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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Polls will close at 7:30p.m. Have you voted yet?

Ohio Lottery

Pirates knock
Reds from
first place

PIIIIRI ftiATD
3.36
4.90
6.95
10.35

.·
26'tx8'······--~············!'·······························'4.95

26''x1 0'················-·······-······~~····· ...····••·····'6.25
26''x12'•....•••.:.....•...•........~··········~···········17 .90
26''x14'.......•.... ~.....................................•8.95
26''x16'.·....~.... ~ .....:............ ~.....................'9.95

•

'
·
'4•95
26 ..X·a· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
26''x1 0'····················~·············-~ .....•..~ ......'6.25
26''x12'......................................................'7.90
. 26''x14'.....~... ~.....~ ....................................'8.95
'26''x16'....~....................................•L•••• ~•••••'9 .95~

Pick 3:418 .

Pick 4:5052
Cards : 9-H, 6-C
7-D; 9-S

Page3

•

Vol. 42, No. 2

•

6.25

~ School

issues .domin~te primary election

By JOHN CHALFANT

1''x6''x8'•.........•..·.............................................~ ....11.20
1''x6~'x1 0'.~........~...................~'···················-·········11.50
.1''x6''x12'.......................................................~ ........11.80
1''xa''x&amp;'...............~····-·············································'1:.60
'2.00 ·
Paclftc ,1''x8''x1 0'................ ~ ..........................................•
'
1''x8''x12'·-·······································..·················'2.40

tion said the 256 requesls for
money from 223 distnciS is the
CQLUMBUS - From waste . largest number in 20 years. The
incincraton in Mayfield Village to record of 304 school issues was set
jail cells In Zanesville and 256 in the 1970 prim~.
school money issues in between,
Slate school Superintendent
vorers face a variety of questions in Franklin Walter traced the high
today's local primaty elections.
number of tax issues to reduced
TheJe ~~~e 110 slalewide issues or state aid and increased operating
, · contestS .at stlk.c, but more than costs, including salar1es for
· one-third of the state's 612 school employees.
districts are seeking money to
''It's a very simple fact that the
cover operating or construction . cost of educalingluis gone.u~ faster
\ coolS~
than the revenue in districts, • WalThe Ohio Dcpanment of Educa- ter said in an .inttzview Monday.

Conerete Wor•

IBIIGLES

5~

6"x6"x1Q/10
s··x.150'

ALUMINUM ABERGLASS
.
S
ROOFCOATING ..................t'MJ.:...... 25.95
'
.
ROOF AND
$ O
FOUNDATION COATING.... !~ ..-· 1 .99
ROOFCOATING ..... ~..............~.~!:.....s1 0.99
.

Buml Sienna Blend

3/8~' x
..20' Rebar...............s2.25

1/2" x 20' Rebar...*3.25

- ·1

20'.......'19.99 • 26' .•.•.•.'28.25
24'.......'26.99. 28'.•••.•:'31.50
30'.•••.'33.25

AILS .

2'x8'

REPLACE
YOUR OLD
SI.,IDING DOQR
WITH THE
ATRIUM DOORI

L

$565 . 4'x8; $795
ODOT CREWS • Crews from the Ohio
. Department or Transportallon were on tbe scene
at Hobson yesterday, wbere a rock slide 11d
. large cracks in the ~round have closed State

1/2'' X 10' CPVC•••.•••.. ~ ..••.•••••••••..•••.•••••.•••.•1.99
3/4'' X 10' CPVC •••.••.....•... ~ ••••••....•.•.•••••••••.12.99
1 112~' x 1O' Schedule 40.............................13.99

I

k=====~-----U~l- . '

ft.,.._..,,

40 4'"
Sewer I Drain Pipe

i •ALL WOOD
:, ! •ENERGY EFFICIENT
•READY·fO.INSTALL ··
•SOIJD ~~lASS MORTICE
•LOCK INCLUDED
the Atrium Door is
actually a whole
system of Ideas for
enhancing the beauty
of any home.
,·Come in today· Jet ua
I help you choose the

cc SINKER...~..................~$16.99
16 cc SINKER...............:...$16.99

·'

Pressure Treated lattice

Atrium Door

WITH 4112 PITCH AND 12'' OVERHANG

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stair .
Members of Pomeroy Village
Council approved the purchase of
new perlcing meters, police department uniforms and fin: equipment
· re~ SCSSIOn
· m
·
when theYmet m
their chambers Mon y night.
· Pomeroy Police Chief Jerry
R h
oug t presented council with a
Jlloposal for the purchase of 12 re·
conditioned ~ meters for. new
parki~g spaces w1thin the village
last mght.
.
According to Rought, the sup.
.plier can provide the re-manufactured Duncan double meters at 8
cost of $~ 16 · h ·
.Sllvii1p .dn~ ~~~;"ji.i'k~of new meters.
Additionally, Rought suggested
that additional
"'u meters be
purehase4 and ~';i;ued in the
lower municipal parking lot, where

.

$2395

Chooae from Charcoal Blend,
Weathered Wood !!lend,

'4

HCl;L \ ...-u~c-,1N

.

4" X 10'
Schedule 40.
1f5.99

hours.

The repair work is temporary.
· according to Anderson, who wd

idea that's rtght fOr ·
your home.

INCLUDES SCREEN
AND
.

.
$
42 GAL. ELECTRIC..........
14995
95
30 GAL. ELECTRIC.........$152
,

52 GAL. GAS.......,.........$23995
. $179
42 GAL. GAS...................
' 95
.

.

$

30 GAL. GAS......;...........

S3
1/2"x4'x12'...............s519

that a hirge hose on top of the into the lines, many of which are
ground is being used to supply under water, in an effort to locate
water to the area until the leak can the breaks.
be located and repair to the pennaMost of the homes in the area
nent lines made. Today village have been without water since Friworkers will begin injecting air · day.

Discovery,
crew land safely
.
.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. {AP) - Discovery and its crew of
sevc:n landed in Florida today after an eight-day "Siar Wars" mission. High wind divc:rted l,he spaceship from NASA's main touchdown site in the California desert.

:"Meigs Boar4 of Elections will use
new computer system tonight

6'0 X6'8"

1/2"x4'x8'..................

Route 7 near tbe Meigs/Gallla County line.
Here, an ODOT worker removes a layer of tbe
road where dama&amp;e occurred over the weekelld.

·water service restored to homes
Water service to about SO
households in the area of the State
Route 7 and 33 intersection and
north along Route 33 has been
restored, John Anderson, Pomeroy
village idministrator, reported this
mmning.
Anderson advised that residents
· should boil the water which they
use for dri11king and cooking
' before using it for the next 48

95
52 GAL. ELECTRIC..........
$169
'

95

169

The staff of the Meigs County .
·Board of Elections will try out a
new computerized system for Tues·
day's election.
·
The board voted to enter into a
short-term lease wil.ll Business
Records C01poration for this computerized system in liF.ht of !he
condition of the. board s existmg

ballot labulator.
Purchased in 1977, the current
tabulator is, according to Board
Director Jane Frymyer, ouunoded,
no longer under warranty and - for
· all practiql) purposes • irreparable.
· A representative !'rom BUsiness
Records Corporation will be on
hand at the board office for the

----Local briefs-~

..

.Charges pending against teens

UDivar181 laadla

........

•.....
•

I

"

•

.,

Possible char~es are pendinJI against three Eastern High School
students for an 1ncident on Fnday afternoon, in which one of the
studenrs set fii'C to. a b8lluoom tissue dispenser in the resttoom.
According to a report from lhe Meigs County Sheriff's Department, light damage includinj smoke damage was reported.

Board of Health to meet

e.

Jon Jacobs, Director of the Meigs Councy Health Departm.~nt,
reminds the
that the Meigs County Board of Health meets on
the second
~ of the month 81 4:30p.m. in the health department conference room.

Boosters to meet Thursday
The Southern Local Band Boosten will hold their May meeting
· on 1banday at 7:30 p.m. in the band room: AD parents of studenrs
In lflde achool through high school who ate interested In the
· · Continued OD piiF 10
'
' J •

r, •

'

•

decide a 0.25 percent sales tax he has since changed his position,
expected to generate about $3.2 .saying some money would be betmillion for the county sheriff's ter than none at all.
.department.
· In Zanesville, voters are being
Sheriff Martin Mahony has said asked to raise the municipal
his department faces a $.750,000 income tax by 0.2 percent t~
shortfall, and announced plans to expand an4 operate the city jail.
Jay off more ~ 50 employees. A
Backers arc displaying posterS
judge last week blocked the layoffs that depict a prisoner behind bars
pending the outcome of Tuesday's and a slogan, "Eight is Not
voting.
Enough." There are eight beds
Mahony had urged the county available in the current jail, which
commissioners to adopt a O.S per- would be expanded to 52 beds if
cent sales tax without a vote as an the ·measure is approved.
emergency measure, and opposed
Polls are open today from 6:30
the voted sales tax as too small. But a.m. to 7:30p.m.

Council buys new parking meters,
fire equipment; police uniforms

S·1 vE AT

8' X 6'
SECnONS

.SO YEAR WARRANTY

Approval rates over the last dent Crystal Ellis said tlie disuict
decade range· from 44 percent in would Jay off employees, ·end most
I982 to 69 percent in 1983. Walter bus service and stop all extracurricoffered no prediction about today's · uJar activities if voters reject a 6.9ouk:ome.
. mill JIIOpCJty tax levy.
"It does fluctuate ... but it's
N'ot all the ballot •ssues deal
surely fair tog~ that around with schools.
50 percent is a pattern of whars
A proposal in Maf{ield Village
happened at special elections," lie would prohibit the mcineration,
said.
'
dumping or stomge of garbage or
Ridgedale Local School Disbict waste in lhe Cleveland suburb. It is
in Mari!Jn County is seeking a 2 being backed as a way to eliminate
~ent mcome tax. Buckeye Local the community as a possible future
m Jefferson County' currently has site for plants like those that l!um
the largest, at 1.5 percent.
medical waste.
In toledo, ~cbool SuperintenVoters in Lorain County will

WELD WIRE MESH

BOX FENCE.

1 Sellon, 10 Pou• 25 _,,.
A MUIUI!Mdbo Inc. Newopopw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,' Tuesday, May 7, 1991

: ~ . Capyrlgi!IM 1..1

Aaleiafed Press Writer

59

'

••

1x6
5/4x6

a.,gla

•

.....

.

Clear tonight. Low in
mid-40s. Party sunny
Wednesday.

IIIII

.

public test of the system tonight at
5:30 p.m. and for the vote count,
and board employees wiJI get a
first-hand look at how computers
have revolutionized the ballot tabulating process.
According to Frymyer, such a
system allows the board to continue using the existing voting equipment and card reader. Therefore,
voters in Meigs and Southern Local
School Disuicts who will be casting their ballotS wiU notice no difference in lhe equipment a1 the
.polls.
Frymyer repons that the system
would allow her office to comput·
erize other year-round aspects of
the board's operation, such as voter
registration records and absentee
b!lllot application.processing.
In addition, the board could pro-vide voter registration printouts,
lists of registered DemoclliiS, regis·
teled Republicans and undeclared
voters through the computerized
system.
Another service thal the new
system can provide is a~:::&amp;Jete
election night log, which
· , by
time, the steps involved in the vote
count on election nighL
Frymyer said last week that the ·
bolrd hu taken no fonnll action
toward the purchase of the equipment.

parking spaces are now reserved
for those with special paid pamits.
According to Rought, little
response has been received since
the institution of the reserved parking area from merchaniS and their .
employees.
Extensive discussion was held
regarding the re-installation of the
meters in this part of the par~ng
lot, with most council members
.~posed to the re-;installation. ~e
history of vandalism to meters m
that part of the lot and theft of .
di
sed
money Cror;n them was scus .
ACC?rdmg to ~~ght, theft and .
vandalism to ~x1~ung meters has
almost been ehmmated due to
cl8mig -or th~ Jots at 1 a.m. on ,
weekerids.
Council also appr_oved the purc~. of summer unifonns for the
pohce department at a cost. of
$878.63, upon the reco~mendabon

. ..

of ROUght.
In other action. council ·
awroved the purchase of air masp
for the fii'C department at a cost 'Of
$1,192 each. the village agreed to
pay for two of the masks and the
fii'C department has indicated that'it
wiD also buy two.
.,
A bid from Ashland Branded
Marketing was accepted for gasOline and diesel fuel for the viDa~,
The bid was submitted to the viilage In the amount of 83.7 CC/Its pi:r
gallon for regular unleaded gaso·
line and 72.8 cenrs per gallon for
diesel fuel.
Sherman Mills inquired of counon
which Mills and
his
contend is a safety
and
hazard.
MlDs had appeared before counContinaed on pa&amp;e 10

Riffe releas·es new budget;
hear1ngs start in House
By ROBERT E. MILLER
· eral Assistance program, which
Aasoclated Press Writer
Voinovich would sharply curtail.
COLUMBUS - The House The program ror poor people who
F'lnance Committee called for pub- do not &lt;~_ualify for Aid to Depenlic testimony today on a sweeping dent Children would be restrucDemocralic revision of ~ublican tured to capture additional Medi·
Gov. George Voinovich s $26.8 caid subsidies.
biUion budget biU.
The Democrats do not assume
House Speaker Vern Rifre Jr., passage of an administration proD-Wheelersburg, unveiled lhe doc- posal to end the state's monopoly
ument late Monday after working on ret~!il liquo~ sal~s. eliminating
behind close doors over the week· 1,400 JObs. Vomc;&gt;v•ch co.unted O!!
end to put it together.
that proposal, whtch woul~ let pnRiffe called the document bal- vate agents sell pa~~ hquor, to
anced, fair and sensitive to public . save the state $48 milhon over the
demands.
biennium.
·
It restores $311.9 million in cuts
Riffe said in a statement that
proposed by tbe governor but afler Voinovich introd~ his bud·
shows SS 14 million in new rev- get, "The JleOI?Ie ofth,t;J state ~poke
enues. The revenues include pins up ... and we listened. He said the
from what he called the closing of new bill is innovative, "taking
tax loopholes, a Joan of $150 mil- advantage of every opportunity to
lion from the state •s $300 million levemge more money from the fed"rainy day" fund and at least $200 era! level."
million in additional Medicaid and
Curt Steiner. deputy chief of
other federal subsidies.
staff for Voinovich , said Monday
Some propams, including oou- night the administration had not y~t
cation and natural resources would had a chance to study the speaker s
get more money than they .;ould in proposal in detail.
the governor's plan.
"We have to stand back and
The House retains Ohio •s Oen- look at the whole p1cture before we

can make a fonnal observation on
it," Steiner said. "But we're very
concerned about the notion that the
entire rain fund, practically speaking, wiU be depleted.' •
Under the category of loophole
closin$5, Rirfe listed as a.$100 mil·
lion btennial item the elimination
of an ·exemption for inter-company
transactions under the corporate
franchise tax.
.
Without comment, he provided
a chart showing new income onder
the sales tax by the inclusion of
magazine subscriptions, rental and
sale of copyright motion pictures
a.nd 900-number telephone services. These items would add
almoot $70 mUJion in new revenues
over the biennium. he said.
"We ~~~e closin&amp; loopholes that
have robbed this state of needed
revenue, an.d kept incentive progmms that have helped the business climate, •• the speaker said.
One of the items the House ·
retained, which Voinovich wanted '
to repeal, were discounts provided
retail merchaniS and auto dealers
for coDeclion of the slate sales tax.
C~tiDued on page 10
·

Sheriff disputes state audit of drug program
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - $7 300 for undercover re~tal cars
Franklin County Sheriff Earl Smith th~ough a sales 1e;nt w o is an
has disputed a state audit that said auxiliary sheriff's
uty.
there were accountability problems
Smith said the cars were rented
and perhaps conllicts of interest in on a daily basis from Ricart Ford
a county drug enforcement pro- Inc. of Columbus and not from
gram.
Mark Laub the auxiliary deputy
The Depanment of Develop· who works for the dealer ror $16 a
meat, which released the audit day. He said the mte ~as lower
Monday, said Smith, alon~ with than those charged elsewhere ror
County Board or CommiSSIO~ers . the same vehicles. .
President Jack Foulk, were g~ven
In another ins1ance, the repon
30 day~ to~ with a plan for said the netwOrk violated regD!acorrecuve IICIIoll.
.
lions that required competitive b•dNo violations of Jaw were ding for office space. Smith said he
claimed, but the report said cenain does nOt know how to sce1c bids for
records suggesled confllctl of inter· offiCe renlal "unlcu you run an ad
est and were turned over to the. inthepal'l?foriiOIIIelhing."
U.S. Deuanaoent or Jliltice and the
He said the network told one or
Ohio Etfiics Commilllon.
two real estate compules of Its
Smltb said he would fCIPO'Id.
needt and wound UJ' with apace
Most of the 18-pqe report list· that CO$l leu than $8 per aquue
ed lmproperbclokkilqilng
foot. He said tbe lOin&amp; rate Cor
nlzational Oawala tile
In other counly officea Is $13.50 to
COUI\ty Dus EAforcement Nctwcn. SIS 50 per ~quare root.
.But it also questioned spending
,;The only thing we ~~~e guilty or

;;!:J•·

is saving taxpayers' money,"
Smith said.
His anti-drug group is smaller
and separate from the Franklio
County Drug Tasl\ Force. Smith's
group was audited because of a
$35,000 federal grant that was
received through the Department of
Development.
The audit covered the period
from Nov, I, !990, through March
3I, 1991.
'
Lt. Gov. ~ichael De Wine
ordered the audit March 26 and put
a freeze on the unspent federal
money after the Oh1o Bureau of
Criminal Identiflcalioilllldlnvestigation, the Department ofLiq~or
Conttol and the Columbus Pollee
Department pulled out of the Del• .
work.
'
Smith aid thal thOIC agencies
withdrew manpower only and
promlled contiauod coopention:
He said DeWine's actions "weil:
whoUy inllppropriale."
•

..

�Commentary
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sen~inel
·u.S. visit keeps China guessing

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Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
.

·- --- .. ·
By ALAN ROBINSON
APSp11111Wrbr
PITTSBURGH (AP) - A lot
has cblnged in the 160-plus daya
. the Cincinnati Reds IIIII Pitts·
smce
burgh Pirateslut,P~se'!eral
mstr:urn.ingful pmea m
Riva-s

Tl.lesday, May 7, 1991

111 Court Street

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON - It has been violeatly.
four decades since China ovemn
The Dalai Lama won the 1989
.
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MAsON AREA
its peaceful neighbor, Tibet, and Nobel~ Prize f~ his quiet and Square, not the sustained violence his country, and as a "leader in
began the systemalic destruction of persistent struggle to free Tibet against TibeL When George Bush hUman rights."
A~
the Tibelan culture. Back then there from ihe Chinese grip. "Because says he will not let aggression
f!l!m~ rT"\-I~
................. c::~ .....
After the meeting, the Dalai
~v
.
.
was no buildup of U.S. troOps to · violence can only breed more 'vio- stand, he is talldng about aggres- Lama declined tO say what he and
push back the invaders, no effec- lence and sufferin$, our struggle sion .against countries that mean Busli had discussed, other than to
ROBERT L. WJNGETI'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tive outCry from the United must mnain non-viOlent and free something to the United States. remark that be found Bush ~ be a
Publisher
'
· General Mana1er
Nations, no sanctions against the of ~." the Dalai L$na. said in And Tibet means nothing in the "warm" human being.
'
aggressors. It was strictly a person- areepting the prize. "We are trying grand scheme of things.
Meanwhile, the Chinese are fes- ·
PAT WHITEHEAD
al problem for Tibet.
'
to end the suffering of our people,
The
'
D
alai
Lama
has
made
tering,
ttying to figure out what it
Assistant Publisher/Contrnller
The things Saddam Hussein not to inflict suffering on others.~
repeated visits to the United Slates all means. Was Bush just being
tried to do in WIIIJl speed in Kuwait
After fOlD' decades of quiet suf- over the years, and has repeatedly sensitive to &lt;;riticism that he is
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assohave been done m slow motion in fering, the Dalai Lama and asked for an audience with the selective about which invaded
ciation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Tibet as the Chinese tty to obliter- Tibelans are understandably con- presidenL But he didn't get it until counaies be will Sland up for? Was
ate
all that is uniquely Tibetan. The' fused by the swift and decisive last week, when in a surpise move, he ttying to send China a mes~e
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
Chinese
have forced their own peo- response of the world community Bush inviled him to drop by while about its human rights· record 10
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with
. pie to move to J'ibet to outnwnber to another invaSion-the annexing he was in Washington to accept an general? Or was he pointedly
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned lettera will be published . Letters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, uotpersonallthe native population. Tibetan Bud· of Kuwait by Iraq. The Tibetans' award from the human rights group telling the Chinese it s time to
"'"
dhist monasteries, shrines IIIII tem- non-violent approach to problem Freedom House.
tles.
compromise with Tibet and right
ples have been destroyed by the solving probably would have preIt must have shocked the Chi- some old wrongs? Whatever the
thousands. Monks have been beat· vented them from wanting the nese as much as it shocked the reason, it is healthy to keep the
en, tonuted and executed. Resis- s.ledgehammer approach taken in Dalai Lama. Bush has been ·a great Chinese
guessin~ and to send the
tance has been violently sup- their beluilf. But they ,would not friend to China, and China has message that
Beijing cannot dictate
.
pressed. EnvirOnmenlll degrada· · mind some sanctions against China always objected to anything that to the president
of the United States
tion was even ~ of the Chinese and a sttong and continuing protest looks like a diplomatic exchange whom he may or
may not receive
plan. Beijing tned to market Tibet from the United States.
between the United States and . at the White House.
as an international dumping ground
That isn't going to happen. The Tibet, which China does not recogRISKY BUSINESS - Small
for nuclear waste.
·
United States is interested in nize as an independent natioo.
American
businesses that had done
Through it all, the spiritual lead- friendly relations with China, and
The
White
House
was
careful
a
modesi
business with Eastern
By MITCH WEISS
er of Tibet, the 14th Dalai Lama, nothing Beijing can do seems terri- not to couch the visit in tenns of
Europe
before
the crumbling of
Associated Press Writer
Tenzin Gyatso, has lived in exile in ble enough to cbange that, not the diplomacy . Spokesman Marlin
communism
have
been lu!nl hit by
. OREGON, Ohio - Ju(lgment day is approaching for environmenllli India, enco111'88in$ his captive peo- brutal putdown of the student
Fitzwater
said
the
Dalai
Lama
was
liberation.
The
old
rules are gone,
activi~ and officials who have beel) fighting the proposed expansioo of
ple, from the outside, to resist non- demonstrations in Tiananmen inviled as the "religious leader" of
but
no
new
rules
are
in place. The
Ohio's only hszardous-waste landfill. .
·
fonner
communist
contacts
that the
The Ohio Hazardous Wasle Facility Board oo Aug. 29 rejecled expanAmerican companies .did business
sion of the Envirosafe Services of Ohio Inc. landfill in Oregoo, a Toledo .
with are either out, or don't know
suburb. ·
.
·
.
how to function in the free market.
. The decision IJ}so limiled the amoun1 of waste the company could store
· One American businessman,
annually. The company contends that could force the landfill to close by
who is an old hand at dealing with
early next year.
countries behind the Iron Curlain,
But the board in recent months said it might reconsider its decision.
said he had a franchise to sell
The issue will be discussed at the board's meeting Wednesday, board
portable .silos, and he targeted
spokeswoman April MorrisOn said Thtmiday.
Czechoslovakia as a good potential
For three months, the board has been reviewing responses from Oremartel. He figured small private
gon, the Ohio EPA and Envirosafe concerning several key issueS, includfarms
would soon spring up in
mg expansion and limilations on the amOunt of wastes that can be stored
Czechoslovakia,
and they would
at the 135-acre landfill, Ms. Monisoo said The responses will detennine
their
own
private
silos. But
need
whether the board reconsider.; the case.
because
of
bitter
disputes
J&gt;elween
"There is a possibility that the board may reconsider its Aug. 29 deci·
the
Czechs
and
the
Slovaks;
permasion "Ms. Morrisoo said. "Bulit's not definite."
nent
land
legislation
and
rules
are
· S~dy Bihn, Ore$on's cleJk-auditor, said she fears that the board will
in
flux.
r~onsider its deciston. The city has been fighting Envirosafe's plans
. The new .private farmers are
since 1984.
unwilling
to buy silos until they are
, Judy Junga, spokeSwoman for Hazardous WasiCS Leak Poison, said the
sure that they have title to their
bQard should buck Envirosafe' s pressure and stick to its original ruling.
land. So J,he fanners are still using .
"You have a new governor, who has never been on our side. You have .
the inefficient cenfllllized silo syspressure from Eti~~e. The cards are slaCked against us, but we~re
tem set up for the old collective
going to keep fighlm$·
fanns.
.
The heart of the ISsue is whether the expansion would threaten the
In
Yugoslavia,
with the country
environment ·
seemingly fallins apart, the land
The city contends the land is unsuited to Store hazafdous materials,
regulations are even more chaotic,
.ially.at a site two miles from Lake Erie. Also, there is i:oocern over
with a market economy being
Toledo's two main warer lines, which run through the middle of the Jand.
encour&amp;Jed
in some regions and
fi~.
'·
blocked.
m
others.
. Altllough no waste can be dwnped within 40 feet of the two watet
lilies Oregon and the coalition expressed concern that an accident could
cooWninate the sole source of drinking warer fiX' 500,000 people in Lucas
County and surrounding communities.
:- Envirosafe conrends the landflll poses no threat to the environment and
.tb&amp;t the company has an ~emplary comp~ record. The landfill primiu:ily accepts such malaialas mercury, arseo1c, lead and chrome. It does
not accept polychlorinated biphenyls, known as PCBs, or medical wastes.
WASHINOTON (NEA) ~ In iiing the teChnology.
Envirosafe President C. Edward Ashby Jr. said the company has been
that could lead to incieased federal
1980,
this counuy enjoyed a 75
But government and corporate funding in those fields.
·
trying to get the board to overturn its decision. He said the expansion is
percent share of the global lll8ltet leaders in Japan recognized the
necessary because the Envirosafe is running out of room.
But dominating the domestic
But the Bush administralion has
for semiconductors, the thumbnail- VCR 's sales potential, assumed debate for years have been oppo- displayed little similar concern for
•The coinpany in November be~an mailing letters aslcing hundreds of
size chips that are the foundation of Cl;lllfrol of the product and now ship nents of the govemment-industty other industries. Indeed, it has
itS' customers to conlact state leg~slator.; and Ohio EPA officials in an
modern computer technology. millions of units to the United cooperation that might make this allowed Japanese corporations to ·
allempt to persuade the board to revel'liC its decision.
Japan's share at 'the time was limit- States - and other countries countty competitive in many fields. purchase approximately 20 of this • :
:The letter~ the board's decisioo "had potentially significant impact
ed to 24 pm:e!IL
around the world ~very year.
on Envirosafe which, in tum, could materially impact your company or
That approach they argue, consti• country's man11facturers of
By 1990, this country's share
Now unfolding are similar . totes "picking winners and semiconductor prOduction equipo
lions.''
had shriveled to 36.5 percent- developments that could allow the losers"-a task anathema to free- ment and materials!
Pj.also criticized the board's decision and former Gov. Richard Celeste, less
than half of what it was a Japanese to dominate future pro- market economists and politicians.
who opposed the expansion. If also ~d the Ohio and U.S. EPAs both
Says the chainnlin of one of the
decade
CIII'Jiec. Japan's share, how- duction and marketina of advanced
In fact, federal policy-makers numerous federal advisory coma!:'Proved the expansion.
. .
· ·
ever, had more than doubled to technologies ranging from flat already engage in that practice. The missions that in recent years have •
49.5
pen:ent- in ~t measure panel displays- already widely Energy Department, for example, is warned of the dire consequences ~
••
because that nation s government used in portable computers - to prepared to spend $8 billion on a likely to stem from the current
has long targeted the rapidly high-defmition television.
' superconductmg supercollider approach:
expandin~ industrY as crucial to its
In the future, Japan's reliance even though many members of the
"If this vital industty is allowed
export-driven
economic
growth:
upon
public-private
cooperation
to
to
wither
away, the nation will pay
scientific
community
argue
that
the
.
Japan's ~ovemment played a target and aggressively pumJe the project allocates far tno large a a price measured in millions of jobs
•
similar role m snatching control of development of nascent lechnolo- ·share of the government's limited across the entire electronics field
video recording technology from ~ is likely to help it assume sim- resources to high-energy physics.
ne Associated Press
·
technological leader.;hip in many ,
the
United States - after the Cali- Ilar· control of superconductivity,
•. Today is Tuesday, May 7. the I27th day of 1991. There are 238 days
Similarly, the White House sup- allied industries such as telecom • :
fornia-based Ampex Corp. invent- X-ray lithography, robotics, Optics, ports the modification or elimina- munications and computers and the
tift in the year.
•
ed
the means of preserving televi- bioteChnology and other 21st-cen- tioo of many restriclioos and P.J;Ohi· technical edge we depend on for
·: Today' s Highlight in Hista'y:
sion
images oo magnetic ta~.
tury advances.
.
; : On May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Gen.
bitions on export sales of mtliwy national security.
Ampex introiluced the VI~
One indication that President aircraft·and other major weapons
I)wight D. Eisenhower's headqtWU:rs in Rheims, France, that was to take
Rep. Mel Levine, D-Calif., is far :.
recorder (for commercial use) 10 Bush has belatedly recognized a systems. That initiative is SJICCifi· more blunt in his analy~is: "We ;
efrect the following day, ending the European 'stlge of World Warn.
1956 and ·the videocassette recorder crisis in the maldllg was the recent cally designed to provide asSIStance have a frightening situation in
.; On this dale:
(for
home use) in 1970. Although White House designation of 22 to a defense industry fearful of los- which the ideologues in this admin: · In 1789. the fust inaugural ball was held in New York in honor of
the
firm
held virtually all the technologies considered aucial to ing domestic .sales because of con- istration are ttying to dismantle the
~ident and Mrs. Geolge Washington.
patents
in
the fiCid, mass produc- the country's economic JliOSperity stricted Pentagon budgets in future most importlint programs ... which
.; In 1812, the poet Robert Browning was born in London.
.
tion
in
this
country was thwarted and national security - a move years.
; · In 1825, !lillian composer Antonio Salieri died in Vienna, Austria.
focus on the key technologies of
by
a
lack
of
interest
in commen:ial- .
.
.
•: In 1833, composer Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Gennany.
the future.
• :: In 1840. composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in the Ural
reg!on of Russia
·. tn 1847, the American Medical Association was founded in PbiladelPomeroy, Oblo

j
'

"

l

'

PREVENTS RUN - Cincinnati Reds back;
stop Jeff Reed (right) prevents the Pirates' Jay
Bell from scoring this run in tbe seventh luning
or Monday nigbt's game iD Riverfroot Stadi1110,

wlllch the Pirates won 3·1. Bell tried to score
fr001 second on a single to center neld by Bobby
BoniUa. (AP)

Robert Walters

Seattle defeats New York 4-2
By JII\4 COUR
AP Sports Writer
SEATILE (AP) - When the

Today
in history
.
sr.·

1

er;jJ
.

j;;

tive But the issue has become
politlcally cluir~, and ttanscendent because 11 will serve as a
symbolic pointer toward a great
decision that Americans are going
to have to make 10011•
The~
'ssue is
'ooalism vs.
merit,
vs.lbility.
·When the 1 Civil Rights Act
was passed almost 75 percent of
minorities ~ere blacks. The ·bill
property ruled out proportionaliam
but' It was later IIJIICid that clue ui
the authentically tragic history of
blacb in America there should be
some bending ~ backward-fiX'
a while
·
Al~ost three decades have
passed Because of recent immigration flows bla~ are now somewhat less 'than SO percent of the
minority population. Propoitionalism today has to deal not ooly with
blacks but Hispanics, Asians,
Moslems Caribbean and African
blacks ~d perhaps, soon, a new
waveofEastEuropelllland Soviet
Jews. Also, of course, women.
Tbat can't work. It d~s!l't
wort. A growing bodf or opuuon
maintains that proponionalism has
been hunins blacks and other

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•'

Chad Carroll, pitcher for the : .
University of Rio Grtllde baseball "
team, shlired District 22 and Mid· •
Ohio Conference Player of the:·
week honors with fust baseman:
RJ. ,Trainer of Urbana University •
during the week of AprillS-21.
•
Carroll. a sophomore lefthander, :
had a win and two saves during the
week. He saved f~ Rio Grande •
the end of both games in its A!Xil
16 doublehe.ader with Ohio,· ·
Dominican and burled a S-1 victory :
·. against Tiffin on April 18, which
sent his record to 4-1.
·.;
The Redmen (27-14) are top·'·
seeded in the district at 17-S and
fmished the season second in the;,.
. MOC at 8-4. The Redmen will host
the District 22 Playoffs starting
Wednesd&amp;y.
·.. ·
Carroll, the son of Mr. and Mrs....
Canni Carroll Jr., Chillicothe, illi
1989 graduate of Huntington Local
High SchoOl. He transfCII'ed to Rio: .
Grande from Ohio University in
the fall of 1990 and is majoring in .·
business management
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and appreciate him for many differ·
ent reasons."
"It Is always difficult for Ole
Miss to lose one of her sbldents,"
Turner said. "This ia especially so
in ow: toss of Chucky, because we
have all JI'O'MIIO feel very close to
him tbrougb his tragedy .. In the
same way that words fa1led us
when he was paralyzed, we cannot
now express the extent of our sorrow in his death."
.
"I am gtateful that he was g~ven
time with us, and that he has
known the love and suppo~ of so
many people who shared h1s bur·
dens and his victories.''
Mullins' injury. united students,
friends and Cans.
.
President Bush stop~ by h1s
Memphis hospital for a brief bed·
side visit during Mullins' early
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his-son, they insisled it was a solid
baseball move.
On Monday night. the 41-yearold Griffey showed once again it
. was no public relati~s gim~ick. . .
. Batting cleanup, JUSI behmd hJS
son, No. 3 hitter Ken Jr., the elder
Griffey produced his 152nd career
home run to lead the Mariner.; to
their third straight victory - a 4-2
decision over the New Yorlc Yankees.
.
'Til teU you, these guys have
some people to get you out with,"
the Yanlcees' Don Mattingly said.
"I don't think there's anyone who
throws any better than their righthander.; do.
~·If that team over there can
score some runs, they're danger·
ous. I mean big-time dangerous."
And if the Mariners are going to
score runs, the Griffeys .have to
produce at the plate.
Griffey Jr. had his second consecutive three-hit night. including a
double, and raised ~is batting average to .337.
Griffey Sr. became the sixth
Seattle player to hit in the cleanup
(See AI,. on Page 4) .

By WOODY BAlltD
AMoclated Prest Writer
MEMPHIS, Tem. (AP) - For·
mer Ole Miss football t~layer
Chuclcy Mullins was detennined to
. li~e 11, ~ ~c despite the: injury
' tliit' telt him JliUIIYzod.
His valilmt SlnJUie inspired fel.
low playm who set aside Mullins'
No. 38 je~ey to be worn in his
memory, and fans all over the ·
nation who donated more than $1
million for his care and rehabilila·
tion.
·
: Mullins·, paralyzed from the .
neck down during a game in 1989,
was dressing f~ clau Wednesday
when he passed ollt and stopped
breathing. He died Monday It a
Memphis hospillli from complica·
lions of a blood clot in his lungs,
doctorS said
Mullins was 21.
"Ch ucky was a very ·special
human being. He fought as Jon~
· and as hard as humanly possible,'
Ole Miss Coach Billy Brewer said
at Baptist Hoip!tal, where he had
come to visit IVIth Mullins' famil;,
Funeral services were sched
for 3 p:,m. Cot Wednesday at Tad
Smith Coliseum on the University
of Mississippi campus. Mullins
will be buried in his hometown of
Russelville, Ala., the university
said.
A defensive back, Mullins was
injured on Oct .. 28, 1989 w~ile
making a taclde m a game agamst
VanderbiiL
· Doctors said Mullins would
probably remain paralyzed from
the neck down, but he vowed to
make a life for himself and manage
to regain some movement of his
upper body. He returned to school
this January.
.
Brewer said the Mullins fBimly
asked not to meet with reporters. ·
Ole Miss Chancellor Gerald
Turnet issued a statement saying
Mullins "bas given something to
each of us, and we will remember

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Ben .Wattenberg

m~lies. It ind~ ~~-doubt; it
rem forces the b1got s 1dca that
minorities can't compete.
Public opinion surveys and
recent elections (in California and
North Carolina) have shown that
proportionalism is massively
unpopular with voters. It is an issue
that has inOamed college campusea. It is setting race against race.
Some Democrats-sensing
political calamity, ~getting wiser,
IX' both -are baclting off their eartier support f~ the blll.
The best policy now is neither
the Democratic proposal nor the
weakkneed Repubhcan cnmJlrOmise. It is time to look afrc&gt;h •I the
coun's decision. Just imagine!
·Those nasty Justices said that businesses can t 4iscriminate, but
should be able to hire people on the
basis of meriL
A p1oposa1 now being circulated
by moderate Sen. Slade Gonon,
R.Wash., adds a few bells and
whistles but on the big stuff says
sticlcwiththecourt'~decisioo.
That would be IVIse. That would
also be the result if Conaress did
~which is often a good idea.

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AMERICAN LEAGUE

Strange bedfellows: Dems and big biz ·.

anyonebutthenisetves.
. The !pie.~ ~ig business in this
mternal poliuclcing reveals part of
what is WIOIIJ with the bill. .
American businessmen- and I
generalize here-are honorable,
entrepreneurial, intelligent, hardWO!ting-and gutless.
Our corporate tigers want to
avoid confrontatiqn, lawsuits, bad
~1icity or boycotts. When conled, they tend to give away the
store, or more accurately, give
away someone else's store, in this
case in the form of de facto preferentiat hiring policies. After all, it
will not be corporate executives
who will suffer tiom reverse dis·
crimination that can come from
proportional hiring; it is the worlcaday people in offices and on the
shop flOIX'.
·
fi is just this proceu that leads
many oppo11enta of the Democratic
bill to say that il will lead to quow. Facins demlnds for hiring by
Blllineu Roundilble, repreaentina the numbera, businessmen will
:t::=·==~ to strike a budget dell with Congreu the biggest of~ cupootions. But fold, not fight
then other buame~s aroaps, a~d
~ il very an:ane leg~~·:rodl)''l Blrdldul: ~Darren M:Oavin iJ 69. Sinpr Tcnaa BJew- ultimately 1be White liouae, Aid JUI8C m bOth the Democratic bill
60. Sea. J111eo DolllenJCI, R·N.M., IS S9. Former football quarterback
that The Business Roundllble and a somewhat better but mushy
Johnny Ualral iJ 58.
.
.
.
negotiators
weren't speakins for ·RBJfublican compromise altern&amp;.

Seattle Mariners signed Ken Grif•
fey Sr. as a free agent last August
to play in the same outfield with

Scorel1oard

..

Mter their political pratfall on
!he Gulf Vfar, Democm_JS said, sh,
if we can JUS! get attennon back to
domestic issues, then we'll be fine.
Democrats may get their wish.
There will likely be a high-profile
litmus vote oo a domestic issue. It
remiiqs to be seen if it will be fine.
It may well turn out to be just one
more major Democratic political
disuter.
The domestic issue in question
deall with a Democratic proposal
to overturn recent Supreliie Court
decisions on hiring rolicy.
Democrats call it a "civi rights
bill." Republicans call it a "qUOia
bill."
Somehow, Democrats have
managed to mingle their fortunea
with both "liberal activists" and
''big businessmen." Neither 8f0up
is exactly at the top of the political
popularity _PI!IIs.
Civil n&amp;hll lobbyists tried to
wort out amngements with The

loaded sacrifice. fly by Cal Ripken Jr. in the
ninth inning of Monday night's game in Ana·
beim, Calif., which the Orioles won 7-0. (AP)

OUT OF REACH- Baldmore's Craig Worthington (bottom) slides out or reach or caurornia catcher Lance P.rrlsb lo score on a bases-

..

;- In 1915, nearly 1,200 people died when a German torpedo sank the
Biitish liner Lusitania off the Irish coast
:' In 1939, Germany and Italy announced a miliwy and political alliance
!Oiown as the Rome-Berlin Axis.
·
• In 1941, SO years ago, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra reeorded
•{Chattanooga Choo Choo" for RCA Victor.
;. In 1954, the SS-day day Bailie of Dien 1,\ien Phu in Vieawn ended
with Vietnamese insurgents ov~ French forces.
:. In 1960, Leonid B~hnev repl
Marshal Kliment Voroshilov as
~ident of the Supreme Soviet.
-: In 1963, the United States laluu;hed the Telsw n cornmunicatiOIIS
sitellite.
·:In 1975, 'President Ford formally declared an end to the "Vietnam
~" In Ho Chi Minh City - foont~ly Saigon- the Viet Cons sllaed a
rilly to celebrate their takeover.
·:1n 1984, a $180 million out-of~ourt sealement was announced in the
·&lt;r.sent Orange" class-action suit brought by Vietnam veterans who
cliiaiied they bad suffered injury from expostn to the defolianL
·:Ten years aao: The u.s. House of :-ilatives pasaec1 a $689 billlfn blldJel resolution endorsed by Presi t Reap~ diat called fiX' masslft IDIIidlna cuts. About 20,000 mourners turned out in Belfast, Nonh·
edl ~ &amp; the funml of IRA hunser-strlbr Bobby Sanda.
•'Five yean 110: The Senate Finance Committee approved a plan to
mJ1re rho .-t sweepins changes in the U.S. income tax. laws in more
tltD 40 yem (A compromise venion was signed by President Reap~ the
foJI!Iwilll Otdo).
.()ao ,_. 110= 1be White HOUle put aside President Bush's pledge

RG pl•tcher
sha'res MOC,
District honor

Former Ole Miss gridder
Chucky Mullins dead at 21

Idle government .imp2des techn()logy

pbia. .

'
Cub14, Altrol 3
Dave Smith sot 1 save in his •
first game back ~t the Astrodome
and George Bell hit a two-run
homer in Olicago's four-run fourth
inning as die Cubs beat HousiOII.
Smith, who signed as a free
agent with the Cubs, pitched 11
seasons in Houston and is the
Astros' all-time save leader with
199. He received
. ·a polite ovation
while taldng the mound in the ninth
inning and refired the side in order
for his sixth save, strilcins out one.
Greg Maddux improved to 4·1,
allowing three runs and four hits in
seven inninB before Paul Assenmacher relieved.

the~~":e~~~

Board;s decision
may
.
be·reconsidered

.

Gehrig:
·
Davilaaid the Reds had no right
squanderins two sood scoring
chances, despite a season-Ions
slump that's seen them score J·ust
78 nms in 24 pmes. Only Houston
has ICQI'edfewernms.
"We knew (Palacios) wasn't
throwing strikes, but the ooly thin~
Durin&amp; the National Leaaue we did.,... bail him QUI r!.JIMS.'
playoffs that Cincinnati won
in six DaVIS
' --:A '""e're
..couldn't
...
..... hi"'"•
-... and
games last fall, Pi~
everybody wants to be the guy who
· score runs. Now it's the
·
gets the hit that breaks us out of the
Back then, two of the PirateS' drought, and everybody's trying
biggest weapons were Doug 1110 hard. It's bappenins to 11n of
Drabek and Bairy Bonds. Now us)'
they're Orhmdo Merced and
That's evident by the Reds'
Viceo11e P.ledos.
avera1es: .164 (Billy Hatcher),
.192 (Paul O'Neill), .103 (Glenn
day night bdJind Palac:iol'_~-bit Brag~~· ._190 (Luis Quinones),
effort over sevea-plus tnnanss: .188 (MarianO Duncan) and .189
Both teams were in first place.
(Jeff Reed).
"It's early in the seuon, but
"I'd like to see somebodk::
you've got to be allUie excited to hot. beca~~W~·..
play the defendins champioos," manager
Pirafes.manager Jim Leyilnd said
One player who isn't having an
· Few would have gueased the average season is Merced. Since he
Pirates would be anywhere n~ was recalled April IS .to' replace
first place, much te~saaon Walk on the roster, few pitchers
ofthe m¥m' best
(16-9) on ha=ni~:~ .350 with two
May 7• if they knew Drabek would homerS and seven RBis.
be 1-S. Or thai Bonds would be hit·
He doubled off Jose Rijo (1-2)
tin'4~t's why it's 1 ream game." to lead off the lint and scored on
Leyland said. "That's y-hy you the fust of Bobby Bonilla's two
have 25 players ... not JUSt your run-scoring singles. Rijo lost
stars."
despite allowing three or fewer
Palacios (2-0), who has a staff· earned runs for the fifth straight
leading l .S2 ERA, limited Cincin· stan.
ed
nati to one hit until Eric Davis · In the only other·pmes play
hOmered in the eighth. The right· in the Nationlil League Monday,
bander walked seven and confront· Montreal beat San Francisco I 0-4
ed bases-loaded, one-out jams and Chicago edged Houston 4-3.
twice in the rust three inl\ings, yet
Expos fo, ~tuu 4
.
pitched out ofaouble both limes.
Deli no DeShaelds, Marqu1s
"Confidence ia the big key for · Grissom and Tim WallaCh each hit
me," said Palacios, w~ 1,1itch~ home runs in the fourth inning,
only 10 minor-leque mnmgs m powering Montreal past visitinjl
1989 following his second major San Francisco. Kevin Mitcbell hit
shoulder operation in two years. two homers for the Giants, giving
"They've got confidence in me. so him a major league-leading 10 for
I've got to show them I can pitch." the season.
· Palacios is in the rowion only
Don Robinson (0-1) was
because Bob Wallt ·has a pulled roughed up for seven runs and
groin, but be's pitched so well that eight hits in three-plus innings. The
a jokester taped "Pipp" over Expos Scored live runs in the thir_d
Walk's locker nameplate. Wally innina. ~by starter DeMIS
Yo t yankees Martinez leadoff double. Martinez
Pipp
was
the
New
four runs and 12 hits
fust baseman who hadora headache ~4 ·2) ga~ un
-F
one day and was replaced by Lou m seven mmngs. , .

·:

.,,.,, ........ ....... c.,....._

10,(15 p.m.

~

. ...
.'

•

•

l' ·.. '

I

�. -

- ~-- -·

--- .... - . -

.-. .

-- Ohio.

7, 1991

Chicago beats Philadelphia
112-100 in NBA playoff game
.

BJ JOE .MOOSHIL
AP Sportl Writer
CIUCAGO (AP) - The ChicaJl? Bulls defeoded their turf. Now
It's the Pbiladrlplria 76cn' tum.
The Bulls held off a late surge
by the 76ers Monday a.ight for a
112-100 victory and a 2-0 lead in
the best-of-seven series that now
aoea to PbiJadolphia for games Friday night IIIII Sunday.
"We defended.our home court
as we blew we would have 10 do.
Now the preasuic is on them,'' said
Michael Jordan, who scored 29
points 10 lead the Bulls.
. "We took their punch, held
. them off and spcceeded," said
Horace Grant, who rebounded a
Jordan miss and scored after the
76ers had cut a 14-point deficit 10
103-98 with two minutes left. That
started a six-point surge that
clinched the outcome.

I

"Their backs are against the
.
wall," Grant added
Two other semifmal series open
IOnJ!';.:;~th Detroit at Boston in
the
Conference and Ulah at
Portland in the West. The Los
Angeles l.akm, who !Cad 1-0, will
.play host 10 Golden State in Game
2 of their conference semifinal
Wedlwday nighL .
.
The 76ers, who never came
close in Saturday's 105-92 loss,
were in it this time. The teams were
tied 33-33 aft« the first quarler and·
the 76ers went ahead 37-33 to SWI
tlie second IJII8l1er.
The Bulls then went on a 7-0
run to go ahead t~ stay, but _they
were unab~ 10 put1t away until the
fmal two mmllles.
.,
Mter Grant's put-back basket,
Scottie Pippen, who fmished With
23 points, scored the next four
points 10 give the BuUs an 11-point

AL action~ .. _&lt;c,....ootm_·

lead with 1:02 to play. ·
"G1111t's lliclcback was the big
play of the game," said 76cn heail
coach Jim Lynam. "We eame out
and played a bella' offensiVe game,
but we missed too many second
sh!)ts. We have to play better
defense if fi~':J,oing 10 beat these
guys. Speci
y, we have 10 go
home and win two pmes."
·The 76cts had betler offensive
balanCe than in ,the opeaer. Hersey
Hawkins scored 30 points, Armon
Gilliam bad 22 and Charles
Bartiey 20.
.
All five Chicaso starters scored
in double·figures.
.
"They came out aQd made
adjustments and we adjusted to
them," said Pippen. ~·11 was a very
physical game, but w~ expected
lhat:"
Jordan was pleased that the
BuUs did not falter when the 76ers
made their late run.

_ued_fro_m_Pag..;_e....;3&gt;______

TAKES CONTROL- Chicago forward
Scottie Plppea (rlaht).steps Ia front of PbDadel, phia center Maaute Bol (11) and takes coatrol of

tbe baD Ia the ftnt quarter or MoodaJ alaht's
NBA playolr game Ia Cbleago, wblcb tk BuDs
woa 111·100 to take a l-0 lead in their secoud·
rouad series. (AP)

'Minnesota hands Edmonton
.7-3loss in Stanley Cup semis
-

.

spot Ibis season. The .Mariners are · Ke'lly home with a sacrifice fly thai
SliD shy a power hiller, but they're right fielder Jay Bohner made a
gettinl solid pilching and playing leaping catch of against the wall.
gooddcfensesincean~Sillrt.
Murphy relieved and gave up a
A crowd of 24.210 watched the pinch single to Hensley Meulens, .
Mariners even their record al13-13 scoring Sax, who was on second
10 bring the attendance at the four- after a.wild pitch by Murphy.
game series 10 125,240, a single
"Bohner made a great catch on
·series record in the Kingdome. The that baD," said Ywees manager
Mariners are 13-7 since their feeble Stump Merrill, who called it the
start and have won nine of their last key play of the game.
10 al bane.
The Mariners scored in the first
Griffey Sr. knows he has to inning when Harold. Reynolds
drive in runs when he bats cleanup.
walked, went to third on Griffey
"When I hit fourth, I just tty 10 Jr.'s single and soored on Leary's
hit the ball in the p,ps and ~ 10 wild pitch. Seattle increased the
drive in some runs, ' be said. ' But score to 2-0 in the second when
I'm not thinking about home runs Omar Vizquel tripled and came
or anything like lhat."
home on Matt Sinatro's infield sinGriffey Jr. said he hasn't gotten gle.
over the P.Y of being on the same
· Seattle's final run came in the
field with bls father.
seventh on Harold Reynolds' RBI
"It's a big thrill any time my single.
·
dad getS a hit." he said. "But it's a
In Monday's only other Ameribig lbriii just IO·be oot there ciii the can League game, ·Baltimore
field with him and to see him blanked California 7-0.
play·"
Orioles 7, Angels 0
·· '!be Griffeys helped Erik HanJose Mesa, backed by four home
son (3-1) get the viciOry, although . runs, pildled a seven-hitter for his
Hanson needed relief help from rust major league complete game
Rob Murphy and Blll Swift after as Baltimore bear California at
strunling 1n the eighth inning. Anaheim.
Hanson pve up six hits and two
The struggling Orioles, who
runs in seven IIIII 0111&gt;third innings, held a closed-door meeting before
strilting out nine and walldng one.
the (!&amp;me, hit three homers off
HanJon, 25, improved his life- . rookie Scott Lewis (1-2). Cal Riptime record to 2-3 against the Yan' ken built Baltimore's lead to 5-0
kees. Yankees starter Tim Leary with his sillth homer, on a 3-2 pitch
(2-2) saw bls career record falliO from reliever Floyd Bannister with
S- 3 against Seaalc. ·
two outs in the fifth.
It was the Yankees' seventh loss
Mesi''(3-3) became the lint Balin their last eight games.
timore pitcher to go the dislance
In the Yankee eigbth, RoberiO this season. He struck oot two one
KeUy doubled, Steve Sax singled and walked none in his 18th major
him 10 third and Matti1J81y brought league stan.
.

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
. YOUR FIRST

ACCIDENT
Wilen you quality oo o p-.red.

riok for Stoto AUJo Componiea:
apec:lol Modallot Auto Polley, your
r1t11 won•t go up with your

ROGAN e&gt;
TfAII.NER .

lDsuJuce Services

214 EAST MAIN
\

POMEROY
992-6687

euv

.l

nals.

I

l
j

!

the playoffs. Afler going 0-4-2 at
Met Center against the Oilers the
previous four seasons, Minnesola is
3-0 this year, outscoring Edmonton
17-5.
"They are an inspired team,"
said Kevm Lowe, who was back on
defense for the Oilers after missing
two games with an ankle injury.
"They're on a roll. They're hungry.''
'
Their fans have whetted the
Stars' appetites. After drawing an
average of only 7,838 fans during
the regular season, the North Slars
are playing before rowdy Slandingroom-only crowds in the playoffs.
A season-high audience of 15,378
thoroughly enjoyed Mpnday's .

:!d

.

Beat of .

By

Beta Sigma Phi Sorority celebrates 60 years

The 60th Founder's Day responding secretary; Dafla Staats, th\l sponsor for the group. '
anniversary of Beta Sigma Phi city counciii'Cpresentative. Phyllis
Following a message from Bela
Sorority was celebmted recently at H~clcett is •the sponsor for the Sigll)a Phi Jnlemational, presented
The Sporl$man in Athens. The group.
. hy Maurisha Nelson, each chapter
1C
event was hosted by the Xi Gamma
From Xi Gamma Mu the current presented its Girl of the Year
'-_._._.._ _ _ _- : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ' Mu Chapter for the other local officers are Kay Adkins, president; Award.
' chapters: Ohio Eta Phi, Xi Gamma Sheila Harris, vice president; BarReceiving Girls of the Year
Alice Mills of Middleport invited to attend ljunday's Open: Epsilon and Preceptor Beta Beta, bara Welsh, recording secretary; Awards were Velma Rue, Preceprcmembers well the quonset hut House with free blood pressure and and the theme was "Celebrate the Niese! Gerard, corn:sponding sec- lOr Bela Bela, presented by Norma
· type building which was used for a cholesterol testing to be done in the Magic."
relary; Charlotte Hanninjl. treasur· Custer; Darla Staats, Xi Gamma
lot of majlr events as.a pan of the ho8pilal cafeteria from 1 10 3 p.m. . Following dinner, current offi. er; and Sandy Ianarelli, c1ty council Epsilon. presented by Linda Faulk;
Middleport §Chools at one time. Member.s of the Meigs Division of cers and new officers for 'the four representative. New officers are Susan Clark, Ohio Eta Phi, present·
Jean Moore, also of Middleport; · the American Heart Association chapters were introduced. The offi- . N1esel Gerard, president: Mary ed by Betsy Jones: and Jackie
recalled aspects of use of the build- will be in the hospillillobby Sun- eers for the 1990-91 year are: from Woods, · vice president; Paula . Hoover, Xi Gamma Mu, presenled
ing recc:ndy.
day 10 register those having the RrecepiOr Bela Beta · Velma Rue, Haynes recording secretary; Linda !&gt;Y Charloue Hanning. ·
Alice· and many rruiy have for- testing done. Laoora10ry personnel president: Joan Cordet, vice presi- Bates ireasurer; Jackie Hoover,
Valentine girls were also bongotten this • that a 'small hou$1l · under the direction of Laboratory , dent: Rose Sisson, recordin(! ~- corre;ponding secretary: Kay . ored They are Ronda Ketchum, Xi
· stood at one side of the qUonset hut Supervisor Cecelia· Lisle will be 1ary; Ann Rupe, corresponding sec, Logan, city council representative, Gamma Epsilon; Debbie Evans,
and it was also used as a pan of the joined by nursing staff members, retary: Jane Walton, treasurer; lind Debbie Miller, alternate 10 city Ohio Eta Phi; and Mary Woods, Xi
Middleport schools facilities. At under the directiQD ofMrs. Rhonda Betty Ohlinger, city council repre- cOuncil. A.R. Knight is the special Gamma,Mu.
one time, the house was used as a Dailey, director of nursiqg, 10 con- sentative, and Jane Walton, alter- envoy for the group and he also · Betsy Jones, Ohio Eta Phi,
location for changing into ~r duct the free testing program. . nate to city council. New officers attended the event .
introduced that chapler's pledges
·attire fa: physical education activi- There will be hospital tours and the are Velma Rue, president; Joan
Current officers for the Ohio Eta for the 1990-91 year. They are
PLEDGE OF THE YEAR •
ties, Alice recalls, and later it public will be invited 10 the dining Corder, vice president: Ann Rupe, Phi Chapter are Susan Ciarlc, ~i- · Sandy Butcher; Sherry Chapman,
HoDklay, a pledge from tbe
Vera
became tile location for lbe home · room of the Sltilled Nursing Facili- recording ~retary; Rose Sisson, dent; Betsy Jones, vice prestdent: Lowry Crow, Kim Dent~ Vern Hoi·
Eta Phi Chapter, Beta
Ohio
economics clepartrnent. Alice says ty where a number of activities will correspondmg secretary; ancj Jane Debbie Evans, recording secretary;
liday, Patty-Taylor and Julie Zirlde.
Slgina
Pbl Sorority, was presentthat downstairs rooms were used take place during the afternoon
Walton, treasurer.
·Kathy Wilfong, corresponding sec- Receiving the Pledge of the Year
ed
the
Pledge
or tbe Year Award
· for ~ooking classes w~ile the Jennifer Sheets wiD be en1enaining
Current officers for Xi G~ma relary; Theresa K~nnedy, u:easurer:
Award in Ohio E1a Phi was Vera
at
the
60th
Founder's Day
se'!fl~g ~las~es occup1ed the there 00 the keyboard and membets
Epsilon .are D~la Staal!', pres1dent; B.ecky Triplett, city council rep~ · Holliday, presented by Betsy Jones.
anniversary
of
Beta Sigma Phi
upstairS of the ~e home.
of the Women's Auxiliary will be Sue .Maison, ~1ce pres•dent; Patsy sentative, and Gwen Hall, cny · A skit was also presented by the
Sorority.
The
event
was held
When Coven ~ Bakery bought registering visiiQrS for sevCI'IIl nice , Ogdin, recordmg secretary; .SuSIII) council altemale. New officers are pledges of Ohio E1a ~i.
. ·
recently
at
Tbe
Sportsman
In
the quonset ~ut, 1t ~so purchased door prizes to be awarded In addi- Well, corresponding secretaT¥; llecky Triplett, president; Vera
Following the announcement of
Atbens
·wlth
the
XI
Gamma
Mu
die small ho~ and It was moved lion, the Auxiliary, under the direc; , Conpie ~n. ~urer: Deb~•e Holliday, v1ce president; Julie Dilthe 1991-92 theme, "A Time For
10 Fol!rth SL, J~ ~low the former lion of President Mrs. Jessie While, Hauber, City counc•l representall.ve Ion, recording secretary; Tammy
Us," special ceremonies were held Chapter servmg as hostesses.
AmenC811 Lepon Hall. It IS still will be presenting long stemmed and Sonya Wolfe, alternate 10 city Bachner corresponding secretary;
by three of the chaplers. The Order
l~ated there and was ~rst occu. silk roses to mothers attending council. N~w officers are Sonya Patty T~ylor, treasurer: Susan of the Rose service was conducted
p~ by the DeVol_family. ~ter, since Sunday's observance is talc· Wolfe, president: Ronda Ketchum, Clark city council representative,
hy the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter for cep10r !leta Beta Chapter for Jane
Altce and her. family moved m10 ing place on-Mother's Day. The vice president; Connie Dodson, and Theresa Kennedy, alternate 10 its members, Sheila Harris and WaliOn and by the Xi Gamma Mu
the house as.a ~nlal. After anum- Nutrition Department of the hospi- treasurer. Sharon Stewart, record- city council. Charlene Hoeflich is Maurisha Nelson. The, Silver Circle Chapter for Carolyn Grueser and
. ~e! of years 10 the house wh~re tal under the direction of Jackie ing secrelary; Christie Lynch. corservice was presented by the Pre- -Ruth Riffle .
i\hce ~ad don~ home eco~om1cs, Starcher will serve refreshments
!he .Mtlls famlly mov~d ,mto an and there· will be a variety of free
spartmenL Later, the MiDs bought healthcare literature available.
the hOme from the late. Dr. ,Clyde Results of the cholesterol testing
!n-els BJ!d the bouse IS sull the will be given visitors in the dining
M,lls r~Sidencc. Another ho~se room. A variety of favors' will be
was. built next door to \he M11ls available 10 visitors and a eostumed
home and it was constructed from individual similar to last years
leftover lwnber ~ter the big move care bear, ~ill distribute those.
'
of all the properties from the sch~l
Hospilal personnel will meet at
area by Coverts. ~at hC?me sun the hospilal Sunday morning .10 put
slands next to the Mills residence.
decomuons in place afler Don Beegle, maintenance supervisor, serves
Staff members at Veterans breakfast.
Memorial Hospital are preparing
Sunday's open house will be
for their annual Open Hoose 10 be only one activity among several
held Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m.
taking place over the entire week as
• •
· The Open House this year will a part of the observance.
• •
•
marie the qJening of National Hos• •
J!!tal Week which has for a theme,
And does that hole in my head
•
•
'Our Team Works For You" as bother me much? Only when the
•
•
•
'
•
•
well lis National Nursing Home wind blows and that seems 10 he all
•
•
'
•
Week which is using the theme, the time these days. Domed such
ALEX HALEY
• •
. "Leadersm
. Care"•
weather. Do keep smiling.
». •
Birth
The public is! ~s usual, being.
•
•
James and Becky Haley,
•
Columbus, announce the birth of
their fitS I child, Alex Austirt Haley,
on Feb. 10 at Mount Carmel Hospilal.
The infant weighed eight
Commaalty Cl1eadar Items open door session on Wednesday
poqnds
and was 21 inches long.
.
• l
. appear two days before aa ennt from 11 a.m. 10 I p.m. in ,the Meigs
Mlltemal grand parents are Rus' &amp;Dd the day or that eveat. Items County &lt;;ourtbouse. Questions
sell
and Donna Powers, .Middle: must be recelv~ weD In advance regarding the Federal Government
port.
Materilal great grandmother is
•
to assure publication Ia the cal- can he .directed to the represenlaLenom
Jen!9ns, Syracuse.
· '
•
tive.
·
eadar• .
I
Paternal grandparents are James
and Audrey Haley, Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival serSorority. Pictured, 1-r, are Susan Clark, Ohio
GIRLS OF THE YEAR • These women of
TUESDAY
vices will begin Wednesday and
Eta Pbl; Velma Rue, Preceptor Beta Beta; Darla
Beta SIJIIIIa Pbl Sorority were presented Girls' of
GALLIPOLIS • Revival at·the continue through Sunday at the
Staats, XI Gamma Epsilon and Jackie Hoover,
tbe Year Awards
their cbapten at the 60th
: Belle Chapel Church in Gallipolis Middleport Church of the
Terri Lee and Ariel Ward
Fouuder's Day
of Beta
Phi
XIG-maMu.
will be held through Sunday at 7 Nazarene. George and Charlotte
Berwyn, Ill., visited recently at he
· p.m. nightly with Ralph Savage, Dixon wiD be the evangelists. Serhome of their grandmother, Ruby
:columbus, as evangelist. Public vices wiD be held each evening at 7
Soeflcer, LangsviUe.
"invited.
p.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.
:
. Pastor Lloyd D. Grimm Jr., invites
• PoMEROY - The FOE Ladie8' the public.
· Au-iiliary will be holding a
·potluck/Mother'$ Day dinner on '
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) ,.... A
· THURSDAY
"Tuesday at 7 p.m. Following the
Columbus man fell 10 his death in
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
:dinner, a meeting will be held with
Cantwell Cliff .State Park during
··election of officers at 8 p.m. All . Springs Grange will meet Thursday
the weekend, a park ranger said
at 8 p.m. Racine Grange wiD visit
. members arc welcome.
today .
All members are urged 10 altend.
, Billie Baisden, 28, fell 15-20
POMEROY • Evangelist R.A.
feet in10 a ravine Saturday night
POMEROY - The Preceptor
West wilf hold a service on Tueswhile hiking with three friends
day at the Meigs County Senior Beta Beta Chapler, Bela Sigma Phi
without flashlights, Steve Bennett
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
. Citizens Cent« at 7:30p.m. .
said. Baisden survived that fall, but
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
feU 40-SO feet to his death while he
.· GALLIPOLIS • Xi Gamma Mu Church. Officers will be instaUed.
was trying 10 climb out.
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi meets at Hoslesses are Shirley Beegle and
His body was recovered Sunday
7:36p.m. Ill the Gallipolis home of · Jeannie Werry.
morning, Bennett said.
Kay Adkins.
POMEROY • There will be an
NOW OPEN FOR THE
organizational
meeting 10
for
POMEROY -The Men's Tuesthe
20th
class
reunion
o
Meigs
day and Wednesday golf leagues at
SPRINI SEASON
the Meigs County Golf Course will High School (1971) on Thursday ~t
Complete Unt of Vegetable
begin play on Tuesday and 7 p.m·. at the Meigs ·County PubliC
Library
in
Pomeroy.
For
informaond ·wding Plants,
Wednesday. There are' 20 teams
signed up for each league. Two 10. tion contact Bob Werry at 992llooming and Foilage
,week halves will be played this 5396.
Hanging lask~ts, fruit and
year. Anyone wishing to substitule
flowering Trttl, Shrubs,
WELLSTON • The Wellston
•.is asked 10 call the club house at
.
.
Azaltas,
Rhad..-drons and
· 992-6312 and leave their name and OhiUco Society will present a baseTonpe;"
Scott
Mlich,
"Air
Contraction;"
Joba
SCI~'CE,.
PAIR
WINNERS
•
A
science
fair
ball and spons card show on ThursHolly TrHs.
phone number.
KeDJ, "Plants Reaction to Light." Back, Nick
was held at Bradbury Elemenlllry witb slxtb
day at the Saint Peter and Paul
Goodwin, "How to Build a Space Heater;"
gnden from Mn. Jo Duan's classes partlclpatHubbard's Greenhouse
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock Parish Hall fro 4-9:30 p.m. AdmisLlbbJ K(JII, "Heat Collection;" Nakuma Tyree, .
inll. All students were awarded participation
SYRACUSE. OHIO
, Springs IJI!ited Methodist Church sion is $1 per person and $2 per
"Soil Erosloa;" Aima Fink, "Water Evaporacerlillcates and ribbons. Tropbles for ftrst, sec992-6778
·wiD serve vegetable soup and bean family. Hourly door prizes will he
tion;" Aaron Hockman, "Genetic•;" and Billy
ond and tblrd places were also given. Trophies
Open
Dally
9-5; Sun. 1-5
:-soup on Election Day from II a.m. given.
Crane, "EiectrQDies."
winners, 1-r, ar,, front, Mike Klein,. "The
&lt;through the evening dinner hour.
ATHENS- Serenity House sup•.Sal!dwiches, piea, cakes and beverport
group for members of the
;·ages wiD also be served. Carry out
•:orders will be available. Orders community affected by domestic
. may be placed in advance al 992- violence will meet Thursday from
The Harrisonville-Scipio Alum·
Classes to bel honored are 1931,
5-7 p.m.
.;5996 or 992-2587.
ni officers met recently to make 1941 and 1951. Music for the
plans for the annual banquet and dance will be by "Alvin Chutes
RUTLAND - The Leading dance 10 be held May 25 at 6:30 Band."
j . MIDDLEPORT - Regular meeting of Middleport Lodge 363 F cl Creek Watershed Association will p.m. at the Harrisonville Elemen·
Reservations are 10 be made by
AM will be &amp;eld on Tuesday at meet Thursday aa6 p.m.
MaY.
20 by calling Larry or Joy
lllty School .
.;7:30 p.m. Re.freshments provided
The menu will include baked Chutes at 992-3690. Officers for
RACINE • The Southern Local steak and deep fried chicken. green the year are Larry Clarlc, presiden~
aflcr the meeung.
Band Boosters meet Thursday at beans, mashed potaiOes with gravy, Howard Gilkey, vice president;
, LONG BOTTOM · River Val- 7:30p.m . Anyone interested is 10ssed s8Iad, rolls and butter, ice Pansy Jordan, treasurer; and Joy
' ley Herbalists meet on Tueaday at 7 urged 10 aatend.
Clark, secretary.
·
1ea and coffee, c~ and ice cream.
p.m. at the Long BOIIOm CommuPOMEROY • There will be a
• nity Buildina. AU members are 10
· bring an her6 or flower that can be dinner 111 lhe Meigs County SeniOr
Citizens Center on Thursday from
: dried for the silent IUCtion.
•
S-6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 per person
with a menu of baked steak,
Angela Payne was the best loser best KOPS loser and Crystal Srriilh
mashed potatoes and gravy, corn,
. WEDNESDAY
and
Wolfe was the runner .was the best teen loser.
.
MIDDLEPORT • There will be cole slaw, biJcuit and bevCf88e. A up atShirley
the
recent
meeting
of
Ohio
was
won
~}'
The
fruit
basket
:;a
at .the Healh United variety of pie will be available at
TOPS Club No. 570 held at the Linda Grimm and the surprise gift
:·Methodilt Church Ia MiddleiiCrt on an extra c1wJe of .75 cents piece. Carpenter's
Hall in Pomeroy.
was won by Shirley Wolfe.
.:wednesday aad. Thursday trom 9 Following the dir~ner, music will be
trina
Faullc
was
named
chapter
The group meets every Tuesday
played by Junior and Rita White,
to 3 p.m.
ansel
and
Julia
Hysell
the
April
from
6-7 p.m. with weigh-in at S
: POMEROY - A repreac:nlllive AI Windon and Bill Ward. A free monthly queen.
p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall in
wiD offering will be taken for the
'from Conpe11man Clarence B.
·Pomeroy.
Linnie
Belle
Aleshire
was
the
musicians. PubHc is invited.
Miller's office will, conduct an

.the Bend..

Bob
· ·· ·.,. ,. h
Hoe

•

.

,. • •

.•

Community calendar

•

game.
"It's like Chieago Stadium, and
there's no beuer place 10 play than
there," Edmonton's Adam Graves
said "It makes the hair on the back
of your neck sland up."
Edmonton, 6-0 in Campbell
Conference championship series
and winner of five of the last seven
Stanley Cups, needs a victory
Wednesday 10 avoid falling in10 a
deep hole. Only eight teams in
NHL hisiOr}' have rallied from 3-1
series deficits.
"We've got to put this game
behind us," Graves said. "We'll
go jniO the game Wednesday with
confidence. We 'U win and go back
to Edmon IOU at 2-2."

· Game 4 will be played at the
Met Center on Wednesday night.
Tonifb.t. the NHL playoffs continue WJth Boston, holding a 2-1 lead,
vis,ting Pillsliurgh in the other
semifmal series. ·
'
· "I think we've got a couple of
lines that feel comfortable playing.
this style," said Dave Gagner, who
had three assi~. "The fast-paced
game gives us more time 10 maneu- ·
ver. SL Louis and Chicago ~dn't
seem 10 want to play like lhat, (but) ~;1
I'd rather play a sp,eed game than a J,
~ow-down game. ' ·
So would Mike Modano, who '
set the tone at the four-minute mark
when he lOOk Gagner's pass at center ice in full stride, split defensemen Jeff Beukeboom and Steve
Smith, deiced goaltender Grant
Fuhr and slid a baclchander iniO th~
vacaled net.
".Mike Modano display\ld
enough speed on that frrst goB! 10
sbow we're not a slow team,"
Gagner said. ''Mike Modano was
going about 300 miles an hour.''
It was quite a departure from the
.lint two games of the series. MinIICIOIB used a defensive style 10 win
the fust game 3-1 and the Oilers
said they were emotionally wi'prepared. A charged-up Ed.mont~n
ream 1111 away for a 7-2 vtctory m
Game 2, with Mucklet crediting the
Oilen' ,peedy supel iority.
Monday nl1ht, Minnesota put
the pedal 10 the metal from the
openinJ faccoff. The North Stars
· acored two breakaway 10als and
eWIII 3~-ye~t-old Bobby Smilb got
1a1o lbe act, doilag a dipsy-do move
10 bell bolb Beukeboom and subllilllll aoelie BID Ranfonl.
·
"'We've £Ill IOIIIC pya who can
liP 111d down the ice," Smith
"We're capable of playing
SOLID LEFT HAND - ID pi'IICtlclq for 1 title !lout w1tb Evader HGiylleld; MID-tl dere. .maa Cart Gila 1111 a lOUd left
ellmlr, wetl. Cspeclally in this
biDd 10 the bead or Edmoatoa wiaptlll ADitoll S..-. Ill tbe
buildinl· •
lint period or Moaday aJpt'a NHL plaJOIF aa- Ia Bloomlapoa,
M.bmc1101a is 18-2·21l Met Cen·
Mimi., wblcb lbe North Stan WOil 7•3. (AP)
.
ter since Jan. 17, includinR6-I in

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

•

is annoimced

•

•
•

.,

BJ MIKE NADEL
AP Sportl Writer
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)
- Speed kills, says Edmonton Oilers coach John Muckier, who
believes the Minnesota North S1ars
are afraid 10 play high-tempo hockey.
Now Muckier. has to eat his
words and the Oilers have to faght
back from a deficit in the Slanley
semifinals.
'
. 'We surprised them a little
bit," said Brian Bellows, who
scorCct twice Monday night as the
North Stars meed pust the defending champion Oilers 7-3 10 take a
,2 -llead in the Slanley Cup semifi-

firet

accident.
Unlike almhr pollclot thot r8C1Uire
throt yooro of policy !IW-""Ip.
tho Modollot ollowa the oKOmptlon
lmmodlotely.
T.,. Modollll recogntzoo the oldor.
lOfer driVer with au-ntlol rote
roductlona ond broodlr covorogo.
Rote roductlono begin aa - l y 01
ogo 26 and .,. panlaulorly ottroctlve for tho 41 to M old.
If you have o driving record.
... just haw low your c1r lnaur~
ence pre,nlum can be with the
Modollat Auto Polley from Sate
Auto lnauronoe Componlea.
Cell ue 1bout thil c1r inMirance
b-kthn~ugh lor oofe drlvera.

1\le8day, May 7, 1991

•

Soeffier personal

Man falls to death
at Logan State Park

flan

ATTENTION

AREA HIBH SCHOOL fJRAOUATES
OF 199_1

\

I

On Friday, May 17, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with
photographs of high school seniors
graduatir~g this
year.. ·
.
•
Now -through Monday, May 13 Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel To
Be Included In This Special Edition, at no
charge.
(Attach your Name, High School, and Parents Name to Photo.)'

**********

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC
ORGANIZAnONS WHO WOULD LIKE TO HAVE AN
· ADVERnSEMENT IN THIS SPECIAL EDITION

PLEASE CALL 992-2156.
Ask for Brian or .Dave

Harrisonville-Scipio banquet, May 25

TOPS, KOPS announce winners

rurnmaae u

:a.m.

'·'

\.l

�•
The

. Tueeday, May 7, 1991

Ohio

Sentinel

Reports given at garden club meeting
A potluck dinner preceded the
April meeting of the Rutland Gar·
den Club held at the home of Pearl
Clnaday.
· Pauline Atltins presided at the
meeting which she ooened with the
readins of "The World Needs
You."
Peiul Canaday had devotions
reading, "Slice of Life· Plant a
Garden.• Sbe closed with Psalm
· 23.
·
Marpret BeUe Weber reported
on planters in the Memorial Park. It
was Voted to Jl.l!iChase ge~ums .
a~d dusty miller to put ·m the
planters for summer.
Pauline Atkins, Pearl Canaday
and Dorothy WOOdard Jlad visited ,
local greenhouses.
Stella Atkins reported on the
Gallipolis Development Center
therapy · in March. Dorothy
Woodard, Stell• Atltins, Binda
Diehl and Neva Nicholson attend·
ed.
Dorothy Woodard reported on
the Volunteer Recognition Dinner

at the GDC tberapy. ·
Pauline Atkins, president. and
the club received a Sena1ori11 Citation from Jan Michael Lons for
their participation in the therapy
progr1111.
Dorothy Woodard reported on
the board meeting at Chester and
Pauline Atkins reported on the
county prden club meeting when
classes were drawn for the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Flower Show
in August. Dorolhy Woodard, SidIa Atkins, Neva Nicholson, J111u1.ine
A!kins. Pearl Canaday and B!nda
Diehlattendedthe,countymeeung.
Pauline Atltins gave a report on
the Ohio Association of Garden
Club's Regional Meeting held at
Salisbury School where Dorothy
Woodard, Neva Nicholson, Stella
Atkins, Pearl Canaday, Binda
Diehl, Margaret Belle Weber,
Pauline Atkins, Eva Robson and
Marcia Denison attended.
Dorothy Woodard was ID see if
Margaret Edwards would hav.e a
demonstration on.making pine cone
wreaths atlbe.May meeting.

-,.

.

.

'
:

SEI liNG UP FOR ART - Rhonda White, left, and Jacalyn
_ Glassburu prepare to hang a painting created by a University of'
Rio Graade student for the exhibit or student art in the atrium
or tbe Fine and Performing Arts Center which will run from
today uutll May 18. A reception and open bouse will be beld in
tbe atrium Thursday at 7 p.m.

.

'Miss Saigon' and 'Will Rogers
· Follies' top Tony nominatiOIJS

1

: By MICHAEL KUCHW ARA
AP Drama Writer
·· NEW YORK (AP)- "Miss
Saigon" and " The Will Rogers
Follies" each received 11. Tony
Award nominations Monday.
· The two shows dominated the
musical categories for lbe awards
honoring the best of the 1990-91
Broadway season. Also nominated
rOt- best musi.cal were two shows
with special appeal for children,
''Once on This Island" and "The
Secret Garden.''
The nominees for best play
were: "Six Degrees of Separa·
tiim," John Quare's dark comedy
of modem-day Manhattan; "Lost
in Yonkers," Neil Simon ' s play
about a family under the thumb of
a tyranniCII woman; the Hartford
Stage production of "Our CounlfY'S Goocl," Timberla,ke ~erten­
. Jiaker'l dnima of COnVICIS ID AuS·
ualia. and the already closed
"Shadowlands," William Nicholion's drama about English writer

C.S.Lcwls.

• "Once on Thiil Island, " a
Caribbean fliry tale about a ~- .
. lint sir! fallin1 in love wllh a
welltby youns man, coUected eight
nominltions llld "The Secret Oar·
di:n." baled• on the classic English
cllikhn's novel by Fiances Hodg·
son Burnett, took seven. ''Our
Coulltr(s Oood" received six

nurniiiii;IQIII.
"Mlu Saiaon." a love SUl!'Y set

ajainst the \'ietnam War, p1cked
up nominations for its two stars,
JelllthaD Pryce and Lea Salonsa.
ptyce. who plays a Ewuian ~P.·
in the musical hit. almost d1dn 1
an- in die musiCal on BI'OIIjlway
afier the British actor was first

'

To the delight of the audience,
Miss Boone introduced her father,
who appeared live.
The song, about~aring for
Judsment Day, prec
'a sermon
from Boone's minister, Jack Hay·
ford, pastor of the Church on lbe
Way in Van Nuys, Calif.
··

turned down by Actors' Equity.
The union later relented.
"Miss Saigon " also was cited
for direction, Nicholas Hytner;
book, Alain Boublil and Claude·
Michel Schonberg; score, Boublil,
Schonberg and Richard Maltby Jr.;
supporting actors, Hinton Battle
and Willy Falk; scenery, John
Napier; lighting, David Hersey, and
choreography, Bob Avian.
Tommy Tune, who already has
won seven Tony Awards, was
nominated for two more - as
director and choreographer of
"The Will Rogers Follies." Ora·
ciela Daniele also received double
nominations - as director and
cboreographer, of "Once on This
Island."
'"The Will Rogers Follies,"
loosely based on the life of the
Oklahoma humorist, also picked up
norninstions for several of its per·
formers: Keith Carradine, who pot·
·trays the title character; Dee Hoiy
who plays Rogers' wife, and Cady
Huffman as a ZieJfeld showgirl.
The musical, which is structured
like an old Zlelfeld Follies revue,
also was nominated for book, Peter
Srone; sc:ore, music by Cy Coleman
and lyrics by Betty Comden and
Adolph Green; scenic design, Tony
Waltnn; costumes, Willa Kim, and
lighting, Jules Fi$ber. •
Nominations for best actor in a
play went to Peter Frechelle, a
priggish military officer in " Our
Country's
Good";
Nigel
Hawthorne who played author C.S.
Lewis in " Shadowlands"; Tom
McGowan, a fopj&gt;ish pedant in "La
Bete," and Courtney B. Vance, a
con man in " Six Degrees of
Separation.''

mung

tO suddeo saess.

Some become so stiff they roll
over on lbeir backs with their legs
sticking straisht up. Some suffer
lockup ontr. of their legs, and can
hop along like rabbits.
Cathy Anne Lapine! of Dover,
· Del., has had two of the goats for
about a year and has only seen
them faint twice. She said she
doesn't encourage iL
''I would be very much against
it if I saw it in a fair or sometbins
- people making their ~~:oats
faint." Mrs. Lapinel said. "It's not
afreak show to be put in .front of a
crowdandmakethem fainL"
Lisa A. Landres, a fiCld mvcstigatol' with the Humane Society of
the Uniled StaleS, said she allellded
several exotic animal auctions last
year and found that fainting goats
appear to be'increasing in populari·
ty, particularly in the Midwest.
' ' Th~se poor goats are being
used for entrz1ainment pwposes. It
is a form of abuse ... part of the
attraction is scaring them and JCI·
ling them 10 keel over," sbe said.

HAILEY EBERSBACH

Ebers baCh birth
· •
d ·
mu:~ Diehl won the doer pize .l$ annOUnCe ~ .
given by the hostess. ·
Others members attending were
Ruby Diehl and Kathy Dalton.

starring Jessica Lanse. a Cather
expert said. •
.
"I don't think she would like it
mucb - not at all," Susan
~osowski, a University of Nebras·
lea-Lincoln English professor, said
·in an interview last week.
The HaDmarlc HaU of Fame production is being filmed in Nebras·
lea, where Cather lived. The movie
is scheduled for broadcast next.
year on CBS.
·
Cather died in 1947, disliked
movies and put a provision in her
wiU that protected her work from
being adapted for lbe big screen,
. but the 1913 "0 Pioneers!" is in
the public domain and fair game
for movie producers. ·
Cather lelt movie adaptati001 of
her books interfered with her rela·
tionship with her ~. Rosows·
ki said.

Jerrima and Tim Ebersbach,
Pomeroy, 1re IIIIIIOUIICing the birth
of their dau£:,Hailey Marie, on
March 4 at
Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight
JlOI!IIds and one OIJIICC ilnd was ~
incbes long.
.
The couple has two sons, Justin
Robson, age eight; and Trey, ase
three. .
MaiCmal ~parents are Jerry
and Irene Dill, Racine. Maternal
lllC8I grandpareniS are William and
cora [)iJJ, Greer. ·s.c.; and Anthony LaFave, Cornwall. Canada.
Parcrnald!:dparenu are Eli
and Bonnie
bach, Middleport.

· RIOT AREA • Police stand guard on a ·
streetln a Hispanic neigbborbood in Washing·
ton after a second night or rioting and rock

MALIBU, Calif. (AP) " Hishway to Heaven :' star
Michael Landon, diasnosed a
month aso with inoperable liver
and pancreas cancer, has learned
the disease lw spread to his colon,
his spokesman says.
But spokesman Harry Flynn
said Monday tbe actor bas been
comforted by fans, who have sent
him about 40,txXl cards and many
gifts, including bottles of holy
water and cancer-cure cassette
tapes.
.
Landon, 54, is known to TV
viewers as Little Joe on "Bonan·
za." the family, patriarch on "Uttle
Holtse on die Prairie" llld an angel
on ''Highway to Heaven."
The actor learned be had an

. I'

I

POLICI ES

"Ads out sad c Me1gs. Galh a 01 Ma5(}1\ eounue.s m ust b e put
pct!d
.
run 3

d~¥ s

COPV D E ADliN E
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W[ONf.SDAV PAP ER
THUftSDAV PAPER
HCIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPEA

OAV BEF OR E PiJBLIC A:TION
11 \00 A .M . SATURDAY·
2 -00 P.M . MONDAY
2 .00 PM TUESOAV
2 00 P M WEDNESDAY
2 :00P .M THURSDAY
2 0 0 PM . FRIDAY

\• 'or~J6

·~" ··-

\:

.. ,

t

··.

BIG KID AND BABIES
PROGRAM
SAT.,' MAY 1l - 1:00 P.M.
PVH Adm. Cont. Room

Call 675-4340 Ext. 232
To Register

Treat Mom l o A Special
Mother's Day Cake!
Also avatlable:
Handmade Silk
Mother's Day Corsages
.
for $3.00.

•
1

CALL AND PLA CE YOUR ORDER TODAY

Gall•• Couf!IY
· Area Code 614
Gi11hpolt5

367 Ch81hire
388 Vi qton
246 Rio Gtande

fttlas on C o , WV
Area Cud e 304

99 2 Mtddtepon
Pomeroy

67&amp;
458

Pt. Plt~• tt1l1
l•on

985 Ch•ter
'43 Ponl•d
247 letart Fall s

576
173

Apple Grove
Mason

882
896

NeW Hlll'en.
letMI

937

Buttillo •

256 Guyan 0•"·
· 643 Arabi• Dill. ' 949 Racine
379 w.. nut
742 Rull..-wd
617 Coolville

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII
AUMADS

lrlq It .. Or W•
Pick lp.

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992·5315 or
915·1561

Acron ,..,. Put OHico
11 7 I. S.C.IMI St.

P0411IOY, OliO

3/6/90/tln

•VINYL SIDING.
•ALUM INUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

.... ._.ult

"Free Ertlmateo"

PH. 949·2101
or lies. 949-2160

•Carget Hoo Faot Dry

Time

Carleton College Scholarship
applications ~ now available for
Syracuse residents. Applications
mar be picked up at the John Lisle :
res1dence, 1290 Church Street in
Syracuse. Call 992-5011 for infor· :
mation.
'

•High Gloa on Tile
Floor Flnioh
MllllliWIS, ow ..

Call Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS!
992·2156
Public Notice

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

Wldnoldly.

Moy

15,

1991 , • 10:00 A .M . lhe
Homo Nttlontl ltnk will of·
fer far oolo at Public Auction
thl following :
1917 FORD TAURUS 4
Dr. lldtn 1 FABP53UX·

HA223912

•

1Ill GMC Convtrwlon 'ilon
2GDECUIHIJ410702 1
1188 CHI!V. Ca-.o Z21.

2

... -.....

101FP87F9FN142018
The Terme of thlt ul• 1re

Cllh.
.
The Home Netlonel Bank
........ lhe right 16 rwjlct

ony or til bldo. Tho Homo
Notlonol Bonll ,...... the
r!vht to ••""""' of tho
obovt ntmod vtltldll from
thoMiortenyllml.
141 7. B. 9, 10, 12, 13, 14,
7tc

742-2C51

3-14·'91-tln

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSULAnON
Contact

STEVE WHITE

,.
11

12

13

15
16
17
1'

0

May 7, 1880
Sadly misted by

Wife

Homus lor Sale
Mobiltt Homes tor SOli e

Jl

F.-rms tor Sll e

&amp; LI'JHSIOCk
61 Farm Equtpmunt
62 W•nt ed t o Buy

a Bu•in•• Build~ng•

Jli

36

63 ltYt!ltOCk
6 4 Hay &amp;. Gram
65 Sued • . Ferllli1 e1

l o h &amp;. Acr•"9 •
R u l h'-t• w..a.d

ljttDijl

HelD Wanlud
Situ1tton Wanted
lnsutanC:e
Bus•n• s Tr•rung
S«:hools • lnsuuc11on
Radi o , TV &amp; CB Rttpllltr
Miscell•nwu s
Waoted ,To Do

GROOM
ROOM

742-21581

4·23· 1 mo.

Owntr &amp; Operator
Pomtroy,

THE

COUNTIY CLUI

S•l•
GOLF LESSONS." l10 oa.

6 lor lSS

NEW GIIPS ................ 14

lraktn Clubs Rtpairtd
nGPHIES • PlAQUES
IADGES
.JOHN lllfOID

s-t c.., .._ a.a.....
,.,,

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

CONNIE'S
OHIO IIVD IIIIlS
and EVEIUmNGS ·
Now Ope n For Sprint!
•Herb Pienta •Pertnlala
•Evll&lt;lutlngo

POOlS,

dried motorlolo.
Open Thurs. thru Sal.
1 0 -6; Sun. 12-11

1,625 Gll.-13S.S4S
Rt. 1, lex 71-A
IUYLAND.
01110 45775·9626
614·742·2904

51100 s.•. 338,
Iarine, OII.

4·21·11 · 1 mo. pd .. ·

4/ 11 /'81 / 1 mo.

•I MINII,H
UPHOLSTDY '
2U•No. Sutall
Mlll.tptrt

ros N. StciiMI 'Str•t

. Hand Tufting
C1111om Drape•

IIDDtiPOIT, 01110 45760'1
. Offke 614·"2·2116
HOME 614-ttl-5692

)6foonEa,......eo

614·992·2321
Wt lty Wlllot W. Do.
Wo Dq What Wt ley.

10-lt-1 ••.

117/ '11 / t mo. pd.

Sp1d.lllt ..

c.m.r_..,.

•RntoNtlan
•RtpelrWork

NEW • UIID PARTI

FOR ALL MAKII •
MOO ILl

Sentinel
Classifi,eda

R. L MASH
CAIPENnY

9t2·71U
or 9t2·55SJ

992-2156

992·5526

I Ill 141-t
....... CillO

·fOI&amp;-

PO.IOY, OliO

111 1/1 ....

4-11·11-1 ...

,.~

·.

I~

.,

&amp; Motor Ho nuts

Serv1ces
83 Eacwating

86 Gun~rat HaultniJ
86 Mobil e Hum c R t~pour
87 Upholste ry

84

,

Electr ic .. &amp; R•lrtQUfil h &lt;J n

.•........
,.•..
._......

IISSBL &amp; 1•11
.
CONSTIUCTION

by tlck

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

.

SIGNS
HtDk"ltl(

•c-pl•te

~~rby
I.

.~

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LAND CLEARING.
WATER 1nd SEWER
LINES

DUW nUCIS
AYAILAILE
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7458

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

Stop &amp; Cet..are
free lstiMIIt11

985-4473
667·6179

CEDAR
CONSTRUcnON
992·66•1 or
691·6164

5-31·'90 tin

- - .,

12·31 ·110-tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

BISSELL .
'BUILDERS

••DMam

CUSTOM llllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

lnflrler·l.terllr
Ta.. tha p• eut of
paiRtiii!J.
lit mt de it fw ytu •
VIIY IIISOIIAIU
HAVIIm... CIS

i'14l

"At lta10nallle Prices"

10

'"· 949-2101
., .... 9~9-2160 :
Day or Nitht
NO SUNDAY UUS
4·16'16·1fn

4·21· 11· 1 "'·· pd .

USID APPUANCES

...., WAIUJIYY
WAJIItiS-$100 1P

:::;::.S"'-stoo .,
,.uns-s ns " . •
-o--s,..,

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIVKE

"z.sm .,

tU-3U1
Acrlll fr01111'ost Office
POMROY, OHO

SPEEDY VAC
Quality

'

ROOFING

949-2161

· _ ,..... • ?t'tiOtle
- G--Ilt

r , .... ••

......

-...

.....C•

CKWOrlt

•Roofing

•lntulatlon

JAMES DESEE

H2-2772 or
742-2251

639 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio

Now/1
$tukll

Howanl L Wrftesel

Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleening
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•Rtpllcament
Wlndowt

4-1-'90-1 - ·

.;;
,~";;;~~
. ,, . ; .;~

NEW- IEPAIR

J&amp;L
I.NSULATION
•VInyl Siding

.Sweeper
Repair
6.98-6591

tin
.....__.....,.._10/30/'11
.. ..

WHAUY'S
AIIO PADS

•Room Addition•
oGer1111
•Kite/lent • letht
•VInyl Siding

C ~tmpeu

Building Suppli•

UIIIO-IIoo-lhc.-$125 .,

CISTERNS, ETC.

Craftera. Orow you own

79

P•h IOf Sll e
Mutical Instruments
Frutlt &amp; Vegfllt•b4•
For Sal e at Trach

ctttttwt

4/3/1110.

After 5 p.m.

tnd Children

56
, 57
50
59

Vacation Mone

11·1

AutO Ropu1r
.
Cil t.nprng Equtpmlllflt

81 Home lnlprovetnent '"
82 Plumbm g &amp; ..,e • mu

WANT ADS bring

614-992 ·6820

USED IAIUOAD TIES

77
78

HouMhold Goodl

UALI'I'Y
•
Polnt Pltllllll· e7H91'

EMILEE MERINAR

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAUliNG
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

75
7Ei

V;~ns &amp; 4 WO 's •
Mot qrcyclll5
8 o•ts &amp; Moton lor S .ll v
Auto P1rts &amp; ACC8Sti0111Ao

1~

Serv-ices

Sli'TK TANI PUMPING
PORT ·A·JOHN liNTAI.

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

Tructl s t or Sa l i!

73

SJ Ant.qu••
54 · Mise. Mtrd"lltfldise

56

..

Sal t~

72

62 - Sporttne.Goodl

IIIMIIIII''

TII·COUIYY
SAJIRATION

THE

7 1 Aut os lor

Mer cliamlise
51

'

Tr~ns or1~11on

H o ~••• lor Rent
Mobile Home. tor Runt
43 Farms tor Aent
44 Ap•r tment tor -Re nt
45 Furnithed Rooms
46 Space tor Rent
47 W1nted to Rent
48 Equtpmanl for RUnt
49 For l• • e

. 21 Bu1ln•• Opporlunily
22 Monerw to Lo ..
23 Prot•lfOnal Ser11icMS

•Lan.._plng •GJadlng

1

31
Jl
3

Happy Ads

Employ,nrnl
Servii,L:S

992~6434

·. JnMemory
RONALD L.
MILLER SR.

•p .

Annouc8merU s
Giveaway

lo11 •nd found
Y•d Sale(JN!td 1n outva u clll
8 Publrc Sale &amp; Auc:lion
9 W.,ted to Buy

247-4035

It. ·1, auttoool, OH.

~

Who P-ea Away

.-

C1rd of Th.,.ks
In Me morv

Busine~ ss

..

•Free Eotimlleo

.i

Open Daly 9·1; Sun. 1· 1 - OPI!N MOTHER'S DAY

. $13 .00
$1 . 30 / day

Metgs C ou{lty
Area Code 614

oRuoonllble Rat eo
oQuollty Work

Syracuse, Ohio • 992·5776

1
2
3
4
5
6
1

.30
.42
.60
.05/ day

$6.00
$9.00

Umsi.fit•tt' fl"IW.~ t'tu't'r ""'

446

I

Farm Supplies

Real Eslale

42

.... 1111 PLOOI CAll

•

. ~o

ad s .

INDIPINDUn · •

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

•

sep~~ral e

NO SUNDAY CAW
J.JI.tfn

Carleton College
applications available

..

41

'

In Lovlna Memory Of

•

lot e ach" d., u

CAIPR CliiNIIS

· $575~ $675, $795

.·

R.11 es ate tor co nsecutrie run1. btoken up d.-y ll will be ch•9ed

.

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

We Honor The Mountaineer and Golden Buebye Card•

...

Monthly

LLETIN BOARD

992-6194

4 INCH GERANIUMS, MUMS, CAlADIUMS.........1100 EA.
10 01 MOlE 85C EA.
.
•
I
While
luppllel
Lart
$400
fl.tJ
..,. '
S pec1a 1• PANSIES .........................~...........

..

6

10

Ann ounce men Is

Over 1 5 Words

/ulluwittl{ tl'i•'tlhti/1(• t•xcluml{t's...

Y iltd Sal Los

"A c l;tS s thud ;utv e ru'svnH.:nt p l;u:ud 111 lh t! O;nlv S H nl111~ [tl•
"CtfPI
c htn•ltutl dtspluv. Bu Sm uss C iMd ;md lt.'ttill no t icus l
. wtn 01ls u ;tpp ~ ,., 1n thv Pt P lt:;lli ant Re11• s t~ r ill nd tht! Ga ll 1
IJUhs D &lt;u'v Trtbun u. m ;~chtng ovtir 18.000 honu~s

Amber R. Willbarger, daughter
of John Willbarger and Jennifer
Lance, recently celebrated her sec- ~
ond birthday with family and
friends.
Maternal 11randparents are ,
Roger and Bente Lance.
.Paternal grandpaiJ:ntS are Alice ·
Willbarger and Hank Lemley.

10 INCH HANGING BASKETS

'

3

not res po mublt! to r t:fiOf S ilher lus t tl iiY (Ch eck
· lor etrur s t~rs1 do~rt ad wnli 111 papl!t ). C l1ll bt~ l o r e 2 00 p 111
dill¥ a tw'• publt cutio11 t o rnak tl c:_orrec uon
•
·Ads th at must b tl pat d m a dvanc u ar•!
C;ud of Th ank!&gt;
Ha pp y Ad:&gt;

Greenhou11e
12 INCH FERN ................$9.95
10 INCH FERN .................$5.7 5
BEDDING PLANTS .... $6.50 FLAT

'

1

Rate
$4.00

' Sen t mt~ IS

AMBER WILLBARGER

.

Words
15
15
15
1.5
15

Day s

'7 ~ 0 1111 IIII I! l\l~ tl 0 11ly tis tMI

In MulliOfiCIIll

Butcher Bull:
Utilities, 58.00-68.75.
Canner/Cutter, 53.00-60.0().
Veal Calves:
Choicrlprime. 95.00-107.00.
Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Springer Cows:
650.00 &amp; down.
Cow/Calf Com.:
. 900.00-down. .
Baby Calves:
180.00 &amp; down.
Butcber Sows:
400-600 lbs.. 47.50-51.00.
TopHop:
.
220-250 lbs., 48.50-49.50.
Butcher Boers:
39.00-41.50.
Pigs by ~ead :
18.00-38.00.

RATES

'P1'u;:t1 of ad f01 all c apttall@th!r s •s doutJhJ pru::ll o l ail cost

from Hubbard'!!

Interferon is a class of proteins
that stimulate the immiiJIC system.
Coffee enemas are not considered
conventional theJapy.
.
On Thursday, Lindon will be a
guest on "The ToniJhl Show."
"He wanted to go somewhere
where he could show people he
isn't aU that sick. He W8Dts people
to know he is hailsins in there,"
,Flynn said.

youngsters, some appeari ng as
young as 10 years old. joined in.
· Police car~ roared throl!gh
nam es eruptmg from burnmg
refuse as they raced to answer scat·
teled calls for help across the area.

• The· Area's Number 1 Marketplace

at n u chii'(J t:.

her day with flowers

· Fl)'lln said.

•

"At:et!tn 5 50 dtStou nt lor ;ad{ patd tn a ttv om c ~:
"F t t!e ad!&gt;
G•vettway an d f ou11d acts undl!l' 15 w o rds w t\1 btr

Remember Mom on

often deadly form of cancer on
AprilS.
Doctors wbo prescribed
chemotherapy are also considerins
interferon treatment for Landon,
whose at-home regimen includes
health foQd and coffee enemas,

l'

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to. 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY .
CLOSED SUNDAY

I

Meigs academic
.boosters meet

Birthday celebration

throwing, Police moved In after the bus at left
was attacked by the mob. (AP)

Classi

LAURIE'S
CUSTOM CAKES

The International Fainting Ooat
Association sponsored a fainting
goat contest at the International
Goat Days at Millington, Tenn.,
last September, and pvc a $1,000
prize for what the ~up's newslet·
ter described as ' goat that faints
the fastest and stays down the
longesL''
·
Ruth Prentice of Terril, Iowa,
said members do riot spook the
goats for fun "because ihat would
beaucl"
·
.
But she added: "It is fun 10 see
them when they so down."
Ms. Landres said. the a!lctiops.
shows and conrests are not iUepl.·
· "What we can do is educate
people nut to purchase these goats
and not participate in ally events
these animals are involved in and
not to J.liUOnize any facilit~es or
institutions that display fainting
goalS. •• Ms. Landres said.

Michael Landon learns
cancer has spread to colon

bepn to sptad.
tear 115 canisten. But the bands of
, .Thirteen polic.c officers )Vere . youths mer~ly ran off and struck
!"Jured Md 13 poJic;e.cars ~ed again elsewhere. ~~ ~isturbance
m the melee, authonbes said.
spread into the adJOIDIDS Adams·
' 'We need to put an end to it Morgan neighborhood and black·
and we're goinstn ~ an end 10 it
·
tonight," Dixon said late Monday
as bands of youths fought hit·3Dd· ·
run sltirmishes with police. Sting·
· ing tear gas lingered over a 12·
block area of the nation's capital
GaUlpolis Stoc:kylll'ds Co.
just two miles from the Wh ite
May4, 1991
House.
·
Medium F'r!lme, 1 &amp; l Steers:
Rarnpasing youths, some mask·
250-300 lbs., 91.00-121.00;
ing their faces with bandanas,
300-500 lbs., 93.00-106.00;
smashed shop windows, wrecked a
500-700 lbs.,74.00-103.00;
fried chicken restaurant and a city
700-Up 69.00-82.00.
commuter bus and overturned cars, · Medium Frame, 1 &amp; l Heifers:
then set them ablau. Burning uash
250-300 lbs., 85.00-106.00;
and smoulderins tear 115 canisters
300·500 lbs., 80.00-96,00;
lay in the streets of the city's
500-700 lbs., 75.50-89.00;
Mount Pleasant area.
700-Up 68.00-81.00,.
Flames erupted from one store· Butcber cows:
front while owners sat in some
Utilities, 53.()()..6().00.
shops with their families in hOpe of
Canner/Cutters, 54.00-down.
discouraging loocem. Others board·
Light weight low grade cows,
ed their windows.
.
47.00-Down.
.
Hundreds of .police flooded into
Heifeteats, Up 10 74.00.
the neighborhood and drove back Holstein Steen and Bulls:
rock throwers by rlripg dozens of
300-800 lbs. 75.00-100.00.

Livestock report

Fainting goats put breeders,
animal rights groups at odds
By THERESA HUMPHREY
Associated Prtas Writer
ELKTON, Md. (AP) - The
growin~ popularity of breeding
goats w•th muscular defects that
make them susceptible l&lt;i fainting'
is angering animal rights sroups.
They say some owners intentionally SJX!Ok lbe animals to watch them
keel over, providing bizarre entertainmenL
"I think it's really sross. I don't
see how anybody can think that's
cute or enjoyable. ... I hate 10 see
the kind of minds peopll! can have
10 see this animal faintins,' • said
Kathi .Travers of the American
Society for the Prevention of Cru·
eUy 10 Animals.
Breeders contend they don't
mistreat the animals. They say they
like the fainting goats because
they're docile and easy to raise.
They also say they wanttD preserve
the breed.
The goats suffer from an inherit·
.ed muscular defect caUed myotonia
congenill. Their muscles can lock
up for several seconds in reaction

loothi~ in pariS «?f lbe nation's &lt;:aJ!i· horns ordered re i idents off the
tal. .' Enough 11 Cn«;JUJb ," sa•d of a Jarsely Hispaoic neigh·
Mayor. Sharon~ Dixon..
borh~od and D1xon O!dered an
Police can equipped w1th buU· ovenught curfew after disturbances

WASHINOTON (AP) - Police
threatened Jarse-scale ~ early
~~~~
aecond ~~t ru~
g, car IJnllllg

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
'- Country singer Johnny Pay·
Check, who served two years in
prison for wounding a man in a
bauoom shootins, will play a trail·
er park resident in a new movie, the
producer said Monday.
F'mal plarll for the Meigs Junior
PayCheck's character in "Par·
High
Academic Banquet were dis·
adise Parle" is quick with a joke,
cussed
when the Meigs Junior High
said producer Daniel Boyd. .
Academic
Boosters met recently at
The movie is about life in a
lbe
sc:hool.
·
West Virginia trailer park w~re
.
·
The
banquet
will
be
held
May
Ood is scheduled to appear on a
13 at 6:30 p.m. for all qualifying
certain day and grant each resident
students
and their guests. Invill·
a wish.
LONDON (AP) - Tbe queen
tions
are
being sent home with
Counlry singer Porter Wagoner and her husband later this month those qualifying
students and any
will appear in the film as lbe gover· will make their rust offiCial visit 10
parent
that
did
not
receive an invi·
nor of West Virginia and will mate the·United Stares since 1983, Buck· tation should notify
the school
the movie's soundtrack with Pay- ingharn.Palace said Monday.
Rotary
office
immediately.
The
Check, Boyd said.
,
Queen Elizabeth II and her bus·
Club
will
be
providing
assistance
Boyd has produced the movies band, the Duke of Edinburgh, wiU
banquet.
"Chillers" and "Strangest fly in. a Concorde jet May 14 to withIt lbe
was
noted that approxinllldy
Dreams: Invasion of the Space -WashingtOn D.C.
Preachers."
· Two days later, the queen will 91 students attended the last nine·
PayCheck, best known for the make an unprecedented address week gradins period academic
party beld at die sc:hool.
hit "Take This Job and Shove it," before a joint session of Congress.
.moved to Craigsville, about 60,
The visit is yiewed by the Jllllal7
miles east of Charleston, after his · .as a restrlmlauon of Anglo-Amen·
..
.
release from an Ohio prison in Jan- can· friendship following the sue·
PORTLAND, ore..(AP) - ·Pat , uary, when Ohio Oov. Richard cessfulconclusionoftheGulfWar.
Boone warbled the 1950s gospel Celeste commuted his 7-to-9 1/2·
After leavinf Washington,
,
Queen Elizabeth I will visit Miami
,hit "Wonderful Time Up There" . year sentence.
as a replacement for daughter
PayCheck was convicted of and Tampa, Fla., then the Texas
Debby at a church convention.
aggravated assault and tlmpering · cities of Austin, San Antonio, DaJ.
Miss Boone appeared on video· with evidence. in the 1985 wound· las and Houston.
tape before more than 5,000 people ing of a man in a. Hillsboro, Ohio
Her Americ8n tDur will end with
Sunday at lbe International Church bar. Celeste ordered him 10 perform a three-day private visit to Kenof the Foursquare Gospel in Port· 200 hours of community service tucky. The queen, an avid ho'rse·
land.
and remain al~ohol free.
woman, has made several trips to
A conflicting obligation pre·
Kentucky since 1983 10 view and
vented ber from appearing and she
RED CLOUD, Neb. (AP) purchase stock.
explained on the video th'at she Writer WiUa Cather wouldn't have
She is to return to London May
asked a "friend" who needed a been fond of a new movie adapll·. 26, a palace spokesman said.
lion of her no~el "0 Pioneers!"

~

••

breat 10 sub.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Trouble erupts second straight night in · Washington

Neva N1cholson, ··Pauline'
Atkins, Marsaret Parsons, Srclla
Adtins, ~ Belle Weber lOll.
Marcia Denison furnished flowers
for the chun:hes.
Margaret Belle Weber, Pearl
Canaday and Stella Atkins were
&amp;JlllOinted 10 the DOIIIinatinS com·
mmee to nominate officers for
1991·1992.
Neva Nicholson had the hint on
"Gardening Week" from "Week
Book."
.
For the j)rogram, a vid~ was
shown of Bank .One's ttip. 10 Hoi·
land, Mich. where those auendinJ
viewed the Tulip Festival Tour.
Pauline Atkins made two
arrangements 111c1 described them.
They were Hogarth ~m~~~gements.
For the rust one slie used greenery
and daisy mums for the second she
used bridal wreath, gi8SS and daisy

---People in the News------.. . . . . . . .
UOUSTON (AP) - Comic
actor Mario Moreno, who portrayed David NIVen's faithful companion in "Around the World in 80
Days," settled a lawsuit filed by
his longtime girlfriend, his attorney
said.
The.Mexican film star popularly
known as Cantinflas·had a relationship with Joyce Jeu of Houston for
22 years, but Moreno said they
'
REVIVAL SLATED· Revival services will begin Wednesday
· never married.
• and continue through Sunday at tbe Middleport Cbureh of tbe
In June 1990, a Harris County
.: Nazarene. Georse and Charlotte Dixon will be tbe evangelists.
family court judge awarded Jett a
: They feature In eacb service the electric Hawaiian and standard
$26 million settlement as Moreno's
common-law wife, but Moreno
· pilar and also the electric violin and piano. Services wUI be beld
· ·eiiCh evening at 7 p.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday. Pastor Uoyd D.
refused 10 pay and countersued in
Mexico, accusing Jeu anll her attor·
Grimm Jr., Invites the pubUc.
,.,.._.,.. neys of blackmail and claiming
.......,
common-law marriages are not
,.,..•
binding there.
I
Moreno's lawyer, Arturo Mora
•
"
Saavedra,
said Sunday lbe out-of•
court
settlement
disposes of all
'•
',.
,.. ,f
:.
legal
action
in
the
case.
Jeu already
••
had taken possession of a condo·
' '
minium in Houston and several
,.
.
·automobiles.
·
Mel Stoof, an attorney for Jett, ·
conrmned the sealement Monday.
Moreno, 79, played Pas~partout in the Oscar-winning 1956
'
movie with Niven, wbo portrayed
I '
Phileas Fosg.
Moreno participated in a Cinco
de Mayo celebration Sunday in
Houston, but he wouldn't commenL

•

..

'

All CONDIIIONEIS. HEAT PUI'II'S and ..
· FUINACES POl MOIU &amp; DOUILfWIDE HOMES , ,

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

NEn'$

MOilLE HOME
~&amp;Anrto &amp;
COOLING

'

~tell

Ott s.Hertl SckMI Ill. eff lt. 141
1614) 446-9416., 1·100·171·5967

•·2t·l1

WI DO

ROOFING ·

AND IYERYTHING UNDDNEATH

-~-··fFIIII ISTIMATUI

'
'
' '
•
"

'

V. C. YOUNG II

.fiiEISMATES

"·

"'

�'.
.

__ .

--- --

~--

..

.. .. . -

- . -.--- · -

·· .....

•c
The

•

Sentinel

.,;...

. .... _ ... ................ . ..

,.~

~~

.a

36
~

•

Land or -.ear•g•, Ito 3D...._
In
Oolllo,
or -CouniJ.
I14

::J:i.

Giveaway

1 .ca.: frtendly.
................
old:- lillie.

---

•

1141M"'2

Spece tor Rent

Put&amp;n For•Aen1. 114 Ul DIM

.

~

Television
Viewing

Tl.iHday,

Ohio

LAFF·A-DAY

Ohio

••

• . TUE.. MAYZ

llpoolol lat.
... -110o1t1 prd
- N1
....
.,.

.......
........"""wv.'::."~11,
•

I:GIIIU

TrollooLotFotlllnl: - . e
..,... L=
'"""
- Gil lrlok
Pllill.SchOol
OuNI
c 'lon

lllbbll,

_

Ren1als

-FotoNI~. -- 1

--'•

41 HOI lUI tor Rent

aochlo Doyor. I1W46-53811.
CUia poopploo 10 good home. I
- old•.•-.7112.
.

3 b1*-'t

llolne, 8u,...•

... """'nod,·-

~-

::0...-:w~-r.=;
1112..2475.

l o r ..nttn · - 3or
4 bdml114-1112-3027.

-fo,

114-1112-2111 or I

1Wo I old Oorman
Shophord Catllo ~~~~- poopplu,
304 IM UZI after 1:00.

The problem, as l see it, is
you' vc been wearing
· that eye

-n - -r
torRent

2bedroorn- -

ftWWd,

"""- lhroll, Vlr!lon In
Ewlnllan. Older dog. •........,
IIIU.
FOUND: Kov Found 01 Tonnlo

~~~=· l1op
111 oltloo to
lfr: 0o11,e:to

ia'ii.'

11

Help Wanted

-·-.---or....
. ,._ =.-n
••
-·-.
-·
Olllv. oTrlbuno,lo
OH. 121 Third vo.,

Oolfl.

•

(Osr, Ar1b1on ...... 10 IIIII
~

21

AUSTRALIA WANTS 'IOU
Exollllnt
~or.
Bonolllo,
~ton. 40f.216.7100.
Ext.
117'1. lo.m.·::·m. Tai
ft~--~·
-Chi- or

~

·

c-

=.,':"'t:..:''l'.a;::

~~,:=

I Slolrloy

VlcliiiiY
or She II bing Rldgi l•
211.
~1-2411.

•
- ,lnllruclEdlolonco

au......
Soclol

- - : Follllll Cil1 I I ollie LAlli.
~ 1llnr Rood AIR, - .

l)oy &amp; Nlgll1. Sind

-· . , _
Aoourno to:
P.O. lo1 213, Clolllpollo, 0H

-

CSI31.

Rewmdl 114

t• MU, ,,...

441-111115.

7

Yard sale

' ''

GallipOliS
&amp; VlclnHy

,

-·

.

Yord--

AI.L
Poldln
DIADUNI!: h2:00
p.m.
lllo cloy lleloN lllo ....... Nil.
lundoy ldlll• • 2:00 p.m.
~-

LCWIIIYIWL
Up lo 11,000 Full lotliol--lloiMin
Oourontlld. -toto ......._
1~ ~•• tMD $14.M ....

AJ&lt;ili.""

Commu~«r Yord SOio~y I

lhni 12. · turnKuro,
:too,
piOio, dlolloe, b o n - d oil

"""·

Conlocl Tho Dlnaf"' of ,...,._
Ina, P I - Coro Conlor, 17D
,..._ Drtve. Cloiiii!OIIo, Ohio

1-1112. Equal 0,..

portunllf EMplaw•.

II old P...UCII or Reall1 - Nunoo To Toko Coro cllll
11:I:ON:OO.I07 Fifth St, .RI. 33, lion In Hie-. I to I doJa, I

-Hivon,WV.

!!JIIfldlnal,
11W5&amp;-1tn
IDk8urlor
"""'·
-

•
-1:00 o\11111
Ill. '!hun
• Prt, Donno.
?, ·
Antiquo
lumMwo~
lollTolling ADalollklnl ot
Domino'• Pjiza, Oilllpoh.
Pomeroy,
...._ ,or Polr10111 to Cloor 3D

acnoo
Ewtnaton.
Will Por
To -.rulllhog.
I ~:~:'

..:::c.r_, . ....,. -- ......
-

a.., eon-

wah Ad

Wllh 112 aero ol tend.
Coli f14.44W2II.

1112 otlliy ""'"· 1-4

wotor, 2 ,dltllod
-114143llld
IIO'a
PortiiiiCI ............
.

1 r - . 1 112 ~~•••ruu llrgo .....,. ,_,,
, _ , p. . _ , . - . . .... ChudiM-IIID .

"*"·

Aolrigo!o1or,

2 hd,_, LR, Dll, - ·
Both,-· Ol!r9- w....

.........

tM
diro;
114-:MM171
- 2411040
· LooMod
Elti1orn
--

--A. .2. .

2br ~ lullr oorpotld,
, wuher, dryer
-up o¥01111111. IM-44WI40.
kllollon

-hod.

1

IUUTII'UL APARTIIIHTI AT
BUDOIT PRICES AT JACKSON
aTATEI. Dl 'ICIIIon Pllll
S1I2Jino. Willi to oholl a
IIIO'Iia. Calll1t 1W 8M. EOH.
Collogolor ..... lumlollld, 1/o/C,

d,;:

. . . . .Lgood ........... , I

~""

"t,

wv

1

Aponrnonl

tM:...... RENT zOWN

1411-Y,
Pl-.

&amp;Auction

Alcll

,_,_,Auction Campony,

full tkM I'' r

...,. oornpWe
.....,...._Lin nJOhlo.
-VIIJirN,~.

Allraln
-11101-0iorn
8u11n111
¥alley
Ploa. Coli Toclliy, 1 - 4317R

ca•••· h

wanted to Buy
Pickup ~""' for

Raglol- -1Zll11.

floworlledo.

18 Wlnted to Do

9

·--·-·118.t-.
Wlonl to lluV

-.a 11mbor.

-lobuy, . . . . . .
Y'IF -. a lorw -.......z;
11441.

• - to lloly,- a dryer
In ........
4
p.m. I~

-ton..... -

Wonted To ..,, J ... Auloo
,. wllholi Coli
LlrrJL1¥11y.tM 1•1101.
,..,_ To lur: . - . . 'llol-

llor,Col-~.,...__

u...,,.,.

..... mut
I

~~:,:.;=
llocllnor f1,7111oir
DlnOI1o

lulllollna- loll Wll. . . . . 111-1121441.

lnl- and -

r:.;·r

polnllna, ·10

,

. . ....

...,.,...

I o.rn. • 1:30 p.m. All! :M-10.
BoloN, otlor - · Drapolno
· - · 114 441 aa~. - . . , .
..,. Todd.., CU.. 114 441 1227.

Pollnlln&amp;- ..................
lng, ,.,._ coli ~'1110

•NRIGNOWf•

II You llood I ............. W.

-•MFotYou.Ma....,..
Pold W..., !Ill E~p.
rk d Cll 1.fti424.7Ut.

onytlmo.

'

Wll
lllbyoll
.. howe
or llllne.
Have
-..euoll.

a''
Opon70.,..

114-112 1101.

AVON • At ~Col
-104-1.

Wll -

111rt1rn

polio - · dooko,
· lkllllng.
put up vlnvl
~ ·~
.....

Wll •

-

-

..... Frl ond

. .~. . . . . •.. . . 011 I04-a7la

'l'llllormMII.

Wll llo.. IUOI •1. Wll . . . -

- ·CoM

- · on .... No hoi 11 t101d
I.J. 3DW7Mn1.

f lllJflCidi

-· -

-.bolt
--

2$ 114 4. 2144.
· llld, 112.20 por - 1 1 h p l l l n , . . , . _
4 CillO! of
tiiO. 4 llnoo - l d on 111nn
~
Ford 110.10W11HOURS: lloiNIIr 1~ Bo1!1rt1oJ,
lo.m..fp.m.; StindiJ, G Nocool'
llp.m.

a

__ .....,..,_=

. _ llorlln 22ft, Qucldy Collin.

K1 • • 1140 12ft tranopclll

Nlol - · , _ Houru, 11-· ·

-

lnoldo, Prtcod To

IICJT .. -

_,.,

....

lho--

lho

~~..;:;:F-.;;;.;:.;.;;

:=1~1;1
Cll llle ww1 .....,
Tony II c:ltlrmeclllr a

·
MniiOr'l Chill of IIIII. (PI 2

-~"'.

•

......
""'"- Dt!IDII,
~ Top. llloroo, 18 llldlo

1 •

_r:r
..

::

=
'•.:i'lm ..

~~=2............hope
to dlvlnt lite~
.

-- ;.
:::? ..

Nrthquak•

0

"--Il

0 MOVI!: llaCIIIHuty !01

(2:00)
1:30(J) Mlletr La1gue 111111111

Cll m • . . , ,..

sao

Jot lkl, - -· ti,DOO. IM-H2:'772l
Wontocl To Bur: OUibolnf' ,

Maggla'a IUI1I v1111a llld hat
o mad night on lho 1o11n w1111

· Mr. Fogai'IY.. Stanto. a

~~--r.l11- :
Mft.

AluMinum

. s.ldna •

FIOIMMD 1111:1 Dan celebrate
Mother' I Day with I

·

llorcuoy llolor l Traitor. 11+ • ·
211-1014.
.
t.

blrbecua. Stereo. Q
(I) (!) ,,. . . . ~;~

• oeiiOVII:

, 'lolioftmiiilllilnino~t~il Tbar clack'

• Nallnilllt Now

.......!"

Campers&amp;

cr-.

lllocll, ........ -

Autos tor Sail

11

...........

--...:"- .....

lint...... CloUdO,I ori, iiiO - . 011 Coil 114- 111-11111.
:MNIZL
,

.

• UnJ ICing Llvel

2

IR,

IU•

IIIII

new

1171 WlndiOI' Mdl211r, 1 bath.

Excolllnl Condlllold l14-24f-

. . . . . lp.m.
1112' luddv 14152, 2

bed_,.,

:ilft. TlotNN&gt;d. -

..

loolory • - opoolll nno-il low - . ~~~-- Col Ill
W.rmkl 1-..auu&amp;.
"5

loorlllco: ,1111 11X72 lbdnn,
"""'1111 , _, 11• t• 4317.

FumiiiNid

Apllll lnl IVOIIobll lor .2 oi 3
-ruatlon
-koro - ·
2111
:.::::::==~==~-,-lor-·-ormonth.
_ , . 01 --.1311111 Hotel
IIII~Jiftl

·

roomt with .cooldl'tg.

Aleu ,,..., . - . All hoak upa
UECIAL ~· 1111 Col II• 2:00 p.m., 304-'173two or- ·
14X70 -.llloonWV.

:=:.•..to.,oom~pl":l~f.!::i
..

=-:=

-j

•

__.,_ ...

=i~~r.::r
Pll.

1:

IHP Trwlllt.., modol.
All
log411111lor to Ill llllor. f3DOO. voluo,
t14DO.Ior IN. Coii1UII-121l
77 Dl!dgo Truck, 11 "'-111,
IS" TV, 12HP
WhHf Hone tnctor, 0 •

_.,"*"•· .-

-n-•-.. -..
=

=..--.-point,

1171 crwy,itor g..ot
• tiiOO. l;llyu . - . .
- . Allor 1 : -.... :IIJW7&amp;.

....
Cookltlolo, 111ra - · hand
bololoo, Ill. ond up. 304-

1'11-1041.

1a-. Coli ...,.
flm.7pm 111-'IU-2441.
A CARIIIEAN ILOWOIITI W1o
o~hl . - . , ,...... to
lho B o - , on 1 iu~ - ·
I don, 4 nlahbl. - - · ·
Holof pold, NO ali-mtch Tloiiotogo0d1roor. 10441.-.
Bulchoolng - - . -

.....- ...........!-"

.-"!!'
H~n ~.
.,_.,..

rt alloli. TabiM I mile •
All mull .... ooldng

!"'-"'..,200.-4711.

Coder Lumbor, Codlr Fonco
- •
For
IM-21MS13.'"
SOlo.

Park.

-ivy.

Cowt tto.a. 1 room, 2 ,...,
1_4_AH_Iy
- l t d , llr ""' Ill .....
...._
_ r-kJ.
No
·_
_ _
.......

~ .,. """""'""

==.c. .

lhon 10,000
mloo, ......... t.Cup, ..1,100.
a • .._
•••••
or

-

- I lor

CllomDion

Olio..-.-.
- -

!!o8. LIW f14.211.1oa.
57

·

flO.

•;

v.t1o, -

, . . Ponllo llcbtlul.. ...

:r.::-11~

-

~.

fltilllleo ...... Prlo, :ldr,

I

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
lOTAPEROFF.

~~~~ -....

Instruments
Plono for_, Wll!llde.,~ 10 1ako .. _ . . _ loo toooty.
TlldiiMMO!JI:d
er.ll
I 1tao m .111.

- - · ...... AC, T·Ts;:
_.........
-

-

.., ... Kid (fll (2:06)

••·'

0 Miami Vloa Stereo.

••
I

~...r&amp;:-=r, ~

HOW LONG WILL YORE
AUNT LOWEEZ.Y BE
TIED UP WITH
ELVINEY,
JU6HAID?

·On=
8eua-•

S c a - and Mro. ICing

THEY'RE BREAKIN' IN .

OHff
IT'LL BE

A NIW TtJP IAIL

11:311 ()). 0 Tonight IIMw

ON TH' GOSSIP FENCE

QIJITI
A SPILL,

Stereo.

(J)Newa

(l) Adam Smllh'l .._,

PARSON

World

a
ICil!:t='itareo.
e 'The Ida' CIS Lela

"
'- -lono,
• lien
"-'11,
.........

Wll ......... , ... &amp;:
tiMiteeiRt~NoMTo

IIIOr-1114-441-.

Ia R TMIIIIMCI. l~

Tllsaa*+ TM lba:euuat.
.,_,._ Fnoo Eolln111111 I
111''1111.'

:-~2.

:

.,

e~po~~~

~'

•

11!00§.;~-=.:.

ASTRO·GRAPH
BERNI~E

BEDE OSOL

......... llr,

LullloNn~
Gft, - ·

'IIIII-.

~~~~-~

... Air.

lll,ooo

.........-1144i-.a:

pi I II till

- , Ill ..... I Clr-1 . .
...,, 1, 11111

..._, . mntmbte

11 you have the deSire to do so, more
travel than usual could be possible lor
you tn the yoar ahead. Thore'a a chance
you may even journey ou1 or 1118
countoy.
·
TAUIIUI (April
ID) Your bell
. 110urce11or ldvanelnt your periOI\IIInteres1a at thlstlme will be through your
mora progr-ve contact•. Involvemente with iradlttonallall could llow
you down . Taurus. trea1 your!lllll to a
birthday gift. Send lor Taurus' Astro-

l'ellrllillonl. Col&amp; p•••• lnfonnl.
Uon nwlled .......... J04.Ill.
I2U, John D. 0ortao11, no

20-...,.

u.ns .... _ ......

=

Graph predictions lor the ,..., -.ct by
mailing S 1.25 pluo a , long. 1011-ed- .
dressed, stamped envelope to AllroGraph, c/o thlo nawapaper, P.O. Box ·
91428. Cleveland , Oti 44101-3428. Bo
sure to state your zodiac llgn.
GEMINI (May 21-.luno aD) You're extremely resourc:etul tOday. and you
could conceive some radlcll conc:.ptt..
Don't discount thorn just ~oo
they're a daparture lrom your normal
way or thinking .
CANCER (Junt 21-.luiJ 22) In - ·
satlons today with people you ldmlre.
try to truly hoar what thoy are sayl!IQ.
Someone whom you'll be talking with
might be able to lurnl!lh you with a valuable point of view you have not yet
conlldared.
LEO (Julr 23-Aue. 22) Don't be hooltunt
to apply new and untried proceduroo1o
old. ualgnmenta today. You mlgh1 be
. able 10 develoP •tep-18Varslhat will en·
· !lance your productivity ,Into 1118
futuro.
VIRGO(Aue. 23-lepl. 22) You haveiWO
valuable aaaeta 1oday; your tllenl lor
organization and your ablll1y 10 elleclively delegllla who ohould do what.
Don't let 1 - gilD go UrluDid.
. LIIIIA (Sept. 23-0at. 181 You could
.have a1endonc)l1o let thlnga go untlltha
lUI minute todoy. Fortunalely, hOWl¥·
er. lhllla one 01 1hoee rare d i F I youmay~q.-eltaRinunderthawlre.

... .

SCDIII'IO (Oal.ll Naw. 22) II you'raln·
volved In IIOIIIOihlng tmponunt todoy
and llllngs . _ - · don'l-thlnk
about throwing In lhe1owel. You're aremarkably llrong flnllhtr who could "'rpriH avoryone.
SAGITTAIIIIIS ( - . D-Dec. 21) Your
material proopec1s tool&lt; quite hopelul
today, and thoralu a paulblllly you may
reap gains In _ . , Wll)lt you leUI axpeel. Once opened, 1 - avenuaa
could produce again.
CAPIIICOM (Dao. 22....... 11) Thi!IQI
may not go axac11J • piannecl today.
butlho reeult1 could be comparable 1o
lhola lor which you wllhod. Bo lle1ible
1111:1 gel ready to go with tho flow.
AQUARIUS (Jan. »&gt;'eb. 18) Your
.shopping lnollncta · ohould be quite
ICUte tOday, and 11111 may.....,.. you IO
pick lip --.~ng ...l?tllllllllothlrt

have Cl\leriOoklcl or =:::'
PISCii
(Pet~. • L iD1 c rntght bring you too-tiler todaY, wtlll

_ _ ,. who II only 1 nodding acqllllnl..... An. you geliD know 1!1011* a bit, you may dlopo,. a , _
lor lrillnd!lhlp.
.
Allll8 Cllaniii21·Aprll1t) S..hlng

uniiiUII mlghl..,ll DJ todllr 111111 COUld

help you IIChteve . , ambltloul

IIIIJec·

11ve. h will be ol a flaallllll nature, tO
you'll have to 1M able 10 rocog- It
qulclcly.
•

.N............
..

s:a.

0 Tlta Qllllaer

~Now

. 0 MOV1I: l1oo CIRI!Ioo•-••"'• Kid
(2:00)

11:01(1) NINitlalilllll-• 1;1
12:21 Cll MOVI!: lnln•olllllllllkNIIonn 1o a

if

(2:00)

Mlchlnt Willi Nlll

laalof!Me

Conn ulan

oe...,..c:.,
12:JI (I) L.- Ccwuahn

E•111111•:•:11
,_war Evil

EAST
• 97

..

•Ass

•Kte32

+10.

+AKQ953
+8 5

+9 6 32

-

••

,.

......

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Tlp·top
1 Changa
5Sagas
2 Old
mine ~
10 Misplaces
work .
1201d
market3 Yukon
place
realdenl
13 Sue
• Envision
15 Actor
5 Diplo·
mat's
Wallach
asset
16 Fitting
17 AV&amp;rl\ge - 6 Past
7 Jeweler's
18TV
aids ·
accessory
20Greek
' 8 Printing
letter
goofs
9 Petty
21 Egg
. quant~y
tyrant
11 Ultars
221mmedi·
ately, in
14 Shares
one's
memos
23 Syria's
feelings

• •
--~

' •· t~

...'

Yeaterday's ,\nswer
with
19 Mountains
In U.S.
South
20 Officer's
ID
2• Singer '
Franklin
25 Some ,
marbles

26 Famma

27 Come to
29 Texan city
30 Fume
33 The same
35 LHt man
38 Finale
39 Suparla·
tlve suffix

prasldent

25 Distantly
28Goads

CNIINnl

.

l ~r.'n:""

......._.. UpJ Ill '

--·"•'"

.....

-.

'"'

, ,.

....
.
..
-..
"

31 Stare
32 Disrobed
3•-glance
35 Basaballar Mel

• ••

....'

--.....

38 Architect

I.M.
37 Concern
onesell
whh
40 Nicholas
Gage

..
.•••...,.
."
. •••...

book
•1 Good

quality
42 Broad·
casts

...
" .
..;:
.......,.,..

•3Ado

I&gt;AILY CRYM'OQUOTES- Here'! how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

..

Is LONGFELLOW

.......,-. .
~

One letter stands for another. In this 5ample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiter~.
apostroph~s. the length and formation of the words au·
all hints. Each day the code letten are dlff('r(:nt.
S-7

NI'XNZL

GZ

QCU

.YNL. ESJNQUA

ASYYMLUL

X N Z
YNEQ

...
.... "
..,
.~~.

"~

•

CRYPTOQUOTE
,.

~ldl

Todlr
1:00i::"tlliiWI•Rt
Tltltlgltt
.
1;1
1:11 ~O .LIIIIIr Willi lOll

....

. ..

on

s. w

1:001&amp;:-0url;l

+AJIO 'I 4

WEST

.

..
On today's hand, you are silting
SOUTH
Easl. .Place cookies or croissaniS. ac· .
+AKQJ108
cording to choice, on the West and ,.
.Q7
South banda. Against four spades, your ·
+J62
+KQ
I ~!~~=~~leads the 10 pf diamonds. You
I;
with the queen and cuh the ·
Vulnerable: North-South
ace of diamODds, declarer playing the
Dealer: East
jack and partner the four. What do you
.do now?
Soalb
Weal Nor ill Eaot
.'
. South's bidding, doubling first and
Paso z+
showing spades. shows a strong DbI.
2+
2+
Paso
All pass
hand - usually 17-19 points.
You can see three tricks, ·but where
Opening lead: • 10
is the fourth coming from? Partn~r
has sltown a doubleton diamond. sii\ce
with three he would (should!) have led
partner with the king of hearts (or an
his lowest card. Thus II seems obvious · bnllkely
club trick) .
to continue with a third round of dia·
You
don't
the right answer,
moods - verily It Is written that part- but partner know
does.
Cash the ace ol ·
ner will be able to ruff with a spade
hearts
at
trick
three.
If Wesl hu the''
higher than dummy's six. Then a h~rt
king,
he
will
signal
encouragement
~
back to the ace will defeat the con·
with
his
highest
heart
spot.
But
with-::
tract, !lnd a fourth round of diamODds
out the king and with a spade higher
may produce a trump promotion.
However, will partner definitely be than the six, he will discourage In·:
dropping his lowest spot.
~ .,
able to overruff dummy? Suppose he heariS,
Don't
put
all
your
eggs
In
or\e
•
cannot. Then you will need to find basket.

David Llllllllll
(I) MOV1I: Till J I t laltlnd

.. ~....,.. 'frlla4IY

+87

..,

·.
.." ..
.• '

• J 10 4

contract.

Ounflgl I r (2:00)
12-.30 ()). 0 1.111 fllltt Willi

I!

+u2

.......•

WUWIIJZ
-

ASNJU

LNXZUJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ANY TIME YOU THINK
YOU HAVE INFLliENCE, TRY ORDERING AROUNU
SOMEONE ELSE'S DOG. - SOURCE UNKNOWN

'

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.-···...
-.
,,
'

..

.,•
••
••
••

.,,'
'

•

••
'

••••'
••

~~ HalliN 7 I ·rP OMIOIIIII. llafrha alar a·

:=I ::.:=.:~r=
,

......

Tonlglll

11:.(1)a-Q

'

••

,.,. -

M'A'I'H

11:00())• (I) &lt;lle 111 ce ·
ONawa
(%) Neaaaatul1
(!) rlllldlll• lp1alall!dlllon
®e Anenlo tW Stereo. 1;1

.,

=

e

.

a Mllor ua.,. aottball

Clldo - · V.f,
....... Polr - · 114-

Ill . . .. Alllonv...... llo\IHIIII. ....... , . _ •••
ftult ""'
honalna
.......... . . tiMI. Aliillli

I

10:20 (J) MOVI!: Pit OMd and

• Crook llld Chate .

PIIIPI• 10011 oondllltn. 12.100.
114 14- .... 1M . . . . .

· Fruits &amp;

::......E1l!t

RaU!11011

111:30 II))

S4;DDO. · -·

-

lpert pets ,that are directly above or

Ill 7GD Club Willi Pit

••••

81

. ,

8 CNN !venlng llawt

I

_,........., ....... rn:-.
............. ....

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

HE at\~ l"HEN HE'S
601N6 10 5'lt'l'lt:H 10
OIEWINI!:i "JJaa',CCD.

MY [:11..0 &amp;-\'15 H£15swnti-11Ne
FRlY- CI~TTE'510 ~'

•
'~

Semccs

------·
.....
.u: ....
., .•

- - lnd .... f4ll. .,..

I

a

w
m• '*'YIOIMIItlnO
Hope belrlanda two
occupantt ot 1 hamllltt
shabr. Slllao. a

- - 111,001-. . .
1ro
or - :UII.- ·
.....iii.i'"iiiila:
~--114-1112

Mustc.f

58

Lalo I _ . , . ...~~o~o~o lor
honw _ , . . o n
Alylourn Rood. ......, nood,

~

4. ""'
ropllr. 114-

I

31, Nortlt ol
ConcN11 l pllotlc ....... tonka,
~......:;:. ,.,., - · eort ::::.~~~'="· J- -

34

s.;,:ep.

Dol1a; -

~
Bullneu
1'!!11!'
I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::=~=;:;=;;;;;;;;:::==~.....,
• .,.........
1 1 IF --~~..oliO-. T·
-==..:B;u;::l;kl;:tng:;;s~,..r
•
"'"'
•
••.
,., ~1}··.-:-=-~0wt=il::
=
-~~.................
OFFICIIMCE FOR LaAlE on
SNAFU&lt;e by Bruce Beattie
andln!Dw fM114 1411111 or 111 Ul DUJ
2nd - . . Clolllpollo. Clooo 10
441«77- _,....

-

•·
1111. 1111 eon. •·

Dido, I7VO ,...
"*'tlle.114 •
1111 evwllngl:
11444110'11..,..

-

'I ''

,!Jog ""' Col _...., Ill
...... IP
l'zirl In Piollle

1
round picnic

I--- -

Space tor Rent

c:itl,1..:.
turdatali.
.
Counttr lloblll' Moine

11,100.010,~.

-

RoomS

·114 •••eo.

lllnld Trolllr,
1171 ...Cidll 1101. 4 door
_ . . ........ I.,., ..... ~- -

IO Aondy TroVIIIAion
Jockoclft conc111 ot Huntlnaton
Clvlo c ...... lily 17, 1111, liS.
t1t ... 3101.
'

echHII

.,....§ • •-

-.-......

Fot •te or nnl 14x'IO honw with holt lot - r
Mo-. 104.,_1 lftor 5:00
Pll.
.
Fot- wllh Ad
O..,Cowilorwy.With112.,..ot
lind. Coli 1M 411 2111.

~ w~

:::..?':i1::...~iiup,:104-1'71"':.~ ,

1 llolh. Co~ oftor4, 304-17M11111.
~
1N7 14111 Clovlon lon1 no
lull buohome. 2 IR, 1 111111\..111 -ric. . - 11
--upo. 304tto,IOO. .-.m .
llN7lll or
.
3 b1*11• 12llll lfll4 Sh.. IZ, Upllllra Apl: 1 , _ 1 BR,
............ otr•...!_.......,...... """" .... ,.ltd, - - _.

Condftlon.

tolf.Conlllnoid.
IM
441MDI. f1,IOO • ... only

~

Starao.

I

..

2

0 lllldnlght Callat
Kilian helps a girl whO claims
he Ia hor lathei. (PI I ol2)

1D:OD ()).

24 .fl. Fleelwf'Qd Wl...._t, •:
104'411-11'10.
''

t-, oklng - .
Not ll«oblo lor Chlldroli, POlo,
~ 114 Ul 0111
.

to Mane
1121.

Staroo. 1;1

. , 111mcll.

iODIII opon_,. 01 Yllllge
ond
Rlwaolilo
Aooort-. In lllddllport. From
tfll. Coll114-ta-771! EOH.

oooopllng opP!Icol- lor
. . . . Ap ??•tnt&amp;. ...........

1m Coruotr 21 ft . with oqu'-, . llrgo bolhroom,
fUOO, or ollor, 304-TIJ.
IM7.
.

1171 vw ..., ....... aood. 1100
010. Col~ olirl 01

'

FIMncl!lll AvoN-. ,u;riloiiDd ....... - , 1 111111

Coii1-N710.
1fll4 Klrblld a..-.

• .30(1) meiTATAIolaa hll ....... """' ...
llartl loll.. . hi&amp;~·

PI0-304.

Clnlol- IIYing, 1 IIICI 2 llocl-

1100 REBATE!
0.. AllY Honll ~ llocll
From llooo ....,.. Conta. lollocllon Flam Which To

CIS,......, Movie

(2:00)$IINO.Q

Antiques

E~.
All
Plld. Both.

UtHMioo
114 . . . . . .

32 Mobile t:tomH
fOr sate

m.

• Cllliall ..... lllton
'I at IIIII.

t:00 (I)

53

.,_.,, . ._AFumllhid

. 'lhtWIOitl;l

8 PIIIMtfna

_ _,,., -...
lroll':la":'O: ' -·..'
lleonuood.l

I wllo. old: · ~ ,...,.. tal
-h..
a yr.ato1c1
...., .....
Yon . . . . . . tor pony
moro.l14ltl 11:1:

t11

.On ..... .

'
'
·
I
'

0 WWP l'lllne ,...,_

each other on ·thetood chain ... "

•

-----.- ·

/.0/)(;!NtJ
flY{)~ANT.J

~

!O'UOod -ion IJODO, 114- . 11M ~ Coprl, 1t 112 ft
1112111114.
230 hp 110, lull _ , . lnd .....;
oolet~ w l l h - 111rao, - oond. 31f4.1711.1421
- - . llahla ond • - or1111.-.
wa-.n•, . . . 3tU.
I
1 1 1 1 1 1 - - - &amp;INIIor.
.lohnoon motor, 721
63
Livestock .

......ldo .............

Beatl
1be
£18MiftediJ

FOOt:&gt;

Sot,~--~ ­
~ M MM ~ h1~11 ~11~2~·~~-=~~~~
- - - - 11400.

GAS'

pllo.l14-44f.'lll44.

VALL&amp;~.J.HtNo CO. 35 Lots &amp; Ac1'81ge
,... . . . . ~clallullo­

-- -FICI

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for sale

nllre
. 7:JI(J) llltjarll 1• I 1h"
8:00 (J). 0 In lite .... of ...
•. Nlghl VIIQII narrowly ._,..
&lt;IMIII at iht h8nde of
.

Floor Covorlna:· .,.. •
M.tl In -k. lllolrohon ca...

..... - thom. Pliant lor on
:~;·:-.:. 114 ... ~ • •

Opponunlty

..

'.

1-177'7i
. . a-form
......
I lmiiiUDinta.
IUJ'1
~~~~ 1rudu,
a I •111.111-.

..-:oo

..

R-loo~lrtoludoo20HI';

. Supplies

q- -

Bullneaa
OHIO

..

~":::' "Tl""-d:"'~

Dlyorlt

--

=~-::.~-_,
•
"'
Direct, aave 1:1000. 11ur ~
, Galllpola. ....,..
f14.3U.
Q.~.=:t:::- .-IOiory

rtamiDII~

· · Doychldu,..
Coro Conlor.
S.ta.
attordlbll.
11-F

HelpWinted

AMr

P'orMroy-

wllh 4 Chllro, 17.10 por - . 4

:."r:O:.:.:J;:

a •• __.,

~· . _ , - - . , . - Wilt

Building

lhroughoui.IIIIO.I-711.
-

_
-_
- -,...
-30WlW1al.
Wlto . . .

11

a Metor ,,.,,.. au11ta11

.ec.

J

SCUM.I.ITS p!SWIU
J ·"
Metric - Rebus - Capon '- Influx - SPECIFIC
While recuperating In the hoapltal, I 1101 caught
between the bed and wheelchair. "Help," Tyelled for
the nurse over the Intercom. A voice shot back, "Could
~ be more SPECIFIC?"
NORTH
1-7-tl

Even if you have trouble with count·
you should alwar~ keep your eye
one thing - the larget. Whal is
target as defender• The number
, tricks you need to defeat the

......

=-::Mot:=~or=H~om~·~~ ~

,

Bobplftlng In lly ljorno: Wllh
AefWII c•a. J"DD 111111, fenced
Play Arwa.IM 441 ON. ~

~ar•....iTonllldlhanto.Q

oeMIIetru•r•
1111,11

llootor,

..

•

;By Pbllllp Alder

m•lllllla'IPiiniiJ

,

1En•ooloi1111 To: 11.0. I'WIIaltklnl,

7:a~uc:caftl]fl 1;1

.WIIMiof,_Q

,.._

'"
..

..' '

BRIDGE

7:01 (J)IIappr .,.,.

Ike

- · b 1 Con Ill ooon
• • I t.
- · · •• ..
, . _ t1J10. Work U,00.--$20.10-tJ.DO. Frl._a
Bot. - .
PolaaY ...,_
...
lloilftint lid.· A I - ond 1:12

1;1

lm•a• and lira. King

- - h.,~?u:='""
•
.

IU

ti.OO
to~MddSind
·- ·IIIICIFot
lnlanrioillon:

Public ·sate

1raolor
""' - · NIIO

Colov•lloo• Von,
cort 111
oholro, ~
· IMd, PI
111
II•
-·
-

·

114 441 ~~~~
...,. ond Choir, ..... por w1Dk.
I Pelce "'ndgn ~ tM.Ctl par Ono 12" 8lnall Axle Form
wiDk. L...,._ Bunk-. - · Ono4ol'~lor­
~ond.;_CIIIOI DIDio-- U...f'l4 4••••.
R o o · - - _ , . . 111ywu.

SWDI
FURNITURE. U
Dtlvo 81., ...... - . l*d

ilai
=:•,:r-:=.&amp;..v&amp;::
IIOIIofcurront

• ., .nd llllko . - .
111r -.,M.
-... -ponloo
nood
homwot W.. Cllll tor amulna
Ollloe: 1'1\11 rwcorded m1 gt. 31~
4330, en se,
Yood lole lllr 10-11 lloln or
WORK AT HOllE
l t o c k - bohlnd
L..a Clll Fnoo 1111- 1300 ond ~ llony Dt~

8

ct.,...

:

H,_ rt 11'11 LCR 2000 IIIII

-.

CIIIIfOit.

11-11 . Alllot .

=ion.
==:1:.
Tr I"':
•.~!".m~,
z ..........-=...
. . . -c:·'"'=r~r ..
-

10
-h; Eloclrla Rl. . 10 .......
White fll; Porlobloi Woohor I
Slcle
tor, An da,
Drvor
1lr
flll.!i. wt.- Air Con Rl nor,
14,wu BTU .,15; Air Condftlonor I,DOO BTU Ill; Skoggl
Apple-, 114-441-7311.
'

AUC;TION

1:110 lftor lp.IIL
...._ or Poroono to Cloor
Flold ol llorm DIIIIIGid Tnooo.
Ewlnglon, l-.af10, oftor

lp.m.

JOW-•·

= ,

ll .. llldclltpart.

.... . . _ lloclol, Almond,

OOIIEAIWENT HOlliS from t1

(U

Dllc- Llllalry ~ Fie 10

m; R-ralor, Nice ,_, •
~·
l2ei:F'
FA&amp;hlpator, MW ,j,:~~ 1:1
"'VICudo,
I'Oiil
rM, $11Dj
,
_
,
~-;
lhlllloollloo,
. ..._. K.nmore,
i
.., t....,
'OUtfl, •rot

Apanment
for Rent

I

rho chuckle quoted
--l.'-.L.
-L.
.
....1,.-.L.
--l
by
filling
in
the mluing words
L.
you develop from step No. 3 below.

«F~"*I;I
I·=:=:2
8

.........
- ""· on.too,
- · 110
22,01101
- ....•Jr..
,aoo

61 Fann Equipment

Merchandise

1110; . . . _ .
Fr laid
Hot
112' .... ....,; . 1 '
.torrtcho ltd PL - " ' w
WiiOil Cottoo T-, • _ ,
•
'
• 11+112-1115 or loo 4011 Pogo

ohlld, .. polo, J04.a71.13$l

bed-• cliY

54 Miscellaneous

1.5'-:
,
LAo-.

caii30W11-141D.

~.~ ~~~~

""',. . ,I,.;.;. .T:I.~,ri';...;I....;.;TI--1 e Com~lote

3-1-1 C.ttut

U!:n""=='

.
7 ,_,

Frlaklllro llolrigorolor, wllh lot loelflr. llrona llowl orroo.
llobr, 1 ~ old, ~ liWIMI1I.
U¥1ngroorn
.....,
IUii
Coflla Table.
FOR LEAII: . . . . . 1DIIICDD
Unl
ooch; . - a ,
114 ueliaooftor4p.a.
Fotl!olr.!Admlrollldo~=
PICKENS FURNITURE
lloltlgerotor,
1

"*"

Thewoman~dolnga

1li lilt.- or Jnnolla

Von 11144'11-

,.. \loJ gu 11n1 v.n,

...,...,...._

~

It'._..,
hlld lumlo!tlng.

Apl,
-

31 Homes for Sale

a -

1171 Ford ~.:•:••:·=-="'=·====:;:=======:..J 781.
AJIP\.WICES

rll

• • twn

Real Estate

=lclloduUngE=I~

Hou11hold Slle. Frl 10 and Sit

. Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Fnoo pick-up Lawn a
Npolr, 20 'fl lip. 114-1411..20e.

a.-

......
...... tM-

=Prlo:/~

Professional
Services

lnonldloto
Avollobll
. For Fui~Timo
Poln·Timo
LPN'o. Com=lvo '!Yqoo, Dt~

...,

lkrblle="'

po• 22 Money to Loan

23

USED

.,

...-~--.....----..., and aald, "Always drive aa
k N U 0 IN ., youwishyour ·-· --."

(J) Allbiiland C uti Ia

~IJI.::i.llawll;l

·~ · 1211. Polr Couple. I PW -·~-~~~~..19111.:o.r"'..":..'t:O:: ;;~ :r"..OO:.:taocitror::: ::,O~fi:L~wa..:•
-•1ton~7~;a•· ~/!'.~out -·u•
Ill. 1t1•. _
Ook Dining.- SUMo, 1 YMr -~-IR In ·~
7PII.
•olloq'ld.
-... ,, lief. • Dop. •·
eneauHa Pie ..... a ,aj ....._., LJaht a ••· wlh
f'll'nlo. 114 441 Sill

. . .-. - A- . . '"

~
- l n g and,_ loll.

wattwa.

..•
.

t:al Cll ,..., Clrlflll
7:00 IJI• 0 Whaal at , _

....... uti 1127 :lrd. An. 13114411_;J.."!1.

0000

1~

I
Ih-s-rl..;lr-:-;.,l.rc-=11--1:

8
Bl£,*ar:-Q
au,ctaae

'LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complllo honw lum-HouN: lloi&gt;Sol, N. ,
ltd.

-..zn:

olio. 114-'IU-1003. ·

1111 bed olpiiNnol, mUll

Point Ptoooont,

Arthur'o Chlln Link Fence.
.._..nlllil, ConuMrclal, Induotrlll, FIOO llotllllllool cDlllo lnlll
. llollon. Phonl: 11+

_..ton. 2 , _ vorllllblo u·
........... II'!Od dllvlng - .

Oponl:::r

!f~.!'l.Yord Solo, lllr Ito 1\
1'..-.y .. _
from

...

DOI'M.1100
1111
_ _ ItO
_
, _ _ lor

C:U-.
e-.

Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity

AMAZING St!CCESS

11ENDIIICI ROUTE: Eorn "DOO •
M,OOO mo. Worklnt PIT 10 UnMo
wllh l.ooolk&gt;nt. Cooh IN• - n t Flam 11,800. R~towith lho F - Trillo
~~~~ n. Col 24 hro., 1 -

Ectw~e

-llll.
·
HAIRSTYLIST:
Tlrod
o1
11011. ol
F~ - y odlllon ' 2:00
Nc:lhl~? lue, • VDu Wanl To
p;m•......,.
Be? Wlnl -II..,.Y? Wontlo
lfovlng Solo: 10' John - · Orow? We've Ool TIIO
-., L!, - . nlc-ojj BoniRo. Oouranlood ) \ ' - ond
11101'1. 21oo wllllnw (o
- h ; OI&gt;Dortunllloo. M.25/hr
llluNntoW ·Piuo llorol
IJII~--·
7217.

".

Business

' .... to I p.m. -

I
I

NYADP

1:30(J)e OIIICIIawiQ

(!)

~~.. ·R..:"ar
...
~::.;
30W7I" Crnt-L
Colll14-44.,.,..

Rood on

10
bod,_, " • ~~ -~ ......_ 2br
·

·
Llrgo ....... Voncl.. ROIIII Fot
SOli, Ropul S - ......

TraM~Uon

'~.Mull

I

. unfuremaH

2

Eom Sl-$10 hour Avon. No
10 noc•-oy, Coli
~-114-112-7110.

Rn.rae ~ WY. LoOidna far
-·ho
d - for lllllled

.......... II,
Dlo4 -

n· , •· T.

UMd

.I I I

1:01(1) . . ..., • • • • •

,

1 I I

1

.

Ill Our Houae

vooF!

''

lfRLOG

aNBATOCiar
eWOIIdTotlly ·

Ponti

1117 · Clllvr 1 Ton 414, Air
~~ Englno, 11,100. IW
'

Houaahold

51 .

I

'

Gbods

42 Mobile Homes

pale l1 on II1e wf·ong eye."
FOUND: -Collie: block wif----------,...-...;,______, !'.!::"· AI.
Loat&amp;Found

tlral - . , -

•••

. . li!CQ

C111vJ _..., 414, 114 Ton

.JI.i\o.I!WIIml.

.

2 lA, I I _ . . , - · i&gt;Ntr
1 c ...............1111.

Large, !Mdlu• and Mllll -

6

-

114• 4~1

llpoiiL
Hood fUmllhed,

JOOr old. llflh Tlllo.
f14. ttl lt21llfllr llp.m~

to~· 1 ....,...

: _fo_lnQol.

I I.

. . 1

me •

~~c.=rQ

-. . . -lop,-

1fT Wanted to Rent

Pun-_..,..,
lrabn_,,__

~

MYSUAL ~'
1
2

I!V!NING

Aood.l14 241 8421.

2

•

or:o.=mb:::-"-!
::
IQw lorm lour llmplto warda.

,,

�\

SenUnel

---Area deaths
.

cil seva11 weet. a&amp;o. Council told
F. Madison Bowles, 83 .• of MiJQ Jut 1Jiabt tJiallhey ba~UnvesMrs, Cbrisline Downie Brabbin Southside, died Monday, May 6, ligated the ~~~ of removing
Bright, 85, a native of Pomeroy, 1991, at the Holz,cr Medical Cen- · such houes m i!Ptofthe new vil·
,died Monday, May 6, 1991 11 Dun- ter.
lqe zoning ordinance and stated
bar Americ:are in Dunbar, W.VL, - A retired fumer and former lhal they would wriJe the ptC)j)tit)
after a long illness. ·
employee of lhc Marietta Manufac- owner a leu.er advising him lbat tile
· Sbe was a homemaker. a rnem- turJng Co., be was a member of tile bouse mUll be made life a demolber of the Dunbar First Baptist Harmony ¥ t Own:b 11 SOuth- isbed.
CblUCb, lhc Order of tile Eastern side, and Minturn Lodge No. 19
Council also bas the autboJ:ity to
Star and the Dunbar Women ' s A.F . .t. A.M., Point Pleasant, demolish tile bouse afta' providing
Club. Sbe was a clwter member of · W.VL
'
the .owner with 30 days' notice and
,the Dunbar Garden' Club. Sbe bad .
He was a son of a civil war vet· charge lhc costs of tile demolition
lived in Dunblr since 1932.
eran.
to tile owner's tax duplicate.
Ban March 10, 1908, in SouthCouncil also:
' Mrs. Bright is survived by two
step-daughters, Lois B. Marshall, side, be was a ion Of tile lale Fran- Approved a request from the
Kenna, W.Va., and Ruby B. cis M. and E8nie (Hayes) Bowles. Pomeroy MlircbaniS Association to ·
Coram, Royal Oak. Micb,; three He was also prec«Jed in death by · close Court Street and the lower
nephews, Alan T. · Downie, his wife, Lena florence (McComb) parking lot for Heritage'Weekcnd
·Pomeroy, William B. Downie J.r., Bowles and three sisters, Amy F. · the weekend ofJ~~~e 8, on the con' Racine. and Charles A, Dowme, Bowles, Ova Henry and Ola Kerns. clition tbal •Y holes boml for lhc
Wol(eboro, N.H.; six step-grandSurvivors include a son and purpose of installing rents and the
of Iaterlor alld Olllo Dep•rtment of NDtaral
·children and six step-great-grand· daughter-in-law, Manford and Nina like for the event be repaired at lhe
RetiOUJ'UIIIn\'IIIIPIOII arrlwd OD tM aceR Jf8o ;
'childreO.
Bowles of Southside; a daughter men:baniS' expelile;
terday to lnYntlpte tile possibility of mlae •
Services will be beld Thursday and son-in-law, Gera.ldine and
• Appointed Don Thomas .and
water causlnl tile damqe. Some ollldall also ·
at 2 p.m. at lhe Dunbar First Bap- . Ri~ Rogers of Dayton; and two ·. Frank V~ 10 the Villqe ZoosuSpect
u IDmolll urtllqulle as COD~utiDI to .
list Cburcb wilh Dr. Milan H.Jobn- grandchildren, DeAnn Hurtado and ing COIIIIIIISSion;
.
tile
damlllf.
~
- Transferred $2,500 from the
·son and Rev. Doyle Smith official- . Paul Rogers.
ing. Burial will be in Grandview
The funeral will be 1 p.m. street and Will« funds 10 tbe gener' Memprial Palk in Dunbar, W.Va.
Wednesdar at the Hannony Baptist al fund for WOJkcr's compensation; and Mills, "'ere council members
.; Friends may cail at the Ks:ller Cbtirch, wttb the Rev. Fred McCalApproved the mayor's report for Bryan Sbank, Larry Webrung,
Contiaued from Jllllf 1
Funeral Home in Dunbar, W.Va., lister officiating. Burial will be in fines collected in April in the Thomas Werry and Bill Young;
on Wednesday from ~-4 p.m. and the Suncrest Cemetery, Point amountol$3,459.
· ·
school's instruniental music program are urged to end the meetMayor Richard Seyler and Clerk
7-9 p.m.
PleasanL
Present, in addition to Rought Brenda Morris.
ing. For furllD' information, pa=ts Cl!l call Edna Hunnell at 9492338 or Ruth Shain at 2A7-4965.
.
Friends may cill at the CrowJ ame.5 C. Vallance
HusseU Funeral Home today from
· James Cecil Vallance, 83, of 6 10 9 p.m. Tbe body will be taken
·282 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, died to lhc church one hour prior to the
hall. All Master Mlsons are weiLodllf to meet
:wednesda
.
~\May !· 1991, at Kings service.
Shade River Lodge #453 F .t .come to attend. Refreshments will
A 1981 blue Oldsmobile station wagon owned by George Cape'Daughters Hospllal in Ashland. Ky. Gib
AM will hold their regular meeting 1le served.
He was bqm in Greenup counons rggent on
hart,
845 East Main SL, Pomeroy, was stolen at 9:40p.m. Monday
on Thursday at 8 p.m. at the lodge
night,
Pomeroy Police report. .
·
ty, Ky., on Feb. 1, l!IQ!, lhc son of
Gibson
Wiggenton . of.
·
The
vehicle
was
siolen
from
where
it
was
parted
on
Main
Street
·the late Charley and Myrtle Giles .Louisville, Ky.; died Monday, May
in
front
of
Kelly's
Comer.
Capehart
told
police
that
be
had
·left
his
;vaUance.
6, 1991.
keys
in
the
vehicle.
Just
as
he
was
retumJng
to
the
vehicle,
a
male
.
He is survived by six children:
He is survived by his wife, the
jumped
inside
and
took
off.
.
Charles and Harold of flatwoods, former Marie Cross of Racine.
Ky ., Mrs. Belly Brackman and
Graveside services w.ill be held
Mrs. Dorolhy Estep, Ashland, Ky., at Gn:enwood Cemetrzy in RaCine
Mrs. Judy Nolie. Soutbshcn, Ky., on Thursday at2 p m
and Carl Vallance, Alamogordo,
· ·
The University of Rio Grande Symphonic Band, under the direcFanners Home Administration
Most of those loans provided
tion of DaVid T. Phillips, will perfam in~ Thursday! May 9
N.~ is also survived by his wife, Fred McCumber
lias initiated a new program of single family homes for .lowat8
,p.m. In the Christensen Theatre of lhe Fmc .a Performmg Arts
guaranteed rural bouamg loans to income families who otherwise
Mona McCoy Vallance; three
Fred
McCumber,
41,
of
114
Center.
_
.
augment its traditional bousing could not have purchased a home.
stepChildren, Linda Rutan, ,BidweU,
The
concert,
entitled
"Man:hes
...
and
Moo:
I"
will
feature
vanous
Opal
Dr.,
Newport
News,
V
L,
died
Troy Bartley of Vintonllld Jo Ann .
loan ~ wbicb could benefit
However,
as
Turnbull
t}'pes of marches from tbe 11;8ci!tional '!' the Mexican bullfight,
Hays Rutland; 22 grandchildren Sunday, May '· 1991 at his resi- many MeigS Counlilns.
explained, for the past several
intermingled
with other~ band literature.
dence.
and sCverat great-grandchildren.
years, the FmHA bas been moving
Tbe
new
II:COI'
d
ii!B
to
John
Philip
Sousa's 'Stars and Stripes Forever" will be perHe
was
born
Jan.
18,
1950
in
. Funeral services were held on
Jean Trusse ~ Middleport Village away from direct loans made by the
formed,
along
with
selections from "'rile Sound of Music" and
Meigs
County,
son
of
Nat
McCumhousin1 specialist, empbasius a agency. Under the new guarantee
Saturday at Carman FUneral Home!
"Blessed
Ale
They"
from
Brahms' Reqwem.
ber
of
Kanuaga
and
.
Virginia
in Flatwoods.
10111 IUIIflllll'e of 90 pen:c:nt Of tile Jlloaram local banks .-e the lenders
·
Tbe
Syrnpbonlc
Band
is
~posed of univ~ty students. music
Addelsberger of Bethesda.
total cost. This mean• that some and the banks are reimbursed for
e&lt;hic•ton
and
other
area
IDIISICtanS.
Tbe concert IS free llld the pubHe Jelired from tile U.S. Navy.
middle income farniliea could con- most of the Joss if a borrower
lic is invited to allend.
Other surviv!)rs include his ceivably qualify for bank loans defaults.
Thelma Lytle
wife, Brooke Bryant McCumber; without a down Jiayment because
Turnbull said lhat guuanteed
four sons, Gareth and Coley, botb of tbe FmHA gullllllteo. .
''
loans
have played an CVCI)I increasTbelma Karr Lytle, 74, of State of lhe borne and Mark and Shawn
On Wednuday at 10 LID. at the . ing role in the FmllA loan proRoute J2A, Racine, died Monday at of SL Charles, Iowa; step-mother, Athens Cotmty Bxtonsion Office in gram. Tbe use of guarantees in lhc
A Gallipolis man was cited for failure to yield Monday fo~g
tile Holzclr Medical Center follow- Helen Shamblin McCumber o.f . Athens, a meeting will be held to housing program will provide yet
a two-car accident on State Route 7.
.
. ing an extended illness.
Kanuaga; step-rather, Stanley explain the new Joan program. Mrs. . another avenue of credit for the low
Harold Stc~ Jr., 28, of Spring Vallo~ Drive,~ cited after he
Born on Jan. 18, 1917, in Addelsberger of Betbellda; one Trussell u well as several local and moderate incOme residents of
struck a ~ car in Salisbury Township: Accading to a report
Pom01oy, she was the daughter ,of . brotber, Ronnie McCumber of Sev- banking officials will be attending rural Ohio.
from the Gallia-Meigs post of the Stale Highway Patn)l, Stewart
.
tho late Dana and Nellie Jones eren, Mary.; and a sister, Sherry the meeting to Jearn more about
was atrem{'ling 10 turn fiom a private drive 01110 Stata Rolle 7 wben
OUr.tees can be made with a
Karr. She worted as a lllu c~ Robena of GaUipolia.
.
be' pulled 11110 the path of a car crossn. in front on him driven by
how it will benefit residents bae.
limited down payment, It was
and was a member or tbe SL Paul
He was a member of the VFW · · Tlie agency will continue to Cllpl•ined and loaDs will be iepaid
Su:phanie L. Amo11, 44, of Syracuse. Both vehicles sustained modLutberan Cllurcb, POmeroy, and the Pcist 176 and tile Malonic Lodge, play_a suong role in pro~iding In 30 years. The inlerelt rate on tile
erate datilage.
.
. .
Lutberan Cllurcb Women. .
NeWJQt News, VL
llOU.sillg credit to low-income resi• loans must be fixed and may not
. Neither ckiver was injured in tbe cla&amp;h.
Sbe is survived by a daughter
Funeral services will be con- dents. As for tho now program, exceed the current rate being
•
and son-in-law, Susan and Philip ducted 11 a.m. Friday at Wa...h- Mrs. Trussell adviaes tbalin come authorized by the Department of
'•
Bllf!IDII and a grandlon, Kevin,,all Halley-Wood Funeral Hotile, Wllh instances a subsidy may be aVail- veteran's Affairs or the current
of Racine; a sister, Therma Theiss, Rev. Choster Lemley officiating. able to those in tbo upper low Finnie Mae rate whichever is highRoanoke, Va., and a brother, Burial will be in Gravel Hill Ceme· income.
A Rutland man was cited for driving left of center following a
er..
Clarence Karr, Millaspon, along tery. 'Ibele will be a military pavetwo-car accident on Rolland Township Road 348.
In talkinA· about the new proFmHA is reducing direct loans
with IICVCill nieces and nephews.
side flaB presentation by Fmney grllll, State Wlor Allen L~ Tum- in an effort to help hold down govHenry J. ~lin . 52, was cited after be struck $1101ber car hesd;on.
Besides ~~arents, sbe was Bennett Post American LqJion.
According to a report from tile Gallia-Meigs post of tile State Highbull said that bis department is ernment spending and to reduce the
preceded in
by ber husband, · Friends may calJ at the funeral geared to pliying a lllrong role in Federal deficit, according to the
way Patrol, Eblin apparendy slid left of cen~ in a curve and struck
Charles Lytle, Jr., two. sisters, Hen- home on Thuraday from 7 to 8 p.m. helping moderate and low income state director. The p'rivate credit
an oricoming car bead-at. Tbe second car, driven by John R.Jeff~.
rietta Karr and Myrtle Reuter, and
families obtain bousing loans.
39, of~· sustained moderate damage.
.
industry, with FmHA assistance
two brothers, Charles (Dick) Karr H~pital
Neilher driver was injured. Eblin was also cited for f81lure to
He noted tbat under the housing through guarantees, will .assure that
and Clair Karr.
wear a safety belt. Jeffers was cited fa failure to wear a safety belL
program, lending amounted to housing loans continue to be avail·
· Funeral services will be. held
more
tban
$46
million
through
.able fa those who otherwise could
Veterans Memorial H08IIit8l
Thursday all p.m. at the Ewing
1,200
loans
during
fiscal
year
not obtain credit, TurnbuU conclud·
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Funeral Home. The Rev. William
1990.
ed
Middleswarth will officiate and RacbCI Band~ ann, W.Va; Donaoy; Vern Smith,
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units responded to I;'
burial will be in Beech Grove ald Covert,
six calls for assistance on Monday aild early TlJesclay.
1 •
Cemetery. Friends may calJ at the Middleport; and .Bliza Orueser,
i
Continued 1rom Pile 1
At
3:33
p.m
••
Middleport
squad
went
to
Pearl
Street;
Melissa
Pomeroy.
"JJ'
•••
_
_
__;;_,;'---------funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Cremeans was transpOr1ed to Veterans Memorial Hospital At 3:39
MONDAY DISCHARGES p.m. Wednesday.
Rerention of those items meant that . Center at Wooster.
p.m., Middleport squad went to Custer s~ David Milburn was
None.
Also, it adds $7 million for prithe House had to replace about
taken to Veterans. AI 8:53 p.m., Pomeroy squad wentiO Minersville ··
$12.5 million in the governor's bud- vate-sector job training. .
Holzer Medk:al Ceater
for Keith Randall Day, who was taken 10 Veterans. AI 10:04 p.m.,
Tamara Lynn
Tbe House bill calls for increasDladlaraa May 3 - George geL
Pomeroy squad went to Nye Avenue. Cathy Day was treated but not
Also restored were tax credits es in. certain fees, including court
Allensworth
Fox, Mrs. Todd Goode and daugh·
transported. At 10:26 p.m ., Pomeroy squad was sent to Locust
for
race track capital improvements costs, along with delays in the
ter, Mrs. David Kirby and daugh·
Street for Christopher Rayburn, who was taken to Veierans.
Tamara Lynn "Tammy" ter, Mrs. How~d McComas and ($14 miUion), a sales tax discount release of capital improvement
At 7 Lm. on Monday, Pomeroy squad .went 10 East Main Street
Allensworth, 26, Columbus, .Ohm, · son, Staci Petrie, Virginia Ramsey. tor ciguette tax stamping ($7 .5 funds and some other bookkeeping
and transpOI'Ied George Eastern to Veterans.
formerly of Mason, W.Va., died Mrs. Mark Reichert and son, and million) and cuts in tile budget of gimmicks such as fund 11'81\Sfers.
Saturday, May 4, 1991, at Grant Lewis Sayre.
the Baud of
Proprietary School · (~"1:1~==~~---------~-------------.-...,
($600,000).
Medical Center, Columbus.
Blrtlll May 3 - Mr. and Mrs. Registration
. Born SepL 2, 1964, in Pomeroy, Perry Blades, son, Glenwood,
Tiie House increased the adminshe was a daughter of Chules R. W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Day,
Allensworth, Sr. and Carolyn S. daughter, Bidwell. Mr. and Mrs. · istration outlay fa .botb basic aid 10
(Bennett) Allensworth, both of James Wilson, daughter, Point primary and seconduy education
Mason, W.Va. .
·
Pleasant, W.VL ·
I . and for instructional subsidies for
An employee of Rite Aid PharDllcllar1u May 4 - Estel a higher educatitlfl. Riffe said jWimamacy, Inc., in Columbus, she was a Clary, Letha Leedy, Mrs. Martin ry and secondary edtiCitiOII will get
1982 graduate of Wahama Hi~h Scurlock and son, Cheryl Thomp- $120 miUion liiCft and the colleges
and universities, S90 million extra.
School, where she was active m son and Alexa Venoy.
varsity basketball and softbaU, and
Blrtbl Mlly 4 - Mr. and Mrs.
was voted most athletic by her. Thomas Albert, daughter, Jackson.,
The, new biD adds. $9 million 10
senior class.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reed, .twin the governor's proposed funding
She was preceded in death by sons, Pomeroy.
level for tile Ohio Arts Council and
her paternal grandparents, Carl and
Dlsellar1e• May 5 - M~s. $15.6 million to the ~bilelll of
Leigh
Marie· (Simmons) Perry Blades and son, Mn. Daniel Nllllllll Resources. It
I'OIIOres
Allenawortb, and maternal grand- Day and daugbta', Kensie Dllrluun. certain cuts in the budget of lhe
parenu, James H. Benneu, Sr., and Shirley Metheney, Roy Shiw, Mrs. Adjuiant General's off'ICe, apparbaby's first birthday Ia apeclal. And ao, for us, Ia the flrlil anntverL;:..y ol'lhe
Juanita {Walters) Robertson:
John Wbimey and son, and Mrs. ently to bead off lho governor's
opening of Cttations, our s~n&amp;le-room, family-centered matemlty car~ u.1it where
Additional sutvi vors mclude James WilJon and daughter.
plan to close certain National
four brothers and a sister-in-law,
DIK..r1e1 MDy 6 - Mrs. Guard 1m1ories.
many toddlen who are celebrating that Ont birthday this year came tnto liits world.
CbarJe1 and Linda AUenswortb, Jr., Thoma• Albert and daughter,
II increase~ Voinovich 's fundinJ
We're Inviting you to celebrate with us at a Baby Fatr featuring exhibits lmm local
Columbus, William Wayne Marilla Ball, Patricia Br'ldy, Dee for agric:u1ture. including tile Agobuslnt:ssea o( the latest In matenJJty, lnfult and toddler'a faahlona, baby products
Allensworth of Mason, ·carl Curfman, Dorothy Fields, John culture Retelreh and Development
and fur'nlture, and gift ltema .for mother and cblld; lnfdnna~IOn bootha on a variety
Euscno AUeoswonli of Yokosuka, ~iffe, James Rainey and Lucy
of topics of Interest t.o new and h a«tant )larenta and grandparents; a special Big
Japan, and Michael Shane RoUins.
,
AUonJwortb of Lolli Beach, Cal.;
Kids &amp; Babies class for slbllngaagea 2 through 12 at 1 p.m.; and demonatrattona
of equipment uiSCd during labor, deltvery and poet-partum care at CretUions. Rc·
winner named
freshments will~ served and door pnzea awarded.
..
of Columbus; rilllanal ttep-grand- J obn E. Moore or Route I, Box by Tile Alloclated Press
mother Elsie Jane (RcMich) Bon- 205, Rutland, comctly Identified South Ceiltral Olllo
.
Saturday, May 11, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
dett, dtfton; niece and nephew, lhc f~ picturejl in the April 28
Tonight, c1eu. Low 4S-50 .
T!ffiiDy and Brandon Allenswortb; Sunday Times-Senllnel to becomo Wednesday, partly sunny. High ?SPVH Community Room
and 1 1pecial rriond, Bonnie J. a winner in tho mystery (mn con- 80.
Wamsley.
tnt. Moore identified tbe 6am u
Ellteaded forecast
Tile runeral will be 1 p.m· that or Harold D. Onliam, Har·
Tllundlly IJiruap S.tuday:
'JlutndDY • the fosle I :111g Funeral riiOIIville. He- one of 11to corA sli1bt .cbanc~ of showers
Home with the Rev. Cbarlu W. reedy identify die farm. HIIIIIIIIC Thunday.FuonFriday. A chance
~vu otracialina. Bm:IAI will wutelocted by laaery. Maale wDL · o{ showers apin Saturday. Highs
be in the Kirldand Memorial Gar- receive 1 S5 fal die 011io Valloy on Tburaday and Priday in mid-60s
The family of.prolessionols
....,
·•
Publillliiii-Ce. 01 ~· of tile : to mid-701, and in the 70s on Satur. Priendi..,...U at die r-.1 contestWIIIIdletllelllelpSolhncr day. Morning lows mostly in mid2520V
Drive Pai1l PteiM!II WV 25660
homo Wectneac'ty, 5 to 9 p.m.
Water eon-don DillricL
40s to mid-Sils.
·

Christine Bright

I
l

Council
•..
Coadn.ed " - Pllltl

F. Madison Bowles

Local briefs ... ---1-;·.

- · Meigs announcements--

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I

Pick 3:373
Pick 4: 6155
Cards : 2-H, 9-C
J-D; 8-S

'

t

Vot 42, No.3
Copyrtghled 1811

news

EMS units answers 6 calls

Rl «-e ·

I •

It's a

a

Fair

A

=

:ii'

~~~;r.::J: Co~test

I:

Weather

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

A Multi.....U. Inc. Newopaper ·

·Voters approve Southern school levy
t

Meigs school levy
goes down to defeat

.

fl.""*''·

Rutland man cited after wreck

,-

2 Section, 11 P-uoo 25 a.~ to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, May a, 1.991

Symphonic Band concert Thursday

:

'· .~

•

Station wagon reported stolen

Gallia man cited after crash

r

Cloudy tonight. Low in
mid-50s. Mostly cloudy
Thursday.

Page4 .

w·

·FmliA initiates
new program

•.

I'

Ohio.Lottery

Strawberry
returns to
New York
•

•

GROUNDBREAKING • Gronnd was broken for tile $1.2 million expaasioo of facilities bousq tile Melp Couoty Department
. of Hllllllln Services in ceremonies lleld Tnesclay afternoon at the
: Middleport site. County and, Middleport vOlap.otrldala, Joal and
· ·state Department of Human Services personnel, and representa-

tives of tbe ardlitecture and contrKtlngllnns surround Middle·
port Mayor Fred Hoffman, and Meigs County CotQmluloners
Richard Jones, David Koblentz, .and Manning Rousb, left to right,
as they moved the first dirt.
.. ,
.

Grll~.nd b.rok~n .fQr $1 ..2~ !!!i!!~o!J proje_c_
t.
/y cHAltLM ~OEPLlCH "'

· ·

·

,

·

Sentinel News Staff
Ground for lhe $1.2 million
expansion of the Middleport building hou~ing the Meigs County
· Department of Human Services
was broken Tuesday afternoon in
ceremonies held on lhe site.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones . in his opening
remarks commended Middleport
village officials, ~~ and present,
for lhe vision whteh !ed up to the
day's ceremony.
Jones said it was in 1966 that
lhe Citizens Development Co. was
organized to raise money to constivct lhe present building at the
corner of Race and North Third Sts.
Jtist a YCIII lite{ lhe Department of
Human Services moved into the
riew facility.
Introduced as members of lhat
comriliuee were Dale Duuon and
Gene Grate, with Phyllis Hackett
representing lhe late Paul Smart,
and NeUie Zerkle representing the
late John Zerkle. Olher members of
the Citizens Development Co. were
Dr. Ray Pickens, and the late
Homet Cook and Walter Harris.
In introducing Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, J.ones commended the mayor and Middleport

~----

• ·'1',~
·

·, .,, · · · ··., ·' H 1'.. ,. &lt;., ,,.,. ;

·.

.

,.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Voters solidly approved one
school levy and soundly defeated
another in Tuesday's election.
· After tbree tnes at the ballot
box, the three-year four miD operating levy of the Southern Local
School District passed by a vote of
655 to496.
The Meigs I..ocal School District's five mill continuing levy for
general operating expenses went
down to defeat by a vote of more
. than two to one, 1,11610 472.
Soutbem Loall
Southern Local Supt. Bobby
Ord Wedneaday morning expressed,
his appreciation to lhe voters of the
district for !heir support of the levy.
He said that the district now should
be able to stay out of the Emergen·
cy School Assistance Fond.
. .
Tbe superintendent did indicate.
however, that passage of the levy
wiD not have any effect on tile cuts
already made by lhe board. Those
cuts, he said, were made in antiCipation of the additional mon.ies ·
~enerated from the levy commg
1010 lhe general operating fund.
The levy will generate about
$223 '000 of the anticipated short.
fall of $400,000 for the operation
of the district's sthools in 1991-92.
Tbe Q.dditiQI141 DIOIIIIY. to brio&amp; tbe
budget into ballwce '!'ill cqmelrom
the cuts made 6y' lhe board at last
month's meeting.

These include elimination of
tbe instrumental music prograin ,
one teaching position, all extra-cur-·
ricular activities except yearbook,
and a chl!lgO in the ldndergarten
schedule from half-day every day
.to fuU-day every other day.
In lhe district 1,169 voters went
to the poDs. Of those voters 56.03
percent voted for the levy while
42.43 voted against it. Only a .
majority vote was required for passage.
Melploall
_
In precincts of lhe Meigs Local
School District, only 1,619 voters
turned ouL Of those voters, 68.93
percent vo~ed against the levy,
while only 29.15 percent supported
it.
.
.
The five mill continuing levy
had it J)8SSed would have generated
$530,000 a year but of that amount
83 percent would have gone directly mto the salaries of teachers an.d
non-certified personnel and lheu
fringe benefits, leaving only a
small portion for other things like
textbooks, other instructional materials and equipment, and general
maintenance of facilities.
The levy has been defeated
numerous times over the past three
years, but was put on lhe ballot at
ev~ regular election by the Board
of.Ed:t:;"i!!ll ~ ~'fc~n,.
with e C9111IA.~! th e elgs
Local Board' oT ECfucittion. That
conii'8Ct expires at the end of June.

w1:

Pomeroy voters select
field for fall election

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ot Human Services buildlng will look one~ the
expansion i&amp; completed. Tile buildiDJ which is
bemg constructed wllb state funds .will be owned
by the county.
former Mayor Zerkle with being members of Middleport Village
lhe man who saw lhe opportunity Council, Jack Sauerfield, James
and worked to raise the money Clatwortby, William Walters and
locally so lhal lhc building could Paul Gerard, Meigs County Commissioners Manning Roush and
be constructed in Middleport.
.Pomeroy Allorney Bernard David Koblentz, several other
· Fultz, who was village solicitor at county officials, state representa·
lhe time the original building was lives of the Department of Human
constructed, .recaUed for the large . Services, and ~vera! businessmen.
Alao introduced and speaking
crowd gathered at the ·site that each
of 111e six original board members briefly were Helen Boyle, District
loaned $5,000 of his own money to Director of the Department of
make the down payment. He said Human Services, Michael Swisher,
that the entire cost of the buil!ling director of the local department;
was paid over a period of years and Bill Ditto of llurgess and
from the Department of Human Niple, architects.
Tom Karr of Wesarn ConstrueServices rental fees.
Continued on pase 6
Olhers introduced by Jones were

TaE FINISHED LOOK • Tbis sketch creal·
ed by the architectural firm of Burgess and
Niple sbows bow the Meigs County Department
Village Council for their role in lhe
expansion projecL
In his response Mayor Hoffman
said that this is the first countyowned facility in Middleport housing a county agency. He credited

Local br•"ef:s----.,

· Rt. 7 touay
..1
ODOT
. reopens

State Route 7 below Middleport, which has been closed sinee
Saturday night due to bighwsy damage created by a massive rock
and laild slide was ~for traffic late Wednesday morning.
John Dowier, Distnct 10 deputy director, Ohio Department of
Transponation reported Ibis morning tbal a section of the pavement
had been remo~ed and tbat only very small voids had been found in
the ground under lhe highway.
He said that a temporary topping has been put in place so that
traffic can be resumed and that permanent repairs will be made
later.
As for furtber ground movement in ll!e area of the ~ighway,
Dowler said none has been detected. He did report tbat his department bas set down a "baseline" to monitor possible moveD~ent

Woman injured in crash
A Racine woman suffered minor injuries Tuesday after the car ·
she was·driving flipped over on Meigs County Road 28.
Christina D. Eynon; 17, of Pine Grove Road, ref~ ~t
for her injuries follow:/lf..the crash in SUIIOII Township.
to a report from the G
-Meigs post of tile State Highway Patro ,
Eynon was northbound on County Road 28 when slle apparently
lost control of her vehicle, went off the side of lhe roadway and
flipped over.
"£ynon was cited for failure to control.
•

Accordinf.

Jury trial canceled
Tbe jury trial set for Friday in Mejgs County Court has been canceled.
·
AccOrding to a court spolccsperson, jurors summoned need not
appear•
Coatlnued on pa• 6

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
· p
Republican voters 10 omeroy
nominated Bruce 1. Reed as thetr
candidate for mayor in Tuesday's
Primary Election.
Of the 433 Republicans who
turned out 10 CB.!il theit ballots, 232
voted for Reed while 181 voted for
Dottie s. Turner. Reed received
53.58 percent of the votes, while
Turner received 41 .80 percenL
In the fall, Reed wiD run for the
mayor's post against Independent
candidates, Larry Wehrung a11d
Ellen Rought. Reed and Wehrung
are bolh now serving on Pomeroy
Village Council.
or the three candidates for their
party's nomination for seats on
Pomeroy Village Council, Scou M.
Dillon, a newcomer to politics,
topped the field with 294 votes-33.95 percent of the total votes
cast. John W. Blaeunar received
171 votes or 19.75 percent, and ·

John L. Amott got 149 votes, or
17.21 percent of the 10ta1.
Dillon and Blaettnar will have
no comyetitt'on t'n the November '
Genera Election since no ·
Democrats or Independents have
filed for the two vacancies.
Brenda Morris, incumbent
clerk-treasurer, had no competition ·
in the primary nor will she have
any in the fall election. She
received 280 votes or 64.67 percent
of lhe total vote.
Middleport did not have a Pri- .
mary Election resierday, but in lhe·
fall voters wil elect a mayor and
flU two seats on council. Incumbent
Mayor Fred Hoffman, running as
an independent, will be challenged
for lhe mayor's post by Democrat
Osby Martin.
The_three candidates for Che two
council seats are Incumbents
William Walters _and James Clatworthy, ~epubltcans, and Paul
Clark, an mdependent.

Meigs sheriff's office
probes armed robbery

The Meigs County Sheriff' s
office is investigating the anned
robbery of lhe Five Points Express
north of Pomeroy on Rt. 7' at
around 11:15 p.m. on Tuesday
night.
According to the report, Mike
"Taz" Roberts, the owner of the
establishment, was preparing to
close and was at the cash register in
David Persons wa~ convicted had been made a "trustee1' by lhe the store' s drive. through when a
Tueaday by a jury in Meigs County sheriff's office, meaning that he small white two-door car wilh two
male subjects' drove into lhe drive
Common Pleas Court on a charge was not confined to the jail ceO. ·
through.
of escape. The 12-member jury
Story said that PersQns walked
Both subjects wore stockings
deliberated for 1!11 hour and a half away from the jail and was ancstcd
yesterdaY. before returning with three days later by the Wood Coon- over their heads and demanded tile
their verdict.
ty, W.VL sheriff's departmenL He money from the cash register.
· Persons was indicted last year was later transferred to Mason . According to Sheriff James M.
following his escape from the County, W.Va. where he then Sol!lsby, t~e subjects ~ere armed
Meigs County Jail on August 7, served six months on misdemeanor with 2S caliber automaiiCs.
After emptying the cash lhwer,
1990. As charged against Persons, charges. Ho escaped from the
escape is a fourth degree felony. · Mason County Jail in February and Roberts was ordered to enter the
Persons was represented in lhe trial was a~ended two weeks later building and lie on tile floor. The
by appointed' counsel D. Michael in Meigs County following an suspects lhen fled north on State
Route 7.
Mullen.
anonymous tip.of
b c
Deputies searched the area for
SenleiiCing Persons oy omAccording to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. mon Pleas Court Judge Fred W. . several hours after learnin' that a
Story Persons - at the time of his Crow lli bas been set for May 30. . white car was seen u-avehnJ east
escaP, from the jail - was serving a
Story was assisted in the trial by on Stille Route 2A8 at approX1iillltesentence on an assault charge, and Assistan 1 Prosecuting Auomey ly lhe-same time. This vehicle was
also described as being occupied
George Mccartby.

Meigs jury convicts
Perso.ns .on escape charge

by two white males, traveling at a
high rate of speed. According to
Soulsby, the vehic le almost
wrecked on the curve at the old
golf course site.
Roberts described the subjects
to be 25 to 30 years old. Both had
brown hair and were wearing white
tee shirts.
No information is being released
on the amount of money taken.

Governor appoints
3 to commission
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov . George _Voinovich has
appointed lhrce viomen, including a
Democrat, to terms on the Ohio
Ethics Commission.
. Voinovich appointed fellow
Republicans Barbara F. Florez of
Cincinnati, and Marguerile B.
. Lehner of Kettering and Democrat
Janis Purdy of Cleveland to the
panel, which investigatu lhe conduct of state officials and employ·

ees.

j

,

...

•!

,

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