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Page 10-Tha Dally 8entlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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.....--Local briefs-----. Ohio weather remains calm overnight
Items to be collected

The Meigs County Soap Box Derby Association will be collect.

ing irems or clothing for a nunmage sale to be scheduled at a later
time. Members of the usociation will pick up the itans if notified
at the following n'!lllbers: Angie Swift. m -7112: Ann Barrell. 74225
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PUCO files for extension
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The staff of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
filed a motion on Monday. AJI!i129, asking for an extension in the
schedule for its analysis of ac1d rain compliance plans for the Gavin
Power Station, according to a release on Tuesday.
·
The Commissior! had requested that Amencan Eleclric Power
(AEP) submit ~ infmnation ~g to its compliance strategy
tor the Gavin Plant The Commission Slaff then IJWyzed the mate-'
rial and was scheduled to issue a report by April 30. That request .
for an extension was based, in pan, on the receipt of coal price
information gatbered by AEP through bi~ ..
The information received Thunday, April 25, and the staff felt
that it was sij!llificant and should be reviewed prim- to its report to
tbe CommiSSion. The staff has requested up to two additional weeks
before rele!lsing the report •
·The Commission's Aaomcy Examiner assigned to lhe proceeding issued an Entry today granting the staff's request for an exte,nsion until ·May 14, 1991 to file its report.

Skin testing clinic Monday
Joan Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs Coonty TuberculOsis Nurse, will
be conducting a skin testing clinic .at tbe Racine Fire Station on
Monday from 4:30-6:30 p.m. 'All community volunteers and fOOd
service )VOI'kers arc urged to take advanlllgc of this free service prior
to alunini banquets and Olher community affairs.

Squads respond to four runs
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UniiS of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to four caDs for assistance on Monday.
AtJ2:04 p.m. the Middleport unit was called to Village Manor
for Vern Smith who was transported to flolzer Medical Center. At
12:52 p.m. the unit transported Keith McCarty from Cheshire tci
flolzer.
.
The Middleport unit, at 3:54 p.m., was called to Page Street fC!'
Roscoe flollon who was taken to Holzer, and at 4:39 p.m. tbe umt
responded to CheShire for Steve Arrowood, also taken to flolzer.

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Continued from page l

issue of continued cooperation
within tbc SEORC.
"We must," Jones said, ."do

everrthing we ·can possibly do to
· retam SEORC support for the
Ravenswood project." Jones also
stared that his meeting wilh ODOT
Dislrict 10 Def!uty Director John
Dowler eatlier m tbe day on Monday .was~· remarking tbat
Dowler anil 0
T have "a real
sincere interest in Meigs County."
According to Jenning~. the fust
step of the project, that of building
a segment from RI)Ck Sprinas to
Five Points, could be under construction b~ mid-1990's, 11\'ith
the public
· g on the environ-

GM...

mental study possibly being held
Ibis summer.
In ?t~er action, the planning
commiSSIOn:
- Agreed to extend Jennings'
conii'IICt for another year, at a cost
of $1,000 plus·mileage and expens-

es;

• DiscusSed tbe new county plat

directory;

.

• Discus~ the progress on a
booklet describing induslrial sites
in the coonty, with the committee
in c~ of the booklet agreeing to
meet pnor to the next meeting;
-Set the commission's next
meeting for July 29 at 3 p.m.

Contin•ed.from·page l

OM Cha.innan Robert C. Stempel
said.
"This is a time of extraorlijnary
de~ on our business. and Gen·
eral Motors faces the rouet and
most competitive Norlh
erican
automotive marlcet in the corporalion's history," he added.
Slempel noted tbat Nortb American factory sales for the entire
automotive industry were at lheir
lowest fllSt-quarter level since the
recessionary period of the early
· 1980s. GM's Norlh American factory sales fell 14 percent from tbe
first quarter of 1990.
·
Botb Stempel and Ford Chairman Harold A. Poling concurred
....
that a gtadual economic recovery
should begin later tbjs yeat, translating into higher vehicle sale&amp;,
altbough many believe tbe market

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Press Intematioaal
Cleveland Electric llluminating, Ohio Edison and Toledo
Edison companies have lost an
appeal regarding the sale of electricity from Ohio's two nuclear
'power plants to publicly owned
electril: providers.
Under antilnlst conditions in an
agreement With the Nuclear Reg11latory Commission, the utilities
were required to connect transmission lines witb government utilities
in their laVice areas.
The city of Cleveland ' won the
conditions onder a 1977 NRC ruJ.
ing that CEI had lried to fix prices
and had unfairly limited the city
sySiml's access to nuclear power.
The utilities recently argued that
the conditions were imposed on
what was expected to be low-cost
nuclear power, but should be

Stocks
A{A Ele Power ..................29 l(l
Ashland Oil ......................34

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AT.tT ...............................37 518
Bob EVIKIS ....................... .17 5/8
Chann~hop ................ .l6 3/4
~ . g .................... .l4
M~I ................. .IS 7/8
Qoad~ ................. 21 7/8
Key
.................. 1-2 3/4
I.Midi''BIKI.,.uooooouooooouoooo22 1/8
Umiled Inc. ................:.....27 518
Multitnodla Inc .................27
lax R.-..na .................7/8 .
ltobbinlotMyen ...............27 l(l
Sltoney's Inc. .....,.............. 16 3/4

S• Bd ..........................20 lfl

Wendy Iat'L ..................... 10 718
WonltiJJstoll Ind. ..............25 3/8
Sllel , . , .,. tlwlO:JO 11.111.

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will remain weak into 1992.
· But Poling cautioned that "it
will be difficult for (Ford) to real- .
izc a G:cfit in 1991.
" ecessions in Ford's major
markets contin11ed to reduce
demand for vebicles, resulting in
low production levels during the
fllSt qUatter," he said.
FII"d's factory vehicle sales during the first three months of the
year totaled 1.24 ·million units,
down 202,000 units or l~t, ·
from the first quaner of 1 .
Like other autoataltc:n, Ford and
GM have been undergoing multibillion dollar cost-cutting efforts
that include
their salaried
work force worldWide. Both also
recently re.duccd their quarterly
dividends in an effort to conserve
cash.
...

trimmin'

dropped because nuclear costs have
skyrocketed
.
The NRC, however, told the
utilities Friday it was refusing to
change the qn:cment involvin~ the
Pe~ nuclear ¥,lint east of C eveian and the avis-Besse plant
nuclear- Pon Clinlllll.
The NRC said Its decision was
based on anti-cOmpetitive prices,
not whetbcr nuclear energy was
iliC)l~ve.

• It is apparent tbat suspension
of the license conditions here
would permit a resumption of the
very activities which were found to
lie anti- competitive," lhe NRC
said in its ruling.
William Ondrey-Gruber, an
assistant law director for Cleveland, said the rulins "means lhat
the NRC has con6nncd the law of
the land, wbicb is that illvestorowned utilities can't use their
monopoly power to close out
avenues of alternative electrical
services,
A spokesman for Ohio Edison
said the company was considering
further action.
"Our position has been that the
licensed conditions at Perry are
neither~ IKI' neoe•ry, ''
DiNicola •td. "They arc openended, ·undefined obligations that
enable wholesale customcn to
require service II times or abaQdon
service 11 will, which mlkea longtenn plannina for ereas of scnice
diffiCUlt, if not impoasible.''
I I

Hospitql.pews
HOI Z1R MEDICAL CENTER
Di1Ch~A~9 • Mark
Caldwell.
Judy Den·
ney, Mn. verner Grace and son.
Mary Oroft, Mary Hunt« and EDa

Kunszabo.

50s.

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Wednesday will be partly
cloudy and there is a chance of rain
over northern Ohio. Highs will be
65 to 75. '
Early Tuesday morning a low
pressure center was over northern
Minnesota' with a cold front to
western Indiana. Another cold front
was over tbe Plains. .
The firSt hoot will move to the
Atlantic Coast by Wednesday
morning while tbe second front
approaches western Ohio. The front
Will move to western Pennsylvania
late Wednesday as higb pressure
seales over die southern Plains.

Meigs County announcements
Carnation sale planned
The Meigs COunty Division of
the American Heart Assoc:iation
will be conducting its annual Carnation Sale with flowers being
delivered May 14.
This year the event is ccnducted
in memory of James Diehl. Mr.
Diehl has been ttJc chairman of the
event in past years. Now with his
death ihe Meigs County AHA
Board honors him for all of his
years of volunteer service he gave
to help fight for otht:r people's
lives.
'
This year Mrs. Ida Diehl will be
taking arden and overseeing flow·
er delivery in tbe Pomeroy area
· with tbe help of Betsy Horky,
Donna Carr, Dan Moms; Jeanette
Thdii!BS and Linda flaley. Denver
and Noril Rice of Middleport will
be taking orden and delivering
flowers in that arcs. Carnations can
be ordered for $1 each by calling
Mrs. Diehl at 992-2573 or Mr. and
Mrs: Rice at 992-3759.
"So buy a flower and put a liUie
spring in your heirt by belying
someone else's to beat. All o the
proceeds from Ibis Carnation Sale
benefit heart research and public
and professional educational programs," said Rice. "You and your
business can show the community
that it cares about the people who
SupportiL"
According to the American
Heart Association, heart disease is
the number I)IIC killer of American
women. Although the deatb rate
has dropped over 24 percent in the
past decade, more research needs to
be done to help find ways to save
the lives of the people who have
cardiovascular disease and help
prevent others from conii'IICting iL
"Support our loc:al American
Heart Association in the fight
against heart di....,se, Meigs County's largest killer. Order your carnations
We're fighting for
your life," wd Mrs. Diehl.

todar.

Ohio Edison, CEI lose,appeal
B~nlted

By UDitfd Pras Intematlonal
It was mostly cloudy across
Ohio ovtrnighL
A few showers popped up over
the norlheast corner of the state
early in tbe night but these only
lasted an hour and were gone. Otherwise it was a quiet night westberwise across the state.
Temperatures were mild during
the night witb readings mostly in
the 60s. Winds were from the
soulhwest 10 to 15 mph.
Tuesday night wiH be partly
clou4y wilh lows in the low to mid

Name omitted from list
The name of !Skip 'Dodson, a
second grader at Rutland Elementary, was omitted from that
school's list for its most recent
honor roll.
Y outb lODe raUy
A youth zone rally will be held
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Harrisonville Holiness Ch,~pel on
~oute 68410 Pomeroy w1th Rev.
John N'eville spealcing. The public
is invited to attend.
Herbalists to meet.
The May meeting of the River
Valley Herbalists will be held
Tuesday, May 7, at 7 p.m. at the
community building in LonJ Bottom. All members arc to bring an
herb or flower tbat can be dried for
tbe silent auction.
Racine Alumal banquet
The Racine Southern Alumni
Baaquet wiH be held May 25 at 6
p.m. M9re information may be
obtained· by contacting Joyce
Quillen at 949-2438 from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. or 949-2695 after 5 p.m. or
by calling Pam Diddle at 949-2749.
Crulle-ln planed
The Oldies aut Goodies Car
Clu~ will have a cruise·in on Saturday at Ple&amp;se!'S in Pomeroy. Registration will be held from. 6-8 p.m.
with show time from 8-10 p.m.
There is a $S entry fee and awards
will be given for show. ·
RldiDI Club to meet
The Meigs Coonty Riding Oub
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Scou's residence on Flatwoods
Road in Pomeroy. All memberS arc
urged to attend. Call 992-3885 or
99~-68.55 for information.
Danee planaeil
·
.
There will be a round and
square dance on Friday from 811:30 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Building featunng Stoney
Creek Band. Jim Carnahan will .be
the caner. Public is invited.
Group to meet
The Lottridgc Community Center Association will meet Thursday
at 7 p.m. The center is located on
County Road 53 soutb five miles
west of Coolville. ·
Auxiliary to meet
The Ladies Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30·p:m.
Officen 'will be elected. AD members urged to aaend.

Dlaatr platNd

·

There will be smOipibord din·
ncr on Sunday at the Lottridge
Community Center from noon to 2
p.m. Colt is $5 for lllulu and $2.50
ror children under 12. Public is
iDviled.

Llkim7Ciabtomeet
,
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m;
with Mrs. Daniel Tbomas u host·
ess. Mrs. Wendell floover will
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review tlie book, "Lulher Alive."
Gospel Concert
There will be a gospel quartet
concert at lhe Reedsville Church of
Cllrist on Sunday from 2:304 p.m.
. with The Joyful ,Sound of Vienna,
W.Va., and 'The Heavenly Express
of Ravenswood, W.Va. The public .
is invited to a~.
. Lodge to meet .
.
·
The Pomeroy LOdge No. 164 F
&amp; AM wil.l meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. with conferring of the
E.A. Degree.
.
Revival plaaned
The Bello Chapel Church in

=~~li~~:r!i%v~~~~~~~..:

S¥C, Columbus, as evangeliSt Ser-

VIces will be held at 7 p.m. nightly.

~c.J:~~;~n~~:e~a~lend.
There will be a rummage and
bake sale at the Racine United
Metboclist Church op Thursday and
Friday beginning at 9 a.m. daily.
The church is.located on Route 124
one mile east of Racine. ·
Golfleapes to belllg play
The men's Tuesday and
wd d
If 1
h
e nes ay go ca~ues at t e
Meigs County Golf oune will
begin play on May 7 and May 8.
There arc 20 teams signed up for
each league. Two 10 week halves
will be played Ibis year. Anyone
wishing to substitute is asked to
caD tbe club house (992.{j312) and
leave their name and phone number
Sale slated
'
Th e young pcop1e •s sun day
School Class and youth group of
tbc Reedsville Umted Methodist
Church will hold a combined rummage sale, bake sale and car wash
on Saturday at the church be&amp;in·
ning at 9 a.m. Funds JBised fii" the
event will go toward the group's
June trip to King's Island. The
~burch is located across from
Reed's County Store in ~ville.

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MTICIW.---7AIIII-1~107AIIHI

Ohio Lottery

Reds hike. lead

in Western
Division

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Vol. 41 , No. 247
. : Copyflghted , ..,

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Hospital news
'VETERANS MEMORIAL
. MONDAY ADMISSIONS ·
David Yonker, Pomaoy, and Erma
Hollon, Middleport.
,
. MONDAY DISCHARG~S •
Nohc.

only if lhe most economical oDilon is adopted.
In lhe bids, coal suppliers 1n southern Appalachia
and from Wyoming and Montana offered to provide
low-sulfur coal after 1995 for less money tban AEP
would spend on high-sulfur coal from its own mine.
The bids reflected falling coal prices in the
A~achia and Far West, and lower-than-expected
rail freight rates, AEP said. The trend w&amp;S expected
to continue tbroughout the 1990s, the company ~d.
Gerald P. Maloney, AEP. executive vice president,
said the increasing price differen~ between building
scrubbers and using out-or-stpte coal "is clearly the
dominant factor, but it is not alone."
·
Maloney said that between 199~ and 2005 the
company would sa~ about $110 million a year by

· . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Low prices for out·
· of-stale coal tbrcaten the )obs of ),200 miners aild
efforJS to get Ohio electnc .companies to invest in
. technology to clean Ohio's .high-sulfur coal.
Bids solicited by American Electric Power Co. for
tbe Gavin power plant in Gallia County were almost
30 percent below anticilllted costs of low-sulfur coal.
AEP also ·is considering spending hundreds of
millions of dollars on air pollution control devices at
Gavin and otber facilities to comply with the federal
Oean Air Act to continue to use Obio's high-sulfur
coal:
·
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But state law allows AEP companies, including
Columbus Southern Power Co. and Ohio Power Co.,
to piSs environmental cleanup costs ratepayers

Extended forecast. ·
. ·
Tuesday night, partly cloudy.\
Thursday lhroJIIh Samrday • ·
Low neat 55. Winds southwest 10
fair Thursday and Friday and a"
to 15 mph.
·
_chance of rain Saturday. HiJhs 55 :
Wednesday, partly suimy. liigh to 65 Thursday 8lld 65 to 75 Friday!
701075.
andSalurday.Lowsinthe40s.
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the:

ment,leaving a . . payment to
districtof$389,634.01.
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In tbe Southern Local School
District, the total was $164,767.61, ..
less $7 ).97 for school employees
retirement and $19,860 for teachers
retirement, leaving a net payment :
totbedislrictof$137,610.61.
~,
The direct allotment to the
county board was $52,208.21.
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NOW OPEN FOR THE ,.
SPRINO SEASON ..l.
Complete ~~~ of Y191t.. lt · 'l"
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Oi-n Deilr 9.5; Sun. 1- s

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':'~ EARLl' EDITIONS ON DISPLAY • An
exhibit of eariJ liooks by Classical Latin
authors, datiDI from tbe 15tb through tbe 18th
centuries, belonging to Dr. Hugb H. Davis, will
\ be a featured display at tbe Meigs County

Library In Pomeroy dt~rlDII tile moatb of May.
Dr. Davis, pictured bere '\rltb the exblblt, ls a
classical language professor emeritus, wbo
returned to his native Meigs County a few yean
ago.

Professor Davis' book collection
currently on exhibit at library
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Every day, alcohol shatters
thousands of families who
have no means of coping
with the
·.
.
problems of the
... .....
alcoholic.
The fact is,
families of
alcoholics
need help, too.

By CHARLENE HOEFUC~
Sentinel News Statr
A small but very significant
part of a classical language professor's bonk collection is currently on exhibil at tbe Meigs
County Library for the enjoyment of library patrons.
Dr. Hugh H. Davis of 222
West Main St., who resides next
door to the library, is the profes·
sor emeritll,\ who provided the
collection of early editions ,
ranging from the 15111 through
lhe 18 centuries.
The books are rcprcsenlalive
of Oassical Latin autbors with
whom Davis had an extensive
acquaintance as undergraduate
ancl graduate student and in his
long careec as college teacher of

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decision had been made, "but they' re starting to
show their hand."
In January, AEP Senior Vice President A. Joseph
Dowd testified before Con~ess that preliminary
studies indicated tbat switching to out-of-state coal ·
would be tbe most economical pollution cleanup
strategy.at tJ.Ie Gavin plant.
.
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Pending tn the Ohio flouse IS Krupmslri's biD for
fmancial andre~ incentives for utilities to use
scrubbers and keep OhiO miners working.
:
AEP flied lhe new coal bids last week with lhe
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, which is
reviewing the company's air cleanup options. The
agency's report, expected Tuesday, was delayed until
May 14.

competition, remain a highly
aaractive and po;ular savings vehicle for millions.
At the end of march, Americans
held $129.70 billion in Savings
Bonds, a one-year increase of eight
percent from tbe $119.88 billion
worlh held on March 31, 1990.

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COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - A
handwriting expert says he does
not tbinlc a woman accused of voting fraud in Pike County wrote an
address on a disputed absentee bal·
lot
James R. Dibowski, a former
examiner for the U. S. Postal
Inspection Service, testified in ~e
federal coun lrial of Betty Salisbury, 56, of Beaver and Judy Scott,
46, ofWaverly.
The case was expected to go to a
jury today.
.
.
The two women are being tned
in U.S. District Court on charges of
conspiring· to vote more than once
in the May, 1990 Republican primary. Mrs. Salisbury , ~ veteran
county Republican c~mmuteewom­
an, is also charged wtth two coonts
of mail theft and two counts of
buying votes.
Dibowski, 79, focused his testimony on an absentee ballot of Paul
Phillips. The government contends
Mrs. Salisbury addressed the envelope in which an absentee ballot
was mailed.
Dibowski said he ccncluded the
·. address was not written by Mrs,
Salisbury after comparing writing
. on tbc envelope to numerous sam-

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pies of tbe defendants writing.
.
Nancy Brewster, a member of
the Pike County Board of Elections, testified It was not unusual
for a number of county residents to
cast absentee ballots.
An investigation of vocing practices in the county began after it
was found lhat more tban SO percent of the votes cast in Union
Township were by absentee ballot
in the 1990 GOP primary. Ms.
Brewster said that in Waverly
Ward 4, 41 of lhe 63 ballots cast
were by absentee vote.
Ms. Brewster said she believes
lhe state election laws allow a poll
worker to help a disabled person
with an absentee ballot. She said it
is wrong if the poll worker pressured an absentee voter to vote a
certain way.
Assistant U. S. District Attorney
Dale Williams asked Ms. Brewster
if sbe was responsible for distribut·
ing 18 absentee balloiS in Mifflin
Township. She replied that she
gave absentee ballots to two people.
Ms. arewster said it was common practice (or party workers to
bring absclllte balfots ill people.

(De Officiis, de Senectute, de
Amicitia, Paradoxia) wilh eltlensive commentaries, published in
Milan, Italy in 1493, one year
after lhe man from Genoa dis. covered tbe New World.
According to Professor
Davis, such books published
before 1500 are technically
known as "Incunabula", a Latin
wo{d meaning literaiir "swaddling clotbes", that bemg interpreted, he said, as "products
from the cradle days of the
Printinl! Press."
Unlike many typical collec·
tors of eatly books who cannot
read Latin easily, Professor
Davis has made the exemplars .
in his coUection serve him well
Continued on page 7

John M. Causey of Reedsville was transported to Orient Correction- .

al Institute on Tueaday to begin serving a sentenCe on reduced charges

of voluntary manslaughter.
.·
Causey enlered a plea of guilty to lhe charge ·in March, following a
1990 murder indicDnenL Judge Fred W. Crow Ill sentenced Causey to
a sentence of five to 25 years on Friday.
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Catlsey wu indicted for tbe shooting death in October of hiS neighbor, Edmund Shamp ..

Thefts, vandalism reported
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that over tbe week·
end, a number of mailboxes were damaged in tbe Letart Township

areas.

Anybody' ,Vith informllion regarding lhe person or persons responsible is asked to contact the depanmenL
.
In other news from the department, Diane Schaniger or Mi~
repor1Cd Sunday that her vehicle was damaged on Saturday evenmg.
Don Smith of Peach Folk ROad reported Monday that he discovered
that his hunting cabin on Peach Fork had been entered and a propane
heater stolen.
.
.
Harold J. Will of Pine Grove Road reponed that wlllun tbe last
three to four days, someone had tipened the trunk of his car and sto!cn
a weed lrimmer and a b&amp;ttety. Also on Tuesday, Roy Bnmty of Pine
Grove Road reported that the windshield or his 1~9 Volkawagen WIL!i
broken.
.
Tom Waylen of Ohio Bell reported Tuesday afternoon that approlU •
mately 3000 feet of four-pair copper wire was taken from the IIOrlgc
arcs on Slate ROIIIC 7 below Middleport.

Two accidents investigated
Two accidents, rcsultin~ in damages to all of tbe vehicles involved
but no injuries were lnvesugated by Pomeroy Police Tuesday.

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Locally, during the first four
months of FY 91, county resideniS
purchased $101,586 wonh of Savmgs Bonds, an increase of 108 peicent when compared to tbe $48,97~
sold during tbe same period last
year,I)Ccording to Ted Reed.

COMMEMORATIVE STAMP· neodore T. Reed, Jr., rilht,
presidellt and CEO, Farmers Bank and Savings Compaay and volunteer chairman of tile Melas County Savings Bonds Catapalp,
purchased the county's first t:0111memoratlve stamp hoaorln1tlle.
50th analversliry of the U.S . Savings Boads Pro1ram from
Pomeroy Postmaster'Tom Reuter.
·

·Two women accused of .------::----Local briefs
:conspiring to vote twice Causey transported to Orient .

If alcohol is runnin
your·family, stop and get
help~-before you.run out
of options.

The
Daily
Sentinel

the Classics.
,
All of tbe voiUIJleS in the
exhibit , with one exception ,
were acquired in ltsly shortly
after the end of World War II
when Davis was still a Special
Agent in the U . ·S. Army
·Counter-Intelligence Corps.
Some· of the choicest items
came from his Italian frontier
Control assignment of three
months at an Alpine village
named Varzo, Privince of
Novara, near tbe Simplon Pass
where the much-storied Orient
Express enters ItaJ~, from
Switzerland on its way to Milan.
The oldest item exllibited is
an edition ofCircro's philosophical treatises on Duties, Old
Age, Friendship and l'a!Jidi&gt;xes

'

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!1ft,"'
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.

Theodore T. Reed, Jr., president
and CEO, Farmers Bank and Savings Company and volunteer chairman of tbe Meigs County Saving~
Bonds Campaign, purchased the
county's first commemorative
stamp honoring the 50th anoiver·
sary of tbe U.S. Sa~ings Bonds
~ from Pomeroy Postmaster
Tom Reuter.
The stamp was designed bf
Primo Angeli. San Francisco. Calif.
It felluleattD Ulustratiolt .of a balll
~le, Mdl 1 11111 and while Yenical
stripe
s M, in t.bl! __. f1l
tbe stamp. Above the eagle are the
words "U.S. Savings Bonds" i.n
blue' on a I!Oid' bac:kiround, with
"29" and .rUSA'' p_rinted in gold
across the eagle s dark brown
feathers, and the words "Fiftieth
Anniversary" in white drop-out
type over a gold background at lhe
bottom of the stamp.
The U.S. Savings Bonds commemorative stamp wu iSslled April
30, 1991 in Washins1on, D.C ..
allowing the stamps to be sold
nationwide on Wednesday, May I.
the actual annivenary date.
The stamp is being issued as
Americans arc purchasing record
amourits of Savfngs Bonds. March
. set a 50-yeat sales record for lhe
month, as Americans purchased
$815 million wortb, exceeding the
previous record $740 million, set in
March 1978.
For tbe first six montbs of Fiscal
Year 1991 sales have been $4.61
billion, a 17 percent increase from
the $3.92 billion sold 4uring the
same period ofFY 1990.
Catalina V. Villalpando, trcasur·
er of lhe United StaleS and National
Director of tbe Savings lkuls Program, calle4 tbe March re'1ults "a
lribute to the continued vitality or
the Savings Bonds Program. and to
the returning savings ethic of
Americans. After half a century,
Savings .Bonds, despite increased

,.;.,.

SYRACUSE, OHIO

II Inc. Hewopoper

U. S. Savings Bond program
SO·years old; Ted Reed buys
first commemorati~e stamp

t

Hl.tlad's Greenhouse

A.MuiU

using out-of-state coal ralher than scrubbers. AEP
Said perviously that the cost difference would be $70
million a year.
Factors to ·consider arc the jobs of 1,258 miners
employed at AEP's Meigs County mine adjacent tp
tbe Gavin plant, and the estimated $300 million it
would cost to close that mine and related preparation
p~ts. lhe company said.
Sta~ Rep. Jerry W. Krupinsld, D-Steubenville,
met Tuesday with AEP executive vice president
William J. Lhota to discuss lhe developments.
Krupinsld said Lhota outlined possible "scenarios," including closing die Meigs mine while making
a 1118jor CGrpol'llte investment in the regional economy. He sail! Lhots didn't tell him a final corparale

t

and lidding
IIOIIming
and """"
Fellage
llalglng llaskth, Frult anti
Flowering Trtts, Shrubs,
lzallas. lhad•dentlr- anti
Holly Tr-.

2 Bee~ 18 Pogeo 21 ..nto

· POm81'0y-Middteport, Ohio, Wednaaday, May 1, 1991

'Out-of-state coal cheaper than scrubbers

Soatb Cenlral Oblo

· The April State School Foundation Subsidy payment to Meigs
County schools for basic education
an~ transportation allowances
tOC8Ied $8l 9.1168.46, according to a
report released by State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson.
According to the report, the
Eastern Local School District
received $145 •084 _63 . less $S,458
.
for school employees retirement
and $18,677 for state teacher.s
retirement leaving a net payment to·
tbe school district of $120,949.63.
ln die Meigs Local School Dislrict, the total amount of basic and
transportation allowances was
$457,808.01, I.ess $14,118 for
school employees ·retirement and
$54,056 for state teachers retire- ·

•

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S

Sc.hool 'Foundati·on
Subsid.y d•.·strib.u_ted

Low tonight in mid 40s.
Thursday, sunny. High
near70.

a1

:

..-&amp;- ©..::..
~~
. WEATHER MAP· Thunderstorms
develop aa11 c:old 1
front from Oblo to Arka11181. A few of these storms will likely ~
become IIC!vere. Scattered tbandentonas will de•elotl al0111 a Ill· ~
tloaary fronlln tbe SoutbeasL Rail sbowers are likely ln.nortlaem, t
Maine Qd In tbe nortllem Great Lales. 1be central alld soutbern • ·
Plains 'will be partly to mostly sUDDy and warm. (UPI)
:. 1

---~----Weather

•
•

Pick 3:466
Pick 4:0895
Cards : 8-H, 8-C
2-D;Q-S

Page4

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l

The fust accident occuried at 4;10 on the parlcing lot at Rite Aide in
Pomeroy. Mary Cundiff, Syracuse, had backed out of a perldng place
and was startiila to move forward when her vehicle was struck by a car
driven by Lutrclle Schoenleb, Pomeroy, as he backed from an adjacent
parlcing space. ThcR was light damage to both vehicles, the driver's
side of the Cundiff vehicle lind tbe taillight section of the Schoenleb ,
car.
The second accident occurred at 8:10p.m. on East Main when Katrina Snodgrass, Racine, pulled from a restaurant parking lot onto East
Main and into the patb of a vehicle dtiveli by Herman Michael,
Pomeroy. There was light damage to tbe front e'nd of the Michael vehi·
cle and moderate damqe to tbe front and left side of the Snodgrass
car. Charles against Sn¢1rass arc pending, police n:pm-t.

Three Eastern contracts not renewed
The conii'IICIB of three teachers were not renewed when the- Eastem Local Boanl of EduCation met in a recent special session at the
school.
Not renewed were tbe contracts of Sherry Hensler, due to the
uncertainty of the need lot a half-time Jeamms disability teacher,
~ph Werry, who has lerYed as a full-lime substitute music ICIC:h·
er, and Robert Shaver.
· The resignation of Jan! Sellers as treasurer' s 111i11111t effective
April 26, was accepted, and Mildred Wilson was hired on a two
year contrac~ proper certification in the arcs of develop.
menially
.
,
Aaendlng the meetin&amp; were Ray Karr, president; Charles Kni&amp;ht,
vice ..Wdent. and members, Bill flannum, I. 0. McCoy, and Jim
Smidi.
.
.

May 4 deadline to registet tualmals
Any 4-H or FFA member planning to sbow and 1111 11111bt bogs
at the Meigs County Pllr this summer must rellisler their •lmala at
tontlnued on paflt

I•

�·. ~.

Ohio

'C ommentary
~

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.111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

lllb

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Bim ~ !"T'&gt;-1..;_
""T'"II"'T"E!E!c::l•""'
~I'

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ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher ·.

·

CHJLENE HOEFLICH
·

· Generai Manager

PAT WJQTEHEAD
Asslataat Publfsher/Controlier
A r.{EMBER of The AssoclQted Press, InlancjDally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They.should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wllh
name, address .a nd telephone number . No unstgM&lt;l leiters will be published. Letters should be In gnod taste, addressing Issues , not personali-

ties.

Letters to the editor
Name of the game is taxes
. - The name of the game is taxes.

,Extract them from the people ID!der
.one pretext or another. George
:Bush lied to iis and lesser mortlls
·are capable of the same thing.
: Schools are a political bandwag·on hel!(lquartered in Columbus.
In Southern the number of studelus is down yet more money is
called for. Wbat about people who
won't pay any taxes? Not long ago
,there was over four {li!Bes of names
of people with delinquent taxes. ·

Welfare is rampant in this area .
How much do they pay? There are
peQple who own no property going
to the polls to vote taXes on prQperty owners.
There is more to these school
levies than meets rile eye. We lllliY
vote for this levy if we are convinced that it will really benefit the
students.
Gayle Price
Portland, Ohio
0

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.Turkey season, what a sport
' Dear Editor:
Turkey season...ah, ye$, what a
sport Did I say sport? Well, some
would say so. Particularly, those
individuals who came down from
Columbus on Friday, April 26, to
participate as bunters of "wild"
turkey. Funny though, how different their perceptions about SJ!o/lS•
· man-like hunting differ from mme.
These "hunters" stopped on
County Road 31, bravely stepped
onto private ptopeny, thouJbtfully
doin$ this wilhout permiSSion, and
heroically and witll great courage
ihot a five-year old tom turkey who
was challenging them strongly by
doing the SliDe thing he had always
dono-mindioa his ~y business
)Yith his hen. Bemg a pet, he .

thought humans were pretty much
alike and would leave him alone.
Unfortunately, for these big,
bold, brave hunters some concerned citizens were watching and
they turned in theii- license num•
hers to the Sheriff. I am happy that
'the Sheriff promptly apprehended
these ."hunters." You know, unless
true hunters police their ranks,
hunting may soon be a thing of the
past. After all, with hunting like
I've just described, isn't it just too
dangerous for these men to be out ·
there facing these fierce animals?
Sincerely,
Carla Shuler
49000 Gainer Rd.
Long Boaom, Ohio

Seeks yes vote on school levy
· : I would like to urse the voters
~of the Southern Local Schoof Dis: trict to vote "yes•: for the school
· levy in the upcoming May 7 elec: tion.
·: I have experienced many
~ ~hools while growing up and went
: to a large higb school. in New Jer· 8ey. As a freshman, I was tonunate
.:enough to make the varsity basket: ball 11:81Tl, however, many ralented
·'!)layers did not get the opportunity
;to compete like they would have
iiad at a smatter school.
1
.:; Sure, we had some opportunities
~dial students did not have at South•ern, and I did have some caring
:!liachen in New Jersey. But other
:tilDes students were just numbers.
· My best experience was having
~the opportunity to go to Southern
High School. (I also attended Point
•Pleasant). The discipline at SHS
:was far superior to any school I had
•

ever experienc.ed and it also taught
me self-diScipline.
All students had a chance to be
important. Everyone knew everyone else and the teacheiS knew you
br name. Having had the opportumty to compare Southern .to other
schools across the country, I truly
believe it would be a wise choice to
vote for this crucial levy.
Once you lose something as precious as the memories and experiences that one can experience at
Southern, you can never get it
back. Once tt's gone, it's gone!
Help avoid the loan, fund and
possible (inevitable) consolidation.
Please keep Southern afloat by
passing !he levy and give my children the opportunity to attend
Southern also. Please Vote "Yes."
·
AmyWolfe
Box872
Racine, Ohio

Jim Diehl's spirit lives on

I

: in August of 1962, my :wife
. Carol and I moved to Pomeroy,
: Ohio to start our first home and my
• ftrSt job as a teaCher and a coach.
: We would slay for five years, sl811
•a family (daughters Kelly and
:Tracey), and bave the opportunity
: to work, teach, cc&gt;ach. and meet
•many great people in the Pomeroy;Middleport area. Crow, VanMeter,
•Finlaw, English, Swindell, Swatzel,
:Porter, Smith, Francis, Werry,
· :swisher, Wolfe, Knight, Gibbs,
:Baer. Reed, Logan, Story, B~Wis,
· Arnold, Phalin, Winebrenner,
' Gloeckner, Lind, Meier, Hysell,
. and Diehl are only a few of the
· many names I recall from nearly 30
: years ago.
.
~
· I remember Mr. Charles Gibbs
:who gave me the opponunity to
:come to Pomeroy ~to start my teach·
.ing career right out of Fairmont
State College. There was Mr.
:Howard Knight, Mr. &amp; Mrs.
' Wheeler Drake, Forrest Ward,
:Aaron Zahl, Bill Orueser, and
:many ochers that l11ugbt or worked
;with liom 1962-67.
• Mlny are the great memories I
:shared with two great guys 'Charley Chancey and Russ Moore.
:Pomeroy was bleased with some
;great student athletes during the
•60's. and we had the great experi:Cnce of being their teachen and
:Coaches. Many times we had to
play ICJiooiJ with more talent, but
.with things li~e the community
~ mPomeroy, !he bard wort of
,our ad"Uea,llld die houn wo spent
qether a cc.cbes - the Pomeroy
Purple Panthers won more than
their share of games.

'

This brings me to the reason for
sharing this letter with the people
of Meigs County. Behind all of this
was a·man who spent his life supporting the people I have mentioned. He was also there for the
student, teacher, parent, athlete,
coach, and people of the community. He was stem when necessary,
lcind when needed, and enjoyed
golf, sports, writing, family, and
many i&gt;ther activities related to the
school and community.
YeS. I'm talking about James A.
Diehl, Jr., who in my five years at
Pomeroy High School and .the
· years since, I have always
addressed as Mr. Diehl.
Since leaving Pomeroy in 1967,
I have 11ught at four other schools
with niany differem principals. I've
been a retail store manager, Jl8rlls
&amp; recreation director, counselor,
and cwrentlr general manager of a
professional baseball team in HuntJRgton, W.Va. Looking back over
all of those years, jobs, 811d bosses,
Mr. Diehl has always stood at the
top of the lisL
It was with great sorrow that I
learned of his passing away the day
af1er his fune131 was held. For this
reason, I have made a special trip ·
to Pomeroy to visit with friends
and family .and 10 share this letter
with you. I t6ow he is already
looking for a golf game or making
someone feel at home in his new
quarters in the sty. Men like James
A. Diehl, Jr. are a passing bleed in
our school system and society. I
feel honored and grateful that I had
the opponunity 10 share five years
with him, and l understand the loss

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Base closings open political wounds
FO~T :WO~TH, !'~ (NE:") a~hing S1.S_trill~n. Without

- Pohbc1811S m CalifomJa claim
that Texas fared better than It
deserv~ in the recent round of proposed military base closings
because it's among President
Bush's various adopted home
states.
·
Here in Texas, however, politicians in_sist,that they're being treated unfauly by the Defense Departmenl Specifically, lhey charge that
the Bush administration is waging
a protracted vendetta against the
state in general and Fort Worth in
particular. •
Once again, the base-closing
fandango is underway. Public officials t!'roughout the country are
JM?Stunng for the ben~Jt ~f constttuents fearful of loSJng JObs or
busill'ess if the P6ntagon shuts
~wn a facili!f that long has proVJded econoiDic benefits.
_
. TJ!ose concen,ts ~ hardly tnvial. ·The ecoROJRic dislocat~c?n_ ~ollowtng sue~ closures can be IDltial·
ly devastallllg -and the long-term
ad_verse· effects frequently are
.pamfully .I!JIP8rCDt for ~·
But military ~nditures are by
far the larg~t Stngle component of
an ·annual federal budget now

stgnificant ~b~s m that category, we cant bnng government
spending under control, balance the
budget, reduce the deficit and attain
the assorted olher fiSCal goals that
enjoythenearlyUJI!IIIimoussuppon
of the nation's taxpayers.
·
"If we want the federal government to indeed ~et its house in .
order we all realize that we are
going to pay the consequences,"
says Kim Hill, a political science
professor at· Texas A&amp;M University. "Each community is 1oing to
have to give up something.
Similarly, Defense Secretary
Richard B. Cheney notes that "a
shrinking budget clearly req~ us
to make som~ ~lJ!d chotces. But
too many pohuctans- Republicans and Democrats alike- would
rather pander \o their constituents'
· worst f~a~s th~n prov~de ~lassy
leadersh•p m a difficult sttuatron.
.
~ . Constder, for. example,. the
tntemperate rhelorx: from· a pau of
Pennsylvania members of Congress
af~r they learn~ that the Philadelphta :r-:raval Sht~~B!d was on the
new hst of factltttes to be shut
down:
·
"It looks like the Department of

Robert Walte~s

DefenS;C is declaJ-!ng war on Pennsylvarua," proclauned Republican
Sen. Arlen Specter. Cheney and
Bush "told the people or Philadelphia (to) drop dead," added Democratic Rep. Thomas M. Foglietta.
PauiTauer,themayorof Aurora
Colo.. didn't have much of a measured response either when he
I~ that the Bush ~dministrabon recommended closmg nearby
Lowry Air Force Base while allowing almost as expendable Goodfellow Air Force Base in San Angelo,
Texas, to remain open.
"I think the neason Lowry was
picked was because the other base
it came down to was in Texas,"
said. the ~ayor. "That's where the
prestdentts ~m."
.
But here m Texas, pohticians
assen that the Busl! administration
in general and Cheitey in particular
~picking on Fort Worth because
tt s the hometown of former Rep.
James C. Wright Jr., the Democrat
who was House speaker until he
was forced to resign amid a scandal
se~~ years ago. .
Our commumty has suffered
worse than any ... in the country
wtth defense layoffs," Democratic
Rep. Pete Geren (who succeeded

Wright) complained after learmng
that Carswell Air Force Base here
in Fort Worth was being recommended for closure.
·
Geren was referring to the fact
that prior to the mid-April base
closing announcement, two of the
city's largest employers- Bell .
Helicopter and General D'lnamics-were forced to lay of thousands of employees because major
weapons eonttacts they had been
awarded by the Pentagon were canceled or scaled baCk.
The General Dynamics work
force here for instance, peaked at
30 000 bui now has been slashed to
10:000. Its production ohhe F- ~6
fighter has been reduced and tts
contract to manufacture the A-12
atiack plane has been cancele4. ·
The closing of Carswell, long
home to a wing of B-52 bombers.
will result in the toss of an additional 6,500 militarY_and civilian
jobs. That's hardly cause for celebration.
But responsible public officials
in Washington have sttuggled to
minimize political considerations
in base closing decisions The systern they have devised o~ght to be
allowed to function;

Do health nuts enjoy what theyGeorge
do?R. Plagenz·
.
:w.e all know we would feel bet-

ter and probably live longer if we
followed the regime of the MQrmons and the Seventh-Day Adventists. They shun alcohol, tobacco
and coffee, get lots of exercise and
practice moderation in the con·
sumption of meat-If they eat meat
at all.
This would be a sensible health
program for all of us. You can't
arguf with thaL But you've got to
admit i.t.sounds dull. If you are
going to be a health nut, be a neal
ltealth nut-like Bemarr Macfadden.
Macfadden, who became a mil'
lionaire as head of a vast publishiilg empire whose )&gt;iggest moneymaker was True S~ry magazine,
'

of those who spent a lifetime
around Mr. Diehl. "...
(his •
As 1ong as guys ....., me . .ormer ~ ~~~ and Crief!ds)
re~beJ: his gift ~.life. Mr. J?iehl
will live m the spun of our b~.
!hank you, Pome£0&gt;:. Ohio for gt~­
mg me~ opporbllllty.to have thiS
memory of James A. Diehl, Jr. .
Bud Bickel; G.M.
Huntington Cubs
Huntington, W.Va.

!

started a religion or health called

his goil but still he had reached a
"Cosmotarianism," by which he more than respectable old age.
meant a religion for the world.
Doctors said he had a liver and gall
He ~hed to his Sunday con- bladder ailmenL Macfadden would
gregauon while standing on his have sworn violently if he had
head. Macfadden believed that heard their diagnosis. He never
improved the cin:ulation. He even bUSted doctors.
thought of having communion in
Subscribers to one of Macfadhis church - with carrot juice in den's magazines-Physical Cutthe chalice instead of wine.
true--got a mammoth watch whose
A vegetarian, Macfadden traced crowded dial gave instructions on
the Fall of' Man not to Adam and what time to do-everything. Many
Eve 'but to the C:trSt man who fell of the instructions still malce good
cor the temptation to eat meat. Par- sense:
• 7 a.m.-Wake up . Stretch.
adise was lost, Macfadden felt,
when man "scorned the carrot for Rise quickly. 15 minutes exercise.
chicken leg."
Deep breathing at an open window.
. He felt that exercise (principally Douse in cold tub. Sing! Rough
with dumbbells before an open towel ·rub. Stay nude as long as
window), vegetarianism and fasting , possible.
would cure 811ything.
• 8 a.m.-No brealcfast. Take
Following this regime himself, glass cool water. Walle to work.
Macfadden predicted he would live Identify the birds. Start day cheerto be 120. When he was 81 he fully.
paracbuted from a plane over the
•10 a.m.-Glass of milk or
Seine River in Paris dressed only in water. Never.use ice.
his red flannel underwear.
• N.- _....,. ..... •llowly.
He married for. the .third time Count 1~0 chews per mouthful.
when he was 80. His bride was 42.
Their wedding cake was made
from whole wheat flour and at the

'
Don't drinlc .at meals. Exercise
teeth on ID!Jgh sour bread. Prevents
tooth decay.
• Noon to 5 p.m.-Refuse til be
rushed. Maintain cheerful mind.
• 5 to 6 p.m.-End of work.
Fivemile walk with deep breathing.
Rest before dinner. Count chews.
• 8 to 10 p.m.-Don't work
evenings. Have blinn less time. A
few nuts or grapes.
• 10 p.m. -Open windows
wide. Let body breathe nude. Exercise IDitil tired:Go to bed.
.
Around the watch dial in red letteiS were the words: "Remember.
Notes! No coffee! No nicotine! No
spiritual beverages!"
That last was not a warning
agilinst religiOIJ---«&lt;though Macfadden was neither a Bible-reader nor
a churchgoer- but against "spiritous liquors."
.
There have been food faddists .
since Bemarr Macfadden but none ' ·
so colorful.
'

J10 d ay
. ffl
• history
•

=~t::::::;r.::~ and

Macfadden died in 19S~ at the
·age of 87. He was.33 years short of

·

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

. W~SHINGTON The 22 Marines in the Gulf wrote to the gam~. tnstead of fighting the effective than ~he Brady Bill.
National Rifle Association is riding ~ him just before the allied groiDid Brady Bill head on, the NRA has · Our associate Scott Sleek talked
the roattails of)he popular Persian offensive began against I:nq. They wisely chosen to push an altema· to several congressional insiders
Gulf.War to solve its own.prob- asked "thal we not forget one of the 'live reconk:heck pmposal. Instead who said the S~~ggen bill. despite
lems_. Fllcing a growing credibility most pnleious freedoms they were of a seven-day waiting period, the its impossible demands, is being
gap and a gun-control bill that defending - ·the right to keep aitd NRA supportS an alternative bill, taken l:eriously. Many members of
Congress may actually pass, the bear anns; according to the NRA sponsored by Rep. Harley Staggj:!S, Congress know thatlthe public
. NRA has ·sent out a fund-raising letter. La Pierre's letter does not . · D-W.Va., requinng an on-the spot wants something done about crime,
letter .th~~ equa~s the freeing of convincingly explain wbat the Iraqi ICCOJd check by the gun stores, lap- but the lawmakers ·n also indebtKuwa~t With the nghts of American invasion of Kuwaii had to do with ping into a nationwide computer ed to the NRA ·for big campaign
gun owners.
the right to carry guns in America. network. It sounds like a great idea, contributions, and solne have a
The letter is part of the NRA's. · Nor does it explain how the war and the nicest thing about it from large constiluency of gun enthusidesperate campaign to fight a rea- meshes with the Brady Bill B.ut La the NRA ~spective is that it prob- asts who bave bought tbe NRA
sonable gun-control measure Pierre does ask the recipients to ably won t work.
line.
known as the Brady Bill, named write to Congress protesting the
The Justice Department says
That line keeps moving. Two
after former White House Press bill.
that developing such an instant · years ago in its. advenisemeals. the
Secretary James Brady. who was
."If (the bill) passes, it will put national checking system would NRA said law-abiding citizens .·
· permanently crippled m the 1981 the federal government on the back . take up IIi five years. But the Stag- shou11n'i have to get government
attack on President Reagan.
of em:y law abiding gun owner in gers bill requires that the system permission to bi.IY a gun. But, -in
The Brady Bill would ~uire a America, n the letter says. ''That is start up within six months .after 1976, an NRA P.l'lphlet ~that a
seven-day wai~ peri~ before a wby we must take the time. and approval. Three states, including ~ realionable w11ting period could
gun purchase to gtve police nme to heed the words of these Marines. Srapers' home staf:e of West Vir- help in reducing crimt4 of passion
check whether the buyer ~ has a We mustaa 'IO prol«l our rigbts. jlirua, don't even have computer- and in preventing people with
criminal record. The bill, 8Jk)IISOI'ed We must prqwe our ·OWn defense ized crintinal records. Any member criminal r;ecords of dimgaous men.
by Rep. Ed "Feighan, D-Ohio, has of freedom."
of Con~s who voted for Stag- tal illness from acquiring guns."
the bal:king ofNRA darling Ronald
The logic is flawed, but. the gelS' btll could stay on the g~
BRIDE BROKERS -In Japan.
Reagan, and so much suppon on NRA has nothing 1p lose. Its mem- side of the NRA, get rid of the the brightligbts and job opportuniCapitol Hill that the NRA is bersflip numbers ere dropping, and pesky Brad.Y Bill, boasttlbout being ties have hued many young women
spooked.
its credibility is strained as it fights tough on crime and rest easy in the away from the farm. 11tat has left
Hence, the fund-raising letter even neasonable gun-control mea- knowledge that the bill, with its Japanese rural men wilh a shortage
tapping into the national pride over SUI'es while gun-related violence in six-month deadline, would be of brides. Marriage brokers have
the war: The leiter, signed by NRA America soars.
meaningless. Staggers' spokeSman been importing Filipino women as
lobbyist Wayne La Piem, says that
But don't count the NRA out of told us the bill is realistic and more mail-order brides, but thal is caus'
~
ing social problems. We predict
that the government will offer single Japanese women more inc~n­
tives to marry, aD!! will set an ~
immigration quota on Filipino
brides.
.
MINI-EDITORIAL -,- George
Bush received an important guest
last week - the exiled spiritual
leader of Tibet, the Dalat Lama.
Tibet was annexed by China in
1959 and since then China has
attem~ a systemadc elimination
of the Tibetan culture and identity.
. When the Dalai Lama comes to
town, he puts Bush in a pickle
because the Chinese don't like to
see 'him at the White House aild
Bush has never been one to rattle
Beijing. But it was different this
time. Over the objections of &lt;;hina,
the Dalai Lama got an audience
with the president, without explanation from the White House. Later
the Dalai 'Lama was asked about
economic sanctions against China
for human rights abuses. Occasionally the Chinese need to be
"squeezed," he said. George Bush
did just that by receiving the
Tibetan monk. It wasn't sanctions,
but it was a squeeze.
.

By Ullited Praa International
T~y is Wednesday, May!, the 121stday of 1991 with 244tofolt0w.
ThiSJS May Day.
.
·

•

- -

~-;or- -··---------·

"

•
WID

Bulls post 103-94 play

Page-2-The Dally 9enUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, May 1,1981

.NRA·taps war pride

The Daily Sentinel

..

By DICK BRINSTER
AP 8(10111 Writer
With Scottie Pippen doing an
impression of Michael Jordan and
Magic Johnson looking more like
the all-"- ICOIUI'g .......- than lhe
"''"'
~the New
all-time
assist leader,
Yort Knicks aiJd Houston Rockets
aleoutofthe NBA playoffs. .1
"Oo dJe road, yQU bave to•talce
it to the blsket, aad 1 wanted to do
that and break down their
defense, •• Pippen ssid after the
Bulls completed a three-~ame
-..~....... of ....
,_,_,._ ""lh
""' ........
w• a 1 3·94
victory Tuesday ni,bt. "Michael
had some opponumties to do the
same thing, bitt he elected to shoot
jumpers.' •
Pippen made five layups and
five dunks to account for all but
one of his 21 points. Jord!Jn had
·. nine baskets on jumpers, four on
layups and one dunk to finish with
33 points.
Meanwhile, Johnson scored 38
PQints in the Los Angeles Lakers'
94-90 victory that completed a 3-0
sweepoflheRockeiS.
~
Elsewhere, Philadelphia completed il sweep of Milwaukee with
a 121-100 victory, Delroittolik a 2I lead in its·best-of-S series with a
103-91 victory over Atlanta, Seattle
avoided a sweep by besting· Port·
land 102-99 and Utah took a 2-1
lead by winning 197-98 over
Phoenix.
·
"I was taking wbat they gave
me while Scottie was going bard to
the basket," Jordan said. "I used to
be able to do that, but 1 guess I'm
getting a little old for thaL ••
Jordan's only dunk of the game
belied that tongue-in-cheek statement. His second-quaner changeof-direction move fooled· three
Knicts before he drove the baseliile
for a slam.
Mter Jordan made a rebound
basket, the Bulls' next eight baslcets were Jayups and dunks, keying
a 20-9 run that closed the gap to
54-53 at halftime.
Chicago, which has 10 conseculive victories over New York and

.

ALTERS FLIGHT- Detroit frontJDan Den·
. ~ Rodman goes airborne to alter tbe night or
the sbot of Atlanta's Kevin Willis (42), as Piston
. fr.ont-liner Bill Laimbeer watches.at left, during

:ruesday niabt's NBA playoff game in Atlanta,
which the Plstous won 103-91 to take a 2-11ead
in tbe best-of-five series. (AP)

Race results ·

'

In;.:~~~~ht.~~-~\~Jshot,

NHL playoffs will ·resume tonight
,
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Boston head
coach Mike Milbury isn't a big fan
of having one of his players stick
with an opponent's top scorer all
over the ice. But the Bruins haven't
faced many players like Mario
·
Lemteux. .
. .
They will tomght m the opener
of ~he ~tan ley Cup sem!finals
agatnst the Pittsburgh Pengums.
"He is an exception to every
rule" Milbury satd "so 1 may
h ' 0· ak
' ti to m
~ ~ e an excep on
Y
ThegPen uins the NHL's second highe!t-scoring team have
man more weapons than Le;.ieux
Mark Recchi and Kevin Steven~
each had 40 regular-season goals
. · th
bee n outstandmg
and
have
m e
playoffs
Thek defense was bolstered by a
March 4 trade that brought Ulf ·
Samuelsson and Grant Jennings
from Hartford And Tom Barrasso
leads all playoff goalies with a 2.46
goais-against average.
But Lemieux may be enough of
a threat 10 warrant special attention
. in the best-of-7 Wales Conference
. final that continues Friday in
Boston.
Milbury saw the effectiveness of
having one player shadow another
when Edmonton's Esa Tikkanen

held Boston playmaller Craig Jan- tender capped a brilliant sev~n- .won the featured pace Tuesday
·
' c
Di · · final
t night at Lebanon Raceway.
ney scoreless in l~st year s up game Adams ~ston .
agatns
Randy Tharps guided the 5finals, won by the Oilers! 4-l. .
~trea! by t1!f~UD~ 8Side 35. shots year-old mare to one-half length
_ "It's not ~e ~ost diffi_cui~,J~b m a sen~-cbncbmg 2-1 vtctory victory that paid $129 _20 , $2S.60
·~the W&lt;J!Id, Milbury satd. . Its Monda~ mghL
.
·
and $16.60. Kari Chef returned
dtffjcult m _the case of I;-emteux
- b;C~•iux also ww
to deal $5 40 and $5 80 for finishing secbecause of ht~ reach and stze. If ~e wtt . e .enseman ay ourq'!e• . ond and Pip's Triumph was third.
gets possessto~ or the p_uck_. its Wf!O ts expected to _play. despite ..
. $4
virtually imposstble to stnp him of bemg cross-checlced m the hack of paytng_ :40·
. .
'L"
the
neck
by
Shayne
Corson
with
The
ilaily
double
combmabon
of
1
•
•
.
d . h th
· te left Monda night
9-2 returned $157.80.
'de~u~~ !'!l~bgu~~~'!{ye B~::idgee ~.~~ have a lot Jf guys willA crowd · of 1,178 w~gered
1
·
•
·
• d ·
Ia
hard
$120 030
seven inches shorter than the 6- mg to gnn tt .~ut,_p y as , as ...:...-'_._._ _ _...;.._ _ _..,
foot-4Lemieux,as.ashadow. _
they hav~ to, Ptttsburgh s Joe
"It sounded hke an amusmg Mullen S81d.
idea if nothing else," Milbury
"They've &lt;!one a good job of
said.'"ifyou had him kind of flail- · brainwashing their guys that .th~~
ing at (Lemieux's) kneecaps to try have ~o play (hard) every shtft,
to keep him away from the puck. If Pengums coach Bob Johnson S81d.
anybody that size could do it, .it
The B':'JinS have the.advantages
would be Randy because of hts of home tce and expenence. They
tenacity.'.'
·
~eached the Cup finals two of the
B
h
"
d
h
ouldn't
have
tllst
8
ut e S8l e w
. three years and are in the ~lay- .
player stick with Lemieux if off~ for an NJ:IL-record . 4th
Boston is in Pittsburgh's zone and straight season. Piusburgh ts _m the
Lemieux is at the opposite blue pl_ayoffs for JUSt the second bm~ m
line, far from the play.
nme years an~ ma~e t~e _thud
"I don't!!'~ you have to be so round for the firSt ttme m Its 24
co.nsumed wtth tt you have_to fll!'- seasons.
fen all ?f ~~ur ?ffense ~htl~. he s
on the tce, Mtlbury wd. Th~t
can do some !~&amp;mage ~ to.a t~am- s
outlook on thmgs when t~eir,~tg
guys are g~ttmg scored agamst. .
If Lemt~ux escapes from h!s
shadow, he II have to get by goalie
Andy l'rfoog. The Boston goalWEDNESDAY, MAY 8

half

S
•~
ports b.rielS

BASEBALL ·
NEW YORK (AP) - The
National League expansion committee will not make tts recommendation to owners IDitil the quarterly
meetlrigs on JIDie 12 and a discussion and vote will follow immediately, NL president Bill White said.
Information has not yet been
disseminated outside the NL
expansion committee. NL
spokeswoman Katy Feeney cautioned that the plans ate subjec! to
.change. Six cities are competing
for the"leam.t, wbich cost $9S million each - Buffalo, N.Y.; Denver; Miami; Orlando, Fla; St.
Petersburg, Fla., and WashingiOn, .
D.C.

half.
Thomas finished with 19 points
and 13 assists and Vinnie Johnson
scored 13 of his 17 points in lhe
second quaner. Kevm Willis ltll
the Hawks with 24 points, while
Wilkins had 18.
·.
SuperSoniellOl. TraU Blaun 99
In Seattle, Sedate Threatt sank a
three-point shot with four secon~
left as Seattle beat Ponland, preeluding a sweep by the Trail Btaz.
CIS.

:

Threatt, who led the SuperSonics with 29 points. put hts team
ahead 100-99 after Kevin Duckworth had given the Trail BlazeiS ~
99-97 lead on an offensive rebound
lay-in with 21.7 seconds to go. :
Clyde Drexler led Ponland with
23 points.
Jau 107, Suas 98
Blue Edwards had 14 of his 22
points in the fourth quarter as Utah
,pushed visiting Phoenix to the
brink of elimination.
:
Karl Malone had 32 points for
the Jazz. John Stockton added Ill
points and 12 assists, .and reserve
center Mike. Brown had 15 points
and II rebounds for Utah.
Tom Chambers had 26 points
and Dan Majerle 19 for the Suns,
who face elimination Thursday
night in Game 4 at ihe Salt Palace.

, · The Daily Sentinel :
(VSI'S ltll-811)

A Dtwilloll ot Multimedia, Inc.

•

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MIZWAY
TAYE-N

Reds notes.~·--------

International
Calendar Men

CINCINNATI (AP)- Pitching said, ··I fouild 'em all pretty easy.''
The appearance was more than
coach Stan William.s felt great
and .
Tuesday, one day after his ftrst per- just a f001110te for Williams.
formance in 17 years.
"It was fun . I'd like to pitch
Williams, 54, pitched one per- again," he said. "I'm from the old
feet inning Monday for the Cincin- school- I miss the game."
t SHOWS POIPIICI OP 011111.
nati Reds to complete an exhibition
$7.00 Per llcket
game against their Class AAA farm
Although it was Williams' first
club in Nashville. He got two bat· . appearance in a long time, it was
ters on ground balls anti one on a the second consecutive year that his
fly ball.
· jciSey has been in a game.
Doors Open 7 p.m.
The last time Williams pitched
Last year, reliever Rob Dibble
competitiv~y was I 972 in !he
was forced to change jerseys
O.J. 7:30-11:30 p.m.
minors.
because he'd cut his shin sleeves, a
MUST IE 21 YEARS Of AGE
"My body feels broken down violation or league regulations. All
and as beat up as ever, .but my arm of his shirts had been ~lit, so he put
CqiNEI IT. 7/143
feels great,'' Williams said, after on one of Williams' shirts to make
. POMEROYI OliO
r,itching batting practice Tuesday. his relief appearance.
'If you throw properly, you never
have ann problems.''
Williams, a right-hander, faced
three left-handed batters. He got
Leo Garcia to ground out to first
baseman Todd Benzinger, retired
Keith Loclcbart on a fly to center,
and covered fliSt base to malce the
putout when Reggie Jefferson
grounded to Benzinger.
~·
Best pf all, he didn't walk a batter.
. 1
· "I don't wan! to go out and
walk anyone when I tell people not
to " he said. "The fliSt two piiChes
I threw to Qarcia, he took for balls.
WITH FIIES••••s2.24
I said, 'Swing the baL' "
•
Garcia complied.
.
Not everyone was so fl!ICJOUS.
His fastball brou$ht afew~
"One $UY S81d, 'You ve got a
"At'IIIIWef 1111
•••l•a
good stratght change-up.' I said,
N1.10Y,.OIIO
PIL 991·2556
'That's my heater,' " Williams

Incredible Hunks

LADIES ONL ~~ ·

Special of the Week.!

·- PIZZA BURGER

$1.54

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLE!

••••my •

lllid.

seven straight this season,
advanced to the second round of
the Eutern Conference playoff,
against Philadelphia.
Ionian scored l'4lointt durin~ a
29-11 second-half spun thal carried
the Bulls. Cht'cago extended t'ts
margin to 86-71 with 10:041eft on
a jumper and free throw by Jordan.
The Bulls advanced to the second round of the Eastern Conference J?layoffs against Philadelpbia.
Kiki Vandeweghe and Patrick
Ewing scored 20 points each for
the Knic....
·
"" ·
Lakers 94, Roc:kets !10
In Houston, Byron Scott's
jumper made it 92-90 with 16.9
seconds to play, and Johnson had
24 of his points in the second half.
The Rockets called a timeout
after Scott's 18-footer from the
baseline and missed a chance when
they could.not get the ball inbounded, and it went over to the Lakin.
Hakeem Olajuwon missed a 3point attempt with 8.6 seconds to
. go.
.
Olajuwon had 21 points and 17 ~
rebounds, and Otis Thorpe added
21 points. James Worthy scored 22
points for the Lalcers.
76en 121, BIICks 100
Charles Barkley, leaping off a
left knee encased in a brace, had 30
points and 12 rebounds for
Philadelphia.
In addition to Barlder, who has
worn the brace since. spraining his
. knee, Hersey Hawkins scored 26
points, Armon Gilliam 18 and R®
Anderson 16 in the 76ers' first
sweep or a playoff series since raeing Milwaukee in 1985.
Alvin Robertson led visiting
Milwaulcee with 26 points.
Pistons 103, Hawks 91
Joe Dumars and lsiah Thomas
sparked Detroit's comeback from a
17-pointsecond-quarterdeficil
The Hawks led 46-29 on a pair
of free throws by Dominique
Wilkins - his first points of the
game - with S:30 left in the fli'Sl

.'•

1-

Become a new cable
·Subscriber. or if you're a current
subscriber add a new service (like ,HBO or The Disney
·
Channel). before May 24th and your first month's service fees
will. go directly to our local schools as a tax-deductible donatjon.
.
.
'
.
.
.
Just call now and mention this offer. We'll schedule your free
installation or additional service connection-another bonus of our
·CABLE + YOU school campaign. When we connect your new
services, we'll ask you to make o~t your check to Your County School

System.
Free connection and a tax-deductible
donation to local schools •..
When you add It all up,
now's the tl.me to get cable TV!

GILL

,..,.....
•

Otter endl May 24 , 1991 . Offer gooel In serviceable areas only.

.

Williams dished n out, too.
Asked how difficult it was to set
the minor-leaguers out, Williams

1

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•

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Wednetday, May 1, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

I

By BIN WALDR
AP B•lhl Wrtter
A lot of people thiDk the New
Ycrt Mea have been ,PD,Yinl in a
fog f&lt;l' a few years. 1biJ time, tbere
-no doubt.
Sbea Stadium became so
shrouded Tuesday night that the
pme - called becauM or t'Of in
tho bottom of !be IICventb inmng,
tn~.Mets a 6-3 vidmy over
"Bvor go swimming?" Mets
-.rt fleldor Kevin McReynolds
ilbd aft« the pme, "Ever clole
'1'M eyea llllderw.-? Thlt's what
it'WIIIitt." .

The game waa atoppe#in the
sixth inning by fo1 for one hour
and 38 miJMde:s with Dwilbt Gooden and !be Meta ahead 4-2. Sbortly
after play retmned, so did the fog,
and !be game- called at 12:19

a.m.n-:::!!~~beat

,,

b~~RJDaa

LOSES BALL - Pltflllurab secoad

Jose Llad (left)

::IoRI tbe HJI Ia 111 attempt to tq tbe RedJ' Herm Wlu1D11bam

• ;:dartlla tlda lltell llttempt Ia tbe seveatll laaillg of TI!ISday algllt's

game Ia Ri•ertront Stadium, which the Reds won 4-3. The baD,
' tbrOWD b;J_ tatc:her Doil SlaUJIIt, ant away from Lind and ,..at into
center field, llllowlag Winllillgbam to advance to third. (AP)

, _~fRed Sox edge Twins, take AL East lead
••
:~

(2-1) ended Minnesota's five-game in two days and the Marine.rs
aM Mark Salas singled to right.
scored lbree unearneclnms.
·
•• The Boston Red Sox found winning stteak.
But Danny Tartablill misplayed the
Erik
Hanson
(2-1)
gave
up
six
• jiower from a unexpected source,
Raogers 8, Blue Jays 5
!&gt;all as both runners scored to give
the Tigers a 9-6lead,
and it boosted them inro firSt JQce
Ruben Sierra hit two homers, bits, wallced four and hit a batter in
five
and
one-third
innings.
Russ
in the American ~ue EasL
. including a three-run sevet~th­
Detroit added four.more runs in
Swan pitched the fin~ three and the ninth.
. "I never tty 10 hll the ball like innmg shot 10 break a 4-4 tie.
that," Carlos Quintana said after
Brian McRae, who had an
Sierra, wbo had a two-run two-third innings ro get his second
his three-run homer led the Red homer in the first, drove in five save. Jeff Ballard (2-2) waa the inside-the·parlc homer iii the founb,
Sox 10 a 7-5 victay over the Min, runs 10 tie a Cll'eer bigb. With two loser.
hit a sacrifice fly ro cap a tJveo.run
Brewen 8, White Sox 2
nesota Twins Tuesday niaht
out in the -m, Sieml ripped a
rally that tied it 6-6 for the Royals
Dante Bichette and Franklin in the seventh.
The home IUD, a two-ou1, tllree- 2-1 pitch off Blue Jays' 'reliever
run shot in the eighth inning, waa Jim Acker (0-1) into the ript flcld Stubbs .homered and Jim ·Gantner ·
The victory went to AI Leiter
had four hits as Milwaukee beat (1-1), who got one OUL
the fl!!t since laSt July 30 and only SWills at ArlingiDIJ Stadium.
tlic cigllth in 654 career at-b8L1 for
Siena's fourth homer of the sea- Chicago. Billy Spiers added three
Angels 6, lndiaas 5
Quilana.
.
son made a winner of reliever Rich · hits 10 the 13-hit Milwaukee Bllaek
(11 innings)
in suppon of Chris Bosio (3-2).
· Quintana's rare homer was time- Gossage (2..0).
Junior Felix keyed a two-run
Bosio was in li'OIIble in each or 11th inning with his firSt home run
li for the Red Sox, who toot over
Athletics 7, Yankees 3
the
firSt four innings and gave up a of the season and Jack Howell
t"rrs1 place in the AL East from
Jose Canseco hit a two-run
sacrifice
Oy 10 Mau Merullo in the . capped the rally with run-scoring
Toronro by a balf-garne following homer and Mark McGuire a twothird.
Bosio
lasted five innings, single.
~e Blue Jays' 8-S loss 10 Texas.
!1111 double. .
'
giving
up
five
hits.
..
Oikland'$ Rickey Henderson ,
·: ln other AL gamea, it was OakThe victory wen·t to reliever
Alex
Femlllidez
(2-2)
was.
the Bryan Harvey (1-0), WhO surren, land 7, New York 3; Seattle 6. Bal- failed ro s'teal a base and remained
tiinOte 3; Milwaukee 8,
2; tied with Lou Brock for the career loser.
dered an unearned run in the top of
Tilen 13, Royals 7
• Detroit 13, Kansas City 7, and Cal- stolen base record. Playing in his .
the lith when he balked home
Rob Deer hit a ll8lld slam in the Chris James.
• ifornia 6, Cleveland S in 11 first game since ~~.Brock's
ci 938Hender- fourth and Lou Whitaker a tieIndians ace relit:V~ Doug Jones
· ~ two on and two 0111 iD ~, rec:Gid
son went J.for-4 with a single breaking solo sb,ot in the eighth.
(0-2) blew a chance for his sixth
Whitaker hit a hI pitch ftom save after giving up a one-out
eighth inning in the Metrodome bef&amp;n Willie Willon laced him
.
....
~·
.
!ep
reliever
Jeff Montgomery (1-1) for homer to Felix. He then surren• ~ Boston losing by a run, Red m ""'
lllllllll·
his
fourth
home run. Then, with dered. consecutive sinjlles to Dick
Spl manager Joe Morpn almost
Bob elch (3-1) sealed .down
one
out,
Mickey.
Tettlefon doubled. Schofield, Luis.Polonia and Howuiod Slllvo L)'CliiS ro pin1;~-bi&amp; for after a abaky aiaJt to bold New
Quintana. But Morpn dcaded by York 10 five bits and two runs in ~r reached on an· infJCid sin,11le eO, who was balling for Luis Soja.
I
eight innings 10 gain the vicrocy.
ilituition to go with Quintana.
• Marlaers '· Orioles 3
...: The blast off Steve Bedrosian
Dave Valle hit his second homer
By Tile Aslodated Prets

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NA'IIONALLIAGII&amp;

... . .,, ....... "13
3&lt;. !.AWl
..........13
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.......ll

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I
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.....- ..10 II
......... 12
.........7 13

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Meigs
161 102 0-11 10 0
Nelsonville 102 000 0 - 3 7 6
JEREMY PHALIN (WP),
MIKE VANCE (S) and JOHN
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I Area diamond notes...

PICKENS
HARDWARE

Meigs·pounds Bucks
11-3 for ninth win

as the couple ·prepared to leave
Riverfront StadbiQI.
• CINCINNATI, - The grade- · · l''l'bey're ,totalty unsuspecting,
' school teicher injured by Rob Dib- and out comes a ball after the game
: ble's latest outburst. is in ·a fo~v- · is over," Moore said. "They're not
: ing mood, but there was no ~ca- haJ!P¥ with that. but it~·''
• lion Tuesday whether the Nallonal · R1chard Porter complamed
; teague would be so accommoclat- Monday that Dibble haCin't even
; .ing.
tried ro apologize for hurting his
: : The Cincinnati Reds reliever
• could be punished br NL president
: Bill White for hurhng a baseball
: 'into the stands after a poor outing
: Sunday in a 4-3 victory over the
'
: Chicago Cubs.
·
Wellston's Rockers, ranked lOth second seed was the 10-S Vinron
·, The ball hit fli'St-grade teacher in last week's Division II state County Vikingsc
: Meg Porter on the elbow. The rankings, was selected the top
The tournament will get under: injug baa forced Poner, 27, to get seed,and Gallia Academy was way on Tuesday, May 7th with
medtcal treatment and miss two selected the second seed in the Nelsonville-York (I-ll) hosting
•• days
of work.
Division ll sectional baseball tout- New Lexington (6-7). Also on tap
: · Her laywer said Tuesday that nament drawings held Sunday .
will be Alexander (3-14) at Vinton
; Porter and her husband, Richard,
County,
and Meigs 00-6) at Belpre
·The first game will put Waverly
:· expect compensation for, the medi- .at8·10 at Jackson with a 7-9 record (S-14). ·
1 cal bills ·and the missed work. But
The upper-bracket finals will
on Wednesday afternoon May 8th
: they don't hold a grudge.
at 4:30, the winner of that game put the winner of the Nelsonville~
"She baa a medical bill and a will play at Wellston against the York·New Lexington game at
' couple of days off work," lawyer Golden Rockets on Tuesday May Sheridan against the top seed on
• Don Moore said. "I don't think 14. with the winner advancing to Thursday, May 9th. The winner of
: they have any great animosity district play,
that game will advance ro district
! towards Rob Dibble. I don't think
The bottom bracket finals will
In the ~ bracket. the Meigs
they're that type of people. They're Marauders (9-7) ~lay at Gal- also be on May 9th, the winner of
, nice people that just went to a ball- lipolis (10-6) 011
y ,May 14, the Meigs-Belpre contelt wiD travgame.
with the winner of that game el to either Alexander or Vinron
' . "Maybe the most important advancing ro district play.
County to play the winner of that
. thing is,tt's not a huge matter. Mrs.
In Division IV, Southwestern game. The winner will also
· Porter is upset and ·hurt, but her will play at Ironton S~ Joe on Frj- advance 10 district play.
' inj'!r. is relatively minor."
.
Sleradzklmlkel A team
day, May 10 at noon, and Hannan ·
Dtbble will have to wait 10 see Trace will play Green Local at
Former Rio Grande pitcher AI
: whether the Reds and White con- Franklin Furnace on May 10 at Sieradzki was picked earlier this
' sider it a minor matter.
week by the Montreal Expos' Class
noon.
• NL s~woman Katy Feeney
Marauders to play at Belpre · A farm team in Jamesrown, N.Y.,
• said Wh1te was out of town Monin softball, the rop seed was the which headed to Florida ror
: day and hadn't had a chance to 16-2 Sheridan Generals, while the extended spring training.
• review the incident A player could
' be fmed or suspended for 1njuring a
fan by purposely throwing inro the
stands. •
: Reds spokesman Jon Braude
$aid Tuestlay that the ttam was trying to get more information about
ihe incident.
"We don't plan to take any
action (at this time) because we're
llill looking into the matter,"
Braude said.
c It was the second time this sea.,n that Dibble's temper got him in
1f01!ble.
• On April II , Dibble threw
behind Houston's Eric Ye]ding
after pitcher Curt Schilling sinped
home a run. That touche!~ off a
tirawlllld broUght Dibble a three·
day suspension and $1,000 fine
troin White.
. .
Dibble has appealed the puniShment and continues 10 pitch pend·
ing a hearing with White on June
17 in New YOrk.
SIGNUP 10 WIN A FREI PA. OF JEANS
• His fling SundaY came momentS ·
' afler· ho compiCIIId his wont perDRAWINGS DAILY
. formance of Ute IICIIOII, givilll up
five hill and two runt in tho last

CIUWI\.1111\1 JUU iOIH.i JUUI lltl'\ji!Wili WlllllllllflOI)',.S81ety-

.421 41/2

He also has a choice betweel)
professional footbaU and baseball.
Last season, Frey, 23, resumed a
bsseball career that had been dormant since his senior year in high
school in 1986.
·
"When I came out of high
school," Frey said, "I had several
offers to play college baseball,

By JOE KAY 1
A.P Sports Writer

:
:

Reds could see why.
"I didn't see nothing (impresCoatlaued on page ·5

are

By Dave Harris
The MeigS MaraudeiS scored six
runs in the second inning as the .
Marauders rolled to a 11-3 vicrory
over the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes in Tri-Valley Conference
bssebaU action Monday afternoon
at Nelsonville.
The win gave the MaraudetS a
9-4 record in the conference, one
half a game behind TVC co-leaders
Belpre and Vinron County. Belpre
knocked WeUston out of the three ttam first place log jam on Mondsy
afternoon with a 3-0 win over the
place in the Big Ten in baseb~l. Goldetl'Rockets.
Jason Wright pounded out three
chose football.
The graduate of Cincinnati St. hits in the conteSt including a douXavier Higb School became the ble, Terry McGuire had a single
only pasiiCr in Buckeye history to and a double and Randy Corsi
throw for 2,000 or more yards three added two singles. Mitchell had
straight seasons. Still, Frey was not lbree singles for the Buckeyes.
Jeremy Pbalin picked up the win
selected in the 12-round NFL drafL
"Before the draft. a few tcains for the Marauders, Mike Vance
contacted me," said Frey. "But went the fUlal two innings, Danny
none made coqcrete offers, I hope Dailey was the starter and loser for
to get in touch with some teams the Buckeyes with relief help from
soon to talk about a possible free- Jeff Wanx. No other statistics
were available on the game.
agent contract."
·
The Marauders will play WellFrey went ro the .NFL scouting
ston
Wednesday afternoon at
combine trials in Indianapolis.
Meigs Hi&amp;h School with the first
pitch at 4:30, The Golden Rockets
were tied with Marlington, lOth in
the state in Division II in last
week's state rankings. Meiss will
,,
·host Vinton County in acuon on
wife. ·
afternoon.
On Tuesday, Moore said that ThWiday
·
In
Sundayls
Kevin TayMrs. Porter had received a ball lor was credited PB,P.Cr.
wtth the win. in last
frOm Dibble's wife, Joanne. Monte Fridsy afternoon 's game with Vinsaid that Dibble later called the ton County. Taylor went the first
couple and left a message on their three Innings, but Jeremy Pbalin
answering machine.
, should have been credited with the
Dibble has refused 10 discuSs his
outbUrst
'·

a

,'
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) : Greg Frey is left with the ultimate
' option play.
,
Frey, the staning quanerback
: for Ohio State the last three seasons, has several career options
• ahead of him.
·
:
He ~ the recipient of a National
Football Foundation and Hall of
Fame post~ graduate scholarship
wonh $10,000 OYer •tWO years. An
English major with a history minor,
he"can choose between law school
and ~wiie school.
• I haven't applied to law
school, yet," Frey said, "but I
·
• haveayear."

l'rustratlon after lllttilla a pop

(A.P)

By JIM LITKE
of Kin s, dii$ Derby il iL
.
AP Sports Writer
•
s so much blllyhoo tied itlro the Derby
There are~ that you want the Kentucky Derby now that you'111 cer1lin ro get a good SIDry, no 11111111r
to be more~ just a grand hone race. And thla; ~WIIo-wtas.'"Bar-we'U 111'10 to Wilt umil SIIUI'day ro
undoubtlldly, ~one of them.
see if it'u great one, a Je'ling one.
The way things have ~n happening in the racing
"And personally," added Wbillingham, who is
bUSIIIeSS of late, eiiCOUIIIIIlllg news is harder ro come siain$ thiS Derby out, "for all the good hones that
by than a so!vent savings and loan. Bad things have are still around, l'm DOl lUre there's a hero anywhere
beert happerupg 10 good people and good hones with in the buncb. On the other hand, let's hope I'm
such regularity ~ IIOI!ble Visits the track.more ftc. wrong."
queo~y ~ a rearee With a pension check burning a · Modesty prevents Whittingham from going on
hole m·his pocket
·
about his own contributions 10 the 'legacy of memo"It's been a beUuva stretch, h8sn't it?" 78-;tear- rable thoroughbred
but so li:esh
the
old Charlie Whittingham, the pre-eminent aainer of images that even a
fan of racin1 could recall
this time and perhaps any other, said Tuesday over the last two.
·
.
the telephone from liis California office.
In 1989, i t - the smallilh, dark bay colt Sunday
"We were just talking the other day, and nobody Silence and his furious duels with Euy Ooer down
could remember any other time when so many hones the sllilch of the Deroy and thO ~ ec.hoing
got burt so close 10 the Derby.
the great Afllrmed-~dar rivalry and holding out the
''Then you go bact to wh&amp;J happened ro the filly promise of the first Triple Crown since 1978.
(Go for Wand) that had to be destroyed after the
In 1986, it was an improbable 17·1 shot named
Breeder's Cup last fall ... the accident with Bill Ferdinand, fmishing first for a supposedly over-the(Shoemaker) and Lsz Barrera's death," he contin- hill jockey, Shoemaker, age 54 at the time, and his
utid, "and this looks like it might tuin out 10 be a geezer of a trainer just a few weeks after IPJOther
busy Season for the crepe-hangers."
golden oldie, then 46-year-old 1ack Nicklaus, blitzed
But thoroughbred racing's problems go well theyoungstenatTheMaslers.
beyond a handful 'of pnfortunate ..individuals. At
For sheer Impact, thoush, those two and countless
· tracks across the land, ~ce is slipping, betting other memorable champions have to slip into a
is down, drug abuse rumors are on the nse and FOR parade behind Secretariat.
.
SALE signs hang from the fences of some of the
· The kind of malaiK that now afnicts the horsenation's most prestigious horse farms. Indeed, in a racing industry had seeped inro much of $e nation's
recent. wide-ranging assessment of the state of the daily life in the aftermath of Watergate in 1973 when
industry, Sports Illustrated was moved to pose the the strapping chestnut colt came 10 Churchill Downs
question: "Can racing survive?"
as a made-to-order hero.
If ever the thoroughbred game was in need of a
The race is so wide open right now, just hope that
brilliant performance to disperse such shadows and the winner's name isn't necessarily a harbinger of
such questions, for lime at least, to rekindle the things to come. One of the probable starters, after aU,
public's imagination and restore the romance of what goes by the moniker Subordinated Debt
was once referred to- without irony- as the Sport

g=rions,

Myers. Dibble siruck out 10 Piratee
in five innings during the Nt
champio~ship series, won by tlic:
Reds m stx games.
:;
!\ crowd of 46,502 gave Dibble·
a playoff feeling apin Tuesday, ·
"The adrenalin I get here is liD
no other place .I pitch," he sailt
" Tonight, it just gave me goose

'While Drabek s!ruggled to
throw strikes, Dibble wu perfect in
~:·
the face ol his latest problems.
Dibble got a m1xed greeting
· Duncan' s first homer put the
Rednhead 4-3 in the sixth. Reds when he relieved with two out in
the eighth. It wu his fust aw-- bum
•
111r1er Tom Browninl (3-1) proleeled ilie leld illlo the eigbth. and anee since be·tbrew a bllllaro the
·~think two frrst-pl.;e club; .
Rob Dibble struCk out the last four Sllllds at Riverfront Stadium ~ a going at it is grest this early in the:
game SI!Oday, injuring a teacher.
batten for his fifth save.
He struck out pinch-hitter Gary season. It shows we're not two·
After beating Drabek with the
frauds out there. Neither ttam is 1
homer, .Duncan offered a possible Varsho to close the eighth, then fluke. "
elplanatioil for the risbt-hander's fanned the side in the rtinth.
The
Pirates
had
won
eight
of
"I bad a day off (Monday), a their las! riine games 10 take over
troubles.
day
ro think things through," ·Dib"Right after being the Cy
place in the NL East coming
ble
said.
"I went Ou! tonight and let . ftrst
Young~. the next year people
into
Riverfront. The Reds now ·
expect too much," Duncan said. it go.
have
four or their last five ro
"I never go for strikeouts. I just · securewon
"SOmetimes you put a lot of p-esfirst place in the NL West ·
sure on yourself."
. pound the strike zone, tty to throw
Dibble sees the Reds' emerging
In Drabek's case, it's press1111110 as hard aa I can, and whatever hap- from their hitting slump thai
pens, happens ...
beperfect.
·
dropped them out of the division
It was. reminiscent of the play- .lead earlier in the month.
· "I've just gotiO try 10 concentrate on throwing strikes and 1101 tty offs, whelf Dibble dominated the
to make perfect pitches," Drabek Pirates and became the co-MVP
with fellow "Nasty Boy" ~andy
said.
SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA

:Frey
has
several
career
options
..

Reds post 4-3 victory

NO STEALS'- Oakland IIIIR tblef Rickey HeDc1er.- ltlllds In
ny out In the seventh Inning of Tuesday nlaht'a home p111e aplnst New York, who fell 7·3. In spite of
10ln1 I tor 4, Headel'IOII didn't steal any bases and remains tied
with Lou Brock for the aU-time career stolen biiBt record of 938. ·

1/2
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......... 13 7 .650
.......... 11 6 .647
1/2
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
To-il

\

Delino DeShielcla' leadoff
homer bt the bottom of !be lllnth ·
ianlag broke. up al!itcbill&amp; duel. :
betweell Dear• Mlninez IJid Mike . •
McrpJI in t.kutieal
:
Morgan (2·2) IIIII a Ole-hitter;
unlll DeShields llil ills lint home·
run of th8ICIIOR OD dlo flnt piiCh.
~nez (3-2) piu:bed a fourhitlllr. He eecipld ldl blgolt jam
by fietlinjl&gt;tutyl Strawberry on a.
grounder to end tile eiahtli with '
I'IIJIIICII on finll!lldlhinL
Niles 11, Giull 9 '
·John Xruk homered and tied.
Mike Scbmidt's team record with
20 RBII in AIJril,
:
The Pllilfies were losina 9-3
when Dale Murphy and Ricky Jor- ·
dan hit CODIOCUtive home runs in
the fifth inning off Bud Black.
Kruk hit a lhree-nm bomer and
Charlie Hayes' twD-1WI homer off
Jell' Brantley (QLI) capped nix-nm
rally in the sixth.
Matt Williams and Dave Ander·
son hit two~rnn homers in the
fourth for San Fnncisco. Joe Boever (1·1) was the winner and MilCh '

..
I.AII--3-I)IIMM. .
II (llobloola'll-3), ,,~p.m.
SaD Pw dooo (LaC011 1-1) at
(lloloN ().I), 7:35 , ..:
t (Hural-0) 11. New Ycnk
(Viola 3-4), :&lt;()p.m.

•

&lt;
I

. Etr.-1, IJGd....

Card:f

By JOE KAY.
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI -Doug Drabek
is trying 10 pitch like a Cy Young
Award winner, !lnd lookiqg less
like one every start.
. ,
Drabek gave up solo homen ro
Hal Morris and Mariano Duncan as
the Cincinnati Reds beat the Pinsburgh Pirates 4-3 Tuesday night in
a rematch of the Nllional League
playoff teams. I.t waa Drabek's
founb loas in live starts.
"I didn't get off ro a good start,
and I'm just trying 100 bald 10 get
that fir&amp;t aood ~ame in where
everything works. said Drabelt: (I·
4). "I rold myiiCif at the bcBinning
of the season that I was not going
10 do that Maybe in the back of my
mind I'm doing it without knowing
iL u
Drabek wlis 22-6 last year when
he won the Cy Young. The righthander didn't get his fourth loss
Ulltil June 28, in his ISth starL He
gave up just four earned runs in his
two starts last year against the
Reds, extending his mastery: he
hadn'tlost to Cincinnati since Aug.
22, 1988.
.
'
That ended Tue,day, and the

1i:ve) ronigbt," Duncan &amp;aid. "I
didn't see hi111 like he wu last

•Tfere•

and two-tbird iwtinp.

Pitllburgh 4-3, MQIIJreal edged Los
ADgelcl 1.0, PbiladelDhia atopped
San Francisco 11-9, Chicago
clubbed Houston 10-3 and St.
LouiJ dl!f.- Atlanta S-3.
Only oace befole had a game at
Shea Stadium been stopped William~~o.a:::;
becMIIIC of fog.
25, 1979,
Hector Villenueva homered, .
the Meta and Pi
lied
at 3·3 in the lith when the mist doubled, singled and drove in a ·
became roo much and the game career-high four nms.
declared a ·tie and replayed a
diJ~~en~v~':;:,.o~t:
month later. .
This lime, Gooden hit an RBI first home run of the season, a
slope and 119warcl Johnlon home- lhreHun shOt in the third off Mark
red tmy off D=k Lilliquist (0-1). Ponugal (2~ 1).
Gary Scott hit his first major
Gooden (3-1) gave up a hotne rwt
leque
home run in the ei&amp;llth for
to Benito Santiago in the fifth
inning and left after the sixth, fin- the Cubs. Kai Rhodes hit 'his tint
hom• for Houston.
ished by !be fog.
Mite Bielecki (4-1) pve up six
The Padres acored once in the
seventh off relievers Pete Schounlk hits in six lnnin .
5, Bra•• 3
and Alejando Pena, who aot his
Pinch
bitter
Milt
Thompson •s
first save.
two-run
single
broke.
a seventh·
Reds 4, Pirates 3
inning
lie.
Hal Morris and Mariano Duncan.
Thompson's two-out single .
homered off slumping Cy Young
came against Clmlie Leibrandt (2winner Doug Dnlbell:.
Tom Browning (3-1) gave up 2) with' runners on second and
. four hits, including home runs by lhild• .
Andy Van Slyke and Jose Lind, in · Jose DeLeOn failed 10 win for
seven and two-third innings. Rob the 21st lime in 23 starts. Reliever
Dibble struck out aU four batters ·he Cris Caupenrer (2-1) SOt the Vicrory
faced for his fifth save.
'
and Lee Smith pitched the ninth for
Drabek (1-4) gave up four IUDS his eighth save 10 eigbt tries.
on eiaht hili and two .walks in six

=

Coatlaued rr,n page 4
e
s
...
_
_..._
_
_
_ _ __
Rd

Raci!lg fans b~pe Kentucky Derby
provtdes much-needed good news.

·Mets stop Padres; :
Dodgers lose 1-0 tilt ~

The Dally Sentinel-Page

1

' ~\

I'

:Oa2
:Cuf'.Z.::::~
pme, received tho baseball and

ll'lltulltiona from catcher Joe
tver. M 1111a If C8IM 011 !be
.Dibble t.,aedllld lleaved the
ball iniO the center fteld ltlllds.
' : The bill bit Puta' 011 !be elbow

E

OFF

, An.

~'U [in(! !hat we kw.Y our

alphaba very well . In Pomeroy, call
Millie Mrlldff at 992-2133. In
Rudand, call joon May at 742-2888.

. -..................................
-- ---- --- -- ------·
-·-

~-~

Seam!

•·

STO~EWIDE

--~·-·---~--~

HO

•

Ill"
8
I0IAINI'I

-·--

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.-

-

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------·

~-~

'

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-

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1
--·--

plrt,

a

w;ut .,,,.

~-

0 1991MNC ONl

COR.PORATIO~
i.

'

' I

�May 1,1991

Ohio

Wedneedlly, May 1' 1991 .
: 1'111 ._, Wllflll"forr IPilei noon, Tluldly, W1y 2.

HUNTS

,..

TOMATO
JUICE
46 01.

$TORE HOURS .
Mot~ day ·fbq, Sunday•
8 AM-H) PM

298 SECOND ST.
POM E-_ROV OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE APR. 28 THRU MAY 4, 1991 ..

u. .......

....

Professor. .. _co_•lln_lled-:-trom-page_•- - - - : - - - - - - - - - Hospital news

0 1-

.

·

ZEST A
CRACKERS
Ll. BOX

I

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--:7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~teac:hina and scholarly

•
Ono of the items in the disPlAY provided him material for
an llftic:lo In 1 learned journal.
Appearing liko a small noteboot, It is a wod: on teaching
proverbs to school childten by
Orlando Petcelli, published in
Venice in 1618. Other proverbs
were added in pen by a reader of
the Relit century. A copy of lhe
professor's study is shown in
the exhibition case. ·
As exrlained by Davis,
almost aJ of the early books
· Lattn,
· the language
·
wete m
of
cl!JIUI'e and science in wesrem
Europe .practically up to the

7

be~dfthelastcentury.
In

'lion to the appeirance

of the t~ font, ofren in what
we can Italics today, so popular-

ized in the A1dine editions of die
Classics, the illustrations,
wbetber woodcuts, or steel and
copper engravings. will interest
the observer at the exhibit
The earliest books lacked a
title page, but the pertinent
information about the printer.
date of publication, and the'
5chema for puttin,g together the
signatureS 'I I' fasctcles of leaves
· of paper, we~;e given at the end
·· of the vo1ume. Davis pointed
.out · · ·
He said that when lhe tl' tle

1

~0Ts{:~e~~W~01~~

page became comm.on in the •
•
1500's the S¥ffibol of the printer ·
was shown m the case of celeCindy Lewis. Micldlepon: Charles
bratcd presses, suc1t as that of
Bissell, Long BoltOm; and Wilma
Grwhius in Lyons, France-a
McMillan. Reedsville.
·
griffin, mythological creature,
TUESDAy DISCHARGES ·half-lion and half-eagle.
Keith Musser.
. :
In the exhibit Davis also calls
·.
attention to the symbolic steel
Holzer Medical Center
engraving on the title pa~e of
Discharges April 30 · Donald Carthe Roman ·satirists from the
man, Maggie Hershman, Elizabeth
DuiCh press of the 17th Century.
Hunt,MichaelMalone,JeweU ·
The book collection will
Mays, Robert Ratcliff, Mary '
remain in place through May.
Stover.
·
Birtlls April 30 · Mr. and Mrs.
·
Hayward McComas, son, Vinton; ·
The was
No. 3CBS's
top-rated
TV
show
of
the
"Hawaii Ft' ve-O." ·Mr. an d Mrs . w·
. tlliam Ramsey ,
19705
"
son,
fomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark
. for
which
garnered 3 tU average rating Reicben. son, Jackson.
the decade.

,WEATHER MAP • The weather forecast ror 'nllnday 1boWs
•· showers over portions of Maloe. A mixture or precipitation Is
~ HJ~ected over tbe northern Rockies associated wttb a Pow pressure
'" system. Scattered thunderstorms are expected over portions 111 the

Midwest. (AP)

: - - -. - - - W' e a t h e r - - - - -

WHITE

.

Soutb.Cen..-al Ohio
showers and thunderstonns Satur·
;• . Tonight, becoming clear. Low · day and Sunday. Highs in the 60s
• 4~-50. Thursday. mostly sunny. Fnday and in the 70s Saturday and
- Highnear70.
·
Sunday. Lows in lhe 40s Friday
. Friday through Sunday:
and 45-55 Saturday and Sunday.
' · Fair on Friday and a chance of

CLOUD
CHICKEN

Leg Quarters .•••..•.':49(
PORK

.

u

Cubed Steal&lt;.........

$ 'lA 9
6.

COLBY

.Longhorn Cheese .•:. $1 8?
USDA CHOICE BEEF

$ . ·l 9~ Wieners ••••• ~ •.•~ •••• ~~~z••

.. ·

Round .Steak.•••.. ._.L:. . 2
.
USDA CHOICE BEEF

..

. .

1

·

,. Bologn~a ••••••••••••••••
' LB. PIG.

~.

The weathennan is promising a

""rains tetum on lhe weekend.
· ;:- An 'approaching high pressure
;~system should start pushing the
·'clouds out of Ohio tonight, setting
, lhe stage for SIDlny sides Thursday
.
0 and Friday.

COFFEE
34.5 01.
.

.

1008 compliel wKh A;N.S.I. safety SW'dlrds. Available'"
only IJ,I5pecial order In fiOI'ft lolotlhout a compltle Ca~
Center , 2·yor limited Wllmlnly or:' cmgine. trlll'llll'lllM!:. •
Oataik in' st01111. GraK Catcher told l!iJl&amp;r&amp;lely,

•

- .
Slar lfiD&amp;el to meet

·Star Grange and Star Junior
;. Grange will meet in regular session
..,on Saturday at 8 p.m. at the grange
~ haJIIQCBtcd ort County Road I near
· Salem Center. Star Grange will
:..have inspection. Potluck refresh.;· men is. will follow the meeting.
.,Bunny Kubl will ptesent the pro• gram on deaf activities. AU mem- bers urged to attend.

.,
t•

~

•

Stocks
ASSOUED .

Am Ele Ppwer ..................29 3/4
Ashland Oil ......................33 3/8
AT&amp;T ............... :...............37 5/8
:Bob: EV811S ...... .................. 18
&lt;llanning Shop ................ .l7
Oty Holiling ..................... 14
Fedem1 Mogu1 .................. 16 3/4
Goodyeat T&amp;:R .................21 I~
Key CeniUrion ......;........... 12 518
Lands' End .......................21 718
limited Inc.......................27 5/8
Multimedia Inc.................27 1/4
Rix Reslaurant ............. ....1
Robbins&amp;:Myers ...............27' I~
Shlllley's lnc.....................16 7/8
Star Banlc ..:.......................20 3/4
Wendy Int'l............... :...... 10 1/4
Wonhin119D Ind ...............25 1/4
Sllld: npol'll an IIIII 0:30 a.11:
f811US pro1itUII by B/11111, El/IJ
111141Mwt of Gfllllpol/s.

~

CHOPS
10 LB.

Le.ttuce ~.~ ••·••••••.•••. 2/$1 $1690
F~ORITE •
. . . . $·
'AMERICAN
2 Yo Milk •••••••••••• :~L. .15-9 ·CHE·ESE
10

ROYAL SCOTT

·

Margarine ••..•..••:. 3/ SJ
.
I

•

'

KEMPS

. ·

. ·..
2/$1 ·Ice Cream ••••••••••••• $2 99
Ml.lk •••••••••••••••••••••
.

TALLCANS

•

••

•

'.
••
•

•
•

CARNATION EVAPORATED

•

.

ARMOUR

5 QT. PAll

•

CLOROX BLEACH
GAl.

TIDE DETERGENT ·
79
136 oz~6

DOG FOOD

79&lt;

20ll.

GeM Only At r.will's Sui* Volu

$2

99

GoM Ooly At ,_••, ,.,.. Valu

a.H IWy At ....., S.,. . .

Gtotl .M 21 tin May 4, 1991
1111111 1 r.r C.tomw

Gtoll AprY 21 lllnl May 4, 1991
U.lt 1 Per (Uitl!ft!W I

GeM . . 21 tin .., 4, 1991
u.lt 1 ,., c.t •• .,

II

.
'

•

'
\

•\

VRVET

TOWELS

Rou3/S1

IWy At ....., ,.,.. Valv
,GoM Aprl 21 tin .., 4, 1991
1111111 I l'wr c.t-

~

.." .

.

.

u.

CHICKEN
THIGHS
10 Ll.

$690

Rump~age IDd bake sale
The Dorcas United Melhodist
Church wiD have a rummage and
bake sale on Thursday and Friday
beginning at 9 a.m. each day, not
the Racine United Methodist
Church as is reponed in today 's
Calendar of The Daily Sentinel.

.

. Bag1.68

Hypo~

topaoll for patching. :
potting, seeding or use as a top •
dressing . 40-lb-net:weight bag. :

Alumni aS!!oclatWn to meet
The Meigs High School Alumni
Association will meet Saturday at
Birchfield Funeral Home in Rut·
land at 10:30 a.m.
M meet!JI'.to tie bdci · ..
There will be a 12-step A.A.
meeting on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
. J.T.P.A. office in Pomeroy.
.

-...:~:;...,~b~~2
'•

peat mix. Helps loosen hard soil so
roots can breathe. 40-lb.'
·
,

' Net~t&amp;g

.•

Womo AHve to meet

...'.

The Women Alive motherdaughter banquet will be held
Monday at 6 p.m. at Dale's ResiiU·
rant in Gallipolis with Joyce
Downing as the speaker.
Meigs County R.E.A.C.T. to
meet
The Meif.S County R.E.A.C. T.
No. 3837 wtll meet Friday at 7:30
p.m. at P1easers in Pomeroy. All
members .-e urged ,.a attend to discuss details of lhe Memorial Day
Weekend safety break. .

.

L.twn And Garden ltvmi Avt~l!able OrU-y In U.rgir Kmart Stores Nurwry Stock And 86gged Items"
Alo'lll.tble ~ ~ SiOfVS With Gan:len Cmter
•

9

0RTHO

· Agricultural

forecast
By The Associated Press
On Thursday, high pressure will
prevail and skies should tum most·
ly ~unny. It wiD. be cooler though

and evaporative losses could be
lessened. Highs will reach into the
60s Thursday. Lows tonight should
range between 45 and 50.
The outlook for spraying is limited due to expected moderate
winds tomorrow. Winds could ease
to less than I 0 mph late Thursday
and early Friday which will likely
be the only spraying opportunity
this week.

,•

8.88Pkg. 2 for$7

Industrial-grade
lawn edging. Black,
4" x 20' stakes. Save!

Ortho Dlulnon
lnSI ctidda for soil and
turf. 10-lb.·net-wt. pkg

68¢

Ea.

42" wire tomato
cage features 3-ring,
9-qauge design. Buy!

2 for$1

Patio blocka to accent
walkways, flower beds,
· more. 2x8x16".

42·J

19.88

Black&amp;~ .·
ablug trimmer. 9~

swath, bump feed . ·:
82209

•

"*

FOR SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOLS '

A ''Yes" Vote Will Help
SAVE Our District
. • CUTS SOUTHERN HAS MADE TO KEEP
. OUR DISTRICf SOLVENT

EBmliatloD of One TeacbtDI Potltlon ............ 136,101.00
·. (Salary, BeneftC., Be&amp;lrement) ..
EBmlnatloo of ln~trumental Music .................. 3'7,800.00
EUmlnatloD of AD Extra-Carrlcalar
. AcUvFtles (Keep Yearbook Oaly) ................. 47,4ZII.OO
Cbanp Kindergarten to AD-Day Every otber
Day, Plus Savlnra on Bus Wear ..................... 3,510.01
Replace z Retirees w/llt Year Teachers ......... 18,181••
·
ESTIMATED CUTS ..... 1141,• •00
•• 4 MIDs (155,898,000 Aaaeaied
'
:
Otl&amp;rtct Value) .............................. .,............:1223,••00
Additional SaVlnp On New bus Replacement
With Lellll U11e and No ~ra.Currlcular
Trips ..........................................................III,MO.IO

&lt;

1·59 $1390

SUNSHINE

Teewnseh engine . 20" side
discharge mower deck. weather- ·•
resislailt handle. 7" tires and more:

. VOTE "YES" ·MAY 7

PORK
SHOULDER
BLADE
STEAK
10

Treet Lunch Meat.'::!· 99 (

u.

$1690

$96

Hymn siq set
·
•• There will be a hymn sing at the
;:Mt. Olive Communi\Y Church in
:::Long Bottom on Monday at 7:30
"'p.m. Pastor Lawrence BUSh invites
·~ lhe public.
·

..., ".

.

PORK

ten the atmosphere which is ne&lt;essafJI
if you want the plants to thrive .

· It will also be a little cooler,
wilh highs both days in the 60s.
. The record high tempezature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 88 degrees in 1942.
The record low was 30 in 1978.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:32 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:26
p.m.

Push mower with 3.5-HP

, GI'8JIIe to meet
The Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet Friday at 7:30
• p.m. at lhe Rock Springs Grange
• Hall. All baking contests will be
"'judaed (subordinate. youlh, young
adults/young marrieds, and junior).
'.Hanisonville Gtanae will host.

$1 69.

eating. Keep a pan of water close to
the radiator in a room where house
plants are growing. It will help to mois· :

::Meigs
announcements
'
'
;

S134f0

$ .,l9

By The Associated Press

!: couple of 'beautiful days before the

MAXWELL HOUSE '
MASTER BLEND

Plants are just like people. If the air is
too dfJI . their leaves (skin) &lt;I'll up. crack
and peel, preventing breathing and

'

~

)'

• •

. BRATWURST &amp;
. .
. LB
ITALIAN SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••;. ~ECKRICH

99C

BEEF··
10 u .

,

'

f More promising'weather
;••. in store for Ohio residents

4 ROLLPKG.

GROUND

$·269

'

..

.

EYE OF ROUND OR
.u
BOTTOM ROUND STEAK ••••••••••••;.
ECKRICH FRESH

TOILET TISSUE

$3~9.

KENTUCKY BORDE.R

·

••

,..

DESPITE CUTS •••••••
''

.

97c

• ....

~~--,.---

0. lo• 172 21457

~ ·

Flowering Dogwoocl
treea. cultivated in 3-

qallon containers. Buy!
Mat~ ..,.:Wnms thown..

1.97~~ce
F..ong-handled tools.
Rake, cultivator, hoe or
showl. Savtl'l!ls!

GUi-301RoMI OI..H-13 ~
GUH41Hoo/ GUi·21 -

Avadable At Your Local Kmart Garden Center

••llln Ill. llaclllt Olllo

-· _..........

M.ol\ft spKII1WlS lhcMn

22.97,

$4

.

:

Cedar Fawn edglnj
comes complete witli 3
stakes. 6" x 10' size.'

.O n Sale Wed., May 1 Thru Sat.• May 4

hiii!GI' ., Scott W.lf•.

~-

Ea.

Follaga plane..
Several fresh , healthy
varieties in 10" pots .

M..cur. .p~C~nwns tt,awn

THE LEVY MUST PASS!

•

8.97

Ea.
Annuala. Your choice
of colorful varieties in
3" to 4 ';; • containers.

.

... ... -·~

-

•

.f

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

BIG BEND ... Your Locally Owned
Low-Priced

ByThe

SUPERMARKET

MANUFACTURER'S

DOUBLE
COUPONS
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
33 YEARS IN THE

TRI-STATE!!

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

PIIONE - - , . . . - - - - - - ' - - - - -

•

MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER BLEND
Kahn's

$

Bologna La.

34.5
CAN

33

Long Bottom group meets

FamilYMedicine

The April meeting of the Long
Bottom Community Association
opened with the Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the flag in unison.
M M p 1c
h
ae I; ee gave t e secretazy's repon and Alta Ballard the ·

oz.$

33

limit 1 with coupon 8t
Additional
Purchaee. Good thru Saturday. May 4.

Hanstine
birthday

CLEAN UP

REGULAR
I, PRICE

WITH·SAVINGS AT
FOOD LAND

iXi

r- A nncT
~u-.:;

1

a.EANING

$1'per1dlv99
.,

,

Freshen.your carpets Cl
y
ean our
for Springtime with Carpets
t h e - - - · for Less

~I

ISSOO CASH REFUND I

,..-~---.,I

I. Tl\ll completed oHiclal requost lo&lt;m mull

JI
II

I accompany your proof of 1)\jrChase.
I
I Moll,., Carpet ~glc $5.00 Cash Retund,
I
I
P.O Bo~ 14071. Baltimore. MD 21263
I
1 YourNome
1
......-:""'
Than
I Addreu
I
1
'S IBIM" MACHINE 3(~Per Sq. II City
State
Zip
· I
I
Pro
. fessional
F-t 1 Doesvourhousohold -"""'-onr,,n ... u.s.• . lhllre- 1
results at a do-lt- ~----"'=---~, have
v.. No
=::~.;.=~~= 1
I Children: 0 0 · - wtll be-.'""'-- I
yourself prlqel
'
Dogs, 0 0
:::!:"-=~~""':.o:"".: 1
1
.,., ..... -allowl&gt;t-lor ..
I
Colo: o o
.. -'"""'· Ollorbplroo~ I

·-----------

\'

-----·

Rio Grande students Catherine Grant, Brandon Russell and
Mike Hickman.

New .version of
'Puss 'n Boots'
set at Rio Grande

RANDA.U D. SNIDER JR.

Snider
birth
'

Mr. and Mrs. Randall Dale
Snider, Middleport, are announcing
the birth of a 8011, Rllndall Dale Jr.,
on April S at Holzer Medical Ceotel'.
. .
The infant weighed seven
pounds and three ounces.·
Paternal grandparents are · ~­
jorie Snider and the late Morn~
Dale Snider,l'orneloy.
Maternal grandparents are Gerald and Bllen RouJht, Pomeroy.
The Sniders have a daulhter,
Brandi, and a 8011, JBIOII KnishL

Women's
fellowship meets

Send a·special r:nessage to mom from ou~
full-line of Mother's Day cards.

..

0, ..

.

ALL WOMEN'S COLOGNES &amp; PERFUMES

and hiding Plants,
Blooming and Foiloge
Hanging Baskets, Fruit and
FlOwering TrttS, Shrubs,
A1altas, Rhododtn*ons and
lll!lly Trns.

20°/o OFF

THIOUGH SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1991

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Konntllh McCulaugh. R.PH Ch- Rllllo. R.PII.
.
•..w lloooi... Uh.
. . . thr• Set. lrOO a.n1. te 9100 P""·

Hubbard's Greenhouse

PIIS(IPflONI
I.-

SYRACUSE. OHIO
· 992·5776
Open Dally 9-S; Sun. 1-S

s...., tOtoo ..... •• 4.oo

~··

lrioftjly lonlce

0,. -

PH. "J·Itll
,._.,, 011.

Nltfotr 'til 9

REJOICING LIFE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
MAY
SPECIAL DISCOUNT

Yearly tuition rate is
$600.00 p~r child. Payments
may be made through 10
payments star·ting and
ending May at the rate of
•·$60.00 per month. Or a one ·
lump sum pay•nt receives
a $50.00 discount.

·GILMORE'S ·

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

.

-1991

MOTHER'S DAt SPECIAL

Kindergarten-:School Expenses
Book Fee - $65.00

FEATURED DAILY SPECIALS
Carry Out Avellable

Pomen~y,

.'

Kindergarten Registration
For 1991-1992
School Year
Registration Fee
$1 0.00 per child

WEDNESDAY: Pineapplt Chicktn Cordon Blu
THURSDAY: Sttok Diane
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY: Broiltd Alaskan Pollock
B.B.Q. Ribs, Primt Rib,
D11p Fritd Butterfly Shrimp
PROM GOERS CALL NOW FOR RESERVAnONS
SERVING LUNCH: Tuu. thru Fri.-11 om-3 pm
•SERVING DINNER .
Wtdntsday &amp; Th111doy- 5 pm-1 pm
Friday &amp; Saturday-S pm·9 pm
CLOSED SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

-

'
·'
' '

Complttl Lint of Veget..,lt

iDINNER

~-- .. .,-

\.

JOB WELL DONE.

SPRINO SEASON ·

.

112 East Malt!

THANK MOM FOR A

An original adaptation of the spirit of fun offered by the producchildren's classic "Puss 'n' Boots" uon, which wiU run for an hour.
bas been set for Saturday, May 4 at
In addition to "Puss 'n Boots"
g p.m. and Sunday, May 5 at 2:30 and "Sleepy HoUow.," Spires is the
p.m. in the Christensen Theatre of author of a full-length CQmedythe Fine and Performing Arts Cen- drama "Four Dead, Four Hurt in
ter at the University of Rio Grande. . Two-Vehicle Crash," firsi perIt will be the final presentation formed at Rio Grande in 1990 an&lt;! ·
of the Little Buckeye Theatre revived recendy at Rio Grande and
Series' "1990-91 season and is Athens.
being presented with a local cast
· McLaughlin, who plaxed Fagin
and crew under the direction of in last summer's sellout production
John McLaughlin, Ed.D., adjunct of "Oliver" at Rio Grande, conmember of the Rio Grande arts fac- ceived and directed the first LBTS
ulty. .
·
·
show of the season, "The ~rittersd
The story of a youth,l!is talking Speak." He recently duecte
cat and their adventures together "Hansel and Gretel" for the LBTS
has been woven into a whimsical and " ...And It Was Signed: Love,
· script by Clifton Spires Jr., Well- Richard," which made its Rio
ston, wbo ~ - tbe adltltatjon Granlle dobut in~· ·
of ''The Legend of-Sleepy JfoUow"·"' AdmiltiQa"'
'a Boots" .is .
· that kicked Off tlie LBTS 1n 1986'.
S2.SO per penon
to all R•o
"It's a show children will enjoy , Grande stUdents, faculty and staff. ·
and so will ac!ults," McL:aughlin For more inform~tion, contact the
said. "It's a very clever scnpt filled Fine and Perfonnmg Arts Centel' at
with Jots of funny situations, plus a 245~5353, extension 364. The tolllot of physi&lt;;al comedy in addition . free number in Ohio is 1-800-282to mime work."
.
7201.
McLaughlin said the 26-member cast, consisting of student and
community performers, has
NOW OPEN FOR THE
responded well to the script and the

SPECIALS ..••

.
~--~--·
I·-----------OFFICIAL MANUFACTURER'S REFUND
CERTIFICATE I
II '·Malllho' rental
· -"check
- •In •
- a•· proof
..
rocelpi"
cr1 purchaoe.
.
I· 2. lhe
Mall your O&lt;lglnOI coSh register receipt with
price you paid circled.

CHILDREN'S CLASSIC TO BE STAGED- A new version

· of tbe children's classic '!J'uss 'n Boots" wUI be performed at·
the University of Rio Grande on Saturday, May 4 at8 p.m. and
Sunday, May 5 at l:30 p.m. as part of tbe Little Buckeye Theatre Series. Seen acting out a scene from the plBy are, from left,

the diStinctive U.S. Marine Corps
cap and collar ornament is a combi·
nation of the America~ eagle, the
globe and an_anchor.

REBECCA. D. HANSTINE.

treasurer's report.
·
It was noted that a smorgasbord :
dinner will be lield May 18 begin- ·
ning at S p.m. A meeting will be ·
-held May 17 to plan.the dinner and
have a worlc session at 7 p.m. .. .
A dopble oven stove was purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Harlan .
Ballard for the building.
Down Home Country Jamboree
will be held Saturday from .?-11:30'
p.m. at the building.
· . ·
Hostess for the May meeung
The Middleport First Baptist will be Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Bal-;
Church wiU soon be sponsoring a
.
fundraising drive. Members of the lard.
Attending
were
Melody
Roben, ·
church will be selling community
Phyllis
Larkins,
Dorsel
Larkins,
cookbooks which will feature
favoriie recipes from contributors Mae McPeek, Ada and Kenny Bis"'
of Middlepon and the surrounding sell, Judy Holter, Danny Lawrence
and Delores Hawk.
area.
' · The price of the cookbooks will
The state of Minnesota. derived its
be $5 each·and orders may be
· placed at the church or by conllicl- name from the Dakota Sioux word
mg _Peggy Lewis, Sixth and Palmer meaning "cloudy water" or "sky-tint,
ed water" of the Minnesota River.
Streets, Middlepon.

·_ Cookbooks
go on sale

The Meigs County Womens ·
Fellowship met recently at the
Dexter Church of Chrisl
Lynn Runyon gave devotions
and Kathryn Johnson conducted the
meeting.
.
A clean-up day will be held Sat- ..
urday at the Ohio Valley Christian
Campgrounds on Rock Springs
Road.
The next meeting will be held at
the Bradford Church of Christ on
May 23. Ann Lambert and Linda
Bates will be demonstrating how to
make fabric fans.
.
The closing song was led by
Jane Hazleton.

·.

· • Rebecca DeAnn Hanstine celebrated her first birthday recently at ·
the home of her parents, Thomas
and Valerie Hansune.
A "Minnie Mouse" theme w;as
carried out through the party. Cake
and refreshments were served to
her brother, Cunis Hanstine, great
grandmother, Rev. Florence Smith,
maternal grandparents, Jerry and
Dorothy Johnson, Carl, Della, Carl
Michael and Catie Wolfe, Jerry
Johnson, Debbie Russell and
Amanda Theiss, Debbie and Emily
Babbitt, Sieve, Jill and Cass Lavalley Dawn, Stephanie and Aubrie
KoPec. Rachel, Whitney and E:mily
Ashley.
Sending gifts were paternal
grand~arents, Harry aod Chris
Hanstme, Karen Thomas, Joe
Napolitan, Michelle Johnson, J~n­
nifer Johnson and Gary and T1on
Pichler.

26·60
CT.

Page-9

_.Ohio University ·
College of Osteopathic Medicine

POISON IVY - ONE OF The area which has the greatest
SPRINGTIME'S MOST COM· exposure to the urushiol will usuaiMON ALLERGIES
ly break out first with a rash and
Question: I'm very allergic to blisters. Areas which have thick·
· poison ivy, but my friend never sltin or less urushiol on them will
gets it - even when he grabs the then break out a day or two later
plant ·in his bare hands. Whitt caus- giving the imPJ:CSsion that tile poies. me to break out when he son ivy was spread from the fi!'St
doesn't?
group of blisters. .
.·
Answer: Poison ivy and its · Question: What can I do to pre' ·
close relatives, poison oak. and poi- vent getting poison ivy?
son sumac, have the potential to
Answer: Avoiding the offendcause itchy blisters in about 85 per- ing plants is the only sure way. If,
cent of those who are exposed it. however, you suspect that you have
Your friend is obviously one of the been in contact with poison ivy or
lucky 15 percent who aren't affect- its cousins, pOison oak or poison
ed by these plants.
sumac, the first thing to do is to
The rash that the plants cause is thoroughly wash the expoSed areas.
known medically as allergic con· If more than 20, minutes have
tact dermatitis, but _most £e'?ple lapsed since the exP?sure, washing
simr,Iy call the cond1Uon 'poiSon may. not keep the mitial rash f'J'om
ivy. '
.
developing, but it can prevent you
What causes the rash is not the .. from spreading it further. .
.
plant itself, but the chemical urushIt's also best to wash w•th soap
iol that is found within the plant's because the chemical that causes
leaves, stems and roots. The plant the rash is sticky and may not come
has to be broken for this chemical off with water alone. If your cloth- ·
to be released, so·brushing up ing has come in contact ·with th·e
against a healthy poison ivy plant sticky sap, it should also be washed
will not cause the blisters. Unfortu- prompdy. Handle the clothes carenately in many cases it's hard to fully, preferably with gloves; to
tell whether or not the plant has . prevent any more skin contaCt with
been broken, since insects can the sap.
·
make~ in the plant's surface.
Question: What's the best treat·
In addiuon, urushiol is sticky and ment for poison ivy?
can be carried on the fur of aniAaswer: There is no way to
mals, garden tools,
.
cure poison ivy once !t develops,
golf balls ot anything else that b~t it can be n:eated to lessen. the
comes iri contact with a broken dtscomfort. Mild cases of po1son
plant. Touching these objects will' ivy may require no mc;re ~ wet
transfer the offe11ding, chemical to compress~s or so.akmg m cold
your skin.
·.
,
water to rebeve the Jtchmg.
.
Once the chemical comes in
There are several .non-prescnpcontact with the skin, it'"begins to tion medicati?ns on the market ~
penetrate in a matter of minutes, can dry up blisters, and your phySJ~ but it takes 12 hours to several days cian 91' pbarmacist can. point you to
for the reaction to appear. First the best products of this type. None
there is re4flC$S and swel~, fQI- of the O'l'e~·counter -products
lowedlly blislC!!S an4 ilching. ·, " sbo)l!d"be !111111 'for t11J1e thin• Contrary to myth, pouon ivy days, and 101110 shOUld not be used
can'i'be spread via the oozing li«J- on large P.arts of the body or on
uid in the blisters. This liquid IS young _children (read the lnstruc.
your body's .own fluid which is lions on the package). .
prod~ by the body's reac~n to ·
Severe cases of pouon ~vy
urushiol; it is not urushiol Itself. should be referred to a phys•~•an.
But a8 you know, poison ivy can be Your family doctor may prescribe a
spread. If the victim gets urushiol type of steroid preparat_ion and
on his or her hands, touching other drugs that carl r~heve the
another part of yoUr or anoiher per- · swelling, blisters and itching.
·
son's body can transfer the chemi''Family Medicine" is a weekly
cal to that area. That's the reason column. To submit questions,
poison ivy tends to tum up all over write to John C. Wolf; D.O.,
the body even though the plants Obio University College of Osteogenerally only come in cont~ct pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
with the exposed areas of the sltin. Athens,
45701.

33 BAGS OF
FREE GROCERIES

Wednesday, May 1, 1991

' ..

john C. Wolf, D.O .

ONE OF

DELUIE _CLUB

'

Associat!! Professor
of Family Medicine

REGISTER TO. WIN

FIOM THE

~e~d

KINDERGARTEN
The program encompaues:
Reading. Math. Science. Art. Music.
Physical Education. Bible. and Char•c·
ter Building.
1

1 . Reading Program:
Includes: Reading. Writing. and
Spelling
A. Learning the first 64 phonogram• of the English language
(the foundation for reading)
B. Study and sentence con1truction
C . And completing six readers
2. Math Program:
Includes number. recognition to
100
A. Counting by 2's, 6's and 10's to
100
B. Belie concept of addition
C. Telling time by the hour and half
hour
.
D . Working with money
3. Science Program
Includes atudy of
A. Weather. the body. the seaahora.
and animals
4 . The bulc• of
A. Muiic, Art, Phylical Education • .
· and · Personal Habita. incl11.ding ··•
Character Building
1. Are ..II part of the program
15. Ba1ic Bible Trutha:
A. Will be taught daily

FOR MCIRE INFORMATION &amp; BROCHURE
WRITE OR CALL
614-992-6249

Ohio

333 fiOitH SECOND .AYE.

aiDDLEPOII, OHIO

."
rl

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· Pat:~e 1o-The -Dally Se

wednaldfJ, IIIJ1,1991

Pomeioy llllld'epciiro. Ohio

1Unet

Pastor's birthday observed _ _ _ _ _ __
ron

!&lt;usee a IIUpri.se 50dl binbday
pany •euady •die dudL

Mrs:

..

6. (3) "JLJ

--•llld
..,...,
taba lundl....._

111

n - ... 1lliriJI dOn't .... 1011 In

tile tlui* F. Wllfld. We "-lllli(re
In tile CIIIIIIIUia'- ''WIMe" Ia 111e one
llnre Ploblem.

,,... ABC, 16,2,

15.0 million .........
7. (15} "J:II&amp;
I" ABC, lS.9,
14.8 tlli1&amp;oD Ill r
7. (14) "UIIIolwed M~ ..
NBC. 15.9, 14.8 mi!!icw homea

9. (7) "America's ~unniest
Home Vidcol"' ABC, b .8, 14.7
mil!jon.....,..
tO. (17) "Family Matters"
mjOjm .......
ABC.
15.6, 14.S milioo hl•nes
2. (1) "Ckers" NBC, 19,3,
10.
(X) ·~ Colllluy Music
l7.9mj0jm "ows
Aw.-ds"
NBC, IS.6, 14.S million
3. (2) "'60 M'IMH" CBS, 17.1,
boDieS.
~
lSJ mjlljoo "ows

Olplo I '
'"1"- Cu.. I - In
COilil\2 111119!--.r n
......
on tile lime

BV. JAJD!S Ul!SU

REGGIO EMU.IA, Italy (AP)
- Luciano Pavwtli celcbmled 30
years 11 an opera singer at a aold·
out coocert in the !heater where be
niJde hil debut.
Tbe Italian tenor sang at the
Valli Theater iD Reggio Emilia,
w~ be appcw.ld iD "Boheme"

l S.8 mj!!iog ........

•*•

usa

---People in the news---

4. (13) " Marder Sbe Wnxe"
CBS, 11.0. IS.8 milk• , _
4. (22) " LA Law" NBC, 17.0,

NBW YOU (AP) - Here an:
llle ri
' I ·· p a c:ompi!r.t
by ~ A.C. NiUD Co. for Alri
2i-28. Tap 10 lilaia&amp;s jnclpde die
Wlllli:'s ........ wiiJi fall H U·
m ' ; e t i4a it ~ M I 11 lltillblllewd,_idll .......
. Aa ur · ill ... ,. . rr deiillts
~Ji a
AratiDJ., au die Jb' w: of dJe
..-.·s 93.l mjDjon 1V ~1. (41) "NBC Sunday Night
Merrie", NBC, 20.4 rating, 18.9

Burton Smidl, Mrs. Aadley _YCJ1111!.
JCJf!llhan Keesee LiDda Keesee
Dawa Kte.ce,
KI;,R;
· James Keesee Jl, Mr. ud
&lt;lay Tllllle, Mrs. Ada Keesee, Mr.
and Mrs. o.tes HaJJ.. Benir Hm-

-nil Js Y011r
Mdin.ta
Life.• A moaey u-ee llld _ ,
·hlloon were JWeseDted 10 Rev.
K:: r from the membm of lhe
cluudl and refres,_,. of cake er, Myrde QuilleD. s~~~: Flyte. Ray
. indic:eaeam11GUI?rw~.
FlyleandTaa,Sarafowb.
A«ending were Mr. and Mrr.
0u1 of IDWII -gueiiS auendiug
Bob s.B.r IIIII, Midwd, Pllyllis were Rev. and Mrs. Oerald
.._ Mr. and u
- I~·
4~
Hada.all.
Jalie Youag. Thlll'lllail M·"'
_
"""a.,..,
......
5 m•lllb, Muguet Nun. Belva Mcea.rfamily,LoraMcCJbe.1
-R
. OUI • 0 ary 5 nouffer, Fanay_ Mt and U - . , _ u_,..,
Mt
Oldaker, An1ie a.od David
·
...... ""'1 ......--...urg. ·
Mc:C1111e. Mr. and Mrs. Dw'1cbt and
Mrs,. William Savage, MI. and.
Mrs. Dave Edwards. Mr. and Mrs.
Ashley and c:bildren, Jenni er, Caslo Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Alben
Tile 1lleiue -

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

' .

Last week's TV ratings

'The dJiiiRD of , _ , Jnes E. JOibaa, 1nrica, Mr. and
Doli
" - and ibe dJUida - b m of Bartm.u ud - . Jomh, LIIIC)'
Vii:Dy Bapill Clwrdi 11M Rev. Hendricks, Shirley Roasb, Mrs.

April29, 1961.
.American soprano Shirley Ver·
rctt waa am~~~ the singers who
•nended the
Mondar night in
I)Us city in PaVIIOIZi's nauve region
of cenlnll Ilaly.

LONDON (AP) - Paul and
Linda McCartney unveiled the it
own line of frozen vegetarian dish·
es Tuesdlly.
_
"'I want 10 fill the supennarkets
with great healthy' food and close
: down the slaughterhouses," Mrs.
McCartney said at a Londoo news

/

ra ..a..&amp;cft ot a - •us

.... ... ,__.. m ne \ COPY'IIGHT 1 • • THE 'KIIOGER co. 1;" . -;.;
in AND PF11CE5 G0D0 SUNDAY. AP!IIl 28.
--·----~~~lltiiOUGHSATURDAY, MA'f • • 111t,IN ,.., • .,..,_
ofa
illllll..._
·' A . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.._.
_ _ will . . . . ,.. • ....,_..... • 1 - a l l l e - - WE RESE11VE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANprico- lD .,.,._ (Wr will be
por TITlES. HClHE SOLD TO OEAL£RS.
-? I
I

- - .-wifaltor--dlail:8

....,

'
The Dally Sentlnei:-Page-11:

- - ilo. - . " - 5 -. - -

cmference.

TO PERFORM • Tbe Rainbow Clofters are
appearing In "Country U.S.A.'' at Easlml HJab
School on Saturday._Pictured, l·r, heeling,
Sharoa Wise, Mary Woods, Cheryl Thoma, ·

Altbougb Mrs. McCartney is
American, several of the dishes are
British favorirts, including ploughman's pie. which is a cheese pie,
and paslies, which are small, deep-

JUdy MeDuiel, Vlvlaa May. Bac:k row, Melanie
Duddlq, Betty .Smltll, Santa, Judy McDonald,
Fraaces Imboden, Shirley Simmons, Phyllis
Sc:on, DoaDie May aDd Allee Lawhorn.

Community calendar
.

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POMEROY • The Pomeroy
First Baptist Church wi'll have a
rummage sale Wednesday through
Friday from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m.
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PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building. .

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POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Lodge No. 164 F and AM will
meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with
conferring of the E.A. Degree.

,

Participants

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WEDNESDAY
POMEROY· The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of the clerk, Sarah Gibbs. Public
invited .

or

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Community Calend11r items
•ppear two da)'S bel'ore an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD in adwnce
to aasure publication In the cal·
. endar.

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MIDDLEPORT · The Evan~e­
line Chapter No. 172, OES, Mid, dleport, will honor its past matnms.
25 and 50 year members on Thurs·
day at 7:30p.m. lniatory work will
be exemplified and Deputy Grand
Matron Betty Schenkel will be the
special guest. Officers wear chapter
dresSes. All 25 and 50 year members ire invited 10 attend.

The free IBM PS/2 Computers for Students Program will be
ending'' on Saturday , May 4th. Please have
. all receipt tapes
totaled and turned in to your sponsor store by that dat.e.

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Absolutely B'o Orders Will Be Accepted After May

•••
•

11th. How many

-has your school earned? The
Kroger Co . cares about your children's education .

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U.S. GRADE A (4-7-LB.

Frozen Young
Turkey Breast ·

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------BUY ONE.
1-LB. PKG.
LITE MEAT WIENERS OR

Oscar Mayer
Meat Wieners

. Paund

j

c

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BUTTERMILK, CHOCOLATE, SKIM,
HOMOGENIZED OR

Fresh Baked

Kroger 2%
Lowfat
·

Apple Pia
2...z.

..

%-GIIan P1p1r Caton

.
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•'

IIIIIIIIER lUilE A UIIIIE -

..••

lvo~ Shampoo

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SJ49

or Conditioner .. 1&amp;-oz.
Las

·

.

$

::: . ....;:... . ..... ~ J49
Fhul Cost
Aft• Rebate ..

ASSORTED VARIETIES GREEN· BEANS
GOLDEN-CORN OR SWEET PEAS '

Stokely's Finest
Vegetables
14.~n... c..

POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
ty Pomona Orange will sponsor a
bake sale at Krogen in Pomeroy on
Friday_beginning at 9 a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Building fea·
turing Stoney Creek Band. Jim
Carnahan will be the caller. Public
invited.

. HARRISONVILLE - A youth
zone rally will be held Friday at the
Harrisonville Holiness O!apel on
Route 684 in Pomeroy with Rev.
Iobn Neville speaking at 7:30 p.m.
The public is invited co attend.
LONG BOTTOM · • Faith
Gospel Church in Long Bottom

DANVILLE • Rev_ival at tile
Pinegrove Holiness Chapel, two
miles from Danville, will be beld
Friday through May 12 at 7 p.m.
nightly with Rev. T1m Hamaker as
evan~ The Henry Eblin Family willl!lovide music. Rev. Odell
Manley mviles the public.

•

REEDSVILLE · There will be a

SATURDAY
baked steak dinner on Samn:lay at
POMEROY - "Big Hex of Little · Chester Elemenwy starting at S
Lulu" and "Best Horse" will be c.m. spllllSChd by the Eastern Ath·
shown at the Meigs County Public etic.Boosters. Cost is $4 for adults
Library on Saturday at 2 p.m. and and $2.50 for children.
at the Middleport Library on Mon·
day at 7 p.m. All area children are
MIDDLEPORT • Tbe Middle·
invited.
· port Youth League wiiLhold its
annual kick-off day on Saturday
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers with a parade at 9 a.m. 'There will
Plains VFW and Auxiliary No. be scrimmage aames all day. base·
.9053 will have a Loyalty Day Pro· ball card show, baked gopds, dunkgram on Saturday to honor all ing machine and speed pitch. There
Desert Storm veterans and other will be cash prizes for the best decwar veterans from noon ti&gt; 2 p.m. at orated bikes and pick-up bucks.
•

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Flll1'01 COlli eMil Ill. ..•

FAMILY PRACTICE

446-5137

992·2188

0 FF

SAVE ON ACTIVE STYLES
FOR 'THE ACTIVE FAMILY

or

llc')"' ...... 21h-6
~ 24.99 . . . 19,99

MOTHER'S DAY, SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1991

POMEROY - The UMWA Supporters Group will meet Thursday
at6 p.m. in Pomeroy at Pleasers.
RACINE . Tbe Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. ,

30°/o OFF

25°/o OFF

40°/o OFF

FRIDAY
TIJPPERS Pr.AINS • There will

HOLZER CLINIC

JOBUCIIEe

MINIATURE
COLLECTIBLE
COLOGNES

LOTTRIDOE · &lt;'t he Lottridge
Community Association will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. for its regular
monthly meeting.

•'

.1.

SILK ·
FLOWERS

attend.

VE YOUR FAMILY.

USA" will be held Saturday at ·
Eastern High School with show ·
time at 7 p.m. Cost is $3 for adults
and $2 for students. Proceeds bene·
fit the Eastern Band. Special enter·
tainrnent will be provided through·
out the evening.

WOMEN'S
AMITY

RACINE -There will be rummage and bake sale at the Racine
United Methodist Church on
Thursday and Friday begilining at 9
a.m. each day.
,

LET OUR FAMILY

R"'\. 19.99-2S.99 .

LADIES'
TIMEX .
WATCHES
OJ ·

~~MEN'S
·

30 /0 OFF

10°/o

COLOGNES

OfF .

l4K GOLD
JEWELRY

MOTHER'S

25°/o

70°/o OFF

DAY CARDS

OFF

PRESCRIPTION SHOP .
992-6669

MIDPLEPORT, OHIO

253 NOIIH SECOND

d.c:a

.-=a

Men's 1i1e1 6 11:1~ 13
R~. 29.99, oo1e 24.99

~~~ 5· 11
Girl:~'~ 1211:1-4

Women'l'l

R..,. 24.99. ..... 19.99

Introducing
~

II-CT. ; ...

- Lay's ·Brand
c;~ Potato Chips

F EE

SEE STORE FOR DET!'ILS

I

08

_ RUTLAND • Th'e Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on Th\BSdaY at 6:30
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
Public is invited 10 anend .

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Ladies AuxiliaJy of Tuppers Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for election
of officers. All members urged co

IUCEJI
FREE

•

For

•

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Ear

Pound

FREE!

IN THE DEll-PASTRY SHOPPE

•

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' · Sweat
Yellow Co,rn

Boneless Smoked
Tavern Ham

••••KROGER COUPON•.• •

'' '

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SUPERIORS BRAND WHOLE
114-17-LB. AVG.I

'

G:ET ONE

•

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•-.

compu~ers

Low Prices. _A nd More.

•

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Sisters.

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be a f!llllm&amp;ge a bake sale in Tup- will hold special services Friday at the post home. Joe Stnible will be
pers Plains beside the Post Office 7 p.m. Rev. Steve Reed invites the . the guest speaker. Refreshments
011 Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. public. For information call 378· will be served.
to 4 p.m. each day. The sale is 6237.
sponsored by ihe Rocldand Pythian
REEDSVILLE · "Country

THURSDAY
,
MEIGS • Serenity House spon·
· sors a weeldy support group for
· members of the community affect·
ed by domestic violence each
Thursday from S-7 p.m. with din·
ner and baby sittin&amp; ser¥ices pro. vided.

•••

fried, filled p1es. Lasasna and beef· the local Coali t.ion for Central
less buraers also an: on the menu.
America lild atizens Against War
The packages feature Mrs. co help promote a NiC&amp;raguan aid
McCsr1nefs picture and the Vege- drive on Monday.
,
tarian Society s seal of approval.
. What upset blm most about his
The fonner Beatie 811d his wife canceled 8pJJC8r1IIICe was that Unit·
bec:sme vegetarians 20 years ago ed Way officials didn 't question
. after sitting down to a Sunday him about what he might say. He
lunch of roast lamb at their Scottish said he had not intended co tum a
farm and looking out of the win· . charity e,vcint inco a political foi'WJ!.
dOW to soc lambs frOlicking out·
side. They brought up their four
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.
children as vegelar'ian
(AP)- Red Skelton's portrait of'a
crying clown, painted by the .enter·
· MOSCOW; Idaho (AP) - Mike tainer for his dying son more than
F~ll. who played Capt. BJ. Hun·
three decades ago, has been recovoicutt on the television series ered by police.
"MASH," says he was offended
Tbe painting " Bright Eyes,"
when his appearance at an Idabo
· cd bv Skelcon was scolen from
SlJII
'
• in Ml!y 1990.
rund ·rat'ser was canceled "---use
""""
the Pagliacci
Gallery
.of his views on the Gulf War.
Gallery owner Bob Lennon said he
The Twin County Uniled Way was selling the 1958 work for a
of nearby Lewiston called off his Chicago man whose identity wasn't
appearance earlier this year ·after clisclosed.
getting complaints about nate·
" We're thrilled. We ·thought it
ments Farrell made.opposing the · was gone forever. I called Mr.
use of force to oust Iraq from Skelton coday co tell him it was
Kuwait.
recovered. He remembered the
" Instead of people living in fear painting quite well," Lennon said
... people should be willing co heir Monday.
.
every point of view," Farrell said
The oil painting or a crying
Monday.
.clown was created for Richard
Farrell accepted the invitation of Skelton, who was 9 when he died
of leukemia.

'

womm·!ll !JitJ"tl 5-11
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19.9!1. ..... 14.99

Shop smart and save at Plc:way on selected Jordachee fashions
for men, women, boys and &amp;lrla. Choose from the hottest stylesat the coolest pricesii'OWid! Reg. 19.99-29.99, eale 14.99·24.99.
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSi\.
CAFFEINE FREE PJ:PSI,

Diet Pe~si or
Pepsi Cola .

I

12.PIIl 12-oz. C..

Spedil ...... on Spilll.... eam. flWIW1 .
S!!lected ~In
ulld ooloft. - - · s llilesll-10.
Rea- 3.99 a.;h. . . 3 ...... 110.

I

I
I

I
I

I

I
I '

New Northern; Free is made for those
who are concerned about the sensitivity
of their skin to inks, dyes, and perfumes.
Northern. Free eliminates these
additives and still gives you the quilted
softness you expect from Northern.

...5.5"!' _.11 . . :

n:'

a&amp;-'

I ..

Sale .... Mlly 19.

M.. _ . , . . .

lllsbli""" . . .,..

0100 RIVER PLAZA

UPPER RT. 7- GALUPOUS, omo

�•

F~~M~.y~• ~~~=~r;;;a;;;u~·L;;;L=ET~I;;;N~.a~o~A:;R~D~r.B~u~Ohs~~o~i-n:-e-s._s~S~1-e-r-v--;i-:·c~;~s~~:~~~=~:~;.
3

1 1 99 1

- -·

'

'
.

0

-

-

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•

o

o R O

-

-

·BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE .
4:3U P.M. D~Y BEF.O]p:
. . PUBLICA'lJON

SPEEDY VAC
.' Quality

Sweeper
Repair

,.

Ca,ll Sentinel

Beef

CLASSDffiDS!

Full
Cut

'

'

'99~-2156

.

lb.

11

·SMALL .
WANT ADS ,

I

Beef Round :

.

'

~

.BONELESS·

•

~

•'

'

'

'lb.

'·

&gt;

'

54

'

Merchandise

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

California Crispy Fresh

.AMISH
CHEESE
.
.

.

' , h~
28·oz. ·
Box ·

)I

•
IC

!:?

'

HAVA·f tl ................................s3.00 .• .
COLBY ........" ......................... s2.7 5 •·
COLBY LITE .....,..................... s2.75 i..

uce

·•••~,s~

...... .........
~

~

·s,3.oo •. ·
SHAIP ......:............................s3.40 •·
MOZZAIELlA .................;...... s2.75 ._..
IWE CHEESE ........................ S4,50 •·
UMIUIGEI ..........·••• ~ .............ss.OO •·
SWISS .......................... s3.55 •·
MAillE ....~...............~,...... ~••••S2.85 •·

'

SMOKED CHEDDAI .....~.......... s3;00 111.

Fried

****'********

SUMMEI SAUSAGE ''"""""'~... S3.19 •·
. flAIL IOLOGNA ....................s3.60 1t.
. ., STICIS ............................ 79• ...
AMISH 1m11 ..............~.......~3.00 •·
GIGAJIC PIODUCED EGGS..o..Sl.H•'t1D1~&gt;'"i .

'

'

'

Iowan! L

WE ACCEPT FOOD STA\WPS
HOURS: Monday thru Saturdlly. 9 to 8

10HIO,YALLEY

ROOFING

'

NEW- REPAIR

An EEQ Emplo.yor .
QUALIFICATIONS:
Bocholor Doar" in Pub·
lie Admlniotrotlon, Oer·
ontology. Sociol · Work.
· Nuraing, or related field,
plul two ·yNrl •xperl~
once In 1 prof*oolonlill co·
pocity In the flold of hli·
man aervicea. pl•nning.
or rolot..n field, or oqulvo·
lent exper:ienceln ectmin·
iotrlllvo aopoclty with
communtty buslnetl Qr
government progr•m:
Full job do-lption moy
bo obtolnod from Joyce
·Bunch, Molgo ·County
Senior Citlzono Canter;
Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio

·. ' .ABIHJtJNCHI

·,,

Wanted

• EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR
MEIGS COUNTY
COUNCIL ON AGING

· · ·PJD&lt;

B~quet

'

'

.

, FOODS

' 514 I. Main

992.6910

PubliC MOllet
. PUBLIC NOTICE
lido wHibe NColved 11 the
Moyor'o office. 237 Aoce
St .. Middleport. Ohio untH
3:00 P.M.. Mliy 13, 1911
lor the hou• locot..n ot 51
North Third Avo.; odjoaont
to villogo hill.'
Tllte. ouoconful blddor will
hovo thirty dov• to remove
t7oe houoo fiom tho pre·

rnl••·

NIIIDV•

· Gutters
Downspouta ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES · ·

PUbliC NOIIce
right to reject onv or~· Dildo
end to wolvo ony inlormill·
tleo in b!ddlng.
·
.
Fr..n Hoflmon, Moyor
.
Vililge of Mlddilport
14i ·24, 1111'1 2tc
·

Buaineu Services

'' MINt.,,

UPHOLSTERY

TII·COUNTY
·SANITAnGN

JU•Ih.S..d
. .......rt '
Hand Tt.lftlng
Cuetom Drapes

. SJ1'11C TANK PUMPING .

742·281il

3~

l";r-;~::::::::·:·~~-~·=~
Tllte'"\~ijj!":,';. ofNOTICE
Mldcleport II
4 23 1

i• """~dlolng mondotory
l!ooh pickup llfVicl for. oil
viUoge rolid.,tl.
lido wiD bt rilcelv..n 11 tho
moyor•o office, 237 Aoco
St .. MidciiO!Iart. Ohio. untH
3P.M .. Miy13. 1111.from
contractoro
intenllod In
providing thl10 11rvico to •pproxlmotlly 800 - n t l.
. All bldo wAIInaludo 1 colt
lor IICh mldentill unit
along with o r-m• ohow·
lng tho, company' 1 qulllflco·
in thlo
tiona end
typo of work.
.
A proooood controct for
thlo oarvicl lo ovoiloliio at

•-'""ao

arne contrector on • ve•rtv

boolo.
.
TheJ villqo ,._rvoo tho
right to rojoct ony or ollliido
ond to wolvo ony lnformoll·

n,n r,t'~ii&gt;on~ Movor

vtllogo of Middleport
14124. 111 1 .2tc

.

614-992-232,1

·Food Club
.

-food Club

UICe

64 oz.
Btl.

2as N. s.c-1

Owner &amp; O~ator

. ~.

o

WHAliY'S
AUTO fAITS

Italian Bread .
~ IIDDLfPciir - P1cture your family in this beautiful home! .

• 2 story w1th 3 bedrooms, lovely firep)ace and located on a
: mce street. It's all electric.and is carpeted. Th1s property has
• an exira teaiUre- rt has an assumable loan. SocaiHor your ·
. showing TODAY! MAKE OFFER $38,400.00.

'

Regular Or

.

I

WOlfE PEN RD.- Appx. 22 acres of picture perfect la~d.
All hookups available wrth a pond for f1shmg. Asking ,.
$19,000.00. MAKE AN OFFER!
.•
NEW LISTING-.2 story home with 51ots and a lear garage.
HOME has 2·3bedrooms, balh, some hordwood floors and a
fireplace. This quaint place can be yours for ONLY ,

$14,500.00. '

1.

I ,..
7 • 7.
....;,..,

t•

, .

2

•

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·.

.

.

NEW USTlNG- RAINBOW RIDGE- Approx. 16.82 acres
w~h 1 2 bld!Oom, I \t.bath m~bile home. Talk .t~out "coan·
' try livinll'' thiS 15 ifl "'any other features. Call abool tlus sleal
- ONLV $16.00000.
NEW LISTING -COMMERCIAL BUILDING IN POMEROY!
Come and surt your own business in lhis.2 story build mg.
Could be usl!d tor many types of bus1nesses. ASKING

$19,900.00:

•

YOO lAY HAY( WHAT SOMEBODY NEEDS! WE HAVE FAM·
·IllES WAITING FOR MANY TYPES OF HO.IES. YOURS IIAY
JUST BE iHAT OlliE OF THEI WANTS! UST WIT" US TODAY FOR fAST. COURTEOUS, EFFECTIVE ACTION.

HINRY I. CLELAND ..................... 912·11.11 .
JfAN tRUSSELL .......................... 949•21~
JO HIU ........................................ ::::~~~
OFFIC&amp; ..... ..... ....... . , ... . :-u •• ............ ,........

. LIP 1111 ·do It for you.
VIRY HASONIII.I

Floor Finilh
MilE . Ow'*

II.

i,

HAVIIIPIBIICIS .

OH.

oRoom Addition•
oOeragea

01110 4SJ~Itl

•Kitcheno • Botho
•VInyl Siding

GOlf LESSONS- SJO ••

•R.u toretlon
•Repair Work
•Landocap.lna •Grading

6 tar ISS·

NEW GIIPS •••••• ~ •••••••• 14

R. L. M.SH
CARPENTRY
4-11-11·1110.

YOUNG'S

S,.Ciallz... In
Custom Fr..e .....lr

CARPENTER SDVICE

NEW a USED PARTS
FOA 'ALL MAKES &amp;

--~~- Addition•

.;.o..--111

MOOELS

-t!1olnrtool ond

992-7013

-con--lie

PI••..,.,, I

-Roofing
-1-·btllrlor

. or 992-5553
ORtou. • • .

P"""lntl

•

IFREII!ITIMATESl

1,100-141.0070
DAIWII, OHIO

V. C. YOUNG-II

mo.

---R-..-~E-stat..:...e_Gen_eraI___ ,L====~
__

f-

' J&amp;L .

··.,

?'~
'

.·

· Window•

•Roofing
•I neu llltlo n

JAIIIS BISEl
992-2772 or
742·225i

...,•• c.

' OFFICE 992·2888

992-5526 -

. POMIIOY, OliO '

1539 Sry..,

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

USID APPUAIICES

~

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

.SSEI1 &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCliON

,..

•CoMplata

··-..
Ina
Stop
&amp; Conrpart
FrH Esthlrflttl

985-4473
667·6179

5-31-'90 lfn

COJitii'S
OHIO IIVD 11115
and EYEILASTIJIGS
Now Open For Sprlns!
•H•b· P11nt1 ·~•renl•le

•Evorlootingo
Creft!lf•· Orow you own
driod motorlolo.
Open Thuro. thru Sjrt.

lANGSVILLE ,.- Efepncealllhe way- Mansion on lhe Hill
- There just isn't enoogh words lo describe this 3 yr. old, 2
story home w~h 2 &amp;l!raeous fireplaces, beijitiful cabinets galore in the kitchen, 3 bog bathrooms, 4 bedlooms, formal din·
ing room, and huge family room. S1ts way back from tf)e road
for privacy and a view. Has approx. 60 acres lor animals or
hunters. CALL FOR MOR.E DETAILS.
$140,000

10-6; Sun . 12· 6

247·4035

s.•. JJI,
lociM, Oh.

52100

BRADB~RY- Clost In- Small one floor plan home with 3
bedrooms. Approx. '"acre with garden space, storage build·
ine and nice sitting porches. Newer carpel·In some rooms,
and a newer range. Owner will trade hourses. $.14,000

•no OYIPIS..,Srt .,

992-SIIS or 915·U61
aa.. Fnm r..t Dfflco ·
POMROY. OliO
10/30/lt Ill

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER and &amp;EWER
LINES

.. DUMP 111UCKS
AVAIL AILE
FREE

APPALACHIAN
. WATER
HAULING
POOLS,
CISTERNS, ETC.
lt. 1, lax 71'A
· MLAIIIO,

OHIO 45775·9U6
614·742-2904

USED RAILROAD TIES
1·12· 80-tln

MICIOWAVE ·
.OVEN IEPAII

. NO JOa TOO SIALL

lEN'S APPUANCI
SIIVICE
992•5335.,
915-3561

CEDAR

ROUJE 241- Asecluded cabin with approx. 3acres an~ all
on one floor. Has ~ wrap-around porch, 2 bedrooms, lirge
open liv1n1 room and kdchen wdh knotty pine·on walls and
ceiling. Approx. '10 yrs. old.
·
$24,900

CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or
698·6164

11·,1·10-tfn

CLOSE TO TOWN- Yet Private - Thi.s 2\1 acres 'is easy lo

AU MUS

lri.. tt .. Or We
Plclllp.

Acnn ,,... hat OHict
117 •• s-.tl St•.

.....,, 011111
.

3/l/10

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIDING
•BLOWNIN
.
7NSULATION

RUTLAND- Sllttn StrHI- Why looklonger7- There are
3 bedrooms in this I\! story ho"le on a 50x140 lot Has ·
newer heal !JUmp, skylight, vinyl sidin11, end a picket fence
for/rivacy. Seller has left the area and WILL NOT REFUSE
AN REMONABLE OFfER, and miY consider asec:ond mort·
gage.
·
·
$27,000

· BISSELL
SIDING CO.

...........

"Fret Eltlmet•"

SHERn WALTIIIS ....................... 387·0421
·DARUNI ITIWART ... :......... ........ 192·1311
I!REN~A JEPI'IRI ....................... 112·3011
S~fi!.D BUTCHI!II ............... ......... 99:2·1371

PIL Mf·2101
or ..... t4t·ll60
NOSIIIDAYCAUS

3-ll·lfR

- .....,.

1',

BISSELL
.UILDEIS

CUSTOM IIII.T
HOMES I GAUGES

"At •••n•W• Prlctl" ·
, ... 949·2111
., .... 949·2160 .
•. Day or Nlglnt
NO SUNDAY CAW
15-

Thundly l Frldoy, ~-· ·Cultotna. -lnttrtor, All .... :
Clc!lhoo. 'EvervthlnO Choopl
•

&lt;I'

Clo- Soil: I I - !lad.noJ : •
Rood HIU l - . BotUIUy Ploy • •
41h Onlyl
:. :

~ Solo: lilly 2nd, 3nl, 411!..~ .:
Cenl10n1ry. Dlo!Mahlr. Cur-.. · ..
· taln~ 1.&amp;111 of Clolhol, Tluoll ·

lloNt-?

'

Cleraal Slit: Nelahbclfhnd
flood; Ill . . . .. on lllght Pool
Bollldore Drl.., Ftldoy,lll, N .
o.aao loll! Rein 0t Shinl. Ploy :
2nd, 'lnl, 4111. N . . 101h •,
Plot .!umbo In Contonory,
•
Olanl ~ Bolr. 234 ..._~ .
PIIUI. Thuro. l F~. ~ l adult~ •

- I&gt;

a..p. - · - ..,
iOIGihll.
-Boll: Cloy town- ofl :.
Ztt l I lilly 3 U, 8-a.

•·:

lily 2nd • 31&lt;1· 11-4. u..Drl.., Rio . Orondo. Crok
lillgul- ·
Fumfton,

HouoohOid h~n~o, Clolhlng.

.

•

s....:

lloeolll- - ~::
Wod. lilly totthrouglllilly W.· •
1
1.3 1ft ... out 211.
.
.•• • :;

n-.
-

Uncoln PIIUI, locond
Lon.,

Announcernenls

~

. .~..... --.
==-::::-:.-:::::-:=-:-:-~·

- .,..

WIIW'H1 .1M. ttl Third Avo., : ;
~- K~a~, AduH Clolhol, lolly • .
Fumnuro, • Mort!
· • •
y.... Boll: ~ fiOOdoJ.!,:. •.
112 1111101 , _ 141 Oli ....; :
,. ._
lillyo llonumont Co. - 011 On Thurs., Fri ...... 2,3. N.
AD -.umon~~. -rontlld For 'toni Boil: lill, 1,2,3. m. : .
lloMOrlli Day, -· - Qorlllld AvonUL Kldo -hili,• •
CenlonoryOhio.
tto•••ttold ·•••· etc., Ralrr ·
.
REDUCE: bUm ell l o t - fOU cancele.
..__ toiUI OML
II Yonlloll: lily 2 l 3. Appoox. 2 '
f!"'h Drug.
.
.
""'"" Nonh of ,......_,
Junction .. Rocil Llci ~ ·a"
4
Giveaway .
SR 211. Chilclron I Adult Cloth,: •
lftll, · Bobv
Tor•..• ••
I puDD!oo poH oollio I IIIII HOueohold
ft.... Crolto.
bloCk' lob, 10 old, 114-'1112•
Yonl Boll: lily 2nd, llrd, 1 4th.•
t-?
7111
Bull
Run
Roocl.
'linton.
'
lrancl Olrll l . , _. ~
Clotho!, II• 4-14. Hoe11llho'iol :
Orlll.
B~ Yard Soli homo, y n1 Boil Thunlcloi lill 2nd ~
Clol
.11 aa 14411. .
·.,: eou~.= 11r111.
~~-:
i$mlil daa to goad homo. Port Chalre, llcy-, Pluoh lloNI
'·
Pold-. lloOd wHh ohilcfrlll. 0orooe loll: lillr 3-4, ·mtt St •
114-311-11:12.
Al.7 liOuth. 4 onlilo Iouth oi '

-bil

-·

I

.

.orno, ....

eouc

6

·

••mo.

tU.

Lost&amp; Found

Porldna Lot In Rio Orondo. 114:MUSIZ.

•
•

Eurelco.- - ·

Pt. Pltlllllt

~-= Frotomfty Pin, AKT on h.
Vlclnfty: At Ohio Vllloy Bonk

&amp; VICinHy ·
22118ott ~~ AN, Ploy 2,3,4.

-

a111.
• Dono,
llrpr
•1'111111*.
'""" IIIO!Ito,
goodhotOihoo, opro..no, aurtolno,

Loot:

1 block tan boogie, hlo

ocorontopolhood,~orongo

_ , 1 blook lob bl!ll colllr,
l!ol&gt;fillod. 114-384-11257, -

24U234.
~: Wiclllr cuohlon 111 on AI.

7 btlwoon Big - • and Union
Ava. onoy llli" aut of

bock oflruC1k,l14.fl2·'1171.

Yard Sale

7

"""'

'

.

3FalllllrYna~
out
ll...IWMI Rlclp.
l'rf, Sot.
Borgolno
onlilt. come II'"" .
to
Big 11,__ Boillar " -·
•~~ ·-~
~J iZ"i"'ldon.
u
- · · Bot• •

-R

1:1111-•:0D.
- · ~~-­
IJpeWIItor,-.-·

B u - Add, ·=-:00, Thuron

=· •

flrl,
· curt~tnt.
•• _ .......
chill,
•r.:.rtler,
fw·1

"' '

joono, ..-...;

Gallipolis
•. VIcinity

t-unitr loll lily as. Gunwitle llldoO, MIIOft Ccluftly 10
..
lor tliNotl4111Dn,....:
I ota 211 ell AI, 7, Thuro., 1111, -11111.
. . •.
F~.. Sot. •? IIIJIIII -hlr, ~ Bolo, lillr 2,J,4. 2121: . ,'
';.":1:"\~o 1 ~ = I lillpti A":i,v;:::-1'"' otoot, 11'
..-,
children
clotho,
n•
.... Milo..
:
dlhuonltlflor.
Hugh Yonl Solo, liiiJ U~~;· ...,
.
-btrllorlhopGo
,,
U MIIOI ota ilia. APril 2ttlt l . Fllfry, l-rtret tiono - · •
IQ!h, lloy 111 llru 4111. M -1 =7.:-"'::~..;.;;;;:,;:::::,::::;;. ., ,
, _ Doell, Lawn Cholro, • liiiHor 2, 1. 102 Boventh a, Now
•
Drawer Chill. Vlrlltr of Olhlr
.. n, Highoholr, " ' " - ·

*

=r.

•= •

"-'

=.~·

131 River ltrMI, KINUII, ...
hind RIJburno Ma"""' liZ, 111.1,

1/4, 10-4.
·
s -~· 114 Fourth A-uo.
• -·· pon 111 u-4th All
• · •· -• •
-:.-,..
o f 1hlngl.

I Flf!IIIJ: II,; 2nd, ~
!'f.;.::-"'
I.
110 •. : : " " ,

mow.' becau¥ it is leveL Comes wHh large living room and
dintng room. Also has afamily room, 2bedrooms, and central
air condiliooing. .
.
( $28,900 .

Porto. .
Fund Rolllna: a::IO-I:OOp.on.,. :

Point Pleasant· 675192• . i

4· 21·11· 1 .... pd.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

Bia Yard Soli: lillY Ill-4th. AI •• · .
t4f II R - Creek Trdor. • •

B~rby
~tl~f1\' .

lEN'S APPLIANCE
.
SIIVKE·

HOWARD BROS.

Fum ure.

by 'llck fflDhllt~

mnDS-$125.,

•Ramodallng 1nd
Homo Rep41ir1
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

. FREE ESTIMATES

·SIGNs ·

.

. . .IIATGIS-$100.,
UIIID-...Ioc.-$12~.,

•ttz/'11 II mo.

MIDDL£POIT- Main StrHt- ThTshome has nice size
rooms, '4 bedrooms. 2 story home with wrap-around porch,
full basement. Sitting on a SOdOO lot Oner wants an offa.
.
$21,000

C:tMtlllt

WASIIIIS-$1" ljl

IIIYH-$69.,

Bohlnd FoHh BoPIIII Chunoh on
Ill, lill~ '2-3rd. Qullto, ,EiaMr
Cooth Curlolno, W""'''lil lnon .

Potio s.11: s.t.-y, ~ "'"· ·
Yami u..erlal, Olhlr M)ec•

....,wAIIUm

Middleport,

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TURNER, BROKER
BREATHE THE CLEAN COUNTRY AIR- Th1s IS anice 3bed·
room home on SeoUl Camp Road. It storage ,~uildings are
your weakness- then this 1s the place you want. ll'aiJohas
basement and garage. You can have all this and.more on_ap_·
prox. 4\1 acres IQr
, . JUST $35.900

"flaW Freah ·From Our In ·Store'B&amp;kery!"

:

Time
'
•lflgh GloM on Tile

COMMERCIAL
We Need

GOLD RIDGE -DOUBLE WIDE ONLY- Adeal too good to
· be true - A24x48 Patriot mobile lleme has 3 bedrooms, two
full balhs, a tam11~ room, and a living room. Also has a real
nice woodbumer. This lovely home won'llastlong at lhislow
price.
ONLY $16.900

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

11•• felt Dry

•Carget

DOmE S. TIIINII, 11010

CIIIIC ...._._ ..... ...,....

co

1.-JC..IIIr

eQuality Work
oF,.. E1t1metea

~·

dllr,.,
7 ··-

. lnNrler • I•Nrl•r
FBIISliMAnS
Takt tht pain o.f of
painting.

HOUSES•LOTS,FAR

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD -Lookmg tor aplacetobu11d?Then
you gotta see this. Approx. two acres of niCe laying cleared
land. Water and electric available. Agral price al $ ,
6 500

'

•RNlllmebla Retq

HOME 614·992·5691

Pomeroy,

POMEROY - Nyt Ave. - Th1s two story :llo 4 bedroom
house has a newer floor furnace with a full basement It
could make you a gOod rental al only
· $10,000

l.lght ..

srr..

Olflco 614·992·2116

614-992-6820

HOME! 992·81i92

u.. s ......... FoaJI:r·•
......... ..,. •xu I,

LINDA'S
PAINTING

CAINY Cll-15
and IILI FLOOI CAH

S1le

2015 NORTH SECOND AVE.

. .,.DIU
.-I

TROMM

COINIIY CWI

•VInyl Siding
•Replaoam•t

'

Prepriced 89~

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

IHI

Complete Grooming
For Alllreltls
EMilfE MEIINAR .

1/1/'11/t

.

(6141 915·4110

GROOM
. ROOM

•

•

Do.

INSULAnON

POMEROY, OHIO
992~2259 .

.

4-23·1 .

'""
Real Estate General

.

Yean kperleaoo

W. Soy Whet
W.Do Wllot

the m1yor'1 office end co·

ploo moy be obtoln..n on re·
· quut •t ,.a ah•rge.
· AI bido mull be good foro
porloci of 1 20 doyo end ony
controct which thi vllloge
enten Into for lhla Mrvice
will be lor • period ·of one
YMr with tho option to ,..
new the contrlct with It\•

WE DO

·4·5-91·1 MO.

POI1·A·JOHN iENTAL

PubliC

ROOFING

'

;::=:;:;:;~;:;=~

any u.oeu

dobrlo ond do ony illld-P·
lng n-illry to - · the
aroo oultoblo lor perking.
T1lte viUI~o re11rv11 tho

'

949-2168

•• Accept

. Regular Or Natural

-

698-6591

,,

1

)

Regular Style

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD ·
·SPACE AVAILABLE ·
· . AP5.00 PER DAY

M

I pl. lid GUst Iuiie. f'lltuH,
I ''' 1'111.
Qmtttln&amp;
Gls&amp;t
2nd, Jnl, f4

"},=•

IIIII....

....

. . . . . '"' '

Yonl - · lilly 2,2,4. 11e11 flllok
houll btlow Sidor'o
Ootllpollo Fony: Woadon wll\.'-

"-*'

4
1
,

-loltorm wkubau, . -..,· . •
b1cJC , tlloooopo, - · lolo • :•
onloc.
Yonl

1,...~-.

lifo. -

,...

1•

locur,~ T¥ II!'NII, etothlli :
ll1ilc. ..,. \~Down lit. I ,..: .
hint. ~
•
. ;: ~

• 'i
. ; •.

Pomtlftu

- ___

• •

••••

Mlddlopon
.'
"
..,••
I VICinity
.
..;.:,_....,.
'•

..,..

'
Ploy i-4 """' • . • .

·-~
......,............
2FIIIIIIy YW -

tic Hllltl JUno ll. l y -

"9J"''

'

2
"'"' Clolhol
...

..
-.:!• :'
..
.

'

· (f·~

lily \U&amp;• . :l
Ill·
. . .- - .

end lotu of ml111..
Mil._

~- :·.
., ....: ....: . , ,
. . . ..... .

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

~

---'-..,.....;.;.;;.:.;~-~·

�4-The

Sentinel

Ohio

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Wednesctay, May 1, 1991

LAFF-A·DAY

72 Truckl for llilll

'N' CAll YLEe by LuTy Wrlpt

Pomeroy-Middle~rt, ~h!C!

BORN LOSER

I

m

widneaC:Iay, May 1, 1991

3

~
........

,_

.........r
.................. llllfrlna.

-

:,·c..~.."411':W: Of

Houtll'lold .
. Goodl

Ford LT.- 'fri.Aolo
Cll
. . . . . M'll.
_ , C.l Allor Mp.m.

1171

Dodfll112,.!3llllortlto4••

=-wrio!. "&amp;;;I :.=,

""

1-.114-4IHIOI.

•

Dwnp,

tilt

114--1

42 Mobile HomH

olon, tto,OOO.
:104112 2111.

t2dO 211r, C.l oRor 4p.m. 114•te3117.

-

'"--

w

lAM I

•

oe

~-I-r-(-TI-:"-·Er.-1~'"T'yl-;1 J

~ ~c!t.c.a.t;r Q

lrown,
•

(J) ~llolnbciw Q

B~'t..-

air, P8, PI, 410 M _.,., U·

:::::..~~
oyl.=,·'"'·

. 0 lntlde 1M POA Tour

WE'DBETTER
ALSO CI-IAN6E TI-llS PART

I

I

The old gent told the young
man that the greatest feeling
....._,__--'·-"-·--'·--'· • of triumph Is rn doing som,·
others aay -· ---.~

8:05 (J) ...."' Hllblllleo

ABOUT lllE PACIFIC LAKE :.

e

0 NBC New8 Q :
(I) Abbitt lftCI ColtiiQ.

1:30 (J)

-o-o'"""':"'G"':'L.-o:-::-v--,lthing

.-1,. . . .

~~.=...Howl Q

(i) 3-2·1 Conl8ct

"I had three orders today. 'Take
a hike. Put a sock in it. Drop
dead!'"

'-11T'i'-1r-.T1-r17r'1 AV

8

1--TI

· Complote tho chucklo quotod
by tilling In tho milling words
L..:...L......JL-..L......JL-..L....J you d 0volop lrom otop No. 3 bolow.

811!.,~1:1

0 UpCiooe
.
1:35 (J) AndJ GrHflth
7:00 (J) • ._ 0 Wheel of

FortunoQ ·
()) I DNim ol JNnnle
()) (J) e IMido Edition Q
(!) (f) M.cNII/LIIIIW
. NlwiHour IJ

ICUIII LITS ANIWIU
H&lt;&gt;
. Caddie - Musty -Limbo - Napkin - INTO the MIND

~eeo:cJc:a

-r

111·7711.

8• MonerHIII

See~ •nd

7:30!JJU£~1Q

11300.114~

wciil!ntlotilntMnt
Tlllillht Sllr.a. Q

(J) • Mlml'o Fotnlly

1111 c~ 1.000 Olfloo,_J.Ikl

.._:.,.,o.a.O. ,,, ·~

,,......,..
11.11
,.too
-. L......,.
.

ond Chilo;
por -k.
Woo dlf'!IUP, fM.Ot per
Junk ·Iloilo,
eodd~and Chill II DN-.
lncl
111.14 .... -

11,110. ._uou.

I

2 bedroom turnllltlcl•pl, 8MQit
•. Mllfdl'p ~ rt, Olllo_, ..,_.
and .......... rwquhd, 3()4..
112 Till.

-..riG.... ,. .

room ti:"o

Eut
000. ftrm.

llaln - - · ·

114 1111 4CI7 allor

•

2
-h. -

Coder._, ~•t
:::::~:':-:-::::':::::-~=-==
No Polo. 11

211r - - • - from

For .... or ,,.., 111111111, blm, Un.-..illty of Rio - · All
_ , , . . o n 31 10100, u t - ............. Nooii14-IIMI.

lwhrol - . t4.... ..., Roottn.
17.71 por-.
-.·4
wHh
4 Chalra,
117.10 Jlllf -· B
- Iori, 112.21
Willi.
4 ~
Chill por
of

oolt. llol., no polo. Allor

,

17.

.

llld- BEAUTJIIUL APARTMENTS AT
dloport. ""' 11111101-111 0111 ..-r PIIICIB AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 131 Jaol-: Plko
·--Dill-·~
112 1121.
from ttl2hno. Wall lo ohoa &amp;
IN CITY: lltr, 4 ~ utNity movlea. CIIIIU t~l UU. EOH.
.............. , 104 •• 3nl

Bill C!lonoh. ·
Yard Nlo, Noloon Rd. Rutland.
Child,.., and a!lunl clothing,
paint gun, .

w-

VCR, CB.

.. ,

aw-.
"

1-.

Yard Ball: .lloY t-4 tour lomlly,
guno, Iota of IHtlo alrlo
c - . oflw clothN and mloe.
I mile t - Rl. 7 up SA 1«1 on

riBhl.

Yll'd Sale: Ook mirror, TV
........ ..,..... cki1Nna
&amp;mloc. 111 a,_ st Mkf:
dllpoft,- lloy 14.

PubliC Sale

8

!lllloftor7p.m.

-·-·7811b.
buy

atanrllna tlmbor.

Tim
W.,.erl to IHry, . - &amp; d"'•r

In _..,. ..,..Iori, call altrir 4

W.- To Buy: Junk Autoo
Willi or wllhoul -ora. Coli
Larry Llwoly. 114 Jill Ill!.

-•=
avouna

One-Y~"A:-"·
H
1
34M.

ca~

alto

CINntng.

AMIOMblli • Alilll.
...52.

O.rclono

30W75-

,....,

tlllld,
-~.

=•

~~Window 14dl 2..., 1 both.

"'"' CondHionl 114-245-·ftorlp.m.

c.ro: Cortlllocl, Alblo, Mull Btalo I-ori.
Foncod AIM, Any Shift, Any llonolon 14110 au - .
Ago. C.ll Anytlmo: 114-441-2053. ~ d~. partially '""
Miny ......... "I, 1 ChUd, $10;12 ......... JCM.e71.'1177. '
• tt:l; 3. 115.
. tNl' 14dl Cloyton moblll
llloo Paulo'o Day C.ra c.ntor, e-. 2 BR, 1 bath, oil
Solo, oftonloblo, chlldcaro. 11-F $10,100. ft4.44e.7211.
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. A~ ~10.
Sofllrl, oltor ochool. Drap-lno
Child

Work W.ntod, will ••Y WHh Ill
or'lldltly I*Mrl In their hOme,
dolly, 30U'III1111.

SPECIAL 1toctorv fa you. 1181

two or thrao 6odroom 14X70
- . ocmp10111y 001 up, Jn.

Frnanc1al

eluding lklrtlna, ,.. -...; tape .... olepa. l13,11l00
(cholco of colora) Col! , _

:::=, .,.,..Wfl2

ro-

Furnlelled

upotalro

opt

ol

dUpln IlL VOmon Avo. lmal.

!Mal "" .........ponolblo .....
- · 11100. pluo -ric,
and doPQO~. 304-t'll2181.

=.
Aport-• .,

Bu11ness
Opportunity

I

c-

::""d:••::!
=4 M

-.0141-.-.

4nNrY Cluloo, Fla to
- - . 1211. ,.,. Cou]llo••

Oloocunt

=!".Q 3~:·'

You Bavo.poW.
U...Mod
we

IUppty.

-

.
•opd.,.•-,. 381
••.

f' ~........
Ill.. - . - . 131. and up, -

1,._,

-·--·

721-4045
""-···
~ Farm•
for Sate

...... lp b&amp;&amp;ltL EQUII..OU..
lng CIIIP. llr Oond., 1aunr1ry

2 houoo1L31 ..... , 111 Olifo 0"
llrrybum Hood. 1om and 3 out·
bultdlngo. :104.f71.24!11.

lo
- ,.._
· .... atlllh
lchciolo.
plckuot. · - Full alii plnboll _,lno, 1110.
1112t.
1-'11134.

Full length " ' - with
. _ , IIIII !!\Ol.!!ll.o_l~ with

:::-...
~~.~:=:=
F-

=

--and
. .
"Lop" ...,_, Gralf 4H pr
lam
1... 110
MCh.
111 t11

•t:

Gltlo .._ 12 - . _ - 1, 10
,.,,._,

45

-

10

........

unllorm OWOIII.., topa, 111-'110.

Fumllhed
Rooms

S1

Locot ~ng Routo lor All,
choop. IIUII HI qulcldr. 1 3+4 ......

--•
Bull,,._
8 u I'd' nga

34

AVON • All ,,_, C.ll Marilyn
Loool Voncllng Routo. &amp;~ OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
w-or-·2141.
mon11L.ocatloni. Choop. t
Anwlcan Llalon Pool t 140, 477·1111.
2nd Avo., Clo!Hpoilo. ~ 1o
Court .._., 1 room, 2 - -....·- · wv.of oooklnalor
lor ........
~~~~ 4 ~='tU$
lind rwume In contldence to:
lar 111111111• care Point Voncllng R-: For Solo. Cool! your wlf• I - blllara
now, No•
Pt-nt Register, 200 Main St, Buol-. Hlall Troltlo Local lllllko ,.,.,r - - n t . wv 211!0.
Looatlono. HaR.ot Maohl- on
Amlw Canc:Nie CO. II now ao- lllllrkot. , _ I l l 0314.
44t.t131eve.
011111"1 opptlc:allono lor rHdy
mix clil-. ICDL I DOT c.;. 22 Money to Loan
lllloollon roqulrad). Far Applica35 l..otl &amp; Acreage
1.0AN1 ft IIAIL
tion ... 1-233... 34.

-- ""·

~="-""rr..:.~P=-Ior'::

........_.

-"'••••o.
I•.-. .

lllrklgollfor 111. 11 HP
Sll'I.'IJIIOiahf
. ·INI-1171.
llurnr ~ - l oM4n.
MWI2f. •
114
Havo ftln Mwlng, now Whlto
II tplna With _.ng. computer !ftlnlrnaohinl-.
AloolrOIIor -·All loooiHopo. -11011. RUih'oFabrlo . . _
Coli ..._
ahr 2:00
1111,
WY. p.m. :104·773.
Horpoinl
Fro01
,_

ROUio IS, -

~e.:r.:::.•

of Pomoi'Of,
parlo,

uloo. COli

·

Kanoaa Fnomo BllolghtanAn-....,1~, 1114-441-

31 Homet for Sale

2homoo on -.-Ill lluf.

-'--....~-

·~

·-·- ..

:

8:30

117\1 Coroa~ 21 ft. wHit AM ..
oqu'-'t, largo bot.._,
or belt offer, 304:17~· .

9:00 (J). 0 Night Cciurl

:::r'·

.:1.

1171 WI"'"'- IIIVII fllllor,
owning, . . _ 1,

, good cond. 34,200.
.,. 141 3013,
j I

.

2111

now

'

Serv1ccs

-- -

MY t::!AD PI.A't!S H!S
WHeN He
6-ETe .D EF'ReeeeD.

~PIPES

HER EARPI..IJtiiiiS.

MAW II

1115 r.- Am, gray, H 41,000-. - - · llwlp
~ ...,., In ..... ·~

JIT
~

OH.

=.i:.'ti

.............._...._.a•,.,..
-· "'*"" and " " -·-·
·:

........

lu-

outo

())
(I)

Wlllto -

~::48

ASTRO-GRAPH

-lor lhlrp. Colt

en:~-·-·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

- ' " " ' IMart
21,000 - .
. - - · or 1:00.·

Plumbing&amp;
Heating
C.rtor'o Plumbing
andH... Ir~g

Fourth ond Plno

Electrical &amp;
Relrlgll'ltlon

._.,2,

810.00 ..,Ice cal on o;pttan.
,.tl"la
loH ..,...,_ pick-up.
114 aMI.

-- :.=::

.........
.....
"tb
Riff
W

t7ll.

,

oom...,.&amp;ll

1

. . . . . .,

.......

S*eo

iDCNNE~Nowo

Ron'o TV Sorvloo, -"'lllno
In lenMI oleo -..a moil
_ _.._,......,wv
. - oatlo, ....
:lfi4.I1I.Hif Dille 114-44W484.

or

HM

Trel1: T1111 Nell

......,.....,...,1.

AMI.nta.J

.....

(J) 8 08111111'1 Fl,.
Gabriel reunites wllh lhe
deughlor he haan't _ , In
20' yeora. Stereo. Q ·

ROllo

137-1121.

~

e

t-·J

tM :M1 NOS, 111 Ut at.

1117 '""' 10,000 mlleo.
Coli 011ytiiJII,I14 Ill 2111

NDTHIN' II trS
SOCIABLE SECURITY
CHECK DAY!!

Aeration - . _ . , . , - - :

IVANI.

(J). My Life ond TIIMI

remambersl978 and an
lnllrludl wllh a lover on July
4. SterfO. Q
(!) (f) CIIIIIIC1 8uo;atJ
Slereo. ·
10:00 (J)
01 Oulntum ~
Sam leaps Into the life ol a
Cuban Immigrant convicted
of murder. !ftereo. Q

•

a - - I n ....,

e

'

WHAT AILS
MISTER
HICKS?

and

S471.

1

Llny King Llvll
9:30 (J)
0 DHr John Kate
receives a diamond ring lrom
rsu11ive suitor. Stereo.

teil A I - outa, tt,IDO. 1171
Dorlao eo- nn, auto, $1,000.

=="·""""~I

·

IIINIIIIMUeNOw

t141ttllll

1111

Conolderable emphUII In the year

~ lheed will be devoted 10 arrangemenls
llla1 could onhanee 'f(NI material aec:u- .
rlly. You might have to work aM harder
thon uoual, bul the end reaul1s wiH be
worth II.

lt'1 45 mlnutll long."

~e C41'T FIND

•

GoH!potle, Ohio

~I halt getting atuok at thla light.

DEPReee.eq TOO...

lmp!OVemente

1110 Cnollor z.a., PL.
PW, Alllfll 81- C..., llony
Otto. liltfrool Take onr
,.,AMita.l14 • • 1••

. Wllntld
Ta !IUr On Land eo..-:

'1HI5 TIME MY Navi.'S

Home

BARNEY

air, Ill ~ 13.-; -

Prlmelllnl .... t:;J

(!) (f)

--

-

81

by THOMAS JOSEPH

M'itrtc lluiHII Comldy
Special from the Katharine
Cornell Theatre In Buffalo,
N.v: (0:30t Sterao.
ltll GieollkeiiiCIIM
F1tm1n A married minister's
rove allalr leads to the
murder olllls mlatraas.
Sterao. IJ
"
llJ MOVIe: Child of
Dallmltt, Cltld or Light
12:00) Stereo. 1;1

AIC, ,_ oaraltA

awning, nc cond, 30W7H31t.

2IR
AINIIh - 11uot w1f11
hMoh,rc::~condftlon.
to -lolo.114-M..21141. ,

CROSSWORD

Stereo. C

tilt Wlldo,_ ltV Alllw;J,

TAUIIIIIIAflrii2D-IIaY 20) II you lry ~~
rei1P a harveot ltom • lleld you hoven t
sown you're nol likely to be very SUC·
CIIUful today. Your chancell ol getting

something lor nothing look rather diemal. Trying to palch up a brol&lt;en romance? The Aatro-Graph Matcllmalcer
can help you understand what lo do lo
make the relatlonlhlp work. Mall $2 lo
Matchmaker, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
QEMINIIMIJ 21.June 20) Strive 'to be a
leader. rallter 1han a leaner, loday. Lot·
ting companions make all lhe decillions
doesn't guaranlee thallhejr choices will
be right. Be more ~Nertlve.
CANCER CJuno 21.JuiJ 22) A likable
bul lndolenllriend might try to ahllt responalbHIIIello you loday. since this individual doesn't want to be MddiH
wilh ony lnconvenlonceo.
LEO l.lulr JS.Ayt. 22) Someone w11hln
your group or dlque might attempt to
do a little pelty politicking today. Thill Ia
t91etable, provided the lndlvlduol
doesn't 1ry to get you directly Involved.
YIIIOO lAIII. 23-a.pt. 22) Ulually,
yO&lt;r're dloc:lpllnttd ond h ... your tMmeonor under control. Bu.l. lhare Ill a
chance you mil)' do aomelhlng outlandIsh In ~ today lhal won'l win you
any ldl'nlrora.
LIIIIA llopt. D-Oct. Zl) An Individual
who Ia v.ry·lond ol you hu won. det'lng ab0u1 rour tnotten11venn• tar.
ly. " you hope 10 k - thll reiiiiOnlhlp
Intact, you'll halie to be rnoro
thoughtlul.

SCORPIO jOel. 24-Nov. 22) You're
someone who likes to function lree from
restraln1a, ao you should be able to un·
deratand lhe lolly ol poasesliveneaa.
$ubdue your Inclinations to lllnlt lhe
lreedom olthe one you love 1oday.
IAOITTAIIIUIINow. 23-Dee. 21) What
Ia merely a harmiiH fllrta11on 10 you
could be juollho opposite to lhe one to
whom you owe your loyalty. Don't be alfllcted wllh a wondering aye today.
CAPIIICOIIN IDle. 22.Jon. 11) Try not
to make ony promlaet today lhal you
know you'll have a difficult time keepIng. II you dO, lltere Ia a very good
chanee you'U 11-ely dlllppolntaomeone whO II depending on you.
AQUAIIIUII.Ion. 20-Fob. 11) You may
feel a 81r11f111, In- need lo be tt&gt;e canter o1 "tenllon todll)'. To expr- lhlll
desire of having all oyoo locueed on you,
you mlghl end up dOing something
quill lilly.
I'IICII (Pill. »M8rc11 20) Think beloN you ~ lodll)'. If not, VOU· may
..per~~nco one or thole omblrrUIIng
mon•da when you wlllt you caukl vanllh an. aaylng lho wrong tiling to lhe
wrong person.
Alllll (llenlll 21-Aprll 11) I!'• com·
.-.clable to acl&lt;nowlldge or pralll an·
01111r;pr ootdad !here II proper tUIIIftcatron. How-.11 you flaner 1011-111 lor
unertor moll- loday, your ploy will

1111111re.

!Ill 700 Club With Pll

I

Roberltole
10:20 (J) MOVII!: ..ddll IIMI Wind
11 :45)
10:30 !I) To .. AMOUncotl

..

ill Crook IIICI Chill

11:00 (J) e

1
1'

ACROSS
1 Report
card
datum
6 Voting
unit
10 Emperor
or king
11 Bouquet
12 Cal·- ·
tails
13 New .
parents'
choices
14 Is In the
red
15 Run
16 Panel
truck .
17 "East ol
Eden"
brother
18 No vote
19 One way
· to see
22 Cl.ose up
23 Sirius,
e.g.
26 In direct
confronts·
lion
29 Yank's
foe
32 Balloon
contenls
·33 Lass's pal
34 Eastern
area
36 Bounders
37 Crack the

. 88

'

lnd Mra. King

.1t:30 (J) e 0 Tonlgh!IIIOW
Sllrao.
()) Nalcll

'l=·.._

='='it..eo.Q
ol till Crlmil'

C81 1.811 !1Wtt Stereo. Q
oa,a111Cttlll
iDipoiiiT._

kin
20Make
doilies
21 WWII
theater
24Home
to the
Hawks
.
and
Falcons
25 Motorist's
vehicle
27Chow

down
28 Old autos
29Symbols
of love
30 Wear ·
away
31 Ship's
bollom
35 Times
preceding
36 BiHiard

needs
38Choose

..

5/1

!

btONGFEI.LOW

I

..

One letter stands for anoth~r . In this sample /\Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnt~lc letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of tl1e wmds arc
all hint~ . Each day the code letters are different .

CRYPTOQUOTF.

5·1

LU R

0 W N R

FT.VVRFFSTA

KYAAIYD

LUR

FTVVRFFSTA

LUR

I. U R

0 W N R

"
"

IIYVLTNR .

-

IASNRZ
UYLVUVWVP
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NEVER ALLOW YOUR
CHilD TO CAll YOU BY YOUR FIRST NAME. HF.
HASN'T KNOW~ YOU LONG ENOUGij. - FRAN
LEBOWITZ
\

'I

Yesterday'• Anewer'

AX Y DL BAAX R

()) Nlglil c- Q

llulic"-

,.

puzzle

Cll (J) e 1111 De

!
!
llJ
VICe.h .:S:eo.Q

42 Autocrats
DOWN
1 Record
feature
2 Airport
sights
3 Property
reclplllnl
4 Lairs
5 Before
6 Muffin
sluff
7 Drama's
"Sales·
man" ·
8 Greek
letter
9 Mudville's
noted
name
11 Shrinks
15 West of
Hollywood
17 Alter·
shaves'

38 Pound
part
39 Rims
40 Flower ·
faatura
41 Envisions
DAILY CRYf'fOQUOTF..S- Heft's how In work It:

ii.JNiwl

a1

EAST

L-----------...J

Harry's romance with
Christine·suffers when T~
reappears. (PI 1) Stereo. Q
(I) (J) • Doogle llowMr,
M.D. [)oogle helpa Wanda
deal with problema arising
lrom her mOiher's dealh.

&gt;

:!:

.J

I .. LIIQUI ..oeblll

~

21-113,

•

tJ4 32
+JH4

•• 3 2
Most bridge players have big egos
... 3
and aggressive personalities. But ev· 8 9 8 710 7 6 5 2
8106$
ery now and then a calm, quiet cham· ... 7 2
+10 9 6 3
pion comes along. Hazen was a para. :
gon of gentlemanliness.
·
SOUTH
+AQJI094
He used to divide his time between
professional baseball and law. Bridge
tAKQ
made its first appearance in his life in
+AKQ
the 1930s, but was In the background •
until his other diamond days were ;
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
over. Hazen represented the United
States in the 1956 and 1959 Worl\1
Weo1
Nort~
Eao1
Championships for the Bermuda Soalll
3•
Pass
Pass
Bowl. He won 11 national titles- nine
4•
Pass
4NT
Pass
team championships, the 194~ Men's
6+
Pa!s
Pa!S
Pass
. Pairs and the 1941 Master Individual.
He worked as the American Con·
Opening lead: • A
tract Bridge League attorney froin
194% to 1986. He was also a director of
the ACBL, vice president from 194&amp; to
1947, and honorary member in 19~8. • dummy entry to take a spade finesse? ·
Hazen played today's hand in the Ozzie knew that Hazen must have; a
1939 National Mixed Pairs Champion- singleton heart - with two •he
ship. He admitted that his final bi~ ol wouldn't have bid a slam. Jacoby
six spades was a shot in the dark. '
could have exited in either ininor ,,
To test yourself, cover the defend· leaving Hazen to play spades from his
ers' bands. West, none other th~n Os- hand. Tbere was only one answer. Ha·
wald Jacoby, Jed the ace of hearts and zen led a spade from dummy and Pill
another heart to dummy's king.
up his ace. As he expected, the king
Hazen stopped to think. Why had Oz. came tumbling down· and HaZI)n
zie led a second heart, giving him a claimed his contract.

Mike decides 1o qun school
and~rsue acting full time.

~

•Ke

One of the real gentlemen of bridge,
Lee Hazen, died on February 13, aged
85

W.(() e Qrowlng Plllnl

'73 Tony 21' . . _ I .....10111
-Hion. 11.- ... 1o. a~
JIIICiatO. t4000. 114-1112-:IM.
1111· Wllam Croft 1511. 111, "''·
PI - . Ex111 NlceiiiOO. ttl,.

l-1-tt

NORTH
+7 6 5

By Phillip .Alder

12:00)
8:05 !Jl.MOVIE: Two llode
Togetltllr 12:15)

Sl2t-4:00.
1112 · lid T,.,. Am, T"-.
lnlorlcor ~ .. _,.:
Ill - . 14,000 mlloo, go;,d
prlco,:I04-I'IWOII.

l!'deon":r~

Mojor Lnguo ._.,.U

BRIDGE

0 MOVIE: Llw IIICI Orclar

1112
..
ClrlndChovr
"""· crt•
307
..
,_
. 1110
lion 4 crt 4 lpood 1100. :JOU'JI.

, . Ford ·Eeooit .... •uto. ...,,
JIMII1 good -dillon. IZ,IICIO.

,

:,·.::::....
0

!!!1111. llrltr - · r.-· mlleo.

81 Fann Equipment

Rial lEMMe

mr.

1181 Vollo, ro. thin 10,000
mlloo, loadod, whlta with
omabcl • - · 1-top, 111.100.
w Iinde.:
- ~...

...

Bes~e

.._....

W o • ...._ or T'rollo&lt; In
Crlllt loh I II. Qil II
...... Mly l.oool. M4-

on -

31

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

J .... -

lOire

!!"f''lll!7
"""""'.... ...
Tradl
IM!C!!I111d

Paolo I

, _ Ill lllr '""" 10 .,._ on
141. Col tf4.J7NIOt.

- · - · - ......
7 38
onllota,_
.. _-_

w.- ...........

IL..---~----...J.;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;~
SNAFUe by BI"'ICe

only
lor

.......... ,......... =
PI- lllr Hie:

Ul

....... w. ............

~ ""· loll: C..l111111111.

llof. " " - - -

Cou "'' -

,_homo--

Domlno'o Plm ol Pomlfoy now
,....... opplloatlono.

r::-· ._1110,. •...

46 Space tor Rent

Up to 11,000 , ..., S..lofaetlon
Loto • ... •• ......... ""
producta
11
homo up G•urantMII. lnun1dlltt SeMce.
on
to . - .
no oxporlonco, 1..00.2tiMIDtM.M ....
Jlarbum Rood. Paved - .
_ , work. For more Inform•
eounty
......,
rw••unat:II
lion ... I 111M IIU 11114 old. 2127. 23
Protenlonal
I'Mirlotlone. compii• llllunw
lion IMIIed on ~. .....,._
AVON I All Arooo I Shl~oy
Servlcel
S2U, John D. Gorlaoh, no
........ 304-t'll-1421.

-ly.

. 4 SP4'o,
mtxtna -.r, """"'· rn1o.
Mlndi, I II tho - , . , . , oon

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

~.
- 110:Conclllon,
aoo:
llorm Door,
Air eon. alblo. """' "'
dM"::l 11,000 ITUittOO. 114-

H - Pork,

1111 4 door, oond,
SilO. !J04.871-'1211 tm a:oo altar
11'5-4131.

numblr.

2

2111.
_ . . , _ _ _ or~Mn~h .
Clallll Halot.

11110,

304-I7MIO llavo -

Mullcll
lnMrumenta

Aport- anu..to lllr or 3
-ruction--·

phone

~

(2:00)

a1 Hltcllhtl!ar Mullc HoUr

• .

MotorHomH

:;1111=·Th=u=-nda=rbl:;:r:::-d,-::Wh=~-:-,,-::.,:-,410.=
114, •• 0380.

"'"" ...... zttl Jocbon Aft.

CA.I'It ... - ·

•·773-

- - ......
1714.

.•

campers &amp;

e

o Munllr, 11111 woow Q

.-.

2 AI!C Collie pupo. mot.~ 114- 4414t72.
•M~~~~·~· ~~~~~~~:~~~~A;;;;d~;d
':
1171 c.ll.le FIMIWood, aood ·
AKC Cllakor ......... DUDGiol, oor. IIIIIch. IOUnd. fiSOO, 080.
- h 114-JSI.1443, btwn. I o.m. · I
g._rald, -* •• lth p.m.
11131
·
1171
IJoc!go
Coll,omall ~ d, ffiO.IO--ilopooh,M4nice 1112 buldlnj. I
11141. 114-4177 .._,
1171
~ 310,
~ l.ol "" ..... llound AKC
lut~
polnl,
·ad
Daiiinnan 1nt
_ -~~-• ·ttiOO. o_.y.
1~
Hln Comito"!. Col 114 441 2110
1i
;'&amp;"'I
wllo.
2111
lllo
lor
Laura.
Altar
oRorfp.•.
. .,
I ::IOPII, can :10447Mif5.
Concnlo I plaotlc llptlc lor*o, ~ ~~oa~o~tr~~~ r• r•ron "": ,,., """' .......... 4 CJI., •
Ron lv1111 Ente,_, Jock.
11100 01

apart:'" IIR~
lllrldllport, From
St•. c.rr-.l'llt EOH.
Fumlohod-homo,tmlle
below lawn. aiiVIuklng river,
Not lul_,t tor adldreli, Pelt,
Now ooo ;II • lpplleot- lor

Sole or Trodo, - . bam, OUI
~--.-lyrr
dod
....._
.. homo. p - J'llll you
to onllr. Far Into. 1-7!5-1117 Largo Loool IIIIICounty.
110,1100.
or
oquot
..
·
""'
S.le. Aaput . ., 1 a S.we
EXTIG2.
value tor lind tn Ohio. Clll
l.ocltloM. - . A - ... 1111Yflmo
3CJ4.77»110 or m.
come. 1400 140 1113.
11M3.
-..

Furnlelled hili~ Apt, AI
, . _ ~~ 1200. por m.,.h,
or 114-

QIICI- lvlng. 1 and 2 bod-

Help Wanted

I300JIIoy

1171 Chovatll, :110, 4 opel, . . .
point lob,, Old 8tylo Rally.''tL 114-

(R)

For Nlo: · - _ ......k
...... lor ........ pick-up lrucll.
v.u:::.~
...u..
. out 01
;

saooo. · - 79

-..·--

8noopy'1 A..,nron
Brown throws a
reunion party for homesick
Snoopy and his brOihera and
slstera~
· Animated) (0:30)
Sterf(l.
®
VIE: 8tond by Mo

•

'.

5177, hW714211.

wn Chovr - . 4 PSAII, 301 01111no. 1100. liOOil

- -._ -•lid.

~001018Stereo.Q

lludtlol T-loo-, Uood •
rolluTII, lflltlna 01 IM; IIW4p-

-.114-:MU:ID.
Camaro,
11244.

Stereo.

;,

Cha~la

•'

Accauorlel

1m Lid. 11ooo1o ....,.. 11oc1y

blluusen
" " -H
· p.rn.
- 114-1124121.
homo, Colt

ralavatld. - . . , ,
Choolllno
tor 4PII. · -· ·~103 ·~

AlitoParta&amp;
11711 Chevolll SS, nc ~
llept, d
trado.
Ddvl
·
I'
!lborgloM
~,.7WIII onyttmo' •
or

opt,
, 304:

12x10 BohuNz, 311!. all goo 1111
12xl0 ICI- rotal -trio.
llo4h Uko !Mwl 11,110. 1 0171.

Employment Services
11

~~---

....

1.f100.AH710.

Orywolllng, llnlohln.t I poloft.
lng, pointing I oftlio -nlng,

p.m. ~tWa-.
W.,.erl to ...,y; Junlc cara wllh
o r - rnolo.. I ocrop mot• 21
II. IIM41NB21.

8locll, ......... c:C~..:· WI,.
..........
1-. lliii Grinde, OH Coli. 114241 111'1.

Old

~

(J)e 1'111 wentler Y•ra

Jacl&lt; claahes with KMen
when she dacldealo move
out.
IJ
(!) (f) Cool Mo-: TMftt
Togllltlr Teena aro making
pollflve.conlrlbutlona 10 11111
world around them by
clearing debris, painting over
affltllnd planting trees. .

20 If. - - boat and trolllr,
304..7S-7153.
.1
. _ For 1111; Malle Olfor. Cjlll
114 441 30111.
'

71 Autos for Sale

Ballctlon

Will mow iowno, 30W75-43H or

W.,. to

w a -• . old clocko,
marflll. lop . lfand, ond - r

t~= 1:00 to 1:00 p.m,

Building
Suppllll

From El.o Home c.ntor. oF.... Which To
ChoN. FlnlnolngAnllllllo. Call

Bobvolttlng In lly Home: With
Reftrencee, Hot ....... Flftetd
Play ANI. 11~ 441 9311.

175-5510.

Wanted to Buy

55

On Any ..... , . , In . . .k

wolcomo. ltoH4f.,;l24.

9

1124 1. lllllln • - . Ponto~
Ho&amp;n: II.T.W. 10:00 Lni. to 1:'00

1100 REIATII

Wanted to Do

-rio.

&amp;Auction

'"=

Dno
_lnd
...... ,
EII

111-alel.

Transportation

~(2:00)

(I)

ALLEY OOP

Exfrl'olnclud'ocll 111,000 or Olfor. For llolallo: 1144-1.

32 ~le Homes ·
for Sate
18

Yll'd Nlo Thur.-FrUSII, 2 iniiN
.. HvNII R111 Rd. at Rod B1m.

....... eto.lo..,._,._

Training

:w, tOam.a.,m.
Klllh Ollorlnoldonoo. 2112 mll11
from Lanpvlllo on SR325, 5th
J1*0 on righl.
l'lnl •lo llor Z-4. lit milo 0111
Loalll 0.... Rd.-· EIMom

. Y.,.....lolllly

H.I.Rolna-

lluoh llorol

IMall llrMI, Mlddlapart, Ohio.

\ 5ALE

'· .

53

MyolltiM A convicted con
man awlncles money from
Ohio residents. Stereo.
())MOVIE: TltiiiiCIM!Orl

Fo~

lp.m.

Fow wtnno 110 Horfzoll.
a~Boot •. Loodod. All

•

e

q

HOURS: llondar tltru Sol!lfdor,
ll.rn.4p.m.; lundoy, 12 llclorj;

SWAIN

.

8 ·C~t~oafl,.
7:35 (J) •nford lnd Son
8.110 (J)
0 UniOIYICI

"'

TAll-!

AUCTION I I'UIIHITUIIE. 12
Olivo 11., GoHI]IIIIII. - • Uood

0 - t Hila (0:30t

you_~

Dn-·ts.ao ~ ....... Rl141
4 Mlloo 011 Rl 7 In ~

Antiques
:::::~-::::-::~~=~~
V..... - . 12t51mo. Buy or Hll. Rhwlno Anllq...,

:"·,...,=Mig""":
Comor'~'

•
75 Boats &amp; Motors .
tarSale . '

lum•n,
WOIII-..1
,...,._ 1111 1: Ntoo 2 aR, ou
~ fum: klloltoil, to

Business

tton, 30WJI...,a,

illltoSW
1D Mtlor IMQUO ..IIbell'l

-•

t.tT'.&gt; T~Y TO GfT THE PllleE
/&gt;OWN. ••
you I&gt;O,
pof'/ 'T WAG
'

1115 XR ' :liol~xoollonl i:Ondl·

"":':it :Ill""'
a
H.

OOUOiy,
moollr 110,1100
0&lt; equal
In - YIIUI
lor llild In Ohio, onytlmo: 3CJ4.
773-1110 or 773-QQ,

OeM"A"I'H

1113 Hondo V-41 ....... 1700
mlloo, lko , _ Oondhlon.

Solo

an. KinD

1:05 (J) HIPPJ DIJI

1171 . . _ GUdo Hartiy
Dovloon. 14,000.114 1411011

REin TOWN

Granny atways said that advice was like snow, the
softer it falls the longer it dwells upon you, and the
deeper It sinks !NTO the MIND."
·

~~

'If Ka•oald GP2 '110 111100. '17·

8&lt;rz\lld 300 4

Elaht

~·~

N0 T J I
1-'"'TI-....,.1--ri-. Trl!-1~

8 World TodoJ
!Ill Out Houll

WELL, THEN

n

m....

....

EVI!NING

I:OOCJle
(J)• a
Ollewo

Fonlf.aO, 4lrA, .............

1181 Chon S.10, 4
AC, AIIIFII l'ldlo,
' - • :111,000
1120.
.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 15

WED., MAY 1

'

:::r.~."fl0111
u.FR...._
tGn, ~=·

for Rent

_

Television
Viewing

1171 Ford ,....... 414, 1111 lilt

Sl

'.

I

.I

.,

'

�Wedneaday, May 1, 1991 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 16-The Dally Sentinel

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

Seven fined in Pomeroy court Tuesday·..;..______________-_
Seven were fmed and five others
forfeited bonils in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
·
Fined were Carl Hughes,
Pomeroy. fined $88 and costs, open
container; Marion E. Snider, fmed
$113 and costs, public iniOxiClllion;

Coolinued from page 1 ·
the Extension OlfJCC Saturday.
The office will be open frolli 9 a.m. to II a.m. on lhat date 10
accept registtations. Fonns will be available from the oft1ce, or
those who have received tl!em by. mail, should bring them in at the
time of registration.
Members 8le advised lhat this is the only date and time that their
animals can be regislered. For those who are unable to come in on
that date, they should arrange for someone else to bring mtheir
papers.
.
. .
The picture money of $10 per animal must also be pa1d on May
4. Anyone with questions should contaCt the Extension Office, 9926696.

Frank Nelson, 'Racine, $375 and
costs, DUI; Herman Redman,
Pomeroy j $63 and coati, petJIIiaing
an unlicelllod driver to operare his
vehicle; John Riffe, Gallijlolis, $63
and costs, expired regtstration;
Ricky Pridemore, Rutland, confined 10 the jail for 10 day for non-

compliance 10 a court order; and
Mehssa Conde, Middlepon, $63
and costs, exPired registration.
Forfeiting bonds were Joy
Sauters, Pomeroy. $48, speeding;
Elizabeth Gillispte, Point l'leasant,
W. Va.• $63, expired t:egistration;
Lawrence Bilcher, Albany, $45,

-A - - - - - - ':
young pig can be correctly re- ·•
ferred to as a piglet. shoal, farrow
and

suckling.

Ohio Lottery

· Ryan tosses
7th no·hit,
no-run tilt

spcwling; Darise Miller, Pqrlland. :
$50, speeding; Gwendolyn Hope
Roush, Letart. W. Va., $63, no ·
valid registration.
·
·
;

PiCk 3:017

Pkk4:%77
Cards : 9-H, 9-€
2-D; 2·S

";

..

Super Lotto

'?

'

Page.3

~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~--~~~--_,·

\

APRIL SHOWERS HAVE
BROUGHT GIGANTIC
MAY -SAVINGS

Taft issues reminder on filing deadline
Secretar}' of State Bob"Taft today reminded local officials of a
· special filing deadline that affects candidates in non-chaner municipalities with a population of 2,000 or more.
.
·
Such candidates, some of whom previously filed nominating
petitions in August, this year must file petitions by May 6 to appear
as an independent candidate on the Nov. 5 ballOL
.
.
Staie law requires these communities to have partisan rather than
non-partisan elections.
·
·
·When election officials in Taft's office recently learned that
some communities were not aware of .the 41w, they sent an advisory
on AJ)ril II to 88 boards of elections outlining the procedore for
complying with the law.
·
"As soon as we discovered this, we bad an obligation to make
communities aware of the law," Taft said. ''We want to avoid the
possibility that election results would be challenged on the basis of
an improper election."
Taft noted that some municipalities might be subject to this
requirement for the first time if their population now exceeds 2,000
as a result of 1990 census.

•

.COME JOIN US.
DURING ·-·THIS .... .

2,1991

,.

Transfer station OK'd
by commissioners

- ~---

to out-of-county landfills, facing ":lent, com~ng the transf~r sta;
lo~g lines and the.possi_bility of uon to havthg a landfill tn the
being turned away. Once in place, county without the worry of dispos;
·
A former landfill site on Howell ' the transfer station could accom- · ing of the garbage left there.
According to Graves, the trans:
HiU Road near Pomeroy will be the modate lhoae t.tlen as well as priloeation of a new solid waste trans- vate citizens wishing to dispose of ·fer station must now be made'a part
of the AGIDMV Solid Waste Manfer station, to be owned and operat: their own garlJqe.
agement District's solid wasle plan.
The
owners
of
the
transfer
staed by Mid-American Waste Systion will be responsible for hauling Mid·American currently operates •
tems, Inc. of Canal Winchester.
. Don Gmves. Director of Land- the garbage from the station sire on transfer station in Vin10n County
fill Operations for Mid-American a daily basis, and the rate for and operate the Gallia County land; ·
informed the Meigs County Com- ·. haulers, accotding to Graves, will fill on a contractual 'basis.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
missioners at their regular meeting probably be the same $13 per-ron
Wednesday of the company's rate agreed to by the landfills in the Roberts was on hand at Wednesdesire to put the transfer station· in district (The staiidard rate is not in day's meeting 10 discuas the results
place, with construction to begin in place at the Ga!lia County Landftll, of a meeting with Ohio Department
early June.
where haulers currently pay $16.95 of Transponation Engineer. D.on
Johnson. Roberts and Johnson ll'et
The station, to be located on per ton.)
The commissione.rs stated with Sutton and Letart Township
county-owned property, could
eliminate travel ume for local trash Wednesday diat they were pleased trustees on Monday for the pUlpOIC:
haulers, who 8le cunently driving with Mid-American '1 unounce· Coatlnued on
14
'
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff .

EMS units answer six calls

Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County ·
Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday.
·
At8:21 a.m. on Tuesday, Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine No.2
for Jim Acree who was taken IOJiolzer Medical Center. A!12:[4
p.m., Racine sciuad went to State Route 338 for David Sayre, who was
. also taken to Holzer. At 3:27 p.m., Pomeroy station went to an auto
fire on East Main Street. The car belonged to David Shuler. At 6:25
p.m.. Middleport squad went to Page Street and took Helen Edwards to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 9:51 p.m .• Mi!ldleport squad went
again to Page Street. EUen Shultz was taken f(om there to Veterans and
later to Holzer. At 10:16 p.m., Middleport squad went to Mill Street
and Second for Stephanie Deem, who was taken 10 Holzer;

Super·Savings!
ANY
3 PIECE
..

LIVING ROOM SUITES

Marriage licenses granted

·F,OOT STOOL
OPTIONAL.

Divorces, dissolutions processed.·

.,

An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in Meigs CoWl·
ty Common Pleas Coon by Audrey Marie Grant and David Gene
Grant, both of Langsville.
·
·
Divorces have been filed by Jon Keith lCarschnik of Pomeroy
against Evelyn Loui~ Klrschnik, ~ada, Co~.; and by Carolyn Sue
Little, Porn~, agaiDSI Donald B. Ltttle, Cheabire.
·
A dissolution has been granted to Diana L. Davis and Rooa1d G.
Davis. and a divorce tb John Martin DeMoss from Pauicia Lynn
DeMoss.

•
•TRIPLE DRESSER
•HUTCH MIRROR
•ROOMY CHEST •HEADBOARD 8o'
FOOTBOARD
•NIGHT STAND

Sale scheduled

CONVENIENT
CREDIT TERMS
ARRANGED!

---Area deaths--

VevaM. Beck
Veva Mae Beck, 91, Ashland,
Ohio, died Tuesday morning, April
30, 1991 in Ashland following a
long illness.
.
Born Dec. 25, 1899 in Perry
County, she was a daughter of the
late Charlie and Addie McHaffie
KeUer. A resident of Ashland since
1973, she was a homemaker. She

.

F~E·~STEEL

AND
LA-Z-BOY.

.

was married .Dec. 15, 1934, to
Oliver T. Beck, who survives.
Services will be held Friday at I
p.m. at the Heyl Funeral Home in.
Ashland. Burial wiU be in Fairview
Cemetery at Galion.
.Friends may Call ·a t the funeral
home one hour prior 10 the service.

Sentinel switches
to AP service

'

'

'

~.

.

'

REC.liNERS

=~

S&amp;
CHAIRS

su::••o S109995

•TAILI MD 4
CHAIIS
•TAILE AND 1
CHAIIS
•DINING lOOM
: SliiYIS WITH
MAfCII .. G' •
CHINAS /

You Will l-in A 1399 Z1nith
VCI with l-oti FlEE.
Thl P1rf1ct Gift for Mother's Day
or thl Niw Graduate.

and feUow teachers Iii develop ·
their school-based action plans
10 improve Ill teachers' skiDs,

At the end of the 1992-1993
school year. the poject wiU end,
but fonda from the Dwight D.
the
are
· 10 Scbool
reap theDistrict
bene~-~ scant will COiiliput..,..
i~t!%t~~
fltr ~ ':Oilier. nivenity's 'Lead . eft"ecrt
llelp
111111 nsY18C
to Support !lie progtanl by pur·
Teec:her Jll!!lriiD·
the~
llld 10 pcjlsi- . chasbig materials, hav~~
The 14 Meigs Local teachers.
bly asSllt with its dissemin8tion.
release time and travel for I
alont;': teachers froi!t East·
Lead lell:bers will irnplct on
teachers 10 attend professional
em
SchOOls and 70 other . their own · 1,800 pupils and
· development conte:rences.
teachers from Athens, Hotting,
influence approximately 500 fetDuring the month of April,
Perry, Vinton and Picttaway . low teachers and more than
the Meigs ~ District held a
Countr, have committed some
12,000 llddilional pupils. Lead
series of meetings to demonof thell' spare time to a three·
teachers have been pm-selected
srrate the new stills learned by
year study in their respective
by fellow teachers and princithe district's lead teachers.
fields. Lead teachers are
pals for their oidstanding teach· .
The fiCSt meeting in April for
· required 10 attend class during
ers and leadership qualities.
fust and second grade teachers
summer in their area of study . .
Project costs total $1.4 milwa$ held at the 'Meigs Local
They will lllso be given leaderlion of which $731,178 is proBoard office in Pomeror.. Lynn
ship training to assist them
Bookman of Hatrisonvdle diswhen they start to demonstrate
cusSI!CI.the hands-on approach 10
their new sldlls to fellow teach•
Science Founda . Cost sharscience. She then demonstrated
·ers.
ing is provided by a written
to the group how to make a
Lead teachers will work as
agreement wid! sdlools to conflashlight with readily-available
SCIENCE TEACHERS • Lead science ud
change "'ents to identify tlie
tribute 111 least SO percent of
and inexpensive items. Darla
·
math
teaclien Ia the Meip Local Schon! District
· !~~f~bemaucs and science probthair Eisenhower mOiley with in
Kennedv of Salem Center disrecently
demonstrated wlult they have leaned
lems within their own schools,
kind cootribulions of personnel
cussed the new curriculum
In
the
Ohio
University Lead Teac:her's program
then work with their principals
and facilities.
· Cootinued on page 14

'

ALL BEDROOM SUITES
ON SALE!!

are partlclpatlagln a three·year _program
through Ohio Ualwnlty. The lead teachers are
pictured here, sharlnll their experiences with
c:olleaa-ln the dlltrict.

Leiul teachers aim to improve schools
A year into a three-year progmm, a group or 14 teachm in

. 100 IN STOCK

Women Alive motherf~hter banquet will be Monday at 6 p.m. at
Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis. Joyce Downing will be the speaker.

.

'

LEAD TF!'A~HERS PROGRAM • These
first and second grade teachers In the Meigs
Loeal Schools are benefitting from the experiences or math and science Lead Teachers, who

40°/o·.

Women Alive to meet

I

YOU WILL RECEIVE. A S399 ZENITK
VCR "FiEE'~ WITH REMOTE. .
PERFECT GIFT FOR MOTHER'S DAY
OR,I THE NEW GRADUATE.
.

SAVE UP TO

The Young People's Sunday School Class and UMYF of the
Reedsville United Methodist -Church will hold a bake sale. rummage
sale and car wash at the church on Saturday, beginning at 9 a.m. Hot
dogs sloppy joes, and soft drinks will also be sold. Proceeds from the
sale ~U go toward the gro
.
ups' summer activities. The church is locat•
ed across from Reed's Cownry Store in Reedsville. · •
·

. Ruth Irene Wolfe, 92, of Syracuse, who died Monday at her resi• denee in Syracuse, is survived by
I 0 grandchildren including four
grandsons reared in her home, 18
great-grandchildren, and one great. great-grandson. T~t info~ation
was not included m the obttuary
: which appeared in the Monday edi; lion of The Daily Sentinel.

. SALE PRICED'•

SJ29995

Marriage licenses have been granted _in Meigs Count_y Proha!J:
Court to William Eugene Erb, 23, Racme, and Kathenne Marte
Michael, 16, Pomeroy; Harry Evans Clark, 57, Pomeroy, and Donna
Kay Clark, 51, Athens; Chris!Opher Shane Stmpson, 20, Syrac~~· and
Carey JoLea Stanley, 19, Point Pleasant, '!'f.Va.; Dlinl! ~y Wi11J8!RS.
35 Pomeroy, and Kathy Sue Hood, 42, Middleport;'William G, Quick,
35: Racine, and Robin Lyn Burnem, 26, Racme; and 10 Scott Allen
Ours, 21, Racine, R~ Dawn Lutz, 17, Racme.

Ruth Wolfe

26-27-28-32-40-45
Kicker 259179

~7~~~rr£C:.t::

EARLY BIRD SAVINGS

to renow lldrd alld rourtb IVJide science teaebm·
at dlltrk:t headqaarten In Pomeroy. The prO.::
JUDI, made poalble In large part by money_
from lbe National Science Foondatlon, wiU continue tor two more yean.

Truck crashes and burns; man injured .

The Daily Sentinel bas switched
its wife. service from United Press
International to the Associated

A West Virginia man suffered

minor injuries Wednesday after the
truck he was driving ovenumed
and caught ftre on State Route 7.
John M. Kuhn, 41, of Wheeling,
. W.Va., was transponed to Holzer
Medical Center by the GaUia County EMS following the accident in
Addison. He was treated for contu-

Press.

The Sentinel had been a UPI
customer for ·six years before
switching to AP Tuesday. The AP
offers the Sentnel wire phOIOS, wire
stories and special graphics pack·
ages to accompany other stories
that iiJljle&amp;t in the newspaJlilr.

sions and later released, a hospital
spokeswoman said Thursday.
According to a repon f(om the
Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Kuhn wa$ northbound on State Route 7 when he
lost control of the Ryder rental
truck he was driving. Kuhn went
off the left side of the roadway and

inro the parlcing lot of the Addison
Exxon Station. The truck then
roUed onto its left side and slid into
two parlced cars.
The truck exploded and caught
fire, ~troying d)e ttuck and the
furniture that Kuhn was hauling.
Damage to the truck was estimated
at $10,000; the fwniture, $15,000.

S,OOO ITU

Air Candilioner ·

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

•

Locllld on Rt. 33 billdl Maon EDan IIIII IIMoft llolel, Milan, wv •
HOMESTYU~

1.llNCll SPFf'J;\T.S

1/orulrJif I r idr111

'•

II II Ill

to.!

p

111.

MONPAY - Creamed Chicken ·
TUESDAY • Beans &amp; Cornbread
WEPNESPAY - Stuffed Peppers, Mashed Potatoes,
Your choice of Green Beans or Corn

•
•

'

THURSDAY - Pepper Steak Over Noodles
fBIPAY • Fish Dinner

RIG. PIKE
1359
SAil PIKI 1299t1
1115 COUPON '30.00
MOW

$269'5

1,000 Ill, 1 1,000 ITU, U,OOO ITU, 11,000 ITU
22,0CIG ITU, AND 2•.000 IIU

GIBSON
CHEST
FREEIDS

SIMMONS

# 1 IN IEDDING! ,

GIBSON NO-FROST
·2-DOOR •
REFRIGERAT-oR
•Adjustable shelves
•Energy saver switch
•Huge 'freezer

CU.$569.95wuto
,,..,

5 cu."·

H FT.

• cu."·
S299
16 cu."·

14 &amp; 15
CU. FT.

S269
$399

19 (U, FT.

$4999'5
$69995

lNTEilMKDIAft TEACHDS • Mlisl Loealllftll IDdlbtlt
gnde teadlm In Olllo UaiTenlty's Lad T"eaeller
recnt·
ly put l'adl pranled co IHa Ia the p,.... to the tilL Here, .
Jlllee Hubbard, IIICing tile
pr-11 ·a Kleace expert.fnt
to her colleapcs oa Friday at Saillhlll')' Elnlentary SebooL

pi,.,..

-•n,

,---Local briefs
'

Vandalism, theft investigated

ftlaDAT ft11111118DAY, C""IW'III UIID'IR 1:1 'IAT . . .
DRINK a DESSERil

ntOII en ••• •IIIIIU.

Meigs County Sherilf JIIIICI M. Souls'by leJMIS that the deplrt-

ment received a report on Wedneaday IIIOl1lin&amp; from Bia Wheel on

8ElUOR8GBT

1m. DJ&amp;COmiT

~

--.1

Laurd CWT lolld that the soft drWt maddne in front of the SIORI
bid been .f~ . . . during the niaht. '
•
The det*lll~t also receiwcl laformation that some itmel bave
been llkea from the VIIIJhln S... I'C!Iideta. Tools. a gun, llld

AMERICAN EXPRESS
ACCEPI&amp;I

••

Low tonight in mid 40s. · ·
Friday, cloudy. High in
mid 70s.

grill- repmtecl allliaing.
Coalillued OB pqe 14

•'

•

CRASH AND BURN- A RJder ...... nc•llp· td Olio HI
lide aad lllid bato the .,.... lot ot tile Addlloa ltDc. after HI
driver kilt caanl OD State RHte -7. Tilt tnKk dlell eaplall~~ ud
'

'·

I •

,, -

•

'

The blaze also damaged one of the
parked cars, a 1989 J:ord Mus11111
owned by Regina L. Coulter, of
Gallipolis. The SliCOIId parked car,
a 1971 Dodge B·30 owned by
Becky A. Bolyard, of Scottown,
sustained light damage.
.
Kuhn was cited for failure (!i
control.
••

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