wis.. was
injured April 25 when his dorbitt£
became caught in irrignioa
machinery.
His limbs were reaaacbod during nine hours of surgery lau:r lhlll
day at St. Paul-Ramsey. On Ap-.L
29, however, surgeons ampuwcd
the right hand because cirwiltioa
was poor and lhey decided the .._.
would not be functional
Reconstructive surgery oo lois
right forearm was scheduled for
Tuesday, Blomek:e said. SwjjOUib
will lake muscle from his bK:t and
replant it on his forearm. she said.

Ohio Lottery

FURN
INSTANT CREDIT
Apply !Miecelft II lei
I•PII Power TODAY!

&amp; JEWELRY, INC.
l..... s.a.IA"'
....,011045760
l'Mttft-2635

1Glll&amp; IOH2.5511

Credit Terms
Lay-aways
MasterCard .
VIsa

SIGN COMPLIANCE - Anne Chapman, lef'l, owner of Ohio
Valley Bulk Foods in Pomeroy, assisted by employee Sally Erwin,
take down the riverside sign for that establisbmenl. Pomeroy Village Council is attempting Ia enrorce a zoning ordinance which
calls for no ofT-premise advertising signage including lbe riverside
or Main Streel. Mrs. Chapman is one of the first to comply with
Ihe ordinance. Busine&amp;• owners have until May 10 lo comply.

Dav1d L. Lanham. 50. of Point
Pleasant, was to be uied for aggravaied murder in connection with
the death of Michael Oliver, 40, of
Point PlcasanL
Grimshaw said laiC last week
Lanham's atiOmey filed a motion
for psychological testing 10 see if
Lanham was competent 10 stand
trial. "This was much to my frustra tion," Grimshaw added.
According to Grimshaw, the
evaluations take approximately 30
days 10 complete.
Mason County Sheriff Ernie
Watterson said the coon system allows for everyone to have
psychological evaluations. He added ht was surprised that the trial
was set so early in the beginning.
WOflh y G. Siders, Jr., 47, of
Point Plcasan~ is being housed in
the Mason County Jail awaiting exbadiction in connection wilh the
murder. Siders refused arraignment
in front of Mason County
Magistrate John S. Reynolds in
February and has been in jail since
that time.
He is scheduled to appear in
front of Reynolds again on May 18.
Watterson and Sgt GL Clark of
the Point Pleasant Detachment of
the West Vt.rginia State Police. said
if Siders is not indicted or extradited by May 18, he will be
released, as he can only be held for
90 days.

POPPY DAYS DECLARED - Middleport
Mayor Fred Holblu, Rated, Ills ckdaml Friday IDd Saturday Ill "Poppy DIJ5" ill tbt Village of Middlepolt. Auiia 1 nits tro. American le1ion F~Df) lleaadt Post No. IU and
Americaa u,;o. l..ew5-Maalq Ullit No. 263
will be distribuliiiJ: !be poppiH It v.. cban's
Cardinal, Middleport Posa Off'lft, Proplts Banking and Trusl Compaay, Milc••s and Fruth's.

Pitlured with Mayor HolTman ue, 1-r, rroat,
Miss Poppy Jennifer Fife, Poppy Priacessea
Heidi Gilmore and Jessica Hoolea. Bull, Mlu
Teen Poppy San Rousb, Americ:aliism Margaret Bowles and Poppy Cbaiman Lala Hull!"
ton of the lewis-Manley Auxiliary, and
canism and Poppy Chairman Katie Gilmore of
the Feeney Bennett Auxiliary.
·

:

·

:
:

·

Amen. :
.
·

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