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                  <text>Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Widows are not in great demand;
woman finds datin difficult
Dear Ann Landers: It's time
someone told the world what
it's ijke for a woman ID be widowed
or divorced. I hope your female
readers will fmd this leuer useful.
I'm 45. People say I'm very
auractive and ibat I look 35. I am
financially secure, have a good
job, own my home and have two
children, ages 20 and 22. I became
a widow three years ago. Here's the
1rue picture:
Eligible men between 40 and 55
are virtually non-existent. Your
pool of "prospects" will be in singles
bars, parent groups and singles
organizations. The ratio of women
to men is about 20-to-1. So, if you
are contemplating divorce and are
40 or older, take another look . Is
there any possibility that your
marriage can be salvaged? The
quality of available men will shock
you. If your spouse is an ordinary,
run -of-the -mill guy, he will be
sna1ehed up immediately. You will
not be so fortunate.
Available women are a dime a
dozen. If you're not aggressive or
gorgeous, you'll spend a lot of
time alone. I invested $2,000 in a
vacation and all I got out of it was
the knowledge lhat I'd belter learn
how 10 be single again.
When you become a widow.
everyone wants to be your friend -for about three monibs -- iben you're
on your own. It's not ibat people
stop caring, they JUSt need to get on
wiib ibeir own lives.
My experiences with singles
groups have been disastrous. The

widows are depressing, can't stop
talking about what a saint their
husband was and are despenate for
male companionship. The divocced
ones are biuer and angry and talk
of nolhing but their ex-husbands,
how difficult it is to get child
support and how badly ibey were
treated

The prognosis is dismal. Once
you've been married, it's lousy to be
alone. Sign me -- NOT BllTER,
JUST REALISTIC
DEAR N.BJ.R.: True, widows
and divorcees are not in great demand. but to suggest that they are
destined to be lonely and miserable
is a truly sour and inaccurate
projection. Moreover. It would be
sheer lunacy to suggest ibat being
married no matter how flawed and
inadequate ibe relationship is better
than being alone.
Over the years I've received
ibousands of letters from women
who freed themselves of alcooohc,
abusive or unfaithful spouses
and found genuine peace and
contentment once they gathered
the strength to throw the bum
OUL
Dear Ann Landers: Have you

lost your mind? What in the world
were you doing when you rep! ted 10
"Depressed in New England," the
guy who let his wife, Vera, da~ hi s
boss in order to save his job? Were
you maybe bungee-jumping off ibc
Wrigley Building?
Generally you're right on target,
but you really blew ibis one. I'll bet
if the shoe were on the other fOOl
you would have said, "Unload the
creep." Yau should have told the guy
to ~u his boss if he wanrs Vera, he
can keep her. ArvJ if there is any
suggestion that he might be canned,
he should get a sman lawyer and
sue the panrs off of Mr. Boss for
discrimination, harassment and
menial anguish.
Granted, Ann, the case may not
be winnable, but because of the
po~ntial embarrassment, Mr. Boss,
in all likelihood, would be happy to
settle out of court... STEAMING
liN SAN JUAN
DEAR STEAMING: You weren't
the only reader who lhought my
answer was a lUckey. I'm eating my
words. Gobble, gobble . Chomp,
chomp.
What's tht lr•th about pot,
cocainL, LSD. PCP . crack. spud
and downus 1 "Tht Lowdown
on Dopt " has •p-lo-tht-minutr
informillion on dr•gs. Stnd a stlfaddrtsud, long, busintss-siu
tn&gt;tlopt and a chtck or money
ordtr for $3 .65 (rhis incl•dts
posragt and handling)((}: Lowdown,
c/o Ann LantUrs, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 6061/-0562. (In
Canada. stnd $4 45 .)

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days berore 1111 event
and tbe day of that event Items
ml151 be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - "Team Up
With Jesus: Winners Meet on AUStar Street" will be the theme for
Riverview Community Vacation
Bible School, to be held at
Riverview School near Reedsville
through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
nightly. Classes for ages three
through adult. Public invited.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church on Texas Road
will be Monday through Friday
from 9:30-11 :30 a.m. daily.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Chester United Methodist
Church will be Monday ibrough
Friday from 9:15-11:30 a.m. daily.

Howard bridal
shower held
The Trinity Church Choir of
Pomeroy recently held a bridal
shower for Lisa Howard, brideelect of Don Snyder.
Games were played and prizes
awarded to Dianne Hawley and
JoAnn Wildman.
Refreshments of sandwiches.
mints, potato chips, punch and coffee were served from a table decorated wiib candles and flowers.
At~nding or sending gifts were
Mrs. Barbara Howard, Mary Snyder, Jane Walton, Genny Harvey,
Gerlene L. Canter. Peggy and Joon
Snyder, Linda Mayer, Pauline
Mayer, Marie Hauck, JoAnn Wild man, Irene Bailey, Dianne Hawley,
Gay Perrin, Mary Virginia Kautz,
Lo1s and Marvin Bun, Carolyn
Thomas, Becky Depoy and Trevor,
Pat and Roy Holter, Ralph Werry ,
Joe and Many Suuble, Mary and
An Skinner.

Weight control
classes slated
The Meigs County Health
Department will begin a series of
six-week classes fer weight control
at6:30p.m.ooJune IS and 17.
There wiU be a choice of nighrs
for the classes, either Monday or
Wednesday. and classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class wiU be of two hours
duration. AuervJance is required at
only one two-hour session weekly.
Classes will include nutrition education, stress managemen~ weekly
weigh-ins, relaxation techniques,
recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise
techniques, and other phases of
weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are ID he held in the coo ference room of the multipurpose
building, Mulberry He1ghts in

Pomeroy.
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations.
Those wishing to register may
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626. Plealle
indicate your preference of Monday or Wednesday evening class.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veier1111S and the Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its regular
meeting Monday at the hall, 124
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
Refreshments will he served at 6
p.m. and meeting at 7 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM - Bill and
Phyllis Cadle will speak during ibe
Evangelistic Outreach Progrnm at
the Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor S~ve Reed invites ibe
public. Fellowship wiU foUow .

RACINE - The Board of Public
Nfairs will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
at council chambers. Cemetery
Trustees will meet immediately
after (8 p.m.)

POMEROY - The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at the
Pomeroy Nursmg and Rehabilita tioo Center.

RACINE - The Soulhern Athletic Boosters will meet Monday at
the high school . All coaches and
parenrs are urged to auend.

POMEROY - The Big Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpenter.~
Hall in Pomeroy. Anyone interest.
ed in working with the festival is
urged to attend.

BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet Mon·
day at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
School Class of 1972 will hold an
organizational meeting Tuesday at
noon at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy to plan a get·
10gether fer alumni. Anyone interested in assisting is encouraged to
attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer Society
will meet Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 7 p.m. in the
cafeteria. Pelar Gonzales, State
Nurse of Hope, will be the speaker.
HARRISONVILLE - The Hac·
risonviUe Senier Citizens will hold
a free blood pressure clinic at the
townhouse Tuesday from 10 a .m.
to noon. Members are to bring
potluck for their dinner. All mem bers urged to attend.

•

Participants sought
A.nyone in~ted in participaltng in the Heritage Weekend
Parade in Pomeroy should contact
Vi.:ki Ferrell at 992-5177 during
the day, or 992-2612 after 5 p.m.

Harrisonville
area happenings
Mrs. Ora Carsey visited Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Carsey, MiUerspon, and
attended the graduation of her
~ddaughter, Jennifer Carsey, on
Fnday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Foley Jr.,
Applegrove , W.Va., Mrs. Helen
Thorckmorten and daughter of
Gahanna, Mr. arvJ Mrs. Gary Foley
Sr. and family of Syracuse, were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mahr.
The LervJ-a-Hand Circle met at
the church Tuesday with nine
members present
Allan Gibson, Columbus, visited his mother, Virginia Gibson, on
Saturday.

Winner named
Teresa Tyson-Drummer was the
winner of a Mossburg pump shotgun, given awat by the local Frntemal Order o Police as a fund
raiser. The gun was provided by
Bawn Lumber of Chester.

On dean's list
Aaron Sheets completed his
freshman year atJoon Carroll University, Cleveland, by achieving
the dean's list for both semesters.
A graduate of Meigs High School,
he is the son of Jim and Jennifer

Sheets, Pomeroy.

Low near 60. Wednesda)',

partly sunny . High In upper 70s.

6691

Vol. 43, No. 26

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25 centa
A Mulllmedla Inc. ~w1oaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, June 9, 1992

Issue 2 projects are
topic of state official
CHESS OLYMPIAD- Participants in the
30th World Chess Olympiad begin their matches Monday with Rus.~ia, Ukraine and England

ravored to rule tbe tournament. Tbe event
attracted more tban a thousand participants.
(AP)

Names in the news

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Anne Archer plays yet another suffering wife in her latest movie,
"Patriot Games."
·· Although I have done many
other types of parts, casting people
kept ibinking of me as a wife and
mother," she said in Sunday's The
Tennessean.
Archer, who won an Oscar nomination for her role as Michael
Douglas· forgiving wife in "Falal
Attraction," plays Harrison Ford's
wife and the target of Irish terroriSIS in the new thriUer based on the
Tom Clancy book.
" At least Cathy is a strong,
bright woman instead of some
dippy broad. She's a brilliant eye
surg eon, in complete control of
herself,·' the actress said.
" It 's also a very affirmative

Reunion planned
There wiU a reunion for former
crew members of the U.S. S.
Manchester CL 83 in Charleston,
S. Ca., Sept. ID-13. Funller infor·
mation may be oblained from Paul
L. Huffman, 4415 Brookhaven
Ave., Louisville, Ky. 40220, (Telephone 502-459-3260).

look at marriage. I even have a love
scene with my husband. How many
times do you see that in movies
nowadays?"

NEW YORK (AP) - Dionne
Warwick ignored warnings about
her ailing back and flew to New
York to perform at a tribute,
despite collapsing hours earlier at
ibe airport.
The 50-year-old Grammy-winning singer flew in a private jet
Saturday and arrived while the Friars Club salute to Arista Records
chief Clive Davis was under way at
the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
Lee Salters, club spokesman,
said Warwick had been warned by
doctors not to fly and collapsed at
the Los Ang eles airport, missing
two flighrs .
Warwick sang ''J'U Never Love
This Way Again" with Barry
Manilow , who helped hold her up ,
said Selma Gore, a club
spokeswoman.
NEW YORK (AP) - Gene
Kelly says he wanted to evoke the
joys of childhood and being in love
when he created ibe tiUe number
from "Singin' in the Rain."

Hollywood 's most famous songand-dance routine marks its 40th
anniversary his year.
"I warUed to bring audiences
back to ibeir childhoods when they
would cavort in the rain, even
though their mothers would give
ibem hell," the 79-year-old actor
and dancer said in the latest issue
of People magazine.
"I also wanted to make them
feel like ibey were in love. A fellow in love does siUy things."
Kelly choreographed the exuberant number, in which he uses an
umbrella, a lamppost and a street
rull of puddles as props.
An anniversary video containing
movie footage will feature Debbie
Reynolds singing "You Are My
Lucky Star" to Kelly.

Booklets distributed
"Show You Care, Our Treasured
Trees" activity workbooks were
distributed recently to second
graders throughout Meigs County
by the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District. These booklets,
furnished by Mead Corporation,
are designed for use in conjunction
with soil and water stewardship
activities.

RACINE - Racine Chapter No.
134 OES will have inspection of
officers Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
Inspecting officer.; wiU be the worthy grand matron of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, Marilyn Bennett.
Racine is the home of chapter of
deputy grand matron of District 25,
Kay Spencer.

OAPSE Chapter No. 448, Eastem Local will hold a picnic SurvJay
at I :30 p.m. at Royal Oak. Bring a
covered dish . Retirees are wel come.

582

Copyrighted 1992

POMEROY - Roger Gilmore
and Tim Glaze will present a program at the Meigs County Library
Wednesday at 2 p.m. The program
will consist of a demonstration on
making model rockets and also a
rocket launch. All children are
encouraged 10 attend.

OAPSE to meet

Pick 3:

Page4

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. in the conference room of Bank One in
Pomeroy. AU members attend.

driver, Dou~ Harland. 31; another
man; and a 13-year-old boy were
listed in fair condition. At least I0
others were treated at hospilals arvJ
released.
Witnesses said the uuck jumped
a row of ~ during the mce, landed on irs left front wheel and turrted
sharply toward the crowd. The
truck ran over a stock car, jumped a
3-foot wall and hit the grandstand,
said Deputy Rusty Shelburne.
It was the secorvJ time ibis year
that a spectator has been killed by
an out-of-wntrol monster truck. In
March, an 82-year-old man was
crushed by a truck at an event in
Niagara Falls, N.Y.

Reds hike
division lead
with 4-1 win

Pick 4:

EXPLAINS FUNDING - W. Laurence
Bicking, director of the Ohio Public Works
Commission, standing left, met with Middleport
ViUage Council Monday night He was there to
explain to Mayor Fred Hoffman, standing right,
and Council members, rrom the lert, James Ciat-

worthy, Judy Crooks, Paul Gerard and Jack
Satterfield, the process to follow to qualify projects ror ruoding under Issue 2 and the local
transportation improvement programs administered by the Ohio Public Works Commission,

Most school board members
expected to seek new terms
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Most of the 21 incumbents on ibe
State Board of Education likely
will seek new terms in November
when the panel shrinks to II mem bers, board president Chester
Roush said.
"I think that a good majority of
our cum:nt board members wiU be
on the·ballot," Roush said at a
board meeting Monday.
"Unfortunately, some will be
opposing one another, obviously. I
ibink probably four or five of our
distncts quite lik ely will have
incumbents opposing inc 1Qll bents,"
he said.
Roush offered that prediction in
an in~rview as the House awailcd
introduction this week of a bill
proposing the new diStri Cts from
which the board will be elected this
fall .
House Education Chairman
Ronald Gerberry, D-Austintown ,
said he hopes the measure wiU n01
be controversial and ibat agreement
can be reached wiib the Sena~.
The measure is needed because
of a new law enacted at the request

of Gov . George Voinovich, but
opposed by the board, which cuts
the size of ibe panel by nearly half.
Members now are elec ted from
each of th e sta te's congressional
districts.
Starting in November, ibey will
be elected from II new districrs ,
each made up of lhree connecting
Ohio Senate districts. There are 33
Senate districts .
Roush said the board wiU not try
to play a role in the legislative
debate over districts, but ibat individual members like ly would
express their views.
"Our consensus was that it's
Important that they get it don e a.s
qui ckly as possible," he said.
Legislators face a July 5 dead·
line for drawing new boundarie..,_ If
they fail 10 acl, Voinovich may
draw ibe districts.
In other action, the board:
- Approved an agreement that
will allow Lake Eric College, a pri·
vate, non -p rofit campu s in
Painesville, to continue training
eleme ntary school teachers . The
co llege had faced possible loss of

accreditation for irs teacher educati on program s after being accused
by the Ohio Department of Education of failing to mee t minimum
state standards.
- Agreed to exempt ibe Canton,
Ci ncinnati, Toledo and FelicityFranklin school districts from a
requirement to add ail-day kinder gancn classes. The districl' sought
exe mption because they did not
hav e 1h e additional class room s
needed.
- Conditionally approv ed a
$3.4 million state grant to help
build an elementary school and an
.~ddition to ibe high school in the
Southern Local district of Meigs
County. Total cost of the project is
$7.3 million, including $3.9 miiijon
in local money through approval of
a tax levy.
- Conditionally approved a
$9.4 million state grant to help
build an elementary and middle
school in ibe Crestview Local di strict of Columbiana County. The
$12.5 million total cost includes $3
million in local money through a
tax levy.

Mason County highway closed
today following tank car leak

One killed, 10 injured when
monster truck veers into crowd
GALESBURG, Mich. (AP} A monster truck veered into the
crowd at a speedway, killing a 6year -old boy and injuring at least
13 people.
The uuck went out of control
during a race late Sunday at Galesburg Motor Speed way. Kalamazoo
Co unty sheriff's dispatcher John
Lasota said.
The dead boy's name wasn't
immediately released. The truck's

Ohio Lottery

ASHTON, W.Va . (AP) - A
leaking valve on a railroad tank car
containing hydrogen c hloride
forc ed the closing of a Maso n
County highway and th e evacuation of a campground, authorities
said today .
No one was injured in ibe 9:45
p.m . Monday acciden~ but ibe leak
prompted the evacuation of th e
nearby Ashton Campground and
closed a section of West Virginia 2
that runs parallel to the CSX Transportation railroad track, authorities
said.
State police had no estimate of
ibe number of campers evacuated.
The tanker was pan of a train
bound for Cumberland, Md., when
the leak occurred, according to
official s at the Valley Volunteer

, ...

Fire Department in Apple Grove.
A state polic e dispat cher in
Huntin gton sa1d the train was about
a half-mile south of Ashton and
about 16 mil es south of Point
Pleasant when excessive press ure
inside the tank er broke a check
valve, causing the leak.
The dispatcher, who would not

Presbyterians approve
•
•
compromise on Issue
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The
nation' s largest Presbyterian organi zation approved a compromise
policy statement Monday that supports abortion rights but commits
the denomination to reduce lhe

Local briefs

Shelly awarded ODOT contract

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for more information, or write to Box USTN,
Making American Dreams AReality
U.S. Savings Bonds, Washington, DC 20226.

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A publi c ~crv lce olt hh

n~wspaper

identify himself, satd the h1ghway
and Ashton Campground wer e
reopened about ; :45 a.m. today
afler the valve was repaired. Lil~c
of the chemical escaped, he said.
Hydrogen chloride can be fatal
if inhaled or absorbed through the
ski n in large amounLs.

A contract has been awarded by ibe Ohio Depanment of Transportation to the SheUy Co. of ThomviUe for a resurfacing project in
Meigs County.
The project bid was $277,274.59 and includes resurfacing of
8.29 miles of State Route 143 from State Route 7 nonh to State
Route 684 . Tile scheduled completion date is August 31.
Another contract awarded was for spot resurfacing on State
Rou~ 33 from mile marker 20.40 to ibe Meigs County line. That
contract was awarded to Shelly and Sands, Inc. of Zanesville in the
amount of $619,246.04. Completion date on ibe project is also Aug.
31.

Title office coverts to computers
The Mei~ County Title Office is converting this week to a system where btles will be issued on a computer system . In view of the
change, severn! problems have developed and Meigs County Clerk
of Courts Larry Spencer is asking ibat patrons of the title office bear
wilb ibe employees until the system problems are resolved.

"overwhelming number" of abortions.
Delegates to ibe 204th General
Assembly of the Pre sbyterian
Church (U.S.A) paused in prayer
before voting 434 to 121 to
approve the statement ibat seeks a
co mmon ground in the "strong
Christian presumption " to protect
life.
"The Presbyterian Church
(U.S. A.) does nol advocate abortion, but instead acknowledges circumstances in a sinful world that
may make abortion the least objectionable of difficult options," the
church said.
The stand is more equivocal in
its support of abortion rights iban a
1983 policy statement that divided
ibe 2.8 million-member denomination wiib irs strong abortion-rights
stand.
Tile new statement says the state
has a legitima~ interest in regulating and restricting abortions. Atibe
same time, it says no law or administrative decision should limit
access to abortion. The report also
recommends that no sanctions be
imposed on physicians.

Ry CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slall'
Issue 2 and local transportation
improvement program monies and
how those funds are allocated for
community projects were discussed
by W. Laurence Bicking, Ohio
Public Works Commission direc tor, at a meeting of Middleport Village Council Monday nighL
Bicking was there at lhe request
of council following some confusion on hew projects are prioritiu:d
and how ibe viUage can better qualify its projects for approval in
future rounds of funding .
After some background on the
administrative aspecLs of the Ohio
Public Works Comm1ssion which
was organized after ibe passage of
Iss ue 2 in 1937, Bicking detailed
how ibe money is allocated according to the legi slation which put
Issue 2 into effect.
He said that the law requires
that "needs be met on a real need
ba sis" as it relates to matters of
healib and safety. He indicated that
water and sewer projects and deteriorating roads are a maJor priority
although other legiumate needs of
communities are considered.
The state is divided into 19 districts and committee members for
each district is made up of represe ntatives from th e community.
Ph1l Roberts, Meigs County engi neer. serves on ibe District 18 com miuce for Mei¥s County and was
present at last mght's meeting.
According to ibe director, Issue
2 generates $120 milijon a year and
is legislated for a total of 10 years,
while the local transportation
•mprovement program (one pen:ent
of the gasoline tax) generates about
$60 million. Each year about $6.4
million comes into District 13
which is composed of I0 counties,
in cluding Meigs.
In th e last round of fu ndin g,

asSistance through Buckeye Hillsllockmg Valley Regional Development and lhal the only other financmJ involvement he is aware of was
ibrough lhe revolving loan program
which is nol administered by the
Chamber of Commerce.
He funher said that he feels economic development of Meigs
County is the responsibility of the
county and affected industries not
of villages which have very limi~
funds. He mentwned that Middleport now provtdcs several services
to all of Me1gs County and specificall y mentioned lhe FHA program
administered by Jean Trussell ,
Middleport's housing director.
Other RusiD&lt;Ss
Co uncil deferred action on the
revised multi-coumy solid waste
management plan until the next
meeting.
The mayor reported that the
revised version guarantees ibe $13
a ton dumping fee for 20 years and
prov1des for a transfer station to be
located in Meigs County. He said
that he had clarified ibese issues
w1ib Lance Wilson, distnct dlfec tor.

Discussed at length was th e
in surance cost increase to the vll ·
!age and possible salary mcreases.
It was noted ibat health insurance

provided by ibe village is increasing from $403.94 a month to
$553.69 a month for a family policy, and from $145 a monib to $193
a month for the single plan. In
essence, ibiS represents about a $45
a week salary mcrease for employees, one cou nc il member pointed

out. Employees not taking insur·
ance t hr ou~ h the v illa~ e plan
receive c:x. tra hourl y compensati on

The mayo r ex plain ed thai th e
bottom line insofar as the increase
in in sur ance premiums is con cerned IS that t here arc too many

Conlinued on page 3

Republicans are preparing jobs
package, won't rule out sin taxes
CO LUMBU S, Ohio (AP) Senate Pres ident Stanley Aronoff
says his majomy caucus is preparing a legislative package to help
Ohio's economy.
Aronoff , R-C incinnati , sa 1d
Monday that th e leg isialion is
being drafted by Sen . Anthony
Sinagra, R-Lakewood, and may he
introduced as early as ibis week.
It will include proposals that
address boib shon· and long -range
economic problems, he said.
The problems were reflected in
Ohio's 7.3 percent unemploym ent
rale in May . While the rate was
below oiber major industrial stales,
it still was highest it has been since
7.4 percent in March 1988.
Aronoff mentioned the legislation Monday when asked abOut ibe
Senate agenda leading to ibe Legislature's summer recess, expected
around July I.
A solution to the state's $370
million budget deficit headed his
list.
He named other bills, including
affordable health care, campaign
finance reform s, sc hool funding
equity, workers' compensation
reforms and a biennial capital
improvements bill pending from
Gov. George Voinov~eh.
Aronoff said the agenda will
depend in pan on a meeting about
ibe budget and other mat~rs Thurs·
day with Voinovich, a Republican,
and House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg.
But he said Sinagra and others
on a Senate task force have been
working on a jobs package that will
be proposed within two weeks.
He said its thrust is to try to
speed bond-issue money to infrastructure, highways and bridge projeers "to put them on as fast a track

as we can."

The state is authorized to issue
bonds for such purposes, but the
flow of money is restricted, creating backlogs that the bill will
address, he said.
In a long-term effort, Aronoff
I

abou t 60 projects were approved
for Dmrictl3. The director emphasized ~&gt;at the law requires ibat projec ts be pnorili zed for funding on
the bas is of how Importart they are
to the di strict. He said that while
th ere arc other considerations, populatl on is not a cntcri a and again
em pha sized sc leCllon on a "real
need" basis.
Mayor Fred Hoffman asked
about funding for street paving and
Bicking said that while resurfacing
has very little regwnal effect, it
might be cons idered if that 1s
"viable to ibe quality of living or
fo r keepmg res1dents here." He said
that mu ch depends on how the
application is written.
He adv ised ibat applications for
Round 6 funding will be accepted
from hm . I to March 30, !993 wiib
the list of approved projects 10 be
released by July l. Roberts report·
cd lhat Round 5 approved projects
arc expected to be announced ialer
tl1is month.
Chamber Funding
A second reading on an ordi nan ce providing for $2,000 to go
toward the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce/Economic Development Office operation was tabled.
Council rev iewed the 1992 calendar year financial report of the
Chamber office which shows total
expenses anticipated of $60,456 for
1992 . It wa s pmnted out that
almost all are of an administrative
nature. The possibility wa s di scussed of mviling Paula Thacker,
Chamber executive director/economi C development direc tor, back
to another meeung .
When Thac ker met last month
wiib Council, she stated !hat her
office had assisted several busi nesses in Middleport Mayor Hoffman las t night raised ibe question
of "w hat businesses", notin g that
he had been involved in sec uring

rncnuoncd unspecified changes to a
program in which stale liquor profliS arc used 10 help Ohio busmesses
expand and 10 try to attract new
firm s from outs1dc the stale.
The package also will mcludc a
hand issue -financed International
Export and Ex hibition Center,
wh ich could create JObs by enhancIng ove rseas mark e ts for Oh1 o
products. V01novich proposed the
center Cllfher ibis year.
In each instance, Aronoff sa id ,
" ll' s a mailer of moving already
availab le money in a raster man ncr."

Vo inovich has proposed
1ncrcasing la, es on alco hol and
tobacco prod ucts to help cu t th e
budget ctcr,cit, wh ich he csu mated
at $370 nul lion 10 the fiscal year
starting July I.
Aronoff said the members of his
caucus would cons&gt;der a boost in
ibose taxes as "a tax of la.s1 rcson
and not f1rs1 resort ."
'
On Fnday. R1ffc said ibc llouse
IS willing to face up to 1ts rcsponSI ·
hilitics but hc lieves, "the Lcg•slalurc and ~•c p&lt;.'Op le of this stale arc
not in any mood for any add1U onal
taxes.' ·

DONATION MADE- Farmers Bank and Savinp Company
hll5 donated toward tbe expense of sending area scouts to scout
camp Ibis summer. Tbe bank will sponsor two scouts this year.
Pictured presenting one or the sponsorships to Robert Klein, a
member of the Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249, is Paul Kloes, president or Farmers Bank. Further information on donating towards
scout camp may be obtained by contact Bob Arms, srout master
Pomeroy Seoul Troop 249.

or

�l'Ueaday, June 9, 1992

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslslaDt Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

l.ETI'ERS OF OPINION ..., welcome . The y should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must. be signe~ with name,
addless and telephone numba-. No unsigned lellers will be pu bhsbed. Leuers
sbould be in good taste, addMssi.ng issues , not personal alles.

Reform bill on collision course
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press W riler
COLUMBUS - Senate Republicans !his week may Bf'prove an. overhauled version of a Hoose biU to refonn campwgn financmg m Ohto, but
a leader of the Democratic-controlled House md1 cates some of the
changes are unaccep!able.
. .
Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima, is sponsor of lhe proposal. whtch IS to be
voted on Tuesday in the Senate Task Force on Campatgn Fmance
Reform, of which Cupp is chainnan. The bill could go 10 the full Senate
later in tile week.
.
One provision of tile bill would prohibit union dues from bemg used
for campaign contributions. Such a proposal two years. ago led to the
death of a similar bill in a Senate· House conference comm •tree . .
House Speaker Vern Riffe, 0-Wheelersburg, allhough refusmg 10 dtscuss Cupp's biU in detail, indicated lastweek that he opposes the dues
restriction which could send the btl! to a )Otnl conference committee ..
Democ~ts most often are the beneficiaries of union .contnbuttons,
which can run into tile tens of thousands of dollars. Republicans say !hose
contributions are bard to match under laws tllat prolu btl large-scale gt vmg
by corporations.
".
.
·
th
Both unions and corporations can have poubca1acnon commltlees at
channel employee conaibutions 10 selected candidales.
Cupp says his bill treats umons and corporauons tile same, thus creating "a level playing field."
.
Riffe and Senate Minority Leader Robert Boggs. D-Jefferson, S81d tlley
don't buy that argument because union members lack resources to make
their voices heard if they don't do so collecuvely.
.
.
Boggs said corporations can get around tile ban by launderi!'g con~ ­
butions through individuals or other orgarazauons. The Senate bill doesn t
address that problem.
• .
.
.
Riffe said Republican arguments that labor s mnuence ts excesstve
confuse him. "I don't Ulldersrand that," he said. The speaker S81d he
knows of one big union that raised $1.9 w.illion, " but it averaged out to
68 cents per member."
.
Cupp s proposal has other l'fOVisions that wercn · t included m tile
House bill, including one that m•ght be wmed at Riffe. It set limns on tile
amount of money a caucus committee can carry over from one campwgn
10 anotller.
Riffe has about $2.3 million that was raised over lhe past two .Years for
Democratic candidales in the fall election. If enacted, the most hts caucus
committee and ocher.; could carry forward w~ld be $400,COO.
He discounted tile idea thai the ban was lllffied at hun.
.
He nored tllat Senate Republicans have a similar committee that 1111ses
large sums of money. In tile pas!, tllat committee has raised millions of
dollars and spent as much as $500,COO on a ~.in~le race.
" They have fund raisers, too, you know, Rtffe S81d. , .
.
Cupp said the carry-over proviSion •s.a maJOr part of hts btl! because H
evens things out for mcumbents and thetr challenger.;, who often are lesser known to voter.;.

Berry's World

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 9, 1992

benefit. He knows !hat inost America ns admire common-man
Democrats, not liberal Democrats.
And he lrnows thai Americans like

Ben Wattenberg
"outsiders " - even if he ' s the
president whose party has controlled the White House for 16
years!
So Harry Truman gets in his
choo-choo-trnin for long "whistlestop" Dips. bashing tile Republican
Congress, and everywhere he goes,
th e crowd yells "Give 'em hell,
Harry .' '

Which he does. "You are the
government," he says. " The government belongs to you and me as
private citizens.... This is a crusade
of the people against the special
interests .. .. " And: "You are the
government, I am only your hired
servant ... "
(And you thought Ross Perot
made that stuff up all by himself.)

Truman blasts out his homespun
The crusading president lakes
tough actions. He desegregates lhe liberal credo: "We must fight ISOanned forces and eliminates di s- lationists and reactionaries, the
crimination in the civil service. A profiteers and the privileged
tllird-party candidate, segregation - class.... Our primary concern is for
ist Strom Thurmond, challenges the little fellow .... " He denounces
him . (I'ruman will lose some small Wall Street "bloodsuckers" and
Southern states because of his the "Republican gluttons of privisland - and will win some non- lege ... cold men ... cunning men ...
small, non -So uthern states, like (who) want a return of the Wall
Ohio, lllinois and perhaps Califor- Street economic diclalorship." And
nia - by the margin of the heavily always, Truman reminds the vorers
of how far they've come economipro-Truman Negro vote.)
Pundit Arthur Krock writes: cally, after enduring hard times.
"The president's influence is His Republican opponent, Tom
weaker than any president's has Dewey, is so confident of victory
been in modem history." But Tru- that he boldly comes out for
man decides to stand up to the ··unicy: ·
There are lessons to be learned.
Soviet blockade of Berlin . The
George Bush should blast out
resulting Berlin airlift sends a mus·
cular signal tllat America is in the his own credo, if he can figure out
global arena to stay and to play. It's what it is. Say something bracing,
good policy and good polincs, even Mr. President, even that America
never had it so good. Bill Clinton
though it disturbs the soft-on-theSoviets former vice president, can trot out a little more class warHenry Wallace, who mounts a fare if he can keep it away from
presidential campaign, fervently gitchy-goo leftism . Ross Perot
should learn that isolationism is a
backed by trendy Lefties.
big-time loser. And the scribbling
class might remember that even
weak presidents have power.
flow does it end? In early
September of 1948, 50 pundits are
surveyed. By 50-0, tlley predict
Dewey will win. Truman says to an
aide: "I know every one of these
50 fellows. There isn't one of !hem
has enough sense to pound sand in
a rat hole."
The polls tighten. Could this
four-man race end up being decided in !he House of Representatives.
No. The dominoes fall in rows, as
they usually do. Truman, the com mon-sensc Democrat, tile outsider,
tile incumbent (a little bit of Bush,
Clinton and Perot) wins the popular
vote 50 percent to 45 pen:enL The
electoral vote goes 303 -189 for
Truman.
And wise-guy actress Tallulah
Bankhead wires Truman: "The
people have put you in your
ploce."
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
lInstitute, is author of "The First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press and a syadicated
columnist for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

I Mansfield I n•l•
IND .

In love, strive for 'happily ever after
Andy Rooney would like to take
"love" out of the mamage ceremony, as in "10 love and to cherish
until deatll us do part. " The colum ntst says love is a feeling and
nobody can promise 10 sustain a
feeling for a lifetime.
He may be nght but docs he
realize what it would do to the language of love if all our romanti c
utterances had to be ftrst checked
for believability?
What would happen to "I'll be
lov1ng you always/With a lov e
that's true always"? Or " I promise
you wi th heart sinccre(fhat I will
always love you, dear"?
Those arc vows we can't be sure
of keeping but unless you are will tn g lo tell your betrothed on your
wedding day that you will love her
(or h1m ) "until the Twelfth of
Never," there could be some doubt
lhat you are in love. And being in
love on your wedding day probabl y
augurs a betler future for your married life together tllan a duly notari 7-Cd prenuptial agreement.
What Rooney did was to con fusc being in love, mostly a n:anst-

tory condillon, w1th the act ol loving that can go on forever. "Bting
in lov e" was what C.S. Lewis
called the spark or explosion that

exalted emotional state Lewis
refers to as being in love she calls a
"high" - something "ecstatic
and joyous t11a1 is a once-in-awhile
condition."
What we ought to be striving for
in a marriage, she says, is "comstarts the engine of love. But the fonablc" - nonnal-in-tlle-middleengine is kep t running by a quieter ness. There will be highs but only
love, sa id Lewis- a "deeper occasionally.
unity maintained by the will and
'' If you have a comfort relationship tllat is warm and nourishing,"
strengthened by habit."
Lewts, an Oxford don who was she says, "you can have something
academia's most famous apologist even heuer than high."
fo r Christianity, blamed tile failure
Granted !hat Lewis and Tepper
of most marriages on the "being- (and Rooney) make good cases for
tn -lovc myth ." People have the their positions, there is such a thing
ide2, he said, !hat if they have mar- as takmg all the romance out of
ned the right person they can marriage by being too reasonable
expect to go on being in love forev - and too realistic. Unless there is
er.
some of the storybook, fairy-tale
As a result, he said, when they quality about marriage, it will lack
can no longer recapture the "fir.;~ the imagination every successful
fme careless rapture" of being in enterprise needs.
love, this proves to !hem they have
We need to play "let's pretend"
made a mistake and are entitled to more in our marriages. Pretense
a change.
that takes the place of the real thing
Sheri Tepper says much th e is bad. But pretense that le2ds to
same thing in her book "So Your tile real thing may be good.
Happily Ever Afler Isn't." The
You may know the story of Max

George R. Plagenz

a week and broadcast them on his
own ni ckel. He w1ll speak to the
people dtrcc!ly, have complete control over his own message, evade

Joseph Spear
the m~d1a "filter" and render the
press even more irrelevant than it
is. Indeed, the Perot entourage
might not eve n include a press
plane. JoLUTlalists may have 10 find
out on !heir own where the Perot
Show will be staged and ny commercial.
No problem thus far. The press
could use a lesson in aggressiveness, and Perot's posturing before
handpicked or parochial audiences
is hardly unique. Richard Nixon
perfec ted it in 1968 , and Jimmy

:Today in history_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
justice of the United Stares, succeeding E~l ':"arrcn. .
.
In 1973, Secretariat became horse racmg s fir.;t Tnplc Crown wtmcr
in 25 years by winning the Belmont Stakes.
In 1978 leader.; of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-&amp;y Saints
struck dow~ a 148-year-&lt;lld po~cy of excluding black men from the Morm~n~es80thood,
c;on;edian Richard Pryor suffered almost fatal bums at his San
f f b ..
Fernando Valley, California, home when a mixture o " ree- ase
cocaine exploded.
In 1985. American educator Thomas Sutherland was kidna~d in
'
r 11
Lebanon - he was released la.~t November along with ,e ow Slage
Terry Waite.
In 1986, the Rogers Commission released its report on .tile Challenger
disasler, criticizing NASA and rocket-budder Morton Thto!«JI for management problems leading to the explosion that claimed tile hves of seven
astronauts.
\

By The Associated Press
Forecasters say Ohio's weather
over the next several days will be
nearly perfect, by most people's
standartls.
Abundant sunshine will produce
temperatures mostly in !he 70s, the
Nauonal Weather Service said. By
Thursday they'll have reached the
mid-80s most places.
Overnight lows will wann to the
60s by late in the week.
The record high temperature for
this dare at the Columbus weatller
station was 96 degrees in 1914. The
record low was 39 in 1913.
Sunset tonight will be at 8 : ~9
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
at 6:02a.m.
Around tilt Dation
Fog and rain hung over the eastern United Slates early today, and
skies were cloudy over much of the
rest of the nation.
Thunderstorms were forecast
across the Plains today, and scattered showers were predicted in the
Southeast
On Monday evening, showers
and thunderstonns extended over
!he East Coast, the Appalachians,
the eastern Gulf Coast states, the
lower Mississippi Valley and lower

•

a

Becrbohm's "Happy Hypocrite."
He put on !he mask of a handsome
man in order to woo and wm the
fair lady. One day some time later
the mask was torn from his face
and, lo and behold, his own face
had become like the face on the
mask. What had begun as a dis guise had become a reality .
If we go into marriage acting as
if we are going to live happily ever
after- and nourish that bit of
"let's prelend" as the years go on
- we just may fmd lila! the fairy
tale comes true.
We should remember the
woman at the party whose
impromptu singing drew raves
from lhe other guests.
"My dear," said her hostess,
"you sing divinely."
·
"Oh, I can't sing," the woman
protested. "I was just prelending to
be Barbra Streisand."
Let's pretend to be the prince
and princess who live happily ever
after - and see what happens.
Gwrgf Plagenz Is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise A~iation .

Carter proved an able practitioner
in 1976.
But Perot has said this is also
how he would govern. And that,
friends, is where things begin to get
com plicated.
Perot apparently envisions an
ETH system in which he and his
minions activate the President's
Channel, broadcast their findings
and opinions on panicular issues to
the people, then ask them to
"vole." The people would occomplish this with "interactive" televi·
sion devices, once they are perfected. Until then, !hey would cast ballots by phone, fllll and modem.
In other words, govemment-byPerot would be a government-bypoll. And that, friends, is fraught
with peril. Polls are stupid things.
They are easily manipulated by the
phrasing of questions. by the mler
in which questions are asked, and
by the limited and specifiC choices
that are forced upon respondents.
More importantly, ours is a representative democracy, not a direct
one. Not even the father of the
Constitution believed in direct
democracy. The best-system, James
Madison wrote, would ''rcfme and
enlarge the public views by passing
them through the medium of a chosen body of citizens, whose wisdom may best discern the true
interest of !heir country and whose
pauiotism and love of justice will
be least likely to sacrifice it to tem·
porary or partial considerations."
Pur anotller way, most of us are
too busy to follow the issues in

\

great depth and we must rely on
representatives whose judgment we
trust to study and debate things for
us. Thai will never change, no matter how fumly we are electronical·
ly linked.
Put another way, issues of great
import should be medilated upon
and not decided at the end of a
half-hour propaganda presentation.
Imagine that a panel of "experts"
came on the P Channel in April
1986, wben Ronald Reagan's popularity was soaring after he
bombed Moammar Gadhafi's tent
and suggested that RR 's likeness
be carved into Mt. Rushmore.
There would've been five faces on
the rock by July. Imagine a P
Channel perfonnance in July 1989,
featuring film of purpled-haired
punks burning the American flas
and a George Bush appeal for con.
stitutional redress. We would've
had a 27th Amendinent by August.
If done right and thoughtfully,
some argue, the ETH would brett!(
policy gridlocks ant! encOWllge cit·
•zen pllrtlctpauon an government.
But "done right and thoughtfully"
means the president and Congress
would have to cooperale - agree
on fonnat, issues and the experts
who would present tllem.
Pardon my cynical hide, but I
think that's as likely as a summei
blizzard in Sarasota, Fla., and one
more reason why the bantam bil~onaire's bright idea is a bummer.
Jostpb Spear Is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enter"
prise AMoc:latlon.

PA.

!)
•I Columbus I 77" I

n·
W. VA .

Silo-. T·•romrs Roin Aurrios

s.--

Ice

Pr. Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

C1992 Acw-Wea!t'lell', In:

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
near 60. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Wedoesday, partly sunny with !he
high in the upper 70s. Chance of
rain 20 percent.

Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Mostly fair. Highs mainly in the
70s Thursday and Friday and 80-85
Saturday. Lows in the 50s Thursday, 45-55 Friday and 50.(i() Satur·
day.

Area deaths
Dallas Blevins

MAUDEBETZ

Many of th e idea s that pour
from lhc brain of H. Ross Perot, the
Wee Daddy Warbucks who will
accept tile presidency if we insis~
seem to have merit . But there is
one notion he has espoused that
gives thi s old crosspatch great
pause.
I refer to the Electronic Town
Hall - his scheme to condu ct
nauonwide teleco nferences with
the cuizenry on important issues
and 10 ask for feedback via a telephonic "vote." We got our first
taste of the ETH on May 29, when
a Perot rally in Orlando, Ra., was
belllned around tile nation. H. Ross
paid for it lock, stock and satellite
and the message that got delivered
was pure Perot. . .
.
This he has satd, ts prcc1sely
how he ;,ill continue to electioneer.
He will conduct two or three shows

1860 abc

Accu· Weathe,e fomcast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

•

Maude Betz
One of Meigs County 's oldest
residents, Maude Betz, 103, died
Sunday, June 7, 1992 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She resided on High Street in
, Middleport for many years. The
past several years she has lived
with two nieces, Loraine Lee of
Columbus, and Sally Bennett of
Gallipolis. Several other nieces and
nephews survive.
Born on May 17, 1889 at Shamrock, Mo., she was the daughter of
William and Sarah Young Reed.
She was a homemaker.
On Jan. I, 1909, she was married to Frank Betz who died on
May 21, 1957. They had a son who
died in infancy. Others preceding
Mrs. Betz in death were two brothers and four sisters.
Mrs. Betz was a member or the
Fir.;t Baptist Church of Middlepcrt,
and belonged to the Busy Bee
· Class. She was also a member of
the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Funeral services will be held at
. I p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. George
Hallenfield and the Rev . James
Seddon will officiate and burial
will be in the Middleport Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday (today) from
2to4 and6to 8p.m.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Freda Davis, Rutland; Pauline Hen. derson. Pomeroy.
MONDAY DISCHARGES Chilton Cadle.

The Daily Sentinel
(U81'11111-MIIl
Pv.bH1hed ..,,.,. aftlmooa, Mon . .y

lh,.,..h Friday, IU C..n lk,_ ~·

Ohio by t.ha Ohio Vallll)' t'liDllobt.,
CompanyfM•IUmedta Jne., Pomaroy,
Ohio 467611 1 Ph. M·a1156. Second eluo
,...... pa;. al Pamoruy, Ohio.

Member: The Aloodalod Pr.o, lAd lho
Ohio New1peper J.oci.atioll. NaLional
..w..erttetna Re,.....n&amp;a~••. Branham
Ne1upaper S.lu, 733 Third A.,_-,
Nn Yark, N- 'btl 10017.

POIITMABTER: Bead oddrou cba- "'
Tb1 Daily s .. unel. 111 C011rl St ,
-..,., OHio 467641.
IIVBICIUPTION IIATU

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Dallr S.n"n•l on • \hna, rb. or 12
IDDI'Itb bMW. Cndit wi.JI be Ji••n earrier

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No •llbNripUoM by aWl pennHW in
.,... when home carri.r ..nice i1
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lbU hboollplaolda llelp CouQ13 w-.... _.................................. 121.84
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.110

.40

Dallas (Chief) Blevins, 72, of
Middleport, died Monday, J nne 8,
1992, at his residence after an
extended illness.
Born in Welch, W. Va. on July
14, 1919, he was the son of the late
Carson and Eller Alice Lunsford
Blevins. He was a retired career
chief pelly officer in the U. S.
Navy. After his retirement he
worked as a car salesman with the
former Tom Rue Motors and the
Chevrolet Garage in Pomeroy. He
was a member of the American
Legion Post 140 at New Haven, W.
Va.
He is survived by his wife,
Josephine Stewart Blevins, a
daughter, Joann Blevins, Middleport, a son, Richard Blevins, Houston, Texas, and a son and daughterin-law, Dallas Blevins, Jr. and
Emilia Blevins, and a granddaughter. Jennifer Blevins, all of Denver,
Colo.; a sister, Lillian Smith of
Welch, W. Va., and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by three brothers,
Howard, Clarence and Jack
Blevins, and two sisters, Vivian
Dickenson and Hazel BeUhassen.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m . at the Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport. Buri·
al will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday, 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Military rites will be held
at the Cemetery by the New Haven
Post of the American Legion.

Martha Hendrien
Martha!. Hendrien, 70, of New port City, Mich., died at tile Riverside Hospital in Trentoo Mich., on
Sunday, June 7, 1992.
Born on Mllrch 2, 1922 in Minersville, she was the daughter of
the late David Joseph and Clara
Genhimer Joseph .
She is survived by two sons,
David Stewart of Warren and
Joseph A. Suain of Orange Park,
Ra.; four stepsons, Gary, Robert,
David and Phillip, Hendrien,
addresses not available; a brother,
Phillip Joseph of Newport, Mich .;
four sisters, Edith Kegerris of Monroe, Mich.; Mrs. Edwin (Mary)
Farley of Newport, Mich .; Mrs.
Mable Hughes of Monroe, Mich.,
and Mrs. Ernie (Phyllis) Balcer of
Racing. Also surviving is an uncle,
George Genhimer of Minersville,
I 0 grandchildren, and two great·
grandsons.
Funeral services will be held on
Friday at 10 a.m. at the Allore
Funeral Home, Monroe, Mich.
Interment will be at Michigan
Memorial Park at Aat Rock, Mich.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from noon to 9 p.m. Thursday .

Fire guts outbuilding
An outbuilding owned by
and Ruby Burke, Mudsock
Road, was completely destroyed by
fll'C Monday morning.
The Tupper.; Plains Fire Department, at 9:26a.m., responded to the
scene which was fully involved
when firefighters arrived . Nine
firemen responded with three
pieces of equipment They were on
the scene until 10:28 a.m.
According to Mark Boyd, fire
chief for the department, the fire
apparently started when gasoline
containers caught ftre in tile buildmg.
The contents of the building
were also destroyed.
Wil~am

Plains and the Rockies.
Thunder.;tonns dumped up to 3
inches of rain on north-central Connecticut on Monday, knocking out
power to 21,700 homes and caustng flash noocts.
In Mary Esther, Ra. , more than
4 If}. inches of rain fell during a
six-hour period. Wind gusted to 60

Eastern Alumni
The Eastern Alumni Dinner and
Dance will be held Saturday at6:30
p.m. with dance to begin at 9 p.m.
Music will be provided by Cruise
Brothers .
Advance tickets are available in
Chester at Baum 's True Value and
Keebaugh 's; in Tupper.; Plains at
Kee baugh's Shake Shoppe and
Hawk's Quick Stop ; and in
Reedsville at Reed's Country
Store. Additional infonnation may
he obtained by calling 985-3 958
afrer6 p.m.
Charter presenlalion
The Mountaineer Two Cylinder
Club charter presentation meeting
will be held Saturday from 6-9 p.m.
at the Letart, W.Va. Community
Building on Sand Hill Road. A
potluck dinner will be held. Public
invited.

Reunion get-together
The Eastern High School Class
of 1972 will hold a reunion get·
together Saturday from 1-3 p.m. at
the Reedsville Locks and Dam
shelter house. Bring family, snack
foods and drinlcs.
Garden Club to meet
Star Garden Club will meet
Thursday at I p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Eugene Atkins with Mi ss
Ruby Diehl as co-hostess. A program will be presented on roses
and their propagation and lhc club
will al so hold its home flow er
show.
Last service
Sunday will be the last service
for Pastor H.E. Alloway-Priddy at
the Coolville United Methodi st
Parish. Church will be held at the
Be tile I Church at 10:15 a.m. Special music for the service will
include the Bethel and Hockingport
Choirs and John Coen. Bethel ,
Hockingport and Torch Churches
will hold Sunday school at 9 a.m.
where the Sunday morning offering
will also be collected. Public invited. A song service will be held at
the Coolville Church at 9 a.m.
Bible school
Vacation Bible School at Hill side Baptist Church will be held
next week, Monday through Friday, from 6-8:30 p.m. Call 9926768 for a ride.
Past Councilors to meet
The Past Councilors Club of

1

odor.
At 2:50p.m. the Racine Fire
Department responded to Route
124 on a repon of elecaical lines
down.
At 3:33p.m. the Middleport unit
went to Overbrook Center for Stella Frank who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland unit, at 10:30 p.m.,
was called to Township Road 175
for MJitk Richmond who transported to Veterans, and at I 1:59 p.m.
the Middlepon unit responded to
Bone HoUow Road for DeUa Milliron who was treated but not lr8nsported.
This morning (Tuesday) at
12:27 Lm. the Syracuse unit went
to Vinegar Streel for Daniel Crislip
who was taken to Vetenms, and 11
3:44 amt. the Pomeroy unit transported Donita Manuel from Veterans to Holzer.

mph at Hampton, Va., and 70 mph
at Fort Stockton, Texas. Heavy rain
caused street flooding in west-cenlral New Jersey.
High temperatures today were
forecast in 70s across the Nortll eas~ tile Midwest and northern and
central Plains; the 80s along most
of the Atlantic Coast and th e

CLEANSING THE SOUL . A Japanese
master in the art of Mabikari, a transcendental
method of cleansing tbe body and soul, performs
her magic Monday on an Araentinean delegate

Southeas t, Texas, New Mexico,
Nevada and tile Northwest; !he 90s
in southern Rorida, the Southwest
and central California; and over
100 in Southern California and
soulhern Arizona.
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 101 at Junction, Texas.

to Global Forum, the non -govermental organizations' meeting place in Rio de Janeiro during
UNCED. (AP)

Summit achieves major goal
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
- After 2 112 years of tedious
negotiations, Earth Summit delegates have approved a new United
Nations body to monitor compliance with environmental treaties
and gauge progress toward the
summit's goals.
Environmentalists praised the
establishment Monday of lhe U.N.
Commission on Sustainable Development, calling it one of tile summit's major accomplishments.
In a JOint news release , four

Meigs announcements

Squads respond to 10 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to I0 calls for assistance
on Monday and early Tuesday
morning.
On Monday at 7:57a.m. the
Racine unit went to Reedsville for
Kip Reed who was taicen to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Tuppers Plains Fire Department, at 9:26 a.m., was called to
Mudsock Road on a sbllcture fire
at the William and Ruby Burke
property. The dcpanment was on
the scene until 10:28 Lm.
At 12:S9 p.m. !he Rutland unit
and Scipio Fire Department
responded to a ttaciOI' lllilcr accident in which Ronald Dunlop
refused treatment.
The Middlepon Fire Department, at I :49 p.m., responded to
Lincoln Street at the Robert Eblin
residence for 1 report of a smoke

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Ohio weather to be perfect next few days

Wednesday, June 10
MICH.

Electronic Town Hall is a short circuit

· By Tile At&amp;«llted Pnal
· Today is Tueaday, June 9, the 16lst day of 1992. There are 205 days
left in the yCS/1.
Today's Highlight in Hisrory:
. On June 9, 19S4, a clramatic confrontation took ~ace during_the Sen. ate·AnnY hearings u Army counsel Joseph N. elch aswled Sen.
: Joseph R. McCanhy for his verbal attack on a member of Welch's law
: flrtll Fnxlerick 0 . Fisher. Said Welch: "Have you no sense of decency,
'
1-• ha
left 110
of decenc ?"
sir? At long...., ve you
sense
Y
On this dale:
.
..
In A.D 68 the Roman Emperor Nero commiued suictde.
1n
lint dime novel - "Malaeska: The Indian Wife of tile
. White HUflier"- was published.
· In 1870 audlor Cblrles DickAw died in Godshill, England.
.
: In 1940: Norway IUfleiiCiered to the Nazis during World War II.
: In 1969, tile U.S. Senile conftrmed Warren Burger to be !he new chtef

OH 10 Weather

A 'tru' man of our time
Does this sound familiar?
As the presidential campaign
opens. it becomes apparent !hat it
will not be a two-party contest
Many Americans want to nominate
a man whose positions they do not
lrnow. The incumbent president is
trashed by the press, his coalition is
nying apart, and his approval rat ings are down below 40 percent.
We're talking about 1948, not
1992, but there arc lessons that
apply. The man with no positions is
not Ross Perot, but Dwight Eisenhower. The president is not George
Bush, but Harry Truman. And lhe
story is vividly told in David
McCullough· s wonderful new epic
biography, "Truman" (Simon &amp;
Schuster, $30).
Old Harry is in the pits as the
election year begins. But he understands America. He knows Americans want to like their president,
and that they like plain people, not
politicians, and certainly not congressmen. He knows !hat the president can control some events, to his

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

envtronm ental groups said the they will c reate what Ses swns
commission will provide a way to called "soft law" !hat can lead to
hold governments accountable for legally bmding treaties.
their actions on the environment.
Scott Hajosl of the Environmenlt will also be a forum for the wl Defense Fund was more circumcontinuation of negotiations begun spcct about the commission. "The
at tile Earth Summit, they said .
proof is going 10 be in the followup
"I think it's one of lhe most sig- by governments, " said Hajost, a
nificant accomplishments" of the former State Department attorney.
gathering, said Kathy Sessions of
He praised the United States for
the United Nations Association of iLs role '" the nego tiation s estab-.
the United Stales.
li shin g th e commission: ' ' The
Although the commission 's reg- United States was fairly construculations will not be legally btnding, tivc on this tssuc."
Continued from page I

Issue two...

drums.
It was noted that currently
employees receive two weeks vacation after a year on the job, and
have I0 paid vacation dloys. Action
on salary increases was deferred.
At the suggestion of Council
member Judy Crooks, the village
will write a letter ol appreciation to
Bob's Market who donated plants
for Dave Diles Park and other areas
around town.
It was reponed that there have
been complaints about noise coming from use of the basketball
courts at Hartinger Park late at
night. The courts are to be cleared
by II p.m. Users of the tennis
courts are also being asked to rum

the lights off when they leave the
courts and activity tllere is also to
cease at II p.m .
Mayor Hoffman advised that
Bill Browning is now the project
manager for the village. Browning
was at the meeting . Don Lowery
and Pauy Stein were again at the
meeting regarding correction of a
water problem on their property .
The mayor advised them !hat Gene
Triplett, engineer, has not reponed
to Council on how tile problem can
be corrected.
The mayor 's report showed
recetpts of $3,963.76. It was voted
to renew a mutual a1d agreement
witll Gallipolis City at no charge to
either communily . Prayer to open
!he meeung was gtvcn by tile Rev .
Mark Morrow .
Allendin g were Mayor Hoff.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are man, Clerk-Tre2surer Brian Conde,
Monday night's Ohio Loll ery and Council member.;, James Clatselections:
worthy, Judy Crooks, Paul Gerard,
Pick 3 Numbers
and Jack Satlerfield.

Chester Club No. 323 Daughler.; of
America will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall.
Hostesses will be Charlotte Grant,
Sadie Trussell and Mary K. Holter.
Members bring readings penaining
to Rag Day or Father's Day.
Tractor pull planned
The Scipio Volunteer Fire
Department will hold a ttactor pull
Saturday with weigh-in at 5 p.m.
and pull at6 p.m. Kids classes 800,
adults classes, 900, 1000, and
II 00. Refreshments available
including homemade ice cream.
Legion to meet
The regular meeting of the
American Legion Drew Webster
Post No. 39, Pomeroy, will be held
Tuesday. This will be annual elec tion of offiCers for the coming year.
All members urged to attend. Dinner at 7 p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m.
Middleport swimmiDg
The Middleport Recreation
5-8-2
Department will offer swimming
(five, eight, two)
lessons at the Middleport Munici- Pick
4 Numbers
pal Pool at General Hartinger Park
6-6-9-1
beginning Wednesday. The price of
(six, six, nine , one)
lhe lessons will be $12 per child or
if more than one child from each
Southern Ohio Hay
family !he price will be $10 for the
second and $8 per child thereafter.
and Pasture Day at
Times sign-up and lessons are:
Jackson Branch
Swimmers must have compleled
Am Ele Power ..
.. 32 1/8
tile intennediate class 9-9:45 a.m.
Ashland Oil ...
.... 30 SIX O.A.R.D.C. Just South
Monday through Friday. All classAT&amp;T.. ......... ....
.... 42 3/4
of Jackson on
es are held Monday through Friday.
Bank One... .
..46 1/R
Intermediate, 10-10:45 a.m.;
Bob Evans...........
..... 15 1/2
S.R. 93
advanced beginner, 11 -11:45 a.m. ;
Charming Shop ............... JO 5!8
beginners, 5-5:45 p.m.; infants,
City Holding ... .....
..20
toddlers and pre-school , 6-6:45
Federal MoguL
. . 18 3!8
p.m.
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. .... 68 3/4
Lessons will last for a two week
Key Ce nturion ..... .. .... 20 3/8
period. Additional infonnation may
Lands End........ ..
.3 3 1/4
be obtained by calling the poe! at
L1mitcd Inc ...................... 20 3/l!
&amp;
nJ J )[OI.I
992 -2177.
Multimedia Inc. ................ 29 1/4
lt;:K0Ao;RA;;c,.;-;O;;;Nof'RoO.o0"-10°P;;;R~TRo;I;;;DT
"""
&amp;R"'M::;;Ic:-1~~..
Ra. Reswurant... .. .. .. . ... 13/16
'"' .. .,. .......... '
I 10 .9 )0 [IA!lT SAI 1SUII OV.l 1 10.) )0 ( R
Reliance Electnc............ .... 20
WHOOPI liOLDBERii 1n SISTIR ACT
Robbms&amp;Mycrs..
... 17
r :o .~ 10 lll ll l ~~ ~ su~ "1.1 . ! 10 . 1 10 I P(.)
Shoney's Inc............... .. 21 5/l!
Judgment awarded
TOM [RUII[ IN rRR AND AWRY
Star Bank ......................... 36 1/2
I 00. 9 JO ~I l l ~l . W ~ '1.11 1 I OO.J JO ( ~ ).
Home National Bank has been
Wendy lnt 'l.. .... .................. l2
fllU~S l
. _ .•.w.
awarded a judgment in tile amount
I 10, 9 JO
"'oo l 1 10, ) l O
1
Worthington
lnd
...
24 1/4
of $16,673.31 from Ronald E.
(Jiol( INO MAN
Stock
reports
are
the
10:30
I
lO O.'. ll I
IU T l lO ,l lO
Hensley, et al, in the Meigs County
a.m.
quotes
provided
by
Rlunt,
l
!THO!
WilPON
5
Court of Common Ple2s.
F.llis
and
Loewi
of
Gallipolis.
ot " "'. "' ....... , " "'"
I
CXU
20
MILT
OU
T
I
OO,J
lO ( Rj
Divorces granted
.
Bank Ont is tx/ra dividend
BRSIC
INSIINCT
Divorces have been granted m
today.
.' IQ, 9 J O ~1 " 1 1«1 ~ ll " lU ' ~
tile Meigs County Court of Com mon Pleas between Andrea Wise
OOLC·: I ~~~~~ &amp; F (Vt V.IITI~ ~ ~ " IOJSBITTE~ :
and Danny Wise; Burl Putman Jr.
and Kelly Putman; and Norma
Mills and Alan P. Mills.
Harmon sentenced
James Harmon has been sen lenced in tile Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas on a trafficking
in drugs charge to 18 months incarceration and has been placed on a
six -month house arrest. Harmon
was also ordered to pay a $2,500
mandatory drug fine and $2,500 for
the cost of prosecution.
Dissolutions sought
Filing for dissolutions in the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas are Leanne Sue Fisher,
Racine, and Ralph Lee Fisher,
Racine; Richard Douglas Darst Jr.
and Sandra Sue Darst; Corey L.
Carnahan, Long Bottom, and Sandra R. Carnahan, Pomeroy; and
Charles K. Burris, Vinton, and Sandra S. Burris, Ewington.
Marrla~e license Issued
A marrtage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
555 Park St.
Middleport.
Court to Jack Randall Coleman, 54.
Middleport, and Charlotte Amanda
992·6611
Carr, 51, Pomeroy.

Lottery numbers

RESCHEDULED
FOR JUNE 22

Stocks

SAID!~ IUo T: •H ~ ~.'.Tt!.Y.I

SUJjO~T

BA~J M ~~ ~~

·~ ·

Court news

~ II '

lO. ~

~.'. li ~V IIt

1 ~

'&gt;.li 1 ~ U~

( P~ f

~~I 'SUII

C ~l~ ~COil

MORTOrr

SYSnM SAVER'reuets

VALLEY LUMBER and
SUPPLY CO.

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
TUesda~June9,1992

Page-4

Swindell's arm pushes Reds
to 4-1 victory over Giants
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Greg Swindell and Cory Snyder
spent several seasons together in
Cleveland . Not only have they
switched leagues, they're starting
to play like they're in a league of
thetrown.
"If he'd possibly been pitching
anywhere else early in his career,"
Snyder said, "he'd have been a 20game winner the first couple of
years. I think we· re both glad to be
out of there now."
Swindell (5 -2) pitched eight
strong innings in Cincinnati's 4- 1
victory over San Francisco on
Monday night. Snyder, who was 0
for 6 with five strikeouts against
Swindell when he played for
Chicago and Toronto last season,
saved face by going 2 for 4 with a
double this time around.
"He's definitely changed his
stroke," Swindell said, ''I'm just
happy as hell for him. He's a hard
worker. He's just been playing on
teams where they've buried him if
he went into a slump.' '
Snyder is now 16 for his last 27
(.593) with four doubles. a triple,
homer and II RB!s over seven
games.
"1 had early success, JUSt like
him," Snyder said. "But we never
could put it all together. I've

worked han! to get myself back to Piniella said, "and I can't think of
where I was. I've got my self-con- one time where he hasn 't pitched
fidence back."
well enough to keep us in the ballSwindell impressed old and new game.''
teammates Monday night. After
Now Piniella is looking for his
giving up a leadoff homer to Dar- hitters to keep the team in some
ren Lewis on his second pitch of ~ames. Chris Sabo, after a day off
the game, he settled into a nasty tn Los Angeles, came back with a
groove on a cold, windy nighL
homer and RBI single.
"I could sweat in a snowstorm,
"His bat was nice and quick
so the wind and cold didn't bother tonight," Piniella said. "We need
me that much," Swindell said . Sabo to get going . Before it's all
" My fastball was more effective, said and done, we need to hit the
because the wind was making it go ball beuer than we have been."
everywhere."
The Reds broke a five-game losGiants manager Roger Craig ing streak against the Giants, who
knew his team was in for a long swept a three-game series in April.
night. Because even when Swindell Cincinnati is II- 3 over the last 14
tired, Nonn Charlton and Rob Dib- games and leads the NL West by 2
ble were waiting in the bullpen.
1/2 games over the Giants and
"They're a tough team to beat if Padres.
they carry a lead past the seventh
Lewis led off the Giants first
innmg," Craig said.
with his ftrst horner of the season
Sure enough, Dibble came on to and only second of his career.
get the last three outs for his sevSwindell also had unusual trouenth save.
ble with the leadoff batter in the
" That' s th e first time we've second, walking Kin Manwaring
seen Swindell. He's just a fine on a full counl That broke a streak
pitch er," Craig said. "He just of 219 innings in which Swindell
keeps gelling strike one, strike one had not walked a leadoff batter.
on the hillers, and he comes right at
But Swindell gave up only two
you. I like thal"
inf~eld singles over the final seven
So does Reds manager Lou innings and picked off two runners,
Piniella.
including Manwaring in the sec"I think of all of his outings,"
(See NL on PageS)

CAUGHT OFF BASE- Detroit first sacker
Dave Bergman puts the leather to Clnelaod's
Kenny Lorton arter Lorton was cau~ht leaning

AL gameS .•.
Orioles S, Red Sox 2
At Baltimore, Bob Milacki (5-3)
gave up four hits and two runs in
the opening two innings, then
blanked Boston on three hits until
giving way to Storm Davis, who

Scoreboard
In the majors._.

41; Mumy, Now Yad., 41; Gant, At.l.mla.
39 ; Bonilla, New Y od. 39; McGriff, Sm
Oieao. 39.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

fUTS - Owvm. s.. Diqo, 76: IVui.

Eaaerw ot ..blon

T_..
PUtabtqh ___

W L
_Jl 2.5

Ptt.

.· New Yodr: .............. 21 28

.500

J

21
PhiladclJiril ...........26
~ ................ v
ChiCI&amp;o······· ..... .V

1&amp;

500

1

St. loua ..

GB

~34

28

48 I

2s

472

31

446

,_,&lt;

'

Wfllltrn IM•Won

CJNCINNATI .. .... 31 23

.574

San Fn.nQ.eo ......29 26

.5Tl

.... .30 Z7

. ~26

ll
ll

Au.nt~

.................. .29 28
lol An,ae.la ... -- 2'l 28

.509

ll

472
439

l.l

HOUI1UI ······· .. .... 25 32

San Oiqto .

7.5

Mood1y's scores
Mcnaul 6. New Yad 0
Philadrll:plti• 7, Plttib.J.f"!h 0
0Ucaao $, Sl l...cuil 2. 13 inn:itlp, Ia

,.....Otic.aao

Philldelphu., 74; Pa!dletoo, Atltnll , 13;
T . Femandez, S1n Oieao. 69; Finley,
Ho uatoa, 61, Sheffield, San Dieao, 6i,
Cant, Allanll, 66.

OOUBLES - Dw&gt;&lt;on, Pbil.oddptu.,
17; V1nS\y.li:e, Pittabur&amp;)t, 17; Finley,
IIOUAOn, 14; Bigjo, Houlton. 14; Once.
Chu:1go, 14; Pendleton, Atlant1, 14;
DtuJIOn. Philadel.phil., 14; Wtll.tch, MmuW, 14 .
TRJPI.-P_.S - D. Sanden, Atlanll., 10;
Finle)', Houaton, 6; Aliocl, SL I...ow., 6:

Offmnon, Loo Anad&lt;a. 4; &lt;ln&lt;o, a.;.,.
10.. 4; Butler, L.a. Anplca, 4; 9 ue tied

with l
llOME RUNS - Boodt, Pin.burah,
14: McGriff, S1n Dicao. 12; Mau
Willitml, San Fnncilco, 11; Ptn&amp;c:.l.,
A.tlantr., I 1: Sheffi.e.ld, San Dqo, 10; L
Walker, Morur.al., 10; Dtuhm, Pbilade.lpiW,9.
STOLEN BASES -

Griuom., Moo·

6, St. Lm.a.a 4, 1nd ~arne

uu\ 21: t..nklor4. SL l.&lt;uio, 19; O.n1,

aNClNNA TI 4, San Frutcuco I

All1nll, II; Lcwit, S1n Fnm=itco, 1'7;

"" Di&lt;r&gt; 3, -

RdJeru, ONaNNATI, 17; Bond.., Pilu.bwJh, 11; D. Sudcn. Atlanta. !6.
PITCHING (7 deciliont) -

2

Allanu 4, U. AnarJe. 2

Tonight's games

Ba:nkhcd, C£NaNNATI, 6-1 , .857, 2.13;

Ne• Yori (Gooden 4-6) at Mont:!Ul
(J. Hunt U.O), 7.35 p.m
Pitubui'Jh (Dnbci: 4-4) 11 Ph.ibdtl ·
phil (Riven 0--1}, 7 : 3~ p.m.

Chic110 (hchon ! -?) 11 St. Louia
(Towbbury f&gt;-1), !Jl • .._
Houa\On (J . Jonu ) -0) at S1n Diego
(Ge. HuriJ0-1) , 10:0~ p.m.
AUJn\.1 (Biclccli 1·3) at U. Ansdct
(Hcn.hi.a S.J), JO:J:!i p.m.
ONONNA11 _(Bro'll'ning 4--4) at SAn
Fl&amp;llctSCO ~ I - J).I0:~5p. m.

Wednesday's games

ClNaNNA n (R.LJO 2--4 ) It San Fran 2-1), J. J~ p.m.
At.lantl (A..-ery J-5) at Lo. Angelea
: (Kevin Gma ]...~ ). 4:&lt;l'S p.m
NCO (Biaci;

•
HW~tm (B. Henry l-4) at SUI Dieao
• (lcfferu 6-4), 4_-QS p. m
•
New Y ork (Cone 3 3) at Montrul
• (Gardner &gt;S ), 7:35pm.
'
Pittlbwjh (l. Sm.ilh 5-4 ) at Ptnladt..l ·
' phia (Mulholland S---4). 7·)5 p.m.
.·
Ollcago (G. Maddw ~ - 6 ) 11 SL Louu
, (Oarl 0-0),11:]5

p.m

Tewlubur,. St. Louit, 6-1, .1~7. 2.09;
Glnine, At1utt, 9· 3, .750, 2 . 7~ ; 0.bome, SL U.W., S- 2, .714, l9S; Bwbu,
S~n Fmu::Uoo, S-2, .714, 4.04; Swindell,
CINClNNATI , 5-2, .714, 116; Moraan.
ClUCJIO, S-2, .114, 3.35; Lcibrandt, Atlmu , 5-2, .714,192.

SllUKEOlfrS - Cone, New Yon..
19: Smoltx, Atl1nt.1, 83: S. Fem1ndcz.
New Yori , 8J; Belcher, CINCINNATI,
65: 0..1&gt;1*. PittabwJh, 6&gt;4: B. llunl, Son
o;...,, 64; Kovin an-, l..oo An~. 61
SAYES - Lee Saulb, SL Cwi.. 15,
D . Jone1, Houlton , 14; Ch~rhon ,
ClNaNNAn I J; Mycn, San Dieao
.
, IJ;
Mitdl W"llli.vtu. Philaddplil. II: lv..,._
land, MunliW, ~ Fr.nro, New Yld, 9.

Amerku Lta&amp;ue
Puckett, Minnc:~ou ,
lS-4; R. Akmar, Tormto . .329; Bardici.,
o.t.1and., .321; MoliiOt', Milw1ukce., .323;
R Kelly, New Yod:, .322: KnDbi.tuch,

BAITING -

MinnCIOll.. .321; Winfield. Tmmto . .314.
RU:-.IS - Puckett, Minneaot1, 45,
t.ltct:, Minnmou, 43; M.cGwirc, Oallind,
42; Knobltuda, Minnc.(J(J, 40; Phillipt,

Ddroit, )9; Mtttin&amp;ly. New York, 37; R.

Alc:znu, Tomn10, li; E. Mutincz, Se.anle,

21
22
2l

618

36; Sicrn, Teut, J6.
RBI - Pudt:ctt, Minne.oc.t., 41; MeGwire, Oa.II!Jnd . 46; Fielder, Detroi1. 44:
Gnl'fey-, Sc.lnlc, 40; Andc:n(l'l, Oa.iumore,
40; Stern, Te1u, 40; C.IMOCO, Oakland,

614

38 .

l l7

4l

Tl

""

6

AMERICAN LEAGt:E
Eut-tm lH..-Won
Tum
w L P&lt;L
Balumm: ... ....... 34
Tororno
Jl
Milwaukee
2'1
New YcU .......... 28
Ba. t.on ...
l6
2l
CLEVELAND . .. 22

"""'"

Welttrll

lOO

26
ll
3l

Tuu .
Minnclou
OUcaao .

KaniU C1y

OI~Won

23 32
11 ]]

..

6.l
9l
ll

446
J86

.. 32 lA
..... 34 26
. JO 2l
26 21

Oilland ..

GB

Califomi1.
Suonle ............. 22 ]4

l7 1
'.67
l&lt;ll
491
4 18

il

400

9l

391

10

Il
4l

Monday's scores

O.ie~go,

15; Andcnm, 811I~;

Se.ilr.er,

TRIPL.Ji..S - Andcrsoa, Baltimore, 6;
F_ M1rtinm, Sr.ar.tla, 3; Drew:rclux, Baliim ~. 3; L John.on, Oric:J10. 3; Bwb,

Tun, 13, C•Nero. Oa.li:land, IJ; Tenl&amp;IM, Oo::tm tl, 1] ; Bdle, C1.£VElAND, 12;

Kanau Crty 9. Minnuot.~ 6
Texu 14, Smnle 3

Gnffe y.

S e~tt.le,

12; Puc-km , M.innetOU,

12.

Tonight's games
Torooto (Juan Guzm1n 6--1)

at

New

Ynrt (Lc:ary 4--4). 7:30 p.m.
Bolton (Dopaon_ 1-2) 11 B.Jumore
(Mea~ 2-5). 7J 5 p m

ClEVELAND (Boucher I I ) 11 De
, uoit (TIIWlt 4-4), 7 J~ f m .
.
Oakland (Cunpbcll --0) at Mihuuiot
• (R. Robinoa&gt; (). I ), I &lt;IS p.m.
· Califomi..t (Valen 2--4) 11 Oue~go (1!1 . bb&lt;nl l-4), !ill pm.
:
Minnaall (ltn!efe' 5-0) 11 K• n n 1
(Masnutll: 2-4) . 35 p m
Scattlti (Flmting 8-1) It T e~u (Bum•

en,

()..O).I:J!i p.m.

STOLEN BASES - UfuJn, a.EVEI.AN D, 24: It Hendmoo. Ott.land, 22;
U~ c h, Mtlwaukce., 20; Andeaoo, Balttmo re . 17; R1ine1 , Chicaao. 16 ;
Knobla uch, Minneaott , lS; R. Alom~r,
Tormto, 13
. PITCinNG (l dccttioru) ----: Fl«ninf.
Semle, 8-J, .189, ll7 , M~ttnl, BllU mo re, 7- 1, .875. 2. ft0; Jutn Gur.m1n ,
T o r o n~ o. 6-1, .8n, 2 ..51; X.. Brown,
Tr.u.J, 9-J, 7:'iC, J .l1, Ocmem, Boooo,
~ 3. no. U6; Mc"()owd], OUclao.. 1-3.
717, 3.~ 0 ; N1 1 y, C LEVELAND. 7 -3,
700, 2 44 : Mc Donald, B1ltimore, 7 -3 ,
700, J 8'7, Gullicbon, Detroit, 7-J, .100,
2.82.

STRIK.EOUfS - C1emena, Ba-ton,

Wednesday's cames
.

Toronto (Key J -4) u New York
(San&lt;.lenon 4-3). 7:JO p.m.
.
8oAon (BoliOo 1-1) tl Baltimore (Sut -

K?, Juan Guzman, Toront.o, 72; Pere:r.,
New Yodl . f:h : R. John10n, S.ale, 64: K.
Brown , Tun, 62, McDonald, Blltimoft,
60: Mc Dowd.l, Ot.ie~so. 60.

SAVES - Eclenley. Oa.li:.!lad, 21 .

. clilfe 1--41), 7:35 _r.m.

0..EVELAND (Annarona

aoit (Rital·l). 7:35p.m.
o.k.ltnd (Darlin&amp; ~ - 3)
(Booio 4-)),1~ p.m.

11

1-1) I I [)D..

Olam , Baitunore, 15; A,mkn., ~
11. I ~ ; Jeff Ruuell, Teu1, Jj ; Mont-

Milw1ukee

gom_ery, K1111-11 Cily, _IJ; Harvey , Call·
f011U11 , 13; Th1apcn, Chic.tan. 13.

Cdil'omi1 (Abbott 2· 8) tt Ch.ie110
(Md"ukill ).ji).l~ p.m.
~ (BJnb 0.1) It Karwa City
(ApP« 5-J),I,ll.m.
(R. Johnlan .5-5) • Tau O.:.e

·s.u

. 0u1mut B), I 'll p.m

Notloul League

COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE - Sua-

1•.

S111 OU.O, .311
Jl\JNS - lloodl. Pilul&gt;oqh.

44; BiJ·
·o Horutoa, Jl: T . Pemtndez, San

aw,.a, s.. o;,p. 31; _Knok.

:!7; ~. s._ l.&lt;uio, 36;

on-, Moo·

. . . 35; Oool,-. 35.
U l - Dtuhoo, Philadolphla, 43:

• ..... l'lllllotah. •2; l'onottaiWI, Aolatu.

mitdemctnor dN. -telUed

A....-ka• Lea11111
Cl-flCAGO WIUTE SOX -

M1uhew Johntm,

Jeffre~

Quia: O.rndlc:r, ah(Wtop.;

SiJY!cd
Pttz.ke, 1nd

Riehm! Hal-

bruner and W1de Norris, fint bucmen;

P..trict Moullrie and Ben Candelaria, canfieldon; MichMI. Stcfanof'f, Chad Brown,
Randall Phillipt., Dezock Brandow, AUOII
lenild and Ierf Cheek, pitchcn; 1nd
0.-vid Becka Jnd Jeffrey Wd, eatchen,
10 minO!' Lctp C(dti(.U .
Nlllolul Luaue
AlL\NTA BRAVES - Sipod Da·
mon llollinl, Anthony Oiicto, Richard
Willi1m1 , Sh1wn Brenaan, Michul
Wuncr, J&amp;JT~~X S1u11a INi David Binabtm.
outfielden; Maurice Chrl.tmu, Ttra~oc
Brtd. Cli.nl. GtJfl(l'l, Anthmy Stoccllin,
A.ttm Turner, D&amp;niel Tcnn, o..rml Mly,
ChtUwpher Onudt 1nd John Si.mmona.
pitchen; Robert Srmth, Tyrme Ocmin&amp;o.
Bryan Speuer and Phlllip Zimmenun,
ahoNt.apl; William Pm.p, catcher, and
Kevin Walla, third bum.tn..
CHICAGO CUBS - Sisned Chru
Dtcyei, Bill)' Cb.ildreu, Charlca Daniel,
Daniel Gultnaon, lon hrolimck, Joe
llino., Ouyle Q.,-li&lt;:S, lly H111d, David
Datil:, Andrew Ellbcdcr and l...uil Mlwa:,
pitchen ; Mic-htel Hubbard and Byron
Bartoo, c1lchen; Kevin Booker, Dav1d
Demon, Kevin Keninaer 1nd Runell
Smilh, outfJe.lden; B)TOD BndleJ '"'
Chri• Plonk, third buemen; uon
Boehlow, f1n1 bateman; 1nd J01h Sim ·
mm.t and Tunotby Sb.llhQL. &amp;h~, \0

minor-leaJUe cunncu.
aNONNA TI REDS - SiFicd luoo
Anacl. Curti~ Lyona. luon Kwnmerfeldt,
Cecil Picb:u 111d Omny Fuud.1, pitcher~;
]Ullin Towle tnd Johnny Be.. Clu:h«'';
and Jeffrey Ntl)', out.fieldcr, to minorleaBUe oontncta . Auigtcd Ansel. X.wnmcrlcldt and NIIY to Billinp of the Pio-

neer league 111d Lyorw, Piclen. Fuucll,
Towle and Rea• to Princ:cton ~ lhe Appalacluan Leap
HOUSTON ASTROS - Si~Jlcd Mlr..-in Billinsaley, Dw1yne Daw1on,
MicNel. On.mich, Chnt Holt, Zak Krilloct:., Hector Mcruclo, Jeffrey Tmbtrge,
Jamie Wtlier, DeiLiy Wc:~tbrook 1nd
Dou1 Ml.icb, pUchan; R1ymood Bowen,
Anthony Roaa 1nd Chria Tllomu, out fielders ; Donovan Mit.chell and Joaeph
Wnt, infielden; A.\an Pmbal and Bren
W yn.ga.rdm, CI\Chcn.
MONTREAl EXPOS - Rcc1llcd
lmathtn Hur~t, piu:hcr, from lnd.imapolit
of the Americ1n Anoci1tion . Optioned
Scott Service, pitcher, to lndianlp&lt;llit.
Serv1ce refuaed the tuilnment 1nd became 1 fret •&amp;cnL Sipod Rodney Hm dcooo, Stc11m Faiteiaek and lati'JCI Ruah worth , pitdu:rs, 1nd Daniel Lane, lhort ltop, to minor-leatue_contnc:u. Ntmod
Se1n Cu.nru.nsh•m mtnar lcaaue eondi·
L.ionin&amp; tnd rehab c-oordinltor tnd Nul
Hunt.inglon 1dminiltntive 1Ui1tant for
minor leap opentioal.
NEW YORX METS - Pl1cod Rodney McCny, outfielder, on wtiven for

sivina him hil unconditioo&amp;l nll.eue. Activated 0...-e O.U.gher,
ootfiddc:r, from the l~·d•y diubtedli11
the purpoae of

Optioned Mull. OcW"Cy, pilChez, to TideWII.c:r ~ the ln~em~tiontl Lc.pr- Signed
Todd Becl:ermtn, Tn.vil Shaffer. Orqory
Sttrt , Allm McDill. Tmn ?Won, Jeflrc)'
Williltn~, Brt:nt Haywood, TyrcJJ Sher-

man, and Robert Swa. pil.chen:: Omtld
K.eilw:r, outfielder; Ja~e Floret, ahorutilp;
1nd Ch1d Eppenon 1nd Heribeno
Monlea , c1tchcn, 10 minor-letp CIJI(I ·
tnctl . Auia.n~ Bec.li:.erm1n, Shaffer,
Sltdl:, .nd KeUL«, to Pi.t11fidd ri the New
York -Penn Leaaue; McDill, Pinson ,
Williuna, and f1ota, to Kinppcl't of the

Appaluhi.n Lea1uo; aacf Eppcnon,
Mon.lea, Htywood, Sherman, tnd SLana,
to the Oulf Cou:l Lup.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - P1.accd
Jote Oquendo, infielder, M lhe _15-dly
diuhlcdiia. Aaivaled Tl1fl Jooel, infielder, fran the I S-da)' di11biod list.
SAN DIEGO PADRES - Si.ned

Thomu Kindle. Bliaa McLain. CluiJ.t.m
M&gt;up!&gt;y, K""""' &lt;mdaoeyk, loll)..,..
and Scott Sin&amp;lCIIOft, plt.chc.n.; John Fan·
uuzzi. Robert Dei....eon 1nd Jua:tin Lons.
infielders; MII"CUU McCoy, :Z.ven Luck el1, William Robb1111d Mia Goebel, outficlden. Placed cm,I-Writ, pitcher. on
the l~ -d1y d.inbled lilt, rctroJc~vc to
J~me I. Act.inted larry~. pitcher.
frun the 15-dly diNb~ liA..

Nttlonal FoolbaU Lape
Cl..l!VELAND BROWNS - Named
Emle Plank I()(IUL

BOStbaU

JUiit)' lO I

BATTING - ICruk, Phlltdelphit,
.l'l.t, aw,.a,
o;,p. .352; v..styt~
Pitwburtb •. 339; McGriff. s.n oae
. 320; 'II. Ctuk, ha Pnneitc-o, .J 6;
DtWtoa, Phu.delpbit, .315; Sbeffidd ,

s..

Transactions

.......

~ORONTO BlUE JAYS -

DENVER BRONCOS - Sipcd Jeff

Aleundor, fllllbact .

KANSAS aTY CHIEPS - Si1nod
Willie 0Wu1, quuterback, and Pellom
M..O.n'el• da:fm.ive end.
LOS ANOELES RAMS - N1med
Ptul YClllllfll' dinldGr d pity« ..Ut:iont.

Sil"od

Tuno&lt;hyMoon,pitcha .

MILWAUKEI! BREWERS - S;,.-.cl
IV;v;n Klock, Daniel Kytlinaer, Randall
Karl, Jeffrey Droll, Ryan Maloney, Sidne)' Robrnon and Chriatopber Psroot.lll,

Pri""'·

GOOD JOB, CHRIS! - Cincinnati third
base coacb Sam Perlozzo (left) con,ratulates
Chris Sabo afler the latter's game-tymg homer

in the fifth inning or Monday night's game
against tbe host San Francisco Giants, which the
Reds woo 4-1. (AP)

Detroit pounds Cleveland 9-2
By The Associated Press
The game already was out of
hand when Sandy Alomar decided
to take mauers into his own hands.
After Cecil Fielder hit a threerun homer in the first inning and
Milt Cuyler got his second career
grand slam later in the inning, the
Detroit Tigers were well on their
way to a 9-2 victory over Cleveland. When Glenallen Hill was hit
by the first pitch from Tigers
reliever John Doherty in the sixth
and Alomar nearly had his head
taken off by Doheny's next pitch,
the Indians catcher charged the
mound.

Both dugouts and bu!lpens emp- balls.
"I would assume that they
tied. Doherty and Alomar were the
thought
we were throwing at Telonly players ejected. No punches
tieton,
but
we weren't," Indians
were thrown, although Cleveland's
manager
Mike
Hargrove said .
Carlos Baerga and Detroit's Tony
·'After
they
hit
Glen
and almost hit
Phillips both had to be restrained
Sandy, we thought they were
by other players.
''That has never happened to me throwing at us, but Sparky and
before, not even in Little League," Mickey (Tettleton) said they
Doherty said. "I wasn'tthrowing weren't, and I have to believe
at either bauer, and especially not them."
When Doherty hit Hill, the batafter I hit the ftrSt one."
ter
took a couple of steps toward
The problems started in the fifth
the
mound, then stopped. Home
with Detroit leading 8-1 and Mickplate
umpire Drew Coble tried to
ey Tettleton at bat. After Dennis
Cook got ahead 0-2, Tettleton had calm the Indians dugouL
"Drew came over and said that
to dive from two head-high fasthe felt the pitch had gotten away
from Doherty and he didn't want
anything to happen," Hargrove
said. " But the one to Sandy was

Akron overlooked for NCAA
tournament bid despite record
AKRON, Ohio (AP) ~Akron
baseball an:h Dave Fross says he
can't understand why the Zips
didn't get into the NCAA tournament field with a 42-18 record.
"It's not right when Providence,
Yale, Delaware, Rider, MarylandBaltimore County and George
Washington all make the tournament," he said. "There's no doubt
in my mind that we're heuer than
all of them . We played Rider 10
Aorida and beat them 5-l."
The team set a school record for
victories this season but fell short
of repeating as Mid-Continent Conference champions by losing 12-10
to Wright State in the conference
chamionship game.
''Wright State was as deserving
as we were to make the tourna ment, but apparently they weren't
even considered,'' he said.
Fross acknowledges that
Akron's schedule, which included
one NAJA. three NCAA Division
III and two Division II opponents,
didn't help support his cause with
the NCAA selection committee.
"I'm sure that had something to
do with it, but mostly we're talking
about potitics and prestige. I think
only 12 of the 48 teams (that made
the tournament) had more wins
than we did," Fross said.
The Mid-Continent tournament
champion doesn't get an automatic
NCAA berth. But the Mid-American Conference tourney winner
does, and that's one reason he's
glad the Zips will switch to the
MAC next year.
"Playing in the MAC gives us a
umgible, reachable goal. It's something that you can count on," Fross
said . "This thing about no automatic bid is nothing more than pure
wishful thinking and conjecture."
Fross expects to return a strong
nucleus next season, led by first

baseman Mike Taylor and second
baseman Jeff Fisher. Taylor had a
team-leading .363 batting average,
74 hits, including 23 doubles, and
52 runs batted in this season. Fisher
hit .318 with 67 hits, including 13
doubles, and 43 RBI.
Taylor was this year's most
valuable player on the team, and
Fisher won the same award in
I 991.
Fro ss also is pleased with
re1urning pttchers Randy &amp;rement
(9· 1, 3.75 earned run average),
Aaron DeAnna (8 -1, 3.81), Jeff
Shirley (6-1, 4 .40), Mike Serdinak
(4 · 3, 4 07) and Jason Goth (4 3,4.40)
"I talked to the guys that are
coming back next year and our
No . I goal is to reach the MAC
tournament," Fross said .

Meigs American
Legion schedule
Date
Opponent
June L ... .. at Glouster (DH)-5 p.m.
June 5 ........ .......at McArthur-6 p.m .
June 6 .... .at Chilticothe (DH)-Ip.m .
June 7 .. ...... .. .. Mariella (DH)-1 p.m.
June IO .. ...... ....... .... ...Athens-6 p.m.
June II ...... at Mariella (DH)-6 p.m.
June IL .. .. .. Lancaster(DH)-1 p.m.
June 14 at Pickerington (DH)-lp.m.
June 16 ...................Winfield-6 p.m.
June 18 ............ ....Chillcothe-6 p.m.
June 20 .. ... at Gallipolis (DH)-Ip.m.
June 2l .......... Giouster(DH)-I p.m.
June 24 .. ............ Parkersburg-6 p.m.
June 28 ..... at Wellston (DH)-I p.m.
July l ... ....... .......... Galtipolis-6 p.m.
July 4 ......... .. .at Parkersburg-2 p.m.
July 7 .... ............ ....at Athens-&lt;&gt; p.m.
July 10 .......... .... .at Winfield-6 p.m.
July ll ............ Wellston (DH)-noon
July 20-25 ........district tournament
Aug . 3-8 ................ state tournament

FootbaU

pendr;d New York YWoe pitdter SleW
Howe indd'Utit.e.ly after Howe pleaded

Major league leaders

L

:6: Vmtun,

tlmorc:, 1~. Reed, Boaton,
t.ltlwlu.kce.,i5 .

Hoston, J, Pud.ett, Minoclott, 3; R1Ux. ,
O uCJgo . J
HOME RUN S - McO~ O&amp;kltnd,
21 , Deer . Or:IIntl , 15 ; Ju1n Gon.uler.,

TormLO 16, Nc:wY ott )
81h.JmOK 5, Boo.on 2
Dc:umt 9, Gi'VEl~l) 2
Milwaukee 6, Oilland 2
Que~ go 5, C &amp;hf~XTUI l

Holliao, l'bD ' 'pH•, lS;

Puckett , Minneaoll, 81 : R.
70: Siern. Teua. 69:
KnobiJU ch, Mtnncaota, 68; B1era•.
CLE VELAND, 63; M1ck, Mumauu., 67 ;
R. Kcl.l)' , New Yod:. 6&amp;. Winfidd. Taonw, 66.
OOUHLE S - E M1rti.nez., Suttle,
18. Joyner, K1ntu City, 18; Htll, New
Yo ri, 13; Reimer, Tnu, 17; Jdferie~.,
K1n111 Cit~. 17; M1tlingly. New York .
HITS -

A l om~r , Toronto,

Millo lAde.~ Cupc 10 Albany of
thollut&lt;ml.oap.
TEXAS RANGI!RS - l'ludluod lho
CUIIRtt of Todd Buma.l;litc:her. from c._.
lahoma Cily of the Amcricaft Aaaoc:ittion.
~I.Dd JdT R~. ~e:r, for u·
•ignmcnL Sianed Ray Willitnu, lhon.·

A&gt;ttllony
Ruba-t·Cepbu
lnd T'un&lt;mlhyllonid
Umae.Po=.
out.fieJden; &amp;rian Hoatetler, catcher; Sctn
Holub, IIIII Gabriel-..., ialiddon.
NBW YOill. YANKEES-~
M..lt c..p., pirdlar, r- tho Ballimono
Oriol01 to comolete tho Peb. l9 Alan

Hoc:koy
NtUontl Hodle7 Lar:l'"

BOSTON BRUINS - l'ired Rid:
Down-, OOKb.
MINNESOTA NORTH STARS Nounod ooadt B.o Oaiooy ...,..U """'I·

...

SAN JOSE !IIAJU[S -

Gn~ebwu, del.._.,

Sip Rob

THANKS FOR YOUR SUPPORT
IN THE COMMISSIONERS'
PRIMARY.
YOUR VOTE WAS
APPRECIATED.

GARY R. DILL
P•ld for by Cllndldllte, Glary Dill
48180 RleiMI Rcl, Long Bottom, OH.

\

curious."

It apparently was more than that

to Alomar, who refused comment
after the game.
In the game, Kurt Knudsen shut
down the Indians on two hits in the
last four innings for his f~rst major
league save.
In other games, it was Toronto
16, New York 3; Baltimore 5,
Boston 2; Milwaukee 6, Oakland 2;
Chicago 5, California I; Kansas
City 9, Minnesota 6; and Texas~4.
Seattle 3.
Blue Jays 16, Yankees 3
At New York, the Jays set season highs for runs and hits (21). An
eight -run fourth inning broke it
open. Toronto sent 14 bauers to the
plate in the inning, which took 37
minutes to play.
Jeff Kent tripled, homered and
drove in four runs, as did Manuel
Lee. Second baseman Roberto Alomar left in the third after slightly
sprainmg his left knee in a play at
the plate. Every other Blue Jays
swu:r had at least one hiL
(See AL on PageS)

AUTO

H ME
t ' '(

1

I ,

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
' and home with the State
Auto Companies .
Let us tell you JUSt
how much your savings
can be .

~Area

too rar toward second base in the first inning or
Monday night's game in Detroit, which the
Tigers won 9-2. (AP)

_(_c_on_un_u_ed_fro_m_Pa_g_e_4l_ _ _ _ __

got the last out in the eighth. Gregg
Olson pitched the ninth for his 15th
save.
Brewers 6, Athletics 2
At Milwaukee, with three singles Robin Yount moved into 21st

sports briefs___,

Meigs Chamber slates linkfest
The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will hold its annual
golf tournament on Thursday, June II at the Meigs County Golf
Course.
Tee time will be at I p.m .
The tournament will be a four -person blind scramble and the cost
will be $50 per person. The cost includes hot dogs at noon along
with green fees, cart and a steak dinner.
For more infonnation, call the Chamber office at 992-5005 .

Women's softball tournament set
The Jack-Trim-Giou Athletic Boosters will sponsor a doubleetimination women's slow-pitch softball tournament at the Glouster
village park from Friday,June 12to Sunday, June 14.
The entry fee is $75 and two softballs. The deadline for registmtion is Tuesday, June 9.
To en1er or to get more infonnation, call Dave Richards at 1767-3090, Greg Koons at 1-767-3656, Tim Seevers at I-767-2911
or Harry Herges atl-347-4240 or 1-753-2154.

Marauder junior girls camp Monday
The 1992 Meigs Marauder girls basketball camp for grades 5-7
for the coming school year will be held from June 15 to June 19 at
Larry R. Motrison Gymnasium.
Cost is $30 and no family has to pay more than $50 if more than
one girls attends the camp.
Instructors will be the 1990-92 Tri-Valley Conference Coach-ofthe Year Ron logan and his staff. Instrucuon will be in ball handling, passing, dribbling and rebounding. Also each camper will be
instructed in offensive skills and moves and defensive fundamentals, both mdividual and team play, positions of the game, rules of
the game and sportsmanship.
Each camper will receive a camp t-shin and awards will be presented the last day of the camp. Foc more infonnation call Logan at
the school at992-2158 or at home at 992-2723.

OU football camp scheduled
An all-position football camp will be held at Ohio University
from June 21 to 24 for students entering grades 6-12.
The emphasis will be on fundamentals of quarterback and receiver play, highlighting the basics of the passing game.
The fee for a resident camper is $160 and $120 for a day camper.
A $50 deposit is required, with the balance due upon arrival. The
deposit is not refundable except if an individual is unable to auend
because of sickness or injury.
For more infonnation, write or call Tim Hinton at the OU foot·
ball office, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio 45701, 1-593-1183 or
593-0210.
For registmtion, contact the Workshops Office, located in OU 's
Memorial Auditorium, at 1-593-1764 or 1-593-2949.

Southern football camp slated
Southern High School will hold a football camp from Monday,
June 22 to Wednesday, June 24 at the Southern football field from 9
a.m. to noon.
The camp is for all students entering grades 4-6 this fall.
Coaches, players and former players from the area will instruct
the campers on offense, defense and special team techniques. Other
topics that will be covered include motivation, self-discipline,
sportsmanship and teamwork.
Players attending the camp should wear tennis or turf shoes,
shorts or sweatpants and a T-shirt Individuals from any school district can attend.
Cost of the camp is $20 and the fee includes a camp T-shirt.
Checks should be made payable to the Southern football program.
If you have any questions you ean contact Southern bead coach
David Gaul at 985-3945 or 949-2611.

_ _ _ __ _

place on the all-time ltst. Yount
moved past Jake Beckley and
Rogers Hornsby on the career list.
He now has 2,931 hits.
Bill Wegman allowed four hits,
walked one and struck out five,
including home run hitter Mark
McGwire three times, in eight
innings. Doug Henry pitched the
ninth and did not allow a hit
White So• S, Angels I
At Chicago. Jack McDowell (83) ended a personal three-game
slide as he yielded four hits in 7 '1/3
innings. walking three and strildng
out etght. Bobby Thigpen earned
his 13th save.
Royals 9, Twins 6
At Kansas City, the hosts overcame a 5-1 deficit as Keith Miller
was 4 for 4, including a homer. The
Twins helped the Royals to a fiverun sixth by committing errors on
three successive plays as Kansas
City scored all its runs with two
outs.
Retiever Tom Gordon pitched 2
'1/3 innings for the victory. Gordon
(1-6) had lost IO straight decisions
since his last win on Aug. 14, 1991.
Rangers 14, Mariners 3
At Arlington, Texas, Juan Gonzalez homered for the fourth time
10 five official at-hats . Gonzalez
followed his three-homer game
Sunday against the Twins with a
440-foot solo shot in the third ining
·off Clay Parker. Gonzalez's !3th
home run of the season was the
longest at Arlington Stadium this
year.
Kevin Brown became the third
nine-game winner in the major
leagues this season.

Vinton Raceway results
Winners in a shortened version
of Vinton Raceway action Sunday
were (by class and place):
Four-cylinder peorge
Adkins (Meigs County, no town
listed) , Keith Faught (Wellston),
Tony Roush (Reedsville)
Eight-cylinder - Paul Shuler
(Langsville). Rick Blake (Dog
Ridge), Rick Bishop (Jackson)
There
powder puff mcmg because_;,;.~~-

TROY-BILT"
TRAIL BLAZER &lt;' ~
Sicklebar Mower
Clear 1000 sq.
ji If/ )II.\"/ 5
mimtl r!.fi with
thts ]8" w;Jc

Off- /a~ ·n mo~ ·cr

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woodr !&gt;rush.
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POMEROY
992-6687

.1!1

sr.re Auro I
lnsur•nce Comp•nles

·...

__::____:..,

ond. He finished with one walk and
three strikeouts.
Sabo led off the Reds ftfth with
his fourth homer of the season to
tie the game. Bill Doran doubled
one out later and scored on Bib
Roberts' two-out single to center
off losing pitcher Gil Heredia (2-2)
for a 2-1 Reds lead
The Reds added a run in the
sixth when Dave Martinez walked,
moved to third on two ground QU{S
and scored on Sabo's single to center off Bryan Hickerson. Paul ,
O'Neill's sacrifice fly off Kelly
Downs in the eighth made it4•1.
Elsewhere in the NL it -was
Montreal 6, New York 0; Phil8delphia 7, Pinsburgh O; San Diego 3,
Houston 2; Atlanta 4, Los Angeles
2; and Chicago swept a doubleheader from St. Louts, 5-2 in l3
innings and 6-4.
Expos 6, Mets 0
Ken Hill pitched his first career
one-hiuer, and some of his Montreal teammates thought it should
have been even beuer.
The only hit off Hill was staning pitcher Anthony Young's
infield single to shortstop with two
outs in the fifth inning. Hill went
on to beat the New York Mets 6-0
Monday night at Montreal. but
after the game everyone was talking about Young's hit.
Shortstop Tom Foley ranged to
his right and might have thrown
Young out had he made the play,
but he bobbled the ball. Official
scorer Bob Mann said he ruled the
play a single because the ball was
hit deep into the hole.
"If there was any question on
the pan of the official scorer, he
should have put an error up and
waited for p clean hit," Foley said.
"We're at home and Ken's pitch-

ing a great game. I know the official scorer has 10 make a decision
on the spot I feel bad personally. It
wasn't a sharply hit ball. I couldn't
find the ball. I just wish it had been
an error. It's a tough play going
into the hole backhand."
Young agreed with the way
Mann saw it.
"It was definitely a hit. He
made a good play just to get to the
ball. The way I run, it would have
been close," said Young.
Several Expos disagreed with
Mann· s call and made motions to
the press box after the game ended.
"If Foley had come up cleanly,
he would have thrown him out,"
Hill said. "But I'm just happy to
win. I felt real on . I don't know
what it's about with the Mets, but I
have good success against them."
Hill, who struck out eight and
walked four, blanked the Mets 4-0
with a four -hi uer at New York on
April 10 - the Mets' home opener. He's 6-I tifelime against them.
Archi Cianfrocco and Rick
Cerone each drove in two runs for
the Expos.
Phillies 7, Pirates 0
At Veterans Stadium, Curt
Schilling pitched a three-hitter for
his ftrst major league shutout and
doubled in two runs in Philadelphia's si~-run second inning.
Schilling (5-3) struck out one
and issued an intentional walk.
Mariano Duncan hit a three-run
homer in the big second inning and
Darren Daulton homered in the
seventh.
Padres 3, Astros 2
At Jack Murphy Stadium, Bruce
Hurst, backed by homers from
Tony Gwynn and Darrin Jackson,
pitched a four-hiuer to beat Houston. Hurst (6-4) won his third

suaight game and ftfth in his last :
six, four of which have been can- ·
plete games.
Gwynn broke a 2-2 tie with one
out in the seventh with his fifth ·
homtr.

'

Pete Harnisch (3-6) allowed :
eight hits in 6 1!3 innings.
Braves 4, Dodgers 2
At Dodger Stadium, David JUS·
tice homered and drove in three
runs as Atlanta edged above the .
.500 mart foc the first lime in two ·
months.
Chartie l..eibrandt (5-2), allowed :
an unearned run and five hits in ·
five innings as he remained unbeat- ·
en in his last six starts. Ramon
Martinez (3- 3) allowed six hits and
all four runs in five innings.
Cubs 5, Cardiuls 2 (13)
Cubs 6, Canlluls 4

At Busch Stadium, Gary Scott :
and Jose Vizcaino, each batting .
under .200, keyed a four-run 13thinning rally for Chicago in the forst
game of a doubleheader.
Chicago completed a sweep
with a 6-4 victory behind Ryne :
Sandberg, who homered and drove ·
in three runs . Frank Castillo :
worked six innings for the victory. :

MANLEY'S GARAGE
&amp; WRECKER
SERVICE
S 10 tlorth Setond Ave .,
Middleport
OPE fl 9·5 r.1on r• ,
9 to 1 S,ltur cJ.l·,

2~

HOUR TOWING
992·3451

The Farmers Bank Invites All Its
Customers To Two More Fun-Filled Trips

JUNE 25

AUGUST 11·15

WORK OF THE

WORST WEEDS!

Jaclyn Swartz. lo the second row are L••n
Eastman, Cynthia CotteriU, Nikki Bentley, AIJt.
ley Roach, Cheryl Jewel~ and Amber Blackwdl.
In the third row are Joy O'Brien, Hadler Hlld·
son, Vema Compston, Lori Kelly, Anne B~
and Amanda Musser. In the rourtb row •n
Kennedy, Taryn Doidge, Vanessa Compstoa,
Katarina Turner and Ron Logan. Not present
when picture was taken was Missy Sisson.

(Continued from Page 4) _
_ _ _ __ _
NL actl.On ... ___

MAKE QUICK

"LinLE NASHVILlE"

AMISH TRIP

BUNSON, MISSOURI
'4 Nights Lodging
•Presley's Mountain Music Jubilee
Theater
•75 Music Hall and The Albert Brumley
Show
•Lowe's Music Show Featuring Loretta
' Lynn
•Me Tillis Theater Featuring Mel Tillis
•And Much More
Deposit of SSO by J•ly 6

NOilTHERN OHIO
•sugar Creek's Swiss Village
•eroad Cheese House
"The Winery
•Apllne Alpa, "Switzerland Over
Here"
•werther's Carvings

Reservatiotts To Be Pcid 11 f•l by Jwly 74

Rlltrvatioas Due JvH 15

Call Joanne William8 at 992-2136 For More Information

J
I

Your
Bank
#Jtli(f!:
...
,__,

Hunter education course slated
A hunter education course will be offered by the Department of
Natural Resources' Division of Wildlife at Forlced Run Sportsman
Club from June 26 to June 28.
The course is offered in prepamtion for the 1992-93 hunting
license sale to begin on Sept. I. Ohio youngsters under the age of
16 who have completed a hunter education course will be able to
purchase a special reduced price youth hunting license foc $7.
In July the Outdoor Skills Section will conduct a drawing from
the youngsters training in June. One of the youngsters will be
selected to receive the ftrst number one youth hunting license at a
special presentation to be held in AugusL
For fwther infonnation or to enroll for the class, residents may
contact Meigs County game protector Keith Wood at 985-4400.

LADY MARAUDER CAMPERS- Tweutyone girls took part in the Marauder girls basketball camp, beld last week at Meigs High School.
The camp open to girls io grades 9-12 in the
coming school year and was was conducted by
Marauder bead girls coach Ron Logan. Logan
was assisted by Mike Kennedy and Kevin
Logan. In the rronl row are (L-R) Melissa Whaley, Amanda Musser, Rebecca Scott, Stacey
Price, Erin Krawsczyn, Charla Roach and

J~,l .. tners

Fs
O'DEU LUMIER
COMPIIIY
&amp;:U Main St., Pomeroy, OH.
1182o6500

*•*

u a a

L_

.Member F,OJ..C..

I

•

Bani{

&amp; Sovings Company
/II W• " .1 ' ;t't 'f'flfl S!H•f •l

I 1 0 llox

d

() 2 (,

f' " ""' '"Y. OH . ~5769
f114 - ~'1? · 2t36

II I II II'

r0

7

Box :1:19

Tupp&lt;'rs f'lains. OH •15783
li14-667-316t

'I

1

�-.

,The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
TUesday, June 9, 1992
Page--6

.
·:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------Community calendar
: 'Tom'~.should quit the guilt trip
-

Dear All~ ~rs:- fm· a 20yeaNlid"woman who has to 1111r a
friend out or suicide at least lhRi
times a week. --rom • says !hat
. his life clepends.1la me IPd !hal if
he doesn't live to ·see his 22Dd
birthday, it will be my fauiL
1 met Tom when we were both
·· m high school. Some of the tids
. made flDl of him because he has
a congenital deformity. As a child,
, he had several surgeries on his
face and looks preny good but DO!
complelely nt:m~al. 1 felt sorry for
him and became his friend There
, was never any romance bet~ us,
, and I was sure he knew that. •·
· - Last year, Tom introduced melO
a pal of his because he thought we
would be perfect for each other. He
. was right. but now he regrets 'it
because he wants me for himself
: : Tom has beea seuding me flG~
· and expensive gifts, and when I
: · tell him to please stop, he becomes
angry.
He is beginning to mate my
life miserable by phoning at least
10 limes a day, and I'm not
exaggerating. He sometimes calls a1
3:00 or 4:00 in lhe morning and
wakes up everyone in the house.
When lttU him he has no right to
' phone at such hours, he starts to ay
: ·and says that he has a gun to his
; "·fiead and that if 1 hang up he will
. _kill himself.
·-~ _ I've begged him to see a psychialrisl but he refuses. What can 1 do?
: ; This guy is driving me up the wall

'

answering machine. It is frustraling
to hear, :rm not home -- leave a
message, bocallse you have no idea
whether or not you've rtaehed the
correct number.
.
Another annoyance IS when vou
ANN LANDERS
run into a 4-year·old kid who
"IJ9l. LooADa.._
msttucts you to leave your name.
I'm sure the .~arents of these
children thmk 11 s cule, but I c~
and 1 feel toLally helpless. -- assure .you that most people dont
lRAPPED IN TEXAS
apprecwe bemg tnstructed by a 4DEAR TEXAS: You and your year-old.
parents should meet with Tom's
I ran across one nut recently
parents 11 once to make sure they who had tnuned his parrot to say,
know bow important it is for him Ill "Wait for the beep.• Thai darned bird
get professional help.
gave me the creeps. Maybe r~ crazy
Tell Tom, in their presence, that but I thmk a person has the nghtto
you wiU 00 looger allow him to hold expect a human vo1ce on the other
you hoslllge to his sickness and it is end of the hne when he makes a
up to him to try to get well.
call:
,
Offer to phone him occasionally
Its too bad some people don l
at your COIIveoience tocha!, butteD ~ealize the telephone is not a toy. It
him not to phone you because you IS truly one of the most fantasuc
are getting an wtlisted number. Then mvenuons of the age and should be
do iL Torn is mentally unstable. If, accorded the digmty It deserves ...
heaven forbid, he should take his A MICHIGAN READER .
own life, it is not your fauiL
DEAR MICHIGAN. Your
Dear Aao Loaders: When I message came through loud and
read the letter from "Earnest But clear • and I thank. you.
Numberless." whooomplainedaboul .. Ann Landers late;t booklet,
people who leave messages on
Nuggtts and Doozlts. has everyanswering machines but fail to thing fro'!' the oU/rageously funny
leave their Jlhone number, I knew I to the pt}lglliUUly 111Sighl[w. Send a
had to write.
self-addressed, long, bUSIMSS-sut
1wOOc. in a store and spend hours envtloiN and a. check or money
every week calling customers about orikr for~ (this uac/udes postage
their special orders. I know very well and handling) to: Nuggets. c/o AM
that a big part of the problem is the Landers, P.O. Box I 1562, Chicago,
kind of greeting th.a! is put on the ~.)6061/.()562. (In Clllltlda, send

Ann

Landers

==•&lt;"

''

'

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

or

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - "Team Up
With Jesus: Winne~ Meet on AUStar Street" will be the theme for
Riverview Community Vacation
Bible School, to be held at
Riverview School ncar Reedsville
through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
nightly. Classes for ages three
through adult. Public invited.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church on Texas Road
will be Monday through Friday
from 9:30-11:30 am. daily.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Chester United Methodist
Church will be Monday through
Friday from 9:15-11:30 a.m. daily.
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Vctcrans and the Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its regular
meeting Monday at the hall, 124
Buuernul Avenue, Pomeroy .
Refreshments will be served at 6
p.m . and meeting at 7 p.m.
RACINE - The Board of Public
Affairs will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
at council chambers. Cemetery
Trustees will meet immediately
after (8 p.m.)

will meet Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 7 p.m. in the
cafeteria. Pelar Gonzales, State
Nurse of Hope; will be the speaker.
HARRISONVILLE · The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold
a free blood pressure clinic at the
townhouse Tuesday from 10 a.m .
to noon. Members are to bring
potluck for their dinner. All members urged to auend.
LONG BOTTOM - Bill and
Phyllis Cadle wiD speak during the
Evangelistic Outreach Program at
the Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public. FellowshiJI wiD follow.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Cenler.
POMEROY · The Bi~ Bend
Sternwheel Association w1ll meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpenlers
Hall in Pomeroy. Anyone inlercsted in working with the festival is
urged to atlend.
STIVERS VILLE - Tent revival
at Stiversville Word of Faith
Church has been extended through
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Public invited.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
RACINE - The Southern Athlet- Wednesday at 8:30am. in the conic Boosters will meet Monday at ference room of Bank One in
the high school. All coaches and Pomeroy. All members auend.
parents are urged to altcnd.
POMEROY - Roger Gilmore
BEDFORD - The Bedford and Tim Glaze will present a proTownship Trustees will meet Mon- gram at the Meigs County Library
Wednesday at 2 Jl.m. The (rogram
day at 7 Jl.m. at the town hall.
will consist of a demonstration on
making model rockets and also a
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High rocket launch. All children are
School Class of 1972 will hold an encouraged to aucnd.
organizational meeting Tuesday at
RACINE- Racine Chapler No.
noon at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy to plan a gel- 134 OES will have inspection of
together for alumni. Anyone inler- officers Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
esled in assisting is encouraged to Inspecting officers will be the worthy grand matron of the Grand
auend.
Chapler of Ohio, Marilyn Bennen.
POMEROY - The Meigs Unit Racine is the home of chapler of
of the American Cancer Society deputy grand matron of District 25,

Kay Spencer.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township TrusteeS wiD hold a special meeting Thursday at II a.m. at
the Shade River Forestry Building
on Joppa Road in Reedsville.
POMEROY - There will be a
dinner at the senior citizens center
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 56:30 p.m. Cost of the meal is $3.
Baked sleak, mashed potatoes and
gravy, succotash, cofe slaw, roll
and beverage will be served. Ice
cream available at an extra charge.
Music by The Classics. Free-will
offering. Public invited.
CHESTER - The Chester Township Trustees will meet Thursday at
I p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.

June 9,1992

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Graduates who insisted on Queen
song leave without ceremony
By JOSEPH NEFF
Associated Press Writer
CLIFTON, N.J . - Roman
Catholic school students whose
graduation ceremony was canceled
in a flap over a song by bisexual
rock star Freddie Mercury spent the
last day of the school year on a
campus ringed by police.
Two AIDS activists were arrested Monday in front of Sacred Heart
School. And Principal Donald
Quinlan, who last week called off
the eighth-grade graduation after
students protested his decision to
bar them from playing the song
"We Are the Champions," left the
school under police guard.
Some of the school's 19 graduates said Quinlan banned the 1977
hit from the June 12 ceremony
because Mercury, lead singer of the
group Queen, was bisexual. Mercury died last year of AIDS.
The song makes no direct reference to homosexuality and is often
played at spQrting events and used

in sports videos because of its title
refrain. Students wanted to play it
during a slide presenlation recapping the year.
Joe Slawinski, 13, said the song
is about overcoming adversity. "It
tells how hard we worked in our
eight years here,'' he Said.
Quinlan refused to answer questions Monday. But Monsignor
Julian Varettoni, pastor of Sacred
Heart, said the problem wasn't
AIDS and sexuality.
"If they wanted to sing 'I'm
Popeye the Sailor Man,' that
wouldn't he appropriale at a religious graduation," Varettoni said.
"This has nothing to do with the
lifestyle of the author."
Ernie Juray, 14, said the school
is planning a ceremony for lhe 10
students who didn't protest the ban.
"It's pilting friend against
friend,'' he said.
Students invited the militant
group ACT-UP, or AIDS Coalition
to Unleash Power, to prolest. The

Micky Foster, Eagle Ridge
Road, Racine, found a wedding
balloon at his home Monday mornIng.
The balloon was released by
Don and Myra Crosby of Greensburg, Ind., in celebration of their
wedding. A note attached to the red
and white balloons requested that
notificatioo he sent upon its discovery.
The Fosler's quickly responded
to the newly married couple that
their balloon had been found.

Flynn, saying tbere are a lot or other items,
including bats and sticks that are used in violeat
incidents aad tbey are not banned from sale.
Some tetoagers have reportedly been filling the
guns witb cleuing nuids. (AP)
MALE ARTIST OF THE YEAR· Alan Jackson waves to the
crowd al'ter re£eiviog the Male Artist the Vear award and the
Single or the V ear award ror ''Don't Rock the Jukehox," Monday
night at the TNN-Music City News Country Awards show at the
Grand Ole Opry House in NashviUe. Jackson also woo Album or
the Year ror "Don't Rock the Jukebox." (AP)

water and gets its increased power
Associated Press Writer
from a hand pump.
BOSTON - It's called the
Several companies make similar
Super Soaker, it squirts wata up to high-powered toys, though Flynn
50 feet and it's all the rage witb the wgeted the Super Soaker, made by
younger seL
the Philadelphia -based Larami
After one squin-gun fight csca- Corp.
Jated into a fatal shooting, and proAI Davis, Larami's executive
pic co mplained they had been vice Jlresident, said real guns arc
sprayed with chemicals, some say the problem.
the souped·up version of the old
"ll's just too much to comprcwatcr pistol is a bazanl and should hend that anyone would think the
, be pulled from StiR shelves.
toy did the damage," Davis said.
,
Mayor Raymond Flynn sought "I'm a father and a grandfather. I
: to do JUS I that io ·a leuer sent tG wouldn't want to put anything in
local merchants Mooday. He 'Cited · their lives that would endanger
' the fatal shooting of a 15-year-QJd them."
boy afler a water gun figh~ saying
Christopher Miles was shot to
the time may have come ''for death May 29 in Boston after walk; adults to discolllllf': the use of !';JY ing into an argument that broke out
1 guns to simulate VJOicot· t~:b\'lt}( · during a fight with Super Soaker.l,
Flynn urged parents and others po~cc said.
; to discourage children from usi.og
Last ..W.:, a woman told police
~ ~· the guns, which cost from $5 to she and her 4-year-old child were
• ~50, to spray "unsusJieCting sprayed in the eyes with bleach by
; ·• llystanders."
two youths using water guns.
' . - The Bradlees department store Boston police say they have
chain said it would temporarily received dozens of similar comremove the guns from its three plaints.
• ~Boston stores to honor the mayor's
In Michigan, police in Genesee
C::~ieques~ then consider a penniiiCD\ and Flint count1es handled com ~~ for those oullets.
plaints last week from motorists
•,: "We're dismayed, because who said they we~e spayed by car. · these are essentially a toy," said loads of squin gun-totiRtl teens.
f Coleman Nee, a.spokesman fll' die
Flint Police Lt. John Steele said
' .,Braintree-based COlJIIIUIY· "kfew ' most of the incidents were merely
: isolared incidents arc putting a bid annoying, though motorists could
\ light on this.''
be distracred by the sudden jets of
:
"It's the most Slllpid thing I've water.
~ ever heard in my life," saicJ
Police in New Caslle, Pa., say a
• Michael Slocum, owner of 16-,-ear-old girl was shot in the
! Slocum's lOY shop in Soutb thwnb Saturday after someone in
i Boston. "There arc other items diM • the t:ruck sbe was riding in fired a
: cituse incidents and accidents evecy large squirt gun into a crowd at a
· day of the week, Sllch as baseball srreet coner.
: bats and hockey sticb. Asc you
In Pooland, Ore., 13-,ear-old
: going to·ban'all thesO'~ • Jeff Ptegcllt modified a bigh-pow: '- The Super Soakm oome in me ered squirt gun by replacing the
sizes. The largest holds 2 liters of plastic canister with a .glass

'

bottle. The bonle exploded May 17
and shards of glass severed the
carotid artery in Pregent's neck. He
spent two nights in intensive care.
"I pumped it up a whole bunch
or times so that the pressure would
get like really tight, and it exploded," Pregent said at a May 20 news
conference called to warn others of
the danger.
Davis said the toys were introduced two years ago and are now
the company's hotlest item, semng
widely across the United Suues and
Ewope.
''Any major retailer has the gun,
and if they don't have it then
they're out of it," Davis said.

or

Wildlife service to
review policy on
panda importations
COLUMBUS (AP) - A federal
agency said it will review its
importation policy on giant pandas
because of controversy over an
exhibit a1 the city zoo, a newspaper
reported today.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will publish a notice in the
Federal Regisler inviting comment
on the policy, according to a letter
from smice Director John Turner
to the secretariat of tbe Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species.
The Columbus Dispatch was
given a copy of the May 28 letter
by the service.
The secrewiat, based in Lausanne, Switzerland, had asked the
service to reconsider its decision to
grant an import permit to the
Columbus Zoo. A three-month
exhibit of two giant pandas from
China opened at the 100 Friday.

ATLANTA (AP)- To para·
phrase the Beatles, Manana Shevardnadze has G-g-g-g-georgia on
her mind. Back in the U.S., back in
the U.S .. back in the U.S. of A.
The daughter of former Soviet
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze is setting up shop in Atlanla
, to fUm documentaries.
· Asked why she dido 't open her
business in New Yorlc or California, Ms. Shevardnadze said that
after several visits to Atlanta: "I
got to love this town. I feel a! home
here." Her daughter, Tam una
Mash viii, is a student at Emory
University and her son-in -law ,
David, attends Georgia State.
So far she hasn't opened an
office and has no financial backing,
but she said she hopes to open
offices in Europe and in Atlanta's
sister city of Tbi~si in the Republic
of Georgia, where her father heads
an elected governing council.

Mother and daughter
return from Arkansas trip

\

LARISSA LONG

To graduate

Sometimes you just gotta put kids in their plare. And when you're
on the road, that place is budded in their own safety belts, and finnly. Do this, and
your kids will be more than ready for the long road ahead of them.

1011 IDlD LWII AUJr Hilt AlOllY.
D F11111 SAFETY III

Larissa l.ong, who will graduate
Saturday from Ohio University, has
been accepted at the University of
l.ouisville in the School of Physical
Therapy.
Long's degree from Ohio Uni·
versity, College of Health and
Human Services, will be in sports
medicine. She has been a student
athletic trainer for the past four
years. During her four years at
Ohio University, she has maintained a grade point averBge of 3.1
and has been on the dean's list
every quarter.
When she graduates Saturday it
will be with very high honors.
Larissa is the daugh1er of Roy and
Maida Long, Pomeroy, and a grad·
uate of Eastern High School.

Linda Ferrell, Syracuse, and her
daughter, Nancy Holbrook of New
Haven, W. Va., recently returned
from a trip to the Ozarlc Mountains
in Arkansas.
The left Syracuse May 18 driving to Dayton to join David and
Joanna Ferrell. From there they
traveled through Kentucky and
Tennessee, stopping in Memphis to
tour Grdccland, the architecturally
impressive home of Elvis Presley
where an aunt still lives.
From there they went to the
Ozark Mountains and Fairfield
Bay, a recreation and retirement
development in the mountains.
There they were joined by Damon
and Agnes Ferrell of Orlando, Fla.

In

..

Frame
NEW &amp; USED
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODIIS
992·7013 or

.

992-5553

OR TOLL FREE .

1·800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO
"B.,.. ¥011 To R..eowr
l'o..,. ,,._,_.Ill"
614·949-2202
4/21/U/1-

Spaces available

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
4+92-lla

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992·5591

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
AU MAlES
Bring II In Or We
PllkU~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
Acron F,.. r.t Offlco
2171. S.Coool Sl.
POMIIOY, OliO

3r.23192/tfn

NOW OPEN!

CALIFORNIA
TANS

15 Sessions ....$25
12 S.ulons .... $20
1 Sesslon....$2.25

SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK aad
LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERY1CE
REASONABLE RATES

992·7553
POMEROY, OH.
s-11·'92·1 ... pd.

1121~

CHUCK'S BOAT·
LOW lABOR RATE
15% OFF On Most
Boat Parts
Co. Rd. 3,
Lading c..... k Rd.
Middleport

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949-2627 or
1-110()..837-1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
Roaidenliall Commwcial
FroaEoUmaiH

742-3030

4r.l618211n

5N1 mo. pd.

FOR SALE
Agriculture
lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
· •New Homes
•Gara es
•Comp ete
Remodeling
Sto" &amp; Co:J;are

9

F EE UTI

Millwood, W.Va.
4-9-tfn

2-1-92-tln

6 ML Out Eagle Ridge

Rd. or 1ML From Basltan

I

New SCA WOLFF
Bed Sl24
Call for ApplToday

I

'1\iltfiryn

'Meaiows

949·2123

WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa
36970 Bal Rua load
P-oy,Ohlo

"SPECtAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Cuatom Painting•

BUWnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

614-992-2242

PUBLICATION

IERWOODS
HOME REPAIR
SERVICE

STRAWBERRIES
TAYLOR'S BERRY
PATCH
KERR ROAD
614-446-8692
or 245-5178
LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY IS
CLOSING!
THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 6:00 P.M.
Last Day For Appointments Is
FRIDAY, JUNE 12
PRIC!i REDUCED!

.. 5&amp;0.100 Wld

owner flnardng of \4) to 10% of pun::hue
11110Url may bo pooablo lor quotlylng peo·
son 1a buy very rKe home on 3'1. Kratln
Roclne. 4 BA. 3 bill,_, 2 -·rented I
BR ..... P"""'rty , _ &lt;.100 oq. ft. l11m1
bldg .

~

BIRTHDAY,
JEFF &amp; BOBI

•SAND oGAAVEL oOIRT
oUMESTONE

(614) 992-3470
511 51'9211 mo.

412/92/lfn

TEAFORD GOLF
AND TROPHY
985-3961
Lessons 512.50
6 LessoDS 560.00
Cl.b Rep*,

CAIPEIITIY
PLUMIIIS, WIRIIG,
cunoa 1utu
UlHIOOM
YAIIliES

Trop~ies,

949-2671

Plaqles

Old Badges .

UCIHE, OH.

5126/1 mo.

6-3-'92-1 - ·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
Hew Homes • Vinyl Siding
Hew Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMER{IAl. nnd Rf..liiDI:NTIAl.
l'llEI: I:STIMA'I'I:S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls I
2112192

FREE ESTIMATES
NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING
WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?

STILL LOOK

GREAT!
HAPPY

ES

985·4473
667·6.119

304-273-SSSS

$20.00

The pt1ot hos- _

-·

12-5-tfn

Call614-992-6637
St. Rl. 1
Cheshire, OH.

AUTO REPAIR

Call614-992·71041or

Debbie Babbit~ R.N. local WIC under are under immunized.
The WIC program serves chilDirector (at 1he Meigs County
Health Department) is reminding dren from birth to five years of age
Jlarents there is a major campaign and Mrs. Babbitt stales one of the
abreast in the United States to objectives for 1992 is to improve
heighten public awareness regard- immwtization rates •
Further information on immuing lhe imponance of child immunization
may be obtained by caUing
nizations.
This campaign is addressed the Meigs County Health Depart·
fully in the book Healthy People menl at 992-6626 from 8 a.m. to 4
2000 (National Health Promollon p.m. Monday through Friday.
and Disease Prevention Objectives).
The U.S. has reduced the inciAny crafter who would lilt:e to
dence of infectious diseases signifidisplay
their crafts is invited 10 do
cantly, in the past 100 years: there
so
at
the
Meigs County Public
are vinually no cases of diptheria
Library
in
Pomeroy during Herand poliomyelitis today. The very
itage
Weekend
Saturday and Sunyoung and the very old are at
day.
Further
information
on this
mcreased risk for very infectious
diseases. Nationwide (and in Ohio) may be obLBined by calling Ruth
50 percent of children age two and Powers at992-581l

•LIGHT HAULING

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

Welcome Slates

and Jack and Agnes Wilson of
Miami.
They all them drove to Branson,
Mo. which is a country-western 5
Happy Ads
center described by the travelers as ;:::;::;;:;::::;;::;;;:::;;~
rivaling Nashville, where they BORN IN ,57 &amp; ,58
atlended shows by Mel Tillis and
Willie Nelson.
THE MUSSER
They left he Ozarks on May 23 •
BOYS
drove to St. l 'Uis, Mo. to tour the
Botanical Gardens and see the
Gateway to the West which rises
640 feel into the air. The group
took the tram to the top of the Arch
where you can see for evaything in
a 30 mile radius.
The travelers returned home via
Illinois and Indiana on May 25.

Local WIC issues advisory

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

CHARLIE'S

EXCAVATING

AVAILABLE.
SEmc BYSTEIIS,
HOME BITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCL£ARING,
DRIVEWAYS lNSTAU£0
UMESTONE-TRUCIONG

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

7131f9

BUUUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TIIACKHOE WORK

.' ....-

•

By TONY ROGERS

HOWARD

•

\

·Super squirt guns awash in squabble
.over safety; parents oppose sales

_

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

Balloon found

WHALEY'S.AUTO
PARTS

co.

PARK CITY, Utah (AP) Harry Reems, who appeared in
hundreds of pornographic films and
co-starred in "Deep Thtoat," is a
happily married church truslee.
FREE ESTIMATES
Television talk shows have been
afler Reems to !ell viewers about
992-3838
his films and his 30-year struggle
'-&amp;-' '·1 mo.
with alcoholism, but he says his
sole pwpose these days is to save
people from killing themselves
with alcohol.
"I know today that those of us
who are spared, every day we live, P.O. lox 194-W. . Aloy
we live with the grace of God,''
RAiOHIO
said the 44-year-old Rooms, now a
(F.,..)y
IWto s..l
real estale agent in this resort town
I
40 miles east of Salt Lake City. He
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
was born Herbie Streicher.
He says he was given a glass of Mowen • ~Saws
scotch by his father at age II, and
• Weetleaten
ended up drinking a gallon of
614-949·2804
vodka a day. His movie earnings
bought him a palatial Malibu beach
home, but he laler wound up living
• Tr"•
Willi" AII•Y
in a l.os Angeles supermarket trash
=
!,
·bin asking for handouts.
G
•' -N·
On July I, Reems will celebrale
three years of sobriety. He's
1
become a trustee in the Parle City
Community Christian Church and
~14·92·111
he's been married for two years.
"I have learned what a miracle
is," he said

,
WATER GUN DEBATE· Bostoo toy store
owner Michael Slocum d,.,.... . llis IliOn Mooday holding one or the popor lligla pressure
· water guns that Bostoa Mayur'Raymoad Flyu
want~ to ban. Slocum dlsapes willl Mayor

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVKE
handful of ACT-UP members were
oumumbered by police. Two were · -floom Addl11ona
arrested for obstructing traffic by -GuU.Work
-£-.!Mil Plumblnti
lying down in the parking lot exit.
-flooftng
"They're learning there's -Interior I Exlwlor
hypocrisy in Catholic education,
Palnli'E\
(FREE TlMATES)
and the bitter irony is that the
church has learned nothing from
V. C. YOUNG Ill
this," Lucy Matijakovich said as
'992-6215
she waited for her grandson, a sevPotntroy, Ohio
enth-grader.
Virginia Ubaldini, who was
waiting to pick up her nephew, disagreed.
"You don't question God, and
these priests and princi~s are his
apostles here," she swd. "If you
don 'tlike it, send them to a public
&amp;
school."
.,.,., B. ,.. Orrr 01 Palolfog
"Some Catholics say gay peo-Lot Us Do /r For Y011•
ple are bad people and arc committing mortal sins," Slawinski said.
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
''And some Catholics sar we
FilE Esnum
should love everybody. That s the
HAVE IEFERIN&lt;ES
side I'm on."
lol«o6pat-...,sap
Clifton is working-class suburb
Ah• ' ,... 614-985-41 ao
...
10 miles from New Yorlc City.

People in
the news

POMEROY - The Trinity
Church of Pomeroy, Second and
Lynn Streets, will have an ice
cream social Thursday, Friday and
Saturday of Heritage Weekend
from II am. to 5:30p.m. Each day
homemade chicken and noodles,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, ham, ham
sa lade, JIOtato salad, cole slaw.
baked beans, cakes, different beverages and homemade ice cream
will be available. Flavors of ice
cream are chocolate, vanilla, peach,
lemon, strawberry, pineapple,
banana and several special flavo~
available by the dip. Food is available for eating-in the air-conditioned social rooms or for carryout. For carry-out call, 992-3172.

Business Services

"Wt Ott The Jo&amp; Done Now"
Call AI Tromm
614·742·2328
20Yn. hp.

llflrtiiCII

lnlaWe

GI.ASSIFIED
ADS

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Appnyotll•lwlwotl
Htosittg ProdiCis.

35 Lots &amp;

LOTS FOR SALE
BEAlJTIFUL LOCATION
Nice Place For Doublewldes and
To Raise A Family
PHONE, WATER &amp; ELECTRIC ALREADY
AVAILABLE

Will Sell Part or AII

Call304-773-5118
or 304-773-5186 AftP.r 5
ASK FOR AL

G11&amp;ty Hi EffidHCy Air
CoNtio•ers, Heat p,._~s.
F1naces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.
Mobile
1391 Safford Sdtool Rd.

Betmelb

Cal

0

�Pag1 8 The Dally Sentinel
Announcements
3

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

35

a

Lots

&amp; Acreage

51

no mobile
tlomMo, 10 min. on Rt. 2 N, price

Announcements

lo10 Approa. 5 Ac. Eo. 11 Ill SW
Of GoHipolls, Horrtson Twp. 200
Ft. Ao.d Frontage. County

llllp, 1~1113.

FrH Adult T1lk llrw.
1·7M-M2-'IQ37
Uvo, Ono On One.

Wo1or. M1ooo To M,OOO Eo.; 21

Ac For t20,000; 814-831-8464,
Ray.

3 ftmat.. &amp; 1 rntla kitten, Utter
7 wile otd, 304.e75-3654.

tr~~lned,

" Either we squeeze more taxes out ol the
subjects or we turn this place rnto a bed
and breakfast ..

1192-2023.

614·94~

2014.

11

Help Wanted

Buu11ful mate cat, neuter-a, - - - - - ' ' - - - - - - rtll frttndly. 614-446-4063.
AVON I All Aru1 I Shlrlay
Cutot a ..ns, To Plant Or Ta S~1r1, 304-615-1429.

Gill Rld Of Ground Motea_ 614&amp; Nfrlget'ltor,

r1~lr, ~-87S-3816 .

Cooko, welt,..saas, apply In
peraon.
Country
Kltctlan,

nMd Racine.

Lost &amp; Found

21

41

313.

FoWMI: medium dog, long whllt
fMir, brown epol on back, blut
eVil, brown eye, 1114· st92-2711.

Experi1nc1d carptt lnatallw,
tumlturt delivery,
tull-tlrnt.
Apply:
Tomorrow,
tO-Noon.
Topoe Furniture, 151 Second
While t.m•l• c.t: 1 blu. I 1 Avtnul., Gtlllpottt. No phone
grMn l'fl, on Rt. 35 ,.., SV
Clneme, 814--446..e201.
Halmylllt I Nail Technician
Guar~nllld Cllentllt. 614-446Yard Sale
7

Opportunity

All Y1rd S.iee Mu.t Be P11d In

NMd Experienced Hut Pump
S.rvlc1 Men. Must Know HM1
Pumps, Fumacu, Air Condlllonsro, Send Wort&lt; Hletory
To: CLA 222, clo Galllpolla Dally
Trlbune.l..~S Third Avenue, GaJ..
llpolll, ut1 45631.

Adv1nce. DEADliNE! 2:00 p.m.
tht day be tor. the ad 11 to run. s.om.on. wan Equipment To
Sundl)' edition • 2:00 p.m. M•, Rtkt, Bale, Approx. 5
~rkUoy. llondoy edition • 2,00 Acree, Hay In Bidwell. 814--388p.m. Saturdly.
8788 .
Big Gll'lge S.le. All new mtr·
chandiH: tlaehllght• 50C: Razor
and twadn pack 50t pad locka
SOc rach mal.. 501 meny other
lleme, all new, from 2Sc
Thwtdey · Sllurday, Junt 11,
12, 10, ~. 71 Yhw StrMI, Gal·
I polls.
Bla S.ltl: jUM 10, 11. Clolhet,
enllquee, looll, .tc. At Porter,
w1tch for atgn..

Gange Sale: June 8-a.tOth.
(llon1• Tun, Wsd) ia.m.-5p.m.
112 MI.. Out Georgn Cre•k
AOMI, From Rt.l 81by, Chlldrtn,
'Adun Clothing, Glauwart,

s.n

Trucking Compony S.eklng Eaperilnctd
Working
Dlnll
Mach1nlc Good B1nerMs And
Weges. 814-682-6e13
Wentld: Mtlntlnanct Engtn. ..
Must bt U.lll•d In hNUng, elr
•~trk:al .
conditioning,
Operation• ln twlmmlng pool •
sew1g1 lrNtmtnt plant htlplul.
Pay comm1nsurate with IX ·
perience. R1ply: Bor ClA 223,
cJo Galllpolle Dally Tribunt, 825
Third Ave., Gllllpolla, OH ~5631 .

Wlll Do Babyalttlng In My Home
Preltn~bly A.gn 2-5. Call 614-992-5135.

Al'ld Ptpper Sh111tra, All S01t1

Mlac. Mtme. Alln!Shl,..

Pomeroy,

&amp; VIcinity

Retrain
Now!IISoulhuat•m
Bualnnt Coll1gs, Spring Vatlty
PlaZI . Call Todly, 614-446-436711
Rtgltttratlon 190-05-12149.

Pt.... nt Aldp, Jun• 11 6 12,
•...-rythln4iJ chup. ~-

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

~~" PMrsoo AucUon Comp~ny,

fuJI time euctlonMr, complltl

1uctlon
.. rvlea.
lk:tnNd
tM,Ohlo &amp; West Vlrv'nla , 304 ·

7n-5715.

9

Wanted to Buv

Otd marbtee, loyt, comk bookl,
lantemt, pk:tur.. and tumlhKt,
Osby Martln, IM·It92-JW1
$tanding timber, will p1y bilr
l)ricotl, c•" Jeny Runyon, &amp;l4-

flo2-2187.
W1nted To Buy: Junk Autos
Wfth Or Without Motora. Cell
Larry

Business

Middleport

,lpple Qrove • Oorc11 Rotd.
One mile from Sou1hlm Hl~h
~hool, oft' Route 124. Mlllrfllty
clelhing. and lnflnt thru 1du11
ololhlno, l.de of other mlac.
lttma. June t, I, 10 from 1!).6.
Jft!ln canc.fl until nut dry d.ly.

8

14

Training

.&amp;it Y..-d Slln Must Be Peld In
Adnnee. DNdline: 1:00pm tl'\l
dey before the ld Ia to run,
Sundly ed~fon. 1,00pm Frldoy,
Mpndlly
edhlon
!O:OOa.m.
latur•y.

Lively. 114 316 1303.

Top Prlcee Pold' All Old U.S.
Coln., Gold Ring~ Sltv., Coins,
Qotd Coln11. Y. T.:s. Coin Shop,
1~ Second Avertue, Galllpollt.
Will buy Heywood Waktfitld
~ or cham,.gne modem
ct.kln turnlturt, lat• 40-SO 'a.

Colil--..rn .

Employment Services

VENDING ROUTE : Gel Rleh
Quk:k? No Way! But Wa Have A
Good, StNdy, AHordtblt, Buel·
nes1. Won't laal. 1-800..284·
Vending Routt: Loc:al. Wt Hevt
lht Newell Maehinta, Making A
Nice Study Cash lneoml. 1·

Help Wanted

·AVON• ALL AREAS! Shert your
lime with Ul. You'll lov• tn•
company. 1.aoG-U92~356 .
A 1m1ll QM dNIIrshlp Ia laltlng
rttu,_ lor en experilnc.C
.. tHpeoraon.
S.nd
qutll(lclltlonl to : S..ln O.~t . ,

P.O. Boa 1113, Pomoroy, 0+&lt;.

IT

&lt;.ffJl5

I

7644.

In Stock. $5.00 lip. Mollohan
~umltUfe,
114-446-"M44.

S.vlngs On All VInyl • Cor·

_

1188 225 V•mahl 4 Wt.ea.r,

!_ _

$1,200. 614-3111-1617.

---

_1

Hl88 Kawuakl KLA 650, on I
oH rvad , water cooled, kM
ml... gt, lliW biiHtry, :J04...895.
3021 afltr 5:00 PM.

Wolff TanNng Btdl

New commercial-Home units,
trom $199.00, Lampe, lotions,
aeceuorin, monthly paym1nlt
low u $18.00, cell today, FREE
NEW color catalog, 1-eG0-226-

6212

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

mo. plus lAilltln. MUll hlv•
rllflrtnee &amp; cteposlt. 304-713MI . Vtmon Av1. arnall home, 2

New Curved Gl111 Oak China
Clblnttt. Llghttd Mirror Back,
Gleu Sh1lv11, Lladtd Glah In
Door, StVIIII SllH . 814-4464316 .

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/U•td

bedrooms, buament, garege,
no peta. rtftrenct I dtpoell requl.-.cl, $250. month. 304-675--

HouHhotd fumlthlng. 11'2 mi.
J1rricho Ad . Pt. PIN .. nl, WV,
call 304-675-1450.

2ti51.

R. 6 S. New, Ulld end Antique
tumhure, M11on, WV. 304-TiJ.
5341.

SWAIN
Sm111 housa, 23"11 Uncoln Av•,
avallable alter JuM 10, 304-675· AUCTIOIJ &amp; FURNITURE. 52
OUva St., Gallipolis. N•w &amp; UMd
1180.
furniture, hllllrl, W•st•m &amp;
Unlurnlehld 2br Houa1, No In· wort. boooo. 614-44&amp;-3158.
aid• Pels, Reltrencee Requlrtd.
()epoelt &amp; Two couch11 end ehalrt, !Ike
$250/Mo. PIUI
ntw elngll booltcaH bed wilh
U111111H. 614-448-1904.
mattr111, 614-?112·2391 or 61,..
Yv, nlc• 3 bldroom houM In "'2·2351
Pomeroy, 614-667-3271.

2021 MtrqueHt AYII, 5 yre otd,

onty 304~7&amp;-1238.
Hou11 For Rant Or S11t On land
Contract For $375/Mo . Rodn1y
Yillagtll614-446-3114

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Historical Area Corner Lot · 816
Main St. Pt. Plnunt , W. V1.
Complately R1nov1ttd : '2 Full
Balha, 3 larg1 B.clrooma, N1w
H\JAC, New C1rp11. Av1ilable
June 15 614-446-2205.

32

Will Babyalt In My Home. Ftn·
ctd In Play ArM. R•fartnc ..
Avliltblt. Rodney A,..a. Call
814-245--5887.
C.re tor btd patient, alao c1r1
tor lovtd one while on vacation,
rusonabte, 614·949-2181.
Gtorgn Por1able Sawmill, don't
haul yow ~~ to lht mill juat
call304-615-tfl,57.
Havt Opening. My Country
Home, For Full Care Elderly,
With Prlv111 Room, 12 YNfl
Experltnct. 814·256-107'6

2 bedroom moblll hom• com·
plat•ty tumlshtd, waah~r &amp;
drytr, •lr cond, no pelt, 304113-5958.
2 bedroom, AC, waeher-dcytr
fumlhud, $200. mo plut
utllltl•e, ret &amp; d1p, 304-875-4874.
2 BR furnished or unlumlthtd .
Cabll, air. Ovtriooklng Ofllo
Rlvar, Kanauga. Clean I quill.
Fosler'• Mobfle Hom• perk. 614·
446-1602.
2bdrm., Bx35 trlillr on the Oflk)
River Campground. Eleetrlc,
weter, trash, and lot paid,
$250/mo, 61•·98S-4256 Of 614949-2526.
Fumlahad 2 bedroom mobile
home, all lite, 304-675-6512 It
no 1n1W1r llava measag1.
Nlc1 2br, Mobile Home For Rent
Out St. At. 218, 8 Mil .. All &amp;
O.poalt Rtqulred. 614·251H251 .

44

lnfom\1~

14x71l mobile homt, exc cond, 3
btdrooma on privata lot , bl-llv11
deck, l~rg• covered tront porch,
wood thld, outbuilding, ntra
room wfWood-bumer, major appllaneea, tots of 1r1r... must
... to 1ppric11a, mutt Nil,

$14,!100. ~-676-2183 .

1970 Aoycr.n 1216! 3bt, $3,000 .
OBO,
121"60, 2br, $3,600 ;
14x70 WI Exp 3br, 2 Baths,

tm

$11,000 OBO 814-:188-11686.

Nlld Your Lawn Mow.d"? Com·
pletl Mowing And Trimming.
614-245-5589.

Total lawn care, hall prle1, pat
tlma special) , lncludet mowing
&amp; wMdlng, call 614-SIQ2-6314",
llam-9pm.
Wantltd To Oo : Oabysilllng In
My Hom1. NufM Assistant
Treinlng. Catl614-441·1226

Financial
21

Business
Opponunlty
NOT1CEI

1

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

·tlec,

1974 Wlndaor 14x1'0, p~~Uo room ,
undl~nnlng,
buin-ln china
cabinet, tlec:: hNt, p~~rtty turnlahtd 6 p~~rl new carpet ,
$7,800. Dloek &amp; tlrh Included ,
614· 245--M06.
tliln New Yorker, 14x70, New
Clrpt'.t_ N1w Hot Water Tank,
New toumact, And N1w Appllancll. 61~388-9261.

1918 Ragtnt 14i70, all •1...-:, 1
bedrooma, stove 6 ret. 304-6'ffi..
5413.
1983 Nashua , 3 Dtdroom , 14J70
with 7J12 tJpando, CA, Ouun
wtttrbtd, gardNl tub, all applianetl, t0w20 deck, t14,200 .
Mu.t mov., 304-fiJS-7860 or 67§...

3594.

1987 Clayton mobllt home,
1&amp;11'2 blth, leundry
room, $7000, 814-94g..2lt10 g..
4pm, 614-949--2162 1her 5pm.

1989 14l70 G•teway model
Brldg•por1 , with 2 porchtl, air ,
no fUrnlturt . Mua1 movt. Call
Clartnct M. Moonty after 6 p.m.
614-2.56--1510 .
1991 14x80 3Br'l, 2 Bath•,
$17,500, Or Auum1 With 1750
Down. Wust Bt Yovadl 614 -446-

8325.
Rtpos ..aMd DoubiiWkiH : 5
Av1ilab~ Only $1,000 Down.
Repo. .aaed Slngln : 31 Avlil•blt Only $500 Down Witn A~
~;~ Crldlt. Call 1-300-SBg..

1 bedroom mobilt homt, air·
cond, pr1vl11 101, everything
tumlshld. 304-675-6563.
1 Room Effltciency, Utlli11H
P1ld,
Exc1pt
Eitc1rk .
OtpotltiRtftrlnCI.
t155!Mo

614-446-7130.
1br Country Sitting, $225!Mo.
All Utllhl11 P1ld, 614-446-1604.
2 bedroom apt , $350. month all
utllili1a paid, no HUO, 304-tiTS.
2n2.
2 Roome &amp; Bath, Downstairs,
No
P1ta,
Ou\1t ,
Cltan,
Rsler•nc• And O.poalt R•
quir~ . 814446-1519.

2bdrm. 1pta., Iotti electrle, appliance• tumiahtd, laundry
room faci!Uies, clott 1o tchool
In town . Application• evallable
11: Villag• Gr11n Apta. 149 or
c•ll614 ·092·3111 . EOH.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackeon Plkt
!rom $192/mo. W1ik to •hop &amp;
mo11ite . Ctll614--446·2566. EOO .

-

01lux• 1br, 2 Car Garage, CA ,
Firat Ava, Gtlllpolla, O.po•lt &amp;
Rtltrtn&lt;:n, Available 6115. 614·
256-1529
Furniahtd 1 bedroom upatairs
apt, MI. V1rnon Av1, $225.
month ptue electric . Retertnc•
&amp; dapoah rwquirtd . 304-675-2651
Fumlahld Ap.r1mtnt, 1 br, next
to Ubrary, perltlng, central h••t ,
air, f"tlfarencn. &amp;14--446-0338,
Otfore 7p.m.
Fumlehed Ettlclency Apartmlnt ,
Privacy, Extra CINn, Ou!ll .
Security &amp; Rt,.,.tnCM A•
qulr.d. 8"14-448-2802.
G111clou1 living. 1 and 2 bedroom ape.r1manla at VIllage
Manor
and
Riveraldt
Apar1men1s In Middleport. From

$1116. eon 614-m-m7. EO+&lt;.
Mt . Vernon Ave ona badroom
apt , exc cond, etove &amp; rtf fur·
nlhlld, privati tntranct &amp; parttlng, »t-875-4.580 or 675--1962.
3()4..

On• bldroom tumlahtd 1p1,
Point PINunt, no pita, 30+
675-1386.

45

Furnished
Rooms

11r, Grtat Saltelion, FNt Stt-Up
And O.Uvtryl Call &amp;14·172·122().

61.t~fil580.

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Aleo trallll' IPICI . All hook·u,.,
C.ll aft1r 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, Muon WV.

81&amp;-5701.
Farms lor Sale

81 Acree, Remode'-d 3br, Excel lint Hunting! Tobacco Ball,
Outbuilding,
Barn,
Hannan
Tract Sch~ Dittrict . 814-2561357.
68 1cre country 1atat1 whh
pond. Vln1on. Colonial farm
tloutl ntwly rtmodtled. 2 large
barns, tummer hou••e gtragt,
ttudlo, hunting cabin. y owner.
Agtnll w1lcomt. Dan Bilek,
61 .. · 388--8210.

Transportation

Building
Supplies

Block, brlell, - • pipes, win·

don, llntall, tic. Cleudt Win·

ttl'l, Rio Grende, OH Call 814-

-------:-----

56

Pets tor Sale

Groom end Suppty Sho:f.jl'o1
G
1
All brMd
lt
l•=m~ Food Ota~~r. 3ut~
Wsbb. CIU 814-448-G231.
AKC Boxer PuPI)IH, $200 Each,
W11taton, Ot-tlo~ IM-384-51"11.

AKC ChineN Pu111, Pelceng-,
Minlatura Plnachtr, hand lad

53

Antiques

46

Space lor Rant

Country Mobllt Home Ptrk, At.
33N., undlr new management.
lole, $85; home ,.nt111, $235;

114-62-2117

1970 Buick Skylark, Y-1, white, 4
-.good eond, 304-11&amp;-1271.

I Engine,

K"lmr:,

$350; Lowery Double

THE CLAIM CHECK
15 Bt66ER T~N TI-lE
I:IA6GA6E ~AN DLER ..

DO I GET A
CLAIM CHE CK7

0

0

0

PUGOR

Smor1a
@ NBA Today
World T odoy
&lt;1])881man
6:05 (1) I Love Lucy
6:30 &lt;llll 0 NBC Newa
(!) Saved by the Bell
(JJ Q (Jl Cl ABC Ntwa IJ..
(1) Wild America S!ereo . Q
Squore One TV Stereo

The hu sband had hopehnldy
eyed a real beauty w o a
.-- - - - - - --, strolled by h1m ouls•de a
T A DBEE
depanment store. The mans
~-.....:_:,ci6
,
7 - wtfe nudged him and satd
.1 .
. . .
"Was •I worth the ....... youre
-'-...l....__J'---'--'---' tn ?"

a

L._

Lori

'
1978 Ford Thunderbird, $650;
1183 VZ 4i0, $700 at lradt tor

Fout·Sirollo. 614-25H1170.

1m

Volkewagon
Rabbit
Aulomallc Tnuwmlulon, G~

CondHion, M50. 814-441-01120.

1111 01de Omegl, $700. 114-24&amp;-

Choeo101s

l.obrldor
F1malt 1 112 YNrll Old, 4 Wk.

Choeolo1e

Puppy.

1400

BoUt/StU Stp,ttlll. 1~11.

1113.

1183 Plymouth Reliant. Needs
Motor Wort. 1884 PtymotAh

AKC Reg. Enollah bulldog pup- R~ilnt DamaQitd Front End.
pin, $450, coR M-F, 8-4pm, John Bat otter. 614-"!88-8788.
WIF'Mf', 304-453-6352 w..._d.lye
only.

1984 Old• Broughln, 4dr., 111 IX·
good condHion, $11100,
localed at
112
Buntmut,
Pom.roy.
,

1raa,

V"''

19M

Camaro,

v..a,

automltlc,

Oragonwynd Cli1"'!' : CFA Per· 114-1112-23
~1
"'""
""""· $2500,
....
114-1112~357.

1185 Oodge Shelby Chorgsr
T..bo, 5 ....... rodlolinr, good
Flllh Tank, 2413 Jac:keon Ave. mpg &amp;
okol"'l 12,500.
Point Pilau.., 304-175-2083, 304-675-153G8.
full lint Tropical fleh birds,
1185 Msrcury Grind llorqule,
smell 1nlmata and euppll..:.
302, V-11, ""'"""''•,Full Power,
Cuslom - o . •"''' Shorp
COli $3,800. 814-446-7215.
57
Musical
1111111 llongor, 1188 112 Esoort
W.gon; Both Good Cond~lon1
Instruments

wrp.

tt,eos.

11on, $8100. 14M. John..., boo1
!iO HP i\700. Coli ony11,., 814-

54

1187 "4WD Ford Bronco II Eddie

Applt Butter Klltll, Sllrtr, And
Sttnd. Antlqut Rock•!,_ Basketball Backboard, Rim, t'olt, And
Ball: 117S Contln1ntal Oolltr, 2
Antique Oultta, 240 Homelht
Chalnaaw. 814-388-943.5.

Cone,_• 6 Plattlc Septic
Tanke, Jll Atratlon Tanke. Ron

F'roducte
G1neela Nutrttlon
featuring Amino Acid Body
Building/ weight loti and let
bumlf ormuf"u. Avllltbll IX·
clu•lnly 1t Alit Aid Ph•rm•cy.
The uf• way to diet .
Hoapltel btd $10. Gae nng• $10.
~-675-7142 .

58

Fruits

EFI $5,11118. 614-446--6113.

Vegetables
Otk tomato tt1U. far

1987 Nl... n 2008)(, $3500, 814-

ule~

4 n.,

5 ft, 8 ft.i 11 Inc~/:;~ etokn

$1 per oozon. 8

·1080. 2
miiH .... ot Galllpol.. on 141.

STRAWBERRIES · y..., Pick, We
Pick.

Conttlntrt

Provided.

Open 1-6 11-F, Sol &amp;-5, CloMd
Sundly • To~~~s ~ Peteh,
8 92:, Or &amp;14K1rr Rd. 81
245-5171.
S1rawberriet1 Pick Your Own.
Call Cleuot Wlnterw,
Rio

Grande, Ohio. 814-246-5121.

Farm Equipment

110 AC TractOf With HeAton
Aoond Bal., $7,950; 608 lnfl
Tractor With 3 Bottom Plow

$3,550. 114-216-6522.

304-675-4084.

mower,

$2350;

880

Nlca, eleln 2 Of' 3 bedroom
hoUit, prer•r privata eel11ng1 terfor doo,., foiCIIng etalrwsy,
gu venl, 40" Gnvely mower,
6'K--~2~2428, INVI mn.. gt lf
30ol-67!5-.t004.
no lniWif.

Z24

nHd

poy· on, $e700, &amp;14·i112-JII76 "'
814-m-20n

millage, grNI condition. pulloUI cd praytr, new apeellan.

a blues singer. S1ereo.

11454.

challenges the wtnner of a
schOOl ~lhng con1est (R)
Stereo.
I!J) I!)
111 Rescue: 911

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

11171 Toyolo .,..or home,4, NH eon1alned, 47,000 .......
304-456-1643.

63

Livestock

, pony, kid broko; 2 - s ....
2 crOMbNd cow• whh catv.. ,
IXCtl ..nt mllklf'l, 114-"11&amp;2·3020
aft• I, •1kdap.

81

3 Jeraey btJH CIIVH tor
$50 MCh. 114-24UII57.

N~,

~

·10 lb. plge lor ulo, 114-IHS.
2017.
Angue And Chi-Angue Blac..

Pursl&gt;rod Llmouoln bull, $1100,

1&lt;6Fl:::aiBILITif.S ...

Homt lmpiuwau•nla:
E.lporlonoe On 01der •
Hconea. Room AddMions,
Foundotlon Wort. llaallng,
K~ehone And Bolhs. F- Estlma.t•l Retwences, No Job

(J)

Homo Romodellng, VInyl Siding,
And Overhtng. 30 .,.._,. Ex·
p.-Mnc:.d. Frw ElllfNIItl IM«6.oi21.
J.W. Conatructlon. Room Add~lons, Roolw, Deeka, Sldlna

And All Types 01 Ea1erior Ani!
Interior Pointing. Will Glvo 1.Dw
Bid. llctnelld. '14-2U-5071.

JET

•

Aeration WOiors, rtpalrad. New
I re-bull motora In 11ock, AON

~

Witness 10 Survival
9:00 &lt;llll II)) Lew a Order

H~~l-e&lt;T

MAN!

AND WHo4:r DO
'1"0.1 OCJ, 5lR ~

Vulnt.'r abll' Bo th

Draier Norl h
Wtsl

l'a!':.

,'\" ortb
J NT

••

Openmg lead

F'..as t

Pa ss
All pass

+I

Aon'e TV SINVIc., tpeelaltzlna
In Zenith aleo ..mctng rnolli
other brands. HouN cell, eleo

DID

lraliof oklrtlng. IM-

YOU COUNT

YOU GOT

THEM CARDS

S3 CAllOS

IlEAL tJOOO,

IN THIS

DECK II

JUGHAID?

THAll'S ONLY
S'POSEO TO
BE 5211

"S'POSEO TO BE"
AIN'T ALWAYS

"WHAT IS"

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

C.nlf't ptumbing
Fourth and Pine

84

Electrical

&amp;

'

\

Refrigeration

General Hauling

S.nd, G111vel, UmMtont, Dk1.

Wicks Hou11ng Senloo, ..ro
Boll RIMt Rood, P""*"Y, Ohio
48761, 514-11V2-3470.

w.

Do Houllng Anytlrns,
Anyplae., No Job T~ I . Or
Too little. Buen'lllnl CIMiMna,

Q..,...l Wort&lt;, Any Kind! 1"37li-22711Any11mo.

87

Upholstery

-roy'o Upholl1ering -

lng trl county ar. ~Pl. TN
belli In lumHuf'l
llering.
c.u 304-«7a-.t54 for tr.. . .
tlmet11.

mailing $1 .25 plus a long. self -ad dressed , slamped envelope to As tro Graph . clo lhis newspaper , P.O. Box

91428, Cleveland. OH 44101 -3 428 . Be
sure to state your zodiac sign .

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Priori1y
s hould be given to a matter you ·ve been
wanltng to finalize but have been u nable
to get a handle on. It can be c on c luded
to your satisfaction today.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll be respon-

Ther e ' s a posstb•hty you mtght have a
mtsunde rs tandtng today wtth someone
yo u truly like ove r somethmg rather silly . Even tf you 're not at fault. make the

apology .
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon. 19) US&lt;Jally .
when you set your stghts on a specific
o bjective . you are tenaciou s m s tnvtng
to ach•eve 1! Today, these quahhes
mtght be ab sent from your repertOi re

AOUARIUS (hn. 20-fob. 11) Subdue

stve to constructive suggestions today the inclination today to take yoursett
but resistant to the dictates of others · and your invotvements too sertously . It
A~Joid involvements with individuals
you have tun with what you do , you 'll enwho fall into the leiter category.
hance your produc1ivity

1188 F""' Bronco U4a4. heel- A•et•nttal
or CCMtauUM:Jal
ion! cond111onl 814-11i12·5421. wiring, new INI"flca or ,....,._
Mull . . lo apprtela1e.
Malt1r UcenHd .a.ctrklan.
Ridenour Elee1rlce1, W¥1100301,
1881 Ford Econoline 250 ven ~-67&amp;-17811 .
wlladder, raclle &amp; ahltvlng, 304-

85

41 Business

9 Joke

abbreviation

anthology
12 Curve
13 Swimming
mammal

42 Beverage&amp;
43 Articles ol
mall

46 Very rat
49 Up to thio
poinl (2 wds.1
53 Everyone
5&lt;4 Leu polite
58 Chemical

14 Apartmenl
(sl.)
t5 Soul (Fr.)
t6 Civil War
general

17 Baboon, e .g.
18 Thick sweet
liQUid
20 Constellation

sufti•

59 Lie
60- -Lucy
61 Chick an 62 Watering

22 Economical
26 Actor's part

place

63 Food

Stereo.

34

64 Fast aircrall
(abbr .)

2
3
4
s

consumer

Norttl Caroli·
na college

35 Artist's dog .
36 Vawn

37 Addillons lo
hOUitS

Military Ioree
9 - - onthe

Cooler
Energy (sl .)
Saul! -

beck
10 Small door
11 Cooling
drinks
~ 9 Implements
21 Monocle
2 3 F ur-boarlng

Marie

DOWN

6 One Day -

1 Belgian river

7 Food 11oh
a Conttruct

-

Time

animal

24 Baby
2S Future
husband
26 Coarse grats

g1ves l'lts ex -wite ·s new
fiance some marttal advice.

27 Largemouthed pot
28 lounge aboUt
31 Oog'o

(R) S1ereo . []
!D Pro Jet slihng From Long
Beach. Calli (T)
10:00 &lt;ll ll 0 Dotellne NBC A
anorectK: tBievistOn anchor
succumbs to the disease
Stereo. []
(J) Q ClfCI Jock' I P1aco
Jac k s integrity IS ques!loned
by a woman from his past.
Stereo
(1) I]) Uttenlng to Americe
With Bill M~
12!1 On Stage Stereo
QJ Soaeball Tonight
12!) World News
(IJ) 700 Club With Pot

wagger

32 Pari ot a
church
33 Pekoe , etc .
44 Unearthly
45 LOIS
frequent

46 Boors
4 7 Radar •ere en
Image
48 loland ol
exile
50 Dog noises
51 Adam's

0

&amp;

Golllpolls, Ohio
814 4413816

dor-

Indian

Q

6 9

Healing

1183 QMC holl1on pickup, lh&lt;&gt;rt
bod, dloMI engine, 4 lpMd,
4a4, now , banery, $1,150, good
eond, 304-682-3713.

Bonet

40 Artiot Salva-

UlrJY King Uvel
(IJ) Scarecrow and Mro. King
9:30 (JJ Cl (J)IJ Coach Hayden

..

2C54152. .

Plumbing

1 Actress
Zetterling

a

~CroeiiRd.P_,s,_

Totsl !own c:ero, holl ~
u,.. -lol), lneludH
a. ...ding, call .,....
,

Anew., to p,.wiout Punte

38 Prohlbi1
39 Actreas -

29 Black bird
30 Coup d'-

y Nigh! Fights (L)
Cll Nashville Now Stereo.
!D Women 's Surfing
lnternatK&gt;nal Bodyboard

BARNEY

-~~uwo.me.

82

ACROSS

ChampiOnships from Hawati
(T)

8

Of

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

DcM (P1 2 ol 4)' CBS
Tuosdo~ovie (2,00)

1!J Tue

men:lal And Rllldtnllll.
1=r• Eltlmattt

$1,600. 814-245-6564.

111114.

Q
I!JII!I @til 'Loneoome

Wol1peporlna,

WIU ...lid polio ooven, -

S!ereo. []

(JJ g I])0 Roaeanne
Roseanne is elated when
Becky finally breaks up wtttl

Ma&lt;t&lt; . (R) Stereo...C

/

J

0

(1) I]) FronUine

62-27!8.

lldlng

Motorcycles

HE LOOKED
FAMILIAR.

INVI516LE

)ob too small. Ata......._ ratn,
cell anytlmt,l14--)t2·MOO or IM--

.crtlnld roome, put .,.. vinyl

74

I 11-IOLJ6HT

I AM THE

CONTE'5TANT ..

home improu . . .u
ond romodollng ol oN oan., nor

air, lift, CNIH, $2,400. 1VI't
Chovy 314 1011 pickup s-. 304176-7330.

lUIAslro Chevy Embllay lllnl
Von
excetlonee
Condlllon
.l.ooclod. li,OOOMI $12,500.00
114-446-2238

• 965

+ Q 9 8765

4 Oklahoma

Oetecttves tnvest•gating a fir e
discover crooked
government agents.(R)

MORTY MEEKLE ANDWno~Tn

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.-.

Relloblo

Cl &lt;Il Cl Home

lflliiiO-t Bob Villa and
Tim match wits in a test of
1oo1 knowledge. (R) Stereo.

Tao Big 0. Smo1111~8.

1162 Chevy Blozor K5 Sllvera!!2J

111-3773.

S1ereo. t;l
11:05 (D lnllde the Third Reich (PI
2 at 2) (2 :25)
11:30 (1) Major Leogue Baseball
Crncago Cubs a1 St LoUis
Cord1na1s (L)

~PLI.~AL

v....

llom·llpm.

1182 F""' Ecollne Von E-150,
$HO. 304-67&amp;-2218.

·~

• 9 4:!

PrimeNewo []

(IJ) Aln Tln Tln, l('.g Cop

Curtle

Rsbuln Trono, • Hube. $1,1195.
814-446-4141 Aftsr I P.ll. Or
Weekends.

Two burro yNrtlngs, hall min~ 1183 Hondo 7V 3 WhHior, $350.
eiUfM, 0011 814-ill:f-33.0.
CoM 114-448-88811 Aftsr 4:00 P.ll.
1181 Hondo XR 350, Excetlon1
Young pigs, I weau old, good Condftlon, $1,100. Firm. 814·:188-

look~~···~~td
114-. by 4-H IMtnber,

llng.

a

I&lt;'EWJTLY FREED fiiMSEtf

BIMrnent Waterproo-

plloa, pickup, ond delivery. 814446.02114.

Goa.tneck fn~U•, Urp Dr...
'"' A_,, s2,noi su- Royol 1HI Chevy 4a4, Air, AM~M
S.ddlo. 114..111-1522.
CU.eue, Century Topper PS
For Nit: mlnlaturt '/MitnameN I'B. H~ch, 5 Spd, And Morol
~belly pill', $100..., 114-1112· 15,000 MIIM. V"''' Nicol $1,700.
814-446-111711.

114-618-2785.

Roger~

1fil81 Chev 314 ton 4 epMCI, 5th

&amp; 4 WD's

SOl 'Til

Shootout from lrv~ne. Ca!it
(T)

f.W tJA/1~ JUST

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uneonct~lono1 111e11""' _.,..
IN. local reteranc• tumtehtd..
Free numae... Cali oo1111ct 1·
814-237o0481, cloy or ' nlgl&gt;1.

Co. RON EVANS lHTERPRISB,
Jeekeon, 0+&lt; ~..Devil
S.W·Vac
s.vAct,

Vans

promoter
of bridge

Two boys lall1hrough a hole

Home

Bod Sell Wl11\rN11hou1 Bed· 1171
GMC 8500 Sorloo Wl1h Air Uft
Chutar, Call After 7 P.M. 614258-6325.

73

+K

• 10 4

at PlliladelpiHa Pllillias (L)
Munier, She Wrote
12!1 Ctoolt end ChiH
@ Women'• Beach
Vottoyb811 Bud USA

1m GMC TrJ..A1I1 15 Ft. Alum

1182 Chovy 8-10, V-6, 5 spd.,

t KJ R

. (,Jl074

0

So .. I&lt; Tonk Purnplna ..,, Gelllo

198'1 Chevy 4x4, Radio Stick,

. ,6

• Cp :) 2

1n a frozen lake. (A) Stereo.

Services

motor, 304-675--3069.

304-6TI)o;STI4 Of' 875-1571

EAST
+ A J 87532

a..n.n Pittsburgh Pirates

....,. oppllonce- WV
304-6764:1111 Ohio~~.

HHeh. oloe brakSI,

Wf~'T

• 10' 4

~Ill Major League

11177 F""' F-150 1ruek, good 300

whM1.L.R~

PHILLIP
ALDER

(1) I]) Novo Anempled
baldness cures; Alan
Rachins . []

79

"Eapertoneecl

1Uio., PSIPB, topper. 814-245-

285 Mr- w/ MaSNy to.ct.r &amp;NSO.

t A:\2
+ AJ 3 2

Aaprnetau(0:30)

ALLEYOOP

(Jl U Fullliouao Slephanie

Ouamy

614·286-ISU

• ' K J 10

0

814-245-Hn. 814-11V2-6211

199'1 Z-28 IUIO 5.7, $19,300. new,
special order, mull IN. Selling
balow wholualt $12,900,. 30.c:

Trucks lor 5ale

+ KQ

(!) Lead-oil Men
(JJ Q Reeding, Writing and

!'orl1

1131'1!121.

1988 Ford T1una l, air, AM!FM
caelllle, FWO, •xcellent condition, aner 5:00 8t4-446-3044,
814-446-&lt;M34.

0

i- t - t~

."olORTII

Bobby ctoesn ·t trus t a
friendship that Eve has wttl'l

ro""T~, 11on1ng e1 $119l.
whetl drive starting It mi.OO

614-446-3521.

1m QMC 314 1on pick-up, 350

Solollox wllog 111lochsment &amp;

Vlnyt eldlng 11rt"!, pro-hung In·

1188 Chevy Chavalltr
auto., loaded, &amp;I,OOOMI,

Brow'!. $28!10; 880 Fonl $2115;

Big 1188 AClHA Oetdlng lneeoUve Fund, $1,880; King 2 HotN

5 mil.. Eol1 ~77, Rovenawvad,
by Sandyville POOl Olllce, Frt,
Sol, Sun. N-.e:oo Pll, other
doyo-houro. 304-273--.

256-625\

72

tlntlh
Devld

Buna. Roaeonobly Prlc:ed. Slo1o
Run ~•rms, Jackeon, Ohio, &amp;14261-63118.

SurpiUI Army Camllliuge dathlng, Smlil combllt ,..,, IHU•r
bod1 (f'llntlt lurpiUI clothing
11ortlng prt.o $12. dolon plocee]
Sam SomwvNII'• aur 28th y..,.,

$3,800; 11161 F""' PU
RNI Good CondHion, $150. 514-

300 lnt'l !rector with

.

Plutk: And Midi I Culvtrtllnc:h
Thru 10 Inch In Stock . Ron
Evane, JKkeon, Ohio. 1-3001131-1521.
1xtra wtlghta. S..re flrwhHI
IXercl. . bflll,l04-A2·Zl25.

SW, 15,000 Mllee, ANI Good

Cond~lon,

875-2332.

ule. 114-«1-0528.

PIM1burgh paint ••• now In
progrna. Ceiling po~lnt $8.SKII
gal, IJCttrlof whitt l1tex $13.H
gal. Burpe~ tttde 50% off. Paint
Plue, 2415 JacUon Ave, Pl. Pit,

$1,500; 11811 P1ymou1h Ro11onl

24' gooMntek combination
llock &amp; horN tral .. r. Good
col'ldhlon . Low mltuge . G•l·
v1nlzH w1ll1 I t.nd-., n.1bbtr
floor mala, ma~her t..turet.

$2500. 304-17

Y~.

1188 Z24 Conv. PiWW, N:, low

Hli, Coli 814-:!51-6040.

Pint fruit l•ra, $2 dozen, quarts,
$2.50 doun, &amp;14-i49-2484 lfttt
5pm.

$2,000; 1915 F.... LTD,

Good Condlllon, 13,000 llllos,

1t88 Ford Tempo, 2 door, 1uto.,
lt..-.o,
aood cond.,
1lr,
15,000MI, $3600, ,14-16$-4418

Fl11 Klllert lor ptll, hom1 &amp;
yard. Gu1rantud ettectlvtl Buy For Salt Or T1111dt For C.tllt ln-ENFORCER al : Baum True tamtllonal TriCtor Mod~ 8414
Ytlul Store, 11 W11t Main Dleasl $1,500. 814-446-1052 Aftsr
StrHI, Chllllf Oh. &amp; V111ey 5:00.
lumber I Supply Corp., 55!
For St..: PTD Manure Sprudtr,
Parte SlrNt, Mlddl1porl, Oh.
Corn
Pllnt.,., CuiUva1or1,
KillS FLEAS I
P1owa, DleU, Ntw Hoiland
Buy ENFORCER Flu Klllars For Square And Round B11tr11,
P1t1, Hom• • Yard. GUIIrtntMd Rtk. ., Hty Blnd"e, MOWtJt,
EHtetlvll Buy ENFORCER At: Condltlontrt, Stedera, Com
Browne Trustworthy Hardware, Plcktre,
Olhtr Equlpmtnt
State Rout• \60, Bidwell, Ohio.
Howe'• Farm Machlntry, Jeck·
ton, Oh~, 814-286-5044.
New 65" Howard rolevator; 9'
dump btd truck; A.C. 3pl. 3 bot· Gravely Tractor With Ellclrlc
tom
plowa;
Agrl·
Power Star1tt. 4 Attachment• $800.
rotav11or; 197'3 Ford Bronco 514-2!16-6358 .
4•4 : 5x10 utllhy trail•: 8SO
Minn. Mollr~t g11 tnctor, 614· Wanted: Ftrm machinery of 111
lllnda. Got enythlng rou want to
"'2·2455 or 614-742-2580.

67S-5413.

1tl87 Ptymouth Turlsmo 15,000
Mil•, tlul Good Condition,

1. . Cutlnl Supr.me Cl1nlc
Brougham, l01dld, IJ:C cond,
28,000 mille, 304-882·2825.

Farm Supplies
&amp;L1ves1ock
61

m~

BRIDGE

m

Improvements

Bower, Exctlltnt Condhlon, 2.9

&amp;

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER !1215.

N1w 8x8 bam lypt bul= .
,
$400. 197! Ford wan, body
engine netdl wane. $500. 304·

0

&amp;

Buc:IQI4 T,..nemiselone, u..ct I

441-1025.

1-800-537-8526.

FREE INSTALLATION

'

1t181 TnM Am._exctlltnt eondi-

Evtnt Enttrprt ..., Jackson, OH

Electric 3 WhMitd Scooltra In·
door/Outdoor, New &amp; Ulld. Ufl
Chaira. Oowman't Homtcarl
614-44&amp;-nal, t-aoo-4sa-N•4.

.

Flnonelng Avalloblo

1p.m.

Miscellaneous

Old uptight pleno, $75; 22 long
rifll, $50; 614-343-5181.

FRANK AND ERNEST

0

Accessories

~e

Needle · Tipsy· Ensue · Shrewd - SUSPENDED
On weekends my husband and hts buddtes go to the
local park to play basketball. One morning they arnved
to find a sign reading, "Those Caught Hanging From
The Rtm Will Be SUSPENDED'"

a

Cabin ·

Auto Parts

'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

0

Trtdt Your Cir, Truck, Boer Or
Ski

76

UNSOAM BL E ! ETTE RS TO

0

All Modolo Ko_.kl Je1 Slds
S10rtlng AI 12,300

114 l&amp;tl 1623 Call Altar

Buy or ull. Riverine AnUquea,
1124 E. MiJ\n Slrstt, Pomeroy.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614 -992·2528.

Childron0
I!JIIII Jeopardy!
1!2&gt; til Enteruinmen1 Tonigh1
Stereo . !;!
OMacGyver
@ SportsCenter
Monoylinl
&lt;Ill The WaHons
7:05 (1) Be""rty Hillbillies
7,30 &lt;llll 1!J Jeopardy! []
(!) Now It Can Be Told
(J) Q Entellainment Tonlgh1
Stereo .
(Jl 0 Maml'a Family
I!JII!I Wheel ol Fortune
l!llll Night Court
1121111 Family Feud
12!1 So o Star S1ereo.
!D Scl&gt;oep Talk
Q1 Cro••fire
7:35
Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 &lt;lJ8 i!J Mann a Machine

1912 Cobia Bow Rider Wl1h
Trallor $10,11119
Cuddy

I

(, [! ANSWH

NewsllourQ

Proctorville, Ohio
1-614-886-7'188
OHicltl Dlsnty Wol1d &amp;o.l

c......nce

,.-'-TI- TI- TI

(Jl CJ Married ... With

Hamlfton Wit• Sports

Coble

'-·--'· •

ell PR INT NUMBEHD LETTERS 1
~ IN THESE \Q UARE\

(1j The Jetteraona ll...

BOATERS

1991

....-

.L

(J) Q lnalde Edition Q
(1) I]) MacNeil/Lehrer

BDAURS

197'8 C.dillae, Fair Condition,
Run• Good, $100. 1514-441-8781.

L._

I

!filii

J .S. Wattne SeNictl, Sarvlng All
YCM.Ir B011tlng Hilde, P•rts. k ·
ceaeorin, Two Cydl Oil And
S.t\llcl. 114-256-eil&amp;O.
Gulnne Mercury Mlrine S«viee.
Mtrcury, W•ri'*, llercrulMr
lpec::l•lllt . Mtreury certified.
Mobllt, W1 come lo you. IW..
251-6VN.

L.-

0

1990 T1ndam Sport 650 Jet Ski.
Showroom condhlon. F•ctory
trtlllr ttand, cover, 2 Hll Jac*·
et•, rldt plate, lttk'tllsa ....,
prop., new licenM. 5H to apprKilte. $3500, 11f..912-3802.

I

I~-,...~'--,1,-...,lr:-,--.1......., "

@Up Cloae
&lt;Ill New Zono Slereo .
6:35 CD Andy GriHith
0 Wheel ol Fortune
7:00

!m.

Hotldoy Modo! $30o.

612 Ext. 260 Aek For

81

AKC

ela111 &amp; 91amHt Kht.nt. 114·
441-384.t Atl11 7:00p.m.

New SKS Rill•, Wilt! Ace....
eort11,
$115.
Ammunition,
$15/100. Jenning• l80 .&amp;uta Pielola, New $105, 2 B111nd1 Ammunition : $1&amp;1100, $201100, C.ll
10 A.M. To 10 P.M. K11p Trying
W•'rt In And Out Constantly.
614-446-1822, 7 Days WMk.

Autos lor 5ale
:;::=-;::-;:-::-:;;:::::::;:-:;~::::;::-;

Cockatiel, btby rabbit•, 304576-2207.

52

Sporting Goods

71

FAROLE

' I' I I I I

1m 111 Full House S1ereo

1tltl0 B1n Trw:Ur Fully Equipped, Mora tntormatlon: 114-446-

245-5121.
SUEL BUILDINGS' l'lle1ory 1m Ct.vlllt parte car $100.
Oil&lt;:ount~ . O.poo~
FO&lt;IIots, ~-675-3816.
Odde &amp; ....o, Sove $$$, \200
To 20,000 sq. ft. limited Supply 1m Grand Prto Por111oc:, Good
Mul1 Sell By 8/301112. 114-446- Condition, Runa Good, 1800.
Coli After 2,00p.m. 814-441-3188.
0721.
19711 Mont• Carta, Run• Good

Bruehhoge, can deliver, 814443-

Rooma for rent . wetk or month.
Stmlng 11 $120/mo. 011111 Hotel.

33

55

OPEN: 7 Otya A W11k, 9 A.M. · e
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon · 5 P.M.
Rl. 141 4 Mlln Off Rt. 7 In C.n~
11nary.

lighted bMr algne, f306up, lite
jacket, $4; V~R 1 nelda hladt,
'15 : 1 bunk Dta, 125; 304-7735418.

One bedroom 1pt tor rtnt,
675-2218.

I

EVENING

fi': RHding Rainbow 0

ARLO AND

AKC
rtglsttred
BalltnhiUI
Glrman Shephard puppltt,
1111dy lo go June 28th, 114-3788455.

lor Rent

$500 Oft Purctlut Pric1 Of Any
New Home At EIMI Hom1 Can-

Hollypark 2 bedroom ~I•
homl
w/1xpando,
d1n
wtfltlpl.ce, CIA, 304-675-2&amp;01 or

CLRSSIFJED RDS

Chair• $129.

SWIMMING POOLS
Only $799 .00 BNU11ful Above
Ground 1h31x4 Pool lnetudu :
Fil1tr, Deck, F1nc1, laddtra,
Elc Don't Bellev11t? Call BPI
1-800-548-1923

2bdrm .,

Read the

OINETTES' Wood Bor S1ools
$14.15 (26") Tobie And 4 Podded

1974 Ouk1 141165, 2 Bedrooms,
Furnished, CA , Und1rplnnlng .
Bts1 Otter. 114--446-&lt;1782.

2 FCA -124 Fl WOlFF TANNING
BEDS For Salt. Sold Togetlltr
Or Slp.~~r1aly . 614-441 -1029.

Read the Best Seller

$119 Sot.

Dir1 Tampera, 1 Y11ttr, 1 Robin,
&amp;14·379-2403.

1984 llbar1y Mobil I
Home
14x70, 3br, Exc. Condillon, On
U Acr11 County W1ttr, Good
L.oealion On Hannan Tract
Road . 614-24~5830 .

202 .

t:Jrawe,.

Cnwar ChHt Of
$44.!15; Twin w.n,. ..

1972 FrMdom 12x55, all
e1ove, rtlrl~ntor, air cond,
scrhntd
porch,
curtains,
l4,950. Good cond. 304-675-2101 . 2 OR apartment• In Middleport ,
newly rtmodlled, low utllltlu ,
1974 14x64, 2btdrm., tumlahtd, no pela, 1220 per month ,
no bldt, undlrpjMtd , stl~, on depo1il rtqulrtd, 814·!192· 2381
rtnttd lot , 614-H2-5100.
dlyl

tnat you do bull·
n1111 with people you know, 1nd
NOT to .. nd money ll'lrough tha
mall until you have lnvtstlgattd
the offtring.
___ _

Privata Pay Pnon.. For Sale
Cha.ap , Local 1·800· 74g..1 186 Eld

4

1 ·t3" TV, $25; 1·11" TV, $25;

~

MI .. Paula"t Day Car• C.nt1r.
s..r. , attordablt, chlldc•re. M-F
6 a.m. · 5:30 p.m. A~• 2~10 .
Befort, afftr achool . Drop-Ina
w11come. 614~224 . New Infant Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.

BEOROOM· Bunlc Bode $119
(2x6);

Apartment

lor Sale

tm

Rockera sn.

Merchandise

Mobile Homes

tlon cau, &amp;M-99'2·2673.

Wanted to Do

2535.

dlllontd, $250/mo. Rettrtnca
And O.potlt Required. No Ptte,
Wattr And S.w1r Paid In City.
614-446-3671 Alter 5:00 P.W

12x60 1m Gnndhaven lflllllf,

18

bedroom trailer, pay own
ulllllln plus dtpoelt, 304-675·
1

2 bedraomt, com1r lol priced
In 20't, 101 locust St, k;ndar-

ell brick m~lnttnanct ""
hom1, 4 btdrooma, emtll living
room, dlnlngroomJtamlly room
combinellon, kltehtn, ulillty
room, all one tevtl, cov1rtd
p.elio In back, privacy tenet,
garage, shown by appointment

•

0

5054.

2 Btdroom Furnished Air Con-

2 lltory, 6 room, bath, 113 basement, gat hell, Union Avt., 304·
Tn-5962 « 304·773-5715.

the ~-.... _ . . . - - -......,.~:0..
be·
low to form lo ur s1mple words

~ 1!1 1121 til CBS Ntwl 0
1m II Andy Grillitll
0 Scooby Doo

tw.ntitl, 21&amp;-3t5-23it.

2 B.clrooms, Family Room , Full
SIHI B111m1nt, Woodburnlng
Flrtplec.. 614-446~99 .

Ro orro ng~ l ~tt er~ o f
0 lour
)(ram bled word!

t;tl Squore One TV S1ereo

YOU MUST BE
THE BAGGAGE
HANDLER ,RIGH T"

LIVING ROOM, Solo And C,_lr
$1711 And Up; CoHN And End
Tobl• $711 And Up; Swivel

304-67~7fili.

Edited by

=·

lor Sale

814-446-3158

.an,

TUE., JUNE 9

GAM I

(!) Video
0 Power
-·

75 Boats &amp; Motors

Vl"RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE!

10 ac,.., 3bdrm houH, bam,
utllhy building, 1ml. trom Mid·
dltport. H1ndyman a~111, low

I

WOlD

~~

mZLTI

6:00 &lt;ll iJ (JJ Q (Jllll ®lllil

Houses lor Rent

Nkt tffkl.nc~:tagt, unlqu•
1nd beautiful,
75-6042

600-955-«154 '

nMdt work, for mort

r~commende

11

P,.,(£ ,

Television
Vie win~

l'tQ(

C. (f'l

TM&amp;I DAILY

\1!

Houee In Clifton. WV. 4 BR, $225

4247.

&amp; VIcinity

IJf' TME

10
Uf&lt;'£ RAIN

Of (J)LF

ltnt Condition, $2,100. 614-446-

......

Gallipolis

C.OC5T FOR THIS ROOND

m

0.. 814-441-M38.

2 BR houM tor rtnl, 1300 Hogg
St . 3~75-4030.

Business

VENO.

8Cru1M Stllp Jobs- HlrlngKittlnt: to good home. Utter $2000/mo. Summerlya•r round .
tnlned. 814--4~1.0055.
Bart•ndaral Catino Wortcet'sl
largl ovel tlbll, • bucket Gil'!: Sfto~ Slltll Tow Guidlll
chalre, talr condltll)n, 614-992· etc. Free lflvtl. HlweiU C.rlbbtanl B1hamall Europe. No
1525.
exp. necneary. 1·208~T.J6.7000
Th,.. kit11ne, tltttr rraintd, _
E:-c•.,t. _16-;;1:;1N
_8
;c.: -;:-:;-:-;:-ce7:"
r.ld.J Ia go 10 good homa , 81"- Easy World Excellent P1yl A•
t82 717.
11mbt1 Products AI Ho,.,.. Call
loU FrM, t-800-487-5566, Ext.

6

SIW£ /&gt;fJJJT THf &lt;:.'6 ... BUT 00

Rentals

3 1n111 kltttn• to glwNW1y, 614·

FI'Mzer

W.D YOO c.otx.D BE MY

Ovtr 2 Acrea Of Survt~td Land
With 360 Ft. Road Fronltgt. Ctll
61~62

446-7078.

BORN LOSER

Motorcycles

tul Building Sltt. Nlca Llvtl
Driveway,
Rurel
Wttll",
Electricity, And Phone Stt\llce
A~allablt. 3 112 Mlln From Holzer Ho.plt1l, $39,000. 614-4464127.

hed ahotal, wormed.

B::S,Io pupplea .,.. of good
"
dog. 814 -446-0352.

lo

1117 Hondo 250-1, 4/W Eocel-

1238.

lloet1y Woodod, Wl1h A a.. uU·

114-381-1335, 388-1317.

puppjaa,

1992

1181
125 """
- ""·
elK elal1,
,..,.,..,
11.000.
good cond, 304-875-20111.

Air Cond!Uona111, R•frlgeratora_
Cheat Frwz.er, Dry., I "WuMr,
Color T.V., Microwav•, 114-251·

O.J . White Road, 18 Acrst,

2 pupplea: black German
Sh1pherd malt l tamale. 4

June

Goods

Nlct mobile holM space nalleblt, call MIX, 1-80Q..837·323a.

Giveaway

Australian

74

Lots tor 1111, trallm acce~
labMI. 304-67$-2722.

Succ ...tul Buslneu Owner 32,
Sooidng Fem1lo Compenlon
Willing
To
Aelocltl
To
hachlront Heme Wrhe: WtyrM,
11W1 Lak- 201, Clovetand,
OIU4111.

months,

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrigllt

Household

terM ,..trlctM

nevottobio, ~7&amp;-nu.

For ..... Ron! Oak member~

4

TUesday, June 9, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bopt. 22) Debli spendmg lor non· essential purposes today

Juno 10, 1111:1

could cause you problems down the
1 line. when you need the resources you
YOJI chanCeS lor success in the year fiddled away . Be prudent
ahead lo&lt;* p&lt;omismg. provided you op- LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) Someone who ·
erate atoog steady, traditional hnes . is pertinent to your present plans might :
Taking
risks
could
prove lack your cooperative spirit today and !
countttrpJoductrve
. be more of a hindrance than a help . This '
q= 1 (IIIey 21-Jvno 20) Be dlscnml· individual musl be handled wilh kid .
nattng with regard to your social tn- gloves.

,.,_nelliS. as well as your compan- - SCORPIO (Del. 24-Nov. 22) II you don 'l
ionS. today . Individuals who are know how to say "no "' loday. others
needtessiy aggtt asJtve could cause you might unload their responsibilities on
problemS. Gemini. treat y~r~t to a yotJ Instead of taking care of them . Be
tMrthday gih . Send tor GemuU s Astra·

helpful, but also be smarr

Graph p&lt;edicliOOS lor 1he year ahead by SAGITTARIUS

INov.

23-0ec.

21) .

PISCES (Fob. 20-lhrch 20) ThiS mogh1
not be a good day to remind someone
who is indebted to you of the obtigallon
There 's a chance you will be reprimand ed rather than repaid .

ARIES (March 21-April 11) In an endeavor that requires a team effor1 to. day. strive to be supporttve. not advef ·
sarlal . Success of the '181lture is more
important than your ego.
·TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) There are a
number of things you should d o today.
but you won' t be able to take care ot
them all. To be productive. 'fOU mu st be
selective regarding what can be

accomplished .

-

grandson

S2 Prlntod
words

10:30 (1) llajor LHgua Soaeball
Atlanta Braves at los
.t.nge~es Dodgers (l)
1m • Bemoy lliller
12!1 Church Streot Station
Stereo.
@ llojor Leogue Soaeball

rt- t-;

lll

55 Gumo
S&amp; St&gt;ock
S7 Nlghttlmo
(pool.)

(L)

11 :00 (l) .. (JJ Cl (Jl u ®I I!)

a•
o-·
R

m-watch
IJ Aroenio Hall S1ereo.

0®CroollondC'haao
Mec&lt;lyvor []
12!) Spor1o Tonlgl&gt;1
(IJ) Botmen

11:30(1)(1) To tho CD111r!!J Stereo .

(Jlll NlghtllnO !;I
CIJ 'F.,..., Knight' Crime
Tlmo Af!l! Primo flmo
Stereo. Q

l2t Monoyllne

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Calebrlty Cipher c:rypiOUfarn• .,.. Cli'W1-' II"Of'l QUOl11k&gt;ns by larnoua PftOtltl . pul and ~~
EICfl...,.ln !hi ciPI'* tellndl tor 11'101Mr rodly "• cu. o ~ t

' AM K

L Z R
1

s

0 K H

f

c

I Y 0 H
0 C Y J K

fMTOM
Rl

T R V K 0 S

FYTVIA

VIP K

C Y K

KWKOZRTIA . '

T V
·'

I Z R
HCTON

VT Y

(IJ) MOVIE; Escape of the

fCOAKY

..,_(2:0Q)

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Politics is too ser ious a matter lo be lett to the
polltlciRns .. - Charles de Gaulle.

11 :35 (l) 1J II)) Tonight Show Wltll

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9

�Page 10--The Dally Sentinel

Summertime! Dressing is easy
By Rochelle Cbadakolf
From solstice to Labor Day,
there are a dozen good reasons 10
enjoy this summer: Twelve week·
ends! No matter what the foocast,
I predict some fun, especially if
you cultivate a casual wardrobe
thatlllllkes get-aways a breeze.
Let's assume you ' ve already
bagged the basics: swimsuit (and
SPF 15 suntan lotion), sandals,
sunglasses, broken-in bluejeans.
Now add some essentials tn
sparkling white.
White pants - jeans, uousers,
leggings or shorts - are convivial
mixers . Make a sound summer
investment in a three-pack of white
T-shirts . They come in handy ,
whether you· ve gor a last-minute
invite to play tennis 81 a COIISC2'V8·
tive club, need a sleep-sbirt
(browse the men· s department fa a
pair of boxer shorts) or want something to serve as a thin layer Wider
a blazer or sweater when the thtr·
mometer dips . Slil' on a man ' s
white shin, midriff-tied over JC1111S.
tails trai~ng over leggings, or as a
handsome swimsuit cover-up. Take
a break from aerobic or running
shoes with a pair of classic white
sneakers for footloose days.
Sneakers, however, do come m
every shade under the sun. Ellcsse,
well known for practical , preuy
sports outfits, offers kicky Remos
($25), in aqua, ~ and raspbaTy,
as well a:; in seasonal standards m
black, red and navy . Lycra-laced
canvas gives Ell esse's 3-ounce
Stretch-lites snug fit and the ability
to dry quickly, endmg squishiness

Poet's comer
I'd like you to understand the
poems I write,
Neither rhymes nor put together
in all the right places.
If a tear ism my bean, I wnte n
on paper,
I dou 't look in a book for werds
to make it right
It's all from my heart and down
on paper.
When I'm so sad and lonely, l
grab that pen .
And it goes down on paper
Which neither rhymes nor put
together in all the right places.
When the sun shines brightl y
afld may heart feels warm
And spring is here, no time to be
sad.
I am writing that down on
paper.
I want my heart to he read , by
what goes down on may paper
Which neither rhymes nor put
together in all the right places.
Josephine Tyree
122 Mulberry Ave., Poe 1croy.

To graduate
Terre Annelle Wood, daughter
of Robert and Cathie Wood, was
awarded a bachelor of scienet
degree from Cumberland College
in commencement services May J6
in the 0 . Wayne Rol~ns Convocauon Center. The Long B0110m reSJ·
d~nt was among 246 graduates.
During the ceremony. interna ·
tiOnally known entrepreneur and
busmessman. Edward Huuon. wa;
awarded the honorary doctorate of
laws dcgtce .

Bftm a ""'ilt .. lilltwJ grass or in a
su&amp;l!m 1IIDllllll
TibeK ' &lt; • IIJ:w crop of
~ 1llll&lt;b .. !laal pallmlli

that ~ lll!ttubled soles.
DesignM " Llw!:l and Sandy Raf.
fiam., ibe ...,.,.,.,. firom Sox Tror
are !1idljly lluW IIIIJnJs LD amazing
palliC!m. ih&amp;' J&lt;clill:fi tn •peetalty
~ lllCII&lt; ~ (5S) make greal
allcmuiiJM:t; 1111&gt; &lt;ruHII1JIDllfY bouquets

for wociJtm,l ~ll mBf Ill&lt; IIIIDlll """' maru:r. but
florJII Jl!lllti """"' w boost res is·
tanee 1111&gt; ·~ lloJ£ !!pdls. Luckily,
the Ol't:llllrl'e ii'Jll'l'tt! at Necessary
Obgeou tJiw-t llfiill1 fibeory. The
desi!lDm ~ &lt;t wtde field of
casn&amp;l ~ lbat can t:alte yo u
frcnn ~··· llll!l0!1ht crutse to
SundBy's fumiJyi plm1C. Available
at B~IMJDI·!IIr ·s. A.tS . Saaw brillge &amp; CJindlunr md rdreshingly
aff~ M.ressary Objects'
hand·"".aDINlr lllJo1ttll pieces mix
eu ;uy. 1lD a ltllti ~op can be
m!!!dlwl ..uill a ~ swing !!1rirt or
leggln.gl; f~W lllllfn SI OO. Sweet
sondrc:ssel; 1111 ~e tengdls are
~ """"" lllll kall the heaL A
TCliiiJ'Ol. &lt;1Jil "'116 llc!Nomg palazzo
)lllll1£ 01; baOil ~fld and ladylike.
If yoo ·~ --~ •• 10 florals, go
for mr &amp;9b raf ~- wtld Jungle
prmts fJC ~ alisiiJI:t
Soln&lt;mJnr.l. .. '!ml'!rifican t detail
IIUille&lt; Bll &lt;IIIOlflill illll all- !!l3r. Coun 1
on NiMlt \llilllnr ,.fu&gt; admits lbat
" w'lum-&lt;y « IIilt 01m theme that
m nDOOH .a! ~ dJdlo:l.." ID tale a
mlllbJrJ r.....Dn:sr 10 the boys of
summer - lillt aedl stilding that
b ee&lt; ~ • !late ba.eball
leat!hN - .mi &lt;me m 10 throw a
curvt llliQ) • ~g white
blam {~ ~5J. ~ ($355) and
buLtoll-.i~P'!Il 11!1111lpe!!! ( $ 305),
Anoibcr ,p od &lt;DJDd1 f&lt;illt fans is a
dw:al1k, ~ wallet ($63)
made: lmm 6r reamer (centerool) u110il l&lt;lllf liaKball mins.
Ordor ~ lflmll J. ll'ltamnan's wood·
ly, wmy nn•os: ltml caaces wandcrlum ~ ll QII HN " '«t!&lt; 11. romance.
AJ.., bmll: flill! u-g fwll •kim ,
quamt lbll!li md lfle " uncomplicalcd - Nanndrt swearer
avBilahk .. oa.l mHIJQ and navy.
A ~ ~Ill to shoppmg, CllliiiOlf$ CJIIl l't:IOle packers

wbo procrastinate, since purchases
can be sent overnight or to their
destination. I. Crew's summer
spectrum ranges from silk blazers
to beach thongs, and check out the
gingham men's shin and women's
bathing suits. Taking the worry out
of wrinkles, Tweeds presents a For·
tuny-pleated skirt, a mid&lt;al.f swirl
of silk ($79). A sophisticated companion would be the long-sleeved
T-shin ($4 2) with an eyelet bolder
around its sqWII!! neck.
Globe ll'OtWs shouldn't feel like
they have the weight of the world
on their shoulders. My pai.Anna,
just back from Spain, reduced the
lug of luggage by using a CordUlll
nylon suitcase whose adjustable
sttaps t:ransform it into a backpack.
Hers came from a company that
publishes "great" travel books,
" Europe Through the Backdoor."
A good scout, Anna also tecom·
mends L.L. Bean ' s soft suitcase
with a detachable daypack. Leave
room for wearable souvenirs local T·shins and jewelry or fleaabout the popularity of country music "bat acts"
ANOTHER HAT ACT· The Statler Brothers
market finds such as vintage Hai·
by wearing some themselves. They won the vocal
appear wearing bats at the TNN-Music City
waiian shins.
group
or the year award ror the 21st lime. (AP)
News Country awards show Monday at the
How 10 stay cool and calm due.
Grand Ole Opry House in NasbviUe. They joked
ing travel delays? Crablree &amp; Eve·
Iyn, after years of catering to the
carriage trade, continues to help
travelers stay civilized. Foil wrapped sachets and towelettes are
me about home theater. · ·
decoder to ex tract 1L
By SCOTI WILUAMS
good companions, easily tucked
"When
you
go
into
a
movie
thePro-Logic uses "stecnng logic"
AP Televisipo Writer
into a fanny pack, pant's pocket or
NEW YORK- There are three ater, you're watching justa project· to push the sound through five
makeup kit. The Swiss Skin Care things you can do right now, today , ed image on a screen with a room· audio channels . Playing through
line offers sachets S!llked in herbal for free, to boost the pleasure you ful of strangers," Joseph said . front channels at left, center and
toner. Descnbed as "indispensable
"You can laugh, you can cry. you right, and two side channels, the
get from television :
on voyages and most essential after
can
feel all these emotions because circuitry lets you create "concert
I. Fix the telephone so it won't
clambakes," towelettes drenched
of
the
medium.
hall" ambience.
ring while you're viewing.
with lemon essence could help a
"It's
more
believable
when
you
OK . That's $600 for a new
2. Fix your snacks and take care
biker or skater "chill." Rose-tinted
have
a
big
screen.
It's
more
bclicv·
recetver. Now you need a compati·
of urgent personal business before
powder leaves look old-fashioned,
able
when
you
have
good
sound.
ble, robus~ center channel speaker
but still work like a charm - just you sit down.
It's
more
believable
when
you
can
and
a pair of side-rear speakers.
3. Lower the room lights to a
press the powdered side against
turn
down
the
lights."
That's
probably another $600 to
your face to remove dust and shine. comfortable dimness.
So
what
can
you
do
to
give
your
$800.
Sounds simple, right? But if you
This venerable company also
home a little home theater?
And, hey, with thai kind of
don't
do
it,
you're
allowing
a
host
makes one thing you should leave
Forget about the $6,500 Sharp investment, a LaserDisc player fer
of potential distractions and inter·
at borne: The Moth Chaser. A pot·
ruptions. And if you're not watch- TV projector and the $9,000 Lexi· your movies is almost mandatory.
pourri with a purpose, this blend of
ing TV for relaxation, entertain- con Dolby Pro-Logic decoder-pro- Remember, too, some enlightened
lavender, .!edar and other natural ment or escape, what's the pomt?
cessor. Buy a stereo VCR. Put your video stores arc starting to rent
moth repellanrs can be stuffed into
If you REALLY want to get a TV between your stereo speakers, LaserDisc movies. Spend as much
one ofCrablree &amp; Evelyn's elegant bang out of television, though, you plug the VCR into your home or as little as you like'
moire sachets or a basket to keep should gcr yourself a home theater.
receiver and presto: Stereo TV!
woolens wearable. Summer doesn't
Today's movies on LaserDisc
Calm down. Sure. you can
last forever.
also
offer a TV picture 60 percent
spend big on big-screen, rear proA meeting to organize an
sharper
than on a VCR, as weU as
jection TV s and audiuphtle sound
antique tractor and small engine
Compact
Disc-quality,
five-chan
·
systems. But you can get startlingly
club for Meigs Countians has been
good audio-visual perfonnance out nel, stereo Surround Sound.
"The problem IS, your receiver planned fer Monday at 7:30p.m. at
of your existing system by making
doesn't know how to son out the Southern Local High School. The
a few sensible upgrades.
public is invited to attend.
''It really comes down to being different channels," Joseph said .
able to suspend your disbelief," "Packed into the sonic infonnabon
fall in the northwest United States. said Jeff Joseph, top marketing on Dolby encoded tape is the inforThey will be offered in the rest of executive for Harvey Electronics, a mation needed to send it to various
Friends and relatives from the
the country and overseas as soon as lugh-end audio dealer. He wear.; a parts of the room."
area
anending the wedding Ellen
So
you
need
a
Dolby
Pro-Logic
product lines can be retooled.
badge these days that reads, "Ask
Chapman and David Ebersboch on
Kimberly-Clark. which has a 30
April II •n Cumberland, Md. were
percent share of the U.S. diaper
Joe Moore, Gallipolis; Mike
market. said May 21 that its HugChancey,
Athens; Beverly Knapp
gi es UltraTrim diapers will be
and
Leighan
Gregory, Letart,
more absorbent and thinner than
W.Va.
;
Joyce
Carson, West
the current Huggies diapers.
Columbia,
W.Va.;
Edna Roush,
Huggies UltraTrims will use a
New
Haven
,
W.Va
.; Aimee
By RICHARD GREEN
felt lining and snugger fit to com But Frye said BLM never exam Manuel,
Wade
Connolly,
Racine;
Associaled Press Writer
bat leaks. Kimberly-Clark, based in
ined the logging ' s tmpact on K1e
Sarah
and
Pat
Philson
,
Randy
PORTLAND, Ore. - Sales of owl .
Dallas, expects to introduce those
Rick
Roush,
Missy
Leach,
timber from some of Oregon's old·
diapers late this summer.
Jim Getsinger, president of the
Both P&amp;G and Kimberly -Clark growth forests could be on hold for Northwest Forestry Association, Chancey, Libby Roberts, Larry,
wtll use smaller packages for the a year after a judge ordered the said the ruling adds to the pressure Sally and Chns Ebersbach , Syracuse.
new diapers, which could allow U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Congress to step in.
retailers to increase profits by fit · to study the effect of logging on the
"lr's clearer than ever that a
northern spoiled owl.
ong more of the diapers on shelves.
umely solution can only be accom U.S. District Court Judge Helen plished through legislative action,
Both companies said they
Stev e and Cheryl Halley
expect retail prices to be about the Frye, who on Feb. 19 issued a tem - otherwtse BLM will be oul of busi- announce the birth of their second
porary injunction against the sales, ness until the middle of next year," child, a daughter, Mcgann Kath same as their current diapers.
granted a permanent injunction he said.
leen, on Feb. 12 at Holzer Medical
Monday extending the ban. The
BLM spokesman Ed Ciliberti Center.
ruling was a victory for environ - said il isn't clear how soon the
The infant weighed six pounds
mentalists.
agency could be back in the timber and four ounces and was 19 inc~es
She gave the agency 30 days ro business because it is unclear long.
make
a timetable for drawing up an whether 10-year resource manageThe Halley 's fir st daughter ,
w1th his wife a1 the Earth Summit
analysis
of
what
the
loggin~ would ment plans scheduled to be finished
Ashley,
is si• years old.
m Rio de Janeiro.
do to the owl, which lives m some m a year will fullill Frye's order.
Grandparents are Joyce Circle,
of th e oldest and tallest forests of
In recent years, BLM had New Haven. W.Va. ; George Circle,
the Northwest and wa.&lt; declared a offered as much as I btllion board Pomeroy ; and Bob and Gerry HalLOS ANGELES (AP) - Magic
threatened species tn 1990.
feet of timber a year from western Icy, Cheshire.
Johnson ran the basketball throw.
T~ BLM had argued that envi- Oregon, but cut back 10 750 million
Paternal gteal-grandmothers are
of course, while Mary Lou Retton
ronmental
impact
statements
it
under short-term plans to protect Delma HaUey, Cheshire, and Thelhandled the balancing act.
Scores of celebri tics and athletes drew up for timber sales between the owl. Environmentalists have ma Grucscr, Pomeroy. Great grand1979 and 1983 met legal require- demanded BLM offer even less.
father is Dave Grueser, Gallipolis.
volunteered their Sunday to the
ments
.
annual Pediatric AIDS Foundation
carnival and raised more than $1.5
million.
Candice Bergen was in charge
of the touchdown pass. Mel Gibson
helped our with the basketball
throw. Chevy Otase with the wheel
of fortune and Sally Field with the
penny pitch.
Dustm Hoffman and Robin
Williams ran the frog toss game.
In just a few hours, you can create a beaut~ul
Sharon Stone was 81 the basketball
painting you'll be proud of We know you can
booth, and Luke Perry worked the
do it because the national Sue Scheewe leachbaseball throw.
A sellout crowd of 1,200 paid
ing staff guides thousands of beginning paint·
$1 ,000 each or $2,500 a family to
ers to creative fu~illmenl every year! h's a great
aw:nd.
opportunity for you lo learn from a gifted and
caring teacher.
GIVE US A CALL FOR
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) INFORMATION!
Garth Brooks rook the top honor as
entertainer of the year at the 26th
RESERVAllONS
annual TNN-Music City News
Awards, but fans gave Alan Jock·
son three awards.
Jackson, who won for album
Paintings on display In store. Make
and smgle of the year for "Don't
Rock the Jukebox" and as male
reservations now.
artist, said he owed a ran who had
gtven him a lucky penny hours
bef&lt;re Monday night's show.
' 'Thank you so much, wherever
you are," Jackson said. He had
been oominated for six awards.
Brooks, whose lastest album is
" Ropin' the Wind," had been
nominated in five categories but
won the top bonor only.
Reba McEntire picked up her
seventh female artist award in eighr
years.
•
529 Jackson Pike
The winners were chosen by
subscribers 10 the monthly country
Gallipolis, Ohio
musrc publication Music City
446-2134
News and by TNN viewers.

us Olllil&lt;llll hoeJ.
A.n til&gt;~ ana] ~ 31 sa.td the
ann B"" ' emrmD M00:&lt;b! was a
"'"""""" !Ill&gt; .. mmliBr dlsdosure last
montb ~ n•-:81 1Um:be1!110 -Clark
Cor:p~ DliAtOI d Blii@P'I diapm.
Proclor .*: Go:snbfl&lt; gjd its new
Ultr11 J)cy ~ - ~ curly cellu·
lose fltw lllll ~ Jlhnds on conUlCt 10 ~ ll&lt;-Jbtg. The} will
rcp1ace iP&amp;G'l bnpm Pllases and
Luvs ~ lim&lt;:!.
Tht: Omonnuorllu:teU company ,
wtuch ~ ablaWI i!!J percent of
rhr $4 hlllwm ll.. S diaj)er market,
srud th&lt; &amp;Jvt&lt;n "'ill b~ .old thts

GRAND RAPIDS . Mich. (AP)
- Fans of the Andy Griffith Show
picnicked and played at eve nts
such as Goober ' s Arm Wresth n'
Contes t and Opie ' s Sac I: Races
durtng the first Mayberr y
Founder's Day Picnic.
"It's a good club to be in
because you know Dan Quayle
isn't going to say anything bad
about it," jokedDan Veldm, ,
referring to the vtce prestdent s
remarks about TV character Mur·
phy Brown having a child out of
wedlock.
About 70 people auended Sun·
day's event. The international fan
club boasts 20,000 members, said
Lyle Fales, president of the Gnmd
Rapids and western Mrchtgan
chapters of the Andy Griffith Show
Rerun Watchers Club.
The series ran from 1960 to
1968.

1\~HYJlti . f&lt;nn . (AP) Tamm} " '.u&lt;!llt ilaH «Jld iler &lt;uburban e=- t&gt;lll oo&lt; d,. &lt;tgn thai
proclanno.l l! !fit&lt; ~orne of country

m mac · ~ · T'.II'HI il.J¢1. · ·

Not md.OO...-J m lhe ho me · s
S, U l5 m:illtrn j'111L:&lt; ,.ere !be lCOn
lctl&lt;:r\ 'l"&lt;Jllmtr!; •w: .. Fir!! Lady
Acr~~ · · C'll ~It' tlrr~~Jn l! gates. the

Nash nllr 31ll!JJti ""l'orted Monda'
Wynem .tmii ~101 fifth husband,
Georg• Ra..~ . lltouglll: a &lt;mailer
rsu1 r , .aJ~ ulll Srencwood . a
"'ash•·ill&lt; sU\lrot&gt;
W\'tlt1m.. :J( !. lius recorded more
than 5o l1ihmn!. SM IS be:it known
lor lh• hn · "'S.'llll..! 8y Your Man."

MBAKZ..-\ CONGO. An gola
I AP 1 - ii"OW"' ~«Jftm Paul II mr ·
pnscd f111111l0T ll"JIIJQ Temuen, hts
wife ml . _ &lt;dbliJi:cn bJ JOining
them ... ~ ~ "' ilmlooade.

" J)o l'OOl """" l!alrd" Do you
grow Clll'1q!jii 1111&gt; IWd ..eryone' Do
your di:IMrmJ pliO 1111&gt; '!l(hoo!' Do you
study ttar4•"" lftlr fl'llll" osked the
Temucm 1111 illwqmse dunng h.ts
I S-mmlll&lt; rdlul! Cllll ~ .
B~ w.UIII\.

* P"P" mpped

Temo011 u m•ocl'lilt;re. Jaymg .
· 'Thn " limr .all ilf 1&lt;liL .. It was a
gtft of $'500 lr&lt;IIDIIlil !lad to ask
rcpcnm ..&amp;at 6r ~~"CD flills wen:.
J ob&gt;JJ iPJ1&gt;11!1 lGiliiJ: t0 Mban za
Con!lD. ~ Mnca's oldest
churdh 1111&gt; lay die corner·
stone &lt;!If .a ~ He iJ on a
~ 1m¥' lllll Aqlil1a.

WA.SHIIINGTUN iAi"l - Bar·
bant Bwllt bp a !low profile on her
67th bD1tlttlft

Tht: &amp;m ~· omtW oo public
evcnrum ~ l'retn&amp;uc 11iJM.. 3llb:d what ~e
bought lb:tii •m, D0ld rep0rters.
" Same~ a&lt; lbBI Jl::ll!."

He .alldc4l lJidbi¥;IJJ. 'Tve gorto

run 0111 _ . md lliad SlliiiCibing.••
Mil&gt;. 8IIIIII • !~:lid ft: and her
hw.'banll&lt;dm mta .....~~ungv pm!OIII!I.
The ~ illlliiS 68 on Friday. He ..mil 'lf"Ddl tlia~ birthday

4307
Buckeye 5:
7-8-10-28-36

Val. 4S, No. :rT
CoPYrighlod 1812

Low In mid -50s. Thursday,
sunny. High in low 80s.

2 Seellono, 14 Pageo 25 centa
A MuiUmadla Inc. NewaiNI-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 10, 1992

Meigs board approves repair work for building
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senlillel Nrws StaiT
Approval for wort on the Central Building of Meigs Junior High
School costing $7,000 was given
by the Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday nighL
Meeting at Pomeroy Elementary
School, the board heard a report
from Supt. James Cmpcnter on rec·
ommended worl: at the Central
Building which has had minimal
use for the past several years. The
superiDlendent said the w&lt;d will

include installation of a ftre alarm
system and two fire doors, and
replacement of the electncal servtce.
It was noted that there will
about 60 addioonal students at the
junior high next fall and that two
addtttonal umts are betng added.
Bruce Wilson, junior high principal, satd that plans call for srx
classrooms to be put into use on the
two floors of the building.
The board employed Mike
Kennedy and Susan Arnold as
tutors ror the summer school pro-

gram al $70 per student, providing
there are enough students to warrant holding the classes. Kathy
Dotdge was hiCed as the htgh
school cheerleader advisor, and the
restgnauon of Fern Gnmm as a
substitute teacher due to retirement
was approved.
The board authorized the trea·
surer to seek btds for gasohne, oil
and antifreeze on a five year basis,
ncet msurance, trres and tubes, ftre
extingui~her repair, and student
acctdent msurance.
.
The board approved paymg the

health insurance for employees
from the insurance reserve fund for
the month of Junc. As explained by
the supenntcndent, paymg from
that fund will decrease the amount
whtch has to be borrowed from the
state loan fund b~ about $45,000
this fiscal year, wtthoul Jeopard•zing the required reserve.
Rates mcreased $3,000 last
month, he said, bur noted that there
IS adequate in the fund to more
than cover the three months reserve
required by the insurance program .
Carpenter said that since the

new fiscal year slarts in July at that
time et~Ier a new insurance compan~ or the same insurance mmpany
wtll be contracted for service. He
noted that the district has already
borrowed and received $250,000
from the loan fund, action ncccs·
sary to pay current bills.
The contracts of elementary
principals, the junior high princi·
pal, and the assistant high school
principal were reduced a total of 20
days a year. Current contracts are
for 222 days while the new contract
is for 202days.
On recommendation of Treasur-

er Jane Fry, the board voled to go
with McDonald on the group work·
crs compensation program. She
srud that there are over 300 schools
in the program and that the savings
to the local dtstrict will be about
$18,000 in premiums over the next
year.
The OOard moved into executive
session to handle personnel and
other matters.
Artending were Supt. Carpenter
Treasurer Fry, and board members:
Robert Banon, presidenl, Randy
Humphreys, Roger Abboll, John
Hood, and Larry Rupe.

Plant exchange slated Saturday
A group of herbal enthusiasts,
themselves the Herbal Hacvesters Society, will be conducting
a plant exchange in the larger minipark on Saturday from noon to 2
p.m. in conjunction with the
Pomeroy Merchants Association's
activities that day.
All gardeners, new or experi cal~ng

Meeting slated

cnced are invited to take advantage
of this plant exchange at which
lime the followmg items will be
available: columbme, mses, Obedi·
ent plant, lemon balm, tarragon,
cone nowers, chives, artemesia.
thyme, sweet woodruff and many
others.
·
All you have to do is brin~ a

plant to trade and organizers say if
you are a new gardener you don't
even have to bring something to
trade · all you have 10 do is stop by
for a free plant
The group is also making plans
for the herbal harvest and country
fair that will be held during Stemwheel Weekend in October.

House OKs new benefits for
unemployed, Bush warns of veto

Wedding guests

Judge extends ban on

old-growth timber sales

PLANT EXCHANGE PLANNED • T ..
Herbal Harvesters Soddy will bold a plaat
nchange in the Jarrer lllini·parll; in Pomeroy on
Saturday during Herilllf Weekend. The pablic

New arrival

is in vi led to participate in the exchange in wbicb
you "bring one to gel one." Pictured, 1-r, are
members or the society, Garrett Karr, Bobbie
Karr, Donna Nease and Dianna Lawson.

..-----Local briefs---, Campaign
No one hurt in accident

A vehicle was damaged, but there were no injuries in a two car
collision at the interSection or Hobson Drive and County Road J
Tuesday morning.
Middleport Police reponed thaJ Carol A Peny was traveling
south on Hobsoo Drive !WI Slar1ed 10 make a left tum onto Counry
Road 3 when her 1990 Chevrolet was SlruCk in the lefi side by a car
driven by Sandra Searles, Rutland Searles was traveling west on
Counry Road 3 and was wming on to Hobson Drive.
There was light danJa&amp;e 10 the front fender and door of the left
side of the Petty car. Searles was charged with failure to yield. The
accident occurred 817:02 a.m.

---Names in the news--WHITE PLAINS , NY (AP)" Good Morning Amenca ·· co-host
Joan Lunden has been ordered to
pay her est:ranged husband $I 8,&lt;XKJ
a month tn suppon.
Lunden , 41, filed fo r d•vorce
earlier this year from TV producer
Michael Krauss, 52. They had been
married for almost 14 years and
have throc daughters.
Ju sti ce Nicholas Colabella last
week ordered Lunden to pay
Krauss $18.000 d month in mlerlm
support and to pay half his unrc tm·
hurscd medical expenses.
"Why the courts don 't te ll a
husband who has been ltvmg off
hts wife to go out and get a JOb ts
beyond my comprehension," Lunden , who reportedly makes $2 mt l·
hon a year, said in a staiCCDcnt.
Kraus s ' lawyer , Norman
Shcresky , satd that hi s chent had
devoted himself 10 his fanuly and
that Krauss had hoped things could
be sculed amicably.
In light of the dectsion. he SBld,
"Maybe things will get better.
They should tlivtde what they have
and gel on with their li ves.··

Pick 3:
661
Pick 4:

Page4

A pro's tips on enjoying television

Proctor &amp; Gamble to sell
more absorbent diapers
B•·J(lll"' "'OLAJij
" · ir rd l'n!Rs Writer
CINC['I."XA Til - Proc te r &amp;
Gam!lk C~ '"'!&gt;'&gt; !II bas developed
teciiD~ llllml wlllll. ..Uow it to
mllk&lt; ll nilunm01 . lll&lt;lro! absorbent
di~ ~ Ill&gt; repfa:e two of

Ohio Lottery

Reds make
it two in row
over Giants

Crow sentences Circle
Shane Circle of Racine was SCIIr.enced to nor less than three years
nor more than 15 years in prison on one count of burglary by Judge
Fredenck Crow rn when he appeared in Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun Monday.
Circle entered a plea of guilty 10 the burglary of the Dale Di Ies
residence near Racine on Man:h 15, Meigs County Prosecutor Steve
Story said. In addition to the prison SCIItence, the judge ordered
Circle to make resti!Won of $16,643 !WI to pay court costs.
At Monday' a hearing four witnesses testified as to the character
of Circle. There was also a Slalement in court from Diles, the victim
in the case.
Circle, 18, will be tal:en to the Orient Reception Center for
assignment to a penal institution sometime later Ibis month, Sheriff
James Soulsby said.
He was one of five individuals charged with burglary of the
Diles residence. John Amos and Marl1 Theiss are scheduled 10 go to
trial on June 30 for the Diles burglary and other charges, Story said.
Charges against the IWO juveniles involved in the Diles burglary
are pending in Juvenile Coon.

WOULD YOU LIKE TO
PAINT A PICTURE?

Park district awarded grant
The Meigs County Part District has been awarded a grant of
$5 ,740 to develop a 23 acre site at Skinner Part, Slate Representative Mary Abel (I)-Athens) announced today.
Abel said that the pad: district will use the funds to develop a
picnic area, hiking trail, and acu:ss routes to the newly created park
located off of Route 124.
According to the Ohio Depanment or Natural Resources, the
pad: district was one of only 12 govemmenJ agencies throughout
the state 10 receive funding assislance from the Cwmtl grant, Abel

JUNE 12 &amp; 13
9:00 A.M. till finished.

said.
The funding is provided by the Land and Water Conservation
fund administered by the ODNR.

Squads respond to four calls
Units of the Meigs Comly Emergm:y Medical Service responded to four calls for assistance Tuesday and early Wednesday mommg.
On Tuesday at 7:34 p.m. the S)'lliCUSe unit went to Dusl:y Street
ror Kevin Dugan who was tmued but nor trllllSJ01ed.
At 9:50p.m. the Middlepon unil responded to Walnut Street for
Continued on pa~ 3

I

I

I

bill heads for
Senate vote
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
long-(!ebated bill that maJOrity Sen·
ale Republicans say will help ease
voter concerns about big-money
campaigns has taken another step
toward passage.
T~ Senate Task Force on Campaign Finance Rcfonn recommend·
ed passage 6-3 Tuesday. The full
Senate was expecll'd to vole on the
bill today.
Minority Leader Robert Boggs,
D-Jefferson, and the panel's other
two Democrats voted against it,
saying it fails to address areas thai
need refonn ing the most.
Boggs said they will offer
amendments during floor debate to
balance and strengthen the proposaL
He said the Democrats wtll try
to insert limits on contributions by
individuals - the bill's biggest
naw, he said - and to outlaw the
laundering of campaign money to
conceal iL&lt; source.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima, task
force chairman, S31d the legislation
is comprehensive and contains
overdue changes that include limits
on campaign contributions and
strong ftnancial disclosure.
He denied claims by Democrats
that the bill is designed to protect
and enhance the ability of Republi ·
cans to raise campaign money
while punishing Democrats by
restricting labor contributions.
Cupp said the measure puts
labor unions "on a level playing
field" with corporations, which
may not contribute to campaigns
under federal or state law except
through political action committees.
Several union officials testified
against the bill in commiuee. David
Lauridsen, spokesman for Council
8 of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees charged that the bill
seeks "to take workin$ men and
women out of the political pro·

cess.··

WASHINGTON (AP)
Democruts say House approval of
their latest effort to extend benefits
for the long-term jobless shows
they want to aid suffering Ameri·
cans, but Republicans say only politics is being served.
The House ignored a Bush
administration veto threat and
voted 261-150 Tuesday to give up
to 26 weeks of extra benefits to
people who will soon begin using
up their regular unemployment
coverngc.
Voting
yes
were 235
Democrats , 25 Republicans and
one independent. Nineteen
Democrats and 131 Republicans
voted no.
In the Senate, Finance Commit·
tee Chairman Lloyd Bentsen, DTexas. said his panel would vote on
his own vers•on of the btll Thurs day.
· The House measure would cost
$5 .8 billion over six years. It would
help more than 1.5 million Americans who would otherwise lose
government aid starting Saturday,
Democrats said.
The House vote came just four
days afrcr the Labor Department
announced thai last month's uncm -

ployment rute had hit 7.5 percent,
the highest level in nearly eight
years.
As they did last year when Bush
killed two earlier efforts to extend
jobless benefits , Democrats were
putting Bush in the position of
looking like he doesn't care about
out-of-work Americans if he
doesn't accept the bill.
" The president has decided that
trailing Ross Perot in the public
opinion polls, that be's going to get
tough on Congress, " said Rep.
Thomas Downey, D-N .Y., a sponsor of the measure . "But more
imporrant than Ross Pecor, George
Bush or Bill Clinton are the mil lion-and-a-half hard-working, des perate people who want to see an
e&gt;tcnsion of benefits .··
Republicans said Democrals
were doing nothing but playmg
politics. Instead of scndmg a measur e to an inevitable veto , they
said, Democrats could ac cept a
Bush-GOP compromise that would
limit the e&gt;tra weeks of assistance
to 20 .
"Why must it be that the leader·
shtp of this body can't forget
November long enough to ... work

QUEEN CANDIDATES • One of rour rontestanrs will be crowned 1992 Heritage Queen by
lhe Pomeroy Mercbnts Association Friday
evening at 7 p.m. at lbe Melp County Public
Library. Competing ror the title are 1-r, Love

out a compromise, bipartisan
answer to a serious national con -

cern like unemployment?" said
Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas .
The Democratic measure would
provide 20 weeks or 26 weeks of
extra benefits for wople wbo use
up their current benefits beginning
June 13. ll would last until Jan. I,
or earlier tf the unemployment rate
1mproves.
It also would make it easier for
more people to qualify for extended jobless benefits in the future .
The administration opposes making
any permanent changes in the system.
Currently, most jobless people
can get 26 weeks of regular benefits, which average abour $170 per
week but vary by state. A program
providing an extra 33 weeks or 26
weeks of coverage, depending on a
state's jobless rate, wiU begin phas ing out Saturday and end entirely
on July 4.
·
Bentsen's measure would provide 26 weeks or 33 weeks of extra
benefits through March 6. The
number of weeks would drop if the
national unemployment rare fell
below 7 percenL

Batey, Amy Searles, April Hudson and Micbelle
LauFbery. Pictured wilb lbe contestants is 1991
Hentage Queen Holly Williams who will per·
form the crowning ceremonies.

Four vie for Heritage Queen title
Heritage Weekend festivities of
the Pomeroy Merchants Association will kick-off Friday evening
with the announcement of the 1992
Heritage Queen.
The announcement will be made
at the Meigs County Public Library
beginnin~ at 7 p.m. Light refresh ments Will be available and the
public may attend.
Four contestants will compete

for the title of Heritage Queen:
Amy Searls, age 18, a graduate
Love Batey, age 18, a graduate of Meigs High School, daughter of
of Meigs .High School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Searls.
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Batey.
The winner will receive a subApril Hudson, age 18, a gradu- stantial prize package including
ate of Meigs High School, daughter gifts and gift certif!Cates from par.
of Mary Hudson.
ticipating men:hants.
Michelle Laughery, age 18, a
Crowning ceremonies will be
graduate of Eastern High School, conducted by 1991 Heritage Queen
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vic Holly Williams.
Lau2herv.

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