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SenUnel

---Area deaths
.

cil seva11 weet. a&amp;o. Council told
F. Madison Bowles, 83 .• of MiJQ Jut 1Jiabt tJiallhey ba~UnvesMrs, Cbrisline Downie Brabbin Southside, died Monday, May 6, ligated the ~~~ of removing
Bright, 85, a native of Pomeroy, 1991, at the Holz,cr Medical Cen- · such houes m i!Ptofthe new vil·
,died Monday, May 6, 1991 11 Dun- ter.
lqe zoning ordinance and stated
bar Americ:are in Dunbar, W.VL, - A retired fumer and former lhal they would wriJe the ptC)j)tit)
after a long illness. ·
employee of lhc Marietta Manufac- owner a leu.er advising him lbat tile
· Sbe was a homemaker. a rnem- turJng Co., be was a member of tile bouse mUll be made life a demolber of the Dunbar First Baptist Harmony ¥ t Own:b 11 SOuth- isbed.
CblUCb, lhc Order of tile Eastern side, and Minturn Lodge No. 19
Council also bas the autboJ:ity to
Star and the Dunbar Women ' s A.F . .t. A.M., Point Pleasant, demolish tile bouse afta' providing
Club. Sbe was a clwter member of · W.VL
'
the .owner with 30 days' notice and
,the Dunbar Garden' Club. Sbe bad .
He was a son of a civil war vet· charge lhc costs of tile demolition
lived in Dunblr since 1932.
eran.
to tile owner's tax duplicate.
Ban March 10, 1908, in SouthCouncil also:
' Mrs. Bright is survived by two
step-daughters, Lois B. Marshall, side, be was a ion Of tile lale Fran- Approved a request from the
Kenna, W.Va., and Ruby B. cis M. and E8nie (Hayes) Bowles. Pomeroy MlircbaniS Association to ·
Coram, Royal Oak. Micb,; three He was also prec«Jed in death by · close Court Street and the lower
nephews, Alan T. · Downie, his wife, Lena florence (McComb) parking lot for Heritage'Weekcnd
·Pomeroy, William B. Downie J.r., Bowles and three sisters, Amy F. · the weekend ofJ~~~e 8, on the con' Racine. and Charles A, Dowme, Bowles, Ova Henry and Ola Kerns. clition tbal •Y holes boml for lhc
Wol(eboro, N.H.; six step-grandSurvivors include a son and purpose of installing rents and the
of Iaterlor alld Olllo Dep•rtment of NDtaral
·children and six step-great-grand· daughter-in-law, Manford and Nina like for the event be repaired at lhe
RetiOUJ'UIIIn\'IIIIPIOII arrlwd OD tM aceR Jf8o ;
'childreO.
Bowles of Southside; a daughter men:baniS' expelile;
terday to lnYntlpte tile possibility of mlae •
Services will be beld Thursday and son-in-law, Gera.ldine and
• Appointed Don Thomas .and
water causlnl tile damqe. Some ollldall also ·
at 2 p.m. at lhe Dunbar First Bap- . Ri~ Rogers of Dayton; and two ·. Frank V~ 10 the Villqe ZoosuSpect
u IDmolll urtllqulle as COD~utiDI to .
list Cburcb wilh Dr. Milan H.Jobn- grandchildren, DeAnn Hurtado and ing COIIIIIIISSion;
.
tile
damlllf.
~
- Transferred $2,500 from the
·son and Rev. Doyle Smith official- . Paul Rogers.
ing. Burial will be in Grandview
The funeral will be 1 p.m. street and Will« funds 10 tbe gener' Memprial Palk in Dunbar, W.Va.
Wednesdar at the Hannony Baptist al fund for WOJkcr's compensation; and Mills, "'ere council members
.; Friends may cail at the Ks:ller Cbtirch, wttb the Rev. Fred McCalApproved the mayor's report for Bryan Sbank, Larry Webrung,
Contiaued from Jllllf 1
Funeral Home in Dunbar, W.Va., lister officiating. Burial will be in fines collected in April in the Thomas Werry and Bill Young;
on Wednesday from ~-4 p.m. and the Suncrest Cemetery, Point amountol$3,459.
· ·
school's instruniental music program are urged to end the meetMayor Richard Seyler and Clerk
7-9 p.m.
PleasanL
Present, in addition to Rought Brenda Morris.
ing. For furllD' information, pa=ts Cl!l call Edna Hunnell at 9492338 or Ruth Shain at 2A7-4965.
.
Friends may cill at the CrowJ ame.5 C. Vallance
HusseU Funeral Home today from
· James Cecil Vallance, 83, of 6 10 9 p.m. Tbe body will be taken
·282 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, died to lhc church one hour prior to the
hall. All Master Mlsons are weiLodllf to meet
:wednesda
.
~\May !· 1991, at Kings service.
Shade River Lodge #453 F .t .come to attend. Refreshments will
A 1981 blue Oldsmobile station wagon owned by George Cape'Daughters Hospllal in Ashland. Ky. Gib
AM will hold their regular meeting 1le served.
He was bqm in Greenup counons rggent on
hart,
845 East Main SL, Pomeroy, was stolen at 9:40p.m. Monday
on Thursday at 8 p.m. at the lodge
night,
Pomeroy Police report. .
·
ty, Ky., on Feb. 1, l!IQ!, lhc son of
Gibson
Wiggenton . of.
·
The
vehicle
was
siolen
from
where
it
was
parted
on
Main
Street
·the late Charley and Myrtle Giles .Louisville, Ky.; died Monday, May
in
front
of
Kelly's
Comer.
Capehart
told
police
that
be
had
·left
his
;vaUance.
6, 1991.
keys
in
the
vehicle.
Just
as
he
was
retumJng
to
the
vehicle,
a
male
.
He is survived by six children:
He is survived by his wife, the
jumped
inside
and
took
off.
.
Charles and Harold of flatwoods, former Marie Cross of Racine.
Ky ., Mrs. Belly Brackman and
Graveside services w.ill be held
Mrs. Dorolhy Estep, Ashland, Ky., at Gn:enwood Cemetrzy in RaCine
Mrs. Judy Nolie. Soutbshcn, Ky., on Thursday at2 p m
and Carl Vallance, Alamogordo,
· ·
The University of Rio Grande Symphonic Band, under the direcFanners Home Administration
Most of those loans provided
tion of DaVid T. Phillips, will perfam in~ Thursday! May 9
N.~ is also survived by his wife, Fred McCumber
lias initiated a new program of single family homes for .lowat8
,p.m. In the Christensen Theatre of lhe Fmc .a Performmg Arts
guaranteed rural bouamg loans to income families who otherwise
Mona McCoy Vallance; three
Fred
McCumber,
41,
of
114
Center.
_
.
augment its traditional bousing could not have purchased a home.
stepChildren, Linda Rutan, ,BidweU,
The
concert,
entitled
"Man:hes
...
and
Moo:
I"
will
feature
vanous
Opal
Dr.,
Newport
News,
V
L,
died
Troy Bartley of Vintonllld Jo Ann .
loan ~ wbicb could benefit
However,
as
Turnbull
t}'pes of marches from tbe 11;8ci!tional '!' the Mexican bullfight,
Hays Rutland; 22 grandchildren Sunday, May '· 1991 at his resi- many MeigS Counlilns.
explained, for the past several
intermingled
with other~ band literature.
dence.
and sCverat great-grandchildren.
years, the FmHA bas been moving
Tbe
new
II:COI'
d
ii!B
to
John
Philip
Sousa's 'Stars and Stripes Forever" will be perHe
was
born
Jan.
18,
1950
in
. Funeral services were held on
Jean Trusse ~ Middleport Village away from direct loans made by the
formed,
along
with
selections from "'rile Sound of Music" and
Meigs
County,
son
of
Nat
McCumhousin1 specialist, empbasius a agency. Under the new guarantee
Saturday at Carman FUneral Home!
"Blessed
Ale
They"
from
Brahms' Reqwem.
ber
of
Kanuaga
and
.
Virginia
in Flatwoods.
10111 IUIIflllll'e of 90 pen:c:nt Of tile Jlloaram local banks .-e the lenders
·
Tbe
Syrnpbonlc
Band
is
~posed of univ~ty students. music
Addelsberger of Bethesda.
total cost. This mean• that some and the banks are reimbursed for
e&lt;hic•ton
and
other
area
IDIISICtanS.
Tbe concert IS free llld the pubHe Jelired from tile U.S. Navy.
middle income farniliea could con- most of the Joss if a borrower
lic is invited to allend.
Other surviv!)rs include his ceivably qualify for bank loans defaults.
Thelma Lytle
wife, Brooke Bryant McCumber; without a down Jiayment because
Turnbull said lhat guuanteed
four sons, Gareth and Coley, botb of tbe FmHA gullllllteo. .
''
loans
have played an CVCI)I increasTbelma Karr Lytle, 74, of State of lhe borne and Mark and Shawn
On Wednuday at 10 LID. at the . ing role in the FmllA loan proRoute J2A, Racine, died Monday at of SL Charles, Iowa; step-mother, Athens Cotmty Bxtonsion Office in gram. Tbe use of guarantees in lhc
A Gallipolis man was cited for failure to yield Monday fo~g
tile Holzclr Medical Center follow- Helen Shamblin McCumber o.f . Athens, a meeting will be held to housing program will provide yet
a two-car accident on State Route 7.
.
. ing an extended illness.
Kanuaga; step-rather, Stanley explain the new Joan program. Mrs. . another avenue of credit for the low
Harold Stc~ Jr., 28, of Spring Vallo~ Drive,~ cited after he
Born on Jan. 18, 1917, in Addelsberger of Betbellda; one Trussell u well as several local and moderate incOme residents of
struck a ~ car in Salisbury Township: Accading to a report
Pom01oy, she was the daughter ,of . brotber, Ronnie McCumber of Sev- banking officials will be attending rural Ohio.
from the Gallia-Meigs post of the Stale Highway Patn)l, Stewart
.
tho late Dana and Nellie Jones eren, Mary.; and a sister, Sherry the meeting to Jearn more about
was atrem{'ling 10 turn fiom a private drive 01110 Stata Rolle 7 wben
OUr.tees can be made with a
Karr. She worted as a lllu c~ Robena of GaUipolia.
.
be' pulled 11110 the path of a car crossn. in front on him driven by
how it will benefit residents bae.
limited down payment, It was
and was a member or tbe SL Paul
He was a member of the VFW · · Tlie agency will continue to Cllpl•ined and loaDs will be iepaid
Su:phanie L. Amo11, 44, of Syracuse. Both vehicles sustained modLutberan Cllurcb, POmeroy, and the Pcist 176 and tile Malonic Lodge, play_a suong role in pro~iding In 30 years. The inlerelt rate on tile
erate datilage.
.
. .
Lutberan Cllurcb Women. .
NeWJQt News, VL
llOU.sillg credit to low-income resi• loans must be fixed and may not
. Neither ckiver was injured in tbe cla&amp;h.
Sbe is survived by a daughter
Funeral services will be con- dents. As for tho now program, exceed the current rate being
•
and son-in-law, Susan and Philip ducted 11 a.m. Friday at Wa...h- Mrs. Trussell adviaes tbalin come authorized by the Department of
'•
Bllf!IDII and a grandlon, Kevin,,all Halley-Wood Funeral Hotile, Wllh instances a subsidy may be aVail- veteran's Affairs or the current
of Racine; a sister, Therma Theiss, Rev. Choster Lemley officiating. able to those in tbo upper low Finnie Mae rate whichever is highRoanoke, Va., and a brother, Burial will be in Gravel Hill Ceme· income.
A Rutland man was cited for driving left of center following a
er..
Clarence Karr, Millaspon, along tery. 'Ibele will be a military pavetwo-car accident on Rolland Township Road 348.
In talkinA· about the new proFmHA is reducing direct loans
with IICVCill nieces and nephews.
side flaB presentation by Fmney grllll, State Wlor Allen L~ Tum- in an effort to help hold down govHenry J. ~lin . 52, was cited after be struck $1101ber car hesd;on.
Besides ~~arents, sbe was Bennett Post American LqJion.
According to a report from tile Gallia-Meigs post of tile State Highbull said that bis department is ernment spending and to reduce the
preceded in
by ber husband, · Friends may calJ at the funeral geared to pliying a lllrong role in Federal deficit, according to the
way Patrol, Eblin apparendy slid left of cen~ in a curve and struck
Charles Lytle, Jr., two. sisters, Hen- home on Thuraday from 7 to 8 p.m. helping moderate and low income state director. The p'rivate credit
an oricoming car bead-at. Tbe second car, driven by John R.Jeff~.
rietta Karr and Myrtle Reuter, and
families obtain bousing loans.
39, of~· sustained moderate damage.
.
industry, with FmHA assistance
two brothers, Charles (Dick) Karr H~pital
Neilher driver was injured. Eblin was also cited for f81lure to
He noted tbat under the housing through guarantees, will .assure that
and Clair Karr.
wear a safety belt. Jeffers was cited fa failure to wear a safety belL
program, lending amounted to housing loans continue to be avail·
· Funeral services will be. held
more
tban
$46
million
through
.able fa those who otherwise could
Veterans Memorial H08IIit8l
Thursday all p.m. at the Ewing
1,200
loans
during
fiscal
year
not obtain credit, TurnbuU conclud·
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Funeral Home. The Rev. William
1990.
ed
Middleswarth will officiate and RacbCI Band~ ann, W.Va; Donaoy; Vern Smith,
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units responded to I;'
burial will be in Beech Grove ald Covert,
six calls for assistance on Monday aild early TlJesclay.
1 •
Cemetery. Friends may calJ at the Middleport; and .Bliza Orueser,
i
Continued 1rom Pile 1
At
3:33
p.m
••
Middleport
squad
went
to
Pearl
Street;
Melissa
Pomeroy.
"JJ'
•••
_
_
__;;_,;'---------funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Cremeans was transpOr1ed to Veterans Memorial Hospital At 3:39
MONDAY DISCHARGES p.m. Wednesday.
Rerention of those items meant that . Center at Wooster.
p.m., Middleport squad went to Custer s~ David Milburn was
None.
Also, it adds $7 million for prithe House had to replace about
taken to Veterans. AI 8:53 p.m., Pomeroy squad wentiO Minersville ··
$12.5 million in the governor's bud- vate-sector job training. .
Holzer Medk:al Ceater
for Keith Randall Day, who was taken 10 Veterans. AI 10:04 p.m.,
Tamara Lynn
Tbe House bill calls for increasDladlaraa May 3 - George geL
Pomeroy squad went to Nye Avenue. Cathy Day was treated but not
Also restored were tax credits es in. certain fees, including court
Allensworth
Fox, Mrs. Todd Goode and daugh·
transported. At 10:26 p.m ., Pomeroy squad was sent to Locust
for
race track capital improvements costs, along with delays in the
ter, Mrs. David Kirby and daugh·
Street for Christopher Rayburn, who was taken to Veierans.
Tamara Lynn "Tammy" ter, Mrs. How~d McComas and ($14 miUion), a sales tax discount release of capital improvement
At 7 Lm. on Monday, Pomeroy squad .went 10 East Main Street
Allensworth, 26, Columbus, .Ohm, · son, Staci Petrie, Virginia Ramsey. tor ciguette tax stamping ($7 .5 funds and some other bookkeeping
and transpOI'Ied George Eastern to Veterans.
formerly of Mason, W.Va., died Mrs. Mark Reichert and son, and million) and cuts in tile budget of gimmicks such as fund 11'81\Sfers.
Saturday, May 4, 1991, at Grant Lewis Sayre.
the Baud of
Proprietary School · (~"1:1~==~~---------~-------------.-...,
($600,000).
Medical Center, Columbus.
Blrtlll May 3 - Mr. and Mrs. Registration
. Born SepL 2, 1964, in Pomeroy, Perry Blades, son, Glenwood,
Tiie House increased the adminshe was a daughter of Chules R. W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Day,
Allensworth, Sr. and Carolyn S. daughter, Bidwell. Mr. and Mrs. · istration outlay fa .botb basic aid 10
(Bennett) Allensworth, both of James Wilson, daughter, Point primary and seconduy education
Mason, W.Va. .
·
Pleasant, W.VL ·
I . and for instructional subsidies for
An employee of Rite Aid PharDllcllar1u May 4 - Estel a higher educatitlfl. Riffe said jWimamacy, Inc., in Columbus, she was a Clary, Letha Leedy, Mrs. Martin ry and secondary edtiCitiOII will get
1982 graduate of Wahama Hi~h Scurlock and son, Cheryl Thomp- $120 miUion liiCft and the colleges
and universities, S90 million extra.
School, where she was active m son and Alexa Venoy.
varsity basketball and softbaU, and
Blrtbl Mlly 4 - Mr. and Mrs.
was voted most athletic by her. Thomas Albert, daughter, Jackson.,
The, new biD adds. $9 million 10
senior class.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Reed, .twin the governor's proposed funding
She was preceded in death by sons, Pomeroy.
level for tile Ohio Arts Council and
her paternal grandparents, Carl and
Dlsellar1e• May 5 - M~s. $15.6 million to the ~bilelll of
Leigh
Marie· (Simmons) Perry Blades and son, Mn. Daniel Nllllllll Resources. It
I'OIIOres
Allenawortb, and maternal grand- Day and daugbta', Kensie Dllrluun. certain cuts in the budget of lhe
parenu, James H. Benneu, Sr., and Shirley Metheney, Roy Shiw, Mrs. Adjuiant General's off'ICe, apparbaby's first birthday Ia apeclal. And ao, for us, Ia the flrlil anntverL;:..y ol'lhe
Juanita {Walters) Robertson:
John Wbimey and son, and Mrs. ently to bead off lho governor's
opening of Cttations, our s~n&amp;le-room, family-centered matemlty car~ u.1it where
Additional sutvi vors mclude James WilJon and daughter.
plan to close certain National
four brothers and a sister-in-law,
DIK..r1e1 MDy 6 - Mrs. Guard 1m1ories.
many toddlen who are celebrating that Ont birthday this year came tnto liits world.
CbarJe1 and Linda AUenswortb, Jr., Thoma• Albert and daughter,
II increase~ Voinovich 's fundinJ
We're Inviting you to celebrate with us at a Baby Fatr featuring exhibits lmm local
Columbus, William Wayne Marilla Ball, Patricia Br'ldy, Dee for agric:u1ture. including tile Agobuslnt:ssea o( the latest In matenJJty, lnfult and toddler'a faahlona, baby products
Allensworth of Mason, ·carl Curfman, Dorothy Fields, John culture Retelreh and Development
and fur'nlture, and gift ltema .for mother and cblld; lnfdnna~IOn bootha on a variety
Euscno AUeoswonli of Yokosuka, ~iffe, James Rainey and Lucy
of topics of Interest t.o new and h a«tant )larenta and grandparents; a special Big
Japan, and Michael Shane RoUins.
,
AUonJwortb of Lolli Beach, Cal.;
Kids &amp; Babies class for slbllngaagea 2 through 12 at 1 p.m.; and demonatrattona
of equipment uiSCd during labor, deltvery and poet-partum care at CretUions. Rc·
winner named
freshments will~ served and door pnzea awarded.
..
of Columbus; rilllanal ttep-grand- J obn E. Moore or Route I, Box by Tile Alloclated Press
mother Elsie Jane (RcMich) Bon- 205, Rutland, comctly Identified South Ceiltral Olllo
.
Saturday, May 11, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
dett, dtfton; niece and nephew, lhc f~ picturejl in the April 28
Tonight, c1eu. Low 4S-50 .
T!ffiiDy and Brandon Allenswortb; Sunday Times-Senllnel to becomo Wednesday, partly sunny. High ?SPVH Community Room
and 1 1pecial rriond, Bonnie J. a winner in tho mystery (mn con- 80.
Wamsley.
tnt. Moore identified tbe 6am u
Ellteaded forecast
Tile runeral will be 1 p.m· that or Harold D. Onliam, Har·
Tllundlly IJiruap S.tuday:
'JlutndDY • the fosle I :111g Funeral riiOIIville. He- one of 11to corA sli1bt .cbanc~ of showers
Home with the Rev. Cbarlu W. reedy identify die farm. HIIIIIIIIC Thunday.FuonFriday. A chance
~vu otracialina. Bm:IAI will wutelocted by laaery. Maale wDL · o{ showers apin Saturday. Highs
be in the Kirldand Memorial Gar- receive 1 S5 fal die 011io Valloy on Tburaday and Priday in mid-60s
The family of.prolessionols
....,
·•
Publillliiii-Ce. 01 ~· of tile : to mid-701, and in the 70s on Satur. Priendi..,...U at die r-.1 contestWIIIIdletllelllelpSolhncr day. Morning lows mostly in mid2520V
Drive Pai1l PteiM!II WV 25660
homo Wectneac'ty, 5 to 9 p.m.
Water eon-don DillricL
40s to mid-Sils.
·

Christine Bright

I
l

Council
•..
Coadn.ed " - Pllltl

F. Madison Bowles

Local briefs ... ---1-;·.

- · Meigs announcements--

.

I

Pick 3:373
Pick 4: 6155
Cards : 2-H, 9-C
J-D; 8-S

'

t

Vot 42, No.3
Copyrtghled 1811

news

EMS units answers 6 calls

Rl «-e ·

I •

It's a

a

Fair

A

=

:ii'

~~~;r.::J: Co~test

I:

Weather

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

A Multi.....U. Inc. Newopaper ·

·Voters approve Southern school levy
t

Meigs school levy
goes down to defeat

.

fl.""*''·

Rutland man cited after wreck

,-

2 Section, 11 P-uoo 25 a.~ to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, May a, 1.991

Symphonic Band concert Thursday

:

'· .~

•

Station wagon reported stolen

Gallia man cited after crash

r

Cloudy tonight. Low in
mid-50s. Mostly cloudy
Thursday.

Page4 .

w·

·FmliA initiates
new program

•.

I'

Ohio.Lottery

Strawberry
returns to
New York
•

•

GROUNDBREAKING • Gronnd was broken for tile $1.2 million expaasioo of facilities bousq tile Melp Couoty Department
. of Hllllllln Services in ceremonies lleld Tnesclay afternoon at the
: Middleport site. County and, Middleport vOlap.otrldala, Joal and
· ·state Department of Human Services personnel, and representa-

tives of tbe ardlitecture and contrKtlngllnns surround Middle·
port Mayor Fred Hoffman, and Meigs County CotQmluloners
Richard Jones, David Koblentz, .and Manning Rousb, left to right,
as they moved the first dirt.
.. ,
.

Grll~.nd b.rok~n .fQr $1 ..2~ !!!i!!~o!J proje_c_
t.
/y cHAltLM ~OEPLlCH "'

· ·

·

,

·

Sentinel News Staff
Ground for lhe $1.2 million
expansion of the Middleport building hou~ing the Meigs County
· Department of Human Services
was broken Tuesday afternoon in
ceremonies held on lhe site.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones . in his opening
remarks commended Middleport
village officials, ~~ and present,
for lhe vision whteh !ed up to the
day's ceremony.
Jones said it was in 1966 that
lhe Citizens Development Co. was
organized to raise money to constivct lhe present building at the
corner of Race and North Third Sts.
Jtist a YCIII lite{ lhe Department of
Human Services moved into the
riew facility.
Introduced as members of lhat
comriliuee were Dale Duuon and
Gene Grate, with Phyllis Hackett
representing lhe late Paul Smart,
and NeUie Zerkle representing the
late John Zerkle. Olher members of
the Citizens Development Co. were
Dr. Ray Pickens, and the late
Homet Cook and Walter Harris.
In introducing Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman, J.ones commended the mayor and Middleport

~----

• ·'1',~
·

·, .,, · · · ··., ·' H 1'.. ,. &lt;., ,,.,. ;

·.

.

,.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Voters solidly approved one
school levy and soundly defeated
another in Tuesday's election.
· After tbree tnes at the ballot
box, the three-year four miD operating levy of the Southern Local
School District passed by a vote of
655 to496.
The Meigs I..ocal School District's five mill continuing levy for
general operating expenses went
down to defeat by a vote of more
. than two to one, 1,11610 472.
Soutbem Loall
Southern Local Supt. Bobby
Ord Wedneaday morning expressed,
his appreciation to lhe voters of the
district for !heir support of the levy.
He said that the district now should
be able to stay out of the Emergen·
cy School Assistance Fond.
. .
Tbe superintendent did indicate.
however, that passage of the levy
wiD not have any effect on tile cuts
already made by lhe board. Those
cuts, he said, were made in antiCipation of the additional mon.ies ·
~enerated from the levy commg
1010 lhe general operating fund.
The levy will generate about
$223 '000 of the anticipated short.
fall of $400,000 for the operation
of the district's sthools in 1991-92.
Tbe Q.dditiQI141 DIOIIIIY. to brio&amp; tbe
budget into ballwce '!'ill cqmelrom
the cuts made 6y' lhe board at last
month's meeting.

These include elimination of
tbe instrumental music prograin ,
one teaching position, all extra-cur-·
ricular activities except yearbook,
and a chl!lgO in the ldndergarten
schedule from half-day every day
.to fuU-day every other day.
In lhe district 1,169 voters went
to the poDs. Of those voters 56.03
percent voted for the levy while
42.43 voted against it. Only a .
majority vote was required for passage.
Melploall
_
In precincts of lhe Meigs Local
School District, only 1,619 voters
turned ouL Of those voters, 68.93
percent vo~ed against the levy,
while only 29.15 percent supported
it.
.
.
The five mill continuing levy
had it J)8SSed would have generated
$530,000 a year but of that amount
83 percent would have gone directly mto the salaries of teachers an.d
non-certified personnel and lheu
fringe benefits, leaving only a
small portion for other things like
textbooks, other instructional materials and equipment, and general
maintenance of facilities.
The levy has been defeated
numerous times over the past three
years, but was put on lhe ballot at
ev~ regular election by the Board
of.Ed:t:;"i!!ll ~ ~'fc~n,.
with e C9111IA.~! th e elgs
Local Board' oT ECfucittion. That
conii'8Ct expires at the end of June.

w1:

Pomeroy voters select
field for fall election

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ot Human Services buildlng will look one~ the
expansion i&amp; completed. Tile buildiDJ which is
bemg constructed wllb state funds .will be owned
by the county.
former Mayor Zerkle with being members of Middleport Village
lhe man who saw lhe opportunity Council, Jack Sauerfield, James
and worked to raise the money Clatwortby, William Walters and
locally so lhal lhc building could Paul Gerard, Meigs County Commissioners Manning Roush and
be constructed in Middleport.
.Pomeroy Allorney Bernard David Koblentz, several other
· Fultz, who was village solicitor at county officials, state representa·
lhe time the original building was lives of the Department of Human
constructed, .recaUed for the large . Services, and ~vera! businessmen.
Alao introduced and speaking
crowd gathered at the ·site that each
of 111e six original board members briefly were Helen Boyle, District
loaned $5,000 of his own money to Director of the Department of
make the down payment. He said Human Services, Michael Swisher,
that the entire cost of the buil!ling director of the local department;
was paid over a period of years and Bill Ditto of llurgess and
from the Department of Human Niple, architects.
Tom Karr of Wesarn ConstrueServices rental fees.
Continued on pase 6
Olhers introduced by Jones were

TaE FINISHED LOOK • Tbis sketch creal·
ed by the architectural firm of Burgess and
Niple sbows bow the Meigs County Department
Village Council for their role in lhe
expansion projecL
In his response Mayor Hoffman
said that this is the first countyowned facility in Middleport housing a county agency. He credited

Local br•"ef:s----.,

· Rt. 7 touay
..1
ODOT
. reopens

State Route 7 below Middleport, which has been closed sinee
Saturday night due to bighwsy damage created by a massive rock
and laild slide was ~for traffic late Wednesday morning.
John Dowier, Distnct 10 deputy director, Ohio Department of
Transponation reported Ibis morning tbal a section of the pavement
had been remo~ed and tbat only very small voids had been found in
the ground under lhe highway.
He said that a temporary topping has been put in place so that
traffic can be resumed and that permanent repairs will be made
later.
As for furtber ground movement in ll!e area of the ~ighway,
Dowler said none has been detected. He did report tbat his department bas set down a "baseline" to monitor possible moveD~ent

Woman injured in crash
A Racine woman suffered minor injuries Tuesday after the car ·
she was·driving flipped over on Meigs County Road 28.
Christina D. Eynon; 17, of Pine Grove Road, ref~ ~t
for her injuries follow:/lf..the crash in SUIIOII Township.
to a report from the G
-Meigs post of tile State Highway Patro ,
Eynon was northbound on County Road 28 when slle apparently
lost control of her vehicle, went off the side of lhe roadway and
flipped over.
"£ynon was cited for failure to control.
•

Accordinf.

Jury trial canceled
Tbe jury trial set for Friday in Mejgs County Court has been canceled.
·
AccOrding to a court spolccsperson, jurors summoned need not
appear•
Coatlnued on pa• 6

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
· p
Republican voters 10 omeroy
nominated Bruce 1. Reed as thetr
candidate for mayor in Tuesday's
Primary Election.
Of the 433 Republicans who
turned out 10 CB.!il theit ballots, 232
voted for Reed while 181 voted for
Dottie s. Turner. Reed received
53.58 percent of the votes, while
Turner received 41 .80 percenL
In the fall, Reed wiD run for the
mayor's post against Independent
candidates, Larry Wehrung a11d
Ellen Rought. Reed and Wehrung
are bolh now serving on Pomeroy
Village Council.
or the three candidates for their
party's nomination for seats on
Pomeroy Village Council, Scou M.
Dillon, a newcomer to politics,
topped the field with 294 votes-33.95 percent of the total votes
cast. John W. Blaeunar received
171 votes or 19.75 percent, and ·

John L. Amott got 149 votes, or
17.21 percent of the 10ta1.
Dillon and Blaettnar will have
no comyetitt'on t'n the November '
Genera Election since no ·
Democrats or Independents have
filed for the two vacancies.
Brenda Morris, incumbent
clerk-treasurer, had no competition ·
in the primary nor will she have
any in the fall election. She
received 280 votes or 64.67 percent
of lhe total vote.
Middleport did not have a Pri- .
mary Election resierday, but in lhe·
fall voters wil elect a mayor and
flU two seats on council. Incumbent
Mayor Fred Hoffman, running as
an independent, will be challenged
for lhe mayor's post by Democrat
Osby Martin.
The_three candidates for Che two
council seats are Incumbents
William Walters _and James Clatworthy, ~epubltcans, and Paul
Clark, an mdependent.

Meigs sheriff's office
probes armed robbery

The Meigs County Sheriff' s
office is investigating the anned
robbery of lhe Five Points Express
north of Pomeroy on Rt. 7' at
around 11:15 p.m. on Tuesday
night.
According to the report, Mike
"Taz" Roberts, the owner of the
establishment, was preparing to
close and was at the cash register in
David Persons wa~ convicted had been made a "trustee1' by lhe the store' s drive. through when a
Tueaday by a jury in Meigs County sheriff's office, meaning that he small white two-door car wilh two
male subjects' drove into lhe drive
Common Pleas Court on a charge was not confined to the jail ceO. ·
through.
of escape. The 12-member jury
Story said that PersQns walked
Both subjects wore stockings
deliberated for 1!11 hour and a half away from the jail and was ancstcd
yesterdaY. before returning with three days later by the Wood Coon- over their heads and demanded tile
their verdict.
ty, W.VL sheriff's departmenL He money from the cash register.
· Persons was indicted last year was later transferred to Mason . According to Sheriff James M.
following his escape from the County, W.Va. where he then Sol!lsby, t~e subjects ~ere armed
Meigs County Jail on August 7, served six months on misdemeanor with 2S caliber automaiiCs.
After emptying the cash lhwer,
1990. As charged against Persons, charges. Ho escaped from the
escape is a fourth degree felony. · Mason County Jail in February and Roberts was ordered to enter the
Persons was represented in lhe trial was a~ended two weeks later building and lie on tile floor. The
by appointed' counsel D. Michael in Meigs County following an suspects lhen fled north on State
Route 7.
Mullen.
anonymous tip.of
b c
Deputies searched the area for
SenleiiCing Persons oy omAccording to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. mon Pleas Court Judge Fred W. . several hours after learnin' that a
Story Persons - at the time of his Crow lli bas been set for May 30. . white car was seen u-avehnJ east
escaP, from the jail - was serving a
Story was assisted in the trial by on Stille Route 2A8 at approX1iillltesentence on an assault charge, and Assistan 1 Prosecuting Auomey ly lhe-same time. This vehicle was
also described as being occupied
George Mccartby.

Meigs jury convicts
Perso.ns .on escape charge

by two white males, traveling at a
high rate of speed. According to
Soulsby, the vehic le almost
wrecked on the curve at the old
golf course site.
Roberts described the subjects
to be 25 to 30 years old. Both had
brown hair and were wearing white
tee shirts.
No information is being released
on the amount of money taken.

Governor appoints
3 to commission
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov . George _Voinovich has
appointed lhrce viomen, including a
Democrat, to terms on the Ohio
Ethics Commission.
. Voinovich appointed fellow
Republicans Barbara F. Florez of
Cincinnati, and Marguerile B.
. Lehner of Kettering and Democrat
Janis Purdy of Cleveland to the
panel, which investigatu lhe conduct of state officials and employ·

ees.

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.Commentary

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

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The Daily Sentinel

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Ill Court street

Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS 'OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

A~

.
,..,...._.._
...... , .........,..o=~,,..
q,v .

~m~

ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
General Manager

Publlober

PAT WJIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
. A MEMBER o! Th e Associated Press , Inland Datly·Pre ss Asso- .
· ela tion and the Ame r ican Newspape r Publis hers Association .
LET!'E RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All lette rs a re subject to editing and must be signed with
. name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pu)&gt;·
llshed . Letters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personall ·

ties.

Responds to board's decision
Dear Editor:

We wish to take this opportunity
to respond to the Southern Local
School Board's decision to eliminate inslrUJRenral music in our district. How very sad it is that our
school district's financial situation
is in such a predicament, but sadder
still is that our children,who partieipate in something·they enjoy so
. much, should have to make such a
• sacrifice.
.
• Band is not self-supporting, but
: neither is it non-educa1ional ·What
· these students have learned:.some
since fourth grade. they will carry
with them for the rest of their lives.
Just about anyone can sing tune
or two, on or off key, but not just
anyone can pick up an instrument
and plav our National Anthem, our
schoolrs fight song, or one of a
hundred different songs. l"stru·
menial music is important to these
students, who are good at what
they do, as it gives them self-confidence, self-esreem, and self-assur: ance that they may not t~et from
• academics or athletics. It IS impor: tant to us asrarents as we have
'spent a lot o money, time, and
effort on this particular aspect of
our children •s education.
Might we take a moment 10
·; a~.,ss
~...... ·• ·
f 'lack
f · 1er
uoe ISSUe 0
•
0 IR •
• est? Contrary to pre_vtous reports,
: if instrumental muste were to he
.reinstated, we could possibly

a

march anywhere from 48 to 55 students next year, according to Mr.
Walters, band director. With the
responsibility of running a school
district's affairs, doesn't it make
sense that those on whose shoulders it falls should make the
attempt to secure all the facts
before !llkin$ such extensiv_e_measures? Riskmg the posSibiltty of
stepping on a few toes, might we
suggest the 'lack of interest' fmger
be pointed elsewhere?
Recently our high school and
. junior hi!!h school band st~dents
held a sprmg concert, at whtch not
one school board me~ber was present. Perhaps prevtous engage~enlli prevented them from attendmg, or ~~u~ they had n~_rela­
uves ~arttctpaung, was not m~­
est~d . The ele~entary band s
spnng concert wtl~ be held :ruesd~y, May 14, 111 7.30 p.m .. m ~e
htgh sch~l gym. May we. ~ J!IIS
opportumty to extend an mv.ttabon
to each ~ member, and ~ndee4 .
to anyone ·~ the communlly, to ·
come and Iuten to what these
young _students have learned. _You
Just mtght ~ pleasanUy surpns~.
Perhaps you I! come away fee~m.g
as we do, ~ mslrUJRenral mustc IS
worth fighnng for after all ..
·•
Smcerelv,
Sam and Ruth
S!Jal'n
49315 Man el Road
R · Ohlo 45771
acme,

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, May 8, :t 891

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Reservations suffer from government 'inaction .
wASHINGTON - Life is
slower on American Indian reservations. That is part of their unique
personality. But the federal govern- ·
ment has taken that attitude one
step beyond slow to rigor mortis.
Even when Congress periodically wakes up and takes action, very
little happens. Five years ago
Congress passed a law mandating
an alcohol and substance abuse
treaunent program for Indian use,
.and budgeted $50 million for the
project. When investigators recent·
ly examined the program to see
how it was going, they found that it
wasn ' t. The law bad not been
implemented and the program was
still in draft fonn.
. ·
Some of the money has been
spent, but the result could hardly be
called a treaunent program. There
was a "Sober Rodeo" - a rodeo
where no alcohol was served. And
· some of the funds were spent to
renovate a camping facility. The
investigators from the Health and
Human Services Department's
inspector general's office were not
impressed.

They also found few "dry booses," or emergency shelters and
halfway houses for Indian youth.
Congress budgeted $8 million for
such facilities, but only one sbelter
and DO halfway houses have been
builL
.
The findings, disturbing but predictable, are included in a draft
~from the inspector general.
OUr associate Jim Lynch has found
other equally disturbing stories.
Indian officials in Michigan
report that as rilany as 20 percent of
!he youths in some tribal communities have been sexually ab~sed.
There are haunting tales out of one
Aiizona tribe of 4-year-olds with
sexually transmitted diseases. '
The Bureau of Indian Affairs
has shown abnost no ability to cope
with crime on the reservations.
Sexual abuse complaints are buried
in bureaucratic buck passing. In the
past five years, the BIA has spent
about $4 miUion to computerize the
crime-reporting system on reservalions. But, sources tell us, it doesn't
work. There are only 100 computer
terminals for more than 300 reservation police agencies.
The Senate Select Committee on

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By JOHN CUNNIFF
Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) - A prominent researcher says the competitive
ability of America's corporations is weakened by age discrimination that
thwm;ts the potential of ralented young managers.
MOre so than in other postwar decades, he said, high management
positions are filled on the basis of age and experience·at the expense of
youth ralent and demonstrated accomplishments.
.
Euiene Jeimings •.who pioneered corporate mobility studies as far back
as the late 1940s, says that in the past decade there was a return to the
view that "grey hair somehow qualifies a candidate for a management
position."
.
He found that since the early 1980s the average age at whtch executives are named chief has risen to 55 years from 51 years, and that the
average ag~; of those now in office is higher by at least 30 percent
"There is a bureaucratic principle that you must wait your age," said
Jennings.
. . •
Jennings, professor emeritus of Michigan State Umverstty s graduate
school of business, has monitored th.e ages, routes to success, tenure m
office and other data on corporate life and executives for more than four
decades.
.
Some initial fmdings were published in 1964 as "The Mobile. Manager •• a book which coined terminology commonly used today m r~fer­
e~ces to executive life, such as "fast track," and in many books smce
then.
·
•
It was while examining published claims about the demise of the .ast
track, or the route of swift job and salary advancem.ent followed by th!&gt;usands of young executives, that he uncovered the evtdence of age discnmination.
· ·
He found, for example, that the fast uack ·- in which the riders have
had three major promotions in six years or less - stiU existed unchanged,
but only to a point.
·
As in the very mobile days of the 1960s, about 12 percent of manag~
at any given time are still on a fast track, he said. That much ts
unchanged. What has changed, he said, is that the track endS abruptly. "It
is truncated.'.'
· ·
Afler repeated promotions, many young executives _become confused

·• wben their advancement ceases and they '8re left m a JOb for several or.
many years. Few recognize, said Jennings~ that the unseen barrier is based
on age.
Age enters the picture because of an econom_y that has ~ased to &amp;f!IW
as !8pidly as before, and because many compames have dectded !0 shrink
themselves to more manageable size. That means fewer execuuve post• tio~ewer positions inevitably meant a re-introduction of seniority an~
• tenure - a~e hierachy - as detenninaniS of who should occupy a po~t·
tion. Someumes, says Jennings, it was suooorted by an ideology of social
juslice•• 'meaning there was something uruair about re(l9Iling to a manager milCh younger than yourself."
·
FaCed with sllCh bloclcages, Jennings continued, many young executives have blamed themselves and changed jobs, leaving their old company to compete with adequate rather than exceUent managers.
.
These people don't know it is ~ disaimination, the professor saul,
."but that's what it is, de facto age dtscrimination." And a con~uence of
it, he added, is that industries have become more bureaucratic'; less competitive.
T\le fast track remains in place to a point, he said, and then ends.
Before the roadblock, many young execuuves continue to move ahead as
young eJtecutives did in the old days, which makes their stan-out all the
more painfuL
..
'The uacli: no longer goes all the way to the top. "Shooting starS, to
use one of the terms from the old days, are rare now. "Fiareouts" are

.

com=t tile best thing that comes of it, said Jennings, who is a confideR·
tial adviser to corporate chairmen and boards, is that some "leverage"

their big-company achievemenlli by taking higher positions at small,
growing companies.

..•

Indian Affairs, spuried on by Sen.
Jolin McCain, R-Ariz., hopes to
start helping Indians with some of
their environmental problems. The
most pressing is water quality.
TribeS across the nation are discovering that their waler is &lt;langerous
to their health. Most tribes do not
have the equipment and resources
to adequately purify and monitor
their water supplies. And federal
inspections are the exception, not
the rule.
_
Environmental hazards on Indian lands .have been exaceJbated by
the arrival of the waste merchants
with garbage on their hands and·
few places to dump it. As we
recently reported, Indian tribes ·
have been bombarded with slick
proposals to lUI"' their cherished
land into dumps for .. ~ er people's
household trash, and~ in some ·
cases, toxic waste.
The waste merchants figure that
reservation land is the national
blind spot It'!' arid and isolated, so
who cares? Certainly not the govemment. Neither federal nor state
environmental regulations apply to
most Indian lands. Fortunately ,
tribal leaders have been routinely

IUT'n\&amp;
TMINGS
Tit.~

TIME.

;·F ast tract still exists, Where U•.S.
::.but ends abruptly
•

Top-seeded Redmen begin play
at home in District 22 Playoffs
NAIA District 22 playoff action and S-4. Losses in the district were more. Carroll), Her~ Sharfenaker
.began today for the \.Jmversity of to Urbana, 1-0; Mount Vernon, 6-2 (senior, Columbus), Jon Gibson
Chesapeake) and Shawn
Rio Grande ·baseball team, 27-14 and 5-4; Walsh, 5-4; and Findlay, (junior,
Haning
(junior,
Logan}.
~ 1.
.
.
overall and 17-5 for the top seed
Chad
CarroU,
a sophomore from
among the six district teams com- . Outside the district, the Redmen
Chillicothe
putting
in his firSt seawins
over
Rose
Holman
posted
peting in the three-day, double
son
on
the
Redmen
pitching staff,
(Ind.), 3-1; Augustana (Pa.), 4-2;
· elimination tournament
has
recorded
seven
s~ves during
Game I of the playoffs, 10 be Capital, 7-0; West Virginia Tech, the campaign.
held at Stanley L. Evans Field, was 9-S and 5-4; Marshall, 4-1 and 7-5;
Redmen Coach Dave Oglesby,
set for I0 a.m. today between third and Otterbein, 14-13. Losses were
who
assumed command in 1987,
seed Walsh (17-7) lUld sixth place to Adrian (Mich.), 11-5; Capital, 11a 78-69-1 record prior to
compiled
Urbana (13-ll}.The winner of that 3; Rose Hulman, 1-0; Ashland; 4·3 the playoffs.
Under Ogle~by, the
nine-inning contest played Rio and 4-3; Marshall, 17·5: Marieua,
Rio
men
were
19-17-1 in 1988, 193·0 and 16-12; and Otterbein, 13-3.
Grande at I p.m. for game 2.
18
in
1989
(their
last ~ce in
Darrell Marcum (senior, HamilTrautwein Field at Ohio Univerthe
playoffs)
and
13-19
m 1990.
sity is the alternate site for the ton) has led the Redmen pitching
playoffs, where fourth seed Findlay staff with a 7-3 record aild has been ..
(14-6) met fifth place Ohio a SllCcessful designated hitter for
Dominican (16-7) at 10 a.m. today. the team. Against Malone in the
Allen EIHott, Cbad Carroll, Eric Md.ean,·Brad
WORKING TOWARD NUMBER ONE The winner met second seed Mount final season game last Saturday,
The University of Rio Grande baseball teaiu
ROBer, Shawn Haning, Mike Voorheis, Joo GibVernon Nazarene (16-6) at 1 p.m. Marcum not only struck out 14 batters in 9-2/3 innings of the first
indiates It's No. 1 in District 22 foUowing Its
son, Ted Thompson, James Lewis, Jason Wright
atOU.
game,
but hit a home run. in the
Dave
Oglesby;
seated,
from
left,
CO·
and
Coach
two-game defeat of Malone lut weekend. The
·Competition at both sites continseventh
inning of the nightcap to
captain Bob Young, Herb Sbarfenaker, and coRedmen opened action in the district playoffs
ues through Thursday until the
, 111 Stco11d St., Pomeroy
tie
with
the Pioneers and send the
today. Team members, standing, from left, are
captain Darrell Marcum.
•
championship game at 3 p.m. Frigame
into
extra
innings.
Rio
Keith DettwhUier, assistant coach; Kyle Schroer,
day at Rio Grande. If necessary, an
YOUR INDEPENDENT I
lith game will be played at Rio Giande won with an adllitional. run
'·
AGENTS SERVING
Grande at noon Saturday to deter- in the eighth.
Other leading hitters for the ..
mine the district champion.
MEIGS COUNTY
Although the Mid-Ohio Confer· Redmen through the season have
SINCE 1R68
ence championship escaped the included' James l.;ewis (junior,
Redmen April 27 when they lost Cincinnati}, Jason_Wright (sophothe second half of their doubleThe Southern Tornado reserves, was a great group of boys to coach. three singles and a home run, header to Walsh by one run, Rio
coached by Bill Hensler; conclnded I had a great time coaching them Simpson two doubles and a single, Grande led the district throughout
'their season with a 20.5lion-~e this year. I think that by the time Ervm two singles, Grim a double, the 1991 regular season.
Their district wins include two
mercy-rule win over the visiung they are juniors and seniors, this and singles each by Johnson,
over
Bluffton, 10-0 and 4-3; Defi·
~ ' ~ -.--u-"' '..!..
·
Trimble .Tomcats Tuesday in six could be one of the best Southern Varnert, Srewart, and'Reiber.
Southern also dropped a tough ance, 6-3 and 6-2; Cedarville, 9-0
innings.
·
teams in several years. I'd also like
6-4
loss to Warren in eight innings. and 3-2; Central State, 12-2 and 6Southern had a 21-hit attack in to thank the parents for their supGrueser
suffered the loss in 3; Urbana, 2-0; Tiffm, 5-l and 6-3;
·
posting the win. That assault was port."
relief of Northup (ll KO's and 6 Ohio Dominican, 5-4 and 3-2;
I~ by Trenton Cleland (3°4, two
EBrlier this Season... .
6-3; Wilmington, 2-1 and
doubles), Tyson Mugrage (three
Southern earlier defeated walks combined). Scott Perdue Walsh,
4-2;
Findlay,
2-1; and Malone, 4-2
and
J.P
.Long
combined
for
the
win
sinsles), Billy Jones (double, sin- Wahama 8-6 behind some good
gle), Andy Fields (two singles}, pitching from Gt'ueser, Williams, (9KO's and five walks).
Hensler agairi paved the way
Michael McKelvey (two singles), and Mugrage, with Williams pickWEDNESDAY: Turkey &amp; Dressing
with
three singles, Jones and
and Joey Hensler and Andy ing up the win.
·
THURSDAY: Baked Steak
Williams had a double, and sin- Grueser two singles, Nort~up a
Grueser (two singles each). J.T.
North up, David . Smith, John gles each by Mugrage, Trenton double, Mugrage, and Drummer
RICHMOND (AP) - An
FRIDAY &amp;
auiopsy showed that race car driver
Chaney and Aaron Drummer each Cleland, Grueser, and two by each singles.
SATURDAY: Broiled Alaskan Pollock
For Warren Matt Davis bad a Gary Neice was dead from a heart
singled.
'
Kimes.
B.B.Q. 'Ribs, Prime Rib,
Tom Evereu had a 3-4 night for
Bumgardner, Ross, Vincent. and .double and two singles, Long had a attack when his car smashed into
double
and
two
singles,
C.R.
Rei· Trimble, followed by Conkey. Chris Roush ·each had hits for
the third-tum wall during the runDHp Fried Butterfly Shrimp
den a single and double, Slater two ning of the Car Quest 300 last
Campbell, Armbruster, and Lewis W8hama.
•SERVING lUNCH: Tuesday thru Fridoy
each with a single.
Southern pitching fanned eight singles, Gilliand and Martin Long weekend at the South Boston
each
a
single.
Northup got the start for South- and walked nine, while Roush went
Speedway.
11 ;oo o.m . • 3:00 p.m.
·Robert Holloway, administrator
em, but ran into some trouble in the the distance for Wahama to fan five
•SERVING DINNER
in the medical examiner's office in
second going ona and one-third and walk two in suffering the loss.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday - 5 pm-8 pm
Richmond, Tuesday said Neice, 36,
innings. Mugrage picked up the Southern is now 9-3 on the season
of Candler, N.C., was dead when
win in relief with four 11nd twb- as they complete thier year· with a
Auto racing
.
Friday &amp; Saturday - 5 pm-9 pm .
'
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) his car crashed on lap 20 I on the
third innings of work. Caichers fine record.
CLOSED SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
. were Rober:t JC!mes an Billy Jo~~;Cs.
MeigS defeated Southern 6-4 in Chris Gehrke, who suffered severe .375 -mile track. Neice' s car was
FEATURED DAILY SPECIALS
, Southern pttchmg fanned 11, mne nine innings.
head injuries in last week's ARCA traveling at a slow rate of speed
Carry Out Available .
by Mugrage, and walked six in
Erwin picked up the win in race at Talladega Superspeedway , when it hit the wall Saturday. .
doing a "su~r job" according to ·. relief of Peterson (combined nine died at a Binningham hospital. ·
Rescue workers tried unsuccessCullen Clark, spokesman at Car- fully to resuscitate Neice. He was
BiU Hensler.
.
KO's and four walks}, while
Hook was the loser, going three Northup and Grueser combined in raway Methodist Medical Center, pronounced dead shortly after 6 .
, \12 Eost Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
and one-third innings of work, the loss (eight KO's· and five said Gehrke, 25, of i.;incoln, Ill., tf.m. at Halifax-South Boston ComRESERVATIONS
ACCEPTED
died at 10:25 a.m . EDT in the munity Hospital.
Handa Wel_lt ~ne•. and Hooper one walks).
and two-thu-d mn!Dgs. They farmed.
Joey Hensler and Bill Jones had neuro-intensive care unit, where he
The funeral for Neice was Tuesfive and walk_ed etght.
two singles and a double, Northup was treated following surgery to day . !Jurial will be today in
Sf{S had 10 stolen bases and and Grueser had two .singles each, relieve pressure on his brain.
Asheville, N.C.
·
Gehrke never regained conjust two errors, while Trimble stole John Oumey a double, and singles
sciousness afr,er sustaining a masfive ~d had three errors. ..
by Andy Field, and Mugrage. .
BtiL Hensler satd, Tyson
Meigs hitters were Brown wtth / sive head injury, ~lark said.
Mugrage was the pitching hero of
the day. He came in to relieve J.T.
Northup in the second inning and
pitched a very strong four innings.
· 1 was very pleased with all the
bo s' performances."
&gt;Bill Hensler concluded, "This

Jack Anderson
and Dale Van· Atta

rejecting the tantalizing offers from
trash companies to lease Indian
land.
. The Indians' battles with a sluggish bureaucracy and carpetbagging entrepreneurs will continue.
Mon~&amp;na ' s Fort Belknap Indian
Reservation is locked in a dispute
with a mining company that is
chewing up tile mountains near the
reservation. Some Indians believe
the mining is polluting their. water,
and when they go to their sacred
sites to perform rituals, the earth
shakes from the mining equipment
The ever-sensitive BIA is considering building a new road to
make the mines more acce~ible to
heavy equipment, and the money
for the road would come out of the
Indians• bndgel
IT IS A DUCK - The forbid:
den won! "recession" sends President Bush up the wall. He has used
every tactic in his political strategy
.hook to avoid the word. He
instructed subordinates to call the
downturn almost any,hin~ but a
recession. But now it's official. The
gross national prod\ICt slid 1.6 percent during the fourth quarter of
1990 and then 2.8 percent in the
first quarter of 1991. There is no
other word for it but recession.
Now the president desperately
wants it to go away before the 1992
election campaign begins .iii
earnest
MINI-EDITORIAL - A new
book, "The Day America Told The
Truth," by James Patterson and
Peter Kim, publishes the candid
results of a survey asking Americans some pretty bold questions,
lil&lt;e what is the least amount of
money it would take to get them to
kill someone ($2 million), how
many of them carry a weapon when
they go out (26 million), how many
of them· would .become prostitutes
temporarily (23 percent) and how
many of them don't think their kids
will take care of them when they ·
get old (46 percent). Instead of
Norman Rockwell, we now have
pollster8 painting America as a
nation of arnorill misfiiS. Where is ·
the silent majority when you need '
it?
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc:

DOWNING CHILD.1
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Southern reserves conclude season
·with mercy-rule win over Trimble

i

Neice died of heart
attack, autopsy says

Sports briefs

GILMORE'S

Robert Walters

Eastern girls hand
Wahama 8-2loss
The Eastern Eaglettes boosted
their girls' softball record to 10·2
with an 8-2 win over Wahama at
Tuppers Plains.
.
Edna Hensley was the winning
·pitcher for Coach Pam Douthitt's
troops (I KO's, one walk, and two
hilS), while .Black suffered the loss.
Eastern hitters were Lee GiUilan
(sing!e. triple}, Jliime Wilson (single, double), Mary Jo Reed (twQ
·singles), Edna Hensley (single),
and Carrie Morrissey (single, two
.walks). ·
Russell and Morrison had the
lone Wabama hits.

Pial.

~

Although practices and laws that
shield rape victims from publicity
Sh!IW admirlble sensitivity to victims, they Ignore the fact that
women can, and do, sometimes
fabricate rape accusations. And
while the woman accusing someone of rape is protected in the

....

ATTENTION ·

~

AREA HIQH SCHOOL QRADIJATES
OF 1991

Published every afternooo, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. , Po-

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lls hlng Comr. any/ Multlmedla.

In.c ..

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Ohio Newspaper Association. National
A&lt;tvert tatng Representat ive, Branha m
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

..

New York. Nrw York 10017 .

In the many accounts I've read
of the alleged rape, I haven't read
anything about the . color of
William Kennedy Smith's walls or
gossip about his bar-hopping. Neither do I want to know. None of
that information would give me
any kind of idea of whether he
committed the rape or not. Is this
what we call protecting the public's
right to know? Devoting ourselves
to creating ~IS of alleged victims and cnminals that allow us to
make subjec. tive judgments about
what ltind of people they are, rather
than concentrating on what the evidence shows?

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This is out job. If you take a .
loo.k at the way the press has his:
to~ly handled rape, we haven't
talhed up a much better score than
the judicial system.

!

· By Naluralizer, Hushpuppies and D. Myers

(I!Sl'S 14$·110)

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'

LADIES DRESS, CASUAL AND SANDALS

A. Dlvllloa Ot Multimedia, Inc.

this is someone who was a freefloating, loose woman and maybe
she was putting herself in jeopardy.

I

20°/o OFF

The Daily Sentinel

.Rape coverage misses the point _S_a"'_ah_O_ve_rs~tre_et
media, the accused is .on parade
from the moment of the accusation
to the final dispositi~ of the case.'
His backgrQund and family are fair
J&amp;n~e for the media. long before he
ts proven guilty or innocent
So what should we do now
about publishing alle$ed rape .victims' names? Recogmzing that we
need to rethink our policies, common sense tells us not to do what
The New York Times did in the
case, which was to profile the
woman with a history of her ·socalled indiscretions over the past
few years. More than a week after
the article appeared, The Times
printed an apology, but by then the
damage was done.
Bob Reichblum, news director
of WPLG-TV in Miami, summed
up The Times story well when he
told The Washin~ Post, "It says,
'She asked for 11.' My goodness,
she has peach walls. She goes to
bars. She gelS speeding tickeiS....
The implication at. every tum was

-

DINNER
SPECIALS ....

flag has 'mixed impact

at them as "damaged goods," as
thou~h an exclusivity that they valued ts now gone. This is not a way
these men chose to feel, but it is
stiU a terribly lDifair and tragic consequence to the victims. ·
Second, defense attorneys in
rape uiaJs have tried to paint rape
victims as tramps who, if they
weren't actually asking for 'what
happened to them were so immml
that one more sexual incident
wouldn't matter. Many victims
have been too afraid to prosecute,
choosint~ instead to try their best to
put the mcident behind them rather
than put themselves and their fami.
lies lhroush the ordeal of a rape

'

.

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (NEA)
three branches ·o r the federal gov- individualadditionsordeletions. .
- Like the Virgin Islands and
emment.
Once approved by Bush, the ltst ·
- ·- - ' - - - - - - - , - Guam, Puertil Rico is empowered
The legal requirements imposed goes to Congress. which has 45
to control all immigration in and
upon the offshore jurisdictions days to pass a resolUtion - subject the current commission see
out of its islands. But the other two
have "evolved in a patchwork ad to presidential veto- rejecting the Cheney's placing of Devens on the
offshore jurisdictions where t~e
hoc fashion, with Congress entire list. However, Congress can- current list as a repudiation of the
1988 commission's work, and they
U.S . flag flies, American Samoa responding to the lDiique and indi- not make individual changes.
are
not happy about this.
vidual needs of each territory,
If Congress votes it down, the
and the Commonwealth of the
Furthermore, the panel is apparsometimes with sensitivity (but) whole process would have to start
Northern Mariana Islands, are
ently perplexed by the inclusion of
denied that authority.
sometimes with il)difference or over from square one. That is coninsensitivity," says a recent study.
sidered as unlikely as Bush return- two large bases on Cheney's list:
Four or the island territories but not Puerto Rico - are exclud- ·
Executive branch departn)eniS ing the list to the commission. the Navy's Orlando (Fla.) Training
. ed f:{om the U.S. customs union, a and agencies also have ' 'responded Most insiders believe the bases Center and the Army' s Fort
beneficial status that allows goodS in inconsistent ways to the needs of chosen by the commission will be McClellan in Anniston, Ala.
Panel members suspect politics
from anywhere in the world to be the territories," adds that study. the ones closed.
played
a big role in the inclusion of
brought into those jurisdictions prepared by Jon M. Van Dyke, a
According to a source: "The
·Orlando.
There is ,general agreewithout the payment of import
law professor at the University of commission has told its staff to
ment
within
the Navy and the Pen.
taxes and duties to the federal gov- Hawaii.
start their work assuming that some
tagon
that,
consistent
with downernment.
.
Van Dyke's repat was commis- bases will be deleted from the
The Jones Act, a federal law that
sioned by an organization that rep- Cheney list, and others will be sizing the fleet, consolidation of
training centers is in order. It is
requires ships engaged in domestic
resents theegress and tlie White added. .
commerce to be regislered in this House have devised a complex pro"In pan, some changes will be weU known that the decision came .
country, applies to Guam and Puer- cess that is now underway. Presi- made just in onler for the commis- down to a choice between Orlando
to Rico .- but not to American dent Bush has appointed an eight- . sion to show it is po1itically inde- and the Great Lakes Training Center, just north of Chicago.
Samoa, the Virgin Islands or the member, .Senate-confirmed com- pendent.
Orlando is newer, cheaper to
Northern Marianas.
mission, chaired by forl)ler New
"But, in fact, some changes will
operate,
and it has major climate
The Nicholson Act, another fed·
Jersey GOP Rep. Jim Courter and be made because some members of
,
advantages
over a training base on
eral law that prohibiiS the landing made up of former high-rankin'g the panel think Chen~y let politics
of fish in this country's ports by milttary officers and Pentagon offi- influence some of his choices, and the shores of Lake Michigan. Why
ships registered in other nations, cials.
in some others, he is simply wrong was Orlando chosen for closing
applies to American Samoa, Guam
The c0111mission is now holding on the basis of future military over Great Lakes? Could it be,
members of the commission wonneed. ••
and the Northern Marianas - but public hearings on the Cheney list:
der,
because lllinois has a Republinot to the Virgin Islands (except for
By July I, it will recommend to
Fort Devens, for example, was
can
governor and Florida has a
vessels less than 50 feet long) and Bush what bases to close. It hils the the subject of considerable debate
Democratic
administration?
Puerto Rico.
power to remove bases from during the 1988 round of base-closAs for Fort McClellan, it is the
Confounded? Petplexed? So are Oteney's list and it can add bases ing decisions. Back then, Devens
most of the public officials and that are not on Cheney's liSL Bush was spared, and there was even a military's only · anti-chemical
many of the residents of the five then has 15 days to approve the loose.agreement between the origi- weapon baining facility. In closing
territories. Indeed, some are dis- commission's list entirely or send it
nal base-closing commission and the base, the Pentagon has made a
decision to stop all future live antittubed and angered by the inconsis- back for further work. However, he
the Pentagon to expand Devens.
tent treallllent they receive from all does nlit. have the power to make
Reportedly, several members of chemical weapon training. ·

Frankly, this is a subject I'd jtist
as soon not get into. No matter how
you 1:all it, someone will demand
your hide on a Ritz cracker.
But the publication by several
news orgaruzali,ons of the name of
the woman who says site was raped
by William Kennedy Smith is JUSI
too imponant not to talk about It is
a departure from the practice most
members of the media have tradi·
tionally adopted-which is to not
publish a victim's name. But is it
. fair to publish lhe accused's name
and not the accuser's? We don't
play favorites jn other tlpes of
crime. Why O::ein cases o rape7
When we
a look at the history of the trelllllent of rape victims ir. our culture and in our
courts, the miSOIIinJ behind keep·
ing a rape victim's identity private
is pretty clear.
First, in many ins11nces wbere
women have been raped, the men
in their lives-their husbands,
fathers or boyfriends-have looked ·

!

,

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On Friday. May 17, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with
photographs of high sc.hool seniors
graduating ~his year . .
Now through Monday, May 13 Drop
Your Photo Off At The Daily Sentinel To
Be Included In This Special Edition, at no .
.
charge.
(Attach your Name, High School. and Parents Name to Photo.)

**********

.ANY PROFESSIONA~ BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL OR CIVIC
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PLEASE CALL 992-2156.
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�'

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

W!clnnday, May 8, 1991

Wednelday, May 8,1991

.

'

Portland, Detroit top Utah, Boston in NBA playoff action

Tomlin's bat surprises Reds,
leads Pirates to 7-2 victory

..

WHERE'S THE BALL - Tbis is the question for wbicb Pittsburgh Pirates pltcber Randy
Tomlin (left) and Cincinnati Reds tbird b•se·
man Luis Quinones seek an answer, as Tomlin
rounds third base and Quinones seeks tbe ball,

I

in Tuesday nigbt's game In Pittsburgh's Tbree
Rivers Stadium, wblcb tbe Pirates won 7-2.
Tomlin .later scored on a single by former Red
Gary Redus. (AP)
'
.

Jackson, Federal Hocking capture
team wins in Meigs Invitational
•

'l

I
I'

The ninth annual Meigs Invitational Track Meet was held Saturday afternoon under near perfect
conditions at Meigs High School. ·
In the girl~ division Jackson
successfully defended its title,
·while in the boys' division Federal
Hocking took home the top honors.
Jackson won the girls' division
with easily with 142 points, and
Waterford was .the runner-up with
96. The host Marauders, who finished in third place with 69 points.
-: •· werefollowed by Vinton County
: · ; (65), Federal Hocking (S3) and
: : Nelsonville-York . (21). Wellston
• • and Alexander, who tied for sev: -: enth·with 16 points, were followed
·: -· by Trimble (12) and Eastern (six).
·:
Federal Hocking slipped past
Wellston 10 win lhe boys' division.
• The Lancers finished with 101
•: • points, and the Golden Rockets had
: ,: 95 ~ints. Vinton County, which
• • finished in third place with 82
; : points', was followed by Meigs
::: (64), Alexander (S7), Jackson (48),
,. Trimble (22), Wellston (18), Nel• sonville-York (seven) and Eastern
: (two).
·
Five records were broken in the
.:;:
: : mee~ and Waterford broke the girls
:. : record in the 3,200 relay. Meigs
·.- held' the record set back in 198S
- :- with a time of 10:47.5, and Water: ; ford ran it in a time of I 0:46.4.
• Heather Rutter set two recor'ds, one
of these in the 1,600 meters. Rutter
• • ran it in a time of 5:38.2, beating
: the time of 5:40.2 set in 1984 set
~ • by H. Kern of Warren. In the 3,200
• meters, Rutter ran a 12:27.4, break• · ing the record set by Ann Trainer
; of Meigs in 1984 with a time of
• 12:40.7. Amber Mustard of Jackson broke the record in the 400
• mC!efS with a time of 62.3 breaking
the record set in 1986 set by H.
Fyffe of Wellston with a time of
62.5 back in 1986.
•
In the boys' division, Federal
• Hocking' s Mickey Cozart set the
record'in the pole vault with a vault
_ of 13' 6" 1/4 breaking the record
• set by Gerald Moore in 1987 witb a
,
: vault of 12'9".
The girls' MVP was Mustard,
while Cozart took top honors for
- the boys.
Girls' results
High jump - I. Chana Tepe,
(Waterford) 4'6", 2. Tara Woltz,

(Vinton County) 3. Sarah Stinson,
(Alexander)
Discus- I. Jeni Pierson, (Fed·
eral Hocking) 86'11", 2. Julie
Riley (Trimble), 3. Letitia
Holsiager (Eastera)
3,100-meter relay - I. Angel
Robinson,.Melcie Hickerson, Shellie Baker and Heather Rutter
(Waterford) 10:46.4-new record
2.Vinton County, 3. Meigs
100-meter hurdles - I ,Missy
Vanover (Vinton County) 17.0, 2.
Kelly R08e (Jackson), 3. Heatber
Hudsoa (Meigs)
100-meter Dasb ..,.. I. Amber
Mustard (Jackson) 13.0, 2. Roanea
Davis (Meigs), 3. Lisa Hinton
(Waterford)
800-meter relay - 1. Emily
McAtee, LISI Hinton, Melcie Hick·
erson and Teresa Hinton (Waterford) 11:53.7, 2. Jackson , 3. Vinton County ·
1,600-meter run - 1. Heather
Rutter, (Waterford 5:38.2-new
record, 2. Susan Craw(ord (Nelsonville-York), 3. Kim Lambert
(Jackson}
Sbot put - 1. Keiiina Cooper
(Jackson) 32'10", 2. Stacie Glass
(Federal Hocking), 3. Jennifer Ousley (Wellstoo)
·
400-meter remJ - 1. Stacey
Harris, Gretchen Colby, Heather
Exline and Jennifer Hill (Jackson)
53.5, 2. Meigs, 3. Waterford ·
400-Dleter dasb - I. Amber
Mustard (Jackson) 1:02.3-new
record, 2. Heather Exline (Jackson), 3. Usa' Hinton (Waterford)
300-meter llurdla - 1. .Kelii·
na Cooper (Jackson) 48.9, 2. Kristen Inman (Nelsonville-York), 3.
Missy Vanover (Vinton County)
800 meter rua - 1. Tracy Ratcliff (Vinton County) 2:37.1, 2.
Wendy Brunton (J8Fkosn), 3. Katrlu Tur~~er (Meigs)
·
Loq jump - 1. Kellina Cooper (Jackson) 16'1" 114. 2. Ronnea
Davis (Meigs), 3. Amy Wagner
(Meip)
200-meter run - 1. Amber
Mustard (Jackson) 27 .1, 2.
Michelle Speakman (Vinton County), 3. Headier Exline (Jackson)
3200-meter run - 1. Heather
Rutter (Waterford) 12:27.4-new
record, 2. Stacie Glass (Federal
Hocking) 3. Kim Lanhart (Jackson)
1,~-meter relay - 1. Wendy

Brunt&lt;in, Amber Mustard, Crystal
Evans and Jennifer Hill (Jackson)
4:30.6, 2. Federal Hocking, 3.
Waterford · ·
~oys • results
·
Shot pu! - I. Glenn Bryan
(Wellston) 44 '3 l/2", 2. Josh Bailey (Jackson), 3. Cory Dever

(We~ton)

Pole vault- I. Mickey Co.zart
(Federal Hocking) 13 '6 114 "-new
record 2. Brian Mayle (Federal
Hocking), 3. Mike Jordan (We11ston)
3,200-meter relay .- I. Inigo
Marinez, Tracey Bobo, Buddy
Anderson, and Joe Walker (Federal
Hocking) 8:47.7, 2. We11ston, 3.
Jackson
Lon&amp;_jump - I. Mickey
Cozan (Federal Hocking) 19'7"
1/2, 2. Brian Mayle (Federal Hock.
ing), 3. Roger Jenkins (Trimble)
llO·meter hurdles - 1. Adam
Little (Meigs) :17, 2. William
Lewis (We11ston}, 3. Rick Patton
(Vinton County)
100·meter dasb - I. Ryan
Mapes (Jaclcson) 11.8, 2. Shannon
Jmian (Vinton County), 3. Mickey
Cozart (Federal Hockin~
1,600.- meter run - I. Matt
Garrod (Alexander) 4:39.6, 2. Inigo
Martinez (Federal Hocking), 3.
Greg Adams (Waterford)
Dllcus - 1. Luke Proffitt (Federal Hocking) 131'11". 2. Glenn
Bryan (Wellston}, 3•. Jeff Hammond (Vinton County)
· Higb Jamp - I. Josh Williams
(Vinton County) 6'0'.' ),, (tie) Andy
Grabam (Vinton County) and Matt
Haynes (Melp)
400-meter dasb - 1. Matt Van
Nosb'llll (Alexander) 53.7, 2. Dave
Bierup (Wellston), 3. Jared
McCauley (Trimble)
400-meter relay - 1. Heatb
Hadson, Shawn Hawley, Frank
Blake and Kevia Musser (Meigs)
46.6, 2. Vinton County, 3. Wellston
300-meter hurdles - I. Lewis
(See INVITATIONAL on Pate 5)

. PITTSBURGH (AP) - ' With him a gold sw and his third win in · third wben Strawbel!r hil'a slow
one swing, Plltlbw'Jb Pirarea piiCh- t1tme decisions.
·
grounder to rookie third baseman
er ~ Tomlin broke his bat and
''I W11 in bere yesterday at 2:30, Ouis Dannels for the final out.
the Cincumati Reds' bans.
working on hitting off a tee,''
"I came close,' ' Strawberry
Tomlin, a career .031 hitter. had Tomlin aaid.
said. "Yeah, it was good for me. I
a two-run single in a five-run
Perbaps the Reds are ready to, just wish I could've gotten a hit the
fourtb inning that curled the consider some extra practice ume. last time up...
Pirates to a 7-2 win over the Reds Five of the eigbt posidon players
Elsewhere in tbe NL it was
Tuesday night.
.
wbo started Tuesday's game had PittsburJh 7, Cincinnati 2; Chicago
"I was just praying he didn't averqes under .200.
4, Houston 3; and .Sari' Diego 4,
throw me a curveball,"' Tomlin
Leadoff man Billy aatcher was Philadelphia 2. .
said. "He did t1W the fii'Sl time up · at .164 and Mariano Duncan, who .
Braves 9, C•rdlttals 2
and I had 'nochance witb iL" In his fo11ows him, was a .188 hitter.
Belliard. wbo bad never driven
fii'St at bat, Tomlin had struck out.
Glenn Baggs was at .103, ~ in more than three runs in a game,
Reds pitcber Chris Hammond a stnltch in the order that inc
brolte a 2-2 tie apinat Bryn Smith
lost after winning bis first three Luis Quinones (.190) and Joe Oliv- (3-1) witb his double in the fourth
er (.ISS). The fii'St b4seman was inning and capped a five-run fifth
starts.
He said he didn' t concentrate in Terry Lee, just up from the minor with his bases-loaded triple. He
the fourth inning, whiclt he started leagues. He maintained his .000 also singled in the second.
by retiring Bobby Bonilla and average with a 0-for-3 game.
Steve Avery (3·1) gave up two
"I don't want to belabor the runs and seven hits in eight innings
Barry Bonds. With two outs and
me bases empty, Hammond made point, but we're not scoring enough for the victOry. Jeff Parrett got the
the mistake of relaxing.
runs," Piniella said. ~ 'That magni- last three outs.
.
"l'd gotten by their big guys," fies ev~ part of the game."
·
Expos 3, Giants 2
Hammond said.
"We re making good contact
Marquis GrissOm hit a home run
Two.walks and a single later, he but. we're not putti.ng anything with one out in the 15th inning to
had the~ loaded and Tomlin, a to¥ether,'' cenrer fielder Eric Davis Hft Montreal over visiting San
career 1 for 31 hitter, at the plate.
sal(l.
Francisco, sending tbe Giants to
Hammond ran a fastball in, and
The Reds were one of the few their seventh loss in eight games.
the second-year Pirilte dumped it teams that created problems last
Grissom '3 fourth homer of the
into sbon cenrer field.
year for Tomlin, wbo came 10 the season came off Trevor Wilson (0"
"I didn't even see where it land- Pirates in August and had one of 3). the ftfth San Francisco pitcher.
ed,'' Tomlin said. " Once I made his worst outings against the Reds. Scott Ruskin (1-0) worked two
contact, I just ran."
It was ·one reason Leyland chose innings fer the victory.
Jay Bell hit a two-run double not to use him in the National
Cubs 4, Astros 3
later in the inning and the Piratea ~playoffs against Cincinnati.
Bob Scanlan gave up one run
were on their way to their second
' I remember that game well," over seven innings in his major
consecutive win against the defend- Tomlin said. "It was mostly league debut and George Bell hit a
ing world c~pions.
because I got th.e ball up. I wa_s three-run homer off Xavier Her· " Chris pttched three good really concentrating on keepmg 11 nandez (0-2) in the ftrst inning as
innings before that," Reds manag- down tonight'' · ·
Chicago .beat Houst.on at the
er Lou Piniella said. "The pitcher
Leyland didn 'I want to take any Astrodome.
got the bloop hit but the walks chances with Tomlin, who had
Scanlan. called up from the
were really the big thing.' '
worked only one inning in the past Cubs' Iowa farm club April 30
. The Reds scored twice in the I 0 days. Tomlin worked into the wben Mike Harkey was injured,
sixth on Barry Larkin's triple, a seventh inninjl before Stan Belinda benefited from Bell's second
single by Davis and a Pittsburgh finished for his third save.
homer in as many nights at the
error.
The outing was the longest of Astrodome.
The Pirates scored twice in the Belinda's brief career.
Padres 4, Phillies 2
seventh against Ted Power on Don
''It felt good to get out there and
In Philadelphia's_first game
Slau!lht's RBI single and an error.
air things out," he said. .
since Lenny Dykstra and Darren
P1rates manager Jim Leyland · The series ends tonight with Daulton were injured in a car crash,
and pitching coach Ray Miller Norm Charlton, 1-2, pitching for the Phillies started a nine-game
stress to pitchers that if they can the Reds against Zane Smitb, 1-3.
road ttip by losing to San Diego. .
make contact at bat, they can help
With Dykstra missing his first
themselves win. On a chart in the
Surprises galore
game of the season, Von Hayes ·
clubho~. the i'j.rates keep track of
The National League was full of opened in center field for the fii'St
positive hitting contributions from siii'JII'ises.
time since Aug. 12. Steve Lake
pitchers. Tomlin' s single eatned
Of course, the biggesc one carne took Daulton's place behind the
when Darryl Strawberry busted out plate.
of a 1-for-23 sluml' and hit a home
Bruce Hurst improved his
BasebaD
run at Shea S tad1um in his first record to 4..() with help from three
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Rad· game &amp;Jainst the New York Mets n::lievera and Fred McGriff extendnor Township police officially since s1gning a five-year, $20.25 ed his hitting streak to a careercharged Phildelphia Pbillies out- million contract witb Los Angeles.
high 12 games with a run-scoring
fielder Lenny Dylcstta with driving
San Francisco's battered pitch· single.
under the influence of .alcohol, ing staff pve up only three runs in
speeding and reckless driving for IS innings, but the Giants lost 3-2
h· M da
·
iden1
to Montreal as sluggers Will Clark,
IS on ry morrung ace
Kevin Mitchell and Matt Williams
·
If convtcted, Dykstra could face
the suspension of !lis license for went 2-for-15 combined.
one year, a $300 fmc and 48 hQIJJ'S
But the. biggest shocker of t!Jem
in jail. POlice say his blood-alcohol all came m_ Atlanta, where ltttle
content level after the accident at 1 Rafael Bell.1ard ha!1 five RB!s m
a.m. Monday .was 0.179 percent, : the ~raves 9-2 v1ctory over St.
weU above the state•s legal limit of Lows.
0.10 percent.
.
"! .?ev~r tho';Jght about t~e
Dykstra slammed his red sports cycle, sa1d Bell1ar~. whR had a
car into two trees wbile driving smgle, double and tnple. Every. home from a bachelor party, caus- ixx!Y hils to have a g~ ~· and
ing multiple injuries to himself and tonight was my good mghL .
It was also a vCC'f gOOd mght for
teammate Darren Daulton. They
were returning from teammate John Darryl. Strawberry s J"C!Ufllto New
Kruk's bachelor party when the York was, well, dram8tic to say the
accident occurred.
least.
Both playe~ remain hospital. Straw!'mY sh~t up the fans who
ized. Bryn Mawr Hospital b~ him lor e1ght seaso.ns lll,ld
spokeswoman !;lien Mattus said t!Jrilled those that~ ~· hit·
they are in fair condition, conscious. ling a two-~ horner m his return
but in pain.
Tuesday mght. But h~ groun~ed
NEW YORK (AP) _ Jurors · out to ~ tile game wtth the tymg
deliberating the fate of 8 gambler run at third base as New Yorlc held
accused of attempted extortion on to beat Los .Angeles 6-5. .
against George Steinbrenner lisAfter sconng two runs 1n the
MASON, WY.
tened to taped conversations.
ninth off reliever John Franco, the
The panel of I 0 men and two Dodgers had runners on first and
.
women began deliberations late
Mondar afternoon after a monthlong tnal in Manhattan 's federal

Sports briefs

.

By BOB BAUM
.
AP Sports Writer .
PORTI.AND, Ore. ({\~') - A
warning to Ponland. Trail Blazers
opponents : Don't get Clyde ,
Drexler upset.
.
The Utah Jazz did, and the result
was a II ?· 97 .Portland victory
Tuesday ntght m Game 1 of thetr
second-round p_layo!f senes. Game
2 is Thursday rught tn Portland
Drexler got a knee to the stomach from Karl Malone with 5:30
left in the third quarter and no foul
was called. 'As Drexler lay·on the

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. (Continued from Page 4)
Williams (Wellston) 42.7, 2. Adam
Little, (Meigs), 3. Frank Blake
(Meigs)
800-meter run - I. Matt Garrod (Alexander) 2:04.8, 2. Tom
Reid .(Vinton County), 3. Joe
Walker (Federal Hoc~ng) ·
200-meter dasb - 1. Shannon
Jordan (Vinton County) 23.7, 2.
Matt Van Nosb'llll (Alexander), 3.
Ryan Mapes (Jackson)
·
3,200-meter rua :.... 1. P.J .
Chadwell (Mei'Rs) 10:51.9, 2.
Todd Barlow (Jackson), 3. Derek
·
Faber (Alexander)
1,600-meter relay - Dave
Bierup, N. Ruden, M. Jordan. and .
W. Lewis (Wellston) 3:42.0! 2.
Vfuton County, 3. Federal Hocking

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Boxing
NEW YORK (AP) - Simon
Brown is vacatin~ his Intemati~nal
Boxing Federalton welter":e•ght
title because the IBF sancuoned
bouts in South Africa and because
of its handling of a title unification
bout with former World Boxing
Council champion Maurice Bl&lt;;&gt;ek·
er, his adviser, James Cooks, S81d
Brown won the IBF welterweight title on April 23 , 1988,
stopping Tyrone Trice in the 14th
round. -·

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Bakimcn (Robinlo&lt;l1·3l at Oakllod
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Milwaukee (Navarro l-0) Chic:aao
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Sports briefs

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)- The
University of Kentucky, coming
off a two-year NCAA probation for
basketball recruiting misdeeds and
academic fraud, admits it violated
another rule last weekend in
recruiting a transfer player.
Kenbteky athletic director C.M.
Newton and coach Rick Pitino said
the violation occurred when recruit
Clifford Rozier attended a postKentucky Derby party at a
Louisville home Saturday night.

. Will DIYIIIon

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·Sports briefs

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Jerome Kersey durlnf Tuesday
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Blazers wooll7-97. (AP)

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Bill Parcells, preparing to negotiate a new
contract after coach ing the New
York Giants to their second Super
Bow I victory in five seasons, has
auditioned with NBC Sports as an
analyst, The New York Times
reported.

SYRA CUSE. OHIO

I•• ,

and ·

game, Detroit won their Baslml offs for Ponland.
back spasms and lost center R;obert
Conference semifinal opener
Jobn Stockton had 23 points and Parish to an ankle injury late m the
pen," Punland bead coach Rick . against Boston 86-?S.
16 assists for the Jazz. Jeff Malone game. Detroit's Isiah Thomas left
Adelman aaid "He W8S mad."
The Loa Angeles Lakets. lead· scored 17.
the game midway through the fmal
The inspired Blazers went on a ing I.(), pmy hOst to Golden State
Pistons 86, Celdcs 75
period and w~ la}ren to a hospital
24-5 run tiw gave them a 21-point in tonigltt's only game. The Bulls·
Two-time defending champion for X-rays ofh1s nght foot
lead, wrapping up their most one- 76ers series, which Chicago leads Detroit was outsbot 39.4 percent to
•'We dwded wh.en we heard
sided victory !bus far in the play- 2-0, doesn't resume until Friday 38.4 pen:ent at Boston, but the Pis- Larry wasn't playmg that we
off's.
night at Philadelpbia
tons took IS more shots thanks to a shouldn't change our game plan," .
Drexler scored six of Ponland's
While Drexler was leading Port- 17-7 rebounding advantage on the . Detroit's John Salley said, ''but we .
next 10 points after the blow from land to vietory, Malone couldn't offensive boards.
did breathe a sigh of relief." .
Malone, Drexler finished with 20 find the basket. He scored 21
The Celtics took a season-low
James Edwards scored 18 potnts
poilus l!ftd a playoff career-high IS points, but had only four.iJ\ the sec• 71 shots .and made a seaso~-low 28 and Joe Du".'ars 17 for Detroit,
ond h81f.
as Detrotl held them to thetr lowest whtle Denms Rodman had 16
' ' I'm not going to say tbey playoff point total since the start of rebou.n(js. The C:ellics were led by
fQitCCI me out of my range because the 24-second shot clock in 1954. . Regg1e Lcw1s w1th 20 pomts.
I can shOot from anywhere," Mal- They lost to New York 82-75 in
Detroit led 40'-3 7 at hairtime
one said. "It was just one of those 1953.
.
·
and Boston, the regular-season
night&amp;"
"If we could get the rebounds," leader with a 5l.2 shooting perTerry Porter added 19 points · Celtics rookie guard Dee Brown . centaj!e. made JUSt seven of ~0
and Jerome Kersey bad 17 points said, •'we could get easier shots shots m the th1rd quarter as the Pis·
and 13 rebounds as sill Blazers, instead of shootin~ jumper after tons opened a 64-53 lead.
including Ill five starten, SCOied !Jt jumper afU7 jumper. •
''We want to attack ·the glass as
double fi10res. Walter DJ!y•s . Boston played without Larry much as poss1blc and set up. our
·
·
halfcoun offense," Edwards S&amp;ld.
In the (ourth quarter, Boston
came no closer than 75 -68 on a
three-point play by Lewis 111ith
5:34 left. Detroit's biggest lead in
the period was 82-69.

Hubbard's Greenhouse

,. J

249 95

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Complete li ne of Vegetable
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Football

1. .

TC2010
GAS TRIMMER

.

In Tuesday night's other playoff ftrst extensive action of the play- ry over Indiana Sunday, because of

team." ·
' 'I just saw that look in his eye
that something was going to hap-

NEW YORK (AP) -

HARDWARE ·

Heating, Water

Utah cut the .Blazers'
lead to 68.{;6:
The ligbt silencecl the Portland ·
crowd.
"It was quite scary," WilliamB
said. '.'It was like Bird going down
in Boston. You don't want to Jl)ay
the playoffs without Clyde Drexler
because he is the heart and soul of
this learn."
Fortunately for the Blazers,
Drexler only had the wind knocked
out of bim. And he was not
pleased.
" It probably_woke me up,"

Sports briefs

PICKENS

For Dependable Home

rebounds.

Drexler said. "It ftred up the whole

court in pain,

.

MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIALS

The Dally Sentinel-Peg~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~-

'

' I

'.

l
I
•
I

�Wednesday, May 8, 1991
Page .6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Ground...

Dissolutions, annulment sought .·
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been flied in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Bobby 1. Slallley and Loretta F.
Stanley, both of Racjne; and .by Phillip L. Fraley, Vinton, and
Racinda K. Fraley, Pomeroy.
·
.
A petition for annulment has been filed in the court by Timothy
C. .Tackett of Langsville against Candy M..Martin Tackett, Columbus.

Civil cases processed
BancOhio National Bank of Columbus has ftled a judgment in
Meij!s County Common Pleas Court against Terry Wyatt of
Pomeroy in the amount of $4,638.86.
.
The case of Michael W. Marcum, and others, against Mark A.
Goeglein has been dismissed in the court.

· Softball tournament scheduled ·

Breaking and entering investigated
Rick Metheney of Painter Ridge Road reponed to the Meigs
County Sherifrs Department on Tuesday that his residence had
been entered sometime between 8:30 a.m. and 4:10 p.m. A small
color television, a VCR, three shotguns, a bow and some cash were
reported missing.
Entry, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, was made by forcing open the fi'ont door. Investigation is continuing into the matter. '

EMS units answer four calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units answered four
calls for assistance.
At 10:15 a.m., Pomeroy went to State Route 7 for Mary Barnhart, who was taken to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
At 1:13 p.m., Middleport fu-e depanment went to Fruth Pharmacy for a truck fu-e. At 5:39p.m., Columbia Fire Department went to
Gaston Road to the Nielson residence for a chimney fue. At 11:45
p.m., Rutland squad went to Beech Grove Road. Melinda Justice
was 1t8Dsponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Dairy Club tomeet
The Meigs County Better Livestock Dairy Club wiil meet on
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Rick Koblentz. The
Koblentz home is located on State Route 7 between Five Points and
Chester. Tonight will be the last dale to accept new members.

-~----------------------------·

,.

:~~-Area

...

deaths--

:t..eland Lieving

Friday, May 10, at Crow-Husseu
Funeral Home with Rev. Glenn
Leland Harold Lieving, 64, of Rowe of6ciating. Burial will follow
;:Point Pleasant, died, Tuesday, May . in Kirkland Memorial GardeJJS,
:-7, !99l,atPieasant Valley Hospital where military graveside services
::;following a long illness.
will be conducted by American
;. He was retired after 26 years of Legion, Mason County Post #23.
'-employment from the Southern
Visiting hours w~l be held at the
·~hio Coal Company, where he was funeral home on Thursday fi'om 6-9
::a general mine foreman and train· p.m. Friends wishing may make
: ing supervisor. He was an active contributions to the American Can~ Qlember and Sunday School teacher
cer Society.
--of the Evangelical Christian Union
::Church of Point Pleasant and a U.S .
.:.Armr veteran of World War · II.
;::Lievmg had also worked as a !icen:-sed plumber and electrician for
·=Lieving Plumbing Company,
~owned by his father, as a general
:..mine foreman at AEP's Philip
::Sporn Mine in New Haven and as
':an eleclrician at Ravenswood
1Kaiser Aluminum Plant.
:: Born October 15, 1926 in New
::-Haven, he· was a son of the late
: Carl L. and Vema L. {Edwards)
:.Lieving.
·
. .
·• He is survived by his wife, of 45
Mary Elizabeth (Cundiff)
· :Lieving; three sons, Raymond
:(Villi) Lieving of Bidwell, Leland
."(Nancy) Lieving Jr., of Huntington
: and David (Connie) Lieving of
· Christianburg, VA; two daughters,
:~ Patti (Danny) Williams of Point
.Pleasant and Beverly (Roger)
':Schultz of Bidwell; three sisters,
..oortha Gray of Letart, Margaret
, 'Brewer and Barbara Wood, both of
~ Point Pleasant; a brother, Nonnan
: D. Lieving of Point Pleasant and 12
grandchildren.
: Service will be held at I p.m. on

.

te~g ~ - now controlled by
medica11ons - that lent him to the
hospital for the weelcend, even wei- ·
coming a I!IOUD to the While House
on Tuesdiy- iTfrom the bottom of
my former fibrillating htart."
And he must have sighed with
re)jef when be got the results of
tests later in the day thai showed
that his rapid heanbeat was not
caused by cardiac di~ but ~ a
medicel dictionary.
. hyperthyroid problem, a condition
Yet White House physician Bur- he shares with his wife Barbara.
ton Lee said the president continStill, for a "man his age," Bush
ues to be in excellent overall health has _had more than his share of
with "an extraordinary cardiovas- medical problems, Among diem:
cular system." And dl;x:tor.i in gen- , -He has degenerative arthritis ,
eral call Bush, 66, remarkably fit of the hips and 1cnees, which maltes
it increasingly uncomfonable for
for a man his lll!e.
Bush bas made fun of the flut- him to jog on haid surfaces.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Pnesi-·
dent Bush's "former fibrillating
. heart," now blamed on an overactive thyroid, is the latest of IIU\IlY
medical woes to beset a man who
routinely passes physical exams
withftyinaoolors.
. Frol!l skin cancer to degenerative arthritis to a potentially IifethreateninJ ~)ergy. Bush has had
enough ailments to fill a small

CHtlauecJ ,.._ JNIIe 1
lion of Po111eroy, general contnM:tor, was rec:qgnized, as was Dick
Miller of l'1lkasbarg Headug and
Cooling, wbo was awarded the
plumbing .00 beating conlnCL
Construction on the exp8nsion
which will provide facilities to consolidate the entire agency under
one 100f, is expected to begin with·
in the next month.
At )nsent the Children's Services, Bureau of Support, JOBS,
Food Stamp Issuance, Legal Services and a portion' of the Income
Maintenance Department are located in offices away from the Race
Street building.
.
After the ceremony, refreshments were served 8l the Middle- .
)XXI Fire Department,

. Continped rrom p . 1 · ·

.There will be a men's softball tournament for Classes D and E a1
the ball diamond in Reedsville on Saturday and Sunday. Cost is $65
per team and teams must P.rovide their own softballs. First, second
and third place trophies will be given away. Call Jim Caner at 3786325 or Kendall Church at 378-6406.

·Bush's 'fibrillating heart' now blamed on overactive thyroid:.

Wednelday, May 8,1991

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

C,LEVELAND (AP) -)'he
Southern-dominated Democratic
Leadership Council is trying to
seize control of the Democratic
Party's 1992 agenda with a moderate platform it bills as the "New
American Choice" - and the
pany's only hope of retaking the
White House.
To Democrats tired of losing
presidential elections and fed up

CLEVELAND (Af) - Here are
the selection~ Tuesday .night in the
Ohio Louery:
'

with Nellie Zerkle representlaa ber brotlaer, die
late Middleport Mayqr John Zerkle wbo lllitlat·
ed tbe project, and Pbyllis Hackett, dlugbter of
tbe late Paul Smart, one of the orlaiaal
lnveston, pictured left to right, participated In
groundbrealdng ceremonies for tbe $1.2 mUUon
expansion of the original buUdiDI.

Pick 3 Numbers

. 3·7·3

(three, seven, three)
Pick 4 Numbers

6·1·5·5

(six, one, five, five)
Cards
2(two)ofHearts
9 (nine) of Clubs
J (jack) of Diamonds
·Hedrick promoted
8 (eight) of Spades
The Super Lotto JackpOt is $16·
Thomas L. Hedrick has been million.
I 0 a.m. The publi'c is invited t~
promoted from planning engineer
attend.
·
10 District 10 Chief Planning and
Ioformation sought
·
The Southern Hil!h School Class Desi$11 Engineer, John D. Dowler,
SPRING VALLEY CINEM4
of 1981 is seeldilg mformation on Distrtct I0 Deputy Director for the
446 4.J74
the whereabouts of William "Bill" Ohio Depai buolllt of Transportation
Morris. Anyone having any infor• . announced·today.
Hedrick replaces Howard Gif·
mation on Morris, should contact
ford, who retired from the departTammy Chapman at 949-2963.
ment after 40 years.
Touraament slated
The plannmg and deaign engiThere will be a double eliminaneer.
is responsi~le f« all aspec~ of
tioa Class D and E Men's Softball
enganeerang
an transportatton
Tournament at Hartinfer Park in
improvements
within the nine
Middleport on May 8 and 19.
llw 5/lel'ce
county
district.
· ,
Shins will be given to the champiHedrick
who
resides
in
Fleming
·
ullne lo~!Js
on and runner-up teams. Sponsor
trophies for top three teams' will be began wort for ODOt in 1970 as
given. Entry fee is $65 plus two an engineer-in-training after gradu- ·
atiJig from Ohio University in civil
balls. Ca!I992-7114 to enter.
engineering. Tom and his wife,
Susan, haVe two children, Tara and
Sara.
Sooth Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
55-60. A 20 percent chance of rain.
Thursday, mostly cloudy with a
•.
chance of showers. High in the
mid-70s. A 50 percent chance of
rain.
Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday:
.
Warm throu$h the period with
fair weather Friday and Saturday
and a chance of showers and thunderstorms Sunday. Highs in mid70s to mid-80s Friday and Sunday
with 80s statewide Saturday. Lows
55-65.

-Meigs f!-nnouncements - country musk: night
The Lottridge Community Center will host oountry music night on
Saturday from 6 p.m. to micfuighL
Refreshments available. Public
invited.
Woodmen dinner
The Burlingham·Modem Wood·
men will have a dinner Saturday at
7 p.m. at the hall. A ftlm will be
shown on Drugs and Safety in the
Home and each mother will be recognized with a flower. Children are
welcome. Public invited.
VFWtomeet
· The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 ·will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. 8l the post home.
VFW AuxBiary to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Ladies Auxiliary No. 9053 will
meet Mollday at 7:30 p.m. Officers
will be installed. Mary Bowen will
be the installiow,oflicers.
·
Scholarships availllble
Carleton College Scholarship
applications are now available for
Syracuse residents. Applications
may be picked up a1 the John Lisle
res1dence, 1290 Church SL in Syracuse: Further information may be
obtained by calling Lisle at 9925011. •
Special service
Rev. Rick Nance, Pliny, W.Va.,
will be the gu~st speaker during
special services a1 the First Church
·of God in Syracuse on Sunday at

-Hillad a bual skin ~ncer
removed from his face in 1986, a
benign colon polyp removed in
1986 and 1 noncancerouJ cyst on
his finaer ltiiiOVCd in 1990.
-flo is highly allergie 10 bee
stings.
-The president suffers from
modera.te bigb-l'requencr hearing
loss, blained on loud engme noises
while he was a pilot in World War
II.
·
-He cannot donate blood
beca•ise of a teen-age case of hepatitis.
-He IUffen from hay fever and
other reap~n~ory.systep~ allergies.
~He bas been treated for mild
g1auoon1a, an eye disease that in its
most adv111ced forms can lead to

DLC promotes 1JemQcrats'

Lottery numbers

ORIGlNAL COMMITTEE REPRESENT·
ED • It was in 1966 that the CitiUD&amp; Develop·
ment Co. was organized and eacb of tbe members loaned $5,000 for tbe down payment on
construction or a bulldlng In Middleport 'to
bouse tbe Meigs County Department or Human
Services. Tuesday afternoon two of those
Investors, Gene Grate and Dale Dutton, along

-The Dally Sentinel-Page-?

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt. Ohio

from

•

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~egulai

•

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Special of the Week!

FISH SQUARE

'new ·choice'

$1.14
WITH ·FRIES •••••••S1.84

AD,OLPH'S DAiiY VALLEY
"At 11M W of the P-.-oy Mmna •1•1•"

POMEIOY, OliO .

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ARMITRON
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•

wai clearly havin&amp; lrOUble keepin~
his usllll pace. "Looking good,'
slimcone called from the lidellnes.
"Looking slow," 1 displeased
Bush shot back.
Then, 'OUl of the eyaiabt of the
pool of reporters that pa with him;
when he jogs, Bush stopped entirely and finished the COWie Wllkillg. :

At Fruth's
for ec·

Save $2.00
:,

bad RIIIIOODd ulcer in 1966.
-Before becoming president,
Bush told interviewers he bad been
a chronic worrier and frequently
bad difficulty sleeping.
Allo, has been prone to numerous ooids and bouts with hay fever
since becoming president ,
Even though Bush's erratic
heanbeat has been stabilized for
now and the doctors have been
upbeat in their prognoses, his
"condition" must goad Bush- a
man clearly proud of his athletic

new choice and deserve a new whether the organization founded
choice and we ought to give it to in. the wake ofMondale's defeat
vative, refreshing effort to bring them."
succeeds in its effort to steer the
working, middle-class Americans
The cqanization's critics, how- party away from its traditional
back into the Democratic fold.
ever, and there are many, are ask- views on economic development,
"Those people don't care about · ing the question W~ter Mondale taxation, welfare and other issues
the idle rhetoric that has paralyZed nosed to Gary Hart · in 1984: · and toward a mone moderale, proAmerican politics,'' Arkansas Gov. f'Whe~e's the beef!"
business approach.
Bill Clinton, the DLC chairman,
The DLC 's answers in the
Critics argue that the DLC positold the orpnization •s rust major weeks ahead could determine the tion leaves little contrast with
convention Monday. "Tboy want a oourse of the 1992 campaign, and Republiclns.

PACKAGE
j

from a bleeding duodenal ulcer. He

l&gt;LC's approach is seen as • inno-

PORTRAIT
• :·.- .. . ; M. •

Jland.
-t'U::.,d
out in a London
hotel during a 1960 business trip

of his .

proweu.
Both Barbara Bush and White
House physician Lee have men·
tioned that Bush felt fatigued in the
~ while joggins. eve11 bef~n the
mcident at Clmp David on Saturday that led to his hospitalidtion.
Two weeks ago, :Bush was jogging at a local military base and

with the party's liberal image, the

ecial

Weather

blillcha.
-He has a ''mild'' enlargement

r

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Jlospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS ; Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy.
; TUESDAY DISCHARGES • Wilma McMillan, Reedsville, and
:Erma Roscoe Hollon, Middleport.

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At Pt. Pleasant ask for Gloria or Carol.

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Bob Evans ....................... .18 3/8
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City Holding ..................... l4 1/l
Federal Mogul ........................17
GoodyearT&amp;R .................21 3/4
Key Centurion ................. .12 lfl
Lands' End .............................22
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Multimedia Inc................ .26 SIB
Rax Restaurant ............. :....7/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 26 3/4
Shoney's lnc..................... 17 1/2
Star Bank ................. ..... ....20 1/l
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Page 8 The Dally sentinel

The Dally Sentinel-Page 8

Pomero,-lddleport, Ohio
Poineroy--Middleport, Ohio

wednesday, May 8, 1991

·Court rules against prayers at gradl:lation
By BOB EGELKO
AIIIXIIted Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -

A
divided slate Supreme Court rulecl
. 11w prayers at public high school
graduation caemonies violate separalion of church and state
"When a school diatrlct opens
or closes the graduation ceremony
witb a pra)'llr, it sends a powerful
message that it approves of the
prayer's religious content," Juslice
Joyce Kennard wrote Monday,
The vote was S-2 to ban the
widespread practice of opening
gradlllltion ceremonies with a religious invocation and closing them
with a benediction
·
Two membcrs.of the majority,
-

Beef Chuck 7-Bone Cut

Chuck Roast Or

Cbief Justice Malcolm Lucas ll!d
The 6tb U.S. Circuit Court of
Justice Armand Anlbian, described . Appclls upheld gradultion PfiYCI'S
their VOIIIS as reluctant and invited
in 1987; the II tb Circuit barred
the U.S. ~upre!D'. Court 10 ~ difreligious invocations. before high
ferendy m a similar, pending case
school football games m 1989.
from Rhode Island.
The four high schools in the dis•
In a dissent, Justice Edward tricl have included prayers in gradPanelli said gniduation prayers ar_e uation caemonies for decades. The
a.valid ".acc~.mmodation of re1•· prayers asked blessings ~d guid81~ belief! comparable t~. the
ance for the grad~ and included
pnnllng of ·In God We Trust on such phrases as 1.n the name of
coins.
our Lord. "
Sin~e the U.S. Supreme Coon
The prayers were upheld in
ruled m 1962 that state-mandated 1989 by a state appeals court,
classroom prayer is unconstilution- which said attendance at graduation
al, it and otber federal lll;d state w~s voluntary. the prayers were
. courts have wrestled wuh the brief and nonsectarian, and the J?ut· ..
involvement of government-funded pose was not religious indocmnainstitutions in religious activities.
lion but 10 add "a note of dignity
· and decorum." ·
·

te

lb.

ro·u n

:,u:r.

PREPARING FOR pUMPKIN CONTEST •
Larry Wolfe, rilht, a member of Radae
CoancU, and Bill Amott, entertabunent
•
nator ror Racine's Fall Festival, are worklnll on
a committee to orgallize tbe l'illage's lint pumpkin contest. The winner or tbe contest, which
wiD be held Oct 4, tbe first day or the Fall Festival, will be the person who RJ'OWS the llraest

lb.

pumpkin, and anyone may enter tbe contest. A
$100 snin111 bond from the Racine Home .
National Bank wiD be presented Ill tbe winner.
The group orpnlzinll tbe contest hopes to milke

.MURRAY

it an annual event. For more informatloa on
Racine's Fall Festival, contact Bill Ne11e at
Racine Home National Bank. Wolfe and Amott
are pictured pllntlng pnmpldn seeds.

$838

Carleton Church holds banqijl!t
A mother-daughter banquet was ton Well~ Kristen Chevalier, and Amanda He[\lman, Tina Justis,
held recently at Dales Smorgasbord . Pauline Hy~ll with Christy Rams- Teresa Reynolds and Margaret
.
. in Gallipolis by the Carleton· burg and Melissa Ramsburg, Kim Henderson.
Church.
Margaret Henderson gave the
welcome and she also planned the ·
evening program entitled, "The
Fragrance of ChrisL" The invocation was by Sadie Carl,
.
Mrs. Kim Herdman presented
several vocal selections and the
. mothers were presented with home
made craft items made by Jessica
and Kristen Chevalier,
Receiving prizes were Neva
·King, oldest; Chrissy Ramsburg,
youngest mother; Ruby Burnside
HOMESTYI.E I.UNf'll SPECI/\LS
and Janet Beal, most children present. Door prizes were awarded 10
!Huruluy Fr·iduy. 11 ti.IIL tu :1 Jl.IIL
Louise Harrison, Marjorie Smith
and Lisa Perdas. At the cOnclusion
.MONPAY- Turkey Club with Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
of the meeting Mrs. Margaret Henderson was presented an arrangeTUESPAY - Philly with Fries, Soup &amp; Salad
ment of silk flowm.
Attending were Ruby Burnside
WEDNESDAY - Meatloaf with
with Mary Lou Burnside, Pat
· Thoma, Marcie King, Betsy
mashed potatoes &amp;gravy, choice of vegetable. ·
Houdashel!, LoiJise Harrison with ·
Marlene Harrison and Pauleue lfar.
THUBSPAY -·spaghetti with Soup &amp; Salad Bar
rison, Marjorie Shith with Brenda
EBIPAY- Hamburger with Fries and Soup
Rouch, Michelle Taylor, Sac!le Carl
with Eva King and Stephanie Carl,
TUICIIDAT It TIIVRJIDAT, CBILDRBI'I UIIDBill:l BAT.nD
Virginia Dean with Belinda Dean
FJI.OJI can D._.8 JIBIIIV. [EXCWDES DRINK &amp; DESSERn
and Sarah Dean, Neva King with ·
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Ohio
0
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Family
Medicine

•

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Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
L

.'

~: Youth

a

and young adults most
:.common victims of appendicitis .

om

' · Question: l'ni" a woman in my
" 40s and have had abdominal pain
· . for the last several weeks. Could
this be appmdicitis?
Answer: I don't ihink so.
Appendicitis starts as a mild
, abdominal pain, but usually pro~ gresses to intense pain fairly rapid" ly. You wouldn't wait for a
' response in the mail or lhrough this
.
newspaper column! If you had
. ' appendicitis, I think you would
' .have ·seen your SUf$00n before you .
· · had a chance to wnte your letter to
' me. A description of the symptoms
of the typical case of appendicitis
. should help you understand why
it's not likely you are suffering
• from this disease.
~
The pain usually begins as a
mild bellyache and is centered
' around the umbilicus - the belly
button in everydar terms. This pain
slowly builds in mteilsity over the
· first day or so and slowly shifts its
area of greateSt intensity from the
i center of the abdomen· to l,he lower·
\. right side. The al'petite decreases
, and a fever begms. Nausea and
·· vomiting may occur. The sufferer
· has no doubt that he or she is Sick
: and needs to see the' doctor - and

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Prices Effective Sun., ~Y 7 thru Sat., May 11, 1991

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Beef Chuck Roast •••••
BUCKET
Beef Cube Steak •••• ~B;.
SUPERIOR . .
.
oz. $
.
9
•
w•
11
Fran k1e 1eners.•••.•• ~
CAROliNA
Sl
09
~
Bacon ••••••••••••••••••••••••
ll. .

•

12

PIG

s

PURINA
CAT FOOD
3.5 Ll

LB.

PEPSI-COLA
PRODUCTS
2 LITER BOTTLE

HEAD ·

BORDEN'S

ORANGE JUICE
112

GALLON

$149

.(
Snack Cakes •.••.•.•. !.'f!••• 69
.

·GROUND
BEEF

.

1

SNUGGLE.

.

Fabr1c Softener ••••6:.~z••
. LOTSA POP
oz.

12
12 PAll
CANS

' G... Only At Pewtl's SuW Val•
. Goe41May 5 .... Mly If, 1991
u..1t 1 Pwr C•t•-

TONY'S
1...,r;Pizza

PURESWEET SUGAR

!.~· $169

,&gt;

Goe4l Only At Pewli's Sutw Valu
GNII MayS thru illy If, I ttl

·, . umlt ,..,c.,._

I

CHARMIN TOILETTISSUE
IIOU $299
PIG.
Untlt 1 ,., c..t.m..

MASTER BLEND COFFEE
34.5

G..i Only At r.wtl's S.W Yalu

GN11 May S thru May 1f, I ttl

MAXWEU HOUSE

·

OZ. CAN

$349

Good Only At Powtl'1 Sutw Yalu
GNII IItty 5 thru Mlly If, I t9 I
lillllt I hr Cull.-

'

r,1i\',UII. NV

$14? 0

·NOW OPEN

GROUND
· CHUCK

$24.95 &amp;UP

(304) 773-9000
TANNING BED OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

cau v. Far 'l'lniAI.Raeruatfont ,

10 LB. PIG.

w'e Ban The Most Puto• llodel
Wolff ')'!lnnlna Bed 'l'llat Seta The S+•nd•rd
For 'l'be TenntaaJilclaatrJI
12 VIIIT8 t:i4.9II'UIII TAl: ~· 1 'VIlli' •3.00 PUIS T.U:

SJ690
•

•

Revival slated

Spring concerts set

MASON MOTEL
Ri 1J

'

$169
'

$169

Meigs marketing students
honor local employers

· l:

from Hubbard's
. Greenhouse

·c ommunity calendar

LETTUCE

UnLE DEBBIE

Harrisonville news .

Information needed

POUND BOX

LB.

Lance personal

· , Now, I'll confuse the picture a
. litde. This is the typical description
' of appendicitis, but unfortunately,
' many individuals don't come into
• the doctor's office with the typical
: symptoms. Parti7ularly in young
- children and the-m lhe elderly, the
" symptoms may be much Jess distinct. The pain may not be centered
in the lower right part of the
'. abdomen. ijausea and fever may
· also be absent until the illness has
become qttite se\\lre.
·
' A few statistics may also be
• helpful. Appendicitis can occur in .
• individuals of any age, but it is
' most common in those between the
:- ages of 10 and 30. Men are affected ·
Community Calendar Items
"a bit more often than women in this appear two days before an event
, age group, but when all ages are .and the day or that event. Items
, considered, this difference disap- milSt be received weD in advance
·:pears. About 7 percent of the Unit- to assur.e publication in the cal. ed States population ultimately has endllf.
appendicitis. Question: What. caus- ·
; es appendicitis, and is surgery still
· , the only treatment? Answer:
WEDNESDAY
.
Researchers are not sure of the
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at the
cause of appendicitis. Many Jlelle Chapel Church in Gallipolis
episodes involve infection that will be held through Sunday at 7 ·
'· destroys the lining of the appendix, p.m. nightly with Ralph Savage,
~ and as the infection worsens, it can
Columbus, as evangel,ist. Public
'· ultimately cause the appendix to invited.
':burst. The ruptured appendix pours
infection and bowel contents into
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
' the abdominal cavity creating the · a rummage sale at the Heath United
: life-threatening illness peritonitis. Methodist Church in Middlepon'on
"Some episodes of appendicitis WedneSilay and Thursday from 9
. seem to be caused by a mechanical _a.m. to 3 p.m..
' blockage of the appendix opening.
' (Such a blockage can be caused by
POMEROY - A representative
. pin worm infection, tumors and fro·m Congressman Clarence E.:
,enlarged lymph nodes.) As a result Miller's office will conduct an
·' of the blockage, infection be$ins open door session on Wednesday
• and leads to the sa111e comphca- from II a.m. to I p.m. in the Meigs
~ tions we see when appendicitis
County Courthouse. Questions
• appeli;I'S to develop directly from regarding the Fedeml Government
mfectton.
can be directed to the representa~
Some individuals have pain that tive.
·· progresses in a pattern that sujtgests appendicitis, but the pam
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ser• clears up with antibiotics. In mdi- vices will begin Wednesday and
~ viduals with these symptoms and continue through Sunday at the
who ultimately had their appendix Middleport Chur~h of the
removed, there was scarring in the Nazarene. George and Charlotte ·
,appendix caused by repeated infec- Dixoo will be the evangelists. Seruon. These individuals clearly vicc:s will be held each evening at7
demonstrate findings that suppon . p.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.
, the infectious origin of appendicitis Pastor Lloyd D. Grimm Jr., invites
theory. Since most individuals with the public.
· ' appendicitis do not have a history
of repeated episodes, we are not
sure what li~t this sheds on our
THURSD~Y
understandmg of the cause of
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
appendicitis.
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
The doctor must decide if the at 8 p.m. Racine Grange wiD visit.
abdorninl!l pain his oc her palient is All members are urged to attend.
· experiencing is caused by appen · '·
dicitis or by other disorders. InfecPOMEROY - The Preceptor
tion and tumors of the intestine, Beta Bela Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
. kidney, ureter, ut.erl!s•. ovary or fal- Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
lopian tube can mtmtc ' the symp- p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
•toms. An ulcer can have symptoms · Church. Officers will be installed.
'that are the same as appendicitis. Hostesses are Shirley Beegle and
·we doctorS use a number of aests to Jeannie Werry.

ZESTA
CRACKERS

Fryer Parts ••••••••••••••••• 49(
GRADE A .
•
. ·
9
(
Whole Ch1cken ••••• !~ ..... ·
ECKRICH FRESH KIELBASA, ITALIAN SAUSAGE or
$219
· t ••••.••.•..•••.••
.
Bra· t wurs
$169
LB.
1/4 Pork Loin

try and identify the specific ca11se
of abdqminal pain, including an
accurate history and a thorough
physical examination. A skilled
surgeon, with all of the modern
tests·, can accurately diagnose
A I C Christopher Lance has
appendicitis about 80 percent of the
returned home from the Persian
time.
Gulf. He was honored by his famiThe treatment for appendicitis is
ly and friends with a cookout.
still surgical removal. In fact, the
He is the son of ltoger W. and
treatment for abdominal pain which
.Bertie Lance. He is a 1989 gradusuggests appendicitis, even though
ate of ~astern lligh School.
.
20 percent or more of the time the
He has now returned to his duty
cause is another condition, is
station at McGuire Air Force Base
surgery. People who have their
in New Jersey.
appendix removed before it rup·
tures do very well. Those whose
appendix ruptured before surgery
Gilmore's In Pomeroy on Mon(lay arternoob.
APPRECIATION DINNER HELD • The
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lefebre~
have a little rougher time because
The
bailqnet wu beld to thank those employers
marlketin1 education program at Meigs Hlgb
Maine, SJlCnt the past two weeks
the infection has spread out o( the .
School, under the direction or David Kucsma, · who provided on-the-job training as a part or
with his brother and sister-in-law~
appendix and into the abdominal
Meigs High School's work study program.
hosted aa employer appreciation banquet at
Lee Lefebre.
. ··
cavity. but most eventually make
Mrs. Virginia Gibson spent the
full recovery.
.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Allan .
So, if you have abdominal pain
Gibson
and sons, Columbus.
The Mt. Olive Community
that seems io be getting worse, go
Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Alkire and
Church in Long Bottom will have
see your doctor. Don't wait to read
Lol~
Clark
visited Sunday after;
revival Monday lhrough May 19 at
an answer in a newsoaner column.
noon
wiht
Mr.
and Mrs. Charles
7 p.m. with Brother Larry Nix,
"Family Medicine'1 is a weelcly
Allcire,
Racine.
:
·Aslwille, N.C. with services at 7
column. To submit questions, write
The marketinjt education pro- Ohio Va)ley Bulk Foods, employ- . p.m. nightly. Pastor Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- 8ram at Meigs High School, under ing Carolyn Fitzpatrick; Chuck
Mrs. Neva Kin~ spent the weekend
versity College of Osteopathic the direction of bavid Kucsma, Blake of Big Bend Food land, Bush invites the public.
with Leo King m Columbus recent;
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, hosted an employer .appreciation employing Catina Wolfe; John
ly.
Ohio, 45701.
banquet at Gilmore's in Pomeroy Quesenberry of Wendy's in
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Deaphridgi,
The Southern Local School Dison Monday afternoon. The banquet Athens, employing John Howerton;
Hamilton,
spent a few days with
was held to thank those employers Pizza Hut, who employs Michelle trict Elementary Schools will pre- her sister Mr. and Mrs. Lon·nie
sent their annual spring concerts on Bolin recently.
who provided on-the-job training Curtis; Reed's Country Siore, who Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. in the Southas a part of Meigs High School's -employs Edna Hensley; Subway,
Mr. and Mrs. Courtney
em
Hi$h
School gymnasium. The Williams,
The Meigs High Sch~l Class of work study program.
employing Chase Cleland; Big public ts invited
Portsmouth, were week.
to attend. The con1982 is plannin,g its reuni'?n fqr
Employers honored, and their Bear, who employs Jasoo Yeauger;
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
1992. Anyone wtth tnformatton on student employees were Larry Kroger's, who employs Tracy certs are under the direction of King.
•
1982 graduates should contact Powell of Powell's Super Valu, Eblin and Mike Cleland; the Meigs thomas Walters.
Kimberly Willford at 742-2103 or who employs Dave Lester; Jim Hill High School Store, who employs
Birchfield Funeral Home at 742· with Angie Swift of Pleaser's, Amy Might; and the 1021 CorpomRemember Mom m1
2333. Names and addresses of employing Jim Carpenter; Annie lion, employing JOhn Barnes.
her day with fl()wers
.1982 graduates are requested.
Cl)apman
of Chapman Shoes and
.

\

POMEROY · There will be an musicians. Public is inviaed.
organizational meeting to plan for
the 20th class reunion of Meigs
High School (1971) on Thursday at
FRIDAY
7 p.m. at the Meigs County Public
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Library in Pomeroy. For informa- Senior Citizens Dance Club will
tion c.o11tact Bob Werry at 992- . sponsor a dance on Friday from 811 p.m. with music by the Happy
5396.
Hollow Boys of Athe"ns. Those
. WELLSTON • The Wellston attending bring snacks for the
Ohillco Society will present a base· snack table. Public invited.
ball and sports card show on ThursPOMEROY - The Return
day at the Saint Peter and Paul
Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
Parish Hall fro 4-9:30 p.m. Admission is $1 per person and $2 per will meet Friday at I :30 p.m. at the
family. Hourly door prizes will be Meigs County Public Library.
Edgar Yerian will present a progiven.
gram, ''The American Indian, Some
ATHENS - Serenity House sup- History·. " Hostesses are Mrs.
port group for members of the George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
community affected by domestic Grueser, Jr., Mrs. Everett Hayes,
wiolence will meet Thursday from Mrs. Pearl Mom and Mrs. Ronald .
Reynolds.
5-7 p.m.
RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek Watershed Association will
meet Thursday at 6 p.m.

.

RACINE - The Southern Local
Band Boosters meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Anyone interested is
urged to attend. ·
POMEROY - There will be a
dinner at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on Thursday from
5-6:30 p.m. Cost is $3 per person
with a menu of baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy, corn,
cole slaw, biscuit and beverage. A
variety of pie will be available at
an extra charge of .75 cents piece.
Following the dinner, music will be
played by Junior and Rita White,
AI Windon and Bill Ward. A free
will offering will be taken for the

POMEROY : Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center is sponsoring a flower and plant sale on
Friday from 8 a.m: to 4 p.m. Public
invited. Proceeds go to the
Alzheimer's Foundation.
•

-.

.

~.

---

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGE~

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

62 7 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
. PH. 4U·1699
HOUIS: 8 l.M.~6 P.M.

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ,

12 iNCH FERN ................ $9,95 .
10 INCH FERN .................$ 5. 7 5
BEDDING PLANTS .... S6, 50 FLAT
10 INCH HANGIN.G BASKETS \ $5 75 "$675 $795 .:

,

Special! PANSIES ........~~!~~.~~f.~.'!~.~.~~.~~ .....$400 FLAT

w.. Honor Th&lt;' Mountaineer and GoldPn Buri\PyP Card•

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Ohio • 992·5776
Open Daily 9·5: Sun. 1- 5 - OPEN MpTHER'S DAY

ER§

DAY· GIFI~§ooo
JEWELRY
TIMEX
COMPLETE

STOCK

WATCHES

l/2 PRICE

30°/o OFF

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

.40°/o OFF

RUSSELL STOVER
CANDY
1 POUND-Reg. 55,25

$1 0.00 per child

Kindergarten-School Expenses
'look ' " - •65.00

Yearly tuition ~ate is $800.00 per child. Pay·
menta may be ma"e through 10 payments start- ·
ing and ending May at the rate of $60.00 per
month. Or a one lump sum payment receives a
S&amp;O.OO "discount.

State leillttred
...ts all State . . ,. . . standard•.
For more Information &amp; brochure write or call:
333 Jl. Second Awe.

,

· Sl oo EA. ·:
4 INCH GERANIUMS, MUMS, CALADIUMS.........
10 OR MORE 85C EA.

MAY -SPECIAL DISCOUNT ·
Kindergarten Registration.
For 1991·1992
, School Year
Registration Fee

\

ONLY$3 99

AVIANCE
NIGHT MUSK
SPRAY COLOGNE
1.5 OZ.-Reg. s4.95
ONLY$339

OFFER
GOOD
THIOUGH

SUNDAY,
MAY 12,
1991

........' Ollie "760
614~992-6249

I,

�wectneedly, U., 8, 1991

~~~~~~~199~1~~=:::~~;::::;::::::~::;::Po:m::~;Y~TMI~d~dl~e~~rt~,o~hlo~----~----------~~--J~~~~~~=:~~~

usiness Services

BULLETIN BOAIJD

•

•

•

.•

•

.
•

CLASSWIEDS1

'

'

.

992·21$6 .

PVH Adm. Con f. Room .
· Call 675-4340 Ext. 232
'
To ReRjster
·

....... Oh.

CAIPO CliANIIS

qllll llll FLOOI CAll

lUBTRACT"
GATHERINC·DUST.
lDD".DOLLARS
.. . .

COI'VRIGHT 1•1 • THE KIIOClER CO. ITEMS AND

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, MAY I, THROUGH 8ATUR·

DAY. MAY 11, 1111, tN PJ'

•DA!

n•1

'

U.S. GRADE

A

Perdu• Split
Chick• Breasts

2

•
•••

I

•

l

.:

•

I

I
•

•

•

"w•

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
MEIGS COUN.TY . ·
COUNCIL ON Al;ltNG I
An !'"!O !Mployilr'
,..,
QUALIFICATIONS: · ·" •

Bac:holor O...·ln PubliC
Adminlllr8llon,

w

ogy. Sodll Worll. Nul"ling,
or lllotod fllld. pluo two
veora oxpeo- 1n a pro,_.... Cll(lldty In tlio
lieldolhum8n~­

piOMing. or 111-llold. cw
•r ...,. 1n

equtv.lent

ednmlotoatM

c:opocliv

bu-•
or-""""" pragnom.

with community

Full job deocrlptlon moy
be obtolned from Joyce
Bunch. Ph. 992·2161 . or
write Melgo County So·
nior Citizens Center, Box

SIGNs ·
by tlGk H!Ohlttl(

Delta Pride
Catfish Fillets
Pollid

.• "

•••

.

,t:ojl~~~ve lown ' c~ttlng ·=s=~~~f&gt;.d~S~==I

~ulpment wll be ouctloned ~

o.ff and eold •• Ia. on Setur-

doy, M1v 11, 1991 ot ~0&lt; 00
•· m. from the Melga County
Sherllf'a Dopt. Goroge oreo
locoted betwMn the Sher·
Iff' a Office . Side Entronco
ond the Melgo County Court

.. ,.

•

•

ASSORTED VARIETIES GREEN BEANS
GOLDEN CORN OR SWEET PEAS '

Stokely's Finest
VegetableS

"..."'

.••

•
"'"
""

"

Houee side entrance.

Tho equipment ""n be ob·
Moved by tho public two

turning
''Fifty''.

hours prior to the 1111 time

.'•

"'•
•

•
'

•

.. .'

'

'
•

•

..•

~ Moore's
~Potato Chips

•

.......

•

"..'

.. ..

•

•

... .

•

For ·
CAFFEINE FREE DI!T COKE

Diet Coke or ·
Cola
12-PIIl 12c C.

8

•

..•

RI~P~RSON

AUC'ftONCO. ·
TERMS: Caoh or ChiGII wid! LD. ·
Not Reepon~lble For Aacllden• Or l.ell Of l'nlpe!!Y
U01111ed &amp; Bonded In Oilla, Ky. I WV M
'

'

Til-COUNTY
SANillTION

·

FRESH

I.NSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window•
•Roofing
•lntul8tlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742-22

1131 Bryan
Middleport,

SIPTIC TANI PUMPIIG
.POIT ·A· JOHN RENTAl

Cleaning

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
4·5·91·1110. pd.

THE

..

sI ' 1
$

.

CUCUMBERS ..................
4" POTS-3 COLORS

'

79 C 1111•
PANSIES ....................$4 9.7 FLAT

The Terma of the 1111 ere

caah.

·

•

The Home Notional Benk
rooervoo the right 10 reject ·
onv or all bldo. The Home
Notlonll Bank r&lt;~oervoo the
right to ,......,. onv o1 the

992-5335 cw 91S-U61
Across From Pool Office
POME.ROV, OHO
I0/3Q/'.9 lfq

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF
INSULATION
Contact

STEVE WHnE
992-6434
After 5 p.m.
·

5·31·' 90 tin

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

BILL SLACK

EMILEE MERINAR

GROOM
. ROOM

.I Owner

992-2269

6 / 7 /'9111

R. L. MASH
CARPENTRY

&amp; Operator

992-5526

614-992-6820

USED RAILROAD TIES

POMEROY, OliO

Ohio

Pomtroy,

8-1 '

4·11·11-lmo.

2-11-91-Hn

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

MICROWAVE ·
OVEN REPAIR

e. e. 10. 12. 13, 14,
Real Estate General

Custom Frame lepalr

Pick Up •

NEW &amp; USED PARTS

Specialiling

FD R ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS

SEIYICE

992·7013
or 992·5553

992·5335 or
985-3561

011 TOLL Fill
1-I00-141·DI70
DARWIN, OHIO

Aaooo ,,.. Post Offfco

300 WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

217 1. Second St.

POMIIOY, 01!10

61 11'81 / 1 mo.

3/ 6/ 90/lln

.

Real Estate General
OFFICE 992·2886
HOME 992·6692

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

..···~.........·-

•

tJUI'(IrltfW ........ ......

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .

601

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room AddiUon1
- GuHer work

- EI•ctriCII •nd Plum,blng
- Concret• work
- Roofing

- Interior &amp;. Ex1tt'lor
P•lntlng

FREE ESTIMATES

_ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE.$. TURNER, BROKER

EAST MAll W~O:.:..I

YOUNG'S

•R a modeling and
Home· Repairs
•Roofing ·
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMAll

'$ '
''•' "'"····
.
•

I'

CED.R
CONSTRUCnON

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

NEED A SMALL BUSINESS BUilDING to start your own bu·
smess in langsville? It's a nice building on approx. I acre lot
Has water, sewage, and re stroom It's already slate approved
for co(llmercial use.
AT ONlY 130.000

REEDSVILLE - .ARE YOU LOOKING FOR RIVER fRONTAGE?
Well. 11 you are, here it is! Approx. 51o 7acres of level ground
that could be used for many purposes. Start your own river
camp ground or use the farm land. ll'sso level, you can drive
your boat right to the river and put 1t in ~ith no ha ssel. Right
off SR 124. ASKING $25,000 - MAKE OFFER.

SYRACUSE - Collllt Street - Hate painting your house?
It won't be necessary wilh this maintenance free siding on
both lhe house and storage building. The house has 3 bed·
rooms. U·shaped kitchen, full basemen! and formal dining
room. ·
FOR THE LOW PRICE OF $34,500

APPALACHIAN

POMEROY- Nice I floor plan home with 3·4 bedrooms. 2
balhs, carpet, W.B. !~replace. Very cute. OWNER WANTS A
SALE - SO MAKE AN OFFER! $27,000.

MIDDlEPORT- 3rd Strati- If you need to be close to the
school this 1s the house for you. This house has 2 bedrooms,
large living room, dming room, and newer wall furnace. A
great starter home for
$17.800

POOLS,
CISTERNS, ETC •

BEGINNER HOME OR A RETIREMENT HOME? It could be
bolh. Small home with low maintenance - in town for con·
~enience. 2 bedrooms, nice kitchen cabinets. Homelocated
'" Rutland. ONLY $19,500.
·

FRONT ST. - MIDDLEPORT - A one story home with 5
rooins. 2·3 bedrooms. some new carpeting and some new
plumbing. Immediate possession.
$8,500

THIS 2 STORY HOME has ~ad some remodeling completed.
You can do the rest. and at this price it should be easy? 3
bedrooms. I bath. front porch to s1t on to enjoy the mce spr·
lng evening! Close to S.R. 7. Th1s isa "REAL STEAl" at ONlY
$16.000.
ACREAGE - Approx. 6.77 acres of ground located oul back
of Middleport N1ce place to build your dream home
$22,500.
CHESTER- PRICE REDUCED- Well buill brickhome wrth
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, brick fireplace 1n LR., 2 car garage. AC
heat pump. Well landscaped yard! NICE HOME- $69,900.
IEMODELED HOME !N T~WN ..:.. large lot, 3·4 bedrooms,
ele. B.B. heat.. uniquely designed front porch. BARGAIN
PRICED AT ONLY $21,900.
APPROX. 51 ACRES of groond for building or hunting,
located on TWP. RD. 125 ·..., RACINE. Will sp!H- has I gas
well on it. utilities milable. CALL fOR DETAILS!
BRINGING BUYER TO SELUR •. JHAT'S OUR BUSIIIESSI
WHETHER THE HOUSE YOU HAVE TO SELl IS flEW AND
COSTlY OR OlD AIID RUNDOWN, THERE AlE FOLKS WHO
WAIIT IT. AND WE KNOW WHO THEY AIEl OUR OFFICE
Will FIID YOU THE "DEAl" YOU WANT. CAll US NOW
FOR PROMPT, RELIABLE SERVICE.
HENRY E. CLELAND ............... ...... 982·1181
JEAN TRUSSELL ........................ .. 841-2110
JO HILL .... .... .... ..... ... ... ............. .. .. 8111·44tf
OFFICE... .... ..... ...
. ...••., ..•• -112·W8

992-6648 or
691-6864

II·14-'90 lin

WATE.

HAULING
20S N. Socond Slrstt
MIDDLE,DRT, OHIO .,,... ,
Offiu 614·•92·2116
HOME 614-''2·5692
DOTTIE S.

·1,625 GAl.-l3S .s45
lt. 1, lox 71-A
lmAND,
OHIO 45775·9626
614·742·2904

Wr Ne:oed

4 · 29-91 - 1 mo. pd.

ROOFING

WE 'DO

MIDDLEPORT- Bradbury Road - Count lhe Extras"Just a glance and you will know 1t's a community where
people care." A newer ranch style home with 3 bedrooms.
above ground swimming pool, lighted baslietball court. 2
storage build ini!S, dog kennel, and a woodburning stove.
All FOR $48,500

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

·T RO- BUILDERS

MINERSVIllE - Spectacular view of the nver. Would be
great .as a renlal property or a starter home. A3 room home
with a bath and 2 lots.
$10.000
POMEROY - lincoln Hts. - "Cute as abutton- Neat as a
pin"- describes this two bedroom home with an equipped
kilchen. carport. 1nd part basement Has a floored attic and
50!288 fool lot
.
$25,000

Notrt/11

RACINE- h•llr Nttdld - For this I \? story home. 3to4
bedrooms with 4 ~orches, hill basement. dimng room, fam·
ily room, and a small outbuildinc. Good size lot.
$28 ,500.
. '

Stoe*l/
AIR CONDITIONERS - HEAT PUMPS and

.

SHERYL

.. ................... 317·0421
..... .. .... ....... ... 18~·1131111
....................... 182·301111
............. 182·1371

Ohle

Pomeroy,

1 2·3~ ·90-tfn

FLATWOOD ROAD- Agrowing area. Approx . 3 acres w1th a
great laying building site or mobil home site. TPC waler avail·
able. Electric lines across the property. Farmers Home Ap·
proved . Almost ready to go, just needs you.
$8.000

MIDDLEPORT- Hlp StrHI- Avery deep lot m a greal
neipbortlood . lm1g~ne your new home on th~ level lot. All
utilities available:.
$11 ,000

·

!FREE ESTIMATES)

NEW LISTING - COMMERCIAL SITE IN MIDDlEPORT This well known established business buikhng can be yours.
Includes the stock and m~ntory and you're ready lor business! Sounds easy? IT IS! Only Serious Inquiries Please.

'

ln.

AU MAlES
lrlllfl It In Or Wt

KEN'S APPLIANCE

MEIGS FARM MARKET

mo.

•Room Addi1iona
•Garageo
•Kitchans • Bathl
•Vinyl Siding
•Restoration
•Repair Work
•Landscaping •Gr·adilngJ

THE

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

the ••I• at •nv tl"''·

GERANIUMS .................

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

985-4473
667-6179

above nemed vehlclee from

!41 7.
7tc

RANGIS - Gos·R~&lt;.--$125.,

FRIIZIRS-$125 up · '
MICRO OVENS-57' .,

•Garaps
•Cc!lnpls"
1-daling
Stap &amp; Compare
FrH Estimatss

JOHN TEAFOID
Scaut c_..ld., a..t.

.

DRYRS- $69 up
RIFRIGIIATOIIS-$100 ..

INaw Homes

IADGES

PUBLIC NOTICE
Wodnaadoy, Mev 16 .
1991. ot 10:00 A.M. tho
Home Notlonol Bonk wMI of·
fer lor 1110 at Public Auction
the following :
19B7 FORD TAURUS 4
Dr. Soden 1FABP53UX·
HA2Z3882
1988 QMC Convenlon Van
2GDEG215HIJ4607021
1911 CHEV. Comoro Z28.
1G1FP87F9FN14208B

90 DAY WAIIAm

W~SHIRS-$100 up

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTIOr,l

lroktn Clubs lepoirtcl
110PHIES - PlAQUES
Public Notice

USED APPLIANCES

4·1· '90-1 mo.

GOlF lESSONS~. 510 ..,,
6 lor SSS
NEW,GIIPS ......~ ........ 54

HALF-RUNNER BEANS ..~~:•• 69(

Farm Machinery will sell at12:00 noon.

AvcriON CONDUCDD U

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter
· Painting

SPEEDY VAC
Quality
Sweeper
Repair
698-6591

S•l•

Merchandise

board with blind door, pine kilchen work lllblo with drawer,

"

~UALITY
·67~9'2~!

54 Miscellaneous

Plus family a~dltlona Will be sold.

very unusual primitive soUihern hardwood cupboard wjth
ftour, sugar bin wO&lt;k board orig . green pain~ early school
masters desk with orig. grain palnl, All Novveau ladies
writing desk mahogany wifl mother-of-pea~ inlay banded
with,birdsaye maple. early Gallla County prim. pewter cupboard, unique VicL walnulsewingcupboardoncaslors, small
empiie 10118 seot upholsiBnld in rosa wlvel, very fine walnut
platform rocker, blue lllllvet mfg. plala, round oak pedeslal
lable with 4 barley twist oak chalro, oak walllalephone, large
chestnut work iable, Circa 1820walnut hepplawhilaaopleaf
table, Viet. candle stand wilh gingerbread, Salem Rocker
wilh orig.palnl,child's mountain chair, pr. needlepoint chairs,
wicker sanee, 2oak rocking, 6mluloi"l·typa chalro, old cream
separalor ·good cond., Slone chum Wilh OaShar &amp; ld, daisy
cl\um, stump puller, grindslona, ice cream freezer, wringer
type washer Speed Queen, old day bad, feather bad, mangle
ironer, iron bulehering kettle, old canning jars, stone jat1,
crOckery, pottery 10rties drip coffee maker, misc. fumiluro,
Gone With The Wind lamp orig. ohade, twin burner lamp,
alabaslar lamp, pr. amber crystal lamps, olher Iampo, loll of
glass, early pattern glass, compoles, etc., Fenton, Heioey,
Imperial, Depression, water pitchers, IBI"Ying dillhes, cups,
saucers, glasses, ate., Carnival bowls, occupied Japan
figurinea, animals, 6 HaiOiand ~. 5 bl.. &amp; while plaltll,
1Ope. china dresser set wllh malehlng peolume bolllao, while
Viet. vase wilh applied ftower, china canclollick, floY.al
chesler vase, pr. Royal Dux. 16'epplled lruM balas, loll of
olherchina,pincushion doll, Effanbedoll, 2 FrozenChartones,
one black clolh Cream ol Wheal adv. doll, early biaque doll
earringo, clolh body eleganl Viet. orig, drau, old bollle
marked 'Pomeroy' other bottles, MajoHca vase, Majolica
plate, 6 slllrling coas1B111, sUverplala. 2 pc. oervlng dilh,lilvef
syrup pitcher &amp; other oUvar, picturea, prinll, frames, oil
palnUng. - a umbn!lla sllnd, 14 quills (bl.. &amp; white, Kate
Greenway 6 etc.) from lale 1boo'olo 1930'1, cosiUme Jew·
elry, collection of IOntage clothes from Viet. to 50'1. Includes
children's clolhes, box feed sacks, Viet pillow ohMis, olher
fine linens, old hooked rug, oampler wi1h hearll and vinel
(some wear), tole lray, tolo painlld deed box, old Kodak
camera, flalsplinl baskell, old slUffed be• and cal, Chris~
mas decorations and olhero, wood burning 10118, omlll pol
belly stove, Wenn Morning healing otove, gas c:ook alo118
FARM MACHINERY &amp; MISCELLANEOUS: J.D. 24TW&amp;r,
bush hoi!. good M.F. IIIOWing machine, J.D. Van BNnlgrain
drill, J. D. mg harrow, hay elevator, J. D. hay IIIII. FOld
culllvator, com sheila", oprayero, horoe collaro, 2 • 30 gal.
jara, 10 gal. alone jar, boom pola, IOie, Good King cullll,
wlndowl, oomerlq, aho\181s, Mal, melal drum, lrapa, a-•
den IDolo, handlea. old tools, plu1 mcn.
·

~9"frby

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY!
GueaoWho7

at that location.
The right Ia re•rved torefuse ony and all blda.

ANnOUES '&amp; COLLECnBLES: Small walnui comer cup·

..

NEW- REPAIR

PH. 949-2101
or los. 949-2860
DCJy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

AVAILAILf
FREE ESnMATES

beQuaen

again,
lntt•d of

FRESH

S.vM81 g.,..,.aUon• of .x:umulatlona.
Hlltul M/nQ dacnud, I no /ong.r hav• UN for
tools, machlnary related lt.me stored In
outbuildings, bam and eiNHie.

ROOFING

"At IICisonablt Prices"

D-11UCIS

10-1..11110.

HowCJrd L WrlteHI

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

COUNTRY CLUB

Flowers and Gifts

OLD GALLIA COUNTY HOMESTEAD OF
HETSEL &amp; NELLIE RUSSELL

......

W1111l,
Wouldn 't It
be nifty to

Mother's Day

LOCATED 3 MILES NORTH OF
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ON RT. 7
ON UPPER RIVER ROAD.
WATCH FOR SIGNS - FIELD PARKING

--.......

Cort R. Hyoell,
Molga Co. Juvenile Court
Courthouu,
I"'m~oy. Oh. 415719
(41 a. 9, 10. 3tc
.

. PUBLIC AUCTION
7 Uaed ·IA!wnboy HI Inch
. · L1wn l\'lowera (II Ia)
W•d•t~a (II l1) ."
bv. Melgo County Ju·
, venue Court Work Pro-

Public Sale

SATURDAY, MAY 11,1991
10:00A.M,,
~=~t

. '
••.
...
.....
...

Public: Notice

PubliC Notice .

722, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789. Deodtlne for opp·
lying Ia M•v ,26. 1991.

PUBLIC
AUC,.IOI

-....
,.

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER and SEWER
LUiiES

C.tMtlllt

•

&amp; Auction

FARM RAISED

'

'

.,
8·

614-992-2121
We Soy Whet W1 Do.
We Do Whot We Sey.

BISSELL
.UILDERS

HOWARD BROS.
EXCAVATING

58
1 mo.

..' ·.

3 Amouncements

· In Loving Memory
Of
FRANCES
EVELYN HYSELL
Bom May B. 1914
Paued Away ·
March 23, 1990
We know oomeone
with heart of gold,
Full of patience, love
untold.
She taught ua how to
walk, to pray,
And cared lor us the
live·long day.
We love you very
much, Mom.
Sadly mined by
Children, Grand·
children and Great·
Grandchildren

,•

.• -

In Memory

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
.AT S5.00 PE.R DAY

'I

TO Wilt PocKET
·WITH A
CLASSIID AD·.

•Rea10nabl1 Rat"
•OuaiHy Work
•Free 'Ettima1ee
•Carget Hat Foot Dry
Time
•High Olou on Tile
Floor Ffnlth
UE lEWIS. ow..
lt. 1, lutlonol, OH.

3b 'V ear• Ex perleace

4·23·1 mo. pd.

4/12 /'11 11 .....

'

Mhldle...-t
Hand Tufting
Custom Ortpel

VIIY IIUONAILE
IIA VI IIFEIINCES
(6141 915-4180

247·.035
51100 s.•. 331,

NO SUNDAY

213· No. Sac...t

paln1ing.
lll mt do it for you.

dried met.rl81o.
Open Thu... thru Sat.
10-11; Sun. 12·&amp;

PH. 949-1101
or Iss. 949·2160

UPHOLSTERY

fBIISTlMATIS
Takl tht pain oui of

Craflera. Orow you own

"Free Eltlmetet''

of Mliiii,•H

lll..rior • Exterior

Now Ope~ For Sprlns!
•Horb Pienta ·-lllo
•Ev-lngo

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

BIG.KID AND .BABIES
PROGRAM
SAt., MAY 11 - 1:00 P.M. .

LINDA'S
PAINTING

01110 IIYD •as
111111 EYEBASTIIGS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

.

Call Sentinel

COIIII'S

SIDING
•ALUMINUM SII)INO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P . M,. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

FURNACES FOR MOilLE &amp; DOUBLEWIDf HOMES
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

BENNETT'S
,

0

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

••

•o•u Ho•
HIA'iiNG I
COOLING

Lecatecl On Sofford Schoel ld. off lt. 141
(6141446-9416 or 1·800·872·5967
4·21·t1

�.

• ••

• I ..

t.

~·

-.

'

. .

•

~~

•

Wedneada , May 8,1991

LAFF-A·DAY

Announce 111 cnts

3

34

oo'-

A-

KIT ' N' CARLYLEI) by larry Wrlaht

Apartment
for Rent

:::...Ave., Gill....... C10M 10 ~ ptuo Ullllllol.
.-, 1 -.I MW217.

71 AUtos for 8818

--n

t1'-

l,.._

4
_ _ ,_.,..,.
llrlke row ohololi now. No

•"....
"::tuH •"'.

...no
1ont

loettw Ul'l after I .

.._ w
haatv•pe
..... till llllonl, you 111541111«
...
1111n1. Proono lor on Upolol,. lojll: 3 1 IR,

ond tool with

Go- ond E·Yop "WWler Plllo".

11 Frul~ Pllormocy.

..,

35 Lot
. s &amp; Acreage

Rod-; lum off Fot While You
Tou Ol'lt.L Avalllblo
FruthPho-cy.
REDUCE: bum oil lot whl~ you
·
-·Drug.
tm OP.t.L. Avolloblo ot
Fruth

. Codlr

~~-.

si.,

' .

'

11 . . .
Piling, '.'IIIli
1271 mo.,
1271 ~ O.DOllt, wo1or pold. 11

~oonw.

t yr old mo~ Slborian Huoky to
g l - -. 114-112-357l l:alt

Slooplng ......,. wbh cooldng.
AJoo t..nw · All --lipo.
Col on• 2:00 p.m., 304·7'73tiiSt, Maoon WV.

paintings
real as

avenlnp.

5 puppiea, half German Pollee

ond ·sh-rd. 4 . ,...,.~. 1
mill. 114-44W545.

111180.

46 Space for Rent

Route
33, North
Pomo....,.
L.Ma.l.-rent•tl,
p1rU,ol......
c.u
114-...·1'178.
Spoolll ono month '""' OjllOO
lrM
101 - h aYllllllto.
Wtl~ AM MarU!"' At. 35,

Hana..on. wv. ~tM357.

GlllfilOIII, QH.

Ploiloont

'

REWA AD,I14-441-712t
LOST, Arabian Mare, 10 Mile
Leon .,.., 304o451-1551 or 31)4.
l'lllol417.

LOST, minlltur. Collie, tnaw.ra
to Bloc'!!!,. ~~!ldo poe, 30W'II1131 or tmHIM7.
LOST: lllck I oliver Gorman
Shephard. Anow.,. to a-.

Yk:ln!IJ ot s-tring Rldgi
218. 11-11-24115.

7

a.

Yard Sale

. ·ALL Yord SaM lluol Bo Paid In
Adv,_. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
" lho day loelorw till ed lo to run.
:s.ndlly odltlon . • 2:00 p.m.
FrldlY. - y edblon • 2:00
p.m. S.turdoJ.
Eoletll Sola, IIIJrtle KUhn
... Brood 91. Thurmon,
Clntorvll~

sc-. Frldq •

SMundly. lloy
10 I 11.11:00lnl tiM I:D pm.
Frt. I Sot. lloy 10 l 11 11-4. 413
Hubbllrd Rd., Ollllpollo. (At. 7
bohlnd - · FumftUN)

Metwt.!fCNMnt, children• clothIna, wt.t·knot•, dl..,.., cur·
t•fne. toyt, etc.
Friday. ew...,.., mower, home
Interior, much more. Ott At. 7
oouth of Ewokll 01 290 Ble'*\.

Gange Slla. M•J 10, 11. 8:30 lo
1:00. rodney Vlllogo II. Thlnl
ll,..t. lnlonta to eduno lnd

IHny other heme.

Moving Sale: 10' John BaM,
color, t.!, ciOihlo, ntc"""'oil

...... 21ou wltMomo Hollow (o
1211), Wed ·llt.
Yond Slla. May ..10·11. Knick

ceo.Me.

KMoka,

~l.aat

wm .do houN c•nlng, Frl ond
·Sat. hPe rerereocet

Me. Felrview

E-vreonAd.
Youth Fund Rol_, Now Lllo
Vlcl«r Conbor, bohlnd Bluo
Fountain Motel, May 10, ,11. 1-4.

Pt, Pleasant
&amp; VlclnHy
4 Ftr.:r-11Yard S1le, May I to 11,
O.IH
Forry ocrou from
N&lt;Z •

304o8~

7111 or 17S-341S. .
Will ltoul )uot call. Will glvo •
tlmoto on olte. No houMhold
tnooh. CIH E.J. 304-471-17t 1.

Pr-=

phone
Clll
you

735-11117

EXT 1122.

=r"·

Business
OpportunHy

3 ......_ homo, Bu-·
A.J!t~~OIIOO roquiNd, 3041
.

INOTICE!

3 - - . 2110 N. lltln 91, Pt.
Pl1, no . poCo, no Hud, 1211.
. . .Hft.... 1110. dtpooll,

OHIO VALLEY PUILISHINO CO.
...,...,....... '""' you do -

~.~!:J=~=h~

51

Commercial,

In•

. . .-n. .

-bar

02711lfter 5pm.

.42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

bod-. 1110. pluo
utllhloo, -•• cr.-11. Aoloton
month

Upland Rood, 3DW75-40tlll.
2br lloblllHoma,z. nil~o out St.
AI. 141. $150/rno. !114 441 1013.

-r.

Hot hold Sola. Frl 10 ond Sot
1.1. t:ON:OO. III1 Fltth 91, At. 33,

-Havon,WV.
21111 Mt. Ylmon, Thure I Frl,
1:00 All til ?. Antiquo tumnuro,
lolo mlac.

Pon,leroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
3 •lly:~ 1(10/11 1112 ..u..
- h cit T.P. 0111- Ad. 3nd

-"""""tAM-?. .

... ~71-1410.
AENT20WN
114-441-3151

Dr•-

Real Estate

10th.
Allin « ohlna. a 3110 on
~~p~~n
Run Ad. Juotlco

PIIIJI

N)l.

Yond ~~~ !loy 10-11 -

or
lhlnO.
lltoolt
boltlnd
Laurll Cliff Fnoo llolhdlot

.

c-

· 4$3.50 pw WMII. AI. 14'1
of1
OraweN,
4 IIIIM Oft At. 7 In Clnlonlry.

HOURS: Monday tlwu Saturday,

la.mAip.m.; Bundly, 12 Noon5p.m.

SWAIN

AUCTION •

~RNITURE.

12

Olivo 91., Oolllpolto. - l Uood
lumburo, hootn, Woolom l
Wot!t - · · 114-441-3151.
VInYl Fl- Coverl1111: $3.111 l
$4.0!1 In Stoolt. llcollohon Corpolo. 114-441-11144.

. . , 111m .,... fM.'JU-2441.

ova'

Ltltl-.-

.

=·
to

to

thl ..,..,~,on 1 ~ .....

liVC,tOCk

=

....r -

Hoi-

~

Col-. ---Ia '"'*"·

Ron 1_,. El'llerDrlooo, .._
oon,OH~.t121.

1171 -

304,..,..,1711.

No/1111

7 tt

mixer,
kngo

230 hp 110, tun -•,. and mony
utroo, oxc -.1. 304-f75.142t

orl71.alltl.
'Wlntod To lur.

7:tlll (I) Hippy o.yt
7 30

...

Llv-OCk
.....

::---:-~--:-~--

• 0111 pllro. eo.. olnottod I ftr '-""Col- 2 to

• -

,.... 11 hp • In rid,. 1110. 4 tlrw mounted on 1tumn a mo. otcl,

Nooln~ted,

,...
-3141. ' bol
"""""'":'~lllllaaod
Cllvol" ou1 of
ot-tiuH,
11,000. pllr. 304471:1121 oltlr
SIMI pipe Idol! lor cuhrert, all I:DOPII.
...... oott lri&gt;m 1:00 to 1:00 Pll.
I old: " ' " pupo, f21
ColtageviiiO, wv - • -h....!.Y'•o l d - - ...~
=--nn
lion """' .. will tor ponJ
."
Ill,
- - . Uood ...,.; 114-ZM 1712.
~..........
••• Starting at $211. ="',...,.,-..,..,....,-,--1
...wa:z-11lov.
-.r - h Dowon lui, 1 par
~ ~ ..... Nolod lor
-lon llbll Scltool ........ '~l8. ONIIca Forma,
ldto lYl- untH June 1.
Wllo'o llhll looll lloto, 411

""d ....,_.,.. ,.....

55

Building
Supplies

llooll, llrlclt. ....... winllnllll, ..... Cloudo WinIn, 'Rro·Orondo, OH Colt 114-

.......... (ZfAP

ND 01-l&gt;

.

=·=
=.,:

"':'!\ ,_"!!J..
-bur::-~
114-441-11111, Stovo

.•.

PubliC Salile
&amp; AUction

u

Wontod:
riding It'
old. ~14.-aG~lfta'IPII.

..

·.

e

1fter

IWO'JHE.~L

t171 - - . 210E,
oporto
I c,t.' o,.o,
SI,IOO. 010, ~71.

Buslnau
Training
Aol,.ln
-lllllouthoootom
...._ Collage, Sttrtna Ytlloy
P!ua. Clll T"':.l:S14-441-411711

'"' 011111

omaao. ...

11....

.....

121111.

wanted to Do
In lly Homo: With
Rwftll\1 Cl ~ Hoi ......, fenced

HAYI~A ~TY

SAT:JRQA.Y AND 'rOW'RE

Nor INVITED.

$1.1_!10. fully IOldod. 304-f75.

to Great.

Buye.. .
Shop
Cllllllllede

•

[ll]CP
liJ .If

::.J

ototh - · 301 I

. T·

IOPl, . '"· P/11..,11,!!, .........

- -.......2.-.

Ptay Alea.l1t 441 0311.

tM. Local - n c • tum-.
Froo oollooatH. Col oollact 1·
114-217-0411, dq .. nlghl.
Rogaro. - - Water,.......
fl...
y..,. ~1or100 On Older I
HlWor ROO&lt;n AddMionl,

Or-

,_lon - . Roollllg,
Wit d • I 8ldlng. Froo Ei11-ooi ·Ralota 111, No Job To
IM-441.o:zal.

E I R TRU SERVICE. l~,
Trimm~, TNa R. . .ual,
.

Trl~.

.

Fnoo bllmlleal I

.

.

DON'T WHINE t1
I TOTED YOU OVER
TH' DOOR-SILL
THUTIY YEARS
AGO!!

AN' I BEEN
TOTIN' YOU

EllER'

SINCE II

..

••

TV ..nltlt
lloo .·
_apoclollzl1111
,... moot
lnROI),~

ASTRO-GRAPH

tomo IJIIIIIIPOO _I,., WY

304'1"/WM Ohio 114-441-2414.
llptlo Tlrtlt P......... tiOLGllltlil
Co. AOIIIVANIINTIRPRISES,
Jook8on,_OH 1-..37:8121.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Electrical&amp;

Moyt, '19t1

Refrigeration

There should be a ·notable improvement
In your financial clrcumslancea In the
year ahead. However, there are 1180 lndlcattone thai you may ba a little too
carelesa In the managemenl of your

resources.

TAUIIUS (Aprii20-MoJ 20) II you're negotlatlne anything ot 1rrpor1ance today,
be 11Ur8 to dot all vour I'S and crOilal
your t'a. Carelessness on your behalf
could unraVel wttat had star1ed out as a
good deal . Trying to patch up a broken ·

llwno,llahl ~
lrg, . . . . . .... 30W'II-7110

I

.......... NOw
• LMy ICing LIYel
1:30 (J)
01 Our Jaltn John
gives Kate mora( auppor1 at
her 1unt'a lunoral. (A)
Slereo. g
·
Cil Cll • My LH• onct n....
Ben recalls lite chaos and
conlullon ol his wedellng to
Reb1CCa In 1985. Stereo. 1;1
10:00 (J). iiJ o-m. LMp
S.m lalpe Into lite lie ol
· one-haJJ aJ a wraaUing tellm .
Stereo. !;I

mlslar

•

romance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help you understand wttat to do
to make the relationship wot!t. Mall $2
plus a long , sell-addressed, stamped
envelppe to Matchmaker, c/o this
new~r . P.O. Box91428,Cielleland,
OH 44101-3428.
GEMINI . (May 21-June 20) Personal
gain Is a distinct polllllblllty today, but
you may have lo work harder thon UIIUII
to acquire II . This could ba due, In part,
to the Individual with whom you're
lnvojved.
CANCER (June 21·July :12) Be aoclally
aware today. or else you tr11y unintentionally lllght an old friend lotl,_ one
you've r.acanlly met. II you do, your • ·
cuses might not ba - t o d.
LEO (July 23-Aug. Zl) Othlra cannot
ba counted on today to holp you
achieve a. personally algnlllclnt objec,tlve. Unla8o It banellte thlm equally,
you'll have to go altar It &amp;lane.
VIRGQ IAuao 21-s.pt, Zl) A olde luue
you 111111 atrongly 1bout could ba adamantly oppr&gt;lld by with
whom you'no lnvolwod. Don't let your
diiiBgr-t ruin the nouon you two
got togetltet Jn lhe ftnll pl-.
LIIIIA (..... 23-0at.ll) It~ melle i
purcheM Dl oanoeq- toNy, ba
sure to get Ill guaront- and -ronties -·~~~~ 1hll merchandise. II It'S
defective, y~ don't wont to get·caught

•,

hOtdlng tile oag .
·
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 221 You may
have lo deal with an lndhrldual who
lakes an unyleldlng .poslliQn rather than
makes a compromise lor mutualadvln·
tages. Diplomacy Is detlnllely required.
SAGITTAMII (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) This
can ba a very productive day tor you .
provkled ,... don't lake on mono lhan
you can hllndle. -lilly toward the
end ol lhl dl)'. You'no not at your bait
when opar111ng under pressure.
CAPIIICOIIft (Dec: 22-.Jifl, 11) Social
arrangement• could have their ups and
downa ICMII)'. Someone you like mey In·
ctucre •••••• wttom you dllllke to join
your p•wt141 IIC1MIIel. Make the bait
oll1.
AOUAIIIUI(ollll. 20-Fab. 111 lin old, re·
solved luue could create domeetlc
complleettonl egaln today - 11 II Is
mllcle a 181111 point Jn a family dl-aaJon. Dott'l Ill lhl one who brings 11 up.
PISCIS (M. IO-M1rcll 20) If you're
tryl,ne to promote br paddle lOmllhlne
loday, 11'1 Imperative thlt you know
when to IIOP Nlllne. o-entph-ng
could cnate wlouo doubtlln your propact's mind.
AJIIIII ,...,.. 21·t\prtl 111 a. caralul
rrt8ft1111tt1,..., reeourcaa todl)', ~ bl
doubly _... If you're handling •ow·
thine al 1 flnlnclal n.Cure lor oomeone
- · H lhlnga don't wor1c out, you could
ba held - a b l e .

• J 97%
+Q9 7

• 865

+H

+K3

.2

SOUTH
.AQ3

• 10 43
+AQ9752

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soatb

W•st

3•4+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3+

6

+

Nortb
I NT

3•5+
3+

Pass

Eut
Pass
Pass
Paso
Pass
Paso

Opening lead : • 4

'-------------1
Squire won wtth dummy's ace of
spades, ruffed a spade and played a di~
amond to dummy's jack. East won
with the queen and returned a spade.
Squire ruffed. played a heart to dum~
my's king and a club back to his queen.·
The ace of clubs dropped the king and
,
jack, and Squire claimed.
@ 1.1, . . WIPAPifiiHTIN'RtiE AUN: '

5 Jukebox

18 Steak
order

collecllon
30 Be a

19 Search

snoop

31 compos

33 Pot
conlrlbu·

40 Southern

for shells

20 Composer

Initials

mantis
hot

spot
41 Feathery
wrap

28 Useful
quality
30 Guilarlst's . lrr--t--f--1naeds
31 Ullimate
32 The
''Planet ol

lhe Apes"
34 Madcap
35 Gear part
38 Turmoil
41 Usa a drill
42 Evening

pany
43 Poel

·

Khayyam

•

44 Snobby

DIIIDth• A detectlve

ones
45 Compa·

Stereo. C

1enJ ·
DOWN
1 Lot size

-rohel lor I CCICIIne .
delflr In Partllnd, ON.
(lJ (JJ .... Who .... ...

llllloldllt... John Henry ......
Bill Moye,. lntervlewl the
· Iota Jolin Manry Faulk lbout
hll 11fii lllnd tillnlt

UAII.Y CRYPTOQUOTES- Hen:'s how to work 11:

i~-~=-~.
QICNNI!~ ......
Ill 700 Club"WI. , ..
Ro• - ·

10:01 (I) MOVII!: l'alltar 0 . .

=·

~=mQ
GD e ._.. H11 Star10. 1;1

0 .... VIII Stna.

................... 1111: ....
l'llfjtl , . . Hoyt Ax!On,
Joltnny flodltgtltl, Alba

McEnllnl, ~Lynn and

Clnt Bilek (1:00)

8
·===-·

IDINOt9W IIICII":Kirg

11:30 ~~Tonight bw

518

A X Y D L BAA x ·R
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

TNk: '1111 111111

(2:30)
10:30. Cnlolt IIICI Cltlle
D IIU.IITonlgltt
11:10 (J). (I) (JJ • . •
01 ....

EAST
.KJ85

WEST
.Q10H
.108 6 5

24 Plow ere·
Salle
tlons
ator John, 21 Slippery 34 Goose
26 Oacanl
swimmers
egg
27 Sand
22 Bridge
36 Spoken

e

(I) . . . .
(I) (J). Arrerto8n

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

).

22 Use a

(2:00)8-. Q

TH' BARN DANCE
IS OVER, PAW!!
TIME TO
HEAD
FER
HOME

ClleW Nova, C doe!.. I
tfrlt. llloor l aood -Mion.
Alld.. .. .... Cilll14 241 1141
otter4'.....

"Mom'l going overboard with
thl! crochet thing."

11 Oui~lng
party

F - r J1ke and McCabe
try to prove a IIOCilllte was
murdltrtKI by her llu*band.
Stereo. C
iiJ MOVII: Web at Deceit

BARNEY

....,., ......... - . /11;, -

Sacrlllco: 1111 11X'I2 Jbdrm,
muol Mit row. 114-388-4317.

17 Prop up

am ae J•k• ........

Home
Improvements

Unoondltlonll lllwtkM ....,.,.,

82

e

OopgllltowMr,
M.D. Wanda blcomel
Infatuated with a vain model.
(A) Stereo. !;I
(lJ (JJ ....... Anclerlon

I]) (J)

briHIInt career iltul ol
brelktl1rought ana
prolenklnll recoQI1ltlon,
• tlndelrtng her to millions of
people n ehll lravela. (1 :001

Serv1ces

.84

10
Rool polnllng.
pointing,

llwna, ~71-

SCW\&amp;BODY HA.S TO
COME= AL..ONI!i AND
Sl"'eP ClN IT.

Martin Ancreraorfl long and

Wlltlamo

n•.
fllnt ,.....'Carl, 114-44U227.

Wont to 1'120.

EVERY TIME IM H.&lt;!~VJt&gt;JGrl
A PR5TTY NICS Dbo.Y...

~1-11

tree
offering
11 Potter's
II Pressed
need
7 B(ewing
12 Arhll
Ingredient
circles h
8 Lennon's
13 Fury
wle
y
d • A ·
14 Wlsa
1 Bask
ealar •Y • n•wer
lawgivers 10 NiflCDrn· 23 Army
37 "Pretty
15 Compass
poop
base
Woman"
pt.
18 Give a
251asue
actor
. 16 Milk buy
check to 21 China
38 Ship

erraatecJ; Din IIcea 1 crisis.
(Pt 2 ol ~ Stereo. ~;~

4100.

,., c . - Z21. All ~1.'"'

,...,...lng

flowered

(G) (2:00)
1:30 Cil Cll e Glowtttll Palnl
Mike flnds hlmNif homeleis
end broke In New 'fork City.

heartbrokltt Hlny geta .

I'M.

NORTH
.A 963
.KI
+A KJ2
.1016

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Blueprint
1 Church
3 Western
part
shrub
5 Yellow·
4 Ogle

Ule

1171 ConDon:l GUiplf'1 11 ft.,

•

·cROSSWORD

8:0!1 (J) e 01 Nlgltt Coull A

ather atrandl. HouM aaiJa, aleo

...... . - ... . ..104..71-1171.
1171 c..,_ Cordoba 310
outo, MW llrao, - point, gi;il
2111.·
After$1100.
1:301'11,
0111 ·
..,..,..
o.;o
-

1'81n IIIII Fnl.,...: l'ln
FIIII/NIIIIvttte Hoyt Axlon,
Johnny Rodriguez, Aebl
McEntire, Lorena Lym and
Clnt Black (1 :00)
8PihneNiwa
0 MOVII!: My Frllnd Fllclla

; i.
Galftlld Oetl •
(0:30) Q.

._, oott-r,::t! .

..,

i

=ao.Q
, lhi Wroll C

(2:001
1:t11i (I) MOVII!: Cltal1o1te't Web

12E.'SR:N.5£ '0 1H£
~ ..

·IU.fUI.

~~~
Rick-At o' 7 =
.uctlon . . . . . Ll
1d
............. J04.I7I-Z7II.
Wool YJrVnll; 104-71U111.
.
- ........ o., Core Clrta'.
. . ., . . . Jable,ohllllolrt. U
1 I.IR. • 1:30 p.m. A-. :n.-10.
-. OohooC l)rap.lna
wI I
111 t11 1224. NaW ktPLOC IN .. .

-·

,r

Wt\6N 'fi.IE. PIMCtlCAL
~'JJ A An31.£N1 ..

ow. CuiiMa &amp;up.--. tar

11--01711.

llg

·

Mothef'l Day 8pecla Bugs
mee11 a wei 11111111"0 but
blundering etork wtt1t an
unortllodOx delivery Hrvice
who tendo to rrladellver hla.
bablea. (A) (0:301
GD MOvt!: '11te lllultWcl'
FOX Night II the Movtet

campers&amp;

81

8mlth1onlln Wortd

~r':Ji..... aunny

, _ _ _ _ _ _ do

~~~~---·

world-famous concert hall's
rk:h history IS lracecl wttlt
Interviews and lootege ot
legendlly performances .

JIT
~ration ........ rapllrocl. I -Itt motO&lt;O In olocll, RON
EVANS, J~, OH. t.eOti-

14

......

..._ of Drelm1 TIMI

(1:00).Stareo.

Curtlo Homo lmprov-nto:

Autos for 8ale ·

57HOII. '
1171 vw . ., ........ 1100
010. Coli~ . . . . . .
on ..... .-..

mon1hl. C.lll14 4 -.

ext1:.!_...100.

Stereo. Q

(lJ Ca!HIIIe MIN It 100: A

(!)

WA::=NO

1Nt .........:"'. runo pd,
-S710•. 104-

in my home dwl~umrner

ond

Kevin pllna 1 party lor
gracJuadon from junior high.

ALLEY OOP

Motor Homes
1171 Tort 21 1., Rat., llovo, fur, ·
-pol to

.

Situation
wanted
Taochor will ..,. lor your child

-

TA'#$.

Wont Ia ltoiy Zll lllnt I lor
Dodae trucll, - . - motor,
304.tlM471.
.

78

Starao.

~MOYIE: A...lllndon
(PQ13) (2:001
(() (JJ e The Wonder y..,.

1..-lf.J".

..

porto. IIOIIJ porta, totr to aood
r;:~:r I oyt

Wlntod: Cloot (nlMJ), 31-10
lbo. d~ lor. bllr+quo. f14.

44104:12

a:oowe

•

CfiUnh,

6

MY

unaa

Jood wllf1 antifreeze.

1177,~

"· 63
c.u

llolnSt,~.

,, .

Mlljor La1gt11 ll.lHbllll

7:31 (I) 8aulwd and San
01 llnlolved
Mr111r1ta A woman Is
accused of lacing her baby's

~

luclaat T . - - . Uooc1 I
reWit. ollrllnG .. 1111; 114-241-

114111 •••

TO ou;:
. ~EcO(ZI&gt;f, you owe u.J"
. ~CJC TA)(f:f po~ 1989.
Acco~t&gt;ING

Acceaorles ·

molor,
.......

There are some players in every
sport who are ahead of their time.
They have ideas that at first are considered eccentric but years later be,
come accepted . One such bridge play·
er was Norman Squire, a Londoner
who died recently. aged 84.
Squire won many national titles in
Britain, including the Gold Cup; Brit·ain's premier team c~ampionship, in
1946. 1954 and 1958. He was a regular
contributor to the British "Bridg~
Magazine" and edited its Bidding
Competition for many years.
Involved with many aspects of bidding theory, Squire was an architect of
"fourth suit forcing." He was also
known· for a great sense of humor,
once writing that "The man on ' tbe
rigllt rises to his feet. climbs upon his
chair, takes a small Union Jat;k from
his pocket, waves it about his head
three times. and says in stentorian and
decisive tones, 'I double two spades whose lead is it? ' "
Squire summed up today's hand correctly. To use his own word, he and his
partner "staggered" into six clubs,
and West led a spade. There was a potential diamond loser and a trump
problem: If declarer could afford a
loser in clubs. he would start with the
ace. But if he had to Jose a diamond , he
couldn 't afford this safety play.

eea

•

..._t100.

w• Min'• F•inlly

8

AUto Psrts &amp;

1m

By Pbllllp Alder

..
. . . . . .r

lllnoury, llotor I Trellar. li4-

76

(I)'Wi~
il!l~ ~r.r-~;a

14ft.
Aluminum
-~~~
AUMbola 8o11, lncludM 20 HP,

.

.

BRIDGE

.

Tonlllltt Shno. 1;1

Mot':HI-30- · 114.
2M-10M.

IIIIIII

UNSCRAMBlE 1\SOVE LEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

you Wish your KIDS WOULD. •

' iU&amp;:=•""•~;a

Outbotnl

.. nkoo, - . . Tlw Woalwr
Oryerlh:pps 114 441 2844.

12

114.ft2-1441.

.75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
' " ' lovtlnar c.pr1, 11 112 n,

PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS IN
IHESE SQUARES

b-11111 M,., King

eaa ~.emptor,

... Dryaro.

G..,.ntood poompt ...,leo 1or

P.O.
Boo
141:•,
llont_,"'llto, pt 11111. .

• -

..

you d..,.lop from step No. 3 bel-.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
• .7
Asylum - Growl - Dandy - Unkind - KIDS WOULD
The woman was doing a very poor job of learning to
drive ..Her Instructor sighed and sald, •Atways drive as

.

.E:2
8

-II,..,

Alullllnum • - lfto s.a, ~!0,
........ 2 - old. 1114-MII&lt;D31.

RooondHionod -

· 11) I Dram at Jalnnll
~lllt.==:nl;l

~ ~lfaV 1;1

1ga Hondo Y-41 IIlii'!•· 110 cc.
LIM ...... Low miM.
brlk;;, bottary, otc. can 614-

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

e
A

IH:.

Golclwlng, .11.200.

.
OR
1113 SUIUIII

Complete the chuckle quoted

V

..

~ ~

D-11
Chllmbwl
mlloo, - · .... ··
with Allie
ond ....,,lriCIOf
runo $710.1142411414.
...... oo112100. O f ~ -· - · · - ~~, ··-r 1N4 mto tltJO. 1f72 Klwookl
9'•~
•• •••7PII 9..-..r•9•v. 100,~0ttw.l~·-•·
::::-:-'
F._N Cub lnlemotlotWI troo- 210 Ylllllhl Erlduro, 1111. Colt
tor, 3 pt hbch, cuftiYoiJH, chc, I::IY:.:""::.:'::.l"""!::..:'IM-2~=:475-123=~'·:-----:-:
~;.: .:-~"11':! Kow-ld, KE 100 oncl Klw-jd
304471:,_
2110 ~R. tM-441-4414.

71

Dl~

-·

.aa.·~

....:;.i

a

1 0 by Mling In tho missing word•

W11M1 Dl Fottune

NtwetiDurg

Motorcycles
tilll~v-Fl.Hilloloot
Dh- - ••24•·

Tr3nsportat10n

Jobo. FOf lnlortriltlon:
Sand
11.00
-..Envalopo To:ond
M.G.
Publlclllon!,

luA Oozing - . -

7:00~· 01

•

months after her
young loVely
moaned, "He told me he'd
love me until lhe cows came
home. How wu 1to know be
Several

wedd.tlng

raised ........,.

OUpetoee

74

I •I'll Suppl1cs

A CAM- IIDWOUTI Wo

I

L--L.--11--L.-il--.J .,

8:31 (I) Andy QrtiH1

Con--

0

•--tlor ll-

24H121.

16

, ..., '"" •

,::t_,.,.

11'7
ltalrlganttor,
cu.
Umailoln!Anguo bull
..
~.

Sola and Chllr, SUI par -11.
I Polco Woodgroup, 114.01 par
-11. IAihlpOd Bunk ..
Bodd(ng and Cltoot of o......
lnctuctoil, 113.14 par -11.
SWivel Rock«, $4.44 par -11.
Rocllnor fl71 I* -11. Dl-•
whh c Cltolre, t7.50 ""' - · 4
Poolar Bl'lA Bod, 112.20 par

4330, ext. H.

Roglol-lon

Gange _

1171.

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowiUootl
-hold tumlolllng. 112 mi.
Jarrtcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WY,

Community Yord '"::i'Y I
thru !2, . turnMuro,
ctooil 400
-nood
Coli tor omozlng
r.:.~·
d0
rwcarded·
meu•ge.
'31.,....
-lng -

Fdiii"ik'Q;;;;;;;;;;:

-- -·--

door, ctwln NW other mlec
Toldltg Altllllootlonl 01
n-.
lnd Fulllr ....... -. 2211 It, Ylmon Ava. D«nlno'a Plizl, Gilllpollo.
Slow homo and mou SIOQ/wk.

from

·

TONPI

...,.;.1

81~~1;1

,.

a..HI, ill', Clmper· lop, MW

nit.

I

ttls-2./=B

' " ' CIIOliY ..,......P 4tr4, 3/4 -

tr71 FOfd Cuotom Yln 304-171-

CAVIVE

11,

'

"""'
modO!. ::.;;;;;uct"iiiioi".
1111 Yoyoger lllnl Yon, 7 pU.
All ............ A1oo lclg4JIIH. Pony HIH F.rm l -thooeo ...,.., ano - · 22.000
••· to 11t ,..,, . - . volua, Opoil ...l.
pllnto, ~I!M~•l•L~.•· ,arutoo, 110.200.
1140D. IoriiLCII~1Z!7.
~
lt.ov g' blo ,_ . . , _ .

IHP TN¥1111 tlltor -

·--·

•MM.

4:00.

3 ola I, Dlnlt[whMo, ..-..no; 1211. ~ IAM-'11&gt;11.bal-hb, · 3Q4.112'-271t1 oltM ·and valtolo-, hlngtng
e:OO Pll.
.
. ...._, trult 1 - . Amlali

Hotbort Ailoo ctutl-, a ,_
Goods
1/lhp. H - - · ptontar, - · T - 1 Mile • ~no. -~
ftorll llvlnplolll
gu'-~
.... lilting -lwvaolw.
3
hitch
I1,JOO.:
11M
2111.

_.,

LPN'o. ComPICftiYl ~. 01~
fwrwntlal Wltlt · bDorionca, _..__ _ _ _ _ __
F~lb~ 'Schotlullng Avail-. .Contact Thl 01-or of Nurtlllfl, Plnocraol C.ro cantor, 170
P!MC,..t Drtva, Oolllpolla, Ohio
451131 114-141-7112. Equal ap.
portunhJ Employer,

WORK AT HOllE
$300
and
'Up/WHit. llony
I:DO till

.....--

I

·~--1 ~. .:;j. .: :B. .v:-1 . . . ~1 ~

Tow

e:tlll (() lerei1J 111• lllu
e:30Clle OINICNewl!;l
. . ()) AbbOt! IIICI CUIIID
~
AIC Newll;l

t .

~

t
- .....,..
P.IOo
....._.• Rune
.,... E-llnll
,., a.vt. 1 Ton 4X4, Air
cond:.L.~M onglno, SI,IOO. 114:2:.:41:..:o5:.;,1M::;_
·------

-d•-da.

111e

tnOurHouM

I

- . . , Frull ' Fonm: .Juol oft
- h , _ - · • ... o1 AlbanY.- 73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

.:it4z.:,..

s Family Yord saro, M•r o,a,1o.
NurH To Tou 'C.,. OJ 111
1:00 til 3:00. Roln or ohlno. toned
Man In Hlo Homo, 3 lo I dlY!I, 8
Comer Flrwt and Adame, Muon, hour ohll. PI-tit Sur·
roundlllfll, 114-2111-1133 llk tor
wv.
Donno.
Clrpofl Solo, Wed ond Thure,
holcehokl
lnlerowve, hllp taldna aro ot oldolty
TV, tooll, wood cratta, .. onn poopto. 1--11111.

~ - · F - t1oy 10, 114
milo oul !lond HIK Rd. AciWO

Fruits &amp;

v-.........-

Marchandlaa

•

Dtooount -·-•
t · - - Cnlloo, Flo to
.
·
1311
.
•
Por
Couple:
•
~~~.~1111. Holol po141. We
;:.;,.,~ You love. Limbed
1
pply
-4121-3711.
Counly Appllata, Inc. EmoLlahl I Sl,.., with
UMdoppiiO,.... T.V. - . 01ten .
, . .tliorfor• 11mti1
a..
_, ottor. MW,
·
a a.m. to 1 p.m. llon ..a.t. e'Mo
IIWIHZ1e.
For
lllo:
Hlgll
C.poclty
411:15111, W :!rd. Avo. 01~
Sctuare Hlr lltora, a. Low a.,
llpotlo, OH
sr,eoo. Shlnn'l T..- llloo,
24C! u - Ahrer Rood, ·o.1.
GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Wooharo, dipre, rofl1gllm0f0, Homo llloontlna Oplr Houoo: Hpott., Ohio. 114-441-1G44.
rongao. SIUI11111 APIII~..... F~ I lot May 11So11, 10AII IPII.
pllnler: 2 -.with 2
Upper Rlvor Ail. loolde Slone Olltl lor llolhor'o ond F.thor'o Fond com ptotll, -~
Ctollllotol. C.III14-44JI.7318.
Doy, -~- GNdNIIon, oto. 0111
lion. 1410. (lllU Ollar) f14o44ll.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
~-~
3U 1713lltorlpon.
Complolo homo tumlohlnao.
.,.,.
lntlmlllonll Cull Low ...,
Hou11: lion-Sal, s.s. J14-Me- Loouol poo11 •so ...., 3 mille ou1 lullvltlo Rd.
..
· · - llloo, . . . • lloWlf
$2,100; C24 lntornotlotWI S2.11!fj
F- Dlllvory.
Mlnolla 311N1t deiUJ:a aamara
lit. Fin- - · t111ft·,2111;
a...
IIAYTAO
wuhor Uood
I dryor,I . :;
oouti~H~.14~00~;1~1~4~~4~1~1~31~1~.=::- lnt......lonll Troctot,
tun .llzo.otock
Almond.
1212 ca. David ,110;
montho, lib ...... $1000. 114- Joint SI.OO· Worlt Ponto Fond ,....... $2,1!11:
411_.1011-41..
12.00. Polo Jtct11U20JIO. Wllbo Owner WIU Fino-. 114-211Unltormo $3.00o Frt. llot. ~ t11J2. ·
Ollt Dtnlnaroom SUho, 1 PoaaY 01n&gt;1am1 Devilold, tncludM Pill Itt., $2,100; R.afOnl Ad.· A1- onc1 132 .rtm'l Form ;::-nt~ Sll 31,
Frla141al,. llolrtgarotor, wHh too Buttamut
PomerDY'
Roor w... QeiN
I
114 41 Sill;
Maier, 1 rur old, S375; lutntent.
,_... l lm.....-o. a.,,
Uvlngroom SUite, 1 year old,
$371; ·Cotfoa Toblo, Entortoln- Ono 12" Sing~ Allto Form ooll, trodo, I:Otloi:OO -dtJl,
mont Unh, Llkl Now. 1200 010h ; Trolor, Ono Clii'Trtltor lor Rood Ill, dll Noon.
Uoo.l14 4414414.
614 ttl aooo after 4p.m.

L'-tood Proctldl or Real•

Loon-

54 Miscellaneous

lor

2 Rat., 12 ou. n.: ano - · white. flO oloh. W"orlt . - .
1 - 7 1.
8112 ·C.rpol rem. MO. and ,._
C.rpol 14.00 • up, llolloMn
Fumluln. 114-441-11444. .

-otw.

F« Full-nme e..cl Pllri·Tirne

· ""·

Ill .-tyeor.
6 F
E I
~ ..,.,._, _ r 1 ann qu pment

Household

room oulla) 304

duotrlll. FrH Eotlmotool Com·
Dloto lnotalllllon. Phone: 114- 3 IR In tho oountry, Rot. I OoP·
Aeq'ed. S200hno.IH 148 380l
POIIEAOY/GALLIPOLIS AREAS !1114-1277.
Fumtahed Tnler, 2br, water
"POSTAL JOBS•
.
!,lrp Local -~~~ Route
,..Fot
... Jllld, no - · 112 milo Eul of
11t77 • 114.10 hr. No oxpl ..... llopHt .... _
~. 114-381ollll3.
For call
uom1-211-111,.1537
ond apollca- LocatlonO. Above Avortga lntlon ·
Info.,
coma.1.-...o.el83.
Portlolly tumlohod mobile
7l.m. ·10p.m. 7 dip.
own your own opporll or !!:!":L
you ""'. utll•too, dapooH,
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU .
lri&gt;m: ~Ts-2535.
ExceUenl:
Pay,
Beneftle,
lWNr, Ladloo, llon'o,
Tr...,artatlan, 407-21&amp;-7100,
44
Apartment
Eot. 1171. ll.m.·10p,m. Toll Petite or Mltamttv D • Din.
,,
tor Rent
Aolundod.
ot -rolton -ri~roblc. aildol ngarta.
A - n Chlmbor of Commarco.
S!oro.
Sock ovar
8hop2010,....
"' " "brlndL
"-·
131,100
lo
$33,100:
AVON I AI ANOo I Shl~oy training, Dlllureo, gr,and openSpot.-, 30W'II-1421.
Ing, ole. Con _ . II dtp. llr.
Buolnooa Eduootlon &amp; Soclill L&lt;iitghlln (112)111-4228.
Sc.._ lnotructore Noodod. Prom Oown Rlntal IMinoao tor ar """"'"""'" lull' corpolod,
Day l Nl9hl. Sond Rooumo to:
wotw turrtoiiiiil, _,_, dryar
P.O. lao 213, Oollpollo, OH Nlo. 114-1142-1002.
ho6*up a'llllllble .•,, ue »tt.
4M31.
22 Money to Loan
Apt, za .tollotiO&lt;I Avo, 2 bodElm 11-$10 hour whh Avon. No
k. .hln tumtohld, 1
LOUal BYJIAIL
door 10 door MCIMII')'1 Call
Up ta N,OOO Foot! SotlatocUon chlld,no.-..~7.
KIJ 114-62·7180.
Oourantood. lmmodllta llrvlco. IEAUTFUL APARTMEHT8 AT
HAIRSTYLIST: Tired ot t10% of . 1.goo.2ce eeeo $14.85 tH. ·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Nolhl"ff? BuoJ u You Wont To
ESTATE&amp; 531 Jookoon Pig
Bo? Wlint -•llonoy? Wont to 23 Professional
lri&gt;m -.,;;: Wolk to ohop l
G,_? We've 0111 The Cll-~.
....... C.U 11t 441 311. EOH.
Services
BoniML Oourontood W- lnd
G - ; Opsoortunltloe. $4.25/hr
oou..ntood Pluo _ , 114-444- Froo plok""' Lawn l
,.polr, 20 yr up. 114-M~-204~.
72S7.
1-lato Opontngo Avollablo

c-.. I7I-r: -·

111 311 . ,

t:::=::;=======:r==========1
51!

~ ~.~:

2 pc
(wiN trodlt tor=~-lied-

1 yoor • - · 304-418 1m.
4 IR ....._ lor ,.., or ooto.
Plantz a...rlvlllon. 114-441-

2

3QW11Io3030 . . ..,..

Metchand1se

a BR, oil
kitchen, MWiy
-led.
114-44..1211.

molt until you hlvo lnvootfgated
II You Hood l PIJChocll, Wo tho otfatolng.
Hive 1 Job·Far You. Full a Pert~
AIIA21NG SUCCESS
tlmo. Pold Wookly, No Eop.
VENDING ROUTE: Eom $2,000 •
· Colt 1-211-324:7131,
$4,000 mo. Worttlng PIT 10 unno
Opon7Dop.
.
wMh Prtmo Locatlona. C.oh INAVON ·All areu, Cal Marilyn v•lmont F""" 35,500. Roglotonod whh tho F - Trodo
w..v... 304-812-2145.
Commlalon. C.ll24 tva., 1-aoo.
713-4001.
Arthur'• Choln Link Fonco.
" HIRING NOWI "

bad- homo, -~ ogod
couple, hlvo .. and

1 V2 ..ory, 3 bedroom holM,
10/dlnlng , _ l lomlly . . - .
notul'll -her I dryer
...p, At. :IS ono ml~ lri&gt;m
Hlndorwon bridge, 30W'IIbulft~n

11 Help wanted
~....:..:..:;.;::....:.:..:::;.:.::..:.._
$300Alto:r
homo. p
to order. For Into. 1

41 Houses for Rent .

3tltll.

F111ancial

Wanted to Rent

~1.

Jattaro of tho
four ocramblod
below to form lour ~IIIPio
v;~~

~~;~

1'1 Dodgo Truolt, 11 Poontloc . .-~- ole
lrid'pol· Ao1ro
Yon,
- . . 13" color TV, 12NP
l01.114-241'4111.
copt1lno ehol,., ~1 J!!d, PI,
- · 01• T_.. pllntalor Mto, u nllnJ PW,~!'· crulao,llr\AM~Pa cuo,
1 laldlna - · 10 WlftL and houoo ....,.. 13,:ow mlloo, ~UI uJlllar wu·
Coli bot- u . - Dam.~
rentJ, 112,000. 30W71·1N4.
Want 10 rent by June 1M, 2 or 3 round plcnlo

oldl111t or ·troller oklrtlng. 1&gt;1-

· RnlclenUII,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

. .., . . lri&gt;m old

Will build potlo oov.,., docko,

ocrMnod rOCIIIII, p&lt;11 , . vinYl

21

Eplocopol
value,

47

Bearhall14-912~7880.

Employment Serv1ces

of Tlw

eentlmtlllll

Wanted

Wont to buJ otondl1111 11mbof.

nm

Wonted to buy, Stondlng timbo&lt;,
FOUND: Border Coli~: block w/ whtta throat, nur . VInton In 1441. Williams I Sono 114·112Ewlngton. Olclor dog. 114-388o
i3S2.
Wonted to buy, woohor l dryor
,In world no ooftcltlon, call after 4
Found: roddloh eolot 1111~ p.m. 114:11t12ol1103.
Pold- doa. No oolllr.
Found around" Vale StrMI, Wonlod To luJ: Junk Autoo .
Pomeroy. Colt 114-112-3132.
wbh or whhout · Coli
FOUND: Koy Found 01 Tonnlo lany UVOIJ. 114-3118-11303.
Court In Oolllpollo. atop . Wanted To low: Stondlng Tl""
In olllco to ldendly: Oollloolla ber, Call aft• Tp.m. 114-387-7111.
Dally Tribuna, a:z5 Third lt.vo.,
Point

Trollor LGI For Rani: Approx. I
mlloo from Rower Plant, Nice
Oulat Location on Irick Scltool
Rood.I14-241-M21.

-

-bod.

1111 Dodgll112-sa

.~
Ullltlff
If&gt; ,,.,

Country ' Mobile\ HCMM Park,

Real Estate

5·6

a

Cll •

8ln.llle ...
QIWCM1c1T.-,

tmC~~WY•••1&gt;a~...Towlng Yohlcla, 414 Enalno, olr,
$3,1011......,,
1171 ~ plciWp, 111, lo.lr
Condition. P!!!!.B1 •uto. $110
~ ollat) tn4'441-17U oftar

tor rwnt .. week or month.
ot 1120/mo. GoiUo Holol.

~~:Z

•

Church,

e:ao Ill
w•NewtCil

c •·

72 TrUcks for Sail ·

114-388oi3S2.

LOsT, 2 rtngo In front

AI:,41,000
........MIIM
·~I 00,

114-4...... .

man,..,.d, e ,.._, old. Male.

6

trat,

ootlanloondllon, wrp ~~~~.
ortcod 10 ·-· _
..
ll021ofter-

Furnished
Rooms

Giveaway
t omolt Coli~ : tn.ndlw, mild

Lost&amp; Found

PonlllO Onond Am ~ 4dr,

....
'.::..;.z:a:.;..;••'_S.:;::....::~.~~l~\~Jff;Se .,..

O R-rango

IVINING

f7 Olda c.toto, body- ... .

Otlllpotto. ,,.._

4

!"""''
ftmllo
Oormon
• snopMrd dog. 114-367-0171.

-

_ru....:."

M

WED., MAY 8

. loodool. ~71-

.,-a:.:.e·
...,.•...

,, . '

ll \ \

M

Mllllnll IE, ltltO.,

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-15

.

Television
Viewing

1'rlno Am, - · '-dod,
a,ooo
- 111
· .,_
dMJon. tit
18'4. Room eon-

't ~ r-AJ'.,:;; ~T;;h-=;:.:,i!::;;'"'§:::"'=·""~"';t=x"'l:n.- *"
""* :=r=
:! ,_,... • · ...., - ·
-rtc.........

IIOI.INT'S GREENHOUSE. 112
ml~ "'' Ill. Olive lid. A.R. In llid!ooll.
ll354.large Garon"-, S1.211
-h.
poe- '
Gllw• S1.50 dGl. Hanging polo,

$3.50.

44

Buildings
Ofl..:l IIW:I 1'011 LUliE .. !1:']:bdrmdiiii;::i.,.;r"i~nt~w~•lil+liiw~

Announcements

r-...

Bullneaa

BORN LOSER .

Wednesday, May 8, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--14-The Dall Sentinel

Pomeroy-4111ddlepo~. ~h!O. •

letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lt&gt;lters,
apostrophes, the length end formation or the words are
all hints. Each day the code letters are different.
One

5-8

D UI 8

CRYPTOQUOTE
EQP . TZI

OQBPOIBNC,
FIXICNTGC.

VQOI

HB

COTCUHBW

C TK I
N U IE

UTBXE.

N U I

TGDTEC

-

CNTB -

HCGTD GIV
. Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I'M ALWAYS FASCI·
NATED BY THE WAY MEMORY DIFFUSES FACT. DIANE SAWYER

�</text>
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