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                  <text>Pacle-14-The

1992

Ohio

Sentinel

--People in the news--YUKON, Okla. (AP) Eleventh Street in Yukon is now
known as Garth Brooks Boulevard
tc honor lite town's favorite son.
The country singer was born in.
Tulsa but grew up in the central
Oklahoma town.
After making the change Tuesday, city officials warned that people would steal lite signs. So except
for one on Interstate 40, the signs
arc only on street lights.
" You need a hook and ladder
truck to get one down from the
street light," said City Manager
Stan Griel.
Brooks , whose current hit album
"Ropmg lite Wind" has sold more
than I million copies, already is
honored in Yukon with his name
pa1nted on a water tower.
NEW DELHI, India (AP) Ailing director Satyajit Ray, who
was g1ven a special Oscar last week
for lifetime achievement, has won
two more awards for best Indian
film and best direction for his latest
movie.

The Jury of the 39th National
Film Festival announced the
awards Tuesday for Ray's Bengal• ·
language "Agantuk " ("The
Stranger").
Ray, 70, has been in the hospital
for two months with hea rt and
brcalllmg problems.
" Agantul&lt;," which prem1ered at
the Venice Film Festival last year.
is the story of a mysterious vis1tor
who arnves at the home of a
wealthy family cla1ming to be a
long- lost relattve.
Ray began collccong priles with
tm ftrsl film, " Pathcr Panchalt"

The hattie farthest south
FOR T MYERS , Fla . (AP) The southernmost land battle of the
Civil War took place at Fan Myers
tn 1865
Fort Myers was a federa l army
outpnst, activated '" 1804 to bre,lk
up calllc dnves supplymg Confcd·
crate troops. The following year,
two Co nfederate compan ies of
horsemen from Tampa Bay
cmempted a surprise attack on the
fort on reb. 20.
Defended by 250 men. the fort
re turned Confederate cannon fire
acc urately. "compelling the enem y
to move his ballcry three times,"
accord mg to rcpons. Skirmishm g
foll owed, but at nightfall the South em troops pulled back and retreat·
eel northward.
The last Confederates tn South
Florida formally gave up tw o
month s after the surrender at Appn·
mato&lt;, Va., on Aprill9, IR65 .

("Song of the Road"), which won
the 1956 CaMes Grand Prix.
MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga. (AP)
- Actress Polly Holliday, who
portrayed the shrill, talkativ_e
Southern waitress Flo on the television show "Alice," told Georgia
Co llege drama students to use
si lcnce to discover lllemselves.
Ms. Holliday told the students
Tuesday to set aside 30 minutes a
day to quietly ponder where they fit
tn the grand scheme of life.
. .
"You must have silence. Thts ts
where your imagination takes
over," she said.
Ms. Holliday spent four years in
the late 1970s as the red-haired,
wi sec~Xking Ao, who had a fond·
ness for shouting "Kiss my grits!"
to patrons and co-workers,aiMel's
Diner. "I always say lila! KISS my
grits' will ~ on my tombstone no
matter what I say," she said.
"Everybody asks me when I'm
going to get back on a sitcom. and I
say when they write me a pan as
good as Ao," she said.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Derek C. Bok, who stepped down
last July as Harvard president after
20 years, will return this fall as a

professor at the university 's
Kennedy School of Government
Kennedy School arfiCials confumed Bok will be there, but it is
nor known whether he will teach a
In a lecture at the Kennedy
School on Mooday night, Bok said
a renewed trust in government is
needed to solve today's problems.
Society increasingly compen ·
sates individuals in the private
sphere much more than those in
public jobs, he said.
''These compensations renect
the fundamental values of our society," he said.
"We often don't think enough
about how vital ethics are." said
Bolt, describing them as necessary
to ensure quality of tife.
"I f you allow the best and
brightest to move into the private
sector, you are not likely to produce a government that performs
these tasks successfully," he said.

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presents tht check to Tuppers Plains Elementary Principal Donald Shoe, and r.llb gradtrs at
Tuppers Plains, who were at !be bank ror a tour.
Tuppers Plains and Farmers Bank are Partnrrs

TRIPS FUNDED • The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company has made a SSOO donation to
the Eastern Local School District, enabling elementary students to take field trips this spring.
Herr, Farmers Bank Vice President Bruce Reed

in Education.

Bank donation will enable Eastern
grade school pupils to take field trip
Elementary-aged students in the
financially-strapped Eastern Local
School District will be able to take
thcrr traditional field nips this year,
thanks to a $500 donation from
Farmers Bank and Savings Company in Pomeroy, presented Thursday
during a bank tour.
Those trips include tours of
Middleton Doll Factory in Belpre,
the West Virginia Farm Museum in
Point Plcasan~ W.Va., Blcnnerhas-

se t Island in Parkersburg, W.Va.,
and Bob Evans Farm Museum at
Rio Grande.
One of the dtstrict 's three elementary schools, Tuppers Plains, is
Farmers Bartk' s Panner in Educa.
tion, and Tuppers Plains Principal
Donald Shue accepted the check on
Thunsday on behalf of the district.
The district's other elementary
schools - Ri vervtew and Chester will also benefit from the donation .

WASHiNGTON (AP) - House
Democrats pushed through a man ·
agement overhaul of thetr scandal tarniShed institution, but President
Bush is leading Republi cans in
demanding more.
The House on Thursday night
approved, 269 -81 , a plan that
would junk much of the old palronag e system that has been blamed
for the penalty-free overdrafts at
the chamber's bank and embezzlement and alleged drug-dealing at
its post office.
The inefficient and loose ly
supervised array of payroll, supply
and other support services would
be consolidatro under a new director of non-legislative and financial
services. Control of lite post offices
would be returned to the U.S
Postal Service.
An inspector general would
oversee those operations. Both lite
services director and the audllor
would be appointed jointly by
Democrats and Republicans .
"This bill represents the most
imponant reform measure taken up
by this House in nearly two
decades," said Rep. David Bonior,
D-Mich , the House majority whip.
But Republicans refused to back
the plan, some voting against it and

64 others simply voting "prcscnL"
They said it was a hasty effon 10
address a political emergency and
demanded that the maJority pany
cede them more power, saying anything less was less lllan reform.
"At one time the Democratic
majority could have reformed out
of principle . Today, they arc forced
to reform out of panic, " said
Minority Leader Roben Michel, RIll. "Unprecedented isn't enough."
Bush on Thursday submitted a
billlllat would require Congress 10
comply with laws from which 11
has exempted itself. This includes
such areas as lite minimum wage,
employment discrimination, investigation by independent counsels
and restrictions on political activities of employees.
Democrats - who have countcrallacked with hearing s on
administration perqui sites charged the Republicans were JUSt
trying to drag tlungs out for political advantage.
"The Republicans are not really
interested in reform at all," Bonior
said. "And that's why they've
stonewalled every serious reform
effort m the last two decades.''
Wh1le lite sometimes rancorous
House debate carried on, a posl

Man charged after incident

When we said we're ,~Ding •
it takes to make home fllliiY
loons, here~ what we had 111
Makes you thmk. th·,m 11) ,\nttlb hkc thL'. loan may be taX dcdumble ··And oo matter InN
long )U-I've (}WI1l':d yrur hmlc. we~ an eqwty
combtned with presrnl mlrrrsr r:ttr \ makes

eqwry loans a smart w.t) tn horrm money And loan 10 fit your needs. To apply. Just c'!!lJ-&amp;X&gt;"::'
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Bank
One
office
near
='(}I{E
make home tmprO\·ements or ma1or purchases
ynu for full dctatls.
W1u:uc.t'r illilhei
Rest of all, mtcrN on a Bank One home equny

BANK

··~. ;i ·.~ r, Jo~' I ,,,,, ,, , ,. , ... I~ Hhlo•h&lt;ll"\l'

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&lt; • • l~ oll\oto &lt; lt l \oo lo l~"

rri ... ,, ., J.,

23 swdents from Pauic ia Chapman 's fiflll grade at Tuppers Plains
were given a tour of the newly-renovated offices of Farmers Bank on
Thursday. The tour was conducted
by Donna Schmoll, the bank ' s
compliance officer, and Jo Ann
Williams, assiswu cashier.
The studeniS viewed demonstrations of the bank's computer equipmen~ recond keeping facilities and
the bank's vault

House Democrats vote reform;
Republicans are asking for more

--Local briefs-----.

0

:;;.; .

House OK's smaller
state school board
00
YOUR

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Baskets L•ge
shrubery ancr trees L.ge
Selection of Easter Flowers

2 Secllona , 14 Pagn 2S oenta
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll1 0, 1992

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Complete lne bed~ IIIII
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Vol. 42, No. 243
Copyrighted t992

COLOR CONSOLE

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

Ope• Deily, 9 1.11. to 5 p.m.
S.lllla11to51.a

Low lonlghl in upper 51k.
near 80s.

Page 4

c~e.

•liOn

Two hundre&lt;l years ago, in 1792.
C.,n. Anthony Wayne was appointed
commander of military forces in Ohto
county, after the defeat of Gen Ar·
thur St. Clair by Indians the prevtous
year. Increasing Indian hostJiity m
the Northwest Territory brought pas·
sage of the Militia Act, which permit·
te&lt;l states to raise armed forces of all
able-bodied. free. wh1te males. age l8

Pick 3: 422
Pick 4: 4504
Cards:
2-H; 7-C; 10-D;
6-S

Saturday , partly doudy . High

and Foli'age H-=tL?
A call 10 arms

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop to
last place in
NL West race

Jason E. Hendrix , 18, of State Route 143 '" Pomeroy has been
summoned to Meigs County Court on a charge of aggravated men·
acing following an incident at the Riggs used car lot on State Route
7 norlll of Eastern High School on Tuesday.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Ray
Riggs was in the office looking out the window when a car pulled
into the lot. The driver, believed to be Hendrix, reportedly got out
and pointed a gun at Riggs. After Riggs jumped back, HcndrU then
got into the vehicle and went south on State Route 7.
Hendrix was lat.cr located, and the gun identified as a BB gun.
He is being charged will! knowingly causing Riggs to believe that
he would cause serious \)hysical hann.
Hendrix is to appear 10 Meigs County Court on Wednesday .

Riffle held in Meigs jail
Monte Ritlle of Pomeroy is being held in the Meigs County Jail
on charges of disorderly conduct and breaking and entering, follow ing an incident at the Carleton Church.
According to a repon from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depanmen~ a call was received after 5 p.m. on Wednesday, stating that a
subject had been seen entering a window at the church, located on
Kingsbury Road.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby responded to the scene and apprehendContinued on page J

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Final legislative action is expected
this month on a bill intended to
improve performance of the State
Board of Education by shrinking it
from 21 to I I elected members.
The House approved the btll on
a 65-29 bipanisan vote Thursday.
Sen. Eugene Watts , R-Gal ·
loway, the chief sponsor, said he
would ask the Senate on April 28
to go along will! changes made by
the House in lite compromise mea·
sure sought by Gov . George
Voinovich.
Watts said the bill was an
imponant Step in continuing reform
of the state's educational system.
"Essentially what we're talking
about is getting better management
at lite top. Anyone who evo- paid a
vis~t to the stale school board
woUld understand thai management
there is a troublesome business,"
Watts said after the House vote.
"We're now going to have a
structure similar to the other stateS,
and particularly similar to the
reform states in education . We'll

now have an ability, I thm k, to
elect a different kind of board lllat
will have a different kind of focu s
lllan we were used to in the past,"
he said.
The bill provide s for board
members, who now arc elected
from the state's 21 congress 1onal
districts, to be electro instr.ad from
II new districts. Each distTICt
would be composed of three con ·
necting Ohio Senate dJstricts.
Voinovich originally wanted a
nine -member board that would be
appointed by lite governor. House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelcrsburg, insistro the panel continue to
be chosen by voters.
Rep. Randall Gardner, R-Bowl·
ing Green, who presented the bi II
in the House, said the measure was
not aimed at members of lite cur·
rent board.
"But litis governor is a manage·
mcnt governor, and he believes an
11-member board can yteld bener
management,'· Gardner said.
Rep. Ray Miller urged defeat ,
saying education faces more sen·
ous problems than siz e of th e

board .
·'Th is lcg 1sla uon 1s s1mply
abou t control. First of all, lite governor wanted 10 aboli sh the state
school board. Then he comes with
thi s proposal 10 reduce the me of
the stat e sc hool board . It is an
cffon thatJS not honest. It JS underhanded. If anything, we need more
people on our state school boand, "
sa id Miller, D-Columbus
Rep . M1 chael Shoemaker . D·
Bourneville, critl ctzed otenstve
lobb ying by Voinovich, and a lack
of comment from Stat e School
S upeTJntendcnt Ted Sanders .
Sanders is an employee of the
boand, whtch opposed the bill.
' ·I guess I was a !Jttle bn concerned when !looked around and I
sa w our new slat e su perintendent ...
and tlle Si lence was deaJenmg as he
&lt;a ttn the crowd." Shoemaker SBJd.
S;mdcrs satd lattr he had assist·
ed board members m prepanng tes~mon y agamst the measure.
"They have a position. I'm nor
sure tl matters an awful lot what I
thmk ... Sanders sa1d .

RAC claims violence increasing
RAVENSWOOD
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation has
expressed deep concern over a sudden increase 10 the number and
severity of violent acts recorded
against members of the company's
salaried and new hourly work
forre, according to a news released
received by the company today.
Company officials estimate a 70
percent increase in strike-related
violence from February to March,
bringing to 3,500 the number of il·
legal violent acts allegedly committed during the nearly 18-monlll long labor dispute. They also
pointed to three aciS of arson. two
shootmgs and two beatings necor·
ded between March 18 and April I.
''The
attacks
against
Ravenswood Aluminum 's new
hourly employees and management
employees have escalatro to an
alarming level during the past
monlll," said Donald W. Worlledge,
president
of
Ravenswood
Aluminum Corporation. ''The ongoing campaign of harassment and
intimidation has reached a new and
more diswrbing level."
A Ravenswood
Aluminum
employee's house was burned 10
the ground, the company said,
while two other fires severely
damaged other employees' garages,
including their cars and tools. All
of the fires arc believed to be arnxt .
One hourly employee's pick-up

office employee was charged in
federal court Thursday will! selting
crack cocaine to ro-wthers. Three
other employees of the House facil·
ity have pleaded guilty to embezzlement.
Just last week. the House ethics
commiuee released names of 22
current and former members who
abused the free overdrafts available
the House 's now-defunct bank. A
list of more than 300 bad-check
wnters will be released soon. possibly nc.t week .
The House· s action Thursday
was an attempt to answer public
outrage at the twin scandals.
The posttion of House postmas·
ter, one of five House officers .
would be eliminated . The other
House officers - the clerk, doorkeeper, sergeant-at-arms and chaplain - would conduct only their
titular funcuons and hand over
administrative task s to the new
director of non -legislative services.
WASHINGTON (AP ) - ConThe Republicans proposed an sum er prices shot up an uncxpccl·
alternative which, in addition 10
edly sharp 0.5 percent '" March,
dealing with House administraliort . the biggest increase m 17 month &lt;.
would change rules of le$islative the government said toda y. as
procedure and give thetr party prices for food, energy and clolll•ng
more power in that arena.
all posted b1g gains.
Their )liUilOSIII was defeated on
The increase in the Labor
a pany-hne, i54-159 vote.
Department's Con sum er Pri ce
Speaker Thomas S. Foley, D· Index was widespread , but
Wash .• said he was open to changes economists said they believed the
in House legislative procedures but huge jump will turn out to be a
wanted to take action immediately temporary shock in what has been a
on the administrative Jn)blems.
pauem of moderating inflauon
The House resolution does not
'' This should tum out lO be a
require Senate or presidential one- month blip and nothing more
approval, since it deals solely with lllan lllar," said Allen Sinal , chtcf
internal House rules.
economist of the Boston Co.

Consumer prices
up sharply in March

truck was shot at while its owner
was in the house, while another
employee 's car fender was shot as
he drove onto a major mterstatc
Two other Ravenswood employees
were physically assa ulted, one w1th
a tire iron.
The company noted lllat these
acts of violence are betng invcs·
tigaied by eilllcr the West V1rginia
Stale Police, local police or the
West Virgima State Fire Marshal's
Office. No arrests have be&lt;:n made.
"We gnea~y appreciate the
coopetation of the a ulllorities in
helping investigate and deter stnke·
related violence," Worlledge statro.
"But there aren't enough law enfor·
cement officen in West Vtrgtma to
ensure everyone 's safety. We must
instead have reslnWlt by all mvolved in the dispute. We must have

an end 10 th1s vwlence , ooce and
for all."
Worlledge ohserved that the increase m vtolence ts occunring at
the same time that Ravenswood
Alummum and Local 5668 of the
Unued Steelworkers of America
(USWA) arc expecting a ruling by
Administrative Law Judge Bernard
J. Rles concenung an unfau labor
practice complamt filed against the
company by the National Labor
Relauons Board (NLR B).
''The NLRB process must remain
•ndependent of any outside pressures." he said. "We deplore any at tempt to even indirectly influence
tlus process through the usc of ex .
treme
acl&lt;
of
violence.
Ravenswood stands commtued to a
peaceful. lawful and equitable
resoluuon of lll1s diSpute ."

Matheny to head program
Elaine Matheny, a board certJ ·
lied lactation consultan t,. has been
emplo yed by the Meigs County
Health Department to provide a
new program for pregnant and
breastfeeding mothers through the
Women, Infants and Children
(WIC) Division .
She will be in the WIC office on
Tuesdays, Wednesdays. and Thursday of each week from 9 am . until
2 p.m. to take calls and sec clients
with questions about breastfeeding.
In announcmg her employment
by the dcpanmcnt, Norma Torres,
R. N, nursing director, said that
Matheny is qualified to help with
the common quesuons every new
mother has . as well as more diffi·
cull si luations, such as nursing a
premature baby, sucking dtfficul ·
ues, and low mill: supply. Matheny
can also help tllose women wishing
to combine breast and bottle feed ing and those going back to work
who wtsh to pump and store breastmilk .
The WIC and Prenatal Dcpanmcnts arc sponsori ng a Nursing
Mother's Support Group to meet
on the first Tuesday of each monlll
bcgmmng on May 5 at noon at the
Health Department. Anyone interested in lcarnmg about breastfced -

in g " we Icome to attend.
"Pregnant women can espectally
benefit by learning more about
breastfeeding before the btrth of
their babies. You do not have to be
enrolled in any program 10 aitend,"
Matheny said.
•
To lind out more about the programs, residents may call Mallleny
at the Health Department, 9926626·..---...,

F.LAINE MATHENY

Some union members return to work at Caterpillar firm
PEORIA, Ill. (AP) - United
Auto Worlcrn walking ptcket lines
at Caterpillar Inc. spit and threw
eggs at other union members who
returned to work. Inside, employees on lite job worted overtime.
The ~:ompany oo Thursday took
thousands of calls from people
looking to take lite strikers ' jobs.
One striker suffered a minor
injury when he was hit by a car
driven by a management worker
arriving through a gate at the plan~
about 150 miles southwest of
Chicago. Police Chief Jim Druin
said the motorist would be citrd for
neckless driving.

Caterpi liar, the world's largest
manufacturer of earth-moving
equipment, on Monday gave WOlt ers in the 5-month -old strike an
ultimarum to return to wort or risk
losing their Jobs. The company has
adveruscd for replacement workers
but declined Thursday to say how
many have applied.
" We arc getting calls from all
over the country ," Caterpillar
spokesman Bd I Lane said . "Our
top priority is getting our own people back."
CatcrpiUar rece1ved 56,000 calls
in three hours Thursday morning,
said Illinois Bell spokesman Jim

Donnelly.
No progress m the five -month
strike was reponed Thursday.
Lane said plants were working
overtitne and may operale over the
weekend, but he declined to say
how many union members returned
to their jobs. He said only that the
number has grown datly s1 nce the
400 reported Monday.
Most of the 13,000 striking
Caterpillar workers stayed off the
job Thursday, many walking ptcket
lines spitung , yclhng and throwing
eggs at others who returned to
work.
Caterpi llar ha s 1ndtcated it

would be wilhng to s11 down with
the Federal Mcdiauon and Conciliauon Service; lite UAW .was Sllldymg the tdca but made no commitment.
One union member attending a
UA W meeting in a city part said it
mtght be the only way to resolve
the strike.
. "Wtllllllis stand-off. I don't sec
thmgs moving without a third
pany," said the 18-year Caterpillar
veteran who spoke on ondition or
anonymny. "A mediator might be
able to come up with a plan that
would allow both sides to save
face."

�'.
Friday, Aprll1 0, 1992

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publi•h•r
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publishtr/Conlrolltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Generd) Manager

LETfERS OF OPINION arc welcome . They sbould bt less tban 300
words . All letters are subjeCt lO ed1ltng and must be signed w1th name .
address and telephone number. No unsi~~:ned lette~ w1U be pubhsbed. Letter-s
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities

The people's economy
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - You do not need charts, graphs, equaoons and percentages to understand why consumers remain depressed amid assurances
that the economy tS recovering.
They are worried. and the things the y worry about are not nec essarily
about the things that economists measure when detemurung whether the
economy is rising or falling, expanding or shrinking.
Surveys conducted by various groups, including the University of
M•chigan, Sindlinger &amp; Co., the Conference Board and the National Fed eration of Independent Business, tend to come close to tdenufymg the
womcs.
But any person can conduct his or her own survey and come up w1th
stmilar infonnation. In fact, the same concerns can be identified simply by
L1lking to one's neighbors and associates. The worries are that ncar the
surface.
People are concerned about jobs.
They are aware that while the offlc ial jobless rate of 7J percent is not
cspeciaUy high coming out of a recession. it fails to represent their situa·

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, A rll1 0, 1992

WASlllNGlDN -The "envoronmental president" could get a
flogging next month when
Cong ress goes public w1th 1ts
mvcstigation into a National Park
Service employee who was trans ferred fO&lt; coming to the defense of
Ycllowstone Parle
What is the administration doing
10 cover its tracks' Our sources say
the Interior Deparunent is uprootmg more employees so it looks like
the anginal move was the kind of
personnel sh uffle that happens all
the time.
Lorraine Mmtzmyer stirred up
the controversy last year when she
publicly criticized the way the
admi nistralion tampered with a
plan caUed the "vision" document
It was supposed to be a framework
for managing the area in and
around Ycllowstonc. The original
60-page draft prepared at the Intenor Department put conservation
and envuonmental interests ahead
of development and logging. But
that was whiulcd down to a 10·
page repon that cut too much slack
for commercial land users.

Mintzmyer, who was the Park
Service regional director in Denver, cri ed foul. And she was tranS ·
ferred to Philadelphia. Last fall she
told a House subcommittee on civil
serv 1ce that the move was political·
Jy motivated and that the "vision"
document was watered down a1 the

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
request of the Wttite House.
She testified that a senior offi·
cial in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service told her the order came
from then-White House Chief of
Staff John Sununu, a charge thai
the White House and the Park Service now vehemently deny.
Mintzmyer believes the White
House knuckled under to pressure
from groups including c.anle ranchers and loggers that want to profit
from commodities they can glean

from national parks. And she said
the groups apparently also wooed
Sen . Alan S1mpson, R-Wyo., into
their camp to get the draft report
revised.
The House subeommitlee ha s
since spent months poring over
huge stacks of documents about the
ease and has scheduled new hearings for later this month. Senior
Interior Deparunent officials have
been summoned to explain why
Mintzmycr was reassigned.
The Interior Department is
apparently feeling the heal because
it is now implementing another
personnel shufne to prove that the
Mintzmyer move was business-a~­
usual. Several regional directors at
the Fish and Wildlife Service are
being reassigned just in tiime for the
hearings. Our sources say the
moves are a political foil to give
the Interior Department something
to point to when they are asked
why Mintzmyer was moved.
Two sowres close to the Interior
Department told our associate Jan
Moller that when Fish and Wildlife
Service DirectOf John Turner heard

FoR WiHifitlG

T~ Cd-D Waf\'~

You a~ tfeResy awaJ?DeD TMe
SiLVeR ~df~T cHeCK
WiTI-f oaK LeaF C\.USTe~.
~aruL.ar-~, sqpiE!R!

uon.

Officially, 9.2 million Americans arc unemployed, but l.l m1l11on
aren't even counted because they gave up looking and another 6.5 mill ion
are wO&lt;king only part-ume because they can't find fulltime worll
They observe industrial companie.s eliminating thousands of jobs. Tiley
might not know the !11lmbers, but they 're aware that the scrvicc sec tor -:utihties, restaurants, government, etc. - whoch added more than 20 mtl lion jobs in the 1980s. hasn't added any for two years.
They are concerned about their debts.
They've been trying to reduce them to rcnect a gnmmer reality. Total
household hab•tities as a percent of disposable income fell in 1991 for the
firs t time since 1982. Installment credit " declining as a percent of
income.
Still, at just over 17 percent, installment credit - cars, mobole homes ,
personal loans, credit cards - remains above 17 percent of disposable
1ncomc. Compare that woth percentages under 14 during the early years of
the '80s.
They are concerned about health-care costs.
They are aware, of coo=. that more and more of their employers are
oucmpung to shed some of the bunden, and they sec the ompact of that '"
h1gger dcduct•on s from their paychecks, and they know costs conunuc to
nsc.
They are concerned about prices in generaL
Many people have a sense that the If paychecks don't buy as much as
they once did. Some of thi s feeling might be a result of smaller pay
increases, but n01 aiL Ta&gt;es have risen. Insurance too. And med•cal b11ls.
of course.
They arc concerned about the governance of the country.
Various pohtical polls confmn what you've probably heard in almost
any kind of social group: Elected officials and candidate.s arc ignori ng the
big ISsues instead of facing up to them , or even proposmg soluuons
They are concerned about the future.
They worry about the continued growth of government debt and budge t deficits, about educauon standards, American competitiveness. the
quality of life. opponun1Ues for youth and affordab1lity of rcurcmcnt.
And they feel their fears aren't bemg dealt with by leadership. elected
and appoointed, in both the publ1c and pnvotc sectors.
These arc among the things that do not always show up on the measure ments used by those who detcnmine when rec essions end and recovcncs
heg 1n . Bu t not only do they exiSt, they have an enormous economic
,mpac t as welL

Today in history
Dy The Associated Press
Today IS Fnday , April 10. the JOi st day of t992. There arc 265 day s
lcfl in the year.
Today's Highlighttn Hlstory
On April 10 , 1912 , the luxur y l1n cr RMS TitaniC se t sa d from
Southampton, England, on 1ts •ll-fated maiden voyage.
On this date:
In 1847, American ncwspapcnman Joseph Pulmer was born on Mako.
. Hungary.
• In 1866 the American Society for the Prcvenhon of Cruelty to An•'
· mals was incorporated.
In 1880, Frances Perkins. the first woman to se rve 1n a president's
Cabonet as Franklin D. Roosevelt 's secretary of labor. was born in Boston
In 1925, the novel "The Great Gatsby." by F. Scot&lt; Fuzgcrald. was
first published by Scribner' s of New York .
In 1932, German president Paul Von H1ndenburg was re-e lected . with
Adolf Hitlcr coming on second.
In 1953, the three -dimensional horror mov1c "House of Wax," produced by Warner Brothers, premiered 1n New York
In 1959. Japan's Crown Prince Akthito mamcd a commoner, Michilw
Shoda.
In 1963, the nuclear-powered submarine USS Thre.sher fatlcd to surf ace off Cape Cod. Mass., in a disaster that claomcd 129 lives
In 1972, 20 years ago, the United Sunes and the Soviet Union JOined
some 70 nations in signing an agreement banning h•ological warfare.
In 1974, Golda Mctr annouoced her rcs•gnauon as pnmc mmtstcr of
lsrneL
In 1978, Arkady Shevchenko, a h1gh -ranking Sov•et Clti?Cn employed
by the United Nations. sought political asylum in the Unued SUttes.
In 1981, the long-awaited maiden launch of the space shuttle Columb•a
: was scrubbed because of a computer malfunction .
In 1981 , impnsoned IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands won election to
· the British Parliament.
Ten years ago: The European Common Marl&lt;et adopted a total ban on
impons from Argentina m response to that country 's seizure of the disputed Falkland Islands from Bntain .
F1ve years ago: President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev delovered speeches on nuclear arms , with the president chal·
lengin~ the Soviets to JOtn the United States in workmg harder for arms
reducuons, and Gorbachev proposing talks on short-range weapons.
One year ago: A day after Mikhail Gorbachev appealed for a moratori um on all strikes, demonstrations and rallies, an estimated 200.000 work ers in Byelorussia defied the Soviet president by staging a work stoppage
in the republic 's capital of Minsk.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Harry Morgan is 77. Actor Chuck Connors 11
71. Aclor Malt von Sydow is 63. Actor Omar Sharif is 60. SJX&gt;nscastcr
John Madden is 56. Sponscaster Don Meredith is 54. Olympic gold medal
speedskaiCr Cathy Tumcr is 30.
Thought for Today: "You can tobaggan into old age before 50, or you
can glide gently, almostomperteptibly, down a gradual slope of the years
mto your 70's. But the ume for a woman to begin cheating old age is
before she begins cheating on the number of candles on her binhday
cake." Clare Boothe Luce, author, diplomat and member of Congress
( 1903-1987).

.

Saturday, April 11
Aecu-Weather* forecast for daytime conditions and high t=perntures
MICH

•

Politics get in the way of conservation, again
about the moves, he was outraged .
lie reponedly went strnightto IniCrior SecreWy Manuel Lujan, who
told him that the decision to make
the transfers had come from channels above Lujan .
A spokesman for the Interior
Department confirmed that the
moves were in the works, and that
Turner was up~t when he learned
about them. But the official Interior
story is that th e moves were trig gered by a retirement in the service , and were nor political.
Minrzmyer, whose transfer
sparked th e whole fiasco, retired
last week saying she had been ham strung by political interests and
could no longer work effectively
where she had been placed.
A 32-year veteran of the Park
Service, Mintzmy cr rose from a
secretarial position to become the
first woman regional director in the
Park Service. Her friends and for mer co -workers describe her as
someone who is not an ardent environmentalist , but is a woman of
unwavering integrity who didn't
like what happened to the Yellow stone repon.
The final " vision" document
issued by the Park Service and the
Forest Service is as flimsy as a
pamphlet and about as hard hitting .
It includes this notation symptomatic of Bush's need to please all
of the people all of the time: "It
(the report) recognizes thai a balance can be struck between preservation and multiplc usc and that
re source prorcction and resource
use are not inh eren lly mutually

exclusive.··
The original version was called
"Vision for the Future: A Framework for Coordination in th e
Greater Yellowstone Area." But
the final document drops the
"vision" moniker.
The hearings do not prorntse to
yield a definitive answer lo th e
quesllon of who speci fi cally tin·
kered wnh the "vision" document
But the recent job shuffling at the
lntcnor Department shows that the
administration is not above manipulating the lives of people lik e
Minllmyer to cover its tinkering,
especially during an election year
when the environmental president
IS supposed ro live up to his vision.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

There is U.N. fungus among us
In M1Ch1gan, sc1cnusts have dis.o, crcd a 10.000-ycar-old fungus,
" "'~ lun g as much as a whale, 30
acres large, h1d dcn under the
pou nd. with on ly pretty, little
mushrooms )Xlkl ng above the surface .
In I'cw York . at the Unned
I'auons. another huge , old and hidden fun gus has been vcgctaung, but
the mu shrooms arc threatening to
sprout b•ggcr and uglier. Preparati Ons hav e been gomg on for two
years for " The Eanh Summit," a
spectacular U.N. conference scheduled for R1o de Janeiro in June.
A domestic political fight about
11 IS already under way. Environ mcntahsts want Prcsidcnl Rush to

;o ucnd the ES gala and announce
that 1t's a grand idea
llu t ll ISn't. It 's an old hidden.
U.N. fungus. patnted green . In eari•cr time s th e U.N. mushroom s
were called. among other things ,
" The New lntcmahonal Economic
Order." "The Law of the Sea"
and " The Brundtlandt Repo rt."
ll ut the theme IS always the same:
The U.N. gets power, the Third
World gets money.
The gencnc argument has gone
th iS way : Poor nation s arc poor
hccausc nch nauons are rich . R1ch

nations shou ld pay poor nat1on s

rcpara1ions. The transfer should
proceed under a cloak of ens is
("the sea," "the environm ent").
The terms of tran sfe r should be
centrally regulated by U.N. bureau crats.
The more dcfirutc ES idea, still

Ben Wattenberg
mostly hidden beneath mountains
of platitudinous and weasel -worded
documents. goes this way: We nred
ge neral environmental clean-up
and, particularly. emissions control
tO dca) Wllh "gJoba) warming."
Poor nauons arc too poor to do it
Rich nations must pay them to do
11. Ri c h nations will raise the
money by uxing theor cllinns for
energy usc
Two years of negotiation s
toward these goals ended in fuzzy
stale mate on April 4. An Intense
gree n propaganda campaign can
no"' be expected to gain favorable
resolution during the Rio meeting.
So far, the United States has been
recalcllrant.
Wh y' The ultimate costs arc
about S70 billion per year in ocw
fore ign a1d . And the b1~~e.st donors

would be nauons where energy is
used for such ignoble poUutions as
single -family houses, two cars per
household and alf-conditwnong.
Like- SWJlrise' - America .
II is sad to sec the U.N. go down
the ri)Hlff road agaon, usmg environmentalism as the mushroom of
choice. Th e environment is one
realm where some global regulation makes some theoretical sense.
If. for example, "global warming"
should ever evolve from environmental theology to serious science,
u could only be dealt w1th worldwide.
What to do ' Reth1nk from
scratch. The intellectual basos for
the Eanh Summit runs counter to
what the human species has learned
recently . This: Centrally diCected
economies don 't worll, and dependency hanms the people 1t IS supposed to help. Thus, the communtst
centralized economies yie ld ed
poverty and pollutton . Govern ment -to -government forcogn a•d
mostly helped scruffy tyrants . Yet
the ES agenda tends to sanctify
both ideas.
There is a bellcr way . For we
have learned something positive a.s
well : L1beny worlcs . Free mark ets
and free politics yield prosperity .

Only free countr ies arc ri ch; only
rich countries can pay the pnce of
environmental clean! mess.
So Presi dent Bush should not go
10 Rio just 10 give the poor nations
and the en vironmcnralists a condescending pat on the head for a had
idea . Ideas have consequences.
Legit•rniling this diScredited philosophy would yield a world both
poor and polluted.
There is one other strategy. The
president could go to Rio and tell
the truth. Which would go somcthmg like this'
"Friends, there is no free lunch.
There IS no payoff in parthandling.
Green beggar socialis m is not the
wave of the future . There are no
magic mushroom s, onl y the magic
of the market, whi ch works
beca use •t comes from libeny, both
po lit ical and economic. It can cure
both povc n y and pollution . If

I owe my readers an apology .

'' a broad coalition of econom1c
and social conservatives with vcry
d1ffcrent concerns and proorities.
But I demuned from the prediction
mentioned above because (as I
explained in a column at the time)

and thi s is as good a tunc as any to
make it .
Back about a year or so ago,
various poi1Ucal observers began
predicting, now that the Cold War
was over . that the huge American
conse rv auvc movement would
bcg1n to spilt. The idea wa s that
anti -comm un• sm had been " the
glue that held th e mov eme nt
together." and that without that co mmuni sm wasn't the only
glue its component parts would "glue" hold1ng the conservative
swn quarreling among themselves. movement together. There was also
Now there is nothing exception- i•beralosm, wh1ch all components
al ahout a mature and highly suc- of the coal•tion detested equally.
cess ful poilttcal movement split - As long as liberalism hung on as a
t•ng. On the contrary, it's almost serious political force in the Uniled
•ncvitable. The migloty Roosevelt States, I argued, conservatives
cool iuon los t one large bloc of left- would stick together to qlpOSC it
wing supponers in 1947 when the
The trouble is that liberalism in
Cold War began and Truman faced America today, if not totally dead
off with Siahn, and lost an even (and it would be almosl impossible
larger bloc of right-wing supponcrs to extirpate altogether its basic
;olmosr simultaneously when the components of imltional sentimen·
na 11onal Democratic Party broke tahsm and class envy), is so mori·
wolh its powerful Southern wing bund thai nobody is particularly
over the issue of civil roghts for worried about it. Even the
blacks.
DcmocraiS, though they have failed
So there has never been any- to find any viable replacement for
thong in the least perpetual about it as an ideology, are careful 10
the conservative movement . which avoid being tagged with it if possi-

William A. Rusher

blc, and the Dcmocrauc presidential hopefuls most closely identified
with it w.cre all forced out of the
race early on.
So a great many conservative
leaders and spokesmen, looking
around for new worlds to conquer,
arc paying more auention these
days to the issues that dJvidc them
from one another .
At the moment the largest fis sure is the one opening between
what has hitherto been the main
lire of the conservative movement

(1ncluding, but not l1mited lo, its
neoconservative wing) and a bloc
lhat is content to call itself the
" paleoconservatives." This group
is composed of a not al10gether
internally consistent array of libertarians, protectionists, nati vists
(i.e., people opposed to present
immigrauon policoes) and isolatiooists (or, as they prefer 10 put i~
"America Firstcrs"). They regard
their policies as deeply rooted in
American history, which is true,
and some of lhem subscribe 10 a
demonology in which their predecessors - the avatars of the True
Faith - had the conservative label
and cause wrongfully wrested from

IToledo I 65" I
e

IMansf ield I 72' I•

69'

• [ Columbus [ 73'

•

I

Dy The Associated Press
A cold front that passed south
lhrough Ohio yesterday and last
niglot was stationary along the Ohio
River early this morning , but th• s
front will move north today and
IOIIight as low pressure moves east
from the plains states. Most of the
wei weather will be along and to
the north of this warm front today
and tonighl and wiU likely be over
the northern third of the state .
By Saruntay morning, low pressure will be over eastern Michigan
woth the warm front entirely north
of Ohio, but a cold front will be

JUSt moving onto nonhwest Ohio.
Tttis cold front should swing enurely though !he state by Saturday
eve ning . Showers and thunder storms will fonn along and ahead
of the front on Saturday with east·
em and north central Ottio the most
likely areas for some wet weather.
Mild weather will be the rule
today and Saturday. Afternoon
highs today may be a lillie sup·
pressed over the north where
clouds wiU be heavy and there will
be a real good chance of showers.
Highs in the north will range from
the mid 50s to lower 60s. South

,...____ Local briefs-__,
Continued from page I
ed Riffle, who was watlcing a shon distance trom llle church. Rifne
was carrymg a hand puppet that was identified as coming from the
church.

W. VA.

~ -l)
Showers T-siOOns Ram Aurries

5mM

leo

Sunny

a..

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the upper 50s. Chance of rain is 20
percent. Sarurday, variable cloudiness with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. High ne ar 80.
Chance of rain is 40 percent.
E&lt;tended forecast:
Sunday throu~h Tuesday:

Fatr on Sunday and Monday. A
chance of showers or thunder storm s Tuesday. Highs in 50s north
to the low and mid-60s south Sunday, the 50s Monday and upper 50s
and 60s Tuesday. Lows mostly in
the 40s Sunday, the 30s Monday
and the mid-30s to low 40s Tuesday .

Ohio poll favors GA program
More than 55% of Ohio's voters
feel the state's General Assistance
program should be restored.
These findings are based on the
most recent Ohio Poll, a random
sample of registered voters
throughout the state, conducted by
the Institute for Policy Research at
the University of Cincinnati.
Tioe poll found 42.4 percent of
the respondents supported a tax
increase to fund the program and
13.2% said other service should be
cut instead.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS .
Fidelis Bell, Pomeroy; Ruby Durst,
Henderson, W.Va.; Michael Sigler,
Rulland: and Charles Boggess,
Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES .
None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, April 9 . Mrs. John
Coykendall and daughter, Donna
Dulaney, Mrs. Kenneth Hess and
son, Charles Martin, Frances
McGowan, John Neville, Patricia
Radcliff, Mrs . John Rose and son.
William Tawney.
Binhs, April 9 -Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Mather, a daughter, Long
Bouom.

COLONY THEATRE

Even with the margin of error
being plus or minus 4%, over half
of the voting population is in favor
of supporting poor Ohioans.
General Assistance is a stalesupported program that pays
$1 00/month (maximum $600/yeat)
to poor, childless adults who have
no other income and most of whom
suffer from various disabilities preventing them from holding a job.
On April I, 137,000 people wm
dropped from the prognun under
Ohio's new time-limited progtam.
According to Judith Bird, associate director a1 Ohio Uniled Way,
"We don't need a crystal ball to
forecast the results of this cut-offwe have only to look norlh to
Michigan. There, agencies are
reduced 10 providing heal' as a ser·
vice tluough 'warming sites.' Propic wm on neighbon as those with
jobs become victims or those without People are forced 10 sell Food
Stamps as the only way to get
cash... thus ~lying on pantries and
food kitchens even more for their
meals.
"This is certainly not what Ohio
United Way wants to see Ohio
reduced 10. And this poll indicates
that is also how iiS voters feel,"
Bird added. The Governor and legislators need to work together to
enact a basic needs program that
can JlrD"ide a true safety net for its
neediest c.uzens.
"We cenainly don't have one
now," Bird said.

Vandalism reported by residents
Mary K. Yost of Syracuse reponed to the Meigs County Sheroffs Department earlier thts weelt that her summer cabin on SUtte
Route 338 had been entered and ransacked. The time of the incodcnt
tsunknown.
On Tiwrsday, Clarence Congo reponed that between Saturday
and Thursday, someone had pulled up hiS matlbox and thrown it
through the window of a trailer on Sharon Hollow. A cement block
was also thrown through another window.

Deputies probe accidents
Jeff~y L. Hesken of Richmondalc has been charged with failure
control and dnvong under suspension following a one-vehicle
accident on State Route 681, west of Carsey Road in Scipio Township on Wednesday.
The vehicle sustained heavy damage.
Gary P. Norris of Racine struck and killed a deer on Oak Grove
Road early on Wednesday. Moderate damage was reported .
to

EMS units answer six calls
Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Emergency Semceson Thursday and early on Friday .
At 9:47 a.m., Racine squad went to Wells Run Road . Bnttany
and Bonme Brewer were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:55 p.m., Lofe Hight transponed Brittany Brewer 10 Children's Hospital in Columbus. At 12:48 p.m., Pomeroy squad was
sent to Locust Street. Mary Lane was taken to Holzer Medical Cen ter. AI 1:53 p.m., Middlepon unit went to South Third and treated
Bemaline Kelly. At 7:33p.m ., Syracuse unit took Charles Boggess
from State Route 124 to Veterans. At II :46 p.m., Rutland squad
went 10 Meigs Mine 2. Karl Brandau was taken 10 Holzer.

and central Ohio will be considerably wanner since a tinle sunshine
os likely. There temperatures will
range from the upper 60s through
the 70s.
The warmth woll continue Saturday out ahead of the cold fron t.

Temperature s will be in the oOs
north and 70s south .
Around the nation
Clouds and fog hung over the
East early today. Snow fell in parts
of North Dakota . Minnesota and
Alaska

-Meigs announcements-Sunrise services
Sunrise services will be held at
the Dexter Church of Christ on
Easter Sunday at6:30 a.m.
Breakfast w11l be served 1n the
basement following the service.
Sunday school at 9:30a.m., communion at 10:45 a.m. and preach ing at II a.m. by Chns Stewart.
The public is invited.
Services set
The First Church of God in
Syracuse will have an ordinance of
the church on April 16 with communion and feet washing . Good
Friday services will be held April
17 and sunrise services and a special program will be presented
Easter morning at 6:30a .m. Sunday evening services will be held at
7:30p.m. Pastor David Russell
•nvites the publtc.
Revivals announced
The Racine Church of the
Nazarene will have revival Tuesday through April 19 at 7 p.m .
nightly. Su nday services will be
10:30 a.m. ao1d 6 p.m. Rev. Jne Jordan will be evangeliSt and there
will be special music. Rev. Thomas
L Gates II invites the public.
Rev. J .T. McHam will be the
evangelist for revival services Sun day through Friday at 7:30p .m.
nightly at First Southern Baptist
Chun:h on Pomeroy Pike.
He was pastor of Sharon Bapust
Church, Smyrna, Ga., for 24 years
and for the past 12 years has served

in full -time eva ngelism . Special
cveniS and music arc planned each
night.
Pastor Lamar O'Bryant invites
the public .
Revival at Hope Baptist Church,
4 70 Grant Stree~ Middlepon, will
he held Sunday through Fnday at 7
p.m . nightly with Jerry Lewis,
speaker. He was pasto r of the'
Fren ch City Church in Gallipolis
from 1973-79. Specoal events and
music each night. Nursery provid·
ed. Public invited.
Gospel sing
An all -night gospel smg will be
held Good Friday begonning at 7
p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.
Featured entertainment includes
Conrad Cook and the Calvary
Echoes. Gospel Roadmasters , Victory, Narrow Way, Taylor Family.
Chosen . Gabriel Quartet, Turle y
Family, King's Harmony, Refl ections Trio, Eden's Family and tl1e
Faith Hannony Boys. Admtssoon t.1
free and refreshmeniS wiU be available. The public is invited .
Bend area gospel sing
The Bend Area Gospel Sing will
be held April 18 at 6 p.m. at Faith
Baptist Church in Mason, W.Va.
Featured entertainments will
include Conrad Cook and the Calvary Ec hoe s, Taylor Family.
Reflections Trio, Mandy and
Maura Clark and the Faith Baptist
Church Choir. The public is invited.
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Racine VFD plans open house
The Racine Volunteer Fire Deparunent will hold an open house
on Sunday 10 unveil its new ftre truck. The open house wiU begin at
1 p.m.
According ID Fire Ooief John Holman, all residents of the depanment's service area: Sutton, Lebanon, and Letan Townships, along
w•th Racu1e VtUage, are mvoted 10 attend. The ftrehouse is located
at Third and Vine Streets in Racine.

_

l l0,9 ?0 01- 1. '
\ A!UI[l.l• I )IJ"'OI-'

Two injured in one-car wreck

.... T I~H ~

A 2-year-old Pomeroy girl was listed in fair condioon in Chol dren's Hospital in Columbus Friday morning after a one-car accident on Wells Run Rood in Lebanon Township Thursday morning.
Bntm Brewer was a passenger in a car driven by Bonnie L.
Brewer, 30, FlaiWOods Rood, Pomeroy, the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the
State Higloway Patrol reported
Bonnie and Britni Brewer were transported to Veterans Memon·
al H~tal by the Racine Squad of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Semce.
Britni Brewer was transponed by LifcFlightto Choldren's Hospi tal on Columbus. Bonrue Brewer was held fO&lt; observation, a VMH
spokeswoman reponed.
According to the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway. the
two were not weanng seatbelts at the time of the accident.
The patrol listed damage to the front of Brewer's 1975 Chrysler
CO&lt;doba as heavy and disabling .
The patrol is investigating the accident.

l ! C.l &lt;'0

....
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"'""""'"'
;pe."

WHITE MEN
CANT JUMP
l 1~.9 lO Oo'!U
"-A! I \Uh """TIN[(~ I 1~ . 1 10

il01'91M1ll
'll ~HII U'

"Hilarious

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·--'i: MY COUSIN

VINNY

Area deaths._ _ __
Wayne A. Rockey
Wayne Allen Rockey, 67, of
Vinton, died Thursday, April 9,
1992, at his residence.
He was born on Sept 22, 1924
in Fairfield Counl)', son of the late
Gail and BJanelle Paul Rockey.
He was a retired security guard
for the. California Plant Prolfetion
Co., Columbus, a World War Army
veteran, and a member of the
Danville Holiness Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Helen Penwell; two sons, Jerry and
Tommy Rockey; three step-sons,
Thomas Starkey or Virginia Beach,

011 IVliiiG SHOW 7:)t
IIATIIIII UNr AT 2:M
lDIIUIOII $1.It

will try to he lp . If the U.N. IS inter·
csted, let' s all plan a new summit,
for a new wodd order."
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER ·
..
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel- :
low at the American Enterprise _
Instilule, is author of "The First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press.

them by William Buckley, Irving
Kristol and various other laterarriving malefactors woth very different agendas.
In case you arc wondering, Pat
Buchanan os the current political
•dol of thi s bloc, and he undoubtedly addresses many of its themes in
hi s public statements . But he is
undcrsUtndably a bit cautious about
swallowing 1Ls platform wholesale
if only because some parts of ii
contradict others . (True libertari ans , for example , arc the sworn
enemies of protectionism.)
My own guess is that the paleoconscrvauves represent only a
mononty of the conservative movement, bur a significant one. Their
strength lies in their passionate
determonatoon; !heir weakness in
their own internal inconsis~encies .
But as we move toward 1996 and a
new century in which the conservative movement will be nequired 10
adopt a fresh agenda addressed to
new issue.s, this is the bloc which
if conscrvausm is indeed going 1~ .
spilt, currently seems likeliest to
take a walk.
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

PA

IND.

you're interested, we in America

Is conservative movement splitting?

The Dally Sentinel Page-3

Mild weather expected to remain in Ohio

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Va., Earl C. Starkey Jr., of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va .. and Wilbert L
Starkey of Charlotte, N.C.; three
step-daughters , Helen L. White of
Vinton, Joan Muncy of Ocala, Fla.,
and Dorothy Ebright of Plane City ;
12 gt11ndchildren; and four greatgrandchildren.
Services will be held I p.m. Saturday at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with the Rev. Rick
Maloy officialing. Burial will be in
Danville Cemetery. Military graveside services will be conducted by
Vinton American Legion Post 161.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Friday from 6-9.

Gel Stthl power •n a va lue -priced. versa tole
gasoline trimme. The FS J6 Lightweigh t.
with rlouble line tap and go l otting head
and comfortable loop handle Ele&lt;troniC

SHOW Till t.tt OilY
AINIISSIOII $1. It
44wt23

rgnitlo n

(USPS 21:1-9110)

Published enry al\emoon, Monday
throuah Friday, I U Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahina
·Company/Multimedia Inc ., Pomeroy,

Ohio •5769, Ph. 992-2156. Second clua
po~"-c"e ~id

at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The A,.ociaLed PrMI, U"M1 the
Ohio New1paper Aasociatlon . Natiora..l
A.d¥erti1inr Repruenlltive , Branham
"New1paper S..Jes, 733 Third A¥m~.

POSTMASTER Send addreu chancu to
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62 Weeb..... .. ....... ..... ......

$84.76

8unday. April 12
1-5 p.m.

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The BG 61 h.Jnd held blower
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ideal fot cleaning
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porches garages. flower
beds and guners Anti
vibration feature helps
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homeowner yet1ts durability and ma ny
features m.1ke 1t the choice of pro Iegge' s

Point Ple&lt;Y&gt;ant
National Guard Armory

With t6'. bar and chain

S369'.!

RT. 62 NORll-1

Spmuortd By..
• Mason County Exlension Homemaa,n
Cu ltural Arts Committee
• Hero Oui:&gt;-Mason County Yo-Tech Centl'T

•GFWC Potnl Pleasant Junior Woman' s Club

STIHL

•Point Pleasant Recreation Dep;lrtment

O.t.lde Mel• Co•nQ

tlw .. u

rugged 009Lchain
I
'-..lw rs perfe-ct for
cumng forewood . limbmg and
deSign With 14 · bd1 and cha1n

,. .

8aturday, April 11

Nnr Yoril . New Yort 10017.

'

tnmmmg Werghs on ly 0
pounds Convement top handle

e,prin8 Edition
10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

homeowner th e

provrdes qu 1c k sr.uts

Handmade Holiday Treasure-s

The Daily Sf:ntinel

Des1gned for the •

NfVfR COM PROM IS!

CHESTER

Wttt Vlovlnlo PT. Pt.EASAKT
Po Pleasant Harowara

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Friday, Aprll10, 1992
Page-4

L.A. hands San Diego 6-3 loss;
Houston edges Cincinnati 6-5
By The Associated Pre!is
Tom Cand iolli and Gre g
Swi ndell gave National League hit·
tcrs a different look in lheir debu ts.
and came away with the sa me
result, almost.
Th e form er Cleve land team mates bolh pitched well enough to
w1 n Thursday night. Only one of
them d1d.
Ca ndi otti , the first full -time
knuckleballer in lhe NL since lh c
Nic kro broth ers, stymied San
Diego and led Los Angeles 10 a 6-3
victory in the Padres' home Qpener.
"" It was fun . It was a different
game," Candiotu said.
Candiotti, signed as a free agent
fro m Toronto, gave up three runs
on six hits in 7 1/3 inning s. He
struck out seven and walked two.
Swindell, meanwhile, showed
off his fmc mix of fastball , slider
and some of baseball's best control.
He left after eight innin gs with
Cincmnau ahead 5- 1 lead in Houston, but lhc Astros rallied for four
runs in lhc ninth and won 6-5 in the
13th on Casey Candaele "s two-out
si ngle.
Swindell, traded from the Indi ans to Cincinnati for lhree young
players in the off-season, declined
comment after his no-decision .
In other games, San Francisco
trounced Atlanta 11-4, Philadelphia
beat Chicago 7- 1, New York
stopped SL Louis 7-1 and Montreal
downed Pittsburgh 8-3.
Swindell held Houston to fi ve
hit s. He struck out seven and
walked none.
The Indians provided Swindell
wtth the fifth-worst support last

at second base in the ruth inning or Thursday night's American l eag ue game in Balti more, which the Orioles won 2-0. (AP)
ta~

DO~'T

lOOK BACK - Baltimore's llrady
Anderson (left ) looks back at the umpire for the
call, but gets no satisfaction, as he gets the ou t
call foiJ~·ing Clevrland shortstop Mark Lewis'

Baltimore blanks Cleveland 2-0
Jh DICK BRINSTF:R

·.-\ P Sports Writer
The new ballpark 111 Balumorc
h.:b a \Try long name Perhaps they
\ h o uld shorten !l 10 somcth tn g

more appropnatc - like Shutout
Sta&lt;llVfll
Onol~ Park at Camden Yard'
has kno._ ,. nothmg but m lhc first
thn:'c ilil\( of 1lo; c.ustcncc . The lat est blaniung was by Ben McD&lt;ln ·
ald. w~J pitched a two-hi tl er
Thlli"SdiY night as lhc Onolcs beat
the CIC\'cland lndlans 2-0.

McD&lt;lnald (1-0) struck out nmc
'" hi s fiflh comp lete game 111 the
majors. pcrmt ttmg onl y one runner
to rc;tLh llmd base.
On open in g day, Baltunorc" s
R1ck Sut cliffe threw a fivc -htt
sh JII\1111 On Wed nesda y. Dave Olio
"'" ' Rod N1c ho ls co mb ined to
hl:Hlk th e Ori o les. Then came
~JciJ&lt;HUirl"s gem. in whi ch he
rcurctl the f1nal I 3 Jnd&lt;ans and IR
of the last 19.
It ·, far too ear ly to judg e. but
maybe the roomy power-alleys (it' s

Salurda.( s games
1,-J,ont rul I \tdr1Jn0 (} 1) II ~CW Y ori:
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Aryn Sm1lh . pttc her . on the l~ · d• y dll • blcd lwt. Recalled Rhe~l Conmer, J'ltch
er. fmm l»Jilvillc of the Amennn Auon ouon . Purchucd the contr1CI of Donn

van Osborne. puther. from
the Tun t.Mgue

Ari:.•n~n

nf

Football
~a tlnr11l

(l...abrandl\5· 11 ), 14(] ;' m

Cl•c:i•••ll IHt mmond

SigneC

J ockt orwdle nl the So.ll.h~m Lague.

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tn Amen Comer were mere ly rare .

CElEBRATE FIRST WIN - Houslon 's Ken Caminiti (lel"l) i•
congratulated by coaches Matt Galante and Bob Cluck after scoring
the winning run on Ca•ey Candarle's 131h-inning single in Thursday night's game againsl visiting Cincinnati, which the Astros won
6-5. (AP)

Spring Is Here!
OUR GARDEN CENTER IS STOCKED TO
OVERFLOWING WITH EVERnHING YOU'LL
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70611 40 lb.
Top SoL ..................... $1.89
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70639 2 cu. ft.
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Wllh

We also stock:
•A wide seleclion of
patio blocks
•landscape timbers
•Privacy fence (several styles lo choose
from)
-Garden tools, ferlilizers, whee I barrows,
lawn mowers

J.~l lli\\S-

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:

"'-'•~ ·.J
( ' lftcinftl ll ' 1 \ln ninjl~

lirl(

By STEVF:N WINE
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Lanny
Wadkins' three consecutive birdies

&amp;rJ[]~\(/~~ij

rrn

Ym 7.St l.n • •
~ 1 1 . Pt1u~.rg~ '

....... t,
LA"-"fdD6 s.r

Bla nkenship was the wmner

an ctg ht srr1 kcout. two walk effort.
Sym mes took a 7-0 lea d, bu t
Southern came back wtlh a four run
rail y in the fou nh to push the score
111 7-4. In that f ramc, SHS scorr,d
when ~1Jrcy Hill reached on an error. Caldwell wal kC((. Amber Cum tngs reached via an errrr, an.:l A1me

Foocball Ll'a11ut

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...,. O-.tHiol• Moy lo
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,., IIC"""""'..O , ... ltl(lll(

By The Associated Press
The long wait to make lhe pl ayoffs appears to be
over for the Los Angeles Clippers.
The Cltppcrs took advantage of the ·absence of
Clyde Drexler on Thursday night to bea t Por~and
I()6. 100, giving lhcm a two-game lead over Houston
and a 2 1/2-gam e maugin over the cross town rival
Lakcrs in the race for two Western Conference playoff spots.
Danny Manmn g scored 34 points and Ron Harper
26 for the Clippers, who have never made lhe playoffs. The franchise's last postseason appearance was
in I976 when 11 was located in Buffalo.
""We won, and whoever they put out on the court
aue preny good players," coach Larry Brown said.
''No one can make up for lhc loss of Clyde Drexler,
but I'm not taking anylhing away from our guys."
Drexler sprained his right knee and did not dress
for the ga me. But the Trail Blazers, who have the
best record m ~1e conference, mlhed from an 81-65
fou rlh-quaner deficit to ue lhe game 100-100 with 38
seconds remaining as Terry Porter scored 15 of his
30 points in th e pcnod.
"It was a tough game, but 1 am very happy lhat
we played well," Harper said. "Even without Clyde,
they still come after you."
Elsewhere in the NBA. 11 wa s Clevela nd 141,
Charloue 134; Houston 117. Minnesota 102; San
Antonio 102, lhc Los Angeles Lakcrs 94; Utah I 13,
Dallas 90; Seanlc I 19, Phoenix 104; Orlando 96,
Atlanta 94; and Sacramento 124, Denver 107.
Manning's hook shot snapped th e 100-100 tic
wilh 26 seconds left for the Clippers, who have five
games rcmainmg , including three at home again st
some of the worst teams in the conference - Den ver, Sac ramento and Minnesota .
""This win helps us develop a Jot of confidence.""
sa td Cha rle s Sm!lh, who had 14 point s and 12
rebounds.
Portland scored 15 consecutive pom ts m lhc third
quarter to trail JUSt 65-63, but Mannmg scored nine
of his 12 third -quarter points in a 16-2 spun that
rebuilt lhe margin to 16 gomg tnto the final 12 mill·

and Terry Cummings had 22 points and I2 rebounds.
Terry Teagle fmished as lhe Laker.;' leading sror·
cr wilh 18 points
Ellion made 14 of 19 shots two days after a 1-for·
10 performance in a loss to Houston.
Rockets 117 1Tim berwol ves I02 - Hakwn Olajuwon scored 26 points and Houston won at Minnesota wilh lhe help of a 23-9 fourth-quarter run.
Otis Thorpe had 24 points and 13 rebounds for the
Rockets, who have climbed into eighth place m the
Western Conference with four suaight victories.
Jazz IIJ, Mavericks 90 - Utah clinched the
Midwest Division wilh a rout of Dallas as Karl Malone scored 28 points m 28 minutes and Jeff Malone
had 26 points.
The 50th vi ctory of the season for the Jazz left
them fiv e games ahead of San Antonio with five
games to play. Utah won the season series 3-1 ovolhe Spurs, who edged the Jazz for the diviSion utle on
th e r.nal day the last two seasons.
.
SuperSonics 119, Suns 104 - Nate McMillan
had 14 points, 12 assists and six steals as Seattle beat
Phoenix for its fifth suaight victory.
The Sonics led 90-72 after three quarters and
opened the fourth quarter wilh a 16-4 spurt for a 1()6.
76 advantage with 6:58 left.
Shawn Kemp had I 7 points and 14 rebounds for

4-n2 -"11
sn PAIIIS1.

IIIDIUPOil OH

&amp; SUPPlY CO.
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1DII frt• 1-100 -73J -UU\

Jeff Slum an's ace on No.4 was
historic.
The neat feats at an uncommon·
ly tam e Augusta Na tional helped
Wadkins and Sluman take a share
of lhc fi rSt-round lead Thursday in
the Masters.
Wadkins deftl y negot iat ed the
old course's most famous stretch.
holes I I through 13, on his way to
a 7-under -par 65. Sluman matched
th at tota l and ne eded JUSt one
stroke at the 213-yard fourth hole.
Brandishing a 4-iron, Sluman's
tee shot landed about 20 feet from
the cup, crossed a ridge and rolled
\fl .

"Like a I -foot putt ,'" he said .
Throu gh 55 prcvtous Ma sters ,
No. 4 had never yielded an ace .
That covers an estimated I I ,000
dnvcs.
Slum a n and Wadkin s held a
three-shot lead going into today"s
second round. Ttcd at 68 were for·
mer PGA champion Wayne Grady.

Cavaliers 141, Hornets 134 -Cleveland
clinched hom ccoun advantage lhrough two rounds or
the pl ayoffs by defeau ng Charlotte.
Larry Nance had 26 pomts. I0 rebounds ard a
career-high 14 assisLs. his first triple-douhle for the
Cavaliers.
Magic 96, Hawks 94- Scoll Skiles· 17-foot
jumper wilh I 30 rcmainmg put Orlando in front, and
lhe Mag1c held miung Atlanta scoreless the rest of
the game.
Stacey Augmon scored 22 po1nts and Kev1n
Willis had 21 points and I5 rebounds for the Hawks.
Kings 124, Nuggets 107 -Lionel Simmons had
12 points and 12 rebounds, and Sacramento handed
Denver its ninth suaight loss.
Trailing 79-77, lhc Km gs used a 11.0 rutn span·
ning lhc end of lhc third quarter and lhc start of the
fourth period for an 88-79 cushion with 10:57 left

Players Championship winn er
Davis i.JJvc JJI , Mile Hulbert and
Ted Schulz.
Leading money winner Fred
Couples, six-time Masters champi·
on Jack Nicklaus, defending champ
Jan Woosnam and 49-ycar-old Ray
Floyd wer e among 12 play ers
shooting 69 . Two-time champion
Ni ck Faldo and Augu sta rooki e
Long John Daly were in a group al
71.
Eighteen golfers broke 70, and
35 bettered par. Both ~gures were
tournament records for the fn st
round, as was the average score of
72.052 by lhc field of 83.
Augusta National wa s made
inviting by a light wind and rela tiv ely slow greens softened by ram
early in the week .
''The opportunity was lh crc to
shoot a good score if you put it in
the right place,' ' Sluman 5ald.
Like in th e hole off the tee.
After his ace, Sluman pulled the
ball out of the cup and handed it to
hts mother, who wa.s in the gallery .
Wadkins gave aw ay lillie. He
said he hit JUSt two bad shots, both

off the tee, and each urne he saved
par.
He flew thro ugh the historic
soulhwest corner of the course,
making birdie putts of 12 feel on
No. 11 , 15 feet on No. 12 and 6
feet from No. 13.
The scorecard read 3-2-4 .
" 1 feel like Amen Comer has
kicked my bun so many limes over
the years, it probably owes me a li t·
tie bit.'" Wadkins said.
Sluman and Wadkins rose to the
top of lhc leader board while much
of th e gallery was focused on a
couple of other Americans, nsing
stars Daly and Couples.
Th e crowd cheered each monstrou s dnve by Daly, including a
320-yard blasl oo the f~N hole. but
lhrcc bOgeys kept him back in the
pack .
Couples birdied three par-Ss but
played the rest of the course at
even par. The tour's holiest player,
long regarded as an undernchiever.
is seeking hi s first ma)Of ude.
"' 1 didn't feel any extra pressure
today."" Couples sa1d . "' Pressure
co me s when yo u are not playmg
well."

AL games ··· - - - - - - - - - (Continued from Page 4)

27 Juts.

Elsew here 111 th e Am er ican
Leag ue, it was Toronto 3, Detroit
I; Minnesota 3, Milwauk ee I; Oakland 5. Kansas City 2; New York 3.
Boston 2; Texas 9, Scaulc 1; and
Chicago 7, Califom1a 6.
McD&lt;l nald oulllueled Jack Arm stro ng (0-1), who allowed two run s
and six hits in six- plu s innin gs.
One of lhosc hits was a solo hom er
by Mike Devereaux , the first Oriole
to connect in the new ballpark.
Brady Anderson. httle ss In his
fir st nine at-bats this season , dou ·
ble&lt;l tn th e third and scored on a
sin gle by Joe Orsulak . Devereaux,
httl css in hi s fir st se ven at -bal l,
homered in the ~flh .
Rangers 9, Mariners I.
The Rangers. led by Ruben Sierra , Dean Palmer and rookie Monty
Fa ri ss, co mpl eted a fou r-game
sweep of the Mariners .

LUMBER
WEEKLY

Scat~ c .

Wadkins, Sluman lead in the Masters

nQJ~ij

Shawn l l ii:~Ri~, pttd·,er, to • rmnnr
lugue c ~~•lr~ct
.\FA
MARit-;ERS
Slgne&lt;J
Fn c (;lln de r,ron, p111: her, to • ~u n111Cl

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but su ffered the loss with a two \l n kcout. I I -wa lk perfor mance.

,\ ml'r inn Lui!Ut

I'

S.n Francuco l!

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wel l again p1tchcd a good game,

L.A. Clippers beat Portland;
Cleveland downs Charlotte

Spurs 102, lakers 94- San Antonio won at the
Forum as Scan Ellion scored a scason-h1gh 33 points

Mills had a two run double. After a
walk to McCoy, Jcs s1ka Codn er
and Angie Swiger each walked to
force home two runs .
Southern's bats were silenced
and SV went on to lhe 9-4 win.
Aim c Mill s doubled, while
Me gan Wolfe and Michelle McCoy
each had singles for Soulhem.
Symmes Valley hiuers were Ad ki ns with a double and s ingl e,
Nance a triple and single, Mays a
triple, and sin gles each by Brown
and Massey.
Southern plays at Nonh Gallia
toni ght.
Inning totals
Southern ............000 400 0 -4-3- 1
SymmesVallcy.331011 x - 9·7-1

Trans:trl ions

' '

Thu~) ·~\C or

rn

By SCOTT WOLFF:
Sentinel Correspondrnl
The Sou thern Tornadoes so ft ·
h:IIJ team fell victim to ea rly
Symmes Valley scoring en rotlle to
dropptng a 9-4 S V AC road contest
Wednesday
So phomore hur ler Jodi Cald -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

UlCS.

Symmes Valley tops Southern 9-4

Ba"&gt;tha!l

!

1

post the save.
Winebr e nner sa1d, "J eremy
(Northup) showed great poise as a
sophomore to come back and pitJ:h
out of that jam . He continued to
pitch great in relief and did a r.nc
job. Keith Jones gave us anolhcr
great start tonight, and we took
advantage of several key situations
offensively ."
Southern had eight hits led by
Keith Jone s' double and single .
Billy Jone s doubled as d1d Lisle ,
while Dill , Nonhup, Ebersbach and
Andy Grueser each singled.
Edmunds doubled and singled,
whil e Carpenter, S1mpson and
Robinson each singled for SV .
Southern dropped a 7-1 contest
in Ravenswood on Tuesday.
Jeremy Dill suffered the loss on
th e mound with a one-strikeout,
two walk effort . He gave up 12
hi ts.
Aaron Bennett wilh relief from
Pat Akers claimed the win with a
siHtnkcout, one-walk cfforL
Eri c Bennett, Micah Kennedy ,
Jo sh Bush and Wes Swain had
multt -hit run sconng night s for
Rav enswood, while Dilly Jon es,
Ebe rs bach and Northup each sin gled for Southern.
Southern, which was sc heduled
to play Nonh Gallia Thcmday, will
host Waterford today.

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Coact1 Micli. Winebr enner 's
So uthern Tornadoes defeated lhe
tlefcn din g S VAC champion
Sy mmes Valley Vikings 4-2 at A1d
to push their record to 4 -1 overall
and 2.0 10 lhc SVAC.
Jun ior hurl e r Keilh Jones was
aga in th e winning pitcher, ptcking
up hi s lhird win of lhc young season. Jones teamed up with sophomo re fir cballcr Jeremy Northup.
who posted the save . They com htn cd for nin e strikeouts and fiv e
wa lks.
Chns Pancrson suffered the loss
wtth eight strikccuts and just two
walks to hts credit.
In the founh inning, SHS scored
fou r runs on a Jeremy Dill single, a
Ch ris Ebcrsbac h single and an RBI
double by Billy Jones . With run ·
ncrs on second and third, Symmes'
pitcher. catc her and third basemen
al lowed a blooping pop-up off lhc
hat of Kc11h Jones to fall untouched
'" the mfteld . As lhe ball caromed
hack to th e infield. both runners
score d for a 3-0 score. Scou Lisle
th en de livered a run -sco ring doubl e
for th e 4-0 score.
Sy mmes carne back with two in
the filth when Northup came on in
rei ie f. Northup walked the bases
do uble to Edm und s to cut Soulh em "s lead to 4-2. Northup lhcn SCI·
llcli down to pttch great bat! and

· ~.n l'·llll l~rm

Caminiti led off lhc 13th w1lh a
Si ngle off Scoll Ru skin (0 - 1), was
sacri ~ced to second and scored on
Candaclc's singl e, bcaung Sander.;'
throw home from center.
AI Osuna (1 -0) pitched the fina l
mnm g and got the victory .
Dodgrrs 6, Padrt&gt; 3
Brcn Butler led off the game
w1lh a home run , Eric Karros hit a
two- ru n shot later m lhc first inning
and Mike Sciascia added a home
run in the seventh as Los Angeles
won San Diego's home opener.
J1m Go lt . the fourth Dodgers
pitcher, went 1 1/3 innings for a
NL on

Southern baseball team posts
4-2 win over Symmes Valley

loaded. th en gave up a two -run

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4 I 0 fee t to dee pest left -ce nter)
coul d give lhe park a reputation as
a puc her 's parnd1se.
But McDonald isn't so sure.
"'The balls carried preny well
Ja.st n 1ght and tnnight." he said. " It
looks to me that u could be a hit ter's ballpark , espec iall y when 11
warms up "
McDunJid said lhc lack of produc tion probably is a sign of
&lt;pn ng.
In three ga me s at Camden
Yards. the teams combined for just
(See AL on Page 5)

yea r (3 .6 runs per game), but
Cin cinnati gave him a 2-0 lead in
the firs t inning Rcggte Sanders,
who hit an RBI single in lhc first.
added a so lo home run in th e
fourlh.
Swindell came ou t aft er the
cig hlh and Scan Bankhead gave up
a pau of si ngles to start the ni nth
Norm Charlton relieved and Ken
Ca miniti hit the first p11ch for a
three-run homer that made n 5-4.
Ramirez followed w1lh a walk.
took second on a saCfl fi ce and
scored the ty ing ru n on Craig Big giO's two-out single against Charl ton.

Friday, Ap rll1 o, 1992

none left the park.
Jeff Robin son (1 -0) got all the
support he needed when Texas
sco red six times in th e seco nd
inning against rookie Dave rlem ing(0-1)
Blue Jays 3, Tigers I
Juan Guzman (J -0) matched his
caueer high with 10 strikeouts and
Dave Winfield hit his first hom e
run for Toronto, givmg the v1sitin g
Blue Jays a sweep of their lhreegame series against Detroi t.
Guzman allow ed three hit s 1n

seve n innings and walk ed four .

Duane Ward pitched a perfect ninth
for his second save.
Walt Terrell allowed all three
run s and sex htts m 8 l{l mmng s.
Twins J, Brewers I
Min nes ota' s Pedro Mu noz.
starting 111 place of beaned Shane
Mac k, hit a tiebreaking , tw o-out
smgle in lhc cighlh inning at Milk·
waukee.
Luis Quinone,;- ~ in g l ed to sl:Irt

the eighth off Jaime Navarro (0· I)
Ktrby Puckcn grounded out and
Chili Davis followed with a single.
Aft er Randy Bush foul ed out.
Munoz singled to left-center for a
2· 1 lead.
Fonner Brewer Dill Krueger (I ·
0) went seven Innings, giVIng up
four hi ts.
Athiftics 5, Royals 2
Ron Darling pitched wcU as lhc
Alhletics defeated Kansas City to
sweep th eir lhrce-game series a1
Oakland .
Hot-hitting Mart. McGwire had
a so lo homer and a run -scoring
double, and Mike Bonlid: drove in
two run s for Oakland.
Darling allowed six hi ts in 8 1/3

3"x5"x8' Treated

Landscape
Timbers
100% ACCURATE - Cleveland forward Larn 'ianct bkrs no
cha nc es on missing this basket on this point-blank baskrt in the
fourth quarter of Thursday night's NBA gamr a~ainst tht •isiting
Chadotte Hornets, who fell 141 -13~. :&gt;lance had~ points., 14 as.sists
and 10 rebounds in the contest. (AP)

2.99

Eastern beats Waterford 9-1
l!v SCOTT WOLFF.
Sentinel Correspondent
Senior pt tchcr Terry McGutrc
and sophomore Tyson Rose com ·
b1ned th e lf p11ch1ng effo rt s 111
boosting v1sitm g Eas tern to a 9- I

non -league baseball vic lory over

Waterford Thursday cvenmg . East ·
em 1S now 3-0.
McG uHc fanned seve n and
walked one m row innings of work
to pick up the w1n . wh1lc Ro se
fanned four and walked JUSt one 111
a good effort to fim sh lh c game.
Jeff Huck suffered th e loss. fan mng two and walking two. before
gammg relief from Ben Coffma n
and Joe Green.
Eastern scored lhree runs in lh c
first when McGu1re doubled. and
rode home on a Tim Btssell smglc
Semor f1rst baseman Mike Smith
the n hammered th e fir st of two .
two -run home runs

ended lhc n1ght ~~lh four RBI "s
lc.ad the Eagle Jut para&lt;k.

to

Eas lcm scored a sm~le run tn
the second. and tv.·o mOre '" th e

fourth. lhrn added a Jooc marker 111
th r scvenlh frame for a 9-0 score
Waterford scored a smgic run 111
the f1nak 10 complete the sconng at
'l . I .

Eastern's dcfrns.c v.Js pcrfc cc
rsrcctally 1ts good pia) 111 the Ill ·
I tc"id .
a double. BJ&lt;Scll three
Stnglcs. O.ad Savoy a double . and
s1n g le s each by Pat S ew land .
Robert Reed. Jared RHknour and
Jeff Durst.
Wa1crford h11U"I"S wen: Enc \k Cu icheon. Ben Coffman . Ty son
Powe rs. Shawn Hc1SS. Larry
Brookover and Sm1th. all ~· 1th sm·
gles.

mark in left field for a 3-0 Eastern
lead.
Sm1lh later hammered anot her

t0n1ght
Inn ing totals
Eastern .
3JccOOJ - 9-Jc -O
Waicrford ... CXXl 000 I - I h 1
\1cGulfC (WP). Rose S1h and
Rolx-rt R'""&lt;l .
Huck (LP). Coffman ~lh. Gnxn 6th
ond McCuu: hcon

Sports shorts
Tennis

BARCELONA. Spa1n (AP) lordi Bunllo stunn ed top-seeded
Boris Brder 1-6. 7-6 (7-2). 6-4 111
the second round of lhe Conde de
Godo clay-coun toumamenL
In third -round matche s. second seeded Ivan Lendl defeated 15th ·
seeded Thomas Muster 6-3. 6 -4
and fifth -seeded Sergi Brugucra
beat Martin Jaitc 7-5.6- I
AMELJA ISLAND. Fla. (AP )
- Top-seeded Stcffl Graf defeated
Brenda Schultz 6-2. 6-2 and ,;cc .
ond-secded Gabnela Sabaun1 beat
Kathy Rmald1 6-0. 6-3 to advan ce
to the quarterfinals of lh c Ba usc h &amp;
Lomb ChampionshipS.

3.49

WMe 1490 o~, Brown 1490·08)

Eastern hiller s were Smllh.

Eastern IS lo ho sl \ orth GaJ l1a

home run m the thud mnin g and

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92.99 "'~"'··~"" ''
32" 6 Panel

98.99 ,_,.. ,. ,.,., "'

LOWE'S HOTEL

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mnmgs.

Mark Gubicza (0-1) took the
loss.
Yankl't's 3, Red Sox 2
Frank Viola, breezing int o the
sixth tnning w1th a two-hit shutou~
Si erra had a three -run homer ,
gave up an RBI double to Raben
rariss a home r and three RB! s and
Kell y and a two- run double to
Palmer had thre e hits, although
Danny Tartabull as New York
swept the two-game series.
(Continu ed from Page 4)
New York went ahead m the
sixlh when Chari.Je Hayes singled.
save, prese rvin g th e victory for
Mets 7, Cardina~ I
Don Mattingly walked with two
Howard Johnson hit a two-run outs. Kelly doubled up the gap in
Candtotti .
Giants II, Braves 4
homer and two-run double on a day left-ce nter and Tartabull - balling
Will Clark homer ed. had four tha t saw both teams lose a player with fir.;t base open and ahead 3-1
hits and drove in four runs as San on the second pitJ:h of lhc game in in lhe count - doubled to left
r rancisco chased Steve Avery and St. Louis.
Ri ch Monteleone got the victory
spoiled Atlanta's hom e opener.
Vince Coleman bunted for a sin- wilh 2 1/3 innings of h1dess rehef.
The Bra ves got lhcir NL cham · gle to lead off lhe game and left
Whitt Sox 7, An~ls 6
pwn sl11p rings before the game, with a strained left hamstring. CarGeorge Bell had three hits ,
th en watched the Giants rap I 5 dinals pitcher Donovan Osborne including hi s ftrst homer, for the
hit s. Matt William s hit a lhree-run sprained his left ankle on the play White Sox and Kirl&lt;. McCa.sl.ill surhomer and Darren Lewis had three and left two innings later. Both vived a shaky return to Anaheim
hits and scored four runs.
playm are listed as day-to-day.
Stadium.
Avery (0· 1) gave up three runs,
Anthony Young (l -0) pitched a
McCaskill (0-1) went f.-c
only one of them earned, on seven six -hiller . Juan Agosto (0 · I) innings on hi s 31st birthday.
hits in 4 1/1 innings . He walked replaced Osborne to start the third
Joe Grahc (0·1) was the loser.
three and struck out r.ve .
inning and promptly gave up fi ve
Phillies 7, Cubs 1
mns.
Dale Murphy hit hi s 397 th
Expos 8, Pirales 3
GRAVELY TRAClOR
career home run and drove in three
Darrin Fletcher and Delino
SALES &amp; SERVICE
runs , leading Danny Cox and DeShields each got three of Mon204 Condo&lt; St.
Pornll "'' OIL
Philadelphia past Chicago.
treal' s 14 hits as the Expos averted
Sprint 111111 S••er 11011'1
Murphy hit a two-run shot in lhe a seaso n-opening , three -game
MOnday,.,. FMiy
founh inning and had an RB1 sin- sweep in Pittsburgh.
gle during a four-run sixth . He is
91.11.·5 ....
Fletcher, Montreal's sixth dif26th on the all-time homer !i st, one ferent opening day catcher in the
Sit. 9 Ul.·l P.a.
be hind Eddie Murray and two last eight year, put the Expos in
behind AI Kaline.
front for good at 3-1 with a two-run
Cox ( 1-0) gave up one run on double in the sixlh inning off Bob
four hits. He struck out three and Walk (0·1).
walked one. Mike Morgan (0 · J)
Chris Nabholz (1 -0) pitched fi ve
lost his debut for lite Cubs.
innings for lhe victory.

NL actl"on ...

~THE

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

60 Pound Bag

Concrete &amp;
Gravel Mix

1. 99

)4&gt; 0'&gt;

2.69
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~~LUMBER
IJOif HOUII W..doy., 7•I Jill
S...day, a... s'"'
londay, IOIIll- lpm

RT.2
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV
PHONE:

(304) 675-4584

·-~~~

�By The Bend

:.

The Daily Sentinel

allllr.
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE • Revival will be
bdd lhrou&amp;h Samrday at 7:30p.m.
ni«hdy at Jhe Reedsville United
Methodist Church . Rev. Gene
Eaton. East Street United
Metllodist church, Vienna. W.Va.,
and Rev . Dan Eaton, Liberty
Assembly o( God, Mason. W.Va ..
will be tile 1uest speakers. Rev .
Cbarles Eaton, pasiOr, inviJes the
public.
POMEROY - The senior class
o( Meip High School wi II present
A. Ni«ht of Theatrical Perfor ·
mances on Friday at7:30 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - There will
be a hymn sing a Faith Full Gospel
Cburcll in Long Bottom on Friday
at 7 p.m. feamring The Harmonies
and ne Dailey Family . Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public. Fel lowship will follow.
TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will host a
dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at
the post home with mus1c by
Happy HoDow Boys.
HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a round and square dance Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport
on Route 124 at Kenny and Millie
Reynolds'. Music will be provided
by Smokey Mountain Drifters ."
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
The public is invited.
RUTI.ANO · There w1ll be a
dance at the Rutland Amencan
Legion Hall on Friday from 8 p.m.
to midnight with music by Free
Country Band. Public invited.
SATURDAY
ATHENS
Old
ume
~ dance, sponsored by
Southeastern Ohio Traditional
Ouce Society, wiD be beld Sausrday from 8-11 p.m . at the Dance
FICIOiy in Athens. Ron Buchanan
wiD be the caller.
MIDDLEPORT · Easter bazaar
and bat.:e sale at Vaughan's Satur·
day 11 9 un. sponsored by Eleanor
Circle of Heath United Methodist

POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers will meet for a
luncheon Saturday at noon at the
Meigs County Public Library 1n
Pomeroy. Janet Bolin will have a
program on Ameriflora Call 992 ·
3887 for information.

.

: POMEROY- Keith Wood , local
wildlife protutor, will present a
rrognm on Wildlife, Past and Pre ·
saM, at the Meigs Coonl)' Museum
on San.day a1 2 p.m. PubliC mv•: cd.
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will have a

pq_duck supper Sawnlay at 7 !'·m:
11.'\he woodmen hall. Cindy Oliven
W11J spea1: on Family Life. Pubhc
invitt.d.
POMEROY - "Electric Grandmother" will be shown at the Meigs
Qlunl)' Public Libnlry ill Pomeroy

ROCK SPRINGS - A vegetable
soup dinner will be held Saturday
at the Rock Springs Church basement beginning at II a.m. There
will also be bean soup, c001 bread,
hot dogs , pie, cake and drinks .
Bring oontainers for soup to go.
LOTfRIDGE - Country music
night at the Lottridge Community
Center will he Saturday from 6
p.m. to midnight. Refreshments
w1ll be served and the public is
invited.
POMEROY - David Young and
The Victors will perform at the
Fmt Southern Baptist Church on
Pomeroy Pil&lt;e on Sarurday at 7:30
p.m.
RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the R ulland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8
p.m. to midnight with music by
Wh1te 's Hill Band. Pub~c invited.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Hysell Run Holi ness Church, Route 124, County
Road 15, will have revival Sunday
through April 18 at 7:30p.m .
nightly . David ScoU, Logan, will
he the speaker. Pastor Roben Manley invites the public.
COOLVILLE · Vanderhoof
Baptist Church, Coolville. will
have revival Sunday through
Wednesday at 7 p.m. nightly. Public invited .
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Charge
Chou w1 Upresent the cantata, "The
Gospel Song of Easter" at the
Asbury Umted MethodiSt Church
1n Syracuse on Sunday at 7 p.m.
Public invited .
POMEROY . The Unuy Smgers
w1ll present an Easter cantata ,
under the d1recuon of Sue Mathe·
ny. at the Zion Church of Chmt.
Route 143, on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Publ1c ~nvuerl .
POMEROY - David Young and
The Victors w1ll perfonn Sunday at
10:45 a.m. at First S01Jthern Baptist
Church on Pomeroy Pil&lt;e .
MIDDLEPORT · The First Bapust 0\urch choir w1U be present~ng
th e Easter cantata, "Hallelu jah'
l'ralse the Lamb," on Sunday at 7
p.m. at the church 1n Middleport.
Public invited.
SCIPIO - The Scipio Volunteer
F~rc Department will have a tractor
pull Sunday with weigh-in at ooon
and pull at I p.m. Classes are for
800.900, 1.000. arid 1,100 pounds
There w1ll also be childrens class·
es.
COOLVILLE · A ch1ldren' pro·
gram . "From the Manger to the
Cross," w1ll be presented at the
Bethel Church on Sunday at 3 p.m

Easter play to be
presented at Mason
p~tS&lt;nted

Jhis play at several churThe Christian Brethnen Church
and the Liberty Assembly of God ches in Ohio and West Y1rginia.
"We aU have a longmg 10
ChuR:h in Mason will be having a
crea~e,"
said Pastor Eaton. "We
joint service on Palm Sunday, April
want
10
leave something beh1nd
•i. a1 7 p.m. at the Christian
that
lets
others
know that we were
...ed&amp;tol Chun:h o( Mason. The
Jr · " tbna. "Ft.el the Nails." here . I believe that we derive a spepom*AJ. Paslor Demis cial satisfaction from creating
, of tile Christian Bnetbren something that glorifies God; and
wanb all area churches that is the intent of this play."
"In the scope of the world in
senmJ public 10 know they
• inYiled ID auero. l'llm ,. no which we live, our creat1011 of
"Feel the Nails" may not seem very
the moving signilican~ but our play has belped
• liiOdtr ll day (aliter and !ODIC people 10 make tifc changing
It fea~~m~ sevaal 5ongs, decisions for Olrist. And that
ltd in various biblical makes us fed men botoed than if
... a "dRam sequence" we 'd received the gJeal.esl accolade
.. wltit:lt llle dtlncttn find them- of mankind."
"I consider it a real joy 10 work
•
livi1lg al die lime o( mx:ifiwid!
my daugller again and am
lion o1 C11ri!L Thi.! enrmaining
looting
forward 10 spending a very
fast )IICtJd play only lasts an
• but the ~J~CJJQy of it will lin· special evening with the !olks at
Christian Brethren. We hope thai
wid! you much longer.
there will be a great nun our and
~ '1'ed lhe Nails" was wrillal by
are
praying that the Lord will neally
IJin Eaw:)ll, piSUir of Liberty Asbless!"
and fealllru be and his
11te Christian Brethren 0\urch is
Cllrissy. Chrissy is a
al West Vqinia Univer- localtld on Ccnlel Street in Mason.
6ty ol l'lrtmbu!J. They have WaJCh for lhe churth sign.

~fcrlllc~is

=
•
•
L

I

NEW YORK (AP) - Woody
Harrelson , who plays a gentle ,
naive banender on the NBC Sfries
"Cheers." says he used 10 lead a
wild life that mcluded bar fights.
" I barely survived my 'roaring
20s,' chasing all tbe material arid
physical thmg s I thought would
make me happy ," Harrelson , 30 .
says in an interview for Sunday' s
Parade magazine. " Violence was
almost an aphrodisiac for me .··
But in 1989, be said, be wound
up in a brawl so violent be feared
for his life. That's when he do:ided
10 change his ways.
Harrelson says he is lead10g a
less-materialistic life now with the
help of his girlfriend. who he
refused to name.
"This may sound corny, but we
have a spiritual tie," he said. " She
was a friend fusl This is the most
stable relauonship I've had."

POMEROY - Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Dance Club will have a
dance Saturday from 8-11 p.m.
with music by Junia White and Jhe
Band. Arthur Conant will be the
caller. Bring snacks for the snack
table. Public invited.

Cburth.
SALEM CEI'fffiR - Baz.aar and
bate sale at Salem Center Fire
House spoiiSllltd by Salem Center
United Methodist Church on Satur.
day f10111 9 am. 10 7 p.m

People in
the news

on Sarurday and Sunday at 2 p.m.
and at the Middlepon Library on
Monday at 4:30p.m.

MILLFIELD - There will be a
round and square dance Sarurday at
9 p.m. at Millf.eld at the Russell
Building. Music will be provided
by Smokey Mountain Drifters and
John Russell will be caller. Public
is invited.

Pomeroy--l.tlddleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll1 0, 1992
Page--6

~Com,;,unity calendar
C-•••il1 Calndar ite•s
1p; • twv da:JS lltfore • eva~t
IIIMI die dly ollbt eft•L I teas
... M receiftd wei ill ad VIlli«
te
It pdlkatlo• ill the nl·

Friday, April 1 0, 1992

PUMPKIN SEEDS DISTRIBUTED . Bill
Arnott, leh, distributed packets of pumpkin
seeds to students at Porllaud Elementary on
Thursday. The seeds will be used to produce
pumpkills for tbe pumpkiD growing contest dur-

in1 Racine's Fall Festival in Sep-tember . Pictured with Arnott, are, 1-r, froat, Holly Evans,
Tyler Johusou, Richard Cogar and Melissa
Francis. Back, Stn-e Chapell, Matt Wi~n. Jobn
Dailey and Darltna Flowers.

Racine Harvest Festival committee
plans for Sept. 25-26 activities
Racine is gearing up for its
annual Harvest Festival this fall
(Se pt. 25 and 26) and plans are
underway to grow the biggest
pumpk.ins ever for that conieS!.
B1ll Arnott, who coordinates
many of the events for the festival,
has been busy distributing packets
of pumpkin seeds to elementary
students in Jhe Southern Local District.

The specially ordered seeds
have the potential to produce
pumpkins weighing between I 00
and 600 pounds, according to
Amou.

The pumpkin growing con test
will be held Saturday, Sept. 25,
during the festival and it is open 10
the public for participation. If the
winning pumpkin is from one of
the schools that school will receive
a trophy . The student will receive a

$50 cenificate

as well as a trophy.

Racine Elementary receiverl 83
packets of seeds; Letan received
28; Syracuse received 30; and Ponland rettived 60 packets.
Arnott advises there arc 60
packets of seeds left and anyone
who would like a packet is encouraged to contact Amou at 247-2402
or Bill Nease at Home NatiOnal
Bank in Racine. 949-2210.

w1fe .

Smith gives Wildwood monthly report
The Wildwood Garden Club
met recently at the home of Evelyn
Hollon.
The meeting opened wilh devotions by Janet Theiss reading from
Daily Devotional, Psalm 56, and
"God Renews" by Helen Steiner
Rice.
For roll call everyone named
their favorite tree or ornamental
bush.
An invitation was read from the
Gallipolis Developmental Center 10
attend Jheir awards volunteer din ner.
A letter was also read from
Freda McGirr. regional director.
that the spring regional meetmg

will be April 25 at Lake Hope
Lodge.
For the arrangement of the
month, Evelyn HoUon had an Easter arrangement using yellow daffodils. gum tree: with a madonna on
a wood base. She also read the arucle "Flower Fragrance Appeal."
Dorothy Smith gave the monlhly report on the dogwood. She
noted there are 17 American
species, ranging from the tiny
Northern Bunchbetry 10 the Pacific
Dogwood, which may grow a-; high
as 80 feet. Other ~ies are shrubs
or small trees . The flower IS a
group of enlarged bracts around a
c luster of small true flowers. The

SAN DIEGO ( AP) - Ac tor
Corey Feldman says he once
preached the C\·ils of drugs while
he was still using them . This time ,
he says, he'sciean.
Feldman , 20, told students at
Patrick Henry High School that he
hasn't used drugs in 16 months.
"My life today is about belping
people ," he said Wednesday .
"They are not paying me to be
here . I· m not here because of the
couns."
He told tl1e students that drugs
and alcohol cost him about Sl million, his house, his car, and his

red fruits are as amactive as the
flowers and serve as food for
wildlife as well . The fine-grained
wood is unequaled for the making
of shuttles for weaving.
Janet Theiss showerl a shamrock
plant considered the national
emblem of Ireland.
Betty Milhoan showed black berries she had made using nora!
clay and popcorn kernals sprayed
with black enamel paint.
For the program, a whue ele phant sale was conducted by
Kathryn Miller, acting auctioneer
The meeting concluded with the
hostess serving a dessen course to
the members.

" When I started smoking pot, I
never thought I would become a
herom addict, " Feldman sa1d .
"One thing leads 10 another."
Feldman's mov1es include
"Stand by Me. " "The Lost Boys"
and "License to Dnve."

Robbers return $1,400 to church
BALTIMORE (AP) - Robbers charges if the man is caught
who stole $1.400 in church collec"My assumption is that lhe.se
tion s returned the money. along
with an extra S4 and a note of sor·
row, a pastor said.
"This is probably one for RipPastor Sharon Hausman led the
Icy's Believe it or Not," said the
Rev. Manin F. McGeough of Our "Blessed to be a Blessing" healing
Lady of Lourdes Church . "We got study at the Alfred United
Methodist Church recently . All
some interest on our robbery ."
Three men , one w11h a gun , three c hurche-s of the Northeast
robbed church volunteers March 15 Cluster were represented. The final
as they took cash and checks from meeung of the healing study will
be at Alfred on Sunday. Sunrise
panshioners to a night deposit.
A day later, a man went to the service and Easter breakfast will be
Roman CatholiC church and handed held Easter morning.
Nina Robinson visited her great·
a housekeeper two enve lopes con tain ing about $900 of the cash and granddaughter, Brooke Elizabelh,
chec ks. On March 27. a note with at Reno. Vicki and Dwight Ullman
more cash was passed through a are Brooke's parents.
Kevin and Tonya Brooks, Hal ·
mail slot at the church.
The n01e read : "I am truly sorry lie, Aaron and Heather, were Sunfor the taking the money. Please day guests of Kevin's parents, Ruth
forgive me. I am repaying it. and Lloyd Brooks . Hallie and
Aaron accompanied their grandparSorry ."
The housekeeper has identified ents 10 church.
the man to police, but McGeough
Nellie Parter anended the wedding
and reception of her greats.11d he would prefer not to press

Group takes trip
The you th department of Hill Side Baptist Church recently trav·
elerlto ML Sterling for a hymn sing
w1th several professional groups.
The group, under the supcrvi .
sion of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jones,
enjoyed The Perry 's , The McK amey's, The Kingsmen and The
Remey·s .
Following the concen the group
enjOyerl dinner.
Rev . James R. Acree Sr ., IS pastor of tbe church.

are people who fell on desperate
times," McGeough srud.

Alfred community happenings
niece, Lorie Adams, to Douglas
Warden.
Clarence Henderson is recovering at home fCIIIowing hosp1tal
tests.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton vis -

ited ber sister,lrene Null, in Cle ve·
land. Mrs. Null is very ill.

Announcements
POMEROY - Women Aliv e
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Carpenter's Hall 1n Pomeroy .
There will be a devooonal speaker
and Pat Ellison will be the craft
demonstrator.

Gibbs. post adjut.ant. Box 616,
Mason, W.Va., 25260, no later than
May 12.
Money will be paid to the
sc hools in the studeJit's name and
not 10 the students themselves. The
money is 10 be used for tuition and
books only.
The two winners will be an nounced at Post I 40's regular meet·
ing May ll
Post 140 will nominate officers
for the coming year at the May
meeting .

Complete nne bedd"~ng and
vegetable ,lants Bl0011ing
and Foliage HanginJ
Baskets Large selection
shrvbery and trees large
Selection of Easter Flowers
Opeu D111y, 9 a.m. to S p.a
Suada1, 1 to 5/..m.

4Mwllb
fl'llllll
l1 litis Areo

LARGE
14' ]( 70'
3 BEDROOM
2 BATH

ROUND lUI DELUXE
3 BEDROOM/2 llTHS
...,.._.-hoWM Slllll .O.k

W~..!, ,Self Storing
Stomw

~sioo9 s

AS lOW AS

PiR MO.

HAM. B.ICGI. Cl ~ '99" ~

CUlT OUT 0111111 AYWIIII~I m -lllt

33226 O.ild="s Home Rd
992-3847
Sunday School · 11 a _m
WordUp · 10 a.m ., 6 p.m
We&amp;lelday Scrv1oes · 7 p.m.
Midd lepotC Church of Christ
51h and M""'

Pastor: AI Hanson

F"" WUl Baptist Churdl
A"' Su.c!, M iddlepon
Pastor: Mart: Morrow

Sunday School · 9 :30 l .m.
Worship - 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m

Syo...- a..rm of G&lt;&gt;d
Apple m4 s..x..d Su.
Pa.aor Rr-.· D:n-.t R~u

c ......1a......
A""'ry (Sy""""')
Pulor: Wedty Thau:ber
Sunday School 9 :4S a.m.
Worsh.Jp · 11 a.m.

Sonoby Sd&gt;ool m4 Wonlllp- 930 a.m

E-Scr&gt;1as- 7 p.m
Woclneidoy Scr&gt;1as -7 p.m.

Wednesday Servn;:es · 7:30p.m

Cllam ot God ot l'nlpll&lt;q
OJ Wluo&lt; Rd. oil SL RL 160

Pas1or Kt1th Rldtr

PasuJr:
.... """""
s...day
School
· 10 a m

Sunday School. - 10 a.m
Worshlp - 9a.m , 6 p.m

T ~~esd ay Sc.!"Yrtts 7 p m

Scn-.co . 7 p.m

P.....- Gar, lhnc.
S&lt;hool . ~ ]() • m.

p.m

w-.y Sa&gt;~= . 1 p.m.

f«5 Run
Pulor: Wesley Thatcher
Sundi!.y School - 10 a.m.
WorsJup - 9 a.m

Episcopal

Saturd1y Servtce · 7:)0 p.m.
Sun.by School - 10 a.m

Wednesday Serv:ior:s · 7 p.m

Worship - II a.m. ,
Wcdne~ day Sef"\o't ce -7·30 p.m

Krno Churdl o(Chrlst
Wonhip-9:30 a.m

Thursday Serv1ces . b:30 p.m

Sunday School · 10:30 Lm

Healh (Middl&lt;p&lt;lrt)
Pa.&lt;J:ror· Frank Smith
Sunday School. . 9:30a.m
Wuntup - \0:30a.m
Wednesday Sei'VIccs - 6p m

Rutbmd i-lnt &amp;plist Churth
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Wonhip - I 0:45 l .m.

Pomer-oy Fin1 Baptist
East Main St .
P..nor Dr. Lee Moms
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Bearwaltow Rldgt Church of Christ
Pastor. Jack Colegrove
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonh1p - 10:30 a.m ., 6:30p.m
Wodntsday Services · 6:30 p.m

41872 Pumcroy Pike
P:utor: E Lamar O'Rryant
Sunday Schix&gt;l - 9:]0 a.m

Zion ChuHh of Christ
flomeroy,Harrisorwille Rd. (R t 14 3)
Putor: interim paSLor
SW1day School - 9:30a.m
Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm
Wednesday SeMces - 7 p m

Wonh1p 10-45 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Servu:es - 7:30p.m .

Uradbury Church of Christ

Wonhip - I 0:30a.m.
Flnt Southern Baptist

Pallor: Tom Runyon

Middleport First Baptist
C~r SUlh &amp;: Palmer
P1nor . Rev. James A. Seddon

Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.

Worship - I 0:30a.m

Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:15 a_m
Wonhip - 10:15 a.m.
Wcdnelliay Scrvu.%s - 1 p.m.

Tupptn Plaias Church of C hrist
Ptstor: Robert Foster
Sunday School - 9 a .m .
Worship · 9:45a.m ., 6 :30pm

Radnt First Baptist
Putor St~e Deaver
SundAy School - 9:30 a.m
Wonlup · 10,40 Lm., 7JO p.m.
Wednesday S&lt;Me&lt;s · 7JO p.m.

Duler Church

or Chri~

P.uuw: Uris S&amp;ewan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m

Worsh1p · I 0:30a.m
Wednesday SeMces · 7 p m

Sih'tr Run Baptise
P:utor Bill LnLie
Sunda)' School - 10 a.m.
Wonh.1p - II a.m . , 7J0 p .m .
W cdncsday Scrv tccs - 7:30 p .m

Rutland Church of Chri51
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School -9 :30a .m

\1t. Lnion Baplist

Hol iness
fin~ G~

8il* H._. Oar-ell

II.! nuk oil Rl. 325
Pasaac R" 01ldl ~
Sl.md.ay Sd.ool - ~ 10 I m.

.\ timnviUt
Pa!ilor· Wesley Thau:hr: r
Sunday School - 9 L m
W o~tup 10 a.m

Wcntup · 10J0..L•.7 J0p.m.
w~,.Xn~-7J0 p. m

w~,-

.. BiWt Hal~ O•nh

PoortChapd
Pastor Rorencc Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m
Wofihlp \0 a.m

15 Pearl SL . l.bddlepcn.
p..,.,.-_Rev Ror ~

- ~.30 .....
W&lt;ntup · lCI..lO un.., HO p.m
Wcdneld.ly ~ . 7 J(l p.m
Sunday -

Hysdl I • Heli!H9. a.....
l'awr Rolrn ~

s......,

c.

Pastor: Rev _ E~rt Shuler

Bradford Chun:h of Chrisl
S1 R1 124 &amp; Co Rd I

Pastor- . Derek Slump
Sunday School - 9:30am
Worsh1p · 10 30 a.m , 7 30 p m
Wcdncsday ScrvJccs 7 30 p m

Old &amp;the~ Willlbplist Church
2860 1 St Rt 7. Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m
E-..crung . 7·30 p.m.
Thursday Semcc - I 30 p.m

or

Surcess Ro.ad Church
Christ
P:a~1or: Joseph B. Hos.tun

Hillside B-aptist Ch ur("h
St.Rt.l43jlUIOffRt.7
P&lt;l&gt;tor : Rev . James R. Acree, Sr
Sunday School - 10 a.m

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worstup · 10 a .m ., 7 p.m
Wednesday Serv1ces 7 p.m

Wontup · II a.m .• 6 p.m
Wr.dnesday Servlcrs · 7 p.m

Llberiy Christian Churrh

Dex1er
Pa§lllr: Woody Call
Sunday School · 1D 1m
E-vming · 1 p.m
Wednesday Scrvu::e · 7 p.m.

llop&lt; Bapelst Chapd
570 Gram SL . Middlepon
PiUlOr: David Aryan, Sr
Sunday School - I 0 a.m
Worlhip- II a.m .• 7 p.m.
W~y Serv!cr~ , 7 p.m

Langs..·illt Chrlstian Church
Sund•y School · 9:30a.m
Worshrp - 10:30 a .m .. 7:30p.m

Vktory Baptise
lll ,\ 2nd SL . Mlddlepon
Pastor: Jarne.s F._Ktt~tt
WOrltup - 10 a.m .. 7 p.m
W e: dncscby Savle~:s - ) p.m

Wednesday Servioe 7:30p.m.

F.ailh Raplisl Churrh
R.ul~d SL, Mason
Sunday School 10 a .m

Wonh.tp - 11 am,6p.m
Wednuday Servttts · 7 p.m .
F....a Run BapUst
Pastor: Ariut Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Wvnh1p - II a.m

Harr-tso.,llk Holiaoeu ~pttr
Pa=o- R&lt;- rom "'- ill&lt;

Wonhxp · 10 a.m
WetkJesdJ:y SeM!%S - 6 p.m

Sundl .. Sd.ool I 0 ,~,. m
Wonbq&gt; : II Lm- . 1 J0 p.m.

Rutland

7.30 p.m.

PaslOr: Arthur Crabtrt:t
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worship - I 0:30 a_m
Thursday Sei"Vl.tts • 7 p.m

Latter-Day Saints

SaJnn Cmter
Pas1.0r. Ron F1ercc
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m
Worship - 10· 15 a_m

Pastor Rev _Gilhl-rl Cr~ig, Jr

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wootup · I 0:45a.m.

Won!up · 10,45 Lm.
Thunday s.rn~ 710 p.m
Rutland F'tft Will B.aplist
SalanSL
Pu1oc Rev . Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m
E"¥aUDC · 7 p.m.
Wecklcs.day Servu:e5 7 p.m.
Fl"...-111 lllp&lt;lsl
Muldlcp&lt;Kl
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhi:p - 11 a.m.
V:,~~~~=Se~....,~
- - 7J0p.m.

Lutheran
SLJ_......_a..rm

Pat.VJr Rev Gcorce C Wand:.
Sund.ay Sdtoa1 9 30 a.m

Worship II

.t..m

S.L P.url lA...,._ C.wdi
Comer S)'CmiOR' .t. Seamd Sl . Pancro...-

Paw.-. LMn A. laO Shmllcr
Sonloy Sdoool - 9C'Il '-"'Wonllap . ll ...._

Un1ted r.1ethodist
UUinl1 J4re , .
W~ · 9.J0ua (lu A 1Dd Sunl.
7 JOpm On! A ~Sunl
Wedoesda) Savotr . 7 J0 p.m.
~

.

llo&lt;hanJ
Paswr: Ktnne1h Bahr
Sunday School · 10 a.m
W orstup- 9 a.m
Wr.dnesd.ay Serv•cc~ · 10 a.m
Cannd
Pastor. Kcnnc.th Baker
Sonday School - ~: JO a.m.
W .:trsh1p - 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;: 4th Sm)

Mom Inc SW
Pauo.- Kamcth Baker

SWKby School · 9:45 a.m
Wordup - 10 :30 a.m.
Thur&gt;day Semcrs- 7-30 p.m
Sunon

Pastor KtiV'Ieth Baker

Retdnill~ Church of Christ

S unday School · 9:30a .m
WonhipSc:rvicc: l0:30Lm

\lnp c..,..._, Pori!lo

Bible Study. Wednesd..y, 6JO p.m

s..-~

Radnt
?utor. Roger G~
S~.mday .5.ctw::Q · 10 a.m
Wcnhlp - II un.

.......

Pa- Sdoool
""""""
Sund.y
'I".30 .un
Wot"dup II am . 630 p.m

Hob,.. Churdl ol Cllrist In
Cbrtstlan Unktn
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday School · 9·30 a.m
E w:nang · 1 p.m
Wednesday Servlces · 7 p.m

Wordup 9un
Sund.a) Xhool . 10 ..___,._
Thun.da~ Scn-..:r:s 7 p. m

Uartford Church of Chrlsl in
ChrlsUan Union
Hanford, W .Va .
Pauor : Rev . David McMan u
Sw1day School- II a.m.

PaQO!' 81Dt4a. ~- ebt-r
Wor.ittp q :)() J. m
\.md •~ ~ 10 X&gt; 1m
Vt ednn.d.a~ 5c:l' Kn . 7 JO p m

P.u1or: Rcv. James S11u:rfJeld
Sunday School · 9:45a.m

Evt:ninc · 7 p.m
Rutland Church ol God
Pa3lof : John f . Corror1n
Sunday School · 10 a .m.
Worshrp . II 1 m . 7 pin
Wednesday SeMct.s - 1 p.m

161 Mutbrny AYO., I'ooneroy, 992-5898
PaS1oc Rev. WaJrer E. Hc.lfll
Sat Cm. 4:45-S:IS ~m .; ~au · 5:30 p.m.
Sun. Coo.· N5-9.15 a.m.,
Sw. Mass - 9:30a.m
Daily Man · IDO a.m

?Jswr Carl H1ci1
Sunday School - 9 a.m
Worsh1p . 10 a .m .. 7 p.m
fh umb; ServJ[J:S . 7 p.m

Our Sn-- I.AcJMn. a.-dJ
WalnUJ and Hmry Sl~. Ra~•ood. W Va

~

Pasur Slwm

H..~m~n

J-

.__,

__

Pataor Clurks E.a.at
Sunday Sdloal 930 a.m
W~ - 11)10._..

W r:dne:s.d.~ ~'lCC:'i

Sunday School - ~ - 30 a.m
Wonhlp 10:45 a.m . (1~1 &amp;r: 3rd Sun)

Laurd Cliff Ffft Metbodbt Cluardri

P1stor: William Williarn1
SLI'Jday School · 9·30 a.m

7 )() p. m

-

Raane

Socnd Hoart C a - Cllurdl

App~Gr-owc

PwC.....
?&amp;aor-- Lan A. lzach Shrdtlr:r
w~ 9.30un
s...by Sdoool · lO.JO .un

l:.asl L&lt;urt

ML Mori.ah Church of God

S-.nntSt Cbutdl fA tht' Su.arcnt

Rev Glenn McMillan

• PaslOf :

SW'tday School - 9-30 a.m
W Orlhlp · I(}: 30 a .m .. b p.m

C.arleton lntertknominatlonaJ

-.1

Cllat« Otun:fl

fJ(

Rmh&gt;illo
Paw:. Rn Clurtc1 C.cn
930 a m
Sunda\ SctKD IQ- JO ._m
\\'("d~~ ~"l!Ct:!. 7 30 p.m
\l.'ooJup

TuptM7"1&gt; Pbias Sl. P.J

Slu.ron 1-busman
S.Ur.d.l .. ~ 9 am
W~p lO a m
Tucl4.r! ScJT~as 1 J0 p m
PaM~~"

Won.tup - \0:30a.m , 7 p.m
Wednesday Se!VIl%S 1 p.m
Rutland Biblr Mdbodisl
Pastor Rev _lvan Myen:
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m
E"'cmng - 7 p.m
Wednes do~y Serv~c:es - 7 p.m.
CoohiUt Uaited Mdllodist Pa.rlm
Putor: Harold E . Alloway -Priddy

Coolvtllt- a.um
Main &amp;. Fifth Sl
Sun~y School - 10 a.m .
w
9 a.m
Tw::W-ay ~Mces - 7 p.m.

"""'r -

Bttttf'l Cburdl
Townstup Rd ., 468(
Sunday School - 9 a m
Worsh1p 10 a.m
Wednesday Scrvlcn - \0 am
Hockingport Church
Gnnd Slrttl
Sunday School · I0 a.m
Wonh1p - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvu::es- A p.m

Torrll Cllurdl

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Sct.ool - 9:JO a.m.
Wonhtp · IO:lO a.m.

Tank
•'!," High Density

Carpet Pad
•Detachable Hlleh

GREEN VALLEY MOll
OliO•

IS LOW AS

$158

87

PER MONTH

.. K&amp;C JEWELERS

RACINE PLANING MILL

0

Mill Wo1k
1· tJht nf l Mak r n~

Syracu$P
992 3978

.

MEIGS TIRE
CENTIR, INC.

'8URANCE , :~:.

-. ........

~··

Joho f fultr . Mqr
Pfl 9'n HOI
PomtorQy

POMUOY. OHI0-992 -111117
Bill QUICKEL
CHURCH SUPPLIES
&amp; BIBLES

(.\\\;(( S,rw

(5.,.r.l

93 Mitt Stroet
Middleport. Ohio 46760
16141992 -6667 - J99B OOKSI

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
2U South Zllll

'

DAVIS-QUICKEL .- :..·; "·
AGENCY INC. ' ~ £ 2;
~·-

111 E. M!ln SIIHI
991-3785 . Pommy

UWUNGS.{OATS

the Nazart"M

PHtor Re...- Herbert Gnte

Lctan. W.Va RL 1
Pastor: James 11wa
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worstup · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Servu:e - 7:30 p.m.

Woniup · 10:40 a.m .. 7 p.m
W ainod.ay &amp;mc:es · 7 p.m
Hnm Churdll olthf ~uatt'fK'

Pastoc Glendon Suood

Cahary Blblt Churd
Pomeroy Pike, Co . Rd.

Sunday Schod. · 9 ·30 a .m
Wontup · 10:30Lm., 7 p.m.
Wab:iday Sc~ - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Spiritual Faith Church
Sute JJ8, Anllqu1ty
Paswr A. Stewan
S unday School - I0 a.m.

1H SalwaOon Army

Calvary Pilgrim Chapd

GRAVELY

•l"qDII

Pasto.: Rev . V1ctor Roush
Sun day School. QJO am
Wor1.h1p . l la.m., 7:30 p.m
W o:i nesda~· Sc:rvJC~ · 7:30p .m

FU&amp;Iir Taknack Churdl
Bailey Run Road
~or. Rev. Emmct1 Rawson
Smday Sctw · I{}00 a.m

Sunday Schooi9 :JU a.m

Pastor: DaVJd Dalley

E-..aung - 7 p.m
Thursda)' Scmcr · 7-30 p.m
Rrjolcing Lift Chun:h

Evminc 7 p.m

500 N. 2nd Ave . M!ddlepon
ranor R~-.. - M• chae.l Pang•o
Surw!ay School - I 0 a.m.
WedneJday Se.rvace~ - 7 p.m.

Stf"lll'VW~

1411 Bndcem.an Sl. Syracuse
Puwr Roy (Mae}Thompwn
Sunday School · 10 a.m

Pentecostal

Evaunc -6 p.m.

l'ontocoslal A""'"biJ
SL RL I 24. Racine
PaSlor: Willi.-n Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Everunc . 7 p.m.
WedllCsday Sctv~ces . 7 p.m

p.m

Cbun:-b

Oil Rl. 124
Puaoc Fmd Han
Sunday School - 9:30 t .m
WonhrJp · I 0:30a.m.• 7:30 p.m.

114E••·n
991 · 51 JO Pooiloroy

BulbncJwn
Puw.-: Ray UU&lt;X:rm Ut
Sunday School - 10 a.m

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Hanisonvllk Prrsbyl.e riu Churctrt

Wontup . 1 p.m
w~bu: 7 pm

Worship - 9 a .m
Sunday School · 9 :45 Lm

Clwi5ti.u ffllow*lf&gt; Cmttr

!\iiddll'port Pftitlyll'fian

204 Condor St.

N.ahonw tde In\. Co

Pome'roy, OH.

l)t C olumbu\ . 0

992-2975

pt W M••rl
"1 ll11 P om~ro-,

. .,

Sunday SQ\ool - 9 a.rn
Wor\hip - 10 1.m . 4 p.m (2nd &amp; 4th Sun.(J
S) ncuSC" Flrsl United Presbylerlaa
Sunday School - 10 a.m
.
Worshtp · II a.m., 4 p.m. (I st &amp;. 3rd Sun.) '

Seventh-Day Advenlisl
Stvmth · DIJ Adventist
Hu. Rd , Pomeroy

Mul~rry

Pastor Rob

Sn yd~r

Satun1ay Sc!"YJct.i
Sabbalh School - 2 p.m
w~dun J

fallll G - ' Churcll

Lone 11oaom
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wonfup - 1&amp;45 am . 7 30 p m
Wcdnc:sday 7 30 p.m

MI. Htrmon UaiiNI Br~ra
In Christ Chun;h
Texu Communny off CR. 82
Pastor: Robtn Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

~Olin c--•ity Clllurch

Palk:W" Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m
E""""'« · 7p.m
W - y ScMa . 7 p.m

,•

•

Worshi p · IO:JOa.m.. 7.30 p.m.
W ednc.1d.ay Se.mces - 7:30 p.m.

ldod Fallll Cllunh
Rt. 7.., Pcmemy Ry-Pa u
Pastoc Rev . R.obtn E. Snulh . Sr
Surday School - 9:30a .m
Wonlup · 10:30 a.m .. 7 p m
Wr.:dncsday Strvrc:e - 7 p m

2 !fl. mde1 north o( Rcodsvillt!
on Sllle Route 124
?anor: Rev. Robert Mart.Jey
Sunday School · I0 a.m
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wtdnadav Services . 7

·1,.,.,;-1 Kr•lldJ ffirl
221 W. Moin St ., Pomeroy

t

'

992-U69
271 llorth

s......

992-5432

, .=-i ·

Veterans

- _.. .Memcniol Hospital
II S l

Mrm..-tal Dr

Pomf'roy

Wf' J dl Oo(IQr \

f'tt'\(rlphon \

n7 -lt04

'"·775'

EW1NG FUNERAL HOME
- n.~"'"

nnd

, .,1 .,.,. -lf11n,, ·

Established 1913
H2-2121
106 ....,

....

\.

(df'n Unlltd Brtthfft In Chrtsl

fU: ,

Space For Rent
5
2.50 Per Week
call992-2156

. -1

Presbyterian

I 1¥11 \

I'OMEIOY. OHIO

~
•

Wedne.W..yScrvtce~ - 7 :30p.m. ·~

Burtiqtoe Co.mllftit}' Church

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

bOI UIT MAIN

,

".,

Middl&lt;'port Penl«osbl
Hurd Ave
Panor· Rev Oart. Baku
Surw!ay School - I0 a.m
Evc.rung - 6 p. m

DyftYiat c-•""ky Ourrh
Sunday School. · 9:30 a.m
Wonlup · 10,30Lm .. 7 p.m

786 NORTH SECOND AVE .

INSURANCE~
­
SERVICES =_t~-

,,'

Sthenvill~ Word of Faith

Thunday Srmcr . 7 p m

c•;,A,.

Brogan-Warner

.

llamsonviUe: Road

\tickUtport Community Churdi
575 Pt•rl St ..'l..ldlepon
Pastor. Sun And:non
Sin:lay School I 0 a .m
Evcrun&amp; -7·30pm
Wc::dnocby Sc:rv1c.c - 7 JO p.m

Mwsr 0-aptl Ourch
Sup . Md.e Malson
Sunday Khool · I 0 a_m
~":'~II a.m., 7 pm
W
Sc:mcc 1 p.m

I

.'

h a nng . 7:30p .m
Thursday Scmce - 7:30pm

115 ~mul Ave , Pom ~roy
~y School - \Q-JO am
Wootup - JOOOa.m. 7 J0 pm

S&amp;km S.., Ruu.nd
Pwof: Roben E. Mus~r
Sunday School · I0 a..m
Wonlup · II :15 a.m .. 1 p.m
llamd.y ScMa 7 p.m

. 1

1-'mor Re\1. Blackwood
S unday School · 9:30a.m .
Wonhrp 10:30 a.m.. 1.30 p.m
Wednesday Serv1ct- 7:30p.m

Trlolly C•.,..-al Cllurdl
Pauor: Rev. Roland Wlldman
O.urt:h · 9:15a.m.
Wontup · 10:30 a.m

Cot~~muaity

.'

Fainiew Bible Church

?-astor: William lustu
Sunday School · 9 JO a.m

Hazd

.

•

r.tlud First Chllrth ~ tlw N azann~

w~ ScMu: - 7

'

Whllr's Chapd Wesley.an
Cool viDe Road
Pas1or: Rtv _Philltp Rtdmoor
S unday School · 9:30 un
Wont11p - 10:30 a .m
Wednesday Servia= - 1 p.m

RuUa.d 0~ ~ tht Nuarmr
Pas1.or: Sanud Duyc

Crow' s Family Restaur ant

PHARMACY

Church·~'

Frffilom Gospel Mlulon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Paswr: Rev . Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9 :30a.m
Wooh1p- 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m.
WediJesday Semce - 7 p.m

Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Won.hip - II a.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday ~mct.5 - 1 p.m

~f'W

•'

Kingsbury Road
Pas to~ Oyde W. Hmdenm
Sunday School · 9:30 1.m
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wt=-dnesday Semce - 7 p.m .

Wecbesday $.emces · 7 p.m
O.rdl oflllo N.......,.
PaAor Rev Thonw McClung
Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Won!up - IO:l0Lm. and6p.m
Wednaday Setvict.s - 7 p m

Southf'f"n Ouster

PJUOI'" Roger Gncr
Sunda)i School - 10 un
W ontup 9 a.m

Church of God

""' -

Pa.nor Flom(cr Snulh
SWJcby SdJooJ. · 10 am
WoMp - 9a.m

PasuJr: a...te. lonn

Worship -9:30a.m., 7:30p .m.
Wednesday Services · 7 ~ 30 p.m

SouUJ ~thd NrwTtstam~l
Silver Ridge
PaslOr Duant Sydoutric:ter
Sunday School · 9 a .m
Worship · 10 a.m .• 7 p.m
Wcdnesday Servtce - 7 p.m

Snowvillr

Sunday X:hool - 9 JO a.m
Wonhip - 10.30 a.m .7 p..m.
l"lMmday Sen-xt:'!i 7 p.m

Christian Union

Su nday Wonhtp · 2:30p.m :
Thursday servi crs · 7:30p .m

Wonlup · 1(}.45a.m. 7 p.m
W~y ~mce~ - 7 p.m

Sunday Sdoool - 9:30 a.m.

\ll. Oh"t' Lllilrd ~hU•dist
on 1:!--t bdund Wdtr:w-illt'

Philip Swnn

~usc Sdtlemml Churcb

R«&lt;&lt;svillo F ello-ip
Ourdl tl tilt !'tau.nne
p....,. John w. lJcugt.,
s...t.y Sdlool . 9,JO om

Wont.p - lfr]()am,6:30p.m
Wtdnaday Servius - 7 p.m.

Hemtock. Grow~ Church
PulOr. Chartes Dunigan
Sunday school - 10:30 1.m
Won:hip - 9:30a.m .. 1 p.m

Pastor~

~ School - 9:30a.m
Wonlup . IOJO o.m .. b:JO p m
w~ Semoes . 7 p.m

Rod Springs
Pomor· Ke1th Rad ~ r
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.

Mason Churrh ~ Chrl!i:l:
\-tillerSl, Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Worship - 1 I a.m . 7 p.m
Wednesday Scrvia=s · 1 p.m

Sunday School . 10:30 a.m
Woohip - 9:30a.m.
ThuOOay Scrvtces - 7·30 p.m

Full Gosp&lt;l Llghlhouso
33045 HUtnd Road, Pomero)•
Pastor: Roy Hunlcr
Sunday School · I 0 a .m
E.,.enmg 7:30p.m.
T uesda~ &amp; Thun.day ·1:30pm

~dlqKW1 Chant. of the 'azanne
p....,...~~n Uoyd D Gnmm . h

Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m ., 6p.m.

P;utor. Joe ~ - s~yre

lkthlchtm Baptist

WeG\(:sJ.ay SeMttj - 7 p m

Pomeroy

Wednt )day Servu:es . 7:30pm

WOfship · I 0:30A.m., 7 p.m

Suno:hy School . 9:45a .m
Ev~: run g 6:30pm
W t"il naday Scrv~cts · 6:30p.m.

E11erung - 7 p.m.
Strvla= · 7 p.m

W~nday

Wonlup · i0,30un.6pm

Eunhat! (Gracr) Keto
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.

P~stor :

Sd&gt;ool . ~ ]() a m.
WonJup - 10-t5 l.m. ,7 pm
Ttnnd.J&gt; ~"Itt 7 30 p.m

w-., Sav.tr .

L G~;tts , TI

s...t.y School · 9 Jtl a.m

Pastor: Kt!rlh Radcr
Sunda)' School . 10 a.m.
Worsh ip· I I a.m ., 6 p.m
Thursday Servu::e1 · 7 p.m

~

Wonllap · 6

l'han~

Paslor:

Flaht·o ods

' "' l..I'C" C1twdl ~ God
~

128 Mill S... Mlddlepon
Pastor: Chuck McPhersot~
Sunday School · 10 a .m.

Enterprist

W~ -ll a.m

Wc:dn::wia)

Nazarene
RariM F1na C'aurdr rAttw Nu.artnt

FEATURES:
•Sell-Storing Storm11l
•15 Cu. Fl.

FEATURES: •Teii\U~••
CellinQS o2 X ..

AlL-TOO-CAI'f EAT SOUP-8AJAD.DE881tRT

Pomeroy Westside Churdlr of Christ

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

__.L .......

BAR.........14.48

Assembly of God

Smday School - 9:30a.m

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

-----

Pulllfroy Churdt ol Chris&amp;

Services·

Syracuse 992-5776

o40 Gal. Hoi Water

tpf&amp;lfASI ftC!! I
Ode&lt; 2 Eggs orrv lf'll8 'NIIt! Homemade Buttannlk Bltcults. ond Cortee 99'

212 W. Main St
Pastor: Andrew Miles
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p .m
We&amp;lesday Services - 7 p.m

Anliqulty Bapllsl
Pulor. Kenneth Snulh

Refrigerator

RT. 33, MASON, WV NEXT TO FAST 4-U ""MASON MJTEL

Vanl.and1 and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday Sch&lt;:JIOII - I0:30 a.m.
E.,.ening - 7:30 p.m.
Wtdncsd.y
7JO p.m

Hubbard's
Greenhouse

IOIO'flllND OOOD'I AI.WAJI COODNC AT

OI'EN SIJN)AYTHRJ ~Y. e-o"" FRIDAY &amp; SAl'\JROAY.I.,.IO"'

Church of Christ

MI. Moriah Baptlst
Founh &amp; .\ohm SL, MKidlcpon

PRESENT HOME
TOO SMAI.I.?
TRADE
IT IN!

Post offers two scholarships
For the 14th consecutive year,
the Smilh-Capchart Post 140
American Legion of New Haven
w1ll giVe two SSOO scholarships 10
students who are children of Post
140 Legion members.
To be eligible, students must be
graduating from high school and
planning 10 further their education
by attending a school of higher
education.
The student's name, the name of
the legion~ parent and the name
and address of the school of their
choice must be submitted to Ray

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

Apostolic
Churdo or J&lt;SUS Christ Aposlolk

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
IALEI &amp; IIIVICE

992 -7075
177 Notth l .. ond ho.

ll!ddlopo• t, Ot.o

.

·-.
•

�FridaJ. Aprll1 0, 1992
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10, 1992

Friday,

SNAFlJ® by Bnltt' Beattir

Giswa;
2 1 -, I l l - OOf, ~

4

Business Services
mr-B&amp;r
s.o-.

0...

\TTE\TI(r\

a.

Tr•y·WII ,._. " - "-L
foiU'" 1.-.l D!f-Bill o..lr

---

~·

lotandoy Pope&lt;
TuesdayPWedn&lt;5d•yP"'""
Thursday Pope&lt;

Call 992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A .•. -5r.•.- SAT.8-l2
CLosED Slll!mn
• Ado o...ok Calia, M-oe . . . , _....m •-• loo ~pood
• Receiwe dl.to-1 for .d. ..... • ........._
• Free Ada: Ct--:r .... f . . l .... ..._ 15 _..,. will I.e
..... lda,. •l- d.atp.
• Price of ad f..,. al oapilat lrcarn • ~ pritt J .d ca.t

1

Public NotiCe

- - ...., 40 ,.., 1o
. . . IDA'
t COlT* oflat

15;--olongtho
• 1ho lata 14
. - es -124M~ to lhll
-·
, _ ollol 14;

_

eastefiJ

-

u.m~

along

43 MilD the

JAIES W. sunl£
-lolhlnkal-

s-:!:~.:
ol our huallllod

(h s-lay Cells)

llld ~~' w. -~
.... ~.ldllllvid
Doiley lor his opeciol
worda of ;cacbt ..S
ond him
his wile,
llol&gt;bM,
lorllld
lhll
-tilul oongo they
._. W• would elooliu
to thank the Die+l•d

2112192lln

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•
•Vinyl Siding

-Replacement
Window

-io-

1o&lt; their opoc:iol ,.,.,.._ in
providing cornlart llld
during lhll
dilfi&lt;:ult timw ho

JliiORS

Office ol

c

-Rooting
~nsulallon

JAIIES IEESEE
992·2772or
742·2097

endured.
Tho Sullie FomiiJ

NOTICE OF DRAWING

. ,; ...

539Brpn"'-

oiJunn

1

. . . . County, Ohio

April '7. 1992
ToAI_It...,.
Concem:
1
On Fridoy, .,. 17111 _,. o1

o·A.II., .. tho ollice ol ...
April

1112. atl:30

eo-· .... o l - o l

lwil bo

..... County, Ohia, Junn
publicly chwn lor
1ho lloy 1992 Tern! ol tho

Com•on PMM Court ol
uidCounly.
W-llrdwd,
L O. lleCoy
Corllmiuionen of Jurors
10, Ill:

Public NotiCe
NOTICE OF SALE
By ol .. Ordor of
Sale i.....-1 out of Iiiii
CoM111on - . Court ol
llloigo County, Ohio, in . .
ca•• of the leader
llortgago
Co•paii'J,
-till....
Ilia, ..

Arnies Sport Lounge
Feny

Brings You
"Beat Blast 92'"
Friday, April1 Oth

_J_

.... O.fondenta. · - •
j 'a uent a-win •• I wd.

being c.. llo..lll~ ill
said Court. I wil ollor lor

Meet Mrs. WIS. Vo9"e
Hawaian Trope 91

Nleot ... lr_t_ol ...
Courtlloun in P-OJ,

Tie
~
Come dressed as 'Tadty
Tounsts". Will . . . prizes,
T-Shirts &amp;a lot more Palty
with WGTR Live RaOO. O.J

lloigo County, Ohio, .....
...., ol April. 1112, ..
10:00 A.ll., lhe IDIIIIIIring

lliddlopol1. Ohio

Card of Thanks

IN MEMORIAM
In Loving Memory Of My Little Brother
AllEN RAY BRICKLES
who would haw been 34 years old today.

57-59 Coull,

Gallipolis, OH.

Open Every Sunday wrth
Full Menu Plus a

"SUNDAY S7 00
SPECIAL
Children $4.50

WIIH. - - pr I

IJ,

' the ..... being at 1he
norl't IMI CorJ*' of lot M
ill II. C. Hobart'a Sabdi.,;oion to lhe Yiloge of
lliddleporl; ... ...., in a
southerly direction about
127 ,_, along the line

SMOKING &amp; NONSMOKING AREAS
11 :00 A.M. 'Til3:00 P.M

- - lots 13 llld M in
•ubciYWon 1D a point 0111 •
. alley 120 . . _ ..._ ...
J. J. Whilo HoMooPf-'Y. tho boing ..

Closed on Mondays
Except for Private
Parties.

'"'·-•-oiLot

FOR RESERVATIONS

t4 in II. C. HOBARTS
ADDITION: "'-coo ..........

CALL 446-9545

north side ol tho - ·

PubliC Notice
PU1UC NOTICE
Biela will bo I
aoed -Iii

1;Clll p.m.

011

April _ , lor

Gr-=•

mowing
ad c-lely lor tho .,.. 1892. -

ond~

,

Real Estate General

.......
Jon:E~

... -

OFFICE V12-2886

.....
___
,...,,,_
All IIIIlS

~

lEI'S = . - E
SERVICE
992·5335.,
915·3561..._

I the IKingdom ol God were a heartbeat away;
I donl llnow what I'd dol I canl !ell what I'd oay.
But rlneverlorgel how il happened thai day;
Tllal mr ...._ brolher waa taken IIWIIY·
They 18id he was Iough, bul his heart, it •••
gold;
.._ dory- sad, but it has to be told.
FotJhere fl laloo comfort unt~ I am old,
He c:ouiiMl be bought and he wouldnl be aolci
He stood up lor kids and I c.n ~ understand,
Why M ignorant fool had a lleering wheel in hia

But then they all say it was part of lhe plan;
Thai fW! got to beli- and I'm praying I can.
So, God. il you're up there, don't lead me astray;
And llhen my time comes please don't turn me

__,_

217L.._.R.

HAULING
COAL
LIMESTONE
AGRICULTURAL
LIME

But .. I C8ll do now, and alii can say
Ia. lillie bnldler, I love you; I miu you today.
Happy Birthday, lit1te Brother.
Your ailler, Joyce

REASONABLE RATES

742-2138

Happy Ads

--ns.

Lot's of people
at30 lead
happy useful
lives.

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Ya.

304·273·5555
4-!Hfn

LINDA'S
PAJIIniiG &amp; CO.
1&amp;o TN,..~ 01 ,.....,
-Ill Us Po II f«

r.·

INTERIOR &amp; unRIOR
37632 Wesl Sltade Road
P-y. Olio 45769
614-91HIIO ~oo.. _
Aft... ,...
c.II91HI92
mopd

.l&gt;

DALLAS It WEBER • Ownor

All SWIS -VINTAGE ..J
&lt;OWCTAIU
"IW..Av ....

~~IT'S

FOR

You··•••
The Classlfteds H~ Something

For Everyone!

The Apartment 0\Neller. .
The Home Seller .
The Car Buyer
The Butler For Hire ...
The Do-lt-Yourselfer.
The Mother's Helper. .
The Job Seeker.
The Bargain Reaper .

••

Apnl 12 · 18. 19'12

The Daily Sentinel

IIDDUPOIT, OM.
tn-lltH:ll.-4:00 ..

m-•n

All• S:OO

r:

1-M2· ...

YOUNG'S

--Addi-

WPBITIR SIRVKI

-(;utlor-

~ llld Plumbing
..floollng
......... IExtorior
Polnli

(FREE ~TIIAn5)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pa•nlJ, OWo

3-13-92-lln

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

-a

...........-----·- ·-·--- .992-5692

WANTED
otd Currency Dated
Between 1861·1929.
Eapec:iltlly National
Bltnk Currency from
any lltltla. Paying
$300.00 and up lor
apeclllc plecett from
Racine, Pomeroy,
Middlepott and
Ravenswood.

PETE SIMPSON
Evenings

1-614-764-2101

31

Help Wanted

Cern=
=~ :J!ueP..ant. ~

dWga nurse. Pnfw GePPk
Ucllgra.ind.
U.·

ps

--

Uc:ensed .,d Boncled

PH. 614-992-5591

INSIDE SAilS COONSELDRS
... AnT Al:copting Applicol
..... FOf ~ FOf Tho Ooonlno 01
OUr Gol1lpolis Locotiai.. Oul..lng _ , . - Ap-

&lt;"sJAYMAR

To Wotk iliA' loGO 1..11. 7:110 P.ll. • - b l y Sot Til
2:110 P.IL Soloty • 1101 Po!onllol . .h T1lno

----l'L-~

. .,.. ..,m

PLM

Call614·992-6637
51. Rl. 7

10

-__ __

,....,,.
.. ID
Z5IIO laD~

a...
sa
-

OH.

·~- .... ...,. cll:lll.l.

112/tfn

-

T&amp;M BUILDERS

rar.g.

LOSS

e.nt.n

E.-.._

5960 At.
WY 25504.

-lor longCMIIIod- 1onn coro focilily.
C.ell&amp;fen ol' floiM ,.,
II,
~

a.m.

Clloloo ol12 colon -

sliding or rolup - .

ts'-ndl!nl lo unlhnft.d . _
ISiyiM
JOx50 •• tut ..
lntF c¥ r

-

_._.,..,.ZM{Ajd•n

llmllin

" CanCalogo,
' ..
Plua.
TodiJ. I~

8

----

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.... ....

-.cJh;,
77M1ill. &amp;

SEPliC SYSTEMS,

9

HOMESI~SM&gt;d

TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,

iOr • -

UloESTONi-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

I

-

,..,

3 lMgo -........ Now

HVAC, ,.._ Clll'pelf. Avail.lble

..... 15 &amp;J4-446.-2205.

-

With
Fill I

-Or
- P-3111,....., t.M1f-

""""",_
...... •
US I aMJ. ComiMfdal

C&gt;ll

3

""""Golo1--C..,
a.ts. c...

... -

1-13-'92'-1 mo.

-

... 01111

Golo1 Ooio&amp;.

NEW OPENING

-

I 1\ -

•• .1!11 !!ll

SUMMER
IMAGES

us.

On 2 112 Lois On D..d End
s.r.t, 614 441 3134.

32 Mobile Homes

tor Sale
$500 Oft """"- Prico 01 Any
" - ttame AI 0 . . Home C.n-1•. GlwP S I I" 1, frM S.I·Up
"""llollwwy! c.a&amp;M-m-1220.

Shop.

. . - - . fully ln-

-114-t92-7e72

- ....,. to

........ -

"::'ol

-.p ..114-f12.1103 11110
Tndot,

c:.o.-

19N Cd 11alt,. 3 t

t ooms,

v- .................., ..
-·
·-~7294.
190:1 lla ' 1 Md2, 2BR.

Sl011111, Ae...,_.or, Ga Fur,_. l
lliily Clasll:,

-c.,....,.t

I

I

Cond~

o .a.o . • - •

17,3110.

I com, 14170

I

POMEROY, OliO

NEW SCA WOLFE BED
12 Vioits ...... $25.00
16 Vioits......$30.00
1 YioiL ...$3.00

... "-ul•'• O.y c.r. Center.
s.... •rtord t d'lildcare. 11-F
I

• am. •

'

p. m_ Agu ~IG.
. . . . 1ft., Khoal. Orap.ina
d
. . 114 441 1224 . .... ln-

c.lhl~

992·2417 or
992·7114

5 ~30

-T-Coro,~

i=

....,_,ing "" pointing,
~- root. induded ....,.
~~so:h4-992-7291, •ilb ar

4-7-92·1 mo.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
REMOVAL

E

...,..

.Ill
. . 4 SJ'I_[
2
. .

5

&amp;

- - Gl1!
traa~a
Tol

0

""' iTobysil '" my ~oomo .

........149:2-51:11

p;atW1t

Will

Do , ....1. UrQo

""'*'·014-379-2921.

I.Mna

Room Fur·
nilure. M~w. lae!rigei"'tor
And SIMa JCM...JII3...435fi.

1986 Sunnybroc* MJ&amp;O. all elK,
uc cond. ~7241 - ...,., 5:00 Pll Sotunlop.

For S..:

1•

Redmln Danville,
MTT72, T - Elodric, 2 IJod.
1001110, Z Full Bllhs. E.lcoUont

eo. •. ..

Clil

~36J.UI39

......

1•5 P.ll.

Ar
-

1

Down

llobtle

HotMs,
Soloc!lon. Singlos. S500

And

D:eet'

11.000

DaM\ With ~ouad CNdit!
c.l1-5r

USED RAILROAD TIES

--To--_,___

=
::i ;
· - - .SloopD

Fmanc1al

,, .::::

B_u_sl_ness
_ _ __

57711121

::S.,~ - - "' •

Oppc.rtunity

..Ltr!~ ~ !·00110--Y-AL..;l.EY..;!NOTI=PU:oCIO-: B: :~. .__
; HIHG CO_.
. . . . . a.,.

- -..... ~

az::...::: .... ""'" ,. . ....
IKJI .. -

MIXE..sE.LL'S
iloooftwinc}

.-- tady

IS • • lllo!rbllor Lila To Sdl ~ Rout•
h -na G ... if Aru For n.
Blat? h• 01 Pablo Qllpe

8 "S

C1

-

:f".!.~~,._

-

.

llln. ,. •
· · ·-

UVEI UYEI LIYEI

1-100-454 1100, (11 ·~ SITEl

.

hlllll... ..,

- boon.....,
Aollol.Oool'll
'"""·
.........·
hu
,...od.
Unoltoehocl? Slngloo .
ThrOUGh 0.. S1ng1N tlea:alet
ter. WVrlle: Slnatn, P.O. 8o1
1043, Galllpollo, Ohio 45131.

oom, 2

]Ill.:...,_. . . . . . alP or
~ In l5 aa. PaiL TraD. cui
to ...ea
on tann.

..

M:i':bo.~-;~IQ;~--

......

=--=-r-.:
.,
•qg
~----1

-----lorCodiL1BiE.

Real Esta te

ail-S.

31 Homes for Sale
HolM On 1 AeN Of
..... Coii1W56-1521.
J

a

.....

Ap~rtment

Size K.nmore 5 c. Fl .

FrMzer, E1ealltnl
195. 614-446-3!37

Condition!

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jackson Pika
trom $192Jmo. Walk to shop &amp;
rncwiH. Call 614--446 -2568. EOH.

Furnished Apirlmant 1 Bed·
room, Utilitln P1ld, 1260/mo.
920 Fourth A.,tnut, Ga llipolis
Ohio. 6'U,.46-4416 Aher 7p.m.

Bunk BaM $99
(2•6); 4 Orawar Chtst Of
Drawers $44.95 ; Twin Ma"ress
199 Sat.

BEDROOM ·

OINETIES Wood Bar Sloo la
$14 .95 (26") Tabla And 4 Padded
Chairs $129.
OPEN: 7 Days A Weak, 9 A.M.- 6

P_M_ Sunday 12 Noon · 5 P.M
Rt 141 4 Miles Ott Rt . 7 In Can·
tenary.

52 SportIng Goods
Remington 870 WlngmiSt•r 3
Mag. 12 Gauge, 30' Full Choke
Barrel. Good Condttlon. 614·245·
5047.
Taurus 9mm semi-auto, n1ra
clip, $375 . Model 37 W1nehestar
16 gauge $150. 304--6~5593 after 5:00.

Big Ri'War Antiquaa . 510 Main S!,
Point Plaaunl, WV

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

leiVt message.

n. above ground swimming
pool , new pump 1nd rlltar, large
daek, 614 ·742-2940
21

21!2 ton ctn1ral AIC, ut ot twin
beds, 614 ·992~934

ComplaUy Furnished mobile
home, 1 mile below town, O'W&amp;r·
looking ri. var. No Pal!l , CA 614·
446-0331

A&lt;~15-And10-

·-6'9580.

1-

Furnished
Rooms

SAeep~n~ rooms with cooking.

IJM tn•ltr sp~c• . All hook-ups.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·7'73.
5651, Muon WV.

46 Space lor Rent
.._ • Gol...... Fony vm.. ftowadug • 111-M .,_, Country Mobile Home Pa/11., Rt .
moftlh, ..,. OM of bw lola

........

~

loti ln .... ....... - 100'111;,
GWrW" Clnanelna .. S10t4t ,_,

33N., under new management .
.._"_!~
1• • $23~ ;

614-.......,..r

_....,..1_ .....-. 49

........

For Lease

~
~--~~~~~
Common:lol Bldg., 12,0110 oq. h.,
Lata taiu*'l Polnl , 100"1. owner 1rvck docluo hool"!! cloor o~n
1
1
ol $10Uii por month Rt. 32, Jacuon, ut1 1~1'17· 3IIT.IZ.
Second Floor Apartmenl For
louo: LR., Ono B.R., Bolh,
Kitchen WI Stove I Rtfrig.
w...r Fumllhed. No P•t•. Cor·
Socond &amp; Pl111" Golllpollo .

For
U.ol
.. - RuralNlco w.t•,
~0. Por Momh; ""paoli AoElocbldlr. And 5ontco
cau 614-446-4249, 614·
t' l .... Ftom Hotar ~=rr·
325, Or 814-44&amp;.4425.

.-,

II

I'

lh... c'lc

z

~-

-.~

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Merchandise
5I

Household

W...od: R II ollol llulldinv
Goods
La! Or ~ For OuoliiY
110 W111*o 5 - •pte wood dining Iabat with 4
0 1 - ....... On -ldop dlalro
lBO. 304-1175-7545 .
Rood. •

.-.maoo.

8" Dewall R1dial Arm Saw $150;
OuHn Sill Sofa Btd, Uka
Br1nd Newt 1250; 2 Recliners,
$20 Elich_614446-4638

gaso!lnt alr·comprtnor.
$495. 40" Gr1vaty mower $400
Old Iron bttle $50. Eloctrlc
conc,.lt mlnr $200. 3 112"
angl• iron $2. ft . Antique bat h
tub. 304-6~004.

Rooms for rant . week or month .
Stirling 11 $120/mo. Gt~llia Ho1el.

ln Olio T-llhlp, Goliipcolis.
WiU H o l p - Tobocco
8aM. I14 4412404

8 A. Pool Table, $45-0 : 16 Cu Ft.
Freezer, 1400. 614- 367-n67.

Furnished Apartment, 1br, next
to Ubrary, ~rtdng, ctn1rll heal,
1ir, relartnca. 614-446-Q338,
Btfore7p.m.

Modem 1 ~room apt, very
clean &amp; nice, no pels, mus1 be
willing to givt raferenct!, 304·
615-1386.

s..

1m Doda• Prospector 360 En·
glnt, Fair "!ih•pe. 614-446-1436.

\

1919 Stapside Chevy 414, Looa.
G,..t! 614-64l-0832 .
~

I

\

1'

Ill

1965 S-10 Bl•zer, 4 whHI drlv•,
T1hoe p.lck•gs, 614·94g..3028
luvamessage

1

/ ' ')
\...._;

u•

t9B7 Chevy S..10 Tahoe, V-6 en·
gin•, topper, $5,000 304--675·
1645.

''

-----

1988 Vlssan Standard , Excellent
Condition, $5.700. 614 ·446~75-4
Ahar 4 P.M .

~ - ~·
~

.,.
'1

~

Cl 1e&lt;~n ~~&lt;~EA.

63

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandi'Se

1ne

Livestock

Good 4·H &amp; FFA Club Pl~s FDt'

Sa ... 6t4·388-9033 AHar 6 .M .
Purple Sequins Prom Dress
Size : 516, Worn Oncr. Call 614:
446..0912, Or 304·675-5554 Ask
For Jutit
Rocker Chair, Desk And Chair,
Hanging Macf"lm• 614446-i398.
Satellite dish wttraclutr syat•m,
receiver &amp; able. Raceiv.r
nMd• repair $200. W1lnul cot·
fut~ Ia bla, Ear1y American aofl &amp;
chair wlcounlry p•ttem $150. Or
all tor $300. 304, 8115·3813.
Satellite dish wltr~cbr systtm,
rtcalv•r &amp; c1bel, Receiver
needs repairs, $200. W1lnut col·
tee table, Ear1y American aota &amp;
ch1/r wlcountry paltern f\50 . Or
all for $300. 304·&amp;95·3813.
Sears Holpoinl Avacado, Green
Side
By
Side
FroslfriKI
Refrigerator, Works Great. $175 .
614 -446-0536 Anytime.
Sears rotatltter, 5hp., hardly
used,
614·7tl2·2423
1fter
4:30p.m.
Sears Wood/Coal Free Standing
F1raplace With Blower, $200;
19BS VW Jat t a, Very Good Con·

dillon ! 11,800 ,

19a7

Dodge

Oa)1ona AC, PS , PB, Auto
Trans ., 52,00 Miles, $4,700. 614·
446-7616 After 4p_m

-

--

Tindy 1000 TX Computer, Cam·
plate With CM-5 Color Man/tot'
And DMP 4~0 Printer, Exctllent
Condillon, IBM Compatable.
$1,495 614·446.{1584, 614-2455554

55

Building
Supplies

1- - - - - ' - - -- - -

en . aluminum trtJck
blut, 614·992-6035

Gr.clous living. 1 and 2 bad·
room •.-rtmtnta at Vlll1ge
Milnor
and
Riverside
Apartment• In Mktdlepor1 . From
1196. Coil 614-992-7187. EOH.

1972 Dodge Dump Truck All
New nrea,
,800. 325 Amp.
Gas Welder, $1,150. 614-367-7031.

Horan tor Nit. AOHA Stillion,
2 m1ras, 3 colts, Mo'l1n's
w~-•1own

•

uuu
1

56

Pets lor Sale

Santa.Canrodls Bull, 304·6 75-

2970 .
Show Pigs l Botn 313192, EX1r1
Nice! 3 Colors. 614-37'9--2563.
S~lal

F.edtr C.lt S•lel
Athens llv•atock SaiH, US 50
Wesl , Albany, Ohio. Saturday
April 11, 1992 At 1.00 P.M. 30
Htad
Of Charolllt
Cron
Halters 'To B• Sold. AU Con·
slgnments Welcome! Livestock
Accapttd Starting At 4 P.U.
Every Friday. H1uHng Available.
614-592· 232:2. Or 614-ii96-3531.
Want lo !aasa toba cco , Mason
County, ca ll Andy Sigler, Mor·
gan's Farm, Rt. ]5, P"11ny, ')04937-2018

64 Hay &amp; Grain
:::-'7"C-::-'--=-:-:,--

::::::-:: -;-::- --;:c:,--- 19811 Furd Ranger XI..T, garage
kepi, lowariKI, must HI, 614·
992-3065 lftar 5pm, Brent Zirtl.le

Baldwin consol plano, 8 yrs old,
nc cond, S1,500 . 304~75--4855
Peavey Mark 3·12 Chanel Mixing
Board, $895 ; Poavey Sler.a E_Q
$175; Ibanez Digital O.ta~ $75 :
All In Excellent Condition, 614 4464525 .

Boltnt Garden Tractor, $500.
614·388·9082.

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

C1nopy crib with mat ching
chest. Other b1by furniture.
Canopy twin siza bed, 4 pc
wicker nl. 304.&amp;75-4548.
Concreta &amp;
Plastic Septic
Tanka, Jet Aeration Tanks. Ron
Ev1ne Enterprl. .a, Jackson, OH
l-80()..5::17·9528 .

FREE INSTALLATION
SW IMMING POOLS
Only $62.91/Mo. • For 12 Months.
19x31l4 Pool lncludtt Filter,
Huge
O.Cil
Etc.
L•ddara,
('BIIod On Selling Prlt!e Of
$699. $14.45 APR , Total Deferred
Price : $754 .92) Ooo 't Belltvt It?
Call BPI

1·800-548-1923
GrfJisis Nutrition
Products
featuring Amino Acid Body
Building, wtolgh1 lass and f1t
bumer tormur•• · A11ailable •1·
cluslvtly at Rlt• Aid Ph•rmacy.
The sate w1 y to dltl.

1.,.----,::_....,---,--

Gu.rantatd wed applianc. .,
Kenmore por1able washer, 1159;
•utornltlc wa•hert &amp; dry.,e,
$95/up; 30" &amp; 40" electric ran ·
gnl 1135; 16cu. H. Frort~r..
retr garatoi"', $175; 24" at1ck
washerll dryers, S185 : Hag·
ger1y'a UNCI Appll1ncaa, 134
Mill St., Middleport,OH.
John.on't, bow meunt , •lectrlc
trolling motor, 614·i112·2ti 4a
Kenmort Dryer, 115: Snow
Blade Far DynarNrk Mow•r.
$25, 20 Inch Bike, $20. 614-446·
2316.
Peney P.A. Syat•m Four Chan·
Four
Shure
nel
And
Mlc:rophonH, $325; Orlgin~~l
1926 Nteklace, 165; Hla And
Ho,. Wllddlng Rings 112 Corol
$22!: H &amp; R 32 Pl11ol $70;
Homtlila 210 Chain S..w $100;
Wilddlng Drasa And Ace..toritr 175; Keybo1rd And
HardcaH, 1100. 614· 388-9168.
Pl1atlc: And M•dal Cutnrt &amp;Inch
Thru eo inch In Stock . Ron
Evans, Jackson, Ohlo . 1-80()..
537~8528.

Portablt change•blt Isner sign
$2911. Frat llllersldtlivtry. Plas·
tic lttttrt $47.50 bo1. l.ao0--5333453, 1nytlma

61 Farm Equipment
467 New Holland hay bind. 32'
Ulllt Grant alava1 or Editon
May•s, 304-675-1858
U!lllly Bld!J .spacial : 30 'u 40'w 9',
1-15'18' Slldmg Door, 1-3' Walk
Door, Palntacf Sleet Siding &amp;
Rooling. $5190
Iron Horse
Bldrs. 1-800·:152·1045
Farmall Cub With Culri~ators,
New Tim And Paint , Sharp~
614-446·7787 Atl tr 7:00P M
Gravely lr1ctor -d ual whMia,
tiller, cuttJ ... ator, b/1dl 304-67S8!119.
inlemallanll
1026
Tractor
$6,850; 444 tntem1Honal Olnel
Wlti't IH loadtr, 15,950; B·2751n·
ttmatlonal Wllh Loader $2 ,950;
Cub Lowboy Wllh Equipment

l1,i195. 614-21&amp;&lt;;522.
JO 1530 Dietel Tractor, " ,9SO;
800 Ford With Plow &amp; Disc,
Bltda And Bush f.log, 13,850.
614-286:6522.
W1nted : Tobacco
614-24S.S047.

Pound1g41.

W1nted : Used !arm •qulpmenl,
anylhlng you want to ull. C11t
614-256--1308. 256-6040 '" " 6
p.m.

62 wanted 10 Buy
Good ua.cl pl1na, prafet Slory I
Cl1rk, Wurfltzer, or Baldwin, 614·
'Ji12·266CJ

Ifill'

6pm

63

Livestock

::"""'7'7"""":"::::-:-::::;:-::::;::-::;:
2 r~~giattred Charol•l• bulls/:20
mo old. Cow/call p.alre. 1 rl
Klnn1lrd, 304--67!-4182 after 8:00
PM .

Angu a And Chi-Angu1 Blick
Buns A1non1bly Prlced. Sl1t•
Run F1rma, Jlc kton, Cl'lio, 614·
286~395 .

Fabf\llry 1986 AOHA Sorrell
Mira, June 1990 F•ntutk: Paint
Colt, 1992 12 Ft. Stock Trailer,
11 .79~ .

614-28H!22 .

r

1984 Chs ..
4 Wheel Dri ... ,
Short Whee Bau, 305, 4 S~
4" lift, Alum WhHIS , Call 304•
6]5..7623, Of 614-446-4015.
•

74

Motorcycles

•'

1981 Hond• Gold Wing Gl 1100,
16,000 Miles, $1 ,7'00. Call After t.
P.M. 614-367-7718

-

1984 Honda Interceptor F-500R··
New Tiras, New "91"' lockha1
Fairing, Engin• Recanlty Ovtrr
hauled, Low Mile1g1, l1almet,
l..ooka Sharpl $2,000 304~75.:
1118.
1985 Honda Shadow 700, 12,000:
miles, $1,400_304--675..3044
1986 Honda 3 wheel•r .350)(;
FUn$ good, $600. 30Hi7S·2074. •

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Autos lor Sale

14tl . Fiberglass Fishi"Ski Boa! , ~
40 Horse Johnson, TraUer, Plu s !
Wore! $850 , Good Con dition
614--446-4920.
''

1977 Olds, 2dr., good shape,
614·992-60n
1978 Monlt Carlo, run s good,
CVA Frontier muule loader, 50
ca liber, 614--992 -5486

$600. 304..675-2074

8hp

Dri;a

1984 Chevy 4 Wheol
Shol1 Whee Base, 305, 4 Spa ·
4" lift, Alum Wheels C1ll
675-7623, Or 614--446-4015_
•. •

Transportalion

Male, Brendel, Great
$250. 304-675-3698

Musical
Instruments

1980 Dodge v1n, 318 angine,
runs great . best offar or tradt
for 4x4 PU truck or 6 or 4 cyl
I ruck . 614,.46-0536, any11ma.

Wt Buy, Sell, Trade, UsiKI Har· •
leys, Parts And Accessones•
•
Availablt . 614 --4i'l-7055

1984 Dodge Aries, 4 door, black,
AMJFM, cn..n•, 4 cyl, IUIO,
614-992-7236, evenings

'Sl

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

First Cutting AourMt Bales: Orchard, Gr111 And Fescue, 4x5
$10 _ No Sunday Catts 614·188-8524.

Fi sh Tan~. 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point PleaS41nl, 304·615·2063,
tull line Tropic1l fish, birds,
sma ll anim als aoo supp liM

Registered Poodlt Puppy, 614·
446-8321.

----------

19B7 Suzuki OR100, runs good ,~
asking $.525, 614·)12·3114 tvtn·
lnga

1980 Ford truck F-100, 34,000
miles $1,995
1985 Camaro
S2,695. 1985 Chrysler Fifth Ave
$3,000. 1987 Olds Cutlllt Clara
Groom and Supply Shop-Pat $2,100. 1986 Dodge Yist1 $.2 ,900.
Grooming. All bf"Hds, s\ylu. 1987 Full aiza Bronco $.4 ,800.
lams Pal Food Dealer Julie 1985 Plymouth Voyager S2,&amp;00.
Wabb . Call 614--446--0231.
1984 Bronco II $2 ,595. 1984
Alrdate Puppies For Sale, Good Fiero $2,500. 1983 Ford Aangar
4:~:4 S2,600. 1985 Olds Oefta 88
Bloodline. 614- 256-6413 .
$2,595 . 1986 Ford Escort $1,600
AKC Boston Terrier Pupplu, 1986 Buick Sky Hawk $'1,995.
$200. Call 614 -2SS--6251 Or tea .. • 1984 T-Bird $1 ,900. 1985 Ford
Message.
150 Y-8 erlQint $2,300 . Several
Cars under $'1,000. Scottys Used
AKC regislared Cocker Spaniel Cars, New H1ven, WV. l04-BS2·
puppies, had shoCa &amp; wormed, 3752.
l04 -6 75-2193.
1981 Cutln1 Crulaor wagon,
Basic And Ad ... anc ed Dog 6 1 4 -~2-28 40
Obedience Classes Offered By
Tha Right Paw Training Center_ 1982 Escort, neiKia rap~~ir, $200,
Call 614-4-46-18&amp;1 For Additional 614·94g..2()66
- -- - lntorm1lion
1982
Mercury
ZI.Dhytr
Oalmalion s,
Ready To Go stationwagon, S100 , 614-992·
5975
Easter! 614-446-1756

Dane,

slld;ng .... glass, bug delioclor,
19,000 milas, 17,200 304-57J&gt;.
....
21 ·
£-&gt;

Birght , Clean Wheal Straw
$2_00t81te . 614~46-9442 .

1 Black Pomeranian Puppy,
Raady To Go ! 614-446-1759.

topper,

Black uquins prom dress, size
3, worn once. Early American
sof1, good cond, 304--675--1645.

~,a

"£u

Regislorod Hereford Butt 614-37'9"·22Jil .

71

Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, elc _ Claude Win·
lers, Rio Grande, OH Call &amp;14245-5121.

Farm • •••
93
~·

ven nga.
large bla ck billy goat. No
horns. $35. Also, wanlad·
Locu51 posts. 304-675 ·7462 .

Antiques

53

Furnished Apar1mtnt, 4 Rooms
And Bath, Centrally located,
Rafatenea And Deposit Raquir.d. No P.Cs. 614-4464144.

....-xz2

1-

&amp;

., , .... - , : R - ""'(;

........

_ , Cooh-

LIVING ROOM . Sofa And Chair
$119 Anti Up; CotfH And End
Tables $79 And Up; Swivel
Rockers $79

15 ac111s on Sowards Rlgdge
Pd., 100 y•rd• down from
Double Creak Rd .; Also, gHH
&amp; shMp tor sale. 614·256:0554,

4S

Oil

-

S rooma &amp; khchan : $250 mo ., all
ulll~loo pold. Coil bolwHn 11 ,oo
a.m.· 5 p.m. 614:446:-0238.

S2 V2 ecra, MIJ'O tni&amp;er
wJdlltt, w I
I porch I elr·
port. 3 .....,_.,., gu nil
osOing $30,0110,

•p

Local Wo . ...

VI'RA FURNrTURE
BARGAINS GALORE•
614-446·3156

30H75-t563.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

ll.J.
- . j---Aiooul~
- . 11 ......
_,
lui 8•811 Ill Sitl Thill HM A

7,

call304-675-1450
-=-:=:-:-'WAIN
S
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive St, Gallipolis . New &amp; Used
furnilura, heaters, Weslem &amp;
Work boots _614-446-3159.

w

Vsty nice 1bdrm., beautiful
country MUing, frat water/
truh, AJC, 11undry taclllll•s.
Part! Rd. ov.,looklng US 33,
Derwin , C.A. Pnn, 614·594-5322,
1V'51mo.

..... .. Flnando£lr
-

1700. Cai1614-367·704! .
PICKENS FUANrTURE
New/Used
Household tumlshing. 112 mi.
Jerricho Rd . Pt. Plaaunt, WV,

Anllq~ Kitchen Cabinet And
Walnut Swl .. el Desk Chair, AntiI cq;cu_o_C_Io&lt;
_ k_s:c
. -c
aM
::;-4_46-01
: --:
96_.::-_
Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. M1in Slntet, PtJmeroy.
P.M.
Hourt:: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. t11 6:00
3 Room lpir1ment Ground p.m., Sundly 1 :00 to 6:00 p.m.
lloo&lt;l Private entrance. Loc1led 614 -992·25 26 outs de of Henderson. Kltch•n
bot
11
1
614-992
I utillti•• furnished. $275. mo.
•
" In que p ano,
"
5094 or 614·992·3411

~.

SllllltWMJ\ Slor. 'm DIIMrY
Sond To:
. . . It nnu, MIA Di LILli

31437
oto0Ha11.

2br G•ng• Ap~~r1menll. localed
106 Locust StrMt, LillllpoHa ,
S22 Wo. 1100 O.posll, Water
FurnisMd, 614-446-3a70.
2br Wish., And Dryer Hook-Up,
S.O'ftl And R•frigerator, CltJse
To
Downtown,
Gallipoli s
$250/mo. Plu• Utilities. O.poslt
Required. 614-245-9595 After 6

One
and
two
bedroom
1partm1nts for rent 304-615·
2053 or 67'54100.

••till•••

=.. ___ _
....
-----lam
.: ......-:: ·---"
......
-0:
,.......... . . -.......
-·
--=Cit•-.
....... =' -:DI··
-~~~~
........., ~

3 Announcements

k.-, ond
-ll'nluglllho
l'lgri"'

a
-:o.:,nt
--===
~ R~
2

Announcements

thlil: 't'O" do ~

-will\,..,...,...
UCUIM. . .

1

Col

4-4..,.tlo

r. ~=;.

Md5 2 8

App~ ......

lilil
Lowno, &amp;tningl,l~7111

2 bedroom 1pt, utilities p.aid ,
Hud lpproved, 304-67S.2722.

1968 Che..y pickup 1nd 1967
Chev Nova SS, 304-675--7833.

2 ~~~========~==========~ ...
1991
pickup,ayaltm,
Rally whMis,
AlpineS-10lll.,.o
cloth
ta, underc01llting, 5 speed,

New 29,000 STU AC, Used
Months, $1,200, New Will Taka

•••. 4 lirts and wheals , 614·992 3590 .

I ooms '-"

---

pwfw•wd. i14-M9-Z311

1bdrm. apt . In Middleport, water,
nwage, trash paid, you pay
e1ectrlc/g1s, $150imo., 614·9492217

72 Trucks for Sale

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complet e homt lumiahings.
Hours: Moo-Sat , 9.5 6l4-44fi.
0322, 3 miles out Bulavilla Rd.
Free Oell.,ery.

Wa.,_ &amp; Dry., 2 8

.., 33 Fanns for Sale

IIIII COA lor _ , In
'"' harne. RaciP+ .,.., bed

7!;04 .

Autos tor Sale

For Sale : 1985 Ford Tempo, 4
Door, Excellanl Condition, New
Tires , $2,900 Call 614--448--4638.

APPLIANCES
retrigeratOf's,
Appll•ne. .,
Beside Stone
614-446-7398,

"'
~s:-::ft c-hou-so
-:1-ra-::llc•,-•
:-•-m-.. c::c2-.-,.

.._

- . s 'WJU

1 Bedroom Country S.Uing, 10
Miln From G111ipoha, $22S"Imo
W11er P1id, O.sx-lt And 2
Atf•rencea Required. 614--445-

GOOD USED
Washers, dryers,
r~ngta. Skaggs
Upper Rlvtr Rd.
Crest MotoL Call
1-SOQ.49S..3499.

Fum/shed 1Br, Ulilltles Paid,
121Wo. Deposit, 251 Stat•
Street G.hlpolia. 614-446..3667.

WITH NO DOWN Po\YIIENTI

.. AIJSTRIUI.

Apartment
lor Rent

71

800-499-3499.

1720.

Tv.. sr- spr- Thnoughou.!J

$20IIo.., ,._,._ A 1ft! Sun.

TRIM and

44

by Larry Wrighl

GE waahtr w as $125 CUI to $75;
Whirlpool wuher $95 ; Kenmore
wuher was $95 cui to 175;
Kenmore dryer $75; Mayl•g
washer &amp; dryer set was S350 cut
to $250; 30 ln. tlectrlc range,
white,. w1s $125 cut to 195;
electric range 30 ln., $125;
refrigerator, 2 door, harveat .
gold, waa $150 cut to $125;
rafTigarator, 2 door, FF, harvnt
golcf, $95; refrigerator, FF,
lVIcado, like new $265. Skaggs
Appliances. 614-446-TlQa or 1·

1915 W"illdaor 2br, Fuly Fur·
est•, Oispoul,

nis11ect_ Dish

Acre ...., trailer, 2 bedrooms,
- _ ............- . Joroys
- AIJI1!o ~ :JII4.5J'&amp;.ZM5.

2 Miles on HvM11 Run Ad.

Hur GoodyNI, Lock I D1m
protect, reference required, 3Q4..
5~246611t•r 5:00PM .

CARLYLE &lt;~

Big Savings On All Carpet In
Stock. Cash And Carry, Mollohan Carpets, 614--446-11144.

3 Block Sawmill Co1/ On Wood
Cook Sto.,t, 614..446-4?119, &amp; 614 256·1977.

Fumil'" And

' G.opo Peal II Snnnll~ danl
houl
........... mill jul!
coll=.;1ttsl

State Route 7, South, Gallipolia .
114-256-1107.

KIT 'N'

Household
Goods

EHicitnl Apartment For Rtnt
Gallil County Sitting. 614·446-

"""'!It-:

...a. -

7

Pooto -Homo,

1973 -

Z 9 f OW&amp;, t2x65, Tot•l
- . """ Good Condhlon!
114 4• . , ..

Call~5111

' .... -

And Reference Raquir~ . No
Pets. 614-446--4879.

Untur"'•hed, Air, Cable,
Beautiful Rlv11r View, Rafar~~nca,
DaDOSh Raquir.cl. Fosler's
Mob~'- Home Park. 614-446-1602.

1 ll2 . . . . Ux:atM

I

1M3 ......._ 3

_To..., __

Two Bedroom House, Oaposlt

2br

........ WY, lt. llonch
F.mily
Room
And

uu.

W1ll Ar-..
.....,.,.
1n 11y - Anilai*.
llod...,
Relwwm

Bedroom House, Furnished, No Pel•, Refaranca And
Deposit . 614-44&amp;-2543.

IIEAIITRIL HOUSE FOR SALE 2678.
Hiolorica!- ear- Lo! - 816
llain SL PI:. Plusant, W. Ya. 2 Bedroom Furnished, Deposit
Cw• 1
Renonted: 2 Full Required, You Pay Utllltlu,

1lon!

wanted10Do

18

--. -

·--5

992-3838

T-.g
ardors
"" -&amp; CIIIMr
uw::la&amp;liid
dDUu.
----51:11

Will I Holluy

115-312

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

*' 11 •scenaneous

p

1lliopiio. -

-

=
9 II

' llogiol- - - ··

Rd. ..._..Aida!IC

BULlDOZER , BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

NCM!!!Sol d

One

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Near
Evergreen, G•llipolia. 614·379-

614-ftl.QZO

Training

614·

'

ma

160,. to. :JD"s, ..,..nings. 614-742·

1t13 Olac1 p' n lbdnn., 14:.:'70
on I Klft. city _.r I tteclric:,

IICI .. - - - -

992-76119

-

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

_.,

&amp;Ykll•y

Business

::".,..,=-6C:-.
-c-c--=-- House tar rani In Syr1cuse

,.,.h stylo
carpi?, on 1tt0 acre,
3111 hm -pilo~ SR

homo, briciT "'""· corpotl, hall-

on

3-16-1 mope!

Of

5

poiilti1•._ 61t tie 8 68 .

Puna OJI

z_IIJ.,.. _ _ uma 14

!\.Local Sale742-2072

NO T'"!f'OOOklv

RNcL Ret...t! C&amp;ll For Ap-

19JU SlryliM mobile home
12165., ccrp' ' t tumished,
SI,J'OO. ~or 6~

-.upon

llaWioll~
~toed

o.r. Fl13.-

S 01* ApartiMnl A8ntill, Elcel·
In Condtion, Bulawilla Pill•

1167 Anftnl 12J:6D, 2 Bed·
room, Totll Elldric, StO'fe,
Rlifllgr•«, Nlw Carpel, Hew
200 lMP BNU.• Box, $4 ,000;
1b5G v.tia;"'ll Ofld TnHer, EJ:.
CliiPid Add On. 6"M-351-T261.

PootF.-~1

........ eo.. .... c

55fi.IIIO. ~-

510

tllmvo.cao ..... - .

Best Prices I SorYic:e lor

. - - - . a .•

.,::Z

ndl, ,,.
... - . . . - .

Pi

Col

t..OO · ~q 11 brk*, 3 b.troome.
:::"
.....,ic,- - po11o5
I
I pump,
,_ Pl. Plouanl,

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

-

.._,.,
Todor,- T -

gr~dr school. 1 room hous•.
1200 dopos11 . 1250 monlh. 304-

lor Sale

e::.:A~..:-:.=

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

GIAUI, GIRLS, GIRUI

Ahor 7p.m.

Homes

b

Homo
.. 8y 150
Finns, TGil Poy, $339 Wool! Or
...... Rush $1.011 Soli.,._
_, SWnpocl Env- 110 ll&amp;A
Supplies, BoJ1 1443, F1irbom,
oHW24.

Xp.tfr.ryn

4I2IV2IIIn

11

l1oJr 3211, Point " - WY
2:5150 EOEicoua i ~rrabk a?ary

-oy.Ohio45761

"It's For You"... You could be a Winner!
Check our classified line ads each day
the week of April13-17.
Five (5) lucky people will win free
advertising. Look for your name and
winning notification April13 thru 17.
One Winner Each Day!

I

""I"', 511 Ul,

1

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limeslone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

llolortydei-Eie.

614-992-2242

ivmg .a
,... . ._1D laiToTaiooll atlhs 3bdrm. 2 ballo home
1a1gt...., roam. lireplace. ITnoshed b a - ..t
~ ............ 1 """'
$45,1110

.,

"SPECIAliZING IN SL.A~
OA CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

_., woll k.opl 1 112 Sial)'

'nnn Ro8d-U )IOI·I're tired ol

BUUDOZING

Wlldllr.

..xJlB'OIIT.C. - A

0

EXCAVATING

713tr91/lln

Custom Paintings

Furnished 38r Houae, 1 Aoor,
S350 +Utilities, Upper Four1h
Avenue, Gallipoli!l, A•farencas
Security O.posil. 614-446--4416

" Faster! Fasterl We're trying
10 improve productivity.··

......,.. OII"'ICtDI Df Nursing
lor II ITod long tonn . . .
PM
ladlty. Must haw r 64j ' 1
nursing ....,_In w.. ""vinio.
LmT! . . . . . ,...... only- R 1 O!iblo "" odminioiJallon
J : : Sllnnl. Rt:l., PcaiWIOJ&gt; dWin 1 acme floor wo;t. n

IAIWII,OHIO

$20.00

~

-..

moric-. --.r:d.5111 -

1·100-141-.0070

3t •
4,. Md a ntCB sWt lot Has a privalalenced pa)O
..ta-~ Cook! be cu.,
$17,000

~~~~--

~. ~ .....
Wmos. o~ lllftld. •tw:tndl•

H-97-lt.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

~

-~ kmli'- . _ . ., ..,.. c:allar, ~=========:r======::====1 ~G~al:; -lipo: -'ii;c-,-:-F•-,-ry-a-cr_o_ss=l-,0-m

svo

hallie Repair
NEW' USID PARTS
FOR lll MAKES
992·7013 or
992-5553
01 TOLL RIE

~

~
U:&gt;sT 1 _., ....... _,. col-

- ..

Specialbln!lln Custo111

'MODElS

Losi&amp;Found

, V\cinily
Of: Cilif ~, Giiftla, Cl:lmry.

FlEE EST IMAllS

(hesbire,

and

bedroom home In Point
Plusant, Hud approved, 304·
675--1198

f.ound . • .._ • 4

•LIGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

Welcome Slates

UNiik) lltw

6

Re•od•li•g

IIISNYIDM

Ill QUAliTY PIINT SHOP

XWUIOY_.»-Allhe edge oiiDwn os ablod&lt; home-

Ml A 2 •"'Y home willo 4-5 -.oolll.
..... -~pard!. capcrt, cu.. itlle playhouse si1ling
miTio a lln:ad~ yani Home has a brinl ..,. roaJ 1lf11l
~-·· and some r.wcarpeling, and a Ar.lg8
loliiling
lfOW $28,900

-Ganges
eCoMplete

'Meadows

Wllll E HOllE CIIL'Y-A ltX7C Nasllw ,_home
-3
I 1/2 balhs a newer metal~.
poodl. - . undorplnn.ng, and ... - air 001115ONlY S7 ,500

s,ar EM ST,. M

having another
birthday!

VALLEY INC.

DK's FARM TOYS

,,.._~

- - oiny1 sidng. 2 beciw.ns. FA NG Unaao. . .
1
~--· and 21ul b&amp;llos
121,100

Don't
so
bad about

Lime

~11-1

21115 NDrlh s-111 An.
......,OH

5

.--.1 .....

3I23I92Mn

WIUIIAnOIMJ.nas
ADW&amp;iiilll&amp; a

UANEA REALTY

m-lng • ., be oblailrom Village ~ 5Z7 Alii
St., BoJT 375, Racine. 0H.
t5171.
14) •• 10, 211:

F,..Es-

Agriculture

.,_ng Lot Numw FOUR 14)
in II. C. HOBAArS
SUBDIVISION m 1he a l uid •11 rort. Ohio. The
Aiel lot is on Lincoln ...t beginning ol • point 121 leet woot ~
Uncoln Sine! lro• 1he
- - o l h J. .I.

A-IIIII
COftllll•dll

•••YCI UPIIR

Sillnltod in ... '"'"' ol
Ohia, County ol llleigs.
Vibgll ol lfcf,.•part, ..:1

OSCAR'S RESTAURANT

LnmMowtng,
FertHizlng. Weeding,
lllld Seeding.
Shrub lllld Tree
TriuwnMgl RemoY..

FOR SALE

SlrMI, Middl_,t. Ohio
U7i0. A co•plelo 1egol
description of lho rNI
_.... ilaloiDwa:

1-304-£75-5789

614-Mt-2627

•cROWIII OVEI

Ianda and teft. . enta.
located at •21 Uncola

Randys.Mh
(Gues1 "'' • a auce. HlltJIPn1n1oaJ""I
&amp; Ethel Ha11""')

lmi'SLAWI
IIIIITIIIICE

11114111n

.......

3bdrm. house In Tuppers Plains

$250 month plus utllltiH
deposit, 614-667-3487

PONDS

..,

3 BA house tor rant, 204 Anderson St., Mason. Serious In·
qulries only. 304·882.]593.

4

985·4473
667·6179

614·949·2101 or 949·2860

A

•New Homes

lew loiMS • Yiayl Sidiag

. . . . . . 01 . . . . . . . . . . . ..

act;

.....,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Stop &amp; Co•p•r•

na: I'SI'IMA'ft'.S

-...o1F...... W. .

BOY SEEKS CARDS
Craig Shergold, a 7-yeaJold 1erminally iH cancer
patient, has a wish t-is wish
is to be in the Gun leSS Book
of Wortd Rooonts as hawlg
colleded the 111051 bumess
cards for a single Jli!ISUi l
Anyone wamng 1o send
Shergold their card can rmj
them in care ct
Children's Make a Wash
Foundation, 32 Perimeter
Center 'E .. Atlanta, Ga .
30346 or you may ~ the
cards oil at F-.est Hair &amp;
Tanning Salon. 1390 Eastern
Ave . Ga~ . Oh. 45631 or
call 44&amp;-8922 .

..-- .. ~·-

COIIIMDlOAL Ud RI'SIDENIUL

who on.nd ,..,.llld
COil d '1 IIC-, . . ..

~Y•-IIId

Public NotiCe

3 bedroom home, 1 bath, Pt. Pit,
$300. month plus deposit 304615--3433 or 675-1109 af1a; 5:00
PM .

4&gt;:11

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
lew '--181 • Replac••••t Wi•dows
• - ~·itio•s • Roofi•g

'IMFomUyOI

I

IEIMIIE
4:30 P. a HI IDGIE
PUIUCIIIOI

Gall.,.

Card of Thanks

PuiiiiC Nollce

•rre

,....

c.llln-1697 •
a-.531-1440

BeDDttts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
lltlWhnl ~ 1..
G ' als, Olio
c.l
446-M16•1-100-172-5967

I OOpm Friday

' 7 puia~ ••
..t, _..
• Trii&gt;IIIH • DDI. 1 q
1' 1-r cn-n .ll.er r.. day ~cl..t.ck
for erro... lint d•y .d ,.._ Ia ...- ~ Cal..,._ 2:00 p. a .
dar afler puWjcptjee .. ......, C:W iCCIW
• Ad. ............. paid ......._, ~

Cmloln..b

ElliMlll"'~

1(11 p.m. Thwsdiy

Fnday Pape&lt;
Sunday Pape&lt;

POLICIES

TopSoiiM'*"**

ltDini ~

s-.. ca. 1

•1Dyr. heat pu~
compresser warranty
ofree estimates

t' ..

1-c&lt;*
...clol' ........
"'1'tti
.......

aw. ma. c:..:m

Fnaces

T&amp;T LlWII SIIVICI
DAY 11ERJ1tE PUBLICATION
Ullpm Solurday
Ullp.m.Monday
Ullp...._ T.-.day
I :Ill p.m. Wedne&gt;day

2 story brick home In Mid·
dlaport, 4bdrm., 2V2bath, dining
room, lront room , kitchen,
basem•nl, ca~r1. $375 plus
deposit &amp; utilities, references
raqulred, 614-927·2297

l'lllps 110 Tr. c.,ms~oo

lllO Wol, """ Olio omJIIl

COPY DEADLINE

41 Houses for Rent

..,. ....... . R5 Mlll

1 _,

......,,.

WJIEflflJ'J

j?i;o;pi~· La 1

foam:lllt 15 . . . . Gill! Mw·Cn-t,
•. . . _
mJi

'fBOY-11&amp;1'

,

51

Rentals

. .,. l o Ciaooe -

\] ,dql ~ ,\ l) ~ ~u hiL\IHk IIPIJH· (h\IHr"

SIO- Of

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-9.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

19!5 16h . Stare raft Bass Boat :
With 65 hp Mercury MoCar &amp; ..
Tfl:,.ling Motor, $3,000. 614--446--•
4638 .
•
BOATERS
Gulnna Mercury Marin• Service .:
Merc_
ury. Manner, Marcruisar ,
spectalist . Mercury ctr1ilied •
Moblla , We come to you . 614- ,

259-5979.

76

1985 Chrysler lrBaron . AUf o,
Turbo, Air, PS , PB, Good Condl·
lion, $1,850; 19117 Doc19• 0 -50,
PU, 4 Cylinder, Sspd. Good
Condition• $2 ,700 614 -256-6251.
1985 Ford Escort, 4 cyl, 4 speed,
looks &amp; runs good, S9SO 304458-lnB.
1985
Oldsmobilr
Cuttus
Suprema Brougham , 66,500
milts , 4 dOOf', 3.6 V-6, loaded,
llkt new, 304·6JS..489] .
1985 Pon1 i1C Tnma Am, Aut o
Trt ns, Good Condition, Runs
Good, s :~,~ 614-446--0m
1986 Chevt t1t , While , Blue Interlor, Extr1 Nice! Garag• Kept!
Automatic, Air , PS, PB . 614-379-

2566.
1986 Ql(js Cutlass Supreme ,
2dr, Gray, Tilt , Cruise , 59,()00
Miles, Cassetta, Rear Defogger ,
Nice Car, 15,995
Gallipolis
Motor Company, 614-446-3060
1986 Oldt Firanu, 5 speed, air.
1m1 tm stereo, tilt whMI , 614·
992~529 Cit! aher 6pm
1966 Ponti•c Tr1na Am GTA,
Red With Go~ Wheel s, SS,OOO
MiltS,
Automati c ,
L.oadrdl
$5,300 . 614 ·256-6507.
1986 A1ngrr, 5 Speed, 1985 tr2
Escol1 W1gon . 1956 Cheliy
B•l1ire, Good Cond111onl 614669..C623.
1987 Dodge Aries , aulo, $2,200
t987 Plymouth Horilon, 40 mpg ,
$1,600, low mllu, 304-f75--2440.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Bud~et Transmis&amp;ions, Used &amp; :
rDbullt , st1rt1ng

al $99 . fr ont ·
wheel dri'o'e starting a! $149.00
614·24S.S6n, 614-992..fi]g3
NEED 1970 to 19n Maverick
front end parts, 30Hi7S-4143

79

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Coachman Mlnl mot or hom•
4~ Ftwd, wl1ir, grnarator :
QIFigt kept , 304-458·1066.
Complete tow blr usrmbly for •
travel trailer wilh ct.ains. 304- ·
773-5846 .

t984 Ford Escort, 4 cyl, 4 speed,
1884 La Baron, ctndy machines,
1 pop m1chln1, 35 fl . 5!M
wheeler, 304-Tn--5651

'

Services
81

Home
lm p rovements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Uncondition•l li falima gu1r11n· :
lee . l ocal references lumished _•
Free egl imales. C1ll collect 1-•
614-237-0488, day or night . :
Rog•rs BasemGnt Walerproo- •
l1ng
Curtis Home lmpro'o'ements :
Years EKperi•nce On Older &amp;
Newer Homes _ Room Additions ':
Foundation
Work ,
Roofi!'9: ·
Kitch•ns And Baths. Frta E.s- •
tim atu 1 Raterancas No Job •
Too Big Or Small! 614:367...0516 . :

JET
•
Aeration M04ors, repai red New :
&amp; rt-tx.litt moto" in stoc/1, RON '
EVAN S, JACKSON, OH . l -800:
537-9528
•
Ron 's TV Service, spttelalizing
m ZllniiM also servicing most
o1her brands . Hause calla, also
some appliance rep.tlra. WV
J04-576-2J98 Ohio 614-44&amp;.2454.
S&amp;ptic Tank Pumping $90, G.alll1
Co RON EVANS 'ENTERPRISES
'
Jackson . OH 1-800-517-9528.
Da.,is
Sew-IJ1c
Servk:t
Goorges Creek Rd . P1rts,
pl1es, pickup, and dttivary 614·
446.()294

.up:,·

-----

~

Wil l build patio covers , dtc.lls•
scrHntd rooms, put up vinyl .
sid ing or \railer s.klrtlng. 614·
245-9152.

82

1987 Olds Oelll 88, VInyl Top,
loaded! Excelltnl Condition!
$5,000.614-446--4225 , AHar 6p.m

Plumbing &amp;
Healing
Carter 'a Plumbing
Four1h 1nd PI~
Gallipolis, Ohio
614 -446-3888

1989 Bulc/1 Reg1t,~, 2dr, Rrd ,
Pow•r Window1, ,..ower Door
loeb, Tilt, Crul... low Miles,
$8,595. G1lllpollt Motor Com pany, 614-446-3060.

Small Plumbing Jobs Done . 614 - '
31'.1-2921.

1989 C.vallrr, 4 door, 5 speod .
AM ·FM casMttt, nklng $4,100

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

87

Upholstery

304-675-4981.

-------

!

1990 Gr~nd Am 4dr, 19,000
Milas, Auto, Cn..nt, Tilt,
Crull&amp;, $7,595. G1llipolls Motor
Com piny, 814,.4&amp;-3060.

I

1990 Mazda 626 OX , 4dr, Air,
Auto , 25, 000 Miln, CruiM, Rt•r
Defogger.
$9,350 . O.lllpolis
Motor Comp1ny, 6l4-446-3060.
1991 B•rwtt1 GT, auto, all options , txc cO(Wt, low mllu, vtry
ah1rp, $11,500. l'ltlnlnga 304·
6Th-3161
1891 Buick Skyl1rtl, tilt, PW, 4

"""'· e1oon, 18,29~ . 304~'15-

~0.
1991 Pontiac

~
-na, ~ed
, 2d
- r.,

4sp., am/fmlllerao, 14,000MI, 1·
owner, llkt new, $5600 or lr•d•
tor 4dr_car, 6l4·949-2&amp;n

~==~~==~~--~·
Mowray '• Uphotst•rlng MrVIe· •
lng tri cou nly .,.. 26 .YMFI. The
best In tumhure upholatering
Call 304--675-41~ fOf ir• -~
lim 1tn.
..-

:
1
1
I

..1

�Mother forbids rough playing
Dar Au Landers: We have two

dauabtm.

10 and 15 y=s old. 1

have forbidikn lhem lO hit one
IJIO!her. I am adamant about lhis
because I remember my own
childhood and il was a nighunare.
When I was a child, my older
brocher used to bcal me up almost
daily. Ow parents rarely stepped m,
and wbcn lhcy did, lhe punishment
was so insignifiCa!IL lhal it didn 't
dela' tum from hitting me agam.
Playing any kind of game with
my brolhcr was impossible. He
would throw lhe bat if he didn't
gel a hit and knock over the
Monopoly game if he losl Cards,
checkers and ping pong paddles
became projectiles on a moment's
lllllice. Childlen in lhe neighborhood
rtfuscd to play with him because he
bad such a violent temper.
I n:ccndy spoke 10 my molher
abJut the way my cluldren aease each
od,lg. :Th~ !;4 19 my telling ~r
lhu she failed me when she didn't
proiCCI me from my brother's brutal
auacts. Her response pul me in a
stale of shock. She said, "I never
saw him hil you.·
I lhen realized that she probably
never did see him beating me up.
My brother was mean but he wasn't
siUpid. The on! y lime I received
parenlal suppott was when llley saw
ltJClll marks or bruises
Paraus should make it clear lha1
lllere will be no tuwng. slappin~ or
punching, and swift punishmcnl will
be meled ou1 to those who break

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
" 1111, Loa Anreles

1'lnHo Synclcole one!
Crea&amp;«w'R SyndlcMt.''

lhis rule. Plwe primlllis, Ann. Your
column helped me lllrough many
tough times when I wa-; growing up,
and 1 wanl 10 help olllers. -- MJ .,
BAKERSFIELD, CALIF
DEAR BAKER: You've wriuen a
valuable !ella, but I'd like 10 add a
few lhoughiS of my own. Hitting
is a normal response for young
children when they are angry or
frustraled. They mus1 be taught
lhatlhis ts not acceptable behavior.
In lhe ideal family, no violence,
brulalily, pinching, slapping or
hitting is allowed Punishmenl for
wrongdoing should be isolation and
lhe withdrawal of all privileges. ThLS
is far more effective ll1an violence.
Dear Ann Landers: Premarital

sex and ex.tramarital sex are
frcquemly deal1 wilh in your
column. Loll of advice lhere. Bul
what aboul post-marilal sex? ll's
almosl like no one cares 10 adviSe
adulls as lo how lhey should
program !heir sex lives in lhe lara
years. How would Ann Landers
advise on lhis one?
Aftcr 30 years of a good marriage ,
!lost my wtfe. After 32 y&lt;:&lt;m of an

equally good marriage, my lad y
friend lost her husband. We are
bolh in our early 60s, long past the
child-bearing age. so we don'l have
10 worry about pregnancy. And yes.
we are havinR sex . but morallv wr
are commiuing adullery.
Abs1inence is nol llle answer
because the hormones are still
raging and we enjoy lllis aspect of
our relationship a lol Somehow 1
can'l believe lhe Crealor intended
for people 10 stop loving and living
afler performing their duties as
spouses and parents. I fl!ld it hard 10
underslalld why people in their
golden years must refrain from
enjoying their sexuality to the
fullesl Can you explain lllis? -- HOT

TO TROT IN SIOUX FAILS, S.. D.
DEAR HOT: Your relationship is
nol adullaous since your spouses

are deceased.
A strict fundarnenlalisl would
Judge you guilty of fornication, since
you are havin_g sex outside of
marriage. If eilhec of you feels guilty
aboul this, lallc 10 your clergyman.
If no~ it's nobody's business.
Is alcohol ruimng your lift or rhe

life of a ilmd OM? "Alcoholism:
How ro lluogmu It, How to Deal
Wilh It, How ro ConqUlr /r" can rurn
things aro•nd. Send a selfaddresud, long. b•sintss·siu
envrlope and a check or money
ordtr for $3 .65 (this rnc/•des
posrage and han&amp;ing) ro · Alcolwl,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Bor I 1562.
Chicago. !II . 60611·0562 . (In
Canada. ~rod $445)

---Names in the news--ORANGETOWN, N.Y. (AP) AI Pacino landed in the doghouse
for letting his canines run loose and
was fined $50.
The aclor's lawyers emered a
guilly plea on his behalf Tuesday to
violating town leash laws, courl
clerk Sharon Macaulay said
Wednesday.
Pacino 's dogs ran loose in
Orangetown, a suburb north of
New York City where he own s
property. on Feb. 6, March 20 and
March 25 . During the lasl incident.
his dog bit another dog.
Macaulay said lhe "Godfalller"
s1ar has !lied to keep his dog s
under conuol by installing an elec ·
!ric fence around his property and
pulling eleclric collars on the dogs.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) " Miami Vice " aclor Edward

'

Tht Welfher it
l~r11ins Uti!

But the Dult
Are Alre..y

Metter Thin
Em I

Friday, Aprll10, 1992 :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

James Olmos is urging lhe Legislature to requue schools 10 leaCh violence prevention, bu1 a lawmaker
says Hollywood is part of the problem.
The bill was approved by 1he
Senale Educalion Commillee on
Wednesday.
Olmos said violence should be
discussed in health classes because
children are "gelling off on lhe
high (of killing). It's the new
drug."
But Sen . Becky Morgan, a
Republican, complained abou1
"graluilous violence" in movies.
"! don'llllink what we do here for
cducalion can make up for whal
your induslry is doing for chil dren," she told Olmos.
" ! agree," Olmos replied . Hol lywood "works off the dollar. ll
doesn't work off making sense ."

He said a lack of vwlence is
why his new movie, "American
Me" aboul Chicano prison gangs,
and his earlier film, "Stand and
Deliver," about a malh teacher
who inspires his inner-cily SIU ·
dents, didn'l make lots of money.
WILBERFORCE, Ohio (AP) Arsenio Hall issed a dare to slu·
dents when he received an an honorary degree from Central Stale
Universily.
"1 dare you 10 dream and chase
those dreams and make them come
true.'' the lalk show hosl 1old 1he
audience of about I ,000 on
Wednesday.
He received an honorary doctor·
atc of humane letters.
Central S1a1e, a predominanlly
black school near Day10n . has
aboul 3.300 studeniS .

"t.t.~..~·"··i
SUit I :pa~J:pj.

..

Judge lets burglary victims
take belongings of thieves
By WOODY BAIRD
. Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn . - A judge
who allows burglary vtctims 10 go
10 lhe lhiefs home and snatch hi s
fa vorite possessions says uncon venoonal sentences can get a lawbreaker's atiCntion in a big wa~ ·
"He learns what a good ciuzen
feels like, worrying whether he' s
going to come home and find all
his slUff still !here," said Criminal
Court Judge Joe B. Brown.
Since his ele&lt;:tiQn lwo years ago,
Brown has buill a repulation as a
tough , strecl· wise judge willing 10
try new lllings in sentencing crimi nals.
He has ordered several burglars
10 open their homes to former vtC·
1ims. With depulies in low , lhey
can lake whal lhey wanl, up 10 a
Iimil sel by Brown that approxi mates lhc value of whal they lost
One victim made several visits
before he was satisfied. •
"The firs I day he didn' 1 find
anything, but 1he second lime he
carne back, he bagged a color tele·
vision and a stereo-componcnl
sel," llle 44-year-old judge said in
an interview Wednesday.
"He's been very creative," said
Robert Jones, assistant administrn lor of 1he Shelby County public
defender's office . "But a 101 of
things 1ha1 have been done in the
past aren'l working, so somebody
needs 10 be creative."
Mosl of the lawbreakers broughl
before Brown arc young, poor and
uneducated. Cla-;hes wilh authorily
oflen mean lillie bul losing !heir
personal possessions can hurt.
"They used to think bread and
water was punishment in prison,"
Brown said. "Bul they slopped
doing it when lhey realized 1he
prisoners were bragging, 'Yea man,
1 was on bread and waler for 14
clays, man. You know I'm bod." '
Brown grew up in Los Angeles
and can speak llle language of lhe
streets. He oflen talks wilh youlh
groups and regularly lakes walks
through Memphis's 10ughcsl netgh borhoods 10 visil
"They don't have many JUdges
lilce me who can go hang out on the
streel comer," he :&gt;aid.
While the victim "raids" have
drawn lhe mosl no1ice, they are
only part of Brown's broader effort
to break the cycle of crime 1ha1
oflen trnps young people growing

up in poverty and ignorance.
As a condilion of probation,
Brown forces lawbreakers 10 gel
job 1111ining and go back 10 school.
They must meel wilh drug and
family counselors, and many are
ordered to mow lawns or pick up
garbage.
Some must wriiC reports on lhe
stree1-gang movie "Boyz N The
Hood," and one was ordered 10
spend his lunch hours at lhe Mem phis Zoo wa1ching gorillas in a

WEEKLY
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mom

A_,_,

MORNING

1121 II Dallgntng Women

EASTER SUNDAY
SERVICES
Sunday School•••••••• )0:00 A.M.
Morning Worship••••••• ll :00 A.M.

QJ (TU, WE,TH,FR)

11111111 AG Ooy
0 (TU,WE,TH,FR) NBC

a Worlcl Doy

Momlng

Come and Hear the Glorious Easter
Story from the Word of God and also
in Song.

®lilt CBS Moming Ntwa
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ID II ABC Worlcl Nowa Thta

Sunday Evening at 6:00 P.M.

~~ Agotntt All Oclcla:

Outstanding performances by....
The Children of God
The Redeemed Quartet
God's Little lambs
Joyful Hearts
Linda Jones

In- Stltllattca
.
(I) (WE) Bualnoaa and lila
Law
(I) (TH) Buatneao of
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REV. ]AMES R. ACREE, SR. CORDIALLY
INVITES THE PUBLIC TO AITEND.

1-

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•

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1992 Cavaler

1992 Olcls Cutlass Cien ·

Slocl&lt;l1110

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5:00 i1J A - Hltclicock How
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5:20 0 NBC Nlg5:30 (D flailing With Rollind
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t1l Gl) Ag Wlll&lt;end Report
Scliolaatlc Sporta
Amortco Cable In the
Classroom []
Ill BllowBtz"'lodly
5:35 (])II Home Shopping
8:00 (!) iiJ ID Paid Program
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8:05 (D I Dream of Jaonnto
8:30 (!) Bozo
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Rophaal

11111111 Mlflnum, p.l.
tiD. 1D 700 Chrb -

(I) (TH) MOVIE: Love Thy
Neighbor
(!) (FR) MOVIE: let Ceallaa
10:30 Ill DOne on Ono Willi John
Toah
mShining nmo Station
1121 II (MO,TU,WE,FR)
Family Feud
1121 II (TH) F01 Your Hotllll
Day
11:011 Ill D Maury Povlch
(J) Joan Rivera
(lJ II Geraldo
(l) Roodlng Rainbow
IIlii Homo
11111111 ~~~- Price II Righi
tiD 18 Succan-N-Uft
1121 One on One Willi John
Tooh
I!) Divorce Court
@ Body by Jeko
Ill DayWotch
ID Htort to Heart Wllh
Shalla Wollll
11:30(l) Whore In 111o Worlcllt
Corman Sendlego?
IIJ Cleulc Concontretion
iiJ Dlvorco Court
Getting Fit
Ill Crlllr I Co
0 Potd Program

=

AFTERNOON

12:00 &lt;2l II 1D II &lt;IJ Cl 1111illl
IIJ .. 0 Nawa
(!) Goretdo
Cll (MO) Travola
(l) (TU) Nove
Cll (WE) lnflnna Voyage
Cll (TH) Creative 9pirtt
(l) (FR) Ullin Upl Voleta In
Cotebrollon of Education
(!) lTV Programming
t!DIIM811ock
iiJ The Judge

CID (MO,FR) Country Kllchan
CID (TU) ~lng ond
Deconttlng Today
CID (WE) Exploring Amorlca:

Sldaby!lldo

CID (TH) Going Our Way

=-·

In Motion
atHe-r
12:05 (D Pany Maaon
12:30 (2) II 0 ACto- loolt
Willi Follll Daniela
rna (J)elovlng
®l ®J ID II Young and 111o
Raalleu

iiJ The Juctga

CID Coolctn' USA
QJ BodyShaplng
0 (MO,FR) Amarieln Boby
1D (TU,THJ Naoltlly Kldo
l :011 (2) D 0 Daya of Our Uvea
CJl Nawa
ID II (JJ II AN My Clltldran
Cll (MO) Moclltno Tlllt
Chlngod lila WOlle!
m (TU) FroniHno
(l) (WE) Condition Crttlcot:
The Arnortean Hooltll Cora
Forum
Cll (TH) Mytllryl
(l) (FR) Gorrtaon Katllor'o
Lako Woblgon Spring
W11klnd
t!DI8AndyGrtffllll
iiJ Sllparior Court
C1D Miller and Company
@ (MO) Motowortd

@ (TU) llcholoottc Sporto
Amorlca
@ (WE) Oymnaattca
@ (TH) NASCAR Roclng
@ (FR) Girta' High School
Boahtball

a

Sonya U.a

I :05 (D (MO) MOVIE: The Good
Guya and lila Bod Ouya
(D (TU) MOVIE: Dallvor Uo

From Evil
(D (WE) MOVIE: One In 1
Millon: The Ron ul'lore

~~~ MOVIE: Grluly

Adamo: The R-w•t
(D (FR) MOVIE: The 1..
Ptralea
1:30 111111 @II Bold lnd ""'
Bllutlful

tiD .. Gomer Pyle
iiJ Buparior Court
@ (MO) lllg Ton Womon'a
@ (TU) Auto Rlctng
0 Fa- Knowa Bat
2:00 (2) II 11J Anolllar Worlcl
CJl (MO) Duaoul Sllow
(!) (TU,WE,fH,FR) Now h
Con Ill Told
1D II &lt;IJ II One Life lo L1V1
Cll (MO) Mldnou by
Jonothlln(l) (TU) Ualentng to
A - With IIIII Moyora
m (THJ Advanlu,.. or
Robin Hood
(FR) 11reot111 on Mo,

m

or 0oc1

1111 till a21• AI lllo Worlcl
Tumo

llD II (MO,WE) Paid

1D llodyllllplnfl

tlarlbottt aad
(JJ
0 Sally Jeaay

•

Holoct~uat

lrHth

t!DIIK-~nd

.

10:05 (!) (MO) MOVIE: Horooo
(D (TU) MOVIE: Sitler
Merge~l and 1111 Saturdly
Night udlao
(!) (WE) MOVIE: Flight lo

Hlflltllghta

tiD. (MO,WI!) Brody

Pot

tiD 18 DuckToloa

~(TU,TH,FR) III'N!y

H-.a
iiJ Jokar'a Wild
ra ao. Stltr
ID (MO) CoAaga
Gymnaatlca
a (TU) Making of The
Boba
a NowaDay
ID Bonanza

-

iiJ Win, loH or Drew
CID (MO, WE,FR) On Shiga

CID (TU,TH) Goapat Jubilee
(WE) Snow Skiing
Ill (MO) Acrooa Amartco
With urry WOOdo
2:35 (!) (TU,TH) All In lllo Family
3:00 (2) II IIJ Santa Barbera
(!) (TU,WE,TH,FR) The
Honoymoonora
(lJ II &lt;IJ II General
HoaplUtl
(l) (MO) Bioi of Joy of
PtlnU"'I
(l) (TU) Welcome 10 My
SIUdto
Cll (WE) Mogle of AcryNc
Palntl"ll With Brenda Horrta
Cll (TH) Magic or Oil
Polnll"'l With Buck Poulton
Cll (FR) Joy of Counlry
Pointing
(!) (MO,TU) OED
(!) (WE) Color. An
lnlroduetion
(!) (TH) Economlca USA
(!) (FR) Advlnturea In Scale
Modeling
1111111 1121 • Guiding Ughl
tiD 18 Chip 'n' Delo'o Roacue
Rangera
iiJ Hollywood Squarea
CID Coolctn' USA
@ (TU) Indy 500: A Race
f01H-a
QJ (TH) Mlcl!ay Thornpaon•a
Off Road Chomplot~~htp
Gntnd Prl•
@ (FR) Ama~co·a Cup
Ill tnlemoHonal Hour
0 Scoroerow and Mra. King
3:05 (!) Tom and Jony'a
@

Funhou11

3:30 l!l (TU,WE,TH,FR) Saved by
Ilia Bitt
(l) Mlator Rogora'
Neighborhood
(!) (MO) Mogle of 011
Pointing Buck PeuiiiOfl
(I) (TU) Creative living With
Sllaryt Borden
(I) (WE) Acrylic Art lo Fun
(I) (TH) Flnanelet Advl1011
(I) (FR) Art of WHIIam
AlexancMr and Sharon
Porktna

llD II 'Toll Spin

iiJ Scrabble

CID Top Card
@ (TU) Sunklat K.I.D.S.
1D (WE) ldltarod Oog Sled
Roco
4:00 (2). 11111111 ~ Oprah
Wlnl!wy
(J) (TU,WE,TH,FR)
DuckTolea
(lJ Cl (MO, TU,WE,FR)
Monlel Wttlloma
(lJ II (JJ II (TH) ABC
Aftaracmol Speciata
Cll Se11me Slrllt
IllS (MO,TU,WE,FR) Jlflny
Jonoa
(I) Body Elaclrte
llD ID Olrl&lt;wlng Duck
~ e Golden Glrta
iiJ (MO,TU,WE) 125,000
Pyramid
iiJ (TH,FR) Sontor POA GoH
CID Club Donee
@ (MO,TU,WE,TH) Qlobtt
Sllpercord Wraadlng
Ill EarlyPrtmo
0 H-• on Hoi Whaola
4:05 (!) FllntaiOnoo
4:30 l!l (TU,WE,TH,FR) Chtp 'n'
Dale'• Reecu. Rangert
(!) Seaamo Slrllt

tiD II Boolle)ulca
IIJ ID (MO,TU,WE,FR) 227
1121e (TH) For Your Hnith
Day
iiJ (MO,TU,WEJ Preaa Your
Luck
Ill lnoldo Pollllca '92
ID Coptaln N
4:35 lD Brady Bunch
5:00 (2) II Colby Show
(!) (TU, THJ Ulllo Monnald
(J) (WE,FR) Po- Team
(lJ II Maury Povlch
(l) Roedl~ Rainbow
IllS Who I Ilia Boll?

11111111 Jeopardy!

tiD II Tiny Toona
Advonturea
'
Cll Geroldo
IIJ Donahue
iiJ CMO,TU,WE) Juat tho
Tan of Ua
12!1 VtdooPM
QJ (MO) Scliolaollc Sporto
Amartca
@ (TU) Monllor Truck

ChllleiiQO
QJ (WE) Gennan Soccar
Wllkly
@ (TH) Thll Will&lt; In Wortcl
Laogua Foolbtll

a (artyPrtono

1D Super Morlo Broa.

Sllperaltow
5:06 (D HIPPY Doyt
5:30&lt;2leCIIMrl
(!) Flnletonol
(l) (I) Whore In lllo World II
Cannan Sandtogo?

&lt;IJ II Mllme'a Femlly
11111111 (MO, TU, Wl!,'rlt) Nawa
1111 1111 (FR) Hlln of 0111o
tiD II Mr. iolvocrore
i1J (MO,TU,WE) My Two

Dada
(MO) Sporto Rapomra

a

ID (TU) NCAA Today

@ (Wt) R101nlng and

Racing
a (TH)

Thoroughnc~

Olga II
Qt Sltowlllz Toctoy

IDPoPire
5:35 ill

Jofferaona

an ·interview wittl BIQ Boss
Man ; WrestleMania VIII

Pralrta

repon

ID rJ Paid Program
(l)
(JJ

a Hammerman~

0 Bononu

lluddl a

liD ID MOVIE: Never Cry

Wolf (PG) (2 00)
CGlKidaMogt
0 NIIA tnolde ShiH Q
iiJ MOVIE: Jake Spenner.
Prtvell Eyo (2:00) Sleroo. 1;1
CID Rtmodollng and
DecoroHng Today
D Women'• TMnil Bausch
&amp; Lomb Championship,
semifinal from Amelia Island .

Fla. (L)
Ill NowoDey
ID The VIrginian
12:30 Cll a 11111D Babe
Wlnktaman'o Good Flohlng
Babe demonstrates how to
find nver waUeye, Babe
hshes for the grey11ng 1n

lmamolk&gt;nlll

5:05 (D Flahlng Roland
Martin
5:30 (!) Andy Grtflttli
IZl Naw Yankee Worl&lt;lhop

1fi Wind In !he Wtllowo

i1J My Two Deda
atNawamokor
S.rurdoyfNewa
5:35 (D Flahln' Willi Orlonclo
Wlloon

EVENING
6:00 IllS (lJ II &lt;IJ II 1111 G
IIZIINowa
(!) Llfealyleo of llie Rich &amp;
Ftmout

Canada.
IIJ Vlclory Garden C
(JJ II ABC Weekenif
Spectalt []
(!] Thlo Old Houu Q
1118) Hlgh·O
II)) Rodney Oengortteld: It's
lonely ellllo Top Scenes

&lt;IJSConcom
®JD U.S. Fonn Report

tiD II Bucl&lt;tl'Hora ond 111o
Toad Wert Q
IIIII Ntwa

IZj Nowton'a Apple Stereo

1fi

Wild Amence Slereo. Q
tiD 18 Amarico'a Moat
Wanted An electronics
is accused of
murd8f Ster&amp;O C
1n~entor

11J TV Honor Society
iiJ Counttralrlka

from the comedian 's earty
films and specials are

IIJ K-TV
QJ SportaCenler

couple&lt;! with foolage from

0 Popeyo

IOt8r'ii8WS With lh8

Ill DoyBreok

CID 23nl Annual Dove
Awerdl The year's best

his new film, Ladybugs , and
film 's

Fishing lor bass with

ID II A~WHkond

Specioto
IIlii 0 epteln Plonol
ond 1111 PlonatHra 0
111111D Ag~ Counlry
tiD tD Toxte Cruudara
IIJ II Ulllo Mermaid
QJ Oultloor Wrlttra
Ill Ntwi/Sporla Cion-Up

top-water ba1ts; a look at a
new portable boat garage .

11J SpomWortd Wo~d
Figure Skaling

Championships , e•hibition (T}

(!) Slrlll Juattce
\11 Cl Boouty end lllo 111111

m
Graal Amartcen QuiH
Slereo.

(JJ II

MOVIE: I've Heard !he
Mormaldo Singing (2 00)
(!) Hometimo
Ill Gl) Paid Prognm
~ 8l Laalltef A dy1ng g&gt;rl s

Pooh

Oftd

fascination with the v1na
outside her w1ndow bnngs
her SISler and a painter
together to deal With her
1llness and the1r own failures .

(0:30)
CID Chlmplonllltp Rodeo Tho
t 992 Time&lt;! Event World
Championship in Guthrie ,

Okla ., is shown . Stereo.

Ill NowaDay
I :05 (l) MOVIE: Bonnude
irlonglo tGi (2:00)
1:30 (l) Sblp CltJIHing With Ktyt
Wood
Now Ytnkae Worklhop

IJi

crf GD

all II CBS Sporta
S.Mday Diet Coi&lt;e F1gure

North American Outdoora
Ill Nawo(Tho Big Story
9:00 (2) II IIJ Captain N ond lila
New Sur.r Merlo WOlle! 0
(!) WH lnd Morning ~WI
11111 IIlii Darl&lt;wlng Duck

m

Body Etoetrlc

C!J To lila Monot Born
,rlll~:tf Garfield ond
t!DI8 Tom • Jerry Kldo 0
i1J Potd Progrem
CID Boekyard Amortca
a Sportamen'a Challenge
Ill NIWI/HIIIIIIWHk
0 fllnlttone Klda
1:05 (D WCW Power Hour
1:30 (2) II 11J Pn&gt;Stara Q
ID II (I) a -•Juice 0

(l) Body Etoetrlc
(!] Kuplng Up A-rencea

tiD 18 TAZ·MANtA Q
iiJ HOIIywoocllnalder
12!1 Joy of Qordonlng
QJ Fllhln' Hole
Qt NowafMoneywHk
0 NtwAn:htoa
l 0:011 (2) G 11J WlohKid Shirring
Macaulay Culkin Q
(!) Bobt Wlnklamon'o Good
Ftahlng
ID II (I) Sllmer1 end !he
Reel Glioalbuolora Q
(l) Body Electric
C!J Walling for God
1111111 ~ 8l Teenage
Mutanl Ntnjo TurUta Q
tiD 18 Bitt &amp; Ted' a E•cellant
AdvaniUra []
iiJ Danca Peny USA
12!1 Atoona'a Cralta
Hun~ng Slrllegtoa
Ill Ntwo/ShowBiz Thta

a

a

Wllk

ID Prtnce Valiant Stereo . 1;1
10:05 ill Nallonal Geographic
Explorer
10:30 (lJ II 1!11 Chip a P!PPO"a
Cortoon Ma-•• Q
(!) Pold Program
(lJ
a Piri!H of Dtrl&lt;
Woler
1IJ
Etoctrlc
C!J Ala You llllng Servod'l
tiD .. Ulllo Shop Q
i1J Youlltquaka
12!1 Counlry Kltcllon
Jimmy Houlton Outdooro
Qt Nowa/Siytl Willi El11

:J

a

Klanacli
1111 Bockalegl at llie Zoo
11:00
1!11 s.vecr br 111o 11111

Ialii

(15 WCW Pro Wraodlng

ID II Nol Juallllo Newa

(J) Body Etoetrlc
~~·Bunny l

Tweely

CD Jul~Child end Company

Skat1ng Championship from

Cincinnati (T)

Auto Roclrlg Lowes 150
lrom Nonh WilkesbOro. N.C.

@

(T)

Ill Nawomakor
Sahlrdly/Nawa
0 Wagon Train
2:00 (!) Majot Laoguo Boaoboll
St . louis Cardinals at

Ch1cago Cubs (L)
ID rJ llfeatyloa or the Rich
&amp; Fomouo
(l) Sawing Willi Honer
(I) Travola []
tiD ID MOVI!: Fo101 (A)
(200)

i1J MOVIE: Abducled (2-on)
12!1 Remoclollng and
Decottllng Today
Ill Newt/Hoeltllwaok
2:30 (l) Boat of Jor of PelnHng
Stereo.

CID tn·Fiohennen Angling
Adventure• How to catch

b•g

largemouth bass. Stereo

Ill Nowa/Siylo Willi Elu
Klonach
3:011 Ill D 0 NBA Showtlmo
(lJ II Ill a PBA Bowling
U.S. Open from Canada.gue.
NY (L)

IIl Woodcarving With Rick
Bull Stereo.
(!) On the Wotarweyo

a NHRA Todly NHRA

Winston Invitational Race
Results from Rockmgham .

N.C Stereo.
Amtrtce'a Cup Defender
Semifinals {L)
Ill Nowa/On lhe Menu
1D Big Vettoy
3:05 (D MOVIE: DIUflhltra of
Satan !AI (2 :00)
3:30 (2) D IIJ NIIA lllakotbtll
QJ

Utah Ja2l at Los Angeles

Lakers (L)
(l) Wood!rfahfo Shop
Stereo. C

®JIDI IIJ"8l PGA Golf The
Masters. 3rd round from

Augusta, Ga (l) Q
CID lnalde Wlneton Cup
Racing Food City 500 from
BnSiol. Tenn. (T) Stereo
a Nowatyour Monty
4:00 (l) Men:lo Adame: Heartland
Cooking Stereo.
(I) - .. tn 111o Worlcl to
~rmon S.ndl1f107 Stereo

~IIALFC

iiJ Square !'ega
CID 2nd Annual

NASCAR/NHRA AII·Shlr
Sollbol Clomo NASCAR
Wlnslon cup drtvers compete

flU:.,. Bock lo lllo

against NHRA drivers on the

a
byBido
a l'1r Flahlng llie WOlle!
a Nowa/Sctonca ond

drag-rac:lng circu~ In softball
from Charlotte. N.C. Slereo
Ill Nowa/Sporta Clou·Up
OGunomoka
4:30 ID g llle Wide Wortcl of
$porta Horse Racing , Blue

tiD II 'NilA Pro Wmlllng
iiJ WliF IlodylleFI
ezp~or~ng Amorlca: Slcla

Taclinology Wllk
llllllonlnu
11:30 (2) e Cillrt.aton Dally Mott
Spelling Ill (1 ·OO)
Cllll On s..no: e.,.,.,...,
RlaponH
(J) LMng Wllh Anlmoll
~ Frugot Gourmet Stereo.

i• ~· Whare'l

Mar~tyn McCoo. Glen
Campbell. (1 :30) Stereo.
@ Reelng Aeroaa America

•

Oaklawn Handicap from Hot

I :00 (2) D

8:00 (2) e 0 Spaeoealt O
(!) U.S. Farm Report
ID II Ill Cl Now
AdVI~rea or Winnie lho

C!J Fra Flelda
till aD Sporta Quoat
IIJ) tD Altack of tho Killer
Tomalooa 0
~ tD Jim Henoon'a Muppel
BobtooQ
QJ Greol Outdoora
Ill DayBreak
1D Augla Doggie ond
Frtando
8:05 (D Bononu
8:30 (2) II 11J Yo, Yogtl Q
(!) Minority Buolnooo Report
ID lltta unci of 111o
Loot
C!J No .. Uka Homo
I!IID Wide Worlcl of Klclti
tiD II ~·a Wortcl []

the Grand Ole Opry Hoose in
Nashvllla, Tenn. Hosts:

Slereo.
9 Evana and Novak

ID Tho l.ltlleo

GooH

performers, songs and
VIdeos are honored hve from

stars (0:30)
CID Gntal Amorlcon Outdoora

7:05 (D Gunamoka
7:30 (!) Wo~d Tomonow

Grass Stakes from

Lexington. Ky . (l); Jeep
SuperStars from Cancun .

Mexico; WOI'Id Extreme Ski
Champtonships from Valdez .
Alaska (T)

i

Frugol Gounnot Stereo

Square Q!1e TV Q
II ALF t;l

Q

a Coyntry Blat Stereo.
a ee~yPrtono

From 1 Counlry Gordon

1111 ID Boaom

Conaopondenta/NOWI
7:00 (2) G Mr. Cartoon
(!) la"Y Jonoo
1D Cl Hemmennon 0

r.:mr
a

iiJ Juat llio Ton of Ua

CD Victory Gordon

D. Jameo Kennedy

a

Stereo.
tiD II
F Wreatllng
Clllttonge Bl'llish Bulldog. El
Matador, Jake (The Snake)
Robens. Beverty Brotliers.
Pape Shango and Repo Men;

(]) uttle Houae on the

QJ UpCio11

Ill Doylreak
6:05 (2) II NBC Ntghtalde
&amp;:30 (2) II S.rurdey Report
ill Botw11n lila Unaa
111181) Ula Cholcea
0 Wttcr World of Kida
a TlioroUfrhiHed Dlgoat

5:00 ID Thla Old Houn []
(!) ~II" a For l'way

12:00 (!)Soul Treln

1111

Grlffltll

i1J OUII Trouble

a Newa/Future w~~c~~

AFTERNOON

D~N Nawa
tiD II Coral Ridge Mtnlatriea

2:30 (!) ]MO) Major Loogue
Boaoboll
(!) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Andy

SportaConlef

ID Fa- Knowo IIIII

Frlenda

llit•••

or;.-a., -"·*·

-·

iiJ Scooby Doo
@(MO,FR)~

•
•

1D (MO) Sportaconler

Repolt

NlghIIJ (TU) Petd Program
iiJ (WE,TH,FR) My Slotor
Sam
QJ (MO) tnatdo t11o Santor
PGA Tour
QJ (TU) Auto Roctng
a Sporta uleNight
5:05 (2) e (TU, WE,TH,FR) Homa
Shopping
(D (MO) Hogen'a H (2) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Momtng
Streldt
5:30 (!) (TH) Lone Re~
1D II Thto Morning'•
Buolneu
&lt;IJ II ABC World Nowa Thla

8Uftrd

81Dc1111t11

iiJ Mullllr, Sho Wrole

5:00 (!) (MO) love Boal
1D II Morning Agricufture

ANNOUNCES

8.9°/oNEw
CAR nNANCING

l

a

HILLSIDE BAPTIST
CHURCH

On The S~ot
Finencing fer
Quelified

woldo? ~;;r
llvtd by lila I!![ 0
My IIIIer Sem Q
Going Our Way
1D Sportacanler
Ill BIHbttt '92

•

MORNING

IVIIHS

on:

.,

SAT" APRIL 11

WPIIY

cage .
Once a mon1h or so, Brown.
holds group counseling sessions;:
with Lhe lawbreakers he ha-; put
probation.
•
" Mos1 of them cannot see day-:
light al llle end of lhe IUDneL Youtell 1hem 10 work hard and geC
ahead to do what?" he asked.;
"You iear him down but you give~
him 1hese small 1hings he can:_
accomplish."
~

1992CavalietRS

bnllret,

•

.
•

fMDclllttlt
2 Dr.,llr, AIIIFII, tinted

...... •IIJ.Iocll:

SATURDAY

Springs. Ark . (T)
Ill World Today
0 Bonlortown Stereo. Q
8:05 ill WCW Sohlrday Nitht
Wraatilng
8:30 (2) e 11J NBC Newa []
Cllll IIlii ABC Nawa~
(J) Wild America Stereo.
C!J Rerum to lllo Sea Stet .
all• cas Nowa Q
at!IIIDNawafl'lnnacle
0 New Zotro Slereo. Q
7:00(2)11 U Wliael of
Fortune 1.,1
(!) Runewoy With lllo Rlcli a
Famou•

(1)11 To Be Announced
(l) Norura Slereo. 1;1
&lt;IJII Hao How

C!J Lawrance Walk
Star Trek: The
Next Ganerallon8
~• Boywoldt
iiJ MacGyvor Q
=~
Qt Capital GongJNawa
0 Rln nn Tin, l&lt;-9 Cop
Stereo. Q
7:30 Cll • 1111 C1D Coah Elplollon
(!) S1 00,1100 Fortune Hunt
CID uH TV Willi Wllloma
end Roe Stereo.
QJSpeedwHk
8 Nowa/Sporta Serurdly
0 Blecl! Shllllon Stereo O
7:35 (D NBA Boalcotbtll New
IIJ) 18 1!11

Jersey Nets at Atlanta
Hawks (L)

8:00 (2) II 11J Goldin Girlt
Dorothy has trouble witt1

Sophia a~er she meels the
Pope . (A) Slereo Q
(!) Bullo Eye
lilii Ill a Who'a ""'
Booa? Tony decides to lin ally
pop the question to Angelo
(Pt 2 ol 2) Stereo. g
(l) Advonruraa of Robin
Hood
(!] Trevola In Europa Willi
Rick Sleveo Stereo.
I!DIIID a 11 a,.nd Opening
of Eun&gt; Olanoy The newly
f1n1shed 01sney theme park
located outsi&lt;le of Paris is
un'o'elled in grand style
Hosts : Melan1e Griffith and
~n Johnson. (2:00) Stereo.

~ ID Major loogue

Bauball Cincinnati Reds at
Houslon Astros (L)
I!) WUF Footboll San
Antonio Riders at

Sacramento Surgo (L)
CID Opty Bocl!atogo Stereo.
QJ Chlekored Flog lndycar
from Phoenix

a0

f1l....

PrlmoNowa -~
Roolt: The Ninrt
GeMratlon (Pt 6 of 7) (2:00)
8:30(2)11 IIJ Powon Thai Bo
SenatOf Powers tries to
1mpress Margaret with a

r119ht ol passion Stereo C
(!) NIIA Boakallilll lnd1en8
Pacers at Chicago Bulls (L)
1D II (l)e Billy Billy ana
Mary spend the weekend
together and q!! cold feet
(Pt t) Stereo. L,l
(!] New Explorora Stereo Q
12!1 Gr11nd Olo ()pry Live
Stereo.
QJ Checkered Flog Formula
One from Brazil (T)

9:00 (2) D IIJ Empty Nool
Laverne comes out fighting
when Or . Weston hires a
former nurse. ~~ereo Q

1D Cl IIlii P
Strongert Larry tries to

!i·ng

forget Mary Anne by
to
a singles bar Stereo.
(l) AuaUn City Umlta S reo.
(!) War File: ehronology 1r1

Europa
CID Sittler Broa. Stereo.
QJ Soturdly Night Thunder
Midgets from Ventura, Caltl.
(L)

Ill Both Stdoa With Jean
JockiiOfl
9:30 (2) • 11J NUflla Hank
competes with his brother lor
ll!,na·s aflactlons. (A) Sllreo.

(lj II

(J)e Growing PHta
M1ke eats dinner wllli Carol
and her boyfriend during e
power failure. Q
Ill Rttlebla SoUn:aa
10:00 (2) II 0 Slatoro "lex UIIS
her own money on 1 client
and lhen laces selling her
home. Stereo. Q
(I) u.s. OlympiC Gold
Continurd on Nat Pqe"

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