<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10485" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/10485?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-11T19:17:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20928">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/a4b4438277fcc569679d56a699ec49e1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c38091412679d7311410c1deb872e17c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="33437">
                  <text>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

\(ILl

\~:1\ :t\~~n ... kd 111

Hnd CrJJmn

I : J II ~l'f lrtl l )., w; r ~ ;r p prO \' l'd , Hltl

hHI w:1~ lor )~~f) .1

:trr:lll~L'IIIL'Ill\ rrt;hk ID :lth·,·rthL' l1ll

nn l y

(&gt;Jd -;
Ill (' (

:~olll' ll

1n

1&lt; :1\ lllL' \'il l:tgc

r ,·~ tJI :tr \L'S\In n

thl'.;

CouliL' II
\1,\'l k

l'i lll·r

l' rd ''

lilt!\-\ Jrl~~

J\

l t1c
l

h~·

l nr )~ "-.{, :1

rn~ .

lllrl',,

~Lllill ...:\ Ill!
,IJ ' Pf(l\~,\1 It V.,l\

"Jh,··jl llrlh.N' 1r/ [()

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

th,·

((hi

n( ~ ~·~tm~ th,· V..th'r

Jrrr0\·cJ
lfit)nc :- from

""'J "

the

.-\] .;1 ,

1un-1o ol

o-..~rJrtm,·rll ri

'\ Jtu ·
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_

�Thursday, April 23, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, April 23, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Frida_y, ApriiU

Look at the other side of pro-life ads
rounded in 1955 by an evangelical
Christian insurance executive. The
De Moss Foundauon refuses to
g1vc intcrv1ews, but Adweek maga~
line eslimmes the cost of the cam-

&lt;otl1llll1l&lt;fi1 runnmg
on sevm&gt;ll uilll&lt; TV lletworf&lt;s, and
I! alw.tty&gt; I'JliS ill &lt;3mfil m m) throat
when ff !10&lt; ill. lit( u l!llll• mg portray I
of • YOlllll£ ~ ~ til a ho,-pr tal to p&gt;d tqot ~ Dl&gt;fant they're
adopin11£ A:&lt; ~ '""""' puts the
baby """~ 1111Dfilir&lt;1r' s arms, the
look tlbl: ~ p•e:'J the actor
playmg licr "!!!l]um;i "'e:tqU15rre, a
JOY alml'!lt ~ fl&lt;l! bchef.
Th&lt; 1111· &lt;
congratulates
all t.hr mJ!&lt;Ikn. "'li.c, ' "decrded ,
mste!ld of * - 1D trough it out
and bm u: llb&lt;DI! !Ntllttes into the
world ·· lir ;ddS: · -yo, aJ.I these
motb&lt;J't. 1-•11&gt;&lt;:&lt; "'Ita adopted
tbesr ct!Mr.&lt;DI "mlt tD "'Y !hanks. '·
As tho 1IIIIDlllill1 . - . ills last line,
the ten .rll., Jll'F""" m a graphoc
on tho SDJlMII. -·!lA. Whar a be:tuulul chruct. ·A C"""'J'IB'lBi &gt;Iii !eanrn::s little
Thor&lt; - ,~

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

LETIERS Of OPINION an: welcome They sbould b&lt; le" tban 300
words. All letters are su bject to ediling IUld must be signed w1tb name.
address and telepbone number. No unsigned !etten wiU be pubhsbed. Letten:
~oWd be in good taste, addressmg issues, not personalities .

The $400 billion political
footnote The deficit
Bv WALTER R. MEARS

AP Special Correspondent

·· ~·~

son Avenue wunderlcmd could ere·

Sarah Overstreet

r h II drrnt ~1!1 ~een· costume s
and scbOOll wdimJIM. and descnbes

them as

r m sure some Madi -

ate an equally compelling ad:
A teen-age girl from an abusive
family becomes pregnant by a bey
who docsn 't want her or the child.
She is terri ficd and confused and
abortion osn ' tan option. As th e
pregnancy progresses, counselors
urge her 10 choose adopuon, bul
paogn at 520 molhon , according to not onlv docs she begm to feel she
The New Yark Times.
can 't p3n wnh her baby, she slalts
Afu:r initiallv running the ads,
cab l&lt; companies CNBC and Life- to sec the chold as something thai
time dectded to stop runnmg them. makes her importanl, finally, if
CNBC, a news and mformation on ly for a shan while.
We cut to scenes of the mother
network, said H later decided it
would only run the ads if they car- and her 2-year -old, who then
ri ed visual and audio disclaimers becomes a 7-year-old, and then a
silltmg the spots were sponsored young teen. The cyc le or poverty
mformation. Lifetime. a network and abuse continue through tht s
featuring programs aimed at generatioo , and as yeaJS go by the
women, told the Times only that mother becomes no more equipped
the decision to stop airing the com- to care for her child than she wa.s a.s
a frightened teen-ager. The new
mercials was "a business issue."
The ad IS very effective, a great teen molhcr is shown nurturing her
c.u mplc of the advertiser's cralt. U child as she wa.s nurtured: scream~
ln organization wanted to ponray mg. hitting, belittling and degrad ·
an unplanned-pregnancy scenario ing him.
If the ad writers get really ere·
that didn ·1 end as perfectly as the
alive,
might bcrrow from the

IIIJIIIr"""'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genonol Mmager

De Moss ads,

pregnancies

that ootM iluJw &lt;mm&lt;U tn ab&lt;Jrtioo. ·'

Both .,., ~ m, the Anhur
S. IX M""' IF·o~ wb.Ich was

1\.ASH INGTON - The soanng federal budget ddiCtt, a centerp~r.cc

real -life case chron icled m HBO 's
documenillry "Child of Rage ."
Here, a litilc girl was sJarVed, beaten and raped before she was adopt ed at the age of 19 months. By the
time she was 6, she had to be
locked in her room to prevent her
from harming her family. She tortured animals, molested her brother
and thought of kolling her adoptive
parents.
Every um c I sec the De Moss
ad s 1 expect my Jhroat to ca tch.
There 's no way I can watch that
mother hold thai baby and look up
al the father without bemg moved.
But th ose rosy ads won't sto~ me
from see ing the other scenano as
Just a.s real.

Berry's World

1

o
l.!ansfteld

59 •

58'

0

•

I•

,

Columbus I 61 o

I

W VA

give up babies they aren't equipped
to care for, we can't guarantee
happy endings for unplanned
babt cs . Without that guarantee,
there os no way I could Jell another
woman what to do about her preg-

l'-,o;4 _4

49~ ¢

Showers T~ Jblrr Rumes

Snow

Ice

~ 6
PI Cloudy

Sunny

Clovl1y

nancy.

(C)l992
NF:WSPAPER
ENTERPRISF: ASSN.

&amp;·1992 Accu-W eart"o!&gt;- h e

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

r-----

'

PA

INO

Souiii-C&lt;'Illnl Ob&gt;
Tonogbt. sbo"·c n D1l&lt;ly wtth
thund c.rswrms poss mbte . Low
around 60. ~ ol rain 60 per ·
cent. Fritb)·. Jl'l'notls cf r.un and
cooler. H!gll I&amp; l~l Clnw:e of ram
SOpercmt

Extended rorecast:
Sa turday through Monda•·:
Unseasonab ly cool with a
chance of showers through 1hc
period lltghs 45 -55 Saturday and
Sunday and in lhc 50s MondJv .
Lows mostly tn the &gt;Os
·

Local briefs ... ----,

Continued from page I
gram re-pon.OO nlhuc cno~m1ght a bJL lO:ry wJs tJkcn from the hu,
parlo.d 011 tile lim ar ott, "k•gs multipurpose butldmg lOt

...

•••

Squads make 8 runs Wednesday
Mcig"!i: ~ SeNices unns an s w~rcd ~ight c3Jls for J..'\'\IS·
umctonW~·
On \\7.Mmewby ·.lt 11 · 16 a.m.. M1ddlcpon and Pomc10y unit s
went iLO 95 Cti~ia Sttreet for a fire: . Rex Dlfst was the properly
ov.-na. and \hllfred !'.nllburn was !.he occupan t. Robert Mtlbum was

u-catod s:

1M~

for smoke mhalauon. At 3:01 p.m., Pomeroy

squad &lt;a·o:tn ro Ptlm&lt;tmy Nu.rsing and RchabtliLat•on Center for
Wayne Gdft;ftgmrl -.flo was tlken to Veterans MemonJI Hosp1ul . AI
6:52 p.m.. '~ urul was sent to Garfield Street for an auto
fire. Amhrm~- MonK was the owner. At 7:47 p.m .. Syracuse u011

won Ul
Ccnl.O"

M!lD S~~«n

Carol Teoford wos taken

On Tbancb~r :BI 2:~ J..m .,

to

Holzer Mc.docal

~ll&lt;.kllepo n :rnd

Pomeroy uniL&lt;.; " 'enl to
a rol:mtllod f""' 11111 olie 'Mburn rt:stdencc. At 23 I a.m .. Middleport
squad wMt 11&gt; NJdl S&lt;ccnd Street and took Du:mc Farley to Veterans. At 8:56p.m_ ~biM!eport squ:id went to Hamollon Srrcct. Dovtd
Darst was tliJm to Pbsant Valley Hosp tta l. At 9: I 2 a.m .. Rae me
unn womllll'&lt;&gt;itbil&lt;l for a smoke cdor.

--Area deaths-Alice L. Allen

Albert Lou r!lC A ll&lt;• . 82 . of
Spnng HilL
\londav .
Apnl :&gt;D. 1992 lit lic·r b!m:.
·
She was bon 1111 Pounleroy on
June 17. l'llOJ9 ao do&lt; l:u Al!&gt;&lt;rt lJ1d
Hamet (Mmrl i R""""--11_
In SJll1lllifdl. i!ilt :mrd !l.:r hu.'
band. O.W AID&lt;n_ 'lib&lt;l dte d on
19 71. O~' n.e.d ..t ta~d o ~r:H ~ d th e
O.W. Alkn Coomi"'&gt;D! She wa '
also ac.U\'t m tbt \\-~ - ., Town
Club. the local Ow 0.:...'0 Alum nae chapter and (.lnn.,;.n Epo &gt;eo pal
Churr:h
Sur\'1'-'0H nnciiUid..t o-n..: so n ,
Mo chae! All011 ol Sao~. W:r.sh .
two dauglll.O'&lt;. P.llltndr. II.Jn-u::i: of
Spring IIlli ••~ h n~a Drom o f

fu_""""

Alzlheimer's: Let's get it in sight and in mind
Al.T.hrumor~ 5 r6lr:itw - com tde r
these tnginmnrJE lbirn:
• 4 m:illmm AimrnL:an3 b.a"e th1s
dc.mcnunr o ~'i, wfin::b robs the
c.ldcril C!l- IllOIIll!lf' Jllrl ]udgment.
and lcirves mono ~le of tunc ·

110n1nt on :fumr ~m

• f4 mm~n!JDidl

.~ tc an'i will

h•vc A.l1:hoimar-&lt; lb-&lt; llli&lt; ve:rr 2030
unlc:s~ IDC'.dacai ~e ~a way
to prevent llfnr ~ progress
of the disco.'&lt;t
• 1rnm tt.t- omwrn iYf Ll'i iymp 1om s . All rlllcmDI&lt;ll .' &lt;;lJII Last an y where fTcrm 3 11m 2lll ,_,. Qr more.
It alw&gt;)~ onth .. obdit lbf the 111c-

urn

• ~h a till ' Ammcan fam 1hcs rs llfle&lt;W a.. ~er ' &lt; dl.&lt; ease The ~ ti costmg lhe
nauon o'•or SWJ lbltlllirilm annually
The anni!B1 . - m! &lt;:mmg f&lt;Jr a per
son wn'tl AIUk'J!IDJt'Jr"'S dll3ease at
homr ~~ S. U'i.JUJOO J :'~ar Fam1bes
pav vutuaD~ Jill«! nli.r rn""'.
.
Alr.hmrnar · i- i1i- lllOII !bJ:e heart dis-

case. nor lUll£ 41~ ~ 111Jr cancer.
Med11cal ~ ~~~ ;t il.I.'l!':i.'iC.'i that
A l~;heiimo:r " ·t. H I1J([Jlll JiU-'it normal
ag-rng. There " •., &lt;lll!liy Kreening
to comrimmdh ~t.:t lei J'fmpmm."J.

JUSt a£~ u1. ~· k.!lown link

between diet, smoking, C:\ercisc or
lob-related stress and thiS Jerrifymg
brain ~isorder. It typiCally begms
as harmless forgetfulness and eventually gi.,..es way w cruel se nilit y
&gt;nd insamty. It ha.s been rightfully

track.mg illi linkage to lhe di sease.
From all indications , intense, continued research offers th e only
hope for someday understand in g
and e liminat ing Alzheimer' s. If
early Intervention ca n be devel oped, perhaps the detenorauon of
nerv e ce ll s can be slowed. If the
onset of symptoms can be delayed
by just S years, it ts estimated that
the devastating impact of the di scase can be reduced for SO percent
of its potential victtms, enabling
cal led a health care tunc bomb, and millions of older Amencans to con Co ngre ss is increasingly bemg tinue to lead produuivc , indepen called upon to focus both resources dent lives.
and attention on the ca use and
In 1991, the National In stitute
effect. as well as a response, to t.his on Aging (NIA) launched two 101 'iOC•ologicaVmed•cal crisis.
uauve s to speed development of
Medi ca l sc 1ence is d1ltgently possrblc effective drug trcatmcnls
look• ng for an swer s about for Al&gt;.hetmcr 's. In addttion, NIA
Alzheimer's: what makes nerve is fund10g a network of nearl y 50
cells det.cnorate' Why do groups of research , diagnosltc and treatment
br.tln cells die? Scient.is:IS are pur- ce nters in communiti es throughout
su•ng a number of avenues of the country tn an cfron to carefull y
1nvestigauon: genes, roxins, mfcc - st ud y Alzheim er's pauents. Th e
ttous age nts. the body's meJabolic Food and Drug AdministratiOn
processes.
(FDA) has agreed to place every
Some of the mo st promrsmg investigational Alzheimer drug on
researc h involves an abnon11al pro- its fast track for review . Congress,
te m - am yloid - found m the too, has rcspQnded to the thrcai of
braons of Alzheimer's panents and thos hea lih cnsi s by sJeadtly

Cong. Clorence
MiUer

mcrcas mg funding for research.
For fiscal year 1992, $282 mil lion wa.s allocated for Alzheimer 's
researc h. with advocates urg in g
Co ngrcs.&lt; to invcsl $500 million fo r
further biomedical research . Las!
fall , Jhe Scna!C approved legis la tion to atd both Alzheimer's vic tim s and th eir famili es. That mea sure - if passed by the House and
stgncd into law - would authori1.c
JUS t ove r $90 million over five
years to underwrite disca~e cxpcrimcnLation and provide support services for patienls and those who
care for them.
By th e time baby boomer s
become the elderly of this nation , it
IS reasonable to expect that 14 mil lion Americans will c;.;rx:-rience the
ravages of this mysterious and crippling disease unless research
res ult s in significant di scoveries
and remedies. Clearly, thr s painful
1ss uc will command far greater
att ention as we move toward ·the
next ccntuty. and Congress must be
prepared to address il5 issues and
invest the appropriate funding into
findmg answers to one of the most
crucial health care challenges we
face.

New faces herald new era of politics
~....::rw ~llllr! J: f1ttle good
for~~·· Coocrnung the
longu.m~ D OB!pl!:i.'iiii&amp;!Dl and state

WouJ.tl

ntws

lcgrsll!li!H ..tbt&gt; JJT&lt; mrrg ""feared
10 pruname&lt; "" 'll""'l:lli &lt;il::&lt;tloos, or
will get Ill&lt; holim 111115 tlaiDI. or who
are quita11g adbor nliuno !a&lt;:e the JUS ufoed wrat'h &lt;Jf IIJiirnJ &lt;m!l!llllliJ::nts, or
are Slfi\Ply llllloa"'i m olie towel
rathor rtum ~ lllll ,. die fa&lt;:e of
tntrBCllib1e ~ ~lems,
the belli ...: a11 ""J ._.. ll!al lhe

AugCBll Oltt.lis -lloiag dansed
But ,.;tu, ~ liB dll: sae llemg
vacated. Drl) lk ...,. snH ll!al
have botm uca4 as a R&gt;lllt of
red:Jstmallllg . . . . . . . 19!0 &lt;mSUS?
Tbepour.l..,...istbl.it&gt;an
enconr.o;gi•IIJ I:IIF-qmbe• of
cases, mta :aj( -..m 11f real
quality art ll'"tll4lnV; tli!l t:q!tt31ml us
'"w~

TAPPING A KEG

•

Unless we can force women to

1-.suc 1n White House campaigns gone by, has been a sort of $400 billion
!oomotc so far thi S year
. .
.
.
•

Stncc: the debt has multJp!1Cd under Republican admmJSlllll..ions. II s
not a promismg topic for PrcsJdcm Bush, who blames t.he problem on
Congress and demands an Jtcm-by-J tcm veLD lO deal w1lh spendmg.
\Vtt~ no ncar-lcrm soluuon available. Democrat Bill Clinton says he·ct
curh hudgct growth, bu t doesn ' t Lalka lot about a suuauon m wh1ch
the re·, only borrowed money to spe nd on new federal ventures.
Ross Perot clatms fixing the dcfictt would be "easy stufr· for him . but
the numbe rs he offers arc suspect at best.
Pcr01. the Dallas billionaue contcmplaung an independent campalgn
(or prCSI{iclll, dcscnbcs deficit spending afi a cancer thrcatcnmg the naUon
,tnd says the maJOr party candidates arc ignonng IL
Ttl ey aren' t, but neither are they pressmg the tssue, the way Jimm y
Car ter dod on 19 76 or Ronald Reagan 1n !980. That may be a Jesson
learned both Carter and Reagan promosed and failed w balance the budI.!,C t wuhm one term. and m bot.h cases H got worse.
~ There· s no such talk now .
DefiCit control is pan of Bush's ccorKJm rc program . But even woth the
curbs ~c wanl5- a freeze on discretionary spending and a une-otem veto
on appropnation s bolls - the adm inistration forecasts a 5399.4 btlh~n
deftci t this year and only gradual reducuons later. According Ill Bush s
hudgc t, the dcficll still would be roughly $200 billion 10 the year 2001.
Clt nton , the likely Dcmocrauc nom•ncc. 1ssued an econon11c paper say 111g he wou ld limit icdcra l spe nding grow th to the rate of mer~ of personal mcome, so as to "c ut the dcf•cn dramatically m_fivc years.
Perot claims the admm tstrauon has spotted $180 btllion tn fraud. waste
and ~tb usc, and seeks $2 billton "to find it and get iL" Perot counts that as
aS 178 billion deficu reduction.
The Bush budget docs recommend a $2.2 billion appropn•Lion to
mprove
federal financtal managoment, but accordmg to the Office of
1
Management and Budge!, the mvesunent would produce savmgs of $138
bi 11 ion over a period of yeaJS, not annual! y.
That pari of the PcrOI plan sounds a bit like Ronald Reagan's 1980
claim that he could prune $195 b~lion from federal spendmg w!lh a five year crackdown on govcmm em waste, fraud and ineffi~tency.
With new compmcrs at the Internal Revenue Serv1ce . Perot says, the
government could collect SJOO billion a year in taJ.es that aren't bcmg
pau1 now.
.
~IIChacl Dukakis, the I 988 Democrauc nommcc agamst Bush, wanted
10 cu rb the de ficit with be tter taX colknion too. But hi s claims were more
modest: about 57 billion the ftrst year, perhaps up to SJS billion later
Perot says hc·d pick up anodler $100billoon now bemg spent to defend
western Europe and Japan, and $20 billion by havmg n ch Americans
fo rgo Social Security and M~dicar~;
.
·'OK. you've got $400 btl Iron. he saHI "You haven' t even broken a
\WeJt.
Bul no-sweat, patnlcss answers arc a lot easier to t.alk about Lhan to
deliver
Promi ses notwilh standing, deficits keep increasing, driven Ln large part
by automatic . formu la payments for benefit pr~gram s such as SoCial
Sccun ty. Mcdrcare. Medicatd, government and mthtary penstons and food
. . tamps.
.
·' I wtll not Jamper with Social Sccunly, bui I would pul real caps on
the growth of uncontrolled spending ," Bush said in hiS SUite of the Un oon
address.
But th e administrauon hasn't saJ d much more about 11.
Se nate DemocratiC leaders bl ocked an attempt by Republicans and
conscrvo:Hivc Democrats lO vote a limll on entitlem ent mcreascs. wh•ch
have bee n running at at~Jul 7 percent a year. The proJX&gt;Scd cap ~ly wa~
-:tringent: 11 exempted Socta1 S~urit~·, and would have resmcted other
progmms to increases based on mflauon and the number of people enu t!cd to benefil5, with an extrn 2 percent leeway at the outscL
Sen George Mi tc he ll , D-Mame, the Senate maJOnty leader, called the
limit · ·nactly the wrong approach to a very scriolLii problem." because n
would hove restrlctcd health care spendin g wtthoul conuolli ng costs.
A proposal by House Republican s to limit cnutlcment spendmg losr
100 . Bm a measure to ra1sc the earning s limtl for working recrp1cnlS ?f
Soetal Security won eas il y in the House. It would add more than $7 htl 11on to clcfJCiLS over the nc:&lt;l fiv~ years .
.,
As president, Ge rald Fo~d tncd to Lackie the cnutlcment problem . For
decades. we have been ..·otmg cvcr -mcn\ t, lng levels of government bene fits. ami now the bil l has co me due." Ftlrd :-.a1d.
That was tn 197\ the year be lore he Jo_q the Whtte House .
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mea rs, vice president and colum nist for The Associated Press. has r&lt;portod on Washington and
national politics for more than 25 years.

1oltiD-

l llileOO 54 ,

a

Clllf SIWlt

cap•-

tals. You may be """' m! dl&lt; lix:ky
ones "111&gt; 1Jflll' ~ m-~ tD vote for
one ohheJJ&lt;
Talle i.JIII}' ADm, •liD " ""'king the Rq.a Ni• 8 11 """llimmm for
Congress tin ttlbt: ~ -Cal Cllllgre3·
sional dll.1lliat Of Ct66mDa. 10 the
southea."""" """"" m! IAor mw:. At

39. Amn has oot previously sought
publtc offtec. In stead he has built a
d1su ngmshed career as a polit.ical
sc1entist, rece1ving hi s Ph .D. in
gove rnm ent fr om the Claremont
Graduate Sc hool neM Los Angeles
and conunuing wrth graduate work
"01rord. Whole there he served as

William A. Rusher
D•rector of Researc h for Martin
GoJbert, the official biographer of
Winston Churchill. (He also mel
and married a charming English
woman named Penny, by whom be
now has three children.)
In 1985 Arnn became pn:sident
of the Claremont Institute for !he
Study of Statesmanship and Political Pholosophy, which is where I
met h1m . The institute is an inde ·
pendent (and solidly conservative)
think tank that has dme important
work on policy issues at both the
sUite and national level.
Now Arnn seeks to put his
know ledge and experience at th e

service of the people oi ili s congressional districl, and I only w1.~ h
I lived there and could vot e for
him. As Ronald Reagan once wrote
to him, "You arc commincd Jo the
principles of limited government.
free enterprise. and traditional fmn ily values." Is there a better plat form than that'
But there arc exc iting new fac es
10 politics al the slate level too.
Take the new 25th Asse mbl y
Districl of California, carved oul of
the San Joaquin VaJJcy by a redistricting panel. Here Barbara Keating-Edh rs seeking the Republican
nomination, and if the voters send
her to Sacramento they will have
shown shrewd judgment indeed .
For this is one very special lady.
I have lalown her since the carl y
1970s, when she was Barbara Keating, the widow of a Marine major
kollcd in Vietnam, trying 10 rai se
five small children on her own. To
the asJonishment of New York 's
ultra-liberal Republican senator.
Jacob Javits, !his busy but courageous young woman ran ~gai~st
him on the state's conservauvc lone

on 1974 and ro ll ed up nea rl y
900.000 votes.
In I 980 she rcmarncd and
moved to Modesto, Caltf. But the
liberals hadn ' t heard the last of
Barbara Keating -Edh. For many
years she has been the driving force
behmd Consumer Alert, the nationwide conservative organization t.hat
battles the follies of Ralph Nader
and o ther liberal "consumer
SJX&gt;k.c.smcn.''
As you might expec t, her progra m for California reflects her
rock -solid conservatism: lower
state t.axes, support for the death
penally, cost-benefil analyses for
environmenial proposals and worlr.
requirements for able-bodied wei ·
fare recipients , just to name a few .
There will be no better bargain on
the California ball&amp; this fall.
So don't despair. With political
candidates of this quality, there's
hope for America yet. The elec·
Lions of 1992 may bring forth people who wtll help to lead il for
decades to come .
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Muscaune. 10111-:J..: ~,. o )[r:utdcht! .
dren; one hmlb..T_Ah"'l11-Ru.'i$1..: U o{

Delaware. Oilw: ~ \~_;.J;.:~. J.:m
Weed of
Mp'iOn .
Ben BanwicL
G,..ve&lt;ll!&lt; """"':" .. ,~ be SJIurday , Ami l) 1l II 3iJ l m . lt

U&gt;a""'"""'' """

Joc k HoUey officoaung.
8 unal wtll be in Moun d Hill
Ce metery, wuh private gravcsidr
~ rviccs held ar lhe convenience of
the family.
Halley, a student. was on born
Nov. 14. 1978 m Gallipolis. son of
the late Jeffrey L Halley and Dr·
olyn Walker of 2003 Galua St
Olher survivors incl ude one SIS·
ter , Carisa A. Walker. at home :
m:lternal grandmother, Eva Wall:cr
of GaJiipolis: pa!ernal grandrnoth ·
er, Elizabeth HaJicy of Gallipolis:
patemol grandfather, Preston Hal ~
l&lt;y of Gallipolos: and st&lt;p- fothcr .
Gene Burgess of GallopoliS.
He was also preceded m dc:uh
by maternal grandfather. James
Walker.
Fncnds may caJI at the f uncr.~l
home on Fnday from 6-8 p.m.
Pollbearers w til be Gtnc
Burgess. Gene Walker . Davtd
Walli:r, and Jim Halley.

Feme! ill Omca~ .
Arrangomont&lt; ...,. b..- ,g handled
by Jack~on l~ mk &amp; InglLng
Williams Funcr.il iiorrm.: II)( Spnng-

ficld .

Jeffrey S. Halley
Scmccs for ldifty S lblley.
13, of 2003 GJMu SL. G:lllipo!LS.
will be bcld lit II 1.IDL S:ltl:ar&lt;by at
Willis Funeral""""'-. •-.nil llle Rev .

Thr Daay SmJiYwl
""""~
:a&amp;•
Um:.uP rna.,. 1 JJ Onurt s..
Publ11hed

Monday

!l'¥t!'f)'

~,

OhiO by 1ib. om, v...., PidriHftrnc
Compal'ly!Mul:llmlfl.b ~ lfl[. - ftlmeroy.
Ohio 45769 . AI. 9R!-J! Q.'Sii&gt;. ~and g' pm:~ paul ., flllmfll'tJ ou~
Me~ . Tht MJ~~doNI ~ Moi thO!
Ohio ~-apa,pn J\i!t&lt;ICUitbl l lll. S,a,u nal
Ad.-ert.illfll ilr,pttilnll~'&lt;l . l!J'n 11ftam
Ne••paptl'l" Sa.'w.t.. :iltl! U'lh.rll'lil _,.,llfnWI!,
N- Yort.. ?W~tt«ila :

"m.

POS'T'MAS'T'Ei. Snnil dil-l~ ~liazti'!':!J w
T'hr Oaity &amp;m1nJ!oi1_ an I C"w-t St
Pnmeruy . DHlD 45~

I'UCE
15Cmt»

Su.t.cnbrn nell 6emtq

---

U&gt; Pll

!ift1

~tUn­

er may TC.Jmt 1111 .ala~ ilbttt Ill 'Vltt .
Daily SentiMil &lt;btl a ~ . w .., ll
montll buB.. Cnuln .-m u- pqm Cllml!."

~ .. _ . . F 3 · Nt•*
5; "'
lift!•• wt..ft ..... - - - - - . . ..
•wmlablr.

...... _a
JlaiJ

a ,

IS Wmb .... .·- ········

-

................... Ill !4

l6 Week&amp; ....•..•.•. ......................... ..... J.n. Ei
52WfJI!!k&amp; ....•. ......... ....•.... .•. .... ..... Siol.Ji

...--~

IS Weeb

26 ween.
52 ween.

...... ... ··--·

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

...

m...o

___ k'§,so
. .m,.-J

Am Ele Power
........... J 1 1tp,
Ashland Od
...... ~ &gt;~
AT&amp;L
.43 7/P,
Bank One ... . ... ............ .45
Bob Evans
~ ....... .. .25 5/P,
Charmi ng Shop..
~9
City Holdmg . ....... . ~ .. 19
Federal Mogul.
... I 7
GoodycarT&amp;R ........... .. 74 7/P,
Key Cenrurion.
....... 19 IM
Lands End................ ... .34 I /4
L1m1ted Inc . . .............. ~~. 24 1/4
MuJumed!a Inc.
. ....... 27 1n
R.u Restaur:mL
I 7/16
Robbins&amp;Mycrs
.. 16
Shooey's Inc . ..... .. .. ........ 22 7/P,
Star Bank ............. ... ... ....... 36 1/4
Wendy lnt'l. ............. .. .. ..... II 718
Worthington lnd
.... .. 24
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi o( Gallipolis.

c-

J t Sl1
J6 ~
____ W,20

Dmly....

Stocks

In 11$3, before be&lt;omin« 1M Zlst
pruHieut of tbe United Stoles, Cbestor /1.. Arthur argued a fugitive sine
that sLaves transporll!d lhn&gt;ugll
Now York state were tboreby !rood

SUIISCUI'110tl&lt; LUllS
..._. ._....

a, c.rriitr •

One Week....
Onr Month
Onr Year ....
SDiiCUt COPT

Page-3

Showers, thunderstorms expected tonight

OH10 \'/eatn er
Accu-\\ 1~ (~DreC:.lSt for d:l yt1me conditions and high tempcr:nurc.s

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel

.

The Associated Pr"'s
A ""lim front will push north
throogll the sutc and cause clouds
to mcrcase dunng the aflernoon .
Th&lt;rc woll also be a slight chance
or aflcrnoon or evemng show ers
Jnd thundcrsrorms. Temperatures
w11l sho¥~~· a drama[lc r1se as the
mcrCW)' cl•mbs from mommg lows
of around 40 to afh:moon h1 ghs tn
the 70s.
Showers and scattered lhundcr ·
s1orms will pn:.,..ail over the state
tooight Th&lt; raon may be heavy al
times, csp&lt;.-cially tn the nonh . Tern~
pcr.nures will rema1n well above
normal as lows hover •n the 50s.
Penods of ram w1ll cominuc Fri dJ.y as a low pres.o;;ure system and
cold from move throul::'h Lhc stale.
H1ghs \llo"lll occur early In the mom mg then temperature s will fall in
rh~ afternoon as colder a.r moves
m. Mornmg highs w1ll range from
55 to 65 degr&lt; es wuh reading s
fall ang mto the 40s by eve nin g.
The lalcst weather map showed

commission...

a weak area of high pressure over
the Ohio Va ll ey. A low pressure
system in th e lowe r pla1n s had a
warm front exte ndin g cast to th e
Ohio Rtvcr. A co ld front trail ed
southw est !rom Lhe low into west·

em texas.
The htgh will drift Jo the aJ!anu c
coast today while the warm front
moves nonh into Lhc lower Great
Lakes. The low and cold front will
move through the Oh10 Valley Fn da .. .

Around lht' n;uion
Thund erstorms prevailed ov er
th e Midwes t early today and fog
hung over the E~L'I I Coast.
Temperatures were cool along
Lh c Canadian hordcr from Mamc to
Minnesota.
Much ol the nauon rcm31ncd
dry th1 s morn1ng. A storm that
brou~hl r.:un and snow to the Eas t
c:tr licr thi S week wcakcr1cd in
sou thca~tcm

CanJd:t
Stmwcr&lt;.; fe ll m the Northeast on

Wednesday, wt th llood watches in

~'-'-'--­

_c_u_
nl_in_ue_·d_fr_um_:_pa..:.·

which were appro .. ed for parual
fund1 ng may now rcce1ve total
funding.
If replacement proJects arc not
found, the county wtll lo se !he
S25,000 involved 10 the rejected
n&gt;-C appltcation.
Highway project.lj
~e•g s Coumy Engineer Philip
Rolx'ru submtttcd h• s department' s
JnnUJI report, ouLiirnng urx:onlln F
pauhmg. pavmg, and bridge rl.'p:ur
"" ork. commg up dufln g Lhc ne,q
~ (' Jf The commt ss ionc rs wil l
r cq,.: ~ the report an d dJSCU \:i 11
~ nh Roberts :u a btcr date.
RoOCrts also repo ned th :u th e
d (' p.10ffil' nt IS now d01n g dHCh 1ng
and lund p:nch•ng work on count y
ro:rlli
Roberts re ported that speed
adnsory signs would be posted on
Flatwoods Road at the entrance 10
Ro~-31 O:lk Resort. Resort mamgcmcnt ~ requcsttXI a speed reduc ~
uoo on the ro:rd. but due to the umc

and cx r c nsc tnvolvcd (to he
tnc mrl:d by 1hc colmty), Rohert s
and th e rcson agreed to in stall the
s1gns. instead . Molorists viobting
the speed can still be arrested and
ftned. Roberl5 said.
The commissioners also:
- Renewed an agreement grant tng marriage licen~ tax rccC.JJHS to
Se renity House , a facility for b;Jt !CrC(\ spouses and children, loc.Jtcd
tn Gallipolis;
- Approved a liansfcr of funcls
for the county's public ass istJncc
budgcc;

A Gall•pOIIS man wa s foun d
dead on the back porch of hiS home
Wednesday afternoon .
Robert K.Jeshng, 61. of 6-1 Mtll
Cred Road. was found dead on the
bad porch of h1s home, a report
fmm the GallipoliS Police [l&lt;'part ·
mCTit Sl:llcd.
According to a rqxm from G:.d.
liJ County Coroner Dr. Edw:ud J
Berkoch. Koes ling had bee n dead
smce the SC&lt;ond week of JanUJry.
lkrttch saul the proboblc cause
of d&lt;arh was SUICide by ha ng mg.
Tht: remains have hccn se nt to
the Franklin Count y's Coro ner 's
off•cr for an autop sy, Bcr k.1 c h
add.:d .

lOc pohce department recctvcd
a call at 5:48 p.m. concemtng the
de.ath, a police deparUllcnt report
Slaled. A further in..c sLigation
resulted in the finding.
1bc inciden t is under investigauon by the polrce deparuncnL

Hospital news
Vdtrans Mtmorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
. Ward Spencer, Long Bottom,
Burton DeWees. Dexter : and
Wavnc Gilliand. Pomerov
ii'ED'iESDA Y DISCHARGES
. Dorsa Pmons and Ruhy Dursl.
llolzrr Medical Centrr
April!! dischargts
Dustrn Eods. Shirley LewiS,
Cla\·lon 1\·t dlc r. \1rs. Robert
R uCh1c . Jnd son: Dorr1s Rudy.
Stephen Russe ll. Bnanna Sess ion
and WiUiarn Wose
Births
Mr. and ~ - Wi lham Ell iS , son.
Rutland: Mr. and Mrs. James Molls,
daughter, Wc llsion and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Schoeppner. daugh·
ter, Athens.

by Hill's Store to be used lor
awards for environmcnt.ally rd:u cJ
projects 1n Lhc academic f:.ur.
Speakers at the schoo l hav~
hcr n Kenny Wiggi ns of !he M e1gs
Counly Ltttcr Conlrol Oiftcc Jnd
Roger Manley of Manly Rccyclm g
center in Mrddleport. They spoke
on tt}e importance of recycl ing as
well as conservati on and environ mental conccms.
Terri Belville, a publiC cduca~
tion and awareness coordinator of
th e Athens -yallia -Hocking Jack so n-Mctgs-Vin ton So l id W:tstc
Dtstriu. presented hands-on at.:tJVI ttcs

Janet Bnlin , an am hassador for
Amcrillora '92, "ipokc on Lhal event
and pre se nted an •nformationa l
video abou t the world c!Jss event.
Other spcokc rs tncluded Davtd
Ha ggerty, 4-H Agent, who spoke
about c:m: for th e env1ronmcnt and
al so provi ded Ihe s tude nts with
tree s to plan!; anrl Ctndy O!Jvcri,
Home Econom ic s Agent, who al so
prov1dcd useful infonnalion for the

h~·~·n l' \l l ' lhkd untll i\ b v 4. ~lLTOrd ­
J II ~~ IO :HI ;[llll ll llnL'l'lnl'll.( frOill 11 uh

I :; ll . SL'nl' t:tr y of

sorcd hy the Coo lville Un11 cd
Mcthodi ~ t Women.
Garrlt•n dub to mt&gt;rl
The Rut land G:mlcn Club wtll
meet Monday ol 7.30 p.m. :11 the
home of M". Rnb cn CanatLty ,
Hysell Run Roatl The prop:un
will be on lili es and pi31llt ngs to
:lllr:Jc t bu ttcr fl•cs A po!lu ck will

fo ll ow the mee ting .

Dann planned
Th e Pomeroy Senior C1111.C ns
Dance Club wtll hold a dance Sa t·
urday 8-11

.........

i.I,RG.I!-

Gallipolis man
found dead

Con tinued from pagr I

Extend deadline

63 ~9 .

Spaghelti dinn er
A sp.:tghcu i dinner will he held
Saturdar from 5- 7 30 p.m. Jt the
Cool nile Ma sonic Lodg e. The
meal ""'Ill a1so mclude gJihc brc::~d.
dc-ss&lt;n and dronl: for SJ.50. adu lts.
Jnd S2. children, wL!h children 12
.1r.:t un,kr. free . Th.: dinn~ r I S .spon -

Earth Day...

- Announced thai c lectma l
wor k. was now co mplet e at th e
Mc1gs County Home.
Present, in addition to Jom~s allCI St U(knl'\ .
Roberis, were Meigs County Commisstoncrs David Kobl cn tz and
Manning K. Roush: Clerk MJry
Hobstctter: Highway Supermten dent Ted Warner; and David
l tl ,· lk,tdlnl ,' to rl'~•stcr to vote
Spe nce r, offic e rnJna gcr Jt th::
Ill i lk Jun ~· ::' pr1111:1r)'~ d CCIIOil ha _~
counly gar:oge.

-Meigs announcements-fundrai.\t'r pl:mnt'd
The Lutle League (G iant s )
Bas.:bcll Tcom oi Tuppers Plains"
pl.liln•ng a f1t11d rJ.blng prDJCC t on
~13\· :! at !.he John Ranktn res 1dencc
on Rout~ 7 1n Tuppers PI::Uns. All
proceeds of the I I fam ily yard and
bake S.J.Ic ""til be used to buv new
untfo rm5. . Anyone wanu~g to
don 3tc lt~ms or b.1kcd coods
:JlouiJ c.::tll Connt~ RJnkin : li 667 -

ef fect 1n north ern Vermont and
New Hampshire.
Strong thunderstorms deve loped
Wednesday evening across Kansas,
w11h d1me-sizc hail falling ncar
Bunker Hill and golf baii -Si!.e had
m.: ar Ru:iscll.
Ear li er 1n Lhc day. had was
reported over nonhcm Ulah. Dcn\C
f og hun g over Long Island . Nl:w
York
Forecasters today c~lllc d for
mostl y fair skie s across the n:tt1 on.
but wi th showers and gusty ttnm dersto rms tn 1he MI SSISSi ppi VJI -

~Tl!IHS &gt;AT~DA~

I SUNI!Al

1.\~G,a, I N ~l~T nJHD~l

St:liL

Icy. Those storms were expected to
sp read inJo the Northeasl by Fri day.
Cloudy skie s were forccasl from
the easlcrn Ohio Valley to the central Plams.
Hot wemhcr wa' likely '" soulh
and cc nrral Texas and Jhc SouJh .
Brok en cl ouds and a few showers
were jorecas t tn the West as a
Pacifi c from moves into the region.
Forecasters called for Jcmperaturc s ul the 40s 111 Maine and Minn c ~ot;l: the SOs in New England
and t h ~ northe rn Plains; the fi)s in
the I'JCII"ic Northwest and the centra l Plat no.; : th e 70s 1n th e mid·
A1lant 1c st;H cs. coastal Ca li fornia
and Ut:th; ttlc ~Us tn much of th e
So uth ;md Cald ornta's mterior; and
the~ ( ):, 111 th e So uthw ~s tem Jc sc rL'\.
The hH:.h lor th e nauon Wednes day w:J :, ·(n (k grccs a t Borrego
.S[H II1 g \ . C:1 IJt .

Names drawn
for jury duty
The l ollo wm~ \1ctgs Count1ans
have been \ elected as potential

grand j11ror ~ for the May, 199 2
term in M c 1~'. \ County Common
Pleas Court VtolcJ M . Lnmb.:rt,
Coo lvill e. Juycc Ann Van ce.
Albany: Evc r e~t P Smll h, Rutland:
Susie W1nd on. Pomeroy : Jeffrey
Lynn Lc w1 s, Pomeroy. Homer
Pea rl P:trkcr. Lnng B o11om :
How.1nl W _:\cwbnll. RaCine; Rita
Jane Mcc s. Portbml: Mo na Lt sa
Hayn es. Syracu ,c . C har les E
Nease, SyrJc usc
llcnha Line Wo lfe, Tu pp e rs
Plains: RohLrt:l Marl ene Murph y.
Reedsv il le: Wehstcr Clay ll ccd,
Reed sville: El ma Mac Epple,
Racm e: Roger Kevin Marcinko.
Tuppers !'lams: Wt!liam D. Lehew,
Pomcruv: Arn old E. Wilson, Rut land: \'.1illiam E. Rice, Pomeroy;
Pearl Gilkey, Pomeroy: Larry Ray
Loudcrm tlt, Racine : Melissa Gail
Jones . Racine: Jacob S. Holman .
Jr., Racine : William R. Lawson ,
Albany: Ronold Euge ne Phillips,
De&gt;tcr: and Kathleen M. Bissell,
Long Bottom.

Don't Miss The
Prom. First
RentYour Tuxedo
from THE
FABRIC SHOP,
Then be
Fashionably
lAte.
Over 180 Tuxedos To Choose From
95
$39
From
and up

u

•

OFF REGULAR PRICE

z
•

COUPON•COUPON•COUPON•COUPON

THE FABRIC SHOP
110 WEST MAIN • 992·2284 • POMEROY, OH.

�Thursday, April 23, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Prototype soap box racer
tabbed economical timesaver

Thursday, April 23, 1992

Page-4

···-··-··----·----------------------------------~!,

8y Dan Adkins
OVPStaff

&lt;=incinnati survives earthquake
to hand L.A. Dodgers 4-3 loss
B.\ 1 ht· ..\ ' ' orb ted rrrss
I \1c I'll~ -;ltiikl' UP in th e N~HronJI
:H!, lH' \\',•q ha s II {J (hHlg tO do

•.

.1111 1i1,· f i ,J II', :iln /\-; tros moving
1 If 1 : 11 · 1 p f:ll't'

I !, l·' .' 1:, .11 1d [ lo dt;crl\ p!:i yc d
·1,1 \111 • l'til . 111 ·:: lll hljll :l kC that h1t
· •"o\h't ll ~ '.dJ I (Hi ll ~l \V c dn CS( I:\ y

II

4-3
,
,i r,·-..u lt 11J J;•. n nro r.\ by Los
,,_,•,·k-.. 1:11,,1 t, , , .,~- ,,~,\1 , Lenn y lbr '.
; tt ~· 1: ·d, .111d Dud!:crs ll tl lr ccr t
-~,,· \ ,, [ 111 \ \\illl
!"I ll') drcln' t re el
I !11 . '·'•l lfl 1 ' 111l' i llt l : l[ l W Jn!l l n g

. 'I' L d ,.

I ·!l

:I

Every earthquake they ' ve had, l"v ,·
,he Ri chter sc ale shook Dod ger been here. "
Reltcver Scoll Bankhead was
Stadtum at ~ :5 I p.m. (PDT) in the
warmtng up to face Darryl Straw ·
hnttom of th e sixth rnn1ng
Although the studrurn ~\h ook , pby bnry when the quake 1111. flut
wa" not slOpped and the play er" Bankhead went right on with lm
w~trmup s.

A crowd of 34.924 had lttll e
rc:.tctio n and rcrnain cd 3ft cr th e
qu ~1k c.

" What earthquake'" Dodgers
ou tfielder Ens DaviS srud. " If you
all s.1y it wa.' an earthquake, then it
"''" ;m earthquake I' ve fel t earth quak e&lt; before . I'm from here .

~ou thern

baseball team posts
4-2 \' idory over North Gallia
ru ns 1n th e tx11ton1
'l lr i ll Su 11thn n's h:J o.;c h ~dl
I II ll,h ic "d ; 1 ..1 , 1 VICtor y llVL' I
·r :h I ;_, lh:l \Vl'd nc:iday.
' ' \\ ll lclm: nl rl·r 's T om ;Jd oc'&gt;
~~ I O\"r'r:\1 1 :Hid 7-2 10th ~.·
'..; ,: rrr1· i hl,' \.'

, 1 ri1 • 1
I·

&gt; I \

'

'\" \(

'·"' !t 1, oll~;i (·1- 1.

4-2) broke a

of th e
·.d l•'lr 1\r :rd d Sc liulu. reach ed
I
jl !
I "
I .r r!V B urri .~ reach ed
• 11 \·•: l llr •.' ll r · , , ,', rHid nror of til l'
.r r: _. .rr" ! 11 .1\ · Dubhms ripped a
.. r1
: q· l · i" ' ~ · 1 1 1 ,\I G :1hcad 2-0
1:· 1: · l· ~ ·tlr :11 li: dl ol U1c fram e,
,,·,• ril : ·1
t:rr• L :1 l ~ l r;:-~ tl wh en
\ . ·, f l1r• · -.,1r1~k d. Ronn1 c
~~.·I unl ·\r1 d y G rue se r
. 1J I
'I•
.1. 1 1' 111 11
Je remy
•• ,I
tu l llllt'd :1 two- run
r.
l·•ltlr \\'il l-. l1n e :m ll
1r: L I'I:!V G r u~...;c r
, )'I ' 1\l j Ill!( dlllihlc
'I :1 " ,!1 1dlt"lCk 111 the lOp

· , .:~r

~

1',
I I,

I I I· II \ I&lt;IUS

i'

\

I] '

I' ' I •

11l! !\

I .I

; I)

[ ,I

.I

111 till'
:\t ill' ll\

I \ki~\ , t/ [l'[ -.,l.lfl lll ~

, I

\

I''

I '

11(

1

·~ •

I1

I

I! '

I

:

.I

: •• 1

ill ' 1

l1ll

Hull
I '"· l.1 ~1 lll R,\·!1

l't, J : •, I

! ,

:

Lon:~ s

;tddcd a smgle.

kuJ a

lc;id Athens. Josh Wood burn -&gt; mglr.:: d 1n th e second mn1ng ,
\\ l~t c h wa:oi th e b st Ath ens hit until
l\ c 1d Sr h:il lcr s1r1g led 1n th e scv10

the th11d . The Marauders sc ored

.ljl

;...

~\k' Lo rr ;i'&gt;.

: r1:

~·; 1 c h

double

;' , k up th:

L

~ I ..... l' 11 1

i

•: ,,h,~ ~ "l [(I ~ 1 \ l'

.II

t 1J1I , ;: 1
rll

wl\h a r nuplc of s1rrg lcs each. Bill y

tl:,·
II' ,_.

1 .I. , ' I i [ · )

•

I,

;. '

i 'i

'.

t• n \lrl'

\

~

~

I

, r 1 1;1l'· 1· ·

I h,· I

l 1111 l'ull11l S 1111d Mtkc "Abby"
\\'c·k h kd lh e wtnner&lt; at the plJtc

: nth.
Ath r no.; scored tw1cc 111 t.h c sec tlrld ~11rd on c e 1n th e th1rd . and
Mc1gs d1dn't era se Lhat leJd until

11

1 '

, ! 1 llrll, ·

Ii I

\\

t , I 1, •

\ 1 r· 11·,

·1

\ [l.llj-~~~~

'\ 11 :1 ,, \1 ' 1]

l hl·

··1 dt on·t fe el an earthquake,"
Reds manag er Lou Ptniclla said .
·· we won th e game , that's all I
care about."
Hams. who entered the game as
a pinch · htttcr tn the six th ami
replaced Mike Sharperson in the
field, mi splaye&lt;l grounders by Gary
Green anti Paul O'Neill m the seventh to help the Reds score th e

:1g: 11n 111 th e fourth

wtl l play Trtmblc today

M e t ~.\

the Reds' bul lpe n receiv ed crcdJ(

for the vtctory after hlowtng a 3-1
kad for Tom Brownmg. Steve r-oster, Bankhead (2 -U) and Norm
Charl ton fin i&lt;hcd
Charlion pttchcd I 1/:1 tnning s
for his sixth save. The game ended
when Eric D ~\V IS liiL'.d to slrctch a

sin gle to left 1nto a doub le and w;l.i
thrown ou t.
Aslros 3. Gia nt s I
At the Astrodom e, Ch m l one&lt;
htl a two -run hom er ill the 12th
lnlllll g.

and Jones tiH.' Il hit. his fir st home
run of the se ason. J drive to left

,\lt c th llunch. nnd Kev in Lambert

.lc

on.

Eric Yeldtng had a one-ou t .s in gle off lo se r Mike Jackson (0 -1)

\1 11t1 \\ \• dil l'\t l.i\'
·1·.' - ll 11'1i S,lh•lll
1 til\' tl\tr,j Ill I ill' 1.1.~[
dl

II

•I:

and Dill (1-}1. North Gallia's hitters were Slll tth (2-3), Dobbms (1 1, tn ple. two R~l s). Tom Meade.
Br:tdtl Sc ltulli and Brent Schu lll
(all 1-})
So uthern £LK'\ to Hannan Tr~lCe
on Fritb y.

rurl thml mnmg. Aaron Drummer.

·j ,

f,

w1n . The two combined to
-,Lnkc out 'i l:&lt; :mll walk one. Dann
Sm1th. who Wl'flt the diStance in
.1b surh111g th e loss. fanned we1ght
:md walked s1x .
Sou1hern's h11ters were Northup
( J-3 . tllfel' Rfll s), WiCkline (! -2)

G1:11.c had a bt g double in the ftvc-

'

I ·'I, •' 1

tl1 ~

1.011

\tl11 II\ rlr Ill ill

.'

go t

i I\!, I ·r , I I L' I tl 111I tr 11

'. i,

I .

'

, [ 11\1.

A T V camera in cent er field
sw aye d for abou t 10 seconds.
Members of the media in the press
box &gt;~lid phones wen t out for a few
mmut cs. but clcclric ll y rema1ncd

pl11 y ball htt by Jeremy Dtll.
Lcadm g :1-2 going into the ' ixth , ticbrcaking mn.
So uthern 's offe nse pwvided son1e
Elsewher e tn th e NL it wa s
11 1 '\u ran c~ when Spaun w.:-Jikctl , Houston 3. San Francisco I m 12
.. tole second and carne home on a tnntngs: Ch icago 9, Philadelphia 5:
~ or t hu p '&gt; lll ~le to crc:1te the final San Diego 9. Atlanta 4; PiHsburgh
-&gt;core.
2. Montreal 0: and New York 3, St.
( irucsc r. who came on in relic! LOUIS 2.
nl startn Kcllh Jones in lhc fourth,
f'o r 1he sec ond stratght ntghl,

hands Athens 6-3 loss

\ l1·i!~.;

.t t C lnustcr be fore rcturntng horne

l·rtol:t y 10 play Vinton Coun ly.

~ •• 1,1 ilj[,/11;'

ftdd .
Xavier Hemandcz (2 -0) was the
winn er. p1t r ll1n~ one hitless inn mg.
The AstrPs were one oul !lwJy

from a

H1 11mu n e ( ~ u utnl 1-tl) u
(\ll)o vll 0 · ! ), ~ J~ p m

KH J H

r11y

l)r l rHt

II

1

I

1".1

L ll

)\ilumnrt ( MJii cll I I ) 11 r-;e"' York
IC • ~ m~1 I 0). ~ JO r m
reu l ( l nH Gu zman I . ) II fl,,. ,,n
IY!()I o 0 2), 7 3 ~ r m
1\ oru u C11y [Gm dnn 0 I) 11 "L m m to

ll .. ~ n (Jtu m•n 2 0 ), 7

3~

r

\1 il ,.~u~N· (:'"avarru

Jll

1· 1) ~I

l•ml (,\ n11 ' 1r n nl( o. 2), J : U p.m.
(h 1c 1 gv ( '-l cDo wdl ] tl) II

..

Cli·V ~
D l':lfOIL

f!corrii U~ l,7 l~pm
il~ l l • n•l

•

fllmwn

Frida} 's g:ames

·' ··

~

Tr. IU

1f"l t . ~ l ~rm

; _,,,, , ,,I ' ''" , r1
r •••

r r•n •n• () :') II

' ""

r'&gt;m

I .;

(D HI1n g I 0 ) ~~ ~1 1mH:~nu

q i i~I.~U~rm

\ ,:, ul r tl ·h·mur g I II a: c~ r ~fornr a
j,\h!-.•11] lt , liiJ~I ' m

J. (]

vt ct ory when Robb y

T homp son homered off relieve r
Dou g Jones 1n the ninth.
l'adrcs 9, II rave' 4

At Jack Murphy Sl:ldium , Bruce
Hurst pitched 7 Ill strong lfmtn g&lt;
and th e S:1n Di ego Padr es hll
Atbnta's Tom GlavtriC hard, ltan\1"'t; the 1991 1\L Cy Youn g .~ward
Wllltl er Ills firs t i'J92los-; .
Glavinc (2 -1) gave up ll lut.s tn
four 1nnmgs, the most hits ~Jnrl his
shortest outrn g this season .
Fred McG1liT h1t J two-run dou -

ble and Jerald Clark a two -run
homer in J riv e- run fir st Innin g,
and McGr iff added an RBI sut gle
1n

\ \ I :I I ', \ 1 1 ! \ ~ ; I I

With a new protmype soap
box racer tn store, the Second
Annual Meigs Coumy AIIAmcr.can Soap Box Derby may
Jll~l prove to be a lillie more exciting !han the organizers had
originally hoped.
Charley Neutzling, director of
the Meigs Coumy Soap Box
Derby Association (MCSBDA).
said that with the new prototype,
racers wiD find that they not
only save a lot of time comructing the soap box racers, but also
quite a bit of money.
The new prolO!ype. weighing
aboul 50 pounds once it is constructed prior to having the additional weights allached for
racing, takes only about two
hours to put together. After the
weights arc added, the racers
weigh about 260 pounds. Ncutzling said.
Ncutzling brought one of the

An earthquak e mc;tsLJflng 6.3 on

've nt about thc1r business.

the second

Hurst ( 1-1) rec orded h~&lt; fm 1
vi ctory in four st.arl'\.
Cubs 9, Phil lies 5
AI Wn glcy Field, Rync Sand ber g hit a l hr cc -run hom er and
Ar1dr c Dawson also drove 1n three
run s.

Shawn Hoskie (3 ·0) won dcs ril c
g iv1n ~

up fiv e runs and f1ve I11L'-&gt; 111

!"ivc innrngs. Ken Pa tt erson , P:1ul

Assc nma chcr and Bob Scaula11
co mpktcd the .s1x -hi ttcr.

Tcrry Mulho ll:ind (0-3) allowetl
s1x. runs :mrt SJ X hi Ls in six iniHrlf.'.\ .

•..
0
1,.ar:ltrs -' · .-.xpos

At Olymrtc Swdium , Kirk Gt b1See NL "" Page 5)

Barry Larkin's brother
wants to play baseball

Dodgers, who lost 4·3. llenavides' miss all owed
Dodger catcher Carlos Hernandez to pul oul Bill
Doran in a rundown bt•twecn third !Jase and
home. (AP)

MISSES BUNT- Cincinnati's Freddie
Bl·run·idl'S (rij.!h1) misses a squee1.r bunt in thr
~l'rn nd inning of Wedntsdi:IY ni~ht's National
Lt·agut' ~arnl' aj!air~sl lhe host Lo s AnJ!eles

Cleveland defeat~ Toronto 7-2
TO RONTO (AP) - Dave
Sttcb ·s back. And as far as th e
Cleveland lndtans arc concerned.
In s tmllng wns ~r fcc l

Unfortunate ly for Toronto , h1 '
loc11ion wa sn't so good. as the
lnd1ans ended a stnng of 13 losse s
to Ihe Rluc Jays with a 7-2 victory
on Wednesday night
Gl enall en Htll sparked the lnd tan s wllll hi s first homer of the sea &lt;o n. tak ing Sticb' s 0-2 pitch to left
for a 1-0 lc;~ll in th e flfsl inn ing.
" I made some mi stake s and I
p:ucl for litem,'· satd Stteb about
hiS fir st swrt smcc las t May 22. "I
hun g a curvcball to Htll. Normally
he wkcs that pttch .·'
Sticb, whose recovery from offse ason ~ack surgery was sli ghtl y
ahead of schedule, cal led h1s perlor~ nan cc decent, save a few bad
pttcltes , mo s\ nolahly , a hanging
Cllrvc to rc lix Fcrmlfl

HI

the fourlh

sa vc of the sea.ron.

kec game was postponed bccau ' e

Carlo' Bacrga hil a two -run
homer, ht s second of the .sca&lt;nn, 10
left oil reliever Duane Ward m tlte
ntnlh , re stonn g Clcvebnd's ftve run lead.
Pal Bo rders doubled in the seventh and scored on Devon While's
Si ngle. Hill, making only his sec ond slliil since Apnl 14. re-mJured
his groin trying to throw Borders
out al home.
Rod Nichol s relieved and after
White stole second. Roberto Alo ·
mar singled to center to cut th e
Indians lead to 5-2.
Indians shortstop Mark Lewts,
three for four with a run score&lt;l, put
the 13-game losing streak imo pcrSJlCCltvc.
"That was a dtffercnt team that
lo ' t 13 in -a-row. · · Lcw1 s satd .
"ThiS team has a lot more talent
1han th e ones th at kept that streak

of cold conditions.

1nmng.

go1ng.

Fermin knockc&lt;l in three runs on
a ground -ou t in 1hc s.ccond, a single

In other games. Ba ltimore eligcd
Kansas Ctly 2· 1. Detroit downed
Texas 12-8, Oakland beat Calt fornta 10-4, New York defeat ed
C111 cago 4-3 and Mmncsota beat
SccHtle R-1. The Boston at Mdwau -

'"'II

left in the founh
a sacn ftce
ll y to ce nlcr in th e sixth.
"I made a occenl p1tch to Fer-

10

min in th e second," St1cb said .
" 1\llt 111 the fourth 1 hung another
CHI C. 1 doe sn't matlcr whether
you're b:lltmg fir st or nrn th , 1f you

Oy JAIME ARON
AUSTI N, Texas (AP) - Uni versny of Texas freshman outfi elder Stephen Larkin JUSI wants to
pla y baseball .
Larkin, who ha s nol been
all owed to play in the tearn· s last

ted to trying to get Stephen bac k on
1he field at Texas.
" We want the untve rsity to
know we have considered !he risk
our son takes. But we·vc decided
we're willing to take this risk wi~1
him because we know thi s ts how
se ven games be cause of a heart
he wants to live his life," she said
condJiion, says he 1s con sidcnng from her home in Cincinnati.
transferring from the school if he·s
"But we will not hesiwtc to lake
not allowed to return to the team .
the boy out if he's not allowed to
·'I want to swy here, but 1f they play . We hope that it doesn't hapsa y no. I'm gomg to go somewhere pen," Mrs. Uu-kin said.
else ,' ' Uu-kin satd Monday.
Larkin, the team's third-leading
Larkin, 18, s:ud he already has hiller at .338, said he has conwcted
a' ked his parents to look into scck- Miami (Ohi o) Untvcrsily, Hawati
mg an inJuncuon against the school and Georgia Tech about tran sferthat would allow him to play .
ring. Miami is !he front-runner
"I want to be able to play as becau se it is close to his Cin cinn:ni
soon as they make a decision . If home, he said.
they s:&lt;y no, I'd like (an injuncuon)
The Longhorn s (35 - 10) arc
to be the next day or as soon as ranked fourth and lead the South possible ," he s:ud.
west Conference.
Larkin. the younger brother of
Mrs. Larkin said tile problems at
Cincinnalt Reds shortstop Barry Texas have arisen becau se the
Larkin, suffers from hypertrophiC school fears being liable should
cardtomyopa th y, which is an something happen to Larkin while
enlargement of the wall s of hi s he's playing.
hcan causing restricted blood now
But, when he was recruited, the
trllo the pumping chamber.
school ''agreed to let the boy play
His fa ther Robert and broth er ball," hts mother said .
Byron , a former basketball st.ar at
" It 's frustrating They're ktnd
Xavier. have th e same condition
of going back on their word," he
and have never encountered prob said .
lems with it.
Texas ath letic director DeLos'
Texas coac h Cliff Gus taf son Dodds and the .sc hool 's general
was told nO! to play Larkin before counsel, W.O . Schultz, were out of
an Aprtl 10-12 series agains1 Texas town Monday. thw offi ces told
A&amp;M in College Swtion, the oul - The Associated Press.
fteld er said. Larkin was not told
Mrs. Larkin said the family ha.'
about the school's order for several offered to si gn a wa1vcr re! co.~slllg
more days.
th e school from any liabiltly, hut
"llts (frustrating). I feel bad for th e universil}' has not provided one
the ktd," said Gustafson, who to stgn .
dcc hne&lt;l further comment.
"We have no inLCnt.ion of suing
Shirley Larklll, the player's these people tf somcthmg h:tppcns
mother , said the family has dis - to Stephen. We absolutely will not
cussed the situation and IScommit - sue," Mrs . Larkin sa til .

Orioles 2, Royals I
Baseball and tnJuncs arc on a
collision course thts season. and
Randy Milligan and Billy Ripken
became th e latc ' l players 10 run
smack mto lhc pntll.
In the second big bang-up in
two llays. Milligan was knocked
out wh en hi s head smashed IIllO
Ripken's shoulder as they chasc&lt;l a
ground ball in Kansa s Ctty
Wedn esday ntghl Bul the Balti more Onolc s were more fortunate
than th e Chtcago While Sox were
24 hours c.1rlier - neither Mtlhgan
nor Ripken su sta.ncd any m~1jor

1njuries.

On Tuesday, the White Sox lost
AII ·S!ar shortstop Owe Gut! len
for the season after he tore liga rncnt"i m hi s nght knee when he mn

tn to left fielder Tim Ramc.1.
" Thank goollne ss . it do cs n 't
look too bad right now ,'· Orioles
mDnager Johnny 0Jtcs said after
h1s team 's 2-1 vi ctory ove r the
Roy;li s.
Milligan was unconsciou&lt;: for a
(See Al on Page 5)

Marauder girls beat Athens 9-2

hon g one like that tn th iS league .
By DAVE HARRIS
you 're g01ng to pay for tl. ··
M ei gs scored four run s in th e
Indians st:ulcr Charles NJ gy (3- fir st mnmg and five more m the
1) held the Ulue Jay s 10 two run s second and rol led to a 9-2 win over
un se ven hits ove r 6 2/3 1nn1 ngs. A1hen s in non -conference softh.1ll
J k~ suuck uut L
.hrec and d1cln ' t walk action Wednesday at Metgs H1 gh
:1 b:llt cr.
School.
.. 1 wa&lt; r lc to;c d wtill my perforW1th the w1n , the Mara uders
mance," Nag y s~u d "Hut I wasn' t
ratse their record to a perfect 9-0.
th e d1i"fcre ncc . Th e team hilling Ath en' drop s to 4-4. Metg s will
w:1s wtwt. won ll11s garnc for us. "
trav el to Tflmblc on Thur&lt;doy
Na~y didn't let up despite a
evenin g
five -run lead, wh1ch LJISO inc iu(lcd
Trtcta llacr had a big two run
Alben Belle's third homer of th e double for Mc1gs m the first1nnmg
SC :J SUII , a SO lO-ShOt tO cen ter off after a walk, .llllgle and a htl bauer
David Well s in the seventh.

loodcd 1hc bases. Chri, sy Weave r
add cll a double as the Marauders
cou ld only manage four hits off of
three Athens ptlchers . Christy May
led A~1 cn s with a double
Tar11 Gerlach went the rou1c to
ptck up the win for Meigs Cyndy
Wasko , the starter and lose r for
Athens, had reltef help from Janet
Allen and Amy Wilron
Inning totals
Athen s.. .... .. 000 011 0 -- 2-36
Mctg' ... . ...... 4 50 ()()() X - 9-4-2
WP- Gerlach (Findley 'ave)
ll'- Wasko

AL games ... (ConunuedfromPagc4J
few seconds after the aCCident.
·· All I could think about wa s
M1ke UDey ," Oates sa ill, refcrnng
to th e Detroit Lions' player who
was paralyzed last year in an NI'L
game . " There weren't five words
spoken in our dugout the rest of the
game."
The mood brightened after the
game when it was learned that Milhgan had sustained no neurological
damage and no broken bones. He
spcnl the night in a hospital and is
listed as day-to -day. Ripken was
treated for a bruised should er and
released .
The acc td cnl was the latest 111 a
season thlll already has become the
Year of th e Injury. Nolan Ryan,
Davtd J ustiec. Ken t Hrbck, Chri s
Saba and Mall Keough arc among
the more than 90 players who have
gone on the diSabled ltsl since

'·You can ' tlose y11ur concentra -

ti on for a second ;1 g am ~·a a club lik e

th e Blue Jay s,' · he sa id . ·· 1f you
do. you ' re 111 tkc p t.rouhlc."

Tell Power threw one ptlCh to
end 1he elglttlt 11nd sl:irtcd a game e- ndin g douhl e pl:1y lor hi s fi rs t

(livision semifinals
Wednrsda)"s scon"o;
I

i

l"l··t ro 11 ~. \1Lnrr e501..il 4, OT , Mo nflr-~ot•

,. I

lr o&lt;h 11·no ~ I
Sr l. m&gt; l~ ~- ('h.J rl g" 4 , 2fr! . Sr L1~ 1 1.1

I'.

r... ds
'

~t·ne~&gt; :' 1

rices sl;uting at

W11mtpq: 4, Va nr0uvcr 2. Wtnn lrq :.
looh Jt"nc5 2 I
hlmnnl"n 4. LA~ Angclu ' · l..l on (fi
1"11 k • d• 11""nr...1 2 I

'I

31~*

".
Tonl~hl's

camrs

S Y M.m gr:: o u Ne w lr"t y. 7 15 I'm

,.

., ·'

W a ~ht n): l &lt;ln ol Potllhurg h. 7 l'o I'm
,"'1•• \ lr~ l u lhnford. 7 ) 5 r m
ll o\lnn •t Bufhlo. 7 )5 p m

spring trJin ing.

Ri ck Sutcliffe (3-1) won wllh a
six -hi ncr.

Frlda) 1 S l:ames
lkt11rrr .,

I

1 ,., ,;,,,,, rl

1·, ; '" I : , ., "&gt;on

1,: , ·"• II , , , , . 11I

I ''

": 1:.-1 ,

[ ,., \·rrr
,\,

1,•

., . , 1 ;

1

&lt; I' "'

iI I

: •'·

\,on

~1tnor:::aoc .o . ~ ··1~ f' m
("hr c J~;n .o\ S1 . l .ou1 1 X )~ I ' Ill
V.ri i( IOlJ• LTII Wrn rt~ r: g . I ) ', p11"

L" "

A n~;..:lc~ 11 b.Jm.,mor. 'I I~ 1'

Kevin Appier (0-2) lost again.
Ripkcn's two-run double in the
fifth put Baliimore ahead 2-1. In
1hc bouom half of the inning. he
and Milli~an collided while going
after Ke1th Miller's ground er,
which went for a single.
Tigers 12, Rangers 8
Cecil Fie lder led off the fifth
inning with a 424-foot home run
that broke a 7-alltic and led Dctroil
10 VICtory in Texas.
Mi ckey Tettlcton, Rob Deer and
Trav1 s Fryman also homered for
the Tigers. Alan Trammell's tworun double and consecutive homers
by Teuleton and Deer made ll 6-0
in the first inning.
Mark Letter (2 -0) shut out Texns
on two hits for 4 1/3 innings.
Reliever Jeff Robinson (1 -2) serve&lt;l
up Fielder's shot.
Athletics 10, Angels 4
Mark McGwirc homered in his
fir st two at -bats, spoilin g Chuck
Finley· s season debut and sending
Mike Moore and Oakland to another victory.
McGwire, leading the majors
with c1ght home runs, connected
for solo shots in the first and th~rd

1rr

NfiA playoiTslak

f' '

1'

Tunl~hl'!ri

I! arne.;

:-. ....- J..r sr y at ( 1\• v\'l~ml, 7.)0 r "'
ln .r1 •n• u Ul"&gt;$1on, !lp m
1. 1\

',JJ ' ' I• \"\!I \L t t·
1, HI •

II

I

I .11

!'.r

"'

!

'

jl ..... , .,..,

'I

~

1,;

II

I,

lo

' ' "'

I

.,,

•I • "

.. ' '

~

·•

, r. " !.11·

I

1

'
..'

..

I.A Clippen•t Ut.ah , IO "IIlpm
Sin An tauo 11 l'h &lt;ldl LI . I0 lt) p m

1

•4-HI) rommrrcial rn~m· • Mukhinl{ Zo nc '~ for nH Jrt •

~ AT! O S"AL

\1, I

I ' '"

U\

.11'

I,

\ ),,, .. , ., •J

I,H IH I ,1\

lorquc •Patcnled Tri-Cul " mu k hin~ blad&lt;· · ~ I" muld11n~
deck • Rear or side cw hcr ontll..af &gt;hn·ddcr aNachnwnh
optional • Available in push or -;o' li-propdlr·d llllXII'is

Hoseba\1

'·' ~

" •'
11

I

~arn e.;

Transaclions

I ,,

' ,

Friday's

m

M,amt at Ctu c•go. Kr m
(kln•l I \ Nr:::w 't'ml, 1\ r m

·"

\; '""· I····

t~J crs arl'onhnJ , l fl IO rm

~ .:.. 1Uc: , , {.joltk.n St~~o·. I (I IIIJ•

·.• \
4

'I

4 1~

~

'1,'9

1I

071

4
Q

ASSOCIATI ON

An

n11unl·cd th•t the CharlOI.te Kr11 gh \.lj .,..JJI
r&lt;n n th e lntc:mation~l Lague ll1 199 l
A.mtr lnn Lf&gt;•Kuf

CA U POH NIA ANUELS

~ Art w ar e~t

C'h ud. Fml c:y, pitc hc:r, f rnm lhc: 15:..J ay
Ooo Rohuum . p1Kh ·
c.r . m lhc 15-da y drllhle&lt;l hsl
KANS AS C IT Y ROYALS - A1
11grl ~ Te rry Shumpc:r1 , w:ond hu r:man.
tn O m 1h1 of the: Amc:n c. an Auocr atHm
O punned I [e.:-tor Wagner . pacher. 10Om.

The Air Cross Trainer"' Low for Men &amp; Women

. .llu hl«ilat . Pl1ced

\\ •·d ;u- , d :n·'s •w:orro;
1\.o):.,.• II• t" ~ h'n:n1~ 4

I', , I •I' ~I ~ 1

N J

.l ~ t"&lt;" , f'f''j . Oni&lt;J

I It &gt;l'lit ll &lt;l 1, I o l ..n tu l
ll• hu•&gt;&lt; ll ~ 1. K~r~uo l. lll' I
'\e,o.. y., 1 ~ &lt;1, 1 111 ca"() I
\1 111 ,.

"•I• ~

\••o lllo· 1

·~ j.!: IIHl''l
"r'1~ rr1 ~ l • or 1.\llw •., krr

I nd :t\

.,,.

I I , .,., fl
'

l

... . ,.,

\: I

I

'

,. \

, : ·;, ..,1 , ,

I

.t

'~

:

I

I

r1

I' ,,
• I"

&gt;

ll

I I 11 I I I

\ .I

~I

..,.,., ,, ... . .....,. ...,.. ..
1 1/'IJ ~ ...,..I •. , - , ,

~I

I

'.,·

&lt;1

,j

I:

r

r "Ill "

'-'I~

LAWN-BOY
/

GALLIPOLIS

l" lllnnaiJ'OOiblll Lnwu"

-··-·-·---·---------~

... ~,~, .., .... ....

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
446-1276

Footboll

1'-. l•t' i! • 1 11 1 ,. II lr. ) p; Jlll\

i""'.ft"'

' ~

1 OIWNTO BLUE JAY S - Op~o on ed
II. rd. T nln." U, r •l(hc:r , to Sy n culol'; of th r:
hnem auona l l..c.axu t

"J EW YORK G I ANTS - Wt rvtd
M.ou nt e Can:h&lt;¥1. rullb.dL

,.....,.

•Jonro~,.. /, ,. ,,...,

II ' • . I

1ha HocaUed Cutt Young. puchr:::r. from
Om aha

[), ..,,.t IJ, r,. , ,.,K

prototypes to Point Pleasant,
W.Va., over llle weekend for an
exhibit at Pleaser 's. Prior to that,
llle prolOiype exhibit was at
Pleaser 's in Pomeroy.
"The good thing aboul this
new racer is that a kid could
purchase one and have il put
logether the day of their race,"
Neutzling said, adding that the
consttuction of the racer requires no wrenches or tools
since it is jus! about ready to pul
together right out of the box.
Neutzling was also quick to
point out the prototypes are precut, which also saves on some ol
the mess during consttuction
lime.
As for cos~ the prototypes
can save racers about $300, with
the older, more-burdensome
models ranging in price from
$600 lO $700.
However, Neutzling said the
masters models, an enurely different class from the prototypes,
cost about SI ,400 and can take

six to seven months to construct.
"We definitely need drivers
(for some of the cars in this
year's race);• Neutzling said. He
added that to help build the roster for this year ·s Independence
Day race. he can make arrangements to visil schools all over
the area to lallt. to kids about the
race and the racers. He said he
would even work his way into
Kentucky to gel to some of the
schools
there
since
the
boundaries set forth by the All American Soap Box Derby As sociation (AASBDA) give him
quite a bit of space to work with .
According to information
released by MCSBDA, any
youngster wanting to panic ipate
Ill the July 4 event can always
fond a sponsor to help share the
cost of a racer, and may even
pair up with a sponsor !hat will
provide and absorb the cost or a
racer. Neutzling added tllal the
MCSBDA also helps the Middleport race winner as much as

I . .
_., ,, If&gt;

,, •
•• • I

..

ovr,...~~~ro....-

JUST HOW DOES IT WORK?-{:barley Neutzling, director of tbe Meigs County Soap 801 Derby
Association, shows Clayton Durbin of Point Pleasant one of the prototype soapbox racers at Pleaser's In
Point Pleasant during an exhibit last weekend. According to Neutzling, the prototype cuts construction
time and costs by more than 50 p&lt;rcenl.

pos.~ible .

Stanlrv Cup

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CHESTER

219 N. Second • 992-5627 • Middleport

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
985 -3308

" • ', 1

'r/. •'r"

•· ill\'"''"'
POMEROY
R &amp; G SUPPLY

992-21 64
o·oELL TRUE VALUE

inning s.

9~2 - S oOO

Ftnlcy also gave up a solo home

,,

run to Rickey Henderson before
lcavmg afLcr the t.hird inr11ng.
Moore (3 -0) allowed one run on
si:c. hils

1n

seven innings.

Twins 8, Mariners I
Bill Krueger won for the thtrd
ume in th ree starts . pitching Min nesota past Seaulc at the King dome.
Krueger gave up one run on
seven hits in eight innin gs.
The Twins tied a season h1gh
with 14 hits. They .s helled Erik
Hanson,(I -3) for eight run s and
nine hils in three-plus innings,
including home runs by Brian
ll arpcr and Pedro Munoz.
Yankees 4, While Sox 3
Kevin Maas made up for a
ba scrunn in g mi stake by Roberto
Kelly with a 1iebrcakmg Single in
~te ninth tnning at Comiskey Park .
Kelly singled with one out in the
ninth agamst ScoH Radin sky (0-1)
for h1s fourth hit of the g:Uilc. Mel
Hall followed with a drive over
cen ter fielder Lance Johnson's
head, but Kelly missed second
base, had to go back and touch the
bag, and could only reach third.
Maas followed wi~l his go-ahead
hit.
Steve Howe (2-0) pitched I ID
perfect innings.

NL action .. .
(Continued from Page 4)
son led off lhc game with a home
run and Doug Drabek (3 -1) made iL
s~1nd up with a f1ve -hi1ter.
Gibson hit his second homer of
the seaso n on a 2-0 pilch from
Dennis Martinez (1-3).
Mets 3, Cardinals 2
As fog rolled into Shea Stadium,
Eddie Murray hit his f~rsl home run
for New York in the ninth inning.
The fog - caused by a cold
front following a wann, rainy day ·
- began pouring in during the lop
of the fourth .
Cris Carpcmer (I -I) relieved to
start the ninth and Murray, sig ned
as a free agent in the off-season. hit
his 399th career home run with one
out.
Jeff Innis (2 -1) got the victory
after striktng out the Stde in lhe
mnlh.

This year's event, slated for
General Hartinger Park in Middlep&lt;m, OH., will showcase
many Meigs, Gallia and Mason
County racers, with the wmner
advancing on to the 1992 All-

American Soap Box Derby in
Akron, 011 ., later this year.
There they will vic for prizes
and cash. and even a $5 ,000
scholarship awarded by the
AASBDA.

Not bad for siltin g in a soap
box racer and nllmg 954 kct
down the track tn appro&gt;~mate l y
25-28 seconds .
Prior to the big day '" Akron,
though, racer&lt; must cam qualify ing points at Slnallcr "spnng ral Ites' in places such as Lancaster,
OH ., Charleston, W.Va., and
Dayton, 011. Ncuu.ling pointed
out, tltougli, ~ml if a racer gets a
"wildcard" spot at the Lancaster
mce (May 16 anli 17). the a win
automatically qualifies them for
the Akron race.
Once at the Akron race, parliCtpants spend an entire week

1991 FORD TEMPO

meeting celebnues that make
appearances .
In recent years, Robert Reed,
a.k .a. Mil&lt;e Brady from "The
Brady Bunch": John Andrelli,
Indianapolis 500 driver, and
Michael Delorenzo of "Head or
llle Class" fame have spent time
with parti cipants during the
week -long event.
According to Neutzling. the
MCSBDA will have its next
meeting on Sa!Urday. April 25, 1
p.m .. at the Trophy Shop . in
Middleport All sponsors and Ill·
tcresled participants an: urged to
attend, he said.

1991 FORD TAURUS

2 TO CHOOSE FROII
4 c*Jor sedan . 4 whoel dnvo. 4 cyl .

surt • 16960

mr. auto . PS. PB. power loeb . tJ/1

wheel.

CfUIS-9 .

radials

WAS
'10,000

LETTING IT FLY- Kyger Creek hurler Luciana Scoll lets one
of her pitches ny durin~ Wednmlay's SVAC sofl hall game against
llannan Trace at Mercerville, which lhc nobcals won 10·0 in fil'l'
innings. ScoU, a junior, slruck oul nirw, w:1lkrd si .\

~nd

NOW

NOW

SJ2,495

S9,495

1991 MERCURY SABLE

...,
...

WAS '13,000

AWFM stereo tape .

Stock t 16990, 4 door sedan . fronl
whool dn1'9. 6 cyl . aulo. PS, PB.
power w1ndows . power locks . tilt
wheel. cruise, AM!FM radio, radials. rea r wm dotog

1991 FORD PROBE
Stock

I 22041, 2 doort,

~onlwhooldnw

trans PS. PB, AM'FM rad.o rdals. buckel seats

WAS
'9,000

gave up ont·

hit. (OVP pholo by G. Spencer Oshornt• l

sedotl,

4cyl •• Sopeed
·

NOW

S8,295

KCHS girls blank Hannan Trace
Ky ger Creek· s softbal l team

struck out on e ancl watk e(J 11ve

pounded the host Hannan Tra ce

The Bohcah' h1tlcr-&gt; were Tony:1

Wildcat s wtth a four-run ra ll y "'
the f1r st i nmn g of Wedn es day's
pm e 10 record a 10-0 Vi ctory 111
fiv e Hllllngs.

Drummund ( 2- 4), P;1LJI:J K emp er

JuniOr Luci .J nJ Scott fann ed
11111 e, walkc.d SIX. and gav e up onL

htl - a singl e to ce nt er Iield hy
Tra ci Brannen -

to pick up her

seco nd win in thr ee day s. Juntor
Lucy Mullens. the losing hu rler,

(1-2) , Aulumn Burnell, Jmll Na11ce
and Jennifer Neal (al l 1-J ).
Kyger Creek (3 -6. 2-5 1will pla y
at Nonh Gallta Fnllay.
lnnin~.:

lnl als

Kyger Creek ...... .4 05 0 I Iilinnan Trace ..000 00 WP- Scott
ll'- Mullens

IQ.(, -0
(). J.X

1983 CHRY SLER LEBARON
S tockl 2 209 1, 4doorsedan 4cyl .
a1r. v1nyl roo!. aulo P S. PB. bll
whocl, c rursc . AM/F M rad10 rad1 ·
als, wh1to walls. gauges . bucker
soals

WAS
'1,995

NOW

SJ,495

1985 FORD BRONCO II
Slock I 90993, stution wagon , 4

wheel dnve. 6 cyl . air. 5 stand.

trans . PS . PB. b~ · trUIS8
rednls. AM'FM St8n&gt;O ~.

WAS
'5,495

1986 CHEVY 5·1 0
PI CKUP
Stockl21331 . 4cyl ,Ssland trans .
AMIFM stereo tape , rachi s. shor1
wheel base

WAS
'3,495

NOW

S2,995

NOW

S4,795

1981 TOYOTA
COROL LA WA GON

SiocU 216 71. S!aboo Wagon .lrnn!
wheel dnve. 4 cyt . air. auk&gt; .. PS,
P8.crUise.AM'FM ste&lt;eo lajle . ra•

wtn delog

WAS
'2,495

NOW

SJ,795

1990 FORD RANGER 4x4

1938 CHEVY S- 10 BLAZER

Sioc:k 1 2 t 95 I . 4 wheel dnve. 6cyl .

SIOck I 21152, ~wheel dnve, 6cyl.,
••. au1o . PS , PB. till wheel, crulae,
AM/FM slereo lope. racial&amp;, bucket

air. auto , PS . PB . AM/FM sloreo
tapo , rad1als . 1!2 ton . long wOO
bed. rear slep bumper, gauges.
sliding rear glass

WAS
111,000

NOW

SJ0,495

seats

WAS

'9,000

NOW

S8,495

�Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

St. Louis, Detroit overtime
victors in NHL playoff action
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
After 10 shots, Brell Hull took his best one.
"Right now , it's the biggest goal of my career ,"
Hull said after his slap shot at 3:33 of the second
overtime Wednesday night gave the St. Louis Blues a
5-4 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks.
" It's the fm;t time I've ever done something like
this," said Hull, who led the NHL with 70 goals this
season but has generally been ineffec tive in playoff
games in the past
It was Hull's I lth shot of the game. Five of those
carne in the overtime periods.
"Great players make gre at plays," Blu es coac h
Brian Sutter said . "With Hully , you JUS! come to
expect it "
The victory gave the Blues a 2-1 victory over the
Blackhawks in their first -round Norri s Divi sion
series. In another Norris Divi sio n playoff game
Wednesday night, Detroit beat Minn esota 5- 4 111
overtime as the Red Wings won for the fi rst time in
the series following two losses at home.
Meanwhile, Winnipeg defea ted Van co uver 4-2
and Edmonton trimmed Los Ange les 4-3 in Smythe
Division play.
Today, the playoffs continue with four ga mes. In
the Adams, Montreal is at Hartford with a 2-0 IC;Jd
and Boston is at Buffalo with the series tied 1- 1. In
the Patrick, the New York Rangers play at New Jersey witllthe series tied 1-1 and Wa.shi ng ton, at PillSburgh, holds a 2-0 lead.
Norris Divi..'iion
Blues 5, Blackhawks 4 (2 OT) - Hull took a
drop pass from Bob Bassen '" the slot and ripped a
20-footcr between Dominik Hasek's pads for his second goal of the playoffs.
Bassen also had an open shot, hu t there was no
doubt in his mind where the puck shoul d go.
"Hully and I were both there and I thought I'd let
him shoot it," Hassen said. "He's the man."
Blackhawks coach Mik e Ke enan sa 1d h1s team
was out of pos1tion on the game-winn er.

Red Wings 5, North Stars 4 (OT)- Yves
Racine's unassisted goal 1:15 into overtime capped a
three- goal rally, lifting Dwoi t over Minnesota and
giving the Red Wings a realistic chance to ad vance in
the NHL playoffs.
Detroit can pull even by winning Game 4 Friday
nigh t at Met Ce nt er. The victory was crucial; on ly
two teams have rebou nd ed from three-game deficits .
Ray Sheppard's power-play goal with 3:32 left in
regulation sent the g;une into overtime and backup
goalie Vince Riendeau stopped all II shots he faced
for the Red Wm gs, who fin ally beat a Minnesota
team that fin1 shed 28 po1n 1s behind them in the regular-sc:tson sumdin gs.
Smythe Division
Jets 4, C:111ucks 2 - The lets built a four-goal
lead and threw a defensive blanket over Vanco uver
as they beat d1e favored Can ucks 10 take a 2- 1 lead in
Lhcir series.
Randy Carlyle, Pat Elynuik, LuCien Deb lois and
Thomas Steen scored for the lets, who fini shed I 5
po mts beh&gt;nd the front ~ ru n nin g Canucks during the
regular =son.
Only sol id work by Canuc~s oalie Kirk McLean,
who made 33 saves, kept the sc e respectable.
Robert Kl{)Q and J1m Sandi scored for Vancou ver '" the d1ird\Jcriod af.J,Cr e Jets had buill a 4-0
lead to break a Shw.OHfb1d by RICk Tabaracc1 , who
bl ocked 24 shots.
Oilers 4, Kin~s 3 - Bern1e NICholl s scored h1 s
seco nd power-play goa l of th e game with 7:23
remain in g 10 lift the Oilers over the Kings, giving
Edmonton J 2-1 lc:td in the sene s.
Nic holls. a forme r King, se t an Oiler club record
w1th his fo urth po wcr-pl:1y ~ oJI of the series when he
heat Kelly Hrurk y on h• s secon d a11cmp1 after fan nin g on the flf sl.
Joe Murp hy had 11ed the game 3-3 ea rl y 1n th e
third per iod as th e Oilers went 3 for 7 on the power
play. DJve Man son and Petr Kl1ma eacll h11 goalpos ts as Edmonton prc'l scd for th e w1nncr before
NiC holls scored

o..; 1ncc rctlnng la st Decembe r
lie 's had no inputm pre -dral't st:1 l"f
mect1n g ~. thereby makm g 1t ev en

llll l

Bengals looking to corral
defensive players in NFL draft
By JOHN NOLA~
CINC INNATI (AP) - Here\ a
surpme: th e Ci nci nn at• Bcng;, ls.
who had the NFL 's worst cklrn sc·
lasL year, say they w ill conccn tr :!ll'
on findmg defe nsive help 111 Snn
day's college draft.
But &gt;f a top offenm e rl:i vn i•l c·
Mich iga n rc cc tvc r l k~ r l t n r tl l
Howard should he ;tva1l:Jhk \\ fll' lt
the Bcn gal s' tu rn conH' \ :1 r1d l 1~·
outs hmcs thC'. tldens1 vc p : l· ~ ..; :r. .11 I
::~blc, the Bcngals n11 ght 'il'krt h11 11.
coach Davt~ Shula .;; ~ud \\\' dm·..,d:Jy
The BcngJ.Is arc c o m1n ~ oi l J ~ 13 season and have d1 c l&lt; nlf lh I'" k
in the fiTS! round Sunday
" The defense wil l he ,·mr ha si7.ed through the dr:ilt . l"'""'llv
But you don't wan t lll p : t\ ~ up !lit'
best player avaii:.Jhlc, e ven 11 yo u
wanted to take a dcfcrhtvc p la y~· r ." ·

Shu la srud.
He also satd hr c on '\ Jd e r ~ !l o u .~ ·
ton quarterback llc~v •d Kl· n ~kr a
first -round pllk.
Shu la said ll al~o cnu ld turn ou t
that general mana ~cr M1kc ll ru wn
and hi s brother, dlfeclor of pla yer
perso nnel PclC Brown, wil l dcmk
10 trade the Bengal s' Nn. 4 r&gt;d.
possibly for two lower p1 cks 111 th,·
fi rs t round. Th e Brow n' hav r
received telephone calls to d1sc u\s
that, Shula sa1d .
li e sa id that among th e moq
appea li ng pl ayers arc defen sive
backs Troy Vincen t of WIScon sin
a nd Terre ll Buckley o f Florid J
State, and Pitlsburgh defensive
lin eman Scan Gilbert, assuming
that Washington defensive lineman
S teve Emtman will have been
se lected before the Bcn ga ls' tum
comes up.
Shula said the Bcngal s need
help at every defen sive positiOn
other than outside lin ebacker,
where they have lames Francis and
Alfred Williams.
It will be Sh ula's first draft as an
NFL head coach. He was promoted
in December from rece ivers coac h
after Sam Wyche left th e Bcngals.
It will be the Benga ls' first draft
without founder Paul Brown, who

~a s the ge neral manager un11 l he
diCtl Aug . 5. Brown' s son, Mike ,
"wl his father's innu c nce and
e nthu sia s m on draft day will be
rnl 'iSCd .

"Forget that he'd been •nvolvcd
'"drafts since 1946. But he had th e
ahil1 ly to ge l everyone invol,ctl
:n1d cxc &gt;led about it," Mik e Brown
\J ill.

Sports briefs

Yarht rncing
S,\ N DIE GO ( API -

ll.Jl

1\.nl h\ t\rn r rrcJ1 mJdc 1\ ri ve ill ;j
lll W D\ 'C ! dd.cm1ing chJ mpion D ~.· n ­
III S CJI IHlrr ·,S tars &amp; Str rpcs. wnl 11111~

the 11iml r:~ ce of th e hes t-o f- 11
Amer~ c a \ Cup defender f1nal hy 4
lll l!l ll ll' '\ ,

:U'\CCO il[J '\ .

Ctll lll l' r

l!lUSl 'W"Irl

sn·cn

or th e

10 r:Jccs to ~Hl van cc t o
the ArnL'~1 c a ' s Cu p mnt ch for th e
f 1ld1 con'i CCUt Jve tim e. Am cn ca3
h:l'i wo n 11 ot 14 ra ces again s t
Su r' &amp; Stnpcs and has an overall
r ~,.· cord ol ~0- 5 Stars &amp; Suircs is
I \. J&lt;J m-c r:ill.
In Ilie hcs H)f~ 9 chal lenger final.
New Zealand took a 2-I lc"d with a
J .l -'icc nn d \"ICtory ove r It aly's II
\'ILHII dJ \\ ' rlC/. 1:1 .

rl' ln3Hii!ll!

LifestYle
FURNITURE SHOWCASE

Recovering addict gives hope

...

FRONTAL SCREEN - The St. Louis Blues'
Phillipe Rozon takes II rrontal position a~a in st
Chi cago's Chris C ht•li os (center! and goalie

Dominik Hasek during the fi rst period or
Wednesday night's NHL playoH game in St.
Louis, which the Dluc s 5·4 in two O\'er times.
(AI')

among NFL personnel d irectors, more di fficult than usual to handiand th e Stec lers on ly hope he drops Cilp the Steelers' draft.
nght into thw lap.
The Steclers have staged nu merOn l y one !co m nhcad of th e ous mock dra fts in recent weeks,
Stcc lcr s, Ne w England, want s a tr y1 ng to dupll catc sccnar 1os th nt
quarterba c k, bu t Kansa s C ity, may develop Sunday.
wh 1ch draft s 20 th , rep ortedl y
" We' re tryin g to sCll lc th e diSwould like to sw in g a trade to putes rww," Oon :J hoc s:J Hl.
111ove up and se lw Klmgl cr. If the "We're say 1ng, 'If we get to th is
Chiefs do make th e deal, the S t ee l ~ po1rll and these arc th e guys who
crs may go for 3 defens iv e back or arc av:1ilah lc, who do we choosc'.1 '
~ l1 ncman
ll opcful ly it won't ro me down to
l:l u1 1f Klmglcr's there
an :~rgu m e nt on draft da y."
"He's got a great, grea t arm ."
This will be Cowher' s fi rst drart
Donahoe sa 1d. " l-Ie's also shown as an NFL head coac h, but desp1te
he's very tough. Yuu do n't ge t in the Steelers· 7-9 rocord of last se a·
the position very of~e n " 10 draft a son, he doe sn't v1cw it a.'\ more cruc ral th:m rece nt dnfts .
potential franchiSe quancrb3ck.
Just ask No ll. He didn ' t hes u;uc
Cowher sa1d th e Stcc lers hav e
to use tile No. I piC k in I ~70 on a " no glann g weak ne sses" hut cau promismg but unpoli shed qu arter- uons Lhcy al sn have no ovcrvvhdm bac k nam ed Bradshaw, a choice Jng strength s
'' Is th1 s dr J ft 1rnpor1 ant?"'
tk1t would ultimntc l y rnak e Su~ r
Uowl history.
Cowher s~ud " It 's 111r portan1 any
Noll got anotl1er such chance 1n wn c you' re tr)'1ng to acqu1rc 11cw
1983 when Man no was available, pla yer.., Hu1 11\ a very yo ung tc:un
hut he instead chose de fensiVe line - and wh:11 wr ll~1vc to do \'i t ~tk c
man Gabe Rn·cra - &lt;.~ n li l11 story some or tfll' t:.llc nt he re and get
d1dn 't repeal Itse lf.
th c11 1to per form to their JXJ!cnu :JI.' '
Noll so li is hstcJ as an adm misLrJtJon ad vJsor, but he's rnJdc only
J few vJSJLS to Tiucc R1vcrs StJdi -

Thursday, April 23, 1992
Page-7

Steelers hoping to get Klingler
in first round of NFL draft
By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Chuc k
No ll won't be around Sunday when
the Piusburg h Stee lcrs mak e thCif
first-round draft pick. They onl y
wish they knew 1f David Klin gler
will be.
Noll's first pick in h1 s firs t dr.1 f1
as the Stcelcrs' coac h in 1969 was
Joc Greene , hi s first pick'" I'J70
was a qu arterback named Terry
Bradsha w. Two drafts, two r~r s t ­
roundc rs. two Hall of Famers.
Torn Donahoe, the Stee lcrs'
direc tor of foo tball operauons. and
new coac h Bill Cowher can on ly
hope to be so successfu l when they
make th e first p ic k o f th e ne w
Stcelcrs' regime.
With Bubby Brister commg ol'f
surgery and Neil O'Donne ll Sl lil
unproven, the perrcc t scenano ror
the Steelers would be if Kilngler s
ava1lable when they mak e the II d1
p1ck on the flist round.
That would have see med like a
laughable imposs ib illly J year J~o.
when Klingler was v1cw cd as th e
crown JCWcl of the 1992 draft.
That was before Klin gler. pl:i y•ng behi nd an inexperienced Un•versi ty of Houston offens•ve l• ne .
failed 10 duplicate a fabu lous JUn•or
season in which he threw 54 touchdown passes. Hi s stock dropped

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

I

Cleveland, New Jersey to take court
in opening round of NBA playoffs
Dy The Associated Press
Th e C leve land Cava li ers la st
wo n an NBA playoff se ri es in
1976 The Ne w Jerse y Nets last
won a playoff game in 1984.
So mct h1ng has to giv e when
they meet '" a best-of-fiv e f&gt;r.st ·
ronnrl serie s bcgi nn 1ng to n&gt; ghl at
R• chf•cld Coli seu m.
Th e Ne ts, making th e lf f~r s t
playoff appeara nce smce 19Xfl ,
have the least playoff CXJlCfi CII CC
among th e t wo team s, with o nl y
three players who faced pre v&gt;ous
postseason compelllion.
Draze n Pet rov&gt; c play ed 111 20
games during Portland 's 1990 dn ve
to th e N BA Finals, whil e Sam
Bow ie had 12 games wnh th e Trail
Rlaz crs in 19X 5 and 19X 9, and
Chris Dudley fiv e games w1th th e
Cava liers in 1988 and 1989.
l'ctrov&gt;c, the Nets' lead&gt;ng scorer and best shooter '" his first season at New Jersey, said he learned
from th e De tro it P&gt;st ons in th e
1990 Finals that the pla yoffs arc a
di ffe rent sto ry from 1he reg ular sc;, son.
"We need to ste p up the intcnsi·
ty," he s:11d . "I was tcll &gt;ng th e
guys tha t nobody 's going to give
yo u any easy layups . They're go1n g
to se nd you to th e fo ul lin e. MoSt
playoff games arc like three reg ular-seaso n games in &gt;ntens&gt;ty ."
ln d1ana is at Bos ton. th e Los
An geles Lak ers at Por tland and
Seall le at Go lde n State on Thursday . Frida y's openers arc Miami at
Chicago, Detroit at New York, d1e
Los Angeles Clippers at Utah and
San An tonio at PhoeniX.
While New Jersey and Cleve land hav e had lm lc playoff success,
th c1 r coac hes arc among the most
expe rienced in the NBA, wit h more
vietorrcs than J.nyonc cl~c ac t1ve.
New Jersey's Bill Filch ha s won

R45 NBA games, 30 more than
Cleveland 's Lenny Wilkens. Onl y
three other coac hes '" NBA h&gt; story
have more than 800.
"No one will work harder or
g&gt;vc mor e of an effort to put
toge th er a winning team than I
w1ll ," Wilkens said. "That doesn 't
mC;Jn I have to let losses eat away
at me."
Fitc h, who was coac h of the
Cav ali ers in 1976 when th ey last
won a playoff series, sa id the 199192 season was one of d1e most d•ffiC ult of his 22-year pro coaclung
care er. He nearly lo st h1 s JOb at
nud scason hefore the Nets rallied
to w1n a pla yoff spot de spit e con Diets w1th several players , Includ in g Derrick Colema n and Chm
Morris'" th e final day s
" Th 1s was the b&gt;ggcst chal lenge
I ever faced ," Fitch sa 1d. "There
were limes when I near ly threw m
the towe l and wondered if it was
worth it. Ri gh t now, I just go da yto-day."
Cavs point gua rd Mark Pr ice
said Wilkens' cxpe ncnce as a pla yer helps him coach the team .
" He ca n relate to us as pla yers." Price sa &gt;cl . " He knows what
we ' re go&gt; ng thro ugh day -to-cla y
heca use he 's been there."
The Net ' kn o w that Pr~ ce 1S
more •mporta nt to the Ca, al• er~
&gt;han anv coach cou ld be .
"W t1en he gets in to a comron
1on e. he' s pretty tough to stop,"
Ne t&lt; back up gu ard TJle Geor ge
sa1ll. " He refuses to let th em lose ...
"Tim cluh ha s tasted a f1ve-

f, Jmc seri es and we' ve lost,"

s~d

lnd1ana guard M1 cheal Willi ams,
w hose pi;.Jy 111 la st year's intense
se ncs with the (clues nearly sent
the Pacers into the second round of
the playoffs for the first time since
the Pacers JOined the NBA in 1976.
Ind1ana pu shed Boston 10 th e
brink of elim ination, fallin g in th e
fifth game 124-12 1 when Ch uck
Person m isscd a three-point a11cmpt
at th e buzzer.
"T hey'll be hun gri er,"
lloston's Regg ie Le wi s sa &gt;d.
" We'l l have to be sure 10 play with
more intensity."
Port land coach Ric k Ade lm :m
sa&gt; d his team docsn 't feel pre ssure
heading into its se ries with the Lakcrs. Buck William s is 32, C lyde
Drexler is almost 30, Dan ny Alllgc
&gt;S 33 and Terry Porter is 29.

NOW OPEl FOR
SPRING SEASON
Complete line of Bedding
and Vegetable Plants,
Blooming and Foliage
Hanging Baskets, Large
Selection of Shrubbery
and Trees.
Open Dally 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

m-sn6

PHARMACY
TOPICS
By Your
SWISHER·LOHSE

PHARMACISTS

1.1-Z·Ioy• RtdiMrs, Adiol L11111
St..ws ' foster Mattresses 111d Sofa Slttptfs
ltautyrnt•
Patie Flllit•elty M.-. Crall, Telescope

Raaearchera hiiYI produced mice that develop AJzheimw'e diaNee, lhe

Quality Patio Furniture by Meadow Craft

5 PC. GROUP
Reg. $663.00

SALE

s499

Umbrella Sold Separately
For Patio ning and Entertaining not a wrought Iron umbrella table
with lour stacking chairs available In summer shades that are bound to
pleaseMomJ
OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M
FRIDAY TO 8 P.M.

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

Britiah acienee journal Natyre raporta . Bad for the mice, but good for
humans, bacauae it will permit eclentitla to atudy the dia...e without

experimenting on people.
New okin-liko bondage oMmo to hoolen hoolng from domu1brMion, ooyo
1 dermatologiet at Northwaelern Unlverelty In Chicago. Omlderm,
dovotoped In loraol, lot'o ontibiotico in ond wound lluldo 0&lt;1t.
According lo o clinlcol otudy In Indio, 6 to tO gr-o of go~ic o cloy (llboul
two to three clovea), given to men who had recoYIIred from one h..,.t
attack, helped prevonlonothOf.

Sumalripllln auc:cinate •••m• to knock out lhe pain of migraine
holldochoo without cOYoing drowoinooo, olorp-ocolo otudy found.

z :JII ill]

Ann
Landers

BEIJING MCDONALD 'S OPENS· An
r ld crly Chin ese woman is escorted past the sening coun ter at the new McDonald' s restaurant in
Beijing Thursday nn th e da1· it was olliriall)

opt.•ned. Man y Ch in('Sl' camt· out of r ur i oo.;1h,
rnt'r(' l)' walki11 g th ro ugh the rt\1.Jur;J nl "ithu~t
hu _l'ing. (AI' I

Help Prea•ve

the Envil'lllllillll.
Recrcle Used 1111.

Jan e t Bolin, Rutla ntl , was
among the se lect group to att end
th e offic•al ~rand opening cere mon ies for A mcr dl ora ' 92 1n

Colu mbus.
Mrs. llolin, who is a mcmhcr of
the Rutlan d friendly Gardeners and
the Friends and Flowers Clu b, has
serv ed as local am bass ador for
Amer~flora, traveli ng th e area to
give in formati ve talk s and show the
video about th iS world' s fa lf of
flowers. She has spoken 10 many
groups, from th e ve ry you ng 10
seni or ci tizens, encouraging them
10 vi sit th e event. swgcd at Franklin
Park in Columbu s unul Oct. 14.
Mrs. Bol1n, a.s past preso den1 of
the Ohio Asso ciation of G: ~rcl c n
Clubs, was Invol ved f rom the plan ning swgcs of this venture and was
honored for her work by being
l!lC[ udcd among the kw

II IVI!Cd (U

sit in Lh c mncr complex dunn g the
grand opc r11ng wh tch k~H urcd Pres Ident and Mrs. George Bush. G ov ~
c rn or Gcu r ~c Yo1r1ov rrh. Bnh
Hop e and o t her d lgJ JJLJr JCS.
Acco r np: Jn J ~d by· her hush;J!HI. J()c

Balm , sh e ·w·:1 s amon g th e fir st to

tour the new opened d1spla y.
Another member of the Rutland
Fnend ly G:ll cl ~ riC&lt;', Su1.y Carpenter, :.tho ~llt c n ~., c d th e first tLJy

A meetin g and practice of D•s tnct I 3, Daughters of Amen ca. will
be held Sa turday at I p m. at the
Chester Lodge H~ll. All memhcr.s
urged to attend the prac tice for the
May 30 rally in New Lex in gton.

349 '"""
al!~l

VIC W!ll g.

$6 99 :.t~l e J}ll[e

Sl SOrnrr

the lown house.

'&gt;

retJdli'

r("IC IJ S Oil f1r OICC Ling thC' CllVifOil 111e/ll thi s week.

TOPS meets

FROM

95 :"=:-

4

Donna J:ick s, Bern1ce Du rst :wd
ll ctdi Delon g were the bes t lose rs
:111d Terri IIIII wa s ru nner -up at the
rece nt meeting of the Oloo TOI 'S
Club No. 570.

491tant

1

Gil CIPI

FROM

z~~ !:"c:*;

Ucm1cc Durst won Lhc frut l ln.r.;-

kct.
M ~ml c y

FROM

$!OFF

$20FF

was n:uncd new

CO!l[ Cq c h ;ll flll :J rl .

W::wda Fu ulk read iJ story en ti tled " Ammun11i on Aga 1n S1 th e
L:ncmy "
Pl:.tll s WL're

t.lJ scu~sc d

AC Delco
Oil Alters

rcga rdm g

the Area Rccoglll llon Day at Grove
l'll y Mcmbc" wi ll meet at the Big
Wheel parkin g lot at (, I 5 a m. to
leave a1 6:3 ll a.m.

99

The group mccL' evny T ucsd:1y

The Harr&gt; sonv&gt;ll c Sen1 or Cui zens w1ll hold a bake and vard sale
May 4 frnm 8 a. m. to 4:30p.m . at

"f'!"&gt;.II P

4 c yh rtO•••

Both Mrs . Carpemcr :1nd Mrs.
Bo l1n arc accr edil cd horti cul tnr c
and fl ow er show JUd ges f"o r the
Ohio Assoc iJll On of Garden Cl ubs,
anti al so allendcd the ex hibito rs
a nd j ud ges schoo l in Columb us
during that lime.
Mrs. Carpen ter IS coordinawr of
E:i rth-Arbor Day aCIIVllics ro r
Pomeroy Elcmcnt.l r y. winch w!l l

Nancy

D of A to meet

... 1111'1 "' -

from 5- 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Carpenter's Hall.
Pe ggy V&gt;nmg rc~11l a s10ry called
"There is 3n An~wcr . "
Sec ret pa ls will be rcw:lnlecl
Tu cstb y 8nd new nam es .selec ted
MJy 5.

DELIVERANCE
SEMINAR

Wltell Mite

atr..orSaUn

Bpiwwa•a

FROM

1!9
AutoltB

Wire Seta

APRIL 24·26, 1992
Friday &amp; Saturday - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 6:00
s

SPEAKER:

Mike Thierer

~lj

.. c,.
4

\ .IIi' PI•! ,.

&amp;
~
1 11 "

g , ,• .

" · ~ ·· ''"·'
l l ·h 111'
~ hN

! ,,.,, II

Deep onoolhoolo to protect babies from potn during ourgery will otoo
improve their chancu of recov.y. Th• N_. England Journal or MecUclne

reporta. Streee or pain ie more dlngeroue B\1n ..,.. &amp;6Ca.

What'o now In modiclne7 W. kMp up with the total newo, the betWr to
serve you at Swi•her-lohM Ph•m.cy.

¢P

5W IS HER LOHSE

PASTOR:

Gary Hines

Mon thru 511 B·OOam lo900p m

E M1in

Frttrtdl'l Strv iCe

1

I&gt;H 992 2 9~~
Pom•ov. OH

OpM1 Week Night1 "til 9

Non-Resistor
Sparll Plugs

EVERYONE
WELCOME!

I) ' I·'

CHESTER, OHIO

s•

::'"'CIIJiel S4 '" •••••••

V [' \)1 I H &lt;,l

·' '" " , ,. , .,llf'

Autollte

NEWLIFECOVENANTCHURCH
OF GOD

-

;a
"·l'"'.4
~c"" ,.
I ,on I \ ()

f&lt;tnn81h McCullough. llt .Ph
Cft• l• fUfflt. R Ph
Ron lid Hanntng . R Pt.

PRES C RIPTIO~S

Autollte

~I 0~1 \ .) i P

Pharma(v
Su nd._, 10 ·00 • m to 4 00 p m

CORNER OF THIRD and OLIVE - GALLIPOLIS - 446-3045

held our own meetings.
1 was in four trcaun ent centers
before I ended up doing time.
Nothing worked for me until I
got with the 12 -s1ep program of
,\NN LANDERS
A.A. It works because it puts the
re.s
pon sibilit)· where it belongs -- on
" 1991 , Loll AnK ..Iefi
Thne; Sy ndl""" and
the user. I've been clean and sober
Creator&gt;&lt; Syndlea&lt;e."
for six years. If Lincoln wants to
do it, he can. -- DRUG -FREE IN
read that leuer from Lincoln ATLANTA
Warkocz,: had 10 write and tell him
DEAR ATLA NT A Amen,
there is hope and not to give up on brother.
Dear Ann : You were miStaken
himself.
I lost my leg beeause of drugs. when you said, "Parents do not owe
Both my brothe~ were murdered their ch1ldren a college ed ucation."
over drugs. I know something about In Illinois and some other states, 1f
the subject At40 year.; of age , after the child is capable of benefiting
more than 20 years of drugging, a from a college education and the
friend took me to a meeting of pa re nt s ar c fmancially able 10
Narcotics Anonymous. The 12-stcp provide it, they must do so. -- HUGH
recovery program saved my life. 1 SCHWARTZBERG
hope Lincoln sees this. It could save
DEAR HUGH: Thanks to you and
his, too. ·· JUDY FROM DETROIT }4 othe r lawym, 1 now kn ow.
DEAR JUDY : Thank you for an
When pla 1111 ing a weddtng, wlw
irtspiring lel!Cl. I hope Lincoln sees pays for wluJr? Wlw srands where ?
it and picks up on your suggestmn . 'The AM Landers Guide for Bride &lt;''
Here's more:
lias a// rhe answers. Send a selfDear Ann Landers: When I read tuidrened. lon g. bu siness-size
!hat letter from Lincoln Warkocz I envelope and a check or mon ey
was irritated . His auiwde is typi,:..l order for $3 65 (rhis Includes
of addicted people ·· and thi s pastage ar.d /uJr.dling) ro : Bridl! .
includes food addicts.
clo Ann Laruiers, P.O. Box 11 562 .
These whmers have a common Ch1 cag o , Ill . 60611 -0562 . (In
f3J iing -- unwillingness 10 assume
Canadn. se nd $445)
respo nSibillly for their live s.
Blaming sorn•.one else (in this ca.&lt;;e,
the Florida prison system) will
nev er get that guy clean and sober.
Placing blame is a cop-ouL
I was in a J3i l whcrc there was no
drug program and no Alcoholics
Anonymous meeti ngs. A few of us
got ahold of th e A. A B•g Book and

Bolin attends grand opening

Yard, bake sale set

WHERE BRAND-NAME MERCHANDISE IS
FOUND AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE

WITH MOTHER'S DAY JUST AROUND THE CORNER, WHY NOT
CONSIDER A BEAUTIFUL Yn PRAaiCAL GIFT

DEAR READERS: Rem ember
the letter from Lmcoln Warkocz, the
drugaddictwhoisnowincarcerated
'" Bowlmg Green. Fla.? He wrote
10 say he has been trying without
~uceess for 15 years to get he lp for
ts addicuon.
L&gt;nco In went 10 jail at age 17
and has been in and out four
Urnes SJnce then. He claims that
although he has pleaded with prison
authorities to be rehabilitated, he was
never placed in a drug treatment
program.
I asked to hear from someone in
the Florida stale prison system about
this man's situation. The secretary
of the Florida Department of
Comctions, Harry K. Singletary lr ,
sent me this prompt reply :
"Mr. Lincoln Warkocz has been
Incarcerated four times by the
department He was offered an
opponunity to participalC in a drug
program while assigned to a
community center but chose to
escape before he was able 10 participate . In August 1990, he wa s
returned to the department with a
new sentence and enrolled in tile
automechanicscourscandtheGED
program . He dropped out of both
programs w1tllin two weeks. Since
his latest lllCalCeration in October
1991, Mr . Warkocz has been placed
on the waiting li st for th e drug
rehabiliU!Uon program."
And now for so me add111onal
com ments from readers:
Dear Ann Landers : 1 am a
recovering drug addiCt and have
• been a fan of yours for 20 years.
Two years ago, I became a member
of Narrotics Anonymous. When 1

Resistor

Spark PlUgS

""'

•••

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store hours: 8:30a .m. to 8 p.m. Monday thr ough Friday,
a· JO 11 .m to 7 p m Saturday , and 9 a.m . to 5 p.m. Sunday

GALLIPOLIS
Wed non da~ .

""~~..·~~~··•
lll.pnl 29. HKI2

•

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, April 23, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Annual father -son banquet
held at Trinity Church

Beat of the Bend...
by Boh Hoefltch
Bet I can tell you someone who
.could stand some cheering up right

The Meig s Division of tb &lt;

I'l l wage r Bob Houdashelt of
: ~omcruy wlll appreciate hearing
!rom yo u. Bob may be a flfm
believer that "once is enough".
However, things hav en' t worked
out that way for h1m. He recently
·underwent the same b3ck surgery

:twice. His first b:.u;k surgery was
'Feb. 21 and he was confmcd to St
Joseph Hospilal in Parkersburg for
:10 days. However, upon his return
home !lob continued to have problems so he returned to the Parkcrs:tJUrg hospital. The doc tor adv1scd
·Boh he would have to undergo the
'same surgery for the second tim e
and that happened on Friday. April
17 . W1th a little bn of luck Bob
will he returned to h1 s home today
Cards will reach him at 102 Wchc
Terrace. Pomeroy.
SIC k and tired of cooking and
espec ially on holiday weekends'!
Well, the Burlingham Modern
Woodm en and Community hav e

worked out Memorial Day for you.
The group will hold a dinner at the
Burlmgham Wood men Hall on
May 25-yo u can ea t there- or
:take nut-from II a.m. to 6:30
:r.rn. The re' ll be chicken. turkey,
.ham and fish dinners-al so sand·

wichcs-and homemade bread and
p1c.." as wel l-sound like a winner?
Proceeds will go to the cemctcncs
1n lledford Township. The Modem
Woodmen Lodge will mntc h th e
j11oncy made on the prOJCCL

If yo u ha ve any qucsuons c&lt;..~! l
~1ildrcd Zie gler, scc rct,Jry, 992 -

·

Amcncan Heart AsSOC13Uon cur-

Cummunity Ca len dar items
appear t\w days befure an n·cn t
and tht· d;Jy of lh at eor·cnt. ll erns

mu st be rrCe ived well in ad\'ance
to assurt' publication in the call'ndar.

THURSDAY
1' 1\ L GROVF · Rcv 1vJI at
f &gt; ln l'~fl ) \ e Hol!ness Church will be
lh· i&lt;l tllfOU~ h Suncloy at 7 r m
nt ~ ~ltl ) Rev. Steve M anl ey and
ra nu l;, Summersv ille. N.C. will be
c vJn~dt'il. Spcc1al stn gtng n1ghtl y.
R.. : ., . Od : ll

~b n lcy

tnvHes the puh -

l tl .

~I ID OLEPORT ~Porc e l ain doll
~·lJ ss . s po n ~o r cd hy Mtdd lcport
,\rl'i Counc tl. wtll bl' £ tll Thurs d~ty

·

nt 7 p.m. Judy Dt xon wtll tc;1ch the

four -wee k d.to..;o..; Cl:1~., 'i t/ C ts limited . Cost " $36. Ca ll 'N ' ~ 7733 to
rcgt s tcr

· ROCK

SPRI~GS

,\ spw:tl

ffJecun~ ,11 the Sal t s l~ ur) Tuwnsl11p
J" ru ~ ICL''- '.'.'Ji]

bC he\d :11 1/IC 10'W JI h;tl : Tliur .. d:ty :11 () p . m Ill

:ippoint

:1

new tJu :itC l.

POMEROY ~ Preceptor Bc~:l
Hcta Ch ,qnn, Be ta St g ma l ' ht
Sorority will rt tLi.' l Thurs d~r y Jl l!r r
Ert scop:ll !'a m h ll uusc.
P0~1EI&lt; O Y

·T he

~oJrd

ol

Dn c L·lor \ u l th e Mc l).: s C o un ty

J&gt;ut-.hL· Lrbr :1r y will rnl'c t l lrursd.ry
Jl 1 p 111. .11th . .: lrbrJry lll l'n111 r rny

way-and this is one of the pnnury I und raisers of the group.

dent\.

The Auxtktry members will N
honored during \'oluntccr Wtd:
wnh a tea on April 30 m the
extended care dm1ng room .
l ntcresung, Jsn ' t u" Weal! want
rcdu cuon in gnvcrnmcnl SJX"lljj-

J

tn g hut no one wants to gi\'(' up
onything. Do keep sm1!ing.

sorcd by the Turpcrs J&gt;Uins 'F\\'

Pust No. 9053 ond Ladies Au&gt;~ l­
wy Fnday rrom 8- l 1:30 p.m.
Mu SiC will be by the Happy Hol·
low Boys. Pub lic mvitcd.
RACINE - Mc1gs Coun1~·
Chu rch Women Un ited will IJOid
its pl:mning scs\ion for lhe M ::~~
klluwship mcctwg at Lhc Rao nc~apt1 S t Church ot J p.m . F1&lt;day.
All key women 10\IJtcd.

CHESTER - M1chael Th1crer
wdl be the guc\t speaker at Nt...,
L1f~ Covenant Church of God m
Che ster. He wtll speak Friday and

Saturday at 7 p.m. and on Sund3~·
a1 Y·30 a.m. and 6 p .m . Tbe publ.c
i'&gt; irn·Jtcd .

POMEROY · The Mo1gs Coun·
so~ Derhy AssOCIJt ron
will meet Fnday at 7 p.m. at PI=·

MIDDLEPORT- l it ,· \\' i mk'n ·,
[='c]hm•\lttp will fi iC'C I 1 tw r-;d:ry .II
the ~liddlcport Cln.ulit o! Clt ml t\
prn_gr;tm wtll he pr ncn tcd h~ ilK
l,tdll'" ot rh c ltn~ t dum h.
TilL' f&lt; :tc·tnl i\lll ~' rl ·
c :111 Lq_:: Hlll i\u:o:.rltc~r y wt ll ln l' L' I
rhursJay :1 1 7·JO p rn :tt Lire hall .

d1uiag rtac- lypfwriter toss compelilion in Portland, Maine on
\hdaesdar, bolping to celeb rate National Secretaries D:~y. A !~ca l
r:adMJ sbhoa llonored secretaries for t he day with a variety of
t•t•IS lor p«&gt;ple to compete in during lunch hour. (API

Rutland gardeners finalize
plans for open meeting
Pbm lor the open meet1ng of
It w::t'i noted thai the recent cdJ ·
th~ Rutland f'nendly Gordcncrs
,..~ fU!alaed ar a recent mcctmg tion of the Garden Path Magazine
ll tb&lt; ltoole of Kimberly Willford , featured an article about the Jade
Garden 4 -H Club led by
"""'Mn.
""-""!.Wliford gave devoti ons on Junior
Mrs. Bolin. Boys and guls panJC itb&lt; l.bz:mc " A New Day'' by Cloy p~llc in th e activities focu sing on
\\""""""' and members responded plants, wildlife co nservation , e nvi10 roll call with ways to 1m prove ronm ental concerns and flor al
arranging.
lbeir pdros.
As a fund rai se r lor the planting
C lub member Janet Bo l1n ,
&gt;mb3ssador for Amwflo ra '92, m front of the Rutland Civic Censb1Jwtd a Vld."' and gave mforrna· ter. the club invited the community
UlMI on the event which honors the to con tribute baked goods ur
:SOOth annJYersary of the New money to a bake sale over Easter
Wor ld DiS&lt;overy by Colu mbus. weekend. Currently, the bed is
Countnes from around the wor ld filled with pink and white tul ips
ll'e Jl1U11CliJ'lll'lg in this fair of hor- represen ting the logo of Amcnllollr ulture and environmcnlal ra. The club plan s to update the
t&gt; br bm. Events arc included for plaming wuh seasonal items afte r
th·e whole family, including a the spring fl owering bulbs arc rinc:uuu.sel and a dinosaur dig ror ished, so additional funds arc need·
cb.ldreo, and practical backyard ed. The public and local busines s
IJndsope ideas for the parents. contribuuons may be given to MarEd uut rooal exhibitS IOCiudc the gorct EdwJrds, treasurer.
A di sc ussion was also held on
rnblttd Fr.mklin Park Conservatohaving
o sales table at the Ru tlan d
"' "11b plli!IS of different climates,
F~rcman's
Fourth of July cclcbra J nd the Smithsonion d1sp loy,
!J
On
- s~eds or Change," including
An auction wa .o; held during th e
'&lt;ASA 5i'JC" nems.
:loll-s. Botta was among the sclcc t rnccUng and Margaret Edwards dis9001&gt; rm-1!100 to the grand npemng played an all gree n design.
MarJortc Davis won the trav elii' ..Uuu ng Pres1dent and Mr.s .
In g prize and the ann iversa ry of
Gcocg~ Bu'ih , Governor Georg e
\ "oinon:h and Bob Hope, among Shi rley VanMeter was observed.
A smorga sbord of appet ize rs
O!b&lt;r dl gll!llnes. Suzy Carpenter .
tunc.

k "\..'""ret:l!)' , also viewed Amcn 011 opcmng day . Both Mrs .

cr' s RestaurJnt.

C .t~~Irn .:' r and Mrs.
.li.."U~dU~;.'"d: horticulture

~oom

To place an ad

Jllll.l'-"

Bol1n arc
and Oowcr

~
for the OhiO AssOCJJ ·
t ~oo o i G:.u den Clubs, and al ~ o
dH~00-.1.1 lht.: &gt;i:Ahibitors and Judges
s..:hoo~ LG Co lumbus du rin g that

brough t by club member s wa s
served .
A b:.~ b y shower for L auren

McKay lcigh Barnes, new daughter
nf member Lorri 8Jrncs and grond ·
tl:iugh ter of member Judy Sno..,dcn
wJs giv en.

WASHJNGTON (AP)- What
arc the ch:mccs you' ll read th ts
story?
Probab ly better than the
prospect that you' lllose weight and
keep it orf. Maybe not as good as
the chance yo u' ll say a pray er
before the day is over.
Likelihood or ~lC flfSI is JOSt one
in 10. The probabil ity you' ll pro y
today is much be tter: 57 10 100.
The rigures Jre from "What the
Odd s Arc," a book whose edi tors

100.
- A smoker wil l try to quil: 71
in 100.
- A wife wi ll outllvc hc:r hu.liband: 70 in J00.

MoN. rhru FRI. 8A.M.-5t'.M.- SAT.8-l2 '
Ct.osw SuNnAY

POLICIES

have spun th e wheel, shaken the
di ce, sh ufn cd the cards &lt;tnd worked
tir e li brary to come up with "A to

-Y ou will und ergo an IRS
e~ud i t this year: one m l(XJ.
- A pcr c)Oil will be mcarcc r:tl cd

Z Odds on Everythin g You Hoped
or Feared Cou ld Happen' '
The book, quoting the Nation:~!
Safe ty Council. says you have a
one in 23 chance or dy 1ng '":~n

one 1n 2(Xl.

• Adtoullid!! f.a l!\ a, Ma6on or !\i eaga ( ount• e• m1.111l

ace tdcnt. If yo u do, chan ces arc one
m two t.hat it will be a car wreck.
Hope w wrn you r state's lot -

tery' The odds arc 4 milli on to one
:rga in st you, far worse than th e one
in 9,000 chance of being hit hy
lightning .
Hope to sec your name m pnnt?
According to th e book, nearly
three quarters of all Americans arc
menti o ned 1n th e media at least
once in their li fetime s. One in lour
is on television at least once.

The book says one in three reopic in the Uni ted St:ltes do wiU10ut
~aro ng drink: without mov 1es or ~l
dai ly newspape r, two m f1 vc: with o ut dru gs, four in five ; wit hout
church, three in fiv e.
Without sex?

be~~

Cud of Thank•

Jn

Trihu~ (eliCep t Clauif1ed DU. play, DU1ine11 Card or legal
Noti.::ea) willa!.o appr.ar in the Po1nl Plea ~an t RepU&gt;r an d

the Daily Sen lmd, rea dung over 18 ,000

- The

E ::~rth

L i'.llill~e

C' rC' Ck C o n~erv::mc y lJr\ lrll: t wr ll
hold 1 1~ re gu lar b\),n d m cc ltn ~
Thur,.; d:1y :il 7 p m f'ub l rl 111\ tlCd

CIIFSTER - Sil:11k l&lt;" c· r Lodge
No. 45 3 F &amp; AM will ltold a spccr.tl rn cct tng Thursd.1 y ar 7 10 p m

with &gt;'-Ork 1r1 the Er\ dq: rn: . All
ma so no.; 1nvt ted Rdt&lt;..'s hrli C ttl \

served.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM · f :11tli F11l l
Go &lt;; pcl C hurc h in Lon;.: Bolt om
will h:1vC prcac l11n g and Stngt ng
Pnc!Jy at 7 p.m . with D;tVId Dailey
and Dail -: y Family S rn gc rs and
n th cr local talcn!. Pa stor Steve
Reed invites the publiC . Fcllowshir
wtll follow.
IIOCKINGPORT - There will
he :.1 ro und and square dance :ll
Hockingport at Kenny nnd Mill1c
Reynolds on Friday rrom 8-11 :30
p.m. Ronnie Wood will be th e
caller. Public mv1tCd.
MI[)DLEPORT · DJnce at the
."v1Jdc1kpo rt Lcg10n Annex Friday

PRICE REDUCED!
The pnoe nu been recu:.d 1o $&amp;8 .900 aoo

will be clcv:lSI:ltcd

hy a mctcon tc tn your l tfcwnc: one

owner Hnanclng of up to 80% ol purchaae
amoort mAy be poul&gt;• lot ~aWylro per-

in 9,000.

son lo buy vory lice homu on 3Y. acres i'l

- i\ pe r so n will he stru ck hy

Aadne. 4 BR. J bllhs, 2 garages , rented 1
BR apt Property lnclu&lt;les 4,800 tq. ft. !arm

ligiHnmg: on e 111 'J.JOO.
- A profcss ion~!l golfe r wtll .12 ,'1

"""'

:11 1olc-~!1 - on c :

unc in 15,001
- A fan will be h1t by a b;~ sc b:ill
:ll a maJOr JcagLJc game: one in
300,000.
- You w1 ll be dea lt o roy:il
flus h m the opcnrng poker kmd .
one in 649.739
- A St:ltc lottery rJJ yer will hil
the jackpot: one in 4 rrtil l ton
- A passe nger wi ll he killed 10

Call 614 -992-7104 for

Will the Lady that Needed

Stanley Degreaser and
Other Products, Please
Call This Number.
949-2360.

rrom 7- J J p.lll. With lllUSiC by
George Hall. Rerreshments avail ·
abl e. PubliC 1nvited

Meigs Counly Young
Democrats Will Begin Selling
Rals of Bedding Plants and
Hanging Baskets on East
Main Street (neJct to Super 10)
on Friday through May 12
from Noon to 7. Grand
Opening on Sunday, 2 PM .
wrth Democratic Candidales
and Officehoklers .
The Public is lnvrted

an :ur crash: one in4 .6 million

Golf scramble set

Ou tSide wedlock, the book says
A rour-person go lf seCJ mhl e,
the fi gures range rrom one in 10 for spo nsored by the So uth e1n High
people who have never been mar- Se hool Golf Team, will be held
ried to one in 33 lor those d1vorccd M:~y 2 at the Mc1gs Co unt y Go!J'
Course.
twice.
Withoul tel ev i sion? Only one in
Entry rce is $35 ror mem bers
:md 540 ror non -members. The Icc
SO.
According to the book, here arc includes golr, cart , lu nc h and
pwcs
some good bets:
- You will rcga tn wc1gh t loss
T hose w:1nt rn g to p:Htt Clpa te
after a diet 90 chances i11 100.
m:ty rcg1s tcr by ca ll ing th e goH
- You will p:tr"Cnt a child : RO in course or 992-6312.
tOO.
-Yo u will qualtry lor a mongogc: ~0 m 100.
The Unucd Methodi st Wome n
- A crimina l will re turn to p!l
wd
l h:1vc a regular mcc ung Man ·
:~ft c r release: 80 in 100
day
:117: 30 r .m. at the R:~c ine Unit·
- A youth will gr:1duatc high
eli
Methodist
Church . All women
sc hrKll: 75 in !00.
or
the
chu
rc
h
arc
invited.
- You will be mam ed: 75 1n

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round Jnd squ ::~rc Uancc spon -

PUBLIC NOTICE

~eclamation .

The permit

area is located in Meigs
County,
S a II a b u r y
Township , Lola 392, 395,
398, Township 1N, Rang e
13W, on the property of
Jaymar Coal Company, Inc .,
Cheaapeaka and Ohio
Railway Company, and J . W.
The permit
1 7.5 acres and is
on the Cheahire 7'11
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle

The pege•nt brought 1o you in part
by· McDonald's ol Pt . Pleasa nt.

TROLLEY STATION

SERTA
CO
SPRINGWALL

773-M-.on
882 - :\~w llu ~n

895-l.etul
lJ.'\7-RufT.Jn

Public Nollce
Map, approximately 1.3
milea northeaat of Cheshire,
Ohio .
The
renewal
application will allow
Addington , Inc. to conlmue
the mining operation• on 0 0698 lor up to live years
past tha upiration date of

24 Auguo~ 1992.
The appHeation is on file
at Meigs County Racorder 'a
Office, Meigs County Court
Hous e, Pom eroy, Ohio
45769 lor public viewing .
Wrilt&amp;n comments or
requests lor an inlormal
conference may be sent to
the Division of Reclamation ,
1855 Fountain Square
Court, Columbus, Ohio
43224 wilhin thirty days of
the las( date of pubtication
of this notice.

CRAFTS

10 Dlrr•oo• St., •~&lt;~•toporl

APRIL 13·18

614-949-2627

Exlended Easter hour~.
Open until 7:30pm
APR . 28. 6 :00 pm Basket Class
MUST PRE-REGIS TER FOR
All ClASSES
HAS· Moo.·S.t 10 am -5 pm
Surlday 1-5 pm

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE
204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Public Nollce
to be in a sealed envelope
marked "Insurance Bid" and

Pomeroy, Ohio

3-13-92-tfn

BOWARD L.
WRIIESEL
ROOFING

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

134M St,ll' ; 1, (l

BUY-SELL-TRADE

NOW OPEN FOR SPRING
Plants, Her~s, Plftlltials,
hlllas~

OPEN
WED.·SUN. 10.5 p.111.

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding

om••-Peta-Wlldllle
Motorcyclea-Eic.

OR TOLl I'IIEE
1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

m 1r9

WANTED
Old Curreney Dated
Between 1861·1929.
Especially Na1ional

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing. Weeding,
and Seeding.

Bank Currency from
any slate. Paying
$300.00 and up for

Shrub ond Tree
Trimming I RemoYOI

Racine, Pomeroy,

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

11l14/tln

Welcome Slates
$20.00

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

Cullom Paintings

All MAliS

Bring 11

614-992-2242

TROY-BI£T
Our Sprinf; Stdpro@fl l

or

Troy -IHit lllkt-1 Now In Sto~k.

u~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
Across Fr. . P•l Offlce
217 I . S.Col4 11.

II SO We&lt;i, Ill eo, 01;, •113-38 IS

PO•UoY, OliO

2/20192/l mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Free EsUmaln

Evenings

...,...., , I tM . tHl

614·949·280 1 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)
2/12192 1fn

NEW OPENING

SUMMER
IMAGES
2 Miles on HvaeU Run Rd

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Visi1s ...... $25.00
16 Viaila ...... $30.00
1 Visit. .... $3 .00
&lt;oiF.r~··

Out , Gravel and Coal
Ltcensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591

L

992·2487 or
992-7884
4-7-92-1 mo.

FOR SALE
Agriculture
Lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

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

BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
4-4-92-tl.

HAULING
COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME
REASONABLE RATES

742-2138

ATTENTION
\luhilt• &amp;

lluuhl~\1 id~

111 rn 1nrnlfl.

Bf If HHJ'I ()(&lt;;K'.N

DK's FARM TOYS

F!~~

~ ·~

-

1-£14-764-2101

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

2-7-92-t ln

COMMmCU.L and RL'iiDENTitU
FREE fSTIMI\'n'S

Ravenswood.

PETE SIMPSON

12-5-tln

lo Or Wo

)Our WAiclilli.D~SaJfr

Middleport and

Commercial

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limestone,

Pick

specific pieces from

Realdenliat&amp;

985·4473
667·6179

~nsulat10n

992-2772 or
742·2097

412/92/Un

Fm UTIMA'rU

4-9-tln

JAMES KEESEE

Ohio 45769

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

•Roolin~

'J\!1. th. ryn
'Meadows
Pomeroy,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

304-273-5555

•Replacement
Window

4115112 1 mo. pd.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Frame l!e;paiir
NEW &amp; USIO
FOR All MAKES
l MODUS
992·7013 or
992-5553

Quality
Stone Co.
SI!ED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

112/tln

949-2188

4-21-92-1•. ,4.

In Custom

Wt!t, Aileo, 00. •1!1·38 IS

Call614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

NEW-REPAIR
GUTTERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

4-21-92- I mo. pd.

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS and
EVERlASnNGS
moo u .m. •• ow.
247-4035

~

GIIJAYMAR

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

IITrDTUrDIII

1 mo. pd. 4116192

On April 3, 1992, in the
Meigs County Probate
Court, Cue No. 27416,
Kenneth L. Hopfer, 2547
fimber Brook Lane, Spring
Valley, Ohio 45370, waa
1ppointed Executor of the
estate of William E. Swatzel,
deceased, late of 34620

576-Ap~e Gro-..~

IUYII'S LAWII
MAINTENANCE

992·3184
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

(FREE ESTIMATES)

4/2llt2/1-

Business Services

4/15192/1 mo.

LOUNGE
Gallipolis Ferry, WV .
Presents Miss Hawaiian
Tropic Beauty Pageant
2nd Compel~ion Thursday,
April 23, 9 00 P.M.

Public Notice

675-PI. Pleu.nl
-1-58- U.on

II

m;ntr.lll"

-Interior I Exlo&lt;lor
Painting

OHIO

NOW OPEN
Hrs. 9 to 5
Mol. tU. Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

y•• ,

66 7 - Col&gt;lvilll'

614-992-2549

ARNIE'S SPORTS

UMW to meet

llulllt' 011 llt' r'

OH., WV. ' H.U.D.
Ajrprond M•faclurod
Hovsing Prodods.

'

DALLAS K WEBER · Owner

All SCALES- VINTAGE •d
&lt;OUIOULI
•1 iden bailable·
D~ILITID

II

THE QUAillY PiiN1 SHOP

MtDDEltOn, ON.

99D3&lt;14-uo --uo ,.
141·1010-Afl• loGO

I I

Quabty Hi Effkiency Air
Conditioners, Heat
Furnaces &amp;Haw
Water Heaters.

r:

t ·l -'2 · ••.

Announcemenls
3 Announcements
I -

Benoells Mobile Home
&amp; Looling
1391 Safford S&lt;hool Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
CoU(614)446-9416or 1-800-472-5967

:Z.

1- -Public
- - -Nollce
----

aubmitt4d or mailed to
Janice \. awson , Clerk-

Traaaurer:, Village ol Syracuse, Syrac use Municipal
Building, Syracuse, Ohio
45 779. The Village of
Syracuse reaerve1 the right
to retect any or all bids.

Janice L.awaon,
Willow Creek Road ,
Clerk-Treasurer
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Robert E. Buck. 14) 9, 16, 23, 31c
Probate Judge

Lena K. He..elroad, Clerk

NICE SELECTION OF DAYBEDS

(4) 9, 16, 23, 31c

Public Nollce

MATTRESS PRICES STARTING AT•••

INVITATION TO BIO

I r m. at the Chcsuor Lodge H.a! i.

All members arc urged LO .attend

The Village of Syracuse
will accept sealed bida until

1hc pracucc lor the li'Lay 30 raDy

JB

12 Noon on Moy 7, 1992

POMEROY . The Pome r0 1
5c ntor Cit izen s Dance Club ..,,]J
liuld , dance Saturiilv S-11 o.m. at

from legally licensed
lnaurance companl81, or
theh agents, to provide the
Village of Syracu .., Ohio,
for the larm of one year,
commencing May 21, 1992,

1\.'c w Lexmgton.

tht· -; cnJ or c ttlt cns ce01er Mu s1c
'~ 111 he b ~ the Smokey Mounta1n
l&gt; r l l : l' f \ :1nd Art hur Connanl w1 ll
t ··~: til e c::i.llcr Public mvitcd . Bna~
\ ll::teb for the snack tabk: .

ORANGE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
PATRICIA C~LAWAY ,
CLERK
46686 GUTHRIE ROAD
COOLVILLE, OH IO 45723
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Orange Township
will be accepting
sealed bids for the 1992
cemetery mowing aaaaon
until Aprll30 , 1992. A total ol
5 cemeteries to be mowed 2
Tru stees

times a month

or as deemed

necessary by the ,trustees.
commercial property, com - Bids wilt be opened May 4,
mercial general liability, 1992 7:30p.m. at the home ol
commercial auto coverage, the clerk Patricia Calaway.
and commercial inland The trustees reservelharlghl
marine lnaurance. Bide are to accept or reject any or all
bids . Low bid may not Influ-

EACH
PIECE

5

LOTTRIDGE ~ Countrv Mu&lt;&gt; C
·" '' Ill wd t he held ot the J:Onndge

ence the trustees declalon.

Happy Ads

Send bkts to :

Palrlcla Calaway, Clark
46686 Guth rle Road Coolville,

Cornmunuy Ccnrcr Salurday from
I) p 111. Hl mHintght RefreshmenLS
;t\ :tliJbl c. Public mvned.

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

GUARAN,EED!

SUNDAY
P0\1EROY · AMVETS ..- 111
rnrcr Sunday at :2 p.m. at the DAV
H:il l, 201 Mu lberry Avenue.
Pomcroy,to elect off1ccrs.

Do You Know Who
Was born

Ohio 45723
(4) 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30
(5) 1, 4, 5, 6 10TC

4/23/52?

54 Miscellaneous

CHESTER - Tabitha will PCI·
form at MI. Hermon Unncd
Bre1h rcn Chu rch, Texas Road , Sun-

come.

192-Middl epo rt/
Pomt'roy
985-C heltcr
843-Portlan.d
247-Lctu1 F11U1
919- K.rinc
712 - Rullllnd

1

For More Info Call

CHESTER- A mcct10g and

.POMEROY - Trinity Church of
Pomeroy will have a carry in dinncr rotlo~mg mornmg wor-.lup Stt·
vice Su/lday . All members wei ·

Gatlin Cmmly 'lei~ Counly ~aliOn Co., WV
ArP.a Code 6 J4 Area Codf' 6 I ·1 Area Code 301

Addlllona

~oofing

614-949·2202

(4116, 23, 30; (S) 7, 4tc

MacNno &amp; Repair.

rrJCtiCC of DIStrict 13, Daughter)
() f Amcrrca, Will be held S:nurdJ\'

day at 7:3 0p .m. Paslor Roben

Classified pages cover rhe
following telephone exchange.! ...

home~

Quality Print Shop, Hdo~s Mill
OUUot Point D&lt;otributing, Subway of
Pt. Ploaoant. N;o Hilt&lt; Muoic &amp; B&amp;A

l'ORTLMD . Gospel song fcs"''"1:u Ponland Elementary School
~ dl be held Saturday at 7 p.m. f.,. .
tur rng Messengers of Love.
Srnp ng Mcsscngc.rs. Dailey Famr ·
h . Joy Srngcr s and Freedom
c~~r.; pel Trto . Free will offcnn £.
l'uhiiC Jnvncd

S'Ul(Jers InV iteS the public .

I 00 p.m Wednesday
100 p m Thur.;day
I :00 p m Fnday

Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

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

111

lll l'n or the church . Donations V.'lli
h.:- acc rptrd

:II

Thursday Paper

Our SJ!rintl ShJ~ent Of
Tror-Hih 11Uen Now I• 311o('k .

-Gull« Work
-Electrical •nd Plumbing

..B.lp. . l'- r. Jl..:_.,
y• ..,.,_ ........

1 00 p rn Tm..&gt;sday

Addington , Inc ., 943 I U.
S. Route 60 Wesl, Ashland,
Kentucky, 41102-9527, has
submilted a r enewal
applicalion for coa l min e
permit 0-0698 to the Ohio
Dspartment of Natural
~ssourcea,
Division o f

1&lt;. ,\CI~E

RUTLAND · Till'

1 00 p m Monday

Public Notice

4,lXXl.

RACIN~

l 00 p m ~turday

Wednesday Paper

446-GallipoU•
3 f•7 - Chl.'lhirr.
388-Villlon
245-Rio Cnndc
256--Cuy• n OUt.
643-i\nbia UU1 .
.179-Willnul

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

BULLETIN BOARD

ge niu s:
'

a future Super Bowl one

Happy Ad!

In Ml'morlam
Ya rd !iale~
• A duaifled ad~e rl iM:mc:nt pla ced in thr. C&amp; l!.pol u Oa •ly

- A ht g h s clto o l pl :1ycr wtll

p!:l y

~ prcpa1d ~

• Tribune 1.1 not rca pona •hle fnr error I ~ther ftnt day (chei;k
for error. flrll da y ad fUOI in parer) . Call bdo~ 2:00 r m
day alter puhl•nt10n to make corr ec tJoo
• Adl that mwt he paid m odvancc are·

if convicted: 60 in 100.
-A college rrcshmar1 wi ll graduJtc: 50 in 100.
- A child wil l live past 75 50
m I00.

- Your child w!ll
one 111 250.

i

1
• Receive dl.co unt for ad~ pa•d 1n adnnce.
• F'ree Ad.: Cnuway and Found ad.&amp; uml er 15 wonh w1ll be 1
r un 3 day11 at no ch a'lle .
• Price of ad ror ~~.11 capllal l e~ten ia 1ifiuhle pnce of ad coat
• 7 pmnl Ime typf' only uted

- You will av01d rmpri'&gt;onm cnt

Then th ere &lt;J rc th e long shots,
some wonh walli ng for, some not·

COPY DEADLINE
Monday l'a pcr
TuC'Sday Paper

Call992-2156

MI DDLEPORT - A pan c a~ c
h r c:~ Ua s t wilt be held Saturday
l1um 7 11 a.m at the Hcatll Unned
Mcthml &lt;&gt;t Church spon~ by thl'

l' uh lr l rnvllcd .

~

LET IT GO- Joanne Morency of Gray, Maine, gives a heave

chub
iloo

SATURDAY
COO LVILLE - Glfls Seou l
Troop 1221 will hold a rccyclwf.
colklliun dnvc ill the Cooh·JJJc
[ km cnLary School parking lot on
S :llllHi:ty from 9 a.m. 10 noon.

CARPENTER SERVICE

What are the chances you'll. ..

ty Soap

Tlnw;d,rv ;rt the pn \1 h \ llt ll'

IJt ll! l&lt;..' l

be at th e dinner. They were his
great-grandfather Ralph Gra ves.

nization which Tuesday vole&gt;d J

:rnd L:ldtL&lt;.; i\lJJ;tlr:Jt ~ v. rll nh· ~· r
wrll lx: ,l I pm. ful l uv. ~· d I') JllL\ l
' 1\ll trt ,· rnhcrs ur 'r:L'd l\l ,il l..:rlLI
1n&lt;
c

tfus co mpleted four generat ions ro

May .

54,000 donation to the hospital ID
hel p pny for special furnJS111ngs far
the hospital's extended card fan!J .
ty - to be used 10 the dming room
.tnd sun room for the factluy's rt 5.1 ·

M1ke, Ell Kennedy, Mike Kennedy,
Adam Thom as, Lennie Jewell ,
Steve Jewell, Marvin Burl, David
Bu1t . Bill Matlack, Paul P1crce.
Don ll:~rr i s, Art Sk inn er, Al len
Skinn er, Chester Kn 1gh t, Ro land
Wildm;~n, Da te llofrmJn, AI Crow,
Davtd Crow, and PJ. Erwin.

Ch ri sti ne Thomas, Ra venna . Also,

carr.auons will be done in mui-

The Women's Auxli.ary of, ..,.
cran s Memorial Hospnal musr bC'
one of t..hc finest organJuuons 1:n
Meigs County.
Members perform a numbcr of
scrv1ces for palient.s, vi.sit.ors and
employees at the hospilJil in atld&lt;uon to operating a gut shop m !bt
hospital lobby. Mrs. Jess&gt;e Wlmc
is the current president of the orga-

gram was presented by J oAn n

TROY-BI£T'

YOUNG'S

t:lllt cr, Greg Thom as and Zac hary.
Attending were Jo e Struble,
Mike Stru ble and Evon, Willard
H1n cs. R:~y Hm cs, Roger H1ncs.
R:ilpli Gr:~ves, Don Thomas. Greg
Tlium.IS :~nd Z;~e hary, NiCk Depoy
and Trevor. ~ob Fet ty , Bil l Felly,
Tony an d Mtkc, Don M:1yc r and

The

Business Services

t: r:mdmotll Cf , Caro lyn Th o ma.;;,

Foll owing the meal, a shnn proWildman and Linda May er. G1rts
were presented to all in :mcnclancc.
The younges t attending was
Zachary Thomas. son of Greg and

Taking orders lor the sale a«
Mrs. Dan Thomas, M1ddlepon;
Nora and Denver R1ce, Middlqot:
Mrs. James Diehl, Pomeroy. 1M
Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Parsons.. Maddlcport . . Feel free to pbone one of
the order talc:ers. De~very of your

WILKESVILLE- Smorgabord
~ lrnn c r at lhe WdkcsviUc Pyth1.1n
ll.dl Saturiily at 4 p.m. O&gt;st IS S5
r.1r :ldults Jnd S2.50 for Children

TUPPERS PL1\INS · Til ,· T"J' ·
p ~ r s Pl:.ttns VFW Po ' l ~u . ll() ~ \

steak dtnncr was served.

rently has ilS camauon sale uOOcr-

Community calendar

.) ~~I()

The ann ual father -son banquet
was held recenuy at Trin1ty Church
or Pomeroy with the !JdJeS ol th e
church prcporing and scrv1ng the
meal.
A socia l ge t-together wao..; held
preceding th e dinner. A baked

7770.

-now.

Ohio

Merchandise

lost : wal~er coo" dog, Hyaltlt
R~n . Smirh Road ar•a. 1os1
Fnday night, \il~-992 - 5056

Mother's Day Candy,
Cards, and Gift

Reward . !01 shiny black ~I
answers to Jasper •ith amtJ.r
ayes, has bMn neuterM and
wn -.aring 1 collar with an 10
tag and • hot pink retleciOf on
tha back. Oi sappe.~red 1round
Hutton Ca. Wnh At. 7 lrN
{Gelllpollsl Friday. ~SI ,.. 001

Boxes.
Long Starn Candy
Rose Suc:kers

rREiflell
e!Trt

MATTRESS

241 3rd Ave. • Gallipolis
(614) 446-6226
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 1G-7
Saturday 1o-s

P•rf•ct For Mod1eri

him, ea l\614~46-1517.

otul
Morlur!D....pur
Day

1&amp;

Oh, '"'!

It Was
Peaehu Pie!!

BGIJQull

NOW TAKING ORDERS

All Y1rd Sales Must Ba Paid In
Adnnca . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tl'la day b41o,. the ld Is lo run
Sunday ~il ion - 2:00 p.m.

Mddltpor..992-6302

Friday. Monday ecUUon - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

If It's Chocolate

�1992

P&lt;~ge

tO-The

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Gallipolis
&amp; ViCinity
.•r1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

33 Farms lor Sale

:,~_,. ..

..:;.,:mmun•t'JI Yard Sate,
1:...;.-: "t·~" .l.cr•l ltl, \by 1 &amp;.
;~

:

~mc.

~ .. -,AI ~~

S.: rtedUin.,

O•tT..-.nt

f••r "•:.r: .. ,. Open

:• w .-~

,1.,1 :1~·1 S .1r u rr::~a y! Rtl5
~; "' il t~r JT r-~n i"Z!In

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
beautiful light tor home I partially wooded....,, 6M-&amp;60.~02
or a14-JIU-2531

• 1 : 5.tru • • ~ J"~ttasant Sl, Sill
J .. ;n
~
I !t: ;·U ., Cll•! dren
. '"' '&gt;1'•:0
'&lt;;•:•!!.
ex::&lt;Jk.S.
loiS
.,,,,., ._,,,.
; ..
'

BEAUTIFUL Home Site For Sa~.
22 At;,.. Or Will Oiwlde Ap-proJim.ately 2 MIIM From Rio
Gr~~nde NNr Other BMutlful

-

.:&gt;t' J no~

~-illf.

' •. ;..

~-IHijNhS

F9ffl,

-

Day

51H45-5040

Phona; 614-245-1575 Evenings.

• '"

··d 11 '::&gt;IJ' IP•! 9!1al e 'khcot,
··:· •!Of ~·' 1•11 . Apr •l 24 &amp;
f :•: ~t! ' LHq ~t womans
. •:' ' •l"o;. •--1'!1 T7'11

.... ,, •

Gaillpoll• Ferry . 100%
fln.anclng at $98.M par
any one of fiof.lr k)ts

'h"'C ~~- .. -.,_,"' ::,,_ 5 ;Jf, 907 : "'t• ~r ~ 'oomdhr.'l rurr. omd , . r
•:•:·:'!-''' .·: •'rH·Jr 'lo 't101r11.•1

304-Qf&gt;-2722.

; .:C •;c Sale
~ .\•_:o •o n

r.·'

..,

~

.. ';

LICII'fl ~d

;·1' '' ' r ·~u&lt;• a . ]()4-

Help Wanted

11
.•. ·•
~·.

'S &lt;fll

t
,J

1

'rc

~cpilances.

• ' ••-·i

\ol,- ~' o1

\lli&lt;:rowavas,

i.

. '' . ,,

'I•'

ConsuHing Psychological MrvlcH Including IYIIuallona,
tum mMtlnga. staff conauiTaliaM , eaM m1nagement Information, .cc. for rnktentl ol
l .ik in Hospital's ICF Uni1 to
mo111ntaln ICF certllicaUon. Mus1
rtav• cunwnl WV license. lnlerested perons conlact 304-5753230 txt. 20 or 24, Mon-Frl 8:00
AM - 4 .00 ~M tor bid form .
Deadl ine tor apply ing May 1~.
1992 Average ol 12 hou~ per
week

'l'll\Jr Non-

"'"i

C.ill 1)14-

;o""'i,

Autos
'' ··:..r Mcron. Call

•· ·

; '- •

.1..nk

• •• 1 • '' JJI:I- g:!O:J
•: f I

: 11']

.,-.

~~- ·~'i.

, •

lloil Qtd U.S.
'S•I-.er Co •ns,

11 • ~

.·.,

.,. ,• .\.

c~m

Shoe,
S.aUipo tis.

"' '"~-

DIETTTIANIOIET TECH
Ple.a 5011nl Hill M•nor, A. 201 -Bitd
Nursing F&lt;1cllity In Piketon, Ot1iD
Has A Futl·l •ma Oppor1unlly
Awa ilaba. For A Oi•titan/Oiel
Tach. Th1s Is A. CHnlcsl PosiUon
Wltrt L.ittlti Or No Supervisory
Duties. PIINsant Slabl• Statf TD
Prcwid• SuPPQft!Tralning. For
lmm.diete ton.lderaHon, C.ll
Mr Und_,.n At 1-614-289-2394.
EOE.

nt Services
· · e c Wanted
·: :·1 • &gt;-:.; ,..•u•r&lt;,f Ohon•

· 5

1 ~C0- 255-

.,,.. , .. ';• 'I

;

1."

•

~

_ '""

.;

'3\l

'NV

... ';

------

tor
tt·:n • • l akm
~·'

·-;- 1• · ,.

i•

Et -

1 ' • ~ u No

" .;:•&gt;f

·1 1

Do 'fOU want to work • tew
hours •ch
and make
SlOO. or morw?? Pic k your own
11m• . 9.00AM -1:00PM 01' 5:00PM
· 9:00 PM. It t,is Is rou and you
l'tav• a JHiasant perSONIIity and
•ant to WCifk In my oftk:e with
all'wr ~Mnt pMSOrllllhi. .,
call m• at 304-67~934 fof mora
i ntorm.~~lion. E.O.E. MIF.

••k

1- 2 days

,,.ltll'q D• ut•t• an
~p1tal.

l.tiW l

t· •• ; ;
1" •

'* -·;~

Ntg iSIIIriCI/
• ~~ tl-1•'- 'S.ir·••e.s IC
· .f: : !-1'1'i .:o•.r month
~of

. . . . ~. -- J

•• ~ ~n~ •c • s

·-·-..,·:•'.11. --.~~u t W'l
'''":i:_ •••'!. Vlotoloc ;lr l
· ,, 1 -:&lt;dr'·, com,

,;

·,:

Dog S.le Pwaon Full-lima.
Orasa Code : Shorts, ApproK

Hot

•n c llJ d l

-·~,

:·•" , ,., 1

Wkly. Aft9. Maybe .. ore,
614-367-0689.
2~--3 00

'iulllng

'o r 1.. dk1n
~·- ar'l"Oacy
. rv. ~g,j 3 1nflf"·

!·~· • •. i'&gt;

·~ 4

-

'·

:r::ri-JCI

'i

:•: ·r :I Von ;o '"1 l(;)rm .

I'

' ,

;

' OH·ap¥

.:-•.1'&lt;-t'i

~.

Wiln
:·_1 : ll , c:o

.:;o, ~l'l

• • --1

,,

-

I

.
~·

:.~tn eral

. ,.... ... ,." 15-24

',,,.

-·

~.~ ,. ,.

•-

1y 15,

lot

!!'

·''"·!I
·~

.. :

pad•-

1 ··' "".Jnl
·.:r~."

~

•

b.oo ..

•

82!'§

"

-

To

-, o""l;;l• )f'

'·'

i.

~ ~·.o. J I\Q n
• •.1
.;J ;~In;ml

'-ol·ll'

•

_·• :r-. :; 1'1itro ~

-" i..ro ~ ~~~

.''.. •

•

'

S.nd

·o ; - : •\CTS

~.,

-

_,

l

:w&gt;J•I Otuo

;

~' ;

.1. •w ~. •' ~ ~:'u
= •ti"&gt;JIIIS

.- .
-,-,

;.; -

~· ; .1 -~~7.

~eH

;,. •· ":.- ,..

~-

·· · ··~

·:..:

.1..

ll

"'

-;

,...

I •
~ot~··

·

.''"&gt;J i
·~

'" •

!d'f"' I

• '.( ':1'12 ·

,.,

,·; ::u

l;"'.,~ ·fr"'l•·
·~r

~~'~ •r•ey

-·1-1 ;

,·•.

....,....

- ·

W~~o~~~ k

~.,··l'

,.;;,.u,

H&gt;t:rt5

~ ... .. :.
f ~-~!;-jol":
~ 11 ftOIW ii · . ;~Ill

·-e -"

~

"'-'

~

~

":"!

••

-

:,~;

Ml~~

;:

.

~ ... ··~·· f l,~:-1•

...... , '!

'l':JI ~,!~" i•

-..

.~~

W l/ 25~ .

Mac hanic Must Hava Own Hand
Tools . Must Hn• E•p.rienca.
C.all Arter 1 P.M. Thursd&lt;~y, 614·
-146-(1736.

'Avon· Ill areu lha sky Is lha
li mit wiln new Hming atruchn.
1~1J92-6356 .

Patient SM\1'~ Assistant. Appro:~nmately 20-2:5 Houra. Par
WMit , MuM Be Enwg.tic And
Abte To Wortt FlaxiiH Schedu~
lnchJdlng Day, Ev1ning And
S. turday Hotlrs. IMdle.al Offlu
E.lperienc. Helpful; Will Train
Malur'll, R"panslb'a Person
WM Ia Senslttva To Bk1tt Control And Reproduetlva HMtlh
Needs Ot Clients. MUit S. Will
Organized:
Aceura.te
Whh
Figures And Record KMping;
Hn• Superior Communication
S.ill• . Must Be Abla To Work
Under Guid-'lnee Wllh Minimal
Su.,.,....ision. RequlrM Rellabl•
Transpcr1alion, Ability To Work
In Ue,gs , Gallla, Lawr111ca
Counllas And Olher Situ If
NHdad. Ti~ And Out 01
Cou nty Trnel Plld. Star1 $5 . ~0.
Sand
Resume
And
Two
E.mplo¥ment Refwencn To
Pl anned
Partnthood
Of
5autn.tst ONo, 3Sifi Richland
Avanue , Alt.ns , Ohio .t5701 By
Apnl 30, 1992, E~SP.
Par90n To Work In Hardwara
Stor'll As ClarfA_ .Apply CLA Box
112, c/o Giilhpohs dally Tribuna,
825 Ti'l ird Avanue , Gallipol is,
Of'no 4S6J1 .

o

(

~)c
:il'l lps

.. ~.

:

, ....

t ..... 1

?.JI" J"UIS

- I "' I "

f •.: ., .., - .~.,.l, .,
!. 1~ ··~ - ,.:

~

8 111 ·

1 •

f ' ' :wtl

~ J:O.;t•:

Leg;;at S.Cretsry, need to hiYI
ba:m computer akills, typing,
t;;ake dkt;;at ion, aend rwsuma to
Bo• C-21, c;;ara Poinl Ptaasanl
R~i stw, 200 Main St, Pt . PH ,

! ~. l( •j ..:~&lt;"l pular

- 1-o

Someone To Build Wovan Wire
Fanu 614· 388-8572 Aner 6p.m.

:r:,; i16--

,.1m:

14

£ ,,,, .r 1: to·, : I• ·:,,c ~·· -.... ~r::r
1'.tn ; 1 ~.,,s.·;
.,,.,' 11 ~ dll in
' r·J ;•-1 .J•'-'' 1'1 •
,; r ~ Tol~'l
il*'' ,.,..,, ~-~ ·, ,_.,. ;~: ~wr'\r.l' CJI1
,jl! ol-t.-~.

••

::;l:

·· "•

' :! 1.1

'.•1

0 •11

' ,J

'hi•-

ng r

.,.,

'·
"

..

~-

;d'

;-.~- ~

.

1

. ..

: "1 ~·-:·

l

~•.,

Pl.-5:•c OrlJms 30 Gal &amp; 5(l G~l
S3 00 And S6 00 614.J67-7802

:,

"1 •. ,., •

-, •·

; I 11•10:

I

'~11•:

.,/,

j t7 Miscellaneous

j: . . .

-... : ' •. ~

., _ 1 •

• .,. ,

I\I&lt;Jr1rl
.,

,.,

1. 1

nl l'd

18

; : .. o •W CO!t'l

• :L'•

-.;

Business
Training

R• lnt in
Now 1!!Southau1•rn
Bus•nass Calleqa , Spring Valley
Pla.u c.u Todar, 6l4-446-4Jti7r'
Raq1 sterallon 19(}..()5..12748

\fOil ·

: •I

:0

·,, .,r&lt;J•ICt!o

'" ' .....

- •

Wanted to Do

Will Eb bys1t In Wy Hom• Rod-:-..til l ney Ann Rata,.ncaa AvaUabla
, Cilll li14-24S.$8117

-

21

1

Business
Opportunity

Acret,

a.. uu~

pay nth.

31 Homes lor Sale
2021 M~rquette Ave, 5 yrs old,
all brick m~lntenance Irs•
home, • bedrooms, amall living
room, dlnlngroomltamlly room
comblnallon, kltchan, utility
room, Ill one 111'4'.t, cove..-d
j)IUO In back, privacy e.nca,
garage, 1t'lown by- appolntmanl
only '30•-t175-t238.
3 a.droom Horne On 1 Acra Will
Con1lder Land Conlract Call
614-256--1526.
bedroom
home,
largt~
blthfutlllty room, vinyl aiding &amp;
windows, new gu tum.ca,
larg~~ tront porch, back porch,
approx acr11 lot on R1. 62 aoulh.
Askl ng p~lc• $20,000. 304-6757M7aher 5:00PM.

3

A..frame CA!bin 16'x37' · Martinton. WV Williams GrMbriar
River Nearby; MonongahaU.a N.aHonal Forest ; N1111 To Handay
Publk. Hunting Arwe; Grut
Hunting, Fi1hlng (Turttey, o..r,
Bur) "od•m Cabin Fm &amp;-10:
Bu.utiful Mountain S•nlng,
tli,900. 614-31'9·2M.
Flatwood Aru, Pomeroy, large
Coun!'
l Carpeting.
Home, New Kttchan
Bath,
Low $30's:
61~23511 .

For sate b(, owner, In HandeBOn
abova ral road trackt· 7 room
~'louse, • Btdroomt &amp; bath, lol
stza 10()1100. Immediate po•
session. S17,000. llrm. Ca ll Helen
MayH. 304-67!.-4142.
Garage apartm.ant. Crab Creek
Rd. $11,500. 'l04·57'6-261S.
HouM And 2.2 Acttoa l.and : 3
Bedrooms, 2 Batt'ls, LIYing
Room, Dining Room, Khct'lln
And Den $46 ,000 . 614-JBB-3491.
Huntington, •uper loeatlon, nNr
city bus, atom, 1-64, or qull't
sttHt, 1 rooms, $1i,SOO. 304.895.-3091 or 304-675-2405 .

.; '1/.i

. I 'T

- •.

I

,,

'

,.

'.

WV

:Jm' ' ' 1• : 1 ,; tl"l e M
11
,.,.,.,It" Jn d
I -::.11: f ,f•; &lt;l
lll9r-

. ·":

·: ot

l•. •

l!l-1-fi TS.

~- 1

w ,_,n. ~n

:..,, •or ~·~ fo ,m
; , •,

;

'l

r.q

1'1

' 'i .

~ ""~ ~ '),~IG
-,

~~:-: 8 ~

l

"' • :;,. J:-o:::lung
_·.- '&gt;~u n1nq
•."' • :-.
.1. 'itn::ng
: •
• oorf ':•gn•l)l
· , ... , ·
A raam
~ • ,,
; . ·11"' rc daas
.
~ o~ 1•4&lt;1 •n Oublic
1 •t
-lb•ot
Ta
· _, - w:n l" ••• Tha
; "
l
"j''~''&lt;:j Or. . ot w··· "~
Wltrt
t,...,
~'•1•' ": I •l dl 1\f j PII'J:. , t• •
l ~~; ' -f' f. :"1-t 11n Th111
., - ... • ·.•l ' :•. -,,,., e-n Look1'1C: :
-1 ~~
1
h-:o9nr.1sive,
p.,~,,..,:-, ..... ,w.:
Cf't1o-S.:ts.d

Will Do Hous.c::leanlng In Gallipolia Araa . S4 . ~ Par Ho ur 614~
446--8406.

Will Do Ho uuk•plng Gilllla
Coun!Y And lmmsdi.at• Surrounding Aru 814 ·)~1734 Ask
For Debbie.
Wl11 take ca,. ot lklarty m.an Of
woman In your home, 23 yaars
.. pt~ r ianca , nt~fvwlcn , pliiH
call 61 4-!18~2115 uk for Flora
Woold Li ke To Babysit In My
Homa. Clou To Hill• And 1(.
M11rt. SM-446-1362.

-,,

IU 111

l\lrt~

::~

P'"Q&gt;tidtl

You

,,wra.1•:0. Sl•cP"rt And

L -·r

lll...,:!lflf .A$JIIft'otnce. Yo:u
ltll..rCI - """ ,bj).jllf1r.tt;ot Qt ThiS

1)-nout :&gt;~~.--.: r" 1.,.,~
111J !"' ,•. -l.,n•''' .;;:
:tmnlo·.

I

IJillll'-""'

~·.1

.1)4., ,o 111 ~·

:'li.C. ;

~);'

8~

R•ply.lm l.J n'!!"'U'·U,.--Jic;r
c. o
\ia;·•~ r ~ '] Bo1
l.~C'i'

!H I-2119-

3 bdnn. Doubts wldl In Racine,
nlca naighbott!ood, $300/mo.
ptua depoait, Includes wat•r,
NW&amp;gl, and truh, 614-HU-2217
4 Bedroom•, Unfumlthad, CHy
WaterL Patrtouc.dmus Ana.

1100 uopooh, S200 Monon. &amp;14371-21lt, Or 81ot-87'5-4014.

Fumlahed 3Br HouN, 1 Aoor,
S350 .UOIII11oo, Uppor Founh
AMnus, O.lllpolls, Reterwnees,
s.curtty o.po.tt. eu ua Ute
Att.r 7p.m.

Nk:o oltlcloncy colloge, unlquo
and buullful, lo4-67'S"-60•2
Onl Bedroom HooN Furnlshad, Dlposil And Raiwanca
Requlrwd. No Pat•. et4-4462S43.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 t.droom furnished mobile
home, air cond, C-1111 anytime
304·7n-S248.

2 BR mobile horM tor r'IIRI .
Ctote to town . 304-615-6783.

Mulberry Htt., Pomwoy, tpa·
cJoua 2 bdrm.. nome , 1g . Uvlng
room, closets, 2 tlrtplec: ...
dining
room ,
illtchen
wleabinMs, tull beth w/\&lt;anlty, 1
112 bath wf•ttower, down•talrs
CA., ga• hut, tinlst.d ba. .
msnl , private len•, near aanlor
elllzen•
hospitals~hurehH·
sci'lool, 614-992·)424 lor ep.
polntmant

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

768-!252.

44

21

Business
Opportunity

!NonCE!
OHIO VAllEY PUBUSHING CO
recomn.nd• thai you do bu&amp;inr.u wlti'l people you know, and
NOT to sand rn&amp;:JMY lhrCMJ91'1 the
~na i l until 'fOtl hava klvnttgatld
th • ottar_l_
ng.
::__ _ _ _ __
Tnll'n bualnea for ule or
ta.asa, Middleport, Ohio. 3041182-3 382.

Apartment
for Rent

1V2 room apt, unlumishad ,
Vi&lt;1rld St, Pt Pn, across strMt
from Cltlzertt Mini Bank, 614·
446·2200.
1bdrm_apt In Mlddl•port, waler,
aawaq•, tra$h pald, you pay
lllc1r!Gigaa, $15Dimo., 614-IMi-

614-1112·3013

304-67~162

Fumfshld Apartment 1 Bed·
room, Ulllitlaa Peld, S2601mo.
120 Fourth Av.nue, Gallipolis
Ohio, &amp;M-4-41-4416 AftiH' 7p .m.

Oion,

nar S.Cond
I Ph,...!.
O.llipolis.
$230.
Par Uonth;
u.posU
A•
qulr.ci. Call 614-446-4248, 614·

opoc11on. 304-17).!!840.

Tara TownhouM Apar1ments , 2
Bedrooma, 2 F!Oofw 11M Sq. Ft .

ow, Olopooao, a
IJUiil'- Pekl Except

1 on ~a~n., CA.

Uke new 1181 mobile home,
12&gt;60, _ , nicely lumlohod,
Homntaad A
BI'OUI. 304175-5540 Of 30
-2405.

'::l2

tMw 14 wkM onty UH. down no
p8yment after 5 YMI'I, * -755-

5885.

Elod;!.,, No Polo. $lOll . 114-307711!0.
Wedge Aph, 506 Bwdatla St,
Polnf PIMNnl:, no plll:l, 1 and 2
~rooms, 304-87&amp;-2072 en.r
5:00

45

Furnished
Rooms

Ropououod llobllo Homoo,
Grool SoiK11on, Slngloo, $500
Down And OoubiH
Roomt fof rtnt • -"Of month.
Down, WHI'I APPfO"d er.dlll 9tarti:Zat $120/mo. Gellla Hotet.

nooo

C.111-ID0-681-1'1't0.

Set..tt HomMMd 1192 14110 2
Or 3 Bedroom•. 2 Bath~P::nyf
Siding. Shingle Roof,
leO
Prkll: $18,1Q!li French City
liloblla Harnea. 814-44&amp;-1340.

614 1

9580.

~MfMng room1

wlttl cooking.
Alto 1raller spece. All hoc*-upa.
Cell 111..- 2:00 p.m., 304 ·77356!1, u . .on WY.

WHO'D EVER BE INTERE STED IN A

191M Chevy 4 Wheel Drive.

~I

Shon WAMI BIN,IO!i. 4 Spood,
... llfl, Alum WhNis. C.all 304675-~23, Or S'M-4411-400.

em

(I ' " 2

b~ '-'EA. lno;

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

PB, Hitch ,

Livestock

63

2 Door Refrlget'IIOf Frost Fru,
Har'4'e:sf Gold W.a $150 CU1 To
195; Retrigarator Whit•, Frost
FrM, Wat $150, CUI To $125;
Side By Side HarvMt Gold, Uke
Naw, Was: $255, Cut To $195; 30
Inch Elaclrlc Renge Wt'llte, Was
h25 Cut To $95; :Jo Inch Electric
Ran.g1, Avacado, Was $150, Cut
To S125i Wattt.r And Dryer Set
Was
a24S Cut To $'190;
Whirlpool Wuher And Dryer
Set. Hl!rvwt Gold, Wu S300 Cut
To 1245; G.E. Dryer Wa1 $125
CUI To $75; Hotpoh'lt Washar
Wu $'150 Cut To 195; Maytag
Dryer, While, Uke Naw, f150.
Skaggs A~lanc.e , 614-446-

DISH "

r - - - -- -

CoffM table with 2 melchlng
end leblas, 304-895-33HI.

APPLIANCES

l-i00-48U-349U.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
CompMCa nome furnishings .
Houra: M~Sat, U-5. 614-4-460322, 3 millS out Bulavllle Rd .
FrM Dellvtry.

loti bed, dr'll . . ., hutch, ladct.r,
Included, 304-675-Mlfi

Pl•atlc And Madal Culvtrl &amp;Inch
Thn.! 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Even1, Jackson, Ohio. 1-8()0.
537-9528.

Angus And Chi-An9ua Black
BuOaL RMaonabty PncH. Slate
Run r-•rms, Jackson, Ohio, 8W286-6395.

Sam Somarvute'1 Army Surplua,
.5 mllea E.aat 1·11 Ravenawood
by Sandyvllla Poet Ottlce. Wild
Tlri1y Seeson Soon, Hat full
rwnge ol slzet, Woodland Of
TrNb.ark Camllauge, army paltern ctothlng, small equipment,
rwntal surplus clot hing. Frl, s.t,
Sun Noon~ :OO PM. other clays,
hours 304·273-5655. Butlne•s
Imprinted
edwer11sing
specllltln up lo 25% discount.

AOHA Aeglster.d Bay Mate,
Good For ._H, Saddlt Also
Available. 614-682-6660.

washtrldry-er,
twin
stroller, large child a twlngHI,
814·1192·2518 aner 5pm

Tandy color co~., 3, printer,
recorder, .and a~h• tllrss, ••
king $200, 814-9112-571'0, ask tor
Brtilda
Turkey gun, n.aw 12 0. Winch. .
ter pump 30" barrel!, 3" thiUt,
$250. 304-87~132 .

Merllat lam~ YNrling Ewn
YNrllng R•m R•ady For Showl
Phont: 114-446--1158.
Polled Het11ford Bulls 1·3 Yrs.
Otd. Top Bloodllnee. Taylor &amp;
TaykM' 514--643-2285.
Slmmenl:al Buill. 1JNr old snd
2 par okil. 304-112-3295 Danny
Oawhurwt or 304-882-2242.
Wanled To LN•: Tot.cco BaM
In Meigs County, 61.-388-9252
pt.... u ..... w.... ga.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Approx. lOO balM of good
mixed hay tor ..... 114..U85-)593

Transportation

WHrTE'S METAL DETECTORS

Ron Alllaon, 1210 Sleond
Avenue, O.Uipolla, Ohio, 614446-4336 .

Autos lor Sale

71

PfCKENS FURNITURE
NawAJHd
Household fumlthlng . 1!2 mi.
Jerricho Rei . Pt ptMsant , WV,
call 304-675-1450.

Building
Supplies

Ceiabrtty.
2.8l-FI!OD.
~- $2,400. 814-367-0122 alllf 5 :00PM.

Block, brk:k, ..,., pipes, wlndOWI, llnllls, etc. Claude Winters, Rio Granda, OH Call 614245-8121.

1161 Mustang $3,500. 1931 Chev
$850. 1985 Hond• Sh.adow
700cc, 2,400 ml, $2,000. 304-fl75l960.

Side by aldt raftlg..-.tor and
dishwasher, J04-675--SI62.

56

Pels lor Sale

11l79 Ct. valle llsllbu, 56,000 actuel Ml, $1000, 1980 AMC Con·
cord, $200, 61··992-5848

SWAIN
AUCTlON I FURNITURE. 62
OIIYa St., Gallipolis. N.-w &amp; UMCI
tumltwa, hNtan. Wncam &amp;
Work boola. 814-44fi..l158.
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!
614-446-l158
LIVING ROOM : Sofe And Chair
$171 And Up; Cotf• And End
T.a~.. $7'9 And Up: Swivel
Rocke,.. $79
BEDROOM: Bunk Bads S99
{2•6); 4 Drawer Chea1 ot
brnNI"'I 544.95; Twin Manrasa
S99 S.t .
DIN ETIES Wood Bar Stoola
$'14 95j2ti ") T1bl• And 4 Padd.c:!
Chairs $129.
OPEN : 7 Dayal WMk, 8 A.M. • 6
P U_Sunday 12 Noon· 5 P.M.
RL 141 4 M1ln ott Rt . 7 In C.ntanarv .

52 Sporting Goods
GUN SHOWAprti 25-26, Char*ton Civic Canter, S.at. 9:00-5 :00
$\ln . 9 :00...AI :OO. Aduns $3 . In formation 700·216-1835.

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine AnliqUIIt,
1124 E. Main S!ra.C , Pomeroy.
Hou,.. : M.T.W. 10 :00 a.m. lo 6:00
p.m .. ~nday 1 :00 to 6:00 p.m.
614-992-2526.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

o,...,

1 Black &amp; Gold Prom
Slu 11, Worn Once, $50. 614·
441-0009.

- - - -- -

12 HP Gravaly Riding Mower, 50
Inch Mowar Deck . 614-446-2165
Alter6PM .
2 power mowert, runs good,
$15aa., 614-992-6929 after 4pm
21!2 ton eenltal A/C , 111 ol twin
bedt, 614·992-.5914
Air Conditioner For S11 le, 5,DOO
STU. 614-.t41-1021.

Cou ch And leather Chair, Whh
Foot Stool _$250. 61.-.t46-3989.
Easy low ear dolly, brand M¥111,
uHd 1 lima, lin loading, strapa,
NSO. et4 - ~2 - J802
For Sel• old plano, ssklng l1SO;
alactrk stove, StOO; other
hou111hold Item., 614·H2-2758
Of 614--596·t017
Fou- (4~ aluminum wt.•ls oH •
lUI Relly Sport C.m•ro, axc .
cond .• $200,614-9112-6$05
FREE INSTAllATION
SWIUMINO POOlS
Onfy $fi2.g1fMo. • For 12 Months.
19d1x4 Poot lneludtt Filler,
Laddera,
Huge
Deck Etc.
rBased On S.lllng Price Of
$efl9. S'1·4.45 APR , Total Oalerrsd
Prk:e: $754.92) Don'1 Bell•"• H?
C.all BPI
1-800-548-1923
a.nnit Nutrition
Products
fNturtng Amino Acid Body
Building, ""'Dht ton and tat
burMr tormuru. Available ••·
cluslvaly al Rltt Aid Phlirmacy.
The sat• war to dt.t.

I.F.C Flbofvl.lu
All
llberlilau suepllea &amp;
m•larlais wholnatl Mon-Frl,
eam-5pm, 61._14~2600, Racine

.........

;

'i

~ ..-.__.__

CD WUd

'

55

Groom .and SupJJ'y ~P14
Groornlr.o. All brMde, ll:ylea.
lams PM Food Dealer. JuNe
Webb. Call 614-4-46-0231.
4 Rabbit•, 10 CAl g .. , Faede,..,
And W1ter 9otUH. 614-l88-fl11.
A.K.C. puppiM, ChiniH Pugs
and moat all br'lleds ara avail·
abla, 304-576-2207.
AKC Boston Terrier PuppiH, 1
Full Mask Female . Call 614-lM6251.
AKC Cocker Spanlal puppl ... 2
mell, 1 femala, black, $100, 114·

667-1au
AKC Miniature Pomsranbu,.,
$200. 614-661--1227.

=·

446~627.

11180 Mustang, 4 eyl, etuo, runt
good cond , good llrn,
. 36'4-675-~.

1981 Pontiac T-1000, hp., naw.
clutch anarnbly, 8! mod•l ~yl
motor, runs &amp; looks good, 1650,

814-9V2-lll21
1181 Subaru 4dr Wsgon, 4WD.
Good Condition, $1,500.
Take Gun1 On Trade. 614·J88-.
1934 benlngs .

••pd,

Oalmatlons For Sale, 614-446·
175&amp;.

1984 Dodge ArtH, • door, blaek,
AMIFM, c. . .n,, 4 cyl, auto,
614-9112- n36, ewenlnfl

Fish Tank, 2413 J.ackaon Ave.
~oint PIM.. nt, 304-67S-2063,
full lin• TropiCIII llshl birds,
emailanlmalt and suppl H .

11184 La BanN'!, candy machinat,
1 pop m.chlne, 3.5 n. Sth
whaalar, 304-Tn-56!11

AKC Doberman Tall
Five
Docked, Daw Cl•w Removed.
Wormed. 614-2511-1320.

11&amp;4 PontlK St.tlon Wagon ,
Full Size, PS, PB, PW, 3 S..ts,
..._ Battery, Nsw Brske S)'ll1em
Good Tlr•. $1.200. 81•-e.cl-1822

PURE BRED SIBERIAN HUSKIES- 1 maa., 2 t.ma•. blua
ey .. , whhe wlmask, longt'lelred, auper nke, $100..., &amp;..t992-6144 alter &amp;pm

1915 Cam•ro. lollded. $3200.
1981 Dodge Aim, PS, Au1o.
$2100. 1887 Horizon, AC. $1400.

Regl&amp;tarH 3yr. old m•l•,
Blchon Frlaa, et•-"N2-27BII
Rsgl&amp;tered AKC Beagle pupt,
1!2blue tick, par'llnts good tlunlers, 614 -.593-1380 ev•nlngs
Shih l'l:u PuJIPI•s AKC Rag .
Flrt1 Shots. a .. ullful loving
Pets, $200 . 614-643-2285.
Tor1cMta •hell Hlm•l•yan Cal.
304-6 7S-e 'l1 II.
Wt\at 's eo diH~trwnl abou1 tha
Happy J.ack 3-X Ilea collu? It
worb!l Conlalns NO synlhellc
pyrethroldt. For dogs &amp; C-llltl

SOlJTHERN STATES :104-&lt;17&gt;2780.

S7

Musical
Instruments

Glbaon Eplphone guilsr wlli'l
PeaY•Y .amp (• mo old) $:100.
304-675-7158 bslw.en 5:1»-7:00

PM.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock

Motorcycles

YOti'Re: Af "-

00,

DiffiC()(.T AI£, I Iii\ OOf'

f)I.Y OR~~

~

--- -----,---;--:-::=-:-

304-675-2440.

1985 Fotd LTD, Y-tl, ··ulomallc,
Runt Good, Body 060d Shapa.
63,000 Actual uu .., $1,200 Or
Tredtl. 814-4-46-1011.
1985 rHn::UI)' Grand Marquis,
Tilt WhHI, PS , PI, Pow11
ta,
Windows,
CUitom
Power
w~.... 61.........7215.

s..

1M&amp; Doclga Art., IUIO. , AJC,
cruise, Michelin tlrM, v..-y
clean, books tor $2400, ..u tOJ
$1500, 080, 114-112~478 ll'lln-

lngo
1i81 Otd• Flrtnu., ! IIP&lt;Md. air,
.am/ fm .tareo1_tilt whMt, 6W·
912-6529 catlaner 5pm
1817 Ptyrnouth Hcwlzon. AT, PS,
AC. 1UI7 ChrnoMt 9·10 pickup.
Chrysl« Cordobo, AT. ,.._
57&gt;-1851.

om

1987 Pontiac: Flreblrdil Y·16, T·
Top, 53,000 mll•l A -FM ca•
aatt, $5,500. lM-!!17!-2311 after
6:00 PY.
1987 Tr1nWm tHsck on black,
350 auto 00 GTA whMit,
&amp;2,000 miles,
Df trade.
614-446-038'1 after 5 P.M.

U,600

tl88 Chevy, Ceiabrlty, k)aded,
$2,800. or' best otter, 304--6755332 aor 614-if2·3488.

Soeroo.

)lOW
ON

Tiff

l

/

Winter Park, Fla. (T)

'·

fffi-P.

(2001
()) Q Ill II MOVIE'
Columbo and the Murd6r of
a Rock Sllr (2,00) Sleroo. Q
IIl Creative Splrll S10reo

SOMEONE'~

Wanl:ad: Small HP Outbolrd
Motor Under 10 HP. 614~56-1528.

WHO MIGHT

COMING IN CUQ. DIRECTIOfo,l
~WER TNI\T VERY
QUESTION!
-~

\Zl
i liD

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

Budjal Tranamlnlona, IJMd &amp;
rebu h, "'artlng It 1911; fron4
wheel drlw atartlng at $149.00
5M·245-56n, 614·1112-t213.

crllll Tho Slmpoono Otto

moves in with the S impsons :
a Michael Jackson film
lollows . Stereo. C

Cheyenne's Truek Auto, Rl. 50
McArtt'lur, Ohio. New PmNum
Quality
Replacemenl Crntl
P1rts AI WhDIH•Ie Prices. No
Hutle R~uma. F,.. o.fi.,.,.
To ArN And Route Body Shopa.
Call For o.tails. 1-I00-2S:t--1358.

0

a PrtmaNowa Q

all Thal'o My Do1i St8'oo.

8'05 (lJ MOVIE: Right 10 Kill?

EEKAND MEEK
- -.....--,

(2 ·00)

IUHAT HA~D
UJI111 -mAl G...h' 'tCUV£
E£[J\J ')[.£ lffi '7

1!J75 Cot~chman $11'1 Wheel, 26'
C•mper, Good Condition, CtNn
C.rpated, And Alr Condhlonlng.
614-446-2405.

1Hf. Mflf.IC ~1\ID

IIJD

5LOC:f{f

Cf HAW

(R) Sleroo. Q

388-81\5.

Stereo

Services

considers rekindling a
relationsh•p with an old

flame . Soeroo. Q
Morse

Home
Improvements

CD IIl Myoteryl

s uspects a car dealer ol the
stabbings ol two women . (PI

Barntn Homa tmpro..-.rnenta.
Addltlona , Garsgu, Painting
Roollng .
ExpertMlCSG'
Rusonabfe . 614-44e-8561, e~
446-43t6.

~l~ Slntol Slorleo

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROPI NE:\IER TH()(J6HT
THAT60ME:DAY

HI ,
J ONATHAN .'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lll141me guarsn'"- local! ref. .ncH tumltt'lld
Fr. eat lm.atn. ~tl col ltd , :
814-237-0488, day or night.
Roger11 Ba11ment Waterp-~
ftng.

crlllll Bovet1y Hlllo, 90210

I 'D 8EO ON A FIR5TNAME MSI5 WITI-l A
EiARBA6E ow_

The kids try everythmg they
can to meet the group Color

Me Bedd Ste•eo .

0

(2 ,00)

I ,. ,

Bathroom•. Kitchens, Roofing,
Elsctrieal
Siding.
Me~,
Drywall, Fr11mlng Room A~
clhions, Plumbing, EII*fancld;
Fru EltlmatH! 304-fts-24-40.

lt'Tf1

Heavywe•ght bout: Tommy
Morrison (29-1, 25 KOs) YS .
Kimmuel Odum (13-8. 11
KOsi. 10 rounds, from
Ledy8'd , Conn. (L)

lb"1
'

a L.lrry King Uvel
Qll Fethei' Dowling My1teriet
Soe'oo Q
9:30 (l) D illl Wingo B'ian

'

BARNEY
HAVE YOU GOT
A FROG IN
THAT SACK,
JU GHA lO ?

J .W. Con"'ructlon. Room Ad·
dltlons, Aoofl, Dacka, Skllng
And All Typea 01 Erterlor And
lnlerlor Palnttna. Wlit Give Lft
LlcenM Sid. 61{.24!-!5071,

NOPE-- FROGS
DON'T SCARE
TH' TEACHER
NO MORE u

I
TURNED OVER A
NEW LEAF-BES IDE S--

Stereo.

CD Adv

turoo
Hood
(!) Under Flr.

till 8D \1lJII

Ohio Valley Wattrprooflng. 1114
Yllind St, Polrw P\aaent, WV
25550, 304-&amp;~3CHII. Fr.. ...
IIIMIH.

Stereo ..

a

ASTRO-GRAPH

wv

Y1RGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Even though

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Usually.

you might not effectively use what you
have at your disposal today. It look s like
you'll still be abkt to achiEWe your obiec·
tlves , thanks to Lady Luck

when someone treats you thoughtfully.
you reciprocate In an even more gener ous manner. However. this noble quality
mlgt'lt not be operative loday.

LIBRA (s.pt. 23-0cl. 23) There is a defInite line of demarcation loday between

ARIES (Mon:h 21·Apri119j Conlinue Oo

Gehl M plndtr mlur. 304-213-

4215.

N:IO.

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

FCH' A Good CINn UINd Car:
Shop Kenny't Auto Cent..-, Up-

por Rlvor Rood, O.lllpollo, 114-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•46-0:IM.

441.ff71.

'Your

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

'Birthday

Carter'• Pturnb4"'il
Fourth and PIM

Golllpollo, Olllo
114-441-1688

April 24, 11192
Advancement in your chosen field of
endeaYor is a strong possibility In the
year ahead . Your road to the top might
be rather bu"mpy, but you can make it.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
commettlll

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) In you• ef-

wlrtng, new aervlcs or ,_Irs.

forts to fullill your ambitious objectives
today, don't attempt to take credH for
things you didn't do . These are the lac·
tics ol a second-rater, not someone
wno evokes respect . Get a Jump on life
by understanding the influences governing you In the year ahead . Send lor

ll. .ter Uc.ntld elset,.clan.
Aidlnour EJactrical, WVD0030e
*-t175-1781.
•

117

Upholstery

Marll'a Auto S.IM, lllddleport ,

Olllo. All YOII~Ioo Oll&lt;&gt;roUGn~
mKhankally checked,
""~'" $3000 I unclor.

many

mini-quiz-book wtll Improve your
game as long as you spend t1me wor~ ­
tng out the answers _ Don't expect to
get them all right But If you study lhe
solutiOns of the ones you get wrong,
you will learn how an expert analyzes

Openong lead • 9

a deal
Cover t he West and South hands.
Agamst four s pades . your partner
le ads the heart nine t hre-e , king , 10
Plan the defense
North's first two bids, a strong, arti ficial and for c mg two cl ubs . followed
by two no-trump. showed a balanced

ruff m T't'lurn The sp.aoe ace wiU be
your fourth tnck
Whatos the snag' How does partrror
know you have a SU1gle4011 dub ra~
than a doubletoo' U you have 1...,
clubs. be must duck the finl niUIId to

ret.atn rommunicatioa

23 to 24 pomts

The ans""r is 10 casb tbe spade By goving up !rump cmlrol, you

West cannot have a smglcton heart.
because that would g1ve South four
hearts . With 5-4 tn thr majors. he
would have used Slayman mstcad of
b1dding three s pades Anyway , you
must assume that West has the club
ace, smt-e the contract w11l surely
make 1f South has that card
This makes thmgs too easy Yoo
\('ad a c lub to West's ace and get a rlub

hr.;!.

leave your paroner in oo doubt lllal
you have a singleloo club, not a
doubletoo.

When delendrn&amp;. olways lrJ to ..,_
any problems pu,_ wiU
haY&lt;. and lry 1o tux! a way 1o belp lllm
make the correct two~cy,Y.,
~ -•
©- . ........ &amp;11
---ticipate

The World Almanac® Crossword PunJe
ACROSS

ring event•
40 Make
precious
42 Mrs. Peron
45- Kennedr
46- alai
49 Deck hand
s 1 Restricts
53 Aclrtll -

1 Oak nuts

7 List of posaible jurors
13 Northern
14 &amp;afore this

Uma
15 Nova Scotia
16 Horse'• gear
11 Palm fiber
18 Enumeralt5
20 Affirmatlvt
reply
21 Freedom of
8CCIII
23 Excavalld
27 Roll of meal
31 E plurlbua 32 Move quickly
33 Colonnade
34 Fodder tower
35 Thou in
office
36 Ia not wtU
37 Stopping
39 Set ol recur -

S6gnoret
~

Crutur1
55 Followed
56 Set on fire

DOWN
1 Blind II 2 Actren
Imogene3 By moutn
4 Crlm1on
5 Fa1tened
6 Killed
7 Church
rooms
8 Rubs out

I Aclor Spartlo
10- 500rlt4
11 Aclor'o port
12 Ranta' m11tn
11 Hoving conlo
22 School

'fl_

ol Robin

Human Factor

,I

World NoWI

all 700 Club Wl1h Pol

lions that have a dtrect elfe c t on yo ur
financial posit ion shouldn 'l be lreated
casually today Indifference o n your behall could be costly
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19) In order
to succeed today, you must be tota lly
committed to ach1eving your objecttves
If you act otherwise. you're not likely to
be even numbered among the front runners .

86 8-10 4x4. low mil•• - 304-&amp;TS-

Pas;

crll ll Hunter Q
!21 Teua Conriection Sterao

Ron's TV Sarvlce, tpeclallzinQ
In Zenith also MrVIclng motl
oUwr tnnds. HouN callt, atao
some appU.anoe ~rt.
304-578~:198 Ohio 61-k46-24S.

or

Pass

Thos

iGollancz, $8 9;, 212-866-;860)

CIJ Ill ~ Prtme nmo Uve

JE1

Rnldenll.al

Norlb

Soeroo. Q

CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jon. 19)

Holl.lnd 111 hayblnd. Holl.lnd lltl lltyblnd, Holl.and Super 117 kqge haMst•.

Vulnerable. Ne1tber

D&lt;aler

By Pbi11ip Alder

Clemmons tries to convict a
wealthy businessman.

Aeration M~ora, rapalr.ci. Naw
I r•buln mOion ln alack, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OM. 1-000Sll-0528.

84

t93
410642

(!) Newt

Will build paUo covwa, dstilt.
.cr.-ned rooms, pul up vinyl
lllding or treller skh11"9. &amp;14PU, 12,600. 2.5.ai52.

1881 Z.28, btut, a~oL6.7, ep~M:I•I
order $19,300. new. Hart opportunH,, must eell S13,300. ~ 875-2332.

A thoughtful play
helps partner

money. SWoo Q
10:00 (l) D tl3l L.A. Low

OL' FAT WOOLLY
WORM!!

possibility that a disagreement might
arise today between you and a close
fri e nd witt! whom you lrequenUy do
business. Don ' t let It jeopardize yo ur
relationship.
LEO tJuly 23-Aug. 22) In situat1ons that
directly affect your resources. think lor
yourself today. Don't rely on the opin ions ol others. You're the o ne wi'IO will
have the beat handle on things

10 Pul•l'rpo Comblno,

SOUTH
.Q98 73
• J 10

moonlights as a bank
s ecurity guard to earn BKira

AN ' FOUND HER A BIG

CANCER (Juno 21·Ju1y 22) The,e ·s a

Good Condblon, $0110.
T•ytar Farm e14 11'-2281.

Steroo

ID Top Rank Boxing

1NclfP

Curtis liome lmproYIIfiM'nls:
YNrt Experience On O+der &amp;
tWwar HarMs. Room Addillona,
Foundaolon W""-, Roofing,
KHct.M And B.llht. Ff'M E•
llmlllll Aaferenc•, No Job
Too 81g Or Smalll 814-361-451&amp;.

Oavtt
Sew-VIC
Service,
Georgn C'"k Rd. Partt, supplin, pickup, and delivery. 814-

t:;l

MOVIE: The Gaunllet iRJ

at Naahvllle Now
I ' '

tJ 1054

II, Again

9:00(l)IJ tl3l Choero Rebecca

l\la7 Ooclgo

IH -

Q

r:D You Aaked for

814-:zM--1251 .

v..y

Soeroo .

Clltl Orexell
receives e large amount ol
money, and the IRS collects

197'i Tropic ana Trnel Trailer V

19110 Blr.tta, Red . 3.1 tnglne.
Air, CC, TW, ArniFitl CasMtte
Surwool. 1981 Tran• Am· while,
T-top, a.o qln.. L.ar.ded. eau
304-e'fS.6Ht

Freddie thinll.s Hillman·s h1p
rapper is bad news for Gina .

(]] tD Ori ..ll't

UUtny Bldg. Spacial : 30'•40"19',

FARII TRACTOR SUPPLY: Ohio
Valtey Stnnc. C.nler. Buy, Sell,
Trtdll. 614-25&amp;-6040.

t131 DIHerenl World

8:30 (l) 1J

Ft. With Roof Air, $3,800. &amp;14-

82

Ylrote t:;l

Muntor, Sho

12!1 Crook an&lt;l ChaM

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

11189 C.ebrily Eura.port, Air
Conditioning, CrulM Control,
511,000 Mil .., New Tlrd. S6,200
&amp;1....a-201.5.

1910 e.r.na GT, la.ded, low
mil•ge, Ia-. over peyrner~ts,
814-112-7147

t131111 Top Copa New

York police capture a rap1st .
cops target a fenci~
operation . Stereo . 1.,1

2000.

1-t!'.S' Slfdlng Door, 1-3' Walk
Door, Palnt•cf 91MI Skflng &amp;
Roofing. $!190. Iron HorM
Bldl'l. f~S-2·1045

a Son

Stereo.
I]) MOVI : Murphy'o L.lw !AI

258-6070.

+5

Your Card Play 4" by Hugh Kelsey

8:00 (l) 11 :fJCooby Show

ALLEYOOP

+A 9 7 3

Todav's hand ts another from ·rest

Crooollre

7: 35il) Sanford

.---------------

BOATERS
Gulnns Mercury Marine Ssntlce
Mercury, Mariner, Mercn.d~
•fM!Ciallat. Mercury cer1Hied.
Mobile, W• come to you. 614-

Sbr Stereo

1D LP8T Bowling From

Pl-fAJf

• A 4 :Z:
.K7542

.9 I;
tQ81 61

c

~II

tit Be 1

a

EAST

••

II Can Be Toia

IJlD
i liD Family
Wnoel of Fortuna Q
Feud

TH.AN/Cfl

w=

PHILLIP
ALDER

()) Q Errterlllnmonl Tonight
Ste&lt;oo . Q
Married... Wl1h Chlldntn

VfTA'f-ff.

BOATERS
J .S. Martneo Servk:e, Serving All
Your Boating Needs, P1r1a, AI;.
c"sorlea, Two Cyc._ ()jJ And
Service. 614·256-6160.

S.pllc Tank Pumping SIO, O..lla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
J.ckson , OH 1-800--537..U521.

~

+KQJ ;

7:30(1)8 tl3l J_.ntyl
(])Now

t-Zl-12

+KJIO ;

•AQl
tAK

a

1989 11ft ~ontoon , 199'1 60ttp..
EYinrude molm, full canvat
cover, ll•h finder, $7400, 114H2-6641 day1, 614--1112-2621
av.nings

NORTH

BRIDGE

!;I

ID SporiiContar
Money11ne
all Tho WaHono
7:05 (l) Addams Family

1889 Dodge Shadow ES, Air,
PS/1'8, Elec: . Wlndowt, 38,000
MIIM, Good Condition, $4,700;

BN Ford lf'Ktor, good rubber &amp;
runt good, 4ft lfruah Hog, set
14" turning plowa. en cloubla
dlac: , cutllvaiOf, 6ft boom pole,
loy .... plow, lip "'"~*·
$3,500. call •v~nlngs 3tN-382·

00

0 MacGywar t:;1

1885 Ct'teckmate boat , 20ft, 235
Johnson OB, Raker S .S. prop,
custom haul Uala.r, $7,800. )()4.
67$-3438.

1N8 Ford Eacc:wt Gl , Ssp., aun~
roof, exc. cond., $3000, 304-882·

1714

t131 Whoel ol Fortune

crJIID Sllr Trek: Tho liieJ1
Generation C
liZ Ill Enlertiolnmont Tonight

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You r -nt u
tl1on to day cou ld have as mu c h or m o re
validity than the log1cal as sumpllan s ot
an associate operat ing lrom a s oph1 S!1 cated
database
Don 't
diSCount
hunches.

19!1 John 0..... Model B, Allis
Chalmara, H.o . 8 O:W~ Hyatar
-21St.
Ellldrk: Forit lift. 81

7:00 lijiJ

CIJ m Cendkl Cemenr
QIJ liD CUINfll Alhllr C

Taurus · Astro-Graph pred1 CIIOil S tod ay
by mailing $1 .25 plus a long, salt-ad dressed, stamped envelope to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper. P _Q _ Bo)(
9 ,428. C leveland, OH 4410 1-3428 . Be
sure to state your zodiac sign
QEMINI (tilly 21.June 20) Size up situ ations realistically. but . il 1! 1sn '1 lhe
case, don't consider yourselt the und e rdog . Your greatest enemy today IS neg - ·
alive th ink ing

61 Fann Equipment

the chock le qUOied
by l dlm ~ •n the m•ISI;ng WOlds
you de-welop from Sle1) No. J below

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Pumice - Human - Belcfl -Jostle - MOI.fTH
As a kid I was shy around people and usually said lhe
wrong !hongs. My mom taught me great rT181ol8r.l, said
thai punong my best fool forward alleast kept my fool ou1
olmyMOUTH .

t:;1

The Jeffer.on1 [J_
Ill Q lnoldo Edlllon 'Q
CD IIl MacNaii/Lah"'r
Hew1Hour C

Exlraal C.all After lp.m. 614-2459521.

81

O Comp!.to

TV"stereo

IDUpCiooe
all New Zom&gt; Stereo
6:35il) Andy Grtfl11h

75 Boats &amp; Molars
lor Sale
16 Ft. Ba. . B01t, es HP With All

19&amp;4 Buick Regal, good cond,
AM!FM, PS, PB, ~- c ruls• .
$800. 304--675-1982.

5
L -..1.-...1..-..1·-~-'--l.___J.

Gl) ~ Ill CBS Nawo Q
crllll Andy Gr1llll1l
0 Scooby Doo

Honda RC 80 Olr1 Bike, 6l4-4462108.

79

device lhal

·

i

'8fi

11119 Mustang Rec:elpll For New
P1r11 R~uln Motor, R~one To
look Uk1 88 Model. $1100. 814-

any

America C

~Square One

For Sale : Yamah.a OT - 50 CC
Billa, In Like New Condition!
Calll14-446-2117.

76

:=~~~.- ~

•

1 I I' I I

6:30 (l) II tl3l NBC Newo ~
I]) !loved by lho Boll
())Q IIlii ABC New Q

~

was
utensillhad

, , -5-H-l_H_C_T___,,performs atask in hall !he lime
l--rr-..:,i-'r'-.--11halrt lakes 10 -- - •

Stereo. Q

.t

I
I

,____,___.___.__._....~

6:05 (l) Boverty Hlllblllloo

If ,1\IGHT e:VW
RAIU IUA

11189 Honda Pilol 400cC Willer
cooled fwd. I re~tt,.... new In
81., $3,200 Of lradt. 514-446-0381
after 5 p.m.

575-Srn.

DUEEL

I1---.,,,---..-,-,1..--rl-1:

Q

World Today
all Rln nn nn, K-9 Cop

l

.,~m.

200 heed of Barroon &amp; glila. For
more lntonnetlon cont.act Rogar
Bent.., (513)584-2:198 rK Laray

4--H plga tor ule, $30. Nd\, 304·

I

K HE l R

1D Night Court Q

a

WITH A LITTLE ACTiON .

And ~

74

L.lrrlck 513-7ao.41102.

REDFIF

Reeding Rainbow Stereo .

09murts

v.r, Nleoollo,IIOCI.

201h Annual Bentley Pig Sale:
F.tdoy AprlO 24onc 7:30 P.M.

lnlant carsaat, l10; Infant carrier, $10; S.arw ct'langlnt;~ tabla
$30; other mite . babr Items:
614443-5453

Sears

a Spd,

112,000 Mlln.

Fa~l•
Co.
r-•lrgrouncla,
Wa.ttln~on Courtt.owe. Seiling

Household

USED

PICT URE 0~ A WATER

YOUNEED SOMETHING

~~~~~~~~~;;r;;;;;;;;;~~ C.aii.Cte,
11189 Ch...-y
4r4, Topper
Air, AMAI
Century
PS

Merchandise
S1

~

PEANUTS

I

~ - l- \

Wf~~1 .

446-2125, Or &amp;14-446-4425.

Concrata &amp; Plutlc SapHc
Tanks, Jl1 Aerallon Tanks . Ron
Evans EnterpriMt, Jaekson, OH
1-100-537-9528.

f*t.~5-13.ae .

EIIGIM

67&gt;-7621, Or ... 441 4015.

Modem 1 B~room Untumlshed
Apertmanl , WHh Appllancu, No
Plots, f189/mo . W.1t•r Included
ftOO O.~t. 6M-«6-361l

One bedroom tumlahed 1p4 ,
Point PIMaant, lllfl clean, no

liZ Ill tl3l

t!ml Ford F150, •14, 300/kyl.,
4sp., PS, PB, •tiding window,
bed liner, toppsr, 114-948-2.4110

For Lease

Color T.V.'• Portable And Console, $60 E1ch_ Mlcrowav. Owen
$90; Ea.elrk Clolh.. Dryer, $65;
AC. 6'14 -256·1238.

2 BR1 12180 Hollypark. New carpet a vinyl lhroughoul . EJcelltinl condhlon. PrieM! upon ln-

150

111M Chavy • Whaaf Drive,
ShOll WhMI BaM, 305. 4 SpNcl,
4" llfl, Alum WhMII. Call 304-

Ufayette Mall: Nice 2 Rooms
And Bath, StWmo . lnctud11
UUiitiH, O.pos,Jt Raqulrwd_ 6t4446-1133,814-448-4222.

One
and
two
bedroom
11p11r1m1nta tor rani. 304--61S2053 Of 875-4100.

-

Tran11mlulon, 614-446-TSis.

]644.

DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES
$31,995 &amp; Up. Built On Your lot
S.. Our ModaiS, 8M-a86-1311.

2 BM!room Hou11, 26 Chll·
llcothe Road , Gallipolis. SI,SOO.
614-446-1&amp;15, 614-446-1243 .

()) Ill Ill • aiiD
Nowa
I]) Yldoo PaSquare One TV Swoo

6:00 (l) •

And AUM Grell, l2,500. Call
814-443-C832.

Near

Furnished Apartment, lbr, Mll't
to Ubrary, parltlf\9, eentral hNt,
"''· r'llfsranca. 514-44"'o--u"ll6.
Befort 7 p.m .
Grscloua ll"lng . I and 2 bedroom apenm•nts 1t Yill•g•
Menor
and
Rlvarsld•
Apartmenls In Mlddl•pon. From
$196 _Call614-992·718i. EOH.

1989 Redman Oanvill•. thn,
Total Elac:trlc, E1 callenl Condltlon, Pricad To Salll 614-367-0139
Aner Sp.m.
Now ecc•ptlng appllcaHo01 tOf
~c:_:":_:c___ _ _ _ _ __ IMa.an Apartmants. Equal Hou•
1992Double wldl Re-po!N•ver log Opp., air cond ., Laundry
lived ln!!Naw Hom•
Wsr- room, frM tra•h p4ckup, clou
ranly!l$(1 down to quallHed to stor• &amp; schoole _ 304 -TTlbuyers. 'l04·7M-SI85 .
552i

Uft,

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

B!q River AnUquee, 510 Main St,
Potnt Pleasant, WV.

EHieleney 1par1ment . Retertnce
snd dapoall required . No pets.

4

Protuaional CoupM; Would Uke
To LNM For 1 v..r: Very Nle. 3
Bedroom, 2 a.th Hom. Wit,
~:.7e In Or
Galllpollt.
Poansfon By June tat,
WltM\.In AMI btate, 614-446-

1bdrm,
$225mo.,
Includes
ulillliH, MCUrlty depo.it raqulred, no pata, 514-992-2218

And O.llv•ry! Call 614 -m-1220 .

1967 Melody t2x65 3bdrm., 2
bath, unfurnished, $ooo c..h •

4I4

• - · 10,000 IIIO•L.f .Inch
]j Inch nr.. Atum :::H&lt;MS, Looks

47 Wanted to Rent

53

Bedrooms,
Stowe
And
tt,OOO Rebate Schult 14x~ 4 2Refr1geretor
Furnished 614-.446Beodrooms, 2 Belhs, Dan Spee Ia I 1940
low Prica . French City Mobile
Homn, &amp;14-446-!1340
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
S.SOO Off Purcha.. Prtc• Of Any ESTATES, ~36 Jackton Pike
N.w HonM AI Else. Hom• C.n..
trom $192/mo. Walk to thop &amp;
ter, Grul Selltction, Fr. . S.I -Up mavin. Call 6l4-446-2568. EOH .

Chivy

11187 Chivy PU, Good Concti-

2217

Paola

Financial

........

Ce&gt;T;•·nr·•:•·

2br House Fumlahed, Deposit
And Reterenc.a Required. No
Plots. 614-U&amp;-487'9.

1171 st..,aldl

446-2512

I

EVENING

304--675--1577.

414

Washen, dryers, ratrig~rllon,
rsng• - Skaggs AppUance11,
Upper Alvar Rd . BnhM Stone
Crut Motel. Call 614-446-1:198,

Lot Witt'l 88 Mobile Home 3Bra,
CA., On Seelud.c:! lot, CloM To
Town, GrMn School , l29,500
Finft. 614-.t6-t314.

mnur

Wi ll Do B &lt;~ bysittlng In My Homa.
Locat ed Neu Cbiy School. 614256-6869

~~~~~~AI
f~e ~6L!i'

rte H.aaklne, 814-446-2631, 814-

GOOO

2 badt wm, 1 Nth, privet• loeai·
tlorl on R~man Ridge HendiH'son area. S200. month 1150
daposlt, 304-17'6-6058 or 304·

.,,_.,..

,,..,• O:H

Bulkllng

Big S.awlnga On All Carpet In
Slock. Caah And Carry, Mo._
lohan C.rpats, 814_...6-~4• .

41 Houses tor Rent

0

1~ Ford :tJ• ton . $500. ChafY
truck I lug Rally wheett on
Daytona 27S-60-15. 304.e75·21'W,

Y()4)

s.eond Avenue, Ga.lllpollt. Mor·

nN.

In town, two story, lhrn bedrooms, full baument, 1·V2 bath,
anaet'ltd 1-112 ea r garage.
C.antral hut and air. Ewenlngt
Call 614-446-8707.

,

',,. ;•

VI~ DID I ff&gt;t

om..
Spoco , Oflk:o
Suite AvaltaiM In Bu.. nea And
Ptotualonal

ooocl

body, . . . ,"9 taoG,
~HOt or 304-511-

21100

Goods

...

~~

.,,

U.val
Rwal
Wat•r,
, And Pt-.ona S.,-..lce
MUM Ftvtrt Hotur
- 514-446--417l

Real Eslale

19B3 Nashue , 3 badroom, 14x70
&gt;.. ,.,, t,;, _ ••
'
; .• ,., ·~ 'or I Bo~bys•" •ng in my home Monday
' ' .,, ~ ..-.r .; - ' '
" ' ~o&lt;~,, .,f i 1!'1rv Fr~ day, acroa• from Nortt'l whh 7x12 upando , CA . Ou.en
watlfbld, garden tub , all ap.
:·1
:''1· ,, , .• - ,-" ....... 11 ' ,tn , Po1n1 Sc hoo l. ha"• raterancn,
pll.ances, 10x20 d.ck, St4,500
• • 1•1 : ~o l ' -t
I 104 fi 7s-.46t2.
Must
mowa, 304-675-71160 or 675•
' " ,.
·; ;r"'l
:-o-n-,-:-.,.
c-:S:. w-m-:i,11,- dc-o--c.
o o 3594 _
'· ~-,'
I;,,. ~·:-'~ I I G.o rg;; P
'\o • .I ~&lt;"1 I l'lau l your logs to tha mill juat 11185 Windsor 2br, Fully Fur••
- i :o·. ~ \·!
nlahed, Oishweskarj Ols,..al,
i C:.311 ~75 · 19~7.
..,. .,..,,
" '
·;
T.V., ~erao s,-tem hraug~
•: • '
I
·•;o; •
, Miu Pilu la's Day Care Cenler. W.alhlf I Dryer 2 B~root'M vr
S•'-· 11tford.ab'-. chikkara. M-F Furniture And Llvlng Room Furj •• :
I : '-' I
li ~ m. · S lO p.m. Ages 2}',-10. nlturt, Mlc:rowne, "'Ratrtrralor
~;. 1 •
. '
.N'J
B• lore, 1har schoot Orop..ins And Stowe. 614-446--354 , l04-'•" \ol 10:1· I : '..&lt;~ '•CJr tl
walcom e 6t4-446-a224 N•w lnlant Todd le r Cara, 614-446--6217.
·l
•" • .,. "-t.
o: L.d A
1986 Claylon Wastwind WxS~
' I ' l"i!lld
I
·
,-,. "o t 1
1 Pum"''had , S.ilndillad , Ctu lst ian Two Bedrooms, AC, N•hll"lll
-1 I·~· 1
: ;, .J :•
i( •l • -~ l:l:Q
would lova to give lestlmony Gas, A·1 CondiUon, $3,800.
1
;~nd God' •
in your Pl'tona: 614 -992-n04 After 8 :30
crturch. 614-3711-622
p_y
. \• ! ' , ''I~
-,~ ,

c..ll

ltlobl .. Home lc:ll:, 112 Acrwa.
Prlvt~teJ. ~· 2 North, 6 Mlln
From t'Oint PieeNnl, WV 614-

OH 45324.

Oualilled Buyer.

1969 FtaiHd 2-ton truck,

TU1 DAllY
PUll Lit

Television
Viewing

HOW l&gt;tXLO YW UKEi
YOOR ~f£1¥., E!!WnJS?

()

""""'· aood

Hu A

Hom• Woritert Ne~ By 150
Firms, Top Pay, 13.31 WMk Or
Morw. Rush $1.00 s.lf-Add,...
s.d Stamped Env~ 110 O&amp;A
Suppll•, Boi 1443, Fairborn,

'

Part, Rt.

Second Floor Apa.nmlflt For
LNaoo LR., One B.A., Blln,
Kitchen WI Slove &amp; Retrig.
Wat•r Fumlst'lsd. No P1ts. Cor·

· I book all the New York lo Chtcago flights via
M ta ml. Before lhts I was a cab d river ''

~crn pl lilllil

Ham~~

114-385-1227

49

Co mpany,

' ; ;,.. ,,., •.\ .• o::l,:•1
o.· •; I'""'
,.,1:
" , ., _ •

Country MotMie

72 Tl'ucks lor Sale

33H., under r...- m.anagem1nt.
lola, $85; hOfM rwnlaia , $235;

441-1340.

25 acr• In Wilkesville 1111a,

"'1 P:easant
!. &lt;i&lt;Cin it~

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

46 Space lor Rent

Fann near Glenwood, 100 aerM
+/nics n1r1cher, good r01d, ~~
lew....,IUable tancf, S1t,900. kat.,._
IMn L.ave :J04-.XJ-6208, Ullom
Rutty, BH&amp;G, AN/tor, lo.-736IMIOS.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April 23, 1992

business and pleasure . II you try t o mi.IC
the two. there's a strong chance something ~ega11'4'e could result . Be careful.

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 2l·Doc. 211 Th, s
is not likely 10 be a product1ve day lor
you - •' you hmct10n al extremes Find
a happy medium thai 1sn 't all work and
no play . nor all piEiy and no work
S •Oua ~

closely monitor non~ssential ex penses. beCause these could prove to
be the budget-breakers Um 11 you r
spending to crlti~l needs

Robtrtoon
10:05 (lJ MOVIE: In Cold Blood IAI
(2,451

10:30 IIl Wool VIrginia Rotror!
tf:OO(])II ())CI IIJD ®liD
De l!ll Nowo
I]) Hight Court Q
III Nowowa1Ch
~•

Araenka Hall Stereo

0'
PGA Golf Kmart Greater
Greensboro Open, 1st round .
_from Greensboro , N.C. (R)

12!1 Crook an&lt;l Ch110
1D BoMIMIN Tonight
Sporll Tonight

a

all Boo dof1own Stereo. Q
t1:30 I]) Kalak C
III John M!:Louglolln'o One
on One

Ill a Hlglollno ~
liZ II 'SOlo 9181kl o' Crtmo

~p:£:tar

=

Stereo.

aMonov11no

..

all MOYlE: PIUore ollho Sky

11 :35 (]) D t131 Tonighl Show
Sllntng Joi!My Certon
Stereo.

e

())DC-. C

8

Arsenk) "if•H Stereo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c..bnly Cipher

EICfl IM'I•

In

11'11 elphar

tUnG~

' UXCG - XUEXXK
XBXIAEPJWZ

EP NE

"
• ,., - - pqa, ~ ..........
lor ...,._
m. t ..,._ wo

r....,...

crwtovr- .. cnetad Irati •

EPX1X

VJEPLME

J

E

JUW
JE ' U

U

E
DMUE

WLEPJWZ

•
ZCL1JII

UEKJWXK
PREVIOUS S OLUTION· " When you 're down and
Iurns up - usually the noses ol your friends... -

out. somethi

&lt;&gt;non

W..:

~

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

What to expect in May sweeps
nonfi ction book . Danner plays
Bonnie Von Stetn, who was
stabbed and beaten in an attack that
ki lled her husband and left her son
a prime suspecL
-"C heers," May 7. Johnny
Carson and Doc Sevcrinscn make
ca meo appearances in an episode
about Cl1ff going to California for a
1.1ping of "The Ton1ght Show."
- "The Go lden Girls," M;~y 9.
Ilea Arthur says goodbye to th1 s
long-running series that move s next
season to CBS.
ABC:
- "Stay The N1ght," Sun&lt;Liy , 9
p.m. Barbara Hershey siMs as the
mother of a high sc hool student
who tal&lt;cs up wuh her son's friend.
The platinum blonde Jl crshe y con·
v1 nccs the boy to l&lt;.ill her husband
and tal&lt;e the rap.
- "The Best of Barbara Wal ters," May 12, 10 p.m. A one-hour
rct.rospcctivc of classic intcrvtcws
by th e Queen of Makin g StJ hj ec ts
Cry
-"Columbo." May 7. H r .m.

By DEBORAH HASTINGS
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES- The 199 19~ television seaso n has official ly
ended. Unofficially, however, it's
st1ll going.
May sweeps begin !Dnight. And
so, to cover th e nex t 27 days, here
IS a semJOfJIC Jal guide to the hype
and hysteria that go hand in hand
wnh network programming during
sweeps periods.
NBC:
-'Miss Rose Wh ite," Sunday,
9 p.m. Kyra Sedgwick plays Rose
White, a. k.a. Rru sa We1ss, a 1947
career girl living a doubl e l1fe in
Manhat tan . A Hallmark Hall of
Fame presentation.
-"Dayo," Sunday, May 3, 7
p.m. EDT, 9 p.m. PDT. Delta
Burke siMs in a two-hour comedy
about a professional woman whose
li fe turns upside down when her
imagmary ch ildhood fn cnd reappears.
-'Cruel Doubt," Sunday, May
17,9 p.m. and Tuesday, May 19,9
p.m. A two-part miniseries starring
Blythe Danner in an ada ption ol
writer Joe McGinniss' best-selli ng

The Harrisonvil le-SCipio Alumni Associauon ofllccrs met recently
to make plans for the annual banquet and &lt;lance.
Dinner will be se rved at 6;30
p.m. on May 23 at the Harnsonvillc
Sc hoo l. The menu includes baked
steak w1th gravy and turkey breast.
green beans. sca lloped potatoes.
tossed sa lad, rolls and butter, 1cc
tea, lemonade, coffee. choco late
cake and cherry cheesecake.
Classes to be honored in clud e

A work session will be held Saturday at the Sa l1 sbury Eleme nt ary
School.
Vo lu nteers wi ll erec t some si:t.:

foot fencing at the baseball dia mond and also put up a haskctball
pole and back board and se t three
benches. Paren ts arc cncour~1gcd to
come ou t and help with the work
begin nmg at 930 a.r:1

Plan open house

193c. 1'!42 and 1952.
Rcscrva ttons and an nu al mem -

bership dues should be sent to Joy
Clark. 102 Park Street, Middl eport ,
Oh1o 45760 no later than May IK .
Banquet d•mcc and dues wil l be S9;
dance on ly $4. Help m decorating
the gymnas ium on May 22 at 6
p m. ISalSO needed.
Alum n1 officers arc Larry Clark,
prcs1dcnt; Harold Gra ham, VIce pre sident; Pansy Jordan , treasurer;
Joy Clark. secretary.

The ar1flual E.1stcr egg hunt for and Robb ie, Da n and Fonda
the youth groups of Tnnity Church Thomas, DanJ e ll e, Mi chell e and
was held at the parsonage on ~lui ­ I kathc r. Sandi Hawley and Sarah,
berry Aven ue.
Auslln and Debb ie Child s, Erica,
Games and th e egg hunt were L1 ncbcy and Brett, Ela ine Puumn.
he ld fol l ow~ng the rnak1ng of E:ts t- Dc·hh1c Putman , Jan Holler, Alyssa
er baskets.
:111rl Kelsey. Dcbb1e Hapton stall,
G1ft ccrllfic:Hcs were provl(il'd Whirncy and Ilraydon, Ka t1e, 1Jrn1c
hy Craw's Family Restaurctnt. :~n d Andy Dam. Ju lie Spaun, Co nPiZZa Hut, McDonald's, Plcascr's. nie ~brc um . Jessica and Jos h.
Dairy Queen and Subway.
Roland and Jo Ann Wildman .
Attend ing were Debbie Coo ke,
The ;. out h groups mccl the fir &lt;a
John and Bethany, Sherry Garnes. :mtl Lillfd Thursday of each month
Andy and Megan , Pau li ne Mayer, :11 5 Jl on All yo uth arc inv1ted for
SJrah Jo Sa lt z, Jim Hu ff. Ja ck1c thL' kllow .~ h1p . During the meet i ng,
!luck, Jim and Dchbic Schrnoll. th L' pr,:.sclluol choir and Lh c Junior
h rnie and Lauren, Cheryl Thom:JS. d101r h;1vc pr:lC ticc . The choirs sin!.!
Ade~rn and Brandy, L.o1s and Maron CL' ;1 mont h dunn£ the rcg ulaLr
Vi n Ilurt, Leta Burt and Morg:tn. wor...:h1p se rvice . The cho1rs wtll
Alice Globol&lt;.ar, P.J . Erwin, Bec ky Slflg Mother's Day, May 10.
Depoy and Trevor. Mary Har m

gr~un year ~c invJtcd w come and
obscn'c Lhc classrooms and obLain

program informatiOn and enro ll ment Jpp lications.
Chi ldren betwee n the ag es of
lhrcc and five years will he const LI crcd for rnro ll rnc.nl based on cltt; t-

b!lity gLJidclinc'&gt;. A child 's tmmu -

or

nil.:tti on record Jnd vcnfiCitlOn
the pJ. r~rH s ~mn u ;d income should

be available. Stafl will be on hand
to answer ques tions ancl refresh-

men ts will be se rved. lnform allmt
may be obta1 ncd by cal ling 992 3088 or 446-66 74.

garden
tips

1992 CAVALIERS

Vol. 42, No. 253

GOrNG FOR GOLD - Prof. Tom Taylor of
Norwic h University coaxes his lab rat, Splinter,
to climb across a tightrope in the third annual
Rat Olymp ics held at the University in North-

s900.00

Great Selection
2 Dr. or 4 Dr's
Auto or standard.
Also Z-24

Cash Back
AND
7.5 A.P.R

W~ite,

MSRP____ $16,147
Discollt_____ S96
Rebate----1,000
Your Price--.14,55 1

V-6,

auto. trills~ air
cottd. and
loaded_

AliD

7.5% APR

1992 lUMINA
Pick out o model
that fits yo•r
hies lyle and driving
needs.

SIOOO.OO
Cash Back
AND
7.5 A.P.R

199 2 5·1 0 PICKUPS

750.00

TAKE YOUR PICK

1

2 wheel L 4 wheel
eives, autos. or stands.,

Cash Back
AID
7.5 l.P.R

-··

utonded cain, mudi

1992 TRACKER 414
Competition blue or
bright red, 5 speed
transmission.

Exdting!

5

1000.00
Cash Back
AND
7.5 A.P.R

Fiaaaciag

1992 CUTLASS SUPREME S

Air canditiaaiag, S sp.
maaual transrnissiaa,
AM/FM stereo,
power steering.

5

750.00

Cash Back
AND

7.5A.P.R

1992 APV
White, V-6,

1

avtomatic traas.

Cash Back

Loaded.

900.00

AID
7.5 I.P.R

$400.00 Additional Rebate
Available to Fir8l Tune New Car
Buyers on Selected Models.

MSRP___ $18,262
Disrout ____ 1,602
Rebate ____ 1,200

DrKtwood

111tallk, V-6,
automatk trans.,
aul5e 1ontrol, air

Your Price--.1 5,460
AIID

!Ondltlonlng,

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Candice
Bergen' s fict itious TV alter ego,
Murphy Brow n, gave a magazine
interview and said childbirth would
be more fun if it worked like a popup toaster.
"If God were a woman ," Murphy Brown told Woman's Day,
"she would have installed one of

CBS-TV show's execu tive producer, se lected the charities: the March
of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation
and the Pediatric AIDS Founda tion.

The state is demanding $339,54 1 in
sales taxes from Jimmy Swaggart
Ministries and has placed a lien on
its property.
The dem and covers sales t.u es
from 1984 through 1986, accord mg
to the Department of Revenue and
Taxation.
The Eas t Baton Rouge city parish government earl ier placed
liens on mini stry property for $1. 19
milli on in delinquent sales taxes.
The Internal Rev e nue Service
wants~ 17,753.
Emil e Weber, an attorney for
the m1nistry , said the organization
was trying to pay off the state and
federal cla im s but the city-pari sh
wants too much .
"That's an erroneous figure. We
st il l have go t to stra ight en that
out ," he said.
Swaggart, once te leviSIOn's top rated ev angelist, was toppled in
1 9~8 when he confessed to an
un spec ifi ed sin. A prostitute sa id he
pa~d her to pose nud e for him .
In October, police in southern
Ca lifornia fou nd a proslltute in
'Swagga rt 's ca r after he was
stopped for a traff1c violauon.

614/992·6614
OR

800/837·1094

1991 SEDAN DEVILLE

MSRP____ $32,211
Platiaum sHver. Discouat ____ 4,999
Loaded!
Your Price
No l.tllury
Tax

MSRP____ $16,147
Light blue, V-6, Dii(OIIt-----S96
air coaditioailg, Rebote ____ 1,000
automatic
Your Price ___ 141 551
traas~ wei
AIID
equipped.

1992 ELDORADO
MSRP---- S3S,469
Polo green, new Disrouat___ 4,SOO
for 92, leather
Your Price
seating. Must
$30,9969
see!
AliD

7.5% APR

V-6,
automatk
traas.. air
roaditloafttg,
alumia11,111
wuels. SHARP.

White diamond,
gtl'aet leather
Interior. (odiHtK
style.

MSRP--- $36,646
DiSCOIIt- --4,720
Your Price

Fiaancing

Fiaaaciag

MSRP____ $20,776
DiSIOIIt--.--1,899
Rebate ____..aoo

Yo1r Price--.18,077

1991 SEVILLE SEDAN
Gray,
leather Interior.
Loaded!

AliD

Fiaaaciag
MSR~

gray, V-6, auto.

Discollt---2.524

air

Rebate---1,000
Yo1r Prke-.22,550

- $26,074

AND

with luxury cars

7.5% APR

anywhere

Fiaaacia1

s20,495
1111

7.5%APR

Fiaaaci11

7.5% APR

Medium slate

condJtJonng,
alum. wheels, p_
seat5. Compare

1992 SEVILLE SEDAN

7.5% APR

1992 98 REGENCY SEDAN
trillS.,

Fiaaaciag

$31,926
AliD
7.5% APR

1992 88 ROYALE
W~ite,

s27,212
AIID
7.5%APR
Fiaaaciag

FiBaacing

1992 CUTlASS CIERA S

PRO&amp;IWICAU

CADilLAC STYLE

1992 SEDAN DEVILLE
Maraoa, V-8,
leather interior.

$21,999

Stock #GMS06

7.5%

AND

API

1991 GEO Metro"-----"· $6669
Automatic, air cond., stereo, bucket
seats.

1991 Chevy Cavalier R/S" __ $7990
Automatic, air condHionlng, 4 cyl., 4 Door.

1991 Chevy Corsica LT--·-...... $8990
1991 Chevy Lumina.. _____ $9990
GM485, loaded.

1991 &lt;hev. Lumina Eura..-""$11,999
Loaded, two to choose from ..

1992 Chevy Lumina..-·--·- S11 999
I

automatic, nice.

1992 Olds 98""""'"'""'"""'"" S18,999

Luxury to spare.

PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
1991 Silverada Pickup"-"""" S11 999
1

Se ntinel Correspondent
The puupose of a one mill levy
which will be on the June ballot for
the benefit of th e Meigs County
Park District was explai ned Thurs day nigh t by Mary Powell, director,
durin g the regular mcctmg of Syramsc Village Counci I.
Powell stated that she is director
of the Meigs Coun ty Park Distrll't
as well as touris m director. With
funds generated through the levy
th e park district hopes 10 develop
fiVer, park and recreational facilities, according to Powell.
Funds will also pemnit a match
for state and federal grants for usc
of development of projects , she
said. The district is presently fund ed through the Meigs Coun ty Com -

miSSioners . The county provides impassible.
$25,000 toward operation of the
It was noted that Council has the
off1ce. The levy, if passed, will understand ing that the county highgenerat e S200,000, accord ing to way department docs hav e the rood
Powell.
on its agenda for repair. However,
Also meeting with Council was a contact w111l the comm iss ioners
Kenny Cundiff in regard to aban- will be made.
donment of alleys no longer used
Counci l interviewed two appli or go no where_ Council explained cants for the position of manager at
that thw plan IS to abandon such London Pool. They were Shannon
alleys but that loca tions of such Slavm and Tom Lowery. Counci l
a ll eys must be made and legal now has three applications for the
advice obtained.
position and will make a dccmon
Cund iff also mentioned the by the next meeting.
condJtion of Roy Jones Road. notThanks was ex tended to Don
ing that it is the only outle t for Houdashelt for h1s donauon vf um c
Syracusc residents in the event of in ass istin g the v11lagc recen tl y.
high water. Kathryn Crow, counci l Attending were Mayor James Pape,
member, agreed that the road I Clerk-treasurer, Janice Lawson,
beyond the corporation is m Jack Williams, DenniS Wolfe ,
deplo rab le condition and with Kenny Ilucklcy, Bill Roush, and
much usc would become nearly K.atluyn Crow, couocil members.

crime of murd er. I think that the
facts will show, eve n for th e purpose of a preliminary hearing, that
the best ev idence the state ha s is
that this is a cnmc of vo lu n tar y
man s laught er or involuntary
manslaughter," defense &lt;Htorncy

K1chard Roderick noted.
The sta te called Ga llia County
Shcnff's Department In vcstigator
John Vance as its fust witness.
Statements from wiUlcs scs indicated th e shoot in g happe ned dunng
a di spute at M cc hcllc Gilmore's

rnmhcr's residence.
Accordin g to V~mcc's teStimo ny : "After be1 ng adviSed of her
consti tutional nghLs and alter sign ing a wai ... cr form she gave me a
statement say ing that she had in
fact shot (Robert Gilmore) in the
back as he was exiti ng ... her moth er's residence," Vance s.aid
"S he said in her statement that
there was some seuflli ng going on
between the v1cUm and her brother
and that she had got the gun during
the sc ufnc and that she had fi red
two shots into tl1e cei ling to try to
get the suhject (Robert Gilmore) to
411it bcallng her brother," Vance
sa id
"S he sa id at some pomt shortly
after that that the subjec t stopped

;md came at her and pushed I1 L: r :. t nd
I believe she stated that he lut her
m the stomach and she saH.J lkH she
stepped to the s1de and he went tu
the front duor ~nd that she stepped
IIllO the front .store. about two or
three steps bd1ir1d him she '"''as ~u
th1s pomt. IDd :.hl· \~lid ~ he p11l il'd
the tngge r :md Jircd." V:1nce co n-

tinued.

"S he said th:11 she procccdni to
fol low him out the door and thl'lt he
pau se d for J cou ple secon ds :.mel
lea ned &lt;1£31/l ~ t the hou se and

grabbed for hi s h;llk , or h1 s sitk . I
believe the wJy .she stated it Jl c
tl1cn CO IHinul'd Oil Ufl the df i V C W~I}'
tow:1rds anothL'f r ~s 1 tk ncc :md that

he eventua lly kll to the gmund,"
Va nce s.aid.
"Now is It lflli.!, Orliccr V~tnrc
that all three of tllC' statements thai
you took that rught Indicat ed thJt

there lwd been a lig ht or a strut:glc
there in the hom e..: of my &lt;.: IJCn t ·\
mother?" Roderick asked
''Yes, sir," Vance rcrltcd.
"[)o the SlaiCJTICIILS mdJCtiC th~H
the dec ease d h1t Me chcl le
Gil more's mmhcr and push ed her
up against the hack IX'droom in th e
horne there aud took J phone frnm
her wh en she was cJIIinJ..; snmcCn ntinued on page 3

UMW declares miners jobs could
be protected with scrubbers at Gavin
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
jobs of miners throughout Oh1o
cou ld be protected if a utility
proceeds with a plan to conun uc
using the state's high-sulfur coal, a
United Mine Workers official said
Thursday.
Officials of American Elcclric
Power say they no longer consider
air-cleaning scrubbers too expensive for the Gavin power plant m
southern Ohio.
The utility had considered
switching to low-s ulfur. out-ofStall: coal to comply with the
federal Clean Alf Ac t at Gavin,
American Electric's dirtiest power
planL
"Our position all along was the
mstallauon of scrubbers was the
least costly way of complying with
the act and in best interest of the
state of Oh1o and the people of
Ohio," srud Larry Ward, president
of UMW District 6, which covers
the State.
Uu lit y ratC5 will increase because of the federal law, he said.
The increase will be bener controlled because the cost of scrubbers "
known, Ward s.1id.
American Electric and the union
s.1y the usc of sc rubbers at Gavm
wou ld save the JObs of I ,200
miners in Mei gs County.
Ward said the UMW hopes other
utilities also will opt for scrubbers
and protect m1ning jobs elsewhere
in Ohio.
Craig Glazer, chainnan of the
Publ1c Uulities Commission of

Lung.

those who joined together to foght
for the economic future of southern
uvc officer Richard E. DISbrow Ohio," Long said.
made the announcement Wednes W1th the pas sage of Federal
day at the company 's annual stock- CIC3n Air Act by the U.S. Congress
holder's meeting . He said that in 1990, Ohio and other cool mm installing clean-air scrubbers wou ld ing states were forced into compl icos t roughly S800 million _
ance with the clean aH mandates.
"A year ago, those of us fighting Senator Long co-sponsored the
10 keep the Meigs mines open were
Oh10 Clean Coal Bill (S B 14 3)
fearful that burdensome federal wh1c h was enacted by the Ohi o
regu lations would fon:e AEP 10 usc General Assembly, to assiSt Ohioout-of-state coal," McEwe n said
based util1t1Cs n1 thclf efforts to
"Now we have renewed hope. But bum Oh1o coal and emp loy Ohio
we must move quicilly through the coal miners.
peflll it process to protect our jobs."
McEwen met with workers and
"This announcement is a tribute toured tlJC Meigs mines on Feb. 12.
to the hard work and cffon by all
A memb er of hi s sta ff sa id
McEwen is cA pcc lcd lo auc nd a
pubiLc heanng May 4 at 7 p.m. at
Chc.shire-Kyger Elementary School
10 support a l1me-bargc unloading
fac ility - crit ic al to the scrubber
RAVENSWOOD , W.Va. (AP)
Ravenswood announced Tues issue - proposed by AEP.
- Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.. day that a new board of directors
The lime-harge fa cility 1s
whose chairman was ousted earlier had been elec ted and that lloy le
expected to be contested by the
thiS week, has announced that com - had been removed as chairman and Sierra Club and other environmen pany Presid ent Don Worllcdgc is ch1ef executive officer "as a result
retirin g.
of a basic disagreement as to the tal organ LIA! uons.
Worlledgc also wi ll ret ire effcc · future direction of RA C."
tive April 30 as vice pres ident of
Abo ut I ,700 mcn:bers of th e
Wheeling-based ORALCO Man - Un1tcd Steelworkers h"vc been off
agc ment Services , wh ich oversees the job at the Jackson County aluth e Jackso n County aluminum minum plant SIOCC Nov. r, 1990 in
plant, company spokesman Patrick a labor dispute.
Gallagher sa1d Thursday.
"Although I am retiring, I will
Gallagher sa id Worll cdgc had continue to assist management w11h
Wt\Silll\GTON (AP) - PreSIbee n planning to re t!f c for so me the operat1on of the Ravenswood dent llush woul d do a bet ter JOb
lime and that the ret irement was facillly for an indefini te period of w1th rhc eco nom y than Democrat
not tied to lhc departure of compatJmc in solv ing il s bu sme ss and
Bill Clinton, accord1ng to voters
ny chairman R. Em men Boy le.
labor problems," Worlledge said.
surveyed on a USA Todav-CNNGallup poll released today.The poll also fo und that Bush
leads bot h Cli nto n in a two -way
race and Clinton and Ross l'crnt in
a three -way rJCc .
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on Friday that
Bush showed increasing support
at 1: 15 a.m. Thursday, deputies booked James J. Jeffers, 32, of
amo
ng voters on th e eco nomy
Langsville, into the Meigs Coun ty Jail on charges of carrying a con·
when
compared to a USA To&lt;laycealed weapon and domestic violence .
CNN-Gal
lup poll taken a month
Jeffers appeared in Meigs County Court and pled guilty to an
ago.
amended charge of improper handlin g of a firearm, was fined $250
In Man:h , 49 percent said Clinand sentenced to six months in jail. That sentence was suspended to
ton cou ld better handle the econotime served.
my but that figure fell to 36 percent
Jeffers al so pled guilty to domestic vmlencc and was fined SIOO,
this
month. Bush rose from 37 perand sentenced to six months in jail, suspended to time served. He
cent
last month to 43 perce nt in the
was placed on one year probatiOn on each charge. A restraining
April
poll.
order was issued.
While 73 percent of those interviewed disapproved of Bush's ceonomic
management, less than half
Meigs County deputies in vestigated an accident on U.S. Route
said the economy is ge tting worse
33 just south of the Rose Hill intersection on Thursday.
- down from 71 percent m Jan Continued on page 3
uary.

AEP chainnan and chief cxec u-

Oh io, Thursday sa1d two of Ohi o's
25 coals plan ts have sc rubbers.
Zi mmer has a full scrubbmg operatl(lfl and Conesville a partwl system.

phase of the law takes cffert Jan 1
1995 .
. '
Amencan Elcctn c says a final
dCCiSIOfl on scrubhcrs hmg es on obtaining pemuts from the U.S Anny
Corps of Engineers. the c·rca uon of
an allowances system by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
and agreement hy the Puh'

Not al l coal planLs arc candidates
for sc rubbers, Glazer sa1d. Some
an: too old and small and others an:
not at suitable sites, he sa1d.
American Electric would spend Uulilics Commission
$800 million for the Gavm scrubThe al lowances system wou ld
bers, Richard DISbrow, chainnan g1ve utiliues cred it for complying
and chief excc uu ve officer, said w1th the law by reducmg air polluWednesday during the company's tion em1ssion.s .
annual meeting.
DISbrow sa1d the cosLs of USing
Amencan Elcctnc offiuals d1d out-of-state em! and mstall in g
not announce the sc rubber dcc1.1ion scrubhcrs now arc nearly the same
but sa1d that company next week it bccau.sc of the al lowances plan and
will announce 1Ls plan to comply the h1ghcr pncc of low-sulfur uxtl
with the Clean Air Act TIJC Jirst
( 'onl inucd on ~);J~e 3

Clean-up activities to
continue in Pomeroy
PnnH.'ro)' Ma)or Brurt· J . Rrccl has ;IIIIHJunn·d th:tl ,·illagtril'a n· up :~c l ivi li t·s ha n' ht•t•n 1.' .\: ltndt·d into Ot'.\1 wtt·k.
Thnse res ide nts or lhl' \"illagt' \\ho ha H' nol )l' l lwd baggt•rl
trash an d rtrhri s pirkt•cl up from lht'ir propt•rti£'"i ran t'-. IH'rt

pick·up nn Mnnda.v, Tuesday or Wt•dnesday.
The

cleaiHJ(l

l :t&lt;,( Wl't'k.

.srhecl ull' was nmilll'd from Th&lt;• DailY Sentinel
-

In add ition, th r ,jJI ;Jgt· wil l .&lt;~lsu n:1t•r1d appli:lllrt' pirk -up
through IVl'dn•:sday. Old app li ann·s ran IJr droppr·tJ ulf in the
area behind th e old juni()f hi l,! h sr hnol. A ppliatH.'t•s wi ll ~1.\o hC'
pirked up by &lt;1ppuin1111l'lll at l,omtroy rrsidt•nrt•s.

Poll finds Bush
regaining ground
on the economy

12,000 miles.

1984 Ford Ranger 4X4"""'""···· $4995
1990 Astro Conversion Van.... $13 499
1

Loaded.

1987 Dodge Dakota Pickup" ••••• $3995
1983 S-10 Blazer 4X4"····""""•• $5995
1986 S·IO Blazer 4X4 ___ "••• $6995
1990 Cutlass Supreme 4 Dr__ $7990
1991 Subaru Layale 4X4"...""""S8999
1989 Ford Festiva..____"__$2990

..--Local briefs---.
Man cited on charges

1981 Chevy Chevette.·-·-···"..S1399
"1983 Caddlac Caupe DeYJ11e"--S 1999
1990 Chrysler Lebaron V-6"_:. $7595

Fia11ci11

ASK US ABOUT
SMART LEASE!

Dy Kathryn Crow

RAC president to retire

1992 Olds 88"""""""·-·---S14,999

Taxes and title len not Included. Interest
rata subJect to bank approval. On the apot
financing to qualified buyers.

Municipal Co urt of .Jud ge Joseph L . Ca in
Thursday afternoon. Here Gilmore, left, and her
defense attorney, Hichard Hoderick, look on
while Ga llia County Sheriff's Department investigator John Vance, far right, exp lains cvt•nts on
a cha lkboard. (OVP photo by J im Freeman)

Purpose of park district levy explained

Congressman Bob McEwen and
Sta te Senator Jan M1chael Long
praised Thursday American Elcc tn c Power's deci sio n 10 install
sc rubbers at the Gavin Plant in
Cheshire.
"As one who has worked hard 10
keep the Meig s mines open and
prov idin g JObs," McEwen said, "I
commend AEP's decision to 1nves1
in sc rubbers because 1t means tl1cy
can keep using Ohio coal."
" More than I ,200 coa l mmcrs
and at least 10,000 re lated jobs arc
saved by this decision ," Long sa1d.
"This dec1S1on will not only benefit
communities in sou thern Oh1o , but
the whole state as well," added

Automatic, air condHionlng, 4 cyL, stereo.

V~.

PRELIMINARY HEARI NG- A Gallia
Co unty woman, Mechelle Rena Gilmore, 18,
accused of murd er in the shooting death or her
husband on April 16 had her case bound o•-.r to
the next term of the Gallia Count v Gra nd Jury
following a preliminary hearing in -t he Gallipoli.&lt;

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
A Gallia County woman
accused of murder in the shoo ting
death of her husband on April 16
had her case bound over to tl1c next
term of the Ga lli a Coun ty Grand
Jury following a prelim inary hearing in the Gal li po lis Municipal
Court of Jud ge Jo sep h L. Ca in
Thursday afternoon.
Mec hell c Rena Gilmore, I R,
Gallipolis, was charged with mur der Monday in the shootmg death
of her husband, Robert L. Gilmore,
20, also of Gallipo lis.
Gal lia County Prosecu tor llrcnt
A Sa un ders opened the hearing
w1th a supulation from Coroner Dr.
Edward L BerkJCh.
"The cause of death in tJu s particu lar case... was a gunshot wound
to Ius (G1lmorc's) person and that
tha t guns hot wound e ntered h1s
bacl&lt;. and ex ited hiS left anterior
ches t," Saunders stipulated. He
added that the informauon was
received from the Frankli n County
Coroner 's office and that Dr. Bcrki ch had no t rec eived Ll wri tten
repo rt at that time.
"I am disappointed 1n the fact
that we're here today and that my
cl1ent stands c harged with th e

Politicians praise scrubber decision

1991 GEO Prizm"______ .$7777

3 Sections, 38 Pages 25 cenh
A Multimedia In c. Newsoacer

Murder case bound over
to next grand jury term

lield, Vt., Wednesday. Members of a lab course
in behavioral science train the rats for 13 weeks
to prepare for the six-event Olympics, including
weight-lifting, rope climbing and jumpin~. (AP)

FORT WORTil, Texas (AP) Sponsors arc afraid to hire a victim
of violence says fomner New York
those turkey thermome ters in our mode l Marla Hanso n, who surbe ll y buttons. Wh en we were done, vived a razor attac k th.1t disfig ured
the themnometer pops up, the doc- her face.
tor reac hes for the zipper conveMs. Hanso n said Tuesday that
niently located beneath our hikim makeup can cover the 150 stitc hes
lines and out comes a smiling , fully she received after the attack Six
years ago. But she still is u11ablc to
diapered baby."
. .
The magaz ine also sa1d 1n lis lind work as a model.
May 12 issue that VIewers can call
"Someone enlightened me to
a "900" number to suggest names the fact that it wasn't the scars: 11
for Murphy Brown's baby, sched- was what they represented - the
uled to be born during the May 18 violence," said Hanson, 30, now a
season finale. Proceeds for the senior at New York Universi ty's
cal ls, wh1ch cost $1.50 each, wi ll film sc hool .
go to charity.
"I was suffering more from the
The baby's nam e wi ll be stigma that came from being a VICrevealed next seaso n. In dec1ding tim than from the assaul t, wh1ch
on a name, the producers will take was pretty brutal," she sa id at a
into cons id erat ion those names fund -raiSer for the National Victim
mo st frequently suggested by Center.
callers to 900-89-MURPHY .
Berge n and Diane English. th e
BATON ROUGE, La. (A P) -

7.5% APR

mu1h, mudt mortL ·

1992 PRIZM

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, April 24, 1992

People in the news

THE POWER OF INTELLIGEIIT ENGINEERING

1992 CUTUSS CIERA S

1.4J" ton ight in mid 40s.
Chance of rain 50 percenl.
Saturda~, high in mid-5~.

Copy•lghted 1992

POMEROY, 0810
The Heart B eat of America

'l-S

Insert

DOW
TAft
CHEV.-OLDS-GAD.-GEO

OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL 8 P.M.
SATURDAYS nL 4 P.M.
SUNDAY 1·5

Pick 3: 742
Pick 4: 7627
Cards:
J-11; 2-C; R-D;

Sharon Gless.

Annual Easter egg hunt held

The Mei gs Coun ty Head Start
Center. located 1n the mulll -pu rpose building on Mulberry Hcig hLs
1n Pome roy, w1ll have an ope n
house from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday throug h Fr~day of ne't week.
Familtc s in teres ted in enrolling
their children for the 1992-93 pro-

Lawn,

tby, 9 p.m. Another version of the
Bonnie Vo n Stein !) tory, st:Hnns

Alumni association gathers

Work session slated

Ohio Lotterv•

A repeat of the first episode 1n
1968 of Peter Falk's mcamation of
the bungling, brilliant Lt. Co lumbo.
- "Oprah Behind The Scenes,"
May 19, 10 p.m. The afternoon talk
show queen gets her first primetim e speCial.
CBS:
- "Murphy Brown," May II
and May 18. Ca nd1ce Bergen's
pregnant Murphy Brown ha s a
baby shower attended by real-life
TV journalists.
- "B urt Reynolds' Co nversations With .... " Friday, 10 p.m . The
star o f "Evening Shade" goes
down home with singers Dolly Parton, Tanya Tucker, Kathy Mattea
and Lorrie Morgan.
- " Elvis: The Gre at Perfor mances," Frirlay, 8 p.m. Pn sc illa
Pr(:s!cv hosts a two- hour spc(l;ll
katu/, ng ba cks ta ge and horn e
movi es of The King.
- .. Hono r Thy Mother," Sun-

I"

CO-CHAMPIONS HONORED - Membtrs
or Southern's and Oak Hill's boys basketball
teams were honored Thursday night at the
SVAC athletic awards banquet at Buckeye Hills
Career Center near Rio Grande with the presentation or lhe conference co-championship trophy. From left lo right are South ern's Michael

Deputies probe accident

,

I

'

Eva ns, Jeremy Roush, Russ ell Si ngl eton a M
Roy Lee Bailey, who is holding the trophy; and
Oak Hill's Renji Lewis, Brook Morgan, Chris
Simpson, Rill Potter and Ryan Morgan. A replica of the trophy will be made available to each
school later. For additional photos, see l'age 4.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
),

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="322">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9616">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33439">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33438">
              <text>April 23, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="191">
      <name>allen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="197">
      <name>halley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
