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                  <text>Wednesday, May 20, 1992

Ohio

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Vol. 43, No. 14
CopyrlghiOd 11192

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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

·'

•

�Thursday, May 21, 1992

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, May 21, 1992

Ideal weather on Memorial Day; cooler temps

OHIO Weather
Friday, May 22
Accu-Wcather® forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THit INTERESTS OF 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsller/Conlroller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M1111ogtr

LETrnRS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name ,
addlou and telepbooe number. No unsigned letten wiU be published. Leners
should be in good taste, addn:ssing issues. nol personalities.

·Oregon often rains
on front-runners
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
PORTLAND - Oregon used to have the cantankerous primary election, a late reminder that even winners can be beaten now and then. With
Bill Clinton rolling to the Democratic presidential nomination . Jerry
Brown yearned for a rerun.
"Shake 'em up," he urged voters in today's primary. "Let's put Ore. gon on the map."
. . . .
But Brown sees his second-place support shpptng m h1 s own Western
terntory. He blames it on the bandwagon effect as Clinton nears the
majority that will put him atop the Dcmocrntic ticket. ·
.
The national lead hasn't always been a help m the Oregon pnmary.
Jimmy Carter lost on his way to the White House.
11 was Harold Stassen's undoing as a serious presidential contender, 44
. years ago, long before his name became synonymous with hopeless but
constant candidacy.
In the era of the Kennedy legend, when none of the brothers lost elcc. tions, Robert Kennedy did, in Oregon. Before that upset, Kennedys had
won 30 elections in a row .
The man who beat him in 1968, Eugene McCarthy is on the ballot
again this year. " I don't think that even in this stale, 5 percent of the people know I'm running," said the former Minnesota senator, now 76.
That was not the case 24 years ago, when McCarthy chaUengcd President Lyndon B. Johnson over U.S. policy in the Vietnam war.
Kennedy came on later, but stronger- until Oregon. McCarthy upset
Kennedy there, 44 percent 10 38 percent Their campaign moved south to
California, where Kennedy was assassmated the mght he won that pnmary. The DcmocraiS nominated Hubcn H. Humphre~ .
.
Michael Dukalcis won the 1988 Democrauc pnmary and earned Oregon in the fall. In the primary, Oregon DemocraiS gave Jesse Jackson his
·strongest showing of the year among wh1Le voters.
: · There's Republican lore, too - Stassen vs. Thomas E. Dewey in the
: 1948 primary, which featured the ftrSt major broadcast debate between
: presidential rivals, an ancestor of the Lelevtsed debates that now crowd
primary campaigns and arc fearured forums m the fall.
.
Four days before the prunary , they debated tn Portland on the quesuon
of ou~awing the Commumst Pany. Stassen satd yes, Dewey no. Dewey ,
. men governor of New York, won the primary wtth 52 percent of the vote ,
· and Stassen faded.
: But he hasn ' t vanished yet At 85. he's in h1s lOth presidential cam• paign. And this time, he apparently will go to the convention with one
delegate to suppon him - from Minnesota, where he was governor 50
years ago.
Oregon ended the boom for Henry Cabot Lodge in the 1964 Republi can campaign; he'd won the New Hampshlfe pnmary on wnte-m votes,
• and there were signals that another vtctory mtght lure h1m home from
· Saigon, where he was U.S. ambassador, to campargn m earnest. . . .
· New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller headed that off. campargnmg m
Oregon as the man who "cared enough to come" after Ariwna Sen .
Barry Goldwater conceded the state to him and concentrated on California. Rockefeller won Oregon, Goldwater won the nomination. and the
Republican ticket lost a landslide in the fall.
.
In the 1976 Democratic campaign. Carter won the early pnmanes and
: took a commanding delegate lead as tile competition moved west. He
: didn't fare well, just well enough. In the last 16primarics that year, Carter
· lost eight, to Brown, then governor of Califomta, and the late Sen. Fmnk
Church of Idaho.
Brown won four , Church won four. but they couldn 't catch Carter.

Amend the U.S. Constitution twice
I argue today in favor of two was proposed and currently awaitamendmeniS to the U.S . Constitu- ing consideration by Congress tion, and I want you to know that I should therefore be immediately
do not come ligMy to this conclu - adopted as law.
sron .
Several balanced budget amend The founding documents arc to ments have been proposed. One
me tile nearest thing to Holy Writ popular version. sponsored by Sen.
ever conceived by mortal man.
Unlike George Bush, who is on
record in favor of six constitutional
amendments, I believe as a mauer
of principle that these hallowed Paul Simon, D-Ill., declares "the
instruments should not be altered president shall tran smit to the
except to address the most pro - Congress a proposed budget ... in
found maners.
which total outlays do not exceed
The integrity of the national total receipts."
treasury and the integrity of
Can there be a more fundamen Congress arc. I believe, profound tal proposition than that? It says we
matters. An amendment requiring a should spend no more than we take
balanced budget should thus be in. It says we must get away from
speedily passed. The amendment this abominable notion tllat we can
forb idding Congress from giving sprinkle faery dust on the books
itself a mid-term pay raise and make them OK. It says we
recently ratified by the requisite must stop running up bills for
number of states 202 years after 11 future generations to make ~ood

Joseph Spear

•

'll'SE c:mM ~ NIDfi&amp;I~Y
N~ NIBlA 'Y'mf MllULWS 16
NIP PWINPUN9~~~
~

Clears up public hearing statements

Our esteemed leaders have tired
our minds and it's time we concen·
trated theirs.
Nor would it diminish the
grandeur of the Constitution to
address this matter. The defictt and
the national debt are arguably this
nation's supreme problems. The
former will amount to $400 billion
at the end of tile current fiscal year;
the latter will stand at $4.1 DiDion.
It will cost us $319 billion a year
- $873,972,600 a day - just to
pay the interest on iL That's a lot of
bridges and librnries.
The congressional pay amendment was conceived by James
Madison and sent to the states for
ratification in 1789 along with II
other amendments, 10 of which
became the Bill of RighiS. It holds
that "No law, varying the compen·
sation for the services of the sena·
tors and representatives, shall take
effect. until an election of represen·
tatives shall have intervened."
The point is pretty simple:
Members of Congress should not
simply mandate their pay raises;
they should ask tlleir employers that 's us - for them.
It is a wonderful idea that would
address one of the biggest dilem mas of our time - the fact that,
thanks to the most recent pay hikes
tile Congress granted itself, we are
now ruled by plutocrats who make
more than 98 percent of their constiweniS. I would deeply appreciate
the opportunity to pass judgment
on the next raise they bequeath
themselves .
It bothers me a great deal to
argue in favor of two Constitutional amendments, but I can see no
other way of dealing with these
problems . I allay my remorse by
telling myself that George wants
six and I only want two, so I'm still
three times more principled than
the president
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
columnist for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

•veot
•

Environment or development?

WASHINGTON (NEA) Wh en President Bush arrives in
Rio de Janeiro to attend the United
Nations conference in June, he will
be making his first foray onto the
batlleground of a new world order
very different from the one he has
long advocated and envisioned.
So far, atlention here ha s
focu sed on the global warming
treaty that is to be signed in Rio. In
its fmal rewriting, which will take
into account suong U.S . objections.
the agreement will talk about working towards Significantly decreased
levels of carbon dioxide emissions
without setting firm timetables or
guidelines. The Bush administration fea red that specific goal s
might hav e mandated costly
changes that could damage tile U.S.
economy.
What has gotten lost in the environmental debate is that the June 314 summit's official title IS the
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
U.N. Conference on Environment
· nisi ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washmgton and
and Development. For much of the
; national politics ror more than 25 years.
world, the developmental aspects
arc paramount.
This is where th e new " new
world order" comes in: It is one
that is potentially unstable, and one
1n which the United States may
have dramatically diminished influthing about gas at Gavin, as Stew- ence.
· Dear Editor:
art knows if he really read my earThe old world order, a gcopohuDuring tile public hearing on the lier "lcner" to the Tribune.
For the past year or so the
permitS the Corps of Engineers
Amencan
Gas Association has run
mu st grant to allow the James
an
ad
campa1gn
nationally talking
Gavin Plant to scrub 1ts h1gh sulfur,
up
gas
for
creating
" le ss carbon
mainly Oh10 coa l, I sta ted ,"1
diox
ide
emi
ss
ion
s,
... no sulfur
The Rev. Dustin Cooper opened
understand that local and Ohio gas
and
...
no
particulates."
dioxide
interests are not opposed to th e
the door of Asbury Methodi st
Now C02 is not a "serious air pol- Church in Springfield, Mo .. one
Gavin scrubber. "
When I started back to my seat, lutant(s)" as the ad claims unless da y in May 1990 and discovered
· two oil and gas people came over yo u believe in the "greenhouse" his church had beeh broken into.
·to me and instead of thanking me myth which AGA is obviously Some sound equipment and an
!hey started to argue with me. Later pushing, This is anti-coal talk, elec troni c keyboard had been
stolen, and Cooper was good and
) read a "leu er" 1n th1 s paper purely and simply,
The AGA staff told me the Ohio steamed.
attacking me, from Tom Stewart,
The burglar wasn't feeling too
of the Ohio Oil and Gas Associa - Gas Association ts an as sociate
member!
During
1991
four
gas
hot
about what he'd done either, he
: tion.
The Stewan letter goes out of iLs groups, including the West Vir - says now. He couldn't even gilylce
way to misquote me instead of ginia Oil and Natural Gas Associa- out the car window toward Asbury
tiOn, tried to get our Public Service when he passed.
thankin~ me for my statement at
Comm
ission to block use of a
ihe hearing, were 1 pointed out the
Yet he was also deflltnL He was
sc
rubber
at the Harrison Power 18 years old, had lost his job and
Sierra Club group oppo sing the
Gavin scrubber is NOT represent- Plant by Monongahela Power wanted the equipment for his own
ing their national policy . 1 have (w hich serves the area around use. " I figured I'd get it from
NEVER mentioned the Ohio Oil &amp; Marietta), Others were Equit.able someone else," he said, "and the
Gas and Consolidated Gas.
:Gas Association until now.
insumnce would write it off.''
One gas man accused me or
Nevertheless , I shall now preA detective came to his house a
.sent the evidence 1 have of gas and "slander" after I spoke May 4 in year later and arrested him. It was
ili! interesiS working to hurl coal favor of the working Gavin scrub- his ftrst arrest. In the months before
flationally and at the state level and ber. He must have spent the past the pre -sentencing hearing last
~emand an apology from Mr. Stew - few years working in Iraq. OtllcrFebruary, he and his wife prepared
art for his attacks on me, rather wise he would realize that in Amer- for his imprisonment. The judge
.than Sierra Club factional leader ican people are allowed to tell the could have sentenCed him to seven
:Ned Ford, who insisted on the truth. even if it steps on some spe- years, but an extraordinary thing
cial interest toes. We call it "free happened.
·IJavin hearing May 4.
:· : The annual report of tile national speech" and it even allows Mr.
"We talked about packing my
·-~~~Club inclutjes a statement Stewart 10 misrepresent my statestuff up and that shed probably
'JIIil' tfJWt IWO of their financial ments to your readers.
have to go back on food stamps
fiiPIIIl'letS ate oil and gas inlereSts;
As for gas/Sierra Club faction and AFDC 10 suppon my stepson,' '
bP America and Atlantic Richfield cooperation, "the enemy of my he remembered: "When we got
(ARCO). DurinJ the 1_99I PUCO enemy is my friend" could be the married, I got ber off that''
~gs on the AEP ac1d nun corn· answer, And as your readers surely
When he arrived at the courtptianee plan AE.P staJt.d that if Jtey know, politics (including energy house and heard Cooper introduce
DID NOT scrub II Gavin they like- politics) makes strange bedfellows. himself, he expected Cooper's tesly would use "out-of-Sillle" natural
timony 10 cinch his trip to jail. "!
~as at three plants to comply by
Yours sincerely, thought he was gonna say, 'We
!995 or 2000, I NEVER swd anyNorman Kilpatrick want 10 send this guy 10 jail."'

=Letters to the editor

on .
The arguments against a balanced budget amendment are
many. Congress and tile president
will never be able to agree on an
" income" figure , tlley say, and the
courts will be arbitrating tile budget. Liberals wiU lend to raise taxes
to make ends meet, they say, and
conservatives will try to dismantle
the government. Failure to balance
the budget is a failure of political
will, they say, and addressmg it by
constitutional fiat trivializes that
great documenL
I emphatically disagree . It is
true tllat the primary problem is a
crisis of political will. Congress
acts like a school of piranha tearing
at the taxpayers· flesh and lacks the
discipline to change. There is not a
molecule of hope in my body that
the lawmakers will suddenly see
the error of their ways and correct
them. I am sick of stewino ov~r ;t

vs. South. It is, quite simply, the
"haves" vs. the "have-nots."
If you take the globe and draw a
line around it roughly following tile
Tropic of Cancer - through the
middle of Mexico, across the
Atlantic, through tile center of the
Mediterranean, across Asia at
about the line that separated the
former Soviet Union with its neigh·
bors 10 the south, then back across
the Pacific - you have roughly
divided the world between the
The new world order, as envi- developed north and the deve loping
sioned and articulated by George south , between the haves of the
Bush, was a triangular affalf built north and th e have -not s of the
around trading alliances, with the south. That is the new world order
new European Economic Commu- as seen by those meeting in R1o for
nity at one comer. the Asian bloc the f lfSttime.
In only a few countries soutll of
dominated by Japan at the second,
and the North American trading this imaginary dividing line - a
alliance dominated by the United couple in Central America, a very
few in North Africa and tile Middle
States at the third.
In the Bush world order, the East, plus South Africa, Australia
Un1tcd States would be the only and New Zealand- does the averglobal military power. It would age person cat more than 2,600
truly become the world's police- calories a day. That, says the World
man , with the bills for services ren- Health Organization, is a measure
dered being paid in part by nations of the difference between rich and
like Japan and Gcnmany.
poor. Seventy-seven percent of the
However. the world order that Earth's population lives in the poor
will be on display in Rio is enitrcly countries south of this line.
different. It is a world order as seen
The basic purpose of the conferby a vast majority of the planet' s ence is to produce a statement of
inhabitants. It is a world order global principles aimed at reconcil based on development. It is North ing environmental and developcally based Cold War division into
three major camps - communist,
non-communist and non-aligned toppled with the fall of communi sm in Eastern Europe and th e
Soviet Union.

Robert]. Wagman

mental goals. However, if you read
the conference's agenda, you will
see that economic and developmental goals easily outweigh environmental goals.
There can be no doubt that environmental and developmental
issues go hand-in-hand. Today the
23 percent of the Earth's population living in the developed nations
use two-tllirds of the world's energy output - and cause three-quarters of iiS pollution. As the poorer
countries develop , their share of
energy use will increase, as will
their share of pollution.
These have-not countries want
to use the environmental concerns
of the developed nations as a
wedge to gain capital, technology
and access to markets they will
need if they arc 10 become players
in the emerging world economic
order.
In short, the Rio conference is
really the first confrontation of this
new world order- one which official Washington does not even
want 10 admit exisiS. Rio will probably be the first batlle in a prolonged war, one for which the
United States has yet to draw up a
baule plan.
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
ed columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Church's response shocks burglar
What he d1dn ' t count on was
that since hearing of his arrest,
Cooper and hi s congregants had
taken a trip into their own souls to
e.amine the core of what they pro-

Sarah Overstreet

remembers. "I couldn't understand
why they were doing this. I'd
grown up in a fundamentalist
church, and I'd seen bad stuff happen between church members. I'd
never seen anything like these
guys. I asked Dustin, 'Why are you
doing this?' He said, 'We just
wanted you to know we forgave
you.'''

fessed . It began as Cooper prayed
and worked through his anger, and
jelled when he learned the burglar
had been apprehended and that
under the county victim-advocate
program, the Asbury members
would be allowed to respond to the
plea agreemenL
"Once he wa s arrested, my
hope and prayer was tllat this was
an opportunity for the church to
make an impact on his life," Cooper remembers, "That he and the
church would meet and reconcile."
A sermon asking the congregation w consider the fate of the burglar began to form in his mind, and
he prepared hand-out cards listing
four choices of punishment. Each
parishioner would be allowed to
choose one.
When the cards came back. 6
percent wanted jail time, 6 percent
wanted the judge 10 decide and 82
percent wanted probation with
community service. This was the
recommendation Cooper gave the
judge, and the judge concurred. II
was Good Friday, a day known for
the forgiving or another thief.
"I was in shock," the burglar

Cooper says the incident has
spurred a lot of "discussion and
searchirtg" among church mem bers. ''After Jeffery Dahmer was
arrested, we asked ourselves,
'Could we have extended the same
offer of grace to him?' Then two
weeks ago one of the members
found out an employee had been
stealing from him. He said his ftrst
response was 10 put the guy away,
then he asked himself, 'What is my
Christian response?'"

Cooper is convinced the correct
Christian response to crime is to do
your best to balance the issues of
justice and grace, and to encourage
reconciliation between victims and
criminals. He also believes that
encouraging restitution to victims
by their victimizers leads to the
most effective healing of the injury
crime causes.
Since the verdict, the Asbury
burglar has a new job, and he and
his family have attended several
Asbury services. I don't mean to
imply a happy-ever-after ending for
the sury, or that anyone knows the
burslar will never victimize anyone
a gam. All 1can say for sure is that
at least for tllis moment in time,
Dustin Cooper's prayers were
answered.
Sarab Overstreet is a syndi·
cated columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Thursday, May 21, the 142nd day of 1992. There are 224
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on May 21, 1892, the opera "I Pagliacci," by
Ruggiero Leoncavallo, was ftrst performed, in Milan, Italy. (Pagliacci
tells the story of a troupe of uaveling performers caught up in infidelity
and murder, and includes the famous aria, "Vesta Ia giubba")
On this date:
In 1542, Spanish explorer Hernando de SolO died while searching for
gold along the Mississippi River.
·
In I832, the ftrst Democratic National Convention got under way in
Baltimore.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MtCH

•

IToledo! 83 ' I
e

PA .

840

IMansfield I 83' I•
• I Columbus I 83' I

•

By The Associated Press
Some rain and possibly thunderstorm s may spoil tile early part of
the holiday weekend for some
Ohioans, but Memorial Day itself
should be lovely, forecasters said.
The unseasonably hot weather
will end on Saturday and clouds
will build up over the state. Some
stormy weather could occur late
Saturday or Sunday
But the Nation;J Weather Service says Memorial Day w1ll be
fair and cooler with temperatures in
the 70s. No min is indicated.
The record high temperature for

thi s date at the Columbus weatller
station was 92 degrees in 1941.
The record low was 34 in 1883.
Sun set tonight will be at 8:45
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
6:10a.m.
Around the nation
Scattered showers prevai led
over the so uthern and ce ntral
Rocky Mountains thi s morning,
where heavy thunderstorm s were
forecast later in the day.
The heavy showers and thunderstorm s tllat drenched parts of the
we stern Gulf Coast earlier this
week were moving into the Mid-

west today. Heavy thunderstorms
were expected in Kansas, Okla homa and Texas.
Cool weather prevailed across
the Northwest this morning . A
freeze was possible tonight in pans
of castem Oregon and Washington .
Storms in the Southwest
dumped golfball -size hail near
Tempe, Ariz .. on Wednesday .
Thunderstorm winds gusted to 75
mph at Killeen, Texas. Tornadoes
touched down north of Roswell,
N.M.
Flood warnings were posted for
several counties in southeast New
Mexico and south Texas.

Unusually warm weather con~n ­
ucd Wednesday in the upper Midwest, w1th a reading of 86 degrees
in Marquette, Mich. That surpassed
by 2 degree s the 1978 mark.
Temperatures today were fore cast in tile 50s in western Mont.ana ,
the 60s in mu ch of the Northwest
and along the Califomta coas~ the
70s in the central Plains, the 80s in
much of the East and South , and
the 90s m the Ariwna deserts and a
small pocket of upstate New Yod&lt;
and northern Vermont.
High Lempernture for the nauon
Wednesday was 105 degree s at
Bullhead City, Ariz.

.----Local briefs...----. Ohio's top 200 companies
Continued lrom page I

W. VA

Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

'

Snow

Via Assodated Press GraphlcsNet

Ice

Sunny

Pt. ClotJdy

CJoudy

C1992Aocu-Weather , Inc.

----Weather---South Central Ohio
Tonight, clear. Lows mostly in
th e 50s. Friday, mostly sunny .
Highs in the mid-80s .
Extended forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Saturday, a chance of showers

and thunderstorm s. Highs in the
80s. Lows in upper 50s to low 60s.
Sunday, fair north. A chance of
showers south. Cooler. Highs in
mid-60s to mid-70s. Lows in upper
40s to mid -5 0s. Monday, fair.
Highs in upper 60s to mid -70s .
Lows in mid-40s to low 50s.

---Area deaths--,--Glen W. Garnes

John McCoy Jr.

John Harvey McCoy Jr., 33,
Glen W. Games, 60, Sunbury.
died Tuesday, May 19 , 1992, in 25526 East Colonial, Christmas,
Fla., died Monday, May 18, 1992.
Grady Memorial Hospital .
Born in Mason City, W.Va., he
He wa s an electrician and a
member of the IBEW Local 683. was a son of John Harvey and EveHe was an Army veteran of th e lyn Hartley McCoy, New Matamoras. He was a construction
Korean Conflict.
He is survived by: his wife, Bar- worker for Chffco Corporation in
bara; sons, Rick Games, Oregon, Flonda.
Besides his parents he is surRobert Ne ff, Columbus, and
Thomas (Julie) Neff, Galena: vived by two brothers, Jam es
daughters, Georgetta Garnes, Diana McCoy, New Matamoras, and
Baker and Virginia Games, all of Thomas McCoy , Christmas. Fla. ;
Oregon, and Nancy Neff, Sunbury : four sisters , Mary Felter, Newpon.
grandchildren, Shane Neff, Galena, Paula McCoy , New Matamora s,
Sarah Cline, Mansfield, and Joyce
and Brian Baker, Beaverton, Ore.
Al so surviving ar e: brothers, Ann Zirlcle, Hartford, W.Va.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. FriWalter Games, Dexter, Joseph W.
Games and Delton Games. both of day at Hadley Funeral Home on
Langsville, Willard Garnes, Port- New Matamoras with Rev . Jim
land, Ore ., and Bernard Garnes, Schoonover officiating. Burial will
Seaule, Wash .; sisters. Lou be in Letan Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeml
Gilmore, Wilkesville , and Reva
home
today (Thursday) from 2-4
Caldwell, St. Albans, W.Va.
p.m.
and
7-9 p.m.
SCIVICes will be held al the
DeVore Funeral Home in Sunbury
at 1 p.m . Friday with the Rev .
Marriage licenses have been
Larry Gnffin officiating. Bunal
granted
in Meigs County Probate
will be in the Berkshire Cemetery.
Court
to
Charles Wayne Thomas ,
Friends may call from 4-8 p.m.
44
,
Rutland,
and Jean Louella
Thursday at the funeral home .
·
Delph.
51
,
Rutland;
and John
Memorial contributions may be
58,
Cleveland,
Eugene
Hartness,
made to the American Heart Association. Delaware County Branch. and Delores Ann Hanlon, 54, Long
c/o Patsy Cooney, 100 Cottswold Bottom; and Terry Silas Mulltns,
22, Albany , and Dcbrn Lynn Spry.
Dr., Delaware, OH 43015 .
20, Albany.

License issued

Girl who gave Tylenol will
serve Saturday detention
HAMILTON, Oh10 (AP) - A
dispute ha s ended between a
JUnior -high sc hool stud ent and
administrators who tried to suspend
her for giving two non -prescription
pain-killers to a friend.
The Hamilton school board met
in special session Wednesday after
a judge had invalidated the suspension and de c ided to let the girl
serve two Saturday detention days
instead.
But the girl 's mother said the
four months of wrnngling has convinced her to put all three of her
children in other sc hool sys tem s
nex t year.
"They co uld have done thi s at
the beginning . 1 don 't know why
they didn't," said Anne Wilktns.

TI1e Daily Sentinel
tll8P8 213-tNII})

Publiahed uery al\ernoon, Monday

throua:h Friday , 1 n Court St.. Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Val1ey Pub1iahinil
Company/Multimedia Inc ., Pomeroy,
Ohio ..6169 , Ph. 992 -2156. Second claM
poatqe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio..

P.hmber: The AuocieLed PrNa , Bnd th e
Ohio Newspaper At1ociation, National
AdvertillnJ Repreaent.ative, Branham
Nt~wspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue ,
Nn Vor\, New York 10017.
POSTMrurrER: Send addru• change~ t.o
The Daily Sentinel, 11 1 Court St..
Pomeroy, OHM&gt; &gt;16769 .

8UB8CRIP110N RATES
81 ClUTier nr Motor Route
OMWook....................... .. .... ....... ..... $1 .60
OM Mcmth... ... .. ..........
. .. ... 16.95
OM Yur........... ............ .. ...... --· ... $63 20
SINOLECOPY
PRICK

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No aub.criptioiUI by mail permitted in
areu whf!rt home carrier servi ce is

anilable.
llalt Subocrlpllou
IDI'fd• Melp Co•ntr

13 w..u .......................................$21 .84
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52 w..u .......................................... l84.7&amp;
O.tnde M•ill Co•ntr"
t3 Weeb .......................................... $23.40

36 w..u ......................................... ~.110

52 W..U........

.. ............ ................ UII.&gt;IO

In February, her daughter. Dana
Merry . 14, gave two Extra-Strengtll
Tylenol capsules to a friend,
eighth-grader Michelle Wiles, who
had complained of a headach e.
Both girls , students at Wilson
Junior High, were suspended under
the school's code forbidding "dangerous drugs" in school.
Miss Merry, a ninth -grader,
appealed her suspension and never
served 11. Mis s Wiles did not
appeal to the school board and
served a five-day suspension.
Mis s Merry sa id she did not
know tllat bringing the over-thecounter medication to sc hool would
violate school policy .
Her lawyer, Michael Shanks ,
argued that Tylenol is not a dangerous drug .
Tobie Braverman . lawyer for the
10,700-pupil district, said the board
interpreted the reference to dangerous drugs to mean all drugs.
Butler County Common Pleas
Judge John Moser ruled Tuesday
tllat the suspension was illegal .

the heliport.
At 1: 15 p.m., Pomeroy unit took Tanya Bun from Spring
Avenue to Holzer. At 2:52p.m., Pomeroy unit went to State Route
248 for David Bigley, who was taken to Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital. Bill Kackenburger was treated at the scene. At 4:05p.m.,
Tuppers Plains squad went to Arbaugh Addition . Mary Scarberry
went to Camden-Clark. At 4:53 p.m. , Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center. Bernice Willard was taken 10 Veterans.
At 7:09a.m., Middleport units went to an auto accident on Lead ing Creek Road. Sandra Call was taken to Veterans.

Board of elections to close
The Meigs County Board of Elections office will close on Mon day in observance of Memorial Day.

Senate passes easy
voter registration plan
By MATTY ANCEY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Senate
today passed legislation requiring
states to register voters when they
apply for drivers' licenses, welfare,
unemployment compensation or
d1sability benefits.
The bill was approved 61 -3 8
with six Republicans joined 55
Democrats m voting for the bill
despite opposi tion from the White
House .
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.
whose state already registers voters
when they apply for drivers' licepscs, labeled as a "red herring"
charges by otllers in hi s pany that
the legislation would open the door
to election fraud.
"We can't put our heads in the
sand and slow the registration of
new voters," Hatfield said, concurring with Democrats in blaming
low turnout in recent elections on
the hassles of registering.
Other Republicans who broke
with GOP leaders to support the
bill were Sens. Dave Durenberger
of Minnesota, Jim Jeffords of Vermont, Bob Packwood of Oregon.
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania and
Bob Kasten of Wi sco nsin. Ernest
Hollings of South Carolina was tile
only Democrat to vote no. Sen .
Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texa s, did not
vote .

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................ 31 5/'d
Ashland Oil ..................... 31 l/4
AT&amp;T.. ...... .
... ....43 1/4
Bank One ..........................45 3/4
Bob Evans ......................... 17 3/4
Charming Shop.....
.. ... 28 7/8
City Holding ................ ..... t9 1/4
Fcdcmi MoguL . . .... . 19 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R..
72 5/8
Key Centurion ..... ... ........... 181 /2
Lands End ............ .. .... J I 3(8
Limited Inc ..... .. ............. 20 1/2
Multimedia In c.. ................ 28 1/2
Rax RcstaumnL . .. ..... .. . 1 1(2
Reliance Elcctnc ............... 20 1/4
Robbms&amp;Myers .. ......... ..... 15 1/2
Shoney's Inc.......
...2 1 1/8
Star Bank ........ .......... ...... .37 l/4
Wendy lnt 'L ....... .......... 12 3/8
Worthmgton Ind ....... .. .... 23 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by 8Iunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Walter Roush , Pomeroy. and Berni ce W1lford, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Kevin Lemley and Edith Reed.

CHESTER TOlMNSHIP
Is tflking resumes for
TOVWNSHIP TRUSTEE
For the remainder of
Mr. Spencer's Term.
Resumes to be submitted
no later than

MAY 29, 1992
Appointment will be made June 3, 1992
Send to: Gary DUI, President
Chester Township Trustees
P. 0. Box 46
Chester, Ohio 45720

Unless an applicant refused, the
90 percent of the voting-age population witll drivers' licenses would
automatically register to vote when
they apply for or renew the pcnmiLS
with st.ate motor vehicle departmenK
The stat es also would be
rcqu1red to establish voter registration by mail. However. states that
allowed voters to register on the
same day of an election would be
exempt from the law. Maine and
Minnesota already have the sameday procedure.
A hodgepodge of state systems
now often requires people to regis ter at the courthouse or library up
to 30 days before an election. The
bill's sponsors say about 70 million
of tllose eligible to vote arc not reg istered.
DcmocraLS on Tuesday accepted
one Republican amendment that
would delay implementing the bill
by a year- until Jan I, 1994 - in
order to give stale legislatures time
to make their laws conform.
The House passed a similar bill
in 1990 , but sponsors there said
they would not take it up again
until DcmocraiS in tile Senate could
break a Republican filibuster. Witll
four GOP senators joining all 57
DemocraiS in an earlier test vote,
Republicans last week gave up
thc1r attempt to block Senate passage.
Accordmg to a study in February by tile Federal Election Commi ssion, 27 state s already allow
people to regi ster to vote when they
apply for drivers ' licenses and 17
other states were considering legislation to do the same.
Twenty-seven states also now
allow voters to register by mail.

Divorce filed
An acuon for d1vorce has been
filed in Meig s Co unty Common
Pl eas Court by Gregory Stephen
Fields, Pomeroy , against Angela
Renee Fields, also of Pomeroy.

had tough year; earned less
CLEVELAND (AP) - Nearly
half of Ohio's 200 largest publicly
held com panics earned. less money
in 1991 than they did tn the previous year, according to a public
relations ftrm's survey.
The Roster of Ohio Companies
is produced annually by Edward
Howard &amp; Co. of Cleveland, which
will publish the repon in June.
A news release by the company
Wedne sday said the report will
show how hard the recession hit
Ohio businesses last year. It said
reven ues for 88 of the 200 companies declined when compared with

Meigs announcements
Concert planned
Trnnsparcnt "rock in a different
light" in concert June 14 at 3 p.m.
at the Racine United Methodi st
Church. A $1 donation will be
taken at the door.
Motbers meeting
The Meigs County Health
Department and Prenatal Clmic
will hold a mothers group meeting
June 2 at noon at the health department in Pomeroy . The top1 c for
discuss1on will be "Brcastfeeding
tile New Baby" lead by a certified
lactation co nsultant. Pregnant
women, as well as nursing motllers
arc encouraged to attend. Further
Information may be obtained by
calling Elaine Matheny at WlC,
992-6626.
Son ball meeting
Anyone interested tn play1ng
s ummer fast pitch softball may
auend a meeting Monday at 6 p.m.
at th e Middleport Ball Park . Further information may be obtained
by calling 992-6890 or 742-2302.
There is a $10 regisuation fcc.
Southern board to meet
The Southern Local School
Board will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the high school.
Legion to meet
The American Legion Drew
Webster Post No . 39, Pomeroy ,
will meet June 2. There will be a
spec 1al dinner at 7 p.m. followed
by meeting at 8 p.m. All members
urged to alJCnd.

IRI.·SlT.·SUN.
DAHA CAIIVIY, MIKE MYIRS
IH

WAYNE'S WORLD
AND

PGil

RODNEY DAHGERIIELD
IN

LADYBUGS
,, IJ

Western Unwn mtrodueed th e f1rst

sin ging telegram July 28. 1933

4U-Iotl

figures for tile prev1ous year.
There were 96 companies, or 4&amp;
percent, which had a worse earn ings performance. Forty-three of
the 200 companies incurred losses,
and overall profits were down 35
percent in 1991, according to th e
survey.
"Results were not uniform
across the state," said Patnck Gal lagher, editor of tile Ohio Roster.
"The recession seems to have been
barely felt in central Ohio, while
tile nortllem part of the state was
hard hit."
He said the report, when pub lished in about three weeks, will
show that 35 companies based in
central Ohio reponed a collective
carmngs gain of 14 percent on a 9
percent increase in revenues.
The Ohio Roster annually ranks
publicly held Ohio companies by
revenues , The 1991 top I 0 arc :
Procter &amp; Gamble , CincinnatJ, $27
billion ; Kroger, Cincinnati, $21.3
billion ; Goodyear Ttrc &amp; Rubber
Co., Akron, $10.9 b1llion : TRW,
Lyn~hurst . $7 .9 billion ; Federated
Department Stores , Cincinnati,
$6.9 billion; The Limited, Colum bus, $6.t billion; American Eloctnc
Power, Columbus. $5 billion: Chiq uita Brands International, Cincin nau, $4.6 billion; Mead, Dayton,
$4.5 billion. and Dana, Toledo.
$4.4 billion .

�Thursday, May 21, 1992

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily ~~!!~~!

In the NHL playoffs,

Chicago beats Edmonton 4-3
in overtime to lead series 3-0

Page--4

Montreal shakes off deficit to post 6-5 win over Cincinnati
By The Associated Press
The Montreal Expos delivered
several lare messages - to their

fans and, perhaps. to themselves.
Trailing 5-2 headed into the
ninth and with Reds ace reliever

Nonn Olar11011 011 the mound, the
Expos appeared hea!tot for a threegame sweep II the baads of Cincinnati.
Thm Mouueal eruplfd (or four
runs. including Maquis Gri.!som •s
bloop single off Rob Di1Jb1c. to win
it6-5.
"I hit a blotea-b3l blooper,"
Grissom said_ ""Tbey all count.
He's the hanbl dllower 1'-e ever
faced It was quile a fntish. The
uue fans wen: Slill around. That
will t.eadl the bns who left 001 to
leave early."
It also migbl ICICb lbe Expos
somedling abcu.tlw""' tw:s.
"To llOOre rour l1lllS in tbe ninth
off ClwWo IIIII Dibl* is a boon
for the orr.,.,.,;· said Tun Wallach, whose ninlh-ioning single
gave him the Expos' CIR'Jer rec:ool
for hits_
Dibble appiRI!IIy W3SD •t ready
10 pitch or Jalt.
"We won the pme Tuesday."
Dibble said. ""but JOU didD' t come
and talk to me.. Now we lose and
you want 10 ll!IL"
The Reds bad fougltl bact (rom
a 2-{) defiCit in die finl inning 10 go
ahead 5-2 in the se-" wben they
sent II mcu 10 the piiR. Bodl l'3uJ
o·Neill md Barty UrtiD bad tworun singlc1.
But a...ttoo, wbo came oo in
the eigbth. allowal 9nglcs by Ivan
Caldaon and Llny Wakr 10 open
the ninth . Dibble relieved and
struck out Moises Alou, then
allowed an infield single w Wallach to load the bases_
Dibble {0-2) wallt.d piocb-b.itter
BROKEN UP- Cincinnati's Glenn Braggs (bottom) slides bard John Vandcrwalto IIIIR die san
into Montreal serond baseman Delino DeShields lo break up 1 dou- 5-3 belcce Tom Foley Sll'1ld out
ble play In tbe second Inning of Wednesday night's National League Pinch -hitler Brct Barberie tben
game in Montreal, wbicb tbe Expos WOD6-5. (AP)
walked to m* i. 5-4 before Grissom singled in the tying .and winning runs_
In other games. il was San
Diego 12, New Yort 6; Adanla 6.
St Louis 3; J'hjl...lphi• 2. HousIn the majors ...
Transactions
IOn I; San Fllii!Cisw 3. Piu.sbw'gh
I; and Los Angeles 5. O.irago 3.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BasebaU
F..alkm DlvWon
A meriCM l.apf'
Padta 12. Mds'
• Ttam
W L
PtL
GB
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Pl.1ced
At
San
Diego. Tcmy Fcmandez
. Pitl6bw].h
.... 23 \ 5
6IB
Keith Milia. infiddc:r, &lt;m Lhc 15-d.y dilSt. LouU ...
. 23 17
.515
I
matched his CJIRD beSI wi!b four
•blod lill. RecalJCid TCZTy Shumpm. mNewYod .......... 22 19
517
l5
fid der, from Omaha cl the Amcncan AlRB!s, including a t.llftle-ruo homer,
MOI'IU'ell ........ .. l 7 20
459
5.5
&amp;ociation.
as the PUa oupal for a scason
Philoddphio ... .... 11 21
.447
6
TEXAS RANGERS - R...Uod Ga-·
65
Ouca1o. .
17 22
436
ald Aleunda, pi tchCJ, from OUahom•
high in JUIIS_
City ollhc American AlaooJtiOI'I. Sent
Gary Shetr~eld. uteruling his
Wtltern Di•Won
R01c: Pnlik. pi&amp;cher. \0 Oklahan.~ City.
: San Fnncuco ..... 22 16
579
hinins sm:ak II 13 pmes WC!II 4
• San Oieco ...... .... .... 22 18
.550
I
Nlllklnal Latut
for 5 witb a homer aad satR:d IMc
· ClndnuU ----11 19
.!IJ
OOCAGO CUBS - Scnl. Ala Anu,
'-"
5
runs. Fred McGriff weal 3 for 5,
• Atlt.nu ..
19 23
452
infields, 10 lo"• oflhe Amcricaa A..oci ·
6
• ftootta~ .
11 n
.4n
1Uon . Acti••tcd Rey Sanchez, infieldc:~,
includirlg
1 two-nm douiJic
6
: Lol AngdCI ...
\~ 21
.417
from the \~- day dilabtcd ilJL
Craig LeiJCII!I (5-2) gu bis fiiSI
Wednesday's scores
viclmy ...... die Mess_
BMkttbaU

Scoreboard

San Fnncit.oo l. Pin&amp;burtth I

DENVER NUGGETS - Named Dan
lu~ co1ch and Gene L&amp;ttlu •ml Mike
E • - willant OOAdlc:..

Dieao 12. New 'York 6
U. Anaclat 5, Ouc•go 3

HOUSTON ROCKETS - Sianed

San

Rudy Tanjanarich, cot~ch, w • lhtee-yur

"""""-

Today's games
Pilll~

(Walk 1-2) at San FnnoKo
(Book"' :1-)). 3,35 p.m.
Nu• York (S. Fernandez 2-4) It s.n
Otqo (Oree: Hauis \-] ). 4 05 p.rn

Friday's games
Atllnta (Gl1vine 6 -2) It Mon tn•.•l
• (De.. Martinez J-4), 7 : ]~ p.m

•

·
Clnchnud (Belcher .l-4) 11 Ph Hadel. phla (lrantlt'r l ·l ), 7:J~ p.m.
Houllton (Portugal ) . \) at St Loua
(1)rd...«&lt;n 2-2), S:3j p.m
Chicat o (G . Madd~t 4 -3) at S•n
Oic&amp;o (Bene. 4·3 ). I O:l:ri p m
Pi.n.burJ.h (T anhn 4-3) at Lo. Ange. 1u (Undioai 4-2). 10·3' p m

'
New Y&lt;rl (Youns 2-J) at San l'rancu
: oo(Swii\6--0), l O~pm

AMERICA:" LEI\Gt:E
EutU'II Dhllloft

Twn
ToronlO .. . .
Ballimc.-e .

P("L
619
Ill'

GB

564

l5

... ..
DcuolL ....

W l
26 16
24 15
22 17
19 17
IS 21

528
462

~~~

Milw•ukce

17 20

459
.317

11.5
11.5

New YD!il: .
B~~t~n .

C~nland .------IJ
West~rn

18

~

filO

568

I

21 18
22 20

5)8

L5

Tu• ....

c.w-~

19 20

487

...

t5

Seanle . .

and c:h.ief fLn anci al officer. Siancd Tim
Ed• ud•. defauiYC end, and AI Goldm,
uatu Md..
PIIILADElJ'IllA EAGLES - S;pd
ChriJ Conlin, offen1ive lineman; Bri•n
Dowler, wide rueiver; 1nd Sttcy llarri·
am , COIIIII:rb.c:k.

n

By CHUCK MELVIN
A touch
of the flu wasn't about to keep Jose
Guzman from his appointed
rouods. ·
"I was saying, if I can reach
home plate with my fastball, I still
want to go out there and pitch, and
forget about being sick," GUllOan
said after he and Jeff Russell combined on a five-hit shutout
Wednesday night as the Texas
Rangers beat the Cleveland Indians
1-0.
Guzman (3-3) took a three-hit
shutout into the ninth inning, but he
left with one out and runners at
first and third after he gave up a
pair of singles sandwiched around
a forceout.
Russell got Sandy Alomar on a
fly 10 right that wasn 't deep enough
to score the runner from third although Ruben Sierra·s throw
bounced away from the catcher and
let the pote ntial winning run
advance to second. Thomas
Howard then ended t.lte game by
grounding out
Charles Nagy (4-3) lost despite
pitching a se ven -hitter for his
fo urth complete game. Guzman
lowered hi s ERA to 2. 76; Nagy
lowered his to 2.06.
" It was a masterpiece, both
sides," Texas manager Bobby
Valentine said. "You almost don't
want to see anybody lose that
game. It's tough to see Nagy pitch
weD and get the 'L'. Guzman was
up against a tough customer.''
The Rangers swept the three game series from Cleveland and
CLEVELAND (AP) -

~l,Aslnlsl

At PM...Iphia Terry Molbol-

Ln'SHIVEI
EMORIIL
-WITH PATIO FURNITURE FROM UFESTYU-

T~LISfOPE
.

The
'

Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

l

'

10

Ta:• 1, C ~nland t
Detroit 4, Milwau.ka: ]
Kuu.u City 7, Ouc.ago 2

SAL£

Toronw 8, Minna(U 7. 10 mlllll!ll

835"

Tonight's games
Milw•ull:ce (PIOMc 2-2) 11 Deuo11 (AI

df'Cd l -3), 7 :35 p .m.
Kanau C1ty (Gordon 0-S) at Tnu
(Rym Q.l ), &amp;:l'i p.m

) -0( se· -~ ~~~
.:ij .. -Jr:: d ;~:

Frld11y's g11mes
1\&lt;:w Y.-rt

C:nt

{Paer:4-3), 7·l0p.m

Ji :-~ ·:

C•Womi• (V•len 2 2) at B• lttmon:
(Mc:Dmlld S- 1). 7.JS p m
Minn•o l• (Smiley 3 2) at V ctJOol
(1..ciw 2-1), 1 :35 p.m
Torontll (Gut m1 n 5 0) It Omago
(Mcl)ow&lt;ll 7 11. i OS p m
Kanau C.ity (Gu. lncn 4 -2) at luu

Caneel Bay Sling
Patio Group by
Telescope Casual

(Wia J-.4), 8· J5 p m
Clt•ebnd (Cook 1-41 at Staltlt (A.
Jof'IMOI'I 4-3), JI :J~ p.m.

Cool and rt 1 re&lt;£~ 1'11'Q u~ ~ ro
ma1nta1n G·at-e~~~~~~ at.lbmm:um ~J
r·JS1 1rames •ea,ill-e ~·.:a:""

NBA playoff slate
T•lahl _ Oevci&amp;J1d 1t ChiCIJO, It

pc1yes1er 'm1s."'l (.)!l()~-­
wea1ne · -1es,1srr.an· - ehd'll'f:.dr~e

pmirw.y - Portlwl at Ullh. 8 p.m
S•l•rdar _ Ch1c•so 11 Cleveland ,
3:10p.m.

W~oaday'•

cbico,. •. Edman""'
_...,.,.o

score

J, OT.

BaM FREE with
Pun: h•M of Pllllo Group

em..,.,

Fvlttrel-

........ - PiiUbwlh

p.m..,..,_

"a....... n5

Chie&amp;IO II EdmOOt(ll, 9:3S

p.miatwrdaJ _ Pittabursh 11 Boston,

7o0l p.m.

"overs
REG. SAL£

Stanley Cup
conference finals

Matching urrtnlla l05.00 22&amp;.110
28!1.00 21UO
s-•ro&lt;br
201.00 141.110
Spring d\air
4010021100
Chaile loungo

iiftwD••r
•Wyt-S,Nf'*r

C....'lltW .....

....«
9

m

11

DECISION 92"
1

THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1992

QUland (S1ewan 2..4) 11 Bu.LOO (V,o--

S--2), 7:3.5 p.m

. . .

a

CLOSE CALL -Edmonton defenseman
Kevin Lowe Oeft) backbands a sbol on Cbicago
goalie Ed Belfour in the first J)eriod or Game 3

or tbe Campbell Coorerence finalsWednesday
night in Edmonton, Alberta, which lbe Blackhawks won 4-3 in overtime lo lead tbe best-orseven series 3-0. (AP)

Former Ohio State quarterback
to start for Ohio Glory Sunday
By RUSTY IWLLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In
the months leading up 10 the Ohio
Glory's first season in the World
League of American Football, general manager Peter Hadhazy got
tired of hearing Greg Frey's name.
Hadhazy would make a promotional appearance for the team and
someone would suggest the former
Ohio St.ate quanerback sbould get a
tryout. Like an overprotective Little League parent, a Buckeye fan
would figure a local son was the
answer to all of the team' s problems.
" In fact, I hated him until l got
to talk to him," Hadhazy said of
Frey.
Hadhazy is happy he finally
carne around. Frey, through a circuitous trip from Ariwna to Florida to Ohio 10 Barcelona, will stan
at quarterback Sunday when the
Glory hosts Binningham in its season finale.
"It's a strange lllm of event&lt;,"
Frey said, shaking bis head_
'"Strange" doesn't do it justice.
Frey has worked at four jobs in
the past four months, including

thr ee with professional athletic
teams_ He st.aned oul in February
with the Professional Spring Foolball League and was in camp in
Phoenix when the league folded
before its flfSt game.
Finding himself unemployed, he
quickly called the Detroit Tigers.
The Tigers had taken Frey, a righthanded hitting outfielder, in last
year's major -league draft. He
JOined the team 's Lakeland Class A
team this spring and hit .300, but
asked for h1s release when he was
asked to give up playing tim e to
accommodate other players.
Back in Columbus, where he
had stantcd for three years at quar·
terback for Ohio State, he spent
two day s training for a job at a
local car dealership. He was at
home on April 21, when he got a
phone call from Hadhazy.
"I said, 'Greg, how would you
like an all-expense paid trip to
Barcelona for four or five days?"'
Hadhazy recalled with a laugh.
The Glory's third-string quarrerbacl:., Chris Cochrane, had been
acquired by Frankfun and the team
needed a ftll-in be!ore depaning for

a game w1th the uragons the next
day . Frey had contacted Hadhazy
before the season but hadn ' l gouen
much of an audience.
"Quite frankly, we didn't show
much of an interest in him at the
urn e." Hadhazy said
But now, down to two quanerbacks, Hadhazy was in a bind and
sought oul Frey. At first , Frey
turned down the offer but later
accepted. He had to make a midnight drive two hours down the
road to Cincinnati to pick up his
oassoon before leaving on the team
plane at 8 a.m. the next day.
Glory coach Larry Little said at
th e time that he doubted if Frey
would even see action in the team's
final fiv e games. He also was
wrong.
Both Pat O'Hara and Babe
Laufenberg - the Glory's 10p two
~uarterback s - have been sidelined with injuries. Suddenly, Frey
has been thrust into a starting role
that no one could have fore seen
even a formight ago.
Last week, in his first World
League action, a tentative Frey
(See FREY on Page 6)

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

8Giton 6. Se.lltlc 4
().llind 4, BaiLtJnOre 2

1.11

base tn the first inning and he
(Guzman) saw how Nagy was
pitching, he knew there wasn't
much room for error - and he
didn't make any, " Valentine said.
Guzman, he said, sometimes
pitches better when he's less than
100 percent healthy.
"It's uncanny. If Guzman has
that little nu. it means he's going to
pitch a great game," Valentine
said. "Sometimes when he feels
real good, he overthrows."
In other games. Toronto edged
Minnesot.a 8-7, Boston beat Seattle
6-4, Detroit downed Milwaukee 4·
3, Oakland beat Balt1more 4-2.
New York edged California 3-2 in
12 innings and K;msa.s City defeated Chicago 7-2_
Blue Jays 8, Twins 7
The Toronto Blue Jays were
detenmined not to get swept again
by Minnesot.a at the SkyDome, and
they were ready to fight with the
Twins and the umpires to make
sure it didn 't happen.
The Blue Jays, after clearing the
benches in the fourth inning
because of beanballs and filing a
protest in the rtfth because of suspicious bats, eventually wound up
with an 8-7 win Wednesday night
when Pat Borders singled home the
deciding run in the lOth inning.
Tempers flared in the founh in
Toronto when Minnesota 's Scott
Erickson threw a pitch behind
Derek Bell. Blue Jays staner Todd
Stottlemyre, who already was out
of the game, led the charge from
the dugout.
(See AL on PageS)

AL contests .. o __:&lt;_Co_n_tin_ued_fro_m_P_:ag~e_:4l

Wtdnesda y's S&lt;"ores

II

have won four straight. The Indians
have lost five in a row and 10 of
their last II.
They've bee n shut out se ven
times this year.
"We battled all night, but we
ran into a tough pitcher," manager
Mike Hargrove said. " We didn' t
tear the cover off the ball, but we
hit some balls hard."
The Rangers scacd their run on
a sixth-inning RBI single by Ruben
Sierra. Rafael Palmeiro walked and
moved to second when Juan Gonzalez hit a grounder that Nagy
fielded and threw to first. Sierra
then singled to right.
Nagy said be considered trying
to force Palmeiro at second but
thought better of it because Gonzalez' grouoder was hit toward first
base.
"I would have had to throw
back across my body," Nagy said.
"I would have launched it into left
field. I made the mistake of walking Palmeiro and he ended up score
in g."
The Ranger s started three
innings with doubles and came
away empty each time. In the first,
Huson doubled and went lo third
on a groundout before Gonzalez
struck out and Kevin Reimer lined
out to diving center fielder Kenny
Lofton . In the seventh, Jack
Daugherty doubled , but Na2v
retired the next three hitters. In the
ninth, Reimer doubled and went 10
third on a bunt before Ivan
Rodriguez popped up and Dean
Palmer grounded out.
"When we left that guy on rll'St

J

•

New Ymi ], Cahlomu 2. 12 ummgJ

Mil wntkoe (N1varro }-4)

With the score 1-1, Will Clark
and Cory Snyder hit one-out sin·
gles in the sixth before Matt
Williams had a soft smgle over
third that scored Clark. Chris James
was walked intentionally and
pinch-hitter Mike Felder hit a
popup to sballow center field that
Andy Van Slyke caught. But he
hesitated before throwing to the
plate, and Snyder scored.

Dodgers S, Cubs 3
At Los Angeles, Mike Shal:person pulled the Dodgers into a tic
with a two-run double . Then he
knocked the ball loose from catcher
Joe Girardi later in the inning for
the go-ahead run.
Down 3- 1 in the fifth, Los
Angeles rallied as Sharperson hit a
deep drive to left-center field, driving in Eric Karros and Brett Butler.
Kal Daniels hit a sharp grounder
deep into the hole, where shonstop
Jose Vizcaino made a diving stop
and threw home. Girardi fielded the
ball on one hop, but Sharperson
barreled over him and th e ball
dropped.

Texas hands Cleveland 1-0 loss

0

TT~

:)42

innings. Jeff Brantley gOl three outs
for his fourth save.
Zane Smith fell to 0-7 against
the Giants in his last 10 appearances.

At Atlanta, StcYt: Avery, who
hadn "1 won in oearly a month,
allowed four bits in 8 1/3 innings
and Brian Huoltt bit a two-run
homer and dnM: in tbrec IUDS.
Avery, 18-11 I yea ago, -.led
last-inning relief lrom Marvin
Freeman, wbo got lbe fmal two
outs. but abo pw: .., one hit and
one run _ Avery walked five and
struck rut thnx.

5

~24

l ) 25

KaMa• City

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Named J.mea HauamaM Y'ia: prealderll

!j

fourth straight victory. Like Avery,
he needed relief, and Mitch
Williams made it even more exciting than did Fr~man for Atlanta.
Mulholland (4-3) gave up nine
hits, Slruek out six and walked one.
Williams came on with runners at
ftrst and second and walked Craig
Biggio, loading the bases. He got
Steve Finley to pop oulto shonstop
and Jeff Bar'ell to fly out to right
field to end ll.
Giants 3, Pirates I
At San Franci sco, the Giants
handed the Pirates their fifth
straight loss behind Bud Black ,
who allowe d four hits in 7 2/3

f.Nvl$1on

21 16

~

FootbaU
National Foolbllll Laaue

4

2A Ill

Oollind
Chict.&amp;O.

a.-.-6,c..

Natkaal BuUillaH Alledadml

M.onlrul '· Cincinnati ~
fltulldelphi• 2, 1--Iouftm 1
Allanu 6, Sl. LouUI 3

land pitched 8 1/3 innings for his

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

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The benches and bullpens emptied, but no punches were thrown
and no one was ejected.
An inning later, Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston announced he
was playing the game under
protest. He contended thai home
plate umpire Larry Young would
not comply wilh his request lo
check Greg Gagne's bat after
Gagne hit his second home run of
the season in the founh .
"Cito protested in the fifth,"
Young said. " In his words , 'a
protest for nol checking Gagne's
bal.' He didn't make lite request
and I want to make this clear, at no
time did I deny a request from him
to check the bat. He never asked
me . He never said lo me that he
wanted the bat checked."
Gaston said he requested the bat
be checked before Gagne's homer
and after the at-bat, and claimed
that Young did nol comply with his
request because the umpire was
uncert.ain of the rule govermng
lalllpered bats. Gaston thought the
bat was corked. and made three
trips to speak with Young follow ing the at-bat
''He didn't know the rule. It was
JUSt a mistake," Gas10n said.
Twins manager Tom Kelly. as
expected, said there was no reason
10 check Gagne. anyway.
The Blue Jays scored their fU'St
seven runs on homers by Bell, Joe
Carter, John Olerud and Kelly Gruber. They won it in the lOth against
Rick Aguilera (0-4) when Gruber
reached on an error by Gagne at
shonstop, a single by Olerud and
an intentional walk that loaded the
bases.
The Twins brought in Randy
Bush from righl field to play a fiveman iltlield, but Borders foiled the
strategy with a deep drive to center.
Tom Henke (2-1) pitched one
inning for the victory.
Red Sox 6, Mariners 4
Ellis Burks' sixth career grand
slam a tie -breaking shot in the
eighth inning at Fenway Park, lifted Boston over Seattle and compleled a Ihree-game sweep.
Roger Clemens (6-3), coming
off consecutive shutouts, gave up ·
two runs on six hits in eight
innings.
Tigers 4, Brewers 3
Mickey Teuleton •s three-run
bMtU,~tt~ 9ll«HlUI in the ninth
~ t\etroil over Milwaukee at Tiger Stadium.
Chris Bosio, 3·0 with a 1.89
ERA against the Tigers last season,
limited them to one run on three
hits for eight innings. Bul he was

pulled with one out and one on in
the ninth, and Doug Henry (0- 1)
walked Cecil Fielder, then gave up
Tettleton's ninth home run .
Athletics 4, Orioles 2
Oakland finished off a three game sweep in Baltimore behind
Bob Welch and Dennis Eckersley.
Mike Bordick's sacrifice fly m
the seventh inning put the Athletics
ahead 3-2.
Welch (2-2) allowed seven hits
in eight innings. Eckersley pitched
the ninth for his 16th save in 16
tries.
Yankees 3, Angels 2
Charlie Hayes doubled home
Jesse Barfield from fll'St base with
one out in the 12th inning as New
York completed a three -gam e

sweep at Yankee St.adium.
Barfield, who tied the game in
the ninth with a sacrifice ny, singled with one out in the 12th off
Chuck Crim (1 -2). Hayes, in a 3for-32 slump, followed with a deep
double to left-center.
John Habyan (2-1) pitched two
inniings.
Royals 7, White Sox 2
Hipolito Pichardo pitched five
shutout innings to win his first
major league Stan and Mike Boddicker finished for his first major
league save as Kansas City won at
Comiskey Parle.
Gregg Jefferies hit hi s fir st
major league grand slam, connecting in the ftfth inning against Alex
Fernandez (2-5).

EDMONTON, Albena (AP)The Chicago Blackhawks are one
vic tory away from their fiTS! Stanley Cup appearance in 19 years,
and they are blazing a record pace
to get there.
"We 're committed to excellence," Chicago's Jeremy Roenick
said after the streaking Blackhawks
won their record-tying lOth straight
playoff game with a 4-3 ovcnimc
victory over the Edmonton Oilers
Wednesday night.
"It was a combinat ion of 20
guy s that really laid their hearts
down on th e ice and played
ex tremely hard."
Th e victory gave the Blackhawks a 3-0 lead in the best-ofseven Campbell Conference fmals,
which they can clinch in Game 4
Friday night in Edmonton_
That would move the Black hawks in10 the NHL finals for the
first time since 1973 , when they
lost to the Montreal Canadiens.
They haven't won the Stanley Cup
since 1961.
In moving to the brink of the
finals, the Blackhawks tied a 22year-old playoff record held by the
Boston Bruin s, who won I 0
straight in the 1970 playoffs.
Chicago's last loss was to the
St. Louis Blues in the Norris Divi sion semifinal. The Blackhawks
won the next three games of that
se ri es and dispatched Detroit in
four straight.
Coincidentally, Chicago's Ed
Belfour tied Boston's Gerry Cheevers, whose I0 straight wins in 1970
is the existing record for goal tenders.
"It was a tot.al team effon that
won it, not JUSt one or two play ers," said Roenick, who scored the
winning goal 2:35 into overtime on
a great deflection of a shot by Chris
Chclios.
Chicago spotted Edmon10n a 20 lead for the second straight game
on goals by Bernie Nicholls and
Craig MacTavish. But Brian Noonan, Rob Brown and Chelios gave
the Blackhawks a 3-2 lead in th e
second period.
Edmonton's Brian Glynn tied it
at 7:13 of the third to force overtime before Roenick scored th e
game-winner for Chicago on one of
the prettiest plays of the mght.
The Blacichawks dominated the
extra period. It appeared the Oilers
were about to clear the puck when
Chelios moved up to corral a loose
puck.
He passed quickly in front to
Roenick, who scored his ninth goal
of the playoffs on a high shol over
Oilers goaltender Bill Ranford ,
Chicago's fifth shot of the overtime. Edmonton had none.
"Our two best players - Chelio s and Rocnick - made the
biggest play of the game," Blackhawks coach Mike Keenan said.
The Oilers were embarrassed 82 and 4-2 in Chicago's raucous st.a dium in Games I and 2, but played
bener at the start of Wednesday
night 's game. Nicholls scored on a
rebound on Edmonton's first shot
two minutes into the first period,
and MacTavish convened a 2-on-1
at the 13 -minute mark.
Edmonton outshot Chicago I3-6
in the first period, but the Blackhawks reversed that in the second
to t.ake command with their trademark buzz-sa w auack.
Noonan made it 2-1 at 6:36 of

the second when he banged home
Roenick's rebound , and Brown
scored his flfSt goal of the playoffs
on the power play at 13:31.
He was left all alone in front of
Ranford and balled Michel
Goulet's centerin g pass out of the
air 10 tie the game.
Chelios kept the puck in at the

Oi ler blue line wnh JUSt over a
minute left in the period and his
low point shot found the comer of
the net.
After sustained Oiler pressure in
the Blackhawks w ne, Glynn fll'ed a
high point shot throu gh traffic to
pull the Oilers even at 7:13 of the
final period.

Foyt, Andretti among
graybeards at Indy 500
By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A.J .
Foyt, Mario Andretti and the other
graybeards of auto racing are an
oddity. In earlier generations, they
never would have lasted as long as
ttey have, let alone remained competitive all these years.
"You wouldn ' t be here. You
retired or you were dead, " recalls
Louie Meyer, the first three-time
winner of the Indianapolis 500 and
one of only a handful of drivgs
who survived - and thrived \through Indy' s most deadl y
decades.
Foy t will be starting his 35th
consecutive ra ce Sunday and, at
age 57, is the oldest known driver
in Indy history. Andrelti, 52, will
he making his 27th stan; A1 Unser,
53 nex t week, is st.arting his 26th
race ; Gordon Johncock, 55, his
24th; Gary Benenhausen, 50, his
20th ra ce; and Tom Sneva, the
baby of the crowd at43, will be in
his 18th race.
All of them were expec ted to he
on the track today for the final
practice session before Sunday's
race. The two -hour "Carburetion
Day" practice is the only time the
car s ar e allowed on the track
between the end of qualifications
and the stan of the race .
Thirty drivers who began their
ca reers after Foyt's first race in
I958 made 10 or more st.ans. Only

nine drivers, including Meyer, who
staned t.lteir careers in the 1920s,
lasted that long.
No driver who started his career
before 1930 appeared in more than
16 races. Thirteen wbo began their
careers in the 1950s or '60s have
driven in 17 or more races.
Why the longevity?
.
"The safely standards are temfic," said Meyer. " So many innovations have come out. Now
they're going 230 mph ... I don't
believe it. "
The '3 0s were the deadli esj
decade. Twenty drivers, mechanics
and spectators were killed froni
1930-39- almost a third of the 65
deaths in the entire 83-year history
of the track.
" In '33 alone, we lost five, "
said Meyer, 87, the oldest known
former driver. But the threat of
death, or even of injury, has never
and will never deter race drivers.
he sa1d.
Meyer, who lived in California,
fir st came to Indianapolis m 1926
as a mechanic and ftrst drove a race
car at the AscOt track 10 Los Angeles later that year. He recalled spinning his car and going back wards
down the track as all the other cars
passed him. His brother told bini;
.. You' II never make a race driver ..
Get out."
The ncx t year, he was back at
(See VETERANS on Page 6)

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

No blacks hired to take
place of fired coaches

I'IRSf PLACE - Tile rounome

or Rob Morgan, Pllt O' Briea,

J•J Ritpnlolf ud Du Morris (L-R) were the winners in the

runt Bi&amp; Bnd Sknwbeelrr Association Golr Tournament held
recatly M 1i1e Mcip Couty Golf Course.

SECOND PLACE - Winniag second place in the Big Bead
Sk••••ed ""' 41ioa Gell Tournament was the roursome of BiD
N~ Jab Mawr, Mikt Lavender and Bob Hysell (L-R). The
-rui.e..s . . lleld ncaiiJ aldie Meigs COUDty Goll' COIII'Se.

By BILL BARNARD
Wilkens said.
"The NBA is rar more progresAP BasketbaU Writer
Opportunities for blacks aren ' t sive that any other major sports
keepmg pace with the large number league." Cavs general manager
of coaching vacancies in the NBA. Wayne Embry said . "Over the
Eleven teams have changed years, the number of blacks hired
head coaches since the start of this seems to go in cycles."
Embry said be is concerned that
season and two of the four black
coaches in the league were fired. Chaney was fu-ed so quickly after
None of the teams have filled their being voted coach of the year, and
does not appear 10 be a major canopenings with a black.
On Wednesday, the Houston didate for any of the cum:nt openRockets retained interim coach ings.
'Tm corJCerned about that, but
Rudy Tomjanovich for the job held
until midseason by Don Chaney, a I'm more concerned about society
black who won the NBA cooch of as a whole because the NBA
unquestionably has come farther
the year award in 1991.
The black-owned Denver than society as a whole," Embry
Nuggets gave Dan Issei the team's said.
Bob Lanier, fooner president of
vacant head coaching job. a decision made by Bernie Bickerstaff. the NBA players union and curone of five black NBA general rently head of the league' s Stay In
School program, said he was never
manager.;.
" We selected who we think is asked to consider taking a coaching
the best person for this organiza- position.
"Everybody wants 10 be asked,
tion," Bickerstaff said. "I said earlier my choice would not be based but blacks are always fOld you have
on racial composition or friend- to be experienced," Lanier said.
"Dan Issei puts the tie to that idea
ship."
"The true test is what happens right there."
Lanier said he doesn't specifiover a period of time, not just in
cally
object to Issei' s hiring
one year." he said. "I think the
"because
Denver saw the qualities
NBA's track record on this maaer
has been pretty good. We started you need to be a coach in h1m.
"When I came off my playing
the season with four black head
coaches. Now there are only two. career, I thoughl I had those quali but there are five black general ties and I was never asked. On the
managers. better than any other other hand. if teams can't see I
have lhe attributes and the gifts to
sport..' '
do
the job. I don't really want it "
Bickerstaff said two blacks With
80 percent or the NBA •s
Gene Liules and Mack Calvin players
black, Lanier asked,
were among four men interviewed
"Aren't
more
of them qualified to
for lhe Nuggets' job. Littles and
another black, Mike Evans. were move up when their careers are
over? The numbers speak for them·
hired as assistants for Issei.
"Don Chaney, Gene Litiles and selves. There has to be something
Paul Silas all have been coaches, else there that's keeping the numand they deserve a chance again ," bers low."
Cleveland Cavaliers coach Lenny

Ex-Xavier eager having trouble
finding college court to call home
CINCINNATI (AP) - Maurice

Brantley was kicked orr the Xavier
University basketball team last season. Now he's looking for another
place to play college ~ketball and
he still hopes 10 earn an acadern ic
degree.
"I 'm a black man," Brantley
said. "I can't be oul there with no
degree in this world. I'd suffocate.''

1111RD PLACE - w-...m, llaird place ia llle Big Bend Steraw~l AssodatiGa GGif lournameut was the roursome or York
lwctes, Rnl T.d«,ltid. Simmons and Ernie Schuler (L-R).

Frey...

(Coolioocd

rrom Page 5)

came in afler Laufenberg was
sacmt se-. limes in tht ftrSt half.
Ftey cxwnpkrd II ol 26 posses for
164 yards and the Glory 's only
wucbdown iD a 21-7 loss to SacraIIICIIIO.

" I dlillt it was Branch RICkey
who Slid. 'Same o{ the best trades
are !be ones you don't make,"'
Hadbazy said "In tlus ca&lt;e, we got

lucky. We deserved 10 get lucky.
Teams that an: 1-8 deS&lt;:rve some
luct."
Lillie said ··1didn't know Greg
until I met him in Barcelona. He
came in last ....,k and d1d a fine
job. The more he plays. the better
he'D get."
" You'..: a d aU tlkR cliChes:
T d nlher he lucky than good· or
'You've go110 he in the right place
at tbe ngbt ume , .. · Frey said .
"Both of those f1t the bill righ t

now.··

Indy 500 vtltrans .. .

For his pan. he 's already thinking about what he' ll do come Mon day. with yet another job behind
him. He's looking for a tryout for
an NFL team.
' Td love for lha1 to hap~ but.
honestly, il probably won L Playing two games in the World League
doesn 't get you in the door," he
said.

"But I'm sure as heck going to
try ."

ELECT

GARY R. DILL
Republican Candidate For
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Hard Working- Dedicated to Meigs County
p~ !wily Grt I. Dl.

48190 RNIMI U.,!aat IIH-. OH.

(Coouru:d from Page 5)

Indianapohs as a mechan1c 10
Wdbur Sbaw. s poL During the ra&lt;:e.
Shaw pulled in. exha usted and
climbed 001 of the car. There was
no one else to d11ve. Meyer
~- so the car owner told hun
10 get in.

"I took u 100-somc miles. and
~ rl us. we fmiShed
founh."
In 1928. Mc:}a hal a nde lmcd
up with c. owner August Duesen berg. Tbe ooly problem was there
was no car. He v.liked mto a room
and saw pans scaom:d all over the

between the

floor.

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

" I had to put Jt togethe r," he
said. " Tbey bad oo mechanic. So
we gOl the car IOgether. and I got
about 10 laps of praclice. and
Augie came up and said. 'l oUie ,
the ar was Del last nigbl ·· ·
Meyer did some scramblin g.
found -her ride with the Miller
t.eanl, qualified 13th. moved up to
third by 400 miles and won the

race.

" From Ibm on. it was a lot easicl'for me 10 gel a car:· he saJd.

--Sports briefs-l'nl rond&gt;a•
NEW YORK (AP) - The New

Yorl GiaJIIS llavc cxp811ded their
mcditll eywj•'Mim aod are rat-

Slid.

Brantley has been unable to find
another school where he can play.
So he is considering re-enroUing at
Xavier, where he's not permitted to
play.
"It's my only option," said the
junior forward from Belleville,
Mich.
Xavier coach Pete Gillen kicked
Brantley off the team at the end of
last season . Gillen has allowed
Brantley to keep his scholarship in
order to complete the remaining 44
hours for a degree in criminal justice.
Brantley met with Northern
Kentucky University officials on
May 1 about transferring and playing for the Norsemen next season.
The only other school to contact
him was another NCAA Division U

Dr. Tracy BeD

Dr. BeU is a Board
Certified Family
Practitioner and will limu
her practice to out pati£nt
medicine.
Her hours will be
Tuesdays
1:00 to 7:00p.m.
and
Fridays
1:00 to 5:00p.m.

school, Wayne State in Detroit
But Branlley expects his cumulative grade point average to dip
below a 2.0 on a scale of 4.0 after
this semester. If that occurs. he'd
be on academic probation and ineligible to play elsewhere.
''I'm messed up all the way
around," he said.
Brantley said he isn ' t comfonable at Xavier because he thinks
GiUen wants him to b111lsfer.
But GiUen said no one is pressuring Branlley to leave.
"We're..trying to help him get
his degree, Gillen S31d
Brantley and Gillen differ on the
reasons behind the dismissal.
Brantley. who was suspended by
Gillen five times in three years,
said he was kicked off the team
because of rumors about him that
created a bad personal reputation.
"He wants me out or here
because he thinks I'm a negative
innuence and won't change."
Brantley said.

Grueser presents program to club members

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hof{lich

TOMJANOVICH mRED - Houston Rockets interim coach
Rudy Tomjanovich smiles ala news conrerence Wednesday foUowing the announcement or his signing a three-year contract as the
team's head coach. He has heen with the Rockets ror 20 years as a
player, scout and assistant coach. (AP)

Issei named Denver Nuggets' head coach
DENVER (AP) - Dan Issei, a vowed 10 make the club exciung to
star forward for th e Denver waleh again.
Nuggets for I 0 seasons, today
Issei. 43. is the Nuggets' lOt.h
became the team's head coach and head coac h in Denver's 25-year
history as a pro basketball fran --Sports briefs-- chise. He succeeds Paul Westhead,
who was fired by general manager
Pro basketball
Bernie
Bickerstaff after two dismal
DENVER (AP) - Dan Issei, a
seasons
as coach.
star forward for the Denver
Bickerstaff also announced that
Nuggets for 10 seasons, was named
head coach. Issei , 43 . is the lOth Charlotte Hornets vice president
head coach in Denver 's 25-year Gene Lit!les, formerly the Hornets'
history . He succeeds Paul West- head coach, will be Issei's No. I
head flied after two dismal seasons assistanL Mike Evans. who was an
as c~ach . Gene Littles and Mike assistant to Westhead, will remain
on Issei's staff as his No. 2 assisEvans were named as assistants.
tant.
Pro baskethaU
Issei has no coaching experience
HOUSTON (AP) - The "mterim" was taken off Rudy Tom · and had served as a television comjanovich' s title as the Houston mentator at Nuggets' games for the
Rockets gave him a three-year con- past four years. He had planned on
becoming Kentucky's director of
tract to be head coach.
tourism
before being approached
Tomjanovich. who played II
about
the
head coach job.
years with 1he Rockets. replaced
Don Chaney on Feb. 18 and led the
Rockets 10 a 16-14 record lhe rest
IOWOPENnB
of lhe season. He was an assistant
and scout for nine seasons.

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Two former Middleport men
hav e chosen a bit of a different
mode of transportation to come
back to the Middleport Alumn1
Association reunion Saturday
night.
They are Edward Lee McComas
and Walter Murray Harri s, both
former marines. who have traveled
by yacht from SL Louis, Mo .• arriving in the Middleport area Tuesday .
The boat belongs to McComas who
resides in the St. Louis area However, I'm told that Harris has a similar one at his home on Newport
Rilehie. Fla.
McComas is the son of the late
lee W. and Julia McComas of
Middlepon and Harris is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Searles,
Cheshire. No doubt the two friends
have some interesting stories 10 tell
aboul their trip ba::k to Middleport
as well as some interesting statistics to report. We have an S.O.S.
out for th em to provide mor e
deta ils- perhaps. th ey will be
forlhcommg.
And speaking of the Middleport
High Alumni reunion, did you
know that Kitty Bachtel Dallas will
be encceing the festivities Saturday
night? And, by the way, the fronl
of the fonner high school, now the
Meigs Junior High School. should
be a si~ht for Middlepon alumni
what woth t.he ouldoor decorations
that are being pulled together by
Iva Sisson, alumni president, and
her group. Should be striking.
Seems like I was sworn 10 some
son of secrecy on the preparations
so I can 'I say more.
Women of the Middleport Pentecostal Church will be preparing
the dinner to be served on the
school lawn al6:30 p.m. However.
you can't wait until 6:30 to get
there. No Siree! The Middlepon
Alumni Band whi ch has been
pulled together for Saturday's
reunion will be appearing at 6: 15
p.m. And the M.H.S. cloggers will
entertain while your dinner is being
served. AI Sahley of Charleston.
W. Va. will be spinning the pialtees for the dance and will be offering "something for everybody"
including some golden old1es .
Photos wilf be taken of reunion
clas.ses.
A Pomeroy mother and her son
will both be graduating this spring.
Diana Harrison will be grnduating from Hocking Technical College on June 7 as a trained medical
asistanL Meanwhile. her son, John
Martin Harrison , will graduate
from Meigs High on Sunday .
Diana is the daughter or Mary
McAngus and the late Martin
McAngus of Pomeroy. Sounds like
a family celebration is in order.
Bob Houdashelt is doing much
better at his Wehe Terrace home in
Pomeroy following his second back
operation at St. Joseph Hospital 10
Parkersburg, W. Va. Bob sends
along his heartfelt thanks to family
and friends for their prayers. sup port. cards and nowers. Bob has
had some major stuff over the past
few years- he's glad to be doing
well.
I almost forgot to tell you about
the emergency runs in April .
Seems incredible but the various
units made 200 or them including
103 to Veterans Memorial; 26 to

The Wildwood Garden Cl ub
held its monthlY. meeti ng at the
home of Beuy Milhoan.
The meeting opened with devotion s of two readings by Eve lyn
Hollon, "The Month of April" and
Holzer Medical Cenler; II to "The Power of Elements at Work,"
Pleasant Valley and 18 to other followed by prayer.
institutions. The Pomeroy Unit
For roll call each named their
made 51 of the runs; Middleport. favorite Easter remembrance.
49; Racine, 33; Rutland, 29; SyraKathryn Miller presided al the
cuse, 27; Tuppers Plains, eight, and meeting and announced the Meigs
Columbia, three. In addition, the County Garden Oubs are sponsorunits which make up, of course, the ing a series of workshops on flower
Meigs County Emergency Medical arranging. These classes will be
Services, made 42 transfer runs.
held at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall Ma y through August in hopes
A history of the SL Paul Luther- lhat more members will take pan in
an Church in New Haven, W. Va., the fair flower show .
is being prepared. The preparers
Betty Milhoan gave th e Arbor
are currently looking for a photo of Day report. She staled the idea of
the Rev. David Strang, a form er setting apart one day each year for
pastor of the church, at least 15 planting trees came from a man
years ago. If anyone should have who lived on the treeless plains of
one would you please contact Mrs . NebrdSka. J. Sterling Monon, who
Mildred Fry. P.O. Box 75, New later became United States SecreHaven, W. Va. 25265, or phone tary of Agriculture, realizing what
her at 304-882-2626. She'd really
appreciate hearing from you.

. .E.r:!;.~~-~.--J
•

va lue. beauty and comfort !Ices
would add to the barren spaces of
h1s state, persuaded t.he authorities
of Nebraska to proclaim th e first
Arbor Day, April 22, 1872. In Ohio
two new ideas were introduced, the
day was made a sc hool festival and
the practice was started of planting
memorial trees and groves as monuments to the fallen soldiers of th e
f~rst World War.
Butternies was the topic of the
program presented by Dori s
Grueser. She noted a poet once
called butterflies a stemless fl oat·
ing nower. They have a complete
metamorphosis. They are born as
larvae from an egg. A larva is
worm -like and in thi s stag e is
called a ca terpillar. ButterOie s,
skippers and moth s belong to the
order Lepidoptera, meaning scalywinged whi ch cenain portions of
t.hcir bodies arc covered with a very
fine soft glistening dust t.hat comes
off the wings when touched. To teU
the difference between moths and

butterOies look at their antennacs .
If they have knobby ends they are
butternies. To tell the male from
thc female. the male has dark spots
on hi s wings which are missing
from the female . There are more
than I 00,000 species throughout
the world. Mrs. Milhoan showed a
butterOy hibernation box she had
purchased.
For th e arrang ement of 1he
month . Juanita Will had purple

l1lac on a wJckO' baJ.Ut_ a1;o fo- a
specimen ex.lubn ..tr had blv o1 the
valley. purple nolru and ..d tnlhum .
To conclude the lllCtliag Evdyw
Hollon had a gam&lt; IIR'!lnmblill&amp;
names or garden ~ •itb
pnzes going 10 lloru Grurev:t and
Peggy Moore. The !Kmcss then
served rcfreshmerus 10 ..., mcmbers and Mrs . ~ woalho: bo!lessdoorprize.

Birthdays, anniversaries celebrated
Mother' s !Jay , birlhdays and
anniversaries were celebrated at lhe
home of Mr. and Mrs. John A.
Dean. Wolfe Pen Road.
The 441h anniversary of Mr and
Mrs. Kcnnetl1 Marlcins, Racine, and
the birthday s of John A. Dean and
Kcnnet.h Marlcins, were celebrated.
Atlending were Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth Marlcins. Racin e; Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Terrell, Mr. and Mrs
Raben Reid. Mrs. Virgima Smilh.
Mica Dawn and Josha and Davod

Reid. Tammy .md Danll Reid, all
of Pataskala; Mr. and Mn !Cometh
Jones. Karla and Angle l]d,rnn[]e,
Pa.; Mr . and Mrs . Juruor Hollan
Smalley. Mr. and MK 0a1oe Sm:illey, Chris and Adam Un. Mr. and
Mrs. Hob&gt;e Sma!iey aDII Jemra. all
of Wi erton. W.Va..; Mr. anr11 ~lr!.
John W . Dean .md James. Mr. amd
Mrs. Bill Spaun . hdu md Slwlnon. Adam Riffle, .all oll'llmmloy;
Mr . and Mrs . Garold Gilkey.
Athens; .John and Vupnia Dcon.

I'm really out of it these days. I
didn't even get to vote on the
young or mature Elvis stamp. Oh
well. keep smiling.

Poet's comer
Lord , I ain't been home since
Mama

And I ain't hen home since
Papa.
I hear the band a playing
Cause they know I'm coming
thru.
I ain't been hoime since Mama
I ain't been home since
Lord you clear!Sed my sou
And you promised me a home.
Let Mama know I'm coming
Let Papa know I'm corning
I won't be missing th em no
more
Cause my Lord saved me
And he said I was going home.
Now please open th ose ga tes
and play thai horn
My Lord has g1ven me a pass to
heaven
And I' m anxiou s to see my

Paj

'Bif i!UIIj~

I

,

11

1JRJe.balt
!N C ~ CtO Pf fl ,,

Mama

Save ?0

And I' m anxiou s to see my
Papa.
My Lord has promi sed me a
home
Where my pain will be no more.
My Lord is with me
And I'll surely make it home.
I ain't been home since Mama
And I ain't been home since
Papa
The band is a playing
Cause they know I'm on my
way
The Lord is with me
And showing me the way.
Written by Josephine Tyree.
122 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy.

~

...•
Big League Baseball Encyclopedia
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Award winner
Amy Harrison has been recog ·
nized for academic achievement as
a Uniled States National Honor
Roll Award winner.
She attends Meigs Junior High
School and wiD appear in the United States Achievement Academy
Official Yearbook, publi shed
nationally.
The USAA National Honor Roll
Awards provide honor roll students
with many benefits and services
and is a great tribute to a studcnl's
dedication, talent and ability.
Harrison is the daughter of
Diana Harrison and John Harrison.
The grandparents are Mary Me An ·
gus , Pomeroy: Laura Harrison .
Pomeroy, and Jack Harrison, Rut land.

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~

CI H

wr01 thr s coupon

1

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'X1 •o•n1nen 1 0 &lt;1!' oo,
iY" I •I'O!Tie " " "0 dl Pd'11('[1.1 1o1l(; ~d ikll
5~dc &gt; SIO'! I d ~D II'J''"' 'JO•O ~ll f'' wnn• D
·I•C n·1 'd ~ Co~ono nJ •, "' r Ol " •d 'LII' I • P•'~ l

!DOD .........

Clear-Fone··

RadarlWala

2995

Cut

~

Reg. 39 .9S

0') ~

IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY!
o

COME JOIN US
IN CELEBRATING
90 YEARS OF SERVING
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

~#-_AII-Sf1L

Friday, May 22

lllaek

Big-Button Phone Clock Radioltassette

i39!,~.

25%2995
25%2995
Off
Off

Reg . 69.95

• Folds up for
convenient storage

-

RO',!. 39.95

Tone/pulse OICIIIng

.t43 -802

-

itMMI J1laek

AMlFM Headset

_

Reg . 3995

• Wake to tape.
FM or AM •1 2-1581

SUPER'TAP£ •

MICRONTA

Wristwatch

Cut

25%
_

Bmm Video Tape

1495 699 Cut~
MP - 120

Reg . 19 .95

• Monlh/dal e
wtndow

Reg

-

HG-120

2~

8.9 9 -

-Cut fj88
4~ . . ...

.... 0.,.

U4 ~~ ~?

•44 451

•63

ltllllle .....
Halogl!ofb !§It
5

• Includes ba111enes

':)(16 ~

~ ~.-

; -;-

- Open House - Refreshments Cake and Punch Served
During Regular Banking Hours
at

97 N. Second Street, Middleport

Meigs Health Services

~~~e.-«.uu.gcamp.

Thursday, May 21, 1992

Page 7

Appointments may be mode by calling

why
dte (Me _..,.. 1 iug for HIV.
leaoiJ dial to gcucnl manager
Geaqe YCIIIII&amp;A . - dose 10 the It= said
mv 1llood - WCR diiiC priJr to

The Daily Sentinel

ladle

MJ!RICA'S
v
Sf'tJRE .

With me COA-1000 Internal CD-ROM dnve Amencn Tr!Otmcn
Store tS makmg Multtmedta compu fmg atlordable Asmgle
dtsc can store up to 260 000 paqes oltel(t Ui60 megab es ·

:a1

Encyclopedtas. dtC!tonanes and othe r reference wo~s
! 8UCI
enhanced graphtcs aM even anrmatton all! all available on~ ID

The COR-1000 bnngs 11 all to your PC We bnng you h~h ~tllltl -

!he h ~h

pnce

~

"0% ln teres1ano no paymenr un111 September 1992 on app10ved RSV P accoun t w11h ,, ngte ·tldi:B I purcha ses totaling $50 00 or more

WORKING TO EXCEED YOUR EXPECTATIONS .. •
Member FDIC

DOL

FoiiOW•ng 11'1&amp; no ·•nterest pe"oo any remam •ng balance •s subject to a lrnance charge of up to 21~ APR dependrng Dl'l your slate at
resrdence
mrnrmum monthty trnance charge) Reier to your RSVP A.ccoun t Agreament Otter ~ah(l May 7·30 1992

rsoc

Most ballery -powered rtems e~clude battenes SWITCHABLE TO UCH -TONE/PULSE phones wor~ on both tone and ou tse tmes There
lore. rn areas haVIng only pulse [rotary dr al)ltn&amp;s. you can strll u5e 5ervrces requrrrng tones FCC regrster&amp;t1 Notter co on
we seN&gt;ce • hal " ' 5811
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES ANO DEALERS

Of

pan~ hne ~t.

'

-·

- ......

·. .

--

- ---.

]..,;~~

�Thursday, May 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

STOP AND SAVE THIS WEEKEND

30%0FF

MHS
RHS
PHS

ALL
•ATHLETIC SHOES
•ALL DEITERS
•Alt NURSEMATES

ALL
•CONNIE
DRESS SHOES
•ALL AUDITIONS

WHS
SHS

EHS

~------~

Days

lH&lt;n;e

~------~

an ad

Call 992-2156

PLUS•••5SRACK OF SHIRTS

MoN.

thru FRI. UA.M .-51' .M.- SA'1'.8-12

Sunda y Pa per

219 N. SECOND

992-5627

• Ad~ 11\JlEid e th e county y)ur 11 d run ~ mu&gt;! \ l&gt;e prep11.1d
• Hcc ei~ c 1lu;c&lt;.&gt; unt for 1ul ~ puid 10 ndntnce
1 Frl"i' Ad s· Givca.wa) and Fo t~nd ad11 und1~r Li ~ u r.-l1 w1ll be

Alfred area
happenings

Public Notice
In the Common Pleas Court

ol Metgs Counly, Ohio
Plainlifts, :

Case No . 92-CV -105

Vs.

E. E. Nelson, et al,

and the Unknown Heirs, Next
of Kin, Legatees, Devisees,
Administrators, Executors,
Successors, Spouses, and
Assigns , ll any of E. E. Nel·
son, Jennie K. Nelson, and
W. F. Thompson, whose last

addresses are unknown.
You are hereby notified

that you have been named

. service on Mother's Day, mothers

· were honored.

Those receiving hanging baskets
wae: Cheryl Thomas. Kaye Hoi ter.
Mildred Arnold and Sandi Hawley .
All ladies of lhe church rccieved a
·potted plant.
.. For his sermon, Rev . Roland
· Wildman selected the topic of
· "'Home." The senior choir present·
ed "God of Molhers" and lhe junior
:(hoir sang ''The Baule Hymn of the
'Republic." The pre-school chou
sang ."The Butterfly Song" and
·· both groups sang "Happy Moth- ers." For the morning prelude,
• organist Ralph Werry pres~nted
"Amazing Grace."
.
.
Senior choir director rs LoiS
Bun. Dixie Sayre aod Ral~h Werry
are director and accompamst of the
youlh choirs.

446--G aiL poL•
36 7 - Che.hirf!

992 -~iddlepo!'t/

Defendants in a legal action

dants. This action has been
assigned Case No. 92-CV-105
and Is pending In the Common Pleas Court ol Meigs
County, Ohio, Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Tho object of the Complaint Is to quiet title to 1·1/2
acres also known as 1.67
acres at real estate located In
Fraction 23, Town 8, Range
15 of the Ohio Company's
Purchase, in Salem Town·
ship, Meigs County, Ohio,
and to quieltltle to the interests of the Plalntlffs , lo preclude any claim of Interest by
the Defendants, and for costs
of the action.
You are hereby required
to answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight {28) days
alter lhe last publication af
this notice which will be
published once a week lor
six (G) successive weeks. The
last publication wUI be made
on lhe22nddayo1May, 1992,

HI-BACK CHAIRS ............... ..S89°
LOUNGERS .........................s185°0
2-SEAT GLIDERS ............. ..S199°0
Sale Prices on Rockers, Tables,
Umbrellas and Canopy Swings
6 Colors In Stock

and lhe rwenly·elght (28)

days for answering will
commence on that date. In
case ol your failure to an·
swer or otherwise respond

VINYL
FLOOR COVERING
12 Ft. Width • 20 Beautiful Patterns

$499

srECIAL

SQ. YD.

of Civil Procedure, Judgement by delault will be r&amp;n·
derad against you for the
relief demanded in the Com plaint.
Dated this 91hday of April,

773- Mu on
SS\2- i\icw lh 'l'c n

6-- l.o.tand r Gund
7- l.mt and r o und

2 5 6-Guyan Oitt.
643-Ar.bia 0Mt.

F.u,

949- Ra cine
74 2-Rutlancl

379 -W.Ir~ut

895-le hrt

B- Public S•le &amp;

lJJ 7-Rufllll lo

Auc t1on

\lohil~

The Heart to Heart Meeting
Scheduled for Thursday,
May 21st, has been
cancelled.
The next meeting will be
held Julv 9th.

:.5" l)ia.

R~ · mott ·

~ll pt' r !if'l • ~- in - 1 :;upf'Rf'mOI" • I ~H toi.Jl l

( hJ~nn r l

ut pabilit ~ • Dark Lit r J(•l pir turr
tuhr • C hanrwl rr mmdf'r d i~p l a~ • SIM·p
tinll' r • Cast or~

Your
Choice
HOURS

Monday 9:30.8:00
Tuesday-Satwday
9:30-5:00

$

10:00 •· m. on June 3rd,
18112 oncl teed otolld.
Tht propoule will be in
plod bldo oubmlrted lor
- h p&lt;ojocl•lollowa:
Job ·1 Burton Townohlp-

Court Slreet Paving.
Job -2 OrMgo Townohlp Surloce-Pavlng.
Job -3 Rudand Townahip

to 168,900 ll1d

Racina . 4 BR, 3 balhs. 2 garages, rvnted 1
BA apt. Property lndiJdls 4,800 tq. ft. flml

P.O. lot 194-Wol• ILy
RAOIIE, 01110
(1..-ly lotio IW,. s..l
&amp;pol
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Gail Saws
•Weedeaten

. .
Call614-992 -7104lor ADO(.

614-949-2804
•

Public No1lce

County Engineer'• Office.
Tho thlga County

31" REMOTE/SUPER WINDOW•••

00

1759
0
46" PROJECTION..........................$1949°

41" PROJECTION..........................S

MoigoCounty

Commiuionen
!lory Hobollll«, Clatk
(5)15, 22, 2t&lt;

DOWNTOWN POMEROY • 992·3671

Tyr-

'' •
0

• - N- ,

'

.

G
S.1H2-tlo

TRIJY-BI£7'.
Ou
Y"~~~'

Read the Best Seller

s....-.

Sbl)lllltm Of

Locol 'f'!!r!-Bih DHitr

WAICFflfLI'S
It 50 Wo!l, . _ Olio •593-3115

1

Card of Thanks
We would like to
thank everyoM lor
their cards, kindnus, prayers, support, their love Uld
understanding In
our time ol nHd.
We know that you
all shara our losa ol
our loved ones,
Roger Wayna &amp;
Kristin Ray Grimm.
May God bleaa you
and kMp you all.
HJ &amp; Alonna Grimm

Read the

flee at 1:00 p.m., May 27,
11M12, to -lnpullrCIIII lie

10% performance bond at

community on the COftll·

tho timo olthe bidding oncl

munlty Houolng lmprov..

file 1 100% performanct

Thia 11 a wrttten houalng

bond. A Iotter oolllbllohlng
a.tilied line ot orecl~ In tho
alolod .. oun~ lrom • bonlc,
doing buolnou within lho

pion co-ing o given jurlo-

·• ofltlt,·.nly-alt!TRACJOR&amp;

111111 are qu11llled ODOT

FREE
DELIVERY

I

-

bid, muot be

pl1ln~

~=oJE~~=~ ~~n

992·7553

" SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

POMEROY, Oil

Bob &amp; Carolyn

Grimm

Real Estate General

S-18·'92-l ... pd.

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

$20.00
Custom Paintings

614-992-2242

NOW OPEN
Hn.9taS
MoL tft Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFLES,
SHOTGUNS

CHUCK'S BOATAUTO REPAIR
LOW lABOR RATE
1So/o OFF On Most
Boat Parts

BUY..SELL-TIL\ DE
4-21-92- I

Co. Rd 3,
leading Creek Rd.

mo.

34- \1 i.sc. M erc h~tndi.'le
:'i"- Buddmg S upph ~

82/tl--184185--

IU:S

Home lmporvementa
Plumblnf: &amp; H ea\l n ~
F.uaVII.I..mg

1

186-IP-

ll« ln ca l &amp;· Rd n gera
Ce ner a l lhulm g
Mobil e Hom e lk pit H
Uph ols tery

YOUNG'S

P11r1111nlals &amp;
Annuals,
Strawflowe111 and
monr Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.

CARPENTER SERVKE

Wway r..tw- Depot St.

742-3030
WI mo.

pd.

laiii11P. .'slll

-!loom Addlllona
-Got~«

-lnlorior &amp; Exterior

Painting

V. C. YOUNG Ill
PDmeroy, Ohio
3 - 1~ -92-lfn

4-71-97·1-,t

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gara~es

•Comp ete
Remodeling .
Sto" &amp; (o:'J;are
f EE ESTI

(5

985·4473
667-6.179
2· 7-92-lln

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

u.'*Do,,OrrFot01,'*""'
••

"'Ta6oiN
-l.tl

"We Get The
Call AI Tromm

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

RACINE, OHIO

.. H.lp~ r- To

licensed and Bonded

614·949-2202
4/U/U/1-

12-5-tf n

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

NOW OPEN!

CAliFORNIA

TANS

949-2627 or
1-800-83 7-1460

I 5 Sesslons....$25
12 Sesslons.... $20
1 Session.... $2.25

Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.

6 ML Out Eagle Ridge
Rd. or 1ML Front las'han

Shrub and Tree

New SCA WOLFF
Bed SL24

Call lor Appt Today

949·2123

Jo~

Tri.mmi.ng &amp; Removal
Residential &amp; Comm•ciltl
Free E1timatH
4126192 Un

~JAY MAR
Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992 ·6637
St Rt 7

Done Now"

Cheshire,

614·742·2328

. ,..,,............... II

Announcements

FlU ISnuns

36970 lal R1111 Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

•SAND -GRAVEL oDJRT
olJIIESTONE

(614)992-3470
5/151'1211

OH.

laftrenctslnDablt

20 Yrs. l:ttp.

INTERIOR &amp; ErnRIOR
HAVl Rlf!IOOS

R«'GMr

Your,,._.....,_, ..

PH. 614-992-5591

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;

&amp; co.

~

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

REMODELING

WICK'S
HAULING SERVIa

rm. - . - .. an. ..,.. - · - · LR, OR.
.
You
HaveTolookFor u•ai_A_.._,.ond45ocroon&gt;l .. lndudTo Spy the Best Buys In ~~~oct~ln~IS~r=·::•:IG"~
-~r.~m~l•:m:la:,~·-:-::"'"~won=•:llril:lrifV:-:P,:1Md:.
101

Enrlas.-g
OPEN
WED.-SUN. lG-S p.m.

4-9--tln

FREE ESTIMATES

'992-6215

11.50 Wtsl,llloo!, Olio •51J.llll
112011213 mo.

,.,.,.aroc.rm., -.. ..-•·

ller~s, P•llllllals.

Planb,

304-273-SSSS

(FREE ESTIMATES)

y, .,~fnifi~H

. Tllob

247-4035

NOW OPEN FOR SPRING

Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

MON.-SAT. 9 to 5
614-742-2772

-lloofing

Our Sprlnf Sbi,..Bd Of
Ttoy-Ddl 1Uien Now I• Stofclt.

1o ancourao«f

52100 u. !31, .... tiiOo

VALLEY INC.

lo Rotl.lllll lt. SS4

Work

-Eieolriclll and Plumbing

7'RIJY-BI£r

ulotlon of lhooe ar...
the propoaed actlono
oenre lhe houolng nMdo

CONNIE'S OHIO
RIVER HERBS 111d
EVERlASnNGS

FOR SALE
Agriculture
lime

ANGIE'S FLOWERS

Middleport

llUTO
PARTS

·II rsptrr~~~~=:~~~~~n.~c~u:srom
Frame
NEW &amp; USED

"''"*- Col

;}}- 1\fiiHJUt'..ll

134 •sa•1·
•
I 1, 11

112N

epeclflc .,.., oommuftitill
or nolghborhoodo, the

the CloSII(Ieds.

Houte hold Good&amp;

52- S porting Cooda

81-

Welcome Slates

'"•',... 614-915-4110
4117

ba ,••. 2 .. -

~EH\

\11-HCII \\DIS!.
S 1-

&amp;au &amp; .'VI o tor• for Sale
Aulo Pllrta &amp; &lt;«o,.o n·~l
Auto Repair
Ca mp•ng Equ1pmenl

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wayne &amp; Pat Cleland

diction, • county or a city,
which muotolNrly doocribo
the concllon ol houalng In

Blcldero wNl bo oonekloted to
one! p&lt;ovlde Input
lor tho ,.urflolng work.
to thlo p&lt;oc••
Tho • - l u i conlri!Cior
8ld Edwerdo
may bo requlrwd to lunlioh
ex-tlvo Oiroclor
onylobwork•requirwdby (5)21,ttc
hitlolgl County Englntor. !.:.,:.~--,.-.,...,.---:,.-;-~~
Thoa~volope,conll1lnlng

'Mecufows

Stobout

the auccMeful bidder muat menl Strategy GrMl

aoopt ot Ohio B•nklng

'l(flth.ryn

SlW.l DOZER
WOU, DRIVEWAY
WORI••tl
UMESTOIIE
DELWERY SERVICE
REASONABLI RATES

Rockey &amp; linda

CLRSSIFIED RDS
Public Nollce

75-7677 78--

46--- Spu't'! fo r Rent
47- Wanted to Re nt
48--- F.qu1pmer~l for Re nt
49- For Lca1e

CHARUE'S

Wll••• All•y

'ner-Blh 1\Dera N•w J,. Stoe~ .

placem.nl
Each bidder muot lllo •

Lawo, will be oooopled ••
complying wllh the bonding
requlrimonl
Ao o prerequlolle lor bid-

ANDERSON'S

=

Public No1lce

Townahip « Job 2 Oran~ Comm ...lonere IWHIVI " '
Townahip or Job 3 Rutland right to eccepl or reject any
Townahip or Job 4 Salem or 111 bide, or •ny part
u-ool.
TownMip."

Bkt opocificotiono moy bo
picked up at the Meig•

Aut011 for Sale
72 - T ruclu for S111le
73--- Va ru &amp; 4 wo·,

2112192

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

owner llnandng of up to 10% at purc:hue
amoun may be posdlle tor quatry1ng per·
soolo buy VJKY r1ce home on 3'A acres In

bldg.

1\~·;pOHT\TlO\

71-

41- HolUea for Re nl

(llo Sunday Calls)

PRICE REDUCED!

menl
The oeoond public h-Job -4 Sol.,. Townohlp · lng will bo held In the 11e1go
Brldgo ond Culvert Re· County Commlulonero of.

0

TH

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

Bennetts Mobile
1391 Safford SdJool Rd.
Cal (614) 446-94

SECOND PUBUC HEARING
- Multlplo Culvert Replac•
TO BE HELD

$1249°

Consol•·

al

0

OuaUty Hi Efficiency Air
Colllitioners, Heat Pu~~.
hrtaces &amp; Now
Water Heaters.

received by the Board of

s2 39°
0
19" REMOTE COLOR TV..................$299°
0
25" REMOTE TABLE MODEL............$419°

13" REMOTE COLOR TV••••••••••••••••••

36-- Re.l E•t..le Wanled

COMMmCIAI. and RESIDENTI.\1.
FR£E t'.S'I1MATES

'

de•crlbed herein will be

-eel

Housing ProM!s.

Df~

BfiT(IJ

recU:ec~

Wan ted to Huy

ll3- L•"e~ lod
64- Hay &amp; C uw
ti ~ S ~ &amp; Fr-n•h ze r

Bwineu Huik:l in~
I 3:..--- LoU~ &amp; Acrea ge

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages ' Replatement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Apprond M-t.cturod

11fJYu:n ux:nm.

BID SPECIRCATlONS
FOR DESIGNATED
TOWNSHIP
ISSUE 2 PROJECTS
IN MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Bid p&lt;opoulo lor 11ft work

0

62-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

&amp; llouhlt•ll idr llorlll· ()II ncr'

IITrDTUrDIII

The pnoe nu been

F.quopm~ n t

61 - F'arm

Business Services
ATTENTION

Public Nollce

Tho bido will bo

Homea for S.M~
Mobik Home• for Sale
r.~~rm• lor Sale

..

(4) 17, 24, (5) 1, 8, 15, 22 ; 6TC

llelgo County Commioolon·
era In the Courl Houee,
Pomeroy, Ohio until 4:30
p.m. tho 2nd ol June, 18112.

MU celllll nf:(J u.s
18--- wl nl.Cd T0 Do

17-

9- Wanted lo Buy

BULLETIN BOARD

Depuly

TELEVISION SALE

3132I Jl----34---

II - Hdp W•nted
12- Sit uatw na Wanted
13-- ln1ura nct:
14--- B w iJJe&amp;~fi T ra1 n1 Jif:
I
)::,.._ Se hoole &amp; I1Uir uct 10n
16- Rad)(l , T V &amp; CB Hep ••r

5- Happy Ach

(,(, 7 - f.nolvilll'

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts
By : Marlene Harrison,

sPECIAL $695 SQ. YD.

F\11\1 ~l ' I'I'I.IES
&amp; 1.1\ I·:STUU,

HE\ I. lS I' \TI·:

44-- Apartment for Rent

985-Che-tn

1992.

36 month no-fade warranty e 12 h. width
Gray, Brown, or Green

53- F'null &amp; VeKclilhll'a
159- F'o r Sa le or Tnde

45- furni.hed Rooma

843- Po rtland
2 4 7-Letart

38&amp;-Vinl o n
24 ~Rio Cnnde

as required by the Ohio Rules

HEAVY WEIGHT
PORCH &amp; PATIO TURF

1

42- Mobile Homee for Rent
43-- F'arm1 for Rent
74-- Moton:yde11

3-- Aanoun.eemenu
4- G iveaway

Ava nell George,PiainliHs, vs,
E. E. Nelson, el al., Defen·

0

RuainMa Opporturuty

22- Money to Loan
23-- Profii'.Uional Sen·lcea

'

I

6 75- PI . Ple111a nt
4 58-Leon
.'i7 6--Appl,. f.ro vr

Po mf! roy

enlilled Fred George and Lois

LO-BACK CHAIRS ............. }79°0

I

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

K. Nelson ; W. F. Thompson :

Memorial Da, Sale

.60
$05/day

21 -

Count y -'1ason Co . 1 W\'

To: E. E. Nelson ; Jennie

•••v•

$130/day

.20
30
.42

56- l'e ll fo r S~t k
57- Mwlca ll n, Lrum enll

1'1\ \\(.1 \I.

f - - - - -==-=--=== = =-=-------,

Defendanls

"The most comfortable casual furniture on the mark.t. • Our .,..
clualn "Perma-Wicker' "provides a natural"glve" lor the total body
comfort and
cool even after long boars In the sun.

15
15
15
15

$
$
$
$

Rates are for cun seculive runs, broken up days Wlll be
charged for each day as ~par a1 e ads

NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

- Moms honored
During the morn1ng worship

Me~

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

Fred George, et al.

Harrisonville
OES meets
The Harnsonville Order of the
Eastern Star met recently for the
May meeting of lhe group w1lh Par
Arnold, worthy matron. and Larry
Wecl , worthy patron.'" charge .
All past matrons and patrons
were presented and welcomed .
Honored masons. Harold R1ce
and Bob Reed. were presented and
- welcomed.
The 50-year members. Srel la
Atkins and Marjorie Ricc. and 60year member, Ruby Diehl . were
presented and welcomed. ·
An announcement was mad e
that the refreshment s for th e
Inspection will be potluck.
Fred George was reported 1ll
wilh Leukemia and a card wa s
signed for him.
The group sang "Happy B~rlh ­
day"to Betty Bishop.
The worthy parron ga ve rh e
blessing before rhc meal by th e
~ refreshmem commiucc: Mr. and
: Mrs. Joe Bolin, Mrs. Donna Nelson
• aod Mrs. Gracie Wilson.

Gallia Counly

C Ol! I

o•

Lloyd Dillinger read "'Molhers"'
and presented 15 mothers with
begonia plants, gifts of lhe falhers,
on Mothers Day at Alfred United
Melhodist Church.
Molher's Day community visi tations included:
Linda, David and Aaron
Williams, Belpre, •isited Thelma
and Clarence Henderson. Nina
Robinson and Clara Follrod visited
· Mrs. Robinson's children, Bob
Robinson and family of Belpre, and
Norma Jean Swar12 and family of
Reno . Laura Cohen, Daniel and
Leah, Akron , and April Neely,
Fairborn, visited lheir parents, Mar·
· guerite and Delbert Steams. Olher
guests were Rose and 1ohn
Lewallen, Meyer, Ariz. Mrs.
Steams and the Lewallens visited
their Kentucky childhood home
ncar Berea. Mike Weber, Hocking
College student, visited his parents,
Brenda aod Keilh Weber. Lori and
Jeff Amos, Columbus, visited her
parents, Bob and Gay Ann Burke
and Randy.
Due to the illness of Pastor
Sharon Hausman, lay speaker, Dick
Ash, Syracuse, gave the sermon
Sunday. Florence Ann Spencer presented the children's sermon,
"You're Special." After the services a family dinna was enjoyed.
Recent church visitors were
Ethel Kerwood and Amber.
Stubensville, and Clarence Warner,
Alhens.
Ethel Stevens. Bradenton, Fla. ,
visited friends in the area: Nellie
Parker, Martha Poole, Nina Robinson, Clara Follmd, and Sarnh Caldwell.
Richard Yost and family auendcd the funeral of his uncle, William
Yost, at Parkersburg, W.Va. Other
family members attending were
Maxine and Delbert Yost of Lan ·
caster.

3

$4 .00
$6.00
$9.00
$13 00

Cla ...•ified pages cover tlw
following telephone exchange.• ...

• Se ntine l iti not rl'llpornihlc lor crro ra afte r l1nl da y (c hec k
lo r r.rro n f1rst da y a d run! in pa per ). Call b ~:lore 2 :00 p . m.
d~t y ll (Lc r public atiOn to 101k e corre&lt; tio n
• i\.is tha t mwt be paid in advance ue.
r::a rd of Thanlu
Ha ppy Ad!
In Memo n11m
Yard Sa le~~
• 1\ clue• fl ed adv ertue mem placed m lhe Gallipo:&gt;IU! Ua ily
T nbune (•~u~r.pt Clal8 if•cd .~~ pl ay , Buameu Card or Legal
Notio~~ ) will al!o appear m the Puml Plcannl Heg111te r and
the Da1ly Srntmcl, r eac h. ugo vc r 18,000 homea

MIDDLEPORT

IS

Over 15 Words

I

ru n 3 da~ 8 11.1 no ~ h a rgc
• Pr1 ce o f ad for a.ll ca. p1t al l cltt~n 1a &lt;lo uble pr we of ad
• j pPml lml' t ~ pc o n!)· u ~e d

month expo. The centerpiece of the U.S. Quincentennial celebration, Amerillora '92 features dramatic attractions, exciting entertainment, international exhibits and exotic cuisine all set against
an 88-acre floral and garden backdrop.

l 00 p m. M onda y
1:00pm Tuesda y
I 00 p m. Wednesday
100 p.m Thursd ay
1·00 p.m Fnday

I

6
10
Monthly

DAY BEFOR E PU BLI CATION
l :00 p m. Saturday

Friday Paper

CLOSED Sl l ~llA y

POLICIES

•••ALL SHOES IN .,SALE ROOM" 'tf2 OFF!

EASTERN PERFORMS ·The Eastern High School Band performed at Amerillora '92 as part or America's Showcase presented
by Wendy's International on May II. America's Showcase will
highlight o•er 50,000 non-professional performers during the six

COPY DEADLIN E
Mo nday Paper
Tuesda y Papt&gt;r
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Pa(X'r

Rate

Words

fOR AlL MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992-7013 or
992-SSSl

OR TOll 111((
1-800·848-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7131f9

MICROWAVE OVEII
O!ld VCR REPAIR
IUUIII
lrl•glt Ia Gr We
Pick ~1!-.
IEII'S APPUANCE

SEIVICI

992·5335 or
915·3561

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SIIES end
TRAILER SITES,
LANDClEARING,

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

ffiEE ESTIMATES

992-3838

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

BILL SLACK

1cHu F - ,_, Offlco

992-2269

2171....... St.
HIIDOY, OliO

USED RAILROAD TIES

4-4-92-tlo

3 Announcements
LIVE! LIVE! LIVE!
l ·90G-4S4· 9800, {18 +) SSTEL
Orl. Fl $3.95/Min .

Reduct: Burn ott tat whila y;,
sleep' Take OPAL, available at
Fruth .Pharmacy, 786 N S.Cond
St., Mtddteport .
Rawar~ oHtrCK:l lot' intormahon
rtgardmg personlp~~~ona who
shot our cat . Scon Watton 614
992-3314
4prn.
·
·

•"•r

4

Giveaway

1~ Doberman, 1f2 Husky pupP111 , has had worm shot&amp; 614.
992-3326
'

3 malt, mlxad poodle pupplll
4mos. otd; milfed femtle Zyra'
old, mixed black/whitt t.mala
614-9Q2-5918
'

B. w..k
Old
Dobermen
Shephard Mix, 614·3&amp;1-7007.

Friendly Klnena To Giwaway
Liller TrtiMd. 614-446-3897
Kltttnt, moH'Itr Slam...

61'5-4506.

.

·

304-

Mother Cat And 4 Kittens To
GIYNWiy. 614-.2$6-623'1.

Swing Set Fr~mt With 2 SwlnJIO
614-446·2316.

.

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel
4

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

Upriaht Plano To Glve~way. 614-

41 Houses lor Rent

Lost &amp; Found

Found:

small

t.mala

300&lt;1.

bto"tde wllh black marking•,
1114-985-4308.

42

Lost : cat, child's pet, lost In
wicinlty of Pnrt St., MkJdlaport,
blue collar, yallowlsh, 114--99257$0

KIT 'N' CARLYLF.!

b~ La ~ Wright

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Huvy duty • ..,_. .nd . , _,
~nouN, ,._

4yrs. aid; eMil:
old ; 614-9112-6300.

.-·

--~5op
·undor Fo;d worranty,
15,1105. CaN 614·

::r.:..-_
-

,_,

U,YNE'S FURNITURE
Complols homo tumlsNnas.
Hout~ : Mon-SM. t-5. ·~
0322, 3 mills ou1 BuliYIHI Rd.
FI'M O.W.ry.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Television
Viewing

M1 Dodgo h4, oldO., AM.t'M,
~ .....,, Ul ktl , new tlrel,
55,1100 llllloo, 1,500 Of oltor:

•

THU.. MAY21

11111, Century Topper, PS ,

C

'

.

,. NOT

G UlLT'1

d(J)

e

L Q AUI

I' I I I

I
f--TI,--r-1::..,.:-1~I ~
YAWLER

0 IIIC ..._ Q

111e llleMC- a.

i'e
oeca-o
o•,_,~
7

All Yard St,_ Mu.t 81 Paid In
&amp;dYiincll. O..ciiM : 1:00pm thl
day befort IM ad Is to run,
$undar odltlon- 1 cOOpm Fridoy,
Monday
edition
10:00a .m.
S.tur&lt;My.

ury.

Send

neme,

lddi'MI,

phone: to ICC 566 PO Box 23
South Hackenuck, New Jarsay
O?Wi .

P1rt-tlme haod on dllry firm,

muat hive ••per~. 614-taS4102. l.ene IMMIQII.

.,.y 22, 9-lpm, Rustic: Hilla,
SyracuM; sum"*' c:lolhn, aaw,
toys, c:l1rlr*, girl• bicycle,
mor~ . R1in postpones until Mly
26.

~lp

P1rt-time

w1nted,

Pomeroy, Oh. Janhorl•l work,
11Y1nlng1. lnttr... ed cans only.

513-544-5331.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Part-time LPN'a nMdttd tor 1CF
sa bod tocllhy. Contoct
Carahlven ot Polnl Pt11aant .

Ganga S1le, Frl • Sat i :OO till

304-li75-3005.

4:00, Lltt11 of evetythlng. 25
Warwk:k Road.

MovlnQ SaM!,

p11rt1

14

1010 Chl'i'-'le,

Business
Training

car,

l\lmhwre, books,
cloth•, toy1 mlec:, 4 mites up

576-2145.

Moblta

Yard S.la, Moaman Ava,
Mildred Sturpon, Fri l S.t,

Roglatorallon ft0.05-12l'IB .

Nowt!!Southllsttm
Busin_. Colla91, Sprina Valley
PIIZI. Coli Today, 614-44&amp;438711

Wanted to Do

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath1, Living
Room, I F1mlly Room, Spring
V•llay Eat1t••· 6~ms-,

E. &amp; R TRE.E SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM Removal , ._.edga
Trimming. FrM Estimates! &amp;14 -

713-5185

367-1'957.

9

GtoJgu Portable S.wmlll, don't

Road In A Hmlow, Can &amp;14-4466987.

Ha'll room In my home tor el·

Wanted t 0 8 uy
,auf JOUI logs lo lha mill just
-S.-10--.,.A-e,.-o"""'Wh'"'""h""w"o-1or--:O;.,ff,.,Th,-o· l call 304--&amp;75-1"95l
darty mala or tamata1 country
atmosphtrt, ~nty 01 TLC, or
UtU mlrbk-1, toys, comk boob, will tab cara of elderly In lhtlr
lantams, pieruraa and tumitura, home. 20 years experianca,
Osby Martin, 614-992-X4t.
have refartnc•, 614-949-3014
UMd Mobile tiot'Ms, Call 614- lf'lar 6pm.

........

446-017!.

;lo_w_n_:._m_oo_
wl;ng
-- o-n-:
d- odd
-:c-:jo:bs,

Wanltd To Buy : Junk Autot

tully lnsurad, 614-992-7672.

2

bedroom, all

alectrlc

homo. Owner, 114-388.g001.

W•nlad To Buy: Large Siz 1
Onll M1kars Form. Good Con·
dillon, Cilll 614-446-4015 Af'lar !.

P
_._M_.-c-- -:-:c--:-c-:::-:-:= I
Top Prkn Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gok:l Rlnga, Sllvw CcNn1,
Gokt Coins. M.T.S. C:O.n Shop,
151 Sacond A.vernHI, Galllpolle.

Employment Services

trail..-,
1200
plus
utllllin, dapotH, 1bdrm. duplex,
1bdrm. apartment, no pats,
$225, utililllt lnet., daposll, 6142bdrm.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

vary nicely tumlshed, Hamn-

1 m:::=:~.=:21=:8.:::--:-:o:-===::--:::

BEAIJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
ESTATES, 538 J1ckson Pika
from $192/rno. Walk to ahop &amp;
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

movt.. Call 8~6-2568 . EOH.

INd R•Hy, Broilcer. 304-675- Fumllhtd apir1manl nail•tHt
5540 or 304-882·2405.
by
wool&lt;
wl1h cooking
1ll88 King mobllo homo, 2 bod- prlvllogoo. ~2561.
rooms, nMds soma ,.pairs, Fumlshld Apsnment, 1br, nail
12,100. 7:30-9:30 AM or 7:30- to Ubrsry, piil1ling, ctntr'lll h.. t ,
i :30 PM, 304-895-3421.
air, ,.t.,-anc.a. 814-446-0338,
1973 Y•ng•rd 12x60 Whh np Btfor~~7p.m.
Out Room, Elldrle Halt, 2 B.O.
rooms, $2,000 In Point PleiSinl, Going to tha bach? 2 BR con·
WY 6~46-1822, 114-446-9511, da on oe.an, 6 miles below
614-441...()917.
Myrtle BNch al Garden Cttr.
S111ps
fi,
full
khchan,
1974 Dulce 141165, 2 Bedrooms, washarldry•r, pool . WHkly rat1
Fumlshld, CA, Und.,.P'nnlng. $475. 511. to Sat . Phone 304$11,000. 614-446-0782.
675-2975.

"aaonabla rat•s. 304-675·11-«
aak for Tom .

Muet mov., 304-675-1160 or 67535114.

Talal lawn CIN, halt prtea, (111
tim. apec:lal), Includes mowtng

1986 14'x70', 2bdrm ., 2 bilk, gas
slave &amp; fumsca, &amp;HI-992-6981

I

WMdlng, Clll 614-Qi2-631(,

ilrn--Vpm.

;-----------1TUioring, C.rtltied r..ehtr, An'JI
Help

2 BR aptrtments in Mkldlaport,
newly ramodlllad, low ulllitiea,
no ~a. $220 per month,
deposit required, 614.g92·2381
doyo

Wanted

Aga,

&amp;·--=-7::--::-----:·1

R.. sonaa.

R•~t• .

Roforoneoa AYoltoblo 614 ...1·

U.S. Government . 1908.
Part-Tima, Own Hours. Procau Wulllng To B•bysll. Newborn
FHA Mortgage Refunds . No Ex- To 5, GrMn Township ArN. 614Nec:aasary. 1...05-321· 446 ..g 256

$25,000 -

lNve rnee.ag~~.
1991

14x80 3Br'a,

2

Baths,
$17,500, Or AstUCM With $750
Down. Must Ba Moved! 614-"6.-

8325.

2 mobile

home~

on 2 lots. Good

Modem 1 BIMiroom Downtown
Complete Klich..,, Carpet, CA.,
6 M.446-0139.

Modem 2 bedroom, w/dlnatte,
kltc:Mn
furnished,
privet•
antr11nca, biiHmant storage
WIWishar-drytr hookup. Off
ltrNt pertdng, yard, no pets, ret
&amp; NCurtty dep, $300. month
plus .a.c &amp; water, 2208 Jettar-

son Ava, Pt. Pn, 304-675--6357.

=flCI

condilion. For mora Information

Will do babyslnlng any hours,
"'AVON' ALL AREAS! S,1ra your have rtfarencn, 304-675-l856.
~me wf!h ut . Vou~l love lha

Ac:c..t To Bank Reclaimed On. bedroom apl partly
Wobila Homt1, GtNI s.Mctlont nlthecl, 304-B75-1912 •f'lar
Wany AI $.500 Oown, And T1h PM.
Over Payments. Call 1-800-580- Ona bedroom fumlsh.-d
5711.
Polnl PINaant, no pall,

c_om=po-=:"':·:,1:c-«&lt;=G-:::!192
:-;c-6:;35;:6;:;.;:-;::;- l

Will Do Ironing Call AMer 5:00

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT • P.M. 614-446·2IM.

Arw 11Nith Care F1dlity Has
1mmtdl1ta Opening For An lndlvidull With Unlvarlhy Tf'lllning And Elpartanea In Human
RHOUtell
And
Maritll·
lngiPubllc Ratetion1. Prior SuBusiness
parvlsoty
Ex parience
And
OpponunHy
Quality Comml.in ication Skills
Naadad
Competitive Salary
With ElcaU.nl Fringe Benefta.
!NOTICE!
S.nd Re 1ume To: Oo 11 CLA 117, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r;Jo G1Uipoll!1 Daily Tribuna, Gat- rtcommands that you do buslllpoUs, OH 45611
nflss with peop'- you know, 1nd
NOT to sand money thro09h tha
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
mail unlit you h1v1 lnvnflgat.d
Exc.llenl
Pay,
81natits, the offering.
Transportation,
407· 292-4~7.
E.Jt. 57'\. 9-ll .rn .·lOp .m. Toll Allention! Styling Salon For
Refunded.
Sal11! Prime Location. C..ll 614:.:::=:.=.,..,--;-- -;--;::--;-- l 446~80] , 614-446...U355.
AVON ! All Areu ! Shirley
Speal'l, 304-675-1•29
Vending Route : Local. Wa Hava
Th1 Newell t.bchinu, Malting A
BAATENDEASfC.ASINO
Nice Staadr Cash 1ncom.. 1-

Financial

21

====;;-;;;::;;;:-;:;;::;-- 1

...:...=====-=-- - -!
WORKERSI!JECK

eoo.g55-035&lt; .

HANOS/Hos'IHMI ,
Ete
PotiUona .&amp;.board Crui.. Ship•
$3001$900 Wk.ly. FrM Trav1l
Caribbean, Honuil, Bahama•
Na E1p. NltCHtary. t-:l06·7J6·
J'OOO Ext. 15MN5.

VENDING ROUTE : Naw Equipment, SO l ocalionl . Great In·

eoma, $5,500 .00. 1-800-933-9919
E.lf. 17.

22 Money to Loan

Data Entry Clerk : Successful
Candidate Must Typ. 45 WPM
Money To loan
Accu~ely, Have D111 Entry 1-800-238-9759, Open From 9
Knowledge And/Or Ellparianc:e. A.M. To 10 P.M.
Aecul'lllt Alpha And Numeric
Filing Skills And Buk: Math

Skills. Worklnp Knowledg• Ot
u.dk1l Terminology Oasirad.
Send A•t.me To : SEOEMS ,
3240 s.R. 160, Golllpotlo, Ohio

45U1 ByeMay 27, 1002.

Real Estate

31 Homes tor Sale

E
ccX
-:P=E R":
IE"NC
" 'EO::D
: -- A
::D::-M:::IN--IS
- :T:c:R
:cA.-- !1 112 1101'), 3 bdrm., baMm.nt,

liVE SECRETARY • Aroo Hoollh dock, Midway Dr., Now Howon,

Cate Facllhy H11 lmmadl•ta WV. 304-882·3108 1fter 5pm,
o.ntna FoJ Jt.non wtth E•cef- &amp;14-992-6i81 leave miiUQI .
...... Sfiorthand And P~nai
Computtr Sklll1. Competitive 1,400 aq tt brick. 3 blldraoma,
Slllry And Ex~lant Fringe 11rg. llvl~ room, brick patio,
Bentlh1. Send Resume To: Box lrM wat..-fMpllc, h ..l pump, 5
CLA 1111. c/o G.lllpolla Dally minutee from Pt Plaaaant,
Trfbuno, uol!lpollo, OH 45U1.
$56,000. 304-&lt;I'IS-5306.
FEDERAL.

GOVERNMENT

IS 10 acrH , 3bdrm houH, bern,

HIRING. $16,000 • $72,000/Yr. 1· uliHiy building, 1ml. from Mid·
10e 5et 1500 Ext GB!i68 Fot dlaport . Handyman lpacial, low
lmmtdlllt Aesponu.
l~ntlas, 216-3t5423it.
Hundl'lldl 01 Compenl• Head 2 ~WHt In Middleport . Low or
Home WorMre OuareniHd In- NO down payment bac.uH ascoma. Easy Work. Ruah Your king pr\CI It DRAMATICALLY
Nama And Addrns S.A.S.E. ItO below property value due to
And 11.00 To: OIA Suppllel, DWMr moving out of lrta. 1t1
Box 1443 Fairborn, £:2".:Sr"'"h monoy WINS! 614·

g:r-ui:-o.

- · ROOC&gt;OMiblo

To 2 story, I room, balh, 1/3 ba. .
Pidl Stl'll'lllllb.rrill. Appty In P•- m.m, 911 hMt, Union Ave.,
eon. 1-12 Set. Ill)' 2jri,-Taylor'l $22,000, 304-'17'3-55162 ar 304llony Poteh, K•r Rd., Bldwoll, I:713-=:-":;n:-•·- -::--:--::-:--.,-,.
PoopiO

Ohkl
NrMdtd- c.rtlfled nurtlng aul•
IIIII for ICf II bed flcllfly. Clll
Cerehl"" of ~nt Ptaaaanl,
30W714005.

Clll 304-i15--65rrl

or

304-6~

23lll.

One 12160; On. 12x65; 2, l Bad·
roo~s, Stove R1triaarator, Un·
darpmnlng, One C..., $3,000;

$3,800. 614-388-9686.

room wl'tlloodbumer, map ap-

pliane. . , $15,500. 304·57'6-2783.

33 Fanns for Sale
68 acre cOLJntry 111111

witi"'

pond. VInton. Colonial farm
howe nnrly r~modal.d . 2 larg1
baml, summar houuJ. g1r1gt,
studio, huntlr'Hjl Clbtn. tty owner.
Aganta wak:omt, 3%. Din

Bfacll, 614-388-8210.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lore tor ui•.L.!!_~Uirll tccapllbM. 3G4-67S.lr.c.l.

bedroom turnish~ apt,
Jetffi'lon Ave. $200. plus
lltc1rlc, 304-675-2406 befor•

Ona

1 112 Bltht, CA., OW, Olspo5ll,
Pltyground, 2 Pools, Utllitl ..
Paid E~cept Eleclrlc, No P.-a.
Start At. S301. eM-317-7850.

The Waples Eldarty and Han·
dlclp housing, Ill utilities pakt,
convtn*'IIY loelttd tot Senior
Citizens, ..curttT •net tn

prolldlon, ren1a nalstance
available, mu.l mMI all HUO
guidelines, call 614-992·7022.
EHO.

45

lots In Naw Haven • 1CIO"'-'

Shoopl~

nooms

w~h

cooking.

buys all lhraa lots. 304-615-

2n2.
R~~J.

O.J. White

18 Acret,

Moally Wooded, Wll, A Bllutl·
rut Building Slla. Nice Lev-'
Driveway,
Rural
W1ttr,
Electricity, And Phone Service
Available. 3 112 Mlln From Mot-

Wanted to Rent

Household

Goods

Couch &amp; 2 •rge m1tchlng
Bedroom Houu, Double chalrt, look llka ntw, $350. 30(..
GlriQI, $300/mo. Ph.ll Deposit, 675-1881.
Must Have Ratarancaa. 11~
GOOO
USED APPLIANCES
3548.
W11tws, drytra, refrigarator1,

2bdrm. lri·IIVII houM, I yn. rangM. Slul1111o Applloncoo,
old, $375/mon., U60 doposfl, Upper Rl~ter Rd. Baaide Stont
6lll Mill St, lllddtopon, Ohio. c- llo1ot. con 6M .. 4ti-T.I08,
1-aoo.4!18-34H.

304-67~1'101

Hou11 on Sand Hill A01d, 2
badroom1..1. g1r1ge, ref, $250.
ri'lg, 304-67S.134&amp;.

Nowor

Home,.~.

Crown City,

2 Sotho, In

~WMO.

6 P.M. 614-245-1085.

'""

Clll After

~

c.nor,, CFA

coli :IOW'IS·-·
SWAIN
AUCTIOH A FURNITURE. 62
Olivo Sl., Qolllpollo. Now a Usod

•

25'

p.m.

= '.

Cnlttsman 10hp, 31" all, lmrn
tractor, ,_ balltery, bela,
muHior I ..... MrJ good cond,
$300. lfM.ji7S-31fl1.
Cub LDwboy 1M, can ba ~
1003 Main St , Point PtHunt,

t,..., .. ·

I&lt;A\IE GONE -

Wfl H OOC'S TIME -

ro

cxwp:ow• 1• *II:J'nt (R)

;:.:v2F_,Bo
.•
12:001

BETHEU~Wl8-

ST~TEMENT

~E

I'W:HINE !

OF

WEEK !

lR)

111e Iller--.
Hiit::lrdl Jitii · as to avenge
.,. - or a lilllt tlo'f.

$600 ,

T..-,

,_ Solo Or
POf&gt;Up
~. 1400, O.B.O.; Hondo 70
~WI
lor, S350. 0 .8.0 . 614-

4W II

Rod M -... Dodtshuncl """"· 614-38H23l
S..niuan Rabbits for S.. 614361-7927

-a.Arwua.s- ....

----:l
-of,.,...... o d
-----

Instruments

hog IINshhog. .... - . . Bolly

o..n.s....--.3BSS.

IBM Model 50 1286-10 Proc:el101, 20M Hard
1 llaprarn, Fonl ...... oncl goo-. , ......
VGA Color Monhor, 101 KBD. L.Gl-12, hychst•lic tranwnia

DriY.,

$1,200. 614-446-1051.

sion, 4Z" 614-MWBTI.

KILLS FLEAS• Buy ENFORCU

do&lt;k, - ·

Flu Killlrt tor pelt, horne I

I.H. lowboy, 3 Pl. Hildl, 5 Pt

yard. Guar~~niMd aflectlva! Buy

-Ba.d-, $3,CDl.
Doell. IU
-

ENFORCER

11 : Bllwn True
Value Store. 11 Wast lbln
Str• , Chntar Oh. &amp; Yahi'Y

Supply Corp., 555

KUBOrA

Buy ENFORCER Flu KIUtn For

P•t1, Home I Yard.. Qyrantaecl
Eftactiva! Buy ENFORCER AI:
Browns Tru~~~
Sl.. a Route 160, Bkfw.n, Ohio.
Nk:e Bedroom Sulta, 1100 Or
Tract. For Something Of E.QUal
Y1lu., Good CondttiGn, Pitcft.r,

S5,MS,Roulo7Norlh,-o.
114-Dl-4151

c!..."-.....

-·,_ -·--- -"""""
17,100. f14.446-MS.

5.~

" " Zll, - -

- " ' ap-

1,~

lttl

0 ;

1*" Weft

, Atldllg

IIDQ. 1M ttl 12G t..w1 - -

n

Trucks tor Sale

Dodgo pidl ,. ,__ con
_71 . . J U.AMI.Pl..._

,.., 7:.';:: ,,
~-

r.-. _ ,.,._

'' C;.- meeb

Blicww

BARNEY

IIIDiilllitir ~ 1

RUN

1177

a.., S.+

__
,...
-a..r--:1111

Pt PIL Y.F.O.-

1la ..... E

Transportat1on

• M I •

...,.. wodl nn,

-

lilt words
(2 Wd&amp;.)

parts
13 Do - others

4S Air derenae

14 Plly by 15 - flxe
!obaosolon)
16 Biographer
ludwig
17 Nothing
18 Move aolde

47 Beginning
50 Sailing lltlp

or g .

~4

ahelttr
57 Tear apart

58 Non-protll TV
59 Fills wilh

suddenly

20 Sldow1ys
22 Kind ol grain
2• Typo ol fish
25- KIPI&gt;Ur
28 Ontnlol

reverence

60 TV's

lalking

horll
(2 wd&amp;.)

btweuge
30 Waltr from

2 Loostn

61 Curly letter

oky
33 Similar

1•1. I

4 S1n - , Callt .

DOWN

37 Least dark

S Can. prow .

1:31CJ).
5

'

bordor
19 Puts 11 rest

plant

21 Blrd's homo

23 Little fl"'

25 Cry o poln
26 Grovel rldgts
27 Sl1le ot

Slllreo.

decay

29 Mtlrltll

•• .., •..,.,

0-..

• •

slress

31 By lht time

Joe

- -to
Photnix

1 OCin¥lrSIIIOn he ·s

owal-d ila plln for a
. - ,. (II)
t;J
tii:GI(J). 0 L.A. .... !Season
Finolo) Vln
is "?Y

s...o.
o-n
,_---·
-.s...o.Q""""""lioi

w;..r -.n..

a.wn

care, hall priea, (lsi ·
mowing
l:ng, call 114-i92-6J1.f,

I

32 Infamous Ro·

man emperor
3• Civil War
general

ltJ

'--+-j-+-i
.--

(1)-

-Q. .........

lM

,..+--11--+-+--+--1

eeOel'-Factor
o r - tries"'
dliilm11oiltioww il 1 hOm 1• • man

'JII't--+--1

(l)

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

prediclions loday by mailing $1.25 plus
a long . sell-addressed . stamped.....,.
lope to Astra-Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland . OH
44101 - 3428. Be sure to state your zod iac sign.

CANCER jJune 21-July 221 Subdue the

Plumbing

Fourth and P9na

inclination to lake a big gamble tor
small stakes today. Be grateful for what
you have . instead of risking everything
tn order to get a few farthings more.

Gal•polls, Ohio
614-446-3188

LEO (July 23-Aug. 2211n a competilive
development today. your position might
not be as strong as you think it is .
Thererore, lt it can be avoided, don 'l in--

Electrical&amp;

llay22,1tm
Improved llnanclal condiiiOIIa are lndl·

Clil.cl

u-

ibr 1111· ytit '11\ead. ·However.

glills"WIII have \o b8 earned.
Nothing will be awarded ~ralis .
GE- 1•;21.June20J You might be
privy 10 some wery valuable and contldenllal Information today , yel It could
prove to be of small worth : you may nol
know how to use It advantageously. Gel
a jump on llle by undemanding the lnlluences governing you in the year
ahead . Send lor Gemini's Astro-Grapll

vite a confrontation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-a.pt: 221 Do not attempi to impose your ideas on an unreceptive audience loday: you mtghl encounter someone wiiO will _....
resentment In nuty lerms.
UBAA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A lriendly associate might put you in an embarrass.
lng position loday by requesling things

you can't deliver. Oon'llet your ago give
you tho impression you can.
SCORPIO jOel. 24-lloY. 22) You're in a
rather strong bargaining position loday,
and you s11ould be able lo gellhe lerms
you desire. However. this is likety to be
achieved in an unbeCOming way.

SAGITTARIUS c-. 23-0ec: 211 "you

au1horit\' loday. use
your besl judgmenl Assog4 m'9 Iasks lo

have 10 delegalo

inepl assistants could do you harm
CAPIIICOM (Dee. 22-JM. 11) GM!
friends the same
ot choooe you
wanl1or yourself loday . H you •• too

1r-..

possesso.e or demondong . you could
send a pal away .

AQUARIUS (-_ . . _ 11) You mus1
be abte to dtstinguish today bet eeu
gening 1hings dOne and genong 1rongs
done properly Poor end resutls will
have to be unwound later.
c11 •1 ~
ty condllions today. you rnigh1 rejocl

•es-

PtSCEs we. • r

your basic rather limn Slrengll1 from lhem. Wrii10Ut guoclelone5.. '
you may be ; oellectioe.
,_S , ....... 21-April tl) Try no1 to
gel involved in an endeawr alibis tme ,
111a1 could pu1 ldditional strain on your I

witl1.-...

resources."butmayd start
..,._t,
hilS the potential to

-·

TAURUS (April • M ; 20) You may
llaW to deal wllh _ . . , lodoy who
will be diamelrically '""
' lo your
doing things. This ondiwitlual ,.
the type who is gitleG •• mekong moun-

....,. or

· - OU1 ol

molehills. 100

11-

(2 Wdl .)

tO Stcul1r
11 Heraldic

6 Ezpo11
7 Himalayan

1 Tobacco
chew

38 Waver

8 Egg poria
9 Low-slake
gamt

3 Oeleattd
completely

62 Uncommon
63 Unemployed

35 Cower

new gir1 in

Honest-

55 Pigeon

...., .... LMI

S...O.r;l

Y.F.D. ~

bao, 4 .....

43 Bachelor's

lJ I . .: C2:00l St8reo

ALECK ~ 1.

D~D

2111

~~ 1h7D Tntllor,

SMART·

earth

0 T... llwok 11DD1g Ill

a_, Slop ... - . Wy

Pt. ..._

Eas t
P ass

40 Spirit
42 WWIIare1

-.A,S...O.I;I

TH '

•

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

_,
__
_
lolr-

IXC concl,

OH !! SO YO'IlE

·

vans &amp; 4 WD's

lrP ¢*11.

North
1t

An1w•r to Prawktu• Pun•

39 Godden ot

compound

Bowocbt and Dylon n.n lheor

Refrigeration

73

I tiotg lell8rs . IPI

~. . . . . -.911210

-·
-84

an

~~61~--

s..v..

C..r111 'S

!i.with

ul
consults Adlm

1bou1 II

s.ptlic link Pumping $910 Gallia
Co. RON EYAHS EN'IERPRISES.
... ...... 014 1-8Q0.637-9528.

ln-

Shangr&gt;U.

..,_Sino.
(l) (J) r, I yl Sir

OFF WITH
MY SAUCEPAN ?

I-

blno,-e.-·... _ ...... JIM-.........

Ho- 114-

Tarax 8230 buM dour,
$22,500. -·1031.

h AJr

..,.
Allor 7 p.II. - Cond.PS.

-, 10 ta:oo.,

I c:llitg lor

I

WHO
Ran 's TV s.Me., spac:i•II.D~
in Zenith 1tso servidna most
ol... ~ ...... utlt., also
.,..... ~ r.palrs.
~Ohio 114-4 ... 2454.

1or 1t. Again

;*i...lll~~;2-

JET

-I

Mow .... , $815; 5 ttoet ; c u
Lozy Boy Tllloro, 1211 EAch,
Whllo Supplloo loot -

o T• N

CUTE&lt;'

,.,_ion llofon, rep~irwd . N.._ .
• ,....,.,..,. motors In -'od., RON
EVAHS, JACI&lt;SON, OH. 1.fl00. '
o.lHIS&gt;t.

T«at

-12--lfTD

HA'3.

Sor.i...
()Ml Rd. Pllf11, supplloo, pickup. dollvsry. 614-

--.$1,550;100Food
sz.-..,
••.5:12.

•••m.

IR)Sino.Q

- . - . Doelcs, Sldlno
And Aa Typos 01 Enorior Anil ·
Hlrior Painting. Will GI-lt Low
lid.lleonsod. 614-~~711·.

DoMs
C gw

---o&amp;SAndA

AAA.

-

ACROSS

12 Hooklike

lois n10t !Al

- CJle 0 a-n Sam and

wv

Stand, PO. 614-371-

boa.

~Ve:R

TI-\A.T YOU'RE.

514-!IIIHUI - , . . .
,_
_ _ ":!;._

lale llodtl 40DD Ford TriCIDr,
$(,150; -Food v.•;,.,_..

1\so Hono

NOBODY

1:'\,11;:1:2 TO..D YQ.J

Rooting:

WEL-L, "fH'';r NAKE5
IT UNANI.MOL-15.

NO .

HA5 ANYBODY

tmp-o~•••nl• :

tor ....

....,. cw- blllw.

2+

Fill THE

org.

l&amp;uiW"ttJ I frilnd has died.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP..----..-------.....,--,

.. ...... 1""*-noo

s...-.- -o.-

11fAnd
1)41

HURST TIIAC'TOR SALES
28 HP 4 WD - ; 211 HP a WO

KILLS FLEAS!

::.:._PO,
. ~ 'il

W.st

I+

ClA~~IFIED AD~

5 Pitr
9 lliddlt Eost

oeDo -.a..Otis

.L W. Conscruction. Room Ad-

--~--~'*CooK
:J1;

S.oanll

3.

t Campus area

. , . his_. on wideo after

Klct.r. And Baths. F'" Ulilallll•! Rao. ..-.ce., Ho Joh
Too 11ft Or Srulf! 114-367-0516.

Equipment

61 Fann

Ma a wat• II'GI

=13'

Y..-. Expart...::a 0o Claar I
........ Room Additions

Worll.

Vulnerable Nt:'llht'r
Dea ler South

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle

CllaM

11:30(1).
- - Ron
-from
a-,na-

~-. doy .. nigh~ .
Aagers BISIIMnl W.tarproo.

-ion

• Q 76;

+2

l ate'- We ll. a! the brtdge ta ble. de· 3.
r ass
3•
Pas.s
Pass
4+
All pass
d arer ts tn control of hts fa te more of·
ten than not
.
Opentng lead
K
II LSn't recorded whether Othell o·
played bndge. but let's 1magme- wh.at:
moghl have happened t[ Desdemona • ' - - -- - - -- - -- - - '
and Othello had sat North·Soulh on to·
da y's deal
Cover the East-West ca rds Aga tnst
four spades. West leads the cl ub ktng tract meant that Desdemona would be
and continues wtlh the club ace. East the dummy rather than declarer
Othe lln rurted the club ace a t tn ck
playing first the hve. Lhen the etght
two and drew trumps. He was mtffed
Whatls your plan"
The biddong was oncky As 1l hat&gt;- tllat tlley d1dn 1 break 3- 3. but he
pens. hve diamonds would have br-en wasn't worned Surely West h.ad the
beller but Othello liked the look of the dtamond ktng for tus two~ l evel over ·
strong ~ 2 Itt Bes1d es . a spade con· ca ll

L

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . he

Home

or K Q 3

Othello as ks. "Who ca n control h1 s

~is

C2:~

,

..._ l.oul retw.ncn furnished.
fNI ..almata C.ll cotJKt 1-

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Ltvestock

E;J

llusQ

1:05()) IMJ¥IE:

~

-..
eur...

., 10 8 5 2

., r-. .., Do9 Stereo.

BASEIIEHT
WAT&lt;RPAOOfiNG
IJnooc d"ti • • lit.. lma guaran-

Ho1point dryor, 11100; big puah t6" double II.. cart. 10' JaM
bwnon phoM, br1nd new, 140; ca-. trsnspart clac., T &amp;uut6J4.M2-"JIUO

OPI

446-4316.

Products

•ny1irne.

• Oooolo -

fttprO¥'IfTMirlta.
icww, Garages. Pa~~·
Roollllg.
Exporl
,
A
ombAI. 6\4_....&amp;-8561. 614-

GE Air Condh-. II,DOO BTU,
1225. 614·367-0131 Aftor 4 P.M.

Good utad Brorhlll ltYi"9 room
lUIIe, 3 axrr~ chairs, lib new, 1

- ·

R........ ._

5

Musical

• 10 8;

By Phillip Alder

.. laid all from ... pllnl os "'*I. (A) Stereo.

Home

IMmalll

tK 9

+ A K Q J9

The Moor
may win more

'1164*L
oen.(II~, on•

Improvements

1~8-1923

fNturing Amino Acid Boctr
Building, \M!Qhl lon and fill
burner tormJu. Avalll.bla U ·
c:lusively tt Rita Akl Pharmacy.
Tha saft WIJ Ia dt.l:.

iubbats; I serill

- - - - -,
\IJlY MUSf 'tClJ 8lYS DIG
IP ALL Wf\T HR"'/JAL
STUfF 00 (AIJDIDATf.'S 1

Services

•

Nulrhkln

1

Deld t.bies who

7

ta o

r a' , a
• • aer..,eop.An

EEKAND MEEK

81

ter. 6~CH100 .
FREEINSTALLATlDN
SWIMMING POOLS
Oflly $799.00 Boo.. lful Ground 1h31r4 Pool kwJuct.:
Finer, Oack. Fenc:a, L.lddln.
Etc. Don't Bel'"- It? C.tl BPI

.

l!l

'

.

""' ... tllnO. Iiiii ........ iM1!12.u2!1 ... - " " "

Tandy Pwsanal
Copier, New, $350, Or S.SI Of.

~--·
55

~AT

WAPPENEO ?

Theo ..

stiaoce, hclals. Stlr'eo.

Sale:

446-01165.

LASo&gt;

TAAT HAS

Fa

Exc..-ciM billa, $25, 6M-9Sk22428

dortt ' -

BE BA.c"K IN TJ.If

eo.; -

~s
a

wv.

lellten Ml50

SOMETHING MUST

SHOUL""'T WE

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

EAST

.108 5 4

+

-•lflb-ata

514112 5112.

-1&lt;

Enl..,..._,

Asking

..(I).

Fa

1:35()) su•ad • Son

~S

Plostlc:

1100,

1100,

OOo

1t11 Scony Sportsman
. -. 12' lorog, nldng

1..aoo-537.g:s2a,

11ar.o,

MW,

. . . . . Sloreo.
D lJIIn' I •• From
Do llotn Heog111s. Miclt (l)

-7123.

WEST

+ 72
" H I

SOUTH
+ A QJ 96

..··-"''-E;I
,...,_

Accessories

Froo

DREAII

ALDE R

~

Tanigllt

Auto Parts &amp;

I ' tndl: lopplr, tika

PHIL LI P

1:30:1::..! •·c:.:w~qald
IIJ e!Eiallllo
ol
c':'eL felnlly

MIIH"crolur

251Um.

76

. ... 7 6
.AJl0 2
• i 643

Iiili aHanlght

1:05())....., ......

BOATERS

;..u . tt

. Kl

•••••
on.w a •

IINcury c:art:lt'-&lt;1 .
W. coma to you. 6M-

79

Tonks, Jot Aero- Tonko. lion
Evans
Jecboft. OH

For

\--(

1!12_,

11.nn.r.

NORTH

BRIDGE

., - 11) . . t;J
OS,
C I

1913 CNsl H Pontoon boat ,

r ·'

Spunl&lt;y · Image · Guild · Unkind · KIND ol GUY
The fellow applied tor a )Ob as an induslrial spy He
was g1ven an envelope to del1ver to the next floor The
fellow opened !he envelope and found a nole !hat read
"Repon lor wort&lt; tomorrow You 're our KINO ol GUY' ..

::"-R
"'""'*
c..•-

"'

1530 HP Johnson moiOI', 614-

S31,9i5 a Up. Buill On """' LA1L
Soo Our llodois, 61U86-731t
I

~·.

ALLEYOOP

from bill. No S.m Somll•lla'a c.-ntta·..,.,
•rmy, surplus.. Our 2ah ,..,, 5
mU.. Eat 1--71. Rawwwa:cc:od by
Sonclywlllo Post Olllr:o, Frl, Sol,
Sun Noon-t :00 Pll.

Conmlo

..

FRANK AND ERNEST

!Gl-

dalivtry Politt ~unt ....
304-Zn-6655 coet of Cll t.un

DAKOTA

""" ·'

lans. 6M U6 'WU Aftlf 7:00

Wcadbum.., Zyra. Old, 1200,

NowiUsod
Houaohold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jorrieho Rd. Pl. PINoont, WV,

21100

a.,a_
iM 245 lOSS
----1£.~

$75. 1

PICKENS FURNITURE

fumltw.. hut... w.......,
Work_._ 1.._3151.

72.500 l l a -.. ~

..... cond,

Slgno, 1.-.533 son ony11-.
Slmptle11y .!ding Inn ....., 10 -Hal-hoy
a_, S-11,
kwlllllim. .
hp, 30" cut, gOod cond, - ·
304~75-1!114 .
Gohlll
- J171orogo - -·
lont~
Solo, Choir~ Good Condlllon,
$125; Rod ....... T - . Flo 63
Livestock
Chowy S-10, Good Condlllon,
S75.1&gt;1-31N417.

2

3 BR homa for Nnt In town,
13GO month pluo doposH . 304-

ing prieo $12. -

He

51

.. -. ...,
llgplo -

Renlal Surplut Clathlng, tlllt-

$250. Froo ioll-..y.

Merchandise

614-992-3187

tn..

,_ •

-...-.

Slgnso Portoblo llghlod:
1ble ....., alan sat;
•

4127.

1 BR hou .. acrou from ti"'a
University ot Rio Orar*. 114·
388.g!j46,

- · · $20, 6-~471.
8'4"''16' 11'1111•, Tandom .....
truttd floor, uc.
1000it.
capacity, aPing StOOO boJ: k'l or
$850 box oft, 614-Mt-2804

-·k

UNSCRAMBLE LET'ERS TO

GET AN IWEi

...
, TNi:
D "" Nul

oeE

Gun-. llen:vry Martn• S«Yica .

LS,- . 4 ........
AMifM . . . .
...... ..

3 pc. living room tufte, dart
bluo,$450; . . . - bodt couch
and ehalr, tan, S&amp;DD; dfy aiM
(new o.k), $150; 1 conwnodl wJo

P1111ic And Medii Culv«t i Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
E.vans, Jack.on, Ohio. 1-100537-1528.

Rentals

-

Fow-Winna, 90hp
AII-FM
c:asaalla,

pcMif tilt &amp; trim, extru , $7,000.
- . :!OW1S-1$17.

~.

t,.... 614-446-2011.

Country Mobile Home P1rk., At .
33N., unct.r new m1n1gement

47

~~

3 Ploeo Bod,_ Sullo, lncludaa 8o1 Spring And Mit.

Bowl I
2699.

ur Ho.pt111, 131,000. 614-446-

41 Houses lor Rent

&amp; - - - . . .. 2 door. No.

2 llrjJI nabl office dtab wilh
form1ca top. chairll indudld,
$65, 614-992-3171 oftor 5pm.

11ft

.w..on.

JOU75.77'60.

--Rogol.-ongOoo

Brown .ottltt. ~75-4004 .

46 Space for Rent
Lots, $85; home rental1, $235;
614-!IQ2-2117

~ 080, ~

~

raitlng.

Par11: StrMI, Middtapof1, Oh.

owner financing at $101.46 par Alao tnular ~- All hook-ups.
month buya •lllh,.. lata, 1304- C.ll Iller 2.00 p.m., 304-m.
5651, Mleon WY.
675-2n2 .
Lota joining Point • 100% owner
financing at $101.46 pet" rftonth

SNnglo

1r&lt;&gt;n

Wrouglt

aoch.

Lwmbar I

Furnished
Rooms

614~9S80.

ell!,....

Chowrafol

llfgl chllr, 6M-JIU.rt14.

Ap~rtmantt, 2
a.ctrooma, 2 Floors, 1166 Sq. Fl.

IVIIJabll, 304-675-27'22.

home, 4 bedrooms, 1111•11 living

yq ,. ~.2 yra uperialnca, garage, shown by appointment
muM haYt \,;U\,'8. 1-100-MJ.-421. only 304-875-1238.

675-1386.

lola In G11tlpolls Farry - 1001C.
owner lintncing •• $98.64 par Rooms tor rent · waH or mont,.
month, any ana of tvur lola Starting at $120/mo. G11111 Hotel.

675-3433.
5pm.

room, au one lavtl, c:ovared
OTR llot bod dn-. womod, 211 paelo In back, prtvocy tonco,

1pl,
304·

a0

1!172

Genesis

Vary nlca 14x10 mobUt home on 5c00 Pll.
privata acre. 3 bedroom~_ ~1:111 T1r1 TownhouM

2021 llltrquatte Ave, 5 yrt okl,
111 brick malnten1nca fr•

room, dlnlngroornl'flmlly room
comblnalion, kltchtn, ullthy

5 :00

ltll

' " Rom Chafgor
tlvough
--~31.,¥­ .._,
II reupftotstarl'd inside,
'fou&lt;Ooo&lt;,
And Ttw
· · L Mllb 01.. r.a..: malar, 150 hp Merc:UJy,

Ona bedroom apt tor twnt , 3046]5..2218.

tur-

IDI!l~
II
t•Q

;::-;;v-;cw •.

=-

Tr.ctor, MOO; 2 Puth
Mowlfl, Ukl New, $35 A P'teee.
614-446-8158.

Rafrigarltor, 1121. 2 aiLWnlrun

2 Rooms • a.tll, Oownttlif'll,
No
Polo,
Oulot,
NI'W Hlvan " " Broad Awn Rat~ranc. And Dapoall R•
A01d,
U
acra. Priced qulr.d. 614-446-1511.
rn.onabla. $15,000. C.ll tor in-

lll:-=E";• !t

......., outbwrd. Runs good .
......ory ...... (1500.
11ttl2,...aller5pm.

dan

1M3 Unc:olft TOIMI C., no rust,
Interior . . . . , . . .......

110 John .,_,. Uwn And ca.,.

window lwninp. sr • JO". $30

Cloon,

limber,

949-3014 lfllf 6prJL

c:omprwsaor, $450. 40.. ~
for Granly S400. f7 cu.ft.

Apartment
lor Rent

44

1 old refrigerator, n.na good ;
11'1r11 lila bleyeta; am&amp;~ cheM
type lrMUf, uNd OM y. ., 614-

plc:kup. $2100. IHP

1983 14152 2 hdrooms, Utility Gracious living. 1 1nd 2 Md·
Min Paula's O.y C1rt C.ntar. CIOHt, Stov1 &amp; A•fri;-rl1or In- room apartments at Village
5.Jft, attord•bla, childc•"· M-F eluded, 011 Furnac., New Car- M•f10f
•nd
AlvtrSida
6 1.m · S:30 p.m. Al)lt 2¥1-10. patlng, Good Condhlon, $7,000, Apar1ments In Middleport. From
$196. Call 614-!IQ2-77Bt EOH.
Betora, 1f'lar achoot OrofHns O.B.O. 614-e6tl-5245.
Wllcome. 614~22 .. . New In·
1983 Nashua, 3 bedroom, 141:70 Lllayette ...11 : 2 Room &amp; Battt,
tanl Toddler Care, 614-446-6227.
whh "h:12 IXpllndo, CA, Ouaan $175/Mo. 2 a.drooms, 2 Baths,
TO's l.lwn L..ndscaplng, odd wat.-bed, g•rd«l tub, all ap- S4001mo. - h Roqulrwd . 614job
Nnlce. Quality work, plla..,.s, 10120 dock, $14,500. 446-77.13, 114 ... 6-4222.

Wtth Or Without Motort. Call
Larry Uv.,y. 6M..388-9303.

•1

A.nt:

446-3806.

1500 Ott Purch111 Price ot Any
Will Bobyoll In My Homo. Fon- New Home AI EIMI Home c.n.
8
ced In Play Aru. Rtfertncn tor, Grut Selection, frtl Sat·Up
&amp; AuC11on
Avollablo. R-.oy Aooo. Coli And Dallvary! Call 614·m·1220.
,---,---:--.--:---1614·24S.S887.
14160 mobile hon.a, exc cond ,

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

For

qulrod. 6&gt;1-Z5ti42St

June 15 6,._...2205.

PubliC Sale

Rick Pa1rson Auction Cornp.~ny,
rull time auetlonaar, complete
1udion
"nrk:.a .
Ucenud
166,0hlo I W•t Vlrv'nlal, 304-

Homes

R.teranc. And OlpMlt A•

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE qulrwd. C.ll After 2 P.M. 614-448Hlltoric•l A,_ Comer Lot - 816 0527.
Main St. Pt. Pleaunt, W. Va.
Completely Rtno¥ated: 2 Full . Nlel 2 Bedroom Mobl.. Horne
811ha, 3 Urge Bedrooma, New For Rant. 8 Mlln Out Rt.218,
HVAC, New C.~t. .lvallabla A.teranca And O.posil R•

VInton INA, 12 ICNI ot oak

Retrain

18

Hollypark 14r70 with add on
liwlngroom, In Hartford, $200.
monfh, 304-882-2016.

lonnatlon 304-al2-356i.

Sandhill Rd, Greenbrier Ea1atea,
Sat only 1:00 till 5:00.

9o00 110? Ul11o bllot ovory1hlng.

Acr11 2 bedroom ll'liler, dec:k.
p;;ch, eentfll hNUalr, stowe,
rtlrlger~~lor, AppM Grove, 304-

€)

SCRAM-l£TS ANSWERS

1-CJ)·-"''-0

1fJ'i Bojo Ski Boat. 85 HP

THESE IQU AiE I

j """

l:li(J),.,~

1910
Barbour
1&amp;-112
fl.
...- . RurH-IIoul with so
.., ~ Odbaard. $4,250 . 1·
~. Huntlnglon.

&amp; PP IN T NUMB E'I ED LETTER S IN

UpCiaoe

., - :r- sw.o. Q

Part time deptrtment •tore mtr-

I I I I' I

= 11

1D- • lw Stareo. t;J
ljll S... 0 . TV Stlr'eo.

•

"You 'll only be charged
tor the time you actually use
!he lawn eqUipmenl ·· the
store owner said "How wdl
youknowhow long l'veused
rt? the man ask ed ·Easy ··
the owner said . ··· · · tell · · 1 •

JYLOL

Cils...dlltr ......

., s

0'~~~

MAWLRY

S...O.Q

I:OS(J) IS Wit In

the

be-

I I I' I I'

0 - . , . SINor PGA
T0-T'*r
0 ~Til n., K·t C...,

.

Sill I

low to form fo ur ·llmple words

•

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.,_Q

1 JU 5T PliT DOIIJN

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-14;,4 Oy CLAY I .

Q lou,
Rearrange ~~rs o f
K rambled words

~ S... 0. TV Ster'eO

1 DIDN T KNOW IF IT
WAS AN E55A\' TEST.
TIM OR FALSE . OR
MULTIPLE CHOICE ..

c:hlndiHr rtMded . Must llwe
wlth-ln15 Milas Of Gllllpolla.
Wof1( you 'rt own day 111M
hours. No wMkandt. Car
nMd.cl. No experience nten-

- - --

I:GICJle we &lt;JJe ••

. - . o.

487'3 .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

-

.........
(J)- -

PI, tllch, 5 Spd, And Mo"!
52.000 ...... -..., Nk:e! $10,000 .

'2/C\\~}A-fG£~~ 8

TUT IAI\Y
'UUUI

tiM Chny 4x4, Air, AW.1=U

1 Bedroom C.ntl'll Air, Retaran·
Cll &amp; Oeposh Requl~ . No
Pets. Available ~ 615192. 614-446-

Yard Sate

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

vans &amp; 4 wo·s

73

•·

Unh.lrnlahed 2bdrm. house,
clun, dtpoah I rttlrtncn ,.....
qulrtd, no lnsiO. pata, 614-992-

dog,

Foril;.d Run Stat1 Part 1r111,

7

51

and bHutltul, 304-675-6042

Thursday, May 21, 1992

Thursday, May 21, 1992

Household
Nl&lt;o oHie~ncy collogo, unique , _ _ _ _Good
___s___

·•

256--&amp;667.

6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

_., EIMI

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.

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36 Sll bltk
41 E)ocllon
4• Acldomy
Award

46 Physlciol
Enrico •1 Yawn
48 Rollo oul
49 Hawkeye

Slolo
51 Quill, e.g
52- Knienl
53 Surrender
56 L1nguagt
suffix

liN Clllt- Pat

~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CIP* CI}'Jitogt.,... -

......,.., from ~ltiOI'III

EM:fl- ., " " - - ltnfllor

~

BOUOCMZMIT

A E M T I

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enott.... ,_. .. '*- c ~ v

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PREVIOUS SO LUTIO N: "' One ot the tragedies or lite is that the men mo s t
in need of a beating-up are always enormou s.

-

Rudy Vallee .

21

�Thursday, May 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Students compete in Envirothon

·I&gt; .' ~ - )
Hocking College. From left are, (rront): Christy
Cooper, Stephanie Sayre, and Jeff Rose; back,
Clifford Smith and JlJS9n Ervin.

AG SOENC:E TEAM - Pictured are memlbtu I I * RariD• FFA AG Sdence Envirotbon
T.- IDIHI """'l'eted in tbe area Envirotbon at

Students from Southern High
School Vocational Agriculture
classes compeled in the area Envirothon for Southern Ohio held
recently at Hocking CoUege in Nelsonville.
Sponsored by the Ohio Federa·
tion of Soil and Water Conservation Districts, in cooperation with
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR), the Envirothon
challenges high school students'
knowledge of soils , forestry,
wildlife. aquatic ecology and current environmental issues. Teams
of three to five students answer
questions in the five subject areas
as a team. A school may field up to
two teams in the Envirothon.
More than 150 students and
teacher-advisors from 27 schools
competed in this year's southern
area Envirothon. Statewide, more
than 220 school teams will compete in area Envirothons in Ohio
this spring. The top two school
teams in each area competition will
go on to compete in the Ohio En vi·
rotllon on June 15 near Cincinnau.
The top-scoring team at the Ohio
Envirothon will be eligible to compete in the National Envirothon.
which will be held this year in

been adopted by more than a dozen
other states. The Envirothon is
designed 10 encourage students 10
learn more about natural resources
and to take a more active role in
doing what they can 10 protect the
environment. The first Ohio Envi·
rothon, held in 1989. involved swdents from six schools. Ohio hosted
the National Envirothon in 1990
near Zanesville.

Maryland in early August.
Resource specialists from the
ODNR, Soil Conservation Service,
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency. colleges. universities and
nature centers prepare and deliver
the Envirothon tests and discu ss
natural resource and environmental
issues with the students.
The Envirothon originated in
Pennsy lvania in 1979 and has since

both men and women's clothing
from time ~ e riod mid -1800' s
through 1950 s, for fashion accessories. and for summertime related
memorabilia for the same time
period. These might include toys,
sports equipment, programs, movie
ads. gifts and prizes from fairs and
summer events. anytlling that will
help ponray summertime in Meigs
County.
Further information may be
obtained by contacting Margaret
Parker at the Meigs County Museum, 9920-3810, Tuesday through
Saturday.

Slides or photos of summertime
activities in Meigs County are
being solicited by the Heritage
Weekend committee of the Meigs
County Historical Society.
The loaned materials will be
copied and incorporated as a pan of
a slide show to be shown Heritage
Weekend, June 13 and 14, at the
Meigs County Museum.
Anyone with slides or photos
should mail or bring them to the
museum at 144 Butternut Avenue
by May 30.
The committee is also asking for

Atomi~

't,'

...
'

.....,.

The hrst maJor nuclear accident in

..

-::' .... ' ...

rire in the Windscale plutonium productwn reactor north of Liverpool.

England, spread rad1oact1ve material
throughout the countryside. In 1983,
the BritiSh government said that 39
people probably died of cancer as a
result

' Ujj,ll -·j•)
I &lt; l i ~U/11&lt;1 &gt; ~,..

'

FAlliN MANAGEMENT TEAM - Pictured
..,.. ' n ollh Jla&lt;ine FFA Farm ManageEMira...,• Tram that competed in the
-

' . '

area Envirotbon at Hockin; College. Front, (I to
r): Mk:heUe Brown and M•chelle Friend; back,
Tyson Mugrage, Chris Brown, and John Amos.

• it]o Caludar items

¥II • - •)IS llofon aa neat
.... 6r .a., II lbt eveal Items
k nuio..t wd iD advaace
n
,...aotioa in tbe cal-

...,..._

nllJliSI)AY
il"'MMfJll'r - Revtval at the
CB!v&lt;ll!'fl 11"\illgJnm· Chapel. Route
na D'tDmlaml. "''" be held through
~ 311 7'.W 11.m. rughtly with
llbllll' Milllt• and family . Pastor
VllllllDTiimusliJ tm&lt;tll!!! the public.
ll,(lJl(li. 5l!'liJiN.(iS -

W!liln IDt 511elllll Clll'tis Th.nlay at
7 liHDl Jll ditr lialr. Spnngs Grange
l!ilill

Oh1o Young
Amcnca. Me 1g s
OrlUIIIJ, .. WJ: llold their regular
m~ !lllNODJ! on Thursday at
6-Jinl ii'Jm 311 Catpenters Hall. All
WI IDimlornHS. aged 18-40.
01 w
- tmoiimlllml ammd.
ll'O~IDl.

~ ~f

lPOJftfllllW . The Metgs Counlt!' ~ '""* 'kUic E~ec:urive Commit·
oadll !IIWl! ]lllll'!day at 730 p.m.
JlldE C..[lililffi Hall.

'*

liA(:liN;B: - Racme Amencan
lf'IJl!l[ 6iJ2 wtil meet Thurs-

uqjil!DI

POMEROY · There will be a
rehearsal of tlle Middlepon Alumni
Band Friday at the bandroom at
Meigs High School at 7 p.m. There
will also be a warm -up rehearsal
Salllrday at 3 p.m. at Meigs Junia
High . This rehearsal will allow
those out of town alumni to
rehearse with the band. All brmer
hand members are urged to auend.

LOTrRIDGE - Country music
night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Center Saturday.
Bands perform 7 p.m. to midnight
Refreshments available . Public
invited.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Class of
1967 will be holding a kick-off get·
together for the 25th reunioo at tlle
Meigs County Golf Course Friday
at 6 p.m. Further information may
be obtained by callmg Linda Will
Gilkey at992-3966.

dance.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Alumni Association will decorate
at tlle Meigs High School Cafeteria
Fnday at6:30 p.m.
POMEROY · The Meigs Coun·
1y React Team w1ll have a coffee
break at the southbound roadside
park on Route 33 between Athens
and Pomeroy starting Friday
eve nmg and continuing through
Monday until 6 p.m. Ca11992-325S
for further mformauon.

7/JIDI~1 m .

\IIOCll $l?RINGS - The MiddleIJil!ll1l ClllilliConservation Leag ue
Wllllllll&lt;l! lfllw:3day at 7 p.m. at the
!lid $fmng&gt; Cn1ted Methodist
&lt;Oiumill

lllUMV1ill.l i - Durtng f1eld
&lt;4ft """""1Jl!.C!"' fo r Eastern Local
piac ~ &gt;dledu.lcd for Thun;rllay" JlllllOlll!f. ri l[hap!er I reading
!Dedi""" aR «ncouraged to meet
....diJ lfurnr dlilif' • reacher 1n the
Jti1Jr.Brf 311 !Ea!!tern H1gh School
~ ditr llooD of 9 and II a.m.
!ll&gt;dllld:""" lfteur chtld' s progress.

RIDAY
[.O!ii[P B101tTOM · The Fanh

lfidll

Legion Hall Saturday at 2 p.m.
Public invited. Musicians and
groups are inviled 10 entertain. Call
949-2038 for further information.

A class in

~ ;anrmgement and the
~ &lt;Dii arrmgmg will be

~ 0111

tom w1ll have preaching and
singing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the (Xlblic. Fellowship will follow .

GiiJIVd Church 1n Long Bot·

SATURDAY
POMEROY · There will be a
hymn sing Saturday at the Freedom
Gospel Mission Church on County
Road 31 featunng Russell Spencer
and the Southern Hill Singers .
Roger Willford, pa,tor, invites ihc
pub tic.
HURRICANE - Descendant' of
the Joseph Rappold and Feltx
Edward Rappold will hold a family
reunion at Hurricane Park in Hurricane, W.Va .. on Saturday at noon.
Call 992-5858 for further informa·
Lion.

RUTLAND - There w11l be a
roast at the Rutland American

ho~

RACINE - Racine -Southern
alumni banquet will be held Saturday at 6 p.m. at Southern High
School. Cost is $10 for dinner and
RUTLAND - Rutland High
School Alumni Banquet will be
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township VFD will hold a baked
steak dinner Saturday beginning at
II a.m. Public inviled.
KANAUGA - Square dancing
and clogging at the DAY building,
8-11 p.m. Music by the Liberty
Mountaineers. Public is mviled.

1: 1 fAR -

bomb

Pick 3: 61ll
Pick 4:8673

Bulls

Balboa d iscov ered the Pacific
Ocean in IS 13.

Page 5

------·-- - --'

Vol. 43, No. 15

3 Sections, 38 Page• 25 cent1
A lolulllmedlo Inc. NewoDil-

Copyright.&lt;~ 1e!l2

Official has mixed feelings
over proficiency test results
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Greater percentages of ninth- and lOth-graders
are passing Ohio's high school proficiency tests, but the state's top
educauan offtcial says there is still
a need for improvement
Instruction Superintendent Ted
Sanders released Thursday the
Dcparunent of Education results of
tests given in March. They showed
significantly larger percentages
passmg students than previous
results.
Sanders said he was pleased but
remains concerned about large
numbers of lOth-graders who have

not passed all four categories after
four anempts.
Ohio law requires that after
Sept 15 , 1993. all students mu st
pass all four categories of the tests.
which reflect proficiency at the
ninth -grade level, before the y can
graduate.
Thursday' s re sults were from
tests given in March to both ninth·
and lOth-graders who failed in one
of more of the categories - read·
ing. writing, mathematics and citizenship - in November or earlier.
Sanders released cumulative
percentages who have now passed
all four categories. There was an
increase in each but math continues

to be
Sat d.

th e most troublesom e. he

Fifty-two percent of this year's
ninth -graders have now passed all
four, compared with 46 percent last
yea r after th e tests were given
twice.
The results showed 63 percent
of all lOth -graders now have
passed all four. Only 56 percent
had passed after their third attempt
m November.
After the November and March
te sts, the passing rates for this
year's ninth -graders are: in writing.
88 percen~ up from 82 percent last
year; mathematics, 58 percent, up
(Continued on page 3)

HOFFMAN
MEIGS COUNTY

COMMISSIONER

Women's society holds meeting
The NIIUil'Cne Women's Society
of the FeUowship Nazarene Church
mel recently at the fellowship hall
with Lisa Putman, Linda Putman
and Marlene Putman as hostesses.
Opening prayer was given by
~ veryone in unison commemorat·
ing National Prayer Day.
Devotions were g1ven by Tami
Putman with women of the b1ble
being her topic.

''.
'

Fourteen women left the next
morning for a retreat in Columbus.

.•'

.•

' .'

..
: j

''

.

•

or

Drew Webster Memorial Day services

$799
900 SECOND AVl•GALLIPOLIS

446·4040
811 W. MA1N.•POMEROY

992·2124

Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses
Announces
Memorial Day Weekend Savings
On Top Quality Hanging ni:l:!ia.~~:
NOW JUST

$8.98

25% OFF

tkalarly:

PREPARING THE SOIL -Junior Rose,
J~mes Vlaing, and Daany Terzopplous, left to
ngbt, were among tbe FFA members of Southern High School working on the Raronick land-

scaping project. Involving students in work pmjects with local businesses is a new facet or agriculture education at Southern.

Businesses, schools work together
to develop learning opportunities
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
More involvement of the com·
munity through its business leaders
is an approach being promoted by
Meigs County schools in an effon
to expand the learning opportun1 ·
Lies available to students for skill
development
Often described as a partnership
between business and schools. stu·
dents are being taken into the f1eld
or 10 a job si!e where they learn the

skills of specific vocauons.
At Southern High School , one
emphasis of the agriculture education program has been greenhouse
management. The progra m ha s
included growing plants from seed
1n a greenhouse, nurturin g th e
plants during the growth pcnod so
that they remain healthy and
saleable, learning how they are
used in landscaping projects. and
then actually getting tile hands-on
c.pcrience of planting at a job site.
One of the teaching projec ts

ck•iiapofthe site. Please call Pete Costello or Pam Hayes
at DIIR-Waste Management Section, (304) 558-2745, or
waile to 1356 Hansford Street, Charleston, WV 25301.
'

the Air Force . He IS a veteran of
World War II. Korea and Vietnam,
rcc eivmg numerous combat deco·
rations.
Flag raismg wi II be conducted
by th e Legion Boy Scout Troop
249. under the leadership of Bob
Arms . The Meig s H1gh School
Band, under the direction of Toney
Dingess, will play the National
Anthem and another number. Julia
Hysell. president of the Drew Webster American Legion Auxiliary
will recite "Flanders Field" and
Gold Star Motllers will be honored.
Florence Richards. District Eight
auxiliary officer, will give the clos·
ing prayer and and memb ers of
Drew Webster post will "Salute the
Dead."
(Continued on page 3)

included working with Ed Hupp
Landscaping on a proJect at the
home of Betty Baronid in
Pomeroy.
Under the guidance of Hupp. a
Southern FF A alwnnus. the flow er
bed soil was prepared and th e
plants grown in the Southern Hi gh
School greenhouse were put inlo
the ground by the students.
Aaron Sayre is the vocation al
agriculture teacher at Southern who
initiated the adults-in -educal!on
program for FFA students.

REG. 1 11.98

(BOUGMVILLA &amp; BOSTON FERNS NOT INCLUDED)

25% OFF All Flowering Trees, Fruh Trees &amp;Rhododendrons
COMMENDATION - A commeadation l'rom
the Ohio House or Representatives on the occa·
sinn of the IOOtb anniversary of Carpenters
Local 605, Pomeroy, was presented to local offi·
ce rs by Rep . Mark Malone at Wednesday
night 's meetmg. Accepting from Malone, fourth
from lert, was Harold Wells, president . Other

For Your First Picnic Of The Season, Come To Bob's For Delicious

Florida Vine Ripe

Florida 11 New White

TOMATOES

POTATOES

•r,sre lib

Hom•Jrflwll

HALF RUNNER

GREEN BEANS

5229
50 LB. 5998
BAG

10 LB.
BAG

99 1 LB.

Ohioans tend

ltXAS X-LG. JUMBO (9 SIZE)

to stay put

CANTALOUPU
51.49 EACH

Just Arrived
SWEET, JUICY, CRIMSON SWEET

WATERMELONS
PLANT PRICES EFF 5/22 THRU SEASON -- PRODUCE PRICES5/22 THRU S/25

OPEN 7_..,.DAYS
_____ A
_ WEEK

Jlellwble. first-hand information Will assure a thorough

Sam Barney of Lancaster will be
the featured spealccr at Memorial
Day Services in Pomeroy , conduct·
ed by Drew Webste r Post #39 of
American Lc~ion .
The serv tc cs will be held at
Beech Grove Cemetery at 10 a.m.
on Monday .
Barney is a member of Fairfield
Post II, American Legton, of Lancaster, and is the past commander
of the 16 4.000-member Ohio
American Legion . He was elccled
to the office at the 71 st Annual
State Convention in 1989.
Barney' s special "War on Cance r" project raised more than
$13 5,000 for tllc American Cancer
Society in Ohio. He retired in 1974
after 28 years of service, 12 years
with the M.arine Crops and 16 with

•New Guinea Hybrid Impauens In 19 Vibrant Colors
•Non Stop Begonias •G eraniums •Fuschlas •Chenille

3'11 Lb.$2 79
Basket

•Piocess operations, including storage and handling
of I8W materials
•
•w.stewater
disposal practices
-f._..tions of transmission lines and pumping
stations ·

Iva Sisson, class of .64, organizer for tbe alumni
celebration, and Olita Lewis Heighton, class of
' 66, library employee. The library also ba.~ all
Middleport High School yearbooks and some
unidentified pictures . McComas and rellow
alumnus, Walter Harris, arrived for the alumni
celebration by boat from St. Charles.

Sam Barney named guest speaker for

PICKUP SPECIAL ONLY
LARGE PEPPERONI PIZZA

Auending were Dian Bisc. Bon·
nic Richards, Crystal Vogelsong,
Ann Bartoe. Sue Sullie. Anna
Skills. Evelyn Barr, Cathy Masters,
Barbara Masters , Kristi Boston ,
Carolyn Whaley. Mattie Teaford ,
Mandy Scyoc, Barbara Swartz and
Sandy Wright as well as tho se
mentioned above.
There were 94 shut in calls
reported and 13 cards sent.

Including ...

MEMORII.BILIA DONATED- Ed McComas, St. Charles, Mo., left, in memory or bis
latber, tbe late Lee McComas, has donated to
the Middleport Library several bound books
cuntaiaing all the Middleport High Scbool
newsletters rrom the years or 1935 -66. The
books will remain atlhe library ror the public to
view. Pictured with McComas, class
' 57, are

LIMITED QUAttTmES AVAilABLE

The Division of Natural Resources is looking for
former employees of West Virginia Ordnance Works or
anyone else with knowledge of past operations, par-

.\1t.slly dear toniJ.:hl. Low 55(tO. P&lt;tr lly ~unn) on Sat urday.

FRED

REUNION • A reunion or those who attended tbe old Sugar
Run School in Pomeroy wiD be held Suaday rrom I to 3 p.m. at
Triaity Church. Ligbt rerreshments will be served. General
cleanup around the building has taken place and plaas caU lor tbe
building to be restored oace runding becomes available.

RACINE · Racine Fire Dcpan·
ment will sponsor a chicken barbecue Sunday at the ftre station at II
a.m. The ladies auxiliary will serve
homemade 1cc cream.

WVOW information needed

----

ELECT

SUNDAY
LETART . Memorial services
by Racine American Legion Post
602 will be held at the Letart
Ce metery Sunday at I p.m. and at
the Browning Ceme1ery in Portland
at2:30 p.m.

MONDAY
BURLINGHAM - The Modern
Woodmen at Burlingham and Bedford Township people will serve
fish. turkey, chicken and ham din·
ner s as well as sandwiches. pies
and homemade bread. Memonal
Day (Monday ) from II a.m. to
6:30 p.m. Money will be used for
upkeep of the Bedford Tow nship
Cemctencs.

'

VOTE FOR A
PROVEN LEADER

Community calendar
c-

Age

the West occurred on Oct 7, 1957. A

'

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

Cavs

Slides, photos sought for
Heritage Weekend show

~.

•

Ohio Lotttn

•l/4 Mile North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Moson, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721 • 773-5900
•2400 Eosl•m Avenue (across from K Mort)
Gallipolis. OH

Phone (614) 446-1711

LESSON IN LANDSCAPING - Colorful
nowers were planted by Wendy Gilbeaut and
Jeremy Smith in a stone planter at the rear or
the Betty Baronick bome or Mulberry Heighl~ as

part of the Southern students' FFA project
work. Here Ed Hupp supervises the planting as
Mrs. Baronick watcbes the area turn from bare
soil into a blaze or color.
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - If you
li ve in Ohio. you probably were
born th ere. And if yo u were n't,
three out o f four of your neighbors
probably were.
New Census surv ey information
released Thursday painll a poruait
of Ohio as a state where people
tend to stay put.
or the state's 10.8 million resi dents. 10 . 58 million are nativ e
Americans, and 75 .9 percent of
them were born in Ohio, according
to the sllllistical sampling from the
1990 Census.
Statewide figures were estimated from the responses given by
people wh&lt;l filled out the detailed
"long fonn" questionnaire. About
one in six households got the long
form, the Census Bureau said.

••

?meers from the left are Gary Saunders, record mg secretar~; Leroy Sauters, treasurer; John
Dean, linanc1al secretary; (Malone and Wells)
John Grueser, tru stee, and Tom Rou sh, conduc tor. The Pom eroy local was chartued on May
16, 1892.

Local briefs.___
Woman hurt in one-car wreck
A Gallipolis woman was inJured in a one-car wrec k on Leading
Creek Road near the intersection of Ohio 7 Thursday around 7 a.m.
. Accordmg to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of tlle State
H1ghway Patrol, Sandm Call . 23, was soutllhound on Leading Creek
Road, drove off the _left s1de of tlle road and struck a bridge. The
respondmg trooper listed unsafe speed a~ the contributing faciOr in
the wreck.
Call was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Service and later transponed to
Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis.
According to a hospital spokeswoman , Call was admitted for
treatment of multiple trauma and was last listed in stable condition.
Damage to Call 's 1985 Chevrolet Ca valier was listed as heavy
and disabling.
Call was ciled by the patrol for failure to wear a safety bell

Deer accidents probed
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Friday that
deputies have taken two deer accident reports.
According to the repon, Dilynn Salla of Vinton was traveling
(Continued on page 3)

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