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                  <text>Ohio

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Page4

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Vot 43, No. 28

Copyrtghled 1il2

Heritage Weekend events to begin Friday evening
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
Events for Heritage Weekend,
this Saturday 'and Sunday, were
discussed at Wednesday's regular
meeting of the Pomeroy MM:hants
Association.
The association is sponsoring a
variety of activities in observance
of the weekend which has been traditionally sponsored by the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society.

Festivities for the association
will get underway Friday evening
with the crowning of the 1992 Heritage Queen at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy at 7
p.m.
Saturday's activities wtll begin
with a parade at 10 a.m. followed
by the recognition of the Heritage
Queen and her court at the Coun
Street stage. At II a.m. there will
be a performance by area clogging
groups and western style dance

demonstration. At noon Denver
Rice will entertain with his toilet
seat guitar. A ctvil war clothing
fashion show will be featured at
12:30 p.m. followed by Civil War
demonstrations at 1:15 p.m. by the
Company B, 91st Ohio Volunteer
Infantry Group. Outhouse races
will be featured at 2 p.m. followed
by mu sical entertainment by Dee
and Dallas at3 p.m.
Also during the dny will be an
antique show in th e larger mini-

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
Meigs County's new promotion al video, "The Hean of the Valley,"
produced by Roger Gilmore of
Aardvark Sound, was presented
during Tuesday's regular meeting
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.
The video, which has been well
received in the community, was
produced for the Meigs County
Park District to promote tourism
and an awareness of the area.
Copies of the video arc available
for $6.95 from the Park District
office, Farmers Bank, Gilmore's
Restaurant or Clarlc's Jewelry.
Gilmore also informed the
chamber of a project he is working
on with Mary Powell, park director, for an informational booth at
the Ohio State Fair in August All
88 counties in the state have been
invited to create a display for their
county and the winning entry will
receive SIO,OOO. Gilmore is working on a plan in which a steamboat
theme will be used to promote
Meigs County.
Gilmore stated he is donating
his Lime and services to the make
the display a reality and called for
the support of all chamber and

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FOR UNION - Wednesday evening Steelworkers Local 5668, ramilies and rriends
attended a rree concert or Phil
Dirt and The Dozers al lhe
Ravenswood High School
rootball field. The event was
sponsored
by
Doctors
Westmoreland, Levine and
Vaidya. Pictured above are Dr.
Westmoreland and Dr. Levine
with their ramilies enjoying
lbe SO's and 60's sound. To lhe
right is a member or the group
singing lo lbe crowd or approximately 7SO people who
attended lhe two and a balr
hour concert.

~-Local

GROUND

$299

90

Dexter man hurt in crash

GROUND

A Dexter man was injured in a two-au- craslt Wednesday a1 3:15
p.m. in Salem Township on Township Road 328, just east of the
Junction of County Road I, according to the State Highway Patrol's
Gallia- Meigs Post
Rickie W. Icenhower, 31, of 28274 Star Hall Rd., was taken by
the Meigs County EMS to Pleasant Valley Hospital, where he was
treated and released for non-visible injuries not specified by the
hospitaL
Icenhower, driving a 1979 Plymouth Volare, was heading west
on T.R. 328 when his car met a 1984 Pontiac Bonneville driven by
Walter Jewell Jr., 66, Rt. I, Dexter, in a curve and sideswiped each
other. Then Icenhower's car went into a ditch.
No one was cited in the crash.
Continued on page 3

CHUCK
I 0 LB. PACKAGE

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briefs-__,

A three vehicle accident on East Main in Pomeroy resulting in
damage to two vehicles but no injuries occurred early Wednesday
afternoon. All three vehicles were traveling east on East Main.
Pomeroy police reponed that Kenneth M. Swann, 35, Peach Fork
Road, Pomeroy, had stopPed his 1981 Toyota truck to make a left
hand tum. Amber Cumml!s, 17, Syracuse stopped the 1991 Ford
Escort she was driving behmd him, but Jerry D.' Downard, 37, Wellston, failed to stop his 1984 Ford dump truck.
He struck the rear of the Cumings vehicle pushing it into the rear
of the Swann truck. There was rear bumper damage to the Swann
truck, both front and rear light damage to the Cumings car, and no
damage to Downard's dump truck. There were no injuries.
Downard was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance.
Police reported that there was some damage to the front lawn at the
liz Cutler home when vehicles unrelated to the accident pulled
around to pass.

BEEF

s

In other matters of the association, Susan Clark, president,
infonned those in auendance about
the consumer survey that is currently being administered in the
busmess district . The public is
encouraged to complete a survey
and this may be done Saturday at
one of three places: Trinity Church,
St. Paul Lutheran Church or at a
table located on Coun Street. The
surveys must be completed as a
Continued on page 3

90
•

community members. Chuct
Kitchen, owner of Dairy Queen in
Middlepon, pledged a SIOO dona tion toward the project and extended a challenge to fellow chamber
members to match that contribution.
Paula Thacker, economic devel opment director, spoke briefly on
the announcement of the prison
which came late last month stating
Meigs County would not be the
recipient of the new facility. Mrs.
Thacker stressed the imponance of
maintaining a positive attitude and
that now steps must be taken to
bring about something positive for
the county.
Mrs. Thacker also discussed the
discount card program started by
the chamber in a fundraising effort.
The cards will be 3" x I 3/4" in
size and will contain advertise·
ments from participating businesses. Advertisements on the cards
will be 3/4" x I 1/16" allowing 12
spaces per card. Participants to date
are Dairy Queen. Middleport; Cardinal Dry Cleaners, Meigs County
Pick-up &amp; Delivery: Gilmore's,
Pomeroy; Hawk 's 76 Station, Tuppers Plains; Pleaser's Restaurant,
Pomeroy: and Fruth Pharmacy,

Pomeroy. Funher mlormauon on
the discount card program may be
obtained by calling the chamber
office at 992-5005.
Kenny Utt updated those in
auendance on the golf outing to be
held Thursday at the Meigs County
Golf Course with tee-&lt;lff at I p.m.
To this date 35 golfers have registered. A dinner, complete with
steak, baked potato, cole slaw and
baked beans will follow the event.
Tom Reed. reporting for the
nominating committee, recommended Duane Weber, Middlepon,
to fulfill the term of the member-atlarge position held by Todd King
who recently resigned. Reed also
stated there is an opening for a
board member from the Chester

area.
All chamber members were
encouraged to attend the PUCO
hearings at the Athens City Building on )IDle 25 at 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
Mrs. Thacker stated another PUCO
meeting was planned for July and
that further information would be
fonhcorning.
Tuesday's meeting was held at
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center and a luncheon was
provided.

Special committee to review,
prioritize all Issue 2 projects

No one hurt in two-vehicle wreck

I 0 LB. PACKAGE

Frozen Pizza................

KEMP'S

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park by Russ and Hope Moore. a limited only to scout members.
plant exchange by the Herbal Har- · lhree events will be featured
vesters Society from noon to 2 p.m. i~cluding a milk run. slalom and
and a quilting demonstration by two-mt le marathon . All events
members of the Meigs County require two persons rowing. TroSenior Citizens. In addition, there phies wtll be awarded for first and
will be a variety of crafters on second place in all events and there
Coun Street throughout the day.
is a $5 entry fee per rower. Starting
Area Boy Scout groups wtll be time for the races will be 10 a.m. at
sponsoring the Meigs Canoe Rally the levee and further mformation
on Saturday with sign-up at 9 am. on the canoe rally may be obtained
at the levee area in Pomeroy. This by calling 992-2439, 992-5959 or
rally is open to the public and not 742-2010.

Meigs Chamber of Commerce
views new promotional video

(

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 11, 1992

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Low In rnld-50.. Friday,
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By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
A five- person committee 10
review and prioritize all Issue 2
projects in Meigs County was
appointed at Wednesday's regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners.
According to Phil Roberts,
county engineer, the policy for
ranking Issue 2 projects has been
changed and the process now must
be handled differently.
Upon di sc ussion between the
board and Roberts and with a recommendation by Commissioner
Rich Jones, a committee was
appointed to rank each project
according to its imponance. The
committee consists of Roberts and
Jones along with Paula Thacker.
econo mi c development director
an d exec utive director for the
Meigs County Chamber of ComCOLUMBUS,O hio(AP) merce,
Frank Cleland, representing
Columbus Southern Power wants
the Public Utilities Commission of villa~e government, and Gary Dill,
Ohio to reconsider a 28.4 pen:ent pres•dent of lhe township trustee
electric rate increase that was association.
Thirteen projects have been
reduced to 18.57 percent.
approved
by Buckeye Hills HockColumbus Southern spokesman
ing
Valley
Regional Development
Thomas A. Holliday declined to
District
to
be
submitted for cons•dcomment on the grounds f&lt;l' a new
eration
of
Issue
2 monies. Of those
hearing, which is also being sought
13 to be ranked according to
by the Ohio Office or Consume~'
imponance,
five are rated locally
Counsel. The utility planned to ask
and
receive
points.
The point systhe PUCO today for the new heartem
is
strictly
set
up
according to
mg.
guidelines
provided
by
the district.
The utility had asked for a
In
addition
to
those
five,
two more
$202.5 million increase. But the
are
selected
but
receive
no
points.
PUCO approved on May 12 to a
This
newly
appointed
commit$123 million rate increase, or 20. 16
percent. allowing the utility to raise tee has come about quickly due to
the fact that all proJects seeking
the rates in three phases.
Issue
2 money must be submitted
The rirst -year increase was
to
the
state by Wednesday. The
reealculated to 8 percent from 9.59
committee
will meet Monday at
percent and the total increase was
9:30
a.m.
at
the commissioners
reduced to 18.57 percent.
office
to
begin
the process of priorThe ftrst-year mcrease will raise
itizing
each
projecL
the monthly bill for the average
Under ~vious guidelines each
residential custaner to $41.74 from
county
was assured lhat a certain
$38.67. Additional increases are to
amount of money would be allot·
follow in 1993 and 1994.
Utilities have 30 days to ask the ted. Now, all monies go into one
PUCO to rehear a rate case. The pot and lhose receiving the highest
Columbus Southern deadline was district ranking in imponance will
probably be lhe projects that are
today.
funded.

Rural Fire Protection
Mike Duhl and Bob First attended the meeting to discuss a proposed rural fire protection plan for
the county.
The 1dca of the program,
according to Duhl and Ftrst, has
been well rccctved by the county's
ftre depanments . It would call for
the installation of a hydrant system
on a body of water such as a pond
util iz ing six -inch PVC pipe to

pump the water.
Duhl and First requested assistance from the board of commissioners in the steps necessary to
take in applymg for Community
Development Block Grants which
they bope could fund the project.
Accordmg to First an estimated
cost of the project would be
approximately $15,000. No action
was taken on the matter and Duhl
Continued on page 3

Utility wants new

rate hike hearing

UNUSUAL CATCH· Tkb softsllelllurtle was pulled from lht
Obio River by Wortby Stanley ol Racine. He was flsblq with
nlgbtcrawlers at tbe Racine Boat Launcb Tuesday wbea lbe l1lrtle
was snagged on 1 regular nslllnJ book. StiDley said tltat tbe
species bas a Ioogb Ibid&lt; skin Instead ol bon over lbe boay ~Jtr
or lis sbeU and thalli's unusual for one to be palled from tile Oblo
River.
•.

•

�Commentary

Thursday, June 11,1992
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 11, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Warmer weather predicted for Ohio

OHIO Weather
Friday, June 12
Accu·Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high remperatures

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DK901'BD TO TBIIN'I1tlm8TS OP 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHri'EIIEAD
Asslstat Plabll • erfCentroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

I..I!TmS OP OI'INION ""' welcome. They should be less !han 300
-.11. All !etten ""' subject to editing an4 must be signed wilh name.
oddla&amp;IDCI lllloploooe lllllllber. No unsigned leiters will be published. Leners
sbould be in r;oocl Wlo, llddrasiag issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By TH Associated Pms
Following are excerpts rrom recent edirorials on national issues in
newsplpCII'S 8CroSS the Sl8le.
·
Tile Cohuabus Dispatch, June 8:
No potilit:al andll in decades has rocked Congress as has lhe House
bank ~ affair. Slill, up ID now, nolhing iUegal has been found in
lhe memben' check-tiling.
The odious cloud tu.tging owr lhe House post office is different in
t1w die llleplials Dillie tbcm do include illegalities that could mean seri·
ous peelria if some Houle memben are found guilty. The House post
office is 111 entity unto itlelf, not part of lhe U.S. Poslal Service.
Invalip!D!1 .,. Clellletinl onlllegations of embezzlement, drug deal·
in,, &amp;holt anplo): , ovatimc, frllud and cover-up. The House panel car·
1)'1111 011 die invatiptions lias had its deadline for rqJOI'Iing exrended 10
July 6 bccllr of die wideDing ICOpC of its work.
Unlike tile check 0\'CI'drJli scandal, lhe post office allegations so far
have not caused wide ripples in lhe pub~c consciousness. Even if only a
pan of lhe lllcplions IR true, lhoogh, it will be a serious black mark
3gainst • inslitution alraldy beld in low repure.
As elections so f• this year have shown, incumbems are in deep trou·
ble. And that is bcclluse., in so many ways, many members of Congress
have sbown they believe they are above lhe law and entitled 10 princely
·pcrts. Votm may convince them tlw lhe free ride is over.
Akroa Baco• Journal, June 5:
For most American children and students, holding down an after·
school or summer job is part of the experience of growing up, learning
responsibility, self-reliance and earning some pocket money 10 supple·
ment edncarioo or some tmject And when they work, children are protected from cxploilatioD by laws that regulau: the conditions of their labor.
Acconling IDa reecnt report from a U.N. agency, the lnlernational
Labor OrJIIIization, for many children, some in America but most in
developing counlries, wort: is a matter of survival.
The conditions of labor n appalling: In faciOries, quarries, garbage
dumps, lrolbels and planlations around the world, children are working
long hours for a few cents or a meal a day while govenunents look the
other way.
The uagedy of child labor is that in the mix of global problems, the
i!buses are easily ign&lt;RCI. There is little incentive to .;ontrol abuses and
protect children btc•nse child labor is cbeap and allows industries in poor
counlricll30fllC competitive edge.
In addition, lhe victims, among lhe poorest in soc1ety, are the least
likely to have political champions. They are therefore expendable
resoun:es.
The Uniled Nations do;lared 19791he Year of the Child to focus aucn·
. ;ion oo children's problems the world over. Working children need action
:: now more than ever where labor laws don't cover children.

.·•
·:

Tile Cindnaati Post, June I:
Allegations and denials are Hying again on Capitol HiU, distracting the
~ .mcmben from the p'CIIl chanlde of lhe season. which is passing a consti·
~ · tutionalamCIIdmentto forte tbernselves to balance the budget, sornelhing
:::congress has not done since 1969 and has no inu:ntion of doing any time

.-:soon.
;·

The larest crop of accusations being explored by a federal grand jury

·:has to do wilh lhe exchange of vouchen for considerable quantities of

: :cash, instead of for postage, at the House post office.
: Against that backdrop - and with congressional approval ratings
· :scraping 111 unheard-of 15 percent- four serious members of Congress
:·are tqing institutiollll reform. They want to tackle lhe real source of dis·
: &amp;atisfaction witb Congress of which petty mismanagement like personal
• :Overdrafts ill only a symbol: ruunely, legislative gridlock.
elfon in the House are two Grearer Cincinnati lawmaken
-:- Reps.
Hamilton, D·lnd., and Bill Gradison, R-Ohio; they are
: joined in tbe Senate by David Boren, D-Okla., and Pete Domen ici, R·
: N.M. Tlleir biD would 11uncb the firSt comprehensive, bipartisan review
· :or~ ope~ltions and procedures in 30 years.
: · To regain public respect, of course, lhe members themselves would
: ~tiD have to summon the decency to SlOp exempting themselves from laws
. )hey impose 011 the rest of lhe population. In an ideal world, they would
; &lt;even place lhc national good abuve partisan advantage and parochial
: i nteresiS including their own re-&lt;lection.

:· l..c:ldint:s

...•
·..•.
.

Berry's World

'

...
'

.
.
••
.·.•
'

••

••

:-.·

.·..••
·....
·.

.·.•
..-•
•
•
•

•
•

.·
IV IIHiil br NfA II'IC

~~

"II'• that book/ Ever since Millie found out
th•t 11/111 msdtl much more money than I did,
b6M IICtlng funny/"

w••

\

H. Ross Perot, growling and
so metimes snarling, has put the
budget deficit back on the front
burner. It is said - by most everyone - that we are undisciplined,
irresponsible, and that "we are
momaging the future of our children.v.
That ought to be rethought.
Without endorsing big defiCits, it
should be noted that a mortgage
may be unpleasant, but it also typically helps buy somelhing useful,
like a house. A good pan of the
mortgage owed by our children
will likely have bought the best
bargain in hislOry, namely "~ce
and freedom lhrough strenglh. '
Oddly, at this anti-govcmmen·
tal, anti·partisan momen~ lhe credit
for this goes to Democrats and
Republicans. And the potential villain- maybe- we don't know
yet because he's not talking, is the
anti-governmental H. Ross Perot.
The proxima1e causes for such

musings are three: 1) the leak of
the Pentagon's first P!JSI-Cold War
"Defense Po~cy Gwdance" 2) the
passage of the ftrst post-Cold War

Ben WaUenberg
defense budget by the House of
Representatives, and 3) a statement
by Perot that sounds booker.;.
There is a flap about the leaked
DPG . In March, The New York
Times published excerpts from a
document in its "final drafting
stage," and characterized it as
endorsing "a one-superpower
world," under the "benevolent
domination" of the United States,
and "(rejecting) collective intema·
tionalisrn. ''

Then, in May, the Times pub·
lished excerpts of a revised DPG
draft, admiring its "suiking change
in tone." Pentagon officials say
that the early draft was nowhere

near fmal, and !hat lhe final vernon
maintains all !hat was essential in
the earlier draft. What is important
now is wbat lhc document actually
says, which is powerful, and roughly this:
·
Twice in this century Americans
made catastrophic decisions about
defense. We disarmed after winning World War I and after winning World War II. Each time
totalitarians took advantage of
weakness; the result was tragedy
for us and lhe world.
Now (says the DPG) we have
won the Cold War. There is a
democratic "zone of peace" !hat
should be maintained. and expand·
ed. Collective security is fine, but it
usually occun only when !here is
credible American leadenhip, wit·
ness the Gulf War. America, the
only superpower, must remain
strong and involved, able 10 act on
its own if necessary to prevent
olher Iraq-like situations. We have

SOONER OR
LATER. "THIS
WAS BOU/IIP

TO HAfPEN.

to be strong enough to deal with
threats that we see, as well as
lhreats !hat we don 't see, because
unseen threats tend to emerge if
!hey are unopposed.
The House passed a $270 billion
defense budget. It's not perfect. It
has some pod in it It's about $10
billion less than President Bush's
request. But it's big money for a
time when big enemies aren't
apparent More important !han the
amount is that our legislators have
(at least for now) learned the lesson
of history.
After much chatter this year
abuut a return to isolationism, it is
now clear that !his time there will
be no pell-mell retreat from the
world. Our children will pay some
of the monetary costs for that. But
it is our mortgaged children who
will likely live unthreatened by cataclysmic war, a gift greater than
any our parents gave to us.
Into this semi-serene picture
sbides H. Ross Perot. He indicates
!hat the Gulf War was an exercise
by George Bush to prove his
"manhood ." If it's true, Bush
ought to be impeached. If it's false,
is Ross Perot a scandal-monger?
Worse, is he an isolationist? What
are his principles?
There was a debate about the
Gulf War. The president said the
threat was real and the United
States had ID lead a military action.
Many Democrats said the threat
was real, but we should let sanctions run longer 10 stop Iraq. Bolli
sides understood lhe high global
stakes: cross-border aggression, a
dictaror threatening lhe oil reservoir of the world with nuclear
weapons.
Does Perot think the threat was
not real? That it was only George
Bush escaping from wimphood?
That tbe United States shouldn't be
involved in such mauers? If he
thinks that, we ought to know
about it. Such views could mortgage lhe future of our cbiklren.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprist
Institute, is author of "The First
Universal Nation," published by
Tbe Free Press and a syndicated
columnist for Newsp.~per Enterprise Association.
·

Postal probe knocks at Rosty's door
WASHINGTON (NEA) Nothing makes a prosecutor happier than when a little fish says,
"Give me immunity, and I'll bring
you a big fish ." Sources close to
the U.S. attorney's office for the
District of Columbia say that is
exactly what happened in a key
investigation on Capitol Hill.
They say that investigators
e•plained to House Post Office
employee James Smith !hat they
had sufficient evidence to prosecute him on multiple charges. In
tum, Smith is said 10 ·have offered
them a big fish - Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-111., powerful chairman of lhe House Ways and Means
Commitree.
U.S. Attorney Jay Stephens has
been investigaung alleged irregu·
larities within the House Post
Office, including lhe reported sale
of drugs by employees; misuse and
possible embezzlement of funds
and stamps; and violations of various postal regulations.
Sources say that, early on,
Stephens' broadened lhe investigation to include long-standing
rumors that House memben buy
large blocks of stam~ back in their
home districts w1th campaign
funds, transport th~ stamps back ID
Washington, and then have friendly
House Post Office staffen convert
them back into cash. In this way, a
ca ndidate can launder campaign
funds into money for personal use.
Initially, a primary target of the

investigation was former House
Post Office employee Wendell
Magruder, who has since been
charged with a drug-related con-

Robert]. Wagman
spiraey. Reportedly, he led investi·
gators to Smith, who, indirectly,
was his boss.
Smith is a longtime House Post
Office employee whose title is
Assistant to the Postmaster Accountable Papers. He earns
$54,687 annually. His job was
supervising all counter clerks and
ensuring that !hey had adequate
supplies of stamps and cash. He
was also in charge of the vault
where large amounts of stamps and
cash are slOred.
According to lhe sources: Smilh
offered details of alleged irregularities in exchange for a grant of
immunity. When asked what kind
of irregularities, he startled prosecutors by telling them he had
directly exchanged cash for House
payment vouchers. After immunity
was granted, Smith told prosecuton that one of the members he did
it for was Rostenlcowski.
Rostenkowski has denied
knowledge of any imtm)lriety. He
says he cannot speak in detail yet
because it is an ongoing matter
before a grand jury.
Smith is said by sources 10 have

totd prosecutors that he was
ordered by a "superior" to take
cash to Roslenkowski 's office. He
was told he he would eventually
get a voucher authorizing the
money to be deducted from the
office expense account He has told
investigators that the dollar
amounts ranged from a few hundred to a maximum of about
$2,000 on any one occasion.
Reportedly. Smilh has named
Post Office Chief of Staff Joanna
O' Rourk e as that supervisor.
O'Rourke, who earns $82,881 a
year, has been hospitalized foUowmg major surgery. Her lawyer says
she will coopen1te fully wilh investigators as soon as she is physically
able.
Stephens bas subpoenaed Rosrenlcowski's office expense vouch·
ers from May 1986 until lhe pre·
sent. Reportedly, Rosrenkowski's
office spent almost $22,000 on
stamps during that period. A
review of duplicates kept on microfilm as public records shows tlw in
1990 and 1991 Rostenkowski
charged his expense account about
$6,000 for poslage, including several purchases in the $2,000 range.
The $22,000, or abuut $4,()()().ayear, has startled Capitol Hill
observers. Congressional offices
send the bulk of their mail free by
utilizing fnnking privileges. House
rules actually stipulate that a mem·
ber should only use postage swnps
to send foreign mail or for special
postal services like Express Mail or

registered mail. Under·this arrange·
ment the average congressman
spends about $1,000 a year on
poslage. There has been no explanation offered as to why Rostenkowski 's office needed to spend
so much on non-franked mail.
Prosecutors admit this is a difficult investigation. Typically House
expense vouchers are prepared by
staffers. Then the member's
required signature is affixed wilh a
rubber stamp. So it may prove very
difficult to tie Rostenkowslci himself 10 any of lhe transactions.
In issuing the subpoena,
Stephens' office required that the
vouchers be handled carefully to
"preserve forensic evidence." This
means fingerprints. Reportedly, lhe
vouchen will be examined to see- if
it can be determined whose fingerprints are on !hem.
In addition to Rostenkowski's
expense records, Stephens' office
has also asked for the records of
Rep. Joe Kilter, D-Pa., and Rep.
Austin Murphy, D-Pa. Bolli made
unusually large purchases of
stamps.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
There were rumors that some
members of the House buy blocks
of stamps in their home districts
with campaign funds, and then
have House Post Office staffen
convert them into cash for other

use.

What personal ads can sometimes do

...
.

•
•
'•
•

Wisely mortgaging our kids' future

From across the s1are comes lhe
news my swee~ eccenbic friend is
engaged.
"Where did you meet her?" I
ask him, quite surprised. As far as I
had known. he hadn't dared anyone
since his divorce over two years
ago .
"I put a ~nal ad in our local
newspaper, ' he says. 'Tm really
happy. I've never felt like this."
A personal ad? This dear, quiet
man - who was ill at case lhe ftrSt
time he listened to "A Prairie
Home Companion" because he
thought the stories were about real
people and they'd be embarrassed
at having their privacy invaded put a personal ad in a newspaper?
I ask him more and learned thal
he not only met his f1811Cee dlrough
his ad, but he also met other
women he had enjoyed dating.
Overall, it had been a wonderful
experience, he said.
Why wlls I so surprised at my
friend's success? I wondered. Why
was it so unreasonable to expect
that people could meet and like
each olher through a personal ad?
Because, I had to adnut, I've held a
stereotype of people who place
such, ads.

For several years, our local
newspaper deemed the ads beneath
their edilOrial standards and refused
to run them. When a new publisher

personal ads. She's about 100 five women to every man. I mostly
overweight, professes not sat at home. Now I've always got a
much mtcrest m shedding any of it, date on the weekends, I've had sev.
and IS happy to share the ground eral relationships tlw lasted a few
rules of ~rsonals:
months, and I still have a couple of
"Unnl.you fl!eel the guy and get close friendships that were left
to know h1m a ~ule, don't give him when we realized we weren't right
your a~dr~ss and phone number. for each other romantically."
She also introduced me to her
came to town and staned running Meet h1m m a public place. I once
best
friend, an attractive young
had
a
relig~ous
fanatic
in
my
livin~
personals in a special section with a
room
handing
out
tracts
to
my
sons
woman
who just became engaged
big hoopla and a $3 charge for each
and
telling
us
how
he
wanted
to
to a man she met through a peoon·
reply, I and some journalist aquain·
start
his
own
religious
commune
al
ad. Her sister married one.
lances of mine had a lot of fun dis·
and
be
tbe
leader!"
I guess in a perfect world, we'd
cussing them privately.
She
says
it
took
a
while
to
figmeet men or women we liked
all
We had no trouble finding ones
through
the "tradiliooal" channelll
ure
out
who's
a
taco
short
of
a
like: "I'm just honest! I admire
and
lhere
would be no need to pay
combination
plate
early
in
the
SWFs 18-42 wilh giant chests!"
$3
a
pop
to
take a chance on mcetr
~·
and
not
all
of
it
was
great
We weren't much interested in
ing
someone
else. But perllaps ~
'You
have
to
have
a
pretty
thick
talking about lhe "WWM" (widlone~t
hc.u
of all are those of
owed white male) "60, retired, skin about rejection, but I do. I figenjoy 1ravel, bowling, camping, ure if they don't want me, then I us too smug to understand the sim ~
pie human need to connect, and
fishing, lousy dancer ... Previous don't need them...
However,
life
"post-persooals"
how bard thal can sometimes be to
marriage was 37 years. I miss comfulfill.
is
much
betler
than
pr&amp;-,
she
says:
panionship of good woman." It
Sarab Overstreet Is a snydl;
"I tried the bar scene wasn't funny. It was poignant It
cated
columnist for Newspaper
A
WFULI
and
lhe
cburch
singles
sounded like sane of us.
Enterprise
As5oclatlon.
groups
where
there
were
always
Recently I learned !hat one of
the women in my office, a warm
woman with whom I've shared
deep and touching convmations as
. Thought f~ Today: "Forg~ulness is a form of freedom." - KahlD
weU as hilariously bawdy onea, has
G1biBII,
Amencan poet and artJil (1883-1931).
dated several men she met through

Sarah Overstreet

pound~

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

By Tbe Associated Press
The only change forecasu:n sec
in Ohio' s weather over the next
couple of days is it will get
warmer. Abundant sunshine and
low humidity should continue
through Saturday, the National
Weather Service said.
Temperatures will warm into the
80s before a cooling trend begins
on Sunday, when rain also may
spread inro the state.
The record high temperature for
this date at lhe Columbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1933. The
record low was 35 in 1972.
Sunset ronight will be at 9 p.m.
Sunrise on Friday will be at 6:02
a.m. a.m.

Around the nation
Rain fell early today from South
MICH.
Carolina west into Kansas and
Nebraska, while thunderstorms
exu:nded throughout the South.
Toledo 84'
Thunderstorms struck central
Oklahoma early today. the 28th
PA.
consec utive day of rain in lhe state.
There was more rain today in
Mansfield 83'
the Pacific Nonhwest. The Nonh ·
east was clear and mild.
Thunderstorms, with hail and
high winds, stretched from central
Florida to Mississippi, aqd across
Arkansas, eastern Texas and Okla·
Columbus 83'
homa. The region was drenched
Wednesday .
Abcut 1.5 inches of rain fell in
one hour in Wichita, Kan., causing
nooding in the southern pan of the
cuy. Several rivers nooded in the
Divorce sought
southeast pan of the state.
W. VA.
Rebecca E. Tyree, Middlepon,
In Te•as , nearly 4.5 inches of
is seeking a divorce from lanny D. rain fell south of Fullshear and
KY .
Tyree Sr., Rutland, in the Meigs there was flooding in Mineral
County Court of Common Pleas.
Wells.
Divorce granted
Much colder weather will reach
Divorces have been granted by northern California and western
the Meigs County Court of Com· Nevada tonight and Friday. Light
&amp;nny PL Cloudy Cloudy
Ice
Show9rs T-storms Rain Rurries Snow
mon Pleas to Natalie Ann More· snow could fall in higher eleva·
head and Paul Frederick Morehead ; tions.
C1992 Accu-Wealh«, Inc.
Via Associ~tted ~u GraptrcsNef
and Kenneth H. Romine and Janet
High u:mperatures were forecast
Irene Romine.
Licenses issued
lows
in
the
upper
50s
to
mid·60s
Marriage license s have be en
South·Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 55 - with highs in the 80s. Sunday, a issued in Meigs County Probate
60. Friday, a mixture of clouds and chance of showers and thunder· Court to: Gregory Alan Robbins,
Am Elc Power ................... 32 l/4
stonns. Lows in the 60s with highs 31, Pomeroy, and Vicki Ann Han·
sunshine. High in the mid-80s.
Ashland Oil ...................... .30 3!8
in
the
upper
70s
and
80s.
Monday,
son, 36, Pomeroy; Charles Edward
Extended forecast:
AT&amp;T .... .. ... ........................ 42 1/2
fair.
Lows
in
the
mid-50s
to
low
Kelley, 21, Vinton, and Eugenia
Saturday through Monday:
Bank
One............... ... ......... .45 1/2
Saturday, a chance of showen 60s with highs in lhe upper 70s to Dawn Anspach, 21, Middleport;
Bob
Evans
........ ..... ............ 16
Todd Martm Kimes, 24, Racine,
southwest, fair elsewhere. Morning low 80s.
Channmg
Shop
.......... ..... ... 30 7/8
and Racinda Kay Fraley, 26,
C~ Holding ...................... 20
Pomeroy; Edward Gerald Smart,
F eral MoguL ............... .. IS l/4
24, Albany, and Pamela Sue Mes·
Goodyear T&amp;R .... ............ ..66
Continued from page 1
sick, 26, Albany; and Michael Den·
Key Centurion ................... 19 3/4
nis Spencer, 22, Racine, and Lois
Lands
End .... .......... .. ....... ..32 1/4
Letetia Frank, 27, Pomeroy.
Limited
Inc ...... ................ 20 5!8
Jack King Jr., 23 . Harrisonville, and John Jeffers Jr., 22, Middle·
Mullimedia
Inc .................. 28 1/4
pon, have been arrested by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department
EMS responds to 7 calls Rax Restaurnnt...
.. ...... ........ 7/8
for the breaking and entering of an uninhabited house in HarReliance Electnc ... ............. 18 7/8
risonville.
Units of the Meigs County
Robbins&amp;Myers ......... ...... 15 1/2
According to the repon, Henry Hom, who owns a house on New
Emergency Medical Service
Shoney's
lnc................ ...... 20 l/4
Lima Road in Harrisonville. notified the sheriffs office !hat the
responded to seven calls for assis·
Star
Bank
.......................... .36 l/4
house he is remodeling had been entered and two coils of wire
lance Wednesday and early Thurs·
Wendy
lnt'l..
..... .......... ....... ll
stolen. Entry was made through a rear window.
day morning.
Worthington
Ind ........... ..... 24 1/8
Working on infonnation fumisbed by Hom, Deputy Roben BeeOn Wednesday at 10:02 a.m. the
Stock
reports
are the 10:30
gle obtained confessions from King and Jeffen !hat they entered the
Pomeroy unit was called to Pleas·
a.m.
quotes
provided
by Blunt,
house late Saturday night and srole lhe coils of wire and some conant Ridge for Annette Sherman
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.
duit. They sold the copper wire Monday.
who was taken to Veterans Memo·
Because of lack of jail space, the subjects were released on a
rial HospitaL
summons to appear in the Court of Common Pleas on a biD of infor·
At 1:3 7 p.m. the Middleport
mation charging breaking and entering.
Fire Department went to Park
Middleport Court news
Street where a village truck was on
itre.
Five were fined and two others
The Salem Town ship Fire
forfeited bonds in the coun of Mid·
Department and the Rutland unit
dlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman Tues·
Philip Anthony, 22, Columbus, was returned to Meigs County
went
to
Nelson
Road
at
3:
15
p.m.
day night.
Wednesday afternoon on an indicunent warrant charging having a
on an auto acc1dent in which Ricky
Fined were Aaron Williams,
weapon under disability and carrying a concealed weapon. He will
Eisenhower
was
taken
to
Pleasant
Middleport,
$10 and costs, allow·
appear in the Court of Common Pleas .
VaUey Hospital .
ing his dog to run loose; Lonnie D.
At 3:20 p.m. the Raetne unit
Maye s, Middleport, $100 and
responded at Station 2 for Lonnie
cos ts, driving under suspension;
continued rrom page 1
Ross who refused treatment
Roben Scarberry. Middlepon, $25
At 8:48p.m. the Middleport un1t
and costs, open container; Walter
110d First will continue to investi· gram .
went to Nonh Second for Charles
A. Ellis, Rutland. $10 and costs,
Swisher also reported to the Atkins who was transponed to Vet ·
gate funding measures.
ex pi red registration; Timothy L.
Duhl presented to the comm is- commissioners that the cost of enms.
Ball, Middleport, $10 fine only,
sinners the new Recreation and Type B day care provided in a
The Racine unit, at II :40 p.m.,
squealing tires.
Tourism Guide created by the home situation is now at $1.70 per went to Ycllowbush Road for Todd
Forfeiting bonds were Roy
Buckeye HiUs Resource Conserva- hour.
R1ce who was treated but not trans ·
Meade , Bidwell, $60, speeding,
Final! y, Bobby Keaton and Matt ported .
tion and Development Area. He
and
Keaton,
members of Boy Scout
also announced the ribbon cutting
This morning (Thursday) . at
Roger D. McClelland, Gallipolis,
ceremony for lhe newly completed Troop 235, Chester, attended the 5:2 7 a.m . the Middleport unit
$460, physical control of a motor
boat ramp at Forked Run Slale Park meeting as pan of !heir requirments res ponded to Front Street for
veh1cle wh1le under the innuence
for scouting.
for Thursday, June 18 at I p.m.
Charles Landers II who was taken
of alcohol or drugs.
Othen attending the meeting to Veterans .
Title 20 contracts renewed
At the request of Mike Swisher, were Commissioners Manning
•••••••••
director of the Meigs County Roush and David Koblentz, Cleric
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Department of Human Services, Mary Hobstetter and Dave Spencer
,o &gt;N ••!
of
the
County
Highway
Depart·
the foUowing existing Title 20 con446 ·4524 "'"'" " .....
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
ment.
tracts were approved for renewal:
lr'IRM!II ~THI([5 SAI'\JRbii!Y ' SUNOAl
D1rectlivcstock prices and receipts
s.vg, r~ 111 GHT rum~ r
A contract for $32,084 for chore
at selected buying points Thursday
service with the Meigs County
by the Ohio Department of Agri ·
Council on Aging; for $11,799.26
culture:
for homemaker·home health aid
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady
with the council on aging; $17,458
VETERANS MEMORIAL
; demand moderate to good.
with the council on aging for trans·
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
U.S. · 2, 225-250 lbs, counuy
portation; SI 0,062.50 with the - Stella Thomas, Middleport; Con43.00-45 .50. a few 42.00
points,
Meigs-Gallia Community Action nie Highan, Pomeroy.
and
46Jl0;
plants 45.0046.00, few
Agency for transportation;
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES 47.00.
$21,664.80 with community action . Ronald Jeffers, Freda Davis,
U.S. 1·3, 250·260 lbs., country
for homemaker aid; $10,000 with James Fisher and Bessie Heck.
points, 42.00-45.()(); plants 44.00·
Health Recovery Services of
46.00.
Alhens; $60,211.15 with Ginger- Funeral time changed
Receipts Wednesday 6,700.
bread House for a Type A daycare
Estimated receipts Thursday 7,500.
setting in which care IS provided at
The time of funeral services for
a center; and a contract with the Elmer Proffitt, 88 of Route 124,
Prices from The Prodocers Live·
Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser- Portland, who died Tuesday have
stock
Association :
vices of 3allipolis in the amount of been changed. The funeral will be
Cattle:
1.00 higher.
$15,345 for running the JOBS pro· held Friday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
Slaughter steers: choice 71.00 ·
Funeral Home. The Rev. Kenny 77.25; select 64.00· 71.00 .
Baker will officiate and burial will
Slaughter heifers : choice 70.()().
be in Bethlehem Cemerery at Great 76.25; select 62.()(). 70.00.
The Daily Sentinel
Bend.
Cows: 1.00 to 2.00 higher; all
(USPS SJS.IIOO)
cows 54.25 and down .

•

I

I I

•

I

I

I•

•I

I

I

Court news

Weather

Stocks

,.-----Local...

Pair arrested on charges

Anthony returned to Meigs County

Special...

Livestock report

A '

Hospital news

Publi1hed eYery al\emoon, Monday
Lh""''lh Friday, I U C""" 8'-, Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio v~Jley Publi•hinl
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,

Ohio 4li769, Ph. 992-2166. Second claM
po1tqe ~id at Pmnmly, Ohio.
Member: The Auociat.ed Ptsl, and the
Ohio Ne•a.,_per Anociation , NaUonal
Ad•ertiainiJ Repnaent.tiTe, Branham
Ne•apaper S&amp;lu, 733 Third Avenue,
Nnr York, New Yd 10017.
I'OSTMABTE~ Send oddruo cllanpo 1o
The Dally Sentinel, 111 Cov.rt St. ,
"""""'Y· OHio 46769 .
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LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Section 4913 .02 of the Ohio
Revised Code, Ohio Power Company (Oh~
Power) has submitted to the Public Utililies

Commission of Ohio (the Commission) an
environmental compliance plan for its electric
generating units affected by new federal acid
rain control requirements (Clean Air Act
Amendments of t990). The Commission has
docketed tl'lis submission as Case No.

92·790-El·ECP.
Ohio Power's environmental compliance plan
for the first of the two phases provtded tor in the

Clean Air ACf Amendments of 1990 (Phase I) is
to Install flue-gas desuUurizatlon systems

(scrubbers) on the two 1300 megawatt
generating units at Ohio Power's Gavin plant

located in Gallia County, Ohio. The plan also
provides for swilchlng from high-sulfur to
moderate-sulfur coal a1 Ohio PoW8f's Kammer
Units t-3, and to low-sulfur coalal its Musklngum
River Un~ 5. Changes and additions to the planl
and equipmentatlhese units will be necessary
to adapt to the bumlng of lower sullur coal. AI
all other generating units affected by Phase I ol
the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. Ohio
Power's plan II to c:ontlnue to uH existing and
planned fuelaupplln. In addition, conflnuous
amlsalon monitoring equipmenf Ia required lo be
Installed at all planta, and meuuresto control
amlaslon of n~rogen Ol!lde and sulfur trioxide are
required. The plan Is estimaled to require

expenditures by Oh 10 Power of appro)(imately
$978.2 million in capital costs . No rate recovery
of these amounts 1s being sought at this time.
The Commission has sel Case No. 92-~L·

ECP lor heanng commencing Wednesday, June

24. 1992. at 10:00 a.m., at the offices of the
Commission, 180 East Broad Street . Cdumbus,

Ohio 4321»0573 The purpose olthe hearmg
will t:te to determme the reasonableness and
prudence of Ohio Power's environmental
comptiance plan The Com mission has also
scheduled local public hearings at the following
times and localions to afford members of the
public the opportunity to testify: Thursday, June

25, 1992. al3:00 p.m. and 6:00pm , atlhe City
Hall Counc11 Chambers, 8 East Washington

Strset, Alhens. Ohio; Thursday, July2, 1992, at
2:00p.m. and 6:00 p.m., al lhe offices of the

I

m the 60s today for the Pacific
Nonhwest; the 70s for New Eng·
land, lhe mid-Atlantic Coast. nonh·
ern California and the Rocky
Mountain region; the 80s for much
of lhe Midwest and West; the 90s
along the Gulf Coast, most of Ari·
zona and New Mexico and in parts

of Nonh Dak:ota and Montana; 8111)
above I00 in southern Arizona.
Vald ez, Alaska, reached 73
degrees Wednesday, a record fot
the date.
The high temperature for the
nation Wednesday was 107 degree~
at Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

Meigs announcements
Group to perform
As a pan of Heritage Weekend,
"The Classics" will be perfonning
the hits of the 40's, 50's, and 60's,
across from the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy on Sunday at I p.m. The
group consists of Bill Ward, Junior
White, AU Windon and Rita While.
Bring a lawn chair. Pub~c invited.
Wedding reminder
The open church wedding of
Allen Davidson II and Tracy
DeWees, wiD be held June 20 at I
p.m . at the Rutland Methodist
Church.
CCL to meet
The Middlepon Child Conser·
vation League will have its annual
family picnic Sunday at 5 p.m. at
the home of Bob Blackston . A
potluck will be held. Meat wiU be
provided. Bring table service .
Th ere will be installation of offi.
cers.
DAR to meet
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughten of lhe Ameri·
can Revolution, wiU meet Friday at
1: 30 p.m. at the school house at
Bob Evans Farm Village in Rio
Grande. The program will be on
DAR Schools and Teaching in the
90's by Mr s. Linda Bohner.
Hostesses will be Mrs . Bohner,
Mrs. Wendel Cleland, Mrs. June
Gray and Mrs. Larry Wiley.
Trustees to meet
Th e Board of Trustees for

.

Columbia Townsh1p will meet in
special session Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the rrre stall on to consid¢
OT A group raling for workers
com pensation.
•
Speaker
•
Dav1d Cas to , Marietta, wiH
speak at the Stiversville Word Of
Faitl1 Church Thursday in memory
of Gary Holter. Pastor David [)ai..
ley invites lhe public.
Country music night
Country music night at lhe Lot'·
tridge Community Center will be
held Saturday from 7 p.m. to mid·
night. All bands are welcome and
refreshment s will be available .
Public invited .
Hymn sing
Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom w1U hold a hymn sing
Friday at 7:30p.m . Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public. FeUowship
wi II follow.
Organizational meeting
The Meigs County Golf Course
Youth League for age 9-14 will
hold an organizational meeting
Tuesday at 1 p.m. Further informa·
tion may be obtained by calling the
golf course at 992-6312 or Carol
McCullough at 992·5322.
Bible school
Enterprise United Methodist
Church will hold bible school
Monday through Fnday from 9-11
a.m. daily. All children welcome.

from page 1_ __
__
Hen'tage ... _Continued
...:....::.._

part of the revitalization process
which the association is currently
pursumg .
Merchants and community indi·
viduals, 10 this date, which have
contributed to the revitalization
project are c;row and Crow, Ander·
son's, Downing-Childs-Mullen·
Musser Insurance, George Wright,
Brogan-Warner Insurance, H.D .
Brown, the Eagles Club, Davis·
Quickel Insurance, Banks Con·
struction, Clark's Jewelry, PDK
Construction, Bernard Fultz, Pow·
ell's SuperValu, Ohio Valley Pub·
lishing, Fabric Shop, Ewing Funcr·
al Home. K&amp;C Jewelers, Kenny
Utt, Marvin and Lois Burt, Dairy
Valley, McCullough and Rime,
Mitchell Chapman and Chapman
Shoes.
Through a joint effort of the
assoc1atwn and the Sternwheel
Commitree, a riverfront sign will
be placed along the parking lot wall
to identify the town to river traffic.

John Musser has offered 10 pur·
chase the necessary materials for
the association . Linda Gillilan has
agreed to paint the sign and the
Stemwheel Committee w1ll install
the sign.
The Ohio Urtivenity Communiversity Band Concen, sponsored by
Bank One, will be presented June
25 in Pomeroy and the merchants
association wiU again sponsor An·
in-the-Park .
Mrs . Clark e•tended appreciation to Kenny Utt for his efforts in
mulching the area along the river·
side parking lot; to everyone who
has assisted in any way with Heritage Weekend; and to the Herbal
Harvesters Society which has
maintained and updared the plant·
ings in lhe larger mini-parlc.
The next regular meeting of the
association will be July 8 at 8:30
a.m. in the conference room at
Bank One.

WITHTDfflE

'•

7

•Short Sleeve Knit
Pullover Shirts
•Dress Pants
•Casual Pants
•Sport Coats and
Blazers
•Suits
•Spring Jackets
•Levi Denims
•Arrow Dress Shirts
(Long or Short Sleeve)

•Swimwear
•Walking Shorts
•Ties •Socks •Sweaters
•Paiamas (long or Short)
•Belts
•Suspenders

Commission, Borden Bu ilding, Hearing Room

11A, 180 Easl Broad Street. Columbus. Ohio:
and Thursday, July 9, 1992, at3:00 p.m. and
6:00p.m., at City Hall Council Chambers, 2f8
Cleveland Avenue S.W, Canton. Oh10. All

OPEN 9:30 A.M.·S:OO P.M. Mon.-Sat.

interested parties will be given an oppor1unlty
to be heard . Persons wishing to intervene in the
case shall file written requests for intervention
stating the reasons therefor, no later than June
17, 1992. Further informallon may be obtained

by contacting the Public Utilities Commission of
at ISO East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
4321»0573
Oh~

'•

�Thursday, June 11, 1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, June 11, 1992

Page-4

Portland beats Chicago 93-88 to deadlock NBA Finals at 2-2
By MIKE NADEL
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)
Michael Jordan put the ball on the
floor and drove to the basket.
Which move would he use this
time?
· Would he race past Clyde
Drexler as he has done so often in
the NBA Finals - as he did in
Jeague MVP voting? Or would he
j ust make Drexler think he would
drive and, instead, pull up for the
quick jumper? In your face, Clyde.

Again.
Thi s time Jordan drove . This
time, Drexler thought Jordan would
drive. And for the first time this
series, Drexler beat Jordan. Beat
him clean, took away the ball, Start·
ed and fmished the fast break that
gave Ponland its first lead.
Drexler's Trail Blazers went on
to beat Jordan's Chicago Bulls 93·
88 in Game 4 Wednesday, tying
th e best-of-seven series at two
games apiece. Game 5 is here Fri-

day night before the teams return to
Chicago Stadium for Game 6 Sunday.
" When you play a guy enough,
eventually you learn some of hi s
moves. Michael's got about 2,000
of them. I just happened to guess
right that time," said Drexler, wbo
had 21 points, nine assists, eight
rebounds and two steals.
" It was just one of those plays
where you 1ry to anticipate one of
his moves and I was able to get my

hand on the ball. Then it was off to
the races.''
Jordan opened the founh quaner,
with two baskets against Drexler
- scoring the last of his 32 poiniS
and putting the Bulls abead 73-66.
With just under four minutes
left, he was trying to increase
Chicago's 82-81 lead . He drove
hard to th e basket before Drexler
used his left hand to knock away
the ball. It deflected into the bands
of Jerome Kersey, who led Terry
Porter, who flipped the ball back to
Drexler for the layup.
Portland 83, Chicago 82.
"I guess I tried that move too
often. I scored on it just (a few)
minutes before. He anticipated it
well," Jordan said. "It's an open·
court situation, and they finished it
off very well. It was a big motiva·
uonal factor for them.
" I've been stripped before. I've
been blocked before. I've been

dunked on before. I've missed
dunks before. You just want to
redeem yourself ... as a team . We
just didn't do it as a team down the
stretch." " ·
Drexler and his team redeemed
themselves. The Trail Blazers after
a miserable performance in Sunday's Game 3 loss and a terrible
stan to Game 4 that saw them fall
behind 10-0 and 18-5. Drexler after
missing seven of eight third-quarter
shoiS and failing to score for almost
8:30 of the founh .
Just before his big play , Drexler
missed two free throws that could
have tied the game with 3:59 to go.
The 12,888 fans in the Blazers'
682nd consecutive sellout crowd
groaned. A few even booed.
"We just couldn't get over the
hump," Drexler said. "It was a
feeling, like, 'We keep making it
tough on our:rel ves." ·
Drexler and the Blazers finally

decided to ma ke things tough on
the Bulls.
Cliff Robinson, 2 of II from the
floor in Game 3, made a free throw
to cut Chicago's lead to 82-81.
Drexler made his steal. Kersey.
who had been shooting 40 .6 percent in the series, dunked on an
assist from Drexler to match
Drexler's 21 points.
After John Paxson's three-pointer made it 85 -85, Robinson made
another foul shot, Drexler played
hand -i n-face defense as Jordan
missed a short jumper, Porter made
two free throws, Portland's defense
coUapsed on Jordan to force another miss. Robinson hit yet another
free throw to give him 17 points,
and Drexler made two foul shots
for a 91-85 lead.
Chicago pulled to 91-88 on
three free throws before Porter took
Drexler's outlet pass and hit the
clinching layup.

Ellis to take care of Mariners' daily
business while Yamauchi head owner

THERE IT IS! - Portlaad's Clyde Drexler
(right) locates tbe baD seconds after it bouam
ofT Chicago froatmao Scottie PipJM'D during the
first quarter or Game 4 or tbe NBA FIDIIS

Wedoesday nigbt in Portland, Ore., wbicb the
Trail Blazers won 93-88 to lie tbe series at 2·2.
(AP)

Sco •·eiJoa rd
Plw.dolphio. 11, - · Aw... 76:

T. Fernandez. San Dieao. 72; Finle,.,
Houlton. 69; Shdfield. S•n Diqo, M;

NATIONAL LEAGUE

5 42

Ll

MdJriff, s... oq, 69.
DOUBLES - VonSiyt• PilubwJh.
19; Duncan, Pkiladclphia, 17; w. am,
Sut Frmciloo,l5; Pmdldm, Atlanta , IS;
Wtllach, Manb'ell,l5 ; 1 are tiM wi1h 14.
TRlPlJ!S - D. Sond&lt;D. A!Wu. I0;
FinliOJ, Houa1011, 6; Aliool, Sl l...oo.U., 6;
Offerman. l....ot Aqele&amp;, 4; Grace, Qtiea.
1o. 4; Bulla-, La. Ana~ . 4; I0 ~ tiod
wi\113.
!lOME RUNS - Bondi, PittJburgh,
14; McGriff, S1n Dieao, 14; M•tt

526
508

2l

Willitrna. San Francisco. II; Pendleton,

l~

47J

l .l

424

! .l

ALim I&amp;, 11; Sbcfficld. San I&gt;icco, 10; L
Will.a, Montm.l, 1(}, D•ulum, Pbiladelphi.a, 10_
~TOLEN BASES - Griuom.. MOD~.n:~-1, 29 ~ Lankford, SL I....wi.a, 19; O.n1.,

Eutem Dhlaioft
Team

W L
.... JJ 2S

Pitllbu!Jh

New YcD . .. ........29 29
SL l....wil .. ........... .19 29
Montiu1.
. .. 26 29
P!ill.odclphio .. .... 26 JO
OUe~go . ....
. ..... 26 J2

Ptt.
.S69
500
500

GB

••

413

~j

464

6

441

7

Wetttrn Dlvlllon

CINCINNATI .... .32
San Oi.e1o ..
. .... 32
San Franciaco .. .30
ALlmll ..
..... 30

~7\

24
T!
27

29
Loo Angelao ..... ... 26 29
Hou.1t.a"t ............. 25 34

Wednesday's scores
S~n

Atl1nt.a. 19; Lew 11, San Franci1co, 17;
OeShield•, Montrel l , 17: Roberti ,

Francilw 6, CNClNNA 11 2

Atlltll&amp; 2, l...ol Angcb I

CINONNATI. Il; Banda. ~..ilwJb. l7.
PITCHING (7 deci•iona) -

S..n DiCSO ~ , HOUI&amp;On \

Monu-e&amp;!S. New York 2
P\UJ'oUI]h

2.

()wym, San [);oao. ~. l&lt;Juk,

HITS -

In the majors ...

Phibdclphll I , 12

111 ·

~1e1go 4, St. Loui.rl 2

Bankhead, ONaNNATI. 6-1, .851, 2 ... 5;

Tcwkabury , St. LouU, 6-1, .857, 2.00;
Glnine. ALbnu. 9-3, .750, 2.75: 0.bomc., SL l..ouir;,$-2, .71 4, 1~; Burlr.eu.,
Slll Francilco, S-2, 714, 4 04; Swindell.,

No games today

CIN CINNATI.~ - 2,

Chicaao.

Friday's games
Montreal (D. Martinez 6--4) 1t Ctuc•ao

(Morglll 5-2), ~ 20 ~-ml..ot Angdes (O_red1 3-J) at Cl'lCINNA11 011mmond 4-2), 7·35 p.m.
S1 n Diego (Bene. 5 5) 11 At11nll
(G11Vlne 9-3), 7:40 p.m.

rromhn

ritubwgh
l-3} II New Ynd:
(Fernandez 5-5), 7:40p.m.
San Francilco (Bw:kc:u 5-2") atll~1100
(Portusal D), 8 ~ p.m
Phil •de\ph11 (Rnh101 0n l -0) ll St

U:Juu (Osbane 5-2 ). &amp;-35 p m

~ - 2.

.714 , l 16; M&lt;rrJIII ,
."114, J .lS; Lr:ibrUidl., Al-

ltnu, S-2. .714, 3.91
STRIXEOUTS - Cot~e, New Y ott.
95; Smoln., All1nta , !IJ; S. Ftm1nde.~: ,
~cw

Yod, 83;Kevin Grou.l...ol

Anaela.

70; Dr•bek, Plttlburah, 69 ; 8el_c her,

C!NaNNATI, ~; G. M..ddu1., ChJC&amp;so.

SAVES - Ue SnUlh, St. L-ows, 1~.
D Jone1, ll oullon, 14: Chulton.
CINONNATI. ll; "'"""· Son Di'110. I);
Milch Wi.lliama, Pbiladc:lpfW, 11; Weuoland. Mon!J"ell, 9; McDowell, l...ol Anf;olet. 9: Franco. N8w Yorlt, 9.

Amoricon Learu•
Toroo10. .329; R. Kelly. New Y&lt;D., 324:

hlltm Dlviliort
w L P&lt;L

Tum

614
l l!
100
401
431

"

IJallimore
Mi1w•ukee ..

l9 27

.17 27

801t~M ....

"
"'

New Yorll

l9

DetroiL
..... 2.1 JJ
ll
CLEVELAND .

Wr:.tun DtvWon

o.llind ..

3~ 17
J I 1Jo
Chic.~ so .... ......... 2J l7
Kanua Cny ....... .24 ])

--

Teua ..

Minnelru .

... 21

6.1

7l

'

II l

ll

I

l44
.l&lt;l'!

&gt;l

)!6

)~

Molitor, M.ilw1ukoe , .317; Knobl1uch,
M1nnt.Joll . .31~ : E Martinu , Se-~1tle.

Mmmou. . .31-4.

]14; Mact..
!tUNS -

Puckett, Mmneao\1 , 46,

4.1
9l
II
Ill

Wednesdxy's scores
Tormt.o 10, New Yotk 3
Baltimo~ 3, Booon 1
CLEVELAND 4, Detroit2, I \ li"IJ\mp
Kllllu City?, Minne10t16
Oue~go 3, C1lifomia 2. 12 lMmg•
Tau~.

Se.nle 3

Today'• gomes
Ca.lilomia (BlylevQl 1-0) 11 llttc•llo
(Fernanda- J-6), I :35 p.m
Bo1ton {Clemenl 9 -3) It Toronto
(Manio 6-l) , "'~p .m.

Blltimm: (Mc0ont1d 7-J) 11 Detn11t
(Oullic.Uoo 7-J), 7 : 3~ p.m

Friday's eamrs
Boom (VicU 5-4) l l TOfUito (Sueb l 5), 7 :35p.m.
Nnr York (K1m ieniecki 1· 3) 11

CLEVELAND (Nagy 7-3), 7 : 3~ p.m.
B•ltimon: (M uuina 7- 1) 11 Detroit
(AI•h.d 2 ·~1. 7ol~ p.m.
.
Chic•ao (Houah 2-2) 11 Minnnou

(Smiley S·l), 8:05p.m.

s,m-a. Tetu, 37. Whit-e. Tomnto, Jl

M&lt;OwU., o.tlw1. 4~. l'lrl ·
ell, M.inne.ou, 49; Fie.lder, Detroit. 4 ~;

RBI -

39. Caner-. Toronto. 39.
HIT S -

Pudett, Minne•ou, 84,

Mack, Minnuou. 7J : Bae~J•. CLEVE LAND, 70; R. A1omu , TO!Ulto, 70; SICtr •, T u . . , 70; R. Kelly, Ne11t '!'ork, 69 ;
Knoblauch, Mtnnc•ot l, 61; Wmfu:ld,

TRIPLES - Andenm, B&amp;ltimore, 6;
Ocvereau 1, R•ltunore., 4; E Muttne%.

Seatt.Le.. J. L Jolrtaon. OU.C:.go, 3; Bwkt,
llottm, 3; Pu&lt;icu, MinnCIIOtl, ); Cu\a,
TOOlflto-, 3; R.aulm, Chicllp, l
110!14E RUNS - McG-.ire. o.llind ,
22, DeeT, Delroit. 15 ; Ju1n Gon.ulez,
Tuu, 14 ; Cuueco, Oakland, ll; Tealolal, Deuoit.. 13; Be.lle.. a..EVELA.ND, 12;

NollonallAape
BAITINO- E.n~.i, PhUidelphi•.
.n2; aw,... s.n Diooo. .m, v~,.u,
l'ilultlqla, .m, w. C!ut. s.. J'nndoa&gt;.

.3!C% Mi:Ooil!. Sot 1Mt&lt;&gt;o .330; O.ullan.
J'biloWplila, .317; Nap~M. Now Yam.

.3t5.

RUNS -

IL
STOLEN BASES - l..d\,.. CLEVE·
Lo\ND, 2Ji; R H01den.on. Od.land, 22;
U.Uch, Mi.lw1u.kce, 20: Anderson, Baltimore , 11; R1ine1 , C hie~1o , 17;
K.mbltudl, r.LmGOU., 16; fulonil . California, l.5 .
PITCHING (1 docili011.1) -----: Flcmin ..
Se.lu.le, 9 · 1, .900, 2.88; Muum1, Balu more , 7 l, 1?~ . 2.60; Ju1n Our.man.
Tmont o, 7 - l, .B7S, 2 . 37: K. Brown,

M""'l'

Alloa~a, 4 ; Ooal. Ailoall. 40; Boalllo.

-Y&amp;40.

m.

Appitr, K~nau City, 66; K. Brown,
Te~u,

62; Jaa~G.mun. Tu:u, 62.

SA YES - EdonleJ,

OU.I1nd, 22;

Oloon. Bal ....... l6; Aouilm.-

11, 16; Jeff Rumll, Tes.••. 16; Moa~­
......,, tt....., Coy. 14; U...oy. Coli·
romi•, 13: 'I'I1lepcn. Cblc:aao. 13; Rear-

lO lu.ne 8.
CLEVELAND INDIANS -

Slgne.c!

P1ul Shuey, AUon G•ll•sher, Roberto
Guu , AJI•n Hehbctt , Dami1n l..tyv1,

Noe N1jcn. Michael Ne:illoo. F~ Smith.
1nd D..,id Welc h, pitchcn; Dcrcl. H• ·
~ iJaTnainc Mlybcn-y, Teny Miller,
JonaUwa NWlnally, and Leroy l'homplon.
outfielden; Epif•nio Cudenu, CurtiJ
Guqe, Jamie Taylor, Oluim TOYI"TIJend ,

•nd t.ne White, inru~.ldert, and John
lew•ndowlii 1nd Mitchell Meluakey .

utchen, to minor-l.elp coomcu .
KAN SAS CITY ROYA LS 1..-i Cwt y~~ ~"""'·

Re -

NEW YORK YANKEES - lt«.U""
kff Jdl.nacn, pitcher, from Cohunbwi ol

u-.e lnlm'lltianalL.a.sue..

- Sign~

TEXAS RANOERS

Jeff

Runion md Mictuel Andenoo, pnchen;
Cory Punon and Oelhon 8roWT!, out ficldcn md; Qu-ia Bun, 11\fields-.

N•llonaltaaue

ATI.Al"'TA BRAVES - P!.1ced Ale-_;.ndru Pt:na, pilchcr, on the 1~ - d• y diJ ·
•bled J.U:t., ~ctive to M.y ]I ActJv•lCid Marvin Fmtman, pitcher, fran the 1'

day d.i.Mbtcd till.

CHJCAGO CUBS -

Si~ ned

Ad•m

Schulhofer and Wilh.JIIll t...umcr , pitch -

en, and Bun Hunu:r, Andre NelJon and
Muio Walton, ouUicldera, to minor ·

lai""-

COLORAOO ROCKIES - Signed
Michael Mach1do, outfu:.lder, and Torry
Z.ri!l.a, infielder, to mmor le.aau.e conlTic ll AuiJned Zerilli to Viuli.J of ti1e
C.difomiJ Lei

R..ORIDA ~S - Signed Rich
1.-0

mt-

LOS ANGELES OODGERS - Activ•ted Juan S.mud, JOCOOd bucman.lrom
the 15-da.y dl.Ublcd llSI. Seru Tom Good ·
W\!1, w lfldds-, to Alblque:rque of the P•·
o. fic Cout lure. SiJlled Bury Dunn,
•hort1top ; Ot nie1 Sumie~to 1nd Jon

Gnvca. pit-chen: Ju.n H~au. outfielder;
and Brim Rich&amp;rdlon, thir-d b11ttnan. to
mmor--leagtK- ta~lnCU

PHILADELPHIA PHILLJCS

-

S1gned hmic Seped1, Jon Z-uber, Tim
Co1t1 , Steve Null, Tony Fiore . Eric
Sm1 th, BlUe Oooltn, ,..h _ri_Tr• nD:era.

Tom Irwin and Ryan M,Williunl, pttchen; BlU Brophy 1nd Ch u h on Moore,
c atcher•. Ahn Hurtt . Mike Oomn,
Llrddl Allen. Otve Filher, Ron K.nu,
Phil Romero and Ben Martinet, infield -

Big Ten schools have until1997

to boost women's sports to 40%
PARK RIDGE, Ill. (AP)- Big
Ten sc hool s must submit to the
conference within a year their plans
for increasing women· s alhlencs to
40 pen::ent of aU sports by 1997. .
The Big Ten Counctl of Prest·
dents and Chancellors voted unant·
mously Monday to accept a recommendation from the conference's
Gender Equity Task Force to bnng
women's teams up to 40 percent of
all conference programs.
The task force approved the 60·
40 goal 10-1 in May.
Schools will encourage women
to play sports but will need other
strategies to meet the goal, S81d Dr.
S(even Beering, president of Purdu e University and council chairman .
Unive rsi ti es may limit squad
sizes for men's teams. cut recruitment and sc holarships, restrict trllV·

TILLER
SALE!

The Best Truck, At The Best
Price At Taylor Motors.
•

er• · tnd Steve Solcmon, Sh•w-n Willi .

Mida•d Th~ and Tim Comilh. outfit.ldm 1-0 minar·lea1rn: emu-acts.
PITfsBURGH P{RATES - O.imed
Jeff Robi.ntoo, pu.cher, off waiven hun
the Tetu R1nscrt . Releucd Dennu
Lamp, pitcher

Buketball

By DENNIS GEORGATOS
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Bud Black reversed hi s form
against Cincinnati, Will Clark
reversed his fonn against Jose Rijo
and Robby Thompson reversed his
lonn at the plate.
It aU added up to a form reversal
for the San Francisco Giants, who
avoided a sweep by beating the
Reds 6-2 Wednesday in the fmale
of a three-game series.
"You never want to get swept at
home," said Clark, who went4 for
4 with a homer, two RB!s and two
runs scored. "We plugged away
here and there and came up with
the win. We're going to be all
rigbt, as long as we keep the enthu·
siasm up high and we keep the
aggressiveness level up high."
Clark entered the game with a
.214 career average against Cincinnati starter Jose Rijo, but he singled, doubled and homered in three
at-bats against the Reds' ace, then
added a double against Rob Dibble
in the eighth.
"I got the pit£hes I needed to hit
and I hit them," Clark said.
Thompson broke an 0-for-21
drought when he started the second
inning with a homer. He also hit a
two-run single off Dibble in the
eighth for three RB!s on the day.
"I was struggling. It seemed
like I was 0-for-forever," said
Thompson. "Hopefully, today was
a sign of things to come.·'
Black (3-1) took a two-hit
shutout into the ninth, but a single,
a walk and a fielding error cost him
the shutout and brought Jeff Brant·
ley on to preserve the left-bander's
first career victory in four decisions
against the Reds.
"It is a little frustrating because
when you get in that position you
like to close the deal, but that happens," Black said.

00
499
l H.P.
Get the Best for Less!

5

ward.

·Rear I me~. powered wheels

Football

do all the work .
• Bust sod. make seedbeds.

NaUonaiP~ILAaaue

CINCINNATI BRNOAI..S - Sianed
Adrian Jone~, oamlll'blck.
DALLA! COWBOYS - Sisne.d
Oren BriUI. ltfety, 1nd Todd Jona,

.......

KANSAS CrrY CHIEFS - N•med
Teny BradWIJ _!YtiaW IIXld.
MINNESOTA VIK.INOS - Siped
Chuek Bna1, rvnnin1 b1c:k, Chri•
Coc:imne. ~~'*:· Danta Whitaker,

tight em . .oo Irvin Smith, come:rback.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Sianed Vlncan Brvwn. li.nt.Mc:br, and

cullivalc. build rich so il.

1992 NISSAN 412
Equipped with 5-apHCI, cloth
bench aeat, carpeting,
flapa, 134 horMpower 111glna, 3
year, 38,000 mile bumper to
bumper.

Patlatld 91. o;..ao II. JOrioo li.d 22

Nllloell""'*'r~
BOSTON BRUINS - ~

Future&amp;amM
Poltland, 9 p.m.

0

Ev..,., loll

~

m

l Mal•
PC*rOJ
992·5500
MoL·frl 7·5:30; Sat. 8·5

O...a

ibo Winalpots lou

fm Dllliol Bodbiawne, JQihmda-.

PIID.AiliiU'IIlA F[YERS - Nunod
PrldaJ-Cblcaao 11

• Immed iate delivery!

O'Dell Lumber

llocby

'Wod•ay's ecort

• 0 SJ ZC, ro choo'c from ..
perfec t for any gard en~

Som Ouh. fullbooi.
SI!:A TTLB SEAHAWKS - Siped

NBA Finals

Bob Clatte
livoJvly 1.

ICiftiot

vite preridatt, tffec·

Black, 0-3 with a 7.47 ERA
against the Reds last season, said
he really didn't do anything differently against them.
"Pitchers don't change much ,"
he said. "You can't change your
basic strengths . You just try to
make better pitche s. When you do
that. you get outs. If you don't
make the pitch, you give up hits.
"I was able to get a lot of flfSt·
pit£h strikes and work abcad in the
count. If you work ahead in the
count, your stuff is better. When
you fall behind, the majority of the
time, your stuff isn't as good."
Rijo (2-5) gave up four runs and
six hits in six imings to lose to the
Giants for the second time this year
and the eighth time in II career
deci sions.
" The way I feel and the way I
threw, I should've done much bet·
ter," Ri)O said. "Two mistakes and
I paid for both . The most I
should've given up today was two
runs. I disappointed myself.''
The Giants took a 3-0 lead on
Cory Snyder's run-scoring groundout in the ftrst and the homers by
Thompson, who hit his fourth to
stan the second, and Clark, who hit
his sixth with two outs in the third .
Clark followed a single by
McGee with an RBI double in the
sixth, and Thompson drove home
the Giants' last two runs with his
single in the eighth.
The Reds' runs both came in the
ninth, the flfSI when third baseman
Matt Williams missed Barry
Larkin's grounder for an enor. and
the second scoring on Billy Hat£h·
er' s sacrifice fly.
Cincinnati finished its sevengame road trip with a 4-3 record
and leads San Diego by I 1/2
~ames and San Francisco by 2 1{1
m the NL WesL
Reds manager Lou Piniclla said

he was loolcing f&lt;J'Wllfd to playing
Sosa's first home run, in the
12 of the next 16 games at home.
second off rookie Mark Clark (0·
"We had a pretty good road 1), gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead they
trip. We played good ball, " he never surrendered.
said. "We played .500 on the road
The Cubs scored their second
and we should pick up the pace at run in the fifth with the help of two
home. We'll be all right."
SL Louis errors and added another
Elsewhere in the National in the sixth on ftrst baseman Gerald
League, it was Chicago 4, SL Louis Perry's second miscue of the nighL
2; Atlanta 2, Los Angeles 1; San Sosa's fifth homer of the season
Diego 5, Houston I; Montreal 8, accounted for the rest of the ChicaNew York 2; and Pittsburgh 2, go offense.
Philadelphia I in 12 innings.
Expos 8, Mets 2
Cubs 4, Cardinals 2
At Montreal, the Mets made six
Greg Maddux looked at the errors to tie a club record.
scoreboard after Ray Lankford
Montreal's Mark Gardner (4· 5)
doubled with one out in the sixth allowed two hits, struck. out four
inning and realized it was the first and walked three in five innings.
hit for St. Louis.
The game marked the fourth
It didn't bother him a bit. He has time the Mets have made six errors,
come to expect such things.
the last Aprill5, 1980, against the
"I don't think I've had a no-hit· Expos. But only two Montreal
ter since high school," Maddux runs, both in the first inning off
said after limiting the Cardinals to David Cone (54), were unearned
three hits in seven innings while
Montreal's Tim WaUach went 3
pit£hing the Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 for 5 with two RB!s. New York 's
victory Wednesday night.
Bobby Bonilla hit his eighth
The four runs by the Cubs were homer.
a boost fa Maddux, 2-6 in his last
Pirates 2, Pbillies 1
nine starts. During that stret£h, the
Visiting Pittsburgh used two
Cubs have scored fewer than three walks, a. single and an error on
runs a game.
Philadelphia's Len Dykstrll to score
"I don't worry about how many an unearned run in the 12th inning.
runs we score," he said. "I worry
Barry Bonds walked against
about how many I give up."
Barry Jones (4·3) to stan the 12th
He had some room for error this and advanced on an infield out.
time because the slump-ridden Car- Gary Varsho was intentionally
dinals made it easy for the Cubs. walked and Jose Lind singled to
They committed three errors and center. Bonds initially stopped at
Chicago's Sammy Sosa hit two third, but raced borne when Dyk ·
homers.
strll bobbled the ball in center field.
Lankford said the Cardinals
Bob Patterson (3 ·0) pitched
helped Maddux (6-6) by being two-thirds of an inning. AJI of Pat·
impatienL
terson 's victories arc over the
"He was pretty much in control Phillies. Roger Mason relieved Pat·
all night," Lankford said. "He terson with nobody out in the 12th
looked relaxed. We gave him some after John Kruk singled and retired
outs by swinging at pitches out of the side for his sixth save.
the strike zone."
Braves 2, Dodgers 1
Steve Avery allowed five hits
over eight innings.
The visiting Braves scored the
winning run in the sixth when
David Justice hit a sacrifice fly to
score Otis Nixon.
Avery (4-5) struck out six and
walked three. Kevin Gross (3 -6)
tOO -meter world record-holder lost despite allowing only five hits
Leroy Burrell, U.S. women's 400- and two runs in seven innings.
meter hurdles record-holder Sandra
Padres S, Astros 1
Fanner-Patrick, and her husband,
At San Diego, Fred McGt iff
David Patricl, also a 400-meter homered for the second straight
hurdler.
game and hit an RBI double.
.
·'The athletes will be very
Craig Lefferts {74) allowed SIX
Strong," Reynolds said. "They're hits in eight innings but failed for
in my corner. I don't care how the second straight game to pitch
powerful the IAAF thinks it is ...
his ftrst career complete game.
"I want respect and I want my
McGriff hit a two-run shot off
name and reputation back. "
Butch Henry (1-5) with twO OU!S in
Three athletes showed strong the third for his 14th of the year.
support for Reynolds at Holmdel He drove in Tony Gwynn, who had
Hig h School, choosing to run singled, to move into a tie with
against him and risking possible Barry Bonds of Pittsburgh for the
suspension from the IAAF, wh1ch NL home run lead.
suspended the seven athletes who
ran the 400 at San Francisco last
Saturday.
They were Chris Marsala, 26, of
New York; Maurice Levy, 27, of
Bound Brook, NJ., and John Ea&lt;;ter, 37. of Branchburg, NJ : None of
the three is even constdered a
national-class runner.
Some 20 others, who were
entered in the event, chose to a~oid
possible suspension and dectded
not to run against Reynolds.
The best-known among that
group were Gary Duncan and Larry
Gardner, each of whom ts about
one-tenth of a second off the trials
qualifying mark of 45.49, and Mike
Spangler, who is about four-tenths
short Duncan and Gardner. both
expre.ssing btttemess at Reynolds'
a~ce, ran in another 400 sectiOn and failed to qualify, wh•le
Spangler skipped both races.
Each has until Saturday to meet
the standard.

Reynolds praying for opportunity
to compete in U.S. Olympic trials
By BERT ROSENTHAL
HOLMDEL, N.J. (AP) - Butch
Reynolds, having proven that he
again is a world-class 400-meter
runner, is praying hard that he will
he pennined to compete in the U.S.
Olympic trials.
"I've been praying an awful lot
lately," the fanner Ohio State star
said Wednesdsy night after running
the 400 in 44 .67 seconds, his
fastest time since being suspended
for two years by the International
Amateur Athletic Federation following a positive drug test in
August 1990.
Whether Reynolds' prayers will
be answered will be determined
June 18 by U.S. District Court
Judge Joseph Kinneary in Columbus, Ohio.
· Reynolds and his attorneys are
asking Kinneary for a preliminary
injunction that would allow him to
compete m the trials June 19-28 at
New Orleans. Kinneary already bas
granted two temporary restraining
orders that permitted Reynolds to
compete last Saturday at San Francisco and Wednesday night in the

Holmdel International Track and
Field Meet.
However, even if Kinneary rules
in Reynolds' favor, the world
record-holder will remain in disfa·
vor with the IAAF.
The IAAF has said that if
Reynolds competes in the trials,
anyone running against him will be
suspended. In effect, that could
mean the United States would be
without a 400-meter runner at the
Barcelona Games.
Reynolds, who has been deftant
of the IAAF's edict to bar him and
insists he is innocent, is determined
to compete in the trials.
"If I have to have two 6-foot-6
marshals behind me, I will be on
the track if the judge gives me" the
OK, Reynolds said.
He has not discussed the situation with any of the other 400metcr qualifiers for the trials, but
sa id he had the support of other
track. and field athletes. They
include two-time 1988 Olympic
go ld medalist Jackie JoynerKersee, American 800 -meter
record- holder Johnny Gray, former

Williams to have surgery Friday
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Linebacker Alfred Williams will
undergo surgery Fridsy to correct a
condition causing irregular heartbeat.
"The doctors have counseled
that thi$ is the best way to go about
i~ and Alfred tells us he's ready,"
Cincinnati Bengals general manag·
er Mike Brown said Wednesday.
"If everything goes as expected, he
should be ready to play football
: again well before the opening of
: training camp."
. .
The Bengals open trammg camp
: July 20 at Wilmington College.
~
Williams, Cincinnati's top ~ick
in the 1991 draf~ has been d1ag~ nosed with Wolfe-Parlcinson- White
· syndrome, a hereditary abnonnality
~ that causes a superfluous pathway
: to develop in the heart's electrical
· conduction system.
· In some patients, including
. Williams, the extra pathway inter,. feres with normal contractions and
' causes symptoms such as rapid
: heartbeat and lightheadedness.
· The surgery will be performed
; by John Schwartz, a Naval surgeon
from Washington, D.C. The procedure is called "radio frequency

catheter oblation.' '
Surgeons operating .thro~gh
tubes inserted in the artenes eliminate the extrll pathway by subjecting it to heat ener~~ from radio
waves. No large mCJSions are necessary for the surgery, and pattenL~
nonnally spend only one mght m
the hospital.
(See WILLIAMS on Page 5)

(Continued from Page 4)
game playas ....
•'Should we be surprised that
· they aren't interested in operaWtg
: conuol? Hardly. What does Nmtendo know about bas~ball n~ht
· now? But maybe they re ask1n~
• themselves, 'What can. we learn?
: They like 10 panicpate m, and then
· penetnlte markets.
:. "On top of which," Mont:·gomery added. "let's not forget
;; that Nlntendo made all that money
!'by miising very few good deals.
· The bottom tine is that they now
. have a piece of a major league
. baseball team, which is stiU a very
.: limited set.
· "They're likely to tum a hand·
. some profit if the team ts sold .ar
: retocatt'A, or even ~ at some po~t
~ in lite ruwre, they JUst unload lhe1r
· 'lion "
~itiCh means the correct answer
; is e.)

BLACK-OUT DECLARED - San Francisco pitcher Bud Black
lets one or bis pitches ny during Wednesday's game against tbe vis·
iling Cincinnati Reds, wbicb the Giants won 6·2 partly on the
strength or his three-bit eiTort in bis eight innings or work. (AP)

Meigs American Legion team
beats Athens 5-2 for first win
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentiael Correspondent
Jeremy Phalin struck. out 15 bat·
ters and scattered five hits as Meigs
defeated Athens 5-2 in American
Legion baseball action Wednesday
evening at Meigs High School.
The win was the fir st of th e
young season for Meigs in fiv e
trie s. Meigs is 1-I in Eighth District Conference play. Athens drops
to 0-3 and 0-2 in the conference.
Meigs broke up a pit£hing duel
by Phalin and Danny Dailey of
Athens by scoring a run off of Dailey in th e fifth inning . Mike
"Abby" Welch reached on a ftcld·
ers choice, and then after stealing
second and advancing to third on a
wild pitch, he scored on a Tim Bts·
sell single.
Meigs made it a HI game in the
top of the suth when Mike Vance
led off the inning with a single and
stole second. Phalin struck out but
reached on a passed ball and after
both runners advanced on a ground
ou~ Jeremy DiU singled to drive in
both runs.
Athens cut the lead to one in the
sixth without the benefit of a base
hit on the strength of three walks
and a Meigs error. But Meigs came
back in the bottom of the seventh
inning when Bissell, Nathan Brown
and Vance htt consecutive singles
10 give Meigs a 5-2 lead.
Athens loaded the bases with

one out in the top of the eighth inning on a Jason Reed single and
two Meigs errors, but Phalin
reached back to ring up another
strikeout and induce the Athen s
leadoff batter to fly out to right
field to end the threat.
Phalin went the route to pick up
the win, scattering a pair of singles
and doubles while picking up the
IS Ks and walking six. Both
Athens runs were unearned. Bissell
and Vance led Meigs at the plate
wilh three singles each. Brown and
Dill added the other two singles for
Meigs.
Dailey was the starter and loser
from Athens. Allen Barber came on
to pitch U1c last three innings. The
pair combined to strike out 14 and
walk six . Justi n Scholl and Reid
Schaller led th e way with a double
each, and Reed and Joe Patterson
added a single each.
Meigs will travel to Marietta for
a twinbill Thursday evening, ani!
will host Lancaster in a doubleheader Saturday . Meigs wi II plar a
doubleheader at Pickerington Sunday:
Inning totals
Athens ........000 000 020- 2·5·1
Meigs ..........OOO 012 20x- 5-7-3
WP - Jeremy Phalin; Joe
McElroy cat£her
LP - Danny Dailey (LP).
Allen Barber (7); A.W. Matters.
Brian Miller (8) catchers

····-------------------·------

STOCK# 2302

F1ther'1 D1y Speoi1ll
All Fathers Receive 20%
OH an Any Men's Shoes
Ondudes athletic &amp; golf)

* Electric AM/FM

StereoI CassetteI Clock
Power Steering
SRding Rear Window
Lower Accent Tape Stripe
Chrome Rear Step Bumper
Cast Aluminum Wheels
DP Dish

*
*
*
*
*

Mariners owners ...

lt•Jiat
At

N•tJonal B•ietkll Aa«iaUaa
DENVER NUGGETS - E•uciiCid
theu option • on Rea&amp;ie William•, for·
ward. and Wimton Garland, pard. for the
1992-93 ac:uon . Ann~ the)' will n«
uerci1e thei.r option on Joe Wolf, for-

P•ul Oret.rl, tiJht md.

Boa ... Pituburah . 45;

IBI - Dwlloa, JIN1+lpld•, 45: ~
Orill', S• IIi... 43; B...ta. PiluborJ!t,
42;
New Yolll. 42: .....,,_,

er. on the 1~-day diublcd lin, retmlctive

4

dott,-.,.,IJ.

o"'o!':.!:f'
o10; Bigio, n...-.
,
Saa
Jlioao, 39: ON·
"""{' ':!'T.!r'ill. !I;Louio,En*,36. l'bilodelpbil.

ActiYiwl

ably less - while the remainder of and shaker on the ownership com·
the money is invested as loans and miuee, said late Tuesday. "People
preferred stock.
buy into basebaU clubs for all kinds
He will not be able to influence of different reasons. The thmg that
how much the team charges for hot was most imponant to us is that the
dogs at the concession stands, let club be under the control of a local
alone whether it should go shop- person.' '
ping for one in the free-agent mar·
Since Mr. Yamauchi deferred
ket. Day-to-day control of the team immediate comment - he issued a
will reside with John Ellis, the statement after the ownership com·
chainnan of Puget Sound Power &amp; miuee unanimously recommended
Light Co .• who will serve as the approval of the sale Tuesday sayMariners chief executive officer, ing he would "discuss my feelings
and several other prominent Seat· and thoughts on this maner" after
tie-area investors who will have today's formal vote- we can only
majority control of the stock.
spec ulate on his motives. But sev·
In fact. the only decisions in ernl people familiar with the way
which Yamauchi will hold any the Japancse do business over here
sway at all are those, as commis- found nothin~ about his actions the
sioner Fay Vincent put it, "in lhe least bit susptcious.
realm of extraordinary events";
·'The thing 1 always keep in
namely. whether to relocate or sell mind is that the Japanese take a
the franchise.
long view of things,'' said Michael
Mo st Americans, naturally. Radnor , who directs the internaregard this as suspicious, since tional business development pro·
most of us remember that Yankees gram at Northwestern Universtty's
owner George Steinbrenner found Kellogg Grnduatc School of Man·
himself similarly restricted only agement.
AFTER running afoul of major
"Nintendo has done a wondrous
league baseball rule 21 (f) amount of busine ss in the United
engaging in activity ''not in the States and I'm sure they have
best interest of baseball " - and future ambitions. And so it's very
asking the very same Mr . Vincent important to them, given the curto suspend him.
rent climate , to establish themSo wbat gives here?
selves as almost-American. And
"I don't know what his motives what could be more American," he
are,'· Chicago White Sox owner added , " than having saved a baseJerry Rci nsdorf, the prime mover ball team by investing in it in a
whitc-k.nightlind of way?"
David Montgomery, who teaches international marketing at Stanford University 's Graduate School
of Business, had no trouble coming
el or slash administrative costs to up with immediate. more tangible
heneftts.
divert money to women's team s.
" To American s, the most
Women's teams account for
important
part of any business
about 30 percent of all teams at the
II Btg Ten schools. Most schools alliance ts equity ownership. The
hav e about the same split, except most important thing to the
th e University of Iowa, whi ch Japanese is opportunity," he said.
"I'm sure they expect to get
already ts near a 60-40 split.
favorable
publicity out of it for one
Big Ten officials onginally were
thing.
For
another, loolc at the overto consider requiring a 50-50 split
lap
between
baseball fans, llUIIlY of
by 2002 but shelved the idea to
whom
are
young
males, and video
tackle lhe 6040 goal fma and wait
(See OWNERS on Page 5)
for possible national legislation.
A 5().50 split " is predicated on
the idea that the Big Ten confer·
ence cannot go it alone." said
Karol Kahr s, women's athletic
administrator at the University of
Illinois.
The NCAA formed its own
Gender Eqwty Task Force in April
Its first mee ting was scheduled
later this month.

San Francisco hands Cincinnati 6-2 loss

Oriffey, Se~ttl e., 12; Puclum, Mirul501.1,

Major league leaders

illand (Moore

MilwnU.ec (N.vuro 6-4) at Seattle

j

DOUBLES - B. Martinez, Se.e.n..le,
20; Joyner, K•n.u Ci1y, 11J; H•ll, New
Ynrt. 18; Reimer, Te.us. 17; Je.fferia,
Kan.au City, 17: Mattina.Jy, New York,
17; ~~tied Mth l~

STRIJ(I!Oll'l1 - Oemea1, 801ton,
81: Ju•n. 0\lllllln, ToronlO, 71; Peru,
N~w Yod. 6,; R. Johnson, Sul1le, 67;

at

CAURJRNlA ANGELS -

Jwuor FeW., oulf'lddet. from !he 1~ - d.ty
dinblod lilt. ~'aced John Motril , oolfidd-

oor-- k-~.gue CU!tnctl.

7.. ). !Ooll p.m.

f uu (Ryan 0.2)

BosebaU
A.nwrkln waue
BAlTIMORE ORIOlES ----:- Sisne.c!
Byrond SrTUU\. Ptdlc:r and, William hd·
dy, ootfidder.

Detroil, 39; MminaJy, New Yon: , 18;

Tt.l.U, 9- J. .150, 3.11; Oemcnl, Boct~.
9-3, .750, 1..56; McJ)rowe.ll, Olie&amp;JO, &amp;-3,
121, 3 . ~0; Naay. CU~VELAND, 7 -3.
700, 2.44: McDonald. 8dUmore. 7 -3,
100, 3.rT; o.illit;k~Wl, Deln:rit, 1·3, .700,

IC.arwu City (Pichudo 1-2) at Ciliforni• {Linaltco ~). 10:3.S8.m.

Transactions

lmmd and Mikes VmerU, flltchen,

Ton"rtlo. 68
Oak.land 5, Milw•u.kee 1

Portland 11

M.at:k, Minnao\J,-4~; M!:G...-ire,OIIkhnd,
44: Knobi•IXh. Minnetou, 41: Phillip~ .

Andcntwl , R.tllimo:n, 41; Griffey, Se..nle,
40, Stcrra. Twa, 40; C &amp;niOCO, OU!and .

l6l
.42 \
397

13 35

Suttle
Califomi1

·""

I

l86

"'

.34

GB

f.T7

37 21
Jl

Toronto

Wlldnud.ly, June 17 -

OUc.ao. 9 p.m.. lf necaiUJ'

6J

HATTlNG - Puckett, Mtnnetot l .
353; Bcrdick, D.llind, .319: R. Alamu.

AMERICAN LEAGU[

Sunday- Portlmd 11 Chicaao,7 p.m.

By JIM UTKE
AP Sports Writer
Try your hand at this short multiple-choice exam: What kind of
man would commit $75 million to
a business venture over which he
will have very limited control?
a.) A very nch one.
b.) A very sbrewd one.
c .) A man who is very co ncerned with his image.
d.) A man who takes the long
view on things.
e.) AJI of the above.
Rarring some unforeseen complications, a group of investors,
w1th Hiroshi Yamauchi, president
of Nintendo Co. Ltd . of Kyoto,
Japan. providing most of the fmancial muscle, will own the Seattle
Mariners by th e end of this afternoon.
When the deal to purchase the
franchtse was first announced in
late January, Yamauchi was to
have contro lled 60 percent of the
stock in exchange for ponying up
60 percent of the $125 million
requtred to purchase and operate
the club. When all 26 maJOr league
baseball teams cast their ballots
today in New York, his fmancial
com mitment will not have been
lessened by one cenL But in order
to gain their approval, Yamauchi
apparently has agreed to take less
than 50 percent of the equity from
the venture - perhaps consider-

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

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�Ptlg1 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 11, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Cleveland edges Detroit 4-2 in 12 frames for first series win
DETROIT (AP) - Cleveland
manager Mite Hargrove was start·
ing 10 wonder if his Indians would
ever win a series in DelroiL
The Indians had several chances
10 ice their first series win in nearly
I0 years Wednesday night, but they
ke1Jt telling it slip away.
First, they let erratic Tigers
Kevin Ritz escape, then they
blew a late two-run lead and had 10
go 10 extta innings.
But Glenallen Hill rescued his
teammates, leading orr the lith
widt his second homer of the night
and his fourth in lWO days for a 4-2
vicny.
"That was a big win for a
young team like us,'' Hargrove
said. "We showed dtat we can be
mentally tough when we need to
be...
Aldlough happy about the win,
Hargrove was frustrated by the first
inning.
Ritz has been plagued by COil·
trot problems throughout his
car=, and be started the game by
walking the fJJSl two hitters and
going 2-0 on Carlos Baerga. But
Baerga swung at a pitch lhnt was
over his bead, then decided 011 his
own to bunt and bit into a force
play that killed the rally.
"If we showed more patience in
the fJJS~ and let Ritz bury himself,
which he was doing, we wouldn't
have needed extra innings," Hargrove said. "It as much my fault as
anyone's for not giving the take
sign.''
Ritz senled down and ending up
allowing just two runs in seven
innings.
"Once I got out of the first
inning, it was like a weight off my
back," Ritz said. "Once I calmed
down,l rWJy goc in a groove."
Cleveland starter Jack Arm·
strong, pitching oothree days' rest,
shut out the Tigers for 5 2/3
innings, but the bullpen allowed
two runs to force extta innings.
Hill, who had homered twice in
Cleveland's 6-l victory Tuesday
night, hit his second of the game to
win it Wednesday night,
" This is unbelievable," Hill
said. "I've been coming up in siruations where I've had a chance to
help the team, and as well as I'm

swinging, dtings will happen.''
Winning pitcher Steve Olin (l·
3) pitched lhe final 3 213 innings.
and allowed just two hits. Mike
Munoz (0·1) came in to pitch the
lllh for Detroit, and allowed back·
to-back homers to Hill and Brook
Jacoby to lose the gwne.
"Both times, they were split·
fingers that stayed up," Munoz
said. " I've been throwing it well,
butlhey just floated."
The last time the Indians won a
series in Delroit was in September
1982. The victory also moves
Cleveland within I 1/2 games of
Deuoit for sixlh place.
"We had to have this win ,"
Olin said. "We are trying to get out
of the cellar, and thiS is the team
we are battling. It's even bigger
because we haven't won hen in so
long."
Elsewhere, it was Chicago 3,
California 2; Oakland 5, Milwaukee 2; Baltimore 3, Boston I;
Torooto 10, New Yort 3; Texas 5,
Seanle 3; and Kansas City 7, Minnesota6.
Wllite S01 3, Ancels 2
It was a good night to be a for·
mer Angel.
Shawn Abner and Kirk
McCaskill, both one-time California players, came out on top of
their former team Wednesday
night Abner's sacrifiCe fly in the
12th inning gave the Chicago
White Sox a 3-2 victory.
McC•sJrill pitched weD for eight
innings, carrymg a three-hiDer and
a 1-0 lead into the ninth. But the
bullpen failed him and he wound
up with a no-decisioo.
"I didn't do bad playing for
them every four of five games,"
said Abner, who was released by
California near the end of training
cwnp. "I guess some oeoole lite
you, some people don't{, -,
The folks at Comiskey Park certainly liked what Abner did with
the bases loaded in the 12th.
With the scored tied 2-2, George
BeD drew a walk from Steve Frey
(2·1). Craig Grebeck then singled,
sending Bell to third. Steve Sax
was given an intentional walk to
flU the bases.
Abner' s fly ball into medium
center field was caught by Chad

Curtis, whose throw was dropped
by catcher Mike Fitzgerald. Bell
heal the throw on a close play, anyway.
!t was tough for McC•still not
to get a victory. Ahead 1· 0, he
yielded a leadoff double to Von
Hayes in the ninth and hit Hubie
Brooks wilh a pitch.
Scott Radinsky relieved, fol lowed by ace Bobby Thigpen, and
Rene Gonzales eventually hit a
two-run single.
The Sox came back to tie it on
Frank Thomas's RBI single.
Atbletlcs 5, B1ewers 2
At Milwaukee, Mart Mc&lt;Jwire
became the fifth-fastest player to
reach 200 career homers, getting
his 22nd this season. McGwire's
2001h homer came in his 2,852nd
career at-bat, faster than everyone
except Ralph Kiner, Babe Ruth,
Harmon Killebrew and Eddie
Mathews.
Harold Baines also homered in
support of Ron Darlin~. who yield·
ed seven hits in seven mnings.
Orioles 3, Red Sox 1
At Baltimore, Rick Suu:Iiffe tied
for the major league h~h with his
mnth victory. Sutcliffe (9-4)
allowed six hits in winning a fourth
straight start for the first time since
1989. He lost his shutout in the
seventh when Ellis Burks hit his
team-high sixth homer.
Mike Devereaux drove in two
runs fer Baltimore.
Blue Jays 10, Yank~ 3
Torooto continued its mastery at
Yankee Stadium as Joe Carter
homered. tripled, doubled and
drove in four runs. The Blue Jays
swept New York, outscoring the
Yankees 28-7 in the three-game
series, with 15 hits in the finale,
including two homers, three triples
and four doubles.
Greg Myers hit a three-run
homer during a six-run second
inning and Devon White got three
hits, drove in two runs and scored
twice.
Rangers 5, Mariners 3
At Arlington, Texas, Juan Gonzalez homered for the fiflh time in
his last four games and Dickie
Than's two-run homer keyed a
five-run third inning.
Seaule starter Randy Johnson

Hall of Fame-bound Winfield
unbothered by snubs by Yankees
By JIM DONAGHY
NEW YORK (AP) - When
Dave Winfield rerurns to Yankee
Stadium it's not exactly a happy

Steinbrenner now, mstead focusing
on the end of a wonderful career
and a place in baseball history.
"The last few years I've gotten
a different perspective on base ·
homecoming.
Except for the tiny lines on his ball," Winfield said. "I am glad I
career stat sheet. there is little indi· played long enou~h to outlast the
cation Winfield spent more than people who made 11 hard for me. A
nine seasons in the Bronx. The lot of people leave the game and
Yankees will never have a day f&lt;r feel bitter that they weren't per·
ceived correctly, but not me."
Winfield or retire his uniform.
Winfield missed the 1989 seaThat's OK by Winfield - he 'II
son following back surgery and
survive.
Winfield showed up this week Steinbrenner thought the 12-time
at Yankee Stadium as a member of All-Star was through. The Yankees
the Toronto Blue Jays. He was sent Winfield to California two
greeted by handshakes from some years ago, and last season he hit 28
old friends and a few cheers from homers with 86 RBis.
He also hit three home runs in a
the fans, but not much else.
This is the same Winfield whom game at the Meuodome last season
George Steinbrenner paid Howie and became lhe oldest player ever
Spira $40,000 to say bad things to hit for the cycle on June 24
about. It ended up getting Stein - against Kansas Ciry .
Looking for a designated hitter,
brenner kicked out of baseball by
the Blue Jays signed Winfield as a
Fay Vincent
That was almost two years ago. free agent. He' s batting .308 with
Steinbrenner may be back soon and nine home runs and 32 RBis, helpWinfield is 40 years old now . mg Toronto battle Baltimore for
Despite all the nice numbers Win- flr.il place.
field put up f&lt;r the Yankees, it all
Any doubt, some stirred by
ended rather ugly for him in the Steinbrenner, that Winfield would
Bronx. He once said Steinbrenner
toot the ··fun" out of baseball for
him.
Winfield declines to talk about

som eday end up tn the Hall of
Fame has been erased . He has
2,763 hits, 415 home runs and
1,634 RBis.
Amoog active players, Winfield
is tops in homers and RBis and
second in extra-base hits, total
bases, games, at·bats and runs.
One of the few things Winfield
doesn't have is a World Seri~ ring.
It's one of the reasons he decided
to sign with Toronto. He played in
the 1981 Series and went I for 22
as the Yankees lost to the Dodgers
in six games.
"My teammates are great,"
Winfield said. "Torooto is a beau·
tiful city and the fans are so sup·
portive. I couldn't ask for a beuer
situation . Maybe that's why I'm
playing so weD."
Despite Steinbrenner's constant
criticisms, Winfield also played
well for the Yankees. He had six
seasons of I00 or more RB Is and
rants seventh oothe club's all-time
home run list (205) and 12th in
RBis (818). He was worth the S20
million over 10 years, cheap by
today· s standards.

allowed only four hits in llis four
innings, but he walked six and hit
two batters. Johnson leads the
league in wallcs (51) and hit batters
(eight).
Jose Guzman (6-3) yielded six
hits and walked one in seven
innings in winning his fourth
straight decision.
Royals 7, Twills 6

At Kanias City, Brian McRae
had three hits and drove in three
runs, leadinl! the Royals to their
ninth victory m their last II games.
The Royals led 5.0 before Min·
nesota scored six times in the sixth.
Shane Mack doubled and scored on
Gene Larltin' s double. Kirby Puck·
eu bunted for a hit and Kent Hrbek
hit his eighth home run.

Brian Harper singled to knock
out Kevin Appier. Tom Gordon
relieved and got Chili Davis to
ground out, but threw a wild pitch
and gave up a run-scoring single to
Scott Leius. Greg Gagne and Jeff
Reboulet singled to score Lei us.
RBI singles by McRae and
Keith Miller in the bottom of the
inning brought back Kansas City.

drift.

"A number of people have the
oondilioo but go their whole lives
and don't know it because they
don't have sym.Ptoms," said
Cincinnati cardiOlogist Dean
Kcreiates. "It can be detected
through an BKG (electroeardio·
gram), but if there are no symptomS, t11tlllly ao trealnlent is called

for."

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land baserunner Kenny Lofton durinR Wednes-

day night's American League ~ame in Detroit,
whicb the Indians won 4-2 in llmnings. (AP)

CINCINNATl (AP) - Rowers
competing in the National Colleg,ate Rowing Championships say
that while everything may look
easy from the shore, alhletes near·
ing the end of a 2,000-meter race
are losing their vision and have
muscles that feel like they are on
fife.
" You can't even see very well
because you have' become so
focused on the task at hand," said
Harvard coxswain David Wciden,
who will be competing in the
championships this weekend.
"You are trying to maintain a
high enough level of concentratioo

to keep rowing well and match
everyone else without giving in to
the fact that you are getting
increasingly tired with every
strote."
Teammate Bill Cooper agreed.
"You have to keep telling your.
self that it will be over soon." he
said. "Your muscles really stan to
bum . The pain is everywhere, but
the legs are the first things to stan
hurting . Then the arms and the
shoulders. "
Cooper said the last quarter of
the race is the hardest
" At that point in the race, the
pam gets very intense," he said .

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Williams ...
(Continued from Page 4)
"It's natural that Alfred be concerned," said Mike Brown. · · Aily·
body would be. But the doctors are
reassuring in what they say. The
risk is minimal. But there is always
some risk in any procedure like
this."
Cardiologists say that a small
number of patients with the condition can develop "heart block "
from the rrocedure and require
insertion o a pacemaker.
But Cincinnati cardiologist Ted
Waller described the risk in terms
that make it seem Williams would
be in much greater danger by
allowing his condition to go
unlrealed.
"There are risks with any
ca!heterization, but this has been a
remarkably safe procedure up to
now. Complication rates are less
than I percent," Waller said.
Brown said he couldn't recall
knowing about Williams' heart
problem prior to the 1991 draft.
Williams agent said the condition
was detected during tests at the
National Scouting Combine in
February 1991, but tbat doc10rs
there cleared him pltysicaUy for the

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�Page

8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 11 , 1992

Sliop Iw 1Cutorit gpom~roy f})Mriwa
11f~rii£f!l~ w~~t~n' J/Mn~ 112 &amp; Jlj
HERITAGE WEEKEND

SATURDAY, JUNE 13
Pomeroy Merchants Association
10 a.m. - Parade, followed by recognition of the
1992 Heritage Queen and her Court
11 a.m. - Performance by area clogging groups,
western style dance demonstration.
Noon - Denver Rice, toilet seat guitar
12:30 p.m. - Civil War clothing fashion show
1:15 p.m. -Civil War demonstrations
2 p.m. - Outhouse races
3 p.m. -Music by Dee and Dallas

EXPANSION SALE!
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

ALL CLOTHING
Sizes 12 Mos. and Up

KENNETH
UTT

Sale-

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ltetas such as Pwses, Mugs, Troll
Pencils en! Stickers, Jewelry, Miniature
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•d Much MoreW

OTHER ACTIVITIES
ANTIQUE SHOW in the larger mini-park by
Russ and Hope Moore.
PLANT EXCHANGE by the Herbal Harvesters
Society, noon to 2 p.m, mini park.
QUILTING DEMONSTRATION
by
Meigs
County Senior Citizens, mini-park
CRAFTERS, Court Street
CANOE RALLY for the public, sponsored by
area scouts, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
HERITAGE QUEEN CONTEST
FRIDAY AT 7:00 P.M.
The Heritage Queen Contest and Reception
will be held at 700 p m. Friday at the
MeigsCounty Public Library in Pomeroy.
The public may and is encouraged
to attend .

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Locally!

Daughter shouldn't get involved
in father's double lifestyle
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and l have had a less-than-ideal
marriage, to say the least. but 1
managed to construct a preuy good
facade for the sake of our children.
l thought l had succeeded in
keeping lhe trulh from lhem, but l
now reali ze that I was kidding
myself.
My husband has been a major
womamzcr for the last 10 years.
All his lies exploded in his face
"!hen I unexpoctedly showed up at
hts office one evening and caught
h!m emertaming his secretary on
tlie couch. l didn 't insist that he
fire her because I was afraid 1f there
was a messy confrontation l might
lose.
- Last week. our daughter '"Tricia,'"
age I7, came to me in tears. She
said her best friend told her that she
had run into Dad at an out-of-the·
~ay inn and he was with a very tall
red-headed woman. holding hands
and kissing her on the neck.
- Tricia is sure the woman is her
(~ther's secretary (she's right). She
~as written a leuer to the woman
and wants my permission to mail iL
It's an excellent leuer. Ann. but I'd
like your opinion. Yes or no? ..
PROUD MOM
. DEAR MOM: The answer is no.
Such a move would accomplish
'it~e . If, however, Tricia would like
to let her falher lrnow how she feels
aooul his double life, I would say,
"OK ·· go ahead and tell him."
Dear Ann Landers: My wife and

Ann

Landers
ANN LANDERS
c .....ns,..Uale"

I were married 28 yean; when she
died of cancer two years ago. four
hospitals and 16 doctors couldn't
help. Our marriage was one of
the best. We loved each other
dearly. Ow two fine children are
adults now, independent. living far
away.
When my wife became seriously
ill , I took early retirement so I
could take care of her. I'd like to
malce it clear that I am no Don Juan.
I am bald, wear glassr.&lt;&gt; and am not
terrific looking. I'm far from
wealthy, but l pay my bills and don't
owe any money.
My problem is loneliness. Re·
cently, I decided to gel in touch
with a few women I dated in college
back in the 1950s. It turns out
that the four I contacted are all
widowed or divorced, professionals
and financially independent One is
a nurse. two are teachers. and one is
a lawyer.
They each remembered me, liked
me and were eager lo get together.
The problem is they all live
thousands of miles away. so casual
dating is out of the question . I

Sixty -six percent of female
melanoma patients in the study had
found their own cancerous lesions,
versus 42 percent for men.
Melanoma, which is thought to
come from too much sun. is highly
curable if found early but more
dangerous if overlooked and
allowed 10 progress.
"Men may be less skin-conscious than women am, or pcrbaps
less prevention-conscious than
women are. (or maybe) they're less
into seeing physicians for suspected lesions than a woman might
be," said the swdy's lead author,
,. Jeffrey D. Holler of Pomeroy Dr. Howard Koh.
Jtaduated with a degree in master
He stressed that those explanal1f Christian ministry from the tions and any link to women's
Huntington College, Huntington, higher survival rate are " highly
tnd. on May 16.
speculative." Nor has it been
: Huntington College offers 50 proved that women's higher sur(llajor areas of study and grants vival rate results from biological
f.!&gt;ur undergraduate degrees each of differences between the sexes, he
which is offered on a basis of tiber· said.
if arts four year program. The col·
Koh. an associate professor of
lege was founded in 1897 by the dermatology, medicine and public
(hurch of the United Brethren in health at the Boston University
Christ
Schools of Medicine and Public
Health, repons the swcly with colleagues in the June issue of the
Journal of the American Academy
or Dennatology.
The results suggest that public
:· In celebrntion of National Nurseducation
and screening effons for
~g Assistants Day, the Pomeroy
melanoma
should aim particularly
i'tursmg and Rehabilitation Center
at
men
and
at body areas not easily
:Will be hosting a steak dinner on
:Monday to honor the facility's seen , such as the back, the
researchers said.
nursing assistants.
Melanoma is expocted 10 strike
·- The dinner is being held in
32,000
Americans this year and
appreciation of the hard work skill
cause
6,700
deaths. Its lesions are
dedication and compassio~ thai
irregularly
shaped
maru that have
l)lays such an important role in
!Tiamtaining the health and well- mixed shades of tan, brown and
being of the residents, said the black. sometimes wii.II dashes of
Jiursing center's spokr.&lt;&gt;woman. She red. white or blue. They are usually
p;)so said that the service and bigger in diameter than a pencil
eraser.
~tiona! quality of CBre provid·
Dr. Darrell Rigel, associate profd by tit~ nursmg assistants is of
tremendous importance to other fessor of dermatology a1 New Yorlc
Uni versily. agreed that women are
Staff members.
~

By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
.. NEW YORK - Here's some tiling to ponder as you strip down
(or the beach this weekend : A
l:tudy suggests women are better
Jhan men at spotting the skin cancer melanoma on lhemsel vr.&lt;&gt;.
· That may be one reason women
have a lower death rate from
melanoma. researchers said.

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managed to visit one woman in
Chicago, and another is coming here
in a few weeks for a shan stay.
but frankly. I can't afford to go
flying all over the country. Early
retirement doesn't pay much. You
ought to see my phone bills!
My male friends tell me to look
in my own area, but I've never been
to a singlr.&lt;&gt; bar and have no interest
in that sort of lhing. I joined two
church groups but the ladies there
are Ill least 10 years my senior. I
want a panncr, 1101 a patient
Ann, I've read you for yean; and
am looking to you for some sensible
advice. Please come to my rescue.
·· T.L. IN A..ORIDA
DEAR A..ORIDA: It sounds as if
you don't need to travel any place ..
the four women you contaeted all
appear to be potential candidates.
. The phone is a lot cheaper than
air travel. Stay in touch wilh the
quartet and invite them to Florida.
one at a time, of course. Please let
me know which one of these dollies
hits the jaclcpoL You sound like a
lovely guy.
Do you have quutions about sa.
but 110 ont w ralk to? Ann Landers'
bookltl. "St:x: and tht Tun·Ager."
is frank and to tht point. Send a
stlf-addresud. lo•g , bllSi~ss- size
tnvtlo~ and a check or monty
order for $3 .65 (this inc/•dt s
posragt and halldling) ro: Tuns.
c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562.
Chicago. Ill . 606JJ -056 2. (I•
Caooda, und $4.45)

"much more aware about their
skin" and better at spotting
melanoma, and that this may contribute to their higher survival .
But he said other faclm appear
to be a1 work, 100.
Men tend to show up at a doctor's office with thicker and more
advanced melanoma lesions, he
said. But research shows that even
when that is taken into account.
men still have a poorer prognosis,
he said.
Rigel said on average, about 85
percent or women are alive 10
yean after a melanoma diagnosis.
compared with about 75 percent for
men.
The study was based on mailed
questionnaires filled out by 213
Massachusetts melanoma patients
and three relatives of dead
melanoma patients. Men accounted
for I09 cases.
In all, half the melanoma cases
were di~covered by the patient.
Rtgel said the rate Ill lower at his
instiwtion, with pcrbaps 20 percent
self-discovered.

Dinner slated

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P~ESCRIPTIONS
E M1in

1

m to 4 00 p m

PH 992 -2915fi
Fnendty S.rva
Pom•O¥ . OM
Op., Week Night• 'ril g

Thursday, June 11, 1992

Page-8

Women better than men at spotting
~angerous skin cancer, study says

Shop

The Daily Sentinel

TAMARA GRATE

To attend workshop

ATTENDS DEDICATJ0~2Lt. Burke Hamilton and 2Lt.
Shane Baker came from Fort ox, Ky, to gel Mrs. Ethel Stitt for
dedication ceremonies of Stewa Field, named in honor of her son,
the late Staff Sgt. Jimmy Stewar , who was killed while serving his
country in Vietnam . Also attending were Stewart's sister
Josephine Donohue and niece, Candy Sue Rime. They returned
home May 28.

Activities announced for
Rutland July 4 celebration
A parade. celebrity auction ,
and fireworks are all
included in this year's annual Ox
Roast founh of July celebration in
Rutland.
Plans for the event are being
finalized by tlte Ru~and Volunteer
Fire Department which sponsors
the event.
Activities will gel underway at
9:30a.m. wilh a parade . Units are
to line up at Depot Street and the
parade will end at Beech Grove
Road. Theme will be "America :
We Are family ." Awards will be
given in the categories of floats.
religious and non -religious; horses.
fire engines, marching units, deco·
rated bikes, and decorated trucks.
A pte balcing and cake dccoral·
in g contest will be staged with
entertainrnen~

entries to be in place by no on.
After the judging the baked goods
will be auctioned off at 4 p.m.
Games will begm Immediately
after the parade and continue until
about 10 p.m. when there will be
fireworks to conclude the activities.
AI 4 p.m. there will be a garden
trac tor pull and at th e same hour
there will be a celebrity auction
with items from Lionel Canwright,
Mario Martin , Hank Williams, Jr.
and others.
Ent ertainm ent will be by th e
Country Misfi ts from noon until 4
p.m. and Whites Hill Band from 6
p.m. 10 10 p.m.
Craft tables will be available for
$5 each .
To regi ster for the parade, craft
tables. or for more information on

Tamara N. Grate, a sevenlh grade
student at Wahama Junior High
School , has been chosen to
represent Mason County at the "I
Could Be An Engineer!" worlcshop
at WVU Monday, June IS through
Wednesday, June 17.
The Wr.&lt;&gt;tinghouse Corporation
has gran~ mollCy to West Virginia
Umversuy s
Dcparunem
of
Mechanical and Aerospace En·
gmecnng to encowage female
students lo consider a career in ert·
gineering. Thts workshop will be
for seventh grade female students,
and only 24 were chosen to receive
this full paid scholarship to the
summer workshop.

any of th e events, residents may
contact Kim Willford at 742-2103
or Marie Birchfield 111742-2178.
To enter the parade, participants
are asked to send the name of their
group, the name of the contact per·
son , th e addre ss and telephone
number, and the category of the
entry to Box II , Rutland Ohio
45 775 .
•

Pop for a new
recliner for Dad!
Lifestyle makes it
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savrngs.
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Pickup time set
Meigs High School seniors may
pick up their grade cards and graduation picwres al the high school
office anytime between 8 a.m. and
2 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Eastern and Southern vocation
students may also pick up their
grade cards at the school. Meigs
underclassmen (grades, nine, 10
and II) may pick up their grade
cards and proficiency test rt3Uits al
the office. and when doing so are
asked to be prepared to pay any
student obligations they owe.
Any questions may be directed
lO 992-2158.

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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

June 11,1992

Thursday, June 11, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Military hopes DNA program will Wildwood Garden Club member
prevent any more unknown soldiers reports on trip to AmeriFlora '92
FORT KNOX, Ky. (AP)- In a Victor Wecdn , Chief of the Anned
grim concession to modem war 's Forces Institute of Pathology. sa•d
ability to leave th e dead without Wedn esday. "Service members
fingerprints or teeth for identifica- want to know that 1f they pay the
tion, the Army has begun takin g ultimate price, proper respec t wdl
blood and sa liva samples from be paid."
recruits for a "genetic dogtag"
Sgt. Joe Ricondo, a Fon Kno&gt;
program.
nurse, said 1,000 to 1,500 recru its
"We hope there will neve r be w1ll give sam ples eac h month at the
another hody buried in the tomb of Army post. Soldiers at Fort
the unknown soldier." Anny Maj. McClellan in Alahama will be test -

•••
DNA DOGTAGS - Army Staff Sgt. Mark Jolliff appties blood
samples from new recruits to DNA specimen cards Wednesday in
Fori Knox, Ky. Compleled cards are in tbe foreground. The two
cards will be kepi with the soldier's medical records and in a central DNA Repository. Tbe DNA specimen will help establish positive idenlilication of fallen soldiers. (AP)

cd bcgmnmg ne&lt; t month. Eventually the program w1 ll be expanded
to the entire Army.
" 1 believe u 's a good idea to
kee p the unknown -soldier rat e
down ." rec ru it Mike Davis, IS, of
Palestine , Texas. said before having his blood drawn.
DNA. or deoxyribonucleic acid,
is the molecular genetic blueprint
found in eve ry living ce ll. By
cross-matchmg the smallest tissue
speci mens with genetic samples on
file, pathologiSts can make identi fications with high re~ability .
The blood and saliva wJ!I be
used only to identi fy a body and
will be de stroyed once a sold1er
leaves the military , said Wecdn ,
chief of AFIP's new Armed Forces
DNA Identification Laboratory.
The blood smears are on cards
that also contain a fm gerprint, signature and bar code. One card will
be kept with the medical records;
the other will be vacuum -scaled,
frozen and stored.
The sa mples cost about $3 per
recrull and tile repository w•ll cost
approximately $500,000 annually.
Weedn sa•d it costs less than pre sent identi fica tion methods. which
have th eir limitations.
Only about 70 percent of mili tary personnel have fingerprints on
record , he sa1d . And dental comparisons arc not always possibl e
because soldiers don't ne ed as
much dental wbrk as they used to,
and thus lack dental records, he
said.
Moreover, fmgerpnn ts and teeth
can be des rroyed in com bat.
" It 's not bullets and bayonets
an ymo re," SaJd Navy Capt . Glenn
Wagner , deputy dire ctor of the
multi se rvi ce Armed Forces Institute of Pathology . "It's stuff that
can really ca use a goo d deal of
damage."
In an e&gt; plosio n in Kuwait last
Jul y, for exa mple , inves tigators
found only one small ponion of a
1aw with intact teetll among tissue
from two dead soldiers.
DNA comparisons helped make
identifications in those cases and
helped sort out hody parts in others. But using DNA in Operation
Desert Storm was challenging
because the military did not hav e
DNA samples from soldiers.
Investigators had to check tlte
DNA of victims' relatives for guid ance. And in one case, they compared ti ss ue to hair found in a
plim's electric shaver.

Former agriculture agent speaks
to area garden club members
Ma1da Mora presided and wel The open meeting of the Chester
comed
th e guests . She lead the
Garden Club wa s attended by
grou
p
'"
The Gardener's Creed.
members from Star, Rulland. Wildwood, Shade Val ley Floral Arts, Devo ti ons were give n by Mace!
Rutland Fri endly, Rutland Friends Barton and included a reading from
and Flowers. Middlcpon Amateurs, "Ton gue of tile W• sc" wh1ch stated
Winding Tra li and Fe rnwood, as "Tact, wise ly labe led the sav in g
well as se veral non -club gues ts. vJrt uc . graces a !Jfc like fragmnce
The meeting wa s held at the ~races a rose.'" A poem. "Alon g
Chester United Mctlt od ist Church Life's Road I Found a Fncnd '" and
and a rose specime n s show was pra yer conc luded devouons.
'"Save the Earth '" lesson was by
featured and roll cal l was "bnng a
Betty
Dean. '" Prevent Pests Natu .2:~~~for
~~cn u
"
rall y .. She stated there arc 440
spcms of msects and mites and 77
types of fungus that arc re sJStantto
tltc co rnmcrctal poisons. Al so that
f1ve granu les rf D1azinon will kill
sp:trmw and black birds. A trap is
sui! the bes t way to control mJcc,
not poiSOnous haiL

Recogmzed were Karen Werry,
co unty cont act c ha~rm a n . wh o
re minded th e group of th e fiv e

rcmam mg cla-:;scs on nowcr arrang~ng

hc1n g con du cted at Rock
Spn ngs Grange Hall on Th ursday
cvc nmgs.

MEREDITH CROW

All-American

Janet Ho lm. Amennora ambassador. spoke hncn y
The gues t speak er. BJ!I Twarogowsk •. ag nculturc agent. rctJred .
rose spcnallst. A th ens County , was
introduced by Belly Dean. program
chairm an. He spoke on "Roses. the
Essence of Sum mer" and gave a

critique on the 92 rose speomens
by 16 gardeners. He spoke on rose
culture froln A to Z, and noted that
Meredith Crow . daughter of J•m preparation of the so li for a rose
and Pam Crow. Pomeroy, has been
garden should begin some time
named an All -American Scholar by before actual planung to 1nsurc satth e United Stat es Ac hi eveme nt
ISfactory amount of organic mauer,
Academ y.
50-50 perce nt soli and organJC rnat·
The USAA has cstabl• shed tile
AII-Amcncan Scholar Award Pro- !Cr.
He stated fu ll sunl1 ght 1S pregram in order to offer dese rved
ferred by roses. They shou ld be
: recognition to supenor students
planted
I S-20 inches apan, depend who excel in the Academic d• sc•ing
on
the
variety , m early spring .
plines. Meredith has maintained a
Speaking
on
the humid Oh•o Val 4.0 grade.
She attends Eastern Junior H1gh
School and was nominated for tile
National Award by Thomas Kelly .
The Brotllerhood of Hope Bapsc hool co un selor at Eastern. Her ti st Church of Middleport recentl y
nam e will appear in the All-Ameri - held a f1 shin g and dinner fellow ca n Scholar Directory wh1ch JS ship at tltc Sonny McClure fanm .
published nationally. She was also
Keith Ashl ey, Broth erh ood
recogni zed for her academ•c director, moderated a short meeting
achievement as a United States where di scussion concerning the
National Honor Roll Award win - Buckeye Baptist Builders from
Columbus who will be coming in
ner.
The Academy selects All -Amer- June to help consb'Uct a first unit of
ican Scholars upon the exclusive the new church building was held.
recommendations of teach ers . Ashley also brought a devotion on
coaches, counselors and other qual- forgiveness.
ified sponsors. Once awarded, the
Attending were Kei th Ashley,
students may be recognized by tile So nn y McC lure, Jim Whulatch ,
USAA for other honors.
Dick Owen. John Pat Riley , Bob
Meredith is the granddaughter Mills, Dale Colburn, Paul Bailey,
of Bob and Katie Crow of Syracuse Mark Michae l and Pastor David
and Dot Neutzling of Pomeroy.
Bryan.

FellOWShip held

I I•

..

The Wildwood Garden Club
met recently at the home of Pauhne
Ey non w•th Dorothy Smith cohostess.
The meetin g opened wJth devotions by Eve lyn Hollon reading
"Jes us Our Wi sdom" taken fro m
Proverbs followed by a prayer. For
roll call everyone was to wear a
spring hat they had made.
Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting and disl"buted the ~ ew
fall bulb catalog hich members
could order. She n gave a report
on the outing to H.inis and Karen's
Greenhouses and to Connie 's
Herbs and Everlastings. She al so
had a thank you from Myron
Miller.
Doris Grueser had the monthly
report on Touch -Me -Not s, also
known as jewelweeds. They arc a
relative or the impatiens and prefer
moist soil and shady places. They
grow one to fiv e feet high . The
orange or yellow-spurred flowers
dioop from slender branches and
when the ripe seed pods arc
touched they ex plode scalt ering
seeds which are eaten by birds. The
nec tar of tile flower is a favorite of
hummingbirds and the sa p is
reported to be a treatment for polson ivy.
For the program , Mrs. Miller
gave th e h•ghlights of her recent
trip to Am eriflora . It JS an event
commemorating Christopher
Columbus' voyag e to th e New
World . The ex position features
Jntemational and domesuc exhibits.
The expo is held on the 88-acre
historic Franklin Park amid the lavish gardens and waterfalls. One of
the auractions is the International

Amph•tllcarrc.
Fo r the arrange ment of the
montll, Paulme Eynon had various
colored irises in a marble vase. She
also had a ga me unscrambhn g
names of different kinds of trees
with a prize awarded 10 Eve lyn

fight off black spot.
He praised tile beauty and quality of the specimen rose s, the
unbl emished folia ge. He noted
flaw s that would redu ce the
prospects of a blue ribbon spec imen, remarking that blem• shes
were mainly du e to th e strange
weatlter.
Added to tile roses brought by
members and guests were a quantity of speci mens from the well known gardens of Art and Beulah
Strauss, Middleport. Their specimens were blue ribbon winners.
Making a point of choosing a
less demand•ng type of rose to
enjoy with less work, the jud ge
ca lled attention to "Hedge Rose Simpl1city" a blue ribbon specimen
brought by guest Mildned Gaul.
A polled rose, "Gardens of tlte
World" was presented to the judge
by the host club. IT was suggested
that he prune the plant as a learning
experience. He cut out som e
foliag e to allow sun and air 10
reac h Jnto the plant.
An arrangement of til e Strauss
roses graced the buffet table laden
with finger foods. Door prizes were
awarded . The table arrangem ent
was taken to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
The Jul y meeting will be a fami ly p1cn•c July l, Dorothy Karr hostess. The program will be "Around
the Table Di sc ussion: What You
Can Do to Save the Eartll." There
wdl be an auction of garden related
Hems.

Annual Bowers
reunion held
The si•th annual Bowers
reunion was held recently at the
hom e of Donna (Bowers) and Herman Bowers, Columbus.
Attending were Ernest Max and
lla Bowers. Todd, Kri s, Josh and
Jodi Bowers, Pataskala; Joseph E.
and Mary Bowers, Steve, Tammy,
Joey, Joshua Marcinko, Reedsville;
Leroy and Joyce Sauters, Bill and
Sandra Baer, Steve, Kellie and
Brandon Hill , Eric and Chelsi
Holle, Sonja and Mathew
Demosky, Robby Wyall, Marcy
Hill , Racine; Nedra Tarvin, Herman and Donna Bowers, Breu E.
Bowers and Cindy, Shawn Hunt
and K1m, Columbus; Kay Proffitt,
Tiffany Barnes, Racine; Danny.
Renee, Nathan and Stephan•e
Wolfe, St. Charles, Mo.; Angela,
Matthew, Michael Sellars, Middleport.

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

I
I

I·

1

RATES
Days

Wood retires after 20
years in the Air Force
Technical Sgt. Kenn eth Wood
on May I reured after 20 years m
the Air Force as a night sergeant
wi th 97th Sec urity Police
Sq uadron , 97th Support Group,
97tll Wing, Eaker A.F.B., Ark .
He ha s served m Texas, South
Dakota , Ohio, North Dakota,
Korea. Arkansas, New Hampshire
and the United Kingdom.
He was presented the Air Force
Commendation Medal for meritori ous servi ce from Sept. 9, 1990 to
April 30, 1992.
Sgt. Wood was deployed to
Ro ya l Air Force Fairford, Unued
Kingdom, during Operation Desert
Storm, as a night sergeant He wd
his D"oops apprehended liberal militant protes ters attemptmg penetration of the base . Hi s leadership
throughout the deployment helped
insure a sec ure base of operations
resultin g in sixth uninterrupted
combat mi ss1ons nown over Iraq.
His apphcation of security operations played au invaluable role in
the successful completion of 14
special assignments.
Kenneth and hi s wife, Yang ,
and daughters. Carne, Cathy and

COPY DEADLINE

Call 992-2156

Don na, are at tlte present time staying with his parents, Jean and Norman Wood , Pomeroy.
He has accepted employment
with Bums International Security
in Columbus and will move there
mthc near future .

Mo~. thru

Thursda~· Pa~r
Papt&gt;r
Sund.n raper

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IN MEMORY OF
SHELLEY MAXINE
SIITH
GONE JUNE 11, 11187

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SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO

R.._,
614-949·2202

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

&amp;

co.

BILL SLACK
992·2269

USED

SMALl DOZER
WORI, DRIVEWAY
WOUaall
UMERONE
DELMRY SEIVICE

992·7553

'992-6215

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

Meadows

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
or

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
985•4473
667•6179

~,..--

__

.....;...;;;~

Education.

Notice le hereby given 1...- - - - - - - - .
lho1 a heoring on !hie
Petition wYI be hold In the
Common Plaoa Court ol
r,
~~~e~ge County on tho 23rd
dey of June, 1m at 2:15

KERWOOD$
HOME RE•AIR
SERVICE

JIM Fry, T. . .-

p.m.

CARPIIT II
I'LUMIIH, WIRING,

cusro•
1u1o
IITHIOOM

lllllge locrii School
Dlalrlcl

(&amp;I 11,11&lt;&gt;

VAIRIES

I)I

r----------1
Busines~~

Sen-ices

949·2671
UCINE, OH.

TEAFORD GOlF
AND TROPIY

A. A

98S·3961
Lenoas 512.50
6 Lesso1s 560.00

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

s19.95 A DAY AND

UP

CIHRepc*,
Tr...ies, Plo ..as
.dladges

CALL (614) 446-9971 (KELLY)

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

S/2tl/1-

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

FOR SALE
WICK'S
HAULING SERVI&lt;E
36970 lal Rllll Road
P-oy,Oiio

~---------1

~

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: llmeslone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992·5591

LOTS FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL LOCATION
Nice Place For Doublewldes and
To Raise A Family
PHONE, WATER &amp; ELECTRIC ALREADY
AVAILABLE
Will Sell Pan or All

Call 304-n3-5118

or 304-n3-5186 After 5
ASK FOR AL

TIES

CHARUE'S

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Homes

....-tho--

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

992·3838

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

-.eillllwiah;
A ~ dlltl _.dl

Lordy, Lordy,

i)ultne.a Opporturuty

5~ Peu fur S a~

- lhlo
WM
..,.oiled. A copy
ol
connponclenco
Jo '---------T""--------~--------~-------,.
otlachld • "Exhibit a·.
7. Thwo rernolno within
tho Bond Retirement Fund
ofllllve Locol, 53«,-t$4.511
.. of AprY 28, 11112. A cwtificollon of lhlo hom lho
BULUOOZER,BACKHOE
CloiiiiT............... and TAACKHOE WORK
Frame
• "Ellhlbit C".
AVAILABLE.
NEW'
USED
•LIGHT HAULING
l. Aevleld Code Soction
SEPTIC SYS"IEUS,
FOR
All
MAKES
18 p r - In pari:
HOME SITU end
•FIREWOOD
11
&amp; MODElS
Th• •cqulring 1chool
TRAILER BilES,
LANDCLEARIHG,
clotrict oholl levy • tax oul992·7013 or
Call 614·992·6637
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
olclo the len-mill llmllllllon
992-5553
UMESlOHE-TRUCKING
upon oil property In the
Sl. Rt. 7
OR TOIL FIIH
ecqulrlng ecllool cletrict lo
FREE ESJlMATES
1·800·848·0070
Chuhire,
pay lho l-lodn110 eo
RAILROAD
DARWIN, OHIO
Mlurnod 111tilthe lrodobtod
4--4-92-tlo
7131{9
6-8-'92'- I mo.
10 MOurned hoediech•rgod bul nol longer
lhM twonty-ltree yun all• lh• orlglnollnc...- ol
tho . _....... provlclod,
!hill lhe levy In the ocqulflng achool dlotrlct In ony
-floom Addltlona
year oholl nol ucoad the
-Guttor Worfl
levy In tho orlglnol achool
~loolrtcol and Ptumblnv
P• Orr Of l'olllilg
dotrict 1o pay the purchoM
-flooftng
price of projlcb -Ired
-Ill
Us
Or II f..- y,.•
-intarior • Ertarlor
tram the ........
Pointi
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
I. Tho lllllge Locol Board
(FREE 'ElrtMATES)
REASONAILI WES
ol Edu..tlon by roeolutlon
FRIE ESIJMAns
de!MI the 21th dey of April.
IIA¥t IIFERIN&lt;ll
•• R.Jp~ Y... T•
t m, r - I l l lhlll puroulelwe6p.a.lonollesoap
y• ..,.,....,...,.,"
onl 1o Soction 5705. 14(C)
POMEROY, OH.
Pomeroy, Ohio
uld Iunde be tronalorrod
Ah• 6 ,_.. 614-98S~I80
S-18-'92-1-pL
3-13 -112-lln
from lho Bond Rotlrernenl
6141'1111 MO.
C/JJ/92/lFund to tho Generol FIMid o1
tho lllolgie Loclli Board ol 1, . . - - - - - - - - .
es ~ Pet~o- WIIdllft
Educollon, • copy ol !hie
Motorcycle•-Etc.
r11olutlon Ia ollechod ••
· 'l(a tfi.ryn
"Edllbll D" and lncorporot·
lUMAIU
odbyrol949-2627 or
Brlogll Ia Or We
10. Awleed Code Socllon
1-800-837-1460
5705.14(C) gronto oulhorlty
Pkk u~.
"SPEClAUZING IN SLATE
to .,. Common PI- Court
lawn Mowing.
KEN'S
OR CANVAS"
ol Molge County lor !he
Fertilizing, Weeding,
398t5
Gold
Ridge Road
Iron .... of Mid tundl.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
and Seeding.
WHEREFORE PoMtlonan
992·5335
Shrub
and Tree
Welcome Slates
prory thol lholr petition be
FREE ESTIMAtES
985·3561
grontld and lhal lhla Court
Trimming &amp; Removol
$20.00
AcrMs l r - P•t Ollko
R•klenta.f l CotnlftMcW
of"''
Cua
tom
Painting•
aum ol 5344,-t$4 .~ from tho
217E. Ioco .. lt.
FreeEotimo._ .
PDMIIOT, ONIO
614-992-2242
Bond Rotir-nt Fund to
41Zft211n
' 2-7-92·tlnl
3123192Ain
412/92/ltn
the G-rot Fund of the
lllolge Locol Board ol (,1 . - - - - - - - - - l

:

to,&amp;...._a-d
ol E+IC-...,..._.....,

01111;

battery io dim lighl

tho

2 1-

1 57-

... - - hlrlto purof ......... bonde luuod

In our ....,. you

165-889

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

7- Loat &amp;nd Fo und
/{...._ Publoc S ~tle &amp;:
Aud1011

CLASS IFIEDS
oblie-llon• created under
... This Way

COJllP'Btulotioru,

598

3995

• F1ve languages

June llltL

Happy Ads

Low As $15 Per Monlh.

Swiss Knife and Light Language Translator

~!

99.95

11...... ,....,..

~E ;~~

... - . -loci

p
1--r
June 10, 111111, ond
whoM blrtll*r -*1
hoW "-t IDdly.

OIJOI O N r

ronelpulse d1aln'lo,l

~

--

5

• Base-to -handset noninn I
• One-touch redial
•43 -554

Of

I

5995
Reg. 69.95
low As S1S
Ptr Month•

Low AI S1S
Per Month ,

... 25 161011077

lar . Reg Sep;uate 111ems 2149 B~

......
y ....

Tho purp-• ol tho
Mllorth below:
I. Tho Melgo Locol
~ Diolricl (b.,Mftar
Mlipl.ocol) ... duly por•lod Locol School
lli*lct - Iilllnod by Ohio
by tho
lhigo Local Boord ol
Edt f L
2. Oro .,. _ , the Z7lh
day o1 July 1M, lllelga
l.oCOJI and Ohio Stno a-d
of e•ec I an .awed lnlo •
lor
oonatrucof• building known ..
lha llolga Locol High
School wtuo lhlo proJocl
llllrog clellned a ProJect
,. hrl01.
l. ....._ ... tho "' .... OOfttnct, the .....
loul Schaol Dlalrlcl
a11 ~ ta lftite for the

"""" &amp; Polly;
Brolhen
ond

Phone
Cut 14%

umBI

IIIEIGS I..OCJIJ. BOARD
OF EDUCAllON
Nolico le henby given
. . - t lo . . Allolulon
of . . lloonl of Educotion o1
. . lhlge Loco! School
Dio•idedoplod on !he 28111
cloy ol April. 11t2, that •
P T
!Ia lilld lor
... of lul1de In the

-·a

In Memory

!ova and miN you.
o.d end Mom,

Cordless

Reg. 139.95

Per Month •

Iandy !lOG SX/25 wnh CO lOilO

-

2

grace our doya and
llghl our plrlha
we go.

Reg . 29 .95

Handy

~ - C•

"TO THE

Dlalrlr:l

glow;

•10 1?61

25M Hz
386SX PC

fiN)

GSIER.II. FUND OF THE

Oiotrict lionel Aotir-onl
- . , . . Ger..li Fund of
Ill lhip Loeol School

•63 76• Salt pnct end$ 6113192

fv1EMOAE)(

12x VHS Camcorder
$1011

lENT

Bid, - 1 oiiS44,45U6 from
P1' I t J1rdge Ill lhlge Locol School

I =n;;;;;:;; can noI eteel I he
lreuuwe cerry In our
hellrta;
r ever dim the
ahlnlnglhoughta
r cherlahed peat
JmporiL

HeadSet

OF FllUCIARY

On llory 15, 1tl2. irl . .
lllolgo Couaty Pro. .le
Court, Cue No. U.U,
Ulion E. p· I :a, 14571 S.
R. 12•. Anduilo, OWo
45772 , ••• ~~ppolalod
Erecutrb of tho of
Worron
P. P l clreaa,
du
111111 o1 MS7I S.A.
I 2•. RoodovHio, Ollio,
4S71'2.

1795

Cut 28%

C1J zm PLEAS COURT
OF IIBGS OOUNTY, OHIO
CASE 10. 1Z r:v 14t
It THE MATTER OF 1llE
1'£ Ill lOri OF THE
IIIEIGS I..OCJIJ. BOARD
OF EDUCAllON
AU1liDIImG 1ltE RUNG
OF
A PEllliON
Public Notice
AIEQUESTIIG 1ltE
TJW&amp; Bl Of $S44,454.51i
NOnCE OF API'OIIfTWMT It THE BOND RfllRE·

••ld.

LCD Calendar/Clock

AM/FM
Stereo

TANDY .

In Memory

tn CA

-- --·

Ch~u~·

895- Letart
?3 7-B ufT1lo

Auditor'i Offlco purouMIIo
Ch•plor 3318. 17 ol the
Revlood Coclo ocknowledged lhallhe unpold bel-

Family Safety and Security

I

3- .-\nnou nrt.:mcnUI
·l--- Giveaway
j- JI.!!pp~ Arh
to-- Lo ~t 11. nd Fou nd

lt..,.en

NOTICE OF APPOtNTIIENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On June 3. 11t2, In lh•
Malva County Prob•l•
CGurt. c.. No.
s.11y
J . s.v..,., 21310 Apple
Grow, IIKine, OH. 45771,
• • appolntJecl Admlnlel-oiiiio-oiNonB.
eel, Ioiii o1
21310 AjijJio Grove, Roclne,

Fl:'o .\;'iCI.\1.

-~ 5--- Furn ~a hed Rovma

773-Ma•un
H B !!-~ew

Public Notice

hos-. -~ 10 10%
.. -al pudnn
...

~~~.~~~h- 79!~~

S 05 / dav

S130rdav

CQLUMN_- HEADlNGS

Co., WY

Public Notice

vm.

"'""'"'
moyvety
..........
loton
"' 3~
son to buy
Nee home
~ . , .-. ~
Raclnt . • I!R.
BR 01'1 - P10p0t1y &lt;!IOO oq. L , _
~-

s5 ·"
60

CL\SSIFIEDS
GET RESULTS · FAST!

4 58-Lton
; 76-Ap p!e Cron

74cZ-Ru tlt nd

owner flnandng ol

TANDY •

IS
I5

charged for each day as separJte .~ d ..,

hh 7 -C.oo l..-iUe

Bl'LLETI\ BOARD

Tho ptlall

s9 ()()
m co

IS

\1onthlv

fl _

KENNETH WOOD

5 6.00

5 . ~0
S JO

6 7 ;)-Pt . l1le.. ant

•t4'1- l~l cinc

PRICE REDUCED!

•any
Sure lo be a hit with
baseball an

i

36; -C.hr:.hi r~

OH.em.

9995

~Jason

15

Over 15 Words

.-\rea Cod&lt; 614 !Aru Code 614 Area Code 304

1

.....-···-·
_
......
Electronic Baseball Encyclopedia

I
3
6
lO

Classified pages cover I he
follou:ing telephone exchanges ...

• Free Ads

15

Rate
HOO

Words

Rates are for conse&lt;uttve runs, broken up days wd l be

1 00 p.m . Wednesday
100 p .m Thursday
1:00 p.m Fnday

~nday

CLOSED SDDA1

Card of Thanll

l ·OO p .m. Sarwday
l .00 p.m. Monday
l:OOp.m . Tuesday

W"ednesdav Paper

I:IA.~t.-."iP.~t.- Sn.R-1~

FRt.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

i\tondav Paper
Tuesday Paper

- - .

ley area, he urged gardeners to
select dischsc resistant varieti es to

Hollon.
The meeting conc luded w1th a
plant exc han ge and the hos tess
served refreshments to the mem bers. Betty Milhoan won the hostess door prize.

11

Ohio

•SAND oGRAVEL oOIRT

oUMESTONE

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Agriculture

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replace11eat Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

VAllEY INC.

Lime
Rt. 2
Mmwood, W.Va.

COMMERCIJ\L and Rt:."mt:NTi r\ 1.
FREE FSTIM.-\'0'..."

304-273·5555

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

4-8-ttn

(Ho Sunday Calls)

(614) 992-3470

Announce men! s

51151'11211 mD

3 Announcements

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

P.O. lox194 W' • Aley
IAOIII. OHIO
(F....tyr.piWps..ll
li!poal

PARTS &amp; SlRVKE
Mowen • Gall Saws
•Weedeaten

614·949-2804

, Iii LDnii:'Dilll
nra::n•~nm.

Bfr r[A IJ'( CI£5KJN

Otta.ly Hi EffidetKy Air

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Appm141M..tadurotl
Houriat PYodod•.
l I

Fr.e Ad\At Talk Une.
1-1'&gt;1..12-1027

Uvt, One On On..

4

Giveaway

2 lana haired blc 1okl, fo.W75-7131 . , . ~ 17S1'371h.......

(oiiCiitioaers, Heat

F1rzaces &amp; Now

i •
~

- N-

Water Healers.

G

.•,f-.~:----..

2 put&gt;flln: lllack
~d mole .

-11.
-

4

montha, had lhota ....._.
614-JU-0335, • ..,.,_
•

Beunell8 Mobile

1391

Safford School

RtL
Cal (614) 4-46-94

3 112 WMII Olcl Pufllllllll. fM388&lt;1351.

3 IMit klllene to glvtN
IMo992-2023.
--J\

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU ® by Bruer Bealli&lt;

Giveaway

32

46

lor Sale

6 Free K!Utnt, 6 Wb Old, Need
Heallh • Sar. Home. House
Sroka. Day Phone: 6'14-4468209, Evenings: 614--44~

r:

R--

llabllo H- Port, At

Fre. Kitlena, 7 WHka Old, 614446-Bm.

33N., under ,... nwMplltlnl.
~. $65; ................ 1235;

5710.

Nice, cillln 2 or 3 bMtroom

Home At El- Home Ctn'"• GrM1 s.toctlon, F'" Sot-Up
And DeUnryl Call 114-172·1220.

I\OIMWW.

tamale, lh1ar
lralned, 6 wka ~d, 304-675-7260

•••t•
Colonial

68 acre counlry

Kiuans: to good home. Lhter
trained. 614-4-Ui-0055.

hoUM n.wly remode*l. 2 ..,..

large

oval tlbtt, 4 bucktt
chalrs, fair condition, 614-992·

studio, hunllng Cllbln. By owner.
Agents welcome. Dan Black.

6525.

614-388-8210.

kittens, litter trained,
ready lo go to good hotM, 614·

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Merchandise

" I knew this was a tough neighborhoOd.
Look at our getaway car~ · ·

6 Lost &amp; Found
1-::=======:-r====::~==l
::::=::-::-:--:-:--:-:-:-:--:=
I·
8

18

Public Sale

Rick Paarwon Auc:Uon Company,
tull tlrrNI auctioneer, compWe

awvk:e.
UcenMd
lost : Child'• Ball Glove, Friday 166,0hlo I WISt VIrgin'-, :J04.
615th At AddaviMI
School 173-5785.
Playground. Name On Gtov"'
9 Wanted to Buy
Ad•m SchuUz. 114-388-9734.

Standing timber, will PlY lair
pricea, call ~ Runyon, 6M-

992·2687.
Wantt&lt;l To Buy: Junk Au1os
With Or WlthoUII Motors. C..H
larry Uv.ly. 614-388-9303.

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

Do

Plano and CJLfltlr .._ont, 614-

311-4302.

ROild, In EvtJgrHn. Cain•, Gold Rings, Silver Coin1,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop.
Friday Only. Walch For Signs.
151 S.Cond Avenue, Gallipolis.
4 Family Sale: Fridly &amp; Saturday, ~1 Shoestring Ridge, Fol· Will buy Haywood Wakaf'-'d
blonde or cham.-gne modem
low Signs.
dnign furntture, lata 40-6CJ't.
ALL Yard Sales Must Be P1id In Call 614-888-6111'.
Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day beofor11 the ad Ia to run.
Sunday adillon . 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00

Training. Clll 6 M-44'1· 1226
Will baby stt In my home,
ruponolbla
with
rellli•"*' · 304-773-SfM.

,..,.g..

WUI Do Babnl«lng In lly Home
Prefll'"lbty .&amp;.gu 2o.5.. Call 1114!lll2-61~

lipolis.
Crtmeans: Amby Lane, t...fl At
Gun Shop On Rl.160, 7 Milts
From Hctzars, Bargalrs Gatonl
6/11ti1. 6112th, 6/13th. 8-6.
Frl, Sat, AnHques, 81by Watkar,

Play Pans, Car S..t, Baby
Clothl8, Glassware, Cwtaina,
Girls, Women'a Clolhaa, Mllll'·
nity Clolhll, Much Morel 1 114
Wilt OUI Mill Creak Road.
61121h, 61131h Just Off Rt.141
Centenary On llnc~n Pika, lid
Trailer. Tooll, Uwn MOWfi"l,
Jewelry, HousehcHd Items, Lota
More Mia&lt;: ., N.-, Utadl

Friday, Saturday, ~? ~lA
Trailer Pa,;,, 3683 Bulavlllt P1k1,
Cra tts &amp; Misc.

· -- - c - - = -

Friday Saturday, Uncoln Pike,
To N~rthup Road, Firat Brick
HouM Put Bridge .
Garaga Sala: Patriot Vlllaga,
Across From The Palriot Auclion Barn. Clothes, Houaehcld
Goods, Jul"'l 11·13th

&amp; VIcinity
Behind Baale School, Ffi &amp; Sat.
9:00-2:00, rain Of thine. Roeklng
loweseal, baby bad, tumll~ra ,
clothn, toys, glasawara, h1gh·
chodr, compultf"'.
First Time 3 tamilita , beside

McDonald's Parking 101, Htn·
dwnon. 9:00 am lo 4:00 pm .
Wad, Thure Frl, rain datu
6117,18,19. di;l,n, Avon, Tupper·
ware, HOme Interior, shOH,
!!quet, clothing.

•n-

Ga rage S..la, 3203 J1ckson Ave,
Frl Sat I Mon. un .. bit of

n~ythlng.

Ytrd Sale, &amp; mlln out JllfT)'t
Alln Ad , Apple Grove, RoM
L..onard 'e, June 10 to 13, 9:00 to
1.
Yard SAlt, Frl, June 12. 801·211h

St on comer .,;:ross trom
Johnaona Ukt, name brand
clothing newborn lhru adult.
Sho.t , baby fumllu,., lnta_nl
c1 rseal. L I XL matemtty
clolhn.

Pomeroy,

,.. Lutey
Fr:t, t-4,

so-.

*

Monday
Saturday.

adiHon

10:00a.m .

Financ1al

lint lor ICF 68 bed t.dllty Call
Careflaven ol Point Pleasant ,
304-675-3005.
OLAN UILLS

The wortd's largest portrait
atudlo Ia looklov 101 3 ,,..,.rgetlc:
&amp; mature tMphone aal11 pat ·
eons needing to ..m mOt"e than
minimum wag•. We olttr
guaranteed hourly r1t1 plus incenllva bonua fOf all who
quality.

To write your own p1ycheck!!
call Tom at 814 ... 4'1 -1150. Mon ·
Fri 1:00 AM to 1:00 PM Of 5:00
PM to 1 :00PM. Sal . i:OO • 1:00

E.O.E.
Sal• P.raon Minimum 2 v..ra
Experience In Sa* 01 Lumber

And Buildln~ Malarial . Valley
Lumber Ancf Suppty. 614-Sii2-

6111t
Wanted: Mainllananca Engl.,..,..
Muat be Milled In halting, tlr
conditioning,
el«:trical.
Opemk)na ln 1wlmmlng pool I
..wage lrNtmenl plant helpful.
Pay commMIUI'Itt whh ••·

porloneo. Roptyo BOK CLA 223,
elo Gllllpollo Dilly Tritx.no, 825
~

456J1.

Business

&amp;

Shalla

Warner

Foreet Run Ad ..
Ml......tllo, Friday I SaUrrdly,
~&amp;prn.

4 bedroom, 2 bllha. 114 Viand
St, $350. mo, rei • dip rtquired .
304~58-1728 .

Nka eHkienc:y cottage, unique
and beautiful, 304-61'S-6042

for Rent
1

bedroom trailer, pay

own

ulllhlol ...... dlpooll, 30H75-

2 bedroom mobile homl complollly lumllhod, walhor I
drylf, air cond, no pale, :J04..
173-!19511.

31 Homes for Sale

2 Bedrooms, Famity Room, Full
Sia Buarnent, ~oodbumlng
" ' - " "· 61. 441 86111.
2021 Marq. .ne Ava, 5 yrs Okl,
all brick rnsintenence lr•

home, 4 bedew;-, amallli'ltng
room, clnl"""""""'lly room
comblnaUon. ldlehan, utility
room aU one
covar.ct
polio' In bock, pri'IIICJ loneo,

a.-,

gangor, . , _ , by opjiOinlrnonl
onty 304-67~1238 .

ow,.,,

BEAUTIFUL H0US£ FOR SALE
Historical Area Corn.r Lot · 816
Main St. Pt. Pleaunt. W. Va.
Complelaty RenoYIIeod : 2 Full
Baths, 3 Larga Blldrooms, New
HVAC, New Carpal . AYIIlabla

tumlhllad,

mo

$200.

2 BA turnlshad

untumt.had.
Cable, air. Overlooking Ohkl
River, Kanauga. O.an I qulec.
WobHa HolM park. 614Of

r=o.t•'•
...·1602.

2bdrm., 8x35 Inlier on the Ohk)

River Campground Elactrk:,
water, truh,- and lot paid,
$250/mo, fW-985-4258 or 6M·
949~526 .

Golllpolll. 6...... 6-1166•.
.l&gt;f On Coro IIIII Rood OH
Rl .325, No Polo, DopooM &amp;

Rer.ranc:.

Required.

Fumlahed 2 bedroom mobi ..
MMnl., Ill eilc, 3()4...675.6512 H
no answer leave rnau.age.

Nke 2br, Mobile Home FOf Rent
Out St. Rt . 218, 8 WIIM Rtf &amp;
o.po.tt Required. 61-t-256-62$1.

85 ac:raa. nice 4 bedroom farm
houat, eentral heat and air e ondhlonlng, $11&gt;,000; 614-;142-2'/M

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Room ernac'-ncy, lhllhl•
Paid,
bc.pt
Eiec::trk:.

IIUST SELL, «11,500. "'90'

614-446-7130,

Mobile Homes

for sate
12160 1m Grancl\ann

O.poslt/Reference.

$155/Mo.

nMdtl work, b mor. information eall. 614-ft2· 267'3.

1f70 Royc:ratl t2x6S lbf, Sl,OOO.
Hln 12x60, 2bf', $3,600;
191'9 1411:70 WI Up lbf, 2 Baths,

2 Rooms &amp;. Bath, Downalalra,
No
Pata,
Quiet,
Aetw..-.ce And O.postt A•
qulrM. 6'14-446·151g .

C'-n.

2 BR apartmante In Middleport,
MWty rarnodtlol&lt;l, loW utlll11aa,
no psta, $220 P¥ month,
depod requlr.d, 614-112·2381

furnished, '-undry
room tac:IIIU.. , c;ioea to ac:hool
In lown . AppUcaUone nallabta
al : Village ~FMn Aplt. t4i Of
c::.aii6M-492-37'11 . EOfi.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

6"-2.5-68117.
can

tor lii)Qd on. white on YIICition,

Brook.lda Apartments, 1 lad-

256·1529.

no

pete,

*-

Furnished

1189

14z10

Gateway mod.t
BrtctoaPort, wilh 2 porchaa, air,

Work boola.

8~3159.

1Wa eouch.. and chairs, lib
, _ -'ngla bDDkCIH bed wfth
mattf'lla , 814-"Jit2·23M or 6,..

-2-235l
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE'

Tabl• 179 And
Rockan $79.

Up;

IQI;t;&amp;

~ Umoualn
l :t~

•1111

$00Sot
DINETIES: Wood

Bar Stoota

OPEN: 7 Ollya A WNk, 9 A.M.· ti
P.M. Sundar 12 Noon · 5 P.M.
Rl . 141 • II too 0t1 Rl . 7 In Con·
tanary.

71

eon:-. bMa, SDIIID D'l

53

Rooms
Rooms tor rlf'll • week or month.
Starting It $120fmo. Gallll Hotel.
114 416 HIO.

to0m1 with cooking.
Hood Your Lawn ~ Corft. no NrfVture. Must move. Call Slaep'ng
AIM lr1ll« space. All hooll.-upe.
olal• -Inti And Trimming. ca.r.nc. II. Mooney altar 6 p.m. Cell oftor Z:OO p.m., 304-173....2U.55111.
!56111, ...._ wv.
6"-251-1510.

11110 Torolam Sport 650 Jot Ski.
Showroom eondhlon. Factory
traU•r lland, cover, 2 llta Jack.
eta., rkll plata, stainless stall
prop., new llcenea. Sea to •pproelllo. 13500, 1"-;142..31102.

Autos for sate

BOATERS
Guinnl ~~on:..., llorlno SaMc:o.
Mereury, M1rinar, llafcruiMr
tpac:lellsl.

Plano ll:ool, aawlng rocltar, NYC
oil c.rw, c:allt Iron mokt , plw
H.O. oHiclol ping Pot11J llblo,

Yareury

Vlnylolding&amp; """'' _.ow,. tn..
IJII_,, .... . . . _ _

teriof daart., lb:Ud"a . ....,..,

...mr

"ihlte bllh::acn•
abiJNII
6. marble l ap, ....,. 1.1.-t, ~mill

--

; .......

,.,. - ·-·nv. .

~

5lldl Good Body • llcOOf,Cyt,
&amp;450.•
11.......~.

0. .....

cmm

'19lW· Ford Thundelbtfd, &amp;650 ;
.... Yl ..., 11011 • Indo lof

--3!1&amp;4170.

55
Block, lrrick, 11'1!-. dowt;, lintel&amp;. .m.. a.ut1a •~
tatS Rlo Glr.ln6l 0111 Clll! tiii'J:I..

2t~

r9'Mi CMi!IIIC, Fair Condition,
--Good, ..... ~-..7!11.
196Ql

Olds Delta 88 2 dr. coupe,
condition, 307 va,

I imm-=wan

'

1.... 116011, 1--6711.

1 . .... .

Odlll
&amp; En!lo,
- SiAit'
· ~- f9IMi ll.lick Plll'k Awanua, 51000
TD 20,000
•q. lllllllmhllil
'
Must S.ll Br I&amp;Lm!Sl. ~ 1111-.
Exc.llenl
ConcltUon,
M,SIIIt 11.........320.
0 -•.r::1

56

TBMOdiJ ltougtwl, 4dr., aU ••·
....-v-~ condition, JIIIOO,

Pets tar Slle

-;;;;;;;;;:-;;;-s;;;;;ij;-;;;;;;.;
Qraom ....-1111 Supplf Slap tJial 1
.....
Grooming. All ~. -w•

..,.

"

w

..........

.......... Grw1d llarquil,
311:1; ~ Autanoollc, Full ·
1tw11am
cr.1SJ,Dl,- .,....·....Yory
7215, Sllorp

Odll o.na II Aorst
lrauqttam, 4dr., sedan, aa:t:.
an£ ,.. llr•, 307 Y-4, 12200,
rBM

AKC Ch- f'IJ!IO. N ;
Minl.atura ·P~ . lhlmi" W
CooU1iol, 570.2Z01'.

~m.

Auno

-Wimer.---..

Col4, - SlSO. good
ne.a. molot,
liM-

rondl,

""''"'-J,C
._.._

A,I5TOiLff
rA, 0, G,lt.t.

IVT /'lOT
IOTI'f

&amp;

Y'Ger NO RIGHT
IT BE L.ONGS TO

I

15

L.ORDS~ I P, T~' DuKE !

Motor Homes

Pop up c.mpar tor aala, &amp;14-

MWMI.

Improvements
BASEIIENT
WATEAPROOFINQ
Uncondll:lonal M...'"" guar~n·

,.._.nc•

t... Local
tumtahad.
FrM Mtlmttl... Call collect 1·
614-m-. elroy or night.
Aopra ea.. menc W.arproo.
n~

RMCiy,

W....

lloont Addlllonl,
F_,lon
lloallng,
10tc11one And 8olhl. F- Ef.
tlmat11! Aahr• en, Mo Job
Too Big Or-11--.e.

-·

J.W. ConotNOIIon. Room AddHionl, Rooto, Dlcb, Sldtno
And An Typ11 01 Exterior And

1n1er1or Pol,.lna. Win 01v1 ~»w
Bid. Ueenlld. fM-2015-50711.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
ALL I KNOW A80UT THAT

16 THAT IT 1:'AKE5

SOAMAER CA».P THEY'RE
6€NDIN&amp; ME 10 .. .

THREe:. v.EEJ&lt;S TO

IF '!QJ

TAKE 114E. &amp;lt:'I&lt;TQ

ACROe6l'HE NOIJNTAit-e.

&amp;T 'THERE ...

1~

.at~a,

no )ob too a!T'IIIM.
Aauonlbte rltN, c.n anytime,
&amp;14-lll2-1400 or N-t92·2'15&amp;.

Corn·

boll Bockbootd, Rim,

1Q83

PviO, And

Ball; 1771 Continental Dollar, 2
Antiqlll Quint , 240 Homellt•
CMinuw. &amp;14· 388-9435.

Conc::rett I
Plastic: Septic::
Tanke Jet Alrlllon Tenlu . ~n
Evans' Ent~r.._, Jac::Uon , OH

•.-.537-o528.

~

· -onto
- 114-446-:ZU..
.....Ito. wv
:JCM-67114:111
Soptlc Tonk P...,..na $110"Glllla
Co. RON EVANS lNTERPHISES,
Jocklon, OH 1-.637-11521.

In~

t.o.ra liar 1M .....-rt~ .
11110 . . . . . - .-nva
'YIINihl
•J77 It a
&amp;
micrapha,_, IDI Ui CUD •
304-6'tW411.

2 mi.:lng

2

614-~2to3 .

Abovo
Ground 19~x4 Pool Includes:

FIHar

Deck, Fence, ladders,

Etc. Dor;•t Bollan H? Coli BPI
,~ ...1123

Frwur chnl .,5, good eondltlon, IM.e&amp;!i-3852.
Ganaeil

NutriUan

tMiutlng Amino
Bulldlng1

Prvdud•
Acid Body
ond fit

wll""' bunw rormtl"u.

0,.. a.a Kerr Ad..
SundiJ

2.s..!'f71.

yard. Qua~rentMd aftactlve! Buy

Blum lrw
Value Stora, 11 w.. Main

Or -..

Call

a.• "'-* ..,

-~.

o..-,Ohto--

~

ONn
Ills

:··- s... · : ~ : · ~~· :
~

- . Golllpolll, 114-446-

llucks tor Sate

.. ' I

-

~ ..

-

tfR!J GIIC Trh\rrto 15 1'1 . Alum
WlllriWithaiO Bod· 111'71
Jail: 15110 Sori• With AI.- Uft
a...tar, Call After 7 P.ll. &amp;142!1o4311!1.

- w

a,_.,

..,.,.___

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
84

Electrical

Refrigeration

m

,

man.

Grev.1r TrdM 'A!Iftl IBIIId!IC.

l.atlll whh• ortlquo claw log . . __ • bot~ tub IIIG. 30H'75-7541.
::IM-314:.:.=:..::,..=·- - - - -

\ 'Your

lngllleounl~lrM'n,..tO.Tho

-•l&gt;iiWI will ... ....... -

...

true again today.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-J•n . tl) You

cial life ha sn' t lived up to your ex peel a·
tions re&lt;:ently , It's up to you to u~ your
initiative to get oul and mingle with new

have grealer inrluence over your peer
group at this time than yoo may .realize.
Take pains to !)e certam your tnput
positive

groups

AQUARIUS (J•n· 20-Fob. 11) Some-

LEO (July 23--Aug. 22) Before surging

thing you're anxious to achieve al this
time could have rar-reaching benefits,
where both your career and finan ces
are concerned . Make this your primary
ob,tective.

ahead with a new venture today . bring
the one&amp; vou're already Involved In to a
satisfactory conclusion . Don't let en -

deavors overlap .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sotpl. 22) A good Idea
you had ·~ a while back, Which you
couldn 't get on the the ground. csn be

PISCES (Feb. 20-ll•rch 20) Over lhe
years, you 've acquired some valuable

knowledge and slcllls which you pres-

transformed to fulfill 8 current need .

entty are not using to your fuiJestadvan·

Make the revision today

tage. Review what you havelo offer and

.

templaling a lob chango al lhJs time . ' SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho•. 22) Srtuallons
carefully analyze matters before making you take personal control over have ex-

Upholstery

n11:15 ~ " ; 'ar ~4 tan 1 '::'=:=:::-7:=-::::::;:::-=::::~-. pdcond. " " 1ilowr.y·. Upltalotwlng oorvtc-

-

are endowed with keen intuition and
good powers of perception Otten.
when relying on these gifts. you arrive at
accurate conclusions. This could be

87

Oo

Anyp~Ko,

.,... • -

91428 . Cleveland , OH 441 0 1•3428 Be
sure to slate your zodiac sign .
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) If yolJr so-

SAGITTARIUS (No•. 23-0.C. 21) Vou

Hlullng Anyllmo,
Na Jab Too lit Or
Too Utue. P 11 maul Cleaning,
Oonorll W.... Any Kindt 114JN-a271 Anytlrnl.

w.

..,..,.._,.....,..,..,t

June12, 1112

ni's Astro-Graph predictions today by
mailing S1.25 plus a long . self· Bd ·
dressed. stamped envelope to Astra·
Graph. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box

Most of your opportunities In the year LIBRA (Sotpl. 23-0cl. 23) There are In- make It markelable.
ahead are likely to come from situations . dlcallons you haven 't lully utilized a ARIES (llltch21-Aprii1t) Don't be ••·
vov' re already Involved in rather than
channel that could enhance your ini . 1 slstant to change today : shiNing condi from new endeavors . Make what you
come and contribute to your materia tiona which may appear to have no pursecurity. Stop dawdling and do some- ,pose could be endowed with several
have going for you count .
.
QEIIINI (Mar 21-June 20) II youre con- thing about it .
.
thldden benefits.

41'JW, 114-IIZ"'MJV.

llfNIIanOI T - -i DieNII\IDI. S11tlllli

\

&amp;

=-"='
· &lt;:~-:..
~~
W Run
R~!:..orcw:I)J, Ohk)

· a•t - - ·

for Sa.. •Of ifTIIill hf c.rt• lt.

Truotwor11w Hlrdwlre, 1:00.

81111 Route 1110, BlcfwoM, Ohio.

Heating

.y~ 1· 'Birthday

Pork St-,lllddltiport, 011.

KILLS FUEASI
Buy ENFORCER Flal Kl'- FOf
·Pita Homl I Varcl O&amp;arlntaed
Ettodlvol Buy EIFORCER At

&amp;

!-:' : •: :•

•
31 1 . .1---

-

Plumbing

ASTRO-GRAPH

- 114-245-

·--, --~
Street, Chaetar Oh. • Vl:l IM•en
Lumber I Suootv Corp.,
at :

82

In

IIHn..... Upltoillorlng.
lor he -

. -3-114-4- Cell ~
tlmat-.

cafe."li's been years stnce we've done this w1thout our
wives," satd one. "Yea." the other answered. "lets do
somethtng wild and have biSCUits and GRA VYI "

a

NORTH
• R7 6
" 86
• 5 43 2

BRIDGE

6·U·!t!

+ K (./ J'
PHILLIP

WEST

EAST

"K J 3
t A 10 8

+ 10543
• 10 7 5 4 2
t(./J9 6

+Q 9 2

ALDER

+9 B i

+ .

3

SOl iTil
t AKJ

ay

A sureis best

"A Q 9
t K7
+ A 10 li 4 2

Vuln e rabl e Hulh

By Phillip Alder

D&lt;a lor So ut h

ACROSS

Crooll ond ChltM

Lov• Aft•lr Willi Boxlno
Host Anthony 0\Jinn.
8 PtlmeNowa r:;l
lllJ That' a My Dog Stereo
8:05 Cll MOVIE: The M•n With
t h e - Qun (POi (2:30)
8:30 (]) II 0 DIH...,t Wortd
Dwayne and a graduate
student become over..Jl!
lr18ndly. iR) Steroo. "-'
lllll8 Drexall'a Clall Mr.
Dre•ell is attracted to a new

laacher . (R) Stereo C
lllJ YO&lt;J Aokod for lt,~~g•ln
Stereo.
t;OO (]) 11 iiJ Choerl Fraisor _and
Ulith get a surpnse ol thEm
own at Fredrick's party .(R)
Stereo. C
(JJ 11 ill'11 M•cOrvar
MacGrver IS transponed
back to the 17th century. (Pt
1 of 2) {A) Stereo. t;1
Cil Cll Mrotary1 The

a move . Be

112 , Roman
4 Hernando De
8 Downy

12 3,000,
Roman

13 -and
proper

14 Talon
1 5 - - my
brother's

t6
11

t8
20
22
24
25
29
33

keeper?
Virginia
wrnow
CoolaChurch
council
Holy places
legume
Goal
Chomlot1y ol
br•wlng
BlbHcalland
Adlettlvo
ending

38 Rational
39 Sub(Mcrolly)
40 Baaaballor
-Ryan
42 Goalie'&amp; nood
44 Gonder
46 Retard
47 New Yotll ...
club
51 Andoa anln111l
55 Abo••
56 Jolt
56 Onoot Amlll'ateJ-.
59 Na•od• elty
60 Archllacl Saarinen

6t Yoko 62-Rhythm
63 Sac
64 Plating motal

34 Engroaaed
36 Ear !comb
lorml

An1war lo Pravioua Punla

37 Popoyo'a
friend OIIYt

2 Typo ol play·

Indian

lng marble
3 - - tne
Mood lor

8 Economi1 e
9 Actor Ken 10 Turn towar d

Love

11 - tho nlghl
before

4 Wob maker
S lablt acrap
6 Neckwear
7 American

DOWN
1 Doc. holld•Y

Cflrlttmas

19 Musical

carpet
25 - National

Park

frr+-1--t-1

sure lt's a step upward and

nol lust laterally. Got a jump on lllelby
understanding thelnfluences govern n~
you In the vear ahead . Send for Gem •

TAURUS (April 20-llor 20) Oeclsions
vou make today that affect others, as
well as yourself. must be constdered

cellent chances for success today .. Act
In a manner where your moves won 1 b:

carefully . Misjudgment could have lar-

subjecled

reaching nugstlve effects.

committee.

to

the

approval

01

a

-

(JJII Cllll !liD
DIDOI-

11:00(]).

(JJ Night Court
(IJ NeWIWaldt

a•

r:;J

po nd er
30 Barre l band
31 --Won·
dtrful life
32 Route
35 Writes
38 Largo knlle
39 Whirl
41 --what
your country

-+-1-1

43 Fish trap
45 Sailing ship
4 7 Cosmonaut
-

Gagarln

48 Take down

--or tw o
49 Taboo Item
50 Chop 52 Col on - Tin Roo t
~+--1-i 53 .00 film alar
Paul 54 By and by
-+--11-1 57 llarrled wom·

an's title

CELEBRITY CIPHER

""*"or....P10041
.
z

c.....brtty C4pt,. cryptogrwne . . ~'""" QUOtlllonl ""
E.ach
tne clpfW ltiNIIi tor ..other roo.,·,

....,.In

· p

G LN R U

V F

P

UPWYBBLPSZP8K

L 0

KFSNPSF
OLLUT

pUt
~

anc:t

r

pr_,

E F M T

a

y

G P Z J

10:30 (I) WUI Vil9lnla Roport
121 Tun Collttoellon Stereo .
10:3S CIJ MOVIE: Mlulng In Action
· 2: The lleglnnlng IAJ (2o00)

26 Child 's loy
27 - ave "
28 Tug

smashes through Joe 's office

with her jeep. (R) Slereo. r:;J
10:00 (]) G i1J LA. Low A man
blames a vendor lor tho
breakup.)LI his marriage. iR)
Stereo. 1.,1
(JJ NeWI
(JJ f1 (!lJI Prtme nme Li1rl
Stereo. 1;1_
(IJ .....,._., Palocl: Seem.
of the Now Yorlt Ullrary The
Now Yorl&lt; Public LJbrary
contains some or the workS's
molt notable oolloctlons;
writers Tom Wolfe and Tom
Morrloon. (1 oOO) Stereo
(I) Under Fire
llll•HuntarC
L.oH TV wiiJi Wllilllmo
ondRM
Ql Wortd NeWI
0 700 Club Willi P•t

wor ~

21 Pandemonium
23 Typo ol

a

"""-1 G11C 314 lOft ple&amp;.up, 350

"""'·

9lrawbai •'-·

Hotpttal

ENFORCER

· s.t M . -

MONEY--

Will build patio CO'IW'I, deck;r•
ac:tlll\lll:l rooma, pull up vin
akllng or trlhw lllk1Jng. 6
.
:M!HI52.

1111'2 GIIC 31• llaldy, 11113
~DI- Sllnl I, 614-

=· .... - ·
II

Avallabta U:·

KILLS FlEASI Buy ENFORCER
Flal Klllofl lor poll, ltotno I

-

mi ... _GIGlaill. .la.mWift

cluolvlly II Rlla Aid Phlrmoey.
Tho 111&gt; woy to dial.
bed, like new, all
at.ctr~- wlalr m1t1,.... pump,
seoo,.., on SR~ on :ru. Cur·
Ill Hollow, Long &amp;on..... OH.

..,

ttp:,1tj11 t~:d:.z::..::-; n

STAAWIIBIRIES - - ........
PIDlL
eonwn.. ~ ,.. r

WHAR CAN
I HIDE MY
BUTTER
AN' EGG

WHAR
PAW CAN'T
FIND IT?

·-·· 812,100,. 304-

~l(anny'a Auto Cenl• FOf A
lliollllll OMit Uud Car, Upper

Oak tomatlt...._,... ...... 4111. ..

LET'S SEE II

,., z..a auto 5.7. 111,300. new,
._..... on:tw, ....,. ..._ Selling
... _. wt
m.nn

Fnllls&amp;

~

O..wis
S.W.V..:
Service,
GICriJIII Cr.k Ad. Pilla, lupplloo, plckufa, lnd dollvory. 114&lt;MI-O:!!N.

a..

Greedy- Liv1d · Oasts - Fungus -GRAVY
Two old gents were havmg breakfasl at a local

(Pt 4 ol 8) C
IBJID @ liS 'Lone110me
DoYO (PI 4 of 4)' CBS
Thtnda.LMovie (2 00)
Stereo. 1.,1
11])18 Bovarty Hilla, 90210
Brandon discovers a secret
about the traok team
members (A) Stereo. t;l
tl) MOYIE; Fighting Boi:k lA )
1200)
Nullvllll Now Steroo
12) Top R•nk Boxing Junior
wonorwelght bout Vincent
Phillips (2~.Q, 16 KOs) vs .
Fernando Sanchez (17~- 1, 8
KO.), 10 rounds, tram
AUantic City, N.J . (L)
8 L.trTy King Li1rol
0 Scorecrow and Mra. King
8:30 (]) G i1J Wingo Helen

BARNEY
Ron'e TV Semce, apec:l.allzlng
'n Zlnhh also eervkklQ rno.t
alhar brands. HouM calla, lleo

Dtrt Tampers, 1 Wtltlf', 1 Robin,

FREEINSTALLATK&gt;N
SWIIIIIING POOLS

Chlldml
iliiD J..,P.rdyl r:;l
lllltll Star Trek
@ ID Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. ~
MecGrvar r:;l
1D SportaCanler
8 MonarHno
lllJ The Wollona
7:05 CIJ Bevortr Hlllbllllao
7:30 (]) .. 0 Jeopardy!
CD Now It Can Be To~
(l) llJ Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. r:;J
(I) 1J Mama'• Fomllr
111 GIJ Whael of Fortune r:;l
0 til Family Feud
Be a Star Stereo
a2 u.s. Air Force Top Gun
Compolltlon From Panama
City, Fla. (R)
8 Crollllre
7:35 Cll Senford l Son
8;00(])11 1111 Coaby Show
Theo's class rinds a wallet:
OllvtB wrhes a blograpny . (R)

Berowne's family nurse dies.

........

SCRAM-UTS ANSWERS

(JJ Q lnolde Edition 'Q

t2Z ltnockout Hollywood' I

Quality hamlt lmprov.......ma,
corpontry, ond rernodoltno o1111

Okl UP"IQh plano, $75; 22 lang

I II •

(j5 The Jaff•raona ll...

a

675-75&gt;11
314

. I' J
I I II
l

() UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
_.....;'O::.;R___,;A;,;,NS::.;W,;,;E:,;;R":':~~·:'::~-:J"=':­

&lt;iJ MUlder, SM Wrote

CurU1 Home imlloNWIMltlnla:
Yowo ~ On Older &amp;

rtng, hive apprtaaat papera of

GMC

•

13

1

and politicians about the
protllems and solutions
facing bl8ok communnies. (Pt
1 ol 21(1 :00)
lllltl The Slmpaona LJss
and Homer become close
after he learns she can ptck
winners. (R~tereo . r:;J
0 t11 Top
1 A New Yorf&lt;
City bomb SQuad detective
l!.ces a hazard. (R) Stareo .

Home

EVANS, JACI\SON, OH.

Dodga Otplomlt Sient 6, 6M·
...-2014 .

PRI NT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESf IQUARES

actors, musicians, athkltes

Services

$1,500. will Mil lot' $800. 3041972

8

.

Q

23ft. Ttrrf camper for ula, c;all
614-!lll2· 1708.

537-0528.

Merchandise

.

Came 10 Dinner (PGJ(2 00)
(JJ llJ ill 111 Young Rldelll
Jesse tries to provo himseil
by following Hickok; Cody
tolls a story. Stereo. C
(IJ Rae• to Sav' tho ~anat
Steroo.
(I) Arc11c WotO (1 oOO) Stereo.
iliiD lm•ge• l R•allllaa:
Atrtclln-Amarican Men Louis
Gossen Jr. talks w1th black

Alrotlon McOon, repolrod. I r•buill mot~ In aleck, RON

6t4-W:Z·5324.

Complete the chud le quoted
~y hlh ng In the m~~~·ng wo r d~
_,__,__, you de11elop lr om step No 3 below

.

Stereo. C
(JJ MOVi!o Tho Thief Who

GROU"O'

JET

only.

.

L-l.-..L..--l_

Ill CBS Newo t;l
lllltl Andy Griffith
IIJ Scooby Doc
t2Z Up CloH
lllJ New Zorro Stereo . r:;l
8:35 CIJ Andr artnlth
7:00 \1111 1111 WhHI ot Fortune

c

Home AemodTII~. VinYl Skll~,
And Onrhrr~ '311 Y11t0 EX·
porioneod. F- Eotl..-1 114-

. -. .. - -

AI&lt;C Rea. Enlll,..
p-. S4fo. ,.n -

FRANK AND ERNEST

Campers&amp;

81

.

o

NOW DROP YOUR
WEAAJNS AND PUT
Tl-4' PIG ON Tl-4'

BUWIDIIIGI!t '"""""" l!llft Odo Omogo, 1700. 11t-2U.
DJ.caunta, O...ft hllllilfS,, 01rrl31
- - --,--c-.,..-:---:;:-::::

guess

I~6,-TI:......:yi-=.'TI:.;_.:;Ir,'..:_lr-i 0

c

ALLEY OOP
79

Is

Naw1Hour Q

cartlllad.

197'1' ~ 1450. 080,
311W'7S49al.

304~1104.

I

ill mMonieCI ... With

Accessories

niZ'll Grand: PPI• Panllac, Good
C"Md:lt1on, ..111111 Good, $800.
~ It Attw 2:00p.m. 114-446-3111.

I

(IJ (I) MoqNell/lthrar

MoiMia, Wt came IO )'OU . 614250-511711.

Auto Pans

,._.,,saa.o.....-as.

Buy or aell. AivwiM Antiques,
1124 E. Main Stf'MI, Pomeroy.
Houre: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 Ia 6:00 p.m.
614-1112-2521.

1/f, ~

Mt&lt;·

Transportation

riiH6 Cllrdgo Colt 5 Spd,

Antiques

WAf~I!!C.

1t11 11ft Fow~Winn1, tohp
Johnson,
AM-FM
ca...ne,
powr un 1 lri"i extraa, 17,000.
llrm, ~75-7'Sn

c::ury Engine. In Stock. Part. I
Ac:eeuorial: In Slock., Factoty"
Trllnod SorYico. IM~56-6160 ,

m.ooo

~ J;ooG O.llrl JWI•
w.bb. C.ll ,. ,, • • Gal

Now SKS Rlllll, With Aeaorilt,
$115.
Ammunition,
$151100. Jenninga 380 Auto Pt.
t~t New $105, 2 8111ndl Ammu~ttlon : $161100 S20I100 Call
10 A.M. To 10 P.M. KIIP Toylno
We'ra In And Out eon.1ntlw.
6,..._1822, 7 Dlyo Woolr..

~~~~

CondMion, 6"-387-G658.

BOATERS
J.S. llorlno Sotvlco -

1911 Ct ••sr MERCEDES 250~
mllactar value MlwMn
to 18,000. IIUII loll
SI,OOQ; :JCM.47W001.

a.ma

Sporting Goods

f.Ji., [ ~~NOlO,

22Ft. Saa111y Mid C.bln,
~o':J: 4, lnclaaed Head,
With EJrt...l Elreollanl

STEEL

114.i5 (21"1 Toblo And • Podrlacl

52

bull, $100,

ollllacllauelll &amp;

Swivel

BEDROOII o Bunk Bodo Sill
12x11: 4 Oro- c.- 01
C&gt;r.werw $44.gs; Twin Manr~•

'- ;

..

1HO Ban TriCker Fully Equip-

Brooding .,.,. For S.&amp;e.
....__....
..

Thnt till lh'dl lhl 9tad.. llbn1
EviM., ~. OhiD n.aam531-05211.

t•tephoM .. ....... .,. a

UVING ROOM : Sofa And Chllir
J1711 And Up; Col110 And End

.

lm.

Would L""' 1loo -

614-446-3'158

.

The woman 's date had
placedhishandonherknee. "I
1
I should look and not
I•
· . . .
• touch," he smiled . "At my age,"
r-----::-::--, the woman laughed , "you
F 0 D N E F lshouldiOuchand -·----·'"

eliD liZ

....
I' ·..·.-:-:

I,

l A RY 0

~-r.:-,-.--,rl

ID lnakle tho Senior PGA
Tour
8 Wotkl Today
lllJ Belman
8:05 CIJI Love lucy
8:30 (])II 1111 NBC Newt r:;J
(JJ S.vod by the Bell
(JJ Q ill 1J ABC Nowa ll.
(IJ Wild America Stereo. t;1
\ll8quare Ona TV Stereo .

pad, Uore mtOflRIIion : &amp;14-446-

orwlll•ll

=.,

8~1388 .

moblla ""'""·

llm

R. ' S. New, Ulld and Anlllqua
tumttura, Muon, WY. 304~1735341.

Only sm.oo BNutlh.O

Point ~ ..m.

1987 Clayton

Haw/Used
HouHtlo4d furnishing. 112 mi.
Jerrk:ho Rd. Pt. Plaaaant, WY,
e.all :J04.475·M50.

o.tuxe I br, 2 Car Garage. CA,
Firat Avt , Gallipolis, o.poalt I
Aetarenc::aa, Avalla~ 1115. 614-

One bldroom tumiMad apt,

2bdrm., 11112 beth, laundry
room, $1000, &amp;M-949-2910 g...
4pm, 6J4..1Mg...2162 alter Spm.

«&lt; • 1G lb. plga far ..... 114-149-

Vqe'4hl

!:.."""'·

Elrporfoneo. IM~SI-107'8 .

S2.50 dauln, !B:II 'I IIli P&amp;" lftB

4U-8627.

Fum~ Apartrnant'-. c:c
111f
:::-:
, ..
Ia Ubrary, pi riling, carll'll hut ,
1m R.gent Wx7tl, all Me;, 3 air, ret.r.nces. 814-446-0338,
blldroorna, a1owe 1 m. $7,800. 8efor9 7p.m.
30Hl'U413.
Fumlshad EHic::lancy Apartmant,
1883 Nashua, 1 bedroom , 14x10 Privacy, Ertra CINn, Outet.
with 7112 oxponclo, CA, 0.... So&lt;urf1y &amp; Roloroneoo Rowatarbed, oardMo lub, 111 lp. quh-.d. IM-441-2102.
10x2G cloc:k, 114,200.
move, :J04..4~7i60 « 115- Gr.ciaut living. 1 •nd 2 bedroom a~rtrnanta at VIllage
35M.
and
Alvars6cla
Manor
111M Uberty llloiHio Home Apartlftlnla In Mid# i)Ort. From
Mx10, 3br, Exc;. Condlthx\, On J!lll. Cllll-·1711 EOH.
1.1 Aul:l County w.... ~
Location On Hann.ln Ttllee One bedroom apt tor rwll, 3041'15-2211.
R&lt;*i. 614-245-5130.

Have Openl~: My Counlry
Homo, ,;, Fun Core Elderly,
Wht'l Privata AOOI'I'l, · 12 y..,..

PlrO tn.M )aos, A - -

room,
Stove
Atfrtg111tor,
Wui'IM, Dryer Hook·Up, 6M-

New ~umac:a, And New AppUanc:ea. &amp;14-38&amp;-9281.

WUI Babvttt In My Home. Fenc.d In Play ArM. Ratwenc:•
Av1llab&amp;l. Rodney Area. Call

PICKENS RJRNITUAE

Apple Butt« Kettle, SU,.r, And
Stand . .lntlqua Roekar B,aabt-

Downlown, UocMrn, :Zbr, Com11JT7 H.. Yorbr, Mx70, New pWa Kltc;hen, Waahef, Dryer.
Carpat, New Hot Walar Tank, C.rpol, CA, 6~31.

18 Wanted to Do
=,....,-:--::--:--;;-::--=-;:::

kid brokll; 2 colla tor

1 pany.

..... -tatas- -.. n....-1

2bdrm. apta., talal 161c:tric:, ep-

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $1C'mo. Walk to ahop I
mov)M . c.tii614-446.ZSM. EOH .

19111 Duk• l4 165, 2 Bedroom•,
Fumlahtd, CA. UnderphVling .
Bast Otter. 614...w6-0782.

1•

Uvestock

.... 114-441-0529.

Door, Savatral Si.r:aa. 114-446SoloUII
016.

rifle, $50; 614-843-5161.

SI,OOO 080 . 614-388-11680 .

19111 l411:64 , 2badrm ., tumiahed ,
no beds, underpinned, steps, on
renlsd lot, 614-992-5800.

: 63

New C~oned Gina Oak China
CatMnatt. Lighted Mirror kk.,
Glaa Shelv-. lAidad Gllll In

do yo

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

Frlldom 12155, all .a.c,
a10YI, ,..friiJiraiOI, air cond,
ac:teaned
pote.:h,
cur1ains,
54.150. Good eond. 304~75-21&lt;11

11112 15ft. Quick Sliver lri-11,.1 2
11114 IOhp, llorcury'o. Onl ror
porto. $1100 OBO. 304-1175-2817.

18K diamond &amp; ruby elustar

oeo,

tm

Wanted: Ftirm machinery of all
lUnda. Got anything you want to
1 sen. Calll14-256-6040.
1

Maple dllllftl .... •ltt141101QR1t"
chairs, Cit It rS'Ut leiU! 7¥11\

54 Miscellaneous

27'22 .

Ei,~ER6ENC~

Metdtalldtse

APPLIANCES

Hours: Mort-Sat, t-5. 114_...60322, 3 mila out Bull¥1111 Ad.
Free O.lilflry.

2 bedroom apt, $350. month all
utllhlol .. ld, no HUO, 30H75-

pllanc..

tn~illf.

USED

GOOD

ARLO AND JANIS

61 Farm Equipment

54 Misce'DPIIIOUS

&amp;prn.

5622.

Nice 3 bedroom, 1 bath home ,
w1ganoa, t/2 acre, out bfdg,
other - eltrn, Camp Contay,

An'(t lrna

814-992-'JM .

814-245--

lumllhod. ~7!H5e3.

YobiW Homes On Appro.x . 11'2
Ac:re. Good Locallon, Good
Coodltloo, Approx $1,000 Per
Yomh lneone. Will Return lnvntmenl: L.n1 Than 5 YNrs,
Pouil* Owner Financing . New
Hav•n,
WV.
304--882·2466

Appllonen.

Chalre $l2i.

2bf On Bob McCormick Rood,

June 15 114-446-2205.

Aontol P"'P"'Y' HouM &amp; 4

~~~~r~,··

Jt25;

plus

'"llhloo, roll dip, 30&gt;1-6-.

1 bedroom mobile home, elr·
eond, privllo 100, .-ythtno

lloblo. ~:Z.

EIKtric r•ngH, $12i; auto.
w•shll'l, S12t; altc1rie ctry.r,
189; 30" g.. 111nga, $125;
Maytag wringer •••her, $11511;
,.frlg.,..tor, $111; 25" cDior TV,

2 bedroom, AC, wuhar-dryer

3 bHroom house, .. rge lot , Milton Rd, Camp Conley. Open
housa Sunday 141h, 2:00 ID
4:00PM. Possibae 0% linanc:ing
by

Sovlng• On AU VInyl &amp; Cor·

In Slock. $5.00 Up. MoiiDhan
wnltwe, 114-441-71144.

SWAIN
AUCTION I RJANITURE ti2
Otlvo 81., Golllpolio. &amp; t.Nmlturt, Malan, Wntem I

Mobile Homes

2535.

Real Estate

32

CAUUSHOW!!

Glgonllc ptd 11lo, Juno 1H2·
13 e....,... Ronlld _ ..

re~,

1100-9554354 .

AVON t All Arua I Shlrtey I -10-..,..--,-lbd:::-:-,.--:llou-ll, -;cbo-m-,
Spears, 304-675-1429.
utility building, 1rnl. from MidCooke, wattretse~, apply In dllpOtt Handyman apacial, low
pe~on.
Country
k'itchen, tw.nl._, 216--lts-.2:390.
Racllll .
2 badroam country haml In
CRUISE SHIP JOBS Hirinp wooded uaa, 4 milea from Ohla
-$2,000/Mo.
Summer
fYNr River llilri'V' block bldg, good
Round.
Bartender~
/Caaino tor small bualneu, clly water,
Woricera /Gift Shop Sales noor tull basement, $36,000. 2.71
Guides !Et:c::. FNI tnnl. Hawaii acr-. 304~3004 .
!Caribbean IBahlmas /Europe. 2 bedrooms, conw ~. priced
No Exp. Naceaary. 1·206-736- In 20's. t07 Locu.t St, Mandtf·
7000 Ert.15i4N8.
son, ~7~7'111.

signs. 8am-8pm..

Mk::hael

6~1734.

Veodin; Route: L.oc:al. We Have
The NIMsl Mac:hintt, MUing A
Nice Steady Cash Income. 1·

reasonable, 814-Mt-2311.

June 11 thru M, 715 Sycamore
SlrMI, Mld~aport . Sorntthlng
lor everyon•.

Houses for Rent

42

F-•.

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
ComP"t• ttom. tum .. hlnaa. Pintle; And lldlltl OU'-'!161hlrltl

3br 1-112 Bath, 600 Block Of
Third
Avenu.,
G.lllpolla.
Ralwencee Raqulrwd, No Pete.

Opponunny

Condit~. Refrigerators,

800-4111-3411.

Appllcatk)ns an now ba6na
taken br p~~rt""lma Nurwlog AJc[
Must be aulllbtt tor aH sNfts.
Nurse Aid clan will be oltlred
with employment Will 1110 accept applications Jor C.N.A.'a.
Pomeroy Nur-sing end Rehab
C.ntar,
36759 Rocksprings
Road, Pomeroy. No phone taflt
please. EOE .

Rood oH SR7 (1 mltoJ. Witch fM

elothmg. mlac.

41
Business

.&gt;.R: M

,,

Waahera!.. dryers, retrlgaratars,
rang11. ~ka~ga AppllanCH, 7i
VIne Stl"'ll, Call &amp;14-446-73518, 1·

VEND.

Core lor bod pllllnt, -

,.~ 1 mUa ... of fblc:f"M

•m

Good, Slaldy, Affordlblo, BUll,..._ Won, Laal 1-800-284-

Friday •nd Slturday, Jun1 12·13.
Wast Shldt A01d nNr Chntlf,
Smllh rwidanct. Take Texaa

lull off SA12• on 'hiJL Rd. 105.
watch lor llgnL FumHtn,
~ tlerna, 2 rengea.

Available. 3 V2 Ml,_ From Ho~
Zlf" Hospital, 139,000. ~~

Ouidl;? No Wayt But We Han A

hair, walkers, amall appliances. miac..

d.ay bafo,. the ad Ia to run ,
Sunday edition- 1:OOpm Friday,

Etoetrlchy, And P"- Son&lt;leo

Sond
qualific.tlons to: Salw Dept.,
P.O. Box Jill, Pomlfoy, OH.

ut...,....on.

,_.

Advoneo. Oladllno o 1o00pm tho

O.J . White Road, 18 Acres,
Mostly Woodld, Wllh A haul:~
tul Bt.~Udi"9 Slte. Nice Llvll
Ortvew•y.
Rural
Walar,

Vwy nk::a 3 bedroom houR In
Pomeroy, 614-667-3211.

p.,.."'Y·

All Yard Sitae Must 8t P•ld In

abfe, call Mu, 1-too-83H238.

VENDING ROUTEo Got Rich

Training

Soturdly

2

A small GM dNitrship la_,ta~
resum.. lor •n IX~

14

&amp; VIcinity

lots IDr ••~. trailers ICCiptabll. 30W75-2722.

Sm.ll houA, 23'11 Uncoln Ave,
available after JWM 10, 304-IJS..
1180 or 61$-6364.

Third ....... a.tNpollt,

Mlddlepon

Chill
Drjor &amp; W-r.
Co4or T.V., Mk:rowaYa, 814-2561231.

"AVON• ALL AREAS! Share your
lime with us . Y01.1'll toon lhl
company. 1-80G-m-6356.

Nllded- Cer11lied nursi~ usi..

Pleasant

Ak

2 FCA 124 FL WOLFf TANNING
BEDS FOf Solo. Scld Togothlr
0. Sopo~lly. ·102!1

ICruiH Ship Jobe... Hlrlng$2000/mo. SumrnerfyNr round.
June 12th, 13th. 3 Family Off Bartenders/ Caalna Worbrtl
Rl7 Addison Townhouse , By Gift Shop/ Saini Tow Guldoli
Ta~ Apr . Nita Clothing, Tovs.
ale; . FfM travel. HaWIW Caribboon/ llahl....,. Europe. No
June 12th, 4 F1mlly: Clothing,
exp. neeasary. 1·2CJ6.1J6..7'000
All Sizes
Numerous Mise::.
N.alghborh~ Road, 11'2 Milt E11:t. t6t7N8.
From l-41.
Euy Wor\! E11:ceUant Pay! Assemble Products At Home. C..ll
Jun• 12th-13th. 465 Gaorges
loU Ft11 , 1-aoG-467-5566, Ext.
Cral'llk Road, Console T.V. Chain
Saw, Sill 516·1 V12 . Good Girt 313.
Clothes, Lots M or e~
E.1perienced carpet lnstaner,
tumltl.lf•
diJiv.,._, tull4imtL
Mowing Sale: 613 Jackson Pike,
Apply:
lomofT'D'II,
10-Hoort.
Frl &amp; Sat June 12th, 131h .
FumiluN, 151 S.:ond
Refrigerator, Microwave, lrash lope
Avenue ., Gllllpotlf;. No phone
Compactor, O.S. Water Bid, calla.
Man,.ss
&amp;
Found11lon,
Treadmill, El Bike, B...- K.g , GOVERMENT JOBS! Now Hiring
Clothing And Misc.
In 'four Araa, Both Skilled AM
Unskilled. For A Cun.nlt list 01
Vard/Cr.ft Sale : Winters Station, Jo~ And Application, Call 1·
Jackson Pike, Jun• 12th, 13tll. 800... 67..t567 E.J:t. U-129.
~ . June 141f1, 1....... Giri1, MI ...
sn, Womens, Clolt•a Twin lndivktual to P.rform Ctean i ~
Bad, MenaCiolll111, Mlsc:t
S.rvicn AI The Gallipolis, Otlio
Post Otflee. Contad The Loc11
Vud Sal• : Friday &amp; S1turd1y, Postmaster For Further lnlorma ·
Centenary.
lion.

Pt.

countv ..... $3,1100. C.mp oh•

C.II8;00.11 :00A.U.

p.m. Saturdioy.
11 Help Wanted
Big Gan~g• Sale. All new m•r- ,;,:.=~;..:.::-::;c;;::-:;::==:

W~ER:

One TV Stereo.

(ti Raadlnll Rainbow t;l
IDl til Full liouH t;l
tl) Smurla r:;J

Goods

In Ban Bend Clmp ground,
county waler, $2,700. S04-57'6a
2894.

!NOlle£!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rKOII'Unlndl lhlt yot.l do bu-.
neu with ~ you know, and
NOT to nod money through tM
mail unlit you haw. lnV'Hiigltad
the offering.

Employment Services

Motorcycles

~ s-nu

Rentals

~idmore

21

74

Household

~Square

5 Kr. . ,..,,let~ no mobile
homea, 10 min. on At. 2 N, pfic.
7
novotlablo,
8 acrea ov..-laaltlng Pt. Ptt.
$3,1100. Holl .... Of la&lt;;orlololn

N6ca mobll1 honNI apace lVIII·
W.nlld To Do: lbbyshllng In
My Home. Huna A.uistanl

3 Family: Ball Run Road, Ott lop Prien Paid: All Okf U.S.

chandisa: flashlights SOc Razor
and blades pack 50t: pad locks
50c ro.ch moltl 50e many other
i1ems, all naw, from 25t
Thursday • Saturday, June 11,
12, 10. 9-4, 76 Vlnt StrMI, Gal-

larm

•

51

I I I 11. I

(JJ Vklto Power

1181 Chivy •••· Air, AIIIFM
~· Clntury T - PS
PB, Hhch, 5 Spd, And UGNI
55,000 111111. Vwy Nicol 81,71&gt;0.
614 441 1110.

0

NIKOVE

(JJ • ill fl IBJII)
IIZID 0 Newt

Happy Hollow,lrall•• acc:epted,

auction

..-.:-,o-p,--corn-::lc::'::b::cc~rl&lt;l,
While tamale c11: 1 blue &amp; 1 "'Ot"d,.-mo-rtl:-:1graan eye, on Rt. 35 n11r SV llntema, pM:tur.. and tumlturt,
Cinema, 61"-446-6201.
Osby Martin, 614-912·Mt.
Yard Sale

Wanted to

&amp; Auction

ma.

7

wtth

bllmt, summer houM, garage,

991-3717.

Found : medium dog, long white
hair, brown spot on back, blue
eye, brown aye, 614-992-2791.

Vinton.

pond ,

lhrM

near lakin, 304-615-54'19 or 6JS.

0

33 Farms for Sale

614-~2·2889.

I

•

1;00 (]) •

.Loodod. 11,000111 $12,500.00
114-446-2238

{)

or615~638.

Kittens, varlalylo chooA lrom,

JUNE 11

THU.,

letters of rha
lour scrambled words below to form four sirnple words

EVENING

1881 Aatro Chevy Ernbaur lllnl
Van
arcai1Mc8
CandiUon

houlo, profit privoll -lng,

1'14-62·2421. INvt ........ ga lt

Kittens, mala I

•

O Rearrange

1'15-3m.

$500 Oft Purchase Price Of Any

FOOND mill Bugla "'"" dog

- · :1114-t'IWZtl.

1815 Ford EconoUna 250 v•n
wlladdw, - · I ohllving. 304-

hom.a,

304-675-6720.

lilA! DAILY C.~
ruzmt 0~
_ _ __;,_ 141114 loy

Television
Viewing

fO CUT UP A Df.AD UMS
T~AT F~U. IIJ Tht. YARD'

l"-11112-2167

5

proved trtdlt C.ll 1..aoG-S89-

Vana&amp;4 WD'I

1112 P'anl Eaollno V.n E·tSO,

Do&lt;lblowldooo
Avollablo Only JI,OOO Down.
Aepoaeaed Slng6n : 3'1 Avalt-.
able Only 1500 Down Wl!h Ap-

8uu1itul mala cal, nautar.d,
rul friendly. 6~063.

voocf

73

Space for Rent

Country

1i81 Redman 14x70, 2bdrm., 2
both
w/IMctrtc hoi water,
cent~ air, utility room. Too
many •-lru to list. 514-e67-3412
nt'nlnga.

B11qto pupplao CMJI ol good
rabbit dog. 814~46-4352.

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Thuracla , June 11,1892

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11

�Page

1~The

Thursday, June 11 , 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Community calendar Woman charged with trying to kill young dying
Co••. .lty Calendar Items
appnr two daJS bdort an event
and 1M day rA that eveat. Items
mast be received ftD iD advaDCt
to IISSllre publlaotion iD tbt cal·
endar.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - "Team Up
With Jesus: Winnen 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 inviltd.

SATIJRDAY
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. - The Liberty Mountaineers will perform
Saturday at the Jackson County
Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
POMEROY - St Paul Lutheran
Church, Second Street and
Syearn ore, Pomeroy, will provide
lunch Saturday from II a.m. to 4
p.m. Hot dogs, sloppy joes, cole
slaw. potato chips, soft drinks, iced
cea, lemonade. coffee and dessert•
will be available for purchase in St
Paul's air conditioned fellowship
hall. Public invited.

DARWIN - Modem Woodmen
of
America
Camp 7230 will have a
CHESTER · Vacation Bible
Saturday
at 7 p.m. at the
cookout
School at MI. Hermon United
Brethren Church on Texas Road south bound park on Route 33 near
will be held through Friday from Darwin . Hamburgers. hot dogs.
buns and condiments will be pro9:30-11:30 a.m. daily.
vided. Bring a covered dish. Public
CHESTER • Vacation Bible inviced. Each father will receive a
School al Chesttr Uniltd Methodist small gift.
Church wiD be held through Friday
LONG BOTTOM - There will
from 9:15-11:30 a.m. daily.
be a fishing derby Saturday from 811:30 a.m. at the Forked Run
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Sportsman Club in Long Bottom
Township Trustees will hold a spe- off Rouce 248 on Curtis Hollow for
cial meeting Thursday 81 II a.m. at panicipants age 5-15. Four classes
the Shade River Forestry Building are offered: ages 5-6; 7-9;10-12;
on Joppa Road in Reedsville.
and 13-15. Prizes awarded in each
class. Open to the public. Free
POMEROY - There will be a refreshmeniS available.
dinner at the senior citizens cencer
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 5REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
6:30 p.m. Cost of the meal is $3. Alumni Dinner and Dance will be
Baked steak, mashed po!BtoeS and held Saturday at 6:30 p.m. with
gravy, succotash, cole slaw, roll dance to begin at 9 p.m. Music will
and beverage will be served. Ice be provided by Cruise Brothers.
cn:am available at an extra charge. Additional information may be
Music by The Classics. Free-will obtained by calling 985-3958 after
offering. Public inviced.
6p.m.
CHESTER - The Chesttr Township Trustees wiU meet Thursday at
1 p.m. at the Chester Town HaD.
POMEROY · The Trinity
Church of Pomeroy, Second and
Lynn Streets, will have an ice
cream social Thursday, Fnday and
Saturday of Heritage Weekend
from II a.m. to 5:30p.m. Each day
homemade chicken and noodles,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, ham, ham
salad, potato salad, cole slaw,
baked beans, cakes, different bev·
erages and homemade ice cream
wi II be available. Flavors of ice
cream are chocolace. vanilla, peach,
lemon. strawberry, pineapple,
banana and several special flavors
available by the dip. Food is available for eating-in the air-conditioned social rooms or for earry·
out For carry-out call, 992-3 rn.
RU'I1.AND - Star Garden Club
will meet Thursday at I p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Eugene Atlans with
Miss Ruby Diehl as w-hoscess. A
program will be presenced on roses
and their propagation and the club
will also hold lls home flower
show.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m.
FRIDAY
BASHAN - Ice cream social,
Bashan Fire House, Friday, 5 p.m.
Eleven Oavors of homemade icc
cream as weD as sandwiches, sceak,
hot sausage, sl&lt;wY JOCS, hot dogs,
coffee. pop, homemade pie and live
en tertainment. Sponsored by
Bashan ladies Auxiliary.
MIDDLEPORT - Ballroom
dance Friday, 7·11 p.m .. American
Legion Annex, Middleport. Cost is
$5 per penon. Fool and i"' avail ·
able. Call 992-9904. 992 -7057 or
992-2232 for information.
RIPLEY, W.VA · Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Fnda y
at Skatcland 10 Ripley, W.Va.
POMEROY - Senior Citizens
Dance Club wiD have a dance Fnday from 8-11 p.m. with music by
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public
inviced. Bring snocks for the snock
table.
CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will
have a free clothing day Friday
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Cheshire.

Vereen still critical
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tony·
winning entertainer Ben Vereen
crashed his car into a tree hours
before he was run down by a truck
and crilically injured while walking
on a highway. in the middle of the
nigllt, 111thoribes said.
. .
Investigators satd they dtdn 1
kn0111 whether there was any connection between the accidents.
Vereen, 45, remained in critical
condition today at UCLA Medical
Center with head and internal
injuries and a broken leg . He
underwent four hours of surgery
after die IICCidell Tuesday.
"He had a restful mght. He's
lltill in crilical condition. He's still
constious and communicative,"
said bospital spokesman Rich

and friends.
"Ben would say thanks ftr carinJ,IIId tt.ep the prayers coming,"
Mn. Vereen said.

By STRAT DOUTHAT
Associated Prm Writer
EAST HARTFORD, Conn. The mother of a young woman
dying of AIDS has been arrested on
charges she fed her daughter ice
cream laced with sleeping pills in
an atcempt to lrill her and end her
suffering, authorities said.
Geraldine Hansen, 46, pleaded
innocent Tuesday to auempted
murder and was freed on $50,000
bail.
Her daughcer, Gina Hansen, 23.
who weighs 50 pounds and is given
less than six months to live, was
treated at a hospital after the overdose and released.
Geraldine Hansen said as she
left court, "Gina knows I love
her." And her lawyer, James
Schultz, said that his client never
tried to kill her daughter and that
the young woman suffers from
dementia brought on by her illness.
Geraldine Hansen, a drugstore
clerk, had cared for her ailing
daughter since she moved back
horne two years ago.
"It's been real hard for her,
bringing up that kid and then losing
her," said Ray Ryea, a ne•t-door
neighbor.
He said Geraldine Hansen is a
hard-working single parent who
lost three children in a ftre years
ago - "then her daughter gets
AIDS, and now this."
Gina told authorities her mother
tried to kill her in late April by giving her ice cream laced with sleeping pills. She said her mother want·
ed to end her suffering and "just

The mother was arresced May 6.

get it over with," accmling to the arrest warrant

L

066
Pick 4:

2193

Page 4

Vol. 43, No. 29

Copyrighted 1992

SETTLING BACK IN • Workers lower the
head of the sculpture "''he Awakening" back
into place at Hains Point In Washington
Wednesday. Last summer tbt ten side or tile

giant's race sustained severe damage and the
entire head had to be removed from the ground
aner It was bit by a car that went out fA cootrol
(AP)

FORTIES AND FIFTIES · Many local residents will remember poodle skirts, juke bo~es
and ice cream parlors as depicted ror Heritage
Weekend at the Meigs County Museum this
weekend. The backdrop for the exhibit was ere-

UIWIO,

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MDIIP II

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport First Baptist Church will have

a Vacation Bible School registration kick-off pany Saturday from
1-3 p.m . for children age four
through sixth grade completed.
There will be games, prizes and
food.

49;;'..
..........
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2

POMEROY - There will be a
recycle day on the parking lot at
Kroger in Pomeroy Saturday from
9 a.m. to noon. All recyclable icems
including can, glass, cardboard,
plastic, newspaper will be accepted.
RUTLAND · There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Lcgmn Hall Saturday from 8 p.m.
10 midnight w1th music by While's
Hill Band. Public inviced.

IO&lt;eogn

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HENDERSON. W.Va. - Square
dance and clogging 81 the Henderson Community Center, from 8-11
p.m. Music by Country Grass. Pubhe is inviced.
SUNDAY
RACINE · Transparent "rock in
a d1fferent li ght" in concm Sunday
at 3 p.m. at the Racine United
Methodist Church. Admission, $1
donation.
COOLVILLE - Dedtcation of
the new fellowship hall for the
Coolville Uniced Methodist Church
will be Sunday at 6 p.m. Public
inviced.
POMEROY · SOLOS, a Christian fellowship of single adults wiD
contin ue iL&lt; singles-orienced bible
study on "Rejection" Sunday at 4
p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Churc h. Th e scripture
will be Luke 4:14-30 and 1 Timothy 5: I and 6:2.
POMEROY - The family of
Harley and Carrie Whaley will
hold a reunion Sunday at I p.m. the
roadside park on Rouce 33 north of
Pomeroy. Bring a covered dish.

lore'9"' or d(:.meshc

s 89 -..ale o••ce
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POMEROY - The Classics will
present a free concert across from
the Meigs Museum tn Pomeroy at I
p.m. Sunday. Bring a law? cha~r
and enjoy the htts of the 40 s, 50 s
and 60's.

.......
....

19TH CENTURY DISPLAY · These dresses are included in a
display or 19tb Century clothing at the Meigs Museum for Heritage Weekend. Here Joyce Davis, celebration committee member,
adds a finishing touch to one or the gowns. The museum will be
open for visitors from Saturday, noon to 9 p.m. and Sunday from
noon until S p.m.
pale), black snuthrng and much
more .

The 91 st Ohio Volunteer
In fantry Group , Com pany B. will
be camping on the museum
grounds over the weekend. They
wrll be doing drills and demonstrations both days, with a ball game
on Sunda~ afternoon. Anyone
mterested m participating in th e
game on Sunday should contact
Dave Gloeclmer through the museum at 992-3810. Sunday will open
w1th a wreath laying at the Civil
War monument at the Meigs County Court House at 12:30 p.m.

briefs----.

A five percent salary increase was approved for certified and
non-certified personnel of the Meigs County Board of Education
when the board mel in regular session Tuesday night.
Appropriations were adjusced for sick leave, personal leave and
vacation , and a special meeting was set for June 29 at9 a.m. for the
purpose of adopting the 1992-93 budget. The school calendar for
the 1992-93 year was adopced, and the financial report presenced by
th e treasurer was approved.
The board approved participation in the Council of GovemmentSoutheascem Ohio Voluntary Education Cooperative, a computer
service progmm. the Southeascem Ohio Special Education Regional
Resource Cencer for special education assistance, the Tri -County
Career Development Program. and the Coalition of Rural and
Appalachian Schools.
Robby Wyatt was presented with a plaque as the Franklin B.
Walcer all-scholastic recipient.

$6 99 sale pnce

·St. SO mtr's. rebate

1 cr' 1
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aftef reba!•

Meigs men held in Bluefield

$7 99 s.alfl priCe

SUfi

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Heritage Weekend will offer a
vanety of activities for the publtc
through the effons of rwo organizations - the Meigs County Pioneer
and Htstorical Society and the
Pomeroy MerchaniS Association.
Displays, exhibitions, demon stra tions and entertainment arc
being planned around the theme
"The Good Old Summerumc."
MUSEUM ACTIVITIES
Activities at the museum on Sat·
urday will begin witll food booths
opening at noon and other activities
beg inning at I p.m. The afcemoon
wi II begin w1th a nag raising cere·
mony .
A display of vintage clothing,
presented against a backdrop from
the 40's and 50's, drawn by Debbie
Hill's Southern Junior Hi gh eighth
grade an class, accessories and
sum mertime memorabilia will be
presented in the downstairs rooms
of the museum. The Railroad Club
of So~lh ~~ Ohio will be on hand
with¥ their model railroad collec tions in the upstairs.
There will be demonstrations of
spinnmg and weaving, quilting
(with an opportunity fo r anyone
who wants 10 try quilting to partici-

Board OKs salary hike

Vour cost

1111@1' rehllle

ROCK SPRINGS - There will
be a hymn sing at the Rock Springs
Voiced Methodist Church Sunday
at I p.m. with Harmony of
Coolville performing. Rev. Ke•th
Rader in vices the public.
CARPENTER · Rev . Bob
Sagraves, Columbus. will be conducting revival at the Mt. Umon
Church locaced two miles south of
Carpenter at 6:30p.m . nightly.
Special singers. Pastor Joe N.
Sayre invices the publtc.

ated by eighth graders at Southern Junior High
School. Patty Cook, Heritage Weekend committe e member, put it all together Thursday after·
noon.

Museum
activities
·listed for
weekend

~-Local

$-199 sale pnt.
-$1 .50 mfr's rebate
$l 09

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ClouJ)

Low tonight In mid-60s.
Saturday. partly cloudy . High In
mid 70s.

World leaders gather to
sign treaties at summit

REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
High School Class of 1972 will
hold a reunion get-together Satur·
day from 1·3 p.m. at the Reedsville
Locks and Dam shelter house.
Bring family, snack foods and
dnnks.
SCIPIO - The Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department will hold a tractor
pull Saturday with weigh-in at 5
p.m. and pull at 6 p.m. Kids classes
800, adults classes, 900, 1000, and
1100. Refreshments available
including homemade ice cream.

,

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2 Sectiona, 14 Pageo 25 OWita
A Multimedia Inc. N"'"ooDer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 12, 1992

LETART - The Mountaineer
Two Cylinder Oub 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 inviced.

Elbun.

Vereen's wife. Linda, said in a
sta~M~e~~t that the couple appreciated expmsions of support from fans

daughter with ice cream laced with sleeping pills

Ohio Lotterv
Pick 3:

Japanese
group buys
Mariners

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store houra: 8:30a.m. to 8 p.m. Mond8y through Frtclly,
8:30a.m. to 7 p.m. Sllturdly, 1nd 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sundlly

GALUPOUS

~~ffi~~~

•

Two Meigs County men charged with cultivating manjuana are
being held in the Bluefield, W. Va. jail awaiting a preliminary hearing in front of aU. S. magistra.te:
.
According to a West Vlfgmta Assoctaced Press story, a turkey
hunter tipped police to a plot of marijuana plant off an old mining
road. The story noced that authorities seized 858 marijuana planiS
and arrested Evereue W. Caldwell, 19, of Middlepon, and Leslie L.
Continued on paae J
·

There wtll be entertainment at
the museum both days with band
and squa re dancing on Saturday
evenmg beginning at 5 p.m. Saturday night at the movie s may be
enjoyed with a vintage movie at a
"good old summertime price."
A pie baking concest (fruit pie.•
only) will be held. with pies to be
at the museum by 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Winners wiJI be announced
and pies auctioned at 6:30 p.m.
The food booth at the musuem
will open at noon on Sunday with
wreath laying at 12:30 p.m . and
other activities to begin at I p.m.
CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL SER·
VICE
Descendants of Civil War Unton
Veterans who re)(ister at the Meigs
County Museum by Saturday afcer ·
noon, listing the union veteran and
relationship, may have a memorial
ribbon to wear at the Civil War
monument memorial service on

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
More than I 00 world leaders
- The largest gathering ever of planned to attend to stgn treaties
heads of government co nvened that creace a plan for cooperation 10
today at the Earth Summit 10 inau- curtail pollution, desertification,
gurate far-reaching plans to clean the chopping down of forests and
up the planet's air and water and the daily extincuon of dozens of
procect its planiS and animals.
species of animals and plants.
On the table are two legaJiy
Europe took an early lead in
advancing plans to help developing binding treaties and three other
nations. The 12-nation European documents that are broad stateCom munity pledged to increase aid ments of principle and action.
More than 60 nations already
for envlfonmental proJects by $4
billion, Ponuguese Prime Minister have signed the climate control
trea ty. which cal ls for the worldAmbal Cavaco Silva said.
Britain Prime Minister John wide reductiOn of carbon dioxide
Major was to announce a plan to emissions, and the "biodiverslly
study th e world's biological treaty," which aims to protect plant
resources and make Bntish climate and ammal species.
Dozens more are expected to
control technology available to
developing countries, according to sign shonly.
The United States has been
an advance text of his speech. The
broadly
criticized for opposing the
proposal on climate chang e
appeared si milar to one made species treaty and for weakening
the climate control pacL Because of
Thursday by the Voiced Stales.
"The environment is no longer U.S. insistence, the latcer no longer
th e specialized concern of a few," includes caps on carbon dioxide
the text said. "It has become the emissions, which are believed to be
the main cause of global warming.
vital interest of us all."
As if to answer those cri ti cs,

sc nror u .S. negotiator William
Reill y said Thursday the Bush
admrnistration will set aside $1.4
brllion for research and monitoring
related 10 climace change, and will
shore the resuils with other countries. It was not clear if new money
was bei ng pledged.
Bush will sign the climate
treaty, said Reilly, head of the
Environmental Protection Agency.
Reilly also announced a U.S.
plan to begin collecting IIDmediately rnformation on the world's plant
and animal species. U.S. delegation
sources said Bush may announce a
similar new scientific 10itiative, but
1t was not clear if that was separace.
In some ways at the summit
politics took a back seat. Bush wiU
be in the same group photo with
Cuba's Fidel Castro. Virtually all
178 members of the Uniced Nations
sent delegations, including Israel
and Syria. Agreement seems universal that the planet's decerioration is on a scale such that no country alone can remedy it

Low income families get an
opportunity to buy a home
Hall. Interested restdents are to call
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tru ssell at at 992-6782 between 9
Sentinel News Staff
Low income Meigs County fam - a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through
ities are being given an opportunity Friday for an appoinunent. Appli·
to own their own homes through a cations will be distributed ooly by
special housing set-aside program appoinunent.
Farmers Home Administration
of the Ohio Depanment of Development (ODOD) and lot and down · (FmHA) fmancing will be used for
payment considerations from the purchasing the homes. The loan
interest will be decennined accord·
Village of Middleport.
Eight three-bedroom ranch style ing 10 income, Trussell e•plained .
She sa id that " low income"
houses are included in the special
ODOD project. They will be built means dependable on-going and
on the lot currently occupied by the adequate income to show loan
old Betsy Ross Building on Fifth repa yment ability. To quali fy there
Street in Middleport. Demolition ;He ma.xtmum income limits after
of the building began this week and deductions for mmor children and
is e•pecced to be compleced in m1d· ch rld care expenses.
The hou sin g speualrst smd that
July by Pullins hcavation of
f1rSt
prionty will be given to single
Pomeroy.
hc;rds
of househo lds with tllc sec Meanwhile, Jean Trussell, Middlepon's housing specialist, is tak- ond pnority being tho se fam11ies
in g applications for the housing at lrvmg in rental housing. All must
her office in Middleport Village qualify for FmHA financrng .

The m3Jlimum adjusced mcome
levels arc S II ,950 for one person,
$13,650 for two, $15,350 for three,
$17,050 for four, $18,400 for five,
and $19,800 for si•. in the "very
low" limits; and $19,100 for one,
$2 1,80 for two. $24,550 for three,
$27,300 for four, $29,450 for five,
and $31,650 for six in the "low"
lr mus. The verv low and low categories have smn e different qualifytn g critcna m regard to the interest
rate .
Once the old Belly Ross buildin~ has been demolished, then the
vrli•gc will be surveymg th e lot,
inswlling utilities and awarding
btd s on the ac tu al houstng con Slructton .

Trussell S31d that she e•pec ts
the first house to be completed
early winter and that the deadline
for completing all etght houses is
June. 1993.

Two Mason County men are
hospitalized following wreck
Two Mason Countians arc n1
Cabell- Huntington Hospital follow·
mg a two vehicle accident late
Thursday night at the mtersccti on
of Jericho Road and S.R. 2, accord ~
rng to a spokesman for the Mason
County Sheriff 's Depanment.
Jesse L. Hoffman, 31, of New
Haven, and Bonnie Gcnnan, 44, of
Gall ipolis Ferry, were both listed in
en tical condit1on Fnday morni ng, a
hospital spokes man said . Both had
bee n taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital by Point Pleasant EMS
and then went to Cabell- Huntington
by HealthNet
Mark Anthony, 17, of Poant
Plea.'Olllt, wa.s the driver of the
second vehicle . He was taken 10
PVH where he was treated and
released.
Apparently Anthony was trdvel ing north on S.R. 2 in his 1986
Chevrolet and Hoffman was travel ·
ing south on his 1982 Yamaha. The
sheriff's spokesman said Hoffman
went left of center and struck the

Sunday at 12:30 p.m. Some proof
of service and line of descent will
be required. Ribbons may be
picked up Sunday between noon
and 12:30 p.m . at the muse um .
Ribbons will be lim iced tD the first
200 registrants.
POMEROY MERCHANTS
ASSOCIATION ACTIVmES
Festivities for the association
will get underway this evening
PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP)
with the crowning of the 1992 Her- - Again, it was a scene ~layed
itage Queen at the Meigs County repeatedly for television YJewers
Public Library in Pomeroy at 7 back home: President Bush being
p.m. The public is invited and hustled off a stage by Secret Serencouraged to attend.
vice agents amid tremendous conSaturday's activities will be~in fusion.
with a parade at 10 a.m. formmg
Six months ago it was Tokyo
behind the old junior high school 81 and an unforgettable stomach ail9 a.m. The theme for the parade is ment that caused Bush to collapse
the same as the museum's "The virtually into the arms of a horri Good Old Summertime."
fied Japanese prime minister .
Immediately followin~ the Thursday it was a downtown plaza
parade wiJI be the recogniuon of in Panama City, with government
the Heritage Queen and her court 81 dignitaries, gunshots and police
Continued on paj!e 3
tear gas fired at anti-American

from lelt SJde of Anthony 's vehicle .
German was a passenger on Hof·
!man's motorcycle.
.
Damage to the Chevrolet, reg1 s·
tered to David Anthony, was CS ·
umated at $4,000. Hoffman's
motorcycle was lisced as a tDtal
loss.
A Point Pleasant man was in ·
jured in a single vehicle accident
wh1ch occurred at 3:15 a.m. Friday
on S.R. 2. in Ashton, according tD a
sheriff's spokesman.
Brian E. Hicks, 28, of Pmnt
Pleasant, was taken 10 Cabell-Hun·
ungton Hospnal followrng the ac·
c1dent. A hosp11al spokesman repor·
ted he was trcmcd and released.
Apparently Hick.s was traveling
north on S.R. 2 when he fa1led to
negotiate the curve at the Ashwn
railroad crossing. The 1985 Ford
ran off the left sr de of the roadway
strikmg a railroad crossr ng light
pole. 1bc veh icle then re-en tered
1he roadway rolling two umes

before comm' to rc&gt;t on rts top.

111e vehiC le was listed as a total
loss.
A Pomeroy woman was treated
and released from PVH followmg a
single vehicle accident on Sec . 9,
near New Haven Thursday evening .
Virginia Boyd, 19 , of Pomeroy
was . taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospatal following the 8 30 p.m.
accident where she was treated for
mrnor IRJUflCS. Boyd was a passcn ~
ger in a vehic le driven by Mclrssa
Rollins, 18, of Rutland
Apparently Rollans was traveling
on Sec. 9 when she lost control of
the vehicle m the gravel. The 1982
Dodge, regi stered to Debbie Corfey, hit an embankment then ftipped
onto •ts top.
Other passengers an the vehicle
wen: T1mothy McCarthy, 20, of
Letart and Phillesha See, 3, of
Pomeroy. They were not IDJured.
111e vehicle was listed as a tDtal
loss.

President has close call in Panama
demonstraiOrs.
Bush and his wife, Barbara,
were unharmed in Thursday's incident, but like Tokyo. the image of a
U.S. president in distress will
linger in an election year.
Bush aides even joked that the
incident - the first time a U.S.
pres ident has been so much in
harm's way since then-President
Reagan was shot outside a Wash mgt on hotel in January 1981 would make the Earth Summit in
Brazil a relative picnic for Bush.
Bush was able 10 make tight of
the episode, saying "no little left-

wrng demonstration " would set
back the cause of Panamanian
democracy - or cause him to lose
his stride.
Spokesman Marlin Fitzwater
offered a whimsical comment:
"It's been a very good trip with the
e•cc ption of the tear gas and the
demonstrations.''
But it served to point up a serious problem for a president who a
year ago was the toast of the world
for his successful conduct of the
Pcrs1an Gu lf War.
Bush had hoped that a warm
Continued on page J

' 1112.

·''

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