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Page-12-The Oally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Community calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - First Souihern
Baptist Church will hold revival
services through Thursday at 7
p.m. Pastor Lamar O'Bryant invites
. the public. Evangelist will be Rondel· Manin, Columbus; and soloist
will be Morris Wood, Gainesville,
....._ Ga.
RACINE - The Racine Church
of the Nazarene will hold revival
with Rev. Dave Canfield, through
Sunday at 7· p.m. nightly and at
. · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Joy .Sizemore will provide special
music. Public invited.
POMEROY - Communion ser·
vices' at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
will be Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with
Rev. Amos Tillis. Rev. Victor
Roush invites !he public.
POMEROY • Maundy Thursday
services at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy will be at 8 p.m. with
communion .
&lt;
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
No. 453 F&amp;AM will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be
served.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the JTPA building. Further information may be obtained
by calling 992-5763.
POMEROY - There will be an
. organizational meeting of the
Pomeroy High Class of 1968 on
Thursday at 7 p.m. at Pizza Hut in
Pomeroy to plan for its 25th
reunion.
TUPPERS PLAINS • A free
commumty immunization clinic
will be offered at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department on Thurs·
day from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for ages
two months through kindergarten.
Children must provide an immu,nization record. ·
POMEROY- Bricklayers Local
No. 32 will meet Thursday at the
Pomeroy Library at8 p.m.
· SYRACUSE - Ordinance at the
Syracuse First Church of God will
be 'i)lursday at 7 p.m. with communion.
RACINE -·An organizational
meeting for the Racine Fourth of
July celebration will be held Thursday at 7 p.m . ·a t the fire station.
Any group or organization wanting
to participate should have a representative anend the meeting.
RUTLAND • The program;
"Wash Their Feet," under the
direction of Marilyn Williams, will
·be presented Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Rutland Church ' of the
Nazarene. The public is invited.
POMEROY • 'The Rutland Elementary Sports banquet will be held
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
High School. Bring drinks and a
potluck dish.

pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053,
Ladies Auxiliary, will sponsor a
round and sauarc dan'ce Fridav
from 8-11:30 p.m. Music wiU be by
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr
will be the caller. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT • The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
· of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Middlepon.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with a communion
service. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Fellowship will follow.
Easter sunrise services will be Sun·
day at 6:30a.m.

POMEROY • Community Good
Friday services, sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be held at Grace Episcopal Church
from noon 10 I p.m.
,

J'llPLEY, W.VA. · The Libeny
Mounl.\lineers will perform Friday
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

'

REEDSVILLE ·"Easter sunrise
service, Eden Uniled Brethren
Church, Sunday 6 a.m. ; breakfast at
7:30 a.m. Sunday school at 10 a.m.
"The Empty Cross" by Robert
Markley a1 11 a.m. Public invited .
HOBSON • Sam McGuire will
be at the Rolison Church of ·Christ
and Christian Union, Sunday morning. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.
Pastor Theron Durham invites the
public.
POMEROY · Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington, Gallipolis, guest preacher,
Naomi Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
Sunday, 10:45 am. Public invited.

'

Thursday; AprilS,

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
.
AP Science Writer
BOSTON - Scientists have
discovered a genetic defect that
causes hyperactivity, the fii'St time
a specific inborn flaw has been
linked to a common behavioral
problem.
The discovery should allow doctors for the first time to spot newborns who are likely to develop the
disorder, as well as provide clues
about its cause and tteaunent. .
Scientists found that attention
deficit-hyperactivity disorder, as it
is formally called, can result from a
mistake in a gene th~t regulates the
body's use of thyroid hormone.
While this gene probably
accounts for only a fraction of
cases of hyperactivity, other thyroid hormone problems may tum
out to he a factor in many cases,
..the researchers reported ..in ,Thursday's .New England Journal of
Medicine.
"Attention deficit disorder is
very common. It is unlikely we
would find one ~ene responsible
for all children wuh this," said Dr.
Peter Hauser, who directed the
study.
Three percent to I 0 percent of
children are estimated to have
attention deficit disorder, and the
problem is more common in boys
than in girls:
Victims have trouble focusing
their attention and controlling
impulses, and tend to be restless
and aggressive. Often, they are disruptive in school. While the disor. der is first seen. in childhood, it
may linger into adulthood.
The discovery of an underlying
genetic defect in some victims was
. made at the National Institute of •
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
SYRACUSE - Syracuse First
Church of God, sunrise service,
6:30a.m. Breakfast follows.
RACINE • Racine Baptist
Church, sunriSe service, 6:30 a.m.,
brea!Cf~. 7:30am. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m. Easter cantata by adult
choir at 10:45 a.m. Public invited.

Diseases In Bethesda, Md.
The researchers found that
attention deficit disorder is cspe·
cially common among people with
a condition known as thyroid hor·
mone resistance, which runs in
families. They studied 104 mem-

bers of 18 families with the $!0ndi·
lion. '
They found that 70 percent of
children and 50 perceiil of adults
who inherited the bad gene that
causes the thyroid disorder also bad '
attention deficit-hyperactivity. •
·

Senti foster Greetings
.
I . .l . k . I ·
Today.
.~
PICK FROM
OUR
WIDE
.
.
ASSORTMENT OF BEAUTIFUL
CARLTON CARDS.
.

'

April 9, 1993

OPEN

E~STER

•

Vot 43, No. 241
Copyllght..t 111113

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll9; 1993

Pharmacy .
992·2955

IN RECOGNITION • Jack Ambrose, assistant maaager or Kroger's Ia .Pomeroy, bas ·
retired after 45 years ol service witb tbe company. To boo or bis years or declicatioa to tbe bu,si·ness com munlty, certificates or support aad

reco'g nltion were presealed to Ambrose on
Tbu~y morning by 8111111 Clark,,rlgbt, represntlng tbe Pomeroy MercHats Association,
and Paula Tbac:ker, executive director for tbe
Melp County Cluoober ol Comm,erce.

Get twice the
comfort for half the price!. Buy
· one Lane®
Recliner, get the
second one

Defense
blames King
for riots
· LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
defense attorney blamed Rodney
King foe lasl year's riots and commended the policemen who beat
him. The jliosccution charged that
the officen mc:ted out stn:et juslice
IW••sc King was "disrespectful."
"These defendants iaught Rodney King 8 Jesson," Assistant u.s.
Attorney Steven Clymer charged
during closing arguments Thursday.
The federal civil rights case was
expected fO go tO the jury - possibly tonight - after closing arguments· of the three other defense
lawyers. lbe prosecution's n:buual
summation, and the judge's
instructions to lbe jurors.
Authorities stood ready tO prevent a replay of last spring's riots,
whieh brob: out when lbe four offi·
cers were acquitted in state court.

bri~

.

SPECIAL DAY OBSERVED - Jack AmbrOR was lloaored
Tbunclay· upoa Ills retlremeut from Tbe Kroger Cp•paDJ or
Pomero7. Ambrose, wbo Is asslstaat store muaaer, bas retired
alter 45 yean ol service wllh lhe company. He wu h•orecl wl.tb
"Jack Ambroae Day" at the store duriDI wbk:b this buge calr.esbared witb bls maay friends and feUow workers.

Get two "Action recliners for the price
of-one and .do.uble your savings! ·
'

\.

'•»'

•

By spectal arrangement w1th this famous
maker, we ·re able to bring you a remarkable
offer' Choose from any of the stylish,
comfort-cushioned recliners we've shown
here, and whe~ you buy one. we'll g1ve

you a second one absolutely free! And,
because they're Action recliners, .you'll be
sure of quality inside and out. Hurry, to
get in on this two for one otter,

Unwind a{ld put your feel up in IIIia WaU-Save.e of
Rocker R&amp;clin~r. II offor8 Qena"?Usly pmpottioned
tuflod back and seal with pillow arms.

LOTTRIDGE • Country music
night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Center on Saturday
from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands
are welcome. Refreshments will be
available. Everyone welcome.

s;;;;
BUYS

TWOI

~

Biscuit-tufted ooauty!
Head-to-toe comfort comes naturally

.----,--·

._..IIIII Plli-IMI 1411111111 VM Sauo,. o1
,_.,A, a a. 1 OIWipwa •Itt prcportkxltd 1ufted

. relaxlnc on this ultnH:ullhloned casual.
It features a hJd&amp;.a-way chaise i'ecllnlnc
· footrest, padded pllk)w anna ani! a
IIOSh biscuit-tufted back. ·

Reposing casual.
Srnart, soft and ready to snuggle Into
thts chaise C~ellvers complete head-t0:toe
comfort. With a bustlebacli, button tufting,
and pillow anns, Its trendsetting style doesr
get In the way of pure, soothing comfort.

856 3rd Ave.
GaHipOIIs
4483045

.,
'

.•

.

In March, the mild· inflation
came despite a 0.7 percent jump in
energy prices ~ the biggest in
eight months.
Gasoline prices fell 0.4 percent.
But fuel oil prices jumped 2.5 percent, natural gas advanced 1.6 perCC.It and elecnicity, 1.4 petcent.
Food and beverage prices in
March rose 0.1 percent for the second consecutive month. The.index
for meat, poult~¥, fish and eggs
jumped 0.8 percent, with pork
prices alone rising 1.6 percent and
poultry climbing 2 percent. Fruit

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. Clinton administralion is congratulating itself fot doing something no
other adminisaation has ever done
- producinl a complete budget in
its fiTSt year ·m offtee. But Republicans -say .they don'tlilc'e the full·
scale d\)Cument any better than the
earlier aJ»'idged version.
And judging from the rhetoric
employed when President Clinton
sent his '$l.S2 nillkirrspending'plan
tO Capitol Hill on Thul1day, both
sides are girdins for i( war that
.could drag out una! fall.
. The upeomins lights likely will
make the sparring over Cfinton's
$16 billion shon-terni economic
stimulus program pale by compari·
son.
, .
In unveiUng the. administration's
budget, Vice President AI Gore
tOOk anotller shot at the Republican
~- filibuster that kept Clinton:s jobs
progr1m from passing before
Conaress left on a two-week

recess.

,

'

''·

Meigs County Sheriff James M. da, stopping at a couple places·
Soulsby interviewed a 63-year-old along the way.
He could only give a vague
Meigs County man Thursday afterdescription
of the two males,
noon who was reported missing
Soulsby
said.
· """'
from Athens on Man:h 25.
Tippie
said
he
found
himself in
Mount Tippie, Albany, resurfaced Tuesday morning at a Gal- Jaclcsonville, Fla., when he began
lipolis motel where he asked for the journey home, Soulsby said.
Soulsby said Tippie reportedly
help in contacting his brother in
hitchhiked tO Augusta, Ga., where
Athens.
Soulsby said Tippie told him he he contacted a minister who bought
left home and was abducted by two bini a ticket to Charleston, W.Va.
Soulsby refuted statements pubmales who got in his car, put him .
in the back seat and drove to Flori- lished in an early report from the

' in _
prices 'fell, offsetting an increase
vegetable prices, including an 18.8
percent advance in lettuce prices.
The price of cereals and baked
goods fell.
The core rate of inflation was
held down by a milder than usual
increase in medical care costs.
They rose 0.3 percent in March, the
smallest since March 1984, after
climbing 0.5· percent in February
and 0.6 percent in January.
Clothing costs fell 0.5 percent
last month, but the ·annual inflation
r;ate in that category for the year so
far is 7.5 percent. Airline ticket
prices fell 0.6 percent, but for the
year to date they have risen at a
19.9 percent annual rate.

Associated Press in which he was
attributed as saying Tippie gave a
"checkered story of ethers driving
him in his car'' and that Tippie said
he "was turned away by Charleston
police as a drunken drifter."
Soulsby said at that time he had
not yet spoken to Tippie.
Soulsby said he asked Tippie if
he had gone ·ro Charleston police
and Tippie said "no."
Soulsby said the incident
remains under investigation and
added that information has beep
turned over to the FBI.
·

Thousands retrace steps
of Christ; Pope hears confession
JERUSALEM (iU') - Christians from &amp;round the world walked
the Way of Sorrow on Good Friday, some lugging heavy wooden
crosses as they traced Jesus
Christ's steps toward his crucifixion.
Thousands made their way
along the narrow street to the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher, built
where Christians believe Jesus ,was
buried after being crucified.
In another Good Friday tradition. Pope John Paul U heard con-

Mi.ddleport Sears Store
will 'remain op.en

fessions.in St. Peter's Basilica The
Vatican picked 12 people from
seven countries 10 be confessors.
Israel's sealing off of the occupied territories last week to quell .
Arab-Israeli violence meant only a
few hundred Palestinian .Christian's
with special permits took part in
Friday's procession in Jerusalem.
"I will nollive ·my life ·in fear
and not do things because of that,"
said Tonya Andrews of North Hollywood, Calif. "I'm a Christian ...
so this goes straight to the soul."
Sydney Reynolds of Orem,
Utah, sl!id she brought her children
to strengthen their faith.
"We believe that Christ has
died for us and will rise, and we
wanted them to learn that these
things are true and mo~ i~porJant

than anything else,'' said Mrs .
Reynolds, 55, while taking a rest
near the Third Station where tradition says Christ fell under the
,weight of the cross.
Gilbert Peru of Anaheim, Calif.,
re-enacted the march dressed as
Christ. Wcaring a crown of thorns,
his arms covered with fake blood,
he was accompanied by two whipcarrying ''Roman soldiers.''
Among the worshipers were
several hundred Otristians from the
occupied West Bank who said it
took them a week to receive a special entry permit for the ritual.
"I feel upset about the closure
because it's"our right (to be here),"
said Iyad Shraiga, 20, from the
West Bank town ·tJf Nablus, as he
walked in the crowd.

The endof Sears' catalog business
is part of a larger Survival
buck and Co~ 's decision tO convert
intended tO save the compa·
effort
about 350 of its 2,000 former cata· .
ny
an
estimated
$300 million yearc
Jog stores, including the MiddleThat
effort
also
includes closing
port store in Meigs.County, to
113
other
Sears
stores
cutting
smalliWiil businesses is a shrewd about 50,000 full- andand
part-time
business move, a retail analyst
.
JVUO·
•
says.
Sears
said
Thursday that the catBill Haptoostall, owner of tbe
alog
stores'
conversion
would be
Middleport Sears Sto~e, upon hear·
CQIIIplete
by
year's
end.
ing that his SIORl had been selected
"We have received hundreds of
don't have jobs period.''
to stay open, aedited 'that decision
calls
and ~ from customers in
Republicans were j~ as point- in part to the hundreds of Bend
smaller
markets who have traded
ed in their criticism of Clintoq's area residents wbo tOOit part in the
with
Sears
for years asking us to ·
spending piaD, which propasrs lax local "save our store" caU-in camremain
as
a
part of their communihilces on eneray, the wealthy and paign.
.
corporations, lllong with spendinl
He said· that his 'business will ty," said Arthur C. Martinez, chairreduc.tions. in ~re than _200 gov- change from a catalog store to· a man and ehief executive ·officer of
·
ernment programs to ach~eve $447 retail sture handling lawn and gar- Sears Merchandise Group.
· The StOres tO be converted span
billion in deficit Jeduction
the den, eleeuonics and appliances.
next five years.
Haptonstll'll said that he did not tlie cpuntry, from California to
know euctly whi:n tbe change will Vennont and Wyoming tO Florida.
In Ohio, the t:onvcrsions will be
"Far from being bold oe bring· occur but he anticipates soon.since taking plaoe in Bryan, Celina, Galing real change to soverrunent lh1lt his contract for tbe catalog business lipolis, Jackson, Middleport, New
.
_.....
. ....... _. .
expires in June.
Amencans v....,.. for, this ..._... IS
Analvu Philip Abbctihaus said
nothing more than a return to tbe
f '7
'II II
s
r-=·_ _
failed policies of the .....,
the decasioa WI a ow ears to home appliances, consumermajor
'eiecI; ------•
rmaintain some lucrative markets
taxes on everyone, more ~
without havin&amp; to buy land or pay .tronics, ind lawn and garden equip- ·
'spending and bi~UF eavanment." labor:
.
'
menL The dealers wilfIIOCic cenam
TliT
;
1
said Rep. John- Kutch of .Ohio,
"Itlrind ol likes them ~ 10 =Jar-selling models and can .
cenaiD other models for cus- · .
Judith '&amp;· Lau4ermilt, 43, Rutland, was arreSted. Thursday mornranting Republican on the. House a~ siiU'tlon where
. Budget Commluee.
these
Je selling their
· tomers.
ing by Pomeroy police for driving under the influence. ,
.
Sears
said
the
independent
deal·
•
·but the~'t haYC to carry •
ers running the convet1ed retail
· Previous adminishtions have overhead IDd tbe costs atld the stOres
will opefllte on a commis·
'
related
expenditures
aecellll}' to
not put forward 1 full · ~u:fet in
sion
for
meR:hanclisc sold. II said
A Pomeroy man was cited for failure to maintain an assured
opeqle them IS I chaiD," Abben·
. their fUll yell' in ~
~
Cllcb.store
·
i
a
~pectcd tO generate
clear
distance ahead followin' ·an accident Thursday afternoon in
insleld to limply IDike modific:l- haus Slid by telephone Thatsday lboul $1 million 11,umally. Focmer •
SalisbUry
Township, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway
tions tO lbe final budJet submis- from SL Louis.
calaiog
store
owners
will
be
given
Pab'Oi
reported.·
·
·
·
.
·
Oa J... 2S, Sean ,llicl it Would first lbot It operating the new relail
sions of their ptdocr n. Howe~t­
.
Albert
0.
Cupp,
38,
40902.Laurel
Cliff,
Pomeroy,
was
eastbound
ei', a change in the budget lnt close most or·itt 2,000 Cltaloa outlell
.
. .
on State Route 124 when he stOpped behind a vehicle driven by
allowed tbe Bush tlll!niDilaltio 10 ·. n. bel •tse it -IIUlllDI out of · FICfAin conaidercd in selecting
Shjrley
A. Smith, 57, 45158 Baum Addition, Pomeroy, at the interleave office withoulaubmltiins a thO Cltaq Nnj I I 8111 SiiiJi said die 111n1 jneluded )llevioua C81alog
section·
of
State Route 7. His vehicle tben ·rolled into Smith's, caus- ·
· IJIIftdinl plan for 1994, thUS' ron:- it mi&amp;bt bep . . . ol ita indlipen- revenues, JIIOllimity 10 tbe I1CIIUt · ins light damage,
·
· · . · ..
ing ClintOn 10 put tOacther a mm. · dcndy owned liares open II ICtail Seir• retail •tore, and custom·er
.
·No
injuries
wei'e
reponed.
Cupp'
s vehicle was not damaged .
outlels.
plctc budaa doc110enL

cmcAOO CAP&gt; _; Seats. Roe-

Repubiicans call full budget
no better than abridged version

"Those scoatOn who held our
jobs package hostage and woeked
for Jl8!1:1ysis are at.!he Slll't of their
spnng break," he told a packed
budget briefing. "Many other
Amcric:p wbo " - senatDrTI represent aren't J1eUin8 •IJIIina brelk.
. They don't ;hlve jobs with vacltlons or health bencfi ts and IIIIDY

..

than the overall rate, shot up 0.5
percent during both January and
r:~. but rose on!~ 0:1 percent

Sheriff interviews,Tippie,
refutes earlier AP story

. a friend and
share the savings!

,,

2 Sactlona, 12 Pa11e• 25 cenla

A Multimedia Inc. NewsJI'Iper•

increases of 0.3 percent in February
Today's numbers bolstered the
and 0.5 perc~t in January. The · case of other analysts who had conea,lier reports had raised fears tinued tO argue inflation would not
among some eetlDOIIIisu that infla- be a problem this year.
tiQn had stopped declining and was
Nevertheless, the seasonally
starting 10 accelerate.
adjusted annual rate of inflation foe
-the year so far is 4 percent, significantly higher than the 2.9 percent
rate for aU of 1992.
More
importantly
for
economists, the core inflation rate
- prices excluding the volatile
food and energy sectors - has
risen a1 a 4.3 percent annual rate so
far this y.ear, compared with 3.3
percent for all of last year.
Tbose core prices, which analysts consider a better measure of
underlying inflationary pressures

Swisher &amp; Lohse

FREE! Or,

50s.

•

10:00·12:30

POMEROY

Low toaJaht In mld-401, Rala.
Saturday, cloudy, blgb Ia mid

Consumer prices up 0.1 percent i~ March

.

'

•

·Good
F·riday

~

.

.·MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise cantata, "He Is Risen," Middleport
Church of Christ, Sunday, 6 ·a.m.;
. ·8:15 and 10:30·. a.m. worship; 9:30
POMEROY - Easter candy is a.m. Sunday school.
.
available until Friday from the
Future Homemakers of America . ~OMEROY • Sunrise service,
and the home economics students HyseU Run Holiness Church, Sunat Meigs High School.
day 6 a.m. Communion. Sunday
schoql, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
TUPPERS
PLAINS
•
The:·TUD·
a.m. and 7:30 P·m· Robert Manley,
. .

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
. 372
Pick 4:
0344

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- today in a report that eased inflasumer p~ices edged up only 0.1 . lion worries.
percent m March, helped by the
The slight, seasonally-adjusted
smallest medical care mflation in increase in the Labor Deplutmeot's
nine years, the government said Consumer Price Index followed

POMEROY - The Meigs High
School Class of 1978 will hold a
meeting Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
home of "''om and April Smith,
1691 Lincoln Heights in Pomeroy.
Plans will be made for the class's
I5th reunion.

REEDSVILLE • There will be
an Ea~ter egg hunt at the Forked
Run Sportsman Club on Saturday
at 2 p.m. Public invited. The hunt is
open to children ages 12 and under.

1993

Scientistsfind genetic ·defect
behind attention deficit disorder

RAI''INE - The Racine Legion
Post602 wiU liold its annual Easter
Egg Hung on Saturday at noon.
The event will be held rain or
shine.

PATRIOT· The MGM Disnict
Cub Scout Pinewood Derby will be
· RUTLAND - The ann~al Good held at Southwestern Elementary.
Friday all-night g_ospcl sing will be " Registration will be from 9-10 a.m.
held Friday at 7 p.m. featuring 12 For more information call Connie
groups at the Freewill Baptist McCormick at 379-2860.
Chur~h in Rutland. Everyone welcome.
·
SUNDAY
PORTLAND • The Portland
LONG BOTIOM · Good Fri- First' Church of the Nazarene· will
day services Will be held at the feature a dramatized version of
.Long Bottom United Methodist "The Sermon on the Mount" on
Church at 7:30p.m. Rev. Norman Easter Sunday at 10:30 a.m. by
Butler will be speaket. Everyone · Rev. Kenneth Maynard. Everyone
welcome.
wel~ome.
RACINE • Oood Friday services
"at Racine Baptis~ Church v.:ill.be at
7 p.m.

pastor, invites the public.

POMEROY • Easter sunrise service, Mt Hermon United Brethren
Church, Texas Road, Pomeroy,
. RACINE- Good Friday services Sunday at 6:30a.m. Breakfast folwill be held at the Racine United lows. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.,
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. A worsliip at 10:30 a.m. Robert
cantata will be. presented by the . Sanders, pastor, invites the public.
Southern Cluster Choir.
·
..
l!'
REEDSVILLE • Sunrise serSATURDAY
vice, Fellowship Church of the
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham Nazarene. Reedsville, Sunday, 6:30
Modern Woodmen will hold a a.m. Breakfast follows. Sunday
potluck SatUrday at 6:30p.m. at the school, 9:30 a.m. and worship at
hall. Ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and 9:45 a.m . Rev. John Douglas
pop will be furnished. Bring a cov- invites the public. . ·
ered dish. Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND • Sunrise service,
PORTLAND • Cemetery clean Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.
up will begin in Lebanon Township Sunday, 6 a.m.
on Saturday. Anyone wanting to
keep flowers should have them
LONG BOTIOM - Mt. Olive
removed by that time.
Community Church, Long Bottom,
sunrise service, 6:30 a.m. Pastor
FAIRPl,.AIN, W.VA. • The Lib- Lawrence Bush invites the public:
erty Mountaineers will perform
Saturday at the Jackson County
MIDDLEPORT • Silver Run
Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va. ·
Baptist Church, Story's Run Road,
suhrise service, 6 a.m. Pastor Bill
POMEROY - Wells Cemetery Little invites the public.
will be cleaned Saturday. Anyone
wanting to save Dowers or decoraPOMEROY • Hillside Baptist
tions should remove them by that Church, Easter cantata, 11 a.m. and
time.
6 p.m. Rev.-James Acree invites
the public.
POMEROY · The youth groups
of-Trinity Church will hold their
POMEROY • Hemlock Grove
annual ·egg hum Saturday at the Christian Church, sunrise service,
parsonage on Mulberry Avenue in Sunday, 6:30 a.m. with breakfast
Pomeroy from 2:30-4:30 p.m.
following. Worship at 9:30 a.m.
Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
a round and square dance at the
Old American Legion 'Hal! in Middleport on Saturday from 8-11 :30
p.m. Admission is free. Children
are welcome with adult supervision. Bring soft drinks and snacks.
Melvin Cross will be the caller.
Music will be by CJ and the Country Gentlemen.

SYRACUSE • Holy Week serPOMEROY ·The Ladies Auxilvices for the Syracuse Charge Unit- iary of the Chester Volunteer Fire
ed Methodist Churches are: Maun- Department will hold a bake sale
dy Thursday at Forest Run with Saturday at 9:30a.m. at Kroger:s iii
communion at 7:30p.m.: Good Fri- Pomeroy. All donations will be
day services at Asbury at 7:30 accepted. Donations may be left at
p.m.; Easter Sunday sunrise scr· , Newell's Gas Station in Chester.
vices at Minersville at 6 a.m.
Breakfast will follow in the church
RUTLAND • There will be a
soc1al rooms. Public mvited.
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
TUPPERS PLAINS . The Tup· p.m. to midnight. Music will be by
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Pure Country Band. Public invited.
will meet Thursday at7:30 p.m . All
mcm bcrs arc urged to attend.
HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance at the
FRIDAY
Reynolds Building in Hockingport
SYRACUSE - Good Fridliy ser- on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. feavices at the First Church of God in turing the country band "Out of the
Syracuse will be heid Friday at 7 Bl,ue." Ronnie Wood will be the
p.m.
~aile.(. Everyone welcome. ·
MIDDLEPORT · Hope Baptist
Church in Middlcport·will have
Good Friday services at 2:30 p.m.
Public invited.

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rromanjaz•1edfior D.U. .

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Friday, Aprll9, 1993

Comment~ry

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, April 9, 1993

'

OHIO Weather

Turkey, Greece at war over ins at . White House
•

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I

WASHINGTON - . At a recent
·
111
Comt
Street
White
House reception to honor
..
Greek Independence Day, Presil'OIIleroy, Oblo
dent Clinton was in a joking mood.
DBVQTED TO Tim INTBRBSTS OJ' THE IIEIGS-IIIASON AREA
"You might argue that I could
have a reverse affirmative action
suit for the over!representation of
Greeks on the White House staff,"
cracked the president, who counts
After being romanced by
five Greek-Americans as close Republican presidents for the last
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
advisers.
·
12 years, Turkey has reason to fear
Publisher
Across town at the Turkish that a .Democrat in the White
Embassy,
nobody was laugl)ing.
House will 1be tougher on the Coun'
PAT WHITEHEAD .
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The fact that White House Com- try's sorry record of human-rights
Assistant Publlsher/ControU.er
General ~anager
munications Director George abuses. ·But any suggestions that
Stephanopoulos, a Greek-Ameri- S tephanopoulos is behind such. a
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be less lhan 300
can, has sparked a war of words, change seem groundless.
words. All leu.n 1110 oubject to editing md must be signed with DII!Jie,
between the Greek and Turkish
One prominent Greek-American
address llld telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
Embassies.
It's
much
different
than
lobbyist
told us, for example, that
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
any of the bloody wars that have word has spread throughout the
plagued relations between the I.Wo Greek community Jhat "lhe Turks
countries for centuries, but it's a have been takinjl shots at George"
thorny issue nontheless.
since the campatgn. .
·
Various sources within the
One top official at the Greek
· Greek-American community Embassy traces the Jhat proliferafrom diplomats to lobbyists and tion of rumors to last October,
journalists- have told us that their when ,the Clinton campaign
counterparts on lhe Turkish side released a sratement to the GreekBy JOHN CUNNIFF
have been spreading false rumors American community declaring
AP Business Analyst
that
Stephanopoulos is tilting the that the United States. "has a
NEW YORK - Facing the nalion in lhe health-care debate are ihe
new
administration toward Greece moral obligation as well as a
consequences of "let the olhec guy pay fe« it" behavior, a !)ad habit ,that
expense.
at
Turkey's
national security interest to see that
has allowed tough problems to be passed off rather lhan resolved. . · · The other guy was government or business or insurers, or any indiviilual or inslitution to whom blame could be assigned foc misfor~~U~CS and
perhaps sued in a·court of law and made to pay.
.
. Meanwhile, as solutions were dodged lhe problems worsened, tl!e
other guys eventually said enough is enough and declined to pay.
Government lhought nolhing could be a better use of lllX money than
.
to subsidize heallh care, and voters seemed to a~. But then, government began complaining about its big budget defictts. . /
.
Individuals and institutions attempted to pass off responsibility for
years, leaving centtal issues unaddressed, including Jhat of figuring out.
how the cost spiral can be slowed wilh fairness to all?
·
By facing the issue now, everyone is getting closer to the hard uulh,
and to accept it may mean a willingness to make difficult choices, even
about who is to be coosidered worthy of treatment and at what price to
society.
· Without question, any real change must be prc;ceded by a willingness
to change lifestyles, but it' has been done before. Remember the throwaway days, when chemicals were dumped in rivers and beverage cans littered highways?
.
.
Realistic action began only when Americans recognized there was no
"away," that anything dumped into the, environment was at their
expense. Only then did they show their willingness to change,habits,
Similarly, ~me progress already has been made in the health-care
· area. Prevention, rather than costly correction, is promoted. The dangers ·
of tobacco, alcohol, drugs and a long list of foods are well known. Exer'
cise is in.
·
Still, the brunt of the problem islihead. Costs continue to rise and not
just bCcause of poor Jlealth habits but, oddly, because of ever more refined
technology. The delivery of heallh-care ~a very special business.
In most industries, improved technology eventually raises productivity
and cuts costs, but it is not always so in health care. Instead, tt may make
even greater financial demands on the system. It's the way of life.
That ·way is different in most businesses. In manufacturing-; for
·· instance, improved technology is employed only if it delivers a better
product at a relatively better price. If the product isn't profitable, it is
dropped.
·" Jha.t detcnnmanon
· · m
· lh e del'tvery of
Is the marlcetplace· wtl· 1·mg. to maAe
health care? Is the public willing to restrain the use of costly technology
that c~uld prolong life? Ration it?
..
Big questions. Having learned years ago that there is no "away,"
Americans are now compelled Y&gt; concede what they declined to do for
years, that there is no other guy, no third party to take rtsponsibiliry.
No self-respecting woman
I know-this is true from my
would exwl the virtue of tradition.
experiences witlt my own chilttren.
So Writes the author of an article
When they were growing up at
in a women's magazine.
home, we always said a linle table
"Women know that tradition is
a code word for keeping ihem in
the kitchen," the writer claims.
As one who believes that "nothin' says Iovin' Iilce somelhin' from grace: "Come, Lord Jesus, be our
the oven" - I'm thinking of guest, and let these gifts to us be
homemade meatloaf and· hot apple blest."
pie-:- I confess I've been!he. sort · . I ~on't think .thetpaid much
of man who could have been the "' a!lenuon 10 what ihey were saymg.
target of that accusation.
I'm not sure I always did. But we
But family tradition isn't con- went through the ritual wilhoutfail.
fined to the kitchen.
Now they are grown up. But
Tradi.tion gives you a sense of when they ~o~ home- frequentcontinuity and belonging - "a ly wtlh lhetr friends - and ':"e stt
feeling that is greaUy needed in our down to a me~;t. th:y all, wtthout
world today," says Beverly Nyc in any self-consc10u~ness or emJ:Narher book "A Family Raised on rassment, bow lhetr head!! and JOtn
Rainbows.".
·
in this children's table grace they
·"We don't always realize the learned whe~ they wer~. small . I
· full irppact of these little things always find thts very m~v_tng. .
until our grown children return
In the ntuals of rehgton - tts
home and comment. on the good habitual, re~ acts- we find
' feeling tht:se traditions gave one of the remforcements ~ can
them," notes Nye.
·
mtegtate lhe·fragments 'of our Uves.
/

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein

In health care, there's no
other guy' to pay the bills

•

(Turkey's) illegal occupation of
Cvnrus comes to an end.''
·
. 'f,It went doWnhill ~m there,"
said this Greek official. "The
rumors about Stephanopoulos
became intense. They (Turks) went
·on lhe offense in order to defend
any turf they felt they were losing." Officially, the Turkish
Embassy insists that they arc not
threatened by $tephanopoulos, and
. mer "wish him all the )lest."
'The Qreck Embassy- should
know that we want to promote a
good relationship between Turkey
and Greece," said one high official
ai the Turkish Embassy.
.The
normally
stoic
Stephanopoulos erupted emotionally when we took lhe djspute to him.
"Look, I'm an Ameriean," he said.
Stephanopoulos added that foreign
policy-mikiftg was oot his job, and
Jhat he works "for the president" ·
and not the Greek lobby.
Shonly after the election. one
Turkish tabloid·.~ lead headline
consisted of a four-letter expletive
directed at Clinton for his Cyprus
commenL B~ow the profane print
was a sketch of Cyprus, with a
raised middle fmger Jetting out of

.'.. AND Wlt4T .·
. POSiliON DID

YOOR At«:fSToR£
Pli\Y?

· ihe Turkish-occupied half of the
island. Greek sources say that their
Turkish counterparts and sonic
Turkish media then baptized BiU
Clinton as "CiinlOJlOI)OUlos."
Greek officials afso assert that
the Turks threw a tantrum when
Turlcish President Turgut Ozal
came to Wasl\ington less than a
week after Clinton's inauguration
for :leries 'of erigagemen~. including a medical checkup and meetings with Turkish-American
grdups. Though Turkish officials
say they placed a request in
December for Ozal to confer widt
Clinton, the visit had not been
scheduled as Ozal's lrip winded
down.
. Then Stephanopoulos told
reporters at a regular morning
meeting Jhat Clinton would not be
able to sec Ozal because he was
"busy working on the economy
and other issues." He also accurately noted that' custom dictated
that a new American president
meet face-to-face wilh the Canadian leader, in lhis case Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Stephanopoulos' ~xp!anation rubbed sail in the
Turkish wound.
"They thought that because
Stephanopoulos ~ a Greek-American he was sabotaging thc visit of
the Turlcish president," 01\C diplomatic source told 011r associate Ed
Henry. "When word came that it
was almost impossible to meet with
Clinton, the Turkish Embassy ·
blamed it on Srephanopoulos."
The Clinton administration
finally scheduled the Mulroney
meeting, removing the obstacles
for a Feb. 8 Ozal meeting, But that
didn't placate everyone. It seems
lhat even journalists from the two
nations are at odds.
· "I · called Stephanopoulos'
office a few times when the Turt- ·
·ish president was in town and he
was ·never kind enough to return
my calls," one Turkish wnespooldent complained to us. "At lc;~Sl
past administrations were kind
'enough to return my ~ails .... If
Clinton had a Turkish-American ·
spokesman, it would work: the otlter
way arouod."
· But one Greek correspondent
told us: "(Stephanopoulos is)
accessible w us when we need him~
He goes w all-the Greek-American
functions, a~d he snacks at the
(local) Greek restaurants.''
Jack Anderson and Michael
Bln'steln, are writers ro~ United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Berry's World

George R. Plagenz

I once heard a preacher say Jhat
attending church, Sunday after
Su~day, is not primarily a matter of
listening to a minister proffer his
limited wisdom on the tangled
problems of our times. Rather, it's
returning constantly to words and
songs and acts that can stand the
· pressure and tension of the yeaiS.
These become for us an intimation that, allho1,1gh so much in our
lives is changing an~ transitory and
unanchored, there are some lhi'ngs
that abide in their everlastin~ness.
If lhe.ritual of churchgomg. can
do this for us, to a lesser or greater
degree, so can other customs and
patterns in our life.
·
Of course, not all customs are
worthwhile.
Take oatmeal for breakfast.
Cleveland Amory, in his book
"The Proper Bostonians," tells of ·
old Judge John Lowell sitting down
to breakfast one morning iri his
Chestnut Hill 'house, his face hidden behind lhe morning paper:

His wife is seatell across the
table from him.
,
· The maid entcrs and sa,S sumething to Mrs. Lowell in a low
voice. It is bad news.· Mrs. Lowell
commooicares this to her husband:
There's no oatmeal!
This is no mjnor domestic
tragedy. Judge Lowell has, until
this morning, had oatmeal for
breakfast every single day of his
adult life.
It is a Proper Bos10niait custom.
What will Judge· Lowell say?
Will he bound from his chair in a
rage shouting "What? No oatmeal?"

· No. He lowers his paper and
says to his wife: "Frankly, my
dear, 1 never did care for it." ·
Some traditions are probably
worth breaking. But we must be.
careful not to throw out all traditims with the oatmeal.
George Plagenz is a syadicat·
ed write~ for Newspaper Eaterprise Assoclatloa. .

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Wooing the economic conservatives _ _ _ __
wqw,

"Hey,
Dad' Mom tells me you've been
into 'Grunge' for YEARS."

For the fust time in its long his·
Unfonunately this bloc, though Democratic. Party and into the deserted Bush were plainly under
tory, the chief strategic problem of powerful (consntuung, even today, GOP. Suddenly Republican presi- · no illusion that the Democrats have
the Republican Pany is to regain around 40 percent of the elec- dential candidates, wilh the ·excep- truly reformed when it comes to
the allegiance of a large number of torate), ultimately became insuffi- tion of the hapless Gerald Ford, . fiscal responsibility. But in voting
so-called '.'economic conservabegan enjoying majorities not far for Perot lh% were expressing an
tives" who have strayed from ·the . . "f.IT.z"llz'am
below 60 percent; and a "Republi- . ClWperared terminallOO 10 bring
fold.
n j
can lock on the White House" America's budget crisis under conAlmost from the start, the GOP
replaced its Democratic prcdeces- trot at last - and a belief that
was the choSen political inslroment
sor,
Bush-type Republicanism wasn't
of the northeastern manufacturing . cient to win a presidential election
. up to the job.
.
interests that industrialized the by itself. In the 35 years following
In just four years, with a big
If the Republican Pany wants to
· country, pu~hed the railroads .1932, the only Republican to cap- assist from Ross Perot, George rebuild its winning coalinon, thc::nlacross the prairies to the Pacific . ture the White House was.a nation- Bush managed to break up this fore, its asiignment is clear: It must
coast, and made the United Stares ally popul&amp;T war hero. Fony per- winning Republican combination.
win back the economic; conservathe citadel and exemplar of free cent was what other Repubhcan
The liberal strategy was (and lives who bolted its ranb in 1992 .
enterprise. From time to time eco- candidates got, and it just wasn't still is) . to~ to alienate "moder- to vote for Perot. But economic
nomic circumstances or new social enough. ·
ate" Repub ·cans, who might be conservatives like former Califorproblems would capture public
The Democratic lock on the vulnerable to the GOP's economic nia Congressman Tom Campbell,
attention, and then the Democrats presidency was finally broken in appeal, from l.he party's new who WMII to Jlllrle the GOP of its
would take over. But from thc end the late 1960s and lhereafter, when recruits, who .-e deeply concerned Social conservatives, would at best
. of the Civil war until 1992, there highly unsettling dev.elopments in • about social issues. By friahtcning reduce the party to its old 40 perwis never a time when the Repub- the- soci11l arena, from ·drugs and lhe former over thc latter's alleged- cenL To win, the Republicans must
lican Party couldn't count on the riots to pocnography..and the sexual ly rabid reli$!osity, the. ~~ts hold onto the social COIISCIVatives
support of those for .whom .low revolution, drove lar~e elements of hppe to butld an anu-rehgtous -and recover its lOSt sbeep. .
taxes and balanced budgets were the Roosevelt coaliltoo (Southern- coalitiol).
.
.
. What we must toot for, then; is
!,he way foc the federal government ers, blue-collar ethnics and reli.
But that's not where the split an altractive candidate who is thor·
to !lO- .
gious fundameriralists) out of the · . developed. Instead, a huge number oughly comfortable With both eco_::..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ___. __;....._.......;
· _.____ of Repu\llican voters of the "eco- nomic and social conservatives,·
Ten years ago: The ·space shuttle Challenger ended its fttst mission · ·nb~J~ic conservative" persuasion, and who is prepared to lpake bis
·with a safe landing at EdwardS Air Force RUe in California after a flvc- deeJ)l)' 1md genuinely concerned own cast-iron economic conset.day, 80-orbit flight.
:·
.
·
· · · about the federal budget deficits, viltiam altogether a~~~vincm,.
Five years ago: Pro-Iranian Shiite Muslini hijaclccrs who had seized a walked otit ori George Bush and
If be's a sovemor or !I!!!IU!tar, 10
Kuwait Airways jetliner on April ftfth killed one-of their hostages as the' cast their voteda Roll8 Perot. ·
much the better. If bo hails from
·plane sat on the ground in Lamaca, Cyprus.
·
.
Note, ptelse, that lhey didn't the Soutlt, .like Cllntoit and Gore, :
~e year ago:_Portner l'ailam&amp;r\ian .ruler Manuel Noriega ~as Cllfl;~Ct•
vote for Clinton. His ·total was perfecL But above all he IIIUII be . : ,
ed m M1am1 of e1ght of 10 drug and racteteerina clwJes; he IS servmg a liarety 43 pen:ent- not far abo¥e ·rei!IIJto out-l'mlt PaoL
40-year prison sentence. Britain's Conservatives SCOfed a coine-from- tho 40 percent that lhe DemocratiC
WWiam Ruill«! ,II a 1711dlcat- . ·
behind national elr,ctiori victory, becomin&amp; the first British poptical party . Party held onto right through the ed writer fcir. Newapaper Eater.
to .wio four straight electlons this ~tury. . ·.
. .. ·
. . . . Reagan . years. The .voters that )lrlse Alsotliltlon. :
· . :
,

A'. Rusher '

Today in history
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By The Associated Press
·
Today is Good Friday, April 9, the 99th day of 1993. There are 266
days left in the year. ·
Today's Highlight i_n HistDfl::.
.
On April 9, 1865, wtth ·the Ctvd Wt11 at a vtrtual end, Confederate Gen.
Roben E. Lee surrendered his army to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at
Appomattox Court House in Virginia.
On this date:
. In 1682, the French explorer Roben La Salle reached lhe r-ussissippi
River.
·
·
In 1833, the fusi laX-supported pitblic library was founded; in Peterborough, N;H.
.· ·
·
.
.. ·
.
. In 1939, si!lger Marian Anderson perf~ed a concen ~ . !Jte I,mcoln
. Memorial in Washington after she was dented use of Consnrunon Hall by
the Daughters of the American Revolution. . · ·
In 1940, Germany invaded Denmark and Norway.
.
In 1942, during· World War II, American and Pliili!'Pine defenders on
Bataan capitulated 10 Japanese f~; ~ . surrender was follqwed by the
notorious Bataan Death March, 1fVhiCh claiined nearly 10,000 lives. . . ·
In 1959, NASA annOunced the selection or America's fir:st seven aslro~t;s: ScUtt Carpenter, Gordon~. John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Wally
Sch11T3, Alan Shepard and Donald' Slayton.
..·
• .· . . .
.-in 1963, British stai$Jian Winston .Churchill was ma~ an honorary
U.S. citizen. ·
.
·
·
. .. .
In 1.965·, the .newly . built Houston Astrodome saw tts frrsql8seball
. game, an exhibition bet~n the Asaos and the New. York Yanlcees. (The
· AstrQs won, 2-1.) .
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I'Toledo!sgo

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By The As$oeiate4 Press
The entire state will see rain
today and tonight.
• Steadier raiJ;J that passed through
the western counties this · morning
will reach eastern counties this
afternoon. It may take till late after-

I

IND.

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Ice

wiD be mainly in the 50s.
The Columbus Weather Station
says lhe record high for this date
was 82 in 194S. The record low
was 18 in 1972.
•
Sunset tonight will be at 8:03
p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be 7:01

a.m.

Around the aati011.
· Rain feU in parts of the Midwest
and Southeast early today and ·•
clouds .covered much of the East

Units of the Meigs County Rutland to Winn Road for DOnna
Emergency Medical Service Basley who WIIS transported to
responded to seven calls for assis- · Holzer Medical Center; 10:00 p.m.
tance ovemighL Responding were:
Rutland to Hysell Run for Reatha
Thursday - 10:02 a.m. Tuppers Clonch who was transported to SL
Plains to Tucker Road for Mabel Joseph' s Hospital in Parkersburg,
Radcliff who was transported to W.Va
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 11:24
Friday - 12:49 a.m. Pomeloy to
a.m. Miildleport to Riverview Main Street for Phillip Lacomb
Drive for Bob Gilmore who was who was taken to VMH, David
transported to Pleasant Valley Hos- Millhone was treated at the scene;
pital; 1:23 p.m. Mid~epon to Jesse 3:40a.m. Tuppers Plains to State
Creek Road for Shirley Caruthers Route 681 West for Jane Ratliff
who was taken to VMH; 7:59 p.m. · who was transponed to VMH.

SIWiy Pt Cloudy c::z .· ·

-----Weather--......__ _
Sunday through Tuesday:

A chance of rain Sunday and
Monday. Lows in 30s to low 40s.
Highs aroitnd 50. Fair on Tuesday.
Lows in the 30s. Highs in upper
40s to mid-50s.

43.fined in county court

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SUPPORTING THE CANCER SOCIETY - Bi~ Bend Foodland again this year sponsored American Cancer Soc.ety Day during :which a portion or the day's sales were donated to the American Cancer Society. Accepting tb.e money on belfair or the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer Society is Ferman Moore, director.
Presenting the check is store manager Cbuck Blake, right. The
store also gave away $100 worth or groceries with a winning girt
certificate.

. Fony-three cases were resolved violation, $25 plus costs; Kevin R.
in the Meigs County Court of Roush, Racine, sear belt violation,
Judge Patrick O'BrienWednesday. $25 plus costs; Timothy R. GorFined were: Darlene Olden, don, Middleport, seat belt violaPomeroy, seat belt violation, costs tion, $25 plus costs; Keith Myers,
only; Timothy Fry, Middleport, Long Bowim, passing bad checks,
seat belt violation, $25 plus coS!$: . $25 fin.e, restitution and costs:
Douglas A. Smith, Akron, speed, Kevin Roush, Racine, no operator's
$22 plus costs; Thoml!S M. Bow- license, $100 plus costs, seven days
man, Hilliard, speed, $29 plus jail suspended to three days if valid
costs; Bronson L. Lauderrnilt, Mid- operator's license presented in 60
dleport, failure to display valid reg- ·days; Lori A. Phillips, Albany; seat
CHARLESTON, W.Va. {AP) istration, $10 plus costs; Eric E. belt violation, $25 plus costs;
·-Former Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. Lawson, Syracuse, seat belt violaEugene Phillips, Albany, seat
is out of prison and serving the last. tion, $25 plus costs; Ettore Tragni, bell violation, SIS plus costs;
four months of his three-year sen- Milano, Italy, speed, S25 plus Qavid Warth, Hartford, W.Va.,
tence for extortion at horne.
costs; Tamela Fry, Middleport, driving under suspension, $75 plus
The 69-year-old Moore left a assured clear distance, $10 plus costs, 10 llays jail suspended; one
federiU prison in Ashland, Ky., on costs;
year probation; Denise Lamben,
Thursday.
··
Mark Mora, Pomeroy, speed, Rutland, expired OL, $75 plus
Moo{e pleaded guilty in 1990 to $24 plus costs: James R. Price, costs, three days jail suspended,
charges he extorted $573,000 from Spencer, W.Va., speed, $24 plus seat belt violation, $25 P.lus costs;
a coal operator in return for a $2 ..1 costs; Norman Riggle, Athens,. Stacy Criswell, Coolvtlle, theft,
million. refund in premiums
$200 plus costs, 10 days jail sus~ing, $20 plus costs; Jackie L.
'.
King, Pomeroy, speed, $23 plus pended, one year J)lobalion, restitucosts: Bruce A. Khula,. Columbus. tion; Kimberly Turner, Coolville;
speed, $25 plus costs; Edward T. speed, $24 plus costs;
.
An Easter egg hunt for Scipio Moor~:, Millersport, .speed, $24 ; Shawn Garnes, Langsville, seat ·
Township children, preschoolers to plus costs; Kevin L. RunniQn, belt violation, (two CharJes) $25
age 13, will be held Saturday at I Marietta, speed, $20 plus costs; plus costs; $15 plus costs; unpoper
p.m. at the Scipio Township Vol- David W. Warth, Hartford, W.Va., passing, $SO plus costs; Tommy
unteer Fire DepartmenL Prizes will seat belt violation, $35 plus costs; Pennington, Dexter, consuming
be awarded to the winners. In case Jerry Uribe, Pomeroy, seat belt viD- . alcohol in a motor vehicle, 10 days
of rain,listen.to WMPO.
lation, $25 plus costs: Thelma E. jail or 72 houn of community serSchroeder, Coolville, speed, $20 vice, costs, three yeari probation:
Lecture planned
plus costs; David T. Poe, Athens. contributing to the delinquency of a
A lecture on parenting skills speed, $23 plus costs;
minor, 10 days ,iai1 or 72 hours of
will be held Wednesday at the
Bertha J. Proffitt, Reynoldsburg, commooity serv1ce conc:unent with
Meigs Junior High School cafeteria . speed, $24 plus costs; Jason E. · consUming charge, $50 plus costs,
at 7 p.m.
Hendrix, ~omeroy, seat bell viola· three years probation: Kenneth .
Mrs. Kathleen Shibley, director . uon, $25 plus costs; Lawrence E. Swann, Pomeroy, seat belt violaand founder of Esteem Strategies in Zier Jr., New BruDS\YtCk, N.J ., . tion, $25 plus costs.
Columbus, will be lhe guest speak- speed, $21 plus costs; Stanley
Forfeiting bonds were: Michael
er. The lecture is being sponsored Chapman, Glenwood, W.Va ., Mitchell, Gallipolis, failure to dim
by the Meigs Junior High Effective · speed, $22 plus costs; Steven B. headlights, $60; Doris Fisher,
Schools Team.
Rousb, Gallipolis, speed, $23 plus Athens, speed, $62; Gerald Eblin,
Refreshments will be served costs; Richard.G. Bailey, Belpre, Ponicroy, possession of a firearm
after a discussion and question ses- speed, $23 plus costs; Terry L. while pursuing a raccoon with dogs
sion. Susanne Bentz is the chairper- Reiber, Pomeroy, failure to conlrol, during closed Season, $185; Steven
son for the team.
$20 plus costs; Ruth Masters, Nurin, Gallipolis, possession of a
· ·
Coolville, failure to yield, $10 plus firearm while pursuing a raccoon
costs; Kathy Ginther, Middleport, with dogs dunng closed season,
seat belt violation, $15 plus cos15:
H85; David Warth, Hartford,
. Samue) Clyde ~illiams. 42, and
Matthew Pierce, Rutland, seat speed, $65; seat bek violation, $43;
Tm~ l$rie Hendricks, 23, both of . belt violation, $15 plus costs; Paul Carmelita Pierce, Cincinnati,
Racme; James F. Cotton, 27, B!ld c. Pierce•. Mason, W.Va., seat belt speed, $85 plus costs:
,
Doma R. Crane, 24, both of Mid:.
dleporL .

Moore released to
deaths-~-- home
'Confinement

-----Area
Rose DeBruhl

.

'

EMS responds to seven calls

01993Ac:~r-lhe&lt;.lnc. .

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, rain tapering to drizzle.
Low 45-50. Chance of rain is near
I 00 percent. Saturday, mostly
cloudy and cooler. High 55-60.
Extended forecast:

'

noon for lhe rain io reach extreme eastern Ohio where temperatures
eastern Ohio.
.
· will rise well into the 60s. SouthTemperatures will not rise much ·east Ohio will see high temperatoday after the rain begins: High lures in the 70s again.
temperatures across .western Ohio
The rairi· will ~nd tonight or
will be generally between 60 and early. tomorrow across the state.
65 . It will be a little warmer over Some sunshine could break out
across western Ohio Saturday. .The
clearing trend will be short lived,
however, as ~me rain is possible
again on Sundity. High temperatures bolh ·saturday and Sunday

• IColumb!isls~ I

a

·Many traditions are worth keeping _ _ _~. ...__

.

MICH.

•

The Dally Sentinel "Page-3

Rain may .mar. Easter weekend holidays .

Saturday, AprillO
Accu-Weatherrforecast for

The Daily Sentinel

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

James Rhodes

nonald Co«rill

James Lester Rhodes, 71, of
Rose A. Easterday DeBruhl, 61,
Donald Cottrill, 76, Syraeuse,
Racine,
died Wednesday, April 7,
of Ravenswood, W. Va. died Fri- died Thursday, April 8, 1993, at
1993,
at
Veteraqs Memorial Hospiday, April 9, 1993, at Camden Camden-Clirk Hospital in Parkers.
tal
following
a brief illness
Ciar,kllHo~pital, Parillness~ersburg, W. burg, W.Va. . .
Born
on
May
1, 1921 at CotVa. •0 owmg a long
.
Born Jan. 10, 1917, in Syracuse, tageville, W. Va., he
was the son of
Born in Meigs County. she was the son of lhe 1iu.e Alpha and Loretthe
late
James
Wilson
and Kara
the daughter of the late Reid and ta Mooney Cottrill, he was a life- Bell Parsons Rhodes.
Blanche Easterday. She was a time member of the Pomeroy DAV
He was a farmer and lmended
, member of the Second Baptist and a Navy veteran of World War
the
Antiquity Baptist Church at ·
Church, Ravenswood, and a gradu- 11.
'
Racine.
ate ofTayloc University oflndiana.
Surviving is his wife of 47
He Is survived by one brother,
She taught school in Meigs County. years, Margaret Cottrill; a daughKenneth
Bart Rhodes of Racine,
Piclrens County, S. C. , Tennessee. ter, Sharon Cottrill; son and daughFuneral
services will be beld at
.Tj:~~~ple in Tennessee, and Heritage· ter-in-law, Craig and Paula Cottrill;
I
p.m.
Saturday
at the Casto FunerChristian Academy at Raves- . a son, Bruce Cottrill; and grandal
Home
in
Evans,
W. Va. Rev.
nwood, W. Va.
· daughtcrs Crystal and Rachael CotHerman
Jordan
and
Ken Goecke
She is survived by one daughter, trill, all of Syracuse.
will
officiate.
Burial.
will
be in the
Melissa DeBruhl 'of Ravenswood,
Also sur.viving are stepsisters
Cherry
Grove
Cemetery
at Cotone brother, John Easterday, Dortha Marrison of Ashtabula,
tageville.
Racine area.
· Naomi London and Beatrice Lisle
Friends may ~all after 2 p.m.
Funeral services will be held JJf SYracuse: a sister, Mary (Betty)
Friday
at the funeral home.Sunday at 2 p.m. at.lhe Straight· Talar of Norwich, Conn.; a stepsisTucker · Funeral
Home, ter-in-law Helen Diddle of SyraRavenswood. Rev. Jack Gwun will cuse, a11d several nieces and Vaughan Taylor
Vaughan ;raylor, 61, of Dayton,
offiCiate. Bmial will be in the Oak nephews. ·
a
former
Meigs County resident,
He was preceded in d!lath by an
• Grove Cemetery. friends may call
died
Thursday,
Aprtl 8, 1993, in
at the funeral home, 7 ·to 9 p.m. infant brolher, two infantsisters, an
Columbus.
.
1
Sabtrday.
.infant granddaughter and a stepAmong his survivors are a
brother, Lawrence Diddle.
· daughter, Mrs. David (Deborah)
, • Services will lie beld Monday at Weber, and .two grandchildren,
Gretta Carnahan
3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in Morgan and Erin · Weber,
Gretta Shain Carnahan, 99, of Pomeroy with Rev. Kris Treintong Reedsville.'
Raeine, died Thursday, April 8, officiating. Burial will follow in
Memorial services will be held ·
·
• 1993, at Vet.eillns Memorial Hospi- Letart Falls Cemetery.
at2 p.m. Mondlly at a church in
Friends may call Sunday from
tal in Pomeroy.
Dayton, according to Michael
2-4
and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
A homemaker, she was born
Schoedinger of Schoedinger State
SepL 15, 1893, in_ Racine to the~ home.
Street Chapel in Columbus.
· Emory and Fanme Jaccaud Sham. Frieda Morgan .
·
She was a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church and the
Frieda Maxine Morgan, 78, of
.r
Racine Chapter 134 Order of the Point Pleasant, died Thursday, · The following couples recently
Eastern Slai and White Shrine.
applied for a marriage licences in
April.8 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She is survived by daughters,
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Born March 15, 1915, in Leon,
·
',
Mildred Carnahan and Ruth Simp- she was a daughter of the late Char- Judge Roben Buck:
son, both of Racine, grandson ~md les and Corrie Mae (Wilson) Watgranddaughier-in-Iaw, Stephen and son. She was also preceded in death
Mary Simpson of Dublin, a half- by her husband, Oris Eugene Morbrother, John Joe Shain of East gan', and by three sisters and one.
Letart, and several nieces and
OEStomeet
nephews.
bs'/:· is survived by two
pressure cUnic
'The Pomeroy OES will hold
Preceding her in death were her daughters, Cheryl Carper, Point
The Harrisonville Senior Citihusband, Curt Carnahan, and sever- Pleasant and Beverly Sayre, zcns will hold a blood pressure practice for inspection on Tuesday
al brothers and sisters. .
Mason; ·two sons, Brian Morgan, clinic at the town house on Tues- at 6:30p.m. at !he Chester Masonic
Services will be held Monday at. La Ra v· · · and Chari
day from 10 a.m. to noon. Lunch Temple. All officers are urged to
• y,Morgan
ugmta
es
.
I p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home Roben
of Teays Valley; will be served for the members auend.
it Pomeroy with Rev. Kenny Bak~r two sisters, Ruth· Cossiby, Florida arter the clinic. All are welcome.
Sorority outing planned
officiating. Burial ~ill follow tn and Virginia Roush, Cross Lanes;
·
The
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Greenwood Cemetery.
one brother; Kenneth WatsOn, ·BarTrees available
Friends may call Sunday from boutsville .
and
tltirreen
The Meigs County Litter Con- Sigma Phi Sorority, will eat out at
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral grandchildren.
· trol Program has a limited number The Olive Garden in }'arke,sb.urg,
• home..OES memocial services will
Funeral services will be held atl of Lo&amp;lolly pine seedlings left W.Va;, on Tuesday. .Those going
be held Sunday at. 6:30 p.m; at the p.m., Saturday, April 10 at the . which will be provided free of are to meet at the parking lot in
funeral home.
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home with charge as long as supply lasts. Pomeroy at 5:15 p.m. Notify Becky
the Rev. Herman H. Jordan official- These trees were supplied by West- Triplett if planning to attend.
ing. Burial wjll follow in the vaco Corporation of Parkersburg,
A:A group to meet
Suncrest Cemetery.
w·Va.
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
Friends may call at the funeral
The Doily Sentinel
Dinner
theatre
planned
meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
home on Friday, April9 ~m 6 to 9
(USPS 219·1110)
The
senior
class
of
Meigs
High
Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy.
p.m:
School will present an "Evening of · • Ca11992-5763 for information.
Published CVI'!r)' aflcrnoon , Monday
lhf"'lURh Friday, J 1J Court St•• Pomr.roy,
Theatre" on April 30 at 8 p.m. at
Ohio by lhe Ohio , Valley Publishing
Hospi~al
Meigs High School. The ptoducTrusteeS to meet
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pcmeroy,
VEfERANS MEMORIAL .
Ohio ,.5769, Ph. 992-2166. Second clua
tion of three one-~~Ct plays ts under
TllC
Bedford Towriship Trustees
pc.iLIIICC paid at PoJi,eroy, Otiio.
Thursday's admissions - L~cy the direction of Celia McCoy. will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Wiblim,
Rutland; Mabel Radeltff, Admission is $3 for ·adults lind $2 townhall.
Member: The .A.sociatod ·Prc.11, and the
CoolviUc;
Eddie McGrath, Athens. for students.
Ohio NewspajSbr Auoriltion, National
Advenisinfi Reprc!li'!nlative , Branham
'fl\ursday's
discharges- None.
Nenpapcr· Sales . 733 Third Avenue,
New York. New York 10017.
· HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DiS(:hlitgcs, April 6 - Richard
SPRING VAll lY CI~EMA ,...,
POSTMASTER: S..d addrolo chonc•• Lo
- ~AMAIN MAm.il SAT. &amp;SUN.
The Daily SentinP.), lll Court. St. ,
IAIIGAtN NIGHT fUIIDAY
King, Robin Baird; Edwin Stucker,
446
4514
.
f\n1K1oy, OHio .5169.
CJPr Cla!IPtQa,_. A~AI~I
Bobbie Lee, Mary Fullen, Mrs .
sUB&amp;eruPnON RATES
Charles Davis and claushter, James
BY Carner or Motor Roato
Watson, Alva Brown, Ruth Cross,
One Woek .. ..................,.................. .... $1.60
One Monlh .............·............................ l6.1111
Rose
Grueser, Danielle Newton,
()no YeRr......... ....... .. .......... ~ .......~....... h3.20
Carl
Caldwell,
Elisa Willis, arid
.
' StNGLB COPY,
Jameso·~.. ·'
,Oa~y. ..............:....~~~---······~·--2~ Centa
Birlhs, Aprit .6 • Mr. ind Mrs.
Toby Hudson; daughter,' Bidwell.
Subicribtta ~ol d~iring t.Q PfiY lho cani·
ar may romit in RdVAnoo direct t.o· The
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Parsons, son,
Daily Sentinel on a lhroo, lix or · 12
Sandyville, W.Va. Mr. and· Mrs.
month hMi11. Croilit 'till bn '((ivcn canicr
~hwook . .
Vincent Smith, son, Mason, W.Va

Egg hunt -slated ·

Couples ap,nly fior licenses

Meigs announcements
Biood

.

news

~=====~~~~

No nhocri.,tioM by mail pcrml11ed In
IU'Mt

where . home canju acrvice i•

' ""'•il•ble:

·

.

, t3

• JbU -crlpllon8
_.JIWkle .._.,,.. Co•nbr

·

w.............................................. S2t .lk

26 WeekL ......................................... I43.lk ..
52 Weoi!L ......................................... .$84.78
O.a.ldo Melp Co••ty
13 Wceko........................................... $23.40
26 Wftftka..:..•................ ......,.t"''''''''' f46.60
52
l88.40

w."..... ,............... . . .... . . . ... . . .
'•··
' .

.

Papers filed .
Articles 9f incorporation have
been filed in the offiCe of Secretaty
. of Slate Bob .Taft for Lo Corbcau
Industriea, -Inc.. of PoinctoY- Incorporaton' arc Tom Reu~er, RoJer
Stewart, Bruce fisher, and Fred W.
Crow, with Fred W- Crow, Jt. as
theqent;. ·... · · . ·
.
•

r· ''

.

EASTER SUNDAY

BUFFET
Sunday, Aprilll - 11:30 a.m.-8 p.111.
"'Enjoy our BUllet, or order from our mtllfl. •

This Particular Sunday Buffet,
· We Will ie Offering: ·
•Honey Dew Ham
. •Turkey •nllpl• Rllets
(sauce optional) &amp;
.Cream BJked
Chicken
sliced to order
/#-~::..
efrled Shrin.,
•Bar-8-Queci
·•Salmon
Pork Ribs
Soufflet
•Leg of
-NOOdles
Lamb
(homemade
(w/mlnt
chicken)
sauce
•Mashed .Irish
optional)
Potatoes
•Prime Rib
•Deviled Eggs
of Beef
•Assorted Salads
(sliced to order)
&amp; Vegetables ·

••

Bread .O.sserts

For Y• of a Century••.
OSCAR'S, OF COURSE
R~member, Et~ery Sunday u "'l'laonlupingDay"

· ~ . Oscars f!&lt;rstaurant

.·. ~\ . I
... " _,......C: .

......., 1WIIt

\-'

,,,

\ltl\ll

.

•IIUCI Pl.rf' •tam' OU'!' 0.
.

~

ftll ..._.

ftJ SftJIIQ Vo\I.LI'r CIIIDIA
· 191 I'Vfta DB L1 ,

•Soups a Homemade

·57;.s9 court St., Galllpolla
446-9545 . •

Re•erwatiora.
Encou~!

.. .
•

�•

•

-.

.·

Sports

The Daily S~~.~~~.J

Friday, April 9, 1993

In NBA action,

Knicks-beat
Celtics
to
win
.
f
irst
Atlantic
Division
title
since
1989:
By

Page-4

lnNLac~on,

~

The Associated Press
The New York Knicks were true
10 form. Brian Shaw wasn'L
The Knicks beat Boston 110-88 ·
in New York to clinch their first
Atlantic Division tide since 1989.
It was another bruising battle Cor
New York, the most physical team
in the league. Knicks guard Doc ·
Rivers, who needed eight stitches
in his ehin after diving to the floor
in the first quarter, came back to
spazk a third-quarter surge. ,
"We don't want .to discount
. winning the division, but we have
bigger goals," coach Pat Riley

Expos make Alou, Reds·feel lost in 14-11-runaway victory
posed to squeeze out a run here and
there on stolen bases and singles?
"We proved somebody else
wrong," outfielder Larry Walker
said, after the Expos scored 14
times in the first four innings and
held on to beat the Reds 14-11
Thursday. "Everybody says we

.
ByJOEKAY
'
CINCINNATI (AP) - NOihin~
uimsual about the Cincinnati Reds
latest showing- they're supposed
to score a lot of runs and watch
their bullpen give up a lot, too. ,
B.ut the Montreal Expos aren't those the guys who are sup-

Wahama tops _Southern
7-6 on questionable play ·
Waha:ma's baseball team
squeeked by the Southern Toma·
does 7-6 Thursday evening at
Mason, W.Va.
Only one umpire showed up to
call the game, which as an e_nd
result may have affected the outcome of the game. The play that'
ttanspired was nO! any fault of the
umpire, but merely a mauer of not
being ahle to be in two places at
one time.
· The score was tied 5-5 in the
bottom of the sixth inning when
Walker and Bumgardner each singled. They attempted a double steal
with two out, but Jones overthrew
third base. ·southern's left fielder
promptly threw the ba~l to third,
where the tag out was made _on_the
runner bef-ore Walker crossed the
plate.
.
The run should not have.scored,
but b'ecause the umpire did not
know for sure, the run was ruled
good, hence creating the 6-5 fmale.
After Southern (2-2) was held
scoreless in the top of the first,
Wahama went to work on SHS
starter Andy Grueser. 'travis Johnson singled, Roush doubled and
Carl King slammed a three run
home run to put Wahama ahead 3-

0.

· . Southern came back to lead 5·3,
with a five-run third inning. Roben
Reiber singled, Robert Kimes
walked, Jeremy Dill singled home
a run, Andy Grueser walked, Jeremy Nonhup walked to .force home -

a iun, and kyle Wickline and Joey
' Hensler each had two-run singles.
King singled home J. King and
Mayes to tie the score for Wahama
in the fifth.
Southern threatened in the top
of the sixth, when with the bases
loaded, it II!'JlC8red that Jeremy Dill
had hit a grand slam. Wahama
ll)ade a great jce cream .cone catch
at the fence to end the inning, leaving Southern without a run.
Wahama then went ahead in the
sixth and held SHS scoreless in the
seventh.
Southern hitters were Dill,
Wickline, Reiber and Hensler, all
with singles, and Jeremy Nonhup,
who has had a hot bat lately, with
two singles.
Wahama·hmers were Mayes
with a double, triple Qnd single;
Carl King ahome run, RJ. Roush a
.. double and singles by Johnson, J.
King, C. Roush, Walker and Bumgardner.
Albright got the win in relief of
WHS starter Mayes. They combined for three strikeouts and five
walks. Grueser and Ryan Williams
each went three for Southern with
Williams sufferinj! the Joss. They
.combined for mne hits, seven
strikeouts and three walks.
Southern hosts Wellston tonight
·in Racine:
Inning totals
Southern: 005-000-0 = 5-.5-1
Waharnli: 300-021-x" 6-9-2

"

'

.

The Reds equally inqJl pirchin&amp;
staff saved the Expos from that~
nario.
Starter Tim Belcher gave up
eight hits and six runs iu
innings, leaving with a 6-aJI tiC.
· Robeno Kelly's first tamer grMd
slam off Chris Nibholz in die sec-·
ond !iaved him from thC loss.
"ltwas a teuible begiooins llul
a beginning I'OIIelbdess," Bel ';"

can't-do this, we can't do that"
Offensively, they did just about
everything they wanted . They
needed just four innings to top their
1992 smgle-game mark for runs
scored. Every starter had a hit and
five had two or more RBis through
the fourth.
• Ttie 14-6 lead in the fourth lead
was so uricharacleljstic tluit manag·er Felipe Alou wasn't sure what to
do next.
'
"That's not my k\nd of game,"
be said. "I never feel I'm good
enough of a manager to man~ge
that kind of game. Our game is a 21 game. ·
"I got lost when it was 14-6.
There's not a whole lot you can do
but 'wait for things to take place."
And then watch in horror as the
bullpen nearly blows iL
Montreal's pitching staff gave
up a total of 14 .hits and nine walks
- five of the bases on balls resulled in runs - to keep the Reds in
this wacky game. Kevin Mitchell's
two-run homer in the seventh off
JeffFassaro cut it to 14-11.
·
Mel Rojas then gave up two-out
singles in the ninth to Barry Larkin
and Mitchell before Chris Sabo hit
a soft fly out to end the 3:37 of
nonstop offense.
The Expos were worn- out.
"I was nodding off, the game
was going so loog," said ,Walker,
who left the game in tile fifth with
. a slight hamstting puU.
And relieved. They'd worried
that their season-opening schedule
against heavy-hitting Cincinnati,
followed by a trip to Colorado,
could leave their pitching staff in a
state of shock.
.
"This was the kind of game you
don't want to play before going to
Denver, with alllhe things they say
about that stadium," Alou said.
"You'd hate to use all y00r pitching staff and go to Mile High with
a loss. That could have really
messed us up for the next 10
dliys."
: .

wee

Saturday'sgames

-*NHL*-

(Stoakmym().0), 1:35p.DL
Mi.nn-... (Banb: ~Q) at Xan.su City
(Appio&lt;C).O), 2:35p.m.
MilwaukM (BOMI 0-0) at Oakland
(Wolch 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
.
' New York (K.ey 1· 0) 1t Chicaao
( B - 0.0~ HI! p.m.
Ba.ton (CJ.nelu 1-0) It Teau (Lei!"" 1·0),1:3l p.DL
Baltimore (Sutcliffe 0- 1) at Seattle'
(CilnU1tU!p C)-0), IO:OS pm.
DotrW (Wclla 0:0) at C.JilonUa (Funll 0.0), 10:05 p.m.

WALES CONFERENCE

&lt;1IMlLAND (lillY 0-1) at Tomnto

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Iuter. Dl•llloa

T...,

WLP&lt;t.GI

Plliladclphia ............. 3
Now Yodl. ..... .......... .2
Pila.burp ··~·-········- .2
Mono.al ................ ,.2

SL Lwio ..................2
Chieoao.................... l
Florida .......:............. 1

0 1.000
0 1.000
0 1.000

I .667
I .667
2 . .333
2 .333

Weot.rnDIYioloo
All&amp;ma ..................... 3 I .7l0
LaoAn&amp;cl&lt;o .............2 2 .soo
~ATI........ ,. I
2 .333
s.. Fnncd&lt;u .......... l 2 .333

.5
.5
I
I
2·

2

.

Colondo ,................o

SmJMso ................o
HOUit.an ......... ~ ........0

I

Sunday's games

15
15

2
2

.ooo

.000

2
2

3

.IXlO

2.5

CI..EVElAND at Tmmto, 1:35 p.m.
Mimmota. at ~uCily, 2:35pm.
New Yodi: l l Qicaao. 2:35 p.m.

tlaataeatT...,3;0Spm.
Milwaukee It ouiand. 4:0S p.m.
-Dc:trait II Califomi.a, 4:0S p.m.
Ballimon: at Seaule, 4:3S p.m.

- Thursday's srores
Mmvooll4, ctN&lt;lNNATI II
St. I..DWI2, San Francisco 1

Today•i games

,.

(Rivera ()-0). 3 :US p.m.
_
Monueai {Bottenfield 0-0) at Colomlo
(B. Smith 0.0), 5,0,5 p.m.
._

San Dief.o (Seminara 0-0) at tolorida

(Bowa1 0-Q~ 7:35pm.
San FranciJco {Swift 0.0) at Pittabutgh
(funlin G-Q), 7,35 p .m.
Houston (PonuaaJ 0..0) 11 Now Yodr:
(S. F........ 0.0), 7,40 p.m.
. 1..01 Anadu (Aitacio 0-0) at AlhnLI .
(P. Smilh 0.0), 7:40pm.
CINCINN~
(Browning 0-0) at St.
lA»&gt; (Atodu 0.0), 8:3.5 p.m.

L
21
31
33

. 37 .
40
50
52

PeL
.712
.575
· .560
,486
.452
.315
.2lll

GB

10
11

16.5
19
29
31

c..,lrol Dhillon
50 22 .694
CU!YELANIL. ....4S 71 .625
At!aiu .......... o....... 39 3o1 .534
O.adme ... .,........... 37 36 · .S01
lndiaaa ................... 37 36 .501
tloaoit ....................35 37 .486
Milwa'*cc ............. n 46 .370

•.au..................

n

Saturday's games
San Francia.co (Brmtley Q.O) at .Piui·
(Cooke 0.0), I :35 pm.

-

W

y-New Yook ...........!2
.Boatat ....................42
New kney ............42
Od..,do .................. 3S
Mimti ....................33
Philodclphia ........... 23
WultJn&amp;100 .....,...... 21

'"

,.,
'

Flou11on (Drabek 0-1) u New York
(Gooda&gt; 1·0), I :40 p.m.
Montreal (D. Man.int.t 0-1) at Col·
ondo (Nied 0.1), 3:05p.m.
Oicago (Morgan 0.1) at Philadelphia

S

ll .S
13.5 .

,13.5 " ,·
IS
23.5.

"'

·'

•v

•

(0. Maddux 1..0), 7 :10p.m.
·
CINCINNATI (Rijo L-0) at St. LouU

:tr••

WHERE'S THE BAlL!~ Cillcinnsfi alder Joe Oliver (top) saa +
far llle W. wllidt
bounced otr Mllalnll'a D8nil " , ., , • I

CB

x·Uuh ....................42 · 32
Den..- ................... 32 41

6.S

o.u.........................a

CM&gt;sran•O.O). 8:05pm.

Sunday's games

x- ~tde ................. o49
• · l'odland ................
LA.CJ;ppcn ......... ~
LA. LWn ............ Jol
OoldCII Slate .. ,....... 31

.438 ·.

16

.2!10

29.S

.uo

40

7A .671
21 .611
3&amp; • .486
3&amp; .472

1.5

4} . .425

13
22
23
26.!

Sat:mnCI'IIG ............ 22 S2 . .1!J1

36

l•clin&lt;llecl playoft'-

y-clinchod divilion title

· Thursday's &amp;&lt;ores

DctroitlOO,Nc:wJtt~ey98

AMERICAN LEAGUE
GB

Cl.EVELAN0 ......... 2

I

.667

1

Milwaukee .. :............ !
TOtoolo .................... l
Do1roiL ... , .......... ., .... I
New Ycrt ........
1
Baltim·ore ..... :............o

L·
I
2
2
2

.500
.500
.333
.333
.000

U.
U:
2
2
l.S

M ......

•

0 1.000

Chicaao ...- ........... 2
Ookl•nd.. ............: ....2
Cali{omio ............c... l
Se&gt;ale ......................l

l

.667

I

.667

I
I
2
3.

.SOO
.SOO
.333
.000

M ..

.-

Houaton 9S, Utah 90
.
Pt.omi.a 123, SacramO'IIO 114
. Po.Uand 1:16, o.n. 107
Oolden SUite 122, L.A. Laker~ 1 i6
(ar)

Tonlgbt'SIIIIIIOS

... ................ !

Kansu City .............0

.5
.!
I
I
1.!
l.S

W_a~hinaton at CLEVELAND, 7:30

p.m.

Oflando It Minncs~, 8 p.m. •
Sacramenta at Seattle, 10 p.m.
[)enyer at Phoe:nlx, 10!30 p.m.

Portland ttl....A. IAi:ett. 10:30 p.m.

Thunday'- srores

OU..~9,MiM•ou4

. Ddmt13; 0Uland 2
Cl.EVELAND lS, New YolkS
lkM1on 9, JU,wu City 4

· ·

Today's games

New Yc.t (Wickman 0.0) It
(Aiv;... 0-9), :!:35e.·

, SaturdaY's games .
CLEVELAND at NfW Jcnoy, 7:30
p.m.
.
'
. ' .
Phihdt.lphU. at Mi.~. 7:30p.m. ·

.

. Adapta at

OLi~aao

.

· T'l~"''!ay's lcores
Be. am 6. Qucb,c :z ,
ChicaJO 3, N.Y. blandcn 2
Occroi19, Tam.PI Bayl •
· l'hilodclph;a 4, WultJn&amp;ton 3

-

,

1

.

Bldlalo a1 Dcttoil, 1:10 p.m.
~ 10 • Tampa Bay.l :40 p.m.
Hldfonl at Queboc, 7,40 pm,
Ottawa at N.Y. ~dt.ll,l :40 p.m.
N.Y. Ranaen atl'inabwJb. 7:40p.m.
New Jcacy n W•hinJGI, 7:40p.m.
Bonon at MOIIIaal. 1:10{'"·
Philadelphia at Toro.1to, :lOp.m.
Sl I...oWs at Minncac:u, 1:10 p.m.
l.ol Angels at SanJcu.t0:-40 p.m.

Sunday'sgames

- • Transactions * National Lao.,.
·
CINCINNATI RI!DS - S•t William
c.n.... ....rialcl., ........apotio ol tho
American A,uacialion fOr- mOdieal reha•

bili&amp;alion.
.. ;
.
LOS ANOELES DODqERS -

p-.

Ph•od Todd W....U,
an 111e IS·
day dlaab)M lilt. Rtcalled Pedt'O Mar·
tinea. pilclw, fn&gt;m Albllquerquc o!U..
l'lcif10C-Loapo.
MONTIU!AL EXPOS - Purcltooed
inlioldor,lrom
Ottawa olllle Amodcon A'-;..;... OpdCIIM Mia SWD, outf'Jel4Dr, 10 Ona.w1.
~lpallld JAiU Th~, P*her. for u -

..._.,Lou_
,,...,..L

'

New Yc:D atBop.on, J·r.m.
Detroir: II Waabinalon,~ p.nl.
U~ 1t Phocni.l, :1':30
S..tile at L.A. Loken, 3:30p.m.
Minnca~ 11 Poi&amp;llftd, I p.m.

B.uktlb..l

_,._._Ouia

Nalloaoii•IIIIW-....
. NEW .JilUEY Nlfi'S
IJudloy, - - · .. ,. loloaillot.

of1.ANDO MAOIC- " - ' Ttll)'
Called,t
on tla• iD,itirM lilt.

!:t•nt,
Writ!" r.r.....l, to a 10-

. day OCIIIIIIICL .

Sunday'• games

Detroit (Moore O-f) It CaUforni, .
(' a, '"' ~ tO:OS p.m.
Blkimon (Mci&gt;t.afd 0.0) tt Seat\le
&lt;H-O-Ol; 10:35 p.m.
.
,.u:wautoo (Navarro ~0) at Oailand
(Will 1).0)', 10,3.5-p.m.

'

Tam,- Bay atOtica&amp;o. 2:40p.m.
Win:nipqat &amp;hmton, 4:10p.m.
CalJIU)' al Vanoouver, 5:10p.m.
Ot&amp;lwa atBocoft. 7:10p.m. .
Toronio at Hartford, 7:10p.m.
Quei:Jtlc at Buff~o. 7:10 p.in.
N.Y. lallndc~ at New Jcncy. 7:4;0
p.m.
Minnt101.1atSL ~· I; IO~.m.

Slpod

. lfinnUau'fl'rombley O-O) ·at K.llllas
Clay (a.-0-0). 1:3! p.m.

..

.

FoolbaU

l!olloool ruo~boll Leo&amp;..

P.m.

.

. 6EATILE SE~HAWXS ·-:- Sitn'od
S~ccy - · comCI\&gt;ad&lt;.

..

"
•
~

'

.'

...
~·

. ;.'#·' ,.:
..
..&lt;·t

.

.. .

,,

..

·

011 a GleulleD Hill bases-loaded double in
111e tWrd malaf of Thursday night's American
• pe &amp;PIC 1D Cleveland, where the'Tribe won
15-S.(AP)

' '

· Baerga's switch-hitting first
helps 'Tribe pound Yanks 15·5 .

'.

JEFFERSON'S OUT- Cit a ' d's R a;k
Jefferson (left) slides iMo die waililc Ill of New
York eatcber Milt
llllaalll Ill

Nabs._.. •

-

''

By BEN WALKER
srove said.. "He uses the whole shoulder and arm problems ended
AP BlisebaU Writer
field and k"s going to tate what- his season.
Joe Hesketh, who lost all three .,
On a night of firsts, Carlos evcrJOIIgiwcluim.'" '· ·
Baerga was a big hit, and so wm:
Al¥110 Esjlii•P• bad a three-run stans against Kansas City Jast year,
the Boston Red SoX. llomlr Md a single during Cleve- could not hold the big lead. Scott ,;:
Baerg&amp; did what Mickey Man- land's big reveatll inning. Gle- Bankhead (1-0) relieved in the sectle, Eddie Murray and no other n3Um Hill lu.l tiRe hituod ikove ond inning and retired all I 1 baners
he faced.
switch hiuer had ever done, bomcr- in tiRe r-.
Tigers 3, Athletics 2
ing from_both sides of the pld:: in
Allert Belle 'wu hit by a piiCh
_
Deqoit
held on for jts ftrst win
the same inning during Cle¥daod's Crom Howe after Baerga· s first
of
the
season
when Mike Henne- ·
15-S romp Thursday ojgtu ovu due home nm. diCII Fm.was ejecled by
man
got
Jerry
Browne to ground '
New York Yankees.
· ..
~-~AI Clllk: aiRS a piiCh
Into
a
game-ending
double play .• ~
·.. -Baerga hit a two-run homer clo.s e ~ _1:Jelle's tucc Collowing
with
the
bases
loaded.
·
right-handed off Steve Howe 'and a Baelp s ·a • •••IInDer:
·
!he
Tigers
gave
up
21 r_uns in ,'
solo shot left-handed off S~ Farr
"I duchl due pill:b was a liltle
·
·
·
-"
•'_....._,
•
.,__
-=~
"II
-as
·
losmg
the
flfSt
two
games
at Oak- . ' .
· m a nme-run sevenlh innin".
uu .,.. . ....,, ....._
w
land. But Henneman, who relieved ':
"I haven 'I thought-.:'a dull."' bonlcrliDc...
Baerga said. "I jusllried 10 bil due
Mike Bid«ti, pitrJ!ing Cm the tostarttheninth,shuldownthe'A's u
ball as hardas I could."
lint ~ si1uce a:aiiiof a ligament after they loaded the bases on an
•
The Red Sox, mean~ COlD- in bis ri&amp;bl elbow July 211, waul six error by shortstop Travis Fryman ·
• ''
pleted their lint tbree-pne 5wa:p inoin1s for - tlue victory. Sam and two w'alks. ·
Tony Phillips had three hits for ·• '
at Royals Sradium with a 9-4 Yil:lo- Mililrflo(O-I)..,.Iuitbanl
ry over Kansas City. BoSIOil hU
Ia due C1llly ada pocs, Deaoit Detroit· Mark McGwire hit his first '"
:;
staned a season wilh three .straigbl beat Oaki•IICI 3-2. ud Chicago . home run for Oakland.
John
Doherty
pitched
7
1/3
.
·
road wins for J,he f~nt time since dcfd!l:d M'• IJII!I-t.
innings for the victory, and Henne- '''
1957.
.
. . Rtd Sal '• ..,_,... 4 ·
BostOJ!'S llirce vi~t!Jries in man got a save. Stonn Davis lost in "'
· Baerga ~e the fua
to homer twiCe m the ·smile Pmilil K • - City metcMcJ &amp;IS Joogc:st his fllSt stan since last July. ,.
Wb"'
Sox
9,
TwinS4
•·
since Boston's Ellis BUlb 011 Alii- rom w· - c Sflat ~ 1992. Alstt,
·
Tim
Raines
and
Ron
·Karkovice
•
27, 1990. He is the {inl IDdj• 10 . due Red S..lied llll . ••"1 hip
two-run
homers
and
Chicago
' ·
hit
do it, and the 26th Overall •
- willa IS tJiCs.
. ,
won
ll
the
Metrodome.
,
·
·
·
Baerga went 4 for S witlu a c1ouScott Cooper, laking Wade
Alex ~z. backed by dou- ":
· ble, ICored four 111111 and c11owe iau Boas' pllee • tluint ' - · diiM in
ble
plajs in each of Jhe f11st three '
three. It was due 92ild lime a awil:li fllill' hills wid! d1ree bias. Mike
innings,
gave up two runs on five ·
hitter,; homered from boduidelill a . Go 2dliad•o +1 IB bit for
hits
in
ei,Rht
inrungs.
'
game, with Mantle_iod Manay , die.._.....,_..-,. · , .
leading wilh 10 cadL . .
1k Jta1 $OK led~ ill die SCIC- ' ' The Whitt 'Sox .Jed 5-0 after four r,
' 'The beauty about CadO. is ODd.illiJt&amp;. Dey ....... t liP M1rt mnings. Minnesota startl)r Pat ··:·
that there's no·.one way to pild1 C...li&lt;D (0-1). ,..O)d 'rd fur t1uc Mabomes Walked four, hit bauer "'
him,''
Indians .~ Mikliar.
lint lillie riEe 'last Jllly IO,
w11en llld IIRw two wild pitches"in thar '"
() .
•.
·.

'*F

a

.

apan.

' .,,

Cardinals 2, Giants 1
Once again, Lee Smith saved
the day.
He tied Jeff Reardon's major
league record with his 3S7th career
save as the St. Louis Cardinals beat
the San · Francisco Giants 2-1
' .
. Thursday. . .
The 35-year-old right-hander
pitched a·perfect ninth inning for
his second save of the season. He
needed only eight pitches to retire
Matt Williams, Barry B·onds and
Robby Thompson.
"The biggest thing was to get

Sports'deadlines posted ·
. The Gallipolis Daily Tribun~.
The Daily Stntint,l, the ('oint
· PltiUIJilt Register and the SIUidayTimes-Ser~tintl value the conlributions their readers make to the
spans sections of these papers, and
these conlributions wiD continue to
be published. .
• However, cenain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos and related articles for basketball and other winter
sponl is the ·last day of the NBA
Finals.- .
Likewise, the deadline fbr submissions of local· baseball- and
· ~all-related photos and related
lll!iclct, from T-balliO the majors,
well other spring anc) summer
sporu, ia the day of the )ast pme , .
of the World SerieS. The deadline
f:&amp;.uhotoi and related articles for
~
and otha' fall sports is the
Salurday before the Super Bowl.
Theac cleadllnel have.bcen institl!ted to give relderi plenty. of lime
to •••their photol bact from the
photopaphy studio of choice and
to livuhe aralfa. the opponunlty to
Pl!lilllh theiC sportl phot01 and
· llticlel dqrloa the appropriare sea- .

as

~..

•·
J,

. ·'

•

We Will Be
Open _Easter ·
Sunday From
2 P.M. Until
8 P.M.

•

,·_4 •

.

..

o;;·

In AL action, ·

Saturday's games

I"' a,

~--

---year

" -'

'· '

.PiuaburJh aL N.Y, Ruwn. 7:40p.m..
Vancouvcral Calauy, ~:40 p.m. .

·

·.
San Anunio It HOUICoft. .1:30 p.m.
Orlanda at Milw.U.:ee., 9 p.m.
,.
Den"" at L.A. Clippm,I0,30p.f11. .
Dallu 1L Golden State, 10:30_p.ni.

(Oolman 0-0), 3:3 pm.
Bodm .(I)ow*n 0.0) at Te•u (Ryan
1).0), 1:3! p.m.

Ol.adc:iae. 7 :30p.m,

Chi.eaaoat~, l:~p.m.

·
0-&lt;l) it TO!Oillo

· ClJ!VELAND

.

.

NL gameS ...

1

Sa,._,

. Norrio Dlv~ ...
W L TPU. GPCA
y-OeuaU ........... 4S ' 21 9 99 lSI 772
y-OU..ao ......... 44 2S II 99 266 221
f·T""""" .......... 42 7711 9S 210 231
SL Louia ........... 35 34 II II 267 266
~ ......... 35 3.5 10 10 262 277
T""pa Bay ....... 22 S2 6 50 230 316

B...bau·

Detroit at 8~, 7:30J.m.
Cl1arlottc It Philldclphla,7:30 p.m.
OlicaJO at Atlanta,1:30 p.m.

Wttlern Dtwilion

Tc.•• ....................... ~

•

New Yodt 110, ao....aa
Miami 117.Milwaukac92
San Anl&lt;lriio 112. LA. Clippcn 101

· Eutim DlviiJon'

'Tea.,.
W L PeL
801ton ............... :...... 3 . 0 1.9QO

of Dtmday's Natloaal League game in Cincioali, w~ die Expos WGD14:1l. (AP)

Aifa,ma Dhi•lon
y·BO&lt;ton ........... 48 :16 7 103 319 :163
y·Mmvool ........ 47 21 6 100 320 270
y-Quobeo ... :...... 44 27 10 9&amp; 336 294
y-Bulfalo .......... 3&amp; 32 10 86 323 27&amp;
llutlooL .......... 2S 49 S SS 267 347
Ottawa.............. 9 67 4 22 191 371

3

.S68

Paclllc Dlvllioo
x-Photnis .............. 57 JS .192

San Diego at Florida, 1:35 p.m.
OU.caao" Philade.lphi•, 1:35 p.m.
San Francilco ll PittabU.Jah, I :35 p.m.
Hou.tton at New Yodt, 1:40 p.m.
Mcm~ttCcioradO, 3:05p.m.
l..ol Aftacl• II Allan_t1.7:10 p.m .
ON~ATI at St. Louil, am; p.m.

r

N.Y. !Unp .... 34 3411 79 296 287
· Philadelphia ...... 32 37 II 7S 302 311

Tonight's games

TWII
W L PeL
· - -..............48 2S .658
l · San Antonio .......4S 21· .616

S4
6S

Fiddler's rua-scoriag slide ill tbe fourth inning

..

Wuhin.,.. ...... 40 ~3 7 1'1 313 777
39 3S ~ M 219 Z11
N.Y. bbnden... 31 3S 6 82 312 276

WESTERN CONFERENCE

~ .............. 11

!I I

New Jenoy .......

324 2!57
300 270
325 323
309 310
235 323
213404

,._lilt.-.. .

Hamilton sports scribe dies at 74

'

Lao Anp 2, San J,.. I
MWwMlDMIIon .

(Mulholland 1-0), 7:05p.m.
.
.S•n Dieso (E ila_nd 0.-0) at Florida
'(Hou&amp;h 1-0), 7:05p.m.
.
l..ol Angele11 (Hcrshiler Dol) at Allanta '

.

·~

Winnipta S. Torm1o 3

1

'

Patrick DlvWH "'
Tum
·w L T 1'10. GF GA
l ·Pi ..buqh ...... S4 21 6 114 347 256

Smytlie DlvlJion
y·Vancouver..... 43 21 9 95
y-CaJauy .......... 40 29 II 91
y-Loa Anpleo .. 38 33 10 86
y-W'tnnlpea ....... 38 36 7 83
Edmmton ......... 26 47 I • 60
Sonlooe ............ II 69 2 .24
•-cliftched divilion tillc
y-clincht.d playoft'bcrl.li

'"'ace I llad a Cew, 8J teaa- . Oippcrs in in 1990. The following pPints and 12 rebounds for Utah.
mates kept CIICOUll&amp;ia&amp; IIC to ye:u, Den vee's Adams tied the
Suns 123, Kings 114
sllool ...... Slid Slaw. -no record against the Oippers.
AI Sacramento. Cedric Ceballos
only 8 of 63 (.177 JICl01*) rn. .
.
. scored Z8 points as Phoenix tied its
•
three pcia' a.p
ln. other games, 11 was Detr~lt franchise record for victories in a
souu ''lky wen: xniaa sm:ca.s 1.0 0. New Jersey 98; S~ Antomo . ~cason . It was the nimh straight
andllryiaalltp-e.._"
112. the Los Angeles Ch~ 108; wiri foqhe Suns, whose 57th victoOae~liisllllw I'
s• Jed Houstoo95, Utah 90; Phocmx 123, ry matched the franchise high set in
in afta' bc:iaJ ddJcacd by Brad Saaamento· Il4; Portland 126, 1980-81. Phoenix got 22 points
LOOaos
·
Dallas 107; and Golden State 122, from Dan Majerle, 21 from Kevin
''Wiucatliame-ill,I._ the Los Angeles Lakers 116 in Johnson and 20 from Charles
it was guiaciO be •Y lliJII,." said overtime.
Barkley. Rod Higgins scored a seaShaw, l6 of 97 (.371} oe J1ureePistons 100, NelS 98 • .
son-high 26 points for Sacramento.
poiot ·M trp;J*dlis
•
AI East Rutherford, Is1ah Trail Blazers 126, Mavericks 107
· ·E~ aaade Dille *ee ,.-.reus Thomas hit two free throws w!th
At Portland, Cliff Robin so"
for Seanle· ! inW 111e Las AlllfPes 35 secooils left and DetrOit contm- scored 21 points and Terry Porter
ued iiS late bid for a playoff benh. had 12 of his ,19 in the third quarter
Joe Dwnars scored 33 pllints and as Ponland beat Dallas. The BJ.az1bon• 25 as the Pistons won their ers forced 14 first-half turnovers
filurlb snighL
and look a 64-42 lead at the break.
Span 111, Clippers 108
Portland opened the third period .
At San Antonio, Dale Ellis with a 13-S run to build a 30-point
· ·scam~ 25 points. San Antonio also lead.
.
·- -gol21 pomts from David RobinWarriors 122, Lakers 116 (OT)
·By KEN RAPPOPORT
Fiset stopped all six shots he faced shots despite 10 power plays, and Tkaeluat ud Sla BanJcS also sm. 20 fiorn Antoine Carr and 18
At Oakland. rookie Latrell
AP Hockey Writer
in the last 11 :59 of the second peri- their only goals carne with New 500RXI fu£ Wi -, " ..,., J'l
•• from Avery Johnson. Danny .Man· Sprewell had a career-high 36'
The second-hottest team in od, .
York- ~l)joying the man advanlll8e.
Ding; led. the Clippers with 31 points, nine rebounds and nine
D~e Ba'duowsky ud Gleaa
hockey? ,Try the Boston Bruins:
Goals by Ted Donato in the filS!
An.ft••i•:autdbTGCaL ·poilits•.San Antonio,. which shot assjsts for Golden State. Sprewell
Everyone knows about the red- period·ilnd Bryan Smolinski and _ . Roenick and Ruublu helped .the
Stee.n liUilc:d luis n.d p i 64 jast ~8 percent from the line in its sent the ~ame into ovenime with a
hot Pittsburgh Penguins, of course. Ray Bourque in the second gave Blackhawks break away from a 1-1 seconds ... die flinlp:aiilwl wid! pevioos two games, made 37 of 44 three-pomt shot with 1.4 'seconds
They've won 15 straight and can B6ston a 3-0 lead before Andrei tie and withstand a lale goal by the T01011to's Ja.ie M - ia die (84 percent} against the Clippers.
left in regulation. With the score
break tlie NHL record tonight when Kovalenko scored at 8:28 for Que- Islanden' PierreT~.
Rockets
95,
Jazz
90
tied
at 116-in the final minute of
penalty 1m; for bitt - A S!
"s
.. they play the New York Rangers at bee.
At
Salt
Lalce
City,
Hakeem
Olaovertime,
Sprewell missed badly
. Red Wlags !1, L tnilq 1
goalal8:23 pweliala• : •
Madison Square Garden.
Joe Juneau had two goals, h1s ' · At Tampa, Steve zennan had lead. over B.tlalo's Alenader ja.won scored 27 points and on a three-pointer as the shot clock
But the Penguins:...incredible 31st and 32nd, and Glen Wesley two shon-handed goals and three MogiiDy jp die. I . . . . _ _
blol:ted eight shots for Houston, · wound down. Victor Alexander
streak has overshadowed the' recent made it6-1 with a two-man advan- assists, and iOilie Vince Riendeau
wbil:b survived a furious fourth- rebounded ihe shot and missed a
~z.s tst .
play of !he Bruins. All they've tage at 15:54 of the second period.
stopped 25 sliots for DeaoiL ·
At l•r;lewood., Calif., Luc: qul!IIEr by Utah. Vernon Maxwell put-back before Billy Owens
done -is win 15 of their last 18, '
Meanwhile, Chicago and Dettoit
Dino Ciccalelli and Bob Probert Robinilko: IOI:IIid lwilz jp . . . . . ldded 21 points for the first-place scored the go-ahead basket with 33
including a S-2 lriumph over the remained tied for the Norris Divi- added two goals each.
•
Rockets. Karl M11lone had 23 seconds Jefl
·
period 10 set • NIIL RWid r..Quebec Nordiques 'on Thursday sion lead after, the Blackhawks beat
Flyers 4, Capitals 3
.
goals by a left will&amp;night
the New York Islanders 3-2 and the
At Philadelphia, . Andrei
. Robillille 110w bs 6I r;ods.
"Over Ibis stretch, good 'funda- Red Wings whipped Tampa Bay 9- Lomakin scored three minutes into br-~ due jBC"-s . . t S 60
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)- Bill News as a spons writer in Septem- .
mentals and sound defense have 1.
.set by ........,. Slr:w: . . dar- Mocllef, executive spons editor of · ber of 1936 and wa$ named spons
.
.
. the third period ID break a 1-1 tie.
been enough ·to win hockey
Elsewhere, 11 was Phlladelphll
Keith Acton ICl up the key goal .ingdle 1976-77 . .
dueloumaF-News and a reporter for editor in June of 1942. He had been ·
games,'' said Boston goaltender 4, Washington 3; Winnjpeg 5, by sliding aaC:' across the blue
Robitaille's lint pal or ..e llle Hamih.on newspaper ,since ·executive sports.editor sioce 1987. ·
Andy Moog, IS-1 in his last 16 Toronto 3, and Los Angeles 2, San Iille to Lorn · on a 2-&lt;lll-2. The dlinl period ca.e ca a puc play 1936, died at his home Thursday.
In 1986, the newspaper pub- ·
games.
Jose 1.
.
.
forward took a couple of strides to at 6:S7. Elc M * td M ----•wlia'_. He ..as14~
llshed a special section in honor of
The Bruins, 15 points out of
6lac:khawks J,lslanders 2
the top~Of the left cin:le and aent a .at 1S:39 a. a ~ rn- Wayae
..A kll of people in Hamilton, a . Moeller's 50th aMiversary with the ·
first place on March 4, improved
At Uniondale, N.Y., Jeremy slap shot into the top right corner GIUD:y as die ~ ••+" S. lol ol ad!letes. should be thankful Journal-News.
.
their Adams Division lead to three Roe nick and Christian Ruuttu of the net for his ei,Rhth goal.
:Jose 20-1 ilu due &amp;Ill UB'*"
fu£ Bill MoJeller," said fanner big
"When people think of the Jour• ·
points over MQntreal and five over scored 24 seconds apan in the secGarry Galley's goal gave the
S..Jole IUIIlic Mad B • !cape pitdler·and Cincinnati Reds · nai-News they think of Bill
Quebec. Each team has three ond period as Chicago beat New Flyers a 3-1 lead.
broke. a:on:bs lie . . . - . . . la•..... ~ter Joe Nuxhall, a HarnU- Moeller," said publisher Janet :
games left.
york.
Jets 5, Maple Leafs .3
caras
a 18:40 or due 1a1 native whose career was chron· Krause.
. The Bruins' victory was their
The Blackhawks were. keyed by
At Wiimipeg, Thomas _Steen scmnd •
icJed by Mlleller. "He was a cl&amp;S,s
"He was a fine man who truly ·
fifth straighL ·
their top-ranked defense m extend- scored the winner and Teemu
xt.Hewas major league." .
loved spons ... Bill was one of the
As in Tuesday's 7-1 rout at ing their unbeaten streak tO 11 - 8 Selanne added his league-leading ...__Sports ~s-Death 'was atttibuted to natural · · comerslones of this newspaper for
Quebec, the Bruins drove goalie wins, 3 ties- at Nassau Coliseum. 75th goal.
.
~
Fumeraf arrangements were more than 50 years, lind people still'
p
Ron Hextall from the neL Stephane The Islanders managed only 23 Fredrick Olausson, Keith
iommp!cte·Thursday.
.
wanted to know what he had to
NEW YORK (AP) -· . Af'edrnl
Moeller Joined the Journal - say.' ~
·
judge rulecl ... die_los An1 Jes
Dodgen al • •
Bnlc!tlJII ia
_(;_c_on_ti_nu_ed_fro
.;:..
.. _m_P_ag;_e_4l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1958 and •
" ..,
swept the opening two-game series. '!heR en. ... die ..._•s llil:kout there and get'it over with," · smith said.
Smith could move ahead of
Fred McGriff, Gary Sheffield name. . . . . . . by u.s. Disllil:t
Mitchell had a great day at the
Reardon
today,
when
the
Cardinals
and
Phil Plan tier hO!Dered for San Judge COPstaacc Batec Motley
plate- 4 for 6 with 3 RBis- but
open
a
three-game
serieJ
against
.Diego.
· Clllile . . . . .
•
ltpl bade'
misplayed a triple in left field and
Cmcinna:ti.
Reardon
is
now
a
setup
.
Bob
Walk,
Denny
Neagle
and
that
fo'lcvcd
k
JIJIIII
•t
.
I
~
failed to catch up with a ball in the
man for the· Reds, so his chances Stan Belinda combined on a five- The Baootlya Da:'g $pllab•lbl'
gap, resulting in a double.
for
saves will be limited this sea· hitter for the Pirates. Belinda, &amp; R - - .
Mitchell, overweiglit and play·
son.
ing with a broken bone in his left · ·: "Right now, I'm a liule bit ner- . ·pitching Cor the first 1i111e since
allowing Francisco Cabrera's ·pcl1T~
fOOl, isn't moving well in the outvous
thinking
about
it,:'
Smith
nant-winning
pinch
single
in
Game
TOKYO
(AP}
lllll:dfield.
said. '-'But I've. really never set 7 of the NL playoffs last October in ed Pere Sampru of due Uailed
.
goals
or
records.
I
just
want
to
stay
Atlanta,
pitched
the
ninth
for
his
. "He's plar.ing with a 'broken
States belt JOdi a hi • IMp*iiil
fiiSt save.
.
· David W' • 6-3. 3-6, 6-410111y
fooL You don t elipect him to·be a liealthy and consistent.''
At St. Louis, the Cardinals got
-San Diego starter Gre~ Harris in lhe q...ma.Is of due JarGold Glover out !here,'' Perez said.
only
four hits. But two were lasted only 4 113 innings, gtving-up Opea 10
"We're trying to put the best
r. O..ia • die
_ offenSe on the field that we can and homers by Mark Whiten and Gregg five ruri!l on eight hits. '
tap-I'IDted ~F ia due wwtd..
_Braves 6, Dodaers 1
sometimes that's the price you . Jeffcri~.
'Sampns liB 3-"Jlpoiulslllt OaiJefferies
homered
in
the
first
At
Atlania, Tom Gla,•ine er's 3,563, a:c&amp;diat 111 AlP offihave to ~Y·"
That s their strength right now: and Whiten, acquired last month in pitched six scoreless innings and cials. .
a trade with Cleveland,- snapped a Deion Sanders hit two doubles as
offense.
seventh-inning
tie with a shot off • the Braves won their home opener.
"I was just tryin~ to put the ball
loser
Kevin
Rogers.
Pinch bitter Ot,is Nixon's badin play: ! wasn't trymg to hit it out
San
Francisco
scored
in
the
sechop
double drove in two runs in the
of the park,'' Kelly said of his
ond
on
consecutive
doubles
by
sixth
inning and broke the game
grand slam. "I hit it bc:uer tlian I
and
Thompson.
·
Bonds
open
before
a sellout crowd that
thought I did. I 'hope it keeps hapSt
~
Louis
starter
Donovan
included Vice President AI Gore.
pening like this for the rest of the
Osborne got the victory, allowing
· Gore thtew out the ceremonial ·
sea5()n. ' ·' " ~
five
hits
in
sevep-plus
innings.
San
first ball and watched the game
· Unless ··the bullpen comes
Francisc~starter Bu&lt;l' Black gave
from owner Ted Turner's box.
around, it will.
Giavine, the only major leagUer
In other National League games, up only one hit in five innings. '
Pirates 5, Padres 4
to win 20 games the last two seaSL Louis slippql past San FrancisAt Pittsburgh, Andy Van Slyke sons, overcame wildness in his sea- .
co 2-1; Piusburgh edged San Diego
had
a two-run homer and Jeff King son debuL He allowed only three
5-4, and Atlanta beat Los Angeles
·
a
two-run
double as the Pirates hits, but walked six.
6-1.
7

Tum

AU.ndc.IMwllioft

TtMt

At Milwaukee, Shaw scored all
but two of his 32 points oo l.bnle- ·.
pointers. He was 10 of IS from
·Iong range and made his only shot
from inside the arc.
Shaw, a lousy three-point shooter in his first three NBA seisoos.
set a league ·record Thursday night
by making 10 lon~·range shots in
Miami's 117-92 Vlttory· over Milwaukee;
The Heat guard sank six threepointers in the fust quaricc and [our
m the third. period to break the
record of nine held by Dale Ellis
and Michael Adams.

Peng:uins, Bruins ·extend winning streaks

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

EASTERN CONFERENCE

OUcaso (Cutillo 0-0) " Pllilldeljohlo

h .

.

-*N8A*-

"'"'""'!"
5, s.n Jneao 4
Atlanta 6, Lao Anp I

"They're making pitches and • ·
Slid "fd'Iik10 lhiDt I'D gea34 or
3S _
_,_ IIU will be a long-lost they (batters) are just hi.tting
c m •t ill Sqw •cr...
them," manager Tony Perez said.
1'llc pmc mipl be: Corgotten, · "Today, the Expos just swung the "
·•
bul DOl die -y die~· bullpen .bars. We're not playing well."
is-w&amp;g
The Reds made two errors, let
the Expos bat around twice in the
Middle relief was the Reds'
bigclt Q . . - piing into the Sea· • first four innings, and failed to
soa. Ia dleir dlree-g.me series ·. make! seveml other plays that could
have kept the Expos in check early.
lpi!ISI ~ llle hillpen gave
up 12- in 9 inniDBs
(See NL on Page S)
"

said. "When you're looking for
something bigger, the division is a
stepping stone." ·
Patricll: Ewing scored 31 points
as the Knicks won their 16th con·
secutive home game and moved I
1/2 games_ ahead of Chicago for
best record in the Eastern Conference. The team with the top record
will j!et home-coun adyantage for a
possuble meeting in the conference
finak.
"I feel good, but lim still thinking about {:hicago," said New
York guard John Starks, who
scored 22 points. "That's our main
goal."
·

In NHL action,

Scot--eboarcl
- .• Baseball • -

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The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy llddleport, Ohio

u

SOil for that
.
.spon.

.,wsre ,. ~,,

P .,.urn

, q,aa e3u=· e

:'Thu Sat~rday Eveniir;g at 01car~
Buffet, it doesn't matter if you were
jrut here earlier for our lUnche()n ·
. buffet ,.. at 6:00p.m. the buff-et take•
'
'
.
off with a different flair. "
•
'

SATURDAY IS --.- ·
II

ALL· AMERICAN NITE"

At Oscar's we'll have:
•Bar-B-Q Pork Ribs .•Tilipia Fish Fiilets
•Escalloped
•Baked Com-on·
Potatoes
the-Cob
accompanied by
•Prime Rib
-.Baked Chicken &amp;
several
vegetables and, of
Shrimp _
,
courae, desserts
•Baked Honey· ·

Why Not Celebrate

I.

The BesiU'6ection With Us?
liE

DLEPORT

~We're PJ8nnina.A SaMci8J Oae"

RCH OF CHRIST

ALL THIS &amp; MORE FOR '8a50.•

Oscar's f%5taurtl11:t
57-51 CourtSt., Gallipolis .

&lt;•14) 446-1545

7

••

.•'
•''

•,

.,

'•
•'
'

Mil -

.

...

• MIDDLEPORT,. OliO
.

tt2·2914

1'IM............, CJnareJa Of Christ :_
AGrwi.._.TeJ&amp;a .A ·

4

..

-

•
..
•

.•'
,!

J

. "Open 7 Day• A Week"
Mon.·Sat.. 11 am-11 pnf
J

'•

CANTATA

. ,.

. · ·

•
•'
'•,

THIS 'E'SitR SUNDAY,
APRD, 11th

Ham, Yams

J

•

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6 The Deily Sentinel

:page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..At the Masters,

'Nicklaus among five le~~ers i~ fjrst round .
By JOHN NELSON
.
Tom Lehman and Lee Janzen, all .
· That's a pretty lmpr~sstye
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP) - There mere .children compared with him. round of golf for Jack," Pavm sa!d·
were geezers galore at the Masters, One shot back loomed the ever- "He's fun to watch. I played wtth
which.couldn't have gotlen off to a dangero!ls 50;year·old, Raymond him ye~ten!&amp;Y· He played ·well, but
more .cl~tc start than Jack N1ck- Floyd, tted w1th Bernhard Langer I d1dn t thtnk he w~ul~ shO?t Staus chasmg Arnold Palmer.
and John Huston. ·---·
under. But then I dtdn t thmk I
"I was going out to the fmt tee,
Nicklaus staried his round with would shoot S-under, either.
and people were saying, 'Did you bif(;lies on the first and second
"That's the way Jack plays
see what Arnie did, stattiqg· out holes.
here. He plavs mistake-free golf,
with three birdies?"' Nicklaus
He got to 3-under when he ' andlhat'swhalyou'veg\)ltodo."
_said. ''!told them thai I couldn' t let holed a 25-footer on the jlar-3 12th
Tom Kite shot 73, and that
him be the low senior out there." ...· hole, then came his only bad shot . wasn't bad for a guy who two days
: So, the 53-year-old Nicklaus of the day. On the famous dogleg ago was in danger of ll)issing the
flfed'a 5-undcr-par 67 that include&lt;! · left par-5 13th, the end of Amen tournament because of muscle
an eagle-3 ori the 15th hole, and'the Corner, Nicklaus pulled his tee shot spasms in his back.
.
'six-ti111e ~ters champion was \II . into the woods and WO\Ind up under
Mize, an Augusta native who
a five-way ue for the lead entering an azalea bush.
lives in Columbu.s, Ga., almost
today 's second round. Nicklaus . He had IP talce an unplayable lie didn' t make the tournament, either.
'now is the oldest player to lead at and settled for a bogey.
But his wife gave birth to their
any point during a Masters.
·
The eagle came on the next par- third son laSt week; ll!en told him
The 63-year-old Palmer! who's 5, a 5~yarder, fairly straiglll with he could go play golf now. He shot
won four Masters but hasn~ t won water m front of the green. l&gt;iick· 33-34.
·
on the tour in 20 years., wound up laus stood over his second shot,
Rain earlier in the week has
in more familiar old-timer territory 232 yards from the·green, with a I · made the course play longer, but it
with a 2-over 74. but not before he iron in his hand.
also has slowed down Augusta
"gOt the. day going for some of the
"Then, I got to thinking maybe National's infamously fast greens.
game's great gray players.
that was a little bit too much club" The opening round started under
' ' I felt like I was 30 again," he said. So,hepulledout the2-lr00 . perfect weather conditions,
Palmer sa.id. "I had visions of and knocked it within 8 feet for although today's start was moved
grandeur. The clubs felt like tooth· eagle:
. up an hour to 7:30 a.m. EDT
picks I was sopum~."
.~
·
He birdied·No. 17 by sinking.a because of a Stann that's Cltpected
. Nicklaus was tted for the lead 16-foot putt, and he wound up his pass through bringing rain and
"with Corey P.avin, Larry Mize, round using only 27 putts.
thunder.
.

'

.

-..

Many of the pretournament
favorites ~truggled in tlie first
roUild. Two-time Masters charnpio~ Nic~ FaldJ? shot 71, PGA champ1on .N1ck. Pric;e of Ztmbabwe and
rookie Phd Mickelson carded 72s,
Dav~ Love shot 73 and.Greg NormanandPayneStewartwereat74.

-

Dear Au laJM!en: This is ill .
~cteiiCe to the Ieaer lboill the .who ru on the ballot Ia Clark

Sports briefs--

{orwa.rd, her lawyers Iold federal
By PEGGY ANDERSEN
SEATILE (AP)- The fate of a jurors in closing arguments Thurslawsuit ftled by a woman who says day.
' 'We're not here asking for
she was gang-raped by Cincinnati
sympathy
... we're asking for fair- ·
Bengals players more th;m two
ness,
"
lawyer
Victoria Vreeland
years aao .now rests with a sixsaid.
member Jury.
But defense ·attorney Peter ·
The U.S. District Court iurY was
Byrnes
argued the woman. identito·begin deliberating today on the
fied
in
court
records as Victoria C.,
validity of a release agreement the
"made
a
choice
in 199l... to accept
woman signed after accepting
$30,000
to
settle
vigorously disput$30,000 from some players.
ed
Claims."
The decision will determine
whether the woman can proceed · Victmia C. "must accept
with her civil .law&amp;uit seeking dam- responsibility for the choice she
ages (rom the NFL club and 19 made," Byrnes said.
Victoria C. left the courttqpm in
current or former players - 12
accused of raping her at a Seattle- tears during Byrnes' dosing
'
area hotel and seven of standing by remarks.
Vreeland
said
the
plaintiff
was
and doing nqthing to help her.
n'ot
competent
to
unjlerstand
that
The release agreement should be
thrown out so the lawsuit can go the agreement she s1gned in 1991
·

Miami . University's stud'.'ent
• '
ne_wspaper t 0· d rop 'Red Sk_IDS

n

.
Mize waves to ._e r...,....t
finishing the
round of this year's Masters Tournament Tburs~
day at S under par to.shar~ tbe lead wjth Jack Nicklaus and three
·
·
others. (AP)

..

r:easons.

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Jose Feliciano
·has come under ftre frQm Miami's
· Cuban exile ccmmunity for agreeing to visit Cuba.
· · The Grammy-winniitg · folk
: singer accepted an invitation to .
. receive an award this summer in
:·cuba on behiuf of fellow Puerto
· Rican Daniel Santos, a pop singer
. who died of a heart attack in
· November. ·
· "Jose Feliciano, who for many
: years was blackballed in Cuba,
: now betrays us and goes to meet
· with the tymnt Fidel Castro," said
: Tomas 6arcia Fuste, news director

my staff and membership, I would like to extend my personal
invitation to you, your family and frtends to visit with us this
EASTER · SUNDAY, APRIL 11th and see how much we have
grown in the three short years we ha,ve been here. Our
SUNDAY SCHOOL begins at 10:00 A.M.;
A speCial program r
.
has been planned for the MORNING WORSHIP HOUR
.
beginning at 11:00 A.M. and the EVENING WORSHIP
SERVICE at6:00 P.M. I invite you to come and . ~njoy the
outstanding performance of the Hillside Baptist Church Choir
as they bring you a special El\STER .CANTATA. We would_alsp
like to present to you a special gift we have picked just for the
occasion. We are looking forward to seeing y~u.
..
..
' . REV.' JAMES R. ACREE; JR.

MIAMI. (AP) -

;.

p bll Notl
·
· u C
ce
The propoeed v•c•llon
baing fully deecrlbed ••
followe: Bl9lnnlng •t the
E.. terly edge of tlie
junctlon'of T-201 Md T-181,
thence Euterfy •bout 700
Mhlong pr-IT-201 llld
along • tum to the rightllld.
Southerly abouteno- 255
r..tlllong pr•ent T-201for
e total ofebout 055 f..t lo
the Northerly edge of T-390
In Section I, T2N, R13W.
The r,urpoee . of the
eforen cl viewing end
h•rlng wil be to determine
whether
or notoftheSellebury
nc•lion
of
• portion
Townlhlp Aolld No. T-201 •
clucrlbed In the Petition

PubliC Notice
County CommlllionJira 18
for the publlo'e convenience

.nd . . .,..
..
The ""'llllon lo v-ile pr11t

of Selllbury Townehlp Road
No. 201 m·ey be ~•••d
copied 11 the Com·
mleelo-'e Office, Mel;p
County Courlhouoe, Pom·
.eroy,Ohlo.
Melge County

.,d

.
Commlulon. .
Miry Hobolllller, Clerk
(4) I, 16, 2tt:

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4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

of radio station WQBA-La CUban- goal kicking dolphin named
Snowflake in his movie debut, a
isima.
Feliciano said Wednesay dllil he comedy caiJed "Ace Ventura: Pet
jUSl wants to ••tate to tha1 sullr:ring Deteclive.''
The story line has Marino and
nation a little musical relief."
• 'I accept the invitation the way the"Dolphins team mascot getting.
an athlete 3ccepts an invitalioo to abducted, With a Super Bowl vicparticipate in lhe Olympics." he tory on the line, offbeat detective
said. "I am not politically Ace Ventura is caiied in 10 unraVel
involved; I'm just a musician, . the mysterious chain of events that
thai's aU."
follows.
Production is set to begin May
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Miami 10 in Miami, with some scenes to
Dolphins quak!lbact 0.. Madno be filmed at Joe Robbie Stadium.
is teaming up with "In LiviD&amp;
The Morgan Creek production
Color" _.Jim
and 1 field. will be disttibuted through Wamer
·
Bros.

POMEROY BOWLING
LANES
"Just for Fun"

NEW YORK (AP) -Coming
:soon to your bookstore: The world
according to Jerry Seinfekl.
The stand-up oomic and sitcom
star is Wllltin&amp; on an as-yet untitled
book dill will give the 38-year-old ·
cbmedian's take on everything
from tues to tipping, junkets to
junk food, and dating to dressing.
"I just thought a bonk of my
material would reach the millions
or Americans who like comedy but
hate the idea of someone llllcing
directly to them," Seinfeld 5l!id.
The book, published by B~tam,
is due out in September to coincide
with t11e season premiere of NBC's
"Seinfeld."

LAWN..&amp; GARDEN

REDUCED! Middleport• 2 Slory lrame home wilh 3
bedrooms, newer repairs, new electric heat pump,
fireplace, anlc space, basement on appro~ . I acre of
ground. Now Aeldng $41,1100

Youth Bowling Tournament
Stanihg April 24 at ·1 :00 p.m. ·
Register at the Lanes by
April 19 &amp; pay your $5.00

DEXTER· 1 112 Slory frame home with 7 rooms, 4
bedr!loms, ceUar, garden area, added insulalion,large
front porch. $11,000

registration fee. Open to
ages 6 to 16. Prizes and
trophies will be awarded.

POMEROY-Vacant lot on Spring Ave. a possible good
site lor mobile home paved slreel, utilities, immediale

382 E. 2nd

pDI&amp;OI&amp;ion.

992·3432

15,000

RACINE. 8.5 aeres with t978 12 X 65 mobile home &amp;
older house, 2 septie systems. TPC waler. ASKING
$23,000

NEW AT OSCAR'S
57·59 Court $1.

Gallipolis

BUFFET

RIVER FRONT LOTS'- Several to choose lrom various
prices, call for details &amp; locations!

6DAYSAWEEK
11 :15AM·1•45 PM
LUNCHEON BUFFET
6 PM-8:30PM
EVENING BUFFET
12 Noon-S PM
SUNDAY BUFFET

.COMMERCIAL BUILDING -W. Main St. in. Pomeroy
heavily !raveled area 1800 sq. ft . 4 bedroom apartment
upstairs. Great investmenV business opportllnity. $33,000
WE NEED USnNGSI CALL US FOR DETAILS ON
USTING YOUR HOME OR PFIOPERTYI
HENRY E. CLELAND.........;...............................992-61111
.KATHY CLELAND....... _.............................- .....812-6181
TRACY BAINAGEf1.............................................148·2438

· OFFICE......._................................................... ~ •• 982..225i

'

In 1609, English explorer ·Henrv
Hudson, wbo was employed by
Dutch, sailed into New York harbor.
He then sailed up to Albany.

SPECIAL SECTI·ON
IN THE

..

•POINT PLEASANT RE.GISTER
•GAlliPOLIS. DAILY -TRIB·UNE ··
•POM.EROY DAILY SENTINEL

'Cheet:s' cast
tapesfinal show
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Film·
ing of the fmal sccoc of "CIIeen"
ended in tears as Ted Danson,
JGrs!W Alley and other cast members bade fan:well to the 11-yearoldsitcom.
Most of the 90-minute episode.
. featuring the return of Shelley
Long as the .intellectual barmaid
Diane Chambers,- was shot last
· week because of the actress' time
constraints. But the rma1 scene for
the May 20 finale was shot
Wednesday following filming of
the second-to-last episode.'
. .
· Woody Harrelson, who plays
Woody th'c bartender. $aid just
reading through the ftnal script was
"heavy."
.
.
·
"Boy, did I cry! Just bawled my
eyes out," he sa!d.
.
.
.
Harrelson wd he Wlll.mtss his
fel,Iow cast .members tembly: b~t
he s not entirely sorry ~ nanon 5
most popular TV bar )Viii be clos·
ing down after 27 I episodes on
NBC
·
·

'

AD'IERfiSING DEADLINE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1993 • NOON
IIISERTION DATE:
FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993

'

•

· CAlL DAVE OR ·p• J.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
.
.

•••Y.

Bette Davis, best known lor her
roles in such movies as "All About
Eve" and •N!Iiv, Voyager.~ was born
April s. 1908. in Lowell. Mass.

byH&amp;R Block

EXCHANGE STUDENT
BENEATS
Doe
h&gt;NOA st de t r e
.
· s an exc..... '"" u n IV..
1n yo_ur home?. II.you ~r "yes,
you may qualify lor a little-known
charjtable deductiOn. The . student
must attend school lull time in 1he
twelfth grade or lower, be a member
of your househok!. and live with ytlU ·
under a written agreement between
you and a qualified organization. The
student' cannot be related 'to you or
·b.
d dent a ....._Arne ·
e your . epen
· ouu~.
ncan
a~d fore1gn students entitle you to
the deduction.
1\sSuming .you qualify, you can
'deduct as a charitable contribution
to 550·per month of your ex·

J:OO·hrk

·2100 te hrk
torNow

61II. . . . . . .IOY .·

· · ......

&amp; FI

' •

WHII••• 12s00 te htk
Bell Machine Cloeed
.
' .

If '
'

••

.

57·59 Court St., Gallipolis
(614) 44W545

"Open 7 Day• A Week"
Mon.~Sat11 arn-11 pm '

bioY our Dm1y Luncheon Buffets
11 am·2 ~ and our Dinner Buffets from
6·9 pm, or ~order~ off the menu/'

FRIDAY IS
•FISH &amp; SEAFOOD NITE"
TO

MENTION A FEW:

eBrolled Tlllpla Fillets- It 'Ia ll!lld that this .
Is the fish eerved at the Last Supper.
-scallops aOyster Stew
•-c:rab Meat -clams •Shrimp
i'CniOie e&amp;rolled Salmon Fillets
(wlthlchaaee -lemon ~ wine sauce)
-frog Uga •Sciuld
ellanV Vegetable, c...,rolel &amp; Deeaerts
ALL THIS l MORE FOR 1
Alwaya30 to.40 Dlahaa-

8.50

a

. ..

Invites the_
.Public To
.
Easter Worship .

...

TaxNews.

you and attends school. You cannot
Claim 111is deduction, howMr, for
foreign studenl IMna with you under •
an aoieement whiCh allows your
child similar privileges with a family
in another countty. . • ·
. ·.

-

.'

'

525 North Second St.
Middleport, Ohio

,MASON DRIVING
UNGE · ,·
up
• penses to support the SIUdent for
NOW OPEN .
· each month the student lives with

992·2155·
. -

.

VICTORY
'BAPTIST CHURCH

STUDENTS OF THE MON111 - 1'1DtrOJ EIIP 1 ..., adents or the moath ror Marclt are 1-r, su- Siden, S...10a
Soulsby, Alisia Burton, Samara Stone, Micltelle RII)'OII. Back,
Andy Davis, Robert Day, Kasey William$ 81111 Billie~

THE BODYGUARD

..

----Names in the news---

.

.

As Pastor of HILLSIDE 8APTIST CHURCH and on behalf of ·

.

OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Miami statement again.st it, " Cox said
University is several months away Wednesday.
from taking any action to distapce
She said the move is a follow-up
itself from the " Redskins" nick- to an editOrial the newspaper ran in
name ·of i!S athletic teams, but the- November demanding that the
school's student newspaper said it name be changed.
University president P~ul Risser
wiD stop using that term.
The Miami Student will replace ·plans to hold a forum in the fall to
the nickname with generic refer- study whether to continue the use
ences suc'h as "Miami hockey of the Redskins nickname.
Some Indian activists have
team" or "Miami baseball teatn~"
objected
10 "Redskin .. as 3 racist
said Jennifer Cox, ediUJr o{ the stureference.
dent ne.wspaper.
··
B.ut Miami University repeated··we would like to see the teim
changed by all means, but we ly has noted that it uses the term
didn't do it as any kind of political and the Indian mBSCOl for its teams
in line with !lie approval and guid·
Two Miami Universiiy
ance of the Miami tribe of Okla·
homa.
- ·
·
grid coaches promqted
The Miami Indians once roamed
oxroRD. Ohio (AP) _. ~i .southwest, before the federal govUniversity footl/all coach Randy ernment forced Native Americans
Walker has announced ~o promo- westward m.ore than a centui'y ago. ·
Phillip Shriver, a retired Miami
tionnmong his staff.
COLONY THEATRE
· TerrY Hoeppner, who coached . Un.iversitr president, Said he disthe·Redskins' defensive ~ks the ag.rees wnh the paper's decision
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
past seven
has been PI'O· because the'.Miami Jribe in Oli:ll!.·
UWI
COS'IIIII &amp; WIIIIIIY HOUSTOII
m'Oied 10 assJSWII head coach. ·
homa has told him it doesn't con~ ..
. Ron Johnson, a graduate assis- · sider the term offensive.
•
tant the past two seasons, has been · "Wh~n the Miami Indians say
I
'.
.
.
hired as a full-time assistant and · . ·they don t want us to use the term,
.
SHow TiMES:
will coach running backs,. He I'U be the flfSt to make the motion
. FIII.-IAT.-IUN. 7:30 I 10:00
replaceS Pat Nardozzi, who left to to drop ii," Shriver $aid.
MONDAY THRU tHURSDAY
becoiiiC UnebaCkers coach at Rhode.
OM E¥WIIng ll!ow 7:30 .
Islatid. · ·
·
Admloolon$1.50
• -~~~·
.

decision Thursday. Bassis, chosen sense of the importance of dive,rsity
ftom among 129 candidates, will . on ..a .campus which includes both
assume his post July 15.
women and minorities, and a real
"I think my values match per- sense of the importance of ,commufectly with the historic values of nity iit a liberal arts college set·
Olivet College," Bassis said. ·\' ... a ting."
.
dedication to liberal arts, a deep

IAII·Iir====~~~~~~=i~§~l~ pr-ntad to "'• .ao.rd !''

meant she was releasing the players ··'
from any further liability.
-·
Victoria C. believed the document embodied the agreement she
thought she and former Bengals
player Iekey Woods had reached
over ·the phone: that she would
keep quiet in exchange for'$30,000
and ongoing help with medical
bills and other expenses, Vreeland
said.
The document was signed by
Victoria C. on Oct. 5, 1991. She
filed her lawsuit six months later.
Defense lawyers contend the
release is a bindin(! agreement.
Lawyers for VICtoria C. want it
voided on grounds she signed
under duress, without legal counsel
.and forinsuJficientcompensation. ·
. Byrnes tejeeted the contentJ'on
that Victon. C. was coerced into
signing:
"No oneover
washer,"
in a said
position
of
dominance
Byrnes,

who represents seven players who
say they had no contact with \he
plaintiff on the night in question.
"Let me suggest to you·... that
she held the gun" with her threat
that she would go public with her
allegations."
Vreeland cited expert testimony
from psychologist Shirley Feld·
man-Summers. who said Victoria
C.'s ability to ajlp~iate the significance of the 'document. was hampered by post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from the alleged
rape and below-normal intelligencc.
And Vreeland said its effects·
were nO! J08C!e clear to Victoria C.•
by CtncllliUW lawyer )ames Peny,
· who prepared the document for 14
ptar~ lll)!l arranged ~ paym~L
. He d1d not 1!8~ •.. I!, you St.gn
. thiS, you know,,lhis IS 11, she said. .

. Olivet C.ollege announces appointment of new president

son- """'

.

Jury to decide Victoria C's lawsuit

Page-7

OLIVET, Mich. (AP) -· Dr.
Michael S. Bassis, provost arid
executive vice president at Antioch
feel TIJICiher, you should tell his University in Yellow Serings,
JllfeniS it's time for them to go. · Ohio, has been named- pres1tlent of
Agnic on a deadline, and stick to iL Olivet College.
Olivet trustees announced their

Ann

Friday, April 9, 1993

.

;County, Nev., under the name
\
1"Almisbty Clod.•
Anyone who will allow him or
ChangiDa Oliii'I.IIIIIIC lilre.thlt ia
llenelf 1!1 be ilnposed 0n for 14
perfectly lcpi.However, die public •
!MQI!w Itt!&amp; I lllrioua aaerUVCIICIS
needs to be IWII'e thai dlil ....ick
poblem.
tltiils the support group
couJ,d aeiUally put IOIIIC kook in
office. Many people who ue lbiJia.) Ia ........... ., ......... · you should be looting for.
unhappy with the available lbcmmllltdle..,._onfi&amp;h
Dear A11 Lnden: The
.~ willw;~ for • ualalown Pll""'ed lite I dnwk 1110Ve. btl followina is the beat adviCe for
m adtird party. BelieVe me, it would hnilll wdtM I few ftlllticw DJes • *.li•c rr;.. d+ipe m~~e~. 1 hope
be beaer not ID CUI a vcMe at aD ia his n-c• I •• •I ~ rellle Ill die you will find room for it in your·
sih!efjm
.rather lhlil wile for
colmm:
know IICIIIIiJIIIIbouL
JMy huabdd 8lld I 111Ye beea
\VIlli ,on -here
Ia Cowlilz Camty, W&amp;Wnaton married only a 1111a1t lime. His I*·
\VIlli ,on hear here
"Absolutely Nobody~ received
et111 arc illepi lfiens Tiley bite
\VIlli ,on say bere
pe~~:ent of the VOle. hoplo no doubt round-trip lictcu bact to ~ir
Let it aay bere
2
In Memory
Public Notice
.voted for him • a profelt apina homdend, ·but 1 . . pth•iw 10
When you leave bere. •• A
the olber ~tel. It probably .woada if they bate lilY •• •Ilion ol RETIRED PLUMBER IN CAL·
PUBUC NOTICE
In loving
Notice Ia hereby given
I!CVer occurred to them dill "'- · .,mg lltcm. They UVC I lot 111CR IENTE, CALIF.
DEAR PLUMBER: Thanks for
of
IIIII on the 2Sth cloy of April,
was an actul person behind tbc money thiD we have, but dley
m&amp;ll)Ory
·
OUr
1... ltll:30 Lm.,the BoMI
name. !nc.idenlllly, • Absolutely bavea' plid for one liD&amp;Je diia&amp; IIIOie wonis of wisdom. And when .
father,
of County CommllllonN•
Nobody died before the election. - lliDI:e they atived. M •wttile, we JtiM leave, pleue like all your IDOls
will view the . propooed
witb
you.
GEORGE
C.
·
v..tlon
of 0.181 mllee ofTP.B., LONGVIEW, WASH.
ueii!V88liiW 10 Illite eadlmea.·
201,
Roe•
Hill Ro1d,
·
DEAR LONGVIEW: ~ gca
My in-laws hate heal br.R for 14
Wllal aM yoMgM tM person who
COOPER,
llllebury
Townehlp,
Malfll
.the kind of panmeu~lbey de 1e ve. IIIOWJ!In They biYe . . I ...0 ..._ _ _.._ 7 •-- r - - " - •
on hiS
County, Ohio 1nd eeld
If none of the Cllldidala running biUlie on lllillcla wums. r.idt -..~-·~~g. 11111"""'-'s booA:·
Boerd will hold e 11n•l
let.
"Gtlru."
is
iMa/fora
lliglustiiii/J
48th
birthday.
IMIIrlng
on the propo•ed
tdcV'JIIIdjsts
and
.-J.«.
bellers,
meets wilh my 1j41UVII,I will write
or
coffee
ltlble.
"Gems"
is
a
co/leeSadly
missed
by
v-tlon
at 10:30 •.m. on
in the- Of IOIIIDUIIC Whole name der junt of every coaceivable
rioltofAIIIILaltdos'mostrtq~sted
April
28th
In the office of
. I.iptillll.
Is ~I. suppDil
J1011P - · 1111/J .......... Stltd a ~lf:.ad·
is not on the ballot but who I feel is 1
George
and
Melge
County
Commie•.or YJCIIDIJ
. of
_,_,___..
. . . , . ..... _ , worthy of the job.
~
_,.
Chn"stina Cooper
elonere; C9urt Ho111e,J
,_,..._
' . Dear ADII 4Dclen: In I R!Cellt P.K. IN WYOMING
dreMed,lo/lg,
tllw:lope
a cMck bllsWu-siu
or JNIMY order
for ~~========·~~P~o:me:•:oy:,:O:hl:o·~---l
column, you c!eai:ribed the pUJht of
DEAR P.K.: l'don'l blow of lilY tllld
•~ oc ( .,. • 1.....
__,
a man who wu sick and tired or his suppon sroup for victims of .,..OJ ,...., IIIC .....,s postage a....
Real Estate General
wife's relallvea ipongios off him. !p"Q8ins n:lllives, bull do lJave I
litutdlillgJ
Gems, cto
AM
P.O. 10:
Bo%-11562,
Clticago,/11.
(They ate him out of house ud suJFI!ion for you. Locale your tiers.
60611·0561.
(/11
Canada,
send
.home. 1'111 up the phoae and eleclrii: barJrbone (I'm - you biYe one)
· billJ and never offaed to pay for a - let )'0111' 1Juslwwl blow bow you $51J7.)

B~baU

NEW YORK (AJ&gt;) - The
majors leagues set records for total
and avera$e auendance during
spring ttaimng. The 48 clubs drew
·3,041,788, topping last year's
auendanee of 2,754,300. The average of 7,242 broke the previous
record of 6,920, set last year.
Toronto set a record with 149,763
fans for its 14 games in Dunedin,
Fla. The previous record of
136,494 was set by llaltimore in
1991.

The Daily Seniinel
·

'Absolutely·Nobod gets votes,.

.M orris'· shoulder injury more
~serious than originally.thought

..

By
The
Bend
.

•

Footban
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns &amp;g!eed in principle 10 extend quarterback Bernie
Kosar's contract four more years ·
through 1999.
··
·

By JOE KAY
He gave up 10 runs and six
.
.
CI_N,CINNATI. (~P) . - Hal homers in five in!Jings of an exhibi·
Judge Dtbble?
..
Morns s~oulder IDJury .•s. much tion loss to Detroit last week. It
Some of the.R¢5 !lie orgaruzmg
.more senous than ongmally was more of the same Wednesday a !Dock court ~o fme playe~s for
.
as MonttealroDed up eight hits and mtstakes. Rel!ever Rob Dtbble
thought . . .
The .cmcmnau Reds fi.r~t base- · six runs off Belcher in the first wan~ to be the J~dge.
man wtll hav~ surgery Frtday !'&gt; three innings of the Expos' 14. 11
Dtbble, who s been suspended
repaiT a tom bgame~t. .0~· Melvm win,
m~ ~any other Red? .
Post, ~ shoul~ spec1ahst m Ch1ca- .
Belcher is ~etting ahead in the . ~t ~ why he w~ts ~ ~ ~e *
go, WI~ rep8lf the tom hgament by count, then givmg up hits.
Judge, pitch~r Jose R1,10 Sllld... So
Moms ~~~e.
.
"Frcm 2-2 on down\to 0-2 in hecang~vchtmselfadiscount.
Morrts WID l;le out another e1ght the count, to my way of thinking,
Canate playing again
to 10 weeks while he recovers.
the pitcher should have a tremenWilliam Canate was
Outfielder
He severely sep~ated the l~ft dous advantage. I'm not taking
sent
to
Class
AAA
Indianapolis on
shoulder March.30 m ~fight wnh advantage of it," Belcher said.
a
medical
rehabilitation
assignment
Cleveland Ind1ans p1tcher J~se "I'm Jetting two-strilce counts get
Mesa, who threw a fastball behind away
·
· Thursday.
Canate, 21, has been on the dis·
,Morris' head. Morris charged the
"i'm throwing everything with
abled
list slnce March 26 with a
.mou.nd and .tned t~ tackle Mesa, two strikes: split-fmger, change-up,
digestive
tract disorder. He's been
landmg on his throw\"g shoul~.
fastball. I'm just gelling too much
taking
batting
practice wiih the
. Both players ha~e rece1ve.d of the plate and getting it too high
Reds
for
the
past
week..
three-game suspenst~ns. Morns in the hitting zone"
plans to appeal his. wh1ch won't go
·
The Cleveland Indians are
)nto effect until he comes off the
Mitchell's r.rst homer
watching closely. They filed a
disabled lisL
•
It looks like that might not be
· Kevin Mitchell had a good day complaint when Cincinnati put
~ntil around the All-Star game. The at the plate - 4 for 6 with a two- Canate on the DL, but lhe National
run homer and three RBIS - and League found nothing1mproper.
Reds are carrying two other .first showed what he 'can do when he · The Reds claimed Canate, con·
basemen: Randy Milligan and Tim . gets a pitch to handle.
sidered one of the Indians' best
Cosio.
Morris missed four weeks last
He hit a two-run homer, his ftrSt minor-league prospec!S, of( Clevewith the Reds, into the second deck land's unproteCted list for $50,000.
·season after Charlie Leibrandt hit in left-center field in the seventh The Indians want him back.
him with a pitch, breaking his right inning off Jeff Fassaro. He's been
hand . Morris missed another 15 hitting the ball up the middle and to
Cincinnati must keep him on the
days with a pulled hamstring late in right field more often than
. noL
major-league roster the entire seathe season.
"That's the ftrst pitch this year son or lose him to waivers; which
they've given me that I could reaDy would give Cleveland a chance to
Belcher bamed
pull,"
Mitchell said. "Everything rec.laim him for $25,000. Canale's
.Right-hander Tim Belcher can't
explain why he's gouen hit so hard has been away. I've ~ot to take time on the disabled list counts as
what they're giving me. '
major-league service.
lately.

·.

•

DIIIII'tllnclu~l

· Oscar's, of c;ptilraelt

.

.

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• I

I

"

SUNRISE
SERVICE••••••••••••.7:00 A.M.
.
SUNDAY SCHOOL.••••••~.~ 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP and CANTATA•• ll :00 A.M.
CANTATA ••••••••••~••••••••••••••• 7:00 P.M•.
..._

-

JAMES E. IEESEE, PASTOR

Come Join Us
This Sunday
For Worship
and Fellowship.
'

.. '

�•
P~~ge

a ·· The oany·Sentlnel

Friday, Al)rU 9, 1993

OhiO

COMPliiiiiTARY
FACIAL

, HAULING
LIME SlONE,
GUYIL -&amp; COAL

01
P

Cllun:b afGod ofProplleq

., ()Mo... ofCIIrlol

OJ. ~Rd. df SL RL JCiO
Puur. Pal H"""" •
s...dly ~ . 10 a.m. .
Wonhil&gt; • II o.m.
wodaeldly &amp;..;... -.7 p.m.

lllW. MoiaSL
Pulor. Aadlew Milos
Suodoy Scloool • 9:30 11-"'Wonlip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WW' daySemou ~ 7p.m.

33226 N

a...... .

7 ='• Home R4.

~=~~~=
Free
Mutt...._

Pu10r:
Solwday Semce • 7:30p.m.
Somday Scboal · 10 lUll.
Wanhip · ll a.m.
Wedaesdly Seovioe-7:30p.m.

......., FlntBopllot

,_,-~w

Ball Maia'SL
Pa-.llr. Leo Mcnia
$undly Scbi&gt;al • 9-.30 LID.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

, ... ·~1111

,_,B. t.aorO'Ikymt
Sunday Scbool· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
w hy Sca:iool • 7:00_p.m.
Flnl Boptiiii:CIIordl
61biOdPsbDerSL

To....

I

•

Sunday Sdoool· 9:1~ .....
Wonbip -10:15 a.a, 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
·
lDrd's Su-.111 Sunday af evay maalb.
WedDadoy Sa flee. 7:00p.m.

._,_Rick
............Hanls

Youlb
Sundoy Sdlool· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WednadlySerricoo · 7:00p.m.
SIIYarR•~

Pilla: Bill Uale
Suaday School· IOo.m.
W:onhip . lla.m., 7:30p.m.
weilueocfar -..7:30p.m.

' MI.UoloaBos: ·
'"-:JaeN.

. Sunday !ld&gt;ool-9:t a.m.
E . _ · 6:30p.m. Wednoldly Seoviool· 6:30p.m.

_.._ .BIJ!d!l
Pill« : Rev. Eul Shiller
Sunday Sdlool • 10:30 a.m.

Wonhip • 9:30 LID· .
Thunclay sem-- 7:30p.m. ·

rr-

Wllllllpllol Cllllrdl
llliOI SL RL 7, MMtAJtpwt
SuDdoy Scbool· 10 a.m.
E......_·7:30p.m.
Thunday Seoviool· 7:30

Old-·

Hll-....... a.wm

,....Q_wu.

oiCiorlol

....., Bill
Sunday School • 9 lUll.
Wonilip · 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

-

Cll- &lt;ICIIrllt

Suodoy School· 9:30 .....
Wonilip ; ID-.30 l.m., 7 p.m.
MillorS..~. w.v

Wednelday SeMoes • 7 p.m.

_F~:.~
Sunc~or Schaal·

to .....

~~ · II a.m., 6p.m.
W
y Servi.., • 7 p.m.

F. . . R• Bopllll
, . _ : Ariu18urt

Suadly Scbool · 10 a.m. '

Wonhip · II a.m.

ML Marlall Bopllol
Fourth ol Mlin SL, Middlqx&gt;n

Putor. a...Gilbert Clli&amp;. Jr.
Sunday Sd&gt;oal · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:~5 a.m.

Ani!Qully Boptlol

P,aor. :kc:nnelb Smilh

. Soildly Sdlool , 9:30'a.m.
Woi;hip - 10:45 Lm.
Thandly ScM- • 1:30 p.m.
R • - rr. Wll Baptlol .,
SalemSL
PuiOC Rev. ·Poul Taylor
Scmdsy SchoOl · 10 a.m' .
· E...un1 - 7p.m.
Wednesdly S.m.. · 7 p.m.

Mill Work .
Cahrnet Makinr.
Syracuse

H.-lock Grove Church

Puur. ""'-'- Baker
Sundly Scbool· 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • IG-.30 a.m. '
Thundly so..;.,.. . 7:30p.m.

Su-

EuiLolart

Put.or: RoprGili&lt;C
SIDIIy School· 10 a.m.

GrllouoU.W ..... "I
WO!Ihip • 9:30 a..m. O• A 2nd Sun).
1:'30 p.m. Clnl i. 4lb Sun)
W-ySema.-7:30p.m.

ReediVIIe Cburdl afCIIrlll
·1'1-. Philip Stunn

......

Wonbip·9a.m.

Pua:a..laJSundsy Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. 7 p.m.
Thunday ~ . 7 p.m.

Chnst1an Un10n
H - C~urdl af Cllrlol ..
Chrlstlaa 1Jnloa
'Thenln Dulhlm
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
E...W.1 • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sem&lt;e~ • 7 p.m.

Mllp Caoperod., Plrtlb

N..-.cliuter ·

'

Hutfoni, W.Va.
-Rev. Dovid McMonis
Sundly School - llo.m.
Wonbip - 9:30-a.m., 7:30p.m.
w.....,..y Service• · 7:30p.m.

a....

·.

Joppa

Pastor: Bnlllda Weber

Church of God
MI. M - Cllurdl of God
.
Racine
Putor. Rev. JIIIICI Souelfleld
Sundly School - 9:4~ uft.

Loq&amp;au-

E..run1 • 7 p.m.
WCdnesday Seoviees • 7 p.m.

1'1-. Rev. Sola J...,_

Rutland Church 'af God • ·

TorellO...... - Co. Rd. 6:1, .•
Sundly&amp;:bool· 9:30 lolil.
w~. to-.30 o.m.

lot.t. 3n1Suadoy ·7:30p.m.
~School · 10:30 a.m.
W
y Servic:eo - 7:30 p.m.

..· K&amp;C JEWELERS ·
212 E. !o'larn Strttt
992·3785. Pqmeroy

RAWUNGS-&lt;OATS_

MEIGS TIRE
CINTER, INC.

_.

J.... DUll Fultz

.

tiiM101 .

8triet
Ohio 46710

Mlddllp&lt;ln ~,.....

. Cllrlotlu Follow*lp Center

Sunday Scbool· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10-a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd .t. 4lb Scm.)

s.., Rlllland

.

,

a

992-54~2

Nati'anwide' lns. Co.

992
. .-2975
..

104 W. M••rl
t9l ·1ll.l Pomeroy

,.''

211 llorlh

992-21_21

.

985-4473

667-6179
2· 7·9:Z·tfd

CHARLIE'S

.DODR WOR:K.

aiiiUMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES
'25 HOUR

ROOFING

584 North 8lcond Avonua
lllddlopoll, Ohicl45160

the Opealag of their
lnfant/Totldler Progra111

AIIIOUICII

~
Snodgrass Upholstery

POOR BOY TIRES
STRUT &amp; SHOCK
2 Fro•t Struts • Labor
• 4 WlleellliJIIIMIIt
Prices Starltng at

, "Helping You To Re&amp;o¥er Your ln¥estment" ·
. Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office S.eatlng

1

..

GIV81Way

w.-

B~nany Spaniel, 5 """""' old.
Ill ohalo. 30I-I1HII7 .....

4pm.

mau

Female Pltl Bull PlOP, wll
good waloh dog, pnllr loii!IIJ
304112 ttli.
FIM kiltoM. 304-41111-11120.

••hout .......
Kit-

·-··14-44f.-... .

Aide lupeola Dloh-

One monlh 'old .......
114-148-2433 onrt(oM.

ATTENTION

Po-ed by Milrcury OUtbOIIrda

CATTLE OWNERS

J. S. MARINE
I

Kill&lt; Undersehullz, A.F.A. certified journeyman •rrior io
offering his hoof trimming !18rvicasiD callle ownors.
15 years experience as a protoslional tarrier. .
All trimming is done with hand tools (not gnnders) 111d
us• in g_a_p&lt;)' ~~le rolover chute~
will lravol up 10 1V. hours trnm Little Hocking, Ohio
and requires a minimum of 15 head of cattle par visit to trim.

c.u ,., •• •1"'!"'614•989·2405

.

3mlt3/1

Loat &amp; Found .

Found: coon ~. block,

Found: ....n aoor ltmale dog,

Wtdn-y, SJI. 124, -.n
Rutllnd ana l.anp¥1111, 114-lQ.

2424.

Found: Wl!llwalch On Flnl

-lpllan.

avenue,_ Clllilpolla. . _... Aarl4
111. Can W~h
446-8404.

ALL Yonl SoiH It Polclln
Advanoe. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dly bllhn the lid lo lo Nn.
Sundly edition • 2:00 p.m.
Frldly. IIOIIIIIJ lldMioa • 2:00

p.m. Solurdly.

Aorlll I 10, 1:30 To 5~1 Rolole
li41. 454 LIOn .......... Roin
Or Shine, 4 Famllr -chi- To
Adun Clolhte. W V.nl Fon,

Auto ~~r llonualo, XRIO, 4
10 HIIW••d 011140
Stoln . Flllor (Aimotl - ).
AHo llloJ&lt;, And

llloe.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

PH. 614·985·3949 .
HOW OFFERING...;•• .•
OIL AND LUBE SERVICE
TIRE RiPAIR AND ROTATING
.3/24/93/ I •o pd

,

.

Middleport, o•lo 45760
(614) 843•5264 1 ~n

"'000

,.,....,n.... ·.

Auto-Rntlib

w.•, .r::-

1411 State Rt 7

112 Norlh ~tumd lvt.

·
. I "I

.
I

I•

........,

'

I

lox l89

_.,with

. •I

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

l-ife • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accldenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

h-•

s,.et.l . . . . P

Allo-

U:

7

~1mo.

614 446·0731&gt;

DID

OUR GOAL

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK · ·
· HARD FOR YOU.
'•BP Dloael Supreme.•.Try It, there Is • ·
: difference.
•Minimum liO Cetane
•Low ash and·aulfur
•Will not gel In winter time.
.
'
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru ..AY 31ST
Special farm terme whh p~~yment 4 tim- • y•r
nKo:t

· · a lid NO INTER~ST or FINANCE CHARGE.

·

.

· Larry E. Mldor

1.:eoo.s98-5654

.

• .·

·'

•

~14-

· Yard Sale

&amp;. VIcini~ -

Rocky R. Hupp; D.C.U. • Agent ·

s-

...., Joppo Rd. • - 11MIJI.
3126 or11MIUI47.

, ......... _ ..... &amp; ,...,... ........

RACINE - Baeh... Rood - This 3 bod100m, 2 bllh
,.hoMo noedo work. but could be made nlca wilh· lh• 11(111
· haridyman'a lauch. It aill on"1.1 I4 ICr8 lot IIIII h• 1 1111·
tutk: vi8W of tho countryside. Wao $1UDO. '
•
NOW $17,000

a-,

GallipoliS
&amp; Vlclnlly

Special arrangements possible tor 4-H gmups and dubs.

•

Ell.

I
Qd ~"Min
Slud, 1-..Mi. "
. --

7

SaVII Big on Voyagers

. 992•7553 ·

992"7075 .

•

129.95 '+ Tax

UCINE,OHIO
614·949·2202
6 4.71.l~l. ,OO'

15 v••,.
Expor-

t--

We will NOW serve children
6 moriths to 12 years of age.
Call us for'inore Information
(814) 99~·7328"
311011-

•
:i/3193 lin

RIDIIRI.*-1 RIDE

...

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

742·2328

PH. 614-256-6160

PORTLAND - It you'ralciOldng lor thot eu....er home on
lho river, ,...,. got it on. to """ bedo"""' fa"" hOUM
hoe naw wtndowo, 2 car ~. 2 bomo, lind ., (!lei
dllcNn hoUtllllllng on ·app10r. t31
2Q to2S
tlllblo ICIM.
,
· AIIONQ •tiO,ODO

' .

:·

GlngerbrCKid Hoose

TROMM BUILDERS

10 mil•• eoutnof GltiHpolil
qn Bladen Road

&amp; SERVICE

'

4

(No Sunday Calls) ·
2/12192Jtfn

IIIDDLEPQRT- ... tllreet- A HM~'alpoalll. - .
' 2 lble and • five room hou.. with 2·3 - . n o . Noodo
· quite 1 bll of """' inside, bioi tho Olllllda looka pNIIy

Pnmeroy

S~lES

614·992·7643

ll',IIH ( nll'&gt;llll.lllllll

· AMERICAN
LIFE and ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE.COMPANY
..

ground. Uoot Ia hayland and

Hospital

FI"E &amp;

lor

' POME~Y - ChlldrS!I:• Home Rd. - Counloy livirlg
doN 10 town. This nioo and nllll ranch hu 3 bedraoms
and lamlly 10om with woodburner. Homa h•o la~go
rooms, nlca llorage bt.ildinge, and • belutilul yiRI. CioN
ID tho hoapilll, ochoots, and 110111. For onl)i
151,000

nioe.

· Established 1913

1 '

WE DO

•.

..Di/{n,if~· and Sf&gt;r• •it~t' Al~t·ny,·..

IP«I.I\

l(d~l IJlJ2-~ , q~

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD - Approx. 7 ocru of vacaiot
1 grat building 1111.
• Wallr and eleclrtc lo avlilabl•. Owner will finanw· wilt •
-*'dOwn payment. ·
$1G,IOO

s......

P.omtroy

106 M....rry Ad.

fiEEEniiiATES

h"t pump, 2 aerao of nice laying IMd, an an older

Mhldltport,

EWING FUNERAL HOME

ot Colu .mbu ~. 'o.

. ·
· I•II!IIO••Ii•g
Stop &amp; Compare

""rogo. H•• a epoclllcular view of lh• golf COUIM$48,000
.

·swlsttER &amp; LOHSE

II S I.

.

eCo~lete

WILLS HILL RD. - A la.V.. modular, with on adtition ~n
• tho rur. Ha g morno, 4 ....._.., and 2 bolho. HSI a

· --=:.~··! ·· veterans

)

. eGar....

DRIVEWAY WORK

205 Nort'- Second Ave.
MlddleJ!OII, OH

ow.

- ~'

( .dl

Cholcelll

5540,,$2.111 Pel ............ ,.
y,., unlelar Co. (lOa) A1-G111.

Tlttru Cllostor o• Rt. 241

992-6669

.f

T-Shlrts • Hats • Uniforms
Verlety of T·Shlrt Colora and Lettering Styl•.

47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Y. Mile OH Rt. 7·

.

Mernor.ial

. •NewHOIMI

MUaed

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS~

HEY GUYSIII ~ Gloto -

To Talk To Voull 1~
Exl Por llln. Boo 18 v...$S.tl
Unlotar Co. I02oDio
0111.
NO ARQUIIEHTSI NO IIAAOINGI Jutl The 01 .,_

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

'

2 Ill mile111allb af Reedlville
... Sllte Rllute 114
Putor. Rev. 1tobat Mlrkley
Suodly Scbool· 10 a.m.
Wanbip · 7:30p.m.
·
Wodnosdly S'emeea ·7:30p.m.

.......... ""': -

992-5141

204 tondor St.
Pomeroy, .OH.

MLIItl•a•lliiW.Aw
'
(8 Cllrlol Clio...
.. .
Tau Cam r~ayc&gt;lf.CR B2 Po-.RabedSonden
. Scmdly Sd&gt;oal • 9:30a.m. . .
. Wonbip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodnosdoy5orviooo - 7:30p.m.

14M Ualled .....,_ 18l'llrllt ·

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

.

CONSJRUCIION

I)IU•U.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
·
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREt; ESTIMATES

2258 Sixth St. • (614) 992·5315

..

Un1ted Brethren

FUNERAL HOME

214 ( Main
992·5130 Pomeroy ·

(4) •• liD

ROUSH'S PRINrtNG

POMEIOY, OH.

,

U.ICMI'oiQoQordl
RL 7 '"' l'onaU)&gt; Bl·Poo•
Po-. Rev. Rabon 5mi1b, Sr.
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 ......
Wonbip • IG-30 Lm., 7 p.m. .
W.....,..y SeMce. 7 p.m.

·~

•P•a="'
........dIll...
lor
County Gorau-.

318/tfn

6

&amp;

OFFICE 99~-2886

"FNII/IInf1 K.,IVCity Fried Chic/tan "

INSURANCE __...,·,...._
· SERVICES

1DC llulbony Avo•
l'oftllnll\ Oh. 4511t •

Thla final ociiGn not
pr•ceded by propcoed
ocUon •nd Ia oppaalabla lo
EBR. OIJ Interceptor ond

Tille Jllhl: I NJ- D.
Smith Wll Not .Be RI1$LAEIIIII
For AAy Doble 00. Tholl lly
OWn.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

3·16-93-tfn

·20 Years Exp.

~1Soi.1D-pm

Real Eatate General

Seventh -Day Adventist

FISHER

Brogan-Warner.

lndiCIIIed. 11 AcUon",

Tu.., Wed, fit.

t:3o om-5:31pm

Appllcltlon No. 01 3&amp;11

36358 SR 7

949·2168

Annou~

u 01

CUSTOM SADDLES, ·
.lEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH

Rlpa/r
llclu,.: Sun. I Man. Clotocl

Wonbip -II a.m., 4 p.a. (Ill A 3nl Scm.)

Wedneda~ · 7p.m.

11\i!lolltporl

!fZm'

Shoe~

obove dooa not lncluda
rocolpt of a v'ollled

U

..._, Ll-lllllh

Sundl_y School • 9:30a.m.
B• . • 7 p.m.

.

s,...,..
FlntUollooll'l-oobJ...
.
Sunday Scbool'. 10 a.m.

ML OUYI o--oiltr Chrdl

;

, P. J. PAUUY, AGENT
. 13 .~··

Wanhip·h.m.
Suaday Sdlool· 9:45 IJD&gt;.

.

Crow's Family Restaurant

· 264 South 2nd

1::00

Harrtoae... ~~CIIarcll .

1

-

S..ij

Presby ten an

Sundly~ool - 9:30o.m.

OlllldStoeot
Sunday Scbool· 10 o.m.
Wonbip-lla.m.
W..tneocloy Seoviou • 8 p.m.

R-Ule
1'1-. Rev. Selcloll JoiiDWohhip • 9:30 a.m.

J

E.-_·6p.m.

w.o •

Wonhip -·10:45 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodnel&lt;lay7:30p.m.

Hodd"'JJCCI't a. ...

• Sunday~. 9:30 ......
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.
W~y Servic:eo · 7:30p.m.

8.-y~·IOa.m.

Fol.. Golotl Chllrdi
Lont lloaom

Betllel Cllordl
· TOWIIIhipRd.,468C
. Sunday Sd&gt;oal· h.m.
Wanhip ., 10 a.m.
."
,Wodnosdoys"eiVicu -lOam.

Wonbip ·9:30a.m.
~J.Sc:hoai· 10:30 IJII.
W
y Servic:eo · 7:30p.m.

'"
"
1'1-. Rev. Cut Bllm .

M - Cbopel Cllun:b
Sup!.: Mille Mt110o
Sunday sc:b&lt;&gt;cl; lOom.
Wonbip·llo.m., 7p..m.
Wodnelday Sem"!' • 7 p.m.

-ru...:s:!l'~ .?;;.m..

,

Wonbip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

-

Mlln A P1t1b SL
Stmday Scbool· 10 ......

.

PIJBUC NOllCE
Tho followlrig wore
rectlvedlprep11red b7 The
Ghlo Envlronm•nta Pro·
._.,tion Agency {OEPAJ l•t
w..tl. EH110Uv• datoa of
Dnlll actlona and looudatea ot propooed actions
and of drift lcllono or•
otat.d. Final actlona ·may .,.
ap-lad, In writing, within
30 cfayo of U.. dote or lhl•
notice, to Tho Environ·
m•ntal Boord of Review,
Rm. 3DO; 236 E. Town 81.,
Columbua, Oh. 43215.
Notice of any oppMI ~hall
bo llled wllh the director
within 3 dayo. Propooad
pcllono will becolllo llnel
unlooo • written adjudl·
cotlon hurlng requut lo
oubmltt.d within ao dlyo of
tho lotuanoe dale; or .the
dlractor rovlaoolwllllclrowa
tha propoa•d octl"!'. Any
peraon may oubmlt oom·
menlo and/or a mMIIng
regordlng •Y drift ocUon
"'llhln 3D dlya of the dole

Mkldlepart P1111 c
Thinl Ave. -

.... E. Mus...
Sundly Sc:hooi · IO a.m.
Wonbip • II: IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedlleldly Semoe • 7 p.m.

CGGIYIIIt Cllurdl

Sunday Scboai·IO a.m.
Thundoy Servic:eo • 7 p.m.

Public Notice

S.. RL 114, RIICiDe
Pular: Wil!Um Habadt
Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
E....... ·7p.m.
Wedaesdly ,S erricol· 7p.m. ,

Ch..-ch

mMIIng,..y ... held.
to •ny ection. lnaluclng
receipt of v•rifled COfll·
plaints,
peroon Blliy
obtain !'01 ca ol further
aellono, and additional
lnformlltlon. Unlooo olll,..··
wloe provided In nollcoo of
particular oollono, all
cGmmunlc 011ona ohall ba
oont to: Heorlng Clerk,
OEPA, P. 0. Box 1041,
Columbuo, OH. 43216-0141
Ph. {614) 644-2115. Conault
ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
Chapa. 3745-47 ond 3746-5
lor requlromenta.
Fino! loouonae of permit
to lna1811.
Ohio Dep1rtment of. .
T.-porlllllon • Dlolrlct10
Choo18r Twp. Ohio
ElfoctiVe DUo: 1113131183 .
Faollty Dncrlptlon: W•t.
wal8t
.

•r.

•t

Pentecostal
'-1-.1"-1117

DJ....._
c-••IIJ Churdl
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.

l'ulor: Helm Kline

tnlereat exieta, •

Fridoy-1~

OlfRL 114
Plll&lt;lr. Bdsel Hart .
91mdoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonlip • 10:30 ~·7:30p.m.

C.,....le Ualtod Metlledlltl'lrllll

Pu1or. Slwm Haua.
Wanhip • 9 a.m.

A ......lcFalllo

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATHER REPAIR

U olgnlllcont

1/4 mile put POd Moil• em New Limo Rd.
Put«: woo- Van Moler
Sunday·7:00p.IL
. Wodnolday-1:00p.m.

•

Ru-BibltMillbodllt
Putor. Rcv. lvlll MyCTS
Sundly Scbool· 9:30a.m.
E-m,-7p.m.
,
Wedoellloy s.m.... 7 p.m.

Alfred
Pu1or: Slwm Haullll&amp;ll
Sundly Sc:hoal· 9:30 lUll.
Wonhip , II a..m., 6:30 p.oo.

Horlford Churdl of Christ In
Chrllllan Unloa

B~ Camm..kJ

l'ulor: ~ Glli&lt;C
SIO!dly Scbool-10 a.m.
Wanhip-lla.m.
LauniCIIffrr. M_.ll Qurcll
Putor. Petet Trembloy
Stmday Scbool· 9:30 ......
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W.....idlySeMoot • 7 p.m.

ML on.. Valtld Mll-oi
Off I:IA bobiad Wilblvillo

Suaday Sdlaol.: 9:30a.m.
• WonbipSavice: !0:30a.m.
Bible SWdy, Weten"•y, 6:30p.m.

. c-=~!urdl

·-

..

. 311/1 mo. pd.

Public Notice

.
. Cllu... af J - Cllrlol,

~1411 Bridaeman
St., Syncuse
· P.-:Roy(Mike)'lbampooo .
Sundly School • 10 a.m.
B...... ·6p.m.
w-....y SeMco . 1 p.m.

Putor: ""'-'- Baker .
SIO!dly ScbooJ.. 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 om. (Ill A 3nl Sun)

NOTARY

·IHG-92·tf.

NEW- REPAIR

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ·

IUY •,SELL • TUDE
3 H' N. 2nd St.
~dilleporl, Ohio
Moft.·Frl. I 0:00·5:00
Satvrdoy 10:00·6:00
Closed Sunday
9t2-3577

.Jeanie Howell, EA

Shade River Saddle Shop · 3

ROOFING

..

BOOK
BARN

Announc erron''

Howard L Wrltesel

. 614-992-1698

PHON:~~E:-7036

USED RAILROAD TIES

Putor.LI,__
~,I;,School· 10 a.m.
w
y SeiVia:o ·1 p.m.

Fallll TObera- Churdl
Bailey Run Rood-. .
Rcv.J!aun!:tt ........
Sundoy Sdlool· 10:00 u11.
EvCDiaa7p.m.
.
.. 'l'hunday Semoe • 7 p.m.

. MGntacSair

United rv'lethodist

SOON.2ndA,...,M.,' i

57 '
St.,
Som
Andenon ,
SundlySdlooiiOo.m.
·
Bvmin_l ~ 1:30 p.m.
Wednaday SeMee • 7:30p.m.

p - KOanah BakCT
9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:4S a.m. (2nd A 4lh Sllil) •

OWNER:
Jeff Wkkenhant
. 3·11·93

· leJolclai'Lif• Clo..., ·

liS Buaemut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sundly Sdlool· 10:30 o.m.
w~
! 10:00 a.m.,7:30 p.m.

Middl

-992-3470

Pu10r: Dovid lloiloJ
Sunday Scbool9:30 a.m.
B....... ·7p.m.
Thunday s.m.. . 7:30p.m.

Tile Sllvodon Ana7

1

SIZED LIMESTONE

SUYernlllt W..a IIFIItlo

TriDII7 CCRIAatloinol Church
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildn)an .
· O.un:b • 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • I 0:30a.m.

I

992 -3978

5•ruf Q3~r.s

Putor. Rebert Yonce

Sunday~.

SL PIUI LuiiMnll Clliln:li
Corner S)'CIIIICII" .t. Second SL, Pomeroy
P-. OeoqeWeiridt
Suaday Sc:boal . 9:45 a.m.
Wanldp • II a.m. •

Loopvllle Chrllltlan Cllun:h

s~ Scbool9:30 a.m:
Wanhip • II ~·· 7:30p.m.
Wodneld.y Scnioo • 7:30p.m.

Fr" Eatlmltn

Pomeroy, Ollio

BILL SLACK .
992·2269

Seasoned
$40.00 a load
. Delivered.
(614) 992·5449

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
' TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE ·

HARDWOOD

Aolldonl._ a eommon:ltl

Acieu · - ,_, Offloe
· 217 L S.CHII St.
POMEROY, OHIO

.....t-.

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

l.ftn lltlowlng,
Feo1Jblng, W.....,g, 111d
Seeding.
Shrub and Tr• :rrlmmlng
&amp; Removal

992·5335 or
915-3561

36970 BaR Rua Road

·
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

c....., Plllri• Cllopd

::!'.l.yworship·
10 o.m.
W
semoe ·6:30 p.m.

CaniHI

Wolnuunoil!auy Su., Ra-owood, W.Va.
Co-guoan; ...... RidJanl ol
'PIIricia Boado-K,.
Suaday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Worship • II LID.
'

Sunday Bvonina • 6:30p.m.
Thandly Service • 6:30p.m.

. ~~

llanisanvillo Rood
Pu10r.Rcv. VlaorRaoult

P1110r. ""'-'- Bak..' Sundly Scbool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wedueldly SeMoot • 10 a.m.

OurSo...,..IAIII-~-

LlllertJ Cllrllllu Church
Dex1er
·
Psotor. Woody Coli

......

Other Churches
EDcl- H._ afPnror
.(11 Btirlinahlnl dJurdl-.tiRoute 33)

.......,

PineGmve
Putor: Geom Weirick
. Wonbip-§:30a.m.
Sunday Sdlool · 10:30 LID.

s...dly School · 9.....
Wanhip • 10 a.m., 7 pm.
Wednesday SeoviCCI • 7 p.m.

S7ncu. Churdl of God
A!'Pelllll Secood SU.

Faith Fll...-., era- far Clorlot
. Pa110r: Rev. Pdnldio Dld&lt;mo
Seovice: Fridoy, 1 p.m.

·

St. Jail• ~- Clo-

s.-·
- Clwrdl
af Cllrtot
Pl-. Jaoeph_ll
B. Haoldaa

Soend Beall Calllallc Churdl

Pl-. Gklldon SII'OUd
Sundly Sdlool,.-9:30 I.Dl. '
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WodojoldaySeMoot·7p.m.

-Scbool·
-10
Smilb
Sundly
a.m.
Wonbip • 9 a.m.

Lutheran

Rev.lllldr-.1

..

31121113

949·2391 or ·
1·100-·37-1460

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; JAI SERVICE

to Roof
FIH Estlmatn,
Low Costa,
Work Gua111ntMd
614-IMt-2335 or
614-593-5010

MAINTENANCE ·

lrllla It .. Of We
lildllp.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

SHRUB &amp; TREE
JRIM and
REMOVAL

Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wanhip IG-.30 lolL, 7:30p.m.
Wodnelday SeiVice ·7:30p.m.

.

••til

~~~~~~ ·r
· ----------,

Cal•ll1 lllblo O.rdl
Pomoroy Pike, Co. Rd.

-

New Bovea Churdl afthe l(azorene

S-.lllo

SL RL 114. Co. Rd. S
Pilla: Den!&lt; Slump
Suodoy Scboal· 9:30 a.m.
Woiwbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodlladoy Seoviool· 7:30p.m.

•

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:-40 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service• · 7 p.m.

Sola Center
l'ulor: 11m Fim:e
. Sundly Sdlool· 9:1S a.m.
Wonbip • IO:IS a.m. ·

Bradford Clourdl "'Chrlll

161 Mulbony .._.._, l'uneiO)', 99l·S891
p - . Rev. W- B. Heinz
SoL Con. ~:45-H Sp.m.; Mw- S:30 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL

Latter-Day Samts

Sundoy School· 10 .....

PUUlr: Jolin F. Coraxin
SIDid~ SchoOl • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m •• p.m.
Wednoscl&amp;y Semce1 • 7 p.m.

Catholic

Rutland '
l'ulor: Anlmr CJobba:
Sundly Scloool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday !lemoio • 7 p.m.

-:.."'.!\!·ySeMoes
II a.m.. 7 p.m.
W
· 7p.ai.

5lS~J:.....

Portlond J1lnt Churc:ll af tile Nuorene
Puur. WiWam Juotis

Puror.Koilb Rader
SuadaY School· 9:1S a.m.
W'onbip • 10 a.m.
W..tneocloy s...;.., · 6 p.m.

..

PollOI: Charles Domi1an
Sundly ochool· 10:30 l.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

W~p - 10..~., 7p.m.

lockSprlap

w-.,..

LetMI,W.Va.RLI
Puoor: J - Lewil
s-lay Scbool • II a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30 LpL, 7:30p.m.
Wodnelday Seovice. ·7:30p.m.

Puur. Somuel Buyo
Sundly Sdlool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodaeldoy Seovioeo · 7 p.m.

W........y SeMoot · 7:30p.m.

Meigs Alumni
Association is
looking for c;urrent
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresses to
Meigs Alumni
Assoclatlo", P. 0.
Box ~5, Middleport,
Ohio 45760

Fllnlewlllble Cll- .

ltullaad Cburdlol the Nuor..t

Wonbip • to a.m.

M - Cllurdl af Cllrlol

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wcnhip · I0:30o.m., 7:30p.m.
w........ySeMoe7:30p.m.
'

PutDr. Jomeo E. K -

H}IOIIlua Hollnea Cbun:h

Stmday·ScboaiiO..m.
Wonhip·lla.m., 7:30p.m.
w~ Service. 7:30p.m.

SeMCOI :

!'!sUr. -SciMJal • Sajlb
sw.lay
9 a.m.

Suadly School· 9:1S a.m.
Wonbip • 10:~ a.m., 6 p.m.

lu-CIIoirdotiCIIrlol
Pu1or. Bu.- E. Uudoiwoad

Wanhip • II o.m., 6 p.m.
Wednos&lt;lay
7 p.m.

Poor! C~optl

3-4-93-1 mo

Vlu• &amp; Maolw C1td

MICiOWAYi OVEN
VCR REPAIR ·
· IDUIAIU

St. II. 7
Clloallin,

992·2487

Coalville Rood . •
Put«: Rev. Pllilliplljc!onao~r
s...aay Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 1D-30 a.m.
w..._.y SeMee. 7 p.m.

Suniloy Sdlool • 9:30 ......

-Sunday SciMJal . 9 a.m.
Wanhip • 10 a.m.

-·

~..... Cloopol

CheoterCIIucb aflbeNaarene
Psotor. Rev. Herbert Grole

Mla....tlle

- 1'-.E-&lt;&amp;...)Keo
-

W~SeMCIOI - 7p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
·
Wonbip. 10:30 a.m. Utd'6 p.m.
Wednesdly SeMcco - 7 p.m.

1'u1or: Deoan Ne'MII&amp;Il

16 s•..

Fraad• Gooptl Mllllooo
Bold Knob, aa Co. Rd. 31
Pu10r: Rev. Roaer Willfaod
Suoday Sd&gt;oal· 9:30a.m.
Wonbij&gt;- 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedlloidory SeMee • 7 p.m;

Pomero7 Churdl af the Nu.eno
PutAJr. Rev. Thoaw Mc:Ciuni

Hoo.. (Middl,..rtl •
Puur.FnnkSmilh
SIO!dly Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m.
W..tneocloy SeMces • 6 p.m.

75 St:, Middlepo!L
Puur. Rev. Roy McCarty
Sundoy ICbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodoosdly ServicO ·7:30p.m.

_ _ H_Ouop...
l'lllor: Rev. Jolm NIYille .

SLRL 143ju,.cdRL 1
Pulor. Rev. J-R. Acne, Sr.
~ Sdlool · 10llLm., 6 p.m.
W
SeM.., ·7p.m.

'!:'"J;

Pilla: Demo NOWIDID
Sunday Sdlool • 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 a.m.
Thundoy s....... 6:30p.m.

Pliler. Robert Manley .
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thundoy Service • 7; 30 p.m.

I'd«: am. Slcwort
SIDIIy Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Srneuoe Cbur'm of tile N~ene
Poll«: Rev. Glenn]dcMillln
• .SundlySdlool ; g,30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesdly SeMce~ • 7 p.m.

F-1••

follawin&amp;

Wesle7~• Bible Bollnea Cllun:h

, _ : TcmRUIIY""
Suodoy-. 9:30 .....
Wanhip • I G-.30 L'!'·

41m~Pike

Wonhip .· lla.m.,6p.m.
Thundoy S.&lt;icol • 7 p.m.

l'lae GraYt Bible BaUnea Church .
1/2 mile df RL 315
1'1-. R... O'Dell Mlnley
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 u!l., 7:30p.m.
Wedaetdly Service · 7:30p.m.

__, Q- afCIIrlol

a:m.

From Founclllllon

To collect your scholarship money
. call'614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-7 or sat. 10-4

'

.SIZED UMESTONE
FOR.SALE
Call 614·992·
6637

io•• $25

KiDJibuly Rood.
Clydo w. llendenan
s-lay Scbool · 9:30a.m.
s.....m,·7p.m.
Wednudoy SoMce • 7 p.m.

Pilla: KeiJb Rader

Sondly worship ·7'p.m.
Wednolday proyer meetina· 7 p.m.

......

CarleiGII 18141 ..._lalllkall Clo...,

Suuc~ar Sdlool· to

R-.rs-BoU-CIIurth
Now Lima Rood. Rullaad
Pulor. Rev. Dewey Kina
Sundly ICbool· 9:30 a.m.

Suodoy Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip·I0:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
W. . . . .ySeMCOI · 7p.m.

Pontiroy, Ohio

· Quality
· Sto•• Co.

- 2 •ilea o• !lyaoll
Run RoatiOH
Rt. 124
12 S.ssio•• $20

Wonbip-IOa.m.. 7p.m. '
W.........y SeMc:e • 7 p.m.

~

Hoi mess

Zl.. Cllurdl afCIIrlol
l'omcr&lt;&gt;Y,HanismvilleRd. (RLI43)

Wonbip • 10:~ a.m.

•I

c.cr.. -

Suodoy Scbool-9-.!0 .....
Wonbip ·IG-.30a.m.,6:30p.m.
Wodnelday Servi&lt;;es ·6:30p.m.

Sunday Scbool- 9-.30 a.m.

·..,·7p.m.

.. GrMt E.,._. Cllllrdl
316 E. Main Si., Pcxneroy ·
Re4:lor. Fr. Billl.vle
.
Holy Eudlorisl ond Suncloy Scboolll a.m.

~ JUd&amp;t Cburdl af Christ
Pulor:Jad&lt;~ .

Rutluld FlniBiptlJI Clo.....

Suuday Sdlool · 10 ......
Wonbip ·9IUII, 6p.m.
Tueadly Sa rices ·1 p.m.

Ep1scopal

K•a Cllurdo af C~rlol
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sundoy Scbool • I 0:30 a.m.

-llapCiot Cllon:ll

1'1-.Rcv.J-A.Soddool

Mlddlefort a...... af Cllrlll
•
5lb IIIII MaiD
.

Wonbip-l:15,10:30 o.m., 7 p.m. '
W - y s.m.., · 7 p.m.

~-. Middlepad

Flnt s

-Al-

w~

,,.,.....

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff ·
Th.la ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

•C. YOUNG
992-6215

(614) 982-3647
Productaln Stock
. 4111111t ....

IMAGES

SaadiBeda.. N. . Tw•·eM:
SilvorRiQo ·
1'1-. 0... Sydiouori'*"' .
SuDdoy Sdlool • 9 a.m.

.,_, Koilb Jto4or

Wonhi~p.m.

s..dly School· 9:30a.m. .

7p.m.
• 7lUll.
p.m.

.

l'ulor: Gary Hines
Sonday ~.9 : 30a. m.

- y School · 11Wonbip - IO..m., 6 p.m.
w.........y s.m.... 7 p.m.
.

Coneulllnll
Carolyn McCoy
(61 4) 992-&amp;0112
Slndra Henderlon

SUMMER

Now Lite Ch..-dl af God

PCI•Ir6J Wlltllde ODrdl oiCIIrllt

IN POMEROY

lndeplncllntiiNuty

mo.

3-4-93·1

*regardless of income
•regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
'regardless of cred~

CLUB

Plumbing

HOME
IMPROYIMIIIJ$

for all college bound students.

EAGLES

designed few your llldn trpe.
MARY KAY

614·742·2131

Church of Chnst

EVERY THURSDAY

MIIY Kly hu I prown-,
effective skin Cllt progr1111

Reaso•altle
Rates
.· JOE N. SAYRE
·· · SAYRE TRUCKING

..,.

Guaranteed Scholarship lliloney

'

.
.
614 446 1157

...

�.

•

•

,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Wanted to Buy

9

rnuay, April 9; 1993

Apanmeni
for Rent

44
•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

..

72 Trucks for sate

-

Friday, April 9, 1993

ALLEYOOP

The Dally 5entlnei-Pageo-11

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

J &amp; D._ Auto Plt1a and SIIYoge,
1110 bUying Junk ..,. &amp; truc:~o.
• 304·773-5343• .

ACROSS

Junk, ear1, muet be tow1bla~

-·537l
Old fumll,.a, . glaoa, ehlna,
~·· arrowheada, toola,

PHILLIP
ALDER

llone t•n. •lao fumllwe
roflnlohlng, 0.01' llanln, 114812·l'l41.
Wanlod To Buy: Junk Autoa
WHh Or Wlthoul llotora. Call
Lany UYOiy. 614-388-9303.

NORTH

Top Ptlcaa Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo Sllvor Colna,
Gold Coins. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
1St S.Cond Avanue, Galllpollo.
WarUd lo buy: u..d mobile
homaa. 614-446'0175 ·

.

14
f.t·tl

+Q 108532

16 Football
eooeh

•••

··~
tKI

Wileb-

18. Aaced

20 Mrs. In

tt2

·~
+Jt7

Employment Serv1ces

SOUTH
+813

.A4
+A4

' tA87132

Vu!Derable: East· West
Dealer: North ·
4 Roatot- UmouOin buttl 1or

-.l--41110•

.

Anaua And Chi.Angua Black
Bulla~ 11-.bly Prlcod· Slate
Run r...,., Jaelloon, Ohio It+

211-4381.

Polled

hoAfonl bullo ond
helfwe; 13 month•, M months

- n g atoek, 11+9112·11151
ovanlnga.

Two 3/4 UIIIOUOin Bulla, 1 Rod,
~' 15 llonlha Old,
AVON I All A,..o I Shirley
Spears, 304-67&amp;-,.211.
304.:&amp;75-62~

arter

~rand Iobeii-'&lt;. by.!ha
.towe81 rata, 1'14-143-;;u 23
orl--62811.

=·

Babyoltlor Noodod In lly Hoina,
~':,"it4 ;:a'MC:;."l.:~lh
~El~R_:,T;R;,;E:,;E=S;E;.R"'VICE=:.--=~:-oDDI...,.n-g,
--'-1
•14-446-1810 • - . . Trlmmlnl[h Trw R.moval, Hedge
1"
- '• '"
• -.,_
Trlm=l , FrH Eatlmaleal Sf4..
Meuage.
387'
Aftor 4p.m.
Generel lawn care: mowing,
waodaatlng, ote., fully lnour.cJ,
614-1112-537l

Ylo".

Third Avenue, Galllpolii, OH

.
=

. 45131.

Sn\oll Englno Ropolr And Tun•
Up, TWo And Four Cyclo, 614lmmodloto Oponi!!Sf· Avalloble 441-4210.
.
For Pori·Timo RN,IIodnlghl Shift
Rollof Sui*Vfoor. Corrlpotllva Stop By St~n Care, com.
Dlllorotrtlal With Ex- plote Lawn
, we Do HAll,
ROO, Equol Opportunhy 614-441-G821.
1pk)yer. Conlact TM DlriClor
Of Nurolng, Plnoc- ea.. Con- Tri-State TrM S.rv~. Topping,
tor, 170 Plnac- Drive, Go~ Trimming, Feeding, Removal,
Stump Removal. Frae b-llpollo, OH 4!5831, 61+446-7112.
llmataa. 11+317.0563.
Uvo
In
babyoiHer
&amp;
houookoapor. Six chikhn. Will mow graoo, :104-87weot.
Aet.rem:H raqulr.cl, 3Q4.6751377 anytime . .

F1nancial

Local Buslnaoa · ..-lng For
Working ~onagor. Roqulraa
Monuol Labor " ' - Wllh
Business Manoging And OrQan1zlng A 21
Group. lluot a. Do_-d.ible.
Opponunlty
Sond fiHumo To: ACII P.O. lox
452, GoiMpollo, OH 45631.
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
.llldd'-rt Pork Rocraallon II ,.oommonda that rou do buol·
taking sppllcatlono lor pool naaa wtlh poople you k.- ond
managor &amp; u•guardo. Ap- NOT IO aend money throug~ thl
plkatfOne; e~~n be picked up .. mall until you have lnvntfgated
lhalllddleporl Clly Building.
lha oflorl!lllo
. .
No Exporlancol hOD To $1100 Loc11 Vending Aouto: $4,000 A
Weekly_ /Pol.ntlal Proc. .lng Month Potonllal. 11 ..1 Sell. 1·
FHA Mortgage Rotundo. Own 100-453-8313.
Houn. 1-50t-445.Q503 Eat.213.
Pepel route, Middleport, Ohio
24 Houri.
. . ., HVM-i NChinel currently
Rallgloul Farilily Man, 82 Years placed II Milllllohod loeatlono
Old, Would Llko Fomalo Llv•ln $2,000. •ertoue lnqulrw rmly,
COmpanion, 10 Years Or OVer, 304-475-4151.
Somo Cooking
&amp;
Light
HouHbeplng. For More lnfor- VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich
motlon Call: 614-386-8732.
Qulok? No Wayl lui Wt HIY8 A
Good, Studv, AHorclabla, Busl~
Sal•: Aatall · Jewelry Ex· n..a. Won't 1...1. 1-800-284-pari•nce A~~qul,.d, For Melg1 8363.
.
Co. Slors, Apply AI Aequlolllon
JIWelry, 151 Second Avenue,
G•lllpon.. Mon ..Sat, 10-12.
Small Local Buolnau_Looklng
For
Experienced Secretary
/R.cesMJoniiJt. Basic Ottlce
KnowledGe Roqulrsd. Sond
Rnumo lo: ACR P.O. Box 452,
Galllpollo •.Ohio 45631.
Somoone To Slay With A Lady
AU real estale ad\let:flslng·ln
Who Rocontly Had A Sioko,
this newspaper is sub jed to
NHda Help, But Can't Afford To
the Federal FalrHouslngACI
Pay Much, Would Consklar
ol 1968 which makes ! lllejjal
Giving 'Room And Board A• Part
lo adver11se "'any preference.
Of Pay. Must Have ReferencHf
Call614446-6731 For lnt•rvlaw.

WANTED:

limitation or discrimination
based on race, colOr, religion,
~x larplll{ll starus or national

Part-Time Potilion

132.5 Hrs /Wk) Available AI A
CommunHr Grou·p ttoma For

, origin: ctr any IntentiOn to ··
make any Such preference,
UmHatlon or dlscr1mlnalion.·

Perwon" With MAJOO In Bldtnll.
Hou,.: "3:30 ~p.m . , Wtd ; 3:30t ::lO / .m., F~; 10 a.m. -tp.m.,

Sat;

a.m.

1.m. -6 p.m., Sun OR I
p.m., Soli, 1 ·11 &amp;.m.,

.e

TNs newspaper wll nor
knowlngl~ accep1
adver1isements for reallllate
whk:h Is tn violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby

Sun; (Aotat.. ~very
her
W•kentl); 2 ·Hour W"kly Staff

Mooting; Or Aa OtherwiM
Sehlduled. High School Doarso
Valid Orlv•r·• UclnY, GCOd
Driving Record, ThrH YNra
Orlvl~
Experl•nc•, - Good

lnlorme&lt;ll/'\al all dWellingS

acrvert!sed In this naW!paper
are avaMable on an equal
oppor1Unlty basis.

CommUnlc•llon And Organl...

lion Skills, Punctual

Ana

Ablt

To Work A• Part Of A Team R•
qulred; Experlene~J Working

.

33 Fanns for sate

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

183 ..... wlmlnaral ~~.':!
putu,., SO acrea crop, 1rnall
otraam. Baoutlful lend wt~

Cant.., 21 Sharack lluKy, 304757-41161.
2 lornw In • - County. 51112

acr• wlhouu. 10 HrM wlfan~~

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
11 Acroo 1111. V....., Land w...r 51

.

·~

Household
Goods

w-

Pair, 814-441o0803.

Full ol• offleo daok. poy; good
ohapa, $75, f14.11112-617l

0528.
lbcl2 Carpol ~AI Yin"' In
••
2 LAlli: !NI'll177' Eoch On Doanlo llock $4.48 Yd. ollohln Car·
Drlvo, Off R~o 35, City School pote, AI. 7 North, 11+446-11M4.
Dloi~OI, 85,100 Frw loth L.llo,
114 Ul 0111.
Yf'RA I'UIINITUAE AND AP.
PUANCES
B.....,_ or rooldontlal 2 ..,.. -11-4428 OR 614-4441-3156
whh. 2M I RL 2 ·-1111! bo1· Enla1111nmant Cantor'l $148 Or.
Aahlon &amp; Appll - a ,
public wator. 1 aero Iota wllh sa.a Woak; looMhOivoo Start·
approvod ooptlc oyolorn 11. . lllfl $21.15; Roollnoro 1121LSolo
Ariel Cha:n $285 Dr 010.13
oora
- - -.olvtllon. - ; Coffoo And End Wllh
Clydo - · J r. 304-4714331.
l)oon " " ~i I' Tablo Wllh I
Chirololo Hill Lako Eotxto 1.11 Cf!!:ln ~"oodl; Waohars,
111, 2.01 Aeroa, IIIL ~uallnl... DrY-.
, AetriQarator'a
oy • Sot ..dor
.aot In And To L.ako, Dam I SDII $261: Holn:
Way. LNI AvoHoi!IO IA.t1 Sl5,!10o, M; hlow' SIIYor Bridge Plaza'
81+311of780 After 5 P.M.
Or 4 IIMoo o.- 141 On Uncotn
Looklng tor 2-4 aarw ground, PikL
. Pomaroy/ll._t&gt;Ort ana on AI. No Do-'1 On Atn1·2-0wn;
7. mult not be flood II'M, •~ Nothing E..r Ptoownod.
tltl2-3324.
Floral 2 pe living room auHo.
Real
Estate
!lood
-~•. tong oouch,
wanted
304.a,~, •'
:--;::-:;::-~~~:---:::::=I GOOD USED APPUANCES 3 Bod room Homo, Double 'NHII-. drym, rafrlgorllora,
Qora;o, Largo 1.11~ Small n -. .s.;;.:ll'! Appllancoo 75
Ae-o, WHhln 441 ""M A- Yfna StNOi~ali 114-441·iiii, 1·
P 11 elon May 111. 114-ltl- 101).4-w.
7804 L.aovell-ge.
-'-7-U\:::f::,N,:.E'S::-::FU"'R"'N"'ITU=R:=E-Complola homo fu~~~~
Haurs: llor&gt;SII, ..5. 1
0322,
3 mllol out Bulavlllo Rd.
Rentals
Froo DIIIYory.

w-

.sao.

11ov1- . m•t 0111, Country
:llnli!l~noom oulta Wlbonch, ~
41 Houses for Rent
oholia w-chlng oornar hutch
OUMn Anna
2 BodrootM - · C - To -like - Uko teOO.
,_ 1380. SOfa &amp;
H~~ Farm SOiling f3001Mo,
lomoll bo1ao a -., floral
,....,..3422.
NIO. Entorliln- ..,.., 175.
4 - l b a l h , - l o Two . ,.. ohl.lra mauve &amp; cane
$100.
SQot..875..S022
IChoola, _..,_, Ora Oftlcl•, .,t
I dap r.qulrod, »t.e75-1080.
&amp; Uaod tumltlft tor aato.
5 roomo • bath locotod..Rt. 218, IItc-.. &amp; rocyote ..blnot,
pta ...... 2 ohaat of dnrworo,
304-f7UII75.
1111111 'ldlchon . cablnot, book
5 Rooma, Flrot A...,.,., Qol- ... -rtllnmonl ciontor, 2
diiOilo, Ohio. Dlf StNII Polklng, oornor oablnoto, :J04.175.1'127.
11275/llo. Dopooft &amp; Roltrsnce,
11+1156-11121.
. Oak China Cablnoto,
Tobloo, Chllf!, Hut-. Coffoo
1 11oom - ; Rodnar Tobloo -End tebloo, Elo. River
83IOIIIo Dopooll • 11"'-noe, Valley O.k Fumh:n, Ooorgaa
614-143-21111 Allor 4 P.ll.
CrNit Rd,l14 441 431o.
S..utlful 311*111. In
PICK=:....-n!RE
SyrocuM, full l:llohan, carport,
. -.• dopooll -ln:l, 114- Ho•••hotd lurnlol!lng. 112 mi.
812-4288 dayo, l,.-tfl7-3716 Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. PI-nt, WV,
~nlnge.

ooii3CJ4.4175..1410.

Thl'll
bedroom, Pomeroy, Rolrfgomor, Excollont Con$2501mo., 1100 dopoolt, ..- . dlfton, 114-245,~;
CM requwecl, no .,._., 114-112·
SWAIN .
1551.
Alm'IOH a FURNITURE. 62
Olivo II., Goillpol ... &amp; u.act
fumH,.., hlatoro, WMto/n &amp;
4:&lt; · ~bile Homes
Wo:l&lt; bciolo. 114-44f.3158.

for Rent

14160 2 Br, 1 milo Iouth of

EureU, on 8t.' Rl.7. No pera,

52 Sporting GOOde .

.....-.1114-2~.

Ramlngton 22 -•. · ololnlng
~1 - · boUghl
Furn~Med, 2 or actnn., tor rtnt loolo, 114
• A- ohapo, ulllhg
In Counlry Parlt. Wuhlrt dryor, air+ 12211 "*'• 114-1112·
2117.1M ;siW227.
3

::::=-=~-•

lpot, Big Yant.,::.u,
FM ~. Do,ioolt,
lllo.
114-3111211.
-

""·'ont - ,.... •n
own I ·1113 14170 Redi&amp;IWI wtth

=::.:-u:IO~:.:~

Q.E. Solf.Cieonlng OVon $150; 2
Ptom Gowna Slzo: 8, 1 Pink, 1
AQua;. 41 Roek . CD'o. 114-44670in L.OIYIIIIII!III"·
, .
G.,oolo 'Nutrklon PrOducto
fori_Uring Amino Aeld Body
Bulldlng/o;:tghl Joaa and lot
burner
ufao. Avallablo OX•
oluolvely et Alto Aid Pliarmotcy.
Tha aalo way to dlot.
Oullor, 831; tannlo ah-, olu
11).1/2, 11, SIO; bonlo ~m and
N!IOflllor, 155; 11+317-7m,
3:00pm.
Hldo • bod ooueh, upholatory
radono, fair ahapo, 120;
chlldo ol dnwars, sa; 1141112-te77, 114-1112•7751.
King Slao iloclrlc llankot, Dull
Conlrol llalga, Warranty Good
Till ~an . ... 120; Col 114-446-

2¥'·
King

W0to-. Tripfo

Slu

~~:p':'o~Ughl~=h· ~.

K"chan ·Tablo, Chi ira; 18.~
BT.U Window Air Condlllonar,
114-245-85118.

Lovol~ Ptom Gown, TuC'Ji lluo,
Slzo , ·10, Worn Once, - .
Price. $40,I14-I 11-0573..
Molal Tool Sox FGr Plcfi.Up
Truek, Slldlna Tny, lloda In
"14 •
"3 Ohio, -Prioo: 1100.
• ·- ·
lllnl Blko SZSj, F!&lt;- llodll T.V.
$50; Wotor WHh ..rror
/Hol-d f2DO; Air Compr-.
- $25; Nintondo $40; Tapoo sa
Eoch,l1+317-o240.

-=·

Nice cleln Mutt.d arm chllrj

white antla• kHchln cupboard,

61+112·7212 anor SP!fl.
Hlco ,..u-. $60; two on
polntlnifo . by . Aonotcl Ortmm,
33152, 130; 114-e-3
Odl Drop Loaf Tobie $66; Wood
Youth Bod $41,1,_.~,.22. .
-ble1 ' = d ~::J~ory" gn
~ 83
&amp;
anylill!l.· ·
·-

LAST NIGHT HE
TOOK A SECONT

Toppon :nfclo1 ova ovon In
;oqd daf!oll,
-tonW,
. .••rlablopqwo}'
wlh
1·14141-11111-44211~1421
altori:OOpm.
•
'flob, ,._ Drop Sinko, Whlto
Poroxlaln On Out • - Aakl{ll
m, Cal. 114 441 1213 Aft&lt;ir
W.M.
.
.
,._ Tnlt 111:oa, f22l ...,, 0r
MOO loth. -1-4110. .
·

MASHED 'TATERS·"

.II.

PEANUTS ·
IT'S J.IARD TO ESE A
51-!EPJ.IERD I
AN't' 51-!EEP..

~ =·1711,~L
Apaft=

"·'",

'.

=

t4" VGA A,.::J..c.or ~·

~"'c.,' ..:

2le IIIII'
ll4 1'1. fiGurld A - -

"'*'·....,.-a
._,A,..5PII

.

.

. .

1M!

·

·

~

.::.

~

c:om,. ~ iil!;

CRACkiNG UP

.

Yamaha 250 L racing motor... •
cucle. Water cooled,
aood .•

,.any

condhlon. Tom down, Wltl1111 :

,

.
II

C'o

.,.'

..."'

~

s

1j

·~

11

I

D

I CAAT ftt-U&gt;

..-&amp;:.

~

4

r:.r=n: ... .~

IIJtllbadtNIItr.ldtal
4..
for rldlna ouaa; tm.: .,.-

·-·· 111W754itt.
.,.
Llvlltock
~
• ••

ltll Doc1ao Doytona, chlrry
.,''
black AlliRI - e tiH
81
Home
oruiH, nir dohot, air: ....;
· ,...
-tnt, now llno. one liwnar,· •x·
Improvements
clllenl -Mion, 1!4300, It+
BASEMENT
812·7132.
'
WATERPROOFING
11111 Ford Rongor $3,600. 1185 UncondfUonal
lifetime gu.~rano 1
Slillbl' 'florl&gt;o 11,tltl5,
'"·
Local
r-ferenc•
t884Uneotn·COnltnantol $2,415. CaN 1-40().287.Q571 Orfumlahed.
114-237- • ·
lUI Onnd Mar- 12.2115. 0481 Rogan Waterproofing. Eo.
INI Ca:llllae DoYflle $2~15. tobllohod1W5.
11111 Onnd PriX 12,485. 181111
Aorootar Van 11 tltlll. 11181 Pon· Curti• Home lmprowmenta. No :
tile IIOOOiJ 70,000 mlleo $2,285.
BIG Or Small, YNn Eo·
eeottyo ood Can, Now Hovon,
nee "Qn Older !Newer ':
.WV. 304-882-3752.
. Addhlona, Foundatlono,
1188 Mercury 'l'opoz loodod, Rooflna. KKchlna /Botho. In·
Mlrsd, l'roo ElllmiiM. 114-317·
$2,700. 1111 Plymout~ Rollonl, . 01116.
ctoon,n,ooo. tN7 Dc&gt;dgo .......
$1,150. 304-475-2440.
•
lilt Dido Calalt: Quod Four
- · 2Dr, PS, PI, Til, 'Cruloo,
Alllf'M Caaootla, sa,100. It+
Ron'o TV llarvloo, apoolollzlllll
4441$1N.

~~c!::.: =~

In Zlnllh eloO -Ina ·
other ~Harwfe. HouM ..
IIH

w.,

aoma appllonca -lro. wv
Outlldo. Aal:lng U,IOO. 114-446· ~3- Ohio 114-441-2454,
114t.
SofOic Tri Pumolna taO Clollla .1111 Ch!vl' Lumina Z-34, c ..... Co. liON EVANS ENTEAPIIISES
......, kuiDDid 1,100 Mll11
Call Altar 8:1lfPJi 11+211-1411.' Jae-, OH 1-100-117-41121. . '
WIU build polio eo..,., docka
1111 Pontlae Orand P~x. blue tcrunod ,_,., P.ul up vinyl
mlteo,
.~u:-·~ loododill2,000
.,.. on,nawtlno.
troller· oldrllng. 114.,\
oao, 114oN2·20DI,
-nlnp.
.

=:

,.,~,_ eou .__
••- - - •
po, ..,.., om/
1m/
- ! t . tako ovor
-

_

82 . .·Plumbing &amp;
· .· Heating

.... .,..., - · . lt+Mfl.

mt.

QLC Hot~ I
lprt!, AC, ~leW TIIM,- Bat.
t1fV: -Condit~ """" -·
.-·-.
~. •-· .•~
-

- o with
IHI, 110, 11+

,_.,_....,

8310
.;.
f'or Jaof:a!. lholl flogllftrsd 1-AngoulluiJ, 11
,__., tile lmoll.lil- ~OW,Apprwi:, 1100Pdt.
c;;:r-''--"
.110,114'
441 '2'1 . . - Colfoio; I14-MUI70.
,_,

eo.., 114- - o flabllfl

'

.

Wltla

1- Chry, ... A - 4

Dr, Loalllor

'i

~IIDr, Mlt

M . Electrtcarl

'",,

~~Rii;frlg~•:.::rat:;;Jon;;';;;w .:

PW,
A,....,.lll •
oontMIIf'Dill. "i~
•'""-k, !!frlng, n1W ..-vfce
tU )
Coot ......, · Uoer 11 d" , .._.rlo'-n. • ..,
· - ·oo flldonour.Eiactrloat,
• •.
3CJ4.t71.1711.
' . .. ·.th.

~~ :'::"D~
;,.-c..,.,•loft
~000 •• ,:.:o...

:

• . ....,..
P.M.
. I

,.

,

.

W,....,L

·wv-. ,,, ·

amoko
2 Comparative

6 French tor

" 1ummer"
7 Slltchll
8 Stopped

•9
10
11
12

Famale bird
Alrere"-n
Wax
- and

down•

17 Llrge

· 19~'t!k
21

or
CtterokM

24 .0bllrved

ze Ear (comb.
form)
28 Not high
21 81 plul one
31 Llw (Lat. I
33 French r••
35 NewDa.,
program

AAV~~!

(.;A..W6...

r.5'.1£AA
,.,.,.~

J--f

GOII-IC.! I, ..,....
ll£lfUBER
Tl41t.IC:6 fJ10l.

"-'"""' Ot'E Oll.Y TO

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP
I'D BE RUNNINGDOWN 1\oiE

~EiV.D'lrl~

AAeGARIWiE

~OVF.&gt;INEi

m~&amp;eouee

I IX'N'T !&lt;NON IF TH4l!s
PHIL.OeOPI-IIO.L, OR

.JUST SIU.Y.

NOTHING.

IF THERE .

WEREN'T .,At.H. ••

I

OUR LANGUAGE AD-VICE: A television show 4kes an Ad-Vice Award
its visit to Florida; the show's host
is identi6ed onscreen as being at "Disneyland." However, the theme park
known as Disneyland is in California.
not Florida. Instead, the pa•k near Orlando, Fla., should be identified as
"Disney World," written as two words.
Such information, which may be easily
checked in reference books and other
sources, should not be considered
Mickey Mouse. Remember that accu·
~v~~~:~ what you say 'is at least
r.
as how you say it.

1

""-&gt;''

~

'~~:t:~' S@R.(}~-~£~s·
0

By Jeffrey McQuain
- .ABYSS (T.uli:ais "l indicates a
deep or seemingly bottomless hole
the earth. There·~ nothing amiss
about the correct pronunciation of the
ABYSS, which rhymes with
AMISS.

•••

..... IlLII.-

FRI

RIFF

appease a person
you'll be dealing
are
romantically
perfect
tor
you.
with
tOday,
you
might
make
a epmmitmenl
ASTRO·GRAPH
. plus a tqng, self-addressed, slamped enve- • · that you'U ·have no intention ol fulfilling . .
lope to Malchmal&lt;er, c/o t~is newspaper, Unfortunately, this could be a bad move.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 II someone is
P.O. Box 4465, New Vorl&lt;. NV 10163.
TAURUS (Aprllzo.May 201 II alrierte! tells performing work or serviCe tor you today
BERNICE
you something in confidence tOday, ("Ike and you ' ro .disp leased with his or. her
every
effort ·not 10 reveal his or her secret efforts. lot this ~1100 knOw hoW you leal.
BEDE OSOL
If you yield to temptation and do so, this Oon't pretend otherwise.
could jeOpardize the relalionllhip.
SAGITTARIUS (llov. 23·Dec. 21 I
GEMINI (lloy 21.June 201 Be wary tOday · Involvement in upensive 8(lduvors.IOdlly
" you have to do businees with a pe1100 is no guarantee that you'll have a good
"hou reputation is suspect Oon'llake · time. In tact, you might not receive equal
verbal stalemenis lbr granlod.' Ha'l8 lmpor· value lor what you opend.
tam cominrtments put in writing.
·
CAPRICORN (Dtc ; 22·Jon . Ill Your
CANCER (June 21.July 221 !htra II a chlincea lor IIICCBOI look good IOdlly. prochance today 1~11 you mlghl be unduly Yicled you are proportr 111011v01ad. In llillll·
influenced by someone who mlghl not have .lianil ~ you're not IOI.IIIy committed to,
.. .
Aprll10, 1113
your beel intertltl at heart. Thll penon • wttat you 're doing, lho r..ulls c:Ould be'
ha• ltd y6u a11ray In lhl put. .
· lkelclty.
·
Clarity yeur objfctlvealn lhl yt~~r ehNCI, orl LEO (JiiiJ 13·Aug. 12) T~la II ont of · AQUHIUI CJan. »Feel. 11) Today, yau
alae you might w""! time achieving thifllll: thoae days .when you might be a batter 1 mlgltl ,.- men cncleltca In vaur .hunchla
• that yield hollow YlotoriH. FOC1JI on go~ls . retlonlllzer lhan Y9'J ora 1 ~· J)on1 and pa10epU-IIWI yaulllOUid. To bton
Ql slgnilicanca that oiler lubotantlal make • - for Why tnlngJ lltouldn, ,. , tilt ..,. elda, ,.... faith In your ~1,

. ®~.
=:"iM~h.2t·Aprl~

111 Occaaionllly
challlnging litualionJ aN stimulating. but
toda)l .tt might bo wiH 10 aVOid corn~ 1
_.....vwr ego rNIY nol be ltlfl.to hill·
dlo _ , j place. Know .....,. 10 look tor
. ·romance and You'D lind rt. Thl Aatrt·Graph

,,

.,

•

.

::0":.:"Z.:::r~~ corn·
.
191

=n:.•::iltiO)

The~

petiiMI aol:lel I~ tOday your
you liMP tadly OOUIIIIIIM a -.g lnftu.
miglll*tpl you to.band lhl Nln In your . enca on.your pnjdlnotl. HYDIK pala.,. big
fovor a bH in order to coma odt on 't op . . apend•re thare'a a cha~ you'li match
Don't Y!old.
· .,.., or. ytl, WMII _ . lhan IIley
LIB (lA (lapt. 23-0ct. 231 In order to , do.
. ..
· .,

.

·,

"

.

36AroN- - ·

The British comedy team of Eric
aDd Ernie Wise used a
two.-liner baaed on the honors awarded
by the queen.
"My name Is Colonel Napoleon Dav·
enport, D.S.O., M.C., O.B.E."
"T~t's a funny way to spell
'Davenport.' "
In today's deal, as In yesterday's, a
defeoder muat play a tiD&amp; at the ript
moment to"efeat tbfee no.-trump.
East's tbree-beart overcall put
South In an awkward poaiUoa. He
wanted to show bla diamond suit, but
that would carry the blddln1 above
three no-trump. Hoplna lor the beat,
be settled for' the no-trump aame.
West led the heart nine: five, 10,
four. East continUed with the heart
CELEBRITY CIPHER
jick. By playin&amp; bla lowest pouible
Cetebtlry CipMr cryptograms •• crul.:l trom quot•tlons by l.-nou1 peopll, pUt ..wl prfiMnt.
cards, East was trylnc to tell bla partE.ch tlfttf In IM clptw tlands for another . Tod•y"$ clw: C• • L.
ner that his only chance of an entry
was ID c!!ilJI: the IoWftl-ranklng of the
·pH y
KHNT .
HYWKUDYJ
'D
suits. However, West was oblivious.
...
South played a dlamood to dummy's
K U DE
DY
HAHKUW
I 0 K
king aDd a diamond to bla ace, but
East's spade dilcard killed that plan •
HAACHOL
TDKUTF
tOEDY"J:EE
Nezt South cubed the club ace. Un·
thlnlrlnlly, West played his elpt, not
X DE K ·
L S Y K
I S 8 ,
I 0 K
S F
the kina.
.
,.
Gratefully, South continued with an- · ED K
X H W
C T Y S.
KUTFT . '
other club, establlsbing dummy's suit ·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Oentopedology Is the science of opening your
aDd coming home with' bla contract.
mouth and putting your loot In II ." - Philip, Ouke ol Edinburgh.
U West unblocks bls club kin&amp; under
the ace, Eut must 1et on play with the
WOlD
jack and cash aU bls heart winners.
IAMI
True, unblockiq the king mlabt cost a
l~ltod loy CLAY I. POLlAN - - - - - - - trick, but it could only be an overtrick:
a small price to pay for trying to deRearranga ~tt1r1 of
feat a game.
.
,
four Krambled words
low to form four simple wo'rds .IJ!~
FIDally, ·note that If South leads a
low club op the first round of the lUll,
West must play bls elabt, not the kina·
VYNEEL
He must save the king to be plllottned
bytheace.
'
·

-

e

1 Sornathlng to

Pw

OUR LANGUAGE

f'.'( W'F U~JC6

"""'' rol.

"'"=

DOWN

aufflx
3 Author ·
Umborto 4 Look angrily
5 Aploce
' (lbbr.)

~···

=:rot,

=r ...
='--.:..·--.,----

:.-;:.

NEVER TO AAVE I-lAD ANV
51-!EEP AT ALL ..

I TI-IINK I'M

il:.a"tl: '

,

111

11111 Honda ~urrl111na, vory
oharpll $2,000. 304-182·24112.
:
83 Hondo 150 Night HIWk &amp;14- '
441-1233
t

TO

::x.

.
.
·= I IDr T.~1 WMI!or, Dnar,
or, ·-••o. ~
-

=$2::,000::.::·:.::3=04.:.-{f7:::.:.&amp;-3:..:::116::0::..- - - :

BUT MA~IlE ITS BETTI;R
I-lAVE LOST VOUR S~EEP TI-IAN

ov

4322.

Mei'Chllldl.. .

1885 Honda 100 cc, 2,100 ml, '

OF COURSE.TI-IERE
WAS LITTLE BO·PEEP
WJ.IO HAD SOME SJ.IEEP.
TJ.IEN SIIE LOST TJ.IEM

.!t.":•

=::-:;:::::;-=-:::::::'•:-=-=:::::::'7'=-c:

Pass

s•

Utle

63- ralo
·64 Anger
65 Cantankaroua
88 Poolng
meteiUI
6Q Atmoephort
70 Droflligcy.

IMt&gt;re&lt;:am.be

.'

=b~ :.1:::',.~

Pass

I+

Eut

liilirii-

honor
unwanted

~

cheap. 304..eJ5.6001.

.

3 NT

A SECONT
BLESSIN'II

HELPIN'OF

Motorcycles

Yamoha 400, Good Condhlon, •'
eiCOIIenl bOdy oondll on naodo 1400. &amp;14-441-1333.
•
Eootor buMIM lor llle. 304- new lnlarlor, aoklng fiSOO, 11+ ~~~~~~------111!2-II:IN.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
178-1526.
W77
Chevrolet
llallbu
Clonic;
Flah Tl:nk, 2413 Jaekoon A.vo. uoellent oondhlon, 18,000 aofor Sale
Point P-nt. 304-41~:1, tual miiM, $2200, 114-$81-C441.
ltml Chock Mate opoacl boll, ;
.fuU llna Troploal
blrdo,
10
amollonlmalo and •
.•
W77 Ford LTD, 4dr., 1150, &amp;1+ tOft., 1001-F, Mercury outboard, ,
traitor, ••rv good condition, •
For Pan Oftly _ _ ,dog 1411-2481.
$2500,114-Mt-24111.
:
a,_lng
canlflod ~­ 1t7l CaDrlcl Clelllc, 2 - · V·
1m'
i5'
Barot!•,
Tri-Hull
·
8111
:
Coli for ~ntmanl
• I, AJC,!';,w. liM, low mlleo, good
342\
oar. 1 - Ol:lo Dolo U, jcood Boat. 15 HP '"'"naon TraUar, ,
~quipped, 83,500, 11+441.. :
Oraol Dana Pupplaa, """'· _.... bad, otako ........
Fawn In Color fiOO. 11+446- 304-t711-4f22.
'
11032.
1t7l Camano, Good Condition, 11111120 vr fllnkor V205, 305 Yl, '
Aloha
One
lla"""lotr
Cuddy,
:
Loadad, T-Topo, $1,500. 614-141·
full oonvoo. T n k - plalli':j ,
1333.
Eagle llndem tl'llller.
'
1880 Chavrolot Plok.Up, $650, cloa!'1 _ de=bll - · Price •
5-1175 or 304- ·'
Rune - . 1m' Ford Plok·Up, $13,uw.
I Cytlndor, Runa Good $850; 678-50113 ....
1m Dc&gt;dgo Van, R'!fiO 4rl0t, I ,1893 Sklffcr1ft1e Ft. M•hogeny :
Spood, f75D. 114- I Codor Ffohln; Boat, Daoip &amp; •
Wldo, 114·245-8108:
·
Roalll- pol- balllod plgo,
1112 Ford Eocort, noodo ._.
IICID oaoh, 114-liiMOIO. . .
,.pol"-_ Jlood Nnnlng ••r:t.!'!' · Flailing "llolor Guido'~ allctrlc • ~
Clog, pup, $60. :iow7S- king .-cJO DBO, 114'Mfl.....,, foot corolrol, aaerfllclng $135.
Ramlnaton 12'' chllnuw, 2.0 cl,
114'14..2515.
$45. 3GU82' 3375.
1Wo
clogo, mate and
........,
.; toUr ..... 205-15o
Auto Parts .&amp;15", good oondKion, l111oo.; 11+
1185-4405.
Accessories
•'
Wontod: ,.bbll dog, pn,.r poi1
4 fii&lt;IUnd luiWg tlrao, 18.5144- :
hound, pan
no INI CodiAac Coupo DoYflla, 15LT, 112 t,..ild; $200, 11+-llt2· •
pl)robrodo, 114417-0112, 61+ ~r aun roof, baded, 41,000 2571.
812-21141.
•
mil•, IIU ,.., 1 yr elltencled
Buctaet Transmluton., UMd 1 ~
..,._,,
4
new
trrae,
,$1,000.
,...
,..buln, all types, et1rtlng at $H; ·:
MusiCal
304-t7S-1102 ..... -~~~·
'"
owner eM-245-1171. "114--311- ...
Instruments
•
lUI 121 GT, turbo, 5 2213.
apiOd, loodod.
ne oond,
· ~ gu tanka, one lon truck
7 pe oh.- "-1 lbport twloo 11,300. 304-17S-d887.
1 n•tora floor maro,
dNmaot W/01......, Cllll &amp; 11111 D.. otatlonwagon, oil whooll
Ito. D a R Auto, R/ptoy, WV. 304-.
cymbal -ors, ZllciiiAn h~
·•
· · hklh ml~ bciilk value 3?2·3133 or 1.-273'1328.
hill Wtoland. lltoll 11-: Criminal ~. M11 tor $2'7'00, 132 But·
- d o to-. I~ 4f413SOZ.
p_...,, Oh, 11+812· 78
Camping .
Baldwin a Roland lornul,
2521.
K-rdo llorlln &amp; lliboon
Equipment
.•
· Oullars And lluoh lllorw- · 1NI Pontlee Onnd Am 72,000
~71='"'='D-•
d,.,..-.:.ll~d.:.oo~m-:oo.;,mo-.""24-.
-...
-1
:
Avollable P - . Huonmlnablnl lll!oa, · Eac:ollonl Condhlon,
lluole, Jae.._, DH 114:216- 13,100. 11+446-7144.
corllalnocl unH, good ooniitlon, ,
u a lnqulrioo only, 114-MII- ,
5118.
',:C:.::.,-,--.,--!7:-::::::-:-=- 1117 Dido Dolta U. 4dr., two 2355.
I
Pt-lor•lo,304-t71-311t.
lono
air, oulo., Ilona
gno~ Ill,
L, d-llko ,_,
Campers&amp;
IGOO; 11111 B-11, 14,00011L, 79
5ap., 4cyl., muot ba -n. oniY
Motor Homes
13100, ~ullfUI rsd polnl &amp;
olulllln11m whoalo; 11+141-2045 1177 Toycu lllnl MOlar Horns :
or 1*14.aa71.
So~ CorllolrYocf, Sleopa 4 22 '
1117 Ponllec BoMiviiJe,, nc Mlloo Par Ooll~ $2,500 iluno ;
.
•
61. Fann Equipment
concl, 85.100. oao. 3114-67S- Ooodl11+3182722 « 67S-5671.
For Sole: fMI Fon 21 Ft C.mpor ~
.f1' month old rqlotorsd
U:nouoln bul' .- . i04-837- . 111N Doclga Doytonl PaCIIIco Soli Contained. 114-441-1003. ·
2!23.
• •TIWbo, LoW IIIINgo, All Eloelrlc,
~ .. ti,OOO !log. 114-:Jn.
Services
"''

'for·Rint
~- Houn: li.T.W. io:w ·~ --- - • ~
~---.....;;.;..;.;.;..;.,;,;,.,___ . o.rn. to 1:110 p.m.,' lundoy 1:00 ~- , _ ·- ·
bodn&gt;Otll lfll, CloUI....;,., F . .
loi:OO p.lll. -·1121.
. . 11200; :Ill ......... - ·
2
wv 104-t7&amp;4141. ...... :""f,
ootNOnlalnal, fiOOO, ~~
54 MIICIIIIIIIOUI

Autos for Sale

Nor"

· THEN HE AST

4 Wheal Drive 1G84 Bronco II :
6...._737. .

1t7l Triumph Til~ 85!000 mlloo,

truoJ'

lllogodoth),l14tl14421

71

-7048.

lnl_,_

\:,=.oal~pot=.':i\1:::

TmnsporiJtton

~=.. ";~= '!:-=""eom.,.-..,l,..r,""304-t=::75-=534=5-••..,.k
Dolamollon, Puppr P.._, 11+ Ia&lt; DoannL
441&lt;0404.
1m Pl,-h F..,, vory gooc1
oondltlon, , _ tl,., $600. It+

•If•

dftlonl UIO. E-.g.: 11+241-

N W - IIIII 317 "--um
S1 ~.=:rh '
~and·
I · y- Wlnlllty, ....... il!drllng,
'
IIIIY1' gnpo
ond . .up for SIMmO. FlAil, 114-NMI2.
Call ; "" ln-tlon, 114-1116- .,,.
· Ant
" lq
11121 aok for lrtndt. ·
""·
!Ill
Apan,m.ent
Buy « ..-. fllvorlna AntloluH;·
44
1124 E. lloln llnot. on AI. 12_4_,

AKC f l a g - Boxor pup,
Mile,. llwn oalarwcl, hb. old,
$208, 114 . . :11107.
'
AKC Rog..., Doborman

,_ -od~m·r. 1t57
Dllllla1 '-'~ ~ · - · le. Edloon
;;
fonii:IIO tractor, :IOHP, 4 - · ototrfng punp 1t71 Font, !f.:J. PI, J point hlloh. turf ' ' 115; dirt blkt lln~te, ItO; ..., houn:. 15100. Font -.A
&amp;1+3l7·7721ioftar
. :::"-m:~.~~~':l
Som -vllle'o Bahlaflold tM- 1
1pn
•
•
•
tod comotl0ugo ~'".bark doolgn
onny panom). llortoay ooooon F.., hay bator, ~ -Hion.
Apr1128 • May 22. Surpl. . fO'IIol 12000. 304 4511173.
cio&lt;hlng. fiji Sandyville Olfleo. F~ • ~~ Noon Ill 6:00 John Doon 400 grlndor mlxar.
Pll. 304-27Hooo.
·
lnt_l,_ 10ft tnnaport dlae.
Plrmall 1144 dlolol.
Soan Lawn ,. HP OT, All good oond; 304-271-GIS.
~=e, 42 lneh $400, It+ Qlnr Clatno wlih· lront
a~eg - o r w1n lrodl
Sot ol WodoiiiQ ring, 1, ,. for 3/4 .., 4WD
~I
klrot @~~d.lKoO,&gt;IIIUI dfamonda, va'"!!_Wln112100, I
2,
f;IDO, ,_..,. - · l - 3 3 .
114 ,_ - ·
Sloroo. and -aunp - · P1go for 4-H It FFA JI'OIICII,
to go,

"J:.•-

11047.·

Why

·_,

. I

For Solo: Sovanl Pal" Mono
Sh-, Slzo: 11.0 (Now), sa Per

.. :OOpm.

tEioC Avolllbla. o.orgoo Crtak
Rood, $14,000 Flnm. 114-446-

Rlvorlronl EnJoy The Vtewl lm·
m-1• 3 lodrDOmo, 2 Bllhe"
Polio Room, . Haot Pump/ • · Zbdmt. apto., lOIII -trio, ap.·
Oo-o, lla"l' More Extra o 4 pllao
E~Jiid,
lllloo Iouth Of Eurekaii 17'1S1
,.....
OIOM to echoOI
llat llou1 7. t85 100 14-Bili- In
to:on.
·
19M Ovollalolo
11rl . e ' ' '
l4t or
..._.
y · ••
.
.,.,ng alloy _.., Ook Drive~
for JWit RlclnaIrick 3 ladRIOtiiO 1 112 Batho,
~rport, AC, Clu Hell, Full 1 or
nm., iiiiiir romodilod,
- - . IIOco!ntiJ Remodeled .Ia&lt;
IliON lmormatlon, oo11 It+
Th~. Price: IM,IIOO, 114' 812-t~ .
4*-ti'tl.
.

!~,!!""=.=on:=~~

Coull...,_

r.g:

For aal• wood bunk ~~
phono :J04.8824300 or
•
3041 ook for Carol.
For Solo: Dryor And Ralrlgorotor
S60 Each Call After 4 P.M. 114251-4750.
.

Four 14"' chrome r.verted
r~erchandise
with d - ~ cond~
_ _ _ _ _ _..._,;,;
--;;;;
··- tlon,. 1100. 61+1112·2:123 baforw

Sotory: ta.OO /Hr, To Stan. " 1nConlld Caollo AI 1·
te...·-•
~• •-- F A
IIOOoPI-ZI02; -•·~ or I"
p i - .'1M3. lquol ep.
joorulllllr IA;plo,.,.
WE'LL MY Will To Typo Nomoo
And •Mnalr F.- Homol
SSOG.OO IW10011. ca111100 ~IIWIIJn.+) Or
1....
»W 111 S u
li.IOI42.
·. "'
Wlllr. u
........,....
..

u---

or - · _ . ,
n - oom...,..ll locotlo.:
......,
. acfri&gt;m
In Ripley, WV. ,._,
location wlh on-01- portdng

houao. Good concl. 30HII&amp;o1818. II
front -porkln;
· floorfnlrn
-&amp;
omptoyao
North
II.
lluot
ba
n
to
oppnelot•.
41 A, I Room, Full au-; 2 123 Cour1 Sl, Ripley, WV. 304Botho, 2 Bamo, - k Shop, 37NIIfl.
W/Ganga, Crlb.lt4-442360.

lachad ganr.· largo "&amp;._nlco
nalghboil&gt;Oo... 304-475-Sw/.
HILLTOP SECWSK)N
• 3100 'Squaro Faot Corllomm
0
ll •~~ n 1 · - • • mil
Pool And 2 Bam1.
• 1:1 Ad~nl Acrwa mil Aval~
~'t-oom Home On 4 Acrn
With 22x2l Pon• floom
.
, Within 3 Mil H .
All or Thl Abolia
Of Rio Oronda • Contact Bill •·
Connell At: Qonna Summer•
Raaltv FOf' lion lnhmnatlcin At:
11+36N258.
·

r.:.

~:.r:..."'~ =n·~.!'$. -pump,
~~~-nawll)&gt;plla,_,
:'1'..~~
at·

Sleeping whh -n;. For Sal• SlU medium tldiM
Aloo tnltw -·All hlok ~
- · donlno w/ leothlr
CaU .... 2:00 p.m., 304· . . wlnt.r
l~m. llko ..., wu SIS, , _
tll51,11a-WV.
140, paid $150; 11ao ml.c. lldln
clothlng; cou 11+1112·2155, "
"49:!,__f~o~r~L~81~SI!..:.·__ lpm or ~14-Mt-2204 oftor 6pm,

- - · $65,000. flnm. Aoli' lor ;;__
Bryon Sm"hars 304-727MII or "" Nnl

lice-. gGocl driving rtcord,
thrw yoan driving expo~onco,
and odaqUIII aUiomol&gt;llo In·
1Urance cown• requiM.
Sllary: sa.oon.r. fo Olarl. If In·
t.,..tad oonlocl CtcNia at 1•
o.dMno for a~
·
100....,~,..-.
...
jlllconta: o4112/ID. EOE.
WANTED:TiiloPart-nmo(20Hto
fMc) comm!'nltY Sldlla lnotrucIOf!l
- Con!munMy
Porsono
With liMcfad
IIMXITa In
Uvl- In llefgo Cot.llly. Hlfth
... n.-- Valid DrtvW't
~'::.. o:;.d'Drl¥1"9 flocord,
Throe , _ Drlvlllfl Ex~noa,

.,.
116 Ae. 4 Bodroqm Houoo, Rural
Water, Oraal Hunllng, $11,000,
,114-:.:,:2::,
1::.1::":.:4=:2·..,...,~---..:.

VACATION

-:=--:-:--.,..-,------- .

~

·31 Hom- for Sale

WHAT MAKES
YOU SAY THAT,
Ml~ TUTTLE?

SHORE .
NEEDS HIM A

1988 Ford Air St8r Automatic: '
Ov1rdrln, ~. N.w TlrM, ExceJ.o
Ioiii Condition, 114-4441·7028.
' .

1981 Kowaoakl 440 LTD, 3,000
· Mllao, .Noodo
Ballery I
Spedometer, $100. IM·256·1223. ·~

Wllh Paroono Wllh MRIOD
Pralarrod. Salary: $5,00 IHr, To
Start, Sand Raouma To Ctclllo
Biker,. P.O. Box 804, Jackeon,
OH 45840; Doodllno For Appllcanto:. 4114183 ' Equal appor·
tunlty Employer. ·
WANTED: Two pori time 120
hrw./WIC.) .Communhy Skllle ln•
ot rucloro n10dod to ooolot par·
sont with IIRIOD In communh~

Real Estate

TH' PARSON

1985 Nlooan, 4 WD, Z angina, 48 '
K •crtu11 mlle1, whtlla bru1h ;
bar ltrlpM, ca,..r, etere0, IIC ,
eond, garage kopl, $4,-. firm . •
.:304:..:,:.ff7.:.,5-t:..:.:1::58::.··, . . - - - - - '

1180 Suzuki, 150 CC, Runa

nvw,

Geargea Portab4e S.wmfll, don,

'

.

Welt

llldrkl·
.
22 Femalo rei.
23 God of lova
2$ Comedian Pltlllpa
27 llonor (al.l
3D Guy'•
counterp1rt
32 WWII1101
.34 Clck beltlt
35 Aontln 101
37 Exhauat
(2 Wdl.)

43 12, Roman
44 lrrlto,.
46 Son of Adorn
48 Gonollc
111atartol
50 Abontlnoblt
.
Snowman
53 Aatronauta'
lorry
55 DefonH
clop!.
•
57 Chewing58 Sc8r Uaauo
61 lllnl•tar'•

opening lead: • 9

G,..l $650· IDU Hondo Odoo.' :
uy,
Runo Good, saso. 614·2566~.
.

:

to the mUI juot
Dollvaoy . Paroon /Warshou.. haul= 7S-1lS7.
Workar, Chauffeur Ucense R• call
qulrsd. Apply At: Sparkle Mlu Paula'• ~y_Carw Cenl•r 1
Supply Co. a!nt Stale Route 141, Bloek Waot or HIIC On Jaekoon
GaUlpG'III, Mondar Thru Friday, Plko ll.f I A.M. ·5:30 P.M. II
8 A.M. To 5 P.M.
OUalfty And Exparlonoo lo The
Ful~Timo Sileo PooHion, Wllh t1 Concern For Your Chlld'a
For A
lnlont
Bonelllo, Soma Travol Raqulrsd. Core. Coli Ue
614.446-8227. p,..
Sond Roouma To: CLA 265, clo /Toddlen
chooton 18c:hool Ago 814-446Gallipolis Dolly Tribune, 825 8224.
.
.. .

.

Soe,.

BARNEY ·

11165 Blaz., $4,5410. 1i86 Chivy
truck lake ov•r paymenta. Must
Mil. 304-475·257V or 175·2718. ·.,

74

ad
In Gatllpollo Fony ..... T.LC. &amp;1·.:,B_W:.:.:;:a:,;n,:.;t:.:.,t::O;...D:,o.:,....,...
B1byattt•r needed tor 18 mo old

rwf rwqulred.
8:00P.M.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

(

15 Ne*Deel

EAST

Help Wanted

.......,

!Doe!.I
For ·~•mplt

+AK4

• KQJ1076S

11

1 Letter of
atpltlbet
4 Turn• right
8 - Guevoro
11 llooe around
13 Without and

Anewer to Pl'ftloUI Pilule

4D H. of IL
41 La. Ume

I

I1

DONUH

8 UD0 T

I
I

Kids ask the craziesl ques·
lions. We passed a trailer park
. _ . .
r one day and my young son
r
asked me why lhey called
r----'M-.:.O_N_A_D__I_:_..,, ~~~.~bile homes when they

1 1

hs,.....,~;;..f..:......:-.:..&amp;~

l 1 I' I . 19 I e
7
L..-1.-.J.-...I.L.......L..- L
• ....I

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS

I'

Compl~·· rho chuckle quoted
· .by flllmg 1n the mi!!ing -words

vou develop trom step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
__,
Chosen • Whirl • Snarl - Bishop - PILLOW
Our teenage son had .come home and proudly an·
nounced he Md landed the softest job in town: I founct
out he was gotng to be a.-tester in a PILLOW factory!

�'

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Com!!Uinit;r Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
(and the day or that event. Items
·must lie received wen in advance
:to assure publication in tbe calDdJ
e r.
·•
FRIDAY
. RACINE - The Racine Church
of lhe Nazarene will hold revival
:wilh Rev. Dave Canfield, through
Sunday at 7 p.m·. nightly and at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Joy .Sizemore will provide ·special
music. Public illvited.

Jamboree in Fairplain\ W.Va.
Maricley at,ll a.m: Public invited.
·
· HOBSON • Sam McGuire will
. POMEROY • Wells Cemetery be at the Hobson Church of Christ
will be cleaned Saturday. Anyone and Chri . U . Suiida
wanting to save flowers cr decora- .
Sball moo,
. Ymomlions should remove them by that mg. Sunday school at .9.~0 a.m.
time.
Pas~r Theron Durham mv1tes the
publiC.
· POMEROY • The youth groups
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff.
of Trinity Church will hold their
ington,
Gallipolis, guest preacher,
annual egg hunt Saturday at the
Chureh, Pomeroy,
Naomi
Baptist
parsonage on Mulberry Avenue in
Sunday,
10:45
am.
Pu~lic invited.
Pomeroy from 2:30-4:30 p.m. •

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
. a round and square dance at the
POMEROY : Good,Friday ser- Old American Legion Hall in Mid·
vice at St. Paul Lutheran Church in dlepon on Saturday from 8-11 :30
Pomeroy wiU lie at 7:30p.m. Rev. p.m . Admission is free. Children
George Weirick invites the public.
are welcome with adult supervision. Bring soft drinks and snacks.
SYRACUSE. Holy Week ser- Melvin Cross will be the caller.
vices for the SYr.u:use Charge Unit- Music wiU be by CJ and the Couned Methodist Churches lii'C: Good try Geml~en.
Friday services at Asbury at 7:30
p.m,; Easter Sunday sunrise serRACINE • The Racine Legion
vices at Minersville at 6 a.m. Post602 will hold its annual Easter
Brealcfast wiU follow in the church Egg Hung on l!aturday at noon.
The even I will be hel_(l rain or
social rooms. Public invited.
shine.
l!YRACUSE - Good Friday serPOMEROY • The Meigs High
vices at the First Church of God in
School
Class of I 978 will hold a
Syracuse will be held Friday at 7
meeting
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
p.m.
home
of
Tom and April Smith,
RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Libeny 1691 Lincoln'
m Pomeroy.
Mountaineers will perform Friday Plans will be Heights
made
for
the claSs's
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
15th reunion.
RUTLAND - The annual Good
POMEROY - The Ladies Auxil·
Friday all-night gospel sing will be
iary
of the Chester Volunreer Fire
held Frida)' at 7 p.m. featuring 12
Depanment
will hold a halc:e sale
groups at the Freewill Baptist
Saturday
at
9:30
a.m ..arKroger's in
Church i.n Rutland. Everyone welPomeroy.
All
donations
will be
come.
accepted. .Donations may be left at
LONG BOTTOM • Good .Fri· Newell's Gas Station in CheSICI'.
day services will be held at the
l,l.UTLAND - There. will be a
Long Bonom United Methodist dance at the Rutland American
Church at 7:30p.m. Rev. Normilll Legion Hall on Saturday [rom 8
Butler will be speaker. Everyone p.m. to midnight M,usic will be by
welcome.
Pure Country Band. Public invited.

..

.

Eastet time is the time for eggs
and the time for eggs is Easter
·
time.
It must be true since the Middlepon Community Association has
prepared about 1500 eggs for its
annual Easter egg hunt to ~ held at
POMEROY ·Easter sunrise ser- Hartinger Park in Middleport Sunvice, Mt Hermon United Brethren day.
Church: Texas.Jtoad, Pomeroy,
The big hunt will begin at 2
Sunday Ill.6:30 a.m. Brealc:fast fol- . p.m. and all the organization needs
lows. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., now is lotsa lcidS. It is stressed that
worship at · 10:30 a.m. Robert lhe event is opeilto aU youngsters;
Sanders, pastor, invites the public.
not just lhose liviilg in MiddleJlon.
Interesting that lhe assocl8tii&gt;n
REEDSVILLE - Sunrise ser- haS taken over the annual egg hunt
vice, Fellowship Church of the It was done for years on end by the
Nazarene, Reedsville, Sunday, 6.:30 Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary Club
a.m. Breakfast follows. Sunday whiclr gave up staging the hunt a
school, 9:30 .a.m. and worship at few years ago.
. ·
9:45 a.m. Rev. John Douglas
The eggs actually are plastic and
invites the public.
inside of each is a prize 'worth at
I · least a dollar. The golden egg will
RUTLAND · Sunrise service, be worth $50 and the .silv.er egg
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.. worth $25 to the children finding
Sunday, 6 a.m.
.
them lhis year. There will be four
age groups involved and the cosLONG BOTTOM " Mt. Olive tumed Easter bunny will give each
Community Church, Long BoUom, youngster under two an egg so that
sunrise service, 6:30 a.in. Pastor will save parents the struggle wilh
uwrence Bush invites the public.
those too young. And, by lhe way,
no parents will be permitted in the
MIDDLEPORT · Silver Run search areas. Once more, the faithBaptist Church, Story's Run Road, ful Middleport fii'Cmen will be .on
sunrise service, 6 a.m. Pastor Bill hand to BSSJst with the hunt
Little invites the public.
There, lhat talres care of everything but the wealher;
· POMEROY • Aillside Baptis~
•
Church, Easter cantata, 11 am. and
Seems lilce lhere' s a lot of action
6 p.m. Rev. James Acree invites in Middleport lhis weekend.
lhe public.
On Saturday evening from 8 tD
II: 30 p.ln., there will be a free
POMEROY - Hemlock Grove dance held at the old American
Christian Church, sunrise service, Legion Hall on Founh St. Music
Sunday, 6:30 a:m. with breakfast will be by C. J. and the Country
following. Worship at 9:30 a.m. Gentlemen. No alcoholic beverPublic invited. .
ages are ~rm it ted. Children are
welcome if Iiley are accompanying
SYRACUSE • Syracu$e First . adults. Residents attending are tD
Church of God, sunrise service, take their own soft drinks and
6:30a.m. Brealc:fast follows. '
• something for 'the snack table.

detennined ' Thursday if · the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital actually will
reach the goal of selling 19 dozen
eggs on their three good egg trees.
As of yesterday afternoon, tbe
auxiliary had sold midway into
their 17th dozen of eggs so they
might yet make the goal. At 8ny
.rate the lhree good egg trees are
attractive decorations about the
llospital and the auxiliary has been
!Q.ICCCSSfUI wilh lhe project even if
the eotire 19 dozen eggs don't sell.
The white trees decorated with
pastel eggs bearing the name of
your favorite good egg will be used
at tbe hospital for a wedt or so following Eastet. You might want to
be a !ale comer in helping the auxiliary reach the goal. Cost is $5 per
n..me on each egg and you can still
take pan by visiting the lobby or by
sending the money and name to the
awtiliary in care of the bospijal. So'
many of your have been supportive
of the auxiliary which does so'
much for the local hospital.

..

NEW YORK (AP) -· A crew
filming AI Pacino's new movie,
"Carlito's Way," was ejected from
lhe Times Square subway s!lltion
for damaging property and disregarding passenger safety, transit
officials said.
"They seem to feel they have
carte blanche to do what they
will," said Bruce Lane, a Transit
Authority superintendent. .
· . The agency frequently accom·
modates film makers shooting· on
location in lhe city. But Lane tQid "
New Yorl&lt; Newsday this film crew
wore out it$ welcome by disrupting
. subway trafric, knocking lluge
holes in ll Brooklyn station ceiling
and then trying to saw down a pole
on a train m the Tun.es S!juare sta·
lion, apparently to get a beuer camera angle. ·
Martin Bregman, lhe fUm's producer, said lhe Transii Authority
had been "totally uncooperative,"
. but he would not discuss details
. until lhe ftlming in New Yorlc: was
complete, Newsday said. ··
· The movie i:e-stars Pacino and
Sean Penn, and is directed by Brian
DePalma.

-·

YoL28, No.8
Copyrighted 1183

SPill~

__ __

The·quality·you
expect at an
unexpected price.

1 .

. $)8,999.

.

PITY ME RECLAMATION • Roeks and
· flirt are llelng hauled from tbe Pity Me site as
'··work coatloues to reclaim the area struck by a
• rock sllde.ln May, 1!191. Some rJI tbe •~~Jcril!l ·
are belnJ UJed for construction· of a road IU'OIInd

.a...BI

GRAVELY
SYI,IM

I

1

I
• cruise contrC?I• rear-window defosger
• power driver seal • power antenna • driver air bag
• anti-lock brake!i • power windows • power door
locks • rear-door child st'CUrity locks_• AM·FM stereo ·

. .

I
i

'

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'

500 I. Mill, PO. .IIY, OH. ~ 992·2174
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-

14 Section 1'22 PagM

Aprll11, 199~

A Mulllmedllllnc. newapaper

tbe bill wbUe tile rest will be fill for a aearby
strip .mine area sc:lleduled for reclamatiOQ "WOI'k
later. (Tlmes-Seatlnel Pboto by Cbarleae .Hoe·
~ . . ,f..
Riebl
'.
..........
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...

ramp at,Athens, the patrol said.
Fellure's hand, v;hich was outside ·
the .cruiser's l"indow, -.yas report•
edly smashed between lhe two cars.
Fellure was treated at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital and released.
Cross also faces Athens COililty
charges of driving while intoxicated and a felony charge of fleeing
and eluding. He faces Meigs County charges of fleeing and eluding,
assault and running a stop sign, lhe
sheriff's depanment reponed. ·
Cross remains in the Athens
County Jail jn lieu of$50'000 bond
imposed by Bennett eros's is being
represented by Athens County Publie l)efender Patrick McGee.

injured in Friday wreck

GALLIPOLIS - · A Cheshire galion,
Y. Saunders:37, 909 Wiuson Road,
Gallipolis pollee
woman and her three passengers
Bidwell; was westbound on
A Liv.erpool, W.Va., woman Sycamore Street when Martin, whO
were injured in a one-vehicle accident Saturday morning in Cheshire was cited by Gallipolis police Fri- was northbound on Second
Township, Gallia County, lhe Gal-, day afternoon following a two- Avenue, failed 10 stop for a stop
Iia-Meigs Post of the State Higli- vehicle accident on Second Avenue sign 81)d struck Saunders' vehicle
(State Route 7).
way Patrol reponed.
in the side.
. Kimberly R. Lee, 22, and one
Joyce A. Balser, 22, Route I, · No injuries were reported. Saun~nger, Jerry A. Litchfield;34,
was cited for failure to yield from a ders' vehicle sustained moderate
Point·Pieasant, W.Va., were not stop sign Brter she pulled from Sec- dafllage and Martin's vehicle sustreated for lheir injuries.
ond Avenue onto Sycamore Street tained light damage. Both vehicles
Transp&lt;ll1ed to Holzer Medical and struck a. westbound vehicle were driven fiom the scene·.
Center by Gallia County Emergen• driven b)o'Lanita R. Hall, 29, 1626 ·
cy Medical Service were Trina T. Woodsie Road, Patriot.
A Crown Ciiy man's vehicle
Lee, 29, Wagner Lane, Poim PleasNo injuries were reponed. Both sustained heavy damage Friday
. ant, and Sandy L. Lee, 24, Stale vehicles sustained moderate dam- evening in a two-vehicle accident
age and were driven from the on Second Avenue (State Route 7),
Route 248, Chester.
'
Trina was admitted and was scene.
Ga!Jipolis police reported.
reponed in stable condition SaturCody T. Boothe, 19, 10597·
day. Sandy was treated and
An Ashton, W.Va .. woman was State Route 218, was southbound:
released.
cited by Gallipolis police Friday when a vehicle driven by Sara I.
· According to the report, the afternoon following a two-vehiCle Colvin, 16, 104 Fraley Drive, Galvehicle was northbound on State accident on Eastern Avenue (State lipolis, whose view was obstructed
Route 7 when it went off the righ1 Route 7).
by a vehicle parked in a no parlcing
side of the road and over a squ~ll
· Jacqueline 0. Nance, 25, 52125 zone, pulled out of an alley !DID his
embankment. Kimberly told the . Ashton Upton Road, was cited for Pl\th.
patrol a southbound vehicle came . fl!ilun; to control.
.
No injuries were reported and
left of center, forcing her off the
According to the repon, Nance ·'no citations were issued. Boothe's:
· roa.L
··
told police she was southbound vehicl~ was towed from the scene.
Kimberly was cited for no driv- when a vehicle driven 'by S81)dra L. Colvin's vehicle sustained moder:
ing privileges. 'rhe vehicle sus· . Daugherty, 34, Route 2, Point ate damage and was driven from
tained heavy, disabling damage and Pleasant, W.Va., pulled out in front lhe scene.
.•
was towed from the scene.
of her, causing Nance to run off the
left side of the road.
Two vehicles sustained minor:
A Umgsville woman was. cited , Daugherty told police she felt damage Friday afternoon on State'
Friday afternoon by the patrol for there was enough clearance when Route 7, Gallipolis police reponed. ·
failure to colitrol ~oUowing a one- she pulled onto lhe highway.
Michael K. Hathaway, 41, 810,
vehicle accident m Salem Town- . No injuries we're reported. Maple Street, Middleport, was,
ship, Meigs County. · ·
Nance's vehicle sustained heavy · nonhbound in a left-hand turn Jane
According 10 the report, Lorena darilage and was towed from the when a vehicle driven "by John R::
L. Oiler, 18, 31645 State Route scene. Daugherty's vehicle was not Ellinger, 39,509 Founh Ave., Gal•'
325, was w~stbound on S.R. 124 damage. .
•
lipolis, pulled from a driveway off·
when she lost control on the wet
.
. lhe east side of the road and struc!l.
road and we'nt off lhe right side.
A Chillicolhe man was cited by him.
.
~he then attempted to pull back . Gallipolis police Friday afternoon
No injuries were reported and · .
onto tl!e road and went off the left follow.ing a· two-vehicle accident no cilalions were issued. Both vehi'
side.
on Second Avenue (State Route .7). cles were driven from lhe scene.
No injuries were reported. DamThomas A. Martin, 35, 253
age to the vehic1e was noi IiSied; Western .Ave .. was cited for failure
Editor's .note: Names, age~
The accident is still under. invesii- to yield from a stop sign.
and addresses are printed as they
Accordinl to the repon, Cathy appear on ofllcial reports..

clamap. '

SMITH NELSON.MOTORS, INC~

.

Parlly doody. High In mld·IIOI.

.

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis when it ignited a shower cunain.
Volunteer Fire , Department . Seventeen firefighters respondrespOnded to four calls between ed with three trucks, but the fire
Friday night and Saturday 1110rning: was out on arrival. Damage was
A furnace malfuliCtion under a contained' to lhe cunain.
The depanment was also called
house trailer owned by Otho
to
a
car fU'C S:30 Saturday .morning.
Wolfe, 47 Dolphin Street, Kanau·
Eleven
fli'CftghterS responded with
ga, ignited surrounding insulation
one
truck
10 Jackson Eswes, 536
at 10 p.m. Friday, the department
J
acbon
Pilc:e,
Gallipolis~ and used
reported.
.
Fourteen firelighters responded
with two lf\lclc:s and extinguished
the blaze with 30 gallons or water
The fire caused S100 worth

• Choice of wire wheelcovers or aluminum wheels
.• special 90th AnniversafY badginy.
Test-drive ··~ 90th Ar\nivNsary LeSabre today at
yOur Buick dealer. You may be su rp~ised to discover
how much Buick quality you ~a~ afford.'
",

.I

.

Weather........... ~ ...............A-:Z

Gallipolis FD answers four calls

, cassette, wilh seek aod scan • OynaRid~ suspenSion
• PASS-Key* 1heft-deterrent system •lpw·liltover trunk ·

Huinor writing focus of workshop

'I

Mlddleport-Pomeroy~alllpoii&amp;-Polnt Pleasant,

·Sports..................;...........Cl-8

.

•

• ATHENS · Once again, Ohio c~ance to appe~ on stage at the
'university Professor Mel Helitzer Front Room coffeehouse to sell
.is offering Humor Writing through , their mawrial to a live audience.
the eo,nmuniversity pr~gram.
· Tho class meets for eight ses,
Wriling is an essential oommu- sions beginning Tuesday, Aprill3, .
nicati()n sli:ill that is vital in the frol)l 6:30-10 p.m. in 211 Scripps
business world. The technique of Hall. Don't ·miss .this chance to
combing writing with hu~o.r can study under an excellent ~fes;;or
.be Ieanied and adds creatiVIty to . and very funny guy I Regtstrauon
. pi.ecellbal may ~1se be dry. .
de&lt;~dline is April6.
Pilnicipants of thts class gam
For more infonniltion or to reghands-on experience wilh . writing, iste(, contact the .Ohio University
criliquinJ, producing ~ I!Crform· Office of Contiriuing Education a.t
'1ng. wriuen comedy !llaterial. The 593-.1770 or toll-me.in Ohio at 1Jinal clasa allows stu4en1&amp; the 800-336-5699. ·,
...

Along the river .............. Bl-8 ·
Business/Farm................Dl-8
Classified ......:................D4-7
Deaths .............................. A-7
EdiloraJ .............................Af'i

Gallia County's religious history
is recalled· James Sands· A-2 ·

F~ur

UD SIMND
lOUIS

conditioni~S

.

"

,_:___,

This 90th Anniv.ersary Buick LeSabre ls built with
the same kind of attenlion to quality that has made
LeSabre the best-selling full-size car in Amfrica.• The
'same kind Of quality that tfas given LeSabre the
highest resal~ value in its cla.')S ...
And right now 11llthis quality comes ar a most
· unex~ted price: Si8,999! '
!I you need further proof Of.LeSabrC 1SinCredible
quality and value, look at th is ·
parllallist of what you get:
• 3800 V~ engin~ • air

~

ATHENS • A Langsville man ·stems from a high-speed chase
charged in Athens County with one, from Meigs County 10 Athens last.
count or felpny a~gravated assault Tl\ursday which eventqally
against two State Highway Patrol in\&lt;olved units of the Meigs and'
troopers was bound over to the Athens County sheriffs' depart· ·
Athens County Grand Jury by ments and the Alhens Post of the
Athens Municipal Court Judge · State Highway Patrol..
Douj!las J!ennell at a pnehmmary
&lt;;:ross !lliegedl.Y fled from a
heanng Friday.
.
Melj!s Clll!nty sheJ:iffs. deput&gt;: folErnest. L..Cross, 27, ~s .accused . lowmg ~dispute w1th his ex-wife at
of assaulnng troopers Ketth fell~ her residence n~ar Pomeroy. The
and Je~emy Mendenhall wuh h1s troopers became mvolved when the
car durmg a htgh-speed chase last chase brought them to Athens
Thursday.
County.
Fellure, a passenger in Menden,
Aggravated assault is a firstdegree fe!ony _punishable by .up 10 hall's cruiser. was injured as
25 years .m pnson and a max1mum Mend,enha!l attempted to pass
fmc of up to $10,000. The charge Cross vehicle on the Route_682

Pomerov, OH.

LESABRE

Inside

Trade·of Charlton for Mitchell
questioned . . Fred W. Crow • A-6

Langsville man bound over
to Athens Munlcipal Court

Mon.-Fri.II:OO..S:OO
Sat.II:00-12:00

WORLD OF CHEMISTRY - Pomeroy Elementary
an
aSsembly Thursday on "Our Wonderful World or Chemistry." Tbe
event was an educational assembly oa the different chemicals
solids, liquids, etc; Student volunteers· assisted with the different
experiments. Pictured is Jennif'er Heck and Phil Potter during one
or tbe experiments.
•
.
.

C-1

Charged with ~ggravated assault

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

204 Condor SL

75 (.'l'flts

Indians drop 5-4 tilt to Blu.e Jays

Party held

THE 9 OTH A N N I v E. R s A R y B u I c K

oriental arid American designs 'by
Myrna Cordray.
For the program Dorothy Smith
read "When Easter Lilies Bloom."
Easter poems were read by other
members and resideilrs ·were aslc:ed
their favorite flowers.
Favors and potted marigolds
from Mary Rose's greenhouse was
given to everyone presenL '
.
Betty Milhoan presented a red
rose to Ada Holter, an honorary
member.
The club will tour the Riverview
Farm Herbs, Route 338 Racine
and Rose's Greenhouse.' Bashan'
on Apnll7.
'

Happ·' Easter

·- ' - - - 4

.

Smith presents program

Preserving
the past ·
through
'yesteryear'
-B-1

. LOS ANGELES (AP) Sponscaster Ahmad Rashad will be
Margaret Parker, president of host of "Caesars Challenge," a
lhe Meigs County Pioa~r and His· daytime game show that.debuts in
torical Society, reports that the June, NBC anniiunced.
organization can certainly use a Jot
Contestants will answer qUesmore volunteers.
tions and unscramble ;words as Iiley
While the society and the orga- compete for more than $25,000 in
nization's museum operate effi- . prizes and a grand prize luxury car,
ciently, fund raising and museum the network said Wednesd;ly. The
operations rely entirely upon vol- half-hour show wiU be taped before
unteers. The society needs mote of an audience in a showroom at Caeyou to be involved. Your ideas and sars Palace, a casino 'hotel in Las
assistance are really needed, Mar- Vegas.
· 1
garet repQrts. There lii'C numerous
Rashad, 43, was a Minnesota
commit~es, all of which could
Vikings wide receiver before he
stand some good indians, and there became a spons commentator.
are other functions which you
might want tD help out )Vith. PerYORK, Pa. (AP) - Movies are
haps, you have a new idea about a terrible these days and it's the fault
program, or)lll exhibit Whatever. of young people, 54-year-old film
If you can help please call the critic Rex Reed says.
museum or stop by and let the soci- . · "Most of today's moviegoers
ety know your interests o~~nd how . are estimated to be between IS and
you'd lilc:e to be involved. . .
20 years old, which exp!Qins why
RACINE - Racine Baptist
You'll be pleased to lc:now lhat
Members wilT be glad to hear so many sub-mental abominations
Church, sunrise service, 6;30 a.m., .· Pomeroy's Pauline Mayer is doing from you. And you Icnow, the old
breakfast, 7:30a.m. SUJida.y school.. · great following .hip replacemenl saying, "Many h~nds make light are be~g passed off as bogus enter·
talnments," Reed told several hun9:30 a.m. Easter cantata by adult surgery at St. Joseph Hospital in work"..
dred
people attending a Junior
choir at10:45 am. Public invited.
Parkersburg, W. Va. Her room
League lecture Wednesday.
.
number is 234 and the zip as I
POMEROY • Sunrise services recall is 2610 I.
I hope the Easler season. is so
will be held at 7 a.m. at St. John
good for you that r.ou have no
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
A surprise graduation and pizza
In case you've wondered, and I cl)oice but to keeRgDiling.
Road. Breakfast ~ill follow at 8
pany was hellf March 29 in honor
you· bave, it was still not
a.m. at St Paul Lutheran Church in
of Fred Thompson by Msrly and
Pomeroy. Worship services will be
Debbie Morarity at D&amp;M Pizza in
at 9:30 a.m. at St John and II a.m.
Syracuse.
'
at St. Paul. Rev. George Weirick
Thompson graduated from
· invites the public.
Hocking College on March 19 wilh
a 3.8 average overall.
MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise ser·
Refreshments of pizza, pop,
vices at Hope Baptist Church in
. cake and ice cream were serVed.
Middleport will be Sunday at 6:30
· · Attending were Mar~y, Karyn .
a.m. Public invited.
and Matt Thompson, Racine; Bob
'and. Alice Thompson, Pomeroy;
MONDAY
Marty and Tonya Meadows, Port..
LONG BOTTOM - Cemetery
land; George and Dale Thompson,
clean-up will begin in Olive TownPomeroy; Paul, Linda, Jeff and
ship on Monday. Anyone wishing
Missy Darnell, Pomeroy; Tom,
to keep flowers should have them
Terri, Todd and Tara Hawley,
removed by that time.
Pomeroy; Dave .and Tina Neigler,
Racine; Bill, Ramora, Rayan and
CHESHIRE · Women Alive
Billy Young, Pomeroy; Scou Hill,
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe
Racine; Mary Byer, Syracuse;
Kyger Creek Club House. There
Jamey Nelson, Racine; Marty,
will be a devotional spealc:er and
· Debbie and Brittany .Morarity,
Racine.
·
· ··
craft ddlnonstrator. Refreshments
will be a soup bar.

RACINE -'Good Friday services
HOCKINGPORT Th
'II
at Racine Baptist Church will be at be a round and square•dance
ereatWI
the
7 p.m.
Reynolds Building in Hoekingpon
POMEROY • Easter. candy is on Saturday from 8-!!: 30 p.m. fea·
wring the country band "Out of the
available until Friday from the Blue." Ronnie Wood will _be the
Future Homemalc:ers of America caner. Everyone welcome.
. and the home economics students
. at Meigs High School.
REEDSVILLE - There will be
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup, . an Easter egg hunt at the Forked
pers Plains. VFW Post No. 9053, Run ~portsman Club on Saturday
Ladies Auxiliary, will sponsor a at2 p.m. Public invited. The hunt is
round and square dance Friday open to children ages 12 and under.
from 8-11:30 p.m. Music will be by
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr
LOTI"RIDGE • Country music
will be the caller. Everyone wei- night will be held at the Lottridge
come.
Community Center on Saturday
from 7 p.m. to midnight All bands
MIDDLEPORT · The Return are welcome. Refreshments will be
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters available. Everyone welcome.
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1:30 p.m . at the
PATRIOT • The MGM District
home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mid- Cub Scout Pinewood Derby will be·
held at Soulhwestern Elementary.
dleport ·
. LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full Registration 9-10 a.m. For more
call
Connie
Gospel· Church in Long Bottom information
will have preaching and singing McCormick at 379-2860.
Friday at 7 p.m. with a communion
SUNDAY •
service. Pastor Steve Reed invites
PORTLAND
, The Portland
the public. Fellowship will follow . .
First
Church
of
the
Nazarene will
Easter sunrise services will be Sunfeature
a
dramatized
version of
day at6:30 a.m.
"The Sermon on the Mount" on
RACINE · Good Friday services Easter Sunday at 10:30 a.m. by
will be held at lhe Racine United Rev. Kenneth Maynard. Everyone
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. A welcome.
cantata will be presented by the
MIDDLEPORT · Sunrise cantaSouthern Cluster Choir.
ta, "He. Is Risen," Middleport
·SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM • Burlingham Church of Christ, Sunday, 6 a.m.;
Modern Woodmen will hold a 8:15 and 10:30 am. worship; 9:30
Potluck SaiUrday at'6:30 p.m. at the a.m. Sunday school.
RACINE • The Racine Board of
. hall. Ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and
Public
Affairs will meet Monday at
pop will be furnished. Bring a cov. POMEROY : Sunrise service,
10
a.m.
atlhe annex.
ered dish. Everyone welcome. ~)\sell Run Holiness Church, Sun·
.
day 6 a.m. Communion. Sunday
POMEROY · The DAV and
PORTLAND - Cemetery c
sehool, 9:30 a.m.: worship, 10:45
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday
up will begin in Lebanon Township am, an~ 7;30 p,m. Ro~ Manley,
at 7 p.m. at the DAV Hall, 124
on Saturday. Anyone wanting to pastor, mvttes the public.
Bilttemut Avenue, Pomeroy.
keep flowers should have them
REEDS Vll.LE • Easter sunrise · POMEROY • Pomeroy Elemenremoved by t!Jat time.
,
,
service, Eden United .Brethren tary PTO will meet Monday at 7
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.- The Lib- Church, Sunday 6 am., breakfast at p.m. in the school gym. The lhird
erty Mountaineers will perform 7:30a.m, Sunday school at 10 a.m. grade classes will be. present !he
Saturday at the Jackson Coun1y "The Empty (:ross" by Robert program. Everyone welcome.

Members of the Wildwood Garden Club met recently with resi·
dents of Overbrook Center in Mid·
dleporL
Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting which opened with the
club creed 'in unison.
For devotions·, Betty Milhoan
announced the spring board meet·
ing on April 17 at Chesler United
Mcthodist ·Church at noon with a
pollock luncheon. The Ohio Association of Garden Clubs spnng
regional meeting will be April 24 at
the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis. The
afternoon program will be an
arranging demonstration, "East
Meets ~est," which will compare

by Bob Hoeflich .

..

Sunda.\

People in
the news

Beat of the Bend...

.

..

Friday, April 9, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- -.. ·;. .-·-Community calendar
.

.

.I

.

ot

ShoiUy after .11 p.m., tbe GVFD
was called 10 tbe scene of an acci·
dent.on Bastem Avenue to wash
gasoline oft' the street. Seven fire.
r.ptera IQIIOIIded with one truck
and UJed 3'0 &amp;•lions of water 10
clean the lite. The accidelit report
was not aVIilable It pnu time.
A ciaarette wu listed as the
caue of a 111181llim atl2:20 Satur·
day morning. According to tile
. report, !he cijjaelkl wu in ID ISh·
tray lillin&amp; Ul !he edae of I bllhiQb
at tbe Julie Kerwood retidenc~~;.
.State R9ute 7 North, Gallipolis,

200 gallon~ of water tO extinguish a
fue in the engine companment of a
1981 Dodge Omni, owned by
Robert Bush, 113 Woody Road
Patriot
·
·
'
The fine, believed to be caused
by a baclcfli'C through the vehicle's
carburetor, caused $800 worth of
damage. ·.

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