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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, April 7, 1992

Desert Storm general will retire ---Names in the news--because of faked flight test
El TORO, Calif. (AP) - The
co mmander of Marine Corps air
units in Operation Desert Swrm
was reprimanded and will rwrc
after admining he faked a 01ght
qualification test and later li ed
about it.
Lt Gen. Royal N. Moore Jr. , 56,
now commander of Fleet Marine
Force Pacific, admllled a JUnior
officer completed s1gnifican1 portions of the August 1990 test, sa1d
MaJ. Nancy LaLuntas. a Manne
spokeswoman in Washington.
The Naval Air Tra1n1ng and
Operating Procedures Standarduation test requalified Moore to Oy
the EA-6 Prowler. an elcctromcwarfare jet aircraft. LaLuntas said

Friday.
In addition to faking the tes t,
Moore admiued that he misled
investigator.; from the Pentagon's
Inspector General's Office, Laluntas S3 id.
The test was faked while Moore
was serving in the Persian Gulf as
comma nder of the El Taro-based

3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, the
umbrella command for all Marine
air units in the Gulf War.
Navy Suretary Lawrence Gar·
rett wrote Moore a letter of cen ·
sure, which will be placed in the
three-star general's service ruord .
The letter was wrillen within the
past month.

'lEW YORK (AP) - Woody
Allen once said his one regret in
life is that he wasn't someone else.
Now he suggests he was half kid·
ding.
. "
Given hi s druthers, he sa1d, I
would rather be Marlon Branda or
Louis Armstrong ... a great pianist
or something."
"!think that being funny is not
anyone's first choic~ .... the comic
auor ami director smd m an mlervicw m Monday's New York

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Chevy
Chase, who got his break on "Sat·
urday Night Live" in the 1970s, is
returning to television.
The 48-year-old comedian will
produce and star in a late -night
comedy-talk show beginning next
year on Fox Broadcasting, the network announced Monday.
"! plan on approaching this
much the way Lome Michaels and
l approached ·Saturday Night
Live,' by working with the funniest
writer-performers I can find,"
Chase said. Michaels created "Sat-

On dean's list
Elizabeth Ann Ewmg has been
named to the Dean's List in the
College of Nursing for the winter
quarter at Ohio State University._
Tammy Klein and Bnan N11l,
Pomeroy , announce th e birth of
their first child, a daughter, Anel
Danielle Klein, on Jan. I8.
The infant weighed six pounds
and 13 ounces and was 21 1nchcs
long.
Grandparents arc Donna Klcm. ·
Pomeroy, and Ru sse ll Cund1ff,
Mason. W.Va. : and Nom Nlll, and
"late" Coy Nitz. Liberty, N.C.

Program slated
Ronald McDonald will present a
program at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy on Thursday at 7 p.m. 10 COnJUnC!JOn Wllh
National Li brary Week . All chil dren arc invited .

Newsday.
"If l could have come from a
differem background, l might have
started off with deeper goals and
maybe achieved some of them earlier in life and at th1s point in my
life be doing a lot better than I'm
doing- doing deeper work or better work," the 56-year-old Allen
said.
His latest film is "Shadows and
Fog."

urday Night Live."
Chase has starred 1n such
movies as "Memoirs of an Invisible Man," "fletch" and "National Lampoon's Vacation."

Q-S

NEW YORK (AP) - Stephen
King, the master of hor:or .. says
he's nothing like the villams m h1s
novels - but people expect him to
be.
.
.
"One of the great dlsappomtmcnts,l think , if l do an autographing or do a per.;onal apJlC'I?,-nce, I
think they expect Dracula, Kmg
said in an interview taped for
today's "Good Morning America"
on ABC . "Of course, I'm just a
guy from Maine - just a normal
guy."
.
The 44-ycar-old author sa1d he
considers the 1986 horror f1lm
"Maximum Overdrive," which he
wrote and directed, his biggest
clunker. The film starred Marla
Maples, Donald Trump's on-andoff fiancee.

DRUG FREE . Drug Free Entertainment
Ni~ht will be presented at Meigs High S.:hool on
Saturdav al 7:30p.m. The event is sponsored by
H.U.G.S. (Helpful, Understanding, Growing

Students) Pictured accepting a savings bond for
the event from .loanne Williams, assistant
cashier for Farmers Bank, is Randall Johnston
and April Hudson. The public is invited to the
e\-·ent.

The fourth annual Tri-County
Full Figure Beauty Pageant will be
held Monday at 8 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
Contestants participatin~ mu st
be age 21 and over and s11e 14
dress and up. There is no charge to
participate.
Contestants will be judged on
make-up, poise and dress.
Registration will begin at 7 p.m.
and door prizes will be awarded.
Admission for the public at the
door will be$!.
Reigning 1991 queens will be

Page 5

Vol. 42, No. 24 I

Copyrlghlod 1992

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~onsuu1er

Meigs man pleads guilty to
manslaughter, assault charges

speaking and presenting gifts. to the
winners of the pageant. Pan1c1pating will be Jane Bush, Tri-County
Full Figure Queen; Jennifer Hesson, Always-A-River Queen:
SICphanie Scan. Miss Gallia County Junior Fair and River Recreational Queen; and Holly W1ll1ams,
Pomeroy's Heritage Queen. Miss
Williams, a member of the Shady
River Shufncrs Clogging Team,
will also perform a clogging routine.
Further information about the
page2nt may be obtained by calling
Marie Palmer at367-7412

lenum.,

Local Bank Launches
Major Loan ~!?~ ,,ee;""n'

f,

t
lm

While some segments o! th~ ':: unmseofconsumerlendmg.
ity are taking a
e p... r--:din to bank offtcmls. the
financial
com!J!un
·rion
on
tne
Accorgragm w'!ll111ake it easJer
tk "wait and see P051
loan pro
· •
of Amenca s
consumers to buy. Loan rates.
n
economyb=g organizations is ftohrey noted.' are lower th&lt;~n__ ~-.·t he)
strongest
r effort.
have been m
.,_f"if,'i\'

•
~1)-,

)

The Victors

'The Victors' to perform
David Young and "The ViCiors"
wi 11 be in concert at F11st Sout11em
Baptist Church, Pomeroy Pike, on
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday
at 10:45 a.m.
Young is a ~usic teacher. song ~
• "i,Uter, publisher and record pro ducer . He plays piano and smgs
baritone for The Victors. For ten
years he traveled as p1amst and
arranger for gospel groups me lud·
ing The Kingsmcn, Sons of Song,
Foggy River Boys, The Prophets

bread House for students there, as well as !'or
guests from Gallia/Meigs Headstart, Carleton
School and Guiding Hand School. Pictured wilh
Mayor Reed, left to right, are Matthew Imboden, Raymond Caldwell, J011bua Manley, Glenn
Johnson and Jeremy Manley.

U. S.
Congressman
Bob
McEwen (R-Hillsboro) will be the
key note speaker at the Meigs
County Republican Party's Lincoln
Day Dinner on May l.
McEwen is serving his sixth
term representing the Sixth Congressional Distnct, and has
announced his candidacy for re election to the newly n:drawn siltth
district
At the beginning of the 102nd
Congress, McEwen was named one
of four Repubhcan members of the
exclusive House Rules Committee.
The Rules Committee is considered
th e prcm ier commiucc in the
House since it sets the terms of
debate for all legislation brought
before the body. The post allows
McEwen to represent the interests
of Ohio's taxpayers with all leg islation presented before the House
of Representatives.
Since coming to Washington in
1980, McEwen ha s served on the
Vclcrans Affairs Commillec and
Publi C Works and Transportation
Com mince . Between 1984 and
1989, McE wen se rv ed on th e
Se lec t lntclligcncc Commillce.
where he became an act1ve proponcn l of U.S . policies to su pport
dcmocrJtic movements behind the
Iron Curtain and 1n Ccntrdl Amenca.
In nddition to tHs rutl -timc committe e assignment s, McEwen is
c hairman of lh e Republican
Research Commincc Task Force on
Tax Policy and Job OpportunitieS
as well as the Rcpubl1can Study
Comm illcc 's Energy Task Force .
He is a member of the Co ngre s-

When he became the 18th recipient of the American Federation of
Police's Golden Eagles Award,
McEwen joined a distinguished
group of Americans, which
includes Presidents Reagan and
Bush. In !987, McEwen received
an honorary Doctorate of Law
degree from Wilmington University.
Elwed to his flfSt public office
at the age of 24, Congressman
McEwen represented the 74th District in the Ohio House of Representatives from !974 until his election to Congress in 1980. McEwen
has the distinction of becoming the
youngest member of the Ohio
House to ever serve as rankin~
member on a legislative commiuee.
Born in !950, McEwen is a lifelong res1dcnt of Hillsboro . After
graduation from Hillsboro High
School, he attended the University
of Miami. McEwen graduated with
a BBA in economics and finance
and went on 10 serve as a Congrc.ssional Assistant to William Harsha.
hi s predecessor in the U.S. House.
McEwen is also a former Vice
President for Development wi1h
Bocbingcr Realtor s, a rcsidc nu al
real es tate development firm in
Ohio.
Aclive in co mmunit y affoirs,
Congressman McEwen IS a mem -

ber of Rotary International ,
Jayc ees, Farm Bureau, K1wanis,
Grange and the Optim1st Club. He
serves on the board of elders of the
H1llsboro Christian Church and is a
mcmher of the Hillsboro Chamber
of Commerce.
Congressman McEwen and his
si onal Compctitivcncs.&lt;~ Ca ucus, the w1fe, Liz. were marncd in 19 76
House Task Force on Economic and make their home m Hillsboro.
Policy, 1he Sicel Caucus, th e They have four children: Meredith
Human R1ghts Caucus and th e Evans, Jonathan David, Robert
Republican Agriculture Task Winston and Elizabeth Morgan.
Force. lie also serves on the cxecuTickeLs for the dinner arc now
live committee of the Biparti sa n on sale. at a cost of $10 each. They
Congressional Rural Caucus.
arc available from any Republicon

Meigs included in seminar

.

and The Couriers. He has worked
as studio piamst on recordings for
artists in cludi n~ The Rambos, The
Goodman Family, Wendy Bagwell
and Sunlightcrs. Speer Family,
Florida Boys, Rex Nelon Singers,
Smging Americans, Statesmen and
Gol d Ci ty Quartet. He has produced and performed on over 500
long-playing albums.
Pastor Lamar O'Bryant invites
the public. A free -will offering will
be racived Saturday evening.

Forget the quan~rly IUII IOn, or even that long-awaited vacauon.
mat! lito Bank One Or JUSt call loll -free ,
indexes and cxpcn panels.
There couldn't be a better lime to l-800-472-lliJ Thts ISthe best loan offer
For once, there's some ft- harrow than nght now lnteresl rates on
news thals bound consumer loans are lower than they've you've seen m years We're positive
to get you excucd.
been in years. (And there$ no telling when 1~. !r' )OUr free copy ol Bank OneS Loan Gwde, send th;]
Bank One ts setting they'II be this low agam. ) So if you borrow I ~t;;;!~~:~~~~~~~~ I
as1de plenty of money for consumer loans now, you could end up paying a lot less for I GUTDE (]J\[J'fR
I
That means we have lois of t1 available for your loan in the long run
I~
I
people hke you to put to good use.
I
A Bank One banker can show you I~
I
Gty,Soue,ZiP
-=
c
How about that home tmprovement a whole range of ways lo borrow, from
I
proJea you've been putung ofP Or the new mstalment loans to lines of cre(ht They're
I
car or the washer and dryer you need. You all e.xplamed in the Bank One Loan GUJde. I
\Vhattwr it tf1hes·
I
can also use thts money for college To gel your free copy, clip this coupon and I
1. ~----- ~~~~~ --- _ _ _j

-=
BANKHONE

(i}
~

I'''"' ' "hi" 1"', •rd11 Jrr'•••al (l 1'1&lt;1.

R.~NI IJ 'JI r i\~{'(1/UI/i(J.\

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, AprilS, 1992

McEwen to address
Meigs GOP on May 1

The Meigs County HJStoncal with dosplays ol trams by local ra•l~
Socicly and Museum has chose n as road club members. There will be
the Hcmagc Weekend theme for antiq ue cars and anttquc farm
1992, "The Good Old Summer - equipment.
Members of the 91sl Civil War
time." Activ1ues and exhibits will
gro up will be on hand to dcmonbe planned around thJS theme.
As a prelude to the weekend. a srrJtc su mm er acttvnics in Civil
"Fashion Through the Years" vin - War t1m cs. A box social will be
wge style show is plannCil for June held June 13 as a fundmising part
II. The museum diSplay will he of th e acuviucs.
"Fashions Through I he Years." The
T hcr~ will be rc crc JtlOn and
annual Hcmagc We ekend dmncr cmcnainmcm both day s.
will be held June 12. Museum ellS Clothing and apparel is needed
plays and actiVIUCS Will be CnJOyCd fo r ~1 c vmtagc style show and fash·
Saturday from noon !O 7 p m and ton dtsplay as well as a summer Sunday from noon to 5 p.m .
time memorabilia. Person wtth
Memorabilia from summer clolhm g or apparel should contact
aclivities will be on display , along the museum at992-3R 10 by Friday.

'

mid 60'\..

OBSERVING EVENT· April 5-11 has been
declared Week of the Young Child in Pomeroy
by Mayor Bruce J. Reed. The event is observed
nationwide. In Meigs County, area businesses
will display artwork, and on Wednesday, a
clown program will be presented at Ginger-

LOGAN RILF:Y

Low tonight in mid 4&lt;k.
Thur-,.b~· . p~rtl) cloud_\. High in

Annual beauty pageant set

Heritage Weekend events
announced by museum

\'f~
'· ·.,.,

Pick 3: 114
Pick 4: 076!

Cards:
Q-H; 5-C; K-D;

New arrival
Jeff and Mary Rdcy, Charleston,
announce the birth of thw son,
Logan Shea MacKenzie, on Feb.
24.
He weighed six pounds and nine
ounces and was 20 mches long .
There is a another child at home.
Sean Patrick.
Maternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Mills, Pomeroy .
Maternal great-grandmother 1s Hattie Fischer, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
and Mrs. Marshall. Riley, Mason.
W.Va

Ohio Lottery

Reds win,
even record

Meigs County Emergency Ser- agement Agency.
vices Dirutor Raben Bycr will be
The three -hour scm1nar "
among those attending a special designed to familiarize local emerhazardou s material s se minar m
gency response crews w1th ConGloLtster, sponsored by Conrail.
rail's information systems and oulDespite efforts to prevent such 1incs procedures used by Conra1l
occ urren ces, railroad accidents during an incident, with emphasis
invol ving hazardous materials do on the need for coordination
occ ur and local emergency between the railroad and local
rcspon~c agencies (fire, police and emergency response units.
EMS) could find themselve s m
Mace said he encourages at least
charge of. or helping with, attempt- one member from every f'11e, police
ing to manage a situation threaten· and EMS department in the three
mg the well-being of hundreds of county are2 10 attend.
people. Thus, it is imperauve that
"We hope to fill the hall with
those professionals know how to emergency responders for this semgather nuessary infonnation and inar," said Randy Mace, director of
respond properly to the specific Sit· the Athens County Emergency
uauons presented to them.
Management. "We expect this to be
In order to improve the pre- a valuable and interesting presentaparedne ss of the eme.rgency tion that won 't be repeated often in
responde~ in this area. ~hich borthis area."
der Conrail tracks, Conrrul w1U pn:Mace encouraged those .ltcndscnt its Emergency Responder ing to pre-register by callillg hi•
Training Seminar for responder office at 594-226!. Only Cl!ough
departments in Meigs, Athens and material will be available for those
Perry counties in Glouster on Apnl who pre-n:gister. Meigs Countians
!4. The seminar is sponsored by interested in attending are urged to
local fire departments,.and the cootact Byer at Meigs EMS .
Athens County Emergency Man -

Ry JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
A Pomeroy man pleaded guilty
to charges of voluntary manslau ghter and felonious assault Tuesday
iu the Gallm County Coun of Com mon Pleas.
Brian L. S1monaux, 24, was
accused of slabbing a Galllpol1s
man to death and injuring three
others in an early morning alterca liOn outSide of the Addison Club on
State Route 7 north of Gallipolis
Dec. 20, 1992.
Terry E. White, 31, of Gallipoli s, died at Holzer Medical Center
from multiple stab wounds to the
chest.
Injured were James Taylor ,
Dennis Coughenour and Daniel
Darst.

Rutland water, sewage system
project said 'right on schedule'
Work on Rutland's $2.2 million
waste water and sewage collection
system IS "nght on schedule with
completion scheduled for June 1."
according to Sandy Smith, project
coordinalor.
Smith,
who is also the
village clerk-treasurer, said during
Monday night's Rutland Village
Council meeting that about 15 ,000
gallons of sewage is being pumped
through the new plant each day by
the nearly 250 households and
businesses which have been conne&lt;:ted into the system. The rest of
1he grinder stations and connec tions to the main tines are expected
to be complcied this month and
May will be spend cleaning up and
seeding areas which were dug up to

CONG. 808 McEWEN
county officeholder. Accordmg to
Jones, only 200 tickets will be sold,
so those iniCrcstCil in auending arc
urged to purchase tickets at once
The last day to purchase ucke ts
will be April 27.
The dinner will be held at the
Me igs County Senior Citilcns Center in Pomeroy. A social hour wil l
be held from 6-6:30 p.m., wilh 1he
dinner bemg served at6:30.

Arafat reported
safe after crash
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - Searc h
plan es found PLO chief Yasser
Arafar bru1scd but safe today 1n
Libya's remote southern dese rt ,
where his plane had vam shcd m a
sandstorm a day earlier, PI.O of~ ­
cials said .
According 10 Arafat's office in
Tun Js, Tunisia , he sent a tcr~ message today from the PLO trainmg
camp at aJ Sarra, Libya : ''I'm well,
everyone 1s well, thank all tho se
who were involved."
It was not Immediately clear,
however, whelher the plane cras hlanded or how Arafat arnvcd at th e
PLO base.
Libya's official news ag ency,
JANA. reported that all three of the
plane's crew members di ed in the
landing . But the agency wa.1 alone
with the repon.

Common Pleas Cou rt Judge rage, either of which IS brought on
Donald A. Cox sc n1en ced by seriou s provocation occasJOncd
Simonaux 1o six-lo- 15 years for the by the v1 ctim thai IS rC&lt;J;(mably sufvoluntary manslaughlcr charge and fi cie nt to mcitc th e person into
threc~ to - 10 years for felonious using deadly force. shall knowmgly
assa ult. The se nten ces arc to be cause the death of another. "
served concurren ~y .
The section continues, "W~v ­
S1monaux r eceived cred it for cr violates th1 s secoon 1s gu ilty of
110 days served 1n the Ga l11a voluntary manslau ghter, an aggra Cou nty Jail.
vated felony of th e f11st degree"
Simonaux was onginally punishable from fiv e-to-25 years
charged with murder, punishable confinement and a maximum fine
by l1fc imprisonment. However, a of$10.000.
grand jury in January 10dictcd
Simonaux eariJcr supplied offi .
Simonaux on a charge of voluntary cia ls a false name of Ll oyd A.
manslaughter.
Si monaux and supplied a false
Secllon 2903.03 of the Ohio birth date.
Revised Code pertaining to volunJudge Cox ordered S1monaux
tary manslaughter states "no per- transported Monday from the Gal~
son. while under the inOuence of lia County Jail to the Orient Corsudden passion or m sudden fit of reelional Faclluy.

installlulCs, Sm 1th sa1d.
village counc il member wa s
Currently all residents are pay- accep ted and Duane Weher wa s
ing a flat fcc of S16.12 a month for appo1 nt ed lo fill the unexpired
the service. Once everyone is term . Fmk's employment schedule
hooked into the system, then the necessitated his resignatiOn, it was
regular charge of $8.06 per 1,000 reported.
gallons of water used be billed. The
The clerk-treasurer said that the
change in hilling is ex peclcd to appli cation for water !me replace start on June I.
ment funds through Issue 2, Ohio
Mayor Ed Martin presided at the Public Works Commission, is due
meeting during wh1ch time a spnng on May I. The village is on a f1ve
cleanup in the village was dis- year plan w1th a total cost of about
cussed. II was noted that the Meigs SIO.OO::J
Coun1y Liner Control will be
Rcpa11 of the dump truck was
asSisling with the cleanup . On di SCUSSed.
Apnl 23 the village dump truck
Allcnding were Mayor Marlin .
will pick up appliances, furniture , Smith, and Council members.
trash and other debris with the Ln- Weher, Vi Ckie Fmk, Jo Ann E:ids,
tcr Control to handle the dumping Steve Jenkins. Jerry Black, and
chatgc.
Kcilh Molden.
The res1gnation of Jim Fink as a

RAC inspection underway
West Virginia sta te and federal longed labor diSpute w1th the
mspectors today staned a n:vicw of un1on .
Ravenswood Aluminum CorporaWednesday's
inspcclion s
l ton to determine is the Jackson stemmed from in furma lion presentCo un1 v, W.Va .. manufacturer is ed to Hamrick last wak by a coal ico mp(ying wllh envJConmc ntal lion of labor and environmen tal
laws, We st Yirg1nia DivJston of groups .
"Their concerns arc lc gtllmatc
Natura l Resources D ~r cc t or Ed
and will be addressed hy thi s mvcs Ham rick announced .
In spec tors from the D,'lR' s t1ga11 0n," fbmnck s.a id. "S mcc the
nlfJC cs of Enmonmental En force ~ company's d1 sc har g~ JX'Tmlt IS up

lor renewal, 11 ts Im portant

[ (I

resolve these ISSUC~ t'ic forc a rina]
determination on Jh c pcrm11 1..,

made ."

Samples L1ken at tile " tc will he
analyzed at sta te and commcrclill
laboratories. "Bccau~ nf 1hc larg e
'-'OI urnc or samples an t1c1 patcd. ; 1
will be several week s hcforc the
re&lt;;ults arc analyzed and returned,"
llamn ck added

nt r r1 t and Comp l 1a ncc Monnor -

1n g/E nforccmen1 and the U.S.
Envlflmmcntal Protection Agen cy's Wheeling office appeared at
the plant early today to begin the11
review of the facillly .
"This compl1an ce in spectiOn
will dctcnmJOc in the allegations of
Ravenswood Aluminum's dis re gard of state and federal cnv lron mrnt~ll !Jws have merit," Hamnck
S:lld.
The inspcCiion will focus on the
company's discharges into th e
Ohio River. its spray trrtgation
f1eld , landfill and storage si te s.
Soil, groundwater and waste sam pl es will be taken. Inspectors also
will rcv1cw compa ny records.
Hamri ck said.
Allegations that Raven swood
Aluminum is ignoring state and
federal law s have been made by
representatives of environmental
groups and organized labor. The
com pan y is in the midst of a pro-

Wyatt recognized by
Meigs County board
An outstanding Mc1gs County
sc holar wa s rccogn11cd by lh c
Mc1gs Coumy School Board when
1t met tn rc gul::i.r sessiOn on Mon ·
day .
Robby W . Wyan IS Mc1g s
Coun1y's rCCipicnt of Lhc Franklin
B. Walter All -Scholastic Award .
lie will be presented a pl aque at the
acadc n11 c cx~.:c l lcncc banquet on
May 7 and will anend a specia l
recognition lunchr.on in Co lumbus
onMay12 .
The need for addl!ional spcc1al
cducauon unl!s for 1992 ~ 1993 was
discussed .
The board endorsed a busmcss

conccpl prrscn1 cd by Clarence Ed
Evan s for a J ETD I (Jobs An Eng•
ncm ngffcc hnology Llc vc lopm c·m
ln1ti:Hivc).

An agr ccmen l wJth SEOVE\ '
(Southeastern Oh1o Vol untary Edu cat ion Cooperative) for computer
software scrv1ccs wa11 approved .
A publi c mcclmg was held to
review th e county office cvaluaUon
report, and compl eted an OSBA
mcmhcr .survcv .

The budget' for the A.R E JORS
pilot program was approved. "'
were the trea surer's financ1al rrport
and the payment of I he bil ls

Marietta to host Division 10 ODOT meeting on Aprill4
Every community in the nine- meeting is scheduled from 9:30 to tratc on regional concerns at the
county region that makes up the 11 :30 a.m.
"macro" level. They will not he
Ohio P}cpartment of TransportaAccording lo John Dowler, cons idermg specific, ncar~ lcrm prolion' s District 10 will have a deputy dir&amp;tor of ODOT, District JeCts that are now underway or
chance to play a key role in shap- 10, the April 14 meeting, like the being soughtm the area.
ing what some state and local offi. ACCESS OHIO plan, will address
"local participauon 1s critical 1f
cials are calling the most compre- all modes of transportation includ- ACCESS OHIO is going to be suc hensive "multi-modal" transporta· ing highways, rail, air, water and cessful," Dowler says. "We intend
tion plan in the state's history.
public 'transit systems. Environ - to do more listening than anything
Ohio's "Multi-Modal State mental concerns will also play a else at this meeting. Our cusiOmers,
Transportation Plan", or ACCESS major role in the planning process.
local governments , development
OHIO will affect how Oh10ans
Dowler explams that ACCESS agencies, the business community
travel ~d move goods far into the OHIOwiUprovidebolhashortand and the general pub(.jc, have a
21st century.
.
long tenm suategic planning frame. direct economic stake in the transLocal participation in crcaung work for decision making in the portation systems that we create
that plan in southeast Ohio will state of Ohio. Its shon-tenn hori- during 1hc next two generations."
begin at a spectal pubhc meeung of zan could be as short as five years,
The April14 meeting in Mariet area government officials . business while it s more long-term focus ta is one of dozens being scheduled
leaders, community and CIVIC orga- could take Ohio to the year 2~. by ODOT in communilics across
nizations and the general public on He also stresses that State tnlns- the Slate . ODOT's District 10
Tuesday, April 14, at th~ Holiday portation officials and ACCESS ·includes the counties of Athens,
Inn, just off I-77, Manella. The OHIO planners intend to concen- Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,

Morgan, Nohl c. Vinton, and Wash ~
ingron . Local off1ua!s, planning
agenCies, bus mess leaders, commu-

nity and Civic orgamzat1ons and the
puhlic arc bemg lflVi!ed 1o panicipute.
Groups and mdividuals interested in presenting co mments at the
public meeting should contract
John Dowler at ODOT's District
I0 office m Marietta. He can be
co ntacted at 373-0212 weekdays
between 7:30a.m. and 4:30p.m.
Written comments also can be
su bmitted lhrough April 30 and
sho uld be forwarded to John R.
Piau, Assi stant Director for Transponation Modes, Ohio Depanment
of Transportation. 25 South Front ·
St., Columbus 43215.
According to Dowler "ACCESS
Continued on page 3

�Wednesday, AprilS, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, April 8, 1992

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April9
Accu - Wcalhcr~ forecast for daytime conditions il!ld high tempcmturc.s

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

ROBERT L WINGETT
Puhlisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHA RLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE'ITERS Of OPINION are welcome . They should be less than 300
words _ All lette rs are su bj et:l to c1.litmg and must be stgnet.J with name.

address and telepbone number. No unsigned let ters wdl be publtsbed Letters
))ho uld be m good taste. addressing issues, not personalities .

Hopes high for revised
testing, diploma system
By ROBERT F.. MlLLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio- There is a modern verswn of former Gov.
James Rhodes' old admonition lllat Ohio's studeniS should graduate from
high sc hool "with a d1ploma '"one hand and ajob in llle olllcr."
Rhodes co tncd the phrase m lllc 1960s wh1le upgrading Ohio's vocaJional sc hool s to make them a respeciable alternative for students who
could not alford or d1d not want to go to coll ege.
Ted Sa nders. slate school supenntendent , said last week lllal a diploma
Oh
10 should be "wonh more than the paper it's pnnlc.d upon " For sl un
1
dcnts. the me&lt;1ning is roughly lllc same.
But Sanders and others also apply it to a new era of, world cconom1c
compelttJon thai IIley say is demandmg improvements in'llle entlfe school
,ys tcm for Ohio's sake- not just the Siudcnts.
.
_ He jomcd the educauon chainmen of the House and Senate 10 wJtncss
. Gov. George Voinov ich's signature on a bill to help students go better
· prepared into college or to jobs that can enhance Oh1o 's role in ~&gt;e emerg ing global market place.
The leg islation changes student testi ng.
Its sponsors, Rep. Ronald Gcrberry, D-Austintown, and Sen. Eugene
Watts, R-Columbus. smd it measures what students have learned ramer
: tl1a11 - as at prcsenl - how they perfonm in relation to each olller.
· Sanders said it "gives us the bas1c tools to JUdge llle effects of what it
"that we do rather than the qualily of our efforts. It enables lllc educauon
system to focus on lllc needs of studen ts."
The b1ll reso lves a controversy that devclopc&lt;ltwo years ago when the
lcgJSlature created a four -tier d1ploma system that called for diplomas
rang 111g from a certifi cate of attendance to a dtploma w1th dtSunctton.
Under the new law, there will only be the tradtllonal diploma and a
diploma w1th honors. The Iauer will have to be earned by the passage of a
12111 grade proficiency test and by meeung certam olllcr cntena to be set
· by the state Board of Education.
.
.
Under present law, the ninth-grade profictcncy test-. whtch must be
passed before a high school diploma is awarded - rcmams tnU!Ct but IS
opandcd to include a f1fth category- sc.tence. .
..
.
The Jest cu rren~y tncludes malll. English, readtng and ctttzenshtp. SCIence wi ll he added in lllc 1995- 1996 sc hoo l year.
The b1ll also ca ll s for a founh -gradc profictency tesl, stan1ng in 1994\995 . It authorizes the state board to add yet another proficiency test
between grades four and nine. no later than the 1995 -1996 sc hool year.
Ph"ed out hy 1hc btl! arc 1hc achievement teste now required for
.srades four. m, eJgill and 10 . Sponsors sa1d thi s chan ge represents a
.philosophical change !llat Stresses \carnmg Jn StC.1d of trackmg 10 ldCnttfy
lhc best and worsl studen t performers.
. . Sponsors conceded that the bill creates a te st-dnvcn curricula to which
. · teac hers teac h. a concern of the Oh•o Ed ucauon Assoc wuon wh1ch Sa.Jd 11
: iden tifi es prohlcms but doesn't solve Ihem.
· Gcrhcrrv s:11d this may be true and 1ha1 it is unfo rtunate. But he sa&gt;d
1he bil l " the hcst opuon he sees avail ab le to sec that students ca n rc.1d ,
wntc . do arahmctiC und become good cit izens.

:Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
llv The Ass&lt;&gt;&lt;iatt·d f'ress
rollow mg arc occrpis from rrcc n1 cdiloria ls on nauonal tss ucs 1n
ncw, p;tpcrs Jcross the

s L:llc .

The Columbus Dispatch, April 2
Most pcoplc would he happy 10 take a day off 1f a doctor prcscnbed
th:ll .
Prc s ~elcn l Bu sh. however.

l'i not mos t pcDp!c.

So there ts no ass ur;::mcc that the prcs Hlcnt will reduce lh c hectic JXICC
hL' kee p-; J.nd take v;.~c;.allons mnrc Llftc n. &lt;t'i h1s doc tor , Burton J. Lee III.
;Hh t'icd lJst week after J;IVI!lF I3ush ~~ ph ysK3 1 and say ing he is in perfect
hL·all h.

FH·n v. hl' n he

1s v~Kaltontng, a~

Wink all thiS g1ves UJC Jmprcss ion of hocmctlcss energy, it also lak es a
tu ll. ,ln(\ &lt;1 n~ d(~s n 't ha ve to OC a doctor to Llctcc t it
II !lush hdi cvcs he has to keep up a frantic pace to please the public,
he's wrong. Ill' ha s the to11g hcst JOh ' " th e world. and all Americans
llnnnl Sc 1l l'\

·

ing on lllose tssues. Instead. Foley .
the third man in line for the U.S
pre sidency in the constitutional
chain of command. is making headlines about bounced checks. nocost prescription drugs. f~tt pad-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ing and ille low fees at the House
gym.
The beleaguered Foley tS being
flogged on television by the telegen ic Gingrich , who accuses the
speaker of cover-ups and other
crimes. The response from the
unflappable Foley has boen lawyttly and measured - reminiscent of
Michael Dukalcis' robotic response
lot he hypolllctical rape of his wife.
Gingrich himself put his finger
on Foley's biggest handicap back
in !990 when he said of Foley .
"He has to get an A-pillS for hav-

mg helped return the House to a
sense of decency. and returning
congressmen to being colleagues
again He 's very decent." In retrospect. the comment is less a com pliment than the assessment of a
man sizing up ht.s ene my' s
Achilles· Heel.
In Foley's hometown, his farner
IS remembered as the judge who
was so well-liked that even defendants thanked him when he sentencal them 10 jail. In Foley's first
coogressional race m 1964, he set
the tone by citing hts opponent for
"distinguished se rvice." In !985,
Foley pronounced that he was
" temperamentally not a basher."
Too bad . One pol told us that
Foley didn't have to fight Gingnch
on the floor of the House. He merely had 10 make life miserable for
Gingrich in his home state of Georgia, where he barely scraped by
wolll a re-election victory in 1990
W&gt;th a margin of !,000 votes.
'The filS! step should have been
to rally the unions in Georgia and
other !raditionall y Democratic con-

HeY, i'ISON, t4e.e:r '{OliR
t-JeW ceLL.MaTe.
L,eoNa HeL.MSLeY! aND
~D L.UCK io VoU BoTH.

Everyone d c~rves some slo w time , th e president of the
tha n anyone cls.c .

mnr~.·

!Ja yton Daily Nrws, March 31
M1kc Tyson ~' a s en!Jtled 10 h1 s cla y in court. and he's cn tillcd lo
appeal lk ilccsn't have a riglnto walk 1hc streets unul h1ghe r courLs act.
,\Iter Mr. Tyso n's sc ntcnun g last week , Harvard law professor Alan
:Oc,howl t/. ru shed out of the courtroom 10 ask a higher coun to dela y
i;(·ndmg Mr. Ty son to pd. Mr. Dcrs how icz said he's so convmced that Mr
Tyson will hchave JX' nd1n g h1s appeal that Mr. Ocrshowitz will prom1se
not 10 pursue the chase up 1hc court chJJn 1f Mr. Tyson violates any terms
ol" h iS rclc;t\C.

Th1s 1.1 n't "Let's Make a Deal " Mr. Oershowitz' s offer JS only sli ght ly less offenSJvc 1han Dona ld Trump's suggestion that Mr. Tyson ought to
be allowcrllo make a chanJablc ccntrJhutJon tn lieu of going 10 prison.
Mr. Tyson's appeal may ~;ike a year. That' s a long umc for someone to
he si111ng 1n p il tf he shouldn't be there. But. on the o!llcr hand, M1kc
Tyson has been fou nd gu il ty of rape . A year LS a Iorge w111dow of opportu nity to hurt agam.

The (Lorain) Morning Journal, March 29
It's taken some do1ng, but Congress has fma lly JrTJJa tcd 1lic public
once too olten.
We're speaking of the check-bouncin g shenamgan s '" the US . House
of Rcprcsc ntattvcs. but that' s only the cawlyst that ha s st.ancd th e pot
holi l ~
.
.
Part of the public' s anger is dlfecicd at the ICJSurcly work hab•ts of
: Cong ress and the extended vaca1ions enjoyed by some of its members.
often '" exotic foreign countries and always at taxpayer expense.
But 1hc hard core of discontent grows out of the perks Congress
~pprovcs for its members to shield !llcm from the rigors of everyday life,
which we more com mon folk must endure.
. free parkmg in Washington is a g1vcn for congressmen. Sc arc free
tnailin g privileges. free and abundant rccreauonal facJ !tltcs and the free
time to c njo~ them , free med1cal presc npttons, a full (and free) med1 cal
sL'lff on call tn the Capitol building, haircuts and meal s at pnces the publ1c
- hasn 'l seen since the Great Depression and retirem ent benefits lllat most
Ul!tpayc rs can only dream aboul.
.
.
. Mayhc voters will forget all these transgressiOns before clccuon day.
'fhcy have in the past. But for an tncumbent runnmg for re -electton,
counting on llle short memories of voters thts ume could be hazardous to
their political heal Ill .

Slltucncics to a "scorc hed earth
policy" against Gingnch. the
Democratic pol sugges ted. Step
two would have been 10 on:hestrale
fund ra iS mg and radio advcnistng
against G1ngrich on his hom~ turf.
Had thi s been done, accordmg to
some party stra tegists, Gingnch
could have been pinned down in
hiS own district this year fighting
for hi s life at the polls instead of
roiling the waters closer to the
Potomac.
"The only way to deal with
New t is on the ground leve l, "
cxplamcd one chagri ned Democrat.
sympathcuc to Foley. " If you treat
him like a national figure. he'll be a
national figure."
Now, because Gingrich has been
allowed the luxury of a national
forum, Foley's leadership is in peril
in Washington, D.C., and his congressional scat is threatened back
home in Washington state. The
local Republicans there arc running
radio ads depicting Foley, in a fictional conversation, gloating over
the "whopping pay raise," he gave
Congress and announcing to check
bounce rs, "No problem , I'll just
have our lillie House Bank cover
lllcm."
It 's llle kind of mortar fire that
Foley can't seem to return in kind .
Americans admire wisdom,
patience and tum-thc -olllcr-cheek
restraint. But they also feel beucr
when the person m their comer has
a limit to his patience . One source
sa1d that Foley would have gone
greater political distances if a story
had circulated about how he
"grabbed somebody by the Lie and
punched him in ihe nose at any
time in his life."
SHARING THE BLAME Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fla .• may
have found llle antidote to the ami in cumb ency fever sweeping the
nauon this election year. Mack
call ed on Pres id ent Bush to fir e
Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady
because Americans are hurting. "ll
was one of the smartest thing s l
eve r did," an astonished Mack
later told hi s colleagues. "It made
me more popular in Florida than
just abou t anything I've done ."
Copyright, 1992, United Ftature Syndicate, Inc.

Whom would Perot hurt the most?
Lei's suck willllllc subJect of H.
Ross Perot and the likely effect of
h1s cand1dacy on thiS year's presidential race .
As l recen tly po1ntcd out. tf
Perot gets on the hallot in enough
states to maller (w h1c h is likel y,
though not cenai n). and then stays
the course and carries out his lllrcat
to spend a hundred mill ton of hts
own dollar s on 1h c ca mpa ig n
(roughly whal Bush and Clinton
will spe nd co mbtncd) . he ca n
unquestionably have a maJOr effect
on Lh c outcome.
That IS far from saymg, howc• er, that he can win. Such a result IS
alm ost inconccivahlc, and fortu nately so. As soon as htS can1 paign
gets seriously under way. just for
one tltJng, th e media will start
going ove r his life hi story With a
fcnoc i1 y lllat wi ll amaze Mr. Perot.
13y November, it's safe to say, hi s
hal o wil l be in considerabl e disar -

be one b1g voting bloc af1cr anodler
jumptng off his bandwagon. He can
write off the anti-abortion bloc and
1he ant1 -gun control vot= just for
starter s. having already offended
holll.
l said h1s election, thougll happtly unlikely, would be unfortunaJe .

William A. Rusher

becau se Pe rot. assumtng office
w1thout a pany of htS own m control of Congress, would quickly
dtScove r th at there tS remarkably
little he can do without the conscm
of lifelong politictans who care
nollltng at all about hos wishes, let
alone h1s best tntercsts. Tbc rcsuh
would be a four -year disaster.
Nevcnheless. Perot's candidacy
would be bound to affca ""' cam pa ig n. and quue poss1bly 1ts outcome. George Wallace m 1968 g()(
ray.
13 percent of the votes, and John
Then too, he wi II be forced to And erson tn !980 got 6 perunt
take stands on all the issues of llle Let 's co mpromise and say Perot
day, inc ludin g th e rea lly tough gets I 0 perc e nt Whom would
ones, and 1ha1 thuddin g sound wtll those voters otherwise have sup-

ported - Bush or Clinton (assummg u' s Clintoo)'
I suppose that in the beginning
most of them would tend to be
drawn from Bush. After all, Perot
l.S a businessman. and apparently a
good one: he would be bound to
app.al. at leas1 at first glance , to
other businessmen and those
friendly to business interesls people who lean toward the Repubhcan Patty.
In addttion. Perot is identified
woth quas1-milttary bravura and
dcrring -&lt;lo - wimess hts successful rescue of two of h1s employees
from one of tbe Ayaiollah Khomci m's prisons. and his selec tion of
Adm1ral James Stockdale (a lon gumc ~.soocr in Vicmam, a Medal
.of IIOOIY winner and a true Ameri can hero) as hiS at least temporary
vice prc s1dent&gt;al running -mate .
Thai should appeal to a great many
oo-nonsense. pro- m1 11tary rypcs IIIOSI!y Republicans. again.
On the other hand, much of
what lm!c we know about Perot 's
opiruons - his pro-choice and progun conlrol positions, for exampl e

L·ln-,c l1u 'i h-watchcrs have n01iccd. the

)HC 'i llknt 's pace IS hrc.:_ll htaklllg. Wh eth er p1Jy1n g £Oif or toolmg around
1n ht'-' ~pcc&lt; lhnJL BliS h is no IJgganl.

und oq~nHlt h;H .

WASHINGTON- If House
Speaker Tom Foley, D-Was h.. is
deposed, it will be becatLse he lost a
battle that thi s " Mr . Nice Guy"
nev er fought. It should have begun
on June 6, !989, when htS predecessor, fonmer Speake~ Jim Wright.
D-Texas. told Congress, "Let me
give you back this JOb."
Fo ley made a mi stake that
month by not puttmg on the gloves
and coming out swingi ng agamst
the man mo st !tkc ly to make his
life mtScrablc, Rep. Newt Gingrich,
R-Ga., the GOP's guerrilla fighter
who now has the De moc rats and
Foley reel mg.
Minorily Whip Gmgrich has
been hammerin g Foley for 1hc way
the House is run, even to llle poinl
of blaming G•ngflc h' s own
bounced checks on the Dcmocmuc
lcac!ersh•p.
.
Th1s is a year when all llle polttical slars should hav e been al1gned
for the DcmocraLs. The country is
ga lvanized for Democratic issu_cs
of health ca re , jobs and tax fatr ness. The party should he cap ita liz-

- tilts sharply in llle other direc tion. and would be likely to appeal
to voters that Gov . Clinlon will
badly need. When !learned lllal my
old sparring -partner Molly Ivin s,
1he most liberal woman in Texas ,
rather approves of Ross Perot, my
nose positively twitched . What
doc s she know chat we don 't'
My gues s. ther efore (a nd I
freely admit it's only a gue ss), is
1hat Perot will stan out by pullmg
more heavily from potential Bush
supporter,; , bul lose most of lllcsc
relatively senSible people m the
course of the campaign and wmd
up keeping Clinton busy trying to
hang on to various Democratic voters eage r to get hooked on a new
brand of snake oil.
One group of voters. however.
will slay with Perot to the ~iller
end , and !h at' s what mig ht be
called "the C inderell a vote": those
s•mplistic so uls who truly believe
that tl&gt; c glass sli pper fits hi s foot ,
and that with him we can defeat llle
two wicked sisters and ltvc happ tly
eve r after.

(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
F:NTF:Rl'RISE ASSN.

Flat tax needs a better mouthpiece
I' vc figured out a novel way lo
kil l a good 1dca: You get a dippy
po l•t•cian to hold 11 steady while
11npe rceptivc pundits pour poison
dow n its throat.
That 's about what is happemng
to the revo lutiOnary co ncept of a
nat -rate tax sy stem. Quirky Jerry
Brown has proposed so methin g
th at he says is a nat tax but in fact
is a s1range mtxture of ground
baloney suspended in snake oil. H1s
crillcs arc having a high time as
th ey smas h Dr. Brown' s bottles and
flu sh lllc contents down the drain.
Jerry says he can abolish the
cx istmg tax system and finance lllc
government with a flat !3 percent
tax on income and a 13 percent
"val ue added tax" on ·goods and
se rvi ces - in esse nce a natiOnal
sal es tax. He would do away with
most dedu ctio ns and abolish ihe
Social'Security tax altogether.
Because it emanates from the
moulh of a character who so unds
lik e he has overdosed on his own
elixir, the flat taX is being panned
as a noxious notion by critics.
many of whom clearly haven't
researched what they reprove. The
flat l;lx is " hideously regressive,"
says Washington Post columnist
Lou Cannon. It' s a "ditsy'' idea,
says his Post coll eague Mary
McGrory. It would be the "grealest
sin gle rip-off of American working
peo pl e in this nation's history,"
says New York Daily News columni st Lars- Erik Nelson.
That is bull. To be more accu rate it is half bull: The generic idea
of a flat ux is brilliant; but Jerry

Brown' s version of a fiat ux os
st upid , and 11 is a monstrous shame
that 11 IS bemg blown out of the
water by the Sheik of Rake.
The most grievous shortrommg
of Jerry's plan 1s the complete
absence of personal allowances. In

joseph Spear
Brown's world. everybody pays.
The destitute be damned- you g()(
income, you pay. This OO.S indeed
render lllc UlJt terribly regressive.
The second most grievous lhing
about Jerry· s plan is that the luden
of taXallon falls almost completely
on llle middle class. He says wort ing people would benefit beaoUSl:
hi s value -a dded ta&gt; would be
levied aga1nst busmess. But wha1
business wouldn't pass il through'
In fact, workers would end up paying a 26 percent tax - 1J percent
of !lleir wages and anothl:r !l percent or everything tbey buy in tile
fonn of a sales tax.
The third most grievollS thing
about Jerry's plan is that it would
abolish llle Social Socurily system.
What's the point of eliminating the
world's most successful social
insurance plan ? Reform it, yes;
demolish it, no.
Fix lllose glaring problems and
you 'vc got an idea whose lime has
come. For el3111ple, if you permit
personal allowances of, Sly, $5.000
per family member, then a family
of four making $25,000 would be
paying taxes on only S5,1XXl of ib

HlCOffie . If lhc nat rate IS 17 percent , thc&gt;r tal would be S850, or
3A percent of tncomc. A $50,000
family would pay taxes on
S30.000, wh1ch at !7 percent
woold come to $5,100. or 10.2 percent of income . In other words, lllc
system would be mildly progresSI\.C..

It doesn't take a genius to see
!hat the percentage or income paid

in uxes for families of four would
max out at $5,020.000 and that
those who make more ca n keep
more. Frankly, I'm not worried that
quintilbonaires who pay $850.000
on taxes rn their ftrst $5 million are
going 10 be able to keep most of
what they make tn excess of that
amount. Especially not if you

atJach the same 17 percent tax on
busmess income- as disbnct from
wages - which would eliminate
loopholes for lllc nch.
So here is the truth you arc not
gellin g in the currcnl debate : A
nal -rate system lllat allows personal all owances and taxes bu si ness
'ncome as we ll as wages would be
s1mple, efficient and fair .
And that 's not eve n the best
part, which is this: Tax lawyers and
accountants would have to find
productive work for a change; the
Internal Revenue Service would be
a IJt~e-bitty bureau: and Congress
could adjourn on July 4 every year.
All that , and Brown is blowing
II.

(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday. April 8, the 99111 day of !992. There arc 267
days ldl in w, year.
Torlay's Highliglll in Histt:l)':
On Apil 8, 1974, Hank Aaron of lllc Atlanta Braves hit his 7!5th
career ~ run in a game against llle Los Angeles Dodgers, breaking
Babe Ruth s record. The round-tnppcr was off pttehcr AI Downing.
On this dale:
In 1513, explom Juan Ponce de Leon claimed Aorida for Spain.
In 1935, the Works Progress Administration was approved by

Coogres:s.
In 1946, the League of Nations assembled in Geneva for the last time.
In 1950, ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky died in London.
In 1952, 40 years ago, President Harry S. Truman seized the steel
iMistry 10 avert a nationwide strike.
In 1970. lhlo Senate rejected President Richard M. Nixon's nomination
of G. Harold Omwellto the U.S Supreme Court.

By The Ass&lt;&gt;&lt;iatrd Press
Temperatures s hould rcma1n
ncar nonmal for llle next couple of
days but more Apnl showers arc on
the way. the National Wc.1ther Service said.

MICH

•
[ Mansf1eld

Page-3

More April showers expected before weekend

OHIO Weather

House speaker Foley may be too nice

The Daily Sentinel

•

I 62' I•

PA

Unloading dock
hearing May 4

Youngslown

The U S Anny Corps of Engi neers has scheduled a public hearJog for May 4 at 7 p.m. al
Cheshire-Kyger Elementary .
The purpose of llle meeting JS to
allow Ohio Power Company, the
ow ner of the James M. Gavin
Power Plant near Cheshire, the
opportunity to cxplmn details of iiS
co ns truction of the l1mc barge
unloading facility ncar the plant
and to put !3.8 acres of wetlands in
the Kyger Creek drainage , as well
as the publiC to prov1de mput to th e

•I Columbus I 64' I

•

W VA

decision.

KY

A low pressure area developing
over the Central Plains today will
head toward the Lower Great Lakes
tonight and across Ohio on Thursday. Rain will develop ahead of it
and could reach Ohio late tonight.
especially thc nonhwest part of the
slate. The wet wealller will likel y
spread oul across the sta te on
Thursday.
Once this system moves off to
the east Thursday n1ght, dry weath er should return and remain into ~&gt;e
weekend . Temperatures will be
mild, with highs rangmg from the
mid -50s to ncar 70.
The record high temperature for
thi s date at llle Columbus We&lt;!thcr
SUltion was 83 degrees in 1893. The
record low was 19 in !972.
Sunset tonight wtll be at 8:02
p.m. Sunnse on Thursday will be at
7:00a. m.
Around tbe nation
Clouds and fog hung over much

EMS units answer 9 calls
Ntne ca lls for assistance were
ans wered by uniLs of Meigs Counly
Emergency Servtces on Tuesday
V1c1 Assoclaled Press GraptJcsNef
e1992 Accu Wea ther. l"c
and early Wednesday.
At 10:49 a.m., Rutland sq uad
responded to County Road 55 for
Elizabeth Allman, who was taken
Friday through Sunday:
South-Central Ohio
too·
Blcncss Memorial Hospi~1l.
Fair on Friday and SahUrday.
Tonight, increasing cloudiness
At
12:12 p.m. , Syracuse unll
Chance of showers Sunda y.
with a slight chance of showers
went
to
Thlfd Street. Mary Wingclt
Htglts m the upper 50s and 60s Fri !ale. Low in llle mid-40s. Chance
was
taken
10 Vc1crans Memorial
of rain is 30 percent. Thursday, day, 65-75 on llle weekend. Lows Ho spilal. At 12:41 p m., Middle mostly cloudy with a chance of 35-45 Friday, in llle 40s Saturday
port unll took Opal Cummins from
showers. High 65 -70. Chance of and 45 -5 5 Sunday.
Race Street to Pleasant Valley Hosram is 40 percent.
piial. At 6.02 p.m., M1ddl eport uuit
was se nl to General Hart1nger
Parkway. Raeni Wood wa.s transported to Veieraos. AI 6: 14 p.m.,
Theron
Durham
officiating.
Burial
Rutland squad and Columb1a Flfsl
Glad:vs Knotts
wil l be in Salem Center Cemetery .
Responder went to Erickson Road.
Gladys Knolls, 80. of Roule 1,
Friends may call at the fun eral
Vinton, d1ed Monday. April 6. home on Wednesday from 2-4 p.m. Raymond Rupe was tak e n to
1992, at VciCrans Memonal Hospi - and 7-9 p.m
tal.
She was born on April 24, !91 1
Nellie Sargent
'" Vmton, daughter of th e late
DAR to me;&gt;t
Nell ie Lou1se Rommc Sargent,
Charles Edgar Dyke Shenefield and
The Re turn Jonathan Mei gs
75. ol 419BI State Route 681.
Lois Alexander Shenefield.
Chapt
er, Daughters of th e Amcri ·
Surv1vors include four sons, Pomeroy, died Wedn esday, April can Rcvol utton will mcel Friday .11
John Knolls of Reynoldsburg, S, 1992 at her residence.
United MeihodiSt Church '"
Born on Oct. 23, 1916 atllcm - Hcalh
Robert F. KnOlls of R1plcy, W.Va.,
M1dcUepon atl:30 p.m .
Vcmon Lee Knotts of Baltimore, lock Grove. she was the daughter
Mrs. Go rdon Kn1ght, former
Ohio, and Kenny R. Knolls of of the late Charle s Romine and So uthea st Oistr1ct Dm:ctor. will
Col umbus; lhree daughter s, Mrs. Frances Eastman Romine. She was prese nt a program nn The GalaEdwin (Goldie) Nelson of Wooster. a housewife.
ragas Islands. location of Darwin 's
She was a member of lllc Hem Mrs. Jean Graham of Spri ngfi eld,
wo rk s on "The On g1n of th e
and Mrs. Timothy (Nancy) Hall of loc k Grove Christian Churc h and Spectes."
Whitehall; one neph ew, Roger the Harrisonvi lle Chapter, Order of
Hoste sses wil l be Mr s. Nan
Shenefield of Dallas. Texas. who the Eastern Star.
Moore,
Mrs . Wtlson Ca rp enter .
She is surv ived by her husband ,
was raised in the home : 19 gra nd Mr s. George Hack ett Jr .,' Mrs .
childr en: 33 great-grandchildren ; Doyle Sargent, Pomeroy: a daugh - Clarence Struble, Mrs. Daniel
te r and so n-in-law. Golda and
and !! great-great-grandchildren.
Robert
Roush. Hemlock Grove, a Thomas and Mrs. Roscoe Wise.
She was preceded in death by
Alumni mfi'tin~
her husband, Harry Knotts on Mjy son and daughter-in -law, Rtchard
There will be a Middleport
29, !986; one daughter. 13ctty. (D1ck) and Judy Sargent. Pont1ac. alumni organi1atwna l rn cc trn g
!940; four brothers: and two sis- Ill : two sisters. Ethel Euler, Racine .
and Edna Smilh, Myrtle Bc.1c h, S.
ters.
C.,
special grandchtldren. Scm and
Servtces will be held 2 p.m.
Ashli
Bcn~ey, Orville. and several
Thursday a11hc McCo y-Moore
and nephews.
nieces
Funeral Home , Vinton. w1th the
IIOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Besides
her parcnl s, she wa s
Rev. Ron F1crce and th e Re v.
Discha rges, April 7 - Mr s.
preceded m death by two brothers,
Rog
er Broyles and dau ghler, Ci nd y
Orville and Bert Romine.
Caslon,
Etckicl Clark, Douic CreFuneral serv ices wi!l be held
Veterans Memorial
means,
Rertha
Elliott, Mrs . KenTUESDAY ADMISSIONS - Frtday al l p.m. at th e Ewmg neth LJVtngsiOn and daughter ,
runcral Home. Skip Dom1gan will
Mary Wingell, Sryacusc.
offic1ate
and burial will be m the Steven Sperry, and Robert Yearan .
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Births, April 7 - Mr. and Mrs.
Burlingham Cemetery. Friends
Mary Poncr and John Meuger.
rrc
d Coffey, a son. Wellston, Mr.
may call at the funeral home 2 to 4
and
Mr s. John Coykenda ll , a
and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday . In ilr.u of
d a u~htcr, CJow11 C1 1y Mr . and
flowers, donations may be made to
the American Cancer Socicly, 13o• Mrs. Kenneth He ss. a daughl cr,
Ru ffalo. W.Va. Mr. and Mrs Joh n
692, Pomeroy .
Am Elc Power . .. . ......... 30 I(2
Rose. a son. Jackson .
Ashland Otl ..................... 32 511\
AT&amp;T....... ..... .... ....
4 ! 1/R
Bank One ................. .. ...... 4 5 !(2
Bob Evans ....................... 26 3/R
Charming Shop .
29 1(2
Cuy Holdmg ...... ....
.. !9 311\
Federal Mogul.. ........... ..... ! 5 1(2
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .... .... .... 6 7
Key Ccnlurion .. .. ............ 18 3/4
AT
Lands End ...... ..... ..... . ..... 32 511\
Limited Inc................... 26 711\
Multimedia Inc . ......... .... ... 26 1/4
Rax Res~aurant ................ I 13/16
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ...
17 1(2
Shoney's Inc .... .............. 23 Ill\
SiJr Bank ........................27
Wendy lnt'L. ................ . II )/R
Wonhmgton Ind .......... .... 23 711\
Stock reports are the !0:30
a.m. quotrs pro•ided by Blunt,
F:llis and Loewi or Gallipolis.
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries

Snow

/c;J

Sunny

Pr Cloudy

Cloudy

------Weather-----

--Area deaths--

O'Blcness. At 7:24 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook Ce nter. Stanlev Roush was taken to
Veterans . At 7:26 p.m.• Syracuse
unit went to College Road. Patricia
Houdashclt was taken to Holzer
Medical Center . At 8:35 p.m ..
Pomeroy and Syracuse un its went
to Pomeroy Pike for a two-car acci dent. Heather Goff, Jason Morris
and Annie Lemley were taken lO

Veterans. Roger Sm1th, Jr. refused
trealment.
On Wed nesday at 12:50 am.,
Tuppers Plains and Chester u11its
went to Keebaugh Road for a s~llC ­
ture fire at lllc Everett Calaway resid ence. Syracuse unit assisted and
lran sportcd Adam Calaway to
0' Blencss . Pomeroy un it also
assisted.

_Meigs announcements __

wa s posted for 1h1s afternoon and
Thursday for the Arctic slope and

of the natton lllis morn mg .
Sunny skies were foreca st for
most of chc West today . Thunderstorms were expec ted in Kansa s
and Oklahoma. Showers were fore cast in pans of Minnesota, Io wa
and Soulll DakoJa .
Partly cloudy sk ies and m1 ld
temperat ures were foreca sl for lll e
Eas t. Tempera tur es ton1gh1 we re
expected to fall below frccn ng '"
the Appalachtan MountaJn s.
In Alaska, a winter SIO'") watch

Marietta ...

t.hc coast.

On Tuesday, cloudy sk1es and
strong w1nds helped keep tcmper'J tur es Ill the 30s and 40s from the
northern H1gh Plains lllrough Nort h
Dakota to upper M1chigan and
northwest Wisconsin .
Highs ioday were foreca st 1n the
40s alon g the Canad 1an border: lllc
SOs across the nonhero states: 1hc
60s '" Nevada, Utah, Kar1sas. M• &gt;soun. sou1hcrn lllmo JS

_c_o_n_li ,_,u_•_d _fr_o_m_:P_".::g,_·_•_ _ _ _ _ __

OH IO will be an acuon tlo cumcnt-one that establishes clea r
pr lort ti cs and creates measurable
steps toward meeting those pn ori ti es. It is one of llle most imporiant
traospona tion plann ing endeavors
to take place tn Ohio since the
lnl crst.ate Highway Act in 1951i."
Dowler also says lllat ACCESS
OHIO will reflect the pnoritics of
the national policy, llle lntcnmodal

Surfa ce Transporiation Eff1ciency
Act of 1991 (IS-TEA), which
p\J ces greater crnphasts on lhc

maintenance and restoration of th e
Inter sta te highway sys tem ant!
env1ronmc ntal protection . It al so
iliiOws Slates unprecedented Ocxi -

biiity in the usc of federal funds for
a w1de range of multi -modal tran srortat ion needs.

_Middleport Court news_
operalor's li cense: John H. Maley,
Athens. $210, in sura nce suspenSIOn, and $60, wrong way on a oneway street; Todd E. Evans, Middle·
po rt , $60, failure to display a
!Jcc nse plaic; Kathy J. Gin ther ,
IV1Jcldlcport, $50. speedi ng.
Ric hard B. Li ttl e, M•ddlcpon.
T11nol hy Coa tes . Pomeroy, a nd
John G. Hayes, Middl eport,
appeared '" court on contempt of
co urt charges on old fines. Little
pc1id and was rclea.scd. Coates and
1-L&gt;y cs arc both conf1ned to the
Middlcpon Jail.

Nmc were fined , three forfei1cd
hands. and twn olllers were Jail ed
on co nte mpi charges in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Larry Le e, Jr ..
Pomeroy, SIO and costs. sp mning
Iires, and $!00 and costs, insurance
s uspension , William Kilgore,
Colu mbu s, $425 and costs and
ihrce days in jail. physical co ntrol
of a motor •chicle while under the
JnfiUCll CC Of aJcohoJ Or dru gs;
Ch ri stoph er M. George, Bidwell.
S425 and costs and three days m
Jail. physical co ntrol of a molar
vehicle while under the inn uc ncc
of al cohol or drug s. and SSO and
cosLs, consum ing alcohol under age
~ I : Matlllcw W. Case . Pal riot , $10
fine only, no taillighls.
Barbara J. Scroud. Gallipo!Js ,
$10 and costs, 1mpropcr backing,

lA~fJ I ~ ~ T JN(ES ~ATUR~I l ~l.lli ()AI

BAI{{j,I H MIGHT llJ{)QAT

APRIL 3 thru I

IOnighl at 7 p m at Pleascr's to
form a Middleport H1 gh School
and $ 100 and costs, msura ncc su:-; Alumn i Band.
pcnsJOn; Duane K. Black, M•d dl cCountry music night
port. $10 and CO.S IS, ille gal
Country music night at ihc Loi - ex hau st: Carl Smilh McFal l, Point
tndgc Community Ce nlcr will be Pl c"1Sant, W.Va., $10 lmc only. no
Satruday fmm 6 p.m. to JTIJCI111ght.
va ltd regJS ir ali on; M1 c hae l B.
Refre shm ent s will be se rved and
llmd y, Midd lepon. $100 and costs,
the public is in vi led.
1n -&gt; ur;:mce suspens ion; and H1chard
Hymn sin~
B. Ltttlc, Middleport, $ 10 and
Th ere will be a hymn SJng at
cosLs. fa ilure to control hJS vehicle ,
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long SSO an&lt;1 costs, di sorderly manner
Boitom on Friday at 7 p m. fcalur
after warmng
ing The Hanmomes and The Oatley
Forfcnin g bonds were Larry W.
Fam ily. Pastor Steve Reed inviles
Byers.
R1pley, W.Va. , $60, no
the public . Fellowship will follow

f~JI}_.l

t~rc

'~IJR ~OA~I

DOllY PARTON In ITIIR16HT TALK
! ~0.9 {0 OA:Ll

~ .l.l 'SUN

11,1. 1 I i'O.J 20 (PG )

RODNEY DAN6EAFIElD In UIDYIU&amp;s
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~AI"\L'I'I '1,1.!

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MY [DUliN UIN NY
10 D.l. 't •

5.1.' SIJN "' I I l).) JO (P)

(. ~llib ~OOK I

"N[W~I! S""

HOLZER CLINIC

Member: The Auocialed

Pr~ a.

Ohio New1papn As•uclllhun.

and thr.
~alJOnHI

A.dvertlllnJl IVpresentahvr . flranham
New1paper Sales . 733 Th1rd 1\vcnur.
New Yort . Ntw York 10017

The Radiology Department at Holzer
Clinic's Main Facility has received the
American College of Radiology 's

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each week .
No 1ubtcripl10ns by mail permitted m

arut where ho me carrier U!TVice u
available .

Mall 8uO.crtptlora.
lrwide Mttip County
13 Wed~.......... ........ .............. S2 i.S4

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throqh Friday , I U Court Sl . Pumeroy.
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Hospital news

Thr Daily Sentinel

"~ ·

WAYNE'! WORLD

Hospital news

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September you 'll save on
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BHTHDUEN

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08

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299

�Wednesday, April 8, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, April 8, 1992

Page--4

Chicago beats Milwauk~e; Boston edges Cleveland 100-97
satd. We JUSt wam~.d 10 keep
playmg hard and IDu~h.
The wtn gave Chtcago a 62-14
record. mcludmg a 33-5 mark at
ho~e. .
..
1 lhmk we occomphs.hed all of
our small goals. Now we.~e $01 to
keep everybody heallhy. Ptppen
sa•d .
. _
Tt.: defeat was the Bucks runth
consecut ive overall and 23rd
stra•ght on the road. Fred Roberts
led.~lilwaukee w1th 18 poml&lt;.
.
All we can do IS try to be poSI L1ve a~.d try to end thiS losmg
~~ealk .. coach Fr~ Hamblen srud.
.The s•Luauon were 1n can have
)OU go one of two ways- hang
your ~ad and Just play II out hke •t
docsn l '!'auer, or go out ~ckmg I
thmk we II go out lc!cking.
.
In other games. 11 was DetrOit
103, New York 94; Atlanta 104,
New Jersey 97; Orlando 135,Charlotte 110, M1am1 100, Washmgton
89. Boston 100, Cleveland 97, the
Los Angeles Cl1ppers 115, Mm nesota 108; Houston 95, San Anto:
nw 92, Utah 124, Denve r 101 :
Portland 110. Golden St21c 101,
Seatde_ll7, the Los Angeles Lakcrs 88. and Phoemx 10 3. Sacramenw 101.

:

By The Associated Press
Tuesday night for a franchiseThe Chicago Bulls got No. 62 . record 62nd vtctory of the season.
Now they want No.2.
Next goa l -:- a second stratght
Michael Jordan scored 30 poinL&lt; NBA champtonshtp.
and Scottie Pippen added 26 as the
IS great, but n's no
Bulls beat Milwaukee 116· forward Horace Grant

Pistons 103, Knicks 94
At New York, Bill Laimbeer
scored 2A points as the Detroit Pistons beat the Knicks. The Piswns
opened an 84 -72 advantage with
9:39 left_ before a W-4 spurt closed
the Kntcks to 88-82 . Detroit
regained control when Laimbeer
sandwiched two jumpers around a
fastbreak layup by Joe Dumars,
making ll 94-B2 wllh 2:02 left.
Mark Jackson led New Yor~ with
26 po10ts. Dumars and lsiah
Thomas each had 20 points for
Dctroll.
Hawks 104, Nets 97
At East Rutherford, Kevin
W• lil s scored 24 po•nts and h1L
three b•g baskets malate II-{) run.
. Stac}~ Augmon led the Hawks
w1Lh 2S 'jlomts, including a goahead three-point play. Derrick
Coleman, who did not play in the
fourth quarter because of a groin
lllJUry, had 16 pomts for New Jersey.
Magic 135, Hornets 110
At Orlando, Sean Higgins hitl2
consecutive shots and scored 29
points as Orlando e~minated Charlaue from the playoff picture.
Johnny Newman led Charlotte
with 22 points.

Heat 100, Bullets 89
At Miami . Glen Rice h11 five
three-pointers and scored 21 points.
Harvey Grant led Washington
wuh 20 points .
Celtics 100, Cavaliers 97
At Rtchficld, Boston's Reggie
Lewis scored a season-htgh 38
points, sank the go-ahead basket
with 11.8 seconds Jei'L and grabbed
the clinching rebound six seconds
later.
Brad Daugheny Jed Cleveland
wt th 27 points.
Clippers 115, Timberwolves 108
At Minneapolis, Ken Norman
scored 26 points on 12-for-14
shooung. Ron Harper scored 24
points and Charles Smith 22 for
Los Angeles, which shot 57 percent
from the field . Pooh Richardson
had 23 points and 15 assists for
Minnesota.
Rockets 95, Spurs 92
At San Anwnio, Hakeem OlaJuwon had 20 points and 15
rebounds.
Sleepy Floyd's seve n points
triggered a 14-3 run to close the
third quaner and give Houston its
largest lead, 79-67.
Jazz 124, Nuggets 101
At Denver. Karl Malone scored

24 points and Jeff Malone added
23.
The Jazz held a 65-43 advantage
at halftim e, and led by as many as
29 points in the final quancr. Regg•c William s led Denver with 20
points.
SuperSonics 117, Lakers 88
At Seattle. Eddie Johnson and
Gary Payton scored IB points each
and led a game -breaking spurt
earl y in th e fourth quancr. Lakers
coach Mike Dunleavy was ejected
for arguing a call with II :24 left
and the Sonics leading 79-70. Johnson then scored six points and Paytonf~urduringa 14-2spu':l.
TrailBlazers 110, Wamors 101
AI Portland, the Ponland Tra1l
Blazers zeroed m on their second
straight Paciftc Division title by
beating shorthanded Golden State.
Terry Poncr scored 26 points for
the Blazers .
.
Suns 103, Kmgs 101
Jeff Hornacek scored three baskets in a 90-sceond span late in the
game to _lead Phoenix to a comefrom -behmdvictory.
Tom Chambers scored 22 points
for Phoenix , while Hornacek had
21. Mitch Richmond led Sacrarnento with 32 points.

NHL loses antitrust suit in Minnesota court
By KEN RAPPOPORT
NEW YORK (AP) - The
NHL's 75th anniversary season is
apparently over prematurely. The
league's entire structure may not be
far behind.
"It wiII ki II the game in Canada
and many places 1n the Unttcd
Stat~s."

Vancouver Canucks vice

.. chairman Anhlll Griffiths said after
l the NHL lost an antitrust suit ~n a
Mmnesota court Tuesday.
Later in the day, players reJeciCd
UNSTOPPABLE- Boston forward Reggie Lewis (leftl shoots
the fmal take-n-or-leave-it contract
over Cleveland's Mike Sanders in the fourth quarter of Tuesday
offer from owners, leaving lillie
ni~hl's NIIA game in Richfield, Ohio. Lewis scored a game-high 38
hope of saving the season. The
points to help push the Celtics to a 100-97 victory. (AP)
ow ners , however, have left the
offer on the table until 3 p.m. EDT
Thursday, in case the play ers
change their mind.
Ironically, the Stanley Cup playoffs were scheduled ID startwmght.
Thursday's games
There were no new negotiations
In the NBA ...
~tw Yurk (Youn g 2-5) 11 St Lnuu
planned and NHL Players Associa(&lt;Abome 0-0),! J5 p.m
M ontrul f"~tlloll 8-7) •t Pl:uD.;.~
tion exec utive director Bob Goode(Wilk 9·2). 3 0~ p m
Atlanti( Division
now satd he would be leavmg New
Cluetgo
(~org•n
14
:O)
11
~dd­
w L Pt'L C.B
Tum
phta (l)eJuus I 0-9l. 7 35 r m
~12
1-Ncw York
York today.
)
San Francaco {llurleU \2-11) All1nt1
592
4\
dlonon
"Unless they reverse thiS tragic
I~- ~
t: i\VCT)' 18-8), /4/Jpm
35 40
l'e,. Je~r:y
C
lrtdnn•ll
(SwlndM
I
lJ
-U
)
al
llous
1J5
4\1
42
35
deciSion, the 75th anniversary sea~hlmt
I~~
440
tun fB . lt f'nry 0-0), 8:35 p.m.
JJ 42
!'tu lidclplm
son IS ov~r." NHL president John
)4
LAiol
Angc:le~
(Candux:.J
ll-13)
s
..
n
)16
14
Wuhtngtrm

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OII CJ~O 4, l'tiJbcldp/111 l
Cinctnna!l4, St n l'&gt; ltgo 2
S1 l .m~ 1 ~ 9, New Yod 2
1\tlama 2. Hou!lon 0
l.r'1 An11du 3, San Fn.ncucn 0

Today's games
San Dl~lfl (R~nt'J U-11 ) at Clndn ntll (Belcher \0-9), U:J! p.m.
CluaJO _(hcUon 1-5) al Ptu.luidplti•
(Greene i3-7),7.35 p.m.
Moot~~ i (Gt rdner 9- I I) at Pi1ubufJ}t
(Z Sm11h 16- 11), 7:35 pm
Atlanta (Smoltz \4 - 13) 1\ HfJUIIOil

(Kile 7 11). 8:35p.m.
New York (Fernandez 1-3) at St
Lows (B SnU\h 12·9), 1JS p.m.

llXAS HA:.;G ERS - l'!..ced ""ol•n
Ry1 n. l"lchrr, on tht 15 -day d,uhlr.d h n

5

roiatlon•IIA'I!IUt'

ST LOt.: IS CAIWI:-ALS - Pbced
loM: Oquendo and Andru Gahrnga . 111
loe.lden, M the 15-day d1.ubled !111 Rer a1kA Lu u Ahre.• . l!lf,rJdel, and Rnan
loniln, ootfit.lder , fmm IAllfVllle of \he
Amencan AUotllll on

Basketball
Nallonal Bu~etball Auodatlon
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS Placr.d Tnm To1hert . fonrrud.,., the 11\·
jun::d hn

MILWAUKEE Bl.:CKS -

An -

nounced the restgnltlon of Del lhmt .
VJce prcndcnl of bu.kc:tt.&amp;U openu(III

Football
Nt!lon•l Foolb•ll IA•Rut
~EW

CINCINNATI (AP) - Xavier
of Ohio basketball coach Pete
Gillen hasn't sa•d much about why
he withdrew from contcnuon for
the head coaching job at Villanova.
"I was very impressed with the
great situation they had at Villanova," Gillen said in a statement
released Tuesday, one day after he
visited the Villanova campus.
"I lovell at Xavier and love living in Ctncinnati. Thts IS our
home," he said.
G ilien could not be rcac hcd for
co mment. Hi s hom e telephone
number is unlisted.
A Villanova spokes man also
had little ID say about Gillen's deci-

O•G LA:'Io"D PATRIOTS Stgned Om1 Gutnm , dclD'\11 vc end

won't be able to accept."
Ztegler said Sunday was the last
possible day the season could be
re -started in order to compleJc the
entire Stanley Cup playoffs . But
some owners already were writing
the pos!Season off.
"It's a dark day,' Griffi ths said
in Vanco11ver. "Obviously, there is
another agenda and l hope they (the
players) enjoy their summer."
"The season is over," said Quebec's Marcel Aubut, a member of
the owners' negotiating commi ucc.
Goodenow agreed that prospects
lor resuming play weren't good,
but blamed the owners.
" It looks vcrv bleak now " he
said . " I think the proposal' conr.rms what we believed for many
weeks - that the owners did not
have any intention to come to an
agreement with the players."

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seven seasons at Xavier, his record

was 156-6 1, wtth NCAA tourna ment berths in all hut this past season.
Gi ll en is a graduate of Brooklyn
Prep and Fairfield University,
where he played baseball and basketball. He was an assistant coach
at Hawaii and Virginia Military
before going to Villanova.

"Pete Gillen called (Villanova
athletiC dtrector) Ted Ace to lo
withdraw hts name from co ntention. He said he did not want to
move hi s family," Villanova
spokesman Jim DeLorenzo ; atd
Tuesday.
Gillen has been an assistant to
D1ggcr Phelps at Notre Dame and
Rollie Mass imino, who left Villanova las t week to coach at
UNLV .
He previOusly has had job offers
fro m Notre Dame , Vir g1n1a and
Prov ide nce, and intervi ew offers
fro m Ohio Stale and Texas A&amp;M.
"Tht s is the one he struggled
wtth the most," Jeff Fogelson.
Xavier athletic director, said about
the Vtllanova open mg.
" This is the one that htt closest
to home . You could tell by the very
fa ct he visited the campus. That's
what made his decision -making so
wre nching . It was enoug h of a
curiosi ty that he had to viSi t 10 be

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Gille n. 44, left Villanova after
two years 1n 19BO and spent the
next five years at Notre Dame . In

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The Daily Sentinel

Page-S

Doran's clutch hitting helps
Cincinnati beat San_Diego 4-2

Ry JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Spring tramin g cost B1ll
Doran hiS JOb Two reg ular-season sw in gs won it
back .
.
.. Doran fmally got into .me Cincinnati Reds' lineup
I ucsd ay mght when Chns Sabo sprained his ankle.
Il lS first two swings resulted in a game-tying solo
homer and a deCISIVe bases-loaded si ngle for a 4-2
v.ctory over San D1cgo.
. The second baseman had lost his sLarting job by
hilling .197 w1Lh no homers and JUSt five RBis in
spnng tram mg. Doran, who usually has slow starts
didn'tlhink anything of it.
'
"Nobody keeps it locked in for 162 games,"
~oran said. "Even the great~! hillers struggle, and
I m certa10ly not one of them .
.
B~t manager Lou Ptmella took 11 to mean Doran
wasn I ready to play. He benched Doran on opemng
da~;n favor of newcomer B1p Robens.
It was JUSt a quesuon of gmng h1m time to give
himhis~trength," Piniellasaid .
Dtdn l take long .
Sabo sprained his right ankle by sliding feet -ftrsl
1010 first base 10 the secood 10mng. Roberts moved 10
Sabo's spot atthtrd, and Doran got h• s chance.
Three innings later, he came 10 bat against Greg
Harris (0 -1). After taking a pitch, Doran pulled a
slider over the nght-field wall to ue the game at2.
~.wcet..
.
,
.
.
That s the first ume l ve h11 the ball decent 10
over a month," Doran said.
One inning later, Doran came to bat with the bases
loaded and two out. Again, his first swing produced a
big hit - a two-run single to center for a 4-2lead.
Point proven.
"Goes ID show you what! know about whether a
guy's ready coming out of spring training," Piniella
said. "He showed he's ready. He'll be in the line11p."
The Padres thought they'd gotten a break when
Saba went out of the lineup.
"You about wish that Sabo hadn 't gotten hun,"
manager Greg Riddoch said. "Doran came in and did
the damage."
Tom Browning (1-0) helped. The left-hander scat·
tered five hits over eight innings, including a two-run
homer by Fred McGriff. Browning also had two
leadoff singles and scored two runs.
Harri s went five innings, giving up eight hits and
three earned runs. The Reds' leadoff hitter reached
safcly every inning against Hams.
" When you do that five times in a row, it makes
for a long night," Harris said. "You can't let the
pitc her get two hits to lead off innings. That's the
position I want to be in - having the pitcher leading
off. But he got hits.'·
Browning singled in the third and eve ntually
scored on the first of catcher Benito Santiago's two
throwmg errors. He led off the fifth with a single, and
1he Reds went on to load the bases with two out
when Harri s hit Barry Larkin on the left arm and Paul
O'Neill si ngled to righL
Up came Domn ID decide the game.
"Spring training's over," he said. " Now it's the
regular season ."
Although Doran's out of his spring funk , the
Reds' baserunners aren't. O' Neill got caught in a
rundown between second and third on Doran's basesloaded single, resulting m the innmg 's final out.

By KEN PETERS
ANAHEIM, Caltf. (AP)- The
ChiCago White Sox wanted to set
the ton e for th e season. Frank
Thomas-said
If their 10-4 pounding of the
Calt fom 1a An&amp;els in their opener
Tuesday night•s any indication, the
rest of the AL West better bauen
down the hatches.
The White Sox had 14 hits,
tnc lu ding a homer and double by
Thomas, one of five Chicago doubles in the game. And the White
Sox raked one of the league 's bet·
Ler pitchers last year, 19-game win ncr Mark Langston, for I0 hits and
seven runs in the fir st three-plus
tnnings.
The lopsided win al so made
Gene Lamont a winner in his major
league managerial debut. He got
the JOb after Jeff Torborg left fol low ing last season to join the New
York Mets.
"We know this team can really
hit and we felt it was imponam for
us to ge t off to a good start,"
Thomas said. ''This was a good
Start.
"Now we've got to let this one
win cool off and come back and
win again tomorrow ."
The 45 -year -old Lamont, who
began managing in the minors in
197 8 and spent the past six seasons
as the third -base coach for the

·

Ptnie ll a and O'Ne •ll got into an an1mated
c.change back in the dugout. .
" In a close ballgame, mistakes beat you," Piniella
said. "It's JUSt that simple. I let some people know
I'm not happy with the way we're running the
bases."
Elsewhere in th e NL it was Atlanta 2, Houston 0;
Chicago 4, Philadelphia 3; St. Louis 9, New York 2;
Atlanta 2, Houston 0; and Los Angeles 3, San Francisco 0.
Braves 2, Astros 0 - Tom Glavinc was so good
in his first sLart of the season that not even the Houston Astros could beat him.
The Astros?
Entering Tuesday's game at the Astrodome,
Glavine was 0-8 against Houston in 12 career starts.
But he pitched a two-hiller and sparked an eighthinning rally with a single as Atlanta started the
defense of its National League flag with a 2-0 vic lOry
over Houston.
Glavine,the 1991 Cy Young Award winner,
struck out nine and walked two.
"I felt a lot like I did last year," Glavine said. "It
was a typical outing for me. I wasn't real sharp the
ftrsl couple of innings and then I sLarted feeling more
comfortable."
With the score 0-0 in the eighth inning, Glavine
smgled off loser Pete Harnisch and moved to third
base on Deion Sanders ' double. Terry Pendleton' s
sacnfice fly 10 right field scored the game-winning
run.
Glavme was 20-11 last season on the way to winning the Cy Young Award , pitching one shutout
against Los Angeles on April 23.
"He won the Cy Young Award for a reason ."
Astros second baseman Craig Biggio said. "He was
getting his off-speed pitches over for strikes. He 's
got four pitches and he used them all."
Cardinals 9, Mets 2 - At Busch StadiUm. Milt
Thompson had a career-high five RBis and the Cardinals rocked Bret Saberhagen, a 1985 World Series
hero against St. Louis, for seven runs in the ftrsttwo
innings.
The victory was cos tly for St. Louis, however.
Cleanup hitter Andres Galarraga cracked a bone in
his right wrist when he was hit by a Saberhagcn pitch
in the fourth and will be sidelined for five or six
weeks, Lt.! team said.
Cubs 4, Phillies 3 - Mark Grace's two-run
homer sparked Chicago as the Cubs beat Philadcl phia 10 make Jim Lefebvre a winner in hi s first game
as manager.
The crowd of 60.431 was the largest ever at Veterans Stadium for a day game .
Greg Maddux beat the Phillies by allowing three
runs and six hits over sc.-en innings. Chuck McElroy
pitched I 2/3 innings for the save.
Dodgers 3, Giants 0- At Dodger Stadium. Orel
Hershiser pit£hed seven innings of three -hit ball and
Darryl Strawberry hit a two-run homer for Los Angeles.
Hershiscr held the Giants to a pair of singles by
Mike Felder and one by Kin Manwaring . Felder' s
leadoff hit in the eighth knocked out Hershiser, who
struc~ out two and walked three. Roger McDowell
got the last five outs for his ftrst save.
Strawberry followed Kal Daniels' two-out double
in the fourth off Kelly Downs (0-1) with his 28lst
career homer. Breit Butler added a fifth -inning RBI
triple.

Sentinel Correspondent
Toc Meigs Marauders are off to
a slow stan dropping their ftrsttwo
games of the young season. The
Marauders dropped a 6-1 contest at
Nelsonville-York Monday before
falling 8-2 Tuesday to host Alexander.
In the game at Nelsonville, the
Buckeyes jumped out to a 6-0 lead
after five inmngs and rode a four ' hitter by D Dailey to the victory.
Thrc
e Marauders hits came
in e seventh inning when Meigs
scored their one run.
Mark Stanley was the starter and
loser for the Marauders with relief
help from Jim Pullins. No other
details were available on the con test.
.
In the loss to Alexander, Me•gs
wasted an early 2-0 lead and commiued six errors as the Spartans
posted the six -run victory.
The Marauders jumped out to a
2-0 first inning lead. Mike Welch
hit the fi(SI Marauder home run of
the year to give Meigs a 1-0 _lead.
Kevin Lambert followed w1Lh a
single, and after two walks, came

horne on an Alexander error.
Alexander plated three runs in
the third inning to take the lead .
Wilson and Johnson both reached
on Meigs errors and scored when
win ning pitcher Barber doubled .
He later scored on a Meigs passed
ball.
The Spartans blew the game
open in the fifth inning, w1th the
big blow being a three-run home
run by W1lson. After Alexander
added a si ngle run in the sixth
inning, Meigs came back in the top
of the seventh inning to close the
scoring . Welch singled and came
around to score on a Alexander
erro r.
Welch led Meigs at the plate
w1 1h the home run and sing le .
Teammate Billy Glaze added two
sing les. and Lambert and Jim
Pullins had a single each. Marauder
ace Jeremy Phalin was the loser for
Meigs, striking out seven and givmg up seven runs on four hits and
three walks in four innings. Pullins
went two innings, giving up two
hits and a run.
Meigs will host Wellston today .

Ryan, Galarraga among players on DL
By The Associated Press
The St. Louis Cardinals lost ha lf
th eir starting infield and the Texas
Rangers lost their ace.
The second day of the major
league season proved very cosll y to
some of the game· s stars.
Those lost to the disabled list on
Tue sday included Nolan Ryan,
Andres Ga larraga and probably
Lenny Dykstra.
The R;wgtrs placed the 45-yearold Ryan on th e 15 -day di sabled
list because of a strained left calf
muscle and an aggravated right
Achtll cs ~endon . The Rangers said
Ryan will be examined today in
Los Angeles by Dr. Lewis Yocum,
an orthopedist.
Ryan wa s forced to leave the
Rangers' 12- 10 season-open ing
victory Monday over Seattle in the
fifth inning because of his calf and
was not involved in the decision.
Ryan was bothered by his calf during spring training .
Ryan, in his 26th season, was on
the disabl ed list twice last seaso n
- for 15 days m May and in July
and August for 21 days. He IS a
314-gamc career winn er and was
12-6 1a.st season.
The Cardinals won their game
against the New York Met s on
Tuesday night but lost Galarraga at
firs t ba.&lt;e and second baseman Jose
Oquendo.
Oque ndo, who dislocat ed hts
right shoulder in Monday ntght's
season opener, was placed on the
IS-day diSabled liSt. Oque ndo is
expected to miss five-to-s ix weeks.
Galarraga brok e a bone in his
nght wrist when by an inside pitch

992-5724

(614) 992-6402 OR 1·800·552·1990

GIGANTIC SPRING
SALE
APRIL 8, 9, to and 11, 199%
3" TRICHLORO TABLETS

SUGGESTED SALE
RETAIL PRICE

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7 • lb. Container Chlorine....................34.74
16 lb. Container Chlorine................... .76.15
26 lb. Container Chlorine.................. !54.00

ABOVE

GROUND

durin~ Tuesday night's game against the visiting
San Diego Padres, which the Reds won 4-2. Sabo
left the game with an ankle injury. (AI')

SABO INJ URED - The Cincinnati Reds'
Chris Sabo tumbles over first base after trying
unsuccessfully to beat out a n infield grounder

Pillsburgh Pirates, was naturally Tartabull drove in the other and
delighted after his victonous debut. Don Mattingly singled three Limes .
Clemens pitched an eight-hit
" This was grca~ something that
you begi n to wonder if it will come complete game, struck out fiv e and
after all those years," Lamont sa 1d . walked one, but was unable to hold
" I had butterflies before the game a 2- 1 lead.
Kelly' s two -run doubl e and
and early m the game, but after we
wen t ahead 8-2 (in the fourth Tartabul l's RBI single came during
tnn in g), I wa.&lt; able ID sit back and a sixth-tnmng uprising.
Winner Scott Sanderson overrelax a lillie."
In other AL games, the New came so lo home runs by Phil
York Yankees beat Boston 4-3 and Plantier and Mo Vaughn in the second 1nning and left after the sixth .
Texas Lopped Seattle 4-0.
Rangtrs 4, Mariners 0
Chicago's Ttm Raines drove in
Kevm Brown pit£hed a four -hit three runs and scored three ttm cs.
"That's the way to get off to a ter and Dean Palmer and Juan Gongood start for us," Raines said. za lez homered as Texas won its
'' We put everything to get her, second straigh t in the Kingdome.
Brown struck ou t seven and
showed what we're capable of."
The vic !Dry was the White Sox' walked four in his first complete
sixth straight in season openers. game •n 39 starts sin ce July 23,
and Jack McDoweU was the winner 1990.
for the second straight year.
McDowell pitclled six innings
against the Angels, giving up tworun homers to Von Hayes in the
fi"t and Bobby Rose in the foun.h.
McDowell, 17-10 in 1991, gave
up eight hits, str uck out six and
walked one. Wilson Alvarez came
on in ~1 e seventh and finished with
hi~ess rel ief for the save.
(614)
253 W. MAIN ST,, POMEROY
Yankees 4, Red Sox 3
Roger Clemens began his bid
CALl 1·800-552·1 990
for a founh Cy Young Award with
FULL SERVICE POOL OPENINGS
a loss as Roberto Kelly drove in
three runs, free agent Danny
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT.

Meigs baseball team drops
contests to N•Y, Alexander
Ry DAVE HARRIS

a nd work lo climinau: the actual fungus

Do You Use Artificial Nails?
TI1cn usc Fungi Naua to prevent the naiJ
fungus associated with anifJcial nails.
Availdle: Foorc•,. &amp; C01m•tic o u .

DeSigned for the •
homeowner. the
'
rugged OOQLcham
1
saw is perfec1 for
cutting firewood lim bing and
tnmm ing. Wetghs only 9
pounds Convenient top handle
design. With 14" bar and chain

S199~
The BG 61hand ·held blower
is powerful and
easy to handle.
Ideal for cleaning
•
dri veways. decks.
porches. garages. flower
beds and gutters. Anti·
vibration feature helps
eliminate fatigue

Middleport, Ohio

ChiS ox hammer California 10-4

SIOn .

Placed

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t rmjhmal Lague

In the majors ...
f.ulem [)I ~ ~~ion
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Deuot11t f'tuladdrtu• . 1 30 p m
!"c• Jc~y 1\ W uh.JngtJ~. 1 Jfl p m
IndtUll 11 MU "''I &lt;I~ ec, K 141 p m

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l'lmr ... da~ ·.., J::ames
1 nro n·.o [lo&lt;Ji m l " .II': o: Dr :,ool

Luh 124. Dawcr 101

!)o!lu 11 Gn lden Sutt, I f1 ~

( 1\uiiO lol-l 0). 7 O'i

Cil'nland 1111\o 2 81 at Ballimolf'
(\lllackl l(Pf'i. 1 : J~ p .m.
Tcut (G 1. tm1n 13 ":') 11 Su ',t\ c

LA CU~n 115. Mllm~ ou \f~~

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15 S) •t Dc;.roat

(l ' " ' "' 1} 12). 1 J~

Tuesday's S4:ores

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Ot-untt I m. ~-c~ YOO 9-.l
lltlanll tll1. Sew le~ ) •n
(}r\anOO \3~. Char!onc 110
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Ziegler said hours after the players dence that !he players' rejection of
quickly rejected the owners' the owners' offer came just hours
revised proposal.
after the ruling.
"The litigation age nda ha s
Jim Quinn, a lawyer for the
taken
over the bargammg agenda,"
players, said the court decision
opens the door for players to chal- Wilkerson said.
Goodenow cal led the court deci lenge any league by-law that would
have previouly been excluded by sion "a hug e win for us. All our
an an titru st exemption that the options are open."
While th e co urt dec•sion may
league held. Quinn said players
have
a long-term effect on the
cou ld now sue the league over the
league,
it was the short term that
draft and free-agent system.
was
the
talk
of hockey today.
"I would not have a good
"It's a sad, sad day for hock night's sleep if I was them," Quinn
ey," Ziegler sa •d following the
said.
Quinn mentioned Eric Lindros players' reJection of the owners'
as a player who would be immedi- contract proposal that triggered the
time bomb on the NHL's diamond
aJcly affected by the ruling.
"It is just my legal opinion that jubilee season.
now that there is no longer a col Goodenow said th e owners· prolec tive bargaining agreement, the posa l was reject ed becau se it
(Q uebec) Nordiques can no longer wasn't substanually different than
asse rt their right to Lindros," the owners' previous "last" offer
Quinn sa1d.
- and, in some respects, he said, it
"We have to c heck with our was worse than the one rejected
legal counsel on where we stand," 560-4 by the players last week.
said Lindros' mother, Bonnie.
" It wasn't just one issue - it
Bill Wilkerson, a spokesman for was a handful of issues," GoodeZiegler, sa1d there was no coinci - now said . "This offer represents
some poSilions that players clearly

Pomeroy

8.95
22.95
50.95
87.00

fr om Wally Whitehurst in the
fourth inning of Cardinals' 9-2 vic tory over the Mets Tuesday.
Galarraga, the Cardmals' new
cleanu p hmer, was acquired from
Montreal in the offsea.&lt;on for pitch·
er Ken H•ll. He was 1-for-6 to start
the season with an RBI.
"It's probably best it happened
at the start of th e season because
enthusiasm 1s h1gh," Cardi nals
mana ger Joe Torre said. "You
can't call lime and say it's unfair.
We have a good bench. We don 't
have any dead wood on th e
bench."
In addition. the Cardinals placed
outfielder f eli x Jose on the 15-day
disabled list, retroactive to March
2H . Jose stra ined his right ham string March 23 in spring tram1ng
and has not played since.

Dykstra, who missed 99 games
for the Philadclphta Phtlhes last
season because of injuries. had a
bone 1n his left wrist broken by a
pitch in the first inn10g of Tuesday's season-opener against Chica go.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

"Their mouths
don't
water

when I empty
the

dishwasher.
But
when
I take out
the
Domino...

20

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I

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MANUfACIUR[R SCOUPOt&lt;

IX P,10G.'J

20

iil:l~

II

S.&gt;&lt; 20q off the purcha.~e of &gt;ny hag or box
of Domino" Light Brown, Dark Brown,

I

L2Ah99

~-f~cti~n~ o'.. B~u):t~:_Brand Sugar
''

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hand"

POOLS
Purchase a pool duri11gl
the sole aad receive a
FREE Solar Blanket and
Start Up Chemkals.

¢

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There's more to baking
than what }W're making.··

I

I

�Wednesday, April 8, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

iversar)' Sale .

Znd Weelr 18th

Yrm $2SO Gift

Certificate Courtesy
of Pepsico

Wednesday, April 8, 1992
Pag~

Name .................. ·--...... ·---

18th

Address...... _.. _.. _........... ..

Anniversary
Customer
Appreeiation
Sale!

Town .............................. .
Phone. __ ---· .............. _...... ..
Deposit Ticket In Store
DRAWING APRIL 26,

HOURr Monday lhru Sunday 8 AM-1 0 PM
298 Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES

LITTLE DEBBIE

SNACK CAKES
MULTI PAJC

APR. 5 THRU APRIL11, 1992

(

$ 89

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
ROMEO AND JULIET - This balronY st~nt
rrom Romeo a nd Juliet , ruturing Chris Hall
and Nikki Meier, will be rratured durin 2 Fri-

Macbeth during An Evening or Theatrical Per·
formanres at Meigs High School on Friday
evening at 7:30p.m.

MACBETH WITCHES· Veronica Sotomay-

Shakespeare selections to be
performed by Meigs seniors
An evening of theatrical pc.rfor·
mances will be presented Fnday at
7:30p .m. by the sen1or class of
Me1gs High School.
The performance s. under the
dwcction of Ccha McCoy. wtll fca·
ture several scle&lt;uons from Shake·
spearc entitled "Shakespeare's
Women'' as well as thr ee other

short presentations. "The Summer
People." "Rest in Peace· and "On
the Shore of That Beautiful Shore ."
"On the Shore of That Beauttful
Shore" is a one -ac t play by Jack
Matthews. Thts play's setting 11 a
remote region of Appalachta tn a
funeral home and furntture store
owned by Wilkte Thomas. Wtllc.tc
and h1 s pan -time asSistant, Paul .
arc shoc ked to learn that &amp;3-year
old Melvin Combs has brought the
bodv of his dcr:eascd wife 10 them .
Wilkie 's wife . Hazel. and the
town's Doc Wi lson both add
eccentric twists 10 the btzarre circumstances of their comedy/drama.

"The Summer People," a thnllcr
bv Shtrley Jackson . takes place in
SeptcmtJ,r m rural New England .

Jane t and Robert Allison arc an
elderly r-.:cw York couple who
spend their summe r at th e lake .
Dunng a regular visit to the local
'tllage, they announce to th e
townspeople that they plan to "stay
on for a few weeks." 'They pay httle auention to the comments by the
locals that suy ing at the lake past
Labor Day has never been don e
before. As the next few days pass,
the Alhson.s begin 10 notice unusual happ.:nmgs. Then they finall y
make one ternble discovery.
The presentation of Shake speare's \\'orne!'! adds a new twist
to the senior play. First. Juliet quc.'tiOns why Romeo has 10 be Romeo
m the famous balcony scene. From

Juhus Ceasar, Portia pleads with
her husba nd, Brutus , to tell her
what has been bothering him . Brutus has been peoccupied with his

plan to murder CaeS31. In one of
the three scenes from Macbeth.
Lady Macb&lt; th lS asking that she be
made more manly. In anodlCr the
witches have "gone to pot" widl
their "double, double, toil and uouble" scene. In the final so:ne. Lady
\1acbeth is seen washing her hands
1n the fa mous slcepwalkmg segment of Macbeth.
The last play. ··Rest in Peace"
by Pat Cook, is a delightful comedy about the passage bet.,ttn life
and death. Horace Wilmerding is
panic-stricken after "waking up
dead·· in the hosp•tal. What ha(}pens under these cm::umSianC~ is
cenainly not what H()fllre expectS.
Admission to the evening of
theatre IS S3 for adults and S2 for
students. 'The public is invited. Parents with small chtldren are urged
to take advanlllge of the nursery
provided by the home economics
department.

rr, Chrissy Weaver, April Hudson and Mary
Compston will perrorm as the witches rrom

The Child Assault Preventron
(CAP) Project of Meigs County is
asking residents to recogmze that
"All children can be safe. strong
and free."
"This theme for the month of
April whtch ts Child Abuse Pre venuon Month, provides a poSittve
way to focus on preventmg c hild
abuse. said Momca Dodrill. cxcr:uIIVC dttector of the CAP ProJCC I of
Gal lia. Jackson and Meig s Co un -

teens. "We teach children how to
rccognJzc threatening situations
and how to get help. We also offer
parent program and teac hers/staff

in -se rvic es in every school we
serve." srud Dodrill.
According to th e e.ecuti ve
director, the CAP ProJeCt ha s
se rved over 5,000 c hildren in
Meigs County si nce the program
started National ly 11 has serv ed

ove r a mtll10n chtldren. Oodrrll
said.
"D unng Apnl we hope parents
and other adults will think about
how " All children can be safe,
strong. and free." Children who arc
loved and cared for grow up to be
loving and caring adults. and that's
a great goal to work on for everyone . Tog et her we can prevent
abuse," Dodrill concluded.

tJes.

"All across Ohio and the nation
our network of CAP ProJeCts will
be highlighting the same theme ."
said Dodnll.
Gov. George Voinovich, in proclaim ing April Chtld Abu se Pre vcnuon Month m Ohio, JOined public officials from around the country in focusing on 1h1s nation al
problem.
According to Dodrill, children
an: learning one of the prevention
messages CAP teaches- "Te ll

Round
BUCKET

(

There will be a m•n• hJ'rhall
clinic April 25 from 9:30am . to

Leg Quarters ................ La. 39

Pick o' Chick. . . . . . . La. 89&lt;

Special of the Week!

SIRLOIN SANDWICH

SUPERIOR BONELESS WHOLE

$ 179

COLBY LONGHORN

$189

Tavern Hams. . . . . . .Ls.

$1.69
WITH FRIES ••••••••• $2.39

ADOLPH'S DAIRY YALltY

Cheese. . . . . . . .

2: 30p .m ., weather pcrm i i!Jnf- . J l
the Meigs H1gh School hJ&lt;chJII

fi eld .
Top1cs;to be covered 1n clude
fun&lt;Uil)lll'l{al s in p1t chm~. flcl,lmg ,
hitting and the need for a good
stretch.
A $10 registrati on Ire ~il l he
charged and further 1n fo rmat10n
may be obtained hy calllnr Coach
Zane Beegle at 992 -66~n f10m R
am. 10 4 p.m. or 2~7-4455 after 6
p.m.

Dinner slated
A vegetable soup dmncr will be
held Sa turday at the Rock Srnn~s
Church·bascmcnt begmmng at II
a.m. Also bean soup. co rn bread ,
hot dogs, pic, cake and beverages
will be served. Containers an: to be
rrovided for those who buy soup lO
take out.

Name omitted
The name ol Tamara Hayman
was unmtcntionally omitted .
the list of Southern High School
Varsity Cheerleaders t-hat per Conned in Friday's sevendl annual
fashion show of the Pomeroy MercltaniS Association. The Daily Sen-

rrom

tinel regrets the error

LOS A.'\GELES (APi - Comtc
actor John Candy sued a dog tram cr he clatms sold h1m a s tck German shepherd for $19.000.
The la " su1 l filed Monday 1n
Supcnor Coun savs the dog . named
.-\rrJs. v. as siC k all th e umc after
Candv got 11 la~t Dccemhcr And

the actor has Si nce learned that
German shepherds of similar pedtgrcc sell for S1.500 to S-1.500. the
IJwsull says.
Candy bought the dog from
Matdlew MargoliS and hiS 1\ational
lnst1tulC of Dog Trammg.

MADE IN ROSEVILlE OHIO

CHECK OUR PRICES AND
COMPARE!

Prescription Shop
992-6669

Middll!port, Olio

IS.S OZ. CAN

s

BATH TISSUE

5

Head Lettuce. . . . . . 2

1
$ S9
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GAL.

LB.$2.29
WINESAP APPLES

99c 3 LB. BAG

BANQUET•

DnR's FCIM, White, Yellow
D-•• ll~~es

BIRDS·EYE
COOL WHIP

CAKE MIXES

$1.29

1101.89

4

99 4

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
We Reserve The Right to Limit Quantities

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'
IN RACINE SINCE 1860

79

5399 TV Dmner................ 10.12oz.
ee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 oz.
DAIRY LANE
MIKE-SELLS Reg. SIJ:19
$ 29

Potato Ch1ps...............~ 11 oz.

1

Ice Cream. . . . . . . . /1 GAL.
1

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GAL

79(

Goo4 Oolr lt ,_.,, S.,. Valo
Olf..Goollpr. S tin a,.. II, 1992
liolll ,. c...-

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....
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ULTRA TIDE ~~ =~ MUELLER'S NOODLES :• l uoL
,. I • • • •-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . I • • •

IDEllWlGNl
16 oz.

12ROU PIG.

VALLEY BELL

TIP ROAST

oz.

KIDNEY BEANS

v ....

BEEF SIRLOIN

12

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT REG

CHARMIN

LARGE SELECTION OF

ROBINSON
RANSBOTTOM
POTTERY

(

SUNSHINE BITE SIZE

RACINE, OHIO
949·2550

\ John Candy sues dog trainer

(

Sliced Bacon......................LB.

PEARL STREET

Clinic planned

2
69

COLUMBIA

CHICKEN

2 UTER BOTru

5279
Steak. . . . . . . . u.
$ 79

Cube Steak. . . . . . . . . . . Ls.

WAID CROSS'
SONS
An Evening or Theatrical Prrrorman~ by thr
~e nior class at Meigs High Sebool 1'01 picturrd
" Dan Daniels and Stacey Duncan.

RC COLA

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

CAP theme focuses on preventing
child abuse during April observance

someone.··
·· Reported cases of ch1ld abuse
arc increasing, and lhat is, m some
ways, good new s. At least many
children now know and understand
that abuse 11 wrong and that they
need not kee p 11 a se&lt; ret. They can
get some held ," said Dodrill.
The CAP ProJeCt of Me1gs
Cou nty, found ed in 19R4. IS a
mcmhcr of a nationa l network of
CAP pro)Ccts that offers workshops
on abuse prevenuon to presc hool ·
crs. elementary age chi ldren and

REST IN PEACE- Chuck Mash, Lisa Poulin.
Jon Sargrnt, Triria Batr , Jertm~- Phalin and
Phil Smith will star in ''Rr"l in PraH" during

1

Rump Roast... . . . . . . .La.

day 's senior class play at Mrigs High School
beginning at 7:30p.m.

DIET RITE

30

USE

$469

Got~ Owly At Ptwti'.Stp~~ Valo
Off,. Goo4 Af&lt;IS tin .... 11, Itt2

~ ~ ~1

: ::
• ,• •
--~ ••

................ . ...
Utoftl PwC.II-

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,., 3jSJ

:~.

Gao~ Ottly

..------_____
·-·---·----·.--·--------·--___.. .__-

At Ptn's Sopor Valo
Olfw Goo4 A,rl S tltro .... 11, I992
l.ioltl '• c..._

4 1 \ '&gt;J

~

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.._

-· -

·- · - - -

(

SMUCKER'S
GRAPE JELLY
32 oz.
(

PIE

I

(

HEINZ
KETCHUP
32 oz.

,

~------------------- --

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-a-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, April 8, 1992
, Ohio

Community calendar
Communit y Calendar itrms
oppur two days bdon an rvrnt
and the day of that tvtnL Items
must bt reuivtd weD in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

POMEROY . The senior class
of Meigs High School will present
A Night of Theauical Performances on Friday at 7:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The T uppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will host a
dance Friday from 8-ll :30 p.m. at
the post home wuh music by
Happy Hollow Boys.

\VEDNESDAV

CHESTER · The Past Councilors Club of Chesler Council No.
323. Daughters or America. Will
meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Members are asked 10 wear an
Easler bonneL Thts will be judged.
Hostesses are Goldie Frederick,
Margaret Amberge r and Virginia
REEDSVILLE· There will be a
meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m . in
the Eastern High School cafeteria
for all students and parents who
will be going on the senior class
trip. Parents are requlfed to attena
this meeung.

THURSDAY

ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Spnngs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. Racine Grange will VISJL
There will be a program and
refreshments.
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
So. JS3. Chester, w1U meet Th~m­
dav at 8 p.m. All master masons
J n~· uc d 10 :Hrend_ Refreshme nts
TCPPERS PLAISS · The Tupv. .U meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home. All tcle;·is•on liCk·
ciS are LObe turned m at the meetPOMEROY · There wtll be a
dtnner at the Senior Citizens Center
'" Pomeroy on Thursday from 56:30 p.m. ~lenu 1ncludes baked
steak. mashed po131oes and gravy .
green beans. cole slaw, roll and
beverage for S3 . Pie will be avail·
able for dessert at an extra charge.
Follov.·mg the dmner, music will be
played by The ClassiCs. A free will
offcnng will be collected. The publiC IS mvued.
POMEROY · Ronald McDon ald w1ll present a program at the
\1eigs Collnlv Public Library 1n
on Thursday at 7 pni Ill
con1unwon wtth Salional L1brary
Week.

Pomeroy

u

QWI
1 iBl
THf
DOiilll CO. ~'1815 AAO
..US SOCID SI.YIID.I..,

P&amp;I:Y-&amp;c:tl of 1hMI
bl rMdily

.... ., IM:blrag. Sian,
-apt • 5 T...... I'IIC*d., .,_ ed. H
_dD,..outoftnld' abiidhm. . . .... 'fOol yow chaic• of •
~-- il..n, when ....iLMtle,

M"a §.. ~ SI.TWI;
DA.Y. . . . . I1. 1S.III~

-

· - filii

IB1IM: hllltQt.'J TO
"'lNf

an ad

Call 992-2156

, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Of iiMtd'ltd. ..t.dl ......... ~ to pwrcJYM

.....
. o- m - -

-

trill Alt 11-.:1 bm M 1M ............,
0Ny OM~
w..pon will Dill KCIIP'ild per il:tm

MoN. lhru FRI. 8A.III .-5 t•.llt.- SAT.8-12

l)fQ ....... ](I~.

CLOS[I) SuNOAY

POUCIES

SATURDAY

Bt:LLETI~

MIDDLEPORT · Easter baz:aar
and bake sale at Vaughan's Satur·
day at 9 a.m. sportsored by Eleanor
Ci rcle of Heath UOJ!ed Methodist
Ch urch.

BOARD

Thur&lt;.da' al the Ep1scopal pansh
house .
TCPPERS PLAISS · The
Orange Town'h1p Trustees w1ll
ho!d a speoal mectmg Thursday at
7 p.m. at the home of th e cle rk .
Pamoa Calaway.
FRIDAY

P0\1EROY . The W1dow s Supr on Group wtll meet Fridav at
noo n for lunch at Tnnuy Ch urch
R:-.:rvau0115 are requested .

POMEROY PIKE-CHESTER-A one story home w&gt;tll new

POMEROY~ohnson Road-A 2 aete parcel o t ground that

dtd have an older house Water and electnc avatlable

c

Domino's Knows
1-\:JW bll..a2 ~m.a ru Home.

$149

Ch~~;;i~R ROLL I Ply
Bath TiISSUe ...... 6-Roll
Pak

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Ia Dr. A. Jacksoa loiles' Office
11 0 -.....aic Street, Po•eroy

FridAJ. A1ril 1H:00·12 Noon
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1312 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis
614-446-1744

Wetl•~• April I - 9:00.4:00
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: ala mvited to 1wwe a FREE hearing test to tee H this problem can
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Clorox Bleach

:J

::n
:::&gt;

~

I

~AX 1• HE'BE.'
Price

00

ern
"2:
J
u
n
I0 n
==.
.....
::
...
c•
The Fastest wav To send Monev.
c•a

r--- •
,.,
5end And Receive Messages ,
At A LOW

1

1

W £!. 5 ~

JI

608 EAST MAIN

POMEROY,
OHIO..,
.~

'

-

RACINE· One Hoor plan home w11h 3 bedrooms. FA N.G
heal newly Hoored porcn. storage b&lt;Jilding $15,500

~-

wile,

l.o&lt;ol Solesma•
742-2072

MINERSVILLE RD.· 2 Slocy frame home witn 3 . 4 bed-

z

Also Available For Your
Convenience
ltoaaog• Sftiiii-

~.

ol

living space a bodrooms, 2 baths, oeihng tans, built in book
shelves &amp; gun cabinet, eX1ra insulation, large wr ap around
porch. GOTIA SEE THIS ONE&gt; $87.500

FOREST RUN RD.· Older I floor frame home with vinyl
siding. 2 bedrooms on 2 29 8Cil!S ol land A qu"'l &amp;
comfortable home $24 .900
WE NEED LISTINGS IIF YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT
SELUNG, WE HAVE BUYERS WHO ARE SERIOUS
ABOUT BUYINGI CALL TODAY AND LET US WORK
FOR YOUI
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................992-61 G1
TRACY BRINAGER............................................ 949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL................................... ...........949-2660
OFFICE........................................................ ....... 992-2259

•

•

.

•

decJ&lt; on 100' 200 lot ASKING $27.900 make an oNer

rooms, I large bath some good pine wooONork. shed &amp;
bu~cling _ lmmedate possess1on 1Home needs some ropalf

I

e

home WJth 3 beaooms, carpel. equipped kitchen, porch &amp;

PORTLAND- A BEAUnFUL Log Home' 2208 sq

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 v•sits ...... $25.00
16 Visits ...... $30.00
1 Visit... ... $3 .00
C.. F•~•I

992·2487 or
992-7884

4-7-92· 1 mo.

1·13·'92'·1 mo .
WANTED
Old Currency Dated
Between t861 -1929.
Especially National

Ho mes -Peta-Wltdllta

Howard L Writesel

Motorcycles -Etc.

ROOFING

'}.flthryn
'Jv(eadows

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

Bank Currency from

KEN'$ APPLIANCE

SERVICE
992·5335 or
985-3561
Aut" Jr . . P•t Offlce

217 I. Socoo4 lt.
POMIIOT, OliO

312319 2/tfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

specific pieces from

Racine , Pomeroy,
Middleport and
Ravenswood.
PETE SIMPSON
Evenings

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Welcome Slates

FREE ESTIMATES

$20.00

1-614-764-2101

Cuslom Paintings

949·2168

614-992-2242
4/2192/tln

3N92/1 mo . pd.

•

•

YOUNG'S

-Guner Work
-EI6olriclll ond Plumbing
Painting

(nlEEESTIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
3·13·9'.1·tln

AlEYrs AUTO

PARTS

• •

USED RAILROAD TIES
4-H2·11n

HAULING
COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTUR AL
LIME
REASONABLE RAT ES

742-2138
3-15-'92-t mo. p d.

TEAFORD'S
COUNTRY CLUB
$ '7

OR TOLL FliEE

1-800·848-0070

DARWIN, OHIO
7/3 r01 1'llnl

ttOWOPEtt

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

I y, Mi. out New
lima Rd •
Rutla1d, o•io

IS Sessions•••• ~S
Plus 1FREE
Hrs. 8-1 0 Mon. llvu Sat.
NEW SCA WOLFF lED 24Sl
btling ProM!s lvcilablo
"

Experifnr:e tlae

11

(~j10::'~io~~=:

'12,SQ,e. " 6
fa 'W

~

.\ .

ott;.._.4.00

oOoh l.,.ir..J

~1-+··~ •··-=k~'

S..... Tr'flliesl

46387 Scout Comp RoadJ
Chater, Oh.

Y111'W1 mo.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
UEE ESTIAU'TES

985·4473

Frame Repair

NEW &amp; USIO PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MOOELS
992-7013 or
992-5553

-Golf louo.,

"""'

I!P&gt;~dm liJing In Cuuum1

742·2341

•
•
••

992-2269

-Roofing
-lnlerior I ExleriO&lt;

•
• • •

• • •
• • •
• • •e

BILL SLACK

any stale. Paying
$300.00 and up lor

"SPECIAUZING IN SLAIT
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

C...dJ

2 Mileo on Hyooll Run Rd.

992-3838

3-16-1 mo

Deeply missetl br your

• •

DOWN HOUE COUNTRY· 11/2 story remodeled log look

BAUM SUBDIVISION· Very mce bncl&lt;lframe ranch slylo

....

NOW Available At ~II
KrOQerfStores

••••ry' s

Gu.or.,leed

• • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
• •
• • • • • ':.:'-.t\
•
• •
• •
• • • •
• • •
• •
• .. • • • •
• •• •
•
•

992-2259

home w1rh 5 rooms , 3 bedrooms , full basement 26 x 14
garage, firepl ace, cen1ral air . Reduced 10 $57,900

UMIT ONE COUPON PfR CUSTOMER

and

•

$22 .500 Make an ofterl

lMf 1 UL 111111 COUPal t
Nq Alllll1liiUI. PUIDUE

Material&amp; Labor

•
•
• •

'tl

:::&gt;

I
I
I
I
I

---------------...:1..---------------··-"·. ..-·

:

.....••..............•...............
I

California
Strawberries

I SlyiM
301150 •octad lor
In-lion

SUMMER
IMAGES

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONi.-TRUCKING
f'IIEE ESTiiltATES

Real Estate General

I

I
I
I

3-5-'92-1 mo. pd.

•
•

JUST $6,500

I

•••••••••••••••••••••
COUPON

••

l'luJII:::hng a home or a mobtle home s1te

-----:--,

2 MEDIUM PEPPERONI PIZZA

1·304·773·9560

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

oomE TURNER, Broker....................... ...........992·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS............................................992·3056
DARUNE STEWARL ........................................ 992-6365
SANDY
...... 992-5371
SHERYLWAL

You'll Low Our
Pan
Pizzas

$6,500

siding, newer roof . newer OOublc pane WindowS, newer
wtnng , and P'umbing . Has 5 rooms. 2 bdrms., an d one car
garage on approx 112 aae ol ground
$25,900

tor

(Yes, we do It all.)
ALSO COMPI.nt AUTO
REPAIR SERVIa 181424
HOUR TOWING.

""'W'A"Klnii'D~t"

• • • • • • • • • • • •
•
• • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
•
• • •
• • • • • •
• •
• • • •
•
• •
• • • • • •
•
e •
•• •
• • • • • • •
•
• • • • • •
• • • • • •
•
• • • •
•
• • •
• •
• •
• • •
•
•

tom land _ Water and electnc ava~lable A great home or

ALL MAIEI

Iring It I• Or Wo
Pick U~-

. Upholltery.

CARPENTER SERVICE

LANGSVILLE-CoRd 111-App&lt;o&gt; 2 acres of beautiful bot-

Great

I /2/tf n

-Room Additlono

ALL FOR $162,000

mobile home sile

Spocializiag I•
Co•plete Auto

Cheshire, OH.

NOW St 4,500

HYSELL RUN ROAD- II a k1tdwn w1!h lots of cab1nets 1s
what you need th1s home IS lor you It has 3 bedroom s. a
la rge k1tchen. and a large hvmg room Comes w1th 314 of an
acre and a pa iKl
$29 ,900

Bounty
Paper Towels
Single Roll

12 colors Of rollup doors
unlimited

do-·

Minister
Charles
(Skip) Oomigan .
Will be missed by:
Children,
Grandchildren and
Great-Grandchildren

an income from it! lfs the C:ho River Lock House and
campsii8S with 22 campsites and room for morn _Has 3
apartments . 4 hotel rooms , and 1he campground has lots of
nver frontage . From the park boaters have 75 f'!111es of un restricted water way without locking Good tish1ng and
water sk.nng at its best are found 1n one of the cleanest

72 SHEETS PER ROLL 2 PLY

Home

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

212019213 mo.

T&amp;M BUILDERS

garden tbiug of yoo.
Yo1 were everytlting to
me ...dso ...
I t•oughl our &amp;vu were
perle&lt;! until dealk
slammed 1M door.
I c111't stop tho 1. .1 aod
tho pain i1 •r hart
an• 11ases to adoe.
Bit 011 this very spe&lt;ial
day I will bt smiliag
rtllemhering our nry
first date.

thanks to our family,
friends and neighbors
during the illness and
death of our parents .
We want to thank everyone for the food ,
flowers, cards and
pray era.
Special thanks to
Whites-Blowers Fun-

WANT TO OWN A UTTLE BIT OF HISTORY? And have

ROCK SPRINGS · A vegetable
soup d1nner will be held Satunlay
at the Rc&gt;e k Spnngs Churth bast·
ment lxg1 nn•ng at I I a.m. There
will al10 be bean soup, corn bread.
hot dogs. pi e. ca ke and dr~nks.
Bnng containm for soup 10 go.

Memory

walking i1

Burke
wish
to
expreaa our sincere

this IS the house tor you. Ths home has 2 beaoom s, large
l1ving room . dining room , and newer wall furnace A great

slrelches of the nver

In

of HI' ftrst date.
Tho day that yo• tied a
pert of me tied. loo.
Each day li1ds ••

The lamily of Robert
C. and Virginia S .

MIDDLEPORT -Jrd St-lf you ooed 10 be close to lhe school

MlLLFIELD · There w1ll he a
round and square dar-.:e Saturday at
9 p.m. at Mlllf1eld at the Russell
Build• ng. Music will be provideJ
by Smokey Moun12m Dnfters and
John Russe ll will be caller. PubliC
lS invitLd .

2

Card of Thanks

eral

r:

4-2-tl- ...

IUSOII, WY.

It 511 Wesl, 111., Olio •19l-381l

Choic•

1

Alli&lt;Alll - VINTAGE 111d
&lt;OLLE&lt;lllll
'Riden l•tilaYe'
DISPLAYID AI
THI QUAUTT PRINT SHOP
MIDDL£POIT, OH.
H7·ll9H:30 •·HO,.
717-l07Hflw !:00

A&amp;B AUTO

Call614-992-6637
St. Rt. 7

Our Sprinf; Stupm"'' Of

&amp;
Garages &amp;

ASKING $45,000

s - home "' molal property

~ - ,,..,pel

TROY-BI~T

Prices Service lor
G.c:· .·.: ~-· :·-. :J ;::=,.=mem=IIIY=.=,=~ Beat
Pool Frome
Bam a
~~t~ :;~: '; '- /
DAVID ARIX
or
· Z..""" / on the llird 18lftiversary IISIIanct.d to

2 story bock bu11d1ng w1th 4 apanments upstairs Has great rental potential , or put your own
business ck:Nmstalrs and rent the apartment s upsta1r s Has

POMEROY - Pomerov Senior
C•tizens Dance Club will have a
da nce Saturday from 8-11 p .m.
with music by Jun1or Wh ite and the
Band . Arthur Conant w1ll be the
ca ller. Bnng snacks for the snack
table . Public invited.

c•

RetldonUall
Comm«c-ial
Fret EaUmatn

DALLAS I(_ WEBER · OWner

NEW OPENING

.

RAC1NE·A commercial

3 lots

614-98H 180 IAI•• .......
Aller 6 p.IL
9BH192

67 5- Pl. Plu••nl
158- l...c on
5 7t.-\ptoloe Cwn:
773 - Muun
8~:!-Nc .. ll11nn
H95 - l .ch•rl
'J37 - UurT.Iu

1-BII(~§]JI- U40

~rt'Jt;,~t ·- ~·

RT 33·Bearwallow Rklge-1 0 acres of n1ce lay1ng land to
e1 ther butld a home or to hun! on
JUST $5 ,000

POMEROY · "Elewic Grand mother· will be shown at the Meigs
County Public Library m Pomeroy
on SAturday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
and at the M1ddlepon Library on
Monday at4 :30 p.m.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Call372-8697 •

o-t'
(\
-~~~ -"

205 North Second Ave.
Mlddl_eporl, OH

For

rtlaeon Co., WV

tJ92 - Middl oeportl
Pomuoy
985- {;hellcr
843- Portlllnd
247- l..c:lar1 F.U.
tJ49 - H. cinc
742 - Hud•nd

lawn Mowing,
Fertll izlng, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

lo Flnd:~-'!,'!A~f~o

LINDA'S
·&lt;-JAYMAR
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Quality
"Tab Tile Prin Our Of Prilllirg
Stone Co.
-lei U1 0./lfor r..•
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR SIZED LIMESTONE
37632 Wesl Shade Road
FOR SALE

"'FAEl nr-...rn---u-..... _...

%-Galon

mvltcd.

Cuunty

614-94~2627

Troy-Bih 1lllen Now In Sio.c k.

OFRCE 992-2886

$

l\olcigt~

Or 11., ly

b6 7 - too lville

Breyers Ice Cream

BURLINGHW - Burlmgham
Modern Woodmen will have a
potluck supp&lt;'r Saturday at 7 p.m.
at the woodmen hall. Cindy O~vcri
will sP\'3k on Family Life. Public

County 1

256- Guy•n lli.t .
613- Anhi• l&gt;i•l
:17'J- W. Inut

Real Estale General

Boston Butt
Pork Roast

100 p m Thllfsday
I 00 p m Fuday

215- Rio Grande

Free Admission

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES
LIGHT ICE MILK OR

1:00pm Wednesday

Fnday Paper
Swl Uay Paper

D•nl••

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

102 E. Main 51reet
Pomtr'!,Y, Ohio

11114/tfn

Thursday Pa per

446-C..Jiipol.i.
36 7- ChuiUre
388 - Vinlon

Apnl t 1. 10:00-6:00
April , 2. 1:00-5:00

""SILVER PlATTER" FRESH . WHOLE

I :00 p .m_Monday
1:00 p.m Tuesday

Local1\-~ · Bilt

WAKffrELD'S

lt lO Weo, llln1 Olio •lll-381)

CALL 992-6120

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

Area Code 611 Area f:oJe 61 ·1 Area C01le 30-1

National Guard Armory, Rt. 62 N.

POMEROY · Keith Wood. local
wildlife protector, will present a
program on Wildlife, Past and PR: scnt. at the Meigs County MUSJeUm
on Saturday at 2 p m Publ•c mvited .

Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper

G~llia

HANDMADE HOLIDAY
TREASURES , Spring Edition

POMEROY · Meigs Count y
Retired Teachers will meet for a
luncheon Saturday at noon at the
Meigs County Public Ltbrary in
Pomeroy . Janet Bolin will have a
program on Amerinora. Call 9923887 for information.

I :00 p rn _Satur day

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges .. .

BULlEnN BOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBliCATION

SALEM CENTER · Bazaar and
bake sale al Salem Cen ter Fife
House sponsored by Salem Centa
United MethodiSt Church on Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 7 p m.

Monday Paper

----------~--~-

• Ad1 oullidc CaUia, M..on or Me~ cu unti ct mull be prepaid
• R~ein d'-count fol' .d, p•id in adunce .
• Free Ad.: Ciweaway and Found ad. under 1:) worda will he
run 3 day• •t .oo ch•rse.
• Price of ad lor all c:apita llcue n 1• double price olad «:oa l
• 7 f»&gt;inl line type on ly ~Hoed
• Trihuae i.a noa retpon•ihlc for c:rron •fler nua day (check
for t:rron ftrlt d•y •d l'un• in f"'per). C. II hefore 2:00 p . m
d.y afler publicalioo Lo •a~ke correc tion

ATHENS
Old
t1me
square/contra dan"'. spon&lt;oml bv
Sout heastern Oh1o Trad1110nal
Dance Sociely, will he held Saturday from 8-11 p.m. at the Dance
Factorv in Athens. Ron Buchanan
wi ll be. the caller.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE

Our Sprinj Sb.lpment Of
Troy..Sd1 1\llen Now In .S.od..

Yow-

We turn your new and
good uoed articloo into
cas h and uve you mo~tey
on what you need.

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2097

~ . . . . . ~to
~...,

· TROY-BI£T'

'"'Uflo4 hIs

•Roo fin~
•Insulation

POMEROY · Preceptor Beta
Beta \liod l meet at 7: 30 p _m on

NEEuiT

EMILY'S AniC

Window

&lt;ef'cd .

P"" Pla1ns VFW Post No. 905 3

II YOU WEAR IT HEAR
I; ADMIRE IT, WATCH
IT, PLAY Ill USE IT or

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

HOCKINGPORT · There will
be a round and square dance Friday
from 8- ll :30 p.m. at Hockingport
on Route 124 at Kennv and Millie
Reynolds· . Music will·be provided
by Smokey Mountain Drifters."
Ronme Wood will be the caller.
The public is im·itcd.

Le&lt; .

REEDSVILLE· Revival will he
held through Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
nightly at the Reedsville United
Methodist Chu rch. Rev . Ge ne
Eaton, East Street United
Methodist church, Vtenna. W.Va ..
and Rev . Dan Eaton. Libe rt y
As.&lt;embly of God, Mason, W.Va.,
~· •II be the guest speakers . Rev.
Charles Eaton. pastor. invites the
public.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

667·6179
1-7·911l n

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SE PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SE WER LIN ES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Din, Gravel and Co al
Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591
t 2·5-tfn

TROLLEY STATION

cum

10 Dlo~ St., IIW.Iop011
APR _ 6, 6 :30 pm - So rn•
Bunny Lo~es You - PI IQU9 :
Tole P•tnting
'
APR_ 13-19 - Eldand1d E.. ter

hours. OP'tfl until 7:JO pm
APR . 28 . 6:00 pm - Buk&amp;l
Cln&amp;
MUST PRE -RE GIS TER FOn

All CL ASSE S
HR S: Man -Sat 101m S pm

Sunday 1-5 pm
fl)r More Into Call

614-992-2549

-2-1 •pd.

4I2I92J 1 m o.

ATTENTION

.:

\lohik 1\ llouhlt•\1 idt• llutm· I hlltl'r~• '
'

.

,'

Pumps 110 Yr. c....,..v. ·
Wcwr•IJ)ODd

Furnam
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Nr"· ~pnp&lt;''""-

!I lln;pf- !I
l Ollll

u .,\SSit'll.;~t

!I l.lnrs
i\11

ONU'

,.. _ ___ ___

$3.33

,2._______

G. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ II. - - - - - - -

7.

-

- - - 12 . _ _ _ _ _ __

:~- -------

II . - - - -- - - - "· - - - - -- ,4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ •.•. _ _ _ _ _ __

15.

10.

I
!

--- -- -- - - -

C,\ SII ONI.\'

1 l'~int "" ~ ,.,.,,j

M~ l l.

OH

l'I.~I'E ~T

15. _ _ _ _ _ __

IIFFil T

in f'nr h ~r•u· r nhn•r Enr h inil i~t l rr •rnup of f'illiu,....~ 1'1'\un t~ n~" "'"rd Cn unt nnm.a oul ,.,j,fr ru nr pho onr rtumlof'r if llllt'll. l lr•ollinr April .11l. 1Qtl2

r·LUt E_____ ,

Clll .mtN OF A!I

NOW Yllll ~ 1-:10: IT. NIIW
) Oll DON'T' Mil VI·. ) Ill ' H
MJ-:llt:II .~NDI S I-: FA STI O: H
lli.\N Y(Jll t:AN SAY
"Altiiii(AllA RllA !"
\liiTII AN All IN TIIF
TilE IMILY
SENTINEl. 1:1./ISSIFIF:II&lt;; ,
Till-:) \10111\ I.IKE
Mi\L IC.

1' 110·' '

Tllr I lr\II,Y,qNliNrL
Ill UIIIHT STIIEF:T
I'OMUlOY. Oil 4'-76'1

Cull &lt;146-2:"12

-----------------------------------------------

• 10 yr. hea1 puflll
compressor warranty
•Free estimates

Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
1391 Safford Sdtool Rd.

Galipolis, Olia

Call (614) 446-9416 or 1-800-872-S967

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Sidiag

New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additio•s • Roofiag
COMMEilCii\1, and RESIDENI'IAt
nu:E FSTIMA'IT.S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)
21121112 11 n

�1992

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce lleank

Announcemenls

31 Homes for Sale

3 Announcements
GIRLSH8la~~GIRLS
Call Today, 11M Tonlt•
1-too..773--1. ., $2.15 Min. 1&amp; +
UaMI .., Cotta ...... C:alltomll .

"'-d Yow Help: Douala• Mason
Paaed AMy lbrcfi 8, 1!192.
Fund8 AN ~ To Help For
Fu.-.ral Elpenua. Trust Fun4
At Lono Star Bani, &amp;10 South
... ln., P.O. Boa: 827, Hlghlllnd, TX

42

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

n

3 Unll Apartment Rent•l, Eu:tilenl Condition, Bulnilll Plk•
Road. Alldu*l Call For AppcMntment. ~.

Mobil• Home For R•nt AI 322
Tflird Avenue, Galltpolle. &amp;14«6-UI8, 614-25~11102 Detore 9
P.M.

For Sale: 1985 Ford ltmpo, 4
Door Exc•llent Condition, Hew
T1r ..·, $2,900. Call 614-446-4638.

32

Ahtr 6

P.M.
l

1985 5-10 Blaz•r, 4 whesl drive,
Tahoe paehge, 814-949-3028
leanrrntssag•

304~75--6583..

1988 Vluan Standard, EKcallent
Condition, $5,700. 814-446-67S4
Alter 4 P.M .

Room •partm•nt. Ground
lloori Privata entrance. Located
out• de of H•ndenon. Khc:h.n
I ullllli•• fumlsfl«&lt;. $275. mo.

Pup, Mala, lo Good Home Only!
All Accassorlas With It 614-4463052.

Wantld To Buy:

CoU~~etor

S35010AY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS!
PEOPLE
CAll YOU.

Old

Antklut Lamps. Will Buy C.lain &amp;aM!II W'lthoul ~· - Call
614-446-1982

Bicycle parts, aluminum storm

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

doof, 3 brokan dishwashers &amp;
junk lo ~lvuway. 304-&amp;JS-5946.
Want.ct To Buy: Jooll Autos
Dog to glvMway. Part Baagla. Wilh Or Withoa.f Molars... Clll
Neutered &amp; has had si'Kies. 304- Larry Llv .. y. 614-38&amp;-9303.
6~75-4
c:.._:_4_:64
_:·:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ Top Prices Pakl: All O+d U.S.
1
Fr- lortg Halrwd Klll•ns To Coins, Gold Ri~s, Slhl'tor Coins,
GlvMw•y. 614-446-2942, Aft•r Gold Coins. M..S . Coin Shop,
151 S.Cond AvWIIMI, Gallipolis.
• p.m .
1 Pu ps T0 '""
W.1nllld : Hawcasement
01'
us.d 8000A.C,
Po rt Beagte
U!Veawayf SliMHype
&amp;M-446-62-lB.
Yaung cats to goad
blaell male &amp; gold male, 61480-5-445

6

Lost &amp; Found

Full-lim~~

medieal •ssistant wanpllysldan
P':rform both
administratin I c:hnical duti•s.
S.r.t rnuma to: PO BOX 458,
~i,., 00. 45171
Hom Nsed Writws NMd«&lt;.
$1000.00 Per. No Exp. Nec:.ssary. C.n t-900-740-T.Jn (S1.49
Mirv18 Yrst) Or Wrtle: PAASE •
3JC, 161 S Uncolnway, N.
Aunn, IL 60542
lAW ENFORCEMENT OEA, U.S .
MARSHAll'S Now Hiring. No
Ell ~rience Necessary FOf AppliCitiofl lntorm.alion Call 2t9'r55-6661. Ext . OtH.SS 8.a m. To
8p.m. 7~ys .

Found: Black Llbndor Vleinity

0t Ctay S&lt;hool. Gollio Coun•y. 11

Help Wanted

6~~4514

------~------:.:____

lost : Male BNgl• d09, only has
:J l.gs, Sumner Rd ., Pom~~roy,
614-!Ja5...4323

A.ccounting Instructor NINidld .
Must Hil"e B.S [)egrM In A£.
count ing . Send Resume To · P.O
Bo1 2t3, Gallipoli s, OH 45631

7

Yard Sale

ALL Yard S.les Must B1 Paid In
Advance. OEAOUNE: 2:00 p rn
the day before lhe 1d Is to run .
Sunday edftlon · 2:00 p m
Friday. Mood•y IKiition · 2.00
p.m. Saturdly.

AVON ! All Atus ! Shir1ey
Speirs, 304-675-142SI.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiri~ S600• Wkly. 0\'*1 8000
Open1ngs .
Mal-'fem11e.
Transp.lHous mg . Call E.I.C.
Now I 1-206-T.J6-"'f000 hi . 159497.

449 Founh A~ Wednuday,
Thur-sday, Friday. ~urnltur11, Old
!lOOks, Coffee Pols, Jewelry,
Clock, Pidurn, Typewrll•r
Yo"ing Sale: 7th, 8th, 9th , &amp;
10th. VInton, Across Frtwn B.aptist Churc:h. Sola Bad, Redlner,
Rocking Chair, Limp~, eott..
Taba., Pots And Pana, Oitlles,
~6qiM Record Play• Records,
Big lltu• John Woodbumlng
s.o.,. Wrth H.,.tolat•r I Pipes,
Motor Homt. 2 Tlllan, Many
Mort' tt11ms1

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
P•tio

S..le, Sat 11th, 116
PtNsanl St, dishes, 1preads,
lheel11, pk:nlc table, •helves,
winter I summer clothes, b.iby
things, eemping items
Rummage S.le, 9:00-4 :00 S..l,
12 BuriJell• Addn , Ninlendo ,
c:tol':'-, cassettes , _lnllqUIIa,
tumrture, jlans, mtcrowav•,
mise: .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Riek P•arson Auction Company.
lull lime .Juc:tlorM.r, c:omplela
1uctton
strvice.
Uc ens ed
166,0hio &amp; WHt Virginia, 104773-5785

9

Wanted to Buy

W1nt To t..ase Tobecco Bases.
Call Anytime 814--38..1769.

•Avon• .111 .,.... The aky Is the
IHnil with ,... NmJng structure.

1--800-992-e35&amp;.

c.,.

Pii'IKt"Mt
Cen1wls ~­
ing Appllc•hons For A NurM
.tJd
Tr~~ming
Progr11m
Scheduled To S.Oin In May
1992.. GradultM
Of
The
Program Will a. EII~Jbt. For
Empaoym.nt At Pinecrnt C.r•
Cent• AI A SIII•Approved
NurM Aid. AppUca.Hons Ace~

,.. llondoy Thru Fridoy Bot·

Dua To An Expansion In
Progn1ms, COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTORS WANTED· Two
liv•ln
lnsti"Uctors
{WHkdays!WMkends) Needed
to Teach Community And Person.JI Skills To One Adun With
O.nlopmental Disabilities In
Meigs County. HOURS: tt) 40
Hn.rWk:
MorntngJEvening
Hours, Y-f ; S._p-Ovar R•
qui~ ; Oay1ime Houri Off; 121
32 Hrs/Wk: S.VSun; SIMp 0\rer
Required: lntormal Setting. VarIous Skills And T1lent NMded
Hi9:h School O.grM , Valid
Dover 's Ucanu, Good [1...,..-ing
Rteord
And
Adequate
Automobile lnsuranu CoverilgR
Required. Sa lart : $4 .SOIHr, To
Start If lntaras led Ca ll 1-300~31 ·2302 No L•lar Tl"lan 4 1 1 ~2 .
Ask For Cecilia. Equal Opportunity Employer

'""" ! :00 A.M. And U)(l P.M.
Someol~e

To Mow Lawn. Ap5 Ac,... llust H•v•
Wow.. 6M-«&amp;-7310 Evenings.
prox.

VaU9han's Cardinal
cep11ng lppllc:atlom

14

17

Du1 to an npans 100 1n
programs , Community Skills Instructors wanted : Two liv.. in
Ins tructors
{weakd•y&amp;tWMkends)
needld
to t.. cfl c:ommunrty and ~­
sonal skills lo one 1duh wttfl
devlllopm•ntal diubilihes in
Meigs Co. Hours : {1) 40hrsJ wk .
momingJ•..,.n ing
hra., M..f,
sl1111p-ov11r r~uh-.d, daytime
l"lrs.. oN ; (2) l2 hrs.Jwk.,
S-atJSun , slaeJKtver requir.t.
in!Ofmal setting various sltills A
liilents needed , high school d•
g,... , v.ahd driver 's license.
good dri"inQ rtcord &amp; adequate
automobile msunnce cover1ga
required , Salary. $4.50/'hr. to
s lar1 If inleres led c.1ll 1...QOO..S3123()2 no later tl"lan 4115192, asil.
tor Cecilia . EOE

Rlgflt, Lllft Fork RoadJ.. Just P.JSI
Boggt Auction !lam, ualtlpollt.

ModlfTI 1 bedroom apl, "ftfY
1986 SuMybroollt4x60, 111 elec, cl. .n I nice, no JMts, must be
IIXC c:ond, 30~5-7241 W. .k willing to give relerencn, 304·
days, •ft•r 5:00PM Saturd•ys.
675-1386.
1989 Clayton Wnt Wind t4x52 Complatly Furnished mobil1
2br,
£x:cellenl
Condition.1 hom11, 1 mile below town ovar$10,500. 614-388-8788 Bator• 9 looking river. No P1111, cA. 614P.M.
446-0333.
For S.le: 1!a89 R.clman Danville,
14x72, Total Electric, 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Fult !11ths, Excellent
Condition, C,all 614-367-0139 Aller 5 P.M.
Repoue11ed Mobile Homes,
Great S.ltctlon, Singtu, $500
Down And Doubles $1,000
Down, With Approved Credit!
Clll 1-800-581-5'710.

33 Fanns for Sale

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
32 V2 1crn, 14x70 lr.Jiklr
wldeck, enclosad porch &amp; carport, 3 oulbuildlnga, gas wall
nnr Racine, asking $30,000,
6\4-247-2622
Acreage: 15 Ac:raa And 10 AcrllS
In Otilo lownship, Gallipolis.
Will Help Anance Toblcco
B.JSII. 614-446-2404.

18

Geot"gn POI1.abilll Sawmill , don 't
haul your tog1 to the mill just
calll04-675·1957.
House po~inting, inlerior &amp; ex tericw. call Kenny Mitchell. 614 ·
JI2-2S44
Miss Paula·s Day Cart Center.
Sar. , dlord1ble, c:hildcare. M-F
~ • m. · 5:30 p..m . Agn 2~10
&amp;.tore, after sc::hool . Drop-Ins
welcome. 814-446-8224. New In·
l•nl Toddler C•re, 614-446-6221.
Trlft, Shrubs, Mulch, Top Soil,
Yawing, Pruning, Spraytnq,
S.ed1ng, All WOf"ll, S25 Mim·
mum. Don 1 Llndscapmg. 614446-9646
Tutoring By C.r111 ied Teach11r
Gr1des . 1·8 In My Home . Now
Thru
Summer
614-446-7310
Evemngs
Wtll bilby:W tn my l"loma by the
WMk or ~r Pt. P!aaunt area
20 years nu rsing erperiance
Calll04-675-l402

lots In New H.lven • 10CI%
owner 1inanclng 11 $l01.46 per
•304·
month buy1 all three
675-2722.

tot•.

lots joining Point • 100% OWI'IIt
lln.Jnc:ing at $101.48 per month
buys 111 ttv• lots. :104--675-

to babysit in your home
or m1n11, ret.rences ava1table ,
6l4-ft2-386l, anytime.

JV)II :&gt;!1
1

"li1r11 ·' orrr · r· fn//, · r

inftJ

!NOT1CE 1
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai rou do busl·
nn.s wilh peopfe you know, 1nd
NOT to send moMy IN~h the
mail unlit you haw ln"nt.g•t.d
the oHering.

n1 s. fl .

MIKE.SELL"S

,'ir•// il ll~r· r·" ·' J " ""-\ . . . IIJ_JIIo_"'"'·

f, .,

DtSTRI9lJTOA OPPORTUNITY
Busineu Is Good · PrHinl lndttpendenl Dtstribulor Woutd
li ke To Sell Established Route
In The Gallipolis Aru For The
Otstribution 01 Patillo Chips
And Oltwr R•lahtd Snack
Foods Mus! Be Financially
Stiibki With Stor•Ooor O.li"•'Y
Experience. S.nd Resume To:
Mik1 Johnson , U&amp;A Distribu~
mg . 31827 State Road 7,
Pomeroy, OH 45679 .

l"t ' _\ " ' , . /u,lllt ' .

/'/or&lt;' Jflll' ,.f, _
,_
, ijir·rl ru/ _lorluj !
I :; ll 'ol"l/.'i or · It' ."--" · 3 duJ."i.
:1 Jlfl/11 ' " ·$ (,.(/1/

., ________

I.

V~ing

Route: l.oc1l. We Have
Thll New..t Machin.~ , M•king A
Nice Study Cl.sh Income. 1·

~

I II . .

:!.
." I.
I.

Business
Opportunny

B00-234-2651.

II .

Real Eslate

12.

-· ~- -

~

1."1. _ ____ _

31 Homes lor Sale

II . _ __

1,400 tq tt brtck, l bedrooms,
lllrgao Hvtng room 1 brick pallo,
lr-.. WIII«!Mpl:k::, neat pump, 5
mlnutes fTom Pt Plhunt

I :; .---------

$56.900. :J04.11S.S30ti.

•

:1.=-=-=== :--===--- 1,400 aq n brick, 3 bedrooms,
livlngroom, brldl
-minutn
wot.,,...lc,
holt pump, 5
446 -2342 675-1333
from Pl. Pit , $56,g()O.
992-2156
. Bed&lt;oom Homo On Ac,. Of
L - - - - - - - - - - _________________j j t.ond. C.l1fiU.256-t528.
I

lar~

patio,

:104-67~301 .

3

1

St-pln~ rooms witfl cooking.
Alto tn.llar space. All hook-ups.
C111 der 2:00 p.m., 304-7135651, Mason WV.

46 Space lor Rent
Country Mobile Home Park, Rt.
33N ., under new management.
Loi.s, $85; home rent.ala, $235;
614-385-8227

49

For Lease

Comm•n::lal Bldg., 12,000 sq. lt.,
truck docks, hNt~. ciNr span
Rt. 32, Jackson, OH 1-117-7436732.
Second Floor Apartment For
Lu": l.R ., On• B.R., Bath,
Kitchen WI Stove I R1trig
Water Furnished. No Pets. Corner Second &amp; Pint, Gallipolis.
$230. Per Monlh; O.posl1 R•
quired . Cal1 614-446-4249, 614·
446-2325, Or 614--446-4425.

Merchandise

O.J. Whit11 Road, 1B Acres,
Mostly Wooded, With A. p .. utlhlt Building Sit• That "ku A 5I
Household
VIew For Miles. N~ Lint
Drtvew.Jy,
R...-al
Water,
Goods
Electridly, And Phone Sen-Ice
A"allable. 3 Miles From Holzllr Big Sa"lnga On All Carpet In
Hospital, Gallipolis. 614-446-4127. Stock. C.ash And Carry, Molloh•n C...rpals, 514-446-JII44.
Putur1lor rtnl, 304-675-2991.

36

Real Estate
wanted

W•nted : Rnktenti•l Building
lot Or Acruge F01 Quality
Hom111. Mua1 Be Within 5 Miles
01 Holzer Ha.pital On Blaeklop
Road . 1-304--27'3-2MO.

Rentals
41 Houses lor Rent

GE wasflor w.as $:125 cutlo $75;
Whirlpool washer $95; Kenmore
wuher was S95 cut to $75;
K1nmore dryer $75; M1yt1g
wasflw &amp; dryer ut wu $3sd cut
to S250; lO ln. electric rang•.
while, was S125 cut to $95;
1lectrtc range 30 in., $125;
r.trlgerator, 2 door, flarvnt:
;otct, was $150 cui to $125;
r.trlg•rlltOf, 2 door. FF, flarvnt
gold, $95; r~frigentor, FF,
avacado, lik.JI new 1265. Skaggs
Appliances. 614-446-739B or 1·
1100-419-3499.
GOOD
USED
W11hen, drytrs,
..ngu. Sklggo
Upper Rlvar Rd.
Crest Motel. Call
t-800-4gg....3499.

3 BR house tor rent, 204 Anderson St., Mason. Serious Inquiries only. 304-882-3593.
4 bedroom 11om• In Point
PleaSint, Hud 1pproved . 304675-1198

Financial

Furnished
Rooms

2722.

Will babysit in my hom1, •ny
!"lours, 514-992 -5136

Willt~

Vary nice 1bdrm., buutlfui
country uti ing, fre• wat11rf
Irish, AIC, laundry f•cllltlloa,
P.,k Rd. oYerlooklng US 33,
D1rwin, C.R. Pn~tl , 8t4-59ot-5322,
$2751mo

F1rm Wanttd: On Ohio River
For Veoatablet. Mlnon H. Rooms lor rent - nell or month
Renick, Real Estate Broltw. 6t4- St.Jrting at $120/mo. G.111i1 Hotel
983-2134.
614-446-9580.

loti In Gallipolis F•ry • 1()()%
owner tinanclng 11 $18.M per
month, any OM of lour lots
avlilablll, l04-17S-2722..

Wanted to Oo

On•
and
two
bedroom
apar1ments tor r•nt. 304-6752053 or 675-4100

45

Will Oo Small, Large Appliance
Rllpillir. 614-31'9-2921

1

Fumlahed 1Br, lftllltln P.Jid,
S21Wo. Deposit, 258 St•t•
S1rHI Gallipolis. 614-446-3667.

197'9 Clairmont, 3 bedrooms,
g1s heal &amp; ct~nlf"ll sir, washer &amp; Furnished Apal1ment 1 Blld·
dryer, sa,ooo. 304-675-7214 .
roomL UUIIUet P1id, $260/mo.
1983 Manslon 14x52, 2!1R. 920 t-ourth AYenue, Gallipolis
Stov•. Refrtgen.lor, Gas Fur- Ohkl, 614-446-4416 Alter 7p.m.
nile• Included. Ullllty Closet, Furnished Apal1ment, 1br, next
N•w Carpeting, Great Condi- to Ubrary, p1r1llng, c•ntn~l hul,
tion! $7.~. O.B.O. 614-669- IIJr, f"llfenmcn. 614-446-0338,
5245.
Betof"l 7p.m.
1983 Nuhu1, 3 badroom, 14x70 Graelou. !lYing. 1 1nd 2 bed·
wUh 7x:t2 up.~ndo, CA, Queen room apertmenta at VIllage
w1terbed, garden tub, 111 ap- Manor
and
Rlnrtkle
pllanc:.a. 101l20 deck, $"14,500. Ap.artm•nta In Middleport From
Mull move, 304-615-1860 or 675- S196. Catl614-992-7181. EOH.

lots lof t.Jllo, lr1U11n .JCCOpI.Jble. 304-175-2722.

21

'.

Ro~rt S1xon On Rt.:J5, Tum moviM. Call614-446-2568. EOH.

Takmg ordllrs lot- t\andmade
cr ochaled doiles &amp; other
c rochet items, 614-992·5136

FOf all your l.lwns_needs, give
us • c.~ll . ComtT1111rc11l &amp; rvstdenli.al, frH eslimales, tully In·
sured, 6M-992·7'ti72

I' IN down I\TIRt

(/.

Miscellaneous

Will Babysit In My Home. Rodor, Aru. Ret.,.nc~~s Av•il•ble
eau 614-245-S887.

Wont to

:' .

Business
Training

Rei: rain
Now!! !Southaast1111
Business eot~. ~f"~ vanev
Pta.u. Cell Today, 6
-4361f!
Regis1et"ation .t0-05-1274B.

The (lassfieds

110 lll't'tl fn

now IC·

tor tutur•

posiliona, pick up applicalions
at Service Desll..

Clarvest ABargain...
Reap T~e Rewards...
\Then You Turn To

(

r.

lrom $l92Jmo. Walk lo thop &amp;

3594.

NMd extfl cash? Own products
11 • dtseount? Wort your own
ho&amp;n? AVON, tree gin wilh
sigrHJp, ull Kay, 614-992-7180

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Eleellenl
P1y,
Benefits,
Transportation,
407-2!12--4-,.7,
Ext
571. ~ . m -lOp.m. Toll
Retunct.d.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
1977 COIIchm•n Tn.ll•rt Sale Or BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jecklon Pike

Up Stop To S.. And Tllk To;

~lld tor_family _pracliet
In Rlle1,., Oluo, to

Employment Services

1m Forrul Park Mobile Home,
2 Bedrooms, 12x65, Total
Electric:, V.ry Good Condition!
614-446-61178.

Trade Fot 82-83-84 112 on Pick·

1-800-255-0242.

10000 IITU . P.O. Box 17M Pt
Ple•unt, WV 25.550. 304-fJS..
5133

M,.•,

Help Wanted

l rooms &amp; kttc:hen: $250 mo., all
utllh ... plid. Call t.tw"Mn 11 :00
a.m.- S p.m. 614-446-0238.

4 bedroom remodeled older
homt, $275. month plua utilities,
$150. seeurlty deposit, references raqu\fed, 304-!"TS-7859 •ft•r
6:30PM
Fumist..d 3!1r HouM, 1 Roor,
$350 +Utilitles, Upper Fourth
Av1nue , Gallipolis, Rel.,-.ncu,
Security Deposit. 614-446-4416
Aher 7p.m .
Galllpotis F..-ry acroaa lrom
grade achoot. 7 room hous•.
S200 deposit. $250 month. lQ4.
S1S-8860
House for rant in Syr•cun, 614gt)2 .7589

42 Mobile Homes

Ap:r;loncoo.

e ..lt Stone
614-446-7398,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home tumlshlngl.
Hours : Won-S1t, 9--5. 814-4460322, 3 mlln DUI Bulavitle Rd .
Free Delivery.
New 29,000 BTU1 AC, Used 2
MontM, S1,200, New Will Taka
$700. C.ll614·367·7045.

PICKENS FURNITURE
NeWI'U•ed
Houuhold furnishing . 112 mi.
Jerr1cho Rd . Pt. pteaunt, WV,
call 304-675-1450.
Portable Whirlpool Olsflwasher,
Gaur.Jnleed l'o Work! Good
Condition . $113. Phone : 514·387·

. ...

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE 62
Olive St ., G1llipoli1. New &amp; Ualld
lurnilure, he1len, Weatem &amp;
Worlt boots. 614-445-3159
VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GALORE I
"6l4-4ot6-3158

One Bedroom HouM, Fur·
n!shed, No Pet•. Relarence And
O.posit . &amp;14-446--2543.
Two B.droom HouM, Deposit
And R•ferene~~ Required No
Pala. 61&gt;4-446-4879.

APPUANCES
refrigerators,

LIVING ROOM : Sol• And Chair
S179 And Up; CoH" And End
Tabi.. $79 And Up; Swi"el
Roc:ken $79.
BEDROOM· Bunk Beds SV9
{2.&amp;); 4 Drawer Chnt Of
Drawen $44.15 ; Twin MaHrt~s

tor Rent

199 Sot.

1411:70 Wlth Exp1ndo, 1 112
Bath1 1 Rt. 14t, GallipoUt, Ail OINETIES Wood Bu Stool1
$14.95 (26"jlabte And 4 Paddlld
Eleetnc, No Ptts. 614-446-4824.
Chalre $129.
2 Bedroom Mobll11 Home, Ne1r
EYergr-..n, G•llipolis. 614-379- OPEN: 7 Day1 A Week, 9 A.M. · 6
P.U . Sunday .12 Noon · 5 P.M.
2&amp;78.
Rt . 111 4 Mtia Ott Rt . 7 In Can ...
2 Bedroom Furnished, O.e?Sff tlnlry.
..
Required, You P•y Ullhllet,

53

Antiques

;:1

2br Mobile Home, Rt. 588 Gal11 11 F 1 .,..,. ..... .,~~..~ ...,
po •· urn,,,.,., "-"'o. • ,oo
0.poslt. 814-446-3870.

::-...,..;:,--=;..,::---=-:
Remington 870 Wlngmal1er 3
M1g. 12 Gauge, 30' Full Choke
hrr.i. Good tandltlon. 614-245-

5047.

2br Unturnlthed, Air, Cab.. ,
Buutllut Rl..,.r View, Aelerenca, lauru1 9mm Nmi-luto, llltra
Deposit R•lrlld . Fatar's clip, $375 . Moc»l 37 Wlneheller
Mobile Homa P•rk. 814-4.....1802. 16 gougo $150. 3CM-li75-55D3 ol·
ter 5:ocr.

sr

Big River Anliquea, 510 Main St,
Polnt Pleuan!, WV.

S Drawer Chill, Mirror BuHat
Spool Bad, Dry Sink, bretser,
Trunk Part•, Cash Register,
Gtan Claw F"!t 1•bl•, Rocking
Ch1lr. AI: .504 ::tecona Avenua,
Galllpolll.
Buy or ..tt. Rl"•rine Ant5ques,
1124 E. Main Stf"lllll, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
614·992·2526.

Musical
Instruments

BUTTER AGAIN

S H UR 0 C

II I' I I I

Pe&gt;any Mark 3-12 Chlnsl Mixing

Boordl$895; Poavoy Stono E.O.

$175; banu Digital Delay $75;
All In Excellent Condition, 614-

446-4525.

Farm Supplies
&amp;Liveslock

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

14 carat whlt• geld wedding
ring. 114 k. pear shapltd
diamond. 14 carl! white gotd
w8ddlng band. 304-675-7'980.
15 acres en Sow•rds Rlgdg•
Rd., 100 y1rda down from
Double Cr.ek Rd.; Also, gHN
&amp; lhNp tor sale. 614·2~554,
1.. ve m1111age.
21/2 ton centr-~1 AJC, set ol twin
bods, 614-992-5934
3 Block Sawmill Coal On Wood
C~ Stove, 614-446-4"9. &amp; 614256·1977.
55 h hOU&amp;II trailer fram11, 2 axles, 4 Uras and wheels, 614-9923590.
8" Dewalt Radial Arm Saw $150;
au .. n Size Sofa Bed, Uke
8111nd Newt $250; 2 Recliners,
$20 Each. 614-446-4838.
Br11nd New Treadmill $350. 614-

446.0423.
Canopy crib wUh mstctling
chest Olhllr baby tumilure.
Canopy twin alu bed, 4 pc
w~ker Ht . 304-67s-.t548.
Conc:f"llta 6 Plaltlc Sepllc
TanU, Jet Aen.Uon T1nU. ~on
Evan• EnterpriiM, Jackson, OH
1-100-537-9526.
Electric &amp;owe, DniMr, 5 Pi~
Oin.. t•. Sp,~~ca HNiar, Mirror,
O..kL Cotf• T•b1e, $10 Each;
Bed lfOX Springs, llattrau $50;
2 Couchft $20 Each. At: 504
Second AYenl.lll, Gallipolis.
For Sale or Rent, S.mi Storage
Tr1111..-., 614-448--8247.
FREE INSTALLATION

SWIMMING POOLS

For Salt: New Holand Rakes,
Ba11r1, Mowen., And Hay Binds.
2 And 4 Row Com Planters,
WhHI Disks, Pick-Up Dtaks,
Manur1 Spread•rs, F•rtiiize
Spreaders WhHt Drills Other
Filld RNdy Equipment, How•'•
F•nn Mac:hlnery At. 124 &amp;
Mayhew Road, J,.ckson Ohio.
6l4·286-5!t44.
lntematlon111
1028
Traclor
$6,950; 444 lnlemallonal tNasel
With IH Loader, $5,950; B-2751nt•mltlonal With Loader $2,950 :
Cub lowboy With Equipment
$l,995. 614-28&amp;-6522.

1986 Honda 3 wh.. ter 350X,
runs good , $600. :w-4-675 ·2074.

Oliver tractor &amp; """ machinery
p111S, II nol In stock will get
Call ''The Olle Man". 614-388Rotary plows, cunlvatora, &amp;
snow blower ltt.Jchments tor
Gravely tractor, good cond., 614·
992-3804
Wanted· Tobacco
614-245-5047.

Poundage.

Want.cl: u ..d larm equipment,
11nytfllng you w•nt to Mil. Call
614-256-1308, 258-3040 after 6
p.m.

62 Wanted to Buy

PM

S.1r1 Hot point Av1cado, Green
Sldl
By
Side
Frosltrae
Refrigerator, Works Great. S175.
814-4'116..0536 Anytime.
Sears Wood/Coli Fr•• St.Jncllng
Fh-.place With Blower, S200 :
Good Con1985 vw Jltll,
dition! S1,800; 1981 Dodge
Daytona AC, PS, PB, Auto
Trans., 52,00 Mllll, $4,700. 614·
446 ·7616 Alter 4p.m.

v.,

Sell· defro•t r•friger.Jior, $75 ;
GE W~~sh•rl dry11r, autom1tk:,
$125; 16" port•bl• colpr TV, $75;
614-142·2352

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, aew•r pipaa, win·
dows, Unt•la, etc. Cl1ud• Win·
l•rs, Rio Gr1nd•. OH Call 614·
245·5121

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-P1t
Grooming. All brHds, styles.
lame Pet Food Dealer. Julia
Webb , C.il 614-4-46-0231.
AKC Sconlsh Terrie;r pupplet,
non-lh~lng,
now
taking
d•posit&amp;,llel1, r11ady to.- E11ter,
614-SM-e&amp;n
Baste And Advanclld Dog
Obedl•nce C!.1 ...1 OtteriiCI By
The Right P1w ll'llnlng Ctntw.
Call 61~1-1884 For Addition•!
In tor mellon.

lncl,dod!

Mint

79

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Services
81

Edition Condition Crit1cal
West Virginia (1 :00)

11§1 Gil IIJ e Royal Family
Victoria tries to get Deacon
Hudson interested in
Elizabeth . Stereo C

•

EEKAND MEEK
lf\[ lAST 12. 't{)lRS SIW M
11Y 1if., Cf 1l1f IU'UA!U.l
GIT SS% Of lHt VJA..TN ..
l.fA!iUJ M nsr L'"f '"'" 1~TH
A 5 1RI lLK)J iXlt1AI? llT/&lt;..fL

12lJether (Pt I) IR) Stereo.

i

Cur11t Homa Improvements:
Veer1 Experl•nee On Otder &amp;
Nevter Homu. Room Additlona,
Fo ...ndallon
Wor11,
Roofing,
Kltcflens And Ba1ht. Fr1e Estimates! Reletencn , No Job
Too Ellg Or Small! 614 -367..0516.
Aeratton Motora, repairlld . New
&amp; re-built motors in stock, RON

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1·800537-9528

MORTY MEEKLE ANDWINTHROP.r--::~-----~---.
(

IT'S EASY
ID6€T

ONE

-·

-~-'- .-.J

,, "

BARNEY

race (2;1JO)

MY MAW IS FIXIN'
BANANA AN'
PINEAPPLE PUDDIN'

MY AUNT
LOWEElY
15 A GOOOER
COOK THAN
YORE MAW"

WITH IIANtLLER
WAFERS TONIGHT!!

Will build p;~tlo cover., dec:ks,
aerMned rooms, put up vlnvt
1lding or trall•r •kir1ing . 61•·
245-9152.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

TONIGHT YORE
MAW 15 FIXIN' TO BE

9

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Graph Matchmaker can help you under- stand what to do to make the relatron Shlp work . Mail $2 plus a long , setf addressed . stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. c/o thrs newspaper . P .O .

BoK 91.28. CleY&lt;!Iand . OH ~4101 -3428 .
TAURUS !April 20-llloJ 20) Subjects
you find interesting might not be of
equal importance lo your friends today
If you interject these topics mto a discussion. you might lose your audience
posthaste.

CANCER (Juno 21..JuiJ 22) Partner·
April I, 11192

1:

Mowr~y 's

Upholslering MfVIc.
ing trl county.,.. 26 YNf"l. TM
belt In tumltur. upholstering.
C.JII 304-ti75-415-4 tor tr .. nllmltes.

Advancement in your chosen field ol
endeavor is a strong possibility lor the
year ahead. Ypur rise in status could
come about through a unique chain ol
events

ARIES (M•rch 21·April 11) Establish
objectives today that are within your
scope ol possibilities. If you attempt
something beyond your limitations. you
could be sorely disappointed . Tryjng to
patch up a broken romance? The Astra-

ships could haYe more disadvantages
tOday than benefits. II there is something important you hope to accom ..
plish , see if you can do it independently
LEO (JuiJ ZS.Aug. 22) Yoo might beneIll in some manner lrom an arrangement initiated by another loday, while at
the same time be deprived of rewards
lor something you 've done entirety on
your own.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-s.pt. 22) P-Ie who
are industrious and productive make
your beSt companions today You havs
abundant enMgy waiting to be chan-

neted tf1 a pos.1r&gt;te man ner. and Hley "ll
help you do it
LIBRA tSepl. 23-0cl. 23) Yoo"ll be ve&lt;y
effective today - 11 you work on Involvements that can be accomplished
speedtly. Ted•ous tasks reduce your Interest and motrvahon
SCOAPtO tOct. ~- 22) Ycxfre
hOlding the WlnnlllQ cards today . ~o
don 't devote your time and energy to tn·
Slgn tfiCfnl 5ituat101'\s. Go after somethrng meamngful.

SAGITTARIUS (llow.ZS.O.C.21) O.ntct
tnvcWvements with otherS lor a con strucltve purpose will bring you ttle
greatest happiness today. tf you can '!
do anything with a pal. do something lor
a pal

CAPRICORN (Doe. Z2-.1on. 11) Someone you ·re closety involved wdh m'Qht
otter you some Vf!lf'1 wise advice today,
but there is a chanceyou·u ignore It, just
because you dktn · t think of it yoursetf.
AQUARIUS (...._ :zo.Feb. ft) Dealings
you have of a cxwnmercial nature stloutd
wort( oot to ,our satisfaction today . But
you might not be as fortunate in involvements with otners fOf social purposes.

PISCES (Fob. - d o 211) h"s bes1
not lo get too ctose1y invotved today
with someone you recently met who
makes

rou

feet a

hit

uncomlortabte.

Continue 10 study this individual from a

distance

l

F.A:o;T
• A 4 .12

, 8•
t A 10 6 1 2
• Q5

., 9 6 2
• K87
.J 10 2

+

SOLTH

+K 7 6

The normal
or the unusual?

.,

.AQW ;J]

+a 73
Vulnerabl e Both
Dealer North

By Pbilhp Alder

Soutb
Wt&gt;st
Nortb
East
Most bndge hands are "normal "
I .~T
Pa s.~
the textbook play works But there are
Pass
All pa s..&lt;&gt;
some for wh1ch the textbook play IS
wrong . The difftculty 1s m separating
Opcmng lead
the routme hands from the unfamihar
Today's hand. taken from '' Bridge L ______________________j
- Tncks of the Trade~ by Terence
Reese and Uavid R!rd ·(Gollancz.
$16 50. 211 866· 58601. is a good exam · un the diamond jJCk
pie . Cover the Wes t and South cards
Declarer was rather lucky . but East
Agamst the contract of four hearts. mtsscd h1 s c hance If West had the dta West !e.1ds the spade jack and dummy mond ace . F.ast c-ould ~e thrf'f' defen plays low . Plan the defense
sive tricks The only othr-r chanre was
At the table . nol wtshmg to g1ve de- either a heart tnrk or - more rPahs
clarer two spade tncks. East made the t1cally - a club tnck Also. the diS·
normal play of the four Declarer won c-ard on the s pade ktn g wasn"t gomg to
w1th the kmg and led a diamond to the be of usc to South If East wms tnck
quef&gt;n and king East s witched to a one With the s pade ace and s witches ~o
trump Alter winmng w1th dummy 's tht' club two {bctler than the jack) , ttte
heart 1ack . declarer called for the contract d1e s Th.e dfofenders have the
spade quwn East won with the ace step on th.e derlarer
Ref ore makmg the ~ tt:· xthook " play
and returned another trump . South
won wtth the queen and led his second always cons tder the hand ::~ s a whole
R~adf'rs aN' mv1fl'll 111 Slf'"nd card-play qucsdiamond WPst had to wm With the
ace . but he had no trump rema1nmg lmm 111 Pfulltp .ilrkr. m cart' of rill.\ nt'WSp.iper.
l&gt;t- ans wcrru on1_1· throu~:h Uw roJumn
Declarer t&gt;o~Jid ruff h1 s spadr loser 1n They([Jcan
1tl2, NEWSPAPER EIIITHIPfUSE o\1 ...
the dummy ~nd dtscard h1s club loser

,.,

3.,

+.I

The World Almanac "'' Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anaw•r to Pre¥toua Puzzle

home

33 Here (Fr.)

PresKienlial
initials
4 Seeped
9 TV cartoon

35 Decline in
stock prices
38 Machete
39 Before
40 Prejudice
42 Barbara and
Sir Anthony
44 Fracas
45 Section ot
org .

series

12 Spanish gold
13 Tearful
14 Actress
Thurman
15 Sound from a
kennel
16 Tennessee

46

Teatr~e

50 Waiters
reward
51 Chemical
sutt111:
52 Eared seal
53 Comedian Philips
54 Mal de55 Pith helmet
56 Women's pa triotic soc

-Ford
17 502, Roman
18 Valentine
archer

20 Slop
22 First garden

23 ldenllly
26 Himalayan
plant
27 Spread
tflickly
29 Greek leiter

Brothers
2 Deceptions
3 TV's led 4 Wu indebted

DOWN

30 Toted
32 Movable

to
5 OYer (poel.l
6 Buddhi&amp;m

1 Dr. -

type
7 Spire
ornament
B Tints
9 Actress Anderson
10 Actor Estevez
11 Posts
19 Idleness

.......,.........,.~ 21 Set ot

frr+----"f---1 2 3
h...+-f---124

Stereo. Q_

Nuhvl,le Now Ster&amp;a

II§) Ill IIJ Ill

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

0:.
Cleaning,

ALDER

clothes
Group o I
words

More
uncanny

f---+-+~ 25 Iron grating

28 Roofing
liQIJid
31 long fish
33 An antiseptiC
34 Cunning

(j)
(JJ lit Homolront Abe
(J) Cl
-·
and Gloria ara afraid they will
never o wn their own
business . Stereo

do rather well today in siluations where
you're able to "look out lor your own interests, but things you attempt to manage lor others might not be handled as
aptly .

De Hauling Af!Y~Ime
Anypl~ee, No Job Toa B~

WEST
10!.171

1:;1

00)

4U

• KJ 7
• QJI
+AK964

.J

PHILLIP

0 MOVIE; Treachtrouo
Croooing (2

r

.QB

Sam leaps mto the life of a
hot hunk on daytime
television . Stereo t;J

GEI!IINI (lloJ 21..June 20) You shootd

Wa

NORTH

BRIDGE

10:00 (])II all &lt;lu•ntum Loop

ASTRO-GRAPH

,

Wilder· Proof-Swish- Tendon· FEW WORDS
"Say It Wrth Flowers,· the sign in the florist shop said
My friend went in and bought only a single red rose He
say's he only bought one because he"s a man of FEW
WORDS.

F1tm1n McCabe battles a
bail bondsman who's tryinQ_
to clear her client. Stereo . L.;l

NUMBER ONE II

Sm.Jit Plumbing Jobt Oone. 614379-2921.

Resldonti.Ji
or
c:omman::lll
wiring, new service or reptlra.
Ma111r UcenMd .. oaclrlelln
Ridenour Elaclrieal WV000306,
304-e7S.1786.
'
'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

a Lorry King Llvol

C1rter'• ptumblng
Fourth and Pin•
Galllpoll•, Ohio
614-44&amp;-38&amp;

84

_

®liD IIJ Ill Joke and 1he

S.pllc Tank Pumping S90, Gallla
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackmn, OH 1-800-!37-9528.
Davis
S.w-Vac
Service ,
Georg•• c,...k Rd . P1n1, suppll••. p.lckup, lind d•Uvery. 614446-0294.

Oswald's shooting 1S
examined; authorities tape
children on a school bus. a
man is harassed by his
netghbor ; skydiYers
exchan~evows . (1 00)
Stereo .
(j) 11
11 Young lncll•no
Chronicles While
traveling down the Congo
River , Indy meets Albert
Schweitzer . Stereo. C
IIl II) Condition Critl"col;
The Ametic1n Helhh Care
Forum Pflil DonahiJB
1ntrorJuces a group of
nat1onal health-care
specialists who d1scuss the
curren1 state of health care
and 1ts role in the political

Jon••

Ron's TV S•rvice, specializing
in Zenith 1110 Mrvlclng mosl
other br1nds. Hou.. c11is, 1110
some appli•ne• repairs. WV
304 -576-2398 Ohio 614-446-2454.

82

Gil IIJ Ill O•vlo Rutoo

9;00 (2)11 ali I Wl1no11 Vldeol

WATERPROOFING

Good conc~tuont 614·388·117"1• ,8,.7_..,...u.:,P,..h,:o.:ls:.:te:.ry~--1911 Pontiac Lemns, r11d, 2dr.,
4sp., •mltmlsllfiO, 14,000MI. 1owntr, like new, S5600 or lrado
tor 4dr. c1r, 614-949-28n

,_-(PGI (2 :15)
8:30 (j) II (JJ 1J Doogto Hownr.
M.D. Doog•e and Vinnie
decide to share an apartment

Home
Improvements

1987 Dodge A.rl•s, •uto, $2,200. Too Little. I•Mm•nt
1981 Plr,mouth Hort::ron, 40 mpg, Oenersl Work, Any Kind! a'fi
$1,600, ow ml5ee, 304-675-2440.
379-22711 Anytime.
1988 · CaYalltr Station Wagon, 1.:;~::.:.::..::::!.;:::;::.._____
Anar 6:00P.M.

!Ill II MOVIE: In Ute Line ot
Duty: The FBI Murders Q 00)
0 Munier, She Wrote t;J
a Crook ond Cheoo
a P~moNtwl Q
liD Roots; Tho Noxt
Qeneretlon (P1 3 ot 7) (2:00)
1;05 Cil MOVIE; Walking Toll, Pert

Q

t9!141 Chovy 85 General Hauling

60-4623.

A.gilterlld Border Collie Puppl. ., Father Wu Gslll• County
J:air Champion Fot- 3 Ya•rs,
Working Cattle Doga, $125 Eatfl.
614-256-1061.

IE Under Fire Speetot

Gunny and Dwight get
stranded in the fog while on
a fishing trip. Stereo.

Betal.-., Qaad Condition! 614-

Fisfl Tank, 2413' Jackson AYe.
Point Pleaunl, 304-875-2063,
full line Tropical lith birds,
am.~tt •nimals lind IIUppiiH.

y

1986 R•ng•r, 5 Speed, ta&amp;5 112

Escort Wogon;

I.

II

Unconditional tilelim• guaran·
tae. Local raterenc" tuml•hed.
Frea lstlm•tn. C111 collect 1- .
614-2374488, d1y or night.
Rogers Basement Wlltrprooflng.

1985 C1valler statlonwagon,
4dr, 1uto ., sharp little w•gon,
all lilt equipment, $1500, "614992-6719

1986 Oldt Flrtnll, 5 apaed, atr,
em/ tm stsreo, lilt whMI, 614·
H2-6529 call aHer 6pm

(j) II (JJ 11 Wonder Yoaro
Kevin has a wild party at his
house while hi~rents are
away Stereo. I:;J
~ Infinite Voy1ge Stereo .

BASEMENT

576-2175.

1985 Pontiac Trant Am, Auto
Trans, Good Condition, Runs
Good, Sl,SOO. 614-446..0m.

H•nk Qathors Story 12;00)

0

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Coacflman Mini motor homa,
464 FOfd, wlalr, gener~tor,
gan~ga kept, 304-4S8-1066.

1978 Ford Fairmont, good cond,
tilleda rtdlator, 304-576-2194 or

1985 Plymouth Gr•n Fury, 4dr
Mdan, ettrl nice, all the l'&gt;qulpmenl, 316, V~. $1600, 614 9928710

'f?
.._,I '

Used &amp;
ttartlng 11 $99; Iron!
whHI driv1 starting a1 $149.00
&amp;14·245-56n, 614-992-&amp;293.

noo~·~~------~~

t984 LA Baron, c.Jndy machines ,
1 pop m.Jchtne, 35 fl. 5th
wh ..ler, 304-m·56SI

\..

Stereo C
(J) MDVI!: Ftn•t Shot The

rab~.11H,

1969 Must•ng $3.,500 . 1939
Chey $850. 1985 Honda Shadow
700cc, 2,400 ml, $2,000. )04-6~

1984 Ford Escort, 4 cyl, 4 spNd,
$600. 304-675-2074.

ALLEY OOP

6ud~el Transmission~,

Autos for Sale

1984 Dodge Aries, 4 door, black,
AUIFM, cassetta, 4 tyl , auto,
614-!K12-n36, evenings

FBI investigate a

medical-investment scam

Condition. · ~

JET

1981 VW, 1 OwlUir, NIIW llrea,
Extra Clnnl $1,395. 614-44&amp;TnT Aller 7 P.M.

a Croolflre
7:35 CIJ Sanlord I Son
8:00 (2)11 all Unoolvod
MylltMS The IRS and the

1989 Four Winns 18ft. ()pan Bow .,
Trailer. 175 HP 110 OMC 6 Cyl. .:
Ski Equipment, Bo.~t CoYers, ,
Trailar Spare Tire, Other Ex1r1"1 -~

76

1971 Monte Carlo, runt good ;
CVA Fromler muUie lo1der, 50
caliber, 6l4-992-54a6

Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
Phillies or Cleveland Indians
at Baltimore Orioles (LJ

1975 t6h. St~rcr1h Bast Boat
Will"! 65 hp Mercury Motor &amp;
Trolling Motor, $3,000 . 614-446· ..
4638.

Transportation

n

r;}

14ft. Fiberglau Fish/Ski Boat,
40 Horse Johnson, Trall1r, Plus ,
MOI'e! $650, Good Condition, ....
614·446-4920.

Flrwl Cutting Round 81ln: Orchard, Gra11 And Fescue, 4•5
$10. No Sunday C.JIIt. 614-3888524.

wuhers
&amp;
dry•rs, Nch $100 and up. Ws
urvk:• 1111 makn. The Wuher &amp;
Dryer Shoppe. 814-448-2944.

0

a

Be I Stor Stereo.
ID Major Ll•gue BaMbell

lor Sale

Garage Kepi . $8,000. 614-U6- ...,:
Good Ul.cl plano, pret..- Story &amp; 1 1904.
Clark, Wurlillar, or Baldwin, 614- - - - -- - -- -"J112-2660 ahllr 6pm
BOATERS
Gulnna Mercury Marina Sarvlce.
Mercury, M•rlner, Me~clliiMr
63
Livestock
tpeclalltt. Mercury tartll\«1.
2 r.glst1red Ch•rotais bulls, 20 Mobil•, W• c:om1 to you. 614mo old. Cow/call pairs. Carl 259-597'9
Kinnaird, ]04-67~182 a her 8 :00

R~dltloned

Ruby I dl•mond Mk gold ring .
Iilii 5, COli $1,400. 1111 $70(1
304-882·2400.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

9684

Only $&amp;2.VVMo. • For 12 Monlht. Angus And Chi-Angus Black
19xl1 14 Pool lnc:ludn Flttw, BuD•,~. Rusonably Piiclld. Slate
Lldclsrt, Huge
Deck Elc. Run t-arms, Jac:kaon, Ohio, &amp;14('Bae8d On Selling Price Of 286-5395.
$699. $14.45 APR, lotal O.terrtd
Price: $754 .92) Don"1 Beii•n it'? 'Farrn.ll Cub With Cuttivator1,1
New llraa And PaimL Sh1rp
Cl.ll BPI
&amp;14-44&amp;-nB1 An..- 7:00 ~.M.
1-800-548-11123
Horses tor aale • AOHA St.JIIion,
G11nul• Nutrition
Products 2 mans, 3 cons, Morgilln's
featuring Amino kid Body Woodlawn Fsrm, l0-4-937-2018
Dulldlng1 Wght losa .Jnd tat evening•
burner rormuf.JI . A"1llable IX· Registered Heratord Bull 6t4·
c:luliv•IY It Rile Aid Ph1rmacy. 379-22111.
The Nfe WIY to diet.
Reglsler•d Umoutin bull with
PeaYey P.A. Sy.t•m Four Chan- papers. 304-i9~3815.
n•l
And
Four
Shure
Mk:rophon.. , $325; Original Special Felldar Celt Salel
1928 Hecklsca, $65; His And Athena ll"utoc:k S.Jin, US so
H..-s Wllddlng Ringt 112 Can~t West, Albany, Ohio. Saturd•y
S225; H &amp; R 32 Pistol $70 ; April 11, 1992 At 1 :00 P.M. lO
Home/lie 210 Chain S.w $100; Head ot Charoi.Jis Crost
Wedding Ortu And Acc:es- Heller• To B• Sold. All Consoriat $75; Keyboard And •lgnmentt W•tc:ome! llvutock
Hardc•A, $100. 614-l88-9t61J.
Aeeepttd Starting At 4 P.M.
Every Friday. Haunn~ Availab4e.
Plastk: And Medal CuJ"er1 61nch 61&gt;"\-592-2322, Or 814· J98-3531 .
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Evant, Jackaon, Ohio_ 1-80064
Hay &amp; Grain
537-9528.
Port•ble chan~abl• l11tter 1ign
$299. Frea iltt1ersldel!very. Plat·
tic tenen $47.50 box. 1-80G-5JJ3453, anytime.

1987 Suzuki DRIOO, run• good,
1sking $525, 614-"2-3114 evenIngs

•

.

0

IJlll
a£ ID Wheel ol Fortune O
IIJ e Fomllr Fl&lt;ld

Q

1984 Honda lnlllrceptor F-M!OR,
New Tires, New ··91" lockhan
Fairing, Engine R~nlly Over·
hauled, low Mileage, H•IITIIIIt,
looks Sharp! S2,000 304-!75- ,
11111

.

ID SportiCenter
a Moneyllne
liD The Wollorto
7;05 CIJ Addams Fomlly
7;30 C2lll 11J Jooportlyl []
(J) Now h C•n Be 'roia
(j) D Enlortalnment Tonight
Stereo. O
Man1ed... With Children

FRANK AND

/

.

lETTERS

Gonorallort []

Mp.y/U T/"ff: ONE wf ff'r ON /&lt;NEW
A SHO{n'CUT'-

.

IN

11J II Entarta'rnmen1 Tonight

~II

sighed, ·so can

8 PR~~~~~u;:!~~~LEIIERS 1• 1• 1• 1• 1• r 1
6 ~~R~~N~E
IIIIIII

11§111 Cumtnt AHolr C
!Ill II Star Trek: The lliex1

!;I

I

the chu ck Ie quoted
by lollmg on the moll1ng word!
L__I_ _I._..L_L_J_.J you develop lrom step No 3 below

.

New1Hour []

Steroo.

'With a single stroke," the
art teacher lectured his class,
"an artist can change a smite
to a frown ." "Thai's nothing,-

EAT
~nye--~-~~~ent
0
1-~~;;5,..:::,.1...::...,1;:...:.:,.16.,.:....,1~-l Q C omplete
BE

(JJ II Csncti! Cam011

1991 Full Size Dinar, 4x4 1
lo.Jded, ?,800 Mlln, Exlandea
Warr1nty, llk• Haw, Pric:ed To
S.ll! 614-446-1675 614-446--8127.

1982 Y1mafla, XT 250 Dirt Bill•.
New Tirn, Exh1ust And TuneUp. 3,700 Mil•t, SSOO. 614--446- ,
3485.

~~I~I~I~~~· ;

(j) II lnoklo Edition "Q
IIl Ill MtcNtii/Lthrer

0 MacOyvor

I

CRIAV

(l) The Jeffertons a_

1984 Cflavr 4 Wha•l Drtv•.
Short WhH BaN, 305, 4 Speed,
4" L.ltl, Alum WhMIS. Call 30467S-762l, Or 614-446-4015 .

1982 Yamaha 750 VIrago, 15,000
mlln, driv• shall drfven, 304675-2524 or 675-5755.

TV"Stereo.

III r

a£

1980 Dodge vsn, 318 •nglne,
111011 gr~t1 !Mil otter or 1rld11
tor 41~ Flu lrudl or 6 or 4 eyl.
trucll. 614-446-0536, anytime.

1·15'I8' Sl[dlng Door, 1-3' Walk
Pallll•d St"l Siding &amp;
Roof ng. $5190. Iron Horu
Bldrt. t-800-352-1045

Doo'i

MA L E R

1111 11J e CBS Nows 0
!Ill II Andy Orlffllh
OkoobyOoo
1D Up Close
liD Now Zarro Stereo. O
6;35 Cil Andy Q~fllth
7:0013111 all Wheel ol Fortune

73 Vans &amp; 4 WO's

61 Fann Equipment
Utun, Bldg. spoc111 ; 30"x40"d", _74_ _
M_o_to_r_c.:.y_c_le_s_ _

!Ill II Night Court 0
0 Smurfo 0
awondToday
liD Aln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop 0
6:05 CIJ Btvo~J Hlllblllloo
1:30 (2) II ali NBC News C.
(J) Saved by the Boll Q
(j) II (I) II ABC News 0
IIl Wild America C
~ Squel'l One

1989 Ford Ranger XLT, garage
kapl, low•ntd, must IH 614 ·
992·3065 after Spm, Brent Zirkle

Baldwin consol pill no, 8 Y" old,
exc cond, $1,500. 304-675-4855.

Wabat•r antique plano, 614-9925094 Of 614-992-3471

Still Rout• 7, so ... h, Golllpolll. 52 SportIng Goods
6U.2!6-1107.

I 60T PEANUT

1983 Chevy C-60, 16ft bed
wlslderacks,
new
•nglne,
$6,500, looks &amp; runs grul, "304675-7659 after 6:30PM.

$250/mo. Ptuo Uthhtoo. Dopooh

9_ _Wanted
to Buy
11
_ _ _:_:..:.._:.:~--

IT"S HWE ..

1979 S1apside Chevy 41c4 , looks
Graa1! ti14-643..0632.

2br Washer And Dryer Hook-Up,
Stove And Ralrlgenttor, CioN
To
Downtown
Gllllpolls

11oog1o Port Gannon Shophord

I

1-'
IE Rtocllng Rainbow 0

AND IT SAYS T~ERE IS STRONG El'tDENCE THAT GIRLS ARE NOT
RECEIVING THE SAME QUALIT~ OF ED\!CATION A5 THEIR BROT~ERS

worrds.b

low ro form lour simpl11

e

388-92~4.

pt~ld,

Hud approved, 304-675-7722.

R~tqUlrtd. 6~24$-9595

WED .. APRIL 8

0 four
Rear range le"•rs of
scrambled words

8;(10 (2)11 (j).. (JJ • ®liD
IIJ
IIJ N•wo
(!) Video Power
Square One TV Stereo .

1978 1 Ton Dodg• Dually. Club
Cab, 360 Automatic, Air, Cruls11,
Carpal, New Tires, Electric:
Braket And Trailer Hitch For
Gooseneck, Also Rene Hitch.
ExcaHant M&amp;ehanical Condition,
Body Good . S2,000 0 .8 .0. 614-

1 Bedroom Cow!try Selling, 10
Mila From GalllpoUI, $225fmo.
Wat.,. Paid, O.polh And 2
Ref•r•ncn Raqulnd. 814-4482 bedroom apt, utllltln

I

1977 Dodga Prospector 360 Engine, F.Jir Shape. 614-446-1438 .

JID4.

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

PE~~ T~INI.S

______.:.:__ ld.. d by

EVENING

1:-::--:--..,---:'..,--::

mo

G.Oi ~6

THE ATTIC.

11

TUT DAILY ~ f'i',l
'UIILII \:)~

Television
Viewing

00 . iT:S AU ~IC.I!T ... TH!iY
IIEIDII f11t»\ "100

72 Trucks for Sale

lor Rent

:tbdrm. ranch style
hom•. brick front, carport, half·
baSIImanl, carpi\, on 7110 acre,
lMI ftcm Holzer HospUal, SA
160, low 30's, INnings, 614-742·

!lE
Tl1RllUC.H OOR

YOU R£.ll.LY SHOUI.OI-IT

(.£TTER&lt;, fJ ~5 IN

1!1x70 on Sandhill Rd . 304-6753c 13
:.:...
4·_____________

a..utitul

REDUCE: burn off fit whllaJ""
...._.,, lab OPAL tablets an EYap dlr.tk:. Avallablll at Fruttt
Drug.

[ FWND 'h'£ (JJ;) WIE

Autos for Sale

J 9edr-ootM, 2 Baths, 2 Car
Gorogo. $45,000. 6~325.

7 Roome, Neldl Worit $7,700, ltaller For Rllfll, &amp;'M-379-2187.
lower Gartl-'d A"snue Got·
ttpotto. &amp;14-38U7811 B•1on D 44
Apartment

77562.

The Dally

Wednesday, April 8, 1992

83 Mazda 626. Runt good.
$1200. 01' best otler. 304"·1"73·
5109.

P.M.

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

36 like some
bed sheets
37 Mohammed 's
daughter
38 Darken
•1 Deep sleep
43 Black
substance
44 - terrier
f--+-f--+~ 47 Ear (comb
lorm)
,...+--1--148 Soft food
49 EJ.ist

0

41 Hours A man

shoots passing motorists on
a highway and then pleads
insanity. Stereo. E;J

!Ill II Hunter []
On Stage S!ereo
at World N•wo
liD 700 Club With Pot

a

Aobertoon

10:20 CIJ MOVIE: W•lklng Tall. tho
Flnot Ch•pter 1Ril2 151
10;30 Amorlcon Muolc Shop

a

Stereo

1D BaNboll Tonight
1t ;00 C2lll

CJl C1 liJ Ill 11§1 Gil

~~Je o~te

...
0

(lJ Night Court

IIJ-woll:h
~ Cl Aroonlo H•ll Ste•eo

«J M•c&lt;lyvor s....eo. 0
a Crook ond Ch...

ID SportoCen..,
8 Spofll Tonight
liD
Ste.eo 0
11;30 (J) Kojok ~
IIl O!MI o.dolono 11192
(JJ
NlghUino C
De •~~ongotoua Curvoo'
Crime Tlmo Alter Primo
Tlmo Stereo Q
8-yllne
liD Roota: The Next
a.-.llort (PI 3 ol7) (2 :0111
11 ;35 (])
1!J Tonight Show

-...wn

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e

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r~ Cipher o;rwtog&lt;IITIS -

cr..at.d from QUDt•loont by ltmout. ~*~Pie ~st and P'lllWII
Eldlleltw In IM apt.- 11..-dt tor WOOII"Ieo r~ ·~ cll.w X lqo.mlJ 5

" AGJ · OCTFGOZ
HCZAGPI

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C A A

NCWATXJA
P REVIOUS SOLUTION '" Put11ng o tt an e asy thing make s 11 hard , a ntt
pulling oil a hard o ne makes it tmpos sibl e ."' - George H Lorimer

8

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

-·---,---·-- -· --- ----.....,
Ohio Lotter\ I

Wednesday, April 8, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern
defeats
Bobcats

Pick 3: 368
Pick 4: 8954
Cards:
3-H; A-C; J-D;
4-S
Super Lotto:
21-24-26-40-44-46
Kicker: 637452

Page 5

.I
I

I

I

,. , _

1 ·· I ..

I

t

I

1J I

I I I

I

Part II'. CloudvLow tonight in hlj:h 30s.
Frid&lt;iy, p.. rtl) cloudy. High In

mid 60s.

.. ---

-----

-.-

---'

See Store For Details

The Big Bear Hug

Vol. 42, No. 242

Tyson • Holy Farms Split

•
Fresh F •ng
limit 1 Per Famay
With 120

·Boneless
Whole
••
•
Russet B ng
Potatoes
Food Club · a;~
Additional
P..-chose
(exdudinQ items
prohibiledby law!

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners approved the issuance of
bonds to finance the new headquar ters for the Deparunenl of Human
Services during! their regular meet ing Wednesday.
Bank One, Athens. N A, was
the low bidder for the bond
issuance, offering an aggregate
interest rate of 6.53 percenl The
county wtll finance $1.3 million
through the bonds al Bank One,
and the bond issuance will retire a
note used 10 finance the eonslruc·
tion of the new building.
Phase II of the building projccl
1s neanng completion, and the
com plex IS expected 10 be dedicat-

ed in early May.
Seven bids were received for the
iss uance, wnh aggregate interesl
rates ranging from 6.53 to 7.08 percent An associate from Peck Shaffer and Williams, the bond co unsel
representing the county, said at
yesterday's meeting thai th e high
number of bidders on a relatively
small project was a compliment to
the county.
"The low debt structure, or the
small a~l of indebtedness of
the county, probably accounts for
1he large number of bids on such a
small loan amount," Denni s
Sehwallie said.
Schwallie also commended
County Auditor William R. Wick·
line and the board for assembling

the necessary informauon for the
bond issuance.
Connector route
Representatives from the Ohio
Department of Transponation met
wiih the commissioners, two of the
Salisbury Township trustees and
Township Clerk Richard Bailey, to
discuss the road alignment for the
first section of the Ravenswood
Bridge Conncclor.
ViciOr Wolff and Sahle Eldaeldabaja, engineers with ODOT, presenled a change in the project's
plan . mvolving the elimination of
a tunnel at the intersection of a new
section of Pomeroy Pike and the
new four lane · and discussed the
IOwnship's role in the road project
Although the tunnel has been

limit 2 P"' Family with

Corn or
Green B

mrlm

Green sear6

Cans

For

Ca
Del Monte

Fruit Sale
29 -30 oz. Can
limit 2 Per Family With Any Other Purchase
(excluding items prohibited by low)

A'(. Ott.or Purtllose
ex~ Items
prohibited y lowl

Regular or
Sugar Free
Jar
LW'ni1 1:] Jar\ Per Family With Any Otrter
Purchase (excluding items prohibited by law I

Freezer Queen

Diapers

Cook N Bag Ent1ee
Solablo S""*,
Sbd' Bee/,

Sbder.::r

Of

~Beef

Open Monday
7 a.m. Thru
Saturday Midnite
Sunday 7 a.m. to
Midnite

X

limit 1 Par l'arniy With

Baby Food

Huggies
26-30-40-44
or 54 Ct. Pkg.

p s
Soft Drinks

4 - 4.25oz. 1 5 C

3

4oz.

Boxes for

Prices Good 4 Days
April1992

Wednesday, April 8 thru
12, 1992

·. IJ.t f

~Jlz"
!L:J ll

.-.,~

IJII'J'!

.. ' . ....... "

.\ ,.

' ''

&lt;\.""~-*WIIo

5

Faygo

Peaches, Pears

'~-·

-

Heinz Strained

Fruit Cocktail,

~tl ~

Cut or French Style Green
Beans or Whole Kerool or
Creom Style Com

Food Club 16-17 oz:. Can

6 Pack, 12 oz . Cans
l imit Four 6 Packs Per Family With Any Other
Purcho~e (eJO;duding 1lem ~ prohibited by low)

REGISTRATION SLATED . Boys and girls
who are interested in participating in the Meigs
County Soapbox Derby in Middleport on July 4
:1re being encouraged to altend a pre-regislra tion session on Saturday at Pleascr's Rrslau ranl. Charles Neutzling, Derby Director, will be
present to ask questions, and this new stock car
will be on display. The se~sion will be held from

II a.m. to J p.m. Here, David Ramsburg, who
raced last year, gets the reel nf lhe new car, as
racers Mall Smith, l&gt;anielle Peckham and
Richard Ramsburg look on. Also pictured is
Karl Kehler or H&amp;R Block in Pomeroy, one or
lhe derby's sponsors. The car will he on display
at Valley Lumber in Middleport through Satur·
day.

Pomeroy Merchants to order
10 new welcome banners
By JULIE E. DILLON

ciation due 10 the succ ess of the

Sentinel News Staff
The Pomeroy Merchants Asso ciation announced Wednesday that
10 "Welcome 10 Pomeroy" banners
can now he purchased by the asso-

show.
The cost of the banners will be
split hclween the merchants assOCI ation and Bank One, Pomeroy, who

organization's seventh annual fashIOn

--Local briefs----.
Prison design sent to officials
Our Finest Quartty.
Extra Lean, Great Flavor.

Cooked Ham

~
w-Added

Bear Minimum Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:

CHILLICOTHE &amp; WAVERLY BIG BEAR STORES

replaccd with a grnde inlersection,
the road alignment itself has nol
changed since firsl unveiled in
mid-February.
After thai segment (Rock
Springs to Five Points) is completed, the IOwnship will be asked to
assume responsibility for as many
as three secuons of road: the seclion of lhe existing Counly Road 25
(Pomemy Pike) from Meigs High
School to the top of the first hill; an
access road which will connect
several residence.&lt; 10 lhe new road;
and an occess mad which will serve
PDK Construction.
According to Wolff, the !alter
road could be changed to a private
road as a part of the state's agreement to buy right of way on thai

property. In that case, the mad will
not be transferrcd to the township
for maintenance.
Other busin~'
Ted Warner of the county highway deparunc~t reponed that crews
were now 1n ihc process of hand
patch ing on coumy roads. In addi tion, bru sh cull ing and roadside
mowing has now been completed
on nearly every cou nty road .
Co ld mix paving is expected to

Coun1y Courthouse,
· announced an upcoming mccl tn g wilh stale Jail inspcc10r s
regarding recent tnspe&lt;:IJOn of the
Meigs Cou nt y Jail and d1scussed
upcom ing repaiTS at lhr sheriff's
office and pil;
·discussed rcloca110n of the
co unty law library wi1h Pomeroy
auomcys George McCarthy, Chris
Tenaglia and John Lentes, all
members of lhc County Bar Asso-

gel unde rwa y in the ncxl week,

cmtion.

:~ccordtng 10

County Engtnccr
Philip M. Roberts.
ln o1her aclion,the board:
· approved the specification s
and authorized advcrtisemem for
hids for the painting of the Meigs

Prese nt , 1n add1l10 n 10 those
n:-~m c d,

were Comm 1ss ioners

R1 c ha rd E. Jo nes, Manning K.
Roush and David Koblcntz, David
Spencer of the highway department
and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Environmentalists oppose
scrubbing Gavin Plant

U.S. No. 1 • 10 lb. Bag

G1 ade A

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Commission approves bond issuance for DHS building

lb.
Food Gub or Thorn Apple Valley

2 Secliont, 14 Pages 2S cen11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April 9, 1992

Coprrlgh rod t992

Consrrucuon of a new 1,260 bed medium security prison 10 be
buill in Southeastern Ohio is one of eight capillll improvements projects which have been sent 10 design professionals, according 10 a
release from the Ohio Department of Administrative Services, Divi sion of Public Works.
The prison 10 be buill in Belmont, Meigs or Noble County has a
1otal project cost of $2] million . Decision on lhe location of the
facilily is expected within a few week s. A deadline of April 28 has
been se t for firms to submit sUite forms listing lhcir qualifications
on all projects except the 1wo for 1he Ohio Dcpartmenl of Rehabili tat ion and Correction.
Those two projects are lhe Southeastern Ohio prison and a prison
on lhe grounds of the Ohio State R ~ formalory at Mansfield 10 cost
S30 million.

Domestic cases processed

,-

Divorce action s have been ftled in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Freda M. Bays, Partl:ind, against Robert W. Bays, Sr.,
Portland; Amanda Fay Fields, Pomeroy, againsl George B. Fields,
Jr., Pomeroy; and by Vicki Lynn Kennedy, Pomeroy. against Perry
E. Kennedy, Pomeroy.
An action for dissoiUiion of marriage has been fried by Ann J.
(Continued on 4)

will donale $500 of iLs Christmas
bulb sa les to the proJect This
year's bulb, now available. features
Pomeroy H1gh School 1n purple
and white.
The banner s will be ordered
next week and should arrive sometime in June.
Susan Clark, presid ent of the
association, expressed her appreci alion for the efforts of everyone
involved in organizing the fashion
show. She also served as general
show chairman for the event held at
Pomeroy Elementary.
Mri. Clark reported repairs to
th e larger mini -park fence have
been completed and that the toial
cost of the project was considerably under budget. A work party to
paintlhe fence will be set with thai
work 10 be done by members of lhe
association.
Members of the association
were reminded to send their $100
contributions to John Musser which
will be used to fund Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultants in completing a
preliminary survey in preparation
for beginnmg the downtown revitalization project The total cost of
the preliminary survey by Stroth
will be $2,000. Musser is chairman
for the revitalization committee.
Continued on page 4

right descending bank of the Oh10
A 383 acre landfill will he con .
By JIM FREEMAN
River
between
river
mil
es
257.8
strucled
nonhwest of the factlny
0 VP News Staff
anct
258
wnh
associaled
sites
1n
for sludge disposal.
The S1erra Club might prcvcm
American Electric Power from wetlands of 1he Kyger Creek waterins1all1ng sc rubbers al the General shed, a tributary of the Ohio River.
This docs not mean, however,
th ai AEP ha s dec1ded 10 mstall
James M. Gavm Plant in Cheshire,
Description or proposed work
sc rubbers atlhe Gavm Plant.
fo rcing a sw itch from high-sulfur
AEP proposes to install a flue
local coal to out-of-state low-sulfur
According 10 BJ. Sm1th. direc gas
dcsulfurization
system
on
two
tor
of public affairs for AEP Fuel
coal.
1300
megawau
gcncraung
umts
at
Supp ly, the company is applying
According to lhe Apnl 6 cd1uon
of "Soulhcrn Coal", the environ- the Gavin Plant.
for the permits to keep the scru bbcr
In order to comply with the option open. Construc tion at the
mentali sts are opposing AEP 's
application 10 lhe U.S. Anny Corps Clean Air Act Amendments of Gavm Plant IS !along place for Site
of Eng;nccrs for a permit to unload 1990, lhe applicanl has developed a preparation shou ld AEP dec1dc to
limestone for lhe plant's scrubbing compliance strategy which would install nuc gas scrubbers.
Accordong to the Corps of Eng tsystem from barges on the Ohio ca ll for the inslallauon of the FGD
system at the Gavin plant.
River.
ncers, AEP has oblllined Section
AEP proposes to construct a 40 I Water Qualny Cert1f1cation
Ac cording to the Corps of Engimooring
dock to accommodate a from th e Oh10 Environment"!
neers, a public hearing will be held
lime
barge
unloadcr and a penna&gt; Agency .
May 4, 7 p.m, at the Cheshirc ncn
l
unloading
faCI Itly for rcCe iV ·
"AEP applied lor ihe limestoneKyger School, 850 Watson Grove
in
g
construc
tion
materials and for unloadrng permit 1n November,"
Rd , Chesh ire.
"Southern Coa l·· stated "U nder
The heartng is being held 10 pro- sh1pp1 ng plant eqUipment.
Faciliucs constructed 1n the normal condliiOns. about 60 days
vide a forum for AEP 10 d1scuss its
proposal to cons1ruc1 a lime barge riv er wtll mclude a 120-fool dock arc requucd lor permit approval.
unloading facrlily and to f1ll 13.8 and 10 moonng cells ranging from 'Southern Coa l' quoted a Corps o[
Engineers offic~al. "However, the
acres of waters of the United 15&gt;1o-25 fee l in diameu:r.
Two
outfalls
will
also
be
conmtcrvcntion of the cnYironmcnt.alStates, inc luding wetlands in the
struc ted 10 dram the upland site. In ists has created a delay 'Wi1h these
Kyger Creek, at the Gavin Plant
This work, accord1ng to the acldit1on to the river facilities, a com plication s, we don't know how
Corps of Engineers, is in conjunc- 1.25 -mile dual waste handling con- long 11 will lake,' the oHicial sard."
Last year, Chnstophcr P Neme,
lion Wllh the insiallation of 3 flue vevor wtll cross wetlands adjacent
gas desulfurization system on 1wo 10 'Kyger Creek. ll will be neces- an expert w1tncs.•:; for the Oh1o Sier1300 megawatt generating units at sary to place both temporary and ra Club, tost1ficd before the Public
pcnnancnt fill miO those wetlands Uti l11tcs Comm1 ss ion of Ohio that
1hc Gavin Plant
to
construclthc co nveyor.
Conlinurd on page J
The faci Itty is located along the

Patrol probes three accidents
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
No injuncs were reponed but
lwo people were cited in three separale accidents probed Tuesday and
Wednesday by the Gall1a-Mergs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
A Shade man was cited after a
1wo -ca r accident Tuesday aflernoon on Stale Route 124 in Sutton
Township.
According lo the patrol , Tem
Lynn Hill, 19, of Racine was west bound on State Rout e 124 and
slowed 10 turn righl inlo a private
dnve. A following car, dnvcn by
John G. Richard s, 38, of Shade.
failed 10 stop and struck Hill's car

on th e nghl Side.
Damage to Hill's 19 86 Chevrolet Cava li er and Rt chards' 197S
Ford Granada was listed as IJ ght.
RiChards was Cilcd hy the patiO I
for f:ulurc to rnamtain assured clear
d1 S~1n cc.

A Rut land man

was Cilcd

after a

one -car acCident on Sut10n Townsill p Road 3.

According 10 th e pairol . Dav1d
E. Peterson, IS, was sou1hhound on

Townsh1p Road 3 at about mid
n1 Fht Wednesday when h1s car ran
off the left side of the roadway .

A Coa l Grove man ' s pickup
stl\ta mcd l1ght damage after be1ng •.trt kmg brus h and an cmbankmrnL
struck by a turkey on Stale Rout e
Peterson and his pa 11sc nger,
14} 1n Sc ipio Township Wcdncs&gt; Andrea Theiss. IS , of Syracu se .
day morning

were uninjured

John P. Goodson, 51, was westhound on Slllle Route 14 3 when a
IUrkcy flew onto the roadway sinkin g the front of his 1987 Chevrolcl
C-20, the patrol reJXlrled
The turkey was not killed.

Damage to Petcrson·s J9S\
Ponuac Fircblfd was Iistcd as mod .

crate.
Peterson was cited hy the pairnl
for fa1lure 10 control and failure 10
wear a seatbcil.

~----------~-.~~~~----~

POSTERS MADE • Members or Pomeroy
Brownie Troop 1271, under the leadership or
Terrie Houser, were busy on Monday as they
made posters ror National Library Week. The
nationwide event rosters an awareness or library

services in the community. Posters, designed by
the library's young patrons, are being displayed
in taxi cabs, local businesses and at the library,
and puzzle placemats are being used in local
restaurants to reinrorce the message.

'

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