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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

June 7, 1992

0 hio Lottery

Reds drop
1-0 battle to
LA Dodgers

Pick 3:
103
Pick 4:

4290
Super Lotto:

12-35- 37-39-40-46
Kicker:

Page4

NEW LOCATION - Valley Diaguostlc Laboratories recendy moved into its new olrKes at
1504 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. A full -service
medical laboratory that bas been in lbe GaiHpolis area for 11 years, Valley Diagnostic Labora-

oew

tories beld an open bouse at its
location last
Sunday. Pictured outside tbe new offices are
left to right are Ali Golj~ owner· Sberri Jarnu'
Jeff Golji, Jim Goldcamp, Kim Gold camp:
Susan Canterbury and Shirley Golji.

Growth ... __c~on..ti~:. .nued=.;r:.ro:. :=m:..:D=--·=--1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the company achieved 1111e diversifi- company pale ntcd technology to million in 1992 and $21 million in
calion by acquiring companies that produce a new line of gas grill bri- 1993.
(Mr. Evans is an investment brocomplement, and yet are counter- quets thgat provide a hickory or
fla
vor.
ker
for The Ohio Company in its
mesquite
seasonal, ro the sausage lines. Those
Gallipolis
office).
The
Zesti
Flavordi
vision
produced
acquisitions wi II provide synergy, and
liquid smoke flavorin gs to the
thus increased earnings.
Sausage produclS are made at meatpacking and the processed food
seven processing planlS and deliv- industries. MaJor customers are
ered fnesb daily to 8,000 supermar- Nabisco, Kraft, Carnation and Heinz.
Continued l'rom D-1
kets and groceries located m the The commercial navor prod ucts arc
Midwest, Southeast and Southwest. used in the manufacture of suchitems nents, automotive, Hartford InsurDetiveries are made daily by Bob as polatochips, pel foods, nulS, phar- ance and O!her fmancial and comEvans' fleetoflrucksandroute sale- maceutical, smoked hams and barbe- munications units with more than
100,000 employees and $2 billion
speople. The company makes every cue sauces.
in
sales annually worldwide.
Hickory Specialties will provide
elfon to deliver a fresh, high quality
who has served with
growth as a result of having 70 per- the Hayman,
extensive distribution network.
company for 20 years in variThe Mrs. Giles acquisition pro- cent of the liquid smoke market and ous locations involving engineering
vided Bob Evans with a line of refrig- the promotion of the gas grill bri- and management capacities, was
erated fresh deli salads, such as pasta, quelS that impart a hickory or mes- division manager for materials and
seafood and tuna, and are sold main Iy qmte navor.
inventory control prior to his curSales for the Food Prod ucts dtvi- rent position.
in the Tennessee and Virginia areas.
Mike and his wife, Jenny, reside
We estimate sales from this division SJonare forea~sttobe $ 1 58 million in
1992 and $208 mill ion in 1993 Pre ~ in Fort Wayne and have three chil10 be $25 million m 1993. Because
Bob Evans is delivering the product taX income is expected to be $16 dren.
10 SUlfe doors via ilS truck fleet. we
expect operating margins 10 improve
asthesaladsaredisaibuted to a wider
area. In May 1992 the company
See me for a State Farm
upgraded several of the Mrs. Giles
recipes and marketed them under the
Bob Evans brand in Columbus and
Cincinnati. The plan is to eventuall y
have the product served in the deli
department with a Bob Evans ladle
and bowl, thus capitaltzing on the
quality and freshness im age of the
Bob Evans brand name.
Hickory Specialties Inc. was acquiled by Bob Evans in March 1992.
It s a no-cost revtew of
Hickory specializes in charcoal prodyour tnsurance coveructS, grills, liquid smoke seasonmgs.
and application systems. The comages and needs
pany has IWO major divisions. NaCAROLL SNOWDEN
lltre-Glo Charcoal and Zesti Flavor.
342 Socond Ave.
Nature-G lo produces several lines
GaUlpolls, Ohio
of griUs (under the Champion brand)
PboDe
446-4290
and charcoal, hickory and mesquite
Home
446-4518
wood smoking chips. The charcoal
""''
and smoking chips are sold under the
Mr. Quick , Old Hickory, and Mountain Hardwood names. It also manuINUIIAIIICI
•
facrures the Jack Daniel's line of
charcoal and smoking ch1ps. The

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soil and Water
Conservation Distrkt, is located somewhere In
GaUia County. Individuals wisbinc to participate in lbe weekly coolest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop olf your
guess to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or lbe Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 pr11e rrom the

&amp;

MARTIN
SENOUR
PAINTS

Vol. 43, No. 25
Copyllghled 1H2

.

· ·-BOUND FOR EUROPE - These Meigs students left today to begin a lour of Europe. Students participatinq in tbe trip and some or counse!o~ acco"!pany10g tbem are, front row, Joy
0 Brten, Ahson Gerlach. Second row, Carrie
Bartels, Susan Grueser, Sharla Cooper, Tara

Gerlach, Jennie Dorsey. Third row Deb Gerlach, Mike Gerlach, Kevin Lamb~rt Rusty
Triplett and Jason DellavaUe. Absent at' time or
photo were Allison Gannaway Adam Sheets
Jason Witherell and Yvette You~g.
'

Thirteen Meigs High School
French students to tour Europe
Thirteen French students from
Mei•s High School accompanied
v
•
byf Eetght adults • left IOda Yfor a tour
o urope.
Their voyage will take them to
E
d h
. ..
ng1an , w ere they will visit London, Oxford, Slrlltford, Canterbury
and Dover. Highlights of th e
English tour will be Buckingham
alace
.
P
, the Tower of london, Btg
Ben and the Houses of Parliament
and Hard Rock Cafe It time permilS the group will aiso taken in a
London Theatre perfonnance
·
Upon arriving in Calais, France,
the group will travel 10 Paris where
they will visit the Louvre the Et' f.
'
fel Tower and of course Notre

V'~19,990
'91 REGAL

HOME STYLE A'" Exterior
Alkyd Gloss House Paint

Dame among
oth
·
da 's
. manyil er sttes. One
Y excurston w I take the tra
. v-.
e1ers to the Palace of VersaJiles
After three days in Paris th
de 1 .11 n
th
• e stu" . swt Y sou 10 the French
RIVlera and Nice France Wht' le
visiting the Cote d: Azur the
will travel to Monte C~lo ~up
the -11 · . h
. ere
Y.WI VISit l e place of Prince
Ranter and the royal family of
Monaco.
After da
. .
denlS wil~ Y f~ RIVIera, stu Alps and MtraveBiancugh the Swtss
ont
tunnel whtch
marks the hi hesl
. •
They will s gnd ~ m Etm?pe.
in I he 1 k ped . dayf anGd mght
a est e city o en eva
which is famous for its Reforma'-

Bener quality
Good h•d•ng

Excellent acheSI(Ifl

• Mildew res1stant

SAVE

We make gal.
your place
someplace
special:M

$5.02

$

Orlg. Ust $25,146, 12 Pass.

$17,990

97
Per

Gal.

GREAT LIFE
SATIN LATEX

$2479

Just A Few ol Our Quality Used
Cars That Your Neighbor Traded ln.
GREAT LIFE
ALKYD GLOSS
'17 IUICI LISAIIE

$2719

1.111111111, ~ .....
conlrMIIng aupw diM lnlorlar.

......

lOCAL 111101

•&amp;497
YOU SAVE $6.20 Per Gal.

YOU SAVE $6.10 Per hi.

-

cmra rwr

IIHCT Ill IIIII

'90 POIIIAC JUISPOII
c:.::::.~--.r
Drlnr .... lnt.........

HOME STYLER
SATIN GLOSS lATEX

$19

HOME STYLE
ALKYD PRIMER

GaL

$17!~

YOU SAVE '5.02 Per GeL

YOU SAVE 14.40 Per GaL

97

Central Supply Co.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

17 COURT STREET
446·2374

_,...ln.....

'19 POITIAC SSE

llll

.... rool....tiM&amp;r.-.ae,atl
mho. l.oool Nlw Pnlwe. Troda,
8tWIPt

'13,990

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

'II IUICI SIYHA....,
....

~~:,:.,~•.Jozt.,ol•l•t.l't2c.
.......

$

NICE!

5995

'17 CHR•

!~-pci'!IWwlndoa:,
-......,-..-.

I It PI

- · 111111. r&amp;'JP ~.:

?9ts ·

~----5-0_M_ORE USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM!

With Approwtcl
Crttllt

for the aged population of the state.
Susan Oliver, executive director
at the local Senior Center, said
there has been some talk of a cut of
between 10 and 20 percent in proposed program funding and that the
purpose of the Wednesday rally is
to appeal to Gov . Voinovich to
"remember us when you start cutting the budgeL"
Oliver said that Passpon slots
are due 10 increase in the next fiscal year but that now due to deficits
there is a possibility of cuuing the
number of slots or the number of
new clients which can be accepted
into that program.

Suspect in Mason murder free

._--av r...:::.:....:..
=, -iiG)P
.0
L&lt;L.ooc*i-ld willl

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stalf
About 20 Meigs County senior
citizens and staff of the Senior
Center will join thousands of supporters from across lhe state in the
Statehouse Rotunda Wednesday
morning in support of Eldercare.
The event bas been organized by
the Ohio Eldercare Coalition .
Emphasis of the rally and press
conference is 10 focus attention on
Eldercare issues and to serve as a
reminder to Gov . George
Voinovich and the legislature of
the importance or continuing services at the current level or above

Local Briefs:-__,

...:i'JJ\

60 lltw Cars In
Stock It Dlscouat
Prlcts

CoMpare Our

Prices. Wt Sell For
Less

·

uon Monument and water display
f th J d' Ea
o Leaving
e et Geneva
u.
the voyagers
·u
Paris ' h the ·
wt return to
, w ere y will
board their night home
·
d
·· · · ·
.Metgs
stu ents pantc.tpaung tn
tht s study tour are. Came Bartels,
Sharla Cooper, Jason Dellavalle ,
Allison Gannaway Alison Gerlach
T
G 1 h s'
G
'
ara er ac , usan ~ueser,
Kevtn Lambert , Joy 0 Bne n,
Adam Sheets, Jason Witherell.
Rusty Tnplett and Yvette Young .
Adults
· th t
·
. accompanymg e our are .
Jcnme Dorsey . (teacher-counselor),
Debra and M1ke Gerlach (coon1 ) M
nd W dell Ge
ohrs
'J
argaretBa
en , Mary
rac , eanne ra db ury
o· Bnen and Jennifer Sheets.
s
i c

Meigs County residents will
take part in Statehouse rally

•1

.

A llulllmedlo Inc. -oaoer

Delegates resume
earth summit talks

GM FACTORY PROGRAM CARS

~--

1 Section, 10 Pogo• 25 conll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June a, 1992

"Over 38 Years Of Dependable,
Trustworthy Service!"

':i.\
~

near 80.

344227

Doe Smith Says:

Hayman ...

....

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telepbooe number witb your card
or letter. No telephooe calls will be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to tbe newspaper olr~te by 4 p.m. eacb Wedn~ay. In case
or a tie, tbe winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm wiU be featured by lbe Meigs Soil and Water Cooservation
District.

Cltar tonight. Low near 60.
Tuesday, partly sunn y. High

A Mason County man bas been released on $75 000 bond fol lowing his arrest last week in connection with the m~ of Bobby
Joe Pulhns, 36, Pmnt Pleasant, ac cording to the Mason County
Sheriffs Department.
. Robert Eugene WaUace, 29, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant (Fiab'OCk) had
hts bond set on the charge by Circuit Judge James Holliday.
Wallace was arrested June 2 by Sheriff Ernie Watterson and
Deputy C.E. Stearns in connection with the death or Pullins whose
body was found outside lbe Southfort. Inn May 30.
'
Waneoon said Pullins's body was taken 10 the West Virginia
Medicai·Examinet's office for an autopsy. It's alleged that Wallace
beat Pullins to death wilb his fists.
Wallace was arraigned before MagistraJe Leonard Shobe who
set his bond 81 $100,000. However, the bond was objected 'to by
Wallace's attorney, Raymond Musgrave. Shobe later tbopped the
bond because magistrates cannot set bond in fmn degree murder
cases. The bond can only be set by the circuit court, which was
established Friday by Holliday.

3 weekend accidents investigated
Three accidents involving ~ehicle ctamage but no injuries, and
only one cntallon were mvesugatcd by Pomeroy Police over the
weekend.
Continued on page 3

•

The Options lor Elders program
is currently being phased out and is
to end on June 30, 1993. That program which provides home assislance to the aged allows them to
remain at home rather than going to
more expensive nursing homes.
The service.• are paid for on a sliding fee sc hedule geared 10 th e
income of the recipienlS and not on
Medicaid income guidelmes as is
the Passpon program .
Whil e many of the Options
clients are being tran sfe rred into
the Pass pon program, many will be
without scrvtccs once the Options
program is phased out due to th e
income guidelines.
A decline in the number of former Options as well as new elderly
clienlS which can be accepted into
the Passport program will be delri menlal to keeping the frail elderl y
in their own homes, Oliver said.
Eldercare programs which provi de home care are an alternative to
more expensive nursing home care,
she explained.
At Wednesday's rally to be held
at 10 a.m. Cindy Farson, Director
of the Buckeye-Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District's Area Agency on Aging, and
Marnie Frey, Director of the
Athens County Visiting Nurses
Association, will explain the
effects of projected stale cuts on
home care services for the elderly.
"Cuts to home care programs
are expected to increase depen dence on Medicaid nursing home
expenditures ." said Farson, "and
Medicaid is currently the fastest
growing segment of Ohio's budgeL"
Senior Centers from Athen s,
Washington and Meigs Counties
are supplying transportation to
Columbus to help rally suppon for
Eldercare services.

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
- Wtth three workin g days left,
delegates to the U.N. Earth Summit
turned today 10 one of the triclciest
iss ues at the gathering: wh o will
pay to clean up and protect the
environment.
Developing countri es want
industriali zed nation s to provide
the money and allow recipient govemmenl• to decide how it will be
spenL
Th e United States and other
industrialized nations, however, are
strapped by tight budgets and are
unwilling to give up control over
what funds they do provide.
Delegates from all 178 U.N.
members were to resume sessions
today following a weekend recess.
They are racing to complete three
treaties by Wednesday so that they
are ready for signing by the more
than 116 heads of state, including
Prestd ent Bush, who is due to
arrive by Friday .
. Delegates also are crafting the
Rto Declaration of environmental
pnnciples, which include the princtple th at polluters must pay for
cleaning up their own pollution,
and a document called Agenda 21
that spells out how the principles
would be enacted and enforced.
The summit' s coordinator, Maurice Strong of Canada, says cleanup
coslS could top $125 billion a year.
. Delegates are also lobbying for
s1gnatures for two treaties fini shed

SENATORS IN RIO- Sen. AI Gore, D-Tenn. left and Sen.
Ket;ry. D-Mass. talk I~ repo~lers Saturday in Rio de Janeiro.
A btparltsan Senate delegatton is 10 Rio to talk wilb international
leaders during UNCED. The Democrat senators support EPA
Administrator WiUiam Reilly. (AP)

Joh~

last week, one on global warming
an d the other to protect plant and
ammal species in danger of extinc~ on .

Both almost certainly will
rcce tve th e minimum number of

signatures by heads of state, includmg those fr om Europe and Japan,
10 be enacted . That made opposillon to th e latter by Bush, who
msists it m1ght hun U.S . business
hard to explain even to allies.
'

Appalachian Highway has
~£!.~~~1!.~~ Adams gounty
Appalachian Hi•hway
was sup ~ b
d
l
f
I
pose
. b o ·unne
· bJO · s to southern
Oh to Y gtvmg
usmess access
•
· to
lh e s la le s poorest countte s. It
has n't worked m
· Adam s c ounty.
The two-lane road has brought a
few motels and small businesses to
th e county with Ohio' s highest
unemployment rate.
" One way or another, tran sportation is still our biggest probIem, " said Mary Jane Campbell ,
director of th e county' s Human
Resource DcparunenL
It 's a famili ar problem across
southern Ohio wh ere develo .
ment-poor c ou~ties depend u~n
'" f d
th thro h A
ug .
Sta ~ un s 1o pu 11 em
Cincinnati Enquirer study of state
spending and revenue collections
found that 29 poor southern counties reIy on money from the urban
counties.
The 29 counties received about
$500 million more in slate serv ices
last year than they sent ro the state
in taxes, the newspaper reported
Sunday . The money came from the
urban counties.
The 28 other counties are Clermont, Brown , Hi ghland, Scioto,
Pike, Ross, Lawrence, Gallia, Jactson, Vinton , Hocking, Meig s,
Athens, Perry, Morgan, Washing ton, Monroe, Noble, Muskingum ,
Guernsey, Belmont, Coshocton ,
Holmes, Tuscarawas, Harrison, Jefferson, Carroll and Columbiana.
Adams County, 60 miles east of
Cincinnati, is a good example of
the counties' collective problem .
County officials say government
and th e schools couldn 't provide
their current levels of service without slate aid. The county's unemployment rate was 16.3 percent last
April.
The county 's actual unemployment rate is much higher when
those who have stopped looking for
jobs and those who have been without jobs for a long lime are figured
in, Ms. Campbell said.
"It could be as high as 30 pet·
cen~" she said. " We don't know."
The lack of transportation and
business development make for
bleak job prospeclS.
" We keep trying to get industry, " County Commissioner Paul
Rothwell said. "But it's difficult to
auract We have gotten a few fastfood restaunmts in the last year or
so, not 100 much else."
As a result, the slate pours much
more money into Adams County
than it collects from county resi -

Ms. Campbell said her departmcnt receives· about $25 million a
year · with slightly less
· than half
that amount corning from the state
to pay for public assi stance pro-•
grams . The county contributes

$2~~.000.

.
.
money IS mostly g~~g to
provt~~ '."ed1cal servtces, she
satd. I ve probably had 100
chents tell me they moved here
from Kentucky ~r some~ state
beca use they can t gel medical bencfllS ·"
.
.
The poor counaes get a disproportwnate share of state funds
because they have htgher unemI
than
.
.th I
P oymcnt
counues wt arge
The

1

less disposable
.
s anddh
mcome
an 1ave
ess commerce
Th
.
1
mean s ess money gomg 10 that
•• 1e m
·
· tax co 11ectiOns
s~
and m e
I.
.
ore
re tance upon state assiStance programs.
"I Jik
think r·
c to
ve helped pay
for these programs :"hen I paid
taxes all those years, ·.said Steve
Johnson, 42, whose cabmet shop in
Adams Co.~nty fell vtcum 10 rhe
recesston. Sun, J'OU hear people
say, welfare _rec ~tenlS should go
out and get a job. ·1 ~at huns.
"PeopIe don ' t understand that
there are few jobs out here in
Adams County. I'm just a plain
country boy who wants to ........ ,
he said
wu.•,
.

Well-known SE Ohio
business leader is dead
Well-kn own business man, contractor, developer, industrialist and
in ventor AJ. Stockmcister of Jac kson died Friday in Oak Hill Commun ity Medtcal Center at the age
of 74.
A na tive of Se nec a Co unty ,
Stockmcistcr and his wife, the former Bernadine Bennett, had rcstdcd in Jackson smce 1946, where he
began A.J . Stockmeister Inc., a
plumbing, heating and cooling
bu siness that has develope'! into
one of the largest mechaniCal construction companies in southeastern
Ohi o.
After completing an apprenticeship program in Cleveland, Stock meistcr worked on the piping of the
TNT plant at Point Pleasant. He
also served with the Seabees and
was stationed with the Marines in
the Aleutian Islands.
Stockmeister opened the Jolly
Lanes Bowling Center in Jackson
in 1959, which now houses th e
Jolly Lounge and the Ponderosa
Res taunmL He also opened a bowling fac ility in Bellevue in 1960.
He constructed and put into
operation the Stockmeister Mushroom Farm in 1972, which was
bought by the Campbell Soup Co.
in 1977. The farm now employs
more than 250 people.
Between 1972 and 1985 Stockmeister developed other small businesses and commercial lease propenies, including the Green Acres
subdivi sion adjacent to the Fairgreens Country Club, the purchase
\

and re nova ti on of th e historic
eight -story Bane Ohio building in
Portsmou th , the construction, lease
an d sale of Ohio Vall ey Area
Li brari es in Well ston , and the
building that houses the Office of
Empl oy men t Services in Jackson.
He made a personal drive to
oblain fin ancing to purchase and
renovate the old Cambrian Hotel in
Jackson in 1984. Finished in 1985
the buil ding is now a landmark i~
the city's downtown.
Other projects credited to Stockmcistcr include the Four Winds
Nursin g Ho me and the 52- room
Comfort Inn.
Not onl y active in indu stry ,
Stockmetsler was heavily involved
in ctvt c activities. Working with
co mmitlees see king economic
development in the area, he participated in the placement of Goodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber, Jackson; Federal
Mogul, Gallipolis; Cris-Craft, Gallipolis ; the Jackson Corporation ·
and Jcno's Inc/Pillsbury, Wellston:
He served on the Jackson Community Improvement Corporation
and was a member of Holy Trinity
Church , a lifetime member of the
Eagles and the Elks, and a member
of the American Legion . He served
17 years as a director of Bane
Ohio-Jackson and was a member or
the Fairgreens Country Club.
Educated in a one-room school
at Rcedtown, Ohio, Stockmeistet
bought and restored the structure in
1975 and later presented it to the
Seneca County Historical Society .

�Commentary

Page-.:2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 8, 1992

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEJlBST8 OP THE IIOtiGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION art welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All lett&lt;rs art subject to editin&amp; and must be signed with name,
address and tolepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lett=
sbould be in good tut&lt;, addmliog issues, not personalities.

Riffe faces toughest
re-election battle yet
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Speaker Vern Riffe faces the political baule of his
life Ibis fall but says he is up to it and that Republicans are dead wrong if
they think they will write his political obituary.
Riffe reacted at a news conference to the comments of Gov. George
Voinovich, who said he will "wOO: vt:ry hard" to help Republicans win
the House this fall so they can elect a speaker.
The speaker said he took no offense because that's what Republicans
are supposed to say. "I'd rathe~ see .a Democratic governor," ~said,
with a smile, at an infonnal meetlllg w1th rq&gt;Ortel:ll m hts office Friday.
The speaker. just getting over a bout with pneumonia, started off by
seeking to dispel any doubts about his health.
"There •s nothing wrong with me. In a week or 10 days, J'U be I00
percent. I'm looking forward to November," said Riffe, D- Wheelersburg.
who is serving an unprecedented ninth, two-year term as speaker.
He brought up what some see as the Republicans' best chance in 20
years, as a result of redistricting! to win the House.
. . .
Riffe's incumbents ran weU m the Republtcan-drawn distncts m Tuesday's primary, and he apparently concluded the districts are not so bad
after all.
He earlier med a suit to have the districts declared illegal, but the U.S.
Supreme Court ordered them used for this year's elections pending a final
ruling not expected until1993.
State Chairman Robert Bennett and other Republicans believe they can
win control of the 99-member House because the GOP-doolinated apportionment board shaped districts favoring Republicans for the first time
since 1972.
The new map already has seat some Democrats packing.
Four Democratic incumbents were fon:ed to run in two disuicts last
wedc because of the Republican map-making, with two being eliminated.
Nine others in the 61-mernber caucus did not run again, mostly for the

Presidential hopefuls prepare for dirty fight
WASHINGTON - Presidential
elections have always been a con18Ct sport, but this year's promises
to be particularly mean, dirty and
hard-hitting.
It's all pan of a day's work for
sleuths, Democratic and Republican, who clinically call themselves
"OptK&gt;Sition research," but whose
job IS the muckraking and mudslinging in the presidential campaign. They uncover, catalog and
computerize the words and weaknesses that lurk as potential targets
in an opponent's personal and professional closets.
" I like to think of it (campaign·
ing) in terms of people paintmg on
a picture. Your opponent is coming
over with a graffib spray can," one
Democratic campaign strategist
explained.
President Bush recently ordered
Republican campaign ~ves to
"stay out of the sleaze ' business.
But what's clear is that one candidale's sleaze is another candidate's
substance. And this year the political sleudting for Republicans wiU
profit from new and picey optical
disk technology that makes
research even more state-of-the-art.
Democrats aclmowled,i:e there is a

~PULAR

high-tech gap berween -the two parties.
Republican researchers have
shifted resources away from Bill

the nation is committed,'' and that
he wouldn't have "to prove my
manhood by sending anyone to
war. ''
In what may be emerging as an
early theme, Perot also recently
hinied he was more courageous
than Bush for daring to come to
Little Rock, Ark., and mingle with
a crowd of supporters without
bodyguards. "I came here totally
by myself.... Would you want a
general afraid to go in the battleClinton, and are furiously playing field?"
catch-up on Ross PeroL Abortion,
Foc now, Democratic strategists
gun control and Social Security are told us that Clinton - who conthe wedge 1ssues they hope to drive demns the "Republican attack
against the Texas populist
machine" - has to spend his time
Clinton and the Democrats, who defining himself rather than auackwould like to leave most of the in8 Bush or Perot. Democrats are
Ross Pcrot-bashing to President haunted by the Willie Horton
Bush, believe they can tum the firSt specter. and determined never
family into the first target over again to allow their candidale to get
alleged financial wrongdoing by hog-tied by negative advertising .
some members.
Democrats are approaching this
Ross ("I hate the mudwrestling election nursing a big grudge from
in politics. I think it's obscene") 1988. Some fund-raising events
Perot delivered a below-the-belt have even b.een earmarked for
shot to Bush recently by suggesting intelligence-gathering on the oppohe started the Persian Gulf war to sition to avoid a repeat of 1988
prove his maseulinity. He said that when Michael Duli:akis seemed
as president he "would not send tongue-tied. ·
A Iaste of the fall campaign is
people onto the battlefield unless

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

9JMrl\tR Rt~D\t6

same reason.
However, the 50 remaining were renominated and none was seriwsly
challenged. Some had wmied about unfamiliar constituencies. as weU as
anti-incumbent sentiment that was said to exist among VIllerS.
No such sentiment was evident except perhaps by low vOiet turnout,
but tbat's not unusual for primaries, election officials said.
Riffe praised his incumbenu for hard campaigning and said be lhinks
they all can win in November. "I don'tlmow of one today that I would
say is in serious trouble," he said.
He could keep the House by retaining 50 seats, but be said Democrats
also are loolt:ing at several districts that have no incumbents. Could he win
60 of the 99 seats? "It's possible. But I'm not predicting that today," he
said.
Riffe has more than $2 million for the campaigns and may add another
SI million at a birthday fund-rai9Cr tbis month in Columbus. Republicans
have said they won't be able to match his bankroll.

comparison.
RIO POLITICS - All things
considered, Environmental Protection Administration Administrator
William Reilly would rather be in
Rio as "Mr. Secretary," the head
of a Cabinet-level agency. Along
with wetlands, clean air and global
warming, Reilly has long agitated
within the administration to
achieve Cabinet starus for the environmental agency and his failure to
do this weighs on him, according to
one top adviser.
"He came in with the notion
that it (Cabinet seat) was a couple
of ycm off and that within the first
two~ there would be a Cabinet
department and he would be the
first Secretary of the Environment," this official told us.
Along with other non-Cabinet
officials, Reilly sits inconspicuously behind the Cabinet members
along the wall in the White House,
a symbol of how relegated Reilly
- the regulator conservatives love
to hate - has been. Ironically, one
of the headiest moments for the
man now heading the U.S. delega·
tion to Rio was apparently when he
was tapped to translate for Bush
and French President Millerralld at
the G-7 economic conference in
1989.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated columnists ror United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

This U.S. election begins with us

With the Jrimaries over and the compromise in order to build a
national election yet to come, let's renewed consensus?
concentrate on some fundamental
Those and similar questions
propositions.
resolved, we will be better able to
First: There is no panacea.
Second: There is no Santa Qaus
and no Superman.
Third, and last, in the words of
William Shakespeare: "The fault.
To the very special girls on the Doulhin and Don Jackson for pbs dear Brutus, is not in our stars. But assess the candidates' replies on
LadY. Eagle softball team, your well done. You all should be very in ourselves, that we are under - the basis of something more than
the sk:ill with which they are packfamtly and friends would like to happy fa- having such a great sea· lings."
In
their
own
strange,
occasionalaged.
say how very proud we are of how son. Good luck seniors.
We have a lot of bad habits to
you all played the whole year with
Best wishes, family and friends. ly weird and quite wonderful way,
the
less
than
20
percent
of
all
adult
discard.
About 50 percent of us
.poise, pride and dignity . Also
Debi Hensley, Pomeroy.
Americans
who
participated
in
the
must
rediscover
virtues last
:would like to congratulate Coach
states' primaries and caucuses have encountered in civics textbooks,
set up an election that will allow all beginning with the vote. Far more
I am concerned about the atti- to make things convement for adult AmeriCBIL'I to confront them- of us must apply to public life what
tude this area has concerning Jesus yourself.
selves at a pivot point in American we know from experience in pri ·
Christ and His church. It seems 10
Jesus said in Matthew 18-6 "But history . Assuming Ross Perot's vate life, which is that perfect solu. me we have lost our reverence and if anyone causes one of the little entry, which appean 10 be a given, tions are a mirage and compnllllise
fear of God when those in charge ones who believe in me to sin, it tbere will be three presidential can- the essential glue of living without
of the ball programs fm:e our kids would be better for him to have a didates offering remarkably differ- war, metaphorical and real. Virtual: into mak:ing a decision - church large millstone hung around his ent visions of the American gov- !y all of us must learn to stop askor ball. One may ask "doesn't God nec k and to be drowned in the ernment's role at home and abroad. ing our politicians to do utterly
· want us to play ball?" I am sure depths of tlte sea
New faces in record numbers are contradictory things, such as mainGod wants us to play ball or any
It may seem unimportant to you just about guaranteed on Capitol taining spending while cutting
other sport for recrcallOII as long as now, but hopefully someday you Hill. If the voters pay as much taJtes and balancing the budget.
il doesn't keep us out of church . will see a need for putting God attention to their choices as they do Rather than continuing to insuuct
:From the very beginninf God made fu;t Hebrews 9-27, says "And it is to their grievances, there is at least others on the need to sacrifice, we
·the Sabbath as a day o rest and to appoin ted unto men once to die, a possibility that the result in Jan- must become more experienced in
:worship him . It's the Fourth com - but after this the judgment." On uary 1993 could be a government offering to sacrifice.
·mandment.
that day you will be without with a clear mandate and agenda
It is a much-remarked fact that
If you have no respect for God excuse. I am praying fa- you.
The key to such a happy out- the American people are liustrated,
or his church that's up to you, but
Gregory A. CRacundi;! come lie s with us , the people . depressed and angry about the
aon 't force the youth of our area to
We 're going to have to be tough- worlcings of government. What is
stay out of church to play ball just
Syrncuse ball coach for pee-wee mindoo, persistent and logical. We less well-understood is how cynical
boys. must demand that the candidates, and depressed many government
staning with Ross ~but includ- officials and officeholders are
ing the incumbent president no less about the people. Like cops, cab
I learned to drive on a model T
than the Democratic nominee, talk drivers and emergency room teams,
Ford. You turned the key to Bat, out the· ashes and build a fire. A in clear , unequivocal language they know more about human
Stepped on die starter and if it stan- chain ran from the draft door, up about what they propose to do in frailty, selfishness and evil than
through a 1-cle in the floor,IO a pul~d. switched the key to Mag, to
they want to know . When they
ley
on the wall, marted draft open, office.
uve battery charge. It had three
But
we
have
to
decide
some
come
close to passing something as
floor pedals. You pushed the left close; and oo my day I had to ktlep important issues even before we cynical as the balanced budget
one hard down for low and as you the draft opened just right to ktlep begin listening to the politicians amendment to the Constitution, a
got rolling, moved the emergency the furnace burning just righL Now and Perot is now as much a politi- shoddy prop from a play with no
!&gt;raJce lever forward for high gear, l mosey over and set the wall ther- cian as either Clinton or Bush. If second act, they all but trumpet
let out the pedal and you were mosta~ the resc is done automatic. we think that the budget deficit and their contempt for the public. When
That's modernization.
Underway.
If you have ever had to use the national debt load are frightening, the public overwhelmingly backs
: The center pedal was reverse
what personal benefitS are we will- the amendment without once supand the right one the brake. It had a old outside toilet on a cold windy ing to see reduced or eliminated? If
night, you know what that draft
purtinL~r::gh measures needed
two piece windshield hinged at die could
we believe that government stale- for a
budget in the heredo
to
you,
especially
if
it's
a
lOP and my brother wrecked us on two holer. Now a much appn!.Ciated mate is intolerable, are we willing and-now, it deserves the contempt
Yellow Bush bridge and I was
to forego the self-indulgence of in which it is secretly held
thrown throuJh the windshield and young engineer, has come up with splining our votes between inde·
At this point, Ross Perot is to
fnlctured my lllwl1 on the tmtpeq- a very satisfying lllllulion. He lites pendents, Democrats and Republi- the presidential election what the
a
long
bollrd
and
cuts
different
size
tiue gauge which wu mounted on
holes in it. and all you need do iJ cans? If we are worried about balanced budllet amendment is to
¢lp of the llldiator cap.
national unity;md civic communi- the deficit. Ife is a statement of
·. Now I get in my car, turn the pick out your size, stick the board ty, on what issues are we willing to principle devoid of specifics. His
liey 10 IIIII, pill the lever in drive, m a slot in the side of the jolm and
$ad everydlinJ else is aulonlatic. slide it through til your bole is
Qot a red liJIIInow 10 tell when the inside, jump in out of the wind and
rlldiator iJ too hot 10 it will be easi- enjoy. He jUSt issued an ~. if
The Lady Eagle softball team onships.
ei on my IICild. Oot a belt to hold you want to be present when he
It's very _gratifying 10 know that
rile down too. That's accomplish· cuts the holes, he will sprinkle would like to sincerely thank Sbezflour
oo
the
bollnl.
you
sit
down
on
friends
are Just a phooe call away
iff James Soulsby and his wife,
JIIML
it
He
cuts
10
the
pattern
and
Jl8·
no
matter
what county you·~ in.
Susie, and evef)'OIIII elae involved
·: We hid I fumllt:e in the baseanteet
the
fit
Now
that's
propess.
On
behalf
of the Lady Eagles
ment at home and one of my job
in wei com inB home tbe Lady
Broots
Sayre
coaches,
parents
and fans.
Wlien I was a JOWIJUn wu to cut
~les softball team after ~
S)'lliCusc.
Debi Hensley
their sectional and dislrict champ•kindlln&amp; wood. bau1 in COli, clean

Letters to the editor

Hodding Carter III

Very proud

Concerned

Not that progress

Team thanks sher·iff

,

foretold in at least one memo prepared by the Democratic National
Committee that calls for playtng
hardball on alleged ethics lapses in
the first family. Some ~arty officials want to see the nauonal campaign take a page from the " inyour-face" style employed by Harris Wofford against Dick Thornburgh in the Pennsylvania Senate
electioo.
The opportunity is to hammer
the theme of "family favoritism"
that would include a laundry list of
sins, proven and unproven, against
Bush family members, }mticularly
son Neil. But officials also believe
they can effectively mine the
Quayle Council on Competitiveness to demonstrate a correlation
between large campaign contributors and White House intervention
in environmental and consumer
proteetion rules.
Pols in both parties agree that by
the time the votes are counted next
November, Bush's 1988 Willie
Horton ads may seem genteel by

•

duty is to let the people know at
least in broad outline oow he would
govern. His opportunity, which he
should energetically seize, is to
energize the tens of millions of
Americans who have stopped voting or never voted and get them
involved.
For Bill Clinton and George
Bush, there is a different necessity
and a different opportunity . Each
must demonstrate that he can rise
above his past and do the right
thing. What the public needs to
hear from them is less about
specifics and more about principles. What ditches are they willing
to die in? What do they really
believe, as opposed to what they
believe their constituencies want
them to say? Do human beings
exist behind the facades?
The sad truth is that Clinton and
Bush will resist laying it on the
line, because tbeir experts wiU tell
them it isn't smart politically, and
Perot may resis~ because he thinks
it isn't necessary. But that's con-

ventional wisdom and this is no
year for the conventional wisdom.
It will prevail nonetheless,
unless the American electorate
abandons its own worst instincts.
That means we have to stop acting
like children, angry at our pan:nts
but unwilling to ~row up. Rather
than throwing fits, we have to
establish priorities. Rather than
asking for miracles, let's require
candor. If we want to point a finger, let's do it in front of the mirror. Once the candidates know
we're serious, they'll have no
option but to get serious as well.
The result could be the watershed
election everyone claims to want
Hodding Carter Ill, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, is president of
MalnStreet, a Washington, D.C.bued television production company, and a syndicated columnist
for Newspaper Enterprise Assodadon_

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Sunday, June 7, the !59th day of 1992. There are 2ffl days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on June 7, 1892,the Republican national convention bepn meetin~ in Minneapolis. In the days that foUowed, the delegates nommaled President Harrison for re-election and Whitelaw Reid for
vice president.
On this date:
In 1654, Louis XIV was crowned King of France in Rheims.
In 1769, according to Kentucky's Historical Society, frontiersman
Dlloiel Boone fust began to expl~ the present-day Bluegrass State.
- In I n6, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia proposed 10 the Continental
Congress a resolution calling for a Declaration o( Independence.
In 1848, French postimpressionist painter Paul Gauguin was born in
Paris.
In 1864, Abraham Lincoln was nominated for another term as president at his party's convention in Baltimore.
In 1929, the sovereign state of Vatican City came into existence as
copies of the Lateran Treaty were exchanged in Rome.
In 1948, the Communists comlt~~ their takeover of Czechoslovakia
with the resignation of President
Benes.
·
In 1967, 25 years ago, author-critic Dorothy Parker, famed for her
caustic wit, died in New Yorlc.
In 1980, a beuec than 50-to-1 sho~ Temperence Hill, won the Belmoot
Stakes in New York.
In 1981, ISIICii planes destroyed a nuelear power plant in Iraq, a facili- .
ty the Israelis charged could have been used to make nuclear weapons.
.
In 1989, 169 people were killed when a Suriname Airways DC-8
crashed in a llllpical forest near the Paramaribo airpon.
. Ten years ago: President Reagan flew to Rome for a six-hour visit that
included a meeting with Pope John Paul
then traveled to London,
where he was welcomed by Britain's Queen Elizabeth n.
Five years &amp;fO: "Les Miserables" dominated Broadway's Tony
Awards, liking eaght prix~, including best musical. "Fences," by August
Wilm, was named best play.
.
One year ago: A U.S. District Court judge rejected a n:quest by San
Franciaoo TV station KQED for pcnnission w televise the execution of
convicted murderu Robert Alton Harris. The government reported the
natim's unemployment l1lle had wcnened 10 a four-year high of 6.9 per- ,
cent in May, up 0.30 pcn:ent from April.
·

n.

The Dally Senllnei-Page-3

--Area deaths-- Pleasant weather forecast for Buckeye State
Maude Betz
·

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 8, 1992

Maude Betz, 103, of High
Street, Middleport, died Sunday,
June 7. 1992. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Funeral arrangements are
being handled by Ewing Funeral
Home, Pomeroy.

Raymond C. Dosky
Raymond C. Dosky, 59, Columbus, died Saturday, June 6, 1992 at
his residence.
He was a self-employed consultant and served as a U.S. Air Fm:e
captain in the Vietnam War.
Surviving are his wife, Clara
(Peggy) ~; four children and
four grandchtldren; his mother,
Loretta Dosky; and his in-laws .
David and Dorothy Sayre of
Racine.
Services will be Tuesday at I0
a.m. in the Schoedinger North
Chapel, 5554 Karl Road, Columbus, with the Rev. John Swickard
offiCiating. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at
the chapel Monday from 2-4 and 68p.m.
A graveside service will be held
Tuesday at 3 p.m., with the Rev.
Roger Grace officiating.

Roger Fox
Roger L. Fox, 50, Route 2, Box
149, Belpre, died Sunday afternoon, June 7, 1992 in NelsonviUe.
Born in Parlcersburg, W.Va., he
was a son of Orval and Bernice
Richards Fox, Belpre. He was
employed at DuPont as an operator.
Mr. Fox is survived by his wife,
Monit Kidder Fox; two sons,
Randy and Brant, of the home; one
brother, Terry of Vincent; and one
sister, Sandra McGraw, Vincent.
He was preceded in death by
one son, Hollie Fox.
Services will be Wednesday at2
p.m. at White-Ethridge Funeral
Home in Belpre with Pastor Jerry
Bush . Burial will be in Fairview
Cemett:ry in Belpre.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. and
7-9 p.m.

Georgia Mays
Georgia Mays, 77, 67670 S!Bte
Route 124, Reedsville, died Sunday, June 7, 1992 at Nelsonville.
She was born in Reedsville, a
daughter of late Seldon and Nettie
Rood Randolph. She was a homemaker.
Mrs. Mays is survived by three
sons, Charles and Donald, both of
Reedsville, Harold ol Little Hockin~. six daughtm, Arizona Wigal,
Alice Chevalier and Tracy Rood,
all of Reedsville, Beryle Barber,
Coolville, Marlene Maxson. Nelsonville, and Ao Arnold, Torch; 32
grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; three sisters, Loretta
Delong and Nora Buchanan, both
of Reedsville, and Elva Rood,
Hockingport; one brother, Claude
Randolph, Reedsville.
Mrs . Mays was preceded in
death by her parents, her husband
Everett, seven children and one
brother.
Services will be Wednesday at
·II a.m . at Eden United Brethren
Church in Reedsville with Rev.
Robert Markley officiating. Burial
will be in Rood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville Tuesday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Edward Poole
Edward M. Poole, 59, South
Webster, died Saturday, June 6,
1992 at his residence.
Born Sept. II. 1932 at
Portsmouth, he was a son of late
Clifford and Pauline Poole. He was
retired from Empire Detroit Stee I
Corporation. He was a member of
the Methodist Faith, a former little
league coach, a member of the
American Legion and a navy veteran of the Korean Conflict.
Besides his parents, he was pre·
ceded in death by his first wife,
Marilyn Salyer Poole, April 30,
1987.
Mr. Poole is survived by his
wife, Mamie Hanes Poole, whom

The Daily Senlioel
(I]IPIIlJ.IIO)
hblieh•• ••..,. aRemoon , Mon4ay

_ . . PridoJ, tn eo... sc.... ~·

Ohio by lho Ohio Yalloy r11Dilohl111
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he married Sept. 22, 1990; two
Lows tonight should be mainly
By Tbe As5ociated Press
sons, Donald Poole, Middleport,
in the 50s. Tuesday should have
The
work
week
should
begin
and Andy Poole, Lake City, Ra.;
highs from near 70 in the nooheast
daughters, Mrs. Bruce (Rochelle) wid! pleasant weather in Ohio.
Mainly clear skies tonight. to about 80 in the south.
Barney, Portsmouth, Julie Poole,
High pressure over the upper
New Boston, Amanda Poole , Tuesday will be partly to mostly Mississii)IJi Valley and the western
Portsmouth; one step-son, Brian sunny.
Hanes, South Webster, Denise
Hanes Billingsley, Pataskala; 10 r - - - grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs.
Continued rrom pqe I
Alden (Judy) Blair, Cincinnati,
Mrs . Dennis (Jane) Rider ,
Ttmothy Rood, 27, of Reedsville, was ciled for DUI. failure to
Sciotoville, Mrs . Lew (Bonnie)
yield the right of way, and driving without insurance following an
lvanovich, Cinci
acc1dent at 12:51 a.m. Saturday on the Pomeroy parking lot.
nnati, and Mrs . Jeff (Tresta)
According to Pomeroy police, Rood was traveling through the parkLehman, Cincinnati.
ing lot with his lights off when his 1982 Mercury struck a 1974
Services will be Tuesday at 2
Ford truck driven by Brian Smith, 20, Middleport.
p.m. at the Melcher Funeral Home
There was no damage to the Smith tnx:k, but Rood's vehicle had
with Rev. Leroy Ickes officiating.
moderate damage to the driver's side front fender and quarter panel.
Burial will be at Scioto Burial
Police reponed that they were already in the vicinity and were about
Park.
to pursue Rood when the accident occurred.
Friends may call at the funeral
The other two accidents occurred on business parking lots.
home today (Monday) from 5-9
Charles Smith, Rutland, strucl-. the parked 1989 Oldsmobile ol Amy
p.m. and from noon until the time
Legar, Pomeroy. as he turned in to part on the Rite Aid lot at 2:30
of the service on Tuesday.
p.m. Friday. There was light damage to the passenger side, back
Military graveside rites will be
quarter of the Legar car, but no damage to the 1981 Buick driven by
performed by the American Legion
Smith. Smith was not cited.
James Dickey Post.
The other accident occurred on the Kroger parlring lot. Henry
Donatioos may be made to HosHartman, Long Boa.om, had parked his 1985 Chevrolet in front of
pice of Southern Ohio.
Krogers, and Carole McLaughlin, Pomeroy, struck the vehicle as
she pulled in front of him to parte_ There was light damage to the
Francis Sheets
front fender, passenger side, of the Hartman car, and light damage
Francis Hall Sheets, 70, Christy
to the passenger side, rear , of the 1984 Cadillac driven by
Road, Reedsville, died Sunday ,
McLaughlin.
1une 7, 1992 at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
She was born in Moundsville,
W.Va .. a daughter of Christina
Martin Hall, Kenna, W.Va., and the
A breaking and entering at the Lee Jacobs warehouse oo Butterlate George Hall. She attended the
nut Ave., Pomeroy, is undet investigation by Pomeroy Police.
South Bethel Church, Silver Ridge,
Jacobs reported to police Saturday that someone had entered his
Reedsville.
warehouse, taken several items including two chrome plated
She is survived by two sons,
swords, and tampered with boxes of mail ooler material. Entrance
Ezra "Jim" Sheets, Gallipolis, and
was gained by learing the screen on the back door, removing a pane
John Sheets, Reedsville, a son and
of glass and then reaching in to unlock the door.
daughter-in-law, David and Mary
Jacobs also said that his car parked at the warehouse had been
Sheets, Reedsville; two daughters
broken into and two speakers taken.
and sons-in-law, Sandra and Jeff
Wrikeman, ReedsviUe, Delilah and
Eddie Ritchie, Newpon News, Va.;
two brothers, James Hall and
A Middleport man was cited for failure to control by the GalliaMichael Hall, both of Kenna ,
Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol following a two-vehicle
W.Va.; three sisters, Delphia Lanaccident
early Sunday in Rutland Township.
ham, Kenna, W.Va. Jane Wheeler,
Troopers
said Charles E. Gilkerson, 24 , 31531 Noble Summit
Kenna, W.Va., and JoAnn Rhodes,
Road, was southbound on County Road 3 (New Lima), one-tenth of
Lancaster; two brothers-in-law,
a
mile north of State Route 7, 81 6: I 0 a.m. when he lost control of
John Sheets, Gallipolis, and Basil
his
vehicle on a curve.
Miller, Kenna. W.Va; two sistersGilkerson's
vehicle went off the right side of the road, came
in-law, Mary Hall, Charleston,
back
onto
the
road.
then went off the left side and struck a parked
W.Va., and Ruby Hall, Clendenin,
car
owned
by
Juanita
Lambert, 34018 New Lima Road, Rutland.
W.Va., Marguerite Sheets,
Moderate
damage
was reported to both vehicles and Gilkerson
Pomeroy ; 12 grandchildren and
was
uninjured
in
the
accident
eight great-grandchildren.
Mrs . Sheets was preceded in
deatb by her husband, Ezra Sheets,
in 1990; her father, George Hall; a
son, Donald Sheets; two infant
children; one sister; four brothers;
and one brother-in-law.
Services will be Tuesday at 2
p.m. at the South Bethel Church,
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)Silver Ridge, ReedsviUe, with Rev. Some United SteelwOO:ers mem- pany said.
Members also have been told a
Duane Sydensuicker officiating. bers believe that Ravenswood
special
retirement mcentive wtll be
Burial will be in the Sooth Bethel Aluminum Corp. is requiring about
offered
to ensure
that each
Churth Cemetery.
I ,500 union worlcers to undergo Steelworker has a job, takes disFriends may call at the church physicals to weed them down as
ability pay or retires.
two hours prior to the service.
they prepan: to rerum to the job.
Union
member
Lewis
White Funeral Home in
Union members are voting by Humphrey, woo worked at the plant
Coolville is handling the arrange- mail on a contract proposal that
32 years, gives himself a 50-50
ments.
would end their dispute with chance of returning to work if the
Ravenswood Aluminum, which contract is ratified. He said he has a
began Nov. I, 1990, when their heart condition that attracted con·
Arthur Stockmeister
contract expired.
siderable attention f1001 company
Arthur Joseph Robert "A.J."
The physicals, required as 1J11f! of doctors .
Stockmeister, 74, of 215 Cross St., the contract proposal. are being
Humphrey also quesooned the
Jackson, died Friday, June 5 1992, conducted at a Ripley motel to timing of the physicals, which
at Oak Hill Community Medical determine whether the members of began last week.
Center.
Local 5668 are capable of perform"My wife and I were talking
He was born in February 1918, ing the heavy wort required 81 the about that this morning ," he said
at Reedtown, Seneca County, son Jackson County plant
Friday. "Why couldn't they have
of the late John and Ida StockrneisUnion members have until June wailed until after the vote?"
ter.
12 to vote on the contract. If it is
Union spokesman Gary Hubbard
Survivors include his wife, approved, they will return to work called the physicals 1J11f! of a "healBernadine Benneu Stockmeister; June 29.
ing process" between Steelworkers
four children, Nea Henry, Janise
On Friday, umon member and the company.
Jones, and Alan Stockmeister of Lawrence Thornton ol Eleanor said
Jackson, and Beth Fries of Cincin· many Steelw&lt;rters believe the
nati; six grandchildren; one broth- physicals are an attempt to wwl
er, leonard Stoclcmeister of BeUe- out the union ranks.
vue; three sisters, Mary Bogner,
"Evt:ryone's asking quesuons
twin sister, Viola Wagner, and about the physicals." Thornton
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Irene Ball, all of Bellevue; and sev- said. "I think they should have
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS eral nieces and nephews.
voted first."
Edith
Manuel, Racine; Dale MaidHe was preceded in death by
The company employed about
one sister, Agnes Warner; and one I ,700 union members when the ens . Racine.
SA TIJRDA Y DISCHARGES daughter, Dea Lee Stockmeister.
labor dispute began and says it exGladys
Walburn.
A mass of Christian burial will pects to take about 1,000 back into
SUNDAY
ADMISSIONS
be held II a.m. Wednesday at die the plant Union members woo fail
Chester
Combs,
Racine.
Holy Trinity Catholic Church, their physicals will be awa.n!OO
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Jackson, with the Rev. Father medical or disabi~ty pay, the comFloydFana.
Roben Metzger officiating. Graveside services will foUow at the Mt.
Olivet Cemetery, Jackson.
Friends may call at the Eisnaugle-Lewis Funeral Home, Jackson
beverages and homemade tee
Revival ertrnded
on Monday from 4-8, and Tuesday
Tent revival at the Stiversville cream wtU be available. flavors of
from 4-8 p.m. An Elks Lodge serWord of Faith Church has been ice cream are chocolate, vanilla,
vices will be held Monday at 8 e•tended through Wednesday at peach, lemon, strawberry, pineapp.m. and a Christian wake service
7:30 p.m. nightly . The public is ple, banana and several special Oawill be held at8 p.m. oo Tuesday.
vors available by the dip. Food is
invited.
available for eating-in the air-conditioned social rooms or for carryTrustees to meet
ouL
For carry-out call, 992-3172.
The Bedford Township Trustees
wil meet tonight (Monday) at 7
Dance planlled
p.m. at the town haD .
The Senior Citizens Dance Club
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
wiU hold a dance Friday from 8-11
Dlscbarau June 5 - Letha
Cbester trastees to meet
p.m.
wilh music by Smotey MounCottrill, Connie Halley, Ruth
The Chester Township Trustees
tain
Drifters.
Public inviled. Those
Lewis, Lena Nutter, Mrs. Kennedl will meet Thursday at I p.m. in
attending
bring
snacks for the
Ridgeway and son, M~ Riffie, regular session 111 the Olester Town
snack table.
Iva Smith, William Wtse, Eva Hall.
Young.
Blr" - Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Whaley reunion
Cade, daughter, Rutland.
The family of Harley and Curie
Swimming lessons
Dlscbaraes June ' - James Whaley will hold a reunion Sunday
Two sessions of swi mming
Bailes, Charles Janey, Claire at the road side parte on Route 33, lessons will be offered at London
McCoy, Mrs. Walter Roush 111d north of Pomeroy at I p.m. Bring a Pool in Syracuse.
daughter.
covered dish . All family and
The ftrst session will be held
BlrtU - Mr. and Mrs. Clil1lon friends invited.
June 8-19 and the second session
Bowyer, 11011, Crown City; Mr. and
wiU be held June 22-July 3. Class
Mrs. Paul Finch, dauah.ter, Jacklee cnmiOdal
fee is $20 per person and partici·
son; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Roush,
The Trinity Clnnh of Pomaoy, pants must be at least six years of
daughter, Letart, W. VL
Second and Lynn Streets, will have age. David Deem is instructor.
Discbar&amp;u June 7 - Mrs. an ice aeam social Thursday, FriA lifeguard traininB class will
Henry Cado and daughter, James day and Saturday of Heritage also be olfered June 15·30. Class
Ferguson, Stacy Fooee, Edward Weetend from II Lm. 10 5:30p.m. fee for this sessioo is S25 and par·
Howard, Balbara May, Gilbert Mil- Each day homemade chicken and ticipants must be at least 15 years
liron.
noodles,
joes, hot dogs, of age.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Marcus ham, bam
• polaUl salad, role
Further information may be
Lawhon, daughter, BidweU .
slaw, baked beans, cates, different obtained by calling 992-9909.

Local briefs...----.

B &amp; E under investigation

Patrol tickets Middleport man

Steelworkers prepare
to return to work at RAC

Hospital news

Great Lakes . A weak cold front
near the eastern border of Ohio.
The high pressure Bml was moving
east. By late Tuesday. it should be
mainly over Ohio and Michigan.
Record high for this date was 98
in 1933 ; record low was 40 in
1977.
Sunrise Tuesday will be 81 6:03

Princess defended
against allegations
LONDON (AP) - A report
aUeging that Princess Diana trioo to
kiii herself five times because of
unhappiness wilh her marriage has
provoked objections from pollli c ians and royal watchers.
The claim was published by the
Sunday Times, which began a seri alization of a new book on th e
Princess of Wales.
Andrew Morton's "Diana: Her
True Story" blames the 30-ycarold princess's alleged suicide
auempts on a bad relationship with
her husband, Prince Charles, and
jealousy of his long friendship with
another woman.
The newspaper claims the book
was ba sed on inteniews w1th
friends of Diana, but it did not
iden tify anyone who provided
details of the suicide allegations.
"It amounts to a massive invasion of what little pnvacy they
have - and it is hard to see how
much of the monarchy will ever
fully recover from thiS media

::J:.Y

binge," satd Labor lawmaker Petei.
Mandclson.
:
Royalty watcher Harold BrooksBaker said the serialization was
intended "to drive the firSt nail into
the coffin of monarchy."
·
Prime Minister John Majo(.
declined to comment on the report
m respon se to a question after a
meeting with Pres ident Bush at
Ca mp David, Md .

Weather
South-Central Obio
Tonight, mostly clear with th e
low ncar 60. Light north wind s.
Tuesday, partly sunny . High close
to 80. Chance of rain 20 pertent.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of showers Wednes·
day with fair skies on Fridai.
Highs in uppers 70s Wednesda~
and Thu rsday , low 70s Fnday .
Lows in upper 50s each night.

Meigs County EMS
units respond to 11 calls :
Units of the Metgs County
Emergency Medical Servic e
responded to II calls for assistance
over the weekend and early thi s
mom mg.

On Saturday at 10:45 a.m. the
Racine unit was called to Star Mill
Parle for Adam Ball who was taken
to Vetcrans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:10 p.m. the Syracuse unit
transported Charlene Goodman
from Spring Avenue in Pomeroy to
Holzer Mootcal Center.
At 3:30p.m. the Racine unit
went to North Broadway for Dale
Maidens who was tak en to Veterans, and at 6:18p.m. the unit went
to Barringer Road for Paul Arthur
who was transported to St Joseph
Hospital in Parlcenburg, W.Va
On Sunday at 4: 10 p.m. the
Middleport unit went to Overbrook
Center for Mary Walburn and took
her to Veterans.
This morning (Monday) at
12: 10 a.m. the Rutland unit was
called to Salem Street for Freda
Davis who was taken to Veterans.
The Middlepon unil, at 12:32
a.m. went to Lincoln Street for Dal -

Stocks
Am Elc Power ..
. ..31 7ill
Ashland 0 1l
....... 30
AT&amp;L ...
. ... .... ... 423/8
Bank One..
...... 46 l/2
Bob Evans.............
... 16 518
Charmi ng Shop... ...... .... .30 3/4
City llolding ................... 19 1/2
Foocral Mogul. ....... .......... 1R
Good ycarT&amp;R .
........ 70 1/2
Key Centurion..
20 1/4
Lands End. ....
. 33 5/8
Lim1ted Inc ..... ............ . 20 5/8
Mulumoo~a Inc.. ...... .. ..... 28 1/2
Rax Restaurant .......... ... 3/4
Reliance Electric.
..... 20 3/8
Robbms&amp;Mycrs. ........ 15 3/4
Shoncy' s Inc ........ ............ 21 518
Star Bank .. .. . .. .
...... .36 l/4
Wendy lnt'l. ..
............ 12
Worthington Ind .... ... ........ 24 l/4
Stork reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Elli• and LOfwi of Gallipolis.
Kty Centurian i.! extra dividend today.

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

a.m. Sunset at 8:59p.m.
Around tbe oadon
Thunderstorms spread ov e(
large areas of the Southwest todaY.;
pounding anew regions hit by hail,
high winds and tornadoes.
·
Tornadoes were reported Sunday in Toas, New Mexico, and
Neb raska.

la s B Iev ins . He was dead on
arrival .
At 1:31 a.m. th e Pomeroy unit
went 10 Wctzgal Street for Violet
Morari ty who was taken to Holzer..
The Rutland unit, at 5:23 a.m.-,
went to Meig s Mtne No. 2 for
Harry Rambo who was transported
to O' Bieness Memonal Hospttal.
At 6:41a.m. the Syracuse uni\
responded to Route 7 for William
Grueser who was taken to Holzer,
and at 7:28 a.m. the Middleport
unit went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Pauline
Henderson who was taken to Vererans.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numhcrs selected in Saturday'j
Super Lotto drawing, so Wcdnes·
day 's p ckpOI wtll be $24 million,
the OhiO Lottery said.
Pick 3 Numbers
1-0-3
(one, zero, three)
Pick 4 Numbers
4-2-9-0
(four, two, nme, zero)
Super Lotto
12-35-37·39-40-46
(twelve, thirty-five, thirty -seven,
thirty-nine. fony , forty -si.&gt;.)
Kicker
3-4 -4-2 -2-7
( thre e, four . four, two , two :

seven)

!lARG.A IN "'-1 1M£B \ H UI(loH &amp; 50 ~0111
Alll(.l l ~ ~ ~(, ~! ll!S I)I.T

. ......... .

HAAAI!ON fDAD In PATRIDI 61'411
....,. '
~

1 10.9 l C ()!I ll '

~Ar W N "" 1 I l O.l JO ( ~ )

WHOOPI 60108116 in IIH!A RCr
i 10 ,9 10 [1,111'

',AI \L'N IIIIo! 1 10 ,1 10 i Pf, '

10'4 CAUIII IN fRR RNO AWRY
I 00.9 10 Cll :L &gt; ';,,o t ~U ~ .... ! OO.J JO : ~ )

ftliENS 3
; !0, 9 )0 [)1.1 1 '

~,1.'

~

MR~

[N(INO
l ?0 .~ lQ )ji l l'

-. ....,

)UII "'A I I l ~.l 10

!.J.I , ~Iftl

"" ' I ;O,l 20 LP~

....... ... "' ...... ,.. . . 3

LIIHRL WIRPON
! OC, , 10 Oollll

SAI , \ UII

-... r 1 00,]

20 jl~,

Bill[ INSTINCT
I 1 0 ,~ }(lllo\ 11 1
(iOL [) JI

l(l

"'ATI N[(S

( 11 [

{ !Jill 'It WOII J
KAlil! . ~T(V[ W r! - • ~ 'f0.1S0!11£R '

SIGN UP TO
RECYCLE
IN MIDDLEPORT
Nestablt/stackablt
bins
Recyeloo
provided for MlehMI IJll· ,
collection!
~

Curbside pickup of recyclables!
You can make a diHerence by
lolning your neighbors and recycle
In the Village of Middleport!
CALL JEAN TRUSSELL
VILLAGE HALL
1182-6782
N•rnMI by 4th Gr.dl,

Mra. Zurcher'• Clue
Middleport
Dnlwlng by Chuck Murnty, 4th Gr.dl,
Middleport

Pt•••....., •

F..- tty '"' ~ ol lltta
Aec:wclng, Ohio DlpMtrntnl of NICUAII A11 curvea.
- . V. \lolnodch,

a.-.

�Monday, June 8, 1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, June 8,1992

Page-4

Los Angeles edges Cincy 1-0
LOS ANGELES (AP) Remember the glory days of the
1960s, when the Los Angeles
Dodgers won with pitching,
defense and hustle on the bases by
a
shortstop wearing No. 30'1
Wei , one game, and about 30
yean laiU, it happened again. With
lhc much-maligned Jose Offerman
playing the pan of Maury Wills.
Offerman set up the only run in
Sunday's 1-0 victory over the
Cincilmali Reds by going from fust
10 dlinl on a bum-and-run play. He
!lCOnld one pilch later on Breu Butler's fifth-inning single, and Tom
Candioui made it stand up with a
siA-bitter.
''Thai doe sn 't happen too
often," Butler said of Candiotti's
two-base sacrifice bum. " But we
have to do those kind of those extra
liule things 10 win ballgames.
II was a collective thing. Offy
was hustling, Candy got the bunt
down, and that's what set up the
whole thing."
Candiotti (6-4) struck out five
and walked one in his fourth complete game. But his suth sacrifice
bunt was more than a footnote to
his second shutout of the year and
IOih in 216 career starts.
" I fek lite I threw the ball better in my last game than I did
IOday," said the right-hander, who
lost (.j) in Piusburgh last Tuesday
night on a bases-loaded walk in the
seventh innin~. "And everyone
knew today, wtth Belcher pitching,
that it was going to be a tough
game and we wouldn't hav e a
whole lo! 10 work with."
After Cincinnati first baseman
Hal Morris booted Offerman· s
leadoff grounder for an error,
Belcher (5-6) fiel ded the bunt
halfway up the first base line. The
Cincinnati right -hander tagged
Candiotti with a bearhug and
Offerman never broke soide.
"They did that in spring training against us," Belcher said in his
first appearance against the
Dodgers since last November's
trade for Eric Davis.
"I beard Joe (catcher Joe Oliver) hollering ' third base,' but I
wasn't going to give up the out just

speedf.

_

Candioui's version: " I was slow
getting to him and then he kind of
spun the wrong way, and I think
that's what made his throw go offline to thinl base. That was a great
play by Jose, but probably the play
of th e game was Breit's d1ving
catch .''

Butler made an acrobatic catch
of Bill Doran's sinking liner to
right-center with runners at first
and second and the game sull
scoreless.
"Off the bat, I thought I had a
hit," Doran said. " But you never
know with Brett out there, because
he gets a great jump on the ball."
Candioui replaced Belcher in
the Dodger.;' rotation after JOining
them last December as a free agent
He wears Belcher's old number,
49.
" I guess he probably wants h1s
number back, " Candiotti said .
" And if he becomes a free agent
and decides to come back here,
we 'II talk about it"
Belcher grudgingly allowed all
three Dodgers ' hits over seve n
innings with three soikeouts and
two walks and escaped a basesloaded J8ffi in tile first inning. But
he couldn't prevent Cincmnati's
third defeat in 13 games.
"I was outpitched and I got a
loss," said Belcher, whose career
record at Dodger Stadium fell to
32-16. "I pitched well, but he
pitched one run better. I was excited tD pitch in this park, but I wasn 't
overly pumped up to face old team mates. I was excited to pitch in thi.&lt;
park because I've had so much soccess here."
In other games, Atlanta downed
San Diego 9-4, San Francisco beat
Houston 3-0. Pittsburgh beat New
York 3.j), Montreal beat Chicago
3-2 and St Louis beat Philadelphia
5-4 .
Braves 9, Padres 4
David Justice seems to have
found his stroke and the Atlanta
Braves seem to have found their
soide. That can't be good news for
the res1 of the NL West

8QII ton (G.rdmer J-4 ) tl B•lllmo ~
(Miladd 4-~). 7J5 p.m .

.1&lt;4

21

21

46l

5l

426

7.l

w......
CINCINNAn.
...... JO- 23
S..~ -- -··· · -29 2S
s.. Diqo - _29 '11
AdanLI .................lS 2J
u.~ ..........15 T1

_4fll

. - - _ll 11

446

.&gt;66
.537
518
.500

S•turday's §C'Ofes

1l
&gt;l

Tuesday's games

pm.

Tor-unto (Jlll n Guzmlll 6-1 ) 11 New
Yort (I...eary4---4), 7·30p.m.
B01 ton CJ:&gt;opton 1-2) 11 Bllumor-e

J5
45

(MeA 1·5), 7.35 p.m.

"

troit (Rill 1-1).

CLEVELAND (Boucher 1-1) 11 De -

1:3.5 p.m.
Odland (Campbdii ·Ol tt Milw1ullee

(R ll.obulam O-l) ,X :~jm
C.hfonu.1 (V•Iaa 2 ) 11 Chic.l&amp;o (Hi-

San Fnao:::ilco 12. l-low\On b
AliWtJphil 1. St. L:..W 5
N&lt;wY... 15 ............ 1
A.U.U S. San Dicto I
UNCNNATI ~ . t...o. AnaeJa4

bbonl5-4). 8&lt;11 p.m
Mmnaut1 (k.rue,l!:r ~- 0) at K.1n1u
C11y ( M~JnlfW:l 2---4). :35 p.m..
Setllle (Aenun1l -l) It Texu (Bm n!ACI" 1-0), 1'35 p.m.

SuDday'stcorts

Major league leaders

Mma.l 3, Ouc.1o 2
Pitttbut&amp;h 3, New Ytd 0

u. AD«ckkl. crNCINNAn o
A.dalu 9, San

1'\atloool League

Oteao 4

San Fnrnaco 1. ~~ 0

BATilNG-K.!ul. Plliltdclpha , .376;
Gwynn. Sm DleJO• .J.49-, VV~Slyh., Pitubur ~ . 346. W (luk , San FnnciJco.
H i . T Fem.tndez.. Sill Di'-"'n, J IB: Mc-

SLL.ow.5.~4

Tonlgbt'• cam..
N~~:w

Yort (Youna 2-3)

Monln..l l

11

(Hill ~ 1).

Ul P·"'
P'i!Ubu!Jh (Palaciot }-0) 11 P!uhdel

pfu CSdsillina 4-3), ? .ll p.rn
O.iClF (SoW£ 5- J and Cutillo 1-' )
II St. LouU ([ld..llOI'L 2-5 and Conrua 01\ l6ll pm.
CINCINNATI (Swmdc:ll 4-2) at s. n
Fnncilca {l-laahl2-l ), 9:35pm
fblaon (l-lanlia.ch 1-5) at Sm OLeg&lt;J
(HIInl ~ ~) . 10:(11 p.m.
Atiultl (Lt:ibrandt 4 -2) I ! Loi 1\.rlj~ell
( Marttnca 1-2). 10:15 p.m .

Tuesday's pmts
11 ~ onuul

New Yodt (Gooda! 4--6)
(II""'&lt;&gt;&lt;!). 7oll pm

PLtLibuf'Jh (Dnbr.k 4---4 ) 11 Ptuhde!

phil (Ri,.. 0- 1), 7J~ p m.
Ouct1o (hcboa 1-7)
(Tewbbury 6- 1),1:35 p m_

1\

SL LouiS

Houtlon (Jone1 l 0) ll S1n D1e8 o

C&lt;lno H.rio 2-'). IO&lt;JI pm.

Alllnll {Bit.Mrl.i 1- l) 1t l..ol Angela
(Jierdriloer S. 3). I 0 15 p. m

aN&lt;lNNATI {Bru"II'IUII' 4 -4) 1l Sill
Fnncilt:o (Riahdri 1-3). I 0: 5 p rn.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
bthn~Dh·Woott

W L
Batrmcn ............. ll 21
TOftiiiiO H....... .........J4 22
)llihqube ··-- ..... 21 2'1

C.B

NewYcd: .... -. ___ _jj 26

l'rt
611
f:HI
52!
519

11

.510

5l

-

..................)6

. , . . . _ __ ___ ..........~ 31

a.JNEI.AND __ .. :n 3-4

.436
191

4l
l
9l
11

w...-.Dt•Won
OMliDd ..-----------12 23

Tcut __ __ _
___ J3 2/J
..-.. m• ____ ........ JO 2A
Qiouo..................ll 'lJ
---····-..22 32
....... .22
.22 ll
_"--a.,.
______..........
ll

c..wrcn. ....

.556
411
~

.¥11
.400

(Jn!f. San Dle&amp;o• . 317; Pendleton , At ·

l•nt.l.

~ 16.

DaWtm. Pb.ihddpha . .316.

~L':..'S- Bondt.
[!.IO. ll ou •Lon, 311,

?itubUIJ.h, 4-4; B11·
T . fem•ndu, Stn

[)JI:Jo. 38. Gwynn . San Diego. 37; Lani. fmd. SL Loo 11. )6 ; K.tu.l, Pb.iladelphi1 ,
36. llolbru, ll'uladdph.J•, 35; Gru.om ,
Mo:.1t~J~

RBI Bond&amp;, PintburJl'l, H~ O.uhon.
Ptnlldel;&gt;tua. 42: Pmdlewn. Adanu, 41 ,
Mwn.y . New Yod. 41 , Ganl, AWnu . 39;
Hondlt . New York , 39; McGnff, S1n
l)u'«o· ~
11rrs G•YM·
74; Kn.&gt;.
Ptul•delphu, 13, Pmdle\on, Atlanll, 73,
T F~~:m a nd u , San Dt~~:ao. 69; Finley .
Houttnn . 61; Shc:ffidd . Stn Dicso. 67:
G1nt. All.lnl.l. 63 : VanSlyke. p;wt..u-Jb,

s., o;.,o.

65
DOU HLES - Dunc an, Phl ltddphia ,
11. V•nS I ~ke, Pltubursh . 17, Finley.
IIOUI\.On. 14. B1wo. HWJLOn. 14: ~
Ch l c11o. 14. Pcndle1on , Ath nu, 14 ,
IJ• ult.on, Pluliddphu, 14; Willach, Ma~ ­
ti"'CII. 14
TRIPLES D Sanden, Atlanu, 10,
~mleJ, llwtlon , ~ ALca , SL l...oua. 6.
Offcrmtn, !..at Angelt.a. 4; 0-ru::e. OUca
so. 4, Buller. La. Aqel.e&amp;. 4; 9 In! ued

wnh l
!lOME RUNS - Banda, Pituburah.
14, McGnff. Stn Dieao. 12; Mitt
Wlih1mt, San Franciloo, II ; PMdklon,
AWnLI , II ; Shdfield. San Oiqo, Ill'. L
W•lia , Montrt:U, 10; Btpdl. Hew~an.
&amp;, Gant. Atlanta. I ; lliull.on, Philtdelphi.l.

s. o. ...... OU&lt;oao. ' -

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9.l

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bury, SL Louit, 6--1, .151, 2.09; Q.vine,

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4.04;. M01Jm, Oriaso,
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llUPI .E~ -Andtnoo, Bt.ltunOft;, ~; E
Martinez. Settlle, ); Deveretu•, Balli ·
man:, J, L Johrum, Chiclao. 3: Bwkt,
Ballat. l : P\Jcllen, Minnet.ou, J; R.lltlCII,
Ouuao, l

UOME RUNS - McGwinl, OU.land.
21. Doer, DetrOit, I ~; C~o. Odland,
13: T i!:Uie:tm. Omntt, I J; Ju.1n Gcnnla.
Tuu. 12; Griffey, Se.au.le, 12; Puc.ken.
MUWIGIOI.I, 11
STOLEN BASES - Lofton, CU:."VEt.AND, 24. R. HmderiOr'l , O.Uitnd, 22:
~~~-

M.Uwaukea, 19; Andasoo. BaJti morc:, 17. Runn , C hi caa o. 16 ;
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PITCIIING (7 dectlioru ) - Acmms.
Sea n le, 1-1, U9, 3 17; Muuuu . Btlu more . 7-1, X75. 2.Ml, Ju an U u1m1n,
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700, J f7 ; McDowdl, Chicaso, 7-J, .100,
J 7l. Gulhdr.sm, Octmit. 7-3, .700, 2.82
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Dontld. 81lumote, 6(}, K. Brmrm, Te.ut,
60, App1er. K.&amp;ruu City. ~9 ; Wiu., Teua.
59: JOK Guzman, Tuu, 59.
SAVI-::S - Echn1ley , 01k11nd,21 ;
A8wlc:r• . M1nna ou, !5; Jerr Ruuell ,
Tuu , 1~. O!Jon, Bt.ltimOR, 14; Harvey,
CJ!lfomll , D, OUn, CUVEI..AND. I ~
MonLJomcry , K•nu1 City, 12; TbiaperL,
Ouuco. 12. Re~rdm, Ba~tm.ll

NBA Finals
Sunday's scurr
Ch1t18 o 94 . Port hnd 14, Cl1ic110
2-1

le~~dl M:ne.

Futurr games
Wedna~hy -Onc•&amp;n 1t

Porll1M . 9
p.m
frilby-Ouctoau •t P!lrtltnd, 9 p.m.
S...ftd.ty - Pcrtl1nd t! ChiCIJo, 7 p m.,
ti noceuary
WcdnudaJ , Jut 17 Portltnd tt
Ouctao. 9 p.m., lf~K~Ca..ry

Transactions
B...boU
A~Mrktll

RUNS - Pu ckett, Minnetott , 45 ;

M&gt;&lt;&gt;. M.,_, •2: M&lt;Owift, OUbnd,

Lnauoe

BOSTON RED SOX - .Sianed Jeff
Funo ~n d Lei/ McKinley, pilc.hcn. tnd
Toa' Shdfudd, oudidda .
CALIFOR NIA A NGELS - Pb ced
Bryan lltrvey. pitcher, m the 15-dty dialblcd l.ill. Rec 1lled Joe Onh~. pitcher,
from Edmonton nf th e P1cifi~ Cout

wau•

KANSAS CITY ROYAlS Sianed

Michtd Tuchr, infiddu.
SEATTLE MARIN ERS - W•iv e d
Dtve Sdun.idl.. pill:her, r~:r th;.r.:-e of
pvin&amp; him hi• unomditim&amp;l
Putchued the: contrttl of Rand~ K.umer ,

~~ frun

fexA5

SA YES-lee Smith. SL Ltuia, 1.5; 0 .
lonet. llouttorl, 14; Oa~ritm, CINON·
NATI, 13; Myen, Sm Diqo, 11; Mitdl
Willitma , Phil1ddphit, 1\ ; Wett.eltnd.

Swod•y'a"""' es

Joyner. Ktn111 Clly, 18: Rc:imer. Teut,

17; Jdferia, Kanau Cily, 17; I-WI. New

STOLEN DASES--&lt;lriooom. Momo-

CINCINNATI . 6- 1. .157, 2.13: T_.t..

SX1

559

Phillip~.

66: Mlck, Minnelw, 66.
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31

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OEVELAND. 67 ; R. Kelly. Nu• Yolk,

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(Mc0o-wdl7 -J), 8:05p.m

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Detroit.

Mimaou. (T•pu:U l.-4) 11 K.an.u City
(Out&gt;cu ~l), Dl ~~

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42; K.nobl•uch,

Alcnur, Tomn1.0., 36.
RBI-Pucken, Minnaot., 4?, MeG-wire. OU!and, 46; Fi eldc:r, Detroit, 4 1,
Gnffe~. Setule, 40; Andcnm. Btltimorc,
39, ClllJOCo, Oallind, 38; Sicm. Te:r.u.
l7.
HJTS - Pud:ett , Minneaot• . 79 ; R
Alomu, Toronto, 1o-. Siem, Te:r.u . 68:

CLEVELAND (Scud der 4-"1)

NATIONAL LEAG UE

HwitM ..

ation.''

Justice drove in four runs with a
homer and triple and John Smoltz
turned in the Braves' third straight
solid pitching performance Sunday
as Atlanta beat the San Diego
Padres 9-4. completing a sweep of
their three-game series.
With the victory, the Braves'
si .rh in a row on the road, the
defending National League champions raised their record w 28-28,
the fust time they've been at .500
since May 8.
" We're playing well now," said
Justice, who boosted his a vecage to
.2!*. the first time it's been above
.200 this season. "Everybody
see ms to be hilling the ball and
we 're getting good pitching. We're
all doing it together.··
Smohz (6-5), like Steve Avery
and Tom Glavine before him this
weekend, bad little trouble with the
Padres ' NL best-hilling lineup,
holding Tony Gwynn and Co. to
su hits as he pitched his thin! complete game of the season.
On Friday night, Avery pitched
seven f1ve-htt innings as the Braves
won 3-2, and Glavine followed that
with a two-hit gem for his NI..-high
ninth victory.
Smoltz struck out five , tying
him with Sid Fernandez of New
York for second in the NL, walked
four and won for the third time in
four stans.
Frank Seminara (0-1), making
his second major league start, gave
up Justice's fifth home run with a
man on in the ftrSt, then headed for
the showers after Justice's two-run
oiple m the fifth.
Giants J, Astros 0
Trevor Wilson pitched a twohitler and Cory Snyder continued
his hot hitting with his eighth RBI
in two days as San Francisco beat
Houston at Candlestick Park.
Wilson (5-5) did not allow a hit
after the second innin$ and struck
out the side on nine pitches in the
ninth.
Snyder gave Wilson all the suppan he needed in the first. follow ing Will Clark's two-out double
with an RBI single off Mark Ponugal (5 -3).
(See NL on Page S)

Scoreboard

In the majors ...

.......

to try to get him at third . You 've
got to !Bke the sure out in that situ-

Cai&amp;aJY ~ the Plcific Cout
RANOE!RS - Pllced Mike

Jeffeoal, pi~hlff, tnd Inn Rodri&amp;uez ,
u~her, on the U-dty diaablt.d U.1. Re-«lled T""l' Moth.-.., pilcl&gt;oo, rn.n a.J.homt City &lt;11 the American Auocialion.
P\lrchaaed the cmtn.t-1 of John Ruudl,
c1tc hm, from Oklthonu Citr . Wtive.d
Ltrn:z Mceullett, pitcher, for tbl! purpo::.e
of sivinl him hit unconditional tde..e.
Dai.pl•ted Juhn Bufield, pitcher, for u -

''&amp;nmmt.
NtUonall...apa

PITTSBURGH PIR.ATES--Actintod
Gary Rcdut, ouLI'tcldor, from the 15-day
diltbled lill. Scna O..e Cluk, wcficlchr,
to Buffalo rl the Amtncan Aatrldatim.

NAILED AT THE PLATE- The L.A.
Dodgers' Brett Buller (22) stumbles after ~ing
tagged out at the plate by Cincinnati catcher Joe
Oliver in the fifth inning of Sunday's National

League game in Los Angeles, which the Dodgers
won 1-0. Buller tried to score on a foul pop ny
by Kal Daniels. (AP)

Boston blanks Cleveland 4-0
By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - Pitchmg has
kept Boston above .500 despite a
season -long power failure. Now
so mething new has been tossed
into the formula for the natfooted
Red So•.
A rare display of stealing and
sacrificing . plus a shutout by Joe
Hesketll and Danny Darwin, added
up to a 4-0 win Sunday over the
Cleveland Indians.
The Red So• took over the
American League lead with their
sixih shutout and kept the maJOrs '
top spot in earned run average at
3.11.
They also stole two bases but
remained nc&gt;t-to-last in the league
with 21 stolen bases. And they had
unu sual bunting success, trying
three sacrifices and succeeding on
th eir firSt safety squee1.e of the season.
"Sure it is" a spark, manager
Butch Hobson said of Jody Reed 's
bunt that brought home Luis Rivera
with the run that made the score 30m ihe seventll. " It 's got to be."
Hit s from so me of Boston' s
least powerful hitters, like Rivera's
doubl e that staned the seventh and
hi s run-scoring smglc m the eighth,
have helped a franchise with a
slugging reputation co pe with
being last in the majors with 21
homers.
"H it ting 's goi ng to co me, "
Hobson said. "That double down
th e line (by Rivera) got us in a situation to get an ex tra run."
It turned out to be a Iux ury. not
a necessi ty , because the Indians
struggled against Hesketh and Darwin, getting JUSt twu runners to
seco nd base and putting two men
on base only in the seventh.
"I JUSt wanted to use the sinker
ball to get a lot of ground balls, and
I did that ," said Hcsketll (2 -3 ).
"They're an aggressive hilling
team . They seldom strike out or
walk. If you keep the ball down,
you'll be OK ."
Hesketh , whose last shutout was
in 1985, was OK until a blister on
his left middle finger forced him to
the bench after 6 13 innings w1th a
four -hit shutout . Darwin got hiS
tll1rd save, allowing there hits and
striking out three in 2 23 innings.
"I looked over some films the
past couple of days and (pitching
coach Rich Gale) picked up a naw
in my delivery that had me leaving
tile ball up " in the soikc wne. said
Darwin, who entered the game with
a 5.34 earned run average. "All I
did was adjust."
The Red So• improved their
record to 26-25. leaving them 5 12
ga mes out of th e AL East lead .
Cleveland, whi ch scored just four
runs in losing the three-game series
2-1 , had its suing of tllree straight
series vi ctories snapped.
Boston took a 2-0 lead in the
fourth on a single by Jack Clark, a
walk to Ellis Burks, an RBI -double
by Tom Brunansky and a run-scoring groundout by Bob Zupcic off
Dave Quo (4-4).
"That one inning just cost
F OR HOt' EO\'IfJER S INSlJRMKE

CALL:

J(Ff

WARNER INS.

him," Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said. ''The way Hesketh
and Darwin were pitching, it was
gomg to be tough to score anyway."
Hesketh threw only 74 pitches
and walked one baner.
"He has good control of hi s
pitches and," Hargrove said, "our
hitter.; didn 't make any adjusllnents
at all to the way he was pitching."
Hobson was worried after Carlos Martinez's one-out single in the
seventh with Boston ahead 2~. He
didn't want the blister to pop,

--...................
....

wu:su

INI41111'NCI

.......IMIIII--..~---~
....... a. ............ ~Ot . . .

--~

,

stan.

And the blister was giving Hesketh "trouble gripping his slider,
and the wind was blowing out."
Hobson said.
A home run would have tied the
game. So Hobson summoned Darwin, who struck out Glenallen Hill
and, after Sandy Alomar's single,
got Brook Jacoby on a ny out.
Tonight, the Indians start a
three -game series in Detroi~ while
the Red Sox begin a seven-game
(See AL on Page .S)

Kane among KC
Raceway winners
By SCOIT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Rocketing around the rim
between the cushion and the wall,
Powell's Todd Kane drove the #78G Maxim Chassis of Bob Gillum to
victory in the sprint portioo of the
Dayton Auto Racing Fan Club
(D A.R .F.) night races Saturday at
K-C Raceway near Chillicothe.
In his first outing of the year,
second-generation driver Jackie
Boggs of Grayson, Ky. claimed the
25- lap Late Model main, and
defending champ Barry Bragdon of
Portsmouth won the Street Stock
feature .
Overall, over 75 cars f1lled the
pit area, prompting a series rj several highly contested heat races for
the large crowd on hand.
W1th the inversion, Kane staned
sixth after setting fast time of
II :96.2. Week-long rains left the
track soft and tacky, allowing for
some exceedingly fast racing, howeve r, a large cushion developed
three- fourths of the way up the
banking. The daring Kane was one
of th e few who chose to run the
dangerously narrow groove above
tile cushion . That groove was the
fast way around the track, however.
and Kane threaded the needle perfccUy between vi ctory and edge of
disaster.
Kane, who picked up $1,400 for
the win , sumved three nasty flips.
The first was a violent series of
flips through turns one and two
from Harry Garrett on the ftrSt lap.
Garrell broke a center section in his
right rear and hit the wall full foo::e
sending him high into the air before
executing the series of flips.
Garrell was uninjured. but his
car was badly damaged. His right
rear tire, however, jumped two
catch fences and hit a spectator in

pit lane, reportedly breaking his
leg.
The action was fast and furious.
On the restart, initial leader J1m
Nicr continued to lead, however.
four hard harrell rolls by Roger
Mossbarger brought out the red on
the fourth go-round, and tumbles
by Kenny Kimbler and Steve
B1xler forced a red on the fifth circuit. All drivers walked away uninjured. but their cars were through
for the night
The fifth lap accident began
when Kenny Kimbler was
squeezed into CJ . Holley , flipping
Kimbler up side down several
times. With nowhere to go Steve
Bixler, Marte Imler, and Gus Wasson p1led in hard. Wasson was the
only car able to continue.
After Jim N1er charged to the
front for the first five laps, Kane
rocketed around him wtth a slingshot ll)j!neuver on the backchute,
taking lhc lead on lap five and
leading the duration . Nier challenged Kane for the nex I several
laps, but Kane pulled away at the
end for an easy win.
Mike Bowling was third, fol lowed by Mark Goodfleish, Dave
Snell, Jason Dukes, Charlie Fisher,
Rt ck Holley, Steve McCann and
Tun Jodrey.
Sprint heat~ were won by Nier
Dukes and Gus Wasson, whtl~
McCa nn took the B-Main . Todd
Cramer escaped in1ury in a hard
front chute flip in the second heal
Jackie Boggs took the lead from
Wheekrsburg's Delmas Cooley on
the eighth circuit, then held off
challenges from Piketon •s Craig
Leist and fast time Jeff Houser
(14:344) of Chillicothe in the Late
Model feature. The exciting event
saw four different leaders and a
(See RACEWAY on PageS)

I want to thank the voters of Meigs
County who put their support, trust,
and confidence in me by voting for me
as their Commissioner in the June 2nd
eledion.

AL Contests ....

__ __

road Dip against -the AL East's top
two teams with three games in Battimore and four in Toronto.
"It's a big Dip for us," Brunansky said. "We've got to pick it up
a little."
The hitting, not the pitching.
Elsewhere in the AL it was Milwaukee 10, California 4; New York
6, Detroit 5; Baltimore 7, Toronto
I; Chicago 6, Oakland I; Kansas
City 4, Seattle I; and Texas 5, Minnesoca 4.
Brewers 10, An1els J
J ust when it seemed things
couldn't get any worse for the Califomia Angels, they did.
California had three players
ejected in its 10-3 loss at Milwaukee on Sunday. Aft&amp; the game, the
Angels learned relief ace Bryan
Harvey had been ~~ed on the 15day disabled list
use of a ten·
der right elbow. Cau:her Lance Parrish is also hurting.
The Angels are still without
manager Buck Rodgers. He's
recovering from multiple injuries
sustained when the team bus
crashed on the New Jersey Tumpike on May 21.
After being swept in a threegame series by the Brewers, tile
An~els were also angry.
'This team is down, and when a
team is down you don't kick them
in the face,'· catcher Mite Fitzger·
aid said. "I felt like a couple of
times in this series they definitely
kicked us in the face while we were
down on the ground. If that's the
kind of baseball (ftrSt base coach)
Tim Foli thinks is good baseball
and we fight, he's going to pay,

it, " said Wathan, who insisted
Bailes was just wild.
"I don t know why Shulock
threw him out of the game. He
wasn't throwing strikes and he
walked three (acutally roar) goys."
Paul Molitor and Dante Bichette
each hit home runs for Milwaulcee
to help Ricky Bones improve to 22. Mark Langston (5-4) dropped his
third straight decision .
Rangers S, Twias 4
At Arlingtoo, Juan Gonzalez hit
three home runs for Texas, including a two-run shot in the eighth.
Trailing by a run, Kevin Reimer
opened the eighth with a single and
Gonzalez followed with a drive w
right off reliever Mark Guthrie (11). Gonzalez' performance offset a
four-run sixth-inning for Minnesota , keyed by Kent Hrbek's threerun homer that put the Twins up 43.
Bobby Witt improved to 7-4.
Oriolts 7, Blue Jays 1
At Camden Yards, Mike Mussina (7-1) allowed one run in 7 2(3
innings and Cal Ripken had three
RBI singles.
The Orioles scored three runs in
the fifth inning to take a 4-1 lead
against Dave Stieb (3-5).
Yankees 6, Tlaen 5
With the Tigers leading 5-4,
Danny Tartabull led off the fifth
with a single off Walt Terrell (0-7)
and Jim Leyritz followed with his
fourth homer.
Mickey Tettleton's second
caretr grand slam in the top of the
fifth had given Detroit the lead.
Melido Perez (5-4) was the win ner.
White Sox 6, Athletics I
At Comiskey Park, Charlie
Hough (2-2) pitched a three-hitter
and Robin Ventura had three hits,
including a homer and a run-scaring double.
The 44-year-old Hough (2-2)
waited three and suuck out four.
Warren Newson hit his first
homer of the season to break a 1-1
tie in a two-run fourth against Mike
Moore (7-4).
Royals 4, Marlaen I
At Royals Stadium, Kevin
McReynolds had two hits and
drove in a nm to extend his hitting
streak to 13 games and reliever
Rick Reed held Seattle to an
unearned run in 6 2/3 imings.
Reed, called up from Triple·A
Omaha on Wednesday, relieved
starter Mike Boddicker after the
second inning when the right-hander's back tightened.
Erik Hanson fell to 2-9.

100.' '

The Angels were in a fightin'
mood in the seventh inning with
Milwaukee ahead by seven runs.
California reliever Scott Bailes
threw a pitch behind Darryl Hamilton before walking him. Hamilton
then stole second base.
Bailes then threw three inside
pitches to Scott Fletcher before
home plate umpire John Shulock
ejected Bailes, Fitzgerland and acting manager Jobn Wathan.
"There is some rommon cour·
tesyinthisgame.lfyouwalkaguy
and the pitcher's struggling, thai's
one thing. But when one of those
pitches is behind your batter ...,"
Brewers manager Phil Garner said.
Wathan admitted his team was
mad because Hamilton stole second
with the Brewers leading by seven
runs.
"We're not scoring any runs.
Wouldn't you be? We'll remember

&lt;c_on_tin_ued_from_Pag..:.e:...:.4&gt;:___ _

Pirates 3, Mds 0

Robert C. Hartenbach
P11d for by Canclldllle, 43741 Ruaaell Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio

•

MARAUDER BOYS SECOND -The Meigs boys track team
had a successful season nnishing as a runner-up iD the Tri-Valley
Conference. Pictured in the front row are (L-R) statistician Amy
Searles, Nathan Baloy, P.J. Chadwell, Matt Clark, Bill Toundas
David Swanson, Crockett Roush, Heath Hudson and statisticia~
Linda Cbapman. In the second row are Robby Wyatt, Frank Blake,

Adam Wyatt, Matt Craddock, Bryan HolTman and Mike l'llillips
In the third row are sta~istician Jacinda Mullen, Matt Haynes:
Shannon Staats, Dan LewiS, Larry Faw, Adam Lillie, Kevin Musser, Chuck Mash and bead coach Fred Baloy. Not pictured are team
member Stefan Taylor and assistant coach Mike Kennedy.

(Continued from Page4)
--'-..::..__:_

last 10.

Don Slaught's bases-loaded
grounder glanced off Magadan's
pove and into 1dl field.
Ellpoe 3, C•bl l
Jam VanderWal's !lues-loaded
pinch·hit single in the bottom of
the ninth innin~ lifted Montreal
(JISt Chicago, gtving Jeff Fassero
(2-3) the victory.

Tomlin (7 · 3) won his third
straight decision.
Lloyd McClendon drove in the
pme's fnt run with a sixth-inning
sing~ off ~te Schourek (0-2), and
the Pirates scored twice m~~~e when

Canlluls 5, Plllllles 4
Ozzie Smith's two-run sin~le
with two outs in lhc ninth inmng
lifted SL Louis over Philadelphia at
VeiCnlliS Sladium.

Randy Tomlin pitched a six-hit
shutout to improve 10 IHl lifetime
against New York and Pittsburgh
took advantage of third baseman
Dave Magadan's error in a three·
run sixth inning at Three Rivers
Stadium to win its seventh in the

With Sincere Thanks,

'

The Bulls' defense was definiteBy MIKE NADEL
ly a factor.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) "Once you learn how to play on
Michael Jordan, prince of mid-air.
The Portland Trail Blazers, kings the road , you know you have to
control the tempo," said Scottie
of airball.
Air Jordan wins that matchup Pippen, who had 18 points, eight
every ume.
rebounds and seven assists for the
The Chicago Bulls, who have Bulls. "We did that with aggresone of the best offensive players sive defense."
The Trail Blazers agreed, but
the basketball world has ever seen,
they
said it made it too easy for
used defense Sunday to move withChicago
to defend them.
in two wins of a second successive
"When you're sensing that
NBA title.
" They didn't get any points you're not shooting well, especially
inside like they did the last game," from the perimeter, you have to
Jordan said after his Bulls held stan driving and gelling easy basPortland to 36 percent shooting, kets," Buck Williams said. "We
forced W turnovers and won Game were turning the ball over and tak3 of the NBA Finals 94-84. "You ing bad Shilts. They were too,
have to keep the defensive intensity sometimes, but when they really
up for 48 minutes ... and we did."
had to have a basket, they drove
The Bulls had five blocked and scaed."
shots, nine steals and scored 26
The only Portland player who
points off Portland turnovers as the made more shots than he missed
Blazers tied a club record for was Clyde Drexler, who scored 32
fewest points in a playoff game . points on 9 for 17 from the field
Portland's 39 second- half points and 12 for 12 from the line. The
and 15 third-quarter points set team rest or the Blazers shot 31 percent
marks.
from the floor and 65 percent from
Jordan scored 26 points and the line.
"I give Chicago a 101 of credit
made three steals for Chicago,
which had to play great defense They played a great game,' '
because its offense wasn't much Drexler said. "But our success is
based on a motion offense. We had
better than Penland's.
They turned the ball over 16 no real movement and we didn't
times - including five by Jordan, get to our spots. Basically, we
who even had a rare traveling call didn't do the things to win.''
Chicago took the lead with an
against him - and shot 42 percent
11-2 first-quarter run and was
in the second half.
''We made a point to forget never caught Portland had stretchabout offense and commit to our es of six minutes in the first half
defense," Chicago coach Phil and almost seven minutes in the
Jackson said. "There is no way we second balf in which it scored nary
anticipated as low-scoring a game a basket.
Pootand missed 14 or its fust 16
as this. It was clear these were two
shots in the fourth quarter, ruining
tired teams."
Ponland looked exhausted from any chance or a comeback similar
the stan. IIS ftrSI shot was an airball to the one they staged in their
by Jerome Kersey. one of about a Game 2 victory at Chicago.
This time, the Bulls simply
half-dozen Blazer breeze-malcers.
fold. Their ability in the
wouldn't
" We played tired," Portland
clutch
is
a major reason they
coach Rick Adelman said. "It was
haven'tlost two consecutive playa tough Dip coming back here.··
The teams wiU have two days of off games since 1990.
"We talked about champions
rest before Game 4 on Wednesday
geuing
off the noor and coming
mght.
back," Jackson said.

NL games ... _

Your Vote and Support Is Deeply
Appreciated.

1lJ W. 2lol St.

P-tJ, OIL 45769
992-5419
1·100-742-3161

which might have cost Hesketh a

Chicago posts 94-84
win over Portland

MEIGS GIRLS FOURTH - The Meigs girls track team bad a
successful season and rmisbed fourth in the Tri-Valley Conference.
In the front row are (L-R) statistician Amy Searles, April Hudson,
Miranda Nicholson, Jamie Schuler and Joy O'Brien. In the second
row are Heather Pauley, Susan Grueser, Jackie Swartz, Elizabeth

KC Raceway action ...
pack of potential winners behind
Boggs at the finish.
Chillicothe's Charlie Seymour
led the first four circuits before giving way to another Chillicothe
driver in Marie Frazier on lap five.
Six cars diced for the top spot, but
Delmas Conley took the lead on
laps six and seven, before Boggs
drove into the top spot on the next
lap.
Conley spun on the next circui~
but made a miraculous charge
through the back to finish fourth
behind Leist and Houser at the fin ish . Tony Throckmonon was fifth ,
Jon Osman sixth, followed by Donnie Kinnison, Scou Wolfe, Ron
Adams tutd Mark Frazier.
Osman edged Ron Adams, Jackie Boggs and the McDonald's of
Henderson , W.Va. and Wolfe's
Gallipolis car in the first heaL Leist
won the second heat over Mark
Frazier, Conley and Gary Wilson.
The exciting Street Stock division was won by Barry Bragdon,
who outran last week's winner Carl
Coleman at the finish . Barry
Brisker was third, while Jerry
Braggs, Ron Jenkins, Bo Walker.
Fred Hardgarber, Roy Coder, Jobn
Reaser and Bob Callahan rounded
out the top ten.
Mike Wilson Jr. looked to be
well on his way to a possible win,
leading the ftrst thirteen laps before

Downie, Christy Dill and Susan Page. In the third row are Heather
Hudson, Lori Kelly, Allison Gannaway, Holly Williams, Mary
Grueser, Heather Franckowiak and Katarina Turner. Not pictured
are team members Belly Lake, Jeannette Thompson and Dan ielle
Scott and coaches ClifT Kennedy and Mike Kennedy .

(Cont_i
nu_ed_fro_m_Pa_gc _4) _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

yielding to Bragdon.
Bob Callahan and Bragdon won
the heats.
Regular racing resumes next
Saturday, then the STARS Super
Late Models come to town on Saturday. June 20 for the annual
U.S.A. 50 paying $5,000 to win.
Summary
SUPER SPRINTS
Fast time: Todd Kane II :962
Fust heat: Jim Nier, Todd Kane,
Kenny Kimbler. Mike Bowling
Socond Heat Jason Dukes, Rick
Holley. Charlie Fisher, Steve Dick son.
TI!ird Heat: Gus Wasson, Harry
Garrett, Mark Goodncish. Dave
Snell.
B-Main : Steve McCann. Mark
Imler Boone Davis and John
Webb.
FEATIJRE: Kane, Nier, Bowl ing, Goodfleish, Snell, Dukes.
Fisher, Holley, McCann , Tim
Jodrcy. Gus Wasson. Mike Imler,
Tyke Kistler, Mark Imler, Ken
Kimbler, CJ . Holley , Steve Bixler,
Roger Mossbarger, Harry Garrell,
Steve Dickson.
LATE MODELS :
Fast Time: Jeff Houser 14:344
First Heat: Jon Osman. Ron
Adams, Jackie Boggs, Scott Wolfe
Second Heat Craig Leist, Marte
Frazier, Delmas Conley, Gary Wil -

.

son.

FEATURE : Boggs, Leist,
Houser. Conley . Tony Throckmorton, Jon Osman. Donnie Kennison.
Scou Wolfe, Ron Adams. Frazier.
Charlie Seymour, Duane Ackley,
Rob McCoy. Greg Stevens. Bryan
Wolfe. Gary Dcinscith, Jeff Grimsley, Tony Kemper, Mike Steel and
Gary Wilson.
Slll.EET STOCKS:
FIRST HEAT: Bob Callahan ,
Dave Greeno, Fred Hardbargcr,
John Reaser.
SECOND HEAT: Barry Bragdon, M1kc Wilson, Jr., Carl Coleman and Barry Brisker.
FE ATURE : Barry Bragdon,
Carl Coleman, Barry Brisker, Jerry
Bragg, Rod Jenkms , Bo Walker.
Fred llardbarger, Roy Coder, John
Reasor, Bob Callahan. BiII McEI -

_

fresh, Rob Den ny, Thunnan Zim mcnnan, M1k c Wilson. Jr. , Rnan
Hamm on, Steve Bubo, But ch
Ow1ngs. R1 chard Trego. Dave
Greeno.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

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

OOPS!

THANKS!
My sincere thanks to all the voters who supported
me In Tuesday's Primary Election. I look forward
to and wnl appreciate your support in the Fall.

SHERIFF JAMES M. SOULSBY
P11d for by Candldllle, 117 Union Ava., Pomeroy
·,

�Sen II

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
EdPekt'sOII
Social Security
Manager ill Atbtas
Q. I was recenlly surpnsed to

learn lhal a mend of my 7-year-old
son was getting Social Security
benefit. I thought Social Security
was for retirement How are cbildren able to rw:ive Social Security'
A. Soctal Security benefits are
paid to children whose pareot(s)
has died, bocoote severely disabled,
or retired. More than 3 million children arc currently receiving these
"dependent's" benefits Social
Security also administers the Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
program which ~ys monthly benefits to needy children with disabiliues. Almost 425,000 children with
disabilities already get SSI.
Q. My teenage daughter was in
a car accident and will probably be
disable d for l.he rest of her life.
Will she be able to get Supplcmcnul Security Income?
A. Until your daughter IS 18. she
might. Because SSI is a needsbased program. her eligibility will
depend on your tncome and
resowres. as weU as her own. Once
she rums 18. only her income and
resource will count You can check
wiih any Social Security offJCt: for
more information.
Q. How much ca n I earn this
year and sun get all of my Social
Security benefits?
A. The 1992 earnings limit is
S7 .440 for people under 65 and

$10.200 for people 65-69.
Q. I rum 65 years old later this
year and I've recently begun to
experience some chronic health
problems. I want 10 buy additional
health insurance to supplement my
Medicare. Isn'tthere a law that
says I can't be turned down or
charged higher mtes because of my
health?
A. Yes. For Medicare beneficiaries age 65 or older, the law provide a one-time, six-month period
during which you can elect a supplemental health insurance policy-commonly called Medigapand be assured !.hat you won't be
rumed clown for health reason. The
six-month period always begins the
fust month in which Medicare Part
B (medical insurance) become
effective for a beneficiary age 65 or
older.
Q. I've been contacted seveml
times recently by an insurance
agenl who wants to sell me a health
insurance policy 10 supplement my
Medicare Part B coverage. I
beheve that some of the coverage
in the policy he wants me to buy
duplicate what I already have under
Part B. Is such duplicate coverage
permitted?
A. It ts illegal for an insurance
company or agent to sell you a
health insurance policy that provide
any of the coverage you get from
Medicare, Medicaid, or any private
health insurance you have-even if
the new policy would pay benefi 1
without regard to the other coverage.

TOPS announces winners
Jan Ice Curry was the best week- weekly loser at the re&lt;:ent meeung
ly loser of Ohio TOPS Club No of Ohw TOPS Club No. 570 held
at the Carpenter's Hall m Pomeroy.
570 for the week of May 26.
L1nn&gt;e Aleshire was the best
Runner up was Shirley Wolfe.
Mrs. Curry also won the frwt bas- KOPS loser.
Heidi DeLong was th e best
ket
Wanda Faulk read an article weekly teen loser.
Shirley Wolfe won the frUit basenti~ed ..The Emouorial Grip."
Members are to bring a Wl11pped ket.
item for the funny money auction
The best w1nner for may as
· June 9.
Donna Jacks.
There will be a greatest
Debbte HiU read a qu1z that was
improvement contest All members won by Wanda Faulk and Shirley
ar to wear a tight fitting outfit to Wolfe.
Tuesday' s meettng. In three
The club discussed some fund
months time . members wtll wear ratstng ideas to purchase new
the same outfit and pictures will be scales.
ialcen before and after with the best
The funny money auction will
improvement to be a winner.
be held Tuesday.
Members will be walking at
Mecungs are every Tuesday at 5
Vcterans Memorial Hospital Tues· p.m. with weigh-In and mating at
days and Thursdays at 7 p.m.
6 p.m. Call 992-2234 or 992-5638
Calista Searls was the best for mfornrauon.

Meigs County land transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County. ObKI
Alfred Co nrad , easement. 10
GTE North Incorporated. Bedford.
Ronald K. Brownmg and Judtth
E. Browmng. parcels, 10 Willie Lee
Cook and V11ginia A. Cook. ~lid·
ctlcport Village.
George W. Miller. parcel, to
Carol A Moummg, Pomeroy v,J.
!Jgc.
Carl Jcnnmgs OffutL dec·d. cert.
of tran s. to Mary E. Offult ,
Lebanon.
Gl enn Robe rt Hall by POA.
MJry K Hall. by POA and Cmdy
Hall. parcel s. 10 Vernon E. Gumn
and Dons I. Gumn , Olive.
Raymond M1 chael . Debb1 c
Michael. R1chard Stewart, Darlene
S1cwart , T1mothy Mtchael, Terry
D M1chael, Larry Michael and
Ir ma Michael. parcel. to Harry
Clark and Donna Clan, Salisburv
Samuel E. Curu s and Mary . E.
CurtiS, parcels, to Stephen Sclkr;
and Lacmda K. ScUers, Suuoo
RJChard M. Reuter. parcel s. to
Wallace Jan Reuter. Salisbury.
Larry E. Baker. parcel s . to
Paulmc L. Baker aka. Pauline L..
Dorst. Olive.
Robert Harry Knous. dec ·d, ala
Harry Knolls, dec'd . af f1d . to
Gladys Knotts. Salem.
Linda D. Hawley, lot 86, to
Hobart Goggirts and Lorenc Gog gms, Middlepon Village.
, : Southern Ohio Coal Co .. parcel.
· • 10 Lucanis M. Brooks and Judy
· Brooks, Columbia.
·
Jerrens M. Elxnbach, fka Rob·~ ~n. Timothy R. Ebersbach. Gerald
:~ t.. Dill. Sr.. Irene M. DiU. parcel, to
.:· Gerald L. Dill. Sr. and Irene M.
DtU, Pomeroy Village.
Ora M. Sinclair, dec'd, cerL of
trans, to Mildred Hauber. Delores
Hawk, Mary Bowles, Charles Sinclair, Bedfond.
Vester Walker. Jr., easement, to
Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc .,
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
RuUand.
Vester Walker, Jr. and Reva
Walker easement, to Columbia
Gas of Ohio Inc., Columbia Gas
Tmnsmission Corp., Rutland.
Larry D. Ashburn and Beny S.
Ashburn. 2.5 A., to Eslil L. Johnson and Reva M. Johnson. Salem.
. Ronald K. Browning and Judith
. E. Browning, lot. 138, to Anna L.
t

•

Browmng, Middleport Village.
Ronald K. Browmng and Judah
E. Browning, lots 135 &amp; 136, to
Delbert M Blake and Loretta M
Blake. Middleport Village.
Billy C Murphy and Irene C
Shaw Murphy, easement, to Ohio
Power Co .. Syracuse.
James H Elias, Janet K. Campson Elias. Chu ck Neumann and
L11cn Lee Hood Neumann, ease ·
mcnt. to Oh10 Power Co .. Syra·
( lJ &gt;;C

Grant A. Newlan d. L1nda S.
' ' " land , Leo Kennedy, Julia A.
1\ cnncdv. casement, 10 Ohto Power
Co. Sy~dcuse.
Alv1n B. Mays, dec'd, affid. 10
Thomas A. Mays, Olive.
Thomas A. Mays and Alice
Mays. parcels. to Jerry St. Cla11
and Armeda StClair, Olive.
Herben L. Sayre, dec'd by com·
miSSIO ner, lot 24. 10 Samuel E.
Curt1s and Mary E. Curus, Ranne
Vi llage.
David L. W1lhamson and Cherie
I. Williamson, .28A. 10 Danny R.
Tillis and Saundra K. Tillis, Rut·
land Village.
Russell Eshelman, dec'd, affid,
to Louise Eshelman, Harrisonville
Vili.1ge.
'11c holas aka, Nickl.1us Gruescr
and Margie Grueser, 4.72A, to
\11chael Gruese r and Millie L.
Grueser, Scipio.
Clyde E. Tnpleu and Pamela C.
Tnp lell. Pt. Lots , to Philip F.
Burgess III and Susan C. Burgess,
Sutton.

Keams family
reunion held

i

SUMMERFAIR • Artist Jan Chalmers of
Yellville, Ark., rtxes clothing on one or ber dolls
as sbe talks with patrollj at Summerrair, Sunday
afternoon, at Coney Is18nd park, along the Ohio

River on Cincinnati's east side. Chalmers said
that it takes about 20 hours to complfte ucb
doll. Summerrair art restival Is celfbrating its
25th year tbls year. (AP)

---People in the news
However, he told the graduates:
DALLAS (AP) - Tammy Faye
Bakker apparent ly has cha nged "Remember this- life, more
often than not, gives young men
plans 10 move to Texas.
The ex-wtfe of fallen television and young women second
evangelist Jim Bakker, who has chances.''
After returning from Vietnam,
been living in Orlando. Fla .. had
been reportedly planning 10 lease a Puller obtamed a law degree and
house 1n Colleyville, about 21 now works as a lawyer for the
Defense Department
mtles west of Dallas.
But Scott Mur111y, sports anchor
for KXAS -TV, said the owners of
PHOENIX (AP) - Members of
the house. JUSt down the street from the heavy-metal band Metallica say
h1s home, told him Ms. Bakker had their songs are inspired by something different than the usual sex,
decided not to SJgn a contract.
"She's not co ming," Murray drugs and rock 'n' roU topics.
The thundering song "One,"
said.
Ms. Bakker wa s granted a about a fully conscious, mute
divorce in March from her hus - quadriplegic, draws upon Dalton
band. who is servmg an 18-year Trumbo's "Johnny Got his Gun,"
federal pnson sentence for fraud according 10 an interview with the
and conspiracy in his P11. ministry. band in The Arizona Republic .
Another song, 'The Shortest
SALUDA. Va. (AP) -Pulitzer Straw,' is based on a book called
Pnze-wmmng author Lewis B. "Nammg Names," about the
Puller Jr. told Chnstchurch School McCarthy era.
graduates that he's proof that life
"We don't sing songs like, 'I
offers second - and even third and want 10 rock and roll all night and
fourth- chances.
party every day,"' said songwriter
Puller, a 1963 graduate of James Hetfield. "It's so blatantly
Chmtc hurch, won the 1992 obvious. it's going to get old real
Pulitzer for his autobiography soon."
"Fortunate Son." He is the son of
Not that the band doesn't enjoy
l.he Manne Corps· most decorated rocldng.
officer, Lt. Gen. LewiS B.
"You play the right choice of
"Chesty" Puller.
notes, and it just sounds so heavy,"
Puller told the 66 graduates of said guitarist Kirk Hammen. "I
the excluSive private school Satur- mean, sometimes you feel like you
day about his tribulations, includ- can just bash people's heads in just
mg academic failures. alcoholiSm with riffs."
and the loss of both legs in a
Metallica was in Phoenix for
booby-trap explosion m Vtetnam.
two shows this week.
"By the time I graduated from
college. I had nunked out of one
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An
sc hool and was on academic and arrest warrant has been issued for
d1 sc iplmary probation al another," rap singer Andre Rommel Young,
Puller said. "I was also wcU on my known as Dr. Dre in the group
way to be ing an out-of·control N.W.A.. for an alleged attack on
alcoholic.
hi s record producer, authorities
" I'm not proud of any of !.hiS, said.
and I rcadtly acknowledge that
Young was charged with assault
most of my problems. most of my usmg a deadly weapon and battery
misfortune s, were of my own mak - for an alleged auack on music proin g."
ducer Damon Thomas at Thomas'

Women's fellowship meets
The Meigs Co unty Women s
Fellowship met recently at Hemloc k Grove Chmtwn Church with
3~ members prc.scnL
Ann Lambert 0ave the opening
praye r and the opening song was
"Open My Eyes Thall May Sa."
There wa s a speCial song by
Sherry Lynn Runyon at the piaoo.
Devo lio ns were g1vcn by
Kathryn John son and scripture was
from Psa lms.
Kathryn Johnson conducted the
meeti ng durin g wh 1ch officers
rc pon s were g 1vcn an&lt;1 the sick

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Monday, June 8, 1992
P1111e 6

Your Social Security

.. His Way W1th Th ee·· was the
cloSing so n~ and Lynn Runyon
gave the closmg prayer.
Refreshments were served by
the host chun:h.
The next meeting will be held at
the Rutland Church of Christ

Program slated
Roger Gilmore and Tim Glaze
will present a progl11ffi at the Meigs
County Public Libmry Wednesday
at 2 p.m. The program will consist
of a demonstration on making
model rockets and also a rocket
launch will be held. All children
arc encouraged to attend.

noted .

T he cvcn1ng pr ogr;1m was a

quilt demonstration and dhplay by
Muncl Bradford.

4-H riders prepare for fair

The /.lcigs 4-H Pleasure Rider.;
recently held a practice session at
the Me1gs County Fair Grounds.
Members. Holly Milhoan, Matt
Milhoan , Sara Craig and Tracey
Shaffer were mstructed by guest
A surprise birthday party was advisor, Terri Carsey from the
held recendy at the home of Maude Young Riders 4-H Club. Members
Betz, High Street, Middlepon, who worked on their showmanship and
horsemanship. A trail class was set
was 103 years old May 17.
. Allending were Dewey and Vir- up with members working their
gmlll Cantrell, Columbus; Bonnie horse through the course.
Attending were Rachael Downie
White, Mary Ball, Racine; Peggy
and
Pam Milhoan, advisors, Bill
Klein, Rosalie and Clarence Story,
Downie,
Donna Mannuel, Dave
Pomeroy; Mary Hysell, Kathleen
Carsey.
Patnce
Circ le and Fae
Davis and daughter, Joyce, Isabell
Craig.
Powell, Flora Marie Gibson, Clay
The club al so went to a 4-H
Tutlle, Helen Williams, Emily
Horse
Clinic at Athens Fair
SIJrague, Evelyn Murray, Nora
unds
that was joined by the
Gro
Rtce, Lenie Young , Marjorie
Athens
4-H
members.
Wigal, Frances Rousb, Middleport;
Demonstrations
on showmanBill Lee, Columbus.
ship,
horsemanship.
barrel racing
Refreshments of ice cream.
and
the
walking
horse
were shown
cake, punch and mints were served
to the members by several advisors.
~~e~~e~M:h, Eva
Altending were Sara Craig,

Holly Milhoan, Man Milhoan, Sara
Grueser. Susan Grucser, and advt sors, Rachael Downie, Pam Milhoan and Kay Ward.
There wiU be a horse clinic for
all 4-H members at th e Meigs
County Fair Grands on June II.

Birthday observed

111

or 111101
MLI

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

home on May 5, said the warrant,
issued Friday.
Thomas suffered a broken jaw,
the warrant said.
•'The incident stems from supposedly inappropriale remarks that
Mr. Thomas had made to Mr.
Young's girlfriend," said city
attorney's spokesman Ted Goldstein.

Bible School
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School at the Bradford
Church of Christ wiU be held June
15 -19 from 9-11:30 a.m. daily.

Xi GammaMu
members attend
year end picnic
The end-of-the-year picnic for
the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter. Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, was held
recently at the home of Gayle
Roush in Gallipolis.
Officers for the past year were
thanked for their service by Niese!
Gerard, outgoing presidenL
Maurisha Nelson reported that
four scholarships were given by
Riverbend City Council Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi. Two were given at
Meigs and two were given at Eastern to srudents going to technical
school who met criteria of need and
grades.
Kay Adkins received an award
for best cui rural ~pon.
One -year perfect attendance
awards went to Sandy Hanning,
Kay Adkins and Maurisha Nelson.
Two-year perfect attendance
awards went to Mary Woods and
Kay Logan. Four-year perfect
attendance awards went to Barbara
Welsh and Jackie Hoover and
Sharon Pratt received a five-year
award of perfect attendance.
Secret sisters were revealed and
new ones drawn for next year.

Officers nominated
Officers were nominated at the
recent meeting of the American
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy. Officers wiU be voted on
at the June 16 meeting.
Nominated were: John Weeks,
commander. Frank Vaughan, rust
vice-commander; Paul Casci, adjutant; Jerry Rought, fmanee officer;
James Gilmore, post chaplain;
Wayne Milhoan, sergeant-at-arms;
Leonard Jewell, post service officer; and Bob Bowen, post historian.
Members participating in the
Memorial Day Services at different
cemeteries around the county were
congrawlated for their performance
by the commander.
Members will be marching at
the Heritage Day parade June I 3.
All are to meet at 9:30 a.m. at the
old junior high school at Pomeroy.
Over 40 members were in atten·
dance for the meeting.

RATES

The John and Norie Johnson
Kuhns family met for their. 1992
family reunion recently, w1th 49
members attending at tbe Letart
Community Building.
The day swtcd with a eovered
dish dinncl'. followed by pnes and
picwre taking. The door prize this
year was a homemade quilt made
by Louise Hall, Sheryl Ltttle,
Emma Lee. and Frances and Nancy
Keams, and was won by Dwayne
Russell, son of Donna Russell.
The family members and friends
present were: Harry and Frances
Keams; Donna. Dwayne, Arny and
Greg Russell; Shalah Hoffman;
Shelly, Tim and Tom Matheny ,
Sberyl, Vernon. Michael and Johnny Litlle; Justin Litlle; Lora Cleland; Bernice Smith; Jerry Walker;
Maree Swtey; Gteg Kearns; Lori
and Craig Chapman; Eileen Buck;
Kelly. Lynn, Derek and Kodi
Hawk; Gerald and Emma Lee
Kearns; Keith, Christie and
Heathel' Rousb; Louis Keams Hall;
Carol Oiler; Janelle Bwton; Mike
Bycn; Alioe Blaker; Teresa Blaker.
Larion Hessin; Bonnie Burtoo; Pete
Mudrak; Connie, Tim, Eric and
Haley Davis; Diana, Amber and
Aaron Ea&lt;b and June McMillian.

Woodmen to
host cookout
Modem Woodmen of America
Camp 7230 will sponsor a cool.out
for members and their families on
Saturday at 7 p.m. at the south·
bound part on U.S. Route 33.
The evening will honor fathers.
Tbe canp will furnish hamburgers,
hot dogs, buns and condiments.
Those attending are to bring a covered dish. and there will be no
charge.

Each father in attendance will
receive a small gift. Fathers.
friends and guesas are welcome.

To place an ad

Call 992-2156

Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
mUllt

416-Colu..,u.

JOHN A. WADE, U.ltll
Ill-NOSE-THROAT

lllfiGY
SPKIAUDIG II
•Milt &amp;
AleriY
efl11111 Allis
tla1wt E• bdectleu
II')'U •

P•••t•k

•lsr'~.

efle.l•dles

..~Nose
lnl111

...,.

I Mason

843- l'ortl•nr:l
247-L.elart

r.u.

67J-Pt. Plr.:••ant
458-leon
576-Appk Grove
773-Muon
8R2- ' i - ltn ~n
89 :')-l~hrt

PlaintiH

BUU.OOZER , BACKHOE
oncl TRACKHOE WORK

BECKY S. TROUT, ET Al

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES.nd
TRAILER SITES,

Defendant
CASE NO. llt-DR-123

M•c Quinn, Sr., whose

Iaat known addruo wao In
the at.te ol California, you
•• hereby notified .... you
how t..n named defendant

l.ANDCI.EARIHG,

DRIVEWAYS INSTAU..ED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
fREE ES'IlMA1T.S

action entiUed

Billy Joe Ttou~ plointill,
votouo Be~y S. Trou~
delen&lt;IML Thio oction hoo

992·3838
6-8-'92'· l

LEGAL NOTICE

so. &amp;

771.MIISSIIISI10S 1«1P111

675·1244
Wit IIUIIey •~ Pl. ft •

'•

................ so
, ••.,....... 1

2"' Off
Alllllnlltllerrl ""'
O,.hh91&amp;115p&amp;

Moyor, Munielpol Building,
of the Ohio Admlnlolro·
Third Street, SyrocuH, Ohio, 1·32
tlve
Code.
In pert, lhla meant
until 4 p.m. lDCIII dmo on that any bidder,
to the extent
Thurodoy, July I, 1192, 1or
lhal
It aubcontracta wortc.,
rurnlahlng 111 labor, malerlahall award euboontntcta to
oloondequipmentneceooory alate
Minority Buaito complete the proloct neto cerllfted
EnltrpriMo
ogknown ao Bridgeman Street gregatedollar valueInof on
noleaa
Slotm Sewor ond SlrMt than flve percent (5%) o1lht
Repair, and at ukltlme and
pt!me conlrocl Blddor proplace, publicly opened ond curement
octlvltleo, to tho
teed aloud.•
extent
that
the contractor
The eallmaled project
purchooHo matorloto ond/or
COli to $17,600.
oholl mull ln tho
ConlrfiCl clocumonll, bld oervlceo,
award of procurement co.,..
ohoell, pion ond opedftcatlono con be oblllned ot oold tractod to oUilo cortlfled MioHkle on June 1SI, 1992, 11 nority Bualnfta Entwprtaea
ln an oggregoto dottor voluo
$25.00 .,.. ..~ which
money wilt be refunded to of not Ina than lwo percent
prime conlract.
tho unoucceoolul blddero (2%1Allo11he
contracloro
oubupon tho retum of the com· conlroctorolnvolvedend
wtlh lhlo
plele oet In good condlllon
will, to the extent
no mora than ton (10) doyo project
proctlCilblo
uoo Ohio Prodaher bid dolo. Checko oholl ucla. materlall,
Mrvloea, end
be modo poyobte to lht VII·
tabor
In
the
lmptemenlolion
loge of Syrocuae, Ohio.
ptojoct. Addttionolly,
Eoch bidder lo requl1ed to olth!o
contractot
comptlonoe wtth
lurnloh wllh Ito propoul, • tho Equal Employment
Bid Guotonty ond Contract portunity requtremonto Opol
Bond ln IICOOrdence with Ohio Admlnlotrotlve Coda
Secllon 153.54 ol the Ohio Chapter 123, lho Go_.o
Revloed Code. Bid oecurlly Eotocullvo Order ol1872, ond
lurnlohecl In Bond form, ohotl Governor'o
Eaecuu.. Order
be loouod by • Surety Com·
oholt be r.qut....r.
pomyotCorporolionltc.nood 84-8Blddoromuat_,P,lywlth
In the Stote of Ohio to protho prevoltlng woge rol01 on
vide oold ..,..ty,
Eoch propoul muot IXIn- Public Improvement• In
toln the luU nomeot the pony Melgo County
or portleo oubmlltlng tho of Syrocuoe, Ohio, •• - . .
propooot ond oll ,....oono mined by the Ohio Deportlnterooted lhenln. Eotch bid- men! ollncluotrlet Retotlono.
Tho VUioge ol Sy,_.
der mual aubmh evidence of
the right to wllve
Ito expetlonou on projecto
ol oimltor olu oncl complex- lrregutorllteo ..a tonjeciMiy
Ity. The owner lnllnde end or ott bldo.
VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
require• thot thlo project be
Jonloo L.awoon,
completed no lolor thon
C1wii·Treoourer
September 1,1m.
Blddoro ore requited to (6) 8, 15 2TC

r--

ClOUD SUNDAY

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SJIIICist 992·5776

'

:'- 1..-t -.d f'o..d
8---- Pvll.l.:: 5.-.k &amp;:
liD

17 - \f~dlaD£Oua
18- WuledToDo

a.,

NOW OPEN!

IEYII'SUWI
JWmiiUCE

CAUFOIIIA
UIS

M9-2627or

15 Sanloos._.$25
12 Sn•lanL.. .$20
1 Saasion. ...$2.25

.........w

Fertilizing.
iltg.
andS t'ng.
ShntbandT,_

6111. o.r Elgie ....
ltl. • I a flllll ....
New SCA WOLFF

TtiiNI·'IJ· AatiOWI

EMdSl2'

c:ill

A - ; • .;.. I C

c.ll for AppLTocMy

I

949-2123

~

lifO.

:-~::,1 ~:i~!

County, Pomoroy,
Ohio 4576i.
The object ol lhio motion
Io to change Ill• pe&lt;manent
cuotody or Poul Quinn ond

ln lhiga

from

Mire

Quinn, Sr. to Billy Joe nout

MICROWAVE OYEII
aad VCR REPAIR
ILl lUlU
Brlog It Ia Or Wo
Pkk U~

KEN'S APP IAIICE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

..:o~ ':'t e ' required to
MIOWW IIIIo motion wilhin
t.enty-eight (21) dltp ollor
'"'" ,,.. ,_, 0ff1co
.,. loot publication o1 IIIlo
217 E. Soc... Sr.
nolle• which will bo
POMnor, 0110
publtohed
onceaucc•••ive
eoch w"k ~~=:::::::::~~~~
lor
all (&amp;)
w..U. The Iaat publication '
wut be made on July 13,
1!1!12, and Ill• lwonty-eighl
(28) doyo lot anowor wilt
1 11

Rut..

of

I CO.

deloult will be tendoted
egolno! you lor the roliol
doled.

985-3961
i.tssHs SJ 2.50
6 i.tssHs ~0.00

-wlht.llt..,..

INTDIOI &amp; IIIBIOI

O.R.,-,

Fl&amp; ESIMn
HIW IIIIMQ

....... ,...t-1 0
&amp;!tor 6 Jl&amp; 61His.4Jit

Loll &amp; A.c ruge

L1¥f!IL!XIo.

Hay &amp; Gram

65--- Seed &amp; Fc rtdJZer

TH \ \SI'ORTATIO'i
. "
71-Auloafor"'lnlc

4142 4J.--.4445---

Ho~a for Rt:nl

for

\lob•le flomu
Far~na

Rent

for Hen t

Apartment for Rent
Fur-n1!iho:rl Hoo ma

'i\'an!f!d II) Henl
Equ•pment for Rent
49-- For Leue
~

\IEHCII \\DI:iE
5 1- Houu ·hol.i G~
52- SporlJI\@ l:ood..
53- Anl~u~
54-- \1 u&lt;: \1&lt;:rcha. nd aae
55-- BualdJ~ Suppl 1r.r.

72- Truck. fo r Sttlo'
73- V11m &amp; ·1 \l ' tr ~
,74--- )t otorcy cle!
i' ;}- lloau &amp;. "l!Ho r s fDr S ale
76--- Auto PortA .'\• \1 r ··~ o; o 1
, 17 - Auto RqHllr
iS,..... Campmg E'luopm~"nl

SEH\' ICES

!

181-llumt lm poru:mr·f1U
82- rlum ltlll l; ,'(,· ll• ·u l1 ng
8J.-..- E~ c avttt1np;
84---- flrctrJI ' fll &amp;· IL·fr1r;nu!i
85-- f.,.nrrl!.lllnul, n~
86--- \luL1Ie 11,.,,.. Jl , puor
8-:'-

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Spedaliring In Cu~lom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PAm

FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992-7013 or
992-5553

L l'luJhl•· r ~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
Worl&lt;
I ~=~A:dditiona
and Plumbing
-lloofing

-lnterio&lt;&amp;Exterior
Pointing
(FREE ESnMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Iii

OR TOll FlEE
1·800-8'1·0070

'992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

IAIWIN, OHIO

7131f91/tfn

ol Courto
(6) 8, 15, 22, 211; (7) 6, 13, Sic

..ntpt· s, PI ••es
.....u

614-949·2202

USED RAILROAD TIES

4/2l/9ll1-

JAYMAR

lgric•ltwre

AUTO REPAIR

li•e

lOWWORRAn
JS% OFF 0. Most
loatP.-ts

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Co. Rd. 3.
1..-!i~ Cnell: Rd.
llrt

... "'+

742-3030

R&amp;C
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LANO CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS &amp;

'.Muufuws
"SPEEAUZNi IN SlATE
ORCNf'IIS"
39815 GoklllidpPc 11 or. Ohio 4S1U

Welcome Slates

$20.00
cu.--.-.
61 '-992-2242

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269

OIUO'S BOAT-

X!Jtfuyn

•LIGHT HAULING

RACINE. OHIO

~=j~~~~ EXCA=T~~

Real Estate General

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

..B..,....
R.--r
f.-,r__r.
,_..,
..

512111-

304-273-SSSS

larTy E. Sponc01

~

FOR SILl

Rt. 2
Uwooll, W.Va.

demanded In the motion

TUFOID GOlF
liD TROPHY

.,... ,..,. .,01~

VALLEY INC.

Civil

Clerk

comply with tho Minority
Buolneso Enterpr!M (MOE)

&gt;--- H..p~ -\4.
&lt;&gt;- t.-. ...I r .....

rt.E .

Procedure, Judgm•nt by

Public Notice

Sak

Farm Erpupm ... nl
Wantf!d to llu y

••igned c... No. 8~

-

Ohio

Public Notice

~··

II- Help 'I" anted
12- Saluai.Jona Wa111oed
ll-- lllauranc~
14- 8UJineu Tralnill@
I&gt;- School. &amp; lnaU'uchon
16-- Rad'10, TV &amp; CB Hepau·

1~·1460
~

rHpond I• required by the

992-2156

l -,\~11

9- " . .kid

commence on hi date.
In cue ol your failure to
anewer or otherwl••

ClAl~IFIED ADl

for

B.u1m:u Hu,lo•np

16162 63-64----1

46--- Spac-e: for Hen I

,k_

'137-IJufJaln

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BtUY JOE TROUT,

1-v~t~

Farm•

Sak

Business Services

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNlY, OHIO

In a

}lobde Hom~ for Sa le

E~&amp;r....

~"

Co., \\'V

667-CoolviUe

vs

F\IUI ~l ' I'PLIES
,~ 1.1\'ESTOCK

I 47 -

94\J- Hi cln t!
742 - Rutl•nd

NOTICE OF
PUBUCATlON
IN THE

t'ru1L1 &amp; Vt;gei.BL b
159-- For Sale or T redc

£LASSIFIEDS

requirement&amp; aet forth In
Seolod propooato wl!! be Section
164.07 o1 the Ohio
rocolvod ollhe ofllce ollhe Revised Code,
and Rule 164-

IOAID QIIIIED

F

'lR5-Cheal~r

388-Vinlon
245-Rto Grande
256--Guyan OUt.
643-Arabia Dlat.
379-Wa lnul

~l om« (or

32ll3435---

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

992-.\1 i ddleporli
l'omero y

367-Chnhir ~

31-

I 00 p m . Fnday

I

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

IN
THE

$ 05/day

51 30 / dav

158---

HE.\1. EST \TI :

$ .60

-------==-=-======---~ 36----- Real [nate 'll'ant.ed

. fROY-BI£f''

. Rex and Ltsa (Wentzel) Roy,
Hocking, announce the birth
of their son, Christopher Lee, on
Apnl 25 at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Grandparen ts arc Bob and
Blanche Wentzel, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; and Clarence and Inez Rby,
Racine.
Marie Roy, Racine, is greatgrandmother.

s13 00

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3(H

Public Nollce

New arrival

$ 42

100 p m Thcrrsday

M1~ ig,; County

GaUia Counl)

! 1- Buaintsa Opportunity
22- Mont; y to l.nan
2l-- Profeu1onal Serwteea

SJO

following telephone exchanges ...

Bl'LLETI\ BO.\RD

CHRISTOPHER ROY

s

1, S7 -

Rates are for .::on.s€'C'.lt1Ve runs. broken up day'S will be
charged for e.&gt;&lt;h d.v"' &gt;epa rate •ds.

Classified pages cover lhe

• Rf:\:en·e dileo unt for ada paid in advance.
• free Ad. : GiYeaway and Found ad. under IS wonb will be
run 3 day• at no cha~e
• Price of ad for all upitallelten i1 douh~ prke of ad c:Oiil
• 7 point line typ-e only uaed
• Senlmel11 not reepo011hle for en-ora after flnt day (check
for erron f1nl day ad run1 ln paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day aher pubhcauon lo make correction
• Ad. thai mUll be paid 1n advance are :
Card or Thanh
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sa le~
• A clu.,t-.tadver-ti.enaenl plac ed m the Call•pol11 Oa.ly
Tnbune (except Clauified DUplay, Bu.tine,. Card or ~al
Notice~) willallo appear in tM Point Pleaunl Heg11tu and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching OYer 18,000 homea

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY IS
CLOSING!
THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 6:00 P.M.
Last Day For Appointments Is
FRIDAY, JUNE 12

Saturday
Monday
Tuesday
WC'dnrsda v

:;6..- Peu rur S ~tl•·
Mwtcallnstrumenl.l

s 20

5 4.00
6 00
5900

C"~ --~-TI~

be prepaid

IT! ACREAT DEAl

·-=Ill Jl of

1.00 p.m
I 00 p.m
1·00 p m
1 00 p m

Wednesday Pap&lt;'r
Thunday Pap&lt;'r

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.. SAT.S-12

• Ad1 oul.ude the cvunly your ad runa

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

JO
Monthh

Over 15 Words

Rate

15
15
15
15
lS

6

Marc Quinn

Ln~c

Words

I
3

Mulbeny Heights, Pomeroy
2 BR, 2\', baths, central air, gas
heat, near Senior Citizens.
churches, hospital &amp; schools.
Call 992-3424 tor appointment

................1.......

\

Days

HOUSE FOR SALE

-s••~

7

HOME SITES

HAUUNG: Umestone,
Oirt, Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded

Call b14-992-6637
St. Rt. 1

4·4-92-tln

IERWOODS
HOllE REPAIR
SERVICE

CARPENTRY
PLUMIIH, WIRING
cuno• lUlu '
UTHROOM

YAIIITIES

949·2671

Cheshire, OH.

UCIIIE, OH.

1/2/rt

6-3-'92·1-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
llew Homes • Vi1yl Siding
New Garages • Replacerneat Windows
Roo• Addilioas • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and Rl'~'iiD j.:Yn\1.
mD: FSTIMAD'~'i

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(llo Suaday Calis)

PH. 614·992-5591

2112192

12·5-lfn

BISSELL &amp; 1-E

CHIRUE'S

seen 10111

COimUCDOI
. . . . . .lieS

992-2259
608 UST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

NEW LISTING- DEXTER CR 10 ·Older 1 1/2 story home
with 4 bedrooms. newer pamt &amp; paper inSide on 1 13 acres
of land ondudos dnlled weN. frun oottar, sheds. porches.and
garden area $15,000 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION'
MIDDLEPORT- 1 1/2 story

~arne

7 rooms, 3
bedrooms. central wr. fireplace . tenood back yard, newer
wiring &amp; plumb•ng, newer carpet &amp; f\oonng. front &amp; side
porches ASKING $29,900

WOU.DIIYEWAY
WOU.-4

u.n011

••••&amp;•,
Sto11&amp;Co•[IHIN

DEUYEIY SEmCE

915·4473
667·6_179

992-7553

RWOIWU UTIS

fi£11SllllmS

POMIIOT,Oil

horne wolll

POMEROY· Remodeled home dose lo 1own w&gt;th a !aoyo
tot tndudos 3-4 bedrooms. carpot, a!ectnc B B heal A
REALLY NIC E HOME! $19.900 IrS A STEAL'
MIDDLEPORT· 2 unit apartment bu1klmg both units rurrendy runted. Good investment tor someone Th16 has a
good monlll~ income $13,000

RACINE- Older 2 story frame !arm homo woth 80• """'
has 3 bocrooms, basement. cislem &amp; TCP water availIMMEDIATE POSSESS!ONI $49,000 come see MAKE
AN OFFER!
REEDSVILLE· 1 lloor bioc1&lt; ~arne home willl 2 bo&lt;tooms,
1 car garage. rear aCI98ned porch, oo•ling fans, produce
building. $18,000
WE NEED USTJNGSI 9~2-2259 THE NUMBER TO
CALL TO UST THAT HOME AND GET IT SOLD!
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................IIII2.181
TRACY BRINAGER ............................................I4~2tlll
JEAN TRUSSELL ..............................................Mt-2660
OfFICE ...............................................................992-2259

FREE ESTIMATES
NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING
"Wt Oet ne Jo&amp; Dent Now"
Call AI Tromm

ltftrtnces AnDaltle

s-JI-'t2-l -,..

WKI'S
HAWIIG SEIYKI
36970Wt.l_.
p ., ...

~

-sAND ~VEL oflRr

HONE MOWER
QJNK

lui94W' ..,

Iowen • C.. Sews

•Wu .. llen

(6141 992-3471

614·949-2104

5fl5tWII

....~-,

OIL, WV. &amp; H.U.D.
......nd Mt~~t~hmrtd
Httsint Prodwts .

~-=:ar:-PAm &amp; SIIYICI

~

,.,,..,

614·742·2328

•

i

•

: -N-

G

,,__~--

.
•

Wty Hi Effich•cy Ai'
c..lliD•en, Heat ~~
Fa atn&amp;Now
Wat• Heaters.
8eBDetb MobiJe
139 I SaffarHcllool U
(614) 446-94

&lt;•

LI

�~

._.,._ '1

.•

Monday, June 8,1992

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 8, 1992

-

SNAFU ® by Bru"' Beat!W

An nouncements

35 lots &amp; Acreage

3 Announcements

--

Ovor 2 Ac,.. 01 SUI'VO)'Od Lond
Wnh 3liO Fl. Rood F!Onlafltl. CaN
1........-2 Or 1-111131.

•Ia.

Aopl O.k .._..._..
&amp;hlp, 114-IN-61111.

For

Sit. And Fut Wi1h
Goa- C.pltto And E· Yap

Dlu10llc: AI Fn&lt;h Pt.rmocy.

Sueenolul B - Ownor 32,
Wllllllil

To

Companion

-·

To

,...,.enc:e •

Lall-

Giveaway

Puppies, German I Elk
Hound Mix-.d. 814--446·1864 .

1 Wuk

,.,._

Cas1or a..nt, To Pa.nt Or To
Gel Rid Of OJOUnd ~~. 614446-7075.

11

21

Help Wanted

FrH German Shepl1ard puppiM Exptn.oc.d cerpet lnltiW.
lo a gcod home, 114-843-5421.
tvmlt""
dlll't'ary, tuU-tlma.
f rHar I rtfrigerl"tOf, need Appty : Tomcw;ow, 1()....Hoon.
Tope Fumhure, 151 Secand
repair, 304-t75-3816.
Avanua., G.lllpoUa. No phoflll
Full bloodtd """'.. ~liMN
cat 2 m111 grav Tabbr ldltena.

304-675-4506.

Killana, lwkl . • 8wk8. okt, four
all white, two black l while, 114992-2612.
:.:_

____ _

Old newaplptta, mutl
Iham all, 104-675-2611.

6

taka

lost &amp; Found

Oellnltely l..oal AI Foodland,
Third Avenue, Galllpolla. 614th
11 : ISA.M. (lwo-$20 Bills) II You
Have A &amp;ig Hurt. Tak1 To

Groclf)' Ston, Reward!

.:.;..:.:..:._:.__.:.__ _ _ __

Yard Sale

7

Cllll .

GET PAID EASY IIONEY FROII
YOU" HOME! We'M Pay lou To
Gather Public tntormation. No
Selling. Wrll• P F 330, 161 S .
llneofnway, N. Aurora, IL 60542·

Little C..Ur11 Plzz• Ia s.king
A13grusl'te, s.tt-Motlv•t.ct tndlvldual• For Our Uomt. Tr.inlllil
PIVQram.
C'ompotHiwo
S.l•ry, Good Btnefilll Pkg., Paid
Training And Unlfomla Ottered.
You Must Hawe AISllurentl Up.
Or Equl't'lllnt OegrM In Busin111 Mgmt . Apply HeN Loealty
, Of Mall Your- Aeaume To Our
Roglon.ol Oificol Al o P.O. Box 70,
Barbou,.'liU•, WV. 25504.

Pum~ .
dltl~rs,

Fumacea,

AJr

eo.

Send Waft History
To: CLA 222, eio GaiN polis Daity

Tribune, 125 Third Ave,.., Gal2 Famity Yaarty Yard Sale: llpollo, OH 45131.
Sheets,
Curtains,
Cloth..,
Odds-N·Ends, Z2 VInton St. i-4 OTR ...t t.d ctrtvw. wantM,. 25
Rain C.ncet1. Monday, Tondly. r,.. or older, 2 yra nperienee,
mu-' ha't'e COL'a. 1-aoo-548ALL Yard Salea Musl 8a Paid In 0226.
Adnnca . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befron the ad tt 1o run .

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday tdltlon . 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
G•rage

Sakr:

June

Acre~~,

lilly In Bidwell. 614-3811-

8788.

clclthtng. and lnl:lnt Hwu
clothing. loti of ott.II..._ June I , I, 'tO from
fgjn cane.~~ until ner1 dry

adult
mlac.
10-e.
day.

June lth, g.. lpm, Sl . Rt 1 North ,
Fin PIMnl1. Furniture, 1dut1
clothing, mttc:. Rain Cll~ .
JuM I, tth. hhlnd MHOnk
todQI In Racine. Hill rnidenca.
Clothea, books, toys1 • mise.

Flalo, llonglng blolcoto- .. 00

121:60 2 Badrooma, Loe1tlon:
EvwgrHn. 114-446-3697, 614245-4223.

31 Homes tor Sale

"AmbhkKI:s

ditioned, $250/mo. Reference
And O.poail Required. No Pelt,
Water And Sewer Paid In City.
614 ue 361'1 Aft•r 5:00P.M.
2 bedroom motMia home completely tumiahed, wether &amp;

dryer, •lr eond, no pets, 304·
7n-5958.

2 t ' occna. COff* lol, priced
In 20'0. 107 ....... St, - - 2bdrm., II35 trailer on lhl Ohio
lOft, 11M-6JS.1'ilt..
AMr CamPSJround. Electtle,
trash, snd lot JN~id,
2 ? ' cue=. F..., Roosa, Ful watlf,
614--985-4256 or 61-4Sia B
,• ._ Woodbuming $25Mno,
949-2526.
Aa t I Cl 114 4tl • •.
Fumtat.d 2 bedroom mobile
home, all alee, 3~512 II

no ans. .r leav. mesuge.
Nice 2br, Uobl~ Home For Rant
Ou1 St. Rl . 218, 8 UiiH Aaf I
Ooposlt Roqul10d. 614-2~~251.

2br Mobile Home For Rant, Total
Elec. No Pals. 614-367-"Mll .
Nice J bedroom• and 2 badrooms, large yard, comet Rind

-Far
"""""I ...._..,M

•nd Perch St. KenUiga , 614-446-

111n

Far 1375o16o. Rod..,.

duded. boail:

I

I

OOCiiS Of1 2

,...... a:.lad ....

..._3041122011.

To Start Now

• Lo.,. PeopM
"'ver Age Of 18
H TheM Oualltllt Apply To You,
Call ~1-olCI Ta Arrwlge An
ln1wvlaw. Part-nma And FuiiTirM PoshloM Ava~ 1ft

IIEAIJTlAJL HOUSE FOfl SALE
Historical .,.. Ccmet Lot • 816
lbln SO. Pl. - _ W Va
eompw-, ......_tid: 2 Full
Batt., 3 '--91 I J 001111 . N.w
HVAC.., New C.rpal. AvaiW.
June 1S 614 tt6 22"S

SliM AndtOr Manag1m11M11 EarnIng Abov•Avwaga lncome.

Wlll Do llobyolltln; In lly Homo
Preferably Ag.a 2-S. Call '"'"

Situation
Wanted

NMd

O..ytime

B•bysln•,

Rtllf'enc.. Call After 5P_Ifl 614-

446-6887.

T/'3-5785.

9

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
M110 lftDbile hcwna, PC cond. 3
bad! OOChS Oft priqte lot. bf...tn ..

wood ...... OUibuitding, •:rtrl
room ...-.oocl-bumlr. major ap-

Business
Training

14

at utras , must
Ml lo appr· da, must s. H,
pli.anou, lal1i

SM ,SOO. l04~278J

Woriling

1!1)11 ~e Md&amp;, 2 Ehdtoou•,
, , _ CA, ~..nning.

Wanted to Do

BootOIIor. ~

Will B.abyai1 In My Home Flo·
eed In P\ay Aru . Ret.,..nc•
Available. Rodney Araa_ Ca.ll
tl4· 24~5887

tor loved one while on wac.al ion ,

rueonabN , 6l4-!Mi-238"1

Oon 't Junk "! S.l U. Vaur Non·

lblor

Apflllanc...

Calor T\l"s 1 VCA's, Mk:rowav••.
Air Condlttonen~, Elc. 8"14-2561238.
Old m•"""· loyt;, eomlc books,
l.t nt.ma, pktures and tumftun,
Osby Martin, fl14-992·11141 .

StaMtlng Umber, will PlY talr
prices, call Jerry Runyon, 614!192-2117.
Wanted To Buy: Juntl Aut011
wtth Or WithoUt Motors. Call
l..tn-y Uvoly. 114-388-11303.

G.orvn Portable S..wmill. don1
h1ul your loga lo !he mill just
call 304-6 75-1~57.

1m N.- Yori~M, 14"170, ,_.,
Carpet New Mot Wat• Tank,
-~And- ....
pliancea.. 1514 12St_

H•ve ()cMnlng. My Country
Home, FOr Full Care E.lderly ,
Wilh Private Room , t2 Years

1Hl Nashua, l b•cll OOfh, Mi10
with hQ opando, CA, Queen
wat~. oardln tub. .. ~

Erpentne. 6M-256-107ti

..;.....,
· $&gt;0,200
Ud
mow.,l6.ac
J04.41S.-1160
or 675-

Min P1ula'a O..y Care C.nt.,Sat. , aHordabla, chUdc.are . M-F
t a.m. • 5 :30 p.m. Ages 2"'t-10
Balorao, an..- achool . Orop-f m;
Wek»me 614-446-8224 . New In·
tant Toddler Ca,.., 61'-'4&amp;-6227_
NMd You r Lawn Mowad? Com·

T01&gt; Prlcoo Pold : A• Old u.s. plete Mowing And Tri mm ing
tolna Gokl RlnOI SUnr Colna, 61-4-245-558i.
Gold Colno II.T.S. Cain Shop,
TOial lawn cara , ~\all priCI, (1st
,_, Soc:ond A-uo, Gdipolla.
Will buy Hwy
d Waltef'-kl
btanda or chlmpttgne modern
....._n furniture, ,... 40-60'1.
C.ON~.

Employment Services

time apeelal) , lnclud"' mowing
I WHding , e.atl 614-992-631(
hm-tpm.

Wanltd To Do: Babysitting In
My Home. NurM Aaaiat&amp;nl
Training. Call fl14-441·122ti .

Yard wan. Hou..e... nlng, Interior

Palnllng,

Availab...

11

ReterencH

6l4-4-ti-6190

Afl•r

lp.m.

Help Wanted

•AVON• ALL AREAS! Shere your
time wHh ue. Vau'll k)ye tha

Financial

company. 1-IOO-ti2-63M.
A omoll Gil dolllorohlp lo loklllil
ruum. b an ••Pflienced
.

~
.0 . 8ox1113, - o y . Otl.
lono loo Salooo

Cr\1100 Ship .lobo, hiring,
St.boOimo. Summtf,
Yaar

Culno

...,T...

- . gil ohot&gt; ..
r
gvi·Q,!"· FIMin..l . -11.
em
n, B.......... E"""'".
No up nec:.•ry, 1·201·1'367000eJL1aNG.

Business
Opportunity

Sond

SpMro, ~142t.

IIOund. ..,.,-.,

21

Dol&gt;&lt;.,

AVOIH I A• Arua ! 9hlrtey

"'"

biiJ Wolili ExceiiOnt Poyl Ao

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHJHG CO.
.-.commands that you do twt'·
neu wt1h people yot.~ know, and
NOT to land money through tha
mall until you have lnY•f9atad
the offering.
2 FCA 124 FL WOLfF TAHIIING

BEDS For Solo. Sold Togott.r
Or Sep~~rttly. t"M-441-1021.
PriYite Pay Phonl1 F01 S...
Cheap, Local 1..aoo-ll9-n• Ed

_,blo Proclocto AI Homo. Call
Toll FrM, 1~-a!IM, Ext.

202.

"'·

Ouk:k? No Way! Bul We Ha.,. A
Good, StNdy, AnOidoblo, Buolnen. Won't Lut 1-100-~

HWalyllol I NaN Tochnlc:lan
GuartnCeed Clien1.... ,,......_

02&lt;7.

Bunk Bodo Sill

Drawer Chest Of
DraMra $44.95; Twin Uattra•
$99 Sat.
(2x6)·

4

DINETTESo Wood Bar Sloolo
$14 .95(26") Tabla And 4 Padded
Chalre $129.

OPEN: 7 01y1 A Walk, 9 A.M. • 6
P.M. Sunday 12 Noon • 5 P.M.
At. 141 4 Utlea ott At. 7 In Can1 bedroom rnoblll home , air· 1..;"""_'Y.:.;·_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Aut

Building
SUpplies

Block, brlct, 1-,
-_
Cal -IM- ·Rio
llniOio,
.... OH
CloUclo
24U121.

1 Room

Effiec~cy,

Paid,

Ellc.pt

Pets for Sale

-;;;;;;;;;-;;;s;;;;;~!h;fi;
Groom and Supply Sittot2 ~

O.posiiJRaf•tnc~ .

-

SKS Rlllooo, With Ac$115.
Ammunition,
tbf Country Setting, $225/Mo. aeries,

$151100. Jenning• 380 Auto Pialofs, N.. $105, 2 B1111ndl Am2 bedroom apt , S350. month 111 munHion: $1811()()1 U0/1~ C.OII
utilities paid, no HUO, 304-675- 10 A.ll. To 10 P.M. Koop 1rylng
Wt'rt In And Out Conatanlly.
27ZZ.
614-446--1822, 7 Days WMk.
2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Downstairs,

Antiques

53

eo--

AKC C h i - -· o,
Miniature PlnadWi. ....r llld
Cockollol, ...., -

"-Ia
AKC

•=a. "OOG

VENDING ROUTEo Got Rich

VEND

3590.
1080 .._,., Homo
\4:11'0, lbt, (u.. Condilian., On
1.i Aer-.8 Co&amp;ny ...... G.ood
l.ocalian On ftaMan Tnr.ca
Road 614 245 5lllt

Rea.

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

1987

••112 ...... .........

2bdnn.,

room. S1UDO, 6'M-to&amp;2!n0 ,.

Pu UOJ

Dragonwwnd Canary: a:A ~­
al.tna I SWMea OS-. 614141 3144 All• T:OO p..11L
Fl.,.._ (-1. .... &amp; -to,

..... ,_...2162 •flo&lt;
199'1

,...

lBr'"a.

s.m.

tiD Mel!, 514-ti2-JIH.

....1025.

-n

1117 4WD Feni B...,.., U Eddlo
...... F I If CondiUon, 2.1
ER 15.115. 114 4 41 l&amp;t:l.
1117
oa.-,

Fruits&amp;

58

Vegetables
STRAWBERRES · - Plm, W.
Pick. ContU.. Poool ' •
Opon H 11-4', Sol H. ~

Sunday • To~• Bony Pilch,
Kwr ~d. 61
•12. Or 114--

24.5-6178.
Pick 'ICU'

moo. 114-

:IIIOSX.

-h

1117 - h TUIIomo 115,000
- . liool Good Condition,
12.-. 1115 F&lt;Nd LTD, V-6,
Good Corldlloo, 03,000 lllloo,
$1,!1111; , .
Aollonl
SW, 115,11110 - . ::.01 Good
Col 01 o. ~ 110 Ford PU
~Condition, $050. ....

2 Balhs,

w,soo, er .-....... woo mo

Down. llwt Be ...ed! SM--4468325.

1--

fflllp?''Mcec1 Ooub...,ides: 5
.......... Only $1,flll" Doom

R
-

ld

Sing~~~;:

Onty , ....

l1 A.,.._

o..n -

e . -. Coli
1710.

....

-=-

_ 011
_- ... a.._c-"""
Prico 01 ""'
t•, Grul S ' ..... Free Sei-Up
And Doli¥ofy! Col
Holryp.t 2
m a
I

homo

_

I

IMbile

_ . . ,,

-

wlf• ==-·CIA.~ or-

6'/H

.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
S .::r. ~ no mobile
~ 1D INn. Oft AI. 2 H., priee
nogolioblo, JOW7S.TI'H
' - App&lt;oL ~ Ac. &amp;.. II .. SW
01 Go--. l..,.. 200
R. Rood Fnw
C&lt;ounty
W.tM. SI,OOO To ,000 Ea.. 21
A&lt; Far-~~.
Ray.

J.O

_...,_.,:-3. · ,_

UD In C..' I '

-:n--.-........

owtW" . . . . . . . . ..

..... .,...

~

..,.. finutdna .. 110l41

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?

CLASSFtm
- ADS

plf

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

11H7D.

Ertra Clean, Oulllt .
l
Relef'encea A•

qu1red. 114-446-2602.

Gncloua living. 1 and 2 t&gt;Mroom apertrnenta at Vlllege
Yenor
•nd
Alnrakle
Apartmanta In fllldcU•porl. From
tlllll. Colllt4-IG·T78t. EOtl.

MI. Vernon A•e one bedroom
·~ · IIC cand, Move &amp; ref turniftud, prtyata entr~~nca &amp; partl."-9, 300-475-0510 or 675-111112.
Nk:a 1 bedroom apt, ltrge
livingroom, $250. month utlllll•
pajd, ~ .

HiCII .audto apl , furnished , nice
location, 'f'lfJ', very unique
(must . . ). tl85. month, plu.

poy aloetlic, aner
hoo
cab6a,· ""'
304-675-4001
5:00PM 01 INwt m age,
onyllmo Sol • S..n.

One ~oom 1p1 tar Nnt, 31M175-Zlll.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Roome lor rant • WMk or- month.
Sbrling ll · Gollla Ho411L

Siooplng """"" w~h coold"9Aieo tralltr IIPKI· All hook-upe.
Cal attw 2:00 p.m., 304-77).
51151, · -

,~.

0..1. - · - . 11

46 Space for Rent

c...r,- HCNIIO Port,

AI.

Roo.. Or Olib 9ooce Avllllablo.

~ ...,......... aM-.t.te ·m
~ Wanted to Rent

~1 :.:'11.'.:.-=

Oolwwap;

-

-

.

~--­
.
.
.
..-I $ . J..&gt;'ZIIIIoo
$31.000.....,.,.....
I

41Zl

- , -----

$7.- ...

Round Inti
Traetor Will\ l aon- iPtlcM
$3,.... IM-21HS22.
1988 OtuUz/UII 5215 COMpat::Vranch 1rador-, ll&amp;e ,._,

1IU Cllr&lt;y

Chonllor

Z20,

..... -

61,000111, ....,

;oor- oft, $670D, 1114-992-11116 or
l5t4-9a-3m

1MI CUUaa S,upwma Clauk:
laodocl, uc oond,

18/lpdiHOI--0 a , d - . 304 112 XIS.

$2500.

Dirt Tam.,...., 1 ....,.,., 1 Robin,

304-C7U401.

con-·.,..__

, _ Foni Tempo, 2 door, auto.,
....
·goad
oond.,

15.00011, $3iOO,,M"- tt'l

-

c..-.

C.lolo 33,000
- . 5 SpMd. ......
ilofll, G!ool Goo ....... Call
IM 4tl 0141.

,., z-a 8UIIo !.7, flt.3DO. new,
_... wt
-·
Sofflng
..._
• .....
11 112,800,.
:JOt:.

610-379-2400.

BN&amp;hllogo,

Electric 3 WhNitd Scooters lndoor!OuldOOf, New l Uud. Ufl:
Chairs. 80W'man'a Homecara
614-446-7283, 1-800-458-6844.

1IU F&lt;Nd Taww L, olr, A.lllfll
For S.~ Of T~ For Ca1Ua ~
~-- FWD, uceftanl concH..
tarnattonal ·TI"IIdor llodtl 8tM 11oft, ailor 5o00 114 046 3044,
O!Hol ti,SOO. 1,...__1052 Aflo&lt; 611 ... 1tl4

5216.

Genealt Nutr"lon Prodi.H:'fa
tNturtng Amino Acid Body
Buikllng weight ~ and fat

KILLS FLEASI Buy ENFORCER
Flal Killers for pets, harM &amp;
yard. Guannteed att.cll'ltll Buy

ENFORCER st : laum True
Value Store, 11 W•t lleln
Slr_., ChMier Oh. &amp; Vallrt
LIMnbol I Su- Corp., ~55
Poll&lt; St-. lllddlliporl, Oti.

KILLS FLEAS I
Buy ENFORCER FIN Killen For
Pete, Home ' Yard. o.,.rantMCI
EnKIIYOI Buy ENFOACEA At

For Sale: P10 llarua Spre.dar,
Com
Plant.-a.
C&amp;ftwlltc:n.,
Plawa, ~ks, ,._. Holend
Square And Round ~
Rok.,., Hay Blncio, - . _
Condltlonoro, - . Com

onw

Pickers,

Howe's Farm M

eon., Otdo, 514~16

F• 1: ......

ltiiMJ, Ja..
5144.

W.ntled : Farrn

mact•••

kinciL Gol onylhlna ..... Coli lt4-:!5H64il.

-

vf •
ID

-llvestodl
---63

Clll- -

,.....

:1017.

~-

?! ~ - - IIIMMf

-·---

tl17 F&lt;Nd F-150 lnd, good JOD

1V7 G.:

l~

15 A. Alum
- w --lie!'; 1078
GIE 15110 With . . Uft
a.otar, Col Ailoo 7 P.ll. 1142511'115

A r~tAI'/

l-AST

~·

I/.

~

-' ill . . . . . .,

0

•

~

•
•

YOUR. L.IFE:!

&amp;

-oa-.n.w-•

w

I

. .

---Van ..

,2!15;

e.......
SJ,2I5; 1117 atw. S.IO 4x4 PU
ss.• ,. ~ Pli $2.1'111_;

Va
n
-~

Umouoln cOI1Io lor ..:., ::.gt.

=-..
y..... plfjtl, I -

J.W. Con.. ructlon . Room Ad ·
diltor., Root., O.Cks , SJdlng
And AH Types Of Erterkx- An.3
Interior Painting. Will Give LDw

Bid. Lleensld . 6"14-245-5078.

(L)

EVANS, JACKSON, OH .

Chicago Cubs at St . Louis

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
DID 'rt1l KNCM' Il-IAT
Mle9 OKAztWA'6

LIL

.s-.o

1117.1ooopQw 1
Wll,
AC,Donr
Ono Or
a..-,
·1721 Far
a.......

a

WHO
WAS THAT,
PAW?

ELVINEY HAD
SOME SDSSIP
BUT I TOLD HER
YOU WAS IN

O.wia

S.W-Vac

TH'TUB

Ollrllng jl1lco $12. ,,. S.m -.lllo'a. our 211hy-. ~
a mll11 Ealt f..Tf, AI• 1 ad, m Grlntl Prtr p
.., Sandyvillo Fri,
s.t, Sufi. -..e:oo Olllco,
Pll, ..,.,. c.:t All•
tlop-houi'IL 304-m-MM.

-

-

._ Gootl

t..-..2......,_
- ~·
.....
.__

maker Instantly reveals which signs are
romantically perfect for you . Mail $2
plus a tong, sell-addressed , stamped
envelope to Matchmaker. clo this

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

GaNipollo, Ohio
fl14.441-3888

Electrical &amp;

rn

'l'our
({) 'Birthday

newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) You 're apl
to do better today In situations thai oth ers originate rather than In those yo u
initiate yourself. Operate In areas that
olfer the greaiesl promise.

•
" ' Rod, Hi.._ - - . 11n1too, ·

11oo -

-

~

-

11110.

Any

JJ1.22711 Anytime.

I:;,;~.:..:.;;.=::;_--lr7 Upholstery

1:::---:-.:,..,...,-,..:.._....,..
-..y·o Uphofolorlng HrYicin9lrl coulty oroa 27 y.oro. Tho

In lllm"wo upltolotorlng.
Cell J04.175.4154 lor ~.. .,.
tlmatn.

you today when dealing wilh 1ntang 1·
bles. but this might not be true where
your material affair s are concerned
Move cautiously .
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan. 19) You
might be lempled lo do just enough lo

gel by today . Unforlunalely . whal you
believe to be adequate may De !hough!

of quite differently by those using an attemalive yardstick .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) Your abiiLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might with- ity to perceive the big picture IS rather
hold some constructi'Ye information to- accurate today . Where you mlghl lose
day rather than pass It on to someone points, hOwever, is where details are
you dislike. ll you do, you ' ll hurt yourself , concerned . Don 't forget to dot the i's
as well as the lndi"Yidual you 're trying to . and cross the t ·s .

penalize.
" PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 2G) Changes
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) Flnanc•al . you devote sulficienl study lo should
trends could be both beneficial and work out as you anticipate today . Con hazardous today, so be careful. There Is versely , alterations you make impul·
June 111112
a poasiblllly you mlghl give back almosl · slvely could do you in.
as much as you gain .
ARIES (March 21 · April 18) Don 't lei
Take advantage of any opportunities , LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You have ex- relallves or outsiders become involved
yoo gel In lhe year ahead to broaden cellen!leadershlp quail lies tOday, and 11 In mailers Ieday that should be reyoor knowledge base, either academl- ' looks likolhey mlghl be pu11o a severe solved beiwOM you and your male .
cally or In a practical sense. This newly- · lest. Don 'I lot events cause you lo lose • Thay might be Inclined to lake sides and
acquired eJtpertise wUI be a big asset In · tallh in yourself - or In your intentions. · · thereby run the risk of offending both ol
your choaen field of endeavor .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Review all you.
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) If you're in- your alternatives today, bul don't dwell · TAURUS (Apr1120-Moy 20) Co-workers
volved In something that requires a fi- , . on them so Intensely that you stifle your might have a better way of doing things
nanclal risk today, be extremely careful. 1n111a11ve. Sound Ideas are useless if lhan you do today. Keep your ego out ol
lhe picture, and put the locus on •mStudy lhls situation irom every angle to they aren'llmplem&lt;!nled .
be cer1aln It's no: 8 foolish endeavor . . SAGITTARIUS INov. 23-0.C. 21) proved producllon procedures - even
Know where to look for romance and 1 Things should go rather smoothly for , if you're not the author
·you'll find II. The Aslro-Graph Match-

a,

•:oo

3.

Pass

I NT

spades_ Rix1

ruffed a diamond 10

hand. cashed the club ~1ng . ruffed a
club and ruffed a spade. bnnging everyone down to three cards Sbe led
the club 10. West had to ruff w 1th the

1937

heart jack and return a trump inte .:

Rixi was arguably the most talen ted South's A-Q
• ·
woman player ever. She had great la·
Why d1d Rm play it thtS way' Be- .·

· ble presence, seeming always to know cause West had paused momentarily .
what would happen during the auction before hlS fmal pass. It was all the .
and where lhe cards were lying during help Rix1 required.
Raden •rr mVJt«i to JMd r-~nf..,Ur q~WStwos to Pflllbp AldtY-. IJJ c~~ol ti.s ~
Rixi ruffed the di amond lead m 1 Tht-r CMJ ~ ~ mly lbrollp llJI- cW~~~nn

the play
examp le.

Today 's deal

is

a

good

hand. cashed til e A-K of spades. play ed

© -.:~. MIEWVANIII &amp;me- A.UM.

Tbe World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Marie

36 Carbonated
beYer age

welcoming

39 Short IIHp
40 Trial
42 Coin's dale

abbr.
5 A president
9 Firearm

apace

owners' org .

amunment

misllwe

15 Jethro -

res,.cl

16 Harnou

51

attachment

17

Wears away

55- degtte

Woo~

56- cotton

wathing
reajdue

58 Planlal
Brubeck
59 WWIIaroa
60 Genuo of

18 Haven
20 Says
22 Language
wtfix
23 Mao- lung
24 Wlao
28- poker
. 32 Use a chair
33 Pigpen
· 34 Ytar (Sp.l
35 Saull-

maple•

61 Coup d' 62 Dawn
63 llldwostorn
college
64 Dlapalchod

DOWN

I Bye-bye

f

-·

B c..tporo'

2 Anloio;&gt;es
3 Wllhoui
purpooe
4 Nolompty
5 Teaae
6 Swallowed
7 Polm off

g

Sn.._ retreat

.....

10 Dilllpalld

11 No "'· bull
19 Employa
brOIIlO

24 AnonUongolting

aound
25 SKrlmOfti
2fi Soulhwnl·

om lndlono

27 Kind

2i Spicy qulllly
30 Siolh
31Airplono
vlmialt
37 CllorTy ly~
38 Portrldgo In

,__
-

43 - Schoior
OS Toatypo

0

a

46 Twoiolcl

48- bend

Roberlaon

48 DirociO&lt;

50Pr~l?

10:30 CIJ Motor Leoguo BaiOboH
Atlanta Brsves at Los
Angeles Dodgers (L)
11:00 ClJ. (i). ()). 1111.

52 Social

flppOin-1 .

53 A -

o•
omNoWIWIICh
II) MocQyver C
a Mu1lc Clly llewo Coun1ry

Hunter

54 Pning alone
57 Guya

Pool Awonl1 Hosts: Lorlanne
Crook, Charlie Chase. (0:30)
@ lleHblll Tonlglrt
Sporta Tonight

a

!Ill !Ieiman
11:30 (!) Nowa
(!) Europeon . . _

()) 8 Nlghlllne C

c• ·s-t:ng .....,..

'MNUHVHTK
KLGHNFK

HK
y

VNN

XYVVLG

V N

p L

Crime Tlmt After Pltmt

C

U L J V

VN

VBL

~~reo
a Monortlnl

MNUHVHTHYRK

(2:00)

OL

ID MOVI~: Tho Big T-o

11:35 ()). (!))Tonight Show W111t
Jllr Lano Slerll!!.
(i) •

..

CIIHro L,l

~·~r

a

trH

o: Explotlvo
)

falls

lor Marilyn; Maggie consuHs
a palm reader. (A) Steroo.
World Newo
!Ill 700 Club Wlllt Pal

TJmo Stereo.

Of

21RotNn

0 llllellgnlng

Exposure A circus mime

24~-1152 .

Wa
Do H1uilng A~lme,
Anyplaco, No Job Too Big Or
.......... 1 wt I' , $350. Too Ultla. Ba"ment Cttlnlng,
Clllll . .
Allor
P.ll. - • Work,
Kindt fll·

East
Pass

Balftbla Cincinnati Reds at
San Francisco Giants (L)
10:00 (!) ill Millennium: Tribal
Wlodom lnd lite Moc*n
World Staroo. &amp;:;I
Gi 119 0 II) Noi'lltem

TCIIal &amp;awn Cllra, half price, (111
mne apectal), 1nc::1uaes mow111g
I Wilding , call 114-192~314",
ilm-ipm.

Refrigeration

Pass

Pass
Pass

,.

Nortll

~ 1D Major Laague

....,:1!14.

84

Pass

Women The issue of sexual
harassment is reflected upon
~the women . (A) S:ereo .

Servk:e,

Tr ansportation

111111 Buldl . . _ ~ ...... 4

9:30 GIIID

Rd . Parts, suppll•, pickup, and datlvary. 814·

82

appar- low

immediately

48 Show oub-

0

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

were

termination

13 Sioux Indian
14 Long time

O

W.st

ent. She was part of the Austnan team
that won the first two European Worn en's Championships in 1935 and 1936.
and the first women 's world titl e 1n

12 The King -

Millennium: Tribal
Wlodom end lite M-..,
World Sleroo .
Gll!l 0 Ill Murphy Brown
Murphy tries to convince
everyone she hasn't lost her
!ouch. (R) Steroo .
I!J WWF Plime Time
Wreotllng El Matador and
Virgil vs. Nasty Boys.
Mullc City Ntwa Country
Awarda Hosts: Tanya
Tucker, Alan Jackson. (2:00)
a Lany King Uvtl
!Ill Scarecrow and Mro. King

BARNEY

~-.

..,n==-Aul,....,..,oa,....,to-:-r,s....,......,..,.._

THAT.• .

Vulner able Roth
Dealer Wes t

taught br idge . and her talent and de· A-K of diamonds . discarding her two ·

Major's life is unbearable
when Polly sides with a
lobbyist. (A) Stereo.

9:00 ClJ 8 (!))MOVIE; 'In lite
Une of Duty: Manhun11n lite
Oakolao' NBC Monday Nlglrt
1111te Mo&gt;Ma (2:00) Steroo .

...

+K 10 95

person was a c lose friend. as was Rtxt : 6 •
Pass
Pass
Markus, who died in London on Apnl 31
at the age of 61.
1
Opemng lead t 2
She was Darn Enka Scharfstetn tn
what is now northern Rumania . and '-- -- - - - -- - ----1
moved with her family to Vienna sax
years later. There Rixi . as she was
nicknamed by a fn end in 19 34. was a cl ub to dummy's ace and cashed the

44 Roady or 47 Shout of

0

SOUTH
+A K 9 7
.AQIO SJ

It 1s sad when a leading personalit y 1 •
dies, but 11 IS doubly painfu l wh en thai 2 e

())II MOVIE: 'Tho
Color of Money' ABC
MondaiNigh1 Movie lA I
(2:30)
GJ8il
II) Major Dod The

!Ill Black SlaHion Stereo. t:;1

6-&amp;.t!

EAST
+Q6 3
• 76
• J 763
• Q762

.KH
• Q 9 52
+H 3

Sovlil

I Weekend·

fl ill

Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Joe.._, OH 1-800-537-1538.

E-150,

m.sm_

I KN5W

WHY DO YCU THINK r
GOT AN ~ " IN a::NC:OCT
THIS TERM'?

WRESTtER~

Carter's Plum~ng
Fourth lnd PIM

..,. FoN E: ndw Z50 van
W 11 , I'Kb &amp; Wtwtng. 304-

OFCOURGE

men:: ill And Anidant lal
"Fr• Eltlmaln

In Z.nllfl slso Mrvielng most

By Phillip Alder

Cardinals (l)
(i) Cll

W ~"T

• 10 4 2

The grande dame
of bridge

0

Wallpopartng, Com-

ott.r brlnds. Houle call•, 1110

ALDER

tAl Stereo.
(!) Major League Baaeball

Qualhy horns impfov~m~~nta
and rttT\OChllng of all aorta, na
job too •man. Raasonabla ratas,
call anytime, 614·JI2-1400 or 814·
m-21S6.

Ron's TV Stn'le., apeclalldng

PHILLIP

dreams she is a recording
superstar in a music video.

1~

•Ezpertencad
"Quality Work
hts•46•Jni.

0

!Ill Prince ValianT Sleroo .
U5 C1J lnoide lite Third Reich (PI
1 of 2) (2:25)
8o30 ClJ 8 (!)) Bloooom Blossom

!!IPO'Il-IEI2 16 A 6UNoO

JET
MraUon .. Olton, rtp.tlrad. N"
&amp; r•bulh motOf'lln al oc k, RON

Georvee Creek

O

(R/

Improvements :

..... good

~~'"'• ....,.,. - · .,...: .....,111W111-1ZIIL

-.a
,..._)

-

!Ia fwll -

1100 ond up. Wa

Dry• • .._. lt4 u1 :lil44.
Surpha Amty Clmllollfltl -

Stick,

· lt,99~.
Ailor • P.ll. Or

a

a Prlmallewo c

Home Remodeling, Vinyl Siding,
And Overhang. )0 Yeare Ex ·
pMieneed. FrM Eltlmatat! 614·
446-0!126.

NORTH
8J 85
• 9 52
t A KIO! t
+A !

BRIDGE

0

0

YN,.. Experience On Older &amp;
Nlwlr Homes. Room Addlllon1.
Foundation
Wortt,
Rooting ,
KlteMna And Baths. Frn Ealirnat"l Aelerenen, No Job
Too Big Or Small! 614 -367..0516

..s.
73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

Purolwod ~ ...... - .
1114-.zJU.

Rainbow ca-ning eyetam wllh

Cllr&lt;y 4x4, -

-

g

O

r&gt;A~Tf~/
~ / 1-,

A.YE! YOUR
PuRse OR

S.plle Tank Pumping SiOI...GIIIIa

-T,.,.,&amp; -

Children C
®J 8il Jtotlordyl t:;l
Star Trek
0
Entertainment Tonlghl
Stereo.
I!J MocGyver
@ SportoCenlar
•
Monoyllne
!Ill The Wallona
7:05 CIJ Beverly Hlllblilloo
7:30 Ill. (!))Jeopardy!
(!)Now II Can Be ToiB
I}) Cll Entertainment Tonlghl
Stereo.
()) II Mama'• Familr
GJ8il Wheel oi Fortune
0 Ill Family Feud
@ Racing t.croa1 America
Mother Goose Stakes from
Elmont, N.Y. (T)
Cro11fl19
7:35 CIJ Sanford I Son
6:00 Ill 0 (!)) Frelllt Princa oi
Boi·Air Geolfrey falls for an
attractive, wealthy neighbor .
(A) Stereo. C
(!) Lead-off l.lan
(i) Cll (I) IIJ FBI: The Untold
S-1 Two people kidnap a
woman and bury her alive 1n
e coifin. (A) Stereo.
(!) !Il Legacy Stereo.
®J qg 0 II Evening Sltilde
Taylor and Aimee decide to
defy their perenls a"1,gel
married.
Stereo. L,l .
crlle MOV E: Airplane II:
The Sequel (PGI (1 :30)
II) Murder, Site Wrote
Croolc and Chaoe
Highway 101 , interviews with
the nominees attending the
Music City Country Awards.
tt :DO)
@ Malar League S.IOboll

O

Home
Improvements

Rolloblo

...,. . . _ Pli $2,0111; ll&amp;u
- - . Hloy. 110 II. 1 -

gal, ut•lor whlfe late• $13.M
gal. Burpoo 50'110 oft. Poinl
Plut1, 2415 Joe.,_, An, Pl. I'll,
300-175-0084.

s..n -

~ K";:::::._

""""--llT PU; 1IU
PU 13,2110; Far&lt;: F- Will buUd p.~tlo covwa, decktl
An;uo
And
PU 4x4 ICt'eened rooms, put up vlny1
aunt Reuonabty Priced. Slalle 150, &amp;uN; , . Run F......, .-_, Cillo, 114- SJ,2I5; F&lt;Nd
I lklfng or- trsller skirting. 81(..

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

1ng,

72 Trucks lor Sale

1113 GIIC hall ton pickup, short
-;;;;;;;;i;:;;j'';;;;;;;-;;ii;"';;;;i;;;:
2 et 11t eel caws wilt c:ahw. - . on;;lno, 0 apood,
IICIIIenl rnllkln., 114-lU 1020 .... - - , , ti,ISO, good
aftar I,.,.,..,...
C&lt;llld,-.mll.
40 • eo lb. .w- trw ..... 1 , . . _

Plnaburgh paint ull now In
pn&gt;g,_L c:.illllil paint 11.111

- · ,_., OUFj)IUe

\v

~

appliance ,..pairs. WV
300-57&amp;..:1318 Ohio 614-446-2054 .

or 614~2-2580 .

dryoro, -

OyiL

TIMf ~wAS
A SIIIAit.

SCtffl&gt;Ut.l/116

1om1

New 15"' Howard rai.IV'IIor: I '
dump bod huck ; A.C. 3pl. 31.ailom plcrwo; Aori- P rofl'fator; 1173 ~onl Bronco
414; 5I10 ui:JIIIy trailer; 150
Minn. Moline gu t~or. tM:

WH-

~:~

IPOTTtD

Services

Home

0

a

537-1528.

~ o OO .

Browns Trustwonhy Hardwan,
Slate Route 160, BidweU, Ohio.

10fl.
RooonciMionod

l75-2l32.

Available ••·

cluslyety al Rite Akl Ph.arm~~ey .
Tha 11fs ••Y to dial .
~~~~ bod flO. Goo ""'f'fi flO.
300-175-7M:I.

~2·2455

~@~~

•A IIIO~T~~flN

UocondiUonal llt1tlma guaran·
,.._ LocaJ rer....rc" fumlthed.
FrM Mtlm1t... Call collect 1·
114-237:0488, day or "'gflt .
Rogera a... mant Waterproo-

180 AC TradOf WJitt

•HachiMnta, aliO ....... ...-. I
ronly, lllw ,_ $7150. 3DW7S-

wv.

3311., - - - - - Nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,.. ~- ..nlllo,IZ35;

-.- .....

1~537-9528 _

~ =-~61~·~·~"-~lll~eoc:__-=--,-,--

__

L.ota • ..., .,...,.
t.a..~

Privacy,
~rily

.(0

ll"ij.

Ground 19I3"1x4 Pool lneludN:
Fumlshed 1 bedroom ~airs Flnt&lt;" Dock, F..,.., ~.
apl , MI . Vernon Av•, $225_ Etc. uon't 8el6evelt? Call BPI
month ph• lltc:tric. Aat•ance
1-300-541-, i23
&amp; dojlaoiiNqUirod. 300-175-2651

Eftk:'-ney Apanmant ,

~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Curtill

TIRED'"

c

BASEIIENT
WATERPROOANG

61 Fann Equipment

"You don'l gel any work done. You're just lazy I" one
worker complarned lo another .· Laziness ," smiled the
goof oH , "is just getting your resl before you GET

a

C~"'

• r

ANire · Decry · Begot · Vrrtue · GET TIRED

(!)) Wheel of Fortuna

NewaHour

1981 20ft. Wikitmna Camper,
Slaept IS, Air, Awnings, Much
Yore! Excellent Condruon! 614·
317-ll&amp;SQ

Claudo wntoro, Rio
Grancio, Ohio. 114 245 lim.

Call

PRINT NU MBfRf D
lflTfR S .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIS

()) II Marrleil ... Wlllt

crJJe
e

I'

I' I, I' I' I' I' I' I' I
@) ~~~~f~MBlf fORI I I I I I I I I I

(i) Qln- Edition Q
(!) !Il MacNeil/Lehrer

1978 Toyot1 mOl or home, liMPS

81

8

00 The Jeflt.....,a Q_

4, Mlf conlalnMI, 47,000 miles,
300-458-1603.

o.n..

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

FREEINSTALLATK&gt;N
Oowraown, Wodem, 2br, ComSWIIIIIING POOLS
p.ta K~t.n, Wash•, Dry...-.
Carpal, CA. 614--4-46-0131.
Only 11911 .00 BNutllul Abow

Furnf~Md

7:00 ~ 8

Budpl Tn~ntmiulons, UMd &amp;
rebl.uh, thr11ng at $91; fronl
wheel drive llartlng 11 1149.00
614-245-5671, 614-992--ti293.

79

1 Ia I

7

On weekends my husband
and his buddies go to 1he local
park to play basketball. One
morning they arrived 10 find a
s;gn reading, "Those Caught
Hangong From The Arm W1ll
Be --------- 1"

I
I'

L.-1..-L.---'.-J...-L
. ....J.

@Up Close

Ski

.... T.-- Am. ucallenl condtlloft, $5,800. 14R. """"- boat
50 .., $1.7UO. CaM anytlmt. 114-

!

II

!Ill New Zarro Stereo . 0
6o35 CIJ Andy Grifflllt

a ..,. nee

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

I

1!)1 Scooby Ooo

CobLo Cuddy Cobin · ·

rsgt.ltnd I 5 el •
German Sto¥ad P' 1t I ,
IOody ID II" Juno 21111, 110-371-

I

UNSEE
5
_,1---~.1'___1...1....J
L --'jL
. . . . . '
WR E S H D

a Wortcl Today

Allllodeia KIWIIIki Jet Skis
Starting At $2,300
Trade Your Car, Truck, Boat Or

6455,

()) II GIIID

\fl.
0 Ill 0 Ill cas Newa O
crJ) m Andy Ortlflllt

Trailer $10,999

AKC

LENDEE

!!JJ New•

0

Olllc:illl Dioney Wortd Boal
1M2 Cobia Bow Alder With
t991

(i) CJ

!llillelmlln
6;05 C1J I Love Lucy
6:30 Ill 8 (!)) NBC Nowo
(!) Saved by lite Bel
(i) Cll ()) 8 ABC Ntwa tl
(!) Wild America Stereo. r;1
Square One TV Stereo.

only.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

kwmliN.

1~14-886-7188

Warner, 304:45M352 . . - . , .

61-4-992-2526.

burner

Proc:IONIII•, Ohio

Financing AYIIIable

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

S.fon 7p.m.

Hamilton Water Sparta

eun..-nu~,

..

lddoa .J:;

E~IOII

24' g
.... CGCabla•llon
olock &amp; horM --Good
concllllon. Low ;:oiiAp Glf.
vanlzld walts l .......... rubber
Hoar mtta, many act.r ..........

Furnished Apartment, 1br, nut
to Ubrary, petklng, ~ntral hNt ,
• ir, Nferanc• 814-446-0338,

MORE MY ST'I'LE ..

25~811.

kiOited

I

•

O

BOATERS

..... Oldl ~ 4dr., ••• ··$1!1DCJ,

the

be-

low to for m lour sim ple wor ds

II) Smurls
@ Checllored Flag

Gulnns Mercury Marina Service.
Mercury, Mariner, MatcNiser
tpac:l•lltt . Mercury certified.
MotM.., We come ta you . 614· .

-..., ..... -ion.
m

0 lou
Rearrange le"er3 of
r scrambled words

liD e Full Houoe Stereo. O

TOLEAVE
NOW I'M RYIN6 ON
•'ACE ' AIRLINES

eestoriM, Two Cycle OU And
S.ntlcl. 614-256-fi160.

1411

WOII

- - - - - - Edlld br CLAY I . I'OUAN _.;:...._ _ __

~ Reading Rainbow 0

~AVE

Your Bolting NNds , Part1, Af. .

..... $450, call 11-4', . . - .

,.m

Fkwl An, GellipoUs, Deposit l
A.e'-anc.. •••U•~ fl.l15. 614256-152!1.

CAMP~

I

"""· 304-475-1677.
1171 c '7 : Flir ConctUon 1HO a... Traeker Fully Equip-Good, sioo. f14.40H7SI . • pad, Mo,. Information: 614-4461171
n
Rabbit )m.
Aul •It Tn.nambllon, Gc;;d
BOATERS
Cui A' &amp;.1650..~20.
J.S . ... nne SllfVIea, Serving All

Chocololo
"t.' -·
Bottw'W bp n
IM-446-1111.

whetl drfM. sft ,.... blade, .,_
end ~. 5I ...... _ _ ,
whael, weiahtt., t05 hr talll
tbna, ~ at• S:OOPII.

o.tuu 1br, 2 Car O.rage, CA,

TO SUMMER

IN STEAD, 11M GOING
TO ~OLLYWOOD! IT'S

1988 161t Four-Winns, 90hp
Johnaon, AM..fM
casMtt•.
pow.r lin I trim , u traa, $7,000

Chocaloto
Lobrodor
1 112 y_, Old, 4 WIL

::----::--=:-'-:-;--;-::;--- Sln-.m..,
Buy or Mil. Ai't'erlne Antiques,

1 ·13.. TV, $2!1 ; 1·11.. TV, $25;
211 Spring Av•nue , Pomeroy. llghttd beer algn1, $3o&amp;up, lite
2bdrm., wafar,TIIIh paid, 814- jackel, $4; V~R 1 r.eds hilda,
S,S; 1 bunk Ma, 125; 304-773446 M12.
5418.
2bdrm. epta., 1otll all&lt;lrk:, lpplillncu fumlahed,
laundry 1f19 Hond• mo1oreycle,18.Sce,
room tacllttla, ck»M to achool $300; old uprliht plano, $75; 22
In tQWTl . ....,_,.ic:aUorw evaUable long rille, S5C; 614-843-5161.
ol o VIII-.(),_, Aplo. 141 .,..
Apple Butter Katt11, Sllrer, And
call 114-412-:m 1. EoH.
Stand. Antlque Aoeu~::•ltet­
ball Baekbollrd, Aim,
, And
1 bedf"O()ft\ .,. •. good kloca11on,
101 SIIIh and Main St. newly Ball; 1776 Continental Dollar, 2
th h d whh MW aPI)Hancea, Anllq'-- Oullta, 240 Home!Ha
Utllit- nol included." Depoait Chaln11w. 514-388-1435.
r.qulr.d .. 304-f75..1'131 or 675Concrete I
Pl..tk Septic
5936.
TanQ, Jal A.,.tlon Tanke. Ron
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Enns Ent.rpriMI, JaeU.on, OH
ESTATES, 531 Jacbon Pike
from l19:21mo. Walk lo ehop &amp;
movie.. Call &amp;M-446-2568. EOH.

t'VE DECIDED I AM
DEFINITELY NOT GOING

Loaciod Wllh Exlrosl Excellent
Condition, 614-367-065i.

1IIZ """' Tilundorlolnl, goad
ccw
mU., fiJOO
080, :JD4.17HII30 or 114-11!12-

....

S(C; \\&lt;1{1 }A -l£ £trse

(!) Video Power
Square One TV Stereo.

22Ft . Saarty Mid Cabin ,
SIMps 4, lncloHd
Head,

Sal

I

Dollor. .......

AKC
$200 ~
Wlhlon, 0No: 8-.1tt Wll.

AU Utilities ~id, 514-446-7604.

2 BR apartments In Mlddl•port,
newly remodeled, low ut llill11,
no pets, 1220 per month,
deposit required, 614-992-2l81

OS

Grooming. AI ....... ..,.__

......... -

Utllltln 8?0 Remington Wing llul• 12
Electric. Gaugo 211' -llod, Good Con$1.55/Mo. dHion, $200. II0-25f.-1867.

6~1'130 .

oe

,.._g

=~h!;'v;::..:..O-;arythlng 52 Sporting Goods

---"""'"""'"·

Care for bed patient, al5o c.ar a

Wanted to Buy

BEDROOM:

6:00 Ill 8

•-55==========-i-;;:=;:::::=~:::;:;::==1•986
n
Or
e

AKC

LIVING ROOM : Sofa And Chair
tl7i And Up; Coffoo And End
Tablooo S7i And Up; Swivol
Rockare 171.

MON., JUNE 8

PUULII

EVE NINO

negotlabla,
304:675-5997
evening• ten• m•suga.

57&amp;-2ll07.

614-44&amp;-3158

•

f'()(.W

"""'·

d•Y'

18

Rk k PNr.on Aucdon Company,
tun thrM luctlonMr, eomple4e
auclion
...-vte•- UcW~Md
166,0hto l Weet VIrginia, 304-

VI'RA FURNITURE
BARGAINS GAlORE!

2 Bedrooms, Upstairs Apart- 1124 E. Main Streal, PorMroy.
ment, Unfllmishad, No Pata. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 • .m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
6 ......... 2583.

SI.OOO 080. iM-lU • ! f

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

tumlture, hut.,., WHiem &amp;
Worll boolo. 1~51.

WAIT...

1985 Bay Llnar Capri 11ason

Webb. Cell 114 441 D2ll

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Oliva St .• Galllpolia. New &amp; Uaecl

$15A

ready, 111 acciSIOrlaa, $8,500.

wv, 56

5341.

NO,

16ft. G11utron boat, Volvo
,_,.., Inboard/outboard and
trailer, $2295, 614-992-3595 aher

'

Hou11hold tumlahlng. 112 mi.

caii304-675·M50.
R. &amp; S. Ntw, Used and AnHqua
tumilur1, Mason, WV. 304-77l-

14 Fl Alum . Boat $225; 12 Ft .
Flbtrglaaa Bo.al &amp; Tn1lltr WHh
Motor, &amp; Trolling Molar $550.
114-441«11.

.

Nowii.JoOid

Jenic:ho Rd. Pl. PINHnl,

UPTO

TIIAT DilLY

\Zl

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

PICKENS FURNITURE

Apartment
for Rent

No
Pota,
aulot ,
Ratarenc:e And O.pot;lt. R...
quirld. 614-446-151i.

Aelraln
Now!!!SouthNstem
1910 Roycra• 12z6S lbf, 13,000.
Bu...... Col!ogo. ~f"~ v... ~ 080, 1912 tbftO. 2bl. 13 .600;
Ptaza. Call Today, 6
..t367 .1 1979 l4I70 WI ~ Jbr. 2 9.aths,
Reglat.,aUon HG--45- tmB

8

44

ctoon,

992-.6\35

12

Now Curvod Giuo 0.:. China
C.Oblnolo. Llghlod lllm&gt;r lioc:k,
Glau Shel't'ee, Laaded Gials In
Coot, S..,.,al Slue. 614-446Ut&amp;.

2 Bedroom Furnished, Air Con·

,........,.,_.~.._

"'Teachable
"Willing To Work

0322, 3 mil• out Bulavll .. Rd .
Free Delivery.

(.0()5€;. ,

3904.

Complete home tumlahlnp.
Houf'S: Moo--Sat, 8:-5. 6~

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
2S3"

ar:re rivw • ... lall, .....1 pump.

' Pooltln

" - Gtova • Oo&lt;eao Road.
One mla. trorn Southam High
School, oft Route 124. M.twnhy

Real Estate

• I"'CWft ~ 3

Wanled : Ptopla Who A.ra :

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

T~EY'R£

1988 Y•maha W1rrlor, good
Urw, good plastic, tkld plales,
runt lllCIII.nl, $1100, 614-985-

EIIIICtric rtlngea, $128-; aUio.
wuhoro, lt29; olaetrlc dlyor,
lat; 30" gu '""" $125;

300-175-6801.

1 bedroom trailer, pey awn
uUtrtiet plus depoa;lt, 304-t75-

- O r Soil On lMid

" Ab~

s..... ,.

The.._. M PWW4, IIU.ing A
Nlco S.oody ~ I·

Conlrad

"Ach6evws

AlfYIId S.l&lt;et Mutt Ba Paid In
Adwancl. Dlacllnt: 1:OOpm tM
day Mfore the ad II to run ,
Sundey ecUUan- 1:OOpm Frkily,
Monday
ldltlon
10:00a.m.

Haw.

Mow, Reke. Ball, Appr-o•. 5

(Mon, Tu., W.cf) a&amp;.m.-Sp.m.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

_Ql54_

- . ,. 614-817-3271.

Someone With Equipment To

8-e-10th.

112 MUe Out G.org11 Cr9ek
R01d , From Rl.l Baby, Children,
Adult ctolhln;, Gllaware , Sail
And Pepper Shakers. All Sort1
Misc. Items. Rair\f.)hlna.

Opportunity
~ Rout« Local. w.

16111

bporloncod
s.mc.
Man. MUll -KnowPump
HMt

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

Business

($ ~ TOf,

-'The Dal__!y Senti

Television
Viewing

IWlb OO!

1988 Kaw01kl KLR 650, on &amp;
on roed, wat•r cooled, low
mlluge, rww bltttry, 304-89S.
3021 1fter 5:00PM.

d..,....

" Some mistakes you only make once m
life ... like trying a water sk• Jump barefoot ··

614-949.

T({'( TO
SfWC£ Hl(ll.

1988 225 Y1m1hl 4 Wheeler,
lt,200. ll14-386-961l

,.,.,M'Iea

J tamales I 1 m1111 kttttn, thler
trainad, 7 wll;l okl , 304-675-36M.

pup~11,

mlt~.n,

Maytag wringer washer, tnl;
IOirlfjtlioiO&lt;,
1111; 11" color TV,
Mt. Vernon Awe. amall home, 2 $125; _
.. ,.. Appilancoo,
bedrooms. biMmtlflt, garage, 114-IG·~I.
no pets,
I depoth ,.._
qulnd, $250. month. 304-fl?S- F1mlly room Mill ' chair, IIC
2651.
conct, $1!0. 304-a~l.
Nke aHk:iency canage, unique GOOD USED APPLIANC£5
•net bauliful, 304-6~~2
Wollhoro,
10lllfjtlfoloro,
Si&lt;- Appllancoo, 16
Unturnlthld 2br Ho~e. No In- ra-.
Vlno Sl-, Cill--7311, 1·
side Pets. Reter~tneN Aequlr..:l. 1100-45-34111.
I250IIIo. Pluo O.pooil &amp;
Ulllkloo. 614-4411-tliOO.
King a&amp;ze wetw bed, like new,
hoH boord wlmlnvw I .........
Very niw 3 bedroom houM In ~stet wldi'IWirl. Twin bed.

OH 44111.

AuS1rallan

r.', In Stock.614-441-"JIM4.
$5.00 Up. llaflollan

ct.pollt 304-71'3:

so...

IS WilEN IM

IN~ 1 I&gt;I~IA'E'f?a1 t&gt;ot.l'l ~ 1-1~
1fl1&lt;; S1il f f

~!9 S.ringo On AU Vinyl &amp; Cor-

Housa In Clifton., WV. 4 BA, $225
mo. plus tAilh*. MuM Niva

Beachlront Home WrHe: W.yne,
17901
205, Cleveland,

4

\llo~

BORN LOSER
V' AI£££! r.LADY~! Aem'S
GOT HOlD

1987 Honda 250-X, 4/tN Excellanl CondHion, $2,100. 614-4461644.

WIW 14W~?J 'r

Ak Condhlonoro, Atftlaorotoro,

2 bedroom house wlblth, 5
mi._ on R1. 82, $200. mo ~u• C.biMt W . - : 114-3804115, 2232 Honey Sucka. Lana,
........ 300.a75-32N.
W..laton, Otdo 4&amp;681. ln Penn's
2 BA ho\IM tor rent, 1300 Hogg ........... CCNIIpioX. 17xlllllnl
51. 300~!1-0030.
Vanhy • Top $29; 131; $41; 551.

R~I.ICI

Fem1t.

Goods

mti.

41 Houses lor Rent

Motorcycles

74

Household

Cofor T.V., Mk:rowtve, 1,..256-

FrM Adult Talk Une.

S.eklng

5I

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by !..arTy Wright

--

a-t Froozw, Dryor &amp;"W.-,

Rentals

1-71WI2-1037
u..... One On One.

Merchand ise
----

Pomeroy-Middleport,_O.hl\t_

0

W111t

DYFUUL.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " If I have 1 lamlly, I woold 1oYe 10 raised In Chicago." - (Aclressl Bonnlo Hunt

my kids

�Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Widows are not in great demand;
woman finds datin difficult
Dear Ann Landers: It's time
someone told the world what
it's ijke for a woman ID be widowed
or divorced. I hope your female
readers will fmd this leuer useful.
I'm 45. People say I'm very
auractive and ibat I look 35. I am
financially secure, have a good
job, own my home and have two
children, ages 20 and 22. I became
a widow three years ago. Here's the
1rue picture:
Eligible men between 40 and 55
are virtually non-existent. Your
pool of "prospects" will be in singles
bars, parent groups and singles
organizations. The ratio of women
to men is about 20-to-1. So, if you
are contemplating divorce and are
40 or older, take another look . Is
there any possibility that your
marriage can be salvaged? The
quality of available men will shock
you. If your spouse is an ordinary,
run -of-the -mill guy, he will be
sna1ehed up immediately. You will
not be so fortunate.
Available women are a dime a
dozen. If you're not aggressive or
gorgeous, you'll spend a lot of
time alone. I invested $2,000 in a
vacation and all I got out of it was
the knowledge lhat I'd belter learn
how 10 be single again.
When you become a widow.
everyone wants to be your friend -for about three monibs -- iben you're
on your own. It's not ibat people
stop caring, they JUSt need to get on
wiib ibeir own lives.
My experiences with singles
groups have been disastrous. The

widows are depressing, can't stop
talking about what a saint their
husband was and are despenate for
male companionship. The divocced
ones are biuer and angry and talk
of nolhing but their ex-husbands,
how difficult it is to get child
support and how badly ibey were
treated

The prognosis is dismal. Once
you've been married, it's lousy to be
alone. Sign me -- NOT BllTER,
JUST REALISTIC
DEAR N.BJ.R.: True, widows
and divorcees are not in great demand. but to suggest that they are
destined to be lonely and miserable
is a truly sour and inaccurate
projection. Moreover. It would be
sheer lunacy to suggest ibat being
married no matter how flawed and
inadequate ibe relationship is better
than being alone.
Over the years I've received
ibousands of letters from women
who freed themselves of alcooohc,
abusive or unfaithful spouses
and found genuine peace and
contentment once they gathered
the strength to throw the bum
OUL
Dear Ann Landers: Have you

lost your mind? What in the world
were you doing when you rep! ted 10
"Depressed in New England," the
guy who let his wife, Vera, da~ hi s
boss in order to save his job? Were
you maybe bungee-jumping off ibc
Wrigley Building?
Generally you're right on target,
but you really blew ibis one. I'll bet
if the shoe were on the other fOOl
you would have said, "Unload the
creep." Yau should have told the guy
to ~u his boss if he wanrs Vera, he
can keep her. ArvJ if there is any
suggestion that he might be canned,
he should get a sman lawyer and
sue the panrs off of Mr. Boss for
discrimination, harassment and
menial anguish.
Granted, Ann, the case may not
be winnable, but because of the
po~ntial embarrassment, Mr. Boss,
in all likelihood, would be happy to
settle out of court... STEAMING
liN SAN JUAN
DEAR STEAMING: You weren't
the only reader who lhought my
answer was a lUckey. I'm eating my
words. Gobble, gobble . Chomp,
chomp.
What's tht lr•th about pot,
cocainL, LSD. PCP . crack. spud
and downus 1 "Tht Lowdown
on Dopt " has •p-lo-tht-minutr
informillion on dr•gs. Stnd a stlfaddrtsud, long, busintss-siu
tn&gt;tlopt and a chtck or money
ordtr for $3 .65 (rhis incl•dts
posragt and handling)((}: Lowdown,
c/o Ann LantUrs, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 6061/-0562. (In
Canada. stnd $4 45 .)

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days berore 1111 event
and tbe day of that event Items
ml151 be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - "Team Up
With Jesus: Winners Meet on AUStar Street" will be the theme for
Riverview Community Vacation
Bible School, to be held at
Riverview School near Reedsville
through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
nightly. Classes for ages three
through adult. Public invited.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Mt. Hermon United
Brethren Church on Texas Road
will be Monday through Friday
from 9:30-11 :30 a.m. daily.
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School at Chester United Methodist
Church will be Monday ibrough
Friday from 9:15-11:30 a.m. daily.

Howard bridal
shower held
The Trinity Church Choir of
Pomeroy recently held a bridal
shower for Lisa Howard, brideelect of Don Snyder.
Games were played and prizes
awarded to Dianne Hawley and
JoAnn Wildman.
Refreshments of sandwiches.
mints, potato chips, punch and coffee were served from a table decorated wiib candles and flowers.
At~nding or sending gifts were
Mrs. Barbara Howard, Mary Snyder, Jane Walton, Genny Harvey,
Gerlene L. Canter. Peggy and Joon
Snyder, Linda Mayer, Pauline
Mayer, Marie Hauck, JoAnn Wild man, Irene Bailey, Dianne Hawley,
Gay Perrin, Mary Virginia Kautz,
Lo1s and Marvin Bun, Carolyn
Thomas, Becky Depoy and Trevor,
Pat and Roy Holter, Ralph Werry ,
Joe and Many Suuble, Mary and
An Skinner.

Weight control
classes slated
The Meigs County Health
Department will begin a series of
six-week classes fer weight control
at6:30p.m.ooJune IS and 17.
There wiU be a choice of nighrs
for the classes, either Monday or
Wednesday. and classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class wiU be of two hours
duration. AuervJance is required at
only one two-hour session weekly.
Classes will include nutrition education, stress managemen~ weekly
weigh-ins, relaxation techniques,
recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise
techniques, and other phases of
weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of classes
which are ID he held in the coo ference room of the multipurpose
building, Mulberry He1ghts in

Pomeroy.
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limitations.
Those wishing to register may
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626. Plealle
indicate your preference of Monday or Wednesday evening class.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veier1111S and the Ladies
Auxiliary will hold its regular
meeting Monday at the hall, 124
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
Refreshments will he served at 6
p.m. and meeting at 7 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM - Bill and
Phyllis Cadle will speak during ibe
Evangelistic Outreach Progrnm at
the Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor S~ve Reed invites ibe
public. Fellowship wiU foUow .

RACINE - The Board of Public
Nfairs will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
at council chambers. Cemetery
Trustees will meet immediately
after (8 p.m.)

POMEROY - The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at the
Pomeroy Nursmg and Rehabilita tioo Center.

RACINE - The Soulhern Athletic Boosters will meet Monday at
the high school . All coaches and
parenrs are urged to auend.

POMEROY - The Big Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpenter.~
Hall in Pomeroy. Anyone interest.
ed in working with the festival is
urged to attend.

BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet Mon·
day at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
School Class of 1972 will hold an
organizational meeting Tuesday at
noon at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy to plan a get·
10gether fer alumni. Anyone interested in assisting is encouraged to
attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs Unit
of the American Cancer Society
will meet Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 7 p.m. in the
cafeteria. Pelar Gonzales, State
Nurse of Hope, will be the speaker.
HARRISONVILLE - The Hac·
risonviUe Senier Citizens will hold
a free blood pressure clinic at the
townhouse Tuesday from 10 a .m.
to noon. Members are to bring
potluck for their dinner. All mem bers urged to attend.

•

Participants sought
A.nyone in~ted in participaltng in the Heritage Weekend
Parade in Pomeroy should contact
Vi.:ki Ferrell at 992-5177 during
the day, or 992-2612 after 5 p.m.

Harrisonville
area happenings
Mrs. Ora Carsey visited Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Carsey, MiUerspon, and
attended the graduation of her
~ddaughter, Jennifer Carsey, on
Fnday.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Foley Jr.,
Applegrove , W.Va., Mrs. Helen
Thorckmorten and daughter of
Gahanna, Mr. arvJ Mrs. Gary Foley
Sr. and family of Syracuse, were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mahr.
The LervJ-a-Hand Circle met at
the church Tuesday with nine
members present
Allan Gibson, Columbus, visited his mother, Virginia Gibson, on
Saturday.

Winner named
Teresa Tyson-Drummer was the
winner of a Mossburg pump shotgun, given awat by the local Frntemal Order o Police as a fund
raiser. The gun was provided by
Bawn Lumber of Chester.

On dean's list
Aaron Sheets completed his
freshman year atJoon Carroll University, Cleveland, by achieving
the dean's list for both semesters.
A graduate of Meigs High School,
he is the son of Jim and Jennifer

Sheets, Pomeroy.

Low near 60. Wednesda)',

partly sunny . High In upper 70s.

6691

Vol. 43, No. 26

1 Section, 10 Pogea 25 centa
A Mulllmedla Inc. ~w1oaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, June 9, 1992

Issue 2 projects are
topic of state official
CHESS OLYMPIAD- Participants in the
30th World Chess Olympiad begin their matches Monday with Rus.~ia, Ukraine and England

ravored to rule tbe tournament. Tbe event
attracted more tban a thousand participants.
(AP)

Names in the news

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Anne Archer plays yet another suffering wife in her latest movie,
"Patriot Games."
·· Although I have done many
other types of parts, casting people
kept ibinking of me as a wife and
mother," she said in Sunday's The
Tennessean.
Archer, who won an Oscar nomination for her role as Michael
Douglas· forgiving wife in "Falal
Attraction," plays Harrison Ford's
wife and the target of Irish terroriSIS in the new thriUer based on the
Tom Clancy book.
" At least Cathy is a strong,
bright woman instead of some
dippy broad. She's a brilliant eye
surg eon, in complete control of
herself,·' the actress said.
" It 's also a very affirmative

Reunion planned
There wiU a reunion for former
crew members of the U.S. S.
Manchester CL 83 in Charleston,
S. Ca., Sept. ID-13. Funller infor·
mation may be oblained from Paul
L. Huffman, 4415 Brookhaven
Ave., Louisville, Ky. 40220, (Telephone 502-459-3260).

look at marriage. I even have a love
scene with my husband. How many
times do you see that in movies
nowadays?"

NEW YORK (AP) - Dionne
Warwick ignored warnings about
her ailing back and flew to New
York to perform at a tribute,
despite collapsing hours earlier at
ibe airport.
The 50-year-old Grammy-winning singer flew in a private jet
Saturday and arrived while the Friars Club salute to Arista Records
chief Clive Davis was under way at
the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
Lee Salters, club spokesman,
said Warwick had been warned by
doctors not to fly and collapsed at
the Los Ang eles airport, missing
two flighrs .
Warwick sang ''J'U Never Love
This Way Again" with Barry
Manilow , who helped hold her up ,
said Selma Gore, a club
spokeswoman.
NEW YORK (AP) - Gene
Kelly says he wanted to evoke the
joys of childhood and being in love
when he created ibe tiUe number
from "Singin' in the Rain."

Hollywood 's most famous songand-dance routine marks its 40th
anniversary his year.
"I warUed to bring audiences
back to ibeir childhoods when they
would cavort in the rain, even
though their mothers would give
ibem hell," the 79-year-old actor
and dancer said in the latest issue
of People magazine.
"I also wanted to make them
feel like ibey were in love. A fellow in love does siUy things."
Kelly choreographed the exuberant number, in which he uses an
umbrella, a lamppost and a street
rull of puddles as props.
An anniversary video containing
movie footage will feature Debbie
Reynolds singing "You Are My
Lucky Star" to Kelly.

Booklets distributed
"Show You Care, Our Treasured
Trees" activity workbooks were
distributed recently to second
graders throughout Meigs County
by the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District. These booklets,
furnished by Mead Corporation,
are designed for use in conjunction
with soil and water stewardship
activities.

RACINE - Racine Chapter No.
134 OES will have inspection of
officers Wednesday at 7:30 p.m .
Inspecting officer.; wiU be the worthy grand matron of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, Marilyn Bennett.
Racine is the home of chapter of
deputy grand matron of District 25,
Kay Spencer.

OAPSE Chapter No. 448, Eastem Local will hold a picnic SurvJay
at I :30 p.m. at Royal Oak. Bring a
covered dish . Retirees are wel come.

582

Copyrighted 1992

POMEROY - Roger Gilmore
and Tim Glaze will present a program at the Meigs County Library
Wednesday at 2 p.m. The program
will consist of a demonstration on
making model rockets and also a
rocket launch. All children are
encouraged 10 attend.

OAPSE to meet

Pick 3:

Page4

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. in the conference room of Bank One in
Pomeroy. AU members attend.

driver, Dou~ Harland. 31; another
man; and a 13-year-old boy were
listed in fair condition. At least I0
others were treated at hospilals arvJ
released.
Witnesses said the uuck jumped
a row of ~ during the mce, landed on irs left front wheel and turrted
sharply toward the crowd. The
truck ran over a stock car, jumped a
3-foot wall and hit the grandstand,
said Deputy Rusty Shelburne.
It was the secorvJ time ibis year
that a spectator has been killed by
an out-of-wntrol monster truck. In
March, an 82-year-old man was
crushed by a truck at an event in
Niagara Falls, N.Y.

Reds hike
division lead
with 4-1 win

Pick 4:

EXPLAINS FUNDING - W. Laurence
Bicking, director of the Ohio Public Works
Commission, standing left, met with Middleport
ViUage Council Monday night He was there to
explain to Mayor Fred Hoffman, standing right,
and Council members, rrom the lert, James Ciat-

worthy, Judy Crooks, Paul Gerard and Jack
Satterfield, the process to follow to qualify projects ror ruoding under Issue 2 and the local
transportation improvement programs administered by the Ohio Public Works Commission,

Most school board members
expected to seek new terms
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Most of the 21 incumbents on ibe
State Board of Education likely
will seek new terms in November
when the panel shrinks to II mem bers, board president Chester
Roush said.
"I think that a good majority of
our cum:nt board members wiU be
on the·ballot," Roush said at a
board meeting Monday.
"Unfortunately, some will be
opposing one another, obviously. I
ibink probably four or five of our
distncts quite lik ely will have
incumbents opposing inc 1Qll bents,"
he said.
Roush offered that prediction in
an in~rview as the House awailcd
introduction this week of a bill
proposing the new diStri Cts from
which the board will be elected this
fall .
House Education Chairman
Ronald Gerberry, D-Austintown ,
said he hopes the measure wiU n01
be controversial and ibat agreement
can be reached wiib the Sena~.
The measure is needed because
of a new law enacted at the request

of Gov . George Voinovich, but
opposed by the board, which cuts
the size of ibe panel by nearly half.
Members now are elec ted from
each of th e sta te's congressional
districts.
Starting in November, ibey will
be elected from II new districrs ,
each made up of lhree connecting
Ohio Senate districts. There are 33
Senate districts .
Roush said the board wiU not try
to play a role in the legislative
debate over districts, but ibat individual members like ly would
express their views.
"Our consensus was that it's
Important that they get it don e a.s
qui ckly as possible," he said.
Legislators face a July 5 dead·
line for drawing new boundarie..,_ If
they fail 10 acl, Voinovich may
draw ibe districts.
In other action, the board:
- Approved an agreement that
will allow Lake Eric College, a pri·
vate, non -p rofit campu s in
Painesville, to continue training
eleme ntary school teachers . The
co llege had faced possible loss of

accreditation for irs teacher educati on program s after being accused
by the Ohio Department of Education of failing to mee t minimum
state standards.
- Agreed to exempt ibe Canton,
Ci ncinnati, Toledo and FelicityFranklin school districts from a
requirement to add ail-day kinder gancn classes. The districl' sought
exe mption because they did not
hav e 1h e additional class room s
needed.
- Conditionally approv ed a
$3.4 million state grant to help
build an elementary school and an
.~ddition to ibe high school in the
Southern Local district of Meigs
County. Total cost of the project is
$7.3 million, including $3.9 miiijon
in local money through approval of
a tax levy.
- Conditionally approved a
$9.4 million state grant to help
build an elementary and middle
school in ibe Crestview Local di strict of Columbiana County. The
$12.5 million total cost includes $3
million in local money through a
tax levy.

Mason County highway closed
today following tank car leak

One killed, 10 injured when
monster truck veers into crowd
GALESBURG, Mich. (AP} A monster truck veered into the
crowd at a speedway, killing a 6year -old boy and injuring at least
13 people.
The uuck went out of control
during a race late Sunday at Galesburg Motor Speed way. Kalamazoo
Co unty sheriff's dispatcher John
Lasota said.
The dead boy's name wasn't
immediately released. The truck's

Ohio Lottery

ASHTON, W.Va . (AP) - A
leaking valve on a railroad tank car
containing hydrogen c hloride
forc ed the closing of a Maso n
County highway and th e evacuation of a campground, authorities
said today .
No one was injured in ibe 9:45
p.m . Monday acciden~ but ibe leak
prompted the evacuation of th e
nearby Ashton Campground and
closed a section of West Virginia 2
that runs parallel to the CSX Transportation railroad track, authorities
said.
State police had no estimate of
ibe number of campers evacuated.
The tanker was pan of a train
bound for Cumberland, Md., when
the leak occurred, according to
official s at the Valley Volunteer

, ...

Fire Department in Apple Grove.
A state polic e dispat cher in
Huntin gton sa1d the train was about
a half-mile south of Ashton and
about 16 mil es south of Point
Pleasant when excessive press ure
inside the tank er broke a check
valve, causing the leak.
The dispatcher, who would not

Presbyterians approve
•
•
compromise on Issue
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The
nation' s largest Presbyterian organi zation approved a compromise
policy statement Monday that supports abortion rights but commits
the denomination to reduce lhe

Local briefs

Shelly awarded ODOT contract

I

Most of I he time, it takes money. That's why U.S. Savings Bonds make a perfect gift.
The Bonds you give today will grow in value with each passing year. One day, they could
help fund a college education, buy a car, or even purchase a new hou se. Find out how
U.S. Savings Bonds can help make your family's
dreams come true. Call I 800 4 US BOND
for more information, or write to Box USTN,
Making American Dreams AReality
U.S. Savings Bonds, Washington, DC 20226.

U.S. Savings Bonds

A publi c ~crv lce olt hh

n~wspaper

identify himself, satd the h1ghway
and Ashton Campground wer e
reopened about ; :45 a.m. today
afler the valve was repaired. Lil~c
of the chemical escaped, he said.
Hydrogen chloride can be fatal
if inhaled or absorbed through the
ski n in large amounLs.

A contract has been awarded by ibe Ohio Depanment of Transportation to the SheUy Co. of ThomviUe for a resurfacing project in
Meigs County.
The project bid was $277,274.59 and includes resurfacing of
8.29 miles of State Route 143 from State Route 7 nonh to State
Route 684 . Tile scheduled completion date is August 31.
Another contract awarded was for spot resurfacing on State
Rou~ 33 from mile marker 20.40 to ibe Meigs County line. That
contract was awarded to Shelly and Sands, Inc. of Zanesville in the
amount of $619,246.04. Completion date on ibe project is also Aug.
31.

Title office coverts to computers
The Mei~ County Title Office is converting this week to a system where btles will be issued on a computer system . In view of the
change, severn! problems have developed and Meigs County Clerk
of Courts Larry Spencer is asking ibat patrons of the title office bear
wilb ibe employees until the system problems are resolved.

"overwhelming number" of abortions.
Delegates to ibe 204th General
Assembly of the Pre sbyterian
Church (U.S.A) paused in prayer
before voting 434 to 121 to
approve the statement ibat seeks a
co mmon ground in the "strong
Christian presumption " to protect
life.
"The Presbyterian Church
(U.S. A.) does nol advocate abortion, but instead acknowledges circumstances in a sinful world that
may make abortion the least objectionable of difficult options," the
church said.
The stand is more equivocal in
its support of abortion rights iban a
1983 policy statement that divided
ibe 2.8 million-member denomination wiib irs strong abortion-rights
stand.
Tile new statement says the state
has a legitima~ interest in regulating and restricting abortions. Atibe
same time, it says no law or administrative decision should limit
access to abortion. The report also
recommends that no sanctions be
imposed on physicians.

Ry CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slall'
Issue 2 and local transportation
improvement program monies and
how those funds are allocated for
community projects were discussed
by W. Laurence Bicking, Ohio
Public Works Commission direc tor, at a meeting of Middleport Village Council Monday nighL
Bicking was there at lhe request
of council following some confusion on hew projects are prioritiu:d
and how ibe viUage can better qualify its projects for approval in
future rounds of funding .
After some background on the
administrative aspecLs of the Ohio
Public Works Comm1ssion which
was organized after ibe passage of
Iss ue 2 in 1937, Bicking detailed
how ibe money is allocated according to the legi slation which put
Issue 2 into effect.
He said that the law requires
that "needs be met on a real need
ba sis" as it relates to matters of
healib and safety. He indicated that
water and sewer projects and deteriorating roads are a maJor priority
although other legiumate needs of
communities are considered.
The state is divided into 19 districts and committee members for
each district is made up of represe ntatives from th e community.
Ph1l Roberts, Meigs County engi neer. serves on ibe District 18 com miuce for Mei¥s County and was
present at last mght's meeting.
According to ibe director, Issue
2 generates $120 milijon a year and
is legislated for a total of 10 years,
while the local transportation
•mprovement program (one pen:ent
of the gasoline tax) generates about
$60 million. Each year about $6.4
million comes into District 13
which is composed of I0 counties,
in cluding Meigs.
In th e last round of fu ndin g,

asSistance through Buckeye Hillsllockmg Valley Regional Development and lhal the only other financmJ involvement he is aware of was
ibrough lhe revolving loan program
which is nol administered by the
Chamber of Commerce.
He funher said that he feels economic development of Meigs
County is the responsibility of the
county and affected industries not
of villages which have very limi~
funds. He mentwned that Middleport now provtdcs several services
to all of Me1gs County and specificall y mentioned lhe FHA program
administered by Jean Trussell ,
Middleport's housing director.
Other RusiD&lt;Ss
Co uncil deferred action on the
revised multi-coumy solid waste
management plan until the next
meeting.
The mayor reported that the
revised version guarantees ibe $13
a ton dumping fee for 20 years and
prov1des for a transfer station to be
located in Meigs County. He said
that he had clarified ibese issues
w1ib Lance Wilson, distnct dlfec tor.

Discussed at length was th e
in surance cost increase to the vll ·
!age and possible salary mcreases.
It was noted ibat health insurance

provided by ibe village is increasing from $403.94 a month to
$553.69 a month for a family policy, and from $145 a monib to $193
a month for the single plan. In
essence, ibiS represents about a $45
a week salary mcrease for employees, one cou nc il member pointed

out. Employees not taking insur·
ance t hr ou~ h the v illa~ e plan
receive c:x. tra hourl y compensati on

The mayo r ex plain ed thai th e
bottom line insofar as the increase
in in sur ance premiums is con cerned IS that t here arc too many

Conlinued on page 3

Republicans are preparing jobs
package, won't rule out sin taxes
CO LUMBU S, Ohio (AP) Senate Pres ident Stanley Aronoff
says his majomy caucus is preparing a legislative package to help
Ohio's economy.
Aronoff , R-C incinnati , sa 1d
Monday that th e leg isialion is
being drafted by Sen . Anthony
Sinagra, R-Lakewood, and may he
introduced as early as ibis week.
It will include proposals that
address boib shon· and long -range
economic problems, he said.
The problems were reflected in
Ohio's 7.3 percent unemploym ent
rale in May . While the rate was
below oiber major industrial stales,
it still was highest it has been since
7.4 percent in March 1988.
Aronoff mentioned the legislation Monday when asked abOut ibe
Senate agenda leading to ibe Legislature's summer recess, expected
around July I.
A solution to the state's $370
million budget deficit headed his
list.
He named other bills, including
affordable health care, campaign
finance reform s, sc hool funding
equity, workers' compensation
reforms and a biennial capital
improvements bill pending from
Gov. George Voinov~eh.
Aronoff said the agenda will
depend in pan on a meeting about
ibe budget and other mat~rs Thurs·
day with Voinovich, a Republican,
and House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg.
But he said Sinagra and others
on a Senate task force have been
working on a jobs package that will
be proposed within two weeks.
He said its thrust is to try to
speed bond-issue money to infrastructure, highways and bridge projeers "to put them on as fast a track

as we can."

The state is authorized to issue
bonds for such purposes, but the
flow of money is restricted, creating backlogs that the bill will
address, he said.
In a long-term effort, Aronoff
I

abou t 60 projects were approved
for Dmrictl3. The director emphasized ~&gt;at the law requires ibat projec ts be pnorili zed for funding on
the bas is of how Importart they are
to the di strict. He said that while
th ere arc other considerations, populatl on is not a cntcri a and again
em pha sized sc leCllon on a "real
need" basis.
Mayor Fred Hoffman asked
about funding for street paving and
Bicking said that while resurfacing
has very little regwnal effect, it
might be cons idered if that 1s
"viable to ibe quality of living or
fo r keepmg res1dents here." He said
that mu ch depends on how the
application is written.
He adv ised ibat applications for
Round 6 funding will be accepted
from hm . I to March 30, !993 wiib
the list of approved projects 10 be
released by July l. Roberts report·
cd lhat Round 5 approved projects
arc expected to be announced ialer
tl1is month.
Chamber Funding
A second reading on an ordi nan ce providing for $2,000 to go
toward the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce/Economic Development Office operation was tabled.
Council rev iewed the 1992 calendar year financial report of the
Chamber office which shows total
expenses anticipated of $60,456 for
1992 . It wa s pmnted out that
almost all are of an administrative
nature. The possibility wa s di scussed of mviling Paula Thacker,
Chamber executive director/economi C development direc tor, back
to another meeung .
When Thac ker met last month
wiib Council, she stated !hat her
office had assisted several busi nesses in Middleport Mayor Hoffman las t night raised ibe question
of "w hat businesses", notin g that
he had been involved in sec uring

rncnuoncd unspecified changes to a
program in which stale liquor profliS arc used 10 help Ohio busmesses
expand and 10 try to attract new
firm s from outs1dc the stale.
The package also will mcludc a
hand issue -financed International
Export and Ex hibition Center,
wh ich could create JObs by enhancIng ove rseas mark e ts for Oh1 o
products. V01novich proposed the
center Cllfher ibis year.
In each instance, Aronoff sa id ,
" ll' s a mailer of moving already
availab le money in a raster man ncr."

Vo inovich has proposed
1ncrcasing la, es on alco hol and
tobacco prod ucts to help cu t th e
budget ctcr,cit, wh ich he csu mated
at $370 nul lion 10 the fiscal year
starting July I.
Aronoff said the members of his
caucus would cons&gt;der a boost in
ibose taxes as "a tax of la.s1 rcson
and not f1rs1 resort ."
'
On Fnday. R1ffc said ibc llouse
IS willing to face up to 1ts rcsponSI ·
hilitics but hc lieves, "the Lcg•slalurc and ~•c p&lt;.'Op le of this stale arc
not in any mood for any add1U onal
taxes.' ·

DONATION MADE- Farmers Bank and Savinp Company
hll5 donated toward tbe expense of sending area scouts to scout
camp Ibis summer. Tbe bank will sponsor two scouts this year.
Pictured presenting one or the sponsorships to Robert Klein, a
member of the Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249, is Paul Kloes, president or Farmers Bank. Further information on donating towards
scout camp may be obtained by contact Bob Arms, srout master
Pomeroy Seoul Troop 249.

or

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