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                  <text>Tuesday, April 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0 The Dally Sentinel

Loony comedian dead at age 67 Woman regrets her one-night
stand; wants a second chance
By MICHAEL WEST
Associated Press Writer
LONDON - Plump, bug-eyed
co median Benny Hill, who won
cult status tn the Uniled Stales but
had his TV show axed in Britain in
198:1 after critics called it sexist, is
dead at age 67.
Police found his body in his
so uthwest London apartment on
Monday night. They were sent after
neighbors reponed not seeing htm
around. Hill had been treated for a
hean ailment this year.
Police did not say when Hill
died and did not deem the death
susp1cious. An autopsy was to be
perfonned later.
Hill initially made hts name on
British lelevision in the 1950s and
began hosting his own TV show in
1955.
A master of sexual doubl e
entendre. with a pop-eyed leer and
a knowing wink, he combined visu al and spoken gags, muSical parody
and mtmicry.
Hts shows always ended wuh
him being chased by scantily-clad
young women. irate husba~d s,

policemen and ol.hcrs to a qu1rky
saxophone soundtrack.

fan who visited him in hospital this
year, said in a statement from
Chicago Monday n1ght: "T he
world is suffering a great loss of a
great talent."
Despite the broad and very
British nature of HtU's comedy, his
show s appealed to audiences in
more than 80 countnes. from Iccland to China.
But in 1989, Thames dropped
them in Britain after some British
criti cs called them sexist, vulgar
and out-of-dale.
Hill retorted "I never und erstand why I'm called sexist. What

docs it mean?"

BENNY IfiLL
His soccess grew after he sig ned
with Thames TeleviSion, part of
Britain ·s commercial TV network ,
'" the late 1960s.
In th e 1980s he became a cult
f1gurc in the United States. "The
Benny Hill Show" - half-hour
se lections of slats from his Bntish
specials -

was first broadcast in

the Unucd States in 1979 and
appeared on dozens of stauons .
Pop star Michael Jackson. a Hill

Cenual Tclevi.sion srud Monday
night that it had been negotiating
with Hill to make some new TV
shows.
Hill, a Iifelong bachelor. was
one of Bntam's wealthiest stars.
Paymg tnbute. comedian Ernie
Wise, said : "He was one of our

greatest exports. He was also our
most successful comedian - supposed to be wonh about 12 mi l~on
pounds ($20 mtllion)."
Hill left no survivors. No fun era l detail s were immediately
announced.

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 27 year-old. attractive. intelligent,
single woman with an embarrassing
problem . Seventl months ago, I met
a good-looking, single man at an
i\N~ LANDERS
offiCe pany. We hit it off early in
"1991, Lo11 Anlf'let~
the evening. I drank 100 much and it
Times Syndicate and
must have been obvious because he
(' rf'stors S)'ndil-a&amp;t'."
offered to drive me home.
What happened when we got
to my apartment was somewhat deserves a secood chance. G1ve 11 a
predictable. We were two unat- shot aod let me know what happens .
tachW, sex-starved people whose I wish you luck.
honnones got out of control. He
Dear Ann Landers: You recently
coded up spendmg the nighL
printed a letter about hospitals thar
Ann. neither of us is the type who pennit overnight stays for family
normally goes in for one-night members. May I tell your readers
stands. I felt ashamed of myself the about another resourre available to
nex 1 morning and we barely spoke. parents of seriously ill children' It's
He asked for my wort&lt; number, but the Ronald McDonald House_
he hasn'1 called.
Since 1974, these "homes-awayI sti II see him at various soc tal from-home" have been providing a
functions and he is cordial but loving, caring and a/fordable place
distant. To make matlers wor.;e, I parcnls can temporarily call home
am very chummy with a good friend while their children are being treated
of hiS. I don't know if this friend IS at a nearby hospital.
aware of our hit-and-run encounler.
At any of the houses, families can
but now I am uneasy in his presence cook, do laundry, wat.ch TV and,
because I suspectlx: might know.
moSI importantly, find the emotional
What a price I paid for a foolish support of others in similar situfling. This man is someooe who, had auons. Families who Stay at a Ronald
I behaved differently, could have McDonald House arc asked to make
been a fabulous candidate for the a donation ranging from $5 to $15 a
long haul. I'm templed to ao;k him to day. If they can't afford it, they are
meet me for a cocktail after work . I wekome to stay at no cost.
would then confess that rm ashamed
Thanks to the hac king of the local
of myself and ,..;k if he has any mcd1cal community, volunteers.
inlCrcst in pretending that night corporations large and small, and
never happened. Yes or no? -- A McDonald's owner/operators and
PHOOL IN PHILL Y
their customers. ~ families arc
DEAR PHILL Y: Why no!' You able 10 live very much like they do
have nothing to lose. Everybody m their own homes while they care

Ann
Landers

for the~ sick child.
There are 120 Ronald McDonald
Houses m the Uniled States and
30 more in Canada. Australia, the
Netherlands, Germany, Austria,
Engt.nd, New Zealand and France.
Should your readers need lodging
at a Ronald McDonald House,
reservations are made through the
social services direc tor al the;r
local children's hospital. Readers
who want funher infonnation can
contact their local McDonald's
restaurant manager or write us
directly at Ronald McDonald House,
One Kroc Drive, Oak Brook, Ill.
60521.
Ann. please tell parents
everywhere about this valuable
community resource. Parents who
can't stay in the hospital with their
sick children can be very close by
in The House That Love BuilL -JIM MURRAY. PRESIDENT,
RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE
INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY
BOARD
DEAR JIM MURRAY : Talk
about domg good whtle domg well
-- McDonald's is high on that list.
I'm glad to pass the word.
Ann Landas· larest booklet,
"Nuggets and Doozies ." has
evuyrlung from rilL outrageou.sly
fwtny to rilL poignantly instghlful.
Send a self-addressed. long.
business-silf en&gt;&lt;lofJf and a chLck
or money ordu for $5 (1/us 1nclu.*s
posMge and handling) to : NuggeiS ,
c/o Ann IAntkrs, PO Box I 1562.
Chicago Ill . 6061/-0562. (In
CafllJtitJ. send $6)

---People in the news-PLAINFIELD. Ind . (AP) Mtke Tyson had three visitors over
the weekend and was allowed to
meet with them in a room away
from the reception area at the Indiana Youth Center, an offiCial said.
Tyson was gtven a separate
room 10 prevent possible disruption
from about 200 other inmaleS and
visitors in the main room, said
Kevin Moore, spokesman for the
state Department of Correcuoos.
He would not identify Tyson 's

i

•

..t.

AN "EGG-ClTING" FIND • Bridget Johnson, (front tefi), found the golden egg during the
Easter egg bunt in Middleport on Sunday. The
rvcnt was sponsored by the Middleport Community Association. Inside the golden egg was a $50

VlStlOfS.

prizr. Jennifer Vining found the silver egg with
a $25 prize inside. Pictured with Johnson and
Vining are Mitch Meadows, (back right), chairman of the event, and Rob Hatfield, portaying
the ever-popular Easter Bunny.

1

Middleport Community Association under the

chairmanship of Mitch Meadows. The day wa.s

complete with a visit from the
y
(Rob Hatfield) who assisted while the children
allempted to find 1,500 e~:~:s filled with $1 bills,
coupons for merchandise or candy, all of which
were donated by area businesses.

Consider this ...

uvc E:oension Scrv1cc and th e
Mei gs County Chamber of Co mmerce last year.
Tlx: program' s steenng commit-

By Brian J, Reed

entire group of parti cipants will

te e co ntinue s to mee t, and the
soon receive dclal l s of a follow -up

Tlx: Ohio Dcparunent of Natural

-1570 1. On ly one packet per request

Resources' Divis1on of Wildlife

can he provided .
The divi sio n expects to dJs -

will offer free hummingbtrd seed
packets agatn this .spring.
Each packet conta in s equal
amounts of Mexican su nnow cr.
sp1derflowcr and catchfly seeds for
planting a 4xl0-fool garden. These
species of plants will attract hum mingbirds and several typc.s of huttcrflies. The packets arc provided
free to the public, using money
allocated from the 1n co me tax
chec koff program for non -game
and cndargcred Wildlife.
By planting the seeds in back yard gardens. you will be prov1ding
a necessa ry habitat co mponent
found 10 be el;pecially attractive 10
hummingbirds. This effort also
encourages public support of managmg the wildliferesourcc m urban
and suburban env110nmcnl~.

tn bute about 20,000 of the packeLs
Lh1s spring .
Just a rcmmder that the American Red Cross Dloodmobile will
vil\it the Meigs County Senior Cititcns Center on

prison for the rape of a M1ss Black
America contestant in Indianapolis

last summer.
The door to the room in wh1ch
Tyson met vtsitors was open and a
pnson officer was m the room durmg the visits Saturday and Sunday ,
Moore satd Monday . Adults arc
housed at the youth cenler bocause
of crowding at other priSOns.

'' \

EGG HUNT HELD - Approximately 500
kids joined in the Easler egg hunt on Sunday in
Middleport. The event was sponsored by the

Tyson, 26, the fann er heavy wcighl boxing champion was sentenced in March to :.1, years m

Wcc.lnc..1~day ,

from I

p.m. to 5:30p.m.
86 out of every I00 people have
e ith er blood type "A" or "0" .
Whether your blood type IS fatrl y
comm on or very rare, your volun -

lecr donallon through the ARC is
always needed by hospital patients
in Meigs County.
The faithful blood donations of
Meigs Countians at each bloodmobile v1sit have saved so many lives
in the years past. Be a hfe saver please be a pan of this imponant
cffon. It's so easy and quick, but
very imponant to our community.

Hummingbirds are fun to watch
and provide wildlife recreauon for
Follow through (or lack thereof)
the entire family, according to the
frequently
proves 10 be the_down Division of Wildlife.
To apply for a seed packet, send fall of many good communlly proa written request along with a self- jects.
Not so with "Take Charge", a
addressed stamped envelope to
comm
unity development program
ODNR, Division of Wildlife, 360
East State Street, Athens. Oh10 co-sponsored by the Ohio Coopera-

meCllng, to be held later thts
spnng.
Projects developed last year arc
bemg selected for funh,?' acuon br,
community members . Graduates

of the program arc urged to conun ue thw participation. and mlercstcd new parti cipants arc also ~el ·

come Details willlx: fonh commg.

OMAHA, Ncb . (AP) - U.S.
Sen_ Bob Kerrey suffered a gash in
hts leg m a car accident m Lithuania, his s-pokesman said.
Kerrey, 4&amp;, who withdrew from
the race for the Democrauc presidential nomination last month. was
in Lithuan1a as part of a Senate
Intelligence Committee trip that
began Apnl 10 and w,..; scheduled
to end Tuesday_
He suffered a five -inch deep cut
1n hiS lower left leg when the car in
wh1ch he was a passenger collided
with another vehicle Sunday,
spokesman Steve Jardmg sa1d
Monday .
Kcrrey was taken to a U.S. military hospital in W1esbadcn. Germany. where doctors stitched his
leg . He planned to return to Washington today, larding said. Kerrcy
lost pan of his right leg in combat
in the Vietnam War.
A Senate commiure staff member suffered a concussion in th e
accident, but Jardmg satd no other
details were immediately available .
BANGKOK, Thailand (!\P) Hungary' s first delegate to the
Mtss Universe beauty pageant said
she doesn 't really want to win.
Dorn Patlto, 19, srud a year serv ing as Miss Universe 1992 would
take away from her studies.
" I don ' t really wan110 w1n
because I want to be a teacher,'·
Mtss Patlto said Monday. "For me,
it 's important to be a teacher and
have children and later look afler a
husband."
Besides. she added, she likes

Gospel song festival slated
There will be a gospel song fes uval at Portland Elementary Saturday at 7 p.m. featurin g Messengers

of Love, V1cnna. W.Va. : Singing

Messengers, Parkersburg, W.Va:
Dailey Family, Joy Smgers and the
Freedom Gospel Trio. A freewill
offering will be taken.

OES to hold inspection
The chaner was draped m mem ·
ory of Lois Pauley at the April
meeting of Harrisonville OES with
Pat Arnold. worthy matron, and
Norman Will, pro -te m worthy
patron, in charge. Gracie Wilson
read a poem "Rose Beyond the
Wall" as members stood in attention .
Elsie and Lewis Scheonian.
worthy matron and patron from
Glousier. were guests.
Stella Atkins and Marjorie RtCC,
50-year members were presented

and welcomed.
Avanelle George thanked the
chapler for the nowers sent to her
when she had surgery recently.
Get well cards were sent to all
members on the sick hst
The OES inspection was
announced for May 14.
The group entered the dinmg
area where they were served
refreshments by a committee of
Mrs. Pearl Canaday, Mrs. Margaret
Bell Weber and Miss Jane Wise.

dressing in jeans and 1'-shirts, and
being Miss Universe mean s
''a lway s wearing nice dre sses.
chang ing I don 't know how many
times a day . I don ' t want to be
always like that."
She satd she likes representing
Hungary at the May 9 pageant in
Bangkok, how ever , because she
can meet people and pracuce her
English.
NASHVILLE. Tenn . (AP) Comedienne Minme Pearl will be
honored in a music and comedy
tribute by country music stars and
cntcnaincrs s uch as Ro sea nn e
Arnold , Bill Cosby and Rubm
Williams.
"Hats Off to Minnie Pearl" will
lx: taped May 6 at the Grand Ole
Opry House for telecast m October
on TNN: The Nashville Network .
Barbara Mandrell will be the host.
Miss Pearl, 79, is known for her
flowered straw hat wtth dangling
pncc tag and trademark "How
Dec" greeting. She is recovering
from a stroke that has kept her
from perfonning.
Among !hose scheduled 10 perform will be Roy Acuff. Clint
Black, Johnny Cash, Vince Gill,
Emmylou Harris. Reba McEntire,
Willie Nelson, Dolly Panon, Ricky
Skaggs and The Whites, Rand y
Travis and Hank Withams Jr

NEW YORK (AP)
Domm1que de Menil. Madame
George Pompidou, James Wolfensohn and The Rockefeller Foundation arc the fir st winners of the
" Montblanc de Ia Culture," a new
award 10 honor an patrons.
The winners were chose n hy
artists including v1olim sl Isaac
Stem, painter flelen Frankenthaler.
architect I.M . Pei, conductor Seiji
Ozawa and opera si nger Joan
Sutherland.
Montblanc, a French manufacturer of wriung mstruments, said it
has established a foundation based
in Hamburg 10 issue annual awards.
Mrs . de Mcnil opened the de
Menil Collection of art five years
ago in her native Houston, housing
more than 10,000 an works.
Madame Pompidou , widow of
the late French president Georges
Pompidou, was praised for promoting Franco -American cultural
exchanges and for asscrnblmg an at
the Pompidou Center in Paris.
Wolfensohn, a New York
financier, was cited for his work as
chairman of the board of the
Kennedy Center for the Perfonning
Arts in Washington and oth er
work.
The Rockefeller Foundation was
endowed by the late John D. Rock efeller Sr. in 1913 to "promole the
well-being of manlund throughout
the world."

Reds snap
losing spell,
defeat LA 4-3

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Page 4

Vol. 42, No. 251

co,.yrtghlod 1992

Luw toni ,~ hi in mid 40s. P:!rtly
Thur..OJ .v, high i!lmid -

2 Sec tions, 16 Pages 25 oents
A Mullimed1a Inc . Newspape r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 22, 1992

RAC, union will resume talks to end strike

'

.

\

'\

\

.'

.

'\,

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- The departure of Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. Chairman R.
Emmell Boyle, ousted in a lx&gt;arclroom struggle, has g1vcn new life
to the Uniled Steelworkers' hopes
lor an end to thCir 18-month labor
d1 sp ute .
"We've been here on e day
longer than Emmett Boyle," union
Region 23 Director Jim Boweo
said to a union hall packed with
cheering Steelworkers, many of
them wearing T-s hirts beanng the
slogan "One Day Longer."
·'ThiS is just a first ste p of a
whole lot more steps to get this

.

·~.\'-.~ !_ \

thing resolved," Bowen said. " But

\

R. EMMETT BOYLE

we just made one hell of a first srcp
for laboring people everywhere."
The company and the Steel workers have been '" a labor dispute since thetr contract expired

Nov. I. 1990. and the union has
consistently pcrtr•yed Boyle as the
principal stumbling block to a new
agreement.
Ravenswood announced Tue sday 1hat a new board of dlfectors
had been elected and that Boyle
hat! been removed as chamnan and

chief c;r;ccutivc officer "~ a result
of a basic d1sagreemen1 as to the
fu1ure direction of RAC. ·'
"The company 's goaJ is lO work
towanl a solution of the labor disrule .'' spo keswoman Linda Arnold

said .
Arnold said Rav enswood had
rcta mcd Peter Nash, fanner general
coun se l of the National Labor
Relations Board , to undcllak c
renewed contract talks with the
un1on. The company last mel with
the un1on in July 1991.
According to Bowen, Nash and

union Vice President George Becker mel in Pittsburgh Tuesday mom mg for what he lcmlcd "a

~.:ordial,

get-acquainted session.··
Bowen said he did not know
when talks would resume, although
he sa id the union could he rcadv
"i n a couple of days." He added,
however, that the compary's new

locked OU I
Ravcn swcxx:L which ranks nmth
among the nation's 11 alurn1num
producers, has hired more th:HI
I ,000 non -un•on replacement
workers . The company once

employed more thon 2, 100 Steelworkers.
Dowen sa1d Tuesday th e un1on

management might need more time

d1d not mtcnd to go back to wDfk

to prepare.
The long- runn1n g diSpul c has

alongs1dc the replacements.
"They can' t be so na1vc as to
th1nk tkH we 're g01n g 10 work
wllh the scahs in that plant ,"
Rowen said . ··It's hcc n ou r j)() SI \10~ . all along tha t the sc ahs mu ~t
go
An NLRB admini Str ativ e Llw

hccomc the focus of national anen in part over Raven swood's
decision to usc replacem en t work t ion ,

ers to operate the plant. Within
minutes after the co ntract exp ired,
management forced the Steelwork ers hut of the plant and moved the Judge s:ud last week he would rul e
soon on union charge'\ that
replacement workers in.
After that. management co n- R&lt;lvcnswuod v1olatcd labor laws by
tended the union was on strik e, locking out union workers . rcfus mg
wh!lc the unum sa1 d 11 had been to bargain 111 goc:x.l faith and h1nng

pcrmanenl replacement workers.
Tu esday's cha nges appar en1l y
were the result of an Easter wed en d shakcup on the board of dlfcc tors of 1lx: pnvatcly held compa ny .
Whdc Boyle wa s forced out . two
oth er directors were hm:d
After the board removed Royle
as ch:.nrm :m and chu.:i" rxccu tJ vc
offiC er, Boy le sa id he dcc1dcd to
re sign his board sc;ll and will no
longe r be a shareholder ·· .., incc I do
not ~ uhsc rihc to the philosophy of
th i ~ board "
Boyle did nol say what will
lx:co rnc of his 21) percent of com p~tny stock, wh1ch he held pnor to
T ucsday 's announcement.
Boyle SJJd he will rema in as
chairman, president and ch1cf exf'cutivc officer of Whcclmg -bascd
URALCO Manage men t Scrvtces,
which oversees the plant.

Proposed prison could be
served by Athens bus system
Athens city offtcials arc considering the posSibility of cxtendmg
city bus serv ice mlO Meigs County,
in the event that a Salem Center
site is chosen as the location of a
new medium-security state prison.
According to a report in th e
Tuesday edition of The Arhens
Messenger. Athens Ci1y Council
unanimously passed a resolution on
Monday. stat ing that the board
plans to "consider the possibilit y"
of providing public transponauon

to th e pnson th roug h thc1r public
Th e pr1 ~0 n . if buil t i1crc. could
transportation system. The resolu - rrovidc a.~ many as 200 job-: for
tiOn was passed in respon se to a rcs Jdcnts of Mei gs and surrounding
request from Meigs County Cham - coumics _ A dcct.s1on as to where
ber of Commerce Prc.sH1cnt the pn so n will tx~ built 1s expected
Leonard Eliason.
in &lt;~tx)ut a mon th from Oh1o GoverEliaso n told co un cil tha t the nor George Voinovich
state 1s interested in havmg public
Co'\t cffC(uvencss and olhcr fca transportation to the prison , and sJ hllity factors would be considered
th;H such service could lransport by the city before a decision would
rn son vis itors from the Greyhound he made on th e bus proposJ I,
st;H10n in Athens to the Salem Ce n- 1nclud1 ng the po ssJb ll1 ty of coq
\h aring hy Mcig _-: Co unt y.
ter SL IC

GOP chairman Bennett says Riffe
conducts a 'pay for play' system
COLUMBUS. Ohto (AP) - the more yo u pay h1 s camp;ugn
li-:1 id
Bennell accused Rtffe of play - coffers the bi gger player you arc in
Democrauc House Speaker Vern
Riffe conducts a "pay to play " in g fav orites with big contributors.
ge ttin g what you want from th e
''Rrffc conduc ts bu s mcss
system that benefits big campa1gn
\t.1 tc - at La xpayer cxpcn~." nrn Archie Swearingen or New Boston and Mr. and
CANDIDATE VISITS- Ted Strickland,
according
to
a
pay
to
play
sySiem
co ntributors , state Republi can
nctl 'W id .
Mrs. John Gill, and their daughter, Christina,
Democratic candidate for the Sixth U.S. ConChatnnan Rolx:rt Benncll says.
gressional seat, visited Pomeroy on Tuesday
all of Portsmouth, at 111cDonald's in Pomeroy.
Bcnncu. who wants to capture
The Swearingens and Gills arc frequent gul'Sts
evening, and di~ussed the i~~ues with local resi control of the Hou se from
dents. Here, Strickland lalk..s with Mr. and Mrs.
at Royal Oak Resort.
DcmocrnLI\ in this year's elections,
accused Riffe, D-Whcclersburg , of
placmg poliucal self-interest above
the good of the state.
hrcak r11an 's law ·
"Good government has a cos t.
CORCORAN. Callf. (AI') but it's not the political contribu - Charle s Manson, mastermind of
The hoard unLJnimously demed
/\. Pomeroy woman's car was disabled in a deer-car acc1dcm on
tiOn system se t up hy Riffe," Bcn - one of the nao on's most infamous parok .
WASHINGTON (AP)
Oh10 7 Tuesday mom mg.
ncft said at a new s co nf erence ma ss murders, was denied parole
MJn\o n onginally wa s sc nAdJusled for innauon. Americans' Tuesday.
Accord1ng to th e Galila -Mctgs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
tl'
ncc
cl to d1 c 1n the stat e's gas
for the cig hU1 time on Tuc~y. the
per
ca
p1ta
income
shrnnk
'"
199
1
Cliff
Treye
ns,
spokesman
fo
r
Ann" r. l.cmley. 31. was nonhbound on Ohio 7 and struck a deer
d:ty of Cal1fomia·s fn st cxccuuon charnhcr lor the gn.~,ly 19fl9 slayfor the fir.it time in nine years, the 1he Ohio House Dcmocrnuc Com- 1n a quar1 er century
thai ran onto the roadway. No inJunes were reported .
In ~~ of preg nant actress Sharon
government said today.
mi!ICC, said Bcnncu's anack may
Domagc 10 the fron1 of Lemley's 1990 Goo Metro was listed as
Durin g a tw o- hour hcan ng. r;nr and CJ ght othe rs m Los Angc. Personal income totaled $19,082 have been designed to help Repub- Man son was both coopc.rativc and k.s.
mOOcratc and di....abling. The car was towed from the scene.
per person last year. JUSI 2. t per- lican attempts to raise money.
co nfronta\lonal, statin g h1 s case
The stJ tc Su preme Court threw
ce nt more than in 1990. the Com"I honestly believe the reason w1th clear slJtrmenL.;; and wah ran t- ou t tht.:: death penalty law tn effcrt
r.1Crcc Department sa1d.
he's saymg that is thetr fund -raJs - Jnf!S
th C' n, l cavm~ Man so n wnh the only
Me1gs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed Wednesday
That marked a growth rate only lfl g effort IS dead m ttlc water,"
M:mson argued lx:lorc 1he lhree- alt cmauvc, life Ill pnso n wi!h posthat deputies tmnsponed Beth Glocckner to Marysvtlle Rcfonnatory
slig htly more than half last year's Trcycns said.
mcmhcr state Board of Pri so n Sible parole
on Monday, to begin serving a sentence recently imposed by Mctgs
4.1 percent innation ra1c as mea "Anecdotal c ¥idcn cc would Terms th at he had been tn prison
Th e execu tiOn Tucsdav of
County Common Pleas Coun on drug charges.
sured by the depanment's mdcx for see m to indicate they're havin g longer than th e law allow s hccausc Robert Alton ll ~uns, conv;c tcd
On Tuesday. Terry Bell was taken to SEPTA Center at Nel ·
personal expenditures.
se rious problems. The reaso n. I tlc wasn't present at the killings.
und er a suh~cq u Ln t clc.ath -penalt y
son ville LO begm servi ng a sentence imposed on an escape from cusIt was the first time since 1982 assume. is people feel thw chances
"I am right w1th God and I am IJw of murdcnng two rr.c n-agc rs in
tod y charge.
that growth in income per ca pHa arc preuy uph1ll . Nobody wants 10 rig ht with my se lf, " he sa 1d. "I San D1cgo, wa.\ th e f~r s t m Ca liforfe ll behind rismg pnces.
~ 1v e u a losing campaign," he
d1dn'l break God's law and I dtdn't nia si nce 1967 .
And, it was the third consccu uvc annual decline in the growth
Wanda Blackburn of Bigley Ridge Road in Long Bottom reportral£.
Eac h year of the Bush admined on Saturday afternoon that early on Friday morning, two juvenile
istration ha s seen smaller income
boys had taken tx:r van from the driveway, and backed the van over
growth than the year before. Per
th e embankment, almost go ing into the creek.
.
.
capita incomes grew 5.4 percent in
Chargc.s have been flied agrunst !he 1wo boys 1n Mc1gs Coumy
1990. 6.9 percent in 1989 and 7.1
Common Pleas Court .
percent m 1988.
The mcomc flgun:s also showed
th e co ntinuing reversal of a midDonald Shue, Pnncipal at Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
!980s trend. dubbed the btcoastal
reported carhcr thiS week that the school had been entered dunng
CCO n o my , Of IDCOffiC S growing
fa sl£r on the East and West coa.sls
the rocenl spnng vacation. An AM/FM radto and a three -channel
than m the country's hcanlaod.
Realistic intercom were taken.
.
.
.
.
Only seven states saw income
Accord10g to Shue, the school custodtan nouced a k11£hen wm mcrcases equal to or better than the
dow had been entered. lnvcsugauon 1s conunumg.
nati onal innation rate last year:
Wyoming, 5.1 percent: Montana
and North Dakota. each 4_8 perMeigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported today that
ce nt : Hawaii, 4.6 percent ;
Catherine Day, fonn crly of Success Road in Reedsville has been
Lou isia na. 4.2 perce nt, and New
arrested 1n Medma County and has posted $1,219.20 for her appearMexico and Arkansas, 4 .I percent.
ance 10 Meigs County Coun on Wednesday, to face several charges
Still, income growth was lower
in 1991 than a year earticr in all 50
.
of passing bad checks.
Shcnff Soulsby reported that Day had been taken 10 Washmgton
states, reflecting the recession that
County to face charges there . but since bond had been posted.
began in July 1990 and continued.
deputies did not get her Tuesday wlx:n she was released hy Washaccording to many economists,
ington County authonues.
throughout 1991.
alignment, have complele~;n;e;:Sii;ms;,~~
BUILDING SOLD • Bill and Carolyn
The states with the five highest
and wheel balance service. Knight
I hat the
McDaniel
have
sold
their
commercial
buildin~
per capita incomes and the five
same
service
on
farm
equipment
will
be
availat
600
East
Main
St.,
Pomeroy,
to
Arthur
L
Spencer of Racine reponed 10 the Mc1gs County Shenfrs
lowest remained the same in 1991
able.
C
and
A
Auto
have
been
in
business
for
14
"Butch"
and
Charisse
Knight,
and
will
close
out
as the previous year.
Dcp::Zent on Tuesday that the back glass in his station wagon had
their
Pomeroy
Home
and
Auto,
Inc.
business
on
years,
the
past
six
in
Gallipolis.
The
lflephone
The five highest were: Conbeen broken out during the nighL
. .
May 7. The McDaniels have operated the businumber will be 992-2094. Pictured at th~ closing
Mary Newlun of Long Bottom reported that someume m March,
necticut , $25,881: New Jersey ,
ness
in
that
building
ror
the
past
26
years.
The
Tuesday
afternoon are from the left, Mrs.
$25,372: Massachusetts, $22,897;
Knights
will
open
C
and
A
Auto
on
May
IS
in
Knight, Mr . Knight, Carolyn McDaniel, and Bill
Continued on page 3
New York, $22,456, and Maryland.
the
building.
They
will
sell
tires,
do
com
puler
McDaniel.
$22,080.

Patrol reports deer-car wreck

CAU FORllllPPOINTMINT.

Pick 3: !!46

c loud~·.
70~.

Local briefs---,

253 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY
(614) 992-5724
CALL 1·800·552·1990
FUU SERVKE POOL OPENINGS

Ohio Lotterv•

Gloeckner, Bell taken to prison

Youths arrested, charged

School entered, items taken

Day arrested, charged

Vandalism, theft incidentspr8bed .

Per capita
income shrinks
in past year

Charles Manson denied
parole for eighth time

�Wednesday, April 22, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
1 1 1 Court Sbftl
Pomervy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 1BE IJIEIGS-IlASOII AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Ploblidoor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistanl Plobllsber/Controller
LETrnllS OF OPINION .,.. wo!mmo

CBAaLL~

HOEFLICH
Ga&gt;oral Manager

no, lbooJAj

I&gt;&lt; less rbw JOO
words. All )ett.ers are subject 10 ednin«, ud 111m1 bl: "!ned w1th name,
address aod telepbon&lt; numba Na lllllipd ko£n will 0. publls!led. Lnen
should be in good taste, addre•~ is!UCL- ·-

Building success through
'New environmentalism'

LOCK HAVEN. Pa. - Deliverme an S86 million pork-barrel proJCCl to his co nstituents would sit
l1ke a Jewel in any politician' s
crown
But thi s central Pennsylvania
town is ungrateful, even angr~ . It
would like to send the taxpayer
dollars back to Washmgton - but
there are no takers in a government
reeling from a $400 billion budget
def1cit.
Now re sidents here find them selves With an $86 million water
project --&lt;lcsptte the fact there arc
aile rna~ ves being overlooked that
would accomplish the goal of flood
co ntrol without the cost of 200
bmldtngs. half a dozen businesses
and a good bite out of the shrinking
local tax b=.
On the other side of the issue are
the on ly city council memb ers
whose seats have yet to come up
fo r re-election since th e uproar
ove r the Lock Haven dike-levee
proJ('Cl began in earnest four years

ago. They are joined by the town' s
paper mill. a few other local businesses, and two influential Republican lawmakers - Rep. William

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Einstein
Clin ger and Sen . Arlen SpeCicr,
who worked hard for the projecL
When the grass-roots movement
10 scrap the levee proJect first gath ered steam, Clinger and Specter
said they would abide by what they
were told by the local clect.ed offi cials.
The town an swered by replacing
their mayor and a majority of the
city council with levee opponenLs.
It was too late. By the tim e the
gove rnm ent was elec ted with a
nearly 70 percent margin, the contracts had already been s t~ned and

------

.

The State of Ohio intends to be a leada 10 the "lrtr mVliOOJJiental ism." We be~eve that we can have a !.11'011!; economv and a healthy enV1·
ronment. In fac~ I've proposed cre.aun~ an En,-utllliDCiltaJ Technology
Center to help bring jobs in the polluooo cootml ~ to Oh10. W1th
our new Science and Technology Counc1l. and Oluo s Edison Cenu:.,,
we're go ing to help Ohio businesses .. crl. smJJleJ wbm !I comes to protecting the environment.
_ • _ .
Companies have known for a long umc thai redocm~ •••asle JS a good
business practice. That' s mor&lt; true t.oday than ~'" V. hen compan1es
redu ce waste. they cut their d.tsposal OOSlS. mJkr more effietent use of
their raw materials, and ~mit wort.er Cllpostat' to baz3IOOus mJieflals.
' Our frrsl pnority as "new envllOillill:lll3h lS 10 redlx:e waste by ere·
aung fewe r pollutants. In other words. ,..e want 10 prevent polluuon
inStead of just controllmg 11 once us already Ibm:.
· Seven state governm ent agenc.es are working togetller 1n the Pulluuon
Prevention Wmtgroup 10 fmd ways thai we oursehes can reduce pollution. We'll be sharing that infonnation "''th the pubb&lt; and wtth busmesses , and encouraging them to gel mvo)"cd tn lh.ts ~,. c:nvlronmenLal
approach.
. I've wntten personally to more than 50 or Otuo's larg&lt;est compames.
aslung them to take part in a polluuoo Jli'C''Cn!IOil program designed to
r¢ducc th e1r emission of 17 targeted cbamcah by 50"c by 19'J5. OhiO
btlsincsses lead the nation 10 participanon on th';S unponant polluoon prev«ntion effort My goal1s to have 100 or Otuo; ~bg.b!e comparues par~~ ~a ting .
.
_
.
Pollution prevenuon 1s the keyS!Dne of the ..,.. rn•uunmentaiLsm
We can leave a cleaner world for our childrro by creanng less poUunon.
But preventing future pollullon won l solve the prolil&lt;m of e:mtmg con tamination.
.
:Clearly. were working hard to dean liJI Oluo ; ennronmental probleins and to proteCt our States tremendous namnln.':SlJUt:es. We re more
t$1 willing Ill address our own prdllems and l3b: rcspa!Sibllity fOf fu i~ them . Unfonunately, not all states~ tins amndr. As a resull Ohto
h~ been inundated w1th wastes from otha ~Tins !lUlSI SU!p.
We have an mnovaDve soud wastt plannalg ..... m Olno. that gtves
local solid waste d1 stncts the responsib1ticy Cor detmnlDmg thai adequate
capacity will be available 10 handle the tr.tsb the dlslnct produces. Our
Jaw requires a mandatory 259t reducuoo 111 the ..-astt dl3l goes to landfi~ s. but many commun111es are dmng e-"rn beucr tbrough successful
rci:ycl ing programs Now that we have our 00.11 soUl wasu: needs well 10
h&lt;!"d. 1 am determined to stop the flow of OUI4-IUI&gt;: Yr.ISte mto Oh10.
. 1 have written 10 every landfill ope:ra10I' m 0.0 and asled tbl!m to vol uritanly slop aeccpung waste from other saa= I am negoo.:mng nght now
with th e Governor of New Jersey an ag:rttmmt th3l ,.-111 help both our
stiotes, by limiung the amount of waste ..,.eo.· Jmcy !elld:s 10 Oluo But the
r~l sol ution to th1 s problem lies tn Con~s. .. boch mllSI change the Ia:"
Lhtit trcaLs garbage as interstate commertt. I .110 ~ urung w1th Oh1o s
Congressional delegation to make th1s chan!J'
Last December. 1 called for a morawnum oo ne• commerCial haz ·
ardous waste incincrawrs . W1th one mcJDer.ll&lt;W 111 ~'J3ll(J(l and another
being built, Ohto will have 21 o/r of the naoon ·, lw3rd&lt;lus ..as~e mcmcration capacity, and many umc s over the C3pXII}" w.e need for our own

grew up in the area and remembers
th e d1 sastrous flood of 1972, says a
flood is so mething everybody
knows can happen but IS prepared
to deal with. " When it comes. you
just clean up and keep on going,"
she says.
Knowmg that the new local
go vernment would give the llood
authority fits once they were elected, the old city council voted away
nearly all of the city's rights to
down the ri vcr.
Jim and Barbara Rogers, who oversee the projects, so they now
operate two small bed-and-break- find themselves with little left to do
fa st es tablishment s on Water on the lo ca l level. Since both
Stree~ know that the town is more Clinger and Specter said they
than likel y to expe ri ence another would abide by the !Dwn's wi shes,
flood SGmeumc in the future. Th ey the new leaders were hoping for
told our associate Jan Moller that some relief from Washington . but
doesn't kee p them from opposing to no avail. Since the election, neither congressman has shown any
the project.
"There's so mething ronc n willingness to abandon the pork
going on here," said Jim Rogers, a that they diligently secured for
sturdy man who was a bodyguard thw home districts.
In a statement Clinger said,
for the Teamsters before movmg to
Lock Haven for the peace and quiet "This project is in the best interest
that the town offers. Hi s wife. who of thepeople of Lock Haven and 1
will work 10 see that il is completcd."
Besides the cost of relocatin g
the residents whose homes stand in
th e way of the levee, the Army
Corps of Engineers. which is buildIng the levee, has also earned the
scorn of local historic preservation ists by digging up an ancient
Native American burial ground that
lay in its way. The Anmy's bulldozers managed to disrupt the fragile
earth holding the remains.
Levee opponents also cite geological concerns about the projecL
One local geologist say s that
because the levee is being built on
very leaky soil which contains the
toxic leftovers from a chemical
plant that used to nperale in the
town (the federal government is
currently spending more than $100
million to clean it up), there is danger that a flood would flush these
contaminants to the surface.
But June Houser, one of the two
pro-levee members left on the ctly
council, will not relinquish her long
fight for federal pork in Lock
Haven . "I believe (the Army
Corps) owe it to God and country
to build this proJeCt at taxpayer
expense."
Copyright, 1992, United Fea ture Syndicate, Inc.
the ground broken on a project that
will forever change th e face of a
town that has looked out over the
Susquehanna river si nce its birth
more than a century ago.
Today the neal row of ce nturyold rrces that used to line the road
next to the ri vcr have been reduced
to piles of wood chips that lie in
ncar proximny to tl1 e earth movers
that are busy a few hundred yards

No more bad news, focus on the good
I have culled from the mailbag a ti ngu ished Deeds and Develo pnumber of complaints regarding the ments as they could.
way the media goes about its busiThe re sults have been surpri sness, most notably iLs fascination Ing. If you've a mind to look for it,
w1th the negative . Much is happen - . you can find good news JUSt about
Ing 1n America and around the
world that IS good, you seem 10 be
saying. so why don't we hear more
:1bout it?

I confess to thts fault. I must
adm it that when 1 plumb George
Bush's personahty, for example , I
focus on hi s hypocrisy and lack of
conviction when I should be effusIng about ht s pleasantly goofy side.
I f1nd my se lf co nd emnin g the
bank.J ng industry' s 15 percent surge
m profiLs last year when 1 should
be marveling over the restiJcncc of
the free markciplace.
To cou nt er this tenden cy, I
asked the Spear Foundation. the
'c vcrely understaffed Washin gton
thmk tank with which 1 am associated, to take on the task of finding
good news. To ensure that its prevJous haphazard efforts to accom pliSh thts objecuvc were not repealed. the SF formed a small un1t
call ed a GLADDD Team and
msrructed staff rcsearc he" to find
as many Good. Laudable and Dis-

1rWJustnes. Enough 1S enough. The Olno Houst of Rqnseruauves passerl
~moratorium Jeg1slation unammously. and- • IS up to th~ OhJO Senate 10 make sure th at Oh10 docs not become everybody s dump~ng
ground .
1 was one of Ohw's f~st env~onmentah51S 1 ~d the legtslauon
tiJal created the Oh1o Env1ronmcntal Prorecoon ~ - Now 1am proud
10 be a "new cnvlfOnmentah st On the oc&lt;:aSIOil of tlns 22nd F.arth Day. I
erlcourage all Oh1oans to JOm me m mv romrruunmtiO rt:duce wasu: . preWASH IN GTON (NEA) v~nl pollu~on . and treat our em tronment as the '-aluable and prt&lt;:JOUS 1992 was supposed 10 be the year
f&amp;SOUfCC it IS.
1n wh1ch Europe's maJor nation s

Joseph Spear

anywhere. Yes. th e S&amp;L scandal
will cost hundr eds of billions of
dollars , but Char le s Keating is
go ing to jail . isn' t he? Ye s, Bdl
Clmlon will win the DemocratiC
nomination , but we won't have to
ponder th e Cuomo eni gma for four
more years, now witl we?
Did yo u know that raw umber
has bee n unrwrcd and will reap pear in the Crayola box of 64° That
Mars In c. has developed a lower
ca lori c Milk y Way" That la ser
technology will be used to peel
potatoe s with Je ss waste 'l The
GLAD DD Tea m found much
more:

Annanmo Foods of Disunction
Inc . is dropp1ng Frank Sinatra's
lmc of pasta sauces. 1 can accept
the crooner's denials of underworld
co nnecti ons, but I disdam his lad.

of appreciation for the free press.
and 1 have been unabl e to stomach
him since the even tn g years ago
when he encountered a Washington
Post co lumni st in a rcslaurant,
stuffed some money tnto her drink
and suggested she engaged in slat tern ly pursuits. 1 never bought or
tasted an ounce of Old Blue Eyes'
tomato gravy . and u's gratifying to
see tha t my boycoll worked.
As a protest aga in st UN sanctions on Ltbya for its refusal to tum
over two men accused in the 1988
bombing of Pan Am Oighl 10 3,
strongman Moammar Gadhafi cut
off contact with th e outside world
lor 24 hour s. Many of us were
delighted not to see Gadhafi 's kisser for a full day. and the SF propos es that L1bya's withdrawal from the
world be co ntmu ed until th e year
2000, with extensions routin ely
granted until Moammar ascends.
The perqui site wars between
Capitol Hill and th e White House
have produced some golden resu!Ls
For one th1ng. it IS tmmen se ly
mslfUctive for the public to see preCisely how privileged the1r servants
hav e beco me. Fo r another , the
price of a hain:ul in the House bar-

bers hop has doubled to $10. For
another, Secretary of State lames
Baker is flying commen:ial on his
purely private trips , as he damn
well should have been all along .
The GLADD Team pledges it will
attempt to keep the Perk Wars alive
until J. Danforth Quayle is no
longer hopping military aircraft to
play golf.
Thanks to the rubbergate scandal and frustration with Congress'
inabi~ty to get things done, dozens
of lawmakers have decided to call
it quits. It is truly sad to see the
hkes of the estimable Sen. Warren
Rudman . R-N.H., depart Capitol
Hill, but it is a colossal thrill to
hear Sen. Tim Winh, D-Colo., say
sayonara. He has been one of cable
television's favorite waterboys for
years and perso nally defeated a
1990 allcmpt to re-regulate the
industry . Wirth's Democratic col leagues are said to be mourning; I
say u· s celebration time.
Watch thi s space . When good
news happens. your GLADDD
Team will be there.
(C)\992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN .

Europe's voters send mixed message

Berry's World

Thursday, April 23
i\ ccu WCJtherl: forecast fot dayttmc condllto n.s and high temperatures
MICH

would gree t a new era , mov 1ng
roward closer economi c union . A

unified and confident Europe was
to claim a central role in world
aJTa~s.

However . over the past few
weeks, European voters ha ve gone
to the polls. and the results have led
to foreca sts of co nfu sion and
uncertainty:
By far, the b1ggest surpn se was
1n Britain , where Prime Minister
Joh n MaJor and his Conseryalive
Party stunned expens by holding
onto a narrow majorit y in Parliament. Every public opinion poll
showed that the populace was tired
of Conservative policies after 13
years of rule. V01ers seemed ready
to give a remade Labor Party a
chance to sec what it could do.
However, the same polls also
showed that John Major was personally very popular and trusted;
the same could not be said for labor
Party head Neil Kinnock. In the
biller, five -wee k natinnal cam ·
paign, which included American style negative ads and a stress on
personalities rather than issues ,
Major exploited the disuust of Kinnock Ill his own advantage.
Still, the narrowness of the victory means that Brilain is liable to
enter a period of uncertainly . Major
1S operating with an actual majority
and vowing to push ahead with

eco nomic and social rcfonn s. But
the Conserva tives clearly lack the
ove rwh elmin g mandate th ey
enjoyed in the past three elections,

Robert J. Wagman
when Margaret Thatcher was al th e
height of her popularity.
At the end of 1992, the agree ment to eliminate trade barriers and
other restnct10ns within the European Eco nomic Community will
take effect. With a maJority of th e
British skeptical of Conservative
Party poli cie s, next year should
bnn g a great deal of soul-scarc hm g
in Britain as it looks inward and
not towards Europe.
In Italy, after 45 years of rul ~ by
50 coalition governments domtnaled by the generally centrist Christian Democrats, voters have thrown
the political system into ncar chaos
by turning to new regional p~_es.
11 is still unclear 1f the Chnsnan
Democrats have been left with
enough power to form a coalition
that can govern.
Since 1948, the Christian
Democrats hav e held power
because of national fear of the Italian Communist Pany, the strongest
communist party in Europe. Now,
though, with the fall of communism generally. that threat ha s
ended. Voters tired of the chronic
co rruption and inefficiency of the
Italian government are now saying

it1s tim e for a change . How ever. as
of yet, they have failed Ill aru culate
what that change will be .
This all comes at a particul arl y
mopportun e time. By new ly adopted rules, for a member 10 fully participate in th e EEC, its natJonal
debt by 1997 mu st not exceed 60
percent of its GNP. Italy's is now
above 100 percent and cl imbing
monthl y. It is go in g to take very
srrong econom ic measures to bring
th e eco nom y under control. Thi s
will probably not be poSS ible under
fragile coalition government.
In Germany, the linchpin for the
new EEC, 11 appears that, after 20
years, Chancellor Helmut Kohl' s
Chmtian Democratic Party 1s in
big troubl e. In a series of votes for
key stale parliaments - contests
that normal! y se rve as barometers
of national sentiment - the Christian Democrats lost control of sevcral states, including those in the
most prosperous area of Germany,
Baden-Wucrttemberg .
In elections where about 12 percent of Gennans went to the polls,
the result wa s called a "political
eanhquake" by ARD, Germany' s
national television network . Two
small radical right -w ing parties
took over two slate parhaments,
and the radical right made big gains

everywhere.
It was not only Kohl and the
Christian Democrats that were the
losers. The Social Democrats and
their leader Bjorn Engholm - who
was to be the main challenger to
Kohl in the next national election
in 1994 - were ousted from control of their state parliament in Hoistem by another small radical pany.
Th ese voters were sending a
message that they are unhappy with
the economic cost of German
reunification and the influx of foreigners into the country, This, too,
is not good for the EEC.
Finally, in France, regional voting has shown that the Socialist
government of Prime Minister
FrancOIS Millcrrand has reached a
new low in popularity. After
receiving only 16 percent of the
vote for seats on France's 22
regional councils, Mitterrand fired
his unpopular prime minister, Edith
Cresson, and made other moves 10
shore up his popularily.
But, as in Germany, the election
showed an upsurge in the popularity of ultra-nationalist, right-wing
parties that are committed to
France first, and only secondarily
to a newly unified Europe.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Thought for Today
Thought for Today: "Success is a journey, not a destination ." Anonymou s.

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•I Columbus I 63' I

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By The Associated Pres.s
The rain will return to Ohto
after a brief respite today. Forecasters said the wet weather wtll be
with us through the weekend.
And it will be cooler,too.
The Nauonal Weather Service
said temperatures tonight could get
close to the freezing mark so me
places. High s in th e north on
Thursday aren't expected to get out
of the 50s.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 87 degrees in 1985. The
record low was 27 in 1978.
Sunset tonight will be at 8: 16
p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
6:42a. m.
Around lbe nation

KY

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pt . Cloudy

C/ou' '·

01992 Accu-Weather , I ~

------Weather----Soulh·Cenlral Ohio
Tomght , variable cloudiness
With th e low 1n the mid-40s
Chan ce of ram 20 percent. Thursday, mostly cloudy with sca ucred
showers . Thunderstorms also possible. H1gh 70-75. Chance of rain 50
percent.

Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of shower s through
the period Lows in th e 40s Friday
and Saturday and 35-45 on Sunday.
Hi ghs in the 60s Friday , 55-65 on
Saturday 50-55 on Sunday.

,..-----Local briefs... --..
Conlinued from page I
her llomelite hedge trimmer had been stolen .
Gary Noel of Albany reponed last week that a chain sa w and
weed tnmmer had been stolen from his bam. The items had been
recovered at the Ohio Valley Tradmg Post at Nelsonville . Charges
of d1 sposmg of sto len properly will be filed against an Athens
Co unty man. accordmg Ill Shenff James M. Soulsby.
.
Soul shy said that the Athens Co unty Shenff's Department will
fi le th e charges in Athens County in lieu of theft charges 10 Me1gs
Co unty . The items were idcnu ficd on Tuesday evening.

EMS units answer six calls
Six ca lls for assistance were answered on ;.;.,:;ctay and Wednesday by units of Meigs County Emergency Serv:sos.
On Tuesday at II :38 a.m .. Rutland unit wect to Loop Road .
Dennis Searles was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:58 p.m .. Pomeroy unit went to the senior center for Harry
Wile, who was taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal. At6:l5 p.m ..
Pomeroy squad was se nt to Main Street for Paul Bailey. He was
taken to Veterans. At 7:02p.m .. Pomeroy squad responded to Gold
Ridge Road. Sandy Banks was transported to Holzer.
On Wednesday at 5 53 a.m. , Rutland un1l went to Salem Street
and tOOk Freda Davi~ to Veterans. At 5:55 a.m., Syracuse squad
went to Scout Camp Road for Waid Spencer. He was tak en to Veterans.

--Meigs announcements-Dance planned
The Pomeroy Senior Cimcns
Dance Club will hold a dance Sat urday 8-11 pm . at the se nior CIU ·
t.ens ce nter Mus1 c will be by th e
Smokey Mountain Drifters and
Arthur Con nanl wtll be th e caller.
Publ1c inv!led . Bring snacks for th e
snack table.
Meeting time change
A special mee~ng of th e Salisbury Township Trustees will be
held at the town ship hall Thursday
ot 6 p.m (not at 7 p m as slated m
today's Com munity Calendar) to
appoml a new trustcc.
To perform
Tabitha w!IJ perform at Mt. Hermon Un1ted Brethren Chur ch.
Texas Road. Sunday at 7 30 p.m .
Pastor Robert Sanders invites the
public.
Drrby meeting
The Me1g s County Soap Box
Derby Assoc iation will meet Friday
at 7 p.m. at Pleaser's Re staurant.
Lodge lo meel
Shade River Lodge No. 453 F &amp;
AM will hold a special meClln g
Thursday at 730 p.m. wtth work 10

The Daily Sentinel
(liSPS 213 -960)
Publishrd rvrry afl.nnOCJn , Monday
throu,:h FndD)' , Ill Court St . Pnmeroy ,
Oh1 0 by t h~ Oh1u Vi! ll ry Pu hhd11nl(
Company / ~1ultu nl'd\M Inc , l'omt'roy,
Ohio 4~,769, l 'h. 9'r!-2 1 ~Jfi Srcoml cia .'-~
pa!UigC pa1d !il Pomeroy, O h1 u

th e EA degree. All masons invited.
RcfreshmcnLs served.
Country music night
Co untr y Mus1c Night will he
held at the Lottridge Communny
Ce nter Saturday fr om 6 p.m. to
mn.ln1ght. Rdrcshmcnls avmlablc .

Puhlic Jnvitcd.
Open meeling
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
w1ll hold an open meeting tonight
(Wedne sday) at 7:30p.m . at the
Rutland Church of Christ on New
L1 ma Roa d. Door prizes will be
awarded and refreshments served
after members di splay of abstract
mt crpretivc designs on the theme
"April in .. ." Mrs. Beuy Dean, a
studen t judge for the Ohio Associ.1·
ti on of Garden Clubs. will com ment on the exhibits and giv e
lrtSlructJonal lips on making good
des igns. The pob!Jc IS invi ted.
Hours changed
Th e Locomotion Tee n Dance
Cente r lias changed its hou rs. The
ce nter will now hold dances Irom 9
r m. 10 midnight. These hOJifS will
hem effec t unul fall.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMIS SIONS
None .
TUESDAY DISCHARGESCarol Ramsburg, Dora Calaway,
Jame s And erson. Clara Phillips.
Arthur Barr, and Roger Reeb.

Memb..r Th~ A.'I"' OCill led I :.Y.I"~~ - and thl'

Ohio

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The Da1ly Stnt1nrl.
Ponw:roy, OHio 4.1769

Ill

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motnr Rou te
One Week .................. . .............. . .$l.60
One Month . .....

One Year

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Subscrillrn not desi rinJ( lo pRy t he Ol rri ·
er JTUIY rem1t in advancl' dirr cl to Thr
Daily Sen t 1nel on 1. lhrf'r, 51 1 nr _12
month hMi1 . Ctl'ldit will Ue given camt"'r

uchweelt.
No Jubscriplinn• by mail prrmill.rd 1n
anu where h ome carrier service is
anilabl t. .
Mall Babwcriptioru;
IMide Meil(ll Co unty
13 Weeki...
26 WeekJ
52 WeekJ

. .... $21 .84
$43 .16
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Oul5ldc Meig5 County
13 Week..L
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26 Week s...
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52 Weclu....

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Ram fell over Washington D.C.
and Richmond, Va., early ttxlay as
deadly flood waters began receding
in western V1rginia and North Carolina.
Snow fell this morning in Bismarck, N.D., after more than a foot
of snow fell Tuesdav over the
lower Missouri Valley . '
The slow-mov10g storm th at
dumped up to 14 inches of snow tn
nonheastem Nebraska on Tuesday
was expected to move toward New
England today.
Ram was expected to be heavy
at times, with posst ble floodmg m
the Green and White MounU1ms.
Heavy rains Tuesday in western
North Carolina were blamed for
four fatalities.

Three people dted in Mont ·
gomery County in tralf1c accidents
blamed on the rain and flood s. and
a 3-year-old boy 10 Guilford Coun ty drowned when he fell into a
swo llen creek.
The rain also caused th e
Roanoke River m western Virginia
10 flood, washing out road s. forcmg
hundreds of people to ev acuate
their houses and killing a motorist
caught in a swollen creek. From 2
to 8 mches of rain fell before the
rains ended late in the evcmng.
Strong thunderstorms extended
Tuesday over Georva and the Carolmas, and showers associated with
a front crossing theo.w esl were
widely scattered from So uthern
Californ ia to we ste rn Montana .

Strong northwe sterly winds kep~
tempera tur es in the 30s in the
nonhem Plams.
Forecasters today called for con·
unued highs m the 30s in Minnesota and the Dakotas; the 40s in
Maine, Montana and Michigan; the
50s m New England , the Pac1fic
Nonhwcst and the Rocky Mountain
states; the 60s m New York state
and much of the Midwest; the 70s
in the mJd -AtlamJC states and CabfornJa; th e KOs in parts of the
Southwe st and much of Flor1da;
and the 90s 1n southw est Texas. the
Arizona deserts and the west coast
of Florida.
The hi gh for the nauon Tuesday
was 97 degrees at Palm Springs,
Cal if

·
·
:
:

University presidents, students head for Statehouse

W VA

Showers T-storms Ram

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Wet weather will remain through the weekend

OHIO Weather

Town wants to return the pork

By GOV. GEORGE \ '01"0\lCH
The envlfOnmemal movement "as bern on !Ius coon[!) "" years ago
today , on the frrst Eanh Day. So much has !l&lt;'t113Callltpllihed smce that
day, its hard to tmagme 11 was JUS! over two dec:a&lt;le; agu
Hundreds of open garbage dumps that foultd our .:nvuunmenc have
been replaced by modern. state-{)f-!he-an Landfills. Au pollunon alerts.
o~ce commonplace m our industnahzed aile'. ..., largely a tlung of the
past. Lalce Erie, declared "dead 20 )•ears ago. no• ;upporu a Lhrivmg
spor1.s fishing industry I am among the man~ Oluoons who ellJOY f1shmg
for walleye and perch on Lake Ene.
But the JOb of cleaning up our envtTOIIIDelll rs 1101 fiiUShed Today we
face more specialized challenges lite coo!J'Oilmg nu: coo131Dmants. and
properly disposing of solid and hazanlous ..~ AI the same ume. our
communities and employers are snugglmg "lib the axnbmcd effects of a
stagnant economy and expanding en~ requm:meniS. We need a
new approach, a "new envlfOnmemalism to suoce;:sfully meet those chal~~-

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, April 22, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stocks
Am Elc Power .................. 32 I I~
Ashland 0 !1 .. ..
... 32 3/4
AT&amp;T ...... ................. ..... 43 318
Bank One....... ...
...... .. .44 1/4
Bob Evans ... ................26 1!2
Charming Shop................ 2R l/4
C~ Ho ld mg ... ..... . ........... . J9
F cral Mogul. .. . ... ..17
GoodycarT&amp;R ................ 75 1/4
Key Centurion ............ ...... 19
Lands End ... ................ . .34 1/4
Limited Inc ..... ... . .. ....... .... 23 3/4
Multimedia Inc ...... ........ 26 1/2
Rax Restaurant.. ..... .......... I 1!2
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 1/2
Shoncy's Inc .................. 23 1/4
Star Bank ............. ........... .36
Wendy lnt'L.. ..................... J2
Wonhington Ind ....... ....... 23 518
Slock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

voting memb ers of universi ty
boards of lfUSlees were tQ meet pn vately with Voinov1ch and his rudes
today. Voinovich met privately
with univer sity pr es ident s la st
week.
William Napier, vice chancellor
of the Ohio Board of RegenL~. srud
the actions indicate increased concern about protecung htgher education from severe funding cuts.
" The student protest apparently
ts rea lly ga ining momentum on
carnpus. I think there 's gomg to be
a btg turnout for that. ... The y satd
they mi ght have as many as 500
students." Napier srud Tuesday .
" It 's been a long time smce
we've seen an issue hke thi s capture the anention of th e students,
but it makes se nse that 11 would
because they are th e ones on th e
rcceivmg end of the cuts," he srud.
Aronoff said the IS percent figure mentioned publtcly by
Voinovi ch should not be co nsi dered etched m stone.
"I n the first place. 1 th1nk it 's

premature because Marc h alone
brought in $141 mJI!JOn more than
ru,ticipated," Aronoff satd, referring to tax rece1pts for last month
that sub sta nti ally exceeded cs umates.
"From early mdica uon s, April
is foll owmg that pattern ," Aronoff
said.
"The executive office ha s
changed the me of the defictt at
leas t ftve tim es '" the last ftve
months. sometimes upwards, some~me s downwards, which , if nothing else, shows it 's an imprec ise
SCJCnCe," he Satd.
Aronoff said the Senate consistently approved spending more
money for education than e11her
Vmnovich or the House of Representauves proposed.
"The Ohio Senate ts proud of
Ohio' s higher education sys tem ,
and the cnu ca l role 11 play s in
Oh1o's economic develooment. We
will contmuc to do our best. even

--Area deaths--

Dis.solulion.s processed
Actmns for dJssolutJon of marriage have been filed in Meig s
County Common Pleas Court by
Robm L. Qu1ck and William G.
Quick. both of Rac1ne, an d by
Homer Steven Hill , Jr., Pomeroy
and Vick1 Lynn Htll, Pomeroy.
A dissolution has been granted
in the court to Laura Robyn Reiber
and Randall Duane Reiber.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) University presidents and thw stu ·
dents were drawn to the Statehouse
today 111 response to the prospect of
a 15 percent cut in state md to help
offset a proJected budget deficit.
Senate Pres ident Stanley
Aronoff. R -C mcinnau, called th e
prestdents together for a mee ting
with Senate leaders to discu ss cuts
that Gov . George Voinovi ch may
impose after July I.
The session was to prec ede a
noon rally by students fr!Jm cam·
pu ses around the state protes ting
the poss ibil1ly of cutbacks that
could cost higher cducauon S248
rrulhon, including $194 million in
subsidies to inili vidual msututions.
Such reductions , whi ch
Voinovich has said might be necessary to deal with a projected $576
m!IIJon budget deficit, would
increase the student share of college cos ts , close students out of
some courses needed for graduauon. and lead to employee layoffs.
Twe lv e students wh o arc non -

Alice Allen

Morgan McDaniel

Alice L. Russell Allen. 82. of
Sprtng Hill, Fla .. d1ed Monda y.
April 20. 1992.
She was the daughter of
Pomeroy Attorney Albert D. Russell and Harriet Merrick Ru ssell.
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
High school and Ohio State Uni versity and was a membe r of
Grace Episcopal Church.
Mrs . Allen was pre ce ded in
death by her hu sband . Wallho c
Allen. also a fanner Pomeroy resi dent.
She is survived by three children, a so n and daughter-in -law ,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Allen. Seattle, Wash .; two daughters, Mrs .
James (Janel) Drum. Muscatin,
Iowa, and Mrs. John (Patricia) Barwick, Spring H!ll, Fla., and two
grandchildren, Alice and Caroline
Drum .
Al so survivmg arc a brot her,
Albert Ru sse ll, Delaware, and a
sister, ~r s. Lawrence (Jean) Weed,
Hillsboro, and two nephew s.
Stephen Weed and Alben Russell.
Jr .. of Columbus.
There will be a memorial service 10 Spring Hill, Fla. and gravesid e se rvices in Springfield . Ohio
Saturday morning.

Morgan William "Morg" Mc Daniel, 70, of Point Pleasan~ d1ed
Wednesday, April 22, 1992, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital followin g
a long illness.
Born April 9, 1922 in Point
Pleasant, he was a son of the late
John and Mary (Forshe) McDaniel.
He was retired from the Kroger
Company in Cincinnati. OH, with
28 years service and was a member
of the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Point PleasanL
He was also preceded in death by
three SISters and five brothers.
Sumvors include his wife, Carol
(Bader) McDaniel of Point
Pleasant; two daughters and a son in-law, Kathleen and Thomas
Thompson of Ashton and Patricia
McDaniel or Point Plcasan~ tWO
sons, Everett R. McDaniel of Gallipolis and Kenneth McDaniel of
Akron, OH: six grandchildren and
five great-grandchildren.
Service will be held Friday at II
a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, Poml Pleasant, with Father
Melvin Avennan officiating . Burial
will follow at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home, Pomt Pleasant. on
Thursday, Apnl 23, from 7-9 p.m.
Rosary will be held at 7:30p.m.

Roberts implores working
class to beat President Bush
CHARLESTON, W.Va (APJ
- President Bush threw down the
gau ntlet to the worlung class when
he vetoed legislation that would
have rescued ailing health hencfil
funds for coal miners. a union offi cial said .
Ur11tcd Mrne Worker s Vrcc
President Cecil Rob erts said he
hopes the challenge is answered in
full force .
"George Bush by that single act
of vetoing that bill demon strated
what he think s of the working
clas s," Roberts said. "Hopefully
the working class will veto George
Bush in November."
Whtte House Deputy Press Secre tary Gary Foster said Bu sh
vetoed the overall bill " because it
Includ ed a tax hike that would have
hurt the country at a ume when
we 'rc just now coming out of a

recess ton .''

have been tl1 c croelcstthing for all .
1ncludmg miners," Foster sa1d .
Roberts spoke Tu esday at a
news con ference he ld at the state
Cap1 1ol by Rep. Nick Rahall . DW. Va. Rahall staged the meetin g to
promote h1s plan to help save the
funds.
Rahall's propo sa l 1S part of
national energy lcgJs lation that
likely will go to the full House for

Court news

in these lea n l1mes, to be sure that
h1gh er ed ucal!on ts treated fatrly
and will not take a disproportionate :
budget cut.'· he sa id .

Middleport court
Five were fined and three others
forfeited bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Danny W. Robin son, Jr. , Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
sq uealmg tires. and $50 and costs,
driving under suspension: Forest G.
Falls, Middleport, $ 10 and costs.
operating a motorcycle without ·
wearing a helmet; Darrell L. John son. Middleport, $100 and costs.
rumtshmg Intoxicating liquor to an
underage person; Larry E. Laudermill, Jr., Vinton , $25 and costs, dis·
orderly manner: and Judy Tyree ,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disor-'
dcrly manner.
Forfe11ing bonds were Robin G.
Corwm, B1dwell , $56, speeding;
James P. Wells. Long Bot!Dm, $60,
spmmn g tircs;Greg Johnson, Middleport, $1I0, disorder! y manner.

BJJl~l~

1¥-TiftHS \HUR~ ! ' ~UPIOAI
Ntr.IIT TU[ S[)IT

8 A~lW

JOHN ~DODMAN In TH£ BABE
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DOllY PARTON In ITRRI611 TAll

Marriage ]i('{·nses

SA1 •W N '~AT I tO.) ?0 {PG)

i 20 ,9 20 OAl l l

Marriage lic enses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Robert Dale Butcher, 33,
Pomeroy, and Amta Jo Aetker. 26,
Pomeroy; and to Roger Dale Shoemaker , 44, and Anna Jo
Williamson, 24, both of Cheshire.

IIITHDUIN
I 00.1 10 0• 11 1

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WHITI MIN CRN'T JUMP
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S AT ; ~u~ ~111111 ~ I tO . l 00 lPG)

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105 Butternut

Pomeroy, Ohio

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a vol e so metime thrs summer .

I ' nd cr h1 s plan. $50 million in
,, ,], rLst earnings each year would

,,, trans ferred from the Abandoned
rvlinc Rec lamation Program 10 the
rcurcd miners' benefit funds .

His measu re also would prolong
hy 15 years the life of the Aban doned Mine Reclamation program .
which re stores scarred landscape
left by now -defunct coal co mpa nie s. The program curr ently is
sc heduled to end m 1995.

" To have raised taxes would

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WALLPAPER AND BLIND SHOP
MEMORIAL BR IDGE APPROACH ON GARFIELD AVE.,
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

MON. THRU FRI. 9·8
SAT. 9·5 SUN. 1·5

428•1 06S

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, April 22, 1992
Page-4

Cincinnati beats L.A. Dodgers 4-3 in tension-packed climate
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ Enc They empued agam m l.he top of for hi.s first save. It was his third
Davis has seen one of baseball"s the nml.h, when Bip Roberts took outing si nce coming off the dishonest rivalnes from both srdes. accption lD a Tun Crews p1tch that abled hst last week.
and it docsn 't look any different 10 got too close.
The ,·ictory went to Scott
S~rawberry had to be restrained
him from lhe Oilier dugout.
Ruskin (1-0), who came in with
"No mauer what lhe standmgs when he tried to gel 10 Charlton. 1wo out m the Sl:\th and retired
are. or what lhe arcumstanees are. who thought Slr3wberry overreact- Sci=ia on one pitch .
or what pan of the season 11 rs. ed.
Billy Hatcher drove in two runs
"Darryl's a great hruer. and I've wrl.h a smgle and a sacnfice ny,
tliese two teams go alrl for blood.··
the form er Cinc~nnau Reds ou t- got to put a lillie b11 exrra on l.hc and Paul O'Neill's first-innrn g
fielder sard Tuesday mght af!Cr hiS bal llD get h1m out," CharliDn sajd _ groundout drove in l.he other. All
ol d team beat the Los Angeles "But 11 w~'t up 31 his head_ The th ree Dodgers run s m the srxth
Dodger.; 4-3 in a game that lWICC fastbaU was inSide and 11 hit him .
were charged to sraner Chris Ham " I can't stop throwing inside . mond, as Strawberry and Juan
threa!Cncd to erupt into a brawl.
" That 's JUSt the tradruon that It's not a situation where I'm go~ng Samuel sa ndwi ched run -sco nng
these two teams have,'' Davrs S3Jd. 10 hll hrm on purpose. If r d ha,·e infrcld hits around a sacnf1ce ny by
"This is kind of tough for me . I been throwing ar him right there, Davis.
was on lhe other side last year, and I'd tell him."
Elsewhere In the National
Charlton ~tteived a seven-game League. it was Pmsburgh 8, Monnow I'm on this side. I'm kind of
suspe nsion last September after treal 7; Philadelphia 7, Chicago S:
confused a liule bit."
Dodgers· !Cmper" Oared when a admimng he delibcra!Cly threw at f'ew York 4, SL Lours 2; and San
fastball from Cinc~nnau rehever Dodger catcher Milc.e SCiascia
Diego 4 , Atlanta 2.
DaviS, a teammate of Charlton 's
Norm Charlton hit Darryl Srraw Pirates 8, Expos 7
berry on th e right elbow. The for four years before coming to lhe
Despite losing Bobby Bonilla,
Dodger slugger took a few steps Dodgers in the offseason, defended
toward the mound before he was Charlton but also sympalluzed wrth
intercepted by plate umpire Joe Strawberry, one of his clo ses t
fnends.
West and call:her Joe Oliver.
"Norm doesn't throw 31 guys."
" We weren ' t trying 10 do any Davis
sard. "He's one of those
thing intentionally rn that s• tua guys
that
pitches msrde . and that
uon ," Ohver said. " You've got
a
sit
uatiOn where Darryl
was
Eric Davis on ded wil.h one out.
and you're nor going to go and do thought Norm was throwing at
anyl.hing like tluL But Darryl's a h1m."
After Roberts broke a 3-3 tre
compeutor and be didn 'r like 11, so
w1th
an RBI single m lhe seventh
you can't blame hrm for standing
off
loser
Kevin Gross (fl-2), Chari·
up for himself."
ron
prtched
two scoreless innings
Both benches and bullpens emptied, but no punches were l.hrown. and Rob Dibble piu:hed l.he ninth

John Smiley and Bill Landrum, the
PiiLsburgh Pirates haven't lost lhw
wmnUJg ways.

Andy Van Slyke's two -run
Lripl e highlighted a five-run first
inn1ng and the Pirates held off a
late rally to beat Montreal 8-7
Tuesday night.
The Pirates. who have won the
last two NL East titles, sent nrne
men to the plate in lhe frrsL
"The Pirates arc walking up
there fearles s and aggressive,"
Montreal manager Tom Runnells

1ng. But after Larry Walt&lt;r
grounded out and W a.lbdr ~!.:d.
Mason g01 hiS thml '"''' b) gromg
Marquis Gnssom on a tlyouL
Vicente Palacros (l~ J thr&lt;"
two scoreless innings ror 1be

Pirates. He took ov"' from &lt;l3t1&lt;r
Dcnn y Neagle in the frhh alitt the
Ex!XJS gO! runncrs em frrst ..t Sttond. Neagle remainod ~ in

the maJOr leagues after 10 appe.arances. seven w1th the Minnesota
Twms In 1991.
Phill~s 7, Cubs 5
At ChiCago, pinch-h111er Wally
Backman broke a IOth-mning tie
wrth a two-run si ngle as the
P!uladelphia Ph1ll1CS rallied to halt
dk:ir srx- gamc k&gt;sing slfeak .
NL

said.

TrlUhng 8-3 af!Cr seven innings,
Montreal closed to 8· 5 in the eighth
on homers by Tim Wallach and
RICk Cerone off Jerry Don Gleaton.
Ivan Calderdon h1l a two -run
homer wil.h one out in the ninth, the
first runs given up by Roger Mason
in 19 2/3 innings and 14 appear ances since l.he stan of spring train·

-1 :07 60. In the 800 meter , Marc
\lr chigan was fourth at 1:57 .40.
Bnan Brelsford finished l.he 400
mete r m 50.38 seconds, followed
by teammate Bryan Specht in 52.75
&lt;cconds.
The Redmr" •n rle relay team
.. as iourth m 3:c5.70
Kim Sowers was second rn the
women's long JUmp at 17 feet. l 1/:' mches, and placed founh in the
tnplc Jump w11.h a distance of 32
fee t. 6-l/4 1nches. Bonnrc Evans
comp leted the 3000 m. ' · r in
11 :01.70 for mth place, "'"' fm•shed sevenl.h m the 1500 meter at
5· 1?&gt; .

Both team s wrll neu compete
Saturday rn the Dislrict22 Olampi onshrps 31 Cedarville

Scoreboard
C lu•l••d (Otto 1-1 ) at Tor0111a
~'" t-1)., 1:35 ,...
Balumon:: {M.!aS itl l 1 -0) 11 K.annt

In the majors...
!'tiA llO~A.L UACl"£

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NBA playoff slate

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.11 Oucas o.. &amp; p.m
Dreu-r.l .11 l'ew Y!d.. 8 p m

Mam.t

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Tuesdn's~

LA Chpprn at Uu.h. 10 'II p m
~ Anllnio II Phoaul. I 0 J0 p m

~.llodclpin• 7. ~5. 10 -p

Stanley Cup
playoff action

Plta~fl.h I. Mom-ea]1
~e- Yod. 4. St Low 2
San Franc:aoo 6. I~ 2
s..n ~M«o 4 , Au...ru 2
Cinfinnati 4, Lol A...,W. J

T uesda ,-·s srorts

M e.~ tiel! 5. H&amp;nfont 2. MorMI&amp;l kads

Todal"'s games

Ph .J oddph 1.1 ·1 ~ u : ho: h o d 0 ~ : 1\
[~h.J C..I!!O (B(Jf,bc 1-0). J 2IJ? m
A·. hnu (Gbune] 0 \ 11 San D'(K O
(Hunt 0 l) .405pm

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(1) \hr'!JnU \ 1).1 JS p m
St Lnu11 (Tr: •k1 bu1y l 0) 11 'c•
Yor:k(Ccncl 1) 740pm.
S•n fnncls«l (Dowm fJ ?1 o: I Lo..JlDr'
(1 lllJTUICh 1- 2).1 3~ pm
Cl•(ln•all {lroWlli•l 2-1 l at L.-

4ntrie1 fR. M&amp;l"titwl: t-1 ).

Thursday's v.m~
U::uu ((nbomt 1-m ..11 sc(S•hc:lhap 0- 2). I -60 p.m
((uullo 0-0),

tenet 2 0
BoQ.on

3. Bu.ff alo 2. aT . 5aiC3 uod I

"ic• Jav:.- 7. "i Y R....np l 'C"ICI
ned I 1
Yt.' Ul'unJUlfl 6. 1'\LUbu~ 2 W uhJnA
lO". lc;~~dJ la'\&lt;el. l 0

Wtdnf"sday"s gamr_or;;
Drulllt

II~ .

l-05pm
Q1,uso at St Low.&amp;. I 3S p m

WltlrupC&amp;. 9 15 pm
M&amp;dcJ It f..dmcnon. 9 3~ p :n

1/af"l("ouw:r at

t....c.

••-Js p.m.

s~

PruJ..Gdpha

.)«wy M Clorwia..... 7:.3f p.a.
lndiB\I 11 &amp;-.. I p.m.
U L..akm .11 Pmland. I0 30 p m
Suule • Goldcr1 SLate.. I 0 30 p m

Friday's games

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Deu.:.ir (Titi.M'I.I 0-1) at Teu.J (Bmwn

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....; Y RMIKtt~ at New ICD.CJ. 1 3~ r m

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11 ~ 1 ~

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Ma~~ at Hartford. 1 '~ pm
Ro.uvl 11 R ufTtlo. 1 ~5 p m

{Grunr: I ! l 11 Oue~go

2 20 p.m

Plnshutpl (L Stnnh ) 0'1 •I \4.-r.::'!:..l l
(Gordna I 1). 1 35pm

Transactions
BasebaU

A~ERICA\

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Ch.or: Gu.tllcn . shortstop. on the 1~ - d•y
d1ubled lt1t Reulled Esteb1n Beltre.
1ho!uwp, rrmn Vancou'lf"Q of Uw P.af.Co:.st La.~

...rw

li B'\alla~

OAKLAf-roTI AHll.EllCS - Pl.ccd
Scoo Bro~na. ullidda . on the l 5--day du.
ablcd ~. l"tt.rotctJYt: 1o Apnlll Actlv..l\
cd Rmdy Re~dy . ltlfidder. from the I ~
.U J duablcd ilsL
TEXAS RA~GERS - De11V'11od

St.e"il! Fu~ovut. p11cht:r. for uapunent
Purdaued the conlnct of Dous 01vu .
Cl tchc r , from Oll•homa C•IJ' of tht:

,._,....._

CJ!'IiCTNNA n J EDS - Placed JOM
llja. plkht'r , on lh• IS-day dl18blf'd

Tonll'l•l, Clt'nb.d l
New Yoct 4. Oacqo J
[)eaott 4. Teus 2
BallltnCft 10. ~ Gt 7 •
Califomia ], Oltland 2

IMl, rdr"Mdlvt lo "pril II. P'llrchutd
llw ~D'.ct ol Gerontmo Berra&amp;. evl ftdder, fran! S•hw4Ut of U. Allltf"kan

Apocl•tlo11. leullf'd St••e fMt•r ,
plldw, fron~ Nuh•iUe. OptiGMdl jdl'
Br.ut~~~ , l•llddtr,IO SMihrillt..

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caJilonti• (fialq 0-0) II Oa.tlaed
(Motft l.(J), l :U p1118GI\Gil (Qc:mtnl 2- 1) II MaJwM.l.k«

T•o•••

New Yolk (S I m 2-1) • 0...C0
~ 1-1~ lolS P"'Bahiraore (Suw:liflc 2-1) a t l..1n.Lil

Citr (M..nr.:w a-n.•:nr~
Dctreil (Ahlrelll 0-2 &amp;l Te.ua ('Bohanatl O.(J).I:3S £A
Minnesota (Inteter 2-D) a t Sallie

(}hraloni ·1).10:0Sp.ID-

Tbunday'spma
(V.... 0-2). r . t i l - (Baaio0-1).2:15~
MiafteloU {Eridltltl 0-1) .. Sank
~nn l ·Zl. l:l.51'.1D.

BaskttbaU
N•U.af Bubtbllll "-ddU.
NBA - Fmed lnciwJa rorward O.k
Dnu S1.000 far I fl11nrn dbow ill •
a~me April 17; P'boati• CCIIItt A.adn:•
Lanl St j(l) , ___ iruti.lbn&amp; I fi&amp;N; Scaak
rorward Sh ..1wn l.anp S2.. 000; Sa1Lie
JWird Guy PIJ'Ulll $1.000; ar~d Se.ulc
KU~rd I:lMa Bai'JW S5DO for the lavvt~
\he bad! dunnJ I pmc: April 14

Football
N•tklul roo~.b.n L..upe
HOl.STilN 01l.J'l!S - S'V"" B....
M.:Ocwdl. ufcry. to 1 mulu-yur CUI ·
tract. MCI Gary WdJmun, w1dc ~

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - S;p...d
Ouml Mili!&lt; ""' IC&lt;m n...np.... olor~1WC tw:ts; ~~ SJ~~~~Inlki.

dctcnlift
end, and Georce Hemina••J. runnint
lod.

Toronto beats Cleveland 2-1;
ChiSox's Guillen out for year
Red Sox 3, Brewers I ~ M1ke Gardiner (2·0)
allowed two hits in se ven innings and Jody Reed sin·
gled in the go-ahead run in the eighth off James
Austin (1-1) at Milwaukee.
Gardiner str uck out a carc cr-h•gh nine, whil e
Danny Darwrn got his fir st save S1ncc 1990.
Boston, held hitless for 5 2/3 .nnings hy Ricky
Bones. tied th e score 1n the sevenlh on Jack Clark's
run -scoring grounder off Mike Fcners, Clark's first
RBI thi s season.
Orioles 10, Royals 4 ~ Brady Anderson tripled
twice in a game for the second time within a week,
and visilmg BalLimore sent Kansas City to its 12lh
loss in 13 games.
Jose Mesa (I -I) gave up three runs and eight hits
m 6 2/3 innings for his third victory in 18 sLarts.
Mark Gubic7.a (0 -2) was lagged for seve n run s
and nine hits in 3 2/3 innings for Kansas Cny , off Ul
1he worst start in franchise history.
Angels J, Alhletic.s 2- Lee Stevens and Rene
Go nz ale s homered and Julio Valera pitched four
innings of one- hit relief as visiting California stopped
a 10-gamc lo si ng srrcak agarnst Oakland .
Valera (1 -1) replaced Don Robinson in the fiflh
after Robmson left wnh a sore left hip. Bryan Harvey
struck oulthe side in the ninth for his fourl.h sa ve.
Dave Stewart (1 -1) gave up three run s and five
hiLS in six-plus innings. He walked six, including four
in the Lhird inning.
Twins 5, Mariners 2 ~ Rookie Pat Mahomcs (I·
0), at age 21 Lhc younge st starting pitcher 111 the
Amencan League, got his first big league victory by
allowing one run in six inn ings as visiting Minnesota
stopped a three -game losing srreak.
Gene Larkin hit a three-ru n hom er and Chuck
Knoblauch h1 t h1 s second ca ree r home run for the
Twins, who won for ju st th e second tim e in nine
gam es
_
R1ck Aguilera got fou r ou" for hiS tlwd sav e .
Rich Delucw (1-2) gave up all liV e run s and e1ght
hits in fiv e innin gs.

By The Associated Press
Jack Morris just keeps wi nning, and so do the
Toronto Blue Jays.
Morris pitched a five -hitt er for Ins seco nd complele game as the Blue Jays bea t Cleve land 2-1 Tuesday mght for their 13th consec uD vc v1CIOry over the
lndion s.
Morri s, who struck out c1ght and wa lked none,

mcrcased his record against Clev el and to 30-10.
" I got them a few times over the yc:rrs when !hey
weren't quile so good a club," MorriS said "This
one is saLisfying because lh cy're a bcncr team now."
RoberlD Alomar homered off Dcnn is Cook (0 -2)
after Devon White was hit by a pitch . The Indians
lost th eir eighl.h smught in Sky Dome.
"The mistake was not the pitch to Alomar," Cook
said . "It was hilling White . That's one too m:tn y
miStakes against a club hke Toronto."
In o th er games, New York beat Chi cago 4-3.
Detroit bc.11 Texas 4-2, Boston bcal Milw aukee 3- 1,
Baltimore bear Kansas City 10-4. Ca lifornra bea t
Oak land 'l-2 and MinnesoLa heal Seattl e S- 2
Yankees 4, White Sox J ~ Ouic Guillen, the
lhrce-tim c All -Star shortstop on the White Sox, tore
1wo li gaments in a ninth -innmg col li sion wah left
fielder Trm Ramcs al Comiskey Park and will miss
the rest of the season.
"Gu1llcn's injury resulted in two torn ligamenls
due to hyperexten sion of hi s righl knee," sa1 d Dr.
Scou Price, who was scheduled to perform arthrosc opic surgery today along with Dr. James
Roscardin.
Tim Leary (2-0) was the wrnner and Steve Farr
go t hi s second save. Kirk McCaskill (1 -2) gave up
four runs and seven hits in srx inmngs, inc luding a
two-run single by Robeno KeUy.
Tigers 4, Rangers 2 ~ Cecil Fielder hit a twO·
run homer in the first inning and drove in three runs
as v1siting Detroit stopped a four-game losing srrcak .
Bill Gullickson (2 -2) allowed one run and five hiLS
in seven innings and Mike Henneman got six outs for
hi s seco nd save. Bobhy W111 ( 1-2 ) was Jhe loser

For Renee Peck. di stan ce runner
fo r the Univers ity of Ri o Gra11dc
women's track team, th e bigger th e
compeuu on gets. the better she pe rforms.
Peck, a five -time NAJA All American

1n runnmg events, fm -

•shed 21st out of 60 runners co mpeting in the Mount SAC (Sa n
Antonio College) Relays al Wal ·
nut, Calif, last weekend . Compet ing in th e 5000 meter event , she
f1nrshed m 18:07.
In the three years she has n1n for

Meigs girls dump Alexander 14-0
By DA. VE IVJUU.S
Sentinrl CG 1 tsf • 18 at
Chrissy Weaver and Tnca Ban
slammed l.hird-mmng lloiDe rum to
pace the the Marauder.; sroml mr
MAIDENS SCORES~ Southern's Christi Maidens (right)
runs
m l.he mning en rome 10 a l.t-{)
scores standing up before Kyger Creek catcher Autumn Burnell
wm
over
Al exander tn TVC sohcan make the Lag in the fourth inning of Game 2 of Monday's SV AC
ball
acuon
Monday e-•enmg_
softball doubleheader at Cbesbire, which Southern woo 14-10.
The
win
gives the MaJaden an
Maidens came home on a single by Marcy Hill. (OVP photo by G.
R
-0
mark
on
the season_
Spencer Osborne)
Me1gs JUmped out to a 3~ lead
at the end of the first llliiJitg ..J H&gt;crcased l.he lead to 5.{) 31 tbc Old ol'
1he second 1nnmg The gamt ""'
call ed after the fifth lflflfD!; ~, llr
10-run rule. The loss "'35 onh llr
Soul.hern·s softball team swept followed by rcachmg on an error second of the year 1n TVC ~, 1111
bol.h ends of Its doubleheader Mon - by third base man McCoy . But Aloandcr , w1th bol.h 1oss1e&lt; rom day against Kyger Creek wil.h 17- Kemper returned and lined out to mg at lhe hands of the Mar:ludl:n
Caldwell to end the fr.IJJle.
11 and 14- 10 vrctones.
The Tornadoes' fourth started
Sophomore Jodr Caldwell, who
when
Aimc Mill s reached on an erp•cked up the w1ns for the Tornaror
by
Will•ams m nght f1eld .
does (5-5 overall), slfuck out fiv e
By DA. VE HARRIS
Ohlinge
r walked before McCoy
and walked nine 1n lhe first game
Sentinel
Correspoeckst
before sinking out three and walk - doubled 10 sc or e Mills and
The Me•gs Mara~ er=d 3
1ng nme in the second conlcst. JLJ - Ohlinger and g1vc Southern a 6-5 : -I de fie n by scoong rm, nm m
n•or Luc1ana Scott. th e v1c11m in lead _But Rae me wasn't done .
Amber Cumm gs reached on an Ihe f1f th rnnmg off fonna ram both deCISIOnS, SlTUCk OUll.hree and
mate Shawn Hamon and hdd m 10
walked I~ rn the opener befo re emor by Conkle at shoostop. which ro st a 4 ·) ,..._10 over '\')SUing
t1ghtc ning up her act m the mght - allowed McCoy 10 &lt;&gt;Core Maidens Ale&gt;ander 1n Tri-Valky Coofa cap wuh sn-cn K s and f1vc fre e walked before Marcy Hill smglcd r ncc baseball ac:uon Monda.&gt; _
10 score Cummgs and Ma1d ens.
pJ.SSCS .
The win was l.he seoorkl n ·c
Fn" -gome hmm for Southern Then Ca ldw ell grounded mto a \'ICtory m a row for the~
"'ere Chnsu Mardcns ( 1-2), Cald- fielder's choice ID Scott that reurcd
"' Meigs defeated Fedcrlll H&lt;rlrng
"cll c 1-) ), Jcss1ka Codner and Am - Caldwell and allowed Hdlto score lcL'l Thursday .
J•cr Oh lin ge r (bo th 1-4). a nd Codner popped out to Drummond
M•kc Vance. 1hc Junror lchM•chclle McCoy (1-5, second -m- at seco nd hasc. Marcy Mathews hJndcr who prded up the """ r..
mng gnnd slam). KC' s hitters were si ngled, but "'·as st rttnd crl when ZJ nc Beegle's Marauders. SIJ'lJ(t
Scou (1-1). M1chellc Conkle. An- Mills struck our.
tlU I ~IX, waJkcd three .:md SiC31tred
.Th e Tornadoe s· offense was 1hrcr hil s 1n gmng th(' roult: _
drea Hud son. Jcnn1fer Neal and
Alic1a Ward (a ll 1-4). and Sally d'!ive n by Codner (2 4 ). H:~mon . who rransfmed to AkunCaldwcll,Cumi ngs and Marcy H1ll tlcr for 1h 1s ~c h oo l year. P""t up
Saunders r 1-5)
Seco nd game ~ Southern (all 2-S). Heather H1ll (1-3) and -..c \ c n hll~ and struck oul .10
needed Its su -run msurrection in
McCoy (1-4). The Bobcats' h1Ucrs un~nown number to p1ck up Ilk:
the fourth 1nmng to shake Ky ger' s were Nance (~·3). Conkle and In\\
f1ve -run rally 1n the seco nd that Scull (both 1-1). Drummond (1-4 )
The Marauders had three of
govc the Bobcats a 5-4 lead thai and Burnell (1-5 )
then hrLS m l.hc fifth mmng UJCiudheld up for one scoreless mmng.
Southern will host North Gall'" '".c RBI smgles by Jim Pullms and
The Bobcats' second sta rted today and play Hannan Trace at \lik e Welch and a Sparun CfTIJI' _
when Paula Kemper reached on an Merce rville Fnday. Kyger Creek Gary Adams also had a smgle 1n
e rr or by shortstop Marcy Hrll . (2 -6. 1-S'i will pl ay Hannan Trace the mning.
Rachacl Polcyn walked before Jodi at Merce rville 10day and North
Joc McElroy and Adams lod the
Nance's smgle scored Kemper and Galli a at Bidwell -Porter Elemen Polcyn . Denise William s struck tary Friday.
out. but Scali singled and Tanya Inning totals-first game
Drummond walked During Au - Southern .... ... 052301 6 - 17- 5-6
tumn Burnell' s at-bat, Nanc e Kygcr Creck..OOO 631 I - II - 6-~
scored on a wild pllch before BurWP- Caldwell
LP ~ Scoll
ne ll 's Single sco red Scott and
Drummond. llowcver. Burren was Inning totals-second game
thrown out on a rundown play be- Southern ....... 220630 I ~ 14 -10-5
Ky ger Crcck .. OSO 200 3 - 10- 6-6
tv.een flm and second
W P ~ Caldwell
Conkle kept the inning alive
LP~Scou
wllh a single, and Sally Saunders

Southern girls capture wins
in doubleheader vs. KCHS

We:~vcr led the Marauders at !.he
p!J.te with l.he home run , a double
and a smgle to go along with five
RBls. Mary Compston added a sin ~1&lt; and a double and four RBls,
:;, lule Baer added her home rur and
3 double.
Tara Gerlach picked up lhe w1n
for the Marauders, while Kris
G1lkey p1cked up the loss for
Ak.,andcr.
Mergs will host Athens on
Wednesday evcnm g
lna.ing totals
Ahandcr.. .... ...OOO 00 ~ 0- 5.1
'!ergs .
. .. 329 00 ~ 14 - 10-1
Tara G~rlach !Yf) and G~ngcr Fmd-

Meigs hands Alexander 4-3 loss
\ tJr:IUders al the p late wni1 Lwo
'r nd~s

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IIWOPDnR
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Complete line of Bedding
and Vegetable Plants,
Blooming and Foliage
Hanging Baskets, Large
Selection of Shrubbery
and Trees.
Open O.ily I Lrn. to S p.m.

SYRACUSE

992-5776

ON lHE 'T IIIIIIDDUPORT

BLACK LUNG CLINIC
Available for anyone with
respiratory problems and a
qualifying history of coal-related
employment.
Based at the Sycamore Street
Occupational Health and
Rehabilitation Center in Gallipolis.

446·5244

MIDDIEPOIT, OHIO
•SHOP FRIDAY "Til&amp;

SHOP LOCALLY

Sports briefs

rebou nd s, was nam ed rook 1c ol t.h c

month .
TROPHY WINNERS -The Middleport Recreation Depart ment recently recognized several participants in its Youth Bowling
League at a banquet at the Pleasers restaurant in Pomeroy. In
front are (L·R) Ginger Darst (total pins champion, leading high
series bowler), Breyden Haptonstall (most improved bowler) and
Amanda Neece (second in total pins and series bowling). Behind
them are Josh Price and Robbie Card (third in total pins).

NL action ... (Continued from Page

CLOTHING

eve nt winner in 1987.
Will e}. the Co-Distncl 22
Coac h of the Year in 1989, rec ruit ed Pe ck for the Rio Grande pro gram. This season, he and Assi stant
Coach Eddie Atkin son have
worked to help Peck bcncr her past
performances.
Peck's Ali -Amcncan cilal10n s
from th e NA!A 1n (ross cu untr..,.·
an d track have outdi stan ce d 1h c
previous number, four, held by two
veteran s of Willey 's pro grJm :
Mark Pierson of Lynchburg, who
graduated in 1987. and Mary
Dow ler of Ja ckso n, who completed
her cclucauo n at R1o Grand e 1n
I9R9 .
llaskclball
NEW YORK (AP) ~ The 1\0i\
fined f1vc players a total of $7,000
for skmni shc s tha t took place 111
two game s during the f1n:U week of
the regular seaso n
Dale Davis of lnd1ana wets fm cd
S2, 000 for th r ow~ng what wa s
dcscrihecl J.S " a nagranl elbow" 10
the back of the hc:rd of Cleveland 's
Hen ry James on Friday n1ght
Andrew Lang of Phocnrx w&lt;J.s fm ed
$1,500 for lnii iJIIO g a f1ght Willi
Seat~e's Ricky P• ercc last Tuesday
ni ght. Three Seattl e players were
also rtncd ~ Shaw n Kemp S2,000;
Gary Payton , S 1,000 and Dana
Barros $5 00 .
Basketball
r-IEW YORK (A P) ~ Glen RICe
of M1am1, who averaged 25 .6
poi nts and S.X rebound s 1n April .
wa s nam ed NBA pla ye r o l th e
month. S~1ccy Augmon of Al lan"'·
who averaged 19.6 p01n1 s and ld

.,: (tnfacnce game on Wedne sday

Pvhl01ary /Respiratory Rehabi&amp;tation

Federal/Ohio Dept. of Health Funded

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS ~ The Middleport Recreation Depart·
menl recently recognized its Youth Bowling League's 199I-92
champion team, composed of Josh Price, Ginger Darst and Robbie
Ca rd (L· R), at a banquet at the Plea.sers rest.aurant in Pomeroy.

eac h.
Aleundcr scored once in th e
... c;:-c ond 1fln1ng, but M eigs ca me
!Jo&lt;i wrth a tally •n 1t.s half of l.he
lramc before the Spartans scored
Jg;l m m l.he l.hrrd 10 lead 2-I.
Bo th teams co mmillcd four
.:. rror'i.
\ k1gs will host Athens 1n a non -

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Bob Willey's cross co untry and
trac k program s at Rio Grande, Peck
has proven to be the backbone of
th e running program and has con IISICntly qual1fied for national com pctirion Earlier lhi s season, she
qual•fi ctl fur th e NAJA Tra ck
Nal•onals, se t for May 21-23 at
Abbotsford, Rri11sh Columbia
Seg men ts of the relays were
taped for ESP!\, to he shown th iS
Sa turday, Will ey sa1 d.
A JUn ior, Peck is the daughter of
Karl and Mary Peck of Balumore ,
Ohio, and IS a 1989 graduate of
Liben y Union High School. While
in high sc hool, she competed in lhc
state lrack. tournament and was an

b
~' Gilkey (L) and An gie Russell

N.rioft.a l.a.pr

Tuesdafs !iCOrtS

CI•Yd••• CN•ul· l) •t
(,......, 7'.35,.-.

Pl1ced

Pat Kc.lly.ICICOI'Id buan..~n. ~m the 15 -·.:by
dtubled bat Ra:alled Dave S!lvr:atn.
ll'lorutop, hun CoJumbu1 tl !he ln~

~

8odM 3. Md•Jolilce I

(W-I-1),1c05 ...,_

"fORK YANKEES

KEEPING CONTltOL of dor sitatioll during Tuesday night's
:'-lalional League p.r lldwus 1H CiDrinaati Reds and lhe host
L.A. Dodgers is bomr platr . .pin .1« West (center), who separates the Dodgrrs' Darryt Slrnto.n]r aod Rrds backstop Joe Oliv·
er while li.eeping Strawlikuy fna charging the pitcher's mound
after pitcher Norm Cb.U. lrit Slnwberry with a pitch in the
eighth inning. ( A.l')

5

The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Peck places 21st in Mount SAC Relays

Rio runners compete at WVU
Universrty of R10 Grande track
at hletes pos!Cd some n01able performances, mcluding tbc &lt;Stablishment of a new school reconl in lhe
Coca-Cola ClassiC at west Virgirua
Univcrsi I)' over lhe weekend.
T1m Murphy , a senior from
Za nesville and the men's team
leader in hurdling events, fmished
second m lhe llfl-merer !ugh hur·
dies wil.h a ume of 14 .80 seconds,
selling a new school stan&lt;1.•rd.
In other men 's even!&gt;. Chad
Cannon was fourth rn the long
Ju mp at 21 feet, 7-1/4 inches, and
set a time of 40 feet, S-1/2 inches
•n the mplc Jump.
Running events saw CllJd Ben·
son finish third in the 30o ~I metcr
run a1 9:57.83, while Mark Clme
was six th in Lhe 1500 meter al

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

With the score 11ed at 4,
Philadelphia got a leadoff single in
the lOth from John Kruk . Heath cliff Slocumb (0-1) walked Darren
Daulton, Julio Peguero sac rificed
and Ruben Amaro was walked
intentionally, loading Lhe bases.
Backman, batun~ for K1m
Batiste, hit a line drive off
Slocumb's leg and the ball bounced
into left field. Amaro IDok third on
me play and scored on Jim Lmde man's groundoul. Mitch Williams
got the victory in his first decision
despite allowing a game-tying RBI
single Ul Hector Villanueva in th e
ninth.
Mets 4, Cardinals 2
At New York , Willie Randolph
broke a sixl.h-inning tic with a two run double and Dwight Gooden
piu:hed seven srrong innings for the
Mcts.
It was Gooden's longe st stint in
l.hree stariS thi s seaso n as he contin -

4)

ued a comeback from rotalor cuff
surgery last September. He gave up
two runs on five hiLs , walked fnur
and SlTUCk OUI three . Good en (2- 1)
pitched 6 2[3 mnings in the McLs'
home opener on April IO againSI
Montreal and six innings ag ainst
Philadelphia on April IS .
Padres 4, Braves 2
AI San Diego, Fred McGriff hit
his fifth homer as the Padres
snapped a five -game losmg slfeak.
The Padres scored three runs on
10 hils off Mike Bielecki (1 -2)
before he was forced out of the
game in l.he ftflh after being hit in
the left knee by a line drive by
Tony Gwynn. Bielecki's sllllus will
be determined following tests.
Winner Rich Rodriguez (I -I)
entered the game wil.h one out in
the second after stariCr Dave Eiland
was forced to leave with back
spasms.

Tennis
MOI\TE CARL O, Mon aco
(AP) ~ Carl -Uwe Steeb or Ger many upset second-see ded Pete

Sam pras of th e United States 6-3,
6-4 and Magnus Larsson of Swc rlcn defeated sixth -seerlerl Pc tr
Korda of Czechos lovakia o-3. 6-3
'" th e second round of th e Mont e
Car lo Open.

lly RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP) ~To
th ose who crii1 C1ze Ohio SLate's
play-ca ll1ng and gro und -oncntcd
attack, nc w offensive coordinator
Joe Hollis says: Stay tuned.
At Ohio State. spn ng promrscs
of fl ea-fl ickers and bomb s frequently tum to autumn's off-tac:klc
play and the fullback div e. But
HolliS, promoted to succeed Ell iot
Uzelac. says Oh1o Stale w1U lTy to
open lh c door on offense.
"You'll sec a difference in playcalling and in se ts ," said HolliS .
who coac hed on th e offenSive lme
la s1 season. " We're go mg to he
more diversified.
''We wnnt to be more unpr c-

dictah lc; we ARE go ~ng to be more
unprcrl ICtablc .''
Last year. the Buck.cycs ran on
75 percent of their plays dunng ~·c
regu lar season.

Th e personnel rn1ght dic tate a
11 milar :l -to-1 rati o ol run s 10 pa"cs th1 ~ sc a~on . Robert Sm Hh. the
19'!0 JJ •g Te n Conference freshman
of the year who sat out last season
in a dispute ov er acadcmtc s . 1s
hack . The quarterbacks arc Kirk
ll erhslTCII . who complete&lt;~ JUSt 14
of .12 passes '" the 24 -17 Hall of
J:amc llowl Joss to Syracuse, and
rcdshirt fres hm an Bob Hoy•n g,
who has never take n a snap 1n a
coll ege game.
llollis blam es he&lt;~d coJch John
Cooper' s shaky con tract st.atus last
se ason ~ he was co mplctmg Lhc
fourth year ol 3 five-year co ntr~KI
- for last ye ar' s di sdain of the
p:tss.
" lthmk th e No. I reason •s thai
we didn ' t 1mprovc. We survived
We felt lik e we were under a lu~ c
pre ss ur e 10 w1n footba ll game s
from the s ~1nrlpoin1 of job secunty .
I tlon ' 1 think we 1m proved offcn .s ivcl y. I th ink th e Imbalance go mg more w1th th e run -

throwbac k to coach (lUll • Colletto· s offense." wd SRllllt. •bo .,..
for a Ohio State fre!Drnan m:on1 ol'
1. 126 yards two ye.ars .ago bclOR
Collello left to Lalt tbc Purdoc
head coaching pb. "It'&lt;&gt; b""""'
wide open than n •'.as last y:-&amp;·
" Bcrng a run mng had _ \ '001
want to run l.hc ball But ~oo lo-~&lt;
to be sman and real~tt lh3! tbc bcllcr you pass the ball, !he bella '
run l.he baU."
Hollis says the run ~ an ~ t -

o us chmcc a y= ago ~ 111r
Buckeyes were 00~11~ lll n!1Z1111D!
back .
"I know one llun!:.
dill
e•~ht games and we drd 9lDC ~
good l.hmgs on offons&lt;.. .. lr sat
Wrl.h Uzclar havm~ ~ rrot'lcms. Hollis was at tht comuol•
when th e Buckeye&lt; jUS&lt;td 'c
umcs and ran 39 trrnes m the OO. t
game . Thai· s a ratJO of 55 peiO'III
runnmg plays to 45 IJ"U'''( JD"''".
"Thai ~,as a PI"""" (of 1"'1c'
from l.he standpotnl of !he I'UHOpass rauo." HolliS sa.w1 " W&lt; :an:

•·c •m

go1 ng to 1mpro, •e r!ht thro • •• ~

game while not loslll£ an~ po.c ol
o ur physical ru!lmng gJmt
that 's the mam OOJOCilvt --

..

HAMBURGER

79c ·

Hollis ~ the S:mrnse defens&lt;:
d&gt;CU!cd tbar. Hcrbs!Ru pas.s that
llllXll.
tbougtr !Ia bsne• IS 001
LI1010 o IS 1 passong qnartaback.
DlmiU! U..: rr1tular season. Kent
GT2113iD ~ 1 Sirong-arrncd pa=r
•JS hA.Disuun~ by Uzelac's

"'=

~offmse_
So m.au~r .. hal lh~

offcnst.
Hollis sa~~ t.bc brgtt pomt " !he
~ a{ the """'" Tloc IJooiWD lmc IS: what dJd
•lor! do tbrough Soomlber' L..&lt;t's
laoa - y dad tbcy wm'" he

=-

....t

Hotbs !3&gt;~ be IS alrealy gewng
.a;hn 00 Jundlu.g fictlc fans and
cro&amp;:~

cnncs.

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wa s

more of a scc unly blanket for us."
Hollis said .
Coo per wets offered a three -year
extension JUSt before lhe Michigan
game. Although dctarls hav e not
yet been worked out. th e hea t 1s
apparently off for now
"Yo u ca n tell !.here's a change
in lhe thought process by the offenSive coac he s." Hcrb slreJI sa1d .
"They want 10 open ll up a lillie
more. We were a little predictable
last year lOO oftcn."
. _
"From what I've seen, lhts IS a

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Ohio State plans to add spice
to predictable, groundhog offense

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�Page 6 The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

New Jersey, Washington
among NUL playoff winners
By JOHN KREISER
AP Sports Writer
John Vanbiesbrouck gave up a momh 's ..urth of
goals in one night. The wrong nighL
Vanbiesbrouck came into Game 2 of !be Nev.·
York Rangers ' Patrick Division semrfmal senes
against New Jersey witb an 11 -game unbealfn sneak
during which be had allowed just 12 goals. He left
with his first loss in two months after surrendering
seven goals on 28 shots in New Jerscy 's smes-tymg
7-3 vicury Tuesday night.
" We drove to the net and got more quahty
shots, " said New Jersey' s Claude Lemreux , who
scored twice and excelled defenSively . "We had the
same chances as !be frrst game. We JUst didn't put
them in."
Vanbiesbrouck hadn 't lost smce Feb. ~0. hadn't
allowed more than one goal in a game srnce Feb. ~I
and had been superb in the Rangers' 2-1 sents-&lt;J!l"'·
ing victory . This ume, though. he was ordr~ and the Devils capualized.
" We made some m1 stak.es out there ." s.a1d
Rangers captain Man Messier, who scored a pau of
shorthanded goals. "We had some good scoring
opponunities and cou ld have put them away early.
but we didn' L "
In !be other Patnck Di vrsion senes. Waslungton
toot a two-game lead by whippmg l'lli.Sburgh 6-2. In
!be Adams Division, Montreal went up 2-D on Hanford with a 5-2 victory and Boston pulled even v.;th
Buffalo by beating the Sabres 3-2 in overtime. All
four series switch sites for Game 3 on Thursday.
The four Campbell Conference series resume
tonight. In the Norris Division, Mrnnesota comes
home to play Detroit after a pau of road vrctones and
St. Louis plays host to the Blackhawks after splining
two games in Chicago.
In the Smythe D1vision . it 's Vancouver at Wm nipeg and i.J:ls Angeles at Edmonton. Both scncs are
tied 1-1.
Lem ieux, the Devils' lOp scorer wah 41 goals.

was at his infuriating best as a pest - and also contributed the go-ahead goal at 17:42 of the second
period. Laurie Boschman made it4-2 just 56 seconds
late! and roolae Brll Guerin gave New Jersey a threegoal lead just 32 seconds into the third period.
Messier's second shorthanded goal gave the
Rangers some hope, but power -play goals by
Lemreux and Eric Weinrich put the game away.
Ca pitals 6, Penguins 2 - The Penguins got a
spart from the rerum of Mario Lemieux, but it lasted
less than half a period as Washington overcame an
early two-goal deficit to rout the Penguins at the
Capnal Centre.
.
.
Lemieux, who missed Game 1 w1th a bruised
shoulder, set up goals by Larry Murphy and Kevin
Stevens in the fust 7:08. But Washington toOk the
lead before the end of the opening period on goals by
Dmun Khristich, Peter Bondra and Michal Pivonka,
then dominated the last two periods.
"They're not JUSt a different team wrth him they're a better team, " said Capitals goalie Don
Beaupre, who stopped the last 28 sbots he faced and
rmproved to 7-2 against Pittsburgh this season.
Canadius 5, Whalers 2 - DerUs Savard looked
like his old self at the Forum, dishing out four assists
as the Canadiens downed Hanford.
Brent Gilcbi;st scored twice, hoth on sewps from
Savard. and Montreal limited the Whalers to 17
shots.
Bruins 3, Sabres 2- Adam Oates showed why
n·s called "sudden-death" overtime when he scored
off a faceoff atll:l4 to give the Bruins the victory at
Boston Garden.
After an icing call aga~nst Buffalo, Oates lined up
ior the draw to !be left of goaltender Tom Draper and
Umed it perfectly - whipping the puck past Draper
for !be wrnning goal before anyone could react.
The Brwns took an early 2-0 lead on goals by Joe
Juroe3u and Dave Reid. Pat LaFontaine cut !be mar gm m half in the second penod and WaynePresle y
ued it at 8:32 of the third penod by Jammrng rn a
loo.sz: puck.

Healed Mullin, Drexler return
to help Warriors, Blazers in playoffs
By The Associated Press
The Warriors, SuperSonics and
Trail Blazers would like to wel come back Chris Mullin , Benoit
Benjamin and Clyde Drexler for
the NBA playoffs. The Lakm and
Spurs would like to welcome bad
James Worthy, Sam Perkins and
David Robin son , too . But th ey
can'~j ust yet.
And the Celtics don't know
whe ther to welcome back Larry
Bud. He still has back problems,
and his courtwortluness is rn question.
The playoffs begrn Thursday.
and inJuries will play a key role.
The four opening best-of-frve
series have Seattle at Golden State.

the Los Angeles Lakers at Portland.
ln&lt;hana at Boswrr, and New Jersey
at Cleveland. The other four senes
begrn Fnday nrgbt - Miamr at
Chicago. Delroit at New Yorl:. the
Los Angeles Cltppers at Utah and
San AnUllliO at Phoenix..
Golden State team physician
Robert Alba said Tuesday that
Mullrn 's leg inJury should be
healed suffiCiently for him 10 play
rn the ftrsl round agamst Seattle.
Mullin. who averages 25 .6 pomts a
game. susLainc:d a sprained right
anlle and calf muscle in Sunday's
season final&lt;, a 108-106 vrctory
over Seattk. He crashed to the
noor after bloctrng a breakaway
layup by Gary Payton.

Hoying in thick of chase
for OSU quarterback job
By RUSTY MILLER
COLU MB US, Ohio (AP)Bob Hoying says so mebody has
fast-forwarded the tape of hrs foot ball career.
"My situation nght now IS happening about two years before I
thought it would, " he sard . ''I'm
not going to complain at aiL"
In the spring of 1990, Hoyrng
was a senror at St. Henry Hi gh
School . He wa s hoprng that. rf
things wrned out right, he might be
competing for the starting JOb at
Ohro State by the tim e he was a
junior.
Hoyrng. Ohro's Mr. Football m
1990, is a redsh rrt freshman wrth
the Buckeyes during spnng wort outs . And much 10 his astoni sh -

men t, he find s hrm sclf nghr up
there at No . I or No 1-A on the
depth chart.
The way Hoying sees 11. he's a
winner no matter what happens
between him and Kirk HerbstreH.
" I come from St. Henry, a small
schooL I've always wanted to play
here," Hoying sard. "So I'll wall
my turn. If things go my way thiS
year and I end up being the starUng
quarterback , that's great. I'm sull
going to have to work th e_next
three or rour years to rcmam the

start.a. ''
But what happens if Herbstrell
wins the job and Hoying spends
most of hi s game tim e with his
anns folded on the sidelines'
"The thing I told myself before
spring ball is, if things don 't go my
way this year. I've strll got three
yean left here," Hoying said. ''I'm
not going to get frustra~ . I'm no1
going to get down at all.
So far during spring wortouts.
Hoying and Herbsueit arc on equal
footing. They hoth handle runmng
and passing plays. They drvrde the
number of snaps. They both face
the same types of defenses.
" We've seen eoough of Bob to
know he 's got a lol of potential, a
Joe of lalent," offen sive coordinator Joe Hollis said. "The great
thing about this spring is he's getling a ton of wort.. The more reps
(.epetitions) be gets, the betler be's
gomg 10 be."
Hoying , a 6-foot-5. 210poundet. passed for 27 touchdowns
and had just eight int=epllms as a
senior as St Henry won the 1990
sutc championship.
But there are still doubts. FIJSI.
he has not taken a snap from center
in college. Second. he s coming off
1 year away from compeuuon .
Third he made hiS name agrunst
the s~ high schools in Ohio.
But almldy be has overcome a

"I was really worried wh en

Mollie went down, " Warriors
coach Don Nelson said. "I still am
a litdc bi~ although doctors tell me
he's going to be all right. "
The Sonics also got some wel come news when it was derermlned
that 7-foo&lt; center Benoit Benjamin
was ready to play . Bejamin ha s
been out wrth a broken right hand
since Man:h 17.
Shawn Kemp, a 6-10 forward
fillrng in for Benjamrn, had 23
points and 19 rebounds against the
Warnors on Sunday.
Drexler is back 10 practicing at
full speed for the Trail Blaztts after
sitting out the frnal four games with
a sprained k.nce. and he said he
would be ready to play against !be

from serv•ng as an announcer or
com mcn1a1 or for a h1gh schoo l

game. Wbtlc da:bning 10 comment
specifrcally on the game, Ri ck
Evr.trd. NCAA director of legislauve sernces. said higlr school allstar events arc considered broadcasts of high school coruests and
that college coaches should not
appear. NCAA offJClals would not
say if they were investig;uing the
matter.

Tmllis
BARCELONA, Spam (AP) Fifth-seeded Nathalie Tauziat of
France defealed Estefania Bonini
of Spain 3~. 7-(, (7-3), 6-2 and
su Ill-seeded Mary Pierce of the
United States routed Silvia Farina
of Italy 6-1, 6-lJ in the f!ISI round
of the International Women's
Champioosltips ol Spain.

JIUtlnTime
For Spriq and
Summer Fun
and Games
VOLLEYBALL
BADMINTON
PITCHING
HORSESHOES
BASEBALLS
BASEbALL GLOVES
TENNIS RACKETS
TENNIS BALLS

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

Wednesday, April 22, 1992
Page-7

•

Comunity calendar

O h 1o UnJvl'r'litv

Co lh:gt' ul ()..,tl'up,llhlc Mt•d 1c inc

•

''

I..,_,·,

J\ l
'

'

-

;,

~

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
lo assure publication in the calendar.

Family
Medicine

•

CHECKING TIDNGS OUT is what New Jersey's Kevin Todd (14) and the New York
Rangers' JOt Cirelb are doing during the first

period of Tuesday night's Patrick Division semifinal game at New York 's Madison Square Gardeo, which the Devils won 7-3. (AP)

Farley back on court after knee surgery
CINCINNATI (AP) - Andrea
Farley is back on the tennis court,
trying to put her second major
injury in two Y""" behind her.
In her first competition since

undergoing major knee surgery in
January, she won a doobles match
6-1, 6-0 last week in Gainesville
playmg for the University of Florida

And she did the entire time ."
Fa rle y, a former Ohio state
champion from Indian Hill Hi gh
School, has had her share of troubles during the past two years. In
the fall and winter of 1990-1991,
she was sidelined for 2 lfl mont.lls
with a back problem diagnosed as

But a few weeks late r, Farley
felt the knee slipping when she hit
her backhand. and she returned for
more surgery Jan.28.
Dcsp il c a knee she sa1d was

"pretty sore" after her doubles
match , Farley said she ha s her
srghts on playing in the NCAA
''muscle overuse.''
Champions hi ps, j usl nine weeks
Last October, she tore the ante- away.
rior cruciatc ligament in her right
knee when a coach conducting
movement drills tossed the ball one
way after she had moved the other
way.
"I didn't show signs of an anterior cruciate ligament tear," Farley
sard. " My knee looked normal , but
Ill Second St., Paeroy
I( felt so tight."
Her doctor performed arthroscopic surgery in November and
fo und the ligament tom but stable.
He decided to sew up the knee and
put Farley on a rehabilitation pro-

"It went really weU, better than
I expected," Farley said.
Farley's return, 10 weeks fol lowing surgery, came sooner than
her doctor or coach expected.
Coach Andy Brandi was reluctrmt
10 let her play for fear she would
not perform up to ber expectations
and becmre discouraged.
" We made an agreement that it
was OK for her to play only if she
would go out and have lots of fun.
She sard she would," Brnndi said.
"Before the match I gave her one
bit of instruction: Hit and grggle. gram:

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"spoon fingers ." What causes
spoon fingers , and how is it treated?
Answer: The unusual appea rance of your fi ngernails that your
nerghbor described as spoon fin gers is called koilonychia in medi cal terms. Koilonychra can occur as
an rnherited abnorm ality. In families with thi s condition , the unusual
upturning nails arc present from
childhood. Since you said in your
letter that you have developed this
in the last few years, the inhented
fonm is not the cause of your problem .
The appearance of fingernail s
gives a fair picture of the general
health of an individual. Much like
the condition of a horse' s tee tb and
mouth is used to gauge its overall
health, your nail s can tell a lot
about your health. Specifically, nail
ab norm aliti es often suggest the
possibility of an underlying medi cal problem.
The mo st commo n condition
that causes koilonychia is iron defi ciency that is often, but not always,
associated with rron deficiency
anemia. Diabetes is another common illness that can cause koilooychia as can eating a diet that provides insufficient protein, iron,
zinc, vitamin C or B2. In addition
to these diseases, poor ci rcula tion
from conditio ns like Raynaud 's
disease may produce ab normallooking nails.
Koilonychia has also been
reported as a complication of constan t exposure to wet, cold mud.
This has been found particularly in
women in India that handled mud
repairing walls and irrigation

water. What causes this , and what
can I do ahout it?
Answer: Welcome to middle
age and older' As we age th e
amount of oil produced by the skin
decrea ses, and this works along
with the dry winter air 10 make the
skin dry out more quickly. The
thi ck layer of dead skin cells on the
ends of the fingers becomes so dry
that it rs more brittle than normal.
Since th e skin bends quite often
with normal use of the hands, th e
extrn-dry, brittle skin actll:llly tears,
producing the cracks around the
ends or your nail s that you mentioned. Young individuals produce
suffi cient skin oil to retard the
c:r.: tremc drying in the wmtcr, so
they rarely develop thiS problem .
The rubber gloves you wear
may actua ll y be part of 1he pro blem. The sweat th at accumu la tes
inside the gloves as you work is
high in salt concentra ti on. Thrs
salty solution inside the gloves can
cause the hands to lose more moi sture, worsening the dry brittle ski n
problem. Th is ca n be avoided by
wearing cotto n gloves, lik e the
inexpensive jersey gloves avai lab le
at every hardware store, inside rubber gloves.
You should launder the cotton
gloves often to remove the accu mulated salt from th em. Regular
usc of mois1U riz1ng creams and
lotions will also hel p retain the normal moisture in the skin. You
should usc one of these seve ral
times eac h day during the winter.
I recommend that you sec your
fami ly doc tor or a derma tologist
soon. The unu sual naris and dry
skm you describe are not going to
improve very much without treatment for the und erlyin g health
problems. Improvement in your
ge neral health may improve these
visible signs of your illness.
canals.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Question: In addition to my nail
column
. To submit qucsuons, wnte
problem, my fingers "crack open"
to
John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio t!ni around the ends of my nails during
vers
it
y
Co llege of Osteopa thr c
the winter and my hands become
rather dry and rough . I alwa ys wear Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
rubber g lov es when I work in Ohio 45701.

Hayes reviews books
during club meeting

FREE MINI VACATION!
ORLANDO, MYRTLE
BEACH AND MORE!*

Mrs . Evere ll Hayes gave two
reviews at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Li terary Club held at
the home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
The first review was on
Ambrose Bierce who was a shon
story writer and a joumai!SL Bicn:e
was born on Horse Creek Cave in
Meigs County. Due Ia the present
rnteres t in the life of Bierce, Mrs.
Hayes wanted to review his life for
the club. His famil y moved to Indr ana when he was a young child . He
au endcd a military academy in
Kentucky giv ing him prefere nce
for advancement when he enl isted
in the Civil War. At the end of the
war he retired as a Major. He
became a star reporter for the Hurst
News. He wrote man y shon stories
At the age of 72 he was still
straight and handsome and he rode
into the Mexican revolutiOn and
was never heard from again.
Mrs. Hayes' second rev rew was
on the com plete stories of Erskine
Caldwell . Ca ld well was born rn
Georgia in 1903 to poor bu t educat-

0

Lewis-Manley unit meets

0
0

When we Slid we're doi
it tales to
,.::f!IIUity
~here~ what we had 1n m1nd.
'A'Ikes ~oo thmk, docsn\ 11I An offer !tkc LhJS,
combmcd .,.,,th present mLercst rJtes. makes
eqwty loans asrnan way to borrow money And
you can usc your eqwty loan LO consolidate debl5,
make tunc rmprtM'fllCniS or maJor purchases
Best of all. mterest on a Bank One home equny

loan may be tax deducublr ·'And no mallrr how
ion~; yoo'vr owned your home. ""-' have an l'&lt;jUIIy
loan to fiL your ncccls To apply. JUSI call 1-800727 -{)565 or VJSil the
.=
Bank One olhcc nrar BANKf!:ONE
you for full detatls
Whalf\n ulam&gt;

T..·IC""P"Ofii'JppiJLallllflfk'-l r'- I.J J Ill ll llnl !vlr lnJ.1~ lr K.],I\

1•

121lollll

-,Pill

ed parenl5 . Hi s father was a Presbyteria n mini ster and they moved
many trm es. At an ea rl y age he
knew he wanted to write . T he
novel "Tobacco Road" was made
into a movie and ran on Broadway
for se ven and one- half years .
"God ' s Little Acre" and "Georgia
Boy" were some of the 50 short
stories and novels he wrote. He felt
the suf fer ing of th e poor and
sq ualid and th e first half of hrs hterJ. ry career was about the poor .
His works arc in a repository in
Darunouth Unrvcrsity. He received
the highest distingui shed awards a
person could receive. He lived one
month after he wrote "Wrth All My
Li fe'' in 19R7 .
Mrs. Bernard Fultz presrdcd at
the meeting and welcomed the
members and one guest, Mrs. Ron
Ru therford. Roll call was conducted with members and guest naming
an unforgettable short story .
The hostess served light refresh ments.

'-..11 \ JJ!l. l\ .U!i l '-.rJflr:l.l\

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0.

Contributions were made to the
March of Dimes, American Cancer
Fund , Heart Fund, Freedom's
Foundation, CARE, Child Welfare
Fund, Food for African Children
and POW-MlA, when the LewiSManley Unit No. 263, American
Legion, met recently at Da le· _,
Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Opening ceremonies were conducted by Lorrene Goggins, president
Material from headquarters was
distributed.
The unit received a pin from the
depanment president for making
membership goo!.
Annette Johnson. unit chaplain,
announced the United States will
observe the annual National Day of
Prnyer on May 7. She will send in
prayer for the national scrapbook.
Some unit chainman made out
their repons during the meeting.
A thank-you card from the family of Ruth Brown was received.
Florence Richards, children and
youth chairman, stated the national
theme is "Because We Care." She
said the major concerns affecting
the nation's children and youth arc
child safety , drug abuse, suicide
and missing children. She also
stressed benefits received from

national child wel fare foundatron
headquarters. She talked of th e
Easter celebration at Veterans Children's Hom e at Xenia. She had
praise for the home, having visited
there.
The sin gr ng of "My Country Tis
of Thee," pmyer from the Nauonal
News by the chaplain, and remarks
by the president closed the meet ing .
Dorothy Casey wi ll host the
next mectin~ .

Seniors to meet
The Harrisonville Sen ior Ci ti zens will meet April 28 with a
potluck dinner at noon at the townho use. A queen si1e hand-stitched
quilt is also for sale.

Meeting slated
The dinner meeting of the
Racine Ruritan Club will be Tuesday at 6 p.m. instead of 7 p.m. at
Star Mill Park. All members urged
to attend.

VCS to meet
The Meigs Co unty Veteran s
Service Com mi ssion will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in !be Veterans Se{Vice Office in Pomeroy.

caller. Pubhc mvued.
MIDDLEPORT - Dance at tho
Mrddleport Leg ion Anne&lt; Frida)'
fr om 7- 11 p.m. wi th musrc hy
George Hall Refreshments avail ab le. PubliC rnv ired.

WEDNESOA Y

John C Wolt, D 0
Associ,1 1L' Pn)t c~s or
of ramily Mcdic in ('

Lak.crs.

The Lakers aren't so luclcy wrtb
their injury problems. Not only did
Magic Johnson retire this season,
but the team also lost Worthy and
Perkins to injuries - and that' s
more than any team , even the Laklot.
When he signed wuh Ohio crs. can be expected 10 cope with.
Robr nso n, the NBA's leading
Stllte. Hoymg couldn't have fore blocker, underwent surgery on
shot
seen that be ...,..]() be this high on
his
left
thumb late in the season
the depth chart this fast Greg Frey
and
won't
be available to the Spurs
was fim~tung up h1s scmor year.
Wanmg in the v.·angs were Kent until at least the Western ConferGraham. Hcrbstreu and Jason ence fmals.
Bird, on the other hand, might
Frank. Johnnv Mattress, Joe Pickbe
avarlablc
Thursday night against
ens and Prc.sioo Harrison were a
Indiana.
He's
not talking, and the
year ahead of Hoying.
Celtics
aren't
speculaong.
Now all are gone but HerbstrerL
Indrana has its own problems.
Frey and Graham graduated, and
Ce
nter Rlk Smits was reactivated
Frank's career ended with a neck
Monday
after mi ssing the final four
rn jury. Mamess and Pickens tranSga
mes
with
sore knee s. He sull
ferred, and llamsoo was swuched
ex pects to be coming in off the
10 defense. where he IS tryrng 10
bench, though .
recover from a series or injuries.
The long regular season also has
Hoying says the biggest transi taken
ns loll on the New Jerseyuon from last year's taxr sqll:ld to
Cleveland
matchup. Especially for
shan ng LJmc wath the first -team
the
Cavalrcrs.
offense tJus ~·ear has been mentaJ
Mark Pr;ce has bandages around
preparation.
.. Before. you could JUSt go our. both legs. Craig Ehlo has a brace
You d1dn ' 1 have 10 worry about on hiS left knee, and Brad Daughercoming 10 pnctice prepared. All ty sti ll has lower back parn each
you had to de was show the ume he stands up or srts down.
Ehlo's mJury was the most scn defense a good look. Now thiS
ous,
costing him five weeks during
year. I'm back 10 compeooon." he
the
seaso
n. But injuries aren't
sard
·'Probably rbe brggest adjuSI - expected to be a brg deal for rhe
mcnr I've had to make from hrgh Cavs durmg the playoffs. like they
sc hool was the pracuccs. They are were in 1989. Thrs year, !be Cava3 I (2 hours long and you have to hers matched the clu b record 57
victori es they had 10 the 1988-89
stay m every play mentally.··
season.
"Different teams. different seaSports briefs
sons," Pr;ce said. " Being healthy
Basketball
IS a big key for us. The last time we
ATLA!'iT A (AP) - Bobby won 57 games, we were tn had
Cremms of G&lt;ngta Tech. Jim Boe- shape gorng into the playoffs."
hcrm of Syrocuse. Lou Campanelli
of Cahfonua and John Calrpan of
~1assachuS&gt;Ctrs apparently vrolated
an :-ICAA rule bv appcanng Sunday on the broadcast of the
McDonald's hrgh o;choo l all -star
game.
An NCAA rule bars coaches

The Daily Sentinel

PINE GROVE - Revival al
Pinq,'fove Holiness Church williJc
held Wedn esday through Sunday at
7 p.m. nightly. Rev. Steve Manley
and family, Summersvi lle, N.C.,
wtll be evangelist. Spe-cial -;inging
nightly . Rev. Odell Man ley invites
the publiC.
POMEROY - Amerrcan Red
Cross bloodmobile at Me igs Senior
Cen!Cr, I 10 5:30 p.rn.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Porcelarn doll
c lass, sponso red by Mrddl eport
Arts CounCil, will begm Thursday
a1 7 p.m. Judy Drwn will teach the
four-week class. Class size is limited. Cost is $]6. Call 992-7733 10
reg ister.
ROCK SPRINGS - A special
mecung of th e Salisbury Townshtp
Trustees w1ll be held al Lhe town shrp hal l Thursday at 7 p.m. to
appoint a new trustee.
PODIUM PRESENTED - Compatri ot Paul Martin, left,
Barllell, presented the Ewings Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution, Pomeroy, with a handmade walnut podium. Accepting
the gift on behalf of the chapter was John R. Kauff, president.
Martin and his wife, Elinor create pioneer wood crafts as a hobby
in their woodworking shop.

Singer-teacher Notestine
to appear at Rio Sunday
Co lum bus-based opera per former Carol Notestine will co nclude the Especially Music season
at the Univers it y of Rio Grande
wrth an appearance Sunday, April
26 at 2:30 p.m. in the CMstensen
Theatre of !be Fine and Performing
Arts Center.
Espec rally Musrc is a satelli te
program of the Valley Artist s
Ser ies, which ha s presented the
newest offerings in theater and
musrc at Rio Grande for a number
of years.
With an extensive background
in opera, as a performer and a
teacher, No testine will offer th e
Espec iall y Music audience a wide
selection of classical music, from
Mozart to Andrew Lloyd Webber,
in a one-woman presentation.
A voice instruclor at Kenyon
and Ott erbein colleges, Note sti ne
currently directs th e Performers'

Harrisonville
community news
John and Ann Will ram s spen t 13
day s tou rrng Florida from St.
Pe tersb urg to Orlando , Daytona
Beac h and St. Augustine. They also
traveled through South Carolina ,
North Carolina, Virginia and West
Virginia.
Bessie Graham, who res ides at
Overbrook Center , visited Sund ay
at the Harold Grnham home.
Mrs. Martha Crowley and
daughters spent Easter Sunday with
her parents in Toledo.
Ed and Sue King 's son, Thomas
and Michael, were home for Easler
from Brcnnersville, N.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Copley pur chased the Harold Graham uarler
on Rout e 14 3 ncar th e edge of

Voice Studio in Co lumbu s and
m&lt;li ntain s a fu ll sc hedule of pcrforrnrng in the U.S. and overseas.
In the summer of 19RR, she toured
extens ive ly as a so loist in Ger many, Sw it zerla nd and Austria .
She won national attention as an
adm inistrator lor the development
of th e Opera/Columbus educa uon
program from 1985 unul 1988. She
has also been seen in comp nman o
roles in Opera/Columbus' produc tion of Macberh .
The American Institute ol Studies has hailed Notestine, noting that
she is "justifiab ly ad m1red as an
enj oyab le and high ly qualrfied
si nger."
Ticket pri ces and ot.hcr information on th e performance can be
obtarned by contacting th e Fine and
Performing Arts Ce nter at (614)
245-5353, exte nsion 364. The toll free number in Ohio is 1-R00-282 720 1.

POMEROY - The Board of
Dire ctors of lh c Mc tgs Counly
Public L1brary will meet Thursday
at I p.m . at the lrbrary in Pomeroy
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppe rs Plains VFW Post No. 905 3
and Ladies Auxilmry will meet
Thmsda y at the post home. Dmncr
wi ll be a 7 p.m followed hy moc1ing. All members urged to allen&lt;!.
MID DLEPORT - The Women' s
Fellowsh ip will meet Thursday at
the Middleport Church ol Chnst. A
prog ram wil l be present ed by the
ladi es of the hos1 church .
RAC INE - The Racme Amen ca n Legion Aux ili ary will meet
Thursday at 7:30pm. ar the hal l.
RUTLAND
Th e Lea dr ng
Creek Conservancy Dtst ri ct will
hol d its reg ular boa rd me et in g
Thursday a17 p.m. Publ ic invited.

Name omitted

FRIDAY
LONG BOTIOM - rar th Fu ll
Gospe l Chu rch in Long Bollom
will have preaching and singin g
f'nd:ry '" 7 p m wrth David Darley
an d Dailey 1-amrly Sin gers and
o th er lo ca l tale nt. Pastor Steve
Reed mvites the publ ic. Fellowship
wi ll follow.

The name of Julrc Rrffle was
unintcmionall y omi!lcd from th e
lrst of students 10 the 12th grade a1
Easte rn High S(.; ho ol who were
named to Lhc honor roll.

HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a ro und and square danc e at
Hoc ki ngport at Kenny and Millie
Reynol ds on Friday from 8- 11:30
p. m. Ron me Wood wli I be th e

sored by the Tuppers Plams Vf'W
Post No 9053 and Lad rcs Auxrl-.
iary Frrday from 8-11 :30 p. m.
Music will be by the Happy Hol low Boys . PubliC rnvitcd.
RACINE - Meigs Coun ty
Church Women Umtcd will ho ld
1ts plannin g sess iOn for the May
fellowship mecung at the Racrne
Bap ti st Churc h at I p m Frrday .
All key women invited_
CHE STER - Michael Thierer
will be the guest speaker at New.
Lrfe Cove nant Church of God rn,
Chester. He will speak Fnday and
Saturday at 7 p.m and on Sunday
at 9:]0 a.m . and 6 p.rn. cnlc pubiJL
1s inv itc.U .
SATURDAY
COOLVI LLE - Grrls Scout
Troop 1221 wrll hold a rccyclrn g
co ll ect ion driv e in th e Coo lville
Elementary Schoo l parki ng lot on
Samrday from 9 a.m tn noon.
MIDD LEPORT - A pan cake
breakfast will be held Saturday
from 7-11 a.m. at the Heath Unrted
Method iSt Church sponsored by U\C
men of the church . Donations wilt
be accep ted.
WIL KESV ILLE - Smorgabord
dinner at ih e Wilkesvi lle Pythian
Hall Saturday at 4 p.m. Cost is $5
for ad ults and $2 .50 for ch rl drcn
Pub lic mvi tcd .
PORTLAND - Gospel song festiva l at Portland Elementary Sc hool
will be held Saturday at 7 p m. fea turin g Messe ngers of Love.
Si ngin g Mc,ssengers, Dailey Faim ly , Joy Si ngers and Fre edo m
Gospe l Trio . Free will a! fcrrng
Public invited .
CHES TER - A meetrng and
practice of Dis tricl 13. Daughters
of America. wi ll be held Saturday
at I p.m. at the Chester Lodge Hall.
All members are urged to attend
the pracucc for the May 30 rally rn
New Lcxtngwn_

Class meets
The. Busy Bee Class of the .~!rei ·
d lcpon ftrst Baptist Church met
rcccn 1ly for a lu ncheon at r on -,
dcrosa Steak Hou se in Ga ll tpo ll ~.
Attendmg were Ruth Ebcrstml1.
Lilli an Demoskcy, Bett y Denn y.
Pooc h Brewer, Beu lah Wl11tc.
Dorothy Evans, Gw ionie Whi le,
Betty Gi lkey, Rev. and Mrs Jam es
Seddon.
The next mectrng will IJc May
21attiJc church .

WAID CROSS'
SONS
PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO
949·2550

town.

" Buddy " Edwards drove rh c
Copley famrly to Columbus to visr l
her parcnLS.
Jeff Lewi s has purchased the
Estep house, which is located near
the Harrisonville SchooL
Mrs. Helen Bogg s has so ld
property knowq as the "Dud" Douglas house.

POMEROY . Preceptor Bera
Be ta Chap ter, Beta Srgma Phr
Soronty wi ll meet Thur.;day at the
Eprscopal Pari sh House

TUPPERS PLArNS - There will
be a rou nd and square dance spon-

FALTERS SLICED

SLAB BACON
5

1.19tb.
GEORGIA

SUPER lOR 12 OLPACK

VIDALIA ONIONS

WIENERS

59(

5

Fifth birthday
Brittany Hunnell celebrated her
frfth birthday with a party at Pleasor' s Restaurant hosted by her uncle
and aun~ Bob and Lisa Johnson.
Attending were paternal grand mother, Edna Hunnell, Velessa
Hunnell, Eber Jr. and Jordan Hunnell Pickens, Hershel and Pany
White, John and Peggy Snyder,
CMsti Collins, her mother, Violet
Hunnell, her sisters, Julie, Courtney and Jenny Sue Hunnell , Donna
Sue Rice, Billie Jean and Mikey
Cu nnin gham , Craig and Kathy
Dougan, Kandi and Steven, Alma
and Ronnie Johnson, and Clarence
E. Hayman Jr., Jan Williams.
Others presenting gifts were her
father and brotber, John and John
E. Hunnell, Virginia Hayman and
Fred, Cheryl and Bill James, Edith
Jividen , Bonnie Mauhews and
Angie Swift.
Cake, c hip s, pop and punch
were se rved and ~a m es played .
Eac h child attendrn g received a
gift.

1.09

lb.

STORK'S 12 PAK

HAMBURGER BUNS

79C
DELMONTE

COCA-COLA

KETCHUP

89( 2Uter

1.29 32 oz.

5
MUELUR'S

THIN SPAGHETTI

79C 16 oz.
PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
We Reserve The Right To l.imit Quantities

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'
IN RACINE SINCE 1860

�Page

~The

11Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middl
We GlaOIY

Accept Your
Fee1eral FooC1

scamps

I 22, 1992

Ohio

Photo finishing

-miMH na ...:1-bctl of ,,_
......_. ilem&amp; • ...,.._,lo t» r~
........._ to1 . . in ..eft KrOQII' S1Qft1 ,

tAC:IIP' • ~ no.d " ttla ad "
... do Rift Old: of "' ~ lt.m , . . ott..,... ..... choice of. (~ ...
. . .. ................. rtlftecmg lht .....
. . . , . . Of

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1

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wNcl\ Wll

C~l

PROCES S ONLY

Easter Special
12 Exposure Roll

enuu.

J'IIIYIOputa-lhiD•~ II..-n 111M
...,.._. prQ within 30 Gays Ontw 00o1
'iMdaf cawpcn will bl atUpted ~ Item

~gge

....

COPYRIGHT 191112 · THE KROGER
CO. IT£MS AND PRICES GOOD
i '-'NDAY. APRIL 19. THROUGH
SATURDAY . APRIL25. 191112, IN

.

.......,.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANmtES NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS .

-~ ., · ' . \
'

-~

1lui !/()~

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

Velvet paintin
Dear Ann Landers: My wonder·
f ul husband travels a lot and on
hts first trip to Me~co brought back
a huge painting on ve lvet of a
matador stabbing a raging bull. The
boll's nostrils are flaring and smoke
is coming out of his ears .
I mad e the foolish mistake of
pretendmg to be pleased and am
now lool::ing at seven paintings on
velvet. They include a Hawaiian
dancer, a cowboy with his dying
horse, a mermaid with a sea horse
in each hand ·· and Elvis thrusting
his pelvis over our Stein way grand
p~ano .

'

California
Strawberries
Ouan

28
with Low Prices &amp; More.

NEW FORMULA . Ha.•lon Lewis, an employee of Frilo-Lay
In c., displays a snack-size sam_ple _of Frilo-Lay's .new formula f~r
nacho cheese Doritos Monday m P1ano, Texas. Fnii!;'Lay Inc., sa.1d
Tuesdav that a new formula for nacho cheese Dontos, one or Its
bi~ g es t:se lling products, will mak e an important c_hange; a lot less
Dorito breath due to Jhe new and improved seasonmg. (AP)

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Our fncnds roar with laughter
behind my husband 's back, and
others have become hysterical in
our presence. How do I tell this
terrific guy that what he thinks is
" art " is in the same class with pink
flaming os and lava lights?
Our lovely home ha s elegant
Vi ctorian furnishings, and the se
paintings do not belong here. How
do I tell him to stop? Thank you for
any suggestion shan of divorce. He
IS a terrific guy and I do love hom. ··
PHOENJX DILEMMA
DEAR PHOENIX: I can solve
yo ur probl em with one word:
Redecorate. Tell that terrific guy
that the decorator's word is going
to be fmaL We bOOI know that no
decorator will OK tho se vclv el
paintings. Donate them to some
charitable organizauons and take a
Lll wri tc-off.
Dear Ann Landers : Arc all
parents blind, or just mine? I'm 15
years old and live with my Whet,

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9

oor choice Art lesson no. 1: stay within the lines

r--=---

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
recen~y found out that I tile to
chew gum and swallow it. I'm
too embarrassed to ask my doctor if
th iS is d&lt;!flg erous. "Gcor~e" sa ys
swallowing two or three packs of
" 1991 , Lo8 ADJelet~
gum a day could kill me. I' ve been
11mft; SyndiN* and
doing
it since I was a chrld and
Creators Syndical~. "
have had no ill effects tha t I can
determine .
my
a brother.
Please ask ooe of your 10formed
My dad and his wife don 't love
experts
if swallowm g so much
each other anymore. My stepmother
gum
can
be harmful .. B.W.,
doesn't like me either. My buiher
and I know they are staying together MARYLAND
DEAR B. W.: I pnnted a letter on
because of us. We 've heard them
this
subject at least three years ago.
talking when they thought we were
At that tim e I asked Dr. Jay Arena.
asleep.
chairman
cmeriws of pediatrics at
Don't they see they're not
Duke
University
Medical School for
doing us any favors? They are
hts
expert
opinion
.
pretending to be happily married
Dr. Arena said there should be no
but nobody is being fooled . My
probl
em if one stick of gum is
dad has girlfriends on the side and
chewed
and swallow ed. Row el
hi s wife knows about it. He is
always so happy when he is seeing obstruction could ou:ur. however. if
someone else. This phony serup is wad s o f gum are habitually
swallowed.
making me sick.
Try repl acin g the gum with hard
I would rather see these two get
candy.
Swallowing up 10 15 sticks a
divorced even if it means sptiuing
day
cannot
poSSibly do you any
me and my brother up. It would be
good.
better for all of us. We resent being
Feeling pressured to lwve sex'
used as an excuse for not doing what
flow
well -informed are you' Write
would be best for everyone. We need
Ann
Latuitn ' bool:ler "Sex and
for
some advice, Ann.- CRAZY GLUE
th e Tee n· ager. ·· Se nd a selfIN EL PASO
addressed
. lon g, bu .s tn eJS -si ze
DEAR CRAZY GLUE: Hand this
envelope
and
a ch eck or money
column to your father and tell him
thi s is your lcuer. You might also order for $3.65 (this 1nclud~s
suggest that he and your steplllOiber po.!lage allli /wndlin g) 10 Tuns.
try counseling. No matter what c/o Ann Latuitn, P 0 Box 11562,
happens, you wiU at least know you Chi cago, Ill . 60611 -0562 . (in
did what you thought was best for Canada . .&lt;end $445)

Ann
Landers

Bv LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NE W YORK -- It 's a one-of-a·
knrd collectiOn : " Th e Last Sup per" alongs ide "The Kitten With
th e Ba ll of Yarn ," "T he Blu e
Boy " bes ide " The Ca pe Cod
Lig htho use.'· Eac h wo rk was
painstaki ng ly crea ted th e sam e
way: No. I is for red, No . 2 is for
blue ...
Pa int-by·numbers art made rts
big brea kthrough thi s week , when
more thru• 700 people queued up at
a So Ho gall ery to vi sit the works
co llec ted by cx·National Lam poo n
and "Sat urday Night Liv e" writer
Mo chael O'Donoghue .
"C heap white win e. chea p
American paintings. Wh at could be
be ncr"" O'Donoghue said Tues·
day. the mornm g after hi s sorn e
200 class ics - all purchased for
loose change - went on display.

"T hey' re krml o l l ok c Cil ia
Pets," explained Paul
' CW&lt;Jt cr ,
co·owner of the Bridge
r·Lust·
berg Gall ery. " You kno o w hor·
rible they arc. bu t ~ 1 c y' re enJoyable
nomhclcss_ ' '
The sho w celebrates the 40th
ann iversary of the paont·by- numbc r
se ts an d e nd s yea rs of
O' Do nog huc· s ag otatin g for "
gall ery showo ng of his co llection .
The f1ll -in-thc·blank crca uon s
incl ude the bcst·sc lli ng paint-by·

Bi
-d

numb er artwork

of all

tJm c ,

Le onard o da Vrnc1's " The Last
Supper. .. Sta y inside th e lines and
you, too , can portray Jesus and hrs
12 do sciplcs breaking bread.
" I ow n a version of 'Pinkoc,' a
class ical painting, and whoever did
it screwed up the mouth a lnUe. so
th ere 's a na sty Iolli e sneer ...
O' Do noghu c sai d of one f,lVO fl le.
"And there 's a particular ly frull y·

What 's th e attrae1io11 here?

lo okrn g ' Blue Boy' tha t's really
...;o mcthmg."
_
Orhcr effort s 10 the collcctro n
:1rc the fa mous k1l1Cn pb ying with

" hal l of ya rn . and the Cape Cod
Loghrhouse - an elfo n tha t som e
lO guest'&gt; at M o nr1a y'~ ope nin g
remcrnh erc d d o1n g t hcrn '&gt;c lvc .&lt;:.,

Bm1 gcw;.Hcr Sa1 d

() 'Do no ghu e, who hough t h1.'
l 1r\l nvo pau H-by-numbrr'&gt; II year\

ago, ha.~ dcvelorcd a kc.c n eye for
v..: orks th ;ll captur e th e JJi lfJn \ JC
L ll

klrv..:::" " rJI the genre
" Ml c h ~Jc l reall y doc s h&lt;.~ve pc r -

t:..~ s t c. And d you ' re
to hJv C 1l, yo u m1ght a.s well
he perf~X L '' Bridge water \aid

kCi l y b:H1
~o m g

O 'Do nogll uc g1vc&lt;.. huwte l f a Ill -

tie less credit: "I w"h I was that
diSce rn •ng. Frankl y, I buy every·
thing th3 t cornr" up. If I su iI have a

rrcc arm or mo rn m the h:Kk s~ t . I
hr&lt;l 'e m up ..

J

e;fgOI( g CARPET
I(
SALE

Cheaper, simpler
travel? Don't bet on it
lly LI SA GENASCI
AP Business Writer
NE W YORK - Don ' t be
fooled by all the loud talk of Slm·
plified air fares. low er rates and
reduced car rental costs: Travel can
slill be a pro cey and stubbornl y
complex affair.
While American Alr~nes recent·
ty red uced its h1 ghcst ticket prices,
th e lo wes t fares on hundreds of
routes actuall y went up. Some new
cheaper fares slafl expmng in less
than a month . And a mind -boggling
range o f fare c hoices persists
despite an in ouauve by Am encan to
whittle them down .
Landlubbers also need to shop
around : Rece nt cuts m some car
rental rates arc not as far-reachin g
as th ey in itially seemed.
" People shouldn ' t let th e per·
cepti on or sr mplofred fare s make
th em less vigilant than they were
befo re about ge 111n g the lo west
rates, " sai d Jea ni e Thomp so n·
Smith . preSident of Topa z Enterprises Inc .. a Portland. Ore., com ·
pany that foll ows au fares .
Amencan an nounced April 10 II
had simplified 11 s fare stru cture
from as man y as 30 rates on some
markets to JUSt four.
Other major arr hn es sard they
would fol low suit. However. as of
Thur sday - nearly a week after
A meri can ·s ann ounce ment -

Amcn can had I I fares on its New
York ·to-Los Ange les route, Uruted
ha d 16 Delta I H. TWA 26 and
Co nun ~n tal 17. Tho mpson-Sm ith
saod.
Prev iously. Ame ri can had 14
fa res on the sa me rou te, whi le
United had 17. Delta 20. TW A 22
and Con tmenta l 26.
As part of its ove rhaul, Amen ·
ca n cut far es mostl y on full -pmc
and fi rst·class uckcts. while prices
lor cxc urston uckcLI! tn some cases
ac tually rose and a wode variety uf
disco unt uckcLs we re ch m111ated .
But u' s the c hea per exc ur si on
ti ckets th at coun t for th e average
con s ume r. sa1d Herbe rt Tcos un,
publi s her of th e Tra ve l S mar t
new slcucr in Dobbs Ferry.

" Ve ry few people ny full -fare
coach. It 's like giv ing away ice in
the winter time" to discount the
more ex pensive tickets, he said.
A seco nd round of reductions
promo scs to give travelers a break
as well .
Am en can on Monday reduced
fares agam to match three weaker
airli nes th at tri ed to und erc ut lis
new fare structure. Mos t airlines
matc hed American 's new cuts.
Besides the new cuts, Ameri can
cased •ts 21·day ad vance purchase
req uirement to 14 days.
But most of Amcn ca n·s new
cut s 1n bus in ess- fare tic kets arc
goo d onl y for lockets bought
throug h May 20.
Am en can al so cut fares from
2 14 Nonhcastcrn and Midw es tern
c1ties to Rorida to malch seasonal
cuts by USArr. But these arc good
onl y th rough June 14.
In addition. American dropped
its new 14 -day advance di scoun t
fares and business fares m about
400 mostly Southwestern markets
to match off-peak pnccs mstitutcd
by Ameri can West.
Thomp son·S mlth sa1d aorlmes
arc in a full -blown price war. "and
that's alw ay s good for the co n·
sumcr
But Lee Howard, preSident and
chrcf cx ec uuv e of Washington ·
based Airlrnc Economics Inc.. said
airline fa res have probab ly ho t·

FISCHER'S SLICED

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t1 cr pn cc system .

But the new pnccs rc&lt;Jurre a Sat·
urd ay ni ght stayovcr. limiting the
num ber o f tra ve lers who can take

advan tage of the offer.
And Hert z Rent A Car . the
na uon ·s largest car rental compan y.
respo nde d to Alamo' s offer woth

FIRST

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Pair

PRill

wn to as many a.s 12 movies for r ox
in Lh c n cx l f ive yea rs, the studio

said Tuesday .
"Thi s os th e fi rs t tim e I can
•cmcmbcr wh ere a director of thi s
sta ture has sard . T il g1vc you my
c:s: clusJvc se r vices as a wr iter,
dor cc tor and prod ucer." ' said Joe
R o~1 . chairman of Pox studi os.
HONOLU L U (AP ) - Car ol
ll umctt and Tom Sellec k, pan-time
Hawaoi rcs idenLs, w1ll appear in a
benefit produ cti on of A.R. Gur·
ney's pl ay "Love Letters" next
mooth .
Proceeds from the performances
May 2 and 3 at Di amond Head
Thea ter will go toward a sc holar·
ship fund that helps actms, singers
and dancers funh er their education
and careers, the th eater said Tucs·
day .
NAS HVILLE , Tenn . (AP) Country st.ar Aaron Tippin will eel ·
cb rate hi s No . I record tonight in
an unu sual location - a weight
room at Vanderbilt University.
" Smce he' s a wcightlifter, we
dec ided it would be a good place to
have it ," Erin Morri s, a
spo keswo man fo r BMG Mu sic .
said Tuesday

day after an announcement be would donate
collection to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame .
(AP)

--People in the news

wrncd ou t

" My adv ice to co nsum ers is:
bc ucr bu y your ti ckels hefore Ma y
20th or you m1ght nut sec an ything
hc ucr," Howard s31d .
On th e heel s of the cuts in air·
lin e ti cket prices. Al amo Rent A
C tr oo Monday said it is reducin g
car -rental rates by up to 50 percent
and mtrod ucrng a nationwrdc three·

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI ,

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-We use heavy "life of the
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-Free, No Obligation Quotes

12-oz .

DONATES ELVIS COLLECTION· Cleve·
land attorney Howard Krantz explains bis
acquisition or Elvis Presley memorabilia Toes·

Names in the news

LOS ANGE LES (AP) - " Ter·
min a tor 2'' director Ja me s
Cameron has struck a movie distri·
bution deal wrth 20th Century Fox
wonh about $500 million.
Cam eron , who se film s al so
includ e " Ali ens " and "The
Abyss," will direct, produ ce or

Valleydale Hb. suro••
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FROZEN ALL VARIETIES
SINGLE SERVE

ASSORTED FLAVOR S

LOS AN GELES (AP) - Arse·
nio Hal l wrll ai r reruns of hi s talk
show out of res pec t for Johnn y
Ca rson durin g Carson ' s last week
on " The Tonighl Show ...
" Arsenro's going to be home
watchin g Carson ," spokeswoman
Dan a Freedman said Tuesda y
" We' re taking the week down. It 's
a show of res pect to Carson by
Arsenio. ' '
Carson ends his 30-ycau run on
" The Toni ght Show " on May 22.
1n most parts o.f the country. Hall' s
syndicated program overlaps Car·
son' s NBC show .
Hall said recently that comedian
Jay Lena, who tak es over :'The
Tonight Show " on May 25, IS not
up to replacing Carson.
"No one will ever reign like he
reigned. And I think it's an insult to
his legacy to say Jay os rcplacmg
him, " Hall sai d in Entcnamm cnt
Weekly.

SLICED MEAT

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NEW YORK (AP ) - Johnn y
Carson writ get a unoque tribut e
from cab le TV's Comedy Central
dunng h1 s final appearance May 22
as " Tont ght" show host on NBC
" We're going dark," Tony Fox.
a spokesman for the 24-hour cable
co med y se rvice, sa id Tuesday.
" We' re probabl y going to put up a
slat e that says som e thin g hkc.
'We' re watching Johnny Carson's
h 1t show and so should you." '
Otherwi se, Comedy Central will
devote its May 22 aft ernoon and
evenon g sc hedul e to an ex tended
Carson tribute until hi s NBC show
atl l:30 p.m. EDT.
That will inc lud e Car son
appearances on " The Jack Benny
Show .. an d " Th e Stev e All en
Sho w." and segme nt s featurin g
romcd 1ans wh o got their fi rst major
break on " Tonight ... Fox said .
" We're going to play this one
sti'ugh t... Fox smd. ··w e arc going
to honor him and lthmk go10g dark
is 1he way to do it. '·
HAGERSTOWN . Md . (AP) Babe Ruth' s sister, Ma ry Ruth
Moberl y, said she wept when theor
fath er se nt him off to refo rm
sc hoo l. but th e budding basebal l
legend didn 't shed a tear and nei·
th cr did h1s father.
" Mothe r and I cried o ur ey e·
ball s out," Mrs. Moberly. 91. told
The Assoc iated Press . "B abe
didn' t cry - gave us all a ki ss
goodbye . It didn't affect Daddy.··
Geo rge Herman Ruth , the New
York Yan kee whose lofe " dcp• ctcd
'" the movi e " The Babe, " had a
co ntentiou s rclatr onship with his
father as he was growmg up 10 Bal ·
t•morc. He often c ut sc hoo l with
other boys - much to his father's
chag rin, his sister said.
Refo rm school fo llowed an u.I U·
all y bad quarrel.
Babe " go t so tired of hcann g
what he should and shoul rl not do.
so he gets to the kitch en door I'll never forget it if I live to be 200
- he gets to the kitchen door and
he say s, Til do what I wa nt you
old S.O.B.'
" I thought. 'Oh my goodness. If
my father gets a hold of him he' ll
kill him,' and he would have. but
Babe got away ," she said. ·:we

dodn't sec him for a long tom e.
" Ev erybody said he was bad.
He wa s n't bad . He was mi s·
chicvous. He would get in more
misc hi ef," she said in th e interv iew
Monday.
Babe carri ed hi s wand e ron g
ways in to hi s adulthood . Tales of
his drinkin g and womanizin g arc
depicted in the movie st.arring John
Goodman . But Mrs. Moberly saod
she docsn ' t know about that .
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Ma gic John son will address Har·
vard Medi cal School graduates on
June 4 during the school 's com ·
mcnccmcnt ccremon1 es.
Jo hnson, the fann er Los Angeles Lakcrs st.ar who quit profess ion·
al basketball after contracting the
AID S virus, wa s invited by th e
graduaung class to be the speaker.
Dr. Edward Hunderl, dean of
stud ent affairs, said John son has
not yet given officials a ti~c for his
talk . but it' s expected to he ahout
AIDS.
NEW YORK (AP)
Sportsc aster Pat Summerall has
been granted an indefinite leave by
CBS and has volunt.arily checked
int o th e Betty Ford Clinic in Ran·
cho M1rage, Calif., a source close
to the announcer said .
Summerall , the network ·s voice
for NFL football and host of it s
go lf and tennis coverage, " request·
cd a leave of absence because of a
personal medical concern ,' · CBS
srud in a statement.
"The network extends to Pat its
full support, hopes that his privac y
will be respected and looks forward
to b1.1 return, " it said.
Jim Nantz will sit in for Sum·
merall and worlc with Ken Venturi
at gol f tournaments, CBS said.
The source . who spoke on con·
diti on of anonymity, told The
Associated Press that Summ erall
chec ked into the clinic Friday. He
reportedly will undergo treatment
for alc ohol abuse.
Summerall wa s hospitalized in
December 1990 for gastro-intesti nal bleeding he said was caused by
a combination of alcohol and pain
killers he had tak en for arthritJs in
his back and k.noc .

Summerall. who lo ve s in Ponte
Vedra Beach. Fla., reportedly earns
$1.5 milli on a year at CBS.
NAS II VILL E. Te nn . (AP) Larry Ga tlin and the Gatlin Broth·
crs arc being honored for raisi ng
$1.5 million for th e Mu sc ular Dys·
trophy Assoc tauon.
The co untry sin ge r and hi s
broth ers Steve and Rud y ha ve
rao sed th e money a s hos ts of a
celebrity golf tourney in Dalla s for
th e past 14 years.
Th e trio , known for thw hots
" All th e Gold in California" and
" Broken Lady," will be honored
June 18 at an annual fund -raos in g
dinner sponso red hy th e assoc•a·
tion.

NEW ORLE AN S (AP ) - A
Saudi prince who suffers from a
blinding di sease mad e the first of
fi ve annual payments of $ 120.000
10 fund an eye speciali st' s rcsc.1rch
at Louisi ana State Umvcrs ity Eye
Center.
"Mayhc this wi ll help not onl y
the people of the Uno ted States but
people all over the world who arc
suffering from retinal doscases ,' ·
said Prmcc Abdul /VIZ Bin Ahmed
Bi n Abdul Az iz AI Saud.

Plan Memorial
Day dinner
The Burlingham Modem Wood·
men and th e Burlingham commu nity will have a dinner at the Modem
Woodmen's hall th ere on Memorial
Day. Chicken, turkey, ham and fish
dinn ers will be served along wub
sandwic hes, hom emade pies and
bread . Food will be avadabl c to cat
in or take out from I I a.m. to 6:30
p.m.
The proceeds will go for cemetery upkeep in Bedford Township.
Modern Woodmen will match the
money made that da y.
Any quesuons conc crnon g th e
eve nt ma y be direc ted to Mildred
Ziegle r, 992 ·7770. Currently sever·
al other fund rai sers arc underway.
Household kitchen supplies ; light
bulbs, and gree t cards among the
sa le items.

REG. $11.00

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- 100% Amoco Continuous Filament Olefin
- 12 or 15 h. Widths
-24 Colors

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�,-,: ~ge-10-The

Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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18th

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Anniversar~

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See Store For Details

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limit 1 Pet- Family With Ar;y Other Purchase
(eKduding ilemi prohibtted by law)

lwnit Two \2 Poch Per Family With Any Other
Purcho~e (e.o:duding items prohhited by klw)

~

,.

Fresh

....

Italian Bread

~

,.
~

•
,.
'
'
,

'i.~

,,

.-.•
~

.,.·

..•

..

u.s.

NO. 1
. 10 b. Bog

16o:z. ~ .

,.

Most Stores
Open 24 Hours
Check Your
Store For
Details

""...•
..,··

26 to 54·

Count

'

.-.-

...•
.•.
...
I'

I

.

.

'

APRIL 1992

Wed .

Thurs.

Fri.

Sat.

22 • 23 • 24 • 25

v2 GAL.

'
'

..
'

Prices Good 4 Days

6.5 OZ. CANS

10 LB. PACKAGE

,·

,...,.

CHUNK

7.S OZ.

1111
~ Russet
' .·. lald

2$1::

$ 59

1 TUNA
KRAFT AMERICAN
$ S9
s
Cheese Singles. . . ..r2 oz. 1
GROUND
$1
p;;~~~~. . . . . . . . . . . . 2
BEEF
DAIRY LANE
99(
SJ290
Ice Cream. . . . . . . .

Pkg. of 6

lb.

1

STAR-KIST

2% Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL

Margarine

69
;,'"trn,1

s

omatoeL. . . . . . . . . . . .LB. 69c
VALLEY BELL

Imperial

Food Club

5 OZ. CAN

POP

67oz•

..

SAUSAGE

6-7.5 oz.

prohibited by
lew)

•.

.

VIENNA

CHIPS

limit 3 Cons Per
Family With Arry
Other Purchase
(excluding items

..•...

..
.

ARMOUR

POTATO

...

•

s

PRINGLES

71• Off I ' elKins Size

.

15 oz.

12

Ribeye Steaks. . . . .LB.
CHICKEN
(
Leg Quarters ••.. . . . LB. 39
FLAVORITE
$1 09
unch Meat. . . . . . . . . .Ls.

~--------!;~-~~~f;_~t5~~~r~~J

..

(
Sausage Links.............. 1o oz. 89
s(
Wieners. . . . . . . . . . . . . oz. 9
MOUNTAINEER BRAND

'•

-

BOTTOM

TOMATO
$2 39 SAUCE

Round Steak. . . . . . . .Ls.
CHICKEN PARTS
(
Pic-0-Chick. . . . . . . . . . LB. 89

Pork Loin

:-'·.•

:·,_:

(
HUNT'S

Pork

.

2 LITERS BOTTLE

Each Pkg. Contains
3 Breasts,
3 Drumstick!&gt; and
3 Thighs

...

'

298 Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITiES
PRICES EFFECTIVE APR. 19 THRU APRIL 25, 1992

Cut FI'Oiftlhe Pork Loin

:·•

7-UP
PRODUCTS

STORE HOUR~ Monday thru Sunday 8 AM-1 0 PM

The Big Bear Hug

.

Phone..............................
Deposit Ticket In Store
DRAWING APRIL 26,

Customer
Appreeiation
Sale!

i:

-

• 0 ••••• ••• •••• 0 •••••• 0 . . . . . . . .

~

•

.

:: ~ : ! ~ :

COUPON ~ : · ·

::

LUNCH MEAT

::... ARMOUR TREET

GROUND
CHUCK

::

10 LB. PACKAGE

...~=

120Z.

99(

5 14~ 0
·'

�• _Pag.--12-·The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

DEN CENTER for colorful
FLOWERS and quality WN CARE.

Visit our

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE

Call 992-2156
Mo~. lhru Flu. 3A,~.-51'.M .. SAT.H- 12
CI.OSEIJ SUN HAY
• Ad a oul!!ide G11l ha, M u~n ro o r 1\f.,aga ~: Q unti ea
• Hecclvc dia roun l fo r ll&lt;h p11rd 1n ucivanl"f:

mu~ l hr

prepaid

r DO p m Saturda y

Tuesda )' Paper
Wednesday Pa per
Thursd.1y Pa~~r

I 00 p m M o nday
I lXJ p m T u csd.:~y
I (X) p m Wrdnesdoy

Friday Paper

I()()

Sunday Paper

r 00 p m Fnday

I

• Pricc o f ad for all U fHi til le ltcn i&amp; d o ubi,.. pnce of 11 J cut~
• 7 p otnt lrne type on I~ u1eci
• Tr ibun e kA not rr.! p\lnlib lt: for er rors aft ,.. r f1r.t d 11 )· (daec k
for erro r• f1nt clay 11d run~ in paper) . Cull Lefore 2: 00p .m

day afte r puhl ira li r.n to ma~ e ~: urr e;: ti o n
• Ad. that mwt be ptud Jn aclvan cl'" are
In '\ 1em o rr11m

A cla.uifwd advr.rt i~w. m en l pla CI'J tn th~: Cll lltpolil! Oai lv
Trth une (cxrrpt Cla uifieo:l DtaJJIIIy, BUAin r.u Card or ~ ~~ 11 1
Noticea ) wtl l11lso 11p pc~n r in the Po in t Plc11nn t Ht:glllter 11nd
the Uaily Sen lin r l , rr..t~rhmgou:r I H, OOO home1

1

1.37Pkg

Yard Salf'.e

AIIOITID ANNUALI
Jumbo pack, 6 plo nts r e r

RATES
Days

Words
15

Over 15 Words
$ .20

3

IS

6

IS

$4.00
$6.00
$ 9.00

10

IS

$13.00

Calliu Counly Yleigt" CHunly .'\1atton Co., WV
(ude (l 11 Arf~a Cm.tc 611 Arc .a Cod t~ 304
14C-.--CiliUpoli•

1)92-MidiJI~·Iw&gt;rt/

tJ75- Pt . l 1lea•anl

:~ tl7 - (he~~hir c

Pomr rn y
q8:l- tht'Hit!r

·15R- l..t!o n
~~ 7(._Appl1· (;rovt ~
77:l- llunn
HH:l-1\(!W ll a"cn
H9:.0- l ..,:tllrl
1l] 7 - Buff.ln

~:ih-Guyan
f~]- A.rahill
:~ 7'~-

919- BucirH·
7 42-R utl an ol

w.J nul

15

$1.

day

d,ly~

992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOIL fREE
1·800·848·0070
7131

Leaf ·n·bud rosebu;ehes careful II
culuvated tn 2-)lallon contaJncr&gt;

wlll bl'

Public Notice

Plonls, Perennials,
Everlasting
OPEN

WED.·SUN. I 0·5 JJ.m.

4·21 - 92·1 .... pol.

fOR SALE

moy bo nocooury ond

~&gt;&lt;~::',.o

VALLEY IN(,

Am c no , ~ M;~:--.te r

Gardener' ---~

:~1 1 - ptt rro..,e . rtt'&gt;l'

a.1 a lr:vcm1e J ]1;1, riHKl• HJer 1d n m.

or tnma!n &amp;. Vl'~e rahlc food In
en me 'm 1c l.l 20-lh -net -wr hJg

Powell. CliHord Auvuatuo
COMMON PLIAS COURT
Powell, Mel Fr•ncee
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Boggoao, Betty Powoll, and
BERTHA J. PROFITI, ot ol.
Nettio Power, who IMI
Plaintilhl
addr
...M are unknown.
-vw.You are hereby notified
EUGENE GUY LONG, et el .
Dolondanto thai you heve been named
Dotondanto In • • I octlon
Cue No. 112-CV· I 13
NOnCE BY PUBUCATION onlitlod Bortho J. ProHIH
ond Joe Foreman, Plointilhl,
TO : Fronchoo Boggoao,
vo. Eugene Guy l.on!J, ot ol.,
Betty Powell, and Nellie
Dofond.,to.
Thil .:don hoa
Powell , addrMaM
boon ualllflod C10o No. 112·
unknown; ond tho Unknown
Holro, Next ol Kin, Leg-, CV·113 and II pending In
the Common Plea• Cour1 of
Dovla-. Admln'-trrolo..,
Meig• County, Ohio. Court
Exaculora, Sncoeeeore,
Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio
Spoua•, and Allll!na ol
.5769.
And row Madia on Powell,
Tho object of tho
Honnoh Jono Powell, Nettie
Complaint
I• to datermlne
Biahop. Miry Dolillh Grimm,
tho
lntorooll
ol aU PlolntiHa
EIIDI Ann ~orem.n , Lucy
and Delendanta In 42Y4
Gainer, Fr~ncu L.ar1Un1,
ac:r•, more or l•a, of rNI
Bortho Spoun, Rolph
M tata located in lebanon
Powoll, ChariH Powell,
Townohlp. MoiJIO County,
Wade Powell, Sylv'- Pool,
Ohio.
and In Soclion No, 30,
leroy Blahop, Frank
Townohlp
No, 2 and Range
Biahop, Anna Biahop
No. It ol lho Ohio
Conoly, Thomu Ytllko
Compa~ny'e Purch .. a and,
Grimm, David Wlll'-m
that
tha raal aatata ba
Grimm, Eugene Stanley
partitioned
or Ordered aold
Grimm, Thom• Franklin
ll It cannot bo portlUonod.
Grlmm1 Harry Fr.ncee
plua attorney 1... , cotll
Grimm, Twllo Dom•ky,
and
euch other reliel ••
Worron Henry Grimm.
Edw•d R. Forem•n, Jeu~
(dl.-, Elza Larklna, Elvo
2
In Memory
Hoym.,, Fr.,k Modloon
Powell, Nettie Smith,
Delbert E, Powell, Roy
Powell, Huel Stulta, Ruth
BIRDIE
Opphllo, Allrad H.old
Who Passed Away
Powell , Wold Em.-oon
4 Years Ago On

1

!tVL'

fi ne teJCturc, ~ hade - t o lerant va ri e t 1t~

FAIIUWN UINfOICID NOll
Features conven ien t X"xSO'* ~ i zc w11h
rhree- ply cons truct ion , green color An
e... ..,cn u al yard rool for any homeowner
•J n," 1r ,t..mru-,

All NW"Mry Slock Sbmm On Thb
P•g~ Aft

On sale Wednesday, April 22 through Saturday, April 25
Nu~ry ~ r .-..- k

.o.n.l 1~1 ( .,...-.j, A~»~ l •bl .. fl.nlv In&lt;;,..,..., ll'uh &lt;... .ro..-n frmt' r

t .. ..-n An&lt;! G•rtkn ilt'm\ 1\V•~.bk- Onlv In 1..1'11~' Km•n ' '""'

Mature Sp«lmnu

-Interior &amp; E.J:t.lor
Painting
(FllEE ESnMATES)

ssss

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

DK's FARM TOYS
I _.~

"'0

appreciated.

)OU IJliTo.

IADIT IUISID IT !allllT &amp; !IIIMDI

(olfow~•l

992·2487 or
992·7884

For Mo re Info Call

614-992·2549

L_

4/15/9211 mo.
omes-Pet&amp;-Wildllt&amp;

4 ·7·92· 1 mo.

BOWARD L.
WHITESEL
ROOnNG

Mol orcyc les-Eic.

'l(athryn

NEW - REPAIR

"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

GUTIERS
DOWNSPOUTS

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

GUTTER CLEANING

Welcome Slates
$20.00

PAINTING
Free Estimates

Cus tom Paintings

941-2181

614-992-2242

411W:Z 1 mo. pd.

Quality

oW" Sprins Shlpm-' or
li-oy-8U1 1\llen. Now In Stvfla.

il 10 WOII, Alhon, Ohio •I!J.JBII

II. IO West,ltho"' Ooo•l93-3815

,.,.,wrlcrF1ttb9f'"'

You• wilcEiil't'D~i'"

2/'l0/9213 mo

Call614·992-6637
St. Rt . 7

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Cheshire, OH.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garoges • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
fOMMERCii\L and RI:SIDI':I'Vfli\1,
mEE FSTIM,\'I"ES

•Vinyl Sid in g

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

•Replacement

(No Sunday Calls)
V12192 tfn

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

THE QUAliTY PRINT SHOP
MIOOUPORT, OH.
•-4:00 poo
142-302G-Aitor S:OO

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

f':

11/14/tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

Remadeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FI!EE ESTIMA'IES

REASONABLE RATES

985·4473
667·6179

742-2138

205 North Second Ave .
Middleport, Oil

1ROY-81£1'

1ROY-81£1
Ou.r Sprtn6 .Shipmf'flt Of
Tr oy- llih TW.. r• Now In Stork .

•Insul ation

"Riders AY&lt;ilablo"
DI5PUYID AI
~2·339h!:l0

r---------------,

•Roolin~

COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

3·15·'92· 1 mo. pd.

1-1·92·tln

IITrDTUrDIIr
1111:n 1ncnm.

Rf r rrn nv txWGN

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Apprned M.,fodvred
Housing Produch.
~

'
I I

Ouafity Hi Effkiency Air
(onditioters, Heat
Furnaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
Bennetts Mobile tlornl'-!~t:.a.!'llll
1391 Safford School Rd.
Coil (614) 446·94 6 or

,• .........................................................•
,

••

CHES HIR E-A 1 112 story home w1th 7 rooms , 3 bdrm s, 1
bath, and newer roo f. vlflyl std1ng , newer double pano
I'M dows . and a basement Can buy wllh $800 down
paymen t, 8 112% Interest , pnymcnts of $166 87 a month tor

••
••
••
••
a
••

••
•
•

30

•

•

••
•
•

•a

•a

•a

•a

a

a

a

a

a

•
••
•

M IDDLEPOAT ·Brownell Av enu e-A nea t 3 bedroom horne
wtt h basement and garilge . cqutpped k1tchen , and ce ntra:
a~r

JUST $24 ,000

AT 7-Approx t6 acres of land w1th an Broom 4 bedroom
farm house dr1llcd well ;1nd TPC water Located nea r th e
Eastern Ht9h School ·
$30,000
MIDOLEPORT-Fron1 S t -11 rental property IS what you 've
been look1ng for we ·ve got tt In th1 s house ~au have a 2
bodroom apartme nt downsta1 rs. nnd a one bedroom apart ·
men ! up , al so has alumtnum s1dm g and a one car garage

$ 18,000
AT 33· Co AD 18- 61 acre s w1th pond. some tnnbcr A
huntor's par.adtse or aTliCC home 51tc
$30,000
CHESTE R -Co Ad 25-Love Hl; J! country atmosp here? Th1 s
homo has lots ol1 t on about 2 II&lt;J t acres wtth 23 acros ot
t1mber The house IS gor geous w/3 bed. btg k1t chen. dlntng
room . and a large ltv1ng room All r ecen tly remodeled wt th
new wtnng, roo t, and lot s more Has lull basement tor that
pool tab le or work shop Ha s shed w1th new wtnng also It
h ea ts with woodburntng furn ace w1th fuel oil furn ace used
lo r back up Great h ome w11h a

GRE AT PRICE $56,900

newer root , newer double pane ·

1o!e yoo,
,
tid
l
OIII'
oble,
Ill
oport of"
10
went wilh jOO, ~~ doy Gad tolled

All CL ASSES

HA S: Mon .-S.at. 10 am-5 pm
Sunday 1-5 pm

Window

All SOLES- VINTAGE &lt;11d
&lt;OllECTABlE

•a
a

••

••
••

•
•a

•
•
••

•

•a
•••

••

•a
••
••

••

••
•a
•
•a

•

•
••
a
•a
••
••

) Daya • J Newapapers · J Unes

YOUR CLASSIFIED AD
ONLY
$J.:U

: •. ----------- ··------ 11----------.
"· ------- '·------ .,.______
'.,'., •

Waa $59,900

• :s.-----•• 4 - - - - - - -

:

~ole 0111 heoflllo

MUS T PRE-REGISTER FOR

INSULATION

HAULING

ASKING $80,900

2 Miloo on Hyaell Run Rd.
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Vioits ...... $2 5.00
16 Vioito ...... $30.00
1 Visil... ... $3.00

APR . 2B. 6 :00 pm Basket Class

&lt;A¥JAYMAR

J&amp;L

DALL AS K. WEBER - Owner

OFFICE 992· 2886

'

11

Extended Easler hours.
Open until 7:30pm

31231921tln

4·Hl · ••·

Card of Thanks

The lamlly of
HELEN G. NEliTZUNG
wloh to thank friendo,
nelghbo,., end
ralatlvu for the
klndneaaae extended
during her recent
lllneaa and death. The
nt11ny c1rd1, glfto,
lattero, and donation a
to both the Cancer
Society and The Trinity
Church are grutly

Across fro• Poll Olfk•
217 (.S ..oo4 St.
POMlROY, OHIO

3·1 J ·92 ·tfn

BILL SLACK
992·2269

CHESTER-Oak Hill Ad -Spac•ous l1V1ng 1n a beau t1fu l
country se1t1r1g A 2 story home w1lh 4 Dodroo ms 1 ll2
bath s fam1ty room. v1nyl s 1d1ng , sm all barn, full basement .
pon d. FRE E GAS on ;lpprox 82 &lt;"Jeres

13·18

'}y{erufows

Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

~ooflng

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Public Notice

'122, 1988

JCOTTI LAWN IIID MIDVII
Clloosc from etthc r P1cture Pride or Shadv
Area 1n convc nirnr 3-lh -nct -wt pkg Attrac -

-Room Additions

-Gutter Work
-l:leotrlcol and Plumbing

ARNI E 'S SPORTS

iJtffiE

K·OIO PUNT fOOD

CARPENTER SERVICE

Rea l Eslate General

Public Notice

f(flJtl»~

YOUNG'S

L·lme

IO"IIANOINO IAIKITI
Popula r flowering varictic"
LOUNGE
Gallipolis Ferry, WV .
Presents Miss Hawatian
Tropic Beauty Pageant
2nd Compet~ion Thursday,
April 23, 9:00 P.M .
Tho pageant brought to you 1n part
by McDonald's ol Pt. Pleasant,
Quality Print Shop, HaHelrs M1ll
Outlet, Point Distributing, Subwav ol
Pt. Pleasan t, Ac. High MusiC &amp; B&amp;A
Machine &amp; Repair.

APRIL

4/2/921ttn

Agr ·culture

I( I

h;bkct.-, Ideal for rorchl'",
patHJ .... . homl' ( )r o ffi ce

SUMMER
IMAGES

We

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

NOW OPEN FOR SPRING

Rl. 2
M'll d WV

grown 1n co n ven1cn t Ill"

CRAFTS
I 0 Dlo•oo4 St., IIW41oport

All MAKES

52100 S.R. 338, Rodoo, Olalo

Business Services

RITE AID PHARMACY
SAVE$$$

A lar~c a.'lsortment of co lor-.

NEW OPENING

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
B•lng It In Or
Pick u~.

t ... ' pill.

TROLLEY STATION

12·5-tfn

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS and
EVERLASTINGS

4~2~/'~'l,

1 mo. pd. 4116192

PH. 614·992-5591

DARWIN, OHIO

247-4035

304 273

Ea

BULLDOZING

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

hereby required
1
to onowor tho Complaint
within twonty -olghl (28)
doyo oftor lho loot
publlcoUon ol thia notice
- -- ; : : : = = = = = = = = = = : ; - - -1Jwhlch will bo publiohed
once 1 wMk for ail: (6)
DANCE 7 TO 11
oucc.. ai .. weeki. Thelaot
April 24, May 1, 15 &amp; 29
publicalion will bo m - on
M · b GEOR E
tho 27th day or ihy, 1~~.
l WOO , • 0.
USIC y
G HALL
ond tho twenty-eight (28)
Middleport Legion Annex
dayo lor onoworing will
•
•
Middleport, Oh10
commence on thai date. In
4- 9-tfn
Food &amp; Ice Available
cau ol your lailuro to 1 ~=======~
anawer or otherwiae 11
roapond ao required by tho
Ohio Rulea ol Civil
Procedure, judgment by
default will be rendered
agalnot you lor tho roUol
domondod in the Complaint
Let Us Price Your NeJct
Dated thia 16th day ol
Prescription or Your Refills
•LIGHT HAULING
April. I ~112.
from Anolher Slore . We Can
Larry Spenc•,
•FIREWOOD
Clerk of Court.
Save You Money! We Will
(4)22, 29;
Beal Any Co~etilors Pricel
1516. 13. 20. 27. 6tc
GIVE US A CALL TODAY I
Terry Spurlin, RPH
C LA SS IFIF.DS
USED RAILROAD TIES
$5.00 Off Transfers
H · 92·1ln
... TJ1i!:i \\' nv
$3 .00 Off New

•I·OIIADI ROIIIUIH

Choo..:.e from

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASE MENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULIN G: Limeslone ,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Licensed an d Bonded

CLASSD'IEDS
GE1' RESULTS • FAST!

I

t

4-21-92- I mo. p&lt;l.

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

$0 )/ d.tv

R.atl'S a re for co nse\utivc run s, broken up
chargr'CI for each day as separate ad~ .

$ 42
$ .hO

BULL~TIN
~0 RD DEADLINE
II;
·
4:3u P: • DAY BEFORE
PUBLICA' I0 N

r .. n l

217-t...~hlrt

IIIJY~'iELL-TRADE

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

614-94~2627
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
RoaldenU.I&amp;
Commercial
Free E•timalH

204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992·3184

HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

KEVIN'S LAWII
MAINTENANCE

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

667-Cmllvillo•

$ .30

BULLETIN BOARD

Dill.
Di111 .

Hrs. 9 to S
Mo1. thru Sat.

1-614-764-2101

An~a

, Monlhl y

Rate

p m Thwsday

843-Portlln d

NOW OPEN

Middleport and
Ravenswood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evenings

Classified pa~es cover the
following telephnnf! &lt;'xclwnge.•.,.

388- \ 'inion
215- Rio Gr•nd r.

Ha ppy Adti

134 N Sl.,ll~leplll1, Ol

specific pieces from
Racine, Pomeroy,

Dil Y BEFORE PUBLICATION

M onda y Pa)X'r

• Free Ada: Civeuw11y and Fo und nd.8 uml~: r 15 word! wil llw
run 3 day a at no r h11rp;c .

Card of Thanlo.s

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between 1861-1929.
Especial ly National
Bank Currency I rom
any slate . Paying .
$300.00 and up for

POLICIES

5. 97

13

Business Services

SPECIAL GARDEN CENTER HOURS: OPEN SATURDAY AT 8 AM; OPEN SUNDAY AT 10 AM

pkg Large soil content
and roo t ba.se l:luy toda y'

The Dall Senti

. newer wir1 ng.

•••
••

,, _ _ _ _ _ _ 14 ..- - - - - -

5 ' - - - - - - -- - 1 0 - - - - - - --

l'li.------

PDII'If'I"')" DM)y Smlind.)

•
:

WITH AN AD lNTHE •
GALLIPOLIS DAU,Y:
TRIBUNE CLASSIFlEDS. I
TIIFY WORK LIKE:
I

a

1

"'ABRACADABRA!":

MAGIC.•

1

1

approx . 1!2 acre of ground

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker .. .............................. 992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ,, ,... ,..................................... 992·3056
DARLINE STEWART ............... ....... .......... ,..........991·6365
SANDY BUTCHER ..... ...................................... ... 992·5371
SHERYL WALTERS, Cheshire............................ 361·04 21

n . _______

CASH ONLY. MII.IL OR PLACE tiT OFFICE
Print one word In each spact above . Each Initial or group
tlgura
counts u 1 word . Counl name and address or phone number If used .
Deadline AprU 30, 1'192,
NAME
COLUMN OF AD
PHONE _____
(aD lllk ~arlo: G.Uipolil Dail)' Tribune., Pt. Pit-aunt Rtp.Ur, IIWI

plumbmg. Has 5 rooms . 2 bdrm s. and one car garage on
$25,900

•~------

NOW YOU SEE IT, NOW:
YOU DON'T! MOVE YOUR•
MERCHANDISE FASTER:
THAN YOU CAN SA.Y •

or

•
I

TJfE 'D!ii.J L'J S'f!J./J7'},[J:L •
Ill COURT STREET :

POMEROY, &lt;iH. 45769 •
CaD992-2156 0

•
I

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

�Page

SNAFUIF' by Bruce Beanie

Announcements

3

Pomeroy~lddleport,

14-The Dally Sentinel

31

Homes for Sale

42

Ohio

KIT 'N' CAKLYLE® by Larr)'

Mobile Homes

Circle Motif: New Man1gement ,
Remcchlad Rooms, C.ble, Olscoum
For
Funtrlll, &amp;

Huntington, auper locaUon , near
c11y bu~ store~ , 1~, or quiet
stre.t, 1 rooms, $19,500. 304a95.:JOI1 "'304-&lt;~7s.2.as.

Reunions,
L.ocltlon:
1380
httMt Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-

Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy, ape·

2 BA mobile home tor rent.
Close to town. 304-6'75-e783.

44

WICII:Hneta, full bath W/VInlty, 1
112 blth wlahower, downstairt
CA, g11 I'INt, tlnlehlld biHnwnt, privet• lana, near 11nlor
hatlplt•ls-churchucl11ten•
IChool, 614·892-l-424 for ap-

Call Today, MMt Tonlte
1-IOO-Tn.1001J, $2.95 Min. 18 •

Mltetel, C.1 Meaa, California.

UVEI UVEI UVEI
1·-454 IIOOI C18 •l SSTEL
O•t. FL $3.115111 n.

~nlment .

RedYCe: Bum on tel while you
a!Hpl Take OPAL, anllab'e at
FNih Phormoey, 786 N. Se&lt;:ond
Sl., Middleport .

MW•g•, lraah paid, you pay
... ctrlc/gas, $150/mo., 614-94~
2217

.....

7 PuppMe, lo Glv..way, 5 Mall ,
2 Female. 614-256-6456.

u..d galvanized roofing , 6141112-302Al

6

Lost

&amp;

Found

Found: Small BNgll Type Oog,
V.ry F~ty. C.U 614-446-4484.
Found:

~mall

house doa, n•ar

Melg1 County talrgrouncJs , 614 -

1112·2251

Lost: One

pt~lr

ol cockatiels

(gray) Male and female . May or
m1y not be together. They took
N~ht on Apt11 11, 1~2 . Will the
tady lhlt liVII on Rt. 2 that

found a cockallet ptuu call
304~7~1717

or

304-675-2063.

Thank you.

11

Help Wanted

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellent
Pay,
Banalils,
Transportation,
407-292-4i'l7,
E1t. 57'1. lhl .m.-IOp.m. Toll
Refunded.
AVON ! All Arus
Spears, 304-675-1429

! Shirley

Babyslner In my home, S dl)'11 1
weak, Monday-Friday, 614-992·
3257
Babyslner, l-5 Cays Per W11l.
Varied Schedule. Reterenc::H
BatRequired. 614-245-9415
WIIn: 8P.M. I 10P.M.
BARlENDERSICASINO
WORKERSID£CK
HANDSJHott ..... ,
Ete.
Position• Abcwlrd CrulN Shlpa.
$300/S.900 Wkly. FrM Tr~vel.
Caribbean, Hawaii, Bahamas.
No E11p. Neee111ry. 1·206·1367000 Ed. 1611N9.

r.. tor
Hrvlca basis to w«t. 11 llkln
Hospital, lakin, WV. 1 Dr 2 days
per w11k. lntarllfed penon call
l04-fi7s..J230 ext 20 or 24, Mon.
Frl 1:00AM · 4:OOPM tor tNd
form . O..dllne tor applying If
May 15, 1992.

loell: walker coon dog, Hy..u Beauliclarv'Barber on

Aun, Smhh R01d ar11 , lost
fridoy nlghl, 114-902·5056

llew..-d: tor ahlny black cat
an.w.,. to Jaaper wh h amblir
h..a b.n 1111Ut1r~ and
••• ...rtng 1 colllr wl1h an 10
t1g 1nd 1 ho4 pink r1lleclor on
the bKk. DINppe~red around
Hutton Car Wllh, Rt 7 aru
{OIIIIpoUa) Friday. pt,uu ret urn
him, CIIIIM-446-1517.

•Y••,

1

Yard Sale

ALL Yard S.._,a Mutt Be Paid In
Advanc.. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1M dly betoN lhe eel Is to run .
Sundly edition • 2.00 p.m.
Frklly. Monday todl11oo - 2.00
p.m. Saturday.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Sale Thv... Frl, Sat, 107

Yllrd
·
27th St, 3 flmll._ t tum onatf'Mt
~to Jolwloon • ll.trbt

8

Public Sale

&amp;

Auction

Rkk PMrMn hc:llon Company,
tull thM tuctkxleer, compllll
aucdon
aervk::e.
Uc1nMd
1M Otdo I W•t Vlr;lnla, 304·

m:ms.

9"

Wanted to Buy

Wanlld 1o Buy: JW'Ik Autos
WMh Or Whhoul Motors. Call
lMrf Uwly. 114.:181 130''.

CommercLtl Palnler Wanted.
Only Highly Skllt.d E•pertanc.
Painter NMd Apply. Rlf~t~ncn
Required. Top Wages Paid. Call
614-245-5380.
Consunlng Dietitian s.rvk• tor
Lakin Hotpftll, Lakin. WV. Mutt
be reglstertld/UcenHd Dletltiarl.
S.rvlcu to be perfOf'mlod 2 clays
per month. lnleruled persorts
c111 304-675-3230 e1t. 20 or 24 ,.
Mon·frl 8:00AM - 4:00PM lor' bid
form . ONdllne for applying Is
May 15, 1992.
Contuhlng labor•1ory Mr"YicM
tor lakin Hoaphel, lakin, WV.
Lib to bill w.dk:aldiMedleare
andlm any 1hlrd par1y companies. Servkl1 to Include
pick-up and delivery. lnterHtld
peraona contact ~75-3230
u1. 20 Of 24, Mon-Fri, 8:00 AM 4 00 PM tor bid form . Oeadlin•
tor applying 11 May 15, 1992.
Consunlng Pharamacy services
tor Lakin Holpits l, Lakin, WV.
mull
be
comPharmaey
puterized 1nd lnt•rfaca witi"IIBM
AS400 computer system and
AIMS 10ft w•re packaga lnter"tlld pel$0na confect 304-6153230 ext . 20 or 24 Mon-Fri
8.00AM · 4:00 PM for bid form
O.ad ll ~ lor applying Ia May 15,
1992.

OIETiliAN!OIET TECH
lop ..,_ Peld: All Old U.S. PI..Nnt Hill Manor, A 201-Btod
Coine, Goki Ringe, Sliver Coins, Nurtlng Faelllty In Plk~on, Ohio
Gold Coina. IUS. Col~ Shop, Hu A Fuii-Tlme Oppor1unity
151 Stcond Av.nue, Gallipolis.
Availab.. For A Oielitan!Oi.t
Teeh. Thlt Is A Clinical Position
Wllh Lltt.. 0&gt; No Supe~isory
Employment Services
Cutin. Pluunt SllbM StaN To
Provide Support/Training. For
lmmltdlale Conaidention, Call
Mr Undeman At 1-614-289- 2394 .
11 Help Wanted
EOE .
t350.0010.y Proe11slng Phon•
CIA ECTOR OF NURSING
Qrderll People Ca ll You_No Ex Plsnan1 Hill Manor, A 2'01 - B~
=nc• Neenury 1..S06-2S5- SNF In Pikaton May Be locking
For You To Run Our Nursing
"Beautlcian/Barbrlr on 1.. lor O.ptr1ment . Arw You ... A Strong
..,...Ice basjs to work at Lakin Advocate Of Rnident Dignit y
Hoapilal, Lakin, WV. 1-2 days And Quality Cere? ... A Team
pe1 wuk.'Consulllng Dietitian Builder Able To Listen To ldaas
..,...lcea lor laiUn Hospttal, Of Others? ... Skilled In Publi c
And
Able
To
lakin, WV. Must ~ reglatar.dl RelaHona
llcll,.ed dietitian. S.rvk" to Repre..,t YOUI Facil ity In The
be ptrlgrmtd 2 deyt I * monlh . Community? ... A Strong OrExparlanced
With
"()onauhlng laboratory Hrv6cn ganller
lor laldn 1-to.plt.al, Lakin, WV. Medltlre, M.cilcald And ParL.U to bill Medkald/Midlcare tonne{ Management? Then This
andlor any third party com- Is The Job You Have BMn Lookp~~n... .
S.rvlcet to Include Ing For. HCF, A Pr~rus i ve ,
Otuo-Bued
pick -up I deUvert.'Consultlng P•ople-Orientld,
pharmac:J unlcn fOf Lakin Corporation Will Provide You
With Orlen1atlon, Suppor1 And
Hos~llal, Lakin, WV. Pharmacy
Any Needed Asslttance. You
m~ be eomputetll~ &amp; lnlef·
taee whh IBM AS400 compu1•' Must Taka Advanlsge Of Tl1 ia
sptem I alms soflwara pa ck- Unique Oppor1unlly By Reply •;-. ln1NU1ed penons cont1ct Ing lmmedlately To : Jim Un.
deman,
Adm lnslrator
cJo
304~75-3230 ut 20 Of 24 , MooFri-, aam-4pm tor bid term. Pl•asant HIU Manor, P.O. 801
Oudll,.. tor applying Is May 15, 334 , Piketon, OH 4566 1. 614 -2892394, EOE.
1192.
2 Secretary I R.ctpllonlttt For
Growlng__ Oft'Je•. Word Procut1~
(WP5.t),
Tr•nscrlpl lon,
PIMMnl Phone Penonality, lnt
BlUing Ea:p., Will Train On Vari oue
Comput1r
Program•
Fllxlbll Day And Evening
Houra. Aasume To : C.thy
eoop.r, P.O. Bo• t10 , Galllpojla ,
OH •5631.

Do you want to work a taw
hours ea ch WMk and make
$.100 or more7? Pick your own
lima, 9 OOAU -1·00PM 01 ~&gt; OOPM
- 9 OOPM. II this Is you and you
have a pluunt persona lity and
want to work In my offlc• with
other piaa1.1nl personalities,
call m• at 304-575-4934 for more
Information. E..O.E.. MIF.

Aid

Home Worker. N..dld By 150
Firms, Top Pay, 1339 Week Or
More. Rush $1.00 S.lt - Addra~ ­
aed St1m~ Envelo~ 110 D&amp;A
Suppli.. , Bo• 1443, Fairborn,
OH .!15324.

For

Phyaic1l Therapy
O.pllrlrMnl With Some Genenl
HNith Clllanlng Outl11. 1~24
Koun- W11kly. Rtfttlflte R....
qulred, PINN Include Wl1h
Reaume. Flepfl To: CLA 113, c.Jo
GllllpoUI 0. ly Tribuna, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

45131.
Alcoho( Or Drug Coun ...« To
Provide CounNIIng Edue~~tion
Pr....-rtaUona In Out P.r lent
s.ttlng, B.A. Deor• Preferred
E1,-rfence D"lrtble. Send
A..urne By May 1at To FACTS ,
At. 2 Box 273-l, Bld\nll, Otllo
45114. 11/FIH E.O.E.

72

Hot Oog Sate Person Fuii -Tlma.
Dress Cod•: Shorl ~ . .A p pro ~~:
250·300 Wkly lvg. May~ t.jora,
614 - 367~9 .

LAW ENFORCEMENT DEl , US.
MARSHAll'S Now Hiring. No
E.~~:pert1nce N.e11ury. For Application Information Call 2t9755-6661 , Ext. OH1M 8a m To
8p m 7 Oeys.

Read the Best Seller

11

Ohio, fi14-44S-4416 After 7p.m.
Fumtshed A,-rtmenl, 4 Rooms
And Bath, c.ntrally Located,
Rerer...,. And DopooH R•
qulf9d. No Pelt. 8141 446 0444.

Help Wanted

'Avon' 111 arMS lhl sky 11 lhl
limit wltt'l new Nmlng 1tructure.
1..&amp;00-992--63.56.
Patient S.rvlee Aulltant, Approxlm~~te ly 20-25 Hourt Per
WMk ; Must Be Energetic And
Able To Work FlexlbM Schedule
Including Oay, Evening And
Saturday Houra. Medicaf Ottlce
Expartanc. H~pful; Wlll 1rtln
Mature, Raponalbte Plf'IOn
Who Is Sensltln To Birth Can.
lrul And Reproduetlva HHHh
Needs 01 ctt.ma. MUll Be Wall
Organized;
Accur~~la
Wflh
Flgu,... And Record K11plng;
H•v• 5uPI'r1or Communication
Skills. Mu.t: Be AbM To Work
Under Guidelines With Minimal
Suploi'Vil&amp;on. Atqulr• Rei Iable
Transportation, Ability To Work
In Welgs, Gallia, Lawrence
Coontlet And Other SitH It
Needed. Time And Ou1 Of
County Tflvel Peld. Start $5.50.
Two
Send
Resume
And
Empfoy"*lt
Raflf'enc.. To
Planned
Parenthood
Of
Southeu'l Ohto, 396 Richland
Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701 By
April 30, 1192, EOE!ESP.
Penon To Work In Hardware
Slo"' AI ClortL Apply CLA Bo1
112, clo Galllpolla O.fly Tribune,
12!5 Third A.v•nua, G.llipoUs,
Ohio 45131.

SonMlOne To Elultd Woven Wire
Fence. 614-388-8572 Aher 6p m.
14

Business
Training

Retrain
Now!I!SouthNslem
Businus Collage, Spring Valley
Piau . Colli Todly, 614-44&amp;-4367f!
Regllterallon f9()..(1S.1214 9.

17

Miscellaneous

1983 Nuhua, 3 bedroom, 14•70
witt'! 7x12 expando, CA, Queen
waterbld, gerdln tub, all appllenen, 10x20 deck, S14,50C.
..uat move, 304--675-7860 or 615359C.
1985 Wlndt.or 2br, Fully Furnlahed, Dl1hw11he~ Ols~al,
T.V., Sl•eo System throughOU1,
w..tw &amp; Ory.r, 2 Bedrooms Of
Fumitwe And Uvlng Room Furnlturel.. Microwave, ~•lrlgarator
And ~love . 614-44&amp;-3547, 304·
'Jill-&lt;t356.
1989 Redman Danville, 14x72,
Total Electric, Excellent Condition. Priced To Sell! 614-367-0139
After 5p.m.

2 Bedroom Houu, 26 Ct'llllicothe Ra.d, Gatlipolls. $8,500.
814_..._1615, 614-446-1243.
2 BR1 12160 Hollypark. New carl* • vinyl th~hout . EIICII·
lent eondhion. Priced upon lnopectlon. 30"'7T.l-5840.
Like new 1986 mobile homt,
12x60, very nicety fumlshtd,
HonMIIINd Rutty, Broker. 3046J5.5540 or 304-882-2405.
RepoausNd Mobile Homes,
Gl'lll S.tecllon, Slngt••. $500
Down And Doubles $1,000
Down, With Approved Credit!
Call 1..aoo.sag...571o.
Schuh Homn111d 1992 14x70 2
Or 3 Badroorna, 2 Baths, Vinyt
Siding, Shlng~ Rool, Sp.cial
Price: $18,995 French City
Mobile Hom••- 614-448-Q340.

33

Fa""s for Sale

Wanted to Do

Will Babysh In My Home_ Rodnay Araa. R1f1,.nces Availabla _
Ca ii614-245--S887.
Babytlt1ing In my home Monday
thru Friday, ICfOIJI trom Nor1h
Point School, have references ,
304~7~612 .

Georges Por1abla Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to lha mill just
csll 304-675-1957.
Housa Claanlng Fo r Parties.
Showing Or Any Occasion; Also
Clean WMkly Or Monthly!
Referancts 614 -446 -3&amp;81, 614446-3388 L..av• Massagt.
M111 Paula 's Day Care C.ntar.
Saft, aHordabl•, chlldcare. M-F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2\IJ-10
Betora, aH•r school . Drop-Ins
wek:ome. 614~46...£1 224 . New lnt.nl Toddler Care, 614-446--6221.
Will [)o Babyslning In My Home
C.nilied Nurses Aid. Good
location . 61-t-44&amp;-2652 .
Will Do Babysllt ing In M~ Homa,
loealed N81r Clay ~hool. 614·
256-6869
Will Do Housecleaning In Gallipolis Area. 14 50 Par Rour 614•46-i&lt;OI.

34

Business
Buildings

Mull Sell By May 111. 3 Steal
40J.60L
601100,
Bulldlnge.
100ll:100. hclory u.als, Call
Now &amp; Sa v.. Bob 614-446-0 nt

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

25 acr.. In Wll....vllll area,
beautiful ~I'll tor home &amp; partially wooded .,..., 814-66g..3402
or 614-1112-2536
BEAUTIFUL Home Slta For Sale.
22 Acr.. Or Will Divide Approxlm~1ely 2 MUn From Rio
Gmlde Near Othlf BNutiful
HotnH.
81-4-24~040
Day
Phone; 61~245-9575 Ev.nlng1.
LOll for llle, trallere KICipllble. 304-675-2722.
Lota In Gelllpoll1 Farry • 100'1r.
owner financing at $98 .64 per
month, any ona of four to11
available, 304-67§..2722.
lola In New Haven - 100%
owner linanc::lng at $101.48 per
month buya alllhrM loCe, a304-

675-2722 .

Will Yow Lswns, 614-446-4663.

O.J. Whhe Road, 18 Acret,
Mottly Wooded, With A Buull·
tui Building Sit• Tl'tat Hae A
View For Mlln. Nice LAval
Ortvaway,
Rural
Wetlf,
Electrlehy, And PhOM S.,-viee
Avall1bla. 3 WHet From Holzer
Hoapltal, SU,OOO. 614-446--4171.

Financial

21

Business
Opportunity

!NOnCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO.
r~tommendt thai you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money throU91'1 the
mail until you hava lnv..tlgat~
th• off•lng.
Vending Route: Local. W• Hava
Tht Newest Machlnn, Making A
Niee StNdy Cul't Income_ 1·
8()().9ss.mM.

2722.

36

Real Estate
Wanted

1
Farm Wanl~ On Ohio River
For Vage11blea. Millon H.
Rartltk, Rul Eatals Brolt•r 614983-2134 .
Want lo buy tot sullabl• for
moblla Mme. will pay eash.
304-675-6~ .

A-Frtma Cabin 16'x37J. Mar11nlon, WV Wllllaml urMbrilr
Aiv•r N.. rby; Monongahalla Na·
tiona! Forest; Next To Hancley
Public Hunting A,.a; Grut
Hunting, Fithlng (Turby, O..r,
Bur) Mod•m Cabin fOf' 8-10;
BNutltul
Mountain
Senlng,
$19,900. 814-379·2'JI8 .
Ex1r~y

neat, ,.ady to move
Into, 2bdrm , t-Int-pump, great
atar1ar home or tor eoupte,
FMHA approved, SyriiCuH, 614·
992-"Mgfl

·

l...atayatte Melt; Nice 2 Rooms
And B•th, S17S'mo. lncludet
Utliltl11, Deposit Requi,.d. 61444l·ml, 614 -4011-4 222 .
Now aecaptlng appUcatlona tor
M..on Ap~~rtmentl . Equal Hous.
tng Opp., llr cond., laundry
room, frM frlllh pickup, efote
to stor• &amp; ldtools. 304-113M29.

One

end
two
bedroom
ap.artments for rent. 304-6752053 or 075-4100.
On. bed
tu 1 hid p1
~nt PIN':, v~·clean, ·~
pet a, 304475-1386.
Tars TownhouH Apenmenll, 2
Bedrooms, 2 F~ra 1166 Sq. Fl .
1 1/2 Batha, CA, oW, Oiapoaal, 2
Pools 1 Utlllti11 Paid Ellcapt
Electnc, No Pets. $301. 814-3677850.
W~ge Aple, $06 Burdette St,
Point PI.. Nnt, no pels, 1 1nd 2
bedrooms, 304-675--2072 •H•r
5:00.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms for rant - -•k or mont h.
Starting 11 $120/mo. Gailla Hot a\.
114-«6-11580.

Space for Rent

Country Mobile Home Park, Rt.
33N., under new managern•nt.
lots, ISS; home rentala, 1235;
614--~

lllotMII Homto lol , 112 Ac,.l,
Private.~, Rt. 2 Nor1tt, 6 Miln
From .-oint Plauant, WV 814Space: Modern OffD
Suha Avella~ In Bu1ln.u And
414
Profeulonal
Building
Second Annue, Gallipolfa. Morris Haskins. 614-44&amp;-2631, 614·
... 6-2512.
Office

49

For Lease

Second Floor Aptnmtnt For
Lu11· L.A., One B.A., Bath,
Kitchen WI Stove &amp; Retrlg .
Water Fumlthld . No P1111. Corner S.Cond &amp; Pine.!. Galllpolle.
$230. Per Month; ueposlt R•
qulr.d. Call 814--446--4248, fi14-44Al·2l25, 0. ~e..&lt;2!.
Merchandise

51

Household
Goods

2 Door Reh'lgerator Froll Free,
HarvHI Gold W18 &amp;150 Cut To
$95; Refrigeret« Whha, Frot1
FrM, Wea $180, Cut To $125;
Side By Side Hervnt Gold, Uke
N.w, Wat! S265, Cut To S19~L.30
lnct'l Elec1ric Range Whhe, WIS
$125 Cut To 195; 30 Inch El.ctrlc
Range, Av1Cido, Waa 1150, Cut
lo $125; Wo- And Dryer Sat
W11 a;245 Cut To S1i0,
Whirlpool W11Mr And Dryer
Set, Hervett Gold, WIS 1300 C:ut
To I24S; G.E. Or;'er Wn St2S
Cut To t75; Hotpol,.. Wnher
Was S150 Cut To $95 ; May1ag
Dryer, White, Like New, $150.
Skagge Applienttl, 614-441-

2br Hou11 Fuml1hed, Deposit
And Ret.rence Required . No
P•t1 . 6M-446-487'9.
3 bdtm Double wide In Racine,
nice n•lgt'lborhood, $300/mo.
plua depoelt, lnti~Hiel wtter,
NWege, and traah, 614 - ~t-2211
Fumlahed 3Br HouM, 1 A001,
$350 +lJtlltUIII, Upper Fourth
Avenue, O.lllpolil, Ret....nee1,
S.curfty Dapoall. 814 Ull 4416
Aher 7p.m.
Nice ettlcilf1Cy cottage, unique
end bNutlful , 304-675-6042
Nice homeo tor rent. Call 304815-3030 01' 304-t75-3431.

Included, 304-675-5536.
P.CKENS FURNITURE
Naw/U11d
Hou11hotd fumiahlng . l/2 mi .
Jarrtcho Rd. Pt. Pl1111nl , WV,
t all 304-t 75-1450.
SWAIN
AUC110N a FURNITURE. 62
Olive St., Galllpollt . New &amp; Ulld
tuml1ure, hlllll"'l, W11tern 6
Wortt boott. 614~3159 .
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALOREI
614--446--3158
LIVING ROOM : Sote And Chllr
$171 And Up; CoHH And End
Tabln $79 And Up; Sw+vet
Rockers 179.
BEDROOM: Bunk Bade $!HI
(2l:8); 4 Drawer Chill Of
Or.wen $44.9S; TWin Mtn,...
$90 Soc .

Aatwood Ar.. , Pomeroy, Ll rge
Count'l Home, New Khchen,
Bath
Carpeting. Low $30'1
Ouatifled Buy~r. llu...Mf-2359. '
For 1111 by OWMr, In Handarson
above railroad tr~ocb- 7 room
house, 4 Bedroom• &amp; bath, LDI
IIIli 100x 100. Immediate pol·
Hlalon. $17,000. tlrm. C.U Helen
M•r•. 30+17&amp;-4142.

42

53

Gartge tpartment. Cr1ob Cr-.ak
Rd. $11,500. 304-57&amp;-2115.

2 bedroom, 1 1&gt;11'!, prtnte loc:l·
lion on RedtMn HldQI Hertcfer.
IOf1 area.
month 1150.
deposit, lOot.178..f051 or 304-

uoo.

15&amp;.5252.

Antiques

Big Alv1r AntlquH, !hO Main Sl,
POint Pt•.. nt, WV.
·
Buy or Sill. Rlverh• Antlquaa,
1124 E. Main Slr..t, Pomtroy.
Hour~o : M.l .W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
814--192 -2526.

i

IF YOU ~ATE TO TELL ME,
W~Y DO YOU TEL L ME ?

bf NE" In&lt;::

54

Miscellaneous

Merchandise
1 Black &amp; Gold Prom Drfll,
Size 11, Worn Once, $!50. 614441-0001.
2 pow.r mower~, rune good,
l15u., 614-992-8929 •H•r 4pm
2 Self-defroetlng refrlger~tora, 1
white, 1 brown, $100 lith,
Kenmore wuher/dryer •~. atmond
color,
$200,
GE
weoherldryer, while, $150, 614·
1112·2352
2112 ton eenlrtl AJC, ut ol twin
beda, &amp;M-192~34
Air Conditioner For Sale, 5,000
BTU . 614-441-1028.
Concrett I
Plastic Septic
Tanka, J.r Aar~tlon Tankt . Ron
Evan• Entarpri111, Jackton, OH
1.aoo.S37·9528.
Couch And Leatt'ler Chllr, With
Foot Stool $250. &amp;M-446-3989.
E1o1y tow car dolly, brend new,
used 1 lime, till loadlnn atrapo,
•
$650, 81 4-Jiil2-3802

Farm Equipment

FARM TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ohio
Vallty Service Center. Buy, Sail,
Trada. 614-256-6040.
p II~ Co bl
IH Modtll80 u .,,pe
m n•,
Very Good Conclltlon, $900.
Taylot" Farm 614-643-2285.
New Holland 7tt hayblnd. New
Holland 9H harbind, New Hoi·
land Super 1171ortga harv11ter.
Gehl 95 grinder ml•er. 304-2734215.
63

Livestock

20th Annu:~l Bentlay Pig Sale :
Friday April 24th, 7:30 P.M.
Faylllla
Co.
Fairground•,
Washington Courthouse. Selling
200 h•ad of Barrows &amp; glh1. For
mora Information contlc1 Roger
Benllty (51~;398 or L8roy
l.llrrlck 513·
02.

4-H &amp; FFA tMdlr plg:t tor 1111,
4!5 to 75 fbi, wormed, detailed,
toothed, til thots, H•mp, Vork,
Duroe, Crots. 304-273-2246
1
•van ngs.
' u I ~.
$
·n p1gs '"" sale, 30 . ..ct'l , 304-

6~5823.

For Sa.. old plano, asking $'150;
lleclrk: atove, 1100; other
houathold llema, 614-992-2756
or 814-696-1017
FOfl11al Gown TN Length, Bur·
gundy Slu: 22·24 , $45 . 614-2566830.

Angua And Chi ·An~ul Slack
Bulls!. R..tonably Pr!ted. Slate
Run t-erms, Jackson, Oh~o. 614286-5395.
AOHA R•glatar~ Bay Mare,
Good For 4·H, Saddle Alao
Av1llable. 614-682--6660.

FREE INSTALlATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $62.91/Mo. • For 12 Montl'lt.
19x31x4 Pool lncludn Flnar,
Ltddera, Huge Daek Etc.
{eB11ad On Selling Prltl Of
&amp;691. 114.45 APFI , Tot1l O.f•rNd
Price: 1754.92) Don't Sellen h?

Polled He,.ford Built 1-3 Yrs.
Old. Top BloodllnH. Taylor &amp;
Taylor 614-643-2285.

Cell BPI
1-800~8--1923

Gerlnl1 Nutrhlon Produe1s
fHiuring Ami~ Acid Body
BuUdlng, Wllgh1 loll and tat
bumar formu4as. Avtillble exclusively at All• Aid Pt'larmeey.
The Nfa way to diet .
LAwn mower wHh rear bag,
used one aummer. P1ld S175
naw· Atklng $7S. 30.!1-675-2183.
Ptu11c And Medal Culvert 6 Inch
Thru SO Inch In Stock. Ron
Evant, Jacklon, Ohio. 1·800537-1528.
Reconditiontod
WIShtrt
&amp;
dryar., ..ch $100 and up . Ws
Hrvictl Ill makH. Ti-11 W11her &amp;
Dryer Shopp1. 114--441-2944
S.m Somervllll'a Army Surplua,
Rntn.wood
5 mlllt Ea.t:
by Sandyvlt._, Post Office. Wlld
Turkey S11eon Soon, H11 full
range of 111M, Woocland or
TrMbark. Camflauge, army pattim ek&gt;thlng, amalt equipment,
renlllturplut clothing. Fri, S.l ,
Sun Noon-6:00 PM. other dsys,
houra 304-273-5655. Buslflolsa
lmprlnt.t
adver1islng
apeclahla up to 25'4 dlscount.

1-n

S.ara
w.. t.rfd~ar,
twin
.troller, large child 1 swingut,
614-lm-2!911 1har 5pm
Snapper 42N Riding Mower,
Large Bag 'N' Wagon, Naeds
Somt Work. 1100. 814--446-0547.
WHITE'S MElAL DElECTORS
Ron Allison , 1210 Second
Avenue, Gtlllpollt, Otlio, 614446-4336.
1 bnlnd new Kenmore air con·
dhloner, 18 BTU, 614-446-3804.
55

Building
Supplies

Block, brk:k, Hwer plpee, win·
dowl, llntlla, etc. Claud• Winten, Rio Grande, OH Call 614245-5121.
Pets for Sale

4 Rebbltt, 10 C.g", Feeders,
And Wtter Bolt ln. 614-388-1111.
A.K.C. puppl•. ChiniM Pu~s
end mott Ill brttedS lrl lVIII·
lblll, 304.57'6-2207.
AKC Mlnleture Pom•r•nlana,
$200. 8J4-669-3227.
Dalmatlons For Sale, 614-4461756.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jack.aon Ave.
Point Pluunt, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropical tiah, biJda,
small animate 1nd supplln.
Five A.KC
Ooblrman
Tall
Doekedt O.w Claw Remand,
WorR*J. &amp;14-256·11320.
Fleglstered 3yr. old male,
Bk::hon Fr1H,I14-742-27U
Reglt1•red AKC BMgie pups,
112 btue tick, pa~la good hunllf"', 614~n.731Ktevenlnga
St'llh llu Puppl11 AK.C Reg .
Flr"11 ShOIIs. Buutltul Loving
Petl, $200. 614-&amp;43-228!.

57

Musical
Instruments

GltMon Eplphone guitar whh
,.avey amp {4 mo old) 1300.
~.fl7~115o8 between 5:1J0...7.00
PM .

Slmmental B~tllt . 1yur old and
2 yNr olds. 304-&amp;82-3295 Danny
Dewhurst or 304--a82-22&lt;42.
64

Hay

&amp; Grain

&amp; Livestock
Farm Equipment

o-r.

19!1 John
Model B, Alii•
Chaimert, H.D. 8 Dour, Hytler
Eloclrtc Fork Lift. S14M6·2359.
Utllhy Bldg. SPKitl : l0'1140'•i',
H5'18' Sliding Door, 1·3' Wolk
Doorl Pclnoecr SlMI Siding &amp;
Roof ng. $$110. Iron HorN

Bldro. f.IQ0-352·1045

ro

moo-w-etLY'

DRAG Tl1AT
VP Ac.A/I.l?

7:00 ~II

1975 16tt. Starcraft Ban Ba.t
With 65 hp Mercury Molor
TroUing Molor, $2,700. 614-4,..
4638.

r:

1919 Chlvella Malibu, 56,000 lctual Ml, $1000, 1980 AMC Con cord, $200, 614-992-5848
1981 Subaru 4dr Wa~on, 4WD,
4spd, Good Condition, S1,SOO.
Take Gunt On Trade. 614·3888934 Evenings .
1984 Dodge Arlit, 4 door, black,
AMIFM, ceuane, 4 cyt, aUio,
614-192-7236, evtning:t
1964 LA Baron, candy maehlnet,
1 pop machlna, 3! ft Sth
whHier, 304-m -58.5'1
1184 Pontiac Station Wagon ,
Full Slzt, PS, PB, PW, 3 SNta ,
New Ballery, N•w Brak• Syst•m
Good
Tlrat.
614-446-1822
Evenings.
1985 Camaro, loaded. $3200.
1987 Dodgt Alre•, PS, Auto.
$2100. 198? Horllon, AC. 11400.
30.!1-6 75-2 440.
1985 Ford LTC, V~ Automatic,
Runt Good , Body l.iood Shape.
63,000 Actual MIIH, $'1,200 Or
Trade. 614..C4&amp;.8011.
1986 Oodg• Ari11 , auto., AIC,
crul11, a.ticM\In tlr11, very
clean, books for $.2400, ..11 tor
11500, 0B0, 614-i92 -2478 IVIn·
lnge
1986 Olds Flranu, 5 speed, eir,
amf fm st1reo, 1111 whNI, 614 ~2-6529 till ahtr &amp;pm
1987 Grand AM, low millt , PS,
PB, AMIFM CIIHIIt, IXt tond,
$4,200. or trade tor au1o pick up,
304-675-1221.
1987 Ptymou1h Horizon AT, PS,
AC. 1987' Ct'levrolel S-10 pk:kup.
1m Chrysler Cordoba, AT. 3046J'5.71158.
1987 Pontiac Firebird, V-18, TTop, 53,000 mlln, Ar.l-fM CIIHtl, $5,500. 304-57'&amp;-2311 1ft1r
6:00PM.
1187 Tr~ona - Am black on black,
350 auto 00 GTA whNit
62,000 mllet, ls,600 or trade:
614~381 after 5 P.M.
1988 Chevy Celebrity, l01d1d,
S2,800. or bell ort.r, 304-67SS332 em 814-992-3488.
1988
Otdsmobile
Cull•••
Brougl'lam, l07 V-8 loaded
never darn~ge~( unb.tiavebt~
condition, high miiNge, prlctld
accordingly, 614-1112-29'N, 614902.:1394

FRANK AND ERNEST
IT'.! Gt.OIAL. WAPMING.

!Ill Tho

I

ra

At.WAYJ GfT IT OU~ING
VE-/'IUf'S CLOjf APf&gt;/lOACHfJ.

'jllll

i

1981 Celebrhy Eura.por1, Air
CondtUonlng, CruiM Control,
sv,ooo un... Haw n ..... 16,200.
814-446--2015.

Unoolnd
Myotorteo In Las Vega s,
pollee search for fraudulen t
shoppers. (R) Stereo.
(!) MOVIE: Dakota iPG)(2 :001
(l)
(I) Ill Wondo• Yea"
The family learns the reason
why Karen wants lo mo11e
back home Stereo C
IIl (!) 3-2· 1 Contlct 'l:xiTI
Stereo .
®J liD i!J"III Royal Fomlly
Ruth decides to leave town
after she Is accused of
causing problems . Stereo .

ra

i

ID MOVIE: 48 Hre. IAI
(2 :00)
[)I Munier, She Wrote
S10reo. c;1
® Crook end Ch..o
PrtmeNowo
Big Brother Jake Stereo

1189 ~ Shadow ES, Air,
PSfPB, Elee. Wlndorwe, 38,000
Mil", Good Condhion, $4,700;
1987 Dodgo [).!10 PU, $2,600.
1990 Berwtte, Red. 3.1 angln•.
Air, CC, TW, AmJFM C.a111ta.
Sun-root. 11M8 Trans Am - wt'llte,
T.top, 5.0 engln1. Loaded. C1t1
199'1 Z·28, bl~.t~, auto!..5.7, lpKial
order' $'1&amp;1,300. new. Han opportunity, mUll sell $13,300. 304-

175-2332.

Ohio Vall•y Waltrprooling, 11111
Viand St, Poh'll Pleaenl , WV
25SSO, 304-67S-l049. Fr.. " .
tlmatea .

EEKANDMEEK
(CRRlJPT
~RUT II-N

8:05 (I) MOVIE: O.llberato
SITing., (4:001

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
.-~--------------~----·

DOIHG AT 'THE
LI BRARY

LCX)KINS n1R0t.J6H 'THE
1300K5 FCQ MONEY.

THE SAME THING
I ALWAYS (X) AT
THE LIBRARY ...

Davia
S.w-Vac
Servk:•
Georg11 CrMk Rd . Parts, tup:
plln, pickup, and delivery. 614446-0294.

-- ·-·· ........

"-'

.. ' • - -

E;J

9:31! (1) 11 !Ul Salnfeld Jerry and
Elaine visit his parents in
Florido (AI Slereo.
(l)
(I) 8 Sibo Warren
becomes involved with the
wife of one of Nora 's client s .
Sloreo. C
(7J Qr~~at'P•rtormanc•• A
reverse-angle view 01
Shakespeare's Hamiel 1s
shown Stereo

BARNEY
YOU AN' THAT
ELV1NEY CAN'T
GO ONE- ·UH-

ONE
BLESSET
OAY

YOU GOT

WITHOUT
YACI&lt;IN' ! 1

A BET!!

Cantt't Plumbing
Fourtt'l and Pine
Gallipotle, Ohio
614 ...48-3888

&amp;

Refrigeration
Reaidential
or
commercial
wlrtng, new Hrvlea or l'lpalra
M1111r Ucenlld electrician·
Ridenour Eflclrleal , WV000306.
304-675-1786.
.

Endeavors you 'I be intenJSted 1n under·
laking in ""' -

87

1F« A Good CINn UMd C.r:
~ Kenny't Auto Center, Upper River Ro.d, GlllipoHt, 614·

Mowrty's Upholtferlng Hrvleing trl county trM 26 )'lira. The
bast In tumllu,. uphollterlng _
Call 304-675-415-4 tor tr 11 • •
tlm1tn.

Upholstery

SOUTH

Opportunities
for both sides
By

1

• Q96
• J l5 2

i

+ K 96 4

~

Phillip Alder

Th e sec ond m1ni -quiz book wntten

tQ4

Vu lnerable North -South
Dea ler Ea st
Soutb

Wes t

Nortb

Eas t

last year by Hugh Kelsey os called .
"Test Your Card Play 4" (Gollancz. ; Pass
Pass
$8 95 , 2l2- 866· 5860 ) There are nine
defenso ve and 27 dedarer ·play prob- 2 NT
lems. in my opinion the deals are

Pass
2•
l' ass

Db l
Pas.••

Pass
Pass

3 NT

All pass

s lightly easter than those tn
Your Card Play 3 "

~Test

I

I NT

Openm g lea d

+4

Tooay's hand os es pec 1ally instruc - '-- -- - - - - - - - - - - "
four lnrk.s

t1v e because 1t features both defens 1ve

and declarer· pl ay possobolot1es The
Note wha t happens of South pl ays
only problem is that the bidding is con· low from the dummy at trick one. II
tnved to rea ch three no-trump Even East wms w1th the kmg, dec larer 1s ·
though that contra ct os cxcellenl, at safe. Bul of East mserls the spade Ill,;
the table 1l would De near ly 1m possible declarer IS as dead as a dodo. After
to reach
Cover the Eas t -Wes t ca rds . How
would you play m thr ee no-trump?
West leads th e spade four
East is marked with the spade king
and the three mass mg aces With care -

South wins w1th the queen and leads say, a dtamond , East wms with the a~
and sacrifices h1s spade kmg to dummy's ace When East regams the leadrhe plays h1s last spade and West cash::
es three tn cks tn lhc suit.

ful tomong , he can be held to lhose

The pnncople is lhat if declare&lt;
must wtn a tnck m th e suat (here ttle_
spade queen) . you should gtve 1t to h1m.

tncks You must win trick on e with
dummy's spad e ace and then play a di amond to your queen No matter how
l!.:ast defends, he cannot win more than

as qu1ckly as poss1ble
© 1• NfWII'APO PITE..,.II At ....

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

1 Male title
4 Jeol
8 Side pool ol a
doorway
12 One or the
Three
Stooge&amp;
13 Information

agcy.
14 Two-toed
sloth
15 Indian
16 Royal
tamlllo•
18 Sllenl

Ane•er to Prewioua Puule

35 Western
hemisphere
assn.
36 Ouinlel
37 Nota 38 Seclude
40 llado with
raltan
41 A alan country
42 Basobollor
Nolan -

44 Artful
46 - - wt'lat
your country
50 Moolllko
pasture
54 From - - Z
55 Head
56 Bollol
movement
57 Offenn
58 Court hearing
59 Organ• ol
hearing
60 Boaal ot
burden

mo~tle'a

SUCC8880r
20 Last mo.

21 leave- Beaver
23 Neal
27 Suppreaa
30 Giving
temporarily
l2 Hawaiian
Instruments
33 lsn'lltl.)
34 Will

l Plant disease
2 Mor11t bit
l Lively dance

4 Actreaa Anderson
5 Up lo this
polnl(2 wdo.l
6 SaloCy 7 Jacob ' s twin

DOWN

E;J

ASTRO-GRAPH

Heating

86 9-10 4x4. Low miles. 304--675-

+ AH2

10:00 (1) D 0 Ouontum Loop
Sam searches for an ancient
Egypllan tomb protected by a
deadly curse Stereo
(!) Nowo
(l)
(I) 8 Search fOr thO
New Ideal Men Soon Baio
and Arleen Sorkin probe into
the search for the elusive
perlocl malo . Guasts·
Roseanne and T001 Amold,
Will Smith and Timothy
BusC!eld. (1:00) Stereo. Q
()) Mort&lt; Au,..ll ComedY
Spoctol Slereo.
crt! aD ~ ID 48 Houre Tho
increasing amount of heroin
coming Into America alarms
01perts . Slereo.
!Ill• Hunter C
1111 Amertcan Muote Shop
Stereo .
World Newo
!Ill 700 Club With Pol

ra

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

o;

t A 8;

+8 3

t:;J

ra

YORESELF

Y A86

t:;J

&amp;

We
Do Heullng Anytlm•
Anyplace, No Job Too Big
Too Ltllle. Batement CINnlng
OIMnl Woril, Any Kind! 614:
379-2278 Anytime.

ra

t:;J

Will build patio covere, dackt,
acr11nld rooma, put up vinyl
1idlng or lrlillf sillr1ing . 614245-9152.

General Hauling

9:00 (1) D 0 Sltnfeld Jerry' s
car makes strange noises
after George and Elaine
borrow it. Stereo. C
(l)
(I) II Roomlor Two
Competition arises when
Edie and Jill attend n1ght
school logethor. Slereo .
IIl Mart&lt; Auooell Comedy
Spoclol (0:301 Slereo.
()) On tho une
crt! liD ~ • Joke end tho
Fatmon Stereo
[)I MOVIE: Leecy of Lloo
(2:00) S!ereo . J.,I
® Naohvtlle Now Sleroo
a Lorry King Llvol
!Ill Father Dowtlng Myotorteo
Stereo.

t:;J

YESTERO"-Y '?

I BET A DOLLER

Y9t 3

ra

8:30 (l)
(I) 8 Dooglo Howoer,
M.D. Ooogla saves the life of
a motorc'ile nder . Stereo.
IIl (!) 3-2·1 Contlct EICITI
Stareo. C
®J 8D i!J"III Davia Ruloo
Gwen offers a prize to the
first person who can find her
a dale. Stereo
rD Maio• Looguo lloaoboll
(L) C
Maniac Manaion Stereo .

8

Septic Tank Pum~ng 190, G.allla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES ,
Jackaon, OH 1-800-537-9528

85

t:;J

E;1

Ron's TV Se~lee, epedalizlng
In Z..ni1h •lao Mrvlclng most
other branda. Hou11 caiTa, also
some appUanct~ repairs. WV
304~7'6-2398 Ohio 614-44&amp;-2454 .

mo.

441~911 .

s
a

t:;J

JEl
Aeration Motor11, repaired New
6 r•buitt motors In stock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1-300537·9528.

Electrical

t:;J

liD Wheel of

0

Curtis Home lmpronmtnt:s
Years Experlance On Old« &amp;
Nawer Homu. Room Addhlont,
Foundation Wortc,
Roofln~ .
Kitchen• And Balhs. Free E•
limat .. ! Rsterene11 , No Job
Too Big Or Small! 614-367..()516

84

t:;J

B:OO (1) II 0

...lHEY SAID YOU COU!1'
KEEP 6A.5U'A.K! THEY
DON'T WANT 'IM B-6£1(!

EA&gt;,.
10 3

+K

• 762

7:35 (I) Sanford I Son

WMAT~)QU

WF..ST
+J 85 4 2

ALDER

WoHono

a

Improvements

J.W. Construdlon. Room Ad dlttona, Roofs, Deekt, Siding
And All Types Of E11arior And
lnlarior Painting. Will Giv1 Low
LlcenH Bid 614-446-3551.

Y K Q 10
t K J 10 9 3
Q 10 7

PHILLIP

Fonuno
~ ID Fomlly Feud
® llo • Sta• Sle•eo
rD Pro Surfing From
Huntington Beach . Calol (R)
Crooollre

ALLEYOOP

4-!t-t2

+

C

Bathroom•. Kllchens, Roofing ,
El«:trltal
Siding,
Maaonry,
Drywsll, Framing Room Ad ·
dltlona, Plumbing, E•perilnc.d ,
Free btlmalnl 304-61'5-2440 .

NORTII

+ AJ

t:;J

7:30 (1) D 0 Jeopardy! C
(!) Now It can 11o Tola
W Entertainment Tonlghl
Stereo.
Morrtoct... With Chtld"'n

Home

Plumbing

BRIDGE

7:05 (I) Addomo Fomlly

Services

82

C

a Monoyllno

.... ..,. "'

&amp;

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditiona1 tltetlma gueren1... local rateranen tumlsh.:i
FrH nllmaln. Call collect 1614--237-0488, day or nlgl'tl.
Rogara Baument Watarprooling.

NUMBERED LETTERS IN

rD Spor!ICentar

Budglll Tr~onsmlnk)ns , UHd '
rebuih, starting •t $99 ; h'ont
wh"l drl\'11 1t1rtlng at 1149.00
614-245-5677, 614-992-6293.

8l

my foot out of my-.....

a Condkl came ..

S1ereo. !;I
[)I MacQyver

Accessories

1917 C.dlllac, 2dr, runt good,
1500, 614-192 -~21

0

~Ill Entortalnmentlonlght

Wanted: Small HP Outboerd
Motor Under to HP 614 -256-1526.
Auto Parts

15

ompressed fellow , !haC the pholographers fur this s hoot
were asking for LONGER hours'"

(!) MocNeii/Lohn"

®J liD Current Anotr C
!llll8 Sta• Trek: Tho ill"nt
Generelton C

tY89 18ft Pontoon, 19W1 60hp. Evlnrude mo1or, full canvae..
eover, fish tinder, $7400, 614- ~
992~641
days, 614-992-2627.
ev•nlngs

76

Wheel at Fonuno

NewaHour

(I)

I I

pu11ing my best foot forward at

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
' "
Zigzag · Lapel · Knoll · Unrest . LONGER
We were si11ing around looking at the s~oal edition
of a famous spo~s magazine . "I heard ," sighed one

00 raThelnoldo
JeHenana C_
Edition t;l

IIl

.,

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LE!!ER S
TO GET ANSWER

(l)

1985 Checkmate bolt 20ft, 2"
Johnson 09, Aaker S.s. prop,
cuatom haul lraillr, $7,800. 1()4.,.
675-3o438.

BOAlERS
J.S. Marin~ Sarvlce, S.rvlnt~ AfT
Your Boetlng Need a, Pa r1a, Atcceasorlft, Two Cycle OU And
Service. 614-256--6160.

0

.

THESE SQUARES

O

Slereo .

1! 7

.

I

&amp; PRINt

6:35 (I) Andy artnlth

----c----c

30Hl'H8t1.

61

16 Ft. Bau Batt, 6S HP With All
Extraal Call Ahlr 6p.m. 614-2419521.

Cheyenne's Truck A..,.o, Rt . sQ'~
McAnhur, Ohlo. New Premium
71 Autos for Sale
Oualhy Replac~nt Craah
'86
C.l•brlty.
2.8l-FI!OO
Pans At WhoiHale Prien No
loaded. $2,400. 614-367-0122 ,,_ HeNle Allums. FrM OtNvwy .
ter 5:00PM .
To ArM And ROUia Body Shops
Call For Detallt. 1-800-2S3-63S8.
1969 Multang $3,500. 1i31 Chev
$.850. 1985 Honde Shldow
Campers &amp;
100cc, 2,400 ml, $2,000. 304--675- 79
3960.
Motor Homes
191'1 Chevella super aport, 3SO
1979 TrOJ!Icana Tr1v11 Tr1ilar 27
high pertormance engine, Cowl
Ft Wllh Root Air, $3,800. 61"·
lndudlon hood, call 304-882 388-9115.
2215

81..25H251.

Farm Supplies

ARt 'tOO

GOI~G:

'

for Sale

Approx. 300 bat.. of good
mlud h1y tor a.ale, 614-985-1593
Transportation

VIE WERE~'\ f..V~I.l

Honda RC 80 Din Blk•. 614~46-2106.

&amp; Motors

t:;J

rD Up Clooe

1989 ChiV) 4x4, Air, AM /FM
c111atte, C.nturt Topper, PS,
PB, Hitch, 5 Spd , And Mo,.!
52,000 Mlln. Vlf'Y Nice! $'10,S.OO.
614--446-tirnl.
::.;.;...:..;.:....:.:....:;___ _ __ _
Motorcycles
74
_r':-:-:-:-:-:--,:::--'-:c:-:--~:-:-:
1989 Honda Pilot 4001:c water
coo led fwd . &amp; rw-erM, naw in
91, $3,200 or trad1. 614-446-0381
oftor 5 p.m.

Boats

:1

!Ill Zorro

.

Comple te the chuckle quo!ed
l
.
.
.
_
by 1 ol lmg n th e mrumg words
'--'-....L.-.L..-'~-'---' you deve lop fro m ~tep No 3 below

!IJ Scooby Doo

1984 Chovy 4 Whell Drive,
St'lort Wh11l BaH, 305,4 Speed,
... un, Alum WhHie. c.u B75-7'62l, Or 614 -446-4015.

75

.

0!Ill •liD Andy
~ 18 CBS Nowa t:;J
Grtlftth

a,

61

wrong things. My mom taught
me great manners, said that

·I I I
4
1
.

\ll

30" 4 S--'

f

t--,-L
c --0.-J,E
,--Tr S-r--llleast kept

6:30 (1) II 0 NBC Nowo ~
(!) Saved
tho Boll
(l)
(I)
ABC Now
1IJ Wild Amertca C
Squore One TVS1ereo.

Wh••l Orin.

I

As a kid was shy around
people and usually said the

r - - - - - - -,

t:;J

6:05 (I) llove~y Hlllblllloo

ra

ECH

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

Tln Tln, K· 9 Cop
Stereo.

I
I

NUHAM

BL

a World Todly

&amp; 4 WD ' s

Chevy t

I I' I I I

I

!IJ $murfo Q

1919 Ford F150, •h4 , 30016cyl.,
4ap., PS, PB, •llding window,
bed liner, topper, 614--~!i-2490
1984

UPMECI

Roadtng Rolnbow Stereo

!Ill Rln

tAM I

(I) II llliUD

1D Nlaht Court t:;J

4" lift,WhMI
AlumBaWhMII.
Call ~·
104~-~==========r~========~~ Short
..,
675-7623, Or 814-441.,.015.

DINETIES: Wood Bar Sloola
$'14 . ~ (26 ") Tab141 And 4 Padded
Cholfl $1~.
OPEN: 7 Doye A WHI&lt;, 9 A.M . • 6
P.M. Sundey 12 Noon • 5 P.M.
Rt . 141 4 Mll11 Ott R1 . 7 In Centenary.

for Rent

Wr&lt;Jb'H\
ttl I H~

Groom •nd Supply St'lop...Pet
Grooming. All brlld1 , tlyl11.
lame Ptl Food ONiar. Julie
Webb. C.ll &amp;14-441-0231.

One Bedroom HouH Furnllhed, O.poall And Reference
Required, No Pets. 6-.......
25ol3.
Mobile Homes

t A~'I

Big Saving• On All Carpel In
Stock.. Caeh And C1rty, Mollohan Carpeta, 614-44&amp;-i'loM.

Loft twMI, d,.e..r, hutcl1, ladder,

41 Houses for Rent

'I · P ·

Varrs

Cil ra

~· ONewo
(!) VIdeo Power
Square Ono TV S10reo.

1987 Chavy PU , Good CondlHoo
New 3SO Engine •
Tra~smlulon, 614-446-7585
73

I

EVENING
6:00 (1) II

WOlD

ruz11n

8

APRIL 22

WED.,

Trucks for Sale

1919 Sttpsldl Chevy h4, 4
Speed, 60,000 Mlln , 3 Inch UftJ
33 Inch Tlr"..1. Alum Slols, looka
And Run• l.lirllt, $2,500 Call
614-643-0832.

56

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home luml1hingt.
Hou,.: Mort-Sat, i--S. 81-4-44103.22, 3 mil" out Bulavllle Rd.
F,.. Delivery.

•

304-67~1577.

n!NJ.

Would like To Rent A HouH
With 3 Or 4 B~rooms , Would
Uila To Hav• HouM In Bldw•ll
Sehoot Olatrtct Area. 614-367ml.

Homes for Sale

3
bedroom
horne,
larg•
baltlfullllty room , vinyl aiding &amp;
wlndowt, new gas fum•~•.
Iaroe front porch, b•ck porch,
approx acre lot on AI . 62 so..,.h.
Asking price 12'0,000. 304~157147 efl•r S:OOPM.

·

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Waahera, dryll"s, retrlgeralort,
r11ng11.
Skagge Appliance•
Upper River Rd. Beside Stone
Creal Motel. Call 814-446-7398,
1-300-4gg..:wgg_

Rentals

3 Btdroom Home On 1 Acr• Will
Consider Lind Contract. Call
614-2.56-1526.

,........ -

Wanted : Rnldentlal Building
Lot Or Acrw•ge For Ouatity
Hom... Muat Ba Within 5 Mlln
Of Hotzar Hospital On Blacklop
Road . 1-304·77"3-2940 .

Real Estate

31

·.....

446~340

Will Do HousakMping . Gillia
County And Immediate Surrounding Area. 614·379-2134 Ask
For O.bble

Would llka To Babysit In My
Home, Close To Hills And KMaft. 6'-4-446 -1362.

•1

46

lots joining Point · 100% ow01r
financing al $101.46 per month
buys an thrN lola. :J04-.675-

Will 11k1 ura of llder1y m1n or
woman In your home, 23 y.. rs
ll'perlence, reflrtncet, pla1u
eall614-989-2115 ask tor Flori

Graclout1 living . 1 and 2 twMIroom apertmll'rtl at VIllage
Alnrald•
Manor
1nd
Apartmenta In Mlddlllport. From
hl8 ~-11 &amp;•• ml EOH

Sl11plng rooml wHh cooking.
Also tr~oller ~ce . All hook·upa.
C.JI lfllf' 2.00 p.m., 304 ·7735651, Mleon WV.

Plastic Drums 30 Gal &amp; 50 Gal
$3.00 And $6.00 614-361-7802

18

Furnished Aparlrn.nl, 1br, next
to Ubrary, Plrtc.lng, central heat,
air, references. 614-446-0338,
Before 7p.m.

EVER SW1 !

19~ Ford l/4 ton. $500. Chivy
truck 6 lug R•lly whle\t on
Oay1on1 275-&amp;0-15. 304-675 -21'14,

1bdrm.,
$225mo.,
lntl~o~dn
utliiH11, Hcurtty deposit required, no peta, 814·9i2-2218

Fumlahed Apirttnenl 1 Bedroom UtllltiM Paid, $260/mo.
920 ~ourth Avenue, ""'-lllpolls

I'Vt

Mark's Auto Saln, Middlaport ,
Ot'!io All vahicllt thoroughly
mechanically ~hacked , m1ny
vehicln 13000 I under.

2
B8droom1, Stov. And
Spllt....ntry,
3
bedrooms, Ratrlgeratm Fumi1hed . 61(..4.46.livlngroom, dlnlngroom, family 3940.
room wttlreP'ece, 3 baths,
COVIIICI dack. patio, double 2br Ger~oge Aptn1mentJ. Loc.sted
garage, Send Hill Rd, 304-675- 106 LocUli 9tr.t, \illlipotit,
$22!5/Mo. S100 Dopooll, Wiler
t258.
Fumlahed, 81,........3870.
32 Mobile Homes
BEAU11FUL APARlMEHTS Al
BUDGEl PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 J1ck1on Pike
from S1i21mo. Walk to 1hop I
movlM. Call6~·2588. EOH.

Reduce Saf• And Fast With
Goa.- C.plllt And E-V•p
Dlurattc AI Frut:t-1 Pharmacy.

Giveaway

For Sale: 1985 Ford Tempo, 4
Door, Exce/ltnl Condition , Naw
Tires, $2,500 Cllll514--446.,.638 .

CJllliC.F..Y.

-

mighl be a bit

skM tn IJiidl*'5l 141 ntiMI&amp;Itum Howev,.. 1her do 5I-' 1o """"'· l hings

a-

m.,.
' -_., quidlly.
TAI.WIS fApril . . . , :til) Yoo may

ilheholding on 10 -

too s1u1&gt;1&gt;0m aboUt
Md C&lt;lfQI)tS thai
i\hepnJVSltobe ol no.alUe. Asofloday, you'l ola1 l o - 'fOAJI grip. Trymg to paldl..., • bn&gt;l&lt;on """""""? The
~ MaU;IIrnall '"' can help you
understlnd w11a110 do to make the rela-

11onship work Mall $2 pius a long . sell ·
10
addressed , stamped envelope
Ma1 chmaker . c /o this newspaper, P .O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 4410 1· 3428.
GEMINI (Moy 21·June 20) Develop·
ments that have an Influence over your
material security should not be treated
Indifferently today . Properly managed,
they can become benefits 1ns1ead of
disadvantages.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Partner ·
shiPS are stm· ·irty ," but it look s like moderating circumstances will start to
make things more harmonious.
LEO (July 23-A"ll- 22) A major obiec·
t1ve can be achieved today, provided
you do not scatter your forces and dilute your effort s. Thts target should be
your primary focus .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) A recent mls·
understandtng you had with a friend can
be resolved amicably today Each or
you are now more Inclined to forg ive
and forget.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You're in a
stronger position than you may realize
loday, especially If you're trying 10 close
an tmportant deal . Don't make unnec·
essary concessions.
SCOIIPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) Somolhlng
that a.ngerad you yesterday will remain

1n 1he b ack of yo ur mind IOday Howev·
Bf . you 'll now treat it philosophically and
effectively.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc. 211 Con·
linue to be prudent regard1ng the man·
agement of your resource s. If any re·
quests are made of you by friends, tend
advice, nat funds
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan. 18) Owmg
to somethmg you 've recently learned,
you may profit today in a delicate rela·
tionship. It 1sn't likely you'll repeat any
old mistakes.
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Feb. 18) Some·
thing you did for another that caused
you considerable inconvenience may,
much to your surprise, be acknowtedged and rewarded today
PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Mo•ch 211) When you
initially get together with friends today,
you may feel a bit tense and withdrawn .
However, these feelings will quickly be
discarded once you reia)C and enjoy
yourself.
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 18) You m&gt;ghl
experience some minor setbacks today .
but they won't lnhlbl1 you from accomplishing your foremos1 objectives. Treat
trifles with 1he trifling attention they
deserve.

Page-16

THAI DAIL!

Television
Viewing

Autos for Sale

~T INfERIORITY

for Rent

The Dally Sentlnei-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ofF IIIF

room, cto.et•. 2 ti,.plac:ea, 1bdrm. apt . In Mlddlapor1, Wttll',
dining
room,
kitchen

GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS
HOME I'S

4

C ~T

Apartment

c~u• 2 bdrm. home, lg. living

448-2501.

KoW fn 14'-fP 'foVfl.
!4fQj£N ~ r&gt;u;

22, 1992

BORN LOSER

Wri~hC

71

for Rent
Announcements

April

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

t:;J

...-1--t- -1
.,..+--f- -1

8 Stuck oul
9 Tropical
cuckoo
.
10 Actr111 We.t11 Motor coa ct'l
11 Point ol view ·
19 loken ot
affection
22 Dickens·
baood
musical
24 Out 01 bod
25 Foolloh
26 - on :
encouraged
27 Building
corner
28 Olllctol
proclamation ·
29 Fable write r
31 Chemical
•
suffix
33 River Island
361umblu
37 Money holder
39 Acl""
Loulae ,
~0 Social groups
43 - Arata!
•
45 Cry ot pain
'
47 Space agcy .
48 Singer '
~
Redding
49 Weight unllo ··
50 Mall center
ebb•.
51 Dovlll!oh
_ ,
52 Consumed
,

food

• "

•

53 High nolo

a

Robertoon

CELEBRITY CIPHER

f0:30 (!) Qreot Performlnceo A
reverse~engle view or
Shakespeare' s Hamlet is
shown Stereo.

11

:oo (1) • mra

0

(I) •

1121• 0 N...o
(!) Night Court C

'Jli •

crt~ liD

Aroenlo Hlil Stereo

OMocQyver C
® Crook end l'ho..

Qt Sport~ Tonight
!Ill Bordertown Stereo
11 :30 (!) Kojok C
1IJ Newow1icl1
(I) • Nlghtitne

t:;J

G U D 0

J y K
K Y l

a.tt.- In tN

CIMitld from

QUOIIIIonl b',o

XJY'ZD

L J G 0

R J V D K U E 0 T
0 R

JZRJO

y H
J A

IMIOUI

PIOPia. ~~

roo.y·, Cl\.-.

cipher lt.ndl for~-

B

P

B 0 L
.

G B XR

YRYBPPX

X J YZ

8AC1 P"IIMrll

V ~ 1W

K U D

AZEOOLR . '

GOPPDR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION . "There are m any ways to violate the WlVir onment
Destroying the patrimony ts o ne or 1hem .. ~ (Artlsl ) Soledad Sevilla. ·

C

C~mo Time Alter Primo

0

Eld!

0 J A 0 R

~ • 'Dingwoul Curvoo'

Tlme Stereo .

Celetw'ITy Cipher D"ypiDgrMie -

'{] 162 by NEA. Inc

'

.

.,,

�Sentinel

Wednesday, April 22, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BIG BEND ••••••

Ohio Lotter\•

Reds make it
two in row
over Dodgers

Low Priced~
Commmrlty Minded

D

Pick 3: 585
Pick 4: 7645

Cards :
A-H; Q-C; Q-0;
9-S

Page 4

4-6-37-40-42-47
Kicker: 114294

Vol. 42, No. 252
Copyrighted 1992

assornD coa.oas
Charnain Batll tissue

HEAD
LETTUCE

c

Formal announcement expected to be
made next week according to officials

ONION SETS &amp; SEED POTATOES AVAILABLE

FOODLAND COUPON

FOODLANO COUPON

137

136

4ROLl

PIG.

CARING FOR THE ENVIRONMENT ·
David Haggerty, Meigs County 4-H Agent,
assisted Becky Triplett's sixth grade class at
Pomeroy Elementary in planting two trees on

the hill just off the playground on Wednesday.
lfaggrrty, along with several other guest sprakers, participated in Earth Day activities at the
school coordinated by Suzy Carpenter.

Day
observed
by students

YUBI YOGURT

e!&lt;:\

•lmlllllll
SUIIEST

HOMOIIIIZED MILl

(

i?'

aoz.
VIMISIBIII

12 OZ. ORANGE DRINK

26 OZ. APPLE • CHERRY

RIGHT 'N EARLY

MOUNTAIN TOP PIE

Buy One 12 01. Pkg.

Buy One 26 01. Pie

Get One

Get One

FREE

FREE

'h GAL

CINS.
~~s..99C

eftAIII• SRF RISE

PILLSBURY
FLOUR

Pomeroy Elementary partic ipated in a variety of Earth Day acuvities Wednesday. Events were coordinared by Suzy Carpenter. a teacher at the school.
The activities were held to
infonn and motivate the stude nts to
think about what could be done to
solve issues lik e global warming,
acid rain. the depletion of th e
ozone layer. etc.
The students received an evergreen tree to plant at home. courtesy of Mead Paper Company; a
coloring and activi ty book from
Super America; and a litter bag .
act1vity books and brochures from
the Meigs County Lttter Control
and Regional Solid Waste District.
A $15 donation also was provided
Co ntinu~d on page 3

eSPinE ...IT ..E&amp;ULAI

FOODLAND COUPON

138

FOODLANO COUPON

192

COCA·COLA

c
5ll.
BAG

2UTER

BOTru

FOODLANDCOUPON

184

FOODLAND COUPON

QUAKERMAID • 14 oz. ::
~ fai\..~1- ••_. .. BEEF SANDWICH II
a~_~;:::...._OIAftQ._·_lTioiiiU----~.
STEAKs
11

I

:
1

l
I

100 CT. BI·RITE 9" WHITE :

I

Buy One 14 Oz. Pkg.
Get One

PAPER PLATES
Buy One 100 Ct. Pkg.

::

Get One

11

FREE l

sa~?tlfLAT

1

I

1

FREE l

II

!~~~~~~~at~~~~L~----J

L----~!~~~~!~JL~~L~----~L---

CABBAGE PLANTS
CAULIFLOWER PLANTS
PANSIES

196

FOODLAND COUPON
185
FOODLAND COUPON
182
I
I OZ. ZIP PACK COUm LINE II
3 VARIETIES KING SIZE
I
13·170Z.BOI
I
CHEDDAR • MOZZARELLA ::
I
SHREDDED CHEESE 11
FREEZER QUEEN DINNER :
I
I
Buy One 8 Oz. Pkg.
II
Buy One King Size Dinner 1
I
Get One
II
Get One
:
I
II

I
I
I
I
I

L----

FREE l ____

We Relerve the Right to Limit quantnlea • Prlcea Effective thru Sat..Aprll 25, 1992 • USDA Food Sta''"" and WIC

t::::d

-~·~t'-·~~-----·_,L

• Not Raaponalble lor

'

FREE

I

\!!'!~!P!!':..~~!'~L71f!.! ____ ...

wa s notmcluded 10 the appltcauon .
Those customers arc not able to

lly IIRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Sraff
The Meigs County Commis-

AMERIFLORA DfSCUSSELJ -Ja net Bolin, Rutland, an
ambassador for Amerinora '92, spoke to stud enls al Pomeroy Elementary on Wednesday as part of the Earth llay activities there.
She informed students of the international noral and garden exposition goin g on now in Columbus in commemo ration of n('w world
discovery in 1492 by Christopher Culumbus

Meigs residents donate 82 units of blood
Meigs County exceeded its goal
for blood donations when the
American Red Cross bloodmobile
visited the Senior Citizens Center
on Wednesday .
Eighty-two units were donated,
including 20 first -time donors.
Those ftrst -time donors were :
Dianna Lawson. Debra Call. Joan
Si mpson. Stan ley N. Watson.
Richard L. Grady, Barbara Hatfield. Linda Cozart, April Priddy.
Sam Rayburn, Roger Abbott, Bren da Johnson, Desmond Jeffers.
Betty Harmon. Betsy Molden .
Sandie Carnahan. Carolyn Elam,
Donna Hawley. James Fisher, Mcrnlee Bryan!. and Cindy Crump.
Multiple-gallon donors were :
William Radford. (13); Virgil Windon (10); Billy J . Spencer (8);
Mary L. Voss (4); and Kathy
McDaniel (I).
Volunteer nurses workmg at the
bloodmobi le were Jane Brown,
Buelah Ward. and Tracte O'Dell.
RSVP workers assisting were: Jack
Sorden. Jeanette Lawrence,
William and Joyce Hoback, Goldie
Fredericks. Florence Richard s.
Gerald Wildermuth, Evelyn
Gilmore. Dorothy Long . Helen
Bodimer. Mary Nease. Emma Clat -

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)AEP offictals d1d not formally
American Electric Power plans to announce the scrubber decision but
tnstall $ROO million air -c leaning
tndiCJted 11 would be made.
scrubbers at its Gavi n power plant
They satd a final deciSion would
lfl sou1hcrn Ohio, co mpany off• hi ngc on three clcmcnll:
uals said.
- -The U.S. Environmental ProLast year the company sa td tec ti on Ag ency musl dcv1sc an
scru bbers would be too ex pensi'e allowances system to give util iti es
as a way to meet the Clean Air Act cred it for complying w11h the law
by reducing a1r pollutton emisat Gavm. liS din test power plant.
SIOns.
Using scrubbers, the plant in
- AEP must gel permllS for the
Cheshtrc could co ntinu e burnmg
h1gh-sulfur Ohio coal.
scrubber project from the U.S.
In January I~~ I. the utility Army Corps of Engineers hccausc
announced it was co nsidering a th e Gav1n plant. in Gallia County.
swit ch to low-sulfur. out-o f-state IS on the Oh io River.
coal for the pbnl. That wou ld mean
- The Public Utli•t•cs Commismore th:m 1.200 miners in Meigs Sion of Oh10 must agree W1lh the
County wnu ld lose their jobs.
decisiOn. Electric r~ll cs arc expectThe company next week will ed to mcrc.a.sc because of the Clean
reveal its plan to comp ly with tl1c A" plan.
law. Richard D1sbrow. chairm an
"All IillS must happen rather
and chtef excc ut•v e off• ce r. said qut ckly because ttme ts runntng
Wednesday during AEP's H5th out," DISbrow satd . He satd each
annual meeting.
month of delay costs Jhc company

worthy, Peggy Harris and Lula
Hampton. Edward Cozan served as
a volunleer donor attendant. The
canteen was served by the Middleport Child Conservation League .
Donors. by community, were:
POMEROY · Debra D. Mora; Billy
J. Spencer; David M. King: Bryan
J. Shank; Walter R. Couch, Joyce
A. McCarthy; Barbara Hatftcld;
Linda Cozart; Penny L. Brinker;
Haro ld W. Brinker; Janet M.
Ambrose; Mtndy K. Harris; Scott
W. Brinker; Roger Abbott; Howard
P. Logan; Wt lliam W. Radford ,
Phyllis J. Witherell; pavid L. Harris; Fonna K. Cu llums; Donald A.
May; Patricia J. Barton; Helen E.
Blackston.
Desmond L. Jeffers; Joseph C.
Ha ll ; Glona K. Kloes; Betty Har mon; Jon P. Karschnik: Gerald E.
Rought; Dan E. Follrod; Clarence
A. Molden; Betsy Molden; Gary E.
Snouffer; Carolyn A. Charles; Carolyn Elam; Joyce M. Hall; Nancy
F. Freeman; Melissa R. JustiS;
Paula L. Justis; Virgil K. Windon;
Mel1ssa Neutzling; Paul F. Marr;
and Paul Price.
MIDDLEPORT - Debra Call;
Sarah J. Fowler; Rhonda F. Grover;
Nancy N. Beaver; Sam Rayburn;
Niesel E. Gerard; Charles P. Ger-

.----Local briefs-----..,
Car, battery reported stolen
Thefts of a car and the battery from a bus are under investigatio n
by Pomeroy Police.
Police reported that ubout 10 p.m. Wednesday a call was
received from Danny lluffington reporting th e theft of hi s blue 1979
Ford Fiesta from the driveway of the Mary Sheets home. 17 14
Chester Road. Pomeroy. Buffington said that he had been working
on the car and about 8:30 went inside the house. When he went
back out to resume work on the vehicle. il was gone.
Thursday morning Carolyn Young of the Meigs Hcadstart ProContinued on page 3

about S10 mtl~on .
The company no longer constders scrubbers too e•pens•ve, Disbrow 53ld. The costs of ustng outof-st:lte coal and msl:lllmg scrubbers now arc ncarl)' 1he same
because of the federal allo~~oances
plan and the htgher pnce of lowsu lfur coal. he 531d.
One AEP stockholder argued
with the scrubber deciSIOn.
· Tm disgusted that we have to
~o w•th that. " Gena Dcferro of
Columbus said "I loS&lt;: tw o lfoJ \1
- firs.l as a consumer and secoriJ
as a stoc khold.: J."
He sa1d thJI SY.II ChJnc furl~

would CO&lt;! the compan) 5200 mtllton. compared "nh the Sl\CXl mtJ .
IJon scrubber conversion .
The Gavin plant produces 25
percent of all au pollution'" AEP' ;
power planll. whJCh arc located '"
srvcn SI..J il'...'

Commision may amend
~ --- CDBG fund application

E~rth

ASSORTED

2 Secti-ons, 12 Pages 25 cents
A Mullimedi.a Inc.. Newsoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, April 23, 1992

AEP plans to install scrubbers at Gavin

c
HEAD

Low too~bl in 605. Chance of
rain 60Pf'ret'ol Frida~ . hitr,!:h in
mid-70&lt;.

Super Lotio:

ard; Mi c hael Mowery; Donna
Hawley ; Toni Givens; Glona J
Peavley; Bessie Fisher. James FISh er and Linda L. Haley.
RACINE - A. Mane Rush; Barbara L. Chapman; Deborah A.
Jon es; Harry D. Ho lt er; William
W. Hoback ; Mary E. Curlls; Bar bara M. Dugan; Joan Wolfe; Lmda
L. Holt er; Joan Simpson; Barhara
F. Beegle; Carol J. Justis; MIN ERSVILLE - Mory L. Voss; RLJT LAND . Stanley N. Watson.
Richard L. Gratly. Donna M
Dav1d so n; LONG BOTTOM ll cnrv E. Bahr. llrucc Hawle y;
Lauro L. !lawl ey; Oris Sn111h;
Kathy S. McDant el; Mcrrik,·
Bryant; Benny R. 13ryant
SHADE - Way ne Milh oan ;
LANGSVILLE - Patricia A. Morgan; Ei lt s E. Myers. and l ara
Clark; SYRACUSE - Dianna L.:tw ·
son; KatlJy J. Cummin gs; MASON,
W.VA .- Brion E. John son. llrcntla
Juhnwn. Apri l Prttldy; LEO N,
W.VA .- C1 ndy Cru mr.
Donatio ns were m ::~dc in the
name of the fol lowing: lola ll ow ell . Buena Grucscr. Kathy Chad we ll, llclen Gygax. L.B. Vaughan.
Pam Newell. Freda Elam. and Jnn
Anderson.
According to Meigs County
Bloodmobile Chairman Bnan J.
Reed, th e nex t bloodmobil e is
scheduled for June 17.

Headline should have
read 'dispute' not 'strike'
The top page I head li ne in
Wednesd ay's Da1ly Sentinel shou ld
have read, RAC. union will resume
tnlb to end iahor dispur c , not

srnkc.
Rav cns~·uod Aluminum Cor-po -

ra tion and th e United Steelworkers
hop e tlte renewed talk s wi ll end
th eir IH -m,&gt;n th la bor diS pute.

Sioner s discussed a posstblc
amendment to th e cou nt y's 1992
Comm unit y Dev elopment lllock
Gra nt Fund applt cation at the
board's regular meeting ()n
Wcdnc&gt;day.
The Ohto Department of De vel
opment has tentatively reJected a
S25,000 CDBG r0'1uest from Tuppers Platns/Chestcr Water District,
wh1ch would have partially fundcJ
an extension of water scrv· icc into
the Pagcville community.
As wriuen. the grant would hav e
funded extension of water sc rvit: c
to the prorcrry lines of

tl1e S D.

new

P;1 gc villc cuswmcrs. Howev er, Lhc

tnstallation of water lm e from the
property boundary to the rcmknccs

board has al so ftlal applocauons for
Issue 2 and Farmers Home Adm1n-

fmarlCe the c.onnec.tian. 'ince Lhcir

low -lo -modc ratc income stalu s
Mean while . the rt)C£Uon of the
facilitated the project's eltgibil,ty TP -C project has also SIJilcJ
for COBG fund ing. The only other approval on Meigs Counl\ ·' other
optio ns would be for TP-C to 1992 CDBG fund requests
waive the fcc and absorb the conAccord1ng lO Comm1 ~~~o ncr
nec tion cost (in some cases. up to R1c.h.ard E_Jones, ··me commh~Jt1n­
$10.000 per rrsidrncr). or for the crs "''Ill now rC\o' ICW the count Y''\
county commissioners to fund tl1e
rcma1ndcr of lhc project.

The latt er or~on. the comm·s feel, 1s not feasible. w that
'' co uld se t a dangerous rrcceJcnt
for future projects . The comm1s·
.stoners also speculated yesterday
th at TP-C would be m a S1mliar suu:llion if they financeJ the rcm:linJ~r of Lhe connection process_
The proJeCt could still be funded
from other sources. since the TP -C
SIOilCfS

total appltcatJOn as submnlL~J tu ih c
sl31c. to ~ 1f amcndmt~m~ to the
ar ph cJIIOn CJn fu nd Othe r prn JU. b ...

Due to ltmued CDBG tunJ,ng.
Lhc comm 1 ~Sioncrs •,H'rc f.JrlcJ to
reJCCl several appltcJtJ Dn.-. ,..,hen
they v-.·erc submitted laLC LJ"t )C.:lf
Now. some of those pr OJCCL~ mJy
be used 10 repi3Ce the TP C pro JCC I. In addttiOn. some prOJCCb
Conrinuf'd on pa~ -~

Bids are being accepted for
Racine's old tanker fire truck
S~llc

o! til l· 11rl·

dq\ lrlm~·nt

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Hnd CrJJmn

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Tht' I lJ7s h)f{l r: ()()() 1r11 d -.. \ \,I \
th.'l·Ltl ld \llrplu_.,; pru pt:rty :utd dh·
t 11 c t k ~l:Jrt llll' ll! ;t.., kc· d th :ll :1 lll!lil ·
rnum l~ lil td \-1,0()() b~· \l' l tnr lilt'
l.dl .Jild Lh.l'&gt;'&gt;l\_ llil' 1.111~ I\ 1\! h l'
1\' lll OVl\lll'\lln ti1 C lrtKk txfm1.· 11 I ~
~ ol d . It .,,p; nut cd tli:l! there 1.\ tlll l\'

du ~~.· t!l nl'\l
dump Lrulk .

14.000 miles on tl&gt;c truck.
·
Seakd bith will he accepted hy

Cour1c1lrrun Jl'lt -llllli flton
rqxmcd th:u h~.· lt:J\ fi\\' lf(C\ let:

vill~g e c lerk
Mnnday, ~-l:l y IR

to he pl:mt c-d u1 ilk' \JII:i ~L'. He .JI\1.1
SJJd that anv fC.'&gt;ILknt s w,1n t1 11~
flow ers to pt'.mt on tltc 1r JlfOf".-' 11 )'
ncar th e str~.·"·t .\ tlOulLI contr.tn hm1
Upon r c~·(l!l llTlL'nd:itiOn of

th e

until

.:'1

p 111 . CHI

The Cr,.;r n woo&lt;l Ccm c tny
tru ~ tc cs

rc[)tlrtcd th JI th e contrJct

for rrww1ng the u·rn ctcry th1 s yL·;u

~ Il l! Ill 'L'l.'l'f' \l,] \

flt l\,·tl

th:H \&lt;11 11 ,' t!l tlh.: 111:1.JI ff,llll

ilk' ):r:Jitn.~ bl'r:I .C r~.·pl.h. \' d, !"ltdd h,·

lh: d

11 1 r,' J'.IIr n!l1 ,· r _c' l. ll111:&gt;

pw
.llld tub,·, J, ,, LIL

CtliHk'rl ;Jl , tl .1pp111\,·d tft,'
: th'&gt;

\1.:l yor Fr:tnl. CL.:IJnJ. Ctlun'- Ji
!r Jf' \l._·;r rnL
monc~ 111 Lt",~· v. .Jt~·r lund to c,l\,:,
p;_p,&lt;;;C"~I J r c~ol u tr l"~ n

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rJI Resource' pJnt ~~lid th ~~ IH"'
J

fur. J Jlld from lhl· L.:n'-·uJ lun ,l

.n l,, tt1c p0!J .:-:- "~qu1rn;,. :1;

11 .' t

Ctlun..· J! rc,,:-,....._·j L il ! d \~ .! .. -! J l
7 p m Allcn ~.lrn~ v.cr~· k. ·,(\..'rt B..:..: L'Il. Hen ry Bent!. S,tlll Jr~&lt;l J..:tt
fht&gt;mtllfl, counnl mcmtx·r,_ .\ L.~•or
Cll'IJn,L Clerk CJ roh·n Pn ... ~·l l
Fuc Chrcf John Holn.un. Slrc~._·;
Commt\'\JOnrr Gknn Rz 1-:-r. Ht l,l rtl
11f Put"lhc Aff3n s Pr r .. hkn t [\Jn
Po" ell. Jn.1 Bo~ Ho~. pr t: 'l•k·nt ol
l ;r~,· . :nv. (ll.'\1 Ccrnctc0 Tr u"t...:\~5

Southern board approves personnel contracts
Numerou&lt;; comra cts for ccrttficcl grade baskct hall , M1ck W1nc hr rn
non -rc rt1f1ed personnel were
'ncr . seven th grade baskethall boys
:qtprovcd when the Southern Local coa ch and hc~d baschall coac h.
Bu;ml or Educallon met Wcdn cs- Suzanne Wolfe. head vollc yha ll
~111d

d;Jy night at So uthern ll•gh School.
Awarded co ntracts for tcachmg
posttions were Sandra Ba cr,
ll oward Ca ldw ell . and Br en da
McGUir e. fiv e years, Dav1d Gaul.
three year; and Linda I'isher. Jenny
Manuel, Barbara Lawrence. Jctta
Kramer. and Scott Wickline . on e
year.
Non -ce rtified personnel awarded contram were Gary Smith, Jwo
years, hus mechanic; Eve lyn Foreman. two years, half-day custodian ;
and James O'Brien and Don Smtth.
hus drivers.
Supplemental contracts fur the
1992-93 school year went to David
Gaul. head football; Scotl Wick line. junior high football ; Howard
Caldwell Ill. head boys basketball ;
Scott Wtckline, assistant boys basketball; James Lawrence. eig hth

year Jnd JgrccJ to nrnc

w ee k ~

t:radtn!! pcrt oJs 1ns tcad of Sl \
wcrl~ s a;; IIi th e cu rrent prJCti CC
~chool v. til st:ln on Au g 24 and
co ach; Barbar a Lawren ce Juni o r end on Mav :'R. t 99J
htgh cheerleader advt sor; Sandra
The board agreed to renew a
Racr , varsity chccr!cJdcr advr&lt;&gt;or . .soft" are agreement v.uh the South ·
Howard Caldwell Ill athktK dtrec - eastern Oh10 Voluntarv Educauon
Cooperat1vc (SE O\'EC)
to r.
Donald Dudd1ng was htrcd as
Calarnuy days for Dec. 4. Jan .
the DPPF coordinator for nnt year . 24. and Feb. 13. for 1he d•stnct and
and Mary Smnh wa.&lt; employed as a Apnl 22 for Ponland only wer e
substitu te for the k.indcrgarten. The approved.
resignation of David Gaul as head
The board accepted Umat
girls basketball coach for next yeAr Aldama Elorla as a foreign
was accepted as was the resigna - exchange student for the 1992-93
tion of Jeffrey Arnold as a ~her. school )'CAr. She wtll be res iding
The nam es of Amy Young and with Stcve and Julie Randolph.
Anfcla Young were added to the
A policy through Brogan-Warnsubstitute tc.'lChers list for the cur- er was accepted for student insurrent year.
ance.
The list of graduating seniors
Auendtng were Scou Wolfe ,
was approved and gradua~on was Sue Grucser . Tom Roseberry ,
se t for May 22 at 8 p.m. in the Joseph Thoren. and Denny Evans,
Charles W. Hayman gymnastum . board members; BOO Ord. superinThe board also adopteJ the school lendent. and Dennie Hill . clerk calendar for the 1~92 -93 school treasurer_

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