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10--The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Ohio

1\IHday, Aprll27, 1993'

'

w~~!! itt. f!l?!_;~!!...ot!:::!._.~·
Socill Setw lt7,
pr Ia Adieu

soc1a.l maurance system that
!l'"bodies elem~ts of 8FO.DP term
!nsurance, .pc~s'o!' polici~s. an.d
mcome. rcdislnbuuon. Unlike pn ·
~ate retlrc.1I)C_IIt plans, socill ob.JCIC·
lives arc an mtqpal part of Social
Security. !'~ ~y bin~ at one
of those ObJCIC~ves: ~sunng that
Wolters and tJx:ir f~ ~ cov. .
ered not only m theu reurement
years but also in the case of disabil1ty or.death. In addition, !1Je S~ial
Scc:.unty benefit formula ~ weighted o:' favor of workers with lo~
eanungs w'!O have: less' ~ty
to save d~g theU: workin¥ years.
They I'CCel.ve a Social Scc:unty ben.efit that repre~~ts a g~e~ter per.centage of .the!r average_earnmgs
than do their higher-salaried coun-

•re.

WINNERS · ,Winners In ihe recent egg bunt
sponsored by tbe Radlle American Lelion Post
602 are, in no particular order: ages to four
years, Douglas Chapman, Jordan Pickens,

"What s m It for me?" That's a
commonly asked_ ques11011.-:- and
human nature being wbllu .u, an
understandable one. I hear 1t alot
when .it comes to Social Security,
especially from younger ~kers.
Nonnally I respond by te!'ing ~
abdut the benefits of Social Secun·
ty :- but !don't just talk abOut
reurement. Instead, I stress t~e
often .overlooked benefits Soc1al
SecC:!t·J!lOyjdes younger people
llity ~· payments to
~ ~ IIJ&lt;! c:'Jildren of liiiii!IIOIIC
lt1th ~ dLSabdtty, and surv1vors .
benefus for th,e me!"bers of a
deceased~ ~family.
.
But tocjay I d liJtc to poae a dj!·
f~t questlol,!. Instead of :'Wh&amp;f s
~ 11 ~ J!IC~· how about if I ask:
What s m tt for al! of us?" The
answer to that quesuon sues ~II
beyond th~ bo~nds of as~ssmg
each !'Mencan. s personal mvestment m the Socia! Security syste!"·
WheJ! you consider tbat ~oc1al
SAmectJI'!ty ~~~~of
encans om die briakofpov?"·
!Y to a safe .p~~u of financ1al
1ndependen~ 1 11 s easy to understand why Ills often regarded as
one of the most succeasful of all
government J1108111111S.

Cbelsie J). Rirne; ages tour to six, Mirlnda
Davis, Christina Johutoa, Ryan Hupp; ages
sevea a.nd up, Aatboay Cottman, Cherlssa ·
, . Barnes, Rachael Morris.

Ladies meet for golf
Eleven ladies attended the fust
outing of the Tuesday Morning .
Ladies Golf League at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
Nor man Custer was named
handicap chainnun.
·
- The group contributed $200 to
the club for the new score board.
Winners for the day were
Norma Custer, low gross and low
putts; and Clarice Krauuer, low
net.
.
All ladies interested in participating in t!le group arc invited to
auend every Tuesday morning 11 9
a.m.

Bowling night observed
A family bowling night was
observed recently by members of
Hillside Baptist Church at Mason
Bowling Lanes. '
·
Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
James R. Acree Sr.. Kristin Acree,
.Mr. and Mrs. Joe Humphrey. Kundis und Joe Jr., Mr. und Mrs. Dan
Hood, Heather und David, Ryun
Nolan, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clonch
and Ryan and Valorie, Megan
Venoy, Robbie Murphy, Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and Sarah and
James , Mr. and Mrs. Ron Justus
and Colt and Kyle, Mr. and Mrs.
Terri Wolfe and ChristOpher, Rev.
and Mrs. Mike Willett aqd Angie,
Teresa Reynolds, Vonda ~ynolds,
Linda Jones and Cory Spaun.

Birth announced .·
Timothy and Tracy Brinager,
Racine; announce the birth of their
son. Braiton Autry, on March 17 at
Holzer Medical Center.
:
He weighed seven pounds and
14 ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Daniel und Pam Riffle, Racine.
Patemal grandparents are Cecil
and Ruby Brinager, Racine.
Other children arc Corey, age
three; and Scort Brinager, age 12.

Winner .announced
Rol)ert Jones was the winner of
!he Middleton DoU from the Meigs
Vocal Music Department. Jones'
granddaughter, Amy, is a member
of the eighth grade chorus. The
winner was selected by Jessie
Blackford.
Mrs. Davis expresses her appre·
-- ... · ciation 10 everyone whO supported
the efforts of the program.
Money raised from this promo·
tion will be used to fund the
group's 1rip to Wyandot Lake in
May
T1_g~s~~~~aMviuss_i1..c~·oedir!!!,eo:t:the

Me

v

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W"

TUESDAY
RACINE ·· The third weelc of
revival is in progress at Mt. Moriah
Church of God on Mile Hill Road
in Racine with Ron Blevins, evangelist. Services are 7 p.m. nightly
with special singing. Pastor James
Satterfield invites the public.
. CHESHIRE · The Gallia-Me~
Community Action Agency wtll
bold a free Clothing day Tuesday
from 9 am. to nilon at the old high
sch9ol buildiJig in Cheshire.
:
·· RACINE • The Racine Area
Commuliity Orgunization will meet
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. New.members are welcome.
RACINE - The Middleport
Pomeroy Branch of the. AAUVI
will ,nee~ Tuesday at 7 p.m: at the
ltaciile United Methodist Chun:h.
·. , Qullied ~all banging winner will
. be announced. .
·
·
·

•

Some ~onld argue that they
real!ze a greater rel!lfll on
!'JCir taxes.if they Wf:tC permitted to
mv_esa their own reurement funds.
It IS reasonable to assume that
some individuals mighf: in~t ~ir
ll!one_y_ profitably, av01d cnppling
disability !lr ~y death, .and generlilly remam unmuae to ill .fortune.
These JJO!!Pie would ·eventually be
able to retire financlal.IY secure. But
how doei one detetmine before~
fact w.ho !b_ose fortunate few will
be? Disability and death arc eql!ai
co~ld

men and women of an ages. In ract;.
statistics show that about 42% o( ·
an men,and 30% ·of women enter-:
ing the wllltforce today will die or;
become disabled before reaching
retirement age
'
One of the ~vantages ofl'CCjuir-·.
ing all workers to invest m a·
national pension program liko~
Social SCcurity is that the fmanciaj '
risks associated with Hfe's misfor- .
tunes are spread throughout tho•
population. In addition, a broad•'
·based social insurance systenf
reduces the impact that inflation ·
and other economic setbacks can ··
have on individu8t contributors. ,.;
Rather than considerins privalc,
i'nvestments as an alternative to.:
·social Security, they should be
regalded as supplements to the pro: .
gram ..:.:.. especially since Sociat:
Security was never mtendcd to be a·
retiree's only source of income. ·,; ·
so _ what's in it for an of us? •
Considering what Social Security
means to individuals in terms of:
retirement, disability, survivors,
and family benefits and what it
means to the countrv in terms of a
better standard of Uvin for man '.
of its citizens, Social ~ecurity
one of the moist impOrtant and fat, ;
reaching investments Americans_
und Ametica _can make.
1.!

"Hands of Heali1Jg" is the theme
for the 1993 Soilllld Water Stew·
ardship Week celebration taking
place this week.
Emphasizing that the greatest
influence on the environment
comes from individuals doing ordinary. thoughtful tasks in their
neighlxl'hoods, the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District is
encouraging individuals and local
groups to join the nationwide
observance of Soil and Water
Stewardship Week.
The conservalioo district, which
works throughout the year on Soil .
!Did water conservation measures,
in providing placemats to local
restaurants and bookmarkers to
fifth grade SIUdents throughout the
county encouragins individual
responsibility and care for natural ·
resources. The local district is only
one of nearly 3,000 conservation
distticts nationwide that works with
the National Association of Conservation Districts to encourage the
wise use of natural resources
through the annual week-long

ATTEND CAMP GALUA ·Students from Carleton Scbool
and Mei~s llldostries visited Camp Gallia In Gallipolis recendy.
They CDJOYed watching tbe Civil War Reenactors and tbey also
toured The Freacb Art Coloay.

Dr. Christopher speaker ·
.for program at hospital

that you may JIOW iun less water to
brush·your teeth is just as important
to tbe environment as a builder
installin' sediment control basins
in a maJOr urban development.
Both require individual action. both
make a difference.

MIDDLEPORT • Middleoort
RITILAND - The Rutland Gar~en Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 Literary Club will meet Wednesday
p.m. at the home of Neva Nichol· at 2 P·'"· at the Meigs County Public Library. Mrs. Richard .Owen
son, New Lims·Road, Rutland;
will review "A Vision of Light" br.
Judith Mcrlde Riley. For roll cal ,
WEDNESDAY ·
POMEROY • The Meigs Soil tell of a "womiUI of vision.•
and Watcr Conservation District
board of supervisors will meei
MINERSVILLE • Tbe WifdWedriesday at 8 p.m. at the Meigs wood Garden Club. will meet
. SWCD Office.
. Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
., honle of Kathryn Miller: •·
·
POMEROY • The Meip CounTHURSDAY
ty dry fire hydrant comm1ttee will
.RITILAND . A free community
m~t at the Meigs Soil and Water .
Con servation District Office on immunization clinic will be held
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. AJI mem· · Thursday 'Bt the Rutland Fire
hers urged to aatnd.
Department from 9. 11 a.m : fQr
ages two months throu~h kinder- .
. LONG BO'ITQM- Bruce Stone garten age. Parents .must bring .
will be in concert ~ednesday at 7 · child'simmunizalionrccord . .•

,T

(Wtlh Uft.Ofl TI'IIY)
lEG. i:l37.00

1

•17'P5

SSJP •296

95

•30• MIIN CAFE UILE
&amp; 2 CAFE CIAI.S
REO. Pia.OO
Allltama Sub~
To Prior Bale
FREE DEUVERY
EASY CREDIT
TERMS
OPEN DAILY

FRI:A~ N

. OBSUVING OWL - Two Meigs County .
boys who touad and aursed an iajured &amp;real
horned owl are tliralng the encouat'r lato a
learalng experience by making aa extra-credit
report on great lloraed owls tor their ·school.

co•l
Of au &amp; OUVI
U1UNIJI446-3045

sALI'26471

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lbc:::IC:::~:~:'ccac:::IC:XX,C:::;:;::;::~ac:::IC:X:X::X:~~

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E-ncounter with owl becomes
positive learning . experienc~,,..-

. · _, ·. y ,PM FREEMAN
' The •yout~gsters, U.ing a stick
. Seatlnel News Staff
an~ part of the t~rkey· blln~.
An' encounter with a wounded rell'leved '!'C dazed bird,llld toOk It
Jreat homed owl resulted in a to Robert s horne where they put
· happy eading and a lclntin&amp; txpe· into a cage.
.
·.
riencc for two Meigs County boys.
. Ro!Jert' s mother, Terennta Hai·
Fifteen-year-old Bruce Hawley n~ 58!d they con~ un area vetand his companion, 13-year-old ennanan who advised them OJ! !'ow
Roben Harris, both of Long BOt· to ~are for the owl. In addiuon,
. tom, were in thew~ Monday Me_1gs County Game P!otector
afternoon to set up a llirtey blind K;ellh \YOOd wa.s ex~mmed the
when they found the owl.
bini, whicb by this point had been
Tuesday afterlloon, the boys named"~ ~Y the ~ys.
showed' me the owl as they
Mrs. J:larris said the bini see!'flcd
described their initial encounter !"ore actlve. when Wood eXIIr!l~
with the injured bird of prey. TltC 11; 11romptmg :.Vood's advumg
owl, about the size of a basketball. them to try sewng the C?Wl free at
sat quiedy in the cage, alert but dusk Tuesday· If the bud proved
with eyes closed, its razor-sharp, unable to fly, WOO&lt;! was to come
inch-long talons wrapped tight get the owl und take tt II? Co!umbus
&amp;round the wire of the cage.
for treabDent, _Mrs. ~ Slid.
. A dog frightened the owl which
Mrs. Harris. expl~~~ tl!e two
flew away und 8lll8Cked into a tree, boys used the b!rd as ~lion fo/
Robert said. The bird tried 10 fly an extra-~re~ll project at the1r
but was unable, the boy said.
school.

.

. O:cfsnian radio also said five
civilians ·were killed as Serb
artillery pounded the nearby .Bn:ko
region.
It reported no new Serb
advances today in the Bihac region,
a pocket of Muslim villages, but
said 21 Bosnian· troops were
wounded in shelling of Bihac and

Here Bruce Hawley,15, and Robert Harris, 13, ·
botl. ot Long Bottom, examine the bird tlley
named "Hooter." .The owl was successfully
retvaed to tbe wild Tuesday evenln&amp;. (Sentinel
photo by Jim Freeman)
-

- After boys find wounded bird. ..

.

ICuehton not plotured)

REO.

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•TEACART

. •Adfus..W. Cllalse l.alllge

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SAU

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - As heavy shelling
rocked several Muslim towns in
northern Bosnia today, British
communder with U.N. peacekeepers said jittery rebel Serbs have .
threatened to fire on his troops if
NATO bombs their posiiions.
The Serbian warning comes a
day·after tougher allied sanctions
were slapped on Yugoslavia for
supporting Bosnia Serbs in tbeir
year-loag ~g against Muslims
. and Croats m Bosnia-Herzegovina.
I The sbdling by rebel Serbs was
reported today fer a second day in
the key Muslim stronghold of
. Gradacac, a ~eged town in the
•. mountains of far-northeastern

I •

CONSIDER A BEAUTIFUL, m PUCIICAL GIFI
Quality Patio Furni~re Halcron·Meadowcraft &amp; Telescope

SAU •24000

Rebel se·r bs threaten
to ·target··peaceke.epers

....•

,...

Low IOnlght In 40s. Clear.
Thursday, sunny, hlgb In 70s.

3 s.ctlona. 26 P~ 25 cents
A Multi meet. Inc. Nnapaper

Pomeroy.-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 28, 1993

...•

48

AEG.$320.00

Vol. a, NO. 254

·uultlnlellalnc.

Following are tei1 ways you cal\!
act to conserve natural resourtes! •
plant a tree, recycle, conservt.
water, save soil, compost, use led':
energy. apply pesticilles carefully,:
reduce consumption, reuse an~·
repair, and get involved.
•:

Recliners, Sofas, Hlde·A·Ieds
Slmmou leautyrest Mattresses

(CU.hlon not plotund)

Inside today

,..

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•LOVESEAT GLIDER

Buckeye 5:
5-9-19·20·21-33

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7666

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REEDSVILLE · Eastern Local p.m. at Faith Full Gospel Church,
Board of Education, special meet- Long Bottom. Pastor Steve Reed
ing, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. ai the high invites the public.
school to discuss personnel matPOMEROY - Belles und Beaus
ters.
Western Square Dance Club will
RACINE • Special meeting, sponsor an open dance Wednesday
Racine Lodge No . 461 F&amp;AM, , from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oat
Tuesday. 7:30p.m. Annual inspec- Res~rt . ·. Gary Sh~emalcer,
lion. Work in the entered appren- Sev1ervtlle, Tenn .. wlll be the
lice degree. Refreshments.
caller.

Pick 3:
319
Pick 4:

.-

Mark Christopher, M.D., Gastroenterologist on the·medical staff
of the Holzer Medical Center and
member of the Holzer· Clinic; will
be the featured spealcer . the
••
monthly. meeting of the Ohio'Valley Ostomy Association on
•,.
Wednesda_y evening, April 28 at
observance.
7:30p.m. 10 the French Five Hun~
The Meigs Soilllld waw Condred Room at the Hospital. . .. .
....
servation
District
hopes
Steward·
As Dr. Christopher point$ out,
ship Week will Challenge individu'"lnfhimmatory Bowel Disease
als to begin, er continue, individual
(IBD) is a group of chronic disor"••
Soil and Water Stewardship
·
conservation actions that heal the
ders that cause inflammation or
•
April 25 .- May ~ . 1993
area in which they live. The fact
'&lt;-·
ulceration in the smail and large
. .,.
intestines. Most often IBD is classipx~~~~~~~~~~~~~"
fied as Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, but i't may also be
WHERE IUND·IAME MERCHANDISE
referred to as proctitis , ileitis,
enteritis or colitis."
·
IS FOUND .AI AN AFFORDABLE PiiCE
According to the National InstiMARK CHRISTOPHER, M.D.
tute of Health, ulcerative colitis
causes ulceration and inflammation
of the inner lining of the colon and
Dr. Christopher, a flative of
rectum, while Crohn's disease is an ~dras. India, came to the Holzer
inflammation that extends into the Medical Center and Holzer Clinic
WHIRl CUSTOMII SATISFACtiON IS
deeper layer of the intestines and· in 1984. He completed his residenOUR IIAIN COICIRN.
can affect any part of the GI tract cy in internal medicine and a fel- .
from the mouth to the rectum.
lowship in Gastroenterology 111 SL
These two diseases have similar Mary's Hospital, an affiliate of the
symptoms that often refiemble University of Rochester in
PATIO FURNITURE:
another condition, Irritable Bowel Rochester, New Ym. He is board
•2 Seat Gliders
Syndrome (IBS). IBS is a common certified in both internal medicine
disonler of the intestines that leads and gastroenterology, with exten•3 Seat Gliders ·
to crampy pain, gassiness, bloating sive experience in all endoscopic
•Plant Stands
and changes in bowel habits. IBS procedures and performs .over
does not cause inflammation and 1,000 a year.
.Umbrellas
when the bowel is checked, it often
This meeting is open not only to
•Bar Table w/cultured marble
appears normal. The cause is ostomates in the Tri-County area,
top &amp; 4 bar stools
unknown but is thoughtlo bc5' relat- but interested pubtic· and health
ed to emotional stress.
care professionals. For further
•Strap Patio Fumlture
In respon~ to many in9uiries information, call Phyllis Brown •.
•ARIELLE 6 pc. Dining Patio
.Cushion Patio Furniture
. about these diseases, the Oh10 Val- . R.N., B.S.N., C.E.T.N., at 446Group
lncluclea
42"
round
gJua
top
table
Md
4
ley Ostomy Assoeiltion invites the 5080. Ms. Brown urges an~one
•Aasorl8d Colora
general public to theApri128 meet- interested to attend the !l:f,'l 28
arm dining chairs In auorted colors. ,
•Patio Acceuorlea
ing, when Dr. Christopher will give meeting, und she also has
'tionReg. $650.00
SALE
,-an update 9R.\1le diagnbsis, causes, at pamphlets and information avail·
complications und new avenues llf able upon request on the topic of,
WIIH ¥OTHER'S DAY JUR AROUND THE COINER, WHY NOI
lrestment for these diseases.
inflammalO!'Y bowel disease.

a't

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Soil and Water Stewardship Week observed

Community Calendar
Community Caleadar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure pubUcatlon In tbe calendar.

letpiKt8.

Car
care
edition

Ohio Lottery

surrounding nonhem IOWIIS;

The Bihac regi'on, between
SeriKontrolled territory in Croatia
and Bosnia, is borne. to about
270,000 residents and refugees,
most fi them Muslim.
. aillac; s capture would give
B'osnian Serbs .control over
Bosnia's entire northwestern region
und bring them close to their goal

The lloys took pic1~s of 'the
owl und leamed sevaal fac:ts about
~real horned owls in Ohio. For
mstance, great homed owls are
found in Ohio but arc relatively
rare in this area. They subsist mainly on meat, primarily in the fmn of
mice which they catch with their
lalons und eat with their powerful,
hooked beak.
·
They learned the owl was an
adult bird with estimated age of
two years.
WASHINGTON . (AP) Mrs. Harris said the boys were Female pilots could be flying Navy
successful in setting the owl free · and Air Force warplanes within
Tuesday evening. The bird was·ser months and Army combat.heli free at dark because owls typically c;pptcrs Within a ye. under a new
sleep during the day and hunt at diiectivc set to be signed Thunday
nighL
by Defense Secretary Les Aspin,
The owl flew away then Pentagon officials say.
~ for a moment, Mrs. Harris
The directive also will tell the
said. Then it took off again.
Anmy, Navy, Air Fon:e and Marine
It was liJtc it was trying to say Corps to provide justification if
'"thanlt you," she ssid.
they wunt to. put any battlefield
. role, including ground combat
units, off linits to women.
'"It's big, it's a very big move
for Aspin to be making," said one
senior official, who like the others
spoke Tuesday night only on condition of unonymity.
· The action means Air Force and
Navy women could be in fighter
for 30 percent und insurance corn· cockpits within months, but female
panic$ paid for 8 percenL Other pilots in the Army will have to
Ulldergo special training before flyprograms accounted for 2 percent.
ing
front-line Apache attack beli- .
An offiCial with the Department
C9PICI'S,
officials said
of Health and Humun ServiCes said
Because
the Marines have no
the study's findings on Medicare
wOiilell
in
training
in lillY aviation
and Medicaid SDending show that
the situation is -r,ilot the crisis that unit, chanses will take longer .in
that service.
(Pollack) suggests. ••

bombing threat two days ago at a
meeting behind Bosnian Serb lines.
" If one NATO bomb drops on
!lis country. he said he will launch
an attack immediately," Watters
tola Britain's GMTV. ''The Serb
commander is in charge of artillery
no more than 10 miles from where
I-'m standing, we are well· within
range."
'
Countries who have conttibuted
troops to the Bosnian U.N.. opera·
lion have expressed concerns that_
their troops will be targeted in
retaliation fer outside intervention.
Bosnian Serbs seem to be COIDII·
ing on those fears. On Tuesday,
!heir COJllmunder said be was certain there would be no foreign military intervention to stop Serb:
advances in Bosnia-Herzegovina. :
"I ani an optimist," Gen. Ratko
Mladic told a call-in show on
Bosnian Serb television. "We can
sleep tighL But we should prepare
ourselves just in case. There is not
going to be military intervention
against us."
·
· Later he seemed to hedge his
bravado, saying his forces had no
shortage of manpower ·'but in case
of foreign military intervention ·
even women will be mobilized."
NATO's top military officers
ope~ed talks today in Brussels,
Belgium, with their former Warsaw
Pact adversaries in a meeting likely
to be overshadowed by the crisis in
Bosnia

Aspin said ready to order
air comb.at role for woinen

Most U. S.families ~aringfor
disabled get no professional help
WASHINGTON (AP) - Near- depressed.
"Amidst tears and hardships.
ly two-thirds of disabled Ameriweary
families arc facing this cnsis
cans who need help at home with
said Ron Pollack, execualone,"
the basic activities such as bathing,
tive
director
of Families USA.
eating und dressing must rely solePollack
releasCd
the report as
ly on friends or relatives, an advoPresident
Clinton's
health-reform
cacy group for the elderly said
task force wrestles with bow to
today.
expand
long-term care benefits for.
Families USA said government
elderly
und
dissbled Amencans.
programs ale failing to reach many
Families USA is pushing for a
low-income, disabled Americuns,
while private insurance policies national home -care benefit. A
don't l!eilerally pay to send nurse's Whire Hoose offiCial, speajdng on
aides mto the homes of patients condition of unony111itY, ssid Tues·
who need help with walking , day that the !)resident's plan likely
~g a meal or using would proVide some long-term care
benefits.
Medicare .and ~edicaid, the
The burden of cimn11 for millions of disabled. Amencans ·falls government's health IJISuruncc J110o
entirely to tbeir friends or relalives, j!ra'"s for the elderly and lowmany of them elderly women in mcome, arc already paying for 60
poor health, Families USA said in a pen:ent of the $23 billion spent on
report. The emotional and financial home-health care costs in 1992,
toll leave• many stressed and Families USA said, Families paid
v

of controlling a large, homogeneous stretch of territory.
The new sanctions against
Yugoslavia, added to weaker ones
il!lposed last May, are aimed ~t
forcing Yugoslav leaders- pnmarily the dominating" Yugoslav
republic of Serbia - to use their
influence to stop the war.
In Belgrade, Yugoslav President
Dobrica Cosic today a~ for a
political settlement- 'everything
else would lead to an unfcreseeallle
IIagedy (and) a len' IBid permanent
war in the Balkans. '
Threats of foreign military inter·
vention against the Bosnian Serbs
heated up Tuesday when Russia
criticized its Slavic brethren. Past
Russian suppon of the Serbs bas
added to Western reluctance to 'tum
the sanction screws toO harshly.
Said Russian President Boris
Yeltsin, pledging unity with the
West: "The time has come for
decisive measures to stifle the con·
flicL"
The West and Islamic powers
are weary of trying to halt a war
that has left 134,000 people deader
missing only to be rebuffed at the
bargaining table by recalcitrant
Bosnian Serb leaders:
Speaking live by satellite from
British headquarters in the centrBI
.Bosnian town of Vitez. Ma.i. Brian
Watters, second in cornllllll1il of the
1st Cheshin: Regiment, said a local
Serb commander had issued the

inp for women on combat support
ships. And Aspin himself had taken
note of the Navy's move, expressing concern to reporters that the
services should be synchronized in
ers.
The New York Times published making greater combat (Illes availthe first account of Aspin's plan in able to·women.
Women in the services have
its editions today and the report
subsequently was confirmed by long campaigning for more direct
combat roles, but in recent weeks
Defense Deparnnent officials.
Aspin's directive is clearly their efforts have· been somewhat
designed to upgrade the status of eclipsed by President Clinton's
women in the military. It ClJMCS at efforts to droJ.&gt; barriers to homosexa time when the Navy has sUffered uals in the mtlitary.
a black.eye re·sutting from a 1991
The Defense Department
convention of the Tailhook Associ- sources said Aspln will direct the
ation, a private group of pilots and services to mate "fiscally feasiother supporters of carrier-based ble" changes und has made it clear
aviation.
he wants 10 avoid expensive renoThe Defense Department issued vations to warships to accommoa report last week saying as many date a smlill number of women.
as 17S officers could face disci"It has to be reasonable," the
plinary action as a result of the senior orticial said. "It doesn' t
tluee-day meeting in a Las Vegas make sense to put women on small
hotel in which 83 women were ships, such as mine sweepers."
assaulted.
But women flying the Navy's
Even before Aspin ' s plan top-of-the-line combat aircraft
became known, Adm. Frank KelsO could be aboard carriers within the
Jr., chief of naval operations, had year. the offiCial said
been preparing to create more post·
The law banning women from
warships prevents them from serving on an array of vessels ranging
from small frigates to aircraft carri-

Man in critical condition
after Tuesday night dispute

di.!.B:l.W::.isfollowingin
af!ica11' : :

denc~ at approJtirnately 6:45 p.m.
following a dilp'IIO ~et!!.ii.MOL
and Sieve Vmy of Piintr.

pule at hi1 residence Tuesday
evening. ·
·
Several wltne11ea reported .
. · Steve Bryant, Fairview Road, Vorey struck Bryant in the head
was lldmlucd to die inlellllve care ·th 11ree roo 1 f
unii Of Cabcii-HmMj111fM Hclpilal . d~;: confrool!/ooec:~ ':..ew.:::
. in HllllliDpJD, W.VL,IIUIIIId mid- yard. Vorcy W1i *'-10 HMC and
night for head Injuries. He waa wu ll'elllld lhiiiiiCllllina for a brotranlfetreilto Huntington from ken Jaw.
1
Holzer Medk:el Center.
· Jt:o llm!lts llavc boeil msde, SalAccordlna to Chief Deputy iabory said, and the 1berlff'a
Dennla Sall1bury .of tbe Galli a dqJilblulnt IB llilllllve.dlidnl the
County S.herlff'1 Department, · inl:idenL ·
·
deputies were called to the 'resl~
~.

1\

. McBUCU II'OR EDUCAnON • Roaeee ud !!e Cn Mila;
OWDen aiMcDnaJclela
ud S,1111r _,ltlpleJ, W.Va.,
~die 11\"DIId aerlea a l t l a dlelr "McciiCIJI 1'11r FhaJ·
DIU'lal w.. I• t11r till,......_!..~
ted Cllle !' 1 4U'• Jl'ch •• lor a eot111 al55,1lG. Tile
top
· HIJ m
wbl .........
compater
Iii•-_..,
IIi sm -~
1 letwen
II tUee Me
loea!'oa•; la\lolYlal ftn tuool dlttrkta, a total of JOt,•
McBoeu were Jutud Ia b . . ,• ...,,_,
$10,!011. For t11e1r etrora ~ tile -....alldrt p1 011'-, Mr • ..a

.
a:

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Mn. Mlllll w.e JNUt:IW a~ award,._ McD1 'L ftc.
· lured, 1-r, are: Raaeol MDII, tnrllll' al Mdlouldl; Metp · ~
Superlnteadeat al Scllooll . . . Rllllel; PWl GoodJIIIe; M ' · -

prbsclpal, Wua•a "&amp;!:ool; J._ Re7110H, prblcl= of
Wallama HIP SdNI al;
litolleJtl. laterml
I al
Buten Loc:a1 SDool District;=~ Alllec~' al ~-:=Life
. C11r1ttiU Sdool; KiBl ftlllfpe,
era ·r-1 Sftaol A kt1
Carol Y-a, Melp C-17 Hadstart; Ralltrta Llwli, M SOli
Jaeatary; Salld• Milt; LadJ DaYII, ltUre • ...,.., ud • • 11
BGh"; ltDre
the.

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�I

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Commentary

,

Ohio temperatures will be above normal next few days

OHIO \'Jc~tthc··

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednelday, April 28, 1993

Thlll'8day, Aprll9
ACQJ-

weamer- forecaaif..-

By The Aslodattd Press
A warm front moving north
thft!ash Ohio will set the stage for
U:!llperalllle3 to climb above norDill over 1be next two and possibly
tt.edays.
Hiliu Thursday will reach the ·
apper 60s north to the mid- and
apper 70s south. Lows will be in
1be mid-40s to the mid-SOs. Normal
hialls ran1e from the lower 60s
aonbeast to around 70 far south
with lows in the lower and mid401t
The tempera!Utes will be govemed by the amount of sunshine
aDd lhe expected passage of cold
fJQII ille'Ibunday and Friday;
Clouds will thicken a bit on
Tliaidat as a cold front appna:hes from the northwest. The front

mw

· MICH.

Panetta puts 'management' back in OMB

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stzeet
Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO 11IE ll'fl'ERE8T8 OF THE IIEIG&amp;-IIASON AREA

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PuJ?IIsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manacer

[.ETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They ·should be less than 300
words. All letters are subje&lt;:t to editing and must be signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Leuers
obould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ·

Small stocks may
make .big news

'

sJn';!l

WASHINGtoN'- Office of
govaDIIICIIt sp•1111i,. was
BUII&amp;et DiJec:IOr the mart of his congressional
1.- Plaeaa was lbJnned to dis- ~-But he ba1 also deYOted his
eova- receally thlllhere'sa "leper energies to the ''M"' in·OMB, to a
colony" within the vast federal
bureauaacy he praides over.
l'aneal told us or .. llpiCY tbll
created an altenlalive to firing or
tnnaferriag undesirable workers.
·They waeiiiiDoned at one location
'Wilbia the bl1ikling - out or sight
and mind. They became known
internally as the "leper colony." degree his predecesaors shied away
Panctll expressed amazt:ment that from.
there are other such examples in
Durin&amp; a recent interview,
the annals of federal personnel Panctll floated some new poposa1s
lllllllgCIIICIL
he says are under SIUdy. To be IAR,
Paneaa called tbll inanlgement they would revolutiObize lbe cuimind set "crazy." "That's the lure of tbe federal work place,
kind of thing you do to work makina il conform more to the
around the sysu:m,.. PMeaa staled. standards of lhe private sector.
" We have to reshape lhaL I );now He's pll'luing some of lhe8c ideas
you run into the anions, but even in conjuncli011 with Vice President
the unions bave got to undetsWid. I AI GCR's .top-to-bottom review of
would think the unions have to be the bureaucracy.
sympathetic. ... People wort their
"I'm basieally gc)ing through a
way up lhrough the system ... (then review process now," Panetta said.
lose) whll it's all abouL"
"We're looking at a whole series
II'S liule surprise that Panetta of lbiap. For CXIIIIple. the whole
has emerged as die Clinton admin- issue of departments lining up at
istration's deficit hawk, since the end 'of the year and spending
~and

8y JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BIJ!I'seu Analyst
NEW YORK - The words large and small. as in large or small companies, have VIJ8IIC .-ings to most people, but to inveators the consequences are precise, specific, aJICfaornelimes incredibly costly.
.
The reason: On average, small companies have a much beller rate of
return t!lan large companies. In fact, it can be argued that lhe bigpa companiea, thouRh relatively safer, have the wors1 record of all.
The srnaii-rompany effect was illustraUld again recendy when' securities fum traced 67 yean of retwns for the srnaJlest 20 pcroent and Iaraest
20 percenl of New Yort Suiclt EXchange listinp. The resuhs:
On avCDJSC, the smalleat returned 19.6 percent annually. the Iaraeat.
11.6 pen:ent
.
.
In spite of such evidence, small investors often lake cuea from Jllai)'SIS
who concenlrale only 011 the Iaraest issues, or invest in so-called index
funds that KU to IIIIlCh the big-SIIXk market ava~~gCS.
.
Ibbotson Associates, a Chicago-blsed investment consulting firm
which conducted the research. found that the healthier performance
applied to the small companiea even when diooounled for the grea1t:r risk.
In its investiptioa, Ibbotson ranked NYSE-Iistinp according to their
equity capilalization. fonning 10 portfotpos cootainiiiJ about ISO SIDCks
eacb, and then tracked the returns lor the period 1926-1992.
The smallest company in the largest category had an equity cap of $5.2
billion, while the largest company in ~ small calegory had a value of
on! $53 million.
the reaults, Gerald W. Paritt, former malhematic:s profes- •
sor who heads Investment lnfonnation Services Inc. in Chicago, found an
"almost mOIIOIQilic .inverse relationshp between company size and investment return."
_ Writing in one of the company's newsleaers, .' 'Inveatmeat Horizons,''
a publication thai analyzes shares of emerging growth companies. he
'observed: "The smaller the company, the greater was its renn to shareholders.''
Bu1 whll is small? And large?
No ~ slept in on the SIIUrday
Confusion abounds. To begin with, the terms are relative, and so is the
categorization of small. inedium llld 18rge. Then, some analysts measure mmUnJ the vmlict was 1elm11ed in
the Rodney Kin&amp; bealing triaL Not .
by sales and others br,lllalket value or equity~
Neil AtmSIIOIIg became the
' Usina different defmitions, a few mutual funds biD themselves as since
fJISI
man
to set foot on the moon
.. "small-cap" by defming a small company as one with equity below $1 have so many
Americans sat so
billion. On the other hand, the largesl company i_n_ the Russell 2000 anxiously by their
television sets.
(small-cap) Index has 1m equity valuation of about $400 million.
11
should
have
been an openPraclically speaking, therefore, a "small" com:zcis whatever size and-shut police lJrutality
cue. hansomeone wants it to be, making il imperative that 1
knows the Standied ia the DWJner of the dozen &lt;l'
dard.
.
In his research, Perriu interprets the defmition in the University of so excessive fon:e complaints that
the Los Angeles Police Department
·Chicago .acarch that uncovered the small-fum effecL
lop
CVfrJ year. But once the racial
The upper limit of what he calls a small stock is the equity capi181izawas introduced, the case
'element
. ·lion of the _company dividing the lowest 20 pcn:ent of NYSE-Iisted comtook
on
1 life all its owa. The first
. panics from the largest 80 percenL Right now, that threshold is about
in acquittals. which
trial
ended
'
'
: $110 million.
touched
off
last spring's riots. A
: Using tbll as the upper limit, he then includes Sl)llller compaOies on
similar verdict the second time
- the Amaican Stock Exchanae and the over-the-counter market. making a
around
was expected to ignite no
:·list of aboul 300 Big Board stocks, 200 Amex listings, and 1,500 overless
than
a race war.
.::ahe-counter listings.
·
.
I do not know whether the savage beating Romey KinJ! received
at the hands of four while police
offiCClS was motivated by his complexion. Bul wtwl do know is that
if the blac:t mOIOrist had been simiBy Tbe Associated Press
larly beaten by black officers, we
Today is Wtldnt'May, April 28, the 1181h day of 1993. There are 247 would not have heard the same hue
:clays left in the year.
and cry.
• Today's Hig!llight in History:
It juSl would have been four
-On April 28, 1789, there was a mutiny on the Bounty as the crew of the bla:k cops woo roughed up a fleeBritish shiJ! set Capt. WiUiarn Bligh and 18 sailors adrift in a launch in the ina felon.
: South Pac1fic.
This selective outrage is one of
On this date:
the JrCII hypocrisies of the black
· In 1758, the fifth president of the United S1a1es, James Monroe, was community. When wbire victimizes
born in Westmoreland County, Va.
black there is proteSt. The churches
In 1788, Maryland beeame the seventh slate to ratify the U.S. Constiru- are packed. The streets are filled.
tion.
·
.
. . .
black
But when black VICUJnJZes
In 1940, Glenn Miller and his Orchestta recorded "Pennsylvarua 6there is silence. The pews are
5000" for RCA Vietor.
empty.
'lbe slreets vacant. ·
In 1942, poUster GC&lt;l'ge Gallup said· most Americans preferred 10 call
The ex{'lanation of this phethe ongoing global conflict "World War II" or "The Second World nomenon 1s thai black-on-black .
War" (other sugge~tions had included "Survival War" or "War of crime has no political currency. It
World Freedom.")
be ttadcd upon the way that
In 1945, Italian dictator Ben,iiQ. Mussolini and his mistress were exe- cannot
white-on-bla:k crime can.
ctlled by Italian partisans. •

mon~y because they don ' t lou do a good job," he expiained.
want to go 11110 lhe next fiacal year 'I lhiak whll we've got 10 do is be
with any money. It stiU happens. much IOUgber, and put more Ieeth
For the life pf me I never under- into the process and say, 'Loot, if
stood why we couldn 'I say to an you can't Jive us a be!...,..t book
agency lhlt if you IIVC money, you at the end of the period, that shows
qht not to be penalized because what you've ex~nded a!ld how
you're doing iL"
you've expended it, then m some
App1'08Ching J00 days on the way we've got to .take some
job, Panetta is baunled by a Gener- (rnoney) back. You 'ye got to be
al Accounting Office study con- . ' nalized .. '
cluded earlier this year, which pe PaneUi acknowledges the iaher· .
found that vu::i every ~­ en1 problems in such a nolion,
ment of the r. · government is which could wind up hurting benemismanaaed. "I think about that ficiaries of programs more than
starement CVfrJ day," PlneUa said. guilty bureauci'IIIS. He also reco~­
If there's an underlying cause, nizes the political peril because It
Panetta pinpoints it as too. much could entail "confronting" the
carrot and not enough stick. Thus
"built-in constituencies" that are
. he's examining wa~ ia which for served by lhesc agencies.
· the firs I time punrtive measures .
Maalging a $1.5 trillion budFt
could be iaructed 011 '
- .00 is a daunting task. and it's only part
depnnents thatkcqJ ~boob
Pllletla's job deacriplioa. But he
or engage in year-e~~ping suggestS that his clUe!' weapon - .
IJRCI.ralherlban tum baclc savinp the bud,el ...:. 'helps Improve the
to taxjl8yers.
'
· odds of unplementmg a sySICIII of
"So much of whll we've done rewards and £.':!shment~- f!e
in aovernment is the carrot added: "Every
carporabOII m
approach, which is please be 'nice, . this country, when they're facing
please do it well, we'D Jive you a problems, knows they have to
ctrtificate at the end of the ,._ if
reshape themselves. You have to
contract. ~ rid of the employees
thai aren t produetive, keep the
oues that are produclive, cut·back
on the services you can't do;"
After a career on Cl{'itol Hill,
Paneua is now becomma more
attuned to the prerogatives of the
executive branch. Panetta now
holds a job that many believe is the
seccnd 111011 powerful in Washing·
ton. Often that's aot enoqh.
"There are oftt:n ~ I've llid
even on·(CapiiDI) HiD lhlll didn't·
think a benevolent IIIOIIIIChy was a
bad idea," he quips, followed by
an explosion of his . infectious
laughter. "I think there are civil
servants out there who want to do
the righl thing. But they look to
people next 10 them who area 't
beinJ productive, who are basically
wastJng their time and they'~ saring how can they gc!t away With llr
and I'm working liard."
.
Jaek AnderBGn and Mlcbel
Blaateln are wrilers for United
Featare Syadlcate, lac.

· _their

IND.

or

'

.

be pom,ayed as victims of ax:ietal
or mstitutional injustice, we can
make claims on the system. So it
-

J

eTAlnS

was that the Rodney Kina case
became a pretexl for lhe black
community to mau-mau for more
government aid and private philanthropy.
To listen to Jesse Jackson, Benjamin Chavis and other prominent

black leaders in the wake of the
King verdict, one almosl came
away 11\\ith the impression that
America had returned to the days
when black lynchi.ngs were commonplace.
.
"II makes me weep to think that
we have to always continually· go
through this mucl\ drama to get
some justice," said a misly-eyed
Jackson. "We've learned when
you gel some justice, ~ have to
fighl for thereat," sard a deftant
Chavis.
Bul here's.the dirty liule secret
that the black leadership is unwilling 10 speak about: The prospecl of
a black being physlcalfy altacked
by a white is far leas likely than a
black being killed - not just
assaulted- by. a person of his own
race.
Conolder
tliat 1·n 1992 • the FBI
..,
reported 1,689 racially motivated
attacks against blacks. This number
is lrOUbling, but not -ly so profound!'/ as the 8,000 or so black
homicides last year, roughly 95
percent of which were committed
by odB' blacks.

..

\=Today in history

h p ,1,.

OSep

7

;,

· , Tonight, IIIOSdy
.._
clear. lAw •

.

, E.E.Davis

'· Ernest E. Davis, 80, .o f State
' ROUte 124, LlniiViUe, di~
Wednesday, April 2&amp;, 1993, • Dlil
':residence foUowiag 111 e:r' " '
illness.
·

·~':...o~- ~~-~~1:!2.:!
· of the late Sanford and Birdie
'Grass Davis.
·. He was a bus drivu nd a
'mechanic, a member of die
Danville Church of Chrisl _. a
:veteran of the U. S. Amty, WcJd&amp;t
War n.
He is survived by this ·wife af 47
years, Evelyn Davis; • soa and
' daughter-in-law,""""" ... ae.-erl'I Dl v:a
is
Cnsp; lhree
1 - , RJIII llilld
Shaun Crisp, and Nllblliel Dlril.
all of Langsville; • bri6at, s
7
Davis, Ud!ul; 1W0 lillll'l. t' 7 E7
Golf-of' La~~:~Ii snd Gas et

Ro ert J. Ul
rragman
b

administnDln since Rooseveh's.
AI the amelime, Senate Minority I '*""Robert Dole was starting

Sununu, all White House staffs to try to put a plln in effect. As
seem to come in spoiling for a fight Dole saw it. the onl'/ way the
only to leave humbler and wiser.
Republicans could 1vo1d an interThe Clinton staff, however, · naf civil .,. wu ·to ·unilt in their
seems unusually cauaht up in its opposition to the new adminislraown importance. They want the tioil. He also saw, as il now turns
worrd to know they are wortin_l 0111 quire corrcc:dy, thai the only
longer and harder than any pres!· place the OOP had 1 real chance of
dential staff ever (S&amp;turdar-nigha ·· ~Clinton was.in the SeDIIC,
staff meetings are common). They where it takes 60 voles to end
and modcrales. ·
•
also want the world to kno;.. they dcblle. Thll means u ion&amp; as the
Meanwhile, the new Clinton are a lake-no-prisoners buncb, peo- GOP stays totally unified it can
jJeople were young II!~ arrog~t·, pie who h~ve cut their teeth on control the body "!ilh only 43
consumed with the pohbcal adrott• hardball politics.
·
members.
ness of their candidale's substantial
As far as Captiol Hill was conDole knew he had to form an
.victory in the SIJ'ange three-way · cemed, the Ointon ~ though! ablolole bond IUIIOill GOP senators
race in November.'.·
·
il wotild be clear sailinf. ~y had because they could slan4 few
Arroaance .in a nell' While . significant mJJjorities 1n both the defectors. He 'IVO!ked tirelessly in
House staff is lhe rule, not the House and Senate, lind the Demo- · the lint few
of the new ses·
exception. Whether it is Jimmy cratic lu!daship in both had to fall sion. ·
·

weeks

v

I'

7

•

_

..

diiJ.LDirsl5-41.~SS6S..

l..ulld D. S ':~:· Sl, ~~
~A' j,lllilll
? ;.Api!
27, 1993. • Da
BCIIpiDI
No16ia 0 ? 7
. _ • .., 0
je-a

•ws

ly every other sqmena of the population.
There are some black leaders
who would attribute intratal:ial
crime to social and CCOIJ!llllle fac"
tors, for which whites ultima~tly
are responsible. Were young black
men not reared in poverty, lbe
argumen1 goes, were jobs. readily
available to them, were they not •
victims of racism, they would not
bend toward crime.
But social and economic condilions f&lt;l' )'llllllg black men in 1993
are hardly worse than they were for
their fathers and gtlllldfathcrs. Yet.
no generalion of black men in
American history has been as vialent as those who currenUy hold ~
nation's inner cities under siege.
Before Rodney IGng was elevat. ed by the black community to the
status of Rosa Parks and Martin
Luther King, he was just another
potential predator. He had already
been convicted of knocking of[ a
convenience store. Willi his drug
habit and alcohol abuse, there is no
telling wbat crimes to which he
may have graduated.
The black community wa$ prepared to protest, to riot even, if juS:.
lice. was ,not. served in th.e King
beating lrial, if all four whtre omcers were exonerated of usi.ng
excessive fore~ against 1he black .
man. Meanwhile, n~ a voice is
raised m
. sympath
. Y to _e th. ousands
of blacks who lose the1r l!ve~ YCIIT
by year at the hands of theu VIolent
young men
man arowing up in_the ghetto has a
Joaeph Perldasls a columnist
beller chance of d~ from a bull~ for The San Diego Union- Trl~
::tsm:i= ~~sc::a,:;.:~ ~~~ buae aad 1 writer for Newspaper
lesding causes of dellh ((!t virtual- Enterprise Association.
·

-a
arq iaP 0 a
Be is -na 'Y llis wife,
AliiaeF.• ireS

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Fruth Pharmacy
·opens 16th store
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WASHINGTON

(AP)

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how the Clinton admimstration
hwi4led the 51-day siege by federal
fortes lpinst the Branch Davidian
cult acar Waco, Texas.
AttOrney General Janet Reno,
Bureau. of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Filcams Din~:b Stephen Higgins
_.FBI Diucb William Sessions
called to testify today before

Field dl!y planaed
The Ohio Vllley Draft Horse
IIIII Mule Assoc:iali011 will hold its
annilal field cia'/ Sunday across
fJOm lhe SliiC highway garage on
Route 7 north of Pomero'/. The
C'ICIIIS lqin-at 1 p.m. and mclude
draft horse events, a fiShing ~rby
for cbilcften, antique tractor and
Hfi•Y•at display, concessions and

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Revival
ReviVal 11 Wbilea Chapel Wesleyan Chun:h, Coolville, will be
May 4-9 at 7 p.m. nightly and at 10
ILIL and 7 n.sa. Sunilay. Rev. Jack
Wilbiii: il)viies·the public. •
~!

Young revival
The YoanJ Revival Techno
Tour wilh. Blaine B~tel will be
tofa) 6 at 7 p.m. at the Spirjt o(
VJCIIDry, one J11i1e lOUth of alternate
10m Roode JO. Special ~serVice
r. pastors and youth pastors 45
..U.ta before the meeting. Fur-

---omeroy Court newsFiDe= ~ &amp;n:ll _. ti, Loa.O Bottom, $63 and costs,
cdas b ' · P a-11 ia • edit. operati'~, ander suspension;
Real Mw« J C1llrlm M::CiotMt. Middleport, $63

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consuming alcohol in a

oe. .-. wellicle, and $63 and costs,

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90..,.
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7

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7

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"'"""" Fritlay. 111 Coon &amp;. • p
Ohio by &amp;be Ohto V.llq ·P'tM H.
Compon..tlaltimoolill Inc., P
YO :

Olilo 45,811, Ph. 1102-2tll6. - . . ...,.... pmd at PuoW".f, Ollio.

decided to .ram lh~ ~tirilulus bil)
through, he found his ISSUe.
.
. Thll there were no Republican
defectDrs through four cloture vora
and.incredible Jl"essure. from tho
Whuo House IS a tesumony to
Dole's skill. He bas emerged as lhC
mosl , impoJiant Re~ublican iri
W~JIOII. • .man~~~~ whom ~
Wh1te House IS gomg to have to
deal.
·
On the other side, Sen. ~ty
'Vader George Miu:heU, D-MainO,
is llid to be dispiriled llld at odds
wilh the White House 11 the
behind-the-scenes finger pointing
begins. · .
,
'The GOP could not have written'
a beuer script for the start of the
new admlnlslration.
.•
· RnberC W~~~Dan II I Jylldlcaleel W,J'Iter for. Newlpaper' Eater··

M•_, no -led"'-· _. ...
Ohio No-por
- •N
.W.II1iliat
R4c .........
t - - Soleo, 7S3 TllmJ - .

Now Yon. New Yon 10017.

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Pwrao)l OHio taW.

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still lake place as no ~ipi181ion all field activities.
.
should fall Saturday or Sunday.
Base 48 heat unit accumulatioliS
Daytime highs will only be in 11M: have broke the 200 mark south of
mid-SOs to mid-60s this weekend. 811 area roughly from Cincinnati to
Lows should range in the upper 30s Jackson. Areas south of 1 Oxfordto mid-40s. The combination of Circleville-Zanesville line are neardrier surfaces, expected dry skies ing 200 heut unit acclllilulations.
and mild winds this weekend ·As such growers in southern Ohio
should make it a fme time for most should watch for .alfalfa weevil
development

Congress opens hearings on Branch Davidian siege

•
failure 10 comply with a coun ·
Fruth Phannacy has opened ils · l.alfP
aline
..._
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bJ!C?as
onll:r.
16th drug Sllre location afltr pP'·
Roger Butcher, Pomeroy, $63
· chasing Kegley Drul of WaY'Cdy, Cow. Ga;ao= , S31S ..r ~
DUJ.
willk
!is
-.1
cou, consuming alcohol in a
Ohio recently.
.
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s
1a
1lo.s7
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vehicle, and S63 and costs,
' Fruth Pharmacy, a gw ••liol
-~~:
no upeaw 's license; Kevin Klein,
·regional drua SlorC chain a. -~'
0
, Jr.. 8 · ,
~ P'l
oy, $2S and costs, failure to
eentraled in Soulhem Ohio and m u _ 11 w·
P.;" · lfar -qirer his vehicle; Lori Oliver,
Western West V"qinia. bepJ pa. Jl!
OJ, $43 _ . costs, fli
oy, $213 and costs, assault,
operating the store in !ale Mlldl.
C..
U13
111d cotts, destructioll of
David Jenkins, velerln SIISe I' IE 1 1, $1U ..i-.
•
JRC4JUI)',IIId
S2S lPld costs, failure
inanager with the Fruth chain. as- . " • " SIB . . - .
IOtqiOCt 10 court
. sumed responsibilities for 1be 10 ,. Ill lis _ . a ? • • , _.
FodeitinJ bonds were Bobby
·Waverly location. and plans to U63 _.~buill 1111:- · , . . _ , Pa11eaoy, $80 no operaremodel and expand the variety or of a • ·;
_. J
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101"'1 license; Kevin R. Smith,
.merchandise. ·
liclf..Jii
.,• . , . . ~.. "' II)', $42, reckleaa operation;
· · Fruth Pharmacy, established in a;
J.t
·
J...ea E. Ward, Portland, $392.
:1952. developed a ~tation as a
. _ . . Pl"t
.. Jl!
Of• DUI,.IIId $42, seat belt violation;
unique business pro~idini pob SU _ . CWbl, • ap ... s Dua HayDea, Minersville, $71,
sional oharmacy services IIIII a Pi
,_.$25 . .
spee~ina ; Wayne Pauley, Jr.,
'Wide selection and Vlriety or mer- •••·· a lo4ht Srw: Jl!
'1
Pueeroy, $70, speedina; Stoll
chandise. Fruth has nine West Vu-i ca111, • i1 ... ~ Williuls', Rutland, $60, assnred
linia and seven Obio loelrioas, S63
;;.
$61_. ClDIII _.line dear diaunce: Joyce Quillen,
employing over 400 pMple ·
daJs a )til. z
10 a.p~,r si6 Racine, $62, speedina: and Mark
a court wl • 0 Jlisll8nis,. Haley, Jr., P« oy, $80 oa each
p
cy• . , . . - .
10 olawo cbarles of drivina under
· The Daily Sealiael
c a'; _. a - Gllllr. Tt.y - I . • ollieense.
J"Q,JP'J .. .,_.~
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7t
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Publiohed O'lef7 - · ......... . r

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prlle Alloclltloa.

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:A:'e

In 1981, under Jun Baker. the new
Relpn White House had immediately reached out to meR conserv•
live !J:entocrall and quickly built a
coalJUon that pasSQd the Reagan
economic P!JC)IIIge.
·
·
There was no reaching OUI by
the Clinton White House. No
Republicans were appointed to the
Cabinet. No Republican was held
over to run a &amp;oard or agency.
· There was not even a half.~
atlempt to forge any kind of bipart1san approach in Congreas.
Republican senaaon found
themselves being pullled inlo a
comer. Dole wu there with his
motMJe: We bave to unify and
flail back. He JC)ta bil boost when
the While House inidally pushed
.lbe lays-in.ahe,mill~y issue.
Then, when l!le ·While House

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· As requested by Mr. Davis.
·graveside serv1ces will •be IJeld • ·
11 a.m. It the Danville CcaJ E.l )
with Denver Hill offic:iatina.
.·Friends may callll 1he Bin •fi H
'Funeral Horne, Rndand, D
I;
"from 7 to 9 p.IIL In liea or Onnw
donalions may be made to die
Salem F'u:e ~t clo 1.-,
'Montgomery, 27320 ...,_,.
Road, Langsville. 4S741.

by 1 degree; Bingharn1011, N.Y.'s
low_was 28 degrees, compared to
. Freeze and frost warnings were 30m 1972; Buffalo, N.Y., was It
issued overnight from ·southern . 25 de&amp;rees, compared lo 27 ill
New Jersey as far south as South 1926; Flint, Mich., broke its 1968
Carolina, includin&amp; ~ of Penn- record or 29 with a26 desree reac~;
sylvania llld West Vuginia.
ing; and Youngstown, Ohio,~
But highs today were forecast to its 1971 record of 26 with a 24·
'
reach .the 60s and 70s across most degree low.
of the nation. Hiahs in the 80s~
· The low temperature for the
forecast for most of the Southeast · nation
was 18 degrees at .
and Calif~ alld along the Mexi- ~.
. The hi&amp;h femji!IBcan border ' from the Pacific to ture was 99 degrees at Coolidge,
.
.
' Houston. Hiahs in the 90s were Ariz.
~ted foi-the desert Southwest
Severe thWlderstorms, with hsil
· Hilhs in the 50s were forecast . and fi~ windS, were forecasa for
for die northern Great Lakes West T • Ibis afternoon, weakenregion, for much of Wy0111ing and ing sligh~y and moving into-otla:
norlhwealall Colorado.
lioma IOIIlghL Showers were fate.
On TueSday, Baltimore's record cast for much of the Midwesa, parlow of 38 11et in 1928 was broken ticularly in the Gn:ill Lakes region. ·

David Koresh and that ents prob- siege and inferno in his horne slate.
The committee' s ranking
ably
should have mov:J eerlier to
They are the government's three
Republican,
Rep. Hamilton Fish Jr.
main decision-makers in the Feb. use .tear gas. A copy of Sessions'
28 nrld of the C\Jlt compound, the lestimony was obtained by The of New York, said Tuesday that he
subseq11en1 standoff and the tesr- Dallas Morning News.
wants to know whether "a classic
"Maybe we should've laken law enforcement operation was
gassing that preceded by a few .
· hours the fiery end of lhe com- this ~sooner," Sessions says of appropriate for dealing with a psypound.
.
the decision to use rear ps.
.
chotic."
"Perhaps, even with all the
Seasions, in teStimony preJI!II'ed
Buthe emphasized that he wants
for delivery al the hearing, wd the expert 'advice, we never fully the hearing to help, not hurt.
FBI did not understand cull leader understood the mind of a man who
"It's very important that we
would willingly bum up his own don't just ~o in for recriminations
children."
and rehashing Bl).d fmger-pointing,
Judiciary Committee Chairman but that we attempt to learn from
Jac:k Brooks, D-Texas, hss been this tragedy,'~Fish said in an interther information may be obtained publicly silent on his view of the ' view.
by calling 304-736-6345.
Rummage sale sel
Heath United MethodiSI Church
At 3:40 p.m. the Rutland un,i t
in Middleport willhave a spring
Units of the Meigs County
rummage sale May 5 from 9 a.m. Emergency Medical Services went to Salem Street for Murl
to 3 p.m. aJid May 6 form 9 a.m. to responded to niliC calls for assis- Davis who was liken to Veterans. ·
· The Rutland unit responded to
noon sponsored by the Elea~~~r Cir" tance on Tuesday and early
cle. ·
Happy Hollow Road at 5:47 p.m.
Wednesday morning.
•
,,
On Tuesday at 8:52 a.m. the for Jessica Laudermilt. She was
. Council to meet
Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine . transported to Veterans.
The Middleport unit went to
Racine Village Council will No. 31 for Bill Cray who was
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill transported to Holzer Medical Cen- Riverside Apanments at 11:13 fQr
Keithann Lee who was taken to
Park.
ter.
AI 10:57 a.m. the Rutland unit Veterans and later transported io
Smorgasbord planned
weni to Wesl Maia Street for Pleasanl VaJJer Hospital.
This mornmg '(Wednesday) at
There will be a smorgasbord ;yonda George wllo was taken to
6:34 a.m. the Rutland anit responddiniler ~U•lhe Lollridae Community 'Veterans Memorial ~ita!.
Center on Sunday lrom noon 10
The M,iddleport unit, at 2:29 ed to Salem Center for Ernest
1:30 p,m. Cost is $S for adults and p.m. went to Grana Street for Nola Davis who wss de8d on arrival.
At 7:27 a.m. the Syracuse unit
$2.SO for children under 12. Carry- Bradshaw. She was taken to Holzwas called to Manuel Road for
out is ·available. Everyone wei- er.
Edith ,Manuel. She was taken t9
come.
Holzer. ,
.
Speciaimeeting
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The Middleport unit responded
to Pearl Street at 9:31-a.m. for
There will be I special meeting
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) of Shade River Lodge ll{o. 4S3 Direct livestock prices and receipts Buck Newell who was dead on
F&amp;AM on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at selected buying points Wednes- arrival.
Wort in the master mason !lclree- day by the Ohio Department of
Refreshments. All master masons Agriculture:
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,...,
invited.
'
Barrows and gilts: steady to
446 4524
• . :•.
weak; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points,
43.50-44.25, a few 44.75;
•
plants 44.S0-4S.SO.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Ant Ele Power.................... 36 314
points, 42.5044.00.
.
Ashland Oil..... :.................25 5/8
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
AT&amp;T........:·....................... S6 7/8
points, 41.50-43.00.
Bank One.:......................... S4 l(l
Receipts Tuesday 9,400. EstiBob Evans ......................... 17 lfl
mated receipts Wednesday 8,500.
Owming Shop.................. 14 7/8
Prices from The Producers LiveOunp lnduslries................. l3
stoCk
Assoc:ialion:
City Holding...................... 23
Cattle:
uneven, 1.00 lower to
Federal MoRUI....................l9 1/8
1.00 higher.
.I
Goodyearr&amp;R ..................74 3/4
Slaughter steers: choice 76.00Key Cenlllrion ...................23 3/8
82.00; select 70.00-76.50.
Lands End .......................... 29 5/8
Slaughter heifers: choice 75.00limited Inc. .......... ;........... 23 1/4
Bl.SO; select.70.00-76.50.
Multimedia lnco .................34
Point Bancorp.................... 14
the House Judiciary Committee.

::,:r.::.•,..ar-.w.sc-.
,;_r.fs r: _Meig.s announcements __

::c.&lt;llldiiJI!e

Whenever. there is a so-called
hare crime against a black person,
it is lreaiCd as front-page11eWs.lf it
· is -utianil eiioup, maybe Jesse
arid Ben wiU come' to town. But
when there is a black-on-black
munler, the story is relegated to the
back pages, if that. It is too 1011tine
an occurrence to rate more than a
passing notice.
.
What message does this send? It
says to me that black life is deemed
less valuable when it is taken by
another black than when il is
tlm:alencd by a white. This is backward. The threat of a black being
victimized by a wbite is fairly
remote. The chances. of blacks
falli!ll prey to one of their own is
10 tlmea s:re:ater·
Just v1s11 Soulh Central Los
Angeles CX: soulb Dallas or southcas! Washington, D-C::~ The black
reaiden~ of these ne1ghborboods
are~ to move about They_ fear
that 1f !heY Stop at a traffic ':e·t,
they mig~\ _be rou~~ fro'!! eu
car by a Jacker. That 1f they
!taDighd
wrong b:ierfr!ey
m. t
an. errant . et
a
~ve-by shooting: C?r if they "!'''k
m!O the wrong building, the~ ,m~ght
~n~~~ a drua-related aang
18h· bl k .
.. h
T: e ac ~nner CitieS ave
become urban Jungles and ~!'I
blact males the predators. . de
black
men qed 15 to,24 constJtute
1 pcrcenl of the US. population,
they commit 19 percent of the
nation's murders. A young black

past while elimil!ating whll didn'L

SO!ltbeast
The record hilh tempcraaure for
Ibis date 11 the Columbus weather
station was 8S dellees in 1914. The
m:ord loiv was 28 in 1967.
Sunrise Ibis llllll'llins was at 6:36
a.m. Sunset will be 11 a:23 p.m.
Around the natloa
.
More seasonable .· weather
returned to the East and Midwest
!Oday after a cold snap saw low

TIJe AJiadated Pres
down will remain high Thursday as
Soils should dry nicely the next . temperaiUtcS willliftaeneraDy into
few days with only a slighl risk of the 70s with slightly cooler 60s
wetting northwest Thursday. Rain come Friday.
rbeaces will increase into Friday
Moisture losses will oulp!ICC any
with showers possible most areas. additions from possible rainl'all Fl'l·
Bill weaing amounts should prove day. Evaporative rates will subside
lil!hl wilh lotals not apt to rise this weekend when cooler air will
much above 14 inch. Field.dry- arrive. But some moisllltc loss will

Congress is opening an ~uiry into

lr:J

Lu=•S«

f

He could not have achieved the
succeu he has without the full
cooperation of the White House.
The Clinton team decided they
would pul Republicans in lbeir
places, and they started out to do
this in ways big and small.
In everylbing from ap::!:
menll 10 1-suradon Day
.
GOP senators found themselves
left oot in the cold. Traditionally,
federal.jud&amp;esbips are controlJcd by
the ICIIIor senator from thai state
who ia of the same party •• the
president Wben neither senator iJ
of the ume party, usually the
White Houle llleasllries to reach
some sort of accornmodallon by
conferring wilh them on future
· •appointments. The new Cli!!loben
judicial-selection team le11t
known quickly tha! Republican
senatora thould ne1ther eli! nor
wrile.
The Clinton team said it took
grell pride in ill careful study of
.the way pasl adminlatratlons ·
wortcd. II planned oa ~ing the.bell of whll worteil m the

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cll:raffblt8i'Pil fk.8
laf
A*
,n_.~.-,
af E s
, sis
uruar•• - • • nao
•;. z· •Fla..·· 'iiJ• navis e1
A?exsn nU. E'
• s - of
~. B IJW,. 1 IW ol
A&lt;? - , C JP n
~ NeiHarlesl of w·
·
u4 'lkha Bad~ of
Besides his J*alll Fie - 1ft- 0 7
. ceded in death by a iat.l! PB • n DliiJ
16:.!1 7
~ ;:.,; Marlayae Davit, •d t e - ia
'Y
' ~ .... ...._
·
ls+C I
1
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in line behind the presidenL Even
before Inauguration Day the new
Wbite .House crew was saying it
was JOinf to hit the ground
"sprintinJ' llld would accomplish
more in 111 fust months then any

=-_y,_,

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--Area deaths'- -

GOP gains upper hand in budget battle---------------Carter's White House led by•
Hamilton Jordan, the Reaaan
White House of Jim Bakc:r, or the
Bush White House under John

C

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0

WASIDNGTON (NEA) - The
failure of Bill Clinton's stimulus
plan to pin SellliiC approval represents a mllior setback for the ~sidenL A series of stunning m1scalculati.ons by the young White
House political staff allowed the
Republican ~minority to pin
the uppu hand, and this spells real
trouble for the president in lhe
fullltc.
Wben ·Senate Republicans galhered in Wubington after the election, ahey were a dispirited lot.
They had lost the White House,
made no Bainl in tryinl to break
the Democratic hold in the Se!llte,
· and their Jlll'l)' faced 1!11 inll'arnliral
blood bath between conservatives

=-'

-----------~ea~r---------. Sou~tnl.........
Fd's• a''

King case shows selective ·outr~ge
As long as black Americans can

dampen any outdoor activities.
There is a better chance for
showers and a few thunderslomls
Thursday night into FJiday as the
front pushes slowly south. Hiahs
on Friday could vary from 60 in the
northwest to the lower 70s to the

.

ClOSET

ltterpreting

may cause a few showers to devel· · temperature records matched or
op over the north but not enough to broken across much of the region.

Weather will remain dry for farmers. next few days

w: WI. -

the~40a
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The Dally Sentlnei--Page--3

Hospital news

a

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Livestock report

Stocks

Rax RestauranL .................. l/4

Reliance Eleclric.......:........ 20 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16l(l
Shoney 's Inc......................20 3/4
Star Bank ........................... 36l(l
Wendy Int'l.. ........... ........... l3 3/8
WorlhingiOO Ind. ,..............25 1/4
Slock reports are the 10:30
a.m. qnoles provided by
Kemper Seesrlties, Inc., o
G.Wpolls.

Divorces and dissolutions ·

.A diWEe was granted Friday in
die MeiJs County Court of Com' 'M vfiJ I ' - - •• -lilly _ . Plras 1D Mlrybelle D. Schultz
J:nff, JI!J
OJ. E1Pa o-m • ~. &amp;deL. Schnltz.
Sr
.a..a..r
_
, WIT I L
Is addition, a dissolution was
.. 7 2
7 ..,..
-·
P. 7iu
1 ide,. Syaw
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J•

YI:I'DAIB' •••••

EMS responds to nine calls

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~utlant:t

Alumni
.. 13anquet.··

granted Monday to William Quick•
eland Rebecca S. Quickel. ·
· · Gail Sprowl, Middleport, filed
for divorce recently from Emery
Allen Sprowl, Manchester.

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May 2Slth

5

Peat ,

11188CaJFik)ll L\'1'1:1

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..................:-... ..1UD
OM Monlll........................___ • •

OM v.r......... - ....··· -- ·
IINGI.a OOPr

IlLLEY

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:a..bocodbon-.... oloolri._toPVIIoo...._
la ..m- 1o n..

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a-tiftet ............ na~lh- Credit will bo . . . -

lJ)al)y

No

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!Jutland Civic: ·
Center·.

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5I ,. .. .....- ..- ...--.....
... ,.
OUIII........ C..,.

ThouJht for Todar,: "The ·world d~s not require so much IQ be
informed as reminded, ' - Hannah More, English religious writer (174S· '
1833). .
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Alumni ~

Guests- $10

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~ •••• ,_ ................

~

(Music by The Swing Shift Band)

d

ponni&amp;W ...

anlloblo.

...........

[)Inner - CJ:J()
Vance - ~:()() .

-..:"·--------....,=
....___ :

Rutland Alumn.i Assn.; Box lZS; IMland, OH 45775

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'Sports

"

1993

The Daily Sentinel
·

In AL $JCtion,

Wednesday, 'April 28, 1993

Mariners' 4-0 win over Tribe
:cost them 'Bosio after.collision ·

Page 4

In NL actioli,

Florida notches 4-3
win over Cincinnati

~

. By BEN WALKER
;AJ'IIINIIsllWrlter
...- In his first 111rt since pitching a
:~ no-hitter, CbriJ Bosio got hit hard.
·:; By uunner, not a btllla'.
,. . Bo~ ~.his left collarbone
.- m a collision With Cleveland's Jeff
~ Tleldway, snd will be out for six ID
~ight weeks. AJ a small consols·
!!!' lion, B?Sio ~ up the wjnner in
~ Se•"lc s 4-0 VICtory over the Indi·
~ ans.
.
·
,, "It~ a liUle bit of a bitter·
::; sweet .Y!Ctory.',' Mariners IIIBIIIF
Lou Piniella 111d. ,
•• ·
r.: The Mariners, already misSing
' Edgar~ and ~ l'lemiDJ.
lost Bosio m the fifth liiiUIIg. Bosio
• was covering first base and was run
• over by TJeadway after cau:hing a
;.. doui1Je-play relay for the last out.
~~ "The problem was I dor.'tthink
' he could find the
I think he
: was Sll1ldd1ina It a · bit and the
:' runn.er got tlicre ·s!multaneously
.and Just nn over him. The runDet
had no choice," Piniclla said.
; . Last Th~y. Bosio pitched
• the lint no-hiller of theaea.lll and
. the second in Mariners history
~ when he beat Boii!Da. Bolio's bid
\ to match Johnny Vander Mcer's
' f~ in 1938 of pitching consecu· ti~ no-hitters ended when Kenny
Lofton led off t~e game at the ·
Kiilgdome with a sinsle.
Bosio (2·1) gave up three hits
· and extended his scoreless streak ID
17inninp.
·
"Eight weeks is a long time ID
go without your No.2 starter," No.
1 starter Randy Johnson said.
"This y.ill be a real tesi!D see
we're made out of."
~ O'Brien bad thme hilS and
drove m two runs off Charles Nagy
(1-4).
In otJ. pnes, New York beat
California S-0, KansaS City defeat·
ed Detroil 4·3 in 10 1nnings,
~

By JOE KAY
•
~2 .hits 111111. four lwis in liis 8 1./3
CINCINNATI (AP)- With the liiiUIIgs.
· ··
game oil the line, it was har4tD'tell
"He~s had six saves bitt one
which was the oxpansion team.
of them bas been 1-2-3," inanager
.The Florida Marlins did every- Rene L!lchcmann said. "He's been
thing right when it malleled 'fuca. that way all year. He aeems to like
day night. They cashed in on !l ID wodt out of the Slmcll."
botched fly ball for the go-ahead
The two starters did a lot of thzL
ruil, then got sensational relief
Florida's Jack Armstron1
pitching ID preserve a 4-3 vic!Dry Ietumcd ID the Slldiwn that's bcCn
over the bwnbling Cincinnati Reds. his ~onal !Drture chamber and
Florida (8-12:) split the two· put m four-plus tortuous innings.
game series and left !Dwn with a He gave ~p 10 hits and .walked
11etter record than the Reds (7-13), thme,leavtng with the score tied 3·
who keep playing like an expan- all.
siOII team.
.
. .
Armstrong, who spent four
"We're a litUe bit better. than years with the Reds, is 1().21 with a
maybe you !~fight think your aver- 5.53 ERA at RivetfronL.
age cxpans1on team would be,"
·"I thought that was a really
said Charlie Hough, who pitched poor outing," be said. "I had a lot.
well in the series opener Monday of· trouble concentrating on my
but lost.
pitches.. I was distracted out lhCre
And the Reds? The team with quite a bit la!owing all the guys and
the NL' s highest payroll keeps recapping all the times 1had ben:."
wasting cllsnces and then·giving
Cincinnati starter John Smiley
away games. It was Cecil Espy's Jave up only one hit in five
tum Tuesday.
mnings, but IelQ.Bined ().3 as a Red
He misplayed Dave Magadan's bec•1se of his enatic control. The
tw~-ou! liner in the eighth inning,
left-bander walked five batters, two
ARRIVEs IN TIME - Meigs Mznuder Mils, S~ leiS to
letting 11 go ID the Waif. The thme· of whom scored. ·
·
third
base .a head or River Valle;r llacks!Dp Maureeu ~'1 tJrrirw
The two bullpeni: picked liP the
· base error allowed Orestes
to
tlllrd
lllc:k'er Nickle Millde Iii tile lint IDDIDJ or
y's lOft·
Destrade ID score from forst base Jl!!Ce• 111aking Espy's misplay deci·
ball
came
at
Cllelblre,
wbere
the
Marauderi
W111113-7.
Sillon,
wllo
for 8 4-3 lead.
SIVe, '
advanoed
011
a
Luciana
Scott
wild
pllcll,
eventually
scored
'to
"It was an easy catch. I just lost
Destrade singled with two out in
~~u~rs' DlDe·llllliDc rtot goilll. (OVP,photo by G. SpeiiCtr
'
it in the lights," Espy said;
the eighth againsl Bobby A~ (().
TANG~ - Cillciuall's Cecil Eipy finds himself tan1Jed ap
He compounded the mislake in 1), who allowed tlliee hits m thme
wl6 Flol idro lint hs au Ortstes Datrade rollowia1a wild pick·
the ninth, when the Reds opened innings. Ayala then got Magadan ID
off tllrow ia tile rifUI inial or Tuaday lli1llt's NatioDal Leape
with a pair of singles off Bryan bit a weak line drive tDwards Espy
pre Ia C_.,uti, wkft tile Marlllls W0114-3. (AP)
Harvey; Espy struck out aying to in left.
bunt the runners over.
Espy had trouble following the
"I've got ID &amp;.et the ball down in ball and wound up trying to ~hake a
that situation all'd i didn't do my basket cau:h at the last second. The
R~aple_ nty~hitsafew.
. River Valley: 101-0104•7·1·3
job," Espy said. "I know I didn't ball went under his glove.
Mc:'g~ and River Valley totaled
WP- Facklec (Taylor save)
"1 .was praymg
· it would get five hits m Tuesday's softball game
get the JO'ob done ·-A·y."
LP- Scou
......,
ToaJcbt's pma
EnGOuraged, Harvey struCk oul down, but'it carried all the way ID at the Cheshire village field, where S h d 1 Win
- • Baseball • ~ubia.atoa at N.Y._ltluden, 7:30
c ra er s
ston
Rewe Sanders and Joe Oliver ID him," Magadan said. "It looked the Marauders lQOk advantage of
p.m.
· • NATIONALLEAGVE
Qucboo "ldonaool, 7:!0 p.m.
close the game for his sixth sive in like he kind of lost it in the lights.•• senior .Luciana sc:o~~;'s firC· sale on ·Cup racer: to appear
It was the second time in t.hfce .walks m. the first mnmg en route tD at store Sa•··-day
seven· chances. They've all been
,._
.W L ..._ Gl
Thursday's eames
. a 13·7 VICtory.
nu
•
• N'b"
.14 s .m
adventures
Harvey
has
given
up
(See NL on Pa~ 5)
Dallaia ll T0101110. 7::R)p.m.
. ~ ---12 • JiOO 2.5 '
v_,..
..
w~a,lOp.m.
Despite,racking
up
eight
strikep . oJ - . - -11 9 .sso
1l
c.J&amp;uy at t.c. ~ 10:30 p. m.
outs and giving up four hits _ to
The Ripley Save-A-Lot super·
IL.._ _ _ _ ll 9 .SSO
:U
=·
10 '
.5216 . ..
~ssy Sisson (2-4). Lisa Fackler market in Ripley, W. VL willllave
Friday's games
_ ,.... :___.. 10 -l.l
(1·2)
and Lee Henderson (1·3), on dislllar NASCAR driver Kenny
if!!;...,
l.ollndom ot w.....,..., 8 pm.,
I 12 .400
6.l
Scott
walked
14.1n four 1rips ID the Schrailer s Kodiak Lumina WinMoai:Nil at Quobcc. 7:30p.m., if nocplate, she $ot the Raiders' only hiL s10n Cup Series race car on displ8y
In six 1nni~f:,;Jackier struck Salllrday from 9 a.m. ID 7 p.m.
Boosting tbeir record to 7·4
A Billy Jones home run high· out four and w
- • Tninsactions • 10 before givThe Hendrick MotorsDons No.
overall, the Southern Tornadoes lighted the fifth inning,· while a ing way 10 staning sbonslop Chris- 25 Chevrolet Lumina wilf be IVIilBuebaU
blasted the Waterford Wildcats IS· Ryan Williams slam in the sixth sy Taylor, who ~e on ID strike able for those desiring ID lite pboA-IAoau•
5 Tuesday night at WaterlOnt.
helped Mick Winebrenner't Tcna·
UNSAS CITY IIOYALS - Ito·
:~e~ne an~ ~alk four ID get the tDsirhc, store, owned b_y Ohio VAl.
colled Rico Jt.uy, infioldor, oad Donnil
Sophomore hurler Eric Jones, does mercy-rule the Wildcats.
••
- pbclla, flem Omaha t4 'lhe
• getting his. first vuslty pitching
~outhern hitters wete Jones with
The JiWdeis (4-6)
host War· ley Supermarkets or l,ialiS1
' ~rll
Amaieu A11ociation. Placod Frank
DiPtdo. pitcher, ~ lila 1!1-day d.ilabled
start, came home the winner in the a home. run, Williams a home run ren LacaiiOday.
located in West Ripley S
mg'
lioL
slll$fest.
Jones
went
four
of
the
six
and
single,
Kyle
Wickline
two
sin·
Inning
iotals
Plaza
near
the
Ripley
exit
I·
T1
1
SI!ATrLE MARINERS- Acti.va\ed
innings, getting one inning of ~elief gles, Andy Grueser a single and Meigs: 91().102-0 -13-4-3
w.n, Bacbwl, iafielda, fnm 111o ll·
and U.S. 33.
· · ····· · ·
··
city dWbted Ull. Optiaaed Stet Boone,
each from· Ryan Williams and double, Jeremy Dill a single, Eric
CalprJ &lt;llhoAndy Grueser. They conibined for Jones a single and Robert Reiber a
Co..t Lela,_. ClabHd Sw.-e Puril,
seyen
'-trikeouts and five walks.
pair of singles.
(lddwr.
olio Loo Anploe
~ ... ~IUmroi-Wio
Grenn
suffered
the
loss
with
Waterford hitters were Tyson
oldlo:louoh.D~
TOitONI'O BUlB lAYS - P1....t Al
~elief from Heiss. They fanned six Powers, Green and Styers each
l.&lt;iw, - · •lho IU.y dilablal lioL
and walked eighL
with singles.
CaUJ up Scott Brow,.Pitchez", f rom
Southern
went
up
3-0
in
the
first
Over the weekend Southern
ltooxYillooldloSaudtoninning when Billy Jones reached on defeated Miller 18· I.
an error and sl()le second before
Jeremy Northup was the winHOUSTON ASTROS - Placed Stcvc
Finley, -tfi ' t, CID tbo ls-GIJ diubJed
Ry81J Williams sinJied him home. . m.in';'g ~'~.'tcher
p
and Jones_· the loser for
lioL
.
Northup and Wickline each walked Miller
SAN DIEGO PADIIES - AodvaiCd
Klllt Stillwell. lnlilrlder, fiom 1bo ll·daJ
ID load the bases, then Jeremy Dill
Southern hittels in that game
diublod lilt. Placed Phil Pllotier, Dut·
slammed
a
two-run
single.
WJl~e
Jones with three sin$les,
ficlda', aa mo ·ls.dly diubW 1ia I'CUOicSouthern plated four runs in the N'onhup three singles, Williams
tive to April26.
second and added a single run in two singles, Wickline a double and
thefounh.
single, John Chaney a triple,
Nau..al ......... Allodal....
,
Robert Reiber two singles and
NBA·- lined Vlado Div~c:, La. An·
ao1oa Lek• - . .. Sl.OOO. r.. ellqnnl
Sports deadlines posted Andy Grueser and Jeremy Dill
!oW. •aaialt SuUle' a Nale McMillan oa
Apri123.
The qallipo/is Daily Tribune, each a single.
•
The
Datly Sentinel, lhe Point
Lanning had a home run for
F-baU
Pleasant R~giste• an.d the Sunday- Miller, Glennaman a double and
No- Paalbol !.tape
CHICAGO BEARS - Aa"'od to
T.mes-Sen tmel value the contribu• singles each by Sex100, Jones and
Meahowl, "'Uiaback.
lion~ their readers make to the ·Browning.
CINCINNAn BENOALS - Sipod
sports sections of these papers, and
Southern will play at Meigs
Allaa DeOIIft..ad. wide~ Madr.
Staten., olfa11ive linemt11; Brad Lebo
these
contnbut10ns
will
continue
to
today
before going to. Eastern .
quancrback; lon 'Wllliama and Mik~
be published.
T~Ut$1ay and coming·home ID host
]Oaulkenon, runnin' bacb ; Clarence
'
Sevillian, wide reca.ver; David Frisch
However,
certain
deadlines
for
VmiOn
County
Friday.
'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
liFt cndoAnil Ford. dcfcnl:i.vc Clbd; o.r.:
•
subm!ssions will be observed. The
The Tornadoes play Eastern at
i ~:~a Htdley, defenlive baek· Brian PiThe · new spacious office features
WL
....
GI
• _
____ ; ]] 6 otrowaki, offensive t1cklc: and Brad
.deadhne for photos and related ani. Racine on Tuesday, May 11 for the
Smith, Gil')' Cuper, and K~rmceleyah
clcs for basketball and other winter . sectional championship game.
• T~~--·---12 I .600
1.5
types of contact lenses and all types of
)kOill.liB;backCI"'.
· - Y •----11 I .579
2
spans is the last day of the NBA Trimble and Miller play each other
DENVER BRONCOS - fired R.ce.t
B
-____
- - -11
2.54
_
.. 9
' .550
.471
Johnson , penOIUlel diredor. Announced
Finals. · ·
.
the same·day in the lower-division
glasses including:
.
the ruignation o r Bobby Mark&amp;, ICOUl.
aJ!VEIAND.--.7 13 .350
6.l
Likewise; the deadline for sub· brackeL The two winners wUI meet
Annawu:ed the retirement of Hugh O.Yid·
·The No-Line Bifocal, Children's VIsion ·
I ] .2'71
7.5
mission s o.f local baseball- and in the district!Dumament
""'GREEN
'""'"'- BAY PACKERS - Signed
Low Vision 8t Free "Off Street'' Parking. '
s.... Rolurcheib, qUa"""""'·
so[tball-rclatcd photos and related ~~~!~ 142 = lS·ll·-4
. err .•
_12 s .706
NEW YORK lETS - W1ived Shelarucles, from 'T-hall to the majors
· T - ------10 I .ll6 2.5
don Cantey, runn jn&amp; back . Agreed to
, o;,.. __..t o 9 .S26 l
as well as other spring and sum me; Waterford: ()()().230 = S-3·7
tenna with Mick B~t11l a lincbaclr.cr·
·------10 10 .500 3.l
~ Da~ md Jtme~ sPencer. de!cn:
spons,
is the day of the last game
a ve tackle~; Mucui.Pary and Greg Shez·~=---.1
II .400
.421 ·s.sl
• s-Ci&amp;J
--·--.1 12
of
the
World
Series. The deadline
wint offen~ive tackle.; ltiek Sayfes and
Oekloed ·-~---·' 10 .:m l.l
Chril Sp,encer, wide recCivm; Damon
for phmos and related articles for
Pieri. aafdy; and Jamie Redmond, c«ncr·
football and other fall sports is the
boot. .
Saturday before the Super Bowl. .
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES - Signed
Brod Elbe&lt;a. ronnina """
These deadlines have been instiPHOENiX CARDINALs - Siancd
tuted to give readers plenty of time
Georp Searcy and Cad Tremble, nmnina:
bacH; Nathan LaDuke. defentive bact ·
to gct'lhcir pho1os back from the
John Bondi. qiiG\arbllck; J)u.ICI' B1.11Chcr'
photography
studio of choice and
D.mn Stcblritann and Ed Sullivan, wid~
receiver~~; Chad FaM, ti&amp;ht end; Robert
Ia give the staffs the opponunily to
an MADrMll
a.m... on4 Muty Malcolm, pianl' Mii.e
publish th~ se sports photos and
HD1' IUIIIEII
Moody , t1ctle; Garry Pay, ceatu; Willie
IUT 1141 111111
Rkbtrcll , deflil1ive e~~.d ; and Ed ward
arucles dunng 1he appropriate seaWooden, linebl&lt;:ker.
son for that sport
SAN DDlOO CHARGERS - Sip&gt;cd

..K

e

l:t

•eep

what

Meigs softballers rec~rd
13-7 win over River Valley

--

.

By JOHN NELSON
LOUISYU..LB. Ky. (AP) - He
suuts ru:owul the bam wearing a
blanket that reads "Bull lnthe
Derby." In his stall, Bull Inthe
Heather sha1tes his head, snorts and
~an eye on dljngs
'He just loves being a hone,"
I

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days that a botclled play by an oilt·
fielder COlt the Reds a game. Cesar
Hernandez misplayed Steve
Buechele's hit intD a triple in the
ninth inning in Chicago on Sunday,
giving the CUbs a 2-1 win.
. The Reds' OUifldd also has misplayed a couple other balls in
games they've won.
"You ca11 make errors in the
infield and get away with them. but
.if )'011 do thalln the outfield, guys
are Joirig to be goinl around the
bases,'' mantlger Tony Perez said.
"That's whit's been hAIIIVIning.
"I don't know wtiYTfi"h8ppen.
ing. We wed: on it every day, and
then we come out he~e and something llsppens, they lose it in the
ligtus or the sun or something."
. The Marlins' bullpen made it
hold up. Trevor Hoffman (1-0), a
Reds minor-~ drafted by the
Marlioa, struci out three in two
innings for his forst majOr-league
win. .
.
"It's a liale bit sweeter u far as
l!lliog it hae," he said, holding a
1ame ball. "I alwar,s thought I'd
get it in a Reds uniform, but it's
njcc: ID get it ben:.
"It was tough. I waa going
against the club that basjcaJly built
me. It's tough JOin&amp; against guys
who I've played with 1nd who
know wllst rm going tD come in
WI'th."
'
Harvey hid a tough time at the ·
start, until Espy got him off the
book. ·A il« the game, Espy held •
cotton swab to !lis nose as he
answered questicm.
•
"I cut myself shaving,"· be said.
"Tbat's.the way ID end a hell of a
day, isn't it?"
In other games, Pittsburgh
downed Atlanta 6-2, San Francisco
beat Philadelphia,6-3, Houston
defealed SL Louil 9-2, San Diego
downed Montrea14-l, LOs Angelq
beat New Yort 4-1 and Colorado
crushed Chic:ago 11-2.
.. Plnlel 6, Bnves Z
A manager gauges his piu:her's
world014 by keeping a pitch count
The norm for a starter who's doin&amp;
wen is 110 and 130 pitches. Any·
thing much higher is a rarity, and
anything above 1SO is almost
unheard of.
Unlea the pitcher is Tim Wake·
fiekL .
.
The Pittsburgh knuckleballer
elay~ by a different set of rules,
IJinlillg his sipiture junk !Dwaid
home plate as many times as il
likes. On Tuelday lliPt, be no.ted
an Incredible 111 Pitches at the
At1anla Braves in the Pirltea' 6-2
victoty.
I' .
.
Almost 11 alnazing as Wake·
field's pitch count was his walk
count - 10. It had 1D71111er Jim
Leylan~~ng the instinct to
. ysnkW
.
"No (dation it drives •11111118·

,,

I CAN'T BELIEVE TIDS!- T u i - to
be tile eon1easu amon1 Detroit head eoaeb
Bryan Murray (wear1D1 1alt) and Red Wln1a
.Dallas Dra•e (left) and SllaWD Barr as 1lley

In NHL playoffs,

react to • play duriq tile lint period or Tiesday Dl&amp;llt's NIB.. p~ p.e aplw tile vlsJt.
iq TonJDio Maple Leaf's, wllo WG11 5..f ia OYer·
lime to lead tile ieries 3-2. (AP)

.
0

Toronto's 3-2 OT win over Detroit
puts Maple Leafs aliead in series

period, set up the winning goal liy sixth game.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
digging
the puck out from a scram·
Selannc's Jl8SIDIIl trom near the
AP Hoe~7 Writer
·
'
ble
along
the
left
boards.
He
piSIICd
end
boards hit the skate of VancouThe TorontD Maple Leafs have
the lead, the momentum and a it to Foligno, who fired a shot vcr forward Tim Hunter and
home game awaiting in their sUd· through a maze of bodies from deflected past shmned goaltendei:
;
denly cllznged playOff series with .betweeen the circles that goakender Kirt McLean.
trainer ilowie Tesher said, and ing," Tesber said Monday.
The Canucks still lead the series•
the Detroit Red Win&amp;s.
· Tim Cheveldae apparently never
that's no bull 011 the bllckstretch.
The Derby iS expected ID diaw
3-2. The sixth game of the best-of-:
"When you come back like that. saw.
Bw the queslion come SIIIUI'day in 19 duee-year-olds when entries arc it ~ves you an edge. They (the Red
Klap 9, J11a111es 4
seven seriea will be Thursday in·
theKenD1Cky Derby will be·
made on ThurSday. On the s = : Wmgs) start thinking about it. and
Luc Robitaille scored twice and Winnipeg and a !ICvenlh, if needed:
Is be TilE horse?
·
of his victory. in' the Florida
, you can't blame them, either," Wayne Gretzky had a goal and would be back in Vancouver on.
"It's scary because everything the sttapping three-year-old roan is TorontD coach Pat Bums said after thme assis1S as the Kin8s took a 3-2 Saturday.
·
is going right That's usually not expected 10 be among the favorites. Tuesday night's S-4 overtime vic- lead in the Smythe semifinals.
Winnipeg's Darrin Shannon:
the way tbiDgs happen in hone rae·
Tomas Sandstrom, another of sent the game intD overtime when:
(See DERBY·on Page 7)
!Dry over the Red Win~s gave the
•
the
Kings' big guns who has·been he scored his second goal of the"
Maple Leafs a 3-2 lead m the best·
silent
during the playoffs, also had night midway through the third:
of-seven Norris Division semifinal.
ccantinuedtiomPage4)'
a
goal
and an assist. Roolcie Robb period.
•
The Leafs, who once trailed the
~----~~--~------~
Stauber
stopped
40
shots
for
Los
series 2. 0 and trailed Tuesday
er up the.wall. But with a knuctle· there wasn't any letdown after· that night's game 4-1, DOW have the Angeles, which can wrap up the
Spqrts brief$
balJer yoo have ID atter yotir·philos- hiL"
best-of-seven
series
at
home
TI11n·
Tellllil San Diego got all 1he runs it opportunity to close out tbe day nighL
.
MADRID,
Spain (AP) - Fnm.:
OP.hY a bit.' With a conventional
stunned Red Wings in G1111e 6 on
pucller it's different You can't put needed in the first when Gary Thursday night in Toronto.
Pat Conacher scored twice and . co Davin of ~entina upset' sec-:
Sheffield hit a two-run home run,
up Willi it.' ' he said.
"Our $1!YS deserved the win," Warren Rychel, Mike Donnelly . ond·seeded Bons Becker of Get-·
Wakefield's bases-on-balls tDtal hia fifth of the season, off Kent Bums sa1d. "We didn't panic. and Tony Granato also scored for ma~Y: 6-2, 6-2 and fifth-seeded:
shouldn't be-too much of a shock Bottenfield (1·2).
We'Ie not a fast team; but we 111e in the Kings, who finished the regular · Em olio Sanchez of Spain beat'
Dodcers 4, Mets 1
to those who follow the Pirates
season third in the Smythe· I&gt;ivi- Olivier Delatire or France 6-1 6-1
Two fonner·Cy Young Award good shape, so we 111e good at the sion, nine points behind the in the first round of the City of
closely. He has walked at least nine
end
ofgamcs.
That's
the.
wort
batteB in all thme of his wins this winners lopked like their old ethic we built all year."
Flames.
Nieuweildyk, 'l'beoren Madrid Grand PriX.
.
selves, Ord Hershiser (3·2) pitch·
ICIISOR.
• .
Fleury,
Chris
Dahlquist
and
Frank
Teaols
:
In other playolf games Tuesday
"If it wasn't for my defense, I'd ing a GOmplete-.game three-hitter night, Los Angela beat Calgary 9· MliSil scored for the Flames.
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) - :
have been out of there quick," and Dwight Gooden (2-3) .allowing 4 and Winnipeg defeated Vancou· Jets 4, Canlicks 3 (OT)
Top-seeded Monica Seles of ·
Wakefield said. "You walk 10 just two liits in eight innings.
Teel}lu
Selanne
scored
a
fluke
~u~v~ playing her first match :
Rookie catcber Mike Piazza ver 4-3 in overtime in the Smythe goal at 6:18 of overtime to lead the ~1nce bemg Sidelined by a viral '
guys, you doli't deserve ID win. If it
wasn't fbr those other. eight guys, homered in the second and Los sc;mifmals.
In games tonigl)t, Washington Jets over the Canucks and extend mfectmn Feb. 21, beat Maria ·
Angeles gotlhree unearned nms in .
I'd have got the loss."
·
.·
visits the New York Islanders in the Smythe Division semifinal Ia a· Stnmdlund of Sweden 6-2, 6-2 in ,
The 26-year-old right-hander the eighth thanks to errors by the Patrick Division and Quebec is ·
the first round of the Citizens Cup. !:,
pitched in!D the 11th inning before Bobby Bonilla and Tim Bogar.
at Montreal in the Adams.
Rodles 11, Cublll
giving way to Paul Wagner. He
' Maple Lealli 5
At Denver, Andres Galarraga' s
a1lowecl six hits, hit two batters 1111d
Red WIDp4 (OT) •
home
run
capped
a
six
.
464-foot
.struck out one.
Mike
Foligno •s goal at 2:05 of
. .'
"He's so wild that he's hard to run fourth inning - the most pro- overtime lifted Toronlo over
lific
one
in
Colorado's
short
histo. get at," Braves manager Bobby
Detroit
ry.
Cox said
Thiny seGOnds into the over· .
Colorado left-hal)der Butch
The winning run scored in the
time,
TorontD's .Dave Andreydluk
.,.,
top of ijle 11th when Braves ~eliev· Henry (1-2) overcame a rough start hit the right goalpost. Wendel
er Mike Stanton (0·1) made a and Scatt=cl nine hits. Mike Mor· Clark, who tied it at 4 in the third
253 W. Main St., PomerQv 1-800-552·1880
~
( 1-4) took the loss.
throwing error on a sacrifice bunt
by Wakefield, «Jlowing Carlos.
f---...!26~1~S~tat::.e!!Ro~ut::e:.7!.N::o~rt!!h!_;1~-IM;:Ot:;D-;:!5;!!58~305~1!.,__ _,J ::
Garcia to score from second.
I0% OFF Hayward
24 FT.
',.
Wakefield scored on Jeff King's
twiKlllt sin.lle 111 left and Orlando
Produds ·
M~d followed with a ·two-run
..
double.
30%
OFF
Maintenance
Wakefield (3·2) posted his
fourth career victory over the
Equipment
Pin Tax :;
Braves.
12%
OFF
Spedalty
Glanll 6, Pblllies 3
Chemicals
In a battle of fust-place teams at
Veterans Stadiwn,Johri Burlcett (5· ·.
0) became the forst National Lea..•
P!er to record his fifth victory,lim·
..
..
1tin~ the Phillies to seven hits,
striking out six and walldng none
.in 7 1/3 innings.
Yep. Hyou u111he proven
Matt Williams homered; Will
Su1taln" trouble-1,.. pool cera
Clark doubled home two runs 'and
eyllern ~~eeordlng to illbel
•
Barry Bonds tripled in two more.
'
direction•
end
get
1lgae
In
Terry Mulholland (2·3) look the
·:
your pool thl1 10mmer, PPG
loss •.
::
.will pay lor til• elgae treatment
chemical• needed to rutora
. Altrol '· Cardinali z
AI HoullOD, Craie Bigio llrotc
·.'•
the pool to en efgM-1,..
a season-long RBI drought by
condition. Wow! Whet could
tripling home two runs in the fourth
be
end good lor your
inning off Rhea! Cormier (1·2) as
pocketbook? Greet •vatem.
the Astros stayed in a virtual tie
5
,,'
· with the Giants for fllll place in the
•'
NLWest.
5
•'
Biggio had no RBia in 69 at·
,.·'
bats enterina the pme.
·,'
lloiD, anpeu,
RV's1re your aewad fur worldJig llll'd. If
Darryl "ile (1·0) got the win,
•
allowinJ two runs on tlliee hits in
,au Wllltllt put more 611111 your lilbtft. come In Old111kllbout
fiveinmnp;
•
t1te
11me1 wi1h a hoples lllnk
hdrel4, ExllGil
•
11 Oftlc:ler.
..
Andy Bene&amp; failed in his bid ID
.•
'lbey're iJn folks.
.
.
·'•
throw San Dieao '1 fint no-hitter
when Mo1Jes Alou .led ~ the IICV·
Hyou don't look fonrird to --~~ will hi
entll lnnina .with 111 oppclllto-field
clrty
okl pool ........... .,....,pool
doublo.
'
ata"lcl, let the Pool P..... lob _ . ot I. ~
Benes (4·1) said he triecf 10
The Pool ......... wtl open fOUl pool II 1
.
ignore the no-hit bid.
.
Member
FDIC
."It wa tile sixth ianinc. If it
ha.d ·gonen IC! tho ninth, tllon l
•IIIITTA
ATIIIU
III.PU
·t•••u. MIIILIP011 I'I ILIO )Ij ¥1Ltl TUrUIIII UI~ IU.Y
would have lot pumped up," he
J7Hl!l "J--,61 •n·"l6 ""''"' "'~I
7!5·1"'· 797..147 576-71U
said. "Actually, 1,. m realfy glad

NL "COntests.~ .. .

will

-"-10
otf--

TorontD ropped Texas 4-3, Olic&amp;go draWn-in infield.
beat Baltimore 9-4, Oakland beat
Ruaty Meacham (1·1) gave up
BOS!Dn 7·2 and Milwaulrce downed one hit in two innings in relief of
MinDesola 3-2.
David Cone, whose record stayed
YaDlees 5, Aqelll 0
at 04 in five Slarts.
Jilllmy ~Y pi":~. his ~d
Wlrlte SOll9, Orioles 4
C8lej:r one-bitter, linuung Califor·
· Jack McDowell became the
nia tD Gary DiSareina'•leadoff sin· American League's fll'St five-game
gle in the sixth inning. New York. winner.. ;
won its third in a row oo ·the road
'f!!e hbst White Sox had 18 hits,
ansi ended the Angels' six-game four by Lance Johnson . Frank
v.:inning strak.
Thomas, who drove in four runs
Key (3· 0) struck out eight, ~nd Joey Cora, who scored fo~
walked one and lowered his ERA tunes, each had three hits ..
ID 0.93.
.
McDowell .(5-0) won. McDow·
Mike Gallego hit two home ell pve up foilr runs on nine hits in
~1: Danny Tartabull and Bernie 7 '1/3. innings.
Williams also connected off OnlCk
Rick Sutcliffe (2· 2) could not
Finley (2-1).
hold a 3..0 lead. He allowed eight
Atllletla 7, Red Sox Z
runs on 12 hits and six walks in 4
Mark McGwire hit two home 213 innings.
·
runs over the fence and Ruben .
Blue Jays4, R111,en 3
Sierra and Lance Blankenship got · . Pl!l Hentgen, put into TorontD's
homers on balls that1rlanced off rotation when Dave Stewart was
outfielder's gloves as Oakland · placed on the disabled list. stopped
· stopped its four·$81!1e losing streak. Texas on three hits for eight
BoiiiDa lost its SIXth in a row on a innings.
WestCoasttrip.
HenfCen(3-l)gaveuotworuns,
Bobby Wm (1 -0) went six both on Dean Palmels seventh
innings.
'
bomerunoftheseason.
.
Daany Darwin (0-4) was ejected
Robb Nen (().I) walked seven in
after hittin~ Rickey Henderson in 3 2/3 innings in his first major
the ribs With his first pitch after ~ue start. The host Blue Jays
giving up Blankenship's home run. .
the lead for good at 3·2 il) the
· Royall4, Tllen 3 .
fourth when Dick Schofield drew a
Chico Lind singled home the two-out walk, siDle second took
winning iun with one out in the third on Nen's balk and sc~ on
botlom Of the lOth inning, complet· ~eliever Todd Bums' wild pltch
ingKansasCiix:IJcomebackfroma ·
Brewers3, TwlnsZ ·
late 3..() defiCit
Pat Lis tach went 4 for 4 and
The Royals scored twice in the Milwaukee sent Minnesota to its
eighth on RBI singles by Wally fifth straight loss.
Jar-, snd Hub~ Brooks, and tied
Bill Wegman (2·3) held down
it 1n the' ninlb on a throwing error the visiting Twins for 7 1/3 innings
by pitc~ Mike Henneman.
and Doug Henry got his fourth
In lhe 1Olh, Joyner drew a lead· ssve.
off walk from John Kiely (0-2),
Jim Deshaies (4-1)' had beaten
Kevin McReynolds singled and the B~ewers last week. The Twins
Mike MacfarlanC sacrificed. Lind have allowed 66 earned runs anti
sinsled up the middle through a 88 hitS in their last seven games.

Bulllnthe Heath~r expected to rule
. 19-horsefield in Kentucky Derby

Southern diamondmen .
hand Waterford 15-5 loss

_,.

Ohio

'

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Joe

.

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INSTALLED
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�Wednesday, April 28, 1993

.~ -

~

lambs for Knicks?
-Answer Thursday

DOUBLE
COUPONS

By The AIIOCiatecl Prea
· as an in-season replacement for
· Things are really stacked against Hubie Brown in 1986-87.
the Indiana Pacers IS they-open the
·'That was a long lime ago ••
NBA playoffs.
Hill said. "It isn't even 1 Jllll1 ~f
They have to play the New Yodt my lhi~ng IS l prepare for the
Knicks, who have the EaStml Con- playoffs."
.
·
·
ference's bes~ record and a 20He's hoping the Pacers are bet·
game winning streak at IIQme. They ter than the way t)ley ended tbe
are coming in having lost ihree or season in finishing 41-41.
.
four .games. They haven •t gotten
"When you go to the playoffs,
. past the fust round of the playoffs the environment ch1nses right
since 1976; winning just three of away, and hopefully the aUitude
· 17 games in that span of five post- changes,•' Hillllaid.
season. appearances. And, they
He said his team matches up
went and got the Knicb mad by well with the Knicks lllld the seabeating them in their latest meet- son'sresultsaredeceiving.
ing.
·
.
"They got us once l'I'Jillv good
··we still have·a ball Wtc in our in New Yext." Hill siid~1·0ther
mouths from them beating us a few than that, the games bave been
weeks afO.'' Knicts guard John close.... It's Rot lilre they dominiiStarts sai4, referring to the Pacers' ed. The fact that we won here the
108-94 victorr. at Market Square last time is certainly goinsto be
Arena on Aprill6, their only will good fot our confidence. You
in four games ~ith New )'IXIt this . always have 10 try your belt, 10 try
· season.
·and go out and wm one of those
So, in addition. to all the above- first two on the n.L •'
mentioned problems facing the
Utah also has to come up .with
Pacers square in 'the face when lhe one of tboic 1'08d victories, and the
best-of-five series opens in New Jazz's effort may be helped by the
York Friday night, there is also a return of17-foot-4 center Mark
touch of revenge from a team Balon.
which finished 60-20, a record
The mairistay of Utah's interior
. topped only by the Phoenix Suns defense for a dtacle, Eaton underwho won two more games, a11d ~ ~ Sllrllet'J in late October.
• which allowed a league-low 95.4 Qe had Jllll begun to ~tum to form
points per game.
·•
when a sprained lower back put
"We won the division, got the him back Oil ~ injured list April .
homecourt ldvantage in the CQ!lfer- 1~.
ence and Won 60 games," Knicks
He returned Sunday against
center Patrick Ewing said. "Things Minnesota, man111ing just four
look very bright.••
. rebounds and no pomts in 16 minThe playoffs get underway · I!ICS·
Thursday night with New Jersey at
In aD, Eaton missed 18 ,games
Cleveland, Charlotte at Boston, the and was used sparingly in others,
Los A.ngeles Clippers at Houston watching his mmutes dip from 25
and Sin Antonio at Ponland. In per game last season to 17 this.
addiOO,. to tlie Pacers-Knicks, Fri- year. ~ Jazz signed 12-year vetday night's ~ include A~ts eran bigiman James Donaldson,
at Chicigo, Utah • SeaUie Dl the wbo had ,been out of the league,
Los )\ngeles Lakers at'Phoenix. • &amp;her EalcO 's lalest injury.
Indiana coach Bob Hill used tel ' "People now realize bow
1)(1 the head man with the Knicks, importaD~ Mart
been to this
. but 1fe was let go 8fter ~ing 20-46 ,~hise," coach
s~ said.

..- -26 .....27 28 29 30 -1

S:.LE G:lOD THRU SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1993
1'VI

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ROSE GAJtDII'IIf CIUMONY- IMMiitJ .rJWdi C.olu
bukelbd player GtGae L}D (ri&amp;llt) fi
2 Pa :' 1 a.toa
with Tar bed~ Jener I : sa a- Ga ' ; 11 by at

According to Sum,

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Boxing matches held
Adams, Bond among victors J
-during NBA contests
irilatest Skyline race action ~
will cost pugilists
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The cost of everythinJ ehe is
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ops, Stern will conviace tile
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ta:=r::
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Rain Saturday and Sunday ·five furlonp in a llrisk 1:01, gai.
turne4 the tract into a sea of loping out tlueo-quanera of 1 milo
muddy glop for training, forcing in 1:14.6. Sanla Anita Deroy runseveral trainers to change their.... nerup Union City wmed six furworkout plans. Some sunny wealb- longs in 1: 13.111d Kissin Kris, secer was expecled to make the track ond in the Artansas Daby did five
fast by roday.
.·
eighlhs in 1:03.2.
'
'"I already know my horse can
"'Yoo dOn't make compromises
~ndle .t1!e mud," Tesh~ said of or break your pattern,' • said D.
h1s dectsiOII to put off a workout Wayne Lukas, who trains Union
until roday. "I want to see hOw he City. "In hindsight, 1 really feel
f!8ndles afllll tract."
comfortable about it. That was a
Wmoats fer Santa Anita Deiby manster move."
winner Personal Hope and Blue
This is the fmt trip to die Derby
Grass runnerup Wallencla also were for owner Arthur I. Klein who
postponed a day, and Louisiana owns an electrical supply coii.pany
Derby win~ Dixieland Heat went in Brooklyn, N.Y., and the IICCOIId
fro~ a nm to a gallop in lhe middle for Tesher, who broupt Wolfie's
of hiS woQ:ouL
Rucal iD Cburcbill Downs in 1982.
Jockey ltandy Romero was
··r came the day befoaethe race
aboard Dixieland Heat for his 1 didn't hawe a box 1!i~Jn't
brother, trainer Gerald Romero, ber what 1 _ ; 1Nt 1 couldn't see
wllen he decided an eighth 9f a · the race afta they went Into tile
rnilc Into the workout that "he first tum. Ho either finlsbed last or
wasn't handling · the courae that · next-to-lilt," TOIIIer recalled
well."
· Wolflo'• Rucal actually finRandy let Dixieland.Heat loDe illhed 1'1111 in a 19-bone field, 2S
alODJ,..and Gerald llid he would leiiJtbl blct of the winner Oato
send tll'e colt out apln Tueaday, Del Sol. Teaher hadn't ~ - the
hopina ~ belter conditions. An4 if race ~ 011 vldeocape llliil he
the ailcluulappy 0111ace day1 . . went tO i1ie Derby mUJeum lalt
"We'll worry about Saturday *'*.
Saturday,'' Olnld llid.
"After I watched the race,"
SeVeaallrllaen lpoaed the~- l'elllor lllid, ''I gafJod up dle·peodltions and 141lt out llloJr honea. pie wbo owned Wcilfle '1 Rucal
Probable Derby favorite, Blue and· illbd lflem, 'Why !lid we ran
Gras~. winner Prairie Bly(IU, did. Wolfie'• Rucalln the Deaby?"' . ·

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Sp-

Reg. $489 - White

WE

3" DOUBLE PRINTS

·cARPEt .
SPECIAL
SALE
•Ughtor hrk
•

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

CAPACITY
WASHER

•

ovi

oatRalph
die lme-up.
Gardlla' claimed the Pure
S·-'- 1r
-".
..,...., eature "'"" beiDg, ~ by

..t
com- • - - - - - -..
. s-•s
miuM•wki+'"'J
of dll: NHL..
is stcc:ring

Kentucky Derby ..~~&amp;omPaae S&gt;

69

rmisii

McDonald's ofGaDipolis car.
., ___eel
•L- noo ·
Heat winners were Bond and
r m an
CJ:P""hyeacross
ltalin...,.
nit lryiDg
to HiD ·
brat., a fncas. Tile problem
Jeff Wood o.f Athe~s !OOk the
ri&amp;M _. is .._ lladlac mating · checlre~ .~g m the Limlled Late
dle"';'!f • fiiiiL
~odCl cf!ruwn over ~n. Flem~~ dlis beUiir !ban mg. Kevin Haught, DICk Gnm and
s~em,.....; 1 • d
f dleNBA's Ed Venham. Wood also won the
ialqe c.:e aad is dad serious heat.In •'- UMP Modified di . .
11111111 n:l'ad- •. I il apia iii time R • u~ B b Ad
I VISIOn,
fCII' die ~r.., ·s • • re event b acmehs ~
ams Rr. camde
Audile also•• uillill.alllbefines
ome t e wmner over o1an o
ia die 1roatd -·~ tep&amp;mish the EScS:::!a anandd 11DougMHenry. Gdedreg

l'~~- "it looks like heawia'

. •..
·.' : .·. .·~ ;.\ ,
.,·.·,..r~...~ •,-;· . ·~·. .

ry. Pomeroy's Todd Smith fmisbecl
second, Dol\ Ross third, followeil
b Dwi h H
and "'A H
Y
g t enry
..., Ollie. :
Pomeroy's T.R. Collums came
from the back of the pact in ,..:;;
Precision Automotive car lb
second in tbe B-Main behind
Rocky Davidson. Heat winnefl
were RusseD, House and Gardner. •
In the four cylincl« pure stoc~
RBeebdbwvBill~l brotlh~rs Brian anO
o y 11 ey c a1med the bet(
wins in lhe Barber Auto Pans~ ·
Brian Bailey overtook teammliiO
Je~y Barber near the end of, u•
.t.!'
second heat to claim the win. BaaS
ber was second.
·
·, '' · ::,
Jeff Braley took the feature
Michael Bater, Delbert Flor;;"
Racine's George Adkins, Bob ~
ley, Doug Sams alKfTim MendelW
haD.
Skyline will run again Fridar
and continue widuegularprogranil
every Friday evening. Skyline wilt
feature the $2,000 .to win Earl Hill
Memorial for Sur.·r Late Models
on Friday, May 2 .
•
,

1

. . gajrts• _,. r. Riley lleinli

al.tgameused..,
.~ ~~~
...,. ..,...,._.!"r
.., 111e -~
new mete:l will be up 81 1 • 1
in time for this "c laid's pla.JCA.
"There will be incu,r f JICIIII•
lies down then.l. Ander .........
we'll take a look at .a{;;;, d'~
~=~C31SCS;:. of die ·fi&amp;t'ial -th
the crowding in the

which And
you'dunleas
mind.we•n:
roar
leak toaffixed.
name
taltiila inaeue8 of a few luDcd
pm:c:nt (and we're not), it's easy 10
unagine the rich Dl cynical mcmbers of pro basketball ~ s rants not to mention the Charles
Barkleys of lhil WDikl - peeiilc
·. the announcemeilt with a smiak. Or
to imagine them saying, IS a.ttey
did aflez paY.i_Dg $20,000 foriiJiDJ
to adjust Bill Laimbcer's llliiUde
(and face) a few yeus back: "I
make $3 minion; 110 what'I'Ii few
thousand dollars."
But tblt's prec!RJy the ••;,....,
that Srem is pllllllina to ldjull. _.
the fmes Bit notb!ng moR: 'lhlif n a
tiliSt step, Ill IDM!IOD·~, p
will. Anything mon: dniPic • dlis
juncture of the M8IOII would fl!ar
with the teams• aJ~~~pc:atiwe
balance. But, by the time tile
league's compeution commiuee
finiShes tinbring in the offra910,
lhere's lilrely to be a much OC)IItirr
'
structure of fines, quieter and
GOT WS GOBBLER - BobSJUoB
t~ 20- longer suspmsions and I policy of
pounc! aobbler 111111 1 alne-lac:b beard TutldiiJ morolos. Slsaoil •kf dealing much more
with
he called the hlfllla to abl!u.U 5 yarcll btl~. Dallllll Ilia wltll a load
ol oumbel' live lbot l'rom 1 1:2-puae Re. . . . . &amp;70. Olllo's sprlnJ
turk~y • . , . started Mondaynd exteads io MayU; (Seotlael phOto
by Jim Freeman)
·
·

Racine's Bob Adams Jr. last Friday
nightatSkylineSpeedwayinStew·
art. Adams came back to lllk:e the
win in lhe UMP Modified feature.
Bond started on the pole and
maintained the lead lhrougholit the
race, although he was challenged
several times by Adams. Next
across the line was Butch McGill,
Bill Childers, Dan Morrison,
TbBobbyl·emanHillan,Bobbyd
ScottMosslrWol'e' Bennl·n
thye

s.lector

Reg. $449 • White

SALE ·

eChlna
Cabi.._•ts
•W•rdrobes
.Utility
Cabinets
•lase
Cabinets ·

$399 $369 '20%
Prlcea Include dallvery, aetup and
of old appllanca.

'

~al

'.

OFF

any••IP'JI...

APRIL 28, 29, &amp; 30
OFFER GOOD ONLY ON OAIGIW. AOU. 135. 111. 121 OR IISC
COLOR MINTFUI.C41 PAOCFSSOif.Y: .
TAKE YOUR RUllO AMYOF'IHE RJ!r •11 LOCAnGI&amp;
27111. SECCII) ME.
-~CillO

Pretc,.lon Sllop
540 w. Union St.
Athlnl, ()H..

.814-512 5811

Pnllc!--·
110HigiiSL .

Gkll 1 •Cll

814-117. . .

•'

PI ~91iwlllap
....

n

a

II:•L
; Cll

fltlll . .

SPRING AIR
IBTREST

· SERTA
SERTAPEDIC

SERTA PERFEa

· ··SUEPER

$8800 lo.Pc. SJJ9001WII 5349Ft11Ea.
1W11

., $101 ftl EL Pc.
$299 0.111 Set

.

r.,p,

$169 hi EL Pc.
$399 a. ... Set

�•

.·

•

:. Wednesday,

Sentinel

.,,

Beat of the Bend...
The Pomeroy Alumni Associastill has a list of "problem
F names" of grads in classes having
:·. reunions. Some of the names may
.... be people who are deceased. No
:~ one is sure. However, here'.s the
.~ list
'
1
1928-Paul Shay, Lawrence
Sou1sby. Anne Sauer Walter,
George Owens, Mary E. Gloeckner
Morton, Edna Curd Boice.
1933-Velma Geary Rempel. ,
1938-Helen Carmen Spahr,
Harry Ralph Carmen, · James
Kevan, Mildred Bruch Meredith,
- Beny Sla'y McConnaughey.
.-

School, was injured RCelltly

C tion

dirt bike accidcnL

ma

Trenton bas been in Veterus
Memorial Hospital twice and is
now confined 10 Oliklren's Holpital in Columbus. .He bas internal
injuries. His room number is 4020
and he would certainly be encouragedinhcaringfrom you 100.

'

.'
•
•

Family --

•

Medicine ·

•••
•

:· POMEROY - The Meij!s Coun::'' ty dry ftre hydrant co!'lmtttee will
;,; meet at .the Meigs Sotl and .WaJer
POMEROY '· There will he a
'- Conservation District Off1ce on special meeting at the Meigs Coun:. Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. All mem- ty Public Libnu:&gt;' .in ,Pomeroy o~
::. bers urged to attend.
· Thursday from 6:30-8.30 p.m. enu:;
· ·
tlCd "Geaing Ready for Reading" a
• LONG BOTIOM • Bruce Stone focus oa reading (reading 'skills
:: Will be in concert Wednesday 81 7 children need and how pareniS can
: p.m. ill Faith Full Gospel Church, .• help). Nick Weiland, Meigs County
~Long ' Bottoin. Pastor Steve Reed Parent Education Program, will be
·
the presenter. For further informa• invites' the public.
::
tion call Susie Heines at 985-4163
::r ·POMEROY - Belles and Beauil after 4 p.m.
··western Square Dance Club will
!: sponsor an open dance Wednesday
POMEROY - Free clotbiDg day •
i: from 8- 11 p.m. at Royal Oak will be held at the Salvation Army
;', Resort.
Gary
Shoemaker, on Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon.
:· sevierville, Tenn., will be the · · All area residents in Deed of cloth;;. caller. ·
ing are invited.
"
:.&lt; MIDDLEPOP, T - Middleport
CHESTER - The Ohio Valley
:;~ Literary Club will !!'eel Wednesday Draft Horse and Mule Association
. ;. at Z p.m. at the MeigS County Pub- will meet Thursday at 7:30pm. at
- lie Library: Mrs. Richard Owen the Chester Volunteer Frre Depart:.,.·will review "A Vision of Light~~L · menL New members are welcome.
,
·:; Judith Merkle Riley. For roll
; tell of a "woman of vision."
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
•; MINERSVILLE - The Wild- Church Women United will. meet
·: wood Garden Club will meet Friday at I p.m. at the Pomeroy
·~ Wednesday ·at 7:30 p.m. at the United Methodist Church for the
~ home of~ Miller.
May Fellowship planning meeting.
•

~

'',

~

~

· THVRSDA Y
.
' RU1LAND - A free commuruty
immunization clinic will be held
·.i Thursday at the Rutland Fire
: Department from 9-11 a.m . for
~ ages two months through kin~er­
" garten age . Parents must bnng
: child's immunization record.
·

each day: Similarly, a cholesterol
level of 2000 produces a much
greater risk than one of 240. Add
your risk factors up. Since I
haven't examined you persqnally,
you're in a Jliuch beaer position to
figure out the influence your
cholesterol has had in causing your
stroke. Question: My doctor started
me on a medication called Lopid
for my cholesterol 'after my stroke.
Do I still need to follow a diet to
k.eep my cholesterol down1
Answer: Yes, you should follow a
diet th8l is low in fats, particularly
saturated fats, in addition to taking
your medication. Most of the
cholesterol in the blood is manufactured by the body rather than
originating from the cholesterol in
foods th8l are eaten. Ealing a diet
that restricts saturated filS - for
example, high-fa meats, milk, butter, cheese, margarine, coconut and
palm oil -reduces the amount of
the raw m8teriaJ that the body usea ·
. to Jllake cholesterol. For some individuals this is all it takes to bring
down their cholesterol to a safe
level. But for nuiny, including you,
.a medication that increases the
elimination of cholesterol from the
body or one th8l interferes with its
production is necessary.
I recommend that you follow
your doctor's' advice. Eat wisely
and take your medication. I also
think you should reduce your other
risk factors as much as you can. I
also want you to talk to your
friends and family about their risk ·
factors. The benefits of prevention .
arc always better than treating a
stroke and its conseque~ . .
"Famll~ Medldae"llla weekly
column. To snbmlt questlo••·
write lo Job• C. Wolf, D.O.,
ObloUnh•enltyCoUeaeolo.teopathlc Medldlle, GniiYeMr lbJI,
Albelll, Oblo 4$701.

Hamsonvl
•
.11e
Happemn·.g· 8 · .
.

·

Mr. and Mrs. James Hewitt,
Columbus, and Mr. 8nd Mn. Bob
Alkire, · were Saturday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Alkire, Racine. ·
.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Mahr ~ Mr. and MIL Francis Foley, Columbus; Mn. Debbie
, Foley and 10u: and Betty Poley
andgrandeon,ofS~.
Margaret Douglu inpending
two weeb with Mr. and Mn. Don
· Giblon in Maryland ~ ·
I .

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M;CLosED SuNDAY

Strawberries

Whole Chicken Fryers

FULL FLAT .. . ; $8.00 (SAVE 20%!

Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
ThuiSday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ad. th.t mUll be paid in advance arc:
Card of Th ...lu
Happy Ado
In MeJnoriam
Yard Sale.
clu•ifled adverU.emeot plaeed in the GaUipo~ Daily

•A

Tr'ihuDe (except ClaMifiod Dilplay, BUiiaeA Card or Lepl
Notku) will alto appear in the Point PleuMt Regilur and
rer~china onr 18,000 bo~

Gallia Counly Melp Counly Maaon .Co., 1VV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Aru Code 304
446-CollipoU•

992-M;ddieportl

367-Cb:eohlre
388-VInroo

PonJeroy

24S-R.io Grande

256-Cuyon DloL
643-AroLia Dlol.
379-'Walnui

4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICinON

Layne Street, New Haven
Two .acres on the river. · ·
Nice 3 bedroom home,
fireplace, basement.
· Homestead Realty, Broker
675-5540, 882-2405

..•

r

Federal Food

scamos

g.

Public Notice

Public Notice

ond the twenty-eight (21)
doyo lor onawarlng will
commence on thll doll. In ·
c••• ol your lollura to
anewar or otherwlea
r•pond •• requlrld by the
Ohio Aulae of Civil
Procedure, Judgment by
defoult will be rendered

oplnal you for tile relief
demlndad In the Pllllloft.
Deled thla 23rd dey of
AprU, 1813.
·
RollwiE.Bucrk,
·
Probell .....
Llnl K. Neouloalld, a.t

Dec••ed, etll.,

, IN THE PROBATE COURT
QF IIEIGB COUNlY, OHIO
JENICIFER t,. SHEETS,
.
Admlnlalrllrlx
ofthaEataliool
·Guy E. Hunl8r, Dec: ••eel,

~

PeUUo. .

' VB

THE ESTATE OF
DAVID G. HUNTER,

1

cant of Thanks

The family of LLOYD
ROUSH would like to
thank their many
friend• and nelghbora
for the euppc.rt during
their recant l"a' your
thoughll, prayer&amp;,
food, cards, and baing
with us.
Also spacial thank&amp;
to the .stall ei the
Exte~ded Care Unit, the
doctora 11 the Vater..,•
Memorial Hoapltol, and
Mle New Haven
Emergency Squad.
Special thanks to
Paetor George C.
Wel~lck and ' Paelora
Trl~la and Richard
Bonde-Krug.
May God ble11 111 of
you.
Wile, Mary W. Roulh;
grandson and wtfe,
• Stephen &amp; Stophanle
Barringer .,d &amp;Ieier,
M 11dred Fry.

FleepondMila

CASE NO. 2&amp;,103
'Docket 13 P-ve 285
NOTICE BY NOTIFICATION
.TO: The Unknown Helre,
Ne:ril of Kin, Devle..e,
Legel.. e, AdmlnlltniDra,
Executore ...d Alelgne of
Guy E. Hunter, Tho•••
Belley H'41'llr, Sr., Lettie
JaM RMCI Hun..,., Mlrgeret
lam!l O..rett end Lalibue
Grebil Gerrett.
· .
You 111 hereby notified
thet YI!U hiiVI blell nemed
Reapondente In • leg•l
ecllon entitled Jennifer L.
Sheeto, Admln,letretrlx of
the Eollll of Guy E. Hunt•,
Dec-eel, vo. The Eellll of

DIIYid G. Huntw, D•c•••d.

et el. Thll 8Ction h• blell
•••lgned Cue No. 26,803
end 11 pending In the
Common Plue Court of
Melge County, Ohio,
Probete Dlvlelon, S8Cond
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
The object of the Petition
lo to determine the helre,
next of kin en.d p.raone
en~tled to the n)lll of Guy
E. Hunter, Dece..ed, In
order thet • dlatrllautlon of
eeldnllllcenblllllldl.
You era hwaby required
to •newer the Petition
within twenty-eight (28)
deyo elter the 1111
publlceUon of thle noUaa
which will be publlehed
once • wHk lor alx (&amp;)
eucceulv• wMka. Th• ,..,
the 2nd doywtlt
ol be
June,
1813,
publication
mlllll
on

(4) 21; (5) 5, 12, 11, 21;
(Gj2,&amp;1c

· Real Eitate General

OFFICE 992~2886

'
205 North Slcond Ave.

Publlc'Notlce

Public Notice .

8

•

949-,Roclne

742-Rudaad

675-1'1- 1'1-nl
· 458-l.eoo
S16-Apple Crowe
773-M-n
882-NewRo..a
895-Lehrt
937- Bodl'olo

667-Cool~·

SAT., MAY 1,
9:00 AM·12 NOON

HARDWARE

985-:a......
843-Portlaad
247-Letarl r.u.

alae Daily Senti.a.el,

OPEN HOUSE

PICKENS'

1:00 p.m. Monday •
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunday
I:OOp.m. Friday

Classified poges cover the
. following telephone eschongea,_ ·

• Free Adl: Giveaway aad Fouad ad. uad.er lS wttrda will be

rua3 da)"lal DO cbarp.
• Price of ad for aU c:apitallotten i1 double price of ad COlt
• 7 poial line type only Wled
• SenliDol bi DOt re1po!ifiblo for Oft'OH after r1r1t day (check
for erron rll',t day ad run• in .-per). Call before 2:00p.m .
day aflelr publication to make correction

DAYBEFOREPUBUCATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday

Monday P!J'""

• Ad. Ou.taide the e'ounly youl' ad run.......t be prepaid
• Roc:eiore dYcount for ad1 paid ia adwaDCe.

WASHABLE

•

we 'oiJdlv

Accept Your

SAT~8-12

l'OLICIES

LONG BOTI'OM - Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a preaching and singing
Friiiay at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
invites tlie public. Fellowship will
follow.

f

COPY DEADLINE

.Call992-2J56

GALLIPOLIS - Washington
E,lementary PTO and Green Elementary PTO will sponsor th~
fourth annual "couno:y treasitres
ans and crafts show at the Gallia
County Junior Fairgrounds on Saturday from I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Sunday from noon to 5 p.m.

MASON, W. VA•

CALIFORNIA

U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE

victim should
istick to low fat diet
" Question: 1 had-a stroke a few
, years ·ago. The doctor discovered I
: had high choleSierol then. I've been
• taking some medication for my
:cholesterol ever since. Did my high
~'c holesterol cause my stroke?
: Answer: Having a high choleSierol
, level can increase one's risk of
; stroke, heart attack and other circu- latory problems, but increasing
; one's rislc is not the same as "caus: ing" an iUness such as your stroke.'
• Much has been said about the
: relationship between high cholesl terol and cm:ulatory problems. The
, danger of high cholesterol has been
• proclaimed with such enthusiasm
:.that its easy to think every individ·ual with a cholesterol over 200
should anticipate rapidly failing
·health, and everyone with a choles;tcrol over 240 has "both feet in the
jgrave" but simply hasn't. fallen
'
;over yet.
• Obviously ~e issue of choles:cerol is important. Elevated choles:terol does increase the chance of
·developing hardening of the arter:ies and its consequences, but the
;significance ofthts one aspect of
·"blood chemutry" has been
:overemphasized. There are otl!er
;factors that also influen~e the risk
.of Jw;demn~ of the ar1enes and the
;assoctated nsks of heart attack and
·Stroke.
.
. .
. One of the most mfluential nsk
;factors is heredity.. If your parents
.and grandparents bved a long and
!heallhy fife, your chance of also
!doing so is very good. Even though
iheredity is an imponant risk factor,
iit is also one that can't be changed.
!fortunately, there are other risk
;factors that can be changed.
· The use of !Obl!cco products and
~the use of alcohol are very impor•tant. Smoking one package of
:Cigarettes each day causes the same
:&amp;mount of inctease in risk of hard·ening of the ar1eries as a choles:terol value of about 380. Consum:ing more than two drinks each day
,does the same thing.
. ~. So, I ;an't teU you for sure what
• caused Y~ slroke, but you can
.:!oolc at your risk facmind,get an
~dea how much cholesterol con:tnbutes to your .health ~!ems. ~
. ;the ~ ranking of nsks, herediJy, sm'*lng, excesSive ~coholuse,
,nabetes IIJI!I hypertenSIOn all rank
Above the risk of cholesterol. ~w~ver, you must look at these nsk
fac~ with ~e common sense.
Smoldns one ctgilette a day - a
Jeat lew pe~ple can perf~rm causes less ns~ than smoking 60.

ouart

lb.

.~ Stroke

To place an ad

MASON, W.VA. - The VFW
Post No. 9926, Mason, W.Va., will
hold a benefit dinner Saturday at
the post home beginning at 11 a.m.
Menu includes one-half chicken,
baked tieans, slaw and roll. Call
304-773-9191 for delivery. There
will be 350 dinners available. All
donations will be accepted and proceeds will benefit a friend of the
organization.

The quick, easy way _to
MILLFIELD - There Will be a
dance and show Frida&gt;: from 8-11
colorful decorating
~ SALEM CENTER - A free p.m. at the Russell Building in
schemes without
:: community immunization clinic Millf~eld with music. by Off Seaobjectionable paint odors.
;&lt; will 6e held Thursday at the Salem sons.
· For all Interior walla.
: Township Fire Depanment from 1:! 3 p.m. for ages two months through
PO¥i'ROY - The senior class
· W•shable.
•kindergarten age. Parents must of Meigs High School will present
. : bring child's immunization record. an ''Evening of Theatre" Friday at
~
·
8 p.m. at Meigs High School. The
• · POMEROY , There will be a production of three one-act plays is
special program
the Meigs under the direction of .Celia
-County t&gt;~useum o Thursday at McCoy. Amlission is $3 for adults
}; 7:30 p.m. oil ''The Practice of Law and $2 for students.
: in Meigs County Over the Past 50
.
'" Years .... Participating will be anor:
TIJPPERS PLAINS- The Tup~ neys Fred Crow, Bernard. Fultz,. pers Plains VFW Post No. ·9053
• Jim O'Brien and Frank Porter . .Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
- 0UUH ~T~Ht~~~
~ Steve Story will serve as moderator dance Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m . · \ . j f.l \fMIW PAINT MAKER
'. for the program. Public invited.
with music by Smoky Mountain
\
.....
Drifters. Red Carr and Melvin
;

!

~

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall Saturday frolll 9 p.m. ,
to 1 a.m. Music will be by Pure
Couno:y Band. Public invited.

,,

\

John C. Wolf, D.O . .
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Cross will be callers. Public invited.

-

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Information may ·
be obtained by calling ~~763 .

w

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

'•

building.

...

Middle · 's Bob Gilmore-be

•

POMEROY - Revival al the
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
'will be Friday through May 9 at 7
PORTLAND - The Lebanon p.m. nightly with Rev. Billy
Township Trustees will meet McCoy and family . Rev. Dewey
Thursday at 7 p.m. 81 the township King invites the public.

: and Water Conservation District
&gt; board of supervisors will meet
~. Wednesday 81 8 p.m. at the Meigs
• SWCD Offtce.

.

Calendar

POMEROY · There will be a
special meeting ri the Meigs County Public Ubnry Board on Thursday 81 1 p.m. for the purpose of
opening bids for the new addition.

:,!"' · POMEROY - The Meigs Soil

has. Midd'l:;c,n Trophies-was
returned to his home Sunday afternoon from ML Carmel West Hospital in Columbus.
Bob's trouble started some 19
1943-Genrudc Meyer Spencer. days ago when he suffered biJ fifth
1953-Norman Wince, Kenneth heart attack. He was taken to
Cole, Audry Hess Ritchie, Cbarles Pleasant Valley Hospital and was
Paulsen, Pauicia Cline, Gaynell moved from there by helicootet to
Thomas Stephens.
the Columbus hospital. things
1958--Austin Bartoo CampbeU, looked bad for a while. In fact, he
Edwin D, Boney.
.
"coded" sill times the first night 81
1963-l(athryn Qualls Parker, ML Can!lel' Doc IlKS ~ lfnlid he
Donald Wehrung, Janet B. Gilbert might bave suffcm:l brain dan\age.
and Larry Bums. .
However, cheerful Bob kidded
If you have knowledge of any of ·Monday sayin~ the he had "dQne a
those named please let the asaocia- · lot of calculauons" and found th8l
ti?n kno.w. Y?U can do th8l by call- he does notbave brain damage. ·
mg ~pril S101th 81 992-3483 or by
He will be going to the Clevesendmjj: a note to the Pomeroy land Clinic for evaluation in a
_ Alumm Assn., P.O. Box 202, ,· month.ltwillbedeterminedatlhll
time if he can be accepted to partic- Pomeroy, OH. 45769.
Incidentally, speaking of ipate in a special program and
deci&amp;;d if some cooective surgery
'" Pomeroy High School, ·you might can
be done.
·
have noted a story and photo in
. Bob sends along his sincere
"The Daily Sentinel the other day
thanks for your cards and prayers.
noting the 90th birthday of Wheel- I'm sure his many friends wish him
- er Drake, former Pomeroy High
;· teacher. The article did not have an welL
address for Wheeler. Former stuI discovered a book on our
~ dents who would like to drop a
bookshelves.
entitled, "The
card or note to him may do so at Joys of Aging".ItI isdon't
know from
· ;-497 Sioux Drive, Westerville, OH.,
whence
it
came.
It
jus(
sort of
C4308l. I'm sure he'd really be
appeared..
However,
I
have·
I pleased to hear from you. It's been resolved to take time to read
it
~ a while.
when things slow down a bit.
!
,
Don't know if you heanl about Somehow I feel I must be oversome of those "joys". I
! it or not but Trenton Cleland, 17, looting
if
the book Jllelltions anywonder
; son of Mr. •and Mrs. Hank Cleland
thing
about
falling apatt. I'll let
. and a student at .Southern High
you know. And do keep smiling.
.
'
&lt;

Comm~nity

. WEDNESDAY
"
: RACINE - The third week of
:: revival is in progress at ML Moriah
!;:; Church of God on Mile Hill Road
:: in Racine with Ron Blevins, evan,. gelisL Sc.rvices are 7 p,m. nightly
~ with speciill singing. Pastor James
~ Sanerfield invites the public.

by Bob Hoeflich

t'
&lt;.

1993

·
- - -Middleport,
.
--- OH
.
-

.

MIDDLEPORT- N. SeCond - Heno's a chance to own
your own business. A bar that is well equipped and
stocked. ~ 05 liquor license, with 2 apartment• and 1
sleeping room. Buying bu~ding and license. Phone now.
We will be happy to give you all the facts.

Dr•tlclllly Reducecl. $31,100

•s

REEDSVILLE -Co. Rd. 50 - Approx.
aeree ol nice
laying land. Approx. 2 acnos til..,.., 1o acnoe peAire, 35
acres timber. Water and electric aval(able.
121,11110
LANGSVILLE- A newly decorated 1\&gt;1 aiD'Y lrarna home
with • bedrooms, family room with a large stone
fireplace, above ground pool, new hut pump and big
deck in rear. Also has an older ganoge and celar. Hea a
nice big IOl
·
Only S21,000
LONG BOTTOM - Hoyman Rold - This 7 yeor old
modular has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, garden
bathtub, fireplace, island bar in kitl:hen, new heal pump,
and a summer kitchen . All in good condition. Alao has a
trailer hook UR. AI of thio on 3.31 actes.
$45,100
WILLS HILL Rb. - A smal horne that cen be bought 11
is or owner will finish. Has a calhadnol ceiling. large living
room, dining area, kitchen, one bedroom, utility area.
New heat pump. mostly drywalled. All new wiring and
fllumbing.
$28,000 unfinlahed. $33,000 flnllhecl.
PORTLAND -If you'telooking lor that summer horne on
the river. we've got it. One to two bedroom farm hou11
has new windows. 2 car ga~; 2 bams, and on old
chicken houoe sitting on approx. 131 acteS, with 20 10 25
tillable actes.
Aoklng SUO,OOO.
DOmE nJRNER, Broker ............................... llt2-5e12
BRENDA JEFFERS.................................. _,..,,fll2.a056
DARUNE ·sTEWART................................- -..11t2.ae&amp;
SANDY BUTCHER ...................--...- .............. 182-8371
JERRY SPRADUNG ............................... (31M) 112 3tM

OFACE •• ,__ ,.................................................... IIJ.2•

Real Estate General

llr=====:~~==~~=~rl

PubliC Sale
&amp;Auction

ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAY,
.
. MAY 1, 1993 • 10:00 A.M. :
LOCATED AT 2813 MEADOWBROOK DRIVE,'
OFF SAND HILL ROAD, POINT PLEASANT, WV
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE DAPHNE E. CAUDIJ.L
.
WILL BE SOLD

I

lb.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
PORTERHOUSE OR

. ·T'"'Bone steak

4-fio/1 1
170 SHEETS PER ROLL 2 PLY
f
I CHARMIN ULTRA OR 280 SHEETS I
I
PERROLL 1 PLY
I

Gal.

•~.~!o/!~s~!,!~or!I~~

"IN THE DAiRY CASE" CHILLED
KROGER APPLE OR

orange Juice ·

oscar Mayer
Meat Wieners ·

,, Cit,.,.
r•
1·/b. Plcf.

Monday,_May 3n1, 1993 • 9a.m.-3p.m.

510.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE If

\

.
LITE MEAT OR

•

OF UloiiT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER
60 COUPON oooo SUN. • ,.II 2HA r. MAr '· 19111

1
\.--•KROGER COUPON•-'

G

"
"I(V THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE"
MUSTARD OR

American
Potato Salad

• Free Blood Pressure C!nd Blood Sugar Testing
from Veterans Memorial Hospital
• Refreshments
• Talk with Maxine Griffith, Classic OnesM
Director
.
.
• Find.out abqut upcoming Classic OneSM Trips
'

.

'

0·,

G

Pound

I. .I '

'

1

,

I'
',

i

,

I

I

,

l I

I

&lt;

Whatever it taluis~

I

Bonk One.Adrono. NA
MsnberFDIC

'
I

GQ

'.

i'

'

Round oak table 'lion heads and claw feel, Cam,brlr:lge 2 pc.
conlemporary living room auite. recliner, swivel rocller. rodler.
3 pc. Frendl tablea, waklut lamp table. ~k. ike new, RCA
nrmoleconlrolcolorconsole. 7pc. wood dinette, Kenmare 18
c.l. !root 1rea relrigntor, Tappon microwave, 3 pc. maple
amal polllllr bedtoom aulftl. 3 pc. Frendl Cheny Buaent
bedroom suita. Waterfall blanket chill Jenny Lind bed, luR
size bed, maplechooer,cridorwardrobe, cardtable1. Maylag
washa' and dryer, mik glau, ••mwore, Comingwant, prg
cookie jar. 6 place aetting Moss Rosa china by Diamond,
Whell Pallllm 1et ol china, 8IOwnle c:emera, 1majllcllchen
applilncea, natwll9, Qu.tity oookwate. pnllllft cooker,
Anniwnary clock, beautiful painting orr canvas. pictutel,
mlrrar; lampe, llnena, towela. quHII, double wedding ring,
ilowlll' garden, bedoplndl, C~atmU ~tiona, Home
lnttrlor. baakell, EurekiiWI!IP8r, old crac:ka, waltlr hole, 2
pc. porc1r aet, wrought Iron ll!wn ~.llln.l)ice 3f!C, ~lumlnum
glider and chllra, picnic table, hind 10011 ~ 111018.

AfJC'f'ION CONIIC7CfiDaY

liCK PIIIIUI AUCTIDI CU.
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
Co-EXECUTORS: ·
JEAN DUNCAN AND HELEN WILLIAMSON

992·2259
REDUCED I Tupper1 Plaine• 3-4 bedroom home on Main
St. 1 bath, newer wiring Md generaltepen, 2, flmplaces,
handcrafted chandaliers f + acra W1th fenced back yard.
NOW ASKING $45,000 Owner may accept raaaot\eble
offer I
REDUCED! Middleport· 1 t/2 story h,ome 4 bldlooma,
nice lOt lllllelrontpOrcl\. close to shopping. NOW ASKING
$32,000 may 81Xl8PI offer!
NEW USTING· S.R. 124 near Rulland 98.99 'acraa with
rwo older homes. 2 sh~~ one brick~""" gu WI
royal~es . Very nice locatiOn! ASKING $ HS,
NEW USTlNG- WelnutSL In Mlddteport-Oneflootrhome with 2 bedroOms, bath , FANG heat, ClfJIIII/drywoll,
large lront porclr, off otraet perking. va,., 111011 &amp; ellonlable.
$24,500
'
POMEROY- One floor rrame horne with 3 bedrooms, bllh.
1uH finished baiiiMnt lot ol100 k 150 ASKING $10,000
MiDDLEPORT· ln!.ll~-2
htne home Wtto 2 bed- .
room• bath, nN8I' roof, worm momlng flU • - · ASKIN~.s8.ooo Ow!ler moy eccapl 1111101111ble alleol

story

Bridii'IIIICh home 3 blcioom-. 1 112
ro&amp;rpello, baaement VERY NICE
,

BAUM AOIJITlON.
bath,' garage.
LOCA TlONI $55,

YOUR HOMETowN HOUSING COINCTION: Cl&amp;
LAND REALTV INC. CALL Ill FOR YOUII HC*I
BUYINGISELiliii NEEDS. WE Alii TO PI EMili

TERIII: OAIH ORCHECI&lt; wmHD . .
Nil 7 I

laM tar...,. or ... - P'QPiftW'

. . _ ... _ - DNo, """""""· · -

. v.,..•

'

.

\¥

'

�1993

___........__
_____

...4
THE BOOK
BARN
IUY • SEll • 'rUDE
317 N. 2atl St.
MldtlltJIOf'l, Olllo
Mon.·frl. 10:00.5100
Sat•rtlay 10:00.6:00

.
•

..

CloMd Sunday
992·3577
l-12·~3·1-

CHESTER AGRI
SERVICE

JONATHAN DAILEY

Dailey birth announced
Leonard "Ed" and Jeoni Dailey
· : announce the birth of their child,
· • Jonathon Edward Dailey, on Jan.
14 at Marietta Memorial Hospital.
He weighed eight pounds and
· was 18 inches Jong.
They have another child, Sarah
; Dailey.
Grandparents are Leonard and
Helen Dailey and Michael Burke
and Sue Bwke.
Great-grandparents are Ruby
Burke and Dale and Mildred
· . Stearns.

· Health club meets
Frances Goeglein presenled the
program at the recent meeting of
the Rock Springs Better Health
Club held at the home of Agnes
Dixon.
Topics discussed during the pro• gT3I!I were "Folk Cures Treat Many
Modem Ills," "Shoe Inserts Relieve
Pain," "Not So Beautiful Bananas,"
- "Learn to Control Stress" and
"Reserve Water for Full Potassi-

·,

614·985·3831
4·3·93· I mo.

,.,...._................_.._-=1 ,

R&amp;C EICAVATIIIG .
BULLDOZING

PONDs

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

,BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

•

LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

KEVIN'S LAWII
IIIINTENIIICE
949·2391 or
1·100·137·1460

urn."

Lenora Leifheit read "Whai's A •
Matter Wilb Kids Today." .
;.
..
The meeting opened with prayer
" and a flag saJute lead by Dorothy
. • Jeffers. Louise Bearhs gave devotions including poems~ "A Gift of
Spring," ''Life." "Kindness,"
""Come Softly Jesus" and "What
More Can You Ask." Officers
reports were given.
Dues. were collected and the
club voled 10 make contributions to
three organizations.
Helen Blackston conducted a
• coniest wilb winners being Nancy ··
Morris and Lenora Leilbeit.
Refreshments were served to
eight members and one guesiNancy Grueser will be hostess
· for the next meeting on May 20.

.

.

Call614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7

•

•

!i

Pork ··-~:.

I

1

RWOUIU PRICES

CALL BEC
, 992·720A or .
742·2223

Roast

:; Sunday by the Syracuse Volunteer ·
Fire Department with proceeds to
•• go to London Pool. Mary Pickens ·
·. chairman of the dinner, said thai
· serving wiD begin at II a.m. and
continue until everything is sold.
Chicken for 350 meals, an increase
.. of 100 from the department's April
" barbecue, .wiU be prepared. Season
swimming passes wiD also be sold
the day of the barbecue.

Alumni plans announced

. ,..... .

C••'"•J:..'"t:.,....,

,.

limit6 Per
Family,
Please

Name omitted

. Nt•f

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE ·

1Work ·
·~=Adclti-

-Eiaotrlcalancl Plumbing
"ffoollng
-'nlllrior I Exterior

'

•
Bi Roll Prem1um ountain
colt· Ice Cream . Top
Peacll Pie
Towels
.

Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Y. C. YOUNG 111 ·
992-6215

.

I

P-oy, Ohio
9-1

PubliC Notice

'

47269 St. Rt. 241 • 1Yt Mile Off Rt. 7
1 Tluu Chester o• Rt. 241

Resldentl11l Roofing Is our

•P•':!:l.i

PH. 614·985·3949

Also: Re
eli••
Co•tl1uous Gutter•••
Sidi•g.

NOW OFFERING......
OIL AND LUBE S~RVICE
TIRE REPAIR AND ROTATING

Half Gallon Ctn.

3/2C/93/ 1 •o ptl

.:.;"'
iv1~~·~· .

Rea.so•able

ShO&lt;
ReptJ/T

Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

Houra: Sun. 6 lion. Clcotd

r..a..Wtd.Frl.

I:30D$:30pm
Thura. I I&amp; 10 n-3 pm

AND EYERnHIIIG UNDERNEATH

10 mllu10uth

of Galllpolll
on Bladen Road

:=:;;;:;:;;;;::~· ::::::==3,4-=93-=J=mo::.
J &amp; THOME

IMPROVEMENTS

ENTERPRISES

Fro• Foun.ation to

Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobi
Homes and
Aluminum Siding
Washing

Roof

lnsi.. •n• Out
Fr.e Eetlmatee,

LowCoata.
WQrk Guaranteed

614·949·2335 or
614-593·5010

flEE ESJIMAJU

985·4181

26 oz. Box

·Shade River Saddle Shop

L...--~----~------.......1

· 36358 SR 7

Farm Raised Fresh.

Your Choice

Bathroom Tissue

Whole Catfish

Captain Crunch Cereals
'

CoHonelle

.

Ore Ida 20 oz ..Bag . .

Onion ·
lim~

1 Boa Froo

· .. P., Fconily ,"PPoo10

·

Regulor, Peanut Bulier
or Crvnchbeny

1 5•1 6

r

199

01:.1Box

Pkg.

,
"'"\ '

Laundry Det~rgent

I,

4RoU

Ultra Surf

~42•44
. 14·;8Uie
.
oz. Box

Arm &amp; Hammer

loothp•te·

I·

2'' ·
.

.

2.7 oz.
Size

~

.

-

'·~

tho day belort the od ill to Nn.
Sundoy tlllltlan • 2:00 p.m.

2 Front Struts • Labor

Friday. lllonday odllan • 2:00

p.m. Soturday.

• 4 WheeiAiiptnDnt
· Prices Start1ng at
1

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

Aprtt :Ill, ;JO. 1-4. 1154 Slc:ond
A...,uo, Mllchlng . Recllnero,
FJ.hlng T.ckJe, lool•, Flah
Tonb,
Otd
FumHure.
Hol11hold. Rain /Shine.

129.95 +Tax

Born Adulo,
Homo lntorior, Mloc. Baby E·
Rt. 7, t 11 HOuao
Swan C'"k, Flklar 30th
•Ill.
Ctolhoa:

tl':'""'•

' FACIAL

SMALL DOZER WORIK, I
DRIVEWAY WORK
aHUMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
W.AIIotta..
REASONABLE RATES
7&amp;11
P-oor. 57S'HOUR

Miry Kly his 1 proven.
ellective lkln Clle prog111m
designed lor y011r akin type.
Conaulllnta

Carolyn McCoy

(614) 992-5082
Slndr1 Henderaon ·
(614) 992-3647
Producta In Stock

_,_

"992·7553
POMEIOY, ON. •
3/7Sit3/1

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

AMERICAN GENERAL ·LIFE and •
ACCIDENT. INSURANCE COMPANY

Auto-Rentals
Sprin1Tinae
Special

RODGERS E-1 RIDE

1419 State Rt.

614·446-0736

7

•

EAGLES

;..~arls and

Service
mowers • Chain Saws
Wttdtaters .

CLUB
IN POMEROY

Authorized: Briggs &amp;
St111Hon MTD, !'ryan,
. I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DELIVERY
. Houra 16- M..f' Q..3 Sat.
Cl011ed SunciiiY

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. ·Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•526. 1/20193/tfn

Gallipolis

•

!luildey odltlon- 1:00pm l'llday,
- r od- !O:OOa.m.

- Y·

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.
T·Shirts • Hats • Uniforms

,

........

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

FREE card.

.. Lie. No. 0051·32

. 949·2104

-

Bla 4 - l y ~~~- Hlo,

A!lril

Eacoto Friday
Yonl - Rlaa8
CNII·
I Sotunlay,-.._
lpm, ,ali i CR. 28. POll, ·
- . 11 I I, lntlquao, fenlOll, .... - . clothlnt, 114-11115-

-.

£

-

llmlly, May 1 .... 2, ..5,
0. a-In an cO. Rd. 21
112 mile . - Eaotom H.s:
Towo, clothn, . . - , omoll opptllnon. Rain ..- .

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAONG

Frldoy, AINII 30, Amott'a nur

(614)
667·6628

Carllton

ATI'ENTION

srrac....

lchOaf,

wolght · . rowing
rNChlntw
CIIUMI'a,
.......

CA:IILE OWNERS

Howard LWrltesel

MICROWAVE OVEN
VCI!:, REPAIR·

••dAlliiAIU · ·

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

lrlnt Jtilll Or ••
JllcltUp.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

FREE·ESTIMATES

EBLIN'S ELE'CTRIC

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE
New Wiring, Rewiring,
Trouble·Shootlng
COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
Licensed, l1sured &amp; Bonded

Kilt&lt; Underochultz, A.F.A. certified journeyman farrier
now offering his hoof 1rimming ""JVicas to cattle owners.
has 15 years experience as a pmfessional farrier.
All trimming is done with hand tools (not grinders)
using a portable mlloverchuta.
Kilt&lt; 1MII travel up ·to 1y, hours lrqm Utile Hocking,
and requiras a minimum of 15 head of cattle per visit to
Special arrangements possible lor 4-H gmups ahd dubs.

.

,

; Call lor • apfiOitJI-.1

_

614·989·2405

PIHH IHWe -u•• I phot!a-•mlter

--

May tot, l:ti0-4:00, Wolle y.,,
n.., lol- slg,. hom Union

A-. Rain dlilo.May 3nl,.ew. .,

FREE ESTIMATES

. (614) 742·2345

BUllE

-BILL
992·2269

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

TO

-

..,

:IIOlh, lily , ... In ~- lioltom of ~ Hill, riln or

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

·A1soclatl&lt;~n is .
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates f&lt;~r April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on
May 29, 1993.
Mall addresses to
Mtlgs Alumni
Association, P. 0.
Box 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45760

.::.:n

=-~~~.~~
hlng. top,

Thi . .d gj!Od.fl!r j .

and

'.

All Yonl 8o1oa MUll II Pa1111n

(614) 992·5315

614·992·7643

.r

Mlddlepon
&amp; VlclnHy

ROUSH'S PRINTING
. 2251 Sixth St. • s,acuse, Oh.

$100 Ptyofl

. .·. , · cliO ,,..,.,

..

Pomeroy,

_;,::.::;.:::::.;::.:.:..JI....._. DoacllM: t:OOpm the
t!aY belor8 the od ill to run, 1

EVERY THURSDAY

YfllKER AllEY .

Ljfe • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accidenf •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

1--------="'-...,.._

NOTICE OF CLAIMANTS
3·16-93-tln
OF THE STABIUZAllON
- .
- _;;;--....:
REIERVI! FUND ·
Purauant to Section
HOWARD ·
&amp;
3701.18 ollhe Ohio Rwlaed
: • CONSTRUCTION
Cod• and Sectlpn· 33 ol
EXCAVATING
Amended Senalll Bill No.
BUl-LDOZER, BACKHOE '
206 ol the 118th G1111eral
and TRACKHOE WORK
' aGara..s
Ai..mb 1y (S.Ctlon 33), thlhe
AVAILABLE. .
remain 1ng money• ol •
, SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
Stablllzellon R••r,. Fund
HOME SITES end
R•••elhtt
(SRF) wiU be cl•trlbullld ID
TRAILER SITES,
Stoll
&amp; C0111art
Ill• hoapltala end lndlvlcUI
, L.AHDCLEAAING,
.
FilE
EniMATES .
ph-plclana on wh- bihall
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
Ill• monltf8 w.,. Originally
UME8TONE·TRUCKING
contributed. Each peraon
FREE ESTIMATES
667·6179
having a claim fl(llllnat the
SRF m~t pr-t a delm to
tho Sup•rlnt•ndant ol ll::;~;;,;;:;6/lf=;t7/;1:;;~ ~iiiii
"'"uran.. (SUperlntanclent)
•
within 180 daya alter the '
Sup•rlnt•nd•nt compll•
• ·
wllh the atatutorv nouce
TRIM
requlrem·• nt contained In
. s.cllon a't Clalmanta olllle
REMOVAL
SRF IIIII\' piiilnt I clllm to
Ill• superlntandent by 1u11y
·LIGHT HAULING•
completing, 111d promptly
• 1
returning, the SRF Proof ol
•FIREWOOD
Clelm Form. Clelmanta moy
requeat the SRI'; Proof ol
SLACK
Claim Form by writing to lila
.
Superintendent et Ohlo
Stabilization Reeerve Fund,
P.
o. Box 211112, USED RAILROAD nES
. Columbus,
Ohio lhll
U221·1t===d~~::!·
7112. B• edvlaed
any
claim prea•nted lo th•
Suparlnt•nclent which Ia
NURSES' AIDE
po.tmarlled .,.... Nciwmber
WIT C
t2, 1113 shall lie lorav•
H PR
New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
liatrecl• to all pM11•, end
TRAINING
no PIIYIIIellt shal be made
• Replacement Windows
nor any eollon mllntalnecl
LOOKING FOR N4!w Garages
Room Additions • Roofing
·
on th• . claim·. T"• ·
SOMEONE
Superlntandant, • aoon •
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
;.1aonably poaalbl•, .will
TAKE
CARE
FREE ESTIMATES
give conaldNallon to _ ,
olal• pr...nled. You will
OF IN OUR
only r•c•lva wrltt~n
HOME.
communication II your
ca~•••
clallll le r•JNted by the
614-992•
7698
.
Sup•lntendanL
'
2112/nllfn
(4) 21; (5) 5, 12, 3lo

3 Fomlly Yord Bolo: Sot tot,
Mncholl Rood, Boby Clothes,
noma, Moo nhold lome, Fumi-

CHARLIE'S

COMPLIMENTARY

J::!

turw,MIIIc:l
All Yon! Boloo- II Pold In
AdYo... DEADLIHE: 2:00 p.m.

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
• and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

TREE

The foUowing student was omit-

KoyotOM Rood, VInton
~~\· LDto Enrythingl

313193 tfn

Announcemenls

3 AnnOU11C811!ents
QUYSI We Wont To _ , Fram
Youlll WE'RE liVE AND WAITJNGI ~IIQ0.1110o33011 Ext. 31157.
sue Pot 1111n. MUll 11 ta Yn.

,.

,.

,

: -rd.

: :...
-Y., .!_rlday, Sllurdoy,
-~
Route
143, lour mil• off Routo 7.

8

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

:=-::::=:-=~=-­
LOSE 12 lBS In 7 DAYS • Tho Rlcll ,..,_, Auction ComU~Imllo 24 HOUR DIETl Send -ion
1uU · time -~.
-p111i
........
Uconood
Uniltlr Co.I02-131.ol11.

•nd iarp lllf.oddrMood, ,..,Ohio &amp; Woet Vi""'nlo, 304otompod .... . _ for oampte ~
•.,
and 1 - l a n pocllage: Nutrl- ~==·----­
lion Cont.,, P.o. a..x 40, Hon- 9
Want
. Bd to Buy
;:,;d.,.=on:.:.,WV:..;.::ZIIt:.:.:tol;:... .....,,....,..,...
Deooraled 1tonew1re, oH 111m~.
My~ll
On ontlquo ....nHuro, md pouch
Booch, -t &amp; 2 Rm, Elf.llotot
$401 $55
Nightly. 1175 IS228 W-y. Ralo thwn...,ltwa. geMNI tntlInc. Mom. Wk. Coli ~8-5112. q... Rivorlno Ainlquoo, Ruoo
~. owner. We do ·~
- - - - , . . , . . , . . . - - - pnJIHia, 114-1112~.
$t

992·3838

2~'

3 Family Sole: Friday, Solurdoy,

"A Quality Assured Contractor"

985·4473

: Happenings

742·2321

20 Years Exp.

.......... .

limitl Box Free Per Family, Please

3
Friday, Satunllv In C.IWOI\IIy
llehlrid Vlllagelillclt Shop, t-7

4-11-1 mo.

: BISSELL

1 Roll
Pkg.

, Harrisonville

'

'

614•142·2138

11411ulbony Awo.
Jlamoroy, Oh. 457S8

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy
FomHy Yonl loloi, Thunc!ay,

MM BUILDERS

PH. 614·256-6160

-c...........

ted from the deari' s list f~ the winter quarter at Hocking College:
Marc French, Middleport.

·

Ple•ty-of

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

949·2168

Your Choice of Variety

limitl On. Free Per Family, Please

'
Clotine Blackwood entertained
• the Lend-a-Hand Circle a1 her
home Wednesday evening. There ·
were 12 members ~01Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
and Robert Day Blizzard, Albany,
Yil.ited Sunday evening with Mr.
: ~ Mrs. Bob A.lkiie.
.
Mrs. Lisa Dil!'and children,
: Syracuse, were Sunday visitors of
·• ·Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stienmentz.
.· Mrs. Marlyn Wilt and sons,
Lancaster, called on Stella Atkins·
and Ruby Diehl recently.

~~('

Celllr.... .,
5770
20•v-n.hp.S.WIH

Plans are now underway fiX- the
·• 1993 Racine-Soulhem alumni banqu~t scheduled for May 29 at 6
p.m. at the high school gymnasium.
Further information is available
" from Shirley Stewart, 949-2617 or
: L;wra Han. 949-2656.

CIIIS,IAI
COII,RUC710N

HAULING .

LEATHER REPAIR

·ar•a•s

CIIIIIOIII I IDIUI10III

•

. Joe Hill, 14, son of Pat and
. Nancy Hill, is recuperating from
·.• surgery at Arthur James Cancer
... Center, University Hospitals,
Columbus. He expects to be there
another 10 days. Cards may be senl
· ·to Joe at Arthur James Cancer Cen·
. ter, Room 735, 300 West Tenth
Ave., Columbus. Ohio 42310.

OWNER:
JeH Wkkerillam .

wMh ..._
up - , 1~4-~d2984.
To oi•Mwoy, 111 Fold truclt lor
porto. 304475-1212.

411618311 mo.

. Sani D.airy

·_ Hospitalized

992·3470

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;

lndepet'tdent Bnuty

AUO GAS lANK
REPAIR

SIZED LIMESTONE

I

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

3-11·93

Fertilizing, WMdlng,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

COMPLETE .
WELDiiiG AND
UDIITOR
SERVICE

36970 BaR Ria Road
Pomeroy, Ollio

Cheshire,

MARY KAY

'
FREE ESTIMATES

Arm Picnic

A chicken barbecue will be held ·

f

SIZED UMESTONE ·
FORSAU

Lllwn Mowing,

•

Fresh Shoulder

Chicken barbecue
scheduled Sund·ay ·

..

· Quallg
Stone o.

•M a~ter

r.1ix
•Buckey•~ f'ec;ds
•Fr•rtilizer fJulk
(; !3 ,1 CJ
•P1 onecr Sc,:ch
•Farm Supplies

WICK'S HAULING .
' SERVICE

Olveeway

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM
S1.00 PER FT•

You-Won't Find A Better

·-=

MYRTLE
BEACH RAMADA:
Ocean Front Luxury Condo· l,()

Pool, Slo- 4 To I. $575 Wlek,

Coil OWnor, IICIUI1t-3!111!

REDiJcE; Bum Ot1 Fill Wlllto

You SiooJ!t Ton OPAL A•ollabto
At: Fruth ~hlrmocy.

4

Glvea'Way

EliOirto

trolna

-

Ftyor or llonol. Aloo

flit

IKIIIonoTo-y s-.1
F-lo Colloo, Colt Aftor I P.ll.
~~~-251-1377.

So-

. ...~·· rt• 30W75-11Q.

Puo&gt;IIIM. llillod Blood, J a D'a A&amp;llo Par111 lnd
814-44MZW: .
3 Malo

pons.

:=i'"* ... a truo/is:

-1-.---·
Old - m.MIIea,
••wl.....
lila.

..-

chino,
,.....

... Dilly .._, .,..

.

•

�..
P~ge 12-The Dally St!ntlnel

,,

Employ

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio
~ poy rent ,.... ...;
owna1IIIIS141ll-wlh
5 , . . wamnly, .. _
aldrllng.
. .- a n d allup lor.-_
Coli lor In-ian, 81+385-

rncr'l Sc" ·.rce&gt;

Help Wanted

11

1ha

44

A,......._Call

Rent

tmMo, Depollt 6 R•fWence
Required. &amp;1t 441 0140. Lava

.
•
,

..._
"'"
1 Badraom,E Ntar ~r
Hotpltol, conomlcal Gal -·•
stllopoolton,RRoqol.Fu~.!"!!!'·.!2~7..

1

=

you.

Eam Addhlontil,_ln Spare
~lantl Company, I.Dcll
or--.., UnllmRtd Potential,
Opportunhy. Sond For
lntor-ion To: Opportunnr,
C~ 261 cJo Golllpolle Dally
TribuntC,:S Tltlrd Avo,_, 0.~
.-,
411831.

ca.-

"I ' m a little disappointed
with this submarine exhibit. •

:!::':n
~,~.t!i,~~':'J~ ~=~=~ Op:.rtu.l:;'~~:
Slllh St Ploallnt, Wocl. May 10, voncomtnt. Sond Rnumo To:
10:00 om to 3:00 PM, ook for Job

Corp rep.

C~

288, c/o Oltllpolll Dollr.

Trlbunei.~.25 Third AYINIUI·, 0. ·

lm-llla Oponlna For Port llpollo, UH 45631.
lfuH lima RN, Rotfol Shift Su- WOIIIon: llokt mora monoyl
. parv-. Compa1111vo Wogao, F- eight wttk lob preparation
- 01-111 With E1porlonc:o, E· ptvgrllm about nonlr~~dlllonol
quol a.ortunhy EmploJor. om~mont, (ONOW), 1-800Contact Tlto Dlroctor 01 Nu. . .:63::.:.7"=:.8::·_ _ _ _ _ _
lng, Plnacrtll Cart Cantor, 170 1Pina-l Drlvo, Glillpolil, Ohio 12
Situation
· 45&amp;31,114-441-7112·
Wanted
~W ENFORCEMENT D£A, U.S.
MARSHALL'S Now Hiring. No lnlotmotlon on baby Cfodlo buill
EaptfiiiiCI ...,. FOr Ap. 0 - olorogo chnl, oold •• IUC·
r:-'lon Into. Call 211-755-8661, lion oround t990, call &amp;t4-852·

-mOnt.

own -

Ctll 1-IIIO-J110.7377,
CUI llln 118 Yn+) Or Wrlto:
PAASE ·S3Z. 111 S. Llncolnwoy,
. N. Auro&lt;aiL 10542.

lomtont To Care For
lloiiW In Tltaro · Home, Com·
panlonthlp And SuporYlslon.
1,._.11!11.
.
No Elptrltnclt 1500 To 1900
WooldJ IPOiontlol Procttolng
FHA llorlgago Rtlundt. Own
Houl8. 1-501-448-0503 E11.2t3.
24 Houro.
Now Toldng Applloatlono At:
Dornlnot ~~. Golllpolitl a
Point PI-nt. -..V.
A NISTRANURSING
HI11 NDIIII1 Co
TION.SCOnic
Urll ng
ntar, a (1001 boci!J&gt;ng Term Core·
Ftclllly tnd mombtr ol tho
I.H.S. . .tnlty of Haanh Care
1o curr'onlly ottldng
tht aanlk:ao or an oxg:rlonctd
Dlr,.octar ol NasurliNng. rftrndMids•H••
w .•
pa
.
I
Complolo undorllll!'dlng o
llocllcaro documontllion In tho
Long Term Cart tnvlronmont,
AbiiRiy to motlvoto ond dlroct a
otrang, lllonloci ·Nurolng .StaH,
and iiolltln Slolo O.parfmtnl
of Hoaftft Survoy Elporitnct.
PlUM ... II
retume •nd
,..... Dll to: Sc.nlc HUla Nu,.._
Ina Conltrf 311 Buckrldgo Road/
Blilwtll, Oh 456311 ATTN: Ad·
. mlnlolrotor. Thank you.

-=•

Pr...-..

R - Soltl Old Eotobllohocl
Componr
Sooklng
Solll
Rop&lt;nd"s..llnlotndlvnl lcn Tho., AGallla
A
rfOU
ng ou 'I rna.
•
- 000 ~•0 •
- 000 Flrot Yoar
-··
..,.i
Bono
"11 I lncontl..
Ea m 1•._.
Complota
Tralnln•• •
Pr-am
-.:
•
For iniii'YIOW Call llr. Loughry
At: 11+44~090 Thursdsy April
2!1, From tO:OO A.M. -8:00 P.ll.
Fnday Aflrll 30 From 10:011 ~.II.
-12:00 P.IJ. Noon.
. Rotall Jowo'- El·
So•···
"7
portonca Roqulr~~d, For Meigs ·
Co. Storo, Apply AI Acqulolllon
.row~, 1!11 Socqnd Avonuo,
Gantpou, lion -$at, 111-12.
TELEPROSP.ECTOR·
nooctoct
lm-lottiJ. Opanlng .aYOIIablo
In local lnturonco olllct. Con·
dktatN mult po:t. .ll! excellent
comMunlcollon okiiiL typing
25+ WPM and bt available 40
Monday noon
thru ·S .turct.y noon. Prior
1ttamarkollng and lnouranco
t&gt;ptfltnco a pl... lllntorntod,
tand rnumo wllh oalory hlotory
to P.O. Box 1079, Mariotta, Ohio
45'110 EOE
.
.
Tho
llolgo
I.Dcal SChool
Ia
currently
MeklngDlotriCI
apo
pllcotlono ~om cortlflild op~llctnto tor an Aoololanl Vorollk
Footbtll Coach 12 poolllona ,
A-rYl Football Coteh, 71h
llh Grodo Football Coach (2
potltlonl~ Boro' Varai1J Bao- .
. kotbtH Coach, Boro• 9th· Grado
~
Coo • B
-•-n
e·~ - oyo' 8th

,.,.,.. ,... -•k,

~~::~':l..'lb:,lh•C:.~~:

Ctoao Cot:,f Coach, Aoaloltnl

High SC .
Trock Coaeh,
Junior Hloh Track Coach, Anlolont JuniOr Hlah Track Coach,
Ba-lll:oach, Asolotont
8-btll Cooch, Gl~o · Rnorvo
8ookotboll
Cooch,
Glrlo'
R... rvt Softball . Cooch, Glrlo'
•untor High Bookotball · Cooch,
"
New
·

~:t ~~oo~hoot"'cl:!~r~=;

AtiYIMr,

Junior
High
Advloort Junror
Cioll Sponoor, Quiz oam Ad·
.,.or,
Aulotont High SchoOl
Principal ipo~ tlmo), Hood
T-hor 11 Srodbury Etomantary
and Mentor lot lho 1993-94'
ochool yttr. Appllconto mUll·

~looclor

•

:=,: ··~lld011t~~··c~~:;

Ions muet meet certltlca•
r-ulromonto ol Ohio lor
~-I 110 dCPR p
-'1
lc
an
• or·
110M lniWHted ahqukf cantlct
'~ ~-nt- S•~rlniOndonl
- · -~ -· .~
""acxlllial' .!;.-E 1 SCMhaooln"'"tr~HI
.o,.

m. ·3 ~ 111

~

-aroy. Ohio.
Tho Town of Ntw Havin will -b.
-llflll~ ifrlcallon•· throiJgh
b
aummar pool
Mt"' ~
-plo)atl. Sand appllelllon to
T - al, Htvtn, P.O. Bo1
_117, HIYtn, WV 25285.·
';,.

'

I

......,_

52

•
2bdnn. opll., total tttctrlc, op.
plilnctl · lumilhtd, laundry
room lacllhloo1 clooo to ochool
In town. APIIIICIIIont available
ot: Vllogo ·a,_, Atllt. 141 0&lt;
caiiiM-812·3711. EOH.

!)

Gutters Cleaned Light Hauling,

•~h

"f·tc
.:..,.,.,

"'"'""'

~~===========~=====;:==~~
• -

54

56

Miscellaneous- .
Merch•ncllae
•-.

1

AYOn.:~..::=~w.:~ =.:.nll.r.~ "ilt~:·

2117.

.

•

aq·,.=

•

'rh--

S::!: - ..-.

~~G~~~~y, 711~~ =~:.-- $71 All Slab, 81+
~::'mont• :,~lddta~~~';!,~ -

$111. CaiiiM-1112-6850. EOH.
Modern 2 BR op4.114-446-0390.

1381

2bclnn.

-

illond;

875-3122.

3S

21 .

Build your houta on tlltao 2
tale. COmbined ala 801100. In
clly llmht. Btllo-d - ··
85000 lar both - · 304-0751114.

Lots

&amp;Acreage

. INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
racommo- lhot you do bullnHI wllh poopla JOU k - , and 41 Ho· - - lor Re
.. nt
NOT to oand manor llwo:,'?.n tht
......,.,
•
InvMI gal oct 2 Car Garlg~~J. 3 Bedroom Houu
ml II u ntll you neva
tho ollorlng.
FO&lt; Rant In l'lontl BubciYIIIon,
Gall Ia Countt Florlol For Sola; S380IIIo 1100 Dopoolt, IM-24151 14
Sorloul I~ rlat Onlyl Phone:
- -·-::-=--:---:--::,..,.--:-1
81+~1118 Aftorl P.ll.
2 « 3bdrm. homt In Rulllnd,
Locol.
Routt: Sl ~ A dopotlt I 10loronco roqulrocl, no
.-· palo! 114-7112-2681 •fttt 5pm or
Wool&lt; Potont .lltal St11. 1. - . an~ moon w-ndo.
653·VNMS.
,.
8

-------..,---.1
=

V.nci'/J

=~f1o~pproclato,

&amp;50oo., 614·

Bath""'"'-.,(- tlzo) "o.
Four doon dlf!Wont .$10.
Nch. 304-675-11117.
Bod nllo. hotllllal type, fill
qUMn, tuM or twin - . Uu
,_, $100, 114 • 42.,.
Ball dn-t _ . , ~ " ' machine, ,_.., -rol and
opoado-ar, aood -ion,
$71,11+112~
Birch c - - . _ $10, &amp;u..u
Tl-~~.. •--~ lanl. - .
Sc"=~n·n
Pup .~.
. •...
$10.
.

lloyo Blcyllo I 18" And liO" •211
Olm,t Gtar T - $20, Supar
Nlnttndo ,.._ S111, 114,4413200,
Burpaa Stadt and bulk now on tala 11 Paint Plua, 2101
Jacillon Avo, Point - .
wv, 304-875-4014.
-

: ::lk: _ . , 21112 x11d
Yol 135 Ulocl 40
112 Far
- . ~~-

I =-~"::'-:7''-':'"'="-.7---.--:-

T - a EquljiiiiMIIJ.. 1T.... Loocf Of Good Yard ...Ia
- I l l ; No Clolhlng, lluot
T• A11111+3711-11251.

Prom •

11,

-

· I,

ctrr·

~ uoollant condhlon,
, two- $11011., 11+1112·
315hlltr5pm.
Puth- $45, 1 ,......1510.

R~wn
_ , Rotolhltr,
Both
- . ,~--lonl
WI
SoA ,..,__
.lull U~

Bclh

•=
~_,.

Brand~ 6,._7611,

Bam -&lt;lite.. Balllalltld · loci
dttlgn
~
.. _

'¥,:-

:.r!J
·-• _ ,
d'.iii; • lily 22. 8utJilul...,al
0111ot"".1rr Brlu~~ ';""'
Pll.

~

I g :00

Otk China Cablnolo,
Tabln, Chairs Hutch•, CoHu
T - -End Ttbloa, Etc. RIYtr
VallaJ Otk Fumllura, Gtorgn
Crook Ad, 114-444-4311.

~~-· 9:::\."~

EaWhacl\tl;
·~llt&lt;lna. .~'
- - . ~ -. . . . . . . _
01111.

.":/:'!

Chromo" bruoh guard, 141; lrf
pod epookar ~~aneta, $10 - ;

~ruar-...L- pii)W'

co'

In
put,
omnm, 010: 11+317·7729. -

r::.~· Slua: 1111, 1110.

'«&lt;S: -

-curllfn.plnkllorol,plnk
2323.
·a plootlo hoOill ..-..
· - - ••
::=1-.,......
Coot l Wo '~bu1n11, ~ ~t
11+1411-zozz.
PIUI Ftln, P00 Rrm.
~~~ . . . . . M8chlne S55;
0110.
OlhH!IIo .,.,..,..ar Whh Four
Com-.:llf - • ton, l2l: Typing BallO.
Z.rox Coplor,
n- -~~ tool bauo, Sl2oa.; .,,.......,._
· l1+112-30l't. btlara
.
~1-·•
Spartl Tobia Top Bun . Lomp,
Couch 1 Chtl&lt; IM'X7-7llll
Good Condftlon Will! 1n11rue'
·
lion Wltl Soli $40 Ctll
Dryer, good,
114-112- 1 6351.
·
Super NES Bullo VI. Bla..a
tEndblalaU"!_~ $10; llllplol~~ ~~ tapo, ~ 114-112I , - MW, $50; ~· u,_, ....., montr. olcL
.
2521.
Tandy Computar, Col« llonnor,
Finn Fin E.-efta Mtchlnt, 1 PrlnWr, ·I S PR&gt;Qrllme, 3 Yaara .
Month Old, t140,114 Ul 321L
Old, llt ...41.o731 Altar 3 P.M.
tlaclriC - ·

-.-..,...,

sao,

*·.

2

-.fuR
-:i.'::

=

For St1o- Loc11oa w1n1or
ltngth. wlpllld
d,Y clllitOd, hO, I
For •~ -~..- I I """"
~
wlnt8r COM,
denim w1 lut..... r
·~
trtm. like new, · now
$40, ,..d $150; Oloo mloc.ll•aa
aiOihlng: call 1, . . .. 2151 , 115pm or~1+MI-220hftarlpm.

ns.

Ttchnlco S l - Rtealvar With
R-~u-. Dual
~
114-4441-7231, Aftar e

•~
• 1on antonna •N
--• , _ ,
,_.,,
100
~ -••1a1
._ coax I nd •,... 3

....._ liar~~~--.....-.
....,. _.......,___

=.!., ~ :1-.~ =--~
condlllan,$100,-

~"":;

Oro-. """i
._.'1148
' ·

::.

-CJ·

r.:.•• J:

941 -:~04s. v" "'r

~

20 Ac,.a,,_1 112 Story, 3 llocf.

room•. With Elocllk:, Wood
Hul, .~oponlt Gttr~gt, Born. I
Mllta From 11-rvllla Oft AI.
790, 81+2511181 After I P.ll.
Wltk- Anrllmt.
2bdnn., full bttimw~. cloao lo
town, '"""
or
~".!f'i'
.
~·~I, I'M--

-~-··

•

l""'· I!!~

3 lloclroom brlott nnch, 5 mil•
from Pt. Ptl on At. 2. 1112 Mitt.,·
trontpcrdtldacll,-oclyord,
2 car dotochocl gor~gt, 187,000.

304-t~l-1071..
3 Room Houta On , krot, Pal"

llal~tmodolocl4. Nooclo Work,
15, • 114-2711-l! 2. •
F
·
our bodroom, , _ pump,
lour ocraa.- to tchoolt. In
lown, 122,500, 11:4'112·3111. ' .

1

4

Rolllgorator, Color T.V., Woohor, King 11u - - · 3,... old- 55
Building
Dryer, Mlcrowavo, VCR, 614-2!11· 1210. nag. GE oloctlk: IIGYI,
lbtftnJIH ,
_123
_ 8·- - = = : - - -- - - · 1110. GE - - . - ·
::!2:::
SWAIN
. $110. --471-71134.
l_,--:o-:-.,..,...:..:....~,..--.,.AUCTION I FURNITURE. l2
llrtck, p i - wino
Oliva St., Golllpollo. Ntw. Uotd Lawn'"""- porto, $11; old nlahl dowo._~ e10. CIIUclt Win•
aland, tiOOj -IOOIDIII-. ,.., ,._....... OH Cal 11+
tumHure hHlel"' Wett1m &amp; ~ji\4-'Jiti1~2124~
- · - ..---.
Wtllllo. &amp;1+256-152~.
' Wort&lt; boOta. 114-44&amp;-315a.
~~·
_ , . , Ront· 2 or 3 boclroom
!-!8"'111,.- wlh - · $110.
Racine oroo, 114-1112-5856.
' ~1,1 ~~.a ~:'~~~~~ns\,R"t~ : ' : :.':""~~!
~
11111
-. 3
Page St.lllddla.~r.
T'~on"'
F~
Two bodniCHII - · · 1250/mo.
,.....
ur..,..
bi•• Ql, 81+
·-·prfyoll -lng In Pomor~ pay
VI'AA FURNITURE ·
112-1813.
-.
•-• • --~ or 304-773own ,.llftlta, 114-8411-2521•.'
114-441-3151 Or 114-441-442l
. "'Il DAY BAll~ AS CASH
lJU naw , - . ... kpaocl Two oor l'!rll... - 1 ' 1 " · 42 Mobile Homes
OR RENT·2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT) Girla ~. 115; Ill" ii1L - l d .• .., D1ll1'loda,
for Rent ·
--,
oilii I ' - • . , , - 112 win01/TSID£
. . ., ......... reol, Mtntl
Nlca mabllt homt tlltt lor up Wro"lht Iron Tobit
FURNISHINGS:
Can • • ~.. 'II" .,wl•• all
W/4 c••1-· lllnlo IMIIirlcullnlor.
~~
........, to11110r.on.abtnoaanAt•-0
.
·~·-· _ , _ . . , .... _ l r l t l l - • • . P - - ' . $15/mon., 1•.'::::.. Fon ick Rocking Choir &amp;58: - . 20 IIi&amp; - - , _ Pr 1 1 ian ,,....
21
·-,.
- - Garden Arch Wav'a *'29 00
dtap. ........... - •
11•1111••• or-~.
17.
'
,. • r '
"~
flwtl• 111 ntm1W - . T...
T- 2bdrm. trallaro.. CondOr Bocldlna ·Twin Molt Sot $111, Full ~oclgaa 11121. lll4-lfTiol1l2.
58 P.rl for Sale
!'tot,_Pomeroy, 1250/mo, 1100 Ill sot Ouoon 1141 Sot; 4
-poon, nc pota, 114-88:r-3013 P10war i!hnt 144.15; Car Bod'i, Matching ilacll-. Flll • -. ond 1upp1y 1~
antr 5pm.
Bunk Bocl'o, Pootor Bodo. Full ....... FObrtc SIO Each, 11+241- - . . . . All ..........
Line 01 8oulhwolltm
11M.
·Pril , _ - r .
~ .bodtoom, . CIA hNI, Stortlna AI 120.00: lnclanollany llallt.U ~ IIIII -~ Coli II' " ' 023L
....lmo., wtohtt and · dryor !lhtpO'' i &amp; Sl- Stilling At
,_
·~!""&lt;d"'l p, dop. and r111., no palo, $11.00. 2 Localioni·Btaldo ~.-o . .,,..11~
uoocl A-n Clroy 9orllfO- VetY
-% . Mount to oldorty, 00\lnlly' Aucifon Or 4 Millo Oul 141. . $311,. no,..._ T-ift, LO}tafllt. Cage i, All,
-lng IM.e43-52Jf
·
~.....
f71Q. 11+4414713.
·
•
. •
.
0pon I A. II. To I P.lj, llorl4ol.

a-.

-

li~~oii;;,jjhlt~•l;•i;~;;i;:ng3321~41JiiJi12ji-;N;;jve~1
..
--

=-

=-~ -~ !_" -

t:':;

a

_...,r

~01

.A1096 3

. A Q3
.AQ

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

·- - -

'

'm"'

*"!!!!'o.

-

. I

BARNEY
I GOT JUGHAID'S
SCHOOL PITCHER,

IT LOOKS
PER1ACTLY
LIKE HIM II

ii7,ooo

Atdlo,

lllltl,

61

Farm Equipment

MIZ SMITH

1m 120 _ _, F~n
eq...,. btlar; 1f77 M-J_For· -~~. Ford, Ocdg• pickup
1
13 ;"~,';_u; I ll2· boclt. 8ltool .,. long. No rull.
30W7M2118.
AC s no Ill com planter,
Holllnd 4711 ~no, Gthl 74
Motorcycles ,

:!,l~l:'s:"~s.elcaltnt.

=UI

call3011141hr.,.uft

PEANUTS

6

Mt-r ftrlfUIOII 1010 TriCIOI
sa,380: 135 11-y Turf ...150:
IIIRtJ ZU 15,160: f Ft.
Fin- 1150; I .ft .
..'II. 114-211-8522.
!lagiOt•ocl purwbrocl &amp; lull
~aadld Ulftoutln bulle &amp;
""''""'· 11+112-4110.
~,.:.,SOil.taclhhmDttvnonHtpolrplllodn B~nd"

••
••
blld or wMh nlva ot oldt Alto
llr. llonllna 3 brocl htlr.r~~, one
pollod htrd alro, P!fcocl on lnoOKtlon, Ohlllco-Fanno, 114Sli-251Z

tiET A

1

TOUPtr.

..

55 Yamaha (llkt

new). Troitlng moto&lt;, pluo ••·

!!::·11W11". '
••~

kopt. Evoningo 304-

Evinnldt Sport Wind 1.5 HP
Bcol , 11ot,!&gt;!1 Good Condition,
1300,114-.,...
.,
1147.
llutl ttiL lt64 Chri
11
ocra

~~.s:oft-:::7U~~·with

76

·

·
·
Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

TttiNIC .lIt,£

.l

1182 Rlnkor 11 112 ft . okl boat,
ll'llk lllru wlndlhlold, 140 HP 1!0
Mtrcnliltr. lnciudn lrlllor and
,. _ _ k•... ·~ · - - •
· -..,.. .,... ~·~··3•·
1115 Sid ~ Good Condition.
Ellrul IS.C.W Finn. Call 81.,..
t41 0"0; After 5 P.M. 114-446·· -·
21 ft. Rtgot cutty cobln wllh ,E·Z
loocltr trllltr. 304-675-2$27.
boot

•

• • •

BORN LOSER
,.YE!&gt;T~Y WE: t.mNE.D TAAT

"

•TH£ 810GilAAl'( OF BW.w\1 N
flWU(LIN ·~THE mJE

,.C)J.I

f*IYO~ e,ut~ WAAT "TN£ 041

HJTOe&lt;ClC.IWHY OF ~N
FAANli.L.U•n~ 'f

!~lORY OF BEN
FRANW!ol'~ UFE ...

McQuain
· A narrow opening or crack is a
CRANNY ( "every little nook and
cranny"&gt;. Canny spellers. know to
insert R after the C of CANNY for the
noun CRANNY.

Black IIIII tool boil lor Bh.

64 -

Hay

&amp; Grain

Ht
1111, $1.50 -~ IN~,.
bt ~, tor
~
1114-M1-30511aft•.4pm.
Straw lor •'-· 114-812·~-

Transportation

11 AIJIOS fo. r 'Sale
=~.,..-..;,;....,....,_,'""".,...,.""
111r.1 ......._ lm-to.~lnal 350
V8 .;;;•r BOdY
-tlno~io4-el5 1111 thtpo.

79

C8f.!!Pers &amp;
· Motor Homes

::304=..-rl-.::=l;cMO;-:.:::-:=-:c:--~
111D H1!,Z, loutd, ...., and

;:.r• _._..

~11-

Services
81

=="" ...,. u,aoo.
=toM.
•ft

1111- ..U, olr, PW, Pll,
traoo,OIO, ,....._

~~- auto., - .
-~
--;.-:•,
••-•n 1 • "
p.... or

....,_.

I

-

' --

Ponllac Grind Am 72.001
lataflonl Condllill!l,
12.100.114 111 1144.
·
ltl7 ,..,., .,.,_ GL I - ·

Alllo. 4 ~. ,_, 11!9t..;
AC; PI, !'1, Gewl , _ .._
I ...,. ....., Nw ~oft.~._fiii
lliliiM. • .-.-~
1111.
'

'

.

47~

48 WWII area
411 llullk:lan Cugat
52 Tille

DOWN

54 l'tmlonn

1 Slender

56 Comedian -

Plttlpe

57 T!fllt ttllout
58 Way out
59 Wheel track

IF 'IO.J WERe NOT eoRtJ
ON THIS CA:n:: ...

IWEDNESDAY

RIFF

..,..nee

tjipt(anca ropolro, WV
304-67W:IM Ohia 114-441-24!54.

A~. Wll Put Slngial Dtl For ·
$11 IW Squar11 Call 814-388·
11164, 10 Yttro Elporltncol •

lajltlo Ton~ Pu....,ngj80"Golllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPKISES
Jacil8on, OH 1_..37-tS28. '

Utility Bldg Spl: 30'140'11'
Palnfocl 81101 Sidoa GIIVIIUmt
IIIII -b!.:o':'ll' Sliding Door
14' Walt
$5,8811' £roctoct:
..,. Bldgt. 1-.w.
1041.

Will build pllla ....... dock•
wuttttocl ,......., put up vlnrl

=:' lroliw' lltlrtlng. &amp;1484

Elec:trlc:al &amp;
· Refrigeration

8 3,000,
Rom en
9 Train rte.
10 A volcano
11 lltdllerr•
gean boat
1611al(cocktatl)
18 Lava
21 Food
22 Son hat
23 Cal' sound
24Let-25 lonUered
animal
26 Noun suffix
28 Abstract
being
29 Olympic org.
30 W. Colli coli.
31 Hollerlhou
33 Tn agcy.
34 Household
I)Od
37 Greek Island
39 Uncannler
41 Wear away
42 ActreuUllmann
43 Yaol aget
44 Lunch, •·II ·
45 - tu, Brute
48- or Eden
48 Wide ahoe

· llze

411 12, Roman
50 L11ge bird
51 Decay
53 Greek letter
55 Cutting tool

CELEBRITY CIPHER
r.mov.

tl'lt--

Celebrity Cipher cryptogr~m~n ~ from quowtlonl by
PIOPfl, PU1 atKI present
Elcft lett• In
~tor lnOtMt. T«&lt;IIY'I t::IW: , ~ ~u- G.

' D Z D D Z J P
OYJWZDA

(s w

..;. ~ r

W Z N I

J N

J

B J N

J ·N

NXAAD

OYJPMAN
SJVZTP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I could do a IBw dance routines, I don 't think
would OYer have stoppocl danclnit. because I love it. " - Ruby Keeter .

WORD
GAME

I

GNUFL

I

...,;H:=-;Y_E:..·.;-N:.....;.0-1, .,. .=
11- 4

1. 1 1 1 :-;

As a kid I didn't do many
things because I would be dis·
appointed if I failed. My .dad
said it was okay to fa il, but it
, .was a real failure - · to ... _

. T RE E LT
If-..,-1 ::...,176....:;~~"1~r-; Q
::......:TI&lt;5

Complete the chuckle quoted
by fil ling in the ri1 is$ing words
L-....1.-.L-.....1-..L....JL--!. you develop from step No. 3 beloW.
•

•

•

•

oft PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

W

THESE SQUARES

.SCIIAM-Lm AN_SWERS

.. Idiocy • Class • Ensue - Script • ACCIDENT
Woman driver lo passenger, "The brakes don '1. work,
that'.s ~Y I'm driving so fast. I want to get you homa
before we have an ACCIDENT!"
-

--- -··

CI 1M3 TV O.ta T:ct::?toe~:: , LP

APRIL 281

' .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) People l)light
can help you to understand whit to do to
be willing to take you into their confidence
ASTRO-GRAPH
make the relalionship work. Mail S2 plus a
today to tell yo u lhings lhey won't tell oth ·
long, self·addressed. stamped enveklpe lo
ers. Don't yield 10 temptation and repeat
Malchmaker. P.O. Box 4465, New Vorl&lt;.
whal
heard.
NY 10t63.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) The
BERNICE.
GEIIINI (.,.y 21-Juno 20) There Is a
merchants who run lhe stores in lhe shop·
ping mall could be •ery glad to see you
chance today that you mighl waste a ,tot ol
BEDE 0SOL tim ~. and ellort trying to change somiilhlng coming
Ieday. However. your spouse might
you reaNy can't. Make the most olthe hand not be as enchanted when the bills stan
you are dealt.
comlrt(l in.
CANCEJi (June 21-July 22) When you
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jen. 19) It might be
start things ioday. you are likely lo do so
wise nollo delogale an important assign·
With a liOUriSh and I strong surge Oi en&amp;r·
mltnltoday 10 a person WhO haS lei you
gy. Unlortunalely. howe•er. you might lack
down previously. This individual's inten·
the fortilude to stay lhe course.
lions 11'8 good. but his or her perlormance
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) P.atienca might nol
could be poor.
be your long suM Ieday ll'hen you 1111 deal·
"OUI,RIUI (....,. ZO.Feb. 19) you·relikely
April Zl, 11113
ing with co-workers. Be c:aJelul not to make to be lather ef1ective at handling big prob·
critical comments Wthey teiiiO meet yotjr
lems IOday. but minor inlraciions could
Advancement In your cnoaen field ol
perlormance standards.
• lhrow y0u oft·ballnte. Don't gi\ie in 10
endeavor iS a slrong possibility in the year
YIROO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) You COUld ba
Insignificant drawbacks.
ahead. What Y.,u evanlually 'gain could be
PI8CU (Feb. ZO..,.ctl 20) SubdtJt any
rather lonunate lodly In acquiring llllnga.
subslantlal . bul galling 1o that point miltlt
but you might ha.. a problem hOicllrtp O(uo
impulaive lnclfna!lona In ,your financial dul·
r11ally tNt you~ patience.
, ·
whaiBYOr you gain. Don'IIOu the Older
lngs loday. Rllll or errallc behaviOr could
·
· 111m • pn;lltlriio a loll,
·
· TAURUS (April 110-MIV 20) Beware of · ·~alter you'.. lllldlthe NlelnclinaliOnoloday ID takt unnectaury
UIRA (8lpl. n.o.L D) In Older to bring - A11111 (lllnttt ti•Aprl It) You mlgltl be,
gambles or loOIIth risks. Caution aho\lld ·be
out lhe 11t11., Olhtrlloday, you mUll flrll
unduly lnfl.-nOid by outlldt r-.. tOday,
ti~t!y embraced and not lolled to the
. , _ uplnt ol caopntiOn yiiUIHII. Ho11t- lnd IUddinly CiliiiQe abjlc:llvea ..
wtnd&amp;. Trying to petch up a bnllton
trw do not pen:eiw tNt irl you, danl lllpeC1 pill llmoll wllllin r118ch. s.t I romance? The Astro·Graph MltiCIImJker
them to go overbolllllor )IOU.
lftdlllck 10 ""

yoo'•e

"

Y T E • '

NMAPJVZNX)

8

IASEIIENT
WATERPROOANG
U_,hlontl lllallmo guaron·
, ... Locol rolo18nca lurnilhtd.
Coli 1-287-om Or 614-~7~·.. Watorproollng. Eo·
1W8.
.

...., brand1. Houu catT1, al.o

woman

Evan (poet.l
~.. otNNW
draw
Veal or bill
ComparaUve
ending
6 - Paeo

1
2
3
4
5

Home
Improvements •

':4 :.f.

1185 -lac nww Am T·T'11,000 ...._ Good Concltliln,
$4,600, 114-441·110.
"'"' . ...._
.ot-'- 1 _................_
""'-""'
·
• _,
•

1)4,11..."1" ~:

Uft10 light Nimrod pop-up c:om·
,..., oloopo 5, alnk; tliblt, ci&gt;ok
Ilion, Clnvall wind damaGed,
1300, 11+112-5053 after 3pm,

Curtlt Hamil l_mprovtment•.: No ·
Jolt Too Bla Or SmaH, Yn10 •EI·
bn Oldar fNewer
111D IIIW IIIII. V-1, Loothtr,
Addhlo,.., Faundallon•,
lunnlofji AC, AlliFII Ca-t, Hom..
G.C. WI ...,.llot, Cltlkl Going Rooflng, ' K11c"-nt IBatho. In"
To Collogt, 81,111,-1-. ....~~, · - Elliii)IIOI. 614·367·
01111.
"
1114 Chow. ~a..lo -Dtvl1 Sawing lllchlnt And
tion Wttgon, P " ·
YIOUum cte.ner Atpelr, FrH
~~amlly Ctr, _
•
Pick-liD And Dtllvory, Gttorgn
c...r. Road, 114 44e42M.
1114 Fanl aood -~
tlon, 1700. l,...;ai!M or 11+ Ran'o TY Strvlct, -llllzlng
In Z.nlth eleo Nrvlolna moal
1182·7112.
1111 !JodP. 0tvtona Loodocl,
" - llllot.-U,Iod. 114-t!l • &gt;
114 t411-21'a. ·
-...
'

N~

A. LESS should be used with
amounts tbat cannot be counted, such
as "less water." The correct word for
items that can be counted is FEWER,
as in "fewer taxes." Sometimes,
though, the singular TAX is used to
indicate the amount of taxes to be
paid; in that case, "pay less tax" would
be acceptable. Once you use the plural ,
TAXES, h'owever, those taxes can be .
counted, and you need to reduce your
errors by using FEWER, not LESS . &lt;

•IJ•

Nn

11111 Jllynto ..h ctwftJ&gt;, runa but
work, GIO. 010.

MORTY MEE'KLE AND WINmROP

111fT Fifth Whltl compar,
""Scamper•, fully •If contained,
qu.n alu bed, lull
bet h,
.....,. I to a. exc cond, 304112./lllll.
'

':l:' La":::;=:

1171 Fanl P.lnto Good Work
i'roiiO, 114-288-

Q. What's wrong with "pay less
taxes"? Or is that an error?

1171
Trot' "d 5th Wh10l, 35 Fl.
,......
--~
crvloor,AokforPaul,614·
4414445.
. I
I

!lo4~ -

~. 1280. Wll

,

Pus
Pass

et.)

42 hln
43 Alverln
Gonnanr
45 BllttrMich
46 GOddHiol

By Jeffrey

~-"'T.~-~~~~~~~ truck btd, aooct condition, 1100,

o•

Eut

3•
Pass

OUR LANGUAGE

1171 :r'oyata CoHea ar lor ,.~ •.
20R tnGint.._5 IINf tr11no., 1100.
080. ~,.,.sa5o after 5pm.

114-1112-5828.
!l:,.~h, ~ • rrlaon le, ~~ 2·
~
lank8, 01"'111 ton truck
...
'wlltllo, nutlotor11i lloor mots ,
:x."'aildDoclngMtAtmStbturd,OISugor Dtld1r1Y etc. Da AAuto, R1pley, WV. 304AOHA 14'- 372-31133 0&lt;1-273-9329.
~;,.·1;;;128.;;;._ _ _ _ _ __

Norl.lt

Pass
Pass

There are certain holdings you
would mucb prefer !be opponents to
lead tound to, not through. For esatn·
pie, K-x or A-Q opposite low carcl3. H
you lead the suit, you will be at the
mercy of a finesse: either your right·
hand opponent has !be critical missinJ
honor or he d.oesn't. But if your left·
hand opponent leads the suit, you no
longer care where the missing honor is
positioned.
Some suit romblnatlons, though.
aren't affected by wbicb oppoaent
leads the suit. Your aim is iiiiJt to make
sure that they,,not you, lead it- as iD
today's deal.
·
North's three-heart response was a
limit raise showing about 11 total
points and at least four trumps.
Declarer won the diamond lead iD
band, drew trumps ending in the dum·
my and tried the club finesse. Unfortunately, it lost and back came anotherdiamond. Declarer took bis remaining
minor-suit tricks ending in the dum·
my. Knowing East bad at least one
spade honor, as West badn't led !be
suit at trick one, South called for the
spade jack. He was hoping that East
wouldD't cover with his honor. HoWever, East wasn't playing ball. He put on
the spade king, and returned the suit
wbeo be wim the trick: one down.
South should force the opponents to
lead spades. After drawing trumps,
South should cash his remaining dtamond tricks. Then, escbeWing !be club
finesse, be plays the club ace followed
by the club queen. Whoever wins the
trick m1,11t open up spades or conced~
a ruff·and-11iseard. Either way, South
loseS' only three tricks: one club and
two__s~~·

~800Wing

-

W.:sl

1•
4•

Wis.
311 Guido'• high
note
40 Bone
4 1~1hou.t end

By PhDII~ Alder

- - HondaE
•soo:cc
~ 1'1
1 ht
llru ...
filii Plain
thl~k chilli plow' ";~h ~:Hoc Honda~lng 11 OCC $1,5011;
...... 014.fll2-7302.
1171 --,. K-10 4 WD Pick-Up,
Olla-lilocl For Alllorotlon
Ntw Hollo~d 4711 Nina ft ·haJ $800, Phone: 11+387·7105. :
blnt. Gtltl sa lc\!.nd~xar. 1112 va. .he 350 Big Boar 414,
Both good cond, " ·
5.
110 ~ltoo, ...c cond, $4,000.
304..,,5-1858
63
Livestock
:r.::::-:-=:::-::-::--:-:-::--:-- II Yallllht 225 4 wheolor. Shaft '
illlt A0HA Fall Gtldlng lncon· - · tltc. IIIII. RtvorH. HIIIYI Fund....~f77 AOHA MtN By low rango. Good condition.
Blor\dr'a uuD£ 11+2118-0522.
$1800. 304-6'11·20111.
4 •-·
~udl hoi~
w"h-cgo-·
tor" all. :::.~
"
~ 75 Bosts &amp; Motors
57f.'¥50.
for Sale

4-11 0&lt; FFA call, wtlghl
approL 240 1&gt;. -·2661.
And Chl..ln1fc":c, Bilek
•.R111001ably Pr • Slott
R'"' Porml, Jackoon, Ohio 11428U3115.
Ja klon
Co
p ltd
u.':..,.,d ·---~U~\y 201hoiA
.,...
-•tkiil.
nnual Solo. Fri., April 30th 7:30.
13 buill, 7 ""''""'· 10 COOfl wllh
I tlatro. Jocklon
County
Folnlroundo.
Cot·
'-!IJ!•l-~;.J."" lnlonntllon

Soal.lt

13 Slippery
14 L'lend
15 Frutt drink
17 EICIIM (II.) .
19 Not at all
20 Devour
21 Federtlagcw.
22 Crow'• cry
23 ltlwHn
maxi and mini
2S Atiglo-Sixon
ltlttr
26 Apiece
(obbr.)
27 Summtr (Fr.)
28 Actor
WaHach
29 Data lor
computer ,
32 River in

deakin

35 at. d!v.
341 Flth lriPI
341 FOttd du - ,

'After you.'
'No, after you.'

C °!:,
ea

e

33 ltoltthach

HOOKY ll

E~c:el·

1110 Sllttroclo St•ollciO, ssp.,
~::.=~. sa,oodml., $8800,

1 Kind of cune
4 Architect van dtr Roltt
TV's talking
horN
(2 wdl.)
12 ~uege

Opening lead: +J

HE WAS PLAYIN'

2773.
1HI Ford Ranger, XLT. Suporoab. 4o4. v.. 1 .-o., AC, topper.
304-m.atso.

.,...,...-.,-,......,.-=:-= .._

V•-

+Q 3 2

..,. Condition! M,OOO. &amp;14-;J78..

":"•= =

=.:rta~:.-'~'r.',::0~, ~i ~~.·~;!t"&amp;~u~~;:~~:~
~-..-t...a;~dm:
g:'=."\:moa.llrln,J..~
73ll, Or -4011-4li-3 ...
· all•l:30jim.
.
• 11112.

1-1 Only. 114-441-2411, 11+4413141.
3bdnn. In Ntw Hovan, $2501
31 Homes for Sale
man., dOpooll 11 IOitronct ,..
. qulrocl, 1,._148-2068.
1110 Clollfon ~llanal, hoot
,
pump, dock. tlwat lloclroan, two 5 Roo~L Flrot Avonuo, Glfo
bathe, localtd on 101 In ·Roclno llpollt. un str1111 Part&lt;l- No
hoot
·~
",30
..,rooo,•c;....... -:.•JI'I. 22•03
rwror n.~~~ P.ta, O.DOelt I Ref....,.• •

soum

TroMmltalon CruiM Control,

•

ea-. -:

Two 11-tlahl - - . . . , $15M.;
high cfialr, 820: upl&gt;ololooliOir, 125: ow t~or at·
For Sa.. : Iaabs• Wllh oaa. ,_...........,17.5q; 1'14t112-12t7.
F
...
. rant, •~• 11+387-71143.
Two llwn ••• - ;;:-:~-:-:-'':;::7'-:-.--::;---;
Far Soia: Puth Lawn II"""S!&gt;~ Aulomo~Do C1ta1M Sl2.50 aB - Ball - n g Rtal,
ball Ctrdo .'lit - . 114-44f.
114-441·1240.
2117.

:O::!::i1ar'::."'J:.

..

K7 4 3

...:=: '1:';7~=' ::= ~.T:~r:~":~

~::'"

5681.

Stant bnnd Eaottrgo ~ car
l:..m
canW: flmt. .......
_
~· Glldar • - bond. dull • - •

Ctr Slarto, Ukt- Condition,
11+441-27$5,

S30: ·iltrnllolo.., 130: 11+1112·
2101.
Pow bua - . MW ooncl..an, I:'::~====--.:--:-$10 -h; rug Ford 1111 kit, Vtry old lour bumtr coollllove,
tiOO: 11+112-2323.
:'~M:. 1 ,.!::r4375w:,;:
~--~ N·~lan - · . _
-•••
,_....
=':.•:-;'-::-:-""::--:-- good
-:--Ouoon
olzo
wotor
btd r.otu~ng Amino Add 8cdr 1Vf.ll btNnci
wldroworo, hNdbotrd, 2 tulip
~alia';;
clition, wT -l&gt;niento;
llmpa l mlrrow, 304.aa2-3436.
gtiVtlya lot porta,
clllliYoty II Aha Aid
A.• 9. FurnRUrll. Now, uoocl, ... The ltla·W~ to dill. .
•
Wooh .... 121: two · - TVe,
llq..o.· Hounhold lurnlohlngo. ~- ..........,..., """' 125 ..art; 181tigortlar, 125; 514Muon, WV. 304-773-5341. ·
~I
u~
~·~---- ltR.use.
.
· -.. ~.
Rolrlgorator, 2 Door, Whlla, $75: aood.
, 140, I
btd wllh poddocl ntto,
2129·
;::::::;:::: 2l::r,
price 1111114 two · IWIYII chtlra,
Ptrlont, 11So: Rolrigtn~lor, Htr· ._II · S410.- prlco $1111; -~...
·
hat Gold, Froot FIOt, Llko Now, 875-13l't.
'
_ , Tanning Bod Will! Faco
$285; Whirlpool Wuhar $95: H tty ~~ '"
Toil. ., $2,800 Firm. 11+448·
.
o .E. Waohtr 1150·, Wht~~
u ... _
,.... OJCII 100, 1D
175 G E. 0
1"5,..,...30 $25, IM-MHAZ.
f'Y•.
i .
ryer • i .
lneh Eloclric Rtngo, 115: Color Ken- w..,... 1 dryor. You may lhlt nt11 r,aar.

Haw

•s-s

.J1096

=
-=··---:-=-=-'..,.--.,..-...,...,:-:-:-,.,1112 Ford Probe, loadocl. 1,000

·1:::::-;;-:::::-:::::-::--:-:::::::-

EAST
+K9 6
. 72
• 8 54
+J1096 5

WEST
+A 10 B

.onan

wlii'Mit

Grocl0111 living. I and 2 btd·
room oporlmonto tl Villas•

.K 7 2

IIIOioftor Spm.
'
1112 Ford Tornpo, fully loadocl,
- - loon of $221.1&amp; por
~Willi

8

1111 Knox mobllo homt, 2
bdmt., mUll bt movoclltom 101, TlrJ T-tlooo . . Aparlmtnll, 2
11+112-3021 .,. 81+112·71117.
Boclroomt~ 1 112 Bat hi, CA,
Gtcrgta PO&lt;Iablo Sowmllt1 don't
$325/llo....~!_lcllk: Not- lnctudocl.
IIIOblla 11+31fT·1110U.
..
·
haui your too• to the mtll jUII 11111 FiaiiWDOd,
c:oll304-6'11·1t!S7.
homtl garogo, olluotocl on large
~1 .ll•ln st., Rutilnd, 118,000, 45
Furnished
Lown. work, .mowing and trim• IM-'lll2·3012.
,
mlng, fully lnaure&lt;l, 614·112·
..
Rooms
5377.
111fT Rodman RlnrYiaw, 14150,
·
2bcfnn., 1 lltth, IM'gt lYing Roomolor ront· wotk or month.
Light Mochonlc Work I Ropolro, wfth callloclraf ctltlnjj, Stortlftll 11 $1:10/mo. Gollil Hotel.
30 Yoar11 Elporltnco, All Typn Coltman goo ru.,_ Coltman 114 4441'115BO.
Of Wor,.Dono. Cheap Roll. 614- 21f.llon 00n1n1 NC, Qllll-.
446·7585. .
gat hot _ . , hiller, 14.&amp;cu.ft. Slaaplng roort11 wnh cooking.
~
2 celll
fane wll~ Aleolr.ll
A hook
111o1 Poula'o Day Carll Canter 1 kit, ~nvl undt'!!......ng. ·~, ~-u "ft or •2 P"
ct· 11 304-upa.
00
1
Block WHI 01 HIIC On Jockoon
~;.0,600 f14.'isi~. ~
ar :
p.m.,·'InPlko II·F 8 A.M. •-5:30 P.M. II mora,
•
•
IMI!II, Mason WV.
•
Cualhy And Elparlonct II Tho 11111 Skyline Hally Rldgo 14170, 46 S
f ' R nt
11 Concom For Your Chlld'1 oH t1tc 2 b o d - AJC
pace Or 8
Cora. Call IJI For A 'VIoH. Infant coYWocl 'poodl, kitchen
/Toddlar11 114-448-1227. Pr... otonga blcla.u••-nlng, Trallor Lo4 WHh Bam Pond, 7
h I
/Sch00I A 614-446~ ·-..-·
lllltt From Golllool1~1 __Wotor
~o;ers
ge
lllwMW,
Z4M.
P1ki.$1101Mo. I14-251-12MI.
·
1111 14xll Shuhr Umftocl Add~
oomo _,. on rour tlol!. VOIJ Good Condition, 3
home. Will do omal -lrll.llkt - . - . . . 2 Complott Bllhe,
painting, ponalllng, llgllll, otl~ AC, 117,500, Attuint Loon Jt4lng lone, · - · cancrott · 245-67111. ·
ropolr ., yord wori&lt;, 304-6'1151
Household
7928.
1812 Cil)'lon, 14o'll, hoot pump,
2 boclroomo, 2 bolhe, 304-675·
Goods
Odd lobo ntoclocl, mowing. ole. 11711.
-;-,,..----,,..--;:-,.-,,..-..,.-304-6'711-1373.
1 Dltct - o n Eo~y American
p••NTING
3 Bod,_ llobllo Homo, Ctn Ln ouho. King olzowoltr btd,
""
Be Left on Rented lot, Mlnut• $100 IICh, 304;.e7~587.
Interior I
exterior, mlnar QFrom Ollllpolle And Hoepftal.
ropalrll, ,._ ootlmotoo, Iawaii aa·1~4~4~41~13~40!:·..,.--,---,---l1112 Carpal $60 All Vinyl In
p~ct.o, hlg- ·qualhy, 304·773.
=:
Stock ...49 Yd. Monohan Car·
5560
llobllo homo lor oalo, prlco ,.. palo, At. 7 North, 114-446·11144.
gotlable, mult be movtcl,
Stap By St~':.:n Cal8, com. -Iota lnqulrlto only, 114-lli2· Cro~tiJ Rolrlgtrotor Llko Ntw, 1
~loti Lown
'Wo Do" All, 5277.
Ytar Old 10 YHr Cofii-IOr
1~.
;::ll;:.:ull-':-ta-c-r"'lllao,-,-:1-::11::3-:14::-x-:70::-:R;-ocl-;·· l =~h teo llokor, UOO;
Tri.Siata Trw Servk». Toppl~, man wllh 5 yur warrantv, 1ft..
•
'
lrlmml ..... Fooctl~,
. Romova, c l - dtllvory, lolup, otoGOOD U-SED APPLIANCES
,..
~
stump
emoval. Fr.e £a. and eklrtln:Bi S1&amp;5mo. Call 114- w..herw, dryoro, ref.&amp;...o.raloro,
. .,. .., 76
t 1matal14--317-0653.
385-2434 I for Mike.
. . l'llnget. Skaggt Appllanc
Vlno Sl'"', Call614-441-7398, I·
Wonted To Do: In Homo Hur~~lng
BusineSs
I00-411-3411,
Cora, In Your Homo, Rolomlcao, 34
614-446-7lli2 Allor 4 P.ll.
BUildingS
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Cofnplete !Jome fumlahlnm;·
Wonted To Do : L'f.': Houta
H
M S
5
Cl ni
~ •• R"
•••
Wtot Columbia Poet Oftlco
ouro:
on- at, g. . 114·
N ~tna, Rl
yne ..... Blda. 15 x 70 kit. Equipped wtlh 0322, 3 mllu aut Bulavllle Rd.
388-11870.
tnlfor hook·up, ..collonl :"/rio Froo Dtllvory.
I
n..o~ I I0 S
· · Moylag wothar and dryer, har·
Yllntocl Jord -k, mow I trim, IJO 101· -,..-, 0
Point Pltoatnt I vlolnky, 304- Polloi Somco. 304-875-ll22.
vnt gold, wao In oon~lco, must

Opponunhy

P.ra for Slle

-ory.

0no bedroom oparlmont, Spring
Avonuo, Pomeroy, 1175/rno.,
1100 dtpotll, no pall, 514-607. 3083 after 5pm. ,
1880 Folnnonl, 14X!54. 2 IR,
good93. condition. S&amp;SOO. 30f.e75-, OM l:ler.lroam I~ Fumlthed,
711
vary. cltan, nc Pit•. 304-8'11·

Commorleol, RulciOntlal, Stova:
614-446-1656.

Buslneas

. , _ "'·

HI-ll

+ 82

•
' •
•
'
11111 ,_lac Grand Prix, blue
tour - · 1oocftt!1 33,000 mllao,
"
" aood080,
~uon,
.naw tlr.o,
11\Dclll
·~.zooil,
tvoningt.
:::;::~:::::::-:::::~7:-:7:-;:::1111 Torota Camry. l.oodocl. El·
cotltnl · Ctl 304-675-

Fllh Tonk, 2413 Jacillon Ava. mllta; 112,800. ftr111. 3-751~103'1. .
Point P-nt, 304-675-2083, 111158.
K - Go ·~~ ~r ~~
u.221 IIIIP Wtldor,
lull llrit Tropical flthl blrdl, 1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1187 - •
,._,~ - · ......... $1115, - ...... anlmala and oupplaa.
I ·
SIOO,1 •
72 Trucks for Sale
pnoloolat; $110; Two -~~ CockllltR lor 1tlo,
2
' ,_ tponmant. Hlct ~.. a-. ... 14, 304- tlrM, $11; -..r, $35; an- "'nd ltocf. vory tamo, sao tiCh, 1171 F-700 Ford dump. $3500.
nolghborhood.
Dtpo.ll
•
tlquO
t10; - . fo!S: . lor mora ~n~a~..uon, 11+11112· 85 til. cab Ford F-250 XLT.
r1111ironce required. 304-4'11· 20' ~ tllllntlon locldtr, 11+11N212,
~.
.
$3500. Bring caoh. 684 Avo
10110.
Stnlry 111250,
Forti Road, Pliny, WV. :
,
·
10t.,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 1 ~!~~~ 16&amp;1c\lble illchta; t;lngll~ ~':,':l:noa~ fiT
P&amp;lllcill
1114 Ford F-160, P8, p~ .A¢, 3
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
-T.V., Blc~'T,_~ Tora,
lnstNmilntS
8plltd, Dwnlrlvo, 10" wnaato,
ESTATES, 531 Jacuon Plt&lt;o ::-200:-:-"-.,..-p-."l,-h"'io-w"'n-cl\.,....bo-11, Baal Ollor, ---.mo.
aa·~ N--Roland Ciorlan Caatottt Starao Torpov·
from 1201/lllo. Wotk to ohop l
Sill 304-1711oAa.
- • ......,_ 1
lin Covor,IIUII Sttl .,.,500,.814movltt. Caii8144412568. EOH.
.
IITDrldll)gllwn-~ hp,
Kt¥boarda Mtrtlll a Glbton 441-1411
'
5
Elftala
24" intolrlor $20. 44" dtcll; good cond,
1S- Gultan And Much 11

Utllllta Paid, 614 446 4418 Ahtr
7 P.ll.

NORTH
+ J 754
.KQ H

Antw•r to P revioue Puzlle

Sibenl

aulfb

111
~5011 11+3l1-2'111

'!

two
luU
'..,..._,,
-· •
2 C:iggoraga.
=-nl, -:.~·
- . naar
I
~. prlct
mid ~·a, 114-t
4H for. IP.
polntmont.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sa1A
..,
$152.17 por _,h jncludlng 111
montho -loiNnl, naw 14170,
dtllvolld and Ill up, oklrtlng
ond lltpo, 1-.37-li625.

11.aeo.

1!!! s-0110 1E1.11.,..r,-"1 uUm.kt-Naw1"·

i;;;;;:i;;;;;;-iiil'i

~bod· -

PHILLIP
ALDER

1111 Otcll Cut- Su"'"""' 3.1
V-41 A.-o, PWI ~2NI~~ocl
Wlln G!8J In ":ira,.:;"~
Condition, $5,800. 114-4
.

1!1

-=

a-

ACROS$

111l Ponllac - l i l t , axe
cond. sa,800,
304-t'll2122 ar 1111-1111..
1111 l,lon:ury T - , loadocl,
~700. , . . ~mouth A.. "nl,
1111 , _ ,
~
I'IS-2440. all• 10pm.
•

n.ooo.

~o.~•., 12
•1?..~~!!~'
~·• •
Shot,l1t 3M IGI

11 cu. Ft.
1YIIa Dotp
F,_ln Oooci Condllfonl $1211;
2 Pair Dt.tl 4ld1 S10 loth.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Autos for Sale

oao.

-

-.lillng, iltlh tub, , _ _ , . .
~
.. air 00111pr1 " · ""'
11", •1:1
~. plalo - · I ""

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13

H:I~IIIWWII11fL .

SportlnQ GoodS

-oy.

1993

1187 Nllun 300 ZX. all opliono,
45,000111, 11415 08o, call 61+

FIIOI Hal
•
1081.
~ with
Taking ~pt~f~'"S.. niO&lt;, =::,:c-..,.,-----:--:--:-- tt.dllgltl . . . - - .- S1Q; ' 113 ·
DINblecl&amp;. Hllndlc•
:t-FMHA, 30"' go n~; froM he OIIM
for mObile
I n - Ktllricad, equOII Ap. ~t'l:z~
~-.; home, hi),
-2223.
Dilcollont By Calll~g: RW
I grill $40 114-4441llanagamtnt Co., Inc. 614-337- 8 Ploco LMr'11 Buko, 4135.
I ~;;iii;;.ei;;
'
me Dr Wrllt To: RW Monag• Good · Concldan, 13211; 1 Solo
And
I Hlco lhrta bodr-n home, big 2 mont Co, Inc. c/o AHWA, Inc. Good Condition, $1211, 81+441- =~ Mtclllnaa:oo For .':::,
car - · _ 011 nlco 101 111 BcEq1 1004 llorillta, Ohio 2841.
~;-~~;~s;&amp;;if();;d;f4j~
, _ ..:;. canoti. Bahlnd P.O.
45'110,
ual HoUIIng O p p e r · ·
1Old Wo odon Babv Crtdll fola;
Rutllnd E l - r y . . - . 1"" lunltJ.
:'.;=".J:Ui::"o~
1112-2120.
Fumlthocl Apartment, 1 Btd· Call 114 •• «», Or
~CI!tl,. 131; 14
Th- bodrvom - · Eagla room, 7111 Founh Avtnuo, Gal· 03111.
120, l14-44f. 22.
R"""' 1 5 acrat , _ roof fUr- llpollo, Share Bath, 01 9Mio.
Ont o o• pllla - - Z.. Grey
.;.::'r.oicoct ,..d, lotat go'- 7Utll- Paid, 114 ua 1418 Allor Air Cond-, ~ BTU 220 ... n I _;,;-;:..... .....
....., axctllonl locallon, 114P.ll.
;:'~~~ ~3.
11.'11 -h. - .

-r:':o,

,.

HILLTOP SECWSION
• 360Q Sq...,. Ftot Cont_,Home On 17.8 krta mil· Wllh
Ppol And 2 lams.
• 13 Adjtcant Ac- m11 AYII~
~b,ttltdroom u __ On 4 •-raa
~
:~~
= n 3 llll•
Ol Rio Orondo • Contoet Bill
Conntil AI: Donna 8 ........,..
Roally FO&lt; ,.... ln"'"""tlon AI:
lt4-384-f258·
Nlco 1 - r ofd' church building
(otllt ~pprovad), 3 bocfroom
paraOflllge, rKently r.mad 'ul,
2.1 ocrtt al lind, ntll to flro .
doparlmtnl In HarrhonVIIIo,
~~~a:c'· 81+1112-200I or

:::r.

Dayo.OH185 ltJII. To lp.m. 7 530118 coiWioactntonedytlmttO. DO
Llw 111 cll.,..chtr ntadocl lor
TCMn of Mt11011, pollco 11.. I 1.,-~..,.--:---::---::-::--aancr dtl'll. Sorv1CH ... A a G LMdlcapo Cora -Mowing,
qul...t !tom S:OO PM till l:30 All Pl:unlng, Londocapo Wort&lt;. Gory
-dayo a
2• 1uo ·on Kapp Call 814-387-7928 F0&lt; EoWoal&lt;t- &amp; holldayo. Compon- llmatn.
Nlod -by .!!!"',mal d mutont hly Dozer and Bobcat wort&lt;, by tho
11=, ·-" PI!1 11111" · hour, lowest rate, 614-843--5123
A
lone may bt obtolnocl •• .. &amp;14-B4U2B9.
C y Bldg.
El R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
LPN Part-Tima Rtlltl All Shifts, Trimming, Traa Romovol, Hoclgo
:::~~'4a. lllddltlon Trimming. Froo Eotlmolool Gf+
3117-7957 Allor 4p.m.
,
u~
. ~-· ""biilhlns Firm Noodl General ·Malnt'enlnce, Pelntlng
' " " - - r~
1
PF!J.!
~
. btiWk.PoiiSotc~ourd"r Yard Wort&lt; Wlndowo, Waohoo

Hol:.

.

4 roorno, both, htll
,_ carpot. air-, under
$30,000. m Ptrlt Drtvo, 304875-4512- - -

TYPIST
GrNt Income opportunity lor
FIDRIDA WANTS YOU
typlll, oam up to $350 por-k,
Ot1ondo IT...,;:.:~ngCaExctf. collonyllmt HlOII-723-tm
Pay And
llo,
n 407210 1111, Ell. 440.
Vlanttd: Full-limo ooclol wort&lt;or ·
FREE JOB TRAI.NINGW. Va. Ill muttro ilvol wllh 1 WV
_..._ oro - · lnttrtllod In llconoa. To wort&lt; with roaldonls
j;;.i;,j';g In i',;;nh occupation lbtn n:~l ~~kol::n~~nl~~·r:~i~
oudlu LPN, NIJrolng ""-lotont. Hoopltol, 304-675-0850, all. 28.
-~~ Aaolllant a modlcol llonday • fridoJ, 6:00am·
ciw'U, 1110, tr11lnlng In 4:00pm. EEOIAA tmployar.
other lltldL Young,......, a
man 11-21 yro old. Out ol Wanted: Full-limo Balltndtr,

·-··

..

r:;;:=:~:=::::::::::==r::::=::::::=======i $200/llo. All Utllftlao Included,
2 Rooma I Both, No Kftchtn,
11 Help Wanted
31 Homes for sa•A
Dt~~htd, 614-441-mS,
,..
•
22
Subtthuto dtlvor tor rvrol popor
route, 11+1112·2125:

11

""
AntlquH
- ,
Buy or taiL Alta~- Anlilf-,
1124 E. llaln 8tnot. on R1. 124
lfi.T.W, 'lo7GQ
u - ""~ · - .
a.m. t o •·~
- 11:1!4-r 1 :oo
2 btdr- •1'4 · upalalro. to 1:00 p.m. 114- 211'¥
Rtcanlly ,.,_ltd. Partir furMl
I
nllhocl. UtiiHita and coblt paid. 54
IC8 lln.JUI
$360. Rtttranctt. 304-e75-t818.
Merchancllee
2 BR condo lot r11nt. llyrllt · . .._..
&lt;
Belch .,.. on lhe ocun. 5 ...n . metal - - . eldlna ....,..
wttkl otlllovolllblo. ssoo.o-k. tabla. 11 . . . . 414
304-675-375
· alcllna. rod - . 011\

Certltlocl Nunlng Atolllanlo.
I co ,. a part il our - h
can. P1 I · I nal Tatm. W.
iOUOtwllly
hovo
full-limo
P e • on 3
~..
11~ and 11pm ·7tm ohlfto. K

~ 1 ~~
~:".,:~
,• ond bttlfto In ..rvodng
. want - ·
T..,- aoaualny ...~~ we
,_
~-~-~~ ,..., In poroonHIIo'
_....._,.._,.,.il:, :Scenic I
Nu..lng Ctntor/ 311 Buckridgt
RdJ lidwoti,Oh. 45614· Thank

.!

"'"''U ,,._

Houn_hold tumlehlng. 1JZ ml
Jarlk:ho Rd. Pl. PI-nt, WV,
caii30W'II·1450.

1 Bad!_, Aporlmanl Ria
Grandt, $111Wo. l14 3111 ll4l.
1 ltdroom, 1 Bath EffldMGY
~~. Pttvota -ng. 10
lllnuttt South l'lom Gallljlolil,

Eom St .-. Ctafl. TIM
Onlara F.- l'e mlly And
114 4.. 13511

Y•IJII. '""" ~-E ~
l'llr«J 12&gt;"'( f'" II,.\ aN~ •.

PICKENS FURNITURE

· Apanment
for

HOUNhold
Goods

IMIZ11NIDrlllonda.

'A_. ALLAI'II.sl.._limo wlh ... YCOI'I CUS¥*lWW1 - -lUI

5I

/

Wednesday, April 28 1 1993

...

•·' ..

•

••

'

•

�Ohio

Ex-Syracuse
football coa~h
dies at 83

IVIRSARY SALE
DEL MONTE

STORE HOURS
.Monday thru Sunday

SQUEEZE
CATSUP

8AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

28 OLBOTTLE

298 SECOND ST.

Pick 3:·
860
Pkk4:
6023 .
Super Lotto:
1-17-18·22-24-U
Kicker:
244165

. • Page6

•

.

•

a1

'

(

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
"SUI.,
25 THRU MAY 1, 1993

•

•

\ .

VaL U, NO. 1 '
llultlnolda Inc.

Additional mental health levy
may be on Meigs ·Nov. 2 ballot

$239

a::~~~~~-------12

.
.
.
s2·
49
Cubed .Steak. . . . . . . .
LB.

USDA SELECT ·BONELESS .BEEf

· CAMPBELL'S'

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75 Oz. Cans

s

s1~
$189

9

Oi. ,..

LONGHORN .COLBY

ch

STUIIPING

., wll-

MaJW

.

.

...._._ .... C
dmn JobD Blaettllllr ere,.ref.- de
pulfor by the Street Lilbt ·
·l.fty Ct •!nee. (Sftliael pboto by Jim Free·

··ar.

-)

.

,--.---- L 0 caJ brle
• .,
,

'F'...

•

•

d•

~ wO ln}UTI!

S

: ..._.

laws

In II&amp;C~'"

Twodri~~a~-iDjulediia••
Wd .., • +Mia
Chester ToWIIIhip, tbe GaJiia.l'rip Pml ~-die S.. JliPwly
· Patrol reponed.
·
'Sheny A..Nc tJOW,-46,1' • W.Va..-•
'i•*••h
coaiiiSions llld Pi ~ rn.. Jfuba " li" C
.a L,.e R.
Tayla was llald lur alia IM'Id •-+Irs ••
'lila Vetil'·
ans Mem&lt;Xial Hospibl, hi1 · ',.,.. Slid dlis • • • &amp; Badl
_ _ , 'uz
-.
Ur..:-(1
J" li Ill Scr-•
women were _u•.....-_ • ) ._ 2 JC
vice.
,
According to the repon, 1'1
-•NM 'ca Slab:
Route 7 when Taylor, wllo was JOI• •ca 0
1 Ra.I2S,
attempted to~ S.R. 7 ~ S.R. 248 _ . - Sl!aCk by Nailz!ing.
Tayler was cited ror faikR ID ,illld. J' diiC"s a ' i l e tained moderlle dliiDICC ..S Taylor•s
• 'lawy, diphljng
damage. Both vd!ldes IOiial a- l k - .
•
The pa1101 a11o in·; ia h llliaar deer- a 7· k a• · 7 1ilrsday ev...nna in u - T~ '·
·
~ ~·~ w3 1~,. 1ill L ,....., 39, RGIIIe 2
.Vinton, was nortbboUIId aa SIIIC :a- 32S
Sl!aCk ..S
killed the deer.
No injwies were iqKIIIed. Tile vdlidi:
li&amp;fll" gr;
and was driven from die-..
.
"I

. 6·7.5 OL

(

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I

"i•-

·

Grapefruit. . . . . . . ". . .. .
'

4

'

BRgUGHTON;s

.

.. .

2 ~ Mllk. . . . . ~··············GAL

BROUGHTON'S .

·

Cottage Che~se. .24 oz. .
DOERGENT

·

Ultra nde. . . . . . . . . 42 01. Reg./47 Oz.

$299

G~NCO ~~~~~--. ~- 2 .s1

5

Sh~

NOODLES

Service wiU be disrupted

Ice Cream. . . . . . .HALF GAL

$ 09 GROUND

.•

1 . BEEF
99( $1490
'·

ORE-IDA REG. or CRINKLE CUT

Thefti uJUler imrestigtlliml

GROUND

....

3/$1~~~ 4~~Lls

79c

..-::::.::.:

=~~.:·:.-r;:-

10 LB. PACKAGE

DAIRY LANE

BATH· TISSUE ·

.

· Lcadiq Creek Cm • 1 Diaticl'l llllil!ntri&lt;iccz ca Sllle
Route 124111d Towlllllip a.l 321ill Salall Tow ·) wil becbrupted SIIUiday in Older 1D I pin wal:u .a lila a lk b •
I
plant. Cu110111en em. 0
1 R..t I (Mel'•• a. Jtmd) 1D

mately 9 a.m. to S p.m.

MUEWR'S OLD FASHIONED

CAT FOOD .

..-a

-16 OZ. CAN

159

10J5

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ARGO
PEAS

s

$

20 PACif
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lass C..po$
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ShlrllflllieiSa ,., . .'... Datid...,,Pd
' the theft ole-a law
a a , . . ,._-ill 1 ·' c. Dsftd
WiiFilmi,OikHiliiS I l . . aa.:llj' 7allil . . . caWalr
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96

Clerlc ~ Hobsletter.

S~uthern board OK's contracts
..

•

Ms. Montgomery said the
House-Senare ComctionallnstituticJDs IDspeclion Commiuee would
tistentoallsidesinitsinvestigation
of the 11-day standoff tbD month at
die Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility, One guard and nine
inmales died during the siege,
"We've had, at this point, the
reassurance of the ~nt that
,.....,
-~ will be forthcnnuna
-·-'0 in aU lhe.
information we want, and if not
we'D go from ill=," she said.
11Im: has been specnl•til&gt;ll that
RelJublican
Gov. · George
VoiDovich might choose Ms.
Montgomery as a candidate for
lieullcnantiQVmiOI'sbouldLt.·Gov.'
Mike DeWi,ne decide to run again
ror the U.S. Senate. She also has
been mentiolled as a )J9telltial candidare for aa«ney general. · .
Ms. MomaomerY dismissed any
sugaestioo of piJrliSan influence on
bc:nmrtasheadofthecommiuee.
''1be sooemcr has a lieutenant
govanor; IIIII to my lalowledie he
will remaill the lieutcDant governor
and the lieotenant governor candidale," she said.

.

Senilael News Starr
The Southern Local Board of
Education at its regular 111~ting
Monday approved contracts for
teachets and classified personnel in
addition to approving substitute
reachers and personnel.
Rehlreop•rlDc:lplls
. Actinf ofi ,l)le recommendation
of Supertnlendent Robert Ord and
Superintendent of Meigs County
Schools John Riebel, the board re. emp~ the ,following people~
exte
serv1ce contracts as pnncipaJs· for a period of three years
for a salary of $7,720: Robert Bee·
gill, Racine :Elementary; Michaela
' Kucsma, junior high; Christy
Lavender, Portland Elementary;
Roger Roush, Letart Falls Elementary, and James Lawrence, Syracuse Elementary.
ApproYesubstitute tea8Jers
The following were approved as
substitute teachers for the 1993·94
school year: Susan Arnold, English
7-12; Robert Ashley, physiCal education K-12; Jennings Beegle, 7-12
comprehensive social Studies;
James Bradbury, physical education K-12; Eileen Buck, elementary
l-8; MarY Bush, LD and SBH K12; Lesley Carr, elementary l-8;
Amy Corbin, elementary 1-8; Jen-

tion.

'

"If -61ito 's ·election laws are
goiJI&amp; to have any real impact on
die conduct of campaigns, tbey
must be vigorously and rully
enfoited," Taft said.
.
The proposal would. increase·
.-nbcrship on the I:PliJmission ID
sevea members instead of five,
cMn&amp;e tho ·appoinlmellt poe e" to
JaDOVC illvo!wment of stale political parties, 1nd pve the panel a
t-. . . - Iliff independent from
the SCCRIII'Y of Sllle.
The lill abo would ICI up a Jroccu !bat could lead to a state
appea1J clllll't mdeib,g an elected
oHidalto fllrfcit office for know·
iDIJy mating C1111p1ip statenlents
wftft reckless disregard for the
lnldl.
billie Houle, Rep. David Hart-

ae,. D-S1Jriqfield, woo 86-6 )liS·

IIUl.,..,._

..,,
'I .

'

i&amp;aorini

pro::J

• •

•

physical educatiqn 7,12; MiCbael
Cuckler, industrial teehnillogy and
driver educadiJii 7-12; TonYJI Cummins, elementary 1-8; D,avid Curfman, general science arid book·
keeping/llasic business 7-12;
Deborah Davis, elementary l-8;
David Deem, elementary l-8;
Bryan Durst, elementary l -8;
. Sbaron Edmonds, elementary 1-8; ·
Cynthia Facemyer, ·health 7-12;
Thomas Fauber, mathematics 7-12;
Teresa M. Fields, elementary l-8;
Michelle Frazier, kinderganen-elementary K-8; Scot Gheen, health
and
Jodi
. physical education 7-12; Hal
Glass, elementary l-8; Cheryl
•
ley, elementary 1-8; Valerie Hanstine, kindergl)rteiJ·elementary K-8;
Pauline Harrison, English and
speech 7-12; Kemberlee HemphillHood, kindergarten-primary K-3;
Sandra Holcomb, comprehensive
business education 7' 12;
Rose Ann Jenkins, elementary
l-8; Bonnie Kibble, kindergartenelementary K·8, biological science
and health 7-12, physical education
K-12; Richard King, LD K-12;
Leda Krauter, homemaking/consumer education 7-12; Timothy ·
LJ!wson, mathematics 7-12; Lee
tee, music K-12, English and
music 7-12; Vinas Lee, elementary

Tenisa L1eving, elementary 1-8;
Kareq Lyons, elementary 1-8;
Bethany Mayer, elementary 1-8;
Michele Mowrey, English 7-12;
Lisa Pape, elementary l-8; Amy O,
Perrin, English l-8;
·
Kirk Reed, social studies 7-8;
history and geography 9-12·,
Nathan Robinette, elementary l-8;
Carolyn Robinson, elementary '1-8;
Susan Roessler, elemenlilry 1·8,
reading K·l2; Sheryl Roush, comprehensive business education 712; Laura Salser, elementary l-8;
Krista Sellers, elementary l-8;
Jody Shipley, art K-12·,. Cynth 1'a
Smllh, elementary 1-8; Kathy
Smith, elementary K-8; Margaret
A. Smitb, elementary 1-,8; Jean · ·
Smithem, mathematics 7-12; Janet
Stiltner, elem. entary 1-8: Carin
Taylor, elementary ,I-S;
Jody Taylor, elementary l-8;
Daniel D. Thomas, physical educalion K-12; Kimberly Van Metre,
kindergarten"elementary 1-8 and
pre-kindergarten; Ruth Warden,
el'ementary 1-8; Ellen Waugh,
math, chemistry and aeneral science 7-12; Ralph Werry, elementary and music l-8, reading K-12,
history 7-12; Shelagh Wilson, ele·
mentary 1-8; Donna WoP£, elemenContinued on pa- 3 .
e•

Secreta!1, of State Bob Taft
tub~ a llill, to be introduced by
Ms. Miiiii&amp;OIIICI y, that would make
tFie elections COOIIIIissiOD independent of bis office. The bill also
"c;:!~ive tric commission
ex
authority and jurisdic-

;"=·-=:.:
'1C

5

E

I

No concerned residents attended

IIF olllie lill illcrtnlq 0 . for
waste-law violations that 81D
andaP*ol*' '
iM:llldo failure to lleed clellJup
0111tn • wen.
diapilllll
• D
Ji'
celurea.
-•i•OIIIr6ra 7 !,L • s "
5 . . . . . . ..
Tile IJill .._ fiMI to a maxi:
CCIIIIIleol••.-ll'.... lleea=• ........ I . 7 .... ·
125,1100 i day from the cur' iDadaa II bllii.lllr
.
·
~- ,_
110.1100
a day.
Tile ...... , . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Lam F'I7PI
. fie
11emmed from
F11•=7!!·Sd10'Jhd+ 'a
0
a' 7 ......... _ .
· .. 5ll
•dd IIDS.Uvthe···-' Flte illlllleea . . . . . . - . . . . - , . . ...
IMoba
Alia ': , . 11 : J , 1
.

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··16

Sevtnltbeftr.......!'-...
the Mel8l QaiY Slldi"S"

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·CHUCK

lbe he&amp;Qng, However, one propertY
owner, Lorenzo Davis of Cuyanop
Falls, wrote a Ieuer to the comnussion supported the proposed road
Closure.
Prior to the hearing, the commission toured the area to be
affected by the closure.
Other ac:tloa
In other action, the COIIUIIi&amp;sion:
- Voted to table ~ball bids
ope11ed Wednesday pending fwdoet
investigation by Engineer Robert
Eason. The commission received
bids from Asphalt Materials and
Koch Materials, both of Marietta,
and Ashland Petroleum Company
. from Ca!deusbw), Ky. '
- Agreed to notify Rev. Flllllt
Smith of Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport of their
approval f~ holding a ''World Day
of Prayer" event on the courthouse
stepS on May 6.
- Visited the Meigs County
Dog Shelter to discuss security _
anangemCIIIS at the shellc:r.

:~i?si:r::~~t~~ :::i£~~~~=~b~ ==:~:e:~aS

.

pri1aD Ill' Jllnrll• k . ,.I Pit r
af P D
A:ncflhe H(\lise
invo1vedinapotiiicih•hile• :'
..tO• riw
bilU including one that would
Sell. Belly Mdqpi•NIJ, R4'a'Ia a6a' ..,.., S
Pcpabti- increase the fine for violating
Ohio's solid· ln1 hazardous.wasre

PRINGLE·
POTATO CHIPS

PINK

By JIM FREEMAN
.... chronic mentally ill. Almost no
Sentinel NeM Starr
money is provided to the general
Repreaenwives from the Gallia- population for services, she
Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, explained.
J;lru• Addiction and Men~ Health
Purchase new ambulance
Servtce!l infonrte!l the Meigs CounFollowing a meetin~ with Emerty Board of Commissioners or their gency Medical Serv1ce Director
desire to place a tu levy on the Bob Byers, the commission agreed,
Nov, 2 ballot.
with Roush abstaining, to purchase
Ron Adkins and Barbara Wol- a 1992 Horton ambulance for .the
ford iold the comrirission during its Tuppers Plains squad.
regular Wednesday meeting that
Byers said the $59,832 needed
the board is singbng out Meigs for the purchase would come from
Colinty for a one mill, five-year · funds obtained by the EMS levy.
expansion levy to expand services
In addition, Byers discussed
in the COWJty.
obtaining reimburse.ment from
ResJ.IOnding to concerns from March's snow emergency. Byers
Commusioner Manaing Roush, indicated his pref~rence of hand
Adkins said aU money raised by the delivering the forms to Columbus
levy will be spent on support IICJ"· sometime next week',
·.
vices in Meigs County.,Ad!Ons said
Close townsbip road
the board singled out Me~s CounFollowing a public hearing conty because similar .levies have been ceming a proposed road closure,
most successful in Meigs County in commissioners voted to permanent·
the i&gt;asL.
,
ly close about 955 feet of Saljsbury
"111iS is the only f~.way, give Township Road 201 (Rose'Hill
it to the voters and let them Road) ftom the easterly edge of the

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et~!~J:E
fo~!~~er~~~~~~.e~;~~.?.~~""'--'~
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W••..
pas~~d-tllrce'

''

'

·

ance Reed, Couaellwom•n Betty

Ohio prison panel chieif·
.promises thorough probe_

TOASTER
PASTRIES
11 oz.
,(

Chuck Roast.. . . . . . . .LB. .·
KENTUCKY BORDER
.
69.(
Wieners.................12 oz.
SUPERIOR ASSORTED
$ 129
Lunch Meats..........LB. ·

ENVi:Lora - r

lage offielals were MIJ ltalllq an'1pa
Wedaeaday ~··:twltl ' II u q :5 2 ...poi1 for die
'I ;a ;
' ........... _,..
WlrtJ, ... b
L
Here, e-n 1 T
maa Larry Wellr••2• Clerk IalllJ B,.U.

MERICO .

$159

1 Socdon, 12 l'llgea 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. .....,..,..

'

24 Pak 1' Oz. C111s

Round Steak............~.........LB.
FRESH
.
. . 89(
Groun~ Tu~key...........~....LB.
.

'\i

Pomeroy·Middleport,.Ohlo, Thursday, Aprll29, 1993

ROYAL .CROWN
.
.
PRODUaS

USDA SELECT BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

Low tonJcbt Ia $0.. Cloudy.
Friday, doudy, blah In 70..

•
'

.

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