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                  <text>By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, May 19,1992
Page-10

Meigs Vocal Music Department
to perforn1 at Ameriflora '92
Members of Electric Youth
from Meigs High School will be
taking part in a unique ch&lt;nl festival in Columbus 011 May 30. The
event is called .. America sings!
and will be held at the Amerifl&lt;n
"92 patt.
America Sings! is the name of a
non-profit organization dedicated
10 providing young performers with
lhe opportunity 10 utilize lheir time
and Wents 10 help others. America
Sings! encourages members of
school and community choirs
across lhe country 10 get involved
with philanthropic, volunteer service projects in their own home
towns. Choirs respond by working
in soup kitchens and shellers,
cleaning up streets and organizing
food drives. Many choruses hold
bolcfit concerts for local charities.
America Sinp! then holds
large, non-compeotive choral festivals 10 salute lhe good worlcs and
showcase lhe talents of America's
youth. The event in Columbus fean

twes Ohio choirs only. lt is a celebnion of son~ and service in the
hean of Amenca.
More than 1,200 young performers from 40 school and community choruses will participate.
Most will perform individual halfhour concerts on one of three
stages in the park.. Atlhe end of the
day, all the panicipants will don
their America Sings! !-shins and
form one massive show choir, to
sing and dance together in a
massed-&lt;:hoir conccn finale. At the
finale they will hear speeches from
people involved in the world of
philanthropic service and perform
three songs, the music and choreography of which each choir learns
prior 10 corning 10 the evenL
Along with doing service proJCCts in their own communities.
most participating choirs will bring
along donations of food, clothing,
toys and funds to the festival.
These donations will be dislributed

Bowen. RiUI Smith, Lena Nessel road. Nell G111ves, Becky DePOY.
He&lt;1ther Thomas, Carolyn Thomas.
Fonda Thomas, Michelle Thomas.
Daniclle Thomas, Sandy Felly,
Wanda Fetty , Mary F. Skinner,
Bethany Mayer. Sarah Jo Salu, !Ia
Darnell. Linda Mayer, Nancy Salu,
Pauline Mayer,lrene Bailey. Christine Bailey. Gail Francis, Ruth
Francis. Mina Swisher, Barb Riggs,
JoAnn Wildman. Mildred Ward ,
Lois Bun. Maye Mora, Mary Mora.
Maida Mora. Clarice K!11utter, Kim
Krautter-Thompson, Mary Virginia
Kaull, Mary E. Russell, Joy Russell, Sandi Hawley, Sarah Hawley.
Dianne Hawley. Debbie Bock. Jennofer Buck. Jackie Buck, Lesley
Carr, Mane Hauck, Donna Carr.
Jessica Martum, Connie Marcum.
Susan Well, Evelyn Lanning.
Norma Louise Jewell, Mary E.
Chapman. Mildred Arnold , Sue

Mem hers from Elccuic Youth
performing are: Kelley G111cscr,
T111cey Grueser. Cassie Hullblrd.
Misi Neutzling , Angeb Searle5..
Virginia Shuler, Holly Wmi•m•,
Michelle Young. Tcricia Cogar and
Kelly Phelps. They are under me
dircctin of Teresa B. Davis.
Donations of any of the above
items may be left at Meigs Ifill&gt;
School or Meigs Junior High
School during this wed:. All poceeds will be delivered 10 Amrlricl
Sings' on the day of the group's
performance.
For anyone wbo is able Ul
attend, the performance will he
from 4-4:30 p.m. 011 the Americml
stage. The Mass Conccn will bepl
at 7 p.m.

Smith, Mandy Smilh, Katie Sntilll.
Gay Perrin, Sally Envin, Ailioc
Globokar. Mary Crow. Carly
Crow, Jill Winebrenner, Nancy
Winebrenner, Becky Trent, Marjorie Crow, Dorethy Woodard,
Nonga F. Roberts, Mary Lou lhk.
Patti Struble, Erin Struble, Marty
Struble, Jan Lavender and IC.ulty
McDaniel
Following the dinner, the grt'IIV!
was entertained by gospel siqgt:r•
Jan and Kathy.
Men of the church, preparing
and serving the meal, were: Jim
Adams, Marvin Bun, Paul Pieroe.
Lennie Jewell, Don Maya-, Gcol:ge
Nesselroad. John Musser. An sm.
ner. Roland Wildman, Ralpl!
G111ves. Bob Felly. Don Men, Joe
Struble. Dan Thomas, Dml
Thomas, Bill Malbd:, Dale Hollman. Lowell De Priest and Ralpl1
Werry.

-

o"

'

IIJ I I

P.Irt h. ( ili Ulh.
Tonl!;bt parlly cloud. Low 5560. Thursda)', partJ~' SUllO~'·

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
PAa'IM!JlSJUP AT WORK • Tbrough the
....-.... ia tduo:alio• program at Pomeroy
111!
J act dl'orts from Pomeroy businesstr s along the parking lot in Pomeroy

.,._ ep..
7

-...,. -...&amp;wers. A group got together Sal-*! ....,_ to plant tbe nowers. Pictured,
ill • ,......_ onltr, are Des Jelfers, Dianna
lAW!
acf MD-Iyu Wilcox, all or Bank One,

Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry, Lilly Powell of
the Lions Club, Angie Capehart or Kelly's
Korner, Vicki Ferrell of Buttons and Bows,
Becky Triplett, sixth grade teacher al Pomeroy
Elementary, Stoll DiDon, a member of Pomeroy
ViUage Council, and elementary students, Rusty
Robinson, Amanda Rusche! and David Ruscbel.

·•

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f.icl::up

by _______________________
Under a bom~rule charter adapled
in 192S and later a1III!I1Cioll. l=u
City, Mo., is governed by a mayor ud
council elected at four-year intervD.
The l2 council memben lll!lld tilt
city manager. who .. lhe cbiel ~
istrative officer of the mllllicipa1lty.

2 Section, 14

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 20, 1992

-DI-

p- 25 _ , .

A llultlmedil Inc.

Wyatt, Anderson to address Eastern withdraws state loan
Meigs High School graduates application: superintendent

TOll.• • IMr!ls Rllonda Dailey, R.N., B.S.N.,
• - el _..,. is surrounded by students of
~ Moip .... Sdool work study program as
e 1 I . •fnb of I•• Emergtncy/Urgenl
~ m I :" P IJ'U during a IOU r of Veterans

Museum seeks articles

3110.

I

1862.

Vol. 43, No. 13
Coprrtghled 1992

on

To eater, or tor IIIOH lnf-alion, Ctllltad tht museum at 992--

•-

share."

After two years of high raungs
there, the show was picked up by
ABC.
"The Lawrence Welk Show"
ran on ABC for 16 years, ending in
1971. After that, it was syndicated
on 248 stations in the United States
and Canada until 1982 - 1.542
performances in all.
Welk assembled a stable of
mostly unknown but always wholeso me talent. Members of hiS
"musical family " who were with
him from the flfSl TV season to the
last included saxophonist Dick
Dale, accordionist Myron Floren
and singer Jim Roberts.

Pfrtlllfat •lstory olitem - - - - - - - - - - -

I

.. . -

homeless and disadvantaged cbildren . Hence the America Si11gs!
motto: '"To kids who fecllhey have
no hope. from kids with hope 10

stage, he was a stern
taskmaster. He was reputed to be
ught-fisted w1th salanes. He fired
onginal Champagne Lady Alice
LA WltENCE WELK
Lo n in 1959 for showing "too
much knee" on camera. And the
In h1s 1971 autobiography.
Lennon Sistas, among the show's "Wunnerful, Wunncrful." Welk
most famous acts, left a decade explained how hts music got iu
later amid reports of fricuon with niCkname. He recalled his r:adio
their boss.
announcer telting about a flood ,rJf
Welk listened to his viewers. fan mail in 1938: "They say that
keeping track of what performers dancing 10 your music is like SIPgot the most fan mail - and mak- ping champagne. Lawrence. you've
ing sure they were featured.
got yourself some Champagne
" He was really on the pulse of Music!"'
his audience. We did three tours a
" He could wall inlO a room,
year to find out what the people any room and charm everyone."
wanted to hear," said Bobby said Kathy Lennon of the Lennon
Burgess. a dancer on the show Sisters.
from 1961 to 1982. "They had to
Lawrence was one of eight chilbe able to feel that they could dren born 10 Ludwig and Olristina
dance along with us."
Welk, natives of Alsace-Umoine. a
region of present-day France that
was once part of Germany. The
couple moved to Rus&lt;ia in 1878
and in 1892 immigrated 10 Amcnc.a
and settled near Strasburg, N D .
Ludwig Welk entertained hu
children
with an accordion lhat bid
Tbe Meigs County Historical Society will_bold a "Vintage~~
been
in
the
family for gencnotion&lt;.
Show" at the Pomeroy Library June II as a luck-oiTfor the society s
Lawrence
yearned
fcJ- his own - a
annual heritage W«kend.
.
S400 model.
Clothing or ac:assori&lt;!S may have belonged lo women, men orchilHis father agreed, provided the
dren, but must be authentic.
hoy
would won the fii1D for four
Tbe w«kend display at the museum will featun tb&lt; clothing/acyears
and tum over all his earrunp
cessories from the style show, plus many additional artidl!fl that
from weddings and barn llancrs. AI
21, Lawrence announced he ,....
·· · ·
committee nqoeslli the foDowinglnforma·
leaving the farm . "You'll be
doD to be completed and returned to the museum by May_ 20. Also,
back,·' his father predicted.
Indicate If the article is to be used for tb&lt; style sbow and dasplay, or
"You'll be back just as soon as
1tror display only.
you get hungry."
Welk began the grind of oneClotbiDgltem
night stands with
bonds. lie
never returned 10 arrniltg.
Welk is survived by hi• wife,
Tllte period represented - - - -- - - - - - Fern, whom he married iD 1931;
daughters Shirley and Dmna Lee;
OWner's name - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - a son. Lawrence Jr.; 10 gnnddlildrcn; and a great-granddaughter.
Display and styled - - - - - - - - - - - Funeral armngemerns were incomplete.
Displayoo~ -----------------------~led

Slavery was
outlawed in U.S.
territories
in

Page4

Lawrence
Welk dies at age 89
.

By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - Lawrence
Welk, the "wunnerful. wunnerful"
champagne music master who
struck up his band with " ah-&lt;Jne.
an' ah-two" for a generation of TV
viewers. has died at 89.
Welk had pneum011ia and died
Sunday night at his horne m Santa
Monica. said spokeswoman Bernice McGeehan.
" The Lawrence Welk Show."
ran for 30 years, until 1982. and
continues today in reruns. Welk
scopped performing in 1989.
Welk, who accompanied hi s
orchestra on the accordion and
waltzed with his Qwnpagne Lady
singer, never wavered rrom t~e
bounCing, effervescent dance muSic
he began pbying as a young man
in his native North Dakota.
"We try to please our audience." be said in 1964. "We try 10
bring it some joy, happiness and
rela&gt;ation and always 10 be in good
taSte - the ltind of entenainment
!hal should come into lhe home.''
His "Champagne Music," and
lhe ph!1ISes "Ah-one. an' ah-two"
and "wunnerful, wunnerful" in his
German accent became pan of the
oation •s lexicon. The show's theme
song for half its run was "Bubbles
in the Wine."
The sunny orchestra leader
toured the country for 25 years
before hilling it big with a TV
appearance in Los Angeles in 1951 .

Pick 3: 503
Pick 4:6022
Buckeye 5:
8-17-28-29-30

to Ohio charities which a•si£1

Trinity Church holds annual banquet
The annual mother-daughter
banquet of Trinity Church was held
r=ntly at the church. The candlelight dinner was prepared and
served by lhe men of the church to
the 103 in attendance.
Attending
were
Aileen
Wehrung, Judith R. Werry, Debbie
Evans, Lennie Haptonstall, Whitney Haptonstall, Oebbie Haptonstall, Melody Farmer. Dixie Sayre.
Lula Circle, Kim Adams , Carol
Jean Adams, Dorothy Sheets, Dottie Musser, Eva Dessauer. Esther
(Scottie) Hayes, Bethany Cooke.
Dennise Mclaughlin, Autumn
Mclaughlin, Carole Mclaughlin,
Debbie Mclau~hlin , Julia
Mclaughlin, Tern Mclaughlin,
Debbie McLaughlin Cooke, Louanna Leonard, Marjorie Leonard,
Mary Beth Weeks, Barbara Weelcs,
Elsie Hines. Jo Hines , Donna
Hines. Mary Grueser, Mary E.

Ohio Lottery

Reds
beat
Expos

Memorial Hospital Thunday. The lour lor the
32 students making up the cll•s.• was arranged

by Mrs. Carol Brewer, Meigs County work
study program coordinator.

Community calendar
C
II • -

wil]r Cal~•cbr items
-,.s llcfore aa event

mghtly. w1th Harry Miller and lam ily . PastOr Victor Roush inviLcs Lhc
public.

T\JI'.SDAY

CHESTER - Chester Council
No. J2J. Daughters of Amcnca .
w1ll meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. The
58th anniversary of the lodge will
be observed. Initiation for a candi date will be held and members are
requested to wear white.

_. • - , el tbt t ..nL items
k ll"lUiMtl •&lt;I i• advance
•
'" ; I &amp;•00. ill tbt cal-

...__

PmO:ltOY - Regular meeting
&lt;Ill Drnr W'cboter ?ost No . ]9.
Aaaa....,. Ugl&lt;ID. wlil be held
T~.

Dona all 7 p.m. Meeting

.mI iP' m .
I1UIOINIE- The Southern JuniOr
llntglllidlliu •rll present a spri ng
pmpm Tlll&lt;:lday all 7 p.m. 1ft the
~ ~ ~rJm. Public
lldlr~&lt;limtmr

1nvited.

POII!IEROY - ReVIval at the
~"*l'

Pl.iinm Chape I. Route

I'll. I'Wut&gt;&lt;i&gt;J. ..m be held Tues&amp;y ......, Sunday __a.t 7:30p.m.

RACINE - A meeting for all
Southern junior parents regarding
ll\e Southern Alumni will be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the h1gh
sc hool cafeteria. Assistance is
needed for the event and further
1nformauon may be obtained by
calling Brenda Dav1s at 992-7138.
Anyone wanting to donate to the
eve nt is encouraged lO do so as
soon as possible .

hr IUI S.--.ute "tramlllg wage .·

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Pauline
Ey non . There will be a plant
exchan ge.

_..,. llliam:h ll. 1993. does
IDdl..vilJ b IIUV'aRC! or 5easonal agrildrwr:ill Miibils. a11 to non~immi ­

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Third Wednesday Homemakers

cr...n ~ wor\len performqiEiiijiiiaJ)'QIT 51GS0Dal work. Also,

diP Fair Ltlllm SU!tdards Act conltlum .. gmM af nemptions from

m ""'l•on"' -

'"'lwmnents. and

I!IR IIJ'aiiiDC .apo provrsions do not
&gt;Ud &lt;mptoy....

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11'11"1

miCII.Ift
..... lllllfl* In .....,..
_.. • &amp; In for rour
• 7 S•J*IY.

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Club will meet Wednesday at 10
a.m. at the muni cipal building .
There will be a potluck and members will decide on the yearly trip.

Robby W. Wyatt has been
named valedictorian and Barbara
Joan Anderson, salutatorian, for the
1992 graduating class of Meigs
High School.
The two lop students will give
addresses at the 24th annual baccalaureate and commencement
exen:ises to be held Sunday at 4:30
p.m. in the Larry R. Morrison gymnasium.
Named honorarians of the class
on the basis of their academic
achievement were Frank Edward
Blake, Heather Christen Davenport. Tara Michaelle Gerlach,
Darin Paul Logan. Joseph Paul
McElroy. Tammy Jo Miller, Bobby
Lee Vance, and Christina G.
Weaver.
The valedictorian, son of Terry
Wyatt, Pomeroy, and Brenda
Wyat~ Middlepon, plans to attend
Ohio University where he will take
a course in pre-medicine. Graduatmg with a 4.0 grnde point ave111ge,
he is the recipient of the Holzer
Science Award, and the Franklin B.
Walters All Scholastic Award. He
received the Danforth Award in his
junior year.
During his high school years.
Wyatt has played football and basketball and been on the !nick team.
He has been on the quiz team for
two years, in the French Club three
years, on student council all four
years, now serving as president,
and a member of the National
Honor Society of which he is now
president
The salulalorian is the daughter
of Don and Bernadette Anderson,
Pomeroy . She will be attending
Ohio SUite University in the fall.
Last year's recipient of the Danforth Award. she is a regional
scholar, a university scholar as
designed by OSU, and recipient of
the American Elecuic Power Edu cational Award.
In high school she has been in
the marching, concen. pep and allcounty bands. on the quiz team, an
officer in the National Honor Society and the French National Honor
Society, and active in Teen Institute and HUGS. the French Club,
and Senior Spirits.
Frank Blake, son of John and

ROBBY W. WYATI
Valedictorian
Margie Blake, Middlepon. wiD be
attending Ohio University where he
has been accepted in the Copeland
Scholars Program .
Active in sports, he played football, basketball and track. He is on
Student Council , in the National
Honor Society, and the senior class
vice president
Heather, the daughter of Jerry
and Gail Davenpon, Middleport,
will be attending Ohio University
next fall. She is a member of the
National Honor Society and the
French National Honor Society,
and has been active at Meigs in the
marching, concert, pep and allcounty bands, varsity softball, and
the French Club. She is the senior
class treasurer and on Student
CounciL
Tara Michelle Gerlach is the
daughter of Michael and Debbie
Gerlac h of Middleport. She has
enrolled at MarietUI College. At
Meigs she has been active in softball and cross country. is treasurer
of the National Honor Society and
Vice JX"eSident of the French Honor
Society, on the quiz team, in the
Fellowship of Christian Students,
in the Pep Club and Senior SpirilS.
Darin Logan is the son of Ron
and Kay Logan of Middleport. He
will be attending the University of
Rio Grande. At Meigs he is on the
Student Council, and is a member

RACINE - The Meigs County
Flfefighters Association will meet
on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Raci ne Firehouse. Richard Fetters
of the Oh•o F1Ie Academy Program
will speak.

BARBARAJ. ANDERSON
Salutatorian
of the National Honor Society and
the French Club. He was in the
senior play. took an educational
tour of London and Paris, is an
audio visual aide, and was the
girls' basketball statistician.
He was listed in Who' s Who
Among American High School
StudenlS, and was the Meigs High
School American Legion contest
winner as well as a delegate to
Buckeye Boys State.
Son of Paul and Kay McElroy,
Joseph will enter Ohio State as a
Designed University Scholar this
fall. He was the recipient of the
1992 American Electric Power
System Educational Award . At
Meigs he has not only been an academic achiever, but alao excelled in
sponing activities. He was selected
for the Tri-Valley Conference All
Academic Team nine times. was on
the baseball and wrestling teams
for four years, and was in cross
country and football two years .
McElroy was cited for academic
excellence in both the lOth and
12th grades. was on the quiz team.
and active in Teen Institute.
Tammy Jo Miller, daughter of
Mrs. and Mrs. Davey Miller, is a
vocational student and a member of
the Vocational Industrial Clubs of
America. She is enrolled in the cosmetolo~y course and works pan (Continued on page 8)

T

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Regular board
mccting of the Meigs County Public Library will be Thursday at I
p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - A class m
tnangl c arrangement and the
mec hanics of arrangmg wlll be
taught by Sheba Curtis Thursday at
7 p.m . at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Democratic E•ecuuve Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.

SHOW OF STRENGm - United Food and
Commercial Workers union inltrnational repnsentative Jerrr Gordon (right) addresses more
than 500 strilung Kroger workers and support-

ers gatheriDg Tuesday outside Kroger ofi"ICts in
Livonia, Mich. The protestors mel to show
strength and said the compa•y was not bargaining in good lallb. (AP)

New law cuts Ohio's State Board of
Education from 21 to 11 members
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The sponsor of
a new law shrinking the State
Board of Education from 21 to II
members said the measure will produce a panel that is mon: efficient
and open 10 change.
Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Gal loway, offered that l,lfCditdon as he
wllChed his bill bemg signed into
law Tuesday by Gov . George
Voinovich.

Watts said the larger board,
whose members were elected from
each of the state's 21 congressional
districts, was not effective and
resisted reform.
"I think what we're doing is
clearing the deck. My prediction is
we're going to have new people
seeking those offices. Those offices
will have much greater visibility,"
he said at a bill signing ceremony.
. "We're going to find that we
not qnly have a more efficient
I'

group by vinue of size, but ... that
we're going 10 get people who arc
not only going to not be resistant,
but will help us take the lead in
education reform," Watts said.
Watts' measure , which look
effect immediately, provides for an
11 -member board to be elected in
November . Candidates will run
from districts that still must be
drawn by either legislators or
Voinovich.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
Eastern Local School District
Soperintendent Richard Smith says
that the "tremendous progress"
made by the disuict in the past year
has made It poSStble for the disuict
10 withdraw its latest application to
the state loan fund.
At a special board meeting held
last week, the Eastern hoard voted
to withdraw its loan fund application for $35,000, which had been
filed to fund the district's operations for the remainder of the fiscal
year, ending in June. According 10
Smith, the district has made a
determination that the disuict will
be able 10 "make it through" the
rest of the year without applying
for loan dollars.
"Two years ago, when I arrived
in the district, we borrowed
$175,000 from the fund. wluch was
less than what was suggested by
the stale," Smith said. "We made

additional cuts, scrimped and saved
and didn't borrow the full amount
This year. our application was for
$35,000. and it has been with drawn."
Several faciOrs have combined
to improve the district's financ1al
standmg, according to Smith . A
local propeny tax levy. passed in
November. 1990. has pumped
$155,000 per year inlO the ·disuict's
coffers. The disuict is also receiving funds tluough the Dependent
Pupil Impact Aid prog111m (DPIA).
which is based upon student enrollment receiving Aid to Dependent
Children (ADC) benefits.
Smith said that the district has
also streamlined ope111tions in the
dislrict's lunchrooms.
The district's two-year, five mill
levy wiD end at the end of calendar
year 1992, but Smith refused w
comment as 10 whetha the district
would seek renewal of the b·y. He
did say, however, that the board

would probably request a new anal ysis of the dislrict 's fliiiiJICeS before
the decision is made regarding a
levy renewal request.
The 1990 tax levy.'" effect,
saved the district from financ~al
ruin. Smith said tha~ prior to the
passage of the levy. the disuict was
"on the verge of going iniO a bottomless pit" of borrowing from the
Slate .

State loans are paid off m twoyear increments, so the last loon r:L
S175.000 will be paid off at the end
of the next fiSCal year.
If no other state loan ceq uests
are made by the district, the hoanl
would be out of the stare loOin fWill
for tbe forst ume in four years. If
levy flUids continue 10 help pay fa
the district 's operations, lhe distr ict's financial condition could
co ntinue 10 improve, and that' s
bound to be good news for resi dents who once feared for the district's SUTYivaL

• ...--~·-·~"'-" .. .. "''""'? .. . - - - - - - - - - ---~- .. -

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WORK UNDERWAY ·The Meigs County
Courthouse is dappled with gray, now that
Gbetn Painting crews have begun to scrape old
paint from the building in preparation lor its
summer painl job. The county commi.~sioners

rectntly awarded the painting bid to tho local
r.rm in tbe amount of $16,632. Tlae ~
whicb was built in !1145, reaiv05 1 Dt'W' a.t of
paint every five yean.

Republicans, Democrats to
have Supreme Court primaries
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) Three judges and a lawyer arc competing June 2 for nomination 10 run
for the Ohio Supreme Court.
Cootrol of the state's highest
court will be at stake in the fall.
Republicans have a 4-3 edge, but
two sealS held by the GOP, and one
by Democrats, are up for grabs in
the Nov. 3 election.
• There are no primary contests
for the chief justice nommauon .
Incumbent Thomas Moyer of
Columbus is unopposed by Republicans. as is Democrat Roben Gor·
man of Cincinnati.
Eac h party has a nomination
contest for two other coun slots in
wh1ch the incumbents are not seek ing re-election. The primary has a
Cleveland flavor since three of the
contenders are from Cuyahoga
County.
Republicans seekmg a successor
for retiring GOP Justice Robert
Holmes will choose between
Hamilton County MuniCipal Judge
Mark Pamter. 45, of Cincinnati,
and Thomas Frutig. 48. of Gates
Mills.
.The winner will face Democ111t
Francis Sweeney of Lakewood in
November. Sweeney, a judge on
the 8th Ohio District Court of
Appeals in Cuyahoga County. is
unopposed in the primary.
Democ111ts nominatin~ a candi date to replace retiring Justice Her-

SHS graduation
Friday, May 22
Southern High School will conduct ilS graduation ceremonies on
Friday. May 22 and not Friday,
May 29 a• published in Tuesday's
Daily Senlincl.
The em:r was made in editing.

bert Brown. a DerDocrat , will
choose between Judge Lesley
Brooks Wells, 54, of Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Court, and
Judge John Patton, 6], of the 8th
Ohio Dislrict Coun of Appeals.
The winner will face sUite Sen.
Paul Pfe1fer, R-Bucyru s. 1n the
Nov. 3 race. PCeifer has no prunary
C1JPOS1lion.
Painter. an ally of Senate Presi dent Stanley Aronoff. R-C.ncmnau,
won the Ohio Republi ca n Pany

endorsement for lhe pnmary. He
has heard more than 30.000 cases
m h1s I 0 years as a tnal court
judge.
"That's a perspective that's
presently lackmg on the Supreme
Court There aren't any recent trial
judges there ," Painrer said.
Frutig . a lawyer for 22 years
wa1 finance chairman for Moyer·~
successful _1986campaign. Frulig
doeS ROt VICW hiS lack Of judicial
bockj(COUnd as a d!11wbock.

,----Local briefs----.
Man cited after one-car crash
A Pomeroy man was cited after a one-car crash on Ohio 124 in
Sullon Township Monday around I p.m.
According to the patrol. Marvin R. Edwards. 55. was westbound
on Ohio 124, went off the right side of the road and struck a
guardrail. Edwards claimed he was forced off the road by an eastbound vehicle, the patrol reponed.
No inJuries were reponed. Damage 10 Edwards ' 1977 Chevrolet
Impala was listed as moderate and disabling.
Edwards was cited by the patrol for driving under the mfluence
and failure 10 controL

Two injured in wreck
A New Haven, W.Va. man and a Reedsville youth wcre treated
for mjuries after a two-vehicle wreck on Ohio 7 in Chester Township Tuesday around 8:30p.m.
According 10 a report from the Gallia- Me'Bs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Ralph G. Gibbs, 41, New Haven, was northbound
on Ohio 7 slOpped in the road. A following vehicle, driven by John
D. Colbns, 16, Reedsville. was unable to stop and struck the rear of
G1bbs' car.
Gibbs and CoDins were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. Collins wa.•
tre&lt;ited and released and Gibbs was transponc&lt;IIO St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Damage to Gibbs' 1988 Cadillac Sedan Dev1lle and Collins'
1988 Chevrolet Cheyenne was listed as light
Collins was cited by the patrol for failure 10 maintain assured
clear distance .
Continued on page J

�WedneSday, May 20, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Street
Pomeror, Ohlo

DEVOTED TO THE lln'BRE8'nl or THE IIIEIG8-IIAIION AR!.A

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
l'llbllsller
PAT WHITEHEAD
As.I!Jtant Publlaber/Controlltr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gt~~tnl M111111g0r

LElTERS OF OPINION .,. welcome . They obould be leu than 300
wordJ . All letters are subjecl lo editins IDd must be signed with name,
~.. and T&lt;lepbooe number. No UDJiped letten will be publiobed. Lea.n
ibouJd be ~n good lUte, lldchuinc iuues, not penooaliD.es .

Bungee jumping bill
may be in trouble
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS ~ A boll !cuing lhc Department of Agriculture regulate
the growong spon of bungee jumping may be in trouble in the Legislaiure
hccausc of a debate over Its inspection provisions.
Rep. Marc Guthne. the chief sponsor, opposes a Senate amendment
allowong the department w contract for lhc inspections and says he will
msost on the ongmal language requiring them done by career employees
of the state.
Sen . Rlchard Finan. R·Cincinnati. proposed lhc amendment "in con·
ccpt" last week as the Senate prepared to vote on Guthrie's bill.
But because he dod not have ll drafted, lhc Senale postpOile&lt;1 the vote
on the amendment and the bill until Tuesday, when Finan indicated be
will offer it agaon.
Fman sa•d state employees lack the expenise to inspect amusement
ndes ~ bungec JUmping would be defined as one under the bill ~ and
that for safety reasons. the inspecuons should be done by experts in the
mdustry.
He also said the House version, which requires lhc state to hire civil
&lt;;erviCc employees. would add to the state payroll at a time wben the state
'' flghung budget defiC its and tryong to cut down on bureaucracy.
Guthne took JUS! the opposue view. He said state employees could be
lraoned to work year-round on salanes paod w1th fees from the industry.
In tenns of safety, Guthrie saod he os concerned about the quality of
mspections under Finan's proposal due w the conflict of interest in " letli ng an industry mspect1tself."
He saod the state employees would have work all year because most
ndcs arc portable and the off-season. when they are disman~ed and
slorcd, is when most of lhc repair and maintenance wort is done.
Guthrie said he was d1sturbcd because Finan told the Senate that the
department "is not wedded" to having the inspections done by state
employees.
" They told us on th e House that this (state inspec tions) is an integral
rart of the bill." Guthrie said.
He saod will ask the depanmcnt of clanfy 1ts posiuon.
"There art a lot of th1ngs 10 thi s bill, but 1f the Senate adopts thi s
amendment. 11 could d1e in a conference com miuce," Gulhrie said.
Bcstdcs cst.ablishmg ovemght for bungcc jwnping- a sport in wh1ch

a person Jumps or IS dropped from a tall OOJCCl while lied to an clastic
cord to soften the fall ~ the bill contains numerous other provisions.
It increases fees for permits and inspections. authorizes the hiring of
consu ltan ts to mvestigate amusement ndc accidents, provides penalties
for ndc rs who 1gnore safety mstructions and requires lhc governor to ere·
Jtc a spec•al line ucm '" the sta te budget for the diviSion's inspection
lund .
The bill carnes an emergency c lause that would have it take effect
Jmmcdtatcly and be an force for the summer.

Deadline for publication
of election letters May 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the June 2 pr~ary
election. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters Will be
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, May 27.
..
. Individuals should address issues and not personalthes.
.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used. .
Letters should be JOO works or less. All letters are subject to edot·
ing and must be signed with name, address and telephone nu~ber.
·7 elephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters Will be
·published. AU letters should be in good taste.

Letters to the editor
Team, coaches express thanks
Dear E&lt;htor:
The Tuppers Plaons Lillie
League Giants baseball !Cam would
lile to thank everyone who helped
and donaled items and baked goods
for the fund raising yard and baltc
sales.

Al so the team and coac he s
would like to thank everyone who
donated to the team. We arc look mg forward to a great season.
Coaches John Rankin
and Benny Bcnnedum

Today in history
·

By T1As.""'iated Press
Today is Wednesday, May , the !41st day of 1992. There are 225
days left in the year. . .
. .
Today's Highlight on History:
On May 20. 1927. Charles Lmdbergh lOOk off from Roosevelt Fteld on
Long Island. N.Y., aboard the Spirit of St. Louis on hiS hiStone solo fl1ght
to France.
On this dat&lt;:
In 1506. Christopher Columbus doed in poveny on Spaon.
In 1830, the first railroad timetable was published, on the newspaper
Baltimore American.
In 1861, North Carolina voted to sa:ede from the Union.
In 1861, the capital of the Confederacy was moved from Montgomery,
Ala., to Richmond. Va.
In 1902, the Umted States ended it' occupation of Cuba.
In 1932. Amelia Earhart look off from Newfoundland for Ireland to
become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.
.
.
In 1939. regular transa~antic air service began as a Pan Amena~~~ Aorways plane, the Yanku Clipper, took off from Pon Washmgton, N.Y.,
bound for Europe.
In 1942, 50 yean ago, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra recorded "(I've
Got a Gal in) Kaiamazoo'' al Victor Srudios in Ho!lywood. .
.
In 1961 , a white mob attacked a busload of Freedom Riders m Montgomery, Ala., prompting the federal government to send tn U.S. marshals
LO restore order.
In 1970, some 100,000 people demonstrated in New York's Wall
Street district in support of U.S. policy in Vietnam and Cambodia. . .
In 1984. lonner Argentine President Isabel Peron, ousted tn a molitary
coup in 1976, returned to her homeland.
In 1985, the FBI arrested John A. Walker Junior, who was lllter coovicted of spying for lhc Soviet Union.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesda , May 20 1992

OHIO Weather

rankled the IRS was one to Hot
Springs. Va. ~ not a long drive
from where the IRS was camped
oul

Junkeung se"ason by federal government agcocics. We pieced together
some of the tteUmg done by IRS
officials last year:
Last summer. for example. one
group attended a getaway at a golf
resort in the Pocono Mountains.
and anolhcr o ne spent a week on
Maryland's eastern s hor e. But
retreats were Labeled learning seminars ~ JUS! the kmd of "red flag"
designation tllat might trigger an
audit of a pri vatc dtizcn or busi ness.
The 11-year-&lt;Jid Council is now
The IRS believes that worker
in U.S. Tax Coun scci;ing a Judg- efficiency is maximized by nice
ment to restore their Lax -exe mp- scenery, and helps foster a team
tion. The Council pleaded to the attitude. That would apparently
IRS in a 1990 lelter that it must onclude hay rides, bonfires, water
meet in opulent surroundings volleyball and body toning ~all of
because those are the kind of which were included in the Pocono
accommodations their prominenl trip last year.
The Pocono's junket last su mmembers are accustomed to. and
they would not attend eduattional mer ~ the fourth consecutive year
meetings if they were short of stan- there ~ involved managers at the
dard. Moreover, Council members IRS ' Philadelphia Service Center,
pay for most of the arnenoties them - who were thae to learn about manselves. while the Council itself aging a culturally diverse work pays lor most of the meals.
force . The Pocono Manor boasts of
It all proves anew that one two I 8-hole championship go If
man'sjunket is another man's edu- courses, outdoor tennis courts and a
cational seminar. The approaching trap shooting range . Each of the
summer si£nals the onset of the 380 attendees was charged a rate of

By jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

"Yes, 1see - but what's the position on abortion and capital
punishment? ... "

How government can aid underclass
In a recent column, I asserted
that the problem of America' s
underclass is not, at bottom, economic at all, but moral. This floes
dirtx:~y in the lace of the liberals'
basic assumption that there is oothing wrong with America's poor
that money. distributed by lhc wel fare bureaucracy either directly (in
the form of cash and food stamps)
or indirectly (in the form of spa;ial
education, free medical care, etc.),
can't solve.
They couldn't be more mistak en. People will not shake off the
mentality of dependency and
become consLructive members of
society unless their more brutish
impulses are restrained by religious
or at least ethical training, and
unless an allegiance to such nonns
as the work ethic is fostered by
membership in a stable family
structure. I realize that at this point
the argument tends to become Clf·
cular (how can a poor person born
on the streets become a member of
a stable family'). but the fact that
the problem is knouy or even insol uble in the case of particular indi -

voduals doesn't invalidate the point,
let alone JUStify JUS! throwing
money at such people.
There arc, however, ce rtain

William A. Rusher
things of an economic nalure that
government can do to ameliorate

the problem, even though lhcy fall
far shan of solving it. One of the
s•mplest and best is HUD Secretary
Jack Kemp's proposal for "enterprise zones·' in our inner cities.
Essc nually, thi s proposal would
create zones in which entrepreneurs
who arc willing to live, work and
invest in them would not have to
pay a capital gains tax in the buSI nesses thus created. The result
would be new locally owned enter prises providing new jobs for people willing and able to work, as
well as new income tax revenues
lor government. To repeat , enterprise zones won't solve Lhc whole
problem, but they arc certainly a
step in the right direction .

This proposal. which is closely
idenuficd with Secrcwy Kemp,
was adopted by the Bush admmis trauon and has been silting in the
"In" basket of the Democrat-&lt;:ontrolled Congress for three years,
gathering dusL Now, in lhc wake of
the Los Angeles nots. it appears
that biparusan suppon may at last
be buildtn~ to pass it. It is, to say
the least, hogh time.
What ha s taken Congress so
long ' Predictably, the Democratic
leaders have uied to blame President Bush. ··He dido ' t g1vc it a
!ugh prionty. " they pout - as if
they leap witll alacrity to pass bills
10 which Mr. Bush g1vcs a high pnority. (Eiimina!Jng the capnal gains
tax altogether. for example') Since
when, many case, has the Pany of
Compassion c !aimed to need a prod
from Mr. Bush to do something so
clearly helpful to the poor?
No , the real reason for the
Democrats' sluggishness in authorizing enterprise zones is probably
the fact that implementing them
wouldn't require the creation of
another elaborate paLronagc net ·

work of welfare bureaucrats, like
those who administer food stamps,
Head Start, Medicaid and the rest.
All it would require is a bill
exempting certain types of busi - .
nesses from the capiial gains tax .
What JUICY boondoggle is lhcrc on
that?
Anyway , why let a Republican
administration get the credit for
such an original and constructive
idea? So lhc proposal moldered on
Capitol Htll until the Los Angeles
riots breathed new lire into it
It may well be that. in the process, they also breathed new life
into the presidential prospects of
Jack Kemp. Kemp's name has fea tured promonen~y in discussions of
possible Republican nominees for
years, but re&lt;:en~ y he has seemed
Sidelined by a Cabinet job in a difficult and unrewarding field . If
enterprise zones are created at last,
and work as well as expected,
Kemp will deserve ~ and get ~
another look.
William Rusher is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

J.V. Brennan: posterity's propagandist
It was the spnngtimc of our diS content, 1970, and Ameroca was
tearing itself apan. Presodenl Nixon
had just announced that he'd sent
troops into Cambodia, widening a
war we wouldn't win - and ripping new wounds at hom e that
would take a generation 10 heal.
And in the Wh1te Hou se, an
eager-to·pleasc military aide,
Marine Col. lack V. Brennan , sent
a memo to Nixon 's secretary, Rose
Mary Woods ~ ostensibly for pas·
tcrity, but knowing it would reach
The Boss.
We've now come to see Bren ·
nan as a networker in a lucrative
1984 deal to supply Saddam Hus sein's l100JlS with new uniforms ~
a deal studded with disgraced mod dlemen : Spiro Agnew, John
Mitchell, Nixon and Romania 's
communist dictator Nicolae Ceaus·
esc u. We'll get to all that - but
forst. a look at a young networker
perfecting his craft
"May 4,1970
"TO: Rose Woods
"FROM: J.V. Breman
"On lhc day following the president's hisla'ic speech ... I had the
privilege of being in his company
for most of lite aftemOOn. I was so
moved by the spirit, determination,
dedication and patriotism which he
conveyed that I feel obliged to
record the mood for history. May I
humbly submit this:"
There followed nine paragraphs

-'-- part sycophancy, part pop-psych
novella~ about a ride on the presIdential yacht, Sequoia, . with
Noxon, wtle Pat, daughter Julie and

Martin Schram
David Eisenhower, and presidential
pal C.G. "Bebe" Rebozo. Mainly,
it was about Nixon's repeated
obsession with a special ceremony
he wanted when lhcy passed Mount
Vernon: "He told me he wanted
the National Anthem 'blasted out.'
He wanted it to be heard' He
emphasized this point by punching
the air with his closed fist."
Tbe memo notes Noxon effected
a "deliberately grulr' voice to ask:
"As a Marine, do you approve of
what I said last night?" Brennan
called the speech "one of the
proudest moments of my life,"
adding: "I only w1sh I were over
there to belp carry out what you've
ordered.''
Nixon responded: "I do, too. I
think I'll resign and we'll go
together." Eventually, they dod ~
they went to Nixon's Elba m San
Clemente; Brennan was his chief of
staff.
In 1980, Brennan left Nixon to
join convicted Watergater John
Mitcbell, Ni&gt;on's ex-anomey general, at his consulting form, Global
Research. There he got involved in
the deal to sell Saddam's troops

uniforms. Details were revealed
recently in D.C.'s Superior Court,
and reponed by The Washington
Post; Brennan , who succeeded the
late Mile hell as Global's president,
sued to recover uncollected commissions on two contracts totaling
$181 m11lion.
Initially, a European-based company, Pan East. heard Iraq wanted
to buy unifomns. Needing someone
w1th connections in Baghdad, Pan
East contacted Agnew, Niwn' s
vice presodcnt, who resigned without contesting evidence that he
took kickbacks. Agnew 's consulting firm referred Pan East to
Mitchell ~ and collected $797,000
in commis..'imns.
Mitchell's form had a contact a Lebanese arms dealer named
Sarkis So~hanalian . Brennan said
in a deposnion he'd prevmusly gotten Reagan official s to grant
Soghanalian a license to export
helicopters to Iraq. (Recently.
Soghanalian was sentenced for
conspiring to v1olate the U.S. Anns
Export Control Act in another
case.)
When it proved too costly to
have uniforms made in the USA,
Mitchell got Nixon to write Ceauscscu (since murdered by his own
people) and urge the uniforms be
made in Romania, Brennan said. It
was done. But Saddam withheld
most of the $8 million in commissions thai Global and Soghanalian

had agreed to share - because the
arms dealer owed Iraq money for
other deals . The judge ruled
Soghanalian clidn't defraud Global.
Today, Brennan knows better
than LO quit his new day job ~ one
most Washington insiders don't
even know he has. His new business address: 1600 Pcnnsylvanoa
Avenue . His title: director of
administrative operations in the
Bush White House. It's stroctly a
non-policy job, Bu_,h's press office
says_ Unless. of course, Jack Brennan chooses to humbly submit a
memo or two, just for posterity .
Martin Schram Is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
I

Berry's World

[Mansfield [ 79'
INO

•I Columbus[ 81 ' I

Around the nation
Chilly weather prevailed this
morning along the East Coast from
Maine to Virginia, with near-freez·
ing readings in New England valleys.
A storm system that brought
more than 10 inches of rain to
nonheastern Texas moved into the
central Plains. Heavy rain was forecast in the Midwest, and thunderstonns were forecast from Montana
to Nevada.
Flood warnings were posted
Tuesday for portions of the
Guadalupe and San Antonio riv ers
in southern Texas.
Clouds hung over much of the

FmHA offers assistance to low,
moderate income families
The Farmers Home Administration can assist low and moderate
KY
income families obtain convcnlional financing through the use of its
new guaranteed rural housing program .
David P. Urwin, county supervi sor
FmHA, reported tl1at the proShowers T-sronns Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Sunny Pt. ClOUdy Cloudy
gram helps prospective home buyC1992 Ao:u-Weamer , tnc ers overcome two of the most common barriers to home ownership,
down payment and monthly monFriday, fair. Lows 55-65. Highs gage costs. Loans can be made up
By Tbe Associated Press
in the 80s. Saturday. a chance of to 100 percent of marker value and
South Central Ohio
showers
or thunderstorms late. amonized over 30 years at a very
Tonigh~ panly cloudy. Low 55Lows
55-65.
Highs in the 80s. Sun- reasonable fixed interest rate.
60. Thursday, partly sunny. High in
The maximum adjusted income
day, cooler with a chance of showthe low 80s.
limit
varies depending upon the
ers.
Lows
in
the
50s.
Highs
65-75.
Friday tbrougb Sunday:
n~mber of persons in the household. Urwin explained. For exam ple, the maximum limit lor a fami ·
Jerusalem, Gallipolis, and the OES ly of three persons in Meigs Coun·
Emma Chapman
375, Vinton.
ty would be $30,700 per year. For a
Graveside services for Emma
Born Nov. 28, 1905, in Chilli- family of four persons. the limit
Mae Chapman, 77, of Syracuse, cothe, he was the son of the late would be $]4, 150. The maximum
who died Tuesday at Veterans Jerry and Anna Blaine Moriany.
Memorial Hospital will be held at I
He is survived by his wife,
p.m . Thursday at Rock Springs Marie Higgins, to whom he was
Cemetery. The Rev. John Corcoran married Jan. 18, 1946, in South
will officiate. Friends may call at Bloomfield.
the Ewing Funeral Home Thursday
Other survivors included: one
from 12 noon until time for the stepson, Richard Higgins, Rock Ry BETH GRACE
graveside services. Arrangements bridge; a stepdaughter, Clara
Associated Press Writer
announced earlier by the funeral Townsend, Vinton; three stepCOLUMBUS ~ U.S. Rep. Bob
home were incorrect.
grandchildren; I3 stepgreat -grand - McEwen says not all of the 166
children and II stepgreat-great- ove rdrafts he wrote at the Hou se
grandchildren.
bank were hiS fault. but hiS RepubJohn Lyle Moriarty
Funeral services will be held 10 lican pflmary opponent wants
John Lyle Moriarty, R7, Vinton, a.m. Thursday at the McCoy - proof
U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller on
died at Holzer Medical Center, Moore Funeral Home in Vinton
with
the
Rev.
CheSter
Lemley
offiTuesday
invoked the had checks
Gallipolis, Monday, May 18, 1992.
ciating. Entombment will be in the ISsue lor the first time in what is
He retired in 1971 from the Forrest Lawn Cemetery, Columshaping up as a heated baulc for
Ctvtl Service Army Corps Lock
hus.
the 6th Congressional DIStriCt GOP
and Dam 15 in Sardis where he
Friends may call Wednesday nomination.
was the head Iockman. He was a
from 6-8 p_m. at the funeral home .
McEwen has acknowledged that
U.S. Navy World War II veteran, a
Masonic services will be con- he wrote the overdrafts during a
50-year member of the F&amp;AM
ducted at 7:45 p.m. by the Vinton 39-month period and admitted he
Lodge 1096, Tombal, Texas , a
F&amp;AM Lodge 131.
wrote some checks knowing he
member of the White Shrine of
didn 't have the money in the bank
to cover them. But he blames many
of the overdrafts on mismanage ment at the now -defunct bank, say·
Continued from page I
ing at least 76 deposits were not
properly credo ted to his account.
The JOist annual Memorial Day service will be held at the
Miller, who wrote no overdrafts
Burlingham Cemetery Monday at I :30 p.m.
.
on the bank, on Tuesday urged
The Rev. Keith KBpple, Belpre, formerly of Bedford Townshop,
McEwen to "put all his checks on
will be the speaker, and there will be specoal musoc by Frank
the table."
O'Brien. Denver Rice, Floyd and Coleen Bnckles, and Scan !(ap"I find it curious that Bob
McEwen continues to claim that he
ple.
.
.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, wtll conduct pam is a victim of slipshod accounting
otic services and others participating in the observance wtll be the
at the House bank, but has yet to
Modern Woodmen Youl' . Dale Colburn will emcee the program.
put records on the table to prove
his point," Miller said.
Miller srud he and voters want
to see documenr.ation "to show that
Pomeroy police investigated a minor accident on West Main
it was the ... bank' s fault, not hi s
Street m front of Pleasers Tuesday afternoon.
(McEwen's)."
According to the report, Elizabeth Hayes, 78, Chester, pulled her
1990 Oldsmobile from Pleascrs parlcing lot into the path of a 1986
"Could '' be that'' was hiS
Ford driven by Guy Bing, MiddleporL There was tight damage to
the left side rear of the Bing vehicle. and to the nghtlront comer of
the Hayes vehicle. There were no injuries and neither driver was
cited .
Eleven were fined and three others forfeited bonds in tltc coun of
Six calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Meigs Emergency Services.
Tuesday mght.
On Tuesday at 8 a.m., Ru~and unit went to Long Strecl. Ethel
Fined were James M. Werry. Jr ..
Gruescr was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospiial. At 8:13a.m., SyraRacin e, $425 and costS and three
cuse unit went to Texas Road. Bcnha Sm1th was taken to Holzer
days in jail , physical control of a
Medical Center. At 8:26a.m., Pomeroy squads went 10 an auto accimot or vehicle while under the:
dent at State Route 7 and Erwin Road. Greg Gibbs and John Collins
influence of alcohol or drugs: Gary
were .taken to Veterans. Gibbs was lllter taken to Sl. Joseph Hospi L. Hanning, Pomeroy, $10 and
tal. At 9:29 a.m., Middleport went to the post office and look
costs, illegal exhaust; Leigh A.
Charles Lovongshimer to Veterans.
Rooovian, Pomeroy, $10 fine only,
At 3:57p.m., Syracuse squad went to College Road and lOOk
wrong way on a one-way street:
James Cotterill to Holzer. At 6:!Xi p.m_, Moddleport unit tool&lt; Harley
George J. Vmcent, Rutland, $10
Little from Cheshire to Holzer.
and costs. fiCtitious tags.
Norman W. Milliron, Racine ,
510 and cost,, allowing persons to
W. VA.

{)~~

Weather

---Area deaths

loan limit under this pro~ram is
$67,500. Loans are made on rural
areas to finance the purchase of a
new or existing modest home .
Modest housing relates to the loan
limit rather than square footage
limitations. Rural areas include
open country or communities having a population not in excess of
10,000 or not in excess of 25,000
provided it is not a Metropolitan
Statistical Area.
Applicants must demonstrate
repayment ability and acceptable
credit history in accordance with
agency guidelines. The list of
approved participating lenders
under this guaranteed loan program
can be obtained from any FmHA
office. FmHA is required to act on
the completed application package
from the lender within 10 days.
More informalioo on the program
can be obtained by calling 5926621.

nation thi s mornmg. Sunny skies
were forecast in New England and
the Great Lakes later in the day,
and temperatures in the Northeast
were expected to soar as much as
50 degrees as warm winds arrived
from the Plains.
Temperatures were forecast in
the 60s m the Pacific Northwest:
the 70s in Maine, the mid -Atlantic
states, the California coast and the
Rocky Mountain states; the 80s in
much of New England, the South,

most of the Southwest and central
Ca lifo rnia : and the 90s in the
Southw estern deserts and nonhern
Plains.
Much of the northern Plains·
were unseasonably warm Tuesday,
with high temperature records broken or tied in a number of cities.
The temperature reached 102
degrees at Pierre, S.D.
.
The hogh temperature for the
nation Tuesday was I 04 at Bull- :
head City, Ariz.

Nine-car crash leaves
two Ohio women dead
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) ~
Two Ohio women were kolled m a
nine-vehicle pileup on Interstate 75
that injured at least six other,
authorities said.
Traffic was snarled for about 7
l/2 hours following the awdenl
about 2 p.m. Tuesday in the north bound lane oll-75, creating traffic
tic -ups.
Four tractor-uailers, a mini -van,
three passenger cars and a Pike
County ambulance were involved
in the accident that occurred
between the U.S. 60 and Interstate
64 interchange s on 1-75, pol1ce
said.
A fore offictal said fuel left on a
raon-slickened 1-75 from ano!hcr
accident that happened minute s
earlier could have conmbuted to
the collisions.
The multi -c ar accident began
when the mini-van n(lrrowly
missed another car mcrgin~ onto 175 and then lost control, saod police
Lt. Drexel Neal. That began the
cham reaction of collisions as other

vehicles veered to avotd the mini.:
van and then lost control them &lt;
~ lvcs .

Fayette County Coroner Johnny
Leach 1dcntilied the dead as
Dorothy Fuller, 67, of Columbus,
Ohoo, and Ann Adam, 37, of'
Hebmn, Oh1o.
The injured were t.aken to lhe
Unovcrs11y of Kentucky's Chandler
Medical Center and to Humana
Hospital of Lexington.
Two of the injured, John Adam ,
45, Hebron, Ohio, was in serious
condition at UK Hospital , and his
daughter Rachel, 5, was in satisfactory
condi!ion,
hospital
spokeswoman Luise Godshall said
Wednesday.
Tbe names and condo lions of the
other injured was not Immediately
avaolablc.
The Pike County ambulance
was return ing home after W.ing a
patient to Cardinal Hill Hospital, a
rehabilitat io n ho sp ital, when it
became ca ught '" the melee. No
one in the ambulance was seriously
'"Jured, authoriues said.

Miller calls for documentation State won't require immediate
refund of overpayment to counties
of McEwen's bank problems
COLUMBUS
state will have overpaid hi s dcpartmen"t

--Local briefs... ---.
Memorial Day service slated

Police investigate accident

~ The

bookkeeping that was slipshod ~
not the bank's," Miller said. " If
the bank was run so poorly as
McEwen contends it was, it would
stand to reason lhat everyone
would be in the same boaL"
McE wen campaign manager

not require immcdialc reimbursements for the additional $10 mil loon mistakenly paid to county welfare departments last month.
The money woll be dedu cted
I rom future payments the depart ments make to the state, the Ohio
Department of Human Services
said.
Many of the state's 88 county
departments received extra salary
money lor the food stamp and public assiStance programs.
Nine depanmenLs were shoned ,
said Sue Moning , state welfar e
department spokeswoman. They
were in Wyandot, Williams, Van
Wert, Preble, Miami, Huron ,
Henry , Hancock and Fa~rfield
counues.
John Witkosky, the welfare
director in Ponage County, said he
was told his department been
underpaid by $200,000. The state
li sted Portage as being overpaid
$124,547.
Russell Johnson, director '"
Medina County, said Lhc state may

Barbara Briggs called Miller 's
statement "another desperate act
by someone not even registered to
vote in the 6th Congressional DistricL"
Congressional candtdates arc
not roquired to live in the district
they seck to represenl Miller now
represents the lOth District, which
was merged into McEwen's 6th
District after Oh1o's congressional
dclegauon was reduced from 21 to
19 to reflect nauonwodc popullltion
shifts reconded in the 1990Census.
"Mr. Miller should accept the
Republican leadership's «planation regarding the House bank and
get on with the issues of concern to
the voters of the 6th District ~
taxes, jObS, and the like,' ' she said.
The statement came a week the
74·year-old Miller, who recently
suffered a hip injury in a bathtub
fall, decided he would rcmam in Meigs announcements
1hc race against McEwen . Moller
Dowers reunion
sa1d he was about to withdraw, but
The suth annual Bowers
changed hiS mmd alter meeting
rcun1on will be Monday for
with McEwen last week.
He claims McEwen, 42 , had descendant of Earnest Max Bowers
offended him wuh statements he and Adric Alice Eichinger at the
made about Miller on the campaign home of Hcnnan and Donna Bow ·
ers, 484 Garden Road, Columbus .
lrail and at the meeung.
Seniors to meet
The Harrisonville Semor Citi zcnw Club will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m . at tltc town house. All mem bers urged to atcnd. Snacks will be
ndc 1n the back of the pickup truck served.
without the truck being equipped
Chesler barbecue
with scats and seat belts; Chrisuna
The Chester Fire Departm ent
K. Harmon. Pomeroy , $10 and will have a chicken barbec ue
com. expired registration: John T. Mcmonal Day (Monday) at II :JO
Robinson, Middleport, $10 and a.m. The menu includes barbecue
cosLo;; , no motorcycle endorsement: chicken, barbecue spare ribs, baked
Thomas R. Quillen, Middleport.
beans, cole slaw and homemade icc
$25 and costs, no operator's cream.
liCense: Thomas B. Grady, Racine,
Offict closed Thursday
$100 and costs, driving under sus The Clerk of Courts OffiCe.
pension: Wilmer F. Halfhill,
Cheshire, $roo and costs, dnvmg Legal and Title Department, will
close Thursday at 3:30p.m. so the
under suspension; and $10 and
clerk can auend a conference in
losts, expired license plates; Ersel Ironton .
Blevins, Middlepor1, $25 and costs.
disonlcrly manner.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles
T. Fd. Long Bottom, $55, speed·
ing : Timothy A. Ellis, Pomeroy,
$60. no motorcycle endorsement:
James E. Elwin, Pomeroy, S460,
physical control of a motor vehicle
wh1lc under the influence of alcohol or drugs. and $60, wrong way
on a one way street.

S42,524 for salaries but has nat
prov1ded enough money for other
expenses.
Tbc fiscal services office of the
state department that send out the
payments has been reorganized so
the error will not be repeated, Ms.
Momng said.

Man with 7
DUis pleads
guilty in death
DAYTON (AP) ~ A man who
had seve n convictions for driving
while mlm:.icated has pleaded
guilty to aggravated vehicular
homiCide in tloc death of a Spnngboro woman.
TraCI Engle, 21, was killed in a
reb 9 crash when Darryl E.
Adkms. 29, of Franklin, ran a stop
sign and emshcd into a car dnvcn
by Ms. Engle's fian ce, John
Young, police said. Young, 25. xas
scnously injured .
Police saod Adkin s showed signs
he had been drmking before the
wreck but refused a breath test
Adkins also plea ded guilty
Tuesday to aggravated vehicular
assa ult. li e IS scheduled for sente ncing on Ju ne 5 before Judge
John Kessler of Montgom e ry
Count Common Pleas Coun.

•••••••••

Middleport court news

EMS units answer six calls

Lottery

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IIJ-810)

Publi1he:d nery af\emoort., Mon4ay
lhroQCh Fnd.&amp;y, I U Court St., PoltNIO) ,
Ohio by the Ohio Va11ty Publllblnc
Company/Multimedia Inc. , Pomeroy,
Ohio &amp;5168 Ph. m .21MI . Seeond clul
pm~Lap paid at ~. Ohio.
Me~: The A.uociated Pnu, and the
Ohio New1paper Auociallon. National

Ad"erti•inJ ~pruentati"e. Branham
Ne.... •p•per Salea, 733 ThlT'd A""UI!,
N.. York, New btl 10017.

POS'T'MASTER Send .ddrftu thana-

&amp;o

The naily Sentinel. Ill Courl Sl .,
Ponwroy. OHio f.61tiA_
·

IUII8CK1P110H IIATU
Br c.rrt.r or Motcw &amp;o.te
0n1 Week _
.......... 11 .60

g: ~=-~ ::~:::::::::
.................~~:.-: :.:::
SINGU:COPT
PlliCI

................... .... ----·:16 Cen&amp;.

,5ub8c.riberl DOt dMirirw &amp;o ~Y the carrf..
er may nmH in adwana. dir~ \0 The
Daily Sentinel on a _lhne •. 111 or ,12
monl.b buil . Crecbl will be l(l••n c:amer
each W8111k .
No aubecriptionl by mail p41nnit~ i.n
anat w bert honw tamer aem«1 ta
lt".ilabJe.
Mall Babamiptloa.
.

'"·-s..-----

I•

!)

i)
•

o.ily........ ..

~

By Tbe Associated Press
A large stationary high pressure
syste m will provide Oh1o With
sunny skies and warm temperatures
at least tluough Friday, forecasters
said.
Highs in the low 80s on Thursday
will cltmb into the upper 80s
o PA
on Friday and Saturday, the
National Weather Service said.
Lows each night will be near 60.
Tbe record high temperature for
thi s date at the Columbus weather
station was 91 degrees in 1962.
Tbe record low was 36 in 1929.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:44
p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
,!-__.j 6: II a.m .

Accu- WeatherC forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH .

$74.54 per n1ght, costing the gov·
emmcnt some $8ll,CXXJ, not mcludong travel.
When 100 internal auditors from
the IRS's Washington office
anended an educational ouung at
th e Princess Royale All Suite
Resort in Ocean City. Md , the IRS
said the partic ipants were briefed
on the agency's new state-of-theart co mputer system. The training
ran May 20 through May 24 ~
concluding just in time to s1a11 the
Memorial Day weekend.
The government looted lhc $59
fcc for each auditor, plus an additional $34,600 for meal costs.
NEWT VS. PAT~ Newt Gongrich says the irony is not lost on
him that long-tome conservative
so ulmate Pat Buchanan was
responsible for a reconciliation
between himself and the White
House. Relations between the pit
bull co ngressman and the Bush
administration had been strained by
Gongrich's outspoken opposition to
many of its policies.
Buchanan and Gingrich had a
fallmg out earlier this year altcra
public wrestling match over who IS
tlte rightful heu to the Reagan Rev olution. Gingrich became a conservative point man against Buchanan
on behalf of Bush, who earlier thi s
year was spooked by a string of
impressiVe pnmary showings by
Buchanan.
Buchanan shot back that be was
a conservative soldier when Gin·
grich was still chasing "Good
Humor uucks." Gingrich suggested Buchanan is "nativist" and
Insensitive in his remarks about
different ethmc groups.
"History teaches you that life is
complc., ironic and unpre dictable," Gingrich told us. That's
why he says he studied history over
political science. "Who would
have thou~ht that a guy runnong
from the nght (Buchanan) would
drive the pre sident toward th e
mainstream of conservatives so that
we have a close r working relationship today than we would have.''
G•ngrich's one cri!lcism of the
White House during a recent interview was thar it ·· has to be much
more radical."
Jack Anderson and Michael
llinstein are syndicated colum·
nists rur United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Middleport, Ohio

Chilly morning in Northeast; sunny through Friday

Thursday, May 21

IRS needs to start policing itself
WASHINGTON~ The IRS
recently revoked the tax·exempt
stalus of a conservative Washington group because it was throwing
quarterly mutings at resons that
provide "all the social and recre ational anneniues expected in luxurious surroundings.''
But last year when th e IRS
decided to educate its employees
on how to earn the public trust, it
shipped them off to a posh moun tain retreal at taxpayers expense ~
$1.850 a person oot including travel. Some 53 IRS officials from
around the country learned about
ethics.
The $124,500 of taxpayer
money was sunk on two four-day
ethics seminars at a reson in the
eastern panhandle of West Vir·
gima. It features a fitness center,
swimming pool, sauna, hot tubs ,
massages, facials, an outdoor jogging course, a croquet ooun and a
hooeshoe pil
A resort brochure told IRS officials lhcy were in for "a setting for
those seeking a place to enJOY
leisure time, have a conference, or
to live.''
Among the retreats taken by the
Council lor Nauonal Policy that

Pomeroy

m.tde Malp Cot~atl' / /
13 Weet.a. ..................................,..... l21.&amp;.4
26 Weeka
.............................. ...... $43. 16
5a w..u~~~~~~;;;· Sl4 76
13 w.u........
...............123..0
36 w..u .. " ................,_
....$46.!10
.. .........aauo
02 w..u .

CLEVELAND (AP) ~ There
were lour tickets sold naming all
five numbers drawn in Tuesday
night's Buckeye 5 game, the Ohio
Louery said. The holder of each
ticket WIDS $100,000.
Pick J Numbers
6-8-6
(six, eight, six)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-7-7-6
(three. seven, seven, six)
BuckeyeS
8-17-28-29-30
(eight, seventeen, twenty-eight,
twenty-nine, thirty)
The jackpot for Wednesday 's
Super Louo drawing will be Sl2
million.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospillll
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS None.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Kathleen Lehew and Lcna Carpenrcr.

. . . """' ..

.3

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.

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THE [UniNG lOGE
'Ul . I .

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I 00 . 1 10 lPG[

THUND£RHrAAT
. 1. . • 10 fll, ll 1

SUPHEN

NO '1.1 1 1~[( ~

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KING 'S SUEPWIILK£RS

I 10 . ~ II• UA:I •

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"'l" I

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10 , 1 )0

IHTNDUIN
I ;C) 10 :!All !

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WHIT£ MEN (A~'T JUMP
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81151[ INSTIN[T
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Gl 'l (: P" [I1 LA1! S A~AIIA&amp; lf AT BUXOff[ C(
('.. : 'J(. \ 0()1,. '

"Al! ifol~

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
500 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

(Now In 111 Tth Year of Operation}

Special of the Week!

ANNOUNCES

PORK RIB

KINDERGARTEN
REGISTUTION

$1.74

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 19 discbarges - Bernard
Burcham, Barbara Fillinger, Mrs.
Ronald Hammond and daughter,
Alma Jeffers, Belly Lamphier,
Charles McGhee, Joseph Miller,
Harrison Robinson. Michael Swan
and Mary Vollborn.
May 19 birtb - Mr. and Mrs.
Davi4 Allison, daughter, Gallipolis.

HARf,A I N 'V-lffolll', SA' UR(lAI I "dJHtlA!
~~~r.A : ~ ~ IG~ 7 TUI S[I.IJ
.

WITH FRIES .... $2.44
'ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
"At Tho lad of tho p_,.y.llaMII

POIEIOY, OHIO

~?

lritltt"

rH. 9U·US6

~~

FOR THE 1992·93 SCHOOL YEARTO
SET UP AN APPOINTMENT, RECEIVE
INFORMATION AND A FREE SCHOOL
MANUAL CALL992·6249.
REGISTRATION FEE:
$15.00 • MAY DISCOUNT
I

l

,,

�Wednesday, May 20,

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
20, 1992
Page--4

WEDO

rtrSt innin~ or Tuesday night's National League
game agaonst host Montreal, wbicb tbe Reds
won 7-4. Sabo, claiming tbal tbe ball bit bim
berore it hit the bat, was ejected. (AP)

Mihn"-• (BooM I I) II I ' "
dmd 1-3). 7:35p.m.
Kanan City (Gordon 0-"i )
(Ryan 0-1),
p.m.

us

Gl
-

SL l.3lia . . ......... .13 16

.590

I

NBw Yui ....... ... .22
Chieaao................ 17
Muruoal ... ....... .. 16
~ - ...... .. 16

JSO
.447
.444
... 32

lS

II
21
20
21

6.5
6.5
7

W..ter-.01•......

CllldM111---..l1
Atlanta ............... .... ll
HOUtm ............. 11
l.oiAnp .. ..... 14

.SJI

l

II
13
22

.Sl,
.439
436

1...5

21

400

6

S
5

Tuesday's Kores
Cl.du.U'7,M•tral4
JlbiladBlphi• 4, Haultcm 3
S&amp;. ~ 7,A\lanti 2

C hlct.lfl IIJ, Clt.mnd 19, C hica&amp;O
leadtltria 1-1
PonJ.nd 119, Utah 102, Port1and leads
1cria HI

Future games
Thunday- CltY!l!land 11 Chkqe..

R p..m.
l'"rkU.J- Pmtlarwi at Utah, 8 p.m

Stanley Cup
conference finals
Pi111bur!h 5, Bo11on 2. Piusb11rgh
lead• aena -0

S...l'nncioro 7' ""'"""" 2

Futurt games

Today's games

ltJnlahl -

(1.. Smith S- 1) IL San fRn·

-.(BIKI.0-1, lll.m.
Ch•d•ull (lrotml•a 3-l) ., MM thll (PII. . . J-J). 7:3! , ....
Hou1011 {Kilc 2-4) u Pha.hd~lph11
l-l), 7:35p.m
St. LDu» (Carmia 0.3) at ALlant. (Av -

~

fiC1 1-4~ 7:40p.m.

C'hica1o (Dttnny J.c:Uoo 0-5)
Anpc. (Ojedll-l), 10:35 p.m.

ll

Loa

Thunday's games
Pin.~
N~.-

(Wilk 1·2) at Sara FranciKC

"&gt; JJS p.m.
Yort: (S. Fcmllldet 2--4) at San

Chaca1o at Edmooton .

' '" Thw"da)'
p.m
- Ptlllburgh at BMt on ,
7:15 p.m

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) ~~:Janel

laaonlll"""'

r...

W l

Pt1.
632
.610

Ne.- Ycd ...........21
8011m.....
II
Mihn~ ......... 17
OcQoL .. .............. 17
ao.-.--13

.553
J l4
.472
.447
.Jl5

17
17
19
21
l7

w....... ot•Woa

Olklaod ___ ............. 23
Chlcq:o................ 21
MUu.-&amp;a ..... ....... .. 2l
Tu• ....
.. ...... .21
CalifomY. ............ 19
Seattle ..........
.15
K.ansu City ......... 12

16

.m

IS
17
20
19

.513
.553
512

1A
2.5

.385
324

~

bar•

or

fmal
al.od PR:n (by otUo ltiib School Athletic
Auocialion diviJiont, wnh firtr -placc
v(l(.N l!l P-lmthe~et, won-lcwt ~ - and
lOW pomu).

Dlvl&lt;loo I

GB
.5
3

4J
6
7

ll

-

.5

l.S
3
J5
8
I0

Tueoday's ICONS
New Yod; 5,

Cafifomi.a 4, 10 inrunJ.1

~7.T~IOI

. D ~~·•

·-o

~lh.'-cn''
_,_S.alol
OoOiood

l . -J

Tontcbt'spm..
(Abbua 2-S:) at

New Yor11

~l - 1),7 o 30p.m-

5eattlc (Fiemuaa 5-l) at Bouon
&lt;c:~anoN

s-3), as p.m.

Oakland (Welch 1-2)
(lo~oa~Ml.O' Bl pm.

11

81ltimorB

8. Euclul (4) 20-2
........... 1£N
~- YG.Jnpwwn 8~r0nlll (I) 17-1 .... 80
I 0 Fairfldd (I) 11-S ... ...... - .......... .. ... j9
Secorullt: 11. CincinnAti Moc.lla- {I)
51 12. Tolfldo Whilma 47 . 13. 8ubertoo
4l. 14. Buwlinfo 0recr1 36. IS. Elyria {1)
}4. 16 (tie): [)JbUn, Alliartoe (1) 32 lB
Cincinn ati Elder T1. l ~. l.ai.cwood 21
20. Hub« Hu . Wayne 15

Division U
Tun~

l'b.
1. rOI"'Imoulh (lJ) 11-2----..3)1
2. Alliance Ma.dinJ'm (4) 19· 1 .....no
3 Akra1H00.0(3)1~1 .......... . . . . 194
&amp;. ThonviUe Sheridlft (2) 19-2 ___ 171
~.

Columbul Wantnon (I) 18-.'5
Qaarlm 16-6....
1. Clrlille 14-L..
I . 8ryUJ16-l..... .....
9. Columi:Jut DoStlm 1&amp;-7
10. St Q&amp;irrville 11- ~

.. 164
.11 &amp;
. 11 2
102
7~

.41

SecoM 11: II . Rawnna Southea1t 46
12. 81~ Villlae Bay 42. 13 llamtlton
Rotl 33 . 14 Saeubenvll1e D . 15 Mol'dore Field 2J. I h. M011111 O~b Wmll:m
Rruwn (I) 2:0. 17 . TtPf City Ttppccanoe
19 . l! (tie ): Want.ani.lle (!), Pauldm&amp;.
Hcbroo LUewood 18

•GOTT
COOLERS
eGOTT WATER 2
THERMOS
?,

DOWNING CHilDS
MUllEN MUSSER

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

13

MASON, W. Ya.

( _ , _ 4-l). DS p.m.
C ltv"lar~d

wu •• ~ .. (Botio ) · 2) II Detroit

Division

m

THtm

Pu.

I. Coldwalef (2.4) 2A-(J

299

2. Utlea {I) 20-1 .

239

!(...,. Cil)' (P\dwdO 0-l) at Oucago
(fc!rMnllll&amp; l-4). l;()j p.m.

l Columbua AcadanJ {I) 21 -3
194
4.. Whetttnbura {lJ 17 - l ~-- - - - lst
S. NOJth.,..ood(l) l 8-l ...
l)l
6. Ham.ihon Badu-o (I) l ~ - 5
110

Tburoday's e•m..

7. er.J.int 14-4 ....
. 711
i . New London I 1-1.... .. ................ .7 1

(G·"kh&lt;" 5-2), 7:Jj p.m.

Banquet TVDinners ... .................s1.69

Banquet TV Dinners .

Libby's Peach Slices 29 oz..............99'

Del Monte Peach Slices 29 oz ...51.59

Store Brand PeachSiices29oz..51.48

Del Monte Peach Slices 29 oz......51.49

.J 9e
Harvest Pie Crust 10oz......................79e

Store Brand Green Beans 16oz.. .. 49e

Store Brand Green Beans 15 01 49c

Sn ur Fine Green Beans 16 oz... .... 40c

Nature's Best Pie Crust 10 oz ...51.29

Store Brand Pie Crust 10 oz....... 51.39

Mrs.Dash2soz ... HHH

Mrs. Dash 2.s oz.

Mrs.Dash2soz

Red Cross Lasagna 16 oz .................99'

Mueller's Lasagna 16 oz ...............51.49

Store Brand Lasagna 16oz..........51.39

Mueller's Lasagna 16 oz ...............51.29

Barbara Dee Vani lla Wafers 12 oz ..89'

Sunshine Vanilla Wafers 1201 .. 5 2.29

Sunshine Vanilla Wafers 1~ o1 52.29

Nabisco Vanilla Wafers 12oz .......s2.39

Jiffy Baking Mix 40 oz .........................89¢

Pioneer Baking Mix 48 oz .............52.29

Jiffy Baking Mix 4o oz .....................51.29

Jiffy Baking Mix 4o oz....................51.29

sse

50¢
Aunt Jane Dill Slices 32 oz..........52.49

Wylwood Green Beans 16 oz

786 NORTH SECOND
STREET
MIDDLEPORT

Second 10: II . FOJLOril SL Wcndehn
55 . ll Attica SenC)Cj Eut Slll Otuwa
Hi.U. (1) 49 14. Cedarville Til~ Lu.cu
"lb. 16. Spencmville 32. !1. Dd"11J'lCC Ay·
enville 28. 18. Bucan Hopewt.ll· Loud!J1
26. 19. Newa.dr; Catholic (l) 16. 20. Tipp

PHARMACY

G tyBethel i S.

.19c Store Brand Peas 16 oz....... .. 53e
Easton's Dill Slices 32 oz...................99' Vlassic Dill Slices 32 oz ................51.69
Banquet CreamPies 14 oz ........... 51.69
~anq uet Cream Pies 14 oz ..........89c
8anqlie1 Fruit Pies 20 oz....................9g. Banquet Fruit Pies2o oz..................51.69
Wylwood Peas 15 or...

992-6491

Placed
O.u OUo, pUrher, on lhr lS -day dllabled ll•t, retroactive lo May 10. R._
calltd One Rohde, lnnelder, ltom Colorado Sprln&amp;• of lht Pulnc Coul
Luaue. Optlonrd Mlllt C hrllilophtr ,
pltdltr, lo Cohrado Sprlnas. A.cllvatltd
Ted Po"'"• pitcher, from the 15-day
diubhd lla:L
MILWA UKEE BREWERS - Op·
UCW'lod Dam:n lloimel , piu:hm. lD Dcwa
of the Am ~mean Anocuuon. Actnu~
MUt Fette~. p11 cher. from the 15 -da)
duablod lat.

Special Offer for Daily Sentinel Readers

Betty Crocker
Hamburg Mateaoz... ..... .. ..... ... ......s1.85

..

Nallonal LUKIR

I,

FREE This

•

2.19

5

Store Brand Peas 16 o1

Store Brand Dill Slices 32 oz.......52.15

Mrs. Dash: joz

Shur Fine Peas 16 o1

.....

Banquet Fruit Pies 20 oz... ..........._.51.39

s1.59 :
Banquet Fruit PieS20oz ................51.79 :

Betty Crocker
Hamburg Mate 8 oz

Betty Crocker
Hamburg Mate 8 az ........... .. ...sl. 79

Pet Ritz Cream Pies 14 o1

5

1.65

Banquet Crea mPies14oz

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1.99
Sure-Jel .................................................51.59

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~aker 's Supreme

Store Brand
Cheese Cake Mix 10) oz

Roya l
Che-ese Cake Mix 10.5 a1

Royal
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1

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Rabbit Pinto Beans 1lb........ 29' Jack Rabbit Pinto Beans 1 lb ........53e Store Brand Pinto Beans 11b........35' Jack Rabbit Pinto Beans 11b..........40' :
'•
:r Ka hn ·s Meat Weiners lib . 5 2.09 Kahn's Meat Weiners lib .... 52.69 Kahn 's Meat Weiners lib . 12.49 Kahn 's Beef Weiners lib ....s2.49
iCarey Salt 26 oz......................................21 c Store Brand Salt 26 oz .........................33e Morton's Salt 26oz................................33' Shur Fine Salt 26 oz............................33'
'
12.19
Durkee s Pepper lcz
. . .s2.59
McCormick Peppe r 4ol ..... s2.39 Store Brand Pepper 4oz
: Pepper Blend 'Ns 4oz
... . ggc
•
iJeno's Pizza Rolls6oz ........................99' Jeno's Pizza Rollssoz...................51.79 Jeno's Pizza Rolls6oz...................51.79 Jeno's Pizza Rolls6oz ...................51.69
I

Acl!YaLcd
Inn C.WUUJ, wtfJeJdez", from the !5 -da)
duabtod u.t. P\aeod Jeny Gc:lff. infielder
utd-oer, CW'l waivcn for lh~ pu1111At at g1" ·
\JII him hit unconditional rdea&amp;e.
NEW YORK METS - Pl1 ced Bre1
Sll:oerh•scn. pitcher, 011 tJte 15-d•y d11
oblt.od 1m, rcuoac:nve 10 May 16 . Rec&amp;.lled
Modncy Mct::r&amp;)', outf"JClder, from Tid~­
f.i the lntC~JU~tional League.

. $1.49

Banquet TVDinners.. .. . .

. ..... . .......89e
;el Ease ....................................................59' Jel Ease....................................................agc
rtheese Cake Mix 1o.5 oz...

MONTRI::AL EXPOS -

PIIILADELPIIIA

. .....

Creamette
tamburg Matesoz...

CHICAGO WHITE SOX
HllCalled
RuMrto Hemandaz., pitcher, fmm Van ·
couva of the Pacific Co111 Lague. OpUonod F..tctan Belttt., &amp;hortttop, to VIII-

••tcr

Hs1.69

'

""'"'·
CU.:VELANO INDlANS -

51.39

Shur Fine Pie Crust 10 oz...........s1.09
Marzetti Slaw Dressing 16 oz. s1.69 Marzetli Slaw Dressing 16 oz... .s2.59 Marzetti Slaw Dressing 1So: 12.75 Marzetti Slaw Dressing 16 oz .... s2.49
Wylwood Corn 16 oz ............................19e Nature's Best Corn 16 oz..................sse Store Brand Corn 16 oz ......................4gc Shur Fine Corn 16 oz........................... 40'

Tum
PU.
l Flll"ppO't Huba HardJ.na (34) 19· 2.35 8
1 Port.Jmoulh Notrt Danw 15-L ... 24l
3 Columbl&amp;na 13- S
118
4. Cuyaho~a H11: 14 -7 .... .. ...
155
5. GaLCI MilliGilmwr 13-3
15-1
6. Mornl Ridged&amp;le 16-5
\02
7 Cancinnati Country Day 16-6
67
8 New Riegcll3-4.... . .
&amp;..
Mmgo Juncticm 16-6
M
10. B1inbridge Punt V..:Jiey 14- 10
65

LOCAL STORE V

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Banquet TV Dinners

WEATHER PERMiniNG

Division IV

LOCAL STORE F LOCAL STORE K

SAVE•A•LOT

PICKENS ,.
HARDWARE

.... .s1.29

5

1.99

.

I

I

PHlll.IES

I

Placed O.le M~y . outfielder. oo the
15·dly dinblod U.L Opli011t.od Kyle Air
bon., pii.Chcr, to S~ton - Wi.li~ Burr of
the lnLemation•l L..t.aaue.. ll.t.n lled Ju h o
Pe1uero. outfielder . from Scra nto n·
wUi .. ~~~

Ir

~brote

summers omval wrth lhos FREE ofler from
Afner~o 92 One c hild under 12 gels into Ameri Fiora92
fi'~e wotfi'full-pnc e adull toc ket purc hased at the front gate .'

Basketball

:
$
TOTAL
................
$34.68 TOTAL.. .............. $33.61
:TOTAL.................
19.70
'

And It s a weekend o f extra-excitong enlertaonment
with internationally occ loomed Donee Brazil . America Sings
and up10ari ou s fun from Brit a rn 's "Flowerpot People' and
Australia's 'C oneheods. · and much. much more' Plus all the
regular fun for kids . like Dr no Drg. Around-the-World Carousel and the Ec ho Coty Sonoc Playground .

National Baakt1b1ll MIIOCllli&lt;Jn

GOLDEN STATE WARRI ORS Named~ P~ch IIIJJUOI coach

Football
Nallon1l Football Uqut
CLEVELAND BROWNS - r\amed
P1t Hill. Roo Marciniak an.! Terr¥ lrl c
DoowJh acouu and Chria L•mlry and

P\oli ICOIM8 ullltUU. .
HOUSTON On..ERS - Signed Btlly
Rcll , cornc:rt.cl:: ErrW1lle.l Mvt!n , J&amp;fety .

It's the World Expo that everyone's talking about. And with
this special offer. this is your weekend to dlscove(~,tt.on.l

Roll RaiLer, offenttYe u clle; and Todd
Wuh.~der

"(Chtldre n und e r 4 are

Hockey

otwny~ o r1 m itted

flee . certo1 n restr1 CI10 nS

TOTAL .............. s33.86

I
I

•

!
I

Xctt

~ (Ericbc:m 2-4) at Toront.o

Teul (Gn••• 1-3) al
(N.., ..., 7.35 ......

Pta.
264

204
3 Huniltm{l)lH•
186
4 Carum Mr.K.mley ( 1) 14-4 . . . .. 113
~ Clayton Nmhmont 21--4 ..
.. ...... lSS
6. Ncw-a.r:k (3) 20-4
•. \-U
7. W&amp;di.-orth (I) 17-2....
.123

6. Colwnbul SL

.,.. .. a...!Md,

CaliloaUa

!l ow a

coach~ rata Ohio h1gh
Dueball telml in the fd\h and
~IIOUOfl poll~ for The Auoci ·

1

Bamuvill~

See Our
Selection Of

Ra.wbaU
Allltf'kan Lnaaa

Tum
1. TdodoSwt(lJJ 17·0 ....
2 Cincinn.au Glen Ea~ (8) 22-1

B&amp;ltim«e..
2A l..
ToronlO ......... . .25 16

cu.. Uit Vallt)' , Delta,

baseball poll

Diqo (Grq. Huri• 1-3), .. ·o~ p.m

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Goadc:nhull.c:n Indian Valley 17. 18. L.n nater Faiifaeld Union 15 . 19 Cue) Lu-

Transactions

Ohio high school

No.- Yod: (Whitehunt 0-2) at San

Dieto (L.clferw 4-2), 10:m p.m

(BwSoa

land W1ync Trace 12. 14 . Johnuo ... n·
29. It Doy\utown Chippewa
21. 16. Springfit.ld KenLan Ridge 20. 11
M cr~roe

Tuesday's scores

since la st Aug. 5. Rob Dibble
potched a perfect nioth for his sixth
save.
The Expos led 2-0 in the first
after Marquis Grissom opened with
a bloop double between second
baseman Doran and right-fielder
Paul O'Neill.
Both Delino DeShields and

THURSDAY, MAY 21st
9:00 A.M. UNTIL 3:00 P.M.

Second lt: 11 . ou...-a-Oiandorf 39

12. Baltimore Liberty Union 36. 11 Havi -

Tuesday's scores

Nno Yolk. I. San DietO 0
Loo ....,._ s. OU&lt;oao 2

~l.qh

11 T~u•

Picnic
Season Is
Here!

sure win but it was a blow ouL''
Pwayne Henry (1-1) pitched 3
1/3 ionings for the viciOry, his f1rst

PARKING LOT SALE

9 o....illo (I) :!~H ....................... S9
.50

10. MiddlafiddCudinal IS- I ...........

NBA conference finals

~

San FnnciJoo ....... 11 16
San Diaso --·· ....... 21 18

1

CES FOR YOlJ!
See low The Bottom Line
Sa
Co~npared
To Our CoDipetitions!
••• DRIVI: • A • Un'LE
TO SAVE • A • LOT!!

and righo-where he could hit it," Moises Alou followed with walks
said Weueland. who blew his th1rd but Reds catcher Oliver forgot that
save in nine opportunites. "I feel booh runners had walked, so he
I'm not pioching well, I loid the tried to get DeShields at second
maoager Tom Runnells that he
(See NL on Page 6)
haso't seen me pitch yeL The hard
pan abouolhis is that I lei the entire
team down. You're oalking about a

MONTREAL (AP) - Bill
Doran wants Monlreal Expos' fans
lo know John Weueland will do
more good things than bad in his
career.
" People will come to realize
how good a pitcher Weueland is,"
sa1d Doran, whose nimh-inning
grand slam off of Wetteland lifted
the Cincinnati Reds to a 7-4 victory
over Monlreal on Tuesday night.
"Welleland's got great stuff.
he's going to be on the long end
more than the shon end."
Ivan Calderon's sacrifice ny in
the eighth gave the Expos a 4-3
lead. And Wetteland was in to save
the game.
With one out in the ninth, the
Reds loaded the bases when Wetteland (0-2) wallced Joe Oliver and
Dave Martinez and gave up a single to Dip Roberts, setting the stage
for Doran.
''Let's face it, l'm not a home
run hitter," Doran said. "That was
the fanhest thing from Weueland's
mind and my mind. I knew it was
hio well and that it would get the
runner in fnxn third. I've been ter·
rible recently with runners on base.
I haven't been consistenL"
Doran had been 0 for 4 with a
wallc before hitting his lhird career
grand slam.
"The pitch was nat as a table

Scoreboard
EuunlliTtllll
W L I'd.
Piiiii:Mqb
... ..13 14
622

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;-5

Wednesday, May

SABO PROTESTS- Cincinnati's Chris
Sabo (17) arpes a caDed third strike with home
plate 11111pire Ed Rapuano (leh), as second base
umpire Jerry Crawford (lo Sabo's leh)?-4 and
Reds mau14!r Lou l'illiella listen in during the

NATJONAL LEAGUE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'AND FANCY •••

Doran's ninth-.inning grand
slam helps Reds beat Expos

In the D18J0rs...

1992

,:::

SAVE • A • LOT PRICES ARE- EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
NOT WEEKLY SPECIALS!!!

.· ,''i' .. ...

aj)~')~:~;:t~~::::&lt;1;:;:~.

Nltlllftaltlocllty Leapt
II LAC KHAWK S -Sianed Mark Remud, 11),11\ender. an d
s~ Poap«. dcfcruem&amp;n

C HI CAGO

LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS
The Tax Books are now open for the
June or Second Half Collection of the
1991 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing date will be
June 20, 1992.
f

HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
.'

AMI P (1\S CE l

~BRA~

( h Ul UISC C\ r (,•.,-

.t.PRtL20THIW 0ClO!EII12. 1992 ·COlUMBUS. OHIO USA

1-800-BUCKEVE
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PreMnllhlo coupon on May 23. 24. or 21 only at lhe AmeriFiora 921for11 gcH and receiVe ono hH child odmls·
lk&gt;n (age A-12) with l:i paying odutt (age 13·59). Coupon no1volld wl1t'l omet promo1ionol oNers. d 1scounfs . season
passes o r prepurchased 1icko1 s OnQ coupon per c hi ld No1 valid I()( Up gr ades.

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MAY 13 THRU 15

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1992.
J

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i'

!

�Page ~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
The

In the NBA playoffs,

Chicago, Portland
record victories

ADVEITISED ITEM POliCY -Each of tho6e advart•sad

lt&amp;m s IS r&amp;QU1f8d 10 btl
a..,ailablo lor sale 1n eac h K1oger S1ore . e~ ce p l a s spt~ c •l• c allv noted 10
tl'lil ad. If we do run ou t of an advertised 1tem, we wdl oft&amp;f y01.1 )lOur choice
of a comparable item , when ava ilable . refle c ting the same sav1ngs 01 a rain ·
chectc. which will entille you 10 pur c ha~ the adv art1~d 1tem at the adv6f11 sed
prk:e within 30 day s Only one vendor cou pon w ill be accupllld ptH 1tem
purchaMd .
f&amp;ad~y

But Jordan said he was "very
CHICAGO (AP) - This was
surprised
this game was so easy.
almost too easy.
Every
time
they made a surge, we
After surviving the rough-andtumble series with the New York came back with a surge."
"We controlled the tempo," he
Knicks, the defending NBA champion Chicago Bulls cruised to a said. "I'm sure it won't happen
103-89 victory over the Cleveland again. Their defense was tentative.
Cavaliers Tuesday night in the This is new ground for tbem and
opener of their OO..t-of-seven East- we've been here before."
Brad Daugherty led the Cavaem Conference finaL
Michael Jordan, with 33 points, liers with 23 points and Price had
and Scottie Pippen, with 29 points, 15 of his 21 in the first half. Larry
12 rebounds and nine assists, led Nance added 19 and John "Hot
the attack in a relatively relaxed Rod" Williams 10. Horace Grant
and Cartwright had 12 each for the
aunosphere.
"It was calm out there with no Bulls.
flagrant fouls," said Jordan, who
"We went out and tried to do
has not scored less than 30 points the right things, but the Bulls came
in his last II games against the out playing a very up tempo game,· ·
Daugheny said. "It took us awhile
Cavaliers.
"It was kind of quiet and the to get our rhythm. We're not going
.; ";intensity was not as high as it has to change our strategy. However.
~· -been. •• Pippen said.
we can't give them an early lead ."
.:: "We came out flat, but I'll guarWilkens blamed early tumovc"
: ·: antee you we 'II be a lot sharper in for his team's slow start.
~': our next game," said Cleveland
"That's been a problem
throughout the playoffs." Wilkens
··coach unny Wilkens.
The next game is in the Stadium said. ''Our shooting percenta ge
Thursday night, with the series was decent, but you can't spot a
shifting to Cleveland for games team like the Bulls 12-14 poinLs 111
the fust quarter on turnovers,··
Saturday and Monday.
The Bulls had 21 assists in the
This one wasn't much of a conteSt. Bill Cartwright hit two succes- first half and 33 for the game.
The Bulls set a playoff record
sive baskets to break a tie and put
the Bulls ahead 10 stay 12-8 before with 19 of 19 free throws, benering
their previous percentage of .964
Jordan had scored a point.
Jordan started hitting and the when they were 27 of 28 against
Bulls took a 30-2llead at the quar- Boston in 1987.
Trail Blazers 119, Jazz 102
ter. They pulled ahead 45-25 in the
The
crowd chanted "Terry .
second quarter before a 15-7
Cleveland run led by Mark Price Terry."
This is Clyde Drexler 's team .
·. helped cut it to 52-40 at tbe half.
_ 'rhe Bulls opened up an 18 - But for this nigh~ and for much of
point lead midway in the third the playoffs , they've been th e
qUliJ1et tbat ended with them on top Poner-land Trail Blazers.
Terry Porter continued his tomd
76-65. The Cavaliers crept within
.:.;seven at 82-75 in the fourth quarter playoff performance by scoring a
career-high 41 points Tuesday
;::bef?.'; ~tB~s ~~~o~~~~i~~~:~ n1ght, leading host Portland to a
: : when they got it to single digits," 119-102 victory over the Utah Jazz
: · Bulls coach Phil Jackson said . and a 2-0 lead in the Western Con· "We came out with the intensity ference finals.
" Tonight he was just on fire, "
.• that we left 1he court with SunPortland coach Rick Adelman said.
_: · day."
-: -· That was the 110-81 victory in "He was making 3s. He was makthe seventh game against the ing jumpers with John Stockton
right in his face. He was taking it
Knicks.
"We had to get out of the strong to the baslcel You can't play
blocks early, we felt the first game a better game than Terry played."
Drexler was no slouch, either.
•• 'was the most important," said lor"Clyde had a monster game ,
- dan. "We learned that lesson
against New York when we lost the too," Adelman said. "He had 36
fu-st game and that gave them a lot points and 12 assists. Of course.
of confidence."
(See PLAYOFFS on Page 7)

In the NHL playoffs,

::·Mending Lemieux leads
Pittsburgh past Boston
By ALAN ROBINSON
P!TfSBURGH (AP) - Mario
Lemieux is a very likely candidate
for the hockey hall of fame. The
medical hall of fame may get him
·~ fu-sl
Bad back, broken hand, separated shoulder. it makes no diiTerence.
No doctor, no defense can stop
Lemieux .
He's already a fixture in the
record books. but he's apparently
. ·• just as determined_to make a name
: ~ for himself m medical textbooks.
. . Lemieux . returmng from a bro: · "ken left hand two weeks earlier
·: : than predicted, scored two goals
: : and set up another Tuesday as the
~:: Pittsburgh. Penguins beat the
. · Boston Brums 5-2 to take a 2-0
: series lead m the Wales Conference
: finals.
, .. - The Brums are going back to
· · · Boston for Game 3 on Thursday,
: : but Lemieux ' s back for the Pen• : guins. That may not be an even

Ray Bourque's return from three
games off with a broken finger.
Bourque was called for charging
Jaromir Jagr at 3:39. a penalty
which drastically altered the
momentum. The Bruins never man ~
aged a shot in the fmal I R minutes
of the period - and got just two
overall - as the Penguins rallied
for a 2-1 lead on goals by Troy
Loney and Jagr, who scored for tl1e
fourth straight game.
Lemieux, his ice time and confidence increasing with every shift,
set up Rick Tocchet to make it 3- 1
at 11 :35 of the second with
Bourque off again for interfenng
with Jagr. The power-play goal was
Pittsburgh's first in 10 chances in
the series.
Adam Oates' fifth goal of the
playoffs got the Brums back in it at
9:43 of the third . But with Dave
Poulin off for tripping Tocc hct,
Lemieux got the first of hi s two
goals, atl2:47; his second came on
an
empty -netter with about a
swiLCh .
nanosecond
remaining.
"He's in so much pain all tbe
Boston never had a chance afte r
time, l don't think any of us know
how he does it," teammate Kevin Poulin's infracuon and a disputed
five-minute penalty on Bob
Stevens said.
Did Lemieux take a huge risk by Sweeney for high-sticking defense retwning prematurely from a seri- man Ulf Samuelsson kept the Pen guins on the power play for th e
ous injury?
"He said it was a bigger risk 1f most of the final eight minutes.
he didn't play and we lose and (tbe
series) is 1-1," Penguins coach
Scotty Bowman said.
After he was slashed May 4 by
the Rangers' Adam Graves,
Lemieux was supposed to be out
from four to six weeks. When a fit·
ted cast and protective glove
designed by a specialist nown in
1 : from Miami gave him extended
•. mobility, Lemieux realized four or
· · five days ago he would back soon.
"! tbink me being there gave a
team a linlc boost," Lemieux said.
"I'm surprised it went that well .
There were a couple of times I was
OFFER GOOD THROUGH
in a bad position and I let the puck
go m traffic, but it's getting better
every day."
So are the Penguins' chances of
retwning to Lhe Stanley Cup playoffs.
• 1bey watched Boston take a 1-0
. lead on Glen Murray's goal just 59
·: seconds iii)O tbe ftrst period, but
:- :'the Bruins couldn't Sll8tain the lift
·: ;: generated by the lead or by all-star

COPYRIGHT 1992 · THE KAOGER CO . ITEMS ANO PR ICES GOOD SUN ·
DAY , MAY 17. THROUGH SATURDAY , MAY 23, 1992, IN Pomeroy
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIE S P\ uNE SOLD TO
DEALERS .

we Glaaly
Accept Your
t.:c·::- __ , Feaeral Fooa

scamps

'· .•

"'r .. -•' ! • ..t· • '·

1957 STATE CHAMPS- The 1957 Middleport YeUow Jackets,
under the tutelage of the late Nolan Swackhamer, won the Ohio
Class A slate baseball bhampionship with a 4·3 win over
Doylestown. Swackhamer wiU be this year's honoree for the Meigs
lli~h School Band Memorial Golf Classic. Members of that 1957

~ ;t
~

,.

i ·. ,;.
'

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN
FED BEEF "UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE
CUT" 111-14-LB. AVG.) CAP-ON

stale championship team were (front row, lel't to right)-Jan Houck,
Junior Rowley, Sonny Knapp, Bob Nelson, Eddie· Crooks, Tom
Davis and Milton (Yogi) Wayland. In the second row are Junior
Kennedy, Dave Hindy, Ed McComas, Jim Bowles, Bob Hennessy,
Steve Bailey, Roger Lightfoot, Harlan Whitlatch and Swackhamer.

Whole
Sirloin Tiqs

Meigs Band Memorial Golf Classic Saturday
The entry fee is a $45 donation to
the Meigs High School Band. The
fcc includes aT-shirt, use of a golf
cart and a chicken barbecue. Those
wishing to take part in the luncheon
only, may do so with a S5 donation
to tbe band.
Pnzes will be awarded to the
golfer with the longest drive, and
closest to the pin, and a pulling
tournament will be held prior to tee
off. Dmwings for door prizes will

The second annual Meigs Band
Mcmonal Golf Classic will be held
Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
This year's tournament will be
held in memory of longtime Middl eport and Meigs H1gh School
lcachcr and coach, Nolan Swack hamer.

The 10umament, which is open

to men and women . will be a 18hole scramble with a blind draw .

NL games ... (Contmucd from Page4)
and threw the ball mto center, seoring Grissom and Deshields went to
third. DeShields scored when
Calderon hit into a double play.
"We won't point fingers but
Paul and I will talk about the
play," SaJd Doran on the miseommun1 cauon between h1m and
O'Neill on Grissom's double. "In
the course of the season nothing
like that should happen."
The Reds went ahead 3-2 in the
third on a two-run double by Barry
Larkin and Hal Morris' RBI single.
Montreal tied it in the fourth
when Calderon sin~led and Gary
Carter had an RBI double.
Cincinnati third baseman Chris
Sabo was eJCCted in the fust inning
after arguing balls and strikes. He
claimed he was hit on the hand by a
Chris Haney pitch but umpire Ed
Rapuano ruled he struck out on
fouled tip.
Red s officals said Sabo has a
brui sed hand but would not take
him to the hospital.
Dodgers 5, Cubs 2
Th e way the Los Angeles
Dodgers are hitting, Ore! Hcrsh1ser
probably f1gured he'd have to drive
in his own runs.
That' s exactly what happened
Tuesday night agamstthe Ch1cago
Cubs. Hershiser (3 -3) scattered
nine hits in seven innings and
broke a 2-2 tie w1th a two-run double in the sixth , leading the lastplace Dodgers to a 5-2 victory .
" Last year, I thiuk they'd pinch
hit for me for sure because I didn't
have enough pitches in my arm to
guarantee that I could continue, "
Hershiser said. " But this year I've
been as high as 120. so they know
there' s more p1tches in lhe arm."
~1e umpire made the right call."
Boskie dropped to 0-4 agamst
Los Angeles, giving up four run s
- one unearned - and seven hiL'
hits in 5 2/3 innings. The Dodgers,

Giants 7, Pirates 2
Will Clark and Royce Clayton
homered. and Trevor Wilson (4-2)
won his third straight start as San
Francisco sent visiting Pittsburgh
to 1ts fourtb consecutive loss.
With the Giants trailing 2-1 ,
Clark hit a two-run homer off Doug
Drabek (3-3). San Francisco added
four runs in the ei~hth on Matt
W1lliams ' hases-loaded triple and
Jim McNamara's RBI smgle.
Dave Righetti pitched two
scoreless mn1ng s for hiS seco nd
save.
Cardinals 7, Braves 2
Felix Jose drove in three runs

and had two hits as St. Louis ended
a 10-game losing streak at Atlan~1
dating to Aug. 30. 1990. The Cardinals won for the seventh time in
nine games overall.
Bob Tewksbury (5 -1) all owed
seven h1ts, wallced three and struck
out lhrec in eight innings. John

Smoltz (3-4 ) gave up five run s and
six hits in 6 1/3 innings.
Phillies 4, Astros 3
Dave Hollins had the flfst twohomer game of hiS care&lt;r and Cun
Schilling (3 -2) allowed three hits m
six shutout innings, his first start
since Sept. 6, 1989, when he was
with Baltimore.

follow the luncheon and gift cenificates will be awarded to the first.
second and third ~lace teams. The
Marauder band w1ll be on hand to
provide music for the luncheon.
For the lucky golfer, $10,000
will be given to anyone who gets a
hole-in-one on Lhe par 3 seventh
hole, and for the first golfer wh o
makes a hole-in-one on the par 3
number nine hole, Smith Nelson
Motors, Don Tate Chevy-Oids, or
Tri-County Ford will offer a choice
of a new automobile. Other special
prizes are being planned for the day
as well.
Mr. Swackhamer graduated
from Ohio University, were he was
a member of the basketball and tennis teams. He is one of a select few
coaches who had won two state
championship teams in two d1ffcrent sports. He coached the 1941
Gicnford, Ohio basketball team and
tbe 1957 Middleport baseball team

to state championships. He came to
this area shonly after his 1941 bas·
ketball championship and help run
a family farm for almost 15 years
before he began teaching and
coaching in Middleport schools. He
also was assistant football coach at
Middlepon for a few years.
After the consolidation of
Pomeroy, Rutland, and Middleport
sc hools, Mr. Swackhamer tau$ht
and coached golf in the Me1gs
Local Schools until his retirement
in 1975. He died in 1980.
A plaque will be presented, in
his memory to his wife, Lucille,
also a longtime teacher, and his son
Richard, who will be on hand for
the tournamenL
The Meigs High Band Boosters
encourage any alumni who were
students of Mr. Swackhamer to
sign up for tbe tournament or lun cheon by calling the golf course at
992-6312.

Meigs girls basketball camps slated for June
The 1992 Meigs Marauder girls
basketball camp will be held from
June Ito June 5 for girls in grades
8-12 for the coming school year.
and on June 15 to June 19 for
grades 5-7 for the coming school
year.
Cost is $30 and no family has to
pay more than $50 if more than one
girl attends tbe camp.
Instructors will be the 1990-92
Tri-Valley Conference Coach-ofthe Year Ron Logan and hiS staff.
Instruction will be in ball handling,
passmg. dribbling and rebounding.
Also each camper will be instructed in offenSive sk1lls and moves
and defensive fundamentals, indiVidual and team play. poSitions of
the game, rules of the game and
sportsmanship.

Eac h camper will receive a
camp t-shin and awards will be
presented the last day of tbe camp.
For more information call Logan at
the school at 992-2158 or at home
at 992-2723.

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86.97

who began the night with a team

batting average of just .239, have
won 26 of their last 32 against the
Cubs.
Mets 8, Padres 0
Bobby Bonilla hit his f~rst home
run since opening day and David
Cone (4 -2) pitched a "'ven -hittcr
for his thlfd shutout as viSiting
New York ended San Diego's five game winning streak:.

HTH GRANULAR l1•1 " l 1. 1r k l11rg, l •._..r r \~ :IH.:r 1! \ a
' hl(•rrn;I! CJr .rnd -.I H I\ h lrl·:rt ll lt'lll .tll• n tllll': he l p~
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58

•

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LOOKING TO PASS- Cleveland guard Mark Prke Oeft) looks
to pass to an open teammate as Chicago guard John Paxson plays
him close during the r.rst quarter of Tuesday night's NBA Eastern
Conference championship series opener in Chicago, which the Dulls
woo 103-89. (AP)

,ff.s ••• _
(Continued
from Page 6)
__
.::__:___ _
NBA Playo'JJ·
every time he threw it to Terry . he
made iL"
Adelman marveled at his team's
guard play.
"lt was just arnazin~ for me to
watch." Adelman said. 'I just kind
of sat there in awe. They were just
superb."

DIVE IN FOR LOW PRICES

'"

Pound

Porter made 12 of 14 field
. goals, including 4 of 5 three-point. ers. He was also 13 for 14 at the
: foul line.
"If I get any hotter, it'll be
. scary," Porter said. "I don't Lhink
: it's humanly possible to be any hot• ter than l was tonight."
· Stockton usually stayed close to
Porter, but the Portland playmakcr
was so hot it didn't matter.
"He did a great job defensive·
ly," Porter said. "It's just that l
made some tough shots. I made
four or five shol' when he was all
over me.
AfLCr a slow Start in Lhc season.

Porter is silencing any critics.
"!guess that talk about h1m
having kind of a down season has
been put to rest," Adelman said.
Unlike Game I, when Utah was
blown out early, the Jan stayed
close most of the way Tuesday .
"We were ready to play," Utah
coach Jerry Sloan said. " But they
made the big shot s out on th e

perimeter. ThCy were sensational. I
don't know if I've ever seen a team
hit the big shots like that. These
guys are playing better than I've
ever seen them play."
Stockton and Karl Malone, who
both had sub-par performances in
Game I, were much better in Game
2.
Karl Malone scored 25 points,
John Stockton had 24 and Jeff Malone added 21 for the Jazz, who
return home for Game 3 of the
best-of-seven series Friday night.
Utah is 43-4 at the Delta Center,
mcluding 6-0 in the playoiTs.
The Blazers never trailed after
Danny Aingc 's thrcc·pointcr one
minute into the second quarter gave
tbcm a 32-291ead.
Portland was up by 13 at halftime aiiiJ 16 in the third quaner.
Tyrone Corbin's basket to stan
the fourth quarter cut the lead to
94 -86, but Drexler scored eight
pomts, including a pair of threepoint plays, and Porter added a
three-pointer during an 11 -3 run
that boosted Portland's lead to 10589 with 8:49 to play.
The Jazz never tbreatened seriously again.
"We came back and played
tough tonight," Karl Malone said.
"We're not going to give up."

BUY ONE

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Ron lid Hanning, R Ptl
Mon thnJ 511 B :001 m 10 9 00 p m
Sund., 1000am t o 400pm,
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH 992 -2966
Fr1endty Strvrce
Pom•ov. OH
E Main
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SUNDAY, MAY 74, 1997

•

Soft Dnnks ..

" ~~q

2 PRICE!

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WITH NUTRA SWE ET

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
DIET PEPSI,

Pepsi Cola or
Mountain Dew
24-Pak 12-ez. Cana

$18

�The

Sentinel

Ohio

20,1992

Wyatt ... _ _ ___:(_Co_nt_in_ued_fro_m_:pa_:g:.e_:l)_..._
time

ill

Gallery Hair Arts ,

Pomeroy.
Tummy is a two year member of
the National Honor Society, and is
listed in Who's Who Among
American High School Students .
For two years she was a member of
the Meigs High School Glee Club
and Chorus, the Women ' s Ensemble, Electric Youth, Madrigals, and
the show chorus.
Bobby Vance, daughter of
Bobby and Yvonne Vance. is a
member of the National Honor
Society and the Spanish Club,
works on the school newspaper, as
a statistician, and plays in the high
school band. She has participated
in the Upward Bound program of
University.

_ __

ing Ohio U~iversity where she will
partlctpale tn the Copeland Scholars Program. The daughter of Bill
and Be!Sy Weaver, she is a member
of the National Honor Society, is
prestdent of the senior class, served
on Srudent Council, and plays volleyball and softball.

RLCS honor roll is announced
Second grade - Heather Baxter.
Third grade - Chasidi Biggs.
Erin Harris and Rose Schrock.
Fourth gn~de- Joseph McCall.
Fifth grade - Shannon Enright,
Jacque Hall and Rachel Pangio.
Sixth grade - Sue Bamhan and
Aaron Pangio.

The honor roll for the Rejoicing
Life Christi:.n School has been
llllllOUilced:
Kindergarten - Timothy Leamood, Andrew Philson, Brandon
Williams and Jeremy Yeauger.
First grade - Cassie Braun .
Joshua Eagle and David Snodgrass.

SUPER ALUMNI DAYS
ALL DRESS SHOES
COORDINATING BAGS AND
BOWS

0

Wednes tlay, May 20, 1992

Community
calendar
Co••••ity Cal.. dar items
appear two days btfort u neal
and dlt day of ~ neal. Items
musl H I'Kfin4 ftll ill advance
to assurt pablicalioa ill tlte calendar.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Revival at th e
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
143, Pomeroy, will H held Tuesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
rughtly widt 1ttny Miller and family. Pastor Viaor Rousl! invites the
public.
CHESTER - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet W~y
at 7:30p.m. at the home of Pauline
Eynon . The re will be a plant
exchange.

okout Sale
Beef
Rib

POMEROY • The Commiuee
for the Establishment of a Retirement Community will meet at the
Trinity Congregational Churc,
Wednesday al 7:30 p.m. Attention
will be given to some important
developments.

DRESS SHOES
AVAILABLE IN:
•White
-Red
•Bone
.Pink
ofuschia
•Black
•Black Patent

HOSPITALITY TABLE
STOP II FOR REFRESHMENTS AND BROWSE
THROUGH SCHOOL ANNUALS AND
MEMOUBILIA ON DISPLAY

CHAPMAN SHOES
TAMMY MILLER

BOBBY VANCE

CHRISTIN A WEAVER

POIIEROY'S QUALITY SHOE nORE
OPEN MON.· THURS. &amp; SAT 9-5
FRIDAY, 9·1

c.,.... n...

WAID CROSS'
SONS

Band Friday 11 the baodroom at
Mcip Hilh Scboolal 7 p.m. 'I1IIR
will also be a wmo--up rebeanal
SIIIWay a J p.m. II Mags Jwia
High. This reheanal will allow
those out of town alumni to
reltelne widt the Nnd All f~
band mcmben f t urged lO aoend.

The
Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

FRESH

FRYER BREASTS
LB.

Frt• Tile Dell

POTATO SALAD

69c LB.

11

DECISION 92"
1

THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1992

DAIRY LANE

2% MILK

).89 GAL
GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS

29c

HAWAIIAN
PUNCH

99c 460Z.
PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
We Resel"Ve The Right To l.imit Quantities

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'

LB.

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

POMEROY - l'umeioy Class of
1967 will be Iridiog a tict-df gettogetbc:r rc. the 25dl rmoioo a1 the
Meigs Courlly Golf Coone Friday
at 6 p.m. Fwtber information may
be obtai....t by calliog Linda Will
Gilkey at 992-3966.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Alumni Associaliool will decorate
at the Meigs Higll School Cafeleria
Friday at 6:30 p.m.
'
POMEROY - The Mags Coon·
ty React Team will Uve a coffee
break at the SOOIIhhcMmd R*lside
part 011 Route 3J herACCD Athens
and Pomeroy swli•A Friday
evening ed continuing through
Monday o.ail6 p.m. Call 992-32.55
for further ioform&gt;lioo.

RIJTI.AND - Then: will be a
hog roast a tlx Rudaod American
Legion !WI Sat!lfda~ at 2 p.m .
Public invtled. Mu5tctans and
groups~ invited to euataio. Call

949-20JII for funber irtfmnolioo.

Purcho~e

(e•duding items
prohibited by klw)

16 oz. Can

's

PoN&amp; Beans

l.mrt 6 ( onJ Per fo mi!y Wilh A ny O rher P\ll"chat.e ( e~clx:ing otems pro!Wlifed by low)

12 oz. C.. Frolll8n

lim 3 Cans Per Faniy
W'tth Any Other
Purdlose (ox"--t- horns

prahbiied1;~)

J
· -~"

Lemonade
FNShsweet Corn

Select

,l

Yoor
O wn

',,

II

('
•

•

·!

t-... .

I

Eors

Cluster of 8 Big

a..

Hamburger or

Wiener

SAllJRDAY
POMEROY - Thete will be a
hymn 5in8 s--day II the Freedom
Gospel MisUm an.th en Coonty
Road 31 fe~~Wiog Russdl Spencer
and the Southern Hill Singers.
Roger Wtllford, JIISO". invites the
public.

HURRICANE . flcon:odants or
the Joseph Rappold and Felix
Edw.d RJppold will bold a ramHy
reunicn a Hunicaoe hrt m Humcane, W.Va., 011 Samntay 11 noon.
Call 992-5858 for fu1her ioformatiort.

Other

Sunldst, A&amp;W Root Beer, RC Cola or

POMEROY - 1'bett will be a

949·2550

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

I lb.
Pkg.

POMEROY - The Meigs Coonl)' Democr.uic Excutive Coounittce will meet 'lbunday a1 7:30p.m.
aJ the Calpmlln IIIII.

ECkriCh
Meat
6Pack
7·U

rel&gt;carslll o( the MiMqJm Alumni

PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO

5

POMEROY - Ohio Young
Democrats of America. Meigs
County . will bold their regular
monthly meeting on Thursday at
6:30 p.m. 31 Carpeotecs Hall. All
intereSted Democrm. aged 18-40,
are inviled to attend.

F1UDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel C'hurcb in Long Bottom will have preaching and
singing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Steve Reed mvitcs the public. Fellowsbip will follow

GREENHOUSE

4.991b.

limit 6 Pkgs. Per
Family With Any

REEDSVILLE - During fie ld
day activities fc. Eastern Local
grille 9 huols, 9 .....led rm Thursday. parmcs ot Clapta 1 reading
students are encounged to meet
with their child's teadler in the
library at Eastel'll High School
bclwccD the boon ol'9 and II a.m.
to checl: oo dttcir cbild's progress.

fuifii~ii'

5

lb.

Rock Spriap United Methodist
OIUidt.

IIIII

BEEF STEAK

ROCK SPR£NGS - A class in
triangle arrangement and the
mechanic! or arranging will be
taught by Sbelia Onis Thursday at
7 p.m. a1 the Rock Springs Grange
Hall.

port Child CoDStiYalioo League
will llusdliyll 7 p.m. al the

In OPEl FOR

BONRESS STRIP

TIIURSDAY
POMEROY - Regular board
meeting of the MeigS Coonty Public Library wil l be Thursday at 1
p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS • The Middle·

The next meeting will be held
Hoffman of Ronda.
June
9 at the church at l:30 p.m.
The bake sale held in April was
reported to be a success.
Birthday celebrations this month
inc lu ded Bulah Zumbac h, Hazel
SEASON
Barnhill and Evelyn Spencer. Joanof letkllng and
na Weaver celebrated an anniverYetetoble
Plants,
lloomlng
sary.
and
Foliage
Hanging
A gift was presented to Bulah
Maxcy who is moving lO Florida.
la ..eh, Lar1e Selection of
Attending were Bulah Maxcy.
ShniUery
Beulah Zumbach, Edna Harmon .
•1111 ~"··
Hazel Barnhill, Eve lyn Spe ncer,
Mae Vineyard, Patricia Hall, Mil dred Brooks, Mil dred Ca ldwe ll .
Glenna Saners and Joanna Weaver.
After the meeting th e gr o up
traveled to Ravenswood to lunch at
Mom's Bounty Restaurant and then
Syracue 992·5776
to Ripley to tow and shop.

s1.69

Groat On the Ga •

RACINE - Raciae American
Legion I'Osl 602 will meet Thursday .. 7:30p.m.

St. Paul Willing Workers give reports
The W-il ling Workers of St Pau l
United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains, met recently at the churc h.
Glenna Sanders, presid ed and
opened the program by reading a
Psalm of Prai se. Th e opening
prayer was by Patncia Hall.
Reports were gtven by Mi ldred
Brooks and Patricia Hall and 22
sick calls were reported. Readings
were presented by Mildred Brooks
and Joanna Weaver.
A thank-you card was signed for
do nor and a ge t well card wa s
signed for Doris Koenig who ts tn
St. Joseph Hosp tUll
Th e qui llin g pro~r cs s wa s
reported by Evelyn Spencer and tl
was noted the group recently com peted three quilt s for Gcmud e

Page-9

. RACINE - The Meigs County
Fuefightecs Associalioo will meet
on Wedneq!ay 31 7:30 p.m. at the
Racine Forebouse. Richard Fellers
of the Ohio m Al::adany Program
will speat.

0 OFF

DARIN LOGAN

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

limit I Free Per ~J. With Any Other Purchcne
(oxdudng items prohllited by low)

BWIE'IER
I \ldl tii iJ Ill ,..,

�The 010111w Sentinel

Wednesday, May

Ohio

•
emor1a

•
av1n s!

WE SALUTE ~L~
' GRADUATING uA:J•
ON A :JOB WELbDONE.
~

•

,

,

I

,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 20, 1992

t

',r

-•.

~' •

~'

.,..

Public Notice
,

BULUnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

MEMORIAl

!-----...:..::=.::::.:.:::::_____.

Silk Flowers

c

The Heart to Heart Meeting

Scheduled for Thursday,
May 21st. has been
cancelled.
The next meeting will be

held July 9th.
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Billy Ray Cyrus "Some Gave Air
On Sale Cass. 799 CD $11.99
New releases just in lrom: Ihl

••
•

: Mt DEW • PEPSI FREE • DIET RITE

~PEPSI

Ilia'~ !::rlll!l l[llf) Mlli~ID
ldllll and many more.

24

GOODTHRU

••

s-u-n

:

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

Downtown Gallipolis
446-3302

••

24

I

••

PICK

•

llmlE'

'

....,.,_

PlalnMIIII

EUGENE GUY LONG, •t II.
O.fendanta
C.0 No. t2-CY·I13
N011CUY PUBUCATION
TO: F....,_~
Betty !'owl,

lENT A
c.wEJ MAGIC
STtAM MACHINE

NAPKINS~

REGULAR
PRICE

~

Delber1 E. P-.U, Roy
Powell, Honl Stulto, Ruth

CLASSIFIEOS
.. . This Way

I )I

•SAND -GRAVEL oOIRT

.UMESTONE

Real Estate General

Opphlo, Allnd !Wold
P-.u. Wold E"*'on
Powol, CUifanf Aug..tue

nw 3 daya at oo cba"«oe • Price of ad for all capit.alle tlen ta double puce of ad C0411
• '; pflinl line type only u.te&gt;..l
• ScntiDel Y not rc.pouihle t'or error- dtt:r hrat da~ (c bed
tur erron
day ad runa Ul paP""r ). Ca ll bdono: 2 :00p .m

r.,..,

da~· a her publication to nnh corrot-Clton

• AW tbat mwt be

Po-.-Fr-

I

\ lohill- ,'\; lloouhil'll idt· llollll' ( h1 tll'r'

OH., WY. ' H.U.D.

, ll'n:'DTUCDA.f

'' 11:n 1ncn,.

BE' r£ R fJr Of SK'~

TRDY-BI£T
Out" Sprtna Shipment Or
Troy.Rilt 1\ll«• Now Ia S!.ock•

y•• , .ullilii'D~.r-

ll SO Will, lok,. Obio •lt3-311l
212CW213 mo.

MLINDA'S
tJ' PAINTING
&amp; co.

I

I &lt;,6ool ...... ...,'01 ~ .....- · ,.. ·-.c-.v•
'll oroo•,.,. ou&lt;-"0101'
~ ~ "'ooo•~~ C)If' 'f19'''"'" ~-1

I
I
I
I

..,,... """o&lt;&gt;&lt;: R , o..,

J '"''

X: Com()(Y' •

Mall

:&gt;?(1

.r

~'1

Cor"'oe 1000 J '"'C 01 · ~·' , ~ ~ •'

.ov

~·')()'

, , ;:)J'

--.,., ..

ro : ~· ""Xi.- '- X 1'" ~ .- ·' -,
~ o llo • -2··
:Jo•..- '""" v· . -~·

~~
~
~v-

ULCH ..•............. 10/$28

,

I_
I -·' - - - - - '"' - - , __ -

I
I

~.,..

_, ......., ---------------... .... '
- .. ~

I ~

=
= = . --.. .-·--..... -a,

FLATS·
DVARIETY

'.

u:""-'"l'M

$250 per month.

~ ·rULL

~&lt;OJ~

-=
I &gt;oor
I ""'
I :0!'1 0 ~

bedrooms. woodbumer, furn ace, cen tral air . and rents for

IUMS........................ 99c

I ·v ~ -----------------1 ...,_

I

BEDDING PLANTS............

·-----------------~

•

to Limit quantltlea • Prlclta

EfiiiCtlv• thru s.t., Mrf 23, 11182 • USDA Food Staqla 81111 WIC

• Not

lor

$ 9,

6

LONGBOTIOM·Hoyman Road·Approx . 112 acre olland
with 1973 Schultz mob1le home that IS 12X65 . Has 2
$11,000

oiiS7112f1 .... peL

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addltlono

''

5.llrl mo. pd.

'l(ptli.ryn
Meadows

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

. WHALEY'S 4UTO
PARTS
with 3 bedrooms. new shingle roof, newer N.G. tumace &amp;
hot water heater. tull basement , carport, shed wftack r~m.
fenced lot GREAT LOCATION' Home needs a low repaors
Owner will accept reasonable otter. ASKING $34,900

ISPinlallllna In Cusltoml

HENRY E. CLELAND .................................... V92-61V1
TRACY BRINAGER....................................... UA-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL................ .......................... V4V·2660
OFFICE........................................................... V92·225V

IUIIAIIS

Iring II I• Or W•
Pkk ~~·

SERVICE

992·5335 or
985·3561
"'"' ......., Ofl\co
217 E. S.C... St.

I'OMIIOY, OliO

3123192Ain

NOW OPEN!

CALIFORNIA
TAliS

15 Sesllons....$25
12 Seaslons....$20
1 Seaslon. ...$2.25

6 ML 011 Eagle Ridge
Ad. or 1ML fr011 Baslan
New SCA WOLFF

Bed SL.24

~ -

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

P.O. hx 894 W&amp; Mer

$15 ,000 ..... Make an offert

THE HOME SELLING SEASON IS HEREI WE HAVE
POTETIAL BUYERS COMING IN EVERYDAY ... SOME
WANT WHAT YOU HAVEl LIST Willi US TODAYt WE
NEED LISTINGS TO MEETTHEDEMANDOF BUYERS!

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

949·2823

rooms upstairs wlbeautitul wiew ollhe river. ldeallocabon
lor someone starting a business w1tl1 a little imagination!

EXCELLENT CAMPING SITE· Longbonom· I acre of
ground along the river. $6 ,000 CALL FOR DETAILS!

412/92/lln

Cell for ApptToday

OWNER IS ANXIOUS TO SELL THIS COMMERCIAL
BUILDING- Locaood on Maon St. on Pomeroy Features
large display window with showroomloHtee space. Lar:ge

SALEM ST-Rulolnd·A 2 story homo wilh 4-5 bedrooms.
ntce front sitting porch, .carport. cutlelmle play house s1tbng
ifl 8 fenced back yard Home has a brand new roof and

$20.00

KEN'S APPLIANCE

nice home currently sel up on rented lot.
SOLD! ASKING $29,900 Make an offor 1

MIDDLEPORT· Gront St.· A VERY CUTE 2 story home

Welcome Slates
614-992·2242

3·13·92-lfn
OF-=:;~
X 52 man1ufacturod
feaMes 3 bedrooms. 2
appl1ances . skylight. added

"SPECIAUZJNG IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Custom Paintings

Pomeroy, Ohio

POMEROY· 1 112 story home on Union Avo. 3-4 bedrooms, carpet &amp; wood lloonng, fireplace, lront silting porch.
ASKING St4,540

DO TilE TURNEJ!, Broker..................................992·5692
BRENDA JEFFEHS............................................992·3056
DAAUNESTEWART ...........................................992-8365
SANDYBUTCHEA..............................................992·5371
SHERYL WALTERS,~.Cheohlre ............. ...............367&gt;0421
.lEARY SPRADUNo;; ............................... (304) 882-3498

Co. Rcl3,
LMdlng Crwk Rd.
lllddltlpon
742-3030

-E'-Iell and Plun~bing
-Roonng
-lnlorior &amp; Exllrlor
Pointing
(FREE ESTIMATES)

'992-6215

MIDDLEPOA.T.Colt. Streei-A very well kept 1 112 story
home wioh vmyl •iding, 2 bdrms , FA NG lumaoo. lull
basement will&gt; shower, and 2 full boons.
$29,900

.

1S'Yo OFF On Most
Boar Parts

-Gutt.Work

V. C. YOUNG Ill

NEW LISTING· HARRISONVILLE· 28 289 acres of va·
canl ground. Asking S16.000

ouilding.

LOW lABOR RATE

Aftw 6 p.a. 614·98H 180

RACINE-Family Needed-For lhiS 1 112 slory . 3·4 bedroom
home with 4 porches. hall basement , dtmng room, family
room and a small outbuildtng . Good stzod lot
.
$26,500

gutters , central air. and some new carpeting, and a storage

CHUCK'S BOATAUTO REPAIR

hl•o6p&amp;i.MYoMossap

POMEROY-Beech Slroet·You need to soo this beautiful

99

Gallia Counl~

Meigt! Counl~-

I ~aeon

Co .. '"' _

A.. a Cod• 614- 1.~ ... Cod• 614• Area Cod. 304 ::
'

6 ':'.&gt;-Pt . Pleuen~. ~ ~

4-46--C. alL poL I

458---Lr:-oo

36 7 -Che.N rr:

Pomro:ro1

388-\'i.nlon

48.5-Che.loer
K43- f'ortlud
:::47-Lctart r.u.
Q49-RicLDt:
742- RuUand

24i-Rlo Gund e:
25b-C.u:nn Dilll.
643-Arahia Uiat.

379- 'hlnut

682-'-

o••_

89~-Lri·rt

037 - Buflolo

b6 7 -luolvillt"

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

(F~=r:--

USED RAILROAD TIES
4·4-92-tho

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING
'.

"We Cet The Je• Dent New"
Call AI Tromm
614-7•n·~El

Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.

l.eadeoi•P_.., ..

w..., ...__Depot St.
ioiii1W .... It.SS4

MON.·SAT. 9 to 5

614·742·2772

614·949-2804

........, "'"'"

•.

\

INC.
Rr. 2
MJ1lwoocl, W.Va.

304-273-5555:

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Viayl Sitliag
•
New Garages • Replace11eat Wia4ows :
Room Additio•s • Roofiag
COMMF.RCIAL and Rt:Smi:NJ'I,\L
mFX t:STIMAD:S

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

•
•

(No Sunday Calls)
211219211

CHARUE'S
SMAll DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORI aad
liE STOllE

DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

992·7553
POMEROY, OIL
S-18-'92·1 ... pd.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
I'ONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SE WER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
licensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992·5591
12·5·tln

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP
134 MSI,II' 1 ~ll.
NOW OPEN
Hrs. 9 to 5
MoL 1~1'1 Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS
BlJY~'!EI..L- TRADE

4-21 -92- I mo. pd .

PARTS &amp; SERVKI : ~JAYMAR
Mowers • a;. Saws
Quality
•Weedeaten

BILL SLACK

992·2269

FREE ESTIMATES

.

HAVE IIFERIIKIS

brick home . Has 3 bedrooms , large llvtng room . full base-.
ment, and a one car garage.
$34,900

$30,000

Classified pages cot·er the
followinf! telephone exchanges ...

,...-------. ,....-------... .
FOR Sill
ANGIE'S FLOWERS
•
Perennials &amp;
•
Agriculture •
Annuals,
S:t.b...
&amp;w..trflowen and
•
lime
mont Everlastings.

FR£1 ISTIMATtS

Middleport, OH

i$5 2v0~S~~~M~~c~.~ ~N~,

P

1 00 p.rr. Frtda~·

•

INTERIOR &amp;EXTERIOR

205 North S.COOd Ave.

EAGLE RIDGE ROAD-Approx. 40 acres of land , of which

1·00 p.m Monda\'

l 00 p.m Tuesday
1 00 p _m Wf'dn~a '
l 00 m Th urs.day

20 Yn. bp.

011

1 mo. pd. 411 &amp;m

ab::lut20 acres are tillable _Has a barn With hay loft an an
equipment shed. Public water and ekJct _avatl .. M~ny great
bYildiog sites and waler for antmals . Olmer wtll f1nance.

LJ

Cal (614)

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

r-----------------,

Hooosing Pndlds.

Bennetts Mobile uu•""
1391 Salford School Rd.

"*
Of,...,.,
- tot u, ,.,, , r.·

I

1
[ W.W.-+N CE~nRC A IC I UP1QES 81Jr ,Qf l
I OFF ICIAL MANUFACTUREU s rlHUND CEan~rCME

Ajlpnnd M-t.t.rad

Quabty Hi EHkieiKy Air
Conditioaers, Heat
hrnaces &amp; Now
Water Healers.

"Taloi'N

24

OFFICE 992·2886

ar~ ·

Happy Ada
"Yard Sa.lr.
• ,\ duaiftod adverti.temen. pla.ced LD the CallipoW Dui~T rlhuoe tentpt Clulifted Di.tplay, Buine.u Cud or l..ef'al
!\otJc~l willal.o appear tn the PoUil Ple&amp;~a.Dl H~~r and
the Oath· SenLmd . rt~~cb.~ OYCT 18.000 home~

llogg

I

P-.d. w.advr.nce

'~ard of TbanU
in Mcmona111

.

;

'

• /\(:Ia ouUide the county Y'&gt; Ur ad runt mwl b.- p~pu:l
• R~ei.-e diacount for ad. paid i.n adnnce
• Free Ad. : Giveaway and Found ada under 15 wo.-d• ..,.JI be

1

DAY BERJRE PUBLICATION
J·OO p.m Sarurday

Monda y Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesda~ Paper
Thursda y Paper
Fnday Paper
SUfl day Paper

POLICIES

(6141992-3470
5115f9211

Real Estate General

.. -

SAT.8-12

CLOSED SLi\DAl'

~

b. SOWtsl, ltlt,. Olio •l!3.Jlll

.

..1

-1

lholu

WAICEIIEUI'S

';;ii:T'iiCii:

. \
.,

36970 Ballun Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Our ~prin&amp; Sbt.-enl 0(
'lroy.Bdt 1\Uen Now Ia Stock .
Yow- l..ocal ~-BUt

o.

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

•,Betty - ... Nollie
·.
· unknown.
who loot
_..._...
....... ,.JJ-You ar• hereby notified
unlln4!;Wn; and 1M Unknown U..t you h0Y11 ""-' nemed
Helre, Nat of Kin, Leg I 11, 0.r.ncs..11 In o legal action
ontlded Berth• J. Proffitt
0.
- - · Admin
.. trlllora,
EJteoutorJ.
Sue CIIIOII,
and Joe ~n, Plalndllll,
lp a ••,IIMI Aaligne of
vo. Eugene Guy Long, oc II.,
AnclrwlloolaOft Po-,
0.r.ncs..11. Thlo .,don hla
......... ~- Pow.ll, Nettle been uolgned C.O No. 82·
Blahop, fiery Deliah Grimm, CV-113 ond lo ptOndlng In
tho Common Pleu Court of
E112a AM J"onm.,, Luoy
llolgo County, Ohio, Court
a.lnw, F - l.alldna,
Street, Pom•roy, Ohio
Bertho Spaun, Ralph
45751.
P....... a..IMPow.U,
The obj•ct of the
Wilde Powoll, Sylvia Pool,
Complaint lo to dttermln•
LMoy Blahop, Fr..k
11M lnter•ta of .. Plolntlffe
Blahop, Anna Blohop
and Def•ndonto In 421\
CGMty, ThomM Yollko
ICI'M, rnore or fM:a, of rul
Grlnom. Dmd Wllom
Mlato located In I.Job•non
GriMm, Eugene S..,Jey
Townohlp, llolgo County,
Grimm, Th- Franklin
Ohio, ond In Section No. 30,
Gnnm, Harry Fr.,_
Townohlp No. 2 Md Range
Grllllrro, Twila Dlmaky,
No. 11 of the Ohio
w..... Honry Gtlmm,
Edward A. Forwn1111, Jeu1e Compony'a Purchue end,

CAPN'
CRUNCH $299
16 oz. 101
CEREAL
NORTHERN 120 CT. PIG

....t.IKNOWS

992·3838

TRDY-BIJ.T'

Po-.

OF IEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

IIEAlHA ~- PRORTT, et oL

mEE ESTIMATES

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

Galn111, Ela LartdM, Elv•
Hoyrn.,, Fr.,k Madloon
Nollie SmHh,

COtilliON PLEAS COURT

Mo~ . thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. •

ATTENTION

BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TAACKHOE WORK
AVAJL.ABL£ .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES Md
TRAILER SITES,
LAHDCL£ARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALL£0
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

2-7·92·11n

Public Nollce

Public Nollce

COI'Y DEADLINE

Call992-2156

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

985·4473
667·6.179

2-Day Admission to
AmeriFiora &amp; Holel
$99.00 per person
Call AAA Travel
614-446-0699

To place an ad

Business Services

IUE ESTIMAYES

July 25-26
Deluxe Molorcoach

7·UP, A&amp;W, ROOT BEER &amp;
CREAM SODA

thot the •••I eotat• b• during · regulor buolnou
partitioned or Ordered oold houro lor 1 period of 180
1111 connot be portluoned, d•y• aubaequenl to
plue ottorn•y • - . cooto publication of thll notice.
ond euch other relief •• (5) u, 20, 27;
~:~~· n•c...ory ond (6) 3, 10, 17, 24, 7tc
You •• hereby required
Public Nollce
to onower the Complaint
within tw•nty-elght (211
NOTICE
doyo alt•r the leol
The de.odlln• fa&lt; ftllng
publication of tltlo notice application• Ia&lt; lh• Klbbl•
which will b• publlohed Foundation Scholorohlp Ia
once o w.. k lor elx (6) June 15, 1882. Appllclllono
eucc-lw w...... The IIIII received after that dllto will
publication will be madt on not be conold•r•d lor
the 27th day of May, 1112, funding until th• ochool
and th• "enty-elght (28) year 111113-114. Groduot.. of
daya lor anewering will llelgo County high ochoolo
commence on that date. In ollendlng Hocking Techcaae of your failure to nical Coll•u•. llorletto
anawer or otherwl11 College, Ohio s..t• Unl·
roopond u required by tho veroity, Ohio Unlv•rolty,
Ohoo Aul•• of Civil Unlvorolty of Rio Gr.,de, 0&lt;
Procedure, judgmiHit by Wahlngton Stata Comrnur&gt;default will be rend•red lty CoH- ore encouregecl
ogoln•t you lor th• rell•f to pick up oppllcodon• ot
dtmonded In U.. Com:r,lolnl the ochool and gill them
Ooted thlo 16th oy of filed before June15, 1882.
Scholar•hlpl are •v•llAprl~ 1V82.
I.Jony Spencer, oble to grllduot• of Melgo
Clerlo of Courll High Schoolo or p~~roono
having • GEO, whou Jut
(4) 22, 2i;
public ochool ollendonce
1516. 13. 20. 27. '"'
woa In Melge County. To be
qualified the oppllcent muot
Public Notice
b• pur•ulng on und•r·
gradu•t• degrH •nd mu11
PUBUC NOncE
Thl •nnuel report Form be o lull tim• otud•nl
vvoPF for the Klbblo carrying ot lent 12 credit
FoundaUon, Bern•rd V. hour1.
s.rn.dY. Fultz,
Fultz, Truot.., lo ovllloble
TruoiM
lor public lnopectlon ot
Klbble Foundation
Bernard Y. Fultz La Olflce,
IIIli W. Second StrN~ (5) 13, 20, 27;
Pomwoy, Ohio 45761, (6) 3, 10, 17, 24. 7tc

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp;Compare

JoinAAA
With Brenda Roush at
AMERIFLORA

~

Public Notice

X·

CRIMINAL RECORDS

•••
•

PACK

~I SS,

New T-lhlrta lrom Matalllca, Aaron
Tippin, KISS and Ions morel
Open Til 8 P.M. Evory Ni\llt
1·5 on Sundays

88 ~

LIMIT OlE WITH COUPON &amp; $10 PURCHASE

WHO KNOWS
WHAT LURKS IN THE
DEPTHS OF
YOUR CARPET?

The Dally Sentinel-Page

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

Stone Co.
· SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992-6637
St. Rt. 1
Cheshire, 0 H•

1/2111n

~

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO

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

.. ,.,~ r- t. a...

,

614·949·2202
4/DI'tJ/1-

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAIIIRNANCE
949-2627 or
1~7-1460

Lawn Mowing,

Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub •nd T""'
Trimming &amp; R•movel

•

A•idtntiof &amp; ComiMidol ~

FreeEalimot:e

'-'2111:1... .

~~~
­
BOWUD L. •
WRII£$£L
ROOFDIG
NEW - REPAIR
GUTTERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

MIIID

.
•

•

••
'

•

••
•
•

•
•

•

•

•'

;:::;=::::'"=-=·:::-:·:...~ ;
CONNIE'S OHIO

~

RMR HERIS 1111 :
MRLAS1111GS ~

S2100U.UI,-.,Giole :
24HOlS
~

...m.
..
[......

NOW OPDI FOI SPRIIG ~.
l'l.ts. .... Pet II •

OPEII
:
WED.·SUN.IG-5 ....
4-21-92-1-.pl

�Page 12-The Dally Sentinel
~,..:"'ouncem e nts

Pomero~lddleport,

SNAFU ® b) Bruce Beattie

31 Homes lor Sale
30ol-U5-3fi71 att.r l :OOPil

IIIIPIIOM; lcQotlavo, Iondo&lt;- .ond
.... your boby
il
. cotana.r
.._
IUf-

-Ill-

wllh your child.

EliDriM 6 Chuck

WIICGRM your
Cillo 111yllmo 21'-328-

~··-~405~1e8100110_C\J

1,8 ... SSTEL

0\ fl 13.11111 n.

!II.,M'"t"

t.

........

puprtact wonn ahotl, 614H~ky

"Firs1 one to overcome fear of he1ghts gets
free sky-diving lesson s!"

mal•.

l
rnlud
pood
.. puppies,
4ma&amp;
aid;
mind
fwna~
2yrs.
-

miud biKklwhltl femlll,

1
w..11
Ofd
Doberman
Shliptt.-d Mil, f"M-381--7007..
Friend" tun.na To Glweaway.

Utlllr l'hiiMd. 114 ue 3897
(Jrrens, rnalhlr Slamaa. 304-

57S-4501.

Used trail•r underpinning, 61499:l-40$1

FOUND; HC of l*ldl GM ear
U,s. FUw Hlven wa. 304-182liM.,._ 5:00PM.

tamoana.

Dolo Enlry c,.,., Succnolul
Candkllte llu.. Type 45 WPM
Accurataty, Hava Data Entry
Knowt.ctga And/Or Experience.
Accuratt Alpha And Numeric
Flllng Sklllt And Btalc Math
Skllla. Wonlng Knowledge Of
lllclcal T..-mfnalogy Oftlr.d.
Send Rnuma To: SEOEMS,
3240 S .R. 110, Gallipolis, Ohio
45e31 By: May 27, 1~2.
EXPERIENCED
ADMINISTRA-TIVE SECRETARY - ArM Health
Car1 Facility Hu Immediate
Opening For "Pw.on Wllh Exc.l,
llnl Shorthlnd And Ptlrtonal
Com~KAw SkHia. Compelltlve
Salary And Excellenl Fring•
Blnefha. SMd Reaume To: Box
CL..A 111, c/o Gallipolis Dilly
Tribune, GIIIUpolls, OH 45631.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Gooop Solo, Fri I Sot. 1:00 1111
4dl0, . . . . . . - n g. "'
.... I h flold.

PubkSale
&amp; Auction

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING. $16,000 • $T.Z,0001Yr. ,,
80!-664-6500 EX1 . 09968 For
lmm~late Respon ...

~I'SI)ft Audkm Company,

tu111 lima auc:tlaneer, complete

~fii:IM

aoz

Hundredt Of Comp~nl• NIHtd

SIAike.
Uc:tnstd
I West vtrging, 304-

tn A ~.

01111 .....,, ,

Home Worklrs Gua,.n1Md In-

come. Easy WOfk. Ruth

The

Call 114-446-

. - - . picturw and tumlh.n,
Ooily-.1.......- .

-.....t To Bu.y : Junk Auloa
•HI
Wllhoul Motors. Call
.............. 514-3U-8303.

a-

...

Urgt~

825 Third A11enue, GaJ\Ipo\11, OH
45631.

Training

Your

R.. n1ln

NowiiiSouthN.t.-n
Buslnen College, ~f':~H Valley
Pill.&amp;. Call Todly, 6
~3ti711
Reg'-t1ratlon fiG..Q5:12JIIIB.

_1-:::8:-::-W':"""a~n-:led-.:t_o77D_o:-:-=

Wm Babyatl In My Home. Fencad In Pit~ Aru. Ratal'lncn
..,._
AYal Iable.
odnty Aru. ....11
614-245-5887.
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Tr11 Rtmoval, Htdgt

Trimming. Fr11 Estimates! 814-

387-l'ISr
GIOI'get Porlabll Sawmill, don '\

haul your logs lo It'll mill just
c.lll04-675:1~7.

Glwt p6ano .... ons In my ~
to
b.qlnnera,
tdvsnoed
students l. aduns. AliSO INCh
cording &amp; transposing . II lntwestld , pleau cal\6t4-m-5403

Havt room In my home tor tl·
dsrty male or ltmllll country
almosphlt'"l, pltnty o TLC , or
will taka care of tldlrty In tt.ir
home . 20 ,Nrt upertanct,
have reterene... 614·949 -3014

.,.., 6prn.

Lawn mowing and odd tobl,
tully Insured, ~14-1!12-1612 .

Nama And Addrns S.A.S.E. 110
And $1.00 To: D&amp;A SuppUes,
O.pt. C, P.O. Box 1443 F.lrbom,

taya. comk bo&lt;*s,

_.... To luy:

Uom'a Smorgasbord,

Aawnswood, WV.

p.m. s.nw.y.

Wanted to Buy
aa.. WIUt Wat• Ott

Part -Tim• Sales Person Hourly
&amp; Commission Attlil Salt Muse
Bt Flniblt, Send R"ume CLA
116, Clo Galhpollt Daily Tribunt,

1-206-736-

dllhwaahen.
Experlenee
naceaaary, apply In person, af-

lUYard--loPIIdln
u..nc., DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
,__, ..... ,,._, ia lo Nn.
Sw.-, ldltian • 2 :00 p.m.
llondoy ocltlon . 2:00

!I

N~e~aaary.

Cooke, line girts, wattrnMs,

&amp; VIcinity

,.,...._

1-800..992--6356.

1000 Ext. 1594N5.

Gallipolis

tlfJ*to

Part-tlmt LPN 't nMdtd lor ICF
68
bed
facility
Contact
Carthavan of Point Pleaunl.
304-675-3005.

No Exp.

Yard Sale

..tiM

I:-:::'::--: ::-:c-:-:-:=-:-:-:c---

8AATENOERSICASIHO
WORKERS/DECK
Rllpontlble Non-Smok..- To
HANOSJHoltnMI,
Elc. B•brtl 8 v.. r Old. 614:4415Poeltlona Aboard CruiH Ships. rn .
$3001$900 Wkly. FrM Tr~v•l.
Carlbbesn, H•all, Datlamas. 14
Business

LoS1 &amp; Found

Aiel

wtnted,
Part-tlmt
help
Pom1ro,, Oh. J1nltcw-lal wcw-k,
awtnlngs. lnt.,tstlld a.ltt only.
513:544-5:131.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
ExC~t~nt
P.y,
B.n•tlt•,
Tr•nspoftallon,
407-2g2-471!\7,
Ext. 511. h .mAOp.m. Toll
Aeh.lnct.d..

25f.IM7.

HelpWanled

11

$25,000 • U.S. Govemm..,l.
Part-Tim1, Own HOUI'I. Process
t-'HA Yong~ge Aetunds. No EII~rllnea Nacu11ry. 1-405-321·

comp~~ny.

"'"'""'Plano
. To Glw..wey. 6l4-

8

HelpWanted

"AVON" ALL AREAS! Snare your
time wi1h Ul. You'll love lhe

llkltt'w ear And 4 Kitlent To
- .•.
Gl ......y. ...............
.. ____._.,P

7

t-;=~:;::~;=~==r-=========:1
11

1"•51111

6

Slz1

- - ....... Good Con~ Call 11C-446-401! Aft11 5

Miss Paula's Dty Catw~ C.nl•
Sat., aHo,dablt, cttlldcare . M-F
6 a.m. , 5 :30 p.m. Agile 2~10 .
~ 45324
Bat~ . alttr school . Orop-lnt
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S. wtlcomt. 614:446-8224. New InMARSHALL'S Now Hiring. No fant Toddilf Cart, IS"M-446-8227.
Ex~rienc• Nacasaary. For Ap:
pticllllon lnlormallon Call 21g.. TO's lawn Landscaping, odd
'rss.-&amp;&amp;81, Ext OtHS5 8a.m. To Job 11rvlca. Ouallly work,
re1sonab.. raltl. 304..fl75-1144
8p.m. 7 O.ys.

atklor Tom.

Nll1, Rnponsibla Peop._ To
Plclt S1rawberrln. Apply In P•r,
eon. 8-t2 Sat. May 23rtl. Taylor't
Barry Patch, Ktrr Ad., Bldwtll,
Ohkl.

Will do babytlltlng 1ny houra,
h1v1 ratarencn, 364-67S-3856.
Will 0o Ironing
11 Aner 5:00
P.M. 614-446-2888
c
_ .

NMdad- Carll lied nul'llng assl• lw:::-..._,
-:-;-n-g" M"o"l"n:c-;
.r w;;cncco-o;
N;:ood
::;:-o-oA
tint tor ICF 68 bed flcltlly. Call Babyslner : Prelarably N.wbom
CarMtven of Pol nl Pi11unl, To 5 Yurw Of Age, Gr....,
304-875-l005.
Townsttlp A.r11. Ca~ 614-446Part time dlpal1ment 11ore mar- 1125&amp;.
chandiMr nMded. Must liwe
wh~ln15 M!lu Of Gallipolis.
Woril you're own day lima
houn. No w..kends. Car

Financial

ftMd.ct _ No uperiiOCI

:- ~ 1o1ment

Services

Help Wanted

t1

~Cft-

ury.

Send nama, addr. . a,
phone: to ICC 56ti PO Box 23
South Hacktnnc k, New Jersay
01006 .

Part-time hand on dairy farm,
must ttawe txpw .. n&lt;:l, 614-..S54102. LNvt m.... ge.

21

Business
Opponunlty

tNOTJCEI
OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO
rscommendt that you do busl·
nut with ,.op~ you know, and
NOT to aend money throlJ9h tht
mall until you have lnvnl1gat.cl
the oHerlng

Allantlon! Styling S..lon For
Sal•! Prime l..ocalion Call 614·
446-1803 , 614-446-8355.
Vending Route: loc1l. Wt Have
Th• Nswast Machlnn, Mailing A
Nice Study C..h Income. 1800-95S-OJ5.4.

Want to:

PIN down EXTIU

VENDING ROUTE: N- Equlpm•nt , 50 Lat:1Uons. Great In·
coma, $5,500.00. 1..SOO,V3J.WI9
[1(1 .

17.

22 Money to Loan
Money To Loan
1-80().238-9759, Open From 9
A.M . To 10 P.M.

Real Estate
31 Homes lor Sale
1,400 .q ft brick, 3 bedrooms,
large living room twkll ptllo,
lrM wttlrfMpllc , h.. t pump, 5
mlnul.. from Pl . Pl•aNnt ,
$56,900. 304-US-5301S

·r,rrr Y" r"·

,.,,,,,,.info f·a s lt.

Sell ir ''"' ~ " '"y ... !IJ'.lili"-"&lt;'·
no ,,.,.,/to/,.,..,,, your l.ou~t• ,
1'/,.,.,. ymn du.&lt;.&lt;i/i••d ud r,,./oyj
I ;, u1 onl.~ ,,. lt· s.o; . .I_ ,/, y," ·

J .1'!!J.'.f. ~ ' $ 6 -tl tl
f .11/l ""' !_jji1 ~");,

I.

2.
:1.
I 1.

:..
1\.
i .,

-to Ubrwy, parting.
..........
''"· hell,
nul
cenll'll

1H8 King mobiMi home., :Z

air, rwtww
8ebt;7p.m.

.om~

/'"ir/ i1 1 ,, Jrulll "t '
I} _

rflrt ·~!

_ _ _ __

10 acrn, lbdrm houM , bam ,
u1illty building, tml. from Mid·
dleport . Handyman tpeclal , low
twentlu , 216-395-ll!tV

2 I'!Oullt In Mlddlepoc1 . Low Of
NO down payment b.eauM . .
....ng priu Is DRAMATICALLY
Dillow prOI*'fy valu• d..- to
owner mowing out of area. 111
!*"'on wit, money WINS! 614-

9il2-3187

~

,....,...

lhlng. 1 and 2 bed~0[~;&gt;1;&amp;5;:!B;d;;;;;;;: O.acla'-roont apertrMnta at VIllage
Undwpinnlnf. ...._
ond
R,_.lilo

1971D'*o141165.2Bod--.

Fumtst.d, CA.

S1
_1
_,..,.
_
- - · 1n Mldd111pon. From
1983 14152 2 B..trooms, Llility St•. Callfi"M-112-7711. EOH.
Ck»uu, S:ID¥11 I Aetriglnllor k"tlloll: 2 Roam 1 illlh,
cluded, Gas Fwnaee. ..._ C.S1151Mo.
2
e , ....,ns, 2 Bathe,
po&lt;IOQ. Good
ST.INXI. ~S4DG_.,".._"' ~...=ulrM.
814-

Con&lt;f;l..._

...._..,.._

One t.li mu apt lor ,.,t, 3042 mobile hamel on 2 klls.. Good 57S-2211.

condition. For man lniDmt.alion
call 304-675-6591 ot 304-61'5:
23 ....

One bl drgom tum5ahld apl ,
One 12160; One 12165; 2. 3 816: ...,.. wn Ava. S200. plus
rooms, Stove Alh;gtnlor, lJn. ~ ~ Nk:n
dorolnning. Ono CA.
1 5=-::00~PM::..- - - - - -

P.-. 1·

FurniShed

liNd mobile ' " !102 .... 45
v.ry nlco 14x?O . - - o n _ _ _ _R_oorn_....,s__-:1

=

33 Fanns for Sale
68 aCN count'{.

I:SI..oi~~"!!~..~-~;-;rii.Go~Rio;;;Kol;ki;;olij:.
Ill . . .95'0

5651. llaiiOI'I WY.

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

bomo, oummor 46 Space for Rern
otudlo, hllflling cobill B y -·
AgW11S •tl IW, 3'K... Dan Country llobille Horne Pn, At.
Blaek. 614-381 1210.
13M. , ...-, , _ management.
L.ota, W; home r~~nla ... $235;
514-t!l2-2167
Business
34

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

Buildings

1fT

Comme~lal Type

Still Budding
S.lo. lOxOO, To ......, llolching Faetory And 0.... 0.
counts. Call
NCMl
Sa•
Thousands . Bob 114............ant
Ends S.1.

loti lor ..... tl'l...,. acc.plabtl. 304-67S-ZT22.
L..ota In Galliploh F.ry .

114-912-242&amp;, 1.. w ,..... lt

r.lerchandise
51

available, ~2722.

Lots In ,._ ~ . 100'11.
owner liMncing a1 $101..46 p.r
monltt buys all Unt kits., alD4&amp;n.-2m.
Lots joining Pok1l: · l(IO'IJC, OIWNf
lint.ncing a1 110\.48 ,... math
bU)'Ii

afl ...... lots.. 3lfM..t75.

21'.!2.
O.J . While

Goods

·- .............

Road, II

Upftar Art. ACL a..lde 91~
Motel Call 114-446-7391,

1 100 499 3491.

LAYHE'S FURNIT\JRE
eo.np.l• home furnlshk\qa.
Haws: lion-Sat, "
~~
a:J:l2,. 3 ""'- out BulnU• Rd.

"-0.0...,.
Uring Room Suite, Llk• PMw,

Acra1t.. $200. 614:256-6575 Afl:• 5 P.M.

Mostty Wooct.ct, With A ~i­
lul Bui~ing Site.. NQ L..nl

Wal•.

Orlveway,
Rtnt
EIICirkity, And PhoAI Sarrial
Awal\ab4e. 3 112 Miles From Motzer Hoapi1al, ll9,000. 6~
4127.

Two Prime Bulldlna lots, In
Rolling
Ac;,..
SUbclvWon.,
100x150 Eaeh. S..W I City

Wstar Anil. . .. o.n.r Aatoetl·
lng To Ksntudly So will Acctpf
Any RNsona.tM Ott.-. 3D4-Ii15&gt;-

1121

PICKEHS FURNIT\JRE
NowiUHd
....... hold fvmhNng. 112 mi.
Jerric:ho Ad.. Pt. Pleuant, WV,

o.-- --

17!.W!lh
• ,..

__

11

P.ll.

SWMI

AUCTION I FUANmJRE. 12
""""91.,Gollpollo.
~

Rentals

-I,_
.,.._.,.
............
Watt.-n I

.Up;........,..

VTRA FURNITURE

41 Houses for Rent
I BR houM acnass ~ thl
University of Rio Grande. 614388-9946.
BK!room

House,

nootrno.

Double

Plus o.pod,
Must Hav• Retwenc:atL 614-416-

Gan~ga,

3!&gt;48
2bdlm. lri......,.. houM, I pn..
old, $37Simon., Sl50 dliposil ,
6111 Min St ., Yidcllpon., OhM&gt;.
614·992:3187
3 BR home tor fWII tn town,
$300 rr.onth plus deposil . 304Ei 75-l4 Jl 3()4,675.. "J'M)g aftei"
5pm.

LMHG 110011: Solo And Cloo~
$170 And
Col* And End
r..a.. S79 And Up; S-'"*

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

BEDROOM:

(ld);

•

B1ri -

eo-

braw.n .......115; 1Win Man.....
PI Sol.
l»tETTES· Wood Bar Sloots

S14.15 (21l T - And 1 Podded
Cholro .....

OPUf o7 0.,. A Wooi, I A.ll. - 5
P.II. 51ntay 12 Noon • 5 P.M.

.__,.

Rl . M1 4 ...... Ott At. 7 In

53

Houu. In Kyger CrM&gt;k. SdiOOI
Dis'lrict. You Pay EIKtric..
$25Qimo. $.2.50 Deposit . 614-l&amp;J.
0415, 6"\4-367-nBO

-PI-WV.

Nawer Home, 3bf, 2 Baths.. In
Crown City, $3501\io. Cal Aftlf
6 P.U. 614-.24S-9085.

8~

c.n..

Arnlques
RiY•

Ani-...-., ,.0 Main St,

Buy 01 ..._ Rtw.ina Antiques,
1 Q4 E.
S.:rHt, Pomeroy.
MouN: ll T.W, '10:00 a.m. lo 6:00

..-n

~

1:00 lo 1:00 p.m.

Nk:a att iciency cottage,, uNqua
1nd bt.aul itul, ]104..C?s:a42

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

UJllwnlsn.d 2bdrm.
house&gt;,
d•an , d•posft I ,.,......... ,..
qulrtd , no lnsi• pilll:a, 614-9923000.

1 old
rune good;
....... l*ydt; .,..... ehaat
typal htar, 1.-d
8MM9-30Mafi•IPftl

42 Mobile Homes

for Rent
1 B.clroom c.tr.t Air, ~
Cit &amp; l&gt;epod R~ . Mo

Ptts . Available: 6JMI2. 614-4464871.

1 bedroom ll'lillr, ~ u.n
utllltiu plus dlposl , JD4...615.
2535.

1.'1. _ _ __
1·1. _ _ __
I !J .____ ___

3 B.clroom, Balh, Ullllth Room,
Sty•
2 Car Garage, Ranc
Home, App. 1 112 Ae,.. Located
01'1 Stata Roule 160, App. II
Mll11 From HOlzer Hospfl.tl. 614388-11301.

Moblta Hoftln Fe. Renrll:
Raflr.nc:ea And ~ II:
qulr.d . Call After 2 P.Jil: f14...44l.
0527.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR S ALE
Historical Area Corner Lot · 816
Main St. Pt . Pteaunl, W. Va.
Comp4etaly Aenovaled: 2 Full
Baths, 3 Llrg• Bedrooms, New
HVAC, Haw Carpet . AvallaiMI
Jurw15 614-446-2205.

~

1088.

Nice 2 Bedroom Yoble Nofne
For Rant. I MU• OUt: ~
A•f•ences And o.pa.it Required . 614-2:56-62!1.

FOf S1l• : Tandy
Ptrsonal
Copier, New, $350, Of Bnt Of,
fer. 614-441 -1700.

Lilt Modal 4000 Ford TraetOf,
$4,850; 5080 Ford With Varm~~r
Round Baiter, $8,550; 800 Ford

FREE:" INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $799.00 Buullful Above $2,9i5. 1514-286~522.
Ground 1913'1x4 Pool lnclud*':
Flltat Dtck, ~nc1, Ladd1rt , New And Uud Farm Equlpmanl
Consignment Sales, Rt.7, Souttt
Etc .
Btlllvl 111 Call BPI
Gallipolis, OH. 614-25&amp;-e040.
1-I00-64S..1923

Doii't

New Hol ltnd hay blne, N. . Hol-

GE Air CondHiono&lt; 18,000 BTU, land auper 117 fol'lga harw11111.
$225. S14-36~31 After • P.M.
Gthl i5 grinder mlnr. All excel,
Genaeia
fulurlng

Nutrfllon

Products

Amino Acid Body
Bulldl"'l, woiaho .... ond 1111

bumer

rormLln.

Awallab~ ex,

lint condition. 304-213-4215.

_63e7:-:-:-L_Iv,.,e_st_o..,c_k-:-:-::

cl~y.ty at Rite Aiel Phermacy. 14 Month Llmou_.n I :~~~·
The ur. way 1o dlat.
Crou Bull, 825 Lb. 614-44
7.
Good UHd Broyhill lilting room
auile, 3 tltra chalra, llkt new, 1
large chair, 814-"2-2184.
Hotpolnl dry.,, $100; big puth
bunon phone, brand n••· $40 ;
lltrao,
$100,
614:H2•11110
anytime.

YO~'RE NOT JUST
AN~60()'( ..

HOME?

Transportation

17

cu. ft.

Alltigwllor, $125. 2 aluminum

EltactiYttl Buy ENFORCER At :

Browns Truttw0i1hy Hardware,
Sltle Route 160. Bidwell, Oh io.
Plaatle And Medal Culwsrt line,
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Ewana, Jacll~ Ohio. 1-800!31-WB.

&amp;
dry.rs, a.ach $100 and up. We
Mn'6cl all mak... The Washll" &amp;
Oryw Shoppa. IM-44M!i44 .
RecondKioMd

washlr1

$251. FrM lel:tara/d.. IHry. !flattic IMI:era $47.50 box. UA
~gna, 1-800-533-3453 anytime.

-.

1111 ....- Matof,
~$10.

,,..n., $1.1100.

,.. bib S211.-

" " - dcofhlng, ......
pra $12. dolan. Fna
,..,..,. PINUIII INI.

_., ... ,_

hm bill. No P-..
Sam ,._,,.,.. Coml!ougo,
...,., ...,..... Our Zllh ,..,, 6

.._btl J..71; RaNiuaood by
Olflco, Fri, Sol,

--..-I'll.

II

ROJ&gt;
\

i·

[&gt;E~T­

(I) -

WHO CAN COSIGN

'· Tflul f ,,

lll~l.NplleMboH

•

1&gt;rrr1.

'·

a• Fllmly Foud

18 a. • lllr Stereo.

'•

IYAT'OIVA/...

CAIVIpA16Nf

~&amp;.....

j

.. , ..

Myoloo lol People report UFO
stghtlngs in Belgium: an
emllouler strikes. IAI
Stereo. C
~::,o.rt: Sho'l Out ol
(PG) (2:001
(I)D (J)·W-YNII

Kevin and Wayne's girtfrieod
fall lor one anotllotf . (A I

28ft,

Stereo. Q

(l) T-. Til&lt; AIOS
Adoluoents talk abOut the

fears, the f1cts and other
tloings surrounding tho AIDS
con~n&gt;msy. (1:301

$2500, 304-m:6011 lhlllinga.
1i 28ft. Nomad. Sleeps 6. 304182-3455.

c
«&lt;. D.Oo:u\Mf
Cou Ill r lilullo:

(!) -

For S.la Or Trade: Pop-Up

Hoi o1 F - 25 ~· ol
1ho CouniJy Music Hall of
Fame m saluted by t1oo
hottnl country Sian with
tribut.s to some of the

,

1971 Malibu Cl1sale, 2 dr. 75%
show room condition. Low
mll11. $2995. firm. 614-992-3481
afltr 5pm.

1983 Dodgt Oll)tomat,
condition, 114-241-3M5.

good

1983 Lincoln Town Car, no rust,

lnl•rior good, runt &amp; \ooltt
good, $1,800 . 080, _,.,..

2238.

Block, bfkk, NWer pipet, win,
dowa, lint-'•· •te. Claude Win-

10&amp;4 Pontlac: 1000 LE, Loaded,

,... Rio Grtndt, OH Call li1424!-512t

56

Pels lor Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All br..cts, .Cylu.
lama P.t Food O.aler. Jullt
Webb. Call 614446--0231.

M1rqueftt, ~71-3119.

$2,800. 514-215-'005.
1885 Camaro, loaded. 13400.
1087 Oodge Alf'M, P9, Auto.
S2000. 1N7 Hotizon, AC. t1300 .
l04~7&amp;:2440 .

t885 Ford Tempo, $600,1M·992·

5422

81

~23JI.

trailer,

304-475-

11 PtlluuNswa C
lllg •ottooo .like Stereo.

Barnen Hom1 tmJWOYifMnta.

Rogers Buement
ling.

Watat~

Hornet knprovemanl.s:
Yooro Elporlonco On Older I
Hewer Homls. Aoom AckUUom,

Curtis

Work,
Rooftng,
Kltchlna And Balht. fi'MI E.
llmltnl Reterancn, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 114-367-0511
Foundation

1:00 (J) •

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
11-IE

D065ARENT E::&gt;&lt;.PECTED

6000 1\-\ I NG-

Af'QUT E!E IN&amp; A

DOG IS .

/

TO C L.IM8 TRE'E:-5 AND
SI-\AKE: GOWN COCONUTS

vu

IN M-1' ~.-..

FeR SMALL. 6l...E9e1N65.

o.-

Ottkt V1111y M11ona will do
bloc:k, brlek, .tone, linpllcet,
tnd cope~• - No job too small
or too lMQI 114-2-15-9111, mn-

304-ll?l~.. Ohio S14-148-21..

ti81 Oida Flr•nza, 5 apeed, air,
anal trn st.-.o, tilt wheal, 114:

Sopllc Tonk Pu..,ng SOO~Golllo

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,.

m~m

Jac:Uon, OH

tagel~222:.

Ron't TV Servk.e, spedallrlng
In Z.nlth at.o Nrtlclng most
ott.r btande, Houae cane, also
OOftiO IOPlloiiCJI IOPOIIO. WV

STAND UP THAI,

-

YOU RA66LE TA66LE
OL' WEED H

plloo, pickup, lind doiiYO&lt;Y. 514-

PcHnt PINunt, 304-675-2063,
full line Tropteal lith! birds,
MWIIammala and auppl " ·

PoodiH, toys, IHCUpl, 11.0
aduHs, AKC,
mlnl•lurt
Schnllut.-.. Cooivllla, 614-667-

•1..,

,...

ti88
Plymouth
A•lllnl
Sl:atlonwtgon, 63,000 MIIH,
Rial Good Condition, 13,800;
1987 Dodge CharQif Good Con·
dltlon, t1,850; 1985 Ford l TO
Good Condl1lon, 11,500. 114-251-

6251.
1900 llociQo Dynooly, Bluo Wnh

Blu• lnttnot-...~...~lr CondMionlng,
PW, PO, AMft'M Ca... tta, 31,000
Mll11, Excellent
Condltlori ,

:ma.

Sa~':J1 Rabblta f=or Sal•. 814·

.

S.am... kltle,. ~u• and Mal
point ttmalaa. ltao Hlm.. ayan
IUnena, No checka, IS14-742-

201a.

57

Musical
Instruments

Sail: Gultara, Ampe, Selected
Models. Hllpara Cellbntt Our
Hth Annl~ Wllh ThaN

82

1M2 314 ton Chevy pickup wllh

~-- 304-87um.

1884 Ford Bronco, tor lilt
S2,800. or trtdt for truck, :J04.
458-1713.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

plus a long . self-addressed . stamped
en~lope to Matchmaker. clo this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.

OH 44101-3426.

prob-

sometfllng you initiate bul rather to
Lady Luck's intervenlion.

L£0 (July 23-Aug. 22) Companions will

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

AHidtnl:lal

or

eommetclal

wiring, new sarva or ,.,_,,..
Mllttr Ucenud lltclriclan.
Ridenour E!oclricol, WVooo:JOI,
304-ll?$.1710.

85 General Hauling
We Do Hauling Anylime,
Anyplac., No Job Too B)g 01'
Too little. IaHman! Claanina,
General Work, Any Klndl· fl1~

3N·2:278 Anytime.

tiOO Ford Atnger XLT, Very
Sharp, 304-175:3008, 114-361·

87

UphoiS1ery

7002.

. .trl, county
· . Uploolooorl"'l
- The·
lng
araa 27 yMra.
beal in tumft:ur. upholstering.
C.M 304-675-4114 lor frM . .
tlmttH.

tnCfc?ur
'W 'Birthday

"""

On•razH

.:J U l!J rJ L:.h.J rJ W U U L!
ll [] :!l o :!l ur..:m o I] u

44 lAbor org.

4 Songbird
8 Enlold

46 -

-

:J[][J~!J::J[][]lJ

lauft

(o....,uclol

t4 0.1111

51

15 ~ uag•

1

Foot

!Jll:J
D[]!J

55Aclrell
lllana-

56 Proof

llegnold

ownonhip

!liMIICio

62 TakH

Jl[il~•)

c~

64 Fnt lircran

4

~--1

l6 Num..-o -

2WII~

38 WWU ennt
lQ - Hori

-

tubfl

3 Cvl

be receptive to your cooperative Inclinations today. This will encourage them
to do tor you what you're doing tor
I hem .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Wlle&lt;a your

on

rrMght be a kttle resr'
today: a ShOrt,
tun e.:(;UI'SIOn may be ~ the thing you
,_, oo gralily youo ..-goo. .Mt dor&gt;'t
put too ,....., miles on yaw c..

CAll Clllll ( D o c . - 1t1Tho ....
pects lot . . - - - ••
mtMng '" ,.,... t.wr tfllday. .... iatty it
you·,., hoping 10 . _ •• do Oll&lt;ough
1raditionll c::twn!lls..
AQU-•18 (...._- 111 You could
be rathOr luc*y lodoy in SdUIIionl thot
1\a¥8 eleil$ll$ ol cNnc:a. MJWI .'*1 il
what you ·.. vying lor
al pride
and- proliL

iS.-

,.ICES (FoiL •

II dl81 A --

...,.'11 ..,...,.,•

career Is concerned. don 't put
until ing with .,.._. lauail&amp; i"illr'Mis could
their .,.
tomOfrow
what
can
be
done
loday
. prOWl vert •
..., 21, 1812
rangeonatts
don"t
include
c:ornlng
to
Your chances tor tulfiUing your objecyou. go IO lllam.
tives
won't
be
Improved
upon
later
.
The year ahead could be an adventur~
UBRA (llept. D-Oct. 22) You 're not tho AlliES~ :n-Afrl111 y,..·• be on
some one lor you . There's even a pos.s•lha mind !odor a l l - - you·...
bllity you may go to a distant place type of person who likes to throw weight · been ow;-,. 'Y a bil -....y. You're
around, but if you want to do something
you ' ve longed to visit.
......, o f - o .,_._ 10 why no1 try lo
GEMINI (lilY 21-June201 You mlghl be today tha1 requires putting the ctout you roctily ~?
possess
to
use.
go
tor
lt
.
8 posed to an important, Inspirational
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ho¥. 22) Time is · T~IS IApril . . . . , 81 • . rnKesaaoe today . Pay special heed ; .it .
your ally today. and vielory will be .,. C4*IJ toUy. Mnll 'lilion COUld turn
could have a profound effect on today s
oultobe.,-.-llyouo-gained through perseverance . So what
affairs. Trying 10 patch up a broken roIf you finish a bit late. as tong as you acmance? The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker
9ies
- ..........
_.. on
• ""'""'
that is
pr*
, .. - complish what you set oul to do?
can help you understand wha1 to do to
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) You
make the re4atlonship work . Mall $2

7

,_

••

I

25a-

25 CarMI .... :
27 c:.,.,.. -

.........

10--al

E'**'ll -at L.ondoro's
Andy
-Taped

-·

11Car~~-?r
23''
I
21

7 Dolby
1-(11.)
tES ' ?'

1 Vk:e Pf'IL

37 Conceit

Car....-

6 ... -

OOWIII

e.g.

CHJi.Rll-. llr.1l:J

5-

63~edat

Winona33 Partition
34 Burgundy,

::JlJ~U

LJ..!.lwW
UU!JI:J

!JI!ll!I!JD
lJi.!J.:JLJU
lJ[J[] uumKJ::JDtm
:JI.!.I[J ~:J!J[J!J [J[JrJ

61 Slender

24 SwHI potato

:n::mu

u ::J 1.m u (j w

5Q Plainllll
60 Hith opirils

22 Addition lo 1
hou11

u u .J ll r.1 ..:m

:!l!JI:J(j U(J[](j rJ.:JrJ
!JI:Jm.l L!DDU .l.ILJD

of

58 Ootll

aplllrt'l river

~U[;]

r.t:J u LJ u

[] rJ rJ ::1 D

47Foo- ( l l.l

13 Fog

(l) An

25-1*1
30 Twofold
31
In
32

Gr-.
._,
s-ci

- .
ol IUrf

w• o

36-

, ; , : / ' Stereo. Q

41-

••
a•.attoun
Amor!can pat owners go 10

&amp;3 IN: 'dated

38Gr-.ollwo31 _ , ""'"

,..IIJ

allnlmls 10 p1aue tloolr

u!:r:'

pats.stereo. L

48Goup

0 700 Clull -

47 LMq

-·
--I

4tBylll-

Sloop

Stereo.
IIIWOIId-

CANCER (JuOM 21-.IUIJ 22) You•
abilities tor material success 1~ good
today. However. this won 't be due to

&amp;14-44..,888

1817 S-to Pick-Up AutomaUc Air
Cond, PS, 13,500 Firm. 614..... 46-88" Afttr 7 P.M.

1091 Chevy S-10, 5 opood,
DMOIA
DREAII HOliES
Sayings. lrunlcerdl $8,100. 304-815-36~ tor tull ln-·Up.-On......,.L.ol. Special
Muelc, 330 Second \van.,., Gal- lomo.JIIon.
s.oo..- -7311. lipolis.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Cart.,'t Plumbing
Fourttt and Pine
Gallipolis, Dnio

84

(2:00)

Stereo.

o•-

covn, d.eh,

siding cw lral.., skirting. 614,
14&amp;-8152.

42

1 VIdeotape

25 01~
29 Actr111

18-.

ASTRO-GRAPH

screened roome, put up vinyl

$7,800. 511..48-JMS.

3 VolkewiQon BMUu fOI' parts
or !11 up. 3 junk Bill IN. Home
Rabbits FOI' S1le: M•ny Lops1 made car !railer. 1900 tor Ill.
Many Rex, fMw Z..land, Rea 6M·H2-34B1 aft.,. 5pm.
Satln1, ~lemlth Glanla, Owtrfs
And 1101llnd ....... 1514:441-0638 72 Trucks lor Sale
..... FOf' by.
1181 F-2$0 IXItndld cab pick,
Aid Female Miniature O.Ch- up, 300 olx eyl, .,.... 304-1175shund Puppy. fl14-3e&amp;-m7.

361-

..._.211.

Will build patio

40 Don

Symphony Orchestra. (I :30)
10:00
0uon1um .._
(SNson Finale) Sam leap$
tniO 1ho i((l ol I muclo

1~37-ISU,

Taltl llwn eare, $8 (1_. time
lfMICIII), lncludn mowing &amp;
Wilding, cell IM-102-6314, tam,
Opm.

ACROSS

Aayol AJbort Hall, Andy
W!Hioms sings Moon River,
Doys ol Wine and Roses and
otloots wltlo 1ho London

DIYII
S.W·Vac
Serwk:e,
01 HIM Crwk Rd. Parte, aup-

1987 Oldl Dllt1 88 , Vln,. Top
L.oadldl Excellent Condition!
$4,900. 61...,.46:4225, Aftlr ep.rn .

The World Almanac 8 CJoaword Puzzle

(2:00) Stereo. C

Pfly11ouoo A

u

--..P"

Billy Clystal, Tom Hanks,
Joel&lt; Palanoe, Joan AI-•
and Tracey Ullman honor the
nat!oo's top comedic talent

p.::,"QDowllng MMJnlf*f*rll111

I BEEN TALKIN'
SWEET TALK
TO IT, PAW-BUT IT
AIN'T
HELPED
NONE

-

Voo!DenbleoN&lt;Irth.SOUtb
Dealer Soutb

,_rt

tB Pol20 Remnant

IIII.Mry King Uvol

BARNEY

tA'l
.110

Nwtll
f.ul
Englishman Danny Roth ha.s wntI NT"
P.,.
ZNT
Pass
ten a third book. "Signal Success m
l ~T
P.,.
Pass
Pass
Bridge" (Gollancz. $2195 . %12-866"12· H pG1JIU
5860), descnbmg lhe different leadmg
and signaling methods m the martecOp&lt;rung lead· • 1
place . It 1s comprehens1ve . cont.allll.D.g
a few With names new to me the ,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _J
Bechgaard Echo. the Ammete-r &gt;Del .
the February Chnslmas Card.
However . thatts my main cnuosm bo&gt;rt ~llleart su. What now'
of lhe book . It IS easy lo get lostm lbe
U....,. Llle beart ace. East i3 npect:
myriad of possibilities. I trunk at would ed 10 "~ cwnot count (o.- orbat Rotb
h.ave been better for the author to coo- calls Llle Amnletft s.pai) With two
centrale on those he thmks are tndls- cuds ,.....IDIDC- be ploys Ills biper.
pensable. But for a pair that wisbes lD W•llllllrft canis ldt, be plays llis lowexpand 1ls stgnahng horizons. t.bts est H..., Llle ~~ marts oledambook ts a good place to slilrt Just k.eep wotb an~ hokli•c ol Q-J-1-1 in
your colander handy
beam. West p;oriDor to lea&lt;lllis·
There are many example hands 'fu.. W.
tbroagtl declanr, 10 Wost
day' s i.s one of the eas1est - and most 5loouJd ..,tell 1o a dllb. EDt i3 a
important. Against threP no-trump. £OOd ~. be will win with lhe
West leads the heart four· five . 10. ~and mum Ius last beart to del eat
queen Declarer plays lbe d.taiiiODd tho o:&lt;JIItrac\ by I'"' lrKh
ace: jack. four. two He continues WJI.b
~ ~ _ , . . , . - - ~1 ~
the diamond three · queen. five . etgbL r - • ~ .u.r. • QI'P Ill ta&amp;:r
West cashes the heart are club three. ,..,.c.lr ~.q an.p tk cvlmnn

(J). 1111 Annuli
-Comedy A -

(I) _ . -

'QJ 16

By Pbillip Alder

t7 Shal&lt;o-

MOVIE: Poychlc

••uo9t

On today's menu:
signals

16 Nonlla t

iStereo. C

91013
t 10 I!

sotml

Elllno's anant!oo. (R) Sle&lt;oo.

woman's confes.sk&gt;t'l re&gt;~esls
1141&lt; loneliness and alienatiOn .

JET
EVANS, JACKSON, Ot&lt;.

0 Solulold A Iormor

(!) An•ltM

Alrallon M~ort, repaired, New
&amp; ,..built motors In ll:ock, RON

537-1521.

llonlion sTereo.

fi.

~moe~L.

~

9.\ K,42

. J)2

12 LORi timt

boHbo!l playor Ylos lor

J.W. Conllndlon. Room Ad ·
dltlont, Aooll, Dlc:b, Siding
And All Type1 ot Eltarlor And
lnttriof Painting. Will Give LDw
Bid. Llelnttd, e14-245-507e.

815-5884.

cal aft• &amp;pm

e-

standld. (AI Stereo. C

,.,..,.nc.. tumlahltd.

Fret •tlmat... Call ool~ ,,
ISM-m-04111, dly or nlgtrt.

tff''rel)lsterad
175 &amp; $125, 614-667Baaatlt hound

1:30 (I).
Ill. Doogte - ·
II.D. On 1ho way to Chicago.
Doogil ornd Vlnnil bacome

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltkmal III•UcM guan11f.·

Artn, 4 door,
4!,000 mlln, PS, P8, all', IIC
cond, $3,500. Clnal owner. 304-

AKC

1:05 ()) MOVIE: Oclopuaoy lPG!
(2:45)

Addillona, Gar~. Painting,
Roofing.
bperl~.
ANsontbll. 1514:446:3588, 614446-4316.

111. Loetl

Q

e

AKC Lob pupploo : ohOIJ, AKC
papere. Chok:a : yellow, black,
choccMale. 614-288·2:176.

Dodge

(A) (2:00)

Ollurder,Sioow"*
18 c.-- Clone

Home
Improvements

371-2601.

1981

~.MOVIE: Fll1ai11Nuty

rns#.Jr PAY

Services

Hl86 Chrysler Filth A'N'ut,
5i,OOO Mills, lolded, b:cellenl
Condition; 1985 Dod~ Caravan
SE, l.Dad.ct, e14-446-11114.

2 .UC.C Aaglster.d YOI"kthlrt Terrier Puppl... S2SO Each. 614,

all-lime greal&gt;. (2:001 Ste&lt;eo
· ~·

EAST

_,

7:36 ()) Ianford • SOn
I:OO(J). 0~

camper.

Camptr

Tonight

Ill
• - · · Fomlly
III.W11Mio1Fflf1unoQ

l

fCil Tl'ff

E--

...
....,

1rEST

• n2
• QJ

c.n a. 'toiiJ

"

(1).
Stereo. Q

/ Nf-f/) . . .fOMEoiYf

fiLPDNAt!f
It

PHILLIP
ALDER

"-niYI c

7:30 (J). 0

.!UJT WHAT" wi-

Si11p1 six. Excellent condition.

1978 Bulcll Regal, Runa Good,
$500. 614-441-01':11.

wheel, enriH, 111 power, very
gOod cond, 12,500 milia, 2000

Flah Ttnk, 2413 Jackaon Ave.

~ bOJ ofl, l
--~=borlnO&lt;
104

l"r'!

6318 01' 11+2.56-6014.

18ft .

·tK~ 76J.4

MDI.., ...
0 The Wlllton1
7:CI6 ()) Brody llunclo

FRANK AND ERNEST

5-lt-t!

tQ &gt;J 3

e

SIO'o't,
304--175-

"l04'- $1000.

NOitTH

•• QJ

Tonlgllt

Ill SportoCon~

campers&amp;

good
6581 Of'

BRIDGE

oMocGr-n

=-c--=---c-c--~c-c

Shaatlt

Supplies

. . _ ....... lOI..f75-4QD4.

1'4"'r11' ~. Tandam nle,
INtlled lloor, ac, liN&amp;, 7'0001b.

--

truck topper, like new, $100,
1514-992·7123.

1968 Dodge Dart GT, :160 engine,
full race cam, road llft.,t, good
lim, body good, $800, 614-fMIJ:
3080 atlar 5pm

Godson · Dough · Erase · Rod&lt;et · CONGRESS
Most people know what IS meant when l IS said
that talk is cheap In this eledi:lfl year, we
agree ,I hat hOlds true excepl when CONGRESS does
rt .

•.• Willi Children

a•
Stereo. C

s·

Cole,.n tent

-r:;a

..,,

o.. ........

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1183

IIIIIIII

SCIIAMWS AHSWEIS

o:a:Noxt

A
f Sa
Thr~~ Wheller, hSO. o.a.o. 114-_71=~UI-0-="S-,O-:r::-,-,l_;e...,_ 446-aaeo.
-:-:

Sote, Chalr'r Good Condition , 1984 Buick C.ntury, FWD 3L, V$125; Red ruck Topp..-, Fits
6, Four Door, RabuiH Engine,
Chevy S--10, Good Condl1ion ,
And Trantmlnlon. Make O"tr.
S75. 614-388-&amp;417.
614-38B·f739.
Nw 12 Ho,... Power MTD
1914 Buick Regal, rebuilt .nglna
Mowert, S&amp;a5 ; 5 Horupower &amp; transmlulon , 2 dOOI', auto,
Larv Boy TII~re UVa Each, $1,900. :104-675--5890.
While Suppll" 1
Womlldortt I Thomn H1rdw1r.. 814- 1984 Mercury Cougar, 302,
44f.-09M.
Automatic Overdrl.,..., 101( Ovtr,
haul. 614-"'-2911!1
Woodbumer, 2yl'l. old, $200,
IM-H2-6686.
1984 Old• II Roy111 BroNrn
LS ont owner, 4 door, air,
AMIFM 111110 catune, lin
Building
55

p.m.

...........

~· -

BOATERS
Gulma Mereury Marins Service.
... rcury, Mariner, Mercrul.. r
spaclallst. M1rcury oertlft.d.
Mobile, Wt come to you. 81425...117!1.

cond,
bath,
nlr..,..tor, $2,800.

e-

~~

Camper, $400, 0.8 .0.; Honda 70

KILLS FLEAS!
Buy ENFORCER FIN Klllo&lt;O F0&lt;
Ptta, Home I Yard. G1.11raniMd

-...:h.. ·
w..ugr,
-· scr
iron• 70".1
r ling.
uo
2 ..,. ....., ofllot dllk• wilh

0 Zorro Stereo. r:;1
1:36 ()) Andy 7:GOIJI• 0 W11MI ol Fonun.

0112-8017.

tir

1
PIII NT NU~.~SEII:E D
L[llEIIS IN ~QUA~lS

Ill Up CloH

w• ~-

tm ChMtau traM! trail.,,

true except when · · - · - · · doesf

€) ~~~c:~~!\E, IETTEill

o-rDoo

1860
Barbour
16-V2
ft.
Mahoatny Run-1-Boul with 50
HP Jolmton ouCboard. $4,250 . 1304-622-1240, Huntington.
1f71 Baia Sid Boat. 85 HP
Johnson OUiba.rd. Runs good .
Noodo upholatery •ortr.. flsoc
814-192-3481 after !ipm.
1981 16ft Four-Winr., QOhp
Johnson,
AM~M
catuttl,
po'ftr tift I tri"1._ •xtras, $7,000.

79

8

as.

(JSThe-.Q_

Motor Homes

Partl. ShMt, Middleport, Oh.

Dragonnrynd Cattery: CFA Kll ,
t..... 114--44&amp;:3844 Aner 7:00

$400.

Wild Stereo r:;a
\lllqun
Ono TV Stereo
a•ces-r:;a
o•Andy!lrtllltlo

lor Sale

76

year. we agree. tha1 holds

I I' I I I

(l)

75 Boats &amp; Motors

25' 1N3 Crnt II Ponloon boM,
8530 HP JohMOn motor, 1514,

Mosl pel:~ know what
IS meanl when ~ IS saJCIIhal
talus~ In this election

CREKOT

UO(J). 0 NIC- Q
(I) 8oorod by .,. ...
(I). (J). AIC 1J.

rongol Urn,

llrm, 304-615-11rf.

I

L.....l---l----1...---L....J "

Ster.o. Q

1883 Kanda no thrat whe•ler,
high! 1ow
now
uso.
or trade tor rld ng lawn mower,
304-t75-2071e.

For ule: mlnlalura VlltnlmiM
pol· billy pl91 , $100.. ., 614-742:

r.'

tot

Gnw"

I I I' I I'

If----r-1..:r-=-r.ll'~l' ~

Ill WOIId Toclly

0 Rln T1n T1n, K·t Cop

Molorcycles

Bud~ .. TnN'ismlaalons, UMd 1
Nbuan, starling at Ui; tronl
whlll drtvt ala~ at 1140.00
114-245-S&amp;n, &amp;M- -6293.

KILLS FLEAS! S.y ENFORCER
FIN Kllllrtl tor pata, home I Want Maaon County Tobacco
yard. Gual'lnt..d lftectlwet Buy quota will pay 25 ctnt• lnow)
lb. Morgan'• Woodlawn
ENFORCER at: Baum True
nn, Rt. 15, 304-t31-2011.
Value Store, 11 Wnt Malrl
Street, Cheater Oh. I Vall•y
Lumbo1 &amp; Supply Corp., 555

Btu. tick coon dog, Walker coon
dog. QOOd aqulrra! dog, also
pu,., 114-142-2234.

-

AN~BO()Y

1:06 ()) a.-ty " - ·

6yr. old gaited painted riding
l'lorae, 614,f42,2234_.
Angus And Chi-Angus Black
Buns, R••eonably Prlcad. Slate
Run Farm•, Jackton, Ohio, 814286-5395.

IBM Modal 50 1281-10 Procaaor, 20M Hard Ortn, 1 Wegaram,
VGA Color Monitor, 1Ctl KBO.
Reg istered Angut Hillers, 614Aololng S\,200 . 814-446-1058.

QuuM
Cheyenne
saGO. IHP Shingle
ounp - . $450. 411• mower
t972

-

wo ••

211oomol Bolh,D
.....
Cloon,
No
Clulof.
Rolonnco And OJpool ....
qulrtd. fiM-Mf.mt.

Danery, belts,
muffler liNt. fllry good cond,
$300. 304-675:3101.
Cub lowboy lM, can be INn

one,..,,

. . . Clool....
$1,200.
V.A.C. C.. -.~~oaoy Horrill
"""' $450. .,. ,.. $450.

Apanment
for Rent

new

16' double axl• cart, 10' John
DNre trtntport cbc, 7 . Bu•h·
hog brush hog, OIC. cond., BOlly
O..n, Sumner Road, 614-0SS.
3855.
l95'1 Jottn a ..,. Model B, Alllt
Chalmers, H.D. e Dozer Hvster
Elaetrte Fork Lift. 614··448-2:159.
KUBOTA
SalastPorlifls Service
HURST R"'• OR SALES
28 HP 4 WO $6995; 20 HP 4 WO
IS, 995, Routt 7 North, Mtrtetla.
614-374:4151

,....,_Of',

..., _ _ .,..,.mo.

44

Cnftsman tOhp, 36" cut, ltwn

tractor,

01

room, dlnlngroomltamlly room

3 BR, 1 bath, ntw tiding,
woodbumlng llraplace. 614:44~
3229.

1-t0G-537-052a.

S99

~

HouH on Sand Hil Road, 2
bedrooms, gartge,
.
nf, $250.
mo. 30Ui75-1'34Ei

$100. ........

Conc:rat• &amp; Plastic Sepllc
Tanll.t, Jet Awatlon Tanks. Ron
EYtns Enllrpr\111, Jackson, OH

61 Farm Equipment

La.._.

BARGAINS GALORE!

2

Merchandise

Sip: Porloblo llghlod chong•
able letter sign $31; non-IIQflta

call JIM..t75-M51l.

lin-- - . •
M6 0453 lkt
1 5 P.M
. To

SNODOG

REESA

~-~POA Tour

1987 Dod~ 4x4, auto., AMIFM,
cue. sttreo, lift kll, new tir.•.
55,000 mil•, 1,500 or btat oHw;
18110 Ford Ranpr 5 sp., owll"·
drtvt, IIIII und• Fo;d warranty,

74

446,9752.

Household

..c....._.

b~ '*~ . Ill(

"""'

""__..

owner flnanclng • hl.&amp;4 par GOOO USED APPliANCES
month, any one of tour lots Vlbaf=&amp;. ~ rRtQeralon,

// . _ __
12 . _ _ __ _

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

Hk:l, dlln 2 or 3 bedroom
........ rnlw pri¥1110 unl"ll,

~

.. u.....

:r.

Wanted to Rent

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

combination, kitchen, utility
room, all one ltYII , coverwd
patkl In brick, prlwacy t.nc•.
oarage, shown by appointment
only l0-4-875-1238.

Ill._ _ __

or monlh .

5I rl ~ """"" whh coo~o~ng .
Abo trM• apK:e. All hook-upa,
wilh Cal ••• 2:00 p .m.. 304-713-

VInton.
lanll
hou.e r..wty rem: ' ' 1 2 llrgl
pond.

1gg1

54 Miscellaneous

Excercl• bib, $25, 614-it92·
2428

571!.

pi-·
- -..... 3IM-57W?ID.

101:.:!'-Q

NO, I REALIZE

$8 ..... Coli

WV.

-

I

•

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448'7604,

1003 Main St. Point PltaNnt,

Ta Bank Aac::laimlld
Mob!• Hornaa, Glut Selectian!
Many AI SSOO Down, And TaU
Over Payments. Call 1.0 !It
.l.ccas

2 btdroom, 12160, 1 V2 balht.,
Aahlon Up&amp;and Ad, ~om ............
no lnald. J*IS.. $115. pM

2021 Marqllltlt Avt, 5 yra old,
til brick malntlntnca tr11
homa, 4 bedrooms, small IIYing

.,;;,nt,

=.:..::.::.
INCk,______S14·_
r~=========t~~~iiiiii~ohorp

...,~
.
MI80 3BI's., 2 a..ths., Moclem 1 B I oom DIMntown
$17,500, Or Anum~ Wllh $750 Complatt K1tchM"t, Carpal, CA,
..,.,..t! , .............
Down. Must

prtvall• acre.
- "-·- room
•'
•3 roa, ,...._adra
tp- n
__._.....

low to lorm fw1 ~mpMt WOfdt.

\tl Squoro OM TV Sleroa.

1iln Cttavy Suburbaon 4 wh11l
drtwe, 350 nbultt
body
fair cond, Pt Pit . V.FJ. 304-675-

©

of the

111•

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301-87'-3521.

lii'1

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four

or without lraller. Aftll' 7pm call

0 . 8 .0. 5~.

8325

O Reor ranoe

EVENING

PJORO'&gt; l

Hll2 Ford Econollne wortr. nn,
1914 Chewy wortt w•n, IM-62·
3171 after 5pm.

L.o_,o

~gn·~-~~-~

mint, gat h.. t, Union Ava.,
$22,g(IO, 3()4:773-5082 or J04..

'

WED., MAY 20

1986 Honda 4 Tru: 200 Sl. With

-~
165, 114-112-2111aft• 5pn.
2 B..troom lhSO Trtitr ! ~ a rou:: Sub, InCountry Setting, 1250 PM ,... ao. Sortna And Mat.,__ 114 •• 2tnt.
UIIIHin, 114-446-lT.Io.

2 ~ory, 6 room , bath, 1/3 biN-

0

614 U6 mu,

rooms, 12,000 In Point "-sant. Wookly 304role
1475.Sal.·
to pool.
SaC. Phone
i?S-2975.
WY
6...._.46-1822, 15141 UIS !1611,
6~1-0117.

·!14-446-G.;?no;;;;;;;;:-uiiiOY

•

S/\~11¥&gt; ~E &lt;1
/IN,!(,

1075 Ford Econoline Van, tn·
gl,.,. nlldt wortt, body good
$800. or lrade for automatic c.r
wlalr, 3114-fl75-5413,

R!..:;'*t-:'::..r2 a!f

._.oom,

HOW 1i!im

2313.

ao-uo All .. 7.!0- Gaing lo U• bach? 2 BA cono:30PM .~n
do Oft ocean, I miiH blktw
IIJrtla S..Ch at Garden Ctly..
Slaepa
6,
tutl
kitchen,
h
~

Sl,ioo. IM-388 D6K.

YOOII(, WX?

2313.

5540 Of 304-88:2-2405.

sz,100.

W~VTOA~K ,

ft.( ?

....

_,_::_~~_.;_~·_s::..~-=!~~~-,!_£trs· .,..,

Television
Viewing

I~ T\JAT ANY

101 Chevy Step Van 350, tullf'
Insulated, Pt. Pit. Y.F.O. :104-175-

I

room., nMdl

Giveaway

=:~

a-....,..,. c.n-

li"'YO, 6UD'I'S I 5IN£
SVtiC¥£ WITH .,---"'

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

plua

IIEJIUTlfUL APARTIIENTS AT
8IJilGET PIIICES AT JACKSON
ESTAlES. !531 JacUon Pika
frOIB Sfl:iltno.. Watt lo st.;)p I
~- C11 614 Ul 2561. EOH.

1h60 ~ hofnt, ue cond,
.,...., nicety tumishld, ~
tud AMity, Brolw. 304-61'5-

~-

cw.nnan, 112

At

~

S200

trail•.

.......... ..,_., 1bdrm. dup.I,
1bdnft.. ~. no pet•,
$225, udlhfoo loci., ~. 11400:Z-D\1,

rtkn, FrM 5.1-Up
And IWtv.ry! Cai1M-77'2o-1220.

sllal .., Clll. Scon Walan, 614182-33'M aft• 4pm.

U2

doyo

o t t - Pri.. 01 ....

' •· Grut 5

....,... a.,... tor lnlarmiUon

4

2bdnlt..

,._

Chavlrolal: 1 ton WrKklr,
rovgh, ttooo, 1"14-IV2·7SS3

The Dally SenUnel Page-13

Pomeroy-Middleport,

LOSER

1ttl Toyot1 Truck 4~:4 DX 4Cyl.,
5 Spd, ~lr, PM-8, Extra Claltn,
13,000 M l l o o S -.

monlh,

Vimon area. 12 aau of oM
Umber, 2 ba~room. al -..:vie
homl. Owner, 6M-381800l

$SOC)

RIIIIMICa: Bum oft tat whit. you
...., TIIU OPAL, Hlillbll at
FNth ,_,._,, 718 N. Second

.,.,

dopaoll ..,ul...t. 514-tt:!-~

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

UVE! UVEI UVE!

l220

,...,

1.6
KnL
Priced
fN.ol lblt $15,000. Cal infomwUon )04..812-3561.
Aoecf.

tly
DUb and
t'V tr PI'OtMelCIINia In our
..., tbirt. . IWIItt thli tiMIUrMI

me.

ftO

Wednesday, May 20, 1992

12 Trucks for Sale

KIT 'N ' CARL YLECi: by Larry Wright

2 BR IF ?'hlrllle in MkNI~ ,
.-loci, low ulllkloo,

" - Hlvtn .,.. Broad Run

,..,,

-

Apartment
lor Rent

44

Country - · Sind HiM Rood,
I rooms, 2 bltha, 5 acr. land,

3 Announcements

Wednesday, May 20, 1992

Ohio

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�Wednesday, May 20, 1992

Ohio

HUNT'S
CATSUP
24 oz.

STORE HOURS

Moftday tnru Sunday
8 AM-1 0 PM

Page4

Spaghetti-0's
or Waldo's

$499

Ribeye Steaks............La.

BUCKET

Cubed Steaks. . . . . . . .LB.

$ 69

2

USDA CHOICE BEEF

$ 199

ECKRICH ITALIAN or BRATWURST

$199

Round Steak............lb.

Sau

2 89
MUELLER'S

ELBO

MACARONI

s
WHITNEY
PINK
SALMON
14.75 oz.

~~:~~··---..···---......12 oz. 59 (

HEINZ
KETCHUP

Wi~ners. . ---··--·-. . . . . LB.s 1

39

32 oz.

(

u.s.

Strawberries. . . . . LB.

Pork &amp; Beans. . Is oz.

4 LB. BAG

(

VALLEY BELL

$179

COUNTRY LEGEND IND. WRAP

89(

GROUND

$ 19

I0 LB. PACKAGE

2°/o Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . . GAL.

4

GRAN.
SUGAR

99(

CALIFOR

FLAVORITE

Amer. Cbeese. . 12 oz.
DAIRY LANE

Ice Cream_""HALf GAL

CHUCK

1 S

90

Vol. 43, No. 14
CopyrlghiOd 11192

--

C'h•ar runis;:hl. Low' in the 50s.
Su nn\ on Frida .\ .

GROUND
BEEF
I0 LB. PACKAGE

s

90

25 oenla
A. Multimedia Inc. Newsoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 21, 1992

State determines fate of Pomeroy CDBG project
By BRIAN J. REED

Sentinel News Staff
The Village of Pomeroy will
probably be forced to drop two
asbestos·laden houses from their
Community Development Block
Grant Fund project for this year,
according to the Meigs County
Commissioners.
The latest developments m the
village's CDBG project was discussed when the commissioners
met in regular session on Wednesday.
Last week, the commissioners
announced that a required asbestos
study had revealed a significant
asbestos content in rwo of the nine

structures to be demolished in the
village using CDBG grnnt monies.
Asbestos removal for those two
structures is estimated at $20,000 ·
the total project cost for demolition
of nine houses. A third house contained a smaller amount of
asbestos.
Meanwhile, the county's entire
CDBG fund release is being held
until the village determines what
action it will take regarding the two
asbestos-riddled
structures.
According to Commission Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, a prev1ou s
"hitch" ill the CDBG program and
the current problem with the
Pomeroy project have forced the
county to "lose six of the 12

months" that commumues have to
fund and complete their CDBG
projects.
At their regular meeting on
Monday, the village decided to pursue asbestos removal and dcmoh·
lion of the two houses in question.
However, the Ohio Department of
Development has reported that the
change of scope that would be
caused by droppillg the other seven
houses from the project would
force another public hearing, causing the village (and the other com·
munities awaiting CDBG funds this
year) to lose at least another 30
days. Instead, the state is cncourag·
ing the village to pursue demolition
of the remaining seven structures.

'The state", accordwg to Hobstetter, "is saymg 'get this together
and get on it now."'
Co unty Engineer Phil Roberts
and Highway Supenntendent Ted
Warner reported th at dust control
had been completed in Olive, Sci pio, Salisbury and Letart town·
ships, and that the county's ditch ing program was com plete. The
county 's mowing program IS now
underway.
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer
discussed the need for additional
staffing in the clerk's legal depart·
ment. According to Spencer, the
addition of an anomey within the
Meigs Co unty Department of
Human Services, the Public

C~fendcr's office, an addnional
assistant prosecutor and an mcrcasc
in anorncys in th e county has all
caused a dramauc increa se 1n
workload for the department. No
action was taken by the board.
The commissioners also:
· Met with Bill Dillo of the
archllcctural fum, Burgess &amp; Niplc
regarding final work at the new
Departmen t of Human Scrv 1ccs

blJlldmg;
· Approved an ame ndment to
the coun ty's sel l-insurance plan,
administered by Klais &amp; Company;
. Approvcn a transfer of funds
for the county h• ghway department
in the amount of $2,800.65 .
Present at the meeting were
commiss ioners Manning K . Roush,

David Koblcntz and Richard E.
Jones, and Clerk Mary Hobstcttcr.

Primary voters will
reshape Ohio delegation

WASHINGTON (AP) - Three s1al new sports complc• . Oakar's
of Ohio's senior membe rs of best-known. bes t-financed oppo·
Co ngress arc scrambling as never ncnt, Cuyahoga County Commisbefore to try to keep their jobs for sioner Tim Hagan, supported the
another two years.
Gateway baseball stadi um and bas·
But one of them will fail in the kctball arena and voted for a tax
June 2 primary.
increase for it
City Co uncil members who
That 's because th e only names
on the Republican ballot in one don't l1ke Gateway supported
sou th ern Ohio district arc incum - Oakar. Gateway's most prominent
bents: Bob McEwen and Clarenc e backer, Cleveland Mayor Mike
M1llcr.
White, supported Hagan.
Both arc co nservativ e Republ1 ·
Oakar and Hagan have attracted
cans who support President Bush. most of the campaign attention in
But while thw voting records arc that district. but five other names
similar, other things make it easy arc on the ballot. Any of tho se
for voters in the 6th Congressional names could draw enough votes to
District to tell them apart.
be a spoiler if the race is close .
If Miller had his druthers. voters
Republicans in that district have
would look first at seniority - this fiVe choices. only one of whom
is his 26th year 1n Congress - and already is in office: Rocky River
then at bad checks. As he put it, Mayor Earl Martin.
"the score is 166 to nothing ."
Voters have even more choices
McE wen's 166 bad checks have in the oddly shaped 13th District,
bec ame the focus Miller's cam - which squeezes between Cleveland
paign, which was revived JUSt two and Akron.
weeks before Election Day .
E1ght Democrats arc in that
Miller, who was bruised in a race . There is no incumbent. but
bathtub fall , was on the verge of one candidate, fanner Ohio Secredropping out of the race and hand - tary of State Sherrod Brown , has
ing over the nomination . But he campaign c.perience.
Other famil1ar names on that
changoo his mind after a meeting in
whi ch McEwen said some things ballot arc North Olmstcn Mayor Ed
Miller didn't believe.
Boyle and Washington lobbyi st
Notably, Miller said he didn't Margaret Rose Mathna, who was
believe McEwen's clai m that a an aide to Oakar. Ms. Mantha drew
statement McEwen made in a radio attention when she bought a town
mtcrvicw shouldn't be interpreted house with Oakar and got a hefty
town Rochester, Mich., Wednesday arternoon. According to
EXPLOSION AFTERMATH ·Workers look over the wreckage
as a dig at the 74·ycar-old Miller.
raise the same month .
authorities, one person was killed and at least 14 others injured.
after a natural-gas explosion leveled a two-story bunding in downIn the interview, McEwen sa1d.
The SIX Republicans vymg for
.. At age 42. I am not ready for a th e nom1nat1on in that d1stfict
rest home yet."
include heire ss Margaret Mueller.
Youth, vigor and energy arc who spent more than $1 milliOn of
assets McEwen has been pitching her family fonunc trying to unseat
A Syracuse man was recently
in his campaign .
Rep. Dcnms Eckart, D-Ohio, who
elected to the board of directors of
In Cleveland and its western is not running for rc-elccuon .
the National Education Associasub urbs, Democratic voters hav e
Another open sca t 1n cludes
tion.
been offered Sl' alternative s to much of the tcrntory now repre Dave Bowen, an instrumental
The Peoples Banking and Trust and Mc1gs Counties ha ve every Rep. Mary Rose Oakar. who has sented by Eckart. and has two mul ·
music teacher m the Meigs Local
ticandidatc frcc.for·al ls.
Company is having a celebration nght to expect a continued healthy represented th em for 16 years.
School District, was recently electOakar
has
the
toughest
compel!
·
Five Republicans and nine
Friday in observance of 90 years of relationship for another 100 years.
ed to the board by a representative
tlon
of
he
r
caree
r
al
a
time
when
arc chasing the party
Democrats
serving Southeastern Ohio.
said Evans .
assembly of Ohio teachers.
she's
vulnerable
because
of
her
213
nominations 10 the 19th District.
Peoples Bancorp Inc .. the parent
Ojlen houses will be held at all
The NEA is a national organizaDemocrats' chOi ces include forlocauons including Middlcpon, 97 corporation , was formed in 1980 ~vcrdrafts at the now -defun ct
tion of school employees boasting
House
bank.
mer
Clev eland Mayor Dennis
and
today
is
compnsoo
of
The
PeoNorth Second Street, where
over two million members. Its
But
Oal&lt;ar's
lOth
Distflct
race
Kucinich,
current state Sen. Eric
ples
Banking
and
Trust
Com
pany
refreshments will be served durin g
board of directors has 150 mem isn
't
just
a
referendum
on
ove
r
Fingerhut
and
Brook Park Mayor
and The First National Bank of
the regular banking hours.
bers nationwide, five of them repdrafts,
or
whether
people
arc
bcllcr
Thomas
I.
Coyne
Jr.
Other offices where celebra- Southeastern Ohio. Peoples Bank
resenting Ohio.
represe
nted
by
a
Washmgton
insidRepublican
choices
lllclude for ·
tions will take place arc 138 Put· with 15 offices throughout Wash·
er
or
a
fresh-faced
outsider.
mer
Rep.
Lyle
Williams,
who lost
narn Street, Marietta; 1902 Wash· ington, Athens and Meigs Counti_es
Bowen, who has been teaching
It's
become
a
referendum
on
his
sca
t
in
Congress
to
Democrat
ington Blvd ., Belpre; 300 Main has assets in c•cess of $386 m!Iin Meigs County since 1967, was
many thing s. including a controvcr· lim Traficam in 1984.
Stree~
Lowell; 801 E. State Street, lion.
elected to an at-large position ,
Athens ; 35 Public Square, Nel meaning he will represent NEA
sonville; 709 North Plains Road ,
members across the state. He will
The Plains.
attend bi-monthly meetings of the
"The Peoples Banking and Trust
NEA board in Washingto'!_ D.C.
DAVE BOWEN
Company began operations in their
Bowen served on the Executive as the president of the MLTA. He new office in the SL Clair Building
Commiuee of the Ohio Education has also served as vice president, on May 25. 1902 with initial capi Association for seven years, as well grievance chairperson, membership talization of $100,000," Raben E.
as serving on several other OEA chairperson, EPAC chaifperson and Evans, president and ch1cf c•ecutivc officer of the company stated.
commillees. He has also been negotiator for that group.
Since
then Peoples Bank. has cxpe·
active in the Southeastern Ohio
According to Bowen, only two rienced exceptional growth with
Education Association, Uniscrv NEA board members have been
and the Meigs Local Teachers elected from Southeastern Ohio, sound and progressive manage ment
Association.
and he is the rmt such member 10
In October of 1924 Peoples
For three years. Bowen served be elected from Meigs County.
Bank. moved into their new build·
ing and present quarters at Second
and Putnam Streets. A major renovation of the building took place in
1968. People Bank is expanding
again in Marietta, 90 years after
setting up in a rented building, by
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported on Wednesday
constructing
a fire story addit1on
that deputies transported Marvin Cremeans, 36, to Oriem Recepuon
adjacent to their present building .
Center to begin serving his sentence tmposed by the Me1~s County
Completion is expected to be in the
Coun of Common Pleas. Cremeans was returned to the msuruuon
summer of 1993.
for violation of his probation.
In 1990 the Peoples Bank of
Soulsby also reported that Randall Stonns and Leslie Stonns,
Nelsonville and Athens was comwho were recently indicted by the Me1gs County Grand Jury,
bined with The Peoples Banking
reported to the sheriffs office on Tuesday, where they were served
and Trust Company, fonn ing the
their warrants on illdicunents. The Court of Common Pleas remand·
Athens County Division . In
ed them to the custody of the sherifrs department pending further
December, 1991, a new full service
coun action .
facilily was opened in The Plains to
funher e•pand service in Athens
County.
In January Peoples Bank purOn Wednesday at 9:27 a.m., Middleport squad went to Overchased
the former Central Trust
brook Center for Mabel Walburn, who was taken 10 Holzer Medical
Office
in
Middleport to expand into
Center. At 10:13 a.m.. Rutland unit went to ~eigs Mi~c 31. Rodney
Merchants Association wbicb maintains the
HERBS PLANTED • Tbe larger mini-park in
the
Meigs
County market.
flumphrey was taken to O'Bieness Memonal Hospllal. At II :08
park. Pictured with the three herbalists is Susan
Pomeroy bas been newly planted wilb additional
As Peoples Banlt celebrates 90
a.m., Life Flight lOOk Kevin Lemley to Gmnt Medical Center from
Clark,
far left, president or tbe merchants assoherbs by three herbalists, Donna Nease, Bobbie
years or serving Southeastern Ohio,
Continued on page J ·
ciation. (Photo by PJ. Harris)
Karr and Dianna Lawson, for the Pomeroy
the people in Washington, Athens,

Bowen elected to NEA board Peoples Banking and Trust
Company to hold open house
celebration in Middleport

,..---Local briefs-----.
Cremeans conveyed to prison

LAYS REG. $1.39 SIZE

Potato Chips.........................

'~ IEAA - ·

FRANCO AMERICAN

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

~ Pork Loin...-.....LB. s1

Lottery
Pick 3: 947
Pick 4:3925
Super Loti :
11-15-18-21-24-40
Kicker:
9-5-6-5-5-6

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. (}H.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., MAY 17, THRU SAT., MAY 23, 1992

49

Ohio Lottery

Expos
top
Reds

EMS units answer calls

·'

•

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>moriarty</name>
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</item>
