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                  <text>Tuesday, June 2, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Middleport FD program -Names in the newsstresses home fire safety
A home safety awareness program is being sponsored by the
Middleport Fire Deparunenl
The program is directed 81 home
safety through fire prevention.
Each month the department will
award either a smoke alarm or a
fire extinguisher to some person
living within the area served by the
Middleport Fire Department.
Drawings for the pnzes wtU take
place at meetings of the deparlment
on the ftrst Tb~day of eoch month
throughout 1992.
There is no cool to have a name
entered into the drawing. Residents
may enter once each month by

mailing a postcard wtth thetr name,
address and phone number to the
Middleport Fire Department, c/o
Home Safety Awareness, 286 Race
Street, Middleport, 45760. Entry
fonns are also available at the Middleport Water Offtee.
The contest is limited to the
coverage area of the fire depanmcnt which includes Middleport
Village, Salisbury Township,
Cheshire Village and Cheshire
Township.
There can be only one winner
per household. Residents must be
18 years of age to enter.

VEIDCLE DAY - James Birchf.eld or Birchfield Funeral Home
was one of tbe business owners wbo partitipated in Vehide Day at
Pomeroy Elementary School. Here, Birchf.ekl makes a presenta·
tioo to some or the school's students.

Students and businesses
participate in Vehicle Day
Students at Pomeroy Eicmen·
tary School enjoyed Vehicle Days
last month. Several businesses and
organizations were represented and
each business provided infonnanon
to the students.
They were informed about the
education required for each business and were given the opportuni ty to ask questions. Several vehi cles were at the school each day.
On May 20, the following businesses and organizations were represented: Paul C. Rice. Foreman
and Abbott; James C. Birchfield,
Birchfield Funeral Home; Shenff
James M. Souisby; Sears; Gerald

Rought, Pomeroy Police Chtef;
Stacey Shank and Kevin Van
Matre, Pomeroy Fire Department.
On May 21: Toni Fisher, United
Parcel Service; Howard B. MuUen
and an old police care; Sco11 Icenhower and Grant Reynolds. Sears;
Sheriff Soulsby; Jeff Shank and
Todd Smith of the Pomeroy Fire
Department.
"We would hke to than all of
the businesses who paniciJlllted in
the Vehicle Day," Principal Debbie
Haptonstall said. "The students
really enjoyed the day and received
a good learning experience in the
process ...

LOS ANGELES (AP) Roseanne and Tom Arnold didn't
trash a $3.5 mtllion mansion after
all, the~ fanner landlord now says.
Spencer Proffer had sued the
couple for $171,000 to cover broken windows and furntture. a
scuffed tennis coon and other damage he blamed on the Arnolds, who
rented Proffer's home for 10
months beginning in 1989.
Proffer has since wtthdrawn his

agreed to pay the Arnolds $66,000.
"The claims made agrunst you
were baseless," Proffer. a CBS
Records c.~.:ccutive, said in a letter
Fnday.
In a sta tement Monday, the
Arnolds said the settlement "was a
complete vtndication." They
claimed in a Jawsu1t last year that
Proffer had the house trashed to
concoct a story he could sell to the
tablotds.

Martha Poole led the program
"Literacy, Coping With WorJs"
when the Alfred United Methodist
Women met recently at the church.
Mrs. Poole opened the program
by reading "Poverty." She displayed books and materials used in
the Meigs County reading program.
All members joined in reading and
discussion and sharing of personal
experiences in helping their children. Conclusions were to give
more help to adults, to children and
their parents.
During the meeting the group
voted to give donations to Sme
Cera and to the church building
fund.
Nellie Parker presided and read
the April leuer from Sine Cera and
gave a report on the pansh clothing
store.
Martha Elliott had the prayer
calendar and chose Cherrye
Cuningan, missionary tn Chicago,

Michelle is a 1992 graduate of
Southern High School and was
presiden~ vice-president and secretary of the Racine FF A chapter and
treasurer of student counciL Her
agricultural program consists of
garden. work experience and bedding plants. She plans to attend
Ohio State University and maJor m
soils.
She received a pin and certificate and her name will be inscribed
on a special plaque displayed in the
vocational agriculture room at
Southern.

STUDENTS OF THE WEEK - The following students were
selected as students or the week for tbe month of May at Meigs
Junior Hlgb School. This honor is achieved through academic
excellence and improvf!ment in behavior. Pictured an F:rin
Krawsczyn, right, reading and spelling, and Diane Hook, history.
Not pictured is Dennis Workman for health.

MCCL members
give reports

The Middleport Child Conservauon League met recently at the
Rock Springs United Mcthollist
Churc h.
Linda Broderick prestded and
opened the meeting wtth the Pledge
members at a table decorated with of Allegiance" and "Mother's
spnng nowcrs Favors were hand- Prayer." Roll call was "A Blessmg
fashioned cameo pins . Hostesses of Spring."
.
were Joann Wildman and Carolyn
Kiuy Darst and Tammte Mash.
Thomas.
members of the nominating com mittee made their report: president,
Lmda Broderick; vice -president,
Kitty Darst; secretary. Nancy_ Morris; treasurer, Bonnte Soou; hiS iOn an Helen Blackston; reporter,
Peggy Harris. Officers were unani·
mously approved.
Peggy Houdashel~ a member of
Plans for the Rutland Fire MCCL for many years, has
Department's annual Fourth of July resigned recently and she has been
parade have been flllalized.
named as "honorary mother."
The parade will begin at 9:30
A family picnic will be he ld
a.m. with line-up at Depot Street June 14 at 5 p.m. at the home of
and disbandment at Beech Grove.
Bob and Brenda Blackston.
The theme is "America, We Are
Refreshments of strawberry pie
Family" and prius will be awarded was served by Linda Broderick and
in the foUowing categmes: h&lt;nes, Helen Blackston to members and
decorated bicycles. fire en~ines, guests, Joshua and Jeremy Manley,
marching units, noats - rehgwus R.D. Snider and Vincent Broderand non religious. and decorated ick.

Friendly Circle holds meeting
Diane Hawley presented a program with writings and poems perraining to Mother's Day taken from
"Ideals" when the Friendly Cin:le
of Trinity Church met recently at
the home of Joann Wildman.
A business meeting was held
with Gay Perrin presiding . She
ia! thanks 10 th
f
gave spec
c men
the chtD'Ch for the mother-daughter
banquet. The men prepared the
·
d
d d the
meal, serv ed 1l an provt e
enttr~ainmenL
Ralph Prall was added to the
pntyer line.
It was announced that ice cream
will be made Tuesday. Wednesday
and Thursday for the ice cream
social 81 tlhe church during Heritage
Weekend. June 11, 12 and ll
The First CongregatiOnal
Church National women's Association wiU be held in Mansfteld on
June 28-July 1. Any of the church

RUt1an d parade
° l
• d
p ans f'Ina1lZe

worntn'that want to go

·

~con-tac;;tro..:trucks;-;;;n;;·fl"l'"'l!lll~~~~~~tr'" .. The u-aveling prize was won by
~

A salad course was served to

Helen Blackston and the hostess
gift was won by Nancy Morris.

Buckeye 5:
7-21-32-34-36

Page 4

Low tonight in 6(k. Thursd~y,
chance or rain 90 percenl. Ul~h
in mid -70~.

Ill. The group signed a birthday
card for her.

Mrs. Elliott read thanks for
birthday cards from Sharon Fogleman, Kenya, Africa, and Donna
Kay Campbell, Syvania, Ala. Florence Spencer read thanks from
Sybil Dodam, Breward, N.C.
Twenty-six stck calls were
reported.
.
Thelma Henderson gave a miS·
sions report on the seuing up of a
dairy in Turkey by Harriette and
Gcrhardtlmmega.
Charl one VanMeter served
sandw 1ches, potato c htps and
orange jello dessert durmg the
social hour to those mentioned and
to Sarah Caldwell, Nina Robinson
and Genrude Robinson.
The next meeting will be June
23 at the church. Nina Robinson
will be hostes.s. Martha Elliou will
lead the program.

Vol. 43, No. 22
Copyrighted 1gg2

2 SecUon1, 14 Pages 25 cents
A Mullimedle Inc. NeweDIDef

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 3, 1992

RICHARD JONES

HOWARD FRANK

ROBERT EASON

PAUL GERARD

JANET HOWARD

BILL SNOUFFER

Meigs voters select field for fall election

FIRE SAFETY STRESSED ·The Middleport Fire Department,
in its efTortto promote r.re safety, recently a'!arded L_be May winner in tbe home safety awareness program . PICtured" Bob Duckworth presenting Euvetta Bechtle her award, a First Alert smoke
detector.

By BRJAN J, RF..ED
Sentinel News Stall'
Republican Robert C. Harten bach will challenge Democrat
William Snouffer in one of two
co unty commissioner races in
November. Hartenbach defeated
five other candidates on the county's Republican ticket to win the
most hoUy-contested local rnce m
yesrerday's election.
Harten bach received 1,396

Chnstina G. Weaver, Middleport, Meigs, has been awarded the
Manasseh Cutler Scholarshtp. She
is majormg tn management systerns.
W
M.ddl
Robby Wayne yau. 1 eport, Meigs. has been awarded the
ManasschCutler Scholarshtp. He ts
maJOnng mTch~:; - p rtland a
•
Joshua ate
er, 0
Southern Htgh School gra~uate,
has been awarded the Creed . ames
Scholarship. He IS maJonng 10
chemiStry.
D ·d Charles !hie. Racine.
avt
d d h
S~uther~-~~c~S~~o=ipc 1 e
Manasse u

votes. His opponents received l.h.c
fo llowing vote oounts: Fred Hoffman, 1,119; Gary R. Dill, 647; Ron
Eastman, 464; Gary D. Evans. 345:
and Larry W. Lavender, 303.
Meanwhile, Snouffer won his
party's nomination by winning a
contest against R. Lm Coleman.
Snouffer received 800 votes to
Coleman's 722 votes. Snouffer and
Hartenbach will vie for the seat on
the board now occupted by Davtd

Koblentz, who chose not to seck
re-election. That term begins Jan uary 2, 1993.
In the second race for the sec·
ond commissioner's term, that

beginning on January 3. 1993 ,
incumbent Republican Richard E.
Jones defeated challenger James
W. Hayman by a tally of 2,872 to
I, IS 7. In that race on the Demo·
cratic ticket, Janet L. Howard
claimed victory over Virgil

Phillips. I ,403 votes to 391.
Treasurer, Sheri IT
Republican Treasurer Howard
E. Frank defeated challenger
Edward W. Durst 2,271 to 2,130
vo tes, while Maureen Hennessy.
unchallenged in her bid for that
office on the Democratic ticket,
garnered 1,502 votes.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, also
unopposed on the Democratic bal lot, received 1,584 votes . rhs

Rcpubl tcan challenger in the fall
wll I be Paul Gerard, who defeated
Jerry Rought, 2,069 to I. 749 votes.
Engineer, Prosecutor
Robert H. Eason received th e
Republican party's nomina tion as
county engineer, defeating Eugene
Triplett 2.270 to 1.832. No Democrat filed for that poSiuon.
Metgs County Prosecuting
Steve n L. Story, a Republican,
received 2,835 votes. He will race-

off with Democrat John R. Lcntes
in November. Lcntes claimed 1,372
votes in his unopposed pnmary

race.

Other Republic.ans
Republican mcumbents who
were unopposed received the fol lowing affirmations ycstcrda&gt; :
Recorder Emmogcnc Hamilton,
3, 152; Clerk of Courts Larry E.
Spencer. 3.499; and Coroner, Douglas D. Hunter. 3.546.

Bush, Miller, DeWine big
winners in Meigs County
BIKE WINNER - Rhonda Frank or Pomeroy, far left, was the
winner or a IS-speed Murray mountain bike given away recently
by Wil-Car Sundry Stere in Pomeroy. Also pictured are Sarah
Frank and Matthew Frank.

New arrival
Lonnie Eugene and Linda Joyce
Bird announce the birth of their
first daughter. Rebecca Joyce Bird.
on Mareh 24 .
She weighed seven pounds and
six ounces and was 19 and one-half
inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Lowell and Elizabeth Messerschmidt of
Windsr, Wise.
Paternal grandparents arc Lee
and Patsy Bird, Danville, Va
Mable Messerschmidt and Violet B~rd are her great-grandmothers.

gram.

Pick 4:

Alfred UMW agree to
donate to church fund

Brown wins Dekalb award

,.. ~

708

lawsuit, apologil.cd for filing it and

Modern Woodmen visit
Hocking River campground OU scholarships awarded

f'\l ,.,...

Pick 3:

0202

BOB HARTEN BACH

Members of Modern Woodmen July .
Dalton Forrider, Master, Troop
Ohio Universily has announced
of America Camp 10900 enjoyed a
52,
Hocking
District
Boy
Scouts,
the
names of freshman class scholfamily potluck picnic at Hocking
reported
on
the
aims
of
boy
scoutarship recipients for the !992-93
Riva Campground recently.
In openmg servtces, praya was ing and the imponance of campmg school year.
offered by Manha Elliot, Alfred, for youth in this area. "Happy
Area residents receiving scholh·ps
are·
Birthday"
was
sung
to
Jessie
followed by the Woodmen's Creed,
Doolillle,
Coolville.
ars
~odd
· Mitchell Gillian.
led by Wanda Findling, Alfred.
Memorial
cemetery
flags
were
Coolville
. the Edwin and Ruth
The pledge of allegiance was led
presented
to
famtlies
of
recently
by Ralph C. Henderson, CoolviUe,
Kennedy Scholarshil' Fund. He is
and the singing of God Bless deceased members. Cheer plates majoring in mechamcal engtncerAmerica was accompanied on the were delivered and cards signed for ing. He graduated from Federal
Hockin Hi h School
autoharp by Marjorie Malone. shut-in members.
Plans
were
finalized
for
a
TaragMitbeUe Gerlach, MiddleCoolviUe.
. Hi h Sch00I d
matching
fund
benefit
for
noop
52,
Congratulations were extended
port, a Metgs g
gra uboy
scouts.
Camp
I
0900
will
have
ate has been awarded the Manto Missy Scarbrough, Parkersburg,
W.Va., who became a registered a smorgasbord dinner June 6 from ass~hCutler Scholarship. She is
nurse at University of West Vir- 5-7 p.m. at the Torch Community ma]Onng m psychology.
ginia, Parkersburg, and to Billy Center. Public invited. Free wtll
Breedlove, CoolviUe, who graduat- offering.
Contest and drawing winners
ed from basic training, USAF, San
were
Amber Gillispie, Ida Liv Micheile Brown, daughter of
Antonio, Texas. Best wishes were
ingston,
Paul
McPherson, Mr. and Mrs. Michael James was
extended to Ken and Lisa Rirchie,
recently married residents of Coolville; Thelma Clegg, Torch; recently named winner of the 1992
Alfred, and to Mel Frasier, Helen Findling, Faye Findling, and Dekalb Agricultural Accomphsh Coolvtlle, who will become presi- Colt Ebtin, Alfred; and David Scar- mentAward.
dent of Coolville Lions Club in brough, Parkersburg, W.Va.
The award. sponsored nation ·
wide by Dekalb Plant Geneucs. ts
presented to the outstanding semor
•
• agriculture
·"
student demon straung
't '
1
~ superior scholarship, leadershtp
and supervised agricultural pro.-~)=~

Ohio Lottery

Reds edge
Cards, hike
division lead

Bedding Plants, all Flab $5
Hanging Baskets $4,
4" Geraniums and Mums
50¢, 6" Geraniums $1
20% Off All
Shrubbery &amp; Trves
Open O.lly 9 1.m. to 5 p.m.
Open Sundly 1 pm. to 5 p.m.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

m-577&amp;

MICHELLE BROWN

WOULD YOU LIKE TO
PAINT A PICTURE?
In just a lew hours, you can create a beautdul
painting you'll be proud of. We know you can
do it because the national Sue Scheewe teaching staff guides thousands of beginning painters to creative fuKillment every year! h's a great
opportunity lor you to learn from a gifted and
caring teacher.
GIVE US A CALL FOR
INFORMATION/
RESERVATIONS

JUNE 12 &amp; 13
9:00 A.M. till finished.
Paintings on display In stont. Make
ntservations now.

I

EIDOFIIUOI
UL£

~

.

) _,'.
•

~ !_]·
y

CLOSE RACE- Congrusman Ctarenc&lt;
Miller (second from left) reviews election
returns with aide Bob Reintsema (Jell) during
tbe Obio primary election Tuesday night at bis
election headquarters in Athens. To Miller's

immediate lefl is campaign manager Bill Klucas,
who checks r.gures with campaign assistants.
Miller and fellow RepublicaD Congressman Bob
McEwen are running ror the same srat,

Factory orders up for fourth straight month
WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories rose I percent in April, the fourth co nsec u·
tive monthly gain. the government
said today in a report showing
manufacruring continues to lead the
economic recovery.
Manufacturers told the Commerce DepaMtent they received a
seasonaUy adjusted $243.85 billion
in new orders in April. Orders had
jumped 1.9 percent in March,
revised up from a previous esumatc
of 1.6 percent. The y rose 0.7 percent in February and 0.5 percent in
January.
It marked the longest string of
advances since onders climbed for

sV. straight months from February
to August 1988.
Economists are counting on
manufacturing to help power the
economy out of the 1990-91 recession. At ftrs~ factories are expected
to work existing employees longer
hours to meet increased demand,
but a sustained rise in new orders
eventually should produce more
Jobs.
One worrisome note in today 's
report was an eighth co nsecutive
decline in the backlog of unfilled
orders. They edged down 0.2 percent to a seaso nally adjus ted
$50 1. 8 billion . That means facto·
rics are having little trouble meet-

--Local Briefs:
Patrol cites Indiana resident
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol cited Eric E.
Powell, 17, Loganpson. Ind .. for fatlure 10 control in a one-vehicle
accident on State Route 681 in Olive Township Monday.
Troopers said Powell was eastbound at 11:35 p.m. when his
vehicle went off the left side of the road and struck three fence
posts. His vehicle was slightly damaged.

Cable service raises school funds

529 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2134

CableVision has raised more than $1,100 for the Metgs County
school system, said Lester Errett, manager of the system.
Customers who responded to the "Cable + You = Money for Our
Schools" promotion during May wrote their checks for the first
month's services fees directly to Meigs County Schools. In addi tion, Cable Vision waived the conncclion fcc for customers who
ordered cable or upgraded the~ existing cable services.
"We thank all of our subscribers who so generously contributed
to this campaign and who jotn us in aiding our local school systems." Erreu said.

mg demand desptte the rise in new
orders of the pa.&lt;t four months.
In April, orders for durable
goods - big ticket items from
uucks to turbines expected to last
three or more years - rose I J perContinued on page 3

U.S. 35 4-lane
is dedicated
•
In ceremony
A project more than three

decades 10 the planning came to a
completion this mommg when area
officials cut a ribbon opemng the
12-mile, four-lane secuon of U.S.
35 from Hol1J:r Medical Center to
Centerville.
While the $41.4 million proJect
might be considered by some to the
end of Gallta County's efforts, offiCials who spoke at the 45 -minutc
ceremony that preceded the high way's openi ng saw it more as the
beginning of economic develop ment for southern Ohio and a key
link in the completion of the U.S.
35 corridor through Ohio and West
Vir~inia

'Everyone, across the country,
seems interested in increasing ceonomic developmcn~ and in order to
do that. we need a safe highway
sys tem." Ohio Department of
Trnnsportation Director Jerry Wray
told the large crowd tn attendance.
"A safe highway system is what
we need in Ohio to compete not
only nationally, but in the world,"
Wray continued. "Gov. Voinovich
Continued on page 3

By BRJAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
President George Bush, Congressman Clarence Miller and U.S.
Senate candidate Michael De Wine
were all winners in Tuesday's
Republican primary in Meigs
County.
Bush received 2.996 votes to
Republican challenger Patnck J.
Buchanan's 873 votes in the race
for Delegate-at-Large and Alternate-at Large, and 2,836 and 826
votes respectively in the lOth District delegate and alternate race.
DeWtne claimed 1,821 votes in
the race for the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate contest.
His challenger, Goorge H. Rhodes,
received I ,57·1 votes.
Congressman Clarence Miller
was extremely successful in ht s
Meigs County race against Con gressman Bob McEwen for th eir
party's nomination for the Stxth
District race . Miller took 3.153
votes. and McEwen 1,186.
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer
was unopposed in the Republican

Primary, wnh 2,540 votes. In the
Republican rnce for Justice of the
Supreme Court (tenn commencing
January I, 1993). Thomas R. Frutig
lost to Mark P. Painter. I ,930 to
523. Also unopposed in the GOP
pnmary was Paul E. Pfeiffer, who
will be the Republican -endorsed
candidate for the JUSticeship term
commencing January 2. He took
2,524 .
Also unopposed in the Republi ·
can primary were: Earl E. Stephenson, Judge of the Court of Appeals.
2.122; Bob McEwen. State Centra l
Commi tt eeman, Su th DlstrJ c t.
2,246; JoAnn Thatl:her, State Central Comm iltccwoman, 2,788; and
f.rank A. Cremeans, cand idate for
State Representauve, 2,830.
Democrats
Meigs County Democrats sent a
vic tory to presidcnlial fronlrunncr
B1ll Cltnton. He took 1,302 of Ute
party' s votes here. Other candl dates in the presidential pt~mary
were: Jerry Brown, 285; Paul
Tsonga s, 129; Bob Kerrey . 32;
Tom Harktn, 27; Lyndon H.
Larouche, Jr .. 26.

Ted Strick land was clearly
Meigs Cou nty Democrats' chooce
as the candidate for Represc nt.alivc
to Congress in the Sixth DIStroCt
He received 652 votes. Joseph P.
Sul1.er recc1ved 419 votes, and Boh
Smith, 383.
U.S. Senator John Glenn was
un opposed 1n th e primary . He
received 1.590 votes.
In the race for Jusuce of the
Oh io Supreme Court. term beginning January 2. John T. Patton was
the victor, with 739 votes. Les ley
Brooks Wells took 589 votes.
Karen Matney Simmons dcfc.ated Zelma Fum1sh in Meigs County' s Democratic Primary as a mcm ber of the State Central Comm ntee.
I, 153 to 2&amp;6. R. Bruce Johnson
was unopposed. and cla1med I ,322
votes.
Also unopposed m the primary
were: FranCIS E. Sweeney. for Justicc or the OhiO Supreme Court,
term beginning January 1. 1.126;
Robert Gorman, cantl1datc for
Chief Justi ce, 1,11 1; and Sta te
Representative Mark A. Malone.
1.539.

Recount may loom for Miller, McEwen
By AP, StafTReporl•
est campa ign s in Ohio's hiStory
A recount was possible in the and th ey have sa td that they
Republican 6th CongressiOnal Dts- endorse h.~rd work. results and
tfiCt primary in sou thern Ohio. leadership, sa1d McEwen, who IS
where Reps. Bob McEwen and completing h1s si&gt;th tenn.
Clarence Miller were nearly dead ·
Miller, who has been in
1 ked
Co ngress since 1967, was not ready
ocA ccor
. d.mg 1o uno ff.1c1a
· 1 results
10 give up
.
provided by the Ohio Secretary of
"I expected the race to be
State's office. McEwen led by 269 close," he said "It renccts the
votes out of 65,703 cast. He had thmgs we did. We made it aggrcs 32,986 votes, or 50.2 percent. to sive."
M·u . 32 717 votes or 49.8 per·
McEwen and Miller faced each
cc~t~ s '
'
other because of rcdistricling fol ·
Under state law, a recount is lowtng the 1990 census. Ohio is
losing two seats 10 Congn:ss, going
1equired tf the difference is less
than 0.5 pen:ent of the total votes from 2110 19.
cast, or, in this case, 328 votes.
The contest was marked with
Figures compiled by The Asso- charges and countercharges que sciated Press showed McEwen w1th uoning each other's inrcgrity , vot 33,616 votes, 1,005 more than 1ng records and concern for con Miller out of 66;1.27 cast. McEwen stitu ents. Miller repeated ly cited
had 51 percent of that vote.
166 overdrafts McEwen wrote on
The difference between the two the now -defunct House bank .
votes would have to be less than
331 to trigger a recount based on
those figures.
Maureen Brown. spokeswoman
for Secretary of State Bob Taft,
could not explain the difference in
tabulations.
Meigs Countians defeated
She said a recount co uld not
levy appeals from tbe Meigs
begin until after the results arc veriBoard of Mental Retardation
fied and certified as offtcial, a proand tbe Meigs County Parks
cess that won't begin for at least II
District on Tuesday, while a
days.
cemettry
levy issue in Olive
McEwen declared himself the
Township
was
successful.
winner.
new
one-mill,
r.ve year
The
"The people of the 6th District
Parks District levy was defeat... have survived one of the rough-

whlc,h McEwen blamed on the
bank s Democrauc management.
Mtller h:oct no ovcr~dfts: .
GaUta County lent tls suppon to
Mtller. ":ho netted 4.()47 votes to
McE wen s 1.320.
.
Ted Stnck land. a Lucasv ill e
psychologiSt
u
· ·
·and Shawnee
r Slate
mvers1ty a'\~ l sllmt rro .cs."&gt;&gt;r, won
thedDcmllocedra2l2K"n7o7mm~llonthStrldCk ·
ian po
·? votes'" e IS ·
trtel, wh1le Chliltcothe Mayor
Joseph Sulzer won II ,252 and
ret ~red co ngressional a1dc Bob
Smith of ScioiOVIIlc won R,36R
In Gall ~a County, Strickland
was also the clear wtnncr by
rcccivmg I ,258 votes. Sul1.cr won
751 and Smith had 652.
Miller also carried Me,gs Coun ty , 3, 153 to McEwen' s I,IR6.
Strickland led the way With 652.
Sulzer had 419 and Smith netted
383

Two of three tax levies
defeated by Meigs voters

I

ed 1,377 to 4,247, while the
J.8.mill MRDD levy lost by a
vote or 3,043 to 2, 733.
An additional, one-mill,
five-year levy for cemetery
maintenance in Olive Township passed, with a vote or 241
to 168.

\'

�.·

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

.Commentary

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 3, 1992

' .

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou ld be less than 300
words . All letten are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be pubhsbed. Letters
should be in good tasle, addressing issues, not personalities.

The hurry up and wait
.Bush campaign strategy
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - First hwry up. lhen waiL President Bush's cam. paign for a second term has been jerking along al erratic rates with varying themes and Jaetics.
· Now. as Bush completes his viclt:ry siring in the Republican presidential primaries, he 's saying his real political push won't begin for II
weeks.
"After our convention, I think we'll start working on that," he said in
Los Angeles the Olher day, on a weslem trip financed by his campaign,
which he biDed as a non-political event and never did ask for votes.
· California was one of five states holding presidential primaries today;
after a final Republican primary in North Dakota next Tuesday, that pan
of the campaign season will be over.
Bush has been winning them all, by comfortable margins, despite the
discomfon of a substantial protest vole, heaviest al the start in New
Hampshire, where the presidem was held to 53 percent of the Republican

School district under fire for helping kids
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Labor Department has swooped
down in full bureaucratic riol gear
on a San Diego school district for
violation or the Fair Labor Standards Act of I938, the law credited
with ending many of the horrors of
child labor.
But what's laking place in the
placid Southern California community of La Mesa is scarcely a scene
from Charles Dickens.
That's why far from being greeted as liberators, Labor inspec10rs
stand accused of gross overkill in
cracking down on an innovative
program that works to keep young
people oul of trouble, in school and
on an achievement track.
For iJS role , the school district
and mom and pop employers face
an investigation and fines of up lo
$700 for each violation - or up 10
$10,000 for each business that
employed underage youth (under
14) and thought it was doing a
good deed. Because seven of the
studeniS are only 13, the dislricl is
in technical violation of the 1938
law .

According 10 local officials and
families, Labor's crackdown on the
5-year-old program called
"Bridges" is a story of misplaced

disguSted by what one described as
"bureaucrats in the ncsh."
In the meantime, while La Mesa
is under government klei11 lights ,
the plight of migrant child farm
laborers remains one of the darkest
corners of exploitation in the labor
market. Labor officials are still
overwhelmed by the waves of
migrant farm children who toil in
the fields in some of the worst
working conditions in the country.
Federal laws and regulations
allow
children as young as 12 to
priorities, misspem resources and
mindless Big Brother-ism. lltook work in agriculture, and the illegal
Labor five years before the La use of child labor on farms is conMesa-Spring Valley School Dis- sidered prevalent. Government
trict even showed up on the radar Accounting Office officials recentscreen, and now il is under orders ly testified that the enforcemem of
federal laws regulating pesticide
to cease and desist
Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., usage, child labor and field sanitation was ''lax.''
recen~y wrote to Labor Secretary
Lynn Martin lo com plain about the
"Bridges" was born as a coop"outrageous" fmes and argued that erative effort linking the school
it was "a great profram which dislricl and the La Mesa Chamber
builds the worth ethic. ' Martin has of Commerce, and the program is
promised a prompt review. Bul targeted to siUdents who are al high
after a recent visit by Labor offi- risk of dropping out and could gain
cials to the school district, some valuable work experience, spendlocal participants lefi lhe meeting ing money , and, above all , self-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Einstein

~Qle .

: His political strategists worried !hal Californians, with economic woes

:is severe as those that angered New Hampshire Republicans, might cast a
l]ifly protesl vote. That's not the note on which they'd like the primary
sc;ason 10 end, particularly with independent Ross Perot nding htgh tn the
aublic opinion polls and seeming potentially fonnidable in the fall.
; So Bush spent Friday in Los Angeles, Saturday morning. m Fresno,
~g about law and order, urban aid and farm programs, while msisl.tng
r}lat "I'm not here on a political mission."
·: Perot could pose a more serious threat to Bush's re-election than GOP
insurgent Plllrick Buchanan ever did 10 his nomination. Butlhe president
lias not been tackling Perot or his positions lhe way be and his campaigners lOOk on Buchanan early in the season.
: "I have vowed ... that I will not attack any single opponent," Bush
~id. "I haven't done il since I staned, five people on lhe Democratic
~. one on the Republican side."
·. Bul the Bush campaign cenainly counter-attacked Buchanan in New
ijarnpshire. Thai was in lhe hurry-up phase. when Bush spnnled across
!he stare, telling people he cared about theii problems, and needed theii
'lDtes.
- In his Slate of lhe Union address, Bush asked Democrats in Congress
to forget politics and pass his economic recovery plan by March 20.
"From the day after that, if il must be, the battle is joined," he said.
He's been complaining about congressional inaction on thai and other
administration proposals ever since.
When Bush mel with farmers in Fresno on Salurday, one man quoted
Perot's complaint about inattention to domestic problems, and asked the
president whether he would focus more on those ISSueS and less on foreign policy in a second tenn.
Bush said he's got a solid domestic P.rogram but Congress won ' t
approve il, and that he'll stress both pomlS m lhe fall when I geltnto that
political arena that I' m trymg 10 stay out of atlcasl unul after our convention."

. · He ignored the reference 10 Perot He made one obliquereference.to
the independent challenger, who has yelto descnbehts posiuonon lllaJOr
issues, in Phoenix Thursday mghl, telling a Republican fund-llllSmg. dinocr he'll win "as we son out where everybody stands on these highly
complex issues," and as the economy revives.
.
. . But there are clear signs of frustration , in and about the campaign.
.When recurrem rumors of a shakeup in lhe Bush organization surfaced in
pnnl, the presidem denied them, absolutely, with a bang of his fist on the
roof of his limousine in Fresno.
Aides, though , acknowledged that such reports are inevitable when a
campaign seems 10 be stalled, and Bush's standing in public opinion polls
slips. Nol everyone in the Bush operation agrees ~ith a strategy that waiL~
until August for a counter-offensive agarnsl Perot s attacks.
· And Bush isn't immune to the mood. "It hasn't been much fun in lhe
jJOlitical arena lately," he !Old the Phoenix dinner. "We've been hammered out there a little bit"
- Nonetheless, Bush told a S2 million campaign fund-raising dinner in
:Dallas Salurday night !hat he is fired up and confident about the fall .
· "My campaign strategy is right the way it should be," he'd said earli· CL

:

"We JUS! have 10 stay on course and keep going," said, Marlin Fitzwater, his press secretary. "It 's JUSl a penod when you don l wm by domg
-all out in an all out campaign. It's 100 early."
· EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and rolum. nisi for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
· national politics for more Ihan 25 years.

Letters to the editor
My name is Dani Rojo and I am

·in Albuquerque, N.M. My journalism teacher, Mrs. Jyl Warner,
brought in r~ Daily Stntintl so
)hat we could see an example of a
-newspaper from a small town . I

-

A special thanks

The teachers in lhe special edu:calion deparunent at Bradbury Ele~~ 'WIIkJlike 10 thank
\liiC' Fro llld all ~the parm!-1 who
;doo•ted food, ~ and pnzes lO
.our Field Day Carnival on May 22.
:The response we received from our
-students' ~IS was nothing short
:()f incredible. Our carnival was a
)remendous SIJCCe.'ls and all of our
students had a grut time.
. We'd like to say a very special
Jhanks to our principal for agreeing
to let us do liOIIIething new and difIerenl that we felt was in the best
•

Prom made a reality
Dear EdilOI':
; The prom al Soul_hern High
School became a reahty through
lhe effons of a lot of people, many
students worked very bald raising
funds and making decorations. A
large number of parents, family,
and friends dedicated themselves in
RJIIIICIWS ways. The administration
and staff were also very COO)JCra-

•

Time to wake up and smell the coffee
Sorry about that rude wake-up
call, but you have been somnolent
for 20 years and absolutely
comatose for the past 12. While
visions of sugarplums danced in
your head, the country has been
going to hell in a handbasket and is
currently facing its most profound
crisis since World War II.
We are talking rundamcntal survival here, Washington.
Our nation is $4 trillion in debt
and going deeper al the rate of
$45,662,100 an hour, $l.I billion a
day, $400 billion a year. This is not
pseudo pelf, people. 11 is real
money that is coming from
investors, a third of !hem foreign,
who thus far have been willing to
buy our bonds to keep us anoat.
What happens if they lose faith m
our abihly to make good on our
com miunents? What if bond prices
subsequen~y collapse and interesl
mtes soar? What would happen to
social programs and health plans
and student loans and highways
and defense and welfare and government pensions?
Down the tubes, people. Gurgle,
gurgle.
The House Budget Committee
report !hal jarred you awake says

the books will never be balanced
unless numerous programs arc curtailed or suspended. It would
require an undenaking of unprece-

Joseph Spear
dented dimensions. Big projects "Star Wars" and space stations
and superconducting super colliders - would have to be eliminated.
Entitlement programs - those
automatically funded things like
Medicaid, veterans' benefits and
farm subsidies that devour 65 percent of the budget - would have
lObe CUI back.
In a way, it's downright farcical .
The Budget Commiuee report was
actually preparet to persuade you
not lo balance the books. It was
designed 10 scare you into vo1ing
against a constitutional amendment
that would mandate balanced budgets. But it got your eyes open;
indeed, you woke up squealing.
House Speaker Tom Foley, D·
Wash., groaned that mandated balanced budgets would "complicate
our fiscal policy ... force U.S. gov·
ernmenl securities to scream

upwards and cosl the American
people billions of dollars.' '
There arc a few things about this
whole exercise that confuse us
Com mon Folic:
I) Does il not occur to the
Folcys of this world !hat being so
deeply in debt is already costing us
over $300 billion a year? That' s
JU S! the interest on the national
debt. Money down the tubes, gurgle, gurgle.
2) Why can our leaders not
understand thai slicing a little pork
here and mopping up a little waste
there won 't even demthe deficit?
This year's shortfall - $400 bil lion - amounts to a quarter of the
total budget. If you eliminated the
entire domestic discretionary portion - that' s every single non defense, non -entitlement penny you would still be $188 billion in
the hole. If you wiped out the entire
Pentagon - every tank and plane
and de signer toilet seal - you
would still have a bottom line of
$109 billion, written in florid red.
3) How could you be so damned
dumb? Did you really think we
could go on forever, just piling
debt on lop of debt ? Did the
thou ght DOl ni cker SOmewhere in

the rec esses of your gelatinous
cerebra that there would have to be
an accounting someday? That if we
didn 'I clean up our own mess, il
would be left to our children lo do
it?
What can Washington do?
Cut Defense spending, domestic spending, entitlements. Yes,
Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security. government pensions. Do away
with cost-of-living adjusuncnts for
a while - and start with your own
salaries.
Freeze. Adopt a no-growth budget and limit all spending increases
to the rate of mflation. Let natural
revenue growth reduce the deficit
and then the debt. When the books
arc finally in balance, never lel
them gel out of whack again.
Tax. Only if you have to, and
start with oil. This nation needs a
disincentive to consume gasoline
anyway .
Sorry, Rip Van Washington, but
the siesta is over. It's time to wake
up and smell 1he rot that accrued
while you slept.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Americans have lost faith in politics

h is a commonplace nowadays
!hal communism, socialism, and
admire your paper and am really the more aggressively statist
surprised to sec that il includes so aspeciS of modem American libermuch information, not only of your alism arc all thoroughly discredit area, but of the cities around you. I ed. What is not so well recognized
thmk your staff docs a good JOb of is whal this implies for lhe whole
purung together a daily newspaper. realm of politics.
We have been so immersed in
Dani Rojo
politics for the past 200 years thai
many people simply don't realize
mterest of our students and to the there are Olher ways of coping with
following parents who donated human problems. Thus in the May
their time to run games and hand 25 issue of The New Republic
out prizes: Linda Buckley, Dorothy Ronald Steel complains that ''The
Boggess, Annetta Johnso n, Eliza- effect of four successive presidents
beth Johnson. Rossie Jude. Sharon
running against govemmenl in genKitchen , Christine Napper, Lisa eral and Washington in particular
Roush, Angie Sellers, &amp; Lora
has been lo discredit not only
Ward. We honestly couldn't have politicians, bul the elemental belief
done this without you . Thanks
that the vehicle for addressing
again 10 everyone who helped.
political problems lies in politics."
Karla Brown
Mr. Steel oughliO consider the
Grace Chaney
possibility that where there's so
Lynn McCarley
much smoke there may be a fire.
Roger L. Foster One o{ the ccnlnll insights of conservatism, now slowly working its
live. Various busmess establish- way into the national consciousmenJS throughout the area gener- ness, is thai politics is n01 by a long
shot the only solution for human
ously donated 10 the project
To all of these people, I would problems - even communal ones.
On the contrary it can, and often
like to say 'Thank You" for help- docs, just make them worse.
ing to make this prom a lasting
Yet anyone who suggests, as
memory. Also, I would like 10 both President Bush and Vice Presthank all of ,roo for the "lOicens of ident Quayle have done, that the
apprcciallon gtven to me.
Los Angeles riots were caused by a
Sincerely, Robena Maidens breakdown of social standards that

Cheers for Sentinel
:a student al Hayes Middle School

"If we continue to crush the pro-democracy movement in Thailand,
President Bush may grant us most-favored nation status .. .. "

worth. Each eligible student is basi·
cally adopted by a business and
works there for 16 weeks - no
more than four hours a wed:.
The idea is to mateh up students
fitting the high -risk profile with
business sponsors who pay them
$3.85 per hour for various duties
ranging from floor sweeptng to
phone answering. Included are
some unique fringe benefits - like
adulls aiding students with lheu
homework or serving as eoun·
selors. The pizza panies and fieldtrips that are pan of lhe experience
are also not very Dickensian.
Another bizarre bureaucratic
twist also hanging over the head of
local businesspeople is the possibil·
ily thai Labor will also penali~e
them for paying the youths lOO lil·
~e . Labor claims they were receiving a " tr.Uning wage" ol $3.85 an
hour when they should have been
getting the minimum of $4.25 an
hour.
For the students and their families, however, the dividends have
been rolling in.
Since I988, when lracking started of the panicipants, only one of
the 60 sludenls in the program
dropped out of school. Most earned
at least a C grade-point average,
which was a marked improvement
over previOus classroom perfbrmance.
Local officials knew they were
in technical violation of federal
labor laws, and that's why three
years ago they changed the slate
education code lO permit the limited employment of 13-year-olds as
pan of school-related programs.
Enter the Labor Department,
which argues that federal law
supersedes stale law. and has been
brandishing threats of hefty fines
for the violations. School Superintendent Warren Hogarth is vowing
to fight to sec the program maintained.
"The beauty of the program is
that the business community and
the educational community work
together on behalf of the kids,"
explained one chagrined employer.
"It's an ideal example of what
docs work for kids."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated columnists for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

is fundamentally moral in nature,
and susceptible of solution primarily al that level, is still accused in
liberal circles of irrelevancy. Don't

William A. Rusher
they realize that the "root cause"
of !he riots was poverty , and that
government can (indeed, musl)
solve the problem politically, by
throwing still more money at it?
The notion that politics is the
only, or atleasllhe besl, way of
auacking social problems is an
18th-century heresy derived from
that copious fount of good and evil,
the Enlightenment One can see
how il developed, out of the new
enthusiasm for democracy as a
fonn of government Gradually, as
democracy grew into a sort of civil
religion, replacing older faiths, politics eliminated all rivals as the presumed best means of addressing
and resolving major public problems.
Today, for all practical purposes, il is the only means lefl .
Democracy has become our secular
god; the politicians arc its priests,
and the president serves (or ought
to serve) as pontifex maximus. The
rest of us are supposed 10 be this
new religion's devout parishioners,
and are scolded if we are not,

(tithing, though, seems to have gotten out of hand: If only govcmmcm
would senlc for a lOth of our
income!)
The remaining nominal exponents of older faiths - the clergy
of the main -line religions and the
professors in th ei r groves of
academe - mere! y underscore the
dominan ce of politic s by their
obscene eagerness 10 subordinate 10
it the greallruths en!ruSted 10 them.
Every trendy, liberal bishop will
find, in this year's Democratic platform, God's true and lively word,
while politically correct sciemists
solemnly bid us vole accordingly
or face (as one of them is forever
threatening) "The extinction of the
human species."
I suspect that a profound ,
instinctive distrust of politics-asthe-solution lies al the bottom of

this country' s spectacularly low
voter turnouts. No doubt cenain
socially marginal individuals fail to
vote for elemental reasons that can
be summed up in the word "alien·
alion." But they ce rtainly don't
consUIUle the one-half of all eligible voters who refuse 10 exercise
their franchise. h is drummed into
us from childhood that participation in public affairs (i.e. politics),
or at the very least voting, .is our
civic duly, as well as a high privilege. Yet many millions of people,
seeing politics for lhe charade that
today il so generally is, choose to
invest their energies elsewhere .
Is it so clear that lhey are
wrong? Or are they trying, in this
obscure way, to tell us something?
William Rusher is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Pomero~lddleport,

Ohio

The Dally Senti nei-Page--3

--Area deaths-- Rain in forecast for today, Thursday
Hugh Custer
Hugh Price Custer, 67, of Stale
Route 7, Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
June 2, 1992 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born on Oct. 21, 1924, he was
the son of lhe late Alonw and Zana
Price Custer. He was a member of
Grace Episcopal Church.
He was a retired Meigs County
Veterans Service officer and former owner-operator of the
Pomeroy Golf Course. He worked
rnany years with the Soil Conservation Service in the Meigs County
office, the state office in Columbus
and as head of the ~nel office
for the SCS office m Bismarck, N.

D.
A veteran of World War II, he
was a member of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post al
Tuppers Plains. He served on the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Commission and Board and lhe Meigs
Co unty Fair Board, and was a
member of Pomeroy Lodge 164, F.
and A M.; Pomeroy Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star; Ohio
Valley Commandery 24, Pomeroy
Chapter 80, and Aladdin Shrine
Columbus Temple.
He is survived by his wife,
Norma A. Custer, Pomeroy; a son
and daughwr-in-law, Michael and
Phyllis Custer. Pomeroy; a sister,
Bcuy Lou Custer, Reynoldsburg; a
step-son and daughter -in -law ,
James and Merri Amsbary of
Pomeroy; two step-daughters and
so ns- in-law , Melinda and Mark
Rowland of Arlington, Ohio, and
Betsy and Breu Jones of Pomeroy;
an aunt, Clara Custer, Pomeroy;
and five cousins, Oarence Price of
Portland, Vic Harmahs of Pomeroy,
John Sauvage of Syracuse, Clara
Frances Lightfoot of Pomeroy, and
Elizabeth Weaver of DayiOn; eight
grande hildren and three greatgrandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his firsl wife.
Shirley Duerr Custer.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Friday al Grace Episcopal
Church. The Rev. Dr. Roy Myers
will officiate and burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery. Military
rites will be held by Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, at the
cemettry. Friends may call al the
Ewing Funeral Home Thursday
from 210 4 and 7 10 9 p.m.

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, June 2 - Mrs.
Everell Carpenter and daughter,
Deborah Duncan, and Nannie Hill.
Births, June 2 - Mr. and Mrs.
David CaldweU, a son, Clyde.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs Counly Probate
Court to Paul Byron Roush. 27,
Racine and Tina Carol Sloter, 27 ,
Racine; and to Howard Edward
Searles. 50, and Mary Ann Pierce,
23, both of Pomeroy .

Delcie V. Forth
Delcie V. Forth, 59, of 263 S.
5lh St., Middlepon, died Wednesday, June 3, I992 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant
She was born on Dec. 6, 1932 in
Gallia County, a daughter of the
late James C. and Minnie C. (Jackson) Forth.
She attended Edna Chapel in
Galli a County, the Middleport
Church of Christ, was a member of
the Home Builders Sunday School
Class and an honorary member of
the Philethea Women Church of
Christ
Also preceding her in death was
one brother.
Survivors include one brother,
Burdell Forth of Crown City; three
sisters - Dorothy Baker of Middleport, with whom Mrs. Forth
lived since 1979; Elsie King and
Mrs. O'Dell Smith, both of Middleport; and one half-sister, Emma
Forth of Mason, W.Va.; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be Saliiiday, June
6 at 2 p.m. 81 Middlepon Church of
Christ The Rev. AI Hanson and
the Rev. Charles Lusher will offteiale. Burial will be al Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call Willis Funeral
Home in Gallipolis Friday, June 5
from 2 to_ 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9
p.m. The body will be taken to the
church one hour before Salurday's
SCIVICCS.

Isaac Jackson
Isaac Dale Jackson of Tuppers
Plains died Tuesday, June 2, 1992,
at St Joseph Hospilal in Parkersburg, W. Va. after an extended illness.
Born in Athens, he was the son
of the late Robert and Margaret
Jones Jackson. He was a retired
electrician and a former coal miner.
He was a member of the I. B. E. W.
972 of Marietta, the New Marsh field Masonic Lodge 426, F. and A.
M., New Marshfield Order of the
Eas1em Star 346, the Athens Redmen Lodge, and the National Rille
Association.
He is survived by his wife.
Doris, a son and daughter-in-law,
John and P. J. Jackson of Wisconsin; a daughter and son-in -law.
Edith Ann and John Rairden of
New Marshfield; a brother and sister-in-law, John and Helen Jackson,
Athens; several grandchildren and
great-grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by four sisters, Elizabeth, Kathryn, Margaret, and Mildred; three brothers, Raben, David
and Paul.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 3 p.m. al the HughesBlower Funeral Home in Athens.
The Rev. N. L. Russell wiU officiale and burial will be in the New
Marshfield Cemetery. Friends rna y
call at the funeral home Thursday 2
10 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services will be conducted Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the funeral home by the
New Marshfield Masonic Lodge
426.

Middleport makes plans
for July 4 celebration
ond Stree1 from Fisher Funeral
Home lo Family Dollar. A parade
will take place al 5 p.m. and a special boal parade at 6 p.m. There
will be Judging and trophies 10 be
awarded.
Evening entenammem will feature the Lee Brothers and the
Shady River Shufners. Mayor Fred
Hoffman will be the speaker. Fireworks will be held at 9:30 p.m.
During the day lhe second annuAn action for dissolution of al soapbox derby race will take
marriage has been filed in Meigs place on General Hartinger Blvd.
County Common Pleas Court by
Ca lvin R. Dowell and Arl ene F.
Dowell, Long Bouom.
A divorce action has been filed
by Harley L. Stalnaker, Pomeroy ,
agains t Lillian F. Stalnaker,
A judgment aclion has been
Pomeroy.
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by James M. Sprouse,
---" ·--· .
.
Jr., Long Bottom, against Judy K.
. ''J.' ~
S,ptipel
Ginther, Long Bottom, and others.
(USPIIIJ.liiO.
The suit alleges breach of a real
Pu.bli1hed uery 11\emoon, Monday
estate agreement between the part.hnuah Friday, J U Court St., Pomeroy,
lies.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahin1
The ease of BancOhio National
Company/Multimedia Inc., PomtJroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 156. Second cla•
Bank against Paula K. Bowen has
po~l.ap paid at Punervy. Ohio.
been dismissed.
Plans for the annual July 4 celebration to lake place in Middlepon
have been announced by Bob
Gilmore, event chairman for Middleport Village Council.
At Dave Diles Park !here will be
a flea market during the day , and a
car show by the Oldies but Goodies
Club headed by Jerry Tillis on Sec -

To end marriages

Judgments sought

V.W

Member: 1'be Aaaociated ?rea, and the
Ohio Newa~per Aasociation, National
Adver-tilina Repnaenlaliwe, Branham
New1paper Sale., 733 Third Annue,
New York, New Yori 10017.

By The Associated Prtss
Rain possible lOII.ighl and Thursday.
As the high pressure area
retreats to the East Coast , a
southerly flow of moist gulf air wiU
slide nonh into the Ohio Valley
and lower Great Lakes through
Thursday.
Thunderstorms also possible .
Over an inch of rain possible in
southern Ohio through Thursday.
With more widespread clouds and
showers, temperatures wiU be several degrees cooler.
High pressure, which was centered along the east coast of Virginia, will continue moving slowly
east. As the high retreats, gulf
moisture will be pulled oonb inlD
the Ohio Valley. The moisture will
continue to spread northward
tonight and Thursday to cover all
of Ohio.
The record high temperature for
this date 81 the Columbus wealher
station was 99 degrees in 1895.
The record low was41 in 1929.
Sunset will be 818:55 p.m. Sunrise Thursday at6:04 a.m.
National wealbrr
Rain fell in the Deep South
ea rly today , and clouds covered
much of the nation.

-Meigs announcementsG06pel sing
.
The Lighthouse Gospel Smgers
from Johnstown will perfonn at
Mt. Olive Community Church in
Long Bottom Saturday at 1 p.m .
PaslDr Lawrence Bush invites the
public.
Seniors to meet
•
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold a blood pressure
clinic al the townhouse Tuesday
from 10 am. 10 noon. Members are
to bring potluck for the dinnef. All
members urged to anend.

8UB8CRIPI10N RATE&amp;
By Carrier or Motor llowte

One Week.. ...................... ................... $ I .60
One M.,lh ....................................... .$6 96
Ono Yoor... . .
.. ......... ___ .... $83 .20
SINGLE COPY

PIUcB
Daily...

... -- iii C.. to

Today in history

Sub.criben not delirina: kt pay l.he Cllfl'ier m~~y rem:i I. in advmce direct t.o The
Daily Sentinel on a three, Iii or 12
month buia. Cre&lt;lil wi11 be civen earrier
each week.

8 y Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday. June 3, the I 55th day of 1992. There are 211
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 3, 1965, astronaut Edward White became the fl!Sl American
to "walk" in space, during the flight of Gemini Four.
On this dale:
In I621, the Dutch West India Company received a chancr for New
Netherlands - now known as New York.
.
In I808, Jefferson Davis - the fl!Sl and only president of the Confederacy - wa1 born in Christian County, Ky.

No 1ubtetiptiona by mail permiUecl in
areu where home carrier aervice i•
•vailable.

AA to mf&lt;'l
An AA meeting will be held ar.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Pomeroy Thursday 81 7 p.m.
An AA meeting will be held
Sunday at 7 p.m. atlhe Jll'A offiCe
in Pomeroy.
NAto mf&lt;'t
There will be an NA meeting
Friday at 8 p.m. atlhe JTI'A offiCe
in Pomeroy.
Middleport OES to mf&lt;'t
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
of Middlepon wiU have its regular
meeting on Thursday l 7:30p.m.
and will honor and present pins to
the 25 and 50 year members. Worthy matron invites all 25 and 50
year members 10 auend the meeting. Refreshments will be served
following the meeting by lhe chapters past matrons.
Smorgasbord
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner a1 the Lonridge Communily
Center Sunday from noon lD 1:30
p.m. Cost is S5 for adults and $2.50
for children under 12. Public invited.
Workshop
The next meeting of lhe nower
arranging work shops held by the
Meigs County Garden Clubs wtll
be held al the Meigs Counly Fair
Grounds in the grange building at 7
p.m. Thursday. Anyone interested
is welcome. Call Mrs. Addalou
Lewis at 992 -2924 for further
information.
Clearanct' sale
The Meigs County Garden
Clubs are having a clearance sale
of the remainder of lhe gardening
and nower arranging supplies from
the closeout of the CarlelOD School
lawn and garden center. The sale
will be held from noon to dart on
Saturday al the comer or Spring
Avenue and Main Street Proceeds
benefit the Carleton School in
Syracuse.

Friday through Sunday:
.
A chance of showers Friday aJld
Saturday with lows from the upper
50s to mid-60s and highs mainly in
the 70s. Fair and cooler Sund zy
with lows in the upper 50s lo low
60s and hi ghs from the upper 60s
10 low 70s.

Flatrock man arrested in
Mason County murder case:
A Ra1rock man was arrested lace al legedly beat Pullms 10 dca~1
Tuesday afternoon for the murder wiUIIIIS fists.
.
of Bobby Joe Pullin s, 36. of Pmnt
Accordin g to Wauerson, the ~ ­
Plea.sam, according to Mason rest was made in pan due 10 the
County ShenffEmie Wa~erson .
cooperation of several people .
:
Robert Eugene Walla ce, 29. of
The funeml for Pullins was hrkl
Rt. 2. Point Pleasant, was arrested toda y, 1:30 p.m.. at the Wilcmm
by Walterson and Deputy C.E. Funeral Home . Burial follow ed (n
Sleams at his home. Wa llace was Eckard Cemetery, Poinl Plcasanl
arraigned before Mason County
Magistrate Leonard Shobe on the
A summ er sc hool program fqr
charge of first degree murder. He
mak
eup cla sses will be held at
was placed in Jail Tuesday in lieu
Meigs
Hi gh Sc hool, Monday, Jvne
of $100,000 cash bond.
8
through
June 26. 8 a.m. 10 noon.
Wallace's auomey. Raymond
The
classes
arc geared for S\UMusgrave, objected 10 the bond.
dent
s
wh
o
have
failed required
but Shobe overrulcd the obJCCUon.
Musgrave said he would lllc a mo- co urses and arc open to Meigs,
Ea stern, and Southern students in
tion on the maucr.
Shobe telephoned the Re gister Mctg s County , and Wahama stuWednesday morn ing. however. to dents In Mason County.
Courses offer ed arc General
report Lh aLmagi sliatc court c:mnot
En
glish
I. General English 2; inlroset bond on a fir st degree mur&lt;Jer
ducti
on
to Al egbra Part I , Con charge. Bond on such a charge
sum er Math , American History .
must be set by etrcuil court . and and General Sc ience.
.
Shobe said the bono was
Cos1 is $35 per half credit , and
withdrawn.
$70 for a full crcd11.
The body of Pullins was found at
lnform auon and appltcations arc
10:30 p.m. Saturday outside the ava ilable at Meig s High School
Southfork Inn. Waucrson said the from either Ihc pnnc1pal or a guidbody was taken lo the State Medi - ance coun se lor. lnformallon may
cal Examiner for an autopsy. Wal · be obuiincd by calling 992-2 158. ·

Announce classes :

DEDICATED TODAY - A ribbon-cutting
ceremony was held tbi&lt;i morning for the .last 12mile S«tion of the U.S. 35 four-lane highway,
from Hoher Medical Center to Cenrerville. The
fl~ sec:lioa of the four-lane project, from State
Routt 7 along the Ohio River to Holzer Medical

u.s. 35

Center, was completed and dedicated in 1967.
The photo above was taken Sunday at tht 35Slate Rou le 325 inte!S("clion near 8 IICkeye Hills
Career Center at Rio Grande. (OVP pholo by
Steph•n Wilson).

EMS units answer calls

Continutd from p•ge I
Seven calls tor aSSI SLancc were
has promised to make Ohio com petitive, and this highway will help answered by unilS of Meigs Emcr·
ge ncy Service s on Tue sday and
us in reaching that goal."
early
Wednesday .
The effons of various community and regional groups lo gel the
On Tuesday al 8:34 am .. M1d·
project completed were hailed by a
dlepon
squad wem 10 the Emergennumber of speakers who touched
cy
Room
at Ve1eran s Memorial
brieny on lhe highway 's signifi Hospital
and
took Deborah Cald·
cance.
well
to
Holzer
Medical Center.
"This is something that's long
At
12:38
p.m.,
Pomeroy squad
overdue, because we saw it started
wcntiO
State
Route
7. Hugh Custer
in lhe 1970s," Galli a County Com ·
was
taken
to
Vetera
ns. Al 3:02
missioner George Pope comment ed. "It's fuially :.appened. and I'm p. m.. Rac ine squad went to Sharon
Road and transponed Bessie Heck
thankful that it has."
to Veterans. At 6:48 p.m., Rutland
squad went 10 Meigs Mine 2. Den·
nis Wright was taken to O'Bicncss
Memorial Hospital .
Continued rrom page I
At 12: 01 a.m. on Wednesday.
cenl, revised down slighUy from a Pomeroy unit went to Art LewiS
1.4 percent estimate issued last
week.
Orders for non -durable goods,
such as food products and clothing,
Oli ve Town ship Tru stee s will
rose 0.7 percent
hold a regular mectmg on Friday at
Shipments from factorie s, a 7 30 p.m. at the Shade River State
measure of currem productioo, rose Forestry Build ing on Joppa Road
0.2 pen:cnlto a seasonally adJusted ncar Reedsville .
S244 .7 bi Ilion

Factory...

Stree t m Middleport Enc Quail s
was taken to Veteran s. At 3: 06
a. m., Rac ine squad went to Stttc
Ro ut e 33 8 for Guy Shuler. who
wa s tr nnsportcd 10 Veteran s. At

7:20a .m.. Syracuse and Racin e
uni LS were se nt to a motor vehicle
acc ide nt on Mornmg Star Ro:.d
Jay Northup was tak en to Gran t
Medical Center by Life Flight.

WHDDPI GOLDB£Rr; in SIHEA ACT
JC,~

!

lG

~ 11 1

)I&lt; I\ ~

"1.' 1 I IO.J 10 i N,)

TOM CR UISE IN fAR RNO RWHY
I

X· .~

J:i

ll' :~·

',A T · W ~

roUT I OO,J JO

RIIINS 3

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MJ "' ll " ll \

~.

IEIIHDUIN
I ()(;,9 J() a,t ;, •

\ A'

',u~

IIJ, J l 00.1 JC ( PC.) :

JUNE 3 thru 7 - 7:00 p.m. each evening
Rev. David Cummings of Vera Cruz, Mexi(o
Will Be The Main Speaker
Rev. Cummings and his family have started 10 churches in various cities
throughout Mexico since 1978

FISH SQUARE
51.19

FOUR OTHER MISSIONARIES WILL BE SPEAKING AND
SHOWING SLIDE PRESENTATIONS

WITH FRIES••••• $1.89

Rev. David Fetter - Micronesia
Rev. Craig Ledbetter- Ireland
Rev. David Wade - Canada (Going to England)
Rev. Gary Edmonds - Missionary to the Appalachians
The Edmonds Family will be bringing special music.

26Weob .......................................... W .l6
62 w..u .......................................... SM .76
O.t.tde Mel• Ccl11nb:

:·: ::.·: :.·· · · · · ·:.· • m:

Pastor James Keesee Invites The Public To Attend

W..U...... .. .... .............. .. ........... 188 .~

'

~)

BfiSI[ INSTINCl

MISSION CONFERENCE

Special of the Week!

r

.. , . . . . .. . , ...

I OC,; ?0 JA il 1 ',AT '·U" i'tA I l X

S2S N. 2nd, Middleport, Ohio

~~

·~.

LIIHAL WEAP0""1 .3

VICTORY BAPTIST
CHURCH

MaU SqbecripUorw

6~

South-Central Ohio
Tonight and Thursday , occa·
sional showers and thunderstorms.
Low tonight in the low 60s and
hi gh Thursday 70-75. Chance of
min 90 percent tonighl and Thurs·
day.
Extended rorecast:

Trustees to meet

laUde Melp CoanQ'
13 W..U......... ............................ $21 .M

~: ~==

Holter reunion
The tenth annual George Holter
Jr. rarnily reunion will be held a1
the home of James and Karen
Holter Werry Sr., Sunday al I p.m .
Barbecue chicken, plates, etc ., and
picnic sheller will be provided.
Bring a covered dish and lawn
chairs . Also bring pictures and
mementos. Call 949-2746 for further information.

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

Rummage sale
The Meigs County Soap Box
Derby Association wiU bold a rummage sale Wednesday and Thursday in the old building beside lhe
Office Supply Shop in Pomeroy.
Anyone who would lie to donate
item to the Derby may do so by
cal ling Angie Swift at 992-7112,
Carolyn Neulzling al 742-28(,() or
Ann Barrell al 742-2464. hems
may be dropped off al the shop
today or tomorrow.

POSTMA81'ER Send edclreu &lt;ha._ lo
The Vaily Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
l'ooneroy, OHio 46769.

Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee received rain, and thunderS101111S were forecast from northern
Rorida to easttrn TelUIS.
Rain also fell in the region on
Tuesday. Heavier rainfall in10 early
evening included almos1 2 inches
in six hours at Hot Springs, Ark_
A tornado touched down ncar
Benton, La., on Tuesday.
Rain and showers were forecast
today from Missouri into North
Carolina . Thunderstorms were
expected in lhe Dakotas, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico. Sunny
skies were fore cast west of the
Rockies.
Ice jams were expected to form
near the Yukon River Delta in
Alaska, raising the threat of floodmg.
Temperatures today were forecast in the 60s and 70s in most of
lhe easiCm two-thirds of the nation;
the 80s in nonhero Texas, the
Greatl...akes region, the Gulf Coast
and much of the West and the 90s
and above in lhe Southwest
Pocatello, Idaho, reached 86 on
Tuesday, breaking lhe record for
lhe date of 85, set in 1960.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was Ill al Laughlin, Nev.

�Wednesday, June 3, 1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

Page-4

By JOE KAY
·: CINCINNA11 (AP) - Geroninfn Pena had to steal third. He
lqlew il. So did Barry Larkin.
- So as Pena edged away from
gecond base with one out in the
ninth inning, the Cincinnati Reds
shortstop edged bet ween him and
the base.
"I'm at least going to go in
there and try to disrupt him,"
Larkin said.
Pena wasn ' 1 paying attention.
The St. Louis Cardinals trailed 2-1,
and all be was thinking about was
getting a good jump towards third.
· He was stunned when reliever
ROb Dibble whirled and threw a
fastball to Larkin.
"He surprised me: · Pena saJd.
"All that's history now."
Pena was out by a foo~ and the
Cardinals were out of chances .
Dibble got Tom Pagnozzi to
ground out and preserve the 2-1
victory, the Reds' seventh in eight
games.
II was the pivotal baserunning
mistake in a game full of them.
The Cardinals, who lead the
fJational League in stolen bases,
had two runners thrown out and
~wo picked off. Cincinnati's Paul
O'Neill twice failed to score from
:third because of lousy judgment.
· " Those are the things you hopei ully avoid," Reds manager Lou
Piniella said.
· The Reds avoided mistakes a little bener than the Cardinals, who
have lost five of six. It made all the
difference.
: Jose DeLeon (2-5) allowed six
hits and no earned runs over six
innings, but two Cardinals mistakes
made him a loser for the third
straight start. Pa)!nozzi's passed
ball let Dave Martinez score in the
second, and right ftelder Felix Jose
bobbled Joe O~ver's double in the
fifth. letting him take third. That
error turned Bip Roberts' fly out
into a sacrifice fly.
· Neither run would have scored
without the mistake.
"We beat them at their own
game," said Tim Belcher (5-5),
who gave up one run and seven hits
pver eight innings . "Their team
manufactures a lot of runs."
"Jose pitched well enough to
win," manager Joe Torre said.
"That's probabi~ .tlis best start
since early in the season. But he
got no run support."
Belcher, who won for the fourth
time in five decisions, lost his
shutout on Jose's RBI ground out
in the eighth. Dibble them carne on

to pitch the ninth and slarted by
walking Ptna on a full COWIL
Pena easily stole second, putting
him in scoring position with none
OUI. But Dibble struck out Craig
Wilson, and the obvious strategy
was to have Pena steal third so he
could score on a grounder or fly
ball.
h was too obvious.
" Dibble was looking right at me
as I broke for the bag," Larkin
said . "He threw it 95 mph and
oearly broke my lwld."
II was a perfect throw for what
Dibble said was his first pickoff in
the major leagues.
''I kepi looking back.. saw Barry
break and just threw it," Dibble
said. " Actually I have a beller
move to second than to fu-st ' '
Now the Cardinals lmow.
" We weren't good on the bases
today," Tooe said. "'When you're
not scori ng runs, you have a tendency to try to force things to happen."
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
New York 4, San Francisco 3;
Pittsburgh 1, Los Angeles 0;
Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 3; Chicago
3, San Diego 2 in 13 innings, and
HOUSIOD 6, Montreal 0.
Mets 4, GiaDIS 3
After enduring an offensive
drought that had the fans at Shea
Stadium booing unmercifully
through a four-game losing streak,
the New Yart Mets have rebounded in grand fashion.
" They just have to load the
bases more," Eddie Murray said
Tuesday night after his grand slam
gave the Mets a 4-3 victory over
the slumping San Francisco Giants.
" Sometimes these things are hard
to explain."
He may not have an explanation, but Murray cenainly knows
what to do when there's no room
left oo the bases. And manager Jeff
Torberg, who suffered as the Mets
scored only two runs while losing
four straight on their homestand
before beating the Giants twice,
was joking about the success of the
last lWO nights.
''They finally recognized the
grand slam sign," Torborg said.
"(Fonnel Ballimore manager) Earl
Weaver was wrong. It's not the
three-run homer !hal wins games.··
The slam by Murray, which put
the Mets on the threshold of a
major league record, was their second in as many nights.
Bobby Bonilla hit one in Moo-

day night's 14 -1 victory over the
Giants. No National League team
has hit grand slams in three consecutive games. The Milwaukee
Brewers hit grand slams in the first
three games of the 1978 season.
The Mets loaded the bases off
Trevor Wilson (4 -5) in the third
mning on a single and two walks
with one out. Murray then hit the
first pitch 403 feel over the left
field fence to tie Babe Ruth, Hank
Aaron and Dave Kingman for fifth
place on the all -time grand slam ~st
with 16.
Reliever Wally Whitehurst (1-2)
worked 2 2/3 hitless innings for the
victory. John Franco got the last
four outs for his ninth save.
Pirates 1, Dodgers 0
Pinch-hiller Dave Clark drew a
walk in the seventh irming off Tom
Candiotti to fon:e in the only run,
and Pittsburgh stopped Los Angeles' six-game winning streak..
Randy Tomlin (6-3), who had a
7.33 ERA in his previous six slarlS,
allowed five hits in seven shutout
innings for only his second victory
since April 25.
Braves 5, Phillies 3
Terry Pendleton hit a two-run
homer off Mitch Williams in the
last of the ninth inning to give
Atlanta its fifth straight victory.
Pendleton reached Williams (22) for his lOth homer after Otis
Nixon had singled and stolen second base. The Phillies had tied the
game in ninth when John Kruk
scored on a wild pitch by Mike
Stanton (1 -2).
Cubs 3, Padres 2
Chicago's Andre Dawson hit a
two-run homer in the ninth inning
at Wrigley Field and Mark Grace a
single for the winning run in the
13th.
After Dawson bounced out, Pat
Clements relieved and Grace singled to right, making a winner of
Shawn Boskie (5-3).
Astros 6, Expos 0
Mark Portugal extended hi s
Astrodome winning streak. to four
games with a six-hiller, and got
outstanding defensive help.
Portugal (5-2) benefited from a
bases -loaded double play that
ended the second inning and Steve
Finley's leapmg cat.ch off the wall
that prevented Archie Cianfrocco
from getting a hit in the fourth. Finley victimized Cianfrocco again in
the seventh with a diving catch .
The Astros got off to a quick
slarl against Bill Sarnpen (0-3) with
ftrSt-inning runs on singles by Jeff
Bagwell and Eric Anthony.

Scoreboard
{loolldter 1-1~ 1-...l! .....
Minneao&amp;l (l.nqs S-0) • Teu. (.Jd-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutemDh\Pon
W L
Prt.
' .. 27 23
540
Pittlbur).h
... T1 23
S40
SL Lwi.l ..
21 24
529
New YOO. ..
.21 26
458
MonUU-1

y...,

21 T1
T1 28

Phlladclptu.•

Ouuao ... ..

449
440

fCOIItQ..I).I . ~p.m.

GB

Major league leaders

.l

•

4.l

Watern Dhldorl

Clndnn•ll-- ---..17 11
San FRncilco
27 23

.S6J
S40

Sa.n Dqo .... .

28 24

SJS

24
. 25 21

419
4S I

22 2~

4]\

u. Anp!CJ ...
Atlmu ..
!lou.:tm . -· ..

n

Tuesday's scores

I

Yod.., .]11.

I

ll

•

"

OU(:IIgo 3, San Du'llo 2. 13 lfV\IIlSI
Clndnn•lll, Sl Louil l
Piw;burah 1, U. An~a 0

a._......_
y .... "" Bonil

1&amp;, Ne.. y !d.. lS.

New Yori 4, San Fr1.11CIK'O 3

HlTS -

HOUIUltl 6, Mootru.l U

Today's gamrs
St. Loul• (01bor11t 5-ll•t Clndn ·
n1ll (Swi ndtU 4-l), U :J5 p .m
Philacklphi• (Sdulhna 3-'J at Atlaru
(Smolu s-4), 12:40 p m
S•n Dieao (Hun. t 4-~) II crnc aao
(Culillo 3-4). 2 :20p .m.
Loa An1dea (Mu,rner 3 I) at P1w

burJ,h (Pa\.1ci01 3-0). J 05 p.m
Montreal (Hill4-2) 11 Houlton (liar

ntK:h 2-5), ! .15 p .m

Thursday's (:ames
Pmshurgh

11

RUNS - Bondi. Pittabw-J,h. 39 , T
Femau4u. San Dicao. 36; l.ru•,
Pbil ........... ll. '""'"' ... Dqo. ll.
IA&lt;&gt;kf::r.SL looM. :14,
~ ; Hollira, Phi1 I ':1 I l l
RBI - Banda, Pitukrah . 40 .
Shcffidd, Sat! Diqo. ll; Gun., Allant•.
31; Pandh"P Atlmta. 31, Nclinff. s..t!

o.,... ]1, ....,,_ -

At.lulll 3, Ph.iladcl~ 3

New York (Goodal 4-5 )

Natloool Inguo
HAlTING - Krull , Pluladelpbu.
33\, Gwynn, Sal Dlqo.. _15-9; V.anSlyt.t.
PitUburJh. l5J ; McGrirf. S-an Olt:,O.
321 ; T . Fcmandu, San Dleao. J 2,
Pendlclon, Atlana. _JI9. Ml.pdan. 1\e-.

l

(l)nballl~).

1 ·35pm
llouJ\00 (J J~CI 2-{)J II San rnncu
cu (Har.dia 2-0). 10·05 p.m
Cincinnati ( Bro.,.. nln&amp; 4-J ) 11 Lo1
,\n&amp;ela Olenh!Hr 4-),, lt:).5 p.m.

Gwynn, Sn D1eao . 11 .

Pcnd.h:lon, Al1una. 61; ~. Ph.iladd
phu, 61; T F-.:manda. Sal Dieso. 65 ,
Shdfidd. San DitfO. 62; McOnfT. San
0."10. 6l; I'Wey. - 6 1
OOUBI.ES - !&gt;mao. Pluloddp"".
16, VanSlyke. P\ltlhuJh, 16; Pmdlcton.

Atlanta, I~ ; O.llltoll.l'bil&amp;delphu, 14;
Ftn.ley. HOISUJII. ll, Wallach. ~.
ll6~Qcldwi&amp;h 12
TRIPLES - D S1nden. A Uanu, 9;
Fvlley. Hwnon, 6; I\JX:al, SL t...:...u., 6;
Once. Oucaao.. "'· Bulb. u. AnJdta.
4. 6 •re tied wnh J
. IIOME lillr'S - ~ked~. Piasbw~.
1 J. McGnfT. S•n 01c.ao. 11; M.u
Willanu, San Fnr.c.aco, II; SbdTw::ld,
San Dq:o, ill. Pmdl.ttcn. A.~ 10. L
w•Ik12. Mmb'CI.i.. 't-. Dnrsm. (]:gaao, I
STOLEN BASES - Gn.u&lt;a. Mmt·
~ 1.A, Lrilord.. Sl. um&amp;. 19'; ~
San Franc.oo. 17; laiNrtl., ~uU.
17; Bands., Pwlburlb.l7. D. Sanden. At·
!anu., 16: Nu:tm,

AL.l.l.tLu.

14; 0

Srruth.

S L Lnuu , \4

PIT on NG (7 dctUICIIIJ) - TcwU.
bwy, S1..l.nwa. 6-1 . .IH, 1.1'1, Gla~

AMERICAN LEAGI:E
~'""' DlvWon
w l P'd.
Tum
6ll
620

""
,. ""llO .,

..... ... .3]
Jl
Balumon: .
Nc.., Yod:
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Orvr-bond __ _ .lt ll

Toronto ..

...

r.s

... :n 23
21

w.-en~

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lll

412

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.S56
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Tu•
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MlntdCU .. .. . ....II 21
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l2
Kanw• Cur

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71
71
!Ol

Tuesday's !JCOrel

Clevftand 4, Sattle J
MiJ1raulee 5, Ddroit4
Toronto 1. Minnol«a S, !] IMlJ11'
Kat.., Cit)' 2, 0Uu1o l

TeJOn I, Ne• Yodl: 2
Bll1tun0ftl -4, CaW'otrua 2
Oilllnd ~- Bolwn 4

Todoy'sgames

~~(Ritz

0-1)

at

hlil•luk« (Wea-

mln 5-4}.l:D p.m.

Bonon (Do.P'on 1-2) 11 01kland
(SluwW 4-l).l'll pm.
8JJtimorc (Mil.Jti.i 4-J) II California
(finley 1-4). Hl5 p_m.
Sultlt (Parker 1·1) al Ck••l•••
~-~·~7~5 .....
Tanmw (Ouvun 6-0) 11 Minnsau

(T•ponl S_.), f1l1 P"'·

OUup (Hibb&amp;ni ~ - 3) It KMuu Cily
(Ma.,.,U 1-4). I :H p.m
Ntw York (Caduc:t 1--4) 11 Tuu
(Bro" 1-l), &amp;:3' p.m

Thursday's games
Detroit (Tanana 3--4) IL Ne• York
(~-

4-2). 7,30 pm.

SuiiM (P1emlaa 1-1) at Cleullnd

Atl•nu ,l -l. 727,29-4, O.bomc, St.
l....olu. 5-2, 114, 1.41. Bu:adl.. s.n fnn -

N5
,

~ · 2. 714, 112.; ~- fDtllon..
S·2, .714. 274.
n..uao. S-2,
714, 3.31, Torru.t.
6-l, .661.
l n; ldferu, s.u. Dqo. 6- .61i1. 4.Crl.

cut:n,

STRIIliDl!TS ~ Cane.. Ne-w Yad. ,

n s FemanOcl. New Ycd:, 11; Sndt:l.
Atlanta, 71, l,tolckr, CIKia•all, U;

a-. s.n Oqo.. 60: G.

MaOdw.. auc.8o. 60. ~.U.~S9
SA VH - l....cc Strudt.. St. Lana. 14;
Mp:n, San Du:p, 11; D. lnnl::a, HCIUIIOII..
12: Ca.•rlloa. Clad•ull. II; Fnlnco,
New Yort., 9; Wettd1nd, Woeueal, I ;
MJtda WilliJm&amp;, ptuj I '; ja I .
1

Amtric.u Lmpo
BAITING -

Pladl:eu,

~hnntaott ,

345. R. Almw. TorqnW), _ )4~ Bordxk.
Oak.l.and.. J19. R. ldl 1• New Ycd. • .n5 .
Knoblauch. Mu1IIICSOU. 121: Mol1tor .
Milwtllkct, ))4; lo)'Mt ,

121

~n1u

Ne-w YOlk, JS; ll ltDy. New YorL ll·,

S.an.. Tuu.,12; Cada. Tarcem.. 32.
RBI - Mc0w1n. ~ 41 ; J\Q.eu.. Mlnatratr )9; ~ llaJiimare.
J1; Sian. TaM... 15; ..... Cltftl.rllll,
:14; .,...,.._ o.u.;.. :14; OrilfOJ, na. 11, R.

Alomtr, Toronto. 61: I . K.elly, Ne-.
y ......., ...... ~.,;·-.

Tau. 6J; boblaucb, U'on•ne«·, 6.2:
ll«oo. - - 61;......
61.
00\JBW - - · T - . 16; 1!.
ManiM:&amp;. Saule. 16; Wferiea.. ~..
WlJ, "' .......... y ..... 16; lloiJ.

N&lt;oY.... I6tbod._U,,._.

Mil_...,
1}. - · . . _ O.,.IS.
11UPl..ES - ........ .....
5;
E. -

-

1 Ooo... -'- adi-

,__l;Buob.-l;,.....,._Nin...... ); ~ Chic:8.p. ); 2l
-.itb2.

Mc&lt;lwiK. OKiond.

land. 14; RHendmm, 0*--land, 22; U.·
u~h, MiJ1t'au.kot, 17; Rainc:a, Olicar.· 16.
Andenon, Baltimore, 1-4; Knob auch ,
MiMe101.1. I l: R. Alornu, Tormto, 11

PfTCIUNG [1 dcci.llont) - fltmin4S.Uu le, 7-1. SJS,lJ7; Mu.11ina , Balu
more, 6-1. &amp;~7. 2.17: McDondd, Balli
mOR, 7-2, .778, 110; K. Brown, Tuu,
8-J, 117. l .l l , Clemen.•, 801ton, 8-3,

111. 1.60; McDO'II'Cll. Chicaao. 7-3. .700,
3./l Mtxft.Chl.lancl.. 7-], .700,17 1
STRJKEOUTS - O cmena , B01ton ,
SO: Petm.. New York, 66; Juan Guzman,
Toronto, 6~; R. John1on, Seutle, 6-4;
Stew an, Oakhnd, S7: McDonlld, Ba.ltimore, SS : Appier. Kanan C~ty . 5S ; K.

Brown. Texu, S~ .
SA VES - Eckc:rdey, Galland, 19;
Asut.Jen. Minncaot1 , 14; Olson. Balu more, ll: I-Urvey. Californil. l ]; Ruudl,
Telu, ll, 1lugpa~ , ChKt&amp;o. 12; Rc..ar·
don, Boruln. l z_

Transactions
B._..ball
Am~rtun

LeaaiM

KANSAS CITY ROYALS - St~
Ouut~er Eddy, Jut.tin Adam and Hart
Ev.na. pikhtn, and Jelani BMd(M, OJ!·
fidder , to mmor le.asuc. CUltnctt.
TEXAS RANGERS - Si~f~ed Mite
Smtth, •c:~ond buemanm and John
Tomutl.lo. fu11 bucman, 1nd Uligntd
\hem w GuuJrm of the South Atllouc
Le.llut.
NatlonallA.a&amp;~

CIDCAGO C1JBS - Plaa:d Km Pll·
!Dim, p1t.chcr. on the 15-day diubled li.IL
COLO RADO ROCKJE S - S1goed
Ryan Frucbura. durd blllctrtlll·ootfidder,
rnd Chru ilmdc:non and Jam~ Hove~ .

p.tdlcn, w nunCI' lc.~~Ue eontnlcta
FLORIDA MARLINS - Sisned
Willie Bro•n and Anthony (Joni!azto,
ootfidden, Gcnld SWford, pitcher, and
Anthony Torrel, ahor11top, to minor

"'""' """"'"''

PITISRURGH PIRATES - Placed
Bob Walk. pischcr, on !he IS ·day diublcd
li11.. Rocalled Vi~or Cole, ptU:he:r, from
Ruffalo of the A.rnenc-an 1\.uoci•tim.
SAN DIEGO PADRES - Optiooed
Tun Sc:ota, pitcher, to Lu Vq11 tJf \he
Plcif~e

eo.. t..e.sue..

Basketball
N&amp;Uonal Bukdb.ll A..aodaUoe
SAN ANTONIO SPURS - N•med
ltu llu1hca 11nd Ron Adam• auiatanl

"""""'~

Ci1y.

RUNS - McG•tre, Oakland, ll .
Ptd:ea. ~ 31; Md,. ~cu.
37: R. Alomu, Tun;11110. ~; Ma D.lllaJJ,

33: C&amp;ncr. T---. u
HITS - Pudcn. Mi

HOME RUNS -

19; l:kltr. Deuvit, IS; Bel ... Clenla..cl,
11; Ttttlc:t.on. Detroit, II ; O'Bria'l , Scat·
tle, I I; floi.JCI, B1ltimore. 10; Griffey,
Seattle, I0; C1111t100, Oakb.nd, 10; Cutc:r,
Tmmt.o, I 0.
STOLEN BASES - Lonon, Cleve-

aft

lilld

DDOFIIIIOI

SILl

Bedding Plants, aU Flms $5
Hanging Baskets $4,
4" G«anluma and Mums
SOt, 6" Geraniums $1

20% Off All
ShM!bery &amp; Traes
Open Dlllly II Lm. Io 5 p.m.
Open Suray 1 pm. to 5 p.m.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

m-sns

In French Open play,
r-Area sports briefs----. Women
head to semis; men behind schedule
Marauder boys cage camp Monday
The 1992 Malaudet Basketball Camp for boys entering grades 5-

8 will be held at Meigs High School from Mooday, June 8lhrough
Friday, June 12 from 9 a.m. to noon.
Daily camp activities will include instruction in defensive and
offensive techniques as well as individual stations stressing shooting, passing, dnbb~g. ball han~ng and rebounding.
The camp wiU feature the Meigs coaching staff and members of
the 1992 basketball team.
App~cation fonns will be passed out to all schools within the
Meigs Local School DislricL For anyone outside the dislric~ application forms may be obtained by contacting either Phil Harrison at
992-6451 or 992-6248, Rick Edwards at 992-6174 or 992-2158 or
Rick Ash at 992-5960.
The camp fee is $30 and T-shirts wiU be given to all campers.

Cincinnati edges St. Louis 2-1

Volleyball league to start Tuesday
The Middleport Recreation Department is seeking teams to par-

ticipate in an outdoor summer volleyball league.
The teams will be co-ed and may have as many as 10 people on a
roster. At least two women must be on the voUeyball co~ from
each team , at all times throughout the game.
The league will begin play on Tuesday, June 9 and will continue
on Tuesday and Thursdar nights until eatly Augus~ ending with a
final tournament There 1s also the possibility of a men's summer
league and a church league if interest dictates.
A minimum of eight teams is required for each league. Those
interested should contact the Middleport Recreation Department at
992-6782.

Meigs Chamber slates linkjest
The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will hold its annual

PICKED OFF - The St. Louis Cardinals'
Geronimo Pena (left) slides back to second bast
too late to avoid Cincinnati piteher Rob Dibble's

pickoff throw to shortstop Barry Larkio Ia tile
ninth inaing of Tuesday night's National Ltll~
game in Cincinnati, wbicb the Reds woo 2-1.
(AP)

Hill's seventh-inning HR gives
Indians 4-3 win over Mariners
CLEVELAND (AP) - For
most of this American League season, the Cleveland Indians have
been unable to do much right. The
Seattle Marin ers know that's
changing.
"We've had good pitching and
good defense and some timely hitting, " said Glenallen Hill , who
homered to give the Indians a 4-3
win over the Mariners. "Winning a
couple baligames is going 10 make
any team feel better. Right now
thmgs are starting to go our way. "
The Indians have won seven of
their last 10 games. The win Tuesday night was a showcase for three
players who recently were on the
disabled iisL
Hill, disabled disabled April 23
to May 22 with a groin injury ,
jumped on Erik Hanson ·s fastball
for a two-run homer in the seventh,
his second of the season.
"I was detennined not 10 make
an out on the breaking bali," sa1d
Hill , who was the designated hiuer.
"He threw a fastball in a spot
where he probably didn't want to
throw it."
Sandy Alomar Jr. was on hase
when H1ll hit iL Alomar had three
hits. He was disabled May 1 to
May !8 because of a cut between
two fingers on hiS right hand.
"When you come off the dis abled list, the pitcher is going 10 be
ahead of you, but l feel more comfortable now, especially the last
four or five days,'' Alomar said.
Dave Quo (4-3) gave up three

tied the game in the fourth following a leadoff double by Edgar Martinez. Griffey has 10 home runs
this season, and four homers and
II RBls in his last eight games.
·'I'm just getting started. II lOOk
me awhile, but I haven't changed
anything," he said.
Seanle's Kevin Mitchell was
scrat.ched because of a stiff ri~ht
wrist. Mitchell pinch hit in the
ninth and grounded into a gameending fielder's choice.
In other games, Oakland edged
Boston 5-4, Baltimore beat California 4-2, Toronto beat Minnesota 75, Texas beat the New York Yankees 8-2, Kansas City beat Chicago
2-1 and Milwaukee beat Detroit 54.

Alhldics 5, Red So• 4
You have 10 go all the way back
to 1986 to find the last time Mike
Moore beat the Boslon Red Sox.
Back then, on July 18, 1986,

Moore was with the Seamle
Mariners. He lost 10 consecutive
decisions to the Red Sox after ~
ending his streak. Tuesday night by
leading the Oakland Athlelics to a
5-4 victory.
Moore (7 -3) had a 6.32 ERA
against the Red Sox during the losing streak.
"Numbers can be deceiving,"
he said. "Last year, I got beat in
some close games. All I can do is
throw the ball and give it my best
shot.""
Moore, pit.ching on three days'
rest because Bob Welch was put on
the diSabled list, allowed one
earned run and seven hits in 6 1/3
innings, struck out five and walked
three. Dennis Eckersley, Oaldand'•
fourth pit.cher, got five outs for his
19th save.
"It really doesn't bother me,"
Moore said of the short rest. "I
(See AL on Page 5)

runs and five hils in seven innings.

HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

Women's softball tournament set
The Jack-Trim-Glou Athletic Boosters will sponsor a doubleelimination women's slow-pitch softballlOilmament at the Glouster
village park from Friday, June 12to Sunday, June 14.
The entry fee is $75 and two softballs. The dead~ne for registratioo is Tuesday, June 9.
To enter or to get more information, call Dave Richards at 1767-3090, Greg Koons at 1-767-3656, Tim Seevers at 1-767-2911
or Harry Herges atl-347-4240 or 1-753-2154.

Hunter education course slated
A hunte.r education course will he offered by the Department of
Natural Resources' Division of Wildlife at Forked Run Sportsman
Club, June 26-28.
The course is offered in preparation for tbe 1992-93 hunting
license sale to begin on Sept. 1. Ohio youngsters under the age of
16 who have completed a hunter education coune will be able to
purchase a special reduced price youth hunting ~cense for $7.
In July the Outdoor Skills Section will conduct a drawing from
the youngsters IJaining in June. One of the youngsters will be
selected to n:ceive the ftrsl number one youth hunting license at a
special presenlation to he held in August.
For further information or to enroll for the class, residents may
contact Meigs County game protector Keith Wood at 985-4400.

AL games ...

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golf tournament on Thursday, June I I at the Meigs County Golf
Course.
Tee time will be at 1 p.m.
The tournament wiU be a four-person blind scramble and the cost
will be $50 per person. The cost includes hot dogs at noon along
with green fees, cart and a steak dinner.
For more information, call the Chamber office at 992-5005.

both times on center court, and I
down while Courter made some 1989.
feel
very comfortable. I'm just ..
unaccustomed errors 10 lose his
"
This
is
a
different
year,
and
going
to play my game and try to
it's rematch time at th~ French first set of the tournament The
we're
both
playing
well,"
Sanchez
be
aggressive
and see if I canOpen. For the men, it's hurry up match was suspended becance of
Vicario
said.
"I've
beat
her
here
win."
•
and waiL
darlcness with Courier leading 6-2,
While rain delayed the men's 6-1,2-6.
quarterfmals, the four top-seeded
"Can anybody see anything?"
women won their matches Tuesday Courier asked as be tried unsucto set up a re-run of last year's cessfully to halt play before lvanisemiftnals.
sevic could win the third seL
In one pairing Thursday, topThe second of Tuesday's scbedseeded Monica Seles, seekmg her uled quarterfinals, between No. 3
third· straight title, will once try Pete Sampras and No. 1 I Andre
again to get past third-seeded Agassi, was posljlOned until today.
Gabriela Sabatini . In the other, No.
In the last two quarterfinals.
2 seed Steffi Graf will try to originally scheduled 10 be played
avenge her worst defeat as a pro, a today, France" s Henri I N'mte met
6-0, 6-2 loss on center court last Sweden's Nicklas Kulti and AIDei
year to Aranxta Sanchez Vicario.
Cherkasov of Russia took on IU
The men have unfinshed busi- Korda of Czechoslovakia. Korda.
ness today, including completioo of seeded seventh, is the only seal left
a suspended match between top- in the bouom half of the dr.lw.
seeded Jim Courier, the defending
Among the WOIIICII, Graf ~
champion, and No. 8 Goran lvani- bly has the strongeot rootivaion as
sevic of Croatia.
she seeks to make ammds for last
Courier raced through the first year's semifinal embarassmeoL
two sets as evening fell Tuesday, That was the second time she had
seemingly on course for an easy lost on the center coun at Slade
win.
Roland Ganus to SaoclJez Vicario
But lvanisevic, furious at him- - the first was when the Spaoian:t
self for mistakes early on, settled won the title as a 17-year-old in
TITLE DEFENSE TIME continued for defending champion Jim
Courkr during Tuesday night's French Open quarlerf'mal male~
(ContinuedfromPage4)
witlt Croatia's Goran lvanisevic. Courier wliS ahead 6-2, 6-1, 2-6
wk• th• match was postponed because of darkness. (AP)
Rangn-s 8, Yuk- 2
think as far as location and stuff, I
Juan Gonzalez bit a two-r. n
probably was as sharp as I have
been all year. "
homer in the flrsl and Dean Palmer
Oakland trailed 3-1 in the sixth. hit a three-run homer in the fifth a1
Joe Hesketh walked Lance Arlington.
Blankenship, Carney Lansford dou Bobby Will (6-4) allowed six
bled, Jose Canseco drove in a run hits in eight innings as he woo his
with a groundout and Mart MeG- third straight start. Tim Leary (4-4)
wire was walked intentionally. was tagged seven runs and live hits
ll sttutS SllADIU
Terry Steinbach then tripled to left m five innings.
o~S!GNIcenter off Greg Harris for a 4-3
Royals 2, While Sox 1
lead and WiUie Wilson singled in a
Kevin McReynolds hit a goDESIGr,ER
run with two outs.
ahead home run in the eigbtb
" ' ' l'"CE
Orioles 4, AnJels 2
inning at Royals Sladiwn. the flfSl
MANUF.-\CTURERS
t:::::OO
,
Cal Ripken Jr. btl a two-run homer off Srou R:u!insi&lt;y (2-2) in
REBATl
.. ~
homer and Jeff Tackell added a 50 innings since last July 27.
solo shot as visiting Baltimore won
Mark Gubicza (6- 3) allowed
its fourth straight
four hits in eight innings. struet 001
Mike Mussina (6-1) allowed three and walked four. Jeff Moottwo runs and five hits in five gomery pitched the ninth for bis
innings, and Greg Olson pitched ninth save.
PLUS. up to ' SO worth of
tbe ninth for his 13th save. Mark
B!"fwen s, r!C«S 4
custom features FREE!
Langston (5-3) gave UI! four runs
Scou Fletcher singled in the goand 10 hits in his second complete ahead run with two outs in the sevgame.
enth off Mark Leiter (3-3) as MilBlue Jays 7, Twins S
waukee won after wasting a 4-0
Derek Bell broke a 13th-inning lead. Visiting Detroit has lost .U
tie with a sacrifice fly off Gary straight, matching its worst skid
Wayne (1-2) and Manuel Lee hit a this season, and dmpped a 5ea'IIOIIrun-scoring single as visiting Iow nine games ooder .500.
Toronto rallied from a 4-0 deficit
Jesse Orosco (2-1), the third
and won its fifth straight.
Milwaukee pitcher, threw 2 1/3
Pat Hentgen (4-0) pitched a scoreless inrungs, and Iloug Henry
scoreless 12th, and Tan Henke fin- got five outs foc his eigbtb save.
ished for his lOOt save.
By DAVID CRARY
PARIS (AP)- For the women,

The Folks At Bob's Market Would Like To Show Their Appreciation
To Their Many Wonderful Customers With Savings Of
30% To 50% Off Their Top Quality Plants, Hanging Baskets And More!

Ted Power, Kevin W1ckandcr and
Steve Olin finished, with Olin getting three oul' for h1s lith save. h
was Otto's second win in two stam
sinc e co ming back . He was disabled May I 0 to May 25 with tendmills of his left shoulder.
''I' m throwing more off-speed
stuff, because guys were locked in
on my fastball." Otto said.
Han so n (2 -8) led 3-2 before
H11i' s blast
"Enk JUSt can't seem to get by
without the one m1stake that k11is
him late in the game." Mariners
manager Bill Plummer said. "He
made a mistake with the ball out
over the plate. Erik tried to pitch
him away and ball came back over
the middle."
Hanson pitched an eight-hiuer
for his third complete game. He
struck out four and walked two.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s two-run homer

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

June 3,1992

The busies! primary night of the
year turned into another viciOry
pany for women, led by California"s dual Democratic Senate nominees, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.
Women also won several highprofile House primaries Tuesday,
and Monlana slale Rep. Dorothy
Bradley gained the chance 10
become her state's first woman
governor, winning a close Democratic primary . Iowa nominated a
woman, Democra1 Jean LloydJones, for U.S. Senate.
"Ca lifornians have spoken
loudly and clearly and sent the
whole counlry a message: The status quo must go,'· Feinstein told
supporters at a San Francisco viciOry rally.
There were fewer upsets than in
earlier primaries this year, and
House members who wrole bad
checks managed 10 win renomination in Iowa and Ohio despile
strong challenges.

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Bill Clinton locked up lhe
Democratic presidential nomination with a six·slale sweep and
quickly promised to wrest Washington from the "forces of the status quo." But Ross Perot showed
fresh strength on Clinton·s victory
night.
Presidenl Bush added six more
wins to his undefeated streak
against Patrick Buchanan in Tuesday's coast-to-coast balloting,
another topsy-turvy day in which
voters sounded a call for change
but appeared uncertain aboul how
to trigger il.
"I am going to give you a campaign with a vision of an America
that works again, that rewards
work. that invests in people, that
insists on responsibility and that
pulls us lO~ether as one nation
under God,' a triumphant CliniOn
promised.
His next big 1ask: selecting a
running mate.
The Arkansas govemor"s final
flourish closed a roller -coasler
nominating contest and included a

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Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby
won the Democratic nomination for
a second tcnn, and both Alabama
and Nortb Carolina moved closer
to electing their ftrsl black members of Congress in this ceniUry.
The most action was in Califor·
nia, which not only tilled the scales
with its 52 congressional districts
and IS open House seau - by far
the mosl of any state - but had
both U.S. Senate sealS up fCJr election for the fust time in its history.
Boxer, a congresswoman from
the Marin County suburbs nonh of
San Francisco, won the Democralic
nomination for the seal held by
Democrat Alan Crans10n, who is
retiring.
With 92 percent of the precinciS
reponing, she had I ,204,262 voles.
or 43 pcn:en~ followed by LL Gov.
Leo McCarthy with 861,096 VOles,
or 30 perten~ and Rep. Mel Levine
with 613,679 votes, or 22 pcn:ent.
Vottn will have a slwp choice
in the general election. Boxer, who

is among the more liberal members
of Congress, will face a suong conservative, Rep. Bruce Herschensohn. He defeated moderate Rep.
Tom Campbell in the GOP prima·
ry.
With 91 percent of the precincts
reporting, Herschensohn had
846,837 votes to Campbell's
773,584 VOltS - 39 pe=nt lO 35
percent. Palm Springs Mayor
Sonny Bono, who never shoolc his
image as a lightweigh~ trailed with
17 percent, and four other candidates divided the remainder.
Sen. John Seymour got a solid
vote of confidence in the Republican primary to fill the final two
years of the term abandoned by
Pete Wilson when he became Cali·
fomia's governor. Wilson appointed Seymour as his successor. but
the former slate senatCJr still has to
stand fCJr election.
With 91 Jl(IW!t of the precincts
reporting, Seymour had 1,073,139
votes, or 52 percent, to 553,556
votes, or 27 percenl. for Rep .

She will face Attorney General
Marc Racicot, winner of the GOP

William Dannemcyer, who is considered more conservative . Two

race .

other candidates trailed, including
dentist Jim Trinity, who picked up
a surprising ll percent.
With 92 percent reponing in the
Democratic race for the two-year
seat, Feinstein, the former San
Francisco mayor. had 1.600.134
votes. or 57 percent. Slate Controller Gray Davis was far back
with 926.496 votes. or 33 perunt.
and two other can&lt;lidates had 5 percent each.
Both Feinstein and Bour
referred repeatedly in !heir campaigns to the paucity of women in
the Senate- there are only two .
Lloyd-Jones defeated Rosanne
Freeburg and will face an uphill
battle against Republican Sen.
Charles Grassley. who had no
opposition.
In Montana. Bradley led the
field in a six-way race. outdistancing her nearest competitor, Helena
prosecuting attorney Mike
McGrath. 41 oen:ent to 34 perunt.

Black women won both of
Non11 Carolina's runoffs in newly
fanned districts that wen designed
to give blacks a better shot at
Congress.
In the 1st District. businesswoman Eva Clayton defealtld Wal·
Ler Jones Jr. , who is white, in a
Democratic race. She will face Ted
Tyler. the white GOP nominee. in
Novemher . In the 12th District.
Barbara Gore Washing10n won a
GOP runoff and will face Democratic nomidee Mel Wat~ who is
black.
Two Democrats and two RqJUblicans, all of them black, wen: sent
into runoffs in a similarly re&lt;hwn
district in Alabama.
In Ohio, R&lt;!l. Mary Rose Oakar
won the Democratic norninalioo for
a ninth term in the Cleveland area
despite a stiff challenge based partly on her 213 bad checks. She woo
39 perrent of the voce. compared to

win over lone primary rival Jerry Alabama, 72 pe=nt in Montana,
California made another piece
Brown in California. where Brown 67 percenl in New Mexico and was of history Tuesday. Its two Senate
pulling 74 percent in California. seats were up together for the flfSt
served eight yean as governor.
Like
Brown, Buchanan trailed time, and women - Dianne FeinBrown, winnin$ four out of
uncommiued
in the three states . stein and Barbano B&lt;ner -became
every 10 voles in hts home state,
wilh
that
option.
could take satisfaction from a
the candidates in both races. anothBut even as the voters handed er ftrsl
respectable showing; he called it
"a miracle ... a revolution." But he Bush and Clinton more wins, they
Elsewhere, there were few surwas trounced everywhere else senl warning signals thai the parties
will study closely as lhey prepare
Tuesday.
for
their summer conventions and a
Clinton was getting 68 pe=nt
fall
campaign that billionaire Perot
or the vote in Alabama, 59 percent
assures
will shape up unlike any
in New Jeney, 6 I percent in Ohio,
52 percent in New Mexico, 47 per- other.
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Lt.
Withoul being on one ballot, the
cent in Momana and 48 percent in
California. Brown's best showing independent Pero1 showed the Gov. Mike De Wine disposed of
was 20 Jl(IW!l in New Jersey, and potential of assembling a winning newcomer George Rhodes in the
in Alabama, Montana and New coalition, attracting support from Republican U.S. Senate primary
Mexico he polled behind uncom- both Democrats and Republicans and then ponrayed himself as the
who wece polled after they voted. candidate or change m the contest
milted.
Bul
voters appear confused about with Democratic incumbent John
LonJ-gonc rival Paul Tsongas,
the fonnec Massachusetts sena10r, Perot too. In California. the exit Glenn .
De Wine, a congressman for
chose Tuesday to endorse Clinton. interviews suggested he draws
more from Bush than from Clinton; eight years before winning election
But Brown would not
in 1990 10 his current offtce. said it
Faring even worse than Brown in Ohio il was the opposite.
And
Perot's
unfavorable
ratings
was time for Glenn to come home
was Buchanan, who spent the night
shot
up
from
past
surveys.
particufrom Washington.
in the stale where he peaked larly
among
Democratic
voters,
a
""The issue in this campaign is
New Hampshire.
sign
that
scrutiny
may
be
laking
a
who is the most likely person to
Bush rolled up 83 percent in
bnng ahout change."" DeWtne said.
New Jersey and Ohio, 75 percent in toll.
"Is it someone who has been
there I R years, who wants to go
back for 24 - basically serve a
quarter of century,longer than anybody has served as a U.S . senator
in this century in Ohio - and who
doesn •t seem to thmk there· s a
This downward spiral. along dustry ·is directly linked to the in· problem' Or someone hke Mike
with the steadily rising volume of creasing volumes of unfair imports De Wine. who has outlined in very
unfairly priced imports has infticted entering the U.S. marke~ the pcti· specifiC fashion what changes need
severe and ongoing injury on the tion claims.
to be made."' he said.
domestic induslry. the petition alJohn G. Oxaal, president of the
Glenn, unopposed in Tucsday"s
leges. Continued underselling, Ferroolloys Association, expressed primary. was in Washington for a
made possible by dumping and confidence
that
the
trade Senate session and committee hear·
subsidized sales has resulted m proceedings would remedy what he ings. His spokesman. Dale Butland,
substantial lost sales volume for the called unfair trade practices. "The challenged De Wine's claim as the
domestic induslry, the petition U.S. Ferrosilicon lnduslry has been candidate of change.
claims. It has the additional effect. severely injured by dumped and
·"I think the question is what
it is alleged, of severely depressing subsidized ompons. I am confident kind of change,'" Rutland said.
the price for ferrosilicon in the U.S. that the trade actions filed will res ·
""Whether you look at Mr.
market. The combination of lost tore conditions of fair competition De Wine's votes against plant clossales and depressed prices hllS to the U.S . ferrosilicon market."" he ing legislation, against mcreasing
decimated the domestic induslry, said.
the minimum wage. against the
Other association members. in equal rights amendment . or
by U.S. producers, the petitioners
allege. By underselling in this addition to American Alloys. filing dozens of other votes lhat he· s cast.
manner, foreign ~ucers of dum- the unfair trade actions were it"s clear that Mike DeWine's idea
ped and subsidized imports have AIMCOR. Globe Metallurgical. of change is to repeal the 20th cenincreased their share of the U.S. Inc. and Silicon Metaltech, Inc. tury." he said.
marlcet from 15.7 peJCenl in 1989. Joining !hose companies were a
fifth producer, Alabama Silicon.
to 21.2 percenl in 1991.
Using U.S. Customs Service Inc., and six labor union locals: the
data, the petitioners said they Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers.
documented steep declines in prices Local 389; United Auto Workers of
America, Local 523; and United
according lhe companies.
Steelworkers
of America, Locals
lnduslry financial data assembled
2528.
3081.
12646.
and 5171. The
by the petitioners portray an inunion
petitioners
represent the
duslry increasingly battered by unmajority
of
ferrosilicon
production
fair impon competition, the news
release stated. The domestic in- workers in the U.S.. the release
dustry"s market share, sales and Staled.
Ferrosilicon is used primarily as
revenues have steadily declined
an
alloying agent in the production
over the last lhree years, which has
of
steel and cast iron. The Fercaused the industry to suffer in·
creasing nel loses. The U.S. roalloys Association is a trade asproducers have been forced 10 shut sociation composed or producers of
down facilities and employment in silicon. chromium. and manganese
the indUSITy has dropped sharply. alloys and metals. and specialty alThe injwy inflicted on lhe U.S. in- loys.

American Alloys. Inc. of New
Haven, a major producer of ferrosilicon alloys, is one of four
petitioners in an unfair trade complaint recently filed wilh two U.S .
governmemal agencies. it was announced today.
In addition, Looll 5171 of the
United Steelworkers of America,
which represents over 210 hourly
employees at American Alloys New
Haven Plant panicipaled in the ac·
The Ferroolloys Association an.
nounced that four of iiS member
companies, including American AI·
loys, filed trade relief actions
against importS of ferrosilicon from
six counlries. The petition alleges
that ferrosilicon producers in Ar·
gcntina, Venezuela. the People's
Republic of China, and three for·
mer Soviet republics · Kazakhstan,
Russia, and Ukraine · are dumping
fcrrosilicon in the U.S. market al
below fair value prices. The peti·
tion also alleges that the state·
owned Venezuelan producer exporting to lhe U.S., FESILVEN. is
receiving extensive subsidies.
The anti-dumping and countervailing duly petition. filed May 22.
wilh the U.S. Depanment of Commeru and the U.S. International
Trade Commission, asks the U.S.
$ovemment to impose anli-dumpmg duties sufficient 10 offset the
dumping by the prodliCetS in all of
the namM countries. It also seeks
counterVailing duties to offset the
subsidies provided by
the
Venezuelan government.
The petition details what the
companies call the less-than-fair
value pricing and subsidies used by
the foreign producers to gain an unfair advantage in the U.S. market
and the devastating effects these
tactics have had on the U.S. ferrosilicon industry. The petitioners
have calculaled that Argentine ferrosilicon is being dumped on the
U.S. market at margins ranging
from 21 to 113 percen~ that
Venezuelan fermsilicon is heing
dumped al a margin of 24 percent
and is subsidized al a rate exceeding 184 percen~ lhat PRC ferrosilicon is being dumped ala margin or 138 percen~ and that impons
from lhe three former Soviel
republics (Kazakhstan, Russia and
Ukraine) are being dumped at a 107
percenl margin, according to a
news release prepared by the companies.
Persislenl dumping at large llllrgins hu allowed the foreign
producen to sell ferrosilicon at
prices undercutting those offered
for ferrosilicon imported from the
six named countries over the past
three years. The petitioners·
analysis shows that when U.S.
producers drop their prices to compete wilh lhc traded importS. lhe
foreign prodocers respond by further reducing !heir prices. the companies added.

prises. In one closely wat&lt;:hed race.
Democratic Rep. Mary Rose Oakar
of Ohio withstood a strong chal lenger who repeatedly slammed ber
over her House bank overdrafts.
California lacked decisiveness
as a primary event - Clinton a00
Bush pulled to insurmountable

De Wine wins nomination,
targets incumbent Glenn

American Alloys among petitioners filing
unfair trade complaint against six countries

lion.

EA.

&lt;:
'•

•
••

30 percent for her nearest challenger. county commissi00t1 Timothy Hagan.
In southern Ohto, Rep. Bob
McEwen. who wrote 166 bad
checks. had a 1,005-vote lead over
Rep . Clarence Miller after all
precincts had heen counted. The
two Republican congressmen were
thrown iniO the same district by
reapportionment. An official canvass was being talcen to determine
whether a recount is required.
Iowa's four -term GOP Rep. Jim
Ross Lightfoot, who admitted to
105 bad checks, defeated political
Wlknown Ronald J. Long.
In Alabama"s Senate race, Shelby had 293.516 votes. or 61 per·
cent. with 96 percent of the
~ttCincts reponing. His main challenger, Jefferson County Commis·
siooer Chris McNair, had 131.782
VOles. or 28 perunt.
In Ohio. Lt. Gov. Mike De Wine
won a GOP pnmary for the right to
challenge Democrat John Glenn in
November.

Bush triumphs again; Clinton clinches Democratic nominaton

FOODlAND 2% LOWFAT MilK

89

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Primary adds new gloss to year of women in politics

••

GOLD 'II FRESH
GUDE 'A' IOIIELESS

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

With 99 percent of Ohio"s
precincts counled, an unofficial
tally by The Associated Press
showed DeWine with 575.774
votes, or 70 percent, 10 Rhodes"
243,413. or 30 percent
Rhodes. an aviation consuluont
in Cleveland. was making his fi~
bid for public offiCe.
He had tittle money 10 spend but
shared a familiar name with former
Gov . James A. Rhodes. The two
are not related.
"Tm in a good mood. I had a
great time. l"m not bitter. l"m oot
angry,'' Rhodes said in an inter·
view Tuesday night
Rhodes posed for a photo with
De Wine at the secretary of suote"s
office. but said there would be no
post-primary endoo;ement.
""I can"t endor.e him because I
think he's a fraud. He's a nice guy.
I' ll vote for him, but I can"t
endorse him. and l"m a lifelong
Republican."" Rhodes said.
He despaired of the choice vot·
crs face in the November election.

DOWNING CIILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSUUNCE

leads in delegate totals weeks ago
- but it was a harbinger of the fall
campatgn.
At hiS celebration, Clinton
sought to cast himself in the outsider"s role that is giving impetus
to Pcrot"s candidacy.
·"I am tired of seeing the people
who work hard and play by the
rules get the shaft,'· Clinton said .
·"We want to put the forces of the
staws quo and short-term greed on
notice: The pany"s over. We're in
for a change. We want our country
back. ''

Clinton entered the night needing just 86 delegateS 10 clinch the
nomination and was leading for
458. which would push his tolal to
2.517- well above the 2,145
needed to fashion a majority.
Bush issued a statement thanking all Americans who votul even those who chose another can-.
didate. and framed the November&gt;:
elections as two big questions :: '
·"Who has the beSI ideas for Arner-·
ica? Who do you trust to lead thiS:.
counlry?""
·
Perot got into the mix as well.
In a CBS interview, Perot .
promised if elected to ""move heav· ,
en and earth to stop the deficit
spending" but didn't say how. and
said he would not raise taxes
except as a last resort. But he·
refused to take the ""Read My Lips:
No New Taxes"" pledge Bush made
four year.; ago.
.. You can ' t ever quote me as·
saying anything that stuptd." · Perot
said.

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il The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

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BATH TISSUE ::

79(

1

4 LB.
BAG

Goodc!:~ At Powell'• Super Valu
Offer
May 31thru Juno 6, 1892
Llml11 Per Cuetomer

90

GROUND
BEEF
10LB.PACKAGE

S

90

�The

OhiO

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

3 Announcemems
Reduc•: burn on let while you
sleep! T1ke OPAL, l'lllilabl• et
Fruth PhlrMICF, 186 H. S.Cond
Sl , Middltport .

Wednesday, June 3, 1992
Page-10

4

Granddaughter feels ripped off Study: men and women are equal but
Dear ADD

LaDders: Last
November, my gnndmolher, who
is in her mid-80s, let 1wo men
who posed as water department
workers iniO her home 10 "check lhe
meier." While one man kepi her
occupied in lhe basemen~ lhe other
one rined lhrough her purse and
took S400.
Grandma called me, nearly
hysterical, saying over and over very well be a fac10r in her recent
lhatlhis loss meant she wouldn't be peculiar behavior.
ahle 10 fix lhe roof on her house. I
Also, consider the fact that people
took ou1 a $400 cash advance on who have been very poor for a good
my credit card and gave her the many years have a difficult time
money 10 fix the roof. I've also parting with money.
given her money for grocenes in
It would be perfectly appropriate
the past when she said she didn't 10 tell Grandma !hat you round her
have anything in the house lo bank book and were delighted Ul
eat and that she was hving on discover that she is now able lO
lef10vers brought in by neighbors.
repay lhe S400 she borrowed. Let
Grandma's hcallh has been dete- her lmow how pleased you are that
riorating rapidly and my mother she is no longer destitute.
insisted that she move 10 Arizona
Dear Ann Landers: I was injured
where Mom could take care of her. in an accident some time back and
When I wentiO help Grandma pack recently came mto a large sum of
her belongings, I discovered her money as a result of lhe settlement.
My boyfriend feels that when
bank book. I was shocked Ul find
!hal she has $45,000 in a savings u's time for us to become officially
account and has added to it as engaged, I should pay for my
engagement ring hecause I'm "rich
recently as last month.
I'm really angry at her for being now." He makes good money and
so dishonest with us all these can cenamly afford to get me a mce
years. Please tell me, Ann, why nng.
Also. he is insisting that my
would a person who pretended to
be so religious all her hfe feign se ttlement money be put in a
poveny and take from others? -- savings accowlt in OOth our names.
FEELING RIPPED OFF IN GARY, We have been fighting about this
for quite a while and I'm making
IND.
DEAR GARY: Lighten up on myself sick over it
Grandma. Her advanced years may
Whatever your advice is, Ann, I

Ann
Landers

By IDLARV APPELMAN
Associated Press Writer
ROCHESTER, N.Y. - A man
might gel to work by driving a
mile, turning lef~ going six blocks
and turning right, while a woman
going 10 the same JOb would tum
left at lite doughnut shop and right
at lite gas stauon.
But they'll both get there just as
surely, a researcher says.
After spending four years run ning rats and college students
through mazes, Thomas Bever concluded lhat females depend more
on landmarks to navigate, while
males use a system of vectors calculating how far and in what
direction they b'llvel.
Thus, while men are beller at
reading maps - a skill that meshes
well with their vector-based navigation - the sexes do equal! y well
overall at findmg their way around,
said Bever, a professor of psychology and linguistics at the University of Rochester.
"It's been claimed that males
are beller navigators than
females," he said Tuesday. "We
don't find that"
Bever's findings, which have
not yet been published, appear 10
support the work of Christina
Williams of Barnard College and
Warren Meek of Columbia Universi ty, who have linked :lifferences in
the way male and female rats navi-

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and lbe day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chesler Townsh•p
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
10 a.m. at the town hall to appoint
a new trustee.
CHESTER - Chester Garden
Club will hold an open meeting on
roses and a rose show on Wednesday al 8 p.m. at lhe Chester Untted
Methodist Church. Bill Twarogowski, a former Athens County
Extension Agent and noted horticulturist. will speak and judge
roses. AU Me•gs clubs and the public is invited. All rose growers are
urged to bring roses in a bot~e or
bud vase for critique.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Lodge
164 will hold its regular mccung on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Middlcpon
Lodge Hall.
THURSDAY
RACINE - Amencan Leg ion
Post 602 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post
POMEROY - Sacred Heart
Church base ment sale, Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. One day
only.
ROCK SPRINGS - Sa li sbury
Township Trustees will meet on
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the townsh •p
garage at Rock Spnngs.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeltnc
Chapter 172. OES, of M•ddlcport
will have its regular meeting on
Thursday 1 7:3 0p .m. anti will
honor and presen t pins to th e 25
and 50 year member s. Wo!lhy

Young initiated
Susan Renee Youn g, a JUniOr
accounting and pre-law maJor at
Ohio University, has been rn1Uated
into the National Honor Soc1ety of
Phi Kappa Phi.
Young is the daughter of D1anc
Young, 34401 Crew Road ,
Pomeroy. and Ron Young, 135
Rosemont Dr., Pudacah, Ky.
Th~ c&amp;remony look place
recently in Baker Ce~ter Ballroom .
Founded in I 897, Pht Kappa Ph1 ts
a national scholastic society with
headquarters at Louisiana State
University. There are 251 chapterS
al colleges and univefSilles
throughout !he United StBtes. .
To be eligible for induction,
undergraduate seniors must r.tnl: in
the upper 10 pcn:enl of !heir degree
college and have at least a 3.5
grade point average on a 4. scale.
Undelpactuatts in the final quarter
of thetr junior year with al least a
3.8 GPA are also eligible.

To host picnic
SOLOS, a Christian fellowship
of sinsle adults, wiD hold a picnic
at the home of Gary Reed ,
Reedsville, on Saturday at 5 p.m.
Those interested in going by car
pool from Pomeroy United
Methodist Church , at 4:30 p.m.,
Jbould call Rev . Eunhae Kee at
992·S788.

POMEROY - The Eagles class
of the United Methodist Church
will have a bake sale on June 3 al
Kroger.
HEMLOCK GROVE - Hemloc k Grange #2049 will mee t on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . 1n regular
session_ Denver R1cc w1U entcrtam.
POMEROY- PERl wdl meet at
I p.m. on Thursday at the sen1or
Clllzens cente r. All members are
urged to attend .
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees w1ll meet in
regular sesSion on Thursday at6:30
p.m. at the Rutland fire station . The
public IS invited.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTIOM - Preach1ng
and smgmg at the Fatth f-ull Gospel
Chun:h in Long Bottom on Friday
at 7:30p.m. Mike Pooler as spc&lt;~k ­
cr f.ellowsh•p w•ll follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
and square dance on Friday from 8
10 11:30 p.m .. sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains VFW #9053 and
the ladies' auxihary. Music will be
provided by CJ and the Country
Gen~ emen .

REEDSVILLE - Olive Town ship Trustees will hold a regular
mcctmg on Friday at 7.10 p m. at
the Shade River State Forestry
Bulid1ng on Joppa Road ncar
Rcedsvdie .
SATURDAY
LONG BOTIOM - There will
be a smorgasbord dinner on Sa tur -

day at 5 p.m. in the Long Bouom
Commumty Building. The all-you can -cat dmner will feature ham and
sovcraJ other meats, scalloped oyslcrs, homemade noodles . seve ral
entrees, etc. Dcsscns and drinks arc
mcludcd. Cost is $5 for adults and
$2.50 for ch1ldrcn.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will meet in regular
session on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Grange Hall , located on County
Road I ncar Salem Center. Rock
Springs Grange will visit Star
Grange. Star Grange will hold the
judging of the slate and national
sewing and needlework contests,
and Star Junior Grange will hold
their annual inspection . Potluck
refreshments will be served following the meeung. All members are
urged to attend.

,

room.

BULLEnN BOARD
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Research, wid reporters later.
"We need the money , and we
will not be silent until thai money
is found," she said. "People still
gel sick. People die in droves.' '
The bill IS named for Ryan
While, an Indiana teen -ager who
became one or the disease's most
prominent early victims. Ryan's
mother, Jeanne White, also testified.
"How many more mothers must
lose their precious children before
Congress keeps its word?" she
asked.

ny Masiello told Monroe as the
Senate honored him Tuesday for
his basketball and business abilities.
Senators lined up 10 be pho tographed with Monroe, known as
"Earl lite Pearl" when he played
with the New York Knicks and
Washmgton Bullets. Monroe now
owns construction and music production companies in New York
City.
"Hey, Masiello, three-second
violation," one senator complained
when the Buffalo senator wok too
long in front of the flashbulbs.

said Tuesday that the Malena! Girl
is buying a six-bedroom waterfront
mansion on Miami's formerly fashionable Millioruure's Row for more
than $4 million.
Liz Rosenberg, a spokeswoman
for Madonna in New York, said
she doesn't know precisely where
the deal standa.
'' llr.now that she was looking at
property in Florida and was in the
process of buying something,"
Rosen berg saJd.

RUTLAND - Dance at the
Amencan Legion Hall on Saturday,
8 p .m to midnight. MuSIC by
While 's Hill Band . The public is
invited.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 will be holding a
car wa&lt;h at Plcasers in Pomeroy on
Saturday, from 9 am. Ul4 p.m.
REEDSVILLE - SOLOS, a
Christian fellowship of single
adults, w111 hold a picnic at the
home of Gary Reed, Reedsville, on
Saturday at 5 p.m. Those interested
m going by car pool from Pomeroy
Unned Methcdisl Church, at4 :30
p.m., should call Rev. Eunhac Kee
at 992-5788 .

ELIZABETH LAWSON

awarded
Oldsters retain Lawson
URG scholarship

their bite

CANTON, Mass. (AP) - Dent.al cxpens say nearly 60 percent of
America's senior citizens today
have at least some of their teeth, a
major improvement over 30 years
ago.
According 10 officials at Col gate- Hoyt Laboratories, preven uve
dentiStry, a better diet and the
availability of nuoride has led 10 a
steady decline m Uleth decay.
However, common oral problems su ll exiSt, including exposed
roots and root cavities, decay
around old fillings, periodont.al or
gum d1 sease and irritatio ns and
sores from dentures.

With SURE•IELL~ 3-step
recipes and my own fresh
fruit, I made delido\J.I
strowbeny jam in minutes.

Elizabe th Nell Lawson, a 1992
grad uate of Eastern Local High
Sc hool ha s bee n awarded the
Trustees Scholarship from the University of Rio Grande.
The scholarship is awarded to
graduating se n1ors in the top 15
percent of their class.
In school, Lawson partiCipated
m Student Council, Future Homemakers of America, and was on the
newspaper staff. She IS also acuve
m 4-H and the Meigs County
Junior Fair Board. She has received
a number of 4-H awards . The
daughter of Delbert and Eleanor
Lawson of Raone, she plans to
major m secretanal st udies.

NEW YORK (AP) - New Kids
on the Block singers Jordan Knight
and Danny Wood sh1fted uncomfortably in courthouse chairs and
Signed autographs in the hall as a
copyright infringement trial got
under way.
Courthouse employees stuck
their heada inUl U.S. District Judge
Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum's
coortroom to catch a glimpse of the
stars Tuesday.
Knight, Wood and a fnend,
Tommy Page, are accused of stealing the chorus of the song "I'll Be
Your Everything," wrillen by
George Soule and recorded by
Percy Sledge in 1974.
Page recorded a song by that
name in 1990. His lawyer says the
three never hcanl Sledge's song.

Begins Thurs., June 4
8 Weeks '59'"
Location: Big Bend Hea~h

Call992-2849 for more information

HOME DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE
THURS. &amp; FA! . JUNE 4 &amp; 5
!O:OOA.M. to 9:00P.M.
Gloria Oiler - 742-2076
Sl. At 325, LangsVIlle, Oh10

RITE AID PHARMACY
SAVE$$$
Let Us Price Your Next
Prescription or Your Refills
from Another Store. We Can
Save You Moneyl We Will
Beat Any Computilor's Price'
GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
Terry Spurlin, RPH

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- Former basketball star Earl Monroe
held court at lhe stale Senate.
"Your presence here brings out
the little boy in me and I'm sure for
a lot of people here," Sen. Antho-

SURE·JELt EASY STRAWBERRY JAM
NO

EXPERIENCE

2 cups crushed strawbemes
4 cups sugar

NECESSARY

I box SURE·}ELL" Fruit Pectm

lj4 cup water
I MIX s/rawbcme.1 and sugar thoroughly. k t asu:k 10 minule5
2 SIIR SURE·If l.L'wilh wafer in saucepan Bring ro a OOi( srming constantly.
Boll / mmute. Removr from heat

To Ust Lt' u Sugar W Recrpes Im ide SURf·{EU• Llghl

II you or a member of your
family were lo geloidt or 1-..vw an
accident, the Ia" thing you .hould
ha.e ID worry about is paying
mediool bills. Call us lor allhe

Nationwide's health
inouronce plano.

btst for strowbrrritJ

•JELLdD

Fruit Pectin -

Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
Moy 15, 111Q2

mil•.
The date ael lor
comrlelion of thie work
ahal be aet forth In the
biddl119 proposol."
Each bidder ahall be
required to file with hio bid
a certified check or

Conlrocl Sileo
Legal Copy No. 112-540

guardnil reconatruction.
Proloel Length: 1ot.l
mlleo.
..The u .. aet lor oomp&amp;etion of thia work ah..ll be a
oat forth In tho bidding
propoul."

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
S..lod prapo111lo will bo
rocolvod .r tho oftlco of U..
Dlroctor of tho Ohio
Department of Trana·
portation, Columbuo, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
Standard Time, Tu•dly,
June B, 1982, lor lm-

provement.ln:
M~ga County, Ohio, for
Improving MEG-7- 13.t2,
Stole Routo 7,
by
r..urfaclng ahoulder• and
repairing

povomonl

Profecl ond Work Longth:

20,851 linear leal or 3.05

Longth : 9.81

Card of Thanks

Tho Family 01
EVA McKINNEY
Would like to thank
avwyone for Ill their
ltlndneu and IUpport
during the cle8lh of
our mother. The
outpour ollova llrom
her frlenda and
nelghbollltouched
our he.lrta deeply.
Spect.llhanka 1o the
Rtrtland EMS alflff,
Rev. Samuel Basye,
Blrchllald Funeral
Home and Dr. Gerald
Vallee and staff.
Mary Lou, Dennis,
Sam and Families

CLASSIFI EDS
... Th" W:oy

thoUSind dolara, or a bond
lor len per cent of hio bid,
poyobio to tho Director.
Biddor muot apply, on the
proper
lorma,
lor
qualification at le..t tan
doyo prior lo tho dole HI lor
opening bido In occordan&lt;o
with Chopter 5525 Ohio
ReviMdCodo.
Plane and apec:lficationa
are on fila In the Department
of Tranaporl.ltlon and lhe
office of the Oiatrlcl Deputy
Director.
The Director reaervee the
right to reject any and all
bido.
JERRYWRAY,
Diroclor of Tronoportation
(5127; (6) I, 2tc

In Memory

2

In Memory Of
IVA "Kay"
LOGAN
Who Passed
Away One year
Ago Today,
June 3, 1991

I)I

MASON COUNTY - 25 acres m/1 A 1 1/2
story, 8 room house, large bam and s mall
utility building . Overlooks the Ohio and
Kanawha Rivers. Price Negotiabl e'
Call Today For All The Details '

[@] ;I

laJAI. j.!OUSINC:
"""""MN

Sandy Dunn, Broker, 675 -4053
Carolyn Thome. Anoc . llrok•r, 882 ·2447
Nancy Conlerbury, 675 -402..4
Betty Sellards. 675 ·5604
Jill Maynard, 675 ·2.HI
Scndy Ellos, M2-2221
Fern O'Ne il, 675 -l09i

Dwight, Family and

fREE ESTIMATES

HAULING SERVICE

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

36970 Bal RUI Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

•SAND -GRAVEl oOIRT
oliMESTONE

(614) 992·3470

"Wt Ott The Joh Done Now"
Call AI Tromm
614·742·2328
,. __2o_,_,_
•. _r._p.____••_,._n_nc_•_•_A_n_na_b.....
te

51151'9211 rna. ·•

TEAFORD GOLF
AND TROPHY
985·3961
Lenons 512.50
6 Lessons 160.00

Club Repai',
Trophies, Plaqwes

liEf ESTIMAlES

985·4473
667·6179
2-1-92-tln

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

Licensed and Bonded

1·800·848·0070

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949-2627 or
1-800-ll37-1460
lawn Mowing,
Fe~ilizJng, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree

Trimminp &amp; Removal
R•ldenlia I Comm•cial
Free Eatimatee
41261112 Hn

CALIFORNIA
TANS

Your 1.«ol Tto,- -Bib Dtcdtr

15 Sessions....$25

b. SO Wot, AliM11, Olio •S!l-381 S

12 Sesslons ....$20
1 Sesslon .... $2.25

6 ML Out Eagle Ridt!t

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
EAGLE RIDGE ROAD· Appro• 40acres of !and, of which
about 20 acres are bllable Has a barn With hayloh and an
equ1pmen1 shed Public water and electric a\lrulablo Many
great build1ng sites and water for animals.
$30,000

JUST

$24,000

$30,000

MIDDLEPORT· Front 51. ·If rental property is what you've
been looking tor we've got 11 In this house you have a 2
bedroom apartment downstwrs . and a one bedroom apan ment up. also has aluminum sid1ng and a one car garage

$18,000

OOITIETURNER, Broker................................992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS..................... ........ ..............992-3056
DARUNESTEWART ........ ............... ................... 992-6385
SANDY BUTCHER ............... ................ ~ .............. 992-5371
SHERYLWALTERS,Choohlre ........................... 367-0421
JERRY SPRADUNG ............................... (304) 882-3498

[~ST

MAIN

DARWIN, OHIO
7/J1(91/tln

r- - - - - - - -

CHUCK'S BOAT·
AUTO REPAIR
LOW LABOR RATE
15 'Yo OFF On Most
Boat Parts

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT- Granl Street- A VERY CHARMlNG ~ 2
story home w1th 6 rooms. 3 BR's, new sh1nglo roof, newer

...,_,.._

FOR SALE

Agriculture
Lime

304·273·5555

•FIREWOOD

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
4-4-92-tla

4-9-lfn
omos -Pete-WIIdUfs
Molort:ycl•s-Eic.

'l(p.tnryn
'JI{ecufcws
"SPECIAUZING IN SLAT&lt;
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761

Welcome Slates
$20.00
614-992-2242

CHARLIE'S
SMAll DOZER
WORir DRIVEWAY
WORI a1d
liMESTONE
DEliVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

412J'j211fn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVKE
Addlllono
Work
-PIIMnbing

C. YOUNG

S-1 8-'92-1 ... pd.

NEW LISTING- 12 Ol3 Acres ol VACANT GROUN D lo·

'992-6215 .

cated on SA 684m Harrisonv1Uo ASKING $12 .000

PORTLAND· BEAUTIFUL· Log Home wtlh 220B sq ft. ol
hving space! 2 baths , 3 SA's, large porch , approx 3 H2
acres. Many, many e•tr·as. MUST SEE I Asking $64,000

BUSINESS BUILDING- Middleport- Large bu1ldong w'lh 2
es&amp;ablished businesse• downstairs and 2 remodelod apartments upsalairs. GREAT RENTAL INCOME! $53,000

EXPERIENCE AND QUAUTY GO HAND IN HAND... AT
CLELAND REALTY YOU'LL FIND JUSTTHATI PUT
YOUR HOME IN THE HANDS OF THE PROFES·
SIONAL WHO'LL GET YOU RESULTSt
HENRY E. CLELAN0 ............... ............................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER........................................... 949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL ................... ...........................9-4!1-2660
OFFICE .................................... ~ .........................992-22 59

~y,Ohio

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

P.O. lu 194-Wtlw Moy
UOIIE, 01110
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

Tho onnulf roport Form
BIIOPF lor tho Kfbblo
Foundation, Barnard V.
Fultz, Truotoa, lo ovlliloble
lor public lnopoctlon 11
Bomllrd V. Fultz lllw Olllco,
111:. W. Socond Stroe~
Pom•oy, Ohio 45761,

during regular buelneaa
houro lor 1 period ol 110
day• aubaaquent lo
fUbiicllion of thlo notico.
(5) IS, 20, 27;
(6) 3, 10, 11, 24, 7lc

lost
1yr old m•l• boxer,
reward .
TuppeB
Plein•
Aeedsv111•. lrlendly, 1nswrs lo
bandit. 614-667-6346 "' 614-~53915

LOST 2 mille goats, SoulhslcM,
S1rte1n Mile Ad, brown medium
helghl
&amp;
black
1n11ller,
REWARD, 304-675-3985

Yard Sale

(Fer.iy l8tlo ~ s..l

PARTS ,ERYKE
Mowen •
Saws

a.

• Weedeaters

614·949·2804
~

Tyrn

3-1

• Announcemenls

&amp; VIcinity
1147 Bob McCofmlck Road ,
Thurs. 41h. Frl 51h, Sat 6th.
24 Stnlth8rt Av• , 614, 615, F~tml ­
lure. Orapn, HolM Interior,
Clolhlog , Toys, Many Other
Items, 9-1

3 F1mily Sal• 1056 S.Cond
Avenue, June 4th Tt~ru 61ti
3 hmllr: June l.4,5th. i-7, 1
lllln From Porter, 8 Mites From
Cheshire, On M4, Rain Or

Shine,
lnt , Crafts lg.
WomensHome
Clolhlng, Much Much
lion!
l5 To 160 On Rt . 5!4, 4 Mitea To
llorg•n C.n181 Road, Flr'lt
Houu lol:a B1by Thing•' Wed ,
&amp; Thura.
4 Family Y1rd &amp; Craft SaM
Bulewtl'- Townhouse, June 4th,
5th. 9:00.?
4 F•mlly Y1rd Sale· June Sth ,
6th. 9a m -? Rain Or Shine

Mlac;. tlems.L ~ruck Mat, CloU•a

Adwenc. . OE.AOLINE. 2:00 p.m

tht dlr bekn tM ad 11 to Nn
Sundar edftlon - 2·00 p.m
Frido,. ......., od•ton · 2oOO

Cornw 01 Van Bu,..n &amp; Htgh Sl ,
Vinton
Mens, Wom.nt, &amp;
Ctllldrans Clothing. Fumltwe,
l R. Water Bed, Sp,.ads, Curlalns, 111 Time Sale! 611 Thru
6151'92. Follow Signs.
First Time Ev• Yard Sale! June
4th, Slh, I. 6th. 2 HousM Below

Bowling Alley

Fri. 5th I Set, 6th. 1 Mile Phi
Jumbo, C.n18r'llry On Grehem
School Ad . l--4 :30.
Fri, s.t, 1~ . White Road Ofl
Rt.1i0, Furnltt.lre. NiniMWiot
Bikes, ClothM. Top, More!
'
Friday, Salurday, Across From

G1nge Sale: Con Mill Road, AI
A-Frame, Wid• Varietr 01
Clothes. Cunalnt, Etc. June 2· l4th, ~ . m -6p.m.
Garage S•l• Friday, S•turday,
9-5. Lots Of Clalhing, Misc. 611
Shoestring Ridge.
G1rage Sale. Th...• &amp; Frt, 1:005:00, 1061 S4cond AYenus, Nice
Clothing, Lots Ot Misc. lemt.

Glganlk: 4 F1mlty O.n~ge Salt:
Rain Or Shkle, Saturday June
6th Ontr! Bargains ~
Clothing. lhn's Llrgt Women.
CNidntns. Toys, Baby fteme'
Household
ttem•
Books'
Otpr.ealon Glasa, si-.o, Much
...,., 211 11cc.. ,, Rood ...,.

O.CWgtt

cren

Aooct,' t 112

MUft From Rout• 7, Watch Few
Signs.

Huge Nmm.g. ua. : June 1st6th. 4104 Patriot ADM. Cadmus,
Ot!to. ant~, lYon, clothing,
collectlbfta. clahes, lupperwar.,
ml.c t-5.
Jun. 3rd, 4th. 2S ~I Ave 9q
O..nce, lnlart, Mise.
., ·

JuM 5th And tth. • ....
teneous ltlfrtl. I Mille Out Stilt
Route M1, From Gallipolis.

June, Slh, &amp; 6th: W""'Vht '""'
PaUo Set; B. .prud•: HolM

c..,..

lntl&amp;riot; Prtnc.u Moue~
111; Men, Womtns Clothing;
HouMhold lt~tms · Route l
Souttl, One Mile
Boer Au~

Rood.

3 Announcements
ADOPTION; lots of

nna

On

Mldc:KIIIon Est81n, Acroee From

CttttMcte Clolt

eou,.. Friday

S.turdly, 1-4. Furnttu,.., Drllpas'

Hou..ootd, t.ooo, t.ooo or Slum
tovt, tendef. HRain W l l t - - .

lnd Clrll . . .tt

your baby

k1 our cc»ontM home eur·
roundod
by
parb
and
pl•yrn~~tn . Protnalonats In our
1arly lhlrtln aw~~tt the truaured
Umn lo ~~ wtth your chUd.
Donna &amp; Chuck welcome your
collect c1111 •nytlme 21S.328-

21'M .

t

Gallipolis

June 4th I 5th1 t To ? 1lM,q
Frt. 111h Vinton ".,.,....·
'

POMEROY, OH.

Mob1le Homes A GREAT REN TAL INVESTMENT! As~ng

Found
Hall
Chow
Hall
Shephard F•m•l•, On Pleasant
Hill Road. 614·245-5366.

on

992·7553

make an offer!

$20,000 CMrner will accepl reasonable otter I

Found . ill1ck l•bfador Ooa
Vicinity· 0 J. White Road, G1l~
lipolit . 614-446-2l07.

Old Bktw.. Sc:hool On 554.
81by Clothtl, tltma, Boys 2-4
Glrt1 10-14, lot1 Miac!
'

Cuatom Paintings

N G turnance &amp; hot water healer, full bsml carport, shed,

RUTLAND- Beech Grove Rd.· Approx 7 acres Wllh three

Found 5129 Black puppr, whtte
lipped back ,_. &amp; lhroel,
orange collar. Main Sl Point
Pii.IISint , 304-67S-5037

p.m. Salurdlir.

949·2823

small lcn ced lol lMMEDIATE POSSESSION! $34 ,900

MIDDLEPORT- One floor !ramo cabin type house w1th 4
rooms . 2 bedrooms, bath. gas space heat. Noods some
repa~rs ASKING $8,000 make an offer!

Lost &amp; Found

6

ALL Yard Sat.a Must Be Paid In

742-3030

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

•LIGHT HAULING

1

Washer - woritl , 304-675-3176.

Mlddl~rt

New SCA WOLFF
Bed SL24
Call lor AppLToday

614·949-2202

Cheshire, OH.

Pup. 614·388~900 .

178 HINtop UIWt, Rrst L..ft A~
Oft Nolglobo&lt;hood Rood.

VALLEY INC.

r•..,.,,...,...,., ..

r. R.ro-r

wood , 29 plr. ' ' " '·
Pulpwood and aawk»g size.
Umbsd on grownd. Roldsi&lt;tt.
Easy access 304-89S-~7 lfter
5 OOPM

FrM

Co. Rei 3,
Leading CNek Rd.

Rd.« 1 ML From Basl.an

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

St. Rt.7

608

992·7013 or
992·5553
OR TOll FREE

t2-5-tfn

Tror-BUt 1\Uen No• In Stotlt.

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
992·2259

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODHS

PH. 614-992-5591

o..,. Sprint: Shipment or

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

Fr•• German Shephard puppln
lo • good home, 614-182-5421.

PARTS

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

NOW OPEN!

~

pu~le1, will ba tnedlum
cal1614-m-6855.

WHALEY'S AUTO

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND ClEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER liNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limestone,
Di~. Gravel and Coal

.W.UCWELD'S

lite,

7

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

(all 614-992-6637

EaSiern High Scflool

••

:Ut2192

Real Estate General

RT. 7· Appro)( 16 acres of land with an 6-room 4 bedroom
water Located near the

ltoMII Olal: CIM ......_ PINI, CIUIIIM, C»&gt;GII

(No Sunday Calls)

WICK'S

Cute

Living Room Suite, Kittens &amp;

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

4/21/92/1-

Friends

farm house, dnlled well , and TPC

.....,.c.._,..,~~

FREE ESTIMA'ITS

2171. locoult.
POMIIOY, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO
Real Estate General

5664.

COMMERCIAL and RE.'iiDENTUL

Acrots F,.. Past Offko

"H.Ip~ fot~

Missed by Husband,

4 while lullen• &amp; mother cat .
CIIICO mothtr &amp; ktnen, 304-&amp;l'S-

7 Wk Olc::l Pu~et · YelkJw lib,
Mind &amp; lrith s.11tr. 614-44&amp;-

BILL SLACK

central a1r

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO

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

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

GREAT WEEKEND GET-AWAY!

4 long Halted Kittens 6144411707

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

ALL MAliS
Bring It In Or Wo
Pick u~.

Real Estate General

675-5540

762ti

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

5126/1 mo.

882-2405

3 Month Old Malt Puppr, Pan
Chow &amp; Part Husky. 6M-36/-

Hem~etts Mobile

MICROWAVE OVEN
aid VCR REPAIR

a1d Badges

Point Pleasanl

3 blk k1t1en s, liTter tralntd, 304675-3776

,....,

Director of Traneportation
(5) 27; (6) 3, 2lc

New Haven

2 Yr. Old Black Border Cofl ...
614- J88-8B30.

CaD

Pavement Width: var·

REALTY

100 h of prlv..:y e.nct, 1 ft tell,

musllakt down, 304-61'5-6813.

1391 Salford School Rd.

mUu.

lou a.
The data aat for
completion of thie work
c•tified check or c.uhl.,'a ahall ba aet forth In the
check tor an amount equal blddi119 propoul."
Each bidder ohall bo
to five 1Mf cent of hia bid,
but In no event more than required to file with hi• bkf
fifty thouoand dollon, or a a certified check or
bond lor len per cent of thlo caahler'a check for an
amount equal to live
bld, poyoblo to tho Director.
Biddera muat apply, on percent of hil bid, but In no
tha proper lonna, lor qualifi. evant more than filly
cation atl-1 tan clop prior thouund don.., or a bond
to the dlt. aat for opening lor t .. por ..,, of hlo bid,
bide In •ccordance with payable to the Dlroctor.
Biddor muolapply, on tho
Chapter 5525 Ohio Rovlood
proper
lorma,
for
Codo.
Plana and apeclfic•tlona qualification at INti len
are on fila ln the Dep.-tment doyo prior to the dole oet lor
of Tr1naport.tion and the opening bide In accord~r~ce
office of U.. Diotricl Deputy with Chapter 5525 Ohio
RovtMd Code.
Oir.ctor.
Plana and epeclflcationa
The DirKtor reaerv• the
right to reject .ny and all are on fila In the Department
of Transportation and the
bido.
JERRY WRAY oftlco of tho Diotrlct Deputy
DIRECTOR OF Director.
The Director reaerv• the
TRANSPORTATION
right
to reject any and all
(5) 27; (6) 1, 2lc
bido .
JERRYWRAY,

eaahler'a cheek tor an
amount equal to lin
perc1nt of hla bid, but In no
avant more than filly

MIDDLEPORT - Brownell Avenue - A neat 3-bedtoom
homo w1th basement and garage , equ1pped k1tchen, and

I
992-5479
az I
~I NA110NWIDE
I!!JI '!iS~~~C!
I .........
I ---............................
.......... ~---~

-------------

Public Notice

LANGSVILLE - How w ould you l1ko a moo 52 acre farm ?
Well here 11 is Appro)( 45 .50 acres lanced, w1tt1 about 10
aaes tillable Also s1n1ng on 1t IS a two bdrm home with a
t1repla ce, and a two car garage Has well water that has
never gone dry . Even has a l11tl e 11mber acres .
$49,000

PeKJuyt' ~

-- -----------I
40¢on
I
~l

I 0:00 A.M., Ohio Standard
Ti11o, T-y. June t,
lor lmprcwornonto In:
Gtlllo and lltlgo C:O..nty,
Ohio tor lmprovlng varloua
routaa and aectlona by

You should never
have to worry about
medical bills.

Notr· Meaw rr IIJgor (JrJd frurl &lt;'UK tly and do nor change amounts or JOm will rtol \t'l pmpn/;,

A J){)li.J/0 masher

Uon, Columbua, OhkJ, until

u.v

ControotSoleo
~Copy No. 12-611

OFFICE 992-2886

detai~ about

3 STIR mutufl's rogerher unrU sugar b complet~ly dissolved and rw longer
grainy, Pour mto pla.mc containers Cowr ILl stand at room temperaturr 24 hour;
51orr rn frrt-zer Altrr opemng. 5!Dfl' in rrfrlgrrmor. Make5 about 4 18 01 1w ntwrH:n.

$5.00 Off Transfers
$3.00 Off New

1

Julia Dianne Riffle has been
named the recipient of an $8,000,
two-year scholarship Ullhe Columbus College of An and Design.
She is the daughter of Frank and
Frana Riffle of Chester, and a 1992
graduate of Eastern High School.
She graduated in the Ulp I 0 of her
class.
The scholarship was awarded
following a national scholarship
contest Aa a part of the competiuon, R1ftle was requined Ul submit
her portfolio to the school.

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propotalo will bo
received •t tha oHice of t1w
Director of tho Ohio
Department of Trarwporta-

TBIIY-BI£T

Monlh Old Pr.gn11nt Longhelred

C.llco C11. 614-446-1803.

- ~ ----

Co1ditioners, Heat Pun~~ts.
Femaces &amp;Now
Water Heaters.

UCINEr OH.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
15, 111Q2

Each bidder ahall ba
roquirod to fila with hio bid a

Projoct

Scholarship winner

&amp;

Fitness

r~~eonetruction.

JULIA RIFFLE

u.v

No. t2-661

DIET CLASS

UNit PRICE CON"mACT
Soolecl pr.P...Io wlll bo
r-vod 11 tho olfico oltho
Director of the Ohio
Department of Tr.n•
porti!Uon, Colurnbua, Ohio,
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio
Standard Timo, Tueodoy,
June I, 1112, tor lm ·
provamanta In:
Athono, Moigo, VInton
Countlae, Ohio for
Improving State Route 32;
ooctlono (0.00) by guardrail

MIAMI (AP) - Madonna is
buying a house in Florida.
The Miami Herald, quoting

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF 01110
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbuo,Ohlo
15, 18V2
Controct ioloo legal Copy

I I

Quabty Hi Effkiency Air

949·2671

1 White ShepMrd, 5 Mo'a Old. 5
112 Wk Old ,:em,.. Kilton, One 8

l0•12 metll b6dg, 304..71-1504.

'

investigate whether there are physiological causes.
In his study, student volunteers
had to find their way through a figure-eight maze in tunnels beneath
the University of Rochester's psychology building. Others ran a
computer version of lhe maze.
On the computer, when symbols
marking the intersections and the

The possibility that men and
women navigate the same way as runner's direction were removed
male and female rats is "fascinat- from the maze, lhe women's pering," said Dr. Bruce McEwan, a formance dropped sharply. The
neurobiologist at Roclr.efcller Uni- males weren't affected.
versity who specializes in sex difBut when the shape and proporferences.
tions of lhe computer maze were
McEwan has found differences diswned, leaving the landmarks the
in the male and female hippocam- same, the females did much better.
pus - a part of the brain that has
In the underground tunnels,
been shown 10 affect navigation in women were much worse than men
rats. "I don't know if that could at running the maze in two direc .
account for differences in behavior, lions - from start to finish and
but it's certainly tempting to think baclr. again . So were female rats
thai maybe they're related," he running a smaller version of the
said.
maze.
Bever said most people, espeBever thinks that's because the
cially women, use both the male females memorized a sel of landand female systems 10 navigate. marks to find their way through the
The male system is actually more maze. To run lhe maze the opposite
primitive, he said.
way, they had 10 recognize the
"Having a landmark representa- landmarka in two directions, which
tion is a much smarter way 10 get is more diff~eult.
around ," he said. "Evolution
Males, on the other hand, could
doesn't need us to walk around use the same vecUlrs - walk 10
wilh blindfolds."
feet forward, turn right, walk 20
He said he doesn't know why feel - in either direction in the
the sexes gravitate wward different symmetrical maze.
systems of navigation but hopes Ul

WASHINGTON (AP) - Elizabeth Taylor viSited Capitol Hill 10
demand that the government live
up 10 1ts promise to spend nearly Sl
billion a year to help people with
AJDS.
The actress was among several
people who told a Senate commitlee Tuesday that spendmg on the
Ryan White Care Act has fallen far
s hort of the levels authorized by the
law, signed by President Bush in
1990.
"We got a lot of tip serv~ce and
very little cold, hard cash," Miss
Taylor, chairwoman of the American Foundation for AIDS

Hauling Products.

Bfii£118VO£~

untdentified real estate sources,

ME MAKE STRAWBERRY JAM? Now I CAN!
j

gale 10 differences in hormone
exposure before birth.
They found that when female
rats run mazes, they orient themselves in relation 10 objects in lhe
room such as computers or cans,
while male rnts rely exclusively on
the gebmetric proportions of the

ApprnodM-'acturod

1111:n rna:nlfl.

---Names in the news.---

Community calendar
matron invites all 25 and 50 year
members to auend the mecung .
Refreshments will be served fol lowing the meeting by the chapters
past matrons.

IITrDTUII:'DIII

different at finding their way around

will take it because I don'tlmow my
own mind anymore. I'm beginning
to regret that I ever got litis sertlemenl It has caused nothing bul grief.
-- KATHY IN LONG ISLAND
DEAR LONG ISLAND: No
maner how much money a woman
has, her fiance should buy the
engagement ring, even if the s10ne
is so small you can't see it under a
magnifying glass.
As for pulling your accident
selllement money in a joint savings
account, I would be wary of a
fellow who would make such a
suggestion.
Since New Y orli: is not a community property state, what's yours is
yours and your fiance would have
no claim on it after you're married if
you kept it in your own name. Sinet
the sum is considernble, I suggest
you talk to your lawyer so you arc
clear on exactly what should be done
to protect it
Gem of the Day: Before you
borrow money from a friend, decide
wh1ch you need the most hecause
you are sure to end up with one or
the other.
Fteling pressured to lulve sex'
How wdl-inform£d are you' Write
for Ann Lalllkrs' booklet "Sa and
the Teen -age r." Send a selfaddressed, long, busintss-sue
en velope and a check or money
order for $3 .65 (this includes
postage and handling) to : Tetns.
c/o Ann Lalllkrs, P.O. Bo&lt; ll562,
Chicago, Ill. 606JJ-0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

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

Giveaway

Avon- buy

Neighborhood Yard Sate: 1J2
01

sell- cont1c1 Frtd-

dll, 614-~92 - 2520

Mite on At.l

o.ora..

et.H

Road. Thur~, ~rll S.f.IA.II.-?

Pt. . .,.. Vetloy Road, 111 Nair
,.,.,..,. Hlllo Follow Slgno
TniCidolld And HolM lnl«tar.
... lqoee, Colno ...... Eli
Tuea, Wed, rt.n.'
'

�Wednesday, June 3, 1992
Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SN&gt;\FU® bv Rrure Beattie

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

44

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

M1lea Out BulaviUa Pllta, Cloth·
lng, M1sc 9-5

On

Rt. 35

Garden

SSOO Off Purchas• Price (M Any

~w Home At Elaee Home Cen-

ter, Grut Selection, Fr.. S.I-Up
And O.llvef'l! Call 614·m-t220

Tart

Apartment Yard Sala·
Saturday, June 6th. Only Slit

Compltlely rtmodeted trallw,
AC, 2 car garage, 1 1t2 acres ol
land, Middleport, Ohio. 6t4·992·

This YNrl Several Apartmanls
Par11clpatlng. Rain Cancels . 9-?

3342

Of Hop. Apostolic
C hurch Ku.auga, Ohio W11d, g..·
Voice

0

W1ll Bargain: Everything Must
Go 1 Sat June 6th, 86 Sanders
Ort vt, Ford RHH Htlch , Gnls

rhu, FurnltuJI.

Yard Sale, Bake Sale 50 Ohio
Ava, Brlclll Home Ba.. ct. Swtmmlng Pool , GOC Grounds, 9-6
4th,Sth,6!h

Pt . Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
7 Family Yard Sate, Jun• 5-6,
IJ.OOAM-4 OOPM . Cancel lt rein
Boat, child organ, c.:lolhts all
slue, afloes, IIIIer, too many
ltemalo mention. 5 milel out Rt
87 turn right on Mason County
50 (Gunvllle Ridge 1112 miles)
Black lop ro.ad
7 tam1ly Corner 4th &amp; Aollms,
New Haven June Jrd &amp; 4th
Lots olltems

Big Garage Sala, June 4,5,6 9 00.5 ODPM, 5 miles ott Rl 2 at
1430 Jerrya Run Rd, nice lumlture, baby bed, clothes bolt
moto,. &amp; much mort
Big Garage Sate, West Columbia, WV June 3,4 1 ~,6, 9.00-5 00,
Flrn Time Sate, Home made 2
whael tractor running boards,
b..:i Hners, truck topper, lots anllqu. dishes, clolha&amp;, old radio&amp;
&amp; much mora Large sale Coma
out Uevlng Rd 310 mLias toward
Wuhlngton GrMn Hous.. watch
lor signs

· I cure my hu sband' s hiCCups by scartng
htm 1 have our broker ca ll and say
the market s down 900 pomts

t===========-r:==========Pomeroy,
Middleport

t8

&amp; Vicinity

1--------'---Garage Sale - June 4&amp;5, 9am-1,
next t o Tuppers Ptams- Chester
wattr oN1ce. Rain or shine

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rlr:k Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auclloneer, co mplete
auction
service
Ucansed
ft6,0tllo &amp; West VIrginia 304m -5785

9

Wanted to Buy

Don'! Junk h! S~Jt Ue Y~r NooMejor
Applian«s,
Woritlng
Color TV' a, VCR s, Microwaves,
Atr Cond111onars, Etc 614 -2561238

Old marbles. toys, com1c books
lanterns , p1cluras and furniture
Osby Martm 614-992 -7441

Big Sala, Back Yard 2625 Jefferson Ava. Frl &amp; Sat, June 5 &amp; 6
Acrosslrom Ordnanetl ballfield

Standmg !Imber, will par lair
pr~cu, call Jerry Runyon, 614 -

Flrsl Tlma Yard Sale, 6112 miles

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos
With Or Wit hol/1 Motors Call
Larrv lively 614-388-9303

out Jerrya Run Rd, JuM 3,4,5
? Couch, chair, lamps,
books &amp; lots or misc. Watch tor
Signs, Rain cancals .
9 00 lUI

Garage Sate, 2S'I5 Mt Vernon ,
Thurs &amp; Frl, 9·00.? Ant1qua rurntture, tools , lola m1sc
La wn lurnilura b&amp;ddmg, linens,
stereos , cookware , clothmg ,
much more. Tues-Thu rs , 2402
Ml Vernon Ave .
M C A.R A

Fund Ra1ser Rummage Sale, Sat June 611'1, 8 003 00, Burde\1e Addn, B•g 25 cent
sale Apprec•ale your suppor1

Moving Sale, TMurs t=rl &amp; Sat 4
mtles Rl 62, dishes , fabric ,
clothing, books, 1\Jrntture, J-04675-6979
Yard Sale Sat June 6 9 OOPM6 OOAM, 13 mtles south Rt 35
Sou thSide Lots baby items ,
clothes (crib, stroller, car seats)
lots household 1lems, desk s,
dresser, cha1r.11 ale Ram date
Juna 1l
Yard Salt, 1312 Viand St, Jurw 56, tablu, wrlngerYwashar, baby
It ems, clothes, etc
Yard Sate, 2 m1las Nor1h of
Lakin, WV Wad Thurs &amp; Sal
Below Pomeroy Bndge
Yard Sale, 202 Walnut St, nartto
Hender1on Trailer Cour1, June
1!11 -Sih 9 OOAM-? Glassware,
dlshe&amp;, freezer, muct-1 mort old
stu"
Yard Sale , 2407 Jefferson Avl,
Fr1&amp;Sat 900 - 400
Yard Salt, June 3 &amp;. 4 M
Froendls resident, County Rd 7
o r Sasslrass Rd 9 00-5 00 tach
day, good clothing, housai'1old
1tems, Gravely walk bai'11nd
w1.1111ac hments, several tam1 hes,
priCIIS good

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
2-mlte&amp; S Tupptrs Plains, Owl
Hollow Ad, 3rd house on right,
June 4,5 5, 9 to?
J-l amlly Juno 4 &amp; 5 road under
Pomeroy -Mason Br1dge Sum
mar dothmg hoosahold lttm&amp;,
miSC
5-lamily yard sale, Thursday,
4th -71 1"1, ant 1que5 and collec
t1blas, I\Jr!llture
ho\Jsehold
1tems , baby clothes, baby !1ems,
stere o t ~r es , tools miSe Take
3J toward Athens , turn lett omo
681 toward Albany, 1 1f2ml on
tefthand s1de S1gns posled
5-lamtly, June 4 5 Western sad
d!e,eurc•se
equ1pmenl, a1r
hoday table clothes, to ys C 8
ba ss unit, etc. Skate-a-Way 9-4
Rain cancels
All Yard Sa les Must Be Patd In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
day before the ad I• to nm,
Sunday edllton - t OOpm Frtday,
Monday
edllmn
10 OOa m
Sa turday
Backya rd
s ale
m1sc .
household ~oods , lovely clothIng, most s1zes, targ1 variety o f
shan , verv reasonable, 9 lO-?
t92 Baer:h Street , Mtddlepon ,
Ph
Carport Sale- 4 tamtly, June 4th
on ly Baby lltma, mans m1sc .
home Interior, ctothmg lot s
more Danville Follow s1gns
from Rl. t24

Dave

Spencer's
residence,
Racme, Sat urday, June 6 G1rl's
clolhes stze 1-3 loys, adult
clothes, household lttms roll
away bed, 101• ol mite.
Friday Juna 5th, one d1y only
Pooler residence on Texu Rd ,
nor1h of Chester
Clothes,
washer, kit chenware, home In·
tenor, plano music, more
Garage Sale- 32797 Pine Grove
Rd , Aadne, June 4, 5, 6
Grapevlnt wreaths, sweeper,
more
Garage Sal• rain or shin•
ctothel, movies, po.ters, mise ,
St Al .7 beside Wesams Canst .
June 4,5,6
June 2nd, 3rd, 41h. Apple Grov•
Doren
Road,
1ml.
from
Southern Hlgtl Sc~ oH Rt.124.
lnflnl to edult clothing, lOis ot
misc. Items. From 1Dam-6pm.
June 5th, 6th, fojlow algne In
Danville- storm door•, lawn
11weeper, girls clothing, other
odds &amp; ends 8- 5pm
J ~..;
0 f,, n .'pm
St reet,
Pomeroy
clothes, mise

107 Laurel
Furnilura,

Mull! f1mlly y1rd Hie on
Baahan Rd. batwNn Bashan &amp;
keno. Jurw 5, IIi, 6, g, Rain e~n­
c•lslhat day 9 to?

33 Farms tor Sale

992-26:~87~--::---:----:--:-c-­

Wanted To Buy Large Stze
Dress Makers Form Good Condillon, C..ll tiM-446--4015 Altar 5
PM.
Top Prices P.11ld All Old US
Colna, Gold Rings , Sltvar Coins,
Gold Com• M T 5 Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenua, Gallipolis

Will Babystl In My Homa F•n clld In Play Araa . Rettrtnces
Aveilable. Rodney Area Call
6\4-245-5887.

E &amp; R TREE SERVICE Toppmg,

304-675-7769.

Georg•• Porteble Sawmill don't
haul your logs to the mill just
call304-675-1957

Lois Approx 5 Ac Ea 11 Ml SW
Of Gatllpolla, Harrison Twp 200
Ft
Road Frontage. County
Weier $6,000 To $8 000 Ea ; 21
At; For $20,000, 614-837-8464,

M1ss Paula 's Day Care Center
Sate, affordable, chtldcara M-F
6 em - 5JO pm Ages 2'h-10
Befort, after school Drop-Ins
welcome 614-446-8224 New In
!ant Toddler Cera, 614 -446~271
Responsible, Chnstlan Femiila
College Student Seeks Summar
Employmenl
OffiCe
WOfk,
Babysfnlng, Sales Clerk 614446-9635

_ _ ___:,__ _ _ _ __
$25,000 - US Government
Par1 ·Tima, Own Houn~ Process
FHA Mor1gage Ralunds No Ex per~enet~ Neces~ry 1-405-3213064
S350,0AY PROCE SS ING
PHONE
ORDERS'
PEOPLE
CALL YOU
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
1-800-255-02 42
"AVON' ALL AREAS' Shari your
t1m1 w1th us Y'ou 'll tov,;r lhe
comp.1ny 1..IJ00-992-635_:_
6:___
1

Sfmtey

Babystller needld !rom 10 00
PM 11117 00 AM 304-'75-2532
Cruise Ship Jobs,
hmng,
$2 000/mo,
Summer,
Year
Round
Bar1endera,
Casino
work.era, gin shop sales,Tour
guides, elc Fret trevtl Hawaii,
Carlbbhean, Bahamu Europe
No •~P nec.ssary, 1-206-n67000 nt ,698NG
Experienced
Heilt
Pump
R S.E S
Service TtcMnlctan ,
With Experience In Furnact
S.rvtce Repair, Some Plumbing
EJperletlCe Needed Insurance
Provided, Send Resume To
ClA 220 eio Gall tpolia Da ll y
Tr1bun1, 825 Thi rd Avenue . Gal
!!polls Ohio 456l1
Farm help needed lor par1 t1me
work, experienced wnh horses
prelerf'ld Write Box C-2 % Pt
Pit Raglsler, 200 Mem St Pomt
Pleasant, WV 2.5550
Gallia-Melgs Communlly Ar: t1on
Agency Ia Seeking Appllcams
For Thl Poslllon Oflralner Aide
With The JTPA Progrsm Tha
Position Involves Assistln~ In
Dellvert 01 Training Acl1~1Uet
As Directed By OtM•r StaH
Outltt May Include Maintenance
Of Reports, Forms , Documents,
Schedules, And Records Pos1·
lion Requires A High School
01ploma Or GEO And Ex r:ellent
Communication Skills Including
Typing
Pos1t1on May Requi re Travel
Between Agency Fac ilities In
The Service Araa And Ocr:.asTravel
To
Othor
slonal
locallona Application May Ele
Obtained And Resumes Submitlad At The Gallia -Malge Com munity Action Agency, 8010
Norlh Stele Roule 7, Cheshlfa,
Ohio 45620-0272 Oeedllne For
Su bmi ss ion 01 Applic.:allons
And Resumes Is 4 00 PM
Tuesday June 16 1992
Equal Oppor1un1ly Employer
GET PAID EASY MONEY FROM
YOUR HOME' We II Pay You To
Gathe r Public Information No
Selling Wnte Pasop 330 , 161 S
Llncolnway, N Aurora, ll 60542 161'1
Hatrstyil s t &amp; Nail Technician
GtJaranteed Clientele. 614-

lots In Gallipolis Farry - 100%
owner financing at $98 64 per
monlh, eny one of tour h&gt;ts
available, 304-ti75-2722.
Lots In New Haven - 100%
owner llnanclng at $101 46 per
month buys all three l"'s, a30467S-2722
Nice mobllt home apace available, cell Max, 1-800-837·3238

Total lawn cart, halt price, {1tt
llmt sp&amp;elal). Includes mowing
&amp; weeding call 614-992-ti314.
9am-9pm
Yard W01k, Housecleaning, Interior
Patnting,
Refef'lnces
614-446-6790 After
Available

Onr 2 Acru ot Surveyed Land
With 360Ft. Road Frontage Call
614-446-3992 Or 614-446-9839

Jpm

Rentals
Financial
21

Business
Opponunlty
INOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai you do busl nass with paopla you know , and
NOT to send money throU9h the
mall until you have mvesllgated
I he ottenng

-

--

-~c--------,--

Ntce atlictency cottagt unique
and Deautllul , 304-675-6042

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale

•oo

1
sq tt bnck, 3 bedrooms
large l1111ng room brick patio
tree water/sapltc, heat pump 5
mmutas lrom Pt Pleasant
$56,900 304-675-5)06
2 story 6 room , bath, 1/'J base
men\ gas heat , Union Avt , 304·
773 5962 or 304-m-sns
2021 Marquet11 Ave , 5 yrs old.
all brick malntenanc:a tree
home, 4 bedrooms, amall living
room, dmlngroomlfemily room
comb1nat1on, k1tc~en, ut1hty
room, all Oil&amp; le11el, covered
pat1o In back, prtvacy fence
garage shown by appom1mon1
on ly 304.075-1238
5 rooms, bath. basement , slave
&amp; ret. all carpeted except
k1lchen, lot 80x100 304 -7n5079 or 773-5545

8 room house, l bedrooms on 2
acre rlvorlront lot, heat pump
llfoplaco, kitc hen eppliances 111
eluded, boat ramp, located New
Haven 304-88:2-2069
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Historical Area Corner Lot - lh6
Main St PI Pleasant, W Vs
Completely Renovated 2 Full
Baths 3 Large Bedrooms New
HVAC, New Carpel Avai lable
June 15 6t4-44c•:_-2
:::2::0_::5:___ __
House On Double Lot, 2 B•d·
rooms Modern Kttchan, W11h All
Appliances , 2 Milas DH Rl 7,
Bear Run Road Call 614-865
5622
Rt 2 Nortll, 3 mllet from Pt
Pleasant All bnck, 3 BR, lull
basement with lamlly room , 2
ca r gara~t On 1 acre Shown
by appo1nlmenl only Call 304
675 324S aftar6pm

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x56 1980 Fairmont
2br,
Central Air, Like New1Ga•. Heal,
Free Set -Upl $6,950 614-446·
Hx70 mobil• home, nc cond , 1
bedrooms on privati tot, bl-level
deck, large cov•rvd lront porr:h,
wood shed, oulbultdlng, extra
room wlwood-burntr, major ap·
phances, tote of extras, must
see to apprlcalt, must sail,
$14,500 304-5-ro -2 783

•o

Sal11
Po a1lion
Par1 -Timt.
Hourly Plus Comm l11slon Local
Bualn11a In Store Salas Send
Rnume To CLA 2:2, , C!lo Gl!l llpolle Dally Tribune 825 Third
Avtnut, Gelllpotls, OH 456Jt
Someone To Mow Rake, Bait,
Approx 5 Acre•. Hay In Btdw.ll
Caah Or Sher•• 614-lSS-8788

SPECIAL OfFER
For Limited Tlma Junt 1st Thru
llith Start Your Avon Bu1inen
No Money Needed At lima ot
Appointment Wilen Vou Ouallly
Cell 1-aoo-281-4801

Business

Training
Rlllr1ln
Now!IISouthealllern
Bustneu College, Spring Vall•r.
Ptua Call Today, 6t4-446-4367 !
R-olattretlon 190-&lt;l5- t274B

House tor rant In Pomeroy, 304 88:2-3336 alter 4pm

Vendmg Route local We Havt
The Nawasl Machines, Making A
Nice Steady Cash Income 1·
S00-653-8363

OTR llat bed drlvors wanted, 25
yra or older 2 yrs experieoc11,
must have COLI 1-800..548R•sf)Ons lble Companion For 8
Yr Old Son \/111!d Ucenu And
Car N~essary Dulles Include
Playing Gamea, Readmg And
Swimming Appro xlmele
Hr
S60 Per Weak Call 614-446·2338
Attar 5 30p m

3 Bedroom Farm House For
Renl, $200/mo ,1 m1 SW 01
Gallipolis 614-837-8464

Ml 1/ernon Ave small hom•, 2
bedrooma, basement , garage,
no pats, reference &amp; deposit requlfed , $250 monlh 304-675-

446·42 47

4226

2 bedroom home Sand Hill Rd,
kllcflanldmmg
area,
large
11v1ngroom, full basement, large
yard, 304-675-2272

1/ENOING ROUTE Get Rich
0Uick1 No Way I But We Havt A
Good, Steady Attordable, Butl·
ness Won't last 1-800-2848363

0175

14

lois lor sale, trailers acceptable. 304-ti75-m2

41 Houses tor Rent

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas
Spurs, 304-07f&gt;-,429

Roy

O.J White Road, 18 Acres,
Mo11ty Wooded, With A Beeutltul Building Slle. Nlea level
Rural
WitH,
Driveway,
Etectrldty, And Phone Service
Available 3 112 Milas From Holzer Hospital, $39 ,000. 614-4464121

--- - -- - - - - -

1967 model houae treUer, 12ft X
50tt • m good condhlon, 614-9921'167

1978 Regent 14J70, 3 bedroom,
all elec, appllancn Included,
S7,SOO New wood barn .. crags
bldg 8M8 $400. 304-67!--4424 or
675-5413
1984 Llbtrty Mobile Homa
14x70, 3br, Exc Conditio~ On
1.9 Acres County Water, uood
Location On Hannen Trees
Road 614 -245-58:10.
1987 Clayton mobile home,
2bdrm
1&amp;112 beth, laundry
room, $7000, 614-949-2910 94pm, 614-949-2162 ahtr 5pm.
1989 Redm•n Danville 14x7:2
Total Electric, 2Br, Excellent
Condulon, Rllduced Prlc1! 6t4·
367-0139Aff,., ot ou
141180 3Br's, :Z Batha,
'$17,500, Or Aaaume wt1h Sno
Down. Mutt Be Movtd! 814-446-

(tl9 91

8325.

.,

AAOTH€R

2651

One m111 oul Charteston Road
reterance &amp; deposit required no
lns1de pels, 304-675-2229.
Unturn 1shtd 2bdrm
houst,
clean , deposit &amp; retertnce~ reqUired , no lnslda pets, 614-9923090

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

74

Motorcycles

1980 Yamahl 650, ttlafl drive,
good condhlon, $700, 614-9925537
1982 Ktwllakl 440, 9,47'3 mllu,

1500. JC4-158-1655.

BRurus&lt;

51

Household
Goods

~ 8quM

PBall

2 chest type snd 2 upright
tr.eurt, $95 Nch; automatic
washers end tlectrlc dry1111 $75
to $1211 each, 2 gu dryll'l $95
asctl, .. te1rtc end gae rsng••
$75 .. ch, we 111o stock new
and UMd sppllanc1 partl. Datber1 Swleher's Used Appliances,
comer or Rand elld Pen:h St.
Kanauga, 6l4-446-747J
Baby Bed With Mettrns. Good
Condlllon, $35 614-446-3617
Big Savings On All VInyl &amp; Car·
pel In Stock $5 00 Up r.tollo~n
Fumllurt, 614-446-7444
Cablnel Warehou" 614· 3844115, 2232 Honey Suclllte Lane,
Wellston, Ot'llo 4S692. In Penn'a
Warat'louM Complex 17Xl9 Mini
Vanity • Top $2i, $39, $49; $.59.
Olnett• Set, watnUI wood, 4
chalra, drop te1f llble with/one
!tal &amp; custom mede pad lor
table China ceblnet Couch, 2
matching chairs. Everytfllng
cleen &amp; very good cond 304675-4304

1 bedroom furnished apt, $200
mo plue etec, Bordman Fuml ·
lurtl, 304-675-:2406

1 bedroom mobile homt, lur ·
nlshod on private lot, located
190 Boweer Rd , Henderson , WV
all utllttlu lnc:luded, $275 mo
304 -ti 75-6563
1br Country Set11ng , S225 1Mo
All Utllltlu Paid, 614-446-7'&amp;04.

BEDROOM
Bunk Beds $99
(2x6), " Drawer Chest ot
Drawers $44 95 , Twin Mat1rasa
$99 Set
OINETIES Wood Bsr Stools
$14 95 (26 " ) Tab le And 4 Padded
Cl'lalrs $1:29
OPEN 70ays A Week, 9A M · 6
PM Surlllay 12Noon - 5PM
Rt 141 4 M1les OH At 7 In Cen
Ienar-t

52 Sporting Goods
New SKS R1tlee , WUh Ac cae
torlas ,
$115
Ammunlllon,
$151100 Jennmga 380 Auto Pistots Ntw $105 , 2 Brand• Ammunition $161100, $20 1 1~ Call
tO AM To 10 PM Keep Trying
W1're In And Out Constantly
614-446-11122, 7 Days WMk

53

Antiques

2 bedroom apt, $350 mo11lh all
u1illtl11 paid, no HUO, 304-675
2n2.

Big River Antiques, 510 Msin St.
Polnt Plaaaent, WV

2 Rooma &amp; Bath, Downstalra,
Clean,
No
Peta,
Oulet,
Referenct And Deposit R..
qulrlld 814-446-1519

Buy 01 sell Riverine An1lqu11,
1124 E Main Street, Pomeroy
Hour. M T W 10 DO am. to &amp; 00
pm, Sunday 100 to 800 pm
514 -992-2526

2 Bedroom•, Upstal111 Apartment, Untumlsfwd, No Pela
614-446-2583
2 BR apertments In Mlddlep-?r1 ,
newly remodeled, low uhlltlea,
no pets, $220 per month,
deposll required , 614 -992-2381
daye
1 bedroom apia good location,

10'1 Sixth and Main St, newly
remod~ed with new appllancn,
Ulllltl•a no! Included Oaposlt
required 304-675-7131 or 6755936
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo Walk to shop &amp;
moviH. Call 614-4-46·2568 EOH
Fumlshltd 1 bedroom upstairs
1pt, Mt Vernon Ave, $225
month pi us electric. Aeltrenee
&amp; dtpoaft required 304-675-2651
Fumlahed Apar1mtn1 Ut!UIIta
Paid Upstairs, Second Avenue ,
G•lllpollt, Extr1 Cltanl 1 Bedroom. No Peta 514-446-9523
Fumlehed Apa,nmenl, 1 bt', next
to Ubfary, perking, c.ntn~l fl••l.
air, tefer.ncu.. 614-446-0338,
Before 7p.m.
Gracloua living 1 end 2 bedroom apartments at Vlllagt
Manor
end
Rlvartlde
Apartm.nte In Middleport. From

S1116. Ctll614·992·718l EOH
Mt Varnon Av• one bedroom
ept, exc cond, lllove &amp; rei furnlhHd, prlvalt entrance &amp; parkIng, 304-67,_..560 or 675-196:2.
One I two bedroom apt• In
Point Pleasant, newly painted,
Hud approved, 614-446-2200
1

CASE . 'IOU TURN AROUND
GRACEFULLY AND

~ '---?(

~

.. Stereo. Q

~

(!) Sowed by .... llell
(I) D (J). ABC Newo Q_
CD Wid Amertto Stareo. Q
~ 5quM One TV Stereo

,.:r,

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Flea Killers lor pels, home &amp;
yltd. Guaranteed •Hecllve' Buy
ENFORCER at
Bsum True
Value Slore, 11 W•sl Main
Street , Chuttr Oh. &amp;. Valley
Lumber &amp; Supply Corp., 555
Park Slroel, Middleport, OM
KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER Flea Kllltrs For
Pets, Hom• &amp; Yard Guaranteed
Effective' Buv ENFORCER AI
Browns Trustworthy Hardware,
Stata Route 160, Bidwell, Ohio

Cheir caning &amp; weaving, lrM
quais, reatoneble prlcn, IInce
t979 304-675-2538 Of 614-256·
1616

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
10'x30' carport, $300, 55 gallon
metal berrel•, $6 eech; 614-985-

3901

o..r

1a cu Ft Chlsl
Freezer,
20 Yeara Old But StU Running
Strong First $60 Haute It 614"46-4&amp;31 After 6P M.
1968 Scotty Spor1eman Travel
Trailer, otd antique teble, organ,
ottoman c.:h1lr, 197'9 Otda Cut.
leas, good shape, 614-992-5962
5hp Rolollllar and combination
torch, 30HI75-MXI1
Air condll lontr, lhrM ytera old
22CI volt, 18,500 BTU. Excellant
condition $300 Phone )04-6756955. Call atler 5.30 pm
Brend New Treadmill $300. 614·
446-'1423
Concrete &amp; Plullc Stpilc
Tanh, Jet Aerallon T•nka. Ron
Evana Enterprl..., Jackaon, OH
1-800..537·9528.
Eleclric fumece I tiiiCtrlc hot
wel•r tank tor aalt, 614-gQ2-3684
days. 614-892-8534 evening•.

Block, brick, ..wer pipes, windows, hntela, tic Claudt Winters, Rio Grandt, OH Cell 614-24.5-5t:21

56

KUBOTA
Sales Ptrtl , S.rvie.

HURST TRACTOR SALES
28 HP 4 WO $6995; 20 HP 4 WD
$5,995, Route 7 Norttl, M•rlll11a
814-:174-4151

Troy-Bitt Sickle Bat Mower, 3 112
HP, Good Condition, U75. 114245-5879
Wanted Farm mect'llntry ol all
kinds Got •nytMmg you wanllo
Mil Cell 614 -:256-61140

Groom ertd Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming All breeds, 1tyln
lams Pel Food Deater Julia
Webb Ca116t44"6-02J1
Airedale Pupplu, 2 Montha Old,
AKC
Registered,
Ercellanl
Bloodlme, 6t4 -256-6413.

7:00 ~J~• II) Wl1MI of Fortune

ffi Tht Jo"onono Q_

(I) g lnoldo Edition 'Q
CD ()) MocNoK/lth..r

Q

NeonH...
~~~· Monteei...With Chltdron

Budget TransmiMion., Ualld &amp;
,.bulH, lllr11ng at $1i; tronl
whet4 drive ltertina at $:14V DO
614-245-5677, 814-992-62113..

Big 1988 AOHA Galding Incentive Fund, $1,550; King l Horae
GooseniiCk Tr~ller, L•rge Drenlng Room, $2,750, Sllvtr Royal
Show Saddle 614-286-6522

quola will p1y 25 ctnll (now)
r lb Morgan'• Woodllwn
rm, Rt 35, 304-1137-2018
Wtnl to Buy young ctlv" lo
put on pa .. u,., l04-675-M18

Young pigs, 8 weeks old, good
looking. raised by •-H member,
6t4-286-8272

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Premium allalte gran $2 50 per
ball Rolla $25 Morgan Fam, At
35, 304-937-2018

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

1976 lincoln Continental Mark
IV Good condition $800. ]04..
675- 1618
1981 Malibu Clinic 1951 Cl1evy
2 door hard top 30'-675-7l41

Double Rag. M.a!e 16Wk Old
Austr.llan Shephard, Red Merle,
9Wk Old Rag Female, Tri-Color.
$150 Each 614-256-1 061

1982 Ford Thund11blrd, good
cond1tloo, 99,000 milu, $1300
080, 304-77l-5930 Of 614-!t926417

Flah Tank, 2413 Jac kson Ave
Point Pleasant, 304-67S-2063,
lull ltne Tropical fish, birda,
small anlmalaand supplies

1983 Plymouttl Reliant NHds
Motor Work 1U4 Plymouth
Reliant Damaged Front End
Beal Oftu 614·388-8788.
1985 C..mero, V-1, IUIOmlliC,
look• good, Nnl good, $2500,
614-7112-2396 or 614-ilt2·2357

old
Reglsler&amp;d AKC t4mo
tamale Beagle, 3mc ~d 1!2
bluetick male pup, $50 N, 6!4593-7390 evenings

1g05 Dodge Shelby Charger
Turbo, 5 lpeed, rtd!sllve~ good
mpg &amp; ei"1erp, lkalng 12,500
304-675-5306

Registered Blue Tick Coon
Hound pups, wormltd &amp; vecclnaled, 304·895-3470.

1986 Chevy Cavall~r1 _new tlree,
good condition, $2wu, 614·1t9:23111 attN 4 30

J W Con.trucUon. Room Addlllona, Roofl, O.Cka, Skiing
And All Ty~e 01 Eiterlor And
Interior Painting. WUI Give Low
Bid licensed. 614-245-507&amp;

Reliable W•llp~perlng,
mllft!l•l And R..ldlntlal
•FrM Estimates
•E•ptrienced

Com·

-ou~~zwork

614

Tnll.

Aon"l TV Service, •peclallzing
In Zanlth also Mrvlclng ma.l
other brands. Hou .. calls, lito
tome IS)I)ilanct ,.palre. WV
304-67'8-2398 Ohio 614-446-2454

Fruils &amp;
Vegetables

STRAWBERRIES- You Pick, We
Pick
Containere
Provided
O~n 8-8 M-F, Sat 8-5, Cloud
Sunday - Taylor'a Btrry Patch,
Kerr Ad 614-446-6692, Or 614245-5118

1988 Ptymoutt'l R•ll•nl Station
Wagon, Good Condition! 13,000
MIIH, $3,800; 1987 Plymoulh
Good
Condlt5on,
Turlsmo,
S1 ,950; 1871 Ponllac BonneviUe,
Good Work Car, S350: 11185 Ford

Slrawberrlts, Pick Your Own
Call
Claude
Winters, Rio
Grande, Ohio. 614 -245·5121.

lion, $1,500 114-256-6251.

:j0118.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

GROWS LATE,

lhe-.!Whenan
M' LOCW,

"""'-llloH1~ baseball pitcller
leads h~ team to the M1nor

League WO&lt;td Series,
George and Pat are called 1n
to onV&lt;Ostigata (1.110) Stareo

i•

-,tlulkllng Arnold
(P013} (2.110)

C • - Ruleo Gwen
tnos to warn Dwight agaons1
onve~
· a partnership. (A)

.-w

LTO, 63,000 MIIH, Good

llm-llpm.

liDO Chevy CavaUw, AM.FM
c. .Mtt, PS, PB, lir-cond, 40,000
mnu, wUI Hll tor P'IY on, 304175-3W8.

72 Trucks for Sale
1978 Ford lT gooo Tri-MI•
Dump 290 Cummlnga $4,000;
1~ Pop-Up Campar, $400. Al'llr
P.M. &amp;14-388-84~.

e

extended family occuptes

adjOining apartments. IPt 2 ol

2)(~Q
Ill
t._,.lleMbell

~~Q

(L)

Monoion Q
1:00 (2). Q NIIA Botl&lt;ttboll
Fonals (L)
(I). (J). Dooglo Howter,
M.D. V•nnre works on a

1111

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

f1tm-school scnpt

r---------~~------~~

WHATOOE5
YOUR ClA.D

r

MEJ.N, Wf-Vo.T
c:oES HE DO R::lR
A LIVIN6:7

NOe&gt;TLY, HE TELLS ME
TO STOP DO INS

D07

WHAT 1M DOING .

r

/1-IINK

TH.A.T!3
IT.

War movoe (R) Stereo Q
CD To1ol at Sr.ndlng Beoo

FollOw the landmar1&lt; t 879
OOUr1 case ol Standing Bear ,

wl1iCh fin1 established lloat
nanve Amencans have

~County

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

We
Do Hauling Anytime,
Anypi1C41, Na Job Too llg Or
Too llttlt. 8Himent CINnlng,
?eneret WaR., Anr Kindt 61437'8-2271 Anyllme.

61 Farm Equipment

87

180 AC Tractor Wl1h Hutton
Round Bater $7,950; 106 lnt'l
Traclor Wllh 3 Bottom Plow
$3,550. 614-266 -15:22

1988 Ford Renger XLT, com·
pletely loaded, exeelt.nt condiUon, low mllelge, muM , .. to
tppeclal•, lli14-9U·25&lt;W

Mowrey'• Upholatwi"9 Nf'tlclng trl county area 27 ,..,.. The&gt;
.,_.. In tumfturt uphOistM'Ing.
Cal 30'-8'75-4154 for lrll ...
tlmsiM

Upholstery

WEST
. 90

BARNEY
WHAT WAS ALL

EAST
.\06J2

• 10 7 3

+Kto

+Q J9;

+ K8

SOUTH
+A K 7
• 6 '1 2
t A J 10 6

+A 8 2

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

By Pbillip Alder

South
I NT

TH' RACKET

ABOUT,
ELVINEY?

The ltnesse seems a stra1ghUor
ward play It ts a 50-50 shot at an extra
trick But the exact technique can be a

West

North

Eas1

!'ass

3 NT

All pass

Opcnong lead ' K
hltie more d1fflcull than !hal When
should you lead an honor for a ftnesse" ; L - - - - - - - - - - - _ J
And when should a defender cover an
honor w1th an honor' Both these coosiderations are present m today's deal
Agamsl lhree no-trump, West led spade Lo dummy 's Jack and leads dumthe heart kmg Declarer saw that he my 's second low d1amond Here the
had SIX top lncks and !hal lhe lhree kmg pops up Declarer wu1S Wllh u..

I

extra tncks he needed wo~ld have to ace. plays a diamond to dummy's
come from the diamond SUit
queen and claims nme tncks. three
South ducked lhe hrsl tnck, won the spades one heart four diamonds and
heart-Jack conttnuatton in the dummy one cl~b
'
and called for lhe d1amond queen.
11 East play&gt; a low dJamood oo u..

When East covered Wllh lhe king, second round soulh hn...., U.. jack
South was glad that lhe finesse had and cashes lhe ace, hopmg lor a 3-3
worked But after wmnmg Wtlh the break.

ace, he had to cash the jack and tO of
Declarer should lead an honor ooly
d1amonds East's d1scard on lhe 10 when he 18 happy to have 1t covered. A
ended d~larer's chances He had only defender should cover tbe last of
e1ghl lncks ,
touching honon, and only tben wben It
As 1t couldn t benefit South for East mtght generale an utra tnck for hi!
to cover the diamond queen, declarer Side
should mstead h.ave led a low diamond
®,..,....,.AlP tMTLa
to tus 10 When 1t wms. South plays a

-

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

An1w., to Previous PMUII

32 Clever
phrase

1 Project
4 Religious

poem
9 Roaal beef au
12 Frothy brew

13 Football, m
Eniland
14 CIO parlner
15 Effusiveness

17 Scooby18 Glosay tabrtc
19 The ones
here

21 Letters of
alphabet

22 Mellcan
shrub

24 Playwnght
David-

murder (R) Stereo t;J
I!J MOVIE: Tl1o St&lt;Nt
Pottlon of R - Cloyton

30 Folk 11nger

Pavarolti
Burl -

31 Eenie,

33 Next to Sun .
34 Horse
35
36
39
40

relative
Make over
Empower

Compact

Crumbles
41 As tar- know

42 Start
45 Native of
Brittany

48 12, Roman
49 Observant
52 Folklore
creature
53 Furlough
54 Poettc
contraction
55 Tenms
equipment
genus
57 Theater s1gn

2

(abbr I

meente ,
miney , -

5 Ftber plant

l Toothhke

56 Butlertly

6 Epoch

projections
Hawaiian
food llah

3 Old -

7 Many 01.

8 Qccutt

(8oble

paoli

DOWN

Ill lMry King U.OI
I I ) - - tnd Mrt. King

NOTHIN' MUCH-I JEST AST LUKEY IF
HE'D LIKE TO TOSS ME
TO SEE WHO
DONE TH'
DISHES

20
22
23
24

r..o.e Martr 1oo1&lt;s lor

friNHance work after
Catheri"!.cancels hts story

1.,1

!O:GO(D-

(1) D (J) •

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

28 lndk.altt

Contamporary cowboys

29 Plains lndtan
31

Q

a.,,

lngrtdtent

Juno 4, 111112
Advancement In ~our chosen t1eld of
endeavor Is likely In the year ahead,
provided you keep pace wlth new
knowledge that can enhance your
expertise

GEMINI flllr 21-Juno 20) You may loel
a strong need lor mtellectual expres·
slon today. Seek 01.11 companions or acllvltiea where you can work wtlh new
Ideas Trying to patch up a brOken ro·
mance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
can help you understand what to do to
make the relationship work Marl $2

35 Rtplott
37 Anger

ot life that comes trom

OH 44101 -3426

to oner
CAPRICORN (Doc.

posal wUI help you tleep your budget tn
balance today Vou ' l1 know how to do
thts tor yourself , as well as tor others
LEO (Jut, 23-Aug. 22) If there IS a proi8CI you wish to get rolling on . don 't watt
tor others to lake the tnlttat•ve The bail
IS tn your court and 11 will be up to you

to establish the agenda
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;.pt. 22) SubS1an1181
accomplishments are poss1ble today 11 you are able to do thtngs at your own
pace If you're subrected to outstde in·
ttuences. your product1v11y could be
retarded

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0.1. 23) You could be
rather fortunate today working on an

endeavor lha1 recenlly ~~red your

22-Jan. 11) Condo-

ltons 10 general could work out rather
wetl IOf' vou today. but )'OI.Jr greatest returns mLght come from a ro•nt venture It
you find thiS to be true. make 11 a pnorrty
maUer

AQUARIUS (J.,, 20-Ftb. 11) Be sure
mdtvtduals you re tn't'Oived With today
lind you as cooperative wtth them as
they are wtth you Thts ts the key to har mony m all your relationships

PISCES (Ftb. 20-"o cll20) Some form
ol ph'(SIC81 8ll.8ftl0fl COUld dO you 8
WO&lt;Id or good 1oday II possible, get ou1
In the fresh a•r. even II you onty haw
lime for a brief . bnsk walk

ARIES (Match 21-April II) You 're likely
to be 1n a rather gregarious mood toda~ . and you may leal 1 need tor some

fancy T emporaruy shelve 1
you consider old hat

lvements

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

ell-fulfill -

form of social gratification Make the
ptans yourselltnstead ol wasting on oth·
ers to do so

ment can be achteved tod
by doing
someth1ng that puts you In the publi c
eye This ts one ol lhose times when
shOwboalmg a little ISn't going to hun
your tmage

issues could capture the greatest por·
t!on or your attention today It won't be
due to demands Of' problema. but because 1t will please you to focus In this

SAGITTARIUS

(Nov. 23-0&lt;oc. 2t)

Knowledge ts power, and I here IS some

TAURUS (April 20-Mor 201 Domestic

area

38 Addo

39 Sewing

a•c•a-.
Unhappy Americans go to
extremes

Implement

42 Work came
43 Cairo 's river

to better their

looks. Starao.~

1111·121 Amooltan

Clvllllleo

agrMmtnl

doing it, revealing a sp1rrt
and cuttura that his
managed to survove (1 10)

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) Makong do
w1th the resources you have at your diS·

Plar without
dialogue
speart's rlwer

27

describe theor wor1&lt; and 111e

spec ta l know hOw you possess that
could be ot value to others . as wetl as
yourself Don t dtscount what you have

Shulo
Colon

Sydney defends a divorcee.
a cl181"11 ts sued by her

k1nd

plus a long . sell -addressed stamped
envelope 1o Matchmaker c/o th•s
newspaper, P 0 Box 91428. Cleveland

BaN-

25 St&gt;okeCivil Wort

paren1s (R~.:,eo
&lt;Il RMth

ASTRO-GRAPH

9 GrHn stone
10 Ftylnv HVcers jabbf.)
t t Wild plum
16 - Johnnr!

4 Chal)lam

9:30 (I). (J) • Anything But

Stereo.

l-1-tl

• KQJ 9
• 97 3 2

To lead or cover
an honor

26 Singer -

~':~':Jl..

Rntdlntllll

85 General Hauling

NORTH
• ~J8

PHILLIP
ALDER

F - A witness iden1iloes
a graffiti artist as a sus~
1n

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

or
commercial
wiring, n• MfYice or repairs.
Muter UcenMd •tectrtclan.
Ridenour Ettctrlcat, WV0003011i,
304-4171-1'781.

Sthoolo

111• C • Jolto and lhe

614446-3888

84

tor a C1vtl

protodion under the U S
Conslilution (2:110) Q

Carter'• Plumbing
Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio

1i8G Dodal Arln, 4 docw, v•ry
cleen Clr,)04-4175o737!.

;) lllg Brotllo&lt; Jikt Starao
1:05 ()) MOVIE: Tho Cowt&gt;ort
/POl (2 30)
1:30 (I) D (J) • lllawlng Point
carol and Maggoe go to a

spa lull ol hunks. (A) Q

446&lt;1204.

82

Q

C • lln&gt;ot11yn llrfdge An

JKkton, 0H 1-800-637-9528

Cond~

19DO ClrMro T-Topa., 30,000
IIIItH, 614-379-2.882 After 6 P.ll.

ltJJALlY IF YOU
LAOO IIJ CU.

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,

,91g Chivy Lw 4r4, New Tlr. .,
Set To ApprKieta, $1,800 Will
Tak• 4 Wheeler On Trade 814446-6332

SWIMMING POOLS

CD (I) Mllltnot Tht C'ato ol

hom. lmprovtmenle
and remodeling of all lOtti no
Job too email. Reaaonabtl r~tea,
calltnytltM, 614-'Ji12-1400 or814-

Will build patio covera, deckl
screened rooms, put up vlnvi
14dlng or tr~lilf tklrtlng. nl245-9152.

1970 Chevy atlort bed truck,
fanden on oulside, 327 tnglne,
4sp,
fllr
body
1980
Vol~wegon Rabbi!, ditMI, for
~-:'fl, good engine, 614-742 -

on a future

vocabOn. (R) Stareo C

Ouallly

1988 Ford Tempo, 2 door, auto.,
good
cond.,
air,
stereo,
65,000MI, $3600, ll4· 98$-441t1

or Trade

Wayne and hos dod struggle
to agree

537-15.28

Total ftn care, hall prica, (1st
time tpiCLII), lncludu rnoMng
&amp; WMdng, call IM-tl2-83t(,

For Sale

"

Aaratlon Moton, rtpalrld New

Yamai"1a YFP -ro . alec plano,
stand &amp; stool w' ax1ra por1abla
stand, $1,300 uc cond, 304675-3978

59

'
'

&amp; rt-buill molora In stock, RON
EVANS, JACI(SON, OH. t-aoo-

1986 Bronco II XL\ 6cyt.:.t 5ep L 4whlll drivel newt,.,,
&amp; ~L.
sunroof, a r, ltNIO, ,_l.OOOml,
best offer over $6000, Haclna,
6t4-84J-5372

58

a man and assumed
hos identity. fA) Stereo. C
(!) MOVIE: Ullono'o RokJ iRI
12·00)
(I)D (J)e Wondo&lt; YNro

&lt;Il On .... Unt wtlh

992·2756.

BRIDGE

kLIIed

JET

O.vl1
Sew-Yac
Service,
?JcrJII CreN Ad Petta, a~
pllea, pickup, 1nd detl'llry. 114-

Pr•mter double ban dtum ..,,
2 rack lomt , 2 lloor tome , snare
1nd sland, 2 cymbals atanda
1nd drum Hal (no cymbals),
$650, 614-949-3068

1:.

Hom• lmprov.man11 .
Years Experltnce On Older &amp;
New1r Hamel. Room Addklon•,
Foundation
Wort, Roofing,
Kllchene And. Bat1'11. Frta EallmatHI R•fer•ncea, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 61'-36J.0516.

304-675~19

answer. He sa1d I should STACK THEM

Q

121 Be • Star Stereo
Ill t:n&gt;oofn
7:35 ()) Sonlonll Son
1.:00 (2) • lUI UnoaMd
Myt-o A hrtc/lhoker who

Cu,le

478421,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
, 1
Chalel- Swamp- Knife - Exrenl - STACK THEM
1wondered oulloud how to carry 3 lemon menngue
poes and my baby My 5 year old came up w1th a log1cai

e Moino'o Fomlly

c• Fomlly Ftud

NSJ A 1WO- S!RCn.

paint lor you No job too 1ma11,
WV llcenu no 028-31f1.001

TO GEl ANSWER

/II.WhMiotF-Q

Improvements

1987 Dodge Charger, 5 SPHCI
Tran , AJC, Sttreo, 60,000 MHea,
S2.~ . 0 B 0. Phone: U4·~
6888

Instruments

Stereo.
(J)

aPI ........ c

!loplk Tonk Pumping 190 Golllo

Musical '

FRANK AND ERNEST

Home

on lidl"9 or

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS

..._,.,1
c
can a.

~~~~

put

THESE SQUARES

(!) How h
Tok!
(I) g ent.blnment Tonight

Services

dKk, roofing.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTER'S IN

+

0
, Sl1e Wnotw
121 Cnlol1 ond Ctllto

1987 4 WO Ford Bronco II Eddie
Bow•r, Excellent Condlllon, 2.9
EFI $5,995 8t4-44&amp;-6613.

57

7:30 (2). lUI

1976 ten It truck Cllmper, Mil
contained, ai"PI 6, S!OO J04675-204i.

His • ...., Construction woukl
llka to build your tddltion or

Comp lete the ih uckle quoled
bi l,l\ ,ng 111 rhe m 1~on 9 word~
.,OIJ deve lop \r om s•ep No 3 below

_J,,_J.L..J.._J.L...J.

• A 8!
• Q sl
764J

Ster80.

r.

i

7:05 ()) a.-ty HltiHto

1111•
Plridof

BASEMENT
WATEAPROOANG
Unconditional lifetime guarantM local rtfenncn tumlsMd
FrM uUmttH. Call ccMIIct ,_
614-237-G488, day OJ night
Rogers Baurnent Wllt•prooftng.

I I I I 16 0

L_J,_

Sblr Troll

Schwarzenegger ClassiC {T)
MOYIE:- 0...

Want Mason County Tobacco

~-,;:G_Y:,....:.N:..,:::O_B:;.._:E:....--11 1us1 like I he taste ot ---··· ·

/Ill -,tine

THE FOR~T 15 NO
T'SPEND TH HIGHT!

81

.--------~to define it defies descnplion,

1111 Tht WollcM1o

IT

Raglatared Hanoverian G.lding,
12 yra old, Uon • Frl c.all aner
3 OOPM, w"kendl
anytime,
:)1)4-6 7S,.,201

"What makes people do

9
I!J MocG'r&lt;er Q

Motor Homes

llmousln cattle for uti, Rtgll·
tered purebtod, 6l4 -!it92-6UIO

~-rl=-:1,-.:..VTA.:_;,T,.......il

Stereo

campers&amp;

79

I I I' I

1111• E'!lftlalnmont Tonlgh1

ALLEY

Angu1 And Chi-Angua Bleck
Bulla, RNsonably Prlc:ed. Stele
Run Farms, Jackson, Qhk), 614·
286-5395

76

T H0 N C

i . ,_.,.,, Q

Ski

Flnenc1ng Avtllable

Livestock

63

AKC regls1ered Lhasa Apso,
ltmate, 304 -n3-9596

Dragonwynd Cattery CFA Persians &amp; Siamese l(ln•n• 6t4446-J844 Atttr 1 00 p m.

Hemltton Wat.,- Sporta
Proctorville, Ohio
1-4114-aa6-7188
Otflciat Disney World Boa!
1g92 Cobia Bow Rider WIIM
Tf'lltlr $10,999
19ft! Cobia Cuddy Cabm •
Cle•rance
All Modele Kawasald Jet Ski•
Staning AI $2,300
Tradt Your Car, Truc:lr., B01t Or

I' I I I' I

1:35 ()) Andy Orilfith

BOATERS
Guinn• Mercury Uarlne Strvlc•
Mercury, Meriner, lhrcNiHr
sp«:letllt
Me~ury c8411ned
Mobile, We come to you 614259.S979.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Pets for Sale

FREEINSTAllATK&gt;N
Only $7'99.00 Buu11ful Above
Ground t9x31x-4 Pool lncludn:
Fllt~r Deck, Fencl, Ledden,
Etc 6ot;'l B•lltvell7 C. II BPI
1-800-548-1i23

6979

EMPJRR

1111 New Zorro Stereo Q

BOATERS

Gravely tractorh plue 111acl'lmenta, dual w Nil, 304~7$-

latte1s of the
lotJr sc rambled words below ro f orm lour Stmp le words

I!JStGmrDoo

II]) •

WDII
8AMI

O Reorra noe

Andy Qrilllth

II]) •

1988 16ft Four-Winna, 90hp
Johnson,
Ar.t-FM
casaette,
power UH I trim, extrta, $7,000
finn, 304-675-7177.
J S Marine Service, s.rvtng All
Your Boating Naeds, Parts, AcC8110rial, Two Cycle 061 And
Service. 614·256-6160

-----~-= Ed1tad ltr ClAY l ,.OLLAN

a• CeCBSNtwoQ

1972 GUO Commodore Boat
19Ft With 1S5 HofM Power
Motor, &amp; Trailer, Good Condition! $2,&amp;95. 614-245--5152.

International Se~t S600. WIG
Jade ring, w,G wedding band,
Y/G ruby ring 304-675-76"90

Q

1:30 (2). lUI NIIC -

{M

~@~~1A-~t~S·

L--'-I_IL..JI'---.JI_'_: ~~rt.a~~~~~~~~~d'~:n:~~~~a~~

QIWortdTCICIIr
0 llbnll'l
1:05 ()) I Lo¥e Lucy

2&lt;28.

New lrragutar jeans, d~mlm
]lcketa, &amp; bib overhauls, plus
bedsprtads, eheeta, towel•,
aullcases, lhtow rugl, mason
Jars, tools, 6 good firu, commercial uhaust fan, llnJill8
beds, 8x10 rugs, lawn chairs,
GOOD
USED
APPLIANCES rockers, easy chalrt 132 ButWuhtn, dryers, rafrigeralota, 1tmul Avanut Pomerov
ranv•• Skaggt Appllencn, 76
Vlna Slreet, Call614-446-7398, 1- Paddle boat wllrailer, Christmas
S00-499-3499.
trM, 20" b1k1, scr••n tent ,
campstova, 2-room lent, uerLAYNE'S FURNITURE
dse bike, 150 N 3rd, 614-992·
Complele home tumlst'llngs 2657
Hour. Man-Sel , 9-5 614-4460322, 3 mlln out Bulavllle Rd Pittsburgh paint sale now In
FrM O.Uvtry.
progress Ceiling paint $8 99
gal, e•tarlor while Ia! ex $13 99
New Curved Glase Oak China gal Burpee seeds 50% ott Paint
Cablntts llghltd Mirror Back, Plus, 2415 Jackson Ave, PI Pit,
Gless Shelvu, Leaded Glass In 304-675-4084
Door, Severe! Sizes. 614-4464316
Ptasl1c Ard Medal Culver1 61nch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock Ron
PICKENS FURNITURE
Evans, Jar:kson, Oh1o 1-800New/Used
5J7-9 S26
Housetlold lurnishlng tl2 ml
Jerricho Ad PI Pleasant, W\1 , Queen S11e Walerbod Semi
call 304-675·1450.
Waveless,
Book case
Haad
Board , Call 6l4 -441.JJ628, Prlr:ed
R. &amp; S Ntw, UM&lt;I and Antique Reduced
T.-. l1"X
lumlture, Muon, WV 304-7735341
Recondil loned
wuhers
&amp;
dr,era, each $100 and up Wa
Refrigerator, H, $125, relrig, Mrvlce all makes Th• Wsshar &amp;
harvesl gold, $95; rtlrig . aide 6y Dl)'er ShOj)pe. 614-446-2944
side, $150, 30" copper1on•
atec.:trlc range, $95, 30' harv..t Tandy 1000 TLJ Computer Wit~
gold range, sgs, Kenmore Color Monitor, 40 Mag HO
wuher, S95, Whirlpool dryer, Modem , Printer, And Lot• 01
$75. Skaggl Appliances, 76 Vlna Soflwar1 $1,300 614-446-ll037
St , 614-446-7398
Used P1pe 2' Scl'ltdule 40 tto A
·-S
:::W
::-A
:c-IN
c-Joint 614-379-2366
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Oliva St , GeiUpolls New &amp; UMd 55
Building
lurnltur•, haaters, Western &amp;
Supplies
Work boot• 614-446 -3159

t2x60 2 Bedrooms, Location
Evergreen 614-446-3697, 614245-4Z23

Apartment
for Rent

•

PUZZLII

One TV Stereo

gz.:;~Q

TRIP OVER T~E
WASTEBASKET '

AFTER YOU STATE 'lOUR

Wf.IEN YOU TALK TO THE
PRINCIPAL . 'IOU I-lAVE TO
ACT REAL COOL

TMAT DAILT

!IIIII

fER~InbowQ

12Ft Flblirglau Boal, Trailer To
Trolling MOtor, $2.50 614-:tn-

Genes1s
Nutrition
Products
fe111turlng Amino Acid Bodv
Building, welghl lou and tel
burner formulas. Available exclusively at Rite Aid Pharmacv
The sate way to diet

EVENING

c•cw_,_

for Sale

Merchandise

•

WED., JUNE 3

6:GO (2). (I) D (J) •

75 Boats &amp; Motors

LIVING ROOM . Sofa And Chair
$179 And Up, CoHN And End
Tables $79 And Up, Swlvtl
Rock•rs $79

44

FO~tl'J( ~ElL

i___.l!!!:&lt;!!.D"--.l..-11...---' L:_,,c!_
J -~olii(____j_JLJ

VI 'RA FURNITURE

2br Uoblla Home FOJ Renl, Total
Etec No Pels 614-367-7438

ALL IS

",=~I

BARGAINS GALOREI
614 -446-3t58

Nice 2 Bedroom Mobile Home
For Rant 8 Mllu Out AI 218,
Relerances And Oeposll Required 614-256-6251

•

CAAIOC£ ..

f~

,l'l)TII€R'S 1

c;::::::::::::=

1 bedroom lralltr, pay own
uttlltln plu• deposit , 3()4..(j752535

Mobile
Home
Unfurnished,
Bulavllle Area, 614--446-t637, 614446-3437

~--

H()\1£

1i87 Dod~ C.ravtn, 8 Cylinder,
Automatic, AC, AMIFM Ste,_,,
Lugg•g• Rack, 58,000 Mlltl,
Good Condition! $6,700. 614446-7417.

SIMplnq rooms with cooking
Al10 lnultr 1pace. All hook-ups
Call elter 2·00 p.m., 304·7TJ5651, Mason WV

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

J67-795l

H1llary Professional Tree Ser
vice Topping, Trlmmmg , Removing, Hedge Trimmed Frae Estlmales l Debris Removed 6t4446-9l84

f'V£ UN.

sao

Furnished
Rooms

Furnished apanmtnl evallable
by
wMk
with
cooking
privlleg... 304-882·2566.

ssttle
estate
Cheater
Motzmlk, 208 ICrt farm, near
Guysville, Alhan• Co Ohio.
lmmedlat• possession. $103,000
or attar For details and map,
call Paul J Gerig, 614-593-3800
during n-ormal bualnese hours
or wrrta · PO Box 268, Athtns,
Ohio 45701

5 acres land, 10 min from Pt Pll
on Rt 2 N pnca negotiable,

Have room for elderly lady
needing
porsonal
care
reasonable rates, 614-949-2381

304-

To

Trimming. TrM Remove!, Hedge
Tnmmlng FrN E.sllmetes! 614-

Employment Services
11

Wanted to Do

Living Room , Dining Roam W1tf'l
Flreprace. Den With Fi,.place
Kit chen, Breaklatl Room, 3
Eledroom, 1 1/ 2 Balhs, Full
Finished Bnemenl, Fuel OU
Fumace,
Single
AUachad
Garagt, Plus 2 Car Garagt In
Workshop, 2 Large Barns, Crib
Shad 1 3/4 Miles Out Rt.218
Evenmgs After 7 PM 614-4462360

.,.;ooo

1982 Ford Ecolln• Van E-150,
304-175-221&amp;.

Room• tor rent · week or month
Starting at $120!mo GaUlt Hotel
614-446-9580

48 Acree, 8 Room Brick Ranch,

Clothes, 0-Adutt Baby Furnitu re , VCRJ. HouHhold, Gas Grill,
Bikes, ~ooters,
Aquarium,
lawn Mower, Sura Cargo Car-

Raln Or Shmt
V1ne St.) June, 4th, 51h, 6th

45

miltS,

TO &lt;.lYE '100

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--13

Television
Viewing

1\tOWD€0

BRUT~ I

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

5·00.

tu,., Dishes, Clothing, Sta~.
Ma1tr111, Box SDringa, An11qutt, Muel't Morel Friday, 511'1,
Saturday Slh

YOO-HOO ..

1988 llulu SJM'Cf Cab, 4x4, uc
cond, rune like new1 agreal gaa

~=·low

Pomeroy-Middleport, OtJio_ __

LOSER

72 Trucks tor Sale

Wedge Apia, 501 B~.Kdett• St,
Point Pluunt, no pet•, 1 end 2
Ndroome, 304-$7~2072 11'1er

Tools, Axe's, Uadoxts, Furnl·

Yard Sate 6 Belmont Dflve, (Dfl

KIT 'N' CARLY I.Eo:'J b) Larry Wright

One bedroom apt tor ,.nl, 304·
675-2218.

Porch Sale Ju01 4th 5th, 6th 4

Rodney

Apartment
for Rent

Wednesday, June 3, 1992

Shop

IIIWOIId-

II) 100 Club With Pol
AoberiMn

4.a

Examine
mlnulelr

45
46
47
50

Flock
Abo'lt

Roman tyrant
Ptk,., t.g.

51 Makllact

10:35 (I) MOVIE: Cl1bum /G) (2·15)
11 :GO (!) Night Cowl

-

c

rn• (J)• 111111 c e

§• -

CD tNitewoatwo•-ld1'
Hoi Stereo

a~&amp;...
Ql 8pollo TGNghl

o-

t1:30(2)• lUI-

~~..........

(J)eNiahiiii•C
c•
em.. nne Artor
Primo T1me Ster80 Q

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ollltwlty

ap. ~- cnm.t lrum quotation. by tiii'IOUI ~. -

JIGWIJF

EC

Mel ~

Eldl.._ If\ the dpfl8l' Mandl tor lnOiflar T(ldly 'l OW N ..... C

f

UVNW

WIG
I G

EC

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N W ME H
UEGGMO

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Ill SpGotoCenttr

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Ql MooDOrli'DO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Keep thy eyes wide open Defore marriage, lind
hatt shut afterward " - Thomas Ful~

0 MOVIE: Tho l.twltoa
a-d(t ·30)
11:35111D Moo- 't2

~·- With Chlldown

IEZOM O

IEJFMO.

�June

Sentinel

AIIWUt4dl 111M POliCY-Each of 1hoN ld-iood ~omo lo reoulrwd 10 bo

1hlo ocl. Hwe do ""' out of an ldYittiold 11om, , . will olfw you your d1olco
of o componl&gt;lo -om. _ , .....,ble, ..tlocting 1ht oomt OIVineo 01 o rain·
chocl&lt; wflich w11 antillt you 10 purchllo tho oct.ortiold 11om ot tho ociYtrliood
prtoo within 3D doyo. Onlv OllCI coupon will bo ~ per ....

Famil~

~-

Medicine ,

Pick 3:
046
Pick 4:
0652

Page4

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIES NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS .

Low lonlghlln 60s. Frid11y,

Super Louo:
5-6-IZ-20-lJ-36
Kicker:
9411519

COPYRIGHT 1982 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUN·
DAY, MAY 31, THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1982, IN Pomeroy

John C. Wolf, DO.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

=

Ohio Lottery•

Chicago rips
Portland five
•
tn opener

r--, . - far oolt In oach Kroger S1ore, ox- uljiOdfically nolld In

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

has been cast on the sweeping gen·
eralizations made from the earlier
studies.
About 10 percent of the time,
we
actually know what causes a
namalrange.
My question concerns my con- person's hagh blood pressure. In
sumptim rJ saiL My docror didn't some of these cases - like those
say ..ything aboul restticting sal~ caused by kidney disease oc Cush·
but my wife insists that I must. ing's Syndrome (an adrenal gland
disorder) - we know that salt conSbould IIUC salt or IIOl?
sumption
must be carefully moniAltswer: I am frequently asked
tored
to
control
high blood presquealions by my patients about the
relative heallh benefits and prob- sure. Unfoounately, in the other 90
lansassocialed with salt consum(&gt;- percent of high blood pressure
tion. It would be easier if l could cases, we don't know the cause.
We docrors use the label "essengive a simple 'yes' or "no" answer,
tial
hypertension" - a highfalutin
bullhal's liOl possible.
way
of saying, "I haven ' t the
Lei me provide a little back ·
slightest
idea why this person has
ground information before I answer
hi~h
blood
pressure" - 10 describe
yourqueslion. Table salt is made of
thiS
common
condition.
the chemical sodium chloride.
Now comes the tricky pan, a
Once salt is swallowed, almost an
poction
of those who have essential
rJ it is absolbed iniO the blood by
hypertension
have a lower than
the digestive tract as sodium aons
nonnal
level
of
a honnone called
and chkride ions, which play a key
renin
in
their
blood.
This substance
role in the bfe-sustaininR chemical
is
used
by
the
body
to regulate
JeiCiions that occur in our bodies'
blood
pressure.
These
"low-renin
cells.
hypenensives"
are
more
likely to
In order to keep these life proceases functioning smoothlr. the be salt sensitive. While this type of
body regulales the concenlnlllon of high blood pressure is common
liOdium within very tight limits. As among African Americans, those
blood circulates to each cell in the older than 60 and the obese, an
body, the bloodstream acts as a individual of any race, age or size
~
liOdium. Each cell can can be a low-renin hypertensive.
You might think that a test for
tkaw exn sodium from the blood
blood
renin levels would tell us
or pvc ~excess liOdiurn to iL
The sodium level or the blood is whether or not a person is salt sencontrolled by the kidneys. In a sitive. While this does make it posIICillhy penon, a diet thai is abun- sible for us to make an educated
dant in sodium doesn't cause the guess, it is not a perfect test
blood level to rise significantly because some people with low
because the kidneys are able to renin are not salt sensitive and
pass the uua sodium into the some people with high renin are.
So, after all that, I ' m finally
urine. When the diet is lower in
sodium. die kidneys reduce the loss ready to directly respond to your
liOdilllll into urine, thereby main· question with an imprecise answer:
I don't know if you need to restrict
~ the proper blood level.
your
salt consumption. If you are
Scieatil'~e siUdies done years ago
African
American, obese or over
indicllled dtal individuals who con60,
you
probably should. If you
stiiiiCd larF amounts or salt had a
don
'
t
fit
into at least one of these
pe~tcr risk of having high blood
pre8SIR. and n:Jucing the amount categories, you probably will have
Sill consumed reduced tho blood no trouble af you consume salt in
pressure. This body of research reasonable amounts. Talk to your
produced the recommendation that doctor. Ask if you have high-renin
all individuals with high blood or low -renin hypertension and
PJ'SIIR avoid salt and that every- whether or not you should follow a
restricted salt diet
one COIIUIIC salt in IIIOdfntion.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Since 60 million Americans
column.
To submit questions, write
!lave hip blood presswe, this salt
consumption recommendation to John C. Wolf, D.O., 250
affetiS a major pan the popula· Grosvenor Hall, Ohio University
tiotl. In recent years some doubt College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Athens, 45701.

1992

cham·e or rain 50 percent. High

In mid-70s.

QDCslioe: I have mild high
My docn has pre-'ir•W. that I lake every
day, llld il keeps my pressure in the

r,:;:;

U.S. GRADE A JUMBO PACK
TYSON/HOLLY FARMS
4-HB. AVG.

Vol. 43, No. 23

Copyrighted 1992

Split Chicken
Breast

Comffiissoners open bids for Issue 2 projects

00
lb.

By BRIAN J. REED .
do various road pa vin g projects
Sentinel News Staff
within that 10wnship. Shelley bid
Bids for four Issue 2 projec ts $9, 171.63 on the Sutton Township
were opened and di sc ussed when project, and $11 ,874.06 on the
the Meigs County Commissioners Orange Township projec t.
met in regular session on Wednes·
Two bids were received on eac h
day.
of IWo projects in Salem and Rut The Shelley Company was the land Townsh1ps. Bids on Rutland
sole bidaer on two road paving pro- Township's pro posed culv ert
jects for the upcoming season. The replacement prOJCCt were received
Sutton Township Trustees will from Jeffers Coal and E.cavating
apply hot -mi•. paving to Co urt of Pomeroy, in th e a moun t of
Street (Township Road 125), and $8,620, and D.V. Weber ConstrucOrange Township Trustees plan to tion of Reed sville, for $8,850.

we Ctaaty

Accept Your
Feelerat FOOCI
·Stamps

Anaaur Sliced Becan
.. .. .. ..
.

MEAT

12....

AniOII' Hot

Those firm s also bid on a
pipe line extcns1on and replacement
project in Salem To wnsh1p. Jeffers'
bid was received on that project in
the amount of $8,970, and Webers'
for $9,275.
Action on the b1ds was tabled
pendin g review and di sc uss ion
with Coun ty Engineer Philip
Robens.
Asphalt bids fro m KOCH Male·
rial s Co. and Asphalt Matera als
Co., both of Marietta, were accept·
ed fo r use during the month of

June. and Roberts was authorized
10 purchase th ose materials at his
di scretion. The b1ds were opened at
I&lt;L'\l week's meeting.
No action wns take n on an
app ropri atio n req uest from th e
Meigs County Parks D1stric~ pending the receipt of more mformation
by the board. Director Mary Powell
had requested that $671.55, certified by the budget commission as
proceeds from the sale of the Meigs
County tourism video. be appropri·
a ted inr o the di strict's sa laries

WITH LOW PRICES. AND MORE!

or

THORN APPt: VALLEY SLICED
Tu~EY BREAST oR

Armour Sliced
Moot Bologna ..

GOLDEN RIPE

Dole

Sharp awarded scholarship

~·

JuJce Cocktail.

84-o•.

ELBOWS , THIN SPAGH£TTI 0 2

J

$

Muller's.
Spaghetti.·.... · · ..

Chicken
Patties .............. H&gt;·oz.

~h~~ries .......

,....

$3
00 i(;~g~;R
2

MINI

Marshmallows ..

-11&gt;•.

2 $1
H&gt;-oz .

~\:pplas,!l 00 ~~~lluttaf 1.!5

Cllillmil Puchls.... .. .. .. . "

Sweet,.., ecn..........S

CUCUMBERS OR

Green
Peppers ...........

PAUL SHARP

s~i;d

REEBOK·NIKE
CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOE SALE

2$
3 1Roi~On.. . . . . . . 1.~$3
s
2
9
2·-ibs.1
$

ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT
SOLID OR

Ban

For

LISTERMINT OR

Listerine
Mouthwash.....

Tomatoes ............
,

32-o•.

$1
Aspir~n Free $500
Onions.................. 2-lbs. AnacJO...............
CALIFORNIA RED SWEET

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Vid~ll;

25%oFF

flO.ct.

3tl EXPOSURE 100 SPEED OR

Fresh
Kiwi Fruit. .......

INFANTS SIZE 1 THRU BOYS' SIZE 6

-----------------1
$

l Ilk.

I
c. I
I

l Fer 11M

.. I :
I
I

UIIIT J DAIS 111111 CGUPOII • t1. .
OF
110

AIIOil10IM I"JJICH..E

LIMIT-~ •E~ CUSTOMEft

--••run-ll•

•

,.,_1·------------~···

2 S3
oau·•cotta Chaaa ...... 2a~~-o~. S3
COUNTY 1.1111 AMERICAN

Ch... Singles...............

WHOLIIIIUIIOIIAINTO

12.....

l~~RE400SPEeo $
FUJI Film ............ Roll

31
Far

OO

4

RECJUIAR

F h
$1 00 Skin
Mennen
$200
ras
fl
Bracer
......
l .&amp;-oz
1 Brocco ower ... Head

Star-Kist Chunk
Light Tuna !!' 11;
lllkz.

$

I

IN OIL UR SPRING WATER

QUALITY SHOE STORE

2
$5
.

Chocolate
$2 00
$100 Milk ................... Gal.

CA~FOANIA

CHAPMAN SHOES

OCEAN SPRAY

KROGER BUffiRMILK OR

~~~I;~M~~A VALLEY cHICKEN

Bananas

Paul Shatp, a gradual&lt;: of Meigs
High School, has been awarded a
talent scholarship tolaling S9 ,000
for as long as he mainlains a 2.5 or
belter grade point average and to
tho School of Music at Ohio State
Uniwnity.
He will ~ivc $2,250 per year
as long as he makes normal
propess toward a music degree ,
mainllins a 2.5 or better grade
pointava11ge, and plays in a major
ensemble each quarter he is in

$ 00 Cranberry
.

2
$ 00
'~;': 1

Sliced
Cooked Ham .... 1

or

qaabdk

of the plan:
. •Executed a !case agreement
w1th the Si;Jtc of Ohio for the new
Dcpanmcnt of Hum an Services
buildmg m Middlepon:
• D1scusscd the vacancy on l.hc
Ga llia ·Jackso n-Meigs Board of
Drug Addicuon and Mental Health
Services. No appointment was
made, pcndmg contact w11h a nom inated resident
Present were Commissioners
Ma nni ng K. Roush, David
Koblcntz and R1chard E. Jones, and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

hibi ts appropriations 1r11o a depart·
mcnt's salaries ac count during l.he
year without a letter of explanation
and prior approval of the board of
commissioners.
The comm issioncrs also:
• Ratified a revi se d version of
the AGHJMV Solid Waste District
plan, and authorized Clerk Mary
Hobsteltcr to issue a letter to town ·
ship trustees and village officials,
urging their immediate ralificatJon

II r The Associated Press
The We!lsiOn le vy wa s
Til e- happiest school officials in :q··provcd by an unofficial margin
1hc st;~ t c may be those in Wellston, nt 51 vo tes out of more than 3, 100
where an o pe ratin g le vy has :· :1q . It lost by one vote in iiS most
rcC CJ\'C.: d voter approval after eight r,·crrH clcfcat.
str:11g ln defeats at the polls.
''The voters smiled on the boys
The five-year, 6-mill levy was ,lrl{j g ir ls, " sa id Wellston school
one of 128 sc hool fun di ng issues
S11pCr1nt c ndc nt Franklin D.
:1pprm-c.:d by vo ters in Tuesday' s \'o . . t:Hd . "To wi n this one took a
pnrn:1ry. There were 250 requests lnt of h:tnl work by a lot of people
I rurn 227 sc hoo l districts on th e :rnd :1lot of elec tions."
h; 11l ot. ~1 nd the success rate of those
Thl' largest millage increase to
proposa ls was 51. 2 perc ent , th e wr n p:bs:Jge in Ohio was a 17-mill
Oh1 0 Depart ment of Education proposa l fo r the Milto n ~ Uni o n
&lt;;~li d
~c hool s m Miami County .
· 'Th is is go od new s for those
Oth er dislricls where large mil corn munili cs that have made cdu - lagc requests were approved were:
C(ltion a priority," said state school Rollin g Hill s, Guernsey County,
S"pcrintcndcnt Ted Sanders.
11&gt;.9 5 mills; Highland, Medina
Cou nt y, 16.&amp;Jl. rni~;,. M!ni.\~r .•.,

or

Sllatp, who plays the tuba, was
sele&lt;:ted to play an the Eleventh
Annual High School Honor Band
at Ohio State University on April
12. Conductors for the concert
given in Weigel Auditorium were
Richard Blaui and Jon Woods .
Sharp resides at 34491 Salem
School Lot Road, De&gt;ter, Ohio
45741.

account.
A commissJOncrs' policy pro -

Half of Ohio's school funding
issues are approved by voters

or

school.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 centa
A Mulllmedia Inc. NewaDaDer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 4, 1992

.

F,;.;hEB~k;;to,,~ ~
Apple Pie ............

~ 2~~. 3
$

Efferdent
$500
Tablets.............. 96-C1.

Kroger Deluxe
Ice Cream........

2 3Huggies ....

Corn
Muffin Mix......

5 $1

ASSOAllD VIIRIETIES

Jiffy

~ -Gal.

!'lAIN I'AGH£TTl0'S, WHERE' S

WAlDO OR

a.s-o.

s1o00

DISPOSABLE SMALL, MEDIUM OR lARGE
TRAINING PANTS

1s-

Pui~Ups ~~-

Kroger
$300
Charcoal... ........ ~~:·

2h$1 Cat's
Choice 4 $1
Cat Food.............

Franco American
Spaghetti ............... :&amp;!'

e-o•.

RIBBON-CUITING CEREMONY - A rib·
bon-cutting ceremony Wednesday marked the
opening of the U.S. 35 four-lane through Gallia
County. Present for the ceremony, from left,
were Slate Sen. Jan Michael Long, U.S. Rep.
Bob McEwen, ODOT Director Jerry Wray, Gal·

With the snip of a pair of scissors on a red, whue and blue ribbon
Wednesday. Gallia Coumy official ly opened its new es t Slre lch of
hi ghway as state and local officials
proc laimed the U.S. 35 four-lane'"
a key 10 reg ional economic dcvclopmcnt.
"This is a proud moment for all
of us in Oh io ," Gallia Co unt y
Cham ber of Commerce Pres ident
Ron McDade remarked at the dedication ce remony held at the new
res1 area two mil es east of R1o
Grande. He disc ussed the benefits
the $41.4 million highwa y would
present to Lhc region.
Noting that the hi ghwa y's complction was a cooperative effort,
Me Dade stressed that the sa me
spirit is necessary for the reg ion
and the stale to achieve iLs leansporwtion goals.
"If we are gomg to be success-

JOin 1he fight for funding remainmg pro1cc ts in the area. such as the
two stretc hes of two -lan e 35
thro ugh Jackso n and Ross counti es
and the connec tor roulc between
Po meroy and Ravenswood, W.Va.
"We're not greedy, just hun ·
gry," Tom Wiseman of the Sou th ·
eas ter n Ohio Regional Council' s
H1ghway Users Co mmitlec. wh1 ch
corlllnually plu gged the proj ec t
witl1 the sL1tc, joked with the audicncc.
Long was particularly 1mprcsscd
w1th the fact tha1the four-lane was
fun ded ent irely by rcceipls from
th e state gaso line tax, and in keepmg with 1he rela&gt;ed mood of th e
eve nt, jested with McEwen on that
point.
''I'm not he re to pick on you
today, but the fede ral money we
saved on th is proJOCI can be used to
fin1sh the highwa y all 1he way to

ful, we have to pu ll toge th er as a

Jndian:1," 1hc scn:J tor said.

10

t"'lm," he said. "It is our desire 10
McEwe n said he was "pleased
work wilh our neighbors north and and rl el 1ghted" that Ohio Dcpartsoulh of us to get the U.S . 35 co rri - men I of Tra nsportalio n DlfCCtor
rlor com pleted," he said.
Jerry Wray, who halls from Lic k·
McDade's se ntrm cnts we re ing Co unty Jnd was a speake r at
ec hoed by ot her speakers who the ce remony, was in a position to
viewed the ope ning of 1hc hi ghway help the southern pan of Oh1o get
as anot her li nk in 1he chain of mal&lt;- 1hc hi ghways it needs in 1m proving
mg 35 a fou r-lane from Dayton 10 the quality of life and the economy
th e West Virginia border . 01her of the rcgim.
speakers, such as State Sen. Jan
"Rivers were imponant in th e
Michael Long, D-C irclcvi ll e, and mid -18th cen tur y, then it wa s
U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen, pledged canals, and then came railroads, bu t

.-----Local Briefs:·---.
Crash victim in fair condition
A Raci ne vouth wa.~ listed in fair condition th is morning in the
trauma un 11 Of Grant Med ical Center, Columbus. for injuries suffered in a one-ca r crash early Wednesday in Sutton Township.
The Gall ia·Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Jeremy
T. North up, 16. 31305 Mitchell Road, was eastbound on County
Road 30 (Mommg Star), three-tenths of a mile west of County Road
28 (Bashan) at 7:20a.m., when he went left of cemer on a curve,
mel a westbound veh icle and went off the right side of the road.
Nonhup's car then came back onto the road and slruck a con·
crete bridge. The car then rolled and came 10 a rest on the passenger
side. Nonhup, who was ejec ted from the wreckage, was taken to
Grant by its LifeRighl helicopter ambulance.
Later Wednesday , a Reedsville man was injured in a one-car
cr•sh on Bashan Road in Orange Township, six-tenths of a male
so uth of State Route 7.
The patrol said Michael E. Cntcs, 19, 50240 Headley Road. was
so uthbound someti me before 8 p.m. when has vehacle went off the
left side of the road and struck a fence. The vehicle then continued
Conlin ued on page J

in th e 21st century good roads arc
the pi peline to prosperity," he said.
Spealung on behall of U.S. Rep.
Dob Wise, D-W.Va., Lucille Margan said there are a number of rcasons to co ntinu e lhe push for
improved hi ghways.
"Driving down here, I found my
car being waved in the wind by 25
Continued on page J

McEwen: OK
given by corps
to scrubbers

Sc h oo l ~

1·:11kd hv one wte.
r.quc st for St
C L ~tr ~vd ! C - RichLwd :-;c hool s tn
Be lrn unl Count-.,.· wJs defea ted for
th e l it h 11 mc (n fou r years The
disaric1 had avkc-c1 ror an additional
4.4. rm ll opcrati" ' levy
A

l en·

Ohio voters bucked politicians
in congressional district races

lia County Chamber of Commerce President
Ron McDade, Bob El'ans, Tom Wiseman ,
ODOT District 10 Deputy Director John
Dowler, and State Reps. Mary Abel, Mike Shoemaker and Mark Malone. (OVP photo).

Highway dedication speakers say
teamwork needed to complete corridor

;\ in:, Lll/1' Co untv, 13 47 mills :
1\ 1 -_- ~ui. \\'i l l l :lrm'Cuu nty, 12 .90
1111 11 - C ,·11rr.ll , Defi:111ce County.
11 q rnrlh- :md Hubbard. Trurn hull (P liiH '·. I I mi lls.
Thr1'1.' k1 1C o., were decided h) s 1~
t~r k '-~ d '.tl k \. the dcpanmcrd s.:.ud .
ln Trum l,H illo nn ty, one con unu ·
11 1 ~ k v~ w:J'i approved by six votes
:md :Hlll thcr was defeated by three
In Sh,· ll w Co unty, an cmcrgrn c y
rcn c v.~1l ·k vy for F&lt;..~irlawn Local

WAS HI NGTON (AP) - Oh10
,.n1 c rs may no1 hear a bout bad
c lll·cks. aga 1n for a while, but l.hc
1\\UC is likely to bounce back.
l&lt; c p. Mary Rose Oakar. who
I• .11 1 c13 overdra ft s at th e now cl1 1"l' d House bank, surv ived a
d (l \~ (_'al l :1g:unst a six~c ha!lc n gcr
Ji l' ld 1r1 Tucsd:1 y's Democratic pri -

oust Ookar.
"Rcrubl 1cam may spend a lot
ol wnc and spe nd a lot of money
111crc an d not 111 olhcr races. Ms.
Oakar will win," she srud. " It 's a
solid Democratic seal.··
lnanadjacenldisuicL,a millionarrc who got little support in three
ca mpa igns renewed her focus on
llJ:Ir\·.
congressional term limns and won
;\ not her 1ncumbcn 1 with over- the Republican nomi nation 10 an
dr:1fls m tl1c House bank, Rep. Bob open scat.
McE wen. had an even closer call : a
Margaret Mueller will take on
~ (~9 - vu t c m~ugm wi lh some abscnrormcr Secretary of Stale Sherrod
tcc ballots uncounted and a recount Brow n. who won the Democratic
l1h cly.
McEwen's 166 bad chocks were
~ ~ h1 g IS'&gt; UC 1n hi s campaign &lt;.~gains !
J{ ,' p C l:1r c n cc Mill e r, an d
Ucrnncrats were lay ing plans to
('llll tr nuc snund111g that theme in the
c.-: ncra l elec ti on 1f McEwen
Au th ori ti es con tinue to invcsti ·ilc corn cs the nominee. The winner g: li C the death of a Dayton man in
\\il l lace Democra t Ted Strickland rural Meigs Cou nty last month .
o l Lii Cl '&gt; Vd lc .
Rona ld Pohl, 57, was rou nd
·T or our guy to win, McEwen dead in Salem Townsh 1p on Ma y
wd! hr th e hco.: t one (opponent),"
II . Pohl and his son, Michael, 31,
s:1r d Dcrno cral lC Party Chair were tt.:rk cy hun ti ng on property
E u gl' Jl C Br:lll .\too l .
ncar Sale m Center, when the elder
·Republ1 can Chairma n Robert Pohl was reported missing. He was
Bcnncu s.a1d he didn't believe l.hc later lound dead fr om gun shot
h11d c heck 1ss uc would defe a t
wounds m the Pnce Stron g Road
M cEwe n in Nove mber, and s u g~
area of Salem Township and was
gc .stcd th e too -close- to-ca ll out - pronounced dead by Coroner Dou come ....,as a resu lt of good will glas HuRler.
tOI'&gt;'arci MJJ !cr rJ I.hcr than the check
According to Me1gs County
~.~.., 11 c bounc1ng back at McEwen.
She riff Jom cs M. Sou lsby, h1 s
" T iirnoul 111 At hens and Was h ~
dcra rtm cn l ha s questioned three
1 111~ ton count1cs rea ll y made it a
subjects regarding Pohl' s death in
( 1 (.\;~c r;1 cc." he said. Those coun an aucmpt to dctcnninc the circumt i C~ arc now represented by Miller
stances surround ing it. as well as to
:1nd hnd hi gh er- than -usual vote r de term inc whether th e shoo ting

nomination in nort heaSI Oh10 ·s
13th Dislricl.
Ms. Nichols predi cted Brown
will hold hi s own, even th ough
Mueller has bankrolled her own
camprugns in the pasL
" Inlhcsccretaryofstatcracchc
ra ised $2 miJii on," she sa1d.
But state GO P exccuu vc director Rex Elsass said timmg 's on Ms_
Mueller's side.
Cap itol Hill turnover and
perquisi tes are hot topics now. " I
Lh ink thi s is the year for her mcs sage,'' he said.

Turkey hunter's death
still under investigation

U.S. Rep. Bob McEwe n
announced this morning that th e
U.S. Army Corps of Engi neers has
approved the necessary permits to
allow the construction of scrubbers
at the Gen. James M. Gavin Power
Plant in Ches hire to meet new
Clea n Air Act sumdards.
"Thi s is encouragi ng news for
our area," McEwen said. " It means
that we have clea red the grea1es 1
obswclc 10 inswll ing scrubbe rs so
1hat American Electric Power can
usc coaJ mined right here in southern Ohio rather th an impor tm g
cos ~ y foreign oil.
'This can save the mining JObs
lllnHIU(
so vital to us all ," he added.
Oll io politicians were also trying
McEwen, who has been outspotn
1rllcrp rc1 Ortk ar' s su rvival in a
ken in his suppo11 of the scrubbe r
"l'
'-'t:
I1 · W;ly pr11H:Jry. She won
pl an an d in keeping th e Meigs
rcnom
mauon w 1th 39 percent of
Mines open, had called earlier for
th
e
\'OIC.
the corps to expedite thw consid Dcmocr&lt;Jl'&gt; looked at th ose num ·
era tion of th e necessary penn its.
" ! spoke today Wilh Col. Van be" and declared the outcome the
F.pps abou 1 thi s goo d news," resull of h ~ud work and years of
McEwen said, "and I wish 10 thank ath·n rion 10 con.sti tu cniS' needs.
Rcpuhllcans looked at tl1c same
the corps for their assistance and
numbers
and concluded, as Bennett
cons id erat ion in ex pediti ng th is
put
it
.
"Mary
Rose Oakar was
process .
repu
dlatecl
by
61
percent of th e
"Now. we will work with the
reoplc
In her own party .••
Ohio Envi ron men tal Protec rion
Oakc r' s new dis tr ict includes
Agency an d th e Public Utilities
Co mmi ssion to e nsure that the some predominantly GOP territory.
remai ning pa perwork is don e as She al so had 213 overdrafts at the
flou&lt;e bon k and publicity about her
rapidly as possible," he sa1d.
role
in the !louse post office invesTh e Meigs Mines. which
ti
l
.
!
ation
wlll hurt her, Bennett said.
emplo y I,050 people, supp ly coal
'
"We
have a great opponunity,"
10 the Gavm Plant. McEwen sought
so
id
.
Oaka r faces Martin Hoke
he
amendments to the Clean Air Act
of 1990 to preserve th e opti on to rn NovcmOCr .
Laura N1c hols of the Democrat·
continue to usc Ohio coal and has
met with workers and toured the 1C Congressional Campai gn ComMe igs Min es in hi s con tinuin g miuce said Republicans wiU do the
effon to protect jobs for southeast- opposition a favor if they focus
1heir resources on attempting to
em Ohio.

'

w:ts accrclcnt.JI.
Snul ~ h y rcrortcd that he had not
recc Jvcd &lt;1 wrutcn rcpon from the
Franklin County Coroner 's OJflce ,
wt1crc Pohl's body was scm ror an
a111op'\y. A vcrbJI rcpon from that
ol'f1cc confirmed the death was due
to J gun shor wo und. Tha t office
wll l not make a determinaUon as to
whclhcr the wound waq self infliCt eel, Soulsby sa1d.
One of the subJeCts has been
admin1stered a polygraph tes t ,
accord mg to Sou lsby .
So ul sby sa1d that authonues arc
al so look ing 1n to the possibili ty of
whe th er Poh!'s dea th co uld be
!rnkcd to a series of killings across
t he .s t:llc Inv o lv in g li shcrmen
Those shoo1ing s arc also stdl u11dcr
Investiga tion.

DNR clears RAC of
pollution allegations
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The SUite DiviSion of Natural
Resources has cleared Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. of allegations it
violated cnvironmentaJ laws at iLo;;
Jackson County plant.
Seven environmental groups and
the United Steelworkers charged in
April that Ravenswood Alummum
was dumping 2.5 IOns of cyan ide
annually iniO the Ohio River and
was discharging solvents and oil
onto a "spmy field" ncar the plant
that was polluting nearby ground
water.
But DNR Director Ed Hamnck
said Wednesday that tests failed to
suppon the allegations.
Hamrick said "Jow levels of solvents" were found in the spray field
and nearby areas during a surprise

sUit e inspection prompted by I~ C' al legations. He said insrx:c tors
couldn 't determi ne whether the
sol vcms were hazardous waste.
As for the allegr.d cyan1dc dis ·
charges, Hamrick said, "All the
wate r sam ples came back either
clean or well below levels of
regulatory concern that would
cause us to take enforcement ac·
tion ."

The stale won't take anyJunher
action on the allegations, Hamnck
said. But the U.S. Enmon mental
Protectim Agency plans additional
tests at the facility.
Hamrick also said he would continue to help the company renew its
National
Pollution
Discharge
Elimination System permit, which
has expired.

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