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                  <text>•

Aprll12, 1992

TOUR MINES - The University or Rio Grande CoUege or Business students loured
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division Mine No.2 Friday. First row, left to rigbl
are Jennifer Hawk, Shelly Sawyers, Bonnie Weddington, lee Anne Taylor and Diane Parks.
Second row - WiUiam Medley, assistant professor; Jackie Hutchinson, and Carolyn Jolly,
secretary.
FIRM EXPANDS, RELOCATES - EnviroFiame Htating, Inc. Friday announced
expansion and relocation. The
show room and sales office is
now located In the Nationwide
Insurance building at 38' St.
Rt. 160 (Jackson Pike), Gallipolis. Omce hours wiU 9-5 on
weekdays. Additionally, the
rirm will be open Saturdays
during tbe beating season,
September through March.
The telephone number
remains the same. A new
warehouse has been construct·
ed eight tenths or a mile out on
Kraus-Beck Road, off State
Route 588. The warehouse will
be ready by mid April.

JACKSON CO. LIVESTOCK MARKET
Ripley, WV
April 2, 1992
SLAUGHTER STEERS :

SOO.IlOO
SLAUGHTER HEIFERS :
700. HXXl
SLAUGHTER COWS
Commercial
Utility
Canner &amp; Cutter
Bulls over I ,000 lb.
Bmd Cows BH
VEAL:
Choice&amp; prime 190-225
226-265 lb.
HOOS:
190-240
240-260
Sows 300-500
Boars 300-500
SLAUGHTER LAMBS
85- 105
YEARLING STEERS :
Good &amp; choice 500-600
6(X). 700
700 &amp; up
Feeder Bulls 700-HXXl
YEARLING HEIFERS
Choice &amp; good 500-f&gt;OO
6(X).750
STEER CALVES :
Good&amp;: choice under 300
300-400
400.500
500-600
BULL CALVES :
Good &amp; choice 300-400
400-500
500-600
HE!FER CALVES :
Good &amp; chmce Under 300 lb
300-400
400-500
Cows &amp; Calves (by head)
Cows (by head)
BABY CALVES (by head )
Beef
Dairy

Star Bane Corp. annual meet April 14
CINCINNATI - Star Bane Corporation will hold its annual meet·
ing of Shareholders on Tuesday,
April 14, beginning at II a.m. m
the 6th floor conference room of
Star Bank Center, located at 4 25
Walnut Street. Cincinnati.
At the annual meeting of shareholders, Star Bane officials will
review the 1991 performance and
first quaner 1992 financial results
of the corporation. Oliver W. Wad-

61.00-65.50
47.00.52.50
44.00-48.00
35.00-43.00
55.00-63.50
4 50.00.ffl0.00

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
chairman of the [House Agriculture
Committee has mtroduced leglslation 10 preserve the availabilily of
chemicals for small crops, sometimes called minor crops.
"So-called minor crops arc a
maJor contributor 10 the agricultural economy of many states, and
more importantly, they are a major
and vital part of the human &lt;tiet,"
said Rep . Kika de Ia Garza, DTelliS, who introduced the bill Fri&lt;tiay with 50 co-sponsors.
"This legislation is needed to
ensure that minor crop growers
continue to have access to those
safe and effective crop protection
chemicals they need," said de Ia
Garza.
The bill, the Minor Crop Protection Assistance Act, would help
preserve federal registration of
chemicals for use on minor crops
- including fruits, vegetables and
other small acreage crops- grown
on less than 300,000 acres annually.
Growers of those crops are
increasingly concerned that some
pesticide manufacturers will volun wily cancel or drop minor crop
uses for their products due to the
cost of developing supporting
health and safety data necessary for
government approval.
Dean Kleckner, president of the
American Farm Bureau Federation,
said many chemicals essential for
the production of minor-use crops

90.00-104.00
1!0.00. 9 1.00
29.00.35.00
31.00.34.00
28.00.32.00
25 00.28 00
48.00. 52.00
72.00.81.00
65.00-74.00
65.00-70.00
55.00-63.50
65.00. 72.50
62.00-70.00
90.00-102.00
90.00-100.00
1!0.00.88 .00
75.00.84 .00
84 00.96.00
75.00.84.00
65 .00. 76.50
80.00-90.00
7200.85.00
65.00. 77.00
500.00-9 10.00
450.00-765.00
9000-185.00
75.00-165.00

~S==iai::Cal=fS=al~c~,~A=I~9~.=~;;:=;:=;;:::::~=;:;;~:;i,:are~n~o~lo~nger available.

MAR

dell, chairman, president, and chief
executive officer of Star Bane Corporation will assess the corpo~a­
tion' s past performance andoutline
goals for the future dunng h1 s
remarks to shareholders.
Star Bane Corporation will
release first quarter earnings for
1992, following a 10 a.m. board of
directors meeting, JUSt prior to the
meeting.

Ohio Lotter,·
Pick 3: 561
Pick 4: 2660
Cards:
2-H· 10-C·' 7-0·'
6-S
Super Lolto:

.

PageS

Vol. 42, No. 244
Copyrlghled 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Aprll13, 1992

tiny tech
preschool
MUll. - W£0, CLOSS
THUO, CLASS

1 UES. •

PRICE:
'!;3tJ.uu nE1;1s rnn 11011 FE£
'13S.UU rEn HUIIlll TUI 11011

MON. APRIL 27th
7 TO 9 P.M.

.,
'

.• ' "
~~:t
~-.

91J. - Hoo -or- 1U ·38~~

TAYLOR MOTORS 2nd ANNUAL
THE OWNER IS ON VACATION SA E
--j

1992 Dodge Dakota Club Cab

Super L.E Package lndudes;,

Super LE Package lndudei:,.P.

AutoiiiCIIJC M191um V-8

Automatic Trills.
Ma,- V-8 Power

AM/FM Cassette
Power Wildows
loeb, Mlrrars
MIG, Mud! More.

-+

a
$
5
Ill Rr-·- 19' 938 •00
Reg. Disc--2,672.00
Total...•••_ 17,266.00
Rebate __ -1,500.00

Yours for
Only

$

15I 766

Tilt Wlt"l
Ctvlu Coatral
AM/FM Camne

Sport Mnb
Mudt, Mudt Mort

00
Reg. Dil! ••.-2,772.00
Total........ I5,681 ,00
Rebate........ -750.00

M)ll -·--

-+

S1B403

Yours For
0•/y

$

'

!('

.. ···•·

. .t•' ,..• '• ~....,.....

.._'', ....- ~

FIRE CANNONS -Members of the 91st
Infantry, Company B of the Union Army fired
their cannons in the Gallipoli~ City Park Sunday afternoon during the Gallia County Civil
War Soldiers' Homecoming. The living history
drew hundreds or area residents lhrou£hout the

CLOSSES OESEnVEU utf FIOST COME BASIS

1992 Dodge D-1 SO 4X2

1•

~

'·
j
~·

•

14I 931

..

weekend who witnessed day-to-day life camp life
in the 1860s. Members or tbe 91st are also
scheduled participate in Heritage Day weekend
activities in Meigs County on Saturday, June 13.
(OVP photo by Kris Cochran)

Fewer farmers seeking
reduced-rate state loans
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Fewer farmers applied for reducedtate loans from the state this year
than in I 991, but the total still
e.cceds the amount of money
available.
State Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow received 2,384 applications under her Ohio Agri-Linked
Deposits program that provid es
$100 million in loans annually.
The cutoff date for applying at
linancial institutions statewide wa.&lt;
March 13. Applica~ons have been
under review, and the number
approved was expected to he
announced today.
Last year, there were 2,587
applications, of which I ,483 were
approved for average loan s of
$67,430.
Carol Rowan, spokeswoman for
Mrs. Wuhrow, said applications
under the seven-year-old program
may have declined because farmers
arc becoming more familiar with
the type of proposals that qualify .
"Plus, some farmers aren't even
'" an economic position to apply

for the loans because of some carryover losses from last year," Ms.
Rowan said in an interview.
"Bas1cally, the farmers apply to
a qualified financial institution or
production credit association each
spring. They apply tile usual lend ing standards to determine th e
credit-wonhiness of e&lt;Jch applicant,
and forward that package to the
treasurer's office for review," she
said.
When
application s
arc
approved. the treasurer invests an
eq ual amount from the state ponfolio with the lendmg instituuon . Participating institu~on s agree to pay
tile state less return than normal on
the invcslmem. and pass the sav ings on 10 borrowers in the form of
reduced-rate loans .
Eligible fann operations must be
hcadquanered in Ohio, maintam a
majority of iLs land or facilitie s in
th e siJite, and be organized for profit.

S1nce the program began in
1985, $710 million has been loaned
1u more than 10.500 av olica nts.

Another $100 miluon wiil.be added
this year.
Rep. Michael Shoemaker, DBoumeville, dtsplayed some of the
humor for which his late father , Ll .
Gov. Myrl Shoemaker, was known
during years of serving in the
House.
Myrl Shoemaker, who oflen told
a joke or two in preparing to prese nt a bill to his colleagues, made it
a point to return to his Ros s County
home e&lt;Jch night dunng legislative
sessions instead of remaining in
Columbus.
Michael Shoemaker recalled rhe
practice as he began to speak about
a bill m the House.
"As you all know , I drive home
every night," Shoemaker said.
"Partly out of sentiment thai my
dad &lt;tid after 24 years, and panl y to
keep 1n tou ch with !he voters, and
partly because my w1fe said, 'Anybody w1th a Bill Clinton hairdo bctler be drivin g home every night.'
So I do that, " he sa1d , drawing
laughter.

Coleman named OVP's pressroom superintendent

From Athens Honda Ca
~

IHI IIOIIOA PIILUOI

.... 111m1

Don Coleman, 44, has been pro- of the Ohio Vall ey Publishing
moted to pressroom superintendent Company accord1ng to Robert L.

"" WlliO
l -11
Ill' COI'l()fiiOfl

~ urtlul owner

rn g S~treo

I911 IIOIIOA CIVIC ll

T 1005 r t(l

Now UOO ~~~ Now '5,995

, ~~, Now '11,900

1

~

ooor

~ 5De'e{l tr ~n$mr$

1988 NISSAN SENTRA
4 DOOR

I916 OUIS WAJS GT

1911 HONDA lCCOID 01
~ u~

i,rr t.l)l't(IIIIOI'IIng Cf UI!ie

~lt retl

5 speed, AMIFM cassette1 air,
rear defrost, 4 new tires .

a1.1lom.lhC l'li"'SIT\ISSIOII

Now '7,800 ,~';, Now 14,995

Now '7,800
1m HONDA CIX Ill

1911 ACUIA llfltGU
,, r.: f · , Piln rn.,.,
10

Now '6,995
ltn IIOIIOA ACCOIO

~~~
:·u o'-4'

A~

I '-! oower

&amp; oc • s ?6 000

t:,~

••n

mdt'~

~ &gt;ON'I:

o-nt

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1.1 1rr

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Now '3,995

~10

V-6, auto., air,
cassette, tilt, cruise, low
miles, Program Car.

Auto., air, AMIFM stereo, 1owner, local trade.

.ill

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX LE

tus CHIVT auam

Now 12,995

~~:;;

1914 NISSAN llANll

HD,1!P(I '&gt;edl~

power

I()(~~~""'"

~

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.-rnrt~ t1n .-~

10w \ C' J•st control

· 1f1SJTI•S~I()I1

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Now '4,495

-tvlom~IIC

Now '2.49~

fO AUaiON CARS
ON OUR LOT!

1991 DODGE
CARAVAN SE
tilt, cruise, AMIFM cass.,
windows, locks, 7-pass.

nice vehicle.

CARS
"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
594-8555

Inc. Newop.oper

Police probe
two weekend
auto wrecks
Two weekend accidents on
Wcs1 Mam Street resulting m vehi cle damage but no inJurie s were
mve stigated by Pomeroy Police.
The first accident occurred at
4:10 p.m. Saturday. James Wilson,
2R, of Cole Strccl, Middlcpon had
stopped his 1978 Chrysler in prepa rati on 10 making a left hand lum
The vchJ clc behind him dnvcn by
Billie J. Krawsczyn, 62, Middleport. had al so stopped but a lhird
vehic le dri ven by Damon Gibbs,
27, Crew Road , Pomeroy , failed to
stop. The Gibbs vehicle struck the
rear of the Krnwsuyn car pushing
11 1nto the Wilson car.
There was light damage to the
rear of the Wilson car, light dam age to both the rear and front of
the 1986 Chevrolet driven by
Krawsczyn, and moderate damage
to th e front end and Icfl side quarter panel of the Gibbs 1n 2
Oldsmobi le . G1bbs was cit ed for

"The $1 million would have 10
be p;ud back to the fcds if, in fac1,
we didn't follow through with a
good, solven t fund," Ney said.
The bill, which the General
Assembly sent to Voinovich last
week, mandates insurance '" a
h1gh-nsk area made up of 27 counties.

Premiums could not exceed $5
per year, and m1ght be as low as $2
dcpend1ng on 1hc results of a
plan ned actuarial study.
"That's a small price to pay to
make su re that subsid enc e insurance is available. If we don't do
thi s, it's not available. And if the
hou se is cracked m half, you lose
cvery th1n g." Ncy Slld.

Body found
near Portland
By BRIAN J . REED
Soulsby and BCI Agent Tom
Sentinel News Starr
Hubler conducted a funhcr inves~ ­
A decomposed body found 1n gauon of the Sellers Ridge area on
rural Meigs County on Saturday is Sunday.
believed to he that of 12-ycar-old
The remains of Jeffrey L. HalJeffrey S. llalley of Gall,poiJs, Icy, 36, were found ncar Portland
who, along with hi s father, was on September R. His death was
reported missmg in early 1991.
ruled have been caused by a gun According to Meigs County shot wound, and is being treated by
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, his county oflicials as a homicide. The
departm en t recc1ved a ~p from a Hallcys were reported missing on
resident on Sellers Ridge Road m February R, 1991.
Lebanon Townsh1p on Saturday.
Accordmg w Sheriff Soulsby,
whi ch led to a search of the area. interrogation of suspects has been
The skeletal remains and clothing ongoing SJncc the elder Halley was
were found at appro&lt;imalely 5 p.m . found la.&lt;t fall . and will con~nue in
on Saturday.
light of the diScovery of what arc
believed to be Jeffrey S. Halley's
Although the rema1ns have not rcma.ms.
been positively identified as bemg
"The mvesugation of Jeffrey L.
those of the younger Hall ey, the
Halley's death is definitely being
clothing found ncar the remains
have been Identified by his mother, treated as a homicide , and right
now, we're treaung his son's death
Carolyn Walker, as belonging to
as
a hom1 ci de as well," Soulsby
hun
sa1d Monday.
The remains have been sen ! 10
Soul sby smd that he wa.s unable
lh c Franklin County Co roner' s
to
co n f~rm that the deat hs were
office for c.aminauon, and lhc
drugrelated, as has been speculatclothing 10 the Oh10 Bureau of
ed,
alth
oug h he said Monday tl1at
Cri mmal Identification laboralory
1he deaths "may have been" related
1n London, Oh10.
to drug trafficking.

r-------

,. ...
'

!

fa il ure to mainl ain assured clear
dis~1nce.

The seco nd accident occurred at
p.m. Sunday ncar the Diary Val Icy. Hca1hcr Fran ckowink, 16,
Middleporl, was coming off lhe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, went lcf1
of center and struck a car driven by
Derek Jackson, 24, Middleport.
There was moderate damage 10 the
passenger side door of the Franck ow1nk 1988 Buick and damage to
lhe front end of Jackson's J97R
Ford.
Frnnckowink was Ci ted for left
of center.
4

AN EARLY VISIT- The F.aster bunny rame to MriJ:S County a
little early this year. Friday thr bunny vi.&lt;ilrd the Middleport
Thrift Shop of I he Meigs County llumanr Society to promote a
fund raising project. Candy in rolorrd plastic r~gs wrre given to
the children. Here eight month old, Ashlet Roslinski, dau~hter of
Lynn Roslinski, enjoys a few minutes on Mi" Runn )"s lap.

Despite talks, Caterpillar plans to replace strikers

2 Door, auto., air, V-6, tilt
cruise, AMIFM cassette, low
miles, 1 owner.

Now '2,495

Wingett, publi sher.
Coleman succeeds Otho Mallo&lt; ,
who retired April 2.
A native of FIJI Rock , W. Va.,
Co leman graduated from Point
Pleasant High School in 1966. Fol lowing graduation, he served m the
U.S. Army three years, 1968 -71,
spending one-and -a-half years 1n
Alaska .
He JOined OVP in April, 197 3.
After se rving in the mailroom for
three years, he wa s a member of
the pre ssroom crew for 16 years,
having served as head pressman the
pa.SI II years.
Co leman and w1fe Cyndi and
their son, Jimmy , 9, reside in
Nonhup.

412

llllll

.iUiom.ih(

MARKDOWN PRICES GOOD THROUGH APRIL 13th ONLY!

•

1986 NISSAN K/C

concnl()n•ng srtreo

1916 PIUGIOT WAGON
'rP

'ofl:l'f lll:iiO

1992 DODGE DYNASR

'Naqoro Ot1f' OV.ntr arr COI'\Clil«l
ong f'•t·a nl(~ cAr

Now '7,800
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owne r arr

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Now '7,995

1911 "'-TIIOUTH GIAII FVIT
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1916 GUll CAWS IUPIIIII
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1917 CHfVT

1m IIONDA CIVIC

r~aea

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Now '8,800

rn11r\

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
bill sent to Gov. Goorge Voinovi ch
that would make min e cave -in
insurance mandatory for homeown ers in 27 counties IS needed
because a real threat exists, legislators sa1d.
The measure is intend ed to
replace a voluntary program thai
was se1 up 10 protect policy holders
from struc tural loss caused by th e
collapse of abandoned coal min es.
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, DSteubenville, said the Ohio Dcpanment of Natural Resources identi fied 3,900 abandoned coal mines in
the eastern and soutllern Ohio area.
''They estimate there could be
as many as I 0,000 abandoned
mines throughout tllat region. We
only dealt with the ones that were
Identified," Krupinski said .
Sen. Rohen Ney, R-Bamesvillc,
SJX&gt;nsor of the bill making coverage manda10ry after Jan . l, said he
is aware of at least 14 hom es
destroyed in recent years, and
many others damaged.
" And that's just in one or two
cities I'm talkmg abouL It' s a deli nite threat throughout most of
Appalachia where there were coal
mines, " Ney said.
Current law requir es property
insurance companies 10 offer customers mine subsidence coverage
as an op1ion. But a spec1al fund
crea ted to handle such policies is
almost broke because of a lack of
voluntary participa~on .
Ncy said the program initially
was financed with $1 million in
federal money, and $200,000 from
the State Controlling Board.

S CIIUUL Yf nn

NEW EMPLOYEE Dave Crow of Racine is now
employed in tbe sales department at Taylor Motors in
Athens. The dealership is
.located at State Routes 13 and
33 in Athens.

Mufllmedla

insurance mandatory

run 92t9a

Ctvlse Coatral

1 Section, 10 Pogoo 25 cento

Bill makes mine cave-in

I~EGISTRATION

Tilt WIIMI

L&lt;&gt;w tonight in upper 40s.
Tues&lt;by, parity cloudy. High
near 60s.

8-9-19-32-42-44
Kicker: 571727

A

Minor crop
bill introduced
to legislature

62.00-65 .00

percent in dollar terms. The Uni1ed
States supplied 29 percent of the
value of Japan's horticultural
impons in 1991.

al products increased almost_ II
percent in 1991, to $4.77 btlhon.
Imports from the United States
were valued at $1.39 billion, up 13

WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
expons of horticultural products in
January this year totaled $433.5
million, up I 8 percent from the
same month a year ago , tile Agri .
culture Department says.
A 22 percent increase in fresh
citrus, 33 percent for apples, 22
percent for shelled almonds and 48
percent for wine led the expanded
January exports, according to the
department's repon.
During the fust four months of
fiscal 1992, October through January, the total value of U.S. horticultural exports reached a record
$2 billion, tile repon said. All commo&lt;tily groups recorded gains durmg the period.
The report pointed out that on
April I, Japan lifted its longstanding quota system on imports of
orange juice . Major Japanese
supermarkets already have begun a
campaign to promote sales of new
orange juice products developed
JOIDtly with leading U.S. juice
manufacturers.
Japanese impons of horticulrur-

Couples
captures
1992 Masters

DON COLEMAN

2 Door, 4 Speed, air, AMIFM
cassette, rear defrost,
miles.

Pomeroy man hurt in wreck
A Pomeroy man received minor
inJuries in a deer-vehicle wreck on
State Route 681 in Bedford Township late Sunday evening.
According to a repon from the
Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Paul Phillips, 41,
Albany, was we stbound on State
Route 681, swerved to avoid a
deer. His car went off the right side

of the road and struck a tree.
A passenger, William B. Stover,
33. Pomeroy, was transported by
th e Meigs County Emergency
Med ica l Service to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released.
Damage to Phillips' 1990 Geo
was listed as heavy and disabling.
No citations were 1ssucd.

CHICAGO {AP) - Caterpillar workers. The un1on disputes the
Inc. sa1d it is moving ahead with figure.
plans to replace strikers who refuse
The company began advcnising
to return to work, even though it for new employees on Tuesday ,
agreed to sit down with union saying it hopes 10 have some worknegotia10rs today .
ing by May l.
The Federal Mediation and ConCatcrp11lar wouldn't say how
ciliation Service invited Caterpillar many people responded, butlllinoJs
and the United Auto Work ers to Bell reponed thousands of calls 10
negotiations loday in a Chicago overloaded company phone Jines
suburb - the first mee ting since the first day the ads appeared in
March 26.
newspapers .
The live-month strike has idled
Caterpillar spokesman Gil
almost 13,000 workers.
Nolde said Sunday that the compaCaterpillar, the world's largest ny expected to process 50 appliea manufacturer of ean~ - moving uons an hour today in Peoria .
equipment, claims its back-10-work Applicant testing also was planned
ultimatum has drawn back 750 at Caterpillar plants in Decatur and

Aurora, he Slld.
The UAW has said n won't Sign
a conrract allowmg replace ments to
keep stnkcrs' JObs.

Caterpi llar proposes nusmg the
top m1n1mum pay from $35.31R
annually to S39,9 !5 by Scplemhcr
1994. The un1on wants top m10; .
mum pay of $40,458 annually by
Caterpillar also " recalling laid - Septcm bcr 1994.
off workers, spokesman B1ll Lane
The compa ny now covers all
SIJd Sunday . Ahoul 2,400 workers hcal!h-care costs a1 all hospitals but
laid off before the strike have first wants to hmit that 10 a smgle Peoright 10 return and will be conSJd· na-arca hospital and have employercd strikers if they don't, Lane ees pay a premJUm to go elsewhere.
said.
Caterpillar proposes a six -year
The union wants a contract pat - guarantee of no layoffs, while the
terned afler one reached wuh Deere union wants to protect a specific
&amp; Co .. a Molmc-based farm-equip - num bcr of jobs. Caterpillar propos.
ment manufacturer. Caterpillar says es 10 mcrcasc average monthly pen11 can't affci'd to match the Deere Sions to $1,800, while the union
contract.
wanLs $2,000

•

�Monday, April 13, 1992

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They snould be Jess than 300
words . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name .
address and telephone number. No unsigrted lenen: will be published_Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not perwnaliues

Governor getting
results on changing
state school board
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writrr
COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich had to settle for less !han he
wanlCd when the House passed his bill to shrink !he Stale Board of Education, but he made more progress than hi s predecessor.
The btparltsan vote for the Voinovich plan alsohroke a string of
dcfeals which the first-term Republlcan has sustained m dealing with the
Democratic-controlled House.
When Voinovich took office last year, he said the board, whtch is
elected from each of the state's 21 congressional districts, should be
reduced to a nine-member panel appotnted by him.
The change was designed to give a governor more authority in sclecttn g a stale school superintendent. The board hires !he superinlCndenl
Sen. Eugene Waus, R-Galloway. introduced !he Voinovich proposal tn
the SenalC, but changed tl so the nine gubernatorial appoinlCes caul~ be
submiucd to vOier review before talung office.
House Speaker Vern R1ffe , D-Whcclersburg, didn't obJCCllo a small er
board. but balked at !he idea of closmg the door on voter selection.
" I've never had a problem with reducing !he size," Riffe said. "It was
.. Jhe governor wanting to make appotntrnents that was the big problem.··
As passed by the House last week, !he board to be elected this No vern.
ber would have II members. Candulates would run in II new districts
made up of tltrec connecung Ohio ScnalC districts apiece.
The bill goes back to the SenalC for consideration of House changes,
probably on April 28. Watts anticipates approvaL
Voinovich acknowledged that the vicwry was a case of half a loaf
betng beUer than none and insislCd that he hadn't given up hts ultimate
goal of gubernatorial appointrnenL
He had more success changing !he board than dtd former Gov. Richard
Celeste.
Celeste, a two-lCrm Democrat, wanted to aboltsh the paneL He ultt matcly was forced to give up the idea in the face of opposttion from an
extensive, entrenched educauonal system .
Voinovich hasn't seen much success tn the Hou se on some other
imponant proposals.
.
.
His recommendation that state ltquor stores be converted to pnvatc
bustnesses remains stalled, along with another idea to ra~se more money
for the stale by elimtnaung a payment to retailers for collecting the sales

w:.

The compromise over the school board tmproves the balance sheet
wtth the House a htlle as the admmistration and legislators begin loo!Ung
for ways to erase a projected $576 million deficit in the budget year start·
tng July I.

Today in history
8¥ The Associatrd Prrss

Today 15 Monday . April 13, the !(}4th day of 1992. There arc 262 days
left tn the year .
.
Today's Highlt ght tn HIStory
On April !3 , 1970, the crew aboard Apollo 13, four -fifth s of the way
to the moon , told Mtsstan Control "We've got a problem here." A tank
of liquid o•ygen had burst. cnppltng the spacecraft. The story ended happily four days later as the crew splashed down safely In the Paofir.
On thts date:
In 1598, Kmg Henry IV of France signed the Ed1cl of Nantes, which
granted nghts to the Prote stant HugucnoLs.
In 1742. 250 years ago , George Fridenc Handel's "Messiah" was per·
formed publicly for the first ume. at the New Mu sic Hall in Dublin, Ire·
land.
In 1743, the thtrd president of the United States, Thomas Jefferson.
was born in present-day Albemarle County, Va.
In IH70, the Metropolitan Museum of An was founded in New York.
In !943, PreStdent Franklin D. Rooseve lt dedicated the Jefferson
Memorial tn WashmglJln.
In 19 5H. Van Cliburn beca me the fir st Ameri can to win the
Tchatkovsky lntcmaoonal Piano ConiCs! in Moscow.
.
In 1%4, Sidney Poioer became !he first black performer tn a leadtng
role 10 wm an Academy Award for hi s wmt in the movtc "Ltllcs of the
helti' '
Ten years ago Sec retary of State Alc&gt;andcr M. Haig Jr. returned to
Wa~h i ngton to consult with President Reagan before resumtng hts d1p!o mauc shuulc between Argcntma and Britain aimed at avcrt.mg an armed
, b1h over the Falkland Islands.

Berry's World

"OH, YEAH? Well, I say YOUR candidate
does more pandering for votes than MY
candidate. "

'

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Monday, April 13, 1992

Tuesday, Aprill4

talk to their lapels while in a crowd
of reporters.
Speaking in code is a way of life
for Washingtonians, the nanering
nabobs of nomenclature. And the
Secret Service name game can't
hold a candle to what they do with
acronyms across the Potomac River
at the Pentagon_ For example, they
call the president's doomsday airplane " Kneecap," or NEACP for
National Emergency Airborne
Command Po st. And the World Jimmy Carter was given the wide Ammunition Reponing Sysname Dasher early in his campaign, tem is, what else' WARS.
suggesting his come-from-behind
Nothing is as easy as ABC at
win. Once in the Wllite House, the the Pentagon . Those leners can
Baptist Sunday school teacher was stand for Atomic, Biological and
called Deacon. Rosalyn was Chemical, or Advanced Blade ConDuchess and Dancer. and first cept The annual dictionary of nulitary acronyms is 400 pages long.
daughter Amy was Dynamo.
And yet one of our Penlagon
Gerald Ford was Pass Key and
Belly was Pinafore. Richard Nixon friends had the nerve during the
was Searchlight and Pat was Cold War to co mplain about the
Starlight. Lyndon Johnson was "Acronym Gap" with the Soviet
Volunteer and Lady Bird was Vic - Union. The Russian alphabet has
toria.
48 letlt:1S, giving the Evil Empire a
Veeps get their special monikers possibility for 5J million four-lettoo. Dan Quayle is Scorecard and ter combinations, while English
Ma.ril yn is Sunshine
offers only 456,976 options.
Despite the shortage of letters,
The names are supposed to be
secrc~ but the word gets out quick·
the Pentagon has made good use of
I y when the Secret Service agents those options. Our associate Dale

sa me name : "Rollin', rollin ',
rollin' ... Ke ep those deficits
growin _"' ) Nancy Reagan was
Rainbow - just about the nicest
name that anyone in the White
House crowd ever called her.

Van Atla recently acquired a list of
more than 2,000 Air Force code
names. The names themselves
aren't classified, but they aren 't
made available to the general pu!)lic either, because the projects they
stand foc are classified_

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

On the Air Force list, names
beginning with Peace refer to mili tary sales to allies. Peace Amazon
is military support for Brazil, Peace
Andes (Chile), Peace Drum
(Kenya). Peace Inca (Peru). Peace
Cognac (France), etc .

~He'l, Sil.L,Yoo

KNoW THaT DaW6

THaT's

~N

Ct4a$itl' \JS ?...

Code names beginning with
Cool are anached to classified programs of the Alaskan Air Command. Names beginning with Patch
arc attached to medical programs.
Names starting with Seven are usually spy sruff. For example, Seven
Bucks is an incentive a-Nard program for narcotics investigations.
Seven Dwarfs is the name for the
security program that Uq!s cruise
missiles snow white and virginal
from the prying, spying eyes of the
world.
That's the beauty of a code
name in Washington . It can hide
what the government doesn't do,
what it does that it shouldn't be
doing and what it does that it
doesn't want you to know it's
doing.
CONDEMNED TO REPEAT
- The current House Bank checkkiting scandal pales in comparison
to the 194 7 audit of that hank. That
year, the General Accounting
Office reponed that S125,000 in
funds were missing. Some of it was
traCed to advances given members
of Congress against their salaries.
One Aorida coniressman wroo: a
bad check for $83,000 to cover a
real estate deal. The 1947 audit
exposed $60,000 in advances to
House Bank employees, including
then-Sergeant-At-Arms Kenneth
Romney, who became the scapegoat for the scandaL Congress
turned the heat on Romney. He got
one to three years in jail while
Congress merely appropriated w:
money to cover the lost funds so
members could cash their paychecks.

George Bush talks, but doesn't act
The Oval Office seems empty
these days, wh1ch leaves us with a
naggt ng quesllon Is our president

centri st pragmatists. But they have

m thcrc 1

this much in common -

Every now and then, we hear
one of Prestdent Bush' s speeches.
prom tstng us leadership on a problem du jour - health care, jobs,
cducauon . These speeches tend 10
happen ri ght after he gets a bad
poll
Then we stl and wan for some thtng to happen - and evenwally
something docs. We get another
speech •bout how nothing is hap pening, and it· s all Congress' faulL
That, of course, ts pure bushtalk
- tn spircd by motives that arc
pol1ttcal, not presidential. And
that's too bad for us aiL
If George Bu sh reall y cared
ahou t solvin g the domestic problems he's now finally talktn g
about, there are a whole range of
thtng s he cou ld be doing - right
now! - to accompli sh hi s stated
goa ls m ways 1ruc to hi s s taled
policies and prtnciples . They arc
ideas that arc being pu shed by
so me of the smartest thinker s
msidc and outside the Beltway .
Some of them are conservatJve ide-

ologues. suc h as the thinkers at the
H erita ge Founda t ion, others arc
they arc

Martin Schram
sc nou s about solving our domestic
problems wnh leadership and
action . That is what sets them apan
from our president.
For example: hea lth care. For
thr ee years , Bush said and d1d
nothing to solve our health -care
crisis, as he heeded the advice of
h1 s former White House chief-ofcynicism. John Sununu convinced
him that !he only way to avoid criticism was to take no ac tion. Bush
sa w the truth, the light and the way
only when his former Anorncy
General Dtck Thornburgh's own
say- nothing , do-nothing approach
to health care cos, htm a Pennsy lvania Se nat e election that had
seemed a cwch. Bush's pollster
warned it could happen to a president, too.
All !he whi le, 35 million people
wt!hout health insur&lt;lllCc continued

to be at risk - many saw illnesses
wipe out !heir life's savings. Many
of these uninsured were working
folks whose misfortune wa.s that
their jobs were in very small businesses that just didn't have the
leverage or wherewi thai to negoti ate the sort of reasonably prtced
health policies larger companies
can arrange.
Two m011ths ago, Bush decided
to solve his problem on health care.
so he gave a speech proposmg a
modest plan. He urged the creauon
of local pools to purchase health
Insurance for !he self-employed or
small -business-employed at reason able ralCs. But !hen he did nothing
to follow up.
Con sider what he could hav e
done - on hi s own, without waitmg for Congress . He could hav e
convened a series of regional sum mits - auended by mayors. chamber of commcrce reps and small
business employers - and simply
established local health-&lt;:are purchasing organizations. He could
have told his Cabinet secrewies
and their assistants 10 provide the
advice and e•pertise - this would
cost us nothing; we're paying the1r
salaries now and all they do is

advise each otber. MiUions who are
today uninsured could have health
msurance.
For school children, a large portion or the uninsured, Bush could
have tmplemented a school-based,
health-coverage effort, setting up
tnSWlii!Ce purchasing pools to bring
coverage to kids.
These an: ways that a conservative -but-caring president could
have used his big slick and bully
pulpit to mobilize the priw.te sector
for problem-solving action - in
health care, education, housing ,
even crime control in inner cities.
Conservative think-tankers regularly call for such bold initiatives
to solve our problems. So does
Jack Kemp, the under-used Secrotary of Housing and Urban Development, who could have made
things happen as supercabinet
domestic -policy czar, which is
what congressional Republicans
urged months ago.
A few years ago, a promising
new leader had another term for
such pnvate-sector acts of public
policy . He called it "I ,000 points
of light"
But that requires a pilot light a nicker of leadership tnstde the
Oval OffICe.

Democrats have lost right to govern
What follows has nothing to do
wtlh the Identity or qualifications
of the ncx 1 presidential candidate
of the Democratic Party. It is not
even a back-door prophecy about
the outcome of November 's nation al election . which as of this wriung
tS SUll wide open, or a lament about
the frustrations of divided govern ment, which th1s month drove two

and narrow agendas of organized
groups that speak for everything
but the national intcre sL Rather
than rcffccting a central philoso-

Hodding Carter III

phy, it reeks of a tired cynicism .
more front -rank se nator s into Rather than offering a vibrant allCrnativc to th e Republican Party's
retirement
relentless
denigration of governInstead. tt rcff ects a long -supas
an
instrument of social
ment
pressed conviction that has been
welfare,
it
routinely
chooses to prenoating toward public utterance for
sent
itself
either
as
little
more than
over a decade.
right-wing
Republicanism
with a
The Democratic Party is dead on
humane
face
or
as
an
open
microtiS fee l, a zombie operating on
post-mortem reOe&gt; long after most phone for entitlement junkies.
Too many congressional
of its vital stgns have been e•tin Democrats
are too knowing, too
guishcd. It is time to admit the
much
the
seasoned
vetel'lllts to die
obvious, roll the corpse into the
in
the
ditch
for
principle.
Indepencrypt and create a replacemenL
operators
held
in
deteriorating
dent
If the pany is nOI literally dead,
conlrOlling as it does Congress and orbit by the gravitational pull of a
most of the nation's slate govern- shared lust for power, their uniments and big cities, then it is verse is most threalelled when the
something wooe. As constiruted it party tries to pull itself together
is hopelessly conup!. 1101 merely in around something more visionary
the narrow sense but in a much than the possibility of a return to
broader, systemic form of corrup- the White House.
Consider just a few of the things
tion that has ealell away its moral
thai me "pany of the people, .. the
core.
"party
of new ideas," cannot do. It
It has forgotten its roots, lost
cannot
faith in its historic mission and
Agree on a national hcalth-&lt;:are
become the captive of the money

program, despitc the fact thai every
other industrialized nation has one
and our "system" leaves over 30
mtllton people wiihoul any covera~e at all.
Agree on a national w: sySlem
that would undo the regressive
"reforms" of the past II years and
re-establish the notion that the llU
code has a higber calling than to
comfort the comfortable and afflict
the afnicted.
Unite behind a demand that politics be freed from its reliance on
big money and made more open to
people of limited means and new
messages.
Lead a racially divided country
back toward a common understand·
ing thai we must stand together, or
watch the republic faD apart_
Not surprisingly, a party that
fails on all these fronts, and many
more, while pretending to speak for
the "common man" is a pany thai
has nothing meaningful to say_
Having chosen to play on Repub~ ­
can ground with a shrinking electorate whose paniciparory remnant
is basically conservative, the
Democratic Party forfeits th e
opportunity or right to victory
except in moments of lOial Repu!)lican collapse.
In the meantime, in the abseoo:
of a pany willing to assen itself on

behalf of enduring intetests of the
American (rather than current electoral) majority, the social compact
diSintegrates. The commonweal is
trampled simultaneously hy street
thugs with readily available
weapons. by slick Wall Street operators w•ih high-priced eonsigliori,
and by government officials who
view government as the enemy_
The COOII&lt;Ctive sinews of the society fray, dangerously close to
breaking, wtth no pany to speak
and au pass•onately for their
rcstorauon.
Rather than offering a solution,
the llemocmtic Party is at the center of the problem, became it offers
the appearance of a viable alternative without the substance. Like the
Whig Party in the middle of the
19th century, it embodies within its
own contradictions the national
failures to which it is incapable of
responding.
Ross Pero1 notwithstanding as
of yet no late 20th-ccnttry ~
or the new Republican Party of the
l850s nses on the ltcrizon. But it
wtll The need is there, along with
the absolute fact of the Democl'lltic
Party's lnin-dead. gutless incapacIty to 1111swer the challenge. lt .was a
great [&gt;artY. but the party is over.
Long live the party'

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Warm weather expected to return to Ohio

Accu- W~ fon::ca.&lt;t for

Nicknames keep it simple for Secret Service
'
WASHINGTON- You know
them as George Bush and Bill Clinton. but to the guys who talk to
the ir lapel buttons while they scan
the crowd for nut cases, they arc
Ttmber Wolf and Eagle.
The Secret Service will tell you
there IS no significance to the code
names - no reason why Bush was
called Sheepskin in 1980 and Timber Wolf in 1988, and cenainly no
relation to the old saying about
wolves in sheep's clothing.
The dour-faced Secret Service
agents hustling around the counlr)
with presidential candidates like to
keep Jhings simple, and confusmg
- stmple so they can speak qwck ly, and confusing so people around
them don't know who they're talking about The White House communications office picks the
names, and the only thing the
Secret Service asks is that they be
easy to pronounce . (Jerry Brown
has doclined Secret Service protection to date, saymg it costs the llUpayers too much_)
The beloved Barbara Bush is
aptly called Tranquillity . Ronald
Reagan was Rawhide, (which
bri ngs to mind a variation of the
old TV series theme song of the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

conditions and high tanperatum.

By Tbt Associated Press
Forecasters said a warmtng
trend will develop m Ohio later thtS

wcet_

Highs on Tuesday mngmg from
:be upper 50s to 60s will climb into
the 70s by Friday , the Natwnal
Weather Bureau said_
But f~rst Oh1o will e•pcriencc
another chilly night tonight w iih a
possibility of snow flurrie s tn the
, north.
Tbe 'hiflto more seasonable
temperatures will result from a
warm front that wa' deve loping
over the Plains states today and
was e&gt;peeled Ill move slowly east-

•I Columbus I 63° I

ward

The record high tempel'lllure for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 86 degrees m 194 I. The
record low was 21 in 1920.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:55
p.m. Sunrise 011 Tuesday will be at
8:08a.m.
Around tbe nation
Rain fell today in the Pacific
Northwest, and snow was foreca&lt;l
for Great Lakes region and upper
Mississippi Valley _
Showers were reported early this
morning in Spokane, Wash., and
Portland. Ore. Rain was forecast
for Florida , New Me&gt;ico, Col orado, Northern California, Oregon
and Washington .

A htgh -prcssure syslCm buildmg
from the Great Lakes to the MJdAtlantic region was expected to
bnng stron g winds to the Southeast
seaboard . Gusung wmd was forecast for eastern New England.
Temperat ures were forecast to
be in the 30s in northern New Eng land ; tn the 40 s in central and
southern New England a nd th e
Great Lake states: m the 50s m the
Pacific Northwest , North Dakota
Jhrough IllmoiS, OhtO and the MidAllanoc stales: tn !he 60s m Northem Cahfonua, Mtssourt, Kentucky.
Tennessee and South Carolwa m
the 70s 1n Southern Ca ltfor~ia

Nevada, Utah . Wyom mg. Okla homa and the eastern Gulf swes:
and in the 80s In New Me&gt;~co .
eastern Colorado ; Teus and
LoutSiana.
Sunda y wa s an unseasonably
warm day for poruons of the central Gulf states and pans of Col 0!11do and Wyommg. High temper ature rec ords for the dail were stl
m Alamosa, Colo .. when: a neadmg
of 72 br oke a h tgh of 71 se t '"
1971 , and Casper , Wy o., where a
htgh of 75 broke the prevwus
record of 74 set m 1988.
The htgh temperature for the
naoon Sunday was 98 m Aru.ona a1
Lake Havasu and Phoerux

Some workers' fees may not be used for politics
W VA

Ice

Sunrry

Pt Cloudy

Doody

v...

------Weather----Soulb-Ceatnl Ollio
Tonight. variable cloudiness
wiih a low 40-45. Toesday, a mi• ture of clouds and sunshine_ High
m the upper 6Gs.
Extmokd ~·..,oo..,tuiSt.._, :
Wtdnesday tlaJ'OIIIll Friday:
Wednesday, fair_ lows in mtd-

30s to mtd-40s . Highs in the 50s
north with 60s south. Thursday,
fair. lows in mid- 30s to mid-40s.
Highs mostly in the 60s. Fnday, a
chance of showers. lows mostly in
the 40s. Highs from the mid -60s
north to the mid-70s souih .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Th e
Bush adrnintstrauon IS moving 10
enforce a 1988 Supreme Court
decision by notifying non-umon
employees their umon fees may not
be used for political activiues !hey
may not like_
President Bush was e•pecJed
today 10 stgn an exeeuuvc order
requiring federal con tractors to post
nooccs to that effect a! JOb sites.
In a second attack on camprugn
support that usually goes to
Democrats, the Labor Deparunem
had a new rule requiring unions to
report "'parately how much they
spend for political activities, lobby ing and contract negottatt ons, a
Whitt House source said Sunday

----Area deaths."- - - Mary Hall
Mary Zell Hall, 63 , of State
Route 325 N_ Vintoo , died Saturday, April II, 1992 at Holzer Med·
ica] Centet.

She was lKrn 011 July 12, 1928
in Comf011, W.Va., daugbtet of the
late B.J . and Mabel Knight
Mitchell
Survivon include one son, Dannie R. Wood of Vimm; one daughter, Mrs. Jeff (Jennie) Dilcher of
Portland; five grandchildren; and
three sisters. Peggy Jentins of
Richwood, Nell Keys of Fairfax.
Va .. and Joyce Davis of HmJosas.
sa, F1a
She was preceded in death by
her husbands. Jennings Morris,
Carl Cochran. and I onnie Hall; and
one grandson. Joshua WOIXL
Memorial SCh m will be held
I p.m. Tuesday at the Danville
Holiness Church, with the Rev _
Rick Maloyed offici.ating. There
wiU be no visitation_
Memorial oontributions may be
made to the Obio University
Research Division School of
Osteopathic Medicine, Athens ,
45701.
· Arrangements are under the
directim ol McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton_

Sadie G. Irion
Sadie G. Irion, 99, of Columbus.
former resident of Gallia County,
died Saturday. April II, 1992, at
the May Fair Nursing Care Center,
Columbus.
She was lKrn on Dec. 23, 1892
tn Merrerville, daughter of the late
J.W. and Albcna Church SheetsShe was a homemaker and a
member of the Gallipolis Chapter
of th e Eastern Star and M.E.
Methodist Chun:IL
Survivors mclude two daugh ters. Ms. Frances C. Ruth of
Bucyrus, and Mn. James (Grace)
Johnson of Middlepon: one son,
Kenneih L Irion of Columbus: one
brother. Brady Shcc:ts of Gallipolis;
one sister , Mrs. Hubert (Jewell)
Sheets of Gallijblis: eight grand chi ldren; and six great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
her husband , Frank L Irion; one
son: throe ~ and four sisters.
Services will be held 31 II a.m.
Wednesday at Willis Funeral
Home. with the Rev. James Lusher

The Daily SentiMl
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ON MODtiL.._~ ------------ ..... t6.il6
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Sobecribsw Nit....-;.. &amp;D .., t.lw! carri~ ~tired to TIM
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53Wo&lt;b

offiC1aung. Burial will be in Mound
Hill CemelCry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m.
Eastern Star services will be held at
8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Lee Burcham , Denver Wallace, Charles
Bail ey . Jim Saunders, Lee Holcomb. and John Milhoan.

Lillian King
Lillian Bess (Bessie) King , 71,
of Middlepon, died Saturday, Apil
II. 1992 at Veterans Memonal
Hospital.
Born in Harnsonville on Aug .
17, 1920, she was the daughter of
the late Jonah and Oleva Elizabelh
Gotschall Conerill. She was a
homemaker and a·parUlCl' in 1 Middleport business.
She was a member of the Bradbury Chun:h of Christ and Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, where she was past
matron and past district deputy_
Survivors include her husband ,
Robert V_ Kmg. Middlepon. two
sons, and daughters-in-law, Robert
Thomas and Wendy King of Worthington, and Timothy J. and Edie
King of Middlepon. and a tlaughtes
and son-in-law, Carol and Darrell
Brewer. Middleport; five grand children, Nicholas and Russell
King, Worthington : Liberty and
Timothy Justice King, and Stacey
Brewer, Middleport; five brothers,
Ivan and Frances Couerill of
Columbus, Raymond and Letha
ConeriU and Don and Faye Coua ill of HarrisonVIlle ; Paul and
Wilma Conerill of Albany, and
Owen ConeriU of Columbia, Mo.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a sister-in-law,
Jean CotlCriiL
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 3 p.m . at the Fisher
Funeral Horne in Middleport with
Tom Runyon officiating. Burial
will be in the Bradford Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Monday), 3 to 5 and 7
to 9 p.m. and until time of services
on Tuesday. There will be an Eastem Star semce at 7 p.m. 1011ight
Memorial conuibullons may be
made 10 the Bradbury Church of
Christ

Gladys Lewis
Gladys Mae LewiS, 79, Middleport, died, Saturday, April II.
1992, at Veterans Memorial Hospi tal .
Born in Mason County on Jan.
28, 1913, she was the daughter of
the late Evereu A. and Mary EUen
Poole Ellion. She was a homcmalt er.
She is survived by a daughter
and a son-in-law, Kathleen and
Terry Cochran of Butler, Pa.; three
sisters, Lawa Gartingtt of Middleport, Minnie Lyons of Gallipolis
Ferry, W_ Va., and Marie Roberts
of Racine : a brother. Roy D. Elliott
of Vienna, W. Va.; thme ~1 dren, Jenmfer Buertle, Victi Pucken. and Amanda S. Cochran: several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband and
four brothers.
Friends may call at the Fisher
Funeral Home on Tuesday, 7 to 9
p.m. Burial will follow on Thursday at Sylvania Hill~ Memorial
Park in Rochester, Pa. There will
be no funeral services.

Thomas Redman
Thomas G. Redman, 69, of
Mason, died Sunday, AJYil 12,
1992 at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born August 9. 1922 m
Mason, son of the Lare Orval H. and
Clara Elias Redman.
He was a truck driver foc Zenle

Trocklng Company in M1ddlcpon.
Survivors include his wtfe, Eulah
M. Johnson Redman or Mason: one
son and daughter-in -law, Ray
Tllmla. and Joyce L Redman of
Mason; two sisters, Mrs. Clarence
(Jean E.) D:ms and Mrs. Dcnsil
(Martha V.) Newe ll. boih of Mason :
two b&lt;others, Homer 0 and
Richard. both of Mason: two
grandchildren;
ooc
greatgrandchild: and several n1eces and
nephews_
Fw-.,ral scrvtec.s wtll he conducted Wednesday at IJO p.m. at
Foglesong Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Bennie Stevens offic Jatin g.
Bunal will follow at Ku1cland
Mcmonal Gardens .
Friends may call the fun eral
home Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
from 7 to 9 p.m.

Thelma Scally
Thelma M_ Scally, 84, of New
Haven. died Friday, April 10, 1992
at Holzer Medical Center.
She was born October 8. 1'107 , m
Smithfield, OH , the daughter of the
Lare Frank B. and Zana M. Steinard
Wood_

A homemaker, she was a member of the New Haven UmlCd
Methodist Chun:h .
She was pnx:eded m death by her
hushaod. Paul E. Scally, m 1968.
Survivors include one daughter.
Mrs. Virgil Glen (Nancy G.) Roush
of New Haven ; one grandson .
James Ray Scali y of Middlcpon:
and ooe grandchild.
Funeral services will be conducted Monday (tm ight) at Foglesong
Funcr.tl Home, with !he Rev. Ben ·
me S~evcns officiating . Burial will
follow at !he Union Cemcterv tn
Smtthlicld .
·
Friends may call the f uncral
home Monday fro m 1 to Mp.m.
In hcu of nowcrs contrihuuons
can be made 10 the New Haven
Unill:'d Methodist Church.

Hospital news
V&lt;trnns Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS BesSie King_ Middleport and
Charles Blake. Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARG ES :\one

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
~one -

SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Wilham Stover, Judith Knapp, and
FidciiS Bell .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTF.R
April 10 discbar~es - Bonnte
Ashworth. John Canode, Mrs. Fred
Coffey and son. Mrs. Steve Maihcr
and daughlCr, and Crystal Thomas.
April 10 births- Mr. and Mrs
T1m Baker, daughter. Jackson. Mr .
and Mrs. Gregory Preston, so n.
Vmton.

April II births - Mr and Mrs.
Troy Facem~e. SOfl, Gallt polis.
April 11 dischar2.s - Mr s.
Ttm Bak er and daughter , Stor m•
Brown. Geraldtne Cummons, John
Leighty, Chelsea Masste, Mrs. Gregory l'teslOII and son. and KJmberly Smittle.
April 12 births- Mi. and Mrs.
Earnest Hill. son. Jackson

An estimalCd 3 million employees out of 19 million working
under labor contracts are in union
or agency shops where they must
pay fees to a union even though
they remain a non-member.
The amount of such fees was
csumated m a published rcpon oo
be $2.4 billion_The source S3Id that
amount "is probably in the ball park ."
The Supreme Court ruled in
1988 that such non-unwn workers
may be required to pay for collec tive bargaining and represcntaoon
on labor-management issues. but
not for other union acuvities th e
worker may oppose.
Alth ough federal law forbids
union s from using dues for d!fcct
campaign contributions, the y can
spend the money for support such
CIS telephone banks, ncwsletlCrs and
get-out -the -vote drives.
Under the new policy, non un,on members could get refunds
of any fees used to finance pohucal
acttvtUcs they oppose . The refunds
will not be available to unton members, eve n if they object to the
union' s political activtllcs . the
Whnc House official satd_
The plaintiff '" the Supreme
Coun case. electronics technician
Harry E. Beck, was to anend the
Whttc House event today.
The president had proposed that
UJc change be made through legis-

There wtll be an organizaoonal
meeting on Tuesday for all Middleport Alumni in terested in partici pating in the Mtddlepon Alumnt
Rand that will perform at the Mid dlcpon Alumni BanqueL Plans arc
currently being formulated for the
band to play !he "Fight Song" and
the "Alma Mater" at the alumnt
ba nquet. All former Mtddleport
band membe rs are encouraged to
panicipalC, and instruments will be
provided where needed.
Acco rding to Alumn1 Band
Direc tor Roger D. William s. the
fo rmer hand members are planning
1o panic ipatc: Kenny McElhinny .
Tom Anderson, Marilyn Anderson ,
1\ola SwiSher, June Kloes . Ruby

Pomeroy unit went to Pomeroy

Nursing and Rehabilitauon Center.
Olarles Blake was taken to VclCrans Memorial HospitaL At 10:08
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Main
Street for Steven Bra10ard. who
was taken to Vetenns.
On Sunday at I: J8 a.m.,
Pomeroy SQUad was sent to Spring

CINCINNATI (AP) - A new
law designed 10 attract whilC-&lt;:ollar
com panies to Kentuck y with ta.
breaks ha s drawn an angry
response in neighboring Cincinnati.
wh ere top officials view ll as a
thrcal.

C in ci nn att Mayor Dw1ght
Tillery ca ll ed th e law " the most
viCtOUS ptecc of legislation I have
ever see n, " while others talked of
retaltation .
Some Cincinnalt City Counctl
members sugge sted wllhholdtng
the city's share of money for a new
hrtdge between Covmgton, Ky .,
and Cincinnati.
They al so sug gested imposmg
toll s on th e Cincinnati side of
hndgcs over the Ohio R1 vcr and
crea ting a ''Ctnc1nnau -only' ·
Chamber of Commerce .

Kentucky Gov . Brereton Jones.
who signed the bill mto law Fnda y,

Vaughan, O!Jta Hc1 gh ton. Nancy
Beave r, Sharon Ashley. Carolyn
Ru ssell Collins, former band d~rec ­
tors Franklin "G inny" Gmther and
George Dallas. Mtke Mullen ,
Kathy McElhinny Hood, Judy Wil dermuth Allensworth, Mar cia
Bowles Martin ez, Iva S1sson.
Diane Lynch, Wayne Davi s, Beverly Parrin Diwn and Karen Roush.
All former Mtddl eport hand
members arc urged and encouraged
to paructpat e m the first Mtddlepon Alumn1 Band . Members may
contact Iva Stsson at 742-21R7 or
Williams at 992-67~2 or 992-5389
for funhcr mformation

The meeting on Tuesday will he
held at Dairy Queen in Middleport
at 7 p.m.

-Meigs announcements-(;roup lo meet
The Pomeroy group of Alco hol te s Anonymous wtll meet
Wcclncsclay at 7 p.m. (rather than
Thursday) at Sacred Hcan Cathol1 c
Chun:h
Lt•~-:ion to mret
Rac1n c American Legion Po st
60c will meet Thursday at 7:30

p .m . 3t th e post home

Egg hunt planned
Le gion Post
602 wtll hold 1ts annual Easler egg
hunt Saturday at !he post home.
Ra c1 nc Amcncan

Court news
Di l'orce rase filed
A divorc e aClion ha s been filed
•n Mctgs Cou nty Common Pleas
Co urt by Li nd a G Bailey ,
Langsville, against Wctzgel G. BatIcy, also of Langsville.
Marriage license granted
A marriage license has be en
granted m Metgs County Probate
Coun to !larry Roger Butcher, 43 ,
and Judy Muril Sayre, 31 , both of
P omeroy .
Judgment sought
A JUd gme nt awon ha s been
fil ed in Meig s Co unty Common
PIC&lt;Is Court by Theresa M. Fridcns ltnc , Reedsville, and others, against
Mt;mit Mutuallnswaoce Company,
Troy, in th e amount of $79,312 .
The su1t wvolvc s an In suran ce

cu .

Avenue. Jam es Braley was taken to
Vetera ns. At 1:40 a.m., Rutland
unit went to Depot Street. Gerry
Cremeans was taken to Veterans.
At 1:19 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to
a brush fire at the Brian Whaley
property . At 7:35p.m .. Tuppers
Plains squad went to the Arbaugh
Addition and took June McCoppin
to O'Bicness Memorial Hospital.
At II :5 2 p.m., Pomeroy squad
re spond ed to State Route 681 .
Wtll1am Stovan was taken to Vet eran s.

upon
"The pre stdent felt he wa sn't
gomg to wJit around for the board
to move ," the source said
The proposed regulaoons. to be
publt shed m the Federal RegtSler.
will include a short coo&gt;mc nt pen ad before a fmal rule ts 1ssued

New Kentucky law upsets
top Cincinnati officials

Organizational meeting
set fur alumni band

Squads make 7 weekend runs
Seven calls fo.- assistance were
answered 011 Saturday and Sunday
by units of Meig' County Emergency Services.
On Saturday at 8: 11 p.m.,

lation, as part of a campatgn
finance package se nt to Congress
short! y after Bush took office, but
no action was taken.
Since the Beck dectston, the
source sa id, the National Labor
Relations Board had 300 stmtlar
co mplaint s but none was acted

Hymn sing
Th e annual Good Fnday hymn
Sing " f U1e Rutland Freewill BaptiSt
Chur ch will be held Fnday at 7
p m. "l the Rutland CJVic Center
Sunnsc serv ices for the church wil l
be Sund•y ato a.m
Re,·h·al
E&lt;t stcr JCv1va l at the Bradford

Chur ch of ChrtSl w11l be Easte r
Sunda y Jhrou gh April 24 at 7 p.m
n1 ghtly . Kcv 1n Yeager will be the
evan geli st. Special music and nursery prov1ded.
Egg hunt planned
Fo rked Run Sport sman Club
wil l holct an Easter egg hunt Saturda y at I p m. at the club house. All
c hildr en arc welcome . Furth er

sa1d he was surpn sed at CmCinnatt's reaction. He was wtth Tdler\
for Jhout an hour o n openmg d.J.~
for chc Cmnnnau Reds.
" He did not menu on (the new
law) to me," Jones told lbe Kentucky Post. " I don 't believe he was
Q\'Crly upset "

Jones said he would be happy to
talk to Cmctnnall or Ohio officllili
about the ISSue tf they conl3Ct hun .
· ·w e need to recog m1 e th at
when th ere are JObs m Ctncmnau
and northern Kcntuck). •·c all benC'I n." he sa1d .

The gove rnor satd the kgtsla tlon wa s not tnt endcd to ent• cr
employers from any parucular area_
hut he anllCipa t.e s compJa..mL' rrom
mhcr areas.
" It wa s our goal 10 make Ken
tu rky th e mo st co mpctJIIIt'C 1n

Amenca. Pcnod ." · he srud . · 'The
da ys ar c over "''hen KeniUd.) IS
go tng to be a follower Kentud)· tS
now a lcadc1."

J1m We st. e&gt;ecuovc dii'CCtor of
Tn-(:ount y Ecooormc [)eycJopmcnt 1n northern Kcntuckv . satd
th e law IS " both a gg rr'i.SL ~'C and
pro~ rCS.S IV C "
.. Tiw; 1ypc of 1 ncrnuvc prog-ram
~ ~ no t new. Out to hr1n g .(all
tognhcr '" one package for ~hu e­
coll ar ftrms IS umquc ," he srud .
The law offers ta&gt; break s to
3tlfact compamcs m htgh -tochnology or scmce fields. To qual•fy a
company must locale m Kcmud_ ,._
cr"'ll' at least 25 ]Obs and have 7,
~1 c

percent o f It s sales o ub1dc Ken -

lucky.
(LncmnatL IS O\'C ractmg to the
law hccau sc 1nccnu"·cs are onh
pan of the proce ss of p1C kt ng a
locJtLOn. some bu s mcss off LCLal;;;
S&lt;lld
Oh iO should resrond With "a
clc3r -c yc d analy s ts or our ov.n
p10blcms rather than I.J shmg out Jt
Kentu cky," said Enc Burlland.
prC'\Ldclll of the Oh10 \'lanu factw cr 'l A,.; soc 1alJon

Burkland sa1d h1s hcadquancr'
rcccJvcd no complrunL" about !he
law .
' Tm sure anv compan ) maktno
a dcns10 n 10 n:pa nd or relocate
v.ould ftnd th 1&lt; an attrXuvc offe-r
hut no t t.hc onl y fattor." he I.,.JH1

Lottery numbers
CLEVEL AN D (AP t - Here arc
Sa iUrd ay r11 ~ h1 ·, Oh1o Li)!Jrr\

'*' lcct10ns:
Super Lotto
H9-

·

J9 1c --C-4~

(CLght.

nm c.

1nforma t10 n may be obtained by

5 - 7 - l -7- ~ -1

call1ng 61i 7-6859.
_ Democrats to mrel
.
The Meigs County Democratic

(f l\ C . \C'\CO

Exec utive Com mittee

will meet

nLnrl crn. thHl\

fon y lWO , frx1 \ foul l
The J.lCkpolL ' S-1 mdl1\'0
)\ ic k("r
twO,

nne

'-t'\CO

l \olro £1.

SC \ CO)

rick 3 :'&gt;um~f"
5~ I
( fl\t'. '&gt;IX , nne 1

Thursclay at 7.30 p.m. at th e CarPid;. --1 ~umbt•ro.,
penter' s Hall tn Pomeroy .
~ - 6- h- 0 \
PTO to meel
l!wn.
\1\ . '&gt; l \, tcrl)'•
Portland Elementary PTO will
Cards
meet Tu esday al 7 p.m. Plans wtll
~ ll v..ol of Heart(;
he finaltzcd for the spnng carnivaL
IO( tcnHJIC! ull&lt;- ,
J (sc , enl of DJamond ,
h ( m I of Spade s

Stocks

Am Elc Power
... J I 1/R
Ashland Od .
.32 1{2
AT&amp;T.
.. 41 1{2
Bank One.
46 7iR
Bob Evans .... ..
.. .. 28 1/8
Charmtng Shop
... JO 1/R
C~ Holdtng .. ... ... . .... . ... 18 I/8
F era! MoguL .....
16 1/R
Goodyear T &amp;R
...... 69 3/R
Key Centurion ................. 18
Lands End..
.. .... 34 5/8
LimilCd Inc. .................... 24 318
Mult imedia Inc. .
..... 26 3/4
R.u Restaurant. ....
. . I 11/16
Robb1ns&amp;Myers .....
.. .. IR
Shoney 's Inc. .. .
22 5/8
Star Bank ........
.29 1/4
Wend y lnt'l
12
Worthmgton Ind ............ .. 23 1/4
Stock rrporl' are the IO:JO
a.m. quotes provided by Ulunt,
Elli.&lt; and Loewi of Gallipolis.

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, Aprll13, 1992
Page-4

Cincinnati beats Houston 5-4
HO USTON (AP ) The
Cincmnau Reds had trouble clearing th e bases at the Houston
Astrodome , so former A&lt;IIO Bill
Doran tool&lt; care of tl
Doran surprued lumself and Ius
former team Sunday, hining a tworun double to left field during a
four-run rally in the liflh inning
that sent the Cincmnali Reds over
the Astros S-4 .
·'It was a freak for mr. I usually
hit the ball on a line to ldt. so be
wasn ' t playong me out of poSI tion, " Doran saod after hi s hot
sailed OVCI the bead o( left f&gt;eJder
Juan Guerrero.
" It was a fas1ball ~ m the zone.
I don 't often hit a ball in the air like
thatlO left. " Dor.m said
Astros manager Art Howe, who
used to play with Doran , was
tmpressed _
"We played Bolly preuy shallow. That's about as hard as be can
hit it to the opposite f&gt;eld." Howe
saod . "The majority of tile time
he· II beat yoo short to lefL"
The game would 1101 ha'-.: been
so close tf !lie Reds bad g01u:n a
key hll near the end_Cincinnati k:ft
the bases loaded in Lhrtt of the last
four mnings.
" I don't know what to say . I
don' 1 know how many Limc:s this
year we ' ve left the ba= loaded. A
tC&lt;lm that· s had as good of swung
pltChtng as we· ,-e had should be
over .500." manager Loo Ptmella
sa td.
·' Our guys JUst ha,-e 10 relaA
and ptc k out a good pnch. W&lt;'re
more than capable. We"re getung
guy s on we 're JUSt not getung tllem
tn ,"heSJJd.
Doran SJJd !lie Reds, "'ho had a
22-9 spring record, "'"" pr=mg
after gcwng off to a 2-4 SWL
" Some of !he guys are ll')'Uig 10
do a louie too muc h." he satd .
·· And we mtght be s"'·tngong at
some ptlChes we mtght nOI nonnally swmg at. Bu1 .,, ·u get u turned
around .··

Doran did hiS best 10 turn 11
around Sunday. He also drew a
bases- loaded walk from Rob Murphy in the eighth mning.
PtlCher Tom Browntng capped
Cincinnati's rally from a 3-0 deficn
wtth a sacrifi ce fly tn the fifth
mrung.
Brownmg (2-0) wound up the
wmner, going 5 2/3 innings and
govmg up Lhrtt runs . Norm Charilon, the founh Reds pitcher ,
worked the ninth for his third save.
Jeff Bagwell led off the Astros'
nonth with a home run against
Charlton, but !lie neXl three batters
made outs.
Pete Harmsch (0-2) lost the 3-0
lead in the fifth. The Reds loaded
the bases with none out on singles
by Glenn Braggs and Paul O'Neill
a nd a walk to Reggi e Sanders
before Doran doubled.
Jeff Reed's RBI grounder tied
the score and Browning put Cincinnati ahead with a fly ball that
scored Doran.
"I didn ' tthrow the ball well
today," SJJd Ham&amp; h. " I felt pretty sluggish."
\Houston took a 2-0 lead in the
first Craig Biggio and Steve Finley
smgled, and Bagwell's groundout
scored a run. A double by Pete
lncavig li a and Guerrero's RBI
grounder added another run .
In other games, Montreal
knocked off New York 8-2, San
Dtego beat Los Angel es 5-4,
Atlanta stopped San Francisco 6-2,
Pmsburgh topped Philadelphia 6-1
and Chicago beat St. Louis 4-2.
EltJI'l'i 8, Mets 1
Thts odd-even thtng with Bret
Saberhage n keeps getting s1I11Jlger
and s1ranger.
To bnefly recap: In odd-num bered years , Saberhagen has been
one of baseball's bes t pitcher s.
gomg 74 -30 overall with a 2.8 5
ERA Among hi s accomplishments
tn that time are two Cy Young
Awards, hos only no-hitter and a
trophy for bemg MVP of the World

~enes .

In even years, however, he has
been mediocre at best, going 36-48
with a 3.70 ERA for Kansas Ctty .
He's also made two of three Dips to
the disabled 1151 during those times.
It had been thai way for Saberhagen ever since he's been in the
big leagues - !lie pauem includes
hiS only season in !lie minors, too
- and was something be wanted to
II)' to change this year in his debut
woth the New York Mets.
Well, II)' again.
Sabe rhagen has begun 1992
with tw o more brutal starts, the
most rece nt on Sunday when the
Montreal Expos banged him for
seven runs tn 4 2/3 mning s and
beat up the Mets 8-2.
Saberhagen, acquired last winter
tn a major trade that sent Kevin
McReynolds and Gregg Jeffenes to
Kansas City, at least lowered his
ERA with his latest outing, from
27.00 to 18.00. He gave up seven
runs in 2 I!3 innings 31 SL Louis in
his first start, so his game against
the 8pos was better, sort of.
"Sooncr or later I'll win, but l
hope it's before I get chased out of
New York ," Saberhagen said .
"The fans are tough and expect
you to perform up 10 your capability. ! haven't. "
Saberhagen IS 0-2 for the Mets
and has allowed 14 earned runs on
15 hits and se ven walks in seven
mnmgs.
!van Calderon hit a two -run
homer in the ftrst inning for Montreal. He htt a tw&lt;&gt;-run single during a five-run fifth inning, fimshing
Saberhagen.
Chris Haney ( 1-0) pitched five
innings in his forst stan of !lie season . He allowed four hits , includmg Wtllie Randolph's home run ,
and left with a 7-2 lead.
Padres S, Dodgtrs 4
Gary Shefftcld drove tn a
carecr-htgh five runs, and his RBI
single witll two outs on the bottom
of the ninth inning won !lie game tn

Scoreboard
rnan I 0), II 35 pm

In the majors ...

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Transactions
Bas&lt;ball
Arnn-k.a•ILIIut
fAUFO R....,I.A A~GEU - T11ded
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·Boston routs Charlotte to cut Knicks' Atlantic Division lead
By Tbt Associated Press
- Reggie Lewis is becomtng the
Boston Celtics' Mr. April.
The fifth-year guard, averagmg
26.1_points on 60.3 percent shootmg on seven games this month, has
led a streteh of 12 victories in 13
games that has pulled the Celtics
within one game of first place in
the Atlantic Division_

LewiS scored 35 potnts on ISfor· l9 shoo~ng Sunday'" a 128102 rout at Charlotte.
" Regg ie's playing out of his
mind," Bosto n forward Kev1n
McHal e said. " I knew all year we
could play lilcc this. It just took us a
whtle to catch our rhythm ."
Kev in Gamble had 26 pomts
and 12 rebounds for BOSton, which

truils !he divo soon -leadtng New
York Kni cks, who lost 73 -61 to
De troit , by a game with three
remaining. The Ccltic s win the

div1sio n on a sea son · series
t iebrcaker if th e two teams fini sh
with the same record.
" We've been very focused lau:ly," Boston coach Chris Ford said.
' 'I'm very pleased with the job
we've been doing on defense. We
have to take care of business every
night. We're not worrying about
any what -afs or loobng ahead."
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Milwaukee 94, Philadelphia 90 ;
Cleveland I 14, Washington 91;
Portland 123, San Antonio 97; and

By STEVEN WINE
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Now
that Fred Couples has answered
skepttes by earning his flfsl Mas ·
ters title, the question beoomes how
many more he'll win.
"Fred has a game that could
wm 1.tus tournament as many Lim es

HIGH FTVES abound in tbf Ciociaaali Rtds '
after Bill Doran comes in followin~ tu.
tht go-abtad run in tbt fifth inning of

du~out
scorin~

Sanday's National Ltagut gamt against the host
Houston Astros. Tht Reds went on lo win S-4.
I API

San Diego.
the mnth mrun~ . but "''On the game
Los Angeles scored fow umes m Atlanta.
tn 1h e mnth to ue 11 befor e
GJa,·on e scauered si., htts tn
Sheffield gave th e Padres thw etght innmgs ag,tlliSI San Francisthird straig ht voctory. Shefftcld 's co_T,..o hits and an error by ftrst
error at thtrd base helped 1h c ba!rntan Sid Bream scoml a run in
Dodgers' raJ Iy.
the nmth arx1 chased Glavme . and
Kun Sullwell led off the San Marvm Frttman fumherl_
Ot ego nmth with a single , moved
Ron Gant htt a three -run homer
up on a sacriftee and Tony Gwynn and Terry Pendleton had a Jl'llf of
was intentionally walked With two RBI singles f01 the Braves Dcwn
outs. Sheffield, who earlier had a Sanda&gt; smgled off Kelly Downs
three-run homer and RBI smgle , (0-2 ) and scored on the fors t, and
lined a smgle to nght off Roger doubled arx1 scm:d in the seventh.
McDowell (0-2).
Pinttes 6, l'lliJJirs I
Barry Bonds hn his frunh home
Bra.es 6, Giants 2
Tom Glavme lost hos shutoul tn run, backing l.1ne Smoth 's ftve -hn -

ter for Pittsburgh's wtn in Pholadelphia.
Bonds connec ted for the third
straight game, a three-run drive in
the siAth innmg off Terry Mulholland (0-2).
Cubs 4, Cardinals 2
Hec tor Vtllanuev a htl a threerun homer into a stiff breeze in the
seventh inning , rallying Chicago at
Wrigley Field.
Greg Maddux (2-0) doubled and
scored Chicago's first run in the
sixth inning. Heathchff Slocumb
pitched I 2/3 innings for his first
save. Omar Olivares ( 1-1) scored
SL Louis' two runs, and was driven
in by Todd Zcile both times .

Young's heartbreaking loss part
of BoSox-Tribe doubleheader split
By Thr Associaled Press
Mall Young's eight no -htt
mning s against the Indians didn 't
even qualify as the best pitched
ga me of the day in Cl eve land .
Roger Clemens was better on !lie
n1 ghtcap.
Young lost th e game - a nd
offiCial credu for a oo-htuer - as
Cleveland took advantage of seven
walks Sunday for a 2-1 v1c tory
over Boston tn the ftrst game of a
doubleheader.
In the second game. Clemens
rebounded from last week 's injury
to his righl ha~ and pttebed a rwohtner, blanking llie Indians 3-0. He
struck out 12 and improved to 16-2
wllh six caree r shulOuLS agamst
Cleveland.
A com mitte e headcd "by the
com mi ssooner changed !lie rules on
qualtfications for a no- hitter lasl
season, requiring a pill: her to go at
least nine mnings.
" l1's IITelevant. because we lost
the game," Young said. "A no-htt lcr' s su pposed to be where you
st rik e ou t the las t guy, and 1he
ca tche r comes out and jumps in
your arms. A loss is a loss."
In ! 990, Andy Hawtons of the
New York Yankees was credtted
wtth a no-hiner when he lost 4-0 to
the Wh ite Sox at C01mskc y Park.
But Ha wtm s' los t his no-htller
when the rule was changed
The last Boston pilCher to lOSS a
no -htue r was Dave Morehead on
Sept. 16, 1965, agamst Cleveland
a\ Fcnway Park..
Cleveland scored single runs 111
the fiTS! and third innings. Kenn y
Lofton led off the ftr.it mning with
a walk, stole second and third, and
scored when shortstop Luis Rovera
ihrew wildly to first on Carlos
Bacrga's grounder.
Young then walked Mark Lcwos
and Lofton starting the tllird inning.
and LewiS took third on Glenallen
Hill's forceout and !&lt;:omd on Baerga' s grounder to shan.
Elsewhere in the Ameri can
League 11 was Torooto 3, Baltimore
I ; New York 5. Detroit I; CalifOInia 13, Milwaukee 9; Chicago 6.
Oakland 4; Seattle 2, Kansas City
I; and TeXl!S 4, Minnesota 3.
In the nightcap, Clemens (1- 1)
was co nsiderably sharper than
Yo un g . He walked three , and

as a Ni cklaus or a Palmer," said
Coupl es' friend and foe, Raymond
Floyd . " He's perfect for thi s go lf
course. "
Coupl es, th e best player in th e
world for th e past 10 months ,
earned his forst major title Sunday
by s hoot ing 2- under -par 70 at
Au gusta National to beat runner-up
Royd by two strokes.
Admirers of Couple s' game,
including Floyd, have satd he' s
dcslincd for supcrstardom . Sun day's victory was a btg step in that
direction.
" Any player wants to win major
tournaments," the 32-year-old
Sea ttl e nauve said. " This puts me
in a cat ego ry where l feel much
beller about my gam e.''
Playing in the final twosome.
Co uples took a two-shot lead by
sinking a 20-foot birdie putt at No.
9, and he stayed ahead the rest of
the way . Hi s shakie st moment
cam e at the par-3 No. 12, where his
poor tee shot defi ed gravity by
stopping on a steep embankmcnL
Racs Creek and a likely double
bogey were JU St a couple of feet
away .

Cleveland 's onlv hots wm: !W&lt;&gt;-OUt
smgles by Baeiga in the f!TSI and
Hill in the thin1
Cl&lt;mem new io spectally for
the gam&lt; alta !lie Red Sox used
etght pitchers on Saturday's 19 tnning, 7-5 won. He had been in
BosiOit fU' treatmmt of a tlislocaled liuk linger on hJS nght hand,
susuined diritg pregame oen:ises
last Tue:sday _
Rn~ -4. Twins J
Tu.as -..-on a1 Mmotsoca as Juan
Gonzalez ~ m fom nm 1111th a
tlutt-run homc:r and a tJe-lnakin~
stngk: , and Kevin BIOMI pitched a
su-hiua_
Gonzalez 's forst- mmng homer
was the only offense early in the
game as Brown (2-0) wended his
shuloo.c sm:al to IS imings befort:
the TWins bed n With tine runs in
the seventh_ Four of tbe six htts
Brown allowed C3JIIt in 1~ sev .
cnth
Blut J•JS 3, Orioles I
AI the StyDome , David Wells
puched four -h11 ball over seve n
mnmgs_
Wells ( 141) allowed one run,
stnd out two, walked t..., and hit
a team-reard Lhrtt bauas. Duane
Ward rq&gt;bced T010 Ht:okt to S1a1t
!lie nmth and finJSbed for his third
53\'C.

Devon Wlull: snapped a 1-I tie
the fiflh ...,th an RBI single off
Jose Mesa (0- 1).
Yaakees s. r~ 1
At T1ger Sladoum , New York
rcrnamed uobeau:n as Mel HaD bad
t""D htts and drO¥t tn thnx runs 10
help beal -...in~= DettoiL
Soon Sander-sot (2 -0) J11tched 6
213 mnings for the win, allowing
one run on six Juts and Lhrtt walks.
John Habyan fiiUSbed for his forst
save.
10

Soon Aldred (0-1) tool: the suth
straight loss for Ttgers starting
pitchers.
Mariners 2, Royals I
At the Kingdome, Erilt. Hanson
ga ve up one run in eight-plus
onnings as Seallle completed a
three-game sweep against Kansas
City.

Hanson (I - I) struck out four
and walked th ree in besting Mike
Bootlicker (0-1 ).
Wllitt Sox 6, Atblttics 4
At the Cohseum, Jack McDowell weathered a three-homer barrnge, trteluding two more by Mark
McGwire, as Chica go beat Oakland.
McGwlfe connected for the
founh straight game, giving him
five home runs this season, and
Jose CanS&lt;X:o also homcred for the
A's .
Angels 13, Brewers 9
At Anaheim, Rene Gonzales hit
a thrtt-run homer and a double in
his Califonnia debuL
Gonzales took the roster spot of
shortstop Dick Schofield, dealt to
the New York Mets on Sunday,
and was in the starting lineup at
third base.
Winner Mark Langston reeled
lhrough five mnin gs, hurt by th e
Angels' 13th and 14th errors of the
season.

--Sports shorts-Auto racing
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) Dann y Sulltvan survived a bumptn g tn c tdent with teammate AI
Unser Jr. four laps from the finish
Sunday to win the closest Toyota
Grand Prix of Long Beach ever and
end Unser 's suing of four straight
vtctories on the downtown street
circ uit.

)

VACATES BUNKER- Fred Couples watches his shot leave the
bunktr on lht fdlh bole during Sunday 's final-round arlion in thr
Maslers at Augusta, Ga., which Coup les won wilh a 2-under-par 70.
(AP)

151211

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4()

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13

'"the lir.;t round of the playoffs
The only game tn NBA ht&gt;tory
with fewer points w;" a 62-57 vic tory by Boston over Mtl waukee on
Feb. 27, 1955 - the first season of
the 24-second clock.
For th e game, th e Kntcks shot
23-for-75 while Detron was 30-for79. Joe Dumars led a ll scorers with
20 points for the P"tons and Den-

Seattle 126, Minnesota 116.
J.R. Reid scored 17 points and
Dell Curry 15 for tltc Homets, who
have lost four consecutive games.
The Celtics shot 73 percent
from the field to lead 39-28 after a
quarter, then made their fir st six
shots of the second period to move
ahead 52-35.
Boston's lead ranged from 26 to
38 points in the S&lt;X:ond half.
Pistons 72, Knicks 61
Detroit and New York played
1hc lowest-scoring NBA game in
37 years, with the Knicks losing
ground to Boston while the Pistons
slayed a game behind the Celtic.~ in
the race for homecourt advantage

niS Rodman gr-dbbcd 20 rehounds,
hiS 39lh game wtth 20 or more.
SuperSonics 126
Timberwolves 116
Rtcky Pierce scored 21 points
and Shawn Kemp had 18 points
and 16 rebou nds, helping Seattle
lake over fifth place in th e Wes tern
Confcrcnt c with a viclOry ove r
Mmnc sota .

Ray Sheppard and Steve Yzertion wtth Ray . Dave Andrcy chuk
By JOHN KREISER
scored midway through the first man scored ftrst -pcnod goal s as
AP Sports Writer
Having spent I 0 days fighting period and agam with 2:49 remain- Detroit beat the Blackhawks at
for their rights during the flfst ing in the game. Dale Hawerchuk Clucago Stadium.
Sheppard scored just 57 seconds
strike in NHL hislDfy, the Buffalo SCI up_all three goals.
into
!lie game and Yzcnnan got hi s
The
Canadiens'
Stephan
Lebeau
Sabres and Montreal Canadiens
42nd
at 9:50. After a sc orele ss,
spe11t their rmt night back on the scored the second period 's only
fight-marred
second pertod,
goal atl6:40.
tee fighting each other.
Th e lhird period fea tured Stcphane Matteau got Ch icago's
The brotherhood forged in the
strike disappeared wh en play numerous brawl s and took 70 min - Ione goal at 7 04 of the third .
Capitals 4, Dtvils 3
resumed Sunday night as the . ut cs to play_
North Stars I, Blues I
Washington's Peter Sondra slid
Sabres outmttled the Canadiens 3Minnesota made the playoffs in a puck into an open net 2: IS into
1 in a game filled w1th JOI penalty
tiS
ftrst game after lhc strike , overti me to gove the Capt tals a vicminutes.
the North Stars had to set- tory over the Devils at the Mead although
·•t think because it was the ftrst
tle
for
a
tic
as Brett Hull scored ht s owlands Arena
game back , guy s were a little
Alexei Kasatonov had forced
testy ," said Buffalo's Rob Ray , JOOth career goal.
Islanders 6, Maplt leafs 2
the overtime by scoring his second
who got into a scrap with MontrePierre Turgeon and Derek Kmg of the game with 2:26 to play in
al' s Cluis Nilan JUSt seven seconds
each hit lhe 40-goal mark and rcgulatton .
into the game.
Kings 6, Canucks I
"It sure put both team s at an Bcnoi1 Hogue, Steve Th'omas,
aaitude thai hockey is back," Mon- Adam Creighton and Many McinThe Kings got four as.sisl&lt; fmm
treal's Kirlr. Muller said of !lie early nis also scored for th e Islanders, Wayne Grctzky, two goal s from
who had bee n elimtnatcd from Luc Robitaille and bnlliant goal altcn:ation.
The fmal two playoff &lt;poLS also playoff con tention in the Patrick tending by Kell y Hrudcy as th ey
dtsmantled Vancoover.
were decided as NHL team s tool to Division before the stnk e.
Jets 4, Flames J
Mike Donnelly, Rob Blake and
the tee for the fir st tim e si nce
T
he
Jets
locked
up
the
las
t
Bob
Kud clski also scored for the
March31.
Kings.
Hrudcy lost his shutout bid
Minnesota locked up the last Smythe Divt Ston playoff berth and
Norris Division berth even before a ftrst -round meeting wtth Vancou- in the final period when rookie
tying St. LoutS I-I when Toronto ver as Ed Oluyk scored twtce, Pavel Burc scored his 32nd of the
was beaten 6-2 at home by the New whil e Keith Tkachuk and Aaron season.
Bruins I, Nordiques I
York Islanders. Winnipeg grabbed Broten C&lt;!Ch had a goal.
The
Bruins' smallest hom e
the fmal Smythe Division berth by
Olczy k 's goal at 4 :20 of th e
c
rowd
in
four seasons, 12,823,
eliminating Calgary 4-3.
thtrd period gave the Jets a 4-0
watched
Adam
Oates' third-period
In other games, it was Edm(ln - lead. Sergei Makarov beat Rtch
give
them
a
tie with Quebec.
goal
lOn 6, San Jose 4; Delmtt 2, Chica- Tabaracci at 5:57 and Gary Roberts
Oates' 20th goal of the season at
go I; Washington 4, New Jersey 3 scored hiS 52nd and 53rd goals lc.ss
in overtime; Los Angeles 6, Van - than a minute apart late m the game 4:14 of !lie third period offset Alex ei Gusarov's fifth for Quebec wtth
coover I; BOSIOO I, Quebec I; and - but it wasn't enou gh.
4:21
left in the second.
Hartford 4 , l'lliladelphia 2.
Oiltrs 6, Shark.~ 4
Wllalrrs 4, Fly.rs 2
Buffalo, which combined with
The line of Joe Murphy, Vince
At
Hartford
Civic Center, the
Minnesota for 360 penalty minutes Damphoussc and Bernie Nich olls
Whalers
beat
Philadelphia
as Yvon
acc ounted for II pomts .
011 the last night before the strike.
Corriveau
scored
rwi
ce.
Murphy had a pair of goals and
scored all its goals on the powe r
Pat Verbeek and Mark Hunter
two assi SIS, Damphousse a goal and
play.
Randy Wood connected I :20 three assists and Nicholls a goal al so scored for Hartford . Steve
Duchesne and ,,. _Whaler Kevin
into the game with Nilan in the and two assists.
Dineen had goals for tltc Ayers.
penalty box following his ahercaRed Wings 2, Blackbawks I

SYSIIM SAVERreum

•, ...: ,., ··••''\ ~.., ·r·,• ljlh: ~·
.-~

,,~

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;

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •AllERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
Quality Cut Fer Your Family
L.-____,.-----::::3~04,:_;-6:..:.75-1244
Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignment Accepted
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

" Biggest break of my life,"
Couples said. "You don ' t ever get
a break like thal' '
"Most balls tllat hit there would
ahsolutely come hack in the
wa~er," Royd satd.
Couples nearly had to put one
foot in the creek to hit hts next
shot. He lOOk an awkward stance,
careful not to clear his throat and
send the ball tumbling into the
water, and chipped lO within two
feet of the pin.
He made the putt for par.
"I was nervous, because I felt
like if I got by that hole , I was
gomg to win ,·' Couples said
He was right. A player once sad dled with a reputauon for choking,
Couples made three birdies and 10
pars over the f mal 13 holes.
Urged on by an adonng gallery
and constant shouts of " C'mon ,
Freddie," Couples finished at 275,
13 under par. The 49-year ·o ld
Floyd shot 71 -277, then became
one of those fans urgong Couples
on.
While Coup le s may someday
approach the accomplishments of
Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer,
i1should be noted tllat several players in recent years have fallen back
to th e pack after winnrng one or
two majors . Nick Faldo, Payne
Stewart and John Daly - who all
fini shed !3th or worse Sunday come to mind.

'

OUT OF REACH - Cleveland forward Danny Ferry (righl)
gets his shot up and out or the reach or Washington rorward Larry
Stewart during Sunday's NIIA game lll Richfield, Ohio, which the
Ca valiers won 114-91. (API

Buffalo emerges from fightfest
with 3-1 victory over Montreal

10 \Opm

WALES CO~FE RE"i CE

~ ~

n 1• (l 11. : 0~

W u hLtlgtr..1 1l :'-lew Y oft: . 1 ) 0 p m

Sc.nl e

X. rJt ! Ktru.•• C r. • ·
1 nu.rl

Tur'Oda('li e;amt'S
Chla1o •l Cl'l'vtland, 7:341 p. m.
'\ e w )et'ley It M11m 1. 1 30 p m

Pilrtlllnd

foCorH

r .a Uomu 1' Mll••....ket
ITur.~;r:o 6, OU. J..od .:

71 2:3829 8
39 213 350

SA.!\ OlEGO PADRF..S

'\"c: w Jcnq u Orl•ndo, 1 JIJ p m
A LI :~~nu u Chluao . ~ ~ p m
l Onldm S t.~ t c: 11l"Uh. 9 ]0 p m

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CaJt~ty

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Sunk 1-:f&gt;. \ottru1aoY l ll'l

Tonight's

..

Se•nk

sco~s

Sunday's

Dnrot1 T!., ~e• Yodl 61
M.U••llkr:c: 'M . rtu.J .dclptlt190

\.l .r ~tu

,~,.. ~ - '

82 29 3 29 1

8c»t.on t?M . Chulonc: 102

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L A Cllppcn 112, Dawu U
Golden S ~tc: I }4 , P,orn11 1L~
~cnmaun 11 4. Mumct&lt;U 94

l

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1).&amp; 11--.!

93 ]78 244

J S 30 14
36 )J I 0
11 H 1 ~

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Ml..am1 \ 05, 0rlando 101

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Saturday's scorts

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llounon

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WESTER' CO -.:FERF.-. CE

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ta ~
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The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Couples wins Masters

9f, "l l3 ~2

4 2 25 11
}6 2! 15

B ufhlo 3, Monual 1
S Y lllanden 6, T oronw 2

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BouA011 ! . C IIIIC"illull I

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~om.

Sm ylht [)ivbioll

In the NBA .. .

Salurdat 's SCOf"!S

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'

Mon:..ru:

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Tutsday' s games

' ATIO '\ AL LUGl[
Tum

Quebec

Monday, April 13, 1992

EXCEPT WHAT'S MOST IMPORTANT.
Effedove 1mmedoately, Columb 1a 's Gallr polis opera tions have been consol1daled 111
our Athens office. But the mos t omportant th1ng woll never leave : our serv1 ce lo ou r
customers We'll keep it convenient for you Ia pay your boll , and
our people will be as close as a phon e ca ll.
To pay your gas bill , you may
t) use the return envelope enclosed
woth your brll,
2) srg n up for Chec kFree, wh e re you
1nstruct your bank to de ducl each
payment automa11cally from your
checking accounl ;
3) pay in person at se ve ral nearby
locatron s :

Star Bank Fruth Pharmacy Swisher &amp; Lohse Ridenour Hardware
Chesler
Middleport
all branches
Pharmacy
Pomeroy
For service requests . 1nformat1on or to report an emergency dunng business
hours, call our Athens office toll -free, Bam to 5 pm, Monday - Friday :
1-800-626-4963
For emergency service after 5:00 pm weekdays , and on weekend s and holidays,
call toll -free:
1-800-282-0157

VALLEY LUMBER and
SUPPLY CO.
555 Park St.

Columbia understands lhe tnconven1ence lhe office closing may initially cause.
But we'll do everything we can Ia make sure our se rvice stays close .

Middleport
992·6611

I

MAKES SAVE - Ntw Jtrsey goalie Chris
Trrrtri (right) reaches out lo make the save on a
shot by Washinglon's Dino Ciccarelli during tbe
-

- --------- - '-

first period of Sunday nighl's NHL game in Ea.•t
Rutherford , NJ., which the Capitals won 4·3 in
overtime . (AP)

COWMBIAGAS

�'

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 13, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Monday, April 13, 1992
Page-6

f:... Your Social Security
lly ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens

.

I

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When most people think about
SoCial Sccunty, they usuaUy do not
thmk abo ut the benefits that the
program pays to ch1ldren . That's
understandable. Beca use It IS true
tha t people arc more like! y to know
rcllrcd indtvt dual s who rccc tv e
Soual Security payment s than to
kn ow c hildren who ge t Soc•al
Security .
Howev er, our Comm tsstoncr,
Gwendolyn Ki ng, has recently
e mphas rz cd the fact th at Social
Security IS also a children' s program .
Here's wh y.
Each mo nth Social Sccuruy
. pays survi&gt;ors benefits 10 approXI matcl) 1 8 mil lio n c hildren of
deceased workers, and dependent
bencfu.s to another I m1llion chli drcn of retired and disabled work -

ers.
I bel1cve that surv1vors bencfilS
arc the least apprcc1ated aspec t of
the Soc 1al Sec unty program
For a ll America ns born after
World War !1, surv ivors benefits
arc taken for granted. They arc as
. muc h a fact of life as tomorrow 's
'un nsc. Rut tt was not alwa ys so.
L'nu l t111s ce ntury, the death of a
llusband usually meant desututr on

for the w1dow or fam1ly. Life msurance policies were rare; the opportunity for women to work outside
the home was small; and there was
no program 10 provide inc ome
replacement for surv1vors.
Ch ildren were usually parceled
ou110 rc lauves or orphanages; widows had to re ly upon the chanty of
thw own families 10 lake them in .
The ongmal SoCial Secunt y
Ac t, passed in 1935, did not make

Schultz attends National - People in the news4-H Congress; top honor

Chnsune Sc hult:£, a member of
the Co untry Bumpkins 4-H Club
and the Country Bumpkins Sw1ne
Cl ub recently attended the Nauonal
4-H Congress held in Ch1cago.
Thr s IS the top honor a 4-H
member rcce1ves for exceUence m
project work .
W mners from each state paruc•pate 1n speCial cducauonal sessions
prov tston s for survtvors. But tn
and arc provided meals and profes1939 amendments to the act pro- SIOnal entertammcnL State winners
vided for monthly benefits for wid - may also compete fo r S I ,000 in
owed mothers wllh e il g•blc chil - ed ucational sc hol arships m some
dren.
awards areas.
T he program has ex pande d
To be ehgibl c for Congress, parsmce th en, and wday 98 out of ti Cipants must be ages 14 -18 and
every 100 ch1 ldre n could rece1ve co mp lete a national 4-H report
surv1vor benefits If a working pai - for m and compe!C In diStrict and
ent shou ld d1e .
state -level scrccnmg.
In fa cl, the &gt;alue of th.is protecSchulll, age 19, is the daughter
tion aga mst tn co me loss for a of Bill and Lmda Schulll, Cherry
worker's family is probably greater R1dge . She is a semor at Eastern
than the value of his or her com - High School and IS ac tive in volley
mcrctalltfe msurance.
ball, uack and the yearbook staff.
If you would like an esumate of
She is also involved m all phasthe Social Security surv1vors bene- es of the 4-H program , mclud1ng
fits that could be paid to your fam •- JU nior frur board, 4-H commutcc,
ly, call or visll our office 10 ask for jumor leade rs club, camp coun a personal ea rn1n gs and bcncfu selors, 4-H Club Congre ss, out csumate statement. It w11l show an stand mg 4-H girl , and citizenship
csumatc of retirement and dtsabil• - Washington focus.
ty bcnefll s a n other important
She has been the Meigs County
•nformat•on. O ur number IS S92 - Darry Princess runner-up, Me1gs
444R. Ou r toll free number IS 1R00-77 2- 12 13.

Past Councilors Club
·members judge bonnets

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -B urt
Reynolds sa1d he promoted Tampa
as the locauon for h•s latest mov ie,
"Cop and a Half," because of its
p•cturesque spots unknown 10 Hol 1ywood fans.
"I rea ll y pu shed for Tampa
because it has n' t been seen '"
mov ies ," he said . " I! has a great
look. The bridges, Ybor City, those
fab ulous sunsets."
The mo v1e is the story of a 10ycar-old boy, played by newcomer
Norman Golde n, who insists on
becommg partners w1 th a police
offi cer after witnessing a murder.
The boy refuses to identify the
killer unl ess he ge ts to wear a
badge and ndc in a police car.
Reynold s, who pla ys the cop,
begins fiimrn g Monday with 8ycar-old Norman

CHRISTINE SCHULTZ
County Farr Queen second runnerup, and the Pork Princess.
She plans to attend Hock1ng
Co llege in the fall m the nursing
program to enter the E.M.T. tram mg. followed by the first and second year nursing levels. When she
completes her R.N. trainmg she
plans lfl return to Meigs County to
usc her trammg

Grange holds inspection

" My Most Embarrassmg Moment"
by Christi ne Napier; "Easter" by
Maxmc Dyer; "Each Spnng God
Renews His Prom1se" by Virgin1a
Carson,
and "Because He L~&gt;cs"
The Past Counc 1lor s Cl ub of awarded th e prettiest, a nd Opal
by Freda Sm1th. The theme for the
Cheste r Cou nCil No 323, Daugh - Hollon, the most ongma l Th ey
program was New Life and Hope
kT' of AmnKJ, met rcccnlly at the were prese nted g1f!S
Ca th er in e Colwell , women' s
Games were conducted by Lora
Jmlr::c h:1ll -~ 1th 'h rg 1na3 L ee and
uv•ucs
chainnan, gave a safety
ac
Da
mewood
and
Ethe
l
Orr.
~1a;c,nct ,\mhcrgc r as hos t esses
trp
on
chemicals
She announced
Cora
Beegle
won
the
door
pnzc.
Gold 1c Fr~·dc r 1c k. , wh o was dl at
the
state
sew
ing,
sweatshm and
Refre
shm
ent
s
were
sencd
to
thl·tnnc, "'a-; aho to OC a hos tess
wooden
toy
contest
will be Judged
l.lllr:l ~L1c 1\IL·c preSided at the Thelma Wh1l C, Faye KuU!art . VIr at
the
June
mccung.
n1cctmL: ._md read trom the book of ginia Le e, ln zy Newe ll , Ella
Donations were made to FnendThe Pomeroy C hurch of th e
St Luke The Lord 's Prayer and Osborne . Mary K Ho lter. Erma
Pkdgc of A ll rg J ~tncc were g 1vcn m Cle land, Margaret Amberger, Mar - :-&lt;azarcnc will ho s t an " Almo st ly Hills Camp, Slate Youth Travel
· uniSon Membe rs answered roll call er a Kell er, Laura Mae Nice, Lora Anyth•ng Goes" olympiCs Saturday Fund, Heifer ProJeCt lntemauonal,
by say mg "What they liked about Damewood, Ethel Orr, Opal Hoi - at 3 p m at the roads1de rest local · · Kelly Farm Fund and for Ohio to
Host Nauonal Sess•on m 1993.
Easle r." Off1 ce rs repon s were Ion, Be tt y Roush, Mary Jo Bar - cd on Route 33 East.
Eldon Barrows, leg •slallv c
nnger, and guesLs, Andrea Hartun ~,
The olymp1cs w•l l mcl ude van ·
l: J\ Cn
~ \tr s '\' 1c~ Hb tall cd Erma ( lcous games , relays and sports cnm - chrurman, reponed on stale legiS!aand Sandra Wh1te
ti ve co nfe rence he altc nd ed 1n
Lmd :1" '.l lC- prc..,alknL
pcuuon for all age groups. Pmcs March So me of th e lo p•c s dr sll;tll Kou' h th.tn kcd the club
will be g"e n and refre shm ent s
cussed mclude the consumer Call 111r hn ·~ ,tt and thanked the mcrn
Rece nt guests of Mac McPec k \C rvcJ .
txrs tor. th.:n c.uct... wh1 \c she wa~ and Ada B1sse ll were Mrs Doannc
The event IS bemg held to pro- for ma label law, and rur al mail
delivery on Saturday.
111 thl' h\)\ rlt.al
!Iampton, O!Jahoma. Mr and Mrs
mo te a stron ge r re lati o nship
There were 59 members, VISitors
1 "" '' C lc l.Jnt\ rea d " Aft er th e John Assel, M•ssouri , Mrs. Leota be tween people of the church and
and
JUniors present for the meeting
\\.'mt ~..·r'' :md McHl iJ Kell er read
f crr cll , Medway ; Mr. and Mrs
the commun ity. The public IS mvH·
"Amen
W1lliam DaviS, Parkersburg , cd and funher Informauon may be A potluc k s upp er follow ed th e
ENer hon nets we re JUd ged by W.Va .; William Bona . Park ers- obtain ed by ca lli ng Steve Black- mcctmg
The nex t regular meetmg will be
E1hc l Orr. l:lb O&gt;borne and Cora burg, W Va : and Raben Bona and well, eve nt coordi nator, at 992·
Saturday
with a potluck supper at
8c:-cr,lc ~1Jry Jo narrlng c r wa s !"anJchildren. Ra venswood. W Va
67'Jc
6:30p.m. followed by fun mght
InspectiO n was held when Star
Grange met recently at the grange
hall
Lowell Ashcra ft , stale depul y
from Athen s Cou nty , wa s the
rn spec trn g off1cc rs. The second
degree was conferred 111 full fo rm
for mspccuon .
The literary program hy lecturer
Eldon Barrows mcluded read• ngs

Olympics slated

Mc Peek guests named

I

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'

. ..,
)~
'

••

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Dave
Dravccky lost h1 s pitching arm to
cancer, but found he could be as
much of an inspiration off the fi eld
as on it.
Dravccky, 36, VISited young
paucms Fnday at St. Joseph' s Cancer Institute and was the sc heduled
speaker at a Saturd ay n1ghl fund raiser for the inslltu!C.
"Spend ing 11me with children
really helps me, and th ey probably
don' t even real1ze u," he sa1d. "It
helps me to keep life In perspcc-

uvc

.'

...

JJ. .\(; IHISI'&lt;(; IIEI.IJ - •\ nag r"ing ceremorn \~ .l'i hrlc.J rrcrnth· ;1 1 th e C ht" ster Fir e
il&lt;' r .irtnu·nl fhe n.Ig '"''dona ted hv Pearl and
l.IIHLt Fdna rd " an d .l1m and Flsit· Folmer i n

memory of their fathers, P~arl R. Edwards and
George W. Folmer Sr. Piclured arc members of
th e department and fa mil y memb e rs as th e}
ra 15&lt;' !he nag.

Former Rich Valley Dairy employees
tecall history; company founded in 1924
1'01:\ I

PLEASANT. W Va
Former
KIC h Vall e)
Dairy
cmpict)L'L'" ,m el thelf farmllcs got
:lH'Ctll ~ r lor ,1 d111ncr and an cvc n111 ;. li l ld lowsh 1p m lhc ~x: 1al

of t.hl' Ma1n Stree t Bapttst
Chun h on Saturday, March 2X
DHlnl' r 'J.',I\ serve-d al fi p m , hut
rn.1r1v ,1rrncd an hour earl y so th ey
could \ L'-11 and v1cw the hundred ...
uf p1 ctu rcs and R 1ch Va lley rnom cn tos the! I were on diSplay throughout
the nx1rn .
Dak Wood gave the mvocauon.
pclu"ng dunng the prayer fo r a
"mcm11nal moment," in honor of
: 1hr deceased members of the R1 ch
: Valle') f,umly. Many who we re un . J blc to ile present sc ut Jette" ol
: bes t w1sh cs. These letters were r ead
~ ~nr l r~ca tly apprccmted by all
'
· ' "'Jlloycc or a farn •ly
: 1. 1 " 'dll.JllY~ Wi.IS ~rnroduccd, they
: rel.ncd m.my mtcrcstm g mc•dents
• occunng dunng the years as an
: employee of R1c h Va lley Da1ry.
: Some of the suua11ons described
; brought tears.
roOil l\

...

'

Those prese nt were: Cleo :md
Norman Lievmg, Lula and Homer
Reed, Joan and Roger Wilson.
h :.~p \ thc1r m ost mcanmgful rca&lt;;On
Sad•
c and Ronme Ba•lcs, Wilbur
lm hrmg present was lO honor the
mcmnry of D W Rothgeb, who and Tillie Rowley, Laura RowiC)
Harris, Harry Flowers, Mrs. Curtrs
found ed the company m !924
Johnson
, De lla Johnson Sauers :md
Many spoke of hrm and his gcnumg
J
P
Sauers,
Dorothy and PalSy
Lunccm for the employees and th cu
Boggs,
Jack
1c
and Robert Boles,
l;umllcs. othl:-rS referred lo him as
Hazel
Roush,
lnc7 Ohvcr, Jean
hc 1ng like a father to them .
Oliver
Somerville,
Helen Fowler,
The milk pasteuri1.ation plant,
lcc!lcd at 205 5th Street m Pmnt Brady and Tim Knolls, Thelma
Pl casanl, was sold to Valley Bell m Hayes and Frank Case, Wilma and
Da le Wood, CharlollC Rice and
19\\
Teresa Brannan, Jan et and Ed
The ICC cream branc h conunucd
to operate under the R1ch Vall ey Hogg, Jimmy Hogg, Carl Hogg,
name at the plant m M•ddlcport, Charlone Hall, Pauline and Evercu
Bums, Janel Pickens, Mary Jane
OH unul 1980.
and
R•ck P1ckcns, Tom and R1ck
PICture slides w1th a narrauve
Pic!:ens,
Be&lt;:ky Bateman, Sonic
was prepared m the early 1950s as
and
Sandi
Bat£man, and Joh nnie
an educationa l device 10 be shown
to the many school chi ldren who and Fay Wilson.
Becky Bateman, dijJghtcr of the
vis ued the plan!S. It was entitled
late
Dec and Roma Rothgeb and
"The M• lk Parade," depicting !he
Johnnie
and Fay Wilson, partners in
story of milk from the farm lfl !he
the
Rich
Valley Co. since 1946,
d1nncr table. This presentation
brou_ght many memories to those were hosts for this R1eh Valley
"Old Timers" gel together.
present for thi s rcumon.
It tx·camc ev•dent as each one
ro ld of !llclf expcncnces that pcr -

dows are e1ther very tidy or very nosy

- and wanllo see what's gomg oo nert
door.

Dravccky was a lcft-handcr for
th e San Diego Padres and Sa n
rrancisco Giants. He made a cou rageo us comeback 10 month s aft er
doctors found a malignant tumor m
hiS pitching arm . But the d1 sease
forced the ampuwuon of hi s shoul der and arm in the summer of 1991 .
Dravecky, who docs not wear a
prosthesiS, said, " I thrnk now I've
come to grips wuh the loss of my
arm, and that there is good that has
come ou t of 11- that even withoul
an arm I can be an encouragement
to others. "
IND IA NAPOLIS (AP) Arnold Sc hwarzcneggcr d1d pushups and ran 1n a sack race over the
weekend lfl promote youth r.mcss.
The star of the "Tcrmma!Or"
movres was in Indianapolis on Saturday as cha irman of the PrcSI ·
dent' s Council on PhySical F1tncss
and Sports He's st opped 1n 43
states to prommc funcss , and hiS
goa! IS al i 50
' 'I'm a strong believer 1n the
squeaky wheels ge t the grease. so
th ose organizations that make th e
most no• se and arc the most obnoxIous out there and protest the most
arc the ones th at w1 ll get .. th1ngs
done ," he srud

by the Chester Seou l Troops.
"Amcnca the Bcaut1ful " wa s
sung by Mr and Mr s. Darrell
Hawthorn e and Mrs L1 nda Well s
June R1denour. preSide nt of th e
ladt es auxtlwry , ga\oe a rcadmg

"The Symbol ol the Fbg ."
The crowd JO in ed 1n Sing•n g
" Amcnca ··
Darrell Haw thorn e gave th e
prayer
Pearl Edwards IS a member of
the fHe departm e nt and Els 1e
ro Jm er IS a memhcr Of the Jad1es
aux 1hary

Council debates over Ja ckson mural
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An
80 foot mmal of Mic hae l Jackson
proposed for ~rc s1de of th e hiStOri C
El Cap1tan Thea ter 1sn't the thmg
10 encourage restoratiOn of Holly·
wood Iloulevard, some say
More th an I ,000 people ha ve
"gned a petit•on s upporting a
mural of th e late Orson Welle s.
sa1d Robert Nudelman, who helped
persuade the Walt Dosney Co. to
spend S6 mil hon to restore the El
Car• tan
He srud Welles IS a mane fitting
cho1cc because th e 1941 clasSic
"CIIl/ Cn Kane" was the rust film
shown at the theater
The Jackson mural has rcCCived
approval fro m several committees
bu t needs Cuy Co unc•l approval
Coun c ilm an Michael Woo sa id
Jackson's 1magc peenng over the
houlevarrl would lure toun sts and
money.

Neighbors with sparkhng clean win-

"

Flag raising cermonies held
Approximately 50 peo ple
auended the n.1g rais mg ceremon y
at the Ch es ter Fire Department
recently.
The nag was donated by Pearl
and Linda Edwards and Jim and
ElSie Folmer 1n memory of lh w
fathers. Pearl B. Edward s and
George W. Folmer Sr.
The nag was prese nted 10 Jumor
Koenig, prcs• dc nt of th e fife
department, by Els1e Folmer. The
nag was raised by the pres1dent and
fam1 ly members
The pledge to the nag was led

TODAY'S BARB
BY PHD. PASTORET

''We wan t lO preserve a real

pcdestn an env ir onme nt lh al
appeals to the o cc ul•ve ca rrying
th e attache case as well as the kirl
wr th the toom "'"·" he sard. "It's
hard f o r me to un ag mc a perso n
who represe nts that popular appeal
beuerthan Michael Jackson."

REBECCA ROUSH

Second birthday
Rebecca Dawn Roush of Racine
recently celebrated he r second
birthday wuh a M1nn1e and Me
theme party at the home of her parents, Raben and Carrie Roush Jr.
Ancndmg the pany were Glenn
and Marie Young, Cam e Roush,
T1na Sla ter, Stanley, Tanya and
Ch ristopher Holter, Jeff and Vanessa Brown, Bnttany Young, Lester,
Caro l and Michael Manuel , Jim
and Opal Hupp , Troy Manu el,
Peggy, Adam and Ben Lee, Kenny
Erw 1n e, Brenda pan sh, Larry
Barnes, Pat Morganstern, Shirley,
Dcbb•e and T1 ffa ny W•ll• s, Penny
Duhursl, Belly VanMeter, Paula
G•lbnde and Yvonna Pers1nger
Oth ers prcscn11ng ca rd s and
g•fts we re Paulme Wolfe, Gene and
Hilda DaviS, He len Manuel, Don
and Angre Rou sh, Lori, Ik e and
Ang1c Apperson, and l1m. Tamm y
and J R Hupp
Ca ke anti ICC cream were also
se rved

Door pmes we"' won by Ta nya
Holter, Kenn y Erw1n c and Ben
Lee.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Second 51., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

Agriculture

I
To place an ad
CaU 992-2156

Sunday, I ta 5/..m-

Hubbard'S
Greenhouse

Public Notice

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS special needs
Notice Is hereby given elderly and,
that sealed proposal• will
be received at the office of

!he Board of Meigs County
Commissioners at the
Courthou1e in Pomeroy,

of the rural

Wherea1, the gap to
aervice acce11 between the
urban and rural elderly
continues to grow and,

Whereas, 23 of tho 26
Appalachian
Ohio, until 12 noon on April ( 8 8. 46 % )
29, 1992, and opened and countiea have poverty rates

Public Nollce

Public Nollce

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TllANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Apfil 3, 1992
Contract Salu
legal Copy No. 92-370
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed propoulo will be

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

exceeding 20 percent for
dale lor tho tollowinQ their 60+ population 11 received at the office of the
compared with 3 ol tho Director of the Ohio
described County work:
Furnish all materials, remaining 62 countiu Department of Translabor, and apphancea (4.84%) and,
portation , Columbua, Ohio,
Whereas, aome line items until 10:00 A.M ., Ohio
neceaaary to complete in a
aatiafactory manner; all that were combined into the Standord Time, Tuesday,
scraping or wire bruahing, alate'• Senior Citizens April 28, 1992 lor im painling, regluing where Block Grant were intended provamenla In:
needed, caulk between to eddren service gapa
Meigs County, Ohio for
fTamea and brtck, apply one 1xiating in _rural areas, e. g. ImproVIng MEG-143-0.00,
(1) coal acrylic maaonry "transportation,
State Route 143, by
Be it resolved that the reaurlacing with aaphall
white
paint (Sherwin
William• or equal) to tho Village of Pomeroy strongly concrete.
following nterior of the advocates that a new
Project and Work length:
Meigs County Courthouoe: funding formula combining 43,772 ltnaar feel or 8.29
All exterior areaa of the federal Older AmBficans Act mile.
Courthouse except the fu nda wllh state senior
The
dale
sot
tor
nortlr oide (r. . ol building). block grant funda maintain completion of this Work
All metal areaa ol roof to equa l bue funding and shall be aat forth in the
receive 2 coats of rual Increase those funding bidding proposal."
reaialant black paint Also factors which address
Each bidder shall bo
to be included in this geographic isolation and required to fila with his b1d
project ia one coal of Gold poverty.
a certified check or
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor cuhiar'a check for an
pain! to be applied to the
Larry Wehrung, President amount equal to five
Dome of the Courthouse.
Brenda L Morris, Clerk p8fcant of his bid, but in no
Two (2) coat. of batUoohlp
gray paint ohall be applied (4) 13, lie
evant more than fifty
to the outside atairwaya and
thousand dollars , or a bond
balconies and two coats of
for tan per cent of hia bid,
Public Nollce
black ruat -reaiatant enamel
payable to the Director
ahall be applied to the
B1ddor must apply, on the
ORDINANCE 606
raiUngo . All pain! ohaU be
proper
forma,
for
An ORDINANCE to
applied by brush only.
qualification at leaat len
provide fee increuea for
Work shall begin not
day• prior to the date 1at for
the Beech Grove Cemetery.
more than 10 days after
opening bide in accordance
BE IT ORDAINED by tho with Chapter 5525 Ohro
awarding of contract and be
completed within
30 Council ol the Village of Raviaed Coda.
Pomeroy, Ohio :
calendar daya, weather
Plana and apecificationa
SECTION 1: $175.00 for are on fila in the Department
permitting. Penally beyond
first grave apace including e&gt;f Tr&amp;nsportation and the
tpecified lime ahall be
mandatory
4
corner
$50.00 per day.
office of the District Deputy
markers, ordered and
All proposal• mual be
Dtrector.
installed by tho Village;
The Director reserves the
accompanied by a Bond
$125.00 for aecond grave
signed by two Sureties
right lo reject any and &amp;II
and any thereafter;
approved by lho County apace
bids.
$200.00
opening and
Commlaaionera in the
JERRY WRAY,
clo•ing- weekd.ya;
amount of $2,000.00 for the
01rector of Transportation
$250.00 opening and
faithful perf01mance ol this
(4) 13, 20, 21&lt;
cloain~ - we•kends and
contract Bond referred to 11
holiday•;
a Bidder'• bond accom·
$50.00 cremation grave.
panying
bid,
which
$100.00 infant grave.
become• a perlormance
$65.00 transfer of lot plua
bond to Contractor re·
corn•r
mark1ra, ordered
ceiving award. All other
read aloud at 1 p.m. on that

bonds will be returned to
biddera alter award of

Contract

and inolalled by the Village;

$10.00 &amp;nnual maintenance care par grave,

All employee• ahall be payable by May t of each
covered by the Ohio year;
125.00 deed tranafer.
WOJker'a Compenution
SECTION II: Avault ia no!
program . Bidder's riak
number mual be furn1ahed

in bid.
The
Me1gs
County
Comml1aionera reserve the
right to accept or reject any
or all bids andlor any part
thereof.

Moigo County

Commlaaion8fa

Mary Hobo letter, CIOC'k
(4) 13, 20, 21c

Tho

lolllage

requirea at least three daya
notice to dig 1 grave, except
in emergencies.
lot purchaaea and/or

grave digging may bt
placed at

th e Pomeroy

Municipal Building, 320 Eaal
Main Street. Pomeroy, Ohio:
Pat Thoma, Cemetery Clark;

(614) 992-2246 w.. kdaya.
Weekends and holidays,
contact the Pomeroy Pohca

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 401 .92
RE GAll Dl NG BASE
FUNDING FOR OHIO'S
SENIOR CITIZENS FUNDS

Syracuse 992-5776

(" nl Thl\ rw"' 'P"fll''

U.S. Route No. 33
Ordinance No. 608
Aprll1, 1992

it 50 WO!t, ~~ .... Oilio •593-Ji 15
212019213 mo

An emergency ordinance
enacted by the Village of
Pomeroy, Meigs County,

Ohio, In tho manor ol the

REASONABLE RATES

hereinafter described lm ·
provement, and to request
cooperation from the Director ol Transportallon .

742-2138

"FREE nnMArn·..u-• •--...

3-15-"92-1 mo. pd.

Call372-8697 or
1-80G-S38-1440

WHEREAS, !he Village
has ldenlified lhe need for IL _ _ _ _..J:.Ii:Ji:U.JWl.l
and proposes the improvement of a portion ol the pub·
lie hlghwoy which Is described as follows
The Installation of a state
line sign located on lhe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge at
the Ohio-West Virginia state
line, 0.08 mile east ol Main
Street.
This ordinance Is hereby

Read the Best Seller
Read the

CLASSIFIED f\DS

declared lobe an emergency 2

measure by reason of the - - - - - - - ' - - -

need for expediting highway
Improvements to promote
highway safety, and provide
II receives the affirmative vote
of two-thirds of the members
elected to Council, it shall
take effa-et and be In Ioree
Immediately upon Its pas·
sage and approval by the
Mayor ; otherwise, It shall take
effect and be in force from
and alter the earliest period
allowed by law.

Passed . Aprll1, 1992
Attest :
Brenda Morris, Clerk
Bruce Reed, Mayor
larry Wehrung,
President of Council
(A complete text of this Ordl·
nance may be obtained or
viewed at the Village Clerk's

Of11ce).
13, 21c

(4) 6,

CLASS IFI EDS
This Way

I&lt;I

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

In Memory Of
DAVID E. ARIX
The loss of my son
left an emptiness
in my heart that
can never be filled .
The loss of his
wife and daughter
made the hole that
much larger. To
grieve the loss of a
loved one who has
gone to the Lord is
one of the hardest
things to face, but
to grieve the loss
of loved ones who
are stili alive is
devastating.
Jettie Arix

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

hi1torically recognized in
Older
Americana Act
funding formula• the

•

POMEROY- 1 lloor lrame home With 3 bedrooms, natuarl
gas lumance &amp; central air, WBFP, new roof, new dock, l
car garage, full bsmt 2 13 acres w/garden area $31,900

NEW UMA RD.- Ranch sl)lle ho1ne w1lh 3 bedrooms, 1 11
2 bath , heat pump, CIA, patiO garage. outbu1ld1ngs, approJI

6 acres $39,500 OWNER SAYS ' MAKE AN Ol'FERI"
WANTED AT ONCE I
LISTING FOR HOMES &amp; PROPERTIES IN THE MEIGS
COUNTY AREA. IF YOU WANT TO SELL , .. CALL US
TODAY I WE HAVE BUYERS WAITING I
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................~~2-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ....................... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL ..............................................949-2660
n•FIC E.. , ............. ,.,...........,....... ,.......................9~2 -2259

•

•

• • • •

•

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Oh1o

11114/lln

r TROY-BI£T
Ow- SPf1nB SbipmtNJI or
'T'roy -Blh 1\llen Now In Stotk.

Yo~l~iH'ilitJ~ol.,

New~pnpt'r~

- 3 l.ln,.s

01'111:\'

$3.33
G. - - - - - - -

2.

7 . - - - - - -- -

3.
·1.

R. - - - - - - ft. _ _ __ __ __

~. - - - - - - - ~~--------

!!. _ _ _ _ _ __
12.

-

-----

1:l.

---------I !l.

1 I.

• • •

• • • •
• • •
• •
•
•
••
..

I'I) Ufll'

II~ II '"Olftl f: nun l nnln&lt;"

l)r11oll1nr Arril .10. 1Qtl2

N,\!1&gt;. _ __ _ _ _ _ _ COI UMNOr'll _ _ _ l'llllN J:
( • II

~· I •

•pprn '" 1: .11 ,pulo• Tl•t ly T nbunr , 1'1 l'lru• nl

Tfq~;to l r r ,

on&lt;ll'nmt'r " ~

NOW YOU SI·: E IT , NO\~
) OU IJUN'T 1 MOVE YOl ll!
MEI!CIIANIJISE FA ST!• I!
Til AN YOII CAN SAY
"ARRAf.AOARRA !"
WITII AN AlliN TilE
THE llAII.Y
SENTINF:I. CLASSIFIEIIS.
Till·~ ) WOHK LIKE
MACIC

Tilt: Dfllll¥-6tJ.IIiNtl.

CAS II ONLY . MAll . OH !'!.ACE AT OFFICE
l 'r\ nl r'lflr "'llfllln r " rh JJ'tlf"f" Rh"vf" [Rrh lniiiRfor J;fnUfl n ( ri(II;Ufl"~

ntlollld,Jr,.,n or phnnr numhrr 1r uiW"tl

(No Sunday Calls)
2112192 lin

.GslJAYMAR

KEVIN'S lAWN

Quality
Stone Co.

MAINTENANCE

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614-992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

P R ol~ ~• nl

,,.,.1 )

614-949-2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fenllizing, Weeding,
end Seeding.
Shrub end Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
RnldonUal•
Commerelal

FJea Ealtmatea
~ .1MO pd.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

NEW OPENING

Baal Prices 6 Service for
Post Frame Garages &amp;

Ill COURT STHEET
I'UMEHOY, 011 45 769

Caii146-2H2

SUMMER
IMAGES

Barna
Choice of 12 eolora sliding or roll up doors
Standard to unlimited 11zes
&amp; Stylu
30Jc50 •ected lor

lnapection
Motorial I labor
Guar&amp;nteed

2 Mile• on Hyaell Run Rd.

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Viails ...... $25 .00
16 Viails ...... $30 .00
1 V•sil... ... $3 .00
Col fw AIP.!ot!••

Pb. Local Salesma1
742-2072

992·2487 or
992-7884

3-16-1 rna pd

4-7-92-1 mo.

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB
tGoll lmoftl
'17.50 ... or 6

,

lor '60
•New
Gr1o'--.'4.00
•Ou6s Repairocl
........laocecl

~·luhtball &amp;

_, ....... S•mr Trophios
46387 Seoul Camp Road
Cheater, Oh.
Yttmtl

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING ,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONi.-TRUCKING
f'll[[ F.ST"IA TL&gt;

992-3838

mo

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

-Room Addition•
-G.r liar Work
-E-al•nd Plumbing
-Roofing
-lnterkw I Ex..,.ior
Painting

1-13-'92'-1 mo

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

(FREE ESTIMATES)

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

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

3-l3·92·lln

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limes tone,
D111 , Gravel a nd Coal

4-4-91-rfn

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861-1929.
Espec ially Nal1onal
Bank Currency from
any slate. Paying
$300.00 and up for
specific pieces from
Rac1ne . Pomero y,

M1ddleport and
Ravenswood.

PETE SIMPSON

Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591

Evenings

1-614- 764-2101

12-5-tfn

DK's FARM TOYS

L~

~\:,
DALLAS K WEBER · Owner

l OlJil Cl,i\SSWU:It i\lt

(,

614·949·280 I or 949·2860

II 50 Will, Aile., 01;, •513-311 S

-------------------------------------------3 ltn) ~ - 3

COMMERCIAL and RI'.SmENTI;U
FREE I'.STIM.U"ES

•Insulation

Real Estate General

• ••

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

•Roolin~

Bruce Reed, Mayor

n~ce

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

112/ll n

(4) 13, 20, 2tc

POMEROY. OHIO_-

Benne11!! Mobile Home !f~ating
L&amp; Looling
1391 Safford Sdtool Rd.
Ohio
Call (614) 446-94

Window

•
•
•
•
• • • •
• • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
• •
• •
• • •
• •
• • • • •
• •
• • • • •
• •
• • • • •
• •
•

u

Conditioners, Heat
Furnaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.

Across Fr. . '"' OHict

217 E. S.coHII.
POMEIOY, OHIO
3123192111n

Approved M-lacturod

Housiog Products.

Oua5ty Hi EHiciency Air

All MAliS
Bring It In Or We
Plrk U~­

985·3561

In Memory

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

IITI:DTUI:DIII
111 en 1ncnm.
9(1TfR BYDfSI(; N
'

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

May 1,1992.
PASSED: Aprll1, 1992
AITEST:
Brenda L. Moms,
Whereaa , the Ohio
Clerk
Oepartmenl of Aging has

$53,000

~ ~ ·r, l c

COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME ,

WAKEitELD'$

dmanee shall be effective

NEW LISTING· Mlddlepon- CommeJP1allapanment Cur·
randy occup•ed by Beauty shop &amp; TI!POO shop, •ncludes 2
bedroom remodeled apls Good monthly rental income.

A pullh\

Tru,.lUlt 11Uel'l Now In Stoe k.
You1 Local Tr!f:·Bilt Dpale,

Department (614) 992-'411 .
SECTION Ill : Thio Or-

NEW USTING- Mlddloporl· 1 112 story lrame home w•th

Making American Dreams AReality

HAULING

or

.

mandatory at Beech Grove

Cemetery.

Ow- Sprlna Shtpmf!lll

mo pd

•
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • •
•
• • • • • • • • •• • • •
• •
• • •
• • •
• •
• • • •
• • •
• • • • • • •
~·
• •• •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
• • •
• •
• •
• •
•

3 bedrooms, hreplacs , CIA, lull basement . new plumbing &amp;
w~r~ont &amp; back porches, lanced back yard ASKING
$29,

~~~
....

J-1~1

TROY-BI£T

Public Notice

NEW USTING- Longbottom· 1 acre w1th OhiO RroJer

/;;. . U.S. Savings Bonds

614-985-4180 Loon..._
Aher 6 p.m.
Call985-4192

CLOSW SUNDAY

NEW USTING· Longbotlom-Appro&lt; 9 acres or

Most of the time, it takes money. And that means startmg to
plan now so Ihal you ca n reach your goals mlhe future. rhat's
v.hy you should invest in US. Savtngl Bonds W11h ju st a littl e
money from each paycheck, you can huy Ronds through lhc
l'ayroll Savmgs !'ian at work. Find out how US. Savings Bonds are
makmg Amencan dream I a reality. Ask your rm ployr• or c&lt;Ill
I ROO 4 US BOND lor more mformal1on .

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

304-273-5555

Mo N. thru F111. 8A.M. -5I•. M.- Sn.8-l2

!ay1ng land Owner will spl1t $18,000

•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
37 632 West Shade Rood

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Vo.

Frontage an ex~lent camp1ng s1te $8 ,000

Complete line bedding and
vegetable plants Blooming
and Fahage Hongin~
Baskets large select1on
shrubery and trees Large
Selection of Easter Flowers
Open Daily, 9a.m. to Sp.m.

- l•t Us Do It For You'

INC.

608 EAST MAIN

SPRING SEASON

' Tea• n.. Pain Out 01 Painting

Lime

992-2259

NOW OPEN FOR

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp;(0.

FOR SALE

TEMPE, Ariz . (AP) - The
lnsh rock group U2 hadn 't played a
concert in Anzona since openmg
and closmg its " Joshua Tree" tour
1n 1987, and thai fact didn't escape
lead singer Bono.

"Thank s for han gin g around
f•vc years," Bono told a sold-ou t
crowd of 13,400 at a conce n Friday
at Arizona State Un• vers •ly. "It
fee ls like f1ve m•nutes 10 me
Thank s a lot. I! won't be fi ve years
be fore we 're back agam."
U2 , on the 24th show of a 32 cuy North Amencan tour to sup
port it s tripl e-plaunum album
"Achrun g Baby," had the fan s on
thCir feet throughou t the concert
They played 19 songs.
Another 700 uckets were put on
sale hours before the show to di scourage scalpers, who wenc as kin g
up to $1,000 per ucket.
U2 film ed so me co ncert"por t• ons of us mov1e ''Ranle And
Hum " a t Arizona Stat e ' s Sun
Dev1l StadiUm 111 1987.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

All SCALI I - VINIAGE111d
COllE&lt;TABL!
·alden Avciloblo"

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Go rages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
F~EE

O~PIAYIO Af

IHI QUAIIIY PRINT IHOP
MIDOIIPORT, OH.

ESTIMAlES

985·4473
667·6179

r.

'1'17-l39H:30 • -4·00,.
741·l07Hiler 1:00

2·1·92·1fn

t ·2·t1· ••

omes-Pela·WIIdllfe
Molorcycld· Eic

'l(p.tfiryn
Muufows
"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy,Ohio45769

Welcome Slates
$20.00
Cuatom Painting•
614-992-2242

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Spetlalldng In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
,
lOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992 _7013 Or
992 •5553
OR TOll FlUE

1·800·848·0070

DARWIN, OHIO
'- _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - __________ _I L.._ _ _ _4.;c12192i11n=:.::::..~ l'--:---...:.:.713::.,:1:.;
f9:,::11.::;lfn::l

'

\

\

\..

�13, 1992

Monday, April

8

Page

The Dally Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruct Beattie

Announcements
•
3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

33

Firm Wlnled:

35

Call Today, Torlllo
1·10CH73-1001, U .H llln. 18 •
llacococ, Cooco llaoo, California.

lor

month, any one ol tour loll

portloa,

available, 304-175-2722.

ful

&amp;75-2122.

Lota)olnlng Point • 100% ow.wr
financing at $101.46 pat monl:h
~ all thr11 loll . 304-675--

Pharmacy.
~uc•:

Gobe..
Diuretic,

••••

Pharmacy.

&amp;

tut

wf1h

tabiMa
&amp;
E-Vap
anllabla at Fruth

"It's such a nice day, I'm driving without
the top ... and without my toupee! "

Unattached? MNI ArN SlngiQI----------~----------1
Through Our ~ngln New$~1-

tar. Wrltt: Singlet, P.O. Box
11
t043, Golllpollo, Ohio 4563t
____
H_e_l:..p_W_a_n_l_ed
__
Giveaway

3 Year Old Chow Oog. 614-446-

8199.

Black Labrador, 814-446-4514.
Blue Tick Coon Hound pups,
pura b111d, 304-815-3430.
SmaU Bob TaU Malt, Very Good
Ltnle Ooa. Dog Good Wllh
Children lnd People. 814-446·

C13l
Wooden pallets to givtawar.
~lrst come first aervld. Gallipolis Dally Tribunt, 825 Third

Ave., Gallipolis.

6

Lost

&amp;

Found

18

Wanted to Do

AVON l All ArNI I Shirtey
Speara, 30W75-1429.

Will blbytll In my home, anr
hour~ , 614·H2·513G

BLUE JEANS AND T·SHIRTS
If You Like c.. ual Orna Artd
Cnu11 Working Condhlona.
CHECK THIS JOll OUT. NRSS,
H.. Op.nlng~ For 10 Sharp
S.IJ.Motl\'lltd Young Adutte. 18
And O.or Tho! Ate Ablo To
T,.,_. M1Jor Wntem U.S. Chin
Starting fOOAV. Trt~nsportltlon
Fumlsh.d Vaar Around And Ex·
penNI During 3 Week Tn~lnlng
Program. COmmiuion Plus
Caeh And Trtp Bonut.. , For
Personal lntarvlew SN: Mrs.
Tolson Moort , AI The Econo
lodge, Gallipolis. Tutsday, 12
P.M. To 5 P.M. No Expertanc:e
Naeanary. No Phone Calla
Plaue, Parenla Welcome AI In·

Will e~~re tor ..derly person In
my home, Raclna ara, bad
palllnl prtflrrld, 6M-!M9-2381

Rawlln1 Black BIN Ball Glove tervlew.

Rt 325 Cora Mill Ad. 2112 mls S

of Rio Granda. 614·245-9455 af- CANNERY WORKERS/A LASKA
Hiring $600-t Wkly. Over 8000
ter 5:PM
Openlngs.
Malt/Female.
Found : 1 Childs Shoa, North TranapJHoualng. Call E.I.C.
Gallla Vklnlly : Morgan C.nter Nowf 1·206-136-7'000 Ext. 159481
Road Off Rt. 160 . 614-368-870:3.
Easy Wort!.! EJ:cellenl P1y!

Aa-

l.Dst: famala tJ.eglt, mlxad, ttmblt Products At Home. Call
5mot. okl, black wfbrind'- Toll FrM, 1-800~67-5566, Ert.
n'larklngs, silver collar, SA 681, 313 .
rtwlfd, 814-698-2606
Full-Tima RN 32 To 40 Hours Per
Lost:Tan Male Puppy Black Wtek.
Somt
Supervisory
Spotted tongue Black nrton col- Ouu... Olfferenllal With E•·
lar . lost 1round Holz• Hospi1al ptrltnce Equal Oppor1unltr
614-446-0225
Employer, PINte Conttcl: The
Oirect01 Of Nursing, Plntcrn1
Yard Sale
7
Cart Ctntar, 110 Plnecrnt

Will Do Small, L.rga Appliance
Repair. 114-379-2921.
Will Mow

t..w,..,

P$tiaH C..ll

Evtnlngo, 6~·7811

Financial
2t

Business
Opponunlty
INOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
racomrnenda that you do buslnes• wtttl peapla you know, and
NOT to 11nd mon•r through tha
mall until ,.ou have lnvnUg•t.d
the offering.

lltatlmt Cash Income, Par
Phon", Must Ou1Ufy Ca U Now
1-800.N1·2293.

VENDING ROUTE , Got Rleh
Quick? No Way! But We Have A
Good, St•ctr. Affordable, Butl·

n.... Won't Last 1-800-284·

VENO.

Real Estate

Drive, Gallipolis, OH 514-446--

7"112.
Homt Wor1lert; Naedtd By 150
Firma, Top Pay, $339 W11k Or
Mo ... Rulli ft.OO S.II·Add,...
&amp; VIcinity
sad Stamptod Envelope 110 O&amp;A
SuppiiH, Bo1 l443, F1irbom,
ALL Yard Salts Must Bt Paid In Oll45324.
Advtnce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m
the dty beforw tht ad Is to run. INSIOE SALES COUNSELORS
Sundar ldltlon · 2:00 p.m. Wt Art Now Acc.ptlng ApFriday. Monday tdillon · 2:00 pliealtiont For SaiH S"trvlce
p.m. Saturday.
Coun..lors For The Optnlng Of
Our Gallipolis l..Dc•tlon. OutgoIng Ptraonalhy &amp; Neat ApPublic Sale
8
artnct A Must, Put Saln
&amp; Auction
ptritnce A +. Must Bt Avail-

31

Homes lor Sale

Gallipolis

r.

Rick Pearson Auction Companr,
full tlmt aucllonMr, com~_.,
auction
urvlc•.
Ucenud
166,0hlo &amp; Wnt Vlrgln'-t, 3041'7').5785

9

Wanted to Buy

W.nltd To Buy : Junk Autos
Whh Or Wtthoul MoiOJI. Call
larry Lively. 6M ·l88-9303

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlatotical Area Corner ~ • 816
M.aln Sl . Pt . Plaaunt, W. Va.
ComP'ttely Renovated : 2 Full
Btths, 3 Llrgt Bedrooms, Naw
HVAC, Ntw Ct~t Avtllable
June 1! 614--446-2205.

WEIGHT LOSS Cent11-. 5960 At.

6C E. BarboursviUa, WV 2M04.

Someone To Mow Lawn Must
Have Monrs, And TMmmer,

Required. 514-245-

11 Help Wanted
Someone To Mow Lawn. Ap.
$2,500 CREDIT CARD!
prow 5 Ae..... Mull Have
Guaranteed Sama oa,. ~ Uower. 614-446-n-10 Evtnlnga.
Aloo Ouollty For o
Business
Dopo11t VISMIC And Cuh Ad- 14
yancoo. 1·800-264 ..789 Ext.
Training
2524.
Nowlt!SouthNslern
$350.00fDay Procn1Jng Phont Relra ln
01-defal People Call You. No Ex- Business College, Spring Valley
ptrflnca Necnury. t•0-255- Piau. Call Today, 614-446-4367(!
Raglstara tlon f90..05-12748 .
0242.

_.n

$3!M&gt;AY PROCESSING
18 Wanted tO 00
PHONE ORDERS' PEOPLE =-:-.,-.,..,....,.,,..-,-,--:CALL YOU.
Will Babrstt In My Homt Rod·
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. nty A.rta . Rafartncn Avallabla.
1-800-25S.0242.
Call 614-245-5887.
2 Secretary I Receptionists For
Growing Office. Word ProcHs-

Types Home Rapalr, Or
Remodeling, O.Ck1 , Siding ,
Roollng , Call Jack Hinchman ,

tng

614-446-3551 .

A.ll

PINUnt Phone Personality, Ina.
Billing Elp., Will Train On Vtri· For all rour lawns nteda , giva
ous
Computer
Programs. us 1 call. Commercial &amp; rnlden·
Fltrlblt Day And hening tlal , lrta uUmtlll, tully InHouri. Rasuma To : Cathr lured, 614-992·76n
Cooper, P.O. Box 910, GIIIUpolis,
Gard•n• lilled - ,..dr to plant
OH 45631.
llrgt or 1m1ll, usa 1700 Ford
Applk:atlons Ar1 B•ing Taktn Tractor, 614-992-6903
For UfeQutrds AI Middlepor1
Munlcip'tr Pool, Applications Georg .. Por1abla Sawmill, don 't
Av1H1ble At : Mlddl1port VIllage Maul your logs to tht mill juat
call304-675 -1957.
Hall.
Asslsttnt Director of Nursing
tor It bed long t•rm cart
tacllit,.. Muat hava 111QI1tared
nur-.ing llcenM In Wilt VIrginia.
Rnponalblt tor 1dminlstratlon
duttes I aom• floor wort a1
charga nursa. Preltr Garallc

background.

Computer ••·
.,.,tence 1 ph•. Apptr Ctra
1-tiVan or Polnt Plelsant, Rl. 1
Box 328 Point Ptuaant, WV

25550 E0Eiconaiderable ulary
end banaftlt.

HOUM

In M11on WV, 3br Ranch

With
Family
Room
And
Kuwah, Saudi Worbr1 Ntoedlld : Fireplace, 1 112 Batha , L.oeated
$35 .00 &amp; Up Per Hour. Tax Fraa. On 2 112 L.oca On Oaad End
Bolh Skilled &amp; Unsillleod For Str..l. 614-446-3i34 .

5489.

Transerlpllon,

3 Un11 Apartmant Rental, Exctiltnl CondiUon, Bulavilla Pikt
Road. Raduetdt Call For Appolntrn.nt. 814446·8568.

7:00 P.M. l Postlbly Sat. Till
2:00 P.M. Salary + Bonu•a.
Growth Potential With ThaN
PosUiona. ~se S.nd A•ume
To L. Burroughs Phyalelans

Reter~tnC~o

(WP5 .1),

3 Bedroom Hom. On 1 Acre 01
land. C. II 814-256-1526

able To Work M·F 9:00 A.M. -

Top PricH Paid: All Old U.S . Into. 815-179-5505 £Jt . K-6~ .
Coins, Gotd Rings, Silver Coins, "Avon• all arMS The skr Ia tha
Gold CcMns. M.T.S. Coin Shop, limit with new aamlng atruct1.1re.
151 Second Avenue, Galllpolla.
1-800-992-6356.

Employment Services

Housa painting, Interior &amp; exltrlor, ea ll Kanny Mltt":hell, 614~2 - 2544

Mlsa Paula 'a Oar C1ra Ctnllf.
Sate, aHordable, childca,. . M-F
6 a.m. · 5:30 p.m. Ages 2YJ-10.

Betora , attar school. Drop-Ins
welcome. 614·446--8224. Naw Intan! Toddltr Cart, 614-446-6227.
for paint ing
intldtiout , roofs Included. law~
care alae, 614 -992-ma, Mike or

Now contracting

Rkk

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Ps y,
Benefits, Tutoring Br Certified Teuh•r
Trantporlllion,
407- 292 -4~7. OrtdH : HI In My Homa. Now
Ext. 571. 91 .m.· 10p.m. Toll Thru Summer. 614-446-7'310
Eveni ngs.
Rolundocl
~~-

Wonl lo:

T.W.

law~

You Are A Win -

ner! Brtng A Copy Of This Ad ,

Along With ldentlllcatlon To:
The Gallipolis Trlbunt Office To
Claim Your FrM Advartislnq.
Prize Must Be Claimed By April
24, 1992 .

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

~0~

boautllul

Mltlno, tr.e Wiler/
lruh, AJC, laundry facilities,
Park Rd. onrlooklng US 33,
country

CM\'1 ftl'&amp;'

45

Mt;~

614~40-8580 .

with cooking.
Atao 111111er tplct. All hook·u~.
C.ll 1fter 2:00 p.m., 304·7'135651, Maaon WV.

110 Uf'f't//o /1'111 11' J'OIII" /,0,11' .

l'lnc:c ymn dossi/it•c/ ad tmlriJl
1!1 H•r~nl.• orlr•s.&lt;, ,) days,

J_JI!IJ_If'l'.&lt;,$ 6. 00

wanted
Wanted :

R"ldentlal

~~o~ln~op~l~lo~.~Co~~I~6;,1~4-4;,~;;~36~2~A;C;· .~~================lr.::::::::::::::::~:1

Ottlca Sp.tce: Modern Otf~
Suh• A~allable In Buslneu And
BuUdlng,

C14

Second Avenua, G1lllpolis. Mor-

49

Ahar 7 P.M.
2
~room
housa,
nur
Goodr,••r Plant, Htretord Lane
2 trtla,.. tor rent, referance ,.:

Second Floor Apirtm..-.1 For
LH11: L.A., One B.A., Bath,
Kitchen WI Slovt &amp; Aetrig.
Walar Fumlshed. No Pet1. Cor·
ner S.C:ond &amp; Pint, G.alllpolls.
$230. Por Month; OopotCI R..
qulrod. Coil 614-441-4241, 114446~325, Or 614-4411-4425.

Merchandise

qulred, 304-!516-2103.

2 bedroom, 1 blth, priVIIe lOCI·
lion on Redman Rklga Htndtr·
mn ,,..._ $200. month $150.
dopooU, 304-771.eG51 or 304766-5252.
2 story

brick home In Middleport , 4bdrm., 2112bath, dining
room, tront room, ldlchtn,
basement, ctrr,::rt, $375 plus
depoa_
i t I u111 tits, celerancn
raqulrtd , 614-927·2297

For Lease

51

Household
Goods

Apar1mtnt Size Kenmore 5 c. Ft.
Excellent

Condition!

$95. 61C-446-3537.

3 bedroom homa, 1 blth, Pt. Ptt, Blg Saving• On All Carpet In
$300, month plus deposit, 304- Stock. Cnh And Carry, Mol-

675-3433 or 67S-1109 al'tar 5:00
PM .

lohan Carpets,

and beautiful, 304-675-6042

42

Mobile Homes

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 112
Oliva St., Gtllipolla. New &amp; UNCI
fumtture, htattrt, WHtem &amp;.
Worfl. boott . 614-446-3159.

lor Rent

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE I
614-446-3158

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Near

Evergrwtn, Gallipolis. 614·3792678.

UV'ING ROOM : Sofa And Chair
2br Unturni1hed, Air, Cablt, 1179 And Up; CoffM And End
Beautiful Rlvar View, Reference, Tabltt 179 And Up; Swivel
Deposit Required. Fottll 's Rockers $79
Mobile Home Park. 614-446-1&amp;02.
BEDROOM : Bunk Bed• $99
All Elaetrlc Mobile Home, Un- (2x6) ; 4 Drawer Chest 01
tumiahad, E•cetlenl Loeatlon, Drawers S44 . ~5 : Twin Manrtss
Clean, Rettranctt Requi.-.d . $99 Set .
614-446--0130.

12x60 Broughman Moblla Home,
2br, TO(al E*trlc, $4,500. 614·

OPEN : 1 Oaye A Wttk, 9 A.M.· 6
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon - a P.U.
Rt. 141 4 Mll11 Off At. 7 In Can·
tenary.

lor Rent

J&amp;e-8838 Alter 5 P.M.
1967 Amhurat 12x64l, 2 Bed·
room , Total El.ettlc, Stove,
Retrigtr11ot, Naw Carpal, Now
200 AMP Brtaktr Box, $4,000;
12x50 Valiant OHic:e Tr1ller, E•·
cellent Add On. 614-367-7267.
1970 Skrllne moblle noma
t2x65, comp'-taly tumlshed,
$.5,700 . 304..fi7S-2968 or 514--446131'7.

1m Champion 3bdrm., 14x10
on 6 acr111, t:ltr water &amp; alectrk:,
614-992..e320
1m Forrut Park Mobil• Home,
2 Bedrooms, 12x65, Total
Electric, Very Good Condition!
614-446--6878 .
1!179 Clairmont , 3 bedrooms,

gtl hHt l c.ntral air, washer &amp;
dryer, $6,000. 304-675-7294 .
1980 Buddy 14X10 total alectrle
Concrete porch, 2full Baths,
WID OW, gtrden bathlub,
CA15x30 abova groung pool.
3ml out ol Porter. Call 614·3881352.5,00
1983 Mansion 14152, 2BA .
Stove, Retrigeflltor, Gas Furnace Included. Utllllr Closet,
New C1rpetlng Grtlt Conditlonl $7,loo, 0 .8.0 . 614-66!15245.
1984 Nashua 3 ~room, 14x70,
CA, 111 appl 1anc... new S..rt
portable dlahw. . her, 10114 front
port':h, 12124 back deck, vinyl
underpinning, $15,000, 614·742·

3096
198S WinMor 2tw, FuUy Fur·
nlshld. Dishwasher Oltpoaal,
T.V., Sterao Srt1em through~ 1

Trtlltr &amp; lot, Pt. PH. araa,
tl5,500. 304--e75-5488 after 5:00

PM'. - - - -...,--=
WITH NO DOWN PAVIIENTI
$2077Mo., Purcha.. A 1Dt1 Sun·
ahlne 14d5 2 BI'CI1oom, 2
B1th1, 814--«1·1018.

33

Farms lor Sale

"' ~era farm will Mil 11 01
divide In 25 ICI1! loti. Tl'lll• cut
lo ICCfll 1nywhtre on firm.
304.el2-3133.

1 bdrm. 1pt.1_furnished, u1lillln
polcl, 31/2 MI. lOUth oC Mid-

Wuhar And Dryer, Whirlpool,

dleport , route 7, 814-36].(1111

Huvyduty, like Naw, Used 6
Months, 614·256-12:22.

1 Bedroom Country Soetlng, tO
lllnutn
From
Golllpollo,
1225/mo. Wtlar Paid, Oopoon
And 2 Rtltr~ncn Required.
614--446--7'104.

53
..,......,.-A.,....
n,..ll..:q_u...,e,_,s.....,._,..
~
Big Rlvar Antiques, !10 Main Sl,
Point Pltaunt , WV.

lbdrm. tpt. In Mlddlepor1, watar,
MWaga, truh paid , rou p•r
eiectrlclg.. , $150/mo., 614-9492217

Bur or sail. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main S!rttt , Pomeroy.
Hours : M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundar 1 :00 to 8:00 p.m.

2 Mdroom apt, utilities rid ,
Hud tpproved, 304-675-272 .

Badrooma, Stove And
Refrigerator Fuml1hed. 614-4463140.

614- ~2-2526 .

54

2

2br Glragt Apartment located
101 Loc..c St-. G.;mpo~lo,
$225/Mo. $100 Dtposh, Water
Fumlthed, 814-446-387U .

2br Wastier And Dryer Hook -Up,
Stove And Rtfrlgerator, Cloat
To
Downtown
Gallipolis
$25Dimo. Plus Ut~lhiH. Deposit
Requl,..d. 814-245-1595 Afltr 6
P.M.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE~1 . 531 Jockoon Plko
from ftv-.cmo. Walk to ehop &amp;
moviH. Call 61"-446·2568. EOH .
Furnished Apiir1ment 1 Bedroom IJUIH6n P1ld, $260/mo.

t20 Fourth Avtnut, Gallipolis
Ohio, 61C~C&amp;-4416 After 7p.m.
Fumlshed Apartment, 4 Rooms
And Bath, Ctntrelly Located,
Reference And Deposit R•
qulred. No Pitt. 614-44fi...0444
Fuml•hed Apartment , 1bf, next
lo Ubflf)', ptr1ling, centrtl httl,
air, reterencu. 614-446-0338,
Before 7p.m.
Grtclous living. 1 snd 2 btd·

room apartmtntl et Village
Manor
tnd
Rlvwslat
Apartments In Middleport From
$1111. C.IIIC4-D02-778l EO~.
Modem 1 btdroom apt, vtry
clean a nlca, no pet•, mutt be
willing to give rat.r.ncet , 3Q4.
875-1381.

CornpCOCiy Fumlohod mobllt
home, 1 mile below town ovetk»oklng rtver. No Pall, Cl. 814«1.0331.

One
1nd two
bedroom
apartment• tCH" rant. 3Q4.47!2053 or 175-4100.
Po!llly sc ...
Vou are I wlniwl Bring I copr
of thl1 ad along wi1h 1.0. 1o the
Dolly Sentlnol Co clolm your lrH
ad~trttllng . Prize
muet be
clolrned bJ A~l 24, 11112.

Tara TownhcKJu ApartmMII, 2
Bod,__, 2 Flooro 1188 Sq. Fe.
1 112 Sothtll CA. oW. 01a-1. 2
- . UC l"lto Paid Exctp4
Eioctrlc, No Poet. 814-3117·7IISO.

Merchandise

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

CompMt1 Ill of mttehtng bunk
bedl. brand new, with m1tehing
cMat of drawer~, 304475-tm.

Coneroco &amp; Plootic S.ptic
T1nltl, Jet Aer8tlon Tanltl. Ron
Evan• Entarprl-, Jackson, OH
1.eOCI-i537·H28,

a.. HIVH with bees, $40.
aach, 304-882-2887.

3

3 Block Sewmlll Coal On Wood
Cook Stove, 614-446-019, &amp; 614256 -1971

9 A. Pool Table, $450; 16 Cu. Ft.
Frt~ztr, $400 . 61C-367-n67
a ~ Dewalt Radial Arm Saw $150;
OuHn Size Sola Bed, Uke
Brand Newl $250; 2 Reclinen,
$20 Each. 614~6-4638 .

8ft . aluminum tNck
blue, 614-Wl-6035

Angus And Ctu-Angus Black
Buns.~. Reason1bly Prlcad. Siata
Run tarms, Jsckaon, Ohio, 614286-6395.

FtbNary

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $62.81/Mo. • For 12 Mont hi.
19x31x4 Poot Includes Filler
Laddera, Huge DICk Etc :
(•Suld On Selling Prtce Of
$699. $14.45 APR, Tolll Oefarrld
Prle1: $1SC.U2) Don't Believe It?
Call BPI
1-800-64 6-11123
Nutrition

Show Pigs! Born 3131i2, Extra
Nice! 3 Colors. 614· 371-2563.
Want to IIIH tob.acco, Mason
County.~, call Andy Sigler, Morgan'• tarm, Rt. M, PUny, 304·
937-2018.

64

BlrahtL . a .. n Wheal Straw.
12.1kli...ie. 514-446-1442.

Gold I Ivory lac. prom drn1
amallllze, If intertsttd call 81~

Ha,. for ••'-· nevlt' been wll,
614-1112·2535

14!1-2Gn

3453, 1nytlma.

Johneon'•, bow mount, electric
trolling molor, 114-Jit2·2848

Kenmore ~"· S1S; Snow
Blade For
namark lllowtr,
125, 20 Inch B ko, 120. 114-4412318.

P. . vey P.A. Syattm Four Chan·
ne1
And
Four
Shure
lllcropho-, 1325; ClrigiRII
1928 Nockloc:fl, 185; ~~· And
Hart Woddlftil Rl"l)l 112 Carol
1225; ~ &amp; R 32 PloCol S7Q;
Homalha 210 Chain Saw tiOO;
Woddlng Q,.n And Aeoorlao 17S; Keyboard And
~ardcoM, $100. 814-388-ele&amp;.

Transportation
71

Autos lor Sale

1081 Mustang $3,500. 193i Chev
$1!10. 118.1 Hondo Shadow
100cc, 2,400 ml, $2,000. 304.e75-

Reclining lounge chair, good
condition, $40, 614-992-3921

1~

Reconditioned
w11hara
&amp;
dryars, Mch $100 1nd up. We
11rvlce all mak ... Tha Wnher &amp;
Dryer Shoppe. 614-446-2944.

3960.

'"

Old

2d

o,

r..

good

oh-.

114-992-601'7
lm Flrablrd, new englnt, new
t111ntml11km, ne.dt ttr.kaa.
h 000 304.e-196l
''•

,

&gt;7

•

1i80 Ford truck F·IOO, 34,000
mUn $1 ,995. 1985 C1maro
$2,595. 198! Chrysler Fifth Ave
ldtntlllcation to the Rtglster $3,000. 1i87 Old• Cutlan Citra
Offlea to citlm your lrN advertising. Prizt must be claimed $2,7110. 19116 Oodgo Vlsto 12,100.
1987 Full tlzl Brqnco $4,800.
bttora April 24, 1992.
1985 Plymouth Vortger $2,600.
Sat1lllta dlah wltracbr tyllam, 1984 Bronco II $2;&amp;i5. 1984
r-.celver I e~~bhl. Receiver Fiero $2,500. 1983 Ford Ranger
nttda r11palr $200. Walnut. col- 4x4 $2,600. 1985 Okla Delta 88
fM tatMe , Ear1y American toll &amp;. 12,1105. 1981 Ford Etcort $1 ,600.
chair w!country pattem $150. Or 19M Buick Sky Howk $1995.
111 for $300. 304-t%-3813.
1984 T·Bird $1,1100. 11185 Ford
150 V-8 engine $2,300. se.,.,al
S.lellhe dish wArtcktr •rl1tm, Carl undtr $1,000. Scottys UNCI
,.celver &amp; cabtl. Raceivar Carw, New Haven, WV. 1o~2·
nMds repairs, $200. Walnul cot- 3752.
ta tabla, Early Amerlc:an aoll &amp;
chair w/country paHem tl50. Or 1981 Ford Escor1, 1uto., $500,
814-i92-2045
all tor $300. 304-81115-3813.
PNNOfl-You

Ara A Win-

ner!! I Bring copy ol this ad and

Sa1,.. Holpoint Av1cado, GrHn

1982 Etcor1, Nade 111palr, 1200,
61--~9-2066

Sldt
Br
Slda
Frosttr..
R1trigerator1 Workl Gratt . $175. 1982 Ford Fairmont, Nllds
514~6-0!lo AnyUme.
Some Work, Good Tlrn, &amp;. Exhaul1 Sy.tam. 614-446-4530.
Two Air Condltlontrw, N... r
one, $100. O.hor o .., $75. 614- 1i82
Uareul)'
Ztphyer
4411~399.
11111onWIIgon, $100, 614-9925915
•
55
Building
1984 Dodg• An ... 4 door, black,
AM!FM , c....n., 4 cyl, euto,
Supplies
814-992-7236, tvtnln!JI
Block, brk:k, NWer plpee, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Win· 19a. Ford Escort, C cyl, 4 speed,
ttra, Rio Gr~nde OH Call 814- $600. 30"7~2014.
245~2t
'
1984 Le B1ron, eandy machinea,
1 pop machine, l5 ft . 5th
56 Pets for Sale
whM'-r, 304-773-5651

Groom ond Supply Shop-Poe
Grooming. All brttds, tt,.!.s.
111M Pat Food Ota~r. Julia
Wtbb. Call 814-446-0231.
Aird.llla Puppl• For Sail,
Bloodline. 614-256-6413 .

Good

AKC rtgi1111'M1 Cocker Spaniel
puppi11, had ehot1 I wormed,
3CM-41i7Wii3.
And

Advanced

~

Obedience Clt1HS Offered By
The Right Pew Tflllnlng Center.

Call 614-446-1864 For Additional
Information.
Oalmatlon
approximately 1 rr. old, S:11s, 814992·11167
Female

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pi~tunl, 304-675-2083
full line Troplell fiatt birds'
tmtll1nlm11s and supptl" .
'

Rtgl11trtd Poodt Puppy, 514446"-1321.

Musical
Instruments
PIIVIJ' Msrk 3·12 Chanet Mixing
Bosrd $895; PH~•,. st-.o E.a.
1115; lbo- Digital OtCoy I7S;
All In Excellent Condhlon, 614·
441-4525.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61

Farm Equipment

25 Fl. Gooaeneck Tn~IIM, Ou11

A•llt, $2,COO. 814-446-oool.

467 Now H.ollond h11 bind. 32'
LIHie Oranl tlevaiDr. Edl.on
MIIM, 304475-1158.
Utlltty Bldg. Spoclol: 30'140'11',
H5'd' Stfdlng Door, 1-3' W.lk
Doori Palntocf SC•I Slcll"l) &amp;
Roof ng. 1$110. 1,., HOroo
Biclro. 1-.:1!52·1045
JO 1530 Dlnel TrocCar, IS~HO;
800 Ford Whh Plow I uloc,
Blade And Buill Hog, $3,8&amp;0,
114-281-8522.
Wonttd: Uood farm oqulpmont
onythl"l) you wont to ttll. eacl
l'f4.256-1301, 251 8040 1fter I
p.m.

62

Wanted to Buy

Qood u•ed plano, pr~~far Slory &amp;

Pllllic And llodol Culvert 6 lnc:h Ctarlt, Wurlhor, or Boldwln, 514Thru 80 Inch In Stoct.. Ron 1112·2110 aftor llpm
Evane, J•ckson, Ohio. 1~ W1ntld to bur Tabbocco 8111
537-g152a.
614-441-41111

)04.

198&amp; Chovy Astro, High Mlloogo,
Excellent CondiUon, 614-4463151.
1985 Chrysler L.Baron, Auto,
Turbo, Air, PS, PB, Good Condl·
tion, $1,850 ; 1987 Oodga 0-50
PU, 4 CYlinder, 5apd, ao(Xi
Condhlon( $2,700. 614·256-6251 .

198!5 Dodge Shelby Charger
TUfbo, 5 lptad, redlallvar good
mpg &amp; sharp, 1ktlng $2;voo.
30&lt;..15-5306.

1985
Ford
Tampo
Gl
Automlllc, PS, PB, Air, 814-25e:
1222.

a

iiJI Fomlty Worlto
IIJ MacOr- r;J

,

1911 Oldo Doh 88, Vinyl Top
l.oldtdl Excellent Condition!
$5,000. 814-446&lt;1225, Aftor lp.m.
1181 Buick R11Jol• 2dr, Rtd,
· Tin,
Wlndowl,
Door
Loc:ko,
Cnlloo,""""
Low lllloo,
$1,1105. Golllpolla Motor c....
piRJ, 114-441-3010.
11181 Cavallor, 4 clo&lt;?&lt;1 5 opood
Afll.fll
• - • . Olll""
•• 'IJO'
304-t71-4111.
·~ .... •

CANPIC&gt;Aif ,
l CAN

voTf FOP. I'.

ft'lfTI'IU.)ft.AH· ·

":::'n~go=-:,-.,-..,----:-::-:-c- '••
0

motorcycle '
"'

0

0

ALLEYOOP

Wo Buy, Soil, Trodo1 Uotd Ho,..
And ACCMSOriM
Available. &amp;1....,~~-.,

... NOW RUN
VI~ES

Boats

a.

(OlJ~LA

IT'LL l...CVK. LIK.E l ' M nED
TO THIS TR:EE 1

•

10 Ft . Aluminum V·Bottom, 2 ·
Seats, Eltc:trlc Uotor, 614-388- _.
1714

===-==::--=::-:-

~::.·

14ft. Rblrgt1n FlttvSkl Bolt, ·
110 Horu Johnson, Trailer, Plua
Morol 1150, Good Condtlon, :
614-446&lt;11120.
I

yllllng... (f'GI 31 (2:00)

EEKANDMEEK

IIJ Murder, Shtl

&amp;

Budg_. Trantmlnlona, UMd I

rebultl, starting at $19· trent
whMI drive atanlng al $149.00

614·24&amp;-san, 614-992-6293.

NEED 111'10 to 19'72 llovortck
tront end parts, 304-675--4143.

.·

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Complata tow bar t811mbty for
travel trtUar with chalna, 3047J3.53C6 01 lOC-882·2303.

Sttr Cra n pup-up campll", $500
304-67'6·297'2.

I THINK THERE:S AN

AND ! HAVENT SEEN

ALIB-.l 8EIN6- IN M'Y
CL05ET. ..

KID

BRO'THER. e&gt;INCE THE.

WHEREVER HE:
I~ I HalE HE.'e

Ot&gt;.Y BE:R?RE ~DA.Y.

HAPPY.

Services

1211 PrtmeNews C
II) Prince Vallaril Stereo.
1:05 (5) Andy Grlfllth
1:30 (]) Ill i1J1 Blouom Blossom
and her brothers hope Ia gat
a new st~mother. (A)
Stereo.
(!) MBA
oklllbclll AUanta
Hawks at Ch•cago Bulls (l)
am I!) 112llll Brooklyn Bridge
George organizes game s 1or
the boys to ~ay inside on a
ra1ny day . Stereo. C
ID Black Stallion Sfereo. r;J
1:35 C5l NBA Basketball Adanta
Hawks at Ch~eago Bulls (L)
9:00 (])Ill 11)1 MOVIE: 'Perter
Kane' NBC Monday Night IC
tho Movleo 12:001 Scereu.
CZl (!) Machine That
~nged the Wor1d Sta,eo.

0

iMurphy
Ill 112le Murphy Brown
lries to catch a 'iDY
who 's leaking personal
mformai!On. (A) Stereo.
11J WWF Prime nme
WraoUI"')
Q!1 Noohvllle Now Stereo.
1211 Larry King Llvel
ID Fotller Dowll"l) Myolerieo
Stereo
9:30 am O!l 11)111) Designing
Women Anthony uses

0

Home
"c.-. '.

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATEAPROOANG
Uncondhional llf.. lma guaran-- \tM. loetl rtfel1!nc:H furnished. t·
Free ... im~tN. Call cOlleCt 1... c

dey or nlghl ' •
Rogers Basement Watllt'JWoo. ,

814-237~88,

ling.

Curtla

0

I

Carlene to 1mpress a n

BARNEY
[ MADE A TERRIBLE
MISTAKE, PAW II
GillE lriE
I STARCHED
THAT
YORE
THING
!I
SOCK II

Ron'a TV Service, tpadaltlinto ~ :
In :Z.nhh tlao urvldng mot\ .•
othlr brenda. Hou11 caff1, alscf~ ·'
acme appliance repalra. W"' ·'1
304-616-2:1911 Ohio 114-446-2454 . .

Oavl•
S.W-Vac
Setvk:e!:
Georgn C,_k Rd. Porto, oi.j;l '
pll.., plc:kup, ond diiiYifY. IW
441.0214.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Will bulkt patio covara, deckt,

screenad room•, put up vlnvt
siding or trtll« tklr11ng. IM245..g152.

&amp;

...

\

Heating
Co~or·o

Pl10nblng
Fourth and Plno
Golllpolla, Cillo
114-44th3881

&amp;

signs are romantically perfect for you.
Mall $2 plus a long, sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Malchmaker, c/o
thiS newspaper, P 0 . Box 91428, Cleve·
land, OH 44101 -3428.
TAURUS (April :~C)-May 20) Unneces·
sary time might be devoted today to en deavors that ara insignificant or even
obsolete . Don't let the sands of your
productiveness be drained for futile
purposes.
QEMINI (MIJ 21..JuM 20) It's admira·
ble to speak or family members in glowing terms today. However , try not to attrlbuta to them accomplishments
they've never achieved .

Smoll PhonbC"l) Jobo Dono. 11431W!I:It.

.. ·.

Refrigeration
Retldlntlai
or
commercial ' ··
wlrl"l), ... M&lt;¥tr:o or rw&gt;aln. ·• '
Maacer Uc.nud electriclln.• '.\
Rldono&lt;lr Eloc1rlc:oi WV000308 · ,"
~~1711.
•
I

, '·'
87
::=-.-:-U=:::p::ho~l~st:.:e[J:...........,..

,,...,
llowroy'o Upholotori"l) i ·;. •
1H1 Pontile Larnono. =uadr., lng trl county arM 28 ,_,._The~. ·~
4••, amlfnntereo. 14
I J. be8t In tumltur. u~lilertna. , •..,
..,.,, llko MMU.Od ., trido Call 30H7!1-4154 lor ~.. t~m
lor 4dr. car, 1
tlmstn.

April14, 11112
You could be In for some plea98.nt surprises In the year allead, once you begin
to realizi that an endeavor you're In·
volved In Is much bigger than you orlgl·
nally thought
ARIEl (Mwch 21·April11) Your allen·
tlon span might not be up to par today,
so be doubly diligent when working on
mental tasks. In tact, have someone

clleck what you do juS1 Co be on lhe sale
side. Know where to loOk lor romance
and you'U lind lt. Tha Aetro-Graph
Matchmaker Instantly reveals which

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South

By Phillip Alder

The concept of the danger hand IS
learned early ln one 's brldge career.
Sometimes the danger hand is the one
wilh :mffu:-ient wlnners toiiefeat your
eontract. But more often it is a hand
held by an opponent who can make a
fatal switch through a weak holding
like kcng doubleton
There are several ways of keeping
the danger hand at bay. Cover the
East-West cards in the diagram .
Against your four-heart contract,
West leads the spade king and East
signals with the jack. How do you plan
the play'
North's double was negative, promising four hearls (or five if he didn't
have sulficient potnls to bid two
hear Is). South was just worth his jump
rebtd . and North had an automatic btd
of game heca"" of the double fit.
The rna m dacfger is that West holds
the d1amond ace. If so, you must try to
keep East off the lead. Therefore, you
must duck the first tnck, in case

CANCER (Ju• 21..July 22) Betore al·
fixing your signature to Important docu·
rnents or agroolng to something that
could be binding, be certain you know
exac1ty what you're getting Into. Don't
walt for lime to point out your mistakes.
LEO (JuiJ :1:1-Aug. 22) There's a possl·
bUlly you may be taken In a-eommercial
arrangement today because of a failure
to pay attention to details. White you
may OvMook them, the ocher guy
won't.

VIRQO (Aug. :1:1-llepl. 22) Don't at·
tempt to behave In the way you feel oth·
ers want you to behave today. Your per·
lormance won 't be bell.,.abte, and It
could hurt your Image rather than anhance 11.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) II you are
called to task H)day because of something you neglected to do , don'l make
excuses. Set a definite date when this
will be done, and then do it.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Two caety
companions might voice unflattering remarks today about an absent lriend .
Don't participate in the verbal lynching ;
the victim will tater learn yoo helped
hold the noose.
SAQITTARIUS (Nov. :1:1-Dec. 21) An
unfriendly competitor will be waiting tor
you to do something wrong loday where
your career Is concerned . Don't give
this individual a chance to use your own
ac11ons against you.
CAPRICORN (Doc. :!Nan. 1g) You
might be more Interested in what you
have )o say today rather than llsteni"')
to the sage advice oC a friendly coonsel·
or . Later, you might wish you pald more
attention.
AQUARIUS (.len. 20-Ftb. 11) Do not
taka anything lor granted today, especially where buslnese is concerned. You
could get a bl,l,taekl and think you have
the upper hafl'd when, In fact, you really
don't.
PISCES (Ftb. -arch 20) Someone
you'll be closely Involved with today
might have Ideas supe&lt;lor to ,ours
Don'tautomatlcally reject them lust because you didn't think ol them.

W.tt
It

Ease
Pass

Pass

All pass

Opentng lead

East's spade jack ts from the jack-10
rather than jack doubleton. Let's suppose West contcnues with another
spade. You wtn and must lead a low
heart
If you cash the ace first, you g1ve
West a chanct to unblock the kmg. He
knr ws you haven't got the heart jack,
~ause otherwcse you would take the
trump finesse .
West is now helpless. If he wms With
the heart king, you wtll score 10 tricks
via three hearls, the spade ace, a
spade ruff 1n band and five clubs. U he
plays low , you put up dummy's queen
and lead a low heart When East plays
the rune, you duck, allow1ng West to
score his king anyway

ACROSS
1 Don -

5 Famous raft
12 Legendary
enchantress
13 01 a
conlinenl

14 Decrease
15 Tall
16 Make fun ot

18

Republican

minstrel

pa rty,

56 Useful
57 Feeble-

familiarly
19 OCianse
20 Edgar Allan

mindedness

58 Tropical
basket fiber
59 More squalid
60 Bodies ol

22 Son or Ruth
26 Cave (poet .)
28 Togeltun·
ness
29 Wntin g

water

DOWN

Implement

32 Colde&lt;
34 Sault Marie

35

An••er lo Previous Punle

37 Part ol corn
plant
38 Loose
40 Delete's
opposite
42 Novice
43 Mal da 44 Fixed ·
47 School org.
49 Cricket loam
52 Medieval

Colo. and llo.

course

Vie w

11 Diamonds
(II. I
12 Ungentle-

Indian
7 Actor Robert
De-

2 Arrow poison
3 Playing a role

36 Cheech and

10 Equipmenl

6 Oklahoma

1 Changes

manly

8 Game fish
9 Call - -

4 Necessily
!» Between

da1

rr--nr-,....,.,.-.,......,.,....,.,.,..,
fn-+-f--+-+--4- -1--.j

Conway

-+-1--+----1

Jacques -

Robeneon

50 Film dlr.ctor
-

t0:30@ SIMball Tonight
13 Aero•• Americe With
Larry Woods (0:30)
~

getting
sound
30 Slippery
31 Clooe

33 - nou1
39 Contending
41 - fly
43 Eva - S.int
45 Broadway
musical
hrr+-1~~ 46 Relates
48 Film dlrtctor

Trav1s. Tanya
Tucker and others jOin
.1
Lorans Lynn as she
reminiSces &lt;l nd travels to her
hometown of Butcher Holler .
Ky . (t :001 Stereo
1211 World Newo
II) 700 Club WID! Pat

am Ill

man

t7 Age
21 Idle
23 Alpine wind
24 Min KtH ol
the comic•
25 Clothes tinter
27 Pile ol grain
28 Egg on

'-r.+-1--+-+--4-+~ 29 Attention-

"

Ran&lt;~ Y

11:00 (])II (!)

+K

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

O

Twitty,

ASTRO-GRAPH

+A 7
Y A7 6 3
t K 10
+K10 973

Keep him
at bay

tO:OO (Z) (!) Madnaui.
Jon1than Miller
am I!) 1121111 No
E1po1ure A frozen
200-yaar-old corpsa IS
discovered near Cicely. (AI
Stereo .
I!J) Cl Hunter r;J
Q!l Lorena Lynn: The

Se•aons of My Ule

• J 8 54
• 6; 2

SOUTH

untriend!:t_la w prolessor (A)
Stereo . L,l

t-8()0.

Plumbing

0
0

Accessories

82

Wrote

Q!l Crook ond Chase

.
BOATERS
GuiMS Mtrtury Uarint Service.
Mereury, Mariner, Mtrcrulur
apeciallst . Mtrcuty cll11ft.d.
Mobl'-, We come lo you. 6~
259-59111.

81

1 Slolr Stereo.

MOVIE: Sey

1985 Radar aa.. Bott, 15 112 ft,.,
40 hp Uarintr motor, 304-5~
2M3.

Motor Homes

iiiJie
Ill Wheel of For1uM 0
Fami!J Feud

Ha

-;;41;;;38~·';;:-:;::-';;:-~;;c-:-:::-:c~'· ;

&amp;

IJlO

0

1975 16ft. Storcroft Bon •--•
~
With 65 hp Mercury llclor &amp; ·
Trolling lllolor, $3,000. 614--446- ·.

Campers

a

Hl-11

EAST
• J 10 2
• J 9;

+KQ9 54
YK8
t A Q93
• 84

c

7:30 (]). 11)1 Jeopanlyl
(!) Now H Can So 'rol.!
Ill E~nelnment Tonight
Stereo . L,J
Mimed... Willi Children

7:35 C5l Senlord I Sari
8:00 (]) Ill 11)1 Freoh Prince of
Bel-Air The famil~ silverware
turns up m1ssing. Guest: Zsa
Zsa Gabor. (AI Stereo. r;J
(!) BuHo Eye
Ill D CIJ D MOVIE'
'Broeclc..t Newl' ABC
Monday Night Movla (AI
(3:00) Stereo. C
(Z) Ameriflora i§2 (1 '00)
(!) Trevelo Stereo.
am Ill 112l. Evening Shade
WOOO and Ava rear their four
s. (Pt 1 ol 2) (R) Stereo.

AROUND ME SO

WEST

ALDER

@ Major League Sollbafl
Atlanta Braves at Cincinna11
Reds or New York Yankee s
al Toronto Blue Ja1s (LI
1211 Croooftre

•:

parts, no 1111.., 614-992·7706

79

PHILLIP

1211-yllne
ID The wanono
7:05 C5l Addamo Family

®Be

19i0 Yamaha 4 whMier, HI I lo :·
Range, Ravtf'lt,Likt New, 360 1'

Electrical
1QIO lludo 128 OX, 4dr, Air,
Auto, 25,000 111~, Crullo, Rar
~r.
H,3ou. Goillpollo
Motor Compo.,, 8,.......301o.
1Ht a.r.na GT lutO Ill optlorw, IIC -.!, t.,; mil.. Yl"f
thorp, 111,500. aYOnlngo' 30(.
6l'fo3111

P/?ffl{&gt;fNTIA/..

Ltff,

~

'

Septic Tonk Pumplftil $90 Goiilo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jockoon, 00 1-800.e37.eW. ' ·

1987 Oodga Ar1n, eulo, $2,200.
1911 P't:"'"h HortzonL40 mpg,
$'1,600,
milts, 304-er~2440.

/

)fqFT oF
youjl I-ON(;

1987 Suzuki OA100, runa QOOd, •
liking $525, 814-JII2-3114 even- ..

JET
·'
Aeration fllolot'W, repaired. New '
&amp; r•bultl mo1~ In alack RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH.
537-11528.
I ·,

1186 Rangor, 5 Spood, 11185 112
Eoco~ Wogon; 11156 Chivy
Belair~;, GoOd Condition! 1141111-41123.

l 'M WAIT'ING f-Of.? A

TfLL W T/tf

NORTH
• 863
\IQ 10 4 2
• 762
+AQJ

Sportscentei

:::::-c::--:--:---:---:-=:='.
tiM Hondo 3 whoolror 350X, ~

Pans

BRIDGE

=

198-4 Hondo lr""'"'"' F-!IOOR, ~
Now nroo, Now "91" Loc:khort ::
Folrlftil, Englno RK«!Ciy Ovof· ,.
hauled, Low Mlleaae, "ktlmtt, •:
Lookt Sharpl 12.000 304-675· ·:
1118.
·~

~-·o

O

Stereo

1911 112 Ton Ford, 12,100. 11+..
446-eS:NI.

Auto

I

A big lima salesman allributss his success to
knowing his products, making lots of calls, nol taking no
for an ar~swer and always MISSING a lhree foot pull

r;J

1i84 3/C Ton 8 Cyllndtf, Cs
Tranemlatlon Truck, $C

76

1

;;.,ls.;..,:..l..;l...:.:..,..l

Garlic· Aroma· Noose · Jurist · MISSING

mlln, Honda line dttachtW.·,:
luggage, Ilk• new, 304--773-SSMr'

&amp; Motors
lor Sale

lem?" The man Bl!piained

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

a

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

75

abolit

LEITERS IN

0

ID New ZDml Stereo.
6:35 C5l Andy Grtlllth
7:00 (])
Wheel of For1uM
(!) The Jell.....,.. Q_
Ill I n - Ed111ort 'Q
(Z) (!) MacNeil/Lehrer

ma Honda GL1000, 10,00!1 .'

•

I

IIJIIIl Curnonl A"alr C

mi6l4-446-1304

Polioaman
man
neighbors called
your
loud fighting. What's the proD-

r-------'......,We're getting manied and '
0 NT0 I N
we're arguing about which
1--.r-4
~ J.II.Siice
Of The_thePeace
...... c·
U Lompl~te
cl'luckle quOted
~--.1.-....1-..L.-L..J.....J.
by ldl!no tn the miuing words
vou develop from step No. 3 below .

IIJ Bcooby Doa

@ UpCioM

Motorcycles

runs good, $600. 304-llWO'Jit.

I

0

~fi ea,.,.
I!] a Slllr Trwlt: The lled
GenenitloiiC
~ e En..,.,-nment Tonight

74

19B6 Olda Cullaas Suprtme,
2dr, Gr11y, Tilt, Cr1.1lse, 51,000
MIIM, CIStatte, R..r Otfogttr,
Nlee C.r, S5,H5. Gallipolis
MoiOf' Company, 114-441-3060.

ill:-1521 c111 attar 6pm

a

I

ie
~• cas Newo 0
a Andy
Ortlllth

1987 Ford Aerro.lar Mlni--V1n. ··
Coil 114-371-2801 or &amp;14·317'- ·
7950 or J04.t7H044

llka new, 304-8JS.4883 .

1t86 Okll Fl.-.nta, 5 lpted, 1lr,
1m/ tm Mlflo, tlh wheel, 614-

CMc:kmd Aag NASCAA

IIJ Smurfs 0

[J

I!]

I"

Home lmprovernentt :
Yeare Experience On Okttr 1
Hewer Homes. Room AddiUonll.,
Foundollon Wort&lt;, Roofing,
Khc:hen• And Bathe. Frea £1.
tlmtlnl Rtferencn, Na Job
Too Big Or Smalll 814·367-0511. ,

1985
Oidtmobllt
Cutlau
Supreme Brougham1 ee,500
mil•. 4 dool, 3.8 v~. loldad,

@

Night Court

\!l

leya, Parts

Purple Sequins. Prom Dress,
Size : 518, Worn Onca. Call 814·
446.0912, Or 304-61~M54 Atk
For Julie.

Rick

4" un, Alum WhMI•. Clll
675-7623, Of 614-446-4015.

A N II E K
~....,.--,,........,;...~~ ::
I 1 ..
I I •I ......1.-..J
'--""·---1.1..-.1..

a

a

1984 Chtvy 4 Wheel Drive, 1•
Short Whool Booo, 305, 4 Spood, :·

Motorcyclal

Por1able changaab'- let1ar sign
$2tl9. Free llnersldtllvery. Pl ...
tk: lett.,. 147.50 box. 1-100..533-

Coleman t-ltat Pump, 2 112 Ton,
[A) Coil, Like New, 614-256·1222.

IIIII Sl., Mlddlopo~,OH .

&amp; Grain

FlroC Cllltl"l) Round Bolao' Or·
cha'&lt;! 1 Gnoa And FH&lt;uo, 415
$10. NO Sundoy Callo. &amp;14.J88.
8!524.

Boltnt Garden Tractor, $!500.
614-:J88..9082.

applllncll,
Kanmor-. porta~ wathar1S15i;
aulomaUc wa1hlrs I arytrl,
$95/up; 30 " &amp; 40"' altctr1c rtn goa1 S135; 16cu. h. Frollt..frM
ratr gerators, $175; 24" atack
wasfiera/ dryara, 1185; Hag·
ger1y't Used Appll1ncn, 134

Hay

Product•
ftaturtng Amino Acid Body
Building . .loht lou and Ill
burner lormur... Available excluslvelr 11 Rile Aid Pharmacy.
Tha Nfa war lo diet

tub. :J04...175-4004.

uatd

1986 AOHA SorTell

Ma111, Junt 1SI90 Fantastic Paint
Cott, 1992 12 ~t. Stock T,.ll.,,
$1,195. 814-286.es22.

2970.

topper,

Bhp gaeoline alr.f:Ompretsor
S495. 40"' OriYely mower $400.
Old Iron kettle 150 . Electric
conc111tt miur $200. 3 112"
angle Iron $2. ft. Antique bath

Gu1rantMd

812~886.

For Soloo lloac Sii«&lt;rl 818 Wolk·
In Cool.- ~ U1ch ne, TtbiH
And Cholro, Cooh RIIJI.Coroo, Good 4·H &amp;. FFA Club Pigs For
SIS Sheila, 8 Fl Stalnl111 Steel Salt. 614·388-9033 Arter 8 P.M.
Prop Toblo. &amp;M-44Wt57 AICor 5
S.nto-Gortrodlo Bull, 304-675P.M.

Basic

2112 ton cenlral AJC, tit ol twin
"-da, 614-992-51134

Livestock

4-H and FFA Marilat lambs, 304·

614~6-lll44.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
3 BR hou11 tor nmt , 204 Ander- Wuhers, dryers, retrlger1tot1,
son St., Muon. Serious In· "'"9"· Skaggo Applloncoa,
Upper River Aa. Bnide Slone
quln.a only. 304.a82-3593.
Cratt Motal. Call 814-446-1398,
3bdrm. house In Tuppers Ptalnt, 1-BOQ..tgg.:wgg_
$250 month pius utllltln and
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
depoalt, 614-667~487
Complete home rumiahlngs.
Furnished 3Br HouM, 1 Floor, Houri: Moo-Sat, ~5 . 614-446$350 -tlhllllla, Upper Four1h 0322, 3 milts out Bulavllle Ad .
Avenut, Gallipolis, Referencn, Fret Delivery.
S.curtty Oapoait . 614-446-4416
29,000 BTU AC, UHd 2
Ahtr 7p.m.
Montha, $1,200, New Will Take
Gallipolis Ferry acrosa from $700 . Call 614-367·7045
grade ~ehool. 7 room house.
PICKENS FURNITURE
$200 depo1lt. S250 month . 304N•wllJted
67H860.
Hounhold tumithlng. 112 mi.
Houaa lor rent In Syraeuse, 614- Jarricho Rd . Pt. Pluunt, WV,
992·7619
call ~75 ·1450 .
Nice tHiclency consge, unique

63

Miscellaneous

Gannls

4 Plec:a Living Room Suitt
RultiBrown $150. 814-4C6-0481

Freezer,

54

(lj Roadlng Ra,_ 0

I!]

0

&amp; 4 WD 's

198-4
Chevy 4 WhotC ~~~··
Short What! BaH, 305, 4 S
, ,
4" Lift, Alum Wh•la. Clll 304- 1
675-7&amp;23, Or 614-446-4015.
. 1.

Vans

I

NUCBH

I

&amp;:30 (])a iiJI NBC New1
(!) Seved by tho Belt
Ill
CIJ ABC Newo
CZl Wild Amerlc:o C
Square OM T'Tsterao

,.

..

[ 11 I I I

!---,..-r...:r-,::11~,

0

,.

OHice Space, C.ll 814-44&amp;-6362
Alter 7 P.M.

Rentals

2 Bedroom 1 Bath Hou11, Con·
venlent In Town Location
(Golllpollo), Coli 614-446-Ci362

oD 1m D'/ NE.A . Int

2321.

73

lot Or Ac1119 For Quality ri• Hlsklna, 814-446--263'1, 614Homn. Mum h Within 5 Mlln 441~512.
Of Holzer Hospital On Blacktop W•rehou• s.-ce Wllh Offlw.
Road. 1-304-273-2940.
loading Dock, 2nd AvlnUI GaJ..
ll~ls, c.u e1t 416 6362 Aner 1
P.ll.

41 Houses lor Rent

~t!f~

SAYELI

Ill. CIJ. IIJI O!l
~·
IIJI(!)
VIdeo
p-

lrom North Wilkesboro, N.C.
1211 Wor1d Todlly
ID Rln nn nn, K· 9 Cop
Stereo .
&amp;:05 (5) Beverly HIUblllleo

t991 S-10 pickup, Roily w~~-.::
Alplna stereo ayalem, clotho.
... ts, undtrcottlng, 5 epeld.•.
otldl"l)roor gl110, b"9 dlllac:tor,:
19,000 mllto, 17,200. 304-571-;·

10r 1 P.M.

Prot.ulonal

Building

+ - s~

1+111-y

614-:Jtl5.8227
large Commercial Building,
large Parking L.ot, 2nd Avtnut,

Apanment

RepoaRtlld Mobtte Homat,
GrMt Stladlon, Slngln, $500
Down And Doubles 1"1,000
Down, With Appr&lt;&gt;110&lt;1 C,.dltl
Call 1-800-588-5710.

1111' I'CCS)' IC 'CC J .. . /Jy JIIICIIIC! ,

Real Estate

V'ENTI&lt;.ILOQUISM ~

1988 Vlsun Sllnchlrd, EJ:cellent•'
Condhlon, $5,700. 114-44t-17541
Aher 4 P.M .
~:

l3N., under """' management.
lois, S85; home r-.nlala, 1235;

44

For Sale: 1~9 Rt&lt;lmln DlnVilla,
14x72, Total Electric, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Full Bathe, ~xcaUenl
Condi11on, Ctll 614~367-0139 Af-

, ..,,, /,,

36

DOG

gina, topper, $5,000. 304-175·
1645.
.

Space lor Rent

I

8

MON., APRIL13

\Zl Square OM TV Stereo .

1981 Chtvy S-10 Tahoe, V-e en·

rootM

low fa form four llmple worda.

6:00 (]).

1981 S-tO Good Condhlon, FOI'
S.ll Or Taka OYer Ptrmenls,
&amp;14-446-4415.

Rooms tor r111t • wetk or month.

0 l011r
Rearranoe letters of the
Kramblod words be-

EVENING

1985 S--10 Bluer, 4 whNI drive,
ptckage, 814-MV.3028
INVemHIIgl

SSOO OH Purcha .. Price 01 Any
New HonM At EIMa Home Cenler, Great Selection , Fret Sat-Up
And DeUvaryl Call614 -m -1220.

ter 5 P.M.

J""' . ..lllllt•r iulr~

Pasture for r.nl, 304--875-2991.

•

Tahoe

OINEnES : Wqod Bar Stoolt
$14.95 (28'.) Table And 4 Padded
Ch1lrs f12t .

1989 Ooubltwlde 24J60, 3 Bldroomt, 2 Sethi, New Roof Underpinning, POfeha. Asking :
$21,500. Phone: 814-245--8059.

C/\011&lt;ri!

0 .J. WhUo Rood, 18 Ae,.o,
llootly Wooclod, With A BoaiAI·
lui Building Slta Thlt Hat A
View For Mila. Nlca Laval
Driveway,
Aural
Water,
Eltctriei1r, And Phone Servtce
Av1Uable . 3 Millt From Holzer
Hospital, Galllpolla. 614-446--t127.

Trucks lor Sale

19111 Stopoldo Chivy 414, U&gt;oko
Groatl614-643-0832.

Rooms

46

A'l£. fW'I£ iJIIO
ot-~~Y m.r.. Ttl !I£ }.tf)Jr rnt~~-5£~V£~ ...nttY'R£ ~~

1912 Dodge Dump Truck. .-tl
Now n..o, $4,800. 325 Amp.
Gas Waldar, $1,150. 114-3417-7'031.

Furnished

Sl•plng

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Television
Viewing

Wll~~ ~

Autos lor Sale

72

Darwin, C.R. Pnott, 614-594-5322,
$275Jmo.

Naar Goodyear, lock &amp; Dam
project, reterance r.qulrad, 304·
576-2466 a her 5:00 PU.

Washer &amp; Dryer 2 Bedrooms Ul
Fumlh.wt And Uvlng Room Fur·
ni1urt, MlcrowiVe, lletrlgerator
And Slova. 304-Jil-4356.

PIN down K\ 'J'UA

'li11"
Sdl it

1'11\ YolJI?- !.\liN~

1
•

Country Mobile Home Park. Rt

REDUCE; Bum Ott Fat W,hllt
You SIN~ Take OPAL Availablt
At : Frulh t'hlrmacy.

4

1bdrm.,

BORN LOSER

n... suoo.

1 BR gtragt lpl., larga front

Vlf'/ ni«&lt;

13, 199Z

For s.c., 1118 Fonl To...,., 4
Door, E l l - Cond"lon, c.cc814-441-4131.

St1rtlng atl120!mo. Gtllla Mottl.

lola In New Haven • 1oo-4
owner llnanc:lng 11 $101.46 par
month buyll tlllhrN IDII, 1304-

with
&amp; E-Vop
IVIIIablt II Fruth

DIUf'ltiC ,

••Ia,

71

lor Rent

Lott In Gallipollt Farry • 100%
owntr llnanc:ing at $98.&amp;4 par

304.e75-23&amp;5.

••f•
I
tabltta

&amp; Acreage

trallll'l eeceptable. 304-175--2722.

rwcepllont, thCMtrt, etc. Point
PINnnt Woman Oub Houst,

Reduce:
GobeN

Lots

l.ota for

NO Tr11paulng or hunllng on
former Rolfe lMI farm. Property
his been laued and postH.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apanment

poreh, roar bolcony. No pOCo.
614-441-2CIOCI, 814 44&amp; 8518.

Acreage: 15 Acrtt And 10 Atrn
In otilo Township, Gallipolis.
Will Holp Fln1ne. TobrlctC
a-. 814....a.2404.

LIVEI UVEI LIVEI
1 · -·11100, (11 +) SSTEL
0~ . FL 13.15/llln.

44

&amp;dO River

9413·2134.

GIRLS~E~'sGIRLS

RENTING

on

For V-aetllbtls. Mmon H.
Renick, RHI Ettttt Broker. 614·

Announcements

NOW

Fanns lor Sale

Monday, April

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bunutl

51 Born
52 Whale group
53 Medical

ill II Clla
Ill iiJI Newo

sutfh

54 Bernstein, tor
short

C5l MOVIE' Maximum
av.rdrtve jA) (2 00)

55 Women ' s patriotic soc .

CD New•watch
cpj 18 Aroenlo 111111 Stereo.

OMacGr-C

Q!l Crook and l!'llue

@ SpomCenter

1211 Spono T onlgllt
0 Bordertown Stereo. r;J
11:30(!) Kojek
(Z) European Journal
Clla NtghttiM c
iiJie 'SweaHnglullell'
Clime Time Alter Prtmo
Time Stereo. r;J
1211 MoMyllne
ID MOVIE: Ouel (2:00)

0

11:3&amp; (])II 11)1 Tonight Show

S18n1ng Johnny ea.....
Stereo.

Ill 11 c"""

1511) ArtOnlo cllan Steroo.

12:00 C1J

e

Dennlo Miller

l!lliD Love Connac:tiOn

CELEBRITY
CIPHER
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,
...
;
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....,.In me._..._
reldly"• c:a. ..-D.
awtlld lrotn IJ''Ol II

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by

fWIIOUI ~ Dill lftd ~
0

fiDr" MOtNr

'NR'D

RNTH

RL

DRANXH

ZBHI .

TZAD

ND

IPHAH

ZGRNLI
R PH

ND

R l

RPLFDZBO

B N U II

ZARPfA

E L N BE

0

PP FVI OUS SOL UTION

LFR
RPH

VH

NB

"''HZAD . '

GJZAXN .
" A man who is not co urageous enough to tak e
in lite''
Muhammad Ah

ri s~ s w1 11 ne~ar accomplist1 anything

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, April 13, 1992

Community calendar Inspector says amusement park
riders must take responsibility

Community Calendar items
appear two days bdort an event
and the day of that ev.onL Items
must bto received weD in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Hysell Run Holiness Church, Route 124, County
Road IS. will have revival through
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. nightly .
David Scott, Logan, will be the
speaker. Pas10r Robert Manley
inv•tes !he public .
COOLVILLE - Vanderhoof
Baptist Church, Coolville, w1ll
have revival through Wednesday at
7 p.m. nightly. Public invued
POMEROY -Rev . J.T. McHam
will be evangelist for revival services lhrough Friday at 7:30p.m .
nightly at First Soulhem Baptist
Church on Pomeroy Pike. Pastor
Lamar O'Bryant inviles !he public.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
Hope Baptist Church, 470 Grant
Street, Middleport, will be held
through Friday at 7 p.m . nightly
wilh Jerry lewis, speaker. Special
events and music each nighL Nwsery provided. Public invited.
POMEROY - The DA V and
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Monday
at 7 p.m . at !he haU, 124 Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy . Election of
officers will take place.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a beginners clogging class Monday
at the Middleport Ans Council
from 6-7 p.m. Funher information
may be obtained by calling 9927853.
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet Mon day at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY - Women AliVe
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at !he
Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy .
There w1ll be a devotional speaker
and Pat Ellison will be the craft

demonstrator.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Oh10 Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., at !he
senior cilizens center ln Po!Jleroy.
All members urged to aucnd. Officers will be elecled.

KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP) Amusement park patrons must take
responsibility for their safety on
rides, !he state's chief ride inspec tor says.
Leonard Cavalier of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture said
patrons
must use common sense on
LONG BOTIOM - Evangelist
rides.
Dave Carpenter will be the speaker
"There's an old saying !.hat peofor the Christian Fellowship Outple
lock their brains 1n the car
reach program at Failh Full Gospel
when
they come into these faciliChurch in Long Bottom on Tues"I don't know
ties,"
Cavahersaid.
day at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
how much more safety you ca n
invites the public . Fellowship fol prov1de to a person."
lows.
·
The department 's ride safety
division licenses 1,400 amusement
MIDDLEPORT - Rev1val ser- rides each year. After initial inSJI(Cvice at Middleport Church of !he uun, each carniVal ride IS seen at
Nazarene through Sunday at 7 p.m. least five more umes in a season,
nightly and 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Cavalier said.
Rev . and Mrs. Bllly D. Crane,
A lice nse means a ride mee ts
Parkersburg, W.Va .. special work- manufacturers' design s1andards,
ers. Public invited.
but doesn't guarantee safety. he
said.
RACIJI.'E - The Racine Church
The state's ride inspection proof the Nazarene will have revival
Tuesday through April 19 at 7 p.m.
nightly . Sunday services w1ll be
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev. Joe Jordan will be evangelist and there
will be SJI(Cial music. Rev. Thomas
L. Gates II invites the pubhc.

gram began m IY85. Inspectors arc

experienced in mechanics, get three
months of training, and take an 80hour course on changes in the ride
industry each year.
lnSJI(Ctor Art Lusane of Cincinnati is responsible for the Kings
Island amusement park, which
opened Saturday for weekends
only, and county fairs and carnivals
in southern Ohio.
"I don't have a problem with
my family riding," Lusane said.
"You're not going to get hurt
unless you don't foUow the rules.''
An inspection program is measured best by the number of riderelated accidents each year that
require hospitalinltion, said Susan
Moscdale, a spokeswoman for the
International Association of
Amusement Parks and Attractions
10 Alexandria. Va.
The U.S . Consumer Product
Safety Commission said there were
about 6,400 nde-related injuries

and three ride fatali'tes '" the
natiOn '" 1991.
·
One of th e fatalities was in
Ohio. Candy Taylor, 32, feU from
the Flight Commander ride at
Kings Island last June 9. A refurbished version of the ride, including safety features designed to prevent such falls, was opened Saturday at the park.
Cavalier also credits the ride
safety program's success to inspector.&gt; ' relationship with ride owners.
''They have more of a counselor-type relationship with the
owners, rather than a policing
one," he said.
The owners inspect rides daily,
and msurance companies also conduct inspections, Cavalier said.
State inspector.&gt; can shut down
rides or fine owners if they don't
have insurance, operate without a
license or don't comply with safety
order.&gt;. That authority rarely is used
in Ohio, Cavalier said.

Fugitive banker arrested; blamed
in Rhode Island banking collapse

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Alumn1 Band will meet at 7 p.m.
on Tuesday at Dairy Queen in Middleport. All former Middl eport
H•gh School band members interested in playing at the Alumni Banquet arc encouraged to aucnd.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland F~re
DeparLment Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., at the
flfC station. All members urged to
attend.
SYRACUSE -Third Wednesday Homemakers Club w1ll meet
Wednesday, 10 a.m., at the Syracuse Municipal Building. Craft in
the morning. Bnng a brush for cole
painting.

c!\;1

By RICHARD A, D'ERRICO

Associated Press Writer
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
bank president accused of embez zling $13 million and triggering
Rhode Island's banking collapse
surrendered after 17 months in hid ing. Some had believed he was
dead.
Joseph MoUicone Jr., 48, negotiated lhrough an attorney for more
than five weeks before his surrender at !he lawyer's home early Sunday, Auorney General James
O'Neil said. Mollicone would not
say where he had been.
" I frankly do not know where
he was," O'Neil said. "We perce ive him as someone who had
arnvcd from afar."
Mollicone could be arraigned as

Ann gives the cold
hard facts about AIDS
DEAR READERS If yo u are
lookmg for a laugh or some hght
reading, plea se sk1p my column
today. It's deadly serious. But It
could be !he most imponant llnng
you will ever read -- a mauer of !1fe
and death. The subject is AIDS.
What appears below is from a
recent Deparunent of Health and
Human Services reporL No fnlls. No
baloney . Just the facts.
About I million Americans arc
now infecled with the HJV virus !.hat
causes AIDS . In the last 10 ye=,
more than 200,000 Americans
have been diagnosed with Al DS .
Approximately 64 percent of them
have died Worldwide. an estimaled
8 m1Uion to 10 mlil•on people art
now HIV -mfectcd.
The average lc ng1h of llme
between HIV •nfect10n and the
development of lull-blown AIDS IS
10 years. Although engag in g in
male -to -male sc &gt;ual con tact and
mtravenous dru g usc remain the
highest fi Sk fac tors. heterosexual
transmission lS show mg the grca~es t
rate of mcreasc.
In the Urutcd StJics, AIDS IS oow
the second lc.:Jd1ng killer of men and
!he fifth lcad1ng killer of women
from 25 to ~ years of age. 11 ha;
hit some mmonty popu la110ns the
hard est. More than one -fourth of
!hose dLJgnoscd w1th AIDS arc bl:tck
and 16 percent arc H1spanK
As of December 1991. there" ac
40,362 reponed cases of AIDS
among men and women between Lhc
ages of 20 and 29. There were 789
cases of AIDS report ed among
persons from I3 to 19 years of age.
The most disturbing fact 1n th•s
repon is thai the mc1dcncc of HIV
mfcction is growing rapidly among
teen-ager.&gt;.
In spite of efforts by the governmen~ the medical commun11y and
CIVIC -minded groups, hig h-ns &lt;
behavior among U.S teens IS
widespread. More than 40 percent
of h1gh school students polled say
they have had multiple sex JXlllners.
Although condom usc has increased
significantly , only one-thud of the
sexually active leens say they usc
them.
II should be noled that only Ia rex
condoms can provide prolcction
against sexually transmiUed disease .
And condoms are not I00 percem
effective -- they can leak, break or
come off.
The two most common forms of
tn~nsmission arc sexual intcrcowse
-- anal. vaginal and oral -- and the
shanng of needles. The virus also
can be acquired thro~h blood
tnlnsfusion. Such occurrena:s have
been rare since 1985, when careful
screening of blood began.
HIV is not transmit led through
casual contact -- kissing , touching
door handle s, phones, dnnking
fountains or todct scats or geuing
an insect bite.
At thi s moment. ther e IS no
vaccine 10 protect a person agams1

Trans -World
chops fares

the IllY virus and no cure for AIDS.
A massiVe efron, however, is in
progress in research labocatories all
over the world.
The drugs AZT and ddl have
proven successful in delaying ilve
onscc of AIDS, improving the
quali1y of life dramaucally for
some AJDS sullerers and ex lending
therr !Jfe expectancy.
What can you do 10 proleCI yourself agrunst AIDS' Do not share
ne ed les. Have a monogamous
rdationship with a person who 1s
healthy and totally trustwonhy.
If you want fwthcr mformauon,
call the Centers for Disease Control
Na tional AIDS Hotline . The
number IS 1-800-342-AJDS. (SpanISh-speaking: 1-800-344 -7432; mD
for the hearing impaired: 1-800-2437889)
Gem of ilve Day: The book of
Gencs1s !ells us that 11 IS n01 good
for man to be alooe but sometimes
11·s a great relief.
Is rhat AM LaNkrs column you
cl1pped ytars ago ydlow with agt ?
For a copy of kr most frequtntly
rrquts"d potms and essays. stnd a
self- addrtssed, long. buszness-me
envelope tllld a check or money
order for $4 .85 (this rnclui!e s
posrage and handlmg) to . Gmu.
clo Ann Landen. P 0 . Bor I I 562 .
Chtcago. Ill. 60611 -0562 ( /n
CaruuJa. send $5 87)

Names in
the news

WAYNE, Pa . (AP) - Bob
llope presented Defense Secretary
DK k Cheney w1lh a set of stars the Bob Hope 5-S tar Award, that

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Authorities speculated Molli cone had been killed or !hat mobsters had aided his escape to France
or Italy.

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CHAPEL HILL , N.C. (AP).The fans weren't the only things
· shaking during rap star Hammer's
recent concert.
Vibrations from the music, the
crowd or the indoor fm:works display caused 70 feet of sewer line 10
collapse during the April 4 show,
the Herald-Sun of Durham reporled

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the entertainer.

Hope, 88, wasn'tlhe only comedian on the podium.
"When I first heard about this
award and its association with Valley Forge, l thought it meant Bob's
first usa appearance was entertaining George Washington and the
IIOOps,'' Cheney said.

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Hope gave the award 10 Cheney
at the Valley Forge Mil•tary
Academy on Sunday. The academy
crealed the award m 1975 to honor

Mollicone became the subject of
a worldwide manhunt after his son
drove him to Boston 's Logan Airport, presumably for a business trip
in New Jersey. There is no evidence he ever took such a flight.

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insurer, the Rhode Island Share and
Deposit Indemnity Corp., to cover
the loss, hasten•ng the insurer's
collapse.
Gov. Bruce G. Sundlun closed
the 45 banks and credit unions the
insurer covered and froze $1.7 billion in deposits. Nine institutions
remain closed.

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early as today on charges of
embezzlement and unlawful night
10 avoid prosecution, O'Neil said.
State and federal charges were med
against him after he disappeared.
The banker is accused of making loans in the names of people
who now claim to know nothing of
the transactions, then used part of
that money for cash-strapped personal real estate ventures. He also
is accused him of lending money to
alleged bookmalcers.
Mollicone vanished on Nov. 8,
1990, shortly after auditors ques tioned him about $13 million in
phony loans at his two-branch
bank, Heritage Loan &amp; Investment
Co.
The alleged embezzlement
forced Herita~e's private deposit

By DAVID E. KAUSH
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Financially ailing Trans World Airlines is
culling prices on many nights by
10 to 20 percent starting today in
response to pnce reductions by
American Airlines.
TWA didn't say it would matCh
cuts of up 10 50 percent !.hat American announced when it restructured
its pricing policies last wed:. But
the airline said Sunday the cuts
would keep its fares as much as 40
percent lower than competitors.
TWA's new, unrestricted oneway fare from New York to Los
Angeles would be $350, compared
to American's new unrestricted
fare of $460. The old American
rare for the same flight was S752.
The reduction comes on top of
sales that TWA - which has
sought protection in bankruptcy
court - instituted last fall, when it
started selling coupons good for
$500 round-trip tickets to and from
40 U.S. cities.
American announced its fare
cuts Thursday as part of a simpli fied rate structuring plan in which
it will offer only three types of
fares: first-class, coach and discounted fares.
The Gulf War and the recession
combined 10 cost the airline industry $6 billion in 1990 and 1991.
American said a simpler, cheaper
fare system would bring some of
that money back by encouraging
more people to fly and by reducing
adm inistrativc costs.
Ana lysts said such a move
might force weaker airlines such as
TWA out of business.
But TWA Chainnan Carl kahn
to ld reporlers in a telephone conference Sunday that the cuts will
have a limited impact because
TWA already has cut costs and is
recovering . He said the airline
expects to gel into the black in
May.
"If the reason for doing !his fare
is to try to get rid of a low-cost
competitor, it's not going to
work," lcahn said.

.J

a -" 'l ..., ,:r •

Prices In EHect Now Thru Aprll19, 1992
WHILE OUANllllES LAST!

....~

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