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Anniversary Celebration
34 Yean in the Tri-State

Ohio Lottery

Reds in
first place
all alone

Pick 3: 197
Pick 4: 2150
Super Lotto:
3-9-11-IJ .. J0-46
Kicker: 521415

Low tonight In mid 40s. Part I)'
cloud}'. Friday , hi~h in mid 60s.

Page 4

C hane~

Vol. 43, No. 4

Copyrighted 1992

SOIL

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.,
which projected 1991 earnings of $15 million, actually losl $23.5 million for the year, company documents show.
The documents were made public as pan of a lawsuit filed last month
against former Chall11lan R. Emmeu Boyle, the Charleston Daily Mail
reported Wednesday.
Ravenswood Aluminum is the site of an 18-month labor dispute with
the United Steelworkers of America. More than 1.700 Steelworkers
have been ofT the job since Nov. 1. 1990.
The company says the Steelworke" walked out. The union says iL'
members were locked out.
Total sales last year were $445 miUion, about $45 million less than
the company expected. Ravenswood Aluminum made an $18 million
profit on 1990 sales of $564 million.
For the first two months of 1992. Ravenswood Aluminum reponed
losses of $4.4 millron on sales of $62 million , the newspaper said.

8 LB. BAG

99C

CYPRESS
MULCH

Two bids are approved
for asphalt material
By BRIAN J. REED

Sentinel News Starr

SPRITE
DIET OR CLASSIC

COCA·COLA

GOLD 'N FRESH
GRADE I A' CHICKEN

VElVET SUPER DIP

WHOLE
FRYERS

ICE CRE

5 QT.

$ 99

PAIL
YRYn ICE CREAM SANDWICHES 12 pk. s1.89

RITE24--12 oz.

lB.

$ 99

CANS

LIMIT 2
PLEASE
USDA CHOICE

$
ROUND
STEAK._._ .. __ .__ .________ ._ .....~~:_ ... _
USDA CHOICE

2LITER
BOTnES

$

T·BONE
STEAK ... _______ .. _..... _____ .-~~: ..... .

79
99

42·16
lOX

oz. $299

HOME BEST

DIAPERS

30-40
CT.

HOME BEST

BLEACH

area .
Highway Supenntendent Ted
Warner disc ussed the possibility of

chemical spraying as a method of
brush control on county roads.
Warner reported that new "selective" chemicals are now available
which wi II not harm grass and
other "good" vegetation.
Commrssioner David Koblentz
did not encourage the use of chemi·
cals, stating that in his experience
as a commissioner and Chesler
township trustee, chemicals are not
popular wrlh residents of the community in that they sometimes
damage garden plants and create
other problems. No action was
taken.
The commissioners accepted the
bid of $16,632 from Gheen Paint·
ing Company of Racine to ~intthe
Meigs County Courthouse thts
summer. Bids on the project were
opened atlas! week's meeting, with
Gheen submitting the low bid. The
bid was approved upon a unanimous roll call vote.
In Olher action, the board:
- Approved repairs to a MasseyFerguson tractor at the county
- Discussed the open house at
the Meigs County Depanment of
Human Services last Sunday, and
co mmended Director Michael
Swisher and the employees for the
success of the ceremony;
· Entered into executive session
IO diSCUSS pending litigation
involvrng the county.
Present, in addioon to Koblenll,
Roberts, and Warner, were Com·
missioners Richard Jones and Manning Roush: Clerk Mary Hobsteuer
and David Spencer from the county
garage .

GAUON

$799

99

4

Youths arrested on charges
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that breaking
and entenng complaints against two Tuppers Plains youths have
been forwarded to the Meigs County Prosecutor for filing in juve·
nile coun.
The youths are being charged wilh the breaking and entering at
the Tup~rs Plains Elementary School last month.
Shenff Soulsby reported that Investigator Bob Beegle obtained
statements from the two juvenr1es and recovered an intercom and
AMJFM radio that were laken.

Accident probed by deputies
Meigs County sheriffs deputies investigated a one-car accident
on Wednesday evening.
According to the acc ident report, Shannon Hargell of
Ravenswood. W.Va. was southbound on County Road 34 when an
animal ran into the roadway. Hargcu swerved, lost conuol in the
gravel and struck a bridge abutment
Heavy damage was reponed to the 1989 Mazda.

Pair held on charges
Brenda Linney and Robert Schoolcraft of Belpre are now being
held in Washington County on felony charges of receiving stolen
propeny in Meigs County.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby expects to return Linney to Meigs
County on Thursday, while Schoolcraft will be released to Meigs
County at a later date after serving time in Washington County.
The pair is charged with disposing of a $9,938 check stolen from
,Donald R. CriteS. They allegedly cashed the check on February 18.

Videos available

Foods~ and WIC

Coupon• Accepted• Not Reeponelble lor Typogl'lphal or Pictorial Errore.

A new shipment of the videocassette, "Meigs County: The Hean
of il All" has been received, and lhe tape is now available to those
who have piiK:ed orders.
Those who are awaiting delivery of ordered tapes may pick them
up where their orders were placed. In addition, a limited supply of
the tapes are available at Gilmore's, Fanners Bank, Clark's Jewelers, and the Meigs County Parks District office. The tapes, which
cos I $6.95, are being sold to benefit the parks district.
Continued on pagt 3
I

A Multimedia Inc. Newsoaoer

Work begins on Middleport levee project
Work on stabrhzing lhe river
bank and improvrng 1h e boa l
launching ramp at the Mrddlepon
levee is underway by D. B. Weber
Construction of Rce&lt;bville.
The levee project rs being pard
for with a grant of $75.000 from
the Department of Natural
Resources, Division of Waterways,
and $37,500 from village funds and
business and personal donations.
The 450 foot section along the
ramp wh ere eros ion has been a
major problem has already been
repaired with larg e stone being
packed along the slope. The same
lrcalment will be used along another 500 feet below the ramp.
Once the riverbank has been stabilized, then the existing ramp will
be repaired, lengthened and resurfaced. Landscaping, paving of both
approaches to First Avenue, and
steps down to the boat launching
area are also included in the levee
project.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman rcpons that donations arc still
being accepted on the village's portion of the project cosL To date
$7,000 has been received. A mark er with names of donors givrng
$ 1,000 or more will be placed at
the levee once the work has been
com pleted.
Contributors so far have included Jay Hall, $2,000: Bernard Fultz.
Holzer Clinic, Cenlral Trust, Farmers Bank, and Columbus Southern
Power, SI,OOO each.

'.

":
.( J.
.~

BANK STABILIZATION· To stop lhe
riverbank erosion near the Middleport levee,

tons of slone have been brought in on a barge
and are being transferred by a crane to lhe bank

'

/

where it is packed against lhe slope. Siabilizalion of the bank LS the first phase of a $112.500
project to improve boat launching rarilities in

Middleport.

MU president will address
Rio Grande commencement
Dr. J. Wade Gilley, president of
Marshall University and former

Dr. Gdley's address will be a
highl rght of the eommcnce mcnl
ceremony, a 116-year-old lradition
at Rio Grande, said Dr. Barry M.
Dorsey, president of Rio Grande.
The instituti on will graduate 370
students th rs year.

program ts to focus auention on our

graduat es and their accomplish -

Sccrct.arv of Education for the state
ments in concludrng lltrs phase of
their cducalion."
of Virgi'nia, will address the Univcrsrty of Rio Grande graduating
A Baccalaureate and Founder's
Day Program will open the Sunday
class of 1992 during comm ence cc rcm O ilic~ at 10:30 a.m. m the
ment exercises on Sunday. May 17
al l p.m.
" The university regards th e Christensen Thcauc of the Fine and
Dr. Gi I ley ha s led Marshall graduati on exe rci se as the most Performing Arts Center. During lhc
sin ce Augu st 1991 and ha s an im rorta nt ce remonial occasion of ceremojjy, the university pays lrib·
ex tensive background rn lhe higher th e academic year," Dr. Dorsey utc to ltl c founde rs, pas t truslccs,
ed ucati on systems of V11ginra and said. "Our overriding goal during facu lt y and presidents of Rio
the planning of lhe commencement
West Virgin ia.
Continued on page 3

garage;

.---Local briefs-___,

18 USE

ULTU TIDE
DETERGENT

The Meigs County Commission·
crs approved two bids for asphalt
material for use during the month
of May when they mel in reg ular
session on Wednesday.
The bids were opened at last
week 's meeting and referred to
County Engineer Philip Robens for
elUUJiination. The low bidder on the
project was KOCH. However, il
was nolcd that the county highway
department has experienced problems with KOCH's products m the
past. I.rUac~ Jbe last lime. asphalt
material was purchased from the
company, the deparunent lost two
worlting days due to the problems.
According to Robens, there is a
possibility that the material "may
not be what it's supposed 10 be" .
When the product was placed in the
county 's storage tank, lllWlled into
a "sludge" and could not be
sprayed as dust control, for which it
was purchased.
If lhe county order.; dust control
lhis month, the first shipment of
KOCH material will be tested at
the Ohio Department of Trans·
ponation laboratory. Upon the rec·
ommendation of Roberts, the bid of
Asphalt Materials Company was
also approved in the event that a
"backup" supplier would be needed.
Roberts reported that the county
is now ready to begin dust control
work in all of the townships, and is
awaiting contact from township
trustees as to when to slait in each

1 Sectlon, 14 Page• 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 7, 1992

RAC loses $23.5 million
in 1991, docunzents show

of rain 70 pern·nt

DR. J. WADE GILLEY

Fueling begins
for tonight's
shuttle liftoff
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(AP) - NASA frlled Endeavour's
fuel tanks today despite forecas~ of
unacceptable weather, preparin g
the new space shuttle for liftoff a1
dusk on a swashbuckling mrssion
mvolving three spacewalks ami the
salvage of a marooned satellite.
The forecast for a 7:06p.m.
EDT launch had an unusual comb•·
nallon of bad weather at the launch
pad and at emergency landing srtcs
in California, New Mexico and
Africa. Forecasters pul the chances
of liftoff at 40 percent, slightly
improved from earlier reports. The
laun ch co uld be tried any tim e
between 7:06 p.m.lo 7:54p.m.

Service offers TV viewing options
to those outside of cable TV areas
ReSide nts 10 Gal lia and Meigs
cou nties who want the televi sion
" ew ing op ti ons offered by cable
tclcvtston , but live ouLSidc of tradi -

tio nal cable telev isio n coverage
areas, may want to look into a new
sc rv tce called Primestar, rnlroduccd
tniO so uth ern Ohio available via
state-o f-the -art direct broadcast
,atelli te technology.
Primcstar is the nation' s first
and only medrum -powcr KU -band
OilS serv ice offered to individual
homeowners .

Coast-to -coast sporting events
and news from Boston to Los
Angeles arc pan of Primcstar's 24·
ho ur progra mmin g. Primc star

offers more than 500 movies each
month, more than 600 major league
baseball games eac h season, profcss ronal basketball, college sports
and regular prog ramm rng that
rncludc s everything from the

cvcntng news to sitcoms and '&gt;pc -

data opuo ns not available any.

cia l children' s features

where else ' '

li ve concerto;;. A PrimcA udto se rvice offers s1x different musiC se r-

Bailey rs also lltc general man ager for Continental Cablevision of
Athens. Conlincnlal, the local dis tributor of Primestar, will handle
programming, equipme nt , service

vices with d1gital quality stereo

and maintenance.

sound . Three information services
provide customers wtth new s,
finanoal mformauon, analysts and

Primcsrar utili1.es a small , threefool dramctcr sate line drsh 10 com-

Primcsw 's PrimcC incma show cases fir st run movi es, champt -

onsh tp box ing and wrestl ing, and

intervi ews.
According to John Barlc.y, prn·
JCC I manager for Primcstar, the ~r ­
vi cc 1S immediately avallahlc to
homeowners in Gallia and Mc1gs
coun ucs.
"Thi s IS tru ly an evolut ion _1n
home entertainment," Bailey sa1d .
"People suddenl y have access 10 a
world of entertainment option s.
Fami lie s everywhere are di scover-

ing lhal this unrquc scrvrcc offers a
co mbination of v1dco. aud1o and

bination w1th a sophis ti ca ted
receiver to rece ive KU -band tclcvi ·

s1on progr~unm 1ng
Before in \ t:! ll ation, Primcstar
conduc ts a site survey lO verify signal rece pti on at the SIIC. Once se rvice IS Jnl ll atcd, Pnmcstar mam Lams all equipment.
Accord1ng to Pnmcs Lai , se t-up

cosLs arc $295 . Monlhl y paymenLs.
aflcr in stallauon arc $24 for th e
frr st year and $29.95 for ea&lt; h
mooth after the first year.
For more informatiOn, ca ll
Primestar at 1-R00-444 -3932.

Supreme Court justice OK's new deadline
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The U.S . Supreme Court has
upheld a lower court order reopening and extending to Friday the f~ ­
ing period for candidates for the
Oh10 Legislature, according 10 the
office of Secretary of Stale Bob
Taft.
The office received word late
Wednesday that Justice John Paul
Stevens had refused Ia grant an
emergency request by Ohio Republicans to block the reopening.
N. Victor Goodman, a Columbus lawyer who represents the GOP
majority on the stale Apportionment Board, had filed th e request
JUSt a few hours =lier on Wednesday.
Democrats opposed the effort
and called it an outrage.
A three-judge panel of U.S. Dis-

tri ct Court ruled Tuesday ~~
Democrats 10 a dispute over 'VIllith
of two se ts of Se nate and House
dislricLI would be used for the June
2 primary.
The panel picked an amended
apponionmem plan adopted by the
board Feb. 18. But it noted that the
filing deadline was Feb. 20 and
said two days was not enough time
to alert prospective candidates.
Democrats, on the issue raised
by a lawsuit filed by Rep. Barney
Quilter of Toledo, argued for di suicts adopted in October that had
been advenised for four weeks in
newspapers, as reQuired bv law.
Goodman said while Republicans prevailed in Tuesday's decision, the filing process should not
be reopen ed because th e re su lt
could be a major foul -up in prepa·

rations for th e primary, now less

than four weeks away.
He cited the need to SCI voung
machmes, rotate candidates' names
from one polling place to another.
mail absentee ballots and meet
other requirements that he said
could make a June 2 primary
impossible.
Goodman al so said the threeJUdge panel could not intervene in
the June 2 preparations because lhc
Supreme Court issued a stay April
21lthal stripped it of the authority.
The higher court issued a stay of
an earlier ruling by the three-Judge
panel that the Republican-drawn
districts violate the federal Voting
Rights AcL Goodman and others
have appealed that ruling . but the
Supreme Court has not said

whe ther 11 will hear thcH cla1ms .
Meanwhile , State Democratic
Chairman Eugene Branstool criti-

ciwJ the Republicans for !herr latest move. He called it " a slap rn
lhc face to a half million Ohroans."
Branstool sa id lhc Feb . 18
amendments to the October plan
involved changes m di stricts where
550,000 Ohioans live. It is an outrage for the GOP to try to deny
them their right to run for the Legislature. he said.
Cliff Trey ens, spokesman for
House Speaker Vern Rrffe. D·
Wheelersburg, accused the GOP of
trymg to close the process " by hiding behind the mcchanrcs of the
election laws. These linlc problems
can be taken care of. The election
is still a month away."

\

1

�Thursday, May 7, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
11 1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE ~TERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGETI
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHLill
Assist.an I l"'lbli&lt;htr!Controlltr
LEffiRS OF OPINION

art

welrorn&lt; They should be less than 300

words All }etten are subJect to e&lt;htins anc:l musl be stg ned w1lh name ,
additss and l&lt;i&lt;pboo&lt; oumb&lt;r. No unsigned 1&lt;11&lt;" will be pubhsbed. Letten
sbouJd be m good llSlt, ~SSID! issut:s. noL periOnalJlles .

r

Letters to the editor
Information sought
Dear Ednor:
Jane Williams, 260 West 13th
Street, Wellston, Ohio, 45692, is
loolang for rnfonmauon on Richard
(Dick) Trainer. His parents were
Garne t and Hannah Trawcr from

OH 10 Weather

candidate. But what temftes many
'" the Bush Camp 1s that Perot will
an ract "swing voters" - mamly
the so-called Reagan Democrats

Robert]. Wagman
who f~st put Ronald Reagan in the
Wlute House and then de se rted
Mt c h:~ el DukakiS for George Bush.
Many have forgotten that
Bush' s ;ictory wos broad. but not
rcallydccp. ln 1988 , 120ofhis426
electoral votes were won by margi ns of IC's than 5 percent. It's thts
lack of depth that scares the Bush
strategisL,.
As they view i~ even assuming
that Bill Clinton gets no more support than Dukak1s did in 1988, he
could win in November 1f a Perot
candidacy Siphons off 5 pertcnt of
Bush's 1988 support in only 12
SUites: Caltfomia, lllmoi s, Pennsylvania, Texas, Mtchtgan, Maryland,
M1ssoun. New Mcx1co. Colorado,

Galila Would app reciate hcanng
from any descenllimts.
Jane E W1UilllllS
260 West 13th Street
Wellston , Ohio 45692

I

WOULD HAll{;

REACTED!

eco nomy and for the environment
that the natUJ'al gas and coal mdustries must cooperate.
If Oh•o '' to meet the requ irements of the Clean Au Act. if the
sta te's natural gas and coal mdus·
tries arc to remain vital contributors to the sta te's economy, then
1t 's 1mpcrativc for the two mdu s-

and empl oyme nt m southea stern

Ohio.

gas and coal will cont i nue to com-

Thomas E. Stcv.an

pctc. £lut we also believe then: arc
m.Hkcl\ where for the good of the

Exccullvc VICe Prcs1dcnt
OhiO 0 11 &amp; Ga' ASSOCiaUon

SI;!IC\ CI!IZCnS, for JOhS, for lh C

Granvill e, OhiO

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today IS Thursday. May 7. th e !28th day of 1992 There arc c1k ''"Y'
kit 111 the year.
Today's Hi ghli gh t m H1story:
On May 7. 194 'i, Germany Signed an uncond1UonaJ surrender Jt Gc n
D'.1. 1ght D E1scnhowcr's headquarters m Rhcuns, Fr~ cc, lhal was to take
rllcct th c fol lowin g day, ending the Europcan swge ol World War II
On thiS date:
In 1789, the flfsl maugural ball was held 1r1 New York •n honor of
Pre Sident Washmgton.
In 1812, th e poe! Robert Brownmg was born m London
In !825.ltal •an composer Antonio Sali en d1cd 1n VIenna. Au stna
In IX33, composer Jo hannes Brahms was born tn Hamburg, c;cnnan y.
In 1840, compo ser Peter llyi ch Tcha1kovsky wa s horn •n th e Ural
rcg 1on of Russm
In 1847, the American Med1cal Assoctauon was found ed 1n Plule~d c l ­
phia.
In 1892, 100 years ago, American poet Arch•bal,i Macle1sh w:l\ IX&gt;m
in Gle ncoe. Ill.
In 19 15, nearly 1,200 people died when a Gcnnan torped o sank the
(lnu sh !mer Lus•tan•a off the Irish coast.
In 193Y, Gcnmany and Italy announce&lt;l a military and pol t\l cal :illtance
known as the Rome-Berlin Axis
In 1941. Glenn M1llcr and HIS Orc hestra recorded " \hatWl&lt;&gt;Oga Chao
Chao" for RCA Victor.
In 1954, the 55-day Battle of Dien [lien Phu m Vietnam ended wnh
Vietnamese insurgenlS overrunnmg French forces .
In 1960. Leonid Brczhncv replaced Marshal Kl1m cnt Voros hdov as
preSident of the Supreme Soviet.
In 1963. the Un1ted States launched the Telst.:lr Two commumcat 1ons
.atellitc'
In 1975 , President Ford formally declared an en d to the "V,cu1am
era.·· In Ho Ch1 Minh City - formerly Sa•gon - th e Vtet Cong sta ged a
rally to celebrate their takeover.
In 19&amp;4, a $180 million out-of-mun settlement was announced m the
Agent Orange class-action su•t brought by Vietnam veterans who charged
they had suffered injury from exposure to the defolianL
Ten years ago: The government announced that the unemployment rate
ihe previous month had risen to a 40-year high of 9.4 percenL
: Five years ago: Democratic presidential candidate Gary Han, dogged
~Y reports aboot his relationship with Miami model ~nna Rice, put his
campaign on hold and new home to Denver to be wtth hiS family .
. One year ago: DoctDrs said !haL President B~ 's recent bout wilh an
irregular h~l was ca~sed by a mildly overactive lhyroid gland, a
aondition they wd was eastly treatable.
T&lt;Jday's Birthdays: Actor Darren McGavin is 70. Singer Teresa Brewer is 61. Sen. Pete ~menici, R-N.M.• is 60. Football hall-of-farner Johnoy Unitas is 59.
- Thought for Today: "Men tire themselves 1n pursuit of rest.·· - Laurence Sterne, English author ( 1713-1768).

J

D?N'T

CUFF HUXTABLE

King verdict and Los Angeles riots
Some thoughts about the nots 1n
Los Angeles and el sewhere, fol lowing the Rodney Kmg verdict:
I. Not unul after the verdict was
handed down did most of us learn
(a.) that there were two other black
men in tlt e car wi1h Kwg, both of
whom were said to have submtlled
peaceably, and (b.) that an earlier
seg ment of the famou s videotape,
which our TV networks neg lec ted
to broadcast, shows Kmg JUmping
up and lunging at one of the offi cers. Together, tll cse facts persuade
me that the jury, which liste ned 10
the evidence for three mont hs and
debated us verdict for etght days,
probably know s a lot more about
the case than those 81 seconds of
t;tpe told the rest of us.
2 The protest marthes after the
vcrd •c t may have been started by
I he usual harmless nakcs. but th ey
·.- ere swiftly augmented and taken
ove r by savage, m1ndlc ss tccn a,c rs of all races who obviou sly
rons1dcrcd the co mm otJOn JU St a

l'

and munist, a super -patriot and a forOklahoma, Tennessee
eign-policy conservauve. However,
Lou•siana.
So the White House sees Perot they will portray him as a social
as a very real threat, and '' IS going li beral, a supporter of aboruon. and
to go after htm 1n a b1g way. It wtll as a man prepared to sharply raise
st:l!l slowly at first, but then will go taxes to support an expanded liberfull tilt as soon as Perot starts qual - al social agenda.
Mostly, though, they will try to
•fyi ng to actually get on state bal·
lotS.
paint Perot as so meo ne who has
They believe that Perot's main spe nt most of his career wheeling
attraction to voters IS the perccp- and dealing in Washington and
oon that he is a conscrvauve out- buying favors everywhere with
sider who will clean up the mess in huge campaign co ntribution s Washington. Therefore, the Bush often to the Dcmocrauc leadership
ca mpai g n is planning a two- on Capitol Hill.
One example has already been
pronged strategy to change this
perception. FITS~ it will try to posi- leaked. Last year Congress passed
tion Perot as jus! another tax-and- a new transportation bill, a piece of
spend De moe rat so voters wi II see legislation that Perot recently
him a~ an alternative to Clinton and attacked as "all show business and
not Bu sh. Second, it will paint h1m no real merit. " But it appears that
as an Inside wheel er-dealer who some langua ge inserted m the btll
has made himself rich at the public will actually benefu Perot and his
family to the tunc of many millions
trough by buying influence.
The Bush forces acknowledge of dollars
The bill contains S30 million for
th at Perot •s an ardent anu -Com a new highway interchange and an
mtcrstatc overpass and connect.ing
road that will link Ft. Worth area
dcvelopmenlS owned by Perot and
his family to the Teus interstate
highway system. The taxpayerfunded highway improvemenlS will
CAR~
dramatically mcrease the value of
the Perot family's Basswood and
Hill wood developments.
The White House intends to
show tl1at Perot amassed much of
his fortun e through government
contracts and through his insider
conneCllons. They intend to play up
his connection with fonmer House
Speaker J1m Wright and to make
much of hiS many political dona tions.
"I th1nk before too long Mr.
Perot's halo is going to be a lmle
tarnished," sa•d one Bush operatt vc. " We arc gotng to show that
he support~ an activ•stliberal social
agenda and htghcr taxes to pay for
it. In the end it will be DcmocralS
who will want to vote for him and
that w1ll mean he will end up tak mg votes from B1ll Clinton."
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

HOW

tri cs to fos ter a more cooperative
sp irit. We remain co mmiu ed to
building a better relationship with
our competitor and seeking opportunities where our cooperation will
support Ohio's economic, environmental and energy needs.
We have made it our goal to
look at many opportunities for
burnmg natural gas. We feel it IS
imperauve to seek new markets for
th e use of natural gas. We also
believe that there is a place where
natural gas and coal can work
together to the mutual benefit of
both mdu stnes for solving Clean
Air Act compliance. However, it is
unfeasible to bum gas at the Gavin
plant We do not seek a market at
that fa cility nor are we working
with any other organizaoon to dis rupt the process toward placement
of scrubbers at Gavm.
We ca ll on Mr . Kilpatri ck to
produce eVIdence linking the Ohio
oil and gas industry wnh any
efforts on behalf of the Sierra Club
to sub ve rt mining JObs . If he is
unab le to come up with thiS cv •dcncc, we ca ll on htm to addre ss
why he seeks to disrupt li ves, JObs

Accu -Weather• forecast for dayttmc condtl10ns and h1gh temperatures
MICH

Bush camp to pummel Perot as 'liberal'
WASHINGTON (NEA) According to well-plac ed GOP
sources, the Bush cam paign has
collected so much negaove matcn al on Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton
that Bush-Quayle operatives don't
know where to begin in selectively
leaking sto!ies to the press and
turrung the mformation mto negaove campa•gn ads.
However, according to thes e
same sources, in recent weeks most
of the anti-Clinton effort has come
to a scnecching halt. These days the
"oppos ition research" effort has
on Iy one target: Ross PeroL
Desp ite any public statements
coming out of the White House to
the contrary, Bush's campaign
planners arc very worried about an
in dependent candidacy by the
Texas billionaire.
Few in the White House actual !y believe that Pero~ no matter how
much he spends, can actually be
elected president as a third -party

loot- and even .
"&gt;co res of tragic cases, to kill.
II CC II SC lO

1n

J Henceforth , yo u can tar get
about gun cont rol Ch 1ef Gates
adm itS that the Los Angeles pollle
were "s•mDiv overw helmed. " The

William A. Rusher
2,000 Nauonlll Guardsmen ordered
their ;ud by Gov. Wilson hlld to
wa•t 15 hou rs for the~ ammuniuon
to arn ._.c . In my ow n hom etown ,
San FranC ISCO, a mob r=paged up
one side of Nob Hill and down the
other, sma sh•ng and looting as it
went. (A lmost every street -level
10

w1ndow on two sides of t.h c venera-

hie Falfmont Hotel was broken )
Not a policeman wJs to be seen
until the damage had been don e.
Mayor Jordan may have so me
exce lle nt exp lan ation for thcH
.1bsencc. but hereal tor. you can be
'i urc. a 101 more Amcnc an s arc
gomg to plan on pmteellng them se lves.
4. The nOLs hav e '" a ll probabii ''Y assu red !h e re -e lec tio n of
George [lush . Every body knows

wh ere th e two par\ICs sta nd on
these ISsues. and many will vote
accord•ngly.
5 The prize for the mo st twofa ced attempt by a poltttc1an to
make hay out of these trag•c events
goes to Slick Wil lie Clmton. who
cxprc ~scd "concern" over the verdi Ct without co nclcmn ing it, and
sympJth1zed with the "millions of
Amcr~cans" who fe lt " abandoned" in thi s cris iS by Pres•dcnt
Dush - but left it to h1s listeners to
deCide whether he was sympathiZIng with blacks outraged by the
verdict or w•th whites outraged by
the nots .
5. I hope a speCial cm:le m hell
is reserved for the cduors of the
newspapers that publiShed the
nam es of the Jurors 1n the Kin g
case for the convenience of anyon e
angry enoug h to go after them . If
any oi the jurors come to harm,
those cd• turs should be prosec uted
as accessorie s before the fact.
fi An al\cmpt wll I now be made
10 prosecute the four poucc defendants under a federal law that forhid.s compi nng to dcpnve anyone

of hi s civ il nghts . ThiS statute,
ongin.11ty dcs•gncd 120 years ago
for use agamst the Ku Klux Klan,
was resurrected in the 1960s when
state juries declined to convtct certain wh11es accused of crimes
against blacks. The Warren Court
naturally found such second-try
prosecu uons constuuuonal, but if
th ey aren't double jeopardy , what
15? One can a1 least hope that the
Rehnqu 111 Court will invalidate
them.
7. What is happening to us, and
what can be done? Simply put, the
sec ular humani slS have been gnaw•ng away at the foundatiOns of
Western CIVIImnion (God, morali ty, the family) for two centuries,
and have finally succeeded in producing, especially tn our Inner
c•ucs. an almost totally amoral kmd
of human being - a sort of human
pit bull . Our country will recover,
1f at all , only by rediscovering and
recommitung llself to the great
salvific truths on which our CIVIlization was founded.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERI'RISE ASSN.

Trust us, George, we're cynical too
I think I have fmally figured out
v.hy Ronald Reagan chose George
Uu sh as his running mate· They arc
both from the same plane! Trust
me, It IS not Eruth.
Remember how Reagan would
say those utt erly prep oq no us
lh tng s that made you wond e r
whe ther somebody had sptked hiS
Jell ybean jar with mornmg ·glory
;ceds? Things about kille r trees. for
exam ple. Or my personal favonte,
uu cred after th e former actor' s
rcuremcnt from office as an expla nation of why he accepted S2 mll l•on for two brief spe ec hes •n
Japan: He couldn't go "back to
pictures," he said , because that
" would be cashing •n on d•c pres•·
dcncy." There IS no other word for
11, the man was surreal.
Bush manifcslS exactly the s:1mc
trait, but he's more subt le and it
took a while to recogn iTe 11. Take,
for example, th e " cy ni ci sm"
theme he has been chcw1ng on as
of late. There IS a "dcepemng cyni cism about the way thmgs work, or
fail to work, in Washington ," he
sa•d in a recent speec h •n Nonh
Carolina.
Guess what he was doing when
he said lhat? He was hitting up fat
calS at a fund-raising dinner. Guess
why he's talking about cynicism in
the first place? Because his ima ~c
specialists told him the public
wants change. So Mr. Insider, Mr.
Resume, Mr. Ready-On-Day-One
is now -presto- a refonmer.
Put another way: Bush is cynically usin1 the cynicism issue to
win voteS. It tends tD malce a body
cynical.
Take the speech he gave in
South Carolina last March . "Life
means nothing without fidelity to
principles," he said. Too often, he

•

cont 1nued, "polit1C1:1n " do the easy

th•ngs, the popular thtngs. but 11 •s
the tough thin gs that tel l you somethin g about ch.1r;1ctcr and honor

joseph Spear
and leadersh1 p."
This from the man who coddles
the murderous Ch1 nese geronto·
crats, demagogues on nag-bummg,
diSplays half a dozen positions on
abortion, nip-naps on taJces, advoCJ ICS SIX am endm ent s to the ConSI11Utl on.

Yeah, George, we're cyn1cal.
Somethi ng else he srud in North
Carolina: "Government has grown
more di stant. Too often, the gov ernment we get is not accountable,
it is not effecuvc. 11 is not efficient
and, rcgrcnably, 1t 's not compas Sionate." Th• s from the president
who vetoed a mintmum-wage btll
because it paid pick -and-shovel
people 30 cents too much , and the
president who vetoed a bill that
funded abortions for impoverished
women who had been raped .
Yeah. George, we're cymcal.
And something else he satd in
North Carolma: Americans "want
a government that spends within ilS
means, the way families do." This
from the president who submitted a
budget proposal thi s very year that
IS $400 billion m the red.
Yeah, George, we're cy nical.
Last month, th e Republican
Party held ilS biggcs1 fund-rai sing
event of the year at the Washington
Convention Center . More th an
4,000 participant~ coughed up the
mm1mum contribuuon of $1,500 to
attend. Many groups bought tables
for $20,000 or more. A donation of
$92,000 entitled th e donor to a

shon photo·op with the president.
·1 he purchase of two tables earned
a pmate rcccpt•on wllh George
and Barbara, or a reception with
Cabinet members, lunch with Dan
and Manlyn Quayle and a meeting
w1th congressional leaders.
The event was cal led the "Pres•·
dent's Dinner," but the mon ey
ra 1scd from corporat•ons and
wealthy contributors - an incredible $9 million - IS "soft" money.
It cannot go to specific candidates
for federal office and IS usually
spen t for ge neral party purposes.
ro ntnbutions do, however, buy the

donor access to anc1 mnucncc wiLh

the high and m•ghty.
Congress recently passed a campaign spending limits bill that closes the "soft mon ey" loophol e.
Bush vetoed il
Yeah, George, we're cynical.
Docs it ever cross your mind that
people like you have something to
do wnh 1t?

No, of course not. People from
- where did you say you were
from? - people from the planet
Hypocrite just don'tthmk that way.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Berry's World

o

•I Columbus I 71 I
o

W VA

Flumes

Snow

V111 Assocmted Press GrRphlc.~Ner

Ice

Sunny

PI Claudy

Cloudy

10 1992 Accu Wea•t1er. Inc

------Weather----Soutb Central Ohio
Tont ght , partly cloudy . Low in
the m•d -40s. Friday, rain likely .
H1gh in the mid -60s Chance of
ram 70 percent.

Extended forecasl:
Saturday through Monday:
Chance of rain Saturday. Fair on
Sunday and Monday. Hlghs in the
upper 60s or the 70s. Morning lows
'"the 40s or the low 50s.

Bv The Associated Press
Clear weather ts predtcted 10
continue over Ohio torughl Friday
v.tll be another mostly sunny day
for the northwest counties, but r.un
is lik ely to develop over the southcasl
Ton•gh t and Fnday arc also
forecast to bnng a gentle warmmg
trend. Lows w1ll be rn the lower or
m1d 40s. Highs arc expected from
the mid 60s to about 70, except for
cooler readings ncar Lake Erie.
The record high on this date m
Col umbu s was 87 tn 1936. The
record low was J l1n 1974.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:32
p.m. Sunnse Fnday wtll be at 8:33
p.m.
Around the nation
It ramed early today across the
Southeast, where cool temperatures
prevailed becau se of a mass of
ch•lly air moVIng south . It was
cloudy across much of the rest of
the nation.
Ra1n and thu nderstorms were
forecast today from Gcorgta 10
North Carolma. Weather in most of
the rest of the coun try was forecast
to be l;ur or partly cloudy.
Sunny skies produced re cordhtgh temperatures across much of
the Northwest Wednesday.
Spokane, Wash., registered 89
degree s, hrcakmg 1ts 1890 record
of 87, Dicki nson , N.D.'s 87
degrees broke the 192R record of
81i; and Billings, MonL. reached 89
degrees. brcak mg a 1966 record of

-----Area deaths---Robert Cundiff

Harry Drake

Raben W. Cundiff, 88, of Route
Harry Drake , 85, Flushing, dted
I m Rutland, died on Wednesday, Wednesday , May 6, 1992 1n
May 6, 1992 at Riverside Wheeling Hosp1tal 1n Wheeling.
MethodiSt Hospttal in Columbus .
Born March 14, 1907 in Mi sHe was a coal miner.
SIO n, Minn .. he was a son of the
He was hom 1n West Vlfg•n•a late Harvey and Emily Holm
on October 23, 1903, the son of the
Drake. He was a rellred em ployee
late W1lliam and Dora May Shoe- of Ohio River Colliers and a
maker Cundiff.
Protestant by faith .
He •s surviv ed by three daughMr. Drake is survived by three
ters : Joann Whalcv, Delaware, daughters, Mrs. William (Conn•c)
Ohio, and Jackie B'iaekburn and
Mason. Morehead C11y, N.C ..
Ilelly Charle s, both of Columbus;
Karen Smith, Gahanna, and Mrs.
f1ve sons: Eugene Cundiff, Middle - W•lllarn (Sondra) Stoban, L•thopoport, Charles Cund1ff, Columbus. l•s; four siSters, Bertha Sliter. StaRalph Cundiff, Rutland, and Gre- ple s, Minn., Vera Larson and
gory Cundiff, Hamden; four sisters:
Dorothy Ehrhardt, both of St. Paul.
Katherine Moore and VHgmia Minn ., and Pansey McCarvill.
Sayre, both of Syracuse; Mildred Northome. Mmn .; 10 grandchilCook, Columbus, and Paulin e dren; and two great grandchildren.
Bentley, Huntington, W.Va.; and
Besides ht s parents he was preseve ral grandchildren and great- ceded in death by h1 s wife, Dorothy
grandchildren.
Martin Drake in 1991.
Bcstdes hi s parcnL~ . he was preServices will be Monday at I0
ceded '" death by h• s wife, Hazel a. m. at the Warren Funeral Home
Nelson Cundiff; hi s brother. Hoben 1n Flushing with Rev . Harri son
Cundiff; and his sister, Betty Jane Gruenlcr officiating Bur•al will be
Jewett.
at Fort Stuben Bunal Estates, Wtn Funeral serv1ccs will be held on tcrsv!lle.
Saturday at II a.m . at Ewing
Friends may call at the funeral
Funeral Home 1n Pomeroy wllh hom e Saturday from 7-9 p.m. and
Rev . Paul Taylor officiating. Burial Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery '"
Cheshire.
Russell Eshelman
Friends may call at the fun eral
Russell G. Eshelman, 67, of
home from 7 p.m to 9 p.m. on State Route 648 in Harri sonvill e,
Thursday and 2 p m. to 4 p.m. and
d• cd unexpectedly on Wednesday.
7 p.m . to 9 p.m. on Friday.
May 6, 1992 at his residence.
He was born '" Dayton on April
2, 1925, so n of th e late Albert
Eshelman and the late Iren e
Wnght. He was a custodian for the
Meigs Local School District and a
sec urity officer in Pomeroy .
Am Ek l'owcr
. 31 3/4
He was a member of the
Ashi:l"'l 0 1l
..... .... 10 3/l\
Pagcvdlc Free Baptist Church. the
AT&amp;T
... .44 3/S
Harri sonville Senior Citizens Club,
Bc111k One
.. .44 1/H
and th e OhiO Employees RetireBob E"1n.s .. .........
177/X
ment System. He was a veteran of
Char mrr1g Shop . ........... 2i)
the U.S. Army during World War
C11 y Holtilng ....
. .. 19 7/R
FcdcralMogul
.... 19 5/R
II.
Gtxld y,·.IT T&amp;R
.. . . .. 75
He is survived by hiS wife of 27
Key Cr ntuoon
.. . .. . IX l/2
years, Louise Eshelman of Har risonville; a son, Ralph B. Edward s
Lantis l.nll .. .. .. . ...
. .34 5/8
Limtt cd IrK
23 3/4
of Harrisonville; a daughter , Nancy
Multllll l' til:t Inc
..... .. 2X 1/S
Lee Pri ce of Otway, Ohio, two
R.ll !&lt;,·,t.IUfOn\
. .... .... I l/4
brothers, Sonny and Jack Eshelman
Rohh Ill \,\: M ycr...
. 16
of Davton; a sister, Lucille Osborne
Shnll t') ·, Inc.
.. ...... .... .23 1/2
of Oh10; three sisters-m-law and
two brothers-in-law; a granddaughSt.1r 11.111' ..
.35 7/8
ter, Terri Lynn Gilley of Otaway;
Wcmh 1111 ·1.
... 12 3/8
and three grcat-grandch•ldren.
W ortlll n~ \1111 Ind .
24 1(2
Besides his parents, he was preSttd rqlllrl s are the 10:30
ceded in death by a daugh ter, Bar·
:t.m. quotes pmvided by Hlunt,
bara Jean Smith; two brothers.
Flli, aruJ Lm·w i of Gallipolis.
Tony and Charles Eshelman; and a
stepso n, Anthony Ciavarell.
Funeral services will be Satur ·
day
at 10: 30 a.m. at Birchfield
The Daily Senlinel
Funeral
Home m Rutland with Rev .
(USPS 213-9601
Dear! Porter offtciating. Burial w•ll
Publuhed uery af\emoon, Monday
be m Well s Cemetery.
lhroUMh 1-'mby Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy,
Friends may call at th e funeral
Ohio b}· the Oh1o Valley Pubhahina:
Companyi Mullimedia Inc, Pomeroy,
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p m. and 7
Oh1o ' 5769, Ph 992-2 156 SN:ond daa
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday.
po:JB!Jq(,. p1u d a l Pcxneroy. Oh10.

Stocks

Member Thr 1\!sociat.ed Pt ee11. and th~
Oh1o Newspaper Auoc1almn , National
AdvertiainK Re pruent.ative , Bnnham
Ne1npap•r SKies, 733 Thtrd Avenue.
New Yort. , New Yori. 1001 7

POSTMASTER. Se nd addre.a chansea to
The Da1ly Se ntinel, 111 Co urt St .
Pomeroy OH w ~ 769
SUBSCRIPTION RATE8
By Carrklr or Motor ll.oate

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Datly Se ntm r l on a thru , 1i1: or 12
monlh bam Credit will be given carriu
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No 111b 1 rnpllon• by mall permi ttftd in
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MaJISublcrtplloM

lulde Melp Coanty
13 Weeb . . .... . ............. ........... 121 .84
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Oat.llde Mel81 Coanty

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"OH, YEAH' Well. 1say I'M more desensitized

PA

IMansl•e ld I 70" I•

Showers T srorms Ram

26 Weeb ...
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to violence than YOU are!"

I

123.40
...SAS.&amp;l
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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Predict fair weather for Mother's Day weekend

Friday, May 8

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 7, 1992

Responds to letter
The Ohio Oil &amp; Gas Assoc•auon has noted, with Interest, the
art icle on the AEP public heanng
bcmg held today, as well as the
assoc1atcd letter sent by Mr. Kilpatri ck from the Surface. Mm•n g
Research Library . Mr. Kllpatnck
asserts that Ohio oil and gas interests arc in conce rt with the Sierra
Club '" an effort to sabotage min ing jobs at the Gavin plant. Wh1lc
the Ohio oil and gas producmg
com munity is comprised of envtronmcntally consc1ous individuals.
thiS Association, which represenlS
tho se producers, emphatically
states it has no relauonship with the
Sierra Club. We also deny any
effort to sabotage or advocate the
loss of mining JObs, particularly
those who supply coal to the Gavin
plant. It IS disturbing that any
responsible person would attempt
to li nk two groups whose goals
have hi stoncally been divergent.
The Sierra Club has been a major
adversary of the Ohio 0 11 and gas
tndustry in many high profile positions, including the reauthomauon
of the Resource Conservauon and
Recovery Act (RCRA). We find it
ludtcrous that a pos1\10n linking
th ese two organizauons would be
put forth .
It is true that the coal and the oil
and gas 1nd ustne s have been
:aggressive com~Litors m the mar .kctplacc and will contmuc to be so
Much 11 made on th e percetved
fnction between the coal and the
natural gas mdustries. There arc
Still many markets where natural

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Court news
Divorces processed
A divorce action has been filed
in Mctgs County Common Pleas
Court by Rebecc a E. Tyree, M1d ·
dleport, against Lanny D. Tyree.
Middleport.
A divorce has been granted to
Kimberly Sue Bailey from Grover
Eugene Bailey
Marriage license granted
A marriage license ha s been
granted in Me1gs County Probate
Court to Gary Franklin Hysell, 43 ,
and Tammy Lynn Daniels, 30, both
of Pomeroy.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Wanda Lyons. Racine, and
Amanda Hawk, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Evelyn Mains, Margaret Hutton
and Charles Tyree .

''

Joe N. Lawson
Joe N. Lawson, 64, of 237
Maddy Ceme tery Rd., Gallipolis.
died Tuesday, May 5, 1992, fol lowing a tractor acc•dent in Vinton .
He was born on May 16, 1926
1n Manm et, W.Va., son of the late
Mr. and Mrs W. Lawson.
He wa s a resident of Gallia
County since 1956, a retired ironworker, veteran of the U.S . Navy,
and a mcm ber of VFW Post 4464
and Ironworkers Local 787
Sur ... ivor s Include h1 s w1fe.
Clc mm1e Ptne Lawson; two daughters, Milltc Jones of San Antonio.
Texas, and Gmce Wnght of Revcn na ; SIX grandchildren; seve n greatgrandc hildren ; thr ee sisters,
Josephme Harris of VIsalia, Calif.,
Lenora L1vmgood of Orlando, Fla.,
and Clari ce Ann Davis of Hunting ton, W.Va.; and one brother, Wylis
Lawson of Palmer Springs, Va.
He was preceded in death by
two brothers, JesSie and Dav1d
Lawson .
Servic es will be held 230 p.m.
Sa turday at Waugh -Halley -Wood
Fu neral Home. w11h the Rev .
Chester Lemley officiating. Burial
will he in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire.
A graves 1dc military nag pre se ntat ion will be co ndu cted by
VFW Post44M
Friends may call at the fun era l
home on Friday from 6-9 p m.

Raymond C. Wilson
Raymond C Wilson, 73, of
Rochester. N. Y.. formerly of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, May 5,
1992, at Ge nnese Ho spital 1n
Rochester.
Born at Hamsonvillc, Sept. II ,
1918, he was the son of the late S.
Ray Wil son and Bcatncc Stanley
Wilson .
He was a graduate of Har risonville High School. and wa s
active in various Mason1c Orders
mcluding th e Shnnc , and associati ons for magicians li e retired
from Xerox in 1985
He IS SUTVIVCd by hiS Wife, the
form er Iris Weber of Cheste r, a
so n. Don Robert Wtlson. Faufield.
Conn.: three daught ers. Marilyn
Belcastro and Kathryn Pecora ,
Rocheste r, N. Y.; and Barbara Pel legr ini of Albany, N. Y.; three
granddaughters, th ree grandsons; a
half-sister, the fanner Llonnda Wtlson of Pittsburgh, Pa.; two SISters,
Eve lyn and Loraine: a sister-in law, Cleo Sm1 th of Che ster; and a
brother-in -law, Opha Offutt,
Pomeroy.
The Nulton Funeral Home at
1704 Penfield Road , Pcnftcld. N.
Y. IS handling arrangements.
Fncnds may call there from 7 to 9
p.m. Saturday. Cremation will fol·
low and private fam tly sntcrmcnt
servic es will be held

85
By contrast, h1gh temperatures
Wednesday were in the upper 40s
and 50s from South Carolina to
New England and the Great Lakes
reg1on .
Temperatures were expected to
be m the 50s and 60s today across

the East Coast, w1 th readwgs m the
40s m western North Carolina. An
unusually late spring snowstorm
there dumped a foot of snow on
Mount Pisgah on Wednesday
Temperatures were expected to
be tn the 60s and 70s across th e

Mtdw cst and the 80s and 90s
through most of the West, although
70 s were forec ast along the West
Coast.
Hanford , Wa sh., was the hot
spot 111 the nauon Wednesday . w1th
an afternoon h1gh of 9X degrees

Echoing Churchill's hopes for U.N.,
Gorbachev proposes expanded role
FULTON, Mo. (APJ - Mikhail
Gorbachev took th e same lectern
from which W1nston Churc hill
warned of the Iro n Curta •n to
declare the Co ld War won and to
promote hiS VISIOn ol a global soci ·
ety.

ing •n RusSian . "This was altogeth er a VIctory for common sense, rca -

Mu•••

Local briefs ... - - Continued from page I

EMS units answer 8 calls
At 11 :20 a.m. on Wednesday, M•ddlcpon squad trca~cd Opal
Kauff at the police department.
At 12:50 p.m., Syracuse squad took Mall Clayton Friend to Vet·
crans Memonal Hospital from the sta uon. At I: 13 p.m .. Middleport
unn went to Overbrook Center. Mane Duddt ng was taken to Veterans. At 1·5 1 p.m., Pomeroy squad was sent to Pearl Street. Clarabelle Rtlcy was taken to Holzer Medical Cen ter. At 2:48 p.m., Tuppers Pl;uns squad went to State Route s 124 and Ml for Ros1c Ntday,
who was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hosp1tal. At 4:05 p.m.,
Racmc squad responded to State Route 338 for Tommy Layne. He
went to Veterans. At 5.05 p.m., Rutland unn was dispatched 10 State
Route 6&amp;4. Russe ll Eshelman wa.s dead on arrival. At 5·24 p.m .
Rutland umt went to Carpenter Hill Road. R1cky Lauderm1lt, Jr.,
was taken to Vctcrans.

-Meigs announcements--

Sorority to meet
The Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter , Beta Sigma Ph1 Sorority, w1ll
meet May 14 at 7:30 p.m. at th e
Episcopal Parish House.
A.'iSociation to meet
The Chester Baseball Associa ·
uon wtll meet Friday at 8 p.m. at
Chester Elementary. All parenlS of
Chester area baseball and softball
players are urged to aucnct.
Notice of meetings
The Meigs County Board of
Health will conduct us monthly
mecungs the second Tuesday of
each month at 5 p.m 1n the second
noor conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department Multi·
purpose Buildmg, Mulb erry
Hetghts. Pomeroy.
Auxiliar} to meet
The Lad1es Au xll1ary of Tuppers Plams VFW Post No. 9053
will mcctlllmght at 7:30p.m. at the
post home.

human values. "

Continued from page I

Grande . A R10 Grande gradua te .
the Rev Bob Ball, will present the
morning
sermo n dunng th e cere "On e epoch has ended , and a
mony.
Rev.
Ball leads the Chu rc h
second IS commcnc •n g," the for·
the
Messiah
Untied Method iS t
of
mer Sovtetlcader told 15,000 peoCh
urc
h
in
Westervill
e.
ple gathered at Wcstmmstcr ColComme nce men t ceremoni es
lege to w1tness the histoncal symbcg1n
at 2 p.m., with Dr. Glik y
metry . "This is a turning point on a
&gt;e
rving
as the featured speaker
histone and worldwide scale.··
A natn:c of Fncs, Ya ., Dr
"In pushmg forward to a new G•llcy received a bachel or of" '
c•vihzauon we should under no Cir - cncc degree in Civil cngmccnng
cumstances agam make the intel - from V1rginia Polytcchrnc lnsU!ulc
lectual, and conseq uently poliucal. and State University. Black s bur~ .
error of interpreting viCtory m the 1n 1961. He obtained hiS maste r\
Cold War narrowly as a victory for degree m civil cng1 nccring fro m
oneself, one's own way of life," the same in sti tullon three yr ::ns
Gorbachcv SaJd Wednesday, speak - later , and was awarded a Ph.D 1n

DAR to met!
The Return Jonathan Metgs
Chapter, Daughters of the Amen ·
can Revolution, will meet Friday at
I: 30 p.m. at the Me1gs County Publi c L•brary m Pomeroy . Elizabeth
Schaad, fonmer Mc1gs County Economic Development Director, is the
sc heduled guest speaker. Hostesses
arc Mrs. Ronald Reynolds. Mrs.
Mark Gruescr, Mrs. Evere\l Hayes,
Mrs . Pearl Mora, Mrs. George
Skinner and Ms. Nancy VanMeter.

son, democrac y, and l ommon

DAY to meet
The DISab led Amcnean Yet er·
ans and the Lad ies Auxiliary will
hold their regular meeung Monday
at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut
Ave .. Pomeroy.
Gamesdav
The Syracuse Youth League
will have a games da) Saturda)
w1th parade at II a.m. and games
beginning at noon.
Program planned
The Area Agency on Agtng will
present a program at Ovcrbook
Center on Monday at 7 p.m. Kathy
Stevens, reg ional nursin g hom e
ombudsman, w1ll presen t a pro·
gram on advance direcuvcs mclud·
mg powcr-of-auomcy, livmg w1ll s
and guardmnshtp . The public IS

env ironm en tal cngmccnn g from:

Virgi ni a PolytechniC 1n 1966 II ~
has co nducted post-doctoral work
:11 Harvard Un1vcrsi ty and th e Um 'crsity of Florida.
He began h1s career as a design
r ng~neer for Newport News Shtp·
budding and Drydock m 1961 , and
JC Hn cd the faculty of Vlfgin1a Poly;
tct hni c a year l ater as an asstsLant
prolcssor of ctvtl engmeenng and
coordinator of off-ca mpu s engt nce ring progranns.
Dr . G II lev was dean of th e
Sc hool of Science and Technology
at Bluefield (W.Va.) SLate College
1n 1966 -67, and then se rved as
prcs idcn r of two msutuuons in the
Vlfgu11a Com munity College sys tem, Wytheville and J. Sargeant
Reyno lds. He returned to Bluefield
Stat e as lls prcs•dent'" 1975, a
poSitiOn he held until he was
named Vlfginia' s cducaoon sec retary 1n 1978 . He served In that
capacny unt1l 1982 , when he
became senior vtcc president of
George Ma..,n University, Falffax,
Va., the position he held until he
returned to West Virginia as Marshall' s 12th pres1dent.
Dr. Gilley participates m numerous professiOnal and community
acl\vJUes, including accreditation
co mmntees for other colleges and
universities, the Huntington Area
Chamber Commerce, Phi Kappa
Ph1, Sigma Xi, Chi Epsilon, Ph1
Delta Kappa, the Huntington
Rotary, the Wolf Trap Children's
Fcsuval Commiuee and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Following Dr. Gilley's address.
confenment of Bachelor and Associate degree s w1ll be conducted by
Dr. Ray Boggs, VICe President for
Acadcm•c Affalfs, the Chrunman of
the msutuu on' s Comm unny Cnllcgc, and the PreSide nt of the University Board ofT rustees.
Cc rcmonJcs will conclude wllh
the graduates fonn 1ng the tradiuon al clfcle on th e green and the
st n g ~ng of the alma mater.

lllVILcd.

NOW OPEN FOR
SRING SEASON
Co•p.. to line of Bedding and
Yogota•l• Plants, Blooming
allll Foliage Hanging
Baskets, Lorto Seleclion of
Shrullborr
and TrHs.
0,. Dlily 91.111. to S p.m.

iunA"i'i):s·

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse 992·5776

Timothy Workman
Funeral se rvi ces for Ttmothy
Workman, who died on Tuesday,
May 5, 1992, w11i be held at Mt.
Un1on Baptist Church ncar Har nsonviiie on Friday at 2 p.m. with
Rev. Joe Sayre officiating. Burial
will be in White Oak Cemetery .
The location of the funeral has
been changed by members of the
family.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
May 6 discharges
Debbie Bullington, Lynas Harrison and Ivan Sheets.•
May6 Births
Mr. and Mrs. David Ferguson,
daughter, Atllens and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Ferguson, daughter .
McArthur.

\

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

The Daily Sentinel-Page-s

Thursday, May 7, 1992
Page-4

Sabo's homer helps Cincy post 5-3 win over N.Y. Mets
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Chns
Sabo's staning 10 feel beller, and 11
shows.
When he came back from a dJsabling ankle inJury, the Cincinnati
Reds third baseman had t:ouble
getting the ball out of the infield .
He went 3 for 29 and got benched.
Now manager Lou Piniella can't
keep hrm on the bench.
Sabo hit a thr ee-r un homer
Wednesday night, hi s second in
three games, for a 5-3 viclllry over
the New York Mets . The n ght
ankle that he severely spra10ed
April 7 has healed enough to let

him swmg again.
.
"Yes!Crday JS the best it's fell m
a long time. and 11' s pretty good
again IOday," Sabo sard.
.
He· s learned to adjust The pam
wouldn't let hun push off the back
foot. so he's changed Ius swmg.
.. 1, puts less pressure on !he
ankle. " he SUJd
.
And his resurgence IS llllang the
pressure off 1h e m1ddle of the
Reds' lineup, whiCh has struggled
w1lhout him .

The Reds relied on the bonom
of th e order 10 produce 1ts fmt two
run s Wedn es day ofi Anthony
Young (2-1). Joe Oliver h1t a solo
homer and FreddiC BenaVIdes hn

a double play 10 produce a 2-0
lead in the fifth.
D•ck Schofield opened the sixth
with his fm;t homer in nearly two
years. He pulled a one-suike pi ICh
from Greg Swindell (3-1} over the
left-field wall, ending a streak of
794 homerless at-bats since June 9,
1990.
But Sabo delivered the decisive
hit in the bottom of the inning .
Dave Martinez singled with one
out and advanced on Reggie
Sander.;' grotmd OUL That left first
base open with Paul O' Neill coming up.
Young chose to walk O'Neill,
who's hitting .412against right1010

Scoreboard
~a tvrd&amp;1 -

NATIONAL LEAGLE
Euttn1 Dh·..,_
W L
ht.

Tum
Pittaburzh
........ 19 1
l"o'c:wYtd .
. ... 16 12
SLl...ouiJ
15 12

'

4l

~-- ·····:;;:
~
...... 10 16
J!l5

7
71

t!IL"C fUJI..il .. ill ~g.!' e&gt;r "IIUtby. ~h)

"

Stanley Cup playoffs

I

4M

OtieaF I . HOlUUIII 4
C illdMad !, N..,.- Y•k 3
Maltrul 4. San Otego 3
i..GI An&amp;dts 3, Philadelphia 1
St. Lollil S, San 1-"nnc,.,o 4. II &gt;n

~.

l."kl.roll 4

Eamonwn S.

\scores
C !-..1• ~"

Vaf\Cou~er ~

U!mmlo:w\

Furure gamr&lt;i

rm.

(Gooden l &lt;:Z) •I ClntloMll (lbmmlliMI 1.1), 12;)5 p.m.
San Franas[;IJ (SWJ.ft 5~0) 11 SL l.o1Hs
(Osbane 3-0}, 1 :3~ p.m.
Allan La (Gla~tne 4-1) at Pt111bu1gh.
(Nu&amp;lt 1-0), 7.3~ f' m
Houuon (Bo,..en 0 1) 11 Ch1(1gu
(Moraan 1· 2), 8 ·o~ p m

Frklay's gamrs
C lnc:lnnall (Rijo t -3 ) 1t C hluto
(lkMI• J..l), J:lt p.II'ISan FranCliCO (Walton 1- 1) •t M&lt;W~tre ­
al (Nabftolz 1-2). I 35 p.m
Oiqo (Hu.n~. 1-3) at PtuladtJptu'
(Abbm. G-5), 1 :3S p.m.
Houlton (Henry 0- 2) al PttUburgh

s.n

(Drabc:t J-2), 7:33_p.m
l.ol Ancdes (Henhi.Kr 2-2)
y ott (Cmt 3-I), 7 40 p.m.

Sew

11

A.tlanu (Lttbrandt 2-2) 11 St Louu
(Tcwbbury J-0). 8.3S p.m.

FrldaJ - Dclrm1 11 Ch1c1~0. S ~0
p rn .. VantOU¥cr 11 E.d!nmtllll. Q . 0 p m
s.aw rda'- Moouul 1t Boswn, 7 30
r m . r.; y Ran&amp;enl II Pitu ~urgh. ; 30

rm

Sunda' - Ch.ingo 11 Dnro1t. 7 ~0
p .m ., U J"~C«:~ury: Edmmtoo 11 Vmoou·
~a. lOJOp.m

Football Luaut
LOS ANGELES RAMS -

Ohio high school

An nounced the nsipati~:W~ d John Math, di ~ ol pl.iycrprnonnel

baseball poll
COLUMBt;s_ Ohw (AP) - ll nw 1
pancJ o f co a ~ha 111CI Oi"uo h1g_h

stilt

buclall IUlT\5 111 \he thml or
f1~c regu.W-te.UOO polls for The AUOC1aw:l Plu1 (by Otuo lLg.h School Athktlc
Auonation dtvisLDns. Wl 1h first-f'lacc
voto 1n fJUO!thc:M:I. won-lOS\ ~~d. and

school boy1

toll.: pc&gt;LnU)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
690

___ I B 9
... 15 12

.667

12 12
11 13
16

500
430
4IJ1

Ort-dud . - - -11 11

.)79

B&amp;lQmore....
Ncw"YcD .....

Bat\CIII........
Milwaukee ....

. ... . II

[)eaoil_ _.

r.s

Pet.

9

•

~St.

"'
••

""' '
"'Te1•
""""...
'"
"
"
c.r.t"" " ....
"'
"
"'
""""""" " ""
'
KIIUUI
"
Wednesda}"' s scores
'

10

•t \h ,, l.f ~

(JIOUj.h 0.1), I: 3~ p m_
DtlfDtt (Ta nana 1 2 ) 11 Ooi !and

(Wc:Jcl! G- I). 3:15 p.m
M.ml!li.OU (X.Ncge• 4- 0) tot n.JI.;J;•nrr
(SuLChffc 4-2), 7:3S p.m.
MUw.utec (Pkaac 2· 1) II "-•nw r ·'
(Davu 0--2), 1:35 p.m
C leuland (Cook 1 - 2 i al T nu
(P •"IIk t-t).. 1:35 p.m.
Toronlo) (:"AoniJ l2) 11 San l, rll•n
ao:w~I-4),10:mpm

New Yorll (Sandtrwn 2 I:

II

r. :.Jn r

n,.(Valcr•l - 1), \0:35pm

Friday 's camt&gt;_li

(ErickiOII t -3), l:t5 p.m..
Br.tm~ (llelketh 0 I) 11 Kan&lt;H

r u~

(Apperl - 2).83~pm

M.J.hru.ilu (Wcgm on ~ ~ ) I I

rrll&lt;

(Brown 4-2), 8 35 r m
Detmt (K_u,l 2-3) 11 Seattk Ohm1 GO), l!l-35pm
Nc.,.. Yoli (X•mtiTILa:.k.J IJ-IJ 11 (J~
land (MOO!t 4-ll. :u Jj p m
Tnronll) (Sueh 1 1) 11 Cahforr"• (r,n
ley 1· \), 10 3~ pm

Wt&gt;dnesdn's scort'

loo,

L:t,h lead. •e

1-0

~ew

carried the big bat w1th two singles
and a double . BenJI Lcw1s and
McCorkle each singled.
Eastern 1S now 9-1 in the S V AC
and Il -l overalL

O'DELLS
10.98
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WEATHII

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Wood

• ••, .. . ,,. __ .,_... ,, ' .. ~- ,l.

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m&lt;.'lh~WL ill'

17.98

· i~

SAVE 10%

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"BEST UITLE LU1118ER YARD IN TOWN"
634 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY

992-SSOO

Mon..frl H :JO; SAT. 8·5

..... 41

ts.

Dawn To Dusk L.

POnED

ROSE BUSHES

Pt~o.

1.
2
3
4
5.

•t;We A ••• ,.,.,

,,., ,..,.

lloo•AIIS•••er

I c:-:;

•2 GALLOI POTS
•ncOLOUIID

Division ill
PU.
321
203
169

YlllmES IVIIUIU

10~

"l t.uco(\ ) 141
X \ o nhwood 111-1
Q Cf-ruwtlk 15 3
10 llal:.unon: l___, tKl"\ y l11 w n If) 2

'14
M6

75
72
fi~

60

POTTED
PLANTS

SHond 10: 11. WhH]trs btJrR (1) Sl.
1:' A'o.mn St V111ccnt -S1 "1a ry J~ 1}
.\ew \1111mM11 F ron11cr (I) 40 14
l-nnltit1 )7 I S. I...ucanillf' Vallf'y J2. 16
lhmc:an!lt ~ Q 17 l.oudoriVlllt 2li 18
'i p n nr;f1dd Krnton R.dge 2(, 1'il lnhn!\O W11 2.~ :'0 Columbut Ready 20

Di ~"is ion

rv

Tr1m

~ .\ nnh

r.

York 11 Ch1et_ir&gt; . k

Pu.

lh :um&lt;m: Q

SATURDAY
MAY 9TH

IDS

:'

CL•Ki rlll~tt Coun1r, DH I -l

92
~

!',

\lmgo lct {2) 1~ -&lt;l
1(} Cnluml-nar1 1 (\ 1 8 1
Q

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60

REFRESHMENTS
WILL BE SERVED

~~s~~~~.._:

~~- -

r~~

~

I

~'

·~-

MOTHER'S DAY

"'' i:

t

IS MAY IOth
SHOP

· lruluding:
••Bob's Market SpeciaJtr•
New Guinea Hybrid Impatiens
Ia 15 Spectacular Colors
•Noa Stop Begonias
•Fuschias
•Ivy Geraniums
•Geraniums
•And Mora!

.,.,, Cflflll,., of loses•

jQ

Traon
l Cold"-ILCr (:;6) 15 (I
;'. rlllumb l1~ Aradtmy (II 1) 1
1 Himl:alfi ll~dm (71 11 2
-1 C rui.hne 1~ ]
~ 01t.a"'• ·Gl,ndorf 7- 1

TO HELP CELEBRATE
OUR 4TH ANNUAL
OPEN HOUSE,
BOB'S IS FEATURING
All FLOWERING
10" HANGING BASKETS
Regular 511.98
Now 2 for$ 22.00

HUDY HYBRID
TEA ROSES

II Ra)· V1lllge B1 y 14
! ~ lb mt lton RO!s 10 IJ. WrllilDII 1•.
1·1
Hel-!ron L•kewt~od 28
15
Su:uhcnvlil e 27 Iii WklltenYll..le 2.5 17
[)rcMitll Tn Va lley ?2. I R Pol111d San,
rl~~ ~I 19 ""'oga don: F1eld 20 20 'd1r
~ lf\i

sa. 99

39.98

Dh.- l.slon []

7 ~ onal R:d!\roilr: 7 1
R )h,n!&gt;n d!(t l'um v. u,., II

Futurr gamf'!'ii
Tonlaht-

Oy SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
A fi ve- hit flfst inning helped
propel Edd ie Co llins' Eastern
Eagles to an 8-5 S V AC victory
ove r Oak Hdl 1n an 1mponan 1
league malce-up game.
Jeff Durst go! the slarl, but was
re li eved by another senior Terry
McGuire, now 3- 1 on the year.
Roben Reed and R1denour shared
1he catching duues.
The above combo fanned 7 and
walked four.
Roger French suffered the loss
w1tl1 four Ks and four walks.
Not only d1d McGuire do !he
job on the mound, but the talented
sen ior had a four-h11 n1gh1 at the
pi ale, where he hit two doubles. a
si ngle and a so lo homer 1n the
fourth innin g.
Eastern went up 4-0 '" the socend on two hits and 1wo walks as
Oak Hill 's pllching woes con!inued.
OH did make it close in the third
when they rallied for three run s off
Durst. OH had three hils and a
walk in the inning before McGuire
extinguished the fu-e .
A big 1hrcc-run , four-hi! fif1h
1nn ing gave EHS 1hc needed
offense to clai m the win .
Besides McGuire's hal night,
Tim Bissell doubled and singled
1wice, Durst had two smgles.
Randy Kaylor and Rod Newsome
each doubles, and singles each by
Mike Smith. Pat Newland and Wcs
Hoi !Cr.
Devon Hale and McCorkle each
si ngl ed for OH, bu1 Breit Lewi s

I lmpnnlhmllirr.•ng01)12 -0JJ9
1 f',,n St~1rc:D.Imei\)13-3
221
1 Ccyl.'logi ll u 12:
142
-t (l • tr--1 "At:ll G-d.m~r 7 I
IJO

playorrs

t.:11h 108, Sea1tle

Eastern beats Oak Hill 8-5

14
. 61
11
42

WCik:rr\Ue

f) Lancnte~Fur.ic.ldt "nw,'ll2 - 5

Oue•a o (McCuk.\U I 3) 1 1 fJa lt.morr
(Muuuu 4-0), /-]5 p_m
Clneland Cl"•v J . I ) al \1 1nn nnla

na

..

Stcot~d Ill :

Today's gamrs

NBA

a.

1~ .

1

gy. "Paul's hiuing .35 0 an d ]' m h'uting .150,"' he said, cxaggeratmg
only a little.
He hit the scrond p11Ch over the
waU, undcrcutung a familiar strate·
gy. With the middle of th e lineup
having trouble hrumg '" lhc clutch ,
O'Neill is gelling wall&lt;ed a lo t 20 times in 112 aips to lhc plate.
Piniella has been looking for
someone to start hillin g behind
O'Neill. Now he's got Sabo.
"He's hit two three-run homers

two RBis in the last six games,
droppmg his average lo.262.
"I'm not really pullmg together
a string of hiLs," said Bonilla, who
was I for 4 Wednesday. "That's
all going 10 happen. It's pan of _the
cycle. Right now I can be commg
out of iL"
Swindell is staning 10 develop
so me co nsistency . He's won hi s
la st three starts and has allowed
JUS! one earned run in his last l 5
inn ings- just what the Reds anucipated when they got him from
Cleveland last November.
"I was getting outs with every
one of my pitches," he said. "I
wasn't afraid 10 throw any of my
pilehes. I felt good."
The only time he regretted any
pitch was against Schofield, who
had some success againsl him in
the American League. A high
change-up led 10 the sttealc-brealc ·
(See NL on Page 6)

in lhc las t three games. That's whal
we need from him," Piniella smd.
"They walk O'Nc1ll and he dehv ers
Not even Benavides' shoddy
play at shortsiOp could topple the
lead.
Benavides had two errors m the
seventh, se tting up unearned runs
on Schofie ld 's sacrifice ny and
Dave Magadan's two-out sin gle.
Norm Charlton came on to strike
out Bobby Bonilla and end the
threat. then allowed just one hit the
rest of the way for hiS eighth save.
BoniUa is h11trng JUS! .238 w1th

,.

Porumoutl"l f2JJI7- J... _____ 292
Alluncc .""'arlmgtoo (4) !G-O
186
Alrur1 Jloban (2 ) 1 I 1
I 22
!olumbus St Charla 01 : 2-2
I~
Thorn¥illf' Shf'rl.:t.n (2) 1 ~-1 --·--92
I!Hryan (: )'fO
8.4
7 Columt:&gt;u! Wa:t.t:rw1112 - ~
S4
~ St 0l!f"!ville4]
40
Q Columh&lt;Js M lla 11 -4
39
I 0 Carlule 9 I
]6

5, Dc:lral 2
C.hl0Tru1 3, New Y crt. 2
0-21

'"
Ill

lJI

()Uland

nlltd Jocl: Call ander, center, and Mike

Saba. The third
baseman considered il sound strale10

101

Tum

ClfwlaiNI 7, TtUI 2
T otmll) I 2, Se.anlc 4

( Y o~os

CmnnNU G\c:n Esw: Ol l ~ -0

21!

4{)7

BaltunDn~ 6. Mmncan.a 2
Karau Cny 3. Ml.lw.ulo: 1
DLAao 1. B011a1 l

9ouon

~

4

S..aJ•

C.ty

Hanu.hon (l 2) 14- 2 ...
Canla"l Md(Ullcy (8) 12-1
T olodo Su.n (S) I}..()
l"cwark {2) \b-3

Sooth 2S . 16. Barberton 2.4 17. 8ea..-ercrc:ri 22 Ill A.I.IU'l 1\onh 21 19 Ham
1m 20 20 Bowlm&amp; Great 19

l

ll

ll

I
2.
3
4

}() 14 \...akeW()I"JO;! (I) 26

Hockey taa~
PITTSBURGH PENGI.JlNS - Re ·

to I.Cm'll with On Kaa, forward. on
mWllyear curuan

Sn-IM!d Jl: II Toledo Whu mer 37
12. Wc:~tcrvUk Sooh 32 13. Wa&lt;hwuth

Wtsten~ Dl•i56on
Chicaao ....... ---- .15 10

Hockey
N alk~MJ

VANCOtNER CANUCXS - Ag:nxtd

•••

6.
yta'l s orthmont (2) 14- 3.
l Euclld 10.2 ...
K Pwj1111 \3 -4
9 Fauf1dd(l ) 11-4
10 l&gt;wMIIl\5-6

I

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES Wa 1ved Pr-eston An de rson, ddens i~c
&lt;od.k

Nc:cdham. ri&amp;ht w\na. f1m1 Muskc&amp;OI"I of
lhc lnlcrnatimal Hockey l...migue.

Dh-L-.Mln I

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Football

~alkwLII

Tum

W L

lead! st·

Tonlaht- Montreal a1 B O(!~ 7 ~o
r m, N.Y . R•nacrs 11 Pl 1tsh urgh .; 30

~~·York

Loa-.

N•tloftal Lna•
CHlCAGO CUBS - Purchased the
c-ontna of Dwtghl Smith, outflC!dcr, frun
Jo'" of the ~can Auoc:iation. Pbced
Rey Sartchcz. infidda, on the 15-day disab led l.11t. Attivatod l01c Vi.zclillo, infic.ldc-, from the 1S-day diublcd W.L
SAN DiEGO P.A.ORF.S- Dc:sipltcd
Will TaylOJ. wtfitldtr, for raai~
Cllltd 11p Tun Scott, pitcher, from Lu
Vcpa of the Pllnfic Cou1 Lcaaue- Pl.aca:l
Larry Andenel"l., pi1clttr, on the 15-d•y
disabtod IUL Pia~ Dave Eillod, pitcher.
m the IS -day dlUhled \111, ~cti.,.e 10
May4
S AN FRANCISCO GIANTS P'll e td John Pmer.on, inf1ddcr, oo Lhe
15-day dlaah!I'Jd lut Arunted Bud 8lacl.,
p~.tchcr , fro:m the 15-day di.u.blfld list.

leads u:ncs 2· I

Today's games

.W

CLEV ELAND INDIANS- Op tloMd Jtft" Shnr, pUdMr, to Coloudo
Sprlna• of lhe Pulfte Cout Lnaue.
Purchu«&lt;lhe COI'Ilrad of Erk: Plu11k.,
plteher, from CaiiiOft·Ahon or lhr

na J-0

~UibwJ.h 4, AUanu 3, 16=p

Toftllllo ..........

DasebaU
ArMric. . IAafiUt

Easttnl

Wednesda~

Oucago

Hopewdl -L.oudon

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II

Wednesday 's scons

THill

Meip %7. 19.

Eutcm Con!e!TJ1N" hna:1 will bq1~ on
Sunday ~n I ! ,, 3 1 0 r&gt; m i! both
We.llern' Conference se~J,na ! ! rnd 111

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Sat Franasco
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How:1011
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. 10 14

43. I~ Dcft.ana: Aymville 40. 13. New
Riq_d lB. 14. TolodoOu.uu Hilb (l) 37
15. bnciM.ati Marianmt :Kl _16. W~­
field 29 . 17. Bethel 21. 11. Pomeroy

fl ~ PuU•~d at Phoenu . l 30 p m
S.unda)- f' ]tltland II 8DIIOn ,
IZ:H p. m . , Lt 1i1 11 ScH l: c. 3 I'm .
Oucago II \ew Yod. 6 :lf• r ~

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s.a..d 1• t I. Fc.toria St.. Wc:nddia!

p m . Phoenu fl _Pnrt.Jand. 10·30 p.m
Friday _ Clt•(llnd at Bruton , I
p.m.; Seu.lc 11 luh, 10 :W p.m

In the majors ...

banders, to pileh

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Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

~;Scudder

...

•
:..;

l,
'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 7, 1992

scatters hits to push Tribe to 7-2 win over Rangers
the third.
" II was mce to have all the people here . but it was more of a distrac tion than anyth ing," be said. " I

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP):;·scou Scudder's dream of piu:hing
·"-at Arling1011 Stadium carne true.
::: But instead of pitching for the
:: :Texas Ranger.; as he had dreamed,
-; his performance added w the night • mare that has plagued the Ranger.;
: ·at home.
:: : Sc udder allowed only five hits
:··over 6 1/3 inntng s Wednesday
·:"-night in the Cleveland Indians' 7-2
/ victory over the Rangers. The vic ; :tory dropped the Rangers record at
: home w 3-8.
• Scudder grew up in Pari s,
: Texas, onl y a two -hour nde from
• Arlington and the Ranger.; were hiS
favori le team.
"I was defin itel y a b1g Rangers
fan," Scudder SaJd, adding that he
made the lllP as many as 30 um es
:each summer.
• " It's great to come bac k here
: -and have my family see me pueh
&lt;well , especially against a good-hittin g team. " said Scudder, who
struck out six and walked three in
hi s longest outing sin ce hi s firsr
slarl of the year.
Sc udder (2-3), who had 20 fami ly me mbers and fn cnd s in atten dance. survived an earl y case of
nerves. allowing four base runners
in the first three innings_ He gave
up Ruben Sierra's rwo·run homer

In

was a lor more nervous than I usu-

all y am."
W1th the Indians cl ingi ng to a 32 lead Paul Sorrento gave Sc udder
ins ur3n ce in lhe e ighlh with a
three-run homer, his second of the
seaso n Sorrento hit a 2- 1 pitch
from reliever Terry Mathews 41 2fcct into the right-fiel d stands, scoring Carlos Bacrga, who had sin gled. and Mark Whiten, who had
walked.
"That home ru n was real big,"
sa id Indi ans manager Mike Hargro ve. a form er Range rs pl a yer
who was among Sc udd er' s
fav ontcs as a kid. " That was the
first tim e in tw o wee ks that he
tumed on the balL "
Kenn y Loft on added an RBI
s1nglc for Cleveland in the eightlt .
Texas. whteh started the day a
hal f-game behind the front-running
Chi cago Whi te So, in the AL
West, co ntinued to struggle.
Th e Ran ge rs dro pped th eir
fo urth straight at Arlmgton and arc
off to th ei r wo rst sta rt at home
since 1985.
In beating the Ran gers for the
fim ume, Scudder, acquired in a

trade with the Cincinnati Reds last
win ter, ouldueled Bobby W1u (33).

" I JUSt wish we could play a little better at home ," Witt said. "We
have a Rood road record and we
played some tough cities last time
out and came back with a prcuy
good record. I can't figure it out. "
The Rangers threatened in the
fifth , loading the bases with two
outs on a single and a pm of
walks. Scudder escaped, however,
when Juan Gonzalez lifted a 385foot drive that was caught at th e
base of the wall by right fielder
Mark Whiten.
"When it gets a liule warmer
here, tltat ball would probably be
out," Scudder said. "I was lucky ."
Left-hander Kevin Wickander.
recalled from the minors on Tuesday, relieved Scudder with one out
and a runner on first in the seventh.
After a strikeout and a walk ,
Wickander got Sierra, the Range" '
cleanup hitter, to pop out w short·
stop.
W1ckander piu:hed 2 2/3 innings
of scoreless one-hit rehef to earn
hi s first career save.
"He threw a lot of pitches (51)
but he'd never had a big leag ue
save and we wanted to gi ve him a
chance w do that," Hargrove said

1

17

of Wickander.
It was the first time the Indians
had posted hack-w-back vicwries
this season and the flrst time since
last Oct. 4-5 in New York.
In other games, Oakland bea t
De troit 5-2, Toronto beat Seat~e
12-4, California beat New Yorl: 32, Baltimore beat Minnesota 6-2,
Kan sas City beat Milwaukee 3-1
and Chicago beat Boston 7-5.
Athletics S, Tigers 2
Oakland manager Tony La
Russa didn't really care that Dave
Su:wart wanled to finish the game.
" !didn ' t go out there to get
Stew's approval," LaRussa said
aft er pulling Stewart in the eighth
inning of the Athletics' 5-2 victory
over the Detroit Tigers.
" If he doesn't understand the
move, that' s his problem, not ours.
Not the team's," LaRussa said .
" If he gave me a stare, that's not
what I was paying anention to out

there.''
Stewa rt (2-2) pitc hed 7 1/3
innings, struck out a season-high
nine and walked three. Vince Hooman and Dennis Eckersley finished
with h i ~e ss relief, with Eckersley
getting four outs for his leag ueleading lOth save.
"[ had in my mind what l wanted to do toni gh~ but I wasn 't able
to finish it. It wasn't a complete
job, " Stewart said. " Once I' m in
the eighth , I' m not the type of
slarler who' s looking for belp when
I get that late into the game."
Willi e Wil son hit a two-run
double off Walt Terrell (0-4 ) in the
siJ.th as Oakland stopped Detroit's
winning streak at four.
' 'I'm not sure if Terrell will he
retained in the rotation ," Detroit
manager Sparky Anderson said .
"But! thou2ht Walt oiu:bcd bew:r
than the number.; showed. ''
Terrell, 0-7 with a 6.30 ERA in

Adams among Ohio Valley
Speedway's weekend victors
By SCOTT WOLFE

Sentinel Correspondent
This past Sunday, for the first
t1 me 1n many years, Ohio Valley
Speedway in Lubeck, W.Va ., hosted super Spnnt cars and the result
was a huge success .
Rodney Duncan of Columbus
passed Mansfield's Mike Zeiter on
the ninth lap to roll to the win.
while Larry Bond made it two 10 a
row thi s weekend wit.h a sweep in
the Late Model division.
Racine ' s Bob Adam s Jr. survived a violent ftrst lap crash to
win the modified A-main.
In the 20-lap Spnnt mam Duncan was followed by former Mei gs
Count y product Ronme Myer s,
Ze iter, Jim Nier, Dave Dickson,
Steve McCann, Rick Holley, C.J.
Holley. Rodney Bolger and Boone
Davis.
H e aL~

were won by Zeiler

Duncan.
The Late Model main saw Bond
Jump into the lead and never loolt:
back in th e Whaley 's Auto Parts/
Faccmcycr Lumber #10. Doug Hall
wa s second , followed by Harold
Redman, AI Flohr in the Racinebased Shain Racing Engines 189 ,
Butch McGill , Steve Lucas, Bob
Adams and Greg Carpenter.
Bond won the first heat over
brother Andy Bond , Rohr edged
Hall in the second, and Redm an
bea t McGill in the third go-round_
Seven cars were eliminated in a
vicious first lap modified aa: idcnt.
Two local dnver.; were in the pileup and shak en slightly, but their
car s wer e heavily dam age d.
Among those in lhc accident were
Rutland' s Ri ck William son.
Pomeroy' s Benny Hickel and Ra y
Plants of Ravenswood.

~nd

Southern hands N-Y 12-4loss
to advance to D-Ill title game

''

GOOD POKE, CHRIS! -The Cincinnati
Reds' Chris Sabo (right) gel congratulations
from leammale BiD Doran afler hilling a three-

NL Contests
ing homer.
" That kind of surprised me,"
Swindell said . " But he always hit
my breaking ball real good when
he was with California. It wasn't a
stupid pitch ; I just threw u a ltul c
too hard for a change- up.'·
Schofield , wh o had govc n up
thinking about homer s. down played his success Wednesday.
"I' ve hit h1m once 1n a while .
Normally he gives me one pueh to
h1t," Schofield SaJd. " If I put u tn
play, great. He's sneak y. He just
left a change-up up."
In other gam es, Pittsb urg h
edged Atlanta 4-l , St. Louis he at
·S an Franc1sco 5-4 in II innings ,
-Los Angeles downed Philadelphia
:3- 1, Montreal stopped San Diego
:4-3 and Chicago beat Houston R-4.
Pirates 4, Rraves 3
DaVIt! Ju sti ce. Mark Le mk e,
Ron Gant and the Atlanta BrJ vc s
learn ed the hard way : There' s no
.defense for no defense.
In the biggest bonehead play of
J.he season, Ju succ and Lemke let a
'soft ny th at should 've end ed the
~o rn e fa ll hctwccn the m in tl! c 11dt
mntng, enahltng Pittsburgh to tic
the score.
The n in th e 16th in ntng, left
fielder Ron Gant let a sonkl ng ltnc
dmc skip past h•m for a trtplc. &lt;;etlin g up th e WJnnJn g run 1n th e
Pirates' 4-) VI Ct on· ove r th e
Pravcs.
·
'That was a game tha t neither
team dese rved to wtn and ncnh cr
te am dese rved to lo.:; c, " Pttt s·
Hurgh's Jay Bcll .'.ai&lt;L
Belt was at the center of tl!e olav
that had the Braves snapptng Jl
each other.
After Atlanta scored in th e top
o f the 11th o n catc her Don
·~)!au g ht 's throwtn g err or . 1he
-p irates pul IWO runn ers on ha se
will! two outs. Bell looped a ball til
shallow nght that e1ther J ustKc or
Lemke could 've eaSil y e a u ~ht
Instead , Lemke. who had come
jnto the game in the scvc ntll mnm g
·for defensive purposes . and Jusucc
:both backed away at the last second
and the ball fell tn , a llow "' ~ th e
tyi ng run to trot home .
" That's hi s ball unti l I cal l h1111
off, and I never called h1m off ,"
.Justice said. "I thought he was
'!!Ding w cau:h iL I eouldn 't believe
:ll. 1 looked down and the ball's at
:my feet."
Lemke, who dropped a foul fly
a few inn;ngs later. acce pted
responsibility.
"I'll take the blame." Lemke
·d. " Biameme.''
:'~~'At the end the inning, Lemke
walked over to Ju s tice in th e
dugou~ but Justice put his hands up
and wall&lt;ed away.
The Pirates won in th e 16th
when Slaught's liner got past Gant

or

•'

run homer in lhe sixth inning of Wednesday
night ' s game against the visiting New York
Mets, which the Reds won 5-3. (AP)

(Continued from Page 4)

•

•

0

- ------=------'------ - -

for a triple. W1th lite de fense drawn
tn, Jose Lmd single d ove r ccnl cr
fielder Otis Nixon.
Pius burgh 1mproved to 10 -1 at
home. The Pi rat es sta ye d ali ve 1n
lhc nin th inni ng when Cec il Espy,
6 for 7 as a pin c h hitte r, had a
p1n ch sin gle wJt h t wo oul s thai
drove in the tymg run .
Stev e Ave ry shut out Pu tsburgh
for m; mnings. The llr.~ vcs ex tend ed t ~ eir scoreless strc.ak again st the
Pirate s at Three Ri vers Stadium to
34 1nnm gs un til Pittsburgh gar a
run in th e eight h.
Bob Pancrso n (2-0), the Pirates'
Sixth pitc her. work ed two in n1ngs
Ben R1 vera (0-1) was the loser in a
game that took 5 hours. 6 minutes.
Dodgers J, Phillies I
Ra mon Martmez won for the
fir s! 11me 1h1 s se aso n a nd Lo s
An geles won for the first tim e L!liS
month w1Lh a victoT'I· at Vr.1crans
Stadium .
·
The Dodger.; had lost five in a
row dur1 ng a span of 10 days. They
ha d four games tn Los Angeles
postponed beca u&lt;;e of the vrolc nce
followtn g the Rod ney K•ng verdiC t,
an d also had a scheduled off-day.
Manincz (1-1) struck out nme in
6 1/3 innings in hi s sixth start of
th e year. Roger McDowel l got h1s
thHd save. Dann y Cox (2 - ~ ) was
th e loser.
Darry l St rawberry and M1k e
Sconsc1a both left the gam e fo r the
Do&lt;tgcrs because of bac k stratn s.
Cardin als 5, Giants 4
FeliX Jose homered off Dave
Ri ghcut wll.h two outs m the botlo rn of the I I th inn 1ng and St.
Loui .:; heat S;m Franc1sco at Busc h
Stadium .
Jose 's first home run of the season went 425 fee t to center field
and gave the Cardinal s their fifth
v1cto ry 1n seve n ex tra-inning
games.
Ray Lankford ha d three hits,
.:; cored thr ee run s and stole 1wo
bases fo r the Card inal s. Hi s solo
homer put St. Low s ahead 4-3 in
the seventh . but the Giants ued it in
th e n1nth wh en Willi e McGee ' s
RBI double was barely beyond left
fi elder Brian Jordan 's lunge .
Juan Agosto ( 1-2), who began
the game wuh an 8.5 3 ERA and

Sports briefs
NEW YORK (AP) - A deleptla n from lite ownership committee
will meet next week the Japaneseled group thai wants w by the Seattle Marinefll .
Co mmiuce chairman Fred
Kuhlmann of the St. Louis Cardinals, AL president Bobby Brown
and Chicago White Sox owner
Jerry Reinsdorf wiU meet in Chicago with Nintendo of America Inc.
president Minoru Arakawa, Chris
Larson and John McCaw.

was booed when he walked on the
f1eld. p1tched on e inning for the
VICtory. R1ghctli (0-3 ) entered in
the nmth and was the loser.
Cubs 8, Aslros 4
Despite a 15 mph wind blowmg
1n at Wrigley Field, Ryne Sandberg
h1t a pair of two-run homers and
Lu1s Sal azar al so connected for the
Cubs.
Sandberg homered in the ftr st
mning off Pe u: Harnisch (2-4) and
added hi s fourth homer of the season in !.he seventh inning. Salazar's
shot, his fim of the year , broke a 4all t1c in lite siJ.th.
Greg Madduz (4-2) gave up four
run s and seven hits in 7 1/3
innings. Houston lost for the sixth
rime in seven road games.
Expos 4, Padres 3
John VanderWal doubl ed, Sin gled and drove in two runs as Mon treal won at home. The Expos won
thw second straight n1ght gam e
afu:r losin g their ftrSt 12 .
Ken Hill (3-2) struggled for SIX
innings and won with relief help
from John Wetteland, who p1tchcd
two innings for hi s fourth save.
Andy Benes (2-3) is winless m four
starts .

San Diego closed to 4-3 in the
se venth on sacrifice ni cs by Kun
Stillw ell and pinch -hitter Kevin
Ward . Benito Santiago smglcd to
lead off the Padres' ninth. but Wetteland struck out the next three batters.

THIS WEEKEND

By SCOTT WOlFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Howie Caldwell ' s Southern
Tomadocttes advanced to the fmals
of the Division Ill sectional softball
tournament Wednesday by defeat ing Nelsonville 12 -4 in a fir st
round game.
Southern will now play Eastern
in the tournament championship
Monday at a neutral si1e.
Ne lsonville took a 1-0 lead in
the fir st, but Southern tied in the
&lt;;eCond 1- 1.
The game became a sec-saw affa" each of the next two innings
when So uthern would go up by
one, Nelsonville would go up one.
th en SHS would repeat the feat.
That happened until Southern took
a 6-4 lead for good in the top of the
fourth .
Soph omore Jodi Caldwell was
aga1n the pitcher, walking II , but
fannin g fi ve and limiting N-Y to
JUSt four hi ts on the night. Jessika
Cod ner was her batterymate behind
the plate_
Shumw ay suffered the loss for
Nelsonville, walking seven. fanntng none and g1ving up 10 South ern hiLS.
Southern 's Michelle McCoy had
her hillin g cap on as she and
Chri sti Maiden s each re co rd ed
thrce- h1t nights. McCoy had two
singles and a double, while Maidens had tw o stngles and a lllplc.
Amhcr Ohlinger singled tw1ce .
and Amber Cumings and Marcy
Hill each singled.
Foley doubled for Nelsonvill e,
Gail singl ed twice, and Alv is sin gled.
South ern is no w I 0-10, whil e
Ea stern. go in g ml o th1 s week' s
play, wa s 10 -1 and leading th e
SVAC.
The two Me1gs County sc hool s
wtll squa re off Monday at 4:30

p.m. at a sue to be deternuned.
Inning lola is
Southern ..... . .012 304 2 - 12- 10-3
Nei..-YorL .. IOI 200 0 - 4- 4-3

SW\S

since beating Boston las t

Sept. II. wasn ' t in a mood to discuss his furure.
"I've got noth ing that's worth
priming to say," he S31d.
BIH Jays 12, Mariners 4 .
Kevin Mitc hell h1l h1 s fn st
Americ an League home run for
Seanlc, but Joe Caner and Manuel
Lee home red as vi siting Toronto
won its founh strnight
MiiChcll. whose 109 home runs
m the last three yea rs led th e
ma)O&lt;'i. ended his longest season~mg power slump when he conI'IX1ed in the founh agamst Junmy
Key (2 - 1). T he homer came 1n
Mitchell's 92 nd at -ba t and 25th
game for the Mariners.
Rand y Johnson (3-2) ga ve up
seven runs- two unearned - and
lhrec hits in five innings.
Angels 3, Yanktes 2
M3Jt Langston (3-1), struggling
with a strained left hip in mid April, ~mi t rd visiting New York to
four hits m eight-plus innings and
struCk out six. Bryan Harvey fin isbed the f1vc- hiner fo r hi s ninth
S3\'C.

Melido Perez (2 -3) lost despite
pitching hi s firs t complete gam e,
allowing 10 hits_ He struck out four
and walked one.
Orioles 6, Twins 2
Ben McDonald pitched a sixhitter and Brndy Anderson and Leo
Gomez homcJed "' Baltimore won
for the seventh lime in eight games
and increased their home record to
11-2. the best in the AL
McDonald (4 -0) struck out five
and walked thrcc in his third comple te game, allow in g homers to
Shane Mack and Kirb y Puckcn.
Kevin Tapani (1 -4 ) lost his fourth
consecut ive decision, giving up

five runs and eig ht hits in four
mnings_
Rovals 3, Brewtrs l
Jim EiScnreich broke a 1-1 ti e
with a home run on t.ltd first piu:h
of th e seve nth inning by Jaime
Nav3ITO (2-3). sending Kansas C1ty
lO its second vi ctory in 10 home
games this season.
M3Jt Gubicza (2-2) pvc up six
hits in se ven innings, stru ck out
three and walked thrcc.
While Sox 7, Red Sox 5
Warren Newson hit a two-run
single off DaMy Darwm (2- 1) in a
four -run eighth at Comiskey Park
as Cl&gt;icago rallied to wm 1ts fourth

Auto racing
INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) Crashes mvolving defending champiOn Ri ck Mears and Japanese
rookie Kenji Momota marred practice for the May 24 Indianapolis
500.
Trnck officials saod Mears, drivin g the car he drov e to his fourth

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By BOBMIMS
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) The Utah Jazz want to remember
two things about the Seat~e SuperSonics' two victories at the Delta
Center this season.
I , The regular season does n't
mean anything in the playoffs; and
2, winning the fi"t game doesn't
mean anything after the first game.
"We're just taking it one game
at a time," Karl Malone said after
scoring 30 points in Utah's 108-

And , numb er one, there was no

100 victory. "We know we've still
got a job to do."
The win in Wednesday night's
only NBA playoff game reversed a
glaring blemish on Utah's NBA ·
best 41-4 home record during the
regular season - a pair of losses to
the SuperSonics at the Delta Center.
"That was the regular season
and, now, that doesn ' t mean a
thing. This is the playoffs. This is
when it's imporun~" Malone said.

The two teams meet here again
Friday night, with Games 3 and 4
of the best-of-seven series Sunday
and Tuesday in Seattle.
"It's a tremendous win for us,
but we know it' s just one game and
far from over, " said Tyron e
Corbin, who came off the bench to
score 23 points.
"We can't be sa tisfied," added
Je ff Malone, wh o had 22 points .
"This team has a lot of weapons to

( Jnt lkJt

rhd\u I rh

REJECTION - Chicago goalie Ed Belfour
(30) knocks away lbe puck lo leammale Jeremy
Roeniek (out or view) and away from Detroit's

Steve Yzerman (19) in the firsl peried or
Wednesday night's NHl game in Chicago,
which I he Blackhawks won S-4. (A P)

In the NHL playoffs,

Chicago edges Detroit S-4 to move
to verge of second-round sweep

The Stanley Cup playoffs continue tonight with games in the
Adams and Patrick Divisions. The
Boston Bruins play host to the
Montreal Canadiens in the Adams
holding a 2-0 lead, while the New
York Rangers play at Pittsburgh in
the Patrick willlthe series tied 1-1.
Norris Division
Blaekhawks 5, Rrd Wings 4
Dirk Graham's second goal of
die game with 4:47 left iD regulation pvc the Blackhawks their vicl!SrY over the despentte Red Wings.
-. The Blackhawks had blown a
pair of two-goal leads and were
hack on their heels when Graham
flashed in front of goaltender Tim
Cheveldae and li~ped Igor

als. 112 ton . shon wheel base,
s1ep bumper.

'!Tlu'

19 N. S.co•d Ave.

Page-7

'

guarantee we were go in g to the
Final Four next year. Numher two,
there was no guaranlee he would be
improve hi s position in the draft "
" Wh en you're co nsider in g
wheth er to turn pro, you have to
see if th e timin g ' s right, " sa 1d
teammat e Mark Bake r. "For
Jimmy, the timing 's perfect."
Anoth er teammate , Jamaal
Brown, added, "I don't think he
could have gotten any better in college. He's ready for the next step.''
Jackson was acclaimed as one of
the greates t high school pla ye rs
ever to come out of Ohio when he
wa s twice selected as the state's
Mr . Basketball. He led Tol edo
Macoi"ber to the state big-sc hool
championship in 1989.
Jackson broke into tears when
asked how he wanted to be rem embered.
"I just want them to remember
me for lite type of person I am, just
what! did on the court. That's secondary in life," he said. " I tried to
go out there every night and do
things to win ..... I want people to
re membe r me fo r bein g a team
player and wanting to win."

.t
PRIVATE WORDS - Ohio Stale junior Jim Jackson Oefl) listrns lo OSU basketball coach Randy Ayers before lhe starl or a
news conference Wednesday in Columbus. Jackson announced that
he will make himself available ror Jane's NBA draft and skip his
senior season al Ohio Stale. (AP)

Utah records 108-100 victory over Seattle

Kravchuk's shot from the left point
into the net to break a 4-4 tie.
Ray Sheppard scoJed two goals
for the Red Wings, including the
tying goal at 2:09 of the third penad.
The Red Wings recovered from
2-0 and 3- 1 deficits in the first

round to beat Minnesota m seven
games, but they know it will be
much harder W come back now.
"If we play with th e kind of
determination we had tonight, we'll
make it very inleresting in here one
more lime, at least," said Detroit
coach Bryan Murray.

throw at us."
For the Sanies - led by De rrick
McKey' s 20 points and Sh awn
Kemp 's 19 points and 15 rebounds
- 11 may have been a case of too
much rest after dispatching Golden
State on April 30 to win their firstround matrhup 3-1.
Utah's last previous game was
on Monday when it defeated th e
Los Angeles Clipper.; in the dcc isive fifth game of their series.
" I don'tlike to have time off
when you're playing well . You
never get six days off in the
NBA," Seattle coach George Karl
said . "There's no question we
wcren 't the same team that we
were against Golden State."
Karl said his Sanies seemed to
run out of gas after a 17 -2 run
erased a 14 -point Jazz advantage
and gave Seattle a 74-73 lead at th e
end of the third quarter.
' ' Utah see med to have more
energ y than we did in the fourth
quarter, and they did a greal)ob on
defense again st us." the coac h
said .
John Stockton, who finished
with 16 points and 15 assists for
Utah, said it also was a matter of
dcterm inalion.
" We had to forget their run in
the third quarter," he said. "We
had to have a spurt of our own."
Stockton put in the order. The
Mailman delivered.
Malone hit a basket and four
foul shots in an 8-0 run that slartCd
lite fourth period. Nale McMillan 's
20-footer and Ricky Pierce ' breakaway pulled the Sanies to 81 -78
with 9:02 left. but they got no closer.
McMillan, who finished with 17
points, said the loss should serve as
a wakeup call for Seattle.
"In a sense, it was good for us_ I
don 't think our concentration was
there like it&gt; was for Golden State,"
he said.
Ed die John son , wh o had 14
po ints off the bench, was confident

TO THE HOlE is where Utah fronlman Karl Malone (32) is
headed despite the dtfense of Staltle dtftndtrs Benoit Benjamin
(left) and Michael Cage (right) in the first hair or Wednesday
night's NBA second-round playoff series opener in Salt Lake City,
Utah, which lhe Jazz won 108-100. (AP)
the Sonics can re bound in Game 2_
" It 's a long series. Hopefully
we can learn from our mistakes,"
he said . ' 'I'm very en co urag ed
because we didn ' t shoot the ball
well a nd we s till only lost by
cog hL"
In to nigh t' s games, New York
takes a 1-0 lead into Chicago Stadium agai nst the defending champion
Bull s, who saw a 17-game hom e
winning streak against the Knicks

Dr. Tracy BeD

Dr. Bell is a Board
Certified Family
Practitioner and will limit
her practice to out patient
medicine.
Her hours will be
Tuesdilys
1:00 to 7:00p.m.
and
Fridays
1:00 to 5:00p.m.

Appointments may be made by calling

Meigs Health Services
Pomeroy
992·6601

snapped on Tu esday _
Portland pl ays host to Phoenix,
wh tch needs a viCtory to take away
th e Trail Blaz ers' homecourt
advantage in the Western Conference.
Cleveland is at Boston on Fn day night in the other Eastern Confe rence scm1 final. The Celtics-Cavali e" series, tied 1-1, has been idl~
smce Monday n1ght while the rest
of the league catches up.

GIFTS
FOR
Just for Mom!

SALE!
Berkline Recliners

James Wllherell, M.D.
and
Wilma Mansfield, M.D.
are announcing
that Dr. Tracy Bell, M.D., joined their
practice in April and is accepting new
patients.

series.

speed stand . trans. . PS ,
gauges , AMIFM stereo 1ape,

DEXTER

THURSDAY
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY!

The Dally Sentinel

In the NBA playoffs,

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
Afler rmishing far ahead of the
Chicago Blackhawks during the
re~ular season, the Detroit Red
W mgs have faUen far he hind them
in the Stanley Cup playoffs.
" We didn't overlook the
' Hawks, but we didn't expect to be
down 3-0," Detroit's Steve Yzer man said Wednesday night after
Chicago heal the Red Wings 5-4 to
move within one game of a secondround sweep.
The Red Wings, whose 98
points were their most since getting
100 in 1951 -52, had finished II
points ahead of the second-place
Blackhawks during the regular season . The Red Wings were 5-1-2
against the Blackhawks in their
season series, but have yet to lead
in any game in the playoffs.
The Blackhawks, who we re
eliminated in the first round last
season after posting the best record
in the NHL, can become the first
team to sweep a series this year
when they play host to the Red
Wings in Game 4 Friday nighl
In Wednesday night's other
playoff game, the Edmonton Oilers
beat the Vancouver Canocks 5-2 w
tal&lt;e a 2-1 lead in their best-of-7

K•SWISS

DPURSES
0 ATHLETIC SHOES

ngor.; of profess ional ball.
Jackson , a 6-foot -6 swingman,
was a flrst·team All-America se lection last season. Most projections
had him as one of the fir st six
choice s in the NBA draft if he
elected to come out a year early.
He is credited with leading an
Ohio Stale basketball resurgence.
He averaged 18.9 points a gam e as
a sophomore as the Buckeyes went
27-4 , won a share of the Big Ten
title and finished fifth in the final
regular-season poll.
Last season , he averaged 22.4
points, 6.8 rebounds and 4 assists a
game as Ohio State posted a 26-6
record and won the conference title
outright.
The Buckeye s went further in
the NCAA tournamenl each season
with Jackson in the lineup, losing
in the second round his freshman
year, in the round of 16 two years
ago and in the Southeast Regional
ti~e game to Michigan last season,
75-71 in overtime.
" Jimmy' s market value Is
hig h," Ayers said . "He ' s got a
good chance of going in lite top six.

victory a1 Indy last year. sus tamed
a frltCt..-ed left foot and a SJXained
right wrist He was released from
Melllodist Hospital, but was not
cleared to drive immediately .
Momota bruised his right leg and
was u peeted 10 remain overnight
at Methodi st for further observatim.

'1G,200

DsANDALS

Jackson, a two -time Big Ten
Conference player of the year, had
said through most of the 1991 -92
season that he intended to remain at
Ohi o State. for his senior year. But
late in the season he said he would
meet with his parents and coach
Randy Ayers after the season to
determine what he would do.
He said he reached his decision
three weeks ago after a meeting
with Ayers and his parents in Toledo.
"I have mixed emotions, but it' s
th e time for me to go on," Jackson
said.
" The only thing he and I talked
about was a sense of fulmlmen~ "
Ayers said. "Had he done everything he wanted to do at Ohio
State? He said, ' Except for not
going to the Final Four and not getting my degree I' ve done every thing. We've won as a team and
I've been honored individually.' "
Ayers said that the coaching
staff had decided for Jackson that
he should stay al Ohio State after
his sophomore season because the
coaches did not feel he was ready
physically or emotionally for th e

Sports briefs

Mother's Day GUt Suggestions:
REEBOK
NIKE

By RUSTY MILlER
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP ) Jim Jackson, saying he had met
mo st of hi s co llege go al s, ha s
dec ided to move on to the cha lle nge of th e NBA and forgo hi s
fin al year of eligibility at Ohio
State.
" I look back at my caree r at
Ohio Stale and ask if I did the best
l could do and did I accomplish the
things l wanted to' The answer is
quite simple: yes," Jackson said at
a news conference Wednesda y.
Jackson closed the books on an
Ohio State career that left him fifth
in sc oring and seventh in both
steals and assists through three seasons.
Surrounded by his fath er, moth er, SISter and Ohio State coach
Randy Ayers, Jackson said the
deciding factor in his decision to
leave was a desire to repay his fam ily.
" A major part of why I really
wanted to come out (for the draft)
was to help my family ," the 2 1.ycar-old JUnior said. "Not that they
really need it. But they put a lot of
sacrifices into this .. . to help me get
to wbere I am right now."

straight.

Mom!

DRESS SHOES
CASUAL SHOES

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Jackson to leave OSU for NBA draft

Just For

2 .0%0FF
0
0

10

Thursday, May 7, 1992

-~

---

Startiag
At

5

199

I~J

EEl&lt;Lf\E

GLIDER ROCKERS
New Shipment -

i
I

JIL~t
j

Received

For Mother's Day!

Sohd Wood,
Beautiful
Fabrics
FREE DELIVERY!

LLOYD/FLANDERS

SUMMER FURNITURE
FREE DELIVERY!

ON SALE
or Mother's
Day!

�-.T."••·. , -··-·"-···

........

-·~

----

-···-

-~

---

Ohio

By The. Bend

omeroy rown1e
mem rs
receive awards; March events listed

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, May 7, 1992
Pag~

•

Members of Girl Scout Brownie
Troop No. 1271 panJCipated in a
variety of acti•ities during March .
Girl Scout cookies were delivered by all panicipating girls. Total
coolc:ic sales for !he girls was 2.004
boxes - 167 cases. Top se ller was
Sara Moon with 339 hoxes. Sarah
Houser was second with 300 hexes

Reports, program given by RUMW Board honors

RECOGNIZED - Bill Call, employee or Veterans Memorial
Hospital, len, is the rtrst recipient of the new ''I Done Good at
VMH" recognition program. Here he receives an ''I Done Good"
badge from Charles Adkins, business office manager.

Call honored by VMH
Bill Call, Emergency Room and
Urgent Care center clerk, is the
first employee at VeteranS Memori al Hospital to be recognized in !he
new "! Done Good at VMH" pro-

gram.
While the employee/volumeer
recognition program at the hospital
is designed primarily to enhance
guesl/patieDI relations. it is also 10
be used in giving special recogmtion to employees and volumeers
for other endeavors.
Call was selected as a recipient·
of the award for preventing the

theft of a hospiial ponable scanner.
Witnessing the anempt to steal the
scanner, Call promptly reported the
incident to the Emergency Room
Supervisor who remanded the
offender. retrieved the scanner and
called the POmeroy Police Depan-

Ruth Steams was leader for the
program "Strengthening Ministry
m Mission Schools and Colleges"
at the recent meeting of the Racine
United Methodist Women.
The program title is also th e
theme of the call to prayer and selfdenial.
The hymn, "Be Thou My
Vision" was sung by the group
reflecting the prayer and motivation of many of those who have
worked in, attended, or supponed
our mission schools and colleges
across the years.
Scriptures were read from Luke.
Proverbs and Timothy. Participating readers were Robin Reiber,
Martha Dudding. Etta Mae Hill and
Alice Wolfe.
Sixteen United Methodist mis sion schools and colleges were
located on a large world globe.
Prayer cards were given each mem ber and !he program ended with !he
singing of the new UMW's binhday song.
Lee Lee opened the business
meeting with the group repeating
!he UMW purpose. Members were
thanked who helped with the Alpha
Delta Kappa dinner and the recent
flea market
A thank-you card was read from
Beverly Moore and her Girl Scout
Troop. The secretary and treasurer
repons were given.
The mission report was given by
Sue Grace, Christian Global Con-

cern Coordinator. A money donation Will be given through UMW to
mission work in Russia. Money
memory gifts will be sent to the
district in memory of deceased
members.
Margie West, Martha Dudding,
Sue Grace, Etta Mae Hill, Eileen
Buck and Lee Lee attended the
UMW Spring Retreat this past
weekend at Camp Francis Asbury,
Rio Grande.
Martha Dudding reponed plans
were complete for the mother daughter banquet May 9.
Plans were finalized for the
county retired teachers luncheon to
be held May 16 at 12:30 p.m. at !he
chun:h.
Lee Lee read a message from
the District President telling of !he
goals which should be fuUilled for
the year.
Sue Grace was the selected
nominee for the UMW "Women in
Mission for !he Year 1992." Her
name will be sent to the district
conference chairman comminee on
membership.
The penny fund collection was
Laken and sick calls reponed.
All future meetings will begin at
7:30p.m. with the exception of the
picnic in August.
Refreshments were served by
LoUJse Stewan and Margie West.
Get well cards were signed.
Auending were Clara Mae Sargent. Etta Mae Hill, Lois Bell,

Martha Dudding, Dorothy McKenzie, Robin Reiber, Margie West,
Ruth Stearns. Alice Wolfe, Sue
Grace, Sharon Hubbard, Chris Hill,
Dollie Mees. Tammy Hill, Gladys
Shields, Louise Stewart, Margie
Roush and Lee Lee.
The next meeting will be May
26 at 7:30 p.m. at the church and
all women of the church are invited .

Balloon tract held
A balloon tract send-off was
held recently at Hillside Baptist
Church.
All balloons were tied with a
tract of salvation and sent off all at
once and carried off in the wind.
All Sunday school classes from
young to adult participated.
Hillside Baptist Church is located on Route 143 off Route 7. James
R. Acree Sr. is pastor.

Lists announced
Two area residents have been
named to the President's List at
Mountain State College for the
winner quarter: Cheryl Leatherberry, Coolville: and John Williams.
Syracuse.
Named to the Honor List at the
school from this area is Jennifer
Johnson, Racine.

3 members

Three members of the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy Mission s
Board were honored recently at the
church with a presentation or
plaques and a dinner in their honor.
Those honored for over 15 years
service on the missions board were
Mrs. Maye Mora, Ralph Graves
and Chester Knight.
Making the presentations were
John Musser. church council president, and Rev. Roland Wildman.
The three were named to the
board by the late Rev. W.H. Perrin
when the missions board was organized.
The board selects and recom mends to the church council selected missions for suppon during the
year.
For the worship service the
senior choi r selected "The 1Gng is
Coming" and the organ prelude
was presented by Ralph Werry oo
"I Asked The Lord." The choir is
directed by Mrs. Lois Burt.
It was announced the annual
mother-daughter banqUCI would be
beld May 9 at 6 p.m. with the men
of the church preparing and serving
the meal. Reservations may be
made by calling !he church or 9925480 no later !han Thursday.

YOO ONT Eso.PE THE GAEJ.T
&amp;NS N THE CLASSfEDS.

mcnL

Call was presented the "I Done
Good" badge by Charles Adkins,
business office supervisor at Veterans. His name will now be listed oo
a program honor roll and he will be
eligible to win a $50 cash prize at
the end of the quarter.

and Nicole Dav1s was third wiLh

ROYALTY - Pictured are the three winners
of the recent Tri-County Full Figure Beauty
Pageant, coordinated by Marie Palmer. From
left, are: Karen Beckett of Letart, W.Va., second

runner-up; Joy Nickels or Gallipolis, queen; and
Brenda Weaver of Gallipolis, first runner-up.

These ladies were amour 15 participants who
were judged on make-up, poise, and dres.•.

Joy Nickels crowned '92 Tri-County
Full Figure Beauty Pageant queen
Joy Nickels of Gallipolis was
Judges for the event were Jenrece ntly crowned the 1992 Tn - nifer Hesson. a student at Point
County Full Figure Beauty Pageant Pleasant High School; Harold
queen dunng competition held at Montgomery, Gallia County com Holiday Inn.
missioner; Becky Rife, owner of
Fifteen area ladJes. age 21 and Classic Cuts by Becky in Middlcolder. were judged in the areas of pon; and Stephanie Scot~ reigning
make-up, poise, and dress.
Miss Gallia County, River RecreNickels is a member of the Gal- ation, and Miss Ohio River Valley
lipolis Kiwanis Club and Gallia queens.
County Chamber of Commerce and
Entertainment wa s by Holly
is employed at Carl's Shoe Store Williams. head field commander at
-Gallipolis. She has two sons ROO: Meigs High School and 1991
; bie and Bobby Joe.
'
Pomeroy Heritage Queen. Also on
: First runn er -up was Brenda hand was 1991 Queen Jane Bush.
; Weaver of Gallipolis, and second
Making donations for the event
. runner-up was Karen Beckett of were: Citizen's National Bank, Art: Letan, W.Va.

ful Hands Gallery, Crow 's Steakhouse, Precision Audio , Rose
Yocum's Tupperware. Don Tate
Chevrolet. Burlile Oil Company,
Rax Restaurant, Pat's PosJC Patch.
Bob Evans General Store , Paul
Davis Jewelers, Lear Photography,
Harry &amp; Lanny 's Station , Sports
and Stuff, Fruth Pharmacy. Places
To Go Travel. R &amp; G Feed Supply,
Joanne Kut &amp; Style, C &amp; A Auto.
Bowman' s Hom e Supply, JR's
Flower Shop, DJ . Craft Shop, Big
Bear, Unique Creations Boutique,
and Auto Trim Center.
Coordinating the event was
Marie Palmer.

'\

.I'

••

.•'

••

Community calendar

'

1
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an eVfnt
and !be day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse
Nazarene Church will be in revival
through Sunday with Rev. and Mrs.
William Hill speaking nightly at 7
p.m. and at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
on Sunday. Public invited.
POMEROY - There will be a
second rehearsal of the Middlepon
Alumni Band on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the bandroom at Meigs
High School. All former Middleport band members are urged to
attend.

hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m. with music by Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public mviled. Those
attending bring snacks for the
snack table.
POMEROY - Southern FHA
will hold a car wash Saturday from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at McDonald's m
Pomeroy.

LOTTRIDGE - Country music
night will be held at the Lottndge
Communuy Center Saturday with
bands perfonning from 7 p.m. to
midnight. Refreshments available .
Public invited.

. POMEROY · The youth group
pf Trinity Church will meet Thursday at 5 p.m. The youth choirs will
practice preparing for the Mother's
Day worship service.

ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Spr;ngs Church Women will have a
bake sale Saturday at B1g Wheel
beginnmg at 10 a.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center is spon:soring a flower and plant sale Fri -day from 8 a.m. 10 4 p.m . Public
:;nv ited . Proceeds go to the
:Alzheimer's Foundation.
- MIDDLEPORT - The Meig s
County Widows Club will mCCI
Friday at noon at the Chrisuan
:Church in Middlepon. Bring two
J!811dwiches. Salad and dessert will
-be furnished .

Cllb'OI

~~~~.
!"': :::.~"''
W •• 4 y l fl " j ' '"'UM

111W40,

6W30,r

RURUNGIIAM - The Modem
Woodmen of America Camp 7230.
Burlingham, will have a potluck
dinner Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
Modem Woodmen Hall in Burlingham. " Moth er's Night" will be
observed and each mother will be
recognized. Meat, rolls. coffee and
soft dnnks will be prOvided. Members bring a covered dish. Public is
invited .

RUTLAND - There will be a

SATURDAY
: STIVERSVILLE - Stiversville
:Word of Faith Church will cele::brate its fifth year Saturday at 6
follow. Bring
: ;,.m. Fellowship
: a covered dish. Public mvtted.

wiJ!

• POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will

!

unil

Hamilton, Good Food ; Ash ley
Hannahs. Colors and Shapes, Artlb
Wear, Caring and Sharing, Think mg Day Patch; Jess ica Hooten. An
to Wear. My Body, Good Food,
Th1nking Day patch; Rebe cca
Houser, An to Wear. Good Food .
My Bod y, Th1nking Day: Sarah
Houser, Good Food and Th1nkme
Day; K1mbcrly McDanJcl . Art t;,
Wear, My Body ; Sara Moon, Good
Food. Co lors and Shapes. MJ
Body, Thinking Day; Brenna S1!'
so n, Co lors and Shapes. Art t;
Wear, My Body, Good Food anll
Thinking Day; Emily Stivers, C~
m and Shapes, Art to Wear. G
Food, Earth JS Our Home an'
Thinking Day.
,
Sarah and Rebecca Housel
earned the Anful Architecture
badge by attending a Black Di3:
mond Council Launch Event i~
Parkersburg , W.Va . They eac b
made a doll house and furniture. · ·
Sarah Houser received a BEsl
(Brownie Science Event m Athens)
participation patch.
;

A world association ce remony
was beld with II girls received the
world association pin. This is worn
by all girl guides and girl scouts of
lhc world. The following received
pi ns, Hea the r Baxter , Carolyn
Bentz, Andrea Burdeue, Stephanie
Burdette, Nicole Davis, Jennifer
F1fe, Jessica Hooten , Rebe cca
Houser, Ashley Hamilton, Sara
Moon and 1Gmberly McDaniel.
A coon of awards was also held
with !he following badges presented: Heather B&lt;Uter, My Body, Col ors and Shapes, Good Food, Caring
and Sharing and Thinking Day participation patch; Carolyn Bentz ,
Good Food; Andrea Burdette, Art
to Wear, My Body, Good Food ,
Thinking Day patch; Stephanie
Burdette, Colors and Shapes. Art to
Wear, My Body, Good Food and
Thinling Day patch; Nicole David,
Tern e Ho use r is leader anfl
Art to Wear, My Body, Good
Food. Outdoor Fun; Jennifer Fife, aides are Sharon Burdette and L1s0
·•
An to Wear. Good Food; Ashley Hoor.cn.
'

Auxiliary gives reports, contributions
Several contributions were made was $243.22; Arcadia party was
and repons given on parties for !he $257.24; Overbrook Center was
nursing home residents at th e $64 .78; and the Infirmary party
recent meeting of the American was $43.21.
Legion AW&lt;iliary of Feeney -BenOne dinner for the scout leaders
nett Post No. 128, Middlepon.
was held as was a wrestling match.
The unit voted on $50 donation s
Communications were read and
to Carleton School for special Easter gifts were given to the
olympics and to the walk -a-thon gro up 's adopted grandparents and
for March of Dimes; and $150 10 handicapped child.
Katie Gilmore reported they will
sponsor a Middleport youth ball
team .
be go1r;: to Pickerington for a
Geraldine HaneiiRsidcd at the Buckeye Girls State Tea.
meeting attended by 42 members,
Auxiliary member of the year
si x juniors and 15 guests. Kathryn was voted on by membership and
Metzger, chaplain, had the opening Bon me Krautter was elected and
prayer.
1
presented a plaque.
A letter of resignation from
Elccuon of delegates and alter Rebeeca Tyree, secretary, wa s nates to !he dismct and depanmcnt
accepted. Jean Gilmore wa s summer convenuon was held. Del appointed to fulfill the term.
egates are Geraldine Hanel. Geral Membership stands at 237 mem - dine Parsons. Katie G it more ,
bers. Shirley Bel~ Hazel McCloud. Ardella Johnson , June Smith.
Betty Denny , Greta Suttle, and Alternates arc Ethel Stilts, Karen
Deanna Welsh were accepted as Lemley, Pauline Greathouse. Sonja
new members.
Wayland. Di stricr convention is
The cost for the Unicare party June 4 at Crooksville. Registration
.

IS noon. Dcpanment convcnuon

111

July 10-12 at Toledo.
The unit will be servmg a dmnn
for the old Middlcpon School ba,ll
players on May 22.
There will be an awards dinner
in June.
There w11l be a hymn sing Jul y
4 at the American Lcg1on Annex .
Field service on cntauon will be
held in November.
Color guards and marching ul\it
will march in the VFW Parade in
Mason.
. There will be a sc hool of
mstructwn June 7 at 2 p.m.
_
Kat1 e G1lmore reported Poppy
Days would be Fnday and Satu•day. There will be severallocatioos
where pcpp1es will be dismbulcd .
. Several siCk calls were reponed
mcludmg Alma Newton, Pauline
Rose , Charles Johnson, RIChard
DeMoss , Mrs. Kelly, Albert and
VclsJC Roush.
The stuffing of 1500 Easter eggs
was noted and dances were di scussed.

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4

S YEARS - Holzer Clinic's nve year service
award recipients an (Ito r): J , Cnig Strafford,
M.D., clinic president; Lowell Allen, Phyllis
Pope, Cheryl MiUer, Tim Betz, Julie McGuire,

John Cunningham, Mark Burris, Skip Imboden,
Don Carman, Debra Shaw, Sarah Daniel,
Robert E. Daniel, clinic administrator, and
Loretta Bowles.

szoFF

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PriiS

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toreogt1 (lr dcmestrc

,
SERVICE AWARDS- Pictured are Holzer
. Clinic's 10, IS, and 20 year service award recipients, (Ito r): J, Craig Strafford, M.D., Hilda
~ Janey, special award; M'illie McCarty, Carolyn

599

~Holzer Clinic

IJII'IJ Ul PGIII1
.. Clllll' t:aat
11 [11 1111

'

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
;.emplbyees reaching five year ser~vice plateaus in 1991 were recentl y
•honored with an awards luncheon
:at !he Holiday Inn.
: The honorees were presented
:COrsages and boutonnieres prior to
•!he llleal
-~ Follo;,.ing ~marks of apprecia:..ion by Robert E. Daniel, clinic

Legion Hall Saturday 8 p.m. to
m1dn1ght. Mu s1c by White's Hill
Band. Public inv1ted.

rz7o
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Evertdl'f LOW Pl'k8!

199

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It 111

car Willi
IAS -929

a recent rontert stop
in Columbus, tbe Oak Ridge Boys were photographed wilb three local law enforcement officers to sbow their support of Ohio's "Buckle
Dowu" Cam paiga. Tbr 41 8uckle Down" campaign promotes increased enforcement of the
safely belt law to help raise safely belt use in

Meigs quiz
team
competes
Students from 50 states, Canada,

-

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'

dance at the Rut land American

HENDERSON. W.Va. - Square
dancing and clogging at the Hender son Community Center, 8-11
• POMEROY - The Meigs Coun - p.m. Music hy Country Grass. Pubty Soap Box Derby AssoCJauon lic is invilcd.
· will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at Pleas SUNDAY
:_er •s Restaurant in Pomeroy .
RACINE - Retirement of old
• LONG BOTTOM - The Faith co lors will be held Sunday at 2
full Gospel Church in Long Bot - p.m. al Racine American Legion
-tom will have preaching and Post No. 602. The public is invited.
-:Singing Friday at ·7 p.m. featuring
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
:1'he Clark Family plus other local
· talent. Pastor Steve Reed invite s be a chicken barbecue at !he Tup)he public and fellowship will fol - pers Plams F~re House Sunday
begmning at II a.m. Cost is $375.
~ow.
Spcnsored by Tuppers Plains Fire
· RUTLAND - There will be a Department.
. dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall Friday 8 p.m. to mid: night. Music by Free Country. Pub~ic invited.

157 boxes.
To celcbrnte Girl Sco ut Week
the trOOp, along wnh JUnior troop
1309 and senior girl scouts. m the
Village of Pomeroy, had a proc Iamation signed by Mayor Bruce
Reed.
The uoop set up a window dis play on Main Street in the former
chamber office. Various projects
were displayed.
Some members attended church
for Girl Scout Sunday in uniform
and took pan in the service.
March 12 was the birthda y of
girl scouting in America.
Troop members attended a skating party hosted by Big Bend Service unit for the county scouts.
At a meeting the members
worked on and completed the
"Valuing Differences: Promoting

Pluralism" program by doin g
required activities.
Member s attended a litter
o!ympics held by co unty service s

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· " H,- ,., . .. . , _

POMEROY - The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will have a
five-mile walk-a-lhon from Meigs
High School to !he road side park
on Route 33 Saturday between 10
a.m. and noon. All proceeds will go
to the building fund . Pastor Paul
Taylor and adults and children will
be walking. A picnic Will follow at
the park. Anyone want to '-ponsor a
walker should contact the pastor.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Tow nship Trustees will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m . at the Rutland Fire Station. The public is
invited.

RUTLAND - The Leading
·Creek Conservancy District will
~old a special meeting Thursday at
J p.m . at the office. subject to cante llatioo.

••

10W30,

The Dally Senllnei-Page-9

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OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

'rfyarn.
Susan Will presided Bl the meet-

Store houra: 1:30 a.m. Ia I p.m. Mondly through Frklrf,
1:30 1.m. to 1 p.m. s.turct.y, lnd 9 e.m. to S p.m. Sundlly

GALUPOUS

'"'~\'r,:!;o,....
13, ltt2.

fill

award recipients named

adminlstraiOr. and J. Craig Strafford. M.D., clinic president, Dr .
Strafford presented each recipient
with a certificate and cash award
representing !heir service plateau.
This year's recipients were:
5 years - Cheryl Miller, Dj:bra
Shaw, Lowell Allen. W~-~da
Gilmore, Phyllis Pope, Stella K1sling, Slc:ip Imboden, John Cunni;&amp;·

ham, Sarah Daniel, Sharcc Luckcy doo, Tim Betz, Loretta Bowles.
Julie McGuire, Mark Burris, Don

Carman.
10 years - Shcny Fellure, Ellen
Riffie, Cliff Queen, Susan Davis.
15 years- Graham Stanley,
Greg Wilson, Donna Davis.
20 years- Millie McCarty, Carolyn Taylor.

Kappa Gamma installation held

..
• Thirty-five members of Alpha
bmicron Chapter, Delta Kappa
bamma, met at the Presbyterian
p.urdi in Wellston recently.
.• Brenda Hall of the music com~ittee introduced the soloist,
Zharo!l Cox, freshman at Wellston
lligh School. Miss Cox presented
by the oomposer Weber from
·
Phanu:,n of the Opera.
·
~press. Aspect of love.
.
Cats. Dorothy Reipenhoff was
·:IJianisL
• Dian Panlow gave the invoca~ion before the rolled chicken
,reasl dinner was served. Favors
!were tiny baskets filled with balls

ll!hiil!ii!-i;\J-liial

Daniel, administrator.

LET'S HIVE I
ORIAL HOLIDAY!
..

SALE

835

event as a three hour competition
full of fun and pressure.

·,('' . 'l( 'i l(lt; •,

· , ~ ll

u'l' fl·,. 1, 1 1,HJie
,irlf: .) ' 1\ 111'

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The Knowledge Master Open
was designed to stimulate interest
and recognition for academic

'\

E~LoWPriOI

Taylor, Susan Davis, Greg Wilson, Sherry Fetlure, Donna Davis, Ellen Rime, and Robert F:.

Mexico. Africa, Asia, Europe and
South America competed recently
in the 18th Knowledge Master
Open. a grueling academic contest.
Using knowledge derived from all
areas of the curricula. high school
teams faced tough questions and
vied for top scores based on accuracy and speed.
A team of II students from
Meigs High School scored 1188 of
2000 possible points. They placed
1186 out of 1751 schools that participated. !he goal of !he team was
to improve upon last year's score
which !hey did by 33 points. Team
members were Barbie Anderson.
Brad Anderson, Man Clark. Stacey
Duncan. Allison Gannaway. Jason
George, Tara Gerlach. Randall
Johnston. Joe McElroy, Steve
Smith and Robby Wyatl
This 1s the second year that
Meigs has entered the Knowledge
Master competition . Quiz tea m
coach. Rita Slavin, described the

to
percent in 1992. Currently belt use in
Ohio is at 53 percent. Pictured from left to right ·
are Steve Sanders, Joe Bonsall, Lt. Karl Barth
Columbus Division of Police; Sgt. Kathy Plesich',
Ohio State flighway Patrol; Officer David;
Plesich, Hilliard Police Dept; Richard Sterban .
and Duane Allen.

~ng and officers reports were given.
~ A note of thanks was recetved

1Jom'lean Ward for !he flowers she
..eceil,ed during her hospital stay.

accomplishments. The contest was
developed to run on classroom
computers in order to provide all
schools !he opponunity to compete

in a national academic contest
Viola Geules gave a report on were Rosalie Story, Pam Crow,
without !he expense of traveling to
upcoming proficiency test legisla- . Becky Zurcher, Fern Grimm, Nel ,
tion.
lie Parker, Twila Childs, Pauline a central site.
Results
of
!he
contest
are
tabuMynle Fri. Esther Maerkcr and Horton and Paula Whiu.
lated
into
national,
state,
and
NeUie Parlcer conducted the necrolThe next meeting will be initiarankings
by
Aca
enrollment-size
ogy service. Mrs. Fri presented a tion at Middleport American
demic
Hallmarks,
a
Colorndo
pubwhite rose to Deborah Hammond Legion Hall Sept. 28 at6:30 p.m.
lishing finn thai hosts the evenL
in memory of Gertlllde Trace and
one to" ~ HouJcr in memory cif
Leona Calvm.
New officers were installed by
the president and Eleanor Essman.
parliamentarian. Officers are Sandra Nodruff, president; Fern
Grimm, rtrSt vice-presidont; Carol
Eberts, second vice-presiden~ Nel lie Parker, secretary; Deborah
Hammond, treasurer. Mrs. Will
101
presented red roses to !he new officers. The group gave Mrs. Will a
WE IJIOLOGIIE FOI AllY IICOIYEIIIEIICE THIS
standing ovation for her services as
lilY UYI CAUSED.
president.
A!tending from Meigs County

BIG

&amp; SMALL

LOTS

Due to a prlntlag error our nffanJ look
lamps lllllng for $12.99 oa front page of
our 11aJ J"fiJtr should llawe rHd In Une
. Swltcii\La•p• a•d
Touch Lamps.

Caneel Bay Sling
Patio Group by
Telescope Casual
Cool and reir esnrng

''~sy

to

mamlet lll GrilCPiu l ntumrnum no
rust lrames leatu re n(:ked on
polyeste r hn 1c,ll Color tu l

weather reSIStant I elaweave

covers .
REG. SALE
Baoe FREE with
Purchaoe of Pallo Group

Matching urrbrolla
Swivel rocker
Spring chair
Chaise lounge

•FntDIIYifJ

305.00 221.00
289.00 216.00
208.00 149.00
403.00 299.00

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•YI11

•Daly t·S, t-aFrtdar
Cor• Tlilnllllll.ocnt &lt;OisGw•

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'

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

By RICK HAMPSON

by Bob Hoeflich
I know many of you will be conducts a vanety of games for
sony to learn lhat Ann Boso of up other residents, serves as a choral
i'ortland way enlered Gram Hospi- reader and takes part in skits staged
tal in Columbus on Wednesday lor at Lhe eenler. She is secretary of
the Resident Council and is recogpossible surgery.
Perhaps, Ann will get lucky and nized as a regular volunteer resilhe serious problems !hat seem to dent assostant to the facility's activbe wilh her will bUll out not all !hat ities director. So-small wonder
bad afler she undergoes tests . !hat Olive was so well recognized
However, it does look serious at during Volunteer Week. She is the
lhe momenL Some problems were first Resident Volunteer of the
discovered when Ann suffered a Parkersburg facility.
And, by the way, thanks to Virbroken hip several months ago and
was a pauent at Vetenllls Memorial ginia Rees of Racine and Hazel
Hospital. Tests !here indicated !hat Me Kelvey, formerly of Meigs
lhe Grant hospitalization is neces- County now hvmg in Ravenswood,
sary. Meantime, Ann would appre- w. Va, for sending along newspaciate your prayers and I'm sure per clippings of Olive's accom plislunents.
would like to hear from you.
Meantime, her daughler, Vicb,
The staff at Velerans Memortal
who has undergone so mu ch
surgery and health problems has Hospital hopes you and your famibeen discharged from Umvcrsoty 1y will drop by the hospital from I
Hospital in Columbus and is at her to 4 p.m. Sunday when the annual
Open House will be held to mark
home in Rocine.
the opening of National Hospital
--Week.
Do keep in mind !hat if youn;
Staff members will be offering
not hankering to do much cookm
on Memorial Day weekend, the free choleslerol tests-blood will
Burlingham Modern Woodmtn and be drawn from the anm-and free
residents of the Burlingham com- blood pressure testing. Representatives of the Meogs D1vision of the
munity may offer some help.
They will stage a dinner at the Amencan Hean Association will
Woodmen Hall on May 25 includ- n:gisler you for the testing of you
ing chicken, turkey, ham and fish want it done. No blood will be
as well as sandwiches, homemade taken for cholesterol tests after
pies and bread . The good thing is 3:30p.m. The Women's Auxiliary
that you can cat there or carry out. headed by President Mrs . Jessie
Serving time is 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. White will regisler you for several
Proceeds will go lor maintenance nice door prizes to be awarded. In
the Skilled Nursing Facility, the
of Bedford Township cemeleries.
Nutrition Department will be servLast week was National Volun - ing refreshments and musical enlerteer Week across the nation and a tainment will be provoded by Mrs.
frie nd of ours was hooored as Resi- Jennifer Sheets, Mrs. Jean Trussell,
dent VolunlCCr at the Cedar Grove Sheriff James Soulsby and Denver
Personal Care facility in Parkm - Rice. There will be health educauon literawre on hand as well as
burg.
The honored Resident Volunteer favors which will be silk roses for
1S none other that Mrs. Olive women and ball hats for men .
Weber, former Meigs reSident. Children will be presented lol Olive was the subject of a feature lipops, counesy of the Women' s
story in the Sunday edition of The A ux.iliary.
Sunday morning, ho spital
Par kersb urg News wrinen by
Harold Hawk, Tuppers Plains, who employees will complete preparaIs well-acquainted woth Olove's tims at the hospital for the annual
long public service work in Meigs event with a. pink and while color
scheme to be carried out. Think
County.
Olive is, of course, a resident of you will enjoy the ouung so do try
the Cedar Grove facility where she to attend.
plays the piano-yes, sti ll -for
religious services and even goes to
Wow' What a crazy, mixed-up
another nursing home closcby to spring. Do keep smiling.
play there. At Cedar Grove, Olove

NEW YORK - The band lhat
rock! the cradle may be balding
stOlen propcny this Sunday.
It's Mother's Day, when the

need for flowers leads some

DIID-

bie -fingered sons and cbugbten
down the primrose path 10 lala:ay.
Flowers are swiped bom window boxes, stoop pot&lt; and silkwalk planters, from public ...U.

Mailbox Improvement Week set
The third week of May is Mailbox Improvement Week sponsored
by the U.S. Postal Service and your
Rural Carrier Craft.
Mailbux Improvement Week is
nationwide effon to help keep
your mail rocqxacfe in~ condJtion, providing protection of your
mail from the weather. Neat, attlliCtive mailboxes make a significant
contribution to the appeanlliCe of
the countryside and streets in suburban areas.
The post olfoce is asking cooperation of all runtl cUSionlm to assist
us by making necessary improve ·
ments to mailboxes, as needed.

a

must be printed in nllllltt&amp;ls DOl
less than one inch high on 1be Side
of the box visible 10 tbr: tatias liS
they approach it or on the door iC
boxes are grouped. Names are
optional on mailboxes bul - .ay
helpful.
The post offoces and its cllstomm are concerned about &gt;'Uiblism to mailboxes. If anyone ,.,..
vandalism, try to oblli.a lice&amp;K
number of vehicle and ootify local
authorities.
The approach to yo11r box
should be fiUed and po&lt;4JLily gntled and kept unobstructed aa all
times.

Box number or house number

Barrows presents program
The Month of May was the
theme for the li1erary program presented by lecturer Eldon Barrows
at the recent meeting of Star
Grange.
A discussion was held on the
diCTerent holidays during the month
of May. Readings included "Go
Ask Your Ma" by Christine Napi er: "What is a Mother" by Pauline
Rife and "Memorial Day" by Freda
Smith. Barrows discussed tornado
safety.
Neva Nicholson. deaf chairman,
reported May is beucr bearing and
speech month. She gave an informative talL

Eldon Barrows, Iegislau•e
chainnan, reporw:I on t.be beallh
ca re bill and asked members to
wriletheirrepresenlllivc:
Upcoming meetings di!&lt;:ussal
were May 16 fun nigiltiD ~·
woth a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m..
foUowed by the fOialb degRe obligation and a presemation by J~
Bolin on Ameriflora.
On June 4 Scar Gf11181' will visit
Racine G131lge and on June 6 Roct
Springs Grange will visit Sw.
There were 32 memben and
juniors present for the meetitt~
which concluded with a potlud
supper.

community gardens and the Park
A•t:nue median strip. Thieves
.exb through fences, over walls
aad Od; lax.i windows.
"ll's the wrst!" says Lynden
Miller. dircc tor of Cenl1111 Park' s
Comr:rvaiiJry Garden. "I have four
SOIU, and I won't even let them
m+ '"io• Molher's Day!''
Ahbougil flower piracy, plantnappmg and shrub rustling have
become year-round problems in
New York. MOlher's Day is spe·
cial.

""Wba1cver is in bloom is in
joopwdy," says Ken Keefa, a volumecr wbo tends several gardens in
Greenwich Village. •'We have an
Jllllle 1ree at Sheridan Square that's
~ to pop soon, and I know 3fOOIIw•• h • will be ripped off.' '
Wlw's a gardener to do? At
pbces lie the New YOtt. Botanical
Garden in the Bronx, the gardenias
att g-&lt;bl, in Bryant Park, behind
t.be Pulllic Libtary, some shrubs are
wind to a burglar alarm: and outside the beller Fifth Avenue apanmml bcuses, bushes are chained to
cacb other or to an immovable
obja:L
But since you can't padlock a
tulip, other strategies have
emerged. Some defensive gardenmgtJps:

-Avoid popular colors, advises
Margaret Ternes of the ·Park
Aftilll&lt; Malls ProjocL
Pad Avmue's chrysanthemums
reKula.rly were ripped off until
Ternes bit on a "wheat-colored"
type that has proven particularly
unpopular with thieves but also
witb many law-abiding people,
· 'unEs.-. they ' re da:oralln ' '
Terne• could.n 't resist lemptatioo. She has 2 112 miles of yellow

Laurel Cliff
area news
Mrs. Sharline Johnson, Columbus, is visiting her grandmother
Mrs. Ann Mash.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs
and Mr. and Mrs. Emesl Vanlnwagen spaot t.be day in I ana"""'·
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore's
Easter guesas weno Mrs. Lisa Dorst
and children, Darbie, Arimas, Jordan and Deana Dont, Columbus,
and Mrs. Sandy Gilmore. Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Haggy and daughters,
Pam and Kim , and Dennis
Gilmore, Rid Kennedy and Billie
Glaze.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Van Inwagen spent the holidays with Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Beach, Sabona,
and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Vanlnwagen and sons, Aaron and Dusty,
Ciocinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Moor,
West Unity, spent the weekend
with Rev. and Mrs. William
Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lyons and
Helen ShreYe, Orlando, Fla., spent
a week with his parenl.S, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Howdl.
Mrs. Ruth Douglas, Columbus,
spent the weekend with Mr1.·
Emma Fox.
•
Mrs. Emma Fox spent Easter
with Rose Hines. Amesville.

.
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'

bans for flfst. second and thlfd
place will he presented. Refresh ments will be se rved throughout
lhc day. Acuv1ties will begin at 10
a.m . The public may participate. A
hayride may also be held.
The youoh of the church will
travel to lhc Columbus ZOO June 30
and to plan for lhc event a craft and
bake sale w1ll be held June 4 from
3-6 p.m. and a car wash will be
held at McDonald\ on June 6 from
9 a.m . lo 2 p.m.
Plans arc 10 the malung for lhc
annual homccommg service and icc
cream soctal and ladies hrcalfast
oullng . The da tes will be
announced .

Days

To place an ad
8• -'~ --.i~-"--

SAT.8-12

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POLICIES
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"'lltft ,,,[ ~110 M mUJ; ( b~ prep1mJ

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Area Code 614 Area
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367 - CheAhlre
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1\otu:i:l&gt;) ,.,ill aJ~,, uJq•um '" ' tdi" ~lnn t l?ll~d.!llllll Heguter 11nd
the 1)., fy !'w•r•l•ML if'tlll&lt;itmif." ,,..,," i.JI,!klil home•

BLLLETI\ BOARD
BULlmiM'••JDUNE
4:30 P. a ID BEFORE

The ne't meetmg will be held
May 25 at 1hc parsonage.
Untson prayer closed the meetmg .

.c M . .Jiblns.

74:! - RutiMn..J

'IJ7 - Hu1Tulo

l'lll1ted t
Sl:- It Iarm

LISTED
EFFECTIVE

Bad SL.24
Call for Apptloday

949·2123

&amp; _.,...

Bi he Tills .Ad .... Oar Store And l!ll•1a1MY
n.e A can • UsiEd . _ _.. orr
o.r A.b ~ Low Sale Prices!

MICROWAVE
and VCR REPAIR
AU MAliS
Iring II lo Or We
Pkk u~.

lllony

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

985·3561
Across Fr. . , .. , Offic.
217 I. SecoM St.

POMIIOT, OHIO

1.

3 PIECELIIIIIBOO• 'I'IILE
IIDUP PIII:EII nt•
UD DP II SftCI!

. . . . . . . . . .0....
OFFill

.........

E!.F£1 111: II Ill IUR
.. SIDCI!

WANT
ADS
WORK!

Public Nlllla!
Public .Notice
The following -....e llr!""
ceivod'lfoponod *'r tho Oha.
En viron mental Pr.oledl-.
Agency (OEP.\) '! HI - .
Effectlw d.-tes c:d finld .,..
lions art.e~lasuanr» d . - d

'lhiR.III ~cUte

614·742·2328
Refenncn Available

TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS
tO Dlo•eo4 St., Mftl4loporl

APRILI3 -18
Exlended Easler hours.
Open until7:30 pm
APR . 28. 6:00 pm
Basket Class
MU ST PRE-REGISTER FOR
ALL CLASSES
HAS : Mon.-Sa l. 10 am·5 pm
Su nday 1·5 pm

SAVE AN ADDITIONAL
S200°0 OFF ANY

SAVE AN ADDITIONAL
S400° 0 OFF ANY

BEDROOM SUITE
PRICED FROM 5699 To 51199
IN STOCK!

BEDROOM SUITE
PRICED FROM 51399 TO 52499
IN STOCK!

. ~

become final uriless • ._..

PIOI lib:-. t(J49., Columbus,

SIVEU
IDDmOIIL

INIW1iit~

reque•l Is subm~ wtftiht
30 days of the iasWinoe14m;

2

In Memory of
HAROLD "'Bub-

DAVIS
Who piiSI ed awaJ
5 yellrS -,o .. ,
7,1917

$AVES

4/15/92/1 mo.

Public Notice

Mother's Day
Candy Cards and
Gift Boxes.
Long Stem Candy

F~!E UTIMJI'rES

985·4473
667·6179

s.ctly milli1S-

fllllllly IAdtrierlllsl

L(Lll!

,\1u ~w alln ~tr um•·n t.e

~. H--

F ruou &amp; \ · · w~ tal:. l ... h

:.•~ F o r S H I I~ or Tr~:~d t

1-'\ll\&lt;1 Sl 'I'I'LIES
&amp;. LIVESTOCK

4 1_

6 1- Furm Efl"'rm••nl
62- \t' 11nl•·d lu Buy

6J-

&amp; Arn ~ll![r

hi--

\1 unL•:tJ

[ b lttl c

~ lilt•

l.IHII O&lt;" l

M- H ay &amp; f.rum
s~~J

&amp;· r..-rt dllf'r

Til \ \Sl'Ol!T \1'10'

HENT,\LS
H.,.,, f"' n,"'

:~ ~:':~!:· :::,~;~;"' R.nt

7 1-

1\ulvB for Sn le

72 -

Tru e ~~

fr•r Sa lo&gt;

73--- Van&amp; &amp; 1 \\ ' {)'~

44--- Af'llrtm e nt for H.·nt

74- !\'lut(J rry du
r- lk&gt;au &amp; ,\1 o to n; for

4 :,_.- Furn u; h,.,.J 11 \H'"' "
4( - Spa r!' fo r Ho·nt

ib- Auto Pull! &amp;
77- Auto ll f:Jialr

:J ':'- \l.untrrl

7&amp;-- C~:~mp1ng Equ•pmenl

lo

ll••nl

1\B--- Equ•pm c nl fvr lkn l
49--- For Lr.ue

:&gt;1 -

lluu~eh vi J G ood ~

1 ,.,

"n•

s.Je

Am""" " '

Sl&lt;:llVICES
81 -

Home l mporvement.e

R2 -

PlumJ,IIl fo\ &amp;· ll c* hn,;

10--- Lxr 11.•~llll ~
X.\.- EI,.O"!rwul &amp; !JI,,•

~&gt; ~ - 'ipo rl10 p&lt; C i\(&gt;l j ~

.-,.1-- \1

f,,,.,. .."O

!\."&gt;--- t; ,.,,..rul ll uu lm g

hnn,J,,.,.

HI J-- Mof.,l,. l!om &lt;" f(,· r•utr

-, -,__ ft,llld .nJ! "'" 1'1'1, ,.,.,

PUBLIC NOTICE

!C -

! f&gt;h"l ' l•·n

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WAT ER &amp;
SE WER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,

PH. 614-992-5591

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additions
-Gutter Work
-£1eotrical and Plumbing
-Roofing

-lntl!rjor &amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESnMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
"RalpU., l'ou To R«oPI!r
YoW"

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

614·949·2202
4/2l/9l/1-

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

IB&amp;Jdalkl'"-t CleR

'41119•1-y
:rDLihln-

P.Ildlo• 1111

. . . _., llii45711Q

Rt. 2

REDUCED - Woo $41,000,
NOW 131 ,000

- Save
$10,000, won'llllll king 11 thtl

ovl, or IJ 1 rellremenl home . 3 BR &amp; 1'1r bath.

Pflcll Cal uatoellyll

Nlcl neighborhood, close to

~,_starting

992-5553

OR TOll fi!EE

1·800·848-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

7131f9lltln

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Approved Mcnoloctvrod
Hou1ing Produlls.

IITCDTUCDIII

111m &amp;:n 1n&amp;:nm
(II ',l(; fl/

'

Millwood, W.Va.

304·273-5555

LJ

Qualily Hi Elli&lt;iency Air
Condilioners, Heot
Furnaces &amp; Now
Water Heolers.
t

Perennials &amp;
Annuals,
Strawflowers and
more Evarlastings.

Bennells Mobile Home ea!!ng &amp; Looting
1391 Safford School Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
CaR (614) 446-9416 or 1-800-872-5967

Baskets, Etc.
la&lt;atotloo Poulin's HRI
~.Mway llttwotl Otpot St
1o Ro~...d ..,d Rt S54

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Z.

Hybrid Tomatoas,

MON.·SAT. 9 IO s

614-742·2772

I li
es·Eic .

?(athryn

Mea&amp;Jws

Welcome Slates
$20.00
Cus tom Pain lings

412/92!Hn

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE
204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

992·3184
I mo. pd. -4/161'92

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINTENANCE
614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
ond Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removol
Re•ldentlal &amp;
Commercial
fre• Estimate~
4nf!ln , 1 me . 11(1.

~JAY MAR
Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992-6637

St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.
1.'2/lfn

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
MIDDLEPORT - Beautlut
MOOI!I homa. Very good coodJ.
lion. PriCed lor those ol you

\luhile &amp; Douhlc11 ide llmnc 0\lncrs

Flf I THl

4-4-92-tlo

Spetlallzlng In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODElS
992-7013 or

ATTENTION

VALLEY INC.

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

RACINE, OHIO

lor on•

-lila light 10
any o• all

FOR SALE
Agriculture
Lime

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

4-2t-92- I mo . pd.

denial

~

.. 14; 71IC

Wnn to·d T&lt; J l&gt;·:•

Public Notice

a.n.•

fl

\1o .~..rl l unrc.m

I ll-

614-992-2242

All.......
lhall
"NIIAil
Offlca
.. lll1l lfall&gt; 5liwt,
Plu&amp;aas;q,. OH on or IMfon
niDI A._ lfay IS. 1992.

...

17-

4-!Hfn

BILL SLACK

.up~~ u

11. - 1\ ll.cl.o•) , T\' ,'\ Cl\ J\,.f""'

1-7-92-lln

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Cmusrz1l

ln ~ lrtt &gt;' ll n n

fiUY-SELL-TKAUE

NOW TAKING ORDERS

llllmlt:1 Co~ of Enful&gt;ll4 nooco No !Hi

_...._

die-

Bu y

,'{

Mddleport•992·6302

Banque fa

A!IE-&amp;D IIOTICE
1!1. ~Ill. . . Pomlln&gt;y
ttninesta......,lftledbida
n.. Gmonn.. (llQC!Ircts - u~

GRAVELY TRACTOR

l"

S o · h w· l ~

If It's Chocolate

M otlteriDaUifhl f'r

l h - . . . , YHtago

204 COHOOR ST.
POIIEAO'f, 0H.
MONDAY ntAU FRI&gt;AY t A.II.·S P.M.; SAT. IA.II.·1 P.ll.

7- l.o ~ l li nd round
f{..._ l'ui,J,. . Sui(' &amp;
.o\ uO'lwn

1·.-

"SPE CIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

n:=::s

IJI"!I.IIM
lOIII 11.,_.1

SAI.ES fl SERVICE

1·1 -- llu ~ on· ·~• T raonont~

\\111n 1('d

.. 1.·

MEHCII:\NDISE

NOW OPEN
Hrs. 9 to S
Moa. thru Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

...,,Ilea-

a - Fuot

\J.'unl l'rl

Pufecl for Mol h e,-i
Dny a,ul

..,_ ~- .. 4111
,..,.__ .,,..,.lnoloHunl·

1111

S ttu~twm

134 Ml S~JM••epat1, Cl.

fd!r~ Abbrrt W., Thomn
hmO.CllitLE!r1octivodii0.41271

-

lld r• \\' unted

Rose Suckers

~--ln.(.ll'octano)

:;....,.,.. o«'yl'lorlg
1 SA""S fl'loll
e '5Ato151¥i'NY
• SAY!~ !.'"(Xi ~t
I'&gt;CO

II !2-

~&gt;- li BI'I' Y 1\dh

Licensed and Bonded

lnS. Oonsul• ORC CHAP.
n'ti and! CAC Chaps_ J745·
·171' and Ji1(6,..5 for requlr•

.........

SEHVICES

I&gt;- Lrn;l nn•l Found

D1rt , Gravel and Coal

(]114(. ~PH.(614)t144-

lfimHI inuance al
&lt;m1 atrtlftadan

InMemoiY

.,. . OFFDY

RKYCUNG

2- In ~1~m.-.ry
J- Announumenlll
·l -- CtV(' II W II.~

For More Into Call

:M•~P:_:·~·P~P~••:.:•:::im=:•l:::el~y-:::1.~3....'...1_'1-::1&amp;_._23_,_3o;-;-(5_1_7,_4_1c_ _
Nollceo
.,__...,
G
1
..OI ........unicadons lilian be
Real Estale en e ra
filed wl lloo d - - i l l
3 dayc. Propooecl ,aclimlswUt ...,..., llllraoringCorli,OEPA,
1djudl~ion

1

E~li'I.OniENT
I

~

:1 ~ Bufiltlnfi Buold o n ~~

:1 :.-.--

COLUMN HEADINGS

614-992-2549

I

ltr-us tdl\:aslwiM provided In
lllld~dpadcularldlons,

ten

Home1 for s ~ lc

31 -

:12- \1&lt;.Jiul r II om··~ r,r
:13-- rum1 for Sttl e

c;;p parate dd&lt;, .

ANNOUI\CEM EI\TS

l'o •t&gt;- f,.r

HE\ I. EST \TE

CLASSIFU:DS
~-G_E_T_R_E_S_U_t:_l'_S_·_FA_S_T_!__

'1-

mile• northeast of Che•hlre,
Ohio.
The
renewal
Addington, Inc., 9431 U. appllc•tlon will •llow
S . Rout• &amp;0 Wea~ Alhland, Addington, Inc . to continue
-Kenlucky, .ft 102-1527, has the mining operation• o n Q.
1ubmit11d I
renewal 0698 for up to five yean
application for coal mine pa1t the expb•tion date of
l'ltllllc Notice
permit 0-()&amp;98 to the Ohio 24 Augua~ 1092.
Oep•rtment of Natural
The application 11 on tile
Gil lite- cjrKrcr re~iseslw..ith· R. . ourc...
Divillon o l at Meiga Counly Recorder '•
~me- p.rcpcsed action. .Reclamallon . The per mil Office, Meig1 County Court
.1mf pnom may submi t area is louted In Meig a Houn, P o meroy, Ohio
1i • burY 45769 lor public viewing.
ummencs ancflor a meeting ~::~:~hlp,
S ' 392
1
• 395 · Written commenh or
.-prdirrg. any draft ac11on 1
lola
._dhno JOJ h'll'!l ot the date Jtl , Townahlp 1N, Rangel requests for an Informal
__.. _ _....__.. .... _..,.. ,... •• u---' 1lW, on the properly o
b
•uu•~oru.
~'
~
conference may a sent to
1
.J6ww c6as nat Include ,.._
Coal Comp1ny, nc., lhe Division of Reclamation ,
1nd Ohio
F
...-oll•veriH-"-mplaint.
_..18 55
ounta 1n Square
Ill sii:;"liftl:anl public lnteresl
Comp.,y, lind J . W. Co uri, Col umbut, Ohio
a~SilS,. ill - i c compainls, Coughenour. The permit 43224 wilhin thirty day• of
- - · rmsy obtain no- contain• 7.5 acres and Is
--•
~-·- ~
the la11 date of publication
•o11
·
- - -~ana, ond loeatvv
on lh • Ch es hl re r •~.r , of
~LUill.lllln" .,.;u
thi• notice.
ildtddanal infarmadon. Un· ,..inute U.S.G.S. Quadrangle

011, Glll5.

St., Cot

n.&lt;;

12-5-tf n

lh-1Dalt

MOtHER'S DIY
SAVINGS

•\Kfulalpar'l

cha rgl'd ior t'.Kh da y

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

New SCA WOLFF

Prir11 'Shqp, 'Sr«t-.q 1111 ~ FIJeasant.
H~ !Mill «JWWIIfl.. M l!.umb•r.
Polli! Otllllll&gt;ll!"§~ , - ll!lgt&gt; lllusc,

BliCI - .....

21 - Hu~m cu Oprorl urut y
2'1.- .\1 on~y t o I..:JIIn
23-- Profeui onal Ser¥i ~e5

RJh'~ Mt' tnr cnnsffu ttvr nJn&lt;; , brokrn u p dJ~"' will be

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

6 ML Out Eagle Ridge
Rd. or I ML From Baslton

GAAW A-.5 ~lif 1411'1
B,.,.,gtU 1b&gt; I"'" '"' """ tlw Quality

ALL PRICES

"""'
- &amp;oanl
.. lie
EnvJ "' hillulJI
ell
Review, .lOll, :tHE. T.....

....,..

Mon thlv

~- ~ ~ ~mDPM

wrHI~

,....._.....,..o1

IS
15
IS

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

15 S.SSlons .... $25
12 S.SSions....$20
1 Sesslon.... $2.25

- l i M lTiRO!'IC
iiiEMJfl!Y ~

1Ciiolta •• sUied. fimal.,..
tiona Ry be apJ '1111, iWI

:J•

6

$6 00
$ 9.00
$1JOO
$130/doy

FREE ESTIMATES

CALIFORNIA
TANS

In

.-:nll!l

Ill ISS W1fSlT 111 fHilil Nl A

AIIJ!hilllas Jtlli W011't Cutll

0

379- W,.Jnul

NOW OPEN!

ARNifSSPUIUSILOONGE

--- __..__.,_

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

ll'l:l - l,. ·lur l

20 Yrs. Exp.

bldg

propooodaotlononildthlll

• ful "N. t.c;J

77J -.,111.H in
Hit.!- .\ , ... llon•·n

94t1 - Ril ~i no·

Call AI Tromm

l~.

BR lip! ~--- ._tJDO

:070--Apple l : r,.•• ·

"We Cet The Job Done Now"

lN.pbrMS.taP~Ib· . ..90D .:1
ownar ~lraiN3JIS .-!IIlla'•,.,.._ ot ~
•mounlmuw !lie~ 1t11r ~ per-

RaaN1

fl7 5-l'l . Plo'IIHHIII
4:&gt;11- IA'""

643--Anhia l)i,.l

~10£ lRl8lllliJCE!l1

• ,. :J•

OtT. 1992'

IS

$ 20
$ .30
$ 42
$ 60
$ 05/d.w

~&gt;6-

J7 -

Business
Services
,rr===============

~he.

•a••

No MoNTMLY PAYMtNl UtmL

3

.'~().·t

66 7 - foo lvilJo·

Gal il!llf ~alll!lns
Qp&gt;am .a 6:30pm,
Tues -l!'llun -Hit -sat. -Sun.
Olhlar if1lolul1s lltll' ~t

soo tD ~ 'UBit' ._.. "-"- an•l'h

611 Ar(:a Cud•:

44~a.llipoliM

d•} altr.r puhln~lll i!ITI' II • rnuJf.11 ,,,.,.,....,1:111 n
mwl\

Codt~

)1aeon (u., W\'

( c~ k

for error' f.rllt .:~~ ..~ ue "'UI" IR l! ot ~t!T I . Call hf'fon- l :OO p. m
lhal

s 4 ()()

FIN ,\NCIAL

---------:;-:=-~=====;----- 36--- Heal

100 p.m Thursday
I :00 p m . Fr 1da_1'

)1cigt; Counl~·

Over 15 Words

Rate

f)

lilt m1 diun:tJf'

Pr~e~ of aod iur aU 'lt!'~llli Wtn

e 1\di

I 00 p m Wf'l'inl"'-d.)y

C/"·"ifi«rl Jl"g''·' cowr rhe
fo/lou;ing !dPphonl! l!xchanges ...

• ReGel ..:: dumuU.IIt1ur •11&amp; JI IU!tl iR .uh•11no:~

• Frm:Ad.. : Cr ..,ntrwll" U'toe'lf,,.,...,./: ,..,ty

DAY HEFOI~E rUBLtCATJON
I 00 p.m. Saturday
100 p m . Mondav
1.00 p.m. Tue~av

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tu~SiJv Par)('r
Wednesday Papr r
Thursda.,. Paper
Friday Pap&lt;&gt;r
SWld ay l'aper

Call 992-2156
Mo, _ thru Faa.

Words

11)

PCMEiRIOIY lllO'MLING

SIIID IDiil'fiOIIL
11 OFF AIY
1

HEADINGSC6NTINUED

RATES

GAl.llJtl'lliUIS lFUI!Ill( W&gt;l.
:Ill ltLSI!JilliS

The monthly ladies ministries
meeting of the Mt. Moriah Church
of God was held at the home of
. Mrs . Shirley Simpson in Racone
with several in auendance.
Prayer opened the meeting and
scri pture from Phillipians was read
by Sandra Boothe. The secretary's
repon was given by Mary Bush.
· Anna Wolle pre sided at th e
· meeting in which plans for several
activities were discussed including
a quilting bee.
A cookout and hymn sing will
be ·held Saturday at 6:30 p.m. and
ladi es bowling night will be
. observed May 15 at Mason.
Mt. Moriah Field Day will be
held May 30 for people between
the ages of I and 101. Contests will
mclude 50-yard dash: tug of war:
three-legged race: sack race: solo ball thirow : distance jump, ciC . Rib.

The Daily Sentine i- Page-1!.

•The Area's Number l
Marl{etplace

tulips lllliiChing down the middle ol
Park Avenue this spring. "Yellow's a popular color," sbe said.
"It will be inteRSting to see what
happens."

...ucJIIGI

Ladies ministeries to
hold cookout Saturday

.. . .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hand that rocked cradle may hold stolen flowers
Associaltd Press Writer

'

Thursday, May 7, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend. ..

. ·.'

.;

&amp; co.

NG

'••""g
-UI U1Dtlt F« r.. •

"Tah IN ""' O.t 01

INllRIOR ' EXTERIOR
Fl!l lsnMAm
HlVI RIFERIN&lt;IS
lefor• 6 p.-. L-• MHsago
Ahor 6 p.a. 614-985-4180
&lt;11711&gt;11

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
fOmfEilCii\1, and Rt:SIDt:,'\'TUL
FilEt: t:STJMATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No

Sunday Calls)
2112192

HOWARD

CHUCK'S BOAT·
AUTO REPAIR

EXCAVATING
BUllDOZER, BACKHOE
an&lt;f T11ACKHDE WORK
AVAilABLE .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAilER SITES,

LOW LABOR RATE
15% OFF On Most

Boal Parts

LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE- TRUCKING

Co. Rd. 3,
Leading Creek Rd.

Fll F.F. ESTI MA TF.S

Middleport
742-3030

992·3838

51511 mo. pd.

- 4-'92'·1 mo.

DK's FARM TOYS

NEW OPENING

SUMMER
IMAGES

~i#b

2 Miles on Hysell Run Rd.
POMEROY, OHIO

DAl l. AS K WE DEA Owner

NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Visits ... ... $25.00
16 Visils ...... $30.00
1 Visit...... $3.00

All ICAtEI - VINTAGE 111d
COLLECTABLE
•Rideu Available"

DIIPUYID AI
THE QUALITY PRINT SHOP
Mt DDt[PORT, OH.

c.n ~« A~ittl••t
992·2487 or
992·7884

r.

9q). ll9HJO .. -tOll pto
141-301G-Ah .. 500

4-7-92· 1 mo

4· 2·91- ••. p

TROY-BI£r
WHITESEL
ROOnNG

Clur ."i prinj: Shiruwnl nr
Tou y- 1\,h 1\U,.n Nnw In ."it &lt;l c ~ .

NEW - REPAIR
GUITERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

R1 SO We&lt;;~, ~thtn\ Ohio •SH381 S

},.,., WAKEilELD~s~···

212019213 mo.

Announcemenls
3 Announcements
GIRLS . GIRLS, GI RLS

M!l-2118

HOME I'S

Ca ll

Today, Meel Tonite
1-900 -7n.1006, $2 95 Min . 18 t
, - - - - - - - - - , Ma1e1el, Cosl~ Mesa, Calll ornia .
411 SJ!I1 1 me p0

CONNIE'S OHIO

RIVER HERBS and
EVERlASTINGS
571 00 SJ. Ul, Radoo, llllio

247-403S
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING
Plants, Herb1, P11tttnlal1,
btrlastlng

OPEN
WED.-SUN. 10.5 p.m.

4·21-92-IM. pd.

~======:::.
,...

TROY-BI£r
Our Sflrintl SlaJpmftll

or

Tto,...BIII TIUere Now In Stofk .
Your IM-cH Tr!!f· Bih DrfJler

WAICifllli'S

b. sow...~~.... o~. •SI3-381l

UV(! LIVE ! LIVE 1
1·900· 4 54 -9800, {18 •) SSTEL
Qrl . Fl ~] 95 oMIII .
Reduce Sa te And Fast With
GoBese Ca pitiS And E-Yap
Oiurelic AI Fruth Pharmacy.
Reduce · Burn oH tat whl111 you
sleep ! Take OP AL, alfa l1 abla at

Fru th Ph;nmacy, 786 N. Second
St , Midrllepor1

4

Giveaway

1 Bla c k Famale Cat, Already
Spade, 614-446 -4287.
2 lem ale A.u sl ralian Shepherd
pu ps· tree to good ho me only.
Make
3648.

great cat11• dog•. 304·67S·

4mo. old male Chow puppy 1o a

good home in the country, 614·
992-6208.
Auslrallan Shllphard, F•ma'-1,
Good Walch Dog, 614-37J.2798.
Babv
only.

chick 1o giveaway

to

flttn

�.. ..
Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

SNAFL ' h\ ll r ucc Bca llil4

32 Mobile Homes

Giveaway

Couch

1991 14x80 38r'a , 2 B.tths Must
Ba Mondl 61-t.446-3325 '

95n

Female pup, ti mo old, Red
Heeler &amp; Au stra li an Shepherd,
both parents reglslered, good
w11h kids , mmds well, 304·882·

33 Farms lor Sale
83 Ac rn

W/2Vr Old Hom•
3Brs, 2 Beths, Bam, SaVflrai
Bu 1ld in~ s,
Callar
Sell
W!lh!Wttho ul Farm E'qulpment
'
Cattle 614-367-0610

3285
Old er couc h and c hair, good
cond , 304-88 2 3104

Puppies,

mother

German

6638

And Grey Striped Kitten 614·
446 -3551

l ots In Gallipolis Ferry
100%
owner hnanclng 11 $98 64 per
month , any one of lour lots
available, 304-675-2722

Wooden pallets to giveaw ay
First coma l1rst served Gal·
llpolts Daily Tribune, 825 Third

Lots m New Haven - 100%.
owner ltnancing at $1014fi per
month buys all three lot s •304·
675 2n2
·

Ave , Gallipolis

Lost

Found

&amp; Found

Whil e Dog W1th Stiver

Collar, Ar ound Burkhan Lane
Gallipoli s 614-446 -2174, 614 -446-

You .von t be a bl e to d o lhts unttl you rea
you nave a really bad d a y at work

4222

black be lt 0 1

______..:--------- 1===========-1-=:==.::====~===-

7

Yard Sale

All Yard Sa\u Mu!il Bo Pai d In
Advance Deadline t OOpm the
day before tha ad Is to run ,
Sund•y edition- 1 OOpm Fridl y,
Monday
&amp;dillon
tO OO am

•-

....tur

da

Y

&amp; Vlclnlly
142 lowar Garfiel d May 6-7-8 5
Fam1he s, C l oth m~ St ereo Cur
ta1n s, Homelnt er 1or, Lots Mrsc '

J Fam 1l y Yard Sa le Stans Mon
da~ . 5/4192 Unttl All Sold' Rt 141
Across From Vault Pl ant
541 Thi rd Avenue May 7tl'l, 61h
fJ!h Homo Interi Or, Furmture
Llnons, Toys Jewelry, &amp; M1sc
Friday, May 8th Only 10 Wtllow
Dr (Oft Burk har1 La ne) 9 4
TV s, Gas Grill S Mtc rowava
Boys Clol h1ng
Garage Sale 1 Z Mrles Out 218
May 4 Thru 8th Lawn Mow ors
Fence Ckllrgor s Fans Other
IUtm sr
Garage Sa le 136 F1rst Avanua,
G.alltpol ts Fnday &amp; SahJrday
May Slh &amp; 9! h Ladtos Clothing
Slza 15 Ancl La rger Chll dran s
Cloth1ng,
Mi scellaneous
Househ old Items &amp; Tools
GaraQa Sale S/9 5/10 8 6
Roush lane , Ches hire, Womantl
Clothing L1ke Now N1ntendo
CO Player, &amp; Hoo sohold
Glgan1tc Sale May 8-9th 9-4
Raln, Stm\1
Z M•le s Out
Bulavllle Road O n Geor ges
Creek, 112 Mtle
Mar 8 &amp; 9, 8 30 To 5 00, Route
1141 454 LeGrande Blvd Ram
Or Shine, 3 Famtly, Chtldren To
Adult Clothes, Baseball Cards, 2
Bicyc les, (Sears) Tow Behind
Tratler Eleetrlc Guitar, Hlati
Chrysler 5tl't Avenue, t-he
Moving Sale Saturday, May 9th
90 Magnolia Or 1. Behind FiHta
Grande Some t-urnilure, Baby
IIams
Porch Sale For Big 4 Church,
On Cox Road A:r.prox 1 Mile
White Doublewl a On Rtght
Friday, Saturday 9-5
Ralnr'ShlneT Friday &amp; Salurday,
o
Knner
Road,
Houehold Items, Oxygen Makar,
Eleclnc Stove's, Kmves

Rl 218,

Thursday, Friday, 1072 Second
A'4enue, Gardan, Hand Tools
Baseball Cards, Records, 8
Track Tapes, M1sc
Thursday, Friday, Adult Clothes
Chlldrans Clothes, Glassware
Many Tires, All Silos Near
North Ga llia H S, St Rtt60

Pt . Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
3

blm1ll" behind Krodel Park,
Nul Rd, turniture, 1ppllanee~ ,
Thurs. Frt, S.l W1teh tor algns

Comer

Walnul I Wilson Sis
Henderwon, WV May 7, 8 &amp; 9,
lois Qf btby cloth. ., small kids
liottt., mise 9 oo-?

&amp; 9th Red

houH

IJrlcll

below
Sidere
~elry, Galllpollt Ferry Rain or
Shine
lnaldeiOutslde moving sale
Tu.., Wed , Thurs May 5-7 8.30
AM-? Across from
Beale
School Gallipolis Ferry, WV
Yard Sale , 2 tamiltos, 2321 Ml
Yemon Ave, S.t, May 9th, B 00
~117

fard Sale, Maaon County As·
sodallon of R1tardod Children
Children• Rummage, May 8 &amp; 9
8 06--4 00, Burdette Addn, something !Of ovary one

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
2 family sale, ciOChlng, beddmg ,
wtll hangmg, tubtshower doors,
11e , will opan at 8am, Saturday
May g, rain Of shme, 1309
Bridgem;an Str..l , Rustles H11t s
Syracuse, Oh
4502&amp; Wlppla Road Pomer oy Five Points araa, May 8 &amp; 9 g.

3prn
Garage Sale May 11.12, Apple
Oro.,._ Doren Rd , Ra cmo
Something for neryonel Some
giveaways 1
May 8&amp;\l, tMn-g~rts , mens
Womll"'ll clothing, househ old
old 1 new, eollectors 1tems l oo ts
anG ..eetr1c ilama mis e , E lrm~r
Ballay 1314ml west o f Oarw1n

R1581
May 8&amp;9, lum llrti road l ett pas!
WMPO from Middleport hill, lots
oll11ms
May llh ana day only Oanvil le,
tpproxlmataly 2ml on AI 325
Rl124, follOW signs Home lnler lor, baby it1m1, lots of mise

on

M1y 81h Rustle Hlll111, Syra cuse,
Home Interior, radial arm saw,
adutt, taen,
and
chtldren s
clott.H, HallowHn costumes,
mise, n~ln cancels
Mondar·Frlday, 91111?, 2 112ml
oU1aldt Ctleatar, SR 246, baby
Items, plus
sized
cl othes
booh, more
S.turdar, May 9th, 10 ·1, 234
Wulbefry Avenue, ball eards
G.l. ~ot gam... clothing

a

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctlooHr, complete
auction
servlca
Uc:ensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Vlrginll, 304·
773-5785

9

Wanted to Buy

Don'l Junk Ill Sail Us Your NonMajor
.lppll•nces,
Worldng
Coh)r TV's, VCR't, Mierowavtt,
Air Condltlonal"l, Elc 614-256·

1238

Wa nl ed to Buy

Wanted To Buy

Junk Autos

W1lh 0 1 W 1lh ouI MoI or s CaII
L01rry Uvgly 614 388 9303

Wanted To Buy L;a rge S1u
Dre ss Makers Form Good Con·
dillon Ca ll 614 -4 45-4 015 Atttr 5
pM

Gallipolis

l'o~ Family. 7th, 8th,

9

Top Pr ices Pa td All Old U S
Cot ns, Gold R1ngs S1lver Co1ns,
Gold Co 1ns M T S Com Shop,
151 Seco nd Avenue, Gallipoli s

Employment Services
11

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Benel tts
Excellent
Pay
Transpor1ation,
407-292 471l7,
Ex !
571
9a m tOp m
Toll
Relunded
I

S h~r l ay

~-­

BartendetS I Caslno
W o r k e r s 1 Deck
Hands•Hoslesses, etc Pos111ont
aboard c ru rse sh1ps $3001 $900
wkly Free h avel Can bbean,
Hawau , Bahamas
No oxp
1 206 -736 -7000
neces sary
Ex11617N3
Consullmg
X-Ray.r Radtology
StfVICts lor Lakin Hos p1 tat to
malnt am
ICF
cert1ficahon
Duties to Include read 1ng and
mterpretallon ol X-ray s ol
ruldents and slaH of Lal&lt;.m
Hospital
lnlerested perso ns
contact 304-675-3230 EUI 20 or
24, Mon-Frl, 8 OOAM - 4 OOPM
lor bid lorm De adl1n1t tor apptymq Is May 22, 199 2 Must have
ab•llly to b•ll medlcar•, m•dtca ld
and/or anv third party agenctes
EXTRA INCOME? Free Recor
ded Messag41 OHers Many Full
Or Part T1me Oppor1 llnllle s Ex
cellant Pay, No Exp Needltd
Start lmmed1 al ely Call 512 9923500 Elrt 511 12&lt;1 Hrs) F11M1
O.tatlsl
GUARANTE ED
WORK
AVAilB LE
Elccellent
Pay
FOf
EAS'f
Homebao;ad
Work
Fuii1Par1
Ttme Call 1-800 44ti 7173 Ert
33-10, M-F 9-5 CS T
LIFEGUARDS WANT ED
cer
tilled li feguards ne eded lor
summar empl oym ent lull and
part t1me posll tons avatlabla
call or come In, Ro y al Oa k
Resor1 Club, 614 992-6 488
Now accepting appl tca l •ons lor
lull &amp; par11tma pos 111 on s A pp l~
In persoo al1er 4 00 PM Gmo s
22nd St &amp; Ja ck son Ava E 0 E
SOCIAl WORK ER
Pleasant H1ll Manor, A 201 Bod
Gerlalrlc
Factllly
S ee lu n ~
Degread Soc ial WOfker To Jotn
Our Exis t ing Soc 1.11 Servi ce
Statt Degree In Human Servtc a
F1eld Nec:esSCiry LS W O r OMR P
And lr MR Elpertenc e ls Helptul
Oedtcallo n To Cltent Drgn1ty A
Must We Ar9 A People Onent ad
Busm ltSs Ofte11ng El CBIIent
Wage And Benehl Pack ag e You
Must Taka Adv antage 0 1 H us
Umque Oppo rtun1t y By Roply
ing lmmedt alely To J1m l111
deman ,
Admrns lrat o r
co
Pleasa nt H111 Mano r P O Sox
334 P1kelon OH 45661, 6H 289
2394 EO£
The Me1gs Local Schoo l D1 st nct
s
r:urro11lly
seektng
ap.pllcalt0/15 tr o m certified applicants l or an Ass1., lanl Vars 1ty
~ oef ball Coach (&lt;I posi tr ons)
1l.h &amp; 8th Grado Foot tta ll Coac h
Boys Vars1 1y Bas ketttal t Co ;~ c h
Boys 9t h Grad e Bas ketball
Coach, Boys' 8th gra de Bas kat hall Coach Bo ys 7tr, Gra da
Bas keth.1 ll Coach
A. ss •s lan t
H1gh School Trac k Coac h
Jumor H19 h Track Coac h , Ass istant Jr Ht gh T r ac ~ Coac h, Hoad
Ba se " all
Coach
Ass1stanl
Ba seball Coa ch Grrls Reserve
Ba sketba ll cooc h Grrls' Re s er~•
So l1ball Coach, Grrls J r H1 gh
Volley ball Coach G1r1s J r Hrg h
Basketba ll Coac h (2 po stt1 o ns)
High Sc hool Naw spapo r Spon
sor H1gh School Che erl 9arter
AdviSor Athlet iC Direct or Head
Teacher a! Br ad bury Ele mentary
&amp; Mentor tor the 1992 93 sc hool
year Appl rca nl s must ho ld a
val1d Oh1o teachmg cer1 111ca1e &amp;
l or co ac hmg pos itions mu st
meet cert1hc at 10f1 roq u ~rementa
ol Oht a for spo rl s med tctne &amp;
CPR Per son s mlerosl ed sho uld
conta ct J1m Ca rponter Suponn
tendant o t Metgs local Schools,
PO Sox: 212, 320 East Mam
Strtel Pomeroy Oh 1o
WANTED Hut Band H1g h Edge
Needs l..aad Guit ar Player, AlsG
Base Playar, Musl Have Ow n E
quipment
Sert ou s lnq wr1 11 s
On ly Call 61&lt;1-&lt;14 &amp;-61 60
-~

Washar &amp; Dryer Repairm an E~·
perlsnced Only Ca ll 61 4-4462944

Business
Training

lawn mowing and odd jobs
tully Insured, 614-992·7'672
'
Mtss Paula I Day Ca~ C.n!er
Sate, aHordatMa, c:hlldea~ M-F
6 am - 5 30 p.m Ages 2~t0
Belo,.., aner school Drop-Ins
welcome . 614-446-8224 New Intan! Toddler Care 614-446-6227
Yard Work , Ask For Gregg, 614245 9583 Call Anyttma

21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends that you do bu st
ness w11h people you know, and
NOT to send money through lho
ma tt unti l yo u have mvestlgatod
the offenng
Allen!lon' Slylmg Salon For
Salor Primo L.oc ahon Ca ll 614
446-880 3, 6t4· 446-8 l 55
Vendmg Route local We Have
Tha NltWest Machtnes, Makmg A
Nlc• Sleady Cash Income 1800- '~ 55-0354

Real Estate
31

Homes tor Sale

2 bedrooms co mer lot , pnced
m 20 s, 107 Locust St Henderson 304-67 5-7619
2021 M;arquette Avo 5 rr s old,
all br1ck mamlen ance Ire&amp;
home 4 bedrooms, small lrvmg
room dmmgroornlfamlly room
combination, kitchen
ulltlly
room , all ona level co'4arad
pallo In back, privacy fellCe,
garage, shown by appointmant
only 304-675-1218
3 Badroo ms Wllh Gar;age W11t
Consider Tr a1l1t As Down Pay ment Prlca $45,000 614-4466325

A Frame home, 2 H acres 3 bod
room s 1112 baths ,llvmgroom
tamtiyroom , underground pool
304-882-2884
Ac:ra, 2 bedroom lrallor, deck
por ch centra l heal/ all st ove
refrig erator Apple Grove 304576 2145
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR S ALE
Htsloncal Area Corner lot - 816
Mam Sl Pt Pleasan t , W Va
Co mptately Renoval&amp;d 2 Full
Balhs 3 Large Bedrooms, New
HVAC New Carpet Ava1lable
Juno 15 614 44 6 2205
Countrr Home Sand Hill Road ,
8 rooms 2 baths 5 acre land ,
304-695 3671 attar 3 OOPM
For sa le or rent 4 rooms &amp; bath
loc ated o n Old R1ver Rd, Glen·
wood W\/ $14 000 304-576 -2141
88 3Brs Mo b1le, On 11'2 Acre
Socludod l ot CA, Close To
Town Groan Sc hool $29,500
F1rm &amp;1 4 ~4 6 -4314
Near Rutl and 5 acres, 3bdrm
hous e g arag e, d&amp;elc fru it l rees,
garden spot 1n the tortiiS 614
~ 2 2J26

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
$500 0 11 Pm chas e Pn ce Of Any
New Home AI Elsea Home Con
lor Grea t Soi8C 11 on Froe Set Up
Aru1 [ffii iVIH)'r Call 514 -n2-1220

t974 14x54 2bdrm appt1anc:n,
lu rn1t ura all • tec tr 1c 614 -9925800
1975 Ho ll y H111 mobil e home
12x60, lar ge ltv tngr oom, 304·
882 -3H5
1979 mob1l e homo 2 bedrooms,
C. A newty ca rpeted , und orpennmg slaps, alec pole , exc c:ond ,
304-6 75 7242
~:.c__ _ __ __
1980 14x65 Fatrmont Bayv1ew,
Fact ory Flteplac: a 2 Bedrooms
1 112 Baths 614-24 5- 5164 Aller 5

PM

1981 Redman Seville 14 ~ 7tl 3
Bedroo ms,
Total
Electnc
Range Retn garator Good Con
dillon, $500 Down Esllmaled
Pa~mant $230/mo 614 -Tn 1220
1984 l4 x7C Cl ayton 3 Bedroom9
1 1r2 Baths, Set Up Ot" Lot In
Quail Creek, Many Ettra s' 614245-9218
1965 Clayton Statesman 24 x52 3
9edroo ms, Total Eleclrlc , $1 ,000
Down Wtlh Approved Credit,
Good Condition , FrH Sel-op
And De11vary 614-m -1220

Gaorgn Portable Sawmill, don t
haul your logs lo It'll m ilt just
Clll 304-ti75 -1957

Colot TV., $60, Mk:rowltwe Ovan
MS. Eloclric Clol'- .....
~
,_, 165•

Sluoggo Appllancos.
Upper Alwt Rc1. Bas\ds Slona
en• 111o1e1 Call &amp;l4-446-ma
1.aoo.-4. .34H
'

Whrte

Road,

ta

BORN LOSER
V WI ~BERFORC.f, (.A~ YCIJ TELL
ME I-WIT 10/, OF

""

'. u....~ NQI

100 IS ?

GOTO

-

614-

C.ON6RE~ 2

•

YOU £XPfC.T
TO DO

THU., MAY 7

1121111

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

~

304~75-5413

1177 Ford F·150 4x4 , New Tlru,
Wheels,
Bn~ketl,
Exhaust,
Rotors Shocks, Rad1o, 80,000
Mtl. ., $2,500 614· 245-5978

New Round ~id 0.11 Tabla, 2
LNvM, Claw Feet , 4 Oak Pre ss
Back Chatr1, Solid O.k Curve
GIIU China C.blnelll 614-4464316

Tears formed in h1s

Suddenly, he realized
it was a formlet ter

"We will always have
our memones."shewrote

eyes as he read her
Jetter of fa rewell.

Furnished 3Br House , 1 Aoor,
$350 +Ut ltlt tas , Upper Fourth
Avenue, Ga lhpohs, Raferencas,
Se cunty Dapos1t 61~46-44t6
Aller 7p m
New
3bdrm
home,
large
kttc:hen , large tam1ly room, 1
wooded acre , $350 after 7pm ,
614 -5420
N1ce ellt c1oncy eottago, unique
and beaut1ful, 304 -67S~42

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
1 bedroom tratler, pay own
u111111es plus deposit, 304· 6752535
N1ce 2 bedrooms, tg yd Corner
ol Rand &amp; Perch St , Kanauga
614-44&amp;-711n
Unlurmshed Mobile Homo, CA,
322 Tlurd Avenua , Gallipolis
614-446-3~8.
614-25&amp;-t9C3
Bator• 9 PM

1 Year Otd Ragl&amp;len~d Black
•ngus Bun 6l4·3S&amp;-.867U
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ollv. Sl , Gallipolis New &amp; Used

Angus And Chi-Angus Black
BunsL Reasonably Priced Slate
Run t-arms, Jackson, Ohio, 614·

~:~s~~:em

286.S3~5

&amp;

V1'RA. FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE•
614-446-31S8
LIVING AOOU Sofa And Chair
S179 And Up, Cort• And End
Tables S71 And Up, SWivel
Rockers S79.
BEDROOM: Bunk Btds $99
12x6). 4 Drawer Chest Ot
b111werw $44 15, Twin Mattress
, . . Sol
DINETIES Wood Bar Stoots
$1415 (26M) Table And 4 Padded
Chairs $129
OPEN 7Day•AWMk, 9AU - 6
P.M Sunday 12 Noon · 5 P W
Rt. l41 4 Miles ott Rt 1 In Can.

'""'"
53

Antiques

Bl!l Rivw Antiques, 510 Main St
Point Plusant, WY
Buy a sell. Riverine Antiques
n24 E Main St,.et, Pomeroy
Hour1 MTW 1000 em to6 00
p m , Sunday 1·00 to 6 00 p m
614-992·2526

54 Miscellaneous

lor Rent

2 RototllllfS, 3 \12 HP, 5 HP
Good Condition' 611 446 t31fi

1bdrm.,

$225mo ,
lncludee
utllfUu, security deposh r.qulr.d, no pet1, 614·!192-2218
1 Br,
Furnlehlld
Apartment,
Central HNI, Air, Prtvels PantNur
Grocsry,
All
Ing,
Malnttnane. Included 6l4-446-

2602
2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Oownslalrs,
Clean,
No
Pels ,
Oulel,
Relerenee And Deposit Required 614-446 -1519

Tandy HX Home Co mpuler W1th
Momlor, Joy Shc ks , D1sks, Bu11t
In Modam Tellrne 3 5 D1sh Dnve
W1th Sevoral Begmnor Book s,
$300 614 -256-1506.
6x16ft lrallar, Tandom axle,
treated floor, exc tires , 70001b
capachy, 614-949-2804
While canopy cnb, stroller,
playpen, swing, walksr, chang Ing table With balhtub undernealh car saal , l1tlla like tvrnlture, d1nette set, 304-675-4548

55

Block, brick, sewer pipes, win dows , lintels , etc Claude Winlets, Rto Grande, OH Call ~14 ·
245-5121

56

Pets lor Sale

2 mala reg tsterld Saagle pups,
$45 each Of both sao, had
s hol s &amp; wor med, J04 -17J.9104
ana• 5 OOPM
Al red ala Pups, AKC Registered ,
Ex cellent Bloodline, 614-256-

AKC rag 1sterad Oalmallon puppitS, 1st s hots , Hwks otd, 614992 -5724 or 614-992-6794
A.KC
reg1stor&amp;d
Shapherd Fomals
old 304-882 2499

German
11 mooths

AKC reg1sterad Groal Dane,
mala black, 1 I month old ,
knows commands, good around
ct111dr&amp;n , e1cet1ent bloodUnes
$220 614 992 5'144

B11tt &lt;my &amp; ? pupptes 304 675
541 9 aner 5pm

'''-'c-c--c--------~

For Salt Plano, Good Co ndition $750 Firm, WM&lt;Ieater
Used Ona Year, l50 Firm 614245--5785

2 bdrm apt In Mlddlaport, all
utitllln pa1d, $2751 mo, 614-949--

2217
Apartment IOJ rent UltiiU11 paid
In town 304-675-3968
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, S36 Jacks on Pilla
horn $192/mo Walk to shop &amp;
movies Call614-446-2568 EOH
Beeeh Strael, M1ddlepot1, Ohio
2 bedroom, turnlshod apt
Utllllies paid, dop &amp; ret r~ulrad
304~112 · 2566

•11

Fumlshed
Aperlment
Utlhtlell Paid Uplltairs, Second
Avenue , Gatupolis, Extra Cltanl
1 Bedroom 6t4-446-9S23
Furnished Apartment I Bedroom~ UUUIIes Pa1d , $2&amp;0/mo
920 ~ourth Avenue , Galltpohs
Ohio, 6t4-446-4416 After 7p m
Furnished Apartment, tbr, nut
to Ubrary, parkmg, central heat ,
614-446·0338,
air, referencn
Bato,.. 7p m
Gracl.xJS livmg 1 and 2 bad room apartmanls al Y1llago
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments In Middleport From
SHMi Call 614·992·7787. EOH
Completly
Furmshed
Small
House, $250/mo + Ut tlitlu No
Pets Call Before 7 PM 614-4460338
One
and
two
bodroom
apartmanls lor rent 304-6752053 or 675-4100
Ona bedroom apt to.- reni , 304675-2218

1-800~8-1923

Geneslli
NulrHkJn Product s
tuluring Amlna Acid Body
Building, weigh! lou and t;a t
bumar formufas Avall1bla ex cluelvety at Aile Aid Phamacy
The Nfl way to diet
Girls N•wbom Thru 12 Year s,
Bop Nswborn Thru 6 Month s
Matarnity,
Swing
Dressmg
Table, Hamstar Cagas 614-44626119
Gulbransan Prem11ra lha atra
organ, A 1 condition musl sea
to appraclale, 614-992 Jtl41
KILLS FLEAS 1 Buy ENFORCER
FIN Killer• IM pets, home &amp;
rard Gua111ntMd affecl1ve 1 Buy
9aum True
ENFORCER at
Value Slorl, 11 We sl M;aln
SlrMI, Chesler Oh I Valley
lumber &amp; Supply Corp., 555
Park SlrMI, Mkktltport , Oh
KILLS FlEAS'
Buy ENFORCER Fle;a K11ters For
Pels, Homl &amp; Yard Guaranta9d
Ett.ellvat Buy ENFORCER AI
Browna Trustworthy Hardwara,
Stele Route 160, Bidwell, Oh1o
King Size water bed,
cond , 614 992-23n

good

Malal root and sldmg, baked
anamal and galv Trailer under
pt~nnlng
1982 Subaru Iron!
wheat drivs , kloka &amp; run s good
$900 304-172-2091
Murrty

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms tor rent - w. . k or month
Starting al $120/mo Gallla Hotal
fi14-446-9580

riding
mow at
~frlglntlor In good condition
304"75-1386

My.,.. aha.Uow wen pump, lank
complete w1th toot nlv1, IOf
aale or trade tor electri c
~frlganlor, s1ova, 614-)12 -2445
until 9pm

Country Moblla Home Part!., Rl
33N , under new managtmlnl
Lots, $85, home rentals, S235,
614-992· 2167

49

For Lease

Commercl•l Build1ng, 12,000 Sq
Ft Ooeks, lavelars, HNiad
Claar Sp•n At 32, Jaeklon,
Ohio. n1-'Jt13-6732
S.cond Floor Aps.rtment For
Leese l A, One B A, Bath,
Kitchen Wf Stove I
Refrig
Weter Fumllhed. No Pets Corner Second &amp; Plna, Gallipolll

1230 P.,. IIO&lt;Oh, Oopoolt R•
qulr.d Call 614--446-4249, 114446-2325, Or 614-446--4425

Pinball Machine, $:175, G•rden
Wagon,
175,
Hometita
Ch1lnNw, S100, Push Mower,
175. 614-245-5978.
Pl•stle And Medal Culvert 6 Inch
Thru 60 lneh In Stock Ron
Evans, Jaekson, Ohio 1-800537·g528
Reinbow
Renltls
Wedding
Gowna And Flowsrt FDf All De·
cnlons Flowers For MemOJial
Day, 2nd HOuN Put Exxon
Slatlon At Rodner Open 10 00
To 4 PM 614-245-5151
Side br aide re~111tor S150
Weeduter, $50_
75-1084
Stgne Portable chang..ble letter .Jgns end loiters
FrM
delivery AAA Signa, 1..00.533-

3453

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

..
1966 Clesslc Morcodos B•n~. 4
D001
614·388-9126,
614-4460706, For More Information

:--:-

1963 LTD Ford, $800 , 1915 Un eoln Town car $1000, both In
exc running cond , 614 -9492804

1
RefrlgeratM,
One
t3
Black/Whltl TV, One 21 M Color
TV , All Good Cond1t1oo, 614-

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Onlr $799 00 8Mut1tul Abov v
19J3114 Pool Includes F1nar
0.:11 , Fence, ladders, Et c
Don"t Bahen h? Call BPI

Autos tor Sale

2 AKC Registered Vorkshire Tornars ('torlctes) All Shots &amp;
Papers, $350 Each 614-379-2601

•11

2 BR apartments In M1dd l e~r1 .
newly remodeled low u!lhl1es,
no pels, $220 per mcmth,
deposit required, 614-992 2381
211 Spnng Avanue, Pomeroy,
2bdrm ,
walerllruh
paid ,
$160imo , $75 dapoalt, no pels,
614-446-9642

71

Groom and StJpply Sttop-Pot
Groommg
brMds, styles
lams Pel Food Dealer. Julie
Wabb Call 614-446--0231

61~~"'------::---:-

046-26411

2 yrs

1968 Dodga Dart CiT, 360 tnglne ,
lull race cam, road lifters, good
t1res, bodr good , '$800, 614-9493080 alter 5pm

AKC black , malo Cocker Spamet
pupp1as, 6wk s old, $100 614·
667-3869

O.humldtfW, Good Condition,

Purab~ Llmoualn bull,
old, 614-742·2545

CFA
rllgi slered
Bluepotnl
Homalayan kttlens, 2 males I
l emal e 304-675 -1 719
F1sh Tank , 2413 Jac kson Ava
Poml Plaasant, 304-675-2063
lull line Trop•c al hs h, bird s
small ammals a nd s upplies
Mala 8uu11 hound, 6 month s
o ld w nh papers, 304-882-3516
PUR EBR ED SIBERIAN HUSKY
PUPPY 1 lemale tan, blua eyo s
whit&amp;
w•mask
long-hatred
super mea, $160ea , 614·992 51&lt;14
an er Spm
Rat Tame r pupp1e s,

304 675

1506

57

Musical
Instruments

Peavey XR600 Mtxer Amp Two
115H PA Speakers, 300 Amp, 2
Shure SM58 M1k11 With Stands
And Boom Adpt Sound Level
Meter 40 Ft Mike Cables 100
Fl Spk Cables, Fuu Box, Guita r
Stand L1ke New' $1,400 For All
614-256-1506

58

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
Hot bed swael pol;atoo plant s
wh 1le lred , lomaloe planl s, 12
kmd s mcl udmg yellow wired
streaks, peppers cabbag• &amp;
brocc oli llowers &amp; 10 pots &amp; tn
llats shrubs, pmes , purple lilac,
grapevtno &amp; chestnultr81a, 614
~2 2220 C':N" 614 -742-2773

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61 Farm Equipment

WITH YOUR 1-IHCE fARC £?

675-3m

Square

URH S E

I' I' I I

One TV Sw oo

Reading

Rainbow

S tereo

Ill Full Houte Q

illiiD Andy Grilll1h
t!! Scoob)o Doo
rD Up Clooo

1977 C.prtca classtc, V-3, runs
good, body fair, dependable
worlr. car, $550 :104-61S-2948
1978
Cutlass
front
end
damaqect , $500 sftet 00 PM,
104-ttfS.2583

e

197'9 JMp Cherokee, V-8, Auto
$950 1982 Eagle, 6 eyl , Auto ,
1935 Plymouth
air, $1200
Horizon , 4 cyl , Auto, $450 1978
Marcury Zephyr 6 cyl, Auto,
$700 1980 Oatson k~o1g-cab
pi ckup S spd , topper $650
304-57'6-28"18

ffi

~li--r, I -,1, -T---jl :

5
tPMCI,
laetory
options
JD,SOOMI, must sa.::nlk:a, $7500 ,
614-992-2697 days, 614-696 -128&amp; '
avanlngs

PI( IN' NUMAF~ED
l F1 ~ s

FRANK AND ERNEST

Range + ReverM , Front And

Back Racks, Uko Naw, 360 ,

1: C.AI'I 'i

75 Boats &amp; Motors

HOW ciOHfV

lor Sale

24 Ft Pontoon With 40
Mot Of, S3,000 614-446-J617

,gas Honda Aecord, 4dr, Ssp,
silver/gray velour inlerlof, left
,..ar dama;e, $1900, 6M-a41l2600, 9-5
1985 Olds Dana 88 Royale 2dr
coupe, lmmaculale condition
•II options, new llrH, 307 V-8,
S299!i, &amp;14-m..fing
1985
tully
llon,
•ner

Red Ponllae Tran• Am,
loeded, exe.Uent eondilow mll81ga, 814-\lZI-7554
4prn

1986 Oldt Flranu, 5 speed, air,
tm lttr.olt un whttl, 614992-6529 calla er 6pm
amJ

1986 Aenger, 5 Speed, taBS 112
Escort Wagon, 1lil58 Chsvy
Belaire, Good Condl11oni 814669-4623.

191!7 Chovy - •1_AI•, ~ 5 -.

Good Condition, u ,100 lt4-25&amp;6l51

1981 Flrwblrd An Original 2
Sealer Wtth Low WUMga, Sharp!
614-256-1470 l.Nvt ......it
1986 Ford Rangar XLT, 8 Cylinder, 4x4, Exeettent Condit ion,
82K $6,100 614-4tl~.
1992 Gao Stam, low miles, aa:·
c:ellent condhlon, 814-992-566i
78 Trana-Am, 400 Cl Envlna,
Reeantly
Overhauled
A lr
Stloc:h, American R~~elng Rima
Wid•
12.000 61..
446-7375

o'Y'""' ,,..

BOAT!RS

KUBOTA
Parts Service

HURST tRACTOR SALES
28 HP 4 WO S6995; 20 HP 4 WO
$5,195, Route7 North, Martina
614-374-415'1

197'8 Mae Tandem dump truck,
13112ft bed, $12,500, 1114-t\l2·
2~78

1978 Chny Tandem dump tr~o~ek,
15ft bed, otA-of-trame rllbu!H 1
3641 motor, new paint, gooa
ndlaltl,.., $8000, 814-V82-2UB

1978 f.t50 RinGO' $1.100. 304-

Mulll Sail 2 QuonMI An:h Style
StMl Building• Bnnd New
Nevar Erectacf. Orw Ia 40l50
Will Sell For Balance Owed Call
am (800) SoQ-.6671

1082 ctoov.,olll pickup, 350.
,.pilr, t1500,

aU1o trans , needs
814-892-6128

1082 O.tNn King Cab, 4 cyt, 5
speed , 4 new tires, $800, good
cond , :KM·e:75-20111

WEST

A LDE R

• 976
• A &lt;J4

• fl 3 2

The simplest
is often best

• K92
t AJ 7

+ AKJIO
Vulnera ble No rth-So uth
Dea ler South

By Phtlhp Alder

up wtth Stanley
Vanessa leaves Dabms (A)
Stareo J:;l

your

:Soo~~=~98 rtor

Scientific American
Frontier• Human -powered
submarmes , a possib le c ur e
for muscular dystr o phy

Homa,

Slereo

614-446 -2725'
'

1066

Services
81

Poycltology

all Cl) 1121 Ill Top Cop1 A

EEKANDMEEK

task IOfce an
a"anged msrr'lleads Ia
specJa l arson

1 wwr OJT VJrrH A
Bl LLIWAIR£. LAST fVI6HT
VJJ.!l) 11-J) ISTW f-1£. (OLW
y::t.\t ALL 111-1 ffi::&amp;£M5

'-lCL' can
HAVE. NJY

murder Stereo

illllll The Slm

A&lt;Ct':LE.M)

up Ste•eo C
t!! Murder, Slle w..te Q

~

ac.-ondChon
(1!1 PrimoNowo Q
QJ Thot'o My Dog Ste•oo

f'ROeUMS?

Improvements

1

R

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional lifetime guaran tee local rarerwncoa lumlshed
Fret astlmat es Call colleet 1614-237-0488, dar or n1ght •
Rogars Basement Walllfproo- •
ling

COmptiBtiOn Of ffiUSIC
parod1es tn clude Mtchaei
Bolton and Hammer Stereo

i

B E HIND

A TREE .

9·00 llliJ 11)1 Choe,. Cliff th inks
Johnny Carson w1 H use hts
)ole&amp; on the To n1ght Show

Ste•eo

member of an old-lashtoned
brewery ts murdered (PI 1 o t

~i

Stereo~ Q

(Season Ftnale) J1m torblds
Brenda ~see Dylan agatn
Stereo

t!! MOVI

BARNEY
IA f'"'-

MINE FIELD fl

87

c.u 304-t'Ts-4154 for
llmet"

tr.. • ...

a

(l) II

Stereo

ASTRO-GRAPH

'Your

'Birthday

Moy I , 1112

Upholstery

at the

daiSY

v1ew
13 Des1res
14 Ltable to
httgatton
15 Kmg of the
Huns
16 Flehe s on
17 Course of
treatment
19- Miss
20 German Mr
21 long hme
23 Gresk letter
26 Sea eagle
27 Ktnd of dog
29 Relating to
grandparent s
30 Actor -

3t
33

44

Pass

Pass

Openmg lead t K

~ocs m wtlh th e ace and watches hlS
partn ers card cl o se ly Here East diS-

c ard:;

the dub

two denymg any mter-

est tn that su1t Ttus makes tt easy for
Wes t to sw1tch to spades and defeat
t he con trac t

Arc yo u lhmkmg that because there
wa s a smgleton d1amond 10 the dum-

my East could hav e gaven a su1t-pref·
ere nee s1gnal at t nck one? That 1S true
tf you and you r partner have dlSCussed~
the JlQ''-.'· Bbthty and - very tmportant
- tf there 1s no c hance of a trump
promotion
Rea~

art' tnVIft'd ro

to l'ful/i p A./der m

In order to be successful 1n the year
ahead , you wtll have to focus on your
goals and objectives free from dlslracUon If you attempt to do too much It
could lead to your undmng

TAURUS (Aprii211-M.oy 20) II 1ou·•e1nvolved In a collective endeavor today

and don't want to share credtl With an
tndMdual you dtSitke, you might do
SOfl'lethlng counterproduct ive Gel a
jump on ltle by understanding the Influences governtng you In the year ahead
Send lor Taurus Aslro-Graph predtc·

ly to be amb1l1ous and tndustnous today , but you may do thmgs lhe hard
way, and thereby prove t o be counter productive
Thmk all your moves
through c arefully

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) II oth"'s

SAGITTARIUS tNov 23-0ec:. 21) II yoo

sense you are harbonng doubts about
your ideas today, they aren 1 likely to
have faith tn them either Be posU1ve
about your concepts or d1scard them

hop4' to bluff your war through something sticky today. you'd better have the
poker face to pulltt off Opponents w111
read
your
1n1enlions
from
your
e xpresstons

CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) ThiS may
not be one of your bet1er days tor man-

word

51

Drooped

54 College
student

55 Strong po ml s

56

Pol1te word

57 Most recent
58 Surg1ca1
Instrument

DOWN
t Wrap
2 To lhts plac e
3 To back. of

1 Swtlt a1rcralt
labbt 1

Ship

Astray
Mustca l
symbols

4 Gathe r

36 Soak (flax )
3 7 Icy
38 Freshwate r

18 Thus lar

22

Eared 1eal
24 Actor
Holbrook
25 Anc1ent
21 Tangled

8 Great Lak e
9 Actor -

(labn cl
5 Layer ot
tissue
6 Pront o
(abbr )

Julia
Nohc e
1 1 last m o

10

mus

12- Memes

28 Auto racer AI
29
30
32
33

R1nr tsland
Dehydrated
Nourished
Mrs tn
Madnd
34 Put out of
Sight
35 Surrounded

by
39 Thousand
40 Rtpudlatton
41 Melodic
42 Myaterr
44 Womes
45 Cash
~+-1~+-1 47 S· shaped
molding
49 Snakes
50 Early mhabitant of Butatn
51 Actor Mtnto

Q

- -+- +--1

~ PrimeTltfto Live
Eorno

agmg your own resources much less
those of others Don't get involved m
anyone else s matenal atfa1rs even tf
tnvited

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) II people you •e
Invol ved with today feel you are too selfserving they mtghl deliberately put obstacles In your path Make 11 all for one

and one tor all
VIRGO [Aug. 23-hp1. 22) In attempt .
lng to tulflll your ambitious object ives
today, be careful not to operata at ex tremes You're on the right track but
the rails are rather flimsy

LIBRA (hp1. 23-0ct. 22) lnvolvemonts
that have strong elements of nsk should
be aVCMded today your will to lose mtght
take precedence over your will to win

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You •e like·

'

AQUARIUS (Jon. :!G-Fob. 11) Slrlve to
maintain harmony and balance '" all
rour affairs loday II not, things could
start to get out of synch In several areas
simultaneously

PISCES (Fob. :!G-Mo,.h 20) Unfo•tunat~y , others might not

be

too eager to
do for you what you II be prepared to do
for them today Don 't request a favor
unless It's absolutely necessary

ARIES

(Morch

21-April

11)

Even

though you mar have to deal with some
rathet' difficult Individuals today , you 'll
handle people 10 a way that wUI promote
cooperation rather than aggravation

-+-+~52 Light - -

~ Human Factor

-4---1- +-1

Stereo

lealhtr

53 Aug lime

illlll
Hu ''" C
a LoH TV Wl1fi WIHiomo
and AH S tereo

t3 World Nowo
a) 700 Club Whh Pol
Rttllortoon
10:30 CIJ MOVIE. Five Coro Stud
(PG) (2 15)
Ill Wool Vlrglnlo Report

al Tlxal Connection Stereo

CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jon. 11) 11 w111
take exceptionally-shrewd maneuver mg on your part to come out on top tn a
business matter tOday Keep !his In
mtnd when you stt down to negoUate

ant-,Uy queJ-

l .lfl'

48 Conc1se

ill Undor Fire

1111111

~

of Uus ~pe
Tbf'y can ~ .nsrm?d only /..brt&gt;usiJ UN ro/UlTUJ
© 1-NEWVAPDiht£
U.lNk

l i&lt;W

Nelli to Sat

Stereo

t10ns today by ma1hng $1 25 plus a long
sell -addressed , stamped em•elope to
Astro-Graph c/o thts newspaper P 0
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3 428
BB sure to stale your zod1a c s1gn

Pas.s

45 Nothmg but
46 Negat1ve

11)1 L.A. Low Becke•

(!I 3-2·1 ontte1

East

torto1se

co nfr o nts Ktttredge about
IB&amp;ktng confidential
1nlormatton Stereo . C

""'

, - -._,....;,._ _ _....:__ __,
Mowrey'a Upholetsring Mrvle'- •
lng tri counly al'll 27 YNI"I The n
but In tumlture uphol.. ering

Pass

Slerao

the gang s p la ne Stereo

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

of•·

Pass

4¥

10 round s . fr o m Bozeman

f 0:00 Ill

&amp;

We
Do Hauling Anytime
Anyplace, No Job Too Blg
Too llnle Basement Cleaning,
Ganarsl Work, Any Kindt 61,..;.
371·2278 Anytlmt

3•

Ltghtwetgtlt bOut Todd

Dav1s
Sew-Vae
Sarvl ce
Georges CrHk Ad Parts su~
pllas, pickup, lnd dellnrY 614·
446..0294

85 General Hauling

particularly

Monl (L)
(1!1 LI"Y King Uvol
a) Fotltf' Dowling Myotorioo
Ste•eo Q
1:30 Ill Ill 11)1 Wingo !Season
Finale) A. ragtng storm hits

1

Pass

Fosto• 122- 1. 19 KOs) vs Jeff
MayweetM• 122 t ·I 6 K0s)

Saptle Tank Pumping $90, Gellla
Co RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1-800-537-!1528

RHidanlial
or
commorcial
wifing, new service or r.palra
Muler lleanMd elaclriclan
Ridenour Elaefrical, W¥000306
'
904-675·1786

2¥

@ Top Ronk Boxing

LOOK AT MY VIEW 11
IT'S A DADBURN

ALL MINE fl

Carter's Plumbing
FoUf"'h and PIM
Galllpotle, Ohio
fi14-446-3888

North
2•

40 - Kap1ta l
43 Turmo•l

Al'!&gt;lonoi(PGI

121 NnhvHie Now

LOOK AT THAT VIEW,
MAW II AN' IT 'S

Heating

West
Pass

1200)

Ron's TV Service, IP«hillzlng
In Zenllh at10 Mrvlclng moo!
olhor brandt HouH calls, •tso
soma appliance ,.pairs WV
304-5~ - 2398 Ohio 61 ..-44&amp;-2454

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgeratlon

.

I NT

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

Murray

II1JI) Stroll Storioo

l!lliD Bovorly Hlllo. 90210

JET
Aarwllon Motors, repaired Naw
&amp; re-bulll motors In stock. RON
EVANS, JACKSON, 0H 1-800537-9528

Q

Ill Myotorrl A board

(!I

Hick's Rooting, O.C::k• Porches
And Painllng FrM Estlmateal
Cheap Prices, 10 Ynr Ex·
perience, 614-388-8964
J W Cons! ruction Room .Ad
d1tlons, Roots , Deeka , Siding
And All Types Of E:ltertor And
ln tanor Pa1nllng Will GiYI Low
License Bid 61-4 ·245-SOJe

I~ Again

Stereo

WHERE r:::D 'rOi-l eTAND
CN THE Eil-IN o:::NTR:JL
155UE&lt;'

Cur11s Homo Improvements ·
Years Ellperlenca On Older &amp;
Newar Homes Room Additions Work,
Roofing '
Foundation
Kitchens And Baths Fr. . Ea~
ltmates 1 Reterenc: .. , No Job
Too Big Or Small' 614-367.0516

You Aokod fo•

Signal accurately

1 -

lllliD In Living Colo• A

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP.,-.,.__,-~-------..,.---

partner never watches what you

play But on most hands 1t does pay to

7 H1de from

Whitley ts swept oH her teet
by Bryon s reactton to the
Senate race Stereo []

South

the l1 e of the cards to make h1s contract t\nd 1t IS doubl y stlly to s1gnaltf

ACROSS

8:30 llliJ 11)1 OIHttent World

Barf'lfltt Home lmprovaments
Addlllons , Garages, Painting,
Rooting
Experienced
Raasonable 614-446-8568 614:
446-4316

84

no

Mtlhouse lalls lor 8 new gtrl
and Bart trtes to break them

llJ1AT

Home

Plumbing

J;J

Ill Worid of Abnonnol

'l7 Ft Southwind SIMps Six

.9864 3
+AJ 2

SOUTH

espec1ally when dec larer has to guess

g

10 11 shde..Jn daluxe truck cam per Fully Hll-conlalnad SSOO
080 304-675-3531

.,

EAST

+ A K J 10

+ 976

known about the lie of the land
Cover the East and Sou th cards m
th e d1agram Agamst four he arts , you
lead the diamond lung two. three ace
Now declarer plays the heart kmg
from hand Plan the defen se
North s sequence. a tran sfer btd fol lowed by a ratse showed at least SIX
hearts and game-tnvllatlonal values
W1th only queens and Jacks (' quacks" )
lhlS was a shght ove rbid
As East probably has only one
heart West should duck the heart kmg
When South lead s a second heart Wf'st

Motor Homes

54

t K Q 10 5

Cubs (L)
(l)ll lilii MOYIE
Preocription Murd., 12 00)

Campers &amp;

67S-2352 anar4:30.

REPOSSESSED

P H ILLIP

79

Sale

K•anM 16' fold-up dltik $800
Haw Holland 63 11ay Un.;lbelar'
1400, lnt'l baler 420, $600, po.l·
holt diiOar, 460, 14mo old polled .,nrord bull, 614-7C2-2535

• 2
+ Q

begmmng of the hand when less ts

;;:~:;;::-;::;:--;;-7--,:;-­

1973 GMC Tsndem dump truek,
131f2ft ~. nme good, ~o.
614· 902-2478

• Q J W/ 6 3

a

at

r.-Ht

+ C/54

Ch1cago

82

Phone 814-2~944.

NORTH

BRIDGE

Gulnr1s Mercury Merine Sarvlee
Mercury, Manner, Morc rulser
specialist
Mercury cer11lled
Mobile, Wa come to you 614 259-S979

Case Combine With 2 Grain
Haad s , $1,100, 2 Row Tobacco
Setter,
$975,
John
Deere
Mowmg Machlna, $450 Call Af..
ter 5 PM 614-24$-5152

Rtd 1a&amp;6 2dr Dodge Charger,
lmlfm llereo, 5ap., new etutch,
al'larp, good eond., $1850, 080,
For Sala Naw Holl and Rake, 614-~ll-2585
Baiera, Mowers, &amp; Hay Binds, ;;;=:;:c-:C.:C'=:-:--::-:-:-c-Piowa, Disks, Com Plan1ars, Wrecked 1187 Ford Muftang,
Manu,.. Spreaders, Seeders, newtr qbulfl 302 engine, $.500,
Drills And Cultivators Other E- _&amp;_14_·1'1_2·.:28;:.20;.:;.._ _ _ _ __
qulpmen1
How.'t
Farm
72 Trucks lor
Machinery,
Jacklon,
Ohio

AM e r ilsl en 1n g lo a le ngthy p anel diSCUSSI On th at con
cerned ou r na t1on al po iiii CS I overh ea rd o n e
fe llo w
say
·Ev en when I h e e xpM s agree the y may be
MI STAK EN

a

Houston Astros

I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
r s
Messy Offen Zlfcon MISTAKEN

Shakes peare wro te ~ Ha ha wh at a
f o ol Honest y IS1 and Trust. h1s sw o rn
brother a v e ry s1mple gen tle m a n 1 At
the bndge tabl e 1t can be a bad 1dea to
tell the truth w1th all of one s stgnal s

(!} M1jor L11gu1 81aebllll

su b1ect

II

breaks

Will build pallo eavers deck s
scrnnad rooms , pul up vlny i
siding Of !railer tklrtlng 614
245-915 2

1981 Yugo, 42,000 Actual Mllea,
$89S 614-245-5152

ro THf ;ruPia.

BOATERS

51ll5

1985 Dodge Shelby Charger
Turbo, 5 apnd, rMIJa11varl good
mpg &amp; sharp , skslng 2,750
304-675-6306

-

a

(l)
Entertalnmenl Tonlghl
stereo J:;l
lilii Momo'o Family
~ G WhHI of Fortune Q
11211D FomiiJ Feud
Be 1 Star Stereo
rD LPBT Bowling Fmm
Ashland Ky (L)
Croaaflrw
8:00 llliJ 11)1 Cooby Show Rudy

~tfCfcANf&gt; -fo'rH

J 9 Martne Service, Servmg All ·
Your Boetlng Needs, Parts, k cnsoriH, Two Cycle Oil And '
Sorvlco 614-256-6160

Coac:hman Mini motor ho,.,.,
460 Ford engine, roof air,
ganerator, garage llapt, A -1
eond, $7,800. 090 :104-458·

1985 Camero , V-6, auto, air
'M ,OOOM I, $3000, 614-}112-2396

,

HP •

t982 FOfd Fairmont, Fair ConcH! ton, 1986 Chevy Speetrum,
Gocxl Condition, 614-446-4580.

1985 Sulek laSab,.. llmhed,
4dr sed;m, bNutitul fam1ly Cit,
llka new, all opt1ons, 307 V-8,
$2995, 614-992-67151

Ka1ser

a_

Atlanta Braves at Pittsburgh
P1rates (l)

)ufVUNI.J ifAVE-L.r

tOft aluminum boall $200, china
cabmel StDO exere ss bilca $SO
call atler 5 00 PM, 304-675-7554

S.tf-Containad,
614-446-1013

1984 Pontiac 6000 4 dr Y..fi eng
PS, PB AC, rut defroster C.ll
304-675-1224

Hft.p WON/JEflf'/6

1n o ne

does

I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
€) ~~~;,,'r~MBif 1001 I I I I I I I I I
a

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l50 Yamah1, 4 WhMier HI, Low

Eve ryon e

repl1ed 'Y ea. he s1g hed
t ul I was pl anm ng 10 lad

I I' I' I I'

Q

Spo.toeont..
(1!1 Monoytlno
a) Tho Wollono
7:05 CIJ Addamo Family
7 30 llliJ 11)1 Jooperdyl C
C!l Now It Con Be Tola
CIJ Moj., Looguo Boooball

sa 1d

NUTM!Y

; G Cu"""l AHal• C
illiiD Sttr TNtt: The ~elll
Goneretlon C
1121111 Entertifnmont Tonlghl
Stereo C
t!! MacGJv" Q

1990 Honda CRX-HF, whtlalblua ,

g rad e tn econom tcs my son
badly

The Jefferson•
(l) 11 lnolde Edition 1;J
(!I Ill MocNoll/lotuo•
NowoHou• Q
lfjll Morrlod. Whh Children

1909112 four wheeler, 300ce, U ·
cellM'II condition, 614 -742-25n

lihlnk I m ge1t1ng a poor

I

CRANO

a) Now Zom&gt; Ste•eo Q
B 35 CIJ Andy GriHI1h
7·00 13liJ 11)1 WhHI ol Fortune

1985 Yamaha FJ1100, ax callent
cond111on, $2300. 614 99 2 3449
ai1N 6pm

1980 Bukk Regal High mtleage
Runs good $500 304-882-3615

1983 Mercury Grand Marqule,
77,000 actual miles, loaded 19711
Flettwing camper, Mit conlalned , awning, ntce 304·T13-

W YOU~ C~ECK &amp;!OK
READY I YOO tl HoAR
FROM U" AGAIIJ 1

1983 Honda 110 threa wheeler ,
high I low r11nge, new 11rU,
$500 runs good, 304-675-2074

285 MF Tractor, W1th Leeder,
$9 850, 180 MF W1th Loader, 81 Marcury SW, Good WCN"h Cat
$6 550, 65 MF With Bush Hog, 8 Cyl Good Tlra &amp; Gu
$2 79 5 614 286-6522
Mileage $650 614-446·1'375

Sat"

DID YOU l&lt;'t.ALLY ~IIJK
YOU COUW GETAWAY

Motorcycles

Nice pigs for salo, 614-9411-2017

Transportation

Army
Surplus,
c:amllauge,
men • junior sizes, small •
qutpment, rental surplus clothing, Sam Somerville s, 5 m1les
East 1·77, R1v.nswood by San
dyvllle Post ot1tcto, Frl Sal Sun
Hoon..fi 00 PM Aner hours Deys 304-273-5655

1.aoG-S31-9528.

Horses for sale, Appaloose
G1ldlng 5 rr old paelng Mare 4
yr Old Walking horse Gelding
Ellc trait horses, 304-882-29fr9
alter 5 00.

Supplies

6413

Concf'l4:e
I
Plal'llc Seplte
Tanks, Jill AwaUon TanU Ron
Enna Eni•P* IMS, Jeckson, OH

Hof'SI for sale Well brok1 Tennessee walker. 7 year old C.ll
alter 7pm 304-57s.2001

74

-:::=--::---:-:-::':-::--:c::::--::::1977 Kawasaki KLR 600 304

Mit• 614-445-1304

TirH, 33 - 12 SO - 15 5 Co.arMr,
614-J67-0657.

DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES
$31 995 &amp; Up Buill On Your lol
S.e Our Models, 614-886-7311

Augus-Cows and Calv81. For
Sill 614-446-4447

Building

A.KC rag l stared miniature Dach
shund pupp1es, 2 red dapple
males, 614 -992-5624

45

a

(l)
lilii ~ ll!l
11)1 NtWI

\II

Apartment

1bdrm
apartment, Syraeuae,
unfurnished, $165/mo., Includes
watar, sewage, and trash,
daposlt, 614-99"2-7289

I' I I !' I

a

Merchandise

1 BR Oullll. Setting. 10 min 's
from Gall1~lls $2251Per mo
Ut 11111. . Paid Deposit 2 Refar s
Required 614-446-7604

LATUME

ae..

Houses lor Rent

44

•

; Cl) 11)1 1D CBS Newo

Apple Grove area, Tabath Moore
Rd, 7 room house, bath,
screened porch, large lawff, !Tee
gas garden raady to P'ant, 304 ~3-6~66 or Jl3-6788

Rea rrange lellers of the
l our Kromb led words be
low ro iorm four s•mp le words

Tour
(1!1 World Today
a) Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo Q
6.05 Cil
n, Hillbillies
B.JO llliJ 11)1 NBC Nowo Q
C!l S.vod by lho Bel
(l)
lilii ABC Newo IJ.
(!I Wlkl Amtrico Ste•eo Q
Squire One TV Ste•eo

Rentals

3 bedroom 2 story home,
referon ce &amp; deposll rttqulr&amp;d ,
304-675·3178

0

t!! Smurfo Q
rD lnoklo lhe Senioo" PGA

Acru,

2 Bedroom House, Unfurnished,
Eureka , $275 + Deposit 614 2566408, ~14 -256 -6718

'Ulllfl

C!l Ykleo Pow.,

1i75 Font Econohna Van , need s
anglne woril, best oHar or trade,

WOlD
GAM I

THAT DAILT

EVENING

i'OU

,sa

Mo
lui stly
Bulldtng
Wooded,
StleWnh
Th1tA Baault
Has A
V1ew For M1los
N~ee Level
Ortveway,
Rural
Water
Elactn c 1ty, And Phona Serv1 c l
Available 3 Miles From Holzar
H
1
osplal , $39,000 61~46-4127.

41

.

'

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-13

Television
Viewing

DONI

lEARN HOW fO
00 THIS 51AA£
AAIH, i&gt;JilAT 00

Chtvy 5 -10, 5apaad white ,
tor full detail•

3044"-

IF YI)J

a:oo rn•

lA.VNE'S RlRNITURE
Complete homa tumls:l~i:
Hours Mon-Sal, t-5 61
0322, 3 mi~ out Bula.vllllll Rd
Frw Oolivery

Commorclal Space To Rant In
Oall Hill, 11,000 Sq A 614.,.462125

Very ni ce 14x7tl mobile home on
prlvale acre 3 bedroom/ exira
room wlwoodburner, m1 or appliances, $15,500 or lake o ver
paymanls w/aomsthlng down
304--5 7&amp; -2783

air,

rongoo.

t986 Clay1on Weatwlnd 14:tt55
Two Bedrooms, AC, Natural
Gas, A 1 Cond!lion 1 $8 ,800
Phona 514· 992-7HH Afttr 6 30

Fo r Sa le 14xfi5 Trailer With 1
Ac re l and State Route 554, Call
614 3677517

unrt

APPUANCES

OvarstuHad
Krothler swivel
rocker/ reeliner, light brown
good cond, $75, 614-949--2585

5711

t989 Chevy s-10, $4300
992·2478

114-~1238

46 Space lor Rent

18

ntl

0 J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U~83 Fotcl Bronco, ntw pa int ,
aluminum whMIS, 3" body tltt ,
1200 lim , S1500. 614-992-6823

lohonC..,.ts,f14..446--

Dak dining room ut Wilson
gott elubt complele set 304615-61B4 after 5 00

Access To Bank Reclaimed
Mobile Homu, Creal S.teetlonl
Many At $500 Down, And Take
Over Ps ymenls Call 1-800-589·

Will Baby1lt In My Homa RodArN. Refer•nees Available
Ca I 614·245-SSSl

8~ S1vlngs On AJI Carp.~ In
Slock. Cah And Carry, Mc»-

SIHplng rooma with cooking
Al so 1railer tpaes All Moll-ups.
Call after 2 00 p m , 304 -~
5651, M. .on WV

1989 Redman Oanvllla, Total
Electric 2 Badrooms, Aeduetd
Price 614 367-0139 After Sp.m.

17 yr
old wanla s umrm~ r
mowlnglrard WCN"h re asonable
raft, hardworking , has own
loots, 614-992-6551 altar 5pm

Goods

1985 Wmdsor 2bl', Fully Furni shed Di shwasher, Disposal,
TV Stereo System Throughout ,
Washer &amp; Dryer, 2 Bedrooma Of
Furmlure And Llv 1ng Room Fur nllure M1crowavt, "Refrtgan~tor
And Stove 6t4-446-3547, 304743-4356

PM

t982 Ptc•.Up Silverado, Ea celltnt Condition, $3,500, 1978
Chrevy Heavy Hall, E1cellent
Concfltlon, $2,000 614-446-4514

2722

c---~

Retrain
NowllrSoulhe at~ lern
Busln8$S Collega Spring Val l ey
Plaz.a Call Today, 614-44!i-4 l 67fr
Reglstarlllon ln&lt;l5-1274 B

Wanted to Do

Lots jommg Poml • 100% owner
fmancmg at $10146 par month
buys all three lots 304..fi75-

61~ ·992-5403

Financial

' AVON' ALL AREAS 1Share your
l1me w1th us You II love lhl
company 1-800-992-6356

AVON I All Areas
Spea rs 304 675 1429

Wanted to Do

Gtvl ptano lusons In my homo
to advanced students &amp; 1duH1
Also leach cording &amp; t111nsposmg It lnlerutad, plene call

Help Wanted

' EXTIU INCOME ' 92"'
Eam $200 -$500 weakly ma1lmg
trav el broc hures For mlormaI!On sltfld a stam ped ad dre ssed
envelop• to Ga la~y Tra vel Inc
P O Box 13106, Si l ve r Sprmgs
Md 20911-3106

14

18

Household

USED

May 7, 1992

72 Trucks lor Sale

Wuh•rs, d,.,a, retrlgenton.,

Lots tor salo trailers acceptable 304 675m2

To A Good Home . Mother Cat

51

GOOD

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Shepherd falhor Coll ie, 304-675-

6

Merchandise

H1daway Bed, Double,

.

'

Thursday, May 7, 1992

lor Sale

Mll st Co mo To Pick-Up 614-446-

-.

11

:oo rna m (l) a ()) 111
1111111 1121 ..

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~ ~ Cf'WI. . . . - Ct'M-.d l'r()ftl QI.IOIII!Onfo b-,. fWnout po«&lt;ppoeo per! llld Pf"MQffl
Eadl .....,. "' lhl . _ lllllr1da 1o1 1100tt1.- r
diM
R

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r .,_,.

11)1 Nowo

(l) NIWIWIIch
ArHnlo Holl Ste•eo

tjJIII

OMocO,..rC

a c.- end C"lteoo
rD Be-ll Tonlghl

-rtown

(1!1 Sporto Tonight
a)
Stereo Q
11 :30(!) Kojok C
Jolin McLoughlin'• Ono

m

on Ont

IIliiJ NIQhUino ~
1121e 'Silk Sttlkl o' Cri...
nmo~r Pri... 11M
Stereo

@ S
Conte•
(1!1 Moneyllno
~ MOYIE: Six Block Ho,.oo

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XCYCZ

UFYGXP
G X

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PREVIOUS SOLUTIO N "Gee, why c ant direct o rs be different from
111m? Why do we always have to carry that same musk?" -

Sploltoe.ti

fHM

te

&amp;wwen

�1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Health
care
services

Bush will work to make LA 'A city of hope'
LOS ANGELES (AP) - PreSIdent Bush, getting a fusthand look
at areas devastated by last week's
riots, says his administration is
committed to helping return Los
Angeles to "a city of hope" now
that peace has been restored.
"We could not begin to rebuild
until the vtolence had stopped and
the order restored," Bush saJd as
he began a two -day visit late
Wednesday . "We have met the
rlfSt mission. ' '
The administration has come
under attack. particularly from
some Democratic leaders, for not
moving quickly enough or not
domg as much as it could following
the outbreak of violence triggered
by the acquittal of four white
policemen charged in the beaong of
a black motorist.
Bush was to tour burned -out
neighborhoods of South-Central
Los Angeles today and meet w&gt;th
victims of the vtolence and with
community leaden; mvolved in the
cleanup.
" I will assure them, as I can
assure all the citizens of Los Angeles, that the federal government is
com mined to help this city- help
this city rebuild," he said in arrival
remarks Wednesday ni~ht.

Wednesday, Bush called the $600
milhon federal relief effon. which
includes low-cost loans, granLs for
temporary shelter and emergency
food shipments, "a good beginning."
Visiting Los Angeles one week
after the nation's most violent outbreak of civil disorder this century,
Bush had special praise for those
who risked their lives to help vic tims of the riots.
"Thank God for what you dtd,"
he said. "You did more than stm -

Bu sh al so was to- meet with
police officers, firefighters and
Nauonal Guard troops before
retummg to Washington on Friday.
"I know I will learn a lot from
what I see," he said.
While in the riot area, the president was to attend prayer services
at a church. He also planned to
meet later today with state and
local officials and to meet separate[y with leaders of the Korean and
Hjspanic communities.
In hi s arrival comments

----Lottery numbers---CLEVELAND (AP)- There
was one ticket sold naming all six
num~ers drawn in Wednesday
mght s Super Lotto drawing, and
the winning ticket JS worth $12
million. the Ohio Lonery said.
Lottery officials said they did
not know whether the buyer of the
winnin~ ticket chose to take the
money '" 26 annual payments or m
a single, discounted lump sum .
The Jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing drops back to
S4 million.
The winning numbers were 3, 9,
II , 13, 30, 46
·
The Kicker number was 521415.

In Ptck 3 Number.;, the winning
number was 197.
In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 2150.
Pick 3 Numbers
1-9-7
(one, nine, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
2-1-5-0
(two, one, five, 7.ero)
Super Lotto
3-9-11-13-30-46
(three, nine, eleven, thirteen,
thiny, forty -six)
Kicker
5-2-1-4-1-5
(five, two, one, four, one, ftve)

ply save a life, you gave a nation
great cau se for hope. And you
proved amidst the hate and the horror that this is sull the Cny of the
Angels."
He saluted tho se " who have
worked urclcssly night and day to
restore order and to return the city
to ac&gt;ty of hope."
Bush also promtsed to keep an
eye on the government's larger
goal of helping to lift residents of
the nation 's inner cities out of
poverty. "There must be no return
to the status quo," he said.
After hts arrival, the president
met at the airport with members of
the task force he had sent here to
coordinate federal relief efforts.

MITCH'S
PRODUCE

pl"rt t rl l

Copyrighted 1992

HANGING

5

BASKETS•••••••••• ]9 5

inccnuves.

"Blue Cross can'tlake all the
SICkest people who want to go to
Blue Cross," sa1d spokeswoman
Paula Shmak. "(The unillSured) are
uninsured because they couldn 't
pass the health screen for anybod y."
But Ney saJd there would be no

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Sixty-one LOp academic achievers in Meigs County schools were

honored Thursday night at the
Eighth Annual Academ&gt;c Excel lence banquet held at Meigs Htgh
School.
Trophies were presented by Ons
Smith, president of the Meigs
County Board of Education, spon sors of the banquet. to each of the
scholars. Those achieving the htgh cst grades in the fourth, sixth ,
eighth, lOth and 12th graders were
honored at the banquet.
Bob Ord, superintendent of the
Meigs Local Board of Educauon ,
spoke to the sc holars on "C hal lenges and Responsibihtics ." The
speaker said that the challenge to
the sc holars is to develop a program to protect the earth from pollution, to come up wnh ways to
control the proltferation of nuclear
weapons and AIDS, and to bring
about the control of drug abuse and
pornography.
Other challenges with personal
responsibility, said Ord. include the
"learned skills" of doing what is
right, fair and honest. "There is a
time LO be an activist in a fX&gt;Sitivc
way," he satd. He chall enged the

sc holars to IC&lt;IID to manage failure.
to learn from their mistakes and
forge ahead. but to never give m to
fatlure: and 10 "learn hnw to learn".
a ncr:cssily because of the constant ly changing technology.
The imponance of being a role
model was stressed by Ord who
told the students that they can learn
role model posturing wh1ch can
lead to posiltve influences in the
Iives of ol.hcrS.
Ord congratulated the famtlics
of the recognized scholars and
described the banquet as a time of
fcllowshtp with a powerful posi(ive.
Wtlliam Buckley , secondary
supervisor, and John Costanza, elementary supervisor, arranged the
banquet with Buckley g&gt;ving the
welcome preceding the dinner.
SmiLh had the invocauon before
lhc dinner. Students from their
respective schools were rec ognized
hy the local superintendents,
Rtchard Smith, Eastern, and Ord,
Southern, W&gt;th John Riebel present in g for James Carpenter,
Meigs, who is hospitalized.
School board members attend ing and rccogntzed were Smith,

Bob Burdette and Bill Quickel.
Gues ts were regiStered by Kitty
Hazier, TAG coordinator, and
Linda Haley, secretary.

incentives.

"When you work for the state
of Ohio, there's no screening,"
srud Ncy . "If lhc state of Oh10 can
do it, they can do it"
}he open-enrollment proviSIOn,
&gt;f &gt;ncluded 1n the btll, would
replace a House proposal to create
a new Medicaid-style pubhc insurance program, the Ohio Health
lndcmntty Organization, to cover
Ohio' s 1.2 million uninsured resi -

25MHz 386 SX PC With Color
VGA Monitor, Modem and Software

·...•··--· m

TANDY~

.: •••

The ne wspaper satd Ney's
rcwntc of the House health refonn
bdl could he completed as early as

$1588

W!NDCM'S .•
Kf.AJJ(TO Rl N

Critics of the House plan have
said 11 would cost billions of dollars
more than it would take in,
Cnllcs of open enrollment have
said premiums mtght not be affordable, and msurcrs could shift cosLs
to other payers.
In addition to open enrollment
Ncy's plan also m&gt;ght mcludc fr..;
or _subsidizcd hc.allh coverage to
children under age 6 whose famil JCS meet certain tncomc requirements
Ahcmauvcs to fund such a pmll lSJOn were under study, Ney said

.

MICROSOfT.

dcnl~.

A spokeswoman for the Cleveland-based Blue Cross &amp; Rluc
Shield of Oh10 satd the 1nsurcr

S211 Off

·~-.: •••
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Includes Windows
And 3.1 Upgrade.
Microsoft" Works for
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low As $49

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llems 1799 .85

o Tandy 2500 SX/25 HD
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o 85MB hard dnve o 2MB RAM
o MS -DOS' 50

~£A, 1 .00/"1{_

Auto-Reverse Car Cassette

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·~ ... 16 1 0/ 4 04 ~ 11031

NEW YORK (AP) - Amcrt
cans widely believe that poliCe mJS
treal minorities, but seven m 10 111
an Associated Press po ll sa y the
Rodney King verdtct did not Jll.IUi y
the anger of the people who noted
in Los Angele.s.
More than si,; in I0 s.ud thc.rr 1S
a significant amow11 of pollee bru tality against minorities around the
country. Of the I ,006 Americans 111
the telephone poll, 22 percent ~1w
the problem as very great and 41
percent as considerable.
But six in 10 also satd lhc [XJI&gt;u·
in their community treat people uf
all races and elhmc groups cquaJi y
Just 31 percent satd thw loca l

Nearl y nmc &gt;n I 0 blacks sa&gt;d
lhcre IS very grc.1t or considerable
poliCe brutality around the country.
Tw o- thlld s of black s sa&gt;d thw
local police someumcs deal more
roughly Wlll1 m1norJtJC S. Two thnd s of while s sa&gt;d thelf loca l
police treat lhc races equally .
Most Americans think the poliCe
~~ their community u.'\C unjustified
v1 olcnt force against utizcns only
&lt;KcasJonally (57 percent) or never
(2c percent ). E&gt;ght percent said it
happens very often , and 10 pen:ent
salll f&lt;url y often .
A solid maJOnty m the poU, 57
perce nt, sa1d there is more crime in

police somet imes lrcat min orit v

th eir area than there was a year

W:l'\

JU Sti fi ed

ago
'll&gt;c poll found no link between
the pcrccpuon that crime is on the
increase and the scnll ments that
local police behave fanly or that
th e anger 1n Lo s Angeles was

Aog 149.95
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nc.J.t week .

Majority perceives police
brutality, rejects LA rage

9995

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--------------------~-------

PRESENTED TROPHY - Jessica Alley, Letart FaUs Elementary rourth grader, was one or 61 students recognized at Meigs
County's ~igbth Annual Academic Banquet held Thursday night
~I Metgs Htgb. School. Here Oris Smith, Meigs County Board prestdent, left, asststed by John Costanza, elementary supervisor, present• a trophy to Jes.•ica. (See additional photos on page 3)

Local briefs.----.

6995

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Tape Player

Patrol probes deer-car wreck

Reg . 99.95
low As SIS Per Month.

2995

A Stockport man's car sustai ned li gh t damage in a deer-car
wreck on County Road 25 (Pomeroy Pike Road) Thursda y.
According to the Gallm-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
Donald C. Holland, 36, was northbound on County Road 25 and
struck and ktlled a deer when &gt;t ran tnto the path of his 1985
Oldsmobtle 88.
The deer was left at the scene and the Ohio Department of TrJnsponauon was noufied for di sposal.

• ~ 3 )7 1 IC&gt;n e! Du lse di;thng

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149-BSO

Board of Elections to meet

2388 ,~·~·

Off

• :&gt;2

The regular meeting of the Meigs County Board of Elections will
be Tuesday at 4:30p.m. at the board off&gt;ec on Mechanic Street in
Pomeroy.

2 1&lt;1

Slle Pr~ee End1 ~19/Q 2

Absentee voting date announced

TANDY

Absentee votmg for the June 2 pnmary election will begin on
Wednesday, according to Rna Smuh, director of the Meigs County
Board of Elccuons.
Absentee halloLs will he mat led or may be picked up from the
board office at that ume . The dcadltnc for absentee application and
absentee voung &gt;S 12 noon on May 30.

Portable
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N OI vahd on spec oal ardor f l&lt;lll e'~O S S a ~ ~ ng s

19995*

ol! regul ar c ar arog pnces Oiler enci s May

30. 1992

Equipment theft reported

Reg . 399 .95

According to Metgs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Bob Hall
of Landscaping SpeciaiJSLs of New Philadelphia, doing reclamation
work in the Pagev&gt;lle area, reponed th e theft of two tractor tire.s and
rims. 15 hooks that held the tires in place, and a cylinder and hoses
from a piece of construction equipment at the work site.
The theft occurred between April 28 and May 6.

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EMS units answer calls
UniLs of Meigs County Emergency Services answered three cal ls
for assistance on Thursday.
At 11:11 a.m., Syracuse unit wen t to the Arbaugh Addition in
Tuppers Plains. Isaac Jackston was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.
At 5:59p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center. Elmer
Lee was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At II :38 p.m. , Pomeroy
unit went to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Kenny
Toops was laken tO Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Reg . 1995.00

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exira Sa le Price Ends 519192

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PR ICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

Sale Ends 5/30/92

3 Sections , 46 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 8, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. NewsDaoer

Top students honored

FLATS............... 5695

could not support open enrollment
w&gt;thout special tax breaks or other

lomers.

·
The poll by ICR Survcv
Research Group of Mcdta, Pa., was
taken Friday through Tuesday . as
trOOps helped restore order tn Los
Angeles.
In interviews around the coumrv
last weekend. separate from tl&gt; ~
poll, some people blasted the not
en as criminals taking advantage ol
a sitllalion. Others said the violence
erupted from a long-simmcnn g
sense of racial injustice.
"Realistically, th1s is JUst an
explosion. What the blacks arc try ing to do is say, 'This is our coun try too,"' said Carl Nonon, 35, a
black security guard in Ja ckson,
Miss.
In the poll, 23 percent said the
anger of the people who rioted '"
Los Angeles was jusufied. Seventy
percent said it was not JUStified, a
feeling that carried through all cate gories of age, income , se x and
region.
However, blacks were tw ice as
likely as whites to say the anger

Lo1, tonigh t in uppn -W-..
( "tr:.in u: or r.J in . \ ;1f 11r1Ln. Ill ~ II
i n mid 60\. { "h,IIHt' rl! r:.t l/1 .~ II

Insert

MIDDLEPORT

Health reform plan would
require open enrollment

groups more roughly.

Pick 3: 497
Pick 4: M\92

Vol. 43, No. 5

BUSH IN LOS ANGELES· President Bush reads a statement
during arrival ceremony at Los Angeles International Airport
Wednesday night. Los Angeles Mayor Tum Bradley look.! on in
background. President Bush will tour tbe South Central riot area
Thursday. (AP)

CLEVELAND - A state Sen ate ven;ion of a health reform plan
would rcqu~rc that health insurers
offer coverage to a ll Oh1oans
regardless of their health. accordmg
to a published report
The Plain Dealer reponed today
that Sen. Robert Ncy , msurance
committee chai rman, wants lO
guarantee access to health insurance to every Ohio residenl
Citing soun:es it did not identi·
fy, the newspaper sa1d his plan
would require all insurer.; to hold
111 annual open enroll ment period.
Anyone who wanted coverage
could buy it at that time.
Ney, R-Barnesville, sa &gt;d
Wednesday he was considering the
idea of open enrollment but had
made no dec&gt;sion . He SaJd he was
waiting for aides to provide him
with statistics on costs.
Ney did say that if he included
open enrollment in his bill , it would
llpply to every company.
"Everyone w1ll lake some of the
risk," he said. "We're not going to
wallop one insurer.''
The senator saJd he expec ted
insurer.; to oppose the idea
"They 'II go irt&lt;;ane," Ney sa1d.
The non-profit Blue Cross &amp;
lllue Shield health plans offered
open enrollment for decades, but
ll!e three Ohio Blue Cross organi zations dropped it, saying competi torS were luring the healthiest cus-

Ohio Lotten·
•

U X)IJHIEAIJH

MEIGS SCHOLARS RECOGNIZED - These students were
honored ror their academic achievement at Thursday night's
Meigs County Acadel!'ic Excellence Banquet held at Meigs High
School. In the_ recognozed group were, lef't to right, seated, Lorri
Uurnem, Danoelle Crow, Andrea McDonald, Denise Shenefield,

Jobless rate
down in April
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nauon's unemploym ent rate
dropped to 7.2 percent in April, the
f&gt;n;t decline in nme months, as the
eco nomic recovery finally made
itself felt in the labor market, the
governmen t said today .
The Labor Department said that
businesses added 126,000 jobs during the month, the btggcst boost in
payroll employment in almost a
year.
The JObless rate had been stuck
at a 6 1/2-ycar high of 7.3 percent
in both February and March.
Eco nomt sts worried that unless
busmcsses started hiring worker s
soon, the fragtle economic rebound
that began '" January co uld falter,
JUS( as a sim ilar recovery stalled
out last year.
Whtle welcoming the April drop
tn th e jobless rate. analysts cau tioned that further improvements in
unemployment were lik ely to be
extremely gr•dual, given what they
expect wtll be the weakest ecooom tC recovery on record.
That view is also shared by top
business executives. The Business
Co unctl, composed of chief execu tive s of I00 or lhe country's largest
corporations, issued a new out.Jook
Thursday predteting that the jobless
rate cou ld well remain above 7 percen t for the rest of the year.
For April, the htrin g strength
came from a 135,000-job surge at
department stores. hospitals and
othe r service industries. It marked
the biggest increase in serv ice jobs
in almost two years.
That surge helped to offset
weakness in manufacturing and
constructio n. Manufacturing jobs
posted a small mcrease of 8,000
last month while jobs 1n the con struction industry actually fell hy
II ,000.

Tumble in tub
' .
.
won t stop Miller
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Re p. Clare nce Miller has been
limping around the Cap&gt;tol after a
weekend fall in his bath tub, but an
atde said that Miller wa sn't seri ously hurt .
" He'll continue to campa&gt;gn,"
Raben RemLscma sa &gt;d Thursday.
Miller, 74, is running in the
Republican primary against fellow
Rep. Bob McEwen. Once-a-decade
redtstricting merged thctr districLs
mto a stngle seat effective in Jan uary .
Rcintsema said Miller suffered a
prunful bruise.

Jason Witherell, sophomores; and Barbara Anderson, senior; and
standing, Frank Blake, Heather Davenport, Tara Gerlach, Darin
logan, Joe McElroy, seniors. Nol present due to other activilies
wcrel'racy Fife, a sophomore, and Bobby Vance, Chrissy Weaver,
and Robbie Wyatt, seniors.

Slavin named Syracuse
swimming pool manager
Ry KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
Shannon Slavin of Syracuse was
hired as the manager of London
Pool when Syracuse Village Coun cil met tn regular session on Thurs day night
Slavin wa s one of three app lt·
cant s and was hired due to her
o periencc as pool manager last
season . Hired as a li feguard and
swimming mstructor was David
Deem. Roderick Newsome was
hired as a hfcguard.
Council decided to change the
former admtssion gate entrance at
London Pool inlo a storage room
and the outside women's restroom
1nto the adm issio n gate and
entran ce in to the concess ion sland
Kenny Cond 1ff and Malcolm
Gutnthcr met wtth the board
reg ard ing the need for speed con trol o n Second StrceL Counci l
:1 grecd to place stop s1gns at vari ou s intersections 10 help the situa tion .
Mayor James Papc inform ed
council that the v1llagc will be
r cqu~rcd to pay 10 percent or the

cost of a grant project. A total of
S IH .500 will be spent to pave the
vrllagc park1ng lot across from
Kmg F1cld and to mstall 200 rcct of
12-mch culven from Cherry Street
to Bridgeman Street.
llob Wingett, grants administrator for the vJIIage. met with council
rcgardmg the village's paruC&gt;pauon
lfi th e Issue 2 prognun . The vi llage
will he invo lved in two Issue 2 prn jecLo.; this year, cu lvert installation
and pavmg on Bndgeman and Sec ond and on Bndgeman ncar the
Church of the Nazarene. ProJeCted
comp lw on date is September.
1992.
II was reported thai grass had
hccn cut at Snowbal l Hill Cemetery
by Lhe township trustees. Howc~ c r,
the vt ll agc wtll be responsible for
ceme tery maintenance for the
remainder of Lhe summer.
81ds for insurance for the VI l lage were received from Brogan
Warner and Davis-QUJckcl insur ance agencies in Pomeroy . The
Da~is - Quickcl bid. in the amount
of $5,280 was approved. Brogan
Warner's b&gt;d was for $5,50R.

Effect of filing deadline
extension appears minimal
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) - A
belated opportuni ty for fihn g nom&gt; naung pctJtions by candid ate s for
the Ohto Hoose and Senate appar ently wdl produce few lakers.
A U.S. D&gt;stnct Court on Tues day ordered the pre-primary filmg
period re-opened in 65 of the 132
di stricts anti said it must he kept
open until 4 Jl.lll today .
However , based on sk etchy
mformation avrulab le m Columbus
late Thun;day, the opportumty has

produced liulc cu.:Hv1ty .
The coun acted a&lt;; a result of a
lawsuu that tlclayed the adopuon of
new legislative dtst.ricts until two
days before the regular Feb . 20
dead line.
The state Apportionment Board
on Wednesday, staling concern s
about th e. impact on preparations
lor the June 2 primary. asked U.S .
Supreme Court Justice John Paul
Stevens to stay the order. Steven s
refused.
Sec retary of State Bob Taft. a

memhc r of th e board , lr'-r tcd lh L:
rrlntln g or ballot s, rndudJn g ;]
fCi.JUif CJIH..: nt for th C rotatiOn of G in ·
didatc s' name s , 1hc mailin g ol
ahs entcc hal lots and other problems
tiLJt an rnllu,;. of lith -hour candi dat es might entail
~burccn Hrown, Taft · .~ cnrnmu
ni cat1on s dir ec tor. po1nt ed nut .
however. thatrt wao.; too soon to tell
how many new candidiltc s m1~ ltt
co me forward m Lhc :1Glllrrl·d lhs·
tncts hcforc thts aftemoon ·o.; tk ;HI
line.

Carlton scholarship
applications available
Any resident of the Village of
Syrnc use planning to attend a college, univen;ity or trade school for
the 1992-93 term can apply for a ·
Carleton Memorial Scholarship by
obtamtng an apphcation form from
John Lisle, secretary of the Carle ton College Board of Trustees ,
and returning the completed appli cation to him by June 19.
Applications returned after Jun e
19 Will not be considered.

STRICKLAND ENDORSED • Ted Strickland, De~ocratlc candidate ror the Sixth U.S.
Co_n~res.s ton~l J?istrict, bas bern endorsed by the
Tn-State Butldtng Trades Council, a coalition or
building trades unions in Ohio, West Viriginia
and Kentucky. Pictured, 1-r, are Steve Burton,

Where Noted

'

Cnunril also:
- Authomed Jack Wtlllam s to
rcpa1r a w&lt;.~ t c r leak m Lhc co ncession stand at Lh c London PlKJ I,
· Agreed to purcha se roof1n g
mate rial and alummum parnt for
the concess1on stand and press 00). .
- Approved the mJ yor 's report
or fin es collec lCd in the amount ol
$4 15 for April;
- Approved th e po ltcc clud's
report as follow s: 10 cn.atiom for
speeding, I,068 miles on the vcht clc; H2 hnur.o.; of in-serv 1cc : 22 mlst:cl lancous calls: ami radar un11 ccr
tification on Apnl10.
Tota l balan ces rn all lun d . .
were suhmittcd hy Janice l...:1w &lt;..: nn
3S fo ll ow s: Ge nc r31 f_. untl .
S6 ,235 .36: Stree t Co nslru ctJO n
$17,1 94 14 : H&gt;ghw ay , S .U~~ is_'
Ftr c ,
S3.1 03 5'1.
Wat er
S 10 .0R c.53, Goara11t y Meter:
$~ . 550_ (, 6 , Cemet er y. S79 4c.
Touli , $41.02 7. R5.
Attcndrng, 1n JddttJOn to M;1ynr
P:1pc were council members hd
William s , Bill Rou s h. Dcnn1 :-.
Wolfe , J&gt;m Hill, Kenny Buckl ey.
and Katt c Crow; and Cl crkn'rrasurer Janice L1wson.

•

TSBTC Business Manager; Strickland· Gary
Piatt, President of the Lawrcnce/JacksoniGallia
Central Labor Body or AFLICIO; and David
Gregg, Business Representative ror Carpen ters
Local 650 in Pomeroy. (Sentinel Photo by Brian
J. Retd)

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