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:

The

Sentinel

' Ohio

SslutinJ
Ovetbtook Centet
I\IATIO

Nursing Home
•

WEEK MAY 12 -1 8 , 1991

&gt;

Pick 4:6961

Cards : K·H, Q-C
.- Q-D;S-S

PageS

Pome10g Nuflinl 8r .Rehsbilitsfion Cenfet
Du1in1 Nations/ Nu11in1 ·Home Wee~
• &gt;

Pick3:148

to GAHS3-2

&gt;.

s~nd

AL

Ohio Lottery

Meigs loses
sectional final

Low tonight in 60s•
Thursday, sunny, high

near 90.

•

&gt;

Val. 42, No. 8
. Copyrighted 11191

' Ohio, Wednesday, May 15, 1991
Pomeroy..Middleport,

2 S.Cdon" 11 Pogee 25 cento
A lfuiU.-Io lno. Newapoper

Teacher accused of abusing Meigs ·student

Msg 12·18,. 1991

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Mrs. Reed sai~ thB! he~ ~n told
Sentinel News Staff
her that the leammg disabibty class
·
t~er hadass!gned him to deten·
An allegation that a Meigs bon. She srud hiS father had always
Junior School teacher physically told him that if he ever felt an
. abused a disabled student was action was unfair that he should
made by the student's parent at · tak~ it to \'Je prin~ipal. ·
.
Tuesday night's meeting of the ·
He di~ that, Mrs. _Reed SBid,
Meigs Local Board of Education.
but the pnncipal told him that the
In open session, Christine Reed "delention woul~ have to stand."
Mrs. Reed SBid that her son told
related the story of the alleged
abuse of ber son. ·
her that when he returned to his
_She said that on May 10 her son class, the teacher ordered him back
returned home "so emotionally ' out mto the hallway.
Already in the hall was another
. upset that he ~as trembling.''

'

· student !:'~o reportedly _was. there .
because Videos were bemg shown
m the ciii$SrOOI!l and that his p~ents prefer that he not watcli televtsian or movies unless they are educational.''
It was then 1 accordi~g to Mrs.
Reed whose mformauon came
from her son, that the teacher
alleged!'( ''put one hand ?,n his (~e
name o her son) throat :..oo·srud
that her son told her that the teacher was upset because he had gone
to the principal concerning the
detention.

Mrs. Reed 5!'id that "there were
no marks on hts (the name of her
son) neck." .
.
"He descnbed to me 1t was the
web between the thumb and forefinger that applied the pressure to
his throat. The teacher, ~cording
to ~hat th_e s~nt told his mother,
adVIsed hun never to go over top
o_f him ~,' ne~ ~do anything
lilce that to hun agam.
Mrs. Reed said that her son told
her that he kept repeating "yes,
yes," and that after some more
stateme,nts from the teacher,

"everything started to go black.';
Mrs. Reed continuing with what
her son told her,' saying that he said
he felt "weird like in outer space"
She said that he told her he was so
afraid that he could not see for a
few seconds, and that he thought he
was going to pass out
After the incident the teacher
and the student ret~rned to ·the
classroom to watch the movie.
Mrs. Reed said tfiat she request·
ed th'e principal to question the
other student who was in the hall
and
and heard the entire inci-

saw

dent
.
The parent saJd that she believes
things happened jus! as her son
related them to her and that the
Other child has agreed to answer
any questions concerning the matter. Mrs. Reed concluded by asking
the board to take appropriate
acuon.
After listening_ to Mrs. Reed's
comments, Supenntendent James
C111p0nter asked her .if she pl,anned
tp pursue the abuse allegation
through Children's Services. Mrs.
Continued on page li

AEP to comply with
PUCO
order·
a

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer _
COLUMBUS - Amencan
Electric Power Co. says it will
comply with an order by state regulators for an expanded ~tudy _o f
options that ':"ould ~ring its G~vin
power plant m Gallm County mto
co_mpliance with the federal Clean

said the report concluded that
reduction in sulfur dioxide emispreliminary AEP study was too sions required by the act
nanow and that there may be little
The PUCO said the method
difference in cOSIS.
used in AEP's study was inapproAEP is requited by law to use priate because it did not project far
the leasl-cost _option or the PUCO enough into the future.
can deny the utility the right to
One assumption ·the PUCO
recover compliance costs from cus- inade was that scrubbers at Gavin
tamers.
.
would qualify for enough emisAir Act
Glazer said the AEP study was sions al)owances to make· overall
Gerald Maloney, AEP's execu- flawed because it was not tied to a costs about the same as importing
tive vice president, responded systemwide plan. The PUCO set a coal from other states.
Tuesday after a staff report of the deadline of May 31 for AEP to forPlants that exceed their allotted
Public Utilities Commission of · mulate such a plan.
reduction levels may trade or sell
Ohio. Scrubber technology - as
Maloney said the company will their allowances to others in .the
well as a switch to low-sulfur coal comply but that the timetable is . same system. AEP is the pareni
from other states - should remain light and that some data on emis- company of eight utilities in Ohio,
as a viable option, the report said.
sions allowances is not yet avail- Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, VirScrqbbers are anti-pollution able.
ginia, West Virginia and Tenequipment that would be installed
AEP said it has to decide on nessee.
at ·the plant to allow the c:f'any Gavin by the summer so it-can
Maloney attributed the differ10 'use Qhio 's high-sulfur
and - . otder scJUbbers or other equipment. ences between the AEP and ~CO
. still meet new federal regulations. · The company must meet a January fmdings to the fact that rued anaNICQ Ch•ir,aen Craia rn... 1995 deedline for the fil'lt ftlajOr ·
over
and AEP

.

'

Pomeroy .Nttrsing and
.
Rehabilitation Center

'

992-6606

992-6472

36759 Rocksprings Rd. • Pomeroy, Ohio

333 Page Street • Middleport, Ohio

'

•

This _Page Sponsored By These Many Fine Businesses .

Hospital
scene of
'disaster'

· EXAMINED - Love Batey, who wUI be a nursing stndenl at
. Meigs High School next fall, was one or seven persons lnjnred
when an "explosion" occurred Tuesday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy as a.part or the anuual lrl-eounty
simulated dlSIISter. Kllftllna 'l"lh Batey ill Kim Shamblin, head or
the hospital's RadloloiiY Department, where the seven patients
were taken until transferred to other treatment areas.

;

ANDERSON'S
FUINRUIE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COVEtiNG
992·3671

-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~THE

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SAUS &amp; SERVICE
992-1975
POIIIIOT, OliO

K &amp; C JEWELERS
BAUM LUMBER CO.
91$-3301

CHESTER, OHIO

INGELS FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN-MUSSER
INSURANCE AGENCY 992-2975

.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY, OHIO

QUALRY PRINT SHOP
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3345

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5627

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2556

HOME NATIONAL BANK
····2210
IACINI, OliO

-··
FDIC

992-6333
SYIICISE, OlftO ·

VALLEY LUMBER CO.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY
POMROY, OHIO

991-2955
•

I

,

POMEROY, OHIO

FABRIC SHOP
992-2284

POMEIOY, OHIO

~Farmers Bank

L:!J &amp; Savings Company .

.....
• .. \bur Bankpi~...
-

992-6611

992-2121

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
992·2104

BliNK ONE ~HENS.

LOCKER 219 /heritage house -

POMEIOY, OHIO -

992-3714 .

Whatever it takes:

PO-OY, OHIO

FRUTH PHARMACY
992·6491

BANKEONE

&gt;

&gt;

•

H2-2136
,_lOY, OliO
667-3161

TUPPEIS PUINS, 01101
Mombtr F.D.I.C.

BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE
992~6687

POMEIOY, OHIO

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

MIDDLEPORT I OHIO

STATE FARM INSURANCE
MilE SWIGD

992·6685

MIDDLEPORT, 01110

(ROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

POMROY, OHIO

SUGAR RUN MILLS
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

992·2115

POMROY, OHIO

Rought to face Reed, Wehrung
in November for mayor's post·
Ellen J. Rought will face Republican Bruce Reed and Independent
candidate Larry Wehrung for the
office of Pomeroy mayor i_n
November.
Althoul!h a Republican, Rought
filed her petition in May and will
JUn as an Independent.
Rought states !hat she~ previously worked with council under
Mayor Clarence Andrews as
Clert/l'reas~J~U for 16 months: She
also handled the HUD Grant for the
Kerr's Run sewer project along
with ocher duties of that office. She
states that she is familiar with the
village·finances and the functions
of the village council.
·
For the past seven years, Rought
has been a police dispatcher for the
Pomeroy Police Department under
lhe cWTent mayor, Richard Seyler.
Additionally, sbe had the opporContinued on page 6

INJURY TREATMENT· Durlaatlle trl•
county simulated dlaltlr at Vetera01 Memorial
Hoepltal Tunday afterD- Wbere a uplollon

House committee warned 1
·or constitutional problems
ELLEN ROUGtrr

----.-Local briefs-woman hurt in accident
. A Pomeroy woman suffered minor injuries Monday after the car
she was riding in was struck by a tractor-trailer on State Route 124.
Josie P. Morton, 34, of Spnng Avenue, was not treated for her
injuries following the accident in Rutland Township. According to a
report from the Gallia-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol,
Morton was westbound when she stopped to make a left turn. The
tractor-trailer behind her, driven by Pearl E. Hutchinson, 52, of
Wellston, was unable to stop in lime and rear,ended Morton's vehicle.
Hutchinson was not injured. He was cited for failure to maintain
an assured clear dislallce. ·
·

Youth cited after crash
A Middleport youth was cited for failun: to.maintain an assured
clear distance following an accident on State Route Tl'uesday.
Jay C. Crcme~~~s, 16, ofBJ:Oidway Street, was cited after he rearended a second car in Salisbury Township. According to a report
from the Gallia-Meigs post of the'State Highway Patrol, Cremeans
·was northbound when the car in front of him, drivo.n by Gloria J.
Compston. 41, Middleport. stopped in traffiC. Cremeans was unable
·
Colltinutd on paae 6

'

over 10.
The first I0 years is the time
during which the company can
most accurately predict its ac1ual
costs, Maloney said.
Maloney said AEP does no1
know how federal regulators will
handle the transfer of allowances
from an AEP plant in one jurisdic-·
lion to an AEP plant in another
state.
·
The decision concerning Gavin
may have to be made before the
company knows how many emissions allowances it wiU receive and
what they will be, worth, Maloney
said
Even before the PUCO report
was issued, House Speaker Vern
Riffe Jr. sera~ plans for a Tuesday vote on a bill that would offer
tax breaks to utilities burning Ohio
coal .
Continued on page 8

By ROBERT E. MILLER
A!l!Kit:iated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- A House com'
mittee has been warned of possible
constitutional problems with a law
requiring woinen seeking an abortion to be told of rillka and alternalives 24 houn in advance.
The warnings carne Tuesday
from Attorney General Lee Fisher
and others, including Marcy
Wilder, staff attorney for 1he
National Abortion Rights Action
League in Washington, D.C.
About two dozen witnesses t_eslified as the civil and commercial
Jaw committee concluded public
hearings. The bill requires clinics
and their doctors to provide specified information or face criminal
'
'
penalties.
Rep. Robert Hickey, D-Daytoo,
chairman, said the bill will not be
voted until next month, following a
two-week House recess that begms

Thunday.

Rep. Jerome Luebben, DCincinnati, ia sponaor of the bill
which has more than ·!10 co-sponsors in the 99-mombor House.
Luebbers was author of a 1986
Ohio statute that requires minors
seeking 111 abortion to notify at
least oae parcnL
\
However, its opponenll were
out in full force Thursday as,

numerous pro-choice Jroups' and
individuals repeated c!Bims that the
bill is an unnecessary duplication
of Ohio's informed consent law
and a violation of women's rights.
They also said the bill is similar
to laws in other states, including
Pennsylvania, that have been out·
l!lwed by the U,S. SupmneCoun.
Jack Gregg Haught, deputy
attorney general, described Fisher
as an interested party but ·said he
wanted to provide information on
the possibility of legal challenges
and their cost.

Supreme Court, in a 1983 decision
tharovenurned llll· Akron abortion
ordinance, re~ted provisions simi·
lar to the bill's 24-hour waiting
period and a requitement that doctors provide s~ified information.
· He also. SOld that if enacted and
challenged, the cost of defending
the law would bC about $400,000 if
the defense is successful and could
total tnore than $1 million if unsuccessful. Haught said the estimate
was based on the auomey general's
de,ense of previous Ohio abortion
laws.
.

Haught pointed out that the U.S.

-Board to contin·ue safety belt
education center next year
The Meigs County Board of
Education voted to continue the
safetyb elt education center ·for the
1991-1992 school )'CIII' when members ~in rcauJar llllion ~Y

e'l'elllllg.

A conllliCt was enleled mro with
Eric Chambers to conduct the Seat
Belt Education Cenror.
In other action at the meetmg,
Jhe board voted to modify the
a~ns for the Early Childhood
1111 to cover lhe COlt ol
insurlnce.
Meigs Health Services - Dr.

•

Doua Hunter lllld Dr. Mark Brown
- wore approved to conduct the
school bus -driver phylk:als for the
1991-1992 school year.
Meryl
Houdashelt
was
employed by the bOitd for 21 per
week tor elaht weeb as an inlb'UCIOr for the Adult Basic Education
program, and a budgel for the ABE
JOBS proaram was adop,ted. funded by the Meigs County Department of HWIIIII Services.
The board also approved textbook adoptions for mathematics
and science programs.

Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy was the scene of an
"explosion" on Tuesday afternoon
when the annual tri-county simulated disaster was held.
Pomeroy and· Middleport ·fire
departments received the warning
of the explosion and flre at Veter:
ans Memorial and dispatched flre
fighting vehicles and an emergency
unil to the hospital where command posts were established.
The explosion occurred in the
lower level of the hospital where,
coincidentally, nursing students
from Meigs High School were
touring the facility.
Seven students were injured and
one fatality was reco.rded. T~e
injured were moved from the lower
level of the hosrital structure by
various hospita emplo'yees who
used sheets and cotS to transfer the
'wounded into special
set up
as trealment centers. Patients of the
hospitals' Skilled Nursing Facility extended care - were evacuated
from the hospital to the patio as a
part of the simulated disaster.

areas

Man dies from
gunshot wound
A Pomeroy man is dead following an apparent self·inflicled gunsHot wound to the abdomen Tuesday.
William J. "Joey" Reiunire,. 23,
of Old Chester Road, died at Veterans Memorial Hospital on Tuesday
morning.
•
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald Rought, the depart•
ment responded to the R'eitmire.
residence at II :14 a.m., after a call
reponing a gunshot wound. Upon
arrival, Rought said Wednesday
morning, Reitmirc was found on a
hillside behind his residence with a
gunShot wound to the lbdomen.
Relunlre was pronounced dead.
after his arrival at Vercrans Memo"
rial.
Rought ·said it was later determined that the wound was selfinfiicted, 111d no foul play is being
suspected. Meigs County Coroner
Douglas Hunter was on the BCene,
as were agents of the Meigs County
Pro~ecuting Attorney •s offJCe, the.'
sheriff's office 8lld Pomeroy Squad·.
I, which transported Reitmire to••
the hospital.
•

.•

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�...- . .....

.

. .......

.,

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1

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--

•

Wedneeday, May 15, 1981 ·

Commentary
WASHINGTON - Defense
Secrel&amp;l}' Ditk Cheney waniS io
make sure dill everyone in lhe Pen·
tagon bureaacrac:y follows the
)lilt)' line on one of lhe most divi·
siw issuea lhat will c:ome down the
pike. this y~ - the closin&amp; of
dozoa• of u.~. military bllses to
ave~.
.
·
1'111 !lue-closing proceiS will be
a P-lY oae !hat will hurt many
. . . «aaiOIIicaaly, put lhousands
of people oua of work IIIII prompt
members of Con~ to utter their
faVIIrile whiae: Not in my beck·

111 Court Stteet
Pomeroy, Ollie
DEVOTED TO Till: INTICRBSTS OF T111t MBIGS-IIASON AU:A

CIL\RU:NE BOII:n.JC.
O.eral •;,.,.

PA'l' Wlll'l'EQAD

Autr••t Publllber/CoatroUer
A MEMBER of The Associated Preu,lnlandDally Prell Auo·
elation and the American Newspaper Pulillshen Auoclatlon.

yard, you don'!!''

'
LE'M'ERSOFOPINION
are welcome. They should bo!leutbanJOO
worda lona. All Jetten are aubled to editing aod must bo! alped wttll
Dame, addreaa and telepbow numbo!r. No unslped Jetten will bo! paJ&gt;.
IIsbed. Letterasbould bo! In good taste, addressing luuel,notperoonall·
Ilea.

Legislators seek limit on
cigarette vending machines
By JOHN CHALFANT
Atlodated 1'n. Writer
COLUMBUS - Swe lqi•!aton arc being aslted to help snuff 901
tobla:o sales 10 minors by J8Utg a law that WOUld ~uire rctaik:n wid!
cigarette vendini macbines to keep them in view of a clerk.
The measure olfeml by Sen. Chaies HorD, R-KetleOng, would limit
die places w* the machines could be placed.
·
It abo would lllow COIIIIIies, cl&amp;ies and townsbips 10 adopt local vending ~ !IIOro roslriclive lila diose at tbe stale level. , .
ExiSliDJ stale law prollibill die l8le or fl.c disttibutioa of toblcco
pioducts to penolll ,ounpr ... 18.
.
. "Obvinully we bave laws Jbal proltibit lhe ale to minors, but !hell -we
put (cipeaes) iDio macllinea. Aad if ao one is fCSPIIIIIible for obsava·
lion, then minon Jet them wid! impunity... Hom said.
His bill would anow clpeao w diDJIIIICIIines only in areas not open •
to die a-I public or 10 wllicll minoa 1rc 1101 generally permitted, or
arras where lhe m_.lriao II "' plaia view and aader control of an employ- ·
ee and in wbidt lhe m..JriM cannot be Uled by t1!e pablic wiiCII the pt.:e
iscbed.
. "It tesjc:e!Jf 1teeps !!I!!ChilleJ la lhe view and aadlir the conii'OI, so to
spealt, of
of eetiiJ!i~- ts,'' Hom said.
The ot(,"'*~ ol To!M:o lftd Cindy Dillribualn is viewiJig
lhepOj)OIII u an iDru 10~ J*tY,IIIilher lor or api• iL
ttut Jack Mveot, 1111 Pllf'l executive cliJeclot, aaid lherc sbould be
c~ in the ..... dill --.s~~~ow local aovemmenu 10 adopt m~ . .
...XUve \lftldlag fCIIIIIIdoa,
··
"Our ooncem wiill that is obviously what you can end up wid! is a
pafchworlc ol different ordiDances Ill over the SIBle. What we would lilte
to see is ... one swe law that everybody can live wilh and qrec on,''
Advent said.
The Senile Ways and Means Commi~ opens hearlags on the bill
Tuesday. .
.

Cbeney can't silence Congress,
but he is aaemptin to silence lhe
~ wbo ·~ 1or him. Before
he o-ne«~ his list of suggested
base closin&amp;s; he circulated a
memo within the Defense Depart·
ment wamin~ers to keep their
opinions 10
lves.
Firat he warned lhem against
lealting die informalion before he
made It public, saying Defense
Dcpanulent employees, "may not,
repelt, may not, publicly releaae, or
comment on the specific bases
inYOlved in diose recommendlticns
prior 10 lhe Secretary or Defense's
publiC IIIIIOIIIICelllent''

Then Cheney set the around
rules ror the ugly political beUie
ahead. He said Defense Department WOlters should "avoid spec.
ulation about whether lhe (base
closings) c:onunission will approve
or dislpprove lhe list, ot aily odJer
foUow-up actions by die Conaroa
or the pn'Cidenl '' And they lhould,
"avoid comment or speculation
about wbat impact c:loaurc of a specific inlllllation would have upon
local area.. or military capabili·
ties. " And "avoid apeculation on
what savin'-s may be gained by
closing specific installlltions.''
And, the most dubious instruc·
lion: "Suess thai the decisiou to
close certain bases Is related to
budget reductions and is not being
inade for political reasons.'' IT
Cheney really believes that now, he.
will not feel lhe same way when
Jlle fight is over.
Cheney's list of suggested base
closures will first go to a bi ·
commission for review.~
will be passed on to Georlle Bush
who, if he approves It, wilf send it
to Congress. which must agree
before the bases are actually
closed. ~ is plenty of opPOJ tu·

nity for detailing along that jJoli~­
caiii'IICit.
, Last year, Cheney' s original
proposal caused an uproar in
Conarcss among those who saw it
as a plan to crush the Democrats.
More than 90 pen:ent of lhe bases
targeted for closing were in Democratic congressional distticts.
Some members of Congress
formed a. watchdog committee
called lhe "Fairness Network,''
spearheaded l!y Rep. Glen Brow·
der, D-Ata., to lnonilllr the process.
"There il no question lhat bases
have 10 be closed," Browder told
our associate Melinda Mus. "But
our main goal is to m11te sure that
it il done smanly and fairly." .
Once burned, Cheney WiS careful to recommend a more baiiiiCCd
list Ibis year, but there still appe8i
to be more Dcmocllltic jobs on die
chopping block. The Cheney flan
recommends the closure o 31
m¥w beses and 12 minor ones by
1997. He says the cuts will save the
mililll)' SSSO million by 1997 and
about $1.7 billion a year lfter thaL
What he isn't boasling about is
the cost of closing those bases.
Some congressioilal sowtes ques·

CLASS Of '91 ?
You KNOW WII~T 11\EY
~AY1 1t:IP· rfVOESN'T
6ET AN'/ 9£.,.1 t"R
11-IAN TtiiS,

=

l·

House Finance Chairman Patrick Sweeney, D.Cieveland; was ready to
start the cpnuniaec's final meeting on the state budget last week whea he
noticed lhcre were no minoriiy RepiDii~ns in the aowded healing room!
Most of the Dcmocrau were already Jhero.
. "We've got lhe best of bolh worlds," SWflelley jolted. "We've got a
.
· ·
quorunrand no R~licans."
The GOP mcm
arrived moments taler. Nearly all of them wound
up voting aplpst Jbe bill.

I

Rep. Jo Alln Davidlon, R·Reynoidlbura, tried IIIIIUCC:eSifuliO insert
into the bill Gov. Georae Voinovicll's piOj)OIIItoturn state liquor aores
over to priVIIe hrsipy·
. A separate bill lhll would ICCOmplisb die chaage already has been
. passed by the Senate and is peJid!nl in lhe Houa.
Ms. r&gt;&amp;vidson's IIIICIIdnieDt failed. But s - y ~w a laugh when
he told her, "I want to buy my liquor at K 111.-t IDD,I want you to know
lhaL'•
I

II
t

I

Today in history

·
Bl JM "-dated Prell
.
. Todly is Wednelday, May 1!5, tbe .135th day of 1991. There a 230
days left ill ~ ~:
.
Toclay's ~ lD HistorY:
Fifty r-s aao. oa May 1!5, 1941, Joe J&gt;iMaaio bepo bis record 56hi · IIRik by s1naJina off Ch ·
Wbite Sox pildaer Ed Smith
pme
at Ylllbe Scadium
1oet, however, 13·1).
110rt.
On Ibis date:
•
.
It shoUld be further unclerscored
In 1602, Cape Cod was discovered by the English navigator that during Ibis seven day waiting
Bartholomew Golnold.
period there is no requirement lhat
In 1886, poeiEmil Dlctinlon died in Amherst, Mass.
an investiption be undertalten by
In 1911, die U.S. ~Court anlered Jhe dissolution ol Slandard local law enforcement agents to
.Oil Co11J1*1Y, rulill&amp; it was in violation of lhe Sherman Antitrust Act.
determine wbelher the person wish·
In 1918, U.S.Iirmail bepn ~between Wasbiugton, JlhiH !phil inJ to pun:hase lhe hlndaua 1w a
IIIII New Yort.
cnminal record or whodier he or
1111930, Ellen Chun:ll, lhe lint airline ~w-*ss, went 011 duly aboard shehasmyhistoryofmeataldisor·
1 UniiCd Airlines OiJht betweea Sin FIIIICilco and Cheyenne, Wyom.
. dcr. All the dealer is required to do
In 1940, nylon atocldnp went on genend sale for the lint lime in the is convey the name and address or
Uniled SIIICI.
lhe purchaser to the local police
In 1948, boun Iller dec:llring ill indqlendence, lhe new state of Israel and if the dealer doesn't hear back
wu eurlecl by TriDsjordan, Ecpt,'Syria.lraQ and Lebanon.
within ~even days he is free 10 conIn 1958, the SovieiUDion l•mcbed Spulnik1IL .
summate the sale. The extent or
1n 1963. u.s. UIIODIUt 1.. 0orc1on COOJ* blasted off aboard Flilh vn
on lhe finll miAion ol the Project Melcury 11*0 propam.
In 1969, Suprane Court Justice Abe Fortu resigned IR!id a COIIttover· .
· sy over his put legal fees.
.
Oil.ANJESTAD, Aruba (NEA)
In 1970, Phillip Lafayeae Gibbs and James s.t Oteen, two blaclt stu·
c1enta II Je•• n• Sllle Univcnity ia Missillifpi, were ltilled when police - lbe c:onc:rete-•d·SICCI hulls of
three unfiniabed lux~ hotels
CJ!lawl fire clurlna ..... piif ... '
·.
alonl
IJPICIICularly ""au ful Palm
In 1m, DcmOcrllic: preliclenti•l candidate Oeom C. Wallace was
Bead!
.._ llllld as lliUie aymbols
·shot and left palyzed while camJIII&amp;nin&amp; at a Laurcl,l.td., shoppill&amp; ten·
·
of
I
Caf.'t
, . OCOIIOIIIftnJpped in
tee.
a lovo-llate relationship with
tourism fnlm lhe United StaleS.
Almolt an of 111e approxim81Ciy
PubliC Notice
30 iiJen lD lhe region arc heavily
cleponckat upon that YIICilion nvel
Md weter nsauw . ..,..
OPPICIAL NOTICI!
....... llldt¥1!1111--..
Tilt. IV IJitlro
u a IOIIICe of jobs· and dollm ADDfT.IIII__,ofthltenwlCentrol an~
bUt tbo IIIDIIpnellt has produced
I'DIIIftlftlll
fl
of 1177,
burdens as well as bencfiiS for
~countries lhrougl)OIIt Jbe

~

m;f.;:

~lllltees

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
lion whelher the Defense ~pan- .
meat will be able to sell the proper.
ty at mar1tet value, and whelher lhe
· estimates for environmental
cleanup of lhe land arc realistic.
If Cbeney 's plan is approved, :
some communities will feel a pinch
and otben will be hit by a sledgehammer. The loss of 18,400 jobi at
tbe Naval Traiqing Center in
Orlando, Fla., will be painful, but
not fatal. But the loss of lhe Whid·
bey Island Naval Air ~tation in
Washington will be devutating.
The II, 700 jobs at the facility
account for 58 J112tent of the wo~
in the county.
Knowing that lhe decisions will
make no one ha~, Cheney is
doing his belt to
a lid on lhe
chit-dw in the PeniiJIOII,
·
STill.. MAD- Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, once labeled by
Ronald Reapn II die "Mad Dog
of lhe Middle East,'' kept a low
profile during the Petstan Gulf
War. He was busy on another front;
stirring up trouble ill Well Africa.
He supported Charles Taylor's
revolt against the Uberian government - a revolt that left Uberia in
wone sbape than Kuwait Wilh
Qac!btfi's prodding, Taylor's suer·
rillas arc I10W raiiling other West
Arne. countries. That hu railed
lhe question in lhe bacb00111s of
Washington as to whether U.S.
forces should be sent to West
Africa Ill teach Gadhsfi a lesson.
President Bush will liltely opt for
sending money inslead ol troopl.
MINI-EDITOlUAL - The
news recendy lealted out that Vice
President Dan Quayle had ta1ten an
Air Forte jet for a weekerd of golf
in Georzja, at a cost of $27,000.
Tbe White House mouthpieces
defended the trip, aying lhat the
vice president should not have to
give up his personal life while he
was in public service. No, of course
nof. We didn't follow Quayle's
petsonallife too closely before he .
became a public servant, but if that
lifestyle includejl personal jets to
rake him anywheie he pleased for a
round of golf, then who are the .
American taxpayers to deprive him
of .Jittle pleasures?
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndi~te. Inc.

Twenty thOUSand and .One .. Con. Clarenc~ Miller
Tbis past weet lhe House of
Representatives considered and
passed the much diacussed and
much debaled "Brady Bill," which
mandaa a aoven day waiting peri·
od bef~ any ptJitblse of a handJUll frCII1 alicensed aun dealer can
be fiaeliRd 1 thint k u importallt
at the 01111et to point out t11at thll
bill if PISSed by the Senate and
siP., Iato law by lhe President,
pertai111 only to handguns pur·
chased. from liceased dealers. It
does not pertain 10 handguns purcMsecl via classified ad or Ill bandauns purclllsed at a 0ea marbt or
ylrd sale. It also does not pertain 10
the purchase of a riOe or a shotgun,
a purchase that can be readily made
at most any !K·Mart, Seau , or
MonlJIOmery Ward department

any investigation to be conducted
is up to the l()l:al police, If they
have the time and lhe manpower
and have access to current cnminal
and mental health records, the)'
may be in a position to checl\ the
would-be purchaser against lhese
existing files. More often than not,
however, no such cenual files
exist, and if they do in nine cases
out of ten, lhe fifes .ie incomplete.
While acltnowledging the short·
comings of the Brady' s!Jl, iiS advocates nevertheless felt dill mere fact
that it prevented an instant purchase of a handgun and provrded .
what lhey view as a "cooling off
period •• for !hose who may, in 1 ·
depressed or highly emotional
9late, want to bring harm 1o lhemselves or to others, was enough rcason to support this Jeaislation.
Never mind lhat lhe vast majority
or criminals obtain their weapons
illegally. Never mind that there arc
already some 20,000 municipal and
state gun control laws on the
books. Never mind lhai Ibis myriad
of laws has done little 10 lhwart the
rapid rise of crime in Ibis conntry.
Never mind !hat state after state
and cily after city arc setting new
homicide records every year.
Unquestionably somethins needs to
be done to address this burgeoning
problem but you don't treat a can.
,
·

cer condition wi~ ~ band~d.
. '_I11e Brady Billm my Judgm_ent
IS htlle IIIOl'e than a band-lid. It IS a
placebo. It gives the _pu~lic !he
ampresston ':hat som~ats bemg
done when ~n fact nothm~ ol con5e9uen~e w_
all be.accomplished by
thts legislation. ~ the other hand,
the ~lll!i!CIS substitute. H.R. •l412.
whtch was offered 11 an amend·
ment to the Brady BiD, ~ which_I
sup~orted, wo~d not only have
pro~ for an 111S11nt check of lhe
prospec:uve 1wldgun puidlaser, but
It would have m~ and helped
to fund ~ es~li~ ~a comprehensrve naUonal cnmmal file
networlt that would be of value to
law ~on:ement ageaiS and.court
offJC!als for counlless other mves~gauve purposes as
Granted
~~ ~ould _take most state and loc!ll
JUnsdtctrons anywhere f~om sr.x
moo~ to ~ years to bnng lhcir
cx1sling cnmin81 records systems
up to ,speed, but you ha~ to start
sometime and '!hat better ttme than
now. The meniS of ~e S!A&amp;&amp;ors
~pproacb can be.~Y evidenced
10 lhe state o~ Virginila !"heie lhey .
have had an IRSIIDt poant·of-pur·
chase b_ackJroun~ check since
1989. Smce lhat lime ~re have
been over 82,000 transactions lhat
have been processed and Jbc whol~
transaction take$ no longer than n
takes your local rc:staura11t or

wen.

--:-:::.
..........

-aonow
matalll w11

Tile eatimated I 0 million

ovenJiabt visiiOn to those i81ands

-UIIIy and.lhe almost 6 million
cnu.. •ipa IJIIIellpn who tour
lhe Clriblielli every ycar generate
far more revenue that any olher
bush II in I fCIIoll bereft of most

. . . the-·-,.............
............
be

fer ,. llllllleut en.,_ ..,._

ject .... Tile ....... '"
......,
11111111 tlhf ....

T...,nlllllp, M....
C.UIIIY. Olllo. Tltlrr ,..._lo
,~ fldlll!lly ,....,_

llllury

11111. 1tc ·
l l

.

lllllllllruowUii.
Indeed, limited agricultural
·export&amp; constitute the only other
economic activity of note. •'The
1110a IPI:Cellful iDdalry we bave
lplft frola IOariam II 6ananu, ''
aya oae of olficlal in the WiadWIId hlepcls Cll die OUICm edae of
thr. t)orlh"""n

~·

Almost three decades ago (in
1962) die coloniaii'Owen that lonr
JOverned lhe reJiton's countries
began Jl11llllin diem iadependence.
Todly; most
islands arc wholly
or Jllrlially autonomous - but that
newfOWid freedom hardly has been
a bonanza.
The unemployment and illitera·
cy rates of numerous countries
range from 25 to 40 percent, their
infrastructure and social services
continue to deteriorate, the region
pays almost $1 billion annually to
tmport food and bevera11es, and
countless effofiS to stimulate ecn·
nomic develollment independent of
tourlam bale failed. .
.
&lt;Nwa clllowJ real eslale developen - II •Jaaly the Ollly IUCCIW
ful enlrcprelleun la many chroni·
cally poor adona - have added
about 10,000 new hotel, condominium, Jlle8t boule and other visitor rooms annually across the
region in rccen1 yesn.
Altbou&amp;h dill already has prOduced aa uamanageab1e glut of
.,.,...nwhdona iD 1011111 countrim,·
Clllll.-ue pmmoecn pl-. 10 further saturate the islands with

f.!

e,;tf11V8P8ntlv ~'l'f\f!.'1~iv" ..,.~nrt•

I -

.

•

heallll spas, gambling casinQs,
shopping centcn and iniCJtOntiJien- .
Jal .
.
~ilities almost certaiDiy ·
will de l!oy the special chnclel' of
the iJ1ands that Initially appealed to
visitors seeking unspoiled natural
settings for Jbeir vacations.
One consortium, for exiunple,
has plans to transform the tiny
island of Caba~ - an obscure
venue off lhe Venezuelan coast
whose current population consists
of 28 fishennln and their families
-,into a $5 billion resort with
14,000 hole! rooms, more than the
combined 101a1 of die Blrbldos and
Puerto Rico.
UnconliOUed development was
COIIIJDWeially (if not llllhetically)
successful in tha boominB 1980s,
but the financial risltl involved
have become an too appwent during the Cl1lltlll
Tourism
IICJOIII the regiCII plunJied 15 Ill 20
percent this year,=rious
economic and polilical
s.
The level of
•urity,
educational aualnmelll and other
rre
ea of ldf-sufllciency 11110111
Aruba's people far exceeds the

-lion.

Mcrilwu~1

"Y-,....,,. -

,

department store to clear a char&amp;e
plate. In Ibis period of time, over
1,500 people were denied purchas·
es on the basis of this bacltground
check. Conversely, in .lhe state of
Califomil where they have a 15·
day waiting period; the homicide
rate has risen 126%, double the
national average. So much for lhe
effectiveness of waiting periods. .
~dent Bush has said he will
ve10 die Brady Bill unless it comes
to him as part of an overall anti·
crime pac:kage, a package he .has
been pleading with Congress to
pass. I find it ironic that many of
the members who have been 80 •
vocal in !heir support of lhe Brady
Bill have been equally vocal in
their opposition to legislation
which would provide the country
wilh laws of substan!!C wid! which
to fight crime.
Sound law iequires a sound sys·
tem of enforcement. In my )udg·
ment, lhe Brady Bill substitutes
emotion for substance. It promises
a .lot more lhan it can dehver. The
Staggen substitute on the other
hand would have committed the
law enforcement community to
achieving a state of die art arcbive
of criminal misconduct, an archive
which would have served the
American public e~ttrcmely weU in '
iiS war against crime.

Will resort fever sink Caribbean?

odlerluxury bolels.
(C}I991

~•-&lt;.

'

NEWSPAPER

J-nr th• ;•l•ntl . Rl\l'l'PRPRI$F A C:C:N

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - After guiding the New
York Giants to !heir second Super
Bowl tide in five years, Bill Par·
¥ells reportedly will step down
today as head coach of the NFL
champions.
.
"He's gone," Newsday reponed a source as saying in today's
edition.
The Boston Globe and the New
York Daily News, citing sources
close to the club, said Parcells has
informed general manager George
Young that he will not honor lhe
final year of his contract. The
Globe said lhe Giants would make
an announcement today, aldlough
die Jeam had not scheduled a news
conference by late Tuesday night
"If 1 knew something, I
wouldn't say because I'd be
divulging a confidence, and if I
didn't know anythin~, I still
wouldn't say because its not my
plaCe" the New York Times quot·
cd Giants offensive coordinator

SPRIIIO SEASON .
eo,.lttt Lint of Y9tablt
and lllfdi119 Plantt, '
lumlng and Failagt
Hanging laskth. fruit and
Flow•lng Ttlll, Shnllt,
Azalta1, ihadedtntlrom anti
Holly Trltl.

.

.Hubbard's Greenhouse
SYRACUSE, OH'O

992-5771
OJII!I Dally 9·5; Sun. 1·5
:~

·'

.. :'
•
•.·

'j

Rl 33

••
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'''
j
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MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT

NOW.OPEN
. (304) 773-9000

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~'

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UIIIOUG&amp;T
lC*D.ccMti

inning of Tuesday night's National League game
in St. Louis, wbich the Reds woa 3·1. (AP)

"'

By The Associated Press
The Portland Trail Blazers, who
want to supplant lhe Los Angeles
Lakers as lhe NBA' s most consis·
tent powerhouse, will have to. go
thfough the Lakers to reach lhe
championship series for the second
consecutive year.
The, twO teams put die stamp of
dominance over lhe rest of lhe con·
ference Tuesday night, completing
4-1 series wins Jhat advanced them
to the Western finals, starting Sat·
urday iii Portland.
The Trail Blazers ousted Utah
with a \03-96 victory, while Los
Angeles got seven points in over-.
time from James Worlhy, including
the tiebreaking jumper with 38 sec·
onds left in a 124C119 decision
over Golden Slale lhat put die Lak·
ers in the conference finals for die
ninth time in 10 years. In that time,
they missed only last season.
In the East, Jhe Chi~go Bulls
.
advanced to die conference finals
Ray Handley as saying.
.
from an assistant's job in 1983, for the third straight Yl!llf. tripping
·According lb several newspa- said he knew nothing about the Philadelphia 1()().95 ror a 4·1 series
pers, Handley, elevated last winter audition.
· win. The Bulls await lhe winner of
from running ,backs coach, is con-· .
Parcells nearly quit as coach lhe Boston-Detroit series, which is
sidercd lhe front-runner to replace after the Giants won lhe Super tied 2·2 going into tonight's game
ParCells as head coach.
·
Bowl in January 1987. At die time, at Boston Garden.
·
"I can't help you on.lhii," Han· . he rcponcdly was in line 10 become
Worthy scored 21 of his 25
dley told The Assocaated Press die head coach of the Atlanta Fal· points after halftime for the Lakers,
Tuesday nighL
cons.
mcluding lhe jumper lhat broke a
When asked about reports lhat
Instead, he wound up getting a llJ-117 tie and put Los Angeles
he would.succeed Parcells, he said: conlniCt extension and slaying wilb ahead for good against the War·
"I've been reading lhat for a cou- die Giants. He has a year remaining riors. He then convened a foul shot
pic of mondls now."
.
on his four-year contract and was. with 28 seconds remaining for a
Attempts by the AP Tuesday to earn at least $750,000 Ibis sea· three-point advanJage.
night to reach Parcells and Young son.
"I thinlc I was a litlle hesitant,
were unsuccessful. A representive
over-passing," Worlhy said of the
in the office of Parcells' agent,
The Globe said Parcells, whose first half, when he made two of
Robert Fraley, would not confmn
team beat Buffalo in Ibis year's eight shots. "I was trying to go for
lhe report.
.
.
the easier bucket. I got more
There have been recurrent Super Bowl, could have received a aggressive in die second half."
rumors lhat Parcells, 49, would three-year extension wonh more
Tim Hardaway, who had 27
step down as Giants coach. He has than $1 million.
poinJS and 20 assists for die War·
reportedly said in lhe past ,that he
riors, made a layup with 21 sec·
would quit if his team won a sec·
The Globe said Parcells' rela· onds to go, malting it a one-point
ond Super Bowl.
tionship wilh Young, reponed to game,
Parcells recenlly fueled specula· have been less dian wann for sev·
Byron Scott gave the Lakers a
lion he was leaving by making an cral years, did not figure in his 122·119 lead wilh two foul shots
audition tape for NBC wllh the decision to quit
wilh II seconds left, After Mitch
possibility lhat ~e would ~come
• 'George has been no problem Richmond missed a three·point
an analyst on the network s pro for me," Parcells was quoted as attemp~ Scott made. two more free
football telecasts,
·
telling friends. '.'He has been very · throws to finish Jbe scoring.
The Globe said Parcells has not supportive.
Magic Johnson, 1-for-11 from
, negiotiated a TV contract and has
"Whenever I asked him to do the field in the first half, led the
no specifiC plans. It said he would somedling to ·help me out, he went Lakers wilh 28 points, 14 rebounds
not coach, however, and had not out and Jried to get Jhat done.''
and 12 assists. Sam Perkins fin·
IICliOliated wilh any other ttams.
The Times reported last monlh
that
teamed up wilh ptay·
by-play man Don Cnqui several
Weeks earlier in an auditiOII.
·"Js lhat what I did?" Parcells,
who had inJisted he was uncertain
about future plans, told the newspa·
per when asked about the report. " I
don't have any comment 011 it."
Young, w~o elevated Parcells

MASON MOTEL

,
•
:
:
:
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l
i

IDTS THE DIRT - Tbe Reds' Hal Morris
hits the diri after swinging aud IJ1issing a .pitch
from St. Louis burler Jamie Moyer in the first

Parcells ' may _res!g~ as Giants' coach

NOW OPEN FOR THE

Robert
Walters

succumbed in the 19s0s 10 the lure
or mass-marltet tourism.
Liftin11 I lon&amp;·standin&amp; -torium on lhe construction of new '
ho!els, lhe govemment invited the
iildustry - iucluding represeafltives of Hyatt; Sonesta and other
.... ;.,. chains - Ill more dian cJou..
"""""lho number or rooms in onI y
ble
Jhree years, from 3,200 in 1988 to
7,200in 1991.
An elaborate new highway net·
work was constructed. A govern·
ment leader insisted that "the con·
strO&lt;:tion of a Hnt-c)ass, 18-hole
golf COIII1C (at a cost of $10 mil·
liOD) is an absolute must" - even
lhoup lhe uid island barely hu
~h flesh water Ill slalte its rcsideniS lhirsts·much less ilriptC lhe
greens.
.
The ubiquitous.Japanese mllfria1i2ed with a $37 million loan from
a consortium of five financial instillllions Ill unclerwriee m~ than 70
percent of a Hyatt Regency's $52
milliOD worth of construction COSlS.
Butlhe govemmeat also hu panicIJ*ed 1n 111e flaancina of thilt 11111

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By R.B. FALLSTROM
fusi pitch in the eighlh, but then Fregosi said that Mulholland
AP Sports Writer
struck out Todd Zeile and got indeed had everylhing worlcing for
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Sooner or Bernard Gilltey to fly out wid! run· . him .
"He was getting Ill his ·pirches
later, Billy Hatcher says, the ners on second and lhird. Dibble
Cincinnati Reds will get rid of all has saved seven of the Reds' last over,'' Fregosi said, "and he was
!hose oosighlly batting averages.
eiRht victories.
· working both sides of tbe plate.
"You hope it's sooner than
"When you' ve JOt a bullpen The 3·2 bn:aking pitch he threw to
later,'' said Hau:her, who -went 3· like -we've got, there s no reason to (Matt) Williarns (in the fourth
for-4 wilh an RBI in Tuesday's 3-1 . let the starter go," Charlton said. inning) was a key pitch."
victory over the St. Louis Cardi- · "I'D give up lhe ball to our bullpen
The Phillies scored die only run
nals, raising his average 29 poin~ any day."
Mulholland would need in the fusl
to .200. "But no panic button .
The Reds lost 1.0 to lhe Canli- inning when Darrin Fleu:her's sec·
We're not down on ourselves and . na1s on Monday and hadn't scored oild·inninll double off staner KeUy
when we start playing well, watch in 13 inninp before talting the lead Downs (1·2) drove in Ricky Jor.
out National League West··
in lhe fourlh on bkxlp doubles by, dan, who had wallted.
The defending world champions . Morris and Hatcher off Jamie
Cubs 5, Braves 4
hardly looked die pan enlering die Moyer (04). Duncan and Morris
Andre Dawson's pinch home
second game of a three-game each drove in a run in the fiflh to run with two outs in the eighth
series.
make it 3.0.
.
_
inning lifted Chicago over Atlanla
ShofiStop Barry Larkin (injured ·
Moyer, who worked five at Wrigley Field.
elbow), caleher Joe Oliver (broken innings and ~ave up lhrce runs on
Dawson's eighlh homer of Jhe
finger) and second baseman Ifill six hits, hasn t won since Sept 15. season came on lhe fllSt pirch from
' Doran (strained lower back) were In his six starts the Cardinals have reliever Kent Mercker (1·2). Paul
out with injuries and the lineup. scored Oll)y on~ run while he was· Assenmacher (i.CJ) worked one and
included four starters hitting .206 ' in the game, a stretch of 27 one· OPe·lhird innings of scoreless relief
or below and two rookies with a lhird innings.
·
· , for the victory and Dave Smith got
total of one major-league at~bat
"What arc you going to do?" lhrec outs for his ninlh save.
between diem.
Moyer said. " You've got to go out ·
Pirates'· AstJ:os 3
Aside from Hal Morris, who !here and try to keep it close. They
Left-handei Zane Smith gave up
went 2-for-4 with an RBI and didn't hit the ball hard, but it two runs in six and two-third
raised his NL·leading average to doesn't matter how hard lhey hit it, innings to beat Houston for the
.389, most of die Reds are slump· a hit's a hit"
.
fourth straight time for visiting
ing. Mariano Duncan entered lhe
Elsewhere in the NL it was Pittsburgh.
.
game hitting .206, Chris Sabo .20:4 Philadelphia 5, San Francisco 0;
Smidl (5·1) last lost to Housoon
and Glenn Braggs .135 and as a Chicago 5, Atlanta 4; Pittsburgh 6, on April4, 1989, and is 4-0 in
, team llle Reds trailed lhe major Houston 3; New York 6, San Diego seven starts against tbe Astros
since dlen. He gave up seven hits.
leagues with a .222 average and I; and Los Angeles 6, Monlltlll2.
were next-to-last in rons.
PblUles 5, Giants 0
, before Stan Belinda wortre!( one
"I hope Ibis doesn't persist too
The San Franciaco GiantS are and one·lhird innings and fihl Lan·
much longer,'' Reds manager Lou making some progress against drum rmished for his fifth save.
Piniella said.
Terry Mulholland. They even had
Pete Harnisch (2· 2) took !he
In lhe meantime·; the pitching some hits Ibis time. •
loss, giving up five runs and seven
staff continues to carry the load.
Mulholland Jave UJ1 eight hits hilS in five innings. Bobby Bonilla
Norm Charlton (2-3) gave up a run . and no runs ill etghl'innlllgs against had a two-run double for the
in 1 1·3 innings and Rob Dibble his former team Tuesday night, Pirates and Jay Bell added two
got the last five oUJs for his nindl leading Philadelphia past strug- RBis.
save ill nine chances.
gling San Francisco 9.0.
Mets 6, Padres 1
Cardinals manager Joe Torre is
Mulholland, traded by the
Hubie Brooks hit his seventh
happy his team isn't seeing the GianiS to Philadelphia in 1989, career grand slam as the Mets best
Reds at !heir best
pitched a no-hitter against the San Diego ·at Jack Murphy Stadi·
"They've got as good pitching Giants last Aug. 15 at Veterans um. Brooks homered off Eric Nolle
as yon can find," Torre said. "And Sladium. He's 4-2 lif~time against (3·2) wilh two outs in the lhird
they're goin!! to hit. You know San Francisco wilh a 1.44 ERA.
inning for a S·11ead.
lhey're not gomg to hit.220 or·.230
"I may get a little m~ · compet·
Wally Whitehurst (2·1), ~g
or whatever. They're going to kill itive when I pitch against a team his first start afler three rehef
somebody."
·
that has the hitters the Giants · appearances. gave up three hilS in
· Charlton, who won for the firSt have," Mulholland said,' "but I Hve innings for lhe victory. Pete
time in five starts, is accus10111ed to doli 't hold lmylhing against lhem Schourek worked fqur innings for
worldng wilh 'little suppon. Ip his for !fading me. That's just pan of his second save.
fllSt six starts, lhe Reds scored 10 lhe business."
Dodllfl'll6, Expos l
runs.
The way die GianiS arc going,
Kevin Gross, breaking out of a
"Three runs is a lot of runs for they may wish lhey had M1,1lhol· slilmp, f!hed six shutout innings
me," said Charlton, who gave up land back. San Francisco has lost to help
Angeles beat Montreal
five hits, struck out three and four st:rai'ght James and 16 of its at Dodger Sladium.
walked lhree. "I don't think 1 was last 20. The G1811ts' 10.22 record is
Gross (2· 3) gave up two hits en
trying to fool anybody, I just chal· lhe worst in the major leagues.
route to his second sttaight victory.
lenged die hitters."
. ·.
"Mulholland pitched a gr~t · The DOdgers took a 2·0 lead
Charlton also was goc:KI at get· game, b~t everybody's been ~mg against rookie Mark Gardner (0.1)
ling out of II'OUblc, stranding·a run· that agamst us,'' San Franctsco on RBI singles by Darryl Strawber·
ner on lhird base in tbe second, manager Ro~er Craig said. ry in die first inning and Eddie
third and fourth innings.
"Nobody is ~nging the bat well Murray in the third. Los Angeles
Dibble gave up a one-out RBI for us."
pulled away with a four-run fourth.
single to Pedro Guerrero on his
Philadelphia manager , Jim

Mum's the word . about military base closings

The Daily Sentinel

•

Reds hand Cardinals 3•lloss

Page 2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy~ldclleport, Ohio
Wednelday,,llay 15, 1111

•

....

ished with 19 points and 15
Jordan said he 1oo.k advantage ~
rebounds.
of Sixers guard Hersey Hawkins'
Chris Mullin and Richmond sore leg to take charge offensively .,,,
scOred 26 points each for lhe War· and on the boards. ·
riors, whose victory in. Gam~ 2
"It got down' to where every .
snapped an 11-game playoff losmg basket counled from here on in, ~
streak at die Forum.
. whoever takes it and goes 10 the , •
Warriors head coach Don Nel- basket," Jordan said. " At that
son said Perkins' easy layup at the point execution was everything." .,
end of regulation cost his team the
· B~kley led the 76ers with 30 ,
gl!I!IC.
points and Annon Gilliam scored · ,
· "I wish we hadn't .had one 21. Scottie Pippen scored 2~ ,: ... •
breakdown at lhe wrong time1" he points, 24 of lhem in the first half. · ·
.,
said. "It shouldn't happen dlat you
should give them a layup at dlat
The Daily S«;ntinel
time. It did, we have to live with
it." ,
. (USPS 1411-9(1())
Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter
A Dlvllloa of Mulllmedla, Inc.
led a 16.0 outburst to start the third
Published every aft ernoOO , Mond ay
.,
quaner thqt gave Portland, now 6-0
through Frida y. 111 Court St., Pomeroy.
Oblo~
by
th
e
Ohio
Va
lley
PuiJ.
,
at home in the playoffs, a 67-52
llshlng (:ompany! Multtmedla, Inc.,
lead.
Po!!l&lt;'roy, Olllo 45769. Ph . 99%-2156. Se·
,,
"It was the key to the g11111e."
cond class pMtag p paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Portland head coach Rick Adelman
said "We turned the game around.
Member: Th r As sociated Press, In- :~
land Dally PrHs As soclauon and t he
We took control, and we main ·
Ohio NPwspaper AUCX!Iatlon. Natton'al
Jained it.' '.
, Adve rtising Representative, Branh a m
Porter scored 22 points and
N~:"Wgpaper Sales, 733 Third A ve nu ~:~, • "':
Nf'w York, Nt"W York 10Ql7.
Drexler, playing despite :a sprained
. '
right big toe, finished wit~ 22
~R : Send address changes
points, nine rebounds and eaght
to ThP Dally Sentinel , 111 Court St,. · .:~.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!57et.
assists, giving him an average of
19.8 points, 10 rebounds and 9.6
8UI8CRIPTION RATI!B
By Carrier or ·Motor ROute
assisiS in Jhe series.
One Week .... .. .. ...... .. ..... , .... ....... .. $1.60
Karl Malone scored 26 points
Qnf!' Month .................................. 16.95
for die Jazz but was 4-for-13 from
OnE' Year ............... .................. $83.20
lhe field in the second half. Jeff
SINGLE COPV.
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Malone scored 20 and John Stock·
Dally ... , ...... , .......... ,....... .. ... . 25 .Cenls
1on had 19 points and 14 assists for
Subscribers not desiring tp pay the car.
Utah.
rler may rf'ml! In a d va n ~ dlrPcl to
Michael Jordan, who has carried
'The Da lly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
the Bulls to playoff victories over
basts. Credit will be gi ven carrier oo cb
week.
...,.
New York and Philadelphia teams
led by Patrick Ewing and Charles
No subscrlpllons by ma ll perm itt e-d In
areas whert' homf." carri er se r Y I C'E~ · I S
Barkley, had big-man numbers in
availa ble.
the fmale againsl the 76ers.
Mall Sui:Mcrlptlons
Jordan had 38 points and a
l•skle Mel~ Coanty
career-high 19 rebounds, his first
13 Weeks ................... .... .. ......... 121.1!4
double-figure rebound game in the
26 WPeks .. .. ... ..... ... ..... ... ......... .. $43.16
52 Weeks .... ........... ... ..., ... .... ..... 184.76
playoffs. He also scored lhe Bulls'
Outside Mel(l County
·last 12 points and 25 in the second
13 Weeks ..... ........ ......... ... .. ....... $23.40
half as they broke away from a 92·
26 Weeks .... .............. .. ..... ......... $45.50
52 We(&gt;kS .. ............ .... .. .... ..... .. ... 188.40
92 tie.
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'

�Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 15, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeclay, May 15,1991

Seattle tops Cleveland·2-1; ·New York, Baltimore al~o win
•

By Clf\JCKMELVIN
AP Sports Writer
•
CLEVELAND (AP)- lndivid·
· ually, no one is threatening to ......
......,
: away Mike Schooler's job while he
• recove~s from an arm problem .
•• Collecllvely, however, the Seattle
· · Mmners' bullpen is getting along
: justfme wilhout him.
: Bill Swift was the latest hero,
; suanding the po1ential tying run at
· ·second base in the ninth inning
· .Tuesday night as the Mariners beat ·
· lheCievelandlndians2-l.
·: It was 1he ninlh successful save
• in 10 opportunities for the Mariners
: this year. Swift and Mike Jackson
are lhe leaders with 1hree each. ·
"Whatever works," said starter
Brian Holman, the beneficiary of
Swift's third save. "It doesn't matter wbo it is for us. The guys have
done a real g&lt;!od eo~"
~er J'!"
eb_vre turned to
Sw1ft m .thiS parucular case
because he needed _ground balls.
an~ because Sw1ft.1S a ~mkerball
p1tcher who fields his pos1Uon well.
After Holman gave up a leadoff
single to Carlos Baerga in the
. !'in~. a sacrifice bunt aaempt was
meYitable, so ·the Importance of a
pitc~'s defense was magnified.
Swift threw out Turner Ward at
first on the bunt, then got two
undou
end 1h
gro"
ts ~
e gatne.
Every mg~t. you ~ whoever
you f~l•s then~htguy, ~efeb~
S81d. Tom~t, tt wa_s S~•ft If I d
needed a strilteout, 1t m1ght have
been som~ll&lt;&gt;dy els~. The whole
conc~pt •s to keep everybody
fresh.
.
: Schooler, who m•ssed the final
.month of 1990 because of a sore
sho~lder, had 63 saves for the
: Mafiners over lh~ past two seasons.
He_s been out. thiS year because ~f
an m~ed. tnc:eps tendon 1hat will
keep him sulehned at least two or
1hree more weeks.
.
Holman (4-3) went e1ght·plus
mnm1•• allowing one run and

.

I

seven hits while improving to 4-0 on an RBI sin~le by Ken Griffey homcredforlhehost Y~.
lifetime against the Indians. He Sr. Clevel4nd tied it iD the second
With Scott Bailes pitching in the
red•wd his ERA to 2.90.
wben Chris James sinwL.A went to e· hth Hensle Meul
doubled
"I really tn'ed to concen-te
•g • homered
· Y and Barfield
ens
ua on
t h'IT d on Baerga 's a-uo
double and Nokes
also•
throwing my curve ball ·down," scored on Ward's groundouL
homered. Then Bailes; who threw
said Holman, who struck out four
Pltcben ruled 'tuesday atpt . six pitches in all, hit Randy
and got 16 ground-ball outs. "I
Welcome back, Pascual. You 'Velarde in the left ,leg and was .
tried to throw offspeed stuff early. I too, Mark.
·
· ejected.
had a better sinker simply because I
· And welcome back to the real
didn't try to overthrow iL"
Jack Monis.
Blue Jays4, Royals 1
The win was the Mariners'
The pitchers held a big edge
Gubicza was outpitched by
eighth in lhe last nine games. and it over the hitters in the American David Wells, who won his fo(Jrth
moved them within a half-game of League on Tuesday. Three reasons strilig!l:C· Wells needed relief ·
· Mike Timlin, who got
first-placeOal(land in !heAL West. were Pascual Perez of the New from
The Indians have lost six of York Yankees, Mark Gubicza of into trouble in 1he eighth and ninth
their last seven. They are 2-9 at the Kansas City Royals and Min- innings, but escaped both times for
home.
·
nesota's Morris.
his fiiSl major league save.
Rod Nichols (0-1) took the loss
Perez, appearing for the first
Greg Myers had a two-run
in his riTSI start of the year, allow- time since Apri125, 1990, allowed homer for Toronto.
. ·
ing two runs and eight hits in eight two hits in six innings as New
Twins 5, Brewers 1
and one-third innings. He walked York beat California 7-1 : He had
At Minnesota, the fans got to
two and struck out seven.
been inactive for nearly all of.last see why the Twins spent $3 million
Nichols has ieehnically been the season and underwent shoultler to sigil Morris as a free agent. Mor-·
Indians' flflh starter au year, but he surgery in August.
ris allowed only a pair of doubles
ha~ appeared in only one game, in
"I was so excited, so nervous, to Jim Ganmer and fanned seven.
rel1ef,· because of a light early but I was also very happy,'' Perez
Chili Davis hit his fourlh homer
sch;eduleand a couple ofrainouts.
said I'm a happy guy, but I'm hap- ~ in three games to P&lt;!Wer the Twins
'I was a little nervou s,' • he piest when I'm pitehmg."
to their fourth straight victory. Tbe
said "It's been a while since I've
Gubicza couldn't have been . Twins moved two games above
been out there facing big-league happy wilh Kansas City's 4-1 loss .500 (17-15) for the fii'SI time Ibis
hitters. I was really mqre nervous at Toronto. 'But he did OK in his season. The Twins u;e 15-6 since
than I was for my first bi~-league first start since June 29, 1990. He starting the season 2-9.
start. But around the sixlh 1nning, I was recovering from arthroscopic
started having fun. Everylhing sort surgery to repair a partially torn
Orioles li, Athletics 1 .
of clicked in."
.
rotator cuff.
At Baltimore, Cal Riplceil conThe sixlh, however, w~s also the
He gave up 1hree runs on seven tinued his lear as the Orioles got
turning point With the score tied hits in five innings.
··
four solo homen. In addition 10 bis
1-1, Nichols walked Pete o :Brien
Monis manages to stay healthy. ninth homer, Ripken singled and
on a close pitch, and Alvin Davis His pitching was kind of sickly this walked twice, raising his batting
followed with a two-out double . season, though, until Tuesday, average to .358.
into lhe left-r.etd comer that scored when he pitched a two-hitter.
Joe Orsulak, Mike Devereaux
O'Brien from first base. O'Brien
It was a different Morris than and Chris Hoiles also homered for
barely got to the plate ahead of the the Twins had seen iq his. firsi the Orioles, who had lost 14 of
tag by Sandy Alomar.
·
seven starts, when be comp1led a their last 18 games against Oak"It was just a bang-bang play," 5,89 earned run av~e. . .
· land. Twenty-two of Baltimore's
O'Brien said. "I.just stuck my toe
In.other gatnes,•t was B~tunore last 23 home runs_ and 25 of 34
in there. The umpire was in a great 6, Oal(land I; Boston 4, Ch1C8,1to I; overall- have come with ·the
position to make the caD."
and Texas 5, Detroit 3.
bases empty.
· "Yeah, he was safe,'' Cleveland
Yankees 7, Allgels t
Red Sox 4, White Sox 1
manager John McNatnara said. "It
After Perez's strong outing,
At Boston, Tom Bolton (4·0)
was
execution of the relay . Jo.hn Habyan pitched three good and Jeff Reardon shill down ChicaHe
in under lhe tag."
innings for his first save. Mel Hal~ go, wilh Reardon earning bis 111h
scored a run in lhe first Matt Nokes and Jesse Barfield save. The Reel Sox
back on 1he

'

.-

'•

..
..••

winning track after losing two
games in a row for the riiSl time in
a monlh.
. Ellis Burks homered for Boston
as the Red sox beat Melido Perez, ·
Pascual's brolher.
Bolton carried a shutout into 1he
ninlh.
Rlulgen 5, Tlten 3
. ,
At Arlington, Rafael Palme1ro
had a two-run triple in lhe fiflh to

Blue Devils capture first
·sectional title since 1969

for the Devils since 1969 when
Cliff Wilson, BJ:at Wilson's' father,
was · the GAHS mentor. The
It's just a family tradition!
Marauders ended their season at
Aflef watching Zane Beegle's
11-9.
Meigs Marauders score once to
Meigs scored the game's first
crack a 1-1 tie in the top of the
run in the second, which started
eighth inning of Tuesday's Diviwhen Eric Heck flied out to right
sion n baseball sei:tional at Memor.~td. Then Terry ~cuter, who got
aboard wilh a double, scored on a
single by Gary Adams. In an
attempt to ~et out of lhe doubleplay poss1bility, Adams was
thrown out attempting to steal at
second by catcher Rod Young. Tbe
inning ended when Mike (Abby)
Welsh struck out.
After Marauder starter Jeremy
Pbalin, who chalked up 15 strike·
outs and two walks in seven and
one-third innin~s of work, kept lhe
French City ·mne away from the
plate in the bottom of the second,
!here were 1hree s~
· t scoreless
innings before Galli is erased lhe
Marauders' lead. int Davis, who
started off the·GAHS sixlh with a
·double, .scored on Ryan Young's
single. Ryan Young: trying to do as
Adams had done 1n the second,
encounlered lhe same result ID ending up as another notch on catcber
Jason Wright's belt. Phalin then
followed by strikin~ out Rob Skid·
moreandRy.an Sm1th.
The Marauders' elgllth
After Terry McGuire popped
out, Kevin Taylor doubled. Jason
Wright doubled to score Taylor, at
which poinl Skidmore left his
shortstop position to relieve StarleT
Clint Davis. Skidmore faced two
batters - Randy Corsi, who
grounded out to shortstop, 11nd
Heck, who flied out to left to end
the Marauders' rally.
The Academy's eighth
OUT PLAY IN PROGRESS- Mei,s'Marauder Shawn Hamon
After Tony Canaday struck OUI,
goes Into his silde lnlo third base on a b1t-and-run play in lhe fourth
Chris Howell singled to left field.
innlna ofTuesday•s Division II sectional baseball game agalinst host
In playing the single, Welsh, the
Gallla Academy, which lhe Blue Devils won 3·21n elgllt frames. On
·
Marauders'
left fielder, committed
this play Marauder Terry McGuire bits a fielder's choice that
an
error
that
allowed Howell to get
results·in lbe lhrow by Blue Devil shortstop Rol) Skidmore (in back•
to
second
Davis
doubled in How·
ground) lo third baseman Rod Young for the out. (OVP photo by G.
which
Beegle
brought in
ell,
after
Spen«r Osborne)
· Taylor from center field to replace

Marietta track teains
sweep Meigs Invitational

Marieua swept both ends of last 4:25.9.
Friday's Meigs Invitational, held at
Tiger girls complete IIWeep
Meigs High School, with the Tigers
The girls' session witnessed
outdistancing' Vinton County _in d!e .Marieua outpa~ Ravenswood by a
boys' session and Ravenswood m 126-76 margm. Athens, which
the girls' session.
. placed third with 7 5 points, was .
The boys' session saw Marieua followe.d by Vinton County {44)
walk away from Vinton County by Miller (23), Wellston (20), Galli~
a 140-67 count. Athens, which Academy (16), Meigs {10), Federal
-showed up in third with 55 poif!ts, Hocking (nine) and Alexander
was followed by Federal Hocking (none).
(48), Alexander (32), Meigs (26),
The girls' team and individual
GaUia Academy (21), Ravenswood · results were as foUows:
(II), Wellston (five) and Miller
Long jump- Hayes (Vinton
(four).
Co.), 15-4 1/2; Schloss .(Athens);
The boys' team and individual . 14-10 1/2; Davis (Melp), 14-1 ·
finishes were as follows:
Tammy Bays (GA), 13-3; Lincol~
Pole vault - Athens (9-0); (Marjeua), 12·5 1/2; Stoter (ManFederal Hocking_ (8-6), Athens (7- etta), 12-4.
. .
6), Wellston (1-6).
Discus - Theiss (Marietta),
Shot put -Poe (Vinton Co.),
120-5 1/2; Kroft (Marietta), 120-3 30-6; Thacker (Marietta), 28-5;
1/2; Staats (Meigs), 118-1; Bert ·Alfred (Ravenswood); 27-6;
Wood (Gallia Academy), 112·3 · Wycinsta (Miller), 26-5; Pillo
t/2; McFee (FH), 110-5 1/2; · (Ravenswood), · 25-5; Micheal
Gobeen (WeUston), 108-3 3/4.
(Athens), 25-3 1/2.
· 110-meter hurdles - Jordan
100-meter hurdles - KostoCo. ) , : 16 .9; Mcc abe (hyrz
.
(v mton
th (Athens), : 17; Goodwin
A ens), :1 8.2; Patten (Marietta),
(Marietta), ·17.7; Casto (Athens),
:17.7; Kriechbaum (Marietta), :18.2; Schwartz (Marieua), :18.3;
: 17.9; Th ompson (FH) , : 18. 3; Young (Vinton Co.), :19.1; Arus
Marazan (Athens); :18.3.
(Vi nton Co.). :19.2.
100·meter dash- Swilhberger
100-meler das(l - Wyatt
(Me!Jll), :12.2; Robinson (Mariet- (Marietta), :13.5; Schloss (Athens)
ta), :12.4; Johnson (Marietta), and Argabright (Wellston), both
:12.4; Hollinshead (Vinton Co.), :14; Bell (Ravenswood), :14.4; ·
:12.8; Gildei'$ (FH), :13:4; Patton Shaver· (Ravenswood), :14.7;
1
(Vinton Co.), : 13.5.
·
Wheeler (Marietta), : 14.8.
Lon1 jump - Jordan (Vinton
1,600-meter run - Sams
Co.), 17-7 l/2; ·lfl!rger (Marietta), (Miller).
5:56;
Crawford
17-5; Casto (Athens), 16-7; Kiger (Ravenswood), 5:58.4; Rogers
{Athens), 16-6 1/2; Byers (Vinton (Marietta), 6:00.1; Coble (Athens),
Co.),l6-2; Vollger(Miller), 16-l.
6:13.8; Bradley (Ravenswood),
u;tgh jump .....! Chapman 6:15.6; Delazzera (Marietta),
{Alexander), .5-7 , 1/2; Kiger 6:31.4.
{Athens), Robinson (Marietta), JorDiscus - Thacker (Mariettil),
dan (Vinton Co.), ali S-2; McGrab 86-9 1/2; Poe (Vinton Co.), 73-1
(Miller) and Erlwein (Marietta), 1/2; Argabright (Wellston), 70· 7;
both 5.0.
, ·
Rogers (Marietta}, 70-0; Pierson
1,600-meter run - Whitmore · (FH), , 64-7 3/4;
Alfred
(Alexander), 5: 12; Brett Baker (Ravenswood), 62-3 1/2. ·
(GA), 5:13; Kri~hbaum (Manet- ·
4 x tOO-meter relay - Athens
ta), 5:13.5; Holzepol (Athens), (:55.1),
Marietta
(:56.6),
5: 15; Ward (Vinton Co.), 5:28.8; Ravenswood (:57), Meigs (:57.4),
Morris (Ravenswood), 5:20.
Miller (: 58.3) and Vinton Co.
4 x tOO-meter relay - Federal (:59.2).
Hocking (:51.3), Athens and
400-meter dash - Arnold
Ravenswood (both :52.6), Vinton (Marietta), I :03.6; Farrington
Co. (:52.9), Marietta (:53.2) and (Ravenswoocn, 1:06.3; Methot
.Miller (:53.4). .
·
(Marietta). -1:08.3; Courtney
Sbol put - Cha{Nilan (Alexan- (See INVlTATIONAL on Paae 5)
der). 43-5 1/2; TheiSS (Marietta),
49-2 112; McFee (Federal Hocking), 39-10; Wood (GA), '35-10
1/2; Staats (Mells), 35·1~;
Lemaster (Ravenswood), 34-1 1/2.
400·meter dasb -:- Chapman
{AIClWider), :54.5; Lawrence (FH),
:58.1; O'Hara (Vinton Co.), :58.2;
Harris (Marietta), :59.3; Mike
Soles ((iA) and Morris
(Ravenswood), bolh 1:02.1.
800-111eter run - Robinson
(Marieua), 2:10.1; Erlwein (Marietta), 2:20.6; O'Hara (Vinton Co.),
2:27.1; Weekley (fH), 2:27.8;
Baker (GA), 2:28; Schore (Vinton
Then there is lhe Sportsman of Co.), 2:30.
the Year "honor" handed to King,
200-meter dash - Johnson
master of hyperbole and hyperven- (Marietta), :24.8; Wlall (Meigs),
. tilation.
:25.3; Hollinshead (Vinton Co.),
"It is for his ability to obscw-e :26.5; McCabe (Marietta), :26.9;
4 QUART &amp; 6 QUilT
'\
minutia in pointless rhetoric that Hall (Ravenswood), :27; Patton
. '
Sports IUstated has made this box- (Vinron Co.), :27 .I.
ing impressario and promoter
4 x 400-meter relay - Manetta
paramount . Sportsman of the (4:08;1),
Vinton Co. (4:13.4), FedYear."
eral Hocking and Athens (both
4: 14.5), Alexander (4:25.4) and
Fifty years ago, in 1141, "C&amp;s~~erole Gallia 'Academy (Soles, Adam
MASON, WY.
Cookery" by Marion Tracy was pub- Clark, Neal Cotton and Baker),
lished. It became a favorite book
among war .brides.

osts 3-2 win over M,eigs in eight innings

•'

rial Field in Gallipolis against Gal-

'•
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'

O'BIUEN St9·~-

Pete

slides 11r11y rrom

Indians cakller Sandy Alomar Jr. to score durln1 Tuesday Diallt's

(AP)

•Coolers
•Water J11gs
•Electric
Ice Cream
Makers

Sports Illstated to parody popular sports magazine
•

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer .
'·
NEW YORK (AP) - Oon King
.. Sportsman of the Year? Buddy
•· Ryan in a nunnery? The lditarod
· ' .r.un through the Streets of New
York? .
You bet. It's right there on the
pages of SI.
Sports lllstaled, that·is.
.
Andrews and McMeel, which
; · specializes in publishing the
humorous and offbeat, has come up
; with a wickedly funny parody of
· the nation's most popular sports
: 'magazine. Prom the cover shot of
' Jose Canseco asking, "How's My.
; Driving?" to the review of CBS's
,. Pigskin Prognosticator (Pig-Prog
: for short) that foretells the outcome
1 of football games minutes into lhe
first quarler, Sports lllstated pulls
no J)UIIChes.
. Everyone is a subject for satire,
: an object of ill-affection.
'
Tbe NCAA gets it in a Scorecard editorial detailing its new
fundraising policy of auctioning off
' nicknames to the hi~hest bidder.
The Fordham Fightmg Irish, for
exa!llple. And the University of
Alaska Seminoles.
' "We take greq t pride in our
. Native American heritage, •• the
: magazine quoiCS an Alaskan boost. er, diste$arding the fact that not
one Semmole Indian has ever set
foot in Alaska.
'
Notre Dame's haughty profile
ralces a beatina by getting, of all
: ~ alhumbs up.
• • To tho Rev. Edward Malloy,
: JRIIitiCat ol NcXre Dime who, dur·
: in1 commencement c:eranonies ...
• awarded senior Orca Davis his
dipl0111a, then puahed him from
behind down a msha of stairs,
adding, 'I'm aorry Greg ·... I sw-e
• hope I didn't clip you and cost ua a
: llllional champion.lhip•••
. Oooh.
• The features range from 1
·revealin1 IIOTY of Buddy R~'l
fmdina Ills calling and C!lllel'ing •

•

...

•

coovem to an ltilarious piece on the because everyone involved has
u,s. Golf Association hooking up read Sports Illustrated for years.
~·th Donald Trump and renaming That familiarity with style and
•ts most prestigious tournament the makeup was critical in putting
Trump Open.
together the takeoff.
Sports Illustrated itself gets its
"SI is something that every redshare of bits. The parody's letlers blooded American kid grew up
.section includes reference to· a reading," Wolff says. "It'~ a rile
swimsuit issue featuring headless of passage. It's clear it's lhe prestore mannequins dressed in mier sports publication. We did this
. bathing - · The parody's editors out of admiration."
I
also complain about Sl's decision .
It's difficult not to admire lhe
to cllangc its look just as Sports Ill- pluck of lhe people involved in lhe
staled was being completed.
parody. Everything - pro and
"We put as much attention to · amaleur
sportS, learn games, indidetail as possible," says Rick vidual events,
sponsors and· adverW&lt;!lff, the editor of the parody, tisers, television, newspapers, jourwhtch gnes·on sale at bookstores nahsm, religion, sex - is raked
thiS week. "About two or three over.
.
·
months ago, we were set and, to
The popular Faces in the Crowd
and liebold, we open that week's SI
section
that often has spotlighled
and it has changed format. They youngsters
who later become stars
.
didn't give us any advance word."
•s esppcially cynical. It compares in
Wolff, who is a senior editor at . photos and print Tommy Lasorda
another publishing house, MacMil- to Betty Friedan, Fmumdo, Valentan Inc., has done freelance work zuela to ·Babe Rulh, and Sleffi Graf
for Sports IUusuated.
to the Statue of Liberty. ·
"I ha 1
r fri
The parody includes real and
ve ots o ends at SI, or I
ridiculous
advertisements includdid," he says with a chuckle. "We .
tng
several
that. require double ~
~~~-~ know a parody was in the checking before
the reader can figTh ·
w-e
out
what's
what
IS parody generally works

.

.

Hardware

•

t

·
(Athens); 1:09.6; Gunzcley ·
(Ravenswood), 1:09.8; Crock
(A~~oJ:~~:~ relay_ Athens
(1:58.1), Md ar(i et la (l:G59 .4i),
Ravenswoo
2 :04 . 1;
a 11 a
Academy (Mandy Burllle, Stacy •
Slagle, Brandy Gordon and
Crlssy Smeltzer, 2:0S.Ii), Federal
Hocking (2:07.2) and Miller

(2:~~!~eter run_ Beth.(Marietta),
2:38.7;
Farrington
(Ravenswood),. 2:43.4; Rogers
(Manetta), 2:43.9; Sara Walker
(GA), 2:47.5; Whltaey Hastwell
(GA),
2:48.4;
. Bradley
(RavenswoOd), 2:51.8.
200-meter dash - Smithberger
(Marietta), :26.9; Argabright
(Wellston),
:29.7;
Bell
(Ravenswood), :29.9; Shaver
(Ravenswood), :30.1; Grimm
(Marietta). :30.8 ..

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

INSURANCE

Pll.

J

~6·1699

HOUISI I A.M.·6 P.M.

WEDNESDAY: Stuffed Manicotti · ·
THURSDAY: Craam Baked Chicken
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY: Broiled Alaskan Pollock .
1.1.Q. Ribs, Prime Rib,
Deep Friad luttirfly Shrimp

BEATS THROW- Gallia Academy's Ryan Young (runnin~)
went into overdrive to beat tbe oiT·Iarget throw of Meigs third sack·
er Eric Heck to firsl base (notice ibe ball above Young's ten shoulder) in lhe third iDning of Tuesday's Division II sectional baseball
game in Gallipolis. Young went 3 for 3 to help the Blue Devils nolch
·· a 3·2 victory In elghl inllings. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

•

PG~Mray,

RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED

,I
··

-

·-~--

WITH FRIES ........~....... S2.19

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
~·at The ""' of the l'omtroy·M-n lridge"

~;·····~·"···~,

MANIA

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.1

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEiYING
•. MEIGS coum
SINCE 11161

'

Hundreds.Of New Cars,
Trucks And Vans On Di

•

3 Big Days At
Grand Central Mall
May 16-17-18
THURSDAY 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
FRIDAY
10 a.m.-9 p.m.
SATURDAY 10 a.m.-9 p.m.

.! ,!
....
.
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Selecr a unique gifr for your graduating
senior. Shown here are handsome
pen/ pend! set, Diamond earrings.
Moonphase watches and flat cut Blue
Star Sapphire and diamond ring. These

'

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I '

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•As!01g ~lor Co.
•Oils Ford
•Oils Lincoln/Mercury

•Mullen Mo!ors
·Parkersburg Nlssan/Peugeot
•terry Simmons Honda, Mazda, VW
•Superior Toyota

•Kincheloe Chrysler~~moulh
•Matlieoy GMC Trucks
·louis Thomas Subaru
•McClinton Chevrolel'lmports •Dick Warner Ponilac

•Whartcin Cldillac/OidsiJeep Eagle

.

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'

'

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,' ~

MEMBER WOIII.D:S LAAGEST

'

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items and many more have been
reduced by 20'X or more for this sale.
Visit us for u truly unique gift ar a
special price.

~GROUP ~ ~ND£1'END£NT

JEWELfRS QRGNj!ZAIION

I

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•

FEATURED DAILY SPECIALS
Carry Out .Avallabla

GILMORE'S
112 East Mllln

High jump - Hayes (Vinton
Co.), 4-8; Gorman (Athens), 4-6;
Berry (Miller), .4-6; Vedder
(Athens) and Arnold (Ml!fietta),
both 4-4; Colman (Ravenswood),
unknown.
·
4 x 400-meter relay- Marietta
41) Ra
wood (4 47 6) Fed
(4: • vens
: · • .•
eral Hocking (4:56 .2), Gallla
Academy (Hastwell, Jtncie
Haner, Tammy BafS and Walker, 4:57.9), and Vmton County
&lt;5:19).

.

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•SEIV..G lUNCH: T111sclay thl'!l Friday
'
II :00 a.m. • 3:00 p.m.
•sEIV..G DINNEI
Wed••llly I l1lurpllay - 5 pm-1 pm
Friday I Saturdly - S pm-9 pm
ClOSED SUNDAY I MONDAY

'$1.•49·

111 Second St., Pameroy

! •

627 3nt Awa., G•lpalls

BAR B.Q.

AUTO

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLIN MUSSEl

____

DINNER
SPECIALS .••.

Special of the rw eek!

r---------..-,.-----,

--

.,.....

...._................
GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFIIGEUYOIS, YYs,
GAS &amp; EUC. UNGES

TOSSES GEM '-'- Meigs nreballer Jeremy Phalin struck out a
game-high 15 batters, gave up nve hits and walked one In seven and
one-third innings of moundwork in Tuesday's Division U sectional
baseball game against bosl Gallia Academy, wbo came from behind
to win 3:2 in eight innings. (OVP photo by G. Spencer OSborne)

Meigs·Invitational..~Continued from ~age 4&gt;

Pickens-

•

Phalin. Ryan Young was intendonally walked, and on 1he wild~
1hat occurred during Skidmore aatbat, Davis and Ryan Youna moved
to third and second, respectively.
Tben after Skidmore struck out, ·
Smith hit a high hopper to short·
stop 1hat McGuire fielded cleanly,
but made a tbrow abat pulled
Reu1er off the fiiSl base bag, making Smith safe at W. and allOwing
Davis to score the winning run.
Game IOials
Davis and Skidmore combined
to strike out eight and walk none,
while Pbalin and Taylor canbined
to fan 16 and walk two.
Tbe Devils' offense was pawered by Ryan Young (3·3), Davis
(2-4, two doubles) and Howell (l3). The Marauders' hit collectors
were Taylor (2-4 ), Adams and
Reuter (both 1-3), and Corsi and
Wright (both 1-4).
District actio• .
Gallia Academy will play Rock
Hill (17-6)- a 4-0 v1ctor over
Ironton in Tuesday's section&amp;on Monday, May 20 at 4:30p.m. at
· Unioto H.S., near lhe Chillicolhe
Correctional Facility. Larry
DePriest a strikeOut artist whose 72 recont'is said to rest on an effeclive fastball and curve, is scheduled
to be the Redmen's starter. This
will be ·lhe second Unioto district
game in Monday datebook, as
Portsmouth (22-7) will take on
Athens (15-7) in the opener at 2
p.m. These two games are the
upper-bracket coniCSts.
Lower-bracket action, which
will take place on Tuesday, May
21, will feature Thornville Sheridan (15-8) vs. McDermott Northwest (9·10) at 2 p.m .. and Greenfield McClain (23-4) vs. Wellston
(22-6) 814:30 p.m.
Score by innings
Mei$1
010 000 01- 2~3
Gallipolis 000 001 02- 3-6-2
WP - Skidmore (in relief of
Davis)
,.
LP- Phalin
.

lia Academy, Bren Wilson's Blue
Devils shed 1hat deficit in 1he bot·
tom of the frame wilh a two-run
· rally to post a 3-2 extra-inning yictory.
· The decision, which boosted the
~cademY_'s record to 12-7, W3$ the
flfSt sectional tournament victory

Sannner .Thne
Helpers!

'•

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Gallia Aca

break :. 1-l tie and Steve
Buechele's homer in the sixth
clincbe4 the~· victory.
Jeff Russell pllc:hed 1he rlinlh for
his sevenlh save.
Detroit has lost five in a row
and TCllliS won its third sttaight
The game was dela~ one hour
and 49 minutes by rain. The last
time a Rangers home game was ·
rained out was on July 2, 1989.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--5

Pomerc&gt;Y-Middlep9rt, Ohio

'•
Ohia
•

BANK ON EVERY NEW
TRUCK AND VAN IN STOCK.
SPONSORED BY:

UNITED

-·-

NATIONAL BANK

\thr P.rhnftrt

WOOD COUNTY AUTO/
NtW.ll
TRUCK DEALERS ASSOCIATION g;~ti~~~
(

�~-

.

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I

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contlnuedtromMet

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o"-¥·-

Wednead!X, ll!y15, 11181 .~

Pomeroy Mlddlef:iort, Ohio

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Teacher...
•

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Rought.. ~

,...---Local briefs...

coatlauecll'romp•t

Reed tesponded "'I alrea(ly have."
John Leach, and Joyce Schug, bus tunity to attend Gallia County
·."No one here condones that drivers; Dollie Scarberry and KeBy Police Academy in Oallipolis,
alloaod action. 1111d it is aBeged,~ Hawkins, cooks: Brenda Hysell, obtaining a certification in law
said CarpenlU.
Naomi Findlay, Wanda Gardner, en[Drcement through the Ohio
In response 10 a question from a · Cathy Swartz, and Orela Kennedy, Police Council, along wilh severil
ooero member about the student's secreraries.
other schools pertaining to law
physical cond!tion, Mrs. Reed said
enforcaneRL
that her son is mplti-handicapped,
Other BI!Sinns
With her Job as &lt;!UP&amp;tcher and
but: not rewded, that he has had
In other action, the board the peace officer lrainmg, Rought
eight surgeries in five years.
entered into purchased services feels that she is more f.niliar with
Pei'SOIIIIel El!lployed
contracts with Paula Jtorton effec- the laws of the State of Ohio and
Su.bslitutes were employed and live April15 10 tutor 1111 ortbopedic the ordinances of the villarce. 81111
several Sl:'Jl!llemental .contracts 10 handicapped student, Sue McGuire "the objective. of people feeling
non-cerllf1ed per~onnel. were_ · effective April 1110 11110r a home- secure in their homes and on the
awarded atlastrught_ s meetmg.
bound student, Carolyn Nicholson, streeL"
The subsllllltes hired were Judy Joan Wildman and John S. Conte
"I believe," Rought says, "that
Eblin, Connie Jones, Josie Mc?non_. to provide services for visually . we have lost the essentials on
and Carolyn Nicholson, aides: handicapped students.
H
1
Deborah ~rue_ser, Debra Burns,
Nathan Tyler Montgomery and
ouse pane approves
Carl Moms. Tun Fry, Kay Ward, Jennifer Nicole Dunn were accept- repeal of boat user fee
James. Vanam~, Kathy Johnson, ed as tuition students for next year.
WASHlNGTON (AP) -· A
Cynthia _McMillan, Donna Stacy, Both will be entering kindergarten.
Jeff Smt~h , Thomas_ Dorst, and
·Mike Skaggs was given P!lrmis- House Merchant Marine subcomArnold Wilson, bus drivers: Shelby sion to use the athletic facilities for mittee on Tuesday unanimously
Da"!s, Lelia Haggy, Delma ~arr. football camp, July 221hrough July · voted to rJ!peal a 1990 law that
Edr,cess Karr, Eva M1Ihron, 27. Permission to lake six days in required the Coast Guard 10 coUect
Pamela Howard! Marvel Petry, December and January as calamity user fees on recreational boats.
Ethel S~D:t· Amta Van Coone_y, days will be r~quested from the
The fees are supposed to be coiBelly)VJ!bams, and Edna DaVIs, Stare Department of Education.
tected starting July 110 reduce the
cooki. .
.
The board, after a lengthy dis- federBl budget deficit, but the Coos!
Jack Kmg, Gerald Pullms, Sr., cussion agreed 10 enter into a con- Guard has not issued any rules for
Ric bird Thomas, Sa111 Morris, tract with the Ohio School Boards' the collection process.
Andy Batey, Barry Grueser. Association 10 provide consultant li'"""'."""'"""'""'*'
. """'"""'"""'"""'"""""ii
~ Leacl_l, and Charles Hy~I. services for negqtiations with the ·
cnS!""JI!IS: Lilly Kennedy, ~yn Meigs Local Teachers Association.
Meier, Mona Frecker, Melanie Kay Voting 10 hi~ a consultant were
He_msley, an_d Diana Nelson,_ secre- Jeff Werry, RIChard Vaughan, and
Am Ele Power ..................28 3/8
tanes_. Denrus Mu~ .was hired 1!8 Roben Bar10n. Bob Snowden voted
Ashland
Oil ..................... .32
sub5?blte mec~ '!lth the speci- against the action stating that "if
AT&amp;T
...............................
36 1/8
f!catJon of no semonty accumula- we don't have money for raises, we
1.17 3/4
Bob
Evans
.......................
non.
.
don't have money to pay a consulCharming Shop ...........•..... 16 1/1.
Employed were Ron Logan as tant 10 come in " ·
·
Oty Hoklin&amp; ..................... 13 3/4
varsity girls' basketball coach for
·
Federal
Moi\11... ............... .16 3/4
the 1991-92 school year, and Fred
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................22 7/8 ·
Baloy as boys' head track coach.
It was v~ted ·iO enter iniO a con- ·
Key
Centurion
..................12 3/4
Since afrer advettising no.certified tract with EMRC to provide films
Lands'
End
.......................
19 1/4
personnel applied for the positions and tapes 10 schools for the 1991Liritiled
Inc
..........
;
............
26
7/8
of cheerleader advisors or boys' 92 school year. A trip to Cincinnati
Multimedia
Inc
.................
27
1/4
varsity basketblil coach, the board and King's Island for ·the II sixth
Rax
Restaqrant
...............
;
..
3/4
hired Phillip Harrison as the bas- graders at the Harrisonville E1eRobbins&amp;Myers ...............26 3/4
ketball coach, Kathryn Doidge as menlary School, May 31 and June
Shoney's Inc.................... .17 1/8
high school cheerleader advisor, 1, was approved.
.
Sw Bank ..........................21 1/).
A proposed calendar for the
and Donna Bendey as junior high
cheerleader advisor.
1991-92 school year was adopted, · Wendy lnt'l. ...... ............. .9
WorlhingiOO Jnd ...............23 7/8
The contracts of several suhsti- and the list of 139 seniors for gnidSIDck reports liN the 10:30 a.m.
lures because of unavailabili.ty to uation Sunday was &amp;PJ?tOved.
.
qiiO,_S provldfd by Bllllll, Ellis
work were non-renewed. The list
An executive sesston was held
IIIUI Lotwi of GtJIIIpolls. Bob ·
includes Tracey O ' Dell, Karen following the open meeting to disEvails, Wtlldys t:r-dlv(dtllds.
Pooler, Janet Simpson, Dinah cuss personnel and pending negotiStewart, aides: Roland Eastman, ations.
·

Wedneeday, May 15, 1991

which the mayor's offiCe stands for
- can:, concern and compassion.
(That Ia) care for our well-being,
concern for our community and
compessioo for our fellow num. II
elected, 1 will strive to meet the
challengl:s 10 unite the ~ with
the comnn~7:
"I truly · ve it's lime for the
voters or Pomeroy 10 be heard and
.for someone who cares 10 listen,"
Rought continues. "I also believe
that it's time for a change in our
village govemmenL I feel that the
office of the mayor should be a
full-time job llld I am pledging to
the voters of Pomeroy that I wiD be
a 'full-time mayor who will be
there for the community's needs. "
Mrs. Rought has been active in
the commiDiity with several youth
programs. She Ia a member or the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post "#39 (holding
various offices on local and district
levels), a member of.the Eagles
AliXiliari 112171, and the Fraternal
Order of Police, Lodge 1195. She
also has served on the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.

;.
Ar.ea deaths--William J. Reitmire, Jr.

Continued rro. p-ae1
·to stop in time and struck CompSton's car.
.
,,
Neither driver was injured. Comps100's passengers, Verna M. . •
Compston, 15, Vanessa A. Compston, 14, Becky S. Meier, 13, and
Tricia D. Mahaffey, 14, were also uninjwed. ·
·

Jury trial continues ·

The jury in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court case of Gregory Eben is expecled to begin deliberalions this morni!Jg.

.

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•
•
:William J. Reitmire, Jr., 23, of
17,28 Old Chester Road in
PQIIIeroy, died Tuesday, May 14;
1991, at Veterans Memorial Hospitaf, from a self-inflicted gunsliot
wc)und.
•He was born on December 17,
1967 in Charleston W.Va., the son
ot:William J. Reitmire, Sr. and
Addie Landaker Reitmire. He was

:~

The jury trial begllll Tuesday morning before 1udge Fred W.
Crow ill. Eben is accused of gross sexual in)position, a lhird«gree
felony.
·
Eben is represcnled by Public Defender Charles H. Knight, !~bile
"
Meigs County Proaecuting Allorney Steven L. SIOry ~ AssJ!!am
,
Prosecutors Linda Warner and George McCarthy have lried die case .., o..
on behalf of the State or Ohio.

EMS makes six runs

Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered -·.~"•
••
six calls for assistance Of! Tuesday.
·
.,''.
.On Tuesday at 11:21 am., Pomeroy squad.went 10 Old Chester
•.1_1'
Road. William ·Reitmire was l8bn to VetaBDS Memorial Hospitli,
where he later died. At 11:31 a.m., Syracuse squad went tO U.S. · ;~
Roure 33 for Kenneth Wolfe, who was taken to Veterans.
· . ;;~
At 4:01 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Union Avenue for Peggy '.~;;
Houdashelt who was taken to Holzer Medical Center•. At4:17 p.m.,
Racine squad went to )::.ong Run Road. Sally Dilley was taken 10 ·...·~
'
.,..1
Pleasant VaBey Hospital Al4:5~ p.m., R11tland IICJIIIId rc:spondcd to
Meigs Mine 31 for Raymond StapleiOn, who was tranii)IOtled 10
Holzer, At 8:31 p.m., Racine squad went 10 Third Street for Chris
Patrick, who was treated but DOt triDipOited.

b
. y

Friends may caB at the funeral
home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on

.

a

FRIENDSHIP
PHOTO
PACKAGE

$1.29

32

oz. an.

Hospi~l

SA111DAY a a.h!.-12 noon
MONDAY 4 p.m.·l p.m.

news

Veteriu Memorial Hospital
TUESDAY .ADMISSIONSEthel Bentz, Racine: Laura Harrison, Pomeroy; Freda Bing, Middle ~
port; Kenneth Wolfe, Shade:
Charles Bissell, Umg BoiiOm;. and
Local corporatlou formed
Jewel Curtis, Pomeroy.
·
TUESDAY
DISCHARGES
Secrelary or State Bob Taft has Lois Terrell and Rachel Bandy.

CONTAINERS FURNISHED

.

HOURS: Mon. thru Sot. I 0 a.m.-7:30 p.m.;
5un. 12 --7:30 p.m. .

HARRIS FARMS &amp; GREENHOUSE

MAllET 143-5193
FlORAL SHOP 843·5 171
54110 ST. IT. 124
PORTLAND, OHIO
3 MILES FROM RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE

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Rower plants are not fed for their first 3
weeks. Begin feeding every 3 weeks
thereafter with this tonic: l/ 4 tsp . Super
K-Gro 15-30-15 All-Purpose Plani Food.
1/2 tsp . liquid soap, 1/2 tsp. KnoK
gelatin. 1/2 cup of bl!er. 1 gol. water.
Feed before noon. Feed I cup per plant
while watering your garden.

Garden Center hours
open 1 hour earlier
Saturday and Sunday
thna June 1, 1991

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Bag14.88

of burning or surge growth . Covers
lawns up to 10000 sq. ft. Save&gt;

· TURF BUUJ&gt;£R

·Plus
2.
--..........==

Bag 22.97

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Scotts Turf Builder Plus 2

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fights weeds as it fertilizes. Deep
greens lawns up to 10000 sq. ft.
Lasts up to 2 full months.

24'.
Weed popper makes it easy to keep your

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•

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LAwn And Garden llemt Available On~ . In larger Ktnill"' Stom NurMI\' S!ock Ano Bagged Items Available Only In S1 o~ Wilh Gar&amp;n Cl!nlcr
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Select play sand' or
ready-to-mix concrete.

Lawn &amp;pi ~••• 20"
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FH-~2 1o.&lt;.1 58-50 !Broo&lt;k"'i

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prico. with t"" KC.OIII&lt; SWDJS Olme&lt;o.
• Simple, IOCUI·fl'89 ~ mm ler4
• Eofylo \OCY1. ec;)fy IO lOO
• 8uiit·in el?:h"onlc floS&lt;'"I

.,. ~o cornero oumi lncludns Qnllt roll ol ~
~ 200 r...... 24-two M-slze t«lDDII( PHOICUE

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'--• ....... ..all. Xll.'
k. pkg. hiwd..vood mulch or
50-lb.-net-\l.t. rnartje chips.

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~- bump fool, more.

' 50-lb ·ntl·wtighl t.g

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(304) 675-2303

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GALLIPOUS, OH. 45631
(614) 446-6620

WEEIHJ-GON

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QUANnTIES ARE LIMITED
" 2501 JACKSON AYE.E

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And See
our Large
Selection
of
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Gifts and Cards
i
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We've Got What You Need!

May 20 thru May 26

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FRUTH ·PHARMACY

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Meigs Junior High School will
conduct an open house on Wednesday, May 22 at 7 p.m. Students
who will be 7th graders in the fall
and their p&amp;rents are invited.

THuuDu 4 p.m.-a p.m.

lawn and garden free of bothersome
weeds. Buy lt at thls excellent Kmart price!

Customize Your
Graduation Gift
With A Balloon
Wrap or Shrink
Wrap From

OR

FRUIT PUNCH
LEMON-LIME or
NEW TROPICAL FRUIT

Open House scheduled

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TIMEX'

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~The Meigs Junior High School
Athletic Banquet will be held on
Salllrday at 6:30 p.m. at the Junior
High School instesd of at the high
school, as was previously
announced.

reported that Articles or Incorpontion have been filed with his office
in Columbus by the following local
companies: Warner Heating and
Cooling, Inc. (Gary L. Wamet and
Bonnie. Sue Warner, incOipOI'BtotS,
Gary L. Wamet, Agent), and LTCB
Leasing Company, Mark H. Murphey, incmporator and Agent).

Lottery numbers

OJ' MRN"a oa LADIBS'

~~ 25°/o
OFF
.

Sooth Central Oblo

,,
Df,rothy M. Staats

oices or
AT FRUTH .PHA ACY

'

BIIICluet location chan&amp;ed

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1.

Tonight, nlostly clear wilh a low
"in lhe low 60s. Thursday, mosdy
sunny ll!ld bot with a high near 90.
Extended forecast
~
Friday tbrou1b Sunday:'
•Dorothy M. Staats, 68, of 1600
A chance or showers or thmiCierJelnima Ave., Ocoee, Fla., died
storms
each day. HiaJts in the 8lls
Mat.day, May 13, 1991 at florida •
Friday,
the 70s Saturday and 65-75
Hdlpital Medical Center, Orlando,
Sunday. Lows in the 60s Priday
~
and Saturday 1111d in the sos Sun·:She was a homemaker.
,
II; he was born June 7, 1922 'in day. .
Paldie Creek, daughter.of the late
Jland Rebecca James.
er husband, Dennie H. Staats
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
of oee, Fla., survives along with
foti'r daughters, ¥rs. Russell A. the winning numbers selected
(Patricia) Maynard of Mason, Tuesday night in the Ohio Lottery:
. W~a., Mrs. Harry (Carolyn S.) Pick 3 Numbers
1-4-8
Young of Pomeroy, Mrs. Donald
(one, four, eight)
(Ribecca J .) Hallahan of Ocoee,
AI(, and Mrs. B.enda K. Revel of Pick 4 Numbers
6-9-6-1
Wi)!ter Garden, Fla.; four sons,
·{silt, nine, six, one)
Dapny L. Staats of Orlando, Fla.,
Charles E. Staats of ApoP.ka, Aa., Carclll
K (king) or Hearts
Da.vid s, Staats and William P.
Q
(queen) of Clubs
St4l1ts, both of Ocoee, Fla., one
Q
(queen) of Diamonds
brocher, Clifford James of Buffalo,
5
(five)
of Spades
N.\'.; 22 grandchildren: and one
grdit-grandchild.
,l'rec:edil1g her in death were two
· Le&amp;ltlatlve law•
Gary · Staats in 1978 and
Sherman StaaiS in 1986.
The Rules Committee of the HoWJe
services will be 11 am. of Representatlvaluues rules outlin·
at Foglesong Funeral Home lng conditions fO!' floor debate on IegW.Va., with Rev. David · latlon propooed by replar standln&amp;
Burial· will be in Fair- ·
tteel, Including emei"Jency
~~~:e1:iy
alven under a- rules. It a11o bas
may call at the funeral
lsdlctloa over re10lutlona creatiJII
0111 and bas lt!IIJ!atlw aufrom 7 10 9 p.m. on Th urs• tbo ty to ~ cllanges In
rules of the Houle.
·
w~~.

ucate
Armltron·
WATCHES

Meigs announcements

~·

Weather

c~.

Stocks

OuR COMPI..E1'.E STOCK

OUve L. Wolfe

· .Olive L. (Ours) Wolfe, 73,
Columbia Station, Ohio, dormer
Pomeroy Jesideot, died liiiCiapeCtedly at her residence 011 Tuelday,
May 14, 1991.
·
She is survived "L.';:.~
Glenroy Wolfe; lilt;.
: Verline Sebo, Verdoana Feliciano,
, Halld,VV~IDouAllen, V~aa
WVenta
o1•C, ~ 10 et
. glas; .our
a~. sons:_ Clive Wolfe, W~ Wolfe,
•Besides his parents, he is sur- Curus Wolfe and Calvm .WoUe:
vived by his wife, Yvonne Edwards two brothers, Russ~II Chne and
RCltmire, Pomeroy; two children, Harvey Ours: one stster, Manha
Erin and Corey Reitmire, at home; Wolf~hildJen; and elaht
one sister, Tammy Louise Reit- greaSthe~ . A-•'"
mile, Pomeroy: two brothers, Mark
.
was ,............. m ~· a
A. Reitmire and Michael T. Reit- SISter, Mary Houaeliolder.
mq e, both of Pomeroy: paternal
She wu ~ former employee of
M
R
·
J.C.
Penney m
Cleveland.
"ld"
grand mot her, Go 1e ay e1tServ"
wil,l
be held Frida
mire, Pomeroy: and maternal
tCCS
B·'-F---~ Hom Y
Rlindparents, Ellen Lee and David a1 1 p.m. at ....,. ..,..,..,
. e,
[aodalcer, Pomeroy.
206. Fro~t S~eet,. Bere~, Obto.
He was preceded in death by his Burial .will be m Columbta 'Cemcmiternal grandfather , Clyde J. teryF. ·. ds . caB th f eral
Rei.tmire.
.
·
nen may
at e un
Funeral services will be held on home from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7 10 9
Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing Funer- 1 • p.m ..on Thursday.
at Home, with "Rev. Glen McMillan
officiating. Burial will be in Cogar .

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The Dally Sentinel-PIC!• 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

786 NOITH SECOND ST.
MIDDlEPOn, OH. 4!760
(614) 992.· 6491

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121/J thru 6

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NOW 480 .
NOW
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Malathion 50. 1 pint.

SAU PRICES GOOD 111U SAIUIDAY

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10.47 ~h~~ce 6.97Q.

Ortho liquid tnnct·

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61ft thru 12

Y SHOES
POIIIIOY

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kills brocldleaf lawn
weeds, roots and all.

B'd• " O.Cha t•
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bump feed. Great price!

82209

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14. hanging bu.... Choice of colors.
Um Planten .••••4.97

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12 plants per flat. Savel

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Po meroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednaday, May 15, 199f
JP.a~·~!B~The~De~ll~y~Sa~nt~ln~e~l------------~--------------~~~~~~~~~~~----------------------------~~~~~~~--~~:

f!EP [O comply... -~co~nliD~-u~ecl~tr~om~pa~ce~1~-....;._-----------:--------------__;_--~:~

Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said he Newark, which drew a 90-0
~ acted parlly because of the report.
endorsement, · woarld slightly
h
· He also -said a special House comnighttime houn of deputy
mittee that recommended the bill c ange
.stiars
·
exceeded its charge of responding regtThe
would require that
.IQ implementation of the Clean Air every registrar's office be open
Act'and swdying issues involved in until 6:30 p.m. on at least one
the use of clean-coal technology.
weeknight each~ Current law
In addition, he said the PUCO
·
th tone office in each
report contained new infonnation county
a until
· 8 p.m. on at
requuesbe operi
thai the House must consider.
least one night a week.
.
There was no i'ndication when
The bill.now
Senate. .
- . goes to the
.
the House might vote on the bill.
As originally prpposed, the
measure would have offered tax
credits to utilities that installed
'scrubbers.
The House Select Committee on
the Federai-t::tean Air Act expanded the measure last week by
· extending credits of $1 per .~n of
Qhio · coal burned to uuhtt~s
already using Ohio coal or that will
do so by Jan. I, 1995.
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, D~
Steubenville, chairman of the special committee, said he was
•
pointed by the delay.
.
"I think the sooner we can get It
on to the flaor and voted out the
better our chances bfhelping the
coal industry," Krupinski said in
an interview.
·
The bill propoSed a vi!Jiety of
incentives for usc of equipment
that would reduce sulfur emissions.
It also would let utilities use lowsuffur coal from :outside Ohio if
~
they could show i\ ~as ~the,!d:st
costly option to comp!y wt ,, rlil regulations.
. In other developments at. the
House Tuesday, repres~ntaftves
sent to Gov. George Vomovtch a
bill intended to block the dislribu. tion and use of steroids among high
school and college athletes. The
. Flouse also approved a bill modify·ing the business _hours of motor
vehicle deputy regiStrars.
And witnesses told a House
panel that a law requiring women
to be told of rislcs and altemalives
24 houn in advance of an abortion
almost cenainly would be chal. Ienged as unconstirutional.
Ohio Department of Transportation officials are concerned about a
House plan to give an extra~ million a year from a srarc gasoline tax
to the Ohio Turnpike.
A staff re~ by the P!Jblic ,Utilities Com!lusston of Oh10 S8ld an
.}jEP srudy, which showed that O\lt·
of-state coal was cheaper than
iiistalling scrubbers, was flawed.
the report said there was litUe_dif.
fc.rence in the cost of the opt10ns
11nd that the utility study didn't
· hive a systemwide plan.
·
~ House Speaker Vern Riffe Jr ..
D-Wbeeleraburg.....d he postponed ~
voting partly because of the PUCO
i'oport. He said _tbe Ho'!se ~ust
cilnsider the new mformauon m the

measure

Meanwhile, the testimonies of week House recess that begins at'" House provisions in a $3.3 bilabout 2S wiblesses concluded the · ThiDSda . · · · ·
•
lion budget for the deJllrlnient. In
hearings befote the House civil and
The 6m•s o~nonents repeated testimony befote a StllltC commitcommerct'alia w commt'ttee on a claims that the "·ill is an unneces- tee, Wray said the Ohio
. .
bill requiring
and doctors sary duplication of Ohio's should not Ft the exn $4 m .
who perfonn abqrtions to provide infonned consent law and a viola- ·a year from lllate 1IXes on auoJine
women with spccifte information
lion of women's rights. They also sold at service atations alonsthe
Rep. Robert Hickey, 0-Dayton. said the biU is similar to laws in 241-mile toO road.
·committee chairman, said the-bill, other states that have been outWray also ob~'ected to the
sponsored by Rep. Jerome Leub• Jawed by the U.S. Supreme Court.
House's proposal or a 1•..1•
.........
1•" ve
bers, D-Cincinoati, will not be
ODOT Director Jerry Wray commi~ ptep&amp;ling a new master
voted until next month, after a two- expressed reservations about sever- _ plan for transportation develop-

Tum=

c:l~ics

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-4 :

=•

Community calendar

menl
• Also at the
ing the mullil1

: .
bill extend ·
·
,control )11'0-io
•u
by tho Oht' 'e{I!U!IIIent of N.aral Resources,
unuiJune 1, 199Ciwas approved,.
33-0. Without the extension, the,
program would end June 1.
:.
The program provides grants tot'
sot' l and w·•··
-.. conser11ation
,
tricts for control of the unusuallyi.
denae and thorny planL

~ram ad~·t'nt'st

WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Mt Olive
Community Church in Long Bottom 'will have leVival throuah Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor Lawrence
Bush invites the public.

dis~

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at I: 30 p. m, Mrs.
George Haclcett will be the IJostess
A formal English · tea will be
served. Mrs. Ronald Reynolds will
review ...The Wind at Morning."
Roll call will be "a historical dream
unfulfilled.
·

BIG BEND

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ODLA

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FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

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NAME----------------

1- ADDRESS----:'--'--------We Support 1

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-Our Armed 1--------------------------------~---i
Fort'ee! ·

.: GaUipolls Stockyards Co. ·
·;
May 11, 1991
J\llediam Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
.; 250-300lbs., 94.00-117.00;
:- 300-SOOibs.• 93.00-106.00;
:· 500-700 Ibs., 74.00-103.00;
;.. 700-Up 69.00-82.00.
I!Jedium Frame, 1 &amp; 21ielfers:
• 250-300 lbs., 85.00-104.00;
: 300-SOO Ibs .• 80.00-96.00;
-~ 500-700 lbs., 75.50-89.00;
_. 700-Up 68.00-81.00.
·
Butcher cows:
~ Utilities, 54.50-61.00.
':"' Canner/Cutters, 55.00-down.
,. Light weight low grade cows,.
4-7.00-Down.
. '
: Heiferettes, Up to 71.00.
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
:- 300-SOOibs, 75.00-100.00.
putcher Bull:
·- Utilities, 58.00-68.75.
:. Canner/Cutter, 53.00-60.00.
Veal Calves:
• Choicr/prime, 92.50-105 .00.
• Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Sprlnser Cows:
• 675.00 &amp; down.
r;aw/Call Com.:
1050.00-down.
Baby _Ctllves:
180.00 &amp; down.
lutdaer Sows:
·
• 400-600 lbs.• 47.50-51.00.

Pork ·'N Beans

$

3 ·*1
u..~l.

• oz.

.$ 09

Fritos oR
San·titas ,_, oz.
lAG

Racine Poppy Days slated

top_~op: .

l!IP.
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•

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OPPIIUIOOD.IIf. . .

I

.• 220-250 Ibs., 49.50-51.50.

FOODLAIDI
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Head:

18.~38.00.

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FOODLAID
NF-100

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pro4:J

ClNS.

Butdler B01n:
: 39.Q0.41.SO.

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CAliS

SIIOWIOAI

Famil:r .
Medicine ·

IOSCAI\

•

Livestock
report
•

will

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Green's
oz.

M-G· M AREA· Support group
MIDDLEPORT • There will be
meeting .for members of the com- a double
elimination class D and E
munity affected by domestic vio- Men's Softball
Tournament at
lence will be held "I:!!ursday from Hartinger ·Park in Middleport on
5-7 p.m. syonsored by Serenity Saturday and Sunday . Shirts to
House. Cal Crisisline and ask for , champion and runner-up teams.
Serenity House
Sponsor trophies for top three
teams. Entry fee is $65 plus two
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- new balls. Call992-7114 for entry.
ty Democratic Executive Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. . POMEROY - The Belles and .
atlhe Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. Beaus
Western Square Dance Club
will hold a dance on Saturday from
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock 8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
Springs Better Health Club will Citizens Center with Jim Undermeet Thursday at I p.m. at the wood,Hurricane, W.Va., as the
home of Frances Googtein.
caller.

MIDDLEPORT - George
SYRACUSE - The Third
KANAUGA • The Liberty
McClintock,
a professional model Mountaineers will appear at the ·
Wednesday Homemakers Club will
leave the municipal building in builder, will speak at Thursday •s D.A.V. Center in Kanauga on SatSyracuse on Wednesday at 9 a.m. meeting . of the Heath Model urday.
for the annual spring trip.
Builders Club at the Jieath United
Metllodist Church at 6 p.m. Pubtlc ' POMEROY - "Case of the Cos- :
HARTFORD - The Church is invited.
mic Cat" and "Cat in the Hat'~ will
Christ Christian Union in Hartford,
IIRIDAY .
be shown at the Meigs County PubW.Va.
have re:vivaltbrough
RIPLEY · The Liberty Moun- lic Library in Pomeroy on Saturday :
Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Ruben taineers will perform at the Skate· at 2 p.m. and on Monday at 7 p.m. ;
Sally is the speaker and New Heart . land in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
at the Middleport Library.
will sing. Public invited.
PRESENTED TROPHIES· Awards were
graders, at the nrst annual Meigs Junior High
I
presented to James White and Cindl Stewart,
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
School Academic Banquet staged at the school
THURSDAY .
seventh gr11den, front, and Kim Janey, Shilo
be
a
round
and
square
dance
on
Monday evening. The students received all A's
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Moore and Heidi Hurtman, second row, and
during tbe year.- ·
can
Legion Post 602 will meet Tuppers Plains VFW Building feaJason Taylor, third row, left to right, eighth
turing the Hot Point String Band.
SPRING VAlLEY WlEMA
Ronnie Wood is the caller. Public
Ohio University
446 4514
. " .
is invited.
College of Osteopathic Medicine
U .(JQ INIUI'IIIIATINI'£5 SATIJIDAY I ~r
SATURDAY
$1.00 ~AMAIN IUiiJIT TUESIII\V
LONG BOTTOM · The Long
Bottom Community Association
'
.
. .
will have a smorgasbord dinQer on
7120,9: 10 DAIL'f Ill 11111111\ •i I\ \nl 1,,,
SAT/Slll MAtUIES
Meigs Junior High School stu- Williams, and Donnie Yost
Saturday at 5 p.m. at the communi·•~·~rr'
1:2G,l : lD ,
dents were recogJ\ized for academOther eighth grade honor stoty building. Cost is $5 for adults
\• 1\.Ih
MnD t•l
•
1.. JL ! ..
ic excellence at the first annual dents honored were Sarah Anderand $2.50 for children under 12.
liwards banquet staged Monday son, Robbyu Baker, Joey Barren,
~!!\'[~liD ~IAIIONl
Ham, chicken, noodles,' dressing.
7:011.11 :110 MJ L'
evening in the school auditorium.
Melissa Clifford, Vanessa CampJohn C. Wolf, D.O.
othet entrees and desserts are·
SAT/~
"'!""'
l.OO,J
.OO
K
Trophies, provided by the Mid- ston, Jerod Cook, James Counts,
included.
Associate Professor
MTID IN\
dlepon-Pomeroy Rolary Club w~re Keith Darst, Becky Diles, Ryan
of Family Medicine
presented to the students making Dodson, Bobby Elhs, Tara Erwin,
MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
1:00,J:i0 ~JLY
lnr. s11ence
straight A's during the year. In that Ben Ewing, David Felly, Jarrod
SAT/SUI! ,_TUllES
Counl)r
Retired
Teachers
will
meet
Question:
I've
had
numbness
Answer:
Surgery
may
be
necesl:OO ,J :zo
:group were Cindi Stewart and Folmer, Misty Frum, Kelly
· ollne lambs
Saturday atlhe Middleport Easten,t
MttD !I )
James D. White, seventh graders, ·Grueser, Jerod Hill, Emily John- and tingling in my hand for seveml sary to remove the pressure from
Star
at
12:30
p.m.
'=:;:~i!i'
. and Heidi Huffman, Kim Janey, son, Adam Krawsczyn, Chuck months . I finally went to see my the c81Jlal tunn~l and the median
~~· ftiO 01 til - ·
doctor
with
Ibis
and
he
told
me
I
nerve
within
it,
but
there
are
other
Shilo Moore and Jason 1'ay lor, Legar, Kevin Logan; Erika Mead·
POMEROY
The
Meigs
Junior
· had carpal runnel syndrome, but he things that should be done fiiSL A
. eighth graders,.
ows.
wrote "repetitive strain injury" on test of the median nerve to confum
. Others seventh grade honor stuBecky Meier, Todd Mitch. Reg• my
insurance form. Are these dif. that-it is being compressed in the
dents recognized were Tavis gie Pratt, Sheri Ramsbll(g, Erica
ferent
carpal region will be requested.
:Abbott, Amber Bennett, Nikki Robie, Joey Ruchti, Adam Sheeets, . lion? names for the same condi,
Tests to be sure that the condition
Bentley, Ann Brown, Chris Chap- Brent Smith, Brian Smith, Kelly
· Answer: Most individuals is not a complication of hypothyman, Megan Clark, Phyllis Clark, Smith, Jason Taylor, Stephanie
.John Clelaild, Bethany Cob~. J~ Thomas, Crystal Vaughan, Allen develop CIIJlal tunnel syndrome as roidism, multiple myeloma and
resuk -of repeated strain of the several other problems must also
my Coleman, Bryan Colwell, Cyn- Ward, Michelle Ward, Amanda the
wrist.
However, repetitive strain be done, because treating any
th1a Cotterill, Ryan Cti~p. Corey Well, Melissa Wilfong, Tonya
injuries
can happen to any joint, underlying disorder often clears up
.Darst, Melissa Ertewine, Michael Will, Walt Williams, Tyler Wolfe,
includin&amp;
lhe wrist, and carpal tun- .the carpal tunnel . syndrom~.
Franckowiak, Jake Gannaway.
Adam Wyatt, Lisa Yeauger, and
nel
syndrome
can have oll)er caus- Women of childbeanng age wtll
· Allison Gerlach, Donald ' Julie Young.
es.
So
in
~o~
case, "CBipal tunnel also be checked for possible tn~­
G~ll. Jsrael Grimm, AWil Hal- ~ Debbiq B~. principal, _gave
SYJld!'Qtr)e
desaibes
your specific nancy. 1f this lest is~ positive, wanley, Todd·Hawley, Suzanna flen. the-welc:OI!Ie,;\'htch was ffi~
coitifllJoh
wblle
"repe!itive
strain in&amp; nino montllsftlay produce.a .
derson, Michael Jarvis, Dorothy : by'a ·moment of silence in rnc!'IIOty
i
njury"
can
be
thouaht
of
as
the "'nanual cuR:."
~
Leifheit, Jason Marcum, Bert of James Diebl. The invocatiQD was
cause
of
this
disOrder.
Let
me
take
If yoU( carpal t!Dinel syndrome
Mash, Nic:kie Mills, Matt given by AI Hartson, Middleport
a moment and explain what hap- is not due to an -underlyina cause
O'Bryant, Mindy PallelSon, Tanya C~urch of Christ pastor.
.
pens
in carpal tunnel syndrome.
and it's relatively m.ild, ~itg ll)e
Phahn. Paul Pullins. Kenda · Following the dinner and recogThe small bones of the wrist are wrist may be of great benefit. An
Reynolds, Joey Robert, Lori Rus- nition program', Nancy Hill, presisell, Tracy Shafer, Gary Stanley, dent of the Kcademic Boosters, collectively called the c&amp;Jpal bones, analysis of the activities that
and they connect the lower arm caused the repetitive strain1injury
Dodger Vaughan, Rosanna gave closing remar!'5 .
hones to the fingers. Long tendons and a change m this behavior is an
stretch from the muscles of the important part of the "rest" the
lower arm all the way to the hand wrist needs.
bones, and these tendons pass by
A common cause of C8f]J8l tunthe carpal bones along th1s path. nel syndrome is hand and wrist
The tendons, as well as the blood motions that must be made over ·
vessels and nerves that serve the and over again on the job. For
hand, would be very vulnerable to instance, typing at a word procesinjury if they simply ran over the sor aH day in an office, or constanthard; prominent carpal hones. Even ly reachin&amp; for parts on a particular
a mild bump to die wrist could shelf in a repair shop can produce
cause serious damage to these frag- repetitive strain. The word procesile "parts" that are essential for sor operator might be helped by
proper control and use of lhe liand. . having hand rests as part of the
Your body provides protection keyboard. In the case·of the repair
against this lcind of injury by creat- shop,
a stool so that pans
ing - out of lhe carpal bones - a can be reac
with the hands in a
"C" shaped path for the tendons more natural PQSition may elimithat is closed off at the top of the nate the pain. A wrist splint worn at
. "C" by a tough ligament called the night and an anti·inflammatory
flexor retinaculum. This closed medication may also help clear up
protected space on the palm side of the problem.
the wrist is - as you might guess ' Some people only get partial
-the carpal tunnel. Any condition relief from these non-surgical treatthat causes swelling inside this ments. These Individuals require
space compresses all the tissues SU(gery to reatore' normal function
within the tunnel.
to thetr hand - or hands. (Yes,
The tendons in the C8f]J8l tunnel carpal tunnel often afrects both
can tolerate a good deal of wrists.) The su~gery is relatively
increased pressure and continue to straightforward. The tough ligafunction fairly normally, but the ment over the top of the carpal runmedian nerve does not suffer in nel, the flexor retinaculum, IS modIn white or tan, ,..._ 12.89
silence. Pain and numbness devel- ified to make it longer, and t11ereby
w-·oobeoS-11.
op in the wrist as. well as in the create more space in the carpal tunthumb, index and middle fingers- nel. The recovery usually require&amp;
.the areas that are supplied by the foil( to six weeks of·hand rest and
media'n nerve. The pain is often support with a wrist. brace. Most
worse at night, parucularly after people who have this SID'gery make
days when the hands have been · a complete recovery. Talk to your
used vigorously. .
·
family doctor and orthopedic SU(·
.. STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Misty Frum was reeoantzed
Question: My doctor wants me geon. They will help you decide if
re~:ently as Student or tbe Week at Meigs Junior Hlp Schon! by
to have surgery. Is this the only surgery is the proper choice for
her teacher Mrs. Jean Bowrn ror her work In readin&amp; del speUing.
Save now on a smart lll!ledion of women'• ll!llllhl!r 111ndmlls
trearment? ·
· you.
She bas also had good attendance and behavior.
.
at Picwayl Choose from thonl*,llinp and ankle wrap fiuhions
that wiD-help }W beat the IWIUIIer heat in style!
.
3
Reg. 12.99-14.99, llllel0.99 ach, 2 pain S20.

MJH students honored for
their.academic excellence

Bush's

15

•
High will have its all sports ban."
quet on Sllurday 116:30 p.m. lithe"
high school.

.

1
1 . PHONE - - - - - " - - - - - - " - " - - -'7"""-;,-,--

·~ .... ~~ . . .

: There was no mdicauon )Yhen
111e House might vote on the btU.
AEP is required by .law to use
ihe least-cost option or the PUCO
.. can deny the utility the right to
.ecover compliance costs from cus[9mers.
·
~ Representatives completed leg. iilalive work on the steroid bill bY
vbting 92-0 to accept changes
,!!Jade previously by the Senate . .
Sponsored by Rep. Suzanne
ilergansky, D-Bedford lieights. the
· Jiill would prohibit the sale_ of
ll!llbolic steroids for non-medtcal
purposes and would require athletic
. facilities to post a warning about
llie dangers of steroi4 use. · .
;J Violators could be charged w1th
11 felony or a misdemeanor.
depending on the amount. of
steroids involved and any prevt~s
c:onvictions. Supporters of the .bill
said steroids can lead to liver caneer heart disease and other illness.
· Abill by Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Arts Council will host a mop
doll class on Wednesday from 10
a.m. to 7 p.m.

·'

Thursday at 7:30 p;m. Refreshments will be served after the meeting.

\

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lI
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I
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American Lqion Auxilay voluntem wiD distribute the familiar
red, handcrafted poppies honoring
America's war dead this weekend,
.designated as Poppy Days by Auxiliary Unit No. tiln, Racme.
The Flander's Poppy (Papaver
Rhoeas) i~ a weed of the grain
rlelds. The constant shelling of
bi!lldings caused the lime of the
.,.dldi!JI cement to spread over the
around aoil and the deep shelllna of
ibe letrlin I1IIIIOYed the surface top
IOil exJ010iinl the llldapound lime
til tile - JllOVIdlnl a perfect set-

dna for thll weed.
This weed (poppymd) is liSCd
In cakei1Dd puUf llld iJ also a
aource olan aceiJc!nt oil wblc:h is
ued U I IPMIIIUID fer olive oil.
Tho potall are

'

1

rich scarlet

color and the plant thrives is groups

or clumps.

Contributions during Poppy
Days are devoted entirely to rehabilitation and child welfare work
for ~ veteran and his family conducted by the American Lesion
and the American Legion Auxiliary.

BCA luncheon set

Total Health Care for Women

SALI!

MAMMOGRAPHY
.ULTRASOUND
01/GYN

999
Res- 12.99

.WOMEN'S AND CHII.llREN'S WATER SOCKS
a-hmoeloelodii)IIH.-liOrboac:hoido,
pootoid&lt;! or all-oround octkooweor! Wonnen'o
1i1u 5-10, girlt' •bet 8-4,
boyo' 111&lt;!1 8-2. Whole 1ize1 only.

......,::~r~

SALI! ENDS MAY 25.
Moat- open nlahla ud Sumta,&gt;..

992-2111
CC6·SJI1

The Bedford Community Asso-

c:illion will be seUing sandwiches,

plate luncbes and hOme-made pie ·
and brad on Memorial Day at the
Woodmen Hall in Burlingham
from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. ProCeeds .
will go for upkeep and repair of the
ceiiiOieries fn Bedford Township.
Cany-ow ordeq y.ill be available .

HOLZER CLINIC

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�. .I
Wednesday, May 15, 1991

•

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,.,

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eight and Forty celebrates 26 years
.

Tbe Eight and Forty Meigs

~ounty S~n No. 710 celebrated
us.~ &amp;nD1vawy with a dinner
~-u~Mason Family Resaaurant in
muuu, W.Va. recendy,.

·
. Petit Chapeau MarJorie Fetty
Introduced the guest of honor,
D~partmental Chapeau Delores
Kii.R~•. Mansf'teld.
fbe mvocation was given by
Lull! Hampton of the Meigs Salon.
Mn, Kilgore spoke of her visit
atlhe National Cbaocau Day lllhe.
Research Center for Respii'atory
Diseases in Children at Denver,
. Colo, The hospital was staried in
1889 and lhc Eight and Pony suppons the hospital with donations
for a children's camp, T.B,
research, cystic fibrosis, asthma
rcscarch, toys for the childn:n playgrounds and clothing,. items for
pools and funds wherev·
er
, Support is given 10 the
Cbil~' Hospital in Columbus,
· Cleveland and Toledo. The petit

Flash Frozen

swi=

The Wildwood Garden Club
met recently at the Morning Sw
Church for a potluck with Pauline
Eynon and. borothy Smith as

18 lb. Average · Whole Red Ripe
Ice Cold
Cut

Ea.
-----------------·- - --- _____ .... __
Breakfast of Champions
Grocery

).1_ " '

General Mills

11

,

· . Regular Or .
.Unscented King Size

I

Country Crock -Classic

e 's

31b..
Bowl·

Umlt I Per

rea

Pleue- 011)' ·"''laaol...-1

,..,,.. - · .............. .., ._,
I ;

Breast Patties • Chicken Chunks • Fillet Strips
Your Choice of Variety

Food Club Boneless

•
IC en

10.5 oz.

Box

Shrimp In The SheD
41·50 Ct.
lb....4.92

. . ..,IIJI

.....

•••

...... •

-:::-- Fkl 10 ildl ..... . . .

,.,...

,.._. 'IIIII II .t1 ... _ ,

.

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.,. ' "I ',,• ._,.'Ft.,.,._,

0

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AJIIilfllr dli 57
'r :1111 tiJia ,_..,

k llle ...W
wilD )llr1

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llr _. M' w Md II._.,
t.
-..
. . . _. 11 .......... . . . ,_ .. ' I ueu 111e G- i fll -''ilclllllww

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de .... wll F 1 • .._ 11r'
;ow'a w•IJt Ill&amp;
............... ,..., ....... AIIIIa ...... k
t .............,. , _ ..
Dtllr'•lh ' t .... ' 11 ttpl

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til

2 I2 H'llr_......_
6wpu;• MJ 1 . . Jleu: II•

'SWk YDa Fw 'IIIII' S II art,

•

.

'

,·;

Heidi Elberfeld won the hostess .

$)99

.

,,... .. Mi tlii;llie

.

C

Mhs .... w t -

.

'

''

1/4

LB. EACH .

FOR THE QR/Ll

door prize,

BloomField
alumni
'J'
. .banquet June }
The Bloomfield Alumni Associ·
atlon will be hosting its annual ban·

quet on June 1 81 6:30 p,m, at the
Jackson Ponderosa (formerly
Bonanza), Alumni dues are $1.50
·and the meal wiU be ordered from
the menu.
Reservllions may be ·made by
May 24 by_ calling 286--8112, 286·
4672 or 2*3SOS.
This year the group will be boo·
orin~ the Class of 1941 's 50th
reumon,

'· .

12 oz.
PKG.

CHICKEN

29

BREAST~

· ta.

CHICKEN
THIGHS

c

PEPSI

•

Several attend funfJral of

PASS
to meet
Vern E. Story of Pomtfr:oy
Thursday·
Hllncss.

Numerous out-of-county rela·
tives and friends attended the
recent funeral service of Vern ·E..
Story, Pomeroy.
Among those attending were
· James and Helen Willey, Grace E.,
Ryan, Michael A. Willey and
Meay Polaczyk, Livonia, Mich,;
Norman Wyatt Scbucfcr, Mt Vernon.; Norman David Schaefer,
Mansfield: Ct..Ies and Helen Earl, ·
Piqua; William T. "Bill" and Mil·
died Schaefer Perry, Mary Weber,
Lana Weber, Bcnlne and Alton
Story,,Juanita Gabriel, Tom and
Deanie Perry, John and Twila
Romine, Athens; Earl Story Jr,,
Grove City; Wilbur Story, London;
Dwight Story, MarysviDe; Pete and
Sarah Guthrie Hackett, Bill and
Betty Jacobs, Gerald "Sparky"
Pullins, Columbus: Dr. and Mn.
William J. Rue$«, Plain City; Del·
bert and Max1ne Guthrie Yost,
Lancaster;' Richard, Pam, Aaron
and Sarah Yost, Retha Day,
Coolville; 1\,lice Finlaw Cappel,
Ontario, Canada; Sydney and

Frances
Emie'and Myr1le
McCoy, Ewingtolll Gerald and
Kathy P,augh, Gle.veland; Pat
Dever, Elizabeth/Eddy, Patters-.
burg, W.Va.; Mr. a.nd Mrs, Herman
Mason, .. Bertbit . Barnett,
Raven$WOod, W. v,.,: Eric and
Becky Lipcomb, 0a1t Hill; Bernita
Stahl SIO!bl, New Marshfield; Carroll and.:Eieanor ·Brl)wn, Becky
Brown Wells, Bidwell: Willie,
Nedra and Heather. Davis, Chillicothe; Randy, Diane and Jenny
Hayes, Paden City, W.Va.: Lutlw
and Blanche Cook, Florida;
Richard and Phyllis Gilkey, Clara
Williams, Ann Blake, Lew and
Jean Peters, Clifton, W.Va,;
OeorKe and Rachel Guduie, Ralph
and !:ee Guthrie, Guysville: Van
llld Diane Hinds, Gllllipolis; John
and Leslie Perry, Ruth Berry Bolin,
Nelsonville; Fcx1est, Catherine' and
Bud Thomas, Linda Mayer, Glenwood, W,Va.; Helen Carro.ll,
Letart, W,Va,; Mary Hope, Hendcrson, W.Va.., Landon and Sarah
Hope, Gillipolis Ferry, W.Va.

-

r~ie PASS (Parents Advocacy

for Special Students) invites parents and families of special needs
children ~ a support group meeting
oo Thursday II 2 p.m. at Woodland
Centers on 412 Vinton Pilce, Gallipolis.
The group has been meeting
once a month for a year in Jackson
County, The gro11p's goal is to
offer parents resources and information·that will enable the JlllfCIIIS
10 set an obtainable goal for their
child, plus slwing the laws pertaining 10 special education. The relaxing atmosphere also allows partici·
pants 10 share their plan as well as
their joys in the day 10 day living
with a special needs child.
• For more information, contact
Phyllis 11286:6611.
This group is for anyone having .
a child diagnosed with learning dis,
abilities, hyperactivity, mental
n:tardation. developmentallr handicapped and a physical handicap.

The Chester Council No. 323
Daughters of America met rcccntly
at lhe lodge haiL
Jo Ann Baum, coUIICilor, condueled the meeting and lhe fo.up
· recired lhe pled_sea 10 lhe Cllriitlan
· and American 1JaiS and the Lord'•
Prayer. The fltSt stanza of lhe Star ·
Spangled Banner was sung and
¥cnes from Psalm IIBwerc Rllld.
It wu DOted that Mary Holter is
ill and that Olarlel B.U IIIII Iva
Powell
from tbelllllpital. ·
Dora Dut&amp;on bu boon tnn•rerrcd· from lhe Amer1c:1J1 Beauty
Council in lJltle Hoeld.
Bstbet Smith. read a 1101e from
Cora Beegle and Brma Cleland

a...,._

spoke abolit ·the roof repair on the

:;!:::f and the rallies she had

,
.
It :was dec11led to meet at 7:~0
p.m, ~~the s~mer llld 7 p,~, m
the Winter. Th11 policy, goes mto
effect for !he next meetillg, A bylaw committee wu ~The next meeting .w11l be an
anniversary and Slallly party, ·
A mother'•.~t !'!'!gram ~as
1liOMII1ed IIIII ~ p~en
by J~Ann Bau11, Mot~,rs-•a·
Law and Vir&amp;inla U. Gnnd·
~othera". and Charlotte Grant,
Madlen. .
'
A begonia.~·· pre~ted to

~S:,:'i~lih,"'.:,:WO
cou:t'~:.

.

.. . . . . . .

99
ONLY

Corner of
General
Hartinger
Parkway and
Pearl Street,
Middleport
992-3471

An icc cream bar was enjoyed at
the close of the meeting,
Attending were Dorothy
Ritchie, Esther Smith, JoAnn
Baum, Opal Hollon, Erma Cleland,
Lora Damewood, Virginia Lee,
Charlotte Gnnt, Sandra White,
Betty Young, Kathryn Baum,
Nancy Bond, Sally Crider, Dora
Dutton, Doris Grueser, Betty
Roush, Marcia Keller, Doris
Koenig, Elizabeth Hayes, Mac
McPeck, Ada Bissell, Thelma
White, Jean Fredrict, Alta Ballard,
Mary Jo Barringer and Bulah
Maxey. .

»t-· •• -·

DEl.I
.·. FRIED
CHICKEN

pcbmia.

.

With
Coupc»n1

'

Every member was presented a

· - ··

, LB.

24 PACK CANS

8 PIECES

Chester D of A celebrates Mother's Day

Umlt I Per Famll)r, ..... -

allkOW._.w.a~...-FU:EAI!Pie

•

•

SIRLOIN PATTIES

cmbapple blossoms in a gn:cn glass

vase.

•

'

Prayer and pledge 10 the flag, Edwards served a dessert course FIOiidL
· Dale Hill, New' Waterford and
led by Becky Edwards, preaident, those auending.
his
mother, Alice Hill, Florida,
Ethel Orr has returned home
opened the ladies auxiliary meeting
·were
qvemight guests of Mrs. Edtel
at. the firehouse on Wednesday. from a two week visit with hU sis;
Raymond Werry, president of the ter, Alice Hill, Rockledge, Fla. · Orr. Other visitors were Janet
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Horton and Gruescr, Logan, and Marilyn Neu·
firemen, met with the women to
:utter
of Wonbington spentlhe man, Galion.
plan for the Memorial Day chicken
Mrs, Pearl Summerfield, Penn,
nd with Mrs, Opal EichinF..
barbecue dinner. Dues and card
sylvania,
and Mrs. Angie Summer,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eugene
Hall
VISit·
money were collected and ~ills
field,
local,
called on Opal Wick,
ed
with
Eima
Cleland
on
lheir
way
were paid. Offu:ers and commntee
ham
on
Wednesday
afternoon.
home
to
Akron
after
several
n:poru were given and cards were
Bonnie
Landers
has returned
months
in
Naples,
Fla.
signed for the sick. Elected to
home
from
a
two
week
visit in Los
Mrs.
Ciani
Conroy
has
returned
office were ·Lora Damewood. sec~
Angeles,
Calif.,
with
Bert and
home
after
spending
sevenJI
weeks
n:tal)': Opal Hollon, II'C8SIIn:r. Inzy ·
Ruby
Landers,
Newell, vice president. Becky with her sisle!, Rose Reynolds in

22 oz.
Canlater

lh

CHOPPED
.

.Chester Ladies Auxiliary plan for Memonal Day

AuOrted
Varletle•
M•kes8Qta.

.99

From Our
Dell

I

Food Club Drink Mix

Turkey Breast

Prevloully F.rozea'

.
'·

Presweetened

Our Very But Quality
Sliced .The Way You Like It

Sweet &amp; Tender

SPLIT
FRYERS

Officers were installed at the elation for ~ group's help with were 10 meet for their reports 10 be
recent meeting of the Preceptor the rcircs~t table ll ~ recent given at the next meeting to
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi fashion sho'¥·
. '·· · ,
· announce plans for the 1991-1992
Sorority held at the Grace EpisroVelma Jt,.c prescntcc!-a pro8!'ftlll year.
pal Cllurcb Parish House.
on a Founder's Day skit given in
The service committee will be.
Installed ~ Velma Rue, pres- 1970 bt!:. ft!ld · Mil~ Kalr at serving lhe Oct 23 Bloodmobile,
ident; Joan Corder, vice president; Point P
t Resort whil:b IOid of
Refreshments were served by
Ann Rupe, recording secretary; the first 20 yeaii of Beta Sigma Phi Jeannie Werry and Shirley Beegle.
Rosie Sisson, corresponding secre- in this ; 4fea. The v~ry first
The next meeting will be a pic·
wy; and Jane Walton,ln:IIIUn:r.
· Founder'* 'Day·1dinner was beld in nic at the home of Joan Corder on
The ~ voted to donate $55 the Little Ho11se ill Middleport, May 23 at6:30 P·':ll·
to the Me1gs County Health Now,~ liter, there are four .
Others attending were Norma
Dcparunem for 11 mammogram test cbtlpteq in Mdp CouJUY.
· Custer, Charlotte Elberfeld, Donna
for its IJIHXlliling clinic:, .
' 1be group .deCided to use the Jones, Lillian Moore, Nellie
A think-you 1101e was received Sporumaa &lt; for . next .. year's Brown, Eleanor Thomas, C~ce
from the Pomeroy Merchants Asso- Founder's Day 81111 all committees· Krautter, Maida Mora and Reva
.
. '
Vaughan• .

Liquid Laundcy .Detergent
Bottle

AT VAUGHAN'S

.Preceptor Beta B~ta installs officers

12 oz.

64 oz.

wc;re paper bones with 8 and 40.
Games were played and prizes
awarded, A gift of lhe Carousel and
one of lhe horses ,l)'IS presented 10
MJs, Kil$ore and othcn attcndlnl,
Mrs. Kilgore announced her
Dcpanmental Marcbe would be
held in Mansfield on July 26 and
27 11 the Comfon Inn on Trimble
Road, ·Bn:akfast wiD be served at
· 7:30 a.m. for ·Depanmental Chapeawt on July 27 and Pouvcir will
be July 26 at 7:30p.m. followed by
Parodies, La Marche will be July
27 119 a.m. with l)anquet·it 7 p.m.
followed by trophy awards,
Chapeau Fetty thanked lhe commiuees for lhcir wOik and Florence
Richards. chairman of the IIOII)inating committee made a motion 10
n:tain the same officers and chairmen-for anodlcc ~.
The next meeting will be held in
June and will be a picnic, A date
will be 8111101111Ctd,

lhe year a wildflOwer is. in bloom, . Moore had amass arr.angement
Plants are being lost due to inhabit· using led tulips, lilac, dogwood and

ing the land, cutting of trees and
some overpowering weeds, Care
hostesses.
should be exercised not 10 injure
Aft« the meal a short business the roots of leaves in gathering
meeting was held with devotions those 'which are·scarce or _easily
by Peggy Moore reading from lhe deaaoyed.
.
·
Country Parsons in the Ohio .
Juanita Will had Now Is the
·Fanner, "Strong In Faith"·and the · Time noting to make second sav·poem "Wildflowers,"
ings of early vegeilibles; Set out
For roll call each member hardy perennial Oov.ier plants and
brought a wildflower specimen. An begin main vegetable gatdens
invitation was read from the Gal· between May 1 and 15, especially
. lipolis Developmental Center to . sweet coin, bush j)cans. and potaauelld its banquet
toeS. Cut htad fr()m tulips and dafFor show and tell, Doris Orueser fodils 10 prevent sees from fannhad a wall hanging made from ing:' Swt spraying and dusting
paper, lace and floral cloth in lhe roses to offset black ·sJ.IOI. Mrs.
Wills noted··her bummmg birds
shape of a fan.
For the pogram, Kathryn Miller were baclt 111 .their feeders on April
had wildflowers noting there are 17.
;
.
For the: arrangement of the
over SO,OOO flowering plants in the
United States with every month of month, ~ertures of Spring~ Mis.

First of the Season • Springtime Treat!

•
1e

Other wooden horses. Table favors .

Wildwood Garden Club holds meeting

reas

I

salona are in 44 of Ohio's coun~
and wort on the IOCII level With
these ehildren, Mn. Kllaore
thanked the Meigs Salon for ·a11
pbasel of Eight and Forty work on
lhc local level,
She announced that this year lhe
salona llld de!Janment bad clonaled
$2.SOO towan1 niiiiCI scbollnbipl,
This is the amount of one scholar·
ship for any nurse OYef 23 years of
·age that will further his or her
training in respil)ltory diseases if
accepted. Scholarships arc given
over lhc nation for this purplSC.
Another special guest was
Meigs County Cynic Fibrosis
Child and her mother. Guest salon
partners attending were Richland
County No. 450, Vinton County
No. 752, Gallia COunty No, 612,
Ross County No. 326. · .
The theme this year was
"Carousel of Love" for children
with respiratory diseases, Tables
were decorated with a carousel and

Open Daily 6 AM·12 Midnight
Sunday I AM· I 0 PM

A Cardinal Affiliated
, Supermarket
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Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,.May 1~, 1991

15, 1991

Mother-daughter buffet Afternoon Circle supports Xi Gamma Mu meets Model Builders
.held at Pomeroy c of c .
.
'f
'.
. t
.meet Thursday
,o
s~h~!2!oo~~ir~~~!!s ~~U) £~}~~ ~Fi~~~~~~ .

BULLETIN
·- - BOARD

CarolynGrueserprescnted a

Approx imately
people
aueoded lhc mother-daughter buf.
fet at the Pomeroy Church of

Christ. ·

The opening music was by Elizabcth Duffy with Betty Speuccr
. . .....
· prayer.
gtv1ng
u10 opeiU1lfl
The welco!Tiill} poem, " A
Prayer for Patience was given by ·
Kalby Haley.
A tribute u, Gertrude Andrews
was given by 'Eileen Bowers and ·
leading de"'llion$ was Pat Thoma.
A special in song was by Janet
and Megan Venoy with Peggy

Bartwa Ducic aM lhc ooe having
the IIIOSl children in 8lfaldance was

Olvic Smith.

Kathy Haley introduced the
~· Angie Lall, who is 1 misSlOIIIIr)' u, India whicb the
urch
sponsors an d sh c spok c on
c
.
h

patience..

YID

Heath United Methodist Church
met n:cendy 811he church.
Euvetta Bechtle presided 81 the
meeting and read a poem ''Only a
Flowtii" and a prayer.
Nan M core prescn....
·-~ the program from the study book «How
Jesus Treated People." She
reviewed three chapters, "How
Jesus Treated the Fallen," "How
Jesus Treated the Fearful" and
"How Jesus Treated the Ontcasts·"
She stressed tbe need of faith.
A letter was read from Karen
Konimiller, a missionary whiclJ the ·

-·nt m··••ng of the Xt Gamma

• c""""'
•--~ wtw
.... prayer
.me mng
and the hostesses were Euvctta
Bechtle, I en Cheshire and Terry

lied
d tt
0 ficers were insta b an of
was announced that mem er5 ·
the losinj! ~ttendance team will
hostAthecardptC:~ the Ohio Eia Phi
rtk '
the
Chapter was read tha. 1!lg
group for its hospttahty . at
Founder·~ Day. Kay ~llnns
lbanlced tbe members for thetr spp- chairman, reminded members to
·p011 800 hard work in preparauon bring canned goods to the next
for Founder's Day.
.
serv_ice;::;;ciiiomjjiiirm
:l
t_tce
_ _m_ee_tin_g_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
~

·~

.......
Pbi s r
Mu Otapler, Beta Sigma
.oro. iGallity
~ldlis.al the home Kay Atkins 1~

~yR.

~

Flowers were given to all
atlllnding 800 the t!rconnions were
Dyer.
done by Janet Venoy and Linda
11.1
•
Laudcrmilt registered the guests.
Frances Eskew gave the closing
The llline of Elizabctb Muvay
prayer. ·
.
.
was omiaed from lite list of people
As people arrived Jill Roessler
attending the Carleton Church
Bricklcs at the piano.
and Brenda Venoy arranged the
mothor-daughter banquet. Also
·
salads
tb
bl Pic
• d
gwen
u,
the
oldest
on
e
ta
tures
were
Circle
suppt115.
J=-u=s=tic=e=a=s
~m~olhe~~r~,E~v~a~De~s~u~wu~.~~~~~Uk~~en~by~B~~~~·~R~cl~ds~.~-----I~t~was~~voled~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
~

Flowers~

~·

d
names Omltfe

omme~!!!w~u~T~~~·n~a

.

.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
· PUBLICATION

. The Heath Model Builder$ Club

It - anllllUJ!Ced a poduck picnic will be beld June 6.
The
UMW picnic • was
8IIJIOUIICed for June 17 in the pat-

will have George McClintock, a
professional model builder, as its
guest speaker on Thursday at the
Heath Uniled Methodist Chun:h at
6 p .m . McCiintoclc will present a
tape of his displays located in various museums around the world. He
will advise the club about various
building techniques. Tbc public is
invited to attend.

Areal fun Boat. 18 foot Marlin Jet

Boat $2950.00. 455

Oldsmobile

eng1ne. New upholstered seats for
6. Can be seen at 2101 JeHerson
Ave., Pt. Pleasant. 675-7141.
(Com puler Ou~ell

at the Hammond Organ
Lighl Refres hments

COPYRIGHT 1991 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY; MAY .12. THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, MAY 18, 1991,1N Pomeroy

•

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho Villogo of Pomo•ov
door, five p111enger. sedan

with lhe following added
equipment:
Four Door Soden
Pollee Pockoge .
No more then 362 Cubic In·
choo V·B Engine
Automolic
Four SPHd
Tr•n1ml11ion

Engine Oil Cooler

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF, BONELESS
TOP ROUND STEAK OR

2

In

Memory

London .Broil
PIIIHI

,In Memo.r y Of
PETE WHEELER
Paned Away
May 15. 1989
My hurt otllt aches: •
1
$ecret - • otlll flow .
,..,.. It .....tiO ..... VC!U
No onewHI ever know.
I often sit and think of

Assorted
Pork Chops

·Holly Farnts .
Whole Fry.e rs

a

.....

IN WATER

Kroger Chunk
Light Tuna

..
...
•"'
•

•.,.
,.,,
•
...•

8.125-oz.

....••
....

..."'.,.,
'.
•

...••••

SQUEEZE

•

••
••
•

Heinz
Tomato Ketchup
2kz.

'"
,•..
••'
••

.

•••

Grade A
Large Eggs

CONTROL OR

Pert Plus
Shampoo

11-Ct.

1Hz.

Five 151 Police Tlroo
Hoovy Duty Front end lloer
Rubber Mota
Heavy Duty Front Soot
Extra Dome Light BttwHn
Visors
Single Key
Left Hond and Righi Hand
Remote Mlrroro
Huvy Duty Allornotor
Loft Hand SpotHght
Duh Gougeo (Volle. Tem
poralureo. Oil, Preuurol
Pollee S..-dometer
Air Conditioning
Tintad Glau
AM/FM Radio
Heovv Duty Shoclto
Color-White
Roar Dooro to Open from
Outoldo Only ond Reor
Door

·Windows

Fixed

Shut.
· EH1octric0 0oo8r Locko A .11
••vv . utv atterv- uxt •
•ov Terminal Off Battery
for Wlro Hookups .
Roar Window Oefr'lot
Eloctrlc.Trilnk Rtleeoe
Colibratod SpHdomotor
and Police Pockago Optlono
'
you:
Each bid muol conteln tho
lull nome ot ....., poroon or
The things you u1ed to
company lntorOIIed In tt!e
uy and do.
ume. end each bid muot be
When days are dark
k
and dr•ry.
occompenlod by • chao or
And everything goeo
bond In tothe
of
.o100.00
tho omount
ut~ctlon
wrong;
of Vlllflgt Council ao !!. guo·
I ·- , . •to hear you · ronty thet if thl b1i1 'ft ••·
wllloper, .
•• ~ ~
ctptod. ocontroct-t-on•
Cheer up Mom and
terod into and ito performence properly aecured.
carr~ on.
TheoecheckeorbondowHI
Lo~o you,
bereturnedtoelle•aopttho
Wife Levada and
oucct11ful · bidder. whoM
Family
check or bond will be held
until tt!e contract or bid 11
properly executed. Bichler lo

FRESH "SILVER PLATIER"
fSOLD IN PKGS. OF 10-10$·LBS.I

.'

IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE

Fresh Baked
Apple Pie
24-oz.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Gallon

12-Pik 12c C..

8

•

J

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CONSTIUCnON
992·66•1
691·61U

LINDA'S -·
PAINTING
lnt•rlor • bt•rlor
Fill ES11111AJIS
Takl lht pain out of
pointing.

let me de It lor you.

VEIY IEASONAILE
HAVE IEFEIENCES
1614) 915-41.0

4· 23· 1 mo. pd.

Howard

LOCATED AT 2910 MEADOWBROOK DRIVE OFF
SAND HILL ROAD IN POINT PLEASANT, WV ~
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE IDA FAYE MACHIR
WILL BE SOLD
ANTIQUES I HOUSEHOLD: Beautilul rope lwisled Willet
eheny bedroom suilo. oonsisdng of poster bed, chesl. triple
dmsaer &amp; nighl stand, farq carvedwalnut 4.po. ~nAMa
bedroom suil8, super oak curved glass clnna cabirwl. oak
library labia marble top lamp table, marble lop coffee labia
and 2 mart&gt;!~ lop end tables. larq carved walnut lamp table,
wing pack chair carved feel. Waletlall cedar cheli. 2 maple
twin beds 2maple night stands. Gal&amp; lag
hall !able. hal
tree. nice.oak tal case wall clock. fancy Daco,mirror, Zenilh
radio tube lype, 25" Zenith color T'{ rernol8, i.Jtzy Boy rocker
recliner, &amp;wivel roe~r. Trandinocomtsmporary sofa. r~r.
oak curio Sears 19' color TV Luggosan Banai-Bac:lt chatr.
maple table &amp; 4 et!eirs. Tappen microwave ovon: Kenmo111
heavy duly wa&amp;har &amp; dryer same as new, 4 pc. patiO set sofa,
rocker; straight chair and coffee table,~ lawn fUmrtultl.
lawn chairs. nice cryslal lamp, lamps, Viet prciUIII lrames
carved. beautilul gilled lrane mirror, ~aled lin box, lloor
lamp,nice selection of. pictures, Bone China ligU"'181, colonial figurine a, bisque brrds, p11k ba~kel.loll ol glauwam, cut
glass vase wilh el&lt;:h birds, t!endpainled German plaiD, Pope
Gosser china plat&amp;a. aauotlfl and bowla, good oelection ol
Slemware wine gtaues, carbide light. decoraled Hower
design slone jar. Rainbow. awee~r. Hoover eweeper, sev·
eralsil-lrays and olher poeees, pttehor, eandehold9rs. salt
and pepper, ale., pots. and pans, C~ C?la cooler, 1111all
kitchen appliances. 210 XL ~rwr, com~. bionkell.
linens, nicellatware ice cream lreezer.(elaclrief, drop cord,
few lools 20'1awn mower, hose on reel, plus more.
JEWELRY: Ringo: 1.75 carat Di~ond Solllaire
ap·
praisedat$4,000. will give paperswolh purchase. 9 Diamond
Cluster Ring.
.
.
AUTOMOBILE: 1980 Cadillac sedan DeV1Ie, 6lilar. V~.
blue, • door, loaded. velour seats wilh 41,365 aeiUal milel.

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters .·
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

. 949-2168

c
•I Mlidi•P•"

4·5·91-l mo. pd.

INDEPENDENT ·
CUPn CUANEIS
ontl nu FLOOR CAll
•Reaaonable Ratu
•Quality Work
•Free Eotlmatea
•Carget Het Fett Dry
. Time
•High Gtoss on Tile
Ftoor Finlih
MilE lEWIS, Ow11. I, Rutland, OH.

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSTALLATION

742·2451

Contact

3-14-'91-tf"

STEVE WHITE

SHRUB &amp; TREE

. 992-6463
After 5 p.m.

TRIM and

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

. BILL SlACK

------=-:-:::--:-:-:::---.::------1

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2269

'

~AILROAD

USED

TIES

8·12·80·1fn

J&amp;L
INSULATION

992-2259

acres on Sumner
.Interior includes large living room, 4 BRs. 2 balhs. spa·
cious kitchen and dinmg_room. stone fireplace and more .
While standing on lhe covered upper deck over the garage
you'll view lhe splendor of landscaped perfection. Th1s home
is picture per1ect and you should be a part of It! CALL FOR
YOUR SHOWING TODAY! $69.900.

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At R1010llllllle Prices"

PH. 949·2101
or lea. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

.

One of ... n/cftiNfl• _ , . , )11111111/lalllnct
Ewtyl/q /1 tit» and CWn andwal c.H For

AVCTION CONDVc:DD •r

RICK PEARSON
AUC'ftONCO.
MASON, WV

773-8785

EXECUTR~Xsn.GRENCELOVE
.

wv.

NOtllllpolllllltFor Ao~l~ .. Or~ OIPn(lllty

-

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

OFFICE 992-2886
HOME 992-6692

·4.i _·.:

:._·. ·...

-. .....

~

~

au-wMWIMIIItiM . . .

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.

NowH-hllt
"Free E stlm•tes"

lnEDIATE PDSS,ESSIOII ,.. This .
.
,
Home with 49+ acres is ready and
. Home Includes
dishwasher. refr&lt;g., range, fireplace. a11 condrt10~1ng, ALL
furniture including 1V and VCR. Alll1 needs IS YOU. ASKING
$54.900.

ALLIUaS
Brlnt It In Or We

Mlfii-FARM CLOSE TO MIDDlEPORT - Both town and
country' Now you can have it all!·This property has appro•.
3.88 ac;es wilh a 2 story frame home that has 3 bedrooms.
family room, equipped kitchen. I car garage and a barn.
Many olher great features plus the comfort of country and
convenience of town alt tor $32.000.

EVERY MAN'S DREAM - A35 ft. Hous1bo1t - There's
nothins more pleasureable than cruising up and down lhe
Ohio R1ver in your own yacht. Sleeps 9, has marme rad1o.
and a tri:nle boat lra1ler. Looks like New! To see g1ve usa
call.
$21 ,000

RACINE - 1\? story home with 3 bedrooms. I II baths. oar·
pel and hardwood floors.·Acomfortable home at an afford a·
ble price of $29.500.

RT. 33 -About hallway to Athens- Brand new conslruc·
bOn. Has a spacious, beautiful2 1,i acre lot. kilche~ w1th Is·
land dming room wrth atrium door, and e large hv1ng room.
Has '2 bedrooms and 2 baths downslairs. and 10uld have 2
bedrooms. and one bath upstairs. Owner w1ll fmish upstairs
for a little more money.
REDUCED $62.500

MIDDlEPORT - Become lhe landlord ollhis mce 2 umt
apartment building tn Middleport. and ~ou can collect the
good rental income it h1s! Th1s buKd1~g 1s lot~ted In a good
ne1ghborhood and is close lo everylh1ng 1n town! The owner
wants to sell. so make · an offer! ASKING $18,000.
COIITENTMENT FOR OUR CUSTOMERS. A DISSATISFIED
HOME IUYER COULD DO OUR IUSifiESS flO EIID OF
HARM TJIATS WHY IIE'RE SO DETERilfiED TO PlEASE
OUR CuSTOIIERS. IF YOU'RE IUYIIIG. lET US HELP FIIID
THE VERY PlACE YOU WANT.IF YOU'IE SElliiiG. WERCAOPII
SAVE \'011 TIME AIID TIOUILE IY SHOWIII8 YOUR P •
ERTY OfllY TO IIITEIESTEO. ~LIFIED PIOSPEC1S.
SIIICE OUI 011 EOIJECT ISTO P DEYOU WITH "HOME
HAPPIIIESS.'' WHY IIOT SEE US - AIID SU WHAT WE
CAll DO FOR YOU Wl:ntOUT OILIGATIOII7
HENRY E. CLELAND .......... .... 992·1191
JEAN TRUSSELL ......... .......... 949-2110
J 0 H.ILL ... ........... ........ ........... 991-4411
TRACY BRINAOER ................ 949-2431
OFFlt:E .. ,:..... ......... .... ............ 992-2219

POMEROY- RT. 7-Apprq•. 18 acres of land. lCCD water
and electric available. WILL SELL ON LAND CONTRACT.
$20.000
MiDDLEPORT - PEARL STREET - A nice 2 story home
willl 3 bedrooms. II! baths, vinyl sidinf· new windows. full
basement. House is on a GOOD STREE .
$39,900
MIDOLf:PORT- UIICOLII STREET- Look at the price on
this 3 to 4 bedrooms. Newly remodeled comes.with n.ew
washer. dryer, range, and refrigerator. Also, a 9 jJiece h~1ng
room surte, 3 beds and 2 night slands. JUST $19,500
POMEROY - SKI IIIlER lOAD - Reldf to build that dream
home! Three 2 Kre buHdinelots. Electric and water avada·
ble.
$1.500
SHERYL WALTERS ....................... 387·0421
DARUNE STEWART ...........: ......... 112-8311
IRINDA JIFFIRI ............... ........ 112-3018
SANDY lUTCHER ........................ 112-1371

1,625 GAl.-'3S-S45
lt. 1, lo• 71-A

. PN. 949·2101

liN RT. 124 NEAR RACINE - Gosh. you gotta see this
house!!!!! - It has a calh&amp;dral ceiling in the liv1ng room and beautiful designs bn the ceilings 1n alllhe rooms. II has a
. umque slone fireplace and an upstairs room w.ilh a bann1ster
railmg overlooking the downslairs. Has a spac1ous basement
with lwo c11 garage. ALL this and more on 3flat n1ce grassy
• acres. Gosh you gotta see il!!l
$105,000 ·

LANGSVILLE -ST. RT. 124- A2 story, 4 bedroom house
wrth a one car garage and acellar. Nices1ze yard. Comes wilh
above ground poollhat is still in craie.
$11,900

POOLS,
CISTERNS, ETC.

SIDING CO •
or Its. 949-2860

RACINE- 3 bedroom home in lown. Close to schools, shop·
ping and churches. Nice size lot. Aplace w1th potent1al for
the r1ght person. Needs some work. Would make a greal star·
ter home! ASKING $19,500 MAKE OFFER!

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

BISSELL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTIIE.S. TURNER. BROKER
CHESHIRE .:._ Wilson GrO¥e Rd. - Come see lh•s lovely
bnck froot home w~h full basement. 2 car garage. 3 bed·
rooms 2 baths and lots of storage space.' Allth1s sitting on
.6300 'of an acre In a great location!
'63 ..900

Ia.,...

TERMS: C1111 or CltKk with lD.

L Wrltesll

4·16·16·Hn

SATURDAY, MAY 18, 19~9~
1 ~~
10:00 A.M.
I .

LUNCH

1

POint Pleaunt · 67:Hi9'.!&lt; '

698-6591

AUCTION

Llollllld llondld In Cillo, Ky. I

'

~UALITY

Quality
Sweeper
Repair

992-7458

-- · ~

AUC7JONEER NOTE:

Diet Coke pr
Coca Cola

tlck mo'""tlf
B~rby
by

SPEEDY VAC

ESTAft

12:00NO~

Springdale 2% ,
Lowfat Milk .

SIGNS

539 &amp;ryan Place
Middleport. Ohio
11-t4-Hn

AUTOM0BILE &amp; JEWELRY WILL BE SOLD AT

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,

,. . . . ......

Ctt4tl11t

992-2772 or
742-2251

Rinu

-.

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

'·' '~

Public Notice

bldo for a 1991 -92, four

u.s.

1-------""1

YOUNG'S

desires to receive 111led

•

of. ciMiok In th•
omount of .10.00 m••l--------.:..~.:....:.....:.._..:..;·...:.....:....,r...:.-..:.._r..;·
payoblo to tiM' D~ment
ofNaturol 11-urcoo: Th- .
moy aloo be pu"""'rred with
F&amp;A
Ill-COUNTY
C81h In 11M • - amount.
11EE
&amp;
UWN CAlf
l'tlino end -lt1cittlano be·
SANnA
nON
come the pro..W of the
Slonolt Werk - lrlooMIN
SII'TK TAHI PUII'ING
p r o - - bldcllra end no
BUU.DOZER and
20 YEARI EXP./ FREE ES1:
reurve1 the right to accept refund w11 be made. Adell·
BACKHOE WORK,
POIT
-A·JOIIH
lENTIL
Coli
Now for 1-onoblol'ri&lt;o
tlonol
lnfor_.iorl
may
be
or rejoc1 ony or all bido.
HOME BITES,
742·2686
Ut-2360
ob
...
ned
fntm
11M
Dlvlolon
Brenclo Morrie, Ciorll
4·23· 1 mo. pd.
LANDCLEARING.
Reclometlan. DepartYlllaga of Pomeroy of
WATER •nd SEWER
320 Eaot Moln St.... ment of Notum Rooour..o.
LINES
Square.
Pomeroy, Ohio 48719 1BII Faunuln
Building
H,
8-.c!
Floor.
DUMP IIUCIS
THE
(11141892· 21143
Cotumbuo, Ohio 43224.
(61 1 I , 22. 29; (811i. 4tc
lVAUJlf
ll'llone: (1141 211·10111 .
FREE ESTIMATES
Eoch bid muot be IICCom·
Jilin led by a Bl 0 G UARANTY. meeting tiM rwqul.. Public Notice
· 4-29-11- :1 mD. j)d.
remoonto of SectiOn 113:84
Complete Grooming
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
ofJ~~~7J'::~:r::o~
• For All lrlltls
Sealed propooolo will bt VISED TMAT IN ACCOR·
roceivod II the:
DANCE WITH TME PIIOVIEMIUE MERINAR .
•Remqdellng end
.
DIVISION OF
BIONS OF TliE JANUARY
RECLAMATION
27,
1872
EXECUTIVE
Home. Repairs
Own1r &amp; Op~rator .
DEPARTMENT OF
Ell BY ~E ft~'ER
•Roofing
NATURAL RESOURCES
ORD
'" '""" •
NOR OF
OHIO. AND
•Siding
18111 FOUNTAIN IQUARE AMENDED
EXECUTIVE
Pollllfoy,
-SECOND FLOOR
ORDER 84·1. FEBRUARY
•Painting
4-8-'90-1 mo.
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224 111. 1884, EQUAL EMPLOY·
NO joa TOO SMALL
until l'frday, June ;4~ . 1
MENT OPPORTUNITY CONFilE ESTJMTES
ti 11 :00 A.M. end OJIIInod
DmONI AilE APPUCABLE
lhereaftor for furniohlng tho TO THIS BID. WAGE RATES
ISED APPUAIICES
CEDAR
meterlolo .,d P.rformlng ESTABLISHED IN ACCOR·
.. lAY Wlllllm'
the lobor for •tlte e&gt;locution
DANCE WITH
SECTION
CONSTIUCTION
WASIIIIS-$100 .,
and conotructlon of:
11113.11 lnd 1113.37 PF
DITIS-$69
lfl
R r. LT ~
992-6641 or
of: MOWING AND
THE REVIlED CODE ARE
aFIIGIIATOIS-S 100 •P
ALSO APPLICABLE.
698·6164
MAINTEN ANCE
IMIIES---$12~ op
Bide
ore
-~~~
t111d
o~&amp;·14· '91·tfn
FERTILIZEII-1991
DEPARTMENT
FIIIUEIS-$125., ·
205 N. St&lt;011d Stroot
RECLAMATION PROJECT d - to:
MICIO
OYENS-$19
,.,..
ATHENS. MEIGS. GALLIA, OF NATURAL RESOURCES,
MIDDtEPOIT, OHIO 45760
KEN'S APPLIANCE
NOBLE. LAWR ENCE, AND DIVISION OF RECLAMAOHice 614-992-28..
TION. 181111
FOUNTAIN
PERRY COUNTIES, OHIO
SQUARE, IULOING H. BESERVICE
HOME 614-992-5692
RECLAMATION PROJECT COHO
fi.OOR, COLUM- ·
992-5335 ... 985·3561
DOniE
S.
NUMBER WR·Mn· 02
OHIO 43224 N0 blclCARPENTER SERVICE
Aa011 From !'Mt Office
BUS,
·
l·n -cordanoe with llie Plano
••
!lor ,.,. withclrww hlo bid
-ftoom Additione
POMROY, OMO
.,d BPIICillcotlono preporocl within oixty 1801 doy. .tt.rtt!e
- Gunerwark
We Need
by ·the D.EPAIITMENT OF IICtull d118 0 f the
1ng
tD/30119 lfn
-Eioctricol ond Plumbing
NATURAL RESOURCES,
open
-ConCJM• work
THE DIVISION OF RECLA· . t~f.Director of No.lurol
-Roofing
MATtON.
COLUMBUS,
-Interior a Ext•lor
•Remodeling and
OHIO. BIOS
WILL BE llooourC8o ~IIFYII the right
Pointing
OPENED IN THE THIRD torojectonyorollbldo.orto .
Home R•palra
occept the bid which em·
(FREE ESTIMATES)
FLOOR
CONFERENCE braoH IUCh comblnotlon at•Roofing
ROOM OF 18111 (BUILD·
•Siding
ll'jG HI OF THE FOUNTAIN temeto pro-le ea may
SQUARE OFFICES OF THE promote the beet lnterett of
•Painting
992-6215
UPHOLSTERY
ihe Stille.
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
Ao :-ldod in Section
Pomny, Ohio
NO JOB TOO SMALL
2U·No. Sacond
NATURAL RESOURCES. 123.1 1 of the Ohio llo·
IHI-'90 lfn
FREE ESTIMATES
Tho U.S. Office of Surfoco vloed Code end Admlnlotra·
Mldtl..,...t
Mining lloclamotlon
end tlvo Rule 123:2·11·02 of
CEDAR
Hand Tufting
Enforcement 11 ouppiylng the Deportment of AdmlnCustom Drapes
100% of the fundo for thlo litre- lorvlt:oo. the CON·
36 Yean Experience
project. TliE
ESTIMATE TRACTOR oholl moko .....,
or
FOR THIS PROJECT AS effort 10 .,.111,. thet certi·
614-992-2328
DETERMINED BY THE Dl - fiod minority bulinna oub· ·
We Say Whot We Do.
VISION OF RECLAMATION controctoro .,d motorlol·
12·31 ·IO·tfn
Wo Do Whet Wo Soy.
IS o155,200.00.
men portlclp... in the con·
10·19·1 mo.
Two pr•bld mootlngo wHI troct. Tho to... value of oubbe held on Tueld1y, May 28.
contrecte lwerded to and
Public Notice
1991 11 10:30 a.m. It the mettrlala
end 1 ..,1c11
Morgarot CrHk Site end It purchaood
from minority UNG
4&amp;11-&amp; 01) OR
18141ON 1-180012127
STEWART'S
1 :00 p.m. It the P8govlllolll buolnHooe ohlll be 11 oet TOLL FREE
'
Site. Morgarot C.- lo forth In thl epeclflcetlono.
GUNS
&amp;
SUPPLIES
1
1-tad in Alexonder Town·
.CONTRACfOf.18 IIEQUIII·
0::PIIOVEO FOil PUBLI·
ohlp, Athlno County end lNG ASSISTANCE IN BE·
I TheAtlt
M
BIUY •SELL &amp;111DE
0111 • ·
PagovHio llllolo..tod In Bel- CURING BIOS FROM CERT~ CATION N
plo Townohip, Melgl Coun· FIE.D MIE I".CONTU£. - · Atheno, Ohio: The
OPEN
1171'81 / 1 mo. pl.
ty.
·
_,
.,. · QJIIly. hnt~Nl. Pomeroy,
thru Saturday
Tuesday
SUPPU!
Ohio; Tho Ironton TribUne.
Coploa of tt!e Plono, Spo· TORS AND
clficetlono
and propoeal MAY CONTACT TliE STATE Ironton, Ohio; Tho Golllpollo
10:00 am- 5:00pm
formo will be forwordod . EQUAL EMPLOYMENT CO· Dally Tribuna, Golllpollo.
WHALEY'S
742-2421
frorn the Dlvllion of Recio- ORDINATOII BY CAWNG Ohio: The Journol Leader.
motion. Dop.-tmont of No- 11141 4111-8380 011 TME Ml· Coldwell, Ohio; end tho
21/z
Mi. outside
AUTO
PARTS
NORITY BUIINEBS OEVEL· Porry tounty Tribune. Now
turel Reoo~rceo, upon ••· OPMENT DIVISION BY CAL· . Loxl~on, Ohio. on Moy 111
SpMiallllntl lit
Rutland on Haw
end • 1191.
CustoM Fl'tllll• lepalr
LiiiiCI ld.
Real Eltate General
RECOMMENDED:
·
NEW I UIED PARTS
5·10·'91·tfll.
GLEN G. KlZEII, Chief
ALL
MAKES
I
FOil
Oivlolon
of Raoltmetlon
Dote: May
•
MODELS
8 1881
APPROVED:
992-7013
FRANCES 8.
or 992-5553
BUCHHOlZER.
OITOil . . .
Director, Depo"mont
•VInyl Siding
of Noturel llooourr:U
1-100·141..0070
Oeto: Moy 9. 1891
•Replacement
DAIWIIf OHIO
(Ill 11, 22. 2tc
5/1 /'91 / 1 ma.
Window ..
•Roofing
•lnaulatlon
Real Eltlte General
JAMES KEESEE

"'TUiiiu:" c

More Legals on Page 2

Bunell

•.

~pt

e

$St

•tern purchased.

Fresh
Broccoli

e

· Public Notice

~

to oubmlt dotelioclopeclfico·
tiona on equipment offered
With hil bid.
All -lad bldo lhollbe ••·
ceivtd In 1he Clerk' 1 Offlco
1t 320 Ell! Mtln St-1, Po·
moroy, Ohio on or before
12:00 o'clock noon on June
14. 1991 .
Tho Vlllogo of Pomeroy

614-992-6820

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLO TO DEALERS.
AIMIIOSED Iilii POLICY-Each oftheleldvtllliled items is required to be readily .available fo r
sale in each KrogeJ Store, except •• specffic:ally noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advtlllloed item, we will offer you vour choice of a compar- nom, availat&gt;le
reflect;ng the lame savings or a raincheck which wiU entitkl you to purchale the l~ertised
item ot tt!e advenisod price within 30 davs. Only one vendor coupon will be ecceptl!d per

Public Notice

GROOM
.ROOM

SENIOR CITIZENS DANCE
FRIDAY, 6 to 10 P.M.
PT. PLEASANT MOOSE LODGE
FREE for Seniors 55 and Over
"GEORGE HALL"

==~=A-mold,

8 USlness serv1ces
.__r ________
The Dally Senll

Ohio

IUniND,
OHIO 45775·96!6
61 4·74t·t9D4

NO SUNDAY CAU5
l·ll-lfn

4· 2&amp;·91 · 1 mo. pd .

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
· CONniUCTION

MICIOWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

aNew NoNs

•Garaess

Pick Up.

a(olllplett

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992-5335 or

••-titling

&amp; Compare

Stop

Free Estilwatas

985-3561

915-U73·
667-6179

, ......... Pest Off(g
217 I. SecetMI 'St.
POMROY, 01110

5-11-'10 Hn

J/6/10/Hn

ROOFING

WE DO

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

FREE EmMATES

AIR CONDIIIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FIIINACES FOR MOIU &amp; ~HOMES
o o 0 o 0

o o 6

o o 0

o o

o 0

0

0

o

0

o 0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

MO. . HOME

BENNEn'S· ~:::a'

........ 011 s.tfertl Sell... IN. .tf ... 141
1614) 446-9416 ... 1-ltl0·171·ll967

0

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w8ctnMda , May 15,1991
BORN LOSER

•
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n ·=: -oil Fol -You

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four JCramblocf · -"• to.
low 10 fonoo laorr ~rnplo - •·

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LET'S SAV I NEVER
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=. . . . "'-·'*
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Bualness
Buildings

AEUEF COli·
IIUNIT't SKILLS
INSTAUC.
1011181 WAHTED: l.,.""""'(ol
noodocl to,_., .-munlly oild
EMERGENCY

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GET PAID IDi' Compl~ 1111114
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w,.a:

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C111~1"•11• ..
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CARPET

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UPHOLSTER\'
CLEANERS.
P,rompl pral lllaMI . . . ..
W. hOnoi' all oucnp:;dtorw cur-

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Middleport

lrVIclnlty
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wlhooi - . . Caa

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- - Aoqulne oloiRty 1o

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...... lo ""' gtOMh
bor, Clll-7jt.Jn. ·~mt. •ond- -lopoooonl
of on 111diYkl•l with oowro111 rwtordatlooo.

Help Wanted

11

IIMIU"PIIICEPHCiHI
OIIIIIRII PEOPLE
CALL YOU.

---1.

~~~~~-CESIWIY.

1.0 -

GMJ IX1'ENIION P.

rnuot 111 1ro llolgo eountv.
Coootoct Cocllla II 1-131·
1302 or P.O. Bor 104,
Jaaklon, OH UMO, no liter
tlwn .-zli9t. Equal Opportunhy,
Ernpioyor.
WANTED: Part~lrno UConaad
Procllcal Nuroo (2Q ~ lor

i.=""!:'':~
5'!~
tloo In Oalllo

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AUITIIAIMI WAIITW YOU

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LPN
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Too
drtw.'a ICe- and go;:!
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drM!II
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Aauuteu Cllln.., ot eem.
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1321.'504-81WDI7.
3 I d ..... 2110 N. Main •• Pl.
~

PH, roo ....., roo Hud, 1211.
month a ortNnioo, t110. dopooft,
1 , _ - 101o4111871.
3 ldrm In P-IOJ
tor ..... 114417o317l

2 bedroom mobile

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2br, Aatw••
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114-211'
1211.
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homo
torroororot:
dip.,
pota,1
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.

Apanmtnt
for Rent

a ,_, Fwn-

·-·~

~- 14 ~. 114-4411340, 11~ 441 3170.

Ooki~Une.4011%llorll·

Up. SIDH1.000 +

wldJ. PT. No

Money to Loan
LOIUitl BY MAIL

Up to 15,DOO Filii lotltloetloro

Re~l Es1~1e
Fumt.Md · Emcl•ncy.

, .... 114-241 1432.

s-

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Elftclooocy,

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nice
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112 llotha,
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10 gonga Wllpl,

2 WDOCIIIu,..., .......... pool,
4 10 Iota, 111¥011, morclo

COftlldlr late model auto 11

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Holloway Sf, Hendanon, WV.

A CARIB- BLOWOUTI
Wo o- louafol Cno1eM,
Florldo to Tho . . . _ On o
Lorawr .._, I Drooroo. 4 ~

1221MV!. Hotll ·Peld, No
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401-411-70.,0.

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11;30(1) Onpplng In (0:30)

(()• Glow~tg Plinl Clrol
ltld Mike rent a cramped
In New Yorlt. (Rl

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8:00 (J). Ill Story a.ltlnd the
Story A nuclear accident
oc:cura In Idaho In 11181 ; an
elaborate 11ter1ry 1oo11 Ia
hatcned; lhl tide of the
temlnlat turns In 1970. (1:DO)
Stereo.

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BARNEY

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· $1110 1141117

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11111,1~11104.

NDPI••HE'S
(/IIIIT IN TH'
OFF FLOAT
HOllER·· IS
FISHIN',
SHERIFF
SNUFFY AlLIN' ?

WHDL6

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TAKE MY

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18 Comparlllft
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.,
21 l1oaltrtt wom- : •;
on'• qillltarl • .,
23 Star dualor .
25 Cairo'• re27 Cut of meat . ·
211 Duck
33 OUOIIY
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8 Slur•
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10 Drift

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'11~-t--i,

Shill Sound from Handel's
Melllah and 'Ol M111 RIYO&lt;
lrorn Showboat (1 :00)
Stereo.
ill
41 Noun Modem
miracle worlters are using
tech~ to.cure pebtlntl,
Stereo.
8 CHN ...... Newl
1D 700 Club
10:30
M'A'I'H
Ql CIOOI!Incl Chtloo
D IIHIIII Tonight

1D.a

·--·

.

lot al A - Hood Cryotat
Ga1oJa1o For loJL 71 \'oaro Old.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

mance? the Allro.Qraph Mlitchmokw
can help you u.-..- wlill to do to
make the retlllonalolp work. Mall $2
pluli a long. MH-Iddr8101d, stamped
envelope 10 Malehmalter, P.O. Box
91428. Clevellnd. OH 4410·3428.
QEIIItl (Mer 21..Juno 20) Avoid In·
votvomenll today wllh lndiYkluals whO
always try to impooo their on olh·
ert. You won't havo mUCh patience wtth
people who tall you whal to lhlnk .
CANCER (Jtrne 21..1uf7 22} Tlolol mlgl1t
not be one ol your bellar clays lor min·
rrglng yourt or MOttoer'a peroonal r•
- -· ae ..bemely _.,., In bo1li

ar....

.lllrtt. 1.1

LIO (Jrrlr D-Aug. 221 You "'."Y hovo to
negotiate 1 dellclto matter with aornoone whO hu an unyle(dll4 dlapoaltlon
today. You atlncl flrm.loo, becluoo the
mm you give, the more thla lndlvldull

It 1001&lt;1 like you will finally rec;elve Ihe V::"i~:.. 23-Sapt. 22) you mey
recognition you've boon atrlvlng rar In havo atanclency II thlsllrneto take on
your chONn lleld. Along wllh lhe acco- more than you can comfortably man·
lldelln the Jllr llheld, ttoere could be ..... Even -~h you feel confldtnl, try
material benelltt at well.
...,...
""'""'
bllh81
TAUIIUI (Aprllao-Mer II) In your nrlh not to overeaHmete rour cape
·
lo lutflll embiiiOUI objectl- todey, ·UIIIIo (Sapt. n-oct. 21) It could prove
your tact lea cou1e1 be lniiiJII elld u of- unwiM today to bank ....vHy on an lnciJ.
lertllvo
.-let• People you lrlp Yldull oolhOIIIrienclllhlp hal , _ retOIIy
up now :ft1 ftnd a way io trip you up Ill· boon pu~ t ~.'::~~':;.:
~
er. Trying to patch up a brOken ro- , down. '"
.

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your expectations.
SCOIIPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 221 Oon'l
count on lady Luck IO further your ambltiOUI objectives Joday. Instead or
rooting lor you. she might bel on the

~=#liuus (-. 23-0oc. 211 Subdue temptatiOns to eaaggerate a recent
accompllllhdment today. lnstpeeead ~:
arousing a mlrat1on 1n your
rs,
might do just the opposite.
CAPR1CORN (DeC. 22.J.In. 11) This Ia
not 1 good time to bUy things lor whiCh
youcan'l peycash. Don't letyour-re
lor 1nat111t gratification mea up your II·
nanclal ......otiOn.
AauulU'i (Jill. :.JO.Feb. 111 Usually,
you're 10meone who appreclatoo lhe
value of making comprornl- a.nd con·
coulont. But you ""' be unroosort·
ably unyielding today on 1 - you
generally take In alrlde.
PCICIS (Feb. 2D M1rofl 211 Lend a
lttlplng hand -·you can lodly, but
dOn't lei thooe who are caplble Of lalt·
lng care o1 themootvn dump their bur·
dens on your brood shoulders.
AJIII (Mireii21· April tl) Enjoy your·
Mlflodey. but don't put all yaur emphl111 on run. Dutlel you neglect at thla
lime could creote compi(CIIIOnl In lhe
not·IOCHIIatant luturl.
~

0 Newl Coun 1;1

~_!.tareo.

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Ql CJIIb tin on.tiJI X

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caa ..... !!IJI!I81Irtl0. Q

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.
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CelilbtttyCiipNJCirMMOIJr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IIIIIs»., . . . . . Pt&lt;ll)ie. P•l1 afl(f Pfeterll,
Eadllet* In fbi ............... - -· , . , . , - .: E «tu•ll U

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lntenlle,.. country lterl,
Including Clwlly Pride.
(1 ·00)
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37 llerlke
38 Dronchea
38 UH lponcH
41 SntrllfGr
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43 akoiWQbr
force
48 'Mother of
ldllt.
I
48 Poetic
conlractlort
511-liall

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biSS·blrltone Simon Estes
performing The Trumpet .

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.

DOWN

(!) PUce Conclrl FIOIII
0t10 Highlights Include

-.1271-.,
• -

.

23=1•r
perton (ol.)
24 Actreu
cannon
2e ldost unusual
21 Border
30 Old boat
31 Guido's high
nott
32 FNglitleio
bird

~

• luU -

E~-·~~~·1
1113.

I

-«

Is found bludgeoned. Stereo.

..r

.;

'

(I),....
(I) (() • Amefl c11'1

ond

Eaot
All pall

36 ArllhrnoUc
sign
38 FomaloiO~
dltrl (abbr.)
40 c...,
42 In line
W....l tr1ck
45ACtrllllolac0raw
46 Over (prol.)
47 Simi,.
compound
50 Not IIIII
53 Named ·
54 Rocka
55 Loom bar
5e Smallan¥11

o.tectiw An exotiC dancer

lor

mwtt w
llltLupe. - .
11U7111 or
Upoololnl Apl: I - . 1 IR,
111m ~ ratH. 111 • • • ·

1 111p wltlilri a
map
S ldoUonleJt
11 Contort
13 Grander
14 Lord's15 Goad
IS N•walabbr.
17 TechniCal
· unlv.
18 Actor 22- Un,ut

a

'IACATIDN II

North
3 NT

Anewer to Previout Puazle

33 Tltllla to uy

A-"o

Stereo.
IO:DO (J). Ill Q u e - LNp
Sam leaps Info lhl lila of a
college student Hlling tomb
sheHors. Stereo. 1;1

NDfN l CAN

...
.
'

West
Pass

Sout~

1 NT
Occasionally a defender will .-be
dealt a selection of apparently useless
Opening lead: • Q
low cards in one suit. But after he has
. ..
signaled his length. he may make a L------ - - - - ---'
suit·pN!ference signal by the sequence
in which he plays the remaining cards.
On today's beat, both Norths In a
team game took a shot at a vulnerable
three no-trump. hoping their diamond
mood two qn the fi rst round to sllow
suit would be worth six tricks.
Both Wests led the heart queen. The an odd number of cards, he played the · ' .
declarers won with the king and led a eight on the secorid round . This waun ., •,
diamond, the Wests ducking. However, unnecessarily high ca rd and suge&amp;t···"
after winning t_l!e second diamond ed some useful honors in the higher· "
trick. the Wests made different plays. ranking suit. Here that pointed to ·:
At the first table, West thought he spades. It did not show he~r ts, the suit ~ ~
knew an entry!~ dummy when he his partner had led, or d•amondl, the "''
saw one. He continued with the heart suit In which the signal was made.
: ;
jack, confident he would N!pln the
Luckily for East, West was enjoylna ,'
lead with the spade king and cash his one of his moN! lucid momenta. He .• ••
heart winners to defeat the contract. spotted that key eight and switched to: . :·
It was a bad shock when East couldn't lhe spade king and anotherspade. The · ~.
beat dummy's club jack and decla·rer defenders collected six tricks and 13 ·
claimed II tricks.
IMPs for their team.
([J 1111, NEWSPAPER ENYERPRII. Alllt
At the other table, East tried to help
his partner. Having dropped the dla·

20 Hebrew Iotter

8:30 (I) (() . .Anyllting lui Love

ndllloned ,...,...,., Dtytra.

Dry• Shoppe. IM ttl 2144.

lha

ftereo. Q
Ql N11ltoillle Now
• Ltlrry King LIYel

KM-__ ......,._lor
A

J.lk. .ncl

2 MOYIE: liad Wind (2:D0)

roloo,111 -

Forrnol SuJIOf c dh a _

1D.

F-n Jake and McCabe
search lor lhl shotgun killer
of a millionaire. (R) 'Stereo.

•

Flea.

8•ctucllaro of

polltlcll conaultantl and
Interviews wlllo cloM
aeaoclatea tr11ce Adolf
Hitler's ablllly to hypnotize an
entire nation. (1 :0Cija
.

W~51-l~ECT.

2 horw Ruollor - · 1111,
1500.
finn. ~

(!)Full,..,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

ACROIS

a Nation PaychoJinalyala,

.

In
O«on 4111 llda tor ti:IJLIJroo,
ptu. YlWtiM. 'One IIIdrocm

toni

'

FOLJNDOOT
THA.T 5PEL..L1Nc5f IE&gt; MY

1111&amp;~·iItal l V.v.rilirmiii-iifiio
: - Wll

One - - lpla ovollollo

1 .............

1t'll ..,=~ 2 ...
~ ......
_ .....

~

50Mc~

Round-

114 Opp., olr carod., foundry
,_,,. lrM lruh plokup, c,looil
to llorao I KhooiL 304·77:15121.

iW1

UI'O

HE.I..LO,
F·E-E ·B·L:E:-8-1&lt;-A- 1-JoJ!

+A K Q3

• t

M.O. Coogle decklta to date
a norrling student. (Rl Stereo.

.

81 Farm Equipment

t6 5

Use those
'useless' cards

The World Almanac~Crossword Puzzle

a
(() (() • OOogll HoWHr,

h

...r

.

(2:00)

IIOUIIT'S OREENHDII8E. 112
up ... Olivo Ad. R.R. In - Clool[oiUnw,
· . 11WIIo
..........
.II

·

'

18 PtlnwN•~•

+9 52

• AK 53

1D MOVII: Any AI lOIII

11?1-11111.

..'

•s
2
tau

.QJ 1087

SOUTH
• J 10 9

lnterv- QOUntry liars,
Including Chlrlly Pride.
(1 :DOl

Aoiiloli

EAST
+AQ 7 64

tA3

Holt Lorllnne Crook

. . . . tlftllWft ............. ....

=-

2 - rid
-~
· :MDU9,2
117
ouwl
• • • • door
oroatod.S4141.P-II
·Frorno Bulldoro. 114-1111141.
2 roh..,_ 110 onc1 I1DO. 2
--olr-wlh

T--

• C¥1fo!!ar, A.T.,

WEST
+K2

+10 8 7 4

tta:..=~Wrole
r-.Q
a Calabt111oa OHitllgl X

2111. Aftor 1:3111'11, OIIIJII.t?l1111.

- WO&lt;ftEnalrio.
or
COr. - GaiMI11roo. .,..
-.sun
11:14121.
Nrl, ......

producto.
·

ALDER

o•

cor.... ...

Cluplor
I:IODiono, utUIIoa
paid. 30W7f.4100.

32 MolllleHomes
lor Bale

I

304~

Oloolcoot IYI14. 1 and 2 flod.
room apart....,.. at Vllloao
Manor
and
Alvorolilo
Aloorrt-...o In lllddloport. From
~Ill. Cllil-·mt EOH.

-:r.:-.. .._ -~~· ...
b

•

. , ,..
. l'ord
2...
. ......
, liDO.
o·r 4T,IIO
- r..r
truck or treotor equal valUe,

-orlor-llrwo.~'='
~

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

lruFI

•

ALLEY OOP

eM-

fi(I(IO. .. -

,.

--

....... M4,100. -·3777.
llclwoll Ololo: 3 IR wl4 ... opting appiiCIIkiow tor
toto, - . 1 ocro. tii,DOO. Will Muon Aptl'lnoomL Equal How..

oovt-ENT - · - St

CLASSIFIEDS ... '
Your Key lo Creal Brryo

120

Fourth, Dolllpollo, 114 4tl 4111

IJ OWroor: 3br Roroch, Cllthodrol

lor

rs:'A"'

~~~~=:-:::=~ - - h . T - a - . = ;
Buy at Mit, A - Antlq....
- olr,
Ocdgo 1124 E. lloln ...... PoonOIOJ. •poll,
·11.10.
- 11.21 doz.
PI,
- : loi.T.W. 10:DO o.rn. to 1:00·
p.rnh8uoodtJ 1:00 to 1:00 p.M.

fourth, Gotlpoollo, tl71 UtiPold. 114-141-4411 aftor 7p.m.
.. ...... - · Tlw _

nlehad.Nioo-. C.Iollorl Ulllltleo Pold,

MO'L
441·1021.

Antiques

reel'-. 114-1Q.2117.

121111. parity fur.

•

rahrndll.

11711 ClirJotor

1211.

D MeiOr League llllbell

(().The Wondlr Y Kavln rellecta on 1111 people,
pieces 1nd axl)lrlenees of
hiS Nil. S-. Cl
CD C!l Nlllonlrl GeagritPftlc
· Special Stereo. Q.
Gl Ill. Hluntlil LlYn:
Trtrll Gho.t ltorla A toy
store Is haunl8d by a ghost
looldng lor a laat io'(t; a
hotel contains 1111 ghost ol a
suicidal woman; a tchool
contalnl ghos~ children.
(1 :DO) Stereo.
MOVIE: Olrln Hood'
FOX Ntgllt II 1M Mo¥IH

~·-•h00. 3Q4.

·-2411150 1114.11 ....

31 Homes for Sale

·w......,
58 '

PHILLIP

(2:D0)

-'11 ~n boll) ......... lttllllr

GIIUIWitMd. lmm rlfllle Service.

~

53

Got
FGr In-~~~~
Pool.
..
_Coroolllloool
4 .,...
Old. Clll ........:.tit - . ..
1111 pw-iill rr•p ,., Luer
- I T wlh Poo 11 n1c prkMf
1110. 40 .... _ lila TV
•
•
- onol' -oncl
•
1100. Now lloclol 10 w- ...._ ..... Clolof

SET UP. WILUNO
S4,1D0._1
_TO
_TRAIN.
__

11111

...•. · - -

otl,oall14111:11t71.

S.lllng. t 100 · · -·
T-IIIRT l CAP ICAUN PAINT·
tHO EQUIPIENT. COMPLETE

22

c-114: $3.111 •
14.11 In Stock. IIOIIaloon Cor-

: : : ~~~ , JIDII·

UIIIHieo Pllld. $2&amp;0frioo. Sta0

FO&lt; Clwop. lilt QUioldy.
1•
CUio
-·
1003441111.

-·.
lntlruiotkitiif
=:• gorliar
Hmlad &amp;UIILUW
oprMigl
~
....
lntlruoloo:
dotand l - I o n 11~ tttl UOZ or
141 1177 ooftror I:DO Pll.

"*•

VInyl -

+ .J 6

dll. M'A'I'H

(I)

gino, ........ .,.,...., ........

Sola onc1 Clair, 11.11 por -k.

Cooocrwlo I plootlo _ . . II'*"'

Apo~rnom.

-•rod.
on III'C ..
3 or or4

1m vw a· , ; me, . - .,...

- taro
- - 121.
-·
2
......
-ro121.
Ond 140.
3Q4.

21R,ol-.,-llel.• Dop. o.q'ad. 114-Zif.1122.

duttrltl, Froo Etl--1
o181o lrwtatlotlooo. Plooooo: 114~:m.

on

54 Miscellaneous
. Marchlndlse

n....._
.....
,
aiMII
-.lfiiNn 1 carDttd 1110 l,..ler
~· AI. 1 laouol on
Point PI ooot, :IOW7JI.

.. , . . ......

010. Cole-..t141 ollir I or

RENTZ OWN

114 ... zsze.

r.om., unfur..

Autos for Sale

..

+ 853
• 94
.KQJ109 7

My~~Mn Chrlstllln Cun
l.Mder Tony Alamo; 4rnella
Earhlrl Murder Evidence
Stereo. Cl
(I) MOVIl: The llllklt SIOiy

--~·
1171 YW a- IJodr a..od. IICID

SWAIN

''

NORTH

BRIDGE

• Cnlllftte
7:31 (I) IMionl 1nclll0n
8:DO (J) • Ill UniOivecl

- In
dlloodJ....,.

AUCTION I RIAIITURE. 12
Olivo 81, Golllpollo. I UOJcl
lumK,.o, ~t"':'t'e woot- l
WorM bootL I
31&amp;1.

..
..
..

news travels !sst. Good news takes the

another.~. "Bad
SCENI~ route."

as.....

FRANK AND ERNEST

IRMI_al_,._

eoroo. 44

IGo~q. Houro: 3:
*:3Gp.m., F~; la.JII.-Ip.m., Ill;
A'VOII • M - C o l llariiJn - ·'"· lun; z.- wooi!IJ
··"-114: _ _.,

LPN MHIInj;

-,1-Ho...,..uses--fo_r_R_e_:nt__

JuiCy - Chilly - SCENIC

Ranter - Midst -

Aller hanging up the . phone, one !Bilow sighed to .

1111 Wille( of ForlrrM Q

1111 Cornlr -

...

..'

(I). Memtl'l l'linly

71

• 14.44 por _

r·r ~

SCJIAM.I.m ANSWERS

.l!t. . . ._

DrafDiiWJnd ·

Reel!- 17.111 por -11. Dlroollo
whh 4 Cloalrw, P.IO por - · 4
a,.. led, $12.20 per
...... 4 Clolll of
1110 por ......
Pl. 141,
4 IIIII 011 Pl. 7 In _ . . ,_
._
, ~ · tlono lotorrdlj,
:;:::::~p.rn.: SundoJ, 12 - .

...
..

7o30~1Jr.=~o
(I)
TOI)Iglrt s -. 1;1

Hour.; ............. ~
0322, 3 nolloa out lulovlllo Ad.

o..-.

Re liJI,

Business

WANTED: Full-tlmllemplaYinlill

_, loooooo . . . ltorno

Maiolo. 304-m.et.

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

In ,.., _, loooooo . . . ltorno

In -

For lale: River.,.,. prapillJ In

Compleo
ohethechuckle
by fill inge in
missi ng quoted
wo rda .
you develop from step No . 3 be low.

7:051]) HIJIIIY Otlyti

LAYNE'i RIAijiTURE
- . . lurnlohlnao.

CliHI ofo.-t
3.M por -k.

lllstento-···· ····.

.

IMIOIIQj... Q

l;orropltlo

·-

DAYETS

-IL'_IL.'....JIL.-.JI'-'_..JI__,
A
•
V

Allllr Q

c .... llotol. eon ~&amp;.1'3111 .

•WMk.
- L-8ha~
w-..-lJunk
114.01 por
. . .,

. .,

. I.•

....
L
1r~.~~:DO)
.=..Mifi
8

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wotlwa, ...,..., htlolgowotoro,
,.,.... SU.. AlliiUancii,
R- IIi. ...ldo • -

FroaDoiYOry.

.

U!,=t..='Q

~uu aiH """ tar1nat. nootlond fnrno . .. W,odln .......
hompor $10. 104-1?1-1102.

RESTRICTED IUILDINCI, 3Q4.

2 IR, ol--In - , - ,

INOI!QEI
Comnou....r
llorlicoo. Wo OHIO VALLEY PUBUIHINO CO.
... _
. , plut
·f'lt•.
ond rnuiiw oodo .....
roorn
.. _... boerd
. rau do Public Sale
8
•_~.-..
-N
- - pooplo,...- and
You -klo I loooooo, gulda,.. NOT
itiiOiiiilliiiO
lr Auction
and lllondtlolp In I lonoiiJ II• mal ornJI ,... -..... PuciOii AueUon eom,.n,, r-J•o. Aoq..._ ololllty lo the otlorloog:
.,..._ u.l14
oldllo
and "':':~~~L!U!iCii!:=:1 comNhnoonl
lo lhe
growlh
. _ AMAZING IUCCESI
_ .... LlooMM Olllo, •
onc1 dlnlopoooonl al on fro. VENOINO ROUTE: 1om I2.DOO •
~ 104-T7W'NI.
dl.- whh oowro111 Nlonltllooo. 14,000- - . g Plf • \lrollo
... In llolgo County. wllh Prlnw Lrloaltoil8. Culo fro.
9 wanted to Buy
c
-- c.alllo
.. 1 -· _ , . FIWII ...... """"'
P.O. Boa 104, torad wlh llw FICior8l T Wl'l CllovJ ~. aulo, 23112 or ""'*-· 011 4..,P~ ltJor ~. C.n24tn.,1thon """'· Equtl
unhy . J13.4001.
.
.
•llldlnrt Umber, EmploJor.
Arlhur'w
Clooln
Unlo.
Fenoo.
.... Willi ••• "tM-1112- WAHTID: Forft.tlrno ornplo,......
- -.... ~.....

--1o
.
.
,
.....

-

.

lca-w IIICI Mrt. King

Lata ooloW 11 te.IDO. rooroolloblo
in IIIIIf wllll lubdlulsl ~a::
mi._ CM.t s.ndhll
,

1312, LooYO

Will lloiiJoM, -lloooda II J0W
houH or mine. Have teleNncea.
114 11:1 IIIOa.
.

loiYtcoa Worktr dh luckcuo

.-lor ..... - -.

.........

·-·lor-

Wo,..ad llnjo, - I n , GuHar

and Plono -

loti

17f.41DO.
For .... _
...n
..... LOrS FOR SAJ..I' In Golllpollo
Forry. Will oc- llal~~ciiJ
oollonolo. Coli :1J14.t71.2JG. N .
-"' onl-.?1·
2?22.
Tloooooou I Ar rl-. pal,.lng,
oncl au11or work. Froo One . , . bulkllna loti, Mlr
•lmil•.~orl""'
llnglHridO. '1112-2721.
17HJDO.

Wll ......... In.....
"'I'_ - ·.,...
Coli
11411N'e417.

--·----- - ---"'
,...,-. . ......,;t:DOIII?.

roo

.

While watching people
move Into lhs houss across
the street, my sister·ln-law
told me the bast way to keep
up wtlh your neighbors Is to

OUpCiole
8:311]) Anclr Cllltlllh
7:00 (J). WIIUI of I'OfiiM Q
(I) lliiMnt of J..-...

To

Old, -

Pl.,. .. Radroer.IM-24f.M41.

•
rgr H No - · Tloanll
IIEIIDIHT
illt.."'OEI,
WY.
Prrr IIIJ
-lng on ·
Jn. Youl
or .....,.. to !f111W1!1
ond ..........

a Yooro

Largo ~.. unrlllrlclldlol oil

Trlntfw -..ctNJif!e 10 VHI
Topa. QuoiMy W"ork. -loction
With .. Wll...... .0-oo1.
. . .. A
btl
ANI.

o.t.lll1114 4tl OMI.

-.t,

1111 114417..11t

3044?1-

Yot. .rw iiddnJon.'llte vauft and
- '-dol- lnoluclod. 3Q4.
77:1-111!11.
Qnve loti, llaeah Grove
~- ..... lnlv ...

-Coil.... - ,_......
·.::..:r: .... _.....
_...., __ ....
--=......
·--a.-w. . . .,... =.'::.:
- .......-..==
IIi- - .

tlacaadtd

lor

Lata • - - on
Aoylooom Rood. Pcuod road,

~Idol....... ........

R&amp;CII&amp;Ion lluel1 Eml Extra
CloSh From _ , Arnozl14

Pt. Plllaant
lr VIcinity

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

tlooo rnallld
11213, JoiHI D.

• "" 111 South u...
....... Harth Aurcn.IL 10142.
Goua;wnM'It Hlrlna f700.$IIOO
... baollonl Jlenellt. Jab

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Ii&amp;.~·Q

2 AKC -on'""'"' FenoaleO &amp;
y..., Did. I AKC - U

...

couniJ
wtlar,
ro.-lotloooo. Coonplolo lnfornoa.

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

OppoftunHJ ~.

t-

Wabb. Clll 111 tttl 0231,
352..231 •.

l

Newl Q

EVERY TIME ...

1&amp;

.

r--~--:"-::--:---,

u.:.:...

Livestock

53

.

(J) ~~~bitt 8ftd caatena

TRICK FOOl.5 THEM

"':1:
Go-All..-.-

3 ·4 - AI-IJ
-18d, air _ . , . ,
Y!*r•at•6......-b1Uar.~ ..

441.--

NAIVE .•TilE FlOWERS

TO l(()ll, MARCIE!

Groorn ond luppiJ
Pot
lanoo Poi! Food O..r. Julie

Cou~-1-,2-

ltaka,....cloaloonow.No
~-~,...
..,.. ''-- l&gt;foono IDi' oro
lnttnwlt. 114-4*-7ltl day,

Pet• for Sale ·

56

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE.on
2nd Avo., Golllpoh. Clooe lo

an,..._,
GorJ-.

IDIT: car.. · E..,.,_ driilor'a .1 - . goDil ......14
~.
f.12 Inc. . . . .". .-.!,
and
-utlil
lJ I I m: 01111. .......... te.lle
Rltllft: ., •••• :tU4. 44MI7I.
lllaly: II.DOihour. 11 - a d
O l d . . . - . - ook. 2 - . Clll-.z302 no ltlar Ilion
- . .......... - . plnboll ll/21/tl; 0111 tor Chri!IIJ. Equal

....

Household
Good I

TEACIIERS ARE VERV

1--.T~rF-T"-1

I)Ourllauu
8:051]) .._., lllllt.lll
8:10 (J). Ill NIC Newl Q

I HATE TALKIN6 .

-· ,_--ion u-

.,...., ga.-, road, or dri- Rotroln
-1!-tlom
- 011J hon I Job for ytOU. ~- ~' larJ14 Y11Jioy
Wa'n loold14
pooplo Pt-. Coli T~
431711
Gorman
'""""
warlouti
okltlt
to
othoN,
lllgltlortllon
·
1 -·

=...
FOUND:

14

, ... - - ....... and ..niOdoct H wou Hu to cool&lt;, ...

Lost&amp; Found

8

HOURS:

at needed; m1y ,.
q....., ovomighto. lntornwt ....

To good homo .....,\ 2 - •
~

lo ldulla wfth
limN- (IIi:

- ' tkHio

_.14 llaluN and Aoiloblo
.flo.- to ~ ond Cook In
...., - . 11-W.f In City. IJcol.
lonl PIJ tor quollty ~ llond
r.flrena&amp;l Mil JWUIM to: P.O.
lor44&amp;, Qolllpollo, OH 41131.

WRITING AREPORT, I 6AVE
TilE TEACHER SOME SPRIN6

...,

~1141411"

34

MSOLUTELV: SIR!

FLOWERS ... DO VOU nltNK
lllAT WOULD FOOL HER 7

-To-!lrJOUio!

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

AND LET'SSAY INSTEAD OF ·

I
II t

•

HI TE F

OWerldT.-,

..-...

I

E XF R I P
11 I I .1~ I

EVI!NING .

~~-"

_

Pomeroy-Middleport, ~li~

8KM

CH

IKICZ

CH

V .I C

J

SKICZ
C H •·

I I

••• :

ZXKFK

IV HI l

..

XPM

YIM .

VHRIFZ . '

JllXIPPCK

XIIOVEFC .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Soccer hal tllmentt ol both ballet and claM:•
- Vtdll 8111 con.
• ..., .., fitEA. InC,

II

11:31 (I) llaRwlll 'tl Hlilaltllltl&lt;llllilllltl•ll
(11:15)

I'

.. .
• &lt;

.'

....'

.... . .
•

,

·-

'
'

'

.'

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