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                  <text>Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnl Pleasanl, WV

May 3, 1992

USDA pays farmers not to grow on federally leased land
WASHINGTON (AP)
Whether you want to grow crops or
let your fields lie fallow , the federal government probably has a program for you.
A recent study by the General
Accounting Office found that the
government spent $3.2 milli on in
1988 and 1989 on farm subsidtes to
growers who were producmg surplus crops on fede rall y owned land.
The GAO al so found that the
governm ent spen t an additional
$350,000 on farmers who agreed
not to grow subsidized crops on the
land they were leasing from se veral
U.S. agencies.
The federal gove rnm ent owns
about 690 million acres of rural
land at install aLJons around th e
country. said the GAO, a congressional watchdog agency. Becau se
some federal agcnc tcs need on ly
part of the land under their junsdi c-

tion, they lease the remainder 10
farmers for agricultural purposes.
In 1988 and 1989, 10 federal
agenoes had leased about 101,000
acres to farmers who received
USDA income-support payments.
the GAO said.
In addition to the rent revenues,
the federal agencies also received

mowmg and fencmg, as pan of th e
lease agreements, the GAO said.
At the same time, surpluses of
some farm commodities have
prompted USDA to encour age
farmers to remove _some of th eir
land from productiOn. Increased
concern about the_effect of farmin g
on the envtronment, especially on
sod, has also spurred the devclor-

land -rnamLaincn ce services. such as
'j

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BUILDING DEDICATED- The new $1.3
million Middleport headquarters of the Meigs
County Department of Human Services was
dedicated at ceremonies on Sunday. Among the
speakers was Ohio DHS Director Terry Wallace
(standing). Also pictured, 1-r, are Meigs County
Commission Clerk Mary Hobstetter; commi.s-

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
An estimated 350 people attended Sunday's open house at the new
Meigs County Department of
Human Services headquarters in
Middleport
Construction on the $1.3 million
building began a year ago. The project, which involved adding a
three -story additioo to the existing
Race Street building, was designed
by the an:hitectural fum of Burgess
&amp; Niple. Ltd. of Parkersburg,
W.Va. The new building will consolidate all DHS operations under
one roof. Until now, those offices
have been spread out among three
Middlepon buildings.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones opened Sunday's
ce remony by thanking those
responsible for construct ing th e
Race Street building in the early
1970's, members of the Middlepon
Citizens Development Corporation
- Paul Smart. Lee McComas. Dr.
Ranlin R. Pickens, Dale Dutton,
Gene Grate, Bernard Fultz, and former Middleport Mayor John Zirkle.
Middleport off1 cials and the

1989 Chevrolet

Ohioans pray for peace and justice
By The Associated Press
Ohioans turned to prayer and
pleas for unity in a continui ng
effofl to ease the tensions heightened by the Rodney King verdtct
and the rioung in Los Angeles.
Three days of rioting in Los
Angeles followed the acquittal last
Wednesday of four white police
off~em accused of assaulting King,
a black motorist. The rioting has
resulted in at least 46 deaths and
more than 2,000 injuries.
On Sunday, a return to relattvc
calm was reported in California.
and churches. sy nago gues and
mosques in Ohio joined thousands
around the country in a spoctal day
of prayer.
Cleveland Mayor Michael R.
White JOined about 300 worshipers
at Morning Star Bapust Church m
calli ng for peace and JUStice.

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Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repor!Cd Monday that
deputies have transported Rober! W. Bays, Sr. of Sti versvillc 10 the
Orient Reception Center.
Bays will serve a two-year pmon term imposed by the Meigs
County Common Pleas Coufl.
Bays was indicted for stealing scrap metal from Don Johnson
and fur stealing an automobile from George Capehart. He had
entered a plea of not guilty to an indicuncnt and was scheduled for a
jury trial in late April. Bays changed his plea to guilty and both
third-degree felony charges. and was sentenced to the max tmum of
two years on each charge by Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill.
The sentence on the second county was suspended and Bays was
placed on five years probation. Credit was given for time served in
the Meigs County JaiL

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"In the shocki ng epilogue to the
Rodney King deci sio n, people
shou ld be seeki ng solutions to
social problems.'' White said at a
news conferen ce after the service.
" We cannot go back to business as
usual."
He said Clevelanders mus1 continue to work for social j11&lt;tiee and
that the cairn in Cleveland is not an
indication that there ts no injusuce
there.
The Rev . Earl Preston Jr. , pastor
of Morning Star, praised White for
mobiliLing Clevelanders to help
av01d the violence that occurred in
other American citie s.
There were some racially-motivated disturbances reported in
Cleveland after the King verdict,
but no major problems, police said.
In Cinci nnati , Sunday's sermon

Bays transported to prison

NP2555

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Athens, Ohio 45701

Camara

police deparunent were thanked for strucLion process.
"Mike and his staff have worked
their cooperation during the construction process. as were the resi- diligently to bring this important
dents of Middleport and officials at project to fruition," Boyle said.
the neighboring Peoples Banking "During the process of construction
and moving, the staff have continand Trust Company.
Jones also recognized the archi- ued to provide a very high level of
tectural fmn and the project's con- service and have continued to push
tractors - general contractor Wesam forward in improving tho se ser·
Construction of Pomeroy; Advance VI.CCS. "
"As you dedicate your bwldmg,
Elec tric and Specialty Piping of
Parkersburg; and Anderson's Fur- I hope you plan to renew your
commitm ent to provide services to
niture of Pomeroy.
Meigs County DHS Director Meigs Cou nty in a time of financial
Michael Swisher explained that no unrest."
Ohio DHS Director Terry Walco unty funds were involved in
buildmg ihe new fa ci lity, stating lace echoed the se ntiment s of
that Meigs County received rent Swisher and Boyle, stating that the
payments from the sta te for office local department's commiunent to
space used by the department. community service was "encourag Those rent payments will now go ing" to the state office.
to pay for t~Je new county-owned
Following the dedication cerebuilding, instead of toward rent on mony , commissioner Manning K.
privately-oWlled faci lities.
Rou sh co mm ented that he was
Swis her introduced Helen proud of the building_
Boyle, director of the Columbus
"This is Meigs Count y's buildDHS district, of which Meig s
County is part. Both Swisher and ing," Roush said, "and it is a beauBoyle recognized and thanked the tiful building. We should be proud
local staff lor their high perfor- of it - there aren't many like it in
mance sta ndards during the con - our commu nity."

___ Local briefs---

1

Ed Gillan
S1!es Mgr.

New DHS building dedicated

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sinners Manning Roush and David Koblenlz;
Meigs DHS Director Michael Swisher; commissioner Richard Junes; Helen Boyle, director of
the Culumbus DHS district and Tum Karr of the
general contracting firm of Wesam Construc-

1 1\U( .Ifup Amrrr&lt;a'

Gallipolis, OH

A Mult1me d1a In c Newsoacer

Cong. Wise to ask
engineers to expedite
scrubber application

Rebate

1900 Eastern Ave.

1 Section . 10 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 4, 1992

M.S.R.P.
Discount

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Copyrighted 1992

II 's no wonder Ihe Consumers D1gest

5 spe ed air. cruise

"' '

co ntrol surplu ses. which drive crops on federal property.
down farm prices.
S1 nce 1974, the government has
According to US DA officials, allowed farmers who lease federal
all farmers who meet tltc qualifica- land to grow crops that are also elitions for income-s upport programs gtblc for government suppor1 payarc legally cnti~cd to receive ~to sc ments, the GAO said.
subsidies.
Dominique Wilkins of the Atlanta
As of Au gus t 1990, the GAO
Hawks
led the National Basketball
satd , about 1,600 farm ers were
Association
in scoring in 1986 with a
growmg one or more subsidized
30.3 average

Reds tied for
first after win
1i over Cubs

[JII· -

Livestock report
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Dtrect livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Oh10 Department of Agricul ture:
Barrows and gilts: mo st ly
steady: demand moderate.
U.S . 1-2 , 225-250 lbs. , country
points, 40.50-42 .00; plants 42.0043.00, a few 43.50.
U.S. 1-3, 250-260 lbs., co untry
points, 39.50-41.00: plants 410042.50.
Receipts Thursday 7,900 Estimated receipts Friday 8,500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 1.00 hi gher
Slaughter steers: choice 69 00 76. 75; select67.00-7100.
Slaughter heifers: choice 6R0075.2S; select 6 L00-68.00.
Cows: steady to higher; all cows
58.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to htghcr: all bulls
67.75 and down.
Veal calves: Sheep and lambs: 7.25 to 9.75
higher; choice wools 72. 00-80.50:
choice clips 75 .00-85 .00: feeder
lambs 81.50 and down: old sheep
25.00 and down.
Spring lambs: RO 00-87.00.

mcnt of other USDA programs th3t
remove land from production.
Under th e law, USDA can
require farm ers to reduc e th e
amount of land in production as a
requirement to participate in farm
subsidy programs. The secretary of
agnculture can also pay farmers 10
vo luntarily dtvert additional land
fr om production if necessary to

Ohio Lottery•

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air conditioning, powe;
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Johnston to appear on program
A Meigs County man is scheduled to appear on local television
on Tuesday 10 talk about his craft hobby.
Eugene Johnston of Danville was interviewed by WSAZ television reporter Bob Smith regarding the walking sticks that Johnston
crafts out of his home.
Continued on pag( 3

I

at Greater New Light Bapti st
Church also focused on the vio lence and the need for unity . The
Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth called for
diverting some of the nation's mil! tary budget to human issues.
"Build house s. not bombs ;
build refrigerators, not guns,"
Shuttleswonh said.
He asked that whites crusade for
ractal fairness.
"America ts on the verge of hell
if 11 cannot quickly reorder it' priorities.', Shuttlesworth said.
The executive board of the
Metropolitan Area Religious Coali tiOn of Cincinnati condemned the
violence in an open lcuer to the
Cmcinnati religious commun it y
and expressed hope that it will lead
to better police -community rcla lions.
In Toledo, about 65 Bowling
Green students marched peacefully
from campus to the Wood Count y
Cou rthouse Sunday to protest the

U.S. Rep. Bob Wise has wrlllen
a letter to the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers requesting that the Corps
"expedite approval of American
Electric Power's (AEP) appl ication
to install scrubbers at the Gav in
Power Plant."
His letter will be submllled
during tonight public hearing by
the Army Corps in Mei gs County.
The Corps, citing potemtal crowd
size, announced a move in the
public hearing from ChcshireKyger Elementary School to Mctgs
High School near Pomeroy, Meigs
County. The meeting, which will
still be held at7 p.m ., will be in the
school's gymnasium.
TWo years ago, Wise sa1d he
wrote the legislation to provide un employment benefits for people
who lose their jobs because of the
new Clean Air Act regulations.
Today, he adds he want&lt; to make
sure I ,200 miners m West Virgmia

At least 10 die
on Ohio roads
lly The Assoriated l'ress
At least 10 people were killed in
traffic accidents on Ohto roads dm ing the weekend, the Stale Hrgh way Patrol said Sunday.
The patro l count&gt; fatalities from
6 p. m. FricL1y to midnight Sunday .
The dead
SUND.I Y
ELYR IA
Lester A.
Whitcamlfe, 34, of Elyna, a pas senge r in a one -c ar acc id ent on

Ohio 2 111 Lora in Counly.
SATURDAY
MOUNT VER NON - Ronda!
K. Gnffin, 48, of Fred ericktown .
driver of a motorcyc le that hit a
utility pole on U.S. 36 in Kn o'
County_
TOLEDO - Kevin Rosonowski, 21, hom etown unavailable .
when his motorcycle hit another
motorcyc le on a Lucas Cou01y
road.
NEW PIIILADELPHIA Bonnie JafV!s, 28. of Gnadenhut ten. when her car was involved in a
three-veht cle accident on a Tuscarawas County road.
BRYAN
Joseph P.
Muehlfcld, 22, of Blakeslee, and
Mtlcs B. Dayhoff. 29, of Montpe Iter. drivers of a car and a pickup
truck that collided on U.S. 20 1n
Willmms Cuumy.
SA RDINIA - Sandra Hiddle
42, of Fairfield, in a car-truck crash
on Ohio 32 in Brown County.
JAMESTOWN - Robert L
Smith, 32, of Jamestown. pas.sc tl !~,- ~
in a one -vehicle accident on a
Greene Counly road in Ross Tmc Jl ·
ship.
FRIDAY NIGIIT
NEW PIII LA DELPI II,\
Todd E. Grove, 4. of Ulmchsvli k .
a pedestri an hit by a car wh il e
crossing Oh io ROO 1n Tusc1raw;1s
County.
AKRON _ John A. c 11 uilo Ill .
25 , hometown unav ali;thk . drt vn
in a one-car crash 011 a co ly .s treet.

and Ohio "don't have to find out
first hand how the program works."
AEP has ncquested perm tssion to
build flue gas scrubbers at its Gavin
plant in Cheshire to comply with
federally -mandated sulfur dimidc
levels by 1995 and to allow con tinued use of high sulfur coal
mined at the nearby Meigs Mine.
"If AEP is permitted to use tech nology rather than havmg to switch
to another fuel at the Gavin plant.
hundreds of mining jobs will be
saved both in West Virginia and m
Ohio," Wtsc wrote in his lcuer w
CoL James Van Epps of the Anmy
Corps' Huntington district.
'This would be espocmlly unfortunate," W1sc cxplamed, "because
of the economic and environmental
viability of using scrubbers to meet
the Clean Air regulations."
As the author of the amendment
to the Clean Air Act 10 provide JOb
Lnlining and transitional un employment benefits to people who
arc displaced by the act's
regulations. Wtsc noted, "I smcerely hope no one will ever have
to usc that program "
Some groups have r.uscd concerns that building scrubbers would
adversely affect wetlands ncar the
power planL "There must be a deli cate balance struck between en-

vlfonmcntal

and

ccooomiC

con -

cerns. espocially
when the
livelihood of I ,200 people 1s aJ
stake," Wise said . ·· B=usc of the
progress made in crcatmg new

"''CI·

lands, the enmon mental tmpact ol
the scrubber proJCCI will ac luall)
be, on average, postti vc"
Wise concluded . ··A uulitis
dCCJSJOil whether to scruf"l Or lD

swuch . fuels is nor a simple
economiC question. for the ch01ce
wlll affccl cnrirr communiucs and
thcu survival ."

The Corps of Engineers
origi nally expocted between 100 10
200 people to attend the hearing,
spokesman Jim Richmond said
Friday. The Corps decided to move
the hcanng after people comente&lt;l
that up to 1,500 people may attend.
including many from Ma&lt;;OO
Counly.
Interested people arc encouraged
by the Corps to attend the hearing.
however, in considemuon of the
large expected crowd. restrain t is
urged by people suppor1ing AEP's
permil appltcation.
"If the hearing 1s dt sruptcd, then:
could be a request for a conunuancc - leading 10 a delay of the
permtt process:· Jacl Fowler, exec utive vice prestdent of the Gallta
Count y

Cu1111il tl1 1;,,

~~~~vlv\" l...nH. J Jt

Corporation wd.

LA mayor lifts curfew;
students return to classes
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Com- of Mann ~s and Na 11onal Gu:ud :-.muter s and school buse s headed mcn contnw cJ to patrol Lh c streets.
back onto free ways this morning,
Three N~llio n ~JI Guard troOjl~
aiming for th e r.rst normal work- killed nn ll~.~p:1 nic mJn m a spom;
day since the nots began . Rul car wh n tTL nl to cra-.h a hamcJtk
ovemigh t, ihc large ly ca lm week - wes t o f d~)wru ow n after curf.:-~A
end was shaken by the shooting by SundJy nreh t. police and the mrlr Nattonal Guardsmen of a moton st wry said. The guJrd smen ftrcd 14
who tri ed to run them down .
tllncs, th e mdrt~uy sa rd m a o;; rJtc The firs t shooting by troops on rn cnL
flot pc11rol broug ht Ute death toll 10
Otherwi se, on ly sporadtc vto47.
lcncc had been reponed Sunday :
Mayor Torn Bradley lifted the Three peo ple were arrested after a
du sk-to-dawn curfew today. Late polrcc Sl;ll lll n WJ.S rlfcd on ; gunmC'Il
Sunday. spokes man Bill Chand ler shot .:Jt ~b rin es sranding guard m
sa1d th e m:1vor would dcc1d c

whether to

Sil l \

with lltal decision

after mcct 111 g w11h police and fire
chi efs.
Even be fore lLt wn brukc , there

were s1gns the city WJS ret Limin g to
nom1a l. Co mmut ers ~ afte r aban-

don rug th e h1 ghways m the cmsh of
last week ·s vtolence - head ed
back to the free ways on a fo ggy
mornmg thai obscured the downtown skylin e.
City workers rcmovcU b J rT IL' r s
tD c.·uts on th e I l ~tr bor Free way that

we re erec ted to block tra lfic i1110
1hc ~ Lrr c k c n arc~l"i .
In rrot - ravJ gc d Korcatown , a
d;ury tru c k delivered mrlk to Lo.s

Angeles sc hoo ls for tuda(s
res um pti on of classes and ye llow
.s drool bu'iCS fl UJI Cd OUl fo r lh Lif
mornrn g p1ckups.
The r1 ots - th e. nntion 's dcadl rc st civrl unr es t 1n 75 year s L'[ ur trd un Wcd ncsd:ty, rJgi ng for
three i..f:r ~·s and ni g ht 'i. Thnus;mds

Long lk:~dr. hut th e Marines didn'1
return fr rl', a polr cc car in So uth

Cc11tLil l rh Ange les was shot ar:
Manne:. rrr Walnut Park, adjace nt
to South CL·rJllal . w ere fired on
from an JUt11, hut Lhcy dldn'l return
the fir e Lrt~·r, rwo men who Lr rcd
to ru n a r~u·. !! ··I Pc k th er e w er e
f.lrrCS IL'd r\1 l , lll\.' ·,1, ,i.._ hun .
Ck r~·· ;rll 11, , r thl' City spoke of
the rr r) t lr111n th,· J'rrlpil .
"\\\• h;l\C Ill ] ,lf~ I\'C lhOSC 1AhO
lrav1' hll'll vrok rll a nd pra y (or
them \\\· h,r, c 111 u\e th rs trJgl."dy
;L\ :1 dwrcc lr 1r ri'IKWaJ," !he R~v .
JJilb I\&gt; !In !Uid tir e Central Ev;m~c ltcil

Chu rch cong regat ton tn

Korcar nv. n, where man y stores
we r e Sl' t u pon by &lt;HSOnl s ts and

kHJt crs.

Card rnal Roge r ~1ahon y, Roman
Ca th olrc archhr :-.hop o f Loo;; An ~c­
l o, ur grcl loil tCr '&gt; In retu r n rner c h:.Jndl :.t' to p:1 nshc.s. no qu cs!J()n~&gt;;

asked.

'&lt;'Crrli cl.

Economic benefits may help waste dump site
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Potential eco nomic benefits may
make it easier to find a place to
build a regional low-level radioac tive waste disposal center, th e
asststant president of the Ohio Senate said.
"! would never tell you it's
easy," Sen. Richard Finan, RCineinnati. said, referring 10 difficulties in finding a location.
However, Finan said he wa s
encouraged by a report that three
areas volunteered to house a similar
complex in lllinois costing at least
$50 million, and providing an estimated I00 jobs.
He said such a site in Ohio
would be developed privately, but
that the state likely would subsidize
its construction.
"We might issue bonds or

something of that nature to enable
it to be built, economic develop ment bonds. You 're going to pa y
for it by Lhe dumping fees that arc
going to be incurred, whtch arc
going to be sign ificant," F10an
said.
He is the chainman of the Senate
Way~ and Means Committee,
which held hearings on a bill
intended to force Ohio out of the
Midwest Interstate Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Commission .
He said the committee is unlikely to approve the measure, spon sored by Sen. Neal Zimmers, DDayton.
"After four weeks of hearings I
have become convinced that from a
legal standpoint we probably would
have great problems leaving the
compact," Finan said in an inter-

VICW .

Ohto is part of a compact that
provtdes for the state to dtsposc of
its own waste and similar matcnal

fro m lndtana , Iowa, M~nn eso t a.
Misso uri and Wi sco nst n for 20
years.
Low-level waste ~ncludc s contaminated clothing or mate rial s
produced mainly by nuclear power
plants, but also by hospitals, factories, and rcsearth centers.
Zimmers said he hopes to meet
with Fman abo ut the fulure of the
bill and the issue in generaL
''I'd certainly hope at this pomt
he 'd give the publtc an opportunity
to testify and prese nt views. and
then bring it to the commtttcc for a
vote," Zimmers said.
"We do have technology and
the ahility to store the truly short-

·'

li fe low leve l waite here 10 Ohto.
and to adequate!) manage that. bu t
we don 't have lhc assurances th(jl

we can be succrss ful 1ft hand l1ng
th e htgh ly radtoact tvc and longer ~
li fe waste,'' he satd
Ftnan

sa1d he dorsn ' t know

when a btll authorinng the state to
proccerl wilh Stl e sclcctJOn m• ght
he Introduced.
"I do get some mixcd responses
fr om d1 ffcrcnt peopl e as to th e
necessity of a btll." he S81d.
Member s of the co mm ission
voted las t month 10 release
$274,000 for the fmt phase of a
program to e&lt;luca te Ohtoans about
nuclear waste.
Money for th e compact comes
from fees patd by utiltties that have
nuclear power plants in the member
states.

,

�Monday, May 4, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill 11 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
p AI' WIIITFJIEAD
Ass!dml Pllbllsller/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M1111oger

LETillRS Of OPINION are ftlcome. They •bould be less than 300
wonk. All letten are subjec.:t to editing and mu&amp;t be •igned with name,
lddmllllld t&lt;lepbone number. No un•igned lettm will be published. Leam
Jbould be in good taste, lddressing issue1, not personalitia;.

Clean up the mess
WASHINGTON, D.C. · I cannot believe that !he Speaker and the
House maJority. having been pub·
licly rebuked for its belated and
grudging suppnrt for full disclosure
in the House banking scandal, is
now digging in its heels 10 impede
investigators. A friend of mine who
farms likes to remind folks that
"lhere ain't much education in the
second kick of a mule." Yet that
second kick of a mule." Yet that
second kick may be what it takes to
get the House majority to honor
special counsel Malcolm Wilkey 's
subpoena of the House Bank
records. I know more than a few
lJIXpayen prqlOred ID deliver it this
November.
There shouldn't be any question
at all about what the House should
do: it should honor the subpoena
and give all of the House Bank's
records to the special counsel. I
said so in a leiter ID !he Minority
Leader, Bob Michael. who has
since put the GOP leadership on
record in favor of complying with
speciB! counsel Malcolm Wilkey's
request for inrormation. In my
JUdgment. thts is the only proper
course for !he House 10 take. Anything less will merely deepen the
public's suspicion !hat something is
being swept under the rug.
Judge Wilkey has made a reasonable and fair request for information. He issued a subpoena only
when the Speaker balked at allowmg the special counsel to review
pertinent House Bank records.
Wilkey argues that because the
Bank's records were so obviously
nawed. only a full review of all
transaction a€tivity can allow
Investigators to answer questions
about the Bank's management and,

more importantly, about allegauon
that illegal activities were sanctioned by those in charge. In short,
Wilkey is asking for the same kinds
of records investigators routinely
examine when a financial institu tion fails and closes its doors.

The half measures offered in
response by the Speaker and hi s
advisors will satisfy neither the
special counsel's need for infonnation, nor the public's demand for a
full accounting.
At best, !he majority's argument
is weak; at worst, it is sheer
hypocrisy. They have never pro·
fcssed concern about the constitu·
tiona! separation of powers when
the case involves a congressionally
appointed proseculOr and a executive agency or official (Lawrence
Walsh's 5-year, S28 million IranContra goose chase comes to
mind.) No. separation of powers
matters 10 !he majority only when
they are on !he business end of !he
investigation.
Hasn't this incident done
enough to tarnish the reputation of
Congress? Must the leadershtp
again put itself in a position of
appearing lD shield those who have
abused their privilege and brought
public scorn upon all who serve
here'
1 am only on a vote out of 435.
but 1 say, let's comply wtth the
subpoena. cooperate wtth the special counsel , and bnng thi s sorry
chapter lD a close. The sooner the
beucr.

Recognize work
tmpossible feat without our volunteers. And,las~y. these people conlinuc to assist us, 1wo limes a
month at our busy immunization
clinics.
So. we give a heany thanks lD
Jeannie Braun and Alice Wolfe,
RSVP staff for finding and
scheduling aU our valuable helpers
and a sincere thanks lD the followmg: Dorothy Long. Joyce Hoback.
Wanda Fetty, Marilyn Powell, Jean
Nease, Goldie Fredericks and Jane
Walton; Mamography:
Jeanette Lawrence.
Sincerely, Nanna Torres, R.N.,
B.SN .. M.S.Ed.
Nursing DIJ'CCtor
T.C. Ervin, R.N.
As.sislanl Nursing DireclOr

A job well done!
Dear Editor:
they wantiOO, and they care.
This leltcr IS about our Emer1 feel these people deserve a
gency MedJCa! Servtce 10 Me tgs very big thank you. I also feel our
County .
dispatchers are exce llent peopl e.
I feel we have a very good sys- they nclp OUl those 10 need by dtS·
tem in this county. A lot of people patching who is nee ded and to
take it for granted that when you where.
pick up the phone and call for help
If you haven't ever been up to
someone wtll be there to answer it.
the EMS office when all the squads
1 never realized all of the time are out at once and LtfcF!ight is on
and work. mvolved in our squad the way and these people arc JUSt as
and ftrC departments until I myself important as those who arc acwally
became an EMT.
caring for the patient they arc often
These people give up time from overlooked but we need eac h other
their famtltes to help those in need. to be a successful team . 1 myself
They don't only give up time but am proud to be a part of Metgs
also part of their live.&lt;. In the short County's EMS System. 1 would
time I have been involved with like 10 say thank you 10 all of my
Meigs County EMS 1 have see n fellow EMS members who make
people give up thc11 Christmas eve, this system work..
birthdays of th eir children and
Rhonda Hoover
many other spectal events in their
EMT
lives to help others. They don't do
Pomeroy Station # 1
this for any other reason other !han

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday. May 4, the !25th day of !992. There arc 24 1 tbys
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Hisu.y:
Firl)' years ago, on May 4, !942, the Battle of the Coral Sea, the f11st
naval clash fought entirely with carrier aircraft, began during World War
11. When the bailie ended four days later. Japanese losses were such tlmt a
planned invasion of Australia through Port Moresby was abandoned.
On this dale:
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuitlanded on Manhattan Island,
In 1776, Rhode Island declared its freedom from England, two months
before the Declallltion of Independence was adopted.
In 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, a labor dernonsuatioo for an
eight-hour work day wmed inlO a riot when a bomb exploded.

'

'

OHIO Weather

LAREDO. TEXAS - The alone when he headed north on
extortion. blackmail and virtual Mexican roads. hitching rides and
kidnapping of a Guatemalan youth working odd jobs to pay for bus
in this border town is a rare trips. When the money dried up, he
glimpse in10 the dark world of ille- walked. Arter a period of months
gal immigration.
he took the plunge across tile Rto
Pain was etched on Pablo's face Grande for the final border cross·
as he sat nervously on a couch mg into Laredo.
before three refugee counselors on
a typical morning at the small
office of the Laredo Refugee Assistance Council. After some coaxing.
the reluctant Guatemalan youth
agreed to recount his odyssey to
"I thought it would be better for
our associate Dean Boyd. "The
only one left is my sister. but I me ," he says.
As an illegal alien, Pablo quickdon't know where she is. I heard
she is somewhere here, bull don't ly found work at a local business .
know." The rest of his family was "Before 1 had any documentation
massacred in !985 in the highlands at all. 1 was working from 8 at
of Guatemala. Pablo doesn't know night until 1 in the afternoon. I was
the killers. nor does he want to dis- not sleeping. At the end of the
cuss it. "It was a long time ago. week the boss said he would give
They killed them and that was it," me money . but he never would .
he mumbles in Spanish.
Only he sometimes gave me $10
He explains that he was 15 and for the week, but never a pay ·

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

check."
Several years of this scenario
passed before Pablo was picked up
by the Border Patrol and deported
to his nauve Guatemala - where
the gauntlet began all over again.
His employe r was simply fined
$2,000 by the local immigration
authorities, a wrist-slap balanced
aga;nst the bonus of cheap labor.
Within a mauer of months.
Pa blo agai n crossed the Rio
Grande. and braved a return to his
old boss after feeling desperate for
wages. He explained to counselors
what happened next
"When 1 came back lD work for
him, he locked me in !he slore for a
year. I lived in the office and was
not allowed freedom to go outside.
He was afraid of the immigration
and said if 1 tried 10 see an at lOr·
ncy, he would put an order out for
my arrest and say I robbed him .
What did I tJo? 1 haven't taken anything."

Accu- Wcather~t forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

IF 't'OU SUIL.P IT,

THEY WILL COME.

MICH

•

IToledo I 52' I

Pablo's plight improved somewhat after counselors worked to
gai n hint a temporary work permil
"I have the freedom to get out
and walk around, but he still
doesn't want to pa y me. He says he
knows a lot of people and if 1 seek
help, he 's going to get me back and
can even get me killed. That is why
I have to get out of Laredo and go
somewhere else.''
Pablo's story, though extreme,
is symbolic of the harrowing experiences faced by both legitimate
asylum seekers and illegal aliens
entering the United States through
Mexico. Of the thousands that pour
into Laredo. the third largest crossing point for aliens along the Mexican border, most come bearing war
stories aboul their trek lo "free dom." They are routinely raped.
robbed and sometimes killed by a
breed of border bandits called
"coyotes" - who charge hundreds of dollars 10 smuggle humans
across the border.
In Nuevo Laredo. Me~ico.
across the river from Laredo. there
arc dozens of or~anizations specializing in trafficking humans, charging from $200 up front ror a trip to
San Antonio to $500 for a trip to
Dallas. Authorities say discounts
are sometimes offered to those
willing to carry backpacks of narcotics to a drop-off point in the
United States.
Coyotes here are infamous for
stuffing illegals into tiny companments of train box cars. often lock·
ing them in with only a pick ax 10
free themselves from the sweltering
heat. Border Patrol agents often
find the coyote customers that
never make it, !he four to ftve bodies that arc washed up on the river
on any given month, victims of
drowning or murder. As a result
many immigrant~ prefer to go solo
and chance apprehension by Immi gration rather than suffer this treat.

PA

IMansfield I 54' I•

•IColumbus I 54' I

Showers T-stonns Rain

Marlin Schram
It is the Paramilitary Perot who
triggers our secret fear. His public
hi story is limited; but he's shown
an extraordinary enchantment with
extra-governmental acts. In the
1970s, hi s daring Lone-Ranger rescue mission of hi s EDS corporate
employees trapped in !ran was
admirable. but unseuling. In the
1980s. he was eas ily seduced by
Ronald Reagan's gucmlla-m-rcsidcnce, Ollie North, into stu ffin g
cas h into a briefcase for a
hostage/POW deal. In a future crisis, could the Paramilitary Perot
think the virtue of his goal justifies
an end-run of our system. leaving
us stuck with an authoritarian,
damn-thc-Constituuon, full -speed·
ahead president?
Last week, Wa sh ington Post

South-Central Ohio
Tonight an d Tuesday. mostly
cloudy and coo l wtth a cha nce of
showers. Low around 40. High
Tuesday 55-60. Chance of precipt tation is 50 percent 10n1ght and 40
percent Tuesday.

The department had earlier charged
th e company with violating the
child labor laws dating back to
!98 6. Dur ge r King admiucd
"ovcncalousness" on the pari of
two officials. but denied hiding
anything required by the governm
__
cn_t_
. ----------

Hodding Carter Ill
hem No . 2 concerned a familiar
name from price fixing and other
scandals. General Electric .
Depcndtng on which newspap er
you rCJd, you either learned for the
first umc that GE had been charged
by. a former employee with consptnng to fix the price of industrial
diamonds - or that GE was look ing into the matter . The former
employee said he was fired when
he ObJeCted to the attempted fix .
The company sa id he was fired
because "he dtd not make his num bers" and "did not share GE's val ues." The Justice Department was
reponed to be taking an active
interest in ''the possibility of price
fixing in the industrial-diamond
industry."
Item No. 3 was datelined Los
Angeles. The headline summarized
the story: ''Maker is Accused of
Faulty Tests On Pans for Missiles
and Aircraft." The " maker" is
Teledyne Inc. The Justice Department claims the company rouuncl y
certified that electrical components
of weapons and spacecraft passed
reliability tests that they had actual ly failed, or tluu were affected by
faulty te st equipment. Teledyne

declined comment, but the story
noted the Pentagon had twice suspendcd th e com pany 1n !990 and
199 ! from sh ippmg the componcms while it changed lhc test proccdurcs
The latter ts an Interesting point.
seem in gly dtscursivc but actually
on !rack fm thi s detective story.
GE's var i ou .~ divisions have a
record of being found in violation
of one kind of government contract
specification or another. Its divi sions h:tvc been fined , and occa Sionally even barred from further
government business. None of the
disbarmcnLI has lasted long enough
to matter. National defense or otllcr
press ing requirements have been
cncd as ameliorating circumstances, and it has been back to
busine ss as usual. What goes for
GE spectflcally goes generally for
most offending government contractors most of the lime.

Earl A. Harless
Earl Arnold Harle ss of
Wilkesville, dtcd Saturday. May 2,
!992 at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Oct. 29. I906 in
Garrelts Bend . W.Va., son of the
late William Anna Pauley Harless.
He was a re tired farmer and a
member of the Church of ChrisL
Survivors include hts wife of 40
years. Gamet Davis Harless; one
son. Bill Harless of Wilkesville:
three daughters, Mrs. Bob (Rosemary) Pope of Newark. Mrs. Lee
(Melinda) Stump of McArthur, and
Loretta McQuaid of Wilkesville:
12 grandchildren: four great-grandchildren: two brothers, Wt!ltam
Harless of Barboursville, and Syd·
ney Harless of Ewington: two sis·
ters, Dicic Gibson of Barboursville,
W.Va .• and Sybil Convery of
Chesapeake.
He was preceded in death by
one grandson, Bobby Pope Jr.: four
brothers, Ernest, Alvm. Tom and
Warren Harless; and three sisters,
Sylv ia Adkins, Ruth Kuhn. and
Bessie Janey.
Services will be held at 1 p.m
Tuesday at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, wHh Herman
Mason offictating. Burial will be in
Salem Center Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 6-9.

~o wonder he governed by invent- ·.
mg transparently coded controversies about quotas and later. welfare.
Soon, Democrats were responding
tn petty partisan kind. Two-party
govcrnmcnl can work - but not
without a bipartisan commitment to
problem -solving.
Yct here we arc: Americans are
saying they don'tlike the presidenual porndge the Dcmocrntic Party
ts offertng and don't like the
incumbent's either. So they are
drawn to Ross Perot - for reasons
that arc right and wrong. The right ,
rca&lt;an IS that he would surely be a ·
problem -so lving leader who
wouldn't cater to either pany. The ·
wrong reason IS Lhat we arc so hun gry for strong leadership that we
may ri sk too much to gcttl
In Latin America. when people
put the11 faith in an all -powerful
leader, they call it the politics of
"personalismo." Perot is no Peron.
But the grcatnsk of a Perot candidacy is that, in our desperate search
for a leader, we may be lured into
placing more fait/1 in the man than
in the sys tem that has seen us
through all time s. good and bad.

Waid Spencer
Waid L. Spencer of Scout Camp
Road in Chester died on Monday,
May 4, 1992 , at Grant Medical
Ccmcr in Columbus.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Ewing Funeral
I-I orne in Pomeroy.

Iris Warner
Iris Warn er. 72. Athen s, doed
early Sunday morning, May 3,
1992. at Pine Hills Cootinumg Care
Center in Nclsonvtlle after a brief
til ness.
Born 1n Bashan, she was a
daughter of the late John and Minnie Gaston Archer. She was a
school cross in g guard for the
Athens City Schools attbe former
Mor!ISon School on Ri c hland
Avenue and the Morrison School
on Route 56. A 1939 graduate of
Coolville High School, she was a
member of Richland United
Methodist Church in Athens. the
Umted Mctllodist Women and was
secretary of the Sunday School for

Now to the final story, this one
spread all over the top of The
Washington Post's front page: A
former employee of a Midwestern
marketing company, Cherry Payment Systems, let go by lhf; company. claimed in a lawsuit that he and
other employees had been coerced
to contribute $!,500 apiece to the
President's Dinner. That's Mr.
Bush's fund-raiser for Republican
congressional candidates. "Let
your wallet be your guide," the
final urgent demand from company
headquarters went, according to the
suit. "Your (sic) either here for the
long term or your (sic) on vacation."

The plaintiff claims that when .
he refused to contribute after on e
last phone call. he was fired the
next day . The company's lawyer
says he was a di sg run~ed employee
who was fired because he did not
cut it as a salesman. For the record
th e Post reported, the company•;

mcnt o r even national scc unty .

Amcncn'.') problem, he says, is that
there arc too mnny regulat ions, too
many laws. too much interference
with business · ability to do business without fede ral busybo dies
lookin g over th eir should ers. The
thousands of co rporate official s
who arc gomg to give over $7 mil lion to the President's Dinner, "the
most successful fund -raising event
in the hi story of politics," to quote
a GOP spokes person. agree.

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Wealhet.lnc .

Extended forecasl:
Wednesday throu~h Frida):
Cool with a chance of show ers
eac h day . Highs mostly Slh
Wednesday and Thursday and 60s
Friday. Morning lows mo stly tn the
30s Wednesday and Thu"'l ay """
in !he 40s Friday.

t'

I
I,

many years. She was a fanner res ident of Richland Avenue in Athens
and had been a resident of Far Hills
Drive for 22 years. She also was
fonncrly employed by Rauchs Bak·
cry.
Mrs. Warner is survived by her
husband. Clarence "Dutch" Warn·
er; two daughters and sons-in-law,
Cheryl and Paul Ayers, Lancaster,
and Brenda and Carl Hartman. Nel sonvi lle; one son and daughtcr-mlaw, Gary and Joyce Warner.
Columbus: three grandchildren : a
sister. Mary Naomi Archer. The
Plams; a brother and sister-in-law,
Russell and Eloise Archer.
Guysville; three nieces and one
nephew.
Besides her parents Mrs. Warner
was preceded in death by a son.
Milford in 1964 , and an infant
brotllcr.
Services will be Wednesday at
I I a.m. at the Richland Untted
Methodist Church in Athens with
Dr. J. Brien McGarvey officiating.
Burial will b~ in Athens County
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call Tuesday 2-4
pm. and 7·9 p.m. at lagers Funeral
Home in Athens and at the church
.one hour prior to services.

Hospital news
Vrlerans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS ·
None.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Ricky Johnson and Gary Richards.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Mary Casto, Pomeroy. and Haze l
McCloud, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ·
None.

Dance planned
The Senior Citizens Dance Club
will hold a danc e Saturday from 81 I p.m . with music by Smokey
Mountain Drifters. The public is
invited and tho se attending bring
snacks for the snack table.
Plant sale
The Pomeroy Nurstng and
Rehabilitation Center is sponsorin g
a flower and plant S~llc Friday from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Publtc inv ited. Proceeds go to th e Alz.heuncr 's Foundation.
Legion to meel
The regu lar meettng of Drew
Webster Post No. 39 of the American Leg ton will be held Tuesday.
This will be awards night and a
special dinner will be held at 7 p.m.
with meeting at8 p.m.
Reunion meeting scheduled
There will be a meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Pleascr's Restaurant for discu ss final
plans for the 40th reunion of the
19 52 alumni.
Trustccs to meet
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Tu esday at 7
p.m. at th e town ship hall at Rock
Spnn gs.
Golf club activities
The Ladies Golf Association of
Riverside Golf Club announces the
beginning of the Ladies Tuesday
Afternoon League begtnning Tu esday at4:30 p.m. Ladies Day wtll be
held Wednesday at 9 a.m. wttlltoeoff at 9:30a.m. All ladies welcome.
Trustees to meet
The Olive Township Trustees
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the state forestry build ing on Joppa
Road.
Pro~ram planned
The rcurcmcnt of old co lors will
be held at lhc American Legio n
Racine Post No. 602 Suntl:ty at 2
p.m. Public invited.
Legion to meet
The Racine Post No. 602 of the
American Legion wtll meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post home.
Dinner will follow.
Tournament canceled
The men 's softball tournament
sponsored by the Bradbury PTO,
scheduled or May 16 and 17, has
been cance led.
React Team to meet
A special meeting for the Meigs
County React Team wtll be held

.---Local briefs...- . . . . .

Pu.bH1hed e-ury •R.ernoon , MonUy
thf"O\IIh Friday, Ill Court St., PmlWIUJ ,
Ohio by tht Ohio. V•lley Publi.•hiftl

c.._

Am Elc Power .. ... ... .. ........ .31 3/8
Ashland Oil .... ....... ........ ... .31 314
AT&amp;T... ... .... ....... .... .. ... ..... .43 l/2
Bank One ............. ..... .. ........ 44 I18
Bob Evans ....... .. .. ....... ...... 18 112
Charmmg Shop ... ... .. .... ..... 27 3!8
C~ Holding . . .
19 7jR
F eral Mogul... .. ............ ... 19 5/M
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. .... ... ... .73
Key Centurion .. .... .. ......... 19 l/4
Lands End..............
.. .3 3 314
Limited Inc .. .. ............ . .. 23 112
Multimedia Inc...
.. 27 112
Rax Restaurant .... ... ... .... I 5/1 6
Robbins&amp; Myers ....... ...... 16 1/2
Shoncy'slnc....
..... 21 314
Star Bank ........... .... .... .. .. .35 ]/4
Wendy lnt'l. .. ...... ... .... ..... ... l2
Worthington Ind . .. ....... ..... .23
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Ulunl,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.

Member:

POSTMASTER Send addreN cha.npe to
Th111 D•ily Sentinel, 11 t CCMlrt Bt.,
~ . OH~46769.

8UJ18CBJPTION ILATU
B:r Canillr .- Molar Ro.te
One Woek............ ........ .. .... ....... ...... .... $1.60
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.-y the c:aJTi.
er 0\11)' nndt in 1111h&amp;nce d~ to The
Daily Sentinel on a three, lUI or 12
month buil . CndiL will be finn mrrieT
each 'WMII: .

SuNcrtben not ctemiRB to

No eablcript.rone by mail. permit~ i.n
areu where home camer IITTI«&lt; 11

J.tde Metp Co.at:r

:i~:
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112 w........ " ............... " ......... $18.40

,.

Page-3

May 15 at Pleaser's Restaurant in
Pomeroy at 7:30p.m. A disc ussion
will be held on the final plans of
the Memorial Day weekend coffee
break. All members arc urged to
attend. Further infonnation may be
obtained by calling Neal White at
69R-341! or Bob Bowles at 992-

222!.
Ilarbecue planned
Th ere wt!l be a c hicken barbecue at the Toppers Plain s Fire
House Sunday beginning at !! a.m.
Cost is $3.75 and includes a halfchicken or ribs. baked beans. cole
slaw . bread and beverage. Pie and
cake will be available for an additional 50 cents. The public is invited.
Anniversary celebration
The Stivcrsvtlle Word of Faith
Church will celebrate its fifth year
Saturdoy at 6 p.m. Fellowship will
follow. Bring a covered dish . The
public IS invited.
Lodge to meet
Pomeroy Lodge # !64 F&amp;AM
wi ll hold its regular mee1ing on
Wed nesday at 7:30 p.m. The E.A.
degree will be conferred.

MITCH'S
PRODUCE
MIDDLEPORT

FLATS............... 6
HANGING
s9
BASKETS.......... 7 s

"We need 10 get Rockefeller m there. He'd be a great prestdent. He
was a great governor," she said.
Kathy Evans, 36. clerk of Jackson County MagiStrate Court. satd she
is undecided on the presidential race.
"Actually, I'm not thrilled with any of them," Evans saod. ''I'm nr~
happy with Bush's perfonnance and I'm not impressed with Clinton. I
was telling my brother la.st week,'! think I'll vote for Pat Paulsen."'
On the outskirts of town. Joyce Bourn of New Haven collected Stg·
natures for mdependent Ross Perot along the roadSide, a sign propped
agamst her car.
"He's an honest man and he's wanting to make a change. He 'll be
working for the people instead of agamst them," she saod.
Bourn said she collected 12 signawres in two hours.
"A !01 of tllem can't sign because they want to vote m the pnmary. If
it weren't for that, I'd have !5 pages of signatures," she saod.
In West Virginia, voters who sign petition s for Perot cannot vote m
their party. s primary.
Democrats outnumber Republtcam by about 2-to-1 m West V~gima .
Bu~ in Jackson Counl)'. Democrats hold an advantage of only 6,%2 to
6,362.
But Democrats were more likely to vote m West Virgima 's 1988
presidential primaries. Then, 54 pen:cnt of Democrats and 49 percent
of Republicans cast ballots, according to Bill Harrington, chtcf of staff
for the secretary of state.
Overall, 51 percent of West Virg;nta's voters turned out for the !988
primaries, HarringtDn said.
"! like Perot," said Shane Ridenour, !9, a fanner. "He's no -non se nse. You don 't know much about Ointon. And Bush, look what he 's
got us in now."
Democrats who were interviewed opposed Bush. Scvcr.tl satd tllcy
would vote for Clinton for president and for state Sen . Charlone Priu
for governor. She and state Attorney Gercral Mario Palumbo are challenging . Gov. Gaston Caperton for ~te Democrdtic gubematonal
nommauon.
"Bush could've intervened in the Ravenswood situatiOn and so
could've Caperton. "saod Democrat Michea Bentz, 18, a Rtplcy High
School seniOI'. She satd she wtU vote for Clinton.
About 1,700 Steelworkers have been off the ]Ob at Ravenswood
Alum anum Corp. smcc November 1990 in a conuact dispute.

Lottery numbers
CLEVE LI\0 D (A~ I- Horc arc
Saturd:.~y rn g ht' ~ Ohi o Lo tt ery
selections:
Super Lotto
1-11 -15-23-24-l K
(one. eleven. f lll ..:,· n . 1\\l'nt ythrce, twcmy -rour. thlrt \ -cn.: lit J
The jackpot 1'\ \~ lr.diJ il: i
Kicker
4-0-7-4-2- )
(four. 1cro . .'&gt; l: \ \·n i ' : ll f .

three)
Pick 3 Numbers
7-6-0
(se ven, s i :~;. , 1 ~ro )
Pic k 4 Numbus
1-1-9-S
(one, on e. n1n c. fr \ C')

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The Daily Sentinel

•vailablt.

Wtth all these clues. you ought
to be able to make the connection.
When you do, here's a possible
tllle for the book : "Fa$$t Track
America . Or, The White House
Dog Thai Went Arf."

By JOHN CURRAN
RIPLEY, W.Va. (AP) - The welcome sign along West Virginia 21 at
the !Own line says. "Progress With Pnde."
But potential voters in next Tuesday's primary say the economy has
made ht~e progress tn Jackson County and an 18-month labor dispute
at nearby Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. has replaced the pride with bitterness.
Outside the post office, Leon Rhodes, 60, a disabled service station
manager and a Republican. said he will vote for President Bush and not
for Arkansas Gov. Bill Clin10n in the fall.
"Bush is the one as far as I'm concerned. 1 don'tlike CliniOn. I've
heard 100 much about him. Besides. he looks 100 much like a Kennedy," Rhodes said.
Rhodes said Bush could not be blamed for the struggling economy
because Bush's programs have been thwarted by Congress, which is
controlled by Democrnts.
"I don't agree with what's going on with the economy. but I don't
blame Bush," said Peggy Holliday. 32. a housewife and a Republican.
"I don't think the Democrats could do anything about it either. They
have no platform."
Holliday called herself a staunch conservative. Pointing to her 3year-old daughter. Mary, who was strap~ into a car sea~ she said:
"She's a Rush Limbaugh listener already. •
. Carolyn Hill, owner of The Rapture House. a Bible bookstore and
gtft shop, said she is leaning toward Bush, but she would rather see
Sen. Jay Rockefeller. a Democrat, in Ute White House.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges. May 1 · Phyllis
Ashley, Dallas Blevins. Whitnee
Caldwell, Mrs. Brian Fisher and
daughter, Willa Gray, Felicia Sexton, Gertrude Swackhamer. Mrs.
Timothy Ward and son, and Mrs.
Forrest Wickline and daughter.
Births, May I · Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Henry, a son, Mason, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Shope, a
daughter, Pedro.
Discharges, May 2 · Mrs. John
Sayre and daughter. Cathryn Snyder, and Nellie White.
Births, May 2 · Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Obelholzer, a daughter, Ray.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Roach , a
daughter. Jackson.
Discharges. May 3 · Margaret
Allison. Carroll Durst. Breanna
Hall, Mrs. Terry Henry and son.
Charles Mc Ghee, and Vinita
Shope.

prc~·adeOI is a convicted felon who

while on probation from an wlier
sentence, plea ded guilty to one
cou nt of mail fraud.
Which brings us back to the vice
president, the EPA and the pubhc
mterest. Keep in mind those three
s10ries of alkged corporate wrong .
dmng. Acung on hts president's
behalf, Dan Quayle says that
America 's problem is not that there
are too many companies that put
proftts above honor, the environ-

Sunny

--Area deaths--

Declawed regulations suit business
Today' s column is a detec tiv e
story . What follows arc a number
of clues, all assc~o1bled from two
East Coast newspapers in one 24IJour penod in late April. What you
arc supposed to do is figure out the
connccuon between them.
The first clue was contained in a
New York Ttmes article detailing
the latest exa mple of Vice Presi dent Dan Quayle's Council on
Compe titive ne ss blocking th e
Implementation of environmental
protection regulauons. In this case,
the Env ironm ental Protection
Ageucy was (and perhaps still is. tf
Quayle has not prevailed) trying 10
requ ire public notifi cation when
compan ies with pollution permits
seck to increase their penn issible
cm1ssion s.
Quayle and Co. say public
notice, allowing public comment
and cri ticism, could cost companies
billtons of dollars. The EPA and
many environmental groups say
that without pub!tc notice. there is
little chance for the public 10 prevent a rise in pollution levels .
Given the competjtiveness council's track record so far, which is
another way or saying the president's track record. the odds are
that the regulation will be eviscerated.
Now swiu:h ID three other newspaper items all from that same
April day. two in The New York
Times, one in The Washington
Post. First. the Labor Deparunent
claimed in court affidavits that the
Burger King Corp. 10!d employees
to hide wage and hour records
"until the labor sweep blows off."

'"'

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

Should we put our faith in Ross Perot?
columnist David Broder wrote that
the risk of a Perot candidacy seems
greater than its reward: "The risk
is that his race would likely divert
aucnuon from what ought 10 be the
central issue in !992 - the need to
end the policy deadlock in Washington by constituting a real govern ment , one where the president
and the congressional majority are
of the same party."
With great respect for the dean
of my trade school, I think that 's
dead wrong. After all, we arc surely better off for having had tw oparty government in the Nixon
years. Our problem today is of our
own making - we haven 't elected
leaders capable of leading with
vision and governmg with skill.
First, we el ec ted for two terms a
vision-right president who could
give a grand speech but couldn't
manage his morning toilet: then we
elected a political peashooter who
gets his core philosophy in daily
fixe.&lt; from his pollster. His victory
mandate of 1988 wa&lt; tlmt only his
party loves the American flag,
loves the Pledge of Allegiance and
suffi ciently hates Willie Horton .

Flurries

Vta AsSQc iated Press GraphicsNet

At the brutal end of these journeys, many immigrants find their
tln;ams of a brighter life shattered.
Like Pablo. they may be looking
for paradise - but in the process
many become human prey.

on ly, Perot says it as a bona fide
Earthltng. Buchanan and Perot
decried America's rush 10 war in
the Persian Gulf- but only Perot
can preach "Come Home Am..:ri·
ca" without worrying that his old
baggage will be route&lt;! through Bittburg.

The Dally Senllnel

-Meigs announcements--

mcnt.

We are a nation wait1ng for
Perot. We are waiting to see if the
H. Ross Perot who has offered lD
be our president is the Populist
Pero~ the Paramilitary Pero~ or the
Plain-Talking Problem-Solving
PeroL
Or perhaps he· s all of the above.
This mu ch we know: Perot is
already the presidential front -run ner when it comes to identifying
what our problems really are . Our
problem is our lcadc" - we don't
seem to have any. We have people
who hold poSitions of leadership:
they arc skilled at telling us only
what thw pollsters told them we
want to hear. which is not the same
as doing what needs to be done .
Which explains our national mess.
It is the Popu!tst Perot who has
caugh t our attention like no one
else. Hts message is the Outsider's
Sptcl, the one used (and abused) by
Jerry Brown and Pat Buchanan in
'92, and George Wallace in '68. It
says U1crc isn't a dime's worth of
difference between the top Democrati c a nd Republican pleaders .
Brown and Perot decry the way
spec ial interests buy politicians -

Middleport, Ohio

Economy, RAC on voters' minds in Ripley

Tuesday, May 5

Illegals face inhuman conditions for 'freedom'

Cong. Bob McEwen

Letters to the editor
Once again. we take this opportuni ty lD thank the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program (RSVP) for
their never -ending support of our
many programs.
Recently, the Meigs County
Health Department Nursing Staff
comple ted immunizing the sixth
graders of our county. with second
doses of Measles-Mumps-Rubella
Vaccine: we went to all the elementary schools. and were wonderfu lly assisted by the RSVP volunlccrs.
Also. recen~y we completed a
ciKJ iesterol and triglyceride screentng followed by yet another successful Mammography Screening
of 25 women, on the O.S.U. mobile
uml in our parking lot
Again, this would have been an

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, May 4, 1992

Pomeroy

Continutd from page I
The interview segment is scheduled lD run on Newsccnter 3 at II
p.m. tomorrow.

EMS units answer calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Services answered etgh t calls
for assiStance over the weekend.
On Saturday at !0:!8 a.m .• Ru~and squad went to th e Meigs
Mines for James Murphy . He was taken to O'lllencss Mcmonal
Hospital.
Atl2:26 p.m .. Syracuse unit went to State Route 7. Hugh Custer
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7:26 p.m .. Pomeroy
squad went to Old Chester Road f&lt;&gt;c Michael Stump. He was taken
to Veterans, and later ID Pleasant Valley Hospital.
On Sunday at8:!3 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Nurs ing and Rehabilitation Center. Mary Casto was taken 10 Veterans.
At 6:44 p.m.. Olive Township unit went to Long Bottom for a fir e
on !he Mary Newland property. At6:57 p.m .• Pomeroy squad went
to State Route 684 and took Lee Ward 10 Veterans. At !! :38 p.m ..
Middleport squad went to Fifth Sueet. Canie Neal was taken to
Veterans.
At 9:51 a.m. on Monday, Mtddlcport unit took Celia Hitc from
Ash Stteetlo Veterans.

Become a new ca b e
subscr1ber. or 1f you 're a current
subscr1ber add a new service (like HBO or The 0 1sr1ey
Channe l), before May 241h and your ftr sl monlh s servi ce fees
will go directly to our local sc hool s as a tax -deduct ible donation
Ju st ca ll no w and mention thts offer. We 'l l sc he dul e your free
mstallat1on or additional se rv1ce connection - anot her bonu s of our
CABLE + YOU school campaign When we connect your new
serv1ces. we'll ask you to make out your check to Your Local School
System.

Free connection and a tax-deductible
donation to local schools ...
When you add it all up,
now's the time to get cable TV!

CALL
CABLEVISION
Oller ends May 24 . 1992 011er good m serviCeable areas onl~
Prem~um servrc es ava1lable only wr111 monHrly cable 'ServiCE'

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Page-4

Monday, May 4,1992

Cincinnati downs-Chicago 7-1
lly JOE KAY
C INC INNATI (AP) - Jose
RIJO expected to win 20 games and
th e Cy Young Award ibi s year. He
looked forward to th e All-Star
game.
.
That was '" spnng tm•mng. A
monill into ille season, the Cmc111nat I Red s' ace would be content
1ust to win a game.
R•JO nearly got No. I on Sunday
· when he rewmed from two weeks
on illc disabled li st recovered from
a sore elbow . He p1tched impress•vely for 4 2!3 mnmgs, but ended
up suupassmg h1s pitch ltmll before
he cou ld qualify for the wtn.
In stead. reliever Scott Bankhead
woiuHI up wllh Ihc VICtory as the
Red s beat th e strugg lmg ChiCago
Cubs 7- 1 R•JO was a glum
bvst~mdcr as he \Vdldlcd his record

stc~ y

O-l in the month of May
"Th• s " too much for me men tally," he ;aid "I m1ght be tough
phy :-. Jc,!ll y, but not mentally . I
,ll

: don't 1.1k~ that. II m1 ght sounU self1sh; I am sometimes."

He wa s In credibl y frustrated
when he sa w manager Lo u Pm1ella
step ou t of th e dugout Sunday with
two out tn ille top of th e fifth.
It had been a IIlumphant return
to that point RIJO allowed just six
hits and one run Wi thout wa lking a
b:lttcr

said. "That' s what's Imponant for
him and what's tmportnnt for the
team. He understands."
No. he doesn't.
Rijo walked off th e fteld,
dropped Ius cap and glove on the
dugout lloor m exasperation, then
headed for the clubhouse. He was
still upset after the game.
"I 'd undcrswnd n 1f I was 1-3
or 2-3. At 0-3, you don't want to
understand," he sa 1d . "One out
away from gcnmg my flfst wm and
I'm taken out. It's JUSt too tough .
"I feel like Donald Trump: It's
not wh ether yo u w1n or lose. 11 's
wheiller you w1n."
He wasn't ille only one m mis cry after the ga me The Cubs ended
a brut:tl week chat Included fo ur
shu touts, a 38- inn•n g scorel ess
streak anLI Lhc one -run loss Sunday .

Th ey've lost 8 of 10 and can't
belteve th ey' re 8-15, stranded al
the bottom of the NL East
"Overall we're JUSLIIlCOIISi s t..:lll
as a tc:.Jm nght now 1n every
aspeu, " ,eud S hc~v.n Gosklc (3-2)
"We all know w h c~ t we ncC&lt;Ito do
to wtn a few 111 a row. We need
somebody to spark us. If th e whole
season goes thiS way, •t 's gOing to
be a lcmg year."
Goskie had a long afternoon. He
gave the Red.s a pau of flfst-mnmg

h1s 4 2/3 tnrungs. Shawon

run s w1thout bcncfll of :.:1 Jut, lctung

Dun ston hroke the shutout With a
two -o ut double that also pushed
RIJO· s j)ItCh co unt past Dlc lmlll of
65.
Ptntcll:l ts dctcrrHtncd not to let
R•jo a~grel\eliC the elbow by throv. Ill £ too 1n :u1y p•rc hco He wiShed
RIJO coo Ill hel ve gouen the Will, but

them load the bases on a palf oi
walks and a hit batter. Bosk1e then
walked Bill Doran to force 111 a run
and gave up a sacnfice ny to Jeff
Branson
Once Boskie startC&lt;I gettmg the
ball over, the Reds started hillin g.
Paul O'Neill doubled and Doran h11

1n

had other pn onucs

lie pouucd

the bul lpen. m:~k -

lO

tus ttmd homer in Lhe third mn•ng,

an d O'Nei ll led off the s"th 111111ng

mg H a Lnurnp h:.l nt rcw rn without

v.:uh hts fourth homer.

viCtory for RIJO.
•ewe want to get h•m ready for
the res t of the su mmer,'' Pmiclla

Bosk1c now ha s given ur Six
homers in hr s 23 2!3 innings :md
h&gt;.~ a 5.70 earned run average.

Scoreboard
M1nnc:Jot1 (M1homu 2-0) 11

In the majors ...
NATIO:\'AL LEAGUE
F as! r rn nlvlslon
w L P&lt;L en
Tum
J&gt;u~JbuJgh
16 1
6'16
New Ynrlo:.
ll 10
600
.St Lo1.m
ll
120
4
Phil•dr.IJ'h!l
'I IJ 458 5 5

,

~\ unln;..ol

"

''

lhtctgn

14

Nl

II

"" '

W nllr n [)l~l!lnn
Cmonn1tl .
IJ II
:S an I r~I1Ci\C&lt;l
II

ll
I)
ll
ll

S1n Otego
[[.,l.l!i!(."Ol

flllln LI

11

11

9

Lm Angeles

4~0

I
I
'I

4JJ9

J

~()()

3.

l"ew York (Cadtrctll)at Sc•ttlc:
(Hem~ng

l"ew York 0

ChiUI{Il 10, C lnrln natl)
San rr i/ICI~~-o 2, lmlado::lf•hll 1
lltuburxh 6, llou1tm 0
St Louu) San D1ego 0
Momred at I oa Angeles , rrd

Coo rcrc nrt ~tm lrin all
C lcwcland 101, U~l.On 76, Clc~~and
l&lt;ad.ilt'rlcl J.IJ

Sunda y's scores

ucd
~ to

Sund;n 's scores

2-2

Tut'sdU) 's

)

Mqntrcal a: 1 us 1\ "gdu ppd
lencc

('unfe rtn rr

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I).~

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( \1 o,, tfXI ] -4) 7 J5 pm
I ou ;\ng~ks (( •nd tnltt J 0) 1
Ph t dcl['ht a (:&gt;.!Jlho lltn&lt;l 0 3) 7 J5 r m
l ornlnn1t l (!l tithn I J) 11 i'ltll
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Future games

J5 prn

Tuuday- s~too 11 Montreal, 7 30
p m P•usb\,r&amp;)l at N Y R•n&amp;en, 1 JO

pm
Thurtd•y- MontR:allt

801\.0n, 7 30

p m , N Y ){an&amp;er• al Ptltsburgh, 7 30
pm

BOIUlO, 7 JO
p m , N.Y Rangers 11 Pituburgh, 1 30
Sa lurd•y -

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Satun.la) ·~:;cons
{ 1ty 6
Tn u 4, Ouoro I
/&gt;Lnne.\"1' 7, :-.:c.w York f.
o~ ~tl~n d ), f'ailfllrnll 2

l.lctr&lt; n l ~ O•l l•n d l

Sund ;n \

~ort•s
]\,,!Inn-:'

1-lt JUIC.S&lt;,Ioi t1 r&gt;.cw York 2
ll •lurn &lt;o ~ H .Si~Ulc f.
( · ~llfor lll ~ II, ( ' ln 1l1n d \
Dctout X Oaklan,J4
l•mtrllO 4, M oiNiu k~ ,

0Hc•go 5, Tuu J

Tonll!hl's i:ames
Mtnn etot• (Smiley 0 2) 11 llo1ton
(CicmcM 1·2), 7 35 p m

Teut (Joae Guzman 2 2) 11 Balumore
(Miloclti 1-2). 7 J5 pm
K1n,.1 CIIJ (Gordon D-3) II CIHe•
l.nd (Olio 1-l ), 7:3~ p.m.
C•lirorn11 (Abbon 1-3) l1 DcMOit
(OuUicbonJ -2), 7.35pm
~h]wlukee (ll6n u I 0) at Ch1c1go
(l::emandCl I· 2), II ~ p m
Toronlo (SLOU lemyl1: 3 I)
(Darbnal -1), 10:05 p m

It

o.k.hnd

Nc..., Yor k (Leuy 2 1) II Se aul e
(S•un2-3), 10 0~ p m

Tuesday's
Tent (Ry•n 0-1)
1· 2), 12 I~ pm

11

~ames
tl1lltmo11: (Meu

Cali(orrua (Gnhc: 2-2) 11 Detro1t (Al -

dred G-2), I J!i p m

Su nd ay's score
EdmoniQII 4 , V&amp;n couv ~r 3, UT, f J
ludlt KnCI J 0

rnurL\Qrl

~a mrs

Tun lw h! - CIHc ~go 11 Dcun,t, 7 Jll
p m, EJm•Yilon II Vaocn u~~. 10 141 p .,
D~ t rn tl • C!u&lt;~~'
\'~n r n11vn a\ I ,)m"ll\&lt;:.1 'I 11 1

W r dnc.ohy -

8 )l ip'",
pm

t'rlda) -

Dctrott ll Chtc J ~ '' ~ 111

prn, Vu11.ouvc:r 11 1 drnnoll&lt;&gt;l 9 ~ ll ' m

l.eag LI~

F•mthall
l"'•llun•l Fnuth~ll Lu~ue
KAN~" S Cl I Y t Il l! I S ~ An
nouncc.J th e rcu r. mrnlt nf li••)d Burnus,
u fcry, and ,\ l t~c Ilei I dd~a~~~ CI1d
1'/II~IOf S

­

S 1 gnt:.~l W&amp;hly ( l u~ •nrl Kc vtn Wh nlcy
comuh1 c k~ lh~ilc5 l. ~ty, guard, (m:g

l-1hr . ., ffw~t~c lHklc . Wt l!um !'nee: 01nd
{orcg I 11 r ku ~·fctro, Kd~tn ~lc ;;~n~.
John 1 ~rr1n .1n tl ld f Sm1th , '"'Ldc rc·
cetvcr!, and I roy WiJ kt.'l londliCk cr

l\1 W ~CliO\ lJIA~IS ~ S1gnell Dob
Drcut l and Knon 1\hncn1, offms 1 ve

lmcrncn 1&gt;-ltlo.c

Pn :os kc~.

1h l! &lt;~lcy, nnu u ckle,
f'&lt;' " IV

111

tcmporanly preserved a one-run

lead when Rose startC&lt;I one of the
more acrobauc double pla ys you'll
see Junior Ortiz h1t a sha rp
grounder JUSt to the ri ght of second
base, and Rose d1vC&lt;I JUSt tn ume to
snare it. He pushed the ball v. 11h h1 s
glove toward shortstop Gary DiS arcma, who caugh t II, spun completely around to avo•d the runner

and thr ew to flfsl baseman Lee
Steve ns.
Stevens dug the throw out of ille
d1r1, slrandmg a runn er Jt t111rd .
' 'I was just 1ry1ng 10 knoc k ll
down, 1f I had any chetncc at all of
gctung to 11 ." Rose s:ud qThen, I
was JUSILhlflk Jng, 'Get one' Fortu·
natcly I gOltl 10 D1S.u, who made a
grC.1 t IUIIl . "
Rose IS h•U•ng 211, so he felt
good about cutting off the run .
"It's n1cc to co nLubutc, because
I've been sl!ugghng w11h til e bat,"
he said.
Th e Angels al so swllcd Cleveland 1n th e seventh 1nn1ng, when
nght f1cldcr Chatl Curlis tf!fcw out
Alex Cole uy•ng to ta g and score
on Carlos B.tcrga' s lly ball. Catcher Lance Parn sh bl odcU the plate
and app l1ed the tag .
Cleve land nwn.t gc r M1k c Helfgrovc was ejec ted lor argumg th.H

Cole v..ts sc~ fe
"If he tagged h1111. I thought he
tagged him too h• gh," Hdfgiovc
so:HJ . "I

SJw

Derek LriiHIUI SI (1-1) took th e
loss for w:ilkmg Cu•t•s lead mg off
the nin th Ted Power y•cldcd the
su1g lcs by Dav 1.1 and Gactti and the
sacnfice lly by Rose.
Cleveland cornn11t ted four errors
in the g&lt;:unc, t.hn:c of thl'rn by shortstop Mark lewiS.
"Mark's th e type of player
where it won't be a problem long, "
HJrgrovc s,ml. '' M:Hk need s to
k1ck himsel f mentally and p1ck h1 s
game up another notch."
Ca l1forma scored twi ce 1n the
tlmd on Jun•or Fel~&gt; 's sacnfic c fly
- l11s 23 rd RBI - and Hub1e
Brooks' RBI double. Luis Polonia
S1nglcd horne a run 1n t.hc fourth.

Cleveland scored stngle runs tn
the tlmd , when Cole scored on a
passed ball; the fourth, when Brook
(See AL on Page 5)

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

ill S foot carne across

the plate and Lance was sull tum·
ing wiill the ba ll From my potnl of
v1cw , the re's no way he was out "
Scull Bailes (2-0) go c the w1n
agams t h1 s form er team by rclinng
both bauers he faced 1n the c•ghth
tnn1ng Bryan Harvey pllchcd the
n•nth for Ius e1gh th save Harvey
saved all illr ee of U1e Angels' wins
1n the l ou r-g::un c sc n~ s.

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

Waiting For The Holiday
Season To Excite Your
Customers?

the fewest pomts scored m a fi&gt;egame scnes.
New York begins its Eastern
Co nference semifinal se ri es in
Ch1cago on Tuesday. The other
Eastern semtftnal series re sume s
tonight, with Cleveland playing
host to Boston after routi ng th e
Cclues in the opener on Satuuda y.
The Lakers, who won r." NBA
lltles 111 U1e 1980s and were los• ng
finalists last spring, were routed
102-76 by Portland in a game
played 1n Las Vegas due to the
unrest In Los Angeles .
"It's been disaster after disaster," veteran guard Byron Scott
satd of the Lakcrs' misfortunes th is
season, which staned w11h the loss
of Magic Johnson. who retired after
testing HIV-posiuvc, and coded
with a forced sh1ft of a playoff
game.

The Trail Blazers advanced to a
West ern Conference semifmal
meeting with Phoenix, bcgmn111g
Tuesday ni ght in Penland.
Clippers liS, Jazz 107
Though thclf game was moved
35 miles to the south, the Clippers
d•d have ille home-court advantage
- they were playmg oo thcu own
flqor, which was transported from
the Spons Arena, and had the backing of the crowd of 7,148 at the
cozy Convcnuon Center.
Danny Manmng had 33 point s

and 10 rebounds 10 lead the way as up ," said Thomas " I wanted to
the Clippers tied the senes.
play hard. I d1dn't want to leave ille
"We"re not going to go away," co un without making my last shot.'
Manning said. "We're going to go
New York held the Pistons to
to UIC Delta Center and play hard. 424 pOin ts, an average of 84.8.
All th e press ure IS on them. '!here which broke ille previous NBA low
wasn't suppose&lt;~ to be a Game 5."
for a fiv e-ga me senes. Kansas City
The Clippers won by outsconng scored 431 111 1n1 agamst Housthe Jazz 11 -2 in the final1:44. Doc ton.
Rivers, who had II of his 17 pomts
Trail nlaurs 102, Lakers 76
in ille fourth quarter, made two free
The Lakcrs closed up shop just
throws w1Lh 54 seconds rerntHm11g off the Las Vegas Stnp, forced
and a three-point play wilh 24 sec- there by nots that turned much of
onds left to c&gt;tend a one-point lead central Los Angeles into a war
to six, clinchmg the victory.
zone.
L.A. won despite an outstandmg
Portland took conuol by lim•tperformance by Utah's Karl Mal- lllg the Lakers to 33 points in the
one, who scored 14 of his career flf st half'. Clyde Drexler led the
playoff-high 44 pomts m ille fourth Blazers with 26 points, 10
quarter and had II rebounds.
rebounds and seven ass ists and
Knicks 94, Pcstons 87
reserve guard Danny Ainge added
The Pistons failed to mak e it 19 points.
past the first round for the flfst umc
The Lakers, playmg without
smce 1986 as th e Knicks advanced. Johnson and a number of injured
Patrick Ewin g had 31 po1nts and regulars, won only Game 3 in ovcr19 rebounds for the Knicks and got wnc at home against Portland .
sconng help m the second half
Ainge was impressed by how
from Gerald Wilkins, who scored well the Lakers did thiS season
n•ne of his 13 points in a f•ve- dcsp•tc illcu many hardships.
llllnute span, and John Starks, who
"They turned what has been a
sco red seven of his 10 tn the last nightmare tnto a prmy successful
2 39 of the game.
season," he sa1d.
lsiah Thomas, wiill 21 of h1s 31
Said the Lakers' A.C. Gr een:
pOints m the fourth quarter. made e•we acccptC&lt;I illc cha llenge when
sure the Pistons d1cd hard . sconng all the ch1ps were down. Right now
thw last 19 po1nts
I'm very proud of how all my
"I JUSt wasn't gotng to g•vc teammates played throughout the
course of ille year."

At lOth annual Meigs Invitational,

Marauder boys claim first crown in meet
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The lOth annual Meigs lnvnational Track Meet was held on Saturday with 20 teams laking part m
near perfect cond tuons.
In the girls division, Ja ckson
won us thlfd str.ught uuc, wh ile ' "
the boys division the host Mct gs
Marauders won illcir first title .
Jackson won with 113 po•nt s,
slipping past Falffield Umon who
f•n•shcd second with 107 points.
Me1gs finishC&lt;I a d• s~w t third place
Wiill 61 points followed by Vmton
County (55). Federal Hocking (47)
Waterford (43), Nelsonville-York
(29), Alc•andcr (25), North Gall• a
(8) and Tnmble (4).
Me1gs won the boys Iitle by
holdmg off Fairfield Umon m the
I ,600 meter relay by just over three
seconds in the afternoons f1nal
event Me1gs had 103 points. followed by Fatrf1eld Umon wrth
97 5. Dcfendmg champion FC&lt;Ieral
Hocking finished in third place
w1tli 72 pomts followed by Vmton
Co unty wllh 59 1/2. Alexand c·r
(47), North Gal lia (33), Tnmble
(22), Jackson (20) and Waterford
(I I).
Si• records were broken on U1e
afternoon. Amber Musrud of Jackson broke the I 00-mctcr dash

reco rd with a time of 12.7, and
Heid1 Fyffe of Wellston set the
re cord m 1988 w1ill a umc of 12.9
Jackson's 400 meter relay team
broke the record set by Meigs in
1985. Jackson ran the event in
52.5, Me1gs set the recurtl wuh a
111ne of 53.3.
Roger Jcnkms of Trimble set th e
record m the long JUmp w1th a leap
of 20' 8 3/4" breaking tying the
record set in 19 88 by Harri s of
Jackson. Chns VIney of Federal
Hocking and Jason Williams both
JUmped 6' 2 1(2" in the !ugh JUlllp
to break the record of 6' 2" set tn
1984 by Singer of Federal HockIng. Charles Peck of North Gal li a
ran the 100 meters 1n 10.9 seconds
to break Co lema n of Well stones
record of 11.1 set in 1983 and Mall
Garrod of Alc•anclcr broke Seevers
of Warren record 1n the 1\00 meter
run. Seever's time was 2:03.7 se t in
1986, while Garrod ran it in a time
of 2:03.3.
The girls' MVP for th e second
stra•ght year was Mus~1rd v. 1th 32
1/2 po1nts, Chns Vtney of Federal
Hocking was the boys' MVP wuh a
total of 28 1(2 points.
Girls results
DISCUS-I. Jeni P1crson (Federal Hocking) 93'9'", 2. Rachel

W•nslcy (Fairfield Un1on) 82'5",
3. Mtranda Ntcholson (Me1gs)
R0'9".
HIGH JUMP-I Erica Haye s
(Vin ton County) 4'10", 2. Sarah
Stinson (A lexander 4'10". 3. Amv
Hallows (FC&lt;Ieral Hocking) 4'8"
LONG JUMP - I. Michelle
Speakman (Vtntun County) IS' 9
3/4 · ·, 2. Becky Shook (Fwlftcld
Un1on) 15'7", 3. Eflca Haye s
(Vmton County) 15'2' 12"
3,200 METER RELAY-I.
Wat erford 10:53.4, 2. Jackson
II 24 6, 3. Me•gs I I 34 .8
100 METER HURDLES-I.
Decky Snook (Fairfield Union)
17 2, 2. Carey Tow nsend (Waterford) 17 .9, 3. Heather Hudson
(Meigs) 13.1
•roo METER DASH-I Amhcr
Mustard (Jack son) 12 7, 2
Michell e Sp.:akman (Vinton County) 13.0e 3. Heather Exline (Jackson) 13.0
800 Meter Relay- I. Watcrfrod
1:57.8, 2. Fairfield Union 1:58.3, 3.
Mc1gs 2:00.0
I ,600 METER RUN-I. Kim
Pasktns (Fairfield Un10n) 5:49.1. 2.
Susan Crawford (Ne lsonvilll eYork) 6:03.4, 3. Crystal Evans
(Jackson) 6·41.0
•4()() METER RELAY-!. Jack son 52.5, 2. Fairfield Union 55.1, 3.

the p:.Lst "

hu a home run wah

t·.~o-o

outs m the

c•ghth mn•ng off Roger Mason ( 12) to li ft Houstnn over P111sburgh.
AI Osll nel (3-0) puched one-

MADE IT - nespile appearances, Cleveland's Alex Cole slips past Ihe tag of California
stcond baseman llobby Rose in the first inning

thlfd of Jrl Jllllln g for the victory.

11h

.1 \~.i lk ,

hnehackcr M1c
an d Lnc Bruun.

AL games

Doug Jones relieved

:llld I tJJJ'Ih..:d for h1s scrcn th save in
C J ~[ l[ nppnrlti lllll CS

sr.Jn.. : r--. Duug Drabek and
llutch Iknry. pitched scoreless ball
Bt 11li

\~'\l ll lllrlln ~S

( ·.mJino1ls 7, P&lt;.~dres I
.It l.llk Murphy Stadium, Bob
1l'\\ ~ \ btu 7 p11Lhcd J SIX-hitler for
l11~ l~r .. t lll111 plc tc game of the sea-

St

"' ill .h

l ' l ll'

Lo1 11 S ~~~San D 1cgo.

Jo . . c hJJ three h1LS :md two

!~H ! ~. llltluthng J run ~ scoring
lll] lk, dlld

CII"' C I,, I"'All HI \J\ - ,\c l!Yil l&lt;&lt;l
Jme IHJu, p11chr r, fr om lht 15 (b) fhJi ·
1hlcd l l~ l.l'l accfl J l' rT l-l ('('d,&lt;a tcll•r . 1•n
the 1 5-d~y dl~&lt;~hlrtllt sl (a ll«! Ul' li n
nell llJICI, lnfu·hll'r, frnm ..,ll ~ h.,JI, "'
the American Auocl alon tlt'nl (,trunl mo Hcrrn•, uutnL"Id• r, In r-.:~~.~hvillr .
MOr"lo~J IUi\L I X/'OS - licn t l, tlbn
to Reyes catc her to Wo.tl'alm 11 , i l h .. t
the l·lond• St1te l,ugue ton 1 rthlhLl,la
ttorr antgnment
t•ll: W YOH.K MI - lS
l'' t.e&lt;l Vtnre
Colcmar1. lllllfi clrl cr, (&lt; n the 1\ d1y d 11
1hlcJ lin Ci. ll eJ up[) J Doner oJtfu-,ltl
c r from lrdcw1 c r n f th~ lrlern ltlorul

F' IW 1 ,\ '(.dA.\D

lly CHUCK MEL YIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Hobb y
Rose can't seem to buy a hn. so he
has 10 fmd other ways to earn h1 s
keep.
"Our p1tching staff' s go 1ng to
keep the score low We ha'c to
make sure we m:~k e the plays,'·
Rose sa1d Sunday after he saved a
run with a sensatJOJW.l play 111 th e
fourth mning then drove one 1n
w1th a sacrtfice lly 111 the ninill as
the California An gels beat th e
Cleveland Indians 6-3.
California won 11 with a threerun ninth mnmg, putting runners at
flfSt and second on two walks sandwiched around a sacr~f t ce bunt
before pinch-hitter Alvin DaVI s
looped a ucbrcalong smglc to ce nter. Gary GaClll followed with
another RBI single, and Rose fm •shcd Lhc scormg wnh ~11s s.tc nf1cc
fly.
But 11 was the Angels' dcfc, ,.c
earher 111 the game that kept tlll'm
1n posnwn to wrn.
In the fourth mnin g, Cal •forn•c~

By The A~•ociated Press
The Detroit Pistons and Los
Angeles Lakers, two team s synony mous w1th playoff success, arc
s lmtm g 1hc1r summer vacations.
The L.A. Clippers, on the other
hand, arc still playing.
The Pistons and Lakers had
tilcir seasons end early on Sunday
whi le the Clippers, making their
first playoff appearance since 1976,
pushed their opemng-round series
to a fifth and decis1ve game tonight
by outlasting Utah 115-107. Sun day's game was postpon ed from
Thursday and moved from ille Los
Angeles Spons Arena to the Anaheim Convention Center due to the
c•v•l unrest in L.A .
"I thought there were a few
guys on our team who JUSt d1dn 't
want us to lose," Clippers coach
Larry Brown sa 1d . "We didn't
have great pracuces (smcc the not ing began on Wednesday) . But I
nouced on the bus coming here tl1a1
we were ready to play "
Game 5 tS ton•ght 1n Salt Lake
City.
Detroit, which won the NBA
title in 1989 and 1990, was ousted
by ille New York Knicks , who beat
the Pistons 94-87 in Game 5 at
Madison Square Garden.
"The game went pre11y much
way the season went offensively,"
said Pistons coach Chuck Daly,
whose team set an NBA record for

The viCtory was the Mets' fifth
1n s 1~ gam es, IncluJmg three
shutou lS, and chw 13th 1n 17.
Astros I, Plfates 0
At the Astrodome, Steve Fmley

l11f
Future

Basehall

4 :-.c aalc 1

K• n.~ dt ( 11v ~

nCI I 0

1\'allnn;,~ l Ln ~:u~

M ol w• ukc.:~.l"r"ntu 4

li• ltnnro~

Oun gu 2., !Jetro.t I, Ctucsgo luds u:

Transaclions

ll ••~tun 7. KJn~u

rny prob lem

\~

Saturday's score

'

California beats Cleveland 6-3

Aft er Cec il Espy led uff the mnth

Campbell Conferrnce

1; 1\

]I)

' &lt;'"' ~ ... .
]!, ..

I.

11

pm

\(;LI-:

11.. ""' ~'~

d' ltrn

till

Monlft-11

hll 10 the flf SI

ad\'.ancing on a M~1rk Grarr doubl~: in the t1rst
inning of Sunday's ~atimml League game in
Cincinna ti , which the Reds won 7- 1. (AP)

Detroit, L.A. Lakers make early exits

b;.~scs 111 1hc SIXth . ilut I wus able to
keep rny compos ure both tun es
Not be1ng c~b l e to do th:r t has been

ll .. ~tno 6 .\lonLrc.a14. 0011too le~Js 'c
nu I 0
l'tta tnn gh 4, NY R•nic:n 2, I'Ltu ·
h u'ljh lu&lt;U KnCI I (}

,

cl

DUNSTON TAGGED OUT - The Chicago
Cubs' Shawun Dunston (left) is lagged &lt;Hoi at tlw
plate by Cincinnati calcher Joe Oli.rr alter

In the NBA playoffs,

h.11t c r and th en let them loJd the

Wall'S CunfHenrt'
~u nda y's scores

Tu e~day's ~ames

(Pvt1 uga l 2

Selld · I g.IVe up

Sranlcy Cup playoffs

At.hm a i Srnoi Lt 11) u Ch.oca11o ll •cll.

loser Ch.:HIIC

" '!lie bc\l part for me w,1s bcmg
\.: ec p m y com rasure." Cone

I'~

rm

aga1nst

;.~blc 10

'\ c.,. York n l'llo~ago, S p m
omu at l'mtl•nd, 10 }() p m

hur;:h (Z .'l rnoth41 ),7.1 5 prn
1\tl •n ll \ \rr nl1 1 1 2) •I (.h "II"

small compared

IS

to what Edtlie did," Johnson srud.
"That was a b•g one."
Cone (3· 1) struck out eight and
walk ed four in record mg h1s thlfd
strai ght v•cw ry . He also s•ngled
home two runs m a f1v c- run fifth

ron -l-0

Tlwr~d&lt;~y's games
t,'.,nfHrntr 1-ltnlfi na Jl

C tn r inllall j]truu.11tn~ 3 )) 11 I' IIU

ll'n (I\ ole

J::umes

~tm lnnall

Sc"' York 11 ChiCago. 8 p m
11ho.:11\ ul'unlt nJ,IO JOpm

Tonic hi's g:mu·,

200 hom ers.
" I thmk mmc

Lclbrandt (2-2).
After allowmg leadoff s• nglcs 1n
each of the first two mmngs, Cone
d 1d not g1vc up ano1hcr htt unt1l Lh c
S ixth , when h e sunvcd a ba sesload ed pm. In h1 s last Slllrt, Cone
pllchc(\ a two -hlltcr to beat Hou s-

1\o.lon I( {']c ~da nd, 8 p m

l'tuliJelrh..:• 1:. SJn I nno~n
lh..._o:l llll 1 l 'oti&gt;ll.J'~ II

and cry•ng to hn th e ball. All that
wil l come ..
John son became only the 16th
maJOr leag uer wuh 200 steal s and

1nnw g

Tonl~-:ht's games
t luc round
LA OJppcn 11 Uu h,IO JOpm
C nnfrrrnCf H-mlfin;alJ

Ne w York J Atl tnu 0
U ndnnaU I, ( h1r.gn 1
St Lou1s I Sa~ Dt~gn 1

~). ~ ( t~

pressure I've JUSt been gomg out

NBA playorrs

lem e

(lmJI;,) p

2 1), 10 35 p m

t 1n1 round
l\ew Ymt 9J, lkl rru t &amp;7, Nc"" York
wtru; senea J 2
Porthnd 102, I. A hler~ 76, Ponland
""li'U Kne'l 3-1
LA Chpper1 115 Utah 107 1enu

Saturday's scores
Atl1nt1

bod (Sluunki 2-0), 10 05 p m

Saturdu)''s score

'"

100

12

(McDo well 5-0), 8 05 p m
Toromo (J uan Guzman J 0) at Oak

7

5.1~

I)

U~ton

(VIOl &amp; 2-2), 7 35 p m
Kan111 Clly (Magnan1t D-1) It
Cltvrland (Arm1tronu: 0-J~ 7:J! p.m.
Mdw1ukee (Botto 2·1) at Ch,c •go

The hole was too deep for the
Cubs' vacationing offense . Dun ston e&gt;tendC&lt;I hts hilling sucak to
12 games and drove m ChiCago's
only run wiill the double off RIJO,
but the Cubs never had more than
one bascrunner in any 10nmg the
rest of the way.
Bankhead (3 -0) allowed jtiSt one
hit over 3 1/3 mnmgse and Rob
D1bble puchcd a perfect mnth.
Another game to blot ouL
HWe've been doing that for a
week, trying to forget," Boskie
srud.
Elsewhere in the NL Sunday. It
was New York 7, Atlanta 0; St.
Louis 7, San Diego I, Philadelphia
12, San Francisco 3; and Houston
I, Pntsburgh 0. Monueat at Dodger
Stadi urn was postpOnC&lt;I because of
the violence m Los Angeles in the
wake of the Rodney King verdict.
Mets 7, Braves 0
Fo r Eddie Murray, Howard
John son and David Cone, 11 was
prcuy much JUSt another day at the
park.
Murray hrt h1s 400th career
home run, Johnson stole hrs 200th
career base and Cone p11chcd a
fivc -h•ner for his second straight
shutout as the New York Mets beat
the ADantJ Braves 7-0 Sunday.
Th ey were all pleased, JUSt not
ccstnuc.
e'lt's a pretty decent number,"
Murray said. "It (ille ball) IS something to keep in the house with
me.''
When Murray connected m che
e1ghth innmg off reliever Marvin
Freeman, he became the 24ill player 111 major league hiStory to reac h
400 homers.
Murray •s also the second alltime leader 111 home runs by a
switch-hiner. M1ckey Mantle •s
first with 536.
The first baseman, who s1g ncd
as a free agent wiill ille Mets. has
1,489 career RBis and 2,527 hil s
In maJOr league history, 15 players
have reached 400 hom ers and
2.500 hitS. Twelve arc 10 th e Hall
of Fame, w1th Regg•e Jack so n,
Dave Wmf1cld and Murray not yet
cli g•ble.
"It's somcth•ng I thought about
dunng the wmtcr,'' Murray sa1d of
rcaclung 400. "Dutthcrc's been no

Gcr&lt;.a ld Perry hit two

run -;u&lt;flng doubles for the Card•'"'" · whu staked Tewksbury (3-0)
'" .1 7.() lead wiill illrcc runs 111 the
fH \1 HHHn g Jnd fou r more m th e
\lullld

l he Clfd 1nal s bane red starter
Dc~vc

Eiland (0 -2) for seve n runs

011 nmc lnts m l

2/J mnmgs.

Phil lies 12, Giants 3
At Ca ndlc suck Park , Mariano
Dunca n went 5 for 5, includmg a
hom e ru n, as Philadelphia routed
S,1n FranCisco
Jo hn Kruk and Dale Sveum
eac h added three RBis for the
Phil lies, who had 15 hi ts. Kruk had
a two-run smglc m ~ five-run sixth
that gave Philadelphia an Il -l lead.
Duncan's first homer of the season gave the Phil lies a 1-0 advanta ge in the f1rst 1nnmg off Trevor
Wil son (1-2).
Wmner Cl1ff Brantley (I-I) h11
KeVIn Bass With hr s first pilch 1n
the bottom of the SIXth and was
CJe cted by plate umpire llruce
Froemmmg . Curt Schilling fin ished.

Why wait? The average amount spent on gifts for moms on Mother's
Day and dads on Father's Day is higher than the amount spent on their
Christmas gifts. Mother's Day, May 10, and Father's Day, June 21, represent
combined relail sales of $16tu $17 billion nationwide. That's a median of$70
being spent for every mom; $60 spent for every dad.
Newspapers reach adults with buying power. Eight of every ten
adults, with household incomes of $50,000+, read an average day's

U.S.

newspaper . Advertise for Mother's Day and Father's Day, where your ads
create excitement, and generate sales: The Dally Sentinel. Call your
advertising account executive today for details, 992-2156.

The Daily Sentinel
St•ttrt.:c 1'..)4.}2 Pl anhook,

Ncw ~pap{'r A d ~ e n ts tn g

Rurcau,lno.

The Datly Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May 4, 1992

0 0 0

Jacoby Jut a sacnfiCc lly: and the
si&gt;th, when Cratg Worthington s•ngiC&lt;I home a run.
Cole matched hi S own team
record wuh fi vc stolen bases, and
he matched his career high with
four hits . He also took second after
drawmg a walk m the mnth mnmg,
but no sto len base was awarded
because th e Angels mad e no
aucmpt to stop h1m.
Cleveland's seven stolen bases
were one away fr om the team
record.
e'We had Kenny Lofton and
Alex Cole in the lineup back -toback . Thclf p1tcher was slow to the
plate. And Parnsh's arm ISn't completely healthy. Those conditions
scream at you to run ,"

H~rgrovc

srud.
Parrish received a cortisone
injection to reduce inOJillmJLiOll Jll
h1s right elbow on Thursday
In other games Sunday, Toronto
knocked off Milwaukee 4-1,
Kansas City beat Boston 5-2, Min nesotn beat New York 4-2, Detroit
beat Oakland 8-4, Chi cago beat
Texas 5-3 and Baltimore bea t Seattle 8-6.
Blue Jays 4, Brewers I
Dave Sueb had been wailmg a
long ttmc for this one, and when u
came, the surrounding s were very
familiar.
Stieb, coming back from arm
problems and back surgery, won
Sunday for the flfsl time 111 nearly a

of Sunda}·'s American League ~arne in Clc,•eland, which the An~cl.s won 6-3. Co le "as safe
on the play. (AI')

. .: &lt;c:.C: . on_::u___:nu:__ed.: . . :._fro.:. _m_P___:a: :ge.:. _4_.:_)_ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

year, lead mg the Toronto Blue Jc~ys
over the Milwaukee Brewers 4-1
with a three-hitter at Count y Stad•um.
Sucb hadn't won smcc last Mety
11 agc~mst the Ch1cago Whit e Sox,
and he hadn 't pllched a complete
game stncc an e•ght-huter at Mil·
waukee on Apnl19, 1991.
"I'v e always fc~rcd out pr clly
well here," sa1d Sucb, who lust h1s
ftr st two dccts•ons th1s season.
"Last year I was 0-2 and came
here and won my fnst game, a
complete game. It's n1cc to dupli cate illat this year "
Sticb had problems with Ius
shoulder last seaso n and dcvclop.:d
lower back problems after go1ng on
th e disabled list Jun e I lie had
surgery Dec . 4, 1991, to tnm a hcrn•atC&lt;I d1 sc.
"It's difficult when you've been

out a ye ar to go out and th row
every bal l where you want to,''
St1ch sai d. " I'm plcascrl, yet II was
110

lll.l ~ [i..: rpi CCC

..

lk \valkcd !ou r ,md ~ truck ut ll
two Suml:ty m a 0S ·pllch ellort th.11
m~1d c h1m 11 -5 111 ~'lilwauk cc.
v.-hc r ~ he 's \\.On s t:\ -,tr;JJght sl :.trt s
" I JUS t wamcd lO g•vc a good,
so lid pcrform:tncc," ~ueb s:ud .
"Th ey gut me some run s. Th e
tlung was I kept runn ers off base
and wa s ahlc to stick around unul
UJC end. I st ill want to be more consistent''

Joe Carter horne red tw •cc for the
Blue Ja ys, who avo!llcd gc tun g
swept in th e four -game series. He
t•ed the score at 1-a ll 111 th e m th,
UJCn put Toronto ah ead w1ill a twonm homer Jnthc eighth 0Jve Wanfield followC&lt;I wuh Ius f•fth home
run , the 411 ill of his career.

Vinton Raceway winners announced
Wmners in Sunday's racing action at the Vinton Raceway were:
Apnl 26's ra10 ed-out feature held Sunday - Todd Smnh.
Pomeroy; Scott Williamson, Vinton; Bnan H1cks, Ewington.
Sunday's feature - Scott Williamson, Vmton; Donny Kmneson,
Radcliff: Todd Sm1th, Pomeroy .
Mini (4-cy ltnder) race - Dave Adam s, Reed sville; Keith
Faught, Wellston; George Adkins, Mccgs County
Approxtmately 1,000 people attended the races.
The next race wtll be held Sunday wtth registration starting at II
a.m. and races starting at I p.m.

Waterford 55.6
400 METER DASH-I. Amber
Mustard (Jackson) 1.02.7, 2.Wendy
llrunton (Jackson) I :03.6, 3. Nicole
JarVIS (Fairfield Union) 1:04.8
300 METER LOW IIURDLES 1.1-Ica thcr E•hne (Jack son) 50.2, 2.
Ilecky Snook (Faulf•eld Un •on), 3.
Heath er Hudson (Mc1gs) 52.9
HOO METER RUN-I. Molly
Hoover (Jackson) 2:34.6, 2. Kim
Paskms (Fairt.cld Union) 2:35 .8, 3.
Rachel! Winsley (Falffield Union)
2:43. 1
200 METER DASH-I. Amber
Mustard (Jackson) 27 .3, 2.M•chcllc
Speakman (Vinton County) 27.5,
}.Jackie Swartz 29.1
3 200 METER RUN-I. Susan
Cra;., ford (Nelsonville- York )
14: 11.0, 2. Susan Gruescr (Me•gs)
14:46.8. 3. Becky Sch1lhng (Jackson) 14'56 8)
1.600 METER RLA Y-I. Ja ckson 4:28.1, 2.Fairf•eld Un•on
4:40.2, 3. Alc.nadcr 4:58.1
•NEW RECORDS
lloys resulis
POLE VAULT-I.Shane Brown
(Jackson) 12'0", 2. Adam Thompso n (Fairfield UniOn) II '6", 3.
Josh Long (Waterford) 10'6"
SHOT PUT-I. Keith Kemmerer
(Fa If field Umon) 48' 1(2" , 2. Tony
Breeze (Nelsonv ille- York) 45' 10",
3 Jeff Hammond (Vinton County)
42'S"
'LONG JUMP-I. Roger Jcnkms
(Tflmblc) 20' 8 3/4", 2. ChriS
Vmey (Federal Hocking) 20' 1/2",
3. Matt Lowery (Fairf•eld Un•on)
19'11'1/2
'HIGH JUMP-I. Chris Viney
(Federal Ho cking) 6' 2 1/2", 2.
Jason Williams (Vtnton County) 6'
2 l/2", 3. Mall Haynes (Meig s ) 5'
10"
DISCUS -I Tony Breeze (Ne lsonvil le-York) 139' 3", 2 Scotl
Wood (Falffoc ld Umon) 137' R",
3. Jeff Hammond (Vmton County)
130' 3"
3 200 METER RELAY -I f':m ficld Umon 8.43 . 1, 2. Alexander
8 52 0, 3 Me1gs 9:07.6
110 HUR DLES- I. Adam Litlie (Metg .s ) 16.0, 2. Adam Thompson (Fede ral ll ock1 ng) 17 (J, 3.
Mark Jorden (V n11 on County) 17.6
'100 METER DASH-I. Charles

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF

THE TEN MILl LIMITATION
NOTICE Ia hereby glvon
lhlt In pureulnc• or I
Rooolullon ol tho Board ol
Truo- oltho Townohlp ol
Olive, R••d•vllle, Ohio,
pooood on tho 5th doy ol
FobriNiry, 1et2, thoro wiM bo
oubm!Uod lo • vote of tho
p.oplo of oold oubdlvlolon
ol o Prlmory Elocllon lo bo
hold In tho Townohlp ol
Olivo, llolgo Counly, Ohio,
ol tho rogulor plocoo ol
vollng tho&lt;oln, on tho fifth
doy ol Moy, 1012, tho
quootlon ol levying o 1111, In
oxcoao ol tho ton mill
llmlbition, lor tho bonolll ol
Olivo Townohlp lor tho
purpooo ol Molnbilnlng lind
o.,.,llllng
Sold tu bolng : on
oddltlonol 1111 of 1 mill lor
llvo (5) yooro ol 1 robi not
o•ooodlng I mill lor - h
one dollar ol valuation,
which omounll Ill loll _,..
($0.101 lor oooh ono
hundred dollon
of
vlliullllon, lor llvo (51 y--.
Tho Polio lor uld
Eloction will open ol 1:30
o'elock A.U. and remain
opon until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
oloold doy.
By Ordol' of tho &amp;o.d ol
Electiono, of Molgo County,
Ohio.
Honry L Hun. ., Cholrmon
Rill D. Bmllh, Dlroclor

eom--.

DAlEO: Fob. 24, 1M
(5) 4, 11, 11, 26, ...

NO WAY OUT- The L.A. Clippers' Doc Ril'ers (25) finds no
11ay out while being guarded by Utah cenler Mark Eaton (center)
and teammate Jeff Malone during the second quarter of Game 4 of
the NUA West semifinals Sunday in Anaheim, Ca liL, whi(·h the

Clippers won 115-108. (AP)
Peck (North Gall•a ) 10.9, 2. Chris
V1ncy (Federa l Hock•ng) II 3,
J.Shannon Jordan (VInton County)
11.4
1,600 METER RUN-I . Mall
Garrod (Alexander) 4 41.5, 2 Chad
Myers (Falfftcld Un1on) 4:46.4, 3.
Jeff Gillman (North Galha) 4.57.6
400 METER RELAY- I Federal
Hocking 46.3, 2.Metgs 46.7, 3.
Alexander 47.2
400 METER DASH-I Shan non
Jordan (VInton Coun ty) 52.3, 2.
Mall Hams (Federal Hocking)
53.3, 3. Jared McCauley (Tnmblc)
54.5
300 METER !NT HURD LESI. Aclam LHtle (Mc1p) 42 0. 2
f.relnk BL1kc (M e1gs) 43 4. 3. Kyle

Wilson (Nelsonville- York) 45.3
•800 METER RUN-I. Matt
Garrod (Alex and er) 2:03.3, 2. Ben
Seals (Falffi cld Un1on ) 2 08.2, 3
Dave Swanson (lvlcigs) 2: 12.2
200 METER DASH-I. Charles
Pec k (North Gedha) 23.3, 2. Shannon Jordan (VInton County) 23.7,
3.Jared McCauley (Tflmblc) 24.0
3,200 METER RUJI:-1. Chad
Myers (f-eiiffreld Un10n) 10·27 8, 2.
P J. ChaJv.cll (Mc•gs) 10.44 .2, 3.
Be n Myers (Falfiield Un10n)
II 05.2
1,600 METER RELAY -I.
MEI GS (Adam Lntle. Kev10 Musser, Robby Wyatt, Frank Blake)
3:43.3, 2. Fauf•cld Un1on 3:46.7, 3.
Alexander 3:50.3

TIGIIT RACE- Frank Blake of Meigs and Chris Viney or Federal !locking are piclured in the 400-meler relay allhe Meigs ln&gt;itational Track Mecl on Saturday . Federal Hocking slipped pas!
Meigs at the finished line for the win by lour-tenlhs ol a stcond.

THE CARD BOX
1'!. Mlie South of Tuppers Plains
On State Route 7 (Look for Sign)

667-6092
1992 WAI PACIS
Toppo Stadium Club s-ball Cardo
Toppo Archleo Baoeboll Card•
Oonruoo Sarteo U
Upper Deck Bueboll

1991 WAI PICKS
Upper Deck NFL Foolbell
Plnnllde NFL FootbltH

Aeer Ultnt Football
Proaet Platinum Serlea I &amp; I
NFL Wild Cord Football

Wild Card Collegiate Booketball
Nolon Ryon PIICHic Baeboll Serleo I
Exotic o,...m Sporto Coro
Vette Set Sporta Caro
Mlllll RIIC Coro
Comlce.COmlc..COmlca
D.C. Coamlc Cordo lnaugurol Edition
D.C. Ftear Baoklllball Upd8o

'I •&lt;-I

SPECIAL OF THB MONTH
1990 USEIAU Jl'lA Ttl TRIVIA STKIII liT

2U

Over 600 BMboll Sllckero, Suporotltro and Rl•'!'ll
Stltro from overy nwjor leogue IN!n.
REG. 18.11
NOW

$

Rememlter,

r•• Certlloa ... Co.m

OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 10 Ul.·6 P.M.
CALL 667-6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOIHTIIEIT.

�Monday, May 4, 1992

By The Bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Page-6
Monday, May 4, 1992

Community calendar .
Beat of the Bend...
: Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
an.d the day or thai event. Items
niost be received well in advance
lc! •assure publication in the cal·
ndar.
MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will have
a ·JIMd and bake sale Monday from
8;4:30 p.m. at the townhouse.
:COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP ·
The Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at the fore st.ation.
· MEIGS - A NRA baSic pistol
cl~ss for women only will begin
1\jopday. Call 992-6311 lD pre-register.
: TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30p.m . at the
home of the clerk, Patricia Cal·
awny.
'

CHESTER - The Chester PTO
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. in the
sc hool cafeteria. All parents and
teachers urgC&lt;lto auend.
RACINE . The Racr nc Chapter

No. 134, OES, w1ll mccl Monday
at 7:30p.m. There w11l be a mock
initiation and all offic~rs arc :!Skcd
10 wear street clothes.

RACINE - The Southern Athkt·
ic Booster will meet Mondav at 7
MIDDLEPORT- The Middlep.m. at the high school All parents port G;uden Club will meet Mon and coaches urged to aucnd.
day at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Arthur Skmner. Mrs. Ronald
•
LET ART- Tbc Letan To"'·nshtp Re
ynolds wtll present the program
Trustees will meet Monday at 6:30 on old-fashioned perennials. Roll
p.m. at the office building . Mary cal l1s a perennial easy to grow.
Powell, Meigs County Pari&lt; DosorJCt
DircclDr. will be guest speaker.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
RACINE· There will be a meet- Athletic Boosters will meet on
mg Monwy at 7 p.m. at Southern Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the h'gh
High School for all eighth grade school cafeteria.
students and Lhcirparcnts to ;:mswcr
questions concerning rcgtSlr.ltion.
POI\1EROY . Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of Eastern Star, will
RACINE - There will be a ban- hold regular meeting on Tucsday at
quet meeting for Southern High 7 p.m. at Chester Masomc Temple.
Alumni junior parents wbo want lD honormg past matrons and past
help Monday at 7:30p.m. at the p.:arons and presenting 25 y ~ ar
high school cafCICria..
pms.
SYRACUSE - The Suuon
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
Munici!Xll Building.

POMEROY . Fratcmal Order of
E;,gics Lldics Auxiliory No. :' 17 1
will meet Tuesday at 7 30 p rn for
election of offiCers.

RACINE - Southern Jun10r

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE
The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Pagevillc Town Hall.

f orne roy area families
!needed to host students
. Foreign high school students
:Will be arriving soon into the
)'orne roy area for homcst.ay pro·
warns, and the sponsoring organiution ts lookmg for a few more
!otal host families.
•' ·According to Pacific lmercultural1oxchange (P.l.E.) Executive
Director, John Doty, the students
all between the ages of IS and
:1S years. have thc1r own spending
;m(lney, are fully insured and are
on•ious to share their cultural
l:xpericnces with their new Ameri !:an families . P.I.E. has progmms
ihat range in length from two
,weeks in the summer to a semester
and full academ1c year. where the
students anend local high schools.
: P.l.E. representatives match stu ·
dents with host families by fmding
common interests and· Hfestyles
).htDugh an informal inhome. meetiJl&amp;. Prospecuve host famthes are

:are

High Boosters will meet Monday at
8 p.m. at the junior high Parents
who will have children at the Junior
hi~h next year arc urged to Jltcnd.
Offtcers will be clcctC&lt;l.

able to review studenl applicalions
and select the "perfee111181dt". As
there are no "typical" hosl families,
P.l.E. can fit a student into iust
about any situation, whether it be a
single parent, a childless couple, a
retired couple or a large family.
For the upcoming programs ,
P.l.E. has students from Spain ,
Germany, Yugoslavia, Italy,
Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, New
Zealand, France and other coun ·
tries. P.l.E. is a non-profit educationa! organization that has span·
sored more than 15,000 students
from 18 countries since its found·
ing in 1975.
Pomeroy area families interested
in learning more about student
exchange or arranging for a meeting may call P.l.E., toU-free, 31 !800-245-6232. The agency also has
opportunities available for communuy volunteers.

MIDDLEPORT · The Middle·
port Literary Club wtll meet
Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Members of the Riverside Study Club of
Gallipolis will be guests for the
luncheon and program . Mrs .
Ronald Reynolds will review
"Escape Room" by Airey Ncove .
Roll call response is "an esc ope for
me.-

In Bob Huejlich
Plans are movmg right along for
a reunion of former students of the
Sugar Run Elementary School in
Pomeroy.
The next session of the planning
group has been set for 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce offices
located in the former Pomeroy
Librnry oo E Second SL
The first reunion is being
planned for May 24 at the Trinity
Church from I to 3 p.m. and all
forme.r studenl£-there should be a
number or them in town for high
school alumni reunions that weekend-are invited . Eventually,
reunions of the Sugar Run students
WID be held at the school.
Speaking of alumni reunions,
the classes of 1942 and 1947 from
the Middleport High School will be
holding special aftemooo reunions
of the respective classes with '42 to
be at the Middleport Fire Stallon
and '4 7 class members to be at the
present Meigs Junior High School
on May 23. Color pbo10s of both
classes will be tal:en during the~r
special get-togethers preceding the
full-school reunions in the evening.
After five years of study, Fred
Sisson. formerly of Pomeroy, will
be named as a deacon in the Toledo
Catholic Diocese during ceremonies to be held on May 16.
Fred. 1he soo or Mrs. Rose Sisson of Pomeroy, has traveled to
nearby cities from his home in
Galion over lhe years to study for a
deacon's position. Ceremonies
noting his aa:ornplishment wtll be
held on May 16 at the Toledo
Cathedral and are open to the pub-

lie.
A membe r or the St. Joseph
Catholic Church in Galion, Fred
has been a teacher at the Dawseu
Elementary School in Galion since
1968 . Fred and his wife, Alice,
have been frequent visitors here
over the years as have their daughters, Andrea, a freshman at the
Galion High School, and Angela ,
an eighth grader at the St. Joseph
Catholic School in Galion.
The S•ssons reside at 761 Heise
Park Lane. Galion, Ohio 44833.
With 10 teams organized, the
Raetnc Youth League is going
great guns this year.
Last year, Gary Norris, vice
president of the league and a coach,
successrully wrote an application
for a small grant from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
for two new ball fields at the Star
Mill Park. With the grant and
through the help of contributions
the fields arc now 95 percent completed and a conce ss ion stand
which will include a refreshment
area, rcstrooms and storage space is
under construction. The project
has been through a combined effort
of Racine Village Council, the Park
Board and the Youth League.
On May 9 special activities will
be held at which time the new
fields will be dedicated. Th e
Racine teams will play three inning
contests with teams invued to take
part and a parade will proceed the
play. And so, another step of
progress for the Racine Commumty .

Branch wood is the restaurant
owned by Sarah Fisher and is localed in the Fisher home at the rear of
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
I think you 'II be pleased with
your visil The food is beautifully
served and is delicious. The fust
floor of the home, where the
restaurant is located, is done in a
Victorian motif and provides plenty
of conversational topics. The staff
is in costume adding to the ~real
aunosphere. Let's just say its an
gmcious dining e&lt;perience.
The restaurant serves only on
Friday and Saturday nights and you
need to make reservations approximately a week ahead since seating
is limited. At the time you make
your reservations, you select the
menu for your dinner which gives
the restaurant staff a head stan in
being well prepared for your visil

RATES
Days

To place an ad

Call 992-2156
MoN . thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P. M. - Su.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad. ouuide th.e county your ad runa mWil be pr-epaid

' Receive di.eoWll (or ad.1 paid in allv•ace.
• Free Ad. : Ci.eaway and Fouod ad. uDder l:i •ord. will be
run 3 day• at ao charse .
• Price or ad (or all capit.alleuen il doubk price of ad eOd
• 7 point line type only ..aM
• Sentind i.J not relpo~~o~iMe lor e:rron after fant day (cher:k

for errorl f~r1l day ad run• in pi! per). Call kfore 2:00 p.RI.
day after publtcation to ma.ke correction
• Ad. tbat mUll b.e paid in a.dnnt":e arc :

Card or Thaolu

H•ppy Ad.
Yanl Salca
• ,o\ cluaifled adverti.ternent placed in the Gallipoli.J Daily
Tril)ltne (except Clu1if.ed Oi.Jpl•y, 8Uiineu Cud or Lepl
Notieee) wili•J.o •ppear in tbe Point Pleu.aot Repter ud
the o.ily Sentind, reatiUn« over 18,000 hoWict

Thanks, Uncle Sam

In Memorl.a111

Accordmg to the Bureau of the Cen·
sus. the federal government dis·
pensed over $1 trillion in fiscal year
1990 to the states California received
$116 billion of these funds. On a per·
capita basis. Virginia received the
most with spendmg of over $UOO per
person.

Bl'LLETI\ BOARD

IOWOPIN FOR
IlliG SEASON

BULLEDN IOIRD DEIDUIE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

c..platt liM of laddlng anti
Y1Jat••l• Plants, 11-lng
IN foliage H...glag
lashts, Lar11 Selection of
ShniUery
IN frill.
0,. Daly 9 L&amp; to S~

:o.

Sl!ZAN THOMA

James

lor 's degree in illustration and
design from the Columbus College
of An and Design on May 8.
The commencement program
will be held al the Ohio Thealre, 55
State Street, Columbus, at 10 am.
The commencement address to the
205 graduates will be deliveml by
Dr. Paul Otte, president of Ftantlin
Umversity, Columbus, following
remarks by President Convani of
the Columbus College of Art and
Design.
Thoma earned an associate
degree of art from Rio Grande College before enrolling for 1he four
year program at the Columbus College. He goal is to obtain wort as
an illustrator or designer in the
media field.
A reception honoring the graduates will be held in V Hall on the
Columbus College of Art and
Design immediately following the
graduation exercises. Family members and several friends will be
anending the cermomy

Wllherel~

Dr. BeU is a Board
Certified Family
Practitioner twlwilllimiJ
her practice to out polienl
mediciM.
Her hours will be
Tuesdays
1:00 to 7:00p.m.

'.

Dr. Tracy Bell

Fridays
1:00 to 5:00p.m.

Pomeroy
..

Gallia County

Meigo Collllly

iiunluors

GREENHOUSE

~all; polio

985-Chc:.aer
843-Portland

937 -B.O'alo

35-----

Some Bankers Just Don't
Know When To Quit.

RESOLUTION Cltl.l2
lhla violation by the Ohio EnBE IT RESOLVED by ... vlronmonlo1 Prolocllon
Council ol lho Vll!.go of Agency, lllowolonupplyhu
PoMeroy,

-

all lltiMberl had the drinking waler an•

-ng:
ly:rod lor the obove menThol ... Cllrlr/T,__ lioned p..-omet.... The ,..

ol 11M VII'- ol Po•• oy teraupptler wilt llkulepa to
tranaftr

ihe

au•

of en1ure that adequale mont-

$&amp;0,000.00 (Sillly Tho&lt;smd torlng wilt be perlormod In
Doll. .) lrom lho General the futuro.

Fllnd 1o lho SlrMI Fund lar
lho oporoUon of current
exponooo.
Thll Rooolulion pooood

•

Aprll20, 1112.

8rwHiallarrio,a.t
Btuco J. Reod, lloyor

Peoples
Bank

LmyWohrung,Pnoirllnl
(4) 27; (5) 4, 2lc

Public Notice

Fred Hollman, Mayor
VIllage of Middleport
(514, lTC

--------

Public Notice ·

ORANGE TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
PATRICIA CALAWAY,
CLERK
46686 GUTiiRlE ROAD
COOLVILLE, OHIO 45n3
PUBLIC NOTICE

Pu bllc Nollce
The Or•nge Township
Tho Vllloge of Ulddt.porl Trual- will be occeptlng
w•ter supply wu late In aoolod blda lor tho t 992

66 7 -Cool..-ilk

=::.12
Co..,cM of lho VIII- ol
BE IT RESOLVED by ...

=~.:omboro
th~=~h ·~o"' 0ao~:k1 ~

AESOU1T10N 414.12
BE IT RESOLVED by ...
Council of lho Vll!.go of·
Po•eror, all

'-•OJ

- - ...... oii4110.S2
lrono SlrMI Fund; SflE-42
fro• Flro Fund ond
S2132.37 1rono Fund
1o n i - Gonoral Fund

lor tho deduction ol
Woclunw1'a Co.panution

chorgeo by lho llolgo
County Auollor In - . . . , ,
1•laDIII~ulan.

Tide Aeeolutian pu·ed
Aprll20,1tll2.

13- ln•uc•nce
14- Bwine11 Training
, 15- Schoo l• &amp; I(Ulruction
I 16-- Rad l(), TV &amp; en Repair
' 17- Mu cellanf'!OW

I

AUSCALIS-'111t1GlCOI.l.KTAIU
,.._.., • u

lrlo&lt;heriDa..p.Ier

&amp;...,,..,.

667•6179
.

If It's Chocolate

------...1

1Wtllaporto992:6302

~

KEVIl'S LAWI
IUIITIIIICE

915·4473

NOW TAKING ORDERS

11

""',8:1,

ll 50~."""'Ciio•S'Il-lllS

614-94~2627

IAOIIf, OHIO

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
ond Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming I Removal

-~r-To-..

A-lloll

614-Mt-2202

Comm•ctal
Frn Eatlmlltn

SNODGRASS

...

'-----"""'===

UPHOLSTERY

~PIIIniG

-

,_

&amp;CO.

~-

"WolioMIWOI,..,
-1.11 Us Dt lllw W
llflm.D
111¥1 liiM+n
W.o6,.._a-• I

--

IIIDDlfPOIJ GUN
SHOP
ll4.f«r''l ~·
lOW OPEN
lh.9t.5

MCh one IlDia. of Ylllu•li R,
wlllciiii'IIOUIIa 1o 1on -

....... s.r.

IIUDGtiiS, IJFLES,

SHOTGUNS

~1-'n- I -·

pd .

In .. emory

9AMto 3 PM

wilh 2·3 bedrooms, 1 bath, some new cab1nets, newer gas
lumace fireplace. lull basement IMMEDIATE POSSES.
SlONI S25 ,500

NEW USnNG- Middleport- Third SL- 2 stmy lrame home

SAM to 6PM
Monday thru Friday
8 AM to 12 Noon Saturday

Monday thru Thursday
9 AM to 6 PM Friday
9 AM to 12 Noon Saturday

NEW LISTING- Cote St. ·

One floor lmme home

with 2

bedrooms . 1 bath. fi111place. part basement. newly painted
outside. front &amp; bacl&lt; porches. $5,500

NEW LISTING- Middleport-Thl1d St. 2 story !Tame horne
with 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, relrigorator &amp; range, warm morning gas stove $8.000

NEW LISTING- SR 248 Cheolor- Business buidng 40 x
90+ includes equipment and tree gas to buHclng. CALL
FOR DETAILS!

Beginning Monday, May 4!

Juat oH ForHt Run Rd.· On old Blod&lt; Plant Rd.· Older l

Peoples

Mason

New Haven

773-5514

882·2135

In Loving
llemoryof
Mabel Julia

992·3131

(5) y..-o..

noor lreme horne with vinyl siding 2 bedrooms on 2.29
acrns. Very peaceful setting. ASKING $24,900

SYRACUSE- 1..oo Circle- Ranch Style home with 3 bedrooms, carport, appliallC81l, cable hooiHip. NICE LOCATIONllmmecliaw possession! 534 .900
BUSINESS IS SO GOOD ... WE'RE RUNNING OUT OF
STOCK I WE NEED LISTINGS. IF YOU WANT TO SELL
CALL US RIGHT NOW! FOR BEST RESULTS CALL-

Point Pleasant
675-1121

HENRY E. CLELAND-........................................tl24181
TRACY BRINAGER ....................................- .... Mt-2431
JEAN TRIJSSELL .............................................. M!I-2680
OFFICE.................-.................... ....................-.."2-2259

MemberiDIC

r

Ohio.
Honry L - . a.oinun
Alto D. S...llh, DirKIDr
DATED: February II, 111112
(5) ~. II, II, H. 4ec

Public Nollce

_... _....

Harman
who died
Yay 4, 1990.
Sadly misSed
by her children
and family

ol Carillon

Schooi aarl
IWge lrt+·•iw Wcwblelf
far pora- willl _ . . .
rolonlollon ond

S•ld

lox

dov...,._

boing:

011

.................... ol
I rat. not ewe I Ill t .I . .

----..

lor oach ono dolr..

..r

•+·
P'ln...-..a.-11
olgh- _ .. (Sil111 loor

_,
nlu•tivn,

Public Notice

for • c

!' d 1

--------

___
5

____

Happy Ads
.....:,.:...:;.

porlodoi-

Tho

NOliCE OF El.ECTlON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
1HE TEN ..U. UIIITATION
NOllCEiallorebygiYen

Polio lor ..W

.,..._ will ol I:JI
A.ll. ond . . . . - -

_tf

7:30 o'clock P.ll. •

....... ,.._of
IIMnln, on .,. -

YOIIng

cloy

01

ol
llwrtngotu,lll-ol
............. llllllot~ ""
..., 1112, ...........

....... ., ...... c:. ..,

1"'

Boord of llolllll A doll on
lor ... purp•••
of
.....,_
ond _
.....

TROLLEY

nATION

51- llou•ehold. Good.
52- Sporting Good.

53- 1\ntique•
54- Mi&amp;c. Mcrch..o.ndi.ae
Build i n~

Suppli('_.

h1-- Van. &amp; 4 wu·.

114- Mowrqde.a
75----- Boau &amp; Moton for Sale
176--- Auto Parll &amp; Aa•-••~1
177- Auto Repair
l 7g_ c~rnpm~ 1-:quipment

:-ii·. H\ IU..81- Ho111e lmporve ...entJ
82- Plumbin~ &amp; H t-..a tin~
83-- F:a:canling
M- Eledncnl &amp; R,r,~mtw~
85--- Central Haulmg
186- Mob1le 1/ome Rep1ur
1

1:17-

Lphoj,; tny

8aJJP)
llrt:hdliiJ' Son!
11-fiDad

PH. 614·992·5591

•LIGHT HAULING'

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992·2269

USED RAILROAD Tl(t-";J
4-4-92-iltt

J&amp;L
KING'S TV INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
ZENITH
•Replacement
SERVICE
•Roofinp
•Insulation
Window

204 H. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992·3184

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryan

Place
Ohio
11114/lf

Middt.por~

1 mo. pd. 41'1 61512

ATTENTION
\lohiiL- ,'\ l&gt;ouhlt•llidt• llollll' 011111·r,
OH., WV. &amp; H.U.O.
Appro,..

·-lad•ol.

r"'- -

u~enm.

Hoo!ittt Prodoi!L

LJ '
'
'

.....
'
..

Co1ditioters, Heat l'tll~
Fomrces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.

~-:·

~ ·~

APRIL 13-18

Ellended Easter hourl.
Open 1111U 7:30pm
Basket Class
lllJST PRE·REGISrER FOR
ALL CLASSES
SUnday 1-5 pm
for"'" Info C.U

614-992-2549
4/ISJ9211

•.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~
'

New Homes • Vi1yl Sidi•g
New Garages • Replacement

~

Roo• Additions • Roofi•g

;::

Wi•clowi:

mo.

JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
(all614-992-6637
St. Rt. 1
c•eshire, 0 H.
1

NEW OPENING

SUMMER
IMAGES

Z Miles on HvMII Run Rd.

POMEROY, OHIO
NEW SCA WOLFE BED
t2 Vioils ......$25.00
16 Vioits ......$30.00
1 Visil ......$3.00

4-7-92-1 mo.

40

PONDS
SEPTIC
SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING : Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
licensed and Bonded

TRIM and
REMOVAL

CUFTS

992·2417 or
992·7114

IIANI'Q, Lord)',
look whose

BULLDOZING

I 0 • .._.. h., IIW41oporl

Ulkr~

-

lhal In purouonco of o ~-ol ...
An htUo• of ... Boord of Eloclono ollloigo c-,
Pn c-mbda .... ol ... Ohle.
HonryLitunlor,aa
C:O..Iy olllllgt, Poall'oy,
AiloD.s.NI,.._
Ohio, ,...... 011 .... 1tlh
..., of F*tury, 1112, . . . DATED: February 20. I tilt
wlibert m 'ID•vva. (5) ~ . I I, 11, 2S. 4ec
of lho fiiiOPio of ooid
oula dlvlsloto Ill o Prl•ory
Eloctto. ...... held In ...
C:O..Iy of ..... Ohio, ol

\\IJISE

Auw.forSaH:

Qua&amp;ty Hi EHkieiKJ Air

HRS: Mon .·Sal 10 •m·5 pm

BUY-SElLTRADE

($0.101 lor ooch ono .__ _....;~!;ll~!!!!l
hundrod dolton of r

Lobby and Loan Department

~IEHCII

71-

172- Tmkdo.Sak

~

APR . 28. 6 :00 pm -

menotu...,.ogl.,.lloor

Drive-In Facilities

Furnilh.ed Room•
46--- Spaee fnr Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
~Equipment for Rent
49- FOT Lea1c

BE HER Err DfSI(;N

W15Mr, ..... pd.

2

-..tuol101iHIIo

992·2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMDIOY. OHIO

42- Mobile Home. for Ken1

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

iiTrDTIICDIII

••z•

Porklliolrlct ....... -

"'Zy
- ol .... Boord ol
Elocllono o1 llolgo e-ly,

41- llo~~ror R &lt;nl

l'" rn

NEW-REPAIR
GUTTERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER ClEANING
PAINTING
Frw Estimates

'l(atfuyn
?.luufows

oiCurNnt[-101.
Sold lol bolng: on

.,_.,,I,__,..

Y'S AUTO
PARTS

INTERIOR &amp; IITDIOI

EXCAVlTING

or and

ffll (STUiirES

WAilEREirS

:n~~an

ca~ ~:~.and

Sto, &amp; (o•pare

-

0111" s.rt. 5' .,
Of
n-.,..B;It 'llllon !'low t. ....._
You 1.-.1
Llaalo.

Public Notice

oald
Election will open ol C:30
A.ll. ond ..moin opon until
7:30 o'clock P.U. on . .id

'

live~tock

Hay &amp; Grun

Til\ \~I'OHT \!"It 1\

IH.\T\1.:-i

:!:&gt;---

Re•--"ell'lg

-

l.my~~~~~~~~~~
I

Tho Polio lor

18- Want..o:d To Do

long Stem Candy
Rosa Suckers
P•rf•ct For Molhor~
D

DALLAS K. WEIIER-0...

1•127: (5) 4, 21c

y . . . . . . ., .......

•

1

Ho•es

Ohio,,..-

Extended Drive-In Hours.
Simpler Lobby Hours.

Ru.l Eat.ale Wut.ed

1

COIRRUCTION

. .

All• 6,.._ 614...HIIO

=~~

34-- BLLIIine.u Building.
l~ll &amp; Acrup;e

W'anled to Buy

Mother's Day

-~
Tllot ... ClarltiT.....,. ~UIDI'S

ol ... w._ of

1

F'urn Equipment

tn~~iii1ffif=~r.~~~~~;;~r=~;;~~;::;~;;~;;;;,~~iti=jiii~~~iifi
BISSEll &amp; BURKE
EXCAVATING
SHRUB &amp; TREt:

Public Notice

•••b•r•

11- Help Wanled
12- SiluaUoru 'il' antec.l

61 626l-1&amp;4---'6:»--

B· sin ss S rvic s

monitoring for UCllnor(llln- cemetery mowing aeeson
NOnCE OF El£CT10N ON
lco In tho drinking water until Uoy 2, 1992. Atotal ol5
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
"SPEClAUZING IN SLATE
1upply 11 requlr&amp;d under the cemoteriea to be m-od 2
lHETENUIUUIIITmoN
ORCANVAS"
1t1tle'a safe drinking waler tlmea 1 month or •• deemed
NOnCE le horeby glYen
39815GoldRidgollwo. Chapter 3745-81 olthe to oecept or reject any or on lhol ln purouonco of o
PoiiiOI'OJ, Ohio 4576!1
Ohio Admlnlolrallve Code blda. low blrl moy not Influ- Roeolulion of ... Boord ol W
Sl
elcome ates
require• a Community waler ence tti• trusten decision. , ... eo-lad- ollho
tupply ualng a ground waler Send blda to:
County ollllelgo, '-oy;
$20.00
eource, to monitor within the
Polrlcla Catowoy, Cieri&lt;
on . . 3n1 ~
Custom Paintings
opodflod three year lima 466116GulhrleRoodCoolvilie,
~~-=-.u::. ol
614-992-2242
period for:
Ohio 45723
I I Aroonlc
61 Load
(4) 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 30
tho pooplo ol ooid 1~;;;;:;+,;;;;:~4/2MIIfn~::;~
21 Borium
1) Mercury
aubdivision at • Prirn_,- 11
(51 I, 4, 5, 6 tOTC
31 Cltdmlum 81 Nitrate
Election to be holcl In llo
41 Ch10mlum 91 Silver
County of Melgo, Ohio, ol
51 Fluoride
101 Selenium
11M rogul• pia. of votinv
Upon being notified of
u.or.in, on ... fifth cloy ol
-------------------1 u.,, ftn, 11M -lion of
Real Estale General
levying • tax. In .._ . ol
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 1 M ton mil llmllalion, lor
11M benofil of lloigo County

OPEN

=-c7'1

Auction
9- ..... ted to Buy

1' \11\1 ~ll'l'lll'
t\ 1.1\ E:'TO&lt; 1,

for Sale

charged lor each day as separate ad'

7- Loot ...1 Fooad
1- l\obloc Sale &amp;

89~..

742-lla~ll.and

Mobile Home. for Salf:

33-- hrm1 for Sale

l - A........-:cae.nu
4- Ci-way
i - U.ppy Ad.
6--- Lo.1 a...d Fo....d

u.,.a

882-Ne"'f'

Horne.~

32-

45-----

458-Lr.o.ll
5 76-Apple &amp;ro..-c773-M..o.

217- Letan t~.u.
949-R•cinc

31-

43- Farm• for Renl
44- Apartment for Rent

6 7 5-Pt.. PLr.-at

)8-- F'ruiu &amp; Veselah~
:)()....._For Sak or Trade

HI : \I. I&lt;ST \TL

Ra,.. are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be

.---......,

Peu for Sale
I S~
1- MwK:al I n1trwaeall

23- Prols•ioaal Servlcet

.,... ftFS•rwJS E•ST!
G ma
ILJa..
•
ft
•

Focto&lt;y &amp; Buildingo, 2323
•
W. Allh A...,uo, PO Box
DISPIAlll•
125, Colullobuo, Ohio '121'ltl QUAIJTT PUIT SHOP
Thla AMolulion _..,
IIIIDUrOil, 01.
Aprll20,1tl2.
m-ntH;ll...ue,.
L -.a, a.t
742-l.U Allor SM,.
a.- J. Reod, u.yor 1'-----·-....;..lo---'""'
(4) l.my
Z1; IS)w.houng,
4, 21t - ·

Public Notice

Public Notice

21- Bu.ai.neu Oppo~tunity
22- Money lo Loan

M1111011 Co., WV

9'12 _l!;ddleportl
Pomeroy

36 7....cheallire
388-Vialon
24~Rio Gnnde
2S6-Ga~yu DiaL
643-Arat.ia l&gt;i.l.
J79-Walnut

FI\\\CI\1.

$ 20
$ .30
$ .42
$ 60
$.05/day

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 ~·Code 304

loauod llltougjl ... Olfico ol

Syractse 992-5176

Over 15 Words

-----(L~!iS[i.iFiiEJ~i---~ 36---

Classified pages COI7er the
following lelephorn! uchonges ...

Upon rovlew ond public
h•ring, permlta will be

POMEROY BOWLING
992-3432 Eve.
Call for Rese!Vations
Open at 6:30p.m.
Tues. -Thurs.-Fri. -Sal. -Sun.
Other hours by appt

992-6601
\

1:00pm Sarurdoy
1:00 p.m Mon&lt;l.y
1:00 p.m Tueday
1:00 p.m. Wednesdav
lOOp .m Thumay
l :00 p.m. Fnday

f'IIBr.mr

Appointments may be made by calling

Meigs Health Services

DAY BEIURE PUBLICA T1a'l

~101:2-5-21..,. 1 •

and

-~

10
Monthly

Bulking
s.. odoido "' Rulo
our CorUIIcotlon

M.D.

and
Wilma Mansfield, M.D.
.
are announcmg
that Dr. Tracy Bell, M.D., joined their
· ·· practice in April and is accepting new
patients.

CO!'Y DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tued.ay Paper
Wednesday Papcr
Tht=iay Papcr
Fridoy Paper
Sunday Paper

Rate

15
15
15
15
15

6

Whoma to receive degree
1 POMEROY · Suzan A. Thoma,
nlaughter of Pat Thoma , 103 Wolfe
:[)rive, Pomero(' and the late Earl
Thoma, wil receive her bache-

Words

1
3

And aren't we glad we don't
liVe in Los Angeles?' Do keep
smiling ..

Have you tried The Branchwood'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS IIIII
MRliSnNGS
S2100U.131,1.... 0Ma

247-4035

IIOW OPDI FOI SPIIII6

....., ........... I.~S,

hnsl..

OPEN
WED.·SUN. 10-S p.a
4-21-12·1-pL

COMMERCIAL and RF..4\IDI:NTIAL
mu F..4\TIMA'D'S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860 ·(No Sunday Calls)
2112192 tl
•

FOR SALE

Agriculture
lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2

a•d VCR REPAIR
AU MAlES
lrl•tll I• Or W.
u~·­

Pic•

KEN'S APPUAICE
SERVICE
992-5335 or

Millwood, W.Va.

304-273-SSSS
4-!Hfn

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVKE

~Additions

-Gulllor WO!It
...£........ ond
-Rooting

MICROWAVE 0¥11

Plumbing

-lnllrior I Exlwlor

Pointing

(FREE ESllMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P-y,OWo
3-t3-92 ·lln

915·3561

Acrouf,..,_IOICM _.
2171. s..-1 St.
flOIDOY, OliO

ANGIE'S FLOWERS
PII!Winlals&amp;

Annual a,
Strawno-. and

~

Evertuttngs.

Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.

Lee.~........,...

w..,
Ntw- ...... St
.......... lt.S54
MON.·SAT. 9 1o S

614-742·2772

.f'/llr-mr·

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday,

May 4, 1992

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUle

31

,.'*... 2 bloc:kl
llaoon, bargoln prlood,

GIRlS, GIRlS, GIRLS

-..-....-lanilo
.-.nJ...-n

2bdrm.

ou1,

614-36~

01111

12.15 lin. 18 •
~~---CIIIIomio.
UIE! lM! LNI!

• ra •)

SSTEL

-

I

--·
-......
.......

,._

;.

"'"

wtth
E-V.p
FN:h

111

5 ,_., houoo, IOonOO lol, Cll~

I.;;Jr;

~ II[

.,
...._to .,._ay,
call

....., • ~
- T o Good
.....,- r=_,_~
~ ......--.

!_
; Will Clka
SlwJts.
" ' - - Spodo
-

~=========1-=========1
tsmtlyraom, uno~orv.....r -8
11

PubliC Sale

&amp; Auction

......
Fw w.llo&lt; l And

... : : : ' 511-311 SSG I. 614-388-

Chlhoahua,
-' - - - . -""'- .....,..
1o
-~ p ... •Gf,. OtiD..
' 1M ""'"""'

Yard Sale

Gallpolls
&amp; VIcinity

ick ~rson Auction Company Guar~~ntNd Sima D1y Aptull lirM IUcUon. . ,, complet. proval! Also Oulllty For NO
•ucllon
aervlce.
Uc1nsed Deposit VtSA!MC And Cash Ad161,ot'l~ &amp; Wnt Virginia, 304- VIne••·
1..aoo-264~789
Ext.
11l-5785.

2524.

9

'AVON• All AREAS! Shar• your

Wanted to Buy

;;:::::-::=::-::~-:=-:::-=7:.!..-:-:-Don't JuN: hi SeU Ua Your Non-

lima whh us. You "ll lova lhl

company. 1-800.992-6356.

Working
f..Jor lpptlaneea,
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
COk&gt;r 1'\"a, VCR's, Microwave•, E1eettant
Pay,
B.,.llls,
Air Conditioners, Etc. 614-256· Transporta11on,
407-292-41'17.
ma.
ER•,•,.
· _lnd.· ~ .m.·10p. m . Ton
u.d Mob41e Hon-.1, Call 614·- 7 5.
AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
Warted To Buy: Junk Autot1 Spaara, 304-675-1429.

Larry Uvoly. ll4..188-11303.

Be on TV m&amp;ny ne.dtd for
commerct.ls, Now hiri~ all
age&amp;, For casting into I :_TT'J.
1111 art. T·237.

Wanted To Buy: Large S.u
01.- Mlkel'l Form. Good CondHion, C./I 1&gt;4~46-4015 Aftet 5 Certified Nurail'l Aulstanl ,
J , _ , - - St.... lion- P.lf.
starting salary l .10, a~ly at
... ...,;t . . Sold! At.l41
Nuroing Rohobilo1a11on
Tap Pricoo Pald : All Old U.S. Pomoror
Cotna, Gokt Rings. Sltv.r Colna C.nl1r, 36759 Rockspringa Rd.,

-----

I.,_, - - ..., "" '
. . . ..... 125 Pwl -rlh Aoltd..

~-· DEADliNE · :too p.m.

. . _, . . . . . . . _,istorun.

EOE.

Yard Work, Light L~~ndat:aplng,
Tillef Work, P•lnling And Ere.

Consutling

Employment Services

- . . - - :tOOp.m.

~-.

• :tGO

11

HelpWamed
::-:---~---,--~

K krterwted In buyi~ or Mlllng
St..W.y Product•, ca ll VIrginia
long, 304-67S-5160.

.. .......

lbr 4th, !ilh. Furcrwry Rally

Gllooop -

-.

u9

--

-

:lin

lmrnedblt• Op.nlng For FuiJ..
llme AN Shift Supervta~ 32 lo
4D Houra p., WeH. tlenejf1
Pocbgo ln1act Wllh Campo!"
tt.e y('"agee 1nd DlfterenUal wfth

Eaporionce, Equal OpportunHr

. -..,.

Employer. Pt.... coniiCI The
otr.ctar of Nur.lng, PinKral
C.re Cent•. f10 Pinecrest
Dri... Galllpollo, Ollio 45631
t"M-446-7'112

X·RayiAac:UotoQy

urvleu for lakin ._.ospllal lo
maintain
ICF
cartif"lcaUon.
Outi.. lo Include r•adlng and
lnt..-prela1ion of X·rtp of

Naidants and ataff ol Lakin
Hospilal. lnl.,....ct parwone
contad 304~75-3230 •zt. 20 or

24, Mon-Fri, 8:00AM . 4:00PM
lor bid form. 0.1dllne tof" a~y-

ln9 t. May 22, 1992. Muat .,.
1b11Hy to bill mtdlcaraJmecUcakl
and/or any third par1y ageneiea.
Exp~lieoced

Par11 Manager
ntlded 11 1 local car d•ltrshlp.
Sind rasuma lo P.O. Box mu,
Pomeroy, OH.

----------nte M•lga Local Sc:hool Dlllrict
Ill

Meldng

currWitly

ap-

pliutlona trom c.l11fled lpplleanta tor 1n Aaalstlnl V1ralty
Foolba/1 Cooc:h (4 pooillons),

7th 6 8th Gt1de Fool: ball CoKh,
Boyo' Varolly llaokotball Cooeh,

lllh

Boyo'

G.-

Bukolba11

UFEGUAADS WANTED: e.rBoyo' ..,.
llh 11!10'
··
ball Coa&lt;h,
11h Gtodo
1illod Uloguanlo nooclod tor Coach,
. . 4,5,1...
-.
Bukll,_/1
c-h,
Aoolotan1
aummer tmpk:jiu....,t, tun and
pal1-tlme poellb. avallaiM, ~lgh Sc,_ Trocll Coach,
- . . TIDf 2 ·z ... lJIIr,
call or come II\ Royal Oak Junlor H~h Trocll Coach, A tant Jr. Htgh Track CoKh, HMd
... Ott'
0 $
Fwni- R,_, Club, 114-H2_..o1Aa.
BIMball
Coach,
Asllstanl
Musk:llnt wanted, Drumm., BaMblll Coach Glr1s' R...-ve
-1101.
wants lead and basslat lo form Basbtball ca.ch, Gir1s' R....-w
gi'QUp dolng CCMlnlry 1nd fock, So"ball Coach, Girls' Jr. High
:::_F;:'t ....
;
,14-698-2083.
Volleyball Coach, Glr1s' Jr. Htgh
s..- ' a z
, Ulll llisc:!
B11kMbeU CoKh, (2 poalllons),
. . , • &amp; S, ._, 21 Enno Olllco Girl Hoodod For Local 1r
High School Nowapapor Spon-

-~-:r=.....__

lap.--.-

. -Ot--=...
i""':'

....-

--------Rd.
--. . . . , , _ '? n D 5

n

Pt.

('aP\o.

..-.nee Oftke, llu.t Be A!Me To
Type. Sind RHUJM To: CU.
114, Clo GllllpoUa Oalty Trlbo!l!r
125 Third Avenue, GalllpoUs, utt

45631.

tor, High School ChMriMder

AcMaor, Athletic lMrector, liNd
T,..hor ol B10dbuty Elomontary
l llonlor tor lho 11192-13 ochool
year. Applkantl mutll hotel 1

valid Ohio l..chlng tllftHicela &amp;

11

tar eo.chlng paeiiiOM mull

mNI corUIIeallon requl,._,,
of Ohio tor epot'tt ~lne I

&amp; Yldnity

CPR. -

lnO....,od ohoukl
contld Jim ea.,.mar, Sup.tn-.
london1 of llolgll.ooal Schools,

-__ ..,u__oo.

c
........ . . , 6-~ 6Dort.
~..,....
u
,., _
_..s..,At
__

~---·
-- llll !II.

-

SOCl.ll WORKER
Pl..._nt Hill Manor, A 201-a.d

Goria1ric
Fad1hy, Sooldng
[MgrMd Scct.l Worbr To Join

1

I

1 ,_ ,
5Ift
_
_&amp;

•

,

h •s•

Dah.

.....,

S.-~ 51 .

• - . , . . atiC:IIIIIS..
.

--1-

P.id In

....._. 0..... 1 GOpm thol
- - - . . . lid • to run ,
.....,
s

10-00-.m.
ffiday,

.....,

.,

-

a..dll ........ to r. "'-'d .....
!ad.. • ... . . .... St,....
.._ . . . . . ? . rain~.

c..op-. ..... """-···

. . . . __. . . . . . ~RillnOf

. . . . . . . .

1

:

......

Otd

llull:. Wa Are A P10p'1 Oriented

a.

I

Ollorlng

Eacollonl
W.9f And s.,...tM PacbQ•. You

0t Thl•

Unlquo Opporlunhy By Aljllylng llftll..dlalaly To: Jim LJitdenwl,
Adn-W,.tratot,
clo

u,-riencld

In

e•l...,t Pay, No Ewp. NMded,
Start Immediately. Call 512-9921500 Ed. St1 (24 Hr.) F,..
Dalalls!

GUARANTEED
AVAILBLE .

WORK

ExceUanf Pay
For
EASY
Homebaslld Wont. Full/Part

--... . . . Ollt

~·

a •

-~ • .
. Oho.IM-

Business

Training
Retr~ln
NowtiiSouthelat.m
Bualn.a Cotte9', Sprtng Van.y
Piau. c.n Today, ,.....,.-435711
Reglsl.ration tta-05-1271lB.

18 Wanted to Do
-----,--..,-.,--Will llabyoll In lly Homo. RoO-

ney ArM. Aat.r.nces Awallable.
c.n 114-24!1-5881.

Georv- Pof1abM S.wmlll, don't
hlul yow loQI to the mill juSI
call30f.815-1~7.

O.UipoUa: 3 hdroom Brick
Homo eom. l..ool, Ownor Loll¥I"V ArM. o\4-.l L.ota And
RentalS Ateo A:wllabk CIIIIM-

~ (Aft• a :oo P.M.) For tntonuUonAndAppotntmarl.

Sat., aftordabfe, chlldca,.. M-F
6 a.m.. - 5:30 p.m. Agu ~1o .

aft• eehoot Orop-lns

S.for.,

In-

fant Toddler Care, 614-446-6221

Mowing.

llghl Haunlng. Don

W.ugh114-4*--

Financial
21

Business
Opportunhy
!NOTICE!

QHIQ VALlEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommanda thai you do bual·
ness wfth people you know, and
NOT to aend money ttv~h 1~
m1U unlll

you

hlv1 lnvtetlpled

the offering.
Anantlonl Styling Salon For
81 ..1 Prime l.lldllon. Cllf 114-

«H803, 114-4441-1355.

Home Worllera NIMted By 150
Flrmo, Top Poy, S331 Woolo Or
lloro. Auah $1.00 !loii-Add-Hd Stamped En\lllope 110 (}&amp;A
Suool ... , Box 1443, Fairborn,
0~ 45324.

Local Vtndlng Aoull FOf' Sa ..

Chup, C./11-74t-1186.

Tavern bualneea for ule or
loaN, Mlddl....... Ohio. 304·
11:1-3382.

Central hell and air. Ewenings

C./1114-+11-17Vl
32 Mobile Homes

~-

Real Estale

s

BE••
~FUl APARTMENTS AT
,..,.."
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

rnovloo. Call614-446~.

S500 ott PurchaM Prtce Of Any
New Home At El. . Homa Cen-

t•, OrNt Sslaclion. Free Sti-Up
And o.llveryt CaleM-772-1220.
1m Fl8ill odt:JO 3 Be6roomt, Tot•
ric Rang..
Rtfrigerttor, Good Condition,

EOH.

EHidancy AplrtfMnl: Nicety,
Furnished, Carpet:ed, Quill« Wefl
Kepi Air Cond11ioned, Prtv1'11

PlnJng,

8"14-446--2602

Afllr

Ohio. I'M..W6-441&amp; An• 7p.m.

1PI MxM, 2bmm..., appll&amp;nc:e1,
tumltW"II, alia ellldric, I"M-912-

Furnished Ap.rtrnerrt, 1br, n.st
to Ubrary, ~rklng. CINrll hal,

5800.

llr.

8352- 5:00

1984 Mz70 Cllyton ! Bedrooms

1 112 Bathe, S..-Up Or l..d 1ft
Quail CrMk, lbny btru! 614245-"12311.
1985 Windsor 2br, Fully fuf·
nlahed, otshwuher Dts~l

~.

at Village
Alnr•ide
AJMrtmefrts in lllddlaport. FRMn
$116. Coil 614-11!12-7781 EOH.
room lpll1rMntl
llancw
and

Mlddlopor1, Ohio, Norlh 3rd An,
2 bedroom
furnished .,t,
~ ond , . . . _ roqulrwd,
304-182-2516.

111~ .

1188 Rlv-wvlew, 14x52, 2 Bed·
I"'OfM, Tetal Electric, Good
Condition, Mua SeW Call 1~14772-1220.
19i20oubla wtd. R..po' ~•r

llwMI

Home W•r·
rarly!!SO. down to qualified
~Moyen . 304-755-5185.

ln!!Naw

PalniPI

BedrOCMM And Fun Sin

BIMrMnt, 814-44&amp;-1610.

l.WV.

=

Buy • .... Rt¥wN Air 1
lU. E. lllaln ...._ P
cp.

4S

Rooms

Merchandise
21ft. abOLI glouM

$

--

-

qual Ylkll, I'M-"Ja 2140

.-mg.

..,.c:e. All hook-up..

CaM ••• 2:00 p.nt, 30ol-7l35651, Mason wv_

46 Space for Rent

,_,..

"'"'·aot
.-.

capacity, IM Itt

33N.,
.--_...
l.d8, SIS; holM ranlalt ,

Lota In GalllpoUs Ferry - 100%
owner financing at $98 .&amp;4 ptr
month, any ona of tour ~~
avall1blt, 304-67S-2722.

loti ln New Haw1n . 100'4
owner fiNnclng 11 $101.46 ptt
month buys all threa lets, 130467S-Z722 .

Lots )&lt;Mning Point • 100"11. owner
financing at $101.46 pet' month
buyt ao
lob. 304-6~
ln:!.

It••

w-

O.J. Whlta RoM, 18

Ae.-.;:

41

Houses for Rent

=-.:~--614-

199'1 Chevy $-10, 5 ipMd Whhl,
1ir, 304-tH-3658 for futtCWalla.

1,000 Oflainal mit., 2 Mlmats,

1917 Hondo 250X 4

ht Ul2340.

Merchandise
51

ss.-.-·--.
- .

76

-. .......

£......_

cha1ra w1 ,...
114-112-2MJ

..... carwd t.b..

C.-

t14--446-JIIo4ol .
Co6or T.V., SID; Mlcrowaw. OvWI
165; Eloc:tolc Clol'- Dryer, S85,
6"14-251-1231.
lohan

GOOO

USED

FREE INSTALU.TIIIII
-POOlS
Only S111.DD 8 I'Mn:1 A-..
!ldiJ:4 Pool ~~
Dock, Fonos, ~
Don' Boliovo k? Cal BPI
1100 Stt

:

AIJHIIIig-----

lOlA Big Groy Fill'~; 1979
Hana
T:a!W_ 514-4

•nzz

Be.

---

PICKENS RJANITUAE

,...,bid

~-.

a...

Aolrtgotllor,
Runny
Cw•

E-....

Good

~
S

UprigM F,...,.r,

Sldo by 675-51112.

Aocl1oro m.

11£0110011:
1111
f:ld);
4 Dr-.
a....
Of
Drowort 144.15; rwtn Man,..

PI Sol.

35l.llh

-- ~

GaGliO

Ono slnglo comol«y ..

s.onc17S-211ZI.

~- PSG. -

PlaltcAnd-~·­

Thno 10 Inch In SladL Evons, .~ado-, OhiA. , _
13M521.

m

5I f .... ¥-

~-- ........

_

-~

-V
. I IAir.

STD

a.aa.111 ••zm

................
__

.._,llT,O ~Ir&gt;­

... 4lll, F

p
lldllloMd
dry9rw, ..... -

·---

&amp;
onj . . . . .

Ccondllon,

JET

~Mallon

IIOiors, rapai,-.ct. New
&amp; r.buift motors In stock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH 1-8005-JJ.iQ'I.

-

dollnry. AAA Slgno, • - sa

Tlreo, 33 - 12.50 - 15.5
114-311-GI$!

-.,..,. -

.... •·

4* •

eym,.

7 T--., AiJ Cond.,

PS. I ' l l . -

so.- •-

--IP.a.

In Z.nilh also Hrvlcing most
o«t.r brands. HouM calla, al.a
tome appliance repaiB. WV
~:!98 Ohio 5.... 46-2454.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'Mil buUd patio covers, decks,
aaMIIoed room•, put up vlny1
aldlrtv ar 1r1it.r sk irting. 614245-915:1.

&amp;

Heating

eo...'

C.rter'a Plumbing
FCK.rlh 1nd Pine

'hlr
'Birthday

Galltpollo, Ollio
614-+IHW

Electrical &amp;

55

Building

Refrigeration

lhrS. 1112

Supplies

-.-.-,.... .....

Important contacts might be made In
the year ahead, thanks to a dynamic
,_ friend who wiH enter your life. This
othorl from
Individual wll help you a more positive and lrelh pertpee1lve.
TAUAUI (April 20-MaJ 20) Your abltlllea IO&lt; acquisition will be good Ieday,
yet you may also be equally as adept at
a•travaganee. 11'1 doubtful If much will
remain In your
Know - e to
loOk tor romance and you'll flnd II. The

....... ..._ Clouolo ..._ Rio lhndo, OH Col ~

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

Pets for Sale

~
~-,.
Wtbb. CIR fit Ul WL

1fT

Upholstery

--- ... - ·--

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

1.

Blinder.; keep racehorses from being distracted Although I have never
seen a bridge player actually wearing
blinders, many play as if they have
them on. They ignore all the clues,
even the ones lhat are so blatant that
they are like a necklle in a nudist
colony.
Take today's deal for example . Cover the East-West cards and plan the
play in four hearts. West leads the
spade jack. East wins with the ace and
returns the spade three.
Maybe South should have rebid
three no-trump rather than four
hearts But thai contract wouldn 't be a
success if, say , West had the spade ace
and East the heart ace .
AL the table, South won the second
trick with the spade king and promptly led a trump. He seemed surprised
and disappointed when West won w1th
the ace and gave East a spade ruff. A
diamond to the ace defeated the

contract.
Why wasn 'l South paying attention"~
West had made a vulnerable overcall

West
1+

2•

F.ast
Pass

4'

Pass

Pass

Pa.'IS

Norlll

Opemng lead

Surely he had five spades and the ruff
was tmminent South had to do all he
could to avoid suffering this fatal ruff.
The only chance was to play off three ;
rounds of clubs, discarding the spade c
queen from hand.
Only then is it safe to lead a trump.
Eventually South ruffs his diamond
loser in the dummy and brings home
10 tricks.
What if an opponent has only two
clubs and ruffs in' Then South might
finish two down, but the cost of that
extra undertrick is Lilliputian when
compared with the game bonus that is
lost if the contract could have been
made and wasn't

ACROSS

Ane•M

Ullmann

to Prevtoua Puute

35 Mrs. in

1 Calif. summer
time
4 Which lhing
B Thin board
12 Joyful

Madrid
36 Signal speed
unit
37 He (lat.)
38 Nominal
40 Divide into

exclamation

13 Series ol
names
14 Helpt
15 Oppolile ol
pOll
16 Put in slanted
type
tB Mnlcan
cactus
20 Anglo-Saxon
Itt!II
2t Depend
23 Acco1dlng lo
law
27 Labor
organizer
- Chavez
30 Former
32 Scream
33 Eros

strata
41 Take care or

(2 wds.l
42 lfath subject
44 Invading

throng
46 Actor Peter
so Most
penimitlic
54 Frying55 Wrlllng loots
56 Wind about
57 Cutkoo
58 Healing
chamber
59 Slave
60 Poaaesaed

DOWN

34 Actreu -

1 Producer
Joseph2 Venture
3 Those people
4 Lll111ry

7 Fairy8 Scented bag
9 52, Roman
10 Aallke toot
11 Moo- tung
17 Aeolo
19 College
elimination
22 Ditter's
dolitrt
24 Scottloh

person

5 Grand6 - - 1016

~uldt

25 A mlli 11 as
~ood es
26 Prying do vice
27 Sact
28 Ghoslly
29- blue
31 Actor Spark •
33 Drivers' or g.
36 Bloaaom
--+--4--+--4--~ 37 Shakeopear·

-t-+-+4

,

- . . y ·s l.lphclslorin~ oorvtclng trl caunty .,.. 2S YN,., The

-1.

beat in I!Jmltu,. uphotttllring.
C.ll :J04.t75-4154 for frM ...

newsp-.
«

'

(

lhe objects of Charloe
Chase's practical jokes once
again . (1 :00) Stereo
Wottd Newo
IIJ) 700 Club With Pat

ean v-Illain

a

be fortunate In a commercial situation
Astr~rapn MatCI'Imaker instantly reveals wlold1 signs are romanlically per- today - II you don 'l allow those who
feet tor yoy . Mall S2 plus along , sell-ad - don 't belong to interfere. Limit particidres.sacl,
slamped
envelope
lo pants to those who are directly
Matchmaker, c/o lhls
P.O. Involved.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 101 -3428. 8AGJnARIU8 (Naw. 21-Dec:. 2t) PropGE- (..., 21-.lune 20) Evan though or liming could spell the difference beyou'll be motlvalod to advanoe your tween success and failure loday . Don 't
sell-lnlerestatoday, !here's a possibility try to finalize things prematurely. Be pathOse you'D be Involved wilh will rare Uent and let matters develop as they
should .
belter peroonatty lhan you do.
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) II you are CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22-Jin. 11) II you're
unable to focus exclusiVely on your not a careful listener today, you could
prime objective today, success could be offended by somelhlng thai Is said
be denied you. Oon'llel peripheral II&amp;- - • no Ill will was Intended . Oon 't
jump lo concluSions.
~distract you.
LEO (.lufJ 21-Aug. 22) Be carefulloday AQUARIUS (,.., 20-fob. 11) Try to
that you .,. not drawn Into a Silly de- aVoid extrlM'nes In your social Involvebate wilh a close friend as to who does ments today. Don't spend more tor a
more for the other. This could be a dis- good time than you should, don 'l overIndulge and make It an early night.
pute that will not produce a v1ct01 .
WIGO (Alii- 21-lopL 22) Your logic Is PIIC£8 (Fob. »-Morc1120) II might be
likely to be superior today to lhal of ln- dltllcull lor you to saparele lhe past
dhrlduels with whom you'll be Involved . · from the present Ieday. This could
Oon'tlela forceful auoctale Intimidate cauae you to enter Into a situation hold ·
Jng a grudge o - somelhlng thai's
you Into beflevlng otherwise.
~ (lllpL D-Oc!. D) You're not ' hl&amp;lory.
likely' to wor1c roo well under prflSUre &amp;41118 (lhtch 21-Aprilll) Channels ol
today, therefore lchedute your asalgn- communlcallon will be open lor you loll*ltS so they can be handled day In critical areas , but you might use
them only tor social purpo18S . This may
eflactlvely .
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 21-11av. 22) You could be ~ralltylng, but unproductiV&lt;!.

-.-+--4--~ 39 Supoeme
"
40 Small
43
VIolinist's
--t--+--1
need
45 Blue pigment
47 Lorge fish
48 - Turner
49 City In
Oklahoma
50 Mall center

Robinson
10:30 liD II Nll)lll Court C
112 Belelioll TonighT
Ill
&lt;IJ Ill
(I)
1111 ID 112111 @ Newo
(l) MOVIE: Ice Slltlon Ztbrll
(G) (3:00)
(J)Newowatch
11 Aroenlo Hatl Slerao

, :oo a

a

a

abbr.

A

QMecGyver C
1111 Crook and thaoe
112 SportaCerlter
Sporte Tonlghl
0 BordlftOwn Stareo

a

c

=·'billing.........
Ctlml Tlml Aftel Prime
Time Sterso. Q

a0 MolteYMne
MOVIE: Reef !lk'f 11
lilomlng (PG) (2:00)

11 :351ll8 Dl Tonight Show
Slltring Johnny Caroon
Stereo.
1D Mtttlecl.:.'\vlth Chlldten

t2:00 (I)

a

Donnlo Mllter

51 lloedow
52 Crlckol
poalflont
53 Dawn
goddeiS

Q

11:301!) K=~
(J)E
nJOIIIIIII
(I) .lllghlllnl

!Ill a chterl c

+J

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

Country-music stars become

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing

1•

South

10:00 (]) I!) Medneu~
Jonolhan Mtller

k1g, Low RltH , Ouality Work,
...ny l.acll Ael.,llnC.. , FrM
Estimal•a, 614-441·1119 Any'llft'MI.

82

the World Stereo

m
Eapoouro Maggie and Joel
are torced to share a hOial
room in Juneau. Stereo . E;1
121 Funny Buoln11s With
Charlie Chose IX

Good

•• lllgns ond

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

®liD @II N

II Cclncllion,

--'--~-­
•S4,7IIO. · - Gm c •
Orr•
Shoppe.llt •• 21M.
-~~---·
~-=h&amp;:
~pot''l T(
•

:.hi

9:30 till ID 112111 Deotgnlng
Women (Season ~inale)
Anthony falls in love with a
debutante named Vanessa.
Stereo. Q

I THINK I'LL SURPRISE
UN-MY FELLERS WITH
LET'S SEE -WHAT KIND
A BODACIOUS
SHOULD
CAKE
I BAKE?
TONIGHT

Ran'• TV Satvlca, apeclaliling

Good

a

a

Reaict.nUal Roofing And Gutt~tt­

~·_...

Q

Stereo. lJ

Hid. 'a Roofing , O.Cks, Pon:has
And Pl!lntlng. FrM Estlmatn!
Chap Prict11, 10 YMr Ex-

• 9 764
• 10 96 1

.K3

By Phillip Alder

replacement has B drinking
problem . S1ereo.
0 WWF Prime Tlrile
Wteotllng
® Nuhvtlle Now Stereo
Lorry King Uvel
ID Fothtt,Dowilng Myoterteo

BARNEY

.14 3

.KQ985
tKQ2

Take a detour
briefly

Q

Small! 614-367-0516.

.A
tAJI03

Hit

SOUTH
• KQ4

iMurphy
liD 112111 Murphy Brllwn
suspects her

lmpro.,.m1nts :

EAST

.A3

+J82

dancers to get money.
Stereo. C
(!) III Major League
Be~eball Manis Braves at
Chicago Cubs Ill
Ill
(I) 8 FBI : The Untold
Sloriao A woman takes
pregnancy and later steals a
baby from the hospital
Slereo.
(]) I!) Trovato
ll§l liD 112111 Evenlng Sloede
Wood and Margaret support
Herman 's decision to work at
the pa~or. Stereo . Q
[) Murd01, She Wrote
S1ereo. Q
Crook end Chile
1111 PrlmeHewo C
ID Prince Vallom Stereo. Q
8:30 Ill
Dl Bloooom (Season
Finale) Blossom runs away
after Nick dis1!£Proves of her
date. Slereo. I;J
Ill
(1)11 American
Detec:tlve Florida pollee go
after local d]dealers. (PI 2
ol 21 Stereo .
®IIIII @ II ajor Dad Gen.
Craig holds a press
conte1ence aner taking pein
killers . Stareo. C
ID Bleck Sllltlon SJereo. Q
9:00 Ill D Dl 'Trill: The Price of
Pnolon (PI 2 ol 21' NBC
Monday Night at the Movies
(2:00) Siereo. C
ill (I) D MOVIE: 'Stormy
Wtllherl' ABC Monday
Movie (2:001 Siereo .
~anged

WEST

+JJo 97 6

ALDER

00 I!) Mochlno That

porionc:o, 61&lt;-388-8964 .

. ~~

I 0

,.,
--ow. c...
IG2_[

LIKE. 'THAT ONE .

E.xper~

lor- ----___--_
------.....
..
- G.----........
-

~lODE'TRACr

IM f.OT5LIRE. I QNSP\ND
I WINY~ COMPLIA'-CN1lS

,.,.,.nc..

Home

Toa Big Or

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

A60UT -.a.J, WINTHROP~

'rtJIJR !Yo-SIC INVI51!'1LITY.

On rn&lt;Mr &amp;
NMHr Homea_ Room Additions,
FCMldallon
Worit ,
Roofing ,
Kitchens And Ba1ha. Free EsUmM•l Aehtrenen, No Job
y..,..

....

'IOU

ling.
Curtt.

1~1121

r............ - - 3453.

l - 171 And Up; S""'OI

-c-~--­
PS,....
lilt -

~ntla:IIW

t-. Local

oo-.i'T HAVE. eNOW6t-&lt;

'IOU Kt-ON 'M-iooi.T I LIKE

.

NORTH
• 812
.JI06 2
ta1
+AQ 7 4

PHILLIP

a

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

BarNft Home lmprowamen1s.
Addillana, Garages, Palnllng,
Rooting.
Exporioncod ,

Uncondfdonll lifetime guar~~n­
tumlan.d
F,.. estlmat•. Call collect 1·
6M-2l7-0488, dar or night .
Rogaa Basement Walerptoe&gt;

t -- 4

N*l

cati304-47S-1410.

Home

I bini..._ Bal-

I'

e

a

Improvements

WAlERPROOFINQ

Qd

tumWIIng. 112 mi.
Jorridlo Rd. Pl. - . . , WY, Slgno: Ponoblo eho..,.- lollHoe

81

$1,.250. · -

1 lll FaN r

1-llJ0-.45-34H.

· - Dollvory.

s,-

rr All a; 1)-l£.
IJ\E.DA ..

Services

IJot.

..,_- r--. Good Ccondlion,

SUggs Appllo-.
Uppor AIYw Ad. Baldo !llono
C..ol lk4ol. Colt 1&gt;4~4&amp;-7318,

BulovUio Rd.

...

ms

P~ •N l NUMBER ED
Lfl1fRS
.

BRIDGE

a

taln.d campaf lrtiilar, sleep~ all,
wl\ltchen, lhower, turnaea, 6l411o1341&amp;1

AIJI!!Siol SaJe

uo

AIJD "THf.YLL
FR:6ABLY Ei.A!I\f-

::---::-:---::-:--:=----Fot Sale or Tr.de: 16ft. Mil con-

-

..,_
popbocAIII
- __
Oougoor
1 o.r.r. ReMONblll . 114-446-3568, &amp;14R l - - n... Goad Ea- 446-43'1fii.
BASEMENT

rangoo.

-

All INDf(ATIO\JS AR£
ITS GOI"-X? 10 6t 11-\t.
DRTIEST, SLE..A21E.S\
PR~IOOJT]AL (AMPAIGll
IIJ HrsTa::'Y

&amp;

...t catr... For 1\4-446-3150.

C

c::::... .............. r r

Wa.._., di\W"8. retrigwal:on,

0322, 3 -

EEKANDMEEK

Trana. Engint1 r.eds wort. 61425&amp;-12311

1981 Coachman 25 Ft. Camper,
With Alr, ExeeU.nt Condition,

s.k 1M •• tU7

8

a

Q

Motor Homes

tv

GEG!DN

Swivel- Omags- Natal - Cohor1- WAIT that LONG·
One not so bright co-worker lo anothe14 "The boss
says I'll QB1 a raise when I eam it. He's nuts d he thinks
I'm gong to WAIT that LONG!"

a

l6D engine &amp; Trans. intact. Atso :
Mft 11 Otds 3.50 M'lglne Good

Campers

I

'

and Cerhon become exotic

B~ Transml .. lons, UMd &amp;
,.bu41, starting at $91; l'ronl
drive atartlng at $149.00
1&gt;1-2~n. 11+992-6293.

11old my elderly au nil was
going lo gel Involved in local
politics. She just sighed and
said, "I Just hope you have
a tender heart but a · · - - .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

8:00 lllD iiJ Fteah Prince of
Bel-Ak (Season Finalel Will

IT 'NON'T BE ~ NOW,
OOP... WE'RE GEmNG
Cl.OSE TO THE RJ\IER!

Auto Pans &amp;

79

a

7:35 CD Sanford &amp; Son

P11111ng Oul : ill Ptymoolh: Good

. . . ..

tm

APPUANCES

lAYIE'S FURNITURE
Cornplo&lt;4 homo 1umlahlngs.
Houno: liM-Sol, w . , _

ALLEYOOP

I

C

(L)

w...._.

-

Smum

1111 Croleflre

Accessories

63

lion! Cool: 1575 Sol1 """ -

Goods

Big Saolngs On U Cllrpol In
Slook. Cull And Carry, llal-

·z

'""'3 ,/'

3 · w Wilh l GnUn

IUIST TIIACTCR SAL£S

Household

Boigo Couch Wilh G,_, And
YaUow F~ Gr.., Chair,
Bo4h S125; Con. Tablo, SIOO; l
Lampo 121, 114-381-1931.

4r

-~2-T-

IW8UJA

~lllg .

qui..... c.11 ,,. ue 4241, ,,.._
446-232.5, Or ., •••• 4425.

w-.Ex-

- Jolin Call
a-.
-C.D.s,..-sm;
Sooor -:::t..~·
Cooouool
Ployo&lt;_ ~
AJ.

Floor Aplrtmtr'IC For

$230. Pot - h ; uopoolt Ao-

&lt;ti,.&gt; . -

Sorvlca. ll4-25W160.

C.. C

TUQIL

Ill Full Houle Q

a

lor Sale

DREAif
..:.5
m,ll5 • Up. lluin On - iAoL
S.. Our-. &amp;14-1A-7Jil

614-441.ozz&amp; Aftw 2:30P.M.

lAne: LA,, One B.A.,

fNOvr;Hrfou&amp;LE
/ AI.J?EAP'(7/
,,
/f'ol

c*t.nt Condition! $2,300. U4446-Jii.44.

DAKOTA

Wanted to Rent

Kh"""' WI !llovo l

ffNtf, Aff1'1.1' Wf

19691/2 lour wheeler, 300cc, ucel*'l condition, IM-742-25n.

Ni&gt;on-4:00 Plf. Aft• ...... -

"Do-.:

f 0f pf'rfj- J'A/Cf_

19'71 Honda Gl1000, 10.000
· mil•, Honda line detachable
15,000 m.Un, shift driven, good
c:ond, $800. 304-67S-20114 .

Doys 304-VW655.

Ano0s.1;,;

AND ERNEST

$1,"100. 304-6~

6884.

BOATERS
J .S. Marine s.rva, s.rvtng An
Your Boat:ing Needs, Plr11, Acc.eort., Two Cycle OU And

=

'

naw, 304-713-5584.
1982 ~,.go Vamahl 750cc,

• arm Supp l1 es
&amp; Ll .;es tock

I

Reading Rainbow Stereo.

1D Curntnl Affal1 Q
Cl Night Court C
@
Entortalnmem Tonight
Stereo. Q
@ Fomlfy Wooto
II) MocOyver Q
@ SporttCenter
1111 Moneyllne
1D The Wattono
7:05 CD Addlmo Femur
7:30 lllD Jeoperdyl C
(!) Now H Can Be "rold
Ill Cl Entortalnmenl Tonight
Stereo. Q
(I)
Mama'o Femllr
®liD WhMI of Fortuno Q
liD • Major League
Buebell Cincinnali Reds at
Pittsburgh Pirales Ill
@Ill Family Feud
11!1 Be 1 Stir Stereo
112 Major League Beoeball

.

Motorcycles

exlras,

INLOGE

@ ChockoNd Flag

i

..-.-..........,

other

0

®IB

o._

Iumpp., like

-

-IJ
Wllh A ~u...
tu1 Bullclng Slta Tho! Has A
Yl'AA FURNITURE
Vlow For IIIIOL N1co l.nol
a&amp;AOAINS IIAIDAEI
Dri_.,,
Alnl
Wsl•
Elactrtctly, And Phone Sorvi~
·~
A..lloblo. 3 Ml1oo Aom - r
I.MHQ . _, Scola And Clio~
Hoopflsl, $31,000. 114-44H12l
Jt7l And Up; ~ And End

Renlals

lilac,

..._
..._
__
Fwd.-.
__ ,.............__

Farm Equipment AI'Mt Catu•.

lot• fof ..... tralt.rs ll:ceptab... 304-675-2722.

~ 1D" pots &amp; in

IIIIo; . . . . . . . . . -

71

614-367-o&amp; tO.

N•,

6

~

a

[) Scooby Doo
@ UpClole
IIJ) Now ZOlfO Slereo. Q
6:35 CD Andy Griffith
7:00 (])I) WhHI of Fortune Q
(!) The JeffeiiOila
Ill Q lnolde EdiUon t;J
(]) I!) MtcNel/lehntr
NewsHou1 Q
Mantee!... With Children

2421 or 114-JII2-2803

75 Boats &amp; Molors

King ...... bod, .....
hh. c:ond.,
114-1112-:Jn
down. Water FurnWied. No P•a. Cor'* Soc:""" I Plno, Galllpallo. Wr lot Roc:lir.-, II Co. R.

proxlmlllly 2 Mi._ From R10
Gnlndl
Ot"er Beaulitul
Hornn.
614-24s.6040
Day
Phone; 614-245-9575 Ev•nings

ug

I

; liD 1121. cas Newo Q
IIJI Cl Andy Griffith

t990 Mazda B-2600 King Cab
pici.up, Sap., AC, JVC ster.o,
bed tl,..,, female drl ......, mull
tell dUll to Jnghllncy, 614-"M2·

~ran s po r1at 1on

Se(ond

BEAUTIFUl Home SHe FOf Sa~
22 Acr• Or Will Divide Ap-

,..,.

•

............. IM.41l017

private aere.. 3 t.Soam~xrra

25 krM In Wllknvll.. art&lt;~,
bAuUtul -'ght br horM &amp; par.
llally woodM atN, 1~9-3-402
or 6M-llt2-2536

E

5

lethm of

four scrambled words
low to form four simple "'"""

Square One TV Stereo

a

19'111 Harloy FlH Greal Condition. 614-245-9428 .
~ 12
•lrMI 19'78 Honda CB7SO, uc cond,

quip ....... ,..... ...... daltlng, Sam Sene ville's. 5 .._
&amp;• ~n. Rlw• r
t 111r s..
o!yvillo Otlloo, 111, 5.11, -

114-tl2-2117

_49____
F_o_r_Lea
__
se
_ __

35 Lois &amp; Acreage

Vegetables

0 Rearrange

1111 Wotld Today
ID Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. Q
6:05 CD Beveffy HtllbllfiH
6:30 llJD Dl NBC Newo Q
(!) Saved by tile Bell
Ill
(I)
ABC New• c._
(]) Wild America Stereo. t:;1
~ Squote One TV Stereo.

il:l-2478.

='.. ~- .:0."!

$235;

Vory nloo 1&lt;111) mol&gt;llo home on

RATS ! I TflOUGI-lT 1-lE
SAID''
1-lE'r'' DUDE"
'

:_::-:=-:~-:--::-:=:-:::--:--:-

74

61 Farm Equipment

I

Counlry lfolllle H&lt;xno Porll, At.

1-lE SAID 1-lE WAS &amp;OING
TO PLA'I' AN ''ETL!DE ''

.114-«HB65.
1!11111 Chovy S-10, $4300, 614-

__ _
Fruits &amp;

7

I Woukt UU TD An A Mob!..
Homo s,.co In Golllpoils. C./I

163 ac:rn ,call tor hlfonnation,
&amp;14-m-n6&gt;11 .

58

11111. ,,..... Tanctc. ...._

illop ..., d"*''l -

47

p.tymer~ta wJ~hing

..;;.1...

otdamobill or Owvrolll al •

~=~:2'

$120/mo. &lt;lolllo Holol.

DID 'r'OU HEA~ WHAT HE SAID
1-lE WAS GOING TO PLA'1' ?
WOI.I!, TI-llS SHOULD BE GOOD~

z

k

L;

I

::: '";'J'": '::!.. -::

6.........._1822

..
e580.

S-10 ptck...p, •
w/.-.d Interior, 11r,

n
5 Old. 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
~ Mo ~ 1100. 614- 1918 F-1SO • WD look Sharp,
llll254..
Ori-Goodl6" -7-·7.

-....;

And...,

6&gt;4-367·7517.

:;

- - onoJ

If Put;

DP GJm Poe 15111 'lilly
El8bonleF
,
Building II ttw. .._. ~

For S.l1: 14x65 Trailer Wdh 1
Acra land, Stale AOUII 554, Call

0

-

... 6 ..... CNd
$Z50.1M 3111'254.

....... 2

B..n lumM down tor mobile
homa loin? C.ll ut we can help.
304-7!5-7191 ert 1l

~nc:.~~ ~kl

..s; P F

54 Miscellaneous

Accen To Bank ReelairMd
Mobile Homes, G,..t s.6acUon!
U.ny At $500 Down, And Taka
0\ler Payments. Call 1..aoo.sag..
5711.

New 14 wide only $59i. down no
~nt 1na, 5 yurw., 304·7SS.

1u....

......

Rooms tor ren1 - ._.._or mon.h.

Also Ifill•

old.,

3HP4WD-; liiHP4WD

Furnished

6

....,__..CoeUr
Spenitl
......_
$100, 514-

~~o_,

• . . . . . 2521.

Houno: II.T.w. ....... p.rn., Sundly 1 :80 1D I!GD ,...

56

Homes for Sale

Antiques

2053atl15-4100.

51'""'"' ooomo wHh

1187 Commodore, 3bdrm., 2
bath, $12,500, 814-992-5891

53

:::-=-,_,..::._;..:.__ __
Ilia RIYw Anllqo-, 110 !II.

One
and
two
bedroom
ap~~rtment 1 tor rent. J04..4I75.

T.V., Sl"oo Syslom Throughoul:

Washer &amp; Dryer, 2 Bedf'l)()fM 01'
Furniture And LMna Room Furnfturl, Mk:rowav., lt•frigaratOf
And Stove. 614-'46-3547, 304-

614 ue 0338,

Bltcn 7p m
· ·
GJJCiout living. 1 and 2 bed-

e

s. .... Hwy. 160

AM "'-*. :Md JKbon Awe.
PIDinl. F
rt, ~2063,
W ._ l""'*"' .... birds,

E.ffidlncy a ...... ment. Aelw.. w:.
and •polit l"llqulniCI. No pata.

h11porch, isi00, 114-378-63i4.

1179 Govenor 14110 2 BedTolal ~ric Aa,..,
Goad Condition, c.a 6\4.7721220.
1910 Buddy 14K71 total illeelrtc
Concrolo pon:to, 21u11 Balha,
WIO OW, goordon bathlub,
CA. 15130 above groung pool
3ml oul of Port or. ~ Call 614-,....:

Waft boots. ~

5P.M.

1500 Down, $165/mo. 114-m- 304-17S416Z.
1220.
FumisMd Ap.rtnwll 1 Bed1i73 lh65 t~~~ 2bdrm., large room, UtiiH• Plkl, 1260hno.
llvtng room llRCMn, dan, AC, 920 Fourth A..,.nut GllllpoU•
1

rocMM,

SWAIN
.uJCTIOll • RJRNITUAE. a
Oliw SL Gdipollo. .... a u..l
tumlh•.... hell--. ......,. a

..., .

ESTATES, 536 Jackson P4kl
fTom $192/mo. Walk to ahop I

for Sale

Vondlng ROUio: l.ooal. Wo Have
1M N-11 llacl!lnn, lloklng A
Nlco Slood)' Cosh fnc:omo. 1·

31

11(1;

,._

Chovy

a

&lt;Il (I)
@
iiJ Newa
(!) Video Power

WOlD
GAlli

,UZILU
- - - - - - - Edi1od by CLAY I. ,OLlAH

•

MON., MAY 4

S©R&lt;iil}A-~t~S~

!MAT DAILY

EVENING

E1&lt;oncG II 15,195,· 1188 Ford PU
$2,795; 1985 Toyota •••. PU

Pels tor Sale

56

Household
GoodS

deposH

•

OUR

11811 Nluan PU S1,895 ;
t171 Chov
Ford PU
19&amp;4S1,795
GMC;
~~========::;r-===~c~-~"~,....~~'"'~~ 12,500;
1914
S-10f1,3i5;
PU Aulo,
314 Ton 4 Spd, ~315 ; B&amp;D Aulo

PorCh, 114-446-2606.

utllitln. M&lt;:urfty

~~

•eon•4•."'!'.,',3,sall5,
. . ~ t,tn DodFords•
.,;
._.. 1188

,- •" "'

'""1

U11Bd
. paopald,rtmo
oi
11 .nn,..
3112"'m' I. "!~~shedh
"
.......
Mkldt.porl, RU, 614-367-0611
bd
..
1 rm., -25rno., lncludos

SHOUI.CVE 16¥£1)

Television
Viewing

6:00 lllG

1987 GIIC PU, V-t, Aulo, PS, PB,
S5,:1111; 1188 Ford PU, 6 C.,l .,
Aulo t3,215; 1188 Chov. S-10
4x4. P_tJ, $4,500; 1187 CMY. S-10
,...~

qui...,, no pols, 614-~-2218
2 Rooms &amp; S.th, eown.tain,
~-..
No
~.
~.... •
HouM And 2.2 ac.... Land: 3 ......_
~ •
"""'
Badi"DCNftS, 2 Bathl, lMng Re~~Slio.po.ajl ft.
1 ·
Room, tNnl~Room, Kitehln qu
·
· &amp;14-388-84fl. 2 BA apartment• In Mldd~,
And o.n. 546,
In town, 1wo •ory, thrM bid- newty rtmOdlled, low utlliUH,
roomt, full buement, 1-"V2 bath, ~.. 1220 per monlh,
ltlached Hl2 e.~r garage. .....--• required, 6M-112-2311

mowtna arMI odd tobl.
-ll4-912-11Sn.
larga Bam, S...al Buildings,
Ml11 Pau•'• Dly Cl,. CAntet. ~rar, Sell With Or Wtrhout

Lawn
tully

26105.

IR AClEAT DEAL

roorM, 2 bathl, 5 .a. land,
304-ats-3671 •ftar 3:00PM.

8

OllR /lf.CifU/#-.
SIZ£ Nil)

50fT ~INK ...

7858.

loU~~

Requlr.d 614-44~766t

~NTE:D A5/W.J.£R.~

tAR!£~T

1imctoryor.Cor-. ~15-

114 448 4369 or 30«15-2330.

1 BR Qulel: Setting. 10 min's
from Galll~la 1225/Ptor mo.
Utilh... Pa . Depollt 2 Refer's

YOO

~I-lK , YO.J

~

IS

S2,000. 6l4~46-4114 .

~. ta~aci.

=:,rc::npand:t1~~~f,.,1g:~:

83 Ac,. F1rm Wilh 2 Y•r Otd
Home, 3 a.drooms, 2 Baths,

Twc ezperienead Harbor Pltola,
40 lo 60 hours per w..i., mu•

Fill THE BIL

Counlry Honw, Sand HIU Aced,

33 Fanns Ior S a Ie

Tr ... 1nd lhNbs Muk:h, top.all, ...ding, painting, pruning,

of Marietta , Ohio. Send fnurne
ta P. 0 . Baz 5175, v..nna , WV

June 15 &amp;14-446-2205.

6131

wlicome. 814-446-8224. New

within commuting dlwtanca

Bllht, 3 Large Bedi'OOI'M, ,._
HVA.C, New c..,.. Awailabla

*"'"·:!183.

Call t..a00-448-7273 Ext .
ll-10. 11-F, f.5 CST.

liv1

Aonomod: 2 .FuU

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lutor lluc*ltl, gr~ 1-1, wiU
lutor In the eummer, 114-Wl·

nme.

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--· --- EXTRA INCOME? FrM Aecord.d MesNgs on.rs Many Full
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And Jr IIA El:J*...-.c. Ia Hefptul.
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Someot~e

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s.nc:J rnume to Florid Bouquet,
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Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop:
151 Ser:ond Avenue, Galllpolla.

114-256-1353, Alk For John.

AU.Yonl-- BoPoldln

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for Rent
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IF

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PREVIOUS SOLUTIO N: " 11' s a recession when your neighbor loses his

job ; it's a depression when you lose your own ." -

Harry S . Truman.

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 4, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Antique -steam and gas engine show set for May 9, 10

Ohio Lotterv•

Eastern
defeats
North Gallia

What are you doing May 9
and 10'1 Take a stroll down
memory lane at the West Virginia State Farm Museum Antique Steam and Gas Engine
Show.
The museum is located six
miles north of Point Pleasant on
RL 62.

- - - - --

-

Pick 3: 586
Pick 4: 0252

Low tonight in upper 30s.
Par! I)· cloud j . \'\' erlnr '&gt; d aJ , high

Page 4

near- 60.

Just listen close and you can
hear the pun pun of the engines
running - the whistle of the
steam engine and see the puffs
of smoke in the air.
Old timers and not so old
timers will be set up and ready
to demonstnllc their machines
and answer questions for you.
Maybe your grandpa or greatgrandpa used engines such as
these. Bring the lit~e ones and
let them see a pan of history.
Unless the young gcncrauon
slart an interest in this antique
machinery, this could be the end
of something good.
There will he a nea market,
the old shops, such as the blacksmith, printing shop, one-room
schoolhouse, and country store
will all be open for viewing.
LasL but certainly not least...
food. There will be cornbread
and beans, hotdogs, coffee, soft
drinks and desserts.
Church service will be held
Sunday morning at the museum

GRINDING CORN MEAL - Meadows stone bohr grist mill
grinding corn meal, owned and operated by Jennings Blllnkinship.

Vol. 43, No. 2

Copyrighted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 5, 1992

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
1927 ECONOMY ENGINE · This is a 1927 Economy (Sears Roebuck) I cyl B H.P. gasoline engine. It 'll'liS used to grind rom and wheat ror animal reed in the late 20's through the 40's by T?m
Grube's grandratber. II is still used to power an 8-inch steel buhr mill grinding corn at the engme
shows.

Story and photographs by Tom Grube
at 9 a.m. There will also be free
daily drawings both days, as
well as tractor parades. There is
no admission charge.

On dean's list
POMEROY - Four
Meigs
Countians made the dean's list for
th e winter quarter at Ohio State
University.
The undergraduate students
who achieved high academic averages for their quaner's worl&lt; were
Carol Lynn Fisher, Racine, who
made a 4.0, Andrea leigh Cleland,
Lo ng Bottom, Jared Andrew
She ets, Pomeroy, and David
Eugene Rice , Reedsville, who had
a grade point average of at least 3.5
and were enrolled for at least 12
credit hours.

It was unanimous.
The more than 35 speakers at a
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
public hearing last night all supported American Electric Power's
decision to install scrubbers at the
Ge nera l James M. Gavin Electric
Generating Plant and urged th e
U.S. Army Corps of Eng meers to
AEP's permit application to build a
lime-barge unloading facility and a
landfill, both critical to installation
of the flue -gas scrubbers.
More than I ,200 people, including dozens of miners wearing hard
hats and carrying signs. crowded

If You're Thinking
About Improving Your Home,
Here's Some Expert Advice.

into Meigs High School Monday
night to listen to testimony.
Co rrectly anticipating a large
crowd , the Corps Friday moved the
hearing from the Cheshire-Kygcr
Elementary School in Cheshire to
the Meig s High School in
Pomeroy, whi ch fea tures more
parking and a larger capacity gym na~ium.

Environmental groups such as
the Sierra Club, largely responsible
for requiring the public hearing, did
not tesufy at the hearing and are
expected to submit letters of tes ti mony to the Corps. When the letters become available, Ohio Valley
Publishing will publish them.

TO LAN()FLLL

---&lt;•)--SWITCH

COAL

DEAN:

Rock 'n' Roll
was king
when this
txmgalow
was built m
the 50s.

But ito;;
window air

SCRUB8£R
SOliO WASTI

CONV£VOO

conditiooer
isn't so cool
today.

to Carne Kennedy, Jackie Hildebrande, Joann McLain, Brenda
Neutzting, Fran Fry, Sara Collums,
Abbey Stratton, Vinas lee, Mildred Wells, Grace Warner , Edna
Triplett, Libby Fisher, Denver
Rice, Alice Mills, Louise Bearhs,
Shelly Sinclair, Donna Byer ,
Rachel Cundiff. Fannie Ailshire,
Jan Lavender, Helen Hill, Marabel
Frecker, Betty Sayre. Eula Jeffers,
Clara Burris.
Mildred Fry, Alice Wamsley ,
Esther Metcalf, Opal Tyree, Grace
Welch, Marcella Chapman, Helen

gins, social se rvic es dire ctor,
presided at the refreshment table.
Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas presented certificates of
appreciation to the group which
included not only members of the
Women 's Auxiliary of the hospital
but volunteers who work in various
capacities of the Skilled Nursing
Facility. Rhonda Dailey, RN,
BSN, director of nursing, inv!led
all volunteers to become a part of
the Auxiliary group and introduced
lucas.
Cenificates of appreciation went

.•

y~

.

'

I

I

SERVICE PINS - Hospital Administrator
Sco tt Lucas presents se rvice pins to several
members or the Women' s Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital during the observance or

Volunteer Week. From the lcf't are Rose Deem,

500 hours; Sara Cullums and Abbey Stratton,
each 1,000 hours, and Helen Hill, 3,000 hours.

\

Fisher, Mamie Buckley, Virginia
Walton , Josephine Smith, Gamet
Ervine, Willogene Ohlinger, Laura
Cozart, Sue Sanders, Rose Deem,
Bonnie Conde, Mildred Hudson,
Jessie White, Wanda Wolfe, Mae
Weber, Doug Circle, Jo Ann Taylor, Mary Fry, Faye Knapp, _the
Rev. Father Walter Heinz, Vu-gmta
Hendricks, Paul Robinson, Alice
Robinson, Sarah Williamson, Amy
Jones, Jeaneae Lawrence, Marcia
Wells, Juanita Roush, Marcella
Chapman, Eloise Robinson, Sara
Voss, Jane Brown, Eloise Matson
and Geraldine Cleland.
Lucas then presented 50 hour
certificates to Women's Auxiliary
members, Wanda Wolfe and Shelly
Sinclair. Pins for 100 hours of service with the Auxiliary went to
Vinas Lee, Jane Brown and Eloise
Matson . A 500 hour pin was
awarded to Rose Deem w1th I ,000
hour pins going to Auxiliary members, Abbey Straaon and Sara Cullums. Helen Hill was presented her
3,000 hour Auxiliary service pin.
Special plaques were presented
by Lucas to Auxiliary members,
Mara bel Frecker, 4, 932 hours;
Louise Bearhs, a plaque in recognition of her being the only charter
member of the Auxiliary, and to
Jessie White, Auxiliary president,
for 12,000 hours. Mrs. White was
also presented an ann bouquet of
spring flowers and was given a
standing ovation by the volunteers.
She ha-; worked witll the Auxiliary
some 23 years. A plaque for 4,700
hours of Auxiliary service was sent
to Betty Sayre of Racine.
On behalf of the Auxiliary ,
Libby Fisher, Auxiliary vice-presidenL presented a gift certificate to
Bob Hoeflich, the hospit.al' s public
relations director, in appreciation
for his work With the Auxiliary.

Golf league to
hold meeting
The Ladies Golf League of
Riverside Golf Club announces the
beginning of the Ladies Tuesday
Afternoon League starting May 5
at 4:30 p.m . Ladies Day will be
held Wednesday a1 9 a.m. with tee·
off 81 9:30 a.m. AU ladies welcome
Wednesday.
PLAQUES • These three members or the
Auxiliary at Vetenuu Memorial HO&amp;plta.l r~eive
special personalized plaques In apprec1atton or
their work during Volunteer Week at the hospital. Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas p~e­
sents the plaques to: (from the left) Loutse
Bearbs the only Auxiliary charter member;

'

•

•

Marabel Frecker, 4,93l hours
Jessie While, Auxiliary President, 12,000 bours.
Mrs. While wu also presented an arm bouquet
or spring Rowen. A personalized plaque was
sent to Belly Sayre Ia apprecialloa for 4,700
hours or service.

Meeting planned
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the township hall at Rock
Springs.

SUSANNE:

DEAN:

incrca.~

The high-

To

THICKE).tiNG
TANKS

FACILITY
SOLOS

efficiency
clermc heal
pump ts a
rentral31r

thi s home\
value and
comfon.the
mos1energy effiCient

SCRU88E R A8SOR8E:R

, r.

VfSSHS AND STACKS

APRil 1M2

conditioner.

syslcm 1s

Artist's rendition of the Gavin Plant after the installation of scrubbers

betng
mstallcd.

Ohio second in U.S. in use of coal
DEAN:
h also works

with your
exisung
furnace.
making it
more efficient
1fl

SUSANNE:

W!niCr.

DEAN :

So year-round
we'll he
saving money
and resources
together.

Now lhat 's

SMART

CINC INNATI (A P) - A coal
industry trade association says tltat
each year, Ohio produces about 33
million tons of coal worth nearl y
$ 1 billion. But the state spe nds
nearly th ni much to imrort low-sul fur coul to feed lls need for elec tricity.
Ohio is the nation' s secon dlargest consumer of cool, according
to the Am erican Mining Congress.
Ninety perce nt of the electricity
generated tn Ohio come s from
coo l-fired boilers, compared w1th a
national average of 55 percent. ·
That's why clean coal technology is especially important to Ohio,
sa id th e AMC's president , John
Knebe l. The group, whtch includes
130 mine owners and 220 manufacturing and engineering companies, end s its two-day annual con-

vcnl ion lOday in CiJKi nnati .

AMC Chairman Allen Born said
Monday thai 1992 could be a ncarrecord year for the U.S. coal industry, even though American compani es are disadvantaged beca use of
hi gh environmental costs and the
subsidies foretgn governments give
their mines.

sa td.
Born sai d ex pons account for II
percent of U.S. coal production .
Ca nada , Japan and Italy are the
largest foreign mark ets , but he said
Third World countncs and eastern
Europe will increase in importance
as purchasers of U.S. coal.
He cited U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency estimates that
by the year 2000, government regulations could cost U.S . coal compani es and the publ ic $280 billion a
year.

" We expec t production to pick
up luicr this year and we expect to
come close to 1990' s record production level of about I billion
Ions," Bom said.
The demand for electricity will
" Th is explos ion of environmentire the demand for cool throughout tal reg ulations has eroded tile comthe world, he sa id.
petitiveness of U.S. industri es in
"Si nce coal ha s ca ptured so the world marketpl ace," Born sa1d .
much of thi s mark et, this growth "Thi s has been especially true for
alone is expected to increase the U.S. minin g industry , which
demand for about 1.5 percent annu - has con tinuously lost world market
ally during ihe nc.t decade," he share. "
Born said foreign competitors
get unfair support from their govern ments.
' ·A lack of tough environmental
rules in some countries provides a
camouflaged subsidy to their min The contract for a resurfacing project in Meigs Coumy has bee n
ers, a subsidy that's often in addi awarded by the Ohio Deparunent of Transporation .
lion 10 overt subsidies they proTom Mayle &amp; Sons Construction of B~ett and Shelly Co. of
vide," he said.
Thornvill e have received the $177,579 contract for repaving of U.S.
Route 33 through Pomeroy. The project is expected to be com pleted
by the end of Augu st.
The bid award is part of $31.5 million in htghway projects
rccemly awarded by ODOT.

Local briefs----,

ODOT awards repaving project

For year-round comfort, take the advice of
these professionals. A high-efficiency elecbic heat
pump is a central air conditioner in the summer.
Plus, it heats your home so efficiently in the winter
that you may save enough on heating to
practically pay for summer cooling.
That's advice you can feel good about.

Get A Heat Pump. It Cools.

.........
~OHIO

Let's press on." Miller said.
Miller also asked the Corps to
assure that the Meigs High School
heanng will be the only hearin g on
the permits and asked the Corps 10
focus stri ctly on the provisions of
th e permits being sought by AEP.
"Finally, and most important , I
urge you to listen carefully and
co nsideratel y to th e min ers who
work at So uth ern Ohio Coal, "
Miller said. "They wi ll lell you 1ha1
we can bum southem Ohto coal in
Ohw. Drotcc t jobs and clean up the
air. .. and they are right, absolutely
nght. Ltsten to their families... listen to the people who depend uprn
coal .. . listen Ill the smcerny of whai

I hey

arc s.aymg."

Congres sma n Bob McEwen
said , 111 support of 1he sc rubber.;,
"ihc queslion before us tonight is
wd l we have clean air with jobs, or
clea n air without JObs' That is the
dcp sion the Corp s will make."
McE we n ur ged th e Co rps to
4U1ckly issue ihe pcrrnil&lt;.
A reprcscntali ve from Congressman Bob WtSc's (W.V a.) offi ce
read a lcllcr from the congressman
also urging the Corps to approve
the pcrmiL'i .

1\'ancy Hollister, from the Governor's Offic e of Appalachta, said
Oht o Governor George V.
Vo inov ic h be ltc ves the Co rps

granttng th e pcrmtts ts m the best
publtc mtcrcsl.
Other ofkials ask ing tl te Corps
to approve th e permits were State
Senator Jan Michael Long (D-Ctrcl cv tll e) , State Rep rescn 1a1ive
Mary Abel (D-Aih cns) and Mark
A. Malone (D-Sou th Pom1).
Roc ky Black, a srokesman for
the Public U~ lil ies Com mission of
Ohio, drew cheers when he said the
PUCO be lieve s the Corps should
not require an cnvtronmc ntal
impact study - which could lead
to a delay cffccllvcly killin g th e
sc rubbers - and should gran! AEP
the requ ested pcrm ns.
Continued on page 3

Officials describe makeup
of proposed scrubber system

GENERAL JAMES M. GAVIN PLANT
FGD RETROFIT PROJECT

Dean Johmon &amp; Susanne El(li.
hosts nf the HOMETIME' television series.

SUSANNE:

Those who did testify wer e
unanimous in their s upporl for
AEP's permit application and for
AEP' s decision to install the scrubbers. Most of the speakers con demned , or at least criticilcd, the
Sierra Club and other environmental organizations.
Two U.S . congressmen from
Ohio and a sprkesman for Congre ssman Bob Wise from Wes t
Virginia testified at the hearing.
Co ngressman Clarence Miller
urged the Corps to approve the permits without delay, without compromise, without strings attached.
"The application has been under
internal Corps review for months .

VMH volunteers honored; awards presented
POMEROY - Over 60 volunteer
work ers at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and its Skilled Nursing
Fa cil ily were honored in cere mom es held Thlmday as a pan of
Nati onal Volumeer Week.
The event opened with a social
hour during whtch lime a variety of
finger foods were served to the
over 60 volunteer workers. Held in
1hc Skil led Nursing Facility dining
room, members of the facility's
staff, Kathy Varcale, activities
dtre&lt; lor, Sharon Vickers, assistant
acuviucs direc tor, and Lorene Gog-

1 Section , 10 Page5 25 cents
A Multim edia In c. Newsoaoer

Support unanimous for sCrubbers at Gavin

QuestJons can be directed to
Tom Grube, Plcsident of the
West Virginia Antique Steam
and Gas Engine Association,
446-2103.

SAW MILL. Tbis "saw mill" was shown at the AplJie engine show in 1983. Earl Gibson is pictured at the control. Standing behind bim is M.E. Grube, builder, owner, operator. It was powered by
a steam engine.

1992

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
"What's all the fuss about? "
That's a que stion probably
asked by many of the nearly I ,200
people who attended last night 's
U.S. Army Co rp s of Engineers
public hearing in the Meigs High
Schoo l gym at Rock Springs.
Those who tes tified on Ameri can Electric Power's scrubber proposal obviously understood th e
econo mic importance of sc rubber
in stallation - but mo st probably
were not aware of what makes up a
sc rubber system.
Scrubbers e.plained
The flue gas desu lfurization syslcm (FGD) would be in stalled on
1wo existing 1300 megawatt generating units at the plant. What has
caused much of the furor with The
Sierra Club arc two auxiliary facilities - a lime barge unloader/doc k
and a 383-acre landfill to accept
scru bber solid was te from the plant.
Prior to publi c te stimony las t
night, Jim Howard of AEP Serv ice
Corporation outlined the scrubbers
and related fac tltu cs through a slide
presentation.
The project 's river facililics
would cons1st of an up stream

SHOWING SOLIDARITY - Union members, representing
severa l different unions , showed up at la st night's U.S. Army
Corp .&lt; of Engineers public hearing at Mrigs liigh School in
Pomeroy 10 show their support for South1•rn Ohio Coa l Company
miners and for Al!terican Electric Power's quest to inslall scrubbers at the l.avin power plant in C hrshire. More lhan 1,200 people
packed the high school auditorium in what appeared to be unani mous support ror A.EP scrubber proposal. (OVP photo by Jim
Freeman)
'·

extension of the plant' s existing
mooring dock to accommodate a
I nn e barge unloadcr, a permanent
material-unloading faciltty to
receive construcUon materials and
plan! equipment and ten new concrete-ca pped mooring ce ll s to be
placed at the dock to fa cilitate
equipment unloading.
Up to six lime barges could be
moored (two long by three wtde)
up strea m but would not protrude
into the river any more than existing barges at the site.
Construction of an overland
co nveyor for the lime material
would span 880 feet of wetlands.
Concrete foundations for the conveyor supports would permancn~y
till _Q7 acres of wetlands.
Development of the landfill (2 5
miles from the Gavin compl ex )
would entail tilling in 13.8 acres of
juri sdictional waters of th e U.S .
govcmmcnL 13 acres of which arc
classified as wetlands. Those wetland s, according to Howard , arc
located some stx miles from the
Gavin plant.
AEP contends that any w e~ands
to be fuled are either man -made or
influenced by human activities.
SUPPORTINI. SCRUilllERS- Meigs Co unty Chamber of
Some are very acidic strip -mine
Commerce
Di rec tor Paula Thacker te stified last night in su pport
ponds resulting from unreclaim ed
of
sc
rubbers
at the Gavin PlanL Thacker emph as ized the imporstrip mine operations of 30 years
ago. According to Howard, all wet- ta nce of coal-mining j obs to Meigs Co unt y. (Sentinel photo by
llrian Reed)
Continued on page J

Ravenswood on 'brink of financial ruin'

Council to readvertise fuel bids
Members of Pomeroy Village Council met in an abbreviated session on Monday evening prior to attending the public hearing on
scrubbers al the General James M. Gavin PlanL
Council agreed lo readvertise for fuel bids. Bids were received
from BP Oil and Ashland Otl, but the btds dtd not spectfy a pnre
for the higher octane fuel used by the village.
It was announced that Todd Smith was hired as a pan-time dispatcher rill- the police depanm ent and Kathy Hysell , the new village
clerk was introduced.
The mayor's report of fine s co llected was approved in the
amount of $5,579.33.
A roning appeals board meeting was set for Thursday evening.
Present at the meeting were Mayor Bruce J. Reed, Clerk Brenda
Morris, and council members Scott Dillon, John William Blaettnar,
Betty Baronick, Thomas Werry and Larry Wehrung, president.

'

••

I

CHARL ES TON, W.Va. (AP)
- An IS -month campaign by outof-work Steelworkers again st
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. has
brought the company to its knees,
according to maJority owners and
board members.
But company officials said
Monday they remain hopcful.
Ravenswood Aluminum is losing customers and suppliers
because of the campaign, majority
owners and board members said in
docum ents filed in a Delaware
Court.

"Once a healthy and profitable
company is now in default on its
bank credit facility , and will be

unable to pay a $71 million obligation when it comes due on June 5,"
the documents said.
Ravenswood Aluminum , one of
the nation's top 10 alumin urn mak ers, has hired more than 1,000
workers 10 replace I ,700 Steel workers whose contract expired
Nov. I, 1990.
Ravenswood officials say th e
workers, members of United Steelworkers Local 5668, walked out.
The Steelworkers say they were
locked out.
The documcnt1 said the company 's condition "is precarious and
worsening, in significant part as a
result of RAC's ongomg labor dis-

pu tc."
The
documen ts
show
Rave nswood's sa les dropped to
$49 1 mtllion la st year from $701
million in 1989. The company ha.s
no retamed earning s or bank credtt
availab le, according to the documents.
Uni ted Stcelworlcers spokesman
Gary Hubbard said the company's
flnanctal problems helped reopen
negotiations last week. They were
the fi rst talks since July 1991.
"The only way the company
su rvi vcs at thi s point is if we get
our members' JObs back," he said.
" We are still encouraged by the
efforts of the (current) management

to reach an ag reeme nt. "
The papers, whtch were filed
April 14 tn Chancery Court, were
unsealed Frid ay. They sought th e
o uster of R. Emmett Boyle, who
was fired shonl y th erea fter as
chairman and ch ief cxecuuvc officer.
Lmc Monday , the company said
its new management team is opti.
mistJc.
" The curre nt cred it ag reement
remai ns in place and active disr usston s to ex lend it were part of a
meeting last week w!th the company's bank gro up, "
said
Ravenswood spokesman Pat Gallagher

,,

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