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                  <text>June

Sentinel

AIIWUt4dl 111M POliCY-Each of 1hoN ld-iood ~omo lo reoulrwd 10 bo

1hlo ocl. Hwe do ""' out of an ldYittiold 11om, , . will olfw you your d1olco
of o componl&gt;lo -om. _ , .....,ble, ..tlocting 1ht oomt OIVineo 01 o rain·
chocl&lt; wflich w11 antillt you 10 purchllo tho oct.ortiold 11om ot tho ociYtrliood
prtoo within 3D doyo. Onlv OllCI coupon will bo ~ per ....

Famil~

~-

Medicine ,

Pick 3:
046
Pick 4:
0652

Page4

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIES NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS .

Low lonlghlln 60s. Frid11y,

Super Louo:
5-6-IZ-20-lJ-36
Kicker:
9411519

COPYRIGHT 1982 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUN·
DAY, MAY 31, THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1982, IN Pomeroy

John C. Wolf, DO.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

=

Ohio Lottery•

Chicago rips
Portland five
•
tn opener

r--, . - far oolt In oach Kroger S1ore, ox- uljiOdfically nolld In

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

has been cast on the sweeping gen·
eralizations made from the earlier
studies.
About 10 percent of the time,
we
actually know what causes a
namalrange.
My question concerns my con- person's hagh blood pressure. In
sumptim rJ saiL My docror didn't some of these cases - like those
say ..ything aboul restticting sal~ caused by kidney disease oc Cush·
but my wife insists that I must. ing's Syndrome (an adrenal gland
disorder) - we know that salt conSbould IIUC salt or IIOl?
sumption
must be carefully moniAltswer: I am frequently asked
tored
to
control
high blood presquealions by my patients about the
relative heallh benefits and prob- sure. Unfoounately, in the other 90
lansassocialed with salt consum(&gt;- percent of high blood pressure
tion. It would be easier if l could cases, we don't know the cause.
We docrors use the label "essengive a simple 'yes' or "no" answer,
tial
hypertension" - a highfalutin
bullhal's liOl possible.
way
of saying, "I haven ' t the
Lei me provide a little back ·
slightest
idea why this person has
ground information before I answer
hi~h
blood
pressure" - 10 describe
yourqueslion. Table salt is made of
thiS
common
condition.
the chemical sodium chloride.
Now comes the tricky pan, a
Once salt is swallowed, almost an
poction
of those who have essential
rJ it is absolbed iniO the blood by
hypertension
have a lower than
the digestive tract as sodium aons
nonnal
level
of
a honnone called
and chkride ions, which play a key
renin
in
their
blood.
This substance
role in the bfe-sustaininR chemical
is
used
by
the
body
to regulate
JeiCiions that occur in our bodies'
blood
pressure.
These
"low-renin
cells.
hypenensives"
are
more
likely to
In order to keep these life proceases functioning smoothlr. the be salt sensitive. While this type of
body regulales the concenlnlllon of high blood pressure is common
liOdium within very tight limits. As among African Americans, those
blood circulates to each cell in the older than 60 and the obese, an
body, the bloodstream acts as a individual of any race, age or size
~
liOdium. Each cell can can be a low-renin hypertensive.
You might think that a test for
tkaw exn sodium from the blood
blood
renin levels would tell us
or pvc ~excess liOdiurn to iL
The sodium level or the blood is whether or not a person is salt sencontrolled by the kidneys. In a sitive. While this does make it posIICillhy penon, a diet thai is abun- sible for us to make an educated
dant in sodium doesn't cause the guess, it is not a perfect test
blood level to rise significantly because some people with low
because the kidneys are able to renin are not salt sensitive and
pass the uua sodium into the some people with high renin are.
So, after all that, I ' m finally
urine. When the diet is lower in
sodium. die kidneys reduce the loss ready to directly respond to your
liOdilllll into urine, thereby main· question with an imprecise answer:
I don't know if you need to restrict
~ the proper blood level.
your
salt consumption. If you are
Scieatil'~e siUdies done years ago
African
American, obese or over
indicllled dtal individuals who con60,
you
probably should. If you
stiiiiCd larF amounts or salt had a
don
'
t
fit
into at least one of these
pe~tcr risk of having high blood
pre8SIR. and n:Jucing the amount categories, you probably will have
Sill consumed reduced tho blood no trouble af you consume salt in
pressure. This body of research reasonable amounts. Talk to your
produced the recommendation that doctor. Ask if you have high-renin
all individuals with high blood or low -renin hypertension and
PJ'SIIR avoid salt and that every- whether or not you should follow a
restricted salt diet
one COIIUIIC salt in IIIOdfntion.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Since 60 million Americans
column.
To submit questions, write
!lave hip blood presswe, this salt
consumption recommendation to John C. Wolf, D.O., 250
affetiS a major pan the popula· Grosvenor Hall, Ohio University
tiotl. In recent years some doubt College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Athens, 45701.

1992

cham·e or rain 50 percent. High

In mid-70s.

QDCslioe: I have mild high
My docn has pre-'ir•W. that I lake every
day, llld il keeps my pressure in the

r,:;:;

U.S. GRADE A JUMBO PACK
TYSON/HOLLY FARMS
4-HB. AVG.

Vol. 43, No. 23

Copyrighted 1992

Split Chicken
Breast

Comffiissoners open bids for Issue 2 projects

00
lb.

By BRIAN J. REED .
do various road pa vin g projects
Sentinel News Staff
within that 10wnship. Shelley bid
Bids for four Issue 2 projec ts $9, 171.63 on the Sutton Township
were opened and di sc ussed when project, and $11 ,874.06 on the
the Meigs County Commissioners Orange Township projec t.
met in regular session on Wednes·
Two bids were received on eac h
day.
of IWo projects in Salem and Rut The Shelley Company was the land Townsh1ps. Bids on Rutland
sole bidaer on two road paving pro- Township's pro posed culv ert
jects for the upcoming season. The replacement prOJCCt were received
Sutton Township Trustees will from Jeffers Coal and E.cavating
apply hot -mi•. paving to Co urt of Pomeroy, in th e a moun t of
Street (Township Road 125), and $8,620, and D.V. Weber ConstrucOrange Township Trustees plan to tion of Reed sville, for $8,850.

we Ctaaty

Accept Your
Feelerat FOOCI
·Stamps

Anaaur Sliced Becan
.. .. .. ..
.

MEAT

12....

AniOII' Hot

Those firm s also bid on a
pipe line extcns1on and replacement
project in Salem To wnsh1p. Jeffers'
bid was received on that project in
the amount of $8,970, and Webers'
for $9,275.
Action on the b1ds was tabled
pendin g review and di sc uss ion
with Coun ty Engineer Philip
Robens.
Asphalt bids fro m KOCH Male·
rial s Co. and Asphalt Matera als
Co., both of Marietta, were accept·
ed fo r use during the month of

June. and Roberts was authorized
10 purchase th ose materials at his
di scretion. The b1ds were opened at
I&lt;L'\l week's meeting.
No action wns take n on an
app ropri atio n req uest from th e
Meigs County Parks D1stric~ pending the receipt of more mformation
by the board. Director Mary Powell
had requested that $671.55, certified by the budget commission as
proceeds from the sale of the Meigs
County tourism video. be appropri·
a ted inr o the di strict's sa laries

WITH LOW PRICES. AND MORE!

or

THORN APPt: VALLEY SLICED
Tu~EY BREAST oR

Armour Sliced
Moot Bologna ..

GOLDEN RIPE

Dole

Sharp awarded scholarship

~·

JuJce Cocktail.

84-o•.

ELBOWS , THIN SPAGH£TTI 0 2

J

$

Muller's.
Spaghetti.·.... · · ..

Chicken
Patties .............. H&gt;·oz.

~h~~ries .......

,....

$3
00 i(;~g~;R
2

MINI

Marshmallows ..

-11&gt;•.

2 $1
H&gt;-oz .

~\:pplas,!l 00 ~~~lluttaf 1.!5

Cllillmil Puchls.... .. .. .. . "

Sweet,.., ecn..........S

CUCUMBERS OR

Green
Peppers ...........

PAUL SHARP

s~i;d

REEBOK·NIKE
CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOE SALE

2$
3 1Roi~On.. . . . . . . 1.~$3
s
2
9
2·-ibs.1
$

ANTI-PERSPIRANT DEODORANT
SOLID OR

Ban

For

LISTERMINT OR

Listerine
Mouthwash.....

Tomatoes ............
,

32-o•.

$1
Aspir~n Free $500
Onions.................. 2-lbs. AnacJO...............
CALIFORNIA RED SWEET

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Vid~ll;

25%oFF

flO.ct.

3tl EXPOSURE 100 SPEED OR

Fresh
Kiwi Fruit. .......

INFANTS SIZE 1 THRU BOYS' SIZE 6

-----------------1
$

l Ilk.

I
c. I
I

l Fer 11M

.. I :
I
I

UIIIT J DAIS 111111 CGUPOII • t1. .
OF
110

AIIOil10IM I"JJICH..E

LIMIT-~ •E~ CUSTOMEft

--••run-ll•

•

,.,_1·------------~···

2 S3
oau·•cotta Chaaa ...... 2a~~-o~. S3
COUNTY 1.1111 AMERICAN

Ch... Singles...............

WHOLIIIIUIIOIIAINTO

12.....

l~~RE400SPEeo $
FUJI Film ............ Roll

31
Far

OO

4

RECJUIAR

F h
$1 00 Skin
Mennen
$200
ras
fl
Bracer
......
l .&amp;-oz
1 Brocco ower ... Head

Star-Kist Chunk
Light Tuna !!' 11;
lllkz.

$

I

IN OIL UR SPRING WATER

QUALITY SHOE STORE

2
$5
.

Chocolate
$2 00
$100 Milk ................... Gal.

CA~FOANIA

CHAPMAN SHOES

OCEAN SPRAY

KROGER BUffiRMILK OR

~~~I;~M~~A VALLEY cHICKEN

Bananas

Paul Shatp, a gradual&lt;: of Meigs
High School, has been awarded a
talent scholarship tolaling S9 ,000
for as long as he mainlains a 2.5 or
belter grade point average and to
tho School of Music at Ohio State
Uniwnity.
He will ~ivc $2,250 per year
as long as he makes normal
propess toward a music degree ,
mainllins a 2.5 or better grade
pointava11ge, and plays in a major
ensemble each quarter he is in

$ 00 Cranberry
.

2
$ 00
'~;': 1

Sliced
Cooked Ham .... 1

or

qaabdk

of the plan:
. •Executed a !case agreement
w1th the Si;Jtc of Ohio for the new
Dcpanmcnt of Hum an Services
buildmg m Middlepon:
• D1scusscd the vacancy on l.hc
Ga llia ·Jackso n-Meigs Board of
Drug Addicuon and Mental Health
Services. No appointment was
made, pcndmg contact w11h a nom inated resident
Present were Commissioners
Ma nni ng K. Roush, David
Koblcntz and R1chard E. Jones, and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

hibi ts appropriations 1r11o a depart·
mcnt's salaries ac count during l.he
year without a letter of explanation
and prior approval of the board of
commissioners.
The comm issioncrs also:
• Ratified a revi se d version of
the AGHJMV Solid Waste District
plan, and authorized Clerk Mary
Hobsteltcr to issue a letter to town ·
ship trustees and village officials,
urging their immediate ralificatJon

II r The Associated Press
The We!lsiOn le vy wa s
Til e- happiest school officials in :q··provcd by an unofficial margin
1hc st;~ t c may be those in Wellston, nt 51 vo tes out of more than 3, 100
where an o pe ratin g le vy has :· :1q . It lost by one vote in iiS most
rcC CJ\'C.: d voter approval after eight r,·crrH clcfcat.
str:11g ln defeats at the polls.
''The voters smiled on the boys
The five-year, 6-mill levy was ,lrl{j g ir ls, " sa id Wellston school
one of 128 sc hool fun di ng issues
S11pCr1nt c ndc nt Franklin D.
:1pprm-c.:d by vo ters in Tuesday' s \'o . . t:Hd . "To wi n this one took a
pnrn:1ry. There were 250 requests lnt of h:tnl work by a lot of people
I rurn 227 sc hoo l districts on th e :rnd :1lot of elec tions."
h; 11l ot. ~1 nd the success rate of those
Thl' largest millage increase to
proposa ls was 51. 2 perc ent , th e wr n p:bs:Jge in Ohio was a 17-mill
Oh1 0 Depart ment of Education proposa l fo r the Milto n ~ Uni o n
&lt;;~li d
~c hool s m Miami County .
· 'Th is is go od new s for those
Oth er dislricls where large mil corn munili cs that have made cdu - lagc requests were approved were:
C(ltion a priority," said state school Rollin g Hill s, Guernsey County,
S"pcrintcndcnt Ted Sanders.
11&gt;.9 5 mills; Highland, Medina
Cou nt y, 16.&amp;Jl. rni~;,. M!ni.\~r .•.,

or

Sllatp, who plays the tuba, was
sele&lt;:ted to play an the Eleventh
Annual High School Honor Band
at Ohio State University on April
12. Conductors for the concert
given in Weigel Auditorium were
Richard Blaui and Jon Woods .
Sharp resides at 34491 Salem
School Lot Road, De&gt;ter, Ohio
45741.

account.
A commissJOncrs' policy pro -

Half of Ohio's school funding
issues are approved by voters

or

school.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 centa
A Mulllmedia Inc. NewaDaDer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 4, 1992

.

F,;.;hEB~k;;to,,~ ~
Apple Pie ............

~ 2~~. 3
$

Efferdent
$500
Tablets.............. 96-C1.

Kroger Deluxe
Ice Cream........

2 3Huggies ....

Corn
Muffin Mix......

5 $1

ASSOAllD VIIRIETIES

Jiffy

~ -Gal.

!'lAIN I'AGH£TTl0'S, WHERE' S

WAlDO OR

a.s-o.

s1o00

DISPOSABLE SMALL, MEDIUM OR lARGE
TRAINING PANTS

1s-

Pui~Ups ~~-

Kroger
$300
Charcoal... ........ ~~:·

2h$1 Cat's
Choice 4 $1
Cat Food.............

Franco American
Spaghetti ............... :&amp;!'

e-o•.

RIBBON-CUITING CEREMONY - A rib·
bon-cutting ceremony Wednesday marked the
opening of the U.S. 35 four-lane through Gallia
County. Present for the ceremony, from left,
were Slate Sen. Jan Michael Long, U.S. Rep.
Bob McEwen, ODOT Director Jerry Wray, Gal·

With the snip of a pair of scissors on a red, whue and blue ribbon
Wednesday. Gallia Coumy official ly opened its new es t Slre lch of
hi ghway as state and local officials
proc laimed the U.S. 35 four-lane'"
a key 10 reg ional economic dcvclopmcnt.
"This is a proud moment for all
of us in Oh io ," Gallia Co unt y
Cham ber of Commerce Pres ident
Ron McDade remarked at the dedication ce remony held at the new
res1 area two mil es east of R1o
Grande. He disc ussed the benefits
the $41.4 million highwa y would
present to Lhc region.
Noting that the hi ghwa y's complction was a cooperative effort,
Me Dade stressed that the sa me
spirit is necessary for the reg ion
and the stale to achieve iLs leansporwtion goals.
"If we are gomg to be success-

JOin 1he fight for funding remainmg pro1cc ts in the area. such as the
two stretc hes of two -lan e 35
thro ugh Jackso n and Ross counti es
and the connec tor roulc between
Po meroy and Ravenswood, W.Va.
"We're not greedy, just hun ·
gry," Tom Wiseman of the Sou th ·
eas ter n Ohio Regional Council' s
H1ghway Users Co mmitlec. wh1 ch
corlllnually plu gged the proj ec t
witl1 the sL1tc, joked with the audicncc.
Long was particularly 1mprcsscd
w1th the fact tha1the four-lane was
fun ded ent irely by rcceipls from
th e state gaso line tax, and in keepmg with 1he rela&gt;ed mood of th e
eve nt, jested with McEwen on that
point.
''I'm not he re to pick on you
today, but the fede ral money we
saved on th is proJOCI can be used to
fin1sh the highwa y all 1he way to

ful, we have to pu ll toge th er as a

Jndian:1," 1hc scn:J tor said.

10

t"'lm," he said. "It is our desire 10
McEwe n said he was "pleased
work wilh our neighbors north and and rl el 1ghted" that Ohio Dcpartsoulh of us to get the U.S . 35 co rri - men I of Tra nsportalio n DlfCCtor
rlor com pleted," he said.
Jerry Wray, who halls from Lic k·
McDade's se ntrm cnts we re ing Co unty Jnd was a speake r at
ec hoed by ot her speakers who the ce remony, was in a position to
viewed the ope ning of 1hc hi ghway help the southern pan of Oh1o get
as anot her li nk in 1he chain of mal&lt;- 1hc hi ghways it needs in 1m proving
mg 35 a fou r-lane from Dayton 10 the quality of life and the economy
th e West Virginia border . 01her of the rcgim.
speakers, such as State Sen. Jan
"Rivers were imponant in th e
Michael Long, D-C irclcvi ll e, and mid -18th cen tur y, then it wa s
U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen, pledged canals, and then came railroads, bu t

.-----Local Briefs:·---.
Crash victim in fair condition
A Raci ne vouth wa.~ listed in fair condition th is morning in the
trauma un 11 Of Grant Med ical Center, Columbus. for injuries suffered in a one-ca r crash early Wednesday in Sutton Township.
The Gall ia·Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Jeremy
T. North up, 16. 31305 Mitchell Road, was eastbound on County
Road 30 (Mommg Star), three-tenths of a mile west of County Road
28 (Bashan) at 7:20a.m., when he went left of cemer on a curve,
mel a westbound veh icle and went off the right side of the road.
Nonhup's car then came back onto the road and slruck a con·
crete bridge. The car then rolled and came 10 a rest on the passenger
side. Nonhup, who was ejec ted from the wreckage, was taken to
Grant by its LifeRighl helicopter ambulance.
Later Wednesday , a Reedsville man was injured in a one-car
cr•sh on Bashan Road in Orange Township, six-tenths of a male
so uth of State Route 7.
The patrol said Michael E. Cntcs, 19, 50240 Headley Road. was
so uthbound someti me before 8 p.m. when has vehacle went off the
left side of the road and struck a fence. The vehicle then continued
Conlin ued on page J

in th e 21st century good roads arc
the pi peline to prosperity," he said.
Spealung on behall of U.S. Rep.
Dob Wise, D-W.Va., Lucille Margan said there are a number of rcasons to co ntinu e lhe push for
improved hi ghways.
"Driving down here, I found my
car being waved in the wind by 25
Continued on page J

McEwen: OK
given by corps
to scrubbers

Sc h oo l ~

1·:11kd hv one wte.
r.quc st for St
C L ~tr ~vd ! C - RichLwd :-;c hool s tn
Be lrn unl Count-.,.· wJs defea ted for
th e l it h 11 mc (n fou r years The
disaric1 had avkc-c1 ror an additional
4.4. rm ll opcrati" ' levy
A

l en·

Ohio voters bucked politicians
in congressional district races

lia County Chamber of Commerce President
Ron McDade, Bob El'ans, Tom Wiseman ,
ODOT District 10 Deputy Director John
Dowler, and State Reps. Mary Abel, Mike Shoemaker and Mark Malone. (OVP photo).

Highway dedication speakers say
teamwork needed to complete corridor

;\ in:, Lll/1' Co untv, 13 47 mills :
1\ 1 -_- ~ui. \\'i l l l :lrm'Cuu nty, 12 .90
1111 11 - C ,·11rr.ll , Defi:111ce County.
11 q rnrlh- :md Hubbard. Trurn hull (P liiH '·. I I mi lls.
Thr1'1.' k1 1C o., were decided h) s 1~
t~r k '-~ d '.tl k \. the dcpanmcrd s.:.ud .
ln Trum l,H illo nn ty, one con unu ·
11 1 ~ k v~ w:J'i approved by six votes
:md :Hlll thcr was defeated by three
In Sh,· ll w Co unty, an cmcrgrn c y
rcn c v.~1l ·k vy for F&lt;..~irlawn Local

WAS HI NGTON (AP) - Oh10
,.n1 c rs may no1 hear a bout bad
c lll·cks. aga 1n for a while, but l.hc
1\\UC is likely to bounce back.
l&lt; c p. Mary Rose Oakar. who
I• .11 1 c13 overdra ft s at th e now cl1 1"l' d House bank, surv ived a
d (l \~ (_'al l :1g:unst a six~c ha!lc n gcr
Ji l' ld 1r1 Tucsd:1 y's Democratic pri -

oust Ookar.
"Rcrubl 1cam may spend a lot
ol wnc and spe nd a lot of money
111crc an d not 111 olhcr races. Ms.
Oakar will win," she srud. " It 's a
solid Democratic seal.··
lnanadjacenldisuicL,a millionarrc who got little support in three
ca mpa igns renewed her focus on
llJ:Ir\·.
congressional term limns and won
;\ not her 1ncumbcn 1 with over- the Republican nomi nation 10 an
dr:1fls m tl1c House bank, Rep. Bob open scat.
McE wen. had an even closer call : a
Margaret Mueller will take on
~ (~9 - vu t c m~ugm wi lh some abscnrormcr Secretary of Stale Sherrod
tcc ballots uncounted and a recount Brow n. who won the Democratic
l1h cly.
McEwen's 166 bad chocks were
~ ~ h1 g IS'&gt; UC 1n hi s campaign &lt;.~gains !
J{ ,' p C l:1r c n cc Mill e r, an d
Ucrnncrats were lay ing plans to
('llll tr nuc snund111g that theme in the
c.-: ncra l elec ti on 1f McEwen
Au th ori ti es con tinue to invcsti ·ilc corn cs the nominee. The winner g: li C the death of a Dayton man in
\\il l lace Democra t Ted Strickland rural Meigs Cou nty last month .
o l Lii Cl '&gt; Vd lc .
Rona ld Pohl, 57, was rou nd
·T or our guy to win, McEwen dead in Salem Townsh 1p on Ma y
wd! hr th e hco.: t one (opponent),"
II . Pohl and his son, Michael, 31,
s:1r d Dcrno cral lC Party Chair were tt.:rk cy hun ti ng on property
E u gl' Jl C Br:lll .\too l .
ncar Sale m Center, when the elder
·Republ1 can Chairma n Robert Pohl was reported missing. He was
Bcnncu s.a1d he didn't believe l.hc later lound dead fr om gun shot
h11d c heck 1ss uc would defe a t
wounds m the Pnce Stron g Road
M cEwe n in Nove mber, and s u g~
area of Salem Township and was
gc .stcd th e too -close- to-ca ll out - pronounced dead by Coroner Dou come ....,as a resu lt of good will glas HuRler.
tOI'&gt;'arci MJJ !cr rJ I.hcr than the check
According to Me1gs County
~.~.., 11 c bounc1ng back at McEwen.
She riff Jom cs M. Sou lsby, h1 s
" T iirnoul 111 At hens and Was h ~
dcra rtm cn l ha s questioned three
1 111~ ton count1cs rea ll y made it a
subjects regarding Pohl' s death in
( 1 (.\;~c r;1 cc." he said. Those coun an aucmpt to dctcnninc the circumt i C~ arc now represented by Miller
stances surround ing it. as well as to
:1nd hnd hi gh er- than -usual vote r de term inc whether th e shoo ting

nomination in nort heaSI Oh10 ·s
13th Dislricl.
Ms. Nichols predi cted Brown
will hold hi s own, even th ough
Mueller has bankrolled her own
camprugns in the pasL
" Inlhcsccretaryofstatcracchc
ra ised $2 miJii on," she sa1d.
But state GO P exccuu vc director Rex Elsass said timmg 's on Ms_
Mueller's side.
Cap itol Hill turnover and
perquisi tes are hot topics now. " I
Lh ink thi s is the year for her mcs sage,'' he said.

Turkey hunter's death
still under investigation

U.S. Rep. Bob McEwe n
announced this morning that th e
U.S. Army Corps of Engi neers has
approved the necessary permits to
allow the construction of scrubbers
at the Gen. James M. Gavin Power
Plant in Ches hire to meet new
Clea n Air Act sumdards.
"Thi s is encouragi ng news for
our area," McEwen said. " It means
that we have clea red the grea1es 1
obswclc 10 inswll ing scrubbe rs so
1hat American Electric Power can
usc coaJ mined right here in southern Ohio rather th an impor tm g
cos ~ y foreign oil.
'This can save the mining JObs
lllnHIU(
so vital to us all ," he added.
Oll io politicians were also trying
McEwen, who has been outspotn
1rllcrp rc1 Ortk ar' s su rvival in a
ken in his suppo11 of the scrubbe r
"l'
'-'t:
I1 · W;ly pr11H:Jry. She won
pl an an d in keeping th e Meigs
rcnom
mauon w 1th 39 percent of
Mines open, had called earlier for
th
e
\'OIC.
the corps to expedite thw consid Dcmocr&lt;Jl'&gt; looked at th ose num ·
era tion of th e necessary penn its.
" ! spoke today Wilh Col. Van be" and declared the outcome the
F.pps abou 1 thi s goo d news," resull of h ~ud work and years of
McEwen said, "and I wish 10 thank ath·n rion 10 con.sti tu cniS' needs.
Rcpuhllcans looked at tl1c same
the corps for their assistance and
numbers
and concluded, as Bennett
cons id erat ion in ex pediti ng th is
put
it
.
"Mary
Rose Oakar was
process .
repu
dlatecl
by
61
percent of th e
"Now. we will work with the
reoplc
In her own party .••
Ohio Envi ron men tal Protec rion
Oakc r' s new dis tr ict includes
Agency an d th e Public Utilities
Co mmi ssion to e nsure that the some predominantly GOP territory.
remai ning pa perwork is don e as She al so had 213 overdrafts at the
flou&lt;e bon k and publicity about her
rapidly as possible," he sa1d.
role
in the !louse post office invesTh e Meigs Mines. which
ti
l
.
!
ation
wlll hurt her, Bennett said.
emplo y I,050 people, supp ly coal
'
"We
have a great opponunity,"
10 the Gavm Plant. McEwen sought
so
id
.
Oaka r faces Martin Hoke
he
amendments to the Clean Air Act
of 1990 to preserve th e opti on to rn NovcmOCr .
Laura N1c hols of the Democrat·
continue to usc Ohio coal and has
met with workers and toured the 1C Congressional Campai gn ComMe igs Min es in hi s con tinuin g miuce said Republicans wiU do the
effon to protect jobs for southeast- opposition a favor if they focus
1heir resources on attempting to
em Ohio.

'

w:ts accrclcnt.JI.
Snul ~ h y rcrortcd that he had not
recc Jvcd &lt;1 wrutcn rcpon from the
Franklin County Coroner 's OJflce ,
wt1crc Pohl's body was scm ror an
a111op'\y. A vcrbJI rcpon from that
ol'f1cc confirmed the death was due
to J gun shor wo und. Tha t office
wll l not make a determinaUon as to
whclhcr the wound waq self infliCt eel, Soulsby sa1d.
One of the subJeCts has been
admin1stered a polygraph tes t ,
accord mg to Sou lsby .
So ul sby sa1d that authonues arc
al so look ing 1n to the possibili ty of
whe th er Poh!'s dea th co uld be
!rnkcd to a series of killings across
t he .s t:llc Inv o lv in g li shcrmen
Those shoo1ing s arc also stdl u11dcr
Investiga tion.

DNR clears RAC of
pollution allegations
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The SUite DiviSion of Natural
Resources has cleared Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. of allegations it
violated cnvironmentaJ laws at iLo;;
Jackson County plant.
Seven environmental groups and
the United Steelworkers charged in
April that Ravenswood Alummum
was dumping 2.5 IOns of cyan ide
annually iniO the Ohio River and
was discharging solvents and oil
onto a "spmy field" ncar the plant
that was polluting nearby ground
water.
But DNR Director Ed Hamnck
said Wednesday that tests failed to
suppon the allegations.
Hamrick said "Jow levels of solvents" were found in the spray field
and nearby areas during a surprise

sUit e inspection prompted by I~ C' al legations. He said insrx:c tors
couldn 't determi ne whether the
sol vcms were hazardous waste.
As for the allegr.d cyan1dc dis ·
charges, Hamrick said, "All the
wate r sam ples came back either
clean or well below levels of
regulatory concern that would
cause us to take enforcement ac·
tion ."

The stale won't take anyJunher
action on the allegations, Hamnck
said. But the U.S. Enmon mental
Protectim Agency plans additional
tests at the facility.
Hamrick also said he would continue to help the company renew its
National
Pollution
Discharge
Elimination System permit, which
has expired.

�Thursday, June 4, 1992

Commentary
111

eo.t Street

Pameroy, Ohio
DJ:VOTID TO TBIIII'I'EJla81'8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHJTEIIEAD
Aslistantl'llbllsber!CoDtroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTEIIS OF OPINION ue welcome They sbould be less than
word&amp;. All letten are 1ubjKt

to

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

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, June 4, 1992

Soulh·Central Ohio
Ertended roretast:
Tomght, occasional showers and
Saturday through Monday :
thund erstOrm s. Low near 60.
A chance of showers and thun Chance of ram IS 90 percenL Fri - derstorm s Saturday and Sunday.
day, cloudy wuh a chance of show - Fair on Monday _ Highs 75-80.
ers and thunderstonns_ High in the Lows from the mid-50s 10 the low
m•d-70s. Chance of rain is 50 per· 60s.

Clinton narrows his VP choices

The Daily Sentinel

)Oil

editing and must be signed with name,

address aDd lalepbone DWD.ber. No unsigned letten wiU be published. Letters
should be iD sood tuce, lddrtssiDg issues, nol personalities.

It's time for Perot to make
:a move or risk a fade
BTTOMRAUM
_ WASHINGTON (AP) - Rou Pero1 is politics' hottest commodity
pgbt now. The next few wecb 1111y tell whether he willlteep on blllzing
or bum up in the
role of a declared candidacy.
:· This year's wmultuous primlry season came 10 a close not with public
opinion coaJac;,g tKOUIId die major-pany candidates, !he usual scenario,
bitt with !he nation'sltl.eDtioo riveted on !be scrappy Dallas computer
!)'coon IIIII his plherinc Cllllpaign.
· ')'he days between DOW IIIII !he Democratic convention in July should
give a pRII}' good signal o_r whether Pera is indeed a force to be reckoned
)vith in the
elecuon, or •s JUS! the latest man1festauon of thiS
year's vocer · - ICtioo with politics-as--usual.
Thai restlessness helped a COilJeiVlllive colwnnis~ Patrick Buchanan,
embarrass a siltinif:aesideot with strong showings in !be early primaries.
And it brieRy
lhed life into the Democratic campaigns of former
MassachusetiS Sen. Paul Tsonps and !ben former California Gov. Jerry
Brown.
· AnalysiS are now astillg lhemselves if PelOI is filling !he void left by
tfaese earlier
stan or whether he has real staying power.
: "An awful lol wiD depend 011 polls in !he next two or three weeks,"
said GOP analyst Kevin Phillips. "Perot's got himself at a very, very high
tivelllthis poinL I'd Wlllcll those nwnbezs very carefully. They're going
16 be hard to sustain...
Exit polls from Tuesday's wrap-up pnmaries held ominous news for
Pi'esident Bush and likely Democratic candidate Bill Clinton alike, but
also pre10nted some iDCOIICiusive and contradict.ory data on Perot.
. They showed Perot would have won in California and Ohio if the elecIillo were held ,__ But they showed him trailing both Bush and Ointon
'" New Jmc:y.
They abo showed a substllllial rise in the number of voters with an
unfavorable opinion of Perot front earlier primaries.
Nationwide surveys ,.inured !he finding of exit polls that roughly one
in lhree Americans -wt vote for Ptrol
A survey by The WasbingtOII Post and ABC News released Monday
showed Paot with 34 pett:ent support, Bush 31 pen:cm and Clinton 29
pC:rcent. A CBS poll showed Busb at 35 perrent. Ointon 27 percent and

down-.,._.

WASHINGTON (NEA) There are rumors all over town that
a secret panel assembled by Bill
Clinlorlto advise him on the choice
of a running male is about ready to
deliver its short list, which may
contain as few as lhree names.
The panel has set up shop in the
Washington office of a major out·
of-town law fmn _ It has consulted
with Democratic leaders coast-tocoast, studied private polls, and
vened resumes of potential vice
presidential choices, looking for
possible skeletons in closelS.
The group's work is so hush·
hush that various rumors have
dozens of different names on the
short list However, no one - not
even most people in the Clinton
camp -really seems to have any
idea who is stiJI under considera·
lion.
The one thing that you do hear
from various sources is that, after
very careful consideration, the
group's short list will contain only
"traditional" candidates. "Tradi tional" is political speak for white
and male.
Reportedly, the group has
reached the conclusion that Clinton

would lose more votes than he
would gain if his running male
were a minority, a non-politician or
a woman. The Iauer apparently has

Robert J, Wagman
been the subject of intense debate.
Many high-level Democratic
operatives believe that a woman on
the ticket would hun Clinton in
two, almost contradictory ways.
First, there is the question of
whether there is cum:ndy a poten·
tial woman running mate of sufficient stature. SecOild. a woman on
the ticket might deflect attention
from Ointon himself, which could
harm him should the contest come
down to a three-way slruggle with
George Bush and Ross PeroL
For a host of reasons - POlitical
and geographic balancing (oremost
- New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley
appears at or near the 10p of most
Democratic insiders' lists of top
choices. But Bradley says he does
not want to run, and he appears to
mean it. Still, it is likely that he
will be included on any short list in
the hope that Clinton could make

~MMeR,

J=

him chilnge his mind.
If you are to believe the rumors,
still in the running also are Scns.
Sam Nunn of Georgia and Jay
Rockefeller of West Virginia; and
one-time Clinton opponent Sen.
Bob Kerrey of Nebraska.
Also reportedly still in consideration is Boston Mayor Ray Aynn,
current head of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, and a very outspoken critic of the Bush adminislration ' s urban policies in the after.
math of the Los Angeles riots.
Guess who's coming 10 dinner?
The most closely watched lists
in town these days are the guest
lists 11 White House slate dinners.
Currently, Democrats hold a 52·
seat majority in the House. Even
with voter anger and redistricting,
neither party really expecls the
GOP to gain anywhere near that
amount of seats in the November
election. But Democrats are very
worried that a GOP gain of as few
as 25 House seats could spell real
trOuble in !he 103rd Congress.
In Ronald Reagan's first term,
conservative Southern Democrats
teamed with Republicans to give
the new President virtually every-

MaN.

THeY'Re. CLOSiNG THe.
3iR Base. I'M GaiN6

To tiavero
Le.T ~ou Go !

shootin'

Perot 81 26 pcn:cnL

Both Democratic aM Republican suategists suggest Perot will peak
soon, pet11aps on !he day he ends his non-campaign and formally declares
his candidacy.
"He is beginning 10 undttgo the kind of scrutiny thai anybody who is
considering running for !he president of !he United States oughliO undergo. That process has just begun and thai process is unlikely 10 treat him
kindly," said Democratic Party Chairman Ronald Brown.
: Perot's formal announcement - odds are he'll do it on his June 27
birthday or on July 4th -is the next Big Event on this year's political
calendar.
But expect a Sle8dy SlrCim of Perot events between now and then including rallies each time Paot qualifies for another slate. He's already
on the ballot in 12 IIIIa IIIII there is no reason to believe he won't make
it onto an 50.
"Mainlaining inlmSI does not seem 10 be much of a problem for us 81
the moment." observed Perot spokesman James Squires. "We've got
mr.-e inlmSilhan I know what to do with."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covtrs national polilics ror Tbt
Associaltd Pna

cent.

thing he wanted. Some recent voleS
have shown that as many as 35
Democrats now serving would like·
Jy vote with the GOP on many
issues if doing so might swing the

r---Local briefs -----..
Continued from page 1
on over an embankment and lllnded on its side, causing moderate
damage_
Crites was taken 10 Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, where

Vote,

Moreover, White House operatives insisl that there are as many
as a dozen Southern and borderStale Democrats who are straddling
the fence, ready to switch to the
GOP. Democrats insist thai figure
is way high, but they confess t1uit a
few House Democrats might be
wavering.
Thus, the careful scrutiny of
state dinner guest lists. An invitation is still one of the most coveted
perks in !Own, and the Democrnts
are interested in who in !heir ranks
!he White House might be wooing.
Oil in !he family?
Some of America's biggest oil
and energy companies are p&lt;...ring
tens of thousands of dollars into !he
campaign coffers of a politicaloeophyte, an environmenlal activist
who, if elected, will come to Wash·
ington seeking much greater energy
regulation.
The young Democratic congres·
sional hopeful is J. Bennett Johnson Ill, 32, director of !he national,
not-for-profit Trust For Public
Land, an organization against off.
shore and Arctic oil drilling, and
for expanding pub~c open spaces.
Why, you might ask, have the
energy companies seemingly laken
leave of their senses to help the
enemy? They are doing so because
the candidate's father has asked
them 10 - and asked them ralher
forrefully.
I. Bennett Johnson is, of course,
the senior senator from Louisiana,
and chainnan of the Senate Energy
and Natural Resounces Committee.
He admits thai he and his son don't
exacdy see eye 10 eye on environ·
mental issues, bul that he would
sure like to see his son in the
House.
So powerful is his hold over
environmenlal issues, thai when
Betmett JohnsOn asks something of
an energy company's political
..:tion committee, even donating 10
an environmentalist, they say
"Yes, sir," with a smile and !ben
write a check.
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
ed columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

he was treated ami released.

Marriage license issued
A marriage license has been issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Johnnie Mae Brown, 28, Langsville, and Jane Bare, 41,
Dc&gt;ter.

Flowers charged in assault case
Meigs County Sheriff James M_ Soulsby reports that Robert L.
Flowers of Racine has been arrested and jailed on a felonious
assault charge for the May 8 assault on James A. Nelson.
The incident, according to Soulsby, took pla:e at the Mike Henry
residence at Portland and the victim was laken to Jackson General
Hospital. At6:15 p.m. on Wednesday, he was listed in critical condnion m the JCU unit at Charleston General Hospital.
Soulsby reponed that Rowers was not known until Wednesday
evening shonly before being arrested. The name ftrSt given was
Rob Taylor. Soulsby also stated that two slatements from Mike
Henry will be given to the prosecutor's office for review and possi·
ble f•ling of charges.

Stolen car recovered
The 1987 Oldsmobile owned by Gene Wolfe, reported stolen on
Tuesday, was recovered in Lctan Falls on Wednesday. A warrant
has been issued for a suspect in the case. The name of the suspect is
be ing withheld pending his arrest

EMS units answer calls
Ten calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Emergency Services oo Wednesday and early Thursday.
On Wednesday at9:04 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Blake Road
1n Tuppers Plains for Lorene Gorrell. She was tal:en 10 St Joseph
Hospital. At 9:31 a.m., Pomeroy unit took Helen Williams from
Peacock Avenue 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital. AI 10:34 a.m.,
Racine units went to Smith Ridge Road lor an auto accident Jared
Hupp was taken to St Joseph. Jina Hupp and Jeremy Hupp were
treated but not transponcd.
At I :52 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook Center.
Bessie Graham was taken 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital. At8:28 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains units went 10 Locust Grove Road for an auiO acci·
dcnL Mike Crites was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
At 10:50 p.m .. M•ddlcpon unu went to Nonh Third and took Petmy
Marcum to Vet erans. At I I:22 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Ash
Stree t Celia Hi te was taken 10 Veterans.
At I 2: 30a.m. on Thursday, Rutland squad went to Leading
Creek Road for Mlldred Lambert. She was tal:en to Veterans. At
I:39 a.m., L1fe Flight transponed Marcum from Veterans 10 Grant
Medical Center. At 1:39 a.m ., Pomeroy squad went to General
Harunger Parkway. Kim Shamblin was taken to Veterans.

Dedication ...

Guisewite has d.evoted several
weeks of recent comic strips 10 her
chara:ter Cathy's travail of trying
to buy a swimsuit. Buying a swim-

Sarah Overstreet
suit is !he worst experience of !he
clothes -buymg year for most
women, and not beQiuse our bodies
are all that bad. Most of us have
only a couple of problem areas perhaps a lad 100 much filet on !be
tenderloins, not enough cleav for
our ages.
These are problems that could
be successfully camouflaged if
swimsuits were designed Cor bodies
that occur naturally within the
species. But instcad of real women,
designers ply their trade for those
aerobics instructors with breast
implants who model bathing suits.
Tum to the swimsuit section or any
catalog and you'll see what I mean:
The ladies ' torsos look like Bar-

hie's, and the SWimSUI( legs are CUI
halfway to the armpits so !he ooly
rump that wouldn't hang out is
DaVId Brenner's. Notice they never
show one of these suits from the
back. They don't dare. because the
scene would resemble the bags
under Roben Mltchum's eyes after
"The Longest Day."
A very small amount of padding
in swimsuit tops would even up the
top-to-bottom score considerably,
but we might as well ask for a credit card with 2 percent interest.
Why, when you can walk into !he
lingerie dcpanmcnl of any dcpan·
mem siOre and find as many styles
of bras as there arc models of cars,
can't they put a liule of that foam
into a swimsuit? I'm not that good
a swimmer anyway, and I could
use all the buoyancy I can geL
From what my boyfriend tells
me, things aren't all that great in
the menswear dcpanment, either.
Forced 10 abandon the 15-year-old
trunks that snagged on a nail last
float trip, he went looking for

something similar in a newer
model but came back empty-handed.
"All they have is those long
jams the kids wear or those tight
liule 'one-size-fils-all' Speedos
you see on Olympic divers," he
groused. "I'm 42 years old, for
heaven's sake! I can't go out in
public looking like the Fresh Prince
of Del -Air, and I must have too
much 'all' because one size doesn't
fit it And those fluorescent lights!
It's like every pimple, lump of fat
and ingrown hair on your body is
painted in day-glo and you're
standing there in bla:k li~ht!"
J was euphoric he llOIJced the ol'
fluorescent lighl fakeout! He's
beginning 10 undersland why it
takes women so long to try on
clothes. Neither of us has a swimsuit yet, but we've grown much
closer.
Sarab Overstreet is a syndi·
cated columnist ror Newspapu
Enterprise Association.

What we need is a sense of community
lb©W/
~~~~©W~l
~JAY~~~~
~~
•.t&lt; l'l'li lly N{"' '"'-

If it is true as Plutarch said that
noble spirits shine in times of dis·
aster and ill fortune, !hen our sense
of decency is surely being tested by
the sturm and drang of January and
May.
l speak of storms and riOll, and
please bear with me while I try to
pull ll all together.
Let's begin with the drang of
May. In effect, we are told, the Los
Angeles rampage lifted the lid on a
refuse eontamer and let us peer at
the rot and ruin we let our cities
become during the greedy '80s.
The riots inspired thousands of
urban dwellers 10 join a save-ourcities march on Washington, during
which scores of mayors and local
officials demanded that Congress
pass a $35 billion urban aid package. "This is a matter of national
security," said Baltimore Mayor

Kurt Schmoke. "Love us! Love IL&lt;
as much as we love you!"
The sturm of January was a
nonheaster that swept up the East

Joseph Spear
Coast and devastated the beaches
of Maryland and Delaware. Dunes,
roads, businesses and homes were
ripped up and washed away. A fed·
craUy subsidized $44 million beach
replenishment project in Ocean
City, Md., suffered a serious sci·
back as sand that had recently been
pum\)ed from the sea washed back
1010 11. And how did the unaffected
react to the affected?
When the U.S. Senate was con·
sidering $2 billion in emergency
funds for the cities - less than 6

Today in history_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
.-

., Tlae "-cllltd PnM
: Today iJ 'l'lsttnday, I • 4, !he I56th day of 1992. There Ire 210 days
l~t in dte yw.

-· Today's hlJbliallt in hlslory:
: Fifty ye111 110. on ]IIIC 4; 1942, !he Baule of Midway began during
World Wtt D, JaulliDI in America's first mllior victory over Ja~ and
m..xlnl I decili-.e turain&amp; point tor !be United Swes in !he Pacific !he·

afer.
. On this dale:
: In 1647, the E.nglilh army seiJ:ed King Charles I as a hostage.
In 1812, the Louiliana Territory was renamed the Missouri Tmit.ory.
- In 1878, Turby IUI1Ied CYfliUI over 10 the British.
: In 11192, 100 ytMIIIO. the Sierra Oub was inca]lorated in San Fran·

cl.'lco.

• In 1896. Hell'y Ford Dtldc aaucctssf•tltest run with his car in a night·
time dri-ve dJroa&amp;h !he of Detroit.

In 1940, !he Allied milil8ry ev..:uation from Dunkirk, France, ended.
Jn 1944, Allied forces libenued Rome.
In 1947, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved !be
Taft-Hartley Acl The law was la!er enacted over President Hany S. Tru-

man's veto.

•

percent of what the U.S. Confer·
ence of Mayors says is needed Sen. Trent Lon, R-Miss.,
denounced the legislation as a
"political Titan tic." Rep. Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga . - lhe loud·
mouthed legislator who thrives on
driving "wedges" between interesl
groups- whined that "there is no
political base in this country for
taxing rural and suburban voters
and sending the money 10 big-city
mayors."
When the tides receded and
coaslal communities asked for
more help, Baltimore Sun columnist Roger Simon bemoaned Maryland's practice of "pouring lax
money into the waves at Ocean
City." An cnvironmenlal writer
suggested in a Sun article that
Uncle Sam suspend support for
beach restorati on_ " Is it reasonable
to ask an individual in Bulle,
Mont., or Memphis, Tenn., to
finance some beach-from communities' indulgent desire to play
'chicken' with nature?" he asked.
Well, yes, it is. And the question
itself gets 10 !he bean of something
that has gone seriously wrong in
America. For whatever reason and I attribute it mainly to the
rapacity and meanness that seem to
be integral to lhe Reagan-Bush
years - we have lost all sense of
community. America has become a
Ball&lt;anized nation in which genders. tribes and religious groups
despise and do baHie with one

In 1956, !he State Deparunent published a partial text of a closed-door
~h given !he previous February by Nikita Khrushchev, in which !be
Soviet leader denounced his predecessor, Joseph Stalin.
In 1985. !he U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling striking
down an Alabama law providing for a daily minule of silcnce in public
schools for "meditation or voluntary prayer."
In 1986, Jonathan Jay Pollard, a former Navy intelligence analyst,
pleaded guilty in WashingtoniO spying for Israel. (He is serving a life
prism tmn.)
In 1989, hundreds, possibly thousands, died as Chinese anny troops another.
SUll1lled Beijing 10 crush !he pro-democracy movement
As incongruous as it may sound,

federal assistance for inner cities
and for coastal communities
amount to e&gt;actly !he same thing:
insurance. In the generic sense,

insurance is a social device in
which risks are pooled, so that the
peril faced by any individual is
shared by an entire group. When
disaster strikes, !he individual does
not have to bear it alone: others
assist on the premise !hey will he
assisted if the need arises.
None of us can help who and
what we are, and arguably we cannot help bein$ drawn to the environmems we tive in. Some love the
sea, some love the cities. Some
love the hills of San Francisco,
some love the plains of KBnsas
some love the rolling fields of Ten:

project's first phase between Holzer Medical Center and Rodney Pike
was begun in 1983, earth was net
turned until March 1990.
The first phase of the project
was sold to the Shelly Co .,
Thornville, for $14.4 million. while
the second phase, from Rodney
Pike to Rio Grande, wen! Ia
Kokosing Conslruction, Fredericktown, for $18.5 million. The third
phase. from Rio Grande to Centerville, was done by Beaver Construction for $8.5 million.
The two new rest areas, which
face each other ..:ross the highway,
were buill by Mullins Construction
Co., Wheelersburg, for $1.6 million.
The opening of the new stretch
of 35 means that the old 35 from
Rodney to Rio Grande will become
pan of State Route 588. From Gallipolis 10 Rodney, the old mule will
become a county road.

Swimming lessons
Two sess ions of swimming
lessons will be offered at London
Pool in Syracuse.
The first session will be held
June 8-19 and the second session
will be held June 22-July 3. Class
fcc is $20 per person and participants must be at least su years of
age. David Deem is insrructor.
A lifeguard training class will
al so be offered June 15-30. Class
fee for this session is $25 and participants must be at least !5 years
of age.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-9909.
Gospel music concerl
There will be a gospel music
conccn at the First Southern Bapti s t Church. Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Nationally· !mown, full -time music
evangelist, John Robels, w1ll be in
concert. A free-will offering will be
rccc.ved_ Public invited.

Grade cards ready
Students at Southern High
Sc hool may pick up their grade
cards ul the office lomorrow (Fri·
day) through ne&gt;l week beginning
at 9:30a.m.
Heritage Weekend dinner
SL Paul Lutheran Church, Second Street and Sycamore ,
Pomeroy, will provide lunch I une
I 3 from I I a.m. 10 4 p.m. Hot dogs
with or without the works. sloppy
JOCS, cole slaw, potato chips, soft
drinks, iced tea, lemonade, coffee
and desserts will be available for
purchase in St. Paul's air-conditioned fellowship haiL Proceeds
will be used IOward the new piano
in the sanctuary. Public invited.
Guest speakers
Bill and Phylli s Cadle will
speak during the Evangelistic Outreach Program of the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bouom
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public . Fellowship
will follow.

DAVIOmm
The Disabled American Veterans and the Ladies Auxiliary will
hold its regular meeting Monday at
th e hall . 124 Bunemut Ave nue ,
Pomeroy. Refreshments will be
served at 6 p.m. and ma:ting at 7
p.m.

Special srrvia
Rev_Bob Anrulroog will speak
at Rejoicing Life Church. 500
North Second Avenue. Middleport.
during the men 's bn:atfast in the
school lunchroom Saturday and
during sezviccs SUDday II 10 a.m.
The public is invited.
Rev _Annsuong is an ordained
minister in Dr. Gerald Dcrsaine's
Christian Retn:at, Bradr:ntoo, Fla.,
with !be Gospc:l Crusade Minislai·
al Fellow&gt;hip. He is a tulSI•haN 10
or works with Ricbanl Kiel, Dr.
Hilton Suuon. NavaJO Missions,
Bill Murray , New Generation
Entertainment, Rev. Ayo Oritse·
jafor, God's News Rebind the
News Television, among otbcn. He
is on the board of directors for
Freedom's Fnends. and Dmline's
Gospel Crusade Inc .• He is also a
member of the Evangelical Press
Association_ He is ronsunlly writ·
mg or ghost-writing many books of
which 24 have been poi&gt;lisbed.

Swim lessons
to be offered
Two sessions of swimming
lessons w1ll be offered at London
Pool1n SyracllSIC.
The first sessiOn w11l be held
June 8- I9 and the second session
will be held June 22-luly 3. Class
fee is 520 per pe=n and participants must be at least si&gt;. years of
age. David Dean is instructor.
A lifeguard training class will
also be offered June 15-30. Class
fee for this session is $25 and participants mUSI be 11 least 15 years
of age.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-9909.

Area deaths To conduct clinic

Conme Karschmk. R N . will

Violet Christy
Viol et A. Chnsty, 80, Grove
C11y. died Tuesday , June 2, !992 at
Doctor's Hospital West in Colum·
bu s_
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Garrett, and parents.
August and Harriet Snyder.
She was rcured from DCSC and
was a member of South Bethel
Evangelical United Brethren
Church . For many years she sang
with the Christy Trio throughout
Central and Southern Ohio . She
was active in children's activities
and as music director in several
churches.
She IS survived hy a daughter,
Janel (J ohn) Chamberlin, Bowling
Green , Ky. ; a granddaughter .
Chri sty Chamberlin, Atlanta, Ga.; a
sister, Amy Christy, Columbus.
Friends may call at Schoedinger
Norris Chapel, 3920 Broadway,
Grove City, today from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. where services will be Fnday
at 10 a.m. with Rev. Finley Hargeu
officiating. Burial will be in Athens
Cemetery in Athen s.

conduct a skin resting clinic at the

Scipio Fire Depanment rn Tuesday
from 5· 7 p.m.
ln accordance WJth Meigs County Board of Health Pohcy. u •s
mandatory for all food handle" to
have a current wbezculin skin test.
Area residents, including boosters
clubs. PTO' s, church groups and
other reSidents , who are m food
serviCe are urged to lake adV1llltage
of this froe service.
This is an opportune lime for a

child entering kindergarten to
rece ive lheir skin leStS.

Furlhcr information may be

obtained by callin g the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Offoce at 9923722_

The Ohio Department of Taxauoo " making applic.alims availab le for the 1992 Energy Crulit
Program , Stale Rep. Mary Abel (DAthens) annou~ IOday_
Abel said that pmons ova !be
age of 65 ..- wuh a pemlallefll dJs ability are ehg•ble for up 10 a 30
percent credit oo !heir lle.ating bt.JI&gt;
or a lump sum payment to ddra~
the cost of fuel.
The program off"" assiStaoc&lt;
from November through March to

houso holds wnh a co mb1ned:
iocome of less than $9,000. Abel :
sat&lt;! thai disability payments, ADC.
generaJ assistance, life insuran ce, :
worker 's compensation and child
support are not considered income ·
lor purposes of the program .
:
Abel sa1d that applicauon s arc :
a&gt;· a~Jable from the Departmen t ol
Ta.uuoo m Columbus by callmg I
800-282-4310 . More mformauon
can be ob tained by calling Abe l\ offiCe at 1-800-2R2-9253 Th e :
&lt;kadhne for makmg appltcatmn lur ·
l.S:Stsunce 1s Sepl I
:

Roberts nominated
Ph ili p M. Roberts ~ on the
Rep ublican nommanon lor Gall1.3
County engmeer 111 Tuesday 's Pnmary Election . Roheru. oompl&lt;nng

Stocks

a term as Meigs Coun!)' rngmea,

-\m Ek Po wn

defeated mcum bem James P Bam!
bv a vote of 2.653 to 2,47!! .

.-ld·~ bnd

· In No ve mber R obert ~ -. 111

.. 32
JU 5/ll

Od

\l&amp;:T
Bor,k One·

oppose Democr;u Joseph L Leach_
who was DIStriCt 10 deput' due&lt;tor of the Oh 10 Department of
Transpcnation from !987 ., 1991.
Leach received 2.889 ~ '" h1s
unopposed race for the nommanon

&amp;!("-

.... 4 1 l /4
A 7 1/X

E&gt;.m~

Ch.lrmm~

. 17 l/4'
... .29 l/2
19 3/8

Shop

C11' Holdmg
ceJer:;i \lo&lt;ul
Go&lt;xh c...- T&amp; R
Ke~ C.:ntunon

Middleport court news

18 1/4

.. 70 1/2
18 1/2
.. 13 1n

L;;nJ, End
Ltrn1tfJ [n(

Two were fmed and one fort'eilcd a bond m !be coun of "llddkpon Mayor Fred Hoffman Tue.da~

\1 u lu m~Uta

20 5/X
Inc.

28 3/4

R~'

.. I 1/R

Slxlnc~. · ~ In:

19 7!2
.. 16
.. 2 t ]/j

R.:,LJ urant
Rdu!ll.:c Fkcux .
Robbm'i&amp;\.hcr'i

ni E!ht.
~Fin ed were James 0 . Jone'i.

Middleport. S I 0, illegal exhausL
and Carl E. Stewan. Cbeshu-e_ S!S
and costs. disorderly manno- _Ste"'
an was also cued for rontempt oi
coon and lodged in !be M!ddlqx&gt;n
jai l.
Forfeiting his bond was lUnd'
L Lee, Columbus, 5460. operaung
a motor vehicle while under the
mfl uence of alcohol or~-

1

Sur BJr.&lt;

'.()

\\ .:nd~ lnt'l
\\ unhtn~wr.ln d

l/-~

.. 12 1/X
. 2~ l/4

Stoc k report s are th t 10:30
a.m. q uol t'"i pro\ idffi b_\· Blunl ,

EJI" and Lut' v.t of fjallipo li s.

SP111N6 VAllEY CINEMA
4-46 4524

Peoples Bancorp Inc.

'""• &gt;vo "'u

7

~ ... "! ·~ "'lli'

UAU :,. • rtliEEl 'IATUADU I SUfGIIT
5....-..rll • IGffT 11JnQIAT

announces dividend
MARIETI A • Tbe Boud of
Direcun of Peuples 8aD:up lm:_
declared a quanerly dividend in the
amount of $0.26 per sbue for
Common SIOCL The dividend will
be paid rn July I, 1992. II Stoct·
holders of recad oo June 13, 19'12.
Peoples Banking md Trust
Company, a subsidiary of Pl:oples
Bancorp Inc .. reandy added two
new offoccs at The Plains and Mid-dlqJOII.IO bena- sene ils nrs1&lt;W!JrrS
in Southeastern Ohio_
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a SoulbOh10 b:mk hokbng COOII"'·
ny with head c:·•&lt;-J1.ei'S in MaridJ.a_
Banking orr. ..., are a!.ln in Athens.
Belin, Cal ·~' , li, Oles1afulllowell, McCor.n-·1, -,-,ue. Middleport.
The Plains ar.u Nelsonville.

=

SONYA'S
COUNTRY KITCHEN'S

,..

Hugh Custer
The family of Hugh Custer, who
d1ed Tuesday at Vetcrans Memorial
Hospital. has asked that in lieu of
nowers contributions be made to
Grace Episcopal Church or the
Ameri can Cancer Society_

-----Hospital news----Veteraas Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Gladys Walburn. Middleport;
James Fisher, Middleport and
Bessie Heck, Portland.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Cora Woodard.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

-Meigs announcements- Applications to be made
available for program

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Di scharges, Jun e 3 - Mrs. Jam es
Dorton and son, Mrs. Dav1d Cald·
wel l and son , Mrs. Drcm Eastman

and son . Paul Hammond, William
No tun gham. Megan Ours , and Iva
Sm ith .

BASH
JUNE 5th, 6th and 7th
•FRIDAY, JUNE 5th

Seafootl Buffett Fro• 4 to 8 p.111.
•SATURDAY, JUNE 6th

Bar-B·Que Ribs Fro• 4 to 8 P·•·
H•H IMII or F•l hclllnii•W.

•SUNDAY, JUNE 7th

Cllicke• Cordon lieu or Strip Steak

The Daily Sentinel

From II to 2 ,...

(U8P8 IU-11101

Publi1hed eury aRemoon. Monct..y
lhroush Friday, 1u Coart St.. PanenJY.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahiq
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769, Ph. 992·2166 . Second cl.ua
s-tar ..id •l Pumnuy, Ohio.

lolembeT' ,.. """""'""' Pnu. lnd tho
Ohio New1paper Auociation, National
~ertilin1 Repruen&amp;alive, Branham
New1pap« S.lu, 733 Third AvenGe..
N.,. Yon. N- Yon. 10017.
P081'MA!JI'Elt S.nol , .........
The D•ily Sentinel, Ill Courl Sl.,
f\Jma'or, OHio 46769.

nessee.

In recent years, the federal government has distributed millions of
dollars in disaster relief 10 victims
of California earthquakes, Kansas
tornados and Tennessee floods.
Should I, an East Coast residen~
be asked 10 finance a Tennessean's
desire 10 play chicken with floods?
I helieve so. ll is a social eontract, wilhout which America
becomes a continuously playing
"Road Warrior" movie.
Note: In the interest of full disclosure, The Curmudgeon owns up
10 the fact that he is a co-owner of
some Delaware property which suffered no damage during the January Storm.
Josepb Spear is 1 syndkattd
columnist for Newspaper Eaterprist Association.

Continued rrom page I

semis is a good reason," she joked,
but added that economic develop ment is imponant and several proJCCts were underway m !he Mountam State to help improve access to
the area.
Improvement of 2-1{2 miles of
35 from Henderson is scheduled to
begin in 1993, Morgan explained,
while W.Va. 2 is 10 be upgraded to
a four -lane and will include the
replacement of the Shadle Bridge
into POint Pleasant
A number of people were recog·
nized for their effonts, including
Wiseman and Stan Evans, who are
co-chairs of the Gallia County
Chamber's Highway Commiuee,
past presidents of the chamber,
local officials, and in particular, the
man who, as McDade put it, "never
let the 1dea of U.S. 35 die," Bob
Evans.
"This area has all the require ments : a trained workforce. energetic leadership and my good
friend Bob Evans," Wrny noted in
his remarks to the audience ... He
may be down on the farm. but his
voice is heard in Columbus."
ODOT DIStrict 10 Deputy
Director John Dowler recognized
h1 s staff and the contractors
involved in the work. and noted the
presence of Meigs County Engi neer Philip Robens, who designed
the original four-lane section of 35
from the Silver Bridge to State
Route !60 that opened in 1967.
Although the 35 project had
been on the stale· s boards since the
1970s, and preliminary work on the

Swimsuit buying can be traumatic
I am peeling off the 48th swim ·
suit I've tried on today, in a dress·
ing room the size of an empty
Velveela box. One lrnee is benito
hold the door closed. the door jamb
having lost the liule eye where the
hook once rested. On the wall are
posted the three rules of The Holy
Swimsuit-Trying-On Ritual:
I. Only three garments allowed
in a fitting room at any one time.
2. State health rules forbid try ing on swimsuits without wearing
underpants or panty hose.
3. You're right The salesclerk
does hate you .
I am putting my street clothes
b..:k on for the 16th time so I can
wallt out to the clothes racks 10 get
my next round of three sw1msuits.
The salesclerk long ago deserted
me for a 19-year-old who is buying
the first three suits she tried on, and
I am for dam-sure not walking out
in front of the other customers
looking like a canned ham packed
into a slingshot, which I do.
I know why cartoonist Cathy

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IIIJII8C!IJPTION llATitB
BJ Curler •llotor aa.t.

fRl~H

fUN

HIRlY .

E~~::~: :~: :: -: :: : : : : :: : : .-: : ~:~::

FOR 1'JII: KillS!
Prizes Give• Away Eacll Day Starli•g At 11:00 A.M.
BAllOONS

SlNGLICCOn
PRICI

Dolly.... ..... - - ................. ..... _ -26 Cento
s.~ooen1oen,..,. oleolrirc,. poy u.. ..m.
er may n~mil in .dvance d.ired W The
Daily Bendael on a thrae, .i:t ar 12
moalh buil. Cndi&amp; will be ,; ..IBI'l carrier

---

Available In
White or Apricot

No tuberriplion. by mail permil\ed in
a1'4!1u where home carrier tamee il
available.

Molt-plloao

......,Katpeo....,
13 W..U.... ---------------- --------------- ·- ---S2U4
:16
Weeb ..... ---------------- -------............ US. l&amp;
52 Weeb ........ , .. _,, _,, ________ __ ___ , ,,,.l84.76
O.toddo llolp CouiT

t3 Woob..----------..............................S23.40
:16 w..u ..................... --------------.......Uti.l!D
52 w..u ..........................................I8Uo

Flm PRICE - CIIAICOAl S•OIEI Hill
GUID PillE - 13• UII01E C011101. muo COIOI TV
DUWIII 2:00
SIIDIY
~~

'

mt.·

SHOE PLACE

992-5627

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..

.

__ .1.

,,

I

I

)

�Thursday, June 4, 1992

Sports

Thursday, June 4, 1992
Page--4

A tradi tion in the Gallia County ~o n&lt;Jiitic s as Reds broadcaster Joe
. , ports scene continues thi s Satur- Nuxhtlil , forme r Cincinnati pitcher
da y when the Cincinnati Reds Brooks Lawrence, lwo-timc HeisDrea m Team meets the Gallipolis man Trophy winner Archie Griffin
American Legion Post team in the and Huntington sponscaster Bob
ann ual Bob Evans Dream Team Dowen.
Helms, the first player to hit a
benefit baseball game Saturday, 2
r .m. at Stanley L. Evans Field at hom e run out of the new Riverfront
Stadium irl&gt;1970, will be honored
1lie University of Rio Grande.
The game will benefit Gallia a1 a pub I ic reception Friday from
Co unty' s youth baseball and soft- 7:30-Y: 10 p. m. at the Holiday Inn.
ball teams, a summertime activity He will be available for autographs
involving approximately 1,400 rlurmg a baseball card show Saturchildren. and tops off Gallia Coun- day m Lyne Center, and is to attend
ty Youth Baseball and Softball I he lun cheon that starts at 11 :30
Week, an activity proclaimed by a.m. at the Bob Evans Shelterco unt y and city officials. For the house. Helms is scheduled to speak
fourth yc.·u in a row, a noted mem - to the luncheon between 12:30 and
ber of the Reds organization will he 12:45 p.m.
An :tucuon will be conducted at
th e gue st of honor for the evenl
Tommy Helms, an infielder for th e sltelterhouse from 12:45 until
th e Reds from 1966 until1972 who ti1C lim e of the game. Items schedserved as the team's interim man - uled for bid include a Pete Rose
ager m the summer of 1989, will be bat. a Johnny Bench bat, and balls
on hand for the evenl In the past, from such notables as Rose, Bench,
the benefit has attracted such per· Ken Gnffcy Jr., Steve Avery, Jeff

MJ's first-half offense propels
Bulls to 122-89 win over Blazers
a "barrage" of ballistic threepoimcrs.
Jordan claimed that he was simply operating " within the framework of our offense."
But there's no way that offense
calls fo r Jordan to shoot from
downtown Chicago. Jordan is a
career 28 percent three-point shooter and has averaged only 1.2
attempts per game. In his frrst 16
games of this posl&lt;;easOn, he was 5
for 16 from long range.
Perhaps lack of practice
explains why he launches threes
w1th the same Oat trajectory as his
10-foot fadeaway jumpers. And
why Portland was so unprepared
for Wednesday's 6-for-10 outburst.
" Those arc the shots we want
Michael to take," said Drex ler,
who scored only 16 points on 5for· l4 shooting in his one-on -one
duel wuh Jordan.
Jordan will talc:e them if the situation is the same as it was Wednesday, when his six three-pointers set
a one-half Finals record and tied
the single-game mark.
"My shot was falling from
everywhere," he said, "so I ran to
the three-point line and let them
go ...
Actually, the game was close for
a while. Portland made its first
seven shots and II of its ftrSt 14 to
Lake a 25-17 lead. Jordan had eight

points on 3-for-7 shootin~ and had
missed two of his three three-point
attempts.
J&lt;J'dan scored the Bulls' next 10
points on two three-point liners and
two drives around Drexler to give
his team momentum.
Jackson rested Jordan at the start
of the second quarter. When Jordan
returned 6:43 before halftime,
Chicago led 45-44.
Then ...
"We couldn't stop him," Portland's Danny Ainge said. simply.
Jordan from 15 feel Jordan for
three. Jordan steal and IS-footer.
Jordan from 15. Jordan for three.
Jordan with an emphatic, twohanded rebound jam. Jordan from
three again.
Meanwhile, Portland was handling the ball like it was a live
grenade, commiuing four turnovers
late in the fU'St half and shooting
two airballs.
It was 66-51 at halftime.
Unbelievably, it got worse for
the Trail Blazers, even though Jordan went from shooter to dishmaster. He took only six second-half
shots, making two, but set up seven
baskets - including four in the
ftrst 3:30 of the half. The Bulls led
104-68 after three, the biggest margin ever at that stage of a championship rowul game.
·

Scoreboar·d
In the majors...
NA TIOSAL LEAGUE
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San 0Kr .. ....19
SUI n-:uro ... 17 2J
479
23 2&gt;
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Wf'doesday's scores
Ci.ncianlli I, St. l...oWa 7
Phib+'Ji'" 4, Al.lalu I
S.. Diqo I. Quooao I

-··""-'
~S.Mmaa.ll

Toa,ht:s pmts

Nnr Ywk (
.. S) II P'inlbwJ.b
(Onbct ).4),1;)5 p.m..
Hou.lal (J . ~ 2-D) • S.-! fnnca.
co (Heftdia 2-0). !O:OS p.m.
Cl.ci••aU (ar-.1•1 4-l) II U.
Aftldtl {lknll._ 4-J), lt:.l~ p..a.

Atlanta, 14; D•ulLOD., Philadelphia, 14;
Fll\lq, Houcm.ll; Bigio,.J-kwton,l):.
Gant. All.anL&amp;. I); W.u.ch, MMt.Jul, 13
ni.PlES - D. Sanden, Ar.W!u., 9;
Finley, Hl7olii.CI'I, 6; A~. SL LoWt, 6;
Grace, Chica.o, 4; BuLla", lM Azl&amp;dt~a.
.. ; 6 &amp;AI tiM! wiLh l

HOME JUNS - Bmdl, PhuburJh,

13: McGriff, San DieJo , 12; Mau
Willianu;, San FnnciJCO, II; Sheffield,
S~n

Diclo. 10; Pmdlcr.on. Atlanta, 10; L

Wal.kcr, Montrul, 9: Gant, Atlanta,&amp;;

"'-· """""·.

STOLEN !lASES - Gtiuom, MIS\·
uu.1., 24: Unkfard, St. LuWs. 19; lcwu.
SUI Fru!ciKo. I 7: Rabt-N, Cl111d11nal~
t 7; Bondi, Pittlbur&amp;f!., 17: D. Sulde:n., At W!u, 16; Finley, HOUilOn. 14; Niam, AtWna,\4: 0. Smilh, Sl.l..wla, 14.
PITCHING (J dc!Nioru) - TewU·
bwy, St. t....ow., 6-1, .IS7, 1.78; Glavirle,

At\anu, 1-3. 727, 2.94; O.bome, St.
louu, 5-2, .71 4, 101 ~ Blllkcc.. San f""ftll·
caw. S-2. ,1\4, H2; Portupl, IL:urton,
S·2, .714. 2.74; Mora•n. Chleaa~. ~-2,
7\ot, l37; Tonilin, Pila~. 6-3, .667 ,
1n Ldfczu, San Diqo. 6-l, .661, 4.02.
STR.IKEOUT'S - Cone., New Ycrt,
ll; Sm.ohx, Atllnt.a , 11; S. Fanandcz,
New YadF. , 71; . . W1 C~.U, 41;
a~ . s.a. oqo, 60;
~ auc...
IJO· 60, Kevin fAo.,. Lat AQdaa, S_9.
SAVES - lee Smilh, ~. l..ouil;, 14 ~
0. J -, Hm..101, I]; Mym, San Dqo,
\3 ; Cll1rlloR, Cladu1tl, 11; Mitch
Will.lanu , Ptuladdphit, 9; Franco, New
Yod.. 9; Wdldand, Mcdteal., 8.

o.

Friday's g1111ts

Osiclfo (Jacbm !}. 7 .N Maddau 5S) •1 Monua.l (Gan:tner l-4 md Nabholz
l-4), 1., S-85 p..m.
S1 Lou11 (Tewtlbury 6·1 ) at
Phil~~5-4),1 · lSp1tL

Ne-w YM (Cone H) 11 Puubul].h
($m11h ~-4). 7:lS p.m.
Atlanu (Afcry l -5) 11 Stn O\c1o
{l&amp;c:rtl 6-J). JOce5 p.m..
Chtdpad (RUo 1-4) M U. A._,n..
(1{~-rill c.r- .l-oll), lkl! p.JL
1-klunm {HmrJ l""l 11 s..n Fnncuto
(D l•d. 2· 1), 10 l5 p..m..

American Leacue
BAmNG - Puckc:et, Minnmota .
3411; R. Almw, Tarmto, .342; BOJI:tic:lr;,
Odland, .337: R. ICdly. /'IIC'II' Ya:l . .33];
Knobl111o;h, MmnetoU, . 125~ loyl'ltr,
Kanan Ci1y, 319; Mobtm, Mihrau.ka= ,
l\7

RUNS - McG wue, Od:ltnd, 40:
Pldcu. ~ • ..0: M.ct. Mi.nnc:I&lt;:U,
H: R. Alom~t, TOl'Oflto, 36; MlltinJiy,
Ne• York, )6 ; Phillipt, De1mil, 34;
Kllohl.ludl, MimcP.I , ll, R. K.tJ..Iy, Ne..,
von.. JJ: C&amp;Jta'. r ~. n

RBI - Pldcn, Minncsda, ~; MeG-

~.

OU.llnd, 42; Fielder, Oettoit, 39;
B&amp;ltimore.. 37: Griffey, Seattle,
35 . Sian, Tc1u, JS ~ ~kilt., Ch~vdand,

A.nckaGI,

A~ERICAN LBGLE
Eu&amp;en DI•W.O.
w L
GO
Tram
ll 20
6ZJ
Tol'(lf'll.o .]I
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M.inrwa£u, 62; Mack, Mim.CIIDI.I, b2.
I)(XJHJ..F..S - Reimer , T"", 17; E.
hhJtmQ:, Se~ttlc., 17, Jc:fferics, K•n•u
City, 16. M.lttinaly. New York. 16; H.all.
Ne• Yod;, 16; it'eod. Bo.lon., IS; Semn,
Mil•tullfle, 1~; loyn10, KMllll City, D
'llUPI..f.S - Andc:non. Btltimore. S.
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ll'll:m. l Butu . Bolnoo, 3; Puct:en. Mln·
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10", !JreEr, rkuml, 1 ~ - (anKCO, QU.lancl,
12, lotlk, Ckvtltnd, II ; Ten.lcloo, Oot:roil.. 11. O'Bncn, Su.We, 11; 6 ~ lied
.,th 10.
STOl.F..N BASES - l..ottoft., Cit~
land, 2.4 ; R Jlcndcnon. Oak!and. 22; UJ.
!Kh, Mllwtu.kce. 17; Raine~, Chict.sn. 16;
Andenon. Bllllmore, 14; Knobl au o;h,
Minnaou, 13, R. AJomtr, TllfUII.O, ll
PITCHJ :-iG (7 dccir.imt) ~ Flenunf.
Seaulr., 7-1.. 117~. 3.17; M~lM. Balll·
more, 6· 1. 857. 2 .77; Ju1n Gurm•n.
Tomno.6-1 . .857, 2J&amp;; McDorlt.ld, Rtl ·
11mcn., 7-2, n&amp;, 180; K. a~ . Teua,
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m 1 w Millowdl. Chiclso. 7-3• .'700,
3 M~. Oallind, 7-3, 700, 3 71

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STRJK.f.OUTS -

Ckmet~t.,

8ot1m

10: Juan GUUIIIJI, Toronto. 72; htez,
New Ylllll. 66; R. John~m, Sclttlc. 64; X.
Brown. TeJ11a, 60; Stc"&amp;rt, Calland, S?;
McDmald. Btllimore. 5S; Appier, Kania
Ci1y, ~S.
SA YES - &amp;:il:mley, OUla11d, 20:
AfUilen , Minnaot.l, 14; 0\aon, Hlltimore. 13; H•Ney, Cliifoolla, \3 ; Ruad1,
Tuu, 13; Thigpen, ChiciJO, 12; Rear-

don, Boo.on, ll

NBA Finals
Chicaso 122, Ponltnd 19, Chicaao
!.dt aerim. 1·4.1

Fulure games
frldiJ p.m.

Ponh11d 11 Chic•so. 9

Sund1y pm .

Chic•ao 11 Portland, 7

Wtdnt:lday, JuM II- Ouctgo II
Ponand, 9 p.m.
Frtd.lr, June 11- Chie~~1.o 11 Ponl.and, 9 p.m., if nocaary
Sund1y, Junt U - Portland 11
OUc. 10, 1 run., if , _..ry
Wcdnsd17, Junt 17 - Portland 11
Otic•ao. 9 pm., if ncce$llf)'

n-ansactions
ll&amp;sebaU

· Americn La~~
MINNESOTA TWIN - Optioned
Pat Mahane~, pitch«. and Jam. 'llrown,
a..t:ficldcr, lo Portl•od ~the Plcific Cout
l..ap Reeallod Willie Blllb, pi~ehcr.
and J.T. Bruen, wdidder, fmm Ponlu!d.
OAJU..AND Allll..EI1C8 - Placal
RK:t~ HOldenaa. outfielder, c.. the I~
da~ dutbled lilt rtlrolctivc to M.l~ 21.
Aai'lll(ld W1h Weia, •horuulp. from lhe
1.'i-dJy diublod lia.
TEXAS RANGERS - Pl1ocd Jtcil:
Dauahaty, outficldtr, oolhe 1.5--d.y diJ.
ablod lilt ..WO.Cl.lve to JUDe I. Pwt:hued
lhe conlfla. of Ruu McGinnit, e.t.eher•nfir.1der, from Oklahom• City of !.he
Amcrio;~n Anoculion. Si1ncd Ritch ie
Moody, p!Lc:her, and Scott Maione, fust
bucmtn~tfiddc:r.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS - SiJ:ned
Stann on .Stewarl, Ol.ltfie!dcr, and To·
mnthy Crw.bl.rec., pu.cher
~allontl

Lu&amp;'"
COLORADO ROCKIES - Stanod
Mark. Thomp•on and Mic\ucl Eifkn,
ptll:hen.

HOUSTON ASTROS - Op1.1oned
Andujar Codeno, •horutop, t.o TUI;:II&lt;7! of

the Pacific Cout Lugue, RecallU LuiJ
OqwJc:z, OUtfieldct, fmn Tuacon.
FLORIDA MARLINS -

Si1ned

Scott Sam11d1 Uld Rid Prechhn&amp;. out ·
fu~.ldcn; Mad Sil:.ccla, Cltchcz-, and An ·

drew Larkin. Man P'etal«l and KC\'1 Ken-

"'"'r'I~LADELPHIA
."""'

PHILLIES StJ ned Sllnlcr Enu nd Jeremy
Kendall. outftcldcn, and l..arry Mitchell,
pitchCf.
ST LOUIS CARDINALS - Acti ·
vawi PMm Ouenao, culficlder, m.n the
.15 -dlly W.ablod !ilL PIKed l.ul1 Alic:ea,
inf!CldCI. on lhe IS-day diubLed liJL

Basketball
l"tiaUon.~l

HM.li:.tlbaii.U.odaUon

lJT'AH JAZZ - Pranoted Scott l....ay·
dm w d~ cl buil:.clball operationt.

Footbatt
N11lonal FootbaliiA-11~
GREEN HAY PACKERS - Silflcd
Charla llmry, ~end

By DAVID CRARY
PARIS (AP) - Andre Agassi
believes the French Open will be
se lf or arch -rival Jim Courier. The
hometown fans have other ideas.
After Agassi and Courier won
Wednesday to set up a semifinal
showdown. France's Henri Leconte
- who entered the tournament as a
long shot - rallied from two sets
dow n to gain another semifinal
, bcnh.

He'll play either seventh-seed.ed
Pe tr Korda of Czechoslovakia or
unsee ded
Ru ss ian
Andrei
Cherkasov, whose quarterfinal battle was suspended because of dark ness Wednesday with the score
level at one set apiece.
In add1lion 10 the rest of their
niatch, today 's schedule included
th e women's sc mifinals, a repeat of
last year's pairings.
Two-time defending champion
and top-seeded Monica Seles faced
No. 3 seed Gabnela Sabatini. Second -seeded Stelli Graf. the cham pion here in 1987 and 1988, faced
No.4 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
Leconte, who underwent back
surg ery last year and is ranked
20 0th tn the world, has been
bcuycd throughout the tournament
by euphoric, foot·stamping crowds.
Center co urt literally shook
Wednesday as he rall1ed from
bch1nd to down Nicklas Kulu of
~wc rl c n 6-7 (10-8). 3·6, 6-3.6-3,6-

' · If

he reac hes the final, his
Amer ica n oppon e nt will have 10

conl cnc! wilh partisan bedlam simi·

la r to that which propelled Leconte
anu Guy Forget to a stunning upset
of th e United States in the Davis
Cup final last year tn Lyon.
But Agassi, after beating No. 3
seed Pete Sampras in straight sets,
predicted lhc winner of his match
with Courier will capture the title.
"If I had to bet, I'd cenainly bet
on that," he said. "I think the ftnal
is the ne.xl round ."

Courier beat Agassi in five sets
in last year's championship match.
Overall, the two have split eight
matches. but Courier has won two
ou t of three at Stade Roland Gar-

LEGAL NOTICE
P~Jrsuant to Section 4913 02 of Ihe Ohio
Re11tsed Code. Ohio Power Company (Ohio
Power) has submitted to the Public Utilihes
Commission of Oh io (lhe Commission) an
environmental compliance plan for its electric
generating umls affecled by new federal acid
ram control requirements (Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990). The Commission has
docketed this submission as Case No
92.790-EL-ECP
Otuo Power's en11ironmental compliance plan
for the first of the two phases provided for in the
Clean .6.ir Act Amendments of 1990 (Phase I) ~
To tnstal! ftue-gas desulfurization syslems
(scru bbers) on the two 1300 megawatt
generaling units at Ohio Power's Qavln ptant
located in Ga11ia County . Ohio. The plan also

expenditures by Ohio Power of approximately

$978.2 millton in capital costs. No rate recovery
ol 1he&amp;e amounts is being sougtlt at this time .

The Commission has set Case No . 92·7»El.ECP fOf' hearing commencing Wednesday, June
24, 1992, at 10:00 am .. at the offices at the
Commission, 180 East Broad Street. Columbus.
Ohto 43266-0573. The purpose or lhe hearing
will be to determine the reasonableness and
prudence of Ohio Power's environmental
compliance plan . The Commission has also
scheduled local public hearings at the following
times and locations to afford members of the
public the opportunity to testify: Thursday, June
25, 1992, at 3:00p.m and 6:00p.m., atlhe City

Hall Council Chambers, 8 East Washington
Street, Athens, Ohio; Thureday, July 2, 1992, at

provides t01 switching from hlgll-sulfur to

2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m., al lhe otfic&amp;l ollho

moderale-suttur coal at Ohio Power's Kammer

Commission, Borden Building, Hearing Room

Uni1s 1-3, and to low-tullur ooef at i1s Muskingum
River Unit 5. Changett and additions to the planl

ttA, 180 East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio:
end Thureday, July 9. 1992. at 3:00p.m. and
6:00p.m.. at City Hall Council Chombefs, 218
Ct...etand Avttnuo S.W., Canton, Ohio. All

and equipment at these units will be neceuary

to adapt to lhe burning of loWer oullur coal. At
all other generating unlto affected by Phase t of
the Ctean Air Act Amendmenll of 11MK), Ohio
Power's plan ialo continue to usa existing and
planned fuel suppliee. In addition , continuous
emission monitoring equipment Is required to be
installed at all pfanta, llJ1d meaaurn 10 control
emission of nitrogen Oldde lind llllfur trioxide are
required. The plan Ia tstimated to require

I

CINCINNATI (AP) - Jay
Koch wants to use arena football as
a way to get back to the Nauonal
Football League.
Koch, cut by the Cincinnati
Bengals last winter, is trying to line
up another shot at the National
Football League. His performance
with the Cincinnati Rockers arena
team will add a line to his resume.
"I'm playing this to get some
film and to show that I can play the
game if I get a chance," Koch said.
"I hope that Sam (Wyche) or any body sees me. It doesn't mallcr
where I go.
"I just would like to play somewhere or just get the opportunity to
play somewhere." .
Tbe Bengals gave him a chance
last December 17 by signing him to
their practice squad. A few weeks
later, Wyche was no longer head
coach and Koch was oo longer on
the team.
"I was working out , gelling
ready to go to camp with the Bengals when I got a call and they told
me that they put me on waivers.
They didn't say why. They didn't
give me a reason or anything, " he
said.
Koch's main prOblem is that he
doesn't fit easily into a position.
He was a lineman for Purcell
Marian High School in Cincinnati.
He played wide receiver, tighl end
and outside linebacker at Ohio
State.
He's not fast enough to be an
NFL receiver and, at 6-foot-2, 225

ter of tbe NBA Finals series opener Wednesday
night in Chicago, whicb the Bulls won 122-89.
(AP)

Agassi, Courier post wins to earn
berths in French Open semifinals
won by an American, either him-

Wednesday's srore

Bagwell, Rob Dibble, Cecil Fielder, Tom Browning, Ron Gan~ Hal
Morris and Chris Saba. Other collectors' balls will also be auctioned. in addition to a 16-by-20
au tograph ed photo of Rose 's
record-breaking hit, and an autogr.phed Big Red Ma:hine photo.
In the interim, youth games, featuring a radar gun and Olber items
of interest, will begin at 11:30 a.m.,
providing youg people tbe opportunity to break records set at the 1991
benefit in such activities as baseball throw, race to base and cau:hing pop-ups. The baseball card
show, under the directioo of Randy
Finney, is scheduled for 10 a.m.-4
p.m. at Lyne Center.
The highlight of the activities is
the benefit game between the
dream team members and the
Legion squad. Local Dream Team

interested parties wHI be given an opportunity
to be heard . Persons wishing to Intervene in the
case shall rue written requests for intervention
stating the reasons lhere1or, no later thin June
17, 1992. Further information may be obtained
by oontecting the PuiJNc Utilities Commission of

Ohio at t80 East Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio
4J266.0573.

ros.
Agassi is st ill without a Grand
Slam utle, and was asked if it trou·
bled him 1hat other young America ns - Co uri er, Sarnpras and
M1chael Chang - had won Grand
Slam crowns.
"IL's a bit ironic that I can stay
in the top three or four in the
world. and have a few shots at it
and then nul do it, and they come
in and just do ir," said Aggasi, who
has reached I he semifinals tn seven
of his 14 Grand Slam tournament
appearances.
Aga ss i denied he sought
reve nge for last year's loss in the

final, bul made if cl ear he

craYc~

the tide.
"It's a roumament I've wanted
to win for three years," he said. "II
doesn't matter tf I'm playing Jim
Courier ... it docsn't matter to me if
I'm playing BJorn Borg out there."
Courier won his 21st straight

match Wednesday, ousting Goran
Ivaniscvic in four SClS. The eighthseeded Croatian ventured a prediction for the Councr-Agassi showdown.
" IL's going to be an interesting
match. They arc going to hit hk c
crazy," lvaniscvic said. " I think
Courter, for me, has a little hit
more chance than Agassi."

Good
Selecdon Of
Sportswear
For The
Ladies
by
•JANTZEN
•CATALINA
•LEVI
•VASSAR
DRESSES IN
MISSY, JRS.,
PETITES &amp; HALF
SIZES

•JACKETS
•SWEATERS
•SHIRTS
•LEVI BENDOVER SLACKS
•ALL WEATHER COATS
•SUMMER HANDBAGS
•COSTUME JEWELRY
•SWIMWEAR
by
•JANTZEN

•CATALINA
•CASTAWAY

pounds, too small to be a tight end
or outside linebacker. Nobody
drafted him out of Ohio State,
where he played linebacker the last
two years.
Koch thought he got his big
break when the Bengals signed
him. He was stunned when he was
released just a few weeks later.
" It was tough to deal with when
Lhcy put me on waivers," he said.
"I've always been told that I was
too small or too short, but the
biggest shock was when they put
me on waivers when I thought l
had a chance to show that I can
play the game. That was toughest
thing to deal with."
The Rockers, beginning their
first season, approached him soon
after he was waived.
"We heard through word of
mouth that there was a good player
that the Bengals were go,ing to
release," said Jim Taubert, the
Rockers linebackers and line
coac h. "We decided we'd follow
up on the tip. We thought it would
be worth it and he's been worth it
so far.''

members mclude Bob Evans, Bob
Eastman, C.L. "Johnny" Ecker,
Fred Staley and Dr. Edward Berkich.
Tbe Legion team, which began
its 1992 season litis week and uses
Evans Field as its home site, consists of Chad Barnes, Gallia Academy; Shawn Cox, Hannan Trace;
Chris Crace, Kyger Creek; Clint
Davis, Gallia Academy; Dylan
Evans, Gallia Academy; Chris
French, Oak Hill; Devin Hale, Oak
Hill; Dusty Hill, Gallipolis Christian; Larry Howell, Gallia Acade-

my; Scou Newell, Kyger Creek;
Alan Queen, Hannan Trace; Rob
Saunders. Gallia Academy; Bradd
Schultz, North Gallia; Rob Skidmore, Gallia Academy; Darin
Smith, North Gallia; Chris Sommerville, Gallia Academy; Casey
Staton, North Gallia; Chns Toler,
North Gallia; Marc Villaneuva,
Kyger Creek; and Ryan Young,

Gallia Academy.
Refreshments will be available
from booths at the field.
Admission to the game is $2 for
adults and $1 for children II years ·
old and younger. Youth leag ueplayers in uniform will be admitled
free. For more information, contact .
Tom Hopkins at 44614 24 or Randy·
Finney at446-4012.

-=.....n----..i 1·~­

Located:
4 nu1es ofi Rt. 1
on State Rt. 141
'In Centenary'

Sports briefs

-,__,_,_
I
I

RENT-2-0WN

Football
PlllLADELPHIA (AP) - Former New York Giants coach Btll
Parcells was in good condition a
day after coronary artery bypass
surgery, according to Dr. Ezra
Dcutseh, Temple University Hospital's director of cardiac catheterizaDeutsch said Tuesday's operation lasted about three hours and
involved implanting an artery to .
bypass blocked coronary arteries.
Parcells, 50, is expected to be hospitalized for another five to six
days.
Tennis
DECKENHAM, England (AP)
- Top-seeded Ivan Lend! of
Czechoslovakia defeated Patrick
Rafter of Australia 6-3, 6-1 and
third -seeded David Wheaton of the
Unued States beat Leander Paes of
India 4-6, 7-6, 6-4 in the second
rou nd of the Beckenham grasscoon tournament
Golf
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)
- Two-time champion Phil Mick-

"'~•

•I

FATHER'S DAY,~~J

4 DRAWER CHEST
'3.12 per WK.

~.:-r

_fJ41

J~~

~~&gt;

tion.

Koch hopes arena football
can spur his return to NFL

HOOKED ON CLWF- Tbe Cbicagi&gt; Bulls'
Horace Grant (right) books Portland guard ClifT
Robinson with both bands during the first quar-

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Reds Dream Team continues tradition with benefit game

The Daily Sentinel

In the NBA Finals opener,

By MIKE NADF.L
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael
Jordan's sbots reached tbe basket
so . quickly, they didn't seem to
have enough air time to qualify for
thn:e points apiece.
Larry Bird rainbows they
weren't. Nor were they the high arcing one-handed pushes popularized by Magic Johnson and
Michael Adams.
They were line drives , like
arrows shot from a bow. Six of
th~m. And they pierced tbe hearts
of ·the Portland Trail Blazers as
suicly as they pierced the middle of
Chicago Stadium's nets Wednesday in the Bulls' 122-89 victory in
Game I of the NBA Finals.
Jordan scored 18 of his Finalsrecord 35 flfSI-half points on threepojnters. He finished with 39 points
and II assists and gave Chicago
the edge going into Game 2 here
Fnday night.
"You've got to give the guy
credit," said Clyde Drexler, the
Portland All-Star who was suppo$ed to be Jordan's near-equal but
who was oo mau:h for His Airness
this nighl "We left him open for
the tlutts and he buried them."
And so M1chael Jordan has done
the impossible, finding yet another
way to bury an opponent. This
time, with what both Drexler and
Chicago coach Phil Jackson called

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

RECLINER '5.24 per WK.

Bunk Bed's Complete
16.29
WK.

Heavy Duty
Washer &amp; Dryer

elson of Arizona State shot a 9·

THIS YEAR'S SPEAKER
- Former Cincinnati Reds
manager Tommy Helms will bt
this year's speaker at tbe Rtds
Dream Team luncheon Saturday at 11:30 a.m. The game
between the Dream Team and
the Gallipolis American Ltgion
team, to beneftt Gallia County
youth baseball and softball, is
scheduled ror Saturday at 2
p.m. at tbe University or Rio
Grande's Stanley L Evans
Field.

under-par 63 to Lake a four-stroke
lead after the first round of the
NCAA Championships. Arizona
State led the team competition with
a 276 total, followed by Oklahoma
State at282 and UNLVat 284.
Mickelson, who had an eagle
and seven birdies on the 7.246-yard
Championship Course at the University of New Mexico, matched
the tournament record set by Jim
Begwin in 1984 at Pinehurst No. 2
in North Carolina and also tied the
course record set by pro Jay Cudd .

STORE
HOURS:

Monday lhru Sat. 9 a.m. till6 p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon till 5 p.m.

Koch plays receiver and middle
linebacker for the arena team. He
enjoys the wide-open game, and
figures it will keep him in shape for
another shot at the NFL this summer.
"There is a lot more runntng.
You have to be in a lot better
shape," Koch said. "There is less
time to catch your wind between
plays. It's constant action."

Geiberger goes from 'gray area'
of golf career into Seniors Tour
By TERRY KINNEY
MASON, Ohio (AP}- At 54,
AI Geiberger has passed through
what he calls the "gray area" of
his golf career.
"Between 45 and 50, the regular tour doesn't want you, and
you're not eligible for the Senior
Tour," Geiberger said Wednesday.
"Then you go from being the
old guy in the locker room to being
the new kid on the block. So it goes
to show you that age is a state of
mind."

Geiberger is loving his state of
mind. He's playing when he wants,
spending a lot of time at home and
already thinking of cutting his golf
schedule further.

"I work to keep my energy
level up and my interest up," he
said. "I say I' II play prel!y hard to
age 58 - 20 to 25 tournaments a
year - then drop down to about
15."
With more than $1.2 million in
earnings on the PGA Tour and
more than $1.8 on the Senior Tour,
he has surpassed the golf earnings
of Arnold Palmer. But he no longer
worries about money lists and
refuses to play every week.
"I go home more than most of
the guys because of my young family," he said. "My goal is more to
enjoy the Senior Tour. That's they
way I want to run my life."

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PHARMACY

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SWISHER·LOHSE

PHARMACISTS
Traveler•' born after 11156 would benefh from revaccination
agalnat childhood dl-•, uya a doctor 81 Long toland Jewlah
Medical Center In New Hyde Porte, New York. AntibOdies from v.._~
clnatlon are notaa long-falling 11 natural oneo, aay re1earchere.
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New machine to break up painful kidney etonet blocking the ureter h.. been developed 81 Mouachuuat• General Hoephal In
Boeton. The electromechanlcali1111ector work• like a tiny jackhammer In the urinary tract, hitting the etone again and again.
Ouch I
• t •••

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Glycolic acid, uoed agalnet acne ocare and age epot1, may aleo
work to tilde mel•ma. the dleco19ratlona In t~e face auftered by
pregnant women and tho.. who take birth control pllle, oev• a
dermatology profeuor the UCLA School of Medicine.

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Sunocraen on the llp1 •eem to be effective to ward off cold aorea,
11ye on lnfectloua d l - opeclallat at the NatlonallnatHute of
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1993 FORD ESCORT LX 4-DOOR WAGON
•Air Condrtiontng
•Power Steering
•Rear Window Defroster
•Light Convenience Group
•Dual Electric Rem. ~irrors
-D&amp;IUll&amp; Luggage Rad&lt;
•Rear Window Wiper/Washer

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

$13,231.00
YOUR PRICE ONLY

$) 0,449.40*

•Automatic Transmission

•Ciearroat Pa1nt

1992 FORD THUNDERBIRD
•Rear ~ Oelrosler
•Tt CkJster COOIM
•f/W Cmdlioning

Stock# 2163

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
115,206.00

•AMIAI Stereo Prem.CassJCiock
•"-' Ooa loclos
oCatvertience Group II

YOUR I'Rta ONLY

$11,919.30*

-f&gt;.Way Power Driver's Seat
•Cast Alum . Wheels
•Rear Window Delros19f

~:=~

-Elect. AMIFM Slereo wiCass. ~

·3.BL EFI V6 Engine
•Auto 0/0 TransmiSSIOn

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

118 285.00

'IEBATE INClUOEO, TAX, TITl.E ANO FEES EXTRA

OPEN 9:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Mon.-Sat.

--.--.
-

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

•••••

•
•

•

YOUR PRICE ONLY

1992 FORD MUSTANG LX

Stock I 225&lt;1

YOUR PRICE ONLY

SJ4,978.00*

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 4, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

{\lomar's grand slam pushes Tribe to 8-3 win over Seattle _ _
By CHUCK MELYIN
CLEVELAND (AP) .- Now
tl)at the Cleveland Cavalters have
.been dumped from tile NBA play·
offs, the Cleveland Indians hope
·hometown fans will notice what
tlley've been doing on the baseball
field lately.
"Basketball season's over with.
Hopefully some people will come
out to see us now," Sandy Alomar
-said Wednesday night after his flfSI
career grand slam led Cleveland
·past tile Seattle Mariners 8-3 .
· The Indians have won three
straight and seven of tlleir last eight
games, leaving tllern on tile verge
of cli mbing out of the cellar in the
AL East Fans haven't yet respond cd - 7,536 showed up for
.W.e,~g~sday's same- but Cleve-tana•s _player.; bOpe they've begun
10 turn things around.
"We have something to prove,"
Alomar said. " We finished last last
year, and people expect the worst
from the Cleveland tnrurs. It's our
job to shut them up.'·
Alamar's bases-loaded home
run capped a seven-run fourth
inning, Cleveland's biggest of the
season. Carlos Baerga started the
oiJ\burst with a home run, his fifth .
and the next five hillers all got singles off Clay Parker (0-1).
Alomar then hit Jim Acker's
first pitch for his second home run
of thc year.
. 'It's a great feeling gelling my
ftrs t grand slam," Alomar said. "I
was just trying to do my job. get a
ffy ball and get a guy in. Instead, I
go t them all in.·'
"Ack throws one pitch and all
of a sudd en we're down 7-0,"
Scat~ c manager Bill Plummer said.
· 'They had a couple of seeing-eye
flares. and we didn't make the play
on Mark Whiten's ball (a smgle off
Parker's glove). That really opened
the gates. One inning and we were
done."
Brook Jacoby added a solo
home run off Jeff Nelson in the
eighth .
The loss. Seattle's third straight,
was Parker 's first decision smcc
1990. He spent last season in the
Scanl c farm system after geuing
cut by DetrOit
Scott Scudder (4-5) won his sec·
and straigh t game, al lowing two
run s and 10 hits 1n si• innings .
Kevin Wickander, Eric Plunk and
Dennis Co ok each pitched one
1nning.
The Mariners scored twice in
the fift h on Ken Griffey Jr.'s basesloaded double, bul they wasted a
chance for more. Singles by Omar
Vizquc l, Harold Reynolds and
Greg Briley loaded the bases with
one out before Scudder struck out
Edgar Marline&gt;. Griffey's double
scored two runs. but Pete O'Brien
Oicd to right, strand ing runners al
second and third.

Seaule added a~ in the eighth
when Plunk, covenng first on an
apparent double-play grounder to
first baseman Paul Sorrento,
missed the relay throw from shortstop Mark Lewis for an error that
let Tino Martinez score from second.
The Mariners left runners in
scoring position in six innings.
''We had the merchandise on
the table but couldn't get the sale,"
Plummer said. "I tllought Scudder
threw tile ball preuy welL He got
out of some jams."
Elsewhere, it was Minnesota II,
Toronto 3; Oakland 7, Boston 6;
California 4, Baltimore 3 1n I0
innings; Detroit 10, Milwaukee 4;
Kansas City 3, Chicago I; and
Texas4, New York 3 in 13 innings.
Twins 11, Blue Jays 3
Some nights ... make that weeks
... no, months ... there is just no
stopping Kirby Puckett. Juan Guzman realizes that, and doesn't mind
being less than perfect because of
one of the greats of the game.
"I can't win them all," Guzman
said after Puckett's second grand
slam in six days helped the Mmnesola Twins hand the Toronto
right-hander his ftrSl loss tllis sea·
son, 11 -3 Wednesday nighL
What many were wondering
before Puckeu hit his first career
grand slam last Friday night was
why it took so long. To be prec1se,
1ttook Puckett 5,191 at-bats to hit
his fu-st It took him just 23 more to
hit his second.
"I' m just seeing it and hilling
it,'' said Pucket~ who tied a career
high with five RBIS. "It must be
myweek.that'salL"
He's been hot for more than a
week . Puck ell, the American
League player of the month for
May, is hitting .432 with six home
runs, 23 runs scored and 27 RB!s in
his last 22 games.
Still, Puckeu wasn't expecting
much against Guzman (6-1), now
16-4 as a major leaguer.
"He's so hard to hi~ I just hope
he makes a mistake," Puckett said.
Kevin Tapani (6-4), who
allowed three runs on II singles in
S 2/3 innings, won his fifth straight
game.
Athletics 7, Red Sox 6
Jose Canseco homered twice,
Mark McGwire added hi s major
league- leading 20th and Terry
Steinbach broke a sixth-inning tie
witll a two-run single as Oakland
swe pt visiting Boston in three
games.
Canseco hit a lW&lt;&gt;-run homer in
the fu-sl off John Dopson and added
a solo shot in tile tllird. McGwire
also homered in the tllird.
Dopson then threw behind
Jamie Quirk, who charged the
mound, leading to both being eject·
ed. Steinbach, who got his winning
hit off Mike Gardiner (3-4),

replaced Quirk. Jeff Parrett (5 -0)
won.
.
Angels 4, Or1oles 3
Pinch -hiller Lee Stevens' first
RBI this season at home - an
infield grounder in the IOtll inning
- capped a comeback for run starved California
The Angels tied it in the seventh
on Gary DiSarcina's first bigleague homer, a tw&lt;&gt;-run shot.
California loaded the bases in
tile IOtll against Alan Mills (2-1).
Stevens batted for Luis Sojo and hit
a slow roller up tile first-base line.
Jose Gonzalez beat the throw home
from charging ftrSt baseman David
Segui to win for Scou Bailes (3.0).
Tigers 10, Brewers 4
Cecil Fielder hit a pair of lw&lt;&gt;run homers, driving in five runs as
visiting Detroit cooled off Milwau·
kee to end a SIX-game losing streak.
Kevin Ritz (1 -1) worked 5 1/3
innings for his first victory in 30
appearances since Sept. 5, 1989.
Blll Wegman (5-5) gave up four
unearned runs in the top of tile first
Royals 3, White Sox 1
Brian McRae singled home the
go-ahead run, and snuggling Mike
Magnante pitched Kansas City over
slumping Chicago.
Magnante (2-4) gave up five hits
in seven innings, lowering his ERA
from 7.90106.54.
Greg Hibbard (5-4) walked
Mike Macfarlane leading off the
seventh inning and pinch-runner
Brent Mayne was sacrificed to secand by Gary Thurman before
McRae's decisive single.
Rangers 4, Yankees 3
New York's Shawn Hillegas
made an errantpickoffthrowafter
Jeff Huson put Texas in position to
win throu~h hi s own failure.

Hillcgis (0-2) was attempting to
pick pinch-runner John Cangelosi
off third base with none out but
'

fired the ball wide oflhird baseman
Charlie Hayes. Cangelosi came
home with the run that gave the

\,\\FTU,;

WELCOME HOME! - Cleveland's Sandy
Alomar Jr. (15) gels a bappy reception lrom
some or his teammales alter his rourth-inning

'

grand slam in Wednesday night's American
League game against visiting Seattle, wbicb tbe
Indians won 8-3. (AP)

llllpPI'iiWVI
llle&amp;lvNII•IL

Recycle -

•Swimwear
·•Walking Shorts
:•Ties •Socks •Sweaters
••Pajamas (Long or Short)
:•Belts
:•Suspenders
OPEN 9:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Mon.·Sat.

01.

Kroger employees of the
Pomeroy store and A &amp; W Root
Beer are teaming up to raise money
for tile Easter Seal Society of the
River Cities. The local society

L1m 11 I~

ClltrGI
10W30,
10W40,
liWliO
ll'mwlill
Motor Ill

Maximll~ prot~\:
against VISCOSitY
\tlermal breakdown

4

We Dave A

(Long or Short Sleeve)

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"t991, Loo An&amp;tltl
Tim" Syudi&lt;ale
Crulon S,..Wua.''

remind women everywhere that they
do have choices, as of tllis writing.
If Roe vs. Wade is overturned by
tile Supreme Coun, their options
will be sharply limited - but that's
another column.
Dear Ann Landers: I have a
major gripe: When you are waiting
to be served in a business establish·
ment and the phone rings, the
salesperson always answers it
immediately, and you arc left
standing there like a dummy.
When that happens to me, I tell
the salesperson, in a pleasant
voice, tllatl was ahead of the phone
customer and will she please take
care of me first Invariably she will
terminate the call quickly, apologize
and serve me.
The phone company has conditioned the public to answer that
ring no matter what Even when

showering, you get out like a fool
and run to the phone. Never mind
how many people have broken an
arm or a leg in tile process. Please
Jell them how ridiculous it is to do
this. They will listen to you. -MIAMI BEACH
DEAR MIAMI : Don't blame
the telephone company for "oondiIioning people" to answer the

serves Meigs, Athens, Morgan and
Washington Counties in Ohio, and
Wood County in West Virginia
All money raised will go to the

Frederick Young UA graduate

IIIII

Great
Selection
Of Gifts
For Dad
•Short Sleeve Knit
Pullover Shirts
•Dress Pants
•Casual Pants
•Sport Coats and
Blazers
-•Suits
•Spring Jackets
-•Levi Denims
: •Arrow Dress Shirts

Dear Ann Landers: The 17-yearold daughter of a e&lt;&gt;-worker took a
home pregnancy test and the result
was positive. When she told her
parents she was pregnan~ they were
very supportive, but her boyfriend
became enraged and said he wanted
nothing more to do witll her.
A few evenings later, the girl
attempted to hang herself. She
was discovered and rushed to the
hospital where she lay in a coma for
three days. After several brain scans
revealed no response, the life
·supwrts were removed and she
quietly passed away.
The double tragedy is that the
home pregnancy test was wrong.
Hospital tests showed that the girl
was not pregnant.
Although these do-it-yo urself
pregnancy tests advise seeing a
doctor for verification, not every·
one reads the fine prinL But they do
read your column, Ann. Please tell
your readers that no matter what the
circumstances may be, one should
not rely on the positive or negative
results of a home pregnancy test.
Many lives have been affected by
this young girl's death, but maybe
through your column some good
will come out of it. .. L.M. IN
FLORIDA
DEAR L.M.: What happened to
your young friend was a needless
tragedy. Home pregnancy tests are
not always accurate and should be
confumed by a doctor. Regardless
of the ouiCOme of the pregnancy test,
however, that unfortunate young
woman had seve1111 options.
The real value of this leuer is to

95 :1~111

11

a "

$21FF

Frederick Louis Young, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Young,
Pomeroy, graduated magna cum
laude from the University of Akron
School of Law on May 23, 1992.
After taking the bar examination
he will be an associate witll the
fu&amp;ll:of fteuildt Precze1Uld-Amokl;which specializes in insurance
defense litigation as·weu as products linbility civil rights litigation.
The fmn is also the special uial
counsel for the City of Dayton.
While in law school, Young
served as a legal intern in the
Atllens County Prosecutor's Office,
a litigation support cleric for Buckingham, Dollittle and Burroughs,
Akron, a summer associate for Fre·
und, Freeze and Arnold, law clerk
for the City of Akron Law Depart·
men~ Stroller Tutor, and research
assistant for Assistant Professor
Howard A. Denemark, University .
of Akron School Law.
He received the Dean's Club
scholarship, the Cooperative Pub-

lishing Co. American Jurispru dence Award for Constitutional
Law, and the Cooperative Publishing Company American Jurisprudence Award for Remedies.
Young's activities in law school
included trial team member, Law
Review intern and senior staff, negotiations team, ABA Criminal
Division Trial Competition, Media
Law Moot Court Team, National
Moot Court Team. Student Bar
Association, Phi Alpha Delta, Stu·
dent Library Commiuee Member,
and International Law Society.

Catholic women
to meet June 10
The 47th Diocesan Council of
Catholic women will convene at St.
·John Arena on June 10. All
Catholic women and priests in the
Diocese of Steubenville are invited
to auend.
Celebrating the SOOth anniversary of tile discovery of America,
this year's convention theme is
"Catholic Women Building the
City of God: 500 years of Catholic
Women in l\le New World." The
convention will extol the important
role thai women have played in
building up the country and in
being the foundation upon which
the Catholic Church in the Americ·
as was builL
The day will be dedicated Io
Hester Dolak, past DCCW presiden~ who died last December. The
collection at the Liturgy will purchase a wheelchair foc a women in

$9 99 sale pr1te

"'s"" '""'""

&amp;
1300 mls •

alte • r!'baW

gaMD"

SWIIS

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t:Y\:J I

3295

filii

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Pllllllote

Polnl'

AI iiWI I
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Sbrln IIIII Arlh-IPIIIIhlti'IPI
Prn:e good w11h

eA~ han oe

Evaryday low

Pritt~

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

lttsun

Mrs. Laura Mae (Hartung) Nice,
Chester, visited her son, Edgar, and
hi s wife, Sharon, in Avon Lake,
over the Memorial Day weekend.
On May 24, he received his J.D.
rrom Cleve land-Marshall College
of Law, Cleveland State University . He is a 1960 graduate of Eastern
H1gh SchooL In 1964 her received
a B.S. from Rio Grande College.
The same year he joined the United
States Air Force, ultimately serving
m Yietnam where he was credited
with 67 combat missions. In 1969
and part of 1970 he was employed
as a corporate pilot for the K.M.
Williams Company, Columbus. He
subsequently received an appointment wi th the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), was trained at
th e FBI Academy, Quant ico, Va.,
and for the past 21 and one-half
years has been a special agent with
the FBI.
In addaion to the above educa·
uonal faciiHICS, he has auended
Ohio St.ate University, Huntsville,
Te.as , where in 19RI he received
an M.A. in Police Science and
Administration. He has pursued
additional aviator ratings via self·
study and formalized craining institutions. He currently holds an Airline Transpon Pilot (A TP) Certifi·
ca te, Multi-engine. with CFI and
CFII instructor licenses.
He is married to the former
Sharon Ann Ritchie. She graduated
from Eastern High School in 1959.

All-American
Charlene Dailey · has been
named an All-American Scholar by
the United States Achievement
Academy .
The USAA has established the
award program to offer deserved
recognition to superior students
who excel in the academic disciplnlCs. The scholars must earn a 3.3
or beuer grade point average. Only
scholars selected by a high sc hool
instructor, counselor or other qualified sponsor are accepted.
Dailey, who auends Eastern
High School, was nominated for
this national award by Tom Kelly,
school couselor.
She will appear in th e All American Scholar Directory which
. is published nationally.
She is Jhe daughter of Charles
and Theda Dailey . Grandparents
are Basil and the late Norma Dai·
ley, Lakeland, Fla., and the lale
Willie and Flossie Taylor. Bick·
more, W.Va.

•

On dean's list
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Slort hourt: 8:30 1.m. to 8 P·" '· Mond•Y through Frld1y,
8:30 1.m. 10 1 p.m. SaturGty, and 9 1.m. to 5 p.m. Sundly

GALLIPOUS

""~\':i.:;,o;M•
10, lii2.

•

At the completion of the second
semester Bl Bob Jones University,
l'rina Darlene Barker, daughler of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Barker of
Racine, was named to the dean's
list having maintained an average
grade of 3. or betler on a 4. scale.
Barker, a 1988 graduate of East·
etn High School in Reedsville, Is a
senior majoring in physical education in the School of Education.

ThcMeigs County React had a
successful coffee break on Memorial Weekend.
React members were busy serving travelers all the way fr om

In 1962 she received her diploma
from the Holler Hospital School of
Nursing in Gallipolis. In addition to
working for 30 years as a regisJered
nurse, Mrs. Hartung funhered her
educati on by receiving a B.A . in
health education from Sam Houston State University in 1977.
Their son, Edgar J. Hartung II
(Jed) IS flmshmg his third year at
Ohio University. He is a candidate
for a degree in electrical engmeering. He curremly carries a 3.8
grade point average.
Mrs. Nice's other son, Kenneth
L. Hartung obtained a B.A. and an
MBA from Ohio Universi ty. He is
married to the fanner Jackie Bahr.
She obtained a real est.ate agem's
license and is se llin g home s in
Louisville, Ky. They have two
daughters, Heather, who auends
Miami University, Oxford , and
Andy, who is a senior in high
school and will attend Oh1o Uni versity.

Texas and Canada.
Anyone interested in joining the
group shou ld contact Neal White at
698-3411 or Ooh Dowles at 992 2221.

If money
talks,
this ad is

Readings given
during meeting

Receive High EFF
Media Filter FREE
WHh Purchase of
HP22HP
Between June 5-12

The Forest Run United
Methodist Women met recently at
the home of Mary Nease for a
potluck supper.
Officers reports were given and
41 sick calls were reported.
Readings and poems were given
during the program and Edith Sis·
son had devotions from Joshua.
She also read "Native American
Awareness." Mary Nease read ''In
Honor of Diversity of Senior Citi·
zens," Faye Wiggins read "Mother
of Our Lord." Erma Roush read
"Lesson from the Oyster." Mary K.
Roush read "Growing Older." Evelyn HoUon read a letter from President Bush to aU churches. Kathleen
Scou read a leuer from a greatgmnddaughter to her great-grand·
,mother. She also read about some
mother-daughter banquets or our
group in 1972 and 1975.

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Scholarship winner
Roderick Franklin Newsome, a
1992 graduate of Eastern Local
High School, has been awarded tile
Rae~ne Home National Bank
Scholarship through the Uruvcrsity
of Rio Grande.
.
The scholarship is awarded to
graduating se niors who hav e
demonstrated exceptional character, personality and leadership.
In school , Newsome participat·
cct in Boys St.ate, the junior and
senior class play, prom, the newspaper and yearbook staffs, football.
basketball, and baseball. He is also
a member of the National Art
Honor Society and was a Rio
Grande American Free Enterprise

• Furr\i1utequard

representative.

The son of Frank and JoAnn
Newsome of Pomeroy, Newsome
plans to maJOr in criminology.

--

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_,.,.

.Tllll,..

"'151

•
•
.•

-.

..•
•

• Llghlwelght

•
•

• Detuu rug and n001 I'\Oute

The S 15 admission fee includes
a snack, hot lunch, aU materials and
services. The fee for parish units is
$60 and $40 roc deanery councils
Registration will begin at 9 am.
with the Eucharisti5 celebration Bl
10:15 a.m. The new DCCW offt·
cen will be installed during the
Liturgy.

sss
1)147

FREDERICK YOUNG

Meigs County speech and hearing
clinic held in Pomeroy, according
to a report from the Easter Seal
Society.
Kroger staff plans on raising
funds by making and selling root
beer floats for $1. A &amp; W which is
a national corporate sponsor of
Easter Seals, will provide all of the
root beer, cream soda. cups, spoons
and straws, and Country Club ice
cream will donate aU of the vanilla
ice cream. The event will tak e
place on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, June 26-28 from II a.m. to 5
p.rt]. in fran[ o(.Lhe K!oger store.
Last year $200 was raised at the
first lime event and tllis year, th e
K!oger employees' goal is to double that amount
The speech and hearing clinic at
Pomeroy is significantly subsidized
by Easter Seals, and according to
Susie Heines, director, there are an
average of 54 clients at each of the
four sessions held per year. Speech
therapists are contracJed through
Ohio University and hearing tests
and one-on-one speech tllerapy is
provided. Clients are early elementary-aged children, Heines reports,
with referrals coming through hospitals, schools, and Head Stan. The
clinic also serves MRDD clients.
Easter Seals is submining a
gran! proposal to provide aU Meigs
County parents of children under
age 3 with free quarterly developmental checklists to help them
gauge the developmeni of their
children. The Meigs County collaborative group of local social service
agencies and Easter Seals devel oped the project as a way of identi ·
fying children's potential developmental delays earlier, when they
are easier and less expensive to
correct

Meeting held

Edgar Nice receives
degree; family visits

Peru.

3 liAR WARRANTY

8M
la'rKit

phone. This is a decision that each
individual malces for him or herself.
Of course, rushing to answer the
phone is foolish, but that element
known as curiosity lives in all
of us. Who's calling? The only
way you'll ever know is to
answer the phone, unless, of
course, you have an answering
machine which not everyone wants
-- including me.
Dear ADD Landers: No, no, no!
Please don't advise guests to fold
the bedsheets nicely and cover
the bed with the spread.
Depaning guests should make
up the bed. so lhal if the hostess
doesn't launder the bedding that
day, the room will at least look
tidy.
I was once mortified when a
guest stripped off the coverlet
and bed sheets and left them
1n the middle of the bed,
which let me know that she
had see n the badly worn but
still comfortable old mauress
underneath •• RED-FACED IN
SACRAMENTO
DEAR SACRA: You've made a
good point My face is redder lllan
yours.
When planning a wedding. who
pays for wluu' Who stands where?
'The Ann Lanlkrs Guide for Brides'"
has all the answers. Send a self·
addressed. long. bus1ness-si ze
&lt;nvelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this includes
postage and hilndling) 10: Brides,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562.
Chicago, J/1 . 606ll-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45)

Employees team up for Easter Seals

....... __

Thursday, June 4, 1992

Page-t

False test result cost girl her life

I

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Rangers tlletr 17th VIctory '" ~he
last 19 games agamst tile v•stung
Yankees.

•
••

• Full.fime edge cltonlng
• Includes aHochments

..
·~
••
...

••

:•.•
••
•

....
'••

..••
)

--INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND AYE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·2635

••

•

�Thursday, June 4, 1992

Sentinel

Community calendar
Community Calendar items in the grange building at 7 p.m.
appear two days before an event Thursday . Anyone interested is
and the day of that event. Items welcome. Call Mrs. Addalou Lewis
must be received well in advance at 992-2924 for further informato ass ure publication in the cal· tion.
enda r.
•
FR([)AY
THURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Preaching
RAC INE - American Leg ion and singing at the Faith Full Gospel
Pos t 602 will meet Thursday at Church in Long Bottom on Friday
7:30p. m. at the po s~
at 7:30p.m. Mike Pooler as speak·
er. Fellowship will follow.
POME ROY - Sacred Heart
Church basement sale, Thursday
TUPP ERS PLAINS · Round
fr om 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . One day and square dance on Friday from 8
unl y.
to 11 :30 p.m.. sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains VFW #9053 and
ROC K SPRIN GS - Salisbury the ladies' au xiliary. Music will be
Township Trustees will meet on provided by CJ and the Country
Thursday at 7 p.m . at the township Gentlemen.
garage at Rock Springs.
REEDSVILLE - Olive TownMI DDLEPORT - Evangeline ship Trustees will hold a regular
Chap ter 172. OES, of Middleport meeting on Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
wil l have lis regular meeting on the Shade Riv er State Forestry
Thu rsday 1 7:3 0 p.m . and will Butlding o n Jopp a Road near
ilu nor an d prese nt pins to th e 25 Reedsville.
and 50 year members . Worth y
rmtro n rn vit es all 25 and 50 year
POMEROY . There will be an
membe rs to allend the meeting. NA mee ting Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Refreshm ents will be served fol - JTPA office in Pomeroy.
low ing the mee ting by the chapters
pas t matrons.
MASON - A full weekend of
gospel music will be held at the
POMEROY · The Eagles class Mason County Fair Grounds Friday
of th e United Methodist Church at 8 p.m. and continuing Saturday
wil\ have a bake sale on June 3 at and Sunday at 1 p.m. each day, rain
Kroge r.
or shine. Admission is free.
HE MLOC K GROV E · Hem-.
SATURDAY
lock Grange #2049 will meet on
LONG BOTTOM . There will
Th urs day at 7:30 p.m. in regular be a smorgasbord dinner on Satur.vcssion . Denver Rice will entertam. day at 5 p.m. in the Long Bottom
Community Building. The all-youPO MEROY - PERl will meet at can-eat dinner will feature ham and
I p .rn on Thursday at th e senior several other meats, scalloped oysl' lll:t Cns (.:e nte r. All members arc
ters, homemade noodles, several
ljr );-.:d 10 at tend.
entrees, etc. Desse rts and drinks are
included. Cost is $5 for adults and
RU TLAND - Th e Rutl and $2.50 for children.
Tow nsh ip Trustees will meet in
regu lar sessron on Thursday at 6:30
SAL EM CENTER - Star
p.(n at the Ru tla nd ftre sration. The Grange #778 and Star Junior
prr blic is mviled.
Grange #878 will meet in regular
session on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
POMEROY ·The Meigs Coun- Grange Hall , located on County
" Soa p Box Derby Association Road 1 near Salem Center. Rock
i rll hold a rummage sale Wednes- Spring s Gran ge will visit Star
day and Thursday in the old build- Grange. Srar Grange will hold the
"' '' beside the Office Supply Shop judging of the srate and national
rnPomeroy. Anyone who would lie se wing and needlework contests,
to donate 11em to the Derby may do and Srar Junior Grange will hold
l&lt;l hv c:il lrng Angte Swift at 992th eir annual inspection. Potluck
l l 1 i. Caro lyn Ne utzli ng at 742- refreshments will be served follow!X60 or Ann Barrett at 742-2464. ing the meeting. All member.; are
llcms may be dropped off at the urged to aucnd.
,'!lop today or tomorrow.
RUTLA ND · Dance at the
POME ROY · An AA meeting American Legion Hall on Sa!urday.
wrll be held at Sacred Heart 8 p.m. to mid ni ght. Mu sic by
Cat ho lt c Chur ch in Pom eroy White's Hi\1 Band. The public is
invited.
Thur&gt;day at 7 p.m.
ROC K SPRINGS · The next
meetin g of the flower arranging
wo rk shop s held by th e Metg s
C::ounty Garden Clubs will be held
at the Meigs County Fair Grounds

POMEROY · Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 will be holding a
car wash at Pleasers in Pomeroy on
Saturday. from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

REEDSVILLE - SOLOS, a
Christian fellowship of single
adults, will hold a pi en ic at the
home of Gary Reed, Reedsville, on
Saturday at 5 p.m. Those interested
in going by car pool from Pomeroy
United Methodist Church, at 4:30
p.m., should call Rev. Eunhae Kee
at 992-5788.

POMEROY • The Meigs CounGarden Clubs are having a clear·
ance sale of the remainder of the
gardening and flower arranging
supplies from the closeout of the
Carleton School lawn and garden
center. The sale will be held from
noon to dark on Saturday at the
comer of Spring Avenue and Main
Street. Proceeds benefit the Carleton School in Syracuse.
ty

&amp;he various ac ttviti es that the gi rls

'llt &lt;:iHi r n~

we re Bethany Coo ke ,
,\rrtumn Ph rllips, Amanda Miller

~tnd

r\mlrca Ncuu ling. Also attend -

rn c v. rth them was Sarah House r.
· Th.ll eve nin g, members and
thc 1r lll Oth crs aucndcd the annual
mo th er/daughter banquet. Attcndrng v. crc lana. Michelle and Lacey
Kc rrrr cdv; De bbie, Bethany and
Johnny Cooke; Melissa Houser and
ran ntc Mrll cr: Brenda and Andrea
:'\ Lilli_hng: Jncl

Am anda Miller.

,\ lrdrl trrp to LrRa's Gardens
""'" ,\;cl.;onvillc wns the hig hl ight
ot M ~1 y 22. The eve ning consisted
"' a tnp throug h the gardens where
th ey ' "' wcu several gol dfish ponds
and a hr kc on the natur e trails .
Once they completed the trail they
mad e mrn r-g arden s. Following
more hrkin g they enJoyed refreshmen ts o f lc monaJd , ice tea a nd

enjoyed were th e I&lt; :u ngutter Regal- homemade chocolate chtp cookies.
Ill and camp cooking skills. Girl s 1\l tcndtn g were Andrea Ncutzling,

POMEROY · The Meigs County Fish and Game Association l'lill
have its regular meeting Satorday
at 7 p.m.
STIV ERSVILLE
The
Suversville Word of Faith Church
all day picnic will be held Saturday
at noon. Music will follow with
evening service of Holy Ghost
Revival with Brother Jerry Coarill.
Public invited.
JACKSON -The Liberty Mountaineers will perfonn Saturday for
the fish fry of the Liberty Township Fire Department in Jackson .
SUNDAY
POMEROY - An AA meeting
will be held Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
JTPA office in Pomeroy.
LOTrRlDGE - There will be a
smorgasbord dinner at the Lot·
tridge Community Center Sunday
from noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12. Public invited.
RACINE • The tenth annual
George Holter Jr. family reunion
will be held at the home of James
and Karen Holter Werry Sr., Sunday at 1 p.m. Barbecue chicken,
plates, etc .. and picnic shelter will
be provided. Bring a covered dish
and lawn chairs. Also bring pictures and mementos. Call 949-2746
for funher information.
MIDDLEPORT • Rev . Bob
Armstrong will speak at Rejoicing
Life Church, SOO North Second
Avenue, Middleport, during the
men's breakfast in the school
lunchroom Saturday and during
services Sunday at 10 a.m. The
public is invited.

Mrc hell c Kennedy, Autumn
Phillips. Amanda Miller, Te rrie,
Me lissa and Sarah Houser.
On May 23 the troop met at the
lead er's home and completed plans
lor allendrng COS I on May 29 and
30. The troop also completed plans
lor a yartl sal e.

INFORMATION/
RESERVATIONS

JUNE 12 &amp; 13
9:00A.M. till finished.
Paintings on dl1play In store. Make
resarvatlon1 now.

got "Spring Fever" at Rutland Furniture and we're
of our Admiral
save big on select
advantage of our
spring savings on new appliances or visit our showroom
and see our largest selection of used appliances and furniture
we've had to offer in the plli!t several years!

SIIIU•I'

nu.' !Iii Ull .\dmi1•:ll fiU!'rit'OIII!'ri

$439 '799" PAIR
lb. Admiral Almond Bee. Dryer-.Was $479.95-.--NOW $359.95 SAVE $260
lb. Admiral White Elec. Dryer _ _ _ was $469.95~-NOW S349.95.. JAYE $120
lb. Admiral Almond Washer.-Was $S79.9S ....... ____,_,NOW

19 cu. ft. Admiral White
$550 •••. 5AYE $300

9 cu. ft. Adm. White or
Deluxe Refrigerator

1 cu. ft. Admiral Amond Refrigerator_ Was $749.95.--NOW $499.95...5AVE $250
lllmitral Electric Range.
_ _ Was $699.95~-NOW $443.00-.SAYE $250
hhllitrnl Miaowav
Was $349.95-NOW $199, 95 ...SAYE $150

Maytag Almond Washer·----..·-·-·--Was S609.9S ...... NOW •487

17 Cu. Ft. Gibson Green RefrigeratOr---Was

00

S799.9LNOW 1499'5

'348°0

S599.9L_NOW

AlL OF THE ABOVE HAVE FULL FACTORY WARRANTIES
AND

OUR

) 20 lb. Admiral White Dryer.-....· · · - - - -..--..- - - - · - - · - · - - - - · * 3 2 5
19 Cu. Ft. Admiral White Refrigerator..- .......... - .....- -.....- ............- ..... 1529
) 19 Cu. Ft. Admiral Almond Refrigerator-·----·--....... _,_,_,_____, 15 29
................ _.'588

$609...NOW 1487
17 Cu. Ft. Gibson Refrigerator______ ...., .. ___,Reg. $699-.NOW 1539

Maytag Almond Washer..- - - - - · - - - - - - - - R e g .

A graduation party for Daniel
Alfred Lawrence was held Sunday
by his parents, Mr . a nd Mrs.
Howard Lawrence.
Allcndin g were Debb rc Christy,
Ja me and Tina Drake, Robin
Gr lli spie, Tommy Adkin s, Penny
Grlli spie, Theodore and Nancy
Wilford , Manu e l, Cath y, Mary ,
Jan e and Miss y Francis, John , Patty
and Andy Henderson, Eli zabeth
Bryant and Howie Lawrence.

Green Electric Range.............................................................................. t 135
Chef Almond Electric Range .................................................................. 118800
00
1
lavlan Cower Gas Dryer.-.........................................·----·······--·-··· 125
1
lavlaa Green Eledri' Dryer..............................·-------······-·-·-··--• 199'
00

lavlaa
lavlaa

1

00

Greet1 Dryer·--·-···-···················-······-··········-·-·..····-···..--····199 00
Greet1 Dryer.........................................................._............................. 99

WHITE MAYTAG DRYER...........................................1 19 500
WHITE MAYTAG WASHER ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s29995
ALMOND MAYTAG WASHER......................................1299 95
All 3 Completely Overhauled With 6 Month Guarantee

Brown Sedional With 21ndiners...............,_..................................................*300
Crahmaster Sofa.............................................................................................1199
(2) CoHee Tables...................... _ ..,___................................-........__each *47
Assorted Occasional C h a i r s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - · - · - ' 2 0
Zenith Systet11
Zenith

3 25" Color Console TV

13" Calor Portable 1V

&amp; Up

With Remate--........................ _,_.,.S300

With Remote.---··"--·-·-·-·-........_, __ 118 8

La-Z-Boy Mauve Rec&amp;ner... "Uke

New"·-----------........SAVE

1

1OO's

King Hickwy Sofa--------.......... ____....................................... 1250

Lancer Hicle·A·BeL"Uke New" ______,..___ ,.. _,_,., ___ ,.., __,_,14 7 5

1

Quasar 25" TV..-------------·..--................................... '200
Large Metal Wardralle w /Mirror on

I

·'·

Door------------..

·----·•149

Elvis fans have argued for years
that th eir hero's likeness should
grace a postage sramp. But others
said the singer's drug abuse made
,hrm a poo r subject for such an
honor.
Th e Postal Service said th e
stamp will recognize Presley 's contri buti on to American mu sic , not
end orse his way of life.
The Elvis stamp is the first in
th e Postal Service's "Legends of
American Music" series. Sramps
of Presley only will be issued the
lw.;t yea r.
Prcslc y began his climb to fame
rn Memphi s in the 1950s, selling
more records than any other entertainer. He died at Graceland in
1077 at 42.
" This has the same effect as
Graceland gettmg on the National
Register of Historic Places," said
Graccland spokesman Todd Morga n. "It makes the general public
who aren' t that informed about
Elvis realize just how important he
w:1 s "

' '
..,-

}

DIKE AWARDED - Skip Johnson of Middleport was tbe win·
ncr of a IS-speed Murray mounrain bike, given away as a promo·
lion by the Wil-Car Sundry Store in Middleport . Here, Assistant
Munagcr Kristi Richmond presenls the bike to Johnson's daugb·
tcr, Bridget .

Dorothy Roach pre sided and
Gl enn Evans gave th e opening
prayer.
Officers repons were given by
Farie Cole and Kathryn Evans.
A donations was give n to a
needy family in the commu nity.
Th ose in need of praye rs are
Stobart and Grimm farnrlr es, the
Koenig family, Marilyn Bi shop,
Kari Jackson, Tom Roach. Ashley
Roach. Dorothy McGuffin, Claremoot and Juanita Buchanan , Delcie
Forthe, Ted Riley , Gen eva Tuttle
and the Clarence Boyles family.
Devotions were given by Mary
Hysell. Dorothy Roach and Flo
Grueser.
The meeung closed wi th prayer
by Raymond Cole.
Hostesses for the evenin g were
Bill and Flo Grueser, Mary Hysell
and Dorothy Roach. Others attending were Thelma Bo yer . Willard
and Nenie Boyer, Joe and Marilyn
Bishop, Glenn and Kathryn Evans,
Bud and Hazel Wilson , Gene and
Dorothy McDaniel, Ros eanna
Manley, Raymond and Farie Cole
and Frank lhle.

J'ANDY'

-

tndudel

.II OMS Hard Ortve.
VGA Color Monitor

....

TANDY

~

~~;ii~~~~~&lt;

Items 1599 .90

Reg . Separate

low As SJO Per Month •

Fast Printer

save
1991s
sso
Reg. 2U.95

Notebook PC
~
200

low As $1~ Per Month •

• Tandy 1110 H O

• Hard drtve

• IBM· Propn nter II

o MS DOS' 5 0
• Just 6 6 po unds

emulat ron

• Push tractor feed

125-14 531 4044

U119radtlo VGM -200 color VGA monitor JI25·41MIIIot only 150 more!

Reg. 1199.00

low As $30 Per Month •

• Pnnts up to 300 cps
• Tandy 1000 ALX· HD • 1MB RAM • Butl!· tn VGA gmptucs
• NO FAN - NO NOISE • Pre -tnstalled Desk Mate" so ftw are

sggg

• 7~ J~ JI

•26 2866

Sheets honored

) 14 Cu. Ft. Gibson Refrigerator...- - - - - - ·..- -..--Reg. $649...NOW 1439

Frigidaire Miaawave.. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - · - - - - - - 138

446-2134

CO-CHAMPION· Carley Crow, Racine Elementary, is pictured
with her co-champion poster and trophy for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District annual poster contest for fourth
graders in Meigs County.

SERVICE GUARANTEE

) 19 Cu. Ft. Admiral Almand Deluxe Refrigerator.................... -

lector 's Item.

The annual family picnic at the
home of Glenn and Kath ryn Evans
was planned at the recent meeting
of the Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Chri st held
in the social room at th e church.

14 Cu. Ft. Gibson Green Refrigerator ........ Was S649.9LNOW 1399'5
18 Cu. Ft. Kelvinator Green Refrigerator-Was $799.9S...NOW 1525'5
Sunray Harvest Gold Electric Range. ___ was

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn . - America
has chosen its presidential nomi·
nces, and now it's picked its King.
The yo un g Elvis Pre sley of
" Hea rtbr eak Hotel, " "Hound
Dog" and the Ed Sullivan Show
has been elected by fans for the
new U.S. sramp.
The Postal Service today
announced that the design out·
polled the "old Elvis" by a 3-to-1
margon and will adorn the 29-cent
stamp to be released next January.
More than 1 million votes were
cast.
With Pre sley's form er wife,
Pri sc illa Pres ley, on hand, the
resu lts were announced at Grace ·
land . the singer' s former home in
Me mphi s that draws more than
650,000 tourists a year.
Votin g was conducted by mail
Ap ril 6-2 4, and postal officials
rece ived more than l.l million
vot es by prepared ballot or post
care. Most of the more than S mil·
Ir on ballots prepared apparently
end ed up in Elvis fans' scrapbooks,
offictals said.
The vote marked the ftrst time
th e Postal Service has asked the
publi c to select postage stamp an.
Officials commissioned two
port raits, the winning one th at
showed Presley in his " Hound
Dog" year s, cradlin g a '50s-style

dents with many benefits and services and is a great tribute to a stu-- ·
dent's dedication, talent and ability.
She is the daughter of Roger and
Pam ela Chaney. Reedsville.
Grandparen ts are Ada Congrove ·
and the late William Congrove, and
John and Doroth y Chaney. Reedsivlle and Rac ine.

Angela Chaney has been recogni zed for academtc achievement as
a United States National Honor
Roll Award winner.
She attends Eastern High School
mrcrophone, the other representing and will appear in the United States
hrm rn his later years as a Vegas Achievement Academy Off1ctal
showman, when he favored bejew· Yearbook, published nationally.
elect Jumpsui ts and capes.
The USAA National Honor Roll
Crrti cs objected to the prOJect's AWiuds provide honor roll stu53 00,000 promotional costs, but
the Postal Service said it ex pects to
make money on th e stamp as a col-

Homebuilders Class plan
for annual family picnic

----~Was $899.95~-NOW $599.95.~5AVE $300

(2) Full or Queen Size Headboards ........,_,_,____ , ..........................._, __ ,_., 147

529 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

FIRST PLACE - Tawny Jones, Salem Center Elementary,
received first place and county co-champion in tbe Meigs SWCD
poster contest.

On 'l'lw l&lt;'lom·

or Almond Refrigerator--·-·-·---·Was $799.95-- NOW

Chaney named national winner

Young Elvis selected
as design for stamp

Graduate honored

WOULD YOU LIKE TO
PAINT A PICTURE?
In just a few hours, you can create a beaut~ul
painting you'll be proud of. We know you can
do it because lhe national Sue Scheewe teaching staff guides thousands of beginning paint·
ers to creative fu~illment every year! It's a great
opportunity for you to learn from a gifted and
caring teacher.
GIVE US A CALL FOR

R
NIT RE C .'S
New &amp; Used, Closeouts
and Discontinueds

There's somethiq for .v~n• at Rutland Fumihlre.
So don't wallr, run! To Rutland Furniture and
CATCH THE FEVER!!

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9 ·.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LONG BOTTOM · The Lighthouse. We're clearing out all
house Gospel Singers from John stown will perfonn at Mt. Olive
Community Church in Long Bot- IAJppllirutces at their lowest prices ever! Also
tom Saturday at 7 p.m . Pastor
1 m, ... 1 ,..,.,.,, Kelvinators, and Gibsons. Take
Lawrence Bush invites the public.

Junior troop activities listed for May
On ,\1ay 1 the Pomero y Junio r
Troop met at th e leader 's home.
Plans we re made for an outd oor
day. Grrls worked on the outdoor
(un badge and discussed outd oor
~ m c rge nc r es and ftrst aid.
On Ma y 9 the girls met at the
leader s home. Attendmg the meetin ~ and working with the grrls on
s r ~n languag e was Penn y
Dewhurst. Girls a11cnding were
And rea Ne ut z!r ng. Mic hell e
Kennedy, Am anda Mrller, Melissa
Huuse r. Au tumn Phdlrps, Aj a
McG loth in and ilarbara Wilson.
The mornrng of May !6the girls
Jttcnd cd the Scout·A-Rama held in
Pu rnt Plea san t. W.Va. Those
allcnd rn' lr ad th e opportun ity to
hi ke p:nt or watch variou s skill s
and cr;IIti be ing taught. Some of

Thuraday, June 4, 1992

WINNER . Chris Krawsczyn, Chester Elementary, shows his
co-champion poster and trophy from the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District fourth grade poster contest.

Meigs S&amp;WCD names
poster contest winners
Tawny Jones, Salem Center Elemcnlllry; Chris Krawsczyn, Chester
Eleme ntary: and Carl ey Crow ,
Rac in e Elementary, were county
co-c hampions and re ce ived tro ·
phics rn the Meigs Soil and Water
Co nse rvation Distri ct (SWCD)
annu ~ l poster contest held recently.
The topic for this year 's contest
was "How Conservation Improves
Our Environment. " A film, "Water,
We Can't Live Without It" was
shown in all the elemenlllry schools
in preparation for the contes~
Each school was eligible to
rece ive a first, second and third
prize with ftrSt prize bcmg $5 and a
blue ribbon; second pnze was $3
and a red ribbon; and third prize
was $2 and a white ribbon.
First. second and third prize
winners respectively in each school
were: Tawny Jones, Laura Payne
and Jeremy Smith, Salem Center;
Kyle Smiddie, Jason Miller _and
Tiffany Richmond, Hamsonvtlle:
Brandon Collins and Levi
McGrath, Rutland; Joseph McCall,
Aaron Schaekel, Jarred Clay,
Rejoicing Life; Bethany Boyle~.
Bndget Johnson and Jerry Clark,
Middleport; Ointon Hom, MarJooe
Halar, Michelle King, Salisbury;
Chris Krawsczyn, Sarah Frank,
Scott Needs, Chester: Travis
Lvons Carrie Sheets, Michelle
O~Nail: Tuppers Plains; Stephanie
Barber, Jason Barber. Amy Adams,
Riverview; Brawn Herman,
Autumn Hill, Ryan Hill, Letan:
Carly Crow, Bobbie Scarberry,
Stacy Lyons, Racine; Chris Debolt,
Steve Tackett, Russell Reiber,
Syracuse; Barbara Wilson, Ryan

Pratt. Wesley Thoene, Pomeroy.
Also, each student partici pating
in th e contest receiv ed a pencil
fro m th e Meig s Soil an d Water
Conserva tion Dcstrict.

Jared Sheets, son of iim and
Jennifer Sheets, Pomeroy, was honored at Ohio State University's
College of Agriculture annual
recognition banquet held recently
at the Ohio Union.
Sheets was recognized as the top
senior in the College of Agriculture
and was awarded a $400 scholarship. While he is completing his
third yem:. he has senior sratus in
view of the credit hours which he
has completed.
Attending the Annual Agriculture and Natural Resources Recog nition Program were Jennifer
Sheets, Aaron Sheets. and Eliza·
beth Lohse.
Sheets is a graduate of Meigs
High School.

DUOFON E '

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�June

Ohio

1992

Former student designs -People in the news'BUG' program t-shirt
Salisbury Elementary staned the
"BUG" (Bring Up Grades) program this year.
The main theme or goal behind
this program was to encourage
each and every srudent to strive to
do their very best.
To recognize their achievements
the students were honored at the
end of each grading period at the
awards assembly as well as those
who had perfect attendance and
those who were on the honor roll.
Srudents were given a point (for

ReUlll•0 n held

BUG PROGRAM - Salisbury Elementary started the "BUG"
(Bring Up Grades) program this year. The main theme or goal
behind this program was to encourage each and every srudent to
strive to do their very best. A themed t-shirt was designed by Jason
Witherell, a former student at Salisbury Elementary. He is the son
or Dr. and Mrs. James Witherell, Pomeroy.

The 1942 Class of Pomeroy
High School met for a reunion May
23 at the home of Joan Mescher in
Syracuse.
The decorations were all in purpie and white and featured two
flags marking the driveway and a
large banner along the fence stating
"Welcome Class of '42." Two bulletin boards held mementos of old
school days. A table also held a
purple and white sweater , sweat
shin, a shield made at the school, a
band leuer and awards.
Name tags displaying pictures
of each one from graduauon was
presented to each person. A list of
the addresses of each class member
was also given.
Refreshments were served and
purple and white napkins were
used.
The afternoon was spent reliv ing high school memories and
rev1ewing old friendships.
States represented were Ohio,
West Virginia, Michigan, Texas,
Arizona, Pennsylvania, Connecti cut and Florida. Approximately 30
people attended.

NEW YORK (AP) - Singers
Paul Simon and Edie Brickell have
found harmony as newlyweds, a
spokesman said Wednesday.
The two were married Sarurday
in a private ceremony in Montauk
on Long Island.
"They're very happy. They've
bee n together for quite a while,"
said the Simon spokesman.
Simon, 50, a native of Forest
Iiiii s, was once married to actress
Carrie Fisher. Brickell, 25, who
had a hit with the New Bohemians
w1th "What I Am," is from Dallas,
Texas.

each subject) if .they raised th eir
grade, lost a pomt 1f the1r ~rade
dropped and had an exll'a pomt 1f
they received an A.
Students could then use th e
points they had earned to purchase
items from the school. They could
also save their points to purchase
larger items. At the end of th e
school year !-shirts were purchased
for every srudent who continued to
bring up their grades. The t-shin
was designed by Jason Witherell , a
former student at Salisbury Ele mentary and a sophomore at Meigs.
He is the son ofDr. and Mrs. James
Witherell, Pomeroy.
This program and the rece nt
academic banquet held at th e
school were made possible by a
competitive grant received from the
school by the Ohio Depanment of
Education through the Effective
Schools Program.

NEW YORK (AP) - Christie
Brinkley, who made her modeling
mark in a bikini for Spons lllusll'llted, said her cover shot in a red
maillot for Ladies' Home Journal is
her swimsuit swan song.
" I don 't want to do those any·
more. It' s galien too hard to suck in
my stomach," she said in the mag-

at.ine's July issue.
Now that she 's bidding adieu to
beachwear a goodbye to oil modelin " is not far behind, Brinkley said.
b" l've bee n planning to retire for ·.
the last 10 years . Modeling is a
very empty job," she said. " It's
been a great career. but I would
rather be known as anything but a
model. I desperately need more
stimulation."

Gospel music
concert slated

8112-5776

Sorority picnic held . . - - - - - - - - - - - -....
The traditional end-of-the-year
picnic for the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
was held recently at the home of
Joan
Corder.
After
the dinner a short business
mee ting was held and committees
for the 1992 -93 year were
announced. A general "gab" session followed with no dcf1tic ways
and means or social events decided.
The Meigs County Park District
has produced a film promoting
Meigs Countf . The f1lm was
viewed and al present agreed it.
could bo a selling ~~ for Meigs

County. ·
It was agreed that the group
would help with fair gates at the
Meigs County Fair to assist the •
other three local cbapltiS.
Members present were Reva
Vaughan, Maidie Mora, Donna
Jones, Betty Ohlinger, Charlotte
Elberfeld, Lillian Moore, Mary
Elizabeth Morris, Joan Corder,
Clarice Krautter, Jane Walton.

ALL LADIES JEANS
20O%0 OFF

~LINDA•s

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

"Ttlo IN , . Orr 01 ,.....,

r.·

IIH ISWHS

IIAVI IEFIIIIKIS
ltfwo6p.a.lltvo . . . . .

Ah• 6,... 614-915-4110

114Mtt_,..

"We Get The Jeb Done Now"
Call AI Tromm
614·742·2328
References AwaDalllt

20 Yrs.llp.

.f'I/OY-BI£f"
Our ~ Shipment Of
'l'roJ-Bih 1lBen New Ia Stock.
You IACGl !!!r-Ba, D...Ur

WAKEIIEli'S
It 50 Wosl, Alkt!. Olio •S!J.lell

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

FREE ESTIMATI'.S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

CWSED SUNDAY

• Reeeivfl

~ ..count for

• Free Ada: Gi veawa y and F'ound ad. under 15 word. wi.lll,e
run 3 day• at no cbuge.

• Prke or ad for all capitall~ tle n

IJ

double prM:e o( ad

COlt

' 7 poinlli"" lypoonly uood
• Trib~me il not re.pon•ibl~ (or cnon after finl day {theek
for error• firtt day ad run1 in paper) . Ca ll before 2:00p .m.
da)' after publication lo make correc:twn
1 Ad. lhat mull be p-aid in advance are:

1

1:00 p.m. Salurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thur&gt;day
1:00 p.m. Friday

- - ' - - ' - - - -- -:___ _:__ _ _

Classified pages cover the
foUowing telephone exchanges ...

tuh p•ud in advance.

WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa

DAY BER&gt;RE PUBUCA TION

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Ada oullidr. Gallia , Maton or Meigt countie. mwl be prepai~ f--

Cud or Thank..
Happy Ad.
In Memoria m
Ya rd Sale.
A da11if.ed adwerli~emenl placed in the GaUipolU. Oa1l)'
Tril.une (ucepl Clauifaed Di.Jplay, BLllineu Ca.rd or Legal
Notice.) will alao appear in tbe Point Pleuanl Regbter and
the Daily Se ntinel , reaching over 18,000 homt-.8

367-Che.hire
388-Vinton
24S,..Rio Gnnd•
256-Gu)'an Dial.
643-Aroblo DIM.
3 79- VI"""'

675-Pt. PlnHnl
458-Leon
5715-Apple Grove
773-MMOn
882-N~ Haven
895-Lelart
937-B• .R'alo

992-Middleporll
Pomeroy
985-ChHt.er
843- Pordand
247- Lelal1 FaD•
949- Ra~ine

742-Rutland

667-CoolviUe

369 70 Bal Run Raad
P-oy,Ohlo

Specializing In Custom

~

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

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

ON
SALE

Satisfaction '-Guaranteed

-Sculptures, Trackless, level
loops, Berbers, Commercial
Carpets
-Expert Installation
-We use heavy "Ufe of the
Carpet" warranty padding.
-Free, No Obligation Quotes

Words
1S

Days
1

3
6
10

IS
IS

1S
15

Monthly

Rate
Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$ .30
$6.00
$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day $.05/day

REG. $16.00

LEVEL LOOP CARPET
-1 00% Amoc:o Con6nuous Filament Olefin
-12 Ft. Widths
- 24 Colors

$9~!

SALE

INSTALLED

•

-20 Colors
-Scotchgord
-Continuous Filament Nylon

$14~!.
SAlE

INSTALLE
W/Pad

1' \ll\1 ~li'PIII : ~
8. I 1\ I ~TIII . I'

r.""

3l- Far•• for Sale
34- Bwineaa Buik:lin8f

985-4473
667-6179

Frulb &amp; Veget.ahka
For Sale or Trade

61EquipMent
62- Wanted lo Buy
l.iYUtod:

2-7-92-tln

TEAFORD GOLF

6 leSSDIS $60.00
CllbRepc*,

41 - Howel for Renl
42- Mobile Homee for Rent

Trop.les, Placpes
...dBadges

-Heotset Nylon
-Anti Static

$18 ~~~rn $13~t
SALE

REG. $18.00

BERBER CARPET

-Dupont Stainmoster
-18 Colors
-Shaw Mark Quality

-Olefin/Nylon Blend
-Xylan-Protection Plus
-18Colors ·

$16
,

99
SQ.YD.

SAil

INSTALLE

$12!~

9:30-5:00

""r

. 992~~671

DOWNTOWII .POiiEROY.
.
I 'OHIO

S t - Houaehold Good.
52- Sporting Goodl
53- Antique.
54- Mite. Mere han dille
SS- Buitding Supplies

:-1· 1:\1( 18

•

,.
82- Plumbing A: Heatin«
83- E•caTatin!J
R4- Eke,.;,.( &amp; Relo·;g"'"""
85- General Haulins

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

PRICE REDUCED!

Rldno• • BR, 3b-.2-,...nd1
BR llll· P-lly 4,800 oq. ft. lonn

l&gt;l&lt;lg.

Coli 814-092-7104 lot Appt.

STAR MILL PARK- RACINE
JUNE 6-7 p.m.
JAN &amp; CATHY
MIDDLEBRANCH BLUEGRASS
COUNTRY BLEND

Co. Rd. 3,

$20.00
Cua tom Painting•

614-992-2242
412192/lfn

992-5335 or
985·3561
Alrus 1- PMI Offko
217 r. s.c... sr.
POMliOT, oa10

3123192Mn

KERWOOD$
HO. REPAIR
SERVICE

.&lt; -JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
(all614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

·Agriculture

112/tln

Lime

CHARLIE'S

Rt. 2
Mdlwood, W.Va.

SMAll DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK aad
UMESTONE
DEUYERY SERVICE

Public Notice

NOncE OF APPOINTliENT
OF F10UCIARY
On Moy 45, 11112, In lhe
Melge County P1obate
Court, ca.. No. 27417,
Ulllltl E. PlcltMt• 14571 8.
R. 124, "-!IYIIIe, Ohio
41772, waa appointed
Executrix of lh• .... ,. of

W•rr•n
P. Plck1ne,
deceMecl, . . bll4571 S.R.

304-273-SSSS
4-9-tfn

REASONABU RATES

992·7553

NOW OPEN!

CALIFOIIII
TINS

Robert E. Buck,
'
PloWt Judge
Lena K. NMutroad, Clettt
(5) 21; (I) 4, 11' 3to

..

Mi•td &amp; Irish. Seller. &amp;14 ue ...
790Q.
••

- - ' - - - - - - : - - : - -··
Cat• &amp; kMtena, vartety at cotora.:~
614· JI2· 3168.

•'

Cute puppies. wUI bl INdium :~
siu, calf614-M2-885S.
~
Fama._ Pklll Coon hound dog. •
l'(f. old, 614--1U41Jt

:

Free German SMphard pupp•.:
lo a good home, 114-982-10. ..

HUGE YARD SALE
FP.!DAY &amp; SATURDAY
JUNE 5th and 6th
Cheshire. Ohio
Starting at 9:00 A.M.
Antique bed, entertainment
cabinet, storm door Uke new lawn
mower, stereo set Ninlendo set,
carpel, curtains, full size, baby
stroller, Junior size and women's
clothes, lots of nice jewelry and
misc. ttems.

CUSTOM lUlU
.ATHROO.

VAIOIU

949·2671
UCIIIE, OH.

s-11·'92·1- pd.

15 SesslonL ...$25
12 Sesslons....$20
1 Seaalon.... $2.25
New SCA WOLFF
BedSL24
Callfor ApplToday

949·2123

o... S,..U., Sid.--•

Of

1f•r· BIII 'llDen New I• StML
yl)., lAxal 'rl!f·Bill v..r...

WAICERE,.'S ·
b 50 Wosl.lliMit. Olio •StJ.llll

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVKE

-11-.. Addltiono

-Gua.rWartt
-£loolricol ond Plumbing
-Roofing
-lnllrio&lt; .. Ex1orior

V. C. YOUNG Ill
' 992-6215

•

~

Pomeror,Ohlo

3-13·92 ·lln

·B..-. r.. T.a....

RACINE MOWER
CUNIC
P.O. hll94 Wolc

IA&lt;III. OliO

r

614·949·2202

II;MI

412J1921l-

Beonetll Mobile
1391 s.tford School RtL
Cal (6141

Mala brlnd&amp;ll Gr..c Dane to~'~
hom• only. Full grown. 304-6753698.
Mother Cat &amp; 4 KltteM Ta

Giveaway, Take One Or TaM All •
614·256~231 .

Part Beagl• Dog To Good Home. '

Would Make Nice Pet
Chllelran. 614·25&amp;.1111.

Far

5wks. old, 8~·

Pupple&amp;· Brittany, Bngl• mix.

Plaau call 304-fi7S..54111.

Washer - worQ, 304-6114771.

Lost &amp; Found

Found: black &amp; lin Foa: hound
or Coon hound wf wt.lte Dn
nose, 614·1185-414l
Found: Black Llbr8dar Doa,
Vklnlty: O.J . Whitt Road, ~
lipolls. 614-446-2107.

Half

Found :
Halt
Chow
Shephard Femal•, On
Hill Road 614-24~5366.

Pt....nt

lost · 'yr old mala boxer,
reward,
Tuppora
P....._
Retldsvllla, friendly, • .....,. to
bandl1, 614-661-6346 or I'M--IIS3915.

LOST: 2 mala pta Southlkta.
Sixteen Wile Rd, brOwn mediuM
&amp;

helgh1

btaek

c

amaller,

==

=7==Y=ar=dS=al::e

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1747

Bob

Th~a.

4th, Frt 5th, Sal 81h.

McCormick

Aoed,

3 Family: June 3,4,51h. 1--7, 7
Mlln From Porter, 6 MO. From
Chlahl11, On 554, Aotn or
Shtne, Home lnt, Craft• La.
Women• CkJih lng Much ~

Mo,.l

'

4 Family Yard &amp; Craft S.S.:
BullyUie TownhouH, June 4th,
51h. 8:00-?

nom•~ Touc:k

11011 c_!Gir.a.

111 Hllnop un~. First L..llt
Off Nolghboohood Rood.

Aold

8-5, Frl, S.lb 137 o-1o Drive,
Frcm Krlstl ttwt. WhQ!Ia .....,..
Fan, TnH:k Bed liner, L.acln
Clothing, Cak Pana, Boy. Cottt-

lng

t0noy

991 IIUI C..k Rood

Gartge Rur Ot HouuJ 'Frf_ '""·
Sal. Baogoln Day, 9-12. Clalr.a.
Drylf, Band S1w, Air Condition~r, Bike, Stann
Door
ALL Yold S.loo llual Bo Pold In
Advanc.. DEADLINE: Z:OO p.m.
the d1y bafoN the lei .. ID run.

Clolhlng, Crafta, Some Fuml-

lurw, Lott Mor.. 6151h,lllth. N.

Fan1, Blcyclet., Wrtnger w..._.,
Many

Name

Brand

Toota.

Slontwaf'l, Caall Iron, ~
Flshlnt GNr, Sil_...,. Fumt-

Sl-

luoo, Shaolo. T-ta. T.V.'o, 'fan1
G...,., T..,., ~ ... Jll
Rocotdo,

olonlry,

~ lthM,

Glassware,

Fe.-_
01n1
r.,.

Potlory, 8 Track Plo,_
Baby Fumhuro. Juno 11\, 11111'
71h, 8111. 44&amp; Sprueo Sl. Ex1.

Got:

llpolla, Ohio.

Frlday,l/7, 1:00~2 .!'Ilea Soul~
Rl.7, Nlco Cloon ......._ Joono,

'

Fh•• In 5 v. . .r ma To 1/41111o
On
Kolnor,
Fri-$01,
11-4
Pl•yh..... 10
lamp, TOOle, Etc.
'

s..- .......

Fn, JuM Slh, 9-5. 1 112 Mil• 0u1
c.nt~~n•ry

Goodin.

Roed

•

Lota

01

Fn, Sot, H, Wlito 011
Rt.1&amp;C, Furnlt..._ Nlnt-.
Blkaa, Clal'-, Toro, lllni
Friday,

9-8:30,

. Clalhlng, - . . . 10

•Weedeaten

Miac_

Cenlww,

LAtgo,
Homo
lntHouMhoki, Nlntencto &amp; Ta~

Frtdoy,-y~-F~-· 5&lt;
On •••
BobyCiaiMo • Gino
10-14, Lotolllacl loro -2-4··

Gor'V* Sole: Frldoy, Setunloy
9-5. Lolo Of Clalhlng --- ....;
sr-1tlng Ridge. , ..... -•

•

1-800-837-1460

........

Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrubancn,.
Trimming l Removal
R•ldoniW &amp; C.Mwdll
Ft.. Eo......

Gt"V* Solo: Thuoa a Ftt, l:ot. ..
5:00, ttltlt
Ntco Clalntng, Lola Of .... • •

5-14-t2·tfo

Announcements

4/:K/1211n

3 Announcemems
Awon- buy or tel .. c:ont.CI Fl'ldo

dlo, 614-~-2~

F,.. AduH T1lk Line.

I hllll '-'

1-714-1112-7037

u... Ono On One.

s-.r "-·
~~~.;i~~4;-:iFi:;:.\:~-~;Ofl~llllr.
:-. .I
llh Onlr~~::

g:::t.
~·· ~Won
Haooollold "':o obr ~~~::

•*4

-~ :m

!IOid. - . .

Oft Qo "'1101
Rood, 1 111
Mtloo
From
"
l
•-Signo.
• W.loh .....

'

:=eo.~,.~~'~r..

:

'!....-

....._

Juno1'1111
«h¥Inion
I ...I..~!.' .. _.,
Fri.

Giveaway

1W1111o- 5Mo'a01d 1
112 Wk Old ~...... KKien, oM I
llonlh Old Pregnonl Longhalnld

Calico cal. 1~46-11103.

2 Yo. Old Block Bonfw Callio
114-188 8830
•
3 blk kill..... lhllf ,....... -

fJ$.3771.

·

Deprwulon~";i... Mucb · ·;~

:lnt, 4th. :ttl Noll Aft ...
.,.nc.,lnfl,., Mile.
., ......

4

.

Rt.7, Sat, 11 :CI0-7:00 ......~ •
5:00,
I
):00: •

wv. ' H.U.D.
0

~li{

r.....-

An wetl•ar.twetl

G.alty HI EfftdeiCJ 1.(oilltiolen, Heat
fii'IIKtS &amp;Now
Water Healers.

·~~­

Otd

94t-2627or

011.,

i.Mng Room Suite, KinPup. 614-388-8900.

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mo~ • Gail Saws

614·949·2804

lEVIN'S LAWII
MAIIITEIIAIICE

:\TTENTIO\

PH. 367-7350

Altr

(f!..•-..!.fr htlt IWp ...

y• .,.,........... ..

llllllll

a

Whh•, Slim Slllpod, 7 W- •
Old, 614·256-1793, l..N¥1 .......':
saga.

Toy•, S-••ra. Etc:.

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

\111hil 1 li. ll1111hlt 11 idt·

4fl.

Ctose To Clay School, Good

P,inting

21201112/S ....

,.

5:00PM.

Kittens, 2 Good Home, 8t.ck. •

F11day. llondoy ""hlon - 2:00

(FREE ES11MATES)

RACINE, OHIO

.JJ.a.-- ~

p.m. Saturday.

~nMowlng,

TIIOY·BI£T

aawl~

and

limbed on ground. Aotdtldl. --~
hsy acc::11a. 304-89S.3847aftar; ...

Sunday tdltlon • 2:00 p.m.

6 IL Out Eagle Rithlt
RtL or I MI. fn111 lasltan

6-:t-' 2-

Pulpwood

C1olhQ AU Slzn! 614-441-2311. '

POMEROY, OH.

PLUMIIH, wailtN&amp;,

124, R..dowllle, Ohio,

45772.

304-171- ;

7 Wk Old ~o: Yellow Lob,.:

Mloc.

liM. . "''" Is.

Public Notice

.

4 Ftmlty Yard Sale; June llh,
llh. lll.m.· 7 Roln or Shine.

VALLEY IHC.

CARfEIITRY

. Bring Lawn Chairs

INSTAllE

.......: •

REWARD, 304-1175..'11185.

11111 mo. pd.

SERVICE

.

Welcome Slates

Mldd'-Port
742-3030

KEN'S APPLIANCE

87- Upholnery

"SPEClAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"

l.Mdlng C..k Rd.

ILliAIU
lrl•gllll Or Wt
Phk !!·

86- Mobile Honte Repai.r

Comer So. Locust &amp;Maple Sis.
Tho prtoa hu been - t o $811,900 llld
OWIIOI llnonclng .. up to 110% of puo:lluo
omoult moy bo pou111a 1o1 "'oll)ing I*·
eon lo buy very rice home on 3~ mw In

REG. $15.00

SAXONY CARPET

HOME DECORATING
OPEN HOUSE
THURS. &amp; FRI., JUNE 4 &amp;5
10:00A.M. to 9:00P.M.
Gloria Oiler- 742-2076
St. Rt. 325, Langsville, Ohio

W/Pad

W/Pad

\\IJI~I.

512611-

BULUnll BOARD DEADUIIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUIUCAnOII

-7 Colors

-100% Nylon
- xotchgord Stain Release
- 24 Colors

44-- Aputment for Rent
45--- FurnU.hed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
4.8-- Equip~nenl for Rent
I 40-- For Loaae

\li.HI II

LOW LABOR RATE
15% OFF On Most
Boat Parts

LessoiJ s12.50

HL\T \1 . ~

Meadows

CHUCK'S BOATAUTO REPAIR

AND TROPHY
915-3961

35,..- Lo~ &amp; Acru!"
3&amp;- R.. t l:.taiO Won!Od

'l(atfiryn

FOR SAlE

FREE ESTIMATES

Bl'I.I.ETI\' BOARD

SCULPTURED CARPET

TRACKLESS CARPET

SAlE

Auction
9- Wanlecl to Buy

I 11- Help W antecl
12- Situattohl Wanted
l l - ln•urattcc
! 14- Buaine11 Trainin«
I!&gt;--- s~hooJ. &amp; lnatructkln
16---- Radto, TV &amp; CR R~pair
17 - Ma.cellaneow
18--- Wanted. To Do

REG. $15.00

REG. $22.00

SALE

SAXONY CARPET

2- ln Memory
3- AMouncemenLI
4- Ci"eaway
5,..- Happy Ado
b- ~ANt and Fo und
7- l..oat and Found
B- Puhl~ Sale &amp;

'·

Calico molher &amp; klnen.
566·..

6

39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•Go rages

4..3-- Farm• fo r Renl

REG. $11.00

~-:

Part Lab, part G•rm•n Shephard

4-4-92-tla

713 tr9 t/lfn

•Hew Homes

MwM:allrulrumenLI

21- Bwu.. . Opporlllnily
22- Money lo Loan
23- Pro(euiooal Service.

f------==--cc:-=c====-'7""-- -.......j

1101.

puppte s.
)902.

USED RAILROAD TIES

DlRWIM, OHIO

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

1· 1\\\1 .1\1.

Ra1es are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ad s.

GET RESULTS • FAST!

12-5-tln

•Com plele
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

RATES

STYLES

PH. 6 14·992-5591

BILL SLACK
992-2269

992·7013 or
- 992-5553
OR TOLL nn
1·800-848-0070

5/151'9211 mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

frame Repair

(614) 992-3470

Uconsed and Bonded

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

•SAN D -GRAVEL oOIRT
oUMESTONE

Galli a Counly Meigs Counly Muon Co., wv
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

446-C.tu,.,u.

4 LongHalr.dK_ . ...

Fro wood, 21 plrw trMI.,:

CDMMmCIAL and RI:SIDEN'I'IAL

thru FRI . 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

_:G~Iv:..:ea.:.w_rt-=--:::: .

ToGoodHomo. t'M-44e-7nO. '
4 whit• kiUtna &amp; lftOtMr cat .. •

FREE ESTIMATES

tyPAINTING
. &amp;CO.
-L• u. o. '',.,
tNTlR lOR &amp;EXTERIOR

:4_

4 llonth Old ...... -

·

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Rtplacemeat Windows
Room Additions • Roofiag

1

-r-

'

The band canceled concerts in
Chicago and Detroit this spring
aft er a prosecutor threatened to
have Rose arre sted.
Dan Diemer, an ass istant St.
Lo ui s prosecutin g anorn ey, said
Rose won' t have to go to jail on the
mi sdemea nor charges but might
face a fine or community service.
Witnesses said the riot began
aft er Ro se plunged into the audi ence to stop a photographer from
taking pictures. then cut short the
band 's show. Forty fans and 20
police offi ce rs were injured.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

POLICIES

~:.~~FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

plans to turn himself in to fac e
charges stemming from a riot in St.
Lou1s las t summer, a spokeswoman
fo r h1 s recording label says.
It 's not clear when Rose will
surrender, Bryn Bridenthal of Geffe n Record s said Wednesday.
" We' re in the process of ttying
to senle it," Guns N' Roses guitall st Slas h said in an interview
from Germany, where the group is
on tour. " I don't want to see us
wa lking on stage and being walked
LOS ANG ELES (AP) - W. off by th e police. "

MoN.

STOlE HOURS

290 SECOND AVE••

!'I Roses, 1s ll rcd of running and

Call 992-2156

•JORDACHE •CHIC •LEVI
•LEE •SUNSET BLUE •ZENA

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

A; I Rose. the k ad singer of Guns

To place an ad

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE

LOS ANGE LES (AP) - Te d
Koppel sa ys he won' t stay on as
host of "Nigh~ine" if stations con ·
tinue to bump it for other shows.
The 12-year-old program follows the local news in 62 percent
of the country. In other markets
affiliat e stations carry syndi cated
shows at II :30 p.m. and bump
·•Nigh~ine'' to midnight or later.
ABC New s Pre sident Roone
Arledge said Wednesday the show
might be on its way out because of
the defections.

2112N.! tin

I'Ll

CO-CHAMPION · Jeremy Kehl, Tuppers Plains Elementary,
received a co-champion trophy for the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District sixth ~rade essay contest.

----Names in the news---

(No Sunday Calls)

DDOFIIIIOI
Bedding Plants, all Fleta $5
Hanging Baskets $4,
4" Geraniums and Mums
SO., 6" Geraniums $1
20% Off All
Shrubbery &amp; Trwa
Open O.lly 9 Lm. to 5 p.m.
Open Sundey 1 pm. to 5 p.m.

•
s
•
Bus1ness ervtces

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~11 :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A gopsel music concert will be .
presented by John Robels at the
First Southern Baptist Church,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, on Friday
at7:30 p.m.
Robels is a nationally know,
full-time music evangelist from Ft. .
Payne, Ind.
Pastor Lamar O'Bryant invites
the public. A free-will offering will
be rccei vcd.

Essay contest
winners named
" How Conservation Improves
Our Environment" was the theme
TROPHY PRESENTED - Opal Dyer, left, presents a co-chamfor the sixth grade essay contest
pion trophy for the sixth grade conservation essay coolest to
sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
Wendy Daniels, Pomeroy Elementary.
Water Conservation District recently.
Students were shown a movie
. . . "Water, We Can't Live Without It"
, ' and asked to write a 200 to 400
word essay.
Winners from each school
C&gt;·?t::· received a first, second and third
prize with f rrst prize being $5 and a
blue ribbon; second prize was $3
and a red ribbon; and third prize
: ··&lt; / , was $2 and a white ribbon. Everyone panicipating received a pencil.
School winners placing first,
second and third respectively were
Kelli Bailey, Billie Renae Pooler,
, Bethany D. Cook, Chester; Tabitha
... ' Powell, Emily Fowler, Lisa Snodgrass, Rutland; Leanna Jo Davis,
·. Laticia Metheny, Amanda Napper,
. Salem Center; Sue Ellen Bamhan,
Tara Davis, Aaron Pangia, Rejoicing Life; Myca Haynes, Salisbury;
Hillary Turley, Jennifer Roush,
Ranetta Wheeler, Letart; Nicole
Hill, Amanda Theiss, Misty Hysell,
Racine ; Evan T. Struble, Billy
Young . Cynthia Caldwell, Syracuse; Wendy Daniels, Amanda
Rusche!, Jessica Wright, Pomeroy;
Amanda Maynard, Ryan Hawley,
CO-WINNER · Hillary Turley, Letart Elementary, shows her Robert Barumus, Riverview; Jereco-champion trophy fnr the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation my Kehl, Stevie Durst, Nick SpurDistrict sixth grade es.&lt;a y contest.
lock, Tuppers Plains; Jason Roush,
Mau Wilhams. Ginger Darst, Bradbury; Darlcna Jo Flowers, Portland.
County co-champions in the
1992 essay contest who received
trophi es from the Meigs Soil and
; /'
Water Conservation District were
'"~·~··· ·
Wendy Damels, Pomeroy; Hillary
Turley, Letart; Jeremy Kehl, Tuppers Plains.

Thursday, June 4, 1992

•

3 llonlh Old llalo Puppp PUI
Chow a Port Hullll.,._ f14-36'11121.

�Page-12-The

Dally Sentinel

Gallipolis

&amp;

32

SNAFU® by Bruce Bea ttie

Sole;

frldov,
Sa-y, ZM ~ Pike •
lllblilnl
Tlno, Rowing
lllchl111, 13" RW T.V., PortabiO

a..-

Slono,

for Rent

11t1 14180 3Br'a, 2 laths,
$17,500,.Or ...... With 1751)
Dowo. ....t Bo lloYodl · -

North Founh 51. M-pon. 2
BR
furnished
tpartmanl.
O.poaM 6 roll&lt;onco. :JOoHIZ-

R--

om...

Clothll, Kldro To Aduno,

CUrtalna.

8325.

sto-.

Dl•'-·

't1rd S.te: 112
Mila Oft RU a..._ CrMi1
Rood. ThUll, Frll Sa[ IA.M.-'

Porch Saio; ...... "'!..lllh, llh. 4
MMoa Oul Bulo•llll ....... Cloth-

33

Ing, Mile. ~-

~··Axe's,
On At. 35.. Tooti,
• - , Fuml-

tutl, Dlltltn, Clclhlng, sto-,
lllnrMa, Box St&gt;rlnga,
3.":;.t!'y":ih.lloral Frfday, 5th,

Ani"

Farms for Sale

34
~"'

Tora Aportmont Y•rd Solo;
Saturdly, June 8th. Only
Thle Year! sav.,.al Apatlmentt
PlrtlclpaUng. Arlin C.nolitr. .. ,_,

Sa..

\"

..... .~,,

Business

Buildings
F
Ront Com
II Bldg
or
:
marc •
.
~450 Sq . Ft. Court St, Golllpolla.
"'en Morgt~n, IM--446-097'1, 8M446-1068.

.

" Regrets 1n life? S ure .. I wi s h I had
vo.l ed lor lhe o ther Elv is s l a mp ...

Bll&gt;v
I·
g;:~~-=·
u="'=======r-======~
35
~;' On
14

SCoot.,..,

Ylrd Sale, Bake Stle: 50 Ohio
Ave, Brick Mome Btsldt Swimmlng Pool, GDC Grounds. t-6 ;
41h,Sih,61h.
Yard Sale: 8 Belmont Drive, (Oft
Vine SL) Jun., 4th , Slh, 6th.
R•in Or Shine.

pt_ Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly
103 N. Third St, M1son, June

5,6,8; rtln dale 8,0,10. t :00-7 .
1985 Nova, A-1 cond. EnrtiM
blkl, blcyeill, ......

2501 .Mtter.on Ave. Friday,
Slturdly. Largtmet'dl &amp;women•
clolhlng, tUppetWirl, gtlaWJrt
&amp; moN. Railn cancela.
3 flmlly

~~t~rago

laio. Frldoy 6

S.turdly. NeXI door to atate
pollcl IMIIIdlng. Babr ciothla.

~mlt~,Mc.

510 Chlndlll' Dr. friday 1 Saturday, Junt 51h I 81h. iam to 11
7 Ftmlty Yard S.le, June 5-8,

8 : 00AM~ : OOPM .

Pomeroy,

Business

Middleport
I I I
&amp; V C n ty

Training

June 511"i, 6th, follow ligns In
Dtnvill• ltOfm doora, lawn
swHpar, glria clothing, o1htr
oddl6 andl, a- 5pm.
June e, 7am-2pm, 107 Laurtl
SlrMt. Pomeroy. Fumlture,
cloth•s , misc.
Multi family yard ule on
Bashan Ad. betwHn Buhan &amp;
Keno . June 5, 8, 8, 9. Rain can·
ctl• that day. ito ?

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rk:k PNrson Auelion Company,
tull lime 1uctionMr, complel1
auction
1ervlce.
Uc enHd
166,0hlo &amp; Wnl VIrginia , J04.
773-578ll.

9

Wanted to Do

_Wl..;l_l-B-.~-,h-ln__,.,M-•""Homo:_ :-F..,
- ' Rt 1.... ncn
eed In
ay ArM.
Av•ilab... Rodney Area. Call
614-245-5887.
E 6 R TREE SERVICE. Topping.
Trimming, Tr.. Removal, Medg•
Trimming. FrM Eatlm1t .. ! 614·
367-7957.
Georgn Porttbte Sawmill, don't
haul your toga to the mill just

c.ll 304-675-1~57.

Hillary Profulllonal TrM S.r·
vita Topping.L.TrlmmlngL Aemov·
lng, HtKig• Jrlmmed, ,.,... E•
11m1tnl O.brla Remov.d. 614446-9314.

Wanted to Buy

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

Miss Paula's O.y Care C.nler.
Sate, aHordable, chlldcar., M·f
Don't Junlc It! Sell Us Your Non - 6 a.m. • S:lO p.m. Ages 2~10 .
Worillng
MajOf' Appllancal,
Color TV's, VCR 'a, MkrowiYtl , Batorw, 1ft1r school. Drap-lna
Air Condltlon~rs, Etc. 614-256· welcome. 614-44H224, New In·
lant Toddler Cant, 614-446-6227.
1238.

Cllneel If rain.
Boat, child organ, clothn all
Rasponslbl11 Chrletlan Female
liZ.., 1hot1, filler, lao many Old marh~. toys, conde boob, College Stuaent
SMka Summer
1t1ms to mention. 5 mU. out Rt. lantam1, pldurn and fumilure, Emplor,ment:
otlk:e
Work,
871um right on Muon County Otby lbrtbl, 614-ii2·JI41.
Bobys nlng, Sala Ctork. 814SO (Gwwfllt Ridge 1112 mllaa) Standing timber, will PlY fair 446·9635.
Blac:k top road .
price1, cell Jerry Runyon, 614·
Total lawn care , half prica, (111
Big Gllrage Sale, Jum~ 4,5,8 - lm-2687.
time 1peelall, lncludt~ mowing
9:®-S :OOPM, 5 mil• on Rt. 2 al
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos &amp; wMdlng, call 814--992-63'1(,
t4JO Jerrr- Run Rd, ntee tumt9am-9pm.
tutl, blby bed, elothn boat With Or Wlfl"iOUI Motor.. Cl ll
Llrry Uvely. 614-388-i303 .
motors 6 much mor..
Ytrd Work, HouMciMnlng, lnR•terwncH
W1nted To Buy : Large Size ltrfor Painting,
Big Gange Salt, Was! Columo,.u Makers Fonn. Good Con· Available. e~NO A.htr
bil, WV. Jurw 3,4,5,6; 9:00-5:00, dHion, C.ll 614-446-4015 Ahar 5 :Jp.m.
First Time SIMI, Home made 2 P.M.
wMel tractor running boards,
Financial
~ liner., lruck topper, lotsan- Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
tlq .. dilhoa, clclhoa, old rodlot Colna, Gold Rings, Silver Coina,
6 mueh motl. Large Nit. Come Gold Coina. U.T.S. Coin Shop, 21
Business
OUILievln.g Rd 3.10 miiH toward 151 Second Avanua, Galllpolla.
Wllhlnglon Q,..n HouM w1tch
Opponunlty

lot-'vna.
Big S.le, Back Yard 2625 J•ff•·
ton An. Ffl l Sat, June 5 I 6.

Employment Services

Aeron hom Ordnance bantlekS.
Firat Tlmo Yord Solo, 6112 mlln _11
_ _H_e..;lp;_W_a_n_t_ed
_ __
out Jefi'YI ~~-~Jd , Jun11 3,4,5. 125 ,000 ~ U.S. GoYWnment.
9:00 1111 "1 . ....__...., chair, lam~, Part-Time, Own Houra. Proceu
books l k)t• of misc. Walch fof FHA Mor1:gage Refunds. No Ek·
Slgnt, Rain cancela.
=•nee Naieenary. 1~5-321·
Garage Sa~, 2515 MI. Vernon,
4.
Thurs A Frt, i :00.1. Antique tur·
'3!010AY PROCESSING
niturt, t~s. lots mise.
PHONE
ORDERSI
PEOf'LE
CUL YOU.
Glr~ge .. ,._ 102 English Rd.
June 6th. 8:30-3:00. Boy's NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-800..2SS-0242.
doU.,., toyt , eompu1er, TV, etc.
M.C.A.R.A.. Fund AltHr Rumml!)t Sale, Sat June 6th, 8:00..
3:00, Burd.ttt Addn, Big :bl cent
•II. Appreeiate your euppon.

•AVON• ALL AREASI Share your
time with us. You'll tove tt11
company. t-t00-119H366 .

! AI AIUI I Shirley
Moving s.a., Thur., Frl a Sit. 4 AVON
,,.. ... 304-175-14211.
mi lel Rt 62, dlaMa, tabflc ,
~~~~ - bookt, fumftun, 30'- B•bJIIn• needed from 10:00
PM 1111 7:00AM, lOol-675-2532.

Y• rd Sill Sat JuM 8 t :OOPU·
6:00AM, n miiM aalih Rt . 35,
Sout tlsid•. LDt• baby Items,
clothft (c rib, etroller, ~r ... tal
lots houuho&amp;d llems, desks,
drnser, chalrw, ele. Rain date
Ju ne 13.

Cruise Ship Jobs, hiring ,
$2,000/mo,
Summer,
v.. r
Round.
BertMderl, C11ino
worktrJ;, gift shop NIH,Tour
guides, etc. Fru
H.wall,
CaribbhMtt, Baham11, Europe.
No ••P nteaAry, 1-206-7367000 txt , 18i8NG.

'""•1.

EJ.perienced

Yard Sale, 2 mit" NDI"'h ol
Lallln, WV, Wed, Thurt1 &amp; Sat.
B - - o y Bridgo.

Yatd Sale, 202 Walnut St , r~~:w:tto
Hendefwon Trailer Court , June
1tt-5th. i :OOAM-7. Gll nwlrt,
dith .., h'Mr:•, much mo ,.. old
ttuH.
Ytrd Sail, 2407 Jttt.rson Ava,
Fri I Sat. 9:00 · 4:00

Farm help needed lor part time
wortc, exJ*Ieneed with horse a
prettrNCI. Wrht Bot C-2 t.W. Pt
Pit. Reglat.-, 200 Main St, Point
Pt.uant, wv. 2S550.
GET PAID EASY MONEY FROM
YOUR HOME! Wt'll Pay You To
Gethlr Public lntonnaUon . No
Selling. Wrfle P...p-l30, 161 S
LJncolnway, N. Aurora, IL 60542·

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon

&amp; VIcinity
s-temily yard 11le, Thursday,
41h·71i't, enUquee tnd eollte·
tlbl.., tumlturw, houHhold
Item~~ , baby clothet, baby lt•m•,
.. .,.o, tlr... loola, mlac. Take
33 loward Athens, tum .. ,. onto
881 toward Albtlny, 1·112ml. on
lofthand lido. Slgno poatld .
5-tamlfy, June 4--5. Wntem sed·
d... exerc:IM equipment, air
hockey table, clolhea, toys, C.B.
bnl untl, ttc. Sbt.+Wey, 9--4.
Rtln cancels.
All Yard SliM Mutt Bt Paid In
Advance. Deadlln~ : 1:00pm the
day before the ad Is to run,
Sunclrtr edition- t :OOpm Friday,
Monday
edH~
10:001.m.
SaturMy.
Annu•l variety 5 family y1rd
aale, June Mh, eorner of Brk:ll I
Main, RutlAnd. Oltlo.
Oave
Spencll''t
rMidtnct,
RICint, S.Curdly1 June e. Glrl'a
ciOihnl •lza 1~, toyt, adult
clol.,_, houeehotd Uem1, roll
I WIY bed, loll Of mite.

Frtdl)', June 5th, on. dly only.
Pooter ,...Gtnca on Tan• Ad.,
north of Chnter. Clo4het,
w11her, kltchenwar., home Interior, plano music, mort.

a•

Garage
Fry rnkMnce next
to Salisbury Eltrnentlry, Friday
4-lpm, Saturday 8-olpm.
Gantgt S.l• Harrlton Smith
rwaldltlCI on Pktl Grovo Rd.,
June 4th, 5th, eth, and 7th.
Gorago S•llo 32717 Pllll GroYI
Ad, Rroclno, Juno 4, 5, 8.
Gf'lpevlne .,..th~ ...,,.,.,

......

G1ntge Sa'-" rain or lhlneclothn, movlel, polll.,., rnlac.,
St.At.7 boaldl
Corto4.
Junt4,5,1.

w-rna

Garage Salo- Juno 415,

Pump
R.S.E.S. S.rY~ Technician ,
Wfth EJ:perlenet In Furnace
S.rvk:e Rtpalr. Some Plumbln\l
EJ:peO.OC. Needed. Insurant•
Pro"lded, Send RHUme To :
CLA 220 c/o O.illpollo C.lly
Trlbunel.~5 Third Avenue, Gai llpatla, unlo 45131.
Heat

e. ....?,

next to Tuppers Pllln. Chelllr

wtt• otf&amp;e.. Rain« ehlnl.

JUIII 118, Bllhln Rd.,_ I Mill

hom RIICino, Roger unUII
,.. ldlllOe, bldttrY. qu.drunrw,
lvmiltn, llrtonl, llllndl, clolhlo,
lie.

101.

GOVEAMENT JOBS! Now Hiring
tn Your Aru, Botti SkiiiiW:I Ana
Unaklltad. For A Currwnl Li11 Of
Jobti And Application, Cali 1·
800-487~547 Ert. M·129.
Halr•tyllat I Nail Technician
GuaraniMd Cllentate. 6 14-4464247.
Mldlclt Copy Ctorio
Medical Record Corr. . pon·
dence S.JVk:e l"ill opportun~y
IVIiltble II I Point Pluunt
Medical facility to phococopy
medical r~~eorda . Part t~ma days
24 hre per WMk. Tr~ J nlng
provided. CltriCII or medical
office
•• pertence
hel pfuL
PtN.. call1-81)0.352-06 35.

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO.
rtcomrn~nds thai you do bull·
n... with people you know, tnd
NOT to 1tnd mon•y thro~h 1ht
mall unt il you ~Yt lnna1tgattd
t ha otftrlng.

304~75-7768.
_ _.:__-'-----,,---,---,Loto Apprvx. 5 Ac. Ea. II Ml SW
Of Gallipolis, Harri100 Twp, 200
Ft. Road Frontage. County
Water. $6.1.000 To S8,000 Ea.; 21
Ac For J20,000; 614..a:J:NJ464,
Rar.

lota In Gallipolis Ferry . 100%
owner flnandng •t $98.64 per
month, tny one of four lots
avtllable, 304-875-2722.
l.olt. In New Haven · 100%
owr.r rlnanclng at $101.46 per
month bu~s alllh,... tell, a304675-2722.

Nice mobU• home ap.ac~ ava l~
tb!., call Ma1, 1-800-837-3238.
O.J . Whhe Road, 18 Ac,..s,
Mo.tly Wooded, With A B11utl~
tul Building Sltt. Nice LIY1t
Orivtway,
Rurtl
Wattr,
Electrlchy, And Phone SliMe•
Av•lltble. 3 V2 Mllte From Moiztr Ha.pi1al, $39,000. 114-4464127.
Over 2 Acree 01 Survayed Ltnd

With 310Ft. R.. d Fronlltga. C.ll
11~1192 Or 814-446-tBlll.

Rentals

F'

m-AIIo

LT -

210 ~ 14,000;

tNI .._..

r,

35 .I'. PH .
lOI-lL 011, f&gt;ro [

P'

IN ;.,

rot: 'iOCAI. ~
DHEc..TOR ()Jf OF
YM fN.

;s;r- .-.~ r:.
73

OM Mdroom apt tor rwnt , 304-

vans

•

THU.r JUNE 4

45

-

8583.

7111·18. Condominium, Daytona
Beach: 1br, Oeunfronl, l&gt;t•hWIIhtr,
MICfowave,
On
Premi..., wro, Pool, Hottub,
S.un1 . 614-388-D758.

42

Mobil. Homes

Real Estate

for Rent

Homes for Sale

1 bedroom lrtlllr, PlY &lt;Mn
Ulilltlee plul deposit , :J04..6752535.
t2•60 2 Bedrooms, Location:
Evarg,..en. 614-446-3697, 614·
245-4223.

882-25111.

1

F f WERE TO 14 &lt;DE LINDER

WOLJLDN'T ~;WE TO GOTO
CAM P WOULD i

11580.

SIIOping rooma wnh cooling.
Atao traillt
lfiiCO. All - -·
Call
a•• 2:00
p.m., 3()4.17)..
!6St, Ma.on WY.

nAT'S ~ GOOD IDEA .. NO ON E
WOUL D ~ N OW WHERE YOU
WERUTS /J.. PERFECT Pc_ ;\.'J

1

2 Bedrooms, Upatalra Apart·
mont, Unlvmlahod , No Poto.
for ~Ale
614-148-2583.
14x56
1980
Ftlrmont
2br, 2 BR •partmtntl In Mlddllport ,
Central Air, Like Ntwl Gat, Hut , MWiy remode~. low utilities,
FTM S.t·Up l $6,950. 814-448- no pet1, 1220 per month ,
d•posh requlr.d, e14-t92-2381
0175.
day•
14x70 mobi .. home, nc co nd, 3
bedrooms on privati lot, bl-level 2 room apartment. 5125. month.
Need E:lperiencH Haat Pump ded , large c overed fronl porch, utun111 pold. 304-47'-5101.
Service M1n. Mutt Kno w Htt~t wood shtcl, outbuilding, txtra
Pumpe, FumKM, Air Con· room wlwood-bumer, major ap- 2bdrm. 1pt1., lolaJ etectrk:, ap.dillor.rw Send Wortl History pllancal, lot• of eltraa, mua1 pllancee ft.lmlshed, '-undry
To; CLA !122, clo Gttlllpolla C.lly ... lo 1pplicate, mua1 Mil, room tac:ilh._, cioN to achool
In tawn. Application• available
TrlbuMJ...B,25 Third Avenue, Ga._ $14,500. 304-676-2783.
111 ; Village G.- Apto. 1411 or
llpolla, Ut1411e3t.
1967 model l"iou. . trailer, 12ft. X cau 8M-h2-37t1. EOii.
OTR lilt bid driver• want•d, 25 son ., in good condition, 1514-i92·
yrs or ofdtr, 2 yr1 axpertenc a, Jtl67
1 badroorn aptl. good looatlon ,
mu.r heva COL's . 1-800-&amp;43101 Slxlh •nd lllln St, newly
1978 Regant 14x70, 3 bedroom, remod.ted wllh MW appllancte,
4226.
Ulllhlat not Included. Depoail
all alt c, appllltnces lnclucMd,
Part· time Nu«rhlon Educatorw: $7,800, New wood blrn .tor•ge ~~r. od.. 304-478-7131 or 111June 1&amp;- September 30, 19U. bldg BxB 1400. 304~75-1424 or
won
with
food
stamp
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
r.clpiMtl. Mutt have vwn 8J5.5413.
tr~~ntportltlon .
Application• t914 Llborty Mobile Homo
1vallabM Melg1 Co. Extanslon 1b70, lbr, Exc. Condh""'.J. On
Offici, llondoy- Frldoy, 6 :30am 1. 9 Acr• County Wat.,., uood from l1trllm0. Wdri to shop
lo 4:30pm, Mulberry H11., Location On Hanntn T~ moYill. Colli~. EOH.
Pomeroy. O..dllnll, June a, Road . 114-24~5830 .
Fum~ 1 Mdroom upltalre
18112. EOE.
ap4,
Mt. Vernon Ava, $225.
1887 Ctorton mobile homo,
~ Companion For 8 2bdrm., 11112 both, illundrt month pha llactrlc. - Yr. Old Son. Valid Licen• And room, $7000, 814-114,.2110 If.
dlpollt -!rod. 104-4171-2Ut.
Car N.c....ry. Dutlee Include 4pm, 814-114,.2112 ahlr 5pm.
Fumlshld
Aplrtmant, 1br naJrt
Plartng Oamtt, A11dlng And
swrmm'"a. Approximate 40 Hr. 198Q Redman Ottwlllt Mx72, to Ulnry, parking, oorerolitaot,
180 Par Woak. Call 114-446-2338 Total Eiletrlc, 28r, Ercllllnl ..,, raterenc11 814 418 0331,
Ahlr UOp.m.
CondiHon, Rod_.. Pricel lt4- Beton ?p.m.
367-0139Aftor 5 P.M.
Qnclouo living. 1 •nd 2 badSomeoM To Maw, Rake, Still,
Appro1. 5 Aorll, Har In Bldwoll. $5410 011 Pur&lt;:haN Prlco 01 Any ,_,. •pa~rnonll II VIMilnor
and
RllllfliM
C111h Or Shar11. 1~ .
Homo ... El- Homo
tor, Gru1 W.llon, FIM Sat-Up Apo~rnontl In Mlddllport_ From
SPECIAL OFFER
illllworyl Coil iM-7'72-1220. f111. Cli18-·7711. EOI4.
For Umftld Time Juno 111 Thru
Avo bedroom
tSih. Start Your Avon Bualnlll. Complaloly nrnadliod trolilr Mt.
opt, ••• colld, •ov• 1 nt lur·
No Monty Nlodod At Tlma 01 IIC, 2 c11 proge, t 112 - •
AHairCrnonl Whln You OU.IIIy. land, Mkldllport, Ohio. 114-ft2· nlltOid, prlntalltl- I port..
Int. :104-4176-4510 or 17S-1N2.
3342.
Cilll--4801.

a

can.

01

v.non

2

a

!Dlllttman

6:05 (J) I Love Lucr

...

I

1 1

I

I

L _.l.-

e

0

~-

5

1--T~.:._-TI.,-".:..:,I.:;'~Ir-~r--1 C)

6;30 (l) G 0 NBC Nowa Q
(!} Sevod by lllo Bell
(!} fD ((I Ill ABC Newa Q_
i!l Wild Ame~ea Stereo. Q
~ Squore One TV Stereo .

~
.. ·,

~

"Over the lasl several years .
our economy has gotten very
1
L-L--''--.J-.1.-' '
weird.· one fellow said . "My
..--------~·.., bank has failed long before my
T J KNET
new --- --- - has "

lnaldo lho Senior PGA
Tour
Wo~d Today

y"---:

~---··

GD il2lll CBS News Q
l!llll Andr G~Hith
0 Scooby Doo

C)

Complete 1h e &lt;huckle quoted
..1.-.J.L......I...--'·
by ldlong •n lhe mt5~o ng wor d~
you de ¥elo p fro m ~ l ep No 3 below

.I..-

PR I ~ I NU MBERED LfllfR S t
IN THE SE SQUAR ES

UN SCRAMBLE lfTTERS TO I
Gfi ANS WER
.

a2 Up Cloae

IDl New Zarro Ste reo . Q

47

Wanted to Renl

Nice;, eiNn 2 or 3 bedroom
houet, praler private 11ttln,l
614-SIG-2428, ,. ..,. meaage
no IMWII'.

Merchandise
51

Household
Goods

2 chHt type 1nd 2 upright
ITMZera, SIS uch; •~ornatlc
Wllhtn and tlec1r1c dryert S75
to S125 uch; 2
dryerw $,95
uch; eltctric a ncl gaa rang"
$75 Nch; we also stock new
and uHd appliance pans. Oelberl Swlah•r'a UHd Applllinces,
comer of Rand tnd Perch St,
Kanauga, 614-446-7473.

a••

B•by Bod With MIHflll. Good
CondHion, $35. 114-446-litl

~

Savlnga On All Vinyl I C.rln Slodc. $5.00 Up. Mollohan
umlture, 114-441-1444.

Cabinet WI,.,.OUM: 814-384·
4115, 2232 Hone~ Suckle Lane,
W•lllton, Ohkl 45812, In Pann's
Waret'loUII Cornpltk. 1h:1i Mini
Vonlly +Top S:ztl; 138; 148; $511.

ing condition. 304-t75-a151.

GOOD USED APPUAHCES
w..harw, dryers, refrigerators ,
rwngoa. Sbgga Appilanc~~ , 76
Vine Strwt , CtU 15'f4.446·7398, 1·
~"-34M .

1- -..,.,.,==-=====-LAYNE'S FURNITURE
ComJWtt• hom•

tum-:t~i;·

Hours: Mon-Sal, 9-5. 81
0322, 3 mu.. out Bula't'llle Fld.
FrM O.ll't'ery.
1 :~~
c. ..- od
--=--::
-:-- - :oa
:-:k -:C::-:h ..
0 1111
1Cabintt1. Ughted Mirror Back,
Gla.. Shelvn, lo act.d Gl•• In
Door, Several SlzH. 614~
4316.
I- - P-IC
-K
""E"NS
-:-:-:F::c::
U R-N-:
IT,.-U.,R"'
E- -

Ntw/UMd

Houllhold lumilhlng. 112 mi.
Jtrrlcho Rd . Pt. PINIInl, WV,
tall 304-675-1450.

lc--:-c---:---.,-,-.,---

R. &amp; S . New, UMd 1nd Antique
furniture , Mason, WV. 304 ·17'3534t

Retngwator, H, $125; refrig.,
ho"'ll1 gold, $95; rotrig. lido br
oldo, Slso; 30" c~portono
tlectrtc r1nge, $95; 30' harvnt
gold range, sgs; Kenmor•
walhor, 195; Whlrtpool dryor,
175. Skaagt Applllnc:tl, 78 't'ln1
S. ., 614-t .•7308.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
Ollv. St., Gallipolis. New &amp;: UMd
tumhurt, hutlera, Wall.,-n I

614~46-1822,

7 Oa~s W.O.

Antiques

53

:::---:::--~::--'---::-::-::-::-~
Big River Antlquu, SIO Main St ,
Polnt Pleuant, WY.
B
1 Rl 1 • 1q
U'f or lei . vtr "' "nt UL s ,
1124 E. Main Str~lt, Pomeroy.
Hours: U,T.W. 10 :00 t .m. lo 6:00
p.m., Sunde~ 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.
6t4-992-2526.
Chllr caning &amp; wenlng, trat
qu~s. rwa110011blt pric•, ainca
19711. 304-675-2538 or 11.._.256•
1618.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

10'x30' carport , 1300; U gallon
metal blrrell, S6 -.ch; 114·185-390t .
1i75 Yamahl 850 Low MUuge,
1600; Mobile Homo IIlii Gran-

:~~~lPR~:s~~~K~~ ~:!.tb.:l~ H.!t.
a

I I' 1 I I
ZA CE R I

--.,::...0,A,-PTI__,L-jl

a2

1LL TRY TC THINK
0 ~ SOME'"HIN G ELSE

the
ba.

SU D L ON

I

l!llll Full Houu t:;1
i1J Smurta t:;J

WOlD
lAIII I

form lo ur simp le words

10

I

•

Ill,
(tj Reading Rainbow Q

M'&lt; 6ED ALL SUMME-R I

Roama tor rent • w.ak or month.
s~:~':JIIt $120/mo, Qallla Holel.

Mob/..
Home Untumlshld,
2 atOJy, e room, bath, 113 base- Bulavlllt ArN, 614~46-1837, 614· won. boole. 1~3159 .
menl , gas Ileal, Union Avt ., 304· 446-3437.
VI' RA FURNITURE
:::--::-::-:---.,:-:-::-:-:-m ·5962 Of 304-m.5m.
Nice 2 B.ciroom Mobllt Home
BARGAINS GAIDREI
5 rooms , balh, baument , 1tove For Rent. 8 Mi ... Out Rt.218 ,
·~3151
a. ftl , all carpelld e1cept Rafertneat And Deposit R•
klle t\tn, lo1 80x100, 304-713- qulrad. 814-258-12SI.
LIVING R()()M : Soft And Ct\air
~ 79 or m -SS4S .
1179
And Up; ColiN And End
2:br Uobllt Home For Rtnl, Tot•l
TabiH $79 And Up: Swi't'tl
61 Aeru, RemodeiMI 3br, Exc ll· Elac. No P11t:1. e14-367-7438.
Rocker. $79.
lent Huntlngt Tobacco Baaa,
Outbuilding ,
B1rn ,
Ha nnan 44
Apanment
BEDROOM : Bunk Bodl 199
Trace School District . 614-256(2:.:6); 4 Orawer Chait Ot
1357
for Rent
Orawarw $44.95 ; Twin M1nr.ss
8 room houH, 3 bedrooms on 2 1 bedroom tumlahed apl , 1200. $951 Set.
acre rlvarfr04"1t 1~, hut pump, mo plus tlec, 8ordm1n Fuml·
DINETTES : Wood Bar Stools
Urepl1 c1, kitc hen appli ancu In· tu,.. , 304-«75-2406.
$14.95 (~"} Table And 4 Podded
eluded, boat nmp, louted N•w
1 badroom mobile hom•, tur·
Chalrl $'129.
Htven, 304-882-2069.
nl s htd on privata lol, located
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE 190 BowMr Ad, Henct.r.on, WV. OPEN; 7 Dayo A Wook, II A.M. - 6
Hl1torlcel Area Corner Lot - 816 au utllltln lncludld, $275. mo. P.M. Sunda~ 12 Noon ~ 5 P.M.
Mtin Sl. Pl . Plea u nt, W. Va 304~7$-6563.
Rt. 141 4 Mllu Ott At . 1 In C.n·
Com plete!~ Renovated : 2 Fufl
tenary.
Bath s, 3 Large Bedrooms, N•w 1br Country S.nlng, $2251\to.
HVAC, New Car~ . Avail able An Utllnila Paid, 814-44&amp;-7104.
52 Sponlng Goods
June IS 6t4-446-2io5.
2 bedroom apt , $3!0. month •II
At 2 North , 3 mliee from Pt utllltiH paid, no HUD, 304-675- N1w SKS Allin, WHh Accusorits,
$115.
Ammunition ,
Ptaaunt. All brtt:il, 3 BR , full 2722.
$151100. Jenning• 380 Auto Pis·
basement wlttl family room , 2
tots, Ntw $105, 2 8nnde Am·
Clr garage . On 1 acre . S hown 2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Downltalre,
No
Ptta,
Ouiet, munition ; $18110?1 $20110C!, C.ll
by appointment only. Call 304- Cl11n,
R•terence And Depoah R• 10 A.M. To 10 P.M. KMp trying
675-3248 after 6pm.
Wa'rt In And Out Constantly.
qulred. 81.....151g.
Mobile Homes

low

(i) a ((I m aDJID
New.
(!} Vidoo Power
Squore 0111 TV S tar eo

PEANUTS

of

wor d ~

112llll 0

- :I0441S-221I.

New Hlv.n. Fum'-hed apart·
men! available by wllk. 304-

GE Retrigerelor, Sun111y tltctrlc
llove with 2 OVWII. Good woril -

Bedroom• 2 BaUts, Full
S..Mment, 4 f.tites From Town ,
Rent : $350. • Otpoatt. 8'J4..«6.

O fovr
Rearra nge lette rs
scro mbled

1:oo &lt;ll •

E-150,

Rooms

2 BR hou11 tor rant, 1300 Hogg
St . 304-675-4030.
3

_'_~;.~_;:t_:~'--..:.S:..@
::. ~~~~.~,!? ~ss

EVENING

&amp; 4 WD' s

1112 fGid ~ -

Furnished

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--13

Television
Viewing

voo oo rm Til£

A..lJ(,

\tJAU(AB()JT ~f£Rg) ..

c.~t. 04, e•c

675-2218.

8

'IS

mow TJI,'-f5 t&lt;Or A

6PJI.IM Jll 1430

North Third. lllddlopo&lt;t. 3 BR,
unturntlt.d
apartment.
Reference I dtpo~h. 304.a&amp;2·
2568.

2 bedroom hom• Sind Mill Ad ,
khchtn!dlning
erN,
large
llvlngroom, full baum1nt, large
yard, 304~75 -2m.

Houses for Rent

800~!13-a363 .

And

tor Sale

11111 PopUp c.._,1400- Allor

2566.

Dinette Set:, walnl.f wood, 4
chalr1, drop INf ltble with/one
leaf &amp; custom made ped tor
tab... Chine cabinet. Couch, 2
mttchlng chalrw. Everything
eletn &amp; very good concl. 30(.
87!5-4304.

41

hom•.

32

1!178 Fen

Dump

Lott tor uta, tl"'llerw aectptabla. 304~5-2722.

HouM In Clifton, WV. 4 BR, $225
mo. plus li:llltiM . Mull ,....,.
rwt.renee 1 O.~t. 304·T732 FCA 124 FL WOLFF TANNING 505&lt;1.
BEDS For S.t•. Sold Togetr.ar Mt. Vernon Av.. 1mall
2
Or Separttly. 614-441·1029.
bedrooms, baMmenl , garage,
VENDING ROUTE : Gat Rich no ~·· ,.terence &amp; dlposit ,._
5250. month. 304-e75Outck1 No Way! But Wa Have A qulred,
2651.
Good , Study, AtfordtbM, Bull·
nna. Won't L.. t. 1-800-284- Nk:e efflchmey ootlagt, unique
8363.
and bNuUtut, :Jo.WJS-6042
Vending Route: Local. We Hav1 One mUa out Chariulon Road ,
The Newel1 Machin••, Making A ,...,.enee I deDoeh required , no
Nice Steady Cash Income. 1· lnlido pete, 304-875-2228.

31

Trucks

Pomeroy-Middleport,

5 IC- lind. tO min from Pt Pn
on Rt. 2 N. price negotlab._,

Rat rain
Nowi!ISouthMJIIom
BuahlMI College , Sp~~~ Valley
Plaza. Call Today, 814
-43671•
Ragist•ratlon lt0-05-127&lt;4B.

18

n

Wrighl

1992

Lots &amp; Acreage

Clot'-, o-Adodt

Fumllura, VCR
Grill,
Bikes,
Aquarium,
Llwn Mowat, S..rw C.rgo C.rrl1r, Furnlturw.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

5

To
Mille
N11t1
Chelltr
Motzmlk, 201 acrw farm, near
Guyavllll, Athonl Co1 _ Ohio.
Immediate pM1e11ion. tl03,000
or o"'r. For dttallt and m•p,
call Paul J . Gerig, eM-.93-3800
during normal buslnne hoLn
or wrTit; P.O. Box 268, Athena,
Ohio 45701.

R - I n g Sole; WI-,
Doorl. EIICtrlc llrofl91, Coiling
Fan, Much YoN! 579 Jay Drive,
Junollh,l-ol.

W!If"llliiiiilil~jltlilt\

[)oubllw-;

Aval\1bfe Only $1,000 Down.
RapouaiMd Singlet : 31 Av1il~
able Only $500 Down Wltn Ap.prov.d Cr-edit. Call 1-800-58i57t0.

~hbortlc ad

Apanment

for Sale

VIcinity

Helghbofhood

44

Mobile Homes

June

Thursday, June 4, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

2228, Evenings;
C.ya.

C:tr:=

114-24!-9081

Merchandise
Ganula Nutrition Product •
f..turlng Amino Acid Bod~
Building •ght lou and tat
bumar lormur... Anllablo ., .
clu1ively •t Rite Atd Pharmacy.
The aate wty to dltt .
International Scout $600. WIG
Jada ring, WIG wadding band ,
Y/Q ruby ring . 304.{175-7690.
KILLS FLEASI Buy ENFORCER
Flea Killers for pels, hom• &amp;
yard. Gua raniNd •Hecllve! Buy
ENFORCER at: Baum Trua
V1lua Store, 11 West Main
StrNI, Chester Oh. &amp; Valley
Lumber 1 Supply Corp., 555
Partl StrHt , Mlddlepon , Ot:.
KILLS FLEASI
Buy ENFORCER Ata Kil ..re For
Pets, Home &amp;: Yard. Guan~ntted
Ettacllv•t Buy ENFORCER AI:
Browne Trultworthy Hardware,
State Route 160, Bldw.ll, Ohio.
New 65" HOWIIrd rolavalor; g·
d"mp bad truck; A.C. 3pl. 3 bottom
plows;
Agrl·
Power
rat•vltor; 1Wl F'ord Bronco
4x4; 5x10 utility trtller; 650
Minn . MoUnt gu t111ctor, 614)!12·2455 .or 614·742·2580.
N
818 b
t
b lldl
10
ew 1975
am van,
YPIIbodyu good,
'"9·
$400.
Ford
engine n..cta woril. $500. 304·
67'S-5413.

:=
....- .--;;;_
:.::;
... _

$3,550. IM-286-1522.

-.
19" John ONN Model 8, Allis:
Chllm111, H.D. 8 o.-, Hy- 75 Boats &amp; Molars
Eltelric: Fort Ul. 114-44f-2l5t.
for Sale
li88 Oeut.lz/AIUt 5.215 compad/nlnch tractor, like rww, 1172 GUO Cuu:s J e 8oel
18hp ditMI hydroetatlc drive., 4
whMI drive, Stu ratr bladt, 7rant • T..-, Good Condiend kJadeJ, 511 ,.., rnooar tion!
S1U45 !!g
whMI, welghtl, 105 tv lolel
tlmt, 304-3n-8611afler 5:00PM .
-.
AlUM
..
24' gooseneck combination •• • trim, ....... 17.000.
atoek I hot111 lrai'-r. Good r..... 30U78-ll77.
eondltion. Low mlleag.. Gltvanlztd wall• • ttndera, n.abbtt
tl001 mate, m;n~g:htr t..turu.
52500. 30H7
.

304~75-4084.

Pl11ttc And Medal Culvert 6 Inch
Thru eo Inch In Stock . Ron
Enna, Jackaon, Ohio. t-100537-8528.

Size Wtttrbed, Semi
WtveiHS,
8ookca11
HINd
Board, Call 814~41.0821 , Prtced
Rtcluced To S275.
Ridlng Lawn Mowr, 5150. 814379-2889 SNrw Craft1man.
Tandy 1000 TL3 Computer, With
Color Monitor, 40 Meg HD
Modem, Print•r, And Lots 01
Sohwarw. $1 ,300. 614 446 8037.

Queen

Building

Block, brick, ..,.., plpu, win·
dowa, llntel1, etc. Claud• Win·
ltra, Rio Grandt, OH Call 814·

245-5121.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom tnd Supply Shop-~
Grooming. AJI brllltds, ttyl...
lams Pel Food Dealer. Julie
Wobb . C.ll 1114-446-0231.
Alredtle Puppies, 2 MonCh1 Old,
AKC
Regl11ared,
Excellenl
Bloodline, 614-256-6413.
AKC Rog . Engtloh bulldog puppl.., $450 , can M-F, B-4pm, John
W•mer, 304--45Ul52 wMkdlyt
only.

u,,..

AKC raglater.d
female, 304·173-959fli.

Apse,

Doubto Rog. Moil 16Wk. Old
.t.u.lrllian Shephard, Rtd Mtrlt,
9Wil. Old Reg. Femtle, Tri-color.
1150 Each. IM-2116-1061.

Young plga, I Wilko old, good

614-

Autos for Sale

a.tt.ry,

t171 Ford LTD 614-448-1055, 1400.

1U4

IN n1·

A

" "

Fo!ii:EST...ESPECIALL..Y

HIE YOUNG LADY-'

CIJIJ Cff

ew.• ......

l £N¥Pi&amp;h:

................... ,.k.,
y_.

~ ioiiOI

u. OOdor I

Wook,

IDl That'a My Dog Stereo
8:05 (J) MOVIE: Qoldflngor (2:25}

-..-..
.....
-.
.
1lo""'
.....
wv .__ ...
lor ,.....

or

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MR5. 'M:JLLOBY TCOK.

t-

JET

v....

~Cl.A550N
A FIELD TRIP'?

NOT THE.
WHOLE.

BUT t FOUND MY
WAY J!'&gt;ACK Ar-NWAY.

9;00 (l) G 0 ChHro Re becca
and Sam test their paren ting

CLA55 ...

JUST ME .

abilitias~baby-SI. tl Jn g . (A)

S tereo.
(i) fl

·=•s

'J

u......_

t9tlll u-urv Gtand
302, v.a, Automadc, Ful Pow.,
Cultom WhMia,
Sharp
C.rll3,800. IM-146-7215.

v...,

S~r Paul
Be rowno's death has made
r~ ~i'W pro blems pub liC.

..a.. ..... rJ·i

toaa Bronco n XL 1cy1,_!:"0-._4whMI *fve, new t1r111, rlt I n.
IUJV00!1 olr,
JilL-.
........ $1000, . . . ..

Wanlld To Buy; Good Ulld
Plano, RNsonably Priced. Call
114-367-7171.

auto., loodod, 11,000MI, .;;,;j

••oo,

8M-i4~5312.

1888

Chivy

pay- on, $1700, 614-H2-l'IJI
&amp;14-tm-20n

T--.. ·--=
.........

'c;. Cll

ASTRO-GRAPH
82

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
84

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgtratlon

Juno 5. 11192

c..-. -

875-3117L

.,

.

.................
Col-.. . . .
• i%"1 Upt 5 1 Is. . . . .
lng trl _ , - , ~""

---

go vern tng yo u 1n lh e ye ar ;~head Send
lor Gem m1 ·s Astr o-G, aph p red1Ct10ns
today b y ma111ng $ 1 25 pius a long . self addressed . s ta mp e d e nvelope to Ast ra Gr a ph . eta th 1s newsp aper. P 0 Box
914 28 . Cle'Je lan d . O H 441 0 1· 34 28 Be
sur e to s ta te your zod 1ac s 1gn
CANCER (June 21 -Julr :121 Keep a
t1gh t rem on yo u r resour c es today and
ttu nk tw1ce b e fore mak1ng any personal
loan s Ther e 's a possttuht y you cou ld
lose money o n a poor pr ospect
LEO (Julr 23· Aug . 22} Don 't t a &lt;e t h•ngs
lo r gr ant ed 1n compe tlll't'e develop ·
ments t od ay 11 you u nderestimate your
opposit iOn. you c ould be 1n lor a rude

awakemng.

85 Genenl Haulng

1190 Chevy
caolllt, PS, PB, aw-.1, 40,ooQ
mila, wiU 1011 lor pay ott, -

1m Oodao :1114 ton plckop,
good contf., SIOO, l-oAM.

• 10 8 5
+ 1097 ~

SOU Til
• J 85
'I' A ~I0 94

Tiptoe through
the minefield

t A42

+u

Vu lne r ab le N£' tther
Dea ler West

By Pbillip Ald er

Soulb

Wes l

l'lu n b

1t

Pass

Pass

I•

Pass

2•

Pass

2 NT

Pass

4•

All pass

Some hands are Simple to play. but
on th e ma}onl y you ha ve to s te p
th rough the t ri cks With ex lrem e care

One wrong move and you will be

Opemn~ lead

blown up by a proverb ia l mine .

Cover the East-West cards in the di ·
a gram_Agai ns t your contract of four
hea r ts. West lea ds the diamond queen
What ts your I me of play ?
No rt h' s
two -dtamond
c ue -bid
s ho we d a s t ro ng hand . proba bly With
he a rt support Wh e n South bid lwo notrump, s howi ng extra va lues with a di·
a mond st o pper . perha ps Nor t h s ho uld
ha ve raised to the ironclad three no-

Your possibilities for gener a ting addtt 1ona1 earntngs from a second sour ce
tOOk encouraging tor I he year ahead. II
wtll be In an area whe re you al ready
possess e Kpe&lt;lise.
G E - (Mer 21..,.,... 20) u ·s best to
a v01d an Individual tod~y with whom
you 've recently croued verbal swords
Neither of you have put t_l'lis situation to
rest, and each of you mtght say thmgs
that willlaler be regretted. Get a Jump
o n tile by understanding lhe influences

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22} Be wary o l
lhe inc lination tod ay to furth e r compl icat e a rrange m e nts th a t ar e already a
httle s ticky. S trive t o keep e verythm g
you do a s si mple as possible .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Thi s is not a
part ic ul a rly goo d day to mi )( bus1ness
with pleasure. It could prove un wis e to
try to promote a commerc ta l endeavor
while s ocla llziiJQ .
SCORPIO (Ocl 1M-Nov. 22) In a JOint
venture today. you 're likely to be more
effective playing the supportive role
ralher than the part of the Initiator, ove n
lhough rou mighl leel otherwise.

SAGITTARIUS (NoY . 23-0ec. 211 Us u
a ll y. you·re a pe r ce pt1ve 1nd lv1dual . bu l
toda y yo ur hunc hes m•ght no t be too re ·
hable _ Re ly on your log•c rather than
your ins tincts
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J•n. 19) Buy
only wh a t IS esse ntial tod ay and s tn ve
to steer c le ar of d e fiCit spend 1ng Your
c red it c ard s 'wtll ap pr ec1ate lhe
brea ther
AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-fob. It} An uncooperative s pir it cou ld work to your d e tnmenl today . Be your own 1nd1v1du a 1.
but also be a team player W ith a little
eHor t, thes e e le me nts ca n be ble nde d
e Hecl ively
PISCES (fib. 20-March 20) You m ight
get some s torm wa rnings today regard ing respons ibilities you 've been ne~
gl ec ting. tr th e y aren 't cleared up no w,
they could compl icate your future .
ARIES (Morch 21· April 11) You m ight
e Kperien ce a few more s ocial pressures
than u sual tod a y. This cond ition ca n be
modified - if you ' re cooperative and
don 't buck the will of the major ity .
TAURUS (April 20-Mer 201 Important
matters should not be finalized too
hastily today . Take adequale time to
c omplete things so the y ~ield the best
advanlages .

Eas1

t Q

L.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,

As t hr o nl y r n1r y ca rd East m1ght

havf' 1s lhe d1 a rnond 10 or nine, the
corrert play 1s to duck the first trick

llf

yo u w1n tnc k one . t he defende rs
c a n de fea t you w1th ace urate play .)

Win the diamond continuation in the

d umm y . dr a w trum ps a nd play a diam o nd t o your ace. Ne xt. finesse dumt rump.
m y 's s pa de quee n a nd c a s h the s pade
From the b!ddm g, you know that ace . If t he k1ng fall s. you are home.
West has the missmg honor-c ards . Yet. But when th e kmg rema ms at large,
u nless he has kin g do uble ton of spades, )USI lead a third s pa d e West wins, but
there is a risk of four losers-one s pade. he is endpla yed.

one diamond and two clubs. You have

If he r e turns a s pa de o r a diamond ,

to engmeer an endplay against West. you ruff in the dummy a nd d iscard the
Bu t while orga mzing the end-position, cl ub two from hand And il he plays a
you must make sure that East cannot club , the king will be your lOth tric k .
get o n pla y to pus h a c lub thro ugh your
© 1-. • ...,APfJI EWTERP~Uil AI.IM.
king

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Answer to Prt't'ioua Puule

4 t Allor

1 Newt

4 Thin pan cake
B Uppercut .
perhaps
12 Actor Ro n 13 Ot aircraft
14 Wa islband
t5 Face part
16 Mo uth pain
18 Variety of
wheat
20 Basketb all
o r g.
21 Dine
22 Old ag e
2 4 Horse
re lative
26 Projec ted U
movie)
30 S nooty
pe rson
34 Ya le s tude nt
3 5 Mo torists '

org.
36 Rustic sle p

deduction•
42 Chirp
43 Prehistoric
ora 12 wdo.}
45 Light - -

leather
47 Aug. llrM
48 II precodos

gee
51 Cuckoo
53 East Asian
c ountry
57 Metri c length
60 Tree
61 Cupid
62 Freight trailer
63 Guido ' s high
note
64 Large knife
65 Not slac k
66 Enthu s iast
DOWN
I Eleclr ic
fishe s

3 7 Plan1 part

2 Ton

39 Mrs . in

c arelessly

Madrid

3 Class

4 Ancient
weapo n
5 Author
Tol atoy
6 Flnloh
laundry
1 Passable
(2 wds .l
8 Yo uth or g.

9 Curlain Iabrie
10 Saloty agcy.
11 Sharpen
17 PolltU tl
19 Actor Majors
23 Genetic
lerlal(abbr.[
25 Fast aircraft
(abbr.[
26 Cull
27 Talon
28 Annoy
29 Direction
J t Columbus '
ship
32 - Ca&amp;&amp;ini
33 - noire
36 Ancient
language
38 Oppotilo ot
nay
40 Actor Sleiger
43 lloat
sonolblt
44 WWllares
46 Uncia 48 Usos hugollr
49 Field ol granular anow
50 Pitct Ol ice
52 VIrginia

m•

Blvonr Hilla, 90210

(230}
Neahvlllt Now Stereo.
Llny King Llvel
IDl Sclncrow •nd Mrw. King

r 1 1), lncludM

Ui111, 814-3'1t-2112 Allor I P.ll.

72 Truckl for Sale

+ 10 6 4 2

a
a

1110 Comoro T-T- IO.ooG

Shop Kannr'• A'*' C.- For A
Good Cilon lJiotl Cor, ~
Rlwor Rood, Cllltlpotil, t14-44tH7t.

'1' 76

friendships. (A} Stereo. C
II) MOVIE : Bronco BIIIJ (f&gt;GJ

t911 Ptymouth Rlltanl SlltUort
Wogon, Good CGndHionl 11J,G00
Mlln, $3,100; 1117 Plynlouth
Turlamo,
Good
CONIUon,
$1,1150; 1171 Port1ilc - - .
Good Woril Cor, S350; 1 - Fani
LTD, 63,000 Millo, Good Contltlon, 11,500. 114-25M2St.
· ...,

" ; 2

The kids wrestle with
mortality and reflect o n thetr

0&lt;

1988 Ford T.mpo, 2 door-, euto.,
air,
lfereo, good
cond.,
65,0001.11 , $3600, J" 1185 ....

1181 Dodgo Arill, 4 c._tn car, loW7Ja1171.

1

~CD

ZZ4

Chavatllr

Gonerelt Charles Kuralt and
Gen . Norman Schwarzkopr
chronicle the personal stones
of remarkable men who
changed the cours e of
?lf1ory in 1942. (2:00} S tereo

=-~

tW
tll87 Codgo et..,..., I Spaid I a

Prtml« doublllt base drum Mt ,
2 reck torN, 2 floor tom1, 11\trt
and 1tand , 2 cymbals atand1
and drum Mal (no cymbala),
$650, 114-11411-3068.

aD! Ill '&amp; ll Ye•r olllle

Allabte . -

~~·
"Eq leu

MocGyvor

stereo.
aJ (I} Myltoryl

anrt-..

304~7~308 .

8;30 (l) D 0 DHiorent World
Whitley 's boss makes se xual
advances toward he r. (A}
S tereo .
l!lliD DrexoH'a Clltu Otis "
happy about hiS •• -wife's
decision.J!l re marry. (R}
S tereo . 1:,1
II]} You Aaktd lor II, Again
S tereo .

t:;J

02II-31DOOt

471421. ~-

t:;J

a
a P~ntiNtwl t:;J

-..

Hil • Har eonoor-lon . . to lrultl ,.., -

1 :00 (l) D 0 Cotby Show Clift
is in charge of the
refrigerator in Clair's
absence. IRl Stereo . C
(!} MOVIE; t orror Sial[a lhe
Cleu Reunion (2:00}
(i) fl ((I fl Young Riden
Buck tries to sa ve hi s
betrothed by pass 1ng a
lll)'Stical test. Slereo.
aJ Sclontiflc American
Frontiore The theoretical
s tandard of art ificial
intelligence is e xamined.
Stereo. Q
(I} My Hometown; Tho
Brltlon Filma A collection ol
home mov-ies taken in a
sme ll town in the t 930s by a
ci nema owner as a gimmick
to draw more customers to
his business is shOwn. (I :00}
aD! ll!l il2lll Top Copa A
police officer foUows a
suspicious man to a parking
lot.(R} Stereo .
l!lliD The Slmpaona Usa
and Bart receive the results
otthe i~atitude tests. (R}
Stereo.
iiJ Mu , She Wrote Q
Ct110k ond Chen

t:;J

Reliant O.maaad Front E.nd. Ao,.ion ...,...., "'•1111nto1.od &amp; . . . - - - irlllocl, RON
Bill otter. 614-1awna.
EVANS, JACKSON. OH.
53»5U.
1985 Camara,
automatic,
lookl good, runs good, 12500,
OuMity ....... .....
61...,~2-2396 or 8M-l112--2357.
and ,.. 1
ol a1 110ft:&amp;, no
t ' ,...._
t985 Codgo Shatby Charger jabtoo....._
IM-lU-MOG or I~
Turbo, 5 speed, redJ-'In~_llOO'd call
mpg &amp; sharp, "-'na w,500. IIIQ-27$1_

Tren., AIC, 9tll'eo, 10,000 ......,
$2,500, 0 .8 .0 . Phono: tM-2511818.

59

&gt;o!

I'M 1t.RfJ II£

P~h

57

STRAWBERRIES- You Pick, Wo
Pick. Contalnerw PIV'IIdtd.
0pon 8~ 11-F, Sat 8-5, CIOMd
Sunday • Taytor's Btrry Patch,
Kon Rd. 114-448 88112, Or 114-

•QO, " '

--~~~~:~!...-

1983 Plyrnoulh A.. lant . N..ch
Motor Work.

1i87 4WO Ford Bronco I Edell
Bower, Excellent Condllton, 2.1
EFt SUM. 114-4-11

Vegetables

a

I WOULDN'T 'AVE FELT
QIGHT L..EA.\/IN ' YOU HER£

1U2 Ford Thunderblnt, good
condition, H ,OOO mlloo, li300
090, 304-173-5130 Of ·~·
6417.

Reglatared Blua Tk:k Coon
Hound pupa, wormed &amp; VIC·
elnaled, 304-SH-3470.

&amp;

t:;J

ALLEYOOP

-

tll8t Malibu Ctullc. 111511 ChiYy
2 door hard top. 304-475-7346.

18116 Ranga&lt;, tlltlll t/2 ea-t
Wtgon; Both Good Condition!
$1.~- 61U611-4623 Call Allor
1p.m.

Fruits

7:30 Ill D 0 Joopardyl C
(!}Now II Can Be ToicJ
(i) fl Enlarllllnment Tonight
stereo. t:;1
(J) Ill M1m1'1 famllr
aD! aD Wheoi ol Fortune
112llll Family Feud
Bl a Slar Siarao
a2 College Beaoball NC AA
World Series from Omaha,
Nab. (gama 12} (l}
Croufire

'·

EAST

• QJ 9 3
+ AQ J 8

7:05 (J) Bevefly Hillblllloa

lOt-And--~
t-......tP'a
. .......
Too lit O r - a---.

Reglsttrtd AKC 14mo. old
female Bu.gle ; 3mo. old 1f2
bluetlck mtle pup, 150 N ., 814·
593·73i0 evenlng1.

S8

IDl

FRANK AND ERNEST

WEST

+K 9 7

ALDER

Monoyllno
Tho Wahona

7:35 (J) Slnlord l Son

_,..,

Transportation

PHILLIP

a2 Spari8Contor

llmOUIIn cattle for 11 ... Reglttartd purwbred, e~H2-t110.
Want to BLI)' young caiYn to
put on pasture, 304-C15-5011.

1888 ~J. Cavat&amp;ar, new tina,
good
ion ' $2000, 814-11823111 .n.r 4:30.

875-3878.

Stereo. ~

Serv ices

look~'::ed by of.H member,

'I'K JR 3
t K 76
• • 53

iiJ MacOrvor t:;1

a

i-4·1!

+ AQ :l

112llll E'!J!rllllnmont Tonlght

a

76 Aulo Pans I
ii;;;t;~~~~~~~di
AcC8SSOI'ies

NORTH

BRIDGE

0l!lliDGD Slar
JeopatrdJI t:;J
Trek

~ T1ae . I w, u..ad •
•
'nd Cttl,
B'· dt nboilt , - . . . " -~·•
"'ngus "'
-~,.
..
...._. drfM ....... t1
00
BuR1, R11.onabty Prtcec;. Slat• ~~ a.....sl ZiJ
Run Fanna, Jaekton, ONo, 814286-5395.
Big t986 AQHA Goldlna ,,_,_
tlve Fund, ll.SSO; King 'l Hcna
Goosenecll TnUtr, large Oreulng Room . $2,750; SMvor Rorll 81
Home

Flth Tank, 2413 Jackaon Av1.
Point Pillaunt, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropkal fish, blrd1,
smelt animals and 1uppllu.

Yamaha YFP·7'0, alec plano,
atand I stool wlntra portabl1
11and , 11,300. 11c cond, 304-

\IIIli

0

New Holland Squtre hllr, 1m
Dodgo Dump Trueiii,..;;;AIIia (::hal.
m•nt MD-4 Tnc:k
det', For
S.la Or Trade For Tr.dor Or
S.wmlll. &amp;M-367·1'031.

1885 Otdl illlto N Royalo
Brougham, 4dr. ...tan, beautiful
f1mily car, all optiorw., nn tN,
307 '1~. $2300, IM-ft2-67t8.

Instruments

(I} MacNeil/Lehrer
NowaHour t:;1
Mlrried ... WIIh Children

Gravely tractor1 plus anachm•nla, dual wneets, J04-t756979.

Crtlgonwynd C.ttory; CFA Por·
slana I Slamnt Klnans. 1514446-384-4 After 7:00 P·"'·

Musical

i!l

eon, Ohio, 614-286-5144.

71

Supplies

00 The Jeffenona Q_

_........,

Show Siddle. 614..288--6522.
For aate: miNature Vletnameae
~0 belly pip, $100..., IM--'JIII2·

0 WhHI ot fortune

(}) Q lnaldo Edlllon t;J

--...--__

•nd

UMd Pipe 2' Schedule oiO $10 A
Joint. 1514-379-2366.

55

\ij G

7:00

0
0

For Sale: PTO Manure Sprudat,
Com Planten,
CuiiiY•tara,
-TEAS
Plows, ~aU, New Holland
Squ1r1
Round Baiera,
- lladntr, Mwouillr
Aakas, Hay Binda, llaw.rs,
CondHionorl,
- Equlpmett.
· Com
. . CCiftW lo you. .....
Pickart, Other
Howe'l Farm Machinery, Jadri· 25Nfll.

Mil. C.ll 6M-256-60ol0.
63
LlveSiock

progrns. Ceiling ~lnt U .99
g11, exterior white l1t11 $13.91
gal. Bwpee 1Hd1 50% oH. Paint
Phll, 2415 Jack10n Av•, Pl. Pit,

fi)fl Ll)},)( H7

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
6 -J
Primer - Notch - V11al - Bygone - CELERY
"Wh al makes people do certain thmgs like laugh or
cry," sa1d !he old gent, "1s hard to define. II defies
descripti on. jusllike the lasle ol CELERY."

6;35 (J) Andr Gnnlth

-15ft,_....., .....

beds,
8x10
rugs,
lawn132
chafrs
rockora.
11oy
chllrw.
But·,
tamut A•onuo, Pomeroy.

Ptnobu~h paint oallt now In

I CAIJ'f WAif I,
fO GROW VP'

iz,H5:

Troy .Silt Sickle hr Mowaor, 1 112
HPS Good CondtUon, $375. llM24 -tm.
Wanted: Farm machlnary of til
klnd1 . Got anrthlng row waM to

'"'I'·

\I"\ LIN~'

HAV( &lt;;OM£

---155--

Naw Irregular jNne, denim
Jacketa, &amp; bib overhauls, plus
b.dap,..ada, shMts, lowell,
eultcasaa, lhrow
maaon
J•ra, tools, I good rn, com·
mtrclal ••haust tan , single

Shp Rototlller and combin1tlon 245-5178.
Iorch, 30H78-!1081.
Strtwberrin , Pick Your Own.
Concrata 1 Piolllc Saotlc C.ll Chtutltl Winton, Rio
Tanke, Jot Aarollon Tanke. Aon Orondo, Ohio. 114-245-5121.
Evan• EntarpriMt, Jtekeon, OH
t-800-1137-8528.
For Sale
Electric furnace • Mctrtc hot
or Trade
watar tank lor 1111, lt4-IIQ2-3184
dayo, IM-41112-8534 IYIIIinga.
11170 Chevy litott bod truck,
tend«~ on outlkM, 327 anglnt,
FREE INSTALLATION
411&gt;.,
lolr
body ;_
1810
SWIMMING POOLI
Only 17H.OO Bllutllui AboY1 ·Volkowagon RobbH , CHill. lor
Oround 11•31•4 Pool lnclucilll: 111111, good .,gino, 114-lt422Dtt.
Flnar Dock, Flt1CI, l.oddarl,
Elc.
Bellon h7 Cell BPI
For Sail orTrodllor car, nlcl 12
1-100-641-1123
ft lllhlng boat, lvlly aqulppod,
1800. 304-475-5091.

o..;,

110 AC Tractor Whh Y - •·r~ good
Round B•llr $7,950; 1iOI lnt1 ,~ , ___. _._... ,._
TrldCH Wtlh s Bottom Plow
..;;:;M:

9;30 (l) D 0 Wingo Joe and
Brian lind Helen worki!!!l a t e
strip joint. (R} Stereo. Q
10:00 (})II 0 L.A. Llw A man
blames a 'iendor for the
breakup ol his ma rriage . (A}
Stereo. Q
(!} NOWI
(i) fl
P~monme Uve

!

Stereo.
i!l Provi

willow

otown, USA The
Intensity and variety of

54 Atoll

55 Singer

Provincetown has been
captured through pro llle s o f
tour residents. (1 :00)
(J) Under Fire
l!llD Blmor Miller
On lltlgo Stereo.
World Newa
IDl 700 Club Wlllt Pot

...-+---1--1
.-+---1--1

a
a

Fitzgerald
56 - - lor All
S.81ons
58 Gr. .tl ridga
5V fNghHtll
bird

Aoblrlaon
10:30 (J) MOVIE: Mi111ing In AC11on
(R}

CELEBRITY CIPHER

(2:00}

(!} WMI Vl:t:a::.oporl

~ c~

l!llD MljOr

IIIHblll Cincinnati Reds al
Los Angeles Dodgers (L)
Ttltl
Slereo.
0 llltblll Tonlgltl

a

eor.leCIIon

11:00(l)IJ (I)IJ CllD
iiJ D il2l Newt
(!} Nlghl Coull

aJ Newtw•lllh

Eadllti1•11'1 1ftll

' y

w

y

~lont by f~mCJW ~- PMI and JnMnl .
flandt !of anot1W fodly'• '*- B ftQUM G.

cryplogr. , . . - cneled tr01r1

SUT

LRUIILEUHL

**

TLMLE

IDLT

aDID

t:;J

HW

J H

I W XL Z

DWNIIYIWWA. '

a Crook lnd Chaao
ra Bt*l8 Tonight

IAJELSHWEI
EWOLEH
U N H XUT .
PRE VIOUS S OLUTION : ''Nerltling Is 10 cheap 11 1 hit, no matter how
muc;h It cos t .. - (l'rclducw) Wlillw Wongor,

11 :30 (!} Kollk C
i!l John Mcllughlln'a One

Cl llt2 by NEA. Inc.

!Dlllllrnln

4

onO..

·,

•

�Page--14-The Dally

Ohio

Thursdav. June

1992

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers top
Reds 7-4 on
West Coast

Pick 3:

002
Pick 4:

5055

Page 4
U · t,.lj .,4,.;nt,

Showers tonight. Satnrda.\,
rhanrt of rain 30 ~rcrnt. ·lliKh
in low -S&amp;.

L ..£a.~,@.,.~ • t:
~~rfou. ;."C

J-

~ '"' .(;(.. R -t•t••."n£

/I

I

.;

~fU...... tfi2. ••• ~-t

.

~~

tl

:.(

Vol. 43, No. 24

Jf

J

9

~~~­

;.Jj

~¢.,.( '£~0 •

-""!

,#ad ..r;. r6 .. ~

JJI

~ ~n"~'-t..-..1

;.f;

I
I

I

lvr W&lt;Ud_

cMtcl

By KATIE CROW
Sentine.l Correspondent
Sealed btd proposals for the
Bndgeman Street storm sewer and
street repatr proJect will be
. d unu.I 4 P·~~ on July 9 at
recetve
the Syracuse Mayors offoce, CounCtlman Kenneth Buckley rnformed
council members Thursday night.
Buckley, who prepared the doc·
uments, stated that the estimated
proJect cost IS $17,600. This is
round five of the Issue Two program. Contract documents , bid
sheets, plans, and specifications
may be obtained at the mayor's

I

~
~

Syracu~e

'/I

wa..u:t_

~&amp;a~

4
'I

S?

1

'/I

.I

offiCe on June 19 for $25 per seL
. Pulice Business
Police Chtef ltm Connolly
reponed that the new r,ohcc crmser
had arnved. The vehtcle, a Ford
Crown v·tctona,
. was pure hase d
through the State of Ohto Purchasmg Program at a cost of $12,090.
Before the new vehicle can be
placed in operation, Connolly will
transfer all radio, lights, etc. from
the old cruiSer. Theoldcrutserwtll
be sold by sealed bids after those
transfers are made.
Kenneth Cundiff and Malcolm
Guinther again met with council

'f

~ cMrd .v:;;d

'71

~ ..Jht a/tLt.d_,

r

~~

3

~

reponed, Gov. Gaston Capenon has
no plans to back rcwnting West
Virginia's water pollution laws, according to Bob Brunner. Envmm·
or off~
mentalists have said changes in the
State officials say the proJCCt ts dioxin levels would increase the
movmg forward , acconding to a amountS of dangerous chemiCals
report in today's Charleston being dumped intn nvcrs and
Gazcue, but a company spokesman streams.
said that's not necessarily the =~
Brunner added the company has
The mill could possibly bring I ,000 indicated to the governor that they
jobs to Mason County, if built.
are willing and able to meet the
Eli McCoy, head of the DNR 's stnctest of standands.
water resources section, stated the
Alabama River Pulp Co.
Alabama company told the state project was on hold because of an
Division of Natural Resources that oversupply in the paper market, and
it could live with current dioxin the new dioxin regulations were
regulations. As a resul~ the Gazette withdrawn.

I

+'

"'o/''" )

I

;.

I

thing poSSible to control traffoc.
Shannon Slavin manager of Lon~
Members of council stated that don Pool. Slavin' gave a breal&lt;down
thepolicechtefpoSIUonwasapan· on all activities at the pool and
ume postUon, and e&lt;pressed thw reponed . a leak in the larger pool
e&lt;treme sausfacuon wtth Connol- area whtch is causing a daily loss
. that of water.
,
ly's performance. Cundiff srud
She also reported that
he agreed Connol!y was dmng a work is needed on the baby pool
good ]Ob and dtdn l mean to cnu- and stated that it would be done
cize in any way.
.
soon.
Cundiff also asked regardtng
Mayor Pape asked that a correct
closing of various alleys that coun- calculation of water and chemical
ctl had menuoned earher. lie was loss at the main pool be made'"
advtsed that council had not order to determine whether the vii~
obtamed legal advice on the maner. Iage should close the pool and
Pool operations
make repair.&lt; now, or lO waJt unul
Also mceung with council was the end of the season.

Alabama River Pulp Co. and
West Vu-ginia officials are at odds
over whether plans for a pulp and
paper mill in Mason County are on,

I

&amp;HtGr~

regardmg stop and speedmg stgns
on Second Street C~ndiff stated
thattf speedmg on clly streets IS
not stopped, youngsters on btcycles
could be mJured. Cundiff also stat~
ed th at the vt.llage needs more traf.'
fie controL He also satd that reStdents are parking tn alleys and he
would like to see all mayor's coun
cases published.
Connolly informed Cundiff that
acctdents wtlhtn the vtllage are
down over last year's figures, with
only four for the year having been
reported. Connolly and Mayor
James Pape a~reed to do every~

sIa vm and
· 1 th k d
those
le wh~~~~~~nti!.,
'" re!l«fn the
1 The we .
Da~.l'~eegm Rl::ria ca1dwe~·
Chr
weaver
'
d 1
·
os
an
ames·
McDaniel
Passes '10 London Pool are available 31 th f 11
. $2 5 f
single S3~ peo ro:~pgl~"!~d s5 f:
each ~dd · 11
1
'
10
e.ceed $S; ~ ~:on. not
f srud 15 d ; 2 f '!:'~n ~I
ti':s are e$n3S an h or ·~ ts.
hour min 1'm per our, wt a twoT 0
urn~
f
.
·
Con~i:~;,::n;n ~.~jtmmtng

Company, state officials disagree on
whether pulp mill plans are on or off

?J

;P'~ J,rr t"./""~

A MuiUmedl• Inc. Newtaaoer

accepting bids fo~ sewer, street project

"

~~w:;;d. ~

2 Sections, 14 Plge. 25 cenls

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 5, 1992

Copyrighted 1992

'(.w.ttP.k.e. ~­
.&amp;;.,1 'zfM.. &amp;&gt;d'.

'-1'7jdtL.

' I

~~

+·~
~..du

Stuan Calwell, lawyer for the
construction umons, said lhe DNR
has set tentative public heanng
dates even though the agency
hasn't rccctvcd a new permit ap~
plicauon. The Affiliated Construe~
tion Trades Foondauon complamcd
Alabama River Pulp uses non~
union cons£ruction workers, and
ran full-page newspaper ads calling
the dioxin regulatory change a
"cancer creek bill."
Calwell said his group wants to
review the pcnnit application
before making a decision on the
proJCCL He told the Gazette he
wondered how Alabama River Pulp
could meet the tougher dioxin stan~

dards wtthout maktng maJOr chan~
ges m plant deSign~
spokesman Ken Goodard told the
Gazeuc. however, that the company
IS still waiting to see tf the state
changes the dioJ. in n:gulations.
"The matter i..'i under review.
Nothing IS going forward at thi s
ume." Goddard told the Charleston
newspaper.
The Alabama company wants to
build its $1.1 bilhon pulp and paper
plant in Apple Grove, on the bank
of the Ohto River. The company
received millions in state super w
credits and promtsed SOO to 1.000
jobs, acconding to the Gvcue.
In January, Goodard said the

Bush says average citizen will vote for him in fall
CLlNJCS UNDERWAY • Boys and girls wbo wDI participate
in tbe Meigs County Soap Box Derby in Middleport on July 4 (and
their parents) can get a helping band in constructing tbeir cars at
clinics now being conducted by Derby Director Charles Neutzling.
Here, David Ramsburg and Butrb Bradshaw are seen bard at
work constructing their kit cars.

Results of contested
races in Tuesday's
primary election

Meigs Soap Box Derby
plans are underway

.,

hrgttf Selection

hrgut Selection
tf

I

Unions, AT&amp;T fail
to reach agreement
WASHI'\CTCl'. , \ I' ,
.'\ e go~
uators for :\rrh'fl l .l l l I I, 11hunc &amp;

Telegraph :md

11~

1

,_ ,

,,

Jll l l l··r, .;

were

Liymg agam tod;t\ 11 • ~ ~· . 1 , 11 :1 con-

Lract

agrccm~·nt. hl.i ·., 11. 11 .1

back

team of un1on h.1r :..' .l llk"r 'i

The head of

,GJi cd

th L· ( l lll1 1lltJnJCJ -

Iion s Work ers of ,. \ :n ,· rtcl sent
some nego tiator\ h (lnL' WLClncsday
after a full day of bJrg~tHJlllg that
stretched almost to mrdnrg ht failet1
to produce a co ntr~KI ~~ ~rccrncn t.
CWA PreSi den t \lorton Bahr
said all the negotiators would leave
tf a scttlcrn cm w:J\n'r rc:1~: h rd bv
Fnday.
"
"AT&amp;T has been unr..: sponsivc
to our critictl cm rln~ lll l'rl \ \~'c urity
rssucs ,' · satd Darr r
But AT&amp;T s p o~~·\1 11.rn Herb
Linncn sa id : "We thrnk utH proposals on career SC(tHil y arc as
comprchen stvc as any m 1ndusLry

Jlld

we

look furwJi d Ul cominuing

dJSCUSSIOllS.''

L1nncn ::,cud the com pany made

a new

w&lt;~gc offrr Wed nesday

• Rtfrltmltrt

• Ou

~~~

Electric

Ren111
• Wuhen &amp; Drym

ntght. lie dccltncd to say how
much, but noted that the company
originally had offered an 8 percent
boost over three years and had
in crease d that once earlier this
week. The unions originally sought
a 13 perce nt pay raise.
CWA and the lntcrnattonal
Rrothcrhood of Elcctrtcal Workers
rcrrc:scnt about 125.000 A!llCJH•.:an
rclcphonc Jnd Tclq.:rdph workers
m the Un1ted Sta t e~. -I ill' lllng-l..lis·
t&lt;trH.: c &lt;ind JclccommJ JilJ CJL ions
rnanuf3cturillg CO H1p any h:1s alxmt

l 17,000 employees wOJ id wrtl c, but
the co nt.rau allccts 0nly domestic
opcrauons.
The prcvtous thrcc~ycar pact
cx ptrcd Saturdayat II :59 r~m .

Ohio River Sweep - 92
Saturda June 20th - 9 a.m. -Noon
Volunteer Your Help In An
Outstanding Clean-up Event
1

1

• 4-H Clubs
• Garden Clubs
• Scouts
• Churches
• Boaters
• Individuals
For Information - Contact

Meigs County Liller Control
Union Ave. at Rt. 7 Pomeroy; PH. 992-6360

Day Beds

Appllmu In
Tht Area

Fret Recliner
with the
Puroh111 of any
Recliner
at the already
Low Price and
Rmlve •
1 11
99 Chlldt
Recliner
FREE

FREE
13 Inch

Magnavox
Remote Control
Color Television
with tht Purehm
of any 2 or J ~ltct
LMng Room Suite
or
4 pleee Bedroom
tulle Including:
Druttt, Mirror
Chttf and Bed

Don't Forget To Visit
Our Newly Expanded
T.V. S.howroom
Lowest Prices Around

In Bleck,
Whitt, Ahntnl
and Wood
Starling
At

$199.00

Final plans for the Second
Annual Meigs County Soap Bo'
Derby are now underway, according to Derby Director Charles
Neutzling.
The derby wtll be held as a pan
of Founh of July festivities in Mtddleport, and time trials and ca r
impoundment will take place on
Sunday, June 28. Boys and gtrls
aged nine through 16 from Metgs
County and surrounding communitics are eligible to participate.
To help prepare young racers,
Neutzling is conducting car con ~
struction clinics each day at his res idence on Leading Creek Road
near Middleport. Those clinics are
held from 11 a.m . to 4 p~m. , and
Neutzling can be reached at 742~
2860 for more infonnation.
There is still time to order kit
cars for the upcoming race, accord-

mg to Neutzling, although June 13
the deadlme for those orders.
Neutzling also said that modifi cations must be made to any cars
constructed for last year's race
prior to their being approved for
the July 4th race, and he is willmg
to C&lt;plain those modifications at
IS

the climes.

Business car sponsorships arc
still available at a cost of $300, and
other financial suppon is also being
sought to defray costs to the derby
committee and the young paruci ~
pants.
In conjunction wtth the race, the
derby committee will hold a fishing
derby at Eli DennL•on Pond in Rutland. The fishing derby will begin
at 7 a.m., and last until4 p.m. Reg ~
IStmtion will begin at6:30 a.m . and
the entry fee is $10.

..----Local briefs----.
Personal injury alleged

.,

Large Seleetion
Bunk B•4•
Red &amp; Blue
Metal
Oak, Pint and
Whitt In Wood
Twin &amp; Full Size
Bunkt
Btdt Starting
If $29910
•Ill •••11•1

A personal injury case has been filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun by Cheryl Powell and Keith Powell, both of Middlepan, against Nancy Reed, E&lt;ecutrix of the estate of Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., Pomeroy.
The suit alleges injury in an automobile accident involving the
late Ted Reed on Apnl 27. 1991. Cheryl Powell is demanding
$10,000 for lost wages, $1,476.90 in medical expenses, and
$500,000 tn compensatory damages. Keith Powell is asking for
$15,000 m lost wages, $19,518.62 m medtcal expenses and $1 million in compensatory damages.

Man charged with domestic violence
Meigs County Sheriff 1ames M. Soulsby reponed Friday that
deputies ~ted Raymond J. Burch of Dyesville on Thursday on a
domesuc vtolence complatnt followmg an incident that took place
on Wednesday night.
Burch is being held in the Meigs County Jail pending a hearing
in Meigs County Coun.

Bonecutter arrested
Jasper Bonecuner was arrested on Thursday afternoon by Starl:
County deputies on a Meigs County Common Pleas Coon indict·
ment charging him with receiving/disposing of stolen JWOperty.
Bonecuuer was working for Bates Brothers Amusement Company and was arrested at Brewster, Ohio.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the Starl:
County Sheriffs Department was notified by Meigs County authorities that he was working there. Following a Rule 4 hearing in
Akron earlier in the afternoon, Bonecutter was picked up and
rerumed here late last night.
Continued on page 3

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush says Ross Perot may be
popular now, but once the Texas
billionaire is pinned down on the
issues "the guy in the neighbor ~
hood" will return to BliSh on Elec ~
tion Day.
At a news conference Thursday
night, Bush said he would not yet
take on the independent presiden·
tial hopeful, who is favored by as
much as a third of potential voters
in nationwide public opinion JXllls.
But Bush gave hts aides and
supporters the green hghtto do so.
He also signaled that his campaign
would highhght Perot's opposition
to the Persian Gulf War and lobbying connections to Congress that
belie Perot's claims to be a Wash~
ington outsider.
"I have the confidence that it
won't be JUS! the Republicans that
will be supporting me, it will be the
guy m the neighhorhood" by the
time eleclion day arrives in
November, Bush said.
The president sought to portray
himself ahove the political fray. He
said he had not even "been in the
playing foeld" during the pnmary
season, despite the fact that he
barnstormed across the South
before the Super Tuesday primanes
in March and paid repeated visits to
New Hampshire and other primary
election slates.

During the news conference which only CNN of the maJOr net~
works chose to carry hve - Bush
also:
-Renewed his attack on what
he calls environmental extremists.
He said he's watching out for
American JObs in opposing any
treaty on global warming that IS
tougher or more costly than the one
he will sign next week at the Ean.h
Summll in Rio de Janeuo, Br&lt;llil.
"And if they don't understand 11
in Rio, 100 bad," he added m reference to criticism his dcc1sion IS
receiving from other swnmtl parUc ~
ipants.
-Expressed hopes, sure to be
fulrtlled, that the Republican plat~
form committe&lt;! will retaJn a strong
anti-abortion plank that reficcLs his
personal view~
-Said "prudence and caution
prevents military action' ' at this
time in Yugoslavta where U~N~
economic sanction s have so far
failed to stop the Serbtan~suppo"ned
army from attaclung other states of
the former Yugoslav republic
- Took a swipe at Perot' s inde ~
pendent presidenual candtdacy by
lauding the two-party sys tem for
giving the nation "fantastiC ht ston ~
cal stability."
On Perot, whose populanty has
soared while the president's
approval rating s hav e sp tral cd

down, Bush said he understands
"the quest for change and the

appeal."
"I also thmk the American people are pretty smart," he added.
"Some day you guys arc gotng
start (asking of Perot) 'How arc
you going to do ll, how are you
going to get this through the
Congress?"'
Bush 11~ the news conference,
a rare session in the fonnal East
Room of the White House, to beat
the drum for congressional passage
of a constitutional amendment
reqmring a balanced federal budget
Perot. at a Las Vegas campaign
rally Thursday, took credll for
bringing aucntion to thai issue.

Union members urged
to switch from AT&amp;T
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Communications Worker s or
Amenc• says that rather than strik ~
ing, 11 wtll uy to wrest contract
concessions from American Tele phone &amp; Telegraph Co. by urgmg
union members and businesses to
switch to other long distance com ~
pantes.

Republicans propose health plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - Three
Ohio congressmen were among a
group of House Republicans who
introduced a new plan for over·
hauling the natiOn's health care
system.
Reps. Willis Gradison. John
Kasich and David Hobson helped
write the GOP's health care bill,
introduced Thursday.
The bill is one of dozens of sug·
gested reforms circulating in
Congress, but the lawmakers
believe theirs will stand out
because it was written over the
course of a year by a special GOP
t.aSk focce.
The bill includes a Kasich pro·
posal to block doctors in many
cases from referring patients to
clinics and testing laboratories in
which they have a financial stake.
It also contains a Hobson pro ~
posal that would set up tax -free
health savings accounts for compa ~
ntes with health&lt;are plans. Companies would contribute to a rnedi·
cal care account and their employees would use money from the
account to buy a basic healtlt care
pohcy witlt a choice of options and

deductible.
The Republicans also propos:
- Pcnnitting small companrcs
to buy insurance as a group. Self·
employed people would be ahlc to
deduct their enure health msurancc
premiums. The current deduction IS
limited to 25 percenL

- lncreasmg the amount of fed ~
era] aid for community and migrant
health centers hy S1.5 billion over
five years and maktng health care
more available to poor people.
- Reducing adminislrntive costs
by using standard msurance billing
fonns.

Environmental spokesman
criticizes DNR's
decision
ground water.

CHARLESTON, W ~ Va (AP)
- An environmental group
spokesman said hiS fear s that
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp~ ts
polluting the ground water weren't
eased by a slate Division of Natural
Resources investigation.
Seven environmental groups
and the United Strelworkers umon,
which is involved in a 19-month
labor dispute with Ravenswood ,
alleged April 2 that the company
was dumping 2.5 tons of cyamde
into the Ohio River annually. They
also said the company was di scharging solvents and oil onlo a
"spray field " near the plant and
the solvents were polluting nearby

Bush has lllcked the idea previOUS~
ly but thiS week has chosen to
make II a high~profile objective.
Perot satd it was "fascinating ·~ ~
that suddenly we've got the prestdent of the United States mtercsted
rn a balanced bodgeL"
Democratic preSidential candi ~
date Bill Clinton, Interviewed on
CNN's "Larry King Ltve" TV
program Thursday night, said he
found Bush's support for a balanced budget amendmem ··somewhere between anutl\ing and amazing" because Bush had prestded
over the quadruphng of the nauonal
debt.
Chnton also ch tdcd Perot for
saying the nauon could cut billlOI!s
in government spending wilhout
"break.ing a swcal. ·'

DNR Dinx:tor Ed Harnnck sa id
Wed ne sda y testing appeared to
clear the company of both allegations and no enforcement action
would be taken.
" I continue to have grave con·
ccms about ground water contamination and cyanide," sa id Norm
Steenstra, head of the West Vtrginia Environmental Council.
Steenstra srud Thursday he has
not obtamed the fonal report on the
investigation and has been unable '
to contact any of the national con ~
sultants who helped put together
the environmentalists' complaint
against the planL

Union offtctals satd Thursday
that the new suatcgy, which they
call an "electronic ptcket hne."
would not preclude a stnkc later.
But they sa td there would be no
strike lh1 s weekend. The umon's
contract wtth AT&amp;T expired laSt
Satunday
In the past, the un ton has fol lowed a "no contract, no work"
policy, mea.mng a quick strike 1f a
new contra ct agreement were not
reached by th e umc the old pact
cxprrcd
" We thrnk. we can be more
effective fulfilling thiS program
while our members work ," said
CWA Prestdcnt Monon Bahr.
The CW A and the International
Brotherhood of Elcctncal Wort.ers
contmued joint negotiations with
the long distance and tclecommumcatio ns manufaclllring company
late Thursday
Bahr said un ion negotiators
would be wllhdrawt. ' an agree.
mcnt were not reached by Friday~
Willtarn Ketchum, the company's
vtce preSident for labor relations
said he hoped llllks woold contin~
tf progress were made~
It was unclear whether the
lBEW agreed with the new policy.
When a reporter called to ask, he
was put through to an ofrtcw who
satd, "We haven't yet decided the
ISSUe.''
. This man, who declined ro give
hLS name, satd IBEW president
Jobn Barry was the spokesman fm
the union and was out o( town.
Ketchum called the new policy
nonsense, sayingAT&amp;Ts COlllpetitors for long dtstance business
employ mostly non-onion help•

..

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