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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, May 12, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Drug rehab programs in prison CAPS announces contest winners
should addressed; former inmate
Dear Ano Laoden: I'm writing
to add my voice to that of the

inmate who wroce to you from a
Florida prison and complained about
the ab!icnce of prison programs for
drug and alcohol abusers.
Like your ~nden~ I have
been in prison. My case made
inttrnational headlines because I was
a capcain for a major airtine and was
convicted, along with the other
two crew members, of flying while
impaired.
At that poin~ I realized I had to
get serious about a recovery program
and set out to learn everything I
could about the disease that had
brought me to the brink of disaster.
The day following my arrest I
entered Anchor Hospital in Atlanta
for treatment of alcoholism. My
flight crew and I were informed that
there was ooly a vague possibility
that any charges would be filed.
None of us knew of the federal
statute under which all three of us
would eventually be convicted. We
knew only that our careers were

ruined.
Upon entering prison , I came
across a memo that said 77 percent
of the prison population of 500 had
been incarcerated for drug-related
crimes. Even more shocking was
the fact that th= was no program
in place to address that problem
except a one-hour-a-week video

sesslon.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"IHI, Loa A.Dieleia
'11r1w SyiHI~

c........,...,_ .
I fought for two months to get a
recovery program started. Tbe prison
administrators were exuemely
uncooperative. They dragged their
feet and did absolutely nothing
to help. I consistently enoountered
difficulty getting them to simply
unlock the door so we could meet.
In spite of the system, lied the group
every week. It was the flfSI time the
inmates were offered an opportunity
to come together and address their
drug and alcohol problems. Our
program was apprwated by the
inmates and effective for those who
panicipated.
I am a hard-liner who believes
that all alcoholics and addicts are
responsible for their actions. I also
know that recovery comes from
discovery, and there is a time-tested
method whereby the individual, with
the suppon of others who share the
same problem, can recover. This
approach costs the prison absolutely
nothing but cooperation and it can
reap tremendous rewards. The fact
that prison officials are reluctant to
cooperate should be a source of

Community Assault Prevention
Services of Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs Counties in observance of
National Child Abuse Prevention
Month, sponsored a CAP workshop
and an information day at the
Pomeroy Kroger Store.
Throughout the tri -county
school area, CAPS sponsored a col·
OOilg contest and an essay contest
The winners are: Rutland, first,
Mallory Ann King; second, Amber
Ellis; and tie for third, Joshua
Fowler and Erin Bush. Pomeroy,
first, Darrell Jenkins and Aja
McGothin; second, Sonya Powell
and Thaddeus Braumgardner; and
third, Jessica Roush and Hollie
Griffith.
Jolm Aaron Boggs, fourth grade,
was the Saint Peter and Paul essay
winner.
Coloring contest winners arc
Ashley Mitchell, first; Seth Riley,
second; Steven Johnson, third .
Kindcrgarlell winners are Shannon
Austin, firs~ Doug Taylor, second;
and Leah Bunnell and Rochelle
Reichert, third.
Swdents of the Month for Saint
Peter and Paul are Cadi Mannering,
Alisha Thacker, Ethan Pariseau,
Rochelle Tribbey, Man Hamad,
Debbie toy, Ryan Owrey, Gabe
Downard and Shelley Ousley.
School activities for 1991 -92
were concluded with a reception
for the tri-county teachers on Friday.

public outrage.
Today, I am free and looking
tOward the future. I work as an
assistant counseloc in the same fine
hospital that was responsible for
my recovery. I don\ know if 111 be
able to fly again, but my goal fOf
the moment is to try to give back aU
that was given 10 me. Please feel
free to use my name if you wish. LYLE PROUSE, CONYERS, GA.
DEAR MR. PROUSE: You and
your crew members risked the lives
of God knows how many people by
drinking on the job. Mochers, fadlers,
sisters, brothers and childmt were
on that flight and they had the right
to expect that you would bring them
safely to their destination.
However. I applaud you for
turning your life around and wish
you luck for continued somety. I
admire what you have achieved and
congratulate you foc your etrons 10
help others. You deserve a great deal
of credit for having the coorage 10
buck "the establishment.· Thank you
for sharing your stay.
Forgtt to savt somt of yo11.r
favoriu Ann Landus collUM.&lt;'
""Nuggtts and Doozits" is rht
aiU"Wtr. Stnd a u/f-addrt=d. long.
hiLfiMss·sizt tnvt!lopc and a cMcl
or money order for $5 (r/U.r iru:lwks
posrag&lt; and lrandling) ro: NKg~u.
Jeannfe Jeffers, Shade, has
c/o Ann LandLrs, P.O. Box 11562, signed with Broadland lntemation·
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In aJ Records, a label based in Kitch·
CaNUkJ. stnd $6.)
encr, Ontario for a one album deal.
Broadland International just
opened an office in Nashville in
1991.
In November, Jeffers came to
The Ewings Chapter, Sons of
producer
Gary Buck's attention
the
American Revolution,
when
she
entered an international
Pomeroy, was recently entertained
contest
to
record a duet album on
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
the
Broadland
label. She will be
William Beegle , Fairfield Church
joining
label
mate
Billie Jo Spean;
Road. Gallipolis.
Brian Billings. Point Pleasant, this spring to record that album.
presented a program on his collec· Tbe fllSI of the releases is slated for
tion of campaign buttons. stickers, late May with record release shows
being planned for Athens and
etc.
Poosmouth
locations.
John R. Kauff presided at the
Gary
Buck
will be co-producer
meeting and members were
of
the
album
which
will consist
reminded to attend the Ohio Stat.e
mostly
of
material
written
by Jef·
SAR meeting in Springfield to suppan the state president elect Keith fers.
Jeffers is working with Taurus
Ashley, Pomeroy, a member of the
Productions
out of Portsmouth,
Ewing Chapter.
opening
shows
for artists such as
The Beeglcs served refresh ·
Mike
Reid,
Porter
Waggoner, Little
ments.
Jimmy
Dickens,
Gene
Watson and
The next meeting will be May
numerous
others.
Her
video, "Mat·
28 at 6:30p.m. at the Meigs Counter of Pride" is aired on
ty Museum in Pomeroy.
WOUB/WOUC TV and she made
her national television debut in
September on TNN's "Be A Star."
Currently, she is working with
local musicians; Robin and Ben
Wolfe, Bob Wolfe, Rick Cremeans,
and Mike Turner in a group called
"Jeannie and Wolf Pack."

ALBANY · Joseph P. McElroy
of Pomeroy, has been named a
winner of a 1992 American Electric Power System Educational
Award.
A senior at Meigs High School,
McElroy is the son of Paul and Kay
McElroy. Paul is a roof bolter operator at Southern Ohio Coal Campa·
ny's Meigs No. 2 mine.
Each of this year's 34 winners
in the AEP Educational Awards
competition will receive $6,000
spread over a three-year period:
$2,500 for the freshman year in
college, $2,000 for the sophomore
year, and $1,500 for the JUDIOr
year.
McElroy will auend either The
Ohio State University or Ohio Uni·
versity and plans to pursue a degree
in engineering, with additional
emphasis in business managemenl
A twe&gt;-year member of the National
Honor Society, he currently main·
Utins a 3.91 grade point average.
"Right now, I'm leaning toward
Ohio State," he reports. "I haven't
decided what type of engineering
field I want to enter. but I'm think·
ing about genetic engineering. ·•
A member of the Meigs High
Quiz Team and Teen Institute ,
Joseph was also an OU Summer
Scholar. "As a Summer Scholar,"
he explains, "T took a summer
course at OU on computer robotics.
It had a lot to do with math and sci·
ence, which is what I'm most inler·
eSted in."
When he takes a break from his
studies, McElroy spends most of
his time competing on the field or
in the gym. lle lists four years of
baseball and wrestling, and two
years each of cross country and

JOSEPH MCELROY
foothall on his resume. During that
time, he was named to the Tri -Val·
ley Conference All -Academic
Team nine times.
A total of 314 students from
throughout the seven-state AEP
System applied for the 34 available
scholarships in the 1992 competition. Winners were selected by two
independent scholastic judges,
based on each srudent's class rank
and/or ~c point average. recommendauons, SAT scores, autobie&gt;graphical presentation , special
~ualrties or talents, leadership abilities, extracurricular activities and
citizenship.
·
With the announcement of the
1992 recipients, AEP has now dis·
tributed I ,005 educational awards
wonh $2.7 million smce the program began in 1955.

"'Amazing Grace" and ··smce Jesus
Came Into My Heart"
Door prizes were won by June
Dewhurst, Janice Grimm, Shirley
Miller . Kathy Reed and Wanda
Vining .

A style show was presented by
ladies of the church rn clud1ng
Sharon Wise, Darlene Vanaman.
Donna Grate, Irene Kennedy, Lrly
Kennedy. Wanda Vining , Deb1
Gilmore and Holly Williams, with
nam~on by Marilyn Williams.
"I Learned About Jes us in
(;;randma's Rocking Chair"" was
sung by Brandee and Bnanna
Gilmore to their grandmother.
Esther Black.

By CllARLENE llOEFLICil
OVP News StolT
Two children of Alana and
Homer Grimm died in a fue which
destroyed the family's Bradbury
Road home outside Middleponlate
Tuesday afternoon.
Dead are nine-month-old Chnslian and two-y ea r-old Roger
Grimm. The bodies were taken to
the Franklin County Morgue for

A Mullimedia In c. NewsoaDer

autopSies, Meigs Co unt y Coroner
Douglas Hunter reported. Cause of
death will he determined by the
autopsies, he said.
According 10 a repon from Jeff
Darst, Middleport Frre Chief,
Christian "s body was found m her
crib in a bedroom, while Roger's
body was found on the floor in the
kilchen. Mrs. Grimm was in lhc
fmnt yard when the fire started, it
was reponed.

Middleport firemen received the
ca ll at 3:54 p.m. to the Co unty
Road 5 res idence, but Darst said
that when they arr ived the hou&gt;e
was engulfed in !lames. Pomeroy
and Rutland units were also on the
scene.
Darst said that Randy Arnold. a
pan-time deputy sheriff and mem ber of tl1e Rulland Fire Department
was fir st on the scene but was
thwaned in his anempts to rescue

th e chi ldren by Ihe heavy smoke. and released .
The cause of the fire rcmatns
He rcp or ltH.II y was Lrave ling
th rough 1l1e area when he heard the under mvesti gation, Dar.st reports.
call on hi s pager. Arno ld was over- Robert Law less of the Stale Fire
co me by smoke and was taken by Marshal's office was on the sce ne
the Middl crort emergency squad lo as was Meigs County Shenff Jam es
Veteran s Mcmona l HospiL.a.l where Soul sby.
The one-story frame stru cture
he w;t.~ trc:1 tcd for smoke inhalation
in the cm u~l·ncv room.
owned by Ll nda Swban and all Ils
Alor1a 'G r11;1m and Patricia contents were dc:-. tru ycd in the fire ,
Champion v.c tc also taken to lhc the fire chief sai d
ho sp ital whne both were Lrc.atcd

Th e f"&lt;.1 tddlq' ttr t f-. 1r~ LJcpart ·

mcn t rcsptHl ik d \\Jlh five picr:c.s of
equ i pm en t :1nd 1·1 men , th e
Po m e r o~ lkp.lrtrncn t wHh two
pieces ol .: quq l rJtc n\ and 10 men.
and Rtll l.tr 1d With rn1c pie ce ol
cquipmeJJl ;11 ~ ~ luur fir emen. Firemen were l 1r1;he sce ne until after 7

p.m.
Funeral arra t~ gcmcm~ will he
h:.~ndlcd

by Ewmg

F um~ra l

llorn l'

Caperton, Benedict nominated
~ESJMATION- Donovan Dodrill aod Moolca DodriD
present a CAP performaoce recenlly al Kroger In Pomeroy during
National CbHd Abuse Preveotion Montb.

Grange officers elected
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange held at the grange hall.
New officers are Anhur Crabtree , master; Ziba Midkiff, over·
seer; Rosalie Story, lecturer; Eldon
Barrow, steward; Norman Will,
assistant steward; Maxine Dyer,
lady assistant steward; Westina
Crabtree, chaplain; Helen Quivey,
treasurer; Pauline Atkins, secretary;
Wilber Quivey, gatekeeper; Linda
Montgomery, Pomona; Rose Bar·
rows. Ceres; and Naomi Reed,
Rora.

Pany Dyer, mast.er, presided at
the meeting. Invocation was given
by Westina Crabtree, chaplain, and
pledges to the Christian and Ameri ·
can flags were given in unison.
Eldon Barrows gave the legisla·
tive report. He atlended the session
at Friendly Hills.
In the baking contest, Allegra
Will Harrisonville was frrs · Ros·

alie Story, Hemlock, was secopd.
Suzy Carpenter was judge.
The remainder of contests will
be judged in Septern ber.
Athens Pomona will have an
inspecting offiar for the grange on
July 3. A potluck supper will be
held at 6:30 p.m. with Athens as
guests.
Rosalie Story, lecturer, present·
ed a program, "Sentimental Jour·
ney."
Takmg ~art were Christine
Napier, "Lets Take the Love Back
to Childhood," Virginia Carson,
"Farm Memories," Westina Crabtree, "The Old Dinner Bell," Norman Will, "In Reaospect," Pauline
Rife, 'The General Store," Arthur
Crabtree, ''The Tin Dipper," Rosalie Story, "Family Ties," and a
game, "'FavorilC Old Sayings," by
all.
Hemlock Grange served refresh·
ments.

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 199Z

(Attach Your Name, High School, and Parents
Name To Photo)

******

will be performing July 24 al nooa on lbe Stage
Americana as pari of lbe oo-site enlfl'tailuoeat
The family will be representatives of local laltol
for Gallipo6s Day at lbe celebration.

2 Sec!lone , 14 Pages 25 cent1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 13, 1992

Two children die in Bradbury Road blaze

On Friday, May 22, The Daily
Sentinel will have a special edition
with photographs of high school
seniors graduating this' year.
Now through Friday, May 15, Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily
Sentinel or At Your High School
Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.

REPRESENTATIVES- The Grubb Family
Sln&amp;ers bave been cbOl!en from lbousaods of
1udldoo eolrles to perform at lbe AmeriFiora
'92 celebralioo of Dlsrovery in Colum blls. They

Richard Slrauss
was born in IR6~ .

Vol. 43, No. 8

JOHNATilAN MJCilAEL

Greg and Pam Mich3el, Colum ·
bu s. announce the birth of their
son. Johnathan Everell, on May 3
al Grant Medical Center.
He weighed seven pounds and
15 ounces and was 20 inches long.
Matcmal grandparents are Larry
and Irene Johnson. U:tart. Great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
William Stover. U:tan.
Paternal grandparents are
Evereu and Sharon Michael, West
Columbia, W.Va. Great-grandpar·
enls arc Mr. and Mrs . Everett
Mi chael, Bradbury, and great·
grandmother is Cecilia Mitch,
Pomeroy. Great-grandfather is the
late John Mitch.

Low tonight in mfd-5();.; .
Thur!&gt;day, "unny. Hi~h m·ar 70.

Composer

Copyrtghlod 1992

Mother-daughter banquet held New arrival
The Rutland Church of the
Nazarene held Its mother-daughter
banquet recently during which 80
ladies enjoyed a ham dinner at the
church fellowship hall.
Mildred Grate opened th e
evening with the blessing before
the meal served by Irene Kennedy,
Donna Grate, Marilyn William s.
Debi Gilmore, Brandee Gilmore.
Brianna Gilmore, Misi Neutzling
and Tony Grate.
Following dinner, a poem,
"There Is a Woman I Want 10 Be,
Lord," was read by Donna Grate.
Rev Adkins provided piano
music and group singing was lead
by Violet Grate. Songs included

Pick 3: 246
Pick 4: 5705
Buckeye: 58252!!2'1
Now you know...

Page 5

Lands deal

McElroy wins AEP award SAR meets

Ohio Lottery•

Bulls bounce
back to defeat
Knicks 96-88

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS,
INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS
WHO WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN
ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS SPECIAL
EDITION PLEASE CALL 992-2156.
Ask for Dave or P. J.

CHARLESTON. W.Va . (A P) votes, or 43 percent. Pritt had
- Gov. Ga.s~m Capenon. nominal· 110,652 votcs. or 34 percent, while
cd for a second term despiiC failing Palumbo was thlfd with 65 ,41R
10 win a majorit y of hi s party's votes, or 20 percent. Dark -horse
vote, faces r.hc task of reuniting a
Democratic Parry ripped by a biuer
primary election campaign.
Caperton said he ""absolutely""
cxpecL-, support in November from
RESUlTS
backers of his two main Dcmcx:mtic rivals. slate Sen . Charloue Pnu
and Anorn cy General Mario
•
Palumbo.
"DemocnHs fight hard in the
98% of precincfs reporlmg
primary and work hard m th e general elecoon." · Capenon said today.
Palumbo S8Id he would suppon
Democrats
the party 's nominee . But Pnu. sti ll
smarting over negative campaign
(Votos) Percent at vote
ads run by the governor, said early
Clinton
today she will never suppon CaperBrown
ton and is considering a write-in
Tsongn
campaign in November.
"I am not about 10 let Gaston
Others
121.4071
Capenon s!Cal this elecoon or buy
it," Priu said early uxlay . She said
Republicans
she would seck a federal invesoga·
tion .
Capcnon will face stale Agricul ·
98% of precincts reporting
lure Commissioner Cleve Benedict
(Votes) Percent or volu
in November_ Benedict scored an
Bush
(97,86 1)
81
easy victory over former state Del ·
Buchanan (17 .680).
eg ale A.V. Criss Ill of Wood
Fellure
(5,98711
5%
County in the Republican primary.
With 2,010 of 2,050 precinw
Numoers may not ~ual 100 du a to round1ng
reporllng, Caperton had 138,063

ELECTION

West Virginia
pnmary

FATAL FIRE • Two children died in Ibis
structure ftre yesterday aflrrnoon . The bome,
located on Bradbury Road, was owned by Linda
Stobart and was complrtel,- destroyed in the

blaze. A fireman and ·lwo women at the scene

were treated at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The fire is still under investigation. (Photo by
Urian Reedl

McEwen addresses Meigs Chamber
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News SlafT
Sixth District U.S. Congressman
Bob McEwen (R-Hillsboro) was
the keynote speaker at Tuesday's
luncheon meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce.
In introducing Congressman
McEwen, Chamber President
Lenny Eliason remarked that the
visit of McEwen, an incumbent
legislat&lt;x", '"is proof of the progress
that the countywide chamber has
made in the past two years."
McEwen discussed several
issues relative to economic devel ·
opment in the county, including his
support of the proposed state pnson
site in Meigs County.
McEwen pointed out that Meigs
County's namesake , Return
Jonathan Meigs, campaigned for
·the Ohio Governor's office (and
was elected) on the platform that
Ohio needed a new pnson.
"It's about time that the state
follows through on Meigs' proposal," McEwen said
Congressman McEwen applauded the communiry for its '"forceful
and unanimous" suppon of AEP's
scrubber proposal at the General
James M. Gavin Plant. He said that
'"things look good on that front"
due to the communny"s vocal
involvemenL
McEwen stressed the impor·
tance of state and interstat.e high·

leaders, o fficeholders and candi ty , spec ifically the completion of dates to speak out for dcvelopmen·
tal disabdJ~cs services, and to help
the Capitol Corridor.
"Regardless of how many spots us get 1h1s levy passed."" Milliken
of four-lane highway you have. it said.
doesn 't do us any good."' McEwen
Eliason praised the local
S8Id. '"You have to be able 10 get MR/DD program , saying that
from 'Point A' 10 'Point 8' ."
"' Meigs County has a lot to proud
When asked by a chamber mem - of. si nce many communities don't
ber how the community could fos - have the outstanding MR/DD proter economic development, gram that we have in Meigs Coun·
McEwen sa id governmenr must ly."'
"remove the prohibitions on busiChamber Director Paula Thack·
ness."
er announced that Ohio Dcparonent
'"We have 10 encourage savings, of Development Director Donald
to enable citizens to borrow,"" Jakcway will be visiting Meig s
McEwen sa1d. He praised propos· Co unty on May 22, and will be
als of a flat -rate income uu, and touring sites countywide.
satd that he feels the proposed
Thacker sa1d that the chamber
enterprise zone system could even· would be hosting a luncheon meet·
tually apply to rural communities .
ing at the county library in honor of
'"Never in history has there been Jakeway's visit, and urged chamber
a time like today," McEwen said. members to anend.
"This decade is going to be the best
The chamber's golf outing has
decade in American history."
been set for June II, with tee-off at
David Milliken, acting adminis- 1 p.m . Entry fcc has been set at
trator at the Meigs County Board of $50. Kenny Un is the organizer.
The mee ting was hosted by
Mental Retardation!Dcvelopmcntal
Disabilities, urged chamber mem - Overbrook Ccmer in Middleport.
bers to suppon the board's upcom ing 1.8 mill levy , and 10 urge
friends and neighbors to supporl
the levy, as well.
According to Milliken, the June
2 attempt will be the sixth time that
the board has tried to pass an oper.
ating levy .
"J"m asking you as community
way improvements in Meigs Coun -

CillllJXUgn .

'" I think they care very deep ly
about West Virg1n1a, " he sa 1d .
''They arc very angry about the

policies of the last four years. They
are deep ly dis sati sfied with th e
Caperton administration. They're
angry and I think I can wm their
vote s.''

AP

Meigs board borrows $500,000 to pay bills
mon ies wiU come after th e new fiscal yea r. July I , Fry reported.
In other financial matters . Fry
was
authorized 10 transfer $2.000
Borrow ing of more than
from
the Class of 1992 fund to the
$500,000 to handle bills of the cur·
yearbook
fund . The money will go
renl sc hool year was approved by
roward
paymg
for color photos 111
th e Mc1gs Local Board of Educathe yearbook, she said.
uon Tucstlay night.
The hoard authomed Landi s
Mcc~ng al the Middleport Ele mentary School, the board mem· ami Gyr Powers, Inc. of Columbus
hers after hearing a financml repon to proceed with the Pomeroy Elc ·
from Treasurer Jane Fry, autho- mentary P'OJCCI. An energy analy ·
nzed her 10 borrow $279.000 from sis has already been completed at
!3ank One for six months al a rule th e sc hool and the ne&gt;l phase to he
of 5.256 perc ent: and $250,000 will be for the firm to come up with
from the State Loan Fund, also to specific rccommend.atJons on heat be secured from Bank One. The in g equipm ent replacement. Plans
first paym ent on th e loan fund call for the work to be completed

Oy CHARLENE HOEFLI CH
Sentinel News Starr

befo re th e ne xt heating seaso n
beg in s.
In oth er action , Jirn Va nam an

was employed as a bus driv er for
th e 1992-93 school year A field
tri p to Aurora was approved fo r the
m lh grade at Harnsonvd Ie. May
2R and May 30. and th e lis t of
graduating seniors was approved.
It was reponed that James Carpcmer. supcrinr cndent, und erwe nt
surge ry at University Hos pital in
Columbus Friday .
Bob Barton. board preSident.
had praye r 10 open the me eting .
Others attending were Randy
Humphre ys, Roger Abbou , Larry
Rupe , and John Hood.

No one hurt
in collision of
train, truck

Senator's plan calls for
20 percent co-payment
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State Sen. Raben Ney, chairman of
the Senate Insurance Committee.
said a 20 percent ce&gt;-payrnent plan
in his proposed overhaul of a
health-reform bill is aimed at cost·
C(Iltainment
"If you don 't pay anything (for
health insurance), you overutilize
i~" he said Tuestlay.
The proposal, which Ney said
came from fellow Republicans in
the House would apply to all health
maintenanCe organizations as well
as more traditional insurance plans.
An official of Ohio Citizen
Action, a consumer advocacy
group, called the idea "crazy.""
"Lower-income people will get
penalized," said Shari Weir, consumer director of Citizen Action .
" Ther. won't go to the doctor until
their tllness has gonen so had that
they have no alternatives.''
Ms . Weir saif'!he proposal
would raise costs because people
would defer routine care until they

candidalCs Rodger Uclknap of Sui·
ton and Larry But cher of Wood
County spill 3 rcrcc nt of the vole.
"T hi S IS 3 V I Ctory for the
rrogrcss we h&lt;~v c mad e in jotJs,
roads and education,'" Caperton
sa1d in a bncf victOry speech shonly before midmght.
F~r sl lady Rachael Worby cried
:md smiled as she stood at Caperton' s side during a downtown rally.
The crowd. made up lar gely of
Democ rau c Party offiCJals and
Caperton administration offictal s,
chanted " four more years" a." a
band played " Happy Da ys Arc
Here Again.··
On th e GOP uckc1. Benedic t
had 100.475 voles , or R6 percent,
while Criss had 16,093 vote s, or 14
percent.
"It' s clear that a s1gn1f icant
majority of Democrats voted to
deny Gaston Caperton four more
vcars in office, " Benedict said.
· He satd he will work lO bring
th ose disaffected Dcmocml"i to hi s

end up in

c~pcnsive

eme rgen cy

moms.

The provision. which would
take effect in 1995, would require
all patients wuh health insurance to
pick up 20 percent of their medical
bills. unless the bills are so high
that they trigger an annual cap.
Insurers would not he permitted
to offer full coverage for anything.
including preventative care.
Mark Davidson, a lobbyist for
Nationwide Insurance Cos., said
the Columbus-based company generally includes a 20 percent co-pay·
mcnl provision in its heahh -tnsurance policies.
"If there is some out-of-pocket
cost. people tend to be more judi·
cious," said Davidson.
Ney was expected to introduce
his plan to the Senate today.
Other provisions included a
requirement that all insurers offer
health insurance to every Oh1oan
who wants it during a tw o-week
window every six months.

'

'

The driver of a tractor- trailer
loaded with coal escaped injury
when his truck was struck by a
train Tue sday afternoon at the
crossi ng at Addmgton No. 4 dock
near Ches hire.
Thomas Myers, Langsville, the
driver. told officials thai he did not
see the Conrail train or hear its
whistle until he was already on the
tracks. The train struck the rear of
the trailer throwing coal high into
the air. Both the cab and the trailer
were overturned.
According to Meigs Co unt y
Sheriff James Soulsby and Deputy
Ralph Trussell the train, going
from Dickenson, W. Va. to Hob·
so n, was traveling at about 17
miles an hour when the impa ct
occ urred . The engine and seven
ca rs passed the scene before the
engineer was able to bring the train
to a .IDp.
There was heavy damage to the
truck and minor damage to the
front end of the engine, the shcr·
ifrs deputy reponed.
Traffic was held up at the Route
7 crossing above Cheshire for
about a half hour before Conrail
emplo yees arrived 10 disconnect
cars and clear the crossing.

TRUCK STRUCK BY TRAIN - Tbe driver
escaped injury when Ibis lraclor·tniler was
struck by a Conran train Tuesday afternoon at
the Addln~ton No. 4 dock crossing near

Cbesblre. Tliomas Myen !illid that be did not see
the train or heM" the whistle when he moved
onto the tracks.

J

..

�i'

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

l

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeneniMonog&lt;r

LEITERS OF OPINION a.re welrome. They 1bou!d be leu thon 300
wordb . All letters are subject to Wiling IIJd must be ligned with name,
~¥"!dress and telephone number No un1igned leuen will be publilbed. Lettm
.. hould be m good taste,

ad~~sing

iisues, nol personalitia.

Deadline for publication
of election letters May 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes Jette" regarding the June 2 primary
t ltct ion. However, in the intere~ of fairness, no election letters will be
.cccpted after 12 nooo on Wednesday, May 27.
Individual• should address i"u" and not per.onalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Leite" should be 300 works or '"''· All letters are subject to edilin~ and must be signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be
pul&gt;lished. All letters should be in good taste.

Politicians hope press can
dig up some dirt on Perot
By MIKF: FEINSILBER
A~'&gt;OCiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The nation's politicians arc wa1Ung for the press lo
dj g up some dirt m1 Ross Perol, whose likely independent candidacy for
prGsldcnt 1s making bolh parucs nervous.
Hcducc Ross to Human D1mcns1ons: that's what politicians mea n
when they say they expec t h1 s appeal will diminish when the country gel5
rn learn more about him. They want the coum.ry to see Perot warts and all
-'- cspecJa ll y the warts.
They'd welcome somcthmg unsavory. But they 'd be happy even 1f the
· press docs no more than compel Perot to lake spccor.c siands on spec1fJC
1Ssucs. Once you stan gcuing spec1fic , you r.nd people who disagree.
Once you have to talk about cutting programs or raising taxes. you lose
some of your folk-hem status and begm looking Joke anotllcr politician.
In the meantime, says Bill Chnton, who mows something about whal
can happen when scrutiny gel5 intense, Perot JS in the most oomfortablc
posuion a politician can fm~ himself: "famow and unexamined."
Those suggesting Perot s appeal w1ll wllt assume that everyone has
, 0mcthing in his past to make h1m look less lofty. And that a billionrurc
who based his fortune on government contrncl5 is not likely lobe exempt.
· " 1 thmk that certainly Perot would gel the votes of some of the people
who arc dissausr.ed with government today, but I also suspect thal when
the mcd1a exposes and takes a hard look at Perot .they'll have second
· ihoughls," Charles Whitehead, former Democrauc state cha1rman m
l·londa , saul a few day s ago.
· Peter Kelly, a !Xmocratic Nauonal Committee member from {:on. nr£1lcut, had thJS to say:
,'
' Peml " reportedly very fragile, crystal-like and docs not brook any
k111&lt;1 of heavy cnumm 111 all h1s dealing s as a corporate leader . When the
pre~'&gt; or the pol1tical strucLure tum to him 1n even llght lOncs he will react
very badly . !nat's the bmk on !he guy."
.
ThLrc.'s mmv here: t.hc same Democrats who were unhappy w1th U1c
press for dwclbng so extcns1vcly on Clinton's past now look to it to foc us
1hc. same degree of auenuon on Perot' s past.
Rcpubllcan s, too. awail the di ssec tion of Ross Perot. Sen. Alan S1mp. snn, R-Wyo .. suggested the other day thai Perot' s "myth of 1magery"
wil l lade when his posioons arc analywl.
Clmton even offered questions that might be asked:
'' Httli he in fact lobbied and made va.~ t contributi ons to congressmen t.n
~ l' l special deals for himself through the Congress'' '
The politicians arc nghl. The press will examine Perot 's past. That's
pan of ils function. The process has begun . Uncanhmg Perot already has
_ l1ct'ornc a side lick beat m JX&gt;huwl JOUrrut lL\m , JUSt a.;; scndmg reporters to
. · l. ittlc Rock to look mto how Clmwn gnvems is an ongomg enterprise.
· , · On the televi sion Lalk shows - In '\ stumping grounds - Perot has
: • 111mwn irritation when pn::.s.-,cd to go beyond gencraJit..ics on such questions
of how he would deal w11h the dcficll. ,
lie tesuly complamed JhaJ hiS a.ssoc1ates had mforrned NBC before he
wen t on "Meet the Pres~" tNII he was not ready LO d1s.cuss spcctfics. He
. LOmplained that he wa:; not told m advance what questions would he
a~kr.d . He already had 1dcnt1f1C(lthe dcficu as the nauon 's most important
pmhlcrn.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, May 13, 1992

.

"Give me a ilulc !Jill&lt;' LO gel all of th1s nailed down, and I will g1ve
vou very speCi fic wa y:-. w~.: will do thi s," he said about hJs 1dcas for rcducl! lg t.hc deficit.
.
.
.
.
1\ few days l&lt;Hc1 , he dcc ulcd to "cut back on mtctv1 ews, telcVJ.sHJn
· .1ppearanccs and spce.i.."hcs." He .'laid he w~l~ tim~ .to develop " careful 1, though l-out posJLJons on each of th e ma_10r 1_ssucs . .
rhal 'II give Perot ume 10 thmk lJ1rough h1 .s posllJOns, while the press
.t" .lfl·hcs for Lhe real Perot.
EIJITOR'S NOTE: Mike Feinsilber has covered event&lt; io Wa\hlll)!IHn since J 968.

Thursday, May 14

They have staked out positions
WASHINGTON - Sen . John
Kerry, D-Mass ., winner of three on the POW/MIA issue that will
Purple Hearts, finds himself back make reconciliation difficult. Kerry
in the jungles of lloc Vietnam WOI. has pursued what might be called a
This time, his mossion is 10 achieve
what has eluded more than a halfdozen previous investigations in
the aftermath of the cos~y conflict:
account for the uncertain falc of
2,273 American soldiers.
Some of hi s friends fear he's
waging a war that's as unwinnablc
as the first.
The political factions within the
Senate Select Commiltce on big ten ! theory for achievmg cloPOW/MIA Affairs nvals '" rancor sure: Give every conspiracy theory
any debate that raged while the hot a hearing, llack down every lead .
war was still on. Even Kerry told and examine every grainy photous "What Bob (Smith, R-N.H ., graph and love sighting.
But his gamble may backfire.
vice-chairman of the Select ComThe
select comminee's work,
mittee) and I are trying to do is
which
winds up at the end of the
walk our way through this pohucal
year, could tum into a carnival, a
mineroetd with I0 other senators."
shooting
arcade in which the oonSome commiucc staff and senaspiratorialosts
throw up theories or
IOrs, and many MIA octivisl5, have
targets
faster
than
Kerry's investibeen agitating for a decade over
gators
can
shoot
them
down.
what they regard as Jrrefutable
Some
so
urces
say
that the
proof that there arc livi ng Ameriamong
the
"minimum
demand"
cans being held in cap tiVJty in
activists on and off the committee
Southeast Asia.
will be an oclmowlcdgment of liv One Senate aide compared it to ing Americans who were knowing MIA "McCanhyism." Those who ly left behind and remain in captivdispute or show skepticism, arc ity today.
sell-oul5 lo Hanoi or the Pentagon,
Kerry Jold us: "There's iol5 of
or dupes of government dismfor folks
our there with bi-'! 1nvcstmation.

ments on all sides of this issue.
DIA (!Xfense Intelligence Agency)
has big investments, 20 years of
say1 ng x, y and z. And frankly
there are documenl5 lloat conlladicl
th eir inves tment. Likewise th ere
are people on the octimt side who
have big invesLments."
Kerry point&lt; out that all thi s is a
recipe for things occasionally gclung "woclcy." Although he wasn't
dirccdy referring to a closed-door
briefing before the Select Committee last month, some committee
sources believe 11 stands as a perfect me~J~phor for the MIA muddle.
One of il5 architeCI5 was former
North Carohna congressman Bill
Hendon , who has waged a decadelong crusade to prove the existence
of living M!As, and government
cover-up. Smith, a long-time MIA
activist, recruited soulmate Hendon
for work on the Select Committcc.
Drawing on classifJCd materials,
the April 9 briefing promised lo
unveil compelling intelligence that
Americans were held in captivity'"
Vietnam between 1973 and 1989,
validating the darkest suspiCions
among MIA activists that th ere
were living Americans left behind
who had hccn forsaken or forgotten
by their government. and raising
the specter of a cover-up that
would dwarf Watergate.

C0&gt;"" """" "'~ "'A\1.-Tl'cl'"'IWJ... 6TTolr

Sfl HU~II\E
NE/&lt;

ALL You
(1\N
INFLUEtKE
tiOO,OOO.~

A political lorellght erupicd
even before the approximately
four -hour session was underway.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Ka n.,
and other Select Committee mem bers wanted the Defense Intelli gence Agency to attend and offer
their input and possible rebuual .
But the vice-chainnan of commince, Smith, and Sen. Charles
Grassley, R-lowa, were staunchly
opposed. Both men harbor deep
susp icions about Jhe DIA's own
motives, management and even
co mplicity in llacking the Americans still considered mis sing in
action or priSOners of war in Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos.
While this skirmish played out,
DIA analyst.~ cooled their heels in
the office of Select Commillec
member Sen. John McCain, RAriz., a Kassebaum ally. After a
heated debate, McCain called for a
vote. By a vote of 7-2, the DIA was
invited in _
Th e smoking gun evidence
turned out to be something called
the "clwter theory." "This is what
caused the the whole briefing to
explode,'' one committee source
explained.
Under the cluslcr theory, all
reports of live sightings - valid
and refuted, sourced or anonymow
- arc represented on a map of
Vietnam and Laos with little pins.
When clusters of pins emerged, the
staff seized on this and other evi·
de nee of living American MIAs.
McCain, who spent more than
six years in a POW camp, launched
an acid -tongued debunking.
Acco rding to sources present,
McCain suggesicd that since there
was a spate of UFO sightings in
Tcxa1, but not New Yark, therefore
there must be lots of UFOs in
Texas. The committee staff, which
had invesJed time and prestige in
the bncling, was visibly rankled.
A McCa1n spokesperson
dcchncd to comment on what transpired during the classified bnefmg.

"You go ahead and have the Republicans. Somehow I'm in the mood for
Democrats tonight."

Kerry said he was ·'very sympalloctic 10 the argument" to keep the
DIA out until the committee had
the opportunity to air it internally .
Asked about the cluster theory,
Kerry replied that it was not
"about to be made public unless ...
somebody violates the process
wh1ch appea" to be the case."
Jack Anderson and Michael
ninsh~· in are syndicat~ed colum·
nists for United Feature Syndi·
cate, Inc.

Trying to describe the LA story
L1kc hundreds of others who
round keyboards for a Jiving, I've
bee n strugglmg for past couple of
weeks to co me up with words to
describe my feelings abouJ the cri ·
sis that consumed Southern Calofomi.a in the forst days of May and
how it was handled by authorities.
Words like incomprehensible,
Inconceivable, incredible, loath some, outrageou s, fatuous, irresolute, unmajestic , st up1d and fraud
come to mind.
It IS incomprehensible to me
why Cai1fornoa Superior Court
Judge Stanley WeJSberg would
move a notorious police brutality
trial involving a black defendant
and four white policemen to a suburban county with a black populatiOn of 1.5 percent. It is inconceivable that the prOSCfution would settle for a jury without a sin~le black
person on iJ . It is incredJbic and
loath so me that Jhese uptight
burghers could look al the videotape dcpicung the ofr.cers clubbing
th e defenseless Rndney King and
hear thw raci st pranle afterward
and somehow conclude they had
acted with reasonable force.
It is outrageous lloal thugs could

control the street~ of south cc:1t.ral
Los Angeles and bum, plunder and
murder at will. It is fatuou s that
bullhea ded police chief Daryl
Gates was not prepared for an ugly

joseph Spear
rcacuon to an acqulllal.
And to whom docs the adjective
"irresolute" apply? To George
Gush , God bless hi s pruden! soul.
Aflcr the verdict, he issued this
stunningly inept stalemcnt: "The
court sys tem has worked. What's
nr.cded now Js calm, respect for the
law ." Then came a day of critical
remarks about the riot. The next
day he met with black leaders. He
then addressed the nation and final ly got around to&gt;saying something
about hi s revulsion over lhc beating
and the absurdity or the verdict.
And "unmajcstic"? To George
again . The man simply can't contro l IH s urge to go for the jugular
wh en hi~ Brahmanic sense of fair·
nm rs offended . Bill Clinton made
the rn1s~•kc of charging the Republi cans with an "absence of action"
on racwl problems durin~ the nast

decade. Out trolled prcSJden.tial
prolocutor Marlin Fuzwater to lay
the blame for the Los Angeles riol5
and urban unrest in general squarely at the feet of Lyndon Johnson
and those Godawful Democrats:
" We believe that many of the root
problems that have resulted in
inner-city difficulucs were started
in the '60s and '70s, and thai lloey
have failed ."
It's arguably true - throwing
money at soc ,al problems has not
worked - but the climax of a ram page was nm the most propitious
moment to malce the point.
And so we come to "stupid ."
Yep, I refer to George again, par·
don my impudence. For more than
three years, he has had in his Cabi.
net a man who has as good a grasp
on urban prohlcms as anyooe in Lhc
co untry . Housing and Urban
!Xvelopment Secretary Jack Kemp
is well -regarded by black leaders,
is possessed of an infectious energy
and spoul~ ideas like Source Perrier
spews bubbly water. So where was
he while the cilics festered' In
Bush's doghouse, thai's where.
Bush and the orthodox conscrvativcs who se favor he craves

don't like Kemp because he
doesn't fit into any of their little
cubbyholes. He champions supplysJde economJCS, but he also has a
heart. He ~J~Iks of "empowering"
the poor by giving them a slake in
their homes, Lhcir communilies. Lhe
American dream.
Kemp wants to provide incentives for small businesses Jo move
into the inner city; he wants to help
public housing tenants buy their
own homes; he wants to reduce the
pror.ts that the construction indus~y makes from low-income housmg.

Until the last few days, Kemp
ha s been a pariah in his own
administration. He wasn't even
invited to strategic While House
huddles during the California crisis
- not until the decision was made
to politicize it, that is. Now Bush
himself is crowing about the initialJvcs his administration has been
pushing all along that have been
1gnorcd by that Godawful
Co ngrc.~~ .

Which brings me to fraud.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
columnist lor Newspaper F:nterprise Association.

MICH .

•

IToledo I 64' I
e

Say what you will about Ross
Perot, he is easily the most fascl'.
nating figure to stride onto our
national political stage in many a
moon. He possesses such an abun dance of strengths and weaknesses
that he changes, in drastic and
unpredic~J~blc ways, every equation
iniO which he is factored.
By ca nceling most public
appearances for six weeks while
his advisers give him a crash
course on Lhe myriad national
issues that he frankly confesses "I
haven't goven a moment's thought
to,'' PerOJ has indicated that he recognizes his major weakness. A
sharp analytical mind and a knack
for 1mprovising radical solutions
aren't enou~h to qualify a person
for the presidency. He must learn,
if necessary by aial and error, what
the body politic can be induced to
accept, and what it can'L
Thus, it's r.ne·for Perot!~ say
Jhat he knows how to solve the
drug problem, "but it won't be
preuy . " So do I - just adopt
Japan's cold-turkey imprisonment
for addicts and Malaysia's death
penalty for pushers. But would the

EXCALIBUR

American society acqu1cscc in such
a "solution"? Almost ce rtainly,
nn; so we may assume that so me
oth er answer to the drug crisis is

William A. Rusher
being sought now by Perot and his
team.
But the process of switchtng
from solutions that arc sound but
impractical to proposals that will
work and arc poliucally appealing
is a corrupting one, as Mr. Perot is
about to discover. Will the man
!hat emerges from this six-week
bath in political reality be the saone
clear-eyed, hardheaded realist that
many Americans understandably
admire? Or will we detect, in the
New Perot, the evasions, tcrgivcr·
sations and half-truths by which
most politicians survive?
That remains to be seen. In
either case, however, Perot is
bound to have a major impact on
the campaign, including its outco me . If the Perot persona, as
revised for the campaign, is still
essentially !hat of a Texas billion -

aire educated at the Naval Academy, he will presumably appeal
most to conservatives wh o would
otherwise vote for Bush over C!Jn.
ton (though he will also draw heavily from lower middle class whites
who might otherwise succumb to
Clinton's redneck charms).
In that case, incidentally, PerOJ
might actually scare a good many
liberal Democrats into abandoning
Clinton as a sure loser and voting
for Rush as the lesser of two evils.
If, on !he other hand, Perot
decides that Bush is the man to
beat, and comes on as a rather leftish populist with ao agenda that liberals can live with (pro-abortion,
pro-gun control, and in favor of
raising taxes on the rich), he can
leave Clinton in the dust as a
spokesman for Americans who feel
unrepresented under the current
"system ."
Thus far we have spoken as if
the election were to be decided
sunply by who comes in ftrsl But
in fact, of course, it's much more
complicated Jhan that. Some eandi-

••

•

'•

date must wind up with an absolute
majority of the votes in the Eleeloral College or the whole contest
gel5 tossed mto the House of Representatives, where each state casiS
one vote, as determined by il5 congressional delegation.

•IColumbus I 67' I

W VA

Such vaticinations arc fascinating, but highly premature. We will
have to await the unveiling or Perot
Mark II, some time in late June,
before we can speculate intelligently.
William Rushor is a syndicated columnist lor Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

By The Associated Press
A cool night under clear skies
was fore~:ast for Ohio tonight Tioe
National Weather Service said lows
generally would be in the 40s.
Sunny skies were forecast for
Thursdax. but forecasters said
clouds wtll starting building from
the west ahead of lloe next weather
system. Highs will be in the 60s.
A few showers could develop
Thursday night and continue into
early Friday . A bener chance for
rain will occur by late in the weekend as another cold front approaches.
Temperatures through the weekend will be ncar or slightly below
normal.
The record high temperature for

ShowfHw T-stonns Rain

..

~lurriss

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
FBI subpoenaed videotape and
photos from news organizations as
a crackdown on rioters gathered
steam. Meanwhile, the governor
ordered thousands of National
Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
Ice
Guard lloops to begin pulling out
today.
01992 " ccu-Wealher. Inc.
Some news organozations JUmed
over information willingly: others
said authorities were going too far.
Four black men with alleged
on Friday, then trur. A chance of
showers Saturday and Sunday . gang tics were arresicd Tuesday m
Highs 65-70 Friday, in the 70s Sat- the attack on white trucker Regi urday and 65-75 Sunday. Lows in nald Denny, whose beating was
the 40s to near 50 Friday, 45-55 shown on live television and came
to symbolize police paralysos durSaturday and in the 50s Sunday.
ing the riot's opening momenl5.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clearing. Low 45 -50.
Thursday, mostly sunny. H1gh
around 70.
Extended loreca.•t:
Friday through Sunday:
A slight chance of showers early

--Area deaths-Ella Holter

Edna M. Monroe

Ella Mae Holter, 81, of Akron,
formerly of Syracuse, died Sunday,
May 10, 1992, at the borne of niece
in Talmadge.
Born on Oct. 23, 1910, she was
the daughter of the late Arthur
Duckwonh and Elizabeth Vaughn.
She is survived by her husband,
Wilbur Holter of Alcron; two sisters, Ann Stacey of Akron and Mrs.
Carl (Marcia) Kerns of Georgia; a
brother, Robert Duckworth of Middleport; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by one sister, Mrs.
Clyde (Sam) Stout.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday, at I p.m. at the Hillegan
Funeral Home in Talmadge.

Edna M. Monroe, 72, of
Cedarville, died Tuesday, May 12,
1992 in Mt. Pleasant Village Nursing Home in Monroe.
She was born on Feb. 5, 1920 in
Middleport, the daughter of the laic
George Rickard and Iris Jane (Fry)
Rickard.
She was an employee of
Cedarville College for 10 years
before retiring . She was also a
member of the Clifton Avenue
Church of God.
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Oakley Monroe, who died
in 1980; and one grandchild.
Survivors include one son ,
Steven D. Monroe of Springfield;
one daughter, Mrs. Sandra Coulter
of Franklin; two grandchildren; two
brothers - Melvin Irwin of GalHospital news
lijXJlis and Clarence Irwin of ChillVeterans Memorial
icothe; two sisters - Marianna
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS - Tope of Bidwell and Ernestine
Lula Young, Pomeroy.
Yerian of Jackson.
Services will be Friday, May IS
TUESDAY DISCHARGES a!
I p.m. at Richards, Raff &amp; DunVirginia Phalin.
bar
Memorial Home in Springfield .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May l2 discharges - Edith The Rev. Donald Cox will ofr.ciByer, William McManis, Mrs. Rick atc. Burial will be 1n Rose H1ll
Miller and daughter, Mrs. Steven Burial Park.
Fnends may call the funeral
Peters and daughter, Walter RJgglc,
home
Thur&gt;day, May 14 from 6 to
and Mrs. Brian Spencer and son.
9p.m.
May 12 births - Mr. and Mrs.
David Downard, son, Wellston .
Mr. and Mrs. Deno1s Reinhart ,
daughter, Jockson.

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Federal Mogul.. ............... ... l9 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... ........... 75
Key Centurion ................... 18 1/2
Lands End ........ .. .......... .... .32
Limited Inc..
. 21 1/4
Multimedia Inc . .. . ........ .. .27
Rax Restaurant. .
... I l/8
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ........ .... 16 3/4
Shoncy's Inc ...................... 22 5/8
SIJ!r Bank .......................... .37
Wendy lnt'l....... ..
.. . .. . 12 5/8
Worthington Ind ......... ....... 24
Stork report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.

By RODD AUBREY
Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio on
Tuesday ruled on rate requests by
Columbus Southern Power Co. and
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric.
Columbus Southern asked for a
$202.5 million increase, but on
Tuesday !he PUCO agreed to a
$123 million increase . The Cmcinnati utility wanted $204.8 million ,
bul was allowed $114.6 million.
At least one of two utility com panies whose proposed rate
increases were slashed says it will
ask for a new hearing and might
appeal lo the Ohio Supreme Court.
For customers, the rate increase
means an increase of about 5 percent or 6 percent a year for each of
the next three years. Columbus
Southern customers will sec a fJrst ycar increase of almost 10 percent.
The increases, whi ch effect
more than I million Ohioans, could
lake effect as early as May 21.
"If thJS ruling stands n would
have a significant impact on operations and on the quality of service
A.~.uciated

The Daily Sentinel
(U8P8111-NJ)
Publi•hed enry aRnnoon, Monday
'hfOUIIh Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy ,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi1hin1

Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio '!5789, Ph . 992-2166. Second daM
pmt.,p paid at Pomeruy, Ohio.

Member: The Aaaociated P'rs1, and the
Ohio Newapaper Auociation, National
Advertilint Repnaenlative. Branham
Newspaper Salea, 733 Third Annue,

POSTMASTER: Bend addreea chanp~lo
The Daily Sentinel , Ill Court St .,
Pomeroy. OHio .ri789.

llliiiSCIIIPTION IIATBI
Br Can-tu ar Motor Rowte

&lt;&gt;ne w-. .......................................... 11 .80
Maotb ..................... .. ...... ...... 18.915
Year.. .................................... ... l83.20

One
One

-not

BINOU:COPT
PIUCI!
Daily.... ...... ........................... .. ,.••..26 Cen&amp;.a

doolri,.lo .. , .... '""'·
er may r.mit in advanoe direct to The
Daily Sentinel on a lhTee,
01" 12
month bam. Cndit will be ri•en carrier

•i•

Meh1ftllll.
No aubKripUo1111 by nWI permitted ta
a,.u when home carrier eer\'ice I.
ITiilab&amp;e.
Mallhbooftpllo•

lnrtdellelp Cownl7

13 WMka. ........................................ $2t.84
:Ill Woeb ...................... ....................k3.16
112
16&lt;.76

w.-.O.utde
. . . . . . . Mel•
. . . ... . Cow.ntl"
. . . ... . .. .

IS Woeb.............. ............ ..... .... .... ..ll3 .40
:Ill Woeb.... ........
.. .. .~ .ISO
112Woeb..... ....... ....

. ..... 168.40

Veterans.
At 6:26 p.m., Tuppers Plain s,
Pomeroy and Ohve Township unils
went to Eden Ridg e Road for an
auto accident. Sherry SmiJh and
Rachel Smith were taken to St .
Joseph Hospital.
Al 7:35 p.m ., Middleport squad
went to Bradbury Road. Patricia
Champ1on wa~ ~1kcn from the ftre
scene to Veterans AI 8:23 p.m ..
Racine sq uad went to Broadway
Street. Da1 sy Sayre was taken to
Veterans. At 9:42 p.m.. Pomeroy
un it went to Peac ock Avenue .
Harold Mlilcr was taken to Pleasant Valley Hos1l11Jli.

-Meigs announcementsRally scheduled
A UMWA rally will be held
Saturday at beginning al 10 a.m . at
the Pomeroy Football Field. All
miners are requested to wear camouflage. International President
Rich Trumpka and vice-president
Cecil Roberts as well as district
representatives will be present. A
caravan will trnvelto Ravenswood,
W.Va. for a USWA that begins at I
p.m. Further information may be
obtained by calling Max Whitlatch
at 992-3130 or Woody Call at 7422944.
Picnic slated
A meet the candidates noght will
be held Wednesday evening al 7
p.m. at Overbrook Center in Mid dleport. All friends and family of
res1dents are inviled.
Concert planned
The Southern High School Band
will present its spring ooncert Sunday at 2 p.m . at the high school

ELECT

Storms raked the nation's mid section Tuesday.
A lOITilldo touched down cast of
Waverly, Ind., but no injuries or
dama&amp;e were reponed. Thunderstorm winds gusJed Jo about 60
mph and damaged trees at Union
City, Ohio.
Three-quarter-inch hail fell a!
What Cheer, Iowa; one-inch hail
near Corinth, Miss.; and golf-ball·
size hail at Leander and Venus,
Texas.
High temperature records were
broken Tuesday in a number of
cities, including Fhn~ Mich., where
an 85 -degree reading broke the
1944 mark by I degree . A 97dcgree reading in Waco. Texas,

'The four were identir.ed in part rig and beaten unconsc1ous at Flofrom news fQOtage and video taken rence and Normandic avenues soon
by bystanders, said Police Chief after the verdict m the Rodney
Daryl Gates, who arresicd Damian King case April 29. His at~J~ckers
"Football" Williams himself.
looked up at the cameras.
" I would have liked to drop Damian W1lliams hn Denny in
kick: him aU the way to the car, but the head with a brick. Mlller looted
I had a feeling I better oot," Gates his truck , Wal5on stomped on his
said.
head, and Gary WJ!hams kicked
Williams, 19; Henry "Kiki" him when he was down and stole
Watson, 27; and Antoine "Twan" his wallet, Gates said.
Miller, 20, were brought in by
Da1man Williams, Wal5on and
about 200 FBI and police SWAT Miller were booked for investigateam offocers in a pre-dawn raid. A tion of state charges of attempted
fourth man, Gary Williams, 33, murder, mayhem, robbery and torsurrendered at a police SIJ!tion.
ture , and federal charges of inter·
News helicopters showed fcring w1th a vehicle engaged in
Denny, 36, bcmg pulled from hi s interslate commerce, Lt. Bruce

PUCO approves rate hike
request by power firms

Squads have busy 24 hours

A fatal structure lire and an auto
accident were among the calls
answered by unil5 of Meogs Emergency Services on Tuesday.
On Tuesday at 3:54 ~ . m ., Middleport and Pomeroy uml5 went lo
Bradbury Road for a strucuore fore
a! the Grimm residence. (See related story, page I.) Al 4: IS p.m.,
Rutland unit was called t&lt;&gt; assist.
At 4:5 3 p.m .. Middleport squad
took Randy Arnold to Veterans
Memorial Hospital from the scene.
Al 5:19p.m., Middleport squad
wemto the Jaymar Coal tipple for
Tim McDaniel, who was taken to

this date at the Columbus weather
station was 88 degrees in !982. The
record low was 35 in 1946.
Sunset tonight will be a! 8:37
p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at
6:17a.m.
Around tbe nation
A storm off the Atlantic and a
front from the Great Lakes com bined today to bring fog and drizzle
from New England to the midAtlantic coastline.
A storm system that produced
llounderstorms in the Ohio Valley
on Tuesday was expccicd to bring
heavy rain to the Carolinas and
Georgia later today.
Rain al.u wa.~ likely in the High
Plains. Calm, dry conditions were
forecast in the West.

surpassed th e 1905 mark by I
degree
Forecasters pred1c1ed highs
today '" the 50s 1n the northern
Great Lakes; the 60s in New England, the northern Plains and the
Calofornia coastline; the 70s on the
mid-Atlantic states, much of the
South and the Northwest interior;
the 80s on the Gulf Coast stales,
Florida, central California and part.s
of the Southwest; and the 90s 1n
south Texas, the Arizona desens
and parts of Southern California.
High tempcrauore for the nation
Tuesday was 101 degrees at Laughlin Air Force Base oul5ide Del R10,
Texas.

FBI subpoenas TV video; 4 arrested in trucker's beating

ill

Nn York, New York 10017.

Since each state's Electoral College votes arc cast, under a unit
mle, on the basis of who comes in
first in that slate, it becomes
immensely important 10 !mow not
only the size of the Perot vote but
its distribution . Will Perot carry
Texas, or only draw enough votes
from Bush there lo throw the state
to Clinton? Will Clinton cany New
York and California, or lose so
many votes to Perot that Bush will
carry both of them?

PA

IMansfield I 65' I•

Waiting for the well-advised Perot

Berry's World

Cooler weather will remain through Friday

OHIO Weather

Kerry fighting to release POW/MIA findings

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Acru-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

By jack Anderson
and
Michael Einstein

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A." islanl Puhli&lt;hor/Controller

Wednesday, May 13, 1992

gym. The concert wlll feature a
medley from the movie "Beauty
and the Beast" as well as a collection of pop song s entitled "Top
40." Public Jnvitcd. Jeff Arnold is
director.
Singing program
Southern se venth grade choJr
will present a ; pring program Tuesday at 7 p.m . in the high sc hool
gy m featuring several pop songs a.s
well as music en litl ed "Read in ',
Ritein and Rockin." Public mvited .
Jeff Arnold is director.

Jo our customers," CG&amp;E
spokesman Bruce Stoccklin said.
He said the utility will ask for a
new hearing. If that's turned down,
iJmay appeal to the Ohio Supreme
Coun, he said.
Columbus Southern spokesman
Tom Holliday said the company
had not reviewed detail s of the
decision but said officials were
" deeply disappointed." The com pany will decide later about
whether to appeal, he said.
The two utilities, along with
Dayton Power &amp; Ligh~ wanted Jhc
increases to help pay for convening
their $3.6 billion Zimmer power
plant from nuclear to coal power.
The plant, which SIJ!rted running
last year, is ncar Cincinnati in
Moscow, Ohio.
The PUCO already gave Jhc
Dayton utility approval in January
for its $129 million rate increase, Jo
he phased-in with 6 percent
1ncreascs over each of the ne xt
three years.
On Tuesday, the PUCO:
- Let the other two uJiiiJies
charge customers for what il would
have cost to build a coal plant,
inst.cad of the conversion.
- Told !he utilities to work
closer with communiues to reduce
demand and work on coo.scrvalion.
- Allowed a special rate and
paying options for low-income customers. !Xtails were unavailable.
- Required Columbus Southern
to extend Lhc amount of time indus·
trial and commercial customers
have to pay thCJr bills from IS days
to 21 days.
- Wouldn't allow the utihtics to
charge customers for a Christmas
train ex hib1t, some advcrt1 sin g
costs or a $20,555 Columbus
Southern employee picnic . The
cost should he paid by shareholders
instead, the PUCO said.
PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer
sa id the cases were diff1cull to
decide.
"Our Job is lo balance the interest of the shareholders and ratepay ers," he said. "We agreed w1th the
testimony of the public who said
over and over again, 'We don't
want to pay for the mistakes of tl1e
Zimmer power plant."'
Commission member Ashley
Brown cnticJZed CG&amp;E's manage men! for trying lo pa'-s on cosl5 to
consumers before looking for ways
to save money.
"This case in many ways 1S a
wake-up call to the mana~cmcnt or
that company," Brown saJd.
Ohio Consumers' Counsel

~~~

William Spratley said he was
plea.sed with the decJsions, though
he was concerned about Columbus
Southern's first -year, tO percD&lt;ll
mcreasc.
"Clearly Jhe effort has paid
off," said Spradcy, who represenl5
consumers in utility rate cases .
" This is a much beuer result than
anyth in g I've see n in nego tia tions.·'

Hagerty said.
The FBI sa1d they were mcm ·
bers or assoCJates of Jhe Cr ip s
gang. Six other people were being
sought.
Denny, 36, of Covma. was hos·
pitalized in good condition Tuesday, recovering from severe head
injuries. In a statement, he said he
had no anger toward those who
beat htm but was glad if police
"got the right guys."
The three days of violence,
touched off by the acquiual of fotrr
white police ofr.cers in the videotaped healing of King, a black
molorisl, left 52 people dead aJld
caused $785 million m damage.
Also Tuesday, Gov. Pete Wilscn
announced the fust withdrawal of
the National Guard troops that
helped restore order. Four thousand
were lD leave t(Xby. TilL rrm:.~in m g
6.000 will [1ull uul ~ r:1du:ll l y , he
sa1d.
.~bout 3,000 Mannes and Army
rroops left las! week.
To 1den1Jfy suspects in other
auacks. the ~overnmem has subpoenaed videotape and photos from
TV statoon s and newspapers.
Scores of looters hauled off goods
'" full 'Jew of cameras. Others
were filmed scmng frre to shops.
KCOP agreed to turn over aboui
90 hours of ~J~pe, said Jeff Wald,
the TV s~J~Uon ' s cxccuuve direcJor
of news progntrnming.

Permits are required before
installing private sewage systems
The Me igs County Health ow ner against negligence and JXXU
!Xpartmem has issued an adv1sory workmanship.
to area residents who plan to bu1ld
Failure to purchase a required
a home, install a mobile home or permit before mstalling a home
move a home to a new location . sewage system is a violation of
Before starting work on a site, a siJlle and local laws, and may result
permit must be obtained from the in the property bemg disapproved
health department to insiJIII a pn - if the owner wishes to se ll the
vale sewage system.
property, and may subsequently
By purcha&lt;ing a permiliO mstall result in legal aCLion being initiated
a home sewage system, a land for violations.
owner is assured of a site visit hy
II is also the pohc y of the board
health department personnel for of health that all persons who clean
recommendations regarding to sewage disposal tanks, grease traps
most feasible type of system for a and so forth, or those wishmg to do
given location. These inspecuons so. be registered and bonded with
w1ll he done by regJStered sanitan- the health departmcnl
ans. The land owner will also be
Anyone contacted by an mdJVidmade aware of the name s of ual wJShing lo clean a sewage dissewage system installers who arc posal tank: is advised to asked that
rcgisJered with the health depart · person for their regisllalion card
ment The department requires rcg- from the board of health.
i.,.cred installers to be bonded, and
!Ills bond protects the properly

ODOT removing
political signs
Stale highway workers arc in the
process of removing all political
sign s from state right -of-ways,
accord1ng to the Ohio !Xpanmcnt
of Traospona tion.
State law proh 1bits the placement of political sign s on stat e
right-of- ways. ·
Those who are not sure whether
their signs arc on a right-of-way
should ca ll the state h1ghway
garage and ask. S1gns w1ll taken to
Jhe SIJ!Ic garage where they can be
plCked up by owners.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

'

446 4524

''

··~ · ~ ""~'~I

llAIIGAIN MIT IN££~ IHUI[IAT. SUNOJor
M~G.IIII JIIG~T

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
500 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
(Now In Its Tth Year of Operation}

ANNOUNCES

FISH &amp; CHIPS

KINDERGARTEN
REGISTUTION

1.64

rufSOAI

•••••••••

Special of the Week!

5

7

11&lt;1 Ill I' "' [S'

FOR THE 1992·93 SCHOOL YEARTO
SET UP AN APPOINTMENT, RECEIVE
INFORMATION AND A FREE SCHOOL
MANUAL CALL992-6249.
REGISTRATION FEE:
$15.00 • MAY DISCOUNT

�•

Wednesday, May 13,-1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
wednesday, May 13, 1992

Page-4

.~ordan's

homer, arm push
iCardinals to 6-4 win over Reds
two-run single off reliever Norm
Charlton as the Cardinals came
from behind a third time in four
games to win.
Reds manager Lou Piniella
came to St Louis a day early and
was watching from the press box
when the Cardinals beat the
National League champion Atlanta
Braves 8-3.
"I saw what they did to
Atlanta," Piniella said. "They're a
good hilling club. Jordan's a goodloOOng young hiuer."
Jose's also hot, batting .426 (23
for 54) in 13 games since coming
off the disabled list His hit capped
a three-run seventh and rescued
rookie Donovan Osborne (4-1),
who left trailintt 4-3 after Reggie
Sanders' RBI smgle in the top of
the seventh.
Ozzie Smith's ground-rule RBI
double off Charlton, which ex tended bis hitting streak to 10 games,
tied the score 4-4.
Charhon was pitching for the
firSt time in four days and wasn't
sharp.
"I like to pitch a lot," Charlton
said "The pitch to Jose was a bad
pitch."
Osborne wasn't sharp, either.
He's had a head cold the last few
days and allowed four runs on eight
hits in seven innings. His ERA rose
from 1.45, second in the league, to
1.83.
"I didn't feel strong but I'm not
goio~ to blame a mediocre start on
that ' Osborne said. "They're the
toughest team I've faced so far."
Rity.
Jonlan ' s home ran in the first
Todd Wmell pitched the eighth
off Greg SwiDddl (3-2} gave the and Lee Smith finished for his
Cardinals u art r lead He also league-leading lith save in 13
struck 001 and jkljlflCd up agamst chances.
SwindelL
Swindell, who had won his three
"The IJont• liDc n I guessed previous SlartS, allowed five runs in
ewvcball aad he diR:w il and I ~ 6 1{3 innings. He went 2 for 3 for
the best of billl, " Jonlan satd . the first two hits of his major "The:lll arne bid; 111 CII1IL"
league career, all of which was
Felix Jose weal 3 for 3 and spent with Cleveland in the Ameribroke a seweadt-iDDiDg tie witb a can League before this season.

By R.a. FAU.SillOM
ST. LOUIS (AI')- Brim Jor~~ oe-dlo-job training
With die SL Loais Canliuls, but
'you. d hlrdly lllliU iL
· Jonlal, a roobc. ads SL Louis
i11 homeN ed RBis and bad a
tbrce-f'lltl *- iD TIIC!day Digbt's
6-4 victory ower Lhe Cincinaati
ttcm. He also dln:w 11111 • rumcr at
lbe plale from left field in the
founh itltlq Ill ~ tile Canlinab
win their ro..a . . . game and
eiglldl in tlleir last 10.
"He' s a 100 RBI-a-year man
the way he· s pcrfonacd so far,"
manager Joe Torre said. "The
thing I like . . . bim is wbm lhcR
are men in lUll iuf: positioo he does
his be5l wort.· ·
Jordan bas f...e home ~ and
18 RBis and is ~ the league
leaden wilb 15 C1D-lme bits. He
also plays stronB safety for the
Adama Falam ~ die Cardinals
are oegc•iMil!t wid! Jmlm's agmt
to 1..-e him I"'"Y lrom NIL
"I don'tlmow. and rm Dill worried abola it.." Jordan said. ''I'm
trying 10 s&amp;ay focused on baseball.
Whatever's gomg to happen ts
going Ill NAn ..
DefeR dus !ICWW1. Jordan had
only 406 at-bau iD tbe minor
leagocs sprt:atl IJ\U fo..- )ICin. He
got a cllaoox 111 play Jlla 1Ws1 baseman ADdres Galafqp ended a
bone in bts wrist in the second
pnc of lbc SQgJD and lbc Cardinals IILil"'d PcQo Gaenuo Ill flnl
He ...,., •• qged it lbc CJRXlflll-

m's

Scoreboard
TBA; s.ale al Utah, TBA ; OU~:aao at

lnthr~ ..

--

New Tca:k. I p.m.
Fri ..}' - Clenland at Boaton, I

NATIONAL LEAGUI:
L

ftL

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•

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........ 19 "'

....-11

........n

___ .1 ]

n

11
19

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m

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0

p.&amp;

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Sal•rdaJ- Portland 11 Phoenit,
II Saulc.. TBA.

TBA. if aeceauy; Utah

G&amp;

5••••1'- New Yotk tt Chi~:aao,
T8A, il 111a1111rT. Bc.loll at CWvtland,

).j

u

J

.,
I

TIA,W-.y

NOTI: II both Butem Confen=nce
Rmifiaa1l awl ia W pma or leu, t.he
Ea.tcm Confereuce fin.lls will bqin oa
!uaday, Jl,by 17 at 3 ~ 30 p.m. II both
W•tan Canfl:fllll.ce u:mUtllllJ end ill
frrc pms arIa&amp;, !.he Weom Conference fiaWI trill bcJin 011 Satwda y. M. y

!6. 3:30p.m.

Slanley Cup playoffs
Tuesday's scores

Edm(J!UCW\ 3. Vancouver 0, Edmooa.on
...u..ne. 4-2

Future games
To•IJhl- N.Y. Ranscn

11

P1tt1 ·

......_HOpm.

trilla}'- I'm.~ •• N.Y Rmgcn.
7:JO p.m.., if DCICGf-U)'
S.blrday - Edmm ton u 011cago,

Ulp.m

Transactions
Ba.wbaU
Amtrian Lupt
TEXAS RANGERS - Purci!uod W
oarr.ma d Dws DaN. caLCher, fran Ok labuma Clty of the Amc:nC&amp;II AIIOClltion.
~led Mike Campbell, pitdu:r, fllf
!UDl.p"l'lall. Act.Jvated Bru.n BohanOfl,
plld!a. &amp;un lhr: 15-dty diublcd l.iJl and
optioned htm to Tulu of the Teut
Leap Annmux:ed Todd 8umJ, pilcher.
l'lq clea~ •a1ven and wu ulisnod to
C.lahmna City

National L.atue

MONTREAL EXPOS - P!aood DarFlctdtc:r, c.~l.tha. on \.he 15-day dil·
ablcd lut. llttallcd D.na1. Roed, outfield·
er. fmm !'us UIJUIY· rthabiliLILJon ua~ ­
!"Ul

mcnt 11 We.t Palm Beach of the Florida
Sl.ltc

--

. O*:llall --······-·-.lD u
~- --------------~~ t l
· Cd · ........... 11 I I
T - ______
U U

Bask&lt;lbaU
NaU..aJ Bukrib.ll Aaod.Uon

LOS ANGELES LAKERS - An ·
600

.. m
• t6

JD
~Cit, ·-·· - ······-' l2

~

$cd.]e _____ ........... UJ

T

2

m

nOllllc;cd the reaJanalioo of Mike Dun·
Ieavy , co1c;h, 10 l'lr: c;ln taka the head
c;oachUII poiti.HXI with the Mihuukce

j

5)6

Dt
.5 t 4
.500

,.__...

l.l
J

Ba•

NEW .JER.SEY NETS

u

1.5
10

Footballl.e.~p~

ClNCINNA 11 BENGALS - Cllimod
Bran BRilllln. wide receiva, orf wa.iven
ftun the CJcvdancl Browrw.
CLEVEUND BROWNS ~ Waived

.....
..
a-CII)'J.a..-.
........_ .. Cioapl
-)

!"""Tolley, tialu md.

HOUSTOI"l OILERS - Sianed Jeff

1.Taa l

K..i..riah, pud; Kerin Lana •nd Dltrle~
Pbann•. aafetic:s ; John Nee, orrer11 i ve
u.dle; Clll'tiJ Reed, wide receiYer; md
lcm' Robinlon, linebda.

J

o.-.14-Nl

Announced

Football
Nadonal

,~IKOI'd

NewYd l. ~ D

•; ·

~

the ta.l&amp;ftlbol of Bill FilCh, COilclt.

r-1. Cl*!lal l
~

Lasuc.

Paul O'Neill added a two-run
double in the second for Cincinnati.
In other games, it was Los
Angeles 2, Montreal 0; San Fran·
cisco 7, Philadelphia 5; Atlanta 4,
Pittsburgh 2; New York 7, San
Diego 3; and Chicago 3, Houston

2.
Dodgers 2, Expos 0
If Kevin Gross ever pitched better, he probably did it against the
Montreal Expos.
Gross, in his lOth season, has
made a career out of beating Mon·
treal. The Los Angeles right-hander
did it again Tuesday night in one of
his finest performances, stnktng
out a career-high 13 in a complete·
game three-hit shutout as the
Dodgers beat the Expos 2-0.
Gross improved to 13-4 with a
2.52 ERA against Montreal. It was
his 12th shutout and ftrst since Junc
II, 1990, against Philadelphia.
"He was in control the whole
game," said Delino DeShields,
who would know since the second
baseman struck out four times
against Gross. "That's the best I've
seen him throw since I've known
him."
Gross, who spent two seasons
with Montreal before moving to
Los Angeles last season, had the
Expos baffled with hissharp-breaking curvebaiL He rebred the ftrst
seven batters before Tom Foley
doubled. During one stretch, Gross
had five straight strikeouts.
Darryl Stnlwherry, who missed
four ~cs with a back strain and a
viralmfection, got all the runs LA
needed in the first inning with a
towering tw~run homer in his ftrst
at-bat since May 5.

1r11l Slnlll Slqlhena,l.incbad:cr.

NEW YdRK GIANTS - Sisn_e d
Merton HanU. wide ruaver, md Bnan
Allzai, WiiOUback.

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Nall-.1 Hoc•ey IA.ap
HAR.TRlRD WHAL..ERS - Fi.m:l Ed

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PHlLADHLPJDA FLYERS - Ertaldcd the cmtncl cl Bill Dineen. coach.

Olympic.
N~med

Port·
land plld Oyde Dre..kr and I:hlc caun
Omstian l..aettn.:r to lhe Olympc team.
USA BASXETBAIL -

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MANKA TTAN - Retained l!d
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erm- the NB A dmtL

Cubs 3, Astros 2
At Houston, Luis Salazar's sacrifice fly scored Andre Dawson in
the ninth inning and lifted Chicago
over the Astros in a ~arne where
neither club had a htt after five
innings.
Houston's Jimmy Jones, malcing
his firSt start since Aug. 12, 1991,
pitched 7 1/3 hitless innings and
Mike Morgan held the Astros without a hit for 5 1/l
Jones retired 17 straight before
Joe Girardi singled in the eighth.
Another hit followed and Jones
was removed .
In the sixth, Jones beat out a
slow roller Ill third for the fmt hit
off Morgan.
Paul Assenmacher (1 -1) pitched
lwo scoreless innings for the win,
while Joe Boever (0-1) allowed the
winning run.

Chicago, Utah win NBA playoff games
By JOE MOOSHIL
Koteles.
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
"The lane doesn't belong to
Jordan has a fantasy - a wtde anybody, and if I'm going to get
open game against the New York knocked down, I'm going to the
Knicks.
hole," Jordan said.
. That didn't happen Tuesday
The Bulls could end the Eastern
ntghl, but Jordan led the defending Conference semifinal series with a
champion Chicago Bulls to a 96-88 victory Thursday night. If the
victory and a 3-2 lead over the Knicks win, Game 7 will be played
Knicks in their best-of-seven series in Chicago Sunday afternoon.
that cootinues in New York ThursIn a Western Conference semifiday nighL
nal Tuesday night, Utah moved to a
"I'd love to go tn there and win 3-1 lead by defeating Seattle 89-83.
No. 6, but it won't be easy," said
Tonight, the Boston Celtics will
Jordan. "And I'd al so ltke to sec take on the Cleveland Cavaliers in
one of those wide-open games.· ·
Game 5 of their Eastern ConferIt was anything but Tuesday ence semifinal. The teams are tied
night, although Jordan tried hi s 2-2.
besL
The Bulls never trailed after takHe scored 37 points, 26 in the mg a 20-18 lead in the ftrst quarter,
second half. But most of them were but they could never put the Knicks
tough points, with 15 coming from away until Jordan converted a
the free throw line after he was three-point play with 35.9 seconds
repeatedly hammered by the left for a 92-86 lead.

Afenir in a cloud of dust in the fourth inning of
Tuesday night's National League game in St.
Louis, whicb tbe Cardinals won 6-4. (AP)

By BARRY Wli..NER
NEW YORK (AP) - With the
additions of Clyde Drexler and
Christian Laenner, the U.S .
Olympic team is complete. Maybe.
Drexler, the star guard of the
Ponland Trail Blazers, became tl1e
lith NBA player selected. Laettner, the 6-foot-11 Player of the
Year who led Duke to the last two

national championships, is the only
co llege player on the squad that
will play in the Tournament of the
Americas in Portland, Ore., where
tl must finish in the top four to
qualify for Barcelona. Both were
added Tuesday.
"I think this team has unlimited
potential," said Drexler, who was
miffed that he was not an original

Edmonton beats Vancouver
3-0 to make Campbell finals
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) The Vancouver Canucks were the
best team in the Smythe Dtvision
during the regular season. As usual,
the Edmooton Oilers showed who
was boss in the playoffs.
"It was defense that won it for
them . ... Our offense Couldn't overcome it," said Canucks coach Pat
Quinn after his team was upset tn
the Smythe Division finals by tJ-,e
Oilers.
The Oilers completed their sixgame trmmph wtth a 3-0 victory
Tuesday night that moved them
into the Campbell Conference
finals for the third straight year and
the eighth time in 10 years.
Edmonton will open the best-ofseven conference ftnal in Chicago
on Saturday. The Oilers beat the
Blackhawks in the conference
finals in 1983, 1985 and 1990, the
only three times they've met previ ously in the playoffs.
Tonigh~ the New York Rangers

They were ahead 30-19 early in
McDaniel scored 18 of his 26
the second quarter when Craig pomts in the fust half. Willtins fin Hodges came off the bench and hit ished with 19 and Ewing 14.
a pair of three-pointers. But the
For a change, the Bulls outreKnicks, led by Xavier McDaniel bounded the Knicks 33-29.
and Gerald Willins, kept battling
Jazz 89, SuperSonics 83
back.
In Seattle, Jeff Malone scored
New Yark came within a point 24 points and Karl Malone 22 as
of the lead six limes in the third the Jazz grabbed their ftrsl playoff
quaner, only to tJe turned back by road victory in mm than a year. In
Jordan or John Paxson, who fin- the lowest-scoring game of the
ished with 13 points.
series, the Jazz got six crucial free
There was one more gasp when throws from Tyrone Corbin in the
the Knicks cut Chicago's lead to fmal minute.
Ricky Pierce led Seattle with 21
73-72 on three straight points by
points.
McDanieL But BJ. Armstrong and
Utah is one win away from
Jordan helped open another sixpointlead.
reaching the conference finals for
Patrick Ewing fouled out with the ftrst time in its histoty. Game 5
3:33 left 1n the game and the will be played Thursday night at
Knicks managed to cut Chicago's Salt Lake City, where Utah was 37lead to 89-86 when McDaniel hit a 4 in the regular season, the best
three-pointer with less than two home record in the NBA.
minutes to play .

travel to Pil!sburgh tor uame 6.
The Penguins, the defending StanIcy Cup champions, lead the series
3-2.
Vancouver became the third
regular-season division champion
to be eliminated in this year's
upside-down playoffs. Montreal
was swept earlier by Boston in the
Adams finals and Detroit dropped
four straight to Chicago in the Norris.
"We've been a very comfortable bunch for the last three or four
months," Edmonton coach Ted
Green said after the Oilers ended
the Canucks'
phenomenal
turnaround season, when Vancouver finished fourth overall with its
best record in club htstory (42-2612 for 96 points).
The Oilers, looking for their
six th Stanley Cup in nine years,
eliminated the Kings 4-2 in th e
Smythe semiftnals.

selection last year, "There is enormous talent and flexibility on this
team.
"There were a lot of guys worthy to be chosen, and I think it is a
real honor to be considered, and to
be selected is an even greater
honor.''

To be the only collegian on the
team is just as special, Laettner
said.
Players including Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, David Robinson,
Chris Mullin and even Michael Jordan, could be questionable for the

Johnson NBA's
leading rookie
By PAUL NOWELL
CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) Larry Johnson's selection as the
No. I pick in the NB A draft last
year was met with skepticism by
fans of Billy Owens, Dikembe
Mutomho and Kenny Anderson.
The choice was vindicated
Tuesday when Johnson won the
NBA rookie of the year award in a
landslide vote after he led the Charlotte Hornets to the best record in
their history.
Johnson, who averaged 19.2
points and II rebounds a game, got
90.5 of a possible 96 vOleS in a poll
of sponswriters and broadcastess to
join such NBA greats as Michael
Jordan, Patrick Ewing and Larry
Bird, who also were named the
league's top rookie.
Denver's Mutombo, an early
favorite for rookie honors after a
great stan and All-Star recognition,
received 3.5 votes and Btlly Owens
of the Golden State Warriors got
two.

.·.

RIDING HIGH- Cleveland second baseman Carlos Baerga (top) rides the shoulders of
Kansas City baserunner Jim Eisenreicb on the
front end of a first-inning double play in the

·~

. "''. "'

. .'.,..

~

'

first inning of Tuesday night's American League
game in Kansas City, which the Royals won 3.0.
(AP)

Kansas City blanks Cleveland 3-0
By The Associated Press
One ou t away from his first
. f.trsl
shutout in three seasons, hts
·
smcc shoulder surgery , Mar k
Gubicza became emotional .
"This is for you, dad," he said.
"I know I'm going to ~et iL"
Gubicza then reltred Carlos
Baerga on a hard smash to fir~!
baseman Wally Joyner, wrapping
up a four-hitter and l&lt;Jmsas City's
3-0 victory over Cleveland Tuc'day nighL
, .
Gubicza (3-2) hadn l pttched a
complete game in 39 stans, since
May 24, 1990, three months before
he underwent rotator cuff surgery.
Th is was his 13th career shutout,
but his ftrst in 67 starts since June
23 , 1989, against the New York
Yankees. And it improved his
career record to 100-88.
"I kept thinking all day that I
wanted to win this for my dad, no
maner what I do, " Gubicza said.
" I wanted to get my IOOth win last
year with my dad watching, but it
didn ' t work out. Staying in the
game and finishing was very
important to me.''

KANSAS em Cl-IJEFS - Sianed
Dou1 Terry, defentive b1ck; Marc:ut
Grant md Bymn Jac;bm, wide rcct.:ivm ;

CARDINALS GET OlJf - St. Louis backstop Tom Pagnozzi (right) lunges toward the
plate to make the out on Cincinnati's Troy

,.

Mets 7, Padres 3
Dwight Gooden pitched 6 l/3
strong innings and drove in a run as
New York beat San Diego. The
Mets have won 12 of their last 13
games at home.
Gooden (3-3) gave up three runs
on stx hits to improve to 77-24 at
Shea Stadium and 12-4 against San
Diego.
Padres third baseman Gary
Sheffield was I for 3, a fourthtnning sing le, in the matchup
against his uncle Dwight It was the
first lime Gooden faced his nephew
m a major league game.
Eddie Murray had a two-run
homer for New York in the first,
Gooden's RBI single capped a
three-run ftfth and pinch-hitter Btll
Pccota had two-run double in the
etghth.

•

Drexler, Laettner added to U.S. Olympic team

Giants 7, Pbillies 5
At Philadelphia, Darren Lewis
got three hits and scored twice as
San Francisco came from three
runs down for its third straight victory.
Bill Swif~ the Giants' unbeaten
right-hander, failed in a bid for his
seventh victory. Swift allowed
seven hits and four runs, all earned,
in ftve iMings - his poorest outing of the season.
Bryan Hickerson (2-1) pitched
two innings for the victory. Mike
Jackson went two innings for his
flfSt save.
Reliever Barry Jones (1-2) gave
up a run-scoring sacrifice fly to
Will Clarlc, an RBI single to Mall
Williams and a run-scoring double
by Kin Manwaring.
Braves 4, Pirates 2
Tom Glavine became the NL's
second six-game winner with a victory over PiliSburgh, which lost its
second stnlight for only the second
time - this season. The Braves
snapped a three-game losing streak.
Glavine (6-1) allowed six hit'
and struck out six over eight
innings. Marvin Freeman pitched
the ninth for his second save.
Otis Nixon, who had three hits,
opened the first with a double, took
third on Terry Pendleton's bunt and
scored on Ron Gant' s grounder to
shortstop. Another run came home
on Damon Berryhill's RBI single.
Gant added a run-scoring double in
the second and Sid Bream had an
RBI double in the fourth .
Steve Buechele's single brought
in both Pittsburgh runs at Atlanta.

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Anthony Gubicza. the pitcher's
fa ther, died of a hean attack last
June.
In other games, Toronto beat
Oakland 3-0, New York beat Scat-

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V1Jttolllt Plants, lloo11lng
allll Follogt Hanging
l.,ktts, largt Selection of
Shrt~..btry
andTrHs.

iui·r•~~ii'REENHOUSE
SyraCISe 992·5776

tic 3-1, Minnesota heat Boston 6-3,
Baltimore beat Texas 5-l, Detrotl
bea t Cal.'••orma
· 4-2 an d Mil wau kee
•~~
Ch'
"'"'! tcago 6-2.
It was eight years to the date
since Gubicza beat Boston 4-0 for
his first shutout and ftrst maJor
league victory.
Scott Scudder (2-4) allowed one
run and six hits in 6 2/3 mmngs as
Cleveland lost its fourth straight
and was shut out for the stxth ume
this season.
.
Blue Jays 3, Athleto:s 0
John Olerud hit a tw~out, tworun homer off Dave Stewart (2-3)
in the sixth as Toronto stoPI&gt;edthe
Athletics' five-game wtnntng
streak and won for the seventh time
in nine games .
Jimmy Key (3-1), Duane Ward
and Tom Henke combined on a
seven -hitte~ for the Blue Jays, with
Henke getung hts ftfth save. Stewart pitched a five-httter at the SkyDome for his flfSt complete game
m 26 starts smce July 3, 1991.

allowing just one earned run, striktngouylftvekand waMikm.gthrec.
3
1
·
M 1an
Hallees 1as' artners
add. ·
c
tbon
· a 1-mmute
(See AL on Page 5)

IT'S THAT
TIME OF YEAR
•LAWN MOWERS
20 and 22 inch
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PROPELLED
By Briggs and
Stratton

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. Va.

KOLCUN'S OUT - The scorin~ a~tempt or Galli~ A~~!my's
Meg ban Kolcun (right) in the s!Xth mn_mg.of Tuesday s Dms10n 11
sectional softball title game agamst Me•gs IS snuffed at the plate by
Marauder catcher Ginger Findley. But the Blue Angels, well
stocked with runs by this point, went on to win 8-0. (OVP photo by
Dave Harris)

GAHS ladies beat Meigs 8-0
for Division II sectional title
Senior Jo Harmon limtted the
high-powered Meigs Marauder
offense to two hits, and fellow
senior Tandra Adams went 3 for 4
at the plate to lead Gallia Academy's softball team to a 8-0 win
over top seeded Meigs in the Division II sectional ti~c game softball
Tuesday at Southern High SchooL
The loss was only the second m
16 games for Meigs.
Amy Morris put the Blue
Angels on the board ftrst when she
reached on a fielders choice and
stole second and third base where
she scored on a base hit by Lorri
Hauldren.
Gallia Academy scored three
{llore runs in the third to make tl a
~-0 game when Adams tripled and
Amy Huffman followed with an
RBI single. A Marauder error and
a pair of sacrifices scored the
inning's second and third runs.
The Blue Angels added insurance runs by scoring solo runs m
(he ftfth and seventh innings and a
pair of runS in the sixth inning to
' lose out the sconng.
· Meigs looked to get things
logether in the fifth inning when
Chrissy Weaver lined a double, but

the senior was thrown out by a perfect throw trying to stretch It into a
triple. Lisa Fackler had the only
other Marauder hit - a two-out
double in the seventh inning.
Harmon was in control through
out the contest walking only one
and striking out four. Adams led
GaUipolis at the plate with a single,
double and a triple. Missy Walker
added a triple, Hauldren and Walker each added a single.
Senior Tara Gerlach, the loser
for the Marauders, struck out one
and walked four while giving up
six hits.

"I think I can be a much bellel
player," Johnson, a 6-foot-5 1/2,
250-pound power forward. said
after receiving the award at a ceremony at the Charlotte Coliseum.
Johnson's only regret is that the
Hornets, who finished the season
with a 31-51 recml, did not make
the playoffs.
"Being a competitor and watching those guys playing out there
makes me want to he out there with
them" he said. "I don't ever want
to be'in this position again."
Picked first overall out of
UN!. V in the June draft, Johnson
proved to even his harshest critics
the Hornets were right when they
selected him over the 7-1
Mutombo.
Even when Mutombo played
well in the early part of the season
and made the All-Star team, John son said he didn't get discouraged.
"I just wanted to prove there
wasn't only one rookie in the
NBA," he S31d.
In February, The Charlol!e
Observer polled spans writers in
every NBA city about their pick as
the league's top rookie. The vote
was
overwhelmingly
proMutombo.
But Mutombo struggled with
inJuries while Johnson kept
improving.
Johnson, who was named the
NBA 's Rookie of the Month in
December. won it again in February and March. He finished II th in
the league in rebounding and 24th
in scoring.
His best games coincided with
the Hornets best basketball of the
seasoo.
Beginning m late February, the
Hornets won 12 of 16 games. The
key was Johnson, who averaged
22.6 points, I 1.1 rebounds and 4.4
assists per game in March.

DOWNING CHILDS

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YOUR INDEPENDENT

AGENTS SERVING
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BONEY
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Olympics.
Bird has played only one playoff game because of a sore back
and Johnson says he will play
despite having testing positive for
the AIDS virus. Robinson currently
is recovering from hand surgery,
Jordan has been plagued by back
pain and Mullin was hun in th e
ftrst round of the playoffs.
The selection committee said it
'\
I"
also will consider all pro and college players as alternates in case i i \ 'i ·~
current members drop out, and it
REACHING FOR THE RIM- Chicago rorwar11 Horar:. GrtLDt
wiU not have a specific list of alter·
(left)
reaches for the rim above the ddnst oll'ered by Ntw York's
nates.
Greg Anthony during the fourth quarter of Tuesday llipr's NBA
"We've had some concern,
second-round
playoiT game in Chicago, which th• Bulls ..,., 116-38.
obviously, about Magic, Larry and
(AP)
David Robinson," USA Basketball
president Dave Gavin said. "But
(ContinuedfromPage4)
we received assurances from all
three that they will be completely
fit and ready to play .... But we do to the lineup, htl a two-run single homer game of hts car=. LOCiud·
have a contingency plan in that all as New York stopped a six-game ing a drive off Bryan Hrley ((}."2)
players in the pro and collegiate losing streak and sent visiting Seat- in the eighth inning that brde a 2.
side will be available to us.''
all tie at Anaheim Stadium.
tle to its II th loss in 13 games.
Drexler believes John son
Frank Tanana, sent to the
Mclido Perez (3-3) allowed one
proved he will have no problems in run and six hits in 6 2/3 iMings and bullpen with a 7.07 ERA, g01 tb.e
Portland, Barcelona, anywhere.
Steve Howe fmished for his fourth victory in his flfSI relief app:arancc
"I think the way the All-Star save. Jeff Johnson (3-3) lost his since Aug. 14, 1990, allowing two
game was played, it dismissed all thtrd straight decision, allowing all hits in two innings. Mike Hc:nnethoughts of Mag;c not being able to
mao got six outs for bis sixth 5a\'C .
co mpete," he said. "The dangers three runs and six hits in eight
Bre.ftrs 6, Wkitr So• 2
mnings and walling six.
of him competing in any NBA
Jaime Navarro (3-3) allowed
Twins
6, Red Sox 3
game or any game is up to Magic .
Greg Gagne doubled home two one run and eight bits in eight
It will be a pleasure to see him
runs in the second and heat out a innings, and Robin Yount hit a
playing again."
two-run double IS Milwat*ce woo
founh at
the
Other members or the team are bunt to key a three-run
'
I
.
its second straight after seven em:
Karl Malone, John Stockton , Metrodome as Mtnnesota won tts socutive losses. Greg Hibbard (4-2}
Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing founh straight and reached .500 for gave up ftve runs md 10 hits in ti
the ftrst time since April 12.
and Scottie Pippen.
Kevin Tapani (2-4) won for the 2/3 innings for visiting Chicago.
"When they say dream team,
flfSt time since April 10. allowing which lost for just the strond time .
thts really is what it is," said one run and six hits in seven m mne games.
Drexler who averaged 25 points innings. Mike Gardiner (2 -I) gave
Sports briefs
and 6.7 ;...isiS Ibis season. "It will up six runs and nine hits in 3 2!3
be a pleasure to play with such innings as his ERA rose from 2.57
Tennis
guys. I think everybody on court lO 4.02.
BERLIN (AP) - Top-seeded
will make everybody around them
Steffi Graf beat Meccedes Paz of
Orioles S, Rangers I
so much better, and I think we will
Ben McDonald (5-0) allowed Argentina 6-2, 6-4 in the second
bnng home the gold.
.
.
one run and five hits in 6 2/3 round of the wr A German Open.
There one other collegian sen- innings. Todd Frohwirth got six
In ftrst round play, sa:ond-sred
ously considered for the team was outs for his second save as visiting ed Ar.mua Sanchez of Spam beat·
7-foot-1 center Shaquille O'Neal, Baltimore won for the lOth lime in Japan's Maya Kidowaki Ml. 6-3.:
who has left LSU as a junior to turn 13 games.
and No. 13 Judith W"temer of AilS-·
pro.
Bobby Witt (3-4) gave up three tria topped Metke Babel of Ger -·
"Naturally, I am very disap - runs and six hits in 6 1/3 tnnings, many, 6-3 ,6-2.
pointed about not playing in the walked five and struck out none as
In other matches, Barbara RitOlympcis," he said, "but I truly Texas dropped to 5-11 at home.
tner of Germany beat Pany O'Reilwish all the team members the very
ly 6-3. 6-2 and Helena Sukova.
Tigers 4, Angels 2
best of luck, especially Christian
defeated
Veronita Martinek of
Travis Fryman had the flfSll woLaettner. I think that Christian w1ll
Germany, 4-6,_7-5, 6-3.
be an excellent addition to the
team. I'll be rooting for the guys to
bring home the gold."

AL games ···- - - - - -

Sports briefs
NEWARK, NJ. (AP) - Btll
Fitch resigned as coach of the New
Jersey Nets, less than two wec~s
after leading them to thetr ftrst
playoff bath since 1986.
.
Fitch, who had a year left on hts
contrliC~ will remain with the club
as a consultant His status has been
in question since December, when
there were repons that Jim Valvano
would replace him.

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�Ohio

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, May 13, 1992

Family
Medicine

Page---a

Single mother expresses concerns
that if my children (I have two)
Dear Ann Landers: I am a single
mis;s a certain number of days wilhin
mother with a 19-year-old daughter.
a
s•x-week period, the teacher can
What are my righiS?
fail
them. Not once have th ey
I've tried my best to raise my
mentlQ/lcd that their absence s
daughter alone. I was only 17 when
affected
the quality of their work.
· Amber" was hom. You could say
ANN LANDERS
AU
they're
interested in is how many
"1'191, Loo Anarla
we grew up together. I've been
TiJn
..
Syndlu
..
ond
days
the
children
missed. This makes
living with a man for the past 14
Crulon Syndic.W'
absolutely no sense to me.
years, have a responsible job, and
The school system says we must
am quite happy with my life. But it
is
21.
keep
our children home if they're
hasn't been easy.
You
say
you
both
went
for
sick and then penalizes us when we
Amber refuses 10 go to school .
counseling
but
it
didn't
belp
much.
do.
I believe this system is patently
where she is a junior. nor will she
implore
you
10
try
again
with
I
unfair
and I'd like 10 lmow whal you
get any kind of a job. She says it's
another
counselor
-and
soon
.
think
about
it. -- MRS. G., CEDAR
my responsibili ty to support her
Your daughter needs 10 understand LAKE, IND.
until she is 21.
the
importance of a high school
DEAR INDIANA: I can see
I say she 1s old enou gh tO accept
education
.
Don't
give
up
on
this
why
you are upset, but there are
some responsibility for herself. I
girl
or
she
'II
give
up
on
herself
and
no blanket solutions to this prolr
want her to graduate from high
the
problems
will
be
unending.
lem
. Every school must abide by
school, but if that is asking too much,
Dear
Ann
Landers:
This
is
in
the
regulations of the board of
she should at least get a G.E.D. and
response
to
the
letter
writer
who
education.
then a job.
signed
herself
"School
Is
No
Place
In your partic ular se t-up, I
Am I legally bound to support my
For
Sick
Children."
believe
it is unfair to nunk a
daughter until she's 21? We have
I'd
like
to
make
it
clear
!hat
there's
youngster
based on days missed if
bolh gone for counseling from time
to time but it hasn't helped much. It more to the problem !han just sick he makes up the work and passes
hurts me to see Amber throwing children . We have a school nurse the tests. Your complaint on that
away her life. I worry about where who sends our kids home with score is perfectly legitimate .. and
she's going to end up. Please help anything from a runny nose 10 a you can quote me.
Do you have questions about sa .
me if you can. ·· SHORT ON HOPE stomach ache and the time !hey miss
is
counted
against
them.
bur
no one to talk to? Ann Landers'
IN LONG ISLAND
If
a
child
is
out
of
school
for
three
booklet. "Sex and the Tetn -Ager,"
DEAR LONG ISLAND: In New
days
a
doctor's
note
is
required
is
frl1llk and to the point. Send a
York state, a parent is legally
before
that
youngster
can
re-enter.
self-addressed.
long. busiMss-siu
re.1 ponsible for an able-bodied child
Most
parents
can't
afford
10
take
their
envelope and a check or money
only until 18 years of age. If the
children
10
the
doctor
every
time
order for $3.65 (this includes
child is not self-supporting, however,
they
miss
a
couple
of
days
of
schooL
postage and handling) to : Tuns.
and must fil e for state welfare
That's
not
the
half
of
it.
Ann.
I've
c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box /1562.
(should the family throw her out),
the stat.e can charge the parents for received several leuers from the Chicago , Ill. 60611 -0562 . (In
all payments it makes until the child school authorities reminding me Canada . send $4 45.)

Ann
Landers

WINNERS · Pictured are some of tbe winners from the Easter e~g bunt sponsorfd by the
Racine American Leg10n . Winners in tbe 1-2
year-old category were Marissa Maynard ,
Joshua Caruthers, Asbly Demoss, Dax Holman,
Amber Litton, Reburta Forster. In the 3·5 year·
olds, Jennifer Wolfe was tbe winner; in the 5-7

year-olds, Bryan Brown was winner; in the 7-9
year-olds, Bradley Brown was winner; in the age
nine and up category the winners were Tammy
Wolfe, James AUey and Crystal Coleman. Find·
ing the most eggs were Jessica Hill, Jeffrey Par·
sons and Rachael Morris.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or tbat event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal endar.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Community Church, 515 Pearl
Stree t, will hold revival through
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
different speakers and singers each
n1 ght. Pubhc invited.
SILVER RUN - The Sil ver Run
Baptist Church will hold rev ival
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with preac hing by Alan Blac kwood.
RE EDSV ILLE - The Eastern
Local Board of Education will hold
a special meeting Wednesday at 5
p.m. at the high school cafeteria to
discuss fmancial issues.
MIDDL EPORT - A meet th e
candidates night will be held
Wednesday ev ening at 7 p.m . at
Overbrook Center in Middleport
All friends and famil y of residen ts
are in vited.
CHES TER - The Pas l Co uncilors Club of Chester Council No.
323, Dau ghter! of America. w1ll
meet al the lodge hall Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
RAC IN E - South e rn Hi gh
Sc hoo l wlil present th e four -ac t
drama play "The Park" wriuen by
the studcniS Th ursday at 7 p.m. al
the lngh sc hool. AdmiSSIOn IS $1.
ROCK SPRING S - The Rock
Spnngs Gr.mge wlll meet Th ursda y
at 8 p.m. al the hall .
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup pers Plains VFW Post No . 9053
will meet Tn ursday at 7 10 p.m. at
the poSI horne
POMEROY - Prec eptor Beta
Be ta Chapt er , Beta S1gma Pht
Soronty. wdl meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. al the F.p1scopal Church.
POMEROY - Evening dmncr at
sc n1or citt1.cns ce nter Thursday 56:3 0 p.m with crea med ba ked
chtcken. homemade noodles. green
beans, cole slaw. roll and beverage
for $3. Dessert w!l l be an add ition-

RACINE - The Meigs County
al 75 center. Mus•c wlil be provided by The Classics. Public invited . Retired Teachers will have a luncheon meeting at the Racin e
MIDDL EPOR T - Middleport Methodist Church Saturday at
Alumni Band practice on Thursday 12:30 p.m. Call992-3887 for inforat 7 p.m. at Meigs High School mation.
bandroom. All former Middleport
HENDERSON - The Gallia
H.S. ban d members are urged to
participate .
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
CHES TER - The Shade River from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Lodge No. 453 F &amp; AM, Chester. Community Center in Henderson,
will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the W.Va . John Waugh will be the
lodge hall. All master masons arc caller.
invited . Refres hm ent s will be
RUTLAND - There will be a
served.
hymn sing at the Rutland
RUTLA ND - Th e Board of Methodist Church Saturday at 7
D1rec tors of Leading Creek Con- p.m. featuring New Life Smgers
servancy District will hold liS regu- and Tabitha. Rev . Arthur Crabtree
lar meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m. invites the public . Fellowship and
refreshments will follow .
a11ts offi ce. The public is invited.
niPPERS PLAINS - A Lovalty
FRIDAY
POMEROY - A special meeting Day program will be presented by
for the Me1gs County React Team the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
will be held Friday at Pleaser's m 9053 and Ladies Au&gt;iliary to honor
Pom eroy at 7:30p.m. Memorial hometown heroes Saturday at 2
Day weekend coffee break will be p.m. at the post home. Pubilc mvitdisc ussed and all members are erl. RefreshmeniS served.
urged 10 attend.
NEW LEXINGTON - D1strict
13,
Daughters of Am erica , will
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plai ns VFW Pos t No. 9053 have pmctice at the senior ciuzens
and Ladies Au xiliary will have a building al New Le•ington Saturdance Friday fr om 8- 11 :3 0 p.m. day at I p.m. This practi ce 1s for
with mu sic by CJ and Country the District 13 rally to be held May
30 at New Lexington. All members
Gen tlemen. Pub~c invited .
in the district are urged to auend to
support
the d1stricL
BAS HAN - The Bashan Reamers 4-H Club will sponsor a dance
RUTLAND - There wlll be a
Frida y fro m 7-10 p.m. at th e
Bashan Ftrc House . J\dmi ssion is gospel sing at the Christian Fellowship Center on Salem Street in Rut 50 cents.
land Saturday at 7 p.m. Featured
RUTLAND - There will be a singers are the Shafer Famil y of
dance Fri day at the Rutland Ameri - Crown City and Patty Simpkins of
can Legion Hall fr om 8 p.m. to Gallipolis.
midnight with music by White' s
ALEXANDER - The Third
Hill Band. Public invited.
Annual Spartan Spring Fling feaPOMEROY - Pomeroy Nursing turing The Fabulous Flashbacks
and Rehabili tation Center will host will be presented Saturday at
a sta ff, rcs1dent and famil y picnic Alexander High School. Gates will
open at 4 p.m. for a 50's and 60' s
Fr~d a y at noon •n celebration of
National Nurs ing Home Week. J\U style cruise-in and feature enterrel at1vcs and famll y of res idents tainment will begin at 7:30 p.m .
"Off Season" and "Backward s"
In Vited .
will perform at4 p.m .
SATURDAY
RUTLAND - There will be a
CARPENTER - Carpenter Sapdance
Saturday at B p.m. at the
US! Chu rch "Busy Bees" will have
Rutland
Ameri can Legion Hall
bake and rumm age sale Saturday
from
8
p.m.
to midnight. White' s
from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. at the [Own house on Route 143 ncar Carpen - Hill Band will perform . Public is
invited.
ter.

,

BAS HAN - Services will be
held at the Red Brush Church of
Christ in Bashan and Keno Roads.
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday
at 10 a.m . and 6 p.m. Denver Hill
wil be the speaker. Public invited.
POMEROY - A UMWA rally
will be held Saturday at beginning
at 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy Football
Field. All miners wear camaflage.
International President Rich
Trumpka and vice-president Cecil
Robens as well as dtstrict representatives will be present. A caravan
will travel to Ravenswood, W.Va.
for a USWA that begins at I p.m .
Further information may be
obtained by caUing Max Whitlatch
at 992-3130 or Woody Call at742· .
2944.

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Church Wom en United held
thei r May Fellow ship meeting
recently at the Racin e Bapti st
Church.
A sack lunch was enjoyed and
the host church served dessen and
beverage. Mary Curtis gave the
blessing.
Edith Sisson , president , wel comed the ladies and presided at
the bu siness meeting whi ch fol lowed the luncheon.
The days offering will be given
to the Meigs Ministerial Associa tion.
During a program in the sanctu ary the prestdenl and kc y woman
from the church, Manha Lu Beegle. again welcomed all the ladies.
Taking part in the program ,
"Call for a Compassionate Com munity, " were Mary Kautz ,

Dorothy Downie, Rachacl Dowme.
Lulu Hampton , Doris Grueser ,
Faye Wallace, Florence Richards,
Ada Titus, Gl enna Rummell ,
Euvctta Bechtel, Beulah McComas,
Marge Graham .
Several songs were sung with
the organist. Lillian Hayman,
accompanying . Barbara Gheen
sang a solo.
Rev. Steve Deaver of the church
talked on words of assurance.
Ladi es taking up the offering
were Nondus Hendricks, Geraldine
Cleland, Sue Lightfoot, Florence
Adams.
Approximately 40 ladies attended.

ELECT

David Jr. wh en she wa.• unable to
pay the $3 toll.
Authorities said she took the car
after breaking into Letterman 's
house. He initially declined to press
charges, but when she returned a
second time she was charged with
trespassing.

WAID CROSS'
SONS
PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Tammy
Wynette was recovering Tuesday
after 14 hours of intestinal bypass
· - surgery to cure an inflamed bile
:. duct, and the 50-year-old singer
:: eqJ&lt;Cts to be bock on stage July 4,
a spokeswoman said.
The operation Monday at
: Barnes Hospital took so long
: becau se of complications from
- scarring left by previous surgery,
• said Belh Tonull, a spokeswoman
: for Wyneuc.
Her condition was listed as seri:: ous but stable.
" A full recovery is expected in
: three to four weeks," Torroll said.
• Ms. Wyneue has canceled all personal appearances through July 3.
: she will resume her tour on July 4
:.in Nashville. Ind., the spokeswom ~ an said.
_ Wyneuc, 50, wa• hospitalized a
- week ago after the painful infection
~ struck during a Canadian tour, her
: fourth recent episode of lhe illness.

SLAB BACON
5
LB.

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99' lb.

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COnAGE CHEESE
JAMES TRIVETT m

HUDSON CREAM

FLOUR

99'S LB. BAG

LOAF

DEL MONTE

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

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actress."

CAIRO, Egypt (AP)
Britain's Princess Diana on Tuesday toured !he Giza Pyramids and
the Sphinx, which she pronounced
''brealhtaking."
She asked questions, but no riddles, ahoutlhe 4,600-year-old limestone statue that experts are trying
to save from falling apan.
Diana's visi t is part of a fiv eday lOur of Egypt 81 the invitation
of First Lady Suzanne Mubarak.
Earlier, Diana met with President
Hosni Mubarak. She also visited a
welfare society for mothers and
children and the institute of polio
and rehabilitation .

105 Butternut

$1.39 240Z

99c

Young, sultry star of such films as
"No Way Out" and "A Kiss
Before Dying," can sing.
Miss Young makes her musical
theater debut this weekend in the
Wilshire Theater production of
"Stardust." also starring Toni Tennille and Hinton Battle.
"I heard !hat one of the producers on Ibis show said, 'She sings?
She dances?' I expected !hat reaction. but I think I've proved
myself," lhe actress said during a
recent break in rehearsals.
She concedes she wasn't prepared musically when she started
rehearsals. but it all came back to
her.
"I dreamed of singing and dancing in the movies," she said. "I
didn't dream of just being in the
movies. Through a twist of fate,
however, I've become Ibis serious

The May meeting of Chester
Garden Club at the hom e of
KalllT, Mora developed lhe topic
"Don t Panic It's Organic."
Following the Gardener's
Creed, roll call , "tell your household remedy of pest control"
included hedge apples in closets,
salt on asparagus bed to control
weeds, hair in nylon hose hung in
the garden and yard to discourage
deer.
Devotions by Patricia Holter
included "A Mother' s Love and
Prayer" and poem "Thank God for
Little Things."
The "Save the Earth " lesson
"Find The Hidden Toxic" by Maye
Mora noted, "There are more
chemicals in the average American
home IOday than !here were in the
average chemical laboratory 100
years ago." A surprising amount of
hidden toxics in our homes arc a
hazard to the family when they are
used, and also to the environment
when manufactured, and when disposed of. Pennanent press clothes
and no-iron be linens are treated
with formaldehyde resin. The result
is toxic fumes. Oven and drain
cleaners contain lye. Air fresheners
and permanent ink pens and mark·
ers conlain harmful chemicals such
as xylene and ethanal. The usc of
herbal mixtures can oflen be substi ·
luted for lhesc products.
"It's Organic" from "Flower and
Garden" by Clarice Krauuer reponed on "Beneficial Nematodes,"
unsegmented wonns, microscopic
parasites that auack and kill cutworms, iris borers, Japanese beetle
grubs, squash borers. 1be burrow
in10 their victims, feed on them and
reproduce without attacking the
plant.
An idea from Flower and Garden was a trap for June bugs and
molh millers. Put a few inches of
water in an old dish pan, add a
quaner cup of kerosene 10 form a
thin surface flint Over the pan suspend a 25 watt light bulb, wm on at
dusk and allow 10 burn all night.
Molhs and June beetles whose eggs
hatch into cut-worms and grobs as
well as other insects will cover the
surface next morning. Continue as
long as insects haunt lighted windows.
"Baking soda is a narural fungi cide" says Cornell University scientisiS. '!he 0.5 percent solution of
baking soda with insecticide soap
in water is effective in presenting
black spot and powdery mildew on

Award winner
James Carl Trivett, ITI. has been
n amed winner of the Ohio State
~ns of lhe American Revolution
pagle Scout Award.
- He is a student at 1be Citadel ,
lhe military college of Soulh Car)llina, and serves in the Regimental
-Band and Protestant Choir.
: He is a member of the AUohak
Boy Scout Council and has been in
)cooling for II years. He ha s
~ed many ouiStanding award '
end 22 badges before becoming an ·
Eagle seouL
: He is the son of James Carl
1 rivett II and Mary Louis Trivett of
Millfield. Mrs. Triveu accepted the
award on his behalf at the recent
~ conference of the Ohio Soci·
~Y Sons of the American Revolu!ion in Springfield.

Banquet held

The annual mother-daughter
banquet of the Hope Baptist
Church of Middleport was held
recently with 29 anending.
Bron Williams, Dertise Michael
and Judy Riley decorated lhe tables
and fellowship hall in the Molher's
Day theme using an abundance of
balloons and flowers. The meal
was catered.
The program featured readings
by Chrissy Williams, Denise
Michael and Judy Riley. Music was
presented by Donna Grueser,
ac companied by Judy Riley .
Games were led by Susan Coleman
and Sue HaiL Each guest received
several favors .
Winning door prizes and game
prizes were Rebecca Owen, Emma
Ashley, Rho jean McClure, Lee
Hendrix and Mary Bryan .
Present were Joyce Mills, Hattie
Fi scher, Bron Williams, Chrissy
Williams, Donna Grueser, Missy
Rainey, Mary Bryan, Judy Riley,
Sue Hall, Susan Coleman, Rhojean
McClure, Jeannie Owen, Rebecca
Owen, Sara Owen, Tricia Richartls,
Debbie Clay, Nichole McDaniels,
Denise Michael , Carrie Michael,
Lee Hendrix, Carol Dye, Jackie
Justice, Emma Ashley, Emily Ash ley, Whitney Ashle~ and Rachael
Ashley.
Rev. David Bryan is pastor of
the church .

Pomeroy, Ohio

TONING TABLES
7 Motorized Tables To Work Off Those
Unwanted Inches, Reheve StiR Musdes •d
Joints or Just Tone Up.

BODYWUPS
No Cellophane • No Lotions • No Gimmicks
LOSE 5 To 23 INCHES IN YOUR
1sr WRAP.
IT STAYS OFF. GUARANTEED
TRY IT AND FEEL THE DIFFERENCE
CALL NOW

June open meeting at Chester
Methodist Church was postponed
until June 17 818 p.m. due 10 growing conditions. Guest speaker, Bill
Tagawaski, agricullwe agent, rose
specialist, Alhens, will speak on
lhe topic "Roses, The Essence of
Summer." A rose specimen show
will be a feature of the evening' s
learning experience. Roll call will
be a rose specimen for critique.
Announcement was made of
plans for a focus group "New Concepts and Design ." The first of
seven meetings at Rock Springs
Grange HaU will be May 21. These
will be workshop meetings and
information on wort shop rnatWal
will be publicized.
ReporiS of the OAGC Region
II spring meeting at Lake Hope
included appreciation of the slides
and narration on Wahkeena by
CASH WINNER - Bonnie Barton of Middleport was the winCindy Wasson and lhe afternoon ner of $100 casll in Foodland's reantly completed "Food &amp; Treaprogram by arrangers Belly Dean.
promotion . Here, Barton is presented with her prize by
Shelia Curtis and Janet Bolin , sure"
Chuck Blake, maaager ol Big Bend Foodland in Pomeroy.
OAGC judges.
Announcements were made of
Gandeners Day Out in Cosboc10n.
Roscoe Village on Aug. II; the
annual OAGC Convention July 2931 at StouJTers Dublin Hotel; and
Region II fall meeting Ocl 24 al
By JEFF WILSON
Each rati ngs point represent s
Athens County.
As:sociatfd
Press Writer
92 1.000 homes.
Among the surprise awards
LOS ANGELES - The fi nal
announced by Region II were
ABC' s " Roseann e" was the
coffee
klatch of " The Golden No. I show.
Meigs County Christmas Flower
Show, Shelia Curtis, chainnan; and Gliis" and the last case for '" Mat'" The Go lden Girls" hourlong
publicity books, Chester, Rutland lock· · on NBC put tJ&gt;o network m wedd1ng ep1sode, featuring the
and Marlena clubs. Attending from first place m t'&gt;e latest television departur e of Beatric e Arthur,
Chester were Bette Dean, Maida ratings race . A.C. N1elsen figures ranked fourth . The show' s three
oth er stars - Betty White, Rue
Mora, Pauline Ridenour, Maurita showed.
NBC was first wtth a 13. 1 rat- McClanahan and Estelle Getty Miller, Jean Frederick and Maye
ing, followed by CBS with 11 .4 re turn next season on CBS ' "The
Mora.
and
ABC with 11.1 , the ratings sur- Golden Palace."
Contributions were made to all
vey
SBid
Tuesday
OAGC projeciS, Arneriflora and 10
the Meigs Museum.
Appreciation for "Sunshine "
from Ada Holter and WA "Dude"
Gibbs was noted. Bette Dean will
be responsible for "Sunshine" in
May.
Hostess Kathryn Mora served a
dessen course 10 13 members and
guests, Jackie Frost and Denise
Mora. Pauline Ridenour received
the door prize.

'Golden Girls ' and 'Matlock'
final shows put NBC on top

Not for everyone

The U.S.-wide " training
wage." which expires March 31,
1993, docs not apply to migrant or
seasonal agricultural workers, or to
non- immigrant agricultural wortcrs
performing temporary or seasonal
work. Also, the Fair Labor Stanroses ...
dards Act contains a number of
During th e business meetmg exemptions from its minimum
conducted by Maida Mora , th e wage requirements, and the training wage provisions do not apply to
any such employees.

FIT &amp; TRIM

BROUGHTON'S

WHEAT BREAD

the blood sugar in about 50 percent
of these individuals. The remaining
50 percent require either oral medication to stimulate the body's
blood sugar regulating mechanisms
or insulin injections.
Individuals whose diabetes is
controlled by diet alone would be
afforded no benefit by the usc of
home glucose monitoring. Those
that take one of the oral diabetes
medications similarly would get lit·
tie benefit since they do not regu·
larly need 10 adjust their medica·
tions.
Type II diabetics who use
insulin can often obtain adequate
control of !heir disease by following lhe prescribed diet and exercise
plan along with one dose of insulin
each day. These individuals may
benefit from lhe ability to checl
their sugar at home, but it is less
imponant than it is for a type I diabetic who must male frequent
adjustments to hi s or her insulin
dosage.
Question: The home glucose
monitors aren't very expensive.
Shouldn 't I have one to check my
sugar?
Answer: There are a number of
manufacturers selling home glucose moniiOrs wilh good accuracy.
but none are inexpensive . They
remind me of my last trip to Disney
World. Polaroid was giving away
cameras to those with a free camera
coupon.
The camera was cheap, right?
Wrong!
The camera was useless without
film, and lhe film cost a dollar for
each picture. Home glucose moniIOrs are like that Polaroid camera in
Ibis respect. The basic inslrument is
affordable, but the test strips that
must be used with each measurement are noL Talk 10 your dociOr.
If use of home glucose monitoring
would benefit your health, she will
tell you so.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
45701.

People in the news

SUCID

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'
'

Question: My doc10r just 10ld
me !hat I have diabetes, but she
didn 't say anylhing aboot gelling a
home glucose monitor. Should I get
one and stan checking my sugar at
home?
Answer: D1abetes mellitus is a
common heallh problem. There are
sill million diabetics in !he Uaited
States, and it's eslimaled !hat !here
are another six million that have
the disease but have not yet been
diagllOSI!(! _Diabetes can strike individuals of any age, but it's most
common in individuals over 45 .
Doc tors talk about two basic
types of diabetes. These two types
can be distinguished in the follow mg manner:
• T ype I whi ch usually first
appears when th e individual is
under 20 and alway s requires
insulin, and
• Type II whose victims at the
onset of disease arc typically over
45 and may or may not require
insulin to control their diabetes.
The type of diabetes derennines,
to some extent, the proper treatment for the condition, including
the use of home glucose monitormg. The insulin required for people
with type I diabetes is usually
given mm: than one time each day.
Since diet and amount of physical activity - two of !he factors
thai determine blood sugar level vary from day to day, type I diabetics who are trying to keep their
sugar at an ideal level must make
adjustments in the amount of
insulin th ey take. Home glucose
moni10ring has been a wonderf•1l
benefit for these individuals . It
allows !hem at any time to accu rately and quickly determine !heir
blood sugar level , which, in tum,
enables them to knowledgeably
adJusl the amount of insulin !hey
must take for each dose.
Individuals with type II diabetes
are somewhat different. Obesity is
present in 80 pen:ent of those with
this di sease as opposed to type I
diabetics, where it is uncommon.
Eating properly and weight reduc tion brings about good control of

949·2550

We Reserve The Right To l,imit Quantities

Call For Menus
&amp; Reserva lions
(304) 675-2260

joh n C. Wolf, D.O.
J\ssociate Professor
of Fami ly Med1cine

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sean

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

Wecangton 's

EASTERN ROYALTY • Terry McGuire of Pomeroy and Lisa
Golden or Reedsville were recently crowned Eastern Prom King
and Queen. Tbe prom was beld at the Blennerhasset Hotel in
Parkersburg, W. Va. oo May 1.

NEW CANAAN, Conn . (AP)
- An obsessed fan who was sent
to a mental institution for repeatedly tr espassing on David Letterman · s property has been arrested
for a seventh time.
Margaret Ray, 39, of Crawford,
Colo., was spotted by two people
walking in the gardens of the house
Monday night and was arrested on
a charge of criminal trespass. said
police Charles Morton. She was to
be arraigned later today .
There is no court order barring
Ray . who has relatives in Greenwich, from visiting New Canaan or
Lettennan's home, state Supenor
Court officials have said.
But Ray had promised never to
bother Letterman again after leavmg a state mental hospital last
spring.
Letterman once discovered her
standing in a darkened hallway outside hiS bedroom and another lime
found her sleeping in another bedroom. He was never harmed in any
of the incident•. police said.
Ray was first arrested in May
1988 while driving his Porsche
ncar the Lincoln Tunnel in New
York City. She identified herself as
Letterman's wife and her son as

99' 32 oz. btl

Catered By

..

Church Women United
hold May Fellowship

KETCHUP

LOWE'S HOTEL

'

Another visit to
Lettennan home
results in arrest

Chester Garden Club
members give reports

Ohio Un iversity
Col lege of Osteopathic Med1cine

992·3033

GUFST SPEA~ - La'!" Spencer, Clerk of Court of Meigs
County, reaatly YlSIIftl Salisbury Elemrntary to discuss handicapped partm&amp; ud problom associated witb being handicapped
Spenar 11115 iatroduad by Dick Warner, manager or Kroger and
Salisbury's partMr ilo edacatioo. Sprncrr encouraged the students
to participate ia 1 bndicapped poster contest sponsored by
Kroger. Posters will be placfd in local businesses when they are
completed to eacoarace everyone to park in the appropriate spot
when stoppiag ill any location.

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES OF 1992
On Friday, May 22, The Daily
Sentinel will have a special edition
with photographs of high school
seniors graduating this year.
Now through Friday, May 15, Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily
Sentinel or At Your High School
Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, At No Charge.
(Attach Your Name, High School, and Parents
Name To Photo)

******

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS,
INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS
WHO WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN
ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS SPECIAL
EDmON PLEASE CALL 992·2156.
Ask for Dave or P. J.

�Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 13. 11112

Pomerov •ddleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel ~ J

'American
Bandstand'
turns 40

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace
RATES

By SCO'IT WILUAMS
AP Televisioa Writer
NEW YORK - Pay attention,
children. This is your chance to sit
down with your parents, watch a
TV program and ask them about
the olden days.
The progrnm, "American Band·
stand 40th Anniversary Special,"
will open tonight on ABC with a
black screen and a tone.
·'That should get your aaention,
because you 're used to seeing pic·
tures," said Dick Clark, its host
and executive producer. "You'll
turn and look at it and it wiD say to
you something to the effect of, 'In
a moment we're going to fill this
sc reen with all the memori es of '
your life.
"'It's never, ever going to happen again . Call somebody. Tell
them to join you in the experi·
ence,'" Clark said, and laughed.
" Maybe we can double the audl·
ence!''
In truth, children, the special has
less to do with the 40th anniversary
of ABC 's longest-running variety
show than with the May sweeps,
when ratings are closely tracked to
help local stations set their advertising rates.
Wednesday's tribute is a twohour blend of current pop music
acts - Boyz II Men, Neil Diamond, Color Me Badd, and the like
- with "archival" foota~e of
show that proved your parents' sin·
cerity in wanting to rock around the
clock.
"It's been a remarkable passage
of time," said Clark, who at age 62
looks a good deal older than hi s
actual age, which is 19. A young

IUUEnN
DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBliCAnON

See Store For Detoib

The Big Bear Hug

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Jim Varney, who created the rubbernecked rube Ernest P. Worrell ,
has a new lock: a beehive hairdo
and cheap jewelry.
Bunny, a bumbling hairdresser,
is in 1V commercials airing in Los
Angeles, St. Louis, Sacramento,
Cal if., and Knoxville.
Varney hasn't abandoned the
toOthy, wide-eyed Ernest, with his
unseen friend Vem and trademark
phrase, "Ya-know-what-1-mean?"
ATHENS, Ohio {AP) - Terry
Anderson, soon to write a book
about his experiences as a hostage,
has wo~ another journal ism award.
He will receive the Carr Van
Anda Award from Ohio University's E.W. Scripps School of Journalism next week, spokesman
Bryan McNulty said Tuesday.
Last week, Anderson accepted a
$245,500 award from Freedom
Forum, a media think tank. He
begins a yearlong fellowship next
month to write a book.

Fnday Paper
5UJlda)' Paper

Classified pages cover the
folwwing telephone e:uhanges ...
f..allia Counly

Lasl Chance...
Meigs Counly Residents
SAVE JOBS- MEIGS MINES
INSTALL SCRUBBERS
Add Conslruction Jobs
Add Jobs at Gavin Plant
Add Joblfor Lime Sludgr
Save Proparty Tax Revenue ...
Meigs Mines Pay- '1 ,534,942
Save Revenues for
School District. - '738, 198
Save Revenues For
Business - '1 ,246,245
We urge you to sef&gt;d a lenar about
joba and tax revenue (letter rn.~st
be f11Ceived by May 14, 1992) to:
Col. Jamea Van Eppa, Corrmande
Hunlington District
U.S. Corp of Engineers
502 Eighth St.
Huntington, W . 25700

With Any

Purdiaoo

{~~
law)

Top Fresh Florida

Ground
Coffee

F1 I ....... Bernard V.

r-.,r......, • .,.......,

-d"-

lor ....... ln•prction •I
t - otllce,
m'A W. Second SlrM~
P
.,. Ohio 45711,
cloriolg ...,r.. bll81neu

l•mrt I Per Family Wrth
Any Other Purchase
(excluding 1tefm
prohibited by low)

- . . , • period ol 110

Ceys
I I'

••b••quonl

I

lo

•oflllena41a.

csto. -.21:

til :1. 10, 17' :M, 7lc
PubUc Notice
.-,TICE

I

----------1WJH\IlBiJH·uJ!If1*·1114·Jii)
.
Genera I M1 1 s
I

ilfOtll ... _ . ....

....... ....ac- ..

OIIOCiilr ,,,,

12 oz. Box

.
. ._
. -,-_
g15,
r t1112.
"'_

I
I
I
I
I

• t ' nil.. •• •veiloiPielge

-••' I
Higll lr'ulr •

Thidc Rich Tomato

Wlile C# Salt Pmt Bathroom

Heinz

Northem

.~ •.

Ketchup

-

-••ing

1-Wra, Nat of Kin, Leg , 11,

o.na ... ,Admtn~

beculorl, Sue~ r r ore,
Spoue•, llld "-•lgM of
~M ConPowilll,
.......... .._ .._..., Noc1l8
lllohop,llllry ....... Grimm,
Ebo """ Forwun, Lucy
Glliner, Fr-.nce~ Lartdna.
llor1he Spoun, R•lpll
Powri,Ch-Powrl,
Powrl, SyMe Pool,
Loroy Blohop, Fr..k
lllahop, Anno lllahop
Conoly, ThomM Wilke
Grimm, Dmd WUIIom
Grimm, Eugono Stonily
Grimm, Thom• Fnnldin

w.cro

.....__
BnY GUY LONG. IIIII.
c.• dsnlll

FlaYOrS

Roast

Mega

Beef

Diapers

., 499

24
J6Ct

dlly1 lor on1w•rlng will
commonoe on !hoi dole. In
c••• of your failure to
anawer or olhtrwlee
,..pond u required by tho
Ohio Rulo1 of Cl•ll
Procodur•, ludgmanl by
dllf•ult will be rendorod
egolnol you lor the rell•l
demondod In the Complolnl
Doled thl1 16th dll)' ol
April, 1H2.

l.8ny Spencor,
Clorll ol Courto

14) 22, :zt;
15l&amp;. 13. 20. 27. &amp;k:

~ogna

Regular, Thid or lite

c- No. f2,Cin 113
MilKE B'l PUBIJCATIOH

Meal

.......
as;.-...

=~!::~':
_...

Eckrich
Bologna

n

5

\lniCnCMft

Happy Ads

Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO
OEPARlliENT OF

Powell, Hi1zlol Stulle, Ruth
Opphllo, AJirod Herold
Powell, Wold E......,..

- · Cllllord Auguo. .
... ond F r Bogg II , a.tly f'owel, and

addr •••• . . unknown.
You oro horoby notiliod
lhlll , .............. ll8iMd
l)o,.,_,la in I l8pl 8Ctlon
... u - Bortho J, Prollln
Md Joe ForMiari, Pl8inliffa,
VL Eugono Guy Lang. o1 II.
Dll•nd-.a.. Th• ation Me
..... aalgnod c.. No. 112CV-113 end 11 pending In

TRANSPORTATION

Columbue, Ohio
April2.. 11011

Conlrect s.r.
. . . . Copy No. 112~1

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
STG-0001' (61
S..locl propoul1 will bo
rocelvocl allh: ollice of !he
Director ol the Ohio
D•p•rlmonl ol T~­

Prices Good

portlltion, Columbu•, Ohio,

Real Estate General

Saturday,
May 16, 1992

OFACE 992-2886

205 North Second Ave.
Mlddllport, OH
HYSELL RUN ROAD-II a k1tcllen with lois of cab1nels

IS

kttchcn, and a large livtng room . Comes wnh 314 ot'an acre
and a patio
$29,900

POMEROY PIKE-Cheller-A one story home w111l new
siding. newer roof. neW8f double pane window s newer
Wiring , and plumbing . Has 5 rooms, 2 bdrms. and One car
garage on approx . 1!2 aae of ground.
$25,900

POMEROY-John1on Road-A 2 acm parcel of ground !hal

dtd have an older house . Water and alec aw~abte . Great
for building a home or a mobile home sile. Close to town

you can't beat

ONLY $5,000

MIDOLEPORT-Rutland Slreet-A nice 2 bdrm t 2X60 mobile home s.ining on 126X200 lot. lr has a nice porch and

smatl oulbu:lding .

1

V. C. YOUNG Ill
, 992-6215

Au c twn

~ult·

fu r ~ult·

Huildmp

35--- Lot~ &amp;: Acrettll!"
· 36-- Heal Efit.al•: ~ttnlt:d

F' arm! for Henl

43

1-\ II ' I! li \11-:\' I'
~Ill\ IU&gt;
II- Help Wanted
12- Si tU.IUoru \l'• nled
· I J..--- lnaurance

Rwine81 Tram1~
15--- Sc Mola &amp; lnatru ctlon
· 16--- HarJu-., TV &amp; CH Repa•r
' 17- \-fl.ct'ltan~w

14

(,)- Furn1 Equtjmunli
6:.! -

\\ u nlcd l• · 'hUI

(,;1.-

l. IYt'.JI"Ittr~

I..+- fi,., 6 (.ru n
(, ~,......... ~..,d

WAS $15,000

NOW $13,500

DOTTIE TURNER, Brokor.................................. t92-569&lt;
BRENDA JEFFERS............................................t92-3056
OARUNE STEWART...........................................992-5
SANDY BUTCHER..............................................992-5371
SHERYL WALTERS, Cheohlre............................367;Q421
JERRY SPRADUNG ............................... (304) 882-3498

t\ J-mrlllr...m

'11 ' 1 ' ' • "~ ""
\I

'

'" f

o

!'

I

•

~lt·

7 I - Aut.., •fur

72- 1 rw:-tt~ tm hull

7:&gt; - hi» b. 4 "''l•l..
": 4--- M"lnrr-vd,

44----- Apartment for R1:n1
I

45--- F'umMhM

Room ~
1\ ull.' ~I':,IIIIT

46-- Spar .. for R t' nl

'":';

4i -

i'K---- (.tampnlf h q uflrnnnll

Wttot .-dto Rent
48.--- F11u•pment fur H.,nt
49--- r or lean

l n'. ·.

~

• ..

~

RJ- Humr· lm"Junwmrm . .

5 1- Hou5eho ld Goo~~
S:!- S p.,rtmf( L .... d~
·,.1-- -

I 18--- \l1anled To Do

\l 1 ~c

\1,•r .-11Undl)t'

~~~&gt;- - HudtlH~t ~ UI'I ' J.,·~

B~ ~ fllunllll"llf.! tl. •i htwniJ
!G.-- I. xo:u YU Ul"4-'

u.,,!tru•ul a. "''"'''"~uo&lt;t
(.enerul Huulmr
Kt ,__ M,.l,ill f lnntt 1hrlJ111r

K--1-

!::.

l ' ' '" ''·"'"'- '

e

BISSELL &amp; BURKE · TRDY-B/J,T.

CONSTRUETIOB
• •New Homes
eGara9es
eC om p ete
FREE ESTIMAtES

985·4473
667·6179

3 -!3-92-tfn

992-5553
OR TOll filE
,,100-141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
713lfi1/tln

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

1/2111n

Tho d•t• oot lor
comrlotlon of thll work
1""1 bo HI lorth In tho
bklclng pup a ul ..
EiiCfi bldclllr ohan be
requtr..r to n~a with hto bid
• aorllllod ahock or
-hlor'1 check lor •n
amounl oqu•l to llvo
percont ol hlo bid, but In no
ovonl mor• then ll«y
1 bond
lhol•and
.olorhl1
lor ..,., I*OWtl
bid,
"1::rlo.,. Dlroctor.

propor ""'i!::.~·on,~
qulllll..lloa at 1•11 left

=:::~:-.:::::.::

NOW OPEN!

CAliFORNIA
TANS
6 ML Out Eagle Ridge
Rd. or I ML fram Basltan

0-

rlghl to rojecl MY Mid all
bkiL
JERRYWRAY,
~ ol Tia18f1 olelon
(5) 1,13, lteZ

06192 tin

Call AI Tromm

4-2H2·1 ... (1L

LOW lABOR RATE
15% OFF On Most
Boat Parts

7

I

(No Sundar Cflllsll

-

ATTE~TIO_\
\ lohilr .'\ llouhlt·•11clt H ,.,,

Ill MillS

Brln111 Ia Or W•
Pkk ~,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
Acnoa J.... ,_1 OISico

2p!l.~~~F

4121921lln

loti., W&amp;IIUD.

lrn:'Dnii:'D. .

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limestone,
Dirt , Gravel a nd Coal
Ucensed and Bonded

PH. 614-99HS91

11 11:n 1nr:n1r1.

Quabty Hi EHiciency Air
Conditioners, Heal
Fumaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
13 91 Safford School Rd.

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

Hrs. 9 to 5

t•"
Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
MoL

SHOTGUNS

BIJY-SELL-TRADE
4-21-92- 1 mo. pd.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BUU.OOZER , BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK

AVAIWLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEPIS,
HOllE SITES and

TRAILER SITES,
l.ANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAU£0
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE rsnMATES

992-3838
-1 mo.

~LINDA'S
~PliNnNG

.

&amp; co.

- Ill u.

Ollt Sprina: Sld-,.nm• or
Tr•y-Biii1Uien N• .- l11 Sl•cla.

Yo.r

mPnfliJ~•

II SO Wost, Allot!. 06lt •Sil-311 S
:IJ20I9V3 mo.

Do'',.,. r.·

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
nn unum

HAYI IEJEIDKIS
. ..... 'p.iL t..n ......

Ah• 6 ,._ 614-985-4180
411711211 .... pod.

·~

~I
·I

Beuuett;; Mobile

MIDDLEPORT GUN
I

ilad~awoll

'

CaU (614) 446-94

SHOP
134.51 •' " I Ill.

..,.. m

Hf: 1 I f1l RV fJf &lt;:JGN

t2 -5-tfn

"Ttttlllo,.. Ott 01 ,..,.,

TRDY-B//,f'

·. ,. ·

614-992-2242

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

I ~..

~~··•
I
&amp;llllPdt,.:

'.

or 1-BOIHI~

..

SHR

&amp;lEi

REIIIJA

ILl GHT HIAlJI..JINtG

•FIREWOOD

Bill SIMI
991-mt
USED Rr

11B

1 mo. pd. 4116192

Co. Rd. 3,

MICROWAVE OVEN
an d VCR REPAIR

I

614-949-2801 or94t-2110

Custom Painting•

ludlng C.--k Rd.
Mlddleporl
74.2-3030
INt-.pd.

"

New Homes • Yiwfl £ s 5
New Garages Replace
r
Room Additioas ' 1 s J

Welcome Slates
$20,00

NOW OPEN

CHUCK'S BOATAUTO REPAIR

1

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NOW OPDI FOR SPRING
Plallfs, ~s, P-tials,

OPEN
WED,,SUN. 1D-S p.m.

7

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

BULLDOZING

Enr!Dslktg

l:ellllw--

20 ln. bp,

'l(fl.tliryn
Meadows

Bed Sl.24
Call lor Appt.Today

949-2123

614-742-2321

(:OMMERCUL aad BJSAM "'DU..
1'1\0: IES'IIIIINIU

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

Pllnl and epoclficotu-

The onctor ,.. .,.. ....

Lawn Mowing,
Ferlilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R•ldontlol • Comm•cill
FreoE1tlnu!._

New SCA WOLFF

1~

. . on,.lnlwDipl bbwll
of Trenaporta•on •net the
of .... Diolrlcl Dopuly
Dlroctor.

"We Cet The Jo~ D e ...,..

949-2627 or
1-800-837-1460

15 Suslons....$25
12 Susions, ...$20
1 Seaslon, ... $2.25

with Chapllr 5525 Ohio ,.__ _ _ _ _
3123_/9_2mn.....t
Alit

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

4/2JI't2/l -

hereby

llebldpro~oool. "

SO Wost, Ailtm. Olio •lll-381 S

614-949-2202

CONNIE'S OHIO
on
RIVER HERBS and
other v•rlou• rout.a end
ooctlon1 by -'Yinu relroEVERlASnNGS
reft..tivr lui dry ....,..,.,1
S2100
U, Ul,l.... OW.
m..-lclng m11eriol lor cenler
247-4035
linee, lana lin• and edglt

thl1 project h•ve bMn
prodetorMlnocl • requhocl
by .... - ...... lorth In

''"'w1Kmn"b~"

~.

.. Bolpi.r.w Y'* To Rw.,...r
Yow 1• ..,,....,"

Public Notice
"'11:-:el,-gl-,""u"'itroe, llorg•n,
Nob!•, Vinton, Woohlngton
Counlloo, Ohio lor
improving ooction ATM-5018.58
US Roule 50 -

u-.

FREE ESFitarES
NEW CONSTRUCIIOII &amp;
REMOD

Sld.-ni!!IPI Of

RACINE, OHIO

·(isJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

s,....

'lroJ' ·-Ih.lll\llen Now In Storck.

2·1·92-tfn

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Spetialiung In Cuslom
Frame Repair
NEW I. USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
'MODELS
992·7013 or

Our

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy, Ohio

or national origin In
._ldorotlon lor .. IWW
"lllnlmUIII wege fill.. lor

what you need--this home ts for you It has .3 barns a largo

pr~ce

Your Friend&amp;

P1IInting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

be cli8crillllnelocl "'lli .. t on
the grounclo ol r.. o, color,

k1tchens . Has a ~~ furnace and root. Was reoontty

BffiTHDAYl

-lnlerlor • EIWior

notlltoo Ill bldcloro !hot It
wiM alllnneiiYoly lnllft lhlll
In MY conlrocl Mtorod Into
purouonl lo lhle •d·
vortl-111, minority bullnNe anlarpria• will be
-~lull _.... .. ty lo
1ubmlt bide In rwpoliM 1o
!hie lnYIIetlon Md will not

redecorated Poss1b1hty of some owner financing
$48,000

HAPPY 50th

end Plumbing

Tranaportatlon

apartments . Thts house has 15 rooms, large haltways,
encklsed !ront porch, one car garage, 4 balhs and 4

GET THE BEAR
MINIMUM
PRICE

j=-'

-Guu.r Work

Prolect and Work length :
until 10:00 A.ll., Ohio
Sllndllrd Time, Thuracloy, o.oo 1m- f•l or 0.00 milo.
Work length: Yerlouo
ll•y 28, 1e82 lor lmIMt Of van- mlleo.
prowm•ta In:
P~~VWmW~t Widh; vari•.
Ath- 1 Gallla, Hocking. .
Tho Ohio Do~t ol

CROW'S SUBDIVISION·Fivo Polnii-A nice one acre lot
w1th wate r and electric available. A great building lot with

Check
Your Store
For
Details

~oom Addltiona

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

POMEROY-Do you Need a lARGE home or it could be 4

Pkg

CARPENTER SERVKE

Cheshire, OH.

JUST $6,500

lb

For m~

Hu!m e6~

I \ 1:rv •
.. '
' It
•• • .. ·· , , '
()l
'

Bns1ness s
~ ervtces

(aii614·99H637
St. Rt. 7

irtE

sv-

L...o.. t and Fo und
3-- Public Sak &amp;
7-

9- W•nt.ec:lto Buy

YOUNG'S

8nd the brMIIy-right (21)

Public Notice

Your
Ooiat ol

•

publicellon tril be . - o n
the 27th ...., of llay, 1m,

ts~u.-. u:

28 oz .

Ultra

partitioned or Ordered eold
II It ..,not be pwtitioned,
pluo •norney r-, co•la
•ncl euch other roller 11
may be n~~e•••••Y and
proper.
You orr hor.by required
lo •nowor lho Complelnt
within lw..,ty-elght (28)
d•ye oller lho l•ol
publicotllon of tlllo notic•
which will be publlehod
once • week lor elx (&amp;)
IUOCIIIiw WMka. The lal

llorMrdV. FuiiZ,
TruDitble Fouerf d m

(' 'FPCY PlUS CCMIT

33---

31--

J(,j._

~=~=:::::::::::===rr;::======:::;if;=======::::;-r;::================.
1
'1

....

11••

OF nmGI COUNTY, OHIO
IIBIJKA .1. HiOFi II, ot ol.
PlainIiiia

:\l nb 1le Home.; fur

a. .\."ti'udtJ&amp;.
Fm St:ik•ur IlmJir

:&gt;!1.- f· nuo.

\T 1-.

32 -

e

:i::'7!'1 r:.~·c:,:.~ b~

til :1. 10, 17' :M, 7lc

r....

Corned Beef, Pastrcmo or

pe~aona

...... • GED, wll- ...,
. . . . ocl1ool . -.......
- • ?1o9 County, To bo
: R 'IMI n"' mtm•t
. . ,........ ., undrr• 5 . . . . . endmual
. . • lUll
eludonl
11 IMat 12 croclll

_________ _:m_::~~b:d ~ ~~~~~~ ~u~y~:.: ::. __ ~
l1mit 1 So); _
Per Family With Coupon And Any O ther Purchase (@l(d...dmg

PI,

T

Ohio

_,.or...., or,..
...... loci!..., in IAb.onon
Townehlp, llelge Counly,
Ohio, - 1n Section No. 30,
Townahlp No. 2 - R""oe
No. 11 ol lh• Ohio

-c:-.- . . . -.--t

..... Ololo Unlnr•lly,
n '
liiW of flo Grlr*, or

Pomeroy,

::,•dln::~d~n:!' ~~n:~

Grimm, Hilny Fr.,_
Grimm, Twllo 0...•~
w...... Henry Grimm,
r
'f
-.t~l •
Edward R. Fonmon, Jeoolo
15, 1112. .~t~~· ::e...~
G.lnw, EID l.arldM, Elvll
1
• ad ........ dille triO
Haytnen, Fronkii. . conaldorocl lor
Po-...... Smith,
' I 1 ..,til lh• ochool
Dolbert
E. Powrl, Roy
,... 1--ltl. Grft+eetM of

..._. c.., illgll ochoole
,
tlftg Hocking Tocltcon~-. Morten•
c IJI, Olllo s.... Unl-

89 5-~ lul

C:.::;l•in~b~~e: ..:~m\~:

1M -Ina lor llllng
se I d • t. the Kl»bbe

Chex

4---- Gi, caw•y
~- Happy Ada
6- Lo.l 11.nd Found

Slroet,
4576t.

Public Notice

n..-11-rtF.,..
-PF ler th• lllbble

3-- Annouocemenu

937-Uu fT.Ju

1-.~T

31 - Homea for Sale

.,, 1 I

\CE\H\T~

67S-Pa. Pl.e ...nl

::~:::.~~;oo~"~

•
I'UIUC NOTICE

\.\\\ll

Pome roy
4i8- lLon
985-Cl-ler
576-Apple Grove
843-Pord•nd
773-Muon
247-l.c t•rt FaUa 1 882-New ll uen

Public Notice

$5.00 Off Transfers
$3.00 Off New

Maxwell House Regular or French Roast

$1.30/ day

• •

'}92-Middkportl

94-9-R•cine

HE \I.

$ .60
$.05/day

CLA.SSD'IEDS
HE~T\LS
GET RESULTS • FAST!
f-~~~:;-;:;;;;-;-;;;:;:~~;:;~~;--l'14241 - Howe~
for Hc nl
i
~obile Uom e~ fur H.cnt

36 7 -Ciw:ah.ire
388-Vinlon

7 42-Rutland

21- Buameaa Opporlumly
22- Money lo Loan
23--- P.-ofeniooal Se.-v tcm

f'.-

RITE AID PHARMACY
SAVE$$$

Public Notice

MaMJn Cu., WV

b6 7 -CuolriUe

11+992-5-&amp;77

••

County

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

~lllir

5f..- Pet.. f111

:i-;'- MI.I41CU I i. tHIItnun~tnta

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
1 charged for each day as separate ads.

~allipoli•

2 4 5-R.io Gnnde
25t-Guy•n DUt.
643-Arabi• Diat.
379- W•Inul

HERMAN lYNCH. I&lt;F1JoC

',,

Me~

Over 15 Words

Rate

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area. Code 3114

Let Us Price Your Next
Prescription or Your Refills
!rom Another Store. We Can
Save You Money! We Will
Beat Arrt Cofr4&gt;1Jtitor' s Price!
GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
Terry Spurlin, RPH

Wheaties

1ill p.m Salttrday
HXl p.m Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00pm Wednesday
100 p m. Thur&gt;day
1:00 p.m. Friday

Weclnesday Paper

concert. Sponsored by Band
Boosters

l.irM 3 l'loase

()!her

DAY BEKJRE PUBLICATION

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

BAND CONCERT
SUNDAY. MAY 17-2:00 p.m.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
CHICKEN &amp; NOODLE DINNER
$3.50- Immediately following

Whole
n
••
Ye ow
Sweet Com

'

COPY DEADLINE

Thursday Paper

Tyson Holly Faa IllS Fresh Fry'

Names in the news
WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) Fans wanted Ganh Brooks to play
a larger arena in nc1ghboring Cedar
Falls after h1s concen here sold out
in 2 1/2 hour:;.
But booking agent Joe Harri s
srud the country star w11l keep his
promise to perform at a 7,000-seat
auditonum dunng th e National
Cattle Co ngress . The co nce rt is
Sepl 18.
" He told them he'd play it this
year. and he's a man of his word,"
Hams said. "He was going to play
11 if 11 was I00 seats."

Words
15
I
15
3
15
6
10
15
Monthly 15

Days

19.
"Especially when you go back
and look 81 old mms and tapes. It's
like looking at a family album. I
don't remember us being that that
young," be said.
In truth , kids, the ancestral
" Bandstand" show began in
September 1952 as filmed music
performaces - very well, children.
"music videos," since you insist
- on Philadelphia 's Channel 6,
WFIL-TV. It was enoonously dull.
According to Michael Shore' s
"The History of American Bandstand." the nex t month WFIL
brought on teen-agers to dance to
the pop hits. Oark came aboard as
regular host on Monday, July 9,
1956.
It wasn't until Aug. 5, 1957, that
the fledgling ABC netwoil&lt; - yes,
children, ABC was the Fox Broadcasting Co. of its day - aired on
67 stations. Within a month ,
"American Bandstand" was the
No. I daytime show.
"It proved once and for all th81,
yeah, people would watch kids
dancing in Philadelphia to recorded
music - which sounds like an
illogical premise, but it woil&lt;ed,"
Clark says.
It became television 's longestrunning variety show, as well as
the cornerstone of businesses that
have made Clark a wealthy man .
But at the time "American Bandstand" was happening, he had no
idea of how big it would be.
He says he's been unjus~y criti ·
cized over the years "for being Mr.
Bland, for being middl e-of-theroad, for whitewashing the music. ' '
" I wasn't stupid .... f knew at
the time that if we didn 't make the
presentation to the older generation
palatable, it could kill i~ ·' he said.

11

FOR SALE
Agriculture

lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2

........
-NEW liiiEJIWIRI
Gllilllll11316

DDMIJSII'IIliWliS
GUTTm 01 FMIJIIIIi.

Millwood, W.Va.

304-273-5555

P~1111111&amp;

Free &amp;llinill?ls

-

4-9-lfn

TROLLEY STATION
CUFTS

IOIIe.-4St.aw~ .......

APRIL 13-18
Extended Easter houri.
Open untO 7:30 pm

APR . 28. 6•00 pm Basket Cla&amp;B
WUST PRE·REGISTER FO~

AlL CLASSES
HAS : Mon.·SI1. 10 1m-Ei pm
Sunday 1·6 pm
For Mort Into C.ll

614-992-2549
4/t 5111211 mo.

I

.lNGirS
IPwl&amp;

A
511

•

...

-E

MJbridT
p 7

'5
••

S
Be.. ..

'l.aall.ri•P , ·~·

lutllwtw

I

p

...

. . . . . . .111..111

.._«tid
614r7G-21h

�p

12-The Dall Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

32

Mobile Homes

45

Announcements

Farms lor Sale

83 Acraa WI2Yr. Old Home,
38rs 1 2 Balha, Barn , Several
Builalngs
Cellar,
Sill
WllhiWII:hOut Farm Equipment,
Cattle. 614·367..()610.

2789 .

35
table.

Not responsible tor any debta
olhar than my own: Rober1 LM
Raduc:e: Burn oft tel while you

s tupl Take OPAL, available at

ott Fat While

Vou Sleep, Take OPAL Available

At , Fr uth Pharmacy.

Giveaway

2 pups, 1 dog . All pan Cocker
spaniat. 614-379-2755.

• puppies, a wooks old. Po" Lob
&amp; Collie. 304·895·3877.
5 luzzy puppies. 614-446..(1924.
Assor1ed Bantam Roosters to
give away, 304-895-39n.
Good oak slabs. 614-388-9354.

Pup s: Part Chow &amp; Husky. 614·
388-8900 .

To a good home: a loveable
mom cat &amp; her liner trained kit·
ten. 614-446-3551.

6

Lost

&amp;

Found

" Excuse me tor a seco nd .. Hi Momw ·

t:=::====::;===r==========l
9

Wanted to Buy

Don't Junk ltl Sail Us Your NonWorking
MaJor Appllanc.s,
Color TV'a, VCA't, Mlcrownu,

Old marb._, toye, comic book1,
lanterns, pictures 1nd tumlturt,
Osby Martin, 11WI2·'"'·

Wanted to buy: 24 fl . • 4 ft .
lbo't't ground pool. Good condition. 304-875-1791.

__

edition

10:00a.m.

Tot&gt; Pr!ceo Pold: All Old u.s.
Coins, Goid Ringe, Silver Coins,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 S.Cond Awenue, G.lllpo41e.

Saturday.

Ga llipolis

&amp; Vicinity
2 families: to ys, clothes, crafts.
Thurs. only. 10..? 204 Myrtle Ave.
f riday · ~ turday : Tomato
stakes. cra ft aupplles, sal of
lour tires for Sunbbd, cr~fts,
baseball ca rds, toys, clothes,
dishes. canning jars, yard
chai rs. hammock, depression
glass. old trunk, chaise lounge,
Daskatball hoop hamper. 2 miles
west ol Ga llipolis, on Slate
Route 141.
Garage Sa le : 1350 Patrtol Road,
May 14th, 15th. Tools 1__ Toys,
Clothes All Slzn, w onder

Horse .
to sell, mo ving to smaller
home: Frl, Sal . Crah, tools,
goat Lots, loll goodies. 475
Kathy St.
~eed

Employment Services
11

Min Paula's Day Care Center.

fanl TodcUtr Cart, 614-446-6227.
Photogrtpher. wm do wltddlngs,
spotta, L loelitlon portJaits.
Rusonablt retH. CAll 304~751531.

-

- - - - - · -- -

Yard sale, Thuraday Way 14.
2610 Jackson Ave.
Yard sale-friday. May 15, 9--4
story brick houH tcrota from
~oca tlona t sc hool.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
3 Famil y, Friday May 15th, W
. ood
May

14th , 9am- 5pm, 559
Brosdway St , Middleport, Ohio.
Clothing and lots mort

Robe rt Barrett resldtnct, SA
124, Rull1nd, Tuesday lill 7
Yard Sale &amp; Mini Fl• Msrtc.t ·
S11. 16th. 10-4. 229 EvsrgrMn
Rd., 8ldw1 11.

wort&lt;ora'Ooek

Financial

$325/Mo. 614-446-4706 Attar 8

PM.

21

~let etlicien cy cottage,

Business

and beautiful,

Opportunity
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommtnds lh.t you do bull·
nHS wtth people you know, and

NOT to lend money thr~h the
msll unlll you ha\l't lnvnttgattd

Real Estate

Shirley

31

"l

Homes for Sale

Handii'Ho8t...
etc. Positions
abo.rd cruiM ah pe. $3001 $900
wkly. FI'M tra't'll. C.ribbNn,
Hawaii, Bahamaa. No axp.

Rtcaptlonlat tor medical oMK e,
part· t ime, experience pttltrrtd,
reply lo: cJo Dally Sentinel , PO

BOX mW,
451'69.
AHpor\IUM,

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Ri ck Pea~ n Auction Company,
lull time auctlon aer, complat•
auction
s.,-.,lel.
UcenHd
166,0t11o &amp; West Virginia , 304·

m -5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Cas h paid lor Harley Davidson
and Indian moloJeyclea and

parte. Any eondhlon. Evenings

304 .. 28-32&lt;li

Pomeroy,

Ot11o

non-.moQr

to

babysl1 8 yr. old ton . Lloh'l
ho~ ..kMplf19 dullea. Aella&amp;6t
tt'lntPQftaUon end 'f'elld lk:enM
nHd.ct. Send rMumt and
rer.renees to 0 . Ooneh, 1804
Cheatnut Sti'HC , Gallipolis, OH
45631.

Business
Training

Retra in
Nowii!Southe..tem
Bu si n.ns College, Sprlflil Valley
Ptaz.a Call Today, 614-C48..t367fl
Regisleratlon~1214B.

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·

Nur Rutland , 5 acrH, 3bdrm.
hou.1, gar~~gt, deck, frulltreet,
garden apol, In the tortln , 614·

1112-2326.
Rl. 2 North, 3 mil. . hom Pt. Pit,
111 brick, 3 bedrooms, tull
baumant wffamllyroom, 2 car
gara91 on one acra, ahowrl by
appolntm1nl .only 304-675-3248
aher 6:00PM
VlntDil aru, 12 acr11 of oak
Umber, 2 bedroom, all electric
home. Owner. 814-3.Q.O.g001 .

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

$500

ot1 Purch111 Prtee Of Any

New Home AI EIMI Home Canter, Grul Se~tlon , Free Set-Up
And Delivery! Call 6"14-Tn-1220.

1980 141185 Fairmont Bay view,
Factory Areplact, 2 Bedrooms,
1 V2 B1ths, 614-245-5164 Af1er 5

"'J
Araa . Rel.,.neea Avtlltbla.
Ca I 614·24S-5887.

P.ll.

Babyainlng
In
My
Moma,
Ch11hlr1 viclnHy. 8*:MI7·75g&amp;.

OW, CA 15x30 pool. lml out of
Porter. Cl11814-l83-8352 - 5 :00

Georges Portabte Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill jus1
call 304-675·1957.
Glva plano IM•on• In my home
to advanced studeriCI I adutta.
Alae leach cording &amp; transposIng. If lntarutld, pluu call

614-992·5403

Lawn mowing and odd Jobs,
lully lnsurtd, 6M-992 -7ST.Z.

IT'~ ACREAl DEAL

Commercial SPICe To Rent In
Oak Hill, 1,100 Sq. Fl. 814_....
2125.

11)88 Blazer 4- wheel

1980 Buddy 14t10 2 B1ths, W/0

304-675~42

Unlumlshed 2bdrm. housa,
clean, deposit &amp; rwftJencea requlJ..:I, no Inside pelt, 614·992·
3090 .

42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 bedroom trailer, pay own
utilities plus deposit, 304-67&amp;2535
2 bedroom !railer, unfurnished,
no pels, seen by appointment
call between 9:00AM &amp; 5:00PM

only, 304-682-3626
2bdrm. mobilt home In Mid·
dlaport, 614·992·5858.

Nice 12'x60', 2 bedroom s, \g .
yd., corner of Rand • Perch St. ,
Kanauga. 614·446-7473.
Unfurnished Mobile Homa, CA,
322 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
614·446-3746,
614·256· 1903
Balora 9 P.M.

43 Farms lor Rent
66 acre country estate with
pond . Vinton. Colonial farm
hous• new ly remodeled. 2 large
barns, summer house garage,
studio, hunting cabin. i3y owner.
Ag en111 welcome, 3%. Dan

Blac k, 614-388-8210.

44

Apartment
lor Rent

1 BR, newly remodeled. 109
Second Ave. Utlllliea
pd .,
$295/mo plus deposit. 614·:l79·

2171.
1bdrm.,

614-9i2-2167

2 BR apartment a In Middleport,
newly remodeled, tow ullltll...
no pets, S220 p•r month,
deposit required, 614-992-2381
day s

2bdrm.

tral tar,

plus
ulililies, d&amp;posit, lbdrm. dupln,
1bdrm. .apartment , no pets,
$225, uli lllln Incl. , deposit, 614·

$200

992 -2218.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $1 92/mo _ Walk lo ahop &amp;
movies. Call614-446·2568. EOH .

Furnished apa rtment available
by
weak
with
cooking
pr iv ileges . 304·882·2566.
Furni9 hed Apartment, 1br, nut
10 Library, puking, eonloal haal,
air. references.
8elore 7p.m.

614-446-0338,

Furnished apt, CAICH, ulllities
pd . Pli11ate , quiet. 614·446-2602.
Furnished E. Hlclane y 920 Fourth
Avenue , Gallipolis.
$18 5/Mo
Ulllllln Pa1d, 614·446-4416 After
7P.M
Gra cious li ving . 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Villaga
Manor
and
Riversid e
Apa r1m&amp;rlts In Middleport_ From
$196. Cal1614-992-7781. E~ .
Nica on• BR unfurnlsh-.1 aot
Range, ,.lrtg. tum'td . Wa,t•r.

garbogt paid. DopooH roqod .
1980 Falrmonl 1h54 G.. Heal, 2 614-446-4$45 after Sp.m.
Bedrooms, Central Air, Llk• New Nlee ltudlo apt, ruml•htd,
Through Out, $8,950. 614·44 6- cablt, $185. month, you pay

0175.

electric plus dapoalt, 304~ 7S.

1983 Nuhua, 3 blldroom, 141170
with 7I12 txpando, CA. au .. n
walarbad, g1rdtn tub , all appflanctt, 10x20 dtck, $14,500.
Mu.t move, 304-675-7860 or 6 15~
3514.

4827.

1985 Windsor 2br, Fully furnished, Olst-twasht!i Disposal,
T.V., Slereo System throughout ,
Wuher I Dryar 2 Bfodrooms 01
Fumlh.lfe And Living Room f urnllure, Mlcrowava , "Refrirrator
And Stove . 814--448-354 , 3041113-4356.

Merchandise
Household

Concma &amp; Pla.tlc Sepllc
Tanka, Jtt Ae,...llon Tanka. Ron
Evant EnttrpriHt, Jec:kson, OH
t-B00.537·0S28.

Goods

O.WauH, ht•'t"f duty 10'" radial

OuHn alz:t bedroom autlt, offwhitt French Provincial, chair

GOOD

USED

LAYNE'S FURNITIJRE

e

Skaggo

Chnl Of
$44.95; Twin Matt.....

Onwar

0\NElTES : Wood Bar Stools
$14,g5 (26" ) Table And 4 Paddltd

Chalrt $129.
OPEN : 7 Oaye A WHk, 8 A.t.t. • 6
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon · 5 P.M.
Rt . 141 4 Mlln Off Rl . 1 In C.n·
tenary.

WhiJipo&lt;ll 14 Cu. Fl frosttrH

RafrtgeraloJ $75. Whlrtpoot 30'
Range $50. Both Good Working

I ~Co,.:.;.:no:..;.61~4~·388-:..:..:.INI00:.;,;~5.:.'P~M::..___
53
Antiques

Bkl Ri~tr AnUqun, SIO Main St,
POint Pt....nt, WV.

Buy ot 1111. Alvtrlne Antiqu.s,
1124 E. Main Stretl:, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
614-~2-2526.

Chair caning &amp; waavlng. frM
quota, rusoneble prlcn, linea
197\'1 304-675-2538 or 6M-256·
1616.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
22" Slit Propelled, Electric
S1.ar1, Raar Bagger, Crattaman
Mowtr, Excelfent Condltio n,

I :'20
::_::0.:.. .:.
••.:.4_:4.:.
48:...:.
T.!:::1.:.
l _-::c:::--=:

50 Inch uw mill 11.,. 35ft 1 T'
flat bttt. ~~75.-U58 .

Armv
Surplue1 camllauga,
man1s, junior e~m,
small •
qulpmant, Nntal turp!us cloth·
lng, Sam SomeJVIIIt , 5 mil••
Eut 1-n, Aavtnawooo1 by San·
dyvllle Post OHice, ffl , ~at, Sun

Throo (31 Chow ChowJ:'pplao,
full blooded, 614-ii2-6

THAT..

Blooming size plant• for ute,

675-2218.

814-)t2-2095.

Read the Best Seller

Sears Lawn Tncter 12 HP $7'00.
00 Uke New 814-256-1267 Attar
7:PM
Shop Smith lor salt, law ace••·
,,. Included, 614·192·

~rltt

2615
Signs: Por1abla changeable Itt·
tar signs and letters. FrH
dellv•ry. AAA Signa, 1-800-533-

3453.

Small older frMlltr, ru.-. good,
$30, 614-192·580.
New 12 Horwa Power MTD
Mowen, $895; 5 HorHpower
Lazy Boy TIII1r11 $218 Eech,
Whfle Supplies LISt. Womel·
dorff &amp; Thomu Hardw.,.. 614·

446-0i65.

Wedding gown and vtll, alze 8,
304-&lt;;75-BeTI .
Whhe

5' bulh hog. 61444&amp;-0S-47 aftar 7
p.m.

Cast Combine With 2 GJaln
Heads, $11100; 2 Row Tob.t.cco
S.ner,
~975 ·
John O..ra
Mowing Machine, $450. Call Af-

ttr 5 P.M. 614·24!-5152.

Cub Cadel pulling tractor,
proven wlnnar, 814-J12-3020
evenings, 614·992-3314 days,
Dallas Weber.
For Sale : New Holland R1k1,
Balers, Mowera, &amp; Hay Slnds,
Plowa, Disks, Com Planten,
Manura Spraad1111, SHdtra,

Drills And Cuillvatora. Other EFtnn
Ohio

quipment
Howe's
Machinery,
Jackson,
Phone: 614-286-5944.

lor Sale

BOATERS
J.S. Ma~no S...leo, Serving All
Your 8011tlng Needs, Par1s, k ·
ct11eoriet, Two Cycle Oil And
S.rvlca. tl14-256-t160.

full race cam, road llfterl, g~
lirts, body good, $800, 114·9413080 ahtr 5pm

at-=

Wanl to buy 4 •PHd tranaml•

olon lof 1083 CJ' !toP wHh 258

engine. 30..a75-316t ·

1911 Mercedn Benz, 280 SE,
n11da minor body work, near
mint Interior, 614-892·7313 or

614-092-71138.

1979 Uallbu Cta11ic 1_2 dr. 75%
show room condnlon. Low
miles. $2995. l lrm. 614..gi2·3481

afler 5pm.
1981 T~undtrblrd, lair cond.,
$1,000 or beat oHtt. I14--2SI-1143.

1982 Oodgo A~to , AT, AC, TS,
PB, CC, tanlwhllt • nee&lt;la work.
614 ..45-3375.

&amp;

Motor Homes

Home

D IFFICULT!E5.

AKC BooNI pupoloo, roady 1o
114 ... 17-1858 uk for F.
l. Benadum.
go, 1'100,

AKC Lab p-lo"' ohOio, AKC
poporo. Cholc&gt;" pllaw, block,
chocolete. 114-281-2371.
AKC oog'od. 2 yr. old blue
ftmatt "Chow Chow, ••king
$150. BlUM aft worth $~
$800. Rodueod lo oan. Good
nalurod • lntolllgont. 114-441IB:U.

:r··

AkC ragitltNd 811Mft hound
175 • $121, 114-e67-

AkC rwgl .. •.-.d miniature Oach·
ohund pupplooJ__2 rod dapple
melee. IM-ttZ.aoz4

AKC
Roglol-.d
mlnloluro
blec:kllllver echnauztr puppr, 3
moe. old, hae 1at HriH of
ohol""""mlng. 114·ll2·3013.

1989 Oodgo Shldow, ES PS,
PB, Air, PW,_~ S-, U iurbo
Engine, 31,ooo IIIIM, Roal Good
CondH!on, $4,2&lt;)0; 1087 Oodgo
Chorgor
Good
Condhlon
11!..000 Mho, 11,150i 11111 Foid
LIU, Good CondHton, 13,000
IIIIM, $1,500. 114458-12St.
18110 Gao p,izm hotchbocll, ...
eollonl eondlllon, low mlloogo,
CIIIIS14-112·T17S attar 5pm at on
wltktnda.

10111 Z-28 a.no 5.71...blue, -..._
22,700 mllta, tl3,000 finn,
12,500. rwtoll,. 304-Bn.
2332 Ovtnlngo.

artists perform in this all-star

TELEV1510H
SET.

tribute to the longesHunning
variety show of its kind.
Host: o~
· k Clark . (2:001
Stereo .
(!) Edge lereo . C

J
1

F,.. ..timet•. Call coiled 1·
614-ZJ7.o0488, day or night.
Aogtr1 BaMmtnl Waterproo-

(!) On

!'

Improvements:

YNre Experience On Older •
Newtr Homta. Room Addhlons,
Wort&lt;,

J.W. Conolructlon. Room Addltlont, Roofa, Dtcka , Siding
And Alt Typet Of Ex1erlor And
lntertor Painting. Will Gi~• Low
Bld.llctMtd. fM--245-507'6.

0 MOVIE: Tilt Porlect Bride

YOU OWE ME

HAM SAMWICHES
FER TH' CHECK ER
PLAYERS !1

30~

FER TH'
NIGHT!'

NOW WE'RE
ALL SQUARE!!

MnUon Moten, rep~lrtd . New

I re-built moton In atock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800537-i521.

Graph Mat chmaker can help you under stand what to do to make the relation -

ship work . Mail $2 pius a long, sell·

Totti klwn ca,., 18 (111 time
opoeloll, Inch- mowing l
weeding, caiiiM-ID2.e314, lam0pm.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Will build pa11o eo-. dteko,
tcretned roam., put up vinyl
lldlng or tr1ller skirting. ,,._
241-lil2.

'Birthday

•-wsee

1--------&amp;

a··.._

Refrigeration

lal

llntor Uconood 11oct cion.
Ridenour Eloctrfeol, WV00030e

1082 Gao Storm, low mlltt, u - 304..TI-1TII.
eollonl eondlllon, 114-HZ·IUI

envelope

to

you're permitted to think for yourself

'Your

Fourth and Pine
Galllpollo, Ohio

Root...... ..
wiring,,_........

stamped

Matchmaker, c/o lhis newspaper , P.O
Box 91428 . Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428
GEMINI (Miy 21-.IUM 20) You 'll be a
produc1ive performer today, provided

down to a crawl .

Ca~•·• Plumbing

Electrical

addressed,

and do things al your own pace. Excessive outside Interference could slow you

&amp;

Plumbing
Heating

84

WEST

'

Upholstery
3 Volkowogon BMIIoo lor pa~o 87
or II• up. 3 Junk BNIIM. Car
_,_,.. Upholotoring - ·
lrallor. SIIOO tor oil. 114-1112-3411 lng
tr1 oounly aroo V yoalo. Tho
tfttr5pm.
bOll ., lumMuro upllofalortng.
1887 Yugo, 42,000 Acluo1 lllloo, Call J04-t75-4114 lor ftN ootlmat•.
$815. 814-245-0152.

(2:00) Stereo. C
11!1 Nothvltlo NOw Stereo.
1211 laiTy King Llvol
!Ill Ftlltt!..Dowtlng Myatlflea
Stereo. Q
10:00 (1)
101 Ouontum Latp
Sam is a singing comedian
lrying to keep his partner OU1
of tro"bte. Stereo. Q
(!J Nowa
(!) (!) G"'lt Pertorm.onceo
Momi:w: performs tb
Mussorgsky's Pict.,res 81 an
Exhibition . Stereo.
all Amerfcln Millie Shop
Stereo .
1211 World Newa
!Ill 700 Club With Pot

Moy 14,1882
Events and circumstances might draw

you closer In the year ahead to an Indivi dual you've previously known only casually. A warm bond will bind this rolatlonshlp, and this new friend may
become your most loyal pal.
TAURUS (April 20-MIJ 20) Where your
car- Is concerned loday, don 't place ,
too much dependence on Individuals:
who are usually around to back you up.
To gratify their own self-lntoresls, they
may have to oppose you. Trying to
patch up a broken romance? The Astro-

EAST
t8 3

+K J 7 2

. 54

• QJ LO 8

tK 1096
+9 8 7

• Jl3
+A J 10 3

SOUTH
• A Q to 96 5
• 96
tQ 2
+Q 54

Analytical power
par excellence

Vulnerabl e: Neither
Dealer: West

By Phlltip Alder

Soutb

Wesc

C..NCER (JuM 21-Julr 22) Your judg~
monllsllkely 10 be betler today than I he
advice of a well-Intentioned friend . Usten to what this individual has to say .
just don't be overwhelmed by it.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Try not to pul off
Important aSSlgnmenls until 1h8 lasl
minute today. Your probabilities for
success are bast early In tho day, when
you 're not only more productive bu•.
luckier.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.,t. 22) A prudent
course of action loday would be to
guard your own Interests before trying
to handlo1hlngs tor others. This can be
dono without being selfish, too.
LIBRA (&amp;.pt. 23-0ct. 23) There Is no
valtd reason to share your good fortune
today wtth those who had no hand In it.
However, be generous with those who

did .
SCORPIO (Oct. 2'-Now. 22) Yo"r power
to eva lu ate correctly might not be as ef·
fat;:tive

ror

you today as your luck will .

Try to operate in the area where you
have the greatest strength.
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-0ec. 21) Today could be prolitable for you - so
long as you don't feel the need to fix
what tsn't broken. One of the ways to
ensure failure is to make impulsive, last minute changes.
C..PRICOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) If you
can organize your priorities In a methodical manner today, success Is likely. If you can't , then you mlgh1 end up
wllh the olher " also rans."
o\QUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) G"ard
against doing things today In a way
where you lake lwo stops forward and

queen . How do you

continue~

The deal occurred at the Sunday
Times / Macallan Malt Whisky Pairs
Championship in London last January.
The natural line is to cross to dum·
my with a hea rt at trick two and take

a spade finesse. However, West wiru
and continues clubs. Then the 13th
club from East effects a trump promotion for West. If South ruffs low ,
West overruffs. lJ South ruffs high,
West discards. And if South sheds the
diamond two, West throws hts second
heart and r eceives a heart ruff .
Anticipating this, Garozzo won trick
one and immediately played three
rounds of hearts, discarding a club
from his hand West threw a club too .

East sw1tched to the spade three
queen, king . West returned his last
club, East winning with the jack and
leading the club a"" Declarer ruffed
low and West overruffed with the

spade seven
Now, though, West had only spades
and diamonds left, and whichever
card he led would cost a trick in that
suit. He selected a diamond, but Garozw ran 11 Lo hts queen and held his
losses Lo five tricks: three spades, one
heart and one club.
In a star-studded field, Garozzo was
the only dec larer to make t wo spades
on this hand.
© ,_ NIWUlNJI ENI CU lUU AIIK

...

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Primitive

wagon
1 Melancholy
13 Cigar uaer

t4

Woman'a

name
15 Wath b6aln
16 City In
England
t7 GrOYtl ridge
18 Basketball
league
(abbr.l
20 Flud

one step back . This procedure coold

deny you the achievement of lmportanl
objectives.
•PIBCES (feb. -...ch 20) Your first
though Is are likely to be your best ones
today, but, unfortunately, you may put

~ more stock In ~ss accurate revisions.

ARIES (Mon:h 21-Apri( 18) The stretch
In your commOfclal dealings could have
definite llmllatlons today. Holding out
tor extra concessions might be an that's
needed to snap the rubber band.

Puu..

locomotive

55 Prehlotorlc
creature

56 Not ohaky
57 Guides

DOWN

21 Detectives

2S Slrlouoly
28 Prleot'o
'4estmenl

32

Ant. .r to Pre'fkHit

41 Macadamia,
e.g.
44 Boat
Implement
45 Head 1•1.1
48 Ahead
51 City In
Wethington
54 Typo of

1 Scandinavian
capital
2 Dec. holiday
3 Small bay
4 Allaa (abbr .)
5 Confederate
aoldler
6 Gordon

Buenos -

33 Unaaoloted
34 Cookoln
water
35 Split
36 Slcrotary ol

Implement

7 Choir part
8 Exclamation
9 Nt~l to Sun.

37 Shreds
39 Absorb

10 Sleeping
places
11 Central
4merican oil

tree
12 Kind of
income
19 Broker's

21
22
23
24

advice
Slender
Diminish
Card aull
Danca
mentuwers

2S Chatters
26 Dlolurb !he
peace

27 Solo
29 Lilted
.,...,..,....,......,..,.....,...,..,.., 30 Remarkable
person (al.l
31 Cub Scout
vroups

37 Singing
oyllablo
38 Large

lrltrles
40 Devout
4 t Bobt one's
hoad
42 Single Plfl
43 Chirp
45 Seaport In
Alaaka
46 - Khayy am
47 Forbids
49 Light - toathor
50 Scarlet
52 Likely
53 Fair grade

il21. 101 Newt
(!J Nlghl Court

Euc

+

10:05 (l) MOVIE: Tilt StOM Klier
IRI (2:001
10:30 llD Ill Night Court Q
11:00 (1) • ()) II (J) • !IUD
(!) Newowttch

Nortll

The best declarers anlicJpate bad
Pass
I.
Pass
breaks and plan how to over come
It
Pass
2t
Pass
lhem . Arguably the player who is best· 2 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
known for this ability is Bemto Gar·
Openmg lead: i
ozzo, an Italian who has lived in the
United States for several years .
To match wits with Garozzo, co ver IL - - - - - - - - - - - - l
the East-West cards in the diagram
Agamst your contract of two spades,
West leads the club nine: two, 10 ,

RaberlaOn

ASTRO-GRAPH

1446-4214.
~.:.:...:.:.:..::___....,-,----

82

t A875

a

JET

Davis
S.W·Yac
Service,
GA~VnH CrMk Rd. Parte, ••~
....--..
-.-olloo, pickup, ond doiiYOrY. 114-

1M Line: Wltll

Klnowha County Schoolo
®liD @ Ill 41 Houro: Hard
E v - F01ensic detectives
use science . savvy and lhe
tinie st clues to solve baffling
ll!l'storles and crimes. (2 001

fing.

56

am! tm .... 0. II wheel, 814m-1121 coli after lpm

Q

~WITH

TE:Q-lNIOI.L

BASEIIEHT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhional lifetime guarantM. Local reterene .. tumlahtd .

Roollng,
Khch~na And Batha. Fret E•
llmat"! References, No Jab
Too Big Or Smalll 614-317-0516.

e

9:00 (1) II 101 Night Court
(Program Finale) Oan
schemes to marry a weal1hy
glrHriend . Stereo .
CiJ II (J) 11J AmeriCan
Bondlland 40th ..nnlvtrtll'}'
Contemporary and legendary

ITU'""" IE&gt; N0'11-l!N:i

WE .ARE

446.. 311.

mets age.
1985 Dodge Shelby

A,.,_uh 5 apttd, air,

!:3A::K OJ

a

~ 2nloc Monolon Stereo.

EXPERIENCII-6

245-6121

1i81 Old a

fALL

1:05 (l) MOVIE: Forced
Vengeance (RJ (2:00)
8;30 (i) II (J)
Doogle Howotr,
M.D. Doogie and his father
volunteer to work at 8 clinic
in Honduras. Stereo. C
11m liD @
Dtvlt Ru~o
Dwight starts to feel insecure
when Erika dates a rich and
famous man. Stereo. C
Major Leogue S.uDell

=

Bernan Home lmprovtmtntt .
AddMione, G~rag .., P.. ntlng,
Aoollng .
Experienced,
AMSOneble. IM-446-&amp;568, 814-

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES
Jaekoon, OH l-800~37-1521 . '

Webb. Cal1114-o44f..0231.

cam.xr n

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Improvements

Stpllc Ttnk Pumpl_ng $901..GIIJUa

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds, styles.
tams Pet Food Deater. Julie

~D) 'UE.S
"TI-l~ C¥&gt;.'6 ...

Servtces

1985 Buick LISa bra Good Con-

Turbo, 5 •peed, radlsllwrJ. good
mpg • sharp, akllng t2",750 .
304-475-8306.

IIJHE.IJ !B£RE"'S
'1-\IS')FOI(E.'. 'MIS:PIT£D'
f&gt;I.JO 'TAI:VJ -(JJT .&lt;:f ·

IIJH:J

1913 Colenn llf'lf camper.
SINpe alx. E1c:ellant eondhlon.
$2500. 304-773-6081ev.nlnga.

dillon; 1981 Hondo l!R80 M'"ot·
cy!o. 614·388·8468 After 5 P.M.
v loaded
k Sk
1985 Bule
ytark, ~.
,
high mllsage, mo't'lng &amp; must
nl!. $1250. 614·245-!003, iuYO
Charger

1!-\IS BUSI~~S Cf 1RYIIJG.
"D CA"Tt:l-\ A R:X..llKAL
CA/JDID!\1£. !IJ A 'LIE' IS
R\DtCULa..JS .. .

614-W.Z·5M2.

Supplies

1985 Buick laSabrw limited,
4dr. sedan, beautiful family car,

8

EEKANDMEEK

1968 Seony Sportsman Ira~~
tr~ller, good condhlon, $600,

F......ollon

eontoct

0

Buclatt TranamluloN, Ulld I

Home

101 Unootved

m

now, $ITS, eK-1182·7123

Campers

=

searches lor a policemen
who helped bring her justice .
(AI Stereo. C
(!J MOVIE: li'oed Houll (RI
(2 :001
CiJ II ()) 11J Wonder Yllrt
Ke 'fin's cocky attitude has
Win me a~ry with him .
Stereo.
(!) 3- . 1
Emo
Stereo. C
11m 111 tU" • Royol Fomlly
Curtis learns how hard it is
to be lhgan of the house.
Stereo.
llD II M IE: IINbakor IR)
(2:30)
0 Munier, She Wrote
11!1 Crool&lt; tnd Chooe
1211 PTfmeNawo Q
Big Broiler Joko ;tereo

&amp;

Auto Parts

Curtla

.AK ?32

PHILLIP
ALDER

Myateriea A woman

ALLEYOOP

&gt;U-1%

+t

+K 6 2

7:30 (1) II 11)1 Joopordyt C
(!J Now It C.n Ba Tokl
(II II E'!!frtalnment Tonight
Stereo. .Q
(J) D Mtmo'o Family
11m Ill Wheel of Fortuna
tl21e Fom(fy Feud
aD Ba • Star Stereo.
Pro Baoch Volleyball
Four- Man from San Diogo IT)
1211 Crouflrt
7:35 (l) Slnlord &amp; Son
8:00 (1) II

251-5919.

r~bultt, atanlng 11 SUU; ftont
wheel drlvt
It S'Mi.OO
114-24W177, I
-8213.

1968 Dodge Dart aT, 360 eng In•

"

speclallat. Men:ury certified.
Mobile, Wt eome to you. 614·

614-374-4151

Autos lor Sale

•'

BOATERS
Gulooa Mercury Marine Service.
Mercury, Merfner, Uercrul.. r.

81

NORTH

BRIDGE

;::hi

0

Ft. Pontoon Whh 40 HP
llolor, $3,000. 114-&lt;448-3817.

6h . truck topptf tor 1111, Ilk•

71

our
'
.............._

24

Sal~ttPa'!!J S.rvk:e

Transportation

.

.fJND
·
'

6*W.Z·3481 after 5pm.

Wanted to Buy

s ister'"

1211 MoneJIInt
!Ill Tile Woltono

0

HURST RAcoOASALES
28 HP 4 WD $6895; 20 HP 4 WD
$5,995, Route 7 North, Mtrllna.

62

sh e truttered , "'Difty , really

My aunt arrived unexpectedly fo r dmner "I leM a
message on your machine " she said . . Mom
sa 1d
that we didn't have an answering mach1 ne . "Well . · she
laughed , "I hope the person I called DIDNT have a

=

1976 Baja Ski Boat . as _HP
Johnson outboard. Runa good.
Noodo uphoiolory wor&gt;.. $1500.

79

clothes and under her breath

. .•. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
' "
Studio · Judge · Crowd ~ Quaint ~ 0/0NT

Stereo.
0 MocGyvorC
SportoC.ntir

IN

She began sorting

UNSC RAM BlE ABO VI lE IIER I
10 GET AN SWER

~=:.me;~; Chl~-

&amp; Motors

Accessories

3963.

wash

A PRINT NUM8fRIO til lER~ IN
~
TH E~~ SQ UARE S

IJI8 11)1 Wh11l of Fortuna
00 Tile Jtftartono l:l...

:.;;~.1~.;
~·-.::·

to the laundromat to do our

dirty , andonlyd1rty1lwehave
enough ... · · .r·

(II II lnoldo Edition 1;1
(!) (!) MacNelf/lohrwr
NewoHour Q

Suz~o~kl RMIO motorcycle, 1 yr.
old, good cond., $1200, 614-742·
2685 ...... 4pm

6119.

Pets lor Sale

7:00

My roommate and I went

7:05 (l) o\ddomo Family

KUBOTA

New Gel'll 2170 nlr~e toot hay
blrld, list price $11,400. apaclal
sale price $800, tor llmlttd tlm1.
Large rebates now In effect on
manu~
sprudert . 304-675-

I

UN CANE

6:35 (l) Andy GrtHith

Honda XL 500 I Honda Hawk
400 Soli o,. Or Bolh, 614·24511711.

76

PHTED

=UpCI-

1987 Ktwuakl KLR 800. 304-

Boats

I

IIll Now ZoiTO Stereo. 0

Motorcycles

Building

Block, brlc:k, ..wer pipes, wlndowa, lintels, etc. Clsude Wlrl·
tera, Rio Grande, OH C.U 614·

ARLO AND JANIS~~----~

1881 Ford Atrwtar Mini van,
automttlc tranamlnlon with
overdrive, amltmlctiNR•, !Itt ,
air, cn.t.., •rc. cond., 814·992·
rno onor 7prn.

75

MUPHT

L-L-L-L-L.......I "

llD II Andy Grtffttlt

446·7804.

like new, 111 opllone, 307 V-8,
brand new tlr11, $299~, 614·U92·

brown ftmale, 114--902-6174.

CLRSSIFIED RDS

285 MF TraCID!,. With loadtr,
$9,850; 180 M• Wllh Loader,
$6,550; 65 MF Wllh Buoh Hog,
$2,795. 614-286-6522.

2

r· ..:.;....:...,:
1 1 --.--~1 :
I1--,:....

0 ScoobJ Doo

19iMt Ford Rang'!.- 5 ap., over·
drh-e, 1UII under t'Ord warrantl,
sharp truck, $5,UU5. Call 61 -

Aon't TV Service, specializing
In Z.nllh 1110 Mr't'lcing moat
ott.r bNnde. House calla, slso
somt appliance rapilra. wv
304-41'1-2:JH Ohklll-4-44&amp;-2454 _

old, $75 aach, 1 back milt, 1

Read the

1951 John OHrt Model B, Allis
Chalm1rs, H.D. 6 0ollf, HyMer
Electric Fork Lift. 814-446-2350.

Dryer Shoppt. 814-4-46·2D'I4.

2 Pomtrenlane, •pr,rox. 4 mos.

199'1 14w80 3Bf't, 2 Baths,
$17,500, Or Aoowno Wllh $750
Down. Must Bt Mondl 814-44&amp;8325.

Farm Equipment

I

OJ Ill Ia. CBS Nowo 0

304.. 28-3207.

r.

55

One bedroom apt lot r.nt, 304-

61

NAGELT

I' I 1 I I

0

Cash paid for Hlrtty Davld.an
1nd Indian motortyclea and
parts. Any condhkHI. E~enlngt

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

a a•

=

JUST
SEEM5

IT

SUPPOSE WE
ALL THINK
ABOUT f.IOW
WE .

5.5 000 miiM 6,500 ot bMt offer;

74

I

•

OSmurfo C
lnllkle ttit PGA Tour
1211 World TodiJ
!Ill Rtn Tin Tln, K-9 Cop
Stereo . Q
6:05 (l) Beverly HINbllllee
6:30 (1) 8 11)1 NBC Nawt
(!J hv.cl by lie Ball
(II II ()) D ABC Nawo Q.
(!) Wlld Americl Stereo. Q
111 Squa"' One TV S1ereo.

175-3773.

Metal root and aiding, baked Wanted to lease: tobacco quota,
enamel and galv. Treller under- Gallla Co~omly. 614-446-2109.
penning. 1U82 Subaru front
I
k
Whtol drivt, - · l rune good _
s_3_ _L_v_e_st_o_c_ __
$900. 304-372-2001.
Foal 1989 Big Red Dun, 4 Stock·
Pinball Machine, $375; Garden lng, A Blaza, 15 Handa 3",
Wagon,
$75;
Homellle Ragltlar Pleatuf11 Bred. 614-371ChalnAw, 1100; Push Mowat', 2820.
115. 814-245-5178.
For sal1: miniature Vlttnamtst
Pla.tk And Medal Culvert I Inch pol- billy plgl, $100.. ., 814-742·
Thru 10 lnct't In Stock. Ron 2050
Evans, Jackaon, Ohio. 1~
Nice pigs lor Hit, 614..g4U-20'17
537-g528.
Prom drwH, Uoor length, ; 110, Purtbr.d ilmousln bull, 2 years
white !acto royal blue allk elto old. 614-742-2545.
have hoop allp, 304-875--1582 or Want Muon County Tobacco
304-773-5185.
quota will pay 25 cente (now~
r lb. Morgen's Woodlawn
Rteondlllonld
wuhtrw
&amp;
rm , Rl . 35, 304-1)37-20'18.
dryen, Heh $100 and up. W•
nrvlca all maku. The Washtr &amp;

Small, Brand New, $75. 614-3670331.

Price, S14-36'H139 After 5p.m.

room ••'-•aadbumer, miJUf appllonc:H, $15,500. 304-51&amp;-Z783.

MarNa 201b. tll..r-euh l't'ator. Can
handle your gardening, yard
work, lawn care. 304·57'6-2132 .

canopy crib, llrollar,
pltypenl awing, walkar, changIng lab t wttti bathtub under·
n..th, car INI, Utt6a like tuml·
turw, dinette Ml, 3~5-4548 .

Electric, 2 Bedrooms, Reduced

Very nice 14x'70 mobile homa on
priv•te leN. 3 llldroam,_ ~Jtr1

KILLS FLEAS!

Buy ENFORCER Fl.. Killers For
Pets, Home I Yard. Ouar~niMd

Noon~ :OO PM. Ahtr hours •
Days 304-213-56!5.
DAKOTA
DREAM
HOliES
$31,995 &amp; Up. Bult1 On Your Lot.
St• Our Models, 614-i86·7311.
Black l.Miher Jackal, Slzt :

1NI Altdman Danville, Total

5711.

Gen1rel Mauling, Gravel, Stone,
Mushroom Compoat, Etc. 614·
446-8038.

Elltellvol Buy ENFORCER AI '
Browns Trustwonhy Htrc:tware,
Rocker: axe . cond ., $7!5 . 614- Slate Route 160, Bidwell, Ohio.
245-8236.
Large Baktrt Pride pizza oven
SWAIN
1\kt new. SS wot1t lable w/2
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 62 shetvH. SS trtpt• bowl alnk
Ollv1 St., GalllpoUa. New a Used wlfaucela.
R1lrigerator
furniture , heatll'l, W•"•m &amp; aandwlc h topptr. Approx 100
Work boots. 614-446-31511.
plua pens. Trlp6a dtek SS wall
ahtlvH.
30Wa5-35l8.
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!
Lumblr S..eor.d Wild Cherry
614-446-3158
I Popltr AIIO Base Board,
Casing Door Jama. 114-446LIVING ROOM : Sot1 And Chait'
$179 And Up; CoHN And End 8038.
Tablet $79 And Up; Swivel Maglc Chef wuher &amp; dryer; GE
Rocktrl $79.
automatic dlehwashlr; Gibson
frMZer; 814-982-1340
BEDROOM : Bunk a.. $9i

Dnwen

Fish Tsnk, 2413 Jtckson Avs.
Polr~t Pleasant, 304175-2063,
lull llno Troplcol llohl blnlo,
smallanlmall and tuppl H .

1-aoo~a-1g23

730.

Lot, Rio Grando. I14-38HT841.

Mony At $600 Down, And Tau
Over PaymoOio. Call 1-800-58'0-

Ap-

llanees, Wt Htvt Movad To: 78
lnt StrMt, Gallipolis, 114-441-

4

Oragonewynd Cattery: CFA Per·
sian Siamese klttena . 614..t463a4" afler 7:00p.m.

SWIMMING POOLS

eom~tt• home tumi•~~~C· GenMit Nutrhl011 Produc1t
Hourt: Mon-S.t, 8-5. 11
0322, 3 miiH out Bult'f'llie Ad. fMturtng Amlno Acid Body
Bulldlng1 weight loa and tat
FJM tMII~Ir)'.
burner fOI'mulaa . A~allable ex·
PICKENS FURNITURE
clualvaly at Rite Aid Pharmacy.
New/Ua.ct
Tht Nfl WIY to diet.
Household tumlahlng. 112 mi.
Jen\eho Rd. Pt. PINHnt, WV, Gulbrannn Premltrt th..tre
organ, A·1 condtllon, must see
eall 304~75·14.$0 .
to apprtelllt. 614..giJ2·JIW1.
Portabla rwfrtgeJator tor aala.
KILLS FLEAS I Buy ENFORCER
614·256-1513 after 6 p.m.
Flea Killers tor pelt, home &amp;
Refrigerator Llkt New, Har~ut yard. Guaranteed eMectlvat Buy
Gold, S25C!i, ~Rolrigoralor Sldo By ENFORCER .t : Baum Trot
Sldo,
....,po~ono,
$115; Value Store, 11 Wnt Main
Refrigerator Advaetdo, GrMn SlrMI, Ch81tlr Oh . 6 Vtlley
Frost Fru $150; 20' Eleclric Lumber &amp; Supply Corp., 555
Range, Ukt New, $150; K•n- Pari St,..., Middleport, Oh .
mort Washer $95; Whirlpool

$95;

Black Or White BunniH. Also,
French Lop Bunniu, G,..at For
4-H Projects. ll4-f46~680.

Ground 19Il"'l4 Pool lneludn:

1-801).4119-3491.

W•-.

Pets lor Sale

APPLI ..NCES FIHor Otek, Foneo, Loddoro,
Etc. Ooti•t Btllavell? Call BPI

1988 Cltyton Wattwlng 14x5.2 2
Bedroom•. Total ElleirJs Exc.
Condition, Set~p On Hented

Reclaimed
Selection!

"'

56

Oniw $7'H.OO Beauutul Above

Washtrl, dryers, rtfrlgtraiOfl,
,...ng,s. Slc.agga Appliances,
Upper River Rd. Btalda Slone
Creal Motel. Call 614--448-7398,

P.ll.

Q,..

l MEAN. I

~~=========::;=====©=•":':':'•:•:•·:"'=~ $1,200.
3()4.475-2218.
1887 Chev
cu ..om Con't'trslon,

314 ton, 45,000 miiH, fully •
qulppta, lmmteullltt cond, 304·
m-5722 lfllf 7:00PM.
1U87 Dodge 4x4, auto., AMIFM,
cuo. otoroo, lift kl1, 11 ,. 0 ,

Reor ronge lenen of
lour Kromb led words
low to f orm four simple words

~ Rtadtna Ralnbi!t 0

11711 F-150 4 WO Looll Sho'JI,
Drl- Good! 614-367-0657.

Commercltl
Sq .
Fl. Docks, Building,
LAvtlera,12,000
Hated
Ct1ar Span Rt 32, Jackson,
Ohio. 711-1113-6732.
Second Floor Apirtmtnt For
•~au:
R o
a.R., ·h 54 Miscellaneous
l. ·• n•
-• •
Kilehon
WI
S1ovo
l
Ro~lg
.
Merchandise
Water Fumlahecf. No Pets. Cor·
n..- Second &amp; Plot Galllpolia.
$230. ~r Month; O.poalt Aequlr.d. C•ll 114-441-4241, 814- Brand ntw Kenmora wes htr,
446·2326, Or 614-441-4425.
$300; window sized air eondhlonar, $1~0; 114-192~102 or
&amp;14-t92·JI90 anytime

WED., MAY 13

0

llD II Full Jfou11 Q

1982 Ford Ecollne Van E·ISO,

1988 Clayton Weatwlnd 14x55
Two Bedrooms, AC, Natura l
Oat, A·1 Condltlon1 $8,800.
Phone: 114-192·'7104 •Iter 6:30

Acetat To B•nk
Mobile HOIMf.

304·

MIIIH, 2,500. 114·24!-5i78.

For Lease

5gg Set.

Clean,
No
Pet a,
Quiet,
Relerence And Deposit Requlred. 614-446- 1519 .

drl~•-

Rotoroi Shock&amp;, Rodlo, 80,000

house, prater private aetllng,
614·992·2U8, IMYI rntSMgt H
no antwll'.

1Br,

2602 .
2 Rooms &amp; Batl'l, Downstair s,

•

wa

1tT7 Ford F·150 4x4, Ntw Tlrtl,
Whaela,
Brakes
Exhaust,

Nica, ciHn 2 or 3 bedroom

(2x6);

Furnished
Apartment ,
Cenl ra t Hut , Air, Prlvalt Park·
lng,
Naar
Groc•ry,
All
Ma intenance Included. 614-446·

I

- - - - - - - Edi..d by CLAY l.

6:oo (1) •
(J)
I!J Nawo
(!JVIdeoPowtr
IZj Squa"' One TV Stereo.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

47 Wanted to Rent

$22Smo.,
Includes
securit y deposit re ·
qulrad, no pets, 614·99l·2216

utilities,

2

WOlD
GAM I

S©\lJJlA-

TIIAI DAIL!
'UllLII

EVENING

11 CheVy · LuY. Stondanl. Long
bod . $600. 304-475-2141.

Counlf'Y Mobile Horne Park, Rl.
33N ., und.r n.w management
Lota, $85; home rtntala, $235;

w lonoman. 304~75-697'9 .

unique

ANYWAY

675-1176.

-:-:----=~:.:.::..,.....,..-- I arm oaw, $300. 614·367-0138.
Chest type 24.7 cu II trHzer.
FREE INST•LLATION

2bdrm.

WHO~~~

----

llrN, $4,500. 114-w.!-.4823.

3 Bedroom House, 2 r.tllea From
Gallipolis, Dtposh Required,

Spooro, 304-Bn-1421.

18

1 8R house across from the
University of Rio Grande. 614·
366·9946.

Rt(,HL

--

tl83 Ford Bronec, MW paint,

alum whMte, 3H body llfl, 1200

Will do housecleaning. 304-89 53136.

Help Wanted

BartendertiCaalno

Space lor Rent

40•48 bulkflng tot rent : S.turct.y lhN Thur.day. 114-446-7750.

51

Rttundtd.

14

$125/mo. , 2bdrm., living room,
kitchen, bath , Dexter, Oh. 513·
254·5086 or 614-742·2751.

THE.Y FEeL. !'V£ AAD lr!

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13

Television
Viewing

[QUIT! DO YOU fW.
/1'£ &lt; l QUIT! K·~I-T 1

1013 Ford Bronco, new paint,
aluminum whNII, 3.. body lift,
1200 Uroo, $4500, 114-tm-BA23

3 bedroom 2 atory t'tome,
reference &amp; deposit required,
304-675·327a.

m~ homa,
Letart Ftllsaf"'a, 814·247-496~

AHantlon! Styling Salon for
S3501Day PfoeHIIng, phone or- Sale! Prima Location. Call 614·
ders! People call you . No tl· 446-i803, 614-446-8355.
ptrienet neceuary. 1-80G-2S5- VENDING ROUTE : Get Rich
0242.
Oukk? No Way! But We Have A
• AVON" ALL ARE \Sf Share your Good, Steady, Affordable, Busi·
time with ua. You 'll tovt 1t'11 ness. Won't Laat. 1-800-284·
VEND.
company. 1-800-912-1356.
Vandlng Route : Local. We Have
.WSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Exeelltnl
Pay,
Benefits, Tht Newest Mtchln81, Making A
407-2i2-411U, Nice Study C..h Income. 1·
Transportation,
Ext. 57'1. 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll 800-155-03.14.

S lr Nf, Coolv ille, Oh _ 9·3pm

Houses for Rent

~onmr s e:~CR

WW.. IF T1W"'S TH£ WAY

2751.

Will do babyshtlng In

!===----- --

mltce llar~eous .

----------

lho offering.

AVON I All Arua I

Slooplng roomo wHh - n g.
Also tralltr apace. All hook-upa.
Clll aft• 2:00 p.m., 304-Trl5651,M..onWV.

49

Rentals

Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo_

!"!It ~I C.K Of 5UIOOL ..
WORK, OIOR( ~ AAD

HATTIE, Till£ TO (:£f
UP FOit 5t:.IIOOL 1

1ffl Ford !longer F·150 414, 351
auto.
•xcellent
condition.
$2800. 304-8112·3430 or 304-862·

hou&amp;l
In Rutland ,
$225/mo.
pl us
u111111es
&amp;
deposll , relarencts rtqulrCKt.
Ready June 3rd, 614·992-7503.

17 A. MIL 3ml From Gtlllpolis.
Cape Cod Homt. 3 Of 5 Br'a L.A.
O.R. Kitchtni\ S.lh. Full Bu•
Sponsored by : Little Kyger
1·208·1lf-7'000 mtnl, CA, 1m, Garege. lmchurc h women : May 15 ~? nec•ury.
Ex11617N3
m.cilattd Possualon 614-446Loca ted in Addison, State Rt. 7.
0857
ApThurs. 14th, Fri. 15th , just oH 141 Dlol~bulonll!p-Doo!gnor
at Ce ntenary on Lincoln Pika at partl. Woufd You Uke To Earn 2 bedrooms, eomer lot, priced
119. Lo ts ol everything, new and Mort Money Than You Do Now, In 20's, 107 Locust Sl, HendarAnd Only Worit Pan-Time From ton, 304-t75-161i.
used. 9·?
Your Homa? Would You lal: U. 2021 Marquene Avt, 5 "rl old,
Thursday, 1012 Second Avenue: Show
Vou How? fot' A Per"Mnal,
r
Rotolitle r;
2 aluminum,
1 Sit-Down ln1~Nltw Can Mr. all brick maintenance tr11
wooden storm doors ; baseball Socu1J 1-I00-344-tOM lnvnt· home, 4 bedrooms, small living
~2K a_ _...
room, dlnlngroomttamlly room
card s; tools; glr11 druaes,
ment
•• ....cur.u.
comblnttlon, khchen, U1JIIty
small to 24 months.
Easy Woril:l ExctUtnt Pay! "'" room, all OM laval, eowNd
lhursday, Friday. Down AI. 7 to umbla Products AI Home. Call patk) In back, prlncy t.nca,
Clipper Ulll, turn right, follow ToU FfM, t-aoo... 87..S561, Ellt. gara~own by appointment
signs. Weight bench, b.aby bed, 313.
only
75-1238.
wal"er, higfl chai r, gun, knlvu.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS l Bedroom•, 2 Slory Homa ,
HIRING. $18,000 . S721..010t0/Yr. 1- Cheshlte
VIllage,
(Gallla
805-15~ Ext G1:1168 FOf County)
Call 6:OOP.M.
Or
Pt. Pleasant
Immediate A"ponH.
Weekend•. Appointment : 6143117.()628.
&amp; VIcinity
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S.
MARSHALL'S Now Hlrl~ No 3 lA Home to Sell on land ConMay 14, 15, 16 Aero. . from Bar·
111lhlad C.uryout In Hendti"'IO, Experitnet Neeeaaary. FOr Ap- tract . Rodney Village II 614--446pllcatlon Information Call 21g.. 1114
WV'O-?
'ru.-&amp;&amp;e!t_
b:t. OH15.!1 la.m. To 3 BA, 1 bath, new siding,
Moving Sale, T~urw, Frl, Sat.
woodbumlng tlr•ptace. 614-446May 14,15,16. 9:00AM to 5:00PM. Bp.m. 1 u.ys.
30-4-675-697'9. Four mil• from PROCESSOR, mau up to $1.._000 3220.
Pl Ptt on Rt. 62. Olat't•, elolh· 1 wMk proceaalng HUDil"HA B
UL OUSE F R SA E
refunda. Will lreln. 1·216-324·
EAUTIF
H
0
L
lng, fabri c, che.t trHzar, wed·
nu.
Hletoricai
A,... Corner Lot - 816
ding gown, quMn alza t.droom
Main St. pt , Pieaa:ant, W. Va.
suits , tumlture, anUqu...
PROCESSOR, make up lo 11000 Complttaly Renovettd : 2 Full
Thurs . 5114, &amp; Fri. 15/15. 10-6. a w..k procMIIng HUOIFHA Baths, 3 lMge Bedrooms, New
321 7 iJJouma r1 Anm•. (OH of l'llfundt. Will train. 1-216-324· MVAC, Naw Carpet. Available
June 15 61........S.22o5.
d1adend) Chlldr~nl ctolhta, n85 .
baby clothet, malemlty clotkes,

Lots joining Point - 100% ow ner
llnancing at $101 .46 per month
buys all thrM lots. 304-6752722.

41

Sat., affordable, chlldcara. r.t -F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2Y,..10.
..,, CondH!onolo, Etc. 114·258· Before, after echool . Drop-Ins
1238.
w~eome . 614-446--8224. New In·

Lost: Vici nit y Of Porter, 7 Month With Or Without Motors. C..ll
Old female Roll weller, Black larry lively. 114-388-!1303.
Wi!h Tan Markings, Weighs: 70 I =~:..:::::!:..:==::::::.
Pds. 614 -388-a3J4.
Wanted To Buy: Llrg. Size
Dreu Mak.,.. Form. Good Condit ion, Call 8M~46-4015 After 5
7
Yard Sale
P.ll.

Monda y

I
He p Wanted

11

Wantfod To Buy: Junk Autoa

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm the
dar betor•. the ad 11 to run,
Sunday ..:ltllon- 1:OOpm Friday,

304-67~2722.

Lots In Naw Haven · 100%
owner linanc:lng at $101.46 p~~r
month buys all thrM lol a, 1304·
&amp;15-2m.

Fruth Pharmacy, 786 N. S.Cond
St., Ulddleporl.

4

&amp; Acreage

Lota In Ga llipolis Ferry • 100%
owner financing at $98.64 per
month, any ona of four lots
available, 304-675-2722.

Dannay.

REDUCE; Burn

Lots

Lots for sal•, trallert accep-

Orl . FL $3.95/M n.

Roomt for rant - . . .k or monlh.
Starting II $120/mo. Oltlllll Hotel.

46

Trucks lor Sale

11111 Chevy 112 lon pick-up, lllr
cond. I14-317·T161.

11~11580.

33

LIVE! UVEI LIVE!
1·90M54·9800l (18 +I SSTEL

72

Rooms

UHd mobile homa, 614-992·55'19

ADOPTION; lots of love, landar·
ness and care awatt your baby
In our colonial horne surrounded
by
parD
and
pla ymates. Professional• In our
early lhlr11ea awaH thatreaaured
times to s pend whh your child.
Donna &amp; Chuck welcome your
collecl calls anytime 215-328-

Wednesday, May 13, 1992

BORN LOSER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by larry Wright

Furnished

lor Sale

3

Wednesday, May 13, 1992

0

A11 AroeniO Holt Stereo.

[J MotcGJYir C

liD Crool&lt; tnd a,...

1211 Sporto Tonighl
!Ill llonlertown Stereo

c

0

11:30 (!J Kojtk
(!) 0...1 Dectalono
(J). Nlghlllnt C
il21• 'Dtngtnlul Curvoo'

Crimi T1rnt Alltr Prtmt

:s=ti
ill
,.....

!Ill MOVIE: Arrow In tltt

Dull
)2:00)
11:35(1)• IDI Tonight Show
Starring Johnny C.roon
Stereo .
CiJII Ctteert C
Manfld.::IN!th Chllcr...n

5•

12:00 I)) •

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- " " " " ••&gt;&lt;_...,,..;;,... c:r..-c~ ffom quotat1o1111 ~ ~ p.opte, .,_ sna Pf'MW~t
EIGfl .....,In tM cipher ...,_ lor ~-

K

IS N P T

ITXGIC
p 0
B P L T

I X

P G

H P L T

TPDZTX
MBR

r-.r·• OW: P ~I

MSR

K

D X R G D

USC ' O . '

CPEZSHG .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Personality is to a man what perfume Is to 8
no'N8f ." - Charles M. Schwab.

Dennlo Miler

liD. Love CO&lt;-.Mctlon
0 11ta Equttfztr

11!1 Netllvftlo Now Stereo.

ll 11i2 by NEA. W:.

13

�Wednesday, May 13, 1992

Cavs defeat
Celtics, lead
playoffs 3-2

we Gladlv

Accept Your

.,,,.,,., Federal Food
Stamps

alii
~~

Ohio Lottery

Ecrning

Pick 3: 335
Pick 4: 8371
Super Lotto:
5-10-25-30-39-4 I
Kicker:
269252

~ F'or Leo rrir.g

ADVIiRIISID tnM POLICY- Each
of thtH advenised h:ems is

required to be readil-y 8118ilable
for sale in each Kroger Store .
except as. specifically noted in
this ad . If we do run out of an
advertised item, we wilt ot1er
vou your choice of a

..,;

Page 5

'ift' lOUf '11enaty

lrOOf'l' wore
f'J'

or.""'

••

comparable item , when
available, reflecting the &amp;Bme

COPYRIGHT 1992 . TH E KROGER CO

savtngs or e reincheck which
will entitle vou to purchase the

ITEMS AND

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY MAY 10. THROUGH SATUR
DAY , MAY 16. 1992, IN

advertlud item at the
adveniaed price within 30 davs.
Ohty one vendor coupon will be
accepted per item purchased .

Pornero~

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEAL ERS.

Vol. 43, No.9
Copyrighted 1992

By BRIAN J_ REED
Sentinel News Starr
The fate of Pomeroy's Community Development Block Grant proJect for 1992 was discussed when
the Meigs County Commissioners
met in regular session on W«lnes day.
The village council's application for CDBG monies was
approved by the board in the
amount of $15,000 late last year.
The monies are earmarked to
demolish several abandoned,
unsafe residential structures in the

20-lb. Avg.

$ ••

LOW PRICES,
AND MORE,

Each

First Lady, Brown
stump in Ohio
suppon a proposal backed by the
By BETH GRACE
nation's governors for $35 billion
Associated Press Writer
in
froeral aid to cities.
Barbara Bush lamented the
He acknowl«lg«l he is trailing
breakdown of the American family
Arkansas
Gov . Bill Clinton badly
and Democratic presidential candidate Jerry Brown bemoaned the in the rnce for the ~ocratic nom disillusionmem of American voters ination - Clinton won handily in
primaries in Nebraska and West
in campaign stops around Ohio.
Mrs. Bush on Tuesday told sup- Virginia Tuesday - but said that
porters of LL Gov . Mike DeWine, wasn't going to stop him.
"We know Clinton's got a lot of
a candidate for U.S. Senate, at a
delegates,
but we think the people
picnic fund-raiser that the brealc of Ohio want a choice," Brown
down of the family has caused
said.
many of the nation 's problems.
A city custodian asked Brown if
"When the family's troubled ,
he
could translate his tough talk
our communities are troubled,"
into
action if elected.
Mrs. Bush said. "We've got 10 put
"Have
you really got the bockthe family back together and keep
bone
10 change the politics and the
it together."
She also defended ber husband 's things that are corrupting the United States?" said Audrey Kaspar,
domestic policies.
"He's the one that called for 30.
"I think I could handle it if I've
enterprise zones, and he's the one
got
people like you, and millions
who's called for reform of the wel more,
supporting me and sU!nding
fare system so that you ' re not
with
me,''
replied Brown.
penalized if you get married and so
In
the
evening,
Brown travel«!
you're not locked into poveny ,"
to
the
Akron
suburb
of Mogadore,
she said. "I don't have any apolowhere
he
attended
a
potluck
supper
gies about George Bush's domestic
at the local Veterans of Foreign
programs."
Earlier in the day , she told stu - Wars post
' 'Tbe reason I stay in this race is
dents at predominantly black Cen be&lt;:
ause - not only do I want to
tral SUite University in Wilberforce
won
in Ohio - but I want 10 tell
that they were on her mind as she
the
truth
about why things aren't
watched coverage of the violence
be
Iter,'' Brown told a
gelling
that erupted after a jury acquitted
white police officers charged with crowd of about 350 people.
Brown spent the night in
beating black motori st Rodney
Youngstown
and was scheduled 10
King.
hold
a
10
a.m.
news conference at
"I thought what in the world
Youngstown
City
Hall today.
.
can I say to you all, Amcnca's best
Brown
planned
to
conunue
hos
and brightest, in the walce of that
tidal wave of resentment and Ohio sweep today with appear fury," Mrs. Bush said. She said sbe ances in Youngstown, Toledo and
de cided to talk about family Columbus.
Clinton' s wife, Hillary , also
because it sustain s people c. nd
scheduled
appearances in Clevestrengthens communities.
land
and
Columbus
today.
In Cleveland, Brown told the
She
was
to
tour
a market in
Camyaign for New Pnorities, a
Cleveland,
visit
a
job
lnlining prosocia advocacy group that lobboes
gram
in
Columbus
and
spealc 10 the
for money to help the homeless,
Franklin
County
Democratic
Pany
unemploy«l and others. that Americans refrain from voting "because tonight
She plann«l to spend the night
they don't believe anyone."
in
Cincinnati.
Brown al so urge d the group to

usc might be needed if the final
few sUiteS ratified the amendment,
first proposed along with the Bill of
Rights in 1789.
The Justice Department hasn't
releas«l its opinion on whether the
amendment is ratified or whether
so me court ruling or act of
Congress is in order.
Ratification requires votes by
three -fourths of the states, or 38
altogether.
Alabama, Missouri, Michigan
and New Jersey voted last week,
and Illinois on Tuesday became
No.40. The amendment also has
passed the Pennsylvania House and
the California Senate, so more raufications are possible.
The amendment would require
that lawmakers wait until arw the
next House elections before receiving any raise s they vote them selves.
The House imposed such ~
restriction on its last pay raise, but
the Senate didn'L
Members of the House and Senate both eam $129,500.
The amendment got its ftrSt ratifications in 1789, tbe year James
Madison wrote it and Con~s
sent it to the sLates with no
line.
'

A Multlmedl1 Inc. Newa011oer

village.
However, an EPA -required
asbestos inspection by the Kemron
firm of MarietUI has revealed that
three of the nine structures will
require asbestos removal, and two
of the three would require "ex tensive asbestos removal proc«lures."
According to Commission Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, the sUite will not
release any of the county's CDBG
funds until arrangements are made
regarding the Pomeroy applicaoon.
Options for the village include
the following : to pay for the

asbestos removal from village
funds; to drop the three houses in
question from the project and proceed with demolition of the
remaining six; or substitute another
e li gible CDBG project (such as
paving or water line extension) and
wait until the next year's projects
to do the demolitoon work and
include the asbestos removal in the
grant application. (The upcoming
CDBG year will be an 18-month,
instead of a 12-month, period.)
Commissioner Richard Jones
said yesterday, however, that he

thought there were "more worth while projects in Pomeroy" and
that he would be opposed 10 spending more CDBG funds on demoli tion of structures.
Hobstetter told the board that
state officials had recommended
that the three asbestos-laden structures be rcmovro from the project
and that the funds be spent on
demolishing the remaoning six
houses, since asbestos removal on
the two most serious houses in the
project alone could cost the village
as much as $20,000, and since a

new proJIXI would require a public
hearing and a delay of at least 30
days.
Also. before funds are released,
the village is still required to complete property appraosals on each
structure in question, and must esti mate rehabilitation costs or cenify
that the structures could not be
rehabilitated, since the sUite will
not fund demolition of properties
that could be rcbabilitatro for occupancy.
Other business
Further discussion was held

with Pom eroy Attorney Christopher Tenaglia regarding the pending move of the county's law
library from the counhouse to an
office on West Second Street,
owned by Bernard V. Fultz.
According to Tenaglia, the bar
association will rrouce funds spent
on supplements for certain publications in order to pay the rent on the
new space, which will provide a
meeting area and other features that
the counhouse room does not
Tenaglia said that the associa Continued on paRe 3

Six members of EHS band named
to 1992 All-Ohio State Fair Band

Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

Six members of the award-winning Eastern High School band
have been namro 10 the 1992 All Ohio SUite Fair Band.
They are T. Charlene Dailey,
Kyle A. Fausnaugh, Dawn J. Foley,
and Letitia A. Holsinger, all of
Reedsville; and Andrew D. Wolf
and Vicki A. Warner, both of
Pomeroy. They are the only Meigs
County band members to be so
honored.
Applications for the band were
receiv«l from schools across Ohio.
All applicants were recommended
by their school instrumental music
teacher and represent some of the

U.S. GRADE A 14-7-LB. AVG.J

Frozen Young
Turkey Breast
Pound

most honor«! young musicians in
Ohio, according to Omar P. Blackman, Director of the All-Ohio State
Fair Band.
In the process of selection, careful consideration was given to
attaining representation from all
areas of the state, keeping in mind
a balanc«l grade distribution (from
grades 9-12): and finding the most
qualifi«l students for the positions
available. Only a certain number of
positions are available in each section, and it is a distinct honor to
have been chosen as a member of
the All-Ohio State Fair Band,
according 10 BIackman .

After five days of rehearsal, tbe
All-Ohio SUite Fair Band will perform at the 1992 Ohio State Fair
from August 7 through 22 in
Columbus. The All -Ohio State Fair
Band was been a featur«l anraction
at the Ohio SUite Fair since 1925.
Dailey plays the nute and piccolo, Fausnaugh the sousaphone,
Foley the clarinet, Wolf the trom bone ami"Holsinger the alto saxophone, while Warner is a percussionist
Th e EHS band is under the
direction of William Hall, and perform«! earlier this week at Amen Flora '92 in Columbus.

,..---Local briefs----, Voinovich
Probe continues into fatal fire

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Big Kl@!!iJ,!l',&amp;•nl'
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42-46oz

MIDDLEPORT (AP) - Investigators arc trying to determine the
cause of a fire that kiU«l two children, fore officials said.
Roger Grimm, 2, and his 9-month-old sister, Krisun, apparently
died of smoke inhalation in the fire Tuesday, Meigs County Coroner Douglas Hunter said Wednesday.
The Franklin County coroner's office wiU do perform autopsies
on the children, Hunter said. Roger was found in the kitchen and
Kristin was in her crib, he said.
Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst said the fire started in the
kiochen and spread quickly. He believes the fore was accidental.
Alanna Gnmm, mother of t.he children , was sunbathong in the
front yard when the fore broke out, said Roger Stobart, a grandfather
of the children. The Grimms lived on a 60-ycar-old house on the
Stoban farm. he said.
Ms. Grimm attempted to enter the hou se to rescue the choldrcn,
Stoban said.
"It was JUSt an inferno. There was just no way to get in there.
It's a wonder we didn'tlose her also," Stobart said.
Randy Arnold, a Meigs County sheriff's deputy, alsu trocd to rescue the children. Arnold was treat«! for smoke inhalation .

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..1

Deputies probe deer accident
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed that deputic.'
investigated a deer accodent which took place on Monday momong
near Long HoUow Road.
.
.
According to Soulsby, Charles E. Hawk of Angel Rodge Road on
Athens was southbound on U.S Route 33 in a 1990 Ford pickup
when he struck a deer that ran into the roadway.
Moderate damage was sustained by the left rear of the truck.

B&amp;E's, theft investigated

Hearings may begin next
week on pay ratification
WASHINGTON (AP) - Forty
SUites now have ratified a constitu tional amendment limiting pay moses for Congress , and debate is
beginning in earnest over whether
the states took 100 long to lake a
stand .
They took more than 202 years.
Rep . Don Edwards, D-Cahf. ,
said he expects the House Judi ciary
subcommiuee on civil and constitutional rights that he heads to begin
hearings on the ratifi cation next
week.
"It's a matter for careful study
and we're going to give it roght
away," he said Tuesday.
"It is not a question on tile merits of tbe proposal," said House
Spealcer Thomas Foley, D-Wash.
"It is a question about wbethe: an
amendment this long delay«! from
its original submission wiU be considered as ratifi«l.''
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., a
constitutional scholar, voiced a
similar position.
"We must ensure ... that we do
no violence 10 our Constitution or
to tbc process by which it may be
amended," Byrd said.
The National Archives anticipated this debale last year, and told tile
Justice Department that its exper-

2 Secllon•, 12 Paga1 25 oenle

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 14, 1992

Commission discusses Pomeroy's DBG application

Red, Ripe Whole
Watermelons

DIGGlNG IN - Ohio Lt. Gov. Mike DeWine and First Lady
Barbara Busb belp plant a tree near Interstate 70 in Springfteld
Tuesday. Tbe pair participated in tbe tree planting, wbicb was
part of a bigbway beautification program aner a rund raiser luncbeon for DeWine's U.S. Senate campaign. (AP)

l&lt;Jw tonight In mid-60s. Chance
or rain 70 percent. Friday,
cloudy. High In mid-70s.

'I

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Why Shop Anywheoe Eisel

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Tampax
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Tampons ...........21 -c1.
Meat Franks .. Pkg: PREE!

James Woodyard of Racine reponed to the Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment that sometime on Saturday or Saturday night, his
garage had been entered and a drill, timing light, soldering gun and
screwdriver bit set were taken. The lock had been cut off the door.
On Tuesday, deputies were called to investigate a breaking and
entering of an empty house at Harrisonville. According to the
report, the property is now owned by Fred Gambill of Albany.The
home was enter«! and locks were taken, as were two wall caboncts
from the kitchen. A m«licine cabinet, bathroom tissue holder and
three lisht swioch plates were also rcpon«l stolen.
Davtd Elliot, Inc., doing contract work for Columbus Southern
Power Co repon«l on Tuesday that sometime on Monday night,
someone had entered a locked companment of one of the company's trucks, located between Wells Cemetery and King Rid~e. and
stole tools, climbing hooks, cham hoost, chaonsaw, ~as droll and
shovels.

No one cited after accident
Minor damage was incurr«l to the left side of the Middleport
emergency squad vehicle in an acc ident on West Maon Street,
Pomeroy, near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge approach Wednesday
afternoon.
.
.
According to a rcpon from Pomeroy Pohce, the emergency veho cle driven by Henry Johnson, 36, Moddlcport,_ was northbound
enroute ro the hospital with a patient when the accident occurr«l.
It was repon«l that Orland Laudermilt, 46, of Pomeroy was
southbound and when he saw the flashing hghts and the soren pull«!
10 the right and slOpped. As the squad maneuvered through the traffic it struck the Laudermolt 1968 Chevrolet truck. There was no
~age 10 the Laudermilt truck, police report«!.
There were no ciU!toons on the oncodent

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64-oz.

Eleven calls for assistance were answer«! by units of Meogs
Emergency Services on Wednesday and early Thursday.
On Wednesday at II :49 a.m ., Racine squad responded to Buck
Town Road. Demetrus Michael was talcen 10 Veterans Memonal
Hospital.
At 2:13'p.m., Middleport squad went to Front Street and took
Continued on page 3

backs home... .
care programs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Many older people plac«l in nurs ing homes probably could be better
served by programs that allow
th em to continue living in lhcir
own homes. Gov . George
Voinovich said.
Voinovich said a package of
Medicaid reform s that he expe&lt;:LS
to be ready in June will try to
incr ease cfficu.~ncy, and redu ce
waste and abuse in the federal -state
program that provides health care
for the poor.
"I think the current sy stem
makes it too easy for people to be
institutionalized whether they need
it or not," Voinovich said W«lncs day in opening the annual Governor' s Conference on Aging.
He offer«! no specific proposals, but said the package would
establish a long-term system that
measures a person's need for services. and then directs them 10 the
most appropriate level of care.
"Our admonistration is working
hard 10 get more cooperation from
the fed eral government to help us
promote more innovative home
care programs for seniors. So much
of what we're doing, folks, is man
dated by Uncle Sam, " Voinovich
said.
He said the proposal would try
to limit growth in the number of
nursing home beds. He said Ohio
already is 20 percent above the
national average in the number of
nursing home beds per I ,000 people over age 65.
''As long as nursing home beds
arc the easiest alternative for care
of the elderly, many people will be
placed in these costly facilities for
reasons of convenience and not due
to need," he said.
Voinovich called for expanded
community -based care options
such as home health visits, homemaker assisU!nce, and meal deliv ery to help people who do not
require institutional care.
He said such changes would be
in the best interest of govemment
and the elderly.
"Older people are able to
choose the settings in which they
receive necessary care. The state
avoids hi~ her costs or caring for
someone m an expens1ve nursmg
home setting, and individuals who.1
truly need nursing home care will
have greater access to a care
provider," Voinovich said.
"My mother is going to be 81
years old. She's at home, and she ...
wants to stick right where she's
at," he said. "And I think our job,
the family's job and society's, is to
make sure she can stay there as
long as she can.''

BAND MEMBERS HONORED - These
members of.tbe Eastern High School band have
been selected as members ol' the prestigious 1\110bio Start Fair Band, and will perform at the

stale fair in August. Pictured are, 1-r, Andrew
Wolf, Letitia Holsinger, Charlene Dailey and
Dawn Foley. Other members selected, but not
pictured, are Kyle Fausnaugh and Vicki Warner.

Senate panel increases powers
to block out-of-state garbage
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Senate panel has agreed to increase
the sUites' powers to block out-ofswtc garbage shopment,.
But the measure faces res istance
from Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind. , who
led an effort two years ago to lock
state borders 10 waste impons . lie
says he' s prepared to fight again.
The compromise bill approved
Wednesday by the Senate Environ ment and Public Woo\s Commlltcc
would let governors limit future
waste 1mports in certain circ um stances. Local communities would
have to request the help.
However, under the measure
governors could not impose any
limits that breach existing contracts
betwe en communities that ship
garbage and the landfills that
receive it. It also protects agree ments between the receiving com munities and waste-hauling companies.

The bill wriucn by Sens. Max
Baucus, D-Mom., and John Chafce,
R-R.I., also stipulates that governors lose the power to ban waste

1mports ,f their states' landfills
aren't brought up 10 swndard by
1995.
The vote on interstate garbage
hauling came during continued
debate of changes in the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act ,
the nation's sohd waste and rcq clmg law.
Sen. Frank Lautcnberg, D-N.J .,
who saod his small but densely populated state has been tranform«l
frorn "a mega-importer'' to a net
exponer of garbage, voted for the
interstate measure.
He said it would allow New Jersey to continue on its aggressi vc
re&lt;:ycling course without suddenly
being drown«! in its own waste .
"11oe proposal before us would
allow waste shopments to landfills
rec eiving exports 10 continue for
the life of the existing contracts, "
Lautcnherg said. "It does not slap
an immediate ban on e&gt;ports of
solid waste. 11ois will give exporting states lime to reduc e thctr
ex pons."
But he warned fellow committee
members that, "We still could face

serious oppos1tion in the full Se n-

me.··

Coats, whose 1990 mea s ure
passed the Senate 68-31 before
New Jersey lawmalcers helped bll
it in a conferenc e, said he wa s
unhappy woth the Baucus -Chafec
bill and would proceed with hi s
own legislation .
"Th1s bill essentoally codifies
the sU!tus quo and that is far from
good enough , " Coats said . "I
understand the commiuce has
struggled, but they have come up
far short "
Tim Gocglein, a Coat s
spokesman, said the Indiana senator want s local communitoes and
governors given powers to ban outof-stJtc waste without the exemption s huilt into the compromise boll .
The compromise gives speCial
consid eratiOn to the nalion 's four
largest trash 1mponcrs - Penn sylvania, Ohi o, Virginia and lndoana.
They may each frcc1.c trash imports
at 1991 levels. In addition, at local
request , states could impose a 30percc nt import cap at particular
landfills.

Merchants discuss plans for
Heritage Weekend activities
Dy JULIE E. DILLON

Sentinel News Staff
Plans for Heritage Weekend
(I unc 13 and 14) were disc us sed at

Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Pomeroy Merchants Associa tion.
The assocoation is planning a
variety of activities, the majority of
which will take place June 13,
between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4
p.m. The theme for the weekend is
"The Good Old Summer Time ."
Activities have' also been plann«l
by the Meigs County Museum for
both days, June 13 and 14.
The Heritage Queen Contest
will he held June 12 at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
and is open to any female student
between the ages of 16 and 19, as
of May I, from Eastern, Meigs and
Southern high schools. Any ques tions regarding the queen contest

may be directed to Susan Clark.
cha1rman of that contest.
Acuvities on June 13 will begin
with a parade at 10 a.m . follow«!
by recogn1t1on of th e Heritage
Queen on Coun Street.
A Civil War demonstration will
be presented by Company B, 91 st
Ohio Volunteer Infantry Group
during the day and that group will
again have a camp set up behind
the Meigs County Court House.
The public os invited and encouraged to tour the camp as this will
also be a tim e of recruitment for
any one interested in joining the
group. The ladies of this group, and
possibly some of the men, will present a fashion show featuring the
Civil War ern style of clothing.
There will be an antique show in
the larger mini-park conducted by
Russ and Hope Moore as well as
other demonstrations and events.
Crafters arc again invited thi s

year to displa y and sell their items
on Court Street. A fcc of $10 will
be charged for each space and
those interested should brin~ their
own table. Further informatoon on
the craft spaces may he obtainro by
call 1ng Dianna Lawson at Bank
One in Pomeroy, or Becky Jeffers
at Davis-Quickcllnsurance.
Anyone interested in participating in the parade should contact
parade chairmen Vicki Ferrell at
Buttons and Bows, or Angie Swift
at Pleaser's Restaurant. Further
infonnation on any Herilllge Weekend activities may be obtainro by
contacting Julie Dillon at The
Daily Sentinel, 992-2155.
In other matters of the association, Susan Clark, president, SUited
the new "Welcome to Pomeroy"
banners have arrived. With proceeds from tile merchants' fashion
show and a $500 donation from
Continued on page 3

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