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                  <text>Page 08

Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, WV

May 17, 1992

Ohio Lottery

Cleveland
Cavaliers
advance

Super Lotto:
4-11-23-27-32-42
Kicker:
1-7-6-4-7-1
Pick 3: 479
Pick 4:8105

Page 5

Vol. 43, No. 11
Copyrlghlod 1ti2

RECOGNITION - Veterans Memorial Hospital Admioistrator Scou Lucas presented these
nve employees with five year employee service
pins duriog ceremonies held io the hospital cafeteria Friday afternoon to wrap-up activities or
National Hospital Week. Receiving the awards

from the left are Ruth McGrath, Rosemary
Young, Sandy Sargent, Sherrie Roush and Sue
Zirkle, aU or the hospital's nursing starr. Others
to receive five year pins later are Kay Cullums,
Jeff Jones, Barbara Hatf'~eld, Pa~cia Dent, Jane
Hul!\nan, Clara Young, Linda Jones and Orenda EIIIOII.

LONG SERVICE - Fifty-five years of service as employees or Veterans Memorial Hospital are represented by these three employees pictured receiving awards f'rom Scoll Lucas, hospital administrator, Friday afternoon. From the
left are Bobbie Hobsteller, wbo received a clock
for 25 years or sen ice; Connie Tucker and Belly
Curfman, each receiving diamond studded

I
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department's top conservationist says farmers have been
given farr warning that unless their
land is protected from erosion they
risk losing their farm subsidies.
Wilham Richards, chief of
USDA's Soil Conservation Service, says the agency is ready to get
Iough with farmers who are not
"actively applying" conservation
plans to their highly erodible land.
Until this year, the agency has
largely been educating farmers
about the law and helping them
adopt conservation plans. Bul an
envuonmental research group has
c001plained that the agency loolted
the other way when it found farmers in violation.
Now, an mtemal agency document also raises questions about the
low number of tracts of land found
not 10 be properly implementing a
conservation plan.
A national team of agency officials found that fanners were not
actively applying conservation
plans on one out of every 6.8 tracts
of land, while field employees had
reported a noncompliance rate of
one oot of every 61.7 tracts.
The report also said there is
potential for fraud if agency
employees are declaring land to be
in compliance if a conse rvation
plan is actually not being applied.
Agency officials, howev er, say
they have no evidence of actual
fraud.
Richards released the stud y to
The A ssoc iated Press on Friday,
but 10 an interview defended his
agency's strategy in implementing
the law. Approxtmately 1.2 million
farmers and 135 m1ilion acres of
highly erodible land are affected.
The law requires farmers with
highly erodible land to be actively
applying a conservation plan to
their land accordmg to a sc hedule
approved by the agency. The plan
must be fuUy implemented by Dec.
31, 1994. Those who don't comply
with the timetable risk losing their
farm subsidies and other benefits,

including crop insurance or farm
loans.
In a May 5 memo to state conservationists. Richards said the
agency must send a clear message
to fanners that they are expected to
carry out their conservation plans
and those who do not will be
reponed to the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.
That USDA agency is responsible
for deciding whether a farmer is
eligible for continued subsidir.-&gt;.
"Eligibility for benefits or other
personal considerations must not
enter into our technical decisionmaking process or override our
professional judgment." Richards
said in the memo, obtained by the
AP. "We need to better identify
producers who are not actively
applying their plans."
Ken Cook, v1ce president for
policy at the Center for Resoun:e
Economics, an environmental
research organization, said the
agency's study verifies his concerns that f1eld offices are uoderreporting potential violalions.
''The deJXU1ment is goin$ as far
as saying there mighl be potential
fraud," Cook said. "The directive
that's been sent 10 the field as a
result of this study really provides
some exuaordinary instructions to
them - not to take personal views
into account, to be honest and to
have integrity.
"It points 10 the fact that there
were massive abuses of the law last
year, and now the agency is saying
so itself." Coolt said.
Richards, however, notes thai
the law required farmers to change
the way they care for their land.
"We're talking about a very
comple&gt; change in the way people
operate land," Richards said.
"We· re talking about moving from
an age-old histaic culture of clean
tillage and plowing the land to the
new technolo~y of residue management (mulch10g the land) ... and
that's a major cultural change. And
it's happening faster than it's ever
happened in history."

Senate approves legislation
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate has approved legi slation
thai would require the Farm Credit
System to repay the federal government the S1.3 billion it borrowed
silt years ago.
Sen. Palrick Leahy, D-Vt., satd
the Farm Credit System would
repay, with interest, all federal

assistance it received.
"The 1987 farm credit refonns
worked," said Leahy. chainnan of
the Senate Agriculture Committee.
"The Farm Cr«iit System is now
solvent and it its time to begin
repaymg the money used to bail it
ou t in 1987."

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
May 9, 1992
STOCK STEERS:
90.00-152.00
300-under
82.50-104.00
300-.500
67 .00-8600
500-700
62.00-67.50
80().over
STOCK HEIFERS
82.00-115.00
300-under
75.00-85.00
300-.500
68.00-83.00
500-700
59. 5().64 .50
800-over
STOCK BULLS:
85.00-117.00
300-uoder
78.00-95.00
300-.500
65.00-80.50
500-700
53.00-68.75
Slaughter BuUs
4
50.00-950.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
47.00-58.50
Bred Cows By #
450 00-630.00
BredCowsBH
Slaughter Cows:
51.50-53.15
High Dressing
45.50-48.75
Utility
35.00-4 1.50
Canner &amp;: Cutter
VEAL:
85.00-91.00
Oloice
77.00-85.00
Medium
80.00-85.00
Good

LAMBS:

Light·Blue

Feeders

Baby Calves BH
HO({SES CWl

Ponies

62.00-68.50
62.00-66.50
85.00-260.00
52.00-61.50
38.00-50.00

Miss., ~din~ recent report
He said so1l accumulate&lt;l as far
as 10 feet back from the grass
hedges in a yearlong study.
"It was fenile soil thai would
have been lost if it had been on
unprolecte&lt;l couon fields," McGregor said.
Soil losses from May through
September averaged 14.1 tons an
acre on grass -hedged plots that
were ulled, compared to 24.4 tons
on plots with out hedges. On

employee service pios. Tioa Neigler wiD receive
a ruby studded 10 year employee service pin
later. Numerous employees were on band for
ceremonies honoring employees receiving
awards and refreshments were served by the
Nutrition Department. Ofr.cers of the Women's
Auxiliary, tbe hospital's volunteer unit, were
presented corsages on Friday.

World wheat trade down
WASHINGWN (AP) - World
wheat trade is projected at 102 mil lion metric tons for the current
year, down 5 million from the previous year, despite increased
import demand from Eastern
Europe, the Middle East and
Africa,
A decrease in imports by the
former Soviet Union and the
Republic of Korea will more than
offset the increases. says the Agriculture Departrnenl's May report
on the world grain siluation.
"The European Community and
Canada will stan the year with
large carry-in stocks and the
prospect of continued high production levels," the report said.
"Additionally, Australia's crop is
expected to rebound substantially

Missouri advances
to stage II
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department has
advanced Missouri to Stage II and
Hawaii to Stage IV in the eradication program for pseudorabies. a
disease of swine and other livestock that usually causes death.
States advance from Stage I,
preparation, to Stage V, signifying
pseudorabies- free status. Stage II is
conuol. Stage III is mandatory herd
cleanup, and Stage IV is surveillance 10 ensure no infec tion
remains. Stage V is Bf;hieved when
a state completes one year in Stage
IV without finding an infected
herd.
At presen~ 10 states and Pueno
Rico are in Stage I; 16 are in Stage
II; 3 are in combination Stage II III; 14 are in Stage III; six are in
Stage IV . One state. Maine , is
pseudorabies free.

untilled plots, the losses were 0 .7
tons With hedges and 1.3 tons With oul hedges.
_"We plan to measure runoff lllld
soil loss from the couon test plots
for at least lwo more years, ·'
McGregor said. "As gaps in the
hedg_es fill in, we expect more
pondmg of water uphill from the
hedges, more complete depostUon
of~ sediment in.those ponds and,
poss~bly, less _sediment and water
leav10g the fields. We also are
comparing other types of grasses
for use as hedges.··

A strategy for success in the
years to come wiU center mainly on
a person's ability to be flexible and
accept challenges, the president of
Marshall University told the 363
graduates of the Class of I 992 at
the University of Rio Grande on
Sunday.
With the future in a constan~y
changing world becoming more
uncenain, "our best bet is to keep
growing through education," Dr. J.
Wade Gilley told the graduates at
Rio Grande's !16th commencement ceremony. "Always make
your next move the kind of move
where you will be able to take
advantage of the opponunities and
challenges that will arise."
Dr . Gilley. who assumed th e

E

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pen Very un ay,
Absolutely no alcoholic
b
N
'bl
everages · ot rupontl 8
for loues or accident!.
For more information call

crop."

R

aces

"The economic lunnoil we have

experienced in the United States is
an example of the change m the
world economy," Dr. Gilley
remarked. "Our standard of living
has been slipping as a resu lt of the
economic sleight of hand going on
around us. All of this economic

388-9300
11:00 a.m
•
start al 1:00 p.m.

COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER - Or. J .
Wade Gilley, president of Marshall University,
urged the graduates of the University of Rio

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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL - Students at
Riverview School in Reedsville got a chance to
experience nature firsthand on Friday, at a Natural Resources Field Day at Forked Run Slate
Park. Here, Chrissy Smith, Amber Church,

jeremy Marcinko, Jeremy Reed and ~ason
McCartney introduce themselves to a fnendly
black snake, as ODNR Naturalist Lynn Barnhart supervises.

Friday. when students and faculty
spent the day at Forked Run State
Park near Reedsville.
A "natuml resources f1eld day"

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Cnise Co1trol
Llggage Rack
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2913 Pltdrnoot Road. Hont~~gton . WV 25704

:104-429--4718

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
•

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(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

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133 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
614·446·2532
Locally owned and operated by Herb Smith for the
past 15 years.

break that blackou~" Bowen said.
"We arc not going to be hurried
by anybody," Bowen said.
The negotiations were recessed
on Wednesday. two weeks after
they resumed in Pittsburgh follow ·
in g the ouste r of former
Ravenswood Ch1ef Executive Offi.
ce r R. Emmett Boyle . Under
Boyle's management, the company
had not met w1th the union since
July 1991.
Steelworkers spokesman Gary
Hubbard said he expects negotiations 10 resume by Wednesday . He
said the company "wanted time to
assemble some backgroond maten -

s1des. But we're hard at It without
the assi stance of mediation ·'
The labor di spute began when
th e un ion' s con tract expired and
Ravenswood hired more than 1,000
replacemem workers w perfonn the
1,700 S!Uiwor\;crs' JObs The company has contended thai the union
IS on strike. The Steelworkers say
they have been locked ou t of the
plant.
In his speec h. Bowen repeated
the union 's freq uent vow that Iiley
w1ll nO\ work alongs1de those who
were hued to replace them.
"If there ts a priority in ncgotiallons, that is Number One." Bowen
said .
al. .'
"One thin g for sure is 1hc scabs
"T hese have not been easy
ncgotialions. · · Hubbard said. will be out and Unlled Steelwork "There arc difficult ISSues for hoth ers Local 566R w11l walk 1n,"
Bowen SHJd

gave boys and girls the opponunity
to experience first hand the wonders of nature found (literally) in
their own backyard.
Student s were tak en by bus
dircc~y to the park Fnday morning,
then spent their entire school day
there, ate breakfast, lunch and a
snack under the shade trees. and
enjoyed nature from several unique
perspccuvcs. Throughout the day.
the emphasis was "hands on".
Participants from the Ohio
Department of Natural Reso urces
mcluded naturalists Lynn Bamhan
and Cheryl Hambcl : Reid Caldwell
and Randy Wachter. managers of
Strouds Run and Forked Run State
Parks, respectively; Brenda Sams,
District Watercraft Supervi sor ;
(Continued on page 3)

HOMETOWN HEROES - Four members of
the Tuppers Plains community were honored on
Saturday by the Tuppers Plains VFW Post for
their contributions to the community. The pO!;t
held its Loyally Day program on Saturday. Piclured, 1-r, are jay Ellis, Past District 8 Commander of American Legion, who was the program 's

keynote speaker; Pal Hall or the post 's auxiliary; Rose Carr, who Sfrved as hostess for the
event ; and llometown ller&lt;l&lt;'S Viclor llahr, Red
Carr and Iva Upton. Rev. Sharon Hausman,
pastor of the Chester, Alfred and Sl. Paul's
United Methodist Churches was also honored,
but was unable to attend.

Lawmakers, challengers run in new districts

s.u..a ' .....

..........
•AftDMlnc:

•fA(M

By MARTIIA RRYSON HODEL
Associated Press Writer
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va . Negotiators trying to rcsol ve the
18 -month -old labor dispute at
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. will
resume their sess ions tlu s week fol lowing a break to " reg roup ," a
union official says.
The week -long break in the contract talks " was needed for both
Sides," said United Steelworkers
Dislrict 23 Director Jim Bowen.
"Many complex ISs ue s
remain,'· Bowen said at a Saturday
rally for the 1,700 members of the
union who have been off the job at
Ravenswood Alum1num smcc Nov.
I, 1990
llolll s1dcs had agreed not to dtscuss details of the nego tiation s.
" and lllere's no way we're going to

Riverview students visit state park
"Up close and personal."
That's how you could describe
the experience for the student body
at Riverview Elementary School on

$19,895

OPTIONS:
New ElkiiCed V6

Grande Sunday to be adaptable to changing
times. The university issued diplomas to 363
graduates in ceremoni.,; on the college green.

Steelworkers say negotiations progressing

NEW 1992 S·15
4 DOOR

NOW

A Multlmedl• Inc. Nawsoaoer

chaos is symptomatic of the
changes taking place in the world.
"Those who will provide global
leadership in the future will provide their countries with a betLer
standard of living, and I hope that
leadership will come from th e
United States," he added.
Dr. Gilley urged the graduates
to continue learning, be nexiblc,
face the changes occurring around
them and in their chosen professions, and be poised to take advantage of opponunity whenever possible.
"I hope you will have an important role in charting our nat10n 's
co ur se in the uncertain years
ahead," he concluded.
Continued on page 3

388-9617 or
Gates open at

Named regional forester
WASHTNGTON (AP) - Eli.-..beth Es till, currently associate
deputy chief of the Nauonal Forest
System, has been named regional
fore ster of the Rocky Mountain
Region.
"Beyond her experience and
abilities, Elir.abeth Estill is also a
trailblazer in her new assignment.
She is the first woman regional
forester in the 87-year history of
the Forest Service," said Forest
Service Chief F. Dale Robertson.
He said she is a trained ecologist
w 1th a background in recreation
and land management, and brings
nwly two decades of experience to
the Rocky Mountain Regional
Forester job.

presidency of Marshall m August
1991, said the standard commencement address examines the kind of
world graduates will face. But in
the four years in which RIO
Grande's graduates have been in
sc hool , the world has changed so
radically in political, economic and
technological terms that i1's impossible to predict what d~e world Will
be like as it prepares for the 21st
century.

I

from last year's drought-reduced
The European Community is
projected to expon 21.5 million
tons in 1992-93. up 500,000 tons
from 1991-92 . Canada's export
projection of 23 million tons is
down l million tons from 1991-92.
Expon potential for the United
States "would be constrained by
low carry-in ~lOCks and production
levels," the report srud. It projected
U.S. ex pons at 32.5 million tons.
down more than 2 million tons
from 1991 -92.
Production in the fanner Soviet
Union will be greater than last year,
the report pred1cted, reducin g
impon demand.
"S teady growth in China 's
wheat consumption since 1990 is
projected to result in imports of 16
million tons during 1992-93, up
500,000 tons from 1991 -92," the
report said. Yugoslavian impons
account for most of the mcrease.

0

1 Secllon, 10 Page• 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 18, 1992

Flexibility is key to success,
MU president tells Rio grads

USDA ready to get Asian hedge helpful in saving topsoil
tough on farmers
VINTON RACE WAY
WASHINGTON (AP) _ An
ornamental grass hedge from Asia
can save valuable topsoil from
being washed off fields Agriculture Department researchers have
found
"J~st one row of the grass Miscanthus sinesis held back about 45
pen:ent of the soil nonnally lost or
eroded from cotton tesl plots last
year," Keith C. McGregor, an agricultural engineer for lbe Agricul tural Research Service in Oxford
•

.\1ostlv cloudv . C hane~:()( show ·
ers. Lu~ in lht mid s o~ .

BANNERS GO UP - The new "Wekome to Pomeroy" banners,
purchased for Main Street in Pomeroy by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association were hung for display Saturday. Twelve or tbe banners were p~rcbased with proceeds raised from tbe annual fashion
show of tbe association and a $500 contribution from Bank One.
Pictured are raul Cline as he bangs one of the banners, assisted by
Susan Clark, president of the ~ssociation, and Scott Dillon, a member or Pomeroy Village Council.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Incumbents and challengers will
run in new d1 stricts Jun e 2 to establish bat de lines for what may be an
all-out war 1n the fall for con trol of
the Legislature.
In most races, Incumbents arc
scekmg re -election . In the House,
there arc 18 non -incumbent races
for nominations.
Democrats have held the House
for 20 years, but that could change
thi s year. House districts were
realigned by the state Apportion ment Board in a way that gives the
GOP its best chance in years.
Republi cans controlled th e
board 3-2 after the 1990 election of
Gov. George Voinovich and Secretary of State Bob Taft. who are
members by law.
They joined GOP Senau: President Stanley Aronoff of Cincinnati
to weaken Democratic strongholds
throughout the 99 House and 33
Senate districts .
Speaker Vern Riffe and other
Democrats are challenging the new
di stricts in the U.S. Supreme Court
A decision is not expected for
mond1s, and a lower court ordered
the elections to proceed.
Democrats control the House
61-38. House members serve twoyear terms. and all seats are up for
grabs.
Rep. Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg, who heads the

House GOP Campaign Committee.
sa1d the party w1ll f1eld a slate that
can hold GOP scats and gam the 13
needed to win the House.
Riffe predtcts Dcmucrm w1ll
keep control. hut admits 11 IS ht&lt;
b1ggest challenge in his IHyears as
speaker.
Republi ca ns have a 2 1- 12
advantage in the Scnau:. where 17
~ca t s are al stake . Senators se rve
st.1ggcred. four -year tcnns.
"Rea listi cally, our goal is to
hold our own," said James Tilling,
strategist for Senate Republtcans.
But Senate M1nority Leader
Robert Boggs, D-Jefferson, sa id
Democrats have a shot at recapturing conuol. Thineen of the 17 seats
at stake arc held by Republican s,
making them more vulnerable.
Boggs said Democrats have candidates who will campaign aggressively to point out failures of lhc
Senate's leadership.
The new House districts paired
25 incumbents, mos~y Democrats,
in the same dislric~ fon:ing one to
move or step down.
Eleven House members are not
running for re-election. That is not
an unusual number; 12 didn't run
in 1990.
Some are stepping down for
other reasons.
Minority Leader Corwin Nixon ,
R-Lebanon, said 30 years in th e
House are enough. Rep. Cliff

Skeen. D-Akron. bowed out after
bc1ng placed in the same dtstrict
with Rep. To m Seese. D-Akrun .
Skeen IS being treated for cancer.
Rep Paul Mechling. DThornv ille. yie lded to Rep. Mary
Abel. D-Athens , after they both
wound up 1n llle new 78th DIStnCL
Other House incumbent s not
seek ing re -election 1nc lud c Reps.
Larry Man ahan . R-Dcfiance;
Robert H1ckcy. D-Dayton ; Fred
Deering, D-Mon rocv dlc; Robert
Clark , R-C hardon; Joseph Sccres~
D-Scnecavlile. Judy Shee rer, DShakcr Heights; and Dean Con ley,
D-Columbus.
Rep. Richard Cordray. R-Grove
Ci ty. IS le avi ng the House to run
for Congress in the 15th Congressional D1smct.
And a soccessor to replace Rep.
Russ Guerra, R-Englewood, who
died in April. will be selected.

In two House drst&lt;lcts
DemocraLs oppose each other f~
pmnary nominauon. Reps. Suzanne
Bergansky of Cleveland and Frank
Mahnic Jr. of Garfie ld Heights are
runnmg 111 the new 15th District.
Reps. Ronald Gcrberry of Austintown and Joseph Vukovich of
Youngs town co mpete in the new
65th.
Three dislricts have Republican
and DemocratiC incumbenLs seekmg nommat10ns. They arc Reps.
Terry Tranter. D-Cmcm nati, and
Dale Van Vyven , 1..-Cmcmnati, in
the 32nd; Reps. Wayne Jones, DCuyahoga Falls. and Tom Watkins
R-Stowe, in the 46th; and Richard
Rench . R-M1lan .and Katherine
Walsh. D-Ober! in, m the 63rd.
In the Senate, mcumbents arc
scck mg re-election in all hut nn•
race. Twelve Republicans and four
Democrats seck new tenns.

Pomeroy wreck reported
Gregory Willett of Pomeroy was charged with improper backio
and no insurance coverage followmg an accident on Mulbe~
Avenue early Friday eve ning.
Pomeroy police reponed that WiU eu was backing from the Yard
at 142 Mulberry Ave. mto the sueet and struck the vehicle of Keith
Riggs, Pomeroy, which was parked in front of 143 Mulberry Ave
There was light damage to the left side and door area of Ri ;
1986 Buick and to the right side rear of the WiUeu 1979 Mertury~s

'

�.., -

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, May 18, 1992

Monday, May 18, 1992

Riverview...

01110 Wud!l1u1
Tuesday, May 19

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERE8T8 OF 11IB IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGET£
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man1111•r

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould 1&gt;e less !han 300
words _ All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
adW.ss and lelepbone number. No unsigned letlen will be published. Letton
should be in good Wle. addressing issues. not penonalities.

Toledo leaders confront
new wave of racial problems
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO - Racial problems have once agam taken center stage in
Ohio's founh -largest city, much to the embarrassment of local leaders
who arc trying to attnlet new jobs 10 this economically depressed area.
Mayor John McHugh said city's image has been tarnished by racial
problems. But he hopes the problems do not hun efforts to atuact new

Iconoclastic Campbell tries to get things done
WASHINGTON - Rep. Ben
Nighthorse Campbell , D-Colo .,
remembers the time a constituent
callel( him to complain that her
garbage hado 't been picked up on
time. "I• told her, 'This isn't the
sanitation department, why didn't
you call them?' She said, 'Oh, I
dido 't think I was going to have to
go that high.'' Campbell sees it as
another day at the office, an indication of how low Congress has fall en on the political food chain. Part
of the reason stems from a system
driven overwhelmingly by blowdried, middle-aged, med18-man aged while men. Campbell is crashing the club called the U.S.
Congress.
Some things are visible. It starts
with the ponytail (he won't cut it),
extends to the dress code (he has
special permission not to wear a
coat and tie) and includes his
choice of transportation (a Jeep
amid BMWs and limos).
Other things are less visible. His
life story reads like something out
of a Horatio AJger novel. "I came
from a very rough home. My dad
was an alcoholic and my mother

was tubercular. I was living in an
orphanage and on the streets," he
explains.
He wasn't coddled during childhood, and his wont is not to coddle
special interests, or even con stituents he thinks get out of line.

worrying about inconsequential
matters while more important
issues like health care and the
deficit are put aside year after year.
He ciu:s the people who called his
office wanting him to pass a bill
requiring people to be kinder to
chickens, or the man who wanted
him to change the national anthem
to a song his brother wrote. One
time, when a constituent was giv ing him a panicularly hard time
about his taxpayer-supported
"They (interest groups) want abso- salary, Campbell struck back. "I
lute subservience to their cause and looked up and found out just before
I'm just not like thaLlf they want a that happened that two cents of a
puppet, they can go buy one," taxpayer's money goes towand OOJlCampbell told our associate Melin· gressional salaries. So I threw the
da Maas recently. Though Camp- two cents at him and told him to
bell is far from a puppet, his politi · shut up."
cal ambitions have recently
"I try 10 reason with them
expanded. He is currently cam - sometimes, but they can get pushy.
paigning for the Senate seat being If you want to pass a law to make
vacaiCd by the retiring Tim Wirth, people kinder to chickens, I just
who Senate observers point to as llai tell them, run yourself and you
the prototype of the media-age pass the law," Campbell said.
po~ucian.
As the only Native American
Campbell's direct style may member of Congress, he's comfonoffend some, but he offers no able as a minority. While large por·
apologies. On voter anger, Camp- tions of Congress is made up mainbell believes too much time is spent ly of lawyers and career politicians,

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

businesses.

The city has been hit hard by the recession. During the last decade,
thousands of manufacturing jobs were lost. Nearly 10,000 jobs have been
ellmmated or moved to other cities in the last three years.
··You can't control what other people think about the city.'' McHugh
said. "We've had problems. Things are better than they were four years
ago." he said.
But the Rev. Floyd Rose, the city's most prominent civil rights leader,
diSag reed, saying conditions have not improved. He added that 11 is
important to let businesses know about issues being raised by the black
community.
'·One way we are going to get change is when the business commun ily
gets mvolvcd," Rose said..
.
. . .
Racial problems have mcreased over the last s1x years. C1vli ngh ts
leaders say the city has not done enough to hire and promote blacks.
There also have been a number of attacks on blacks who have moved
in to predominantly white neighborhoods.
But civil rights leaders say few events have brought together the black
community like the recent police shootings of two young black men.
Rcs1dents disagreed with findings that whiu: po~ce officers were jusuGed on shooting Deon Williams, 19, and Fred Carter, 18, both of Toledo.
They were shot and killed in hotel rooms about two weeks apart. Police
were try1ng to arrest them on various charges, including armed robbery.
CIVIl nghts leaders and Black Mus~ms have led several marches to
protest the deaths.
.
.
.
In the laiCst police confl1cl, the head of the local Black Muslims sa1d
pollee officers phys1cally and verbally abused him when he was arrcsiCd
in front of his home May 8.
Charles Muhammad was charged w1th obstructing offlcial business ,
resisting arrest and disorderly conduct after police questioned hun about
l11s mother-in-law's car, which she had reported missing.
Muhammad said he was the latest victim in what he called the Toledo
police's war against black leadership and young black males.
He warned the city that violence could explode in Toledo this summer.
"I'm not threatening that we are going to do this and that," he said.
~·B ut I'm warning the city this has to stop."
Police ChiCf Marti Felker said the city does not have a vendetta against
blacks.
· But Toledo's black community has continued to monitor race relations.
Thirteen covil rights leaders were arrested in 1988 afiCr they took over a
City Council meeting in protest of the firin g of a black city official. .
. They contacted the U.S. Jusuce Dcparunent and Oh10 C1v1l R1ghts
Commission to investigate complamts. Both agcnc1es sa1d Toledo was 20
years behind the times as far as min ority hinng and other civ1l rights
issues.
City leaders have been trying to address the complaints. McHugh has
se t up numerous conferences between black and white leaders trying to
diffuse racial tensions.
McHugh, who took office in January 1990. has taken a different
approach in re sponding to the criticisms than former Mayor Donna
Owens, who refused to meet with civil rights leaders.
.
.
"Our race relations have improved vastly," McHugh Sllld, noung that
the city's Board of Community Rclauons has become active in trying to
resolve racial problems.
"Do we have all the answers' The answer is no. We arc still working
on the problems we have and we will continue to work on them on a daily
b:lSIS ," he said.

Deadline for publication
of election letters May 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the June 2 pri'!'ary
election. However, in the interest of fairness, no elecbon letters wlll be
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, May 27.
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used. .
.
Letters should be 300 works or les.•. All leiters are subJe&lt;t to ed•t·
jng and must be signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published . No unsigned leiters wlll be
·published. All leiters should be in good taste.

Today in history
By The Assa&lt;iated Press
· Today is Monday, May 18, the I 39th day of 1992. There arc 227 days
Ut in the year. This is Victoria Day in Canada
Today's Highlight in History:
0o May 18, 1980, the Mount St. Helens volcano in Washmgton state
exploded. The blast. took 1,300 feet off the top of the mountam, lcavmg
57 people dead or m1ssmg.
Oo this date:
In 1642, the Canadian ciry of Montreal was founded.
In 1804 the French ScnaiC proclrumed Napoleon Bonaparte emperor.
In 1860: the Republican Pany convention in Chicago nomina!ed Abraham Lincoln for pres1dent.
In 1910 Halley's Come~ as seen from Earth, moved across the sun.
In 1911·, composer Gustav Mahler died in Vienna. Ausuia. His last
rd "Mozart"
.
· Iy vants
' hed
:woIn : 1926, evangelist
Aimee Semple McPherson mystenous
hile visiting a beach in Vemce, Cahf.; she reappeared a month later,
w
to have been ki"dna~ ·
claiming
In 1933 the Tennessee
ley Authority was created.
In 1934: Congress approved the so-called Lindbergh Ac~ which called
for the death penalty in cases of tniCrstate k:idnappmg.
In 1951, the Unned Nations moved out of ~ts temporary headquariCrs
in Lake Success, N.Y., for illl permanent home m Manhallan.
In 1953, Jacqueline Cochran became. the f1rst woman to break the
sound barrier as she piloted a North Amencan F-86 Canadair over Rogers

~;f~9~:!:onauts Eugene A. Ceman. Thomas P. Stafford and John

w

Young blasted off aboard Apollo Ten.
.
·In 1980. in the South ~~rean city of Kwan&amp;Ju, townspeople and students began a nine-day upnsmg that was finally put down by troops .
Ten years ago: A jury in New York C!tY conv1cted the Rev. Sun
Myung Moon, founder and leader of the) Umficauon Church, of tax eva·
sion. (Moon served 13 months 1n pnson.

,·

\

B\9USE

P\l~

Campbell is a jewelry maker and
rancher by profession. He says thai
he only agreed to run foJ orfice
afiCr his neighbors asked him to.
His office on Capitol Hill, decoraiCd in Western style with handcarved wooden furniture and an :
Indian head garment estimated to .
be worth $50,000, is a far cry from ·
his roots. At age 12 he l0&lt;'1c his ftrSt .
job, and soon dropped out of high
school to join the Air Force dunng
the Korean War. After the war,
Campbell went back for his general
equivalency diploma and later
atiCnded college in California. But .
it wasn't until last year thai Camp·
bell fmally went back to receive his
high school diploma.
.
Campbell says his rough begin·
ning is a big reason why he now .
considers his family to be the most ·
important aspect of his life. But he
also asks people to consider his
experience before they condemn
the entire congressional process.
One of his best friends in the
House is Rep. John Lewis, D.-Ga.,
another rags-to-riches member who
was a leader in the civil rights
movement before eniCring elective
p~litics. Campbell is also close
with Rep. Joe Kennedy, D.-Mass.,
whose background could scarcely
be more diffcrem than his. "When
I took my oath of office, I rernem·
ber standing between him (Lewis)
and Joe Kennedy and I was thinking that nigh~ 'My God, we're in a
world where a Johnny Lewis can
have an equal opportunity in making national policy as a Joe
Kennedy, or some kid like me.'
Nowhere in the world could this
happen."
Though he defends the institution, the process gnaws at him.
First, then is the reliance on staffs
to do most of the work. Campbell
says he ge•s more things accomplished on the lloor of the House
gym than anywhere else, because
il's one of the few places where
members can iniCraCt one-one-one.
"I'll tell you what, all men look
alike in a jocksuap. When you get
alone you can cut through the posturing and get right down to the
niUy-griUy."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are columnists for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Perot needs to think like a reporter
Not a moment too soon, H. Ross
Perot enu:red the Cocoon Phase of
his all-but-official campaign to be
our president. Dashed into ~~ actu ally .
Perot spun himself into meta morphic seclusion - no in-depth
interviews until he gets a few indepth ideas - not because he is
afraid he cannot be a good candidate. but because he knows he
indeed can be. He knows he can
emerge from his cocoon to soar
above tile roughly -paved campaign
trail (a veritable Macadam Butterfly) and even win in November .
But only if he gets his act together
In May.
Back at IBM, they still talk
about how Perot, a sure-fire talker·
seller-marketer, met a year's sales
quota in a month. But a May-ful of
smooth talking won't produce a
November victory if his problem solving rhetoric crumbles under
proper public inquiry and basic
fact-checking .
Perhaps Perot sensed the danger
of a collapse into billionaire buf·
foonery the morning of Sunday .
May 3, when a nation of television
viewers actually saw it start hap·
pening before their awakening
eves. NBC News· "Meet the

Pres s" produced 30 minutes of
sharp interrogation that was a
marked departure from the tedium
of the medium we've come to
expect each Sunday , on all networks.

Martin Schram
Perhaps Perot expected yet
another network news-chat with
sem1-planned, quasi-prepared inU:r·
views. But the Meet the Pressers Tim Russert, Lisa Myers and AI
Hunt - did the sort of classic
interviewing that happens these
days mainly in off-camera print
interviews, if it happens at all.
Questions and follow-ups were
based on facts, well-researched and
absorbed- on gun control, Job
Corps, affirmative action, enter prise zones, welfare, abortion, our
national deficit and lhe real, painful
numbers behind every pol's painfree Holy Trinity: "eliminate
waste, fraud and abuse."'
The Perot we saw fumbled,
flim-flammed and filibustered ,
apparently hoping to stall his way
into a commercial. He blamed the
reporters and the medium. In long
ramblin~ answers, he complained

that TV "sound bites" never offer
enough time for him to c~plain
what he thinks. Deep down, he had
to know: His temper got shon only
when his answers feU shon.
With all that in mind, I have
decided to make the following inkind contribution to Perot for PresidenL Below is a memo of suategy
advice- the son that any average
presidentially aspiring billionaire
might want to clip and affix to his
refrigerator as a handy reminder:
TO: H. Ross Perot, populist
without a party.
FROM: Manin Schram, strategist without a cause.
SUBJECT: How to Master the
Media and Win the Presidency.
You've had grand success in
business by out-thinking your
adversaries, analyzing their objectives - then beating them at their
game. Now you must put that tech·
niquc to work on your present lillie
problem : increasingly inquisitive
journalists.
Step One: Put yourself in their
shoes - become H. Ross Perot,
ace reporter. (P.S.: I like the way
you begin every answer with "'Su:p
One" or "Firsl" or "Number

One." Keep that- listeners will
think they're hearing a detailed

plan.)
Reporter Perot, you are about to
interview a high-prome fellow who
burst onto your rront pages and is
soaring in the polls - but nobody
knows what he'd really do about
the problems that worry us most.
Being your thorough, aggressivebut-always-fair self, figure out just
how you'd interview him. or
course, you'd be as prepared in the
interview as you arc in the board·
room . You wouldn't insist that he
present 12-point programs to solve
every problem, but you'd insist he
be accurate and candid. If he started to llim-Oam or llub facts showing he didn't know what he
was talking about- you'd nail
him on it, reporter Perot.
Step Two: Now you are presidential candidate H. Ross PeroL
You're about to face the media.
To be a strong. even winning candidate, you need only remember
this:
Just be prepared to answer the
media's questions in a way that
would satisfy the fines~ most dciCrmined journalist you know: Ace ·.
Reporter H. Ross Perot.
Martin Schram is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Beware of learning the wrong lesson
Two profoundly diffcrcnl Head Start, is sa1d by Republican
in stincts arc compcung for and Democrats alike to have been a
su premacy a few week s after the success. So was, and 1s. the Job
Los Angeles nots. One is inclmcd Corps.
to compromise and cooperation,
But the War on Poveny got conwith a stress on shared responsiblhties rather than apportioned blame.
That one was e~pressed at a Wh11C
House meeting last week between
congressional Democrats and the fused with other agendas, aimed at
president.
less precise goals like "empower·
The other has two faces. One 1s ment .. and Hcommunity involve*
that of the partisan, eager to point men~" goals that might have made
the accusatory finger at someone sense but were too heavy a political
else. The other is that of th e load to sustain. What political cross
resigned realist, speaking more in fire didn't mangle, the Vietnam
sorrow than in anger, who admits War terminated. DespiiC its known
the problem but has given up on triumphs, we never had a chance to
solutions. They don't work, they're find out whether the War on Povertoo expensive or there's too little ty could succeed on its own temns,
consensus, goes the word from thiS since the government surrendered
quaner.
early, at a cost markedly less than
The first instinct is obviously that of the 100-hour war in the Per·
the one to follow. Tbe Iauer two sian Gulf.
are part of the problem. We've
But we have "thrown money"
been learning the wrong lessons at other social problems that money
from bad history for almost two largely relieved. Poverty was once
decades now, and it's time to a certain accompaniment of old
unlearn them in a hurry.
age. No more, thanks in significant
"You can't solve problems by pan to government programs. A
throwing money at them." We all host of diseases, like polio, TB,
know that old saw. It's wrong, or at malaria and smallpox, were once
least its implications are wrong . epidemic, until government threw
Well-funded programs have not money at them.
failed. Badly-thought-out or incomNo. that old do2 won't hunt. If
plete programs have. The War on you target the money with iniCiliPoveny was not exactly a bi~ ticket gence and persistence, money can
item, costing less than $2 btllion a cure a IOL If it were not so, why are
year at its height, and its most so many of us in such avid pursuit
expensive single people-program, of the buck? Why is the defense

Hodding Carter III

bud get even now one at which the
government " throws money."
"There's no consensus." To
which a logical reply is "build it
and they will come." Leadership is
just that, leadership. Consensus
docs not form naturally, rising to
the top like cream on fresh milk.
Passivity guarantees failure . You
have to provide ideas, publicize
them, react to the public reaction,
adapt and then implement them.
Times of crisis, even transient crisis, are also times of opponunity.
Attention is focused. Take advan tage of iL
"We can't afford 'it.'" This
ever-popular chestnut does not
require identification of "it." It is
just something that is assumed to
be understood. We can't afford
domestic tranquility? We can't
afford justice? We can't afford a
society that works passably well
for all of illl people? While the bud·
get deficit and the $3 uillion-plus
national debt are real impediments,
the current budget allocations are
not sacrosanct. Neither is the tax
code. The integrity and domestic
ltllllquiliry of the nation are.
Partisanship is what party poli·
tics are all about There's nothing
inherently evil about iL But if politics should stop at the water's edge,
at least when the nation is imperiled by foreign enemies, also il
should be given a rest when the
nation is imperiled by domestic
upheaval. The blame is thick

enough to go around. so let 's all
stipulate that the Democrats and
Republicans are blamewonhy. We
can work out the accounting at the
polls.
In the meantime, let's knock off
the posturing, the Mickey Mouse of
a press secretary blaming the Great
Society, or Democrats on the hustings blaming Ronald Reagan. The
truth is that there has been a collective turning away from our iniCmal
disintegration. There have been
voices crying in the wilderncss
unheeded, and they should be given
their due, but our generation of
vipers has bipartisan lineage.
Divided government has been a
built-in e~cuse for past failure; it
must not be allowed to be a barrier .
to present action.
As for the ftrSt instinct, it contains the seeds of potential danger.
Cooperation and bipartisanship
must not be a smokescreen for
inadequacy. "Doing something"
could be worse than doing nothing
if it is no more than a palliative,
designed to calm fears and mask
symptoms while leaving the cancer
untouched.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award·winnlng reporter, edi·
tor and publisher, is president or
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C .·
based television production com·
pany, and a syndicated columnist
for Newspaper Enterprise Associalion.
\

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-MiddlepOr".. Ohio

Aocu-Weather" fortt&amp;St for daytime conditiona and
MICH.

IMansfield I n•l•

Qa

IND.

Qa
•I Columbus I 75•1

(Contlned from page 1)...
Keith Wood, Meigs County
Wildlife Officer; and Mike Duhl of
the Meip Soil and WBlrZ DislricL
Swdellts from grades 1-6 visited
various stations throughout the
park, and learned m&lt;n about noc·
tumal animals (like bats), snakes.
water safety, soil and water conser·
vation and first aid. A matching
game designed to teach the students ~bout animals and their habi·
Fwl .. a. 5aUt Plrt. Here, ODNR Naturalist
ASSEMBLY • A uture
hiJ - - fl
tat was also included in the staa.,t BwW prep81'e1 the boya and girls for
the KIMtia eajoyed by llblclntlltlthw okw
tions.
...,...,... . _ aature bike.
Scbool oa Friday, whea tlte Kltool'a st.f •
After lunch, students, took a
body enjoyed Natural RI!IOUrca Piel4 Day &amp;It
hike alon~ Forked Run's Honeysuckle Trail.
1 --------------e Hi
IIIII c:hal- graduates forming a circle on the Degree - Angela L. Bosti~k.
Earlier in the day, the gradUIICS liYC iD the observed tbc annual Baa:alaureaJe lmgiD&amp;
we amc cJos.. gxeen and the playing of T~ Red Racine; Heidi A. Caruthers, Midand FounderS Day service, which er to tbc ~~~:~~...-,;Ball amlin- and Whitt, the university's alma dleport; Connie D. Cleland, Middleport;
Robert R. Lucas,
pays tribute to past presidents, ucd. ·b wiD be liP 111 ,.. 10 form 11131U.
Meip
County
graduates
an::
Cheshile;
Nancy
J. Vance, AJbuny.
the
kind
of
society
ill
wbicb
we
trustees and faculty at Rio Grande.
Colle1e
or
General
Studies
willliYC..Colleee
at
Tec•ooo&amp;ou,
AJso.
The sermon was presented by
and
Liberal
Arts,
Bachelor
or
FoiJowiaa llr. Gillcy's lddress
ciate of AppHed Business, Secrt·
the Rev. Robert Ball, pas10r of the
Church of the Messiah United at the af1CniOOB comlllCIICcment Science Degree - Sarah K. tarial Technology - Mary L.
Butcher, Pomeroy; Amy R. Mann,
Methodist Church in Westerville ettelllODJ. coafamcat of the bac- Amon, MiddleporL
Collece or Education, Bache· Pomeroy; Janet S. Morris, Racine.
and a 1970 graduate of Rio Grande. calaweaJC aad asoc:iate degrees
College of Technology, Associ·
Taking a passage from Proverbs was ronducted by Dr. Barry M. lor of Science Degree - Don W.
23:7 - "As a person thinks in his or Dorsey, ... sitl! .. of lbe university. Becker, Middleport; Edward J. ate or Applied Science, Early
her heart, so they are" · Ball told The class - jii • A by llr. Ray Collins, Reedsv1lle; David A. Curf- Childhood Development the graduates that what they feel in Boggs, me univasily's vice Jnsi- man Sr., Albany; Dav1d L Deem, Kcnda D. Rizer, Racine.
College of Technology, Associ·
their hearts will be the kind of peo- dent for AcM!rmic Affairs. A wel- Racine; Kresha L. Fields, Rutland;
Lisa
M.
Pape,
Racine;
Krista
M.
come
10
tbe
class
was
given
by
ate of Applied Science, Electronple they will become in lau:r life.
"Your university delO"ee can be Jane Gau.l Peurson. president of Roush, Racine; Krista L. Sellers , ics Te&lt;hnology - Terry S. Fields,
Portland; Tabitha A. Wilt , Pomeroy ; Rodn ey L Wood, Long
used to sharpen the tools of what the Alwnni llolnl of Dim:tors.
Preseruiftl tile bcncdiclion was Pomeroy; Mary A. Winebrenner, Bollom .
you have learned," he said. "It's
College ofTe&lt;hnology, Associ·
not what you've learned that will Dr. Keitb R. Brandeberry of the Syracuse.
College
or
Mathematics
and
ate
of Applied Science, Manufac·
University
Boanl
of
Trust=.
fol·
make the ultimate difference , but
Natural
Science,
Bachelor
of
Scilowed
by
tile
playiDg
of
the
tradituring
Technology - Terry A.
how you think in your heart that
ence
Degree
Jennifer
L.
Couch,
Newsome,
Pomeroy.
tional
Pomp
tutd
CirruutiDIU.
makes the difference.
Pomeroy:
Charlolle
A.
Hart,
Associate
of Technical Studies,
The
cucmony
ended
with
the
"I want to suggest to you that we
Pomeroy ; Michi A. King. Plant Safety Assistance - Lynne
Pomeroy; Ella J. Smithern, M. Crow, Middlepon.
L1ngsviUe.
Emerson E. Evans College of
Clair Nelson
Alma Miller
Business Management, Bachelor
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Alma E. Miller, 94, formerly of
Clair 0 . NeJ&gt;m, 71. of Marion, or Science Degree - Christopher
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Middlepon, died Sunday. May 17. died on Sam-day, May 16, 1992 at S. Hanning, Middlepon; Larry W.
Evercn
Horner, Ponland and Kevm
1992 at Heartland Nursing Home hlS home.
Lavender. Syracuse; Dennis L.
Lemley,
Pomeroy.
in Marysville.
He was 1xm oo Apn121, 1915 Thornton, Langsville; Judith A.
SATURDAY
DISCHARGES ·
She was born on May 23, 1897 in Meigs County, the soo of the late Williams. Syracuse.
Allen
Lipscomb.
in Langsville. She was lhe daughter Frank and Mittie Ogdio Nelson. He
College or General Studies
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS of the laiC Anhur and Loverna Goff was a mmlber ol Olmmuniry Unit- and Liberal Arts, Associate
Arthur Barr, Pomeroy; Ruth CanRumfield. She was a homemaker ed Metbodist Church in Marion. Degree Laura L. Ellis, ter, Syracuse; and Cora Woodard,
and anended the Heath United Star Grange 718 ill Mcigs Counry. Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
Methodist Church .
and the Marion Senior Citizens.
Holzer College of Nursing,
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ·
Surviving are two sisters, Fay
He retired in I 976 from C&amp;.O Associate of Applied Science
Otis
Knopp.
Riggs of Zanesville, and Freda Bar- Railroad. where be had been
cus of Columbus; grandchildren : employed for 40 yean. and was a
Connie Browning of Columbus, 25-year residerM ol Mar ioo.
Swviving are diRe soo.s: DonPhil and Pam Weber of Plain City,
Ohio, Gary Miller of Columbus a;.! C. Ndsoo ol Malia, Oltio, Cecil
On Saturday at 2:58p.m., Middlcpon squad went to Story's Run
and Roben and Sherry Miller of R. NeiSlOII of West Chester, Ohio
Road. Neva lhle was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:30
Galloway; nine great-grandchildren and Dwight V . Nd5m, Columbus;
p.m., Middlepon squad went to Oliver Street for Clarence Boyles,
two brothers, Arcbie Nelson of
and IWO great-great grandchildren.
who was tal&lt;en to Veterans. At 3:38p.m., Racine squad went to Star
Besides her parents, she was Maumee and Edwin Nebo of
Mill Park 1n Racine for James Boso. who was treaiCd at the scene.
preceded in death by her husband, Woosta; a sisa:l". Vesaa Camde of
At 4:38 p.m., Middleport squad went to North Front Street. ·
David E. Miller; a son, Charles R. Woosta; se11t11 II'''"" hiJdren; and
Genevieve Dcmoskey was transponed to Veterans. At 7:05 p.m .,
Miller; and a brother, Archie Rum · five ~ -granddlildlm.
Tuppers Plains squad went to Reedsville and took Alberta Edwards
lksjdcs bis (JIIaiiS. be was 1ft·
field.
to Veu:rans.
Services will be held at noon on ct:d&lt;d in dcalb by bis wife. Elc:anor
On Sunday at 8:26 a.m., Rutland squad took Forrest Lee from
Wednesday at Fisher Fun&lt;ral Miller Nelson. wbo died on
Kingsbury Road to Veterans. At 9:34 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad
Home in Middlepon with burial in November 21, 1989; one grandson
went to State Route 124 in Reedsville. Curtis Cauthorn was taken to
and three sis!=.
Riverview Cemetery.
St Joseph. At II : 19 a.m., M1ddlepon squad went to Village Green
Friends may call at the runeral
Funcnl SCI vica will be held on
Apanments. Daisy Sisson was taken to Veterans. At 11:31 a.m .,
home on Wednesday morning after Tuesday a1 tO a.m. at Community
Middleport squad went to Walnut Street. Grace Call 10 Pleasant
United Methodist Cbucb with
10 a.m., until time of services.
Valley Hospital .
Rev. Robert Hrisal officiating.
At 1:17 p.m .. Pomeroy squad went to Mechanic Street for a
Charles Tyree
Burial will be in Nd5on Cemeiery
slructurc fue. Cathy Laudennih was the propcny owner. At 2:30
Charles Tyree Jr.. 61. Main near Rutland a 3 p.m. OD Tuesday.
p m.. Rutland unit went to Hysell Road Road. Cora Martin to VeterFriends may c.all on Monday
Street, Rutland, died Sunday, May
ans. At 4:02 p.m .. Rutland station went to State Route 124 for a
17, 1992 at Veterans Memor ial from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Boyd
washdown at Hilltop Grocery. At 5:03 p.m., Scipio station went to
Hospital following an extended ill- Funrot! Home. 122 West Columbia
County Road 338 at Pageville for an auto fire. At 6:37 p.m., M1d ·
Street in M31on.
ness.
dl epon squad went to Overbrook CcniCr. Stanley Roush was taken
He was born Jan. 4, 1931 1n
to Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal. At 11 :34 p.m., Racine squad went to
Pmlic Noeice
Rutland to the late Charles Tyree
Manuel Road and took Edith Manuel to Veterans.
~et:GW~OIIIeiQS
Sr. and Ollie Mae V01ers Tyree. He
On Monday at 8:2 1 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to the sheriffs
CouniJ, Cillo
was a conslruction laborer.
offocc
and took Arthur Petnc w Veterans.
EsiOIO ol Geoo1[lo C.
He is survived by two so ns.
s....,-.
=d
POMEROY . Seven calls for aSSIStan ce were an swered on Fri·
Lanny Tyree and Charles Tyree III.
Ca•-Z1460
doy &lt;lnd early Saturday by un1 ts of Meigs Emergency Scrv1ces.
both of Middleport; four daughiCrs.
Do&lt;:kt1l,hgo310
NOTICE OF APPOIIfTIIEHT
On Friday at 10:09 a.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook
Jeannie Litscomb, Pomeroy, SanOF RIIUCIARl
Center. Ralph Frank was taken to Ve te rans Memorial Hospital
dra McClure, Langsv1lle, Deidra
R - Co*, Sec. 2113.01
At 12:09 p.m .. Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry Avenue and
Hysell, La Pone, Ind., and Melissa
-on lby u. 1!192, . . . .
treated
Patricia Champion. At 12:2R p.m.. Rutland squad went to
Johnson, Middleport: a sisu:r, Opal
Meigs Coun1y PI l "*Cawt.
Beech
Grove
Road. Gerald Overturs was taken to Pleasant Valley
Tyree , Pomeroy; two brothers,
c...e No.
Bon ll EwHosp11al.
At
5:04p.m.,
Rutbnd un1ttook Cathy Payton to Veterans
James Tyree, Syracuse , and John
tnw. 101 lit IJ A¥1fMW,
from the station. At~ : 18 p.m., Ru~and squad went to Meigs Mme 2
Pomeroy. Cillo 4S1Ii9, . . .
Tyree, Middleport; his fl3flcee, Sue
appoinled • ' · ;islraiDI' of
and took John F10ncnarty to O"Bicness Mcmonal Hospital. AI
Lillie, Rutland; special friends ,
the oslote ol GoGrgia C.
10:39 p.m.. Racmc squad went to Third Street for Marion Smder,
Denise Little and Michael, of Ruts.• ._.
of
who was tre&lt;!ted at the scene
land: 12 grandchildren ; and several
7C2 East !bin 5nm, On Saturday at 653 a.m. Syracuse squ.1d went to Slate Route
nieces and nephews.
.... ,. Ohio 4519.
124
in Portland. Evercll Homer was Ulkcn to Veterans.
Bes1dcs h1s parents he was prePl'hNdge
ceded in death by three brothers.
~..ena K.. n
toad,
Roy, Ray and Robert Tyree: two
Cl«k
sisters, Ruby Hyatt and Margaret
!51 18. 2S 161 1. lTC
Barren; one granddaughiCr; and an
infant daughiCr.
Services are Wednesday at II
a.m. at Birchfield Funeral Home in
- - Co..-1 olllolgs
CouniJ, ONo
Rutland with burial in Miles Ceme Esu• of ClilD• E..
tery.
OougDs. . . -d
Friends may call at the funcral
eo.. No. 27412
home Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9
Oocllet Nlll, . . . 321/:117
NOTICE OF &amp;PPCRT11ENl
p.m.

Flexibility... ~&lt;con;_IID_·on~_rn-_..:.....;,..;;....-,
n--•

W. VA.

I

Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

Snow

'Cfl

&amp;nny

Pl Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Weather, Inc.

-----Weather---Wednesday through Friday:
South Central Obio
Wednesday, fair. Lows in the
Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
50s.
Highs in mid-70s to mid-80s.
slight chance of showers. Low in
Thur
sday and Friday, a slight
the mid 50s. Chance of rain 30 percent. Tuesday, partly sunny with chance of showers and thunder storms. Lows in upper 50s to low
the high around 75.
60s.
Highs in the 80s.
Extended forecast

i,

---------Area deaths
Clarence Boyles

Marearet Hutton

Clarence "Pop" Boyles, 79, of
Middlepon, died on Saturday, May
16, 1992 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
He was born in Middleport; the
son of the late Elmer and Anna
Hister Morris Boyles. He was a
member of the Hope Southern Baptist Churt:h in Middlepon and was
employed for 30 years with the for·
mer Coven Bakery as a breadmaker, 1ruck driver and mechanic.
Surviving are his wife, Julia
Lewis Boyles, whom he married on
December 21, 1933; a daughter,
Mrs. Joseph (Betty) Leiving of
Pomeroy; a daughter, Janice Miller
of Columbus; two sons, Charles
(Linda) Boyles, Middleport, and
Marvin (Mary) Boyles of Colum bus; 12 grandchildren; four stepgrandchildren and 17 great-grand·
children.
Besides his parents, be was pre·
ceded in death by a scm, Clarence
Boyles, Jr.
Services will be held on Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport with David
Bryan officiating. Burial will be in
Gravel Hill Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Monday from 7-9 and
until the time of service on Tuesday .

Margaret Faye Hutton, 76, State
Route 33, Pomeroy, died Sunday,
May 17, 1992, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
following an extended illness.
Born on Aug. 31. 1915 at
Pomeroy, she was the daughu:r of
the late Robert Hunnel and Dora
Hysell Hunnel.
She is surv1ved by her husband,
Chester Hutton; four daughters and
three sons-in-law, Beverly and Bob
Chapman of Syracuse; Sandra and
Bill Bretz of Columbus; Candice
and Dan Wellman, Gallipolis, and
Sherry Roush, Racine; a sister,
Betty Gilben, Springfield; seven
grandchildren, and five greatgrandchildren. and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a sisiCr, Wilalma
Kaptenia, and five brothers, John,
Marvin, Charles Edwin and Roben
Hunnel.
Graveside services will be held
at I p.m. Wednesday at the Rock
Springs Cemetery. Pastor Ira Wellman will officiale. Friends may call
at the funeral home on Wednesday
from noon until the time of services.

Sue Kell
Sue Kell. 90. of Hartford, died
Saturday, May 16, 1992, in
Pleasant Valley Hospital afiCr an
extended illness.
Born Feb. 15, 1902, in Hartford,
she was a daughiCr of the late
Roben F. and Barbara (Holt)
Knight. She was also preceded in
death by her husOOild, Edward J.
Kcll, who died in 1986, four
brothers and two sisters.
A former clerl&lt;. at Juhling's Store
in Hanford, she was a member of
the Hanford United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are a son and
daughter-in-law, Roben E. .and
Priscillia L. Kell, Gahanna, Ohto; a
sister, Bess Smith, Mason; and
several nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be Tuesday, 2
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Re~ Young
officiating. Burial will be in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday, 6 to 9
p.m., at the funeral home .

The Daily Sentinel
(tJBP811J.IM)
Published enry at\.ernoon, Monday
tlo...h Friday. l u Court Bl., .........,.

Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahina
Company/Multimedia lne., Pomeroy,
Ohio C~769, Ph. 992-2156. Second cl. .

........ ,_;.~at l"'lrnooo)', Ohio.

Member: Tbt AN&lt;ociatod !'r.o, ADd the
Ohio Newtpapef Mlodation:, National
AdY.niliDI R.epruenW.tin, Bnftham
Newapaper Salu, 733 Third Anrn...

NewYon,NewY&lt;wtt0017.

POSTMABrER: Bead cha- lo
'!'!o•·•I).UJ".'I!IIntto•!(""UI Coorl 81.,
PaaaUOJ, OIUG45181.
1111J111CIUPI'ION L\TU

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...

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tiNOLBCOPY
PBICI:
Dolly................................. ............ :!&amp; Con II

~

,....

remll in adnnce direct &amp;o The
Oailr Sentiael on • thr.. , If• « 12
montll . . . Cndil wm be li•-..t· carrier

Ill' ...,,

udl-·

No ,ubecript\ou by mai~ penniUed. in

llollh--

anll when horne umer ~e!'Yi«~ il
aftitab&amp;e.

....... Motp eo..~
w.............................................. a.a.ts
a26 w.............................................. SM.78
O.tot4ollolp Cou~

13 w..u. ........................................ nt.M

uw.............................................. W.40

=:::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
J

Wanda Lyons
Wanda L. Lyons, 53, Fourth
Stree~ Racine, died Saturday, May
16, 1992, at Grant Hospital,
Columbus.
Born on March 3, 1939 at
Letart, W.Va., she was the daughter of the laiC Ban and Ora Graham
Brinker. She was a homemaker and
a member of the Racine Baptist
Church, the Racine Fire Department Auxiliary and the Pomeroy
Eagles Auxiliary.
She is survived by her husband.
Harry R. Lyons, Sr., Racine; two
daughters and sons-in-law, Dcbo·
rah and Charles Johnston, Racine,
and Elizabeth and Charles Wolfe,
Jr., Letart; one son and daughterin-law, Harry , Jr. and Tamra
Lyons, Fort Stewart, Ga .; and a
son, Jeremy Lyons, Racine; four
grandchildren, Jonathan and Steven
Lyons, Fori Stewart, Ga., and
Christina and Stefani Johnston ,
Racine; three sisters, Ramona
Roush of Pomeroy, Rita Smith of
Darwin, and Agnes Boggess of
Letart; IWO brothers, Frank Brinker
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Harold Brinker of Pomeroy; and
her stepmother and siCpfather, John
and Louise Bacon, Racine.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Joy Clark
will officiate and burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home Monday
from 5-9.

Arminta Gill Windon
Arrninta Gill Windon, 82. Winfield, W.Va., died Saturday, May
16, 1992 at her residence, follow·
ing a brief illness.
Born May 19, 1909 at Mercer
Bottom. Mason County, W.Va.,
dalij!hter Jlf. lite late Lightbard and
Maggie Euers Gill, she was a Putnam County schoolteacher for 44
years. She was a member of the
Beale Chapel Church in Gallipolis
Ferry, the ftetired Teachers Association and the Get·Together Oub.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Chester Windon.
Surviving are a daUghter, Mrs.
Sue Ray or Scott Depot, W.Va.;
three sons, Kenneth L. Windon of
Lakeland, Aa., Bernard M. Windon
of Lake Forest, Ill., and Dale A.
Windon of Ona, W.Va.; and seven
grandchildren.
Services will be II a.m. Tues·
day in the Chapman Funeral Home,
Teaya Valley, W.Va., with the Rev.
Edwand L. Grant offteiating. Burial
will be in the Winfield Cemetery.
Friends may call at the runeral
home MondaY from 6-9 p.m.

Hospital news

EMS units answer calls

2

v-.
a

--·lore

-E.-.

Southern alumni

meeting planned
A meeting for all Southern
junior parents regardmg the South·
em Alumni will be held Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the high school cafeu:ria.
Assistance is needed for the
event and further information may
be obtained by calling Brenda
Davis at 992-7138. Anyone want ing to donate to the event is
encouraged to do so as soon as possible.

Lottery
Super Lotto
4-11 -23-27-32-42
(four, eleven, twenty -three,
twenty-seven, thirty-two, fortytwo)
Kicker
1-7·6-4-7-1
(one, seven, six, four , seven,
one)
Pick 3 Numbers
4-7-9
(four, seven, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers

-·---·

8-145

(eigh~ one,

-~

-

-·

OFADUCIARl'

Rewi-d Co*, Sec. 2111118
"On ApiV. 1!1!12, in 8le
Ueigs Counly Plolle"*Coun.
Cooello. !7C12,Lowamr0.
While,74&amp;il~lld,-•

E.

Ohio 4S7V1, -

EJ:_oi ...-

......____

-"""
.... Ciln-

ton
Dm , -M'l.
lite of 36100
Rd ~
P o -. Cillo 671111.

Paga••

-E.--

Pic' 1 Judge

Lena K.. ,.

' oat,
Clort

C5) 11. 2S (6) 1, lTC

S~AIN5 YALLEY CINEMA -,

446

~514

. .. : .

. . - /'1

Dr. Tracy Bell

Dr. BeU is a Board
Certified Family
Practitioner and will limit
her practice to out p~nt
medicine.
Her hours will be
Thesdays
I :00 to 7:00p.m.
and
Fridays
I :00 to 5:00p.m.

Appointments may be made by calling

Meigs Health Services
.._DD5 :rrw:mziiN
'1'1111 tam 11111 .,.. . . . , . . .
ua:n ~ a ~ma

c~l"'

'

zero, five)

James Witherell, M.D.
and
Wilma Mansfudd, M.D.
.
are announcrng
that Dr. Tracy Bell, M.D., joined their
practice in April and is accepting new
patients.

ltlDIJ

Pomeroy
992-6601

..,

�Monday, May 18, 1992

The Daily ~~!!!~~!

Sports
.fall 5-4 to Phillies
Brink gets victory in big-time debut
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Philadelphia Phillies were begin ning to think they'd cornered the
market on blown leads.
Rob Dibble and the Cincinnati
Reds' defense let them know
they're not alone.
A wild Dibble let the Phillies
overeome a two-run deficit in the
ninth, and a botched pop-up gave
them the run they needed for a 5-4
victory Sunday.
"We've lost a few like that,"
John Knik said. "We've seen a lot
of balls drop in front of the outfield
and over the infield, so it's not 100
$!range. It's just good to be on the
uther side."
The Phillies' injury-decimated
pitching staff hasn't been very
adept at holding leads. The bullpen
has just six saves in 36 games,
blowing five chances.
That's why it was satisfying to
watch Dibble and company strugile in the ninth.
Dibble (0-1) inherited a 4-2 lead
from Greg Swindell, who pitched
one of his best games for the Reds.
The left-bander struck out a season-high nine over 7 l/3 innings
before tiring in the 8(Hlegree heaL
Dibble had saved all five
cha nces since recovering from
shoulder tendinitis in spring training . His fastball is back in th e
upper 90s, but his control sometimes is still back in spring tram ing.
"I just dido 't have it," be said.
"That's the bottom line . Some times you don't have u. It's my
fault we lost."
Steve Lake opened the ninth
with a single, and Dibble walked
Mickey Morandini and Wally
Backman on four pitches each to
load the bases. He then fell behind
3-1 on Lenny Dykstra, who could
wait for something to handle.
He got a strike and lined ll to
center for one run. Mariano Dun -

can did the same thing, tying it at 4
with his single to left.
That ended Dibble's perfor mance and was mere! y the prelude
to the game's biggest mistake.
Norm Charlton relieved and got
Dave Hollins to pop up to shallow
right field . Second baseman Bill
Doran had a long way to run
because the inHeld was plavinR in
with none out. He pulled up when
he saw right fielder Paul O'Neill
charging in. But O'Neill pulled up,
too, Ieuing it ball untouched to
break the tie.
Manager Lou Piniella blamed
O'Neill. The right fielder didn ' t
argue.
"The ball's got to be caught. It
hurts to lose a game t.hat way."
0 ·Neill said. "If I had a chance to
play it over again, I'd come steaming in and catch the ball."
Hollins didn't see the ball drop.
He was berating himself for hitting
a shallow fly when a deeper one
was needed to get the run in.
"It wasn't deep enough," he
said. "We were JUSt lucky. We'll
take it. We 've had a few snatched
rrom us."

The comeback also saved Brad
Brink from a loss in his majorleague debut. Brink, 27, was tlhe
Phillies' No. I draft choice in June
1986 out of USC, but has been
slow getting to the major leagues
because of reconsuuctive shoulder
surgery in 1989.
''I've waited a long time for
this, " he said. "It's excitin~ . "
Too exciting for a wh1le. The
Reds batted around in the second,
when Brink gave up a pair of walks
around a bunt single by Ouis Sabo
to load the bases. Brink then hit Joe
Oliver to force in a run. Swindell
followed with an RBI s1ngle and
Bip Roberts singled home two
man:.
Brink's nerves got to h1m.
"I tried to keep it under control
(See NL on Page 5)

Scoreboard
In the majors .. _

diner 2-1), ?J$ p.m.
Oak la nd (Moore 4 - 2) at Ballunore

(Su\CWTd -2). 7:35p.m.
Tnu (Brown 5-J) 11 Clrul.nd

NATIONAL LEAGUE
[ultm Dl•llkMI
W L
~L

Tum

.. 23 13
22 IS

PioiObwJh ...
St l.CJUil ..

639
S9 5

GB
I

5

NcwYcd ..

. 21 11

.sn

MonlJUl ....

16 18
16 20

47 1
444

6
7

l "i 20

429

75

~~J~ ·

Western DMPon
S111 FnnC.Co .... 20 16
S:'i6
San Dicto ....... .20 17
S41
Clnd•n~U ---- 18 18
.SOt
AUanu
.. 17 22
416
Houll.m
16 21
4)2
Ia Anplet
I J 10
394

J

(Xuddu l""), 7:15 p.1111 .
MUwauluz (Wcpnan 2-4 )
(Kons 2·3). 7.35 p.m
Km~u

( Mas;n&amp;n~.c

City

11

0. 3)

Dctro tt

a l 0.1u

go ( Mceuk.ill 2-J), I O"i p m

Tutsday's gamts
Cah/omu (B iykvc:n 0-0) a l New Ylrl
(Sandenorl J.1), 1 JO p .m
Sc..nle (Sw~.t~ 2-"i) al Roam (Hca.lu:iil

5
l
0
4'
55

0.2) , 7 l "i pm.
O..LI.Ind (Sluunk.1 ) . ] ) at Ba.llJmore
(Mc.a 1-J), 7J "i

p.m.

Sm Francaoo 2, OUcago 0
Clnclnull 6, Phlladtlphla ~
San Dqo I 0, JliwbJ.rgh 9

2- 1) at T oronLO
tS ucb l -3). 1JS p.m.
Tuu (P•"IIk 1-1) at Clurl111d
(0Uo l.J), 7:l5 ,_... ,
Mihwau.koc (R . RCJbuuclol (}-0) 11 De
trot! (Tanana D). 7 :JS p.m.
Kanau Ctty (Af'I"'U J -1) at Cluuao
(lloosh (). l ), 8 M p m

Mootrul 7, A.Lllrn• I
H~l. SL laW2
Lot Anac.la 2, Nc• Y o~

NBA playoffs

Saturday's scores

0

MtnnaiOUI

Saturday's K'Ort

Sunday's scores

C ot~f.-ann.ws

S111 Dlqo 6. PuubwJ,h 5
Mool.tfA1 S, All&amp;nu 4

Ponl and I \J, Utah &amp;1 , Pnnl.a.nd lud
1cna ] .{I

Pttlladelphll 5, ClndnniU 4

SL Louu 7, HOJAOn 5
loll An3clC1 6. New Yolk 1
0ua 10 4. San Fran!;IKO )

Sunday't scom

Today'• games
Clnclnull (R1jo t -J) al Montrul

(GardJier }-1 h I :35 p.m.
llw11.0r1 (J. J(lf)(31 Q..O) at Ptulack:Jpru.a

( Oflfuftlft ~1naa11
C itutlnd 122, BotiOII lt4, Clutiand wiN Mttel 4-)
O UCIJO 11 0, New Yod I I. ClllCIJO
WIN llalll:t 4 - J

Futurt games

(AbboU ()-6), 7 33 p.m

Sl . Louu (01 lw me 4- l ) at At1•n11
(Lc:ilnndl :}. 2) , 1 4() p m

Ne•

(Manomt~~

Yor'l (Goodell-]) 11 S.an Dleto

(Hun1 2-J) . I O:OS p.m
Oue~ao {CutJlo 1-3) at Lo. Anaellll
(Ke.Orou I -J), 10 . 3~ p.m

Cot~rtrtflce nu~a

T••daJ - C\.fuland a1 Ch~ I
p .m .; Uuh 11 Portl.nd . I (}: )0 p.m
Th~trtdaJ

-

CM,...lud II C lrlkaco,

·~ ...

Stanley Cup playoffs

Tuesday's games
C\ndnna.tl (ltammond J -2) al Mon -

lreaJ (H•Myl-1), 7:.J! p.m.
HoWl ton (8 Henry 0- ) ) 11 Pluhdd
phil (Schillil1(_2·2), 7.35 p m.
Sl. Lo\ul (lcwlt1bury 4-1) 11 At\&amp;n LI
(SmolL1 J..J ), 7 40 pm
New York (Cone J- 2) 11 S•n OtCJ O
(Melendez 4-1), I0:05 p .m
au~ao (Bc.ltte 4-2) at Lot An gela

W«kend scorn
Sawrdliy - Chw;,iao I , F..dm01 ~&lt;.w~ 2.
lead. ~ 1.0

Ouc:~~ao

St.tfUhJ - PltllhurJtt ... 8!»lal 3. OT .

PluabwJh le.diiCnOI 1 0

Fulure a:ames

(HentWer 2- ~). J()-]l p.m

Tonl1hl I ]~ p.m

P'lwburah (Dnbcl J-2) al SU1 Fran·
a.co(Willon J-2), 10:35 p.m

pm

ru.ct.,. -

Edmonton

Bolwn

It

ll

f: hi CIJO.

Plw~r-Jh . 1 ]~

Transaclions
AMERICAN LEAGUF:
l.aatem [)h.llloft
T.....
W L
Pd.
Baltimon: ......... ... 2A 12 .6111
TOflll'llO ..... ....... .25 I4
64 \
New Yt;d ............. 19 17 .S2!
8•10\.... ... ......... 16 17 .41S
WiJwaLW:c .... ........ 16 II
411
()droi1. ................... 16 20
444
c~...,.d

_____ u zs

.34t

8150ball
GB

Amerkan Lape
BO STON REO SOX - 1\ ( t tv ated

5
5

John Dof-on, pudte r, and Mlie Grncnwell , oulftcldu Opl.loned Paer ll oy.
p1leher. 10 Plwn~cka Df lhc: lncanauonal
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Saturday'oororOI
Ooklulol6. N.., Yooi1
s..al.1, Toron10 6

M,.......,.,
an•..t'
JoWw"*-!_l .!uu 4
1

DETROIT TIGERS - Placed Al.an
T ruruneU, lhoruWJp, on lhe IS·cby dis ·
•bled lilt. Pun:hued the Cltlrltncl of Kurt
Knudsen . pttcher, from Toledo of lhe
"'mcrie&amp;r~ AIIOC'iation_

MILWAUKEE BREWEitS - 1'\a&lt;od
AdnJ A.Uanwn. ca~hcr, oa llle I S-d•y
d1ubled !..at. Recalled OIYe Nilu011,
caldw!r, &amp;om Dr:n.... ollfte A.maicul A•
IOClatiOII.

NEW YORK YANKEES - Pur challed the eontnct af Shawn Hillep1.
piu:hcr, from Col\lrnbu• (}( lhe lnwna·
tiona! t..aaue . Optioned Jllr John1oa,
pitcher, _to Columbu. Phced And}
S~ . in6clda', on lhe IS-day dia-

oblod liiL R"""" MilrAI GoJqo, ioofidol·

-iz

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•. tr..•nii•Wiillil

Doaoll7. it.- ~J l

d Jltib Jdfooal and l.uoe McCullen, pile.hen, from Ctiahmaa Cily of

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TeUAl. MiJwtuiet I, 10 inninp

Today'•r•m••

MinneiGU (lruepr 4·0) '' Toronto
(Mooto ol-2), l :I$ p.m.
OUlomit (FWeyl-1) at New Yolk
(Cadu•d·l),1:10 p.m.
SuUio (Ill""'" J-l)" a....... (OarI

m~

1.

TI!XAS RAN&lt;JI!IU - P\udwod lhe
ggntt&amp;U

the A-merican Auaeiation Ser'll Terry
~WI.

piLch.-. 10 Oklahoma Gty. Orsipai.Cd Dou1 O.vi1, Cltcher, for uaip ·
"""L

NetktMILHcue
CINCrNNATI RfDS- Atduled.

Hal Morrll, nr11 ltutmn, from I.e
dlubltd lilt. OptkNMd Mill Hill, pllch~tr, 10 NuhYIIIC! d ttM Amerkan All«l·

etlon.

LOS ANOELES DODGERS -

Placed Dan)l Stnwberry, oucliclcicr, Cll

lhe IS ·d•y diubled lilt. rctlOicti.-&amp;: to
May14. Aa:ivatod le1 Dtnicll, fial baJo.
nw1 ,

fnm U. diablod lUl

In the NBA playoffs,

Bulls, Cavs to meet in conference finals
By JOE MOOSHIL
CHICAGO (AP) - It was a
tough series that took a lot out of
the Chicago Bulls . But now that
it's over, they can be thankful to
the New York Knicks.
:'It hardened us for the next
senes and the series after that, ••

Reds squander lead,

Michael Jordan said after scoring
42 points Sunday to lead a I 10-81
rout in the seventh and final game
of the Eas~rn Conference semifinals. "Give New York credit for
giving us a wake-up call; we were
sleep walking."
The Bulls felt the pressure of

Charlotte Hornets get
O'Neal in NBA lottery

Amber Cumings, Michelle McCoy, Raberta Caldwell, Christi Maid·
ens and Jodi Caldwell. In the back row are Michelle Brown,
Heather Hill, Marcy Hill, Angie Swiger, Megan Wolfe, Marcy
Mathews and Jessika Codner.

SOUTHERN SOFTBALL TEAM- The Southern softball team,
coached by Howie Caldwell, turned in a I(). II record for tbe season,
earning sectional runner-up honors in the tournament. Pictured are
(front row. L-R) Heather McPhail, Aime Mills, Amber Ohlinger,

Nier, Conley among KC Raceway winners
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
KC Raceway personnel proudly
exclaimed, "The fourth time's a
charm!" as beauJiful springlike
weather brought out a large crowd
and full field of cars for Saturday's
season opener, which saw Piketon 's Jim Nier win the Super Sprint
fealure and Wheelersburg's Del mas Conley take the Late Model
main, whil e Cmleville's Mike
W1lson won the Street Stock divi sjon.
Three times the opener had been

postponed by rain .

Mike Bowling set fast time of
11:999, just three-tenths of a sec ond off Kevin Huntley 's unlimited
sprint record of II :672.
From the onset, the sprint feature was both fast and furious with
pole-siller Mike Imler of Chi ll icothe taking the lead for the first
seven laps.
Nier took the lead from David
Snell on the 13th circuit and never
looked back, although Harry Garrett and Snell were within serious
striking dtstance at the finish.
Rounding ou t the top 10 were Mike
Imler, Rick Holley. Mike Bowling,

Indy 500 lineup posted
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
lineup for the May 24 Indianapolis
500, listing driver , hometown or
country, car number , cha ss isengine. and four-lap average speed
in m•les per hour (r-Rookic)
Row I
I. Roberto Guerrero, San Juan
Capistrano, Calif., No. 36, LolaDuJCk, 232.482.
2. Eddie Cheever, Aspen, Colo.,
No . 9, Lola -Ford Cosworth ,
229.639.
3 Mario Andretti, Nazareth. Pa ..
No . 2, Lola -Ford Cosworth ,
229.503.
Row 2
4. Ane Luyendyk , Netherlands,
No . 6. Lola -Ford Cosworlh ,
229 127.
5. Gar y Bettenhau sen , Mon ro v.a , Ind ., No. 51, Lola-Bui ck,
228.93 2.
6. Michael Andrctti , Nazareth,
Pa., No . I. Lola -Ford Cosworth ,
228.!69 .
Row3
7. Scott Brayton , Coldwater.
Mi ch., No . 22 , Lola -Bu1 c k,
226.142.
8. Danny Sulli van , Aspe n,
Colo.. No. 18, Galmer -Chevy A,
224.838
9. Rick Mears, Jupiter, Ra . No.
4, Pcnske -Chcvy B. 224 .594 .
Row4
10. Bobby Rahal , Dublin, Ohio.
No. 12, Lola-Chevy A. 224 .158.
II. Emerson Fittipald1, Ilrazli .
No. 5, Penske-Chevy B. 223607.
12. AI Unser Jr .. Albuquerque,
N.M., No . 3 , Galmer-Chevy A,
222.989.
RowS
I 3 Stan Fo&gt;, Janes ville, W1 s.,
No. 91. 1991 Lola-BuiCk , 222.867.
14. John Andretti. lnd•anapol1s,
No. 8, Lola -Chevy A, 222.644.
15 . r-Eric Bachelart, Belg1um .
No. 19. 1990 Lola-Buick, 221.549.
Row6
16. r-Philippe Gache , France,
No . 44 , 1991 Lola -Chevy A.
221.496.
17. Scott Pruell. Dublin, Ohio,
No . 10, Truesports-Chevy A,
220.464.
18. John Paul Jr., West Palm
Beach. Fla .. No. 93 , 1990 LolaBuiCk, 220.244.
Row7
19. r-Paul Tracy, Canada, No. 7,
1991 Penske-Chevy A, 219.751.
20. Jeff Andrelll, Nazareth, Pa.,
No. 48, Lola-Chevy A, 219.306.
21. Jim Crawford, Scotland. No.
26, Lola-Buick, 228.859.
Row8
22 . AI Unser, Albuquer9u e,
N.M., No . 27, Lola-Bu1ck,
223.744 .
23 AJ. Foyt, Houston. No. 14,
Lola-Chevy A, 222.798.
24. Buddy Lazier, Vail, Colo.,
No. 21, 1990 Lola-Buick. 222.688.
Row9
25. Raul Boesel, Brazil. No. II ,
Lola-Chevy A, 222.434.
26. r-Brian Bonner. Boston, No.
39. 1991 Lola-Buick, 220.845.
27. r-Lyn St. James, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., No. 90, 1991 LolaChevy A, 220. I SO.
Row 10
28. r-Jirnmy Vasser, Discovery
Bay, Calif., No. 47, 1991 LolaChevy A, 222.3 13.

29. Dom1n1 c Dobson. Fairfax .
Cahf., No. 68, 1991 Lola-Chevy A,
220.359.
30. Tom Snev a, Parad1 se Val Icy, Ari z., No . 59, 1991 Lo laBuick. 219 .737.
Row II
31. Gordon Johncock, Hastmgs,
Mi ch., No. 92. 1991 Lola-Buick,
219.288 .
32. r·Tcd Prappas, Los Angeles,
No. 31, 1991 Lola -Ch evy A,
219.173.
33 . Sco1 1 Goodyear , Canad a,
No. 15, Lela-Chevy A, 221.801.
Ftc ld average - 22 3.479
(Record ; former record 218.590,
1991)
Former winners (I 0) - Mario
Andr clll, Aric Luycndyk, Danny
Sulliv an. Rick Mear s , Bobby
Rahal , Emerson Fillipaldi, AI
Un ser, A.J . Foyt, Tom Sncva, Gordon Johncock.
Rook1cs (7) - Eric Bachclan.
Plullppc Gache, Paul Tracy, Bnan
Bonn er, Lyn St. Jame s, Jm1my
Vasser, Ted Prappas.
Youngest - Paul Tracy , 2l
Oldest - AJ . Foyt, 57.
Defending champion .- Ric k
Mears.
Chassis - Lola 27. Pcnske 3.
Gal mer 2, Trucsports I.
Engines - Chevy-A 15, Buick
12, Ford Cosworth 4, Chevy-B 2.

Steve McCann, Kenny Kimbler,
Tyke K1stler and Tim Jodrey.
Bowling ~arne back off the t.ail in
rim -riding fashion to post a strong
sixth.
Bowling came off the tail to
claim the f11st heat over Mike Imler
and Ki stler, while Nier won the
second over Rick Holley and C.J.
Holley.
Delmas Conley took the lead
from Scoll Wolfe in the McDon ald ' s of Gallipolis/Henderson Ebers' Citgo #14 on the fourth lap
to drum the Late Model win over
defending track champion Craig
Leist of Piketon.
Jeff Houser, who took third, was
followed by fellow Chillicothe
driver Mark Frazier. Scott Wolfe.
Tony Throckmorton . Wellston' s
Don Clark. John Osman , Duane
Ackley, Charlie Seymour and Neal
McCreary followed them.
Wellston 's Don Clark also had a
great showing in h1s Don's Body
Shop # 1 A late race inc1dent
knocked Clark out of a strong
third-place run.
Heal winners were Greg Stevens
and Charlie Seymour.
Mike Wilson claimed the Street
Stock main over former champ
Barry Bragdon, Brian Conkle. Bob
Callahan and B1ll McElfresh.
Heat winners were Barry Brag ·
don and M1ke Wilson.
This week, May 23 KC will
hold its Memorial Day champi o nships and ne•t we ek ho st a
$2 ,500 to win STARS Spring SO
for Late Mode ls and Super Sprints
SUMMARY
Super Sprints
Fast 11m e: Mike Dowling
II 999
F1rs1 Heat: M1ke Bowling, M1kc
Imler. Tyke Kistler, David Snell.
SECOND HEAT Jim Ni cr.
R1 ck Holley, C.J Holle y and Steve
McCann .
FEAT URE : Nicr. Harry Garrett , Snell, Mike Im ler, R1ck Holley, Bow li ng, McCann, Kenn y
K1mbl er. Ki stl er, Jodrey, Mark
Imler, John Webb , C.J. Hol ley .
Boone Davis, Roger Mossbarger ,

Dave Dickson, Steve Dickson,
Rick Cordell.
Late models
FAST TIME : Delmas Conley
14 :164
FIRST HEAT: Greg Stevens,
Jeff Houser . Don Clark, Scott
Wolfe
SECOND HEAT Charlie Seymour, Mark Frazier, Tony Throckmorton. Duane Ackley.
FEATURE : Conley, Craig
Leist, Jeff Houser, Mark Frazier, S.
Wolfe, Tony Throckmonon, Clarit,
John Osman, Ackley, Seymour,
Neal McCreary, Ron Adams, Greg
Stevens, John Dunsmith, Terry
Hudnell, Donnie Kennison, Glick.
Street stocks
FIRST HEAT: Barry Bragdon.
Larry Brisker, Bill McElfresh,
Brian Conkle.
SECOND HEAT: Mike Wil son , Bnan Hammond, Bob Callahan , Barry Brisker.
FEATURE: Wilson, Bragdon,
Conkle, Callahan, Carl Coleman ,
McElfresh, Larry Brisker, Dave
Greeno, Richard Johnson, Steve
Bobo, Tommy Mossbarger, Fred
Hardbarger. John Reese, Roy
Coder, Brian Hammond, Keith
Denny, Barry Brisker, Thurman
Zimmerman, Butch Owings and
Jerry Bragg .

- - Sports briefs Track and field
MO DESTO, Calif. (AP) M1 ke Powell came within two
•n ches of h1 s world long JUmp
record Saturday. soaring 29 feet 2
1/2 inches at the S&amp; W Modesto
Invitational. Joe Greene finished
second with a wind - a~ded jump of
28-1 1(2
Andre Cason won the 100
meters in a wind-aided 9.88, twohundredths of a second off Carl
Lewis' record . In women ' s sprmts,
In ger Miller of Southern Cal took
the 100 in a wind-aided 10.9.
Gail Deevers captured the
women ' s 100 hurdles in 12.75 .
Tony Dces won the men' s 110 high
hurdles in 13 .08. the fastes1 lime
th1s year.

THE NAVY.

By HAL BOCK
SECAUCUS, NJ. (AP) - Last
week, Allan Bristow, coach of the
Charlotte Hornets, was asked about
the NBA l01tery and what he might
do if he happened to get the No. 1
pick.
"He said the village idiot could
make the pick," said Pat Williams,
GM of the Orlando Magic. who
owns the option. "I appreciate
Allan's confidence in me.'
Probability worked for Williams
Sunday when the Magic, equipped
with the second worst record in the
league this season and the second
most chances at No. I, came away
with the top prize in the Iouery LSU's 7-foot-1 All-American
ShaquiUe O'Neal.
"Based on ability, size,
strength, power and potential, he is
the class of the dra:t," Williams
said.
Bristow, with just four ping
pong balls in the lottery drum, ~ot
lucky and won the No. 2 pick. 'If
Orlando passes on O'Neal for some
reason, we'd take him," the Hornet
coach said.
He must really believe in that
village idiot business.
Williams is not passing, despite
rumors that O'Neal, who will cost
upwards of $6 million a year,
would prefer to play in Los Angeles. Because the Clippers and Lakers were playoff teams this season,
they did not participate in Sunday's
louery. The only way O'Neal could
get there would be to sit out the
season and return to the draft nex I
year. If he sits out two seasons, he
would be an unresuicted free agent.
"Everybody else wants to come
to Orlando," Williams said. "I
don't know any players in the
league who wouldn't want to play
in Orlando.

being forced mto a Game 7, and
the~ responded like champions.
'Michael rose to the occasion,"
said coach Phil Jackson. "Our
whole defensive effort in the sec ond half rose to a higher leveL The
series was a good test for us . It
woke us up and will make us ready
for the next series."
The next series. against the
Cleveland Cavaliers, who defeated
Boston 122-104 earlier Sunday in
their Game 7, will open in Chicago
with games Tuesday and Thursday
nights.
Game 2 of the Western Conference final will be held TuesdaY.
witlh Utah at Portland. The Tra1l
Blazm won the series opener 11388 on Saturday.
The Bulls wrned the screws on
the Knicks in the second half after
leading 56-51 at halftime. They
outscored the Knicks 54-30 in the
last two periods to win going away.
"Their pressure, shot-blocking
and aggressiveness flattened us out
totally in the third quarter," Knicks
coach Pat Riley coach.
"Our backs were against the
wall and we felt the pressure," said
Jordan. "We wanted to get out of
the blocks early. we wanted to be
aggressive."
And it was Jordan who saw that
the Bulls got going quickly. He
scored the firSt six points and had
18 at the end of the fi!St quarter to
put Chicago on top 30-25. The
Bulls never trailed af~r that.
However, an 11-point lead melted to 60-57 when Pauick Ewing hit
two successive shots early in the
third quaner.
Although Ewing, who led the
Knicks with 22 points, said his
injured left ankle did not bother

him Riley said, "Patrick wasn't
100 'percent. You could see on his
shot that he came up short. However, I think he proved to all whal a
great warrior he is.''
Also proving his worth and
playing on an injured n~ht ankle
was Scottie Pippen. Maligned for
not playing tough du~ing some
games of the se~es, P1ppen finished with 17 pomts, II rebounds
and II assists.
Jordan and Xavier McDaniel
JOstled each other and drew tcehnicals in the Hrst period.
"I felt he was trying to intimida~ Scottie," said Jordan. "I knew
I'd get a teChnical ."
McDaniel, who scored 14 points
Sunday and was a key in helping
the Knicks tie tlhe series at three
games each, said, "I have no hard
feelings. We are disappointed, but
Chicago played a heckuva game.
They played very hard."
Cavaliers 122, Celtics 104
In RichHeld, Ohio. Brad Daugherty scored 16 points in the opening
period and Cleveland never let up
as the Cavaliers advanced to the
Eastern Conference Hnals for only
the second time in franchise history.
The Cavs shot 73 percent in the
fliSt quarter, and Boston never got
closer than 10 points after that.
Cleveland blew it open by sinking
10 straight shots from the field in
the third quarter - the last three oo
long jumpers by Larry Nance for a 93-67 lead.
Daugherty had 27 points, nine
rebounds, six assists and three
blocks before leaving to an ovation
with 8:24 left. Reggie Lewis led
the Celtics with 22 points.

"We're the LA of the east, anywa y. "
If Williams is not scared off by
the money or the rumors that
O'Neal won't sign, Bristow said
the Hornets, picking No. 2, would
lean toward Alonzo Mourning of
Georgetown.
"Barring any flaws, we've got
to f1ll a void with a defensive presence, and that means it's more
toward Mourning," Bristow said.
"We're 95-96 percent certain. but I
don't want to say deHni~Iy until
we bring him in and see how he fits
in with the Hornets."
If Williams and Bristow follow
those plans, Minnesota, picking
third, would likely wind up with
Player of the Year Ouistian Laettner of Duke. The Timberwolves,
with I I balls in the draft drum, had
the best chance at No. I because of
their 15-67 record, worst in the
lea¥ue.
'If you have the most chances
and don't get No. 1, you'd rather it
was some other way." Minnesota
president Bob Stein said . "But
genenslly, all things considered, it's
EYES ON THE PRIZE - Cln eland rorward Joba Williams
a fair sustem. II does what it's
(rigbt) keeps bis eyes locked on the boop as BOSioa frootmaa Kevin
in~nded to do and that's the way it
Mella~ tr!ts I~ stop him during Sunday's NBA srrood-round play,
should be.
orr
finale 10 RIChfield , Ohm, whlrh thr Cavalit&gt;rs ...on 122-10-lto
"We've got the third pick, and
we've never been higher than si•th.
._....:&lt;_Co_n_ti_nu_ed_rro_m_P_ag.::.e_4_:_l_ _ _ _ _rJa_i_m_tb_e_se_r_ies._&lt;_
A_Pl_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __
so from t.hat standpoint we'll be
selec ling higher than we ever have.
Andy Benes (4 -3) con unued 10
f.xp!l'i S, Bnnes 4
Tony Gwynn, Gary Sheffield and
Thai should put us in good position as much as I could. It's tough. Fred McGriff - went 22 for 51 pitch well away from home. chec kAI
Atlanta.
Montreal roughe4
he said.
to bring in a player thai will give us though,"
up
T
·m
Glavu.:,
who was 1rymg 10
ing
the
Pirales
on
three
runs
and
He wound up allowing seven with 15 RB!s.
some help."
boxome
the
NL
's
fU"SI se ven-game
seven
hits
m
7
2[l
inrun
gs.
Benes
11
"This is the first series all year
hits, three walks and four runs in
The lot~ry determined the top siot
wmn
er.
as
the
h
pos beat th·e
iMings. The Phillies' I~ rally where everything 's clicked: the 4-1 witlh a 1.84 ERA on the road.
three picks. The remaining eight
Randy Myers p1tched the final slumping Braves in a game Interpitching, the hitting, the defense,"
non-playoff teams will draft in left him with a big smile af~r the said Gwynn, who has 13 hits in his two-thirds of an IMJOg for hiS II th rupted by a be nch-clea rin g con inverse order of last season's won- game.
"A long time ago I learned that last 24 at-bats . "This is the first save, allowing a two-run double to fronwion .
loss records with Dallas fourth, if you keep your team close, time all season where we're play- Jay Bell with two OUI 10 the nmth .
A1lanUJ relieve r Kent Mercker
Denver fift.h, Washington siuh,
ho
t
Marq uis Gn ssorn on the hand
Andy
Van
Slykc
struck
OUI
to
end
got a chance to win," he ing like I thought we could be playSacramento seventh, Milwaukee you've
w11
h
an 0-2 polch '" th e S ~&gt;lh
the
game.
said. ··After that second inning, I ing . We went wild in this series."
eighth, Philadelphia ninth, AtlanLa was proud of the way I fmished . I
mmn
g,
causmg bot h be nches to
Pirates sLatlCr Rand y Tomhn (4 The Padres, who won seven of
lOth and Houston I I th.
pour
omo
1he f1cld. No punches
II on their road trip, trail first- 3). whose ERA has chmbcd from
finished strong."
were
thrown
and O&lt;dcr was quickty
Mike Hartley (1-0), making his place San Francisco by one-half 1.67 to 4.46 in his last four startS .
took a 2-1 lead into the fifth. but re stored.
first appearance since returning game in the NL West.
In four mnmgs, Glav me (6-l )
left after retiring onl y one of Jh c
Sheffield
each
Fernandez
and
from a pulled hamstring, pitched a
gave
up five runs oo seven hilS. He
seven
batters
he
fac
ed
1
n
the
perfect eighth for the victory . have 10-game hitting streaks, going
"alkcd
throe .
inning
.
Mitch Williams finished for his a combined 37 for 85.
fourth save, striking out two of the
bined for those totals.
three baiters he faced.
The only disappointment for the
Despite a shaky start, senior
hurler Casey Staton settled down Phillies was an injury to Kruk. The
by fanning 12 and walking four in National League's leading hitter
a complete-~ame effort while get- (.383) strained groin muscles while
ung some b1g plays in the outfield running out an infield single, and
to help preserve the North Gallia came out of the game an inning
Win .
later.
Kruk said he might be able to
Gelling the Pirates' hits were play in spi~ of the injury.
Rob Canady (2-3), Staton (1 -2),
"If I can swing, I'll play, " he
Larry Burris, Shane Hollanbaugh, said. "It's not like I steal bases
Tom Meade (all 1-3) and Chris anyway, so I'm not going to worry
Toler (1 -4). Eastern's hitters were about it."
Wes Holter (2-3), Tim Bissell (1-2.
double), Durst (1-3), Mike Smith
Elsewhere in the NL it was San
(1-4. double) McGuire and Pat Diego 6, PiliSburgh 5; Montreal 5.
Newland (both 1-4).
Atlanta 4; St. Louis 7, Houston 5;
Eastern finished 14-2 overall Los Angeles 6, New York 3; and
and was league champion at 11-1. Chicago 4, San Francisco 3.
Last week EHS was ranked I7th in
Padres 6, Pirates S
the state in Division IV.
The San Diego Padres head
North Gallia, 9-6. will advance home with all ,.,n.s of streak&lt; &lt;Jill
to the disuict fmals Wednesday at going stroog.
5 p.m. against Portsmouth Notre
The Padres completed a threeDame- a 1-0 winner over Lynch- game weekend sweep of the div• burg Clay .
smn-leading Pittsburgh Pirates with
During the game, Collins was a 6-5 victory Sunday at Three
well on his way to becoming a Rivers Stadium.
happy father, adding to an already
San Diego fmished the serie s
hectic weekend in which he gradu- with 25 runs and 38 hits in the
ated from the University of Rio three games as the f11st four batters
Grande.
in its order- Tony Fernandez,

NL gameS ..

North Gallia beats Eastern
13-9 in D-IV district tourney
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
"When it rains it pours!"
That's what Eastern High
School baseball coach Eddie
Collins was echoing this weekend
as his Eastern Eagles fell to a 13-9
defeat at the hands of North Gallia
Saturday in the Division IV district
baseball tournament at Athens
High School.
Jack James' Pirates, minus three
seniors on the senior trip and one
player because to an ejection, not
only fmished the game with a total
of nine players, but they soundly
defeated the Eagles.
Eastern went up 2-0 in the fliSt,
but Eas~m suffered control problems, allowing North Gallia to tie it
at 2-2.
Eastern went ahead 4-2 in the
second, and 6-2 in the top of the
third. but a disasterous third inning
for veteran Eastern pitching saw
North Gallia go ahead 8-6 with a
six run third inning. The Pirates
never looked back.
On the night, Eastern pitching
walked an uncharacteristic II batters, fanned eight and gave up
seven hits. Jeff Durst. Terry
McGu11e and Tim Bissell com-

The

Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

THANKS!

THEY'RE OUT THERE FOR YOU.

Thank you for attending our
annual Open House last Sunday as we
marked the opening of National Hospital
Week and National Nursing Homes Week.
We loved having you come out and we
sincerely hope that you found the afternoon
not only enjoyable but educational.

•

We are your Hometown Hospital and we are
here to serve you- day in, day out, year in,
year out.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

fMiJ

When called upon they're usually the first to get there, and
often the last to leave . They like the challenge and satisfaction
that comes from doing an important job for their country.
They're the men and women of the United States Navy.
They're out there for you.

IT'S YOUR NAVY.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

!

115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy
992·2104

,,

11

DECISION 92"
1

THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1992
Advertising Deadline:
Friday, May 22, 1992
12 Noon
Call Dave or P.J.
For More Information, 992·2155

�~
r---~~~·-'r~y~1_8~,_1~
----~--p---------------------·------~P~o~m~e~r~oy~
--Midd_le~po
~rt~,_O_h_lo______________________________~The~~~~ly~Se~n~tl~n~ei__P~a~g~e-,7

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Monday, May 18,1992

Page--6

·Legions announce delegates and Guilt is a major factor whenever
·alternates for Buckeye Girls State there is a suicide; group support

SHERYL THOMA

STEPHAN1E PRICE

HEATHER
FRANCKOWIAK

LORI KELLY

NANCY NALLY

BOBBIE WHITE
MEIG S · The 46t h annua l
American Lcgron Auxtlt ary Buck·
eye Girls Sl1te Government Scm r·
nar will be held June JJ.2Q on the
.:ampu s of Ash land Unrvcrsity rn
Ashland .
Auxi li ary units fr om Pome roy
· and Middleport have selec ted their
delega tes and al tcr natcs, all of
w hom arc

m

their

J UiliDr

LINDA CHAPMAN

year,

10

Buckeye Girls State.
From the Am e ri ca n Lcg ron
Feene y Bennett Auxiliary Un II No.
11R delegates and alternates arc,
accordin g to Katie Gilmore, Amcr·
1c..anJsm c halmlan for the auxiliary:
· Stepha ni e Price, Mctgs Hr gh
School, delegate, daughter of Steve
anrl Kathy Pnce, Pomeroy.
Shery I Thoma , Mer gs Hr gh
School, alternate. daughter of Guy
· , a nd Ellen Thoma, Rutland .
·- · Lmda Chapman. Mcrgs Hrgh
~ - S"chool , delegate. dau ghter of Joe
a nd Marge Chapman , Mtddleport .
· Lon Kel ly, Meigs Hrgh School,
a lte rnate. daughter of Thomas and
Jean Kell y. Mi rtrlleport.
J.Jcath cr Franckow iak, Mctgs
Htgh Sc hool , delegate. daughter of
: Myron and Rcmalcc Franc kow iak ,
Mtddleport.
Kyla Sellers . Meigs Hi gh
School, alternate, daughter of Pam
- ~llers, Middleport.
Bobbi Whllc, Eastern Hr gh
; , Sc'hool. delegate, dau ght er of
- RCIIJert and Dove While, Coolville.
Nancy Nally , Eas tern High
School, alternate. daughter o f Jim
a nd. Katie Nally, Pomeroy.
From th e Am eri can Leg ion
Drew Webster Auxiliary Unit No
39, Pomeroy, representatives arc:
Courtney Camille Mtdkiff ,
Meigs High School , delegate ,
(jaaghter of Cecil and Mtlhe M1d·
kif'r. Pomeroy. She IS a member of
National Honor Society, man:hmg,
concert and pep band. and student
c ou nciL She auends Hemlock
· Grove Christian Church and is a
: ;..oiunteer for the American Heart
Association. She was a 1991 -92
regional scholar,
.
,
· .. Michelle Young, Metgs Htgh
School, allernate , daughter of
Diane Young, Pomeroy, and Ron
Young, Paducah, Ky. A member .of
National Honor Society, she parllC·
: ijll!teS in cheerleading, the music
: ~tib French club, marching and
· t&lt;illc~n band. She is a member of
· E lectric Youth, Choralicrs, Madri ·
: gals and the yearbook staff.
:· J'he purpose of Buckeye Gir!s
· Stile is 10 educate young women m
·. tflo:. duties, privi~eges, rights and

KYLA SELLERS

COURTNEY MIDKIFF

responsibil iti es of American citi -

zenship; 10 give to these citizens, in
a rcalisttc manner, an opportunity
to learn the probl ems of govern·
mcnt wtth spectal emphasis upon
the contnbutron women can make
10 the welfare of th e city, county,
state and nation.
The mythi cal state began '"
1947 wnh 3{)4 young women who
had comple ted their Junior year in
lu gh sc hool. Thts year, over 1100
gtrls from vanous counues in Ohio
wt ll paruci pate.
Approximate ly 40 girls com ·
prise a u ty, wtth a government
advrsor and co un sel or. Each girl
po lur ca l parti es · federa lr st or
naLionalisL. She will live m on e of

th e 28 clllc s named for famous
counucs whi ch arc named for past
state pres idents or the Ameri ca n
Lcgron Au&lt;ihary . In GJJls State,
partic1 pants elect their ow n c it y,
co unt y and state offic ial s. Th ey
lea rn the duties of til e various puh·
lie offi ces, fun cuons. llmlt.ation s
and powers. They have til eir own
leg islatures, mtroduc e and debate
their own bil ls, make and enforce
ordmanccs , re gul ate thclr city , conduct their own police force, courts
of law, and admm1stcr JUSlK c.

Ann
Landers
ANN !ANDERS

"1991, Loo ..........
Tlma S)1Jdk...
Crelllon S)'Ddic.W'

be helpfuiiO those who don't know
what 10 say or do when tragedy
slrikes someone close. I hope the
following leuer can offer some
comfort 10 the bereaved:
Dear Ann Landers: A dear friend
sent me this poem. It was written by
Alice Kerr of Lower Bucks, Pa, She
is a member of the Compassionate
Friends, an organization for paren!S
who have lost a child. I thought your
readers mig hi benefit from i!S wortls.
.. FAJTHFUL READER
Now I Know
I never knew, when you lost your
chi ld,
What you were going through.
I wasn't there, I stayed away ,
I just deserted you,
I didn't know the words to say,
I didn't know the things 10 do.
I think your pain so frightened me,
I didn't know how 10 comftlfl you.
And then one day my child died.
you were the rJISt one there.

You quieti y stayed by my side,
listened,
And held me as I cried.
You didn't leave, you didD) go.
The lesson learned is ...
Now I know.
DEAR FRIEND: Thai 1011Ching
poem could have been wriDea only
by a peiSOII who has lived ilmlgb
the cxpcriencc. I have RJOOII!na•b'
the Compassiona!e Friends iD ibis
space many times, ._. once llllOft:
won't hurt. This is a splendid
organization whose: members are
bonded by the loss of 1 beloved
child,
To join, or learn more llbout
this organization, which now has
over 600 cllaplcn 1itnJu8bout the
country, readers can send a !lelfaddressed, slampcd eavelopc 10 The
Compassionale Friends, P.O. Box
3696, Oal: Brook, IU. 60522· 3696.
(A dollar 10 help defray costs would
be greatly appreciated.)
LotU'so""'' TaJ:L charge of JOIIT
lift and IIITn it aroiUIIf. Wriu for
Ann l.anikrs' II&lt;'WixxJkltt, "Hqw ro
Makt Friends and Stop Btiftg
l.mu:/y." Send a self~.lmtg.
businLss-siu tn~lopt: turd a cii«J:
or monty ordLr for S4 .15 (tllis
includes postage and ltaNIIUig) ro :
Friends. clo Annl.anikrs, P.O. BO%
I 1562, Chicago, ll/. (i)6JJ.{)562 , (1ft
CanadJJ. send $.5.05.)

College graduates labor at finding
work; job market worst in decades
By JEFF DONN
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - Faced with !he
wurst job market in decades, many
college students are doing more
than just dropping resumes in the
maiL
They are swarming to profes ·
sional meetings, tapping every contact they can - and sendmg their
resumes in more auention· getting
ways tilan the Postal Service.
Btll McCandless, an Emerson
College senior, has been seeking
work as a TV news producer since
January. He said he has spent thou·
sands of dollars traveling to Wash·
ington and other places 10 meet net·
work people at their offices and at
conventions.
"Some people call it sleazy ,
slimy , because you're always
manipulating," he said. "I say ,
'No, you're creating an opportuni·
ty .'"
Competition is stiff because of
an overabundance of gntduates and
a shriveled economy. This spring's
projected crop or I . I million gradu·
ates from four -year colleges is the
largest ever, according 10 the U$.
Education Department
Victor R. Lindquist, a North ·
we stern University dean who

writes an annual report on the job
market, said this year's survey of
259 mid-to large-size businesses
showed that 47 percent intended to
hire fewer graduates than last year.
He said this is the worst situa·
tion for graduates he has seen in al
least two decades.
"The kids have recogmz.ed that
it's a very competitive market The
JOb of their dreams may be post·
poned," he said.
L. Patrick Scheetz, author of a
similar survey and assistant place·
men! director at Michigan State
University, said the job markCI for
graduates has shrunk by a third
smce I989. including a 10 percent
drop this year.
He said many graduating seniors
have responded by broadening their
searc hes.
"They're usi ng network con·
tac!S, they 're using vacancy listings
in placement offices ," he said _
"They're using family, friends,
faculty as references."
Scheetz's study, completed m
December, found that hiring is
expected to be especially scant for
stu den IS who rnajared in the liberal
arts, soctal sctences and communi·
cations.
He said there are some areas,

including business and pbysi~l
sciences, where jobs still exceed
the labor supply,
Success Slaies are cDer 10 lilld
in such fields. Michael Broggi, a
21-year-old who is gradnaring from
the University of Massacbuseas.
snared a $34 ,000-a·year job as a
field engineer for Genetal Electric
Co.
He attributed his good fOitltne to
following up on leads, preparing
for interviews, luck - and an
uncle who worlcs for the company.
"I have a couple of friends !hat
arc really having a lCITible lime,"
he said, "They're all mvious, but
really happy, forme."
Corporate officials said they are
seeing some of the most aggressive
JOb candidatcs in years.

MICHELLE YOUNG

Auxiliary meets
The LcwJS -Man ley Unrt 263,
Amcr icJ n Leg ion A~.u iliar y, met
rece n tl y at Dale 's Restaurant m

Cal lrpolis wi th Dorothy Casey as
hostess.

Lo rr cne Gogg in s, prc std cnt ,
a nnoun ced th e D l Slfi CI Summ er

Co nvention at Crooksv ille June 4.
Florence Rtchard s was elected as a
delegate and Margaret Bowl es ,
alternate. The dcparuncnt co nven tron. Jul y 9-12 in Toledo, will have
the same delegates.
A d o nation was ma (1c to t he

Haitian Relief Fund .
Poppy co nt ri bution s were
repo rt ed and it was noted Poppy
Days for Mtd dlcport were held
May 8 and 9 with Lula Hampton ,
poppy chatrman and Mrs. Bow les,
Amcri can1sm chamnan .
Mrs. Hampton, legislati ve chair·
man , stated the defense department
has been ordered to cut i!S active
duty and National Guard duty.
Mrs. Bowl es was appoin ted
chairman
of the nomrnating com ·
RYAN TRIPP
mutee whtch will report at the next
meetin g.
Clostng cere monies were by
Todd and Kelly Tripp, Chester, chaplain Annette Johnson and tile
announc e th e birth o f their fir st president.
chi ld , a so n, Ryan Todd Gordon
Tripp, Jan. 20.
He weighed one pound and 12
Tn 1989, an esumated 97,000, or
and one-half ounces and was 13
14.
1 percent, of all slruciUre lues in
and one ·half inches long.
Paternal grandparen!S are Alvin the United States were SCI dcliber·
atcly or were su;'J)CCted of having
and Barbara Tripp, Chester.
Maternal grandparen!S are Har- been sct deli beratcly. Nevertheless,
lan Whi~atch, Mason, W.Va., and this repre sents a decrease of 2.5
pereem from the year before.
Leith~ Hunt, Chester.

New arrival

Fishy fires

Commun ity Calendar items
appear two days be(ore an nenl
and the day of that even!. l!ems
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in !he cal ·
endar.
MONDAY
RACINE · The Racine PTO will
meet Monday at 8 p.m. at the elc·
mcntary school to recognize outgo·
ing officers and to elect new offi .
ccrs for ne&lt;l year, All parcn!S or
guardians of students encouraged
to attend.

Royalty sought

The Meigs County Junicr Fair
Board recen~y extended the deadline for the junior fair king and
queen contest
The new deadline is May 22.
Applications are available at !be
Meigs County Ex tension Oflice.
Mulberry Heights, and completed
applications should be retw1led 10
the cxrension office_
The interviews for Lhe Meigs
County Junior Fair King and
Queen will be held June 8 at I p_m_
American Legion, will be held Those applying will be contacted
Tuesday. Dinner at 7 p.m. Meeung by the king and queen commitue
at8 p.m.
witil a time for their interview.
For additional information conRACINE · The Southern Junior lac I a member of the commiuee:
High choir will present a spring Tammy Queen, Sherry Seddon,
program Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Becky Ours, Melissa Guess, Miranhtgh school gym . Public invited . da Nicholson, or advisors, Kathy
Jeff Arnold duector.
Reed and Janice Weber.

POMEROY · Revival at the
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
143, Pomeroy, will be held Tues·
day through Sunday at 7:30p.m.
nightly. witil Harry Miller and fam·
ily. Pastor Victor Roush invites the
POMEROY . AMVETS will public.
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Smiuy's
CHESTER · Chester Council
rn Pomeroy.
No. 323, Daughters of America,
RACINE · Racine Village will meel Tuesday at 7:30p.m. The
Council will meet in recessed scs· 58th anniversary of the lodge will
sion Monday at 7 p,m. al council be observed. Initiation for a candi·
date will be held and members are
chambers at Star MiU Park,
requested to wear white.
MlDDLEPORT · The OH KAN
WEDNESDAY
Coin Club will meet Monday at
CHESTER
· The Wildwood
Burkeu Barber Shop in Middlcpon.
Garden
Club
will
meel Wednesday
Social hour and trading session a1 7
at7:30
p.m.
at
the
home of Pauline
p.m. precede the meeting. Refresh·
Ey non , There will be a plant
ments. New members welcome.
exchange.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Regular meeling
lOW OPEN FOB
of Drew Webster Post No. 39,

BRill 811801

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

C.plete II• of lecl!ll!ll •1111

INSUUNCE

SllniUtry

111 Second St., P011eroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1168

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

, ............... lloolitl..
...., .., l1r11 Stltctl011 of
IIIII TrHJ.
O,.Wy9~&amp;taSp.a

1iUii'ulrs·
GREENHOUSE
SJfiiC'st 992-5776

To place an ad

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

Monday P.lJX'T

1·00 p m. Saturday

Tuesday Papet

1.00 p m Monday

Mo,. thru

8A.w.-5P.)[.- SAT.B-12

F11 .

SO DAY

UOSED

POLICIES
&lt;:0-l:t ~Hif ad nm1 MIMI be prepa.ld
f....- ad. ptid al!l .d.,allU_
• r ree Ad. : Ct~way a..:~ f ou.ad a,d. uoder 15 • o rd. will ~
f'1Lil J d.a,.. •• -.a ~
• ~ Q( ad for d a~,..._J ktkn 11 double prN:e of ad colll

1

A.d. tloUt.flod.e

WednesdayPapcr

l.OOpn1 Tut~J)'

Thursda y Papt:&gt;r

1 00 p m Wl'dn~tw

Fnday Papt·r
Sunday PajX'r

100 p m Thur-.dav
1.00 p.m Fnday

U..,

type ~ l&amp;llt.ld
• Sentmd II_. rmpo-.ih&amp;e tor etTOI"I afteT ftnt day (c b.ecil
for ttTorl r..... d._!' a,d ntiU Llll papa). C.U hefoR 2:00p.m.
d.y ahtt P"'w..,,.._ to Jlnke cone&lt;tioa
• ~ U..t awt 1M' ph! t. abaaa: arr:
':ani al n..b
Happy Ad.
1. M-,...
l'ard S.Je.
• ·' d....f..,.j a d . . . - . pt-d ..... C.!Upolio Dtily
T ralMuc (eza::pt Cl.nii~ O.play. 8 .. J.OeN Card or ~al
\o~Jooos I ..;llal.o eppo-r.,. t.h.t Potat Jl'\euan1 Repter 1nd

N011CE OF El£CJJDI! ON
TU lOY II EXCESS OF
THE TBf -.a.I.MToVJON

I
67;- 1... . l'l ~aunt
4 J 8 -Lcnn
J 76---Appl;• Cro ... ;•

949- Ra cin e
i42- Rullaad

89;)-U.tut

.-,a~--,.·--­
willloe
ol . . _ .. ~·­
of Nid

LAYNE FURNITURE

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

LIVING ROOM SUITES,
Sofa and Chair
PRICED FROM

a~.-..

1

of ltu;i::; ...... ..

. _ . . .. . _ P I

,
"" ,..
for

••

..

coi ••
II

p•rpoae

0

""
'2

.,
-ca••, ..

_.._,

'ud . . . . ol

.....BJ . . .
a r
01liD.

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSlEIIS,
HOME SITES and
mAILER SllES,
LVIDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

. THAi SAl9-5-l'H, 44&amp;«122

UMESTONE-mUCIONG

992·3838
WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa
369 To 1a1

~

$3.00 ott New; $5.00 off Transter

•SAND -GRAVEL -otRT
.UMESTONE

ol . . - . . ..

. . . . c. tr.

(614)992-3470

1 ,ao-.·D. s.ill. Dit 1

~Ln

51151'9211

15) 4, .. 11, ... 2S, 411:

PW!Ic Notice

Public Notice

NOllaOFB£CIIONOII

loe1d ill ... Townohip o1
Oliwe, lloigl County, Ohio,
.. lite ,....._ p!ocoo o!
voli"V llleroin, on the
::-:~...
1-.
. . • uln of leuting •
- . l o - of ..... _.
' . . , .... ol

fi.. (5) Y-• ot o oeto ""'
exc-ing 1 mill lor uch

or-.

:O:ol .._

r--·ip lor ...
.,.....,llinillgond

F*w,.r-.-wiil..

.. . .
C
....... .,. llid 1 * j j · inl
.. o ..._., B f
~ 1oe i'llltllicI

- -

'I

I 1o o -

iaa.

JOHN A. WADE, U. UK.
EAR-NOSE-THROAT
AWRGY
IOAIDatTfiED
SPKIAUDNG IN

•Ad_. &amp; P...trk deru
tllearfntlkls
•Recurrent Ear lnfedhns
ita.l4ren

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

..ayNo5e

·~ afSU.&amp;
........

•New Homes

•Garages
•Com plete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

one dollor ol voluetion,
which -.....to 1o ton cenlo
(S0.1D) lor . .ch ono
hundred dollar&amp; of
vo!uolion,lor li\10 (5) , . . .,
Tho Polio lor uid
Elecllon sill Optln et 6:30
o'doclr. A.ll. ond remoin
0pt111 until 7:30 o'clocl&lt; P.ll

F-EE ESTIMA'rES

985·4473
667·6179
2· 7·92-tfn

oluid .-,.
By Onlar

ol the

Boord

ol

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ohio.
Elecliona, olllei9&lt; County,
Real Estate General
Henry L Huntor, Qooinnon
Rita D. Smith, Diroc:lor
DAlEO: Fob. :U, 19!12
(5) 4, .. 11, 11, 26, 411:

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·7269

Public Notice

Correction
Mrs. Bernard Fultz hosted the
recent mee ting of the Middlcpon
Literary Club, not Mrs . Ronald
Reynolds as was stated in the
recent report of the club. Also, the
group did not view a movie Slarring
Sidney Ponier, n was noted he
played the main role in the Sllbjoct
di scussed.

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

PI.C!Bc Notice
TAll lOY el EXCESS OF
THETBf-.a.I.MToVJON
NO'fla io ......, gino
Ia pw
or o
A 1'# ol . . ao..d af
1i
.,. . . Tea 1'! .,.
p ' wile. 01oio,
P ill d - . . 51lt . , ..

USED RAILROAD TIES
4-4·92-llo
NOTICE OF ELEcnoN ON
TAll lEVY II EXCESS OF
THE TEN lllll!IITATION
NOTICE It hereby given

992-7159
608 ~SJ MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
NEW LISTV«r HARRISONYitlE- 28 289 Acres ol VA-

CANT GROUND asb1g $16.000

POMEROY- A home pl!fled io' anyone bu1 has leaiU""
clesogned ..., J11e t&gt;a :to ,. , ..., on mood 3 bedrooms,
it .,pa:ej
..... lg · ondudesoampways, speaal
1aor w•emg &amp; balll.....,. ASKING $34 .900

llll!EASVIU.£ RD.- 2..,., home wl$dng. beaulllut stw·
- · sane
~ IM!doons , .t wry
~bdl. shed. 01 dioMng. ~ lronl porch .. l!llfOY the
wudattJ ~. b?s neul &amp; appror.. 1 acre of
Heme
ASKING $22,500
..., .MAKE AH OFFER1

good,_.-,

-some._

come

VAC»ff LOT· Ibn St PonWliOT 60 • I00 tn+neciate

pos,.,.,,;.·.,,., ONLY $1 .900
511 J3: 2 -r-home- 3 --· ~Ely
non I I l lndudeo ,_, ~. a!lioal air, deci&lt; l
page. $37,!i00

-

Faclaf Leslols

HBIR'f E. a

as &gt;

oreun.nt~·-

l$0.1 0) lor •••h on a
hndrod dollar• ol
VII• f on, lor lv• (5) ,_a.
The Polio lor uld

.....

-&amp;,
...... ol ... - ol
Eloc!iooll ol llhlgo County,

-H&amp;II

- - - -- -·

_ ttN251

TROY-BI£'1
sw,...

Our Sprinf;
or
Troy -Bib '1\Den New I• Sl•4:k.

Yo~.t"l~~'r,~K
l l SIW...,"-s, Olio•li;~.J~tl
2I20NJJ3 mo.

Ohio.

HlrlrY
L 0.
"""""·
Alto
......Qgl,_
llnootar
DA~O:

Feltntary It, 1111:1

(5) .... 11, ,,

26. . .

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Fu-m~ ~M

5-.k

14---- ku»JM:U fkdd~

:c.--

lot. 4 -" C r't"~
Jt.- fieal Utat.r 'u~

~ l l'l'lll

...

61- r.,,. Equipment
62 - Wanlrdto Buy
63-- L•e~toc il

64---- Uay &amp; Gra1n.

rertilizu

6..&gt;---- s~ &amp;

lH I\•I ' OHI \l\1 1\

HE\T\1.~

11- A••~ I~ Sak

43-- Eqwpmrnt

7&amp;---- C.apinf!: [quiJ*t:BI

f(lr Rot:et

\IEH CH \ \fJI~ E
51-

H ou~;Cbo&amp;d

Good.

:.2- S por~~

S.l- ,\nL&gt;que.
:04- \1 u,(" \1c:n haadu.c
S.:r- Ru1lduv ;;.uppi&gt;N

IU- H- lmpouemenla
&amp;::! - Plumb~ &amp; Healioj!:
33-- E•ca•at1ng
~ [ko:trh:al &amp; R ,f,\!m• tio~
8.&gt;-- Gcnoc-ral H• u hnj!:
lk,..- "l.,bJe llo:»mc: Rc:p-.1r
R' ~ ~ l ph ols t&lt;&gt;r~

more E'1811astings.

Happy Ads

LOW LABOR RAn

1So/o OFF On Most
Boot Parts

'To4o n. ,.. o.t Of ,.,lloa I
-Lot u, o. It F.

W'1 mo. pd .

r.·

INllRIOI &amp; EXTERIOR
FIEf £5nllATIS
HAVI llfiiDKII
..,.,,,... t.........

'l(atfiryn

'Meadows

Ah• 6 ,.-. 61His-4110

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATI
ORCAHVAS "

Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

Addillono

..QJ-WO&lt;!c
~- ond Plumbing

614-992-2242

-Rom~

-Roofing
-lnlorior • &amp;t.rior
P•inti
(FREE 'E\nMAlES)

vI (. YOUNG Ill
• 992-6215

Pomeroy, Olio
3· l3·!12·tfn

Custom Paintings

412/92mn

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
All MAlES
Brlog II Ia Or We
Pick

u~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE
204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992·3184
1 rno. Ptl 41161!12

PARTS

IAIWI., OHIO

I~=~~~~~==!!=======~

I,

SERVICE
992·5335 or
985-3561
Aueu f,.. PMt Office

217 l. S.Coool II.
I'CiaOOY, DNIO

NOW OPEN!

.. . . . . _.lt,S54

MON.·5Al9te5

614-742-2772

Agriculture
lime

INC.
Rt. 2
Millwoo4,. W.Va.

304·273·5555
4-9;t01

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Ho~~e~ • Vi•yl Si4iag
New Gon ..s • lepiMe•eat Windows
Roo• Atltlitioas • Roofiag
COMMDICIAL a . . RI'Sm!EtVfi,\L
li'RIE IES"IUIATI:s

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(lo s..~~.., C1lls)
2112192

CHARLIE'S
LIMESTONE
DELIVERY
SERVICE
IUSOIIIU IWIS

614·949·2202 .

5-18-'92-1 mo p:1

R&amp;C EICAVATIIIG
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SE PTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;

SE WER UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HDME SITES

MIDDLIPOIT GUN
SHOP

949-2123

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

WrA•,.,

lex 194
IA&lt;lll, OHIO

lf--'Y '-tie .......

Dirt, Gravel and Coal
l icensed and Bonded

12-5-11~

134MStrl\

~Cl.

NOWOPUt
Hrs.9hS
MatinS...
HAIIDGUIIS, 11US,
SHOTGUNS
BUY-SElL-TRADE
4-21 -92- I - · ,...

fojioal

:
G
~ · N -,f--~

614-949·2804
:,I~T-""-1-!
..~"!!''~'·~·"~T
t
&gt;

RAONE,.OHIO

P'OIIIIOY, OL

6 ML Out Eagle RidcJI
New SCA WOLFF
Bed Sl.24
Call lor ApptToday

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

992·7553

PH. 614~992:5591

Rd. or I ML Fr011 Basl.n

~

..,..,..... r- r. a-...,.

15 Sesslons.... $25
12 Sessions.... $20
1 Sossion.... $2.25

HAPPY BIRTHDAY,

Nicky and Lindsay

r.lio'o HI

HAULING: Limestone,

PARTS &amp; SERVK£
Mowen • Gail Saws
•W..-.ters

Love,

~•

..,•.,w.-o.,.e

ann•••

FOR SALE :

Hybrid Tomatoes.
Baskets, Etc.

CAliFORIIIA
TAliS

Some say life begins at forty;
That we cannot say.
The only thing we
know for sunt
Is we love you more
each day.
MOM I

614-742·2328

39815 Gold Ridge Road

Welcome Slates
$20.00

CARPENTER SERVKE

I ·100~848~0070

5

CHUCK'S BOATAUTO REPAIR

J•• Dtlt New"
lefon••s

Amuals,
StJ awfto•ars and

742-3030

YOUNG'S

"We Cet Tlie

Perennials&amp;

Co. Rd.J,

4117l'l:lll-.

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

ANGIE'S ROWOS

Leading Creek Rd.
Middleporl

.

,...
•cr 1ng11nil tor
_.,noC
--olvoloiOMon,

f' \ll\1

,\ Ll\ L:-TIJII,

20Yn.l~~p.

1391 Safford Sdtool RcL
Cal(614)

WHALEY'S llUTO
people ol aoid
aubclhrielon o1 • Prlmory
Elecllon 1o bt halcl in the
ISpecltlliling In hslom
Counly of lloigo, Ohio, a1
everyone who
frame Rtjlair
1M NgUW p!acoa of voting
donated toward
NEW
&amp; USED
· on
the1M
......
-..~ cloy 1I I'lll~kir1g the Car Show
FOR All MAKES
of June,
1112,
-lion
of llvrin!l • tox. In .....
a success and the
&amp; MODUS
of 1M ..., 01lllltoltolion, ,,.
992~7013
or
u.. _ , ollllolgo County
trip lo Hershey,
992-5553
P... Dlotr!ct lor . . ,....,.,.. 1L...:..P.:.an:.:.":.:.·~·.:.a.:.re::a:::lily::.!.:..I_J
OR TOll FlU

Sald lea bolag : en
-lanll 181 or 1 •ill ot •

~

Call &amp;I Tromm

Bennetts Mobile

The Wahama Band &amp;
Boosters would like
to taka this
opportunity lo thank

the

7:11 · · - , ... -

1liAC1'
&amp;&amp;!AGAJ
JEAN 11JUSSB l

I I

0111Sty Hi Efficiel&lt;y Ai'
(ondilioaers, Heat r·~~
FumKes &amp; Now
Water Heaters.

THANK YOU

o! Fabtuary, 1M. will
be eubmin.d to • vote of

wll .,... ol 1:311
A.ll. ond ...............

ott.C1t1

'

Card of Thanks

Pork Colllmt..- . ol the
Counly or llolgo, pg,..oy,
Ohio, 1 odon1M3nldoy

~

e..,..____

II I DIII'ICn,.

BrfrfA BHlf ~

thai in purau•nee of 1
Rooo1ution ol 1M BDord ol

whlcll-lo 1o .... -

NEWI.IIARD.·-slyte-3-.,.,.., 1112batlo,
teat P"''P a oenn~,;,. g;r.oge. 01di+'ngs. Appro._ 6
.,.,._ Aslung S3!1,50) Oooner """ .xllfll reasonable

OH., WV. &amp; ll.U.D.
A,prowod M-tactvrod
Hotuing Produds.

II I LD'I"LLI:'D ...

au. Road

P-oy,Ohio

SERVICE WITH A SMILE
Terry Spurin, RPH

llid

L.oe.

23--- Profe.u-..1

fREE ESTIMATES :

4-24-'92'·1 mo.

Than Afro/ Other Stor..

fOf aoid
,._
.. _

7:» o ' - P.ll. •

BUUUDOZER,BACKHOE
ond mACKHOE WORK

(lnsutance) Prescription Plans

Polio

16-- Rad io, TV &amp; CB Repa•r
17- \1lA cella neow
JB-- '11anted T o 0..:.

Au ctio:»n
!).___ " 'ant I'd 101 Buy

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

the River
We Handle More Third Party

...... of fill.

a no
r

I&gt;- Pubhc Sak &amp;

1 ~37-Bu fTa l o

m .

Lowest Price on Either Side of

~

l l-- In &amp;un nee
14-- ll1.u1inua Tra1n1~
]:;....._ Schoo:» la &amp; lrtJitru cllon

r uund
r o:»und

'·~W'Hiiiu"D~"

RITE AID PHARMACY
WE DELIVER!
In More Ways Than Onet

f.a-

1 .......

7- lo&amp;t a nd

FREE ESTIMATES

I ..._ ..t *'lop

..... -

&amp;S\2- :'\e ... ll a~·· n

h II Wtsl, ~Olio •ll3-3!1l

JIILES OVT llJlJ.VUE PilE

..WE PTE
s.id !all ...... , ••
'9
, _ ........ ..

o,_..-.,.

lo

4Q- For Le...~oor

Ollr SJirinfl: Sl:dpa~ent or
lro,--81.111\D.en. No• In S.oc- 11.

$1150.00

of

of C.hto• Sdaaal ..cl
.._..,,!iwWwF':

I

b-- Loat and

' II - Hdp W anled

TROY-B/£'1'

LANE MOTION SETS
Sofa and Recliner

.. ...
- _...
___
...
AJI.---ol . . . . . . . f l l
._ ~ ollloigl

22- \1 oaey

Business Services

$450,00 lo $995,00

•••

3- Announcemenll
4---- G u ·c:away
:r- lh ppy Ad.

7~.1- \l uon

LARGE SELECTION OF

autJiw· ioa .. • ......._,
Dt cti~n ~ M IMIId ill . .
C:O.IJ ol ltleigo. Ohio, ..

au.~

21-

56- Pcll for Sale
51- ~uuca.l la•t.TWIIe nlM
~ rnuUI &amp; V~etahle.
S9---- t"o r Sale or Trade

, - - - . . . , . - -- - , . . . , - - - - , . - - - - --; 41- Hou.a for R~
77- Tntek• f,n S.le
42- \tuLlk Hofor R-1 :'l- Va111 &amp; 4 WD'1
4J.- Fara. fo r Meat
74.-- .'\llolonoyclea
44--- Apl.l'"llllt':llllcw Rull
7&gt;- Boaa. &amp; .' f o lot'• fo r SaJe
4&gt;-- Furn1111b~ R 76- A. .. to Part. &amp; Aw~•mn~J
46- SpiLT fo.- Rt-ct
77- 1\uto Repaa.-

667 -CoolviUc-

IIUEDI BOARD DEDUNE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

11011CEia......, .....

1

47- \\ •nted I&amp; Rntt

()&lt;12-\1iddkporti
Pomeroy
9lJi-Chester
843- Portland
247-Let a r1 r.u..

Bl.LLETI\ BOARD

..., Ia ,.....
or •
R ' f ol ........ ol
PooltC
• ·
ool.,.
C
!Jollloigo.P
....
Ollia, I
'Ill • . . ,.,

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

Gallia Counly \1cig'l'o Count y ! '1ai!On Co .• \\' \ '
Area Code 611 Area Code 6 H I Area Code :!04
446-Callipoli•
36 7 -Cheahin:
388-Vinton
2 4 5- Kio Cnnde
256-Cuyan Olat.
643-Anhia Oi-t.
379- \l'alnut

IS
IS
IS
15
IS

Rate
Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ 30
$900
$ .42
$13.00
$ 60
$130/day $.05/dav

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up day., wJll b&lt;&gt;
charged for each day as separate ads .

Cla ssified pages co•·•·r th ••
follouing telephone exclwn;;•· ·'···

the ~ Se.luld. ,--c:la. Ill! o-u- UI.OOO hoaet

I'I.CIIic Nolice

I
3
6
10
Monlhly

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

• Recc-.: d-.co1111t

• -; pc"UUI -

DAY BEKJRF PURLICATtON

DATED: ,.._1211. 1tll2

Community calendar

wdl f un ct ion in one of th e two

Ohi o women , divided into se ven

Dear Ann Landers: The suicide
of a child or other loved one,
regardless of age, is one of life's
h.mhestlnlgedies, Grieving relatives
need to know that they are not
being judged or blamed by olhets.
They blame themselves enough
already. II doesn't help to say,
"He's (lrobably beller off." It doesn't
help to say, "You have other
children." Guilt is a major factor
whenever there is a suicide, no
matter what the cause, Everyone
who loved that person wonders
what he or she miglu have done to
prevent it
Grief-stricken swvivo~ need to
know that their friends are still
there for them. Sometimes friends
you though! you could count on
suddenly disappear. They avoid
you because they don't know what
to say.
In most cases, swvivors want and
need 10 talk about their loss. It's
important 10 keep the memory of
the deceased alive. While it may be
painful to discuss, it's beaer than
trying to forget that the person ever
existed.
Ycs, there are support groups for
survivtn. but what about friends and
relatives calling from time 10 time
just to see how you're doing? ..
BEEN THERE IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: Your leaer should

Words

Days

&lt;i:aJAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED UMESTONE

FOR SAU
Call614-992-66l7
St, Rt. 7
CIJes~ire, 01.
112mn

r-1

.., ..

CID/92/1- ·

lmi'SUWII
IWIRIIICE
949-2627 or
1-1100-837-1460

a..wn Mowing.

Fertilizing. Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimminp &amp; Removol
R . """Iiili ' c-mon:iol
Ft.EIIIinutlle

4/2Sit2lfn

IOWIID L.

nmsa.
IDOFIIG

NEW - REPAIR
GUTTERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

••a•

41'1S.W1 MD. pd.

COIIII'S OHIO .
RMIHDIS..e

MllASIINGS·.

DI.U.UI, . . . CIIt

247-4035

lOW OPIII FOI srt•
........... l's,

1..an

n'

WID.-SIII. 10.5 ....

Hl-ft-t-~

�Monday, May

l?age 8 The Dally Sentinel
31

UVEI UVEI UVE!
(18 +I SSTEL
Orl. FL SUW n.

875-3431.

1 -~54-!160QI

Poplar Hlightt Ad(Hiion, baauti·
tul 4 bedroom, 3 baths, fam ily
room, poot, ga11gt, acre lot ,
Somervll~tc ANny, 304-675-3030
or 175-3431.

Not rnponstbM for any debts
other than my C7WI'I: Robert L.M

Denney.

__

sale &amp;
""'' E-Vap
with
tablltt
&amp;
available at Fr..-h

GobeN

tabiM:a

Oluretk:,
Plwmac:y_

32

l

Hie

4

Vinton a,-.a, 12 acres of oak
limber, 2 bedroom, all electric
~ome . Owner, 614-388-9001.

,_

Reduce;

lu1 with
l
E-V•p
lvtlt.ble 11 Fruth

5520.

Miles Of Gallipolis.

Lo.. : Doa In Rio Grande Bladl. Work J&lt;MI're own day lim.
And Whlt• With Brown And """"- No -oncto, C.r
Black Fac1. H11 Collar And ne.decl. No experience nece.
WNII Fla1 Collar On . ........,.. Ary. Send r.me, address,
To Mime; "Wimpy"'. It Fcund, ......_: to tee 566 PO Bol 23
PluM C.ll 114-245--59!1, 614- South Klc:kMslck, New J.r.,.y
2•5-5152.
016116.
Found: Bible on roed near Ro6Ungtvil._, W.y 10, 304-675-t6Tl.

FOUND; a.t of black GM ear
keya, Htw Haven srN. l04-8823664 sftar 5:00PM.

Ho..ny •

Pon-T!mo -

Commtss6on Retail S.les Must
a. Fnlble, Send fksume CLA
111, cJo Galllpolll O.lty Tribune,
825 Third A.. Galllpolill, Ohio
~:to

U. : whtte, ,.male dog, brown

:;:_..:~~~t

E l R TREE SERVICE. Topping,

PROCI:SSOII, maloo up lo JO~OOO
pt'OCM.slng HULiit'HA
,..fundi. Will tr~ln . 1-216-324. . .k

I

Give piano IMtont in my noma

to

t.Qin,..,.,

tl udentt l

advancld

adulta. Alao tuch

cording • transposing . It lnterHStcl, pease call 614-992-.5403

7285.
PROCESSOR, maiiA up 1o $'1000
..... proc:.t.alng HUOifHA
r.tundl.. WUI train. 1·2"16-324-

ALL Yard S..llls Must Be Pakt In
Advance. DEADliNE: 2 :00 p.m. 7285.
the day before tht .ct ts to run .
Sunday ~hlan · 2:00 p.m WANTED; EMERGENCY RELIEF
Friday. Monday edition . 2:00 COMMUNITY
SERVICE
p.m. Saturday.
WORKERS AI A
~nunity Group Home For Per.ans Wllh O.u $'of mental 0..
Public Sale
8

c-

Rick PMrson Auction Com~ny,
full lim. auctlonMr, compiMI
et¢tlon
IMV~I.
UcenHd
~6 . 0h6o &amp; w..t Virglnll, ....
773-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Cash paid for Har1ey Dlfklson
and lndi•n ~oreyeiM •nd
par1s. Any condhlon.. Evenings
304--428-3207.
Don, Junk It! s.JI Us Your NonWOrking Malo&lt; Appllanc;oo,
Colof l'V',, VC:R't, MtcrCIIWIVII,
Ak Conditlonen, Etc. 614-2561238.
OM marbiH, ID'p, comic boob,
l•nltms, p6cluNS •nd furniture,
Otby Marlin, 614-992--..1.
Used Mobile Homet, C•U 614446-0175.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
WUtl Or Wit~ Motors. Call

u.., LI\'OIJ. 8M-388-11303.
W•nted To Buy: lllrvo- Size
Ortu Makers Fonn. Good Candilion, C•ll IM--446---4015 Aftw 5

•biiMieo

Hna room In my home for alOf female, country
atmos~. pl.,ty of TLC, or

will take eart ot tldtrty In their

home. 20 yNrt uperlenct,
hew ,..tet.nc:... 614-94Q-3014
afler8pm .

Mitt P.ula't O.y Care Centlf.
S.lli, attorda~•. chUdcare. M-F
I a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agel 2¥r10.
Beton, after schoat . Drop-In•
welcome. 61-4~46-8224 . Naw In·
flint Toddter
6M-44&amp;-t227.

c.,..,

Hipoll.nlidwol~:lgh School
,.., Ysild
'• IJcenM

S

Good DriYing Raconl,
Good Communi&lt;allon And Organlzalion Sldl.. , Punc1ual And
Able To Woril A8 Psrt Of ATMm

Roquhed; Eq&gt;Orior&lt;:o Wor1dng

With Persons With Mentsl
RMardaUon And Oewlop1M1•111
Dillbiliti• Pr.terr.d. Hours: At

Scr.dulorl'A• -

SallfJ

14 .50Mour. Send Rnurne To
Ceel\&amp;1 Bek•. P.O. Boz 504,
Jackson, OH 45640. Deadline
FOf Applicants: 5l2'tri2. Equal
Opportunity Emp6opr.

WANTED: Full-nrne UcenMd
Pradk:.l H~.ne For T'4fG Community G~ Hom. For Pw.ons WithniCI:f."*dal Ot.abiiii\M
In Galla County
(GalllpoUt/BidweU}. Houra : 1·
9P.M. OR 1-1\A.Mn-g P.M.
(AotatH}
Tlun;
12-IP.M_,
F~I!Sunllrlon ; lncludoo 2-

Ho..r w... o, so.n II..Oing; Or

.a..

Otherwlte Scheduled. Cur,..nll LPN Ucente !Interim Pwmil
Accopoablol.

OOPNES'NAPNES/Or
Slllo
Board ~ T,.i,;ng, V•llcl

1

81 on TV many OMdMt for
cornmerci.llla. Now hiring 1H
•gft. For caetlf19 Info 615·T7'97i11 ext . T-237.
GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING. ft6 ,000 - ST2LOOO/Yr 1
805-.564--6!00 Ert. 01:5968 For
Immediate A11pont1.

FEDERAl

Par1 -tlrne ease maNglllr'te.tchlr
tor Goodwill lndustr}n, Pt .
Pluant
DegrN
requirwl
Somt tr~nl. ~ resume to
Personnel, 1005 Vlrtfinls Ave.,
Hunllngton
WV
251'04.
Deadline: U.y 22_EEO, MJFIV!H,
JTPA training.

Davo...........

14

Business
Training

Rl4raln

Now!!!Sou1hN.tem

Busl.-o CollogO, ~~ Vollo~
Piau. Call Today, I
-4367 .!
Registw•lion tto-05-12148 .

18

Wanted to

Do

Win Babysit In My Home. FeneM In Pl.aJ.c!~ ReMnc•
Aual Is tHe.
A,..a. Call

61&lt;-2.5-!18117.
Babylln~

In

My

Homo,
Cheshi,. viclnlly. IIU4-361-75i8.

Want to:

Ci\6Ii?!!

9 . _ _ __

6.

7.
8

Opportunity
!NOTlCE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
f'ICOI?Imends lhat you do butl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT Ia ••nd money lhrout~h the
m•ll unlll you have lnvesltgatld
lhe off111ing.

13._ _ _ _---t
14 . _ _ _ _--1
15., _ _ __ --f

83 Acrst W!2Vr. Old Home,
3Brs, 2 Baths, B•m, Sev1ra1
Buildings,
Cellar,
Sell
With/Without Fsrm Equipment,
C•ttle. 614·367-o610.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lots In Galllpollt Ferry . 100'%
owner financing at $98.64 per
rnonlh, any one ol lour lo15
available, 304-675-2n2.
loiS In New Haven • 100%
owner financing 11 $101.46 per
month buys all thrH lots, •304-

1m Chevy Suburban, 4 whe..
d~ ... 300 rebuiH onglno, body
lair cood, Pl . Ptt. V.F.O. 3()4...6752313.
1971 Ford boz v•n, 1981
Phaenlz Pontiac, 614-742·2445,
hm-Opm.

•

Hundr.ds ol Companies NHd
Hon1ll Work.,. Gua,.nteed In·
come. Easy Work. Rwsh your
name and Address S.A.S .E. 110
and $1.00 to: 0 &amp; A Suppll•
Dept . C PO Box 1443 F•lrbom,
Oh &lt;5324

a

1121

v..c:Ung Rout1: l.oeal. Wa H1v1
Th4l Newe.t M.:hln•, Making A
Nke StNdy C.ah Income. 1·
800-955-0354.

VENDING ROUTE : New Equipm.nl, 50 loe•tions. Great In·
come, $5,500.00. 1-800·933-9919
Ext17.

41 Houses for Rent
1 BR hoUN ICIOSS from !he
University of Rio Gran&lt;t.. 614JBS -9946.
2 _B•droom Hou .., Down Rt.7, 3

M1les
Overlooking
River.
$280/mo. Reference Required .
614-446-1615, 614-446-1243.

Money to Loan

Real Estate

Bedroom Kome For Rent
N•ar Gallipolis And GallipoliS
City Set-tools . 614~46-1617.
2

31

Homes for Sale

5o00 PM.

SIMpln~

rooms wtth cooking .
Also tralltr tpace. All hook-ups .
Can "'" 2:00 p.m., 304-n:J..
5651, Mason WV.

46 Space for Rent
40x48 building for rent : S.turday lhru Thurtd1y. 614-44~7750.
Comm1rti11 Space To Rent ln
Oak Hill. 1,100 Sq. Fl. 614-440.

~=--':":'::-::-::"-~~'::"'"

Commercial Building, 12,000 Sq.
Ft . Ooc:ka, Levelera, HNted
Clear Sp•n R1 . 32, Jackson,
Ohio. 711-)ll-6732.

House: In Kyger CrHk School
2 story, 6 room, bath, 1/3 basemen!, gas h..l, Union Ave., District. You Pay Et.ctrlc.
l22,1100, 304-m- 5962 or 304- $250/mo. l250 O.poalt . 614 -l67·
0415, 614·367-1180 .
m-577! .
2021 M•rquetle Ave, 5 yn old,
•II brlek mt:lntena nc e tne
home , 4 bedroorn1, small living
room , diningrDOmlfamily ronm
combin.tlon, kilchen , utilily
rvom , all one level , cov8r1d
pat6o in b•ck, prlv1 c y tonc1,
garage, shown br_ appointment
only l04-67~t238
3 BR, 1 bath, new tiding,
woodbuming lireplac• 614-446-

3221
68 acre country tstate with
~?nd .
VInton . Colonial farm
ho!Ae newly romodll8d . 2 large
bllmt, •ummer l'louu garage,
ttudio, hunting cabin By owner.
Agents welcome, 3%. Dan
Bl"ack, 614-388-8210.

Nice et11dency cottage, unique
and bMutllul, 304-675~42
Unturnlthed 2bdrm . house ,
clean, dtpostt 6 rtftrencn r.
qulrt&lt;t, no lnalde pels, 614-992·
3090.

42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 bedroom lrall•r. p.ay

40 ' Hoi PcMnt While Sill-Cleaning Rang•. Excellent Condition.
614-446-394 5.

GOOD

own

2 bedroom trailer lor renl,
Hereford Lan•, f11fer11nce ,..
qulrwd , 304-576-2103
2 bedroom tr•ll• mostly fur nished, Vlnlon, Ohio
1,
depotlt &amp; relerenc11, 304-675!718.

•re

2 Bedroom Tr•ller, For Rent On
Rl .588, GalllpoU•. 304-67S-5109.

2 bedroom, 12x60, 11!2 b•ths,
A.shton UP'•nd Rd , unlumlshad ,
no Inside pets, 1165. plus
utiiHies, t\00 . depotl1 . 304-67'54088

2bdrm. mobile tlome In Middlepon , 614 -992-5858.

Apartment
lor Rent

2 Rooms &amp; Balh, DownS1alrs,
CINn,
No
Pets,
Quiet,
R•fertnce And Deposit R•
qulred . l14-o446-1519.
2 BA ap~r1m•nt• in Mlddllapon,
newly flmodei~, low utilitlee,
no peta, 1220 per mont:h,
deposl1 requlr.d, 114-it2-2381

M•dlaon An. three bedrooma,
new kllehtn, bath, utilll';' room , dalyt
upper 30's. Somerville R.. tty,
*""'7S-3030 01' 11S-3ot31.
Meedowbrook Drive, one Uoor
plan, 3 bedroome, kltch•n.
dining 1nd femlly room, Som•
rvll" Fleetly, 304-675-3030 Of

175-:M:to.
NNd offer, 2923 Spruee Ave,
compMte kitchen, tMHment,

g.o,.go, s ......111o R..Hr, 304-

675-3030 or 675-:M31.

New H.lven srN Broad Run
Road, priced rusonable.L c•ll
tor lnfcrmation 304-182-34c0.

2bdrrn. trailer,
$200
plus
utllttln, dtpoalt, 1bdrm. duplex,
1 bdnn. 1pa.rtmen1, no pets,
5225, utllllie• Incl. , daposlt, 114-

w.!-ll:toe.

BEAVTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jaeuon Plkt
from $1112/mo. Walk to 1hop &amp;

movlao. Callll4-440.2568. EOH.
Fumlshld Apar1rMnl, 1 br, next
lo Ubrary, perking, cent111l hut,
air, ,..t.l.nc.. 814 Uti 0338,

llofon7p.m.

USED

APPLIANCES

Concrate I
Pl11tlc Sepllc
T•nkl, Jet Aerwtlon Tanks . Ron
Enn• Enterprt .... Jeckaon, OH
E1carcl• blk1, $2.5, 614-9922_42
_ 1 = = = =:-:-==- FREE INSTALLATION

SWIMMING POOLS

Hotpolnt dryer, $100; big pueh
bunon phone, br•nd new, $40;

$100,

et1,..o,

114-H2-7111GO

•n~lme .

KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER Flea Kllltrs Fof
Pet1, Horne I Yard. Guaranteed
Ettectlv•! Buy ENFORCER AI:
Brown• Trustwort~y Hardware,
Slste Rout• 160, Bidwsll, Ottio.
Klngalza waterbed. 12 drawer
dol.lbJa pedHtli. Uke new .
Rote-mlrrorld helldbotrd. 304-

875-3288.

Complete home fumiahlngt.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9-5. 614-4460322, 3 mile• out Bui•vllll Ad.
FrMOallue~.

living Room Suite, Like New,
$200. 614-256-6575 Af'l•r 5 P.M.

PICKENS FURNITURE

Sales Par11, S.rvlce

HURST tRACToR SALES
2e HP • WD $6!115; 20 HP • WD
$5,995, Roule 7 North, Marlena.
614-314-4151

•

NITGOU

m

I THINK THIS IS THE BEST

WHICH REALLY DOESN'T MEAN
AN'ITHIN6 BECAUSE ~OUR OTHER
STORIES WERE 50 DUMB .

S · t8

1 LOVE A GOOD
OMPLiMENT

UH

122 Checkered

from Charlene . N.C.
World Today
;) Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Slereo . 1;:t
6;05 C1l Boverlr Hlltbllllea

11:\

62

Lumt.r Se.. oned Wild Cherry
Poplar Alao But Board,
C..tlng Door Jams. 614-4468038.

&amp;

Magic Chet waeher &amp; drytr; GE
automatic dlahwaahlr; Gibson
trMZer; 614·62-e:Mo

to·····=tobacco quota,
Gallla County. 814-446-21011.
63

Livestock

For Hie: minl1lure Vietn•mese

pol- belly plga, $100oo., 61ol-7422&lt;l50
Registered Angus Heifers, 614«64752.
Want M•son County Tobacco
qwCita will pay 2S cenlt (now)

r.

r lb. Morgan'• Woodl1wn
rm, Rt 35, 304-1137·2018.

Wanted: Calva• To RaiN For

BNI. 814-448-3025.

Transportation
71
19811

~

Dan GT, 360 onglno

tun race cam, rotd lifter~,

QO.Od

u308o
.... after
bodr5pm
goocl, - · l~&lt;-~~&lt;i-

197'1 Mercedes~ Benz, 280 SE,
needs mlr'IOf' body work, nNr
mint Interior, 114-t92·73Tl or

81..w.!·7938.
1m Okls Slallonwagon, aood
eondlllon, utra Ml: Mk:MIIn
197'9 Malibu Cllnlch 2 dr. 75'%
ahow room cond ion. Low
mlln. 12995. llrm. fl14-lt2·l481
efter Spm,

198:1 Toyots Starthl, Sl•nderd,
6&gt;1-+16-:IM!

12,100. 304-175-5890.

1185 Buk:k Skrlarl&lt;, V-41, looded,

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Ollv• St ., Gallipolis . New &amp; UHd
furniture, haate,., Western &amp;
Woril boolt. 614-448-:l15Q.
VI'RA FURNITURE

BARGAINS GALOREI
LIVING ROOM : Sof• And Cksir
$17\f And Up; CoHM And End
Tabltl S~ And Up; Swivel
Rotkers $79.

BEDROOM · Bunk Bodt $!19
(2x6); 4 Dr~wer Chest Of
Orawars $44.95 ; Twin Manr. .s
l 99 Sot.

will!

ool$85. 30..... 75-1e1111.

Rteondltlo&gt;nld
w11Mra
I
dry111, Nch $100 and up We
Hrvlce all m•k•. The W•sher I
Orytr Shoppe. 614-446 -2944.

Ntw 12 Horae Power MTO
Mowel'l, $895: 5 HorNpower
lazy Boy Tllleral...$298 Each,
Whllt Supplln
11. Womel·
dorlf &amp; Thom11 Hardwa,... 614·
446..0965.
Student LPN book•, uniforms I
equipment, 304-675-3818.

55
DINETTES : Wood Bar Stoolt
$14.95 (2fi"} Table And 4 P1dded
Chairs 1129 .
OPEN : 7 Oars A Week, V A.M. · 6
PM Sundal12 Noon - 5 P.M.
Rt . 141 4 M lfl Off Rl . 7 In Centenary.
Water~

super
elngle
headboard , 6 dr•w•rs . padd~
ralls, good cond, $l.S.O. 304-5762962
Whirlpool tlarvnt 90ld 1tove
continuoua cluning, $225.
080 Whirlpool lrost lrH white
19 c u ft rstrlgerator WI lee
makar, $250. 080. 304-675489 4.

Antiques

:-:-:::--:--'---,-:-:Bi~

Rlvw Antiques, SlO Main 51,
Pomt Pluunt, WV.

Buy or 1111. Riverine AnHquae,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Houre : W.T.W. 10 :00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1 :00 lo 6:00 p.m.
614-992-2526.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 old refrigerator, runs good;
a rt ra alu bicycle; small chest
type truzer, used one yNr, 614949-3014 after 6pm.
10 Gat. fish 11nk, light• &amp; Ulter
sy11•m. 1o11 utraa! S tropical
fish, exc . fa ir prat~ . sao. 614-

300-9305.

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, uwer "'pn, win·
dows, llntals, ate. Clsudt Wlnllrs, Rio Grande, OM Cali 814245-6121.

56

Pets lor Sale

Groom •nd Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. All brMCit, afylee.
lams Pel Food O..ltr. Julie
Webb. Call 614-446-0231.
2 Pomeranl•m puppln, 1 bl•ck,

1 reddish, 304-i95-3926.

AKC lab pupplto; ""'"'· AKC

paperw. Choice: y.llaw, black,
chocolale. 114-281-2378.

ThrN (3) Chow Chow puppl••,
lull blooded, 114-IU:l-1340

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

18' doubla uta can, 10' John
Otere lrantpor1 dlac, 7' Bulhtlog bruthhog, ezc. cond.,

Oeln, Sumner
3855·

a:.:2
Road, 1&gt;1-

EIIICiric Fori&lt; Uft. IM-441-1.
Ren111 Surplut clothing, llar1· Cub Cadet pulllno tr~etor
lng price $12. dozen. Fr.. proven winner, li4-J112-3020
delivery Point Pteaunt am.
:104-213-6655 coM of call taken
from bill. No dNiert PINH.
Sam Somtrville'l Camtlauge

ormr, ourplu•. Our 281h yur,

S

evanlnga, 114-992·3314 dlya,
Dalla• W•ber.
1
Farmall Cull With Culllvatora

:--.,...,...,-=.,--:---BtiO, Mower, I Row Tobocco

mil .. East 1·77, Aavanawood by Saner,

Main

Line

Aalotlller,

S.ndrvlllo Poll Offlco, F~. S.l, Tobie«&gt; F......, 114-388-1080
Sun Noon-':00 PM.

1987 Olds Cullu• Sler1 $2,70G.
1987 Conversion Van F-150, TV,
4 captain. chairs, C!1 bad!. ....
make• full aile btd ta,OOO. 1183
Ford Rang• 4x4 $2,600. 1188
Doda• Villa 62 000 mN•

l3,oGo. "'" Fonl F-150 $2,300.
1185 Oldo Dono sa $2,010. om
CJ5 Jeop exc cond U,llt5. 1m

79

campers

Al'ter eP.M.

Blazer full size $1,000. 11M

1983 C:O.eman tllltl c•mper.
5eHPS al•. Excelhml condhlon.
$2500. 104-m-5081 evenings.

$7,800. OM-4~11165.

ttGO Gao Prlzm hltchMck, ex.
cetlent condition, low mlleege,
callll-4--992·7175 after 5pm Of on

Hom. Improvements.

BsrNn

Addtllons, Gareges~PIInl,

Foundalllon

Worl&lt;,

_.,.30 .. --

conciUon.

11184 Fonl BnH1CO, lor Hlo
$2,800. or trade tor truck, 304458·1713.

S.pllc Tank Pumping SOO, Galllt

s.w. Y•c

Davt•

AND SHE SAID TWeNTY'
YEARS YOUNGER_

ti~_: \

·tJ!f·
1-- - --- - o

•

•

' "

BARNEY
I'LL JEST RAKE IT
UNDER TH'
HOUSE

MY FRONT
YARD LOOKS

~~--...

LIKE A

MAGNOLIA II YOU
LOOK LIKE MY FRONT
YARD II

PIGPEN II

Plumbing

ASTRO-GRAPH

&amp;

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Clrtw'e Plumbing
Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohk»
814-446--3888

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgerallon

::::;:;::::;::;--=:::------,Aasldanflal

or

commercial

wiring, new HrYiee Of ,._I,..
M1tter UcenHd llectrklan
Rlclonour Eloclrk:•l, WV000301.
:IIM-675-17118.
'

85

General Hauling

-1

Wo Do Houllng Anyllmo,
..,.,...., No Job Tao Big Or

Too Utile. BIMIMnt CIMning,
Worlt, Anr Kind! 1~

3~An,Oimo.

;;W;:--;Do:;:--';;=:;::--:-- : H•ullng
A~lmo
AnrPioce, No Job Tao
Too Lhtle. Batement Cl•anlng
•

PHILUP

E.4.ST
• J 7
• 10 3
t J !086 2

WEST

• Q 10 9 8

ALDER

• 7 ll

t K5

+ K 10 4 2

tAJ 9 .1

Sot TTH

. 653

Expert thinking
explained

. A KQJ 98
t A
. Q 76

Vulnera ble Both
Dealer Norlh

By Philt1p Alder

Soutb

Wesl

Norlb

F..ast

o;

Q..,...l Wori&lt;, Anr Klndl 111:
3~ Anrtlmo .

1i88 Bl•• •· whwl drive. :JCM.
o75-1171.

;;::::;;:-U";-p;::h::ol;:st;:e:::r!.y--,Mowrey'• Upllolooorlng .....~c-

f17

mg trl county area 27 fNI'I. The

boOI In lumMuro uphol11orlng.
Call 30•-675-415ol for hoo " '
UmetH.

C

oullook . (AI Stereo . l;l
;) Black Sllllllon Slereo l;:t
9;00 (l) II I]) tlJ MOVIE;
'Calondar Girt, Cop, Killer?
Bembt Bembenek Story'
ABC Monday Night Movie
(200)
ill Millennium: T~bol
Wlodom and tho Modern
World Stereo. l;l
illlllil ~ Ill Murphr Brown
(Season F~na l e) Murphy goes
1nto labor during a live
broade~~st. Stereo . l;l
II) WWF Prime Time
Wreattlng Ultimate Wamor
vs. Nasty Boy Br1an Knobbs
® Nuhvltto Now Soer8&lt;J
lArry King Live!
;J Fotllor Dowling Mroooriea
Stereo. 1;:t
9;30 0 aD ~
Evening Sllodo
(Season Flnala) Wood acts

m

c

mn g Pla y' (Goll ancz . $13 95. Th e
Bndge World . 39 West 94lh Strccl .
New York. NY !002 51
Toda y's hand from lhe book would
t np up most pla yers. Co ver the East ·
Wes t cards and pl an the pl ay 1n four
hearts . We st lea ds thP heart two f ive .
10, kmg.
As there's no hope of a club ruff tn
the dummy . the only chanc(' appears
to be a 3-3 spade break And to keep
commumcation With the dummy . you
must du ck the ftrst round of spad es
However. there 1s one other slight posstballt y for ~ e nera t mg the lOth tnck

I"
3"

Pass
Pa~..,

Pass

Pa~

I•

l'as.s
All pass

&lt;1 •

Opemng lead • 2

def enders can stop an at tempt ·to
sq ueeze West. You w ould have to re-ct•fy the count by los1ng t hree club.
tn cks On lea d th ose three limes. th~
defenders wi ll pla y a second heart to
stop th e ruff . then two rounds of
spades to brea k your link w1th the ·
dummy 1
'
Al lnck two. cash the d1amond a('{"
and th en duck a spade Win Lbe heart
return, draw the la s t trump . plaY a
spade to dummy's ktng and ruff a diamond Here the kmg drops and you are
home. If hiS maJest y doesn t appear .
play for lhr spades to be 3· 3

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

plant
33 Medieval
poem
34 Showr

Instruments
5 Clam genus
8 Southweslern Indians

clothes

12 Moon

37 Mrs. In

goddosa

Madrid
40 Classroom

t 3 Part of corn

plant
14 OiYorce

talk
41 Silvery fish

capital

43 WWIIarea
44 Complains
46 High note
47 Alcohol lamp
49 Irate
51 lluse
52 Timber lree
53 Archiltcl Saarinen
S. Mild
expletive
55 Tint
56 Small brown

tSTrpeof
doubleheader
17 Use a crayon

Shred
Loss cooked
Uncle

Actren
Anouk-

24 Builder

26

~our

'Birthday
May 19, 1992

Even though you might nol have an
easy row to hoe in the year _ahead, your
chances for advancement tn your c ho sen field of endeavor look better than
usual.
.
TAURUS (April ZO.Moy 20) There s a
chance you might do something out of
spite today that could prove counte~ ­
productlve. just because you won t
want to acknowledge the contribution
or someone you dislike. Know where to

lo ok lor romance and you 'll find 11. The
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker insl antly re ·
veals which sign s are romanlically perfect lor you . Ma11 $2 plu s a long . self-addressed,
slamped
envelope
to
Matchmaker . c/o this newspaper. P 0

!hal will pur you oul of th e r each of d iStracUng, peripheral inHuen ces.

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov . 22) Don'l be
afraid lo thmk b•g loday, even it lhose
you 'll be involved wilh aren ' t in accord.
Your ideas are likely to be s uperior to
theirs.

Box 91428 , Cleveland . OH 4410 1·3428 .
GEMINI (May 21·June 20111 you lry lo

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc. 21111 you

bend events to suit your will today,
you're not likely to experience any success . However. if you refram from inter·
fering, you could be quite lucky.

operat e along traditional lines today ,
your probabilities for profit are good
This m1ght not be the case . however.
when betting on long shot s

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Your altitude will determine lhe kinds of responses you get tram others today .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) An as sociate who can't carry his own weighl
might try to climb on the back of your
pony today-. This could be a handic ap

Friendly behavior will induce warm reaclions; cranky behavior wiU initiate an

argument.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Minimize your
recreational pursuits today and locus
on situations that could be financially
meaningful. You'll be luckier in this area
than you will be playing games .

VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt 22) An unpleasant encounter can be avoided today if you excuse yourself from the presence of an individual with whom you've

had a recent run -in.
LIBRA (Sopt 23·0ct 23) You 'll be qu&lt;1e
effective as a loner today, provided
you 're left to do things on your own time
and al your own pace . &lt;Tak e me asures

that may do you in.

AQUARIUS (Jon. ZO.Fob. 11) Your &lt;nlu·
ilion might be quite valuable today, but
you may not use it as effectively as you
could , the result of it conflicting with
your logic .

PISCES (Feb. ZO.Morch 20) There is a
possibility- you might negotiate an arrangement today that doesn'l serve
your best interest even though it may
look good on paper . Be careful
ARIES (Mofch 21·Aprit 19) Chances for
achieving your objectives look good today, provided you do no1 suffer from
self -inflicted wounds . Don ' t abuse your
luck.

Puu~

32 Ginseng

1 Hawaiian

18
IQ
21
22

Anawer Ia Prew-iou•

31 Broadcasl

GoYernment
levy

27 To lhls place
28 Dawn
goddess

7 01 blood

1 Excessive

2 Asian country
3 Riddle
4 - Francisco
5 Million (prof. )
6 Hebrew God

bird

DOWN

injured when an old bud
_~
comes to town . Stereo LJ

V8118IS

8
9
10
11
16
20

-

Trpe of boonCylindrical

FUI with lo"" '
Seed plan lor
Indignation
Anatomical
nelworh

23 Stage
direction

I 0;00 C!l Now a
riJ Ill Millennium: T~bol
Wltdom and tho Modem
World Stereo . 1;:t
illl aD ~ Norlhom
Elpoou,. (Season Flnalel
The history of Cicely is lold
in llashback sequences .
Stereo. 1;:t
11]) 18 Hunttr Q
® A Ctlobnollon of Eddy
Arnold Country-music stars.
including Vince Gill, Anne
Murray, Alabama. Roy Clark
and olllers, pey tribute oo
cOYntry-music legend Eddy
Arnold . (1 :001 Stereo .
awortd NtWI
;) 700 Club Willi Pat

25 Consecrated
oil
29 Ancient
theater
30 Grieved

e

Heating

84

tQ 9143
• 8)

e

«8-&lt;l29ol.

62

m

a

I

SIIIYk:e,

1117 11-10 Pk:k.Up AUiomoik: Air
Cond1 PS, 13,500 Finn. OM-446811111 anor 7 P.ll.

11111 Chovr S·10, 5 opood,
N,IOO. 304-ii5-3858 lor lull In-

WHAT 9-&lt;E'D BE IF S HE
W,A..SN'T A TE;ACHER __.

Roo's TV Swvtce, speelaUzlnt

tn Zenith •teo Hr¥1cing moSt
Ollher brlnd1. Houee cans. also
101M el)pllance repelrs. WV
30&lt;~71-23118 Ohio ~~~~2.5ol .

22,700
12,500. bolow 101•11.. 300-4752332 eveninge.

11171 Ford ltangor F-100 ••4, 3S1

r 1"\SKED MRS. HACKABERRY

Bid. licensed. d"M-245-5015 .

''"o 5.7Lbluo, looded,
mlloo, .,3,000 firm,

FOGO Fiol rod $1,000. 111111 Oldt
0moa.o 40, dooo nco run, I7S.
304-4'15-7217 or 075-12&lt;7.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

J.W. ConstructMln. Room Ad-

Ae11tloo MCitora, repalr.d. Nn

2) (2o00)
I])
lnoldo
Amorlco'a Tolllllr Unaolvod
Ufeatylea Comedians Dave
CO&lt;IIier and Dave Thomas
take a satiric look at the
profuSion of raalily· typo
shows seen on television _
(I 00) Slereo. C
riJ I]) Lepcy-stereo . Q
IIIJW a21111 Evonlng Sllado
Plans to celebrate Wilt's
birthday fall apart . Stereo. l;l
il]). MOVIE: 'Bill &amp; Tod't
Excellonl Advenlure' Fox
Night II tho Movlea (PGi
(2 00) Siereo .
II) Mulder, She Wrooo l;l
® Crook and ChoH
a PrtmeNewo C
;) Prince Yellen! Siereo . l;:t
8;30 (]) 8 01 MOVIE; 'Bild on o
WI"'' NBC Mondloy Night al
tho Moviei(PG131(2o30)
Gunny boosts her spirits wfth
a new hair color and a new

Roofing:

l r..t:Juln motors In stock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. I-80053M52e.

Crouflre
7:35 (1J Major Loaguo Beaoball
St. Louis Cardinals at AHanta
Breves (L)
8;00 (]) 11 01 Freah Prtnce of
Bel-Air Will's fever can only
be cured by having his

Stereo.

Kllehena And B•thl. Free E•
tlmatnl Relerences, No Job

JET

a

l!llllil liZIll MaiO! Dad

Unconditional lltec.lme guUII~

1&amp;111 Z·28

Trucks lor Sale

lHE- FR~ CHJTI AL
El[CftOf...JS

Improvements

weektnd•.

3 Volkowo9on a.ooltl ''" pa~o
or II• up. 3 lunk - - · Homo
mad• car trtller. 1900 for all.
614-192-3481 lfl..- Spm.

1M SfiLL lo\XRRIW
ABCXJT 88

Home

1187 Dido Dono 88, Vln,O Too&gt;
Loadodl E•collonl CondHionl

Blue lnterlof.J..~Ir COnditioning,
PW, PO, AMII"M C.IMHI, 31,000
MIIM,
Euellent
Condltkwl,

I'M ~RIW
AeourlHf Ol!TCCME-

WHY SO
Gl.U'otl ?

(f

GIOf"VM CrNk Rd. Pant, auppUM, pickup, end delivery. 614-

6~atlw6:00 .

EEKANDMEEK

Services
81

(l)

(l)ll

Motor Homes

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jaekaon, OH 1-800-53H528.

formation.

ALLEYOOP

&amp;

Buk:k SkJ Hawk $1,il0. 11M T·
Bird Sl,aoo. ~C ~ c....
Ntw Haven, WY.
-3752.

me.

1011 John o..r. Modtll, Alii•
C"·lm•,..
.., H.D. I ...,.,......,
~. H
nyt01er

'

Wanl to buy IXC moblf home
tires, h14.5, call and ....,.
30&lt;~75-467'3.

dhlooo, Roohr, Docila, Slclino
And All Typoo &lt;M E11orlor And
Interior Pslrtt+na. WI" Gin Low

$2800.

DfPVIJfll

Budaal T,.nomlulorw, Uood l
,.,..TM, olafllng 11 Slt._!!_ont
wheel driYe ••rtlng II ~.00
010-245-M77, I&gt;I-11112.Q93.

198S Otdt Flrenza, 5 •peed, •lr,
sm.l fm ate~lo tilt wheel, 8149112-«5$29 eall• 111 6pm

Of 304~75-1571

.6\

E1ther opponen t mtght have lotm g smpassed . or be yet to come
Ro th's f1rst book lS «Clu es to Wm - gleton or doubleton tn diamonds (Th~

Too Big Or SmaHI61&lt;-367-o516.

exceiJent

'

7;05 C1l Brody Bunch
7:30 (])II 01 Joop1ordyt C
C!l Now 11 Can a. Tala
(l) 11 EniOrtalnmenl Tonight
Stereo. 1;:t
I]) II Meme'a Family
illl aD Wheel of Fortune 1;:t
~ Ill Fomlty Foud
® Be a Slllr Slereo
122 Major League Beaoball

~ I S - JZ

1\0RTH
t A K 11

flJ To Catch o Killer (PI I at

19118 Dodgo A~oo. • door,
45,000 mUM, PS, PB, elr, 11c
cond, $3,500. 304-e75-5814.

1987 Cutlau
Gr.. l lhlpl. 11,000 miln. 304-

BRIDGE

Accessories

Curtla Home lmprovtmenls:
YNn Experience· On Otder &amp;
Ntwll' Homes. Room Additlona

--Supreme, 307.

Professor 10 graduating law students 'When pre v•ously asked a legal que stM)n you c ould honestly say
'I don 't know · Now you ca n say. w1thout hes •tat1ng . 'It
D EPEND S ...

tonsils removed . (R) Stereo.

1981 Chrysler Fifth A'ltnut,
59,000 Milas, L.oacMd, E.Jic.tleM
Condition; 1985 Dodot Csr•v•n

SE, l.oadod, 110-446-111•.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
' •s
Pursue - Viper - Fudge - Invade . DEPENDS

&amp;

Auto Pans

11185 Oodge She! by Ctlerger
Turbo, 5 •peed, rldlliiYer, good
mpg &amp; •hrp, 11tslng $2,1'50.

auto.,

~

BOATERS
Guims Mercury Mertne Servk:1.
Mercury, M•riner, Merc:ruiHr
lpecllfitl . Mercury certllltd.
Mobne, We come to you. 614·

lM. Locat reter.nc• fumlahld.
FrM nUmal•. C•ll CGIIICt 1814·237..()468, d•y or night.
Rogers BateJMnt Weterproofing.

11171 F-100, 4 WD SI,OOO. 1m

61 Fann Eqlllpment

.

.0 .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

72

TO

VVHI~LING

Sarvk:e. 614-256-6160.

1985 Camara, toadtd. $.3400.
1H7 Dodgs Aim, PS, AUio.
$2000. 1987 Horizon, AC. $1300.
304-675-2440.

304~75-6308.

I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I
IIIIIIIII

a b solule - · - - ·

Londoner Danny Roth has wn llen :
two anteresting qu1z books Hts ap- ~
proach is first to explam how to count ·
out a hand and then how to use thatm formation to so lve hts 60 opening-l ead .
declarer-play and defense probl ems
But an unusual tw1 s t ts that he doesn"t
always stoj&gt; the pla y at the cnll ca l
moment It might have al rea dy

Will buUd palio c:ove,., decks,
sereened rooms, put up vinyf
tiding 01 lrtllar aklr11ng . 61-4245-9152.

Poodln, toy1, lMcupa, alao
adults, AKC, also mlnlalur•
Schnauzert~ . Coolville, 814-6673404.

NffP A

Your &amp;o.tlng Needs, Par1a, At.·

19110 Dada• O,nuly, Bluo Whh

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleaunt, :J04.175-2063,
lull lin• Tropical llth1 bird•.
sm1ll •nlm111 and 1uppll11.

GOING

ceeiOtift, Two Cydl Oil And

TOIIII IIWn Cll'l, $8 (1st time
llped•l), lnc:ludM mowing &amp;
wMdlng, call 6M-992-6314, tam9pm.
'

Orr.gon•wynd Callery : CFA Persiln Slam... klnena. 814...a463844 1fler 7 :00p.m.

you'ff

eOATERS
J.S. Marino S...k:e, S...lng All

1t89 Olds Cutlau C..lale 4
door, low mlle•ge, on floor shin,
lugg1g1 nck, quad 4, blut, 304-

AKC
Reglatered
Labrador
Relrtlver puppl•s, ahota &amp;
plptrl, 614-'742·3034.

ENOUGH, SfN.ATO~ · ·

614-9112-3481 ..... Spm.

Roofing.
Ex
AIUOI""IIble. 1514-44 568, 814~
448-4316.

875-271•

'

1!ml Boja Ski Boll. e5 HP
Johnton outboard. Runs OOOdNMdo uplloll1ory worll. f1500.

high ml,..ge, moving I mutt
814·245-5003, - ....
message.

..u. $1250.

•~&lt;NT
J:!MsF ~ ED I'
l fT1f ~S

Genoredon C
~ Ill Entertilnmenl Tonlght
Stereo. C
II) MacGY.or Stereo. l;l
122 SporbiCenlor
a Moneyllne
;) The WoHona

sav11:rf

1960
Barbour
16-112
tt
M•hogany Run..a-Bout whh SO
HP Johneon OUiboonl. S4,250. 1304~22..e240, Huntington.

67!8

polo reoc1r ''" hook-up. 614-14112862 lt.lf' lpm,

~

•"o,

a

l o r a luxury to become an

.A NS WE~

li&amp; 1111 Joopardrl C

I /

$4,900. 814-W&amp;-4225, Aft.- lp.m.

2 Air conditioners, electrical

=•... .

1984 Buk:k Regal, rebu»l engine
&amp; trantmluiorl,
door,

tak es a s hort penod of 11me

il]) Ill Slllr Trek: Tho Next

&amp; Motors

AKC NQIItlred B1...t1 hound
puppies, $75 &amp; $126, 614-167-

11111 Rtd Carpet, Very Good
Condition, Call Ev1nlnge: 8'14·
446-ll695.

50 Inch uw mill ..... 35n • T'
tlat batt. 304-675-2358.
Alii Ch 1
WD 45 .. 200
a
• mera
••·
·
V.A.C. c... 5600. Milley Harril
Ponr 1•00. 7~ dloc 3pl 1450.
Shp Br!Qga new onaono U50.
taft boaT~...'~01~ traner Sf.GOO.
I
18 blko S20. 304-

SilVIRI

1981 Thunderbird, fair cond.,
$1,000 or bell offer. 1514-251-1143.

Pl•sUc And Medal Culvert 6 lneh
TtiN 10 lnctl In Stock. Ron
Evant, J•ckson, Ohio. 1-300Rtellng weight bench
&amp;
leg cwl •tt•chmente &amp; w. ghl

Y1maha ~ dirt bike, powerful,
wlth IXtfla, good ehape, 304-

"'"· $1100 080, 6&gt;1-192-5530.

8111.

SWAIN

30&lt;-421-3207.

Autos for sale

p aced . modern world . 11only

NewaHour l;l

SQVIIO: T

76

OuiHin Sill Wattrbtd Wilt\
Bookcau, Htadboard.J. $75 . 614·
446~453 BatwHn 5 1-'.M. To 11

537·9528.

';II tlJ MorriocLWith Children

2so.sm.

Ovsr 200 Ft. Spill Raila 2 Plua
Posta $200; AKC Choeol•t• L•b
Puppy, 4 WMks, $300. 114-446-

PM

C.1h p.ald for Harley Davidson
alld Indian rnoton:ycl• and
pir11. Any condiUon. Evenings

lor Sale

Wlnt~

I've nOIICed In 1h! S fa st

LUJSYT

UNS( ItAMB l f

;) Now Zarro Stereo. 1;:t
6;35 C1l Andr Grillltll
7;00 ~II 01 Wheel of Fortune

~The Jefferaona [J_
(l) II lnolde Edition 1:;1
riJ I]) MacNeil/lehrer

Wanted to Buy

{:1

122 Up C!OIO

1986 Hooda 250, four whMier,
runa grNt 304·173-5284 or 7735730.

75 Boats

I

I
I I' I I I'

II) Scooby 0oo

1550, 114-1185-3581.

ALEVE

"

011]) llil
~ Ill CBS Newa l;:t
Ill Andy Grllflth

1978 Suzuki 750GS, good !Ires
1nd chain. Exceptionally clean,

I

I' I I I' ;

I

Flag NASCAA

a

1917 Ford Rangsr XLT Shortbed
4fWhMl Solid Body, Newly
Overhauled, 408 Engine, $1,600
Firm. 614-251-6357.

CAUSY

I· I I I' I

mIllRoodln~alnbowl;:t l;:t
il])
Full
II) Smurto

Motorcycles

875-5088.
Hew And Uud F•rm EqlHprMnt
Conslgnmenl S.lee, Rl.7, South
G•lllpollt, OH. 814-256-6040.

New/Used
Household lumlstling. 112 mi.
J•rricho Rd . Pt Pleuant, WV,
ca ll 304-675-1450.

~~~~1." plu• dopoall , '"""" 7'- 53

44

Household

614-446-3158

lm-31e7

KUBOTA

BIOCI:mlng elu plant• for ale,
614-742-2015.

yard. GuarentHd efteellvel Buy
ENFORCER •t: Baum True
Value Store, 11 West M•in
SlrHI:, Chuter Oh. &amp; Valley
Lwmblr &amp; Supply Corp., 555
Part StJMt, Middleport, Oh.

Goods

304~75-3278 .

ar••·

For Sale : New Holland Rske,
3 Piaca Bedroom Suire, In- Bat1r11, Mowers, 6 Hty Binds,
cludu Box Sl)rtng And Mat- PIOYttl, Disks, Com Plenten,
Manure Spr11aders, SMCiera,
lrns. 114-446-2b11.
Orilla And Cultivators. Olhef Equipment
Hawe's
Farm
DAKOTA
DREAM
HOMES Machinery, J•ek•on,
Ohio
$31,995 I Up. Buln On Your Lot. Phone : 614-286-5944.
S.e Our Models, 814-886-7311 .

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
FIN Klllare for pets, home &amp;

Merchandise
~

61 Farm Equlpmenl

Merchandise

Only $7H.OO B.. utltul Above
Gn~und 191:31 x4 Pool lncludn:
2125.
Filter O.Ck, Fenca, laddara,
Counlry Mobile Home Park, Rt . Elc. ~'I BIIIIWIIt? Call BPI
33N., under new management
1-800-MII-1923
Lots, $85; home rtnllla, $235;
614-992-2167
Genult
Nutrhlon Products
futuling Amino Acid Body
47 Wanted to Rent
Bulldlng, . .lght lost end tat
Nics, clun 2 or 3 bedroom bumer tormula•. Available II·
house, prtflf privati tltllngj elusively at Rite Aid Ph1rm1cy.
614-992·2428, IUVI mtuage l Tillaate way lo dlel.
no 1nawer.
Good uMd Broyhill living room
eult1, 3 extra ch•irs, like new, 1
49
For Lease
llrge chair, 114-JIU-2194.

3 bedroom 2 slory home,
reference &amp; deposit requlrtd,
3 Bedroom Hous-e, 2 Mllu From
Gallipolis, Deposit Required ,
10 aeru, 3bdrm house, barn, S32MAo. 614-446-4706 &amp;.her 8
U1illly building, 1 mL from Mid- P.M.
dleport . Handyman speei•l , low
lw.ntiiS , 216-395-2:l9r..
3 BR home lor rent in ttMn
$300 month plus deposit . 304:
2 houa. . In Middlepor1 . Low or 67~· 3433 304-675-7'109 •her
NO down payment because as- 5pm
king price Is DRAMATICAllY
~ property value due lo House on Sand Hill Road , 2
OWMr moving out of
1st bedrooms, garage, rat. $250
perwon with money WINS! 614· mo . 304-675-7346 .

Miscellaneous

1-800.537·i528.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

2bdrm. houH in Rutland ,
$225/mo.
plu1
utilili"
&amp;
deposit, reference• requlrltd
Monew- To Loan
1-800-238-9759, Open From g Ready June 3rd, 614-992·7503.
A..M. To 10 P.M.
2bdrm. lrl·leval houiM, 8 vrs .
old, 1375/mon., SJM deposit ,
6JI Mill St ., Middlaport, Ohio.
614 -992·3187

22

One bedroom tumlttled •pl,
Jettaraon Ave. $200. pius
electric. 304-675-2406 before

Washars, dr)'tra, refrigeralors,
ranges . Sklgga Appllane . .,
Uppar River Rd . Betide Slone
Crest Mot1i. Cell 614-446-7398,
1-800-499-3&lt;t99

Rentals

Vtncllng f1:1r The 21st Century.
::cJ,~hones Fof Sale. 1-8C0-226-

letters of !he
lour Krambled word' be·
low to lorm lo vr 31mpl e words

illlllil
6:00 (])II ril II I])
~~~~ 01 Nowa
C!l Vldoo Power
ljZl Squoro One TV Soeroo.

STOR'i YOUVE EVER WRITTEN .

54

GAM I

EVENING

I

1981 Ctlev Cullom Conve,.lon,
314 lon, 45,000 mll11, tully •
quipped, lmmae1A1t1 cond, 304173-5722 aflar 7:00PM.

74

WOlD

0 ieorrol"'ge

IJ..

Lots joining PCI:Int · 100"4 owner

financing 11 $101.46 per month
buys 111 thr" Iota. 304-675-

MON., MAY 18

Dally Senllnei--Page-9_

TIIAT DAIL 1
PUIIlll

6;30 (])II 01 NBC Newa l;:t
C!l Sovod by lllo Bell
(l) II (I) tlJ ABC Nowa
riJ Wild Amarlc.l Stereo. Q
~Square One TV Stereo.

675-2722.

Two Primt Building Lots In
Rol ling
Acres
Subdivi~lon ,
100x150 E•ch . Sewer
City
Water Avai lablt. Owner Relocating To Ktntuck_. So will Accept
Any Reasonable on.,_304-675·

ond 5o00 PM.

12~-------1

Farms lor Sale

446-8803, 6t~..al55.

In town Point P'-aunl, W"V. call
304-e75-2658 betwNn 8:00 AM

11. _ __ _---1

33

614-~92-55U

2n2 .

Country Home, S•nd Hill Roed,
8 roome, 2 bathe, 5 1cre land,
304~95-3611 sl'ttr 3:00PM.

--t

Used mobile home,

AlltnUon! Styling Salon For
S.le! Prime l.Dcatlon. Cell 614-

BEAVTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

2._ _ _ __ _ 10._ _ _ _-1
4.
.5.

Business

Hiatoric•l ArN Corner Lot • tl6
Main St. Pt. Pluunl, W. Va.
CompiMely Renovated : 2 Fun
Bethl, 3 l.llrge Bedrooms, New
HYAC, New Ctrpet. A.v1ilable
June 15 614-446-2205.

aid in advance ralel!

.1.

21

n.

your clulter into cash ,
Sell it the easy way ... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 papers,$6.00

~ 7'11 .

lois tor sale, trailers •cceptable_304·675-2722.

Apple Grove 1.5 ac res , modern
3 bedroom, g•rage, cily waltr,
nMd to ..
ut~ linancing
av•ilable , Somer~llle Really,
304-4i75-30JO or fi7S-3431

Tum

I.

Financial

Ac:,. , 2 bedroom trailer, dKk,
porett , central h••t lair, tlove,
refrlg•r~tor, Appll Grav• , J04.
578-214,.

PIN down EXTRA

Ae etst To Bank Reclaimed
Mobllt Homes, Great S.leetlon!
Many At UOO Down, And Take
Over Paymenla. Call 1-800-589-

35

eouno,

Gain.

1n

Drtver'a Ueenu Good "Driving
Racord And Mlllng,_ To
P.M.
Orin In eona-t;ed Tr1Hic
Good eommt.mlcalion
Top Pricoe Paid; All Old U.S. ......... Orpnlullon
Sldllo,
Coint, Gold Rlngt, Sitnr Coins, And
Punctual, And Able To Wort! As
G~ ~ llT.S. Coin Shop, Part Ot A T.-m Required; EJ:.
151
A.,.,ua, GaJIIpolla.
perienee WortUng Wkh P.raon
Wtlh Mentll Rtt•rd•Uon And
DIAbllhl•
Pret.r.d. Salary: $8.00/Hour, To
Start. Send Aeeume To Cecilia
Baker, P.O. Box 104, JscQon,
OH 45640. DHdline For Ap1I · Help Wanted
pllcanlco 51211!12. Equal Oppor·
tunlty Emptoyer.
12.500 CREDIT CARD!
Guarant.cl S•me Dey Aj&gt;pro¥111 Alao QlroiiO, Fo&lt; NO 12
Situation
O.posh VISAIIIIC And C.oh AdWanted
...,, neet_ 1-100-214-6789 ~ 2Sl4.
CompU.- Consuft•nl Whh ln'AVON" ALL AREAS! Share your du.try Ellperience Can Provide
ti me with ua . You 'll kJw the Support To Your Company OJ
companJ. 1~992-6356 .
Oroanlu11on. uporloo&lt;o W•h
OCSS, WlnOow:l , UNtl Networks
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
And Most 8..-lnlea Softw•rt
E x ~lenl
Pty,
Benafila, Spoclallzlng
In
Socurl!r.
Transport•tlon,
407-2i2-411f7, Upgrades, Tr•inlng, PrrH~nla­
E•t
571
lll.m -10p.m. ToM ltvl llllnt•nanc:e And Problem
Refunded.
Solvl~ C.W. Clark. 114-JNAVON I All Arus ! Shh1ey 2081.
Spurs, )O.Hl'S-1429

Employment Services

Van, en-

-"· body good

•

1991 14w80 38r't, 2 Baths,
$17,500, Or Assume Wlth $750
Down. MilS! Be Moved! &amp;14-4466325.

cltrly mala

1

&amp; Auction

1'1\BitS 2

$800. or trade tor automatic car
w/1lr, 31&gt;4-t75-15413.

Nice 1 BR·, lumished kllchen,
ca.rpe,llng, w1ter paid. Deposit
required . 614-44fHI568.

nished, Ol•hwathtr Disposal 45
Furnished
T.V., Stereo svst•m Throughout:
Washer &amp; Dryer, 2 Bedrooms Of
Rooms
Furniture And living Room Furniture, Microwave, "Refrlrr~tor Rooms lor renl · wtllk or month.
And Slove. 614 .... 46-354 , 304- Slanlng at $1.20tmo. Galli• Hotel.
614-446-9580
143-4356.

call 304-675-1957.

Uwn mowing and odd Jobt,
tully ln1uttd, 8"14..fi2-71172.

&amp; VIcinity

Eeono~lne

1975 Ford

gl.,. -

Gracious living . 1 •nd 2 bedroom ap11rtmenl• •t Vill•g•
Menor
and
Rlv•rside
Apartmenlt In Middleport. From
$196 . C.ll 614·992 ·7781. EOH.

198!5 Windsor 2br, Fully Fur-

Georg• Por1able Sawmill, doo't
hat.~l your logt to the mill lust

825 Third Avtnue, Galllpolls, OH
45631.

Gallipolis

\

Television
Viewing

NON, SON, r THCXJ&amp;I.IT YOU ~.t..JHl'&lt;l

IX&gt; YOO OOW f.l{).JT HOW 5TORKS
CWVER

2313.

44e-7733, 61H.fl.4222.

1983 Schultz, 14J70, 3 bedroom,
gas furnace, porch, underpen ning, utlllly pole, 304-675·7649.

367-1957.

Llwn mowing &amp; trimming, (20
'I'· oldl. ·~~185&amp;.

Yard Sale

I

Furnlst.d Etticlency 920 Fourth
Avenue, Gallipolis. $"185/Mo
Ulilltl1s P•id, 614-446-4416 Afler
7P.M

()175,

l'rlmmln;, TrM Rtmowal, H.;ge
lrimming. Fr• Eallmat..! 614·

........,
.,.lch on left ~tytw'Mr; black, Pan-Time s- mala doa, whHs chat, Mile Hill &amp; Convnlulon RaoaM S.io Muot
a. Flo•lblo, Sond CU.
Rd., RecTne.
116, clo Galllpolhl Daily Tn,..no,
7

&amp; 4 WD's

19"M Chevy Step Vsn lSO, lully
lnwlal~, Pt. Pit. V.F.O. 304-tilS-

Furnished •pi: CAJCH, utllltl•
pd . Private, q~o~iet. 614-441--2602.

T~ro~gh Out, l6,950. 614·446-

wittHn15

Found: bt•ck &amp; while terrW,
amall dog, hilS brown collllr,
Pomeroy vk:lni'ly, 614-192-3489.

for Rent

Vans

I~==========-r-==========i :;;;;:-;-:-;--:-:-:--:-:--:--:c--o:
1980 F1lrmont 14x54 Gtt Heal, 2
11
Help Wanted
18 Wanted to Do
Bedrooms, C•nlral Air, Llk• New
Pa" lin. dlplrtrnenl ttora met'·
chtndlur needed Mull llvt

&amp; Found

73

BORNLOS~R

1973 V1ngard 121:60 With Tip
Out Room, EtiCirlc H.at, 2 Bed·
room1, $2,000 In Point Ptaasant,
1822 814
9591
-446·

" Can ·t you weathermen get anything
right ? You predicted baseball- SIZed ha•l
This is tennis balf s•zed! "

Kllttnt to good home, approx.
6wks. vkf, weanU, &amp;14-m-

Lost

Apartment

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Nlct one BR unfurnished spt.
1968 King mobile home, 2 bed- Range, relrlg . turn'ed , Weter,
rooms, needs some ,.pairs garbage paid. Oepoeit req 'ed.
$2,700. 7:30-9:30 AM or 7 : ~ 614-446-4345 •ft•r 5p.m.
UO Plol, 304-8i*:M21.

1 YNr Ok:l Male Eskimo Spitz,
Good Witch Ooa.
NNda
Country Home. 114-31"i-t36t

Pupp'-t 1o 304"-l~i.
Qlv•w•y, Bri1·
t•nyi8Ngle,
;;-7':-;:--...;,:.:..:~::,::_:..::::.:__
Rabbi1a, 304~ .

Mobile Homes

$500 Ott Purchase Price Ot Any
New Home At Elsea Home Center, Great Selection, Fr11 Set-Up
And O.llvary! C•ll 614 -m-1220.

1 Lab Gold4n Rolno-, Aboul 2
YoorG~d Alao Colllo Shoohard
To A
Home. IM-388-87'11.

KIT 'N' CARL \'LE!E: hy Larry Wright

lafayettt Mall: 2 Room &amp; B•th,
$175/Mo. 2 Btdroomt, 2 Balhs,
$400/mo . Deposit Required. l14-

lor Sale

Giveaway

6

44

Homes for Sale

Nlc• 2 tlory, b•semenl, garage
&amp; l•rga lol, axe location, SomarvUie Reany, 304·67S-3030 or

Announcements

Reduca:
Gobese
OturwUc,

Monday, May 18, 1992

SNAFL ® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

18, 1992

341n fine-

35 Of sacred
tmages
36 Annual
38 S.llor's
jacket
39 Entice
40 Bloodsucker

41 Fast aircraft
(abbr.)
42 Claw
45 Chriaten
48 Astronauts '
" all rigM "

Robonoon

50 Chop

10:30 C!l Mljor Loaguo Beooboll
Chlcego Cubs at Los
Angelos Dodgers (L)
@ 8eHboll Tonight
10:35 C1l MOVIE: Motor Dundee
(2:30)
11:00 (]) 8 ril II I]) Cl 1111 ID
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Starring Johnny Clroon
Ster8&lt;l.

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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 18, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-People in the news- ·Your Social Security
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Dan
Aykroyd plans to open a New
Orleans club 10 be named for his
Blues Brothers act with the late
John Belushi.
Among tile investors: Belushi's
widow , Judy, brotller Jtm Bclushi,
actors John Candy and River
Phoenix. and Isaac Tigrett, cofounder of th e Hard Rock Cafe
cham.
"We hope 10 do for blues what
Preservation Hall has done for Jai.l
internauonally," Tigreu said .
"New Orleans· gift to Lhe world ts
tts music and a group of blue s
lovers have joined together to create a venue for live local and
national talent. "
Aykroyd recen~y was in New
Orleans scouung siles on the riverfront and in the French Quarter .
The venture also would include a
museum and restaurant.

Miss America Carolyn Sapp will
star in a lclevision movie based on
her relatio nship with an abuSive
boyfriend, NBC said.
The filming of "Miss Amcnca:
Behind the Crown" is 10 begin in
June for bro.1dcasl in September.
Sapp, 25, was living in Haw3.li
when she became engaged to Nuu
Faaola, who played football for tile
New York Jets. She said he turned
violent and threatened her with a
butcher knife in 1990 before they
splu up.
Faaola was never charged.
Sapp, who grew up in northeastern Washington, said she didn't
expect playing lhe role to cause her
any emotional distress.

assets.
Generally, 10 qualify for th e
QMB program in 1992, you m~st :
be entitled 10 Medtcare hospital
Income eligibility guidelines are insurance (Pan A); have an annual
higher this year for the Qualified income at or below th e national
Medicare Beneficiary (QMB) pro- poverty level; nol hav e resources
such as bank accounts, stocks and
gram, according to Ed Peterson .
"If your income was 100 high to bonds in excess of $4,000 ($6,000
qualify last year. you may want to for a couple). The national poverty
reapply because the income eligi- levels for 1992 arc $6,810 for an
biltly guidelines were raised to individual, $9,190 for a family of
conform with the new national IWO.
If you think you qualify for
poverty guidelines," Peterson
explained.
assistance under Lhis program, you
The QMB program is run by the should file an application at Human
Health Care Financing Administra· Service A~ency . If you think you
tion, the federal agency Lhal runs might qualify for assistance but do
Medicare, and the State Human not have Medicare Part A conlaCt a
Services Agency. Under QMB , local Social Security office or caU
Stale Medicaid programs are the Social Security toll-free number
required to pay Medicare medical l -800-772-1213- any business day
insurance (Part B) premiums , from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m . 10 inquire
deductibles and co-payments for about filing an application for
certain elderly and disabled persons Medicare Part A. The Athens
with low incomes and very limited phone number is 592-4448.

Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens

SPOKANE, Wash . (AP) -

Birth is announced
EASTERN ROYALTY • Terry McGuire or Pomeroy and Lisa
Golden or Reedsville were recently crowned Eastern Prom King
and Queen. Tbe prom was held at the Blennerhasset Hotel in
Parkersburg, W.Va. on May I.

Meigs County land transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Naree Hale. 2 1/3 A . 10 South em Ohio Coal Co., Salem.
Homer L. Miller, 14.04 A., tO
Yvonne A. Wooten and James L.
Fife. Jr., Salisbury.
James R. Johnson and Sarah L.
Johnson, pl. 101 #341, to Greg L.
Vining and Brenda L. Vimng, Mid dlepon Village.
Belly Jane Russell, 1. 7 A. to
Carroll Lee Russell, Chester.
Dale E. Taylor, lot, to Thomas
McClung and Madeline McClun g,
Pomeroy Village.
Drew Websler, Post #39, Amcr·
ican Legion, Inc ., Anicles of Inc.,
Pomeroy.
Harry H. Tipton and Clara B.
Tipton, Pl. Lots, to Wayne Jarvts
and Clara Jarvis, Middleport Vil lage.
Alben R. Eastman and Doris 0
Eastman, 40A, to Charles Eastman
and Robin Easunan, Bed!ord .
Larry Roush and Grace June
Roush, I.OOA, to Emory L.
O'Bryant, Jr. and Patsy A.
O'Bryant, Chesler.
George R. aka. George W.
McDaniel and R. Carolyn
McDaniel, Parcels, to Arthur
Knight and Charisse P. Kmghl,
Pomeroy Village.
Rebecca J. Smith, tra cts , to
Terry L. Smitll, Suuon.
Terry L. Smith, parce ls. 10
Rebecca J. Smitll, SutiOn.
Richard Carter and DaiSy
Caner, I.OOA, 10 Dale Carter and
Patsy A. Carler, Otive.
Lawrence Darst and Carolyn S
Darst, 0.83 A, to Dixie I. Porter.
Ru~and .

Katie Guth , dec'd , by adm
WWA, lots, 10 Nancy B. Reed ,
Pomeroy Village.
Edwin B. Hamilton and Nancy
S. Hamilton, par~:els, to Corbeu R.
Caudill, Salem.
Samuel N. Arnold, cert., to Ruth
E. Arnold, Syracuse Village.
Ruth E. Arnold, parc els, to
Edward R. Chapman, Sr., Rutll C.
Chapman, Floyd T. Chapman and
Kenda S. Chapman, Syra,usc Vtl ·
Iage.
Mildred Miller, parcels, to Gary
A. Jones and Sandra K. Jones, Saltsbury.
William R. Hayes, Jr., tracts, to
Mark Allan Davis and Mary Ann
Davis, SutiOn.
Louie M. Christian, dec'd, affld.
10 Exa Mae Christian, Harrisonville.
Rutll Foley, doc'd. by exec., pt.
inL, oil, gas, coal, min, to Dcngil L.
Leggett, Chester-Lebanon.
Rutll Foley, doc'd, by exec., pt.
inL, oil, gas. coal. min., 10 Eleanor
F. Roth. Lebanon-Chester.
Rutll Foley, dec'd, by exec., pt.
inL, oil, gas, coal, min., to Donald
Leggett, Lebanon-Chester.
Ruth Foley, dec'd, by exec ., pt.
inL, oil, gas, coal, min., to Randall
Leggett, Lebanon-Chester.
Ruth Foley, dec'd, by exec., pt.
inL, oil, gas, coal, min., 10 Dorothy
M. Leggell, Trustee , Lebanon Chester.
Ruth Foley, dec' d, by exec .• pl.
inl, oil, gas, coal. min., to Marsha
Leggett, Lebanon-Chesler.
Ruth Foley, dec'd, by exec., pt.
int., oil, gas, coal, min .. 10 Ilene
Anderson, Lebanon-Chester.
Ruth Foley, dec'd, by exec., pt.
inl., oil, gas, coal. min ., to Junior
C. Dotson. Lebanon-Chester.
Ruth Foley, dec'd, by exec., pt.
int., oil, gas, coal, min., to Ralph D.
Leggett, Lebanon-Chester
Rulh Foley. dec'd, by exec., pl.
im., oil, gas, coal, mm., to Carolyn
S. Gaston, Lebanon-Chester.
Gary L. Wolf and Patricia L.
Wolf, Lot I, to Dennis Newland
and Helen Newland, (\live.
Miriam Smith Walters, Robert
D. Walters, Juanita Smith Lan nigam and Roy Ralph Smith,
66.5A,IO Dixie A. Smilh, Lebanon .
Olin D. Boothe by Executor,
.16A., to Edward J. Werry.
Chester.
Sherman While, par~:tls, 10 Jeffery Steven Beelccr, Chesler.
Felicia Gruiser, dec'd , cert of

trans., to Freda M. Grueser. Evelyn
Hollow . Helen Oberholzer , Edna
Hcrben. Salisbury.
Alvtn Smith and Rtta Jean
Smith, 1.35 A., to Alvm R. Snuth
and Rita Jean Smtth, Bedford.
W.E . Engle, confirmation of
sale, elal, Steven A. Giglis, etal,
Metgs .
W.E. Engle and Gamet Engle,
parcels, 10 Bruce E. Sabel and
Pnina I. Sabel, Columbta.
Maxine G. Burress and Gordon
P. Guthrie, lots , to William H.
Guthrie, Middlcpon Village.
Karen J. H. Story. 3.98A, 10
Steven L. Story, Bedford.
Dorothy M. Dcmoskey, dec'd,
Cc rl. of Trans., Carl E. Dcmosky,
Mtddleport Village.
Norman W. Owens and Helen
E. Owens, 14A, 10 John A. Henderson and Patricta Henderson,
Lebanon.
Joanna L. Council, l.3137A, to
Kevin D. Thomas, Rutland.
Charles B. Davis, parcel s, 10
Don R Hill and Mary E. Htll ,
Letart.
Janel Manuel, aka, Janet Oyler,
nka Janet Slacbctka, Robert J. Slac het ka , 1/2 int. tracts , to Paul
Black , SutiOn.
Bernice R. Roush and Russell
Roush, right of way, to Tuppers
Plains, Chester Wa1er Dist., Lctan.
William R. Osborne and Kathy
D. Osborne, right of way, to Tuppers Plains, Chester Water Disl.,
Chesler.
Charles E. Mi chael , Sr. and
Patricia Mtchael, nght of way, to
Tuppers Plains, Chester Water
DisL, Lctan.
John C. Sheets and Jason D.
Sheets. nghl of way, to Tuppers
Plains, Chesle r Wat er Di st. ,
Orange.
Thomas C. Porter and Judy A.
Porter, loll, Roben E. Landers and
Margaret A. Landers, Pomeroy Village.

Annual banquet held

Greg and Patty Taylor, Mount
Alto, announce Lhe birth of their
daughter. Breanna Marie, March 15
at Holzer Hospital.
The infant weigh ed eight
pounds and eight ounces and was
21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents arc Janel
Duffy and the late Patrick Duffy .
Paternal grandparents arc Fenton and Jeannie Taylor.

The annual mother -daughter
banqu et was held recently with
Mrs. Kathryn Mora leading the
program.
The group opened with the
hymn "Faith of Our Mothers" witll
Belly Dean as pianisL
Several people gave readings
and poems including "Old Folks
Arc Worth a Fortune" by Belly
Dean, "When God Created Moth-

BREANNA TAYLOR

Curtis presents program
The Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts mel recently at the
home of Pat Holter wtth eight
members and one new member,
Bonnie Smtth, atlending.
Roll call was answered by nam ·
tng a water planL
Shclia Curtis and Alice Thompson arc going 10 the regional mc cltng.
The group was invited to th e
Rutland Fncndly Gardeners open
meeting.
Winding Tratl held a sale of
greenhouse supplies.
An invitation was received to
the 50th wedding anniversary of
Bob and Alice Thompson on May

Weigh-in set

24 al the Rock Springs Grange
Hall.
Market lamb weigh -in and reg Shclia Curtis prescmed a proistration
for 1992 4-H and FFA
gram on Water Barrels and other
Water Gardens. Wa1er lilies can be market lamb exhibitors has been
starled in a barrel that receives sun . set for May 23 from 9-11 a.m. al
The lilies have to be 6-8 incpes the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Any 4-H or FFA member planunder the water. Fish can live in
ning
to show market lambs at the
gardens as long as they arc 18 -24
1992
Meigs County Fair must reginches deep in the cenlcr. Line the
ister
,
weigh in and pay picture
garden with sand a layer of heavy
plastic. Add oxygenating plants to money tn the amount of $10 per
keep out algae. Frogs are good to animal (maximum two, one ewe
and one wether) al tile above dale
keep mosquitoes to a minimum.
The traveling prilc was won by and time.
For more mformation, contact
Kathryn Mora.
The ho stes s served refresh - Chip Haggcny at the Meigs County
Ex1ension Ofltcc, 992-6696.
ments.

ers" by Helen Wolf; "Memories"
by Marilyn Spencer, "What is a
Mother Made Of?" by Jennifer
Mora ; "Springtime Prayer for
Mothers" by Pam Crow; and "Children Learn What They Live" a
poem by Kathryn Mora.
The children's chOir sang four
songs and Mrs. Mac Young had the
closing prayer.
Mrs. Kathryn Mora presided al
brief business meeting with 10
members present. Fony-three sick
and shut-in calls were reporled.
Betty Dean purchased some silverware for the kitchen.
A ham, baked by Kathryn
Baum, was sent by the group to
Gladys Spencer.

Revival slated
Revival al Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel will be held Tuesday
through May 24 al 7:30p.m. nightly. Special music and preaching by
Henry Miller Famtly. Rev. Victor
Roush inviles tile public.

Holiday Values
-

0

.RITE AID
CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS

0

1018 BAG

0

Y&amp;S
STRAWBERRY
TWIZZLERS

CREST
TOOTHPASTE
6r06JO.lOR

199

FOil KIDS 46 Ol

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79c

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199

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CHARCOAL
LIGHTER

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,Mter Rebate

0

129

0

ACTIFED
TABLETS

0

299

••
BAIN DE SOLEIL
•
659
•
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• REPELLENT
299
••
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•
1 99
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• ~~%179
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LessMail

Patrick L. Lawson, 1.91A, to
Austin G. Lawson, Columbia.
Earlene Stobarl, Frederick J.
Stobart and Roger Adams by
Executor, parcels, to Michael D.
Harman and Linda K. Harman,
Bedford.
James W. Suttle, dec'd, cen. of
trans, ,10 Greta M. Suttle, Lebanon.

~

Just In Time For Memorial Dav At Rite Aid

Leonard E. Daily Jr .. ctal, Jcnnt
Daily, ct"l, Vtrg in ta L. Vance, et"l.
and Ronald Vance, eta!, parcels. to
Leonard E Daily, Jr. and l enni
Dai ly, Olive.
Deborah L. Boatr ight and
Nathan Boatright, 3/4A, 10 Gregory
Boatright, Che.slcr.
Robert Lee Barber, parcels, to
Ann Barber, Orange.
Wc sBancu Bank Parkersburg,
parcels, to Hershel B. McClure,
Pomeroy VIllage.
Maunce W. Carnahan and Belly
M. Carmahan, 20 A., 10 Delores
Hanlon, Chester.
Buena Grucscr, dec'd , affld., 10
William Grucscr, Salisbury.
Erncs linc Price , Easement, lo
Gayle H. Price and Edna Price,
Lebanon.
Mildred Ingram, parce l, to
Linda K. Brickles, Rutland.
Co lumbia Gas, Tran s. Co rp .
Ease. to Michael Kincaid,
Lebanon.
Esther A. Spalionc , Dorothy
May Farmer and Sarah Jane Welch,
49 .ORA, 10 Eugene Davis and Hilda
Davis. Lebanon.
Dcwaync G. Stutler and Martha
C. Stutler, 45A., lo Dennis W. Harri s and Lill y M. Harris, Orange.
Frances Reed, corrective deed,
10 Frances Reed, Olive.
Frances Reed, parcel, Tommy J.
Reed and Reg1na D. Reed , Olive.
Deborah L. Boatnghl and
Nalhan Boatright, 9 3/4A., tO Gregory Boatright, Chester
R.E. Douglas, 84A, to Jeffrey B.
Amos and Lon L. Amos , Bedford.
Dalton W. Henry, I.IOOA . to
Jock L. Dye and Mary E. Dye, Sutton.
Ronald K. Browning and Judith
E. Browning, Pt. lots, 10 Wtllie Lee
Cook and Virginia A. Cook, Middlcpon Village.

-.-..··--- ··--

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DEODORANT
2250Z

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189

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PRICES

ONWEE~LY SPECIALS EFfECTIVE MAY

18 THAOI '(; H MA Y / 4 1997 • SOME ll EMS MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN All STORES

FRENCH'S
MUSTARD

~£s

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SOFT SCRUB

199

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POMEROY, OH.

$219

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•
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RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
300 EAST MAIN STREET

Juan Peron was
elecled president of
Argentina in 1973,
18 years after
being ousted m a
military coup.

PageS

Muslly cloudy. Chance or shOW ·
ers. Low in the mid 50s.

----~-----·-·--·-

Vol. 43, No. 12
Copyrlgh1od 1992

-· .

~----•

1 Secllon, 10 Pogoo 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newa01aer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 19,1992

Southern graduation May 29;
Ihle and Ervin top seniors
man and sophomore years.
Members of the class of 1992
arc Jeffrey Dean Allen, Kelly
Autumn Allen, Ann Elizabeth
Amos, John Mark Amos, Jason
Andrew Arnott, Roy Lee Bailey ,
Mark Andrew Brown, Michelle
Ann Brown, Tamara Jean Buckley,
Dee Anne Canter, Pedro Luis
Castillo, Shane Sullivan Circle,
Kenny Lee Clark, Jo shua Tale
Codner, Amber Dawn Cumings,
William Patrick Davis, Sarah
Rebecca Duhl, Christopher Jay
Ebersbach, Kellie Jane Ervin, Norman Kenneth Evans, Christina
Dawn Eynon, Robin Crystal Foley,
April Lynn Freeman. Michelle
Leann Friend, Laura Marie Fryar;
Heather Renee Gibeau!, Carrie
Ann Gloeckner, Kevin Lee Grady,
Todd Mauhew Harrison . Jody Gale
Hayes, Terri Lynn Hayman,
Andrew Tracy Hill, Marcy Dawn
Hill , Michael Joe Hill, Glenda
Dawn Holler , James Thomas
in war. Pictured at the proclamation signing are,
POMEROY POPPY DAYS • May 21·23 bas
Holler, Virgil Brian Hudson ,
1-r, Mary Martin, Senior Citizens Poppy Queen;
been declared Poppy Days in Pomeroy by
Kellie
Ervin,
daughter
of
Paul
Velessa
Dawnene Hunnell. David
Poppy Chairman Veda Davis; Me gao SwearinMayor Bruce J. Reed. Tbe red poppies are made
and
Mona
Ervin,
Racine,
will
Charles
lhle,
Robin Renee Imbogen, Poppy Princess; Mayor Reed; Brittany
by veterans and distributed by American Legion
the
salutatorian
address.
A
deliver
den, lo Wa long, Lisa Mae Jones,
Powers, Junior Miss Poppy; and Amanda Fetty,
Au.xiUarics in honor of tbe sacrince or lives lost
member of the National Honor Theresa Lyn Lee, Scott Andrew
Little Miss Poppy.
Society, her activities during her LiSle, Rebecca Dawn Lutz-Ours,
high school career have included Andrew Clayton Mahlman, Robin
drama for three years. vice presi- Dawn Manuel, Michelle Lynn
dent her JUnior year, treasurer her McCoy;
junior year and a member of the
Rebecca Kay Parsons, Trevor
softball learn for three years. She Alan Petrel, Jamison Shawn Profhas been active in 4- H was Meigs fin, Robert Allen Proffitt, Brian
County Fair Bunny Princess last Allen Randolph, Brandy Leigh
year and runner-up the year before Roush, Jeremy Lester Rou sh,
Jeff Warner, President of the and has taken part in junior leaders Michael Shawn Russell. Renee
By BRIAN J , REED
Asbestos removal for tile strucSentinel News Staff
tures in queslion is estimated at Pomeroy/Middleport Lions Club, 4-H. She was honored at the Meigs Dawn Russell, Eric David Shoults,
approximalely $20,000 - equal to and members Bruce Teaford and County Academic Banquet her Dawn Marie Shuler, Ronald Alan
Modification of a demolition
the entire demolition project. Rev. William Middleswanh soph_omore yeo/ and the high Spa4n, Don Andrew Stephenson,
($15,000 in ' grant money and approached council regarding ' the school academtc banquet each Melissa Marie Teaford, Mark
projcctiO be funded by Community
$5,000 of village funds).
possibility of the club making year. She panicipaled in tile Ameri- Christian Theiss, Stacey Irene
Development Block Grant Funds
Following extensive discussion, improvements to the parking lot can High School Math Exam, the Theiss, Jenny Raye Varney, James
was discussed when Pomeroy VilViUage Administrator John Ander- stage.
lage Council met in regular session
Ohio University American History Howard Vining, Ronnie Steven
Wtth funds raised by the club, Con lest and was an Ohio Universi- Wagner, Rebecca Jane Wil es and
son was autllorized by counci I 10
on Monday evening.
The village has received county
pursue a fourth option, that of the Lions are interested in con-· ty Governor's Scholar her fresh- Chad Ray Wisc.
asbestos removal and demolition of structing a roof over the stage and
approval on a $15 ,000 CDBG fund
application for tile demolition of only the two houses in question. If installing new railing, and possible
unsafe structures witllin the village. that request is denied, the village replacement of steps, installation
However, a required asbestos test will modify its application to electricity and handicapped acccs revealed significant asbestos con - include only the six houses that sibitity facilities.
Upon the motion of Councilman
lent in two of the nine houses 10 be have no asbestos content.
demolished witll the funds. A third
Councitinan John Blaeunar indi- John Blacttnar, council autllorized
house revealed a lesser asbestos cated that tile fue depanmcnt could the club to develop more concrele
content.
demolish tile Olber six houses atlil- plans and to report back to the
The state wtll not release any of Oe or no costlo the village, if nec - board al a laler date.
Councitinan Scott Dillon reporttile county's CDBG funds until tile essary.
Police Chief Gerald Rought and ed that the St. Paul Lutheran
village makes arrangements to
modify Lheir project or remove tile Councitinan Thomas Werry repon- Church Sunday School has
ed on estimaiCS received for possi- ex pressed an in1eres1 tn tnstalltng
asbestos.
ble purchase of radio equipment for and maintaining a planter in the
County
CommisThe Meigs
lower parlcing lot.
siOners. who oversee th e CDBG tile police depanrnenL
The church has also requested
According 10 Rought, the new
program on the coumy level, have
suggesled three options 10 tile vil - equipment, if purchased, would permission 10 mark off handi lage : etimination of the three hous- opcrale on an ultra-high radio band, ca pped parking spaces near the
es in question from the project, and a new frequency would be church on Sundays and for special
events al the church.
elimination of lhe demolition pro- assigned.
Pending
further
investigation,
Werry stated tllat fencing needject and replacement wilh anotller
Mayor
Bruce
Reed
was
authorized
ed
to be installed al Monkey Run
eligible project, or waning unttl
tO
approve
a
radio
purchase
based
park 10 control traffic in that area.
next year for the project, and
Action on gasoline bids for tile
including asbestos removal in the on tile recommendation of Rought
and Werry .
grant application.
(Continued on page 3)
Baccalaureate and commencement exercises for seniors al Soutll ern High School will be held Fri day at 8 p.m. in the high school
gymnasium.
The baccalaureate address, invocation and benediction will be
given by Rev. Roger Grace, pastor
of the Racine United Methodist
Church.
The valedictorian address will
be presenled by David lhle, son of
Charles and Donna Ihle, Racine. A
mcm ber of the National Honor
Society, 1hle has panicipaled in the
quiz bowl for two years, was a
computer lab assistant this year,
was honored al the academic banquet each year and al the Meigs
County Academic Banquet his
sophomore year. He is a member of
the scholarship team, participated
in Lhe American High School Math
Exam, and was an Ohio Univer;ity
Governor's Scholar his freshman
and sophomore years.

KELLIE ERVIN

CDBG alternatives discussed
by Pomeroy Village Council

DAYIDIHLE

De Wine, Rhodes seek GOP
nomination for Senate

C. . . . Awillell AI Aoll AIM

TAMPAX
TAMPONS

Pick 3: 503
Pick 4:~022

•

0

MENNEN
SPEED STICK

Ohio Lott cn

Jordan
named
MVP

PHONE 992·2586

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
political veteran and a political
rookie are vying in the June 2 pri mary for the Republican nomina tion for the U.S. Sena1e seal held
by Democrat John Glenn .
Lt. Gov. Mike DeWinc and
newcomer George Rhodes both
want 10 be the GOP nominee who
runs against Glenn in November,
but Rhodes isn't taking any
chances. He says he may try to run
as an independent if he doesn't win
tile primary.
Glenn faces no challengers in
tile primary.
DeWine is confident of victory
in June, and has aimed his cam paign ammunition at G lcnn. He
woukln 't comment when asked his
opinion of Rhodes.
"I look at this race comparing
myself with John Glenn. He's a
nice man, but I don't think he is
going to be an instrument for
change," De Wine said. "I think
1992 presents a real opportunity for
us to change things in Washington.
The public is fed up with what tlley
see going on."
The 45-year-old Cedarville rcsi·
dent has been in government service for 20 years . He was Greene
County prosecuiOr, served a lenD in
!

the Ohio Senate and was a congressman from 1977 to 1980. He
has been tieulenant governor since
1991.
De Wine is married and has eight
children.
DeWinc, who announced early
in the campaign thai he wrote as
many as 31 overdrafts on the
House Bank while in Congress,
said he would malce congressional
reform a priority.
His proposals would require that
Congress live under the same laws
tt imposes on others, cut in half the
size of senators' and representatives' staff and reduce tile number
of congressional committees. He
also suppons limiting consecutive
terms a senator could serve 10 two
six-year terms and representatives
to four two-year tenns.
He said he would call for adoption of a two- year budget cycle,
inslead of tile current one-year. He
said Lhat would allow Congress to
spend more time on program man agement
Rhodes decided to make his
potitical debut after a conversation
wiill a woman who sat next to him
on a plane flight last July.
During a discussion about the
natilJII •s problems, Rhodes, 67. said

the nation needs new. young leadership. She suggesled tllat he run
for office.
Rhodes is a private aviation
consultant and has served as an
expert trial witness. He is an Army
veteran who served in the Pacific
campaign in World War II and in
Korea .
He lives in Cleveland, is
divorced and has two chtldren.
Although he is anxious 10 make
changes on Capitol Hill, Rhodes
has a low opinion of those with
whom he would serve.
"Power corrupts. That's really
Lhe problem we have today in our
federal government We have too
many people in power who can't
handle it," he said.
He said DeWine is a "pawn of
special interests" whose campaign
has consisted of "lame excuses and
weasel words."
But he believes he would be a
different kind of sena10r.
''I'm a leader. I'm not a phony.
I don't B.S. people," he said.
He believes he can do something to cut tile federal deficit and
slash government spending by
recruiting allies in the Senate.
''I'd have 10 first fmc! 50 other
(Continued 011 pqe 3)

DONATION MADE • Riverview Brownie
Troop 1079 bas made a donation or library
books to the Riverview School in Reedsville. The
books were earned by the troop through their
magazine sales. Pictured as tbe books are pre -

sented are, rront l·r, Brownies Tiffany White
Jessica Barber and Renee Barringer; and back'
l·r, Riverview principal Debbie Weber and
Troop Leader Teresa Church.

April housing starts down 17 percent
By JOHN D. McCLAIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Housing
slariS plunged 17 percent in April,
Lhe largest drop in eight years, lhe
government said today . Every
region of the country suffered
declines.
The Commerce Departmem said
construction of new single-family
homes and apartments totaled 1.12
million at a seasonally adjusted
annual rate, down from a revised
1.34 million a month earlier. The
March ra1e originally was estimated 10 be 1.37 million.
Analysts had expecled construe tion to slow in April after four
sharp montllly advances, including
a 6. 9 percent gain in Man:h. but the
cxlent of the drop was unexpected.
It was the steepest since starts fell
26 pen:cnt in March 1984.
Many had said the March
)

increase ovcrstaled the strength in
housing slariS because it included a
80.4 percent surge in apartment
building.
The multi-family sector, which
is overbuilt in many areas, fell back
43.1 llCrcent in ApriiiO a seasonally adJUSICd annual rate of 152,000
units. Construction of five or more
units dropped 42.8 percent, the
largest on record.
Constru,tion of single-family
houses fell in April for a second
straight montll, down 10.6 percent
10 a 963,000 rate a.fter a 2.9 percent
til'£ line in Marc h.
The single-family drop was lhe
largest since a 13 percent decrease
in January 1991.
It was the fu-st decline in overall
housing starts in seven months.
Despite the sharp drop, starts during the first four monlhs or 1992
were 30.4 pen:ent above those of

'

the same period last year.
Housing construction led the
eco nomy 's growth al a 2 percent
annual rate during tile ftrst-quaner
with a 15.8 percent advance, the
largest stnce tile second quancr of
1986.
Builders had been encouraged
by new home sales, which rose
through 1991 and jumped 11.9 percent in January. However, sales fell
7 percent in February and then
dropped another 14 .8 percent a
month laler.
Analysts said the choppy performance renecled forecasts of an
occasionally erratic housing
rebound. They project a modes,t
increase in housing activity for
1992, particularly if interest rucl
remain relatively low.
. ·
Fixed-rue mortgages rangcCI.
between 8.96 percent and 8.84•pei.(Contlnaed 011 pqe 3) :
I

~-

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