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Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, wv

hal DB Sunday Tlmee Sentinel

Mlly5,1111

Ohio Lottery

Reds rally to
edge St. Louis
Cardinals ..

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Supp.o rt the New Hig.h . Sch·ool and ·the .
Operating Levy May 7

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PickJ:S44
Pick 4:6155
Cards : K-H, J.c
4-D; 7-S

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Super Lotto:

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4·7·9-16-26-27
Kicker:497784

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A Multi
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Pomef!7-Middleport, Ohlo, r.,pnday, May 6, 1991

State officials to probe
massive·rock slide
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The number of
high school students ·
attending each
building is shown
on the map.

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By BRIAN J, REED

Seutlnel News Staff
State o(ficials are exjlected 10
visit the Hobson are~ today to
determine what caused a massive
rock slide and shifting of the ~
over the weekend.
Meanwhile, the Meigs County
Commissioners have declared a ·
disaster area and lhe American Red
Cross has arrived on the scene to
assist victims in the Stricken vicinity. .
.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Office and Emergency Medical
Services began to receive calls
early Friday morning concerning
small rock slides in the Pity Me
area near the Meigs/Gallia County
line.
Friday nillht, Meigs Emergency Services puecur Bob Byer and
other county officials began evacuating residents in the area due to
larae cracks in the ground near the
slide. Those cracks - which caused
hollSCII to slip from their founda·
tions • continued 10 expand over
the weekend.
State Route 7 was closed by
local authorities shortly
after tbe
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A _pr:~t New Haven woman
die&lt;f m
II Hillltingtl)n Hospital
shortly
unllergolng an emergency caasarean operation Saug.
day: following accident on S.R.
2. The baby died Sunday;
Shelli Jo Hill, 18, a Wahama
Higb School.seni!l', di~ of injuries
she suffered m the 4:15p.m., threevehicle accident on S.R. 2 in northem Cabell County. Hill' s 6-month
term baby was delivered during
emergency sur~ery at the Huntington hospital mmutes later, but died
at 5:20 a.m. Sunday, a hospital
spokeswoman who did not want to
be named said Monday. The baby
had remain.ed in critical condition
,in the hospital's neonatal iniC!ISive
care unit from the time it was born.
Cabell County authorities will
take evidence to the prosecu.tor'·s
office ioday 10 decide if homicide
charges can be filed, according to
the Huntington Herald-DjspaiCh.
Chief Sheriff' s Deputy C.A.
Adams told the Dispatch he plans
10 meet with Cabell County Prosecutor Chris Chiles today.
"Naturally, anytime someone is
killed in a traffic accident, you' re
looking at negligent homicide,"
Adams 10ld the newspaper Sunday.
"But I'll have to leave that up to
Chris Chiles f!l' decision."
Adams said a 1987 Dodge Aries
station waRon driven bv B.S.
Priyanalh, 53, of 562 Jay Drive in
Gallipolis was northbound on the
two·lane road when it collided
head-on with a 1989 Dodge driven
by Bobby Lee Keaton, 60, of 538

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) .If American Bleclric Power Co.
can recover from !Biepa)'crs the
$330 million cost of closing its
Meigs County coal mine, the
company may offer land it owns
in three counties for industrial
developmenL
AEP has not decided whether
to install scrubbers at ill Gavin
power plant in Gal1ia County (I'
switch to low-sulfur out-of-state
coal to comply with federal
clean air act requil'ements by
199S.
AEP must make a decision
by early July.
Ir AEP made the switch, ill
Southern Ohio Coal in Meigs
County would ~lose. The closing would leave 1,258 miners
ou't of work and ultimately
could cost 8,000 related jobs in ·
soutbeasrcm Ohio.
AEP has discussed with state
legislators the possibility of
making corporate Investment
in southeastern Ohio if it closes

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Can yo.u· afford to ·continue to
operate ·these· f~ur smal.l high
schools when one central high
school can save approximately
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$1.2 million per year?

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A Columbus woman, formerly
of Mason, who jumped from a
moving .car driven b~ her sister,
· died Saturday in the Grant Hospital. Columbus, only one week following the ICCidenL
Tamara Lynn "Tammy"
Alleuwortb, 26, was ~~er
in a 1980 Pontiac driven her SISter, Debra S. Allensw
, 31, at
approximllely 2:1S LID., Sltlllday,
April 27, when the twb ~~pp~~e~~dy
p into a vedlal disagreemenL .

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were not a factor in the accident.
Priyanath and his 4S·year-oid ·
wi(e, RaJIII!kshmi, were talcen to
Cabell Huntincton Hospital. Mrs.
Priyanath remains in the intensive
care unit today, while Mr .
Priyanath was scheduled 10 be discharged, accordin~ to a hospital
spokeswoman. Pullins was trea~Cd .
and released Saturday from the
hospital, and Keaton was not taken
10 a hospital..

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Officials.unable to make positiv~
identification of trailer victim
Positive identification of a body
found in a burned-out trailer locat·
ed on a dead-end road off Liberty
Lane in Pomeroy late Sunday after·
noon has not been made.
Dr. Douglas Hunter, Meigs
County Coroner, reporsed that
while the body has not been positively Identified, the camper-type
trailer was apparendy the residence
of Mickey Oiler.
·
He said that the body was
burned beyond recognition and that
it was sent to the Franklin County
Morgue for an autopsy . Dental
records will probably be used to
make positive identification , Dr.
Huntenaid.
On the scene Sunday in addition
10 Dr. Hunter were Pomeroy Chief
of Police Oerald Rought and sever·

al of his officers, and a unit of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service. The State Fire Marshall
was called in 10 assist in the investigation.
·
Police reported that the fire
probably occurred late Saturday
night !I' early Sundly morning l)ut
because of the Isolated location
was not discovered until hours
later. The fire was reported to
, police • 4:41 p.IJI.'by a relative of
Mickey Oiler. It wasn't until tbe
fire was being inveatigated that the
body was found inlide. ·
Chief Rought said that tile
investigation is continuing not only
as ro the identification of the body
but as to the cause and circumstances of tile fire.
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Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones lw labeled the
project as "a million dollar building
owned by the county and paid for
by the state."
Meigs County Department pf '
Human Services Direcror Mich8el
L. Swisher stales that Jones, along
with Commissioners !)avid
Kbblentz and Mannin4 Roush,
"have spent mant hours m formulating the r,oject
· "This,' Swisher said, "is an
- Allensworth jumped from die excellent ClUIIIIple of ""hat coopelll·
vehicle, in front of the 76 Station in tion between local and state govNew Haven, accordina to the ernment can -bring about. The
Mason County Sheriffs Depan· building will not only be an asset to
menL The vehicle wu traveling the DHS, but to the community and
county '• well."
west along u.s. 33. .
The $669,887 geliCial contractAllensworth wu transported 10
ing
bid wu awarded to Woaam
,Veterau Memorial Hospital and
ConiUUCdon
of Pomeroy. We18111,
ACCEPIS CONTRIBUTION • Clllldrell ID
was 1llllr lllren 10 Orut Hospital.
accordin~
to
Swisher,
will
begin
Funeral arrangement• are
51J'IC•I wll ajoJ- DIW playlfOUDd equlpmeat, tllaak1 to· tile. Mela• County Bikers.
incomplele and will be IIIIIOUIICed constnacuon very soon. Advance
Electril:
was
awarded
the
$129,900
Thlll'lday e¥MIItYeral ohbe bikers met with
by the Foglesous Funeral Home.
~yracuse VDiap MaJor Eber Pickens lllld COUD•
Coatinued on page 8

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Former Mason woman dies .
after jumping froin moving car

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· Grourulbreaking ceremon~ for · The public is invited to join
the $1.2 million expansion of the state and local officiall in the cereMeigs County Department of mony, leading to the constrUCtion '
Human Services building in Mid- of the three-story colonial style
dleport will be held Tuesday at addition 10 the existing Race Street
2:30p.m.
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location.

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AEP to build scrubbers at
Gavin. ·
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·
Circleville, whose district
eDCOinpasses much ·or southeastem Ohio, said AEP's proposal
would not begin 10 replace the ,
mines.
"Quite frankly, I think it
adds insult to injury," Long
said. "It doesn't sound like a
positive thing for these miners."
Lower-than·expected bids
from low-sulfur coal suppliers
make it difficult for AEP to justify spending miUions of doUars
nn scrubbers to reduce sulfur
dioxide emiSsions.
The company said bids from ,
southern Appalachia and the
West were 30 percent below
estimates.
"We've got 10 comply. and
all the numbers are telhng u~
again and again that we have 10
do it in a way that will be very
hard on southeast Ohio," said
Gerald Maloney, another AEP
executive vice presidenL

Ground breaking ceremonies set
Tuesday for $1.2 million DHS facility

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the mine, which was developed
in 1972 to feed the power plant
William Lhota,.an 1\BP executive vice president, said there is
a pOssibility that ~ ~mpany
land in Athens, Meigs and Vinton counties could ·be made
available for industrial Jlllfks at a
minimil COSL
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But the offer is coqtingent
upon the company recovering
from ratepayers the $~30 million cost of closing the mine, ·
AEP said. The cost includes
investment in equipmeat, reclamati!m and employee coils.
A Public Utilities CGmmis·
sion of Ohio spokes~ said
there is no precedent.for an
Ohio utility C0111Jl811Y 10 receive
such a reimburacment.
"They're dangling a carmt 111
the same time they're talcing
away the siCak,'' Slid Rep. Jerry
Krupinski, D-Steubenville.
Krupinski is
· a bill ·
ta provide a pac:~,ncen­
tive~ designed to encourage

Guyan Street in Barboursville.
Authorities say one of the cars
crossed the cenlet line. .
When struek, Priyanath 's station
wagon spun into tile southbound
lane where it was hit by a car driven by Charles T. Pullins, 20, of 619
Page St., Middleport. Hill was a
~nger in Pullins' 1984 Buick. ·
Adams declined 10 identify who
was at fault in lhe accident until he
1alks with Chiles. He 10ld the HuntingiOn paper that alcohol and drugs

an

AEP may·offer land for
closing Meig~ mine

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Paid for by"'Togettier lor Chlldref!•
Cindy Frazier,Treu.,230 Shawnee lane
Gallipolis, 0. 45631

evacuation began on Friday night,
The American Rect Cross also
and was re-opened by the Ohio arrived on Saturday, ,and closed a
Department of Transportation on temporary shelter that had been set
Saturday morning.
up in the former Middlepon AqterODOT Engineer Don Johnson, ican Legion Hall in Middleport.
who was on the scene S aturda r, Displaced Hobson residents were
stated that the road would remam then transferred to quarters in :a
open as long as it was ;passable" motel in Mason County, W.Va.
due to the ~ck of an appropriate
Red Cross personnel are expecldetour. The road, according to ,ed 10 begin lhe ·process of finding
Byer; was fmally closed on Satur- more permanent housing for the
day night, and remained closed this Hobson residents ioday. · .
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morning.
Byer said this morning that he
. According to ODOT County . anticipated the arrival of officials
Superinteodent. James Proffitt, the from several state and federal agenofficial state detour leads traffic cies later today, for the purpose qf
through Rutland on· State Route detennining the cause of the rook
124, and then to Wilkesville and slides and the cracks in the groUJ!(I.
Gallipolis (near Holzer Medical
Johnson stated on Saturday that
Center) on State Route 160.
the lateral movement of the eanh
However, Proffitt does not indicated that the incident could
anticipate the road being closed for have been caused by the aftershock
long. He reponed this morning that from an Illinois tremor on Friday.
ODOT Deputy Director John Other residents are speCulating that
Dowler and ODOT Engineer Don pent-up water from an abandoned
Johnson will be on die sire again mine in the area could have caused
t~y to assess the area. In addithe damage.
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tion, equipment is being moved
Byer reported Monday morning
onto the site, where repairs .are that' officials ·will be looking into
expected to get underway someContinued on page 8
time today.

New Haven woman
killed in
.
3-car accident in Cabell County
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Low tonight in rnid-40s. .·
Party cloudy. Tuesday, •
partly sunny.

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dl memben to pr111at a dMck ror $1,1100. Jo
llrye, left, OD bellalf Of tile dab, prtleDbl t•e :
elleck to Mayor Plckeu aacl Jt. HID, coac:n
•ember. Tbe 1110DtJ ._ railed by tile IIIIIen ..
their sixth IDDUal loy l'llll,

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�:Commentary

Pomeroy-MicldlePOft, Ohio
MondaY. May. 6, 1881

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The Daily

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Sen~inel

111 Cour&amp; street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher ·
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CHARLJ!:NE HOEFLICH
. General Mauger

PAT WHITEHEAD
· Assistant Publlsher/Conlraller
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A ME MBER o! The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and Ute American Newspaper Publis hers Association .
LE,TTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No 1\DSlgped letters will be pub. llshed. Letters should be In gOod taste, addressing Issues·, notpersonall-

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_Taft may run; DeWine
:·::to stay put next year
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By R()BERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Republican Secretary of State Robert Taft II has
thought about running for U.S. Senate next year despite the fact he is only
four months into a term that does not expire until January-199S.
But newly elected LL Gov, Michael De,Wine, also mentioned as a pos' sible challenger to Democratic Sen. John Glenn, has removed himself
" ·from consideration.
PoHtical Analysis

"Right now ... I am really enjoying the challenge of this job," Taft

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WASHINGTON - It isn't easy
to be a point of light thcsc days.
More and more Americans are
reluctant to .volunreer their time or
talents for a 'ood cause because
they are afra1d of being sued if
something goes wrong.
In Wyoming, the state legislature had to pass a law to atop cow. boys from suin~ volunteer rodeo
clowns for failing to adequately
distract the bulls.
In New Jersey, a children's
baseball coach was sued by the
family of an outfrelder whQ was hit
in the eye by a fly ball. 'Lawyers for.
the family argued that the boy was
a natural shortstop and that the
coach had been negligent in putting
him in the outfield. ·
In Califorilia, a mountain rescue
volunteer was sued by a climber he
rescued. The climber sustained
ijlinal injuries in a 90-foot fall and
then claimed that lhe "recltless and
negligent" rescue techniques
caused him to become a
quadriplegic.
It matters not who wins these
suits. Most of them never make it
to a trial, except on "L.A. Law."
They are settled out of court for
undisclosed sums by jittery insurance companies that would rather
pay for a settlement than pay for an
expensive trial that they might lose
anyway.
It doesn :t even !DBtter who is
right, as long as the lawyers get
their cut. And therein lies a big
chunk !Jf the problem. The Associ-

atlon of Trial Lawyers Or America
is one of the IIIDiit generous polilical contributors in Wasbinglllll and
that almost guarantees that 111y legiSiation to curb the lawsuit-happy
trend in America never mates it
out of Congress.
·
One victim of the stn)ng lawyer
lobby is a bill to protect volunteers
rrom being sued ·for their good
deeds. One out of two Americans is
a volunteer. At a time when the
Busb administration is pushing for
more Americans to give of theil'
time and talents, lawsuits are
putting volunteers at risk. One poll
found that one out of every five
business people·is afraid to volunreer for fear of being sued.
· Rep. John Porter, R-DI., tried to
help those nervous poiniS of light
with. a bill he called the Volunleer
Protection Act. It would have held
organizations responsible for the
actions of their volunteers, but the
volunteers themselves couldn't
have been sued. The bill has been
bottled up in committee for five
years and may never reach the floor
beCause the Association of Trial
. Lawyers doesn'tlike it.
A similar IIIC8SUI'C propo5!ld last
year by Sen. MilCh McConnell, RKy., was defea!M.
·
Time and time a~ain. the trial
bar crushes legislauon it doesn't
like with brilliant political maneu·
vers and handsome campaign conbibutions. The association, with a
membership of 65,000 at~ys;
most of whom represent plaintiffs,

·. : said. "I have no plans to ruri for the Senate."

' ·' .But he added, "I don't want to be totally ruled.out"
" • DeWine said Friday that he is "not running for anything in 1992. I
• • have a big job with a big agenda.''
State Republican Chainnan Roben Bennett says Glenn .1- as a result of
. . old unpaid Clllllpaign debiS and some conflict of interest allegations · ; -· will be vulnerable next year if he seeks a fourth term.
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: : : . Bennett has been keeping a list of possible challengers that included
:- :. PeWine and others, but not Taft
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-: ·: Taft apparently updated the chairman, who now says that Taft should
;. not be ruled out
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"I haven't talked to Bob (Bennett) for a while. But when I campaign, I
• go all out," said DeWine. "If I planned on ruoning for the Senate, I'd
; ; : have to be out campaigning right now,''
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DeWine and Taft ran for what many see as lacltluster offices last year
• , • to help unify ~ Republican ticket. Each aborted long-plamed campaigns
: : ~. for ~:~ovemor, yielding to George Voinovich who went on to win the top

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iF THe SoVieT tJt-liotJ PULLS
iTSeLF ioGe.iHeR, GeRMaNY
$PI.iTs aGaitJ, THe WaR'saw
Pac;T Re-~iTe~, THe. BeRLIN

ADVANCED TACTICAL .Fl

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shouldn't judge the community or
the people. As the old sayint goes
"You can't judge a book y its
coveru.
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I have found this conununity as
good as any I have ever Hved in. I
·: r e d 10 say I im a pastor in
and what makes it an even
bigger blessing is to know that
these people are my friends.
Rev. Wm. D. Justis
Fust Chultb of the Nawene
Ponland, OH 45770

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iMPRo'/e, We'Re GoiNG
NeeP THiS. P'Lat-~e.

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President Bush has now
unveiled the plan for refonnation
of the Amer1can school system
whereby he hopes.to redeem his
pledge to become known 10 history
as "the education president." The
new education secretary, Lamar
AJexander; has appeared on every
talk show in Washington as the
point man for the Busb policy. Sen·
ate Democratic leader George
Mitchell and House Democratic ·
leader Richard Ge~Jhardt have
responded by welcomm~ what they
describe as Mr. Bush s belated
interest in the problem of education, but have mournfully condemned his plan as both too little
and too late.
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Critics compare the reading
ability and othe'r skilfa of the average American high school or college graduate with those of (say)
Japanese or Gennan studeniS of the
same age, and point grimly to the
relatively poor American performance. How can America possibly
· compete with such countries in
future years, they demand, if our
workers are practically unable to
read or write, let alone do simple

arithmetic?
(after it's !liken its own share) to ·
That is a good question and it the teachers, who are represented
bolhers a lot of people. Most of all, p~imarily by: another go~lla only
it bothers parents. As a result, the _ sh&amp;~:Jtly smaller: the Amen~ Fedissue of education has a permanent- erauon of Teachers. Anythmg left
ly powerful head of steam, as every' over ... but forget it. Practically
pofitician learns at his county lead- nothing is left over.
er's knee.
ApproP.riations for "our
From its very outset, this nation schoolchildren," then, or "our
has believed that, by guaranteeing schools," or "improving educaevery youngster a free education up lion," go largely into the pockets of
to some specified level, it was the educational bureaucrats and the
making oppottunity equal and ·public school teachers. The schools
democracy possible. That is why themselves continue to suffer.
the United States today spends a
~of course, is why the per·
11111er propMion of its hu1:1e gross fectly sensible JI'OI)OS8I to give par1!8lional product on educauon than eniS vouchers itnd let them choose
Germany, France, Brbain or Japan. • the school they want to send their
Why, then, is the performance of children to terrifies the NEA and
ountudents so poor?
AFT the wav a crucifix terrifies
One principal reason is that Dracula: They know very well that
between the public treasury and no sensible parent would send a '
America's schoolchildren stands a child to one of th·e snake pits
big, hairy, 800-pound gorilla called which, in our major cities public
the National Education Associa- schools have so widely become.
tion. Money intended 10 help There WOuld then be a lot fewer
schoo.children is paid over, not to jobs, let alone lllises, for teachers.
the children, but to the vast educa·
tiona!. bureaucracy dominated by
And that menuon of "snake
the NEA. This bureaucracy, in tum, piiS" brings us to the second princisluices what is left of the money pal problem in American educa-

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. CONGRATULA
Tile ledl' Eric Dmt (r!pt) II tGIIIIIl•
uleted . , dllrd bale COidl s- Ptrlozzo ....
tbe pllt-:wia·
niDI two-nan homer Ia the elglltll lanlnl of Suadl1 1 pre aplut
the visiting St. Louis Cardinals, wbldl the Redlwoa ,._2, (AP) , .

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"LISTEN, comrMiel 'TNy're chanting 'RE·
SIGN' ,.. 'RE-8/GN. ' RtNI(Jn up for t/HJ
prtJiidllncyl"
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State Budget iu Cross Roads
Afler several wedcs of discussion,
it seems that Ohio's two year $28
billion budget bill will soon be
making it's way out of the Ohio
House of Representatives and will
be8in it's hearings in the Ohio Senate IICilt week.
As a member of the Senate
Finance Committee and as a member of the .General Government
Sub-Committee, My colleaaues
and I will begin to review this document, hopefully reaching a con·
sens~ ~ment by the July 1st
ConsUtuUonai cleadllne. However ·
with a potential deficit, the tast mi
the priorities that lay beftR us wW

•

be great
~ith worthwhile projects like
Opuoas for Elders,which provide
in home services for our elderly,
the Civilian Conservalion Corp,
which assist our local govemmeniS
in Southern Ohio, and Career Education, which provides studeniS
With opportumties to plan thoir
future, being laid upon the chopping block, itil sure 10 be a heated
8ncl interestin' discu ..ion of the
stale'S fiscal Jnorities.
The Ohio House of Representatives has attempted 10 restore some
of the c1111 and rarranse the Executive Budget priorities lo meet
many of the state's unfunded

needs. Last week the House had
announced that .SSOO million in
addilional state revenues had been
located and it was hoped that these
d!)llars could offset the proposed
budget CUIS.
However, last week the non-partisan Legislative Budget Office told
the House Finance Committee that
the Oovenaor'1 proposal could be;
an addldolial $580 million out·of
•balance if some of the Governor's
· key ISIUIIlpti.ons are wrong, includ·
ing tbe proposal aimed at restruc·
turing Ohio's General AssiStance
program. If this restructure takes
more .than a 12 month period· to

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lion. No other' ~:f! nation in the ~
free world unde
to educate iiS ~
entire population through high ·'
school, let alone provide it with a::
free college education, without:
sorting out, by appropriate tests:
those who can benefit from such an :
educalion and those who can't. •
Only America, in its egalitarian :
frenzy, insists that evc:rym¥1 can be ~
educated effectively 10 such levels. •
The result is that we keep millions •
of youngsters in schoOl or college •
(and hence off the labor market) "
long after they have stopped learn·
ing anythins • a practice called
"warehousing," much favored by
labor unions.
&lt;
· Education, in short; is a fine
thing. But forcing everybody to
stay in school through 12 grades,
and encouraging them to try for
four more, and then wondering
why lhe average result is ~ com- .
pctenl than a Japanese with equiva- ·
lent uaining, is an exercise in SID·
pidity.

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Renee Peck, the sophomore
trek athlete fltlm Baltimore, Obio
and qualifil:r for tbe NAJA Nation·
al Track Tournament, won first
place for the University of Rio
Otande women's 1eiUil in the 3000
meier nm Saturday at die TwiJiPt
Invitltional a MMihall Univenity.
Peck bested five other alhletes
to win with a time of 10:08.6,

The Daily Sentinel

al-ott..-.

CUIPIJfMtl)
A llh-11._
oil• loe.
Pv..llbod ..-y
Mo~
t....... rrtday, Ill cawt II .. ,..
- · Olllo. lly tilt Olllo VIII., l'llbUIIllftl CompOnyfl!luHtm..... Joe..
Pwt•ror. Olilo t!I'IW. I'll. 9ft.tJN. a.
...,. elua pilotqe

JNild

at l'ollle\'0)',

Ohio.
Momlifr: , . . ~-··.. l'rllo. ...
land
Dolly Praa Aaao&lt;tatlllli and tlif
Olllo N-.r:.='•U•- Nat-1
Mwrttllii&amp;
Nowopa,..-

-Sal... 'ISJtallw,
Tlllnl AVOII..,

N&lt;w Yorlt, N.., Yorlt 10017,

POII'MASTEII:
·
-Court
........
IO -n. DallY - , Ill
II.,
CJiiiD.,.,
.

Aw•••·

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ICIICUPIION IIA'I'IB

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One WHit ....... ............ , ............., .JUO
One

occur, that alone would create a
$165 miUion deficit in thiJ docu·
menL
·
Whatever the ouiCorne, it will be
tlie ICSpOilSibility of the Ohio Gen- ..
craJ Assembly to balance the Sllte
governments commitment to
Ohioans versus the current fiScal
situation of this state budget.
As always, please feel free
call or write me, Stilll Senaror Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or commenrs about these
or any other ilsues. My number is
(614}466-8156, and my llddrea is
the Statehouse, Columbua Ohio,
43215.
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off=aco•r.c.
:a. ..

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Meigs girls
edge Vinton
County 10-9
.

The Meiga Marauder scored
fiWI TUI1I in the lbtdJ Inning to tum
ITOUDd a 9-5 defiCit and ~ ,
ihe vilitlnf ViniOD CouMy ;;.

d:

lead with the Mataaden

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Peck, Murphy place first ~=~=a-~~
baainc:
for Rio at Marshall meet ~=:'u~=~~n~

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William A. Rusher..
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Pittsburah tops Boston 4-1
de.,...
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Bureaucracy stifles U. S. education

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One Monlb ........... .... ,.......... :......16.15

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uunior.

.·.Davis'
eighth-inning
homer
.
~~5!a~ rtt5A~£
•
R
d
•
c
d
. gives e S 4•.2 ·WID over . '._ar S c.."!::rn:~~:::::;a~ ~=:.~~C:.~

State budget at crossroads __se_n._Ja_n_M,_'chae_lLo_n..;_g

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people love their community and
Dear Editor:
hm a pastor in Portland, OR I they care about each other and the
am serving as pastor of the First c::m of the school closing it
e everyones problem.
Church of the ~ne there.
I have heard people talk about
In the year and a half that I have
been there I have found the people Ponland and run the ~le down,
:In the PllrUand area are a kind and which I don't think 1s fair to the

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Portland is.a nice place to live

;help.
y have always got a smile
:ilr a wave to greet When we
su.ttd -the Church,
people were
V(Z'f nice 10 us when we needed a
tool, ladder, or even some water,·
thewwere rigbt there to help.
hen the school board was
tallting about closing our school the
people rallied 1 0 = and fought
10 keep it open. HY? You say its
because they have c~ildren in the
school. Yes, that is part of it, but I
feel the main reason is because the

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WaLL i$ Re.son:r aND

~~~S~i2N WeaPoNS SuD~J.lLY

-A STEAl. AT $95 81u!HTE'R

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two--

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•,. ·lovin.y,:ople always willing to community or the people. One

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Letters to the editor ·

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. ICCODd. The Redmen fired hack
with I IIIII in the IWfd and ICored
two 11101e in the fourth to tie 3-3,
1M the Pic I I neaed an unearned
Nil ill the fowth.
Thinp Rllllined ll8tic until the
IICvenlh when Mlrcwn '1 home run
apin knoaed the acore and forced
the pme in an extra inning. The ·
Rechlen then ICOred in the eighth
1114 Carroll neaed his IICWJJth ave
of the when he alelllled in
for Brad Roser (freihman,
DeJaWare), who wu credited with
die win 10 boolt his reccnl to 7....
Rio Gnnde had 11 hits and a
pair of enon and the holts JeCOnl. .
• 1M hill and a sinale error..Eric
Md Me (frellman, Columbus) led
tile way for Rio Grande by con·
- - 011 all tlaee of his at·baiS,
nne loa Gibtoll
Chesa·
·
BIG
HITTI!:R
Darrell Marcam, pitcher
&amp;~
aad
lllttla~
oa
SattardaJ
lletped
tile
piiD)
wu
two
for
five.
•
oa to YktGrla fl,._:l • S-4 cmr MalaiJd dalpated 1a1tter for tbe Unlnnll1 of Rio
Aady Bertbiae was three for
oae' ill extra laaillp, xOiat Rio Gra... top
Grude "-biD·ae., swbqs at a plkll froll a
lkree
for Malone and Steve Buso
Httl for , .. Dlltrkt 22 ..... _ wlllcll - Wlbaiqtoll lllli'ler durlq ~e Re'dale•'• llome
.~-...
well OM for tllree. Troy ThonJ.psOn
CGIItelt wldl tile Qualten oa Ma1 l. Mar-em'•
. ~ Weda1adtJ at lllo Graadellld at Olllo
lla4 tile ton from the pitcher's ·
~alta tltJ.
.
mound.
Pl.,eft ScHdule - The playolhdledulc hu Wallh and IJibMia
op.aiq tht tounWDellt at Stanley
eact • JIM ''p.
l.fbanon) led the Itedlln llit L. i - Fllkl at 10 a.m. Wednes·
day. '1'111 winner meets Rio Grande
at 1 p.m. Wednesday for fame 2.
.
will a dlfficlllt do 'k"* ova lllree for five and Mart Sa.bly Field B for the playoffs will be at
Ollio Uaiversity, where Jame 3
CINCINNATI (AP) -This is the one who. makes divinJ catches rallying the RediiO a 4-2 victory Ma1011e," OJIIsby c:o~~neaMd. Wlllt two for fi'te.
over
the
SL
Louis
Cardinali.
He
"They
llllu'bilcld
a
a•IDII•IIII"It
was
one
hell
df
a
J&amp;me,"
matches Ohio Donlinican ·against
the Eric Davis the Cincinnati Reds to end ralliel, the one who deUverJ
Fmdlay
at 10 a.m. Wedneldly. The
made
divin&amp;
catehu
with
ruaners
tude,
but
it
will
take
u
eqallly
Oglesby
reflected.
"Marcum
need - the one who runs down ciUicll home runs to win games.
winner
opposes Mount Vernon
Davis did all m.t SUilday while on base in the flflt anchevuth excellent effort for us 10 Jet a pitdled a JNil .-e aadlllnlck out
balls in .the gap to take. away hits,
Nazarene
at 1 p.m. Wednelday at
inainp and hit a two-rU11 hamer •
chaace at winninJ til• cllampi· 14 blain- 10 i1nia ."
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for
same
4. The winaer of
.pitt of a four-rua tally in tile clahth
Olllblp bec'Usc an or·tiJe ~ee in
Maio. toll ••• ~in
OlfLecSmidl.
the playoffs will ba evenly tbtlliJII•IOfii*IWO.Illlliathe p1110 3 piayl the winner of pme 4
"It .- Ida allow today," Ctrdi·
fidt '""""
. • and 1114 another in till at 1 p.m. 11Jailday at Rio Onnde.
nala lftlllltlr Joe Tone aid. ''He
...........
1'lle winninJ lllllll will continue
competitiml until the,..,, pioullip
pme. Ill for 3 p.m. FDdaY • Rio
o..dt.lf noee y, aa 11th pme
It wu the ftnt dme Ia a 10111
PI'MUUlOH (AP) ,;_ Dllplr- • eel es, sccnd 011 a lntb~ IIJd will lit played at Rio Grande at
time thai tile'ft8ldtr COIIId ate lima call for
m•· ' - w • 0.. J..mp cridcal aooa s-da)', May 11.
·
show olf.
IIIIU, 10 tJie P'ltllbwib l'elpilll ~~,!"!l~t,~dbyy,
Devil pullo4 hil left llalllllt'iniJ not only beat the 8011011 Braina, - rr- •~•Y
wltile nmninl out, Jl'll w Apru ·t~~ey boll tllelll up. · _
J11!11i111
Jralnl' Ilia aua a_ ~Y
,I'HI~(, JA; If Y LIN I MA
19 and made one 1111t ill the next
Paced with pedlapl tile bigelt !Yidl injwia
·
l 11 1 1\
two weeki. Reds mana1er Lou · win-or-die ptM iD 111a ftlncllile's
·. "~ WOR:t be •. sweep, not
Piniella laid he·didn't want Davis 24-yoar hiatory, the PenJuiaa ~~IIUll
IIIUCII
playinJ unlil he wu fully recov· turaed 10 a weapoa they've
IJIIII
u. .
.... OIIIIT - ·
....... \' ___J
en:d and~ to do everylhinJ he's been tnown to employ: their
• time ~Ylnl injuria u ~ did
knowi1 fat
.
. iea.
~nURJ ~liled oppOitUillllel II
Davis tdun*' 10 the lineup Sat·
•'They outplay,.ed us atld they PilllburJII Pllellder TOll Bltras·
unlay, siql• home aru01nd stoic . outllit ua," defearemen Bob 10 ~,:~=-play·
Ia the Redl' 3-1 YiciOy. Sweaney llid aftlt ...._P'I ,._1
......, n d
He wu •
jcwJ Sunday, thwltt- · victory Suday aiJIII aUCe4 the
~'1;..:.::
inJ
the Cardinali with l1iJ ~ · BruiRI' lead 10 1·1 II tiM Walel
ciMck,! drftu WI~
.
befoN . . . . Smith's invincibilil.y. Coall ......_
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· CardiDIIi ltlrfM' 1- Deleon
Pill I liP'• lltw victorlelowr U1f
• ......, ..--......,
tDOt 1 1-0 lad and 1 lilt• lllMr IOifDI 11...,. II IN 111" ol'llll ,oftu alll.dowiCI ~wieax in the
1111 etpdl. willa 11e pw • a ~lid from till tiCIIDous often· first two pntl 111 loatoll, w.u
two-ont triple 10 lilly Hatcher. live 1k1J1a of~ plaJer .-c1 )farlo ineffective with a pulled po1n.
Slllitll, who 1111 COftiJWltid 111 i1lae llAma, Mid lirtl1 ._ 1111 ,_ Craig J~nnhey .f~11 ottotaled_!l x
of Ida save oppottwddes this Ill· :pins outllit tllo-Btuina. Until'Dow. po 1nts m ~ e 1r1 1 wo aa-.. 1 ,
10111nd his~ IS ovcnll,·CIIIIe 011 · ; LeillieJIX, fto lw' three 1oals ' played spanngly hecaiiiiC of deby·
to race 1..-y Latldn.
·
'and two asalita In the last two dnlioo .
The ahortsiOp doubled 10 riJht
. I
, . .
to 1C0R1 Hatl:her, inct O.,Vjs bft I . .---~------~~--.--..------~--~----.,
(See NL OD Pqe 4)
"Aayoae caa wia on a Jivu
day, tlllt'1llow H
ed it iJ." tht
C01cb llli4 or the plaJolf opposi·
lim. '1t's the 1111111..-ly relied
~
• tOties
I've aeen ia ~':' yRrs of
I pur 0 YIC
Malane on tht PW liM' field
- - . ....,
iaC...
The opener or Saturday's twin
'l'lle Relben, 27-14 ovaallllld
bill IIW the letlllai· and Pioneers
17-!I in die diltrict, willllOII the · defelld apiast _ . other for five
diaict DlaYOifl betii · Wedael
ianillp before litiJer team·Jot on
Tlia
cbbl;i~
l
O
Ur:
tht ICOI'8bol!nL 'l1lat pivllep _ ,
day
am011t will fRtun: the top six 10 tbe ~ ,.. Malone tied in
ill tht dlilriet, Wbidl jw:lgde, tbe sixth.
frolll seo"" piKe to liKtb, Mount
Unable 10 1111p the deMJock by
Veraon Nuarent (16--6), Walsll the end of tile aeveatll, die pme
(17·7), Pindl9 (14·6), Ohio contiMecl for
Rtra
DM it" an (US·7) Mid \1dllllll (13· illlliap until tile to, of the 10tll
11). ·
· .
wbeli the Jtldmea flroke out for
Wallll will J11!f UJWa at Sian- three 111111. Malolll ..-wared widl
ley L. Evaaa P1eld at 10 r.m. one of its own in dllbcltlo- of tile
Wedlluday for 1111 ftnt pme of iDainJ, but failed to Illite any fur·
tlleplavnffs. The winntr of tl!at Iller hntray. ·
niac-ianinJ contelt meets llio
Dlnd1 Mlmlm (IICIIior, Halllil·
l
...... lli • "
Olinde at lp•. W Iindt~
1011 pitA:IIed an ..;...t- '*'or 7"
~ COICII Da"
by 2/3 iniJiDJI aad Cllad Carroll
..... ..........1 ...
wina (sopbomon:, CbillicodJe) atepped
. '" I1Yf:l M-. ud plawn• ill die in for die ..V..'IJJilid ca-'e
seed "wry ~~ illJi&amp;llt 1M ... of tlMir llia..mt, OM 31111

;:, 'J:,*:t': ·

baS the·ninth largest political action text of studying it.
, committee in WashillgiO!l and hires .
Money ISn't a bad taCtic either. •
two of the most powerfUl lobbying In the 1989-90 election cycle,
firms to champion iiS causes.
, according to the Federal Election
. .Since many trial lawyers make Commission, the Association of•
their money off of victims of vari- Trial Lawyers contributed more
ousliCCideniS, their goal is to parry then $1.5 million to candid;~les.
anydling that limits lawsuiiS. While And that was only the money that
their mission of protecting the came with the association's name
righiS of the injured is noble and on ii. Individual trial lawyers also
necessary, there is a certain amount donate huge sums.
of pocketbook protecting going on
Goi-don MacDougall, executive
too.
director of the National Coalition
Whenever legislation crops up for Volunteer Protection, analyzed
that .the trial htwyera don't like, campaign conbibutions and voting
they rally their troops to lobby patterns to figure out what hapinfluential members of Congress. pened to Sen. McCoiUICII' s meaProduct liability reforms don 'I . sure to limit suits against volunreach lhe floor in the House·or the teers. In the election cycle before
Senate. The same g~ for an inrcr- the bill came up, the trial lawyers
national airline treaty that has been 'had given SS82.000 to the 6S senalanguishing in the Senate for eight tors· who voted against the
years. That aeaty would ~e the. McConnell amendment The .assoway international airline passen- ciation gave less !han $40,000 total
gers are compensated when they 10 32 senators who vo1cd for the
are victims of a crash, but it will McConnell amendment: .
never pass.
The trial lawyers can afford to
Congressional sources told our be generous to protect their ipter~
associate MeHnda Maas that delay ests and those of their clients.~
is the most effective lo6bying tactic· Leste'r Brickman, a professor·at the•
of the trial lawyers. It worts well Caidow School of Law at Yeshiva '
when the members of Congress University in New YOlk, says that ·
who are sympathetic to · the plaintiffs' lawyers earn a total of!
lswyers' causes also happen to be . $13 billion a year on personal~
chairmen of powerful committees. injury la,w,uits. The top personal~
The chairman can send a bill into injury lawyers can make $1,SOO an~
the Bennudll Triangle on the I&gt;re· hour.
~

· ·; •~ . DeWine, of Cedarville iii southwest Ohio, surrendered a safe seat in
; . ;" congress to give balance to the fonner Cleveland mayor's ticket.
•: · • He said at the time he really wanted· the No.2 job, although an appar: ;_· :ently bored Voinovich resigl!ed the same post in 1979 to run for mayor.
.::: ·· ~Wine said Voinovich .has given him responsibilities and challenges
•, · jle.enjoys.
·
.:
: ; ' • "I have son1e departrileniS thatreport to me," he silid.
:.
Taft ~dgingly dropped out of the ,1990 governor's race after saying
·· · ·be was mit 10 stay. The·party rewarded him with fmancial bacldng for a
slick media campaign that uDSe!lted two-term Democrilt Sherrpd Brown.
• ·.- Taft, althouj!D~saying he likes his job, may be in a position that fonner
:
U.S. Sen. WilliaJii Saxbe once cautioned against when he rejeCted a GOP
call to run for governor..
::
"I'd enjoy running, but not serving," said Saxbe, who retired after a
.· career that also inc.luded stiniS as U.S. and Ohio attorney general.

.....

11 toot a 17-llit Mlll:k aad un
i111111a 10 do it, bat dll UnMnity
or ll1o Graau ba..ball team
seed 10
· Dl.-tct 22

Jack Aiulerson and Dale Van Alta

: . : ., pffice,

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Volunteerism in ·U. S. hampered

P11g1 3

Malone falls in two to Redmen;
Rio Grande will host playoffs,

Pige 2-TheDtlly S.ntlnel
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ytte o.lly Sentinel

,._:or Mlddlepart, OhiO

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liNGLE COPY
l'lllc&amp;

Deily ................................... 25 ~·lo
'0

- b e rt not dtoii'IIIJ to pay tbt-·
rtll' ~y romlt Ia - - dlroet to

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n.e ~ - - oa a a, lor 12 m•tb

bull. Criidlt wllbtst- ........
No

.,....,lpt_ by moll

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

•voila!"·

Ia
..........ft ..
perm~

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c...IJ aJ.II
•13 WHitl
w-...................................
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bec. . . ofllin.
!
The MIIWhn dlcl the 1*11' at
ond place Heidi ADen of VirJinia three -n. play Ns 1qt, t1u1 the
Tech (10:183). Both die IDWI'IInd . La4y ~ lcoted faar 11111 in
wbllltll's teams competed aaain• the
.,
fr-_, IIIII exll" H
athletes from Marshall, ·Virginia the:.';, 9-3
fifth.
Tech, West Virginia University, Maraudell ..ud ill comrh k
Glenville S-. Betel. BedlltJy.ud tile Mil i1111i111 widJ two IIIII - '
Willnin8tOD.
.
die ftvt II dll lixlll iiiJIII • win
In oilier women'a events, Rio tile iUna- Mlillllad drrw IIIII in
G.r ande's Vonda Stiles (senior, the biJiiltth fnn':t.a::t:i•ton
Shawnee) was fourth in the long County helpecl tht
.
cauae
jump at 16 feet, two inches, and widl three emn.
placed fourth in the niple jump at
· Tara Gerlach wu the Winning
33 feet, 2-1/2 inches.
~r for the Matauders, Tricia
Debbie Gray (sophomore,
had the billlll for Mlip wilb
McConnellville) wu ftflb ia the two _ . aid a daalllo. Mllp II
1!100 • !1:47.1, wblllllllnY Coab now l:I:-7 o¥Md 1111 10.5 IIi die
(MIIiot', Sllllbury) Willlftll in die TVC. VlntoR-ID lUaadlO.
q,1e jallljla 3ffoet. 3-~ lnehel. 4.
Tim Murphy, a jaaior from Score hJ laaiap · ·
ZallcsviUe, led Ills :rrzm•n on ViniDII Co. 111 4.20 0- 9-9--6
lbe mea's squd 111\*.!DIIInt in Meigs
201 OlSx-lG-1-5
the bigb jump at 81. f..t. eiaht
wP-Gtdld
it ch1, twO incbelmcn!llan cbal·
LP-Conway
lenf'l'.! Aclrlll Lawreace of Vir·
JiDII Tecb and Gle~~ville State's
Larry Shimmel. Mwpby allo
second in die 100
hurdle•
Meip
(l~.liiCOI'dl).
A total of 120 binli llavl been
Rio Ofude's me~~'s 1600 ltlay . killed in Meip Coullty Iince the
team ftniah.. fourth 1t 3:2tL Indi- bellnninl of Wild llltby _ . •
viduall;r, Travis Rambo tiunior, April 22, accordin1 10 a repon
Columbllllt) wu aecond allot from Keith Wood. ODNlt Divilion
pu1, 44 feet, 11·112 inchu, founll
of WilcDife officer lbr Melp Coanin die hUimer at 134 feet, nine ty.
incllel, ,.ad lixtiJ in tile dilcUa at
The llliby' hllldq • 011 - 139 feet, • incll.
tinua tiJI'OuJ• Miy 11, witll
Alao placlag for the ReclineD buaterl btinl restricted to one.
were Aaro• Griffin (freahillu, bllrdld l*lllcr 1111111 • Cllact·
W'"aiOn),IIIWtll in die lOO 111W . Ia of aU birU ltlllt be wade at
at 11.2 aecondl, and third ill tho ·BIIJIIl's at 0
by 1 p.m. oa lilt
200, 21.2 II'COIIdl; Man: Micllipl ell)' of 1111 btr&lt; I II, Wood..,....._
~ KeUirilll), lbudll ia tht
H..-. . ..reqaiNd • lll¥e I
blme~et, t:SB. 7; rild Joel S!M*.« ll8by hlllltbll peimtt or mUll be
(senior, Gallipolis), fiftll m the the land owner on which die turkey
ja~. 1S41xt, tine iac111a.
II'* 111111, WGOd 1114 1111 IIJIOil·

TOUJhly .10 IICOIIds filler than ICC-

i:".;

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Hunters capture 120
toms in
County

••ter

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MIIOII 11M* 01
May 11 at the Billy Hays lnYita·
lional in BloomlnJton,
'

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ATTENTION

AREA HISH SCHOOL SRADUATES
. OF 1991
J

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·On Friday, May 17, The Daily Sentinel
will h·ave a special edition with
photographs of high school seniors
graduating ~his year.
Now through Monday; May 13 Drop
Your Photo Off At The .Daily Sentinel To
Be Included' In This Special Edition, at no
,
charge.
(Att1ch your N•me, High School. 1nd Pl,.ntl N•m• to Photo.)

**********

ANY PIOFESSIONAL, IUSINESS, INDIV.Al 01 CIVIC
OIGAtiUnoNS WHO WOIID ua YO HAVE AN
IN IllS SPECIAL EDmON

PLEASE CALL 992·2156.
Ask for Brian or Dave

,

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�··-- --· . .
Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

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'Pomeroy-Middleport, ~hlo

-

Monday, May 6, 1991

Monday, May 6,1991

· -·~ndians hammer A's 15-6 in series' second blowout Sunday
By Tbe Alsol:.ted Press
: It WISII't a good day to be a Cy Young Award winner.
.
Bob Welch~ 27-6 lasl seam, had one rJ the worst swts of his career
.Sunday as Oeveland crushed Oakland for lhe second straigh( game. .
'
Aftl:c belling the A's 2().6 on Saturday, the indians came back for a
" 15-6 rout Sunday 8l tbe Ooktlllll Coliseum.
.
•· Welcb gave up 13 bits and a career-high 11 runs in four and two-third
- innings. He loslto Cleveland for tbe first time in 10 career decisions.
"It's frusll'aling," A's pitching CQ!!Ch Dave Duncan said. " You don't
•· like it but it happens. They hit everything. We lhrcw everything we had,
111111 they bit everything we had."
·
The 15 runs tbe Indians put up behind winner Greg Swihdell (1-3)
. were six more than they scored in all over his five previous swts this sea-

.

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Over in the National League, 1990 Cy Young winner Doug Drabek
• dropped to 1·5 as Pi~ lost 6-4. Drabek was 22-6 last year.
Elsewhere in the AL it was Detroit 8, Texas 7; Toronto 3, Kansas City
·o; Boston 9, Chicago·I; California 6, Baltimore 4; ~ta S, Milwaukee 2 in 10 innings; and Seattle 5, New York 4 in a 16-inning !light game.
The 15 runs the Indians put up behind winner Greg Swindell (1·3)
· were six more than they scored in all over his fjve previous swts this sea-

··

.
eight home runs and is lied with Oakland's Dave Henderson far the AL
lead.
.
Texas took a 1-0 lead in the second on Ruben Sier,a'" sixtb bomer, but
the Tigers sent 10 billers to the plate in the bottom of the inning and
scored five runs off Kevin Brown (2-2).
Walt Terrell (1-3) pitched five and one-third inn~ for the victory.
Red s.. !1, Wlllte Sox 1 - Kevin Romine hit his first ~ leque
grand slam, leading Matt Young (1-1) and Boston over Chicago at
Comiskey Plitt and a sweep or the three-game series.
Romine hit his grand slam off Alex Fernandez (2-3) in tbe second
inning.
'
AJI&amp;elli 6, Orlolel4 - Jim Abbou survived an early lhree-nm delicit
as Gary Gacui ~ a six-nm rally in the fourth inning with a three-run
homer to lead California past visiting Baltimore..

In the NBA playoffs Sunday,

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•
NL action

s ·

Autopsy notes
from dead
racer awaited

:w

:Cine

.

ishcd 17 for 61 from the field, 27.9

deciding playoff games:
"Lany was l!bsolutely spectaeu·
Jar, amazin~. stupendous," Ford
said."I dido t know if LaiTy would
be back after the half until I beard
the crowd. He is truly amazing and

percent.

....

M~JiC Johnson had 21 points,
17 asSISts and 10 rebounds for the
Lalc:ers against Golden State, which ·
couldn't overcome the loss of
Mullin, who averaged 25.7 .points
this season.
·
•
"I didn't know I wasn't going
to play in this ga111e until the
shootaround before tho game,"
MuUin said. "Bllt I feel cOnfident
about Wcdtasday night.'' ·

~.··

Detroit held the Hawb to 26
percent shooting in the first half,
building a 30· 15 lead late in the
first quarter and a S9-4~ margin at
halftime. Atlanta never threatened
in the ICC6nd half as its starters fin-

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North GalUa hands Southern
11-4 softball defeat Friday

MAKING A POINT • A teenaaer· dies every lD•seoonds In
Amerlat from an akobol·re•tect acddent, and Meigs High School
students broughl that point home on Friday. Z5 studen1s and one

out five and walk nine.
North~~ hitters were Maureen
Kelley"and Angie Saunders (both
2-4), Kadly Hager (1-2), Dee Dee
Dobbi11s, Spence and Cherie
Weaver (alll-4). Southern's bitters
were Counts, McCoy and Winebrenner (all1-~). tuid Papc {I 4).
North Gallia, 3-S. is scheduled
to host Kyger Creek today at Bid·
wcD-Parlllr in the first round of the
Bidwell seclionallllllrUDent
Score by lulap
North Olllia l0l106 0-11-8-4
Southern. 0000130- 4-4-7

North Gallia's Pirates racl&lt;ed up
five runs in the first four inninp of
Friday's SVAC sofiball game
against the host Southern Tornadoes before lhc Racine nine could
.erase their goose egg from the
scoreboard, but the Pirates respond·
ed to the Tornadoes' first Ially with
a six-run outburst in the sixth to
walk away widl an 11-4 victory. ·
Karen Spence, who went the
distance for the Vinton green,
fanned nine and walked seven.
Cheryl Pape. who started for tbe
TomtdoM, c:anibined with relievers Caldwelllllld MI:Coy to 1llrike

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MEIGS
COUNTY RESIDENTS

·-I
·Wtuld you I'• t~ purchase a SOx100 ft. build"

•'
•

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,- ----

If you do,' (entad Jean Trus•l~ Housing
- Sptchlllst, ftr furthtr Information.
Phone (614) 992-6712

237 ._ Street, Ml.llpert V.., Offlc11
'1'11111 HrYice .. .,., •• , ................. effwla ...... v••, ..
om. .. o\ppaladtla.
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MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

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i.' . JOINT EFFORT • Slgnillf tbe joint proela· ·
"' ' matlon designating Natlo11a Nunes Day aud
Natloul Nurses Weell for the Holzer Medical
:" · Cellller and the Holzer Cllalc IIi Roller! E. D10lel
;:, ' {e), seated, Administrator of Holzer Clink. To
::: blli left Ia Jan Frazee, R.N.C., aad to his rlgbt,

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MONPAY- Turkey Club with Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
- Philly with Fries, Soup &amp; Salad
WEDNQDAY - Meatloaf with
mas~ potatoes &amp;gravy, choice of vegetable.
THUBIDAY - Spaghetti with Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FRIDAY· Hamburger with Fries and Soup
iU mD'Iti&amp;U 0'7,CD"DUMWISMTna
..._ C'P '***a DIIU. (Excl 1 1DU DRINK a TliP!tftBRQ
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KENT, Ohio (AP) - The Kent
Roosevelt High School prom was
;:· held the night before in the same
" gym. Then rock music and rappers
:;, gave way to Olenn Miller runes for
lbe annual seniors piom.
1•

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:--:::::

JCHIN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc.

Mary Bl1en Buell,71,1ike many
:~ · of ber ~didn't make it to her

:c DeprelliOI!, a formal gown and

"WE NAVE NEARINS AIDS"

.~..

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PLEASANT VALlEY HOSPITAL,

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
. dENERAl A'LEIGIST ·

,, tickets were a luxury ·few could
" llfford, she said during Sunday's
V'mtage Venture.

.,

Bertie s.t.den, R.N., C.P.N.A. Staadlng, left to
rlghl, ·a re Nancy BruDDer, M.S., M.A., R.N.;
LIHa Adldas, R.N.C., Charles I. Adlllns, Jr.,
who 1iped llle prociiDialloa on bebalr of lhe
Holzer Medlral Center; Ann Wlckll•e, R.N.,
and Karen Newberry, R.N.

dance to Glenn Miller at proms

:~:.own htgh school prom. In the

.

INDIO, Calif. (AP) - Margaret
Tallichet Wyler, who starred In
such films as "It Started With
Bve" and "Stranger on the Third
Floor," died of cancer Friday. She
was77.
She· starred opposite Charles
Laughton and Deanna Durbin in
"It Started With Eve" in 1941.

':~~
···

(304) 675-.1244
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Fenton Taylot, Melp Hlah Scliool Principal•
Tbe students voted on t.belr cholees for kin&amp; and
queen which were announced by tbe junior class
offtc:ers.
. __

Crash Dummies to visit
Rio's Cruise-In Thursday

Margaret Tallichet
Wyler dead at 77

.,."

. I

Q~ AND KING CROWNED - Jennller
Taylor and JlliOII Wrlgbt were CI'OWIIed as the
1991 Meigs High School Prom Queen and Kln1
on Saturday evenln~~:. Crownlna the queen Is

Vince and Larry, the famous
Crash Dummies which have
appeared in television commercials, will make an appearance at
the Antique and Custom Car
Cruise-In 114 lhe University of Rio
Giande on"Thursday, May 9 from
6-9p,m.
·
The public is welcome to the
event, which wiD also feature classic cars on display and music by
the Mega Mustc Machlhe. There
wiU also be games and conrests fa
both adults and children.
Tbe Cruise-In is sponsored by
the Rio Grande Substance Abuse
Prevention Program and the Stu·
dent Programming Board. The
Crssh Dummies have appeared at
. similar events to promole highway
safety with a message of budlc up,
don't drink and drive and use a
designated driver.
The Cruise-In will be held
behind thc ·Student Center in the
parking lot near State Route 32S
and Ridge Avenue. Signs will be

··L

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•

lng lot in a good location fer only S3JOO'l
Would you llct te build a new home and pay
na real tltate taxn for 15 years?
. Would you .., to ha¥1 up to ISOOO FREE
for site m.revlllltl'lh on your ltuHdlng loti

•

will '

National Nurses Week is being shift nursin~ staff
also be industry's ability to sustain life
celebrated across lhe counlry, with included in this spccialaclivity.
thiough increased technology,
spccialactivilies sc:hedulcd locally
A unique display of student uni· changes in the seuings where
to recognize and honor all of the forms, caps, nursmg scl!ool pins bealth care is delivered, chan~es in
nursing Sl8ff at the Holm Medical and yearbooks, r~resenting not health care financing an the
Center ind Holzer Clinic, accord- only the former olzer Hedical chanfing health care needs of
ing to Joann Patton, R.N., B.S.N., Center School of N~ and DOW · today s consumers. The community
nursing ,administrator and event lhe Holzer College of ursing at is asked to join in celebrating
ch8inium.
.
the University 9f Rio Grande, but National Nurse's Wcelt, designed
National Nuises Day is Monday, also other schools from wl!ich to celebrare nursing's accomplish- ·
•., May 6, 1991, to launch the full Holzer nurses have received their ments and efforts to improve· our
;;,. wcelt's events, May 6 . 12.
. education. This wiD be in the enlry health care system, so aptly
:::·' Ms. Patton points out that a hall of lhe hospital cafeteria.
e~ressed in this year's !home,
•· proclam•tion'wasjoind~ed by · Computerized banners will be ' urses Care for America." ·
: Charlee I. Adkins, Jr.,
C chief on ~lay in each nursin~ unit and
According to Ms. Pauon, the
: executive officer, and Robert E. lhe eteria entrance, dcsraed and Holzer Medical Center and the
: Daniel, Clinic• adminisirator, prepared by Margaret arnish, Holzer Clinic employ almost 400 ·
.., declaring this one special weelc to H.D:, Obstetrician and Gynecolo- nursing crsonnel, which includes
• honor the professional scrvi~ ten- gist
from the Ho~ Medical Cen- 333 at t e hospital and SS at the
'
••' dered by the total nursing staffs at ter Medical Sta f and the Holzer clinic. Collectively, they meet the
clinic and hospital. ·
Oinic.
beallh care needs of the residents of
•• lheThe
highlight of tbe week will
As
Nancy
Brunner,
M.S.,
M.A.,
the
and clinic's molti-ser• be a/lro~ ~ "Nursing Humor R.N., vice president of Nursing vicehospital
area. :riley teptesellt a variety
•• to E eclively Manlge Stress and
Services at the hospital points out, of nursing specialties, including
'I Promote Communications." Guest . "There are more than two million medical/surgical, critical care,
will be Debo,.h Hasue, registered nurses in the United emergent care, ambulatory care,
• ~er
. , ·M.S., a noted srcaker on States, representing. the nation's OB/GYN, operatinfroroom, pedi·
• nursing humor who is e Educabealtli care ~ provid- atries, IV therapy, me Health,
•• tion Coordinator of Critical Care largest
ing daily, high qualitj;'cost-effec- etc. Many of thclc nurses are addi·
• Nursing at Mt. Carmel Medical live care for all Americans in a tionally·qedentialed by numerous
' Center, Columbus. The .~ js.
variety of settings. The .nursing nationally recognized organiza•' • sc.
h
edoled
for
2
p.m.
in
the
French
. profession has been a stro!lg sup- lions.
••I S0Q Room, Wednesday, May 8.
porter of'efforts to improve access
Other members of the planning
FoDowing
Ma.
~·s preaento
health
care
servtces
and
to
commiucc
assi~Pauon Include
l tation, a dessert'buf ct will talte enhance lhe quality of the nation's Linda Adkins,
R. · ., Jan Frazee,
'•• ~ce on the patio, adjacent 'to the beallh.
.
R.N., Mary Harrison, R.N., Karen
ncb 500 Room. A special travel•
Newberry, R.N., Kim Skidmore
ing
'• dessen can will visit all of the Brunner added that the demabd R.N., Bonnie Simms, R.N., Nancy
•• hospital floors starting at midnight, for nursing services is greater than Smith, R.N., Susan Taylor, R.N .
. so that the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. night ever, due to an aging ,.\qiCrica, the and Jorja Williantson, R.N.
'.

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Colif~ 6, o:E.:...•
Seoale!,NowYod&lt;4,16lnniop
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_:· HMC and Holzer Clinic to recognize
nursing staff during national nurses .week .

•
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teacher, drelled ill blatk, took turns "dying~', to encourage students attelld.bag the school prom on Saturday to abstain from alcohol.

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WP-Spence

NAnONAL LEAGUE

diameter. You can take it on your
boat, or if you live in an apartment
you can use it on your deck and
Backyard barbecues tate a store it away in a closet in the winl!ealthier turn this summer with ter.
new grills that do not 1180 clwl:oal. · The IDiit runs on propane cylinDoctors are cautioning cl!efs this ders that you can get at most hard·
"tear to use less cbarooal because of ware stores. Its insulated base proIts association with colon cancer.
tects tables and floors. The
The Quick Orill, by Bo-Ox Sys- adjustable flame control' surpasses
tems of Montreal, Canada, uses c.harc:oal bar~cues because you
high-tech combustiO!I technology can adj11st the rue for delicate fish
to ~e your ~· A ~ttety or and IUI1I it off when sausages splat·
electric current drives a miCIOJIIO- ter and flame, Do not use indoors,
cessor .that feeds air inlll the cham- .
·
ber where wood, rather than charFor really healthy cooking that
coal, ·burns. Instead of smoke, · you can do inside or out, try Hot
which contains chemicals, you get Rock.
heat for cooking.
Made by Frieling USA, of Char·
This grill also smokes meat and lotte, N.C., the Hot Rock is a new
fish in minutes rather than hours concept of cooking that uses only
and doubles as a p&lt;Xtable rueplace the heat of your oven. Shaped like
for cam~g.
a pizza stone with hindles, Hot
To hRht the Quick Grill.• use a Rock is placed in your oven for 20
piece of paper and match - no minutes at S(J() degrees. Then Jake
lighter fluid. Then add lhree chunks it out tO your palio - it has nice,
of wood . The base stays cool, ·big handles- wbere you can sear
allowing you to move it away from vegetables, shrimp, chtclcen or ftsh
kids or pets once it is going. Very - all without oil or fsl
easy to usc. Not for indoors.
And .are you a sashimi .or
sevicbc fan and need to keep your
Many of the gas grills you see rtsh cold on a sollry evening? 11\c
are huge. But the Portable Gas Bar- Hot Rock also can be placed in the
becue Grill, by Nordic Ware of freezer and will retain the cold out·
Minneapolis, is a mere 15 inches in doors for an hour.
· By RON GASBARRO .
AI' Newlfeatnres

·Detroit, Boston ~advance to second-round action
,:_rna:!

•·

What's
in store:
.
.Getting the grill going

. AbboU (1-4), who lilt wm 011 SeJi 10, allowed eisJtt hill and 1bR:e
cned 1'1111 in five lllll ~ h~Ulp.
·
Califomla lied it It 3-3 olJ JeiiBliilnl ('2-3) when Luis Sojo siJI&amp;Icd,
Wally 1oyrJ« doabled llld Glealldt 1111 ddnl bomer.
Mai1lien S, YQII- 4 - Orq B~J. bit a tw~nm bomer in the
16dllnalaa, enc11aa die lollpa pme in Klngdome· hjs10ry and rallying
Selale )ll!lt New Y"ort.
. AfterKcvinMMIIilbomerllllllllledllltoleadolftheYankccS'16dl.theMarlners
WOII it wben Omit Vlzquel doubled with one out and Briley holnend off
Rkh Momei"'DC ~ t).
The game toe* five boura, 31 minutes, Slll')llqin&amp; tbe feu bours, 27
miauiiDI dill Sanle and TORliiiO needed to play 13 inninas in 198S.
The Ylllbes \Yellt u-t when Maas homered for tbe secood straight
pme 11pinst Bill Krueger (1-0).

.

He r.eturned to a tremendous
By ne Aslodated Press
son. ·
Winning the NBA title some- ovation and~ 12 points in less
minutes of the third
.. Blue Ja~ 3, Royals 0- Dave Slieb (3·2) pitcbcd no-hit ball for five :::"g~!.:re
~v.=: than·od,seven
then finished with 32 as die
• and two-third innings and C(llllbined with two relievers on a ihree-bitter as lion. ·-·
......-~tics held on for a 124-121 victo. ·Toronto beat struggling Kansas City. The Royals finished their ho!nestand
• 28
·
A pair of injured superstars, ry over the Indiana Pacers.
"I was coming back no matter
• It T~ Gordon (1-2) gave up only six hits in eight iruiings and was the
lsiah Thomas and Larry Bird,
what,"
Bird siid. ''Tbe fans were
- hard-luck loser
played vital roleS as the Iletroit Pispumped
up and I wasil't going to
... Twins 5, Brewers 2 -Shane Mack's bases-loaded s4crifice fly tons and Boston Celtics advanced
let
them
down.~
·
• sparked a thrce-nm lOth inning as visiling Minnesota beat Milwaukee.
into the second round of the NBA
The
Pistons,
seekiJ13 to become
~ • Rookie Chuck Knoblauch wallced to start lhe IOih offEdwjnNunez (1· ~layOffs with fifth-game victories
just the third team tQ win three
· · 1) and moved to second' wben Nunez fumbled Kirby Pucl!:ett's sacrifice
un:raolden Stale's leaclln~scor· straight NBA !ides, moved into the
· for an error. Gene Larkin sacrificed lhe runners up before Nunez wallctd
.
• Cbili Davis intentionally to load lhe bases. Mack snapped lhe tie and · cr, Chris Mullin, was ull'a le to · second round Tuesday at Boston,
· Brian Harper added a two-run single.
.
.
play because of a sprained right which advanced P-. the first round
• · Rick Aguilem (1·2) pitched three innings.
knee and the Warriors lost their for the fust !inle m lhree years.
, Tonight' s only game pairs
·
Tl-rs 8, Rangers 7- Rob Deer had two home nms among his four 11th consecutive playoff same at
Pbiladelpbia
at Chicago, wbich
the Forum
as the Los
Angeles Lakbits as the Detroit held on to defeat Texas at Tiger tadium. Deer has . ers·
won Game
1 of their second- · leads 1-0 in the Eastern Conference
semifinals. Portland pla)'s host to
round series 126-116.
(Continued from Page 3)
· Thomas, ·who missed most of Utah in a second-rouod opener on
• • • _:..._ _ _....,...-=.._:____ the season's second half with a Tuesday, while Golden State is at
banging slider for his rust homer in year's American League Cy Young right wrist injury that required the Lakers again on..Wednesday,
· 46 at-bats this season.
winner didn't do any better Sun: surgery, w01e a proteetive covering with Mullin expected to retmn. .
Bird 's dramatic return enabled
: "No excuses," Smith said. day. Bob Welch {3-2) gave up, 11 on the wrist and a wrap on his
the
Celtics to sc01e 42 points in the
p.
u
lled
left
bam
string
in
the
deci
•
"Tbe ball really carries here, but runs on·13 hits in four and twosive
fmalgarnc
of
Detroit's
bestthird
period, and they went on to
that one would have been out in St. third innings as Oalc:land lost to
of-five
aeries
lpinst
Allanta.
,lead
112-96
with $CVen minutes
Loois."
.
Oeveland IS-6.
·
Thomas
bad
26
points
and
II
remaining.
BosiOr!
then withstood a
Davis said the secret to his sue- ·
Mark Portugal (3-1) got the vicassists
as
the
Pistons
·breezed
to
a
late
cliarge
that
polled
tbe Pacers
cess was his readiness.
tory for Houston. He left after
113-81
victory
over
the
Hawks,
within
two.
·
"It's a matter of believing in Orlando Merced's three-run homer
who
made
only
29.7
percent
of
With
the
Celtics
leading
120: yourself,'' he said. •'When you in lhe eighth and Gurt Schilling got
their sbols.
118, Cluck Person took an off-1111·
· haven't played in a week: and you his fourth save.
"He.'a
a
student
of
drama,"
Pisance
lhree-poiilter with IS 8CC01ICis
:go up to the plate with the attitude
Glan1s 2, Mets 0
tons
bead
coach
Chuck
Daly
said
lefL
Brian
Shaw then bit four free
:that you haven't played so you're
Bud Black outpitched Dwight ·
of
Thomas.
"He
blows
just
when
throws
in
the
final seconds, offsetnot going to get a htt, then you're Gooden as San Francisco SlOPilCd a
to
appear
oil
center
.
stage.
He's,
ling
a
three-pointer
by Person that
not JOing tO ,ge! a bit You've just five-game losing streak. Kevin
done
it
all.
He's
been
MVP.
He's
gave
him
32
poiniS.
got Ill have amfidence."
·
Mitchell hit his eighth home run.
"I didn't want to go into over, It's tough to have confidence helping the Giants beat the Mets earned it all...
Bird
was
brilliant
in
a
more
dratime here, so I went for it," said
:against Smith (2·1 ), who hadn't for the first time in nine tries.
·blown a save opportUnity since last
Black (2-3) pitched a five·hitter matic setti!li· Already playing Person, who made five of nine
:Aug. 18. Smith had allowed two for his second shutout of the sea- despite a back. injury that will . lhree-poinrers.
aoston head roach Chris Ford
runs and six hilS in his 11 preVious son. He sttuck out Six lllld walked require postseas!Jn surgery, Bird
missed neatly 10 minutes of play· · said. it was Bird's inspirational
appCalances this year.
· two.
·
· Pinlclla called him "a reliever
· Gooden (3-2) had not lost at ing time after smashing his face effort that enabled lhe Celtics to
improve their record to 2l-7 in
who's been almost infallib~."
Shea Stadium in 10 decisions. He into the Boston Garden floor.
· But Smith didn't have anything · allowed six bits and struck out four
:going for him Sunday. He faced in eight innings. ·
Jive batters, givi~ 11t1 four bits and
Dodpn 3, Pblllles Z
·a walk. Aflec Davis' horner, Smith
In Philadelphia, Alfredo Griffm
pve up a double to Hal Morris, an put Los Angeles ~ with an RBI
mtentional walt to Paul O'Neill single in the eisJtth inning and Jay
and an RBI single to Mariano Dun- Howell worked around a leadoff
can.
.
triple in the ninth to protect tho
Smith was more· upset that he lead.
·
failed to hold what would have . · Mike Morgan (3-2) was the winbeen a victory for DeLeon, who ner and Joe Boever (2-1) took lhe
has lost twice Ibis season when the loss.
,,
'
Cardinals have been shut out. He
Cubs !1, Braves 6
lost 19 games last year wl!en the
George Bell, Ryne Sandberg
Cardinals gave l!im the second- and Marlc Grace each hit hmne runs
lowest run support in the National as Chicsgo won at Atlanta.
League.
Reliever Chuck McElroy (1 -0)
"Jose had pitched $UCh a beauli- got I! is rtrSt major lea~U:t victory
ful game," Smith said. "If I'd have and Dave Smith, in his
appear. come in with the score tied and ance since April22, earned his fifth
given it up, it would have been a save. Charlie Leibrandt (2-3) gave
different thing. But he's been strug- up five runs Qn eight hits in four
ging to win and he's had bad and two-third inninjs.
luck."
Padres 6, Expos 3 ·
The Reds' four-run eighth gave
Benito Santiago hit a three-run
Tom Browning (4-1) his third con- homer and Jim Presley also con.. secutive victory. The left-bander nected, helping Ed Whitson stop
' allowed six hits over eight innings, · his lhrce-game losing streak.
"inCluding Bernard Gifkey's RBI
Whitsol' (2-3) gave up seven
single in the second and Jose hits, including Marquis Grissom's
Oquendo's fust homer in the sev- three-run homer. He stru~;k out
enih.
. eight and wallced lhree in his rtrSt
•'Tile defense made the big complclc game.
; playa for me· today, esr.eci!lllY
Brian Barnes (0·1) lasted only
· Brie," Brownins said. "k s nice to four and two-third innings in his
: see him .back in ceDter field nm- =:rarance since suffering a
: ning down those dri•"
injury in spring training.
· . Rob Dibble pilcbed die ninth far
:his seventh save ill as many opportunities this aeason and his 8eCOIId
I
since appealing a four-game sua:pension for throwing a baseball
· tnto the Slllnds.
.
.
: In other National League games,
:Houston beat Pinsburgli 6-4, San
·Francisco stopped New York. 2-0,
SOUTH BOSTON,·Va. (AP) Los ~ held off Philadelphia Officials are awaiting the autopsy
. 3,2, Chicago defeated Atlanta 9-6 of race driver Gary Neice as they
.and San Diego downed Montreal6- try to piece qether 1he eveniS that
:3.
HELPING BIRD - Bostoa forward Larry Bird (bottom) Ia
led to his deatl! during the Car
As1ros 6, Pirates 4
helped
off the floor by teammates Kevbt McHale (left) Md Reale
· Tl!ere's no place for losers, Queat 300 at the South Boston LewiiiD the secGIId half of Sunday's NBA playoff pme apiDafihe
.
Doug Drabek is finding out. Not Speeclwa7..
vllltllgiDCIIau Pacers, who losl 124-111 In the ftnal game of tbe
Neice
s
body
Was
taken
to
Richeven in the parking lot
.
mond Saturday for autopSy by the best-of'-ftve series, (AP)
Drabek, forced to walk more state
medical examiner. The 36than a mile to Three Riven Stadi- ·
year-old
ttiver from Candler, N.C.,
·um whel! lie got shooed away from crashed into
third-rum wall dur:the ~yers' parkin$ lot, struggled ing the 20Jstthe
lap
of tbe NASCAR
:agiDI Sunday in Ptttsburgh 's 6-4 race on the 3/8-mile
Oval.
·loa to Houlton. He fell to 1-S, this
Rescue
officials
tried
unSU(X:esS·
:after winninflhe Cy Young Award fully to resuscitate Neice
at the
last year wbile JOing 22-6.
·
scene.
He
w•
talten
to
HalifaxDrabek's latest trouble began
when most of his usual routes to South Boston Communi!:f Hospiwhere bos~~':' offictals pro; work were closed because of the tal,
nounced
him
shortly after 6
~ Maralhon. When a traf.
p.m.
· fie officer did not recognize him
we got to the car, he
would not let him )lll'k in the was"When
over the steering
·playen' lot, Drabek needed his wheel.slumped
We
poiUided
his chest,
pwa mini-marathon to reach the gave him CPR andondid
all we
l!lldlum.
could.
but
lie
didn't
!apOIId
any: Once Drabek Fl there, his luck thing," rescue worker to
James
:didn't get any l)etier u gave up
runs on IIVC8 hill and four Crowder said.
officials iald tho ol
· walb in live iDninll. Ho ball'llled theTrack
accident
is
still
not
known,
:ro aet pua tbe llfdl imlln&amp; ill four though they are sure the track's
·of his six IWII, IIIICI il Olf to his new asphalt surface was not to
'Mlntlllrtlince ..... 1-81111987. 'blame.
"It Milled lite liMn W11 !Old·
"Tbei'C'a no way the surface
: block on every street," liC said. cauacd the crasl!," said Winkie
: "But that wasn't the problem. Wllklna, general manqer of the
• Every 111r1 hill t - tbe ume: I'm speedway. "That car wu goinaboua five mUes an hour when It bit
. Jltl! 1101 throwing tbe blUM alL"
llll wu any conaolalion, lalt tho walL''

·

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

I

)IOSied from U.S. 35 in Rio Grande.
Tbe registration fee is $S per car

ancl will be conducted from 6 •7
p.m. Cars will compete for Student
Choice trophiCII, incluiling Best of
Show. There is no admission
cllarie to see the cars or participate
in the contests. For more information, contact Bob Onh· at 1_800•
282•7201 • extension 279·

Lab mistake bolsters
AIDS virus claim

ov~~i:~t&lt;:&gt;latedThthc~~ .
virus amtinues ·with French scienlis.ts reporting they llliCovered an 8year-old laboratory mistake that
bolsters their claims, a newspaper
. sayt!iow it's up to u.s. researcher
Robert Gallo to show the AIDS
virus he isolated larer at the Nalional Institutes of Health oame from
an American patient and not from a
umplc of lhe French virus sent to
him from the Pasieur Institute

*ELECT*

Bruc·e·J. Reed
Republican Candidate For

Mayor - Pomeroy Village
Dedicated To
The Needs of Pomeroy
·Your Vote Is Appreciated
Paid for by the Bruce J. RMCI for Mayor CommittH
John F. Munar. Treaa.• Mulberry Hgu .. Pomeroy. Oh.

,

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commu.nity Calendar
CommoDity C.a leadar Items

memben are~-

appe• two days before • eveat
aad tbe day ol that eveaL lteiDI
must be received weD Ia ldvuce
to assure pulll!Qtlou lu tile cal-

POMEROY - Evangelist R.A.
West will hold a service on Tuesday a.t the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center at 7:30 p.m.

eadar. ·

phone number.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Sprinp Uniied Methodist Cbun:h
will serve veplllble 11011p and bean
soup on Eleciion Day from 11 Lm.
tbrou&amp;IJ the even~t,dinner hour.
Sandwiches. pies,
and bevel'-

... will also be ICMld. Carry out
orders will be available. Ofders
may be placed Ia adVance at 992-

7:30 p.m. Rcriahments provided.

afiet
. dl8 meeliDI-

MIDDI..IiPORT - ReauJir meet- ·

ing of MiddleDort Lod&amp;e 363 p a:
AM will be lield on Tupaday at

Kay Adkins.

I

.·

--

"" r

•

•

\

· TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Back
home in Tampa, Gen. Norman
. Schw.-zkopf says he looks forward
to retirement, .doesn ~t con side~
hi~lf a ce!~ty and.has no great
. political aspttabons.
. Schwarz.kopf, comm~nder of
U.S. forces m the - agamst Iraq,
returned to the United States two
weeks ay,o after 239 days overseas.
He · retires from the Army in
August.
·
"I'm still the same pa:son. Yes,
(the war) changed my hfe, but I
. hope it has not ChanJed me." he
~ in People magazmc's May 13
ISSUe.

distanL

"I often think of how much
CIIC2iY and effort is wasted finding
somebody to hate or find fault
with," Parks said Sunday. "I think
this world is a big enough place
that we should give the other pcison the same love and care that we
expect ourselves.''
Parks told about 400 people at
Northeastern University that ciVil
righ~ activists should "carry on
the ~le as 101,11 as we .can until
we don t have 10.'
The Ford Hall Forum, which
spoasored the speech, gave Parks
its annual First Amendment Award
r.,.- her,c:ommitmen! to free expres-

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JERUSALEM (AP)- Violinist
• Sir Yehudi Menuhiq 11!1~ members of Israel's parlialncint to mate ~
peace with Palestinians seeking a
homeland of their own.
·
Menuhin, a 75-year-old British
Jew appeared before the Knesset
to aCcept the 1991 Wolf Foundalion Prize for Ans.
Menuhin received a $100,000
grant with the award. which said he
had brought nations together
"through musical education
enlightening peoples and elevating
cultural levels throughout the
world...

•

Buy Only The Pieces You Need!
Oak, Maple and Cherry Finishes.

Political strategists are knocki11g
at his door, but.Schwarzk:opf said
he does not have any big ideas.
"The type of politics I have in
. mind is being mayor of a small
· town," he said, although he mentioned some broader issues. "The ·
things·! feel very sttongly about are
education, the war on drugs, the
environment and conservation and
wildlife."
The 56-year-old military man
said he has no regrets about relicing.
"People have the wrong idea
abo~t •enerals," he said. "Thev
think we have our stars tattooed on
us. But believe it or not, when I go
o·to bed, I wear pajamas. I wear
. Frankenhcimer's films include civilian clothes a Jot, and I think
"The Manchurian Candidate" and ·
·
"Birdman of Aic:allliz.,
I'll be very comfortable,"
BOSTON (AP) - Rosa Parks,
who galvanized the civil rights
movemcut by refusing to give liP
her seat on a segregated A4lbama
bus in 19SS, says equality is sliD

•

'

MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - The
exclusive Malibu Colony has two
more celebrity residents: Tom
Hanks and his actress wife, Rita
WilSon.
The couple.bought a 63-yeat-old
surfside home from "Fmlch Connectioo' 1 director John F1'lllllcenheimer.
The Los Angeles Times said
Sunday the couple paid close to the
$3.25 million asldng price for the
1,800-square-foot home in the.
gated enclave.
Hanks was nominated for ail
Oscar for the 1988 movie "Big."·
His other movies include
"Splash,"
"Bonfrre .of the Vanities
. .. and "Ora,_,,..

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) ..!... Kennit
the Frog, Miss Piggy and the other
Muppets will slowly make their
way back to television, starting
· with a spectal tentatively set for
Halloween.
- Brian Henson, son of Muppet
creator Jim Henson, has been overseeing the creations since his father
died nearly a year ago.
Brian Henson says in the May
II issue of 1V Guide that Jim Hen. . son Productions wants to get the
Muppets "back on the air and to do
more with them. We 'II start in a
smaU wav, primarily with holiday
specials.'r
Other than CBS' tribute to Jim
Henson in November, thf. Muppets
have been inactive since his death.
They've been seen in reruns of
''Sesame Sttcet.''

•

.

'

.

I

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Gran, Gray or Brown

The Dally Sentlnei-Pege 7

Iraqi troops move out as
.
Allies pus·h southward

BEDROOM .
FURNITURE .

POMEROY - The Men's Tuesday and Wednesday golf leagues at
the Meigs County Golf Course will
begin play on Tuesday and
Wednesday. There are 20 teams ·
signed up for each leque. Two 10w~k halves :will be played this
year. Anyone wishing to substitute
IS asked to call tlie club house at
992-6312 and leave their name and

-Names in the news-

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OPEN STOCK

Chaptec of Bela Sigma Phi mbets at
7:30" p.m. at lbe Gallipolis home of

POMEROY - The FOB Ladies'
Auxiliary will be holding a
potluck/Mother's Day dinner on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Following the
diriaer, a meeting will be held with
election of offteers at 8 p.m. All

Monay, May 6, 1891

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
- 1berc will bo!. .
LONG BOTI'OM - River Vaia
rumrnap
sale
at
the
Heath Unite&amp;
Habelisa mecl on Tuelday at 7
Methodilt
Cbun:h
in
Middlellort
ad:&lt;
at the Long. Bottom Commu.W~y
arid
ThursdaYfi'Om
9!
!JuDclil&amp;. All niembetl are 10
Llll.
to
3
p.m.
..,
an ber6 or flower that can be

Sil96 or 092-2587.

GAILIPOUS - Xi Gamma Mu

TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at the
BeUe Chapel Church in Gallipolis
will be held through Sunday at 7.
p.m. nightly with Ralph Savage,
Columbus, as evangelist. Public
invited. .
.

dried for tho lilenlauction.

...
::!
...
!

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I

pou•ds of bread for some 1,,000 survivors of
the cyclone wblcb struck the island last week.

CYCLONE.SURVIVORS Alocal polk:emati
restralus people from.approac:bJDa 1 belleopter
tllat just landed ou the Urlr Island to brlo111.000

(AP)

.

Storms hainper relief efforts in.
cyclone-ravaged lowlands
Ba~staltesh

DHAKA,
(i\P) . There were no immediate
With time running out for sick and reports of injuries or damage from
starving survivors in cyclone-rev- the thunderstorms, which hit as
aged lowlands, thunderstorms and , hundreds of thousands of people
tough weather today hampered huddled on spi.ts of land isolated by
relief efforts and escalated fears the · Ooodwaters.
• death 1011 could rise sharply.
·
A stonn alert for sea-going ves.
"The altical period liaS started. sels ww reimposed, with foreeast, Famished men, injuted men can era saying '-usty winds and rain
only survive for four to five days would prevail until late today. The
under the clrcwnstances,'' said Dr. Weather Bureau advised ships "10
Mohammad Musa of CARE Inter- stay,as near lli the coast as possinatiooal, a worldwide aid group.
b1e. ••
Official reports say more than
Few trucks could travel south125,730 people llave perished fol- ward because the roads were floodlowing I8st Tuesday's cyc~e that ed, officials said.
swamped coastal areas With huge
Communications with the area
waves and winds up 10 145 mph. was nearly wiped out by · tbe
An estimated 10 million people cyclone and all reports were
were left homeless ~ the cyclone, deiayed.
o~ of the worst to h1t Bangladesh
Meanwhile, there were repons
tllis century.
·
. today of problems plaguing relief
~ R¢ Crescent- the Islamic efforts·and acts of desperation by
eqwvalent of tho Red Cross- pre- survivm.
,
dieted the death toU would J&gt;ro!la·
Associated Press photographer
b1y reach 200,000 from starvanon Udo Weitz, who flew in a relief
and disease~ spre.ad by water helicopter over coastal islands
fouled by rottulg·iDima1 carcasses inundated with sea water, said
and sewage. Newspa~r reports throngs of survivOrs at Urir Char
said the fmal toll could hit 500,000, islalld pounced on the ~raft seekwhich would exceed the aftelmath ing food.
o[ a 1970 cyclone that bit the
"Police and army solcliera beat
; _ nation on ~ northenl ~of the 'back the people &amp;ljd they ·were
Bay of Bengall
•' f
' made to sit ill a·line. '-n 11111y gen"We don't see how they can era! gave each of them a small loaf
avoid one of the biggest cholera
.
epidemics in the century," said
John Mohrbacber, a spokesman for
CARE in New York.
"The situation has become
worse and we are very worried,"
Sentinel
said Emdasd Hossain, director.of
the Red Crescent Society's
Classified&amp;
Cyclone PrepardneSs Program.
992-2156
The thunderstorms and rough
seas today delayed two rivercraft
and four trucks carrying supplies to
the east coast. CARE reported.
Gusty winds and rain on Sunday
~pered Bangladesh's fleet of.17
helicopters and a few fixed-wmg
airplane.s on missions to airdrop
lies.
.
'
~ARE officials said a relief convor was stranded with 35 person- .
111 SecoM St,. POIIIII'oy
ne in Comilla, 70 miles north of
'
the devastated port of Chiuagoog.
10• IIDEPIIIENT
"The weather is pretty bad. It is
AGENTS SEIVIIG
holding up and hampering our
IIIIGS COUNTY
relief operations," CARE's
'
Bangladesh Deputy Chief Robin
SINCE 11161 .
Needham said.
·

-

'

DOWNING CHU1
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

of bread wrapped in plastic;'' he
· said today.
"Not .all the people had even
one loaf. Famished children came
running for food," he said. At least
16.000 people live on the island,
about 40 miles east of Chittagong.

DOHUK, Iraq (AP)- U.S. Iraqi border town of Kanimasi
Army troops patrolled near this · could begin Wednesday.
The official, who spoke on conbattle-scarred city today in their
deepest thrust south from the Turk- dition of anonymity, had no further
ish border. and the military said it details of the plan.
In other developments:
may begin transporting up to
-Ron Waldman of the U.S,
200,000 Kurdish refugees back to
Centers for Disease Control said
their homes.
· ·
Tbe arrival of the 32Sth Air- cholera has been confmned at the
borne on the outskirts of Dohuk Cukurca camp in Turkey, but offiand the news of the operation to cials :wereQ't certain of how many
move the refugees appeared to refugees have died from the dis-.
accelerate efforts to persuade Kur- ease. The in~tional relief orgadish refugees to leave camps along nization Doctors Without Borders·
reported Sunday that seven people
the Turkish-Iraqi border.
.
Also, a possible allied occupa• have died of cholera at Cukurca,
lion of Dohuk would mark a signif- home to an estimated 70,000
icant expansiqn of the secure zone · refugees.
·
designed to allow an estimated
-Germany's Foreign Minister
450,000 to 800,000 Kurdish Hans-Dietrich Genscher is sched!lled to !lfrlve in Iran today to disrefugees to return.
· Thousands more refugees have cuss aid for Iraqi refugees seeking
died in rugged mountains along the shelter·in Iran. About 1 million
Turkish and Iranian borders. where Iraqi refugees, including many Shi,they fled Iraqi troOps that c01shed
.thcll' re~llion foDowillg the Persian Gulf War. Military officials
say more than 30,000 refugees
have returned, blit the figure is
likely higher.
.
Dohuk, about 30 miles south of
T~y. is home to many refugees
and could become the largest
northern Iraqi city occupied by
aUied ~·As U.S. troops arrive,
Iraqi soldiers headed in the opposite direction in tnlcks piled goods
that residents said were looted.
A U.S. military official in
Silopi, Turkey, said a truck eotlvlly
to transport 100,000 to 200,000
refugees from the Uzumlu and
Isikveren camps and the nearby

ite Muslims in the south, fled :to
Iran after Iraqi lJ'OOPS crushed their
revolL

-.:.Australia will send a 70member medical relief team lo
northern Iraq to help Kurdish
refugees. Defense Minis!ef Ro~n
Ray announced todar- They are
exl'ected to leave Fr1day to join
Bntish units around the town Of ·
Zakho.. .
'

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-lrl!Q'S government today Ii~­

ed censorship rules imposed on foreign journalists at the start of the
Persian Gulf War. The only resson
cited for the change was that censorship was no longer necessary.
Officials told foie~~umalists
that they no longer
security
clearance.
In Doltuk, signs o.f war abound
along deserted streets.

15 0UNC1

-IVORY

1''

24 PL•6 FUI

SINE-OFF~~
IIGULM

TAILITI

2''
INAME·-------..,.--1

IADDRESS._ _ _ ____....-.:..;.....""'"-1

1 - - - - - - - . . ; _ __ _
IPHONE._ _._ _ _ _ _ __
L~-----

1991 CHEVROLET

.APPLIIIe
......

' S-10 PICKUP

COLOil COMPUTIR
WI1H HAID DIMI

2
GALLON

WATIIING

CAN

.

24~

14X70

•

-3 BEDROOM

J1
FEATURES INCLUDE: upgrade carp~! throughout. deluxe pad, lull 71f.l ft. sidewalls, textured ceiling throughout,
mirrored featured wall, mlnl·blinds, hous-t type door with

LIVING ROOM SUITES
CORRECTION .
. The PURESWEET SUGAR
In Sunday's Ad Should Have .Read
4 ll. BAG

Sl
09
HOT S1.69

CHARMI~

WITH COUPON

TOILET TISSUE
.

Should Have Read
12- PIG.

$29~

'

SOFAS, .LOVESEATS, CHAIRS
Stop in and look over our beautlf!ll
upholstered .furniture. Many new suites have
arrived. You'll like our low prices on quality
furniture . .

lEG. '6.79. SOFA &amp; CH ................-............~- .......... Salt ... ,•.,.,
l&amp;lli. 1709 MOTION SOFA .....! ........................._ ,••••••••• Salt s... n•••
IIICIII, S719 SOFA I CHAII ...... !!!!Jt.~!!!\..~!1.~- ... Salt
1799 SOFA &amp; CHAII ....- .........!!r.!!!r!................. Salt
$1519 SOFA, lOVESEAT, CHAII ..-!l.!l'!tl.lr!P...Salt S1,21
S919 IECUNING SOFA.-..........~..'!!!!!......... Salt $
Sl715 5 PC. SEC'"'NAI. ...!t.!..~ff!!o!!l.!t!!lt!!!... Salt S1 a 71111

u,,,,.

•

NOT I ROLL PACKAGE
992-3671
FlEE DEliVERY

storm, 30 gallon electric water heater, wall vin~ls throughout,
stainless steel sink and much much more .

'

!,·

''CARPET SALE''·

_...

sw

7
20

PER MONTH .......... .. $158 * .

p,;c. ol home include• delivery and cef.up wilh sk•r1ing. one Mt of ~!apt
wrth 4x4 deck, 20 h. of material for all ulilhy hookups, h. .l lope, tlo
downs. and blod&lt; .

CARPET

"'"tteA"-

.

·

.2uafi(:y rlJtiill,

•12: " · .....

BERBER
CARPET
.,~ c::M

·--

............Uitll

SALE

S12~.
........ _.....,....!

ANDERSON'S

FUINRUIE, APPUANCES, TV'S, FLOOI COVERING ·

.PLUSH
CARPET
•O..C.fllllllu..,

.,..........,.

•ltelft ......
•11.Colltn

SAU

S18!!

•

~:lf0nla61c

.%t116r

'180 montho whh 11 .75% APR
and 1o-M. down to qual•led buy•,. .

......... till' ......

Stop In And Set John Smith Or Dick Cole For Details.

COLE'S MOBILE.HOMES
LoCated 5 Miles East Of Rt. 33

DOWNTOWN
YISA

on Rt. 50 East, Athens

IAASTEICAID

592~1972

·~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::11

1 .•

'

"• .

I'

OFF
WITH COUPON

......... c...,

•
I

TYLENOL

.
13 995

.LIST PRICE INTRODUCTORY $
'16,900
SALE PRICE........ .

. STORE HOURS: Monday 1:30-8:00; Tutlday-Satulday 9:30·1:00

I'

100 COUNt D·I'IIING1H

,ii.(

'I

�Pat:~•

8

The:.:DII:Iy~S:ai1:1U:ne:I~PI:IG:•:;:e.

The Dally Sentinel

------Area deaths-----•

•

Myrtle Welsh

Myrtle Jeanette Welsh, 69, of
: ' ~ CoolviUe, died SWiday at Uniwni. : ty Hospiral in Columbus following
: •

j'

;. an ~!elided illness.
&lt; ·Born iD Sistemille, .W. Va., she
-: was the daughter of the late
·., William A. 8lld Elizabeth Jeaoeu.e
. ·: Martin Smith. Mn. Wel1h was a
: • homemaker and a resident of
: Athens County tc. 55 yean.
·She is survived by 111110 daughc
;. ters and sons-ill-la.,.., Doris and
;: Max Ellis -of Athens, and Linda
••• Wade and Richard Sullivan of
:: Vancouver, W. Va. three sons and
. daughters-in-law, Dennis and
:· Shirley Welsh of Coolville,
. : : William and Karolyn Welsh of
; . Reedsville, Timothy and Mica
•• Welsh of Arkansas; a brother,
·• George Smith of Guysville, a sis• ter, Naani Steed of Columbus; 15
pandchildren, three great-grandchildren, and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents she was pre•, ceded in death by her husband,
.• Duane in 1966, four brothers,
Frank, Wi IIi am, Clarence, and
David Smith, six sisters, Kalberine
Long. Alice Archer, Jessie Steed,
Lalrie Bambart. Effie Williamlon,
and Addie Wells, 111110 infant sons,
. Duane, Jr., and Donald, and an
infant great-grancldiiJ&amp;bter, Rebrh
Llllce.

Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at II a.m. at the While
Funeral Home in Coolville. The
Rev. Edsel Hart will oftJCiate and
burial will be in the Carthage
. · Cemerery. Friends may call at the
funm1 home after 2 p.m. Tuesday.

Elmer Hysell

Robert Purtell officUiltxldie • ·
vice .00 burial was in Homer Hill

Cemetery.

Helen Will
Helen Marie Phillips Will, 40,
of Racine, died Sawrday at Grant
HoSJ)ital as the result of injuries
Ja;eaved in 111 aullliDObi1e accident
Thursday on Meigs County Road
34 in Sutlilll Township.
Mrs. Will was talten by LifeFlight heliooptcr to &lt;lnml Hospital
fotlowing the accident for treat·
ment of multiple injuries suffCfejl
-when she was ·thrown from the
vehicle onto die roadway.
Born on Dec. S, 1950 at Mason,
W. Va •• she was the daughter of
Tessie Grady Wolfe of Racine and
the late ·Robert Phillips. She was a
member of die ML Moriah Church
of God, Racine.
· Besides her mothet, she is survived by her husband, llarold J.
Will, Racine; stepfather, Bobby Joe
Wolfe, Racine; daujlhters. Brenda
Teaford and Mehssa Teaford,
RaCine; sons, Marvin Teaford and
Michael Rood of Racine, and
CbristoPber Meldau of Pomeroy; a
sister, Vooda Wolfe of Shade; two
brolhe~;~, Terry L. Will of Florida
and Craton Wolfe of Racine, sever·
at aunts and uncles, nieces and
nepbewa.
.
Besides her fathc:r, she was preceded in death by her l'andpaaCIIts.
Funeral aemces will be held at
II a.m. Tlll:lday at the Letart Falls
Cemetery Chapel. Burial will be in
die Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
~Monday. 7to9p.m.

SheDi J. Hill

Shelli Jo Hill, 18, of New
.
Funeral services f« Elmer Wal- · Haven, W.Va., died'Satwday, May
· . ter Hysell, 79, s..te Route 143, 4, 1991 at Cabell Huntington Hos·
• ' Rbtland, who died Friday evening, pital from injuries she m:.eived in
May 3,1991, at die Pomeroy Nurs· an automobile accident.
:· -ing and Rebabililltion Cmter after
She was a senior a Wahama
an exu:ndcd illness, were held this High School arid a part-time
llfternOOII (Monday) at Birchfaeld employee at Shear Designs. She
Funeral Home in Rullllld.
was a nursing student at Mason
Born in Pomeroy, .he was the County Vocational School and a
son of the tate Walter and Mary student nurse at Pleasant Valley
. . Searls Hysell.
,
Hospital. She was a member of
Mr. Hysell was a coal miner for Future Business Leaden of Ameri·
. · 38 years and retired from Ohio ca. the Hi-Y Club, Who's Who and
Univetiity IS a custodian sue- the Pantomime Club. She played
- !lOr. He was a member of the rad· onaeothermgirle
'r sm' ~mftbalber10~ch0:
. ford Church of ChrisL
~..~--'cading~squad.
· , • He is survived by his wife of 58 ,.,_.,
· •
H u
She was tiom July 19, 1972 in·
. . years, Flossie Pien:eWyalse ;Aa sond Gall•'pol•'s to Guy D. and Wanda
• "anddaughlel'-in-law,
ter .an
Riffie Hill, both of New Haven,
I
b
Jean Hysell, Co um us; three W v
. daughters and sons-in-taw, Rutb
. a.
she .
: . and ll.on Schleppi, Westerville;
Besides her parents,
as sur•. • Mary and Jim Lynd. Minfcrd:. ~ vived b) · her fianc~ Chuck T.
·ns r of Ma'ddleport three
. Connie an d Dave ·Hen dnc k I, Pull 1 • ·•
•
· Pomeroy; a daughter, Dorothy sisters: Mrs. Ron (Tanowa)
: · Basham Rutland; six sisters, Rosie . McGrath, Alfred, Mrs. Scou
· Longcrbone, Vinton: Cora (Tammy) Litchfield, Mason,
. Woodard, Lan~sville; Ann Car- W.Va., Mrs. John (Penni) Rollins,
· swell and Bonme Arnold, both of ~·la'Y·V~!IonebertbrodtberT ll!d81~11•
: , pomeroy; Lena Napper, RuUand; ter-m- w: ""'
an em
•
,. ·and Betty Johnson, Middleport; Henderson, W.Va.; and several
' two brothers, John Hysell, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and
: Evansville, Ind.; and Jim Hysell, coosins.
~ : Columbus; 17 11andchildren, 20
Her daughter, Shelli Brianna
great-grandchildren, and severs! Pullins, died later lln May S from
•
and"....... s.
the same accidenL
.
, , . meces
·-....-w
Funeral -...;~- will be held 'at
Besides his parents, he was pre-··ceded in death by four brolhers 8lld 2 p.m. Wednesday at Foglesong
a sister.
Funersl Home in Mason, W.Va.
with the Rev. Jimmy Lewis. Burial
will be at Evergreen Cemetery in
Letart, W.Va. Friends may call
PUblic Notice
from 2-4 p.m. an~ 7-9 p.m. .
Pallbearers will be DenniS ~yus,
COLUMBIA GAS
Andy
Kearns, Shane Gnmm, ·
OF OHIO, INC.
Steven Pickens, Travis O'Bryan,
PUCOCA8E
NO. 81-181-GA-AIA
Mart King.

:d

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..

•

.
0

•

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0

. ..
......
•

0

.•

,..,...,., I. 1881, ond
tptOiol conlrectt ••-•od
puraoent 10 Ohio II""IHCI
Codt !4801.31 . .
PIIOP08ED RATES
The - • d HIM tnd '
tr._catlon - · •• cit..
cflbtd Mlow. wll e-r•tt
lonl--of •• 0.011 ,113
In -atlni ,_.._ All

tht 11repoMd ,,... ,,. IUb:
jtct to t l.att Ptymtnt
Cha'V' of and DM-htH
pt!Ctllt month on ony
unplld btl-• of •2.000 or

mort.

o-•

for t.arv•
...,Ice
.....................n .....
far ...... o-.1 ....let

T..,_...lon - t11e tuiiINI ol • pending PUCO
~
Ill Mig In C... No.
11-IIJO..GA·UNC. H Ca......., -llcelloft In .....

- .. ::rl•'"'·
......................
.............................

...- _..

..... I~ "' ..... tile
-will

.._...,
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....
lmtll Gentrtl lt,.,loe.
ltntlla-.IT=arttGt
a..
GI-IITrMI-,al'lll•
..........
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,
........,_....
doft ... w'n
v6oi ...

...
.·

Shelli Brianna PuDins, one day
old, of New Haven, W.Va., died
Sunday, MayS at CabeU Huntington Hoapiral from injuries received
an automobile accident.
She was bern May 4 in Huntington, W.Va., to On~~:k T. PuUins, of
Middleport, and Sh~Ui Jo Hill, of
New Haven, W.VL
Besides ber father, she is survived by her maternal grandoarents
Guy and Wanda Hill, ol New
Haven, W.Va.; paternal grandpar-

TO PLACE AN AD CALL IJIJ2.21 56
MONDAY thru fRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUtfDAY
-

••

INI...._Inaludlt • . .
oolpllon of .......... 0..11

lleovtct_.dl.ergtO..II
lleovtctTr••• ......,,__
vlotltrlff ............. -

pottd In ca.. No. II- 1130.

OA-UNC.

'cC.Itlllled • Pact II

It's all paid for . .

WEDN£SDAV PAP£A
THURSDAY PAPER
tKIUaY PAPIE.A
SUNO"V PAPER

.
,.

Birchfield Funeral Hotne/

Main Streer

Rurland, Oh.io

742-2~3 3

G.ali•CtMtnty

.
l

.

446 G l";alla

H7 Ch-e

IEFOII£

PUILICATJON
II ;00 A .M . SATURDAY
2 ;00 PM . MONDAY
2 ;00 P.M. TU£10-U
2 :00 P.M. WEDIIEIDAV
2 :00P .M . THURSDAY ,
2 00 PM . f!IIOAY

311 Villi•
201 RiaG211 o.._o-..

"'obi.•

103
o;.._
Ul W-r

· o- 4.000 ....... -

por

one-"'· Cull- 1110

meter,...lllllllth,,.._dleel
of ""' aontumod.
If Hrvlct undor thlo rtll

tol&gt;odull It dl-nllnuod It
lhe,.quMtoflheouiiGmtr,
Columlolt ohell IIIII Iii under
lillY Dills lhM to' ""'""
HrVIce 10 tile Nmt cullo_, on tile 111111 premlunllllhe ...._
11M nloido
1111- of an-unt"'UII
to lire Cull- c..,.. for
Noh month of tM hetwnwnlntlporlocl.buiiiiiiiOtxMVIft .........._

,
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lrtniQIOftttlon Hrvlaolo any
- · Cull- oliO
thtll pay on Admlnl-lve
F• of 120 P., motilh por

....oy •d Til iJGIIIY PIP

Pltn Ttrlff -oalule Alcltr,
far Ill aon .. mpllan Hch

Ful _ . , . _ , Hrvlat
Ia 1110 IVIIIblo II I t-11_ . . . .,.,.,...

LA II II I a IN I II A L
TIIANIPOIITATION 1111·
VICI - Tlolt'"' lOIII d 111 II
..... Ll lo . . . . . . ne •

wloo ........... _ . , -

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...........
............... ....
......... IOtlleNmtOU-

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of April

.....:oltflftiiMuM--'
• tile Ouu •• .,.,.. tit

.....

,

lnt IIJI'IM. but ..... IIIII' '

...,., 11111 ...

•

JAMES C. BIRCHFIELD - Owner-Operaror

.

.

l:==~~n:

OILIVIItY

.,

'

1'111

"':flO"

F

Ill ' lltvlll ...,
au•aiMI of
for . .
each

pra,and .._... for ...
aoiiiOIIolr....,lhlaollof
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•• DOOMef
fl1llllly -

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..... l8olllty -

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0.. 100.000
- 1.4211

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dlrectty thrwu... • dual·
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ittr of Colunilllll. Por tuol&gt;
QUtl-111. tile II!Pimuno
cltl_., ....... illellbl e.21
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.
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IIIQUUT

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tile PUCO fiMIIIoM tlotr

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tnd ........ propo••lll tlotr

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,.... ,...., return tha
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IP~
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pllosllen: and L4P:OW
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for wlolah IIIey aao tulratl,.._., order lloal IIIII ~ llooll bl ....... oflte.
forlh-: ..,.. .......
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AN PilliON. PIIIM •
COIIPOIIATION. 011 AJ .
IOCIATION MAY PILl.

IIUitiUANT TO 14101.11
Of' Till IIIMIIO CODI,
AN OI.IICTION TO SUCH

o-.

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Tho-

TIOP . .I • ft.AQUIS
IAHU .

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HOWAlD UOS.
EXCAVATING
~LlDOZIII

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lACK HOE WOAK.
HOMIIITII.

LANDCLIAIIING.
WATIIt Mid IEWER
UN I I

DUMP 11UCIS

Includes H1J
1111s! Sounds usvi!-11

SITE ltl IIDDllf'IIJ lluilll1111 clfl Ill yours.
busi·

CUSTOII-T
..-s&amp;IAUGIS

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(6141 446·9416 ...

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ROOFING

WE DO

.

.

AND IYIIYTHING UNDIINIATH

Ttl

'LINDA'S
PIINIIIG

1111tlltr • tat.....
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f..tiM ... "' If
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It .... J$111.

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o....r&amp;o,n...
614-992-6120

......,.

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. . . . . ..

S..,l Cen;ere

915-4473
667-6179

.....
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Plum'""' ••

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...
(Filii! ISTIMATI!81

V. C. YOUNG Ill •
•
992·6215

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oMitiJ 0:0. on T"-

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AUTO PAifS
Spill ....

NIW • UIID PAIIT8
FOil ALL MAKII •
MODILI

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............70

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CHIIIIC'I'IOI

YOUNG'S _ "
. CAIPENTEI
_,...,..,., .......SEIVKE ::

11-14·'90 lin ::

IISSDl&amp;M..

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r~;:c:••:r~·~s~
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c....... ....,,...o.- nw.. "'"'Itt.

I. LUSH

1 o-1: luto. 12-1

CIIPitniY

147-4115
L L Ill,

992-5526
POIEIOY - Nice I ftoor plan_home with 3-4 bedrooms. 2
blths, ~arpet. W.B. firepiiCe. Ve11_ cute. OWNER WANTS A IIL..:.==~~E£:~
SALE - SO MAKE AN OFFER! 127.000. •

~--=,:~~~.:nc:~
UiftiiR• . f
luldltn Cllli!IIIIL Hlllllt IICIW

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NO SUIIOAY

tVInylll•na

IEIDSVIU£ - AI£ YOU 1.0111111 fOIIMI FIMJME?
Will.~ YOU lit, ~trt it is! A~ox. Sto 71CIII 111-I'OJIIMI
that could Ill used lor many purlJO*. Start yout ewn rtver
camp lfOUnd or use ll1ela1111i1nd. H'sso llwt, you CIJ1 driwt
your boat aiahl to 111e river and put rl in will1 no hnsel. Ri&amp;ht
oH SR 124. ASKING $25,000- MAKE OFfER.

ao••10•
IENNEn'S •a•••
•

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MII&amp;WAOS

ttt-7451

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...ILDIIS

IIOU LISSIIIS- S10 •·

NO SMA'

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CO. .YCLII

'•Frll lltlmiiM''

All CONIII10NEIS - HEAT PUMPS and
FUINAas FOI MOIU &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES :

USED IAUOAD

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IISSILL
~~-·co.
._

IIIIOYAL

llll SI.A(I
992-2269

ttt-•w•.,.

4LOWNIN
INSULATION

•

•FIREWOOD

CIDAI
COISTIUC!IION

ltHk/J

TIIMand

•LIGHT HAULING

FlEE ESTIMATES

eVINYL IIDING
•ALUMINUM lt!)INII

N1r 111

111 •

.........

IIIW -- IIPAII

•
Gutter.
Downepout1 ••
Gutter Cle.,ning
P•lnting
•
FlEE ESTIMATES

949-2161

- 4/tlt/'1111 -

11·--

...

........
Jll.

.

POOlS,

CISIIIWS.

nc.

....
.. . , ...."

1,625 IAl.-•JS-*45
lt. 1, ... 71 ...

· ACRUIII - Approx. 6.77 acres ofii'OUnd klcilld out back
of Miildllpoat. Nac:t plate to buitcl your- drene lltiM.
$22.500.

"
5
·~·:.::-·

::::::.

.

J'FS

tft·mt•

"•·r•t·nt•

CHESlER - PIICE REDUCED- Well buiH brick home willl
4 bedrooms. 2 baths, brick fireplace rn LR .. 2 car pr•ce-AC
heal pump_
$69,900.
. Well landscaped yard! NICE HOME.

4-21·11 ° 1 - - "'·

SPHDY VAC

bid-,

........, .....

Quality
'
.
·Sweeper
·Repair
691-6591

.....

""'·'"
SIGNS
b 'I ' " ' '""""elf
~1

..........................................
•

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Of

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S-I&amp;TID

Home Repelrt
•R!»&gt;IItet
. .
ellcilflg

AI'PIOX. II ACID of llfDUnd lor bu=
· II or hunlint
I1ICIIId on 'IWP, liD. 125- RACINE. Will
- hn I PI
• wtl 111 It, llllillll Millblt. CAU FOR AilS!

Paid for by Candidate-Dottle S. Turner
163 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, Ohjo

Foretllloupt IDIIenl !Piaaatac 18 loaded throup poUelee
from Foretllotlpt Ule Juai'Mce Compaay

11 c~ ~ ..~,;""""
11

8

eRe~~~adaUna8IICI·

....11 ""

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..,.,.. ..,...., 1e ..,........ 10

&amp;I -

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71 Aut• P1r11 • Aec•tortW
ll ··Aut• • .,..

u ..............viC*

u 8.'1•ne

~LID-

Por Ill' 11rtt 2.GOO Mof por lfM!IIalll
feelllty - •• 7011 ,., Mol; . . . . .

MDIOfcYCI •

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op,_,,....,.,..

II TIIWtl -llr111ot. 3-4
*I'IIICEII AT M'I2UIO.
1r111t '*"'· IIMCIAIN

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n v-•4wo·,

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to

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lion looull - _ _ . . ...
the ...,. 111111n11 -.nth• of
April llooo .... ~.The

~Win••

Tllll I""' NRf has hid- ....IIIIIJCIIIIplllll.
You e111 do tile , . alld It tloil ~ t tlloulil Ill ....,, 3
btdl 001111, I bllll. I!Dnt ~It srt on to enjoy_lt!t IIICt SJII· ·
inl twtninc! CloM to S.R. 7. ThiS is 1 "MAL ST£AL"•at ONLY
$16.000.
.

and ln,.elelll • - •
wllo • • • - II letlt "lt~iY
11.000 Mof fill' be· 1'

cu•- _.. -anp-

POMEROY VILLAGE
Old ~alues

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

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2l -

111 011......,
rte will lit ,..
d4.-111111
..1ni•,.lolftt&lt;l .....,_ or..._
• ...., .............
MAINLINE DILIVIIIY
CHAttal - 'l1llt ... ......,

In Rulllnd.

· • L.Ait81 81NIIIAL 1111·
VICI - Tlolo- Iaiit alD III le

tween
OciDIDW Nuuan
11, 11141
btlllltt1 cltllvend
..., .. e ....1_111 of 1.800
Mol IHII """""·
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10% In
of.,..,

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tllefll'lwral_lft!l_tlllont Df Calianololo't _..,
........,... ........ .....
-~~.." 11,000
Mtf . . 'tW MIIUIR Jfo..
. . - t tntl Ootobtr 11,
tnd ..... dtllwory Df I
llllnhnumof1.100Mof111Ch
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7l - AutMtOfl••
72 Trudl1 f01 •••

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1H11

ftclllty.

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10=flaY!ii.~
1 i3Ji~

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POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

c
-•n 11111.,. ....... ao" rtf - ....._
olalllttlon to ,........ 111nut1 oon-.,clon mull

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wHibo•-Hdtor
..,..
DillyCull-.....
C'*'•

, ...... 100 •blo foil;
Forlhl- 21.000tublo
•
por - 11.0110
por 100 foil:
. o- 21,000 ..,.... ..... - 12.0180 100aulolat.«.
ln d lltlolt, IHII oontu....,
• mUit ..., - . Cutlemor
Clollll"' .,........ ~
per'nMMIIII, 'rtll dla11Df ...
aon........
If Hrvlol under tlolo rota
Hhldialo 11 111-""""od tt
.... ......... Gflhe-10-.

REPUBLICAN FO.R

..

171
n3

207 l ..ortfolls

-.. .

month, ... 11 fol'-e:
For tile flnl 4.000 cubic
t.« por - 11.7470

•

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...

... cu.....

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OINI!ItAL iiRYICE Tlol•,... ......, ... 1e evtlllo·
1111 10 Ill a u • - who
oontumt II --1011 Mol
per Ylll b o t - hp·
tambtr 1 _. A_.c 11.

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a..... ,.,._...

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ca..·

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, ...
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....,...for oil
111111 tile I _ . , 1....,.

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PIIOPOIID INCIIIASI!D
IIATIS IY ALLIGINO
thtll lilY ., Adno-ad..
' " ol 120 ,.,.por ~ . ood11ww .._... ...,. TIIAT, IUCH PIIOPQS/11.1
Alii! UN.IUST AND . Oil·
flclllly.
~ ......... In ful r'IIIIUINmintl IWYIDI ~ the NIIUII11d In- CIIIMINATOIIY 011
UNitiASONAILE.
lo alto tvoiiOble 11 o tuPIIII- .,.H Iii ~~- In lui A """ oliN Apt~llcttlon
mentol ""'""·
for Nlto Hrvlcol; lmtll
GENEIIAL TAANSPOA- Oan_l....,lol le 1.1% and It tvtllobilo for Jn.-tlon 11
TATION SERVICE - ·Thlo Q....,.llt,.lollt14.1"for .,. offloo of Columllla
rill tahldulllt ovtlltlolo II • ''""lltrtallon Hnrlc11: ol Ohio, lno. It 200 Civic
c:c...........
Ill OUIICHJII'I who allow nlll ...._
_ . . , with the _ . . lion lttvllle le 10."' 1111111 Olole 41111erttthelfllolt
lormt · tnd oondlllona of G.,... T,..,IPOfttiiOri ..,.. ............ Utllllaae c.....
Colunollle't lrtn-rlltlon viol It 17.4".
nol''''"
1101111
llrHII. tnt! who-~~~- II
1"IHII 300 Mol por - ·
chera11 111 aulllHt to Ololo41111.
o l - Jllllce ....
The mu~m rate fer atl cfiMIII, lnatu.... a1N1n111
dllo11iu by C-blt 10
ID 1111111111...,-fllloo, lily bien .,_roved lty the
ou1tomer of auetam•r·
PUCO fiiJuuMI llw I'UCO.
COWMIIA GAl OP
- - ..e ...... ... .... I ==~
11M liiPa.
OHIO. INC.
ChMJOI ....,lte ..._ - . I' •
11-lliJUIIIIAtlono
141
Ill
•.
liD
loot .. ralatlll • • 111
dltfor to.m liae A"llliddlllon, lht CUll- 1111111 I _ _ _ __._ _..._ _""":"_ _ _ _ _ _ __
..., lillY tppllooble - l y I"
.,.._
allloautlo
AUI Eltlltl a.net'll

mt~or · - 11.011t por 100
oubla - · In Mdltlon, , con-""'ll""".e Cut1a- c...... of 17.'40 por

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f'Xt'IIOIII{t'll ...

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35

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Rent '

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a.z w•ed•o•u'¥

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IINIIIAL INFOIIMATION
, 1-.. on tho ..,....,,
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OF

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n •-w.....
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ou-

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w.._
Lou • Atr•=•

36 R..IEMMt

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32 MoWie ........ for •••
33 , ............ .

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follot!'lll/{ I ,.,~,.h,;Ut•

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#y "•lwuML
JAI.EB IIATI!S- Colum"'"
bilolepropo ..... lhret.....,.
II ANI OIIUrTION
ala ttltt
- - follow
II ATil - Cllumlllllle ....... ·
=:,.~ 10 olllhrM Hilt ;;;:_ ,..., 1'111 f o .......... to I l l -Tho Ioiii monthly lrllltP lilian-:
_.,.for .., ....... It lhl
-All 111111 . . . , _ lloo
tum of "" ....,.. for the thtll.,. ...,.,_to lnal.,.
coli of ... end tile chtrgo lhl Trentplil- T•·
for oil olhtr COlli.
Or· ..., lu""'- 111 foa:lh
-loththe-ttndtht In
llulto llld
pr&lt;)poHdrltlt- Mlbjtcllo 11. _ _ 011 ~~~~- 1111
- - or lncrteH 1ft DC·
ut
.. llot "Gee Pu_gi.naparutlon auttoCoat Aec.....," II'Owltlona moro mllll .,.., Into 1
ol C-ble'o I I - tnd SeMotAFHir..,lwllh'Co·
Rovuletlona o1 fllo wllh the
PUCO 11 19qul ild 11y PUCO lunoblt: lhl fomo of - tho
Qrdlra dated Oc&amp;olllr 1 1. .........., IMiftlltltoltleclln
1871 and Ootoblr 1 I. 1M """'Hd IIJIIfl,
1878. In Ctoo No. 71-111-Yhamlnlmurn-forell
GA-OIIO.
cltll... loa .,., c•m~r~~ 10
-All biHt reoodtlod olto cwatomer ol cuoiOmor·
ll&gt;tll bl odju- 1o Include ... le •.OZ ptr Mof,
lhtllll-. E...,...noytnd
SMALL GENE AAL
T-orery PIP Plan TarHf TRANSPORTATION JEll, _ . Alcltr llllorth In VICE-Tlolamo....,_lele
Columloll'a Auleund Aaeu- ' ""tlltbilo · 10 11 cuiiOme,.
lallono on file with tho who odoerwiH aonoply wllh
PUCO .
· lho ....ertltonnund-.11SMALL GENIIIAL SEA· llont of "-•~•-•o ~,
.. ~..
VICE- ·...._,_
•,.. ••ochodulolt portallan .......,,_
llrltfo.
evlllllill 10 til au1101111ro.
Tlil mo•lmum rete for til
1M .,a111M11 Clhargu far 111 dllharlet by ColumbMI to
- _ , . . . . , t h e - of ouuomor of outtomtr·
... lnd tile Interim, 1....,. =r•thlllbttllelllllll
....., Md T--rery PIP
•--·lot tolto 1'1111,
Pltn. Ttrlff 8ol-thlo lllcltr. loot til ,.;;;.. ... - · In
for til aontu.........., Hch od4lilon, tile
mull
month, . . . . foMowo:
..., ...., IIPIIcelll• noenlhly
For tile flnl 4,000 cubic; Cull- Clwgt ............
t.« f i l l ' - - 11.7470 only- c u - CM'II
..., 100 011lolo foil:
wlllbuau dfor ..... ..,..

,...._ '""

SPRitiO SUSOtl .

AYOR

.80
.Dit ay

t1 .30/ day

t:lmc~i/ir•d f'OJW~ f'fll't•r I lu•

,;

~Pub§llc~Noi~.Jce~-;!2Publli:~-~ND~tle~•;

· '_, "7eoat~ned .....

~

Although the average funeral and
burial cost much less today than
many people expect . . .surely a
funeral will cost more in the future.
With Forethought® . funeral · planning,
your funeral is fully funded and won't be
a financial burden on your family.
Affordaple monthly payments are also
available to fit almost everyone's
budget.
CaD us today to team how you too can
be 's ure "It's all paid for."

DAY

TUESDAY PAPER

'

. ·
ckey Oiler

0

••.00
t13.00

.

..
plo.c«Jm Th.Da•ty Stmhn .. (.. .

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY 'APER

X· VOTE MAY 7th·

.

.30
.42

.. ,. .

•A cl. . .h .. achl •rti~etn_..
4:IIPI
cln .. t•tld d••plifY, lu•imas Card Mid lttg• nOticftl
wtM 11l•u ..-p•~~t .. lhtr PI PhtMifll lhgiiUtr a nd lhtt G••
P4*• Dally Tr~bunl', r•achtng owr 18,000 hon••·

0

He was bern Seplember 8, 1957,
a son of the Jate Jack "Louie" Oiler
and Anna Margaret Singer. He
w~rted as a boilermaker and
served in the United Sllles Navy.
He is survived by four brothers,
Mark, Pomeroy; Jack, Florida;
Milte, Pomeroy, and Charles Sorden, Connecticut.
Beiides his parenll he was pre.
ceded in death by two sisters, Flo. renee and Karen Sue Singer.
Services will be bcld at the convenience of the family. Arran11e·
ments are being handled by EWlllg
FunmJHome.

dilr ahttf publlcMion to m11k11 correchon .
'Ath: ttt.i must b• pe•d lr, ad"•nc• .,-"
C•rd ot Th ..hv
Happy AdJ
'" Mlff1'IOfiMt•
Y •d S.tut

~

~

story).

...oo .

'7 poinl line type only uMd .

------·
NOW OPEII FOR TNE

Mickey G.' Oiler, 33, Liberty
Lane, Middleport, died sometime
over the weekend J;R8111118bly in a
fire which struck ftis trailer home
on Liberty Lane. (See front page

be

•s.ot'"el 11 n.ot , .. pontibt a fot error5 11ftt r first d • . IChvc:k
lor ttrrOfJ hnt d., ld hlnl m plfMH'I . Call before 2 :00 • ·'" ·

Ra1fu

Mi

I .

. 20

0

0

15wordl~il

n....... -

·-·T

a,. 11w.r41

"••••torcon•cutfvetvnLWelllnupd••WtMINclt.,._.
1. . . ........................

tun :J dtlf'l M no ctt•t•·
.
"Ptt.,_ ol ad fOf all c•ltelletbtr t t1 doultlo p1 in of ad cosl.

Hospital news

Dail'

•

10

_

14.00

ttl
16
16
15

3

Monthly

.,_..•c.-•
1.&amp;0 discount for • ctf Pilei tn advance.
"free.. GNe.-.y • nd Found ada Under

..

w11

1

' Ads outs6de Metgt.. Glilli• or M••on cou nt i• must be,..

\State•..

Weather

• tht Area's Number 1 Marketplace

o..,.

•POLJCII'S

Groundbreaking...

:z.ttemate

CIGssi

•

• ..,lrtd or will _ . , , by

,... proPoHd ..........

•

Shelli B. Pullins

Meigs County EMS units
answer·12 weekend calls

Dace to be lldd
ents Cbuck 8lld Donna Pullins, of
Tbe Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Middleport; palet1la1 ~-grand­ Dance Club wDI bold a ciiDce Friparenll Dau IIICl Edna wu- and day from 8-11 p.m. wilb musiC by
Meip County .Bma:gency MedTbeoclore and Becky Pullins; pall:l· lbe Hippy Hollow Boys of Albeal. ical S«vii:e8 IIIISWS'ed lZ calls b
nal great-peat Jl'llldparents Mr. Thole •lt!mding briu&amp; 1118Cb for mi._ oo Slbtiday, Sllllday and
and Mrs. Wilbur Hoover, Gaye lbe mact lillie. 1be pablic is irMt- e.lyoo Monday. .
Wilson and Mattie Pnlllns; aunts ed ID """c'
.
011 Salladay a 2;34 p.m., Syraand unctes s- Pullins, Middlecu•e 1qaad weal to the mobile
port, MQ. Ron (ranowa) McGrath,
B.ro- to be lleld
bome IJIIk- for Mary J.uvere, who
A1fied, Mn. Sc:oa (Tammy) LircbTbe •OMal chic•rn hlrbecue at was taken to Veterans Memorial
field, Muoa, W.Va., Mrs. Iobn lbe Tuppcn Plains Fire House wDI Hospital. At 9:57 p.m., Rutland
(Penni) Rollins, Letan, W.Va., be hefd Sunday (Mother' s Day) squad
went to New Lima Road.
Delben llld Terri Hill, Henderson, belianing at 11 a.m. The cost is Brian Dotson
was liken 10 Holu:r
W.Va: and 111event1 COUiins.
-$3:'15 and dessert is .SO cents extm. Medical Cmter.
She wu pretedec1 in death by
On Sunday at 1:01 a.m.,
her mother, Sbelli Io Hill, who died
PeriOIWBIICe lei be beld
Pomaoy squid wentiO Wclchlown
May 4 from die same accident.
The Meigs County Senior Citi- Hill for .Lawrence Kline who was
Funeral services will be held 2 zens Center will bo~l a perfor· taltea to Veterans. /l.t ':22 a.m.,
p.m. Wednesday at the Foglesong IIIIIJce by die. Rio Grande Cbonle Syral:nse 8Qillld went to Blind HotFuneral Home in Mason, W.Va. on May 14 at 1 p.m. This group, low Road. f&gt;eUa Milliroo was taken
wilh the Rev. Jimniy Lewis offici- und« die direcliol) of David Faber, to VeterliDJ. At 8:13a.m., Pomeroy
atins. Blirial will be in the Bver- is a ~elec:t group of cotJe&amp;e SIUdenlll ~quad went to State Route 143.
gnlell Cemettzy, Lclart, W.Va.
who peabm in coocen at commu- Mary Ana Spwrier was taken to
Friends may call 2-4 p.m. lmd 7• nity IC:bools, chun:hal 8lld organi- Velallnl.
9 p.m. Tuesday at tbe funeral zations. The public is invited to
home.
.attend this special event. A free
will offering will be Iaten for _the
CoaliDIIed rrom •••
'Thmara Allensworth
Grande Cborale.
•
Tamara "Tatnmy" Allensworth,
electrical bid and Parkersburg BurgesS 8lld Niple of PartersbvrJ,
2li, of Columbus. formerly of
Rodeo to be lleld
Heating and Cootinj the $145,000 W.Va.) will coosolidate lhe agency,:
Mason, W.Va., died Satunlay, May
A Buc:keye Rodeo will be held heating, ventilatioo and plumbing under one roof. At the~ lime,
4, 1991 at Grant Medical Center, at die Rock Springs Fair Grounds contracL Swisher said those bids do Childten's Services, Cfeild Support,
Colunibus. . .
. .
SllllDJlay and S!Jnday beginning_at not include
features JOBS, Foot1 Stamp issuance, l:egal
Funeral arrangements will be 2 p.m. SDOIISOI'ed by the Southern that
will be ·
to
the
building's
Service&amp; arid a portion of the
announced later by Foglesong Local School District. AdmiSiion is total cost as finaa1ces allow.
Income Maintenance Department
Funml Home.
$S for adlilts and $3 for students.
When completed, die expansion are 'located in offices away from
Children age six and under admit- (designed by Architectural firm theRaceStreetheadquaners.
Dorothie Games
ted free.
.
Dorothie Madeline Games, or
--=c=oa=tiD=..td:::..:.:..trom:::.:..!.P•:::....:•:.___ _ _ __
Le1811, died Friday, May 3, 1991 at
Rummage
sale
plamaed
Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
will be a lliiJIIlliiiC sale at !Jotb possibilities when,they ariiye. Wi~.~ l'nd fecll;nll o.flic~ perHuntington, following a brief ill· theTbele
formmg mvestegaht!IJS m this dan- _
Heath United Methodist Church _m die c:ounty.
ness.
.
· in Middlepon
Movement
of
lhe
earth
in
the
gerona
area, treSpiiiSCfS could fmd
on Wednesday and
She was bom May 12, 1926, Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
area has basically subsided, Byer tbemsc1&gt;:es in'IIOUible."
'
daughter of the late Charles T. and
said, and his job bas changed from
Elva HigginbothomRobinson.
IDI'ormallon souaht
overseeing the evacuation of the .
~
She was preceded in dealh by her
The Southern High School Class area 10 coordinating • on .the local
husband, Dehner, in 1990.
of 1981 is seeking informalior~ on level • tbe investigation of the
v ..._ _ M-orlal H~ltal :.
.She was owner and operator or the wL·-bou!S of William "Bill" cause of the incident, which will
Games' Greenhouse at Hartford Morris.
'""'"'
SATURDAY
ADMISS
Anyone having any infor- consist of assisting state and feder- James
Will, PoiDeroY.
. ONS •
and LetarL
SATURDAy DiSCHARGES •
Survivors include four daughters, mation on Morris should contact a1 off'~~:ials and making the ncces- sary contacts.
Ours, David Yontcr.
·
Mrs. Douglas Iva Oldalter of Wea Tammy Chapman at 949-2963.
Meanwhile, Byer issued a
Columbia, l.orie Gail Kyle of
Scbolanlllp a:llllatdHs avall·
reminder lbat the area is closed to
UNDA Y ADMISSIONS •
.
Della Milliron, Middleport, and
Leuert, RetaRoush of Pomeroy, and
• 1e
·
soghtseers.
Ocla Ward. Pomeroy.
Mrs. Richard (Pamela) Mann of
Carleton
College
Scholarship
"This
area,"
Byer
said
this
SUNDAy DISCHARGES
Kegley, WV; two bro
_ !hers, ZoUie appllc:ations are now available for morning, "is a disaster area, and Charles
BisselL
and Junior, both of Jacksonville, Syracuse residents. Applications sightseers are ordered to stay out.
Fla.; one sister; Effie 1ll1bert of 111a1 be picked up at die John Lisle
•
Jac:ksonville; nine grandchildlen resulence, 1290 Church Street in
'
and seven gmet-grandchildren.
Syracuse. Call 992·5011 for inforFuneral services will be conduc- mation.
ted 'Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the CasiO
Corllplttt Li•.of V~g~tltlbl•
Funeral Home wilb the Rev. Gerald
DAR to meet
and lldlling Plants, ·
Sayre ofliciatins. Jlurial will follow
The Return Jonathan Meigs
South
Central
Ohio
Blooming 111111 Foil. .
at Sunrise Memorial Gardens iD C~
- , Daughters of the Ameri-·
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
Letart.
....:..- will
Frida
Hanglfl!llalktts. Fruit and
can o.........,
meet
Y at the mid-40s. Tuesday, partly sunny
Friends may call lbe funeral . 1:30 p.m. in the meetillg room of with a high 6S-70.
Flowtring TrMI, Shrv...
hometonigbtafter6pm
..... u.· County Pub!' u . '
""' """'JIS
IC
v•-1 m
Exleaded
foi'I!CIISt
Azaleas, lholl•ll••••• snd •
Fred McCumber
Pomeroy. Edgar ~erian will pre·
wedDelday throagll Frldar:
HouyTrHS.
sent thel:gram, ,, 'The Amencan
Fair on Wednesday and Friday.
Fred McCumber, 41, of 114 Indian
u:.
" Ho
Opal Dr ,.,___ N s. v died
•
e ....IIOI'y.
stesses A chance ot: showers Thursday.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
.. ·-",~..... ew a.,
will be Mn. George Skinner, Mrs. Highs in mid-50s through the 60s
SYRACUSE. OHIO
Sunday May 5 ~991 at ~is resi- Mart Orueser Jr., Mrs. Everett
Wednesday, and in die~ Thursdence. ' ~·
•
992-67711,
He was born Ian. 18, 1950 in · :t=J::OO~ Mora and Mrs. day and Friday. Lows mostly in lhe
OJMII
9-S: Sun. 1·5
40s.
.
Meigs County, son of Nat MeCumtierofKaniJIIIIII.
He retired from tbe U.S. Navy.
Otber survivors include his
wife,- Brooke McCumber; two sons,
Gareth and Corey, both of the .
home; step-mother, Helen Shamblin McCumber; one brother. Ronnie McCumber of Severen, Mary.;
and ·
s..__ R-'--f Gal
lipoi~ISIIISter.•
~.a o
•
Services and burial will be
annouilced later by Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home

0

Pur.,anl to tho requlr•
mtnlt of Ohio A""loed Codt
§4108.18. Columbia Gtoof
Ohio. Inc . .IColumbilol her·
tlly ..,.. notice IIIII on
Mtrdl I, 1811, h flied with
liMo Public UtNIIIto Comml•
tlon of Ohio II'UCOI .,
Appllcollon for authority to
Mltlld llo flltd WHit to
inertiae the retel 1nd
clllrgeo for , ............
AA lA AFF!CTI!D •
The new ltrHft will be
effiCI!vt In Ill terrllorllt
. urvod by tho OOIIIfllny.
PIIEIENT AATEI '
Thto•llllntr...tlnlhoH
•••• trelhOM - - I n
"trlout PUCO ,... tch• ·
dulto. municipal 1'1111 ordl·
nen01 contr1CC1 thet have

Meigs announcemen~

•

r,

,,,

,,

�.

'.

.Pita•

a

1D-The Dally Sentinel

'

LAFF-A-DAY

LOll &amp; Found

44

.. 1. ....... . . ....... .... , ... . ............. . _

Apltblwnt
for Rent

5I

The Dally Sentinel Page 1.1

Mondlrf, Mlly 8, 1991

Pomeroy Middleport, O"lo

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

BORN LOSE.R~___,.___,

72 1l\ICb tor . .

Houuhold

OOOdl
Couofl ..............
Fol IIIIo: lnllt..I
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.

: -=. . . . . . . . "' . ..
_

1071

'l1lulr, •

Pomeroy,

"Oh, I don't hlame the saving·s ·
and loan people. If I had that
much money, I'd be irresponsible too!" ·
· ·

... -

.......--.
SWAIN

1 lA.
pold. 'lOt Fourth.

~··· e1u11 ·~

';~' '

AUCTION I FURNmiiiL 12
Olive II., OIIM....... - I ~Mod

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~~~~~==~==~r:;=;;:;::::::::::i'IIIUI

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.

C1Nt TV L...ot.lt't Inc. f i WOrth. TJ1.

32 Mobile ttomn
for Sill
WOflliERI

SAUDI

INTENTION EVER
TO 60 AWAY TO
SEA FOR THREE
'(EARS ..

Building
SUppllll

OOUr"-

a! 11J:c.

c-t8

oe Andy Griffith

CUpCiole
8:35 (J) Andy Grtlfttll

Uvntock

7:00IJie IIJ.Wheet of FortUne

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7 llh. l'llln
at VIr~~ It, Rlclrw,

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Ava begins labOr and goes to
the hospltll in a truck. (PI 2
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·

9 WLAF Foofball
Ill On lllaga

1D Wortcl W- Skiing From
OrlandO. Aa. (T)
• PttmiNiwl
I
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Help Wanted .

11

35 Lota &amp; Acruge

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; I-lAVE 'lQ.I eea.l
MY LIT'TLE

r DON'r

THAT!$ THE KIND a:' HE'L.P
'IGlJ EIET' ~ND HE.~.J

KNOW •.•

Ql Larry Klng Llval
0 llai!!J and t11e Be1ot

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1:30 (JJ} 1121 e Dlolgnlng Women
Suzanne Is envious when
Anthony Is invited !O join' a
counlry club. Stereo. 1;11

~~~~~C:Iet~--Ho--rne-~;
lmprov1111ent1

,

10:00 (lJ ()) llordll11na Mlldlctne

Waller Cronkite compares
the heaHh-care systems ol
the Unltad Stales and
canada. (1 :00)
Gil 1121 e NNcrcrrtllill111~mm bpolul8
Holing piCks tlghll with hla
patrona, and JOII beeeimea
o~ssed. Slareo. 1;11
D Pro lurtlng From Hawaii

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44
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)~ARNEY

THAR'S A

LITTLE DRINK
FOR YOU,
SUGAR PIE

WATERIN' A

YO'RE
TETCHED

DADBURN

.(T)

PLASTICitL
,I.DWII. If

IN TH'

HAlO,
MAW!!

8 CNN Evanlng NO 700 Club Wl1ll PM
Robertaon

111'.20 &lt;1J MOYIE: Doctors' Wlva
(R} (2;00)
10:30 Oe M'A*I'H
• CIOOit end Chi"
11:00 !Jl e Cll (J) e a 1121e
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(l)NenW81Ch

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·'
lactlor you. Mall $2 plus a long, selt-addretaecl. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, c/o lhla newepaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

GEMINI

(Mer

21-.lune 201

Somtone

you treated Wllh' conllderatlon rtcenlly
hal- Wonl~: eomethlng nice
• lor you. Thla I
may be In the
poeltlon to do oo todl)'.
,
CAIICIII (Junl 21-.IUIJ 22) You could
be luckier than uiUIIItodoy In your part:
nerlhlpa Wl1h Individuals wh- Ideal•
ond ·atlndarda cloeoly peralltl youre.
Mutual beneftll COUld be In the oHing.
Ll~ .......... 22) Don't limit your
1rnagmaaon whirl goalland obllctMI
001-/ied. You'll In I good
IIGh..,_nonl ~ 1t. thll time - ·
ng II poaalblt.
(Alii, D llapUI) Thllllone 01
1 ' - t1an whlni'OIIIIIaJ be liMe to tlO
... for~ .....
,tl ....

=

' wisdom and exablt lo prollt lrom the
perience ol olhero at this time. Be a
good Mstener and a keen observer, and
l.lliiiZe wnat you learn.
IACIITTAIIIUI (NoV. 231-Dic. 211 Your
pul ellerll have not gono unnoticed
nor unappreciated. and ltl-allka they
won't go unrewardecl. That wlllch Ia due
you Ia coming, so continue to be

Lato=r.:tereo.Q

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llrtoul

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dey; MPICIIII)' HK'l of I

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Q S P I V X
P G U G, S 0 G •
YesteftliY'i try· t uote: ONE WAY TO PRE· "
VENT CONVWA.tfo::t:ROM BEING BORING IS TO
..
SAY THI! WRONG 1liiNG.- FRANK SHEED

..

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QS1XSGX

ea

~
M0Y11: Tllllllfllo"'n-•

•
(Brk. sp.)
•
31 Oocurrenee
32 Sides in a •·
classic
·baltle
36 -Grande • ·

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZGN

I~(J)IIIIIta•Q

ICiiiiiiiiO
lltDng

....., ,. llllilne With
.

11:100 Up CioN
11:10~11 M naiOao•.poro
• pta • .
11:10 IJl
Lale Night With

na·
lura, fOllOw through 11 your Intuition
(Got. 14 NOY. 221 There are' dlclatos. n could put you on 1 Winning
In lie Ilona thlt VOU be tracl&lt;.

~tiUI don'tWIItetoo much

S-6

I N/llarll-r:ow
1::'8 ..........

»&gt;I llhiDI You III8Y
be 111e n otplanl o1 happy lldlnp
to lflveta your
alementaoielllnel.tla:u-.thlodoea todl)' lhll WIN not ghe you IIOIMI to be reclcltll.
. hopaa end expec18110111. Hn II dljlyad
- . don't worry; you
IJIItA (s.pL D Dol Ill Par ta. next lor lhDUidn't hive toO long a wall,
leW dayl, you may be able to do 1n jOint - ' " " ' lhM In lndepanHnl ..-s c-llhlt-Aprl 1t) N you haW
en~ll a 1. Give IIIII -

'

·a·~~G:7
OTIII
.

mind that It's the bollorn Nne that
coun11 today. Don't lowi light o1 your
-youh8vetodl81

weapon

One letter stands for •notber.ln this sample Ills used . ,
.for the three L's, X for the two O'.s, etc. Single letters,
apostrophe,, I he length and formation of lhe words are
all hints. Each day the code letters are different.

a-

AGUAIIUII,_ 20 Feb. 1t) K- In

&gt;;

29 Kicked off
30 Fencing

lsi.ONGFELLOW

8 .,._ Tonight
11:311 (J)
Q
d]}
Nil

•

AXYDLR~AXR

~=AIII.:.Q

IliOn
ID

buys
22 Spread
rumors
23 OocasionaUy .
24 Put lhe
wrong
address
on
25 Drawn out

DAII.Y CRYPTOQUOTF.S- Here's how to work It:

IDe 'lwi. .OU llulfiiS' Cll

CAPIIICOIIN IDle. 22-.lan. 11) You
hi.. gained 1 new admlror, someone
you've aloo "-' atiroc1,clto but hi,.
had the opportunity 'lo get to
k,_ · That'allboulto olw&gt;ga.

01111**'-

King

11:30 (J) e 1!11 Toni9hflh0w
stereo.
())Men
(lJ Europun Journ8l
,.

patlont.

Ynllt'day'e Answer
21 Far\cHul
27 Desolate

goat

9 Miami 'lice Stareo.
IIIOnllaaa
.
Ill luctit Tonight
IIIMO...,..II

'

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•

38 "I dldn1
do~; e .g .
39 Marine
flyer
40 Pebble·
strewn

oe AnlniO HaM

....,...., _ _ _ No

. . te door

a

Murphy tries to catch a spy
who's leaki!JQ Information tC1
the tabloids. Stereo. 1;11
18 Nelhvtlle Now
ID Pro lleach Voleybell
Cuervo Gold Crown from
Clearwater, Fla. (T)

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

- g i l l d LCR liDOO lloh
,...,, uoellnt 001 •kH1, Utw

......... niod:!a. Till ......

c2:om

MOYII!': •c cclllall'

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(2:00) Stereo. Q.
(lJ ()) lhlpe 01 11M World
Stereo. C
IIJ) ID • Murphy lltoWn

114112CoiiHTIII!o,
1131 01 .. . 401 Page
••• llld 'I: rt~ . ·, ..

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.Wid: Till Taking of Peggy
Am' NIIC Monday Ntgllt M
111e Movlla
~·

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POIIEIIOI'IGALLIIOIJI AREAl -.til, Eot-•1 c-. 3 ' llli . , ..... lufttllte
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loowt
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Lulllm&amp;. Alliin
1ft.
.uln!ALIA WANTS 'IOU
1100 110 II II
42 Mobile HomM
II I II
Poy,
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Tis
t&amp;lan.
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torRent
Ill.
T..
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LCIMIIT IIAIL
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drive. (:l.:reo. Q
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Bualnus

l!o;:111111111..

36

. 41 Colle&lt;:·
· lions
1 Complain
5Combos . DOWN
1 Fancy
10German
seashell
river
11 Warnings 21doHze
3 Brought
13 Network
bac:k
junction
14 Ceremony 4 Acts as
an omen
15 Holy war
5
French
17"actress
Yankae
6
Outsider
Doodla
·
7 Catch
Dandy"
18 Nut shap4 8 l.ke
Stone·
19Commo·
henge riles
lion
8 Endur'
20 Under·
ance
stand
12
Inclines
21 Pocket
16
Like some
sluff
cheese
22 Tilled
25 "Star
Wars"
crealor
26 Singer
Redding
.27 Bagel
extra
28 "- a girll'
29 Paycheck
extras
33 Bro's
sibling
34 Etch
·~s Appear
37 Asian
ACROSS

Mlljor 118ches Elzabeth to

'-Ualila.IINn,wlh

Land or 'curag1, 1 to 30 .._,

Opportunity
----~~~~~--Cllil'o. ATTN:·
INOIICII

~ ~

-

~

Will ..... l• .... Will FH! ...
_, IIIIi. No hM Hid
Col E.ol.

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

L...,.IIMbr'
Ill 1D. Major Did The

lOKIC WA~l£
lOR fQ:AI$51

.'

CROSSWORD

(I)

IVMO£AT

olo- -nlng, Frt ond

leS. Mv. ••utl:au

~

I Lady

ally

- -.....
- .""'You;"*
. N o.. ·....

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1:05 (J) MOVIE: No Way to Treat

~

.
"tilliNG NQWI•
N 'lliu 1 """""II Wo

+

and MacGyver recall
harrowing adventures from
their ~st. Stereo. Q

Wllh

t K7S
+10913

·-

QICroaanre

ACTIVt

.Q,

.Q

7:35 (J) Slintofd and Son
8:00 (J) • l!lll'181h Prtnca of
Ill AM Hilary triOS to
conYlne:e Will to date her
haughty celebrity boJS. ·

' ALLEY OOP

aa••
INII•
uw.
~· ~' lllddiiiiDrt.

~rdyii;J

D Amerlca'a Cup P,..._w

op

&amp;-11-11

The major dillerence between an
EAST
expert and a less good player is the WEST
•KJ 9 3
time each spends in counting. An ex- •to6 42
. •to 7 6
.pert always adds up eve"l'one's high· • J 9 S.4
tJI098
t3
card points and suit lengths. An aver- +K872 .
+AS
age player doesn't. '
True, 'it sounds like a tall order, but
SOUTH
anyone can do it. You just have to be
• A K8 2
willing to make the ellorl. Start by
tAQ642
counl'ing the trump suit. Then look at
+QJ6
declarer's high-card points. Finally,
once you are doing those two almost
Vulnerable: North-South
subconsciously, include any other crit·
Dealer: South
ical suit.
W01l
Nort~
Elll
Cover the South and West hands in Soutb
It
Pass 1•
Pass
today's diagram and plan your de·
2
•
Pass
3
t
Pass
fense. Against three no-trump, your
J
NT
Pass
Pass
.
Pass
partner, West, leads the two ol clubs.
Alter winning the !irst trick with the
Opening lead: 2
ace ol clubs, which card do you lead at
·
· ·
trick lwo?
The counting sta~ts during the bid·
ding. From the auction, you khow .
South bas lour hearts and 'at least live
diamonds. From partner's openlne be able io win live tricks before &amp;oulh
lead, which shows a lour·card suit, you collects nine. Even il partner has the
··
know declarer has three clubs. This K-J ol clubs, the suit can walt.
With the given layout, that's eucHy
means ·South probably has 1-4-i'&gt;-3
how the hand pans out. Declarer ducks
distribution.
Does this point you to the right an- a couple ol spades In dummy, wins
swer? Correct - you switch to the dummy's ace on the third round, and .
king ol spades, just In case declarer tries to run the diamonds. When th!Y
has a singleton queen. Having dia· don't break, he has to dislodge the king
monds under control, your side should ol clubs to get out lor one .down.

laoebal
Qllle I 81ar

HrGH- p~FO/!fVIANC.E 1
SpoRTSitJfAfl
$H 0t~ ~VT
f
Tt-11-Y wovt.P CLASH !
WITH THE /tifT Of
....
.,.
- - - -My fOJ&gt;Y.
~-'
~~~~~~~--------~~~~~~~==~~~~~~----------~~~~~~~v~~~.~~J

Fumllhed

-

:L'I&gt; GfT

___..

4nd

NORTH
.11875

By PWIIIp Alder

e

~ rFR~A~N~K~A~NzD~E~R~N~E~ST~-.----~------------------~

Coli

v.

··

BRIDGE

(J)
Coull 1;1
. (J)
En181tiilnmenl
Tonlgllt Stereo.
(J) • ~·· Family
Ill Wheel of Fomone Q
Oe Mljol LIOIIIIII

fOr Sill:

Public Sill
&amp; AuCtion

wlh 01 ......... LMJ LhoiJ.I1WII 1111

1;11

7:05 (J) HaPPJ Doya

.75 .BoltS &amp; MoiOrs ~

I J i l l t - II Yllii!IO
.......
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.....

Ylllll Solo 1111J 10-11 Ao1n 01
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lo
o ....
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here BEFORE you.'

8-~
l c - end M~. King

Qnalouelvlng.1ohd ·Ziiod-

=·l!liMPooiOIRao:Poul

s ·J

Unfair - .Perch- Viola- Gabled- BEFORE
Elementary schOOl teacher gave a lecture on ·
ecology to her students, • An~ the .earth. ~ was

~~ · ~1.':=" 1;11

Main II.

To lilY: ~unll Auloo

SCUM UTI ANIWIU

Newallour 1;11

-llornlly
·. ..., 1-H.
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..

8:01 (J) ......, ll.b.lll
e:30 (J) e 0 NIC Men !;I
(J) Abbott lftd Cac?IIO
Neni;J
()) 3-2-1
111 ceCIINaWei;J

Info. Col f11.71NIOI
Ext. IC:etl.
.

8

•
•

R J T EM

='i..., ..

WilEN '(00 RETURNEP,
I WOULDN'T 1!€
WAITING FOR YOU ..

,led ""'

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lour """''" - •·

D lch ha'lc 11p0rt1

.,.

. --·-·-

KUWAIT.

lOom-Spin

10 form

EVENING

·WELL,tl= vou DID,

I !.lAVE NO

... ...

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M.lt In .......... Cao:

. •

Help wanted

11

&amp;

--· -,or

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