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Page 1G-The o.lly Sendnel

Monday,

u.y 20,1891

Runaways tell about their lives on the streets.
Dear ADD Laadera: I feel
compelled 10 IUpOIId k) lhe leu«
from lhe 18-)'W"-old runaWiy who
is pregnant and hiS AIDS.
Would I like her blclc if ibe WCle
my daughlel'l You IIC!ll would ·- in
11 minure. When our dlughl« was
15, she disappearecl. Far two weeks
we didn't know if she was dead or
ali\'C. It Will lhe wont lltdeal I ha\'C
ever experienced, worse than lhe.
death of lily ~nts. Ycs, she w111
having problems at school and lhere'
we~ problans at home, 100. bul we
never dreamed that she would run
away.
Afler 14 days lhc phone rang. My
hcsrl dropped 10 my knees. It was
our daughler, calling from Covenant
House, a home for run&amp;Wiys in New
Orleans. She Will sony that she left
lhe way she did. No. she'd had no
idea we would be so upset Yes,
she'd like to come back home if we
would acCept her. I was so dtrilled
. that she was alive I could barely

'I

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speak.

,,

• She is home now - subdued and
.well-behaved, but still unable to
understand why we were upset. AU
I could say was, "Wait till you ha\'C
children of your own." To every
runaway I would .like to say, "Go

bid: home whe~ You belong. You'd
be surprised how much pwents can
forgive. Their love is unconditional."
·- PENSACOLA MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: Thank you for
an extranely moving letter. Read on
and see whai it's like from the eves
of lhe runaway.
Dear ADD LaDdera: After
reading dw letter from "Too Late
For Me," I knew I had to write. I
was 18 when I got into liOIIIC trouble
at home. My parents were on
vacation, and 1 was afraid ·iO face,
them so ! took off for California
because it was warm there and
.- e d glamorous.
' r lived on the streets of Los
"Angeles, panhandled for change, ate
once a day in soup kitehens and lost ·
35 pounds. I didn't shower for weeks
at a time and slept in alleys and a
bandoned buildings. I'm lucky I
wasn't killed.
·
I'll never forget my 19th binhday.
.It Will lhe most depressing day of
, my life. I decided to go home and
beg my folks 10 lake me back. It
was easier dum I thought, and that's
·where I am now. Thank God. Call
me -· LUCKY IN LA CROSSE ~·
DEAR LUCKY: Thanks for
sharing your experience. Here's

four national runaway hotlines:
another one:
Dear Ana Laaders: I was 1S Runaway Hocline: 1-800-231-6946;
when I decided it would be great to National Runaway Switchboud:
be free of school and the rules laid 1-80()..621-4000; National Youtb
down by my pareats. so I took off Crisis Hoclinc: 1-800-HIT HOME;
and lhe Co~ House's Nineline:
for the West CoasL
.
II was lousy. I was hungry a lot, 1-800-999-9999. If you need ODC,
begged for handouts and was scared USE m
Is alcohol rllinill1 yoiiT lift onhe
of being robbed for small change,
lift
of a lo~~td ou? "Alcoholism:
beaten up or raped. I was lucky lhat
none of those things happened 10
me. It was a miracle.
I ran into a girlllcnew from home
·and she , must ,havc.· ~~""'·
family because two days later when
·1was walldng 011 lhe street my UDCic
and aunt pulled up. I stan.ed 10 run
when a prostitute grabbed me and
said, "Are you crazy, girl? Go witb
your folks. Do you want to end up
·like n\e?" Then she showed me the
ncedlc tracks 011 her arms. I knew
she was right and went home to my
family.

How 10 Rtco1lliu It, How 10 Deal

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene will be iD revival
with Dr. J.W. Lambert Tuesday
through Suaday. Evcaing servcics
begin at 7 p.m., except Suaday.
when services will be held at 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev. Glenn
McMillan inviles the public.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The OH KAN
Coin Club will meet Monday at
BurkeU Barber Shop in MiddlcporL
TUESDAY
Social hour and tradin$ session at 7
TUPPERS PLAINS • Sign up
p.m, precede the meeung. Refresh· · for new cub scouts and boy scouts
ments will be served. New mem- will be held at St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
bers welcome.
Plains on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
NEW HAVEN, W.VA. •
Revival at New Haven First
POMEROY - The Veterans
Church of God through Friday with Memorial Hospital Women's Aux-

The accident occurred in Geauga Couaty at the Clevelaad
Parachute Center, where instructor
Ed Vclcro said Ms. Shields had
jumped from a plane at 9,500 feeL
1'toy Towaship fire Lt. Fred
Ogrinc said Ms'. Shields was found
in 1S inches of mucky ground. She
was conscious but complained of
.
chest pains. .
"She didn't remember jumping

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Paving topic
of Pomeroy
councilmen

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ices on hundreds.

·

tow':}

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our favorile

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HAMBURGf:

CREST
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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Open house at
Meigs Junior High at 7 p.m. for
students entering 7th grade and
their pareats.

1

VLASIC

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4.60Z.

"'f" 149

"

BEAUTIFICATION PROJECT· Employees or Kroeer have
oace agaia been liard at work planting flowers Ia tile stone wall
planter across from tbe store oa East Mala Street. Here, Judy
· Saowdea, Peggy Bush, Store Maaa2er Dick Waraer aad Betty

out of a plane. She didn't remember hitting the ground," said Mark
Mosley, an emergeacy ·medical
technician from Parkman Township.
Mosley said two olher skydivas
who saw her falliag with a faulty
parachute streaming behiad her
"tried 10 fly over 10 her, but she
was flyiag at a much faster rate."

600 PlUSJ!~·ZERO

ORSPEC'""9
~'gLE
79

RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. (AP)
- A United Steel workers of
America official said he hopes
·r~ N~iona1 ~lib~ Rel\l,i9JAS
B
acuons agamst Ravenswood
' Alumiaum Corp. will brio~ the
company back to the bargaming
table.
Tbe NLRB on May IS flied an
uafair labor practice complaint
charging Ravenswood Alumiaurn
with harassiag and iatimidatiag
uaion members, said Claude Harcell, !ll:ting assistant regional director of the agency's .Cincinaati
offoce.
The agency last week also told

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19

WASHINGTON (AP)- President Bush is urging fair trials and
compassioa for alleged Iraqi sympathizers being tried ia Kuwait
despite the ''brutality and terrible
grief" inflicted on that nation's citizens by Saddam HusseiD.
As for dealing with Saddam.
Bush said he's not ready 10 support
even a partial lifting of economic

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Sprtng •nto Summer...
•

hoaorlag Gulr War veteraDs on SaDset
Boulevard ia Hallywood, CaUf., Suaday. (AP)

·

--------Names in the news--------

NEW YORK (AP) - Harry
Reasoner,
a
founding
coiTCSIIOIIdent Yt~ilh Mike Wallace
oa "60 MiautcS," bid farewell to
viewers.
Reasoner. 68, becomes "editor
emeritus" aad will appear
occa1ionally on tbe top-rated
Sunday P•OSJ am, CBS spokcsmaD

'

Roy Bruneu said.
On Sunday night's show,
Reasoner recalled his doubts when ·
producer Don Hewitt asked him to
make a pilot for the TV news
ma~azine in 1968.
'I said sure, but I also said I
didn't think it would fly ,"
Reasoner said. "I've been wrong a
lot but never so happily wrong. ••
The former Minnesota newsman
added, " I could ~o on and on but I might cry and Mike hates to see me
cry."
Reasoner joined CBS in 1956
a~d left in 1970 for eight years,
during which he was anchorman of
ABC's ev.ening news.
PROVIDENCE, R.I . (AP) State Rep. Patrick Kennedy
planned to share his graduatioa day
with constituenis by throwing a
party but called it off because of
the risk 'Of gate-crashing reporlerS.
Keanedy, 23, graduated with
honors Suaday from Providence
College.
, He has come uader intense
scrutiny in recent weeks because of
an allejled rape at the Kennedy
estate ID Palm Beach, Fla. The
lawmaker's cousin William
Kennedy 9mith, 30, is accused of
auacking a 29-year.old woman qa
March 30 when Kcancdy was
there.

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Smith has dCnied wrongdoing.
"We fell the focus would
probably have been off Patrick and
his graduation, and that it would
betome another media feeding
frenzy," said Chris Nocera, a
Kennedy aide, explaining the
cancellauon ..
Kennedy was one of 1,100
degree recipieniS. He was joined at
his commencement by his parents,
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
and Joan Kennedy. The·.Kennedys
are .divorced. Patrick is the
younges! of their three children.
Intensifying the unwanted
attention was his mother's arrest
Tuesday in Massachusetts on
drunken driving charges.

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' PRICES ON WEEKLY SPECIAl-S EFFECTIVE MAY 20 THRU MAY 2ti . 1991 • SOME ITEMS MAY NOT BE AVAILA8LE IN ALL STORES.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was
stiU off-lcey, but this time, at least,
Roseanne Barr's rendition of the
national anthem wasn't booed.
The sw of "Roseanne" san~
"The Star-Spangled Baaaer'
SIDiday at a fund-raiser for the T J.
Martell Fouadatioo for Leukemia,
Cancer and AIDS Research. The
event at the University of Southern
California featured a celebrity
ba!M'blllgame.
Barr was among other singers
leading the crowd ia the anthem,
but she was nearest the microphoDc ·
and she clearly struggled with the
high notes.

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have begun doling out stiff senBut, he added: "I think it would
time,
tences to alleged collaborators with · be ia Kuwait's inrerest to extend
· "At this juncture. my vie)lo' is we the Iraqis. These included a 15-year
don't wantiO lift these sanctions as . seatence to an Iraqi who wore a
long as Saddam Husseia is in Saddam Hussein T·shirt.
power," Bush said Monday at a
"I can understand that there's a the&amp;':::J:tl:faced."
JOint news conference with Gemian lot of bitterness from those Kuwait·
• The two leaders ex pressed
Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
·
is wbo saw their couatry raped and confidence and support in Soviet \
.
President Mikhail S, Gorbachev
GIRCLEVIL:LE, Oh1o (AP) as ~'::!a'h~~~:~t::ixf~wf«;oli~~~~ ~~;:F~~~·sa':~. uacoascionable but did not outline aay new aid for A small exploston occurred M~n­
his collapsing economy. Bush and day at the DuPont ~a_nufactunng
Kohl sidestepped whether G.or· plant but no one was mjured and no
bachev should be invited to Lon- evacuauons wm ordered. a comdon for the July summit of major pany official said
Leaders in the blood bank field industrialized nations.
Ronald Berlin, e pl_oyee relaWASHINGTON (AP)- The before anyone ever heard of AIDS.
tions
superintendent, SBJd a vessel
said
Monday's
dramatic
announceAnd
even
though
health
profesAmerican Red Cross is fighting to
containiag
ethylcae glycol explod·
ment
is
likely
.
to
bolster
the
credi•
They
emphasized
U.S.-Gersionals.
are
praising
the
organizapreserve its image as the depeadbility
of
the
110-year-old
disaster
ed
at
around
S:30 p.m.
man
friendship
although
it
was
tion's
new
plan,
they
say
there's
no
able collector of half the nation's
organizaA
small
fire caused by the
relief
and
blood
supply
clear
lhere
still
are
problems.in
the
blood supply by overhauling a col- guarantee it wiU increase the level
explosion
was
immediately put out
tion.
·
relationship,
which
was
strained
by
lection system that evolved decades of blood safety.
"The Red Cross still elicits Germany's refusal to sead troops to by the company's firefightiag
- - - ' - ' -'--• images of Oara Barton and troops the Persian Gulf War. Kohl, for cre\11, he said.
BloucJ Stnlply Pl:tr,
in World War II." said Dr. Joel example, showed no willingaess to
"We have about ISO people
Solomon, chief executive officer of comply with a U.S. request for . working at the plant but no one was
The Red Cross announced changes In how II collects,
the American Association of Blood Germany to lower its interest cares. near the sire at the time of exploprocesses and delivers one-hall of the nation's blood supply.
Banks.
·
• Bush and Kohl agreed that
"I think people will realize that
S Arue of American Red Croaa Blood Servlcae
NATO
should remain the military
an organization that is trying to do
umbrella
for the Western nations
good is now trying to .do better,"
despire
the
diminishing threat from
he said.
the
Soviet
Union.
But Jim McPherson, executive
director of the Council of CommuAaron. Sheets, Meigs County's
• Bush reported "not much
nity Blood Cenrers, cautioned, "It
highest
rankiag seaior, was ia
remains to be seen if this really progress" from the fmt day of talks Columbus Tuesday to auend a
between State Department officials
fixes their problem."
8!Jd
Soviet Gen. Mikhail Moiseyev, recogaitiDD luncheon honoring the
The Red Cross anaounced in
winners of the Franklin B. Walter
San Diego that it will close its 53 who was sent here by Oorbachev to All•Scholastic Award.
blood centers in rotation next year iron out U.S.·Sovicl differences 011
Sheets, son of James and Jeato install a new computer system a treaty cutting conventional arms nifer Sheets, Cotterill Road,
·
and make other changes to protect in Europe.
'
Bush
did
not
directly
bring
up Pomeroy, was one of 88 county
the U.S. blood supply from the
the subject of.interest rates with scholars presented plaques at the.
AIDS virus and other threats.
luncheon held at the Raddisoa
"lllstcad of continuing to parch Kohl, even though the administraand bandalc a system that evolved tion would like 10 see Oermany Hotel.
One of three valedictorians for
in the 194ns, we will mo\'C Ill the ease its tif!t money policies, aaid the 1991 . class at Mei's High
next generation," Red Cross Presi- an admimstratioa official, who School, Sheets has maintained a 4.
dent Elizabeth Dole said. "Tbe briefed rej)Oilllil on the coadltion . grade average for his four years of
LJ The 53 canters nationwide will
world has changed and we must of anonymity.
Oa the subject of whether Got· liJWI school, while excelling in ath·
divide Into 10 regions. Testing will
change with it."
.
bachcv
would be invited 10 anead !cues, and participating in numerbe consolidated to the 10 regional
The Red Cross, founded by forJuly'a
aeven-nation
IIDD• ous other extra-curricular activities.
labs lor efficiency and
Ll The 53 canters nationwide mer Civil War nursing lllperllltcn· mit Ia London, theccoaomic
.Ia addition 10 his ICbool activiofficial
said
effecllve118811.
will close in rotation, during
dent Clara Bartoli in 1881, estabties, Sheets hal becD an active
such
an
lnvitalioo
would
have
to
be
1991 , to Install a new
lislied its firSt blood doaor ceater in extellded by Britain. the host gov- member of the Middleport Church
1938 to provide "family doaaLJ The Red Cross will
compatble computer network.
of Christ and Its youth activities,
emmenL
tions" for scheduled surgery.
1nc111ue the number ol
The system will provide one
and 4-H and a:outing programs. He
The
official
said
the
administra·
In 194 7, · the organization
Jntemlllnapectors
natlonallllliialJY ol.donor:
also
playa scvetal·musical instrufonaed Its network of blood banks tioa wu DOt acdvcl~ such ments.
who examine blood.
hiStoJY, data and last resu~s.
an invit*ioo, even
the issue
10 provide blood supp11cs 10 civil·
Other Meigs County seniors
of
aid
10 the Soviel UniOD wiD be a
-~-:':CC
: -=:::
..,.=Aod
=Crou
= = - - - = = - - - - - - - - - - - --:;AP:;! i8D hollpitals. It now colleets half rl· .major issue at that summiL
IIOIIIinatcd for the Franklin B. Wal'
lhe nalioa's blood supply.

~ec:~~::v::

jects "have literillly destroyed the
building." '
.
· Reed staled last night that Lambert told him complaints to the
Pomeroy Police Depanmeat bad
been ineffective, and that damage
continues to worsen.
J::ouncil agreed 10 reiaforcc a
ban on skateboarding and bicycling
on village sidewallts, in accordailce
with Village On1iaance 373.
.
Cleaaup, Park MalnteuDce
Members of couacil also dis·
cussed the possibility of holding a
spring clean-up in ·lhe YillaRe. Discussions have been held on the subject before, with the cost of such a
program deemed to be a deterrenL
However, cowicil member Betty
Baronick initiated discussion last
night on a one-week clean'!!' which
woqld not in_cludc ~pphanccs,
greenery or ures. Vtllage Clerk .
Brenda Morris agreed to investigate the cost of such a cleanup.
Council member Bill Young
inquireil about cleaning and maintaining the laUiis COJDts and swin~
at the Mechanic Street part. Moms
indicated that aew swing seats and
hardware had been purchased and
were about to be installed in all of
the yillage parks. It was sugg~led
that a civie group, such as a garden
clnh, be asked to mainlain the tennis courls.
In other business, couacil:
• reminded candidates that all
election signs must now be
~moved:

· • approved Keaneth Ncigler as a
voliDiteer fue department member;
• approved a change of name on
an existin$ liquor permit at the
Food Shop m Pomeroy;
• approved work on the Ohio
River .Sweep on June 1S. Crews
will be cleaning from Nyc Avenue
to the parlciDg lot s1agc.
Also present at the meeting
were: Council members Larry .
Wehrung, Bryan Shank , and .
Thomas Werry.
·
·
•

p
Small explosion at Do ·ont ·
causes $20,000 damage

sion," Berlia said. ·
He said tbc plant.' s 24-hour
operations would coatiaue. Berlin
estimated that damage to equipment was about $20,000.
DuPont's south-side plant manufactures polyearer film, which is
used iD the electronics, packaging
aad communications industries:
The plant hiS I ,200 employees.
"The company will investigate
the cause of lhe explosion. I don't ·
lhinli: the EPA (EaviCOIIIDental ProteCtion Agency) would be involved
because the fire didn't hanD anyone . There' s no environmental
impact, at all," he said.

Sheets attends recognition
luncheon in Columbus

•

2 PTER B01TLE

sanctions against Baghdad at this

Pomeroy Village Council discussed the possibility of milliag
and paving a portion of West Main
Street when they met Moaday
night in regular session. .
According to Mayor Richard
Seyler, the Ohio Department of
Transportation has notified the viilagc of its intentioas of paviag
from the Nyc Avenue interSCCtion
of East Maia Street to the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge next
Spring. Council's discussion ~st
mght concentrated on the posstble
paving by the village of West Mail\
Street from the bridge to the
Pomeroy/Middleport liae.
Village Administrator John
Anderson presealed estimated cost
figures for the paving project,
includin~ milling of the section
(which 1nvolves removing the
asphalt layer to the con~te below)
and paving with two inches of
blacktop. According to Aaderson 's
estimate, such a miUing and paving
project would cost the viUage an
estimated $32,000. If the project
could be done as a part of the state
work, however, the cost to the viilage could be reduced.
In related actioa, .the village
voted to adven!Sc for paving woJt.
on several village streets and at
Beech Grove Cemetery for this
sum~er, and &lt;!iscussed upcom\ag
patching work m the village, which
according to Andersoa, should be
underway vc::rr soon.
Restrictioas levied
Following a complaint lodged
by Sally Lambert of Lambert Insurance, the council issued a warning
last ni~ht againSt skateboarding and
bicyclmg on village sidewalks.
Lambert has reporled to Couacil.man Bruce Reed that,skareboard·
ers and bikers (most of them juve·
niles) have caused damage to her
insurance office on East Secoad
Street According to Reed, the sub-

Red Cross fighting to preserve its_ image

CHARCOAL .
LIGHTER FLUID
QUART

ed another,
unlawful surveillance of the union hall and tried to
intimidate a plctet by following his
car closely ·tot ~rnlleS; Har­
. cell said Monday.
Ravenswood Aluminum was
given 14 days to respond. A hear·
ing is scheduled Sept. 1 in
Charleston.
Spokeswoman Debbie Boger
said Monday the company had not
bcea notified of lhe oomplainL
"We'll ICSjiOnd as required after
we're officiallr. notified," Boger
said. uThis isn t something that' s
taken us by surprise."

Jim Bowen, director of United
Ravenswood Aluminum, under
Sreelworlws
District 23, on 'MoDthreat of another complaint, to give
day
called
on
Raveaswood Alutile Uaited StcchwoJt.ers safety
minum
to
reiUIIIe
;w&amp;oli:lilions.
·
· stg4ies the ~~ ·slid it needed fot
"This
has
got
10
ead
sometime,
.contract aegOUatiODS.
About I, 700 union members . and now is as good a lime as any,"
have been off the job at Bowen said.
In the meantime, ."We'll contiaRavenswood Aluminum's Jackson
ue
to push· our cases ~efore the
County plant since Nov. 1, when
NLRB
and to pursue every Other
their conuact expired. The uaion
legal
method
available to make
says its members are locked out:
sure
our
members
receive justice,"
the company says they are on
he said.
strike.
The uafair labor practice comThe two sides have met several
times in Pittsburgh with a federal plaint alleges that security guards
mediator.
' taunted a picket, physically assault·

Bush urges fair trials for Iraqi sympathizers

V•

'

INSERTS

Wrltesel put t11e flnldliDI tDIIdlea Oil ille flowers oa Moadaylfter·
aooa. The vUlage OWDS tile wall, while Kroger employees take
respoasibUlty for tile beaatncllltlna ~k.
·

NLRB issues complaint against RAC
made

POLAROID
COLORRUI

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By BRIAN J, REED .
Seatlael News Staff

I

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Joha
DenVer sWapped Rocky Mountains
highs for the wide open spaces at
lower elevations to record an
album here.
The album, tentatively titled
, ,"FoxfJre," is scheduled for release
in the fall. It will be diSiributed by
American Grammaphone Records,
founded by Chip Davis of the
Omaha-based musical group
Mannheim Steamroller.
Denver, 47, was Joined this
weekend by his wife, smger-acuess
Cassandra Delaney, who flew in
from Aspen, Colo., for their
daughter Jesse Belle's second
binhday 011 Saturday.
.
ExplaiaiDg his coming to
Nebraska, Denver said he met
Davis about a year ago and "had a
wonderful day with him. It felt like
mectinJ an old friend. ••
Deaver is belt known for his
hii,S of two decades ago, ''Rneky
Mountain High" and "Sunshine on
My Shoulden."

80s.

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THUMBS UP, • Televlsloa star Roseaaae
Barr, left, gives a thumbs up as her husbaad,
comic Tom Arnold, looks DD duriag a parade

Page4

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Woman survives fall .
PARKMAN, Ohio (AP)- A
suburban Clevela!ld woman who
survived a fall from 9,SOO feet with
a broken p&amp;rachute remained hospitalized in critical condition today
with a compressed fracnm of the
spine.
, Jill Shields, 31, of Euclid. was
flown Sunday evening by heli- ·
copter to MetroHealth Medical
Center in Cleveland

Partly cloudy t011ight.
Wednesday, high in low

•

... Rite Aid
Buying Power
Directly to You .. l

Community calendar
RACINE · OAPSE 4S3 will
meet at Southern High School on
Moaday at 7 p.m. to vote 011 contracL Union members are urged to
attend.

Pick 3:551
Pick 4:6590
Cards : 8-H, Q·C
5-D; 6-S

I

A word from Ann: Thanks to all
who wrote. You've given an awful
lot of good advice. There are now

iliary will meet in the conference
room at 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
Scholarships will be selecled.

Indians top
Yankees in AL
East play 3-1

18S¥1lon,10 1'8g.25CMIII
A lluttiiMCh Inc. New~per

I'm ·in college now, working at a
part-time job and feeling terrifoc. I
owe my life to that prostitute. -·
LUCKIER 1HAN I WAS SMART

Rev. Rick Weaver as Evangelist.
Services begin at 7 p.m. with special singing.

Ohio Lottery ·

·

at

•

Commuaity Caleadar items
appear two days before au eveat
aDd the day of that eveat. Items
· must be received well ID advaace
to assure publicatioa iD tbe cal·
eadar.

.

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·'A nn

Witllll, How 10 Co-uer It" CIIIIIIITn
.... a self-ad·
thilliS around. Stnd
dmsed, long, business-siu envelope
tJNi a check or money order for
$3:65 (this IIICiudes postage and
lrandling) to:A/coltol,cloAMLiln·
ders, P.O. Bo;c 11562 , Chicaf0, /11.
606JI-0562 . (In Canada, stnd
$4.45.)

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,1. , ~------------~~~~------~--------~~

r0 .

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1er All-Scholastic Award from their
resJ)ectivc schools were Andrea L.
Clelaad. daughter of Charles and,
Viola Cleland, Eastern Hiah
School, and Jennifer Darlene.
Smith, daughter of Darrell and •
Imogene G. Smith, Southern High .
School.

Launch delayed
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. .
NASA today delayed the '
laiDich of Columbia for at least a
.day becauae of a rash of lutminUIII glitdlcs: two dlll-t computer JIIOb!ems lltd a--' COD•
cern over fuelremp..llle IIDIOrS.
Columbia -IIIIDOied to have •
blasted off at 8 a.m."BOT Wedncs- .
day on a biomedical reaearch mit- ·
sioa witb ~. 30 rats
and 2,478 tiny jellyftlll.
NASA tell dlret:tor Mike Leift. ,
bai:h sald the Dille-day fli&amp;bt could
be delayed men Ibm a waif oac
of the malfuactionina coraputer '
parts has 10 be replacacl. Miuion
(AP) -

m-aen
- exl*lell k) decide
by e.Jy ...._how llli»CICi«&lt;CC.

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' Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

The Dally SenUnei-Page-.3:
Page 2-the Dally SentiMI

4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1\leeday, May 21,1911

Effects of Chernobyl had political impact
Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

ventiooa1 ,_ill Europe lbat mipt Europe was the nuclear deterrent
strike civilian nuclear reactors, foiCe the U.S, and NATO allies had
contaminating entire battlefields in pla:e in the region.
D~OTED To THE lllrl'EKESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
1986, it created the 'Mllllt nucfcar and populations.
The United States adopted a
reactor accident in history. The
1bc Cbemobylaccideot robbed " no first usc" policy - swearing radiation , including many new
fallout was the equivalent of 10 the So'(iets of any belief that a it would not usc nuclear weapons if cases of cancer. 'lbae would be no
fiMUrJMEDIA.NC.
Hiroshima-sized nuclear bombs . . European conflict could be non- the Soviets only used conventional way to' flush radioactive material
Only now is the Central lnrelli- nuclear. It spoke loudly 10 them bombs, tanks and aniUery. It was out of the soil or water table,
BOBEII.T L WINGET!'
CHARLENE HOEn.ICH
gence Agency learning that the that in any shooting cnpgement- quile the opposite. The Soviets and turning the breadbasket of Europe
Pabllsller
Getleral Maucer
political and military fallout was even involving 155mm anille?" · WIIIISaw Pact countries in the mid- into a wasteland.
LOAN SHARKING - The
· even more far-reaching.
rounds- an ara.- Slrikc could hit 1980s had an overwhelming
1
PAT WHITEHEAD
meeJc
shall inherit the earth. but the
Psychologically, the fallout a civilian reaciOr and cause a dis- conventional advantage in these
Asslstut Pullllaller/Coatroller
big
banks
are determined to rob
spread 10 the Kremlin and Soviet persa1 of radiation more lethal dian regioos. So the United States and
them
blind
in the meantime. Why
military-planners, who have long most nuclear bombs.
NATO implied they would be are consumers
A MEMBER of The Assoelated Press, I nlan(l Dally PressAssopaying 19 pacena or
operated under the premise that a
As grave as the accideut WlL'I, it forced to use the medium-range
cla11on and the All)erlcan Newspap&lt;&gt;r Publishers Association.
more
interest
on credit-card
conventional war in Ewope waged could have been much worse, since nuclear missiles early in such an
balances when the banks are onlf
by the Sovil$ WlL'I winnable- How- only 5 percent of the reactor's . enpganenL ·
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tha.n 300
paying
6 percent for ~ money7
ever,
.
this
myth
went
up
in
a
·
radioactive
IDI'tria1s
were
rdcascd
The Soviet military leaders, who
wonls long. All leiters are subJ...,I to editing and must be signed wllh
radioactive cloud. The Soviets real- before the explosion was became more supportive of Why haven't in.terest IlleS on credit
name. addr ess and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good tas te, addressing Issues, not personaiJ.
ized that their military superiority contained. It was still a discbalge Gorbachev's pe8'e initiatives-as a cards declined along with ... cuts
ties.
in a ground war in Europe was that was enough 10 drop radiation result, knew following Chernobyl being induced by the Federal
more than offset by the real risk on every countty in the Northern that it would be impossible to Reserve Board?
Here's the story: If you have run
that it could lead to a disaster in Hemisphclc. It was enough to force acquire more land in Europe by
up
huge balances on your credit
which nuclear power plants became the evacuation of more than conquest
without
risking
card
that you pay interest on
targets - even inadvertently 300,000 'Soviets, and render 3,000 ·contamination that might last for
monthly,
you are paying not ooly
during a ground war.
square miles in the vicinity centuries. There would be no way
for
your
mistake,
but also for a lot
According to an inter-agency uninhabitablo. Hundreds of Soviets to prevent an accidental strilce on
of
mistakes
the
issuing
bank has
intelligence review, the spectacle in the region have already died West or East European civilian
made
·in
the
last
decade.
Banb
~
of Chernobyl played a "signifi- from lh,e accident- and tens of nuclear reactors, which could result
reeling
from
a
raft
of
souring
loans,
cant" role in eropelling Soviet thousands more deaths are in a meltdown or other serious
President Mikhail Gorbachev 10 the expecleld in the DCXt two decades.
radiation leak, creating clouds that loans made with abandon during
By JOHN CUNNIFF
· the 1980s to such can't-miss
bargaining table in late 1986 to
This was a mere foreiasre of a would spread throughout Europe.
.· ·
AP Busiuess AnaiT51
Tens of thousands would die customers iilce Doriald Trump and
. · NEW YORK - Based on current indicatJons, thiS will be Jhe weakest negotiate medium-range nuclear full-blown war's ~·or
legions of other greedy developers.
yc;ar for homebuilding since 1975- and if things don't improve soon, and conventional forces treaties in course, the most sagnificant from the radioactive clouds, either Now those loans have llll1lCd bad, ·
Europe. Soviet officials were de'trrent to Che Soviets launching a within days or years, from the
perhaps since 1957.
.
.
the prospect of a con- conventional war aaainst Wcstcrn various diseases caused by and the banks must scramble to '
alarmed
. Thai assessment comes from Gene Bishop, president of Lomas
recoup their lost investments or ,
Mongage USA, a Dallas-headquartered financial services company, based
face massive losses and insolvency.
on sesearch done for its publication, "U.S. Housing Markets."
Some are ttying to stay alloat by
The conclusion is based largely on a 40 percent drop in lUst-quarter
keeping rates on credit cards
residcnlial building permits, a certain forerunner of later activity. Tow
artificially high, and by charging
permit numbers have now declined in 17 of the pastl9 calendar qWI!lelS.
above-market
rates to small. According 10 Brian Bragg, edilor of Jhe publication, the declines come
business borrowers who hive fewer
despi!C indications that markets in some pans of the countty, such as
options. And those small·busiaea
Texas, are now beginning 10 show an Ojlj)Oi1unity if not a need for' new
owners are among the few and the
units.
;.Juckv
Most banks have retrenched
The outlook contrasts somewhat with that for existing home markets,
on
lending in the wake of the
which have shown faint signs of recovery, aided in )l!l1'l by lower interest
1980s, and have in the
disasuous
rates, lower prices and improving weather conditions.
.
process created a credit crunch for
The new-home market, however, responds to a different set of
the average business customer. ·
economic considerations, especially in the multifamily sector. The latest
MINI-EDITORIAL - Figuring
burden, Bishop says, is a lack of funding.
.
out
which banks are the safeat 10
From coast 10 coast, developers find few lenders interested in financing
keep
your savings is hard enough
new projects, he says. Equity partners are hard to fmd. And the insurance
without
having to go birdindusuy, historically a good source of funding, has problems of its own.
watching.
Thanks to some
' Moreover, Bragg says, after nearly five year;itndustty recession,
_ _,_ bureaucrats at the nation's banlcing
many builders have dissolved their operations or wo d down activilies to
agencies , ihe Federal Deposit
mere survival mode. In itself, he says, that could
drag on recovery.
Insurance Corp. now has two log&lt;is ·
The repon, based on counts of permits in m¥&gt;r markets throughout the
for
consumers: One is the "eaale '
countty, differs sha!ply from some Olher projections made in real estate
logo"
and the other the so~alfed
markets; where a tendency exists 10 fmd some ray of hope in grim figures.
"FDIC
logo." It has created some
Bragg says he simply didn't see any improvement in the data.
confusion
among bank customers
Residential builders in California, the biggest homebuilding state, .lOOk
th~ eagle logo must be ·
because
out fewer than half the number of permits obtained in the first quarter a
used by S&amp;Ls. while commercial
year ago, when the downwm already was deep.
banks
have the option 10 use both '
The collapse of residential construction in the Northeast remains deep,
logos.
However, only commercial ,·
esjlecially for multifamily housing, and BishOp says the area will have
banks can use the FDIC logo. &amp;. ·
Jess apartment construction than in any year since World War II.
in mind that the FDIC insures ·
Chicago and Detroi~ the two largest markets in the Great Lakes region,
deposits
at both commercial banks
authorized 40 percent fewer one-family homes in the first quarter than in
and
savings
and loans. One more ·
the same three-month period of 1990.
fact:
The
deposit
insurance fund ·
In Aorida, the second most active homebuilding state, permits fell 30
backing
up
both
banks
and S&amp;Ls is percent. Even Texas, with a less weak economy, suffered a decline,
brokeso don't bother looking at "
although its 5 percent falloff in single-family permits was the smallest of
logos.
any state.
·
.
In all areas, Bragg says, the greatest financing diffteulties involved
multifamily buildings, and there was liule indication of any improvement
soon.
In fact. the National ~ty Committee, whose member builders view
it as an advocate of public policy changes, believes immediale executive
HONOLULU (NEA)--The pro- accomparued by samer trunks and Ian Hotel known as the "Pink
action is needed "across the entire banking system."
tection of historic sites endangered servants, they remained in Hawaii Palace" ever since it opened in
, 0 e~
Roben C. Larson, chairman of the group and vice chairman of The by contemporary development on vacations that usually lasted for 1927 because of its striking pink
Taubman Company, one of the nation's leading real estate owners, pressures is hardly a challenge in months.
exterior.
generation of Hawaiian resorts.
buildess and managers, contends that lenders must re-evaluate properties the communities that cherish their
By far the oldest of the historic
While many other Waikiki
The Westin Kuaui, built at a
over longer time frames.
heritage and embrace a proud tradi- properties is the 90-year-old
hotels are separated from each cost of $350 million, boasts of
He suggests that not only are banks reluctant to lend on new projects, tion of preservation and restoration. Moana, the fllSt hotel on Waitilci other only by narrow alleys, that everything from "the world's
they are equally determined not to evaluate existing pro~es on a
Especially notable examples are .Beach. Restored today are numermajestic SpanishMoorish suucture largest collection of diaft horses,"
sensible basis.
·
towns that were founded as colo- ous reminders of the era's colonial
stands on 10 tranquil acres of pro- to a fleet of amahogany venetian
The cyclical nature of real estate cannot be ignored, he says, and he nial settlements in the Northeast, elegance and tropical splendor fusely landscaped grounds. When launches" traversing 800 acres of
criticizes "myopic valuation systems" that appraise buildings on old seaports in the South 101 early
including the Moana's birdcage Hawaii was governed by a royal lagoons. It claims 10 be "Hawaii's
liquidation baSes, confusing "temporary impairment" with permanent mining towns in the WesL
elevator, intricate millworlc, hard- family , the summer palace of most spectacular resort."
loss of earning power.
But historic preaervalion also is wood teak floors, grand staircase, 9ueen Kaahumanu was located
But ihe Hyall Regency ,
thriving in a thorouJhly unlikely colonnaded lobby and three-story- ihere.
.
Waikoloa was constructed at ~n
location - Waikikt Beach, this high porte cochere.
The third hotel is the Halekulani even higher cost-8360 millioncity's crowded, noisy tourist disAs part of the $50 million reno- which opened in 1917 as a summer and insists that it is athe most spectrict where ~idewalk vendors are vation, the guest rooms on each beach house for Honolulu residents tacular resort on earth." It ofrers
packed into the limited space left floor are fmished in a different type attracted by the ocean breezes that guests a choice of fantasy-oriented
By Tbe Associated Press
vacant in the concre't can)'OIIS sep- of wood- oak. on the second, provided relief from the oppressive activities, including wild game
Today is Tuesday, May 21 , the !41st day of 1991. There are 224 days arating scores of undistinguished mahogany on the third, maple on heat
hunts, dolphin rides and picnics
]eft in the year.
hotels.
the fourth, koa (indigenous to
The restored original building atop remote cliffs accessible only
Today's Highlight in History:
In the midst of that hurly-burly Hawaii) on the fifth and cherry on (whose extraordinary feature s by helicopJer.
·
On May 21, 1927, Charles A. Lindbergh landed his Spirit of St. Louis stands a trio of ~ial buildings- the sixth.. .
·
include floors made of eucalyptus
The slightly more modest Grand
ncar Paris, completinJ the fllSt solo airplane flight across the Atlantic hotels constructed m the early 20th
ReqUI~mg no enhancement,
wood) now is surrounded by a Hyatt Wailea says it has "Hawaii's
Ocean. Lindbergh covered a distance of more than 3,600 miles in 33 1/2 century whose present owners have however, IS a spectacular century- modem resort complex that inde- largest ballroom," a health spa
hours.
spent millions of dollars to recap- old banyan tree whose branches- pendent critics regularly rate as the almost twice as big, a "Slate-of-theOn this date:
ture their original~~·
75feet high and spreading 1~ feet best in Hawaii and among the art nightclub" and no fewer than
In 1542, Spallish explorer Hernando de SolO died while searching for
The hotels' earliest viSitors were across- shade a veranda-lined,
finest in the world.
five onsite or nearby 18-hole ·golf
gold along the Mississippi River.
.
almost exclusively wealthy people nostalgia[Illedcourtyard.
All of those hotels now are ·courses.
In 1832, the firSt Democratic National Convention got under way in whO had the 'time and money to
Hidden behind a raucous bazaar owned by Japanese investors (as
· What none of those properties
Baltimore. The delegates would norninaJe President Jackson for a second make leisurely and luxurious two- · of shops peddling everything from
are many oihers in Waikiki), and provides, however, is a sense of the
term:
weeklong steamship journeys to gaudy T-shirts 10 plastic seashells none of their room rates is cheap- majesty, beauty and serenity unique
In 1840, New Zealand was declared a British colony.
and from the mainland. Often stands the venerable Royal Hawai- but all are preferable to the new
to Hawaii.
.In 1881, Clara Bar10n founded the American Red Cross.
: In 1919, a proposed federal amendment (0 give women the right to
vod: passed the U.S. House of Representatives by a vote of 304-89.
: In 1924, 14-year-old Bobby Franks was murdered in· a "thrill killing"
. bx,Nathall Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, lwo students at the University
Is America morally bankrupt?
However, there is the matter of icans are not Catholic.
of.chicago.
.
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!ln 1941, so·years ago, a German U-boal sank the American freighter Recent evidence arrives 10 support religion. Some years ago, embla- Most Americans of Iri sh
•
opposite answers.
s'Robin Moore in the South Atlantic.
•
zoned on the cover of Time mapdescent aren't Catholics. but religious and we are m~~ cor- '
•In 1948, in a message 10 Congress, President Truman urged statehood · There has been scandal, or at zinc, was the question "Is God Protestants of Scotch-Irish and rupt Perhaps our comtp11011 IS not
least reports of it Was there scan- Dead?" Now we know: Not in Northern-Irish ancestry.
. for ·AIIIsb.
very corrupt and we are religious.
dal
in Palm Beach? In the White America, He isn't
•tn 1956, the United States exploded the fJJ'St airborne hydrogen bomb
- More than half the ArabPerhaps
we are both.
House? Was the White House
oWtr Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
A new survey shows 90 percent Americans are Christians. There
•
:In 1959, the musical "Gypsy," inspired by the life of stripper Gypsy dal perhaps about a writer who of Americans identifying them'
are fewer Moslems than had been
'
Religious intensity does seem 10
Rcpe Lee, opened on Broadway with Ethel Merman in the role of Gypsy's over-wrote?
selves as religious. Ninety is a lot estimated. The unduplicated have diminished, or chanp;ed. There ''·
Does it mauer? Of course, say ' of percents. Scholars say the Amer- Arab/Moslem total is about 2.2 is talk of religion of convenience,
medler, Rose.
Jn 1968, the nuclear-powered U.S. submarine Scorpion, with 99 men those who maintain we're on a slip- ican rate of religiousness is a third ·.million. Only 2 percent of blacks cafeteria Catholicism and pick-andabpllrd, was last heard from. (The remains of the sub were laJer found on pery slope; it's all jlllft of the fabric 10 a half higher than in other mod- are Moslems, but 40 percent Qf ch~se piety.
of moral erosion. Just consider em nations. ·
the ocelli floor 400 miles southwest of the Azores.)
. ,
Moslems are blaclc.·
;In 1979. former San Francilll:o City Supervisor Dan White was con- crime, drugs, promiscuity, illegiti-About 11 percent of the 6.8
Tile study, from the City UniThe · CUNY survey shows '
vLot...t in the sllooling deaths of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor
macy, divorce and homosexuality. versity of New Yorlc (by Professor million "ethnic" Jews- are reliCatholics about as likely to be
~Milk. .
.
·
10 begin a
list that conserva- Bm:ry Kosmin and Dean Seymour giously Christian.
divorced as other Americans. Other
:fn
Ensign JCIII Marie Butler accepted ber degree and commis- tives will happily provide. Libaals Lachman), was based on a massive
And there is one overwhelming
sion from the COlli Oulrd Academy in New London, Conn., becoming give the morility leclllre with a dif- sample of 113,000 adults. It ·con- number: 86 percent of Americans polls show Catholics at roughly
national norms regarding birth conferent spin: We bad a decade of firms eart.a reaeareh, but because · are Christians. Roman Catholics
1M finl woman 10
from • U.S. servite academy.
trol and legal abortion. Yet all that '••
:Jn 1985, Paal
l of Riverside, Calif., who was expecting septu- unspeakable greed presided over by of its large sample offers insights are the largest single denominlltion conflicts
with the teachings of
plets, pve birth 10 six live babies, three of whom died in the following · an amiable dunce (who ended the about small groups in America, as (26 percent), followed by Baptists (
'
Catholicism.
·
Cold War).
19 percent).
well !IS large. For example:
yea ago: Socialist FrancoiJ MiUtnand assumed office • presi·
And, next year, for the seventh
Strange. Americans are
- Most Asian-Americal)s arc
offteialdom of some main· ''
deilc of Fnnce; PrWdent Reagan met at the Whire House with West Ger- consecutive time "values" will be a Christians, typically Catholics or immoral. Americans are religious. lineThe
Protesrant denominations puts
mtl a..ccllor Helmut Schmidt; two more Irish nationalist hunger-Sttik- big political/presidential issue. Baptists.
What's going on?
Marxist
guerrillas in El SaiVIdor
en-died at the Maze Prison in Nonhem lrellncL
·
· De~oniL
. Pabaps our religion is not very
. -One-third of Hispanic-Amerhigh
on
the
allar.
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Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

111 Court

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WASHINGTON - The day

that reacla" No. 4 ll the Olemobyl
nuclear complex exploded in April

News not good in
homebuilding

Waikiki recaptures historic grandeur
.
·
R b t W. It
a erS

Today in history

.

WOMEN'S CLASS WINNERS - Mary
Rose, left, and Brenda 1'11U!e were the wbmen
in the Women's Wap Obllade Coarse at Sat-

EMS units answer four calls
Units of MeiJs County Emergency Medical Services answered
four calls fa' 8SSIStance on Monday and early Tuesday.
.
At 10:56 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad \vas ca11ed 10 Mount Olive
Road. Mary Price was transported 10 StJoseph Hospitil.
At 6:31 p.m., Middleport squad wentiO Vine Street.Jor Pat
Jacks, who was taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hospilal. ·
At 5:10a.m., Syracuse squad went 10 Ducktown Road. Courtney
Jones was taken 10 Holzer Medical Center.

---Area deaths'-·- Joshua N. Mullins
· Joshua NicholaS Mullins, infant
son of Tim Hamilton and Elaine
Muliins of New Marshfield, died
on Saturday, Ma~ 18, 1991at Ohio
State University Hospital, in
Columbus.
He was bom on Friday, May 17,
1991 at osu Hospilal.
Besides his parents, he is survived by a twin brother, Isiah; his
grandparents, Ted and Joyce
Mullins of New Marshfield; a
grandmo.ther, Connie Welch, a
step-grandfBthlir WWiam Welch· a
grandfather, Cltd Hamilton: aitd
a step-grandmother, Pandy Hamil.ton, all of Athens; two uncles,
Chad Mullins of New Marshfield
and Tony Hamilton of Athens: and
an aunt, Angie HamiiiDD !&gt;f Athens.
Graveside services will be held
IOday at 11 am at Torch Cemetery
with Ann Heli~tin offtciating.
Further details will be anouneed
by White Funeral Home in
Coolville.
·
•

James Preston
James M. Preston Jr., 77, of Cliflon, died Friday, May 17, 1991 , at
Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
He was · a retired dormitory
counselor at WV State Rehabilitation Center at Institute.
Born January 13, 1914 at Lewisburg, he was the son of the late
James M. Sr. and Frances F.
(Auemory) Preston.
Survivors include his wife;·
Gertrude E. Preston of Clifton; a
son, James M. Preston mof Martinsville, VA; daughter-in-Jaw,
Susan L. Preston of Martinsville; a
slep-daughrer, Doris S. Caner or
Middleport; three stepsons, Fred
Gibbs Jr. of Langsville, OH,
Richard L. Gibbs of Decantor, TX
and Roben B. Gibbs or Syracuse,
OH; l}VO grandsons, 11 step-

The Daily Sentinel

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grandchildren and 11 step-greatgrandchildren.
Graveside services were held on
Saturday, May 18, at the Kirkland
Memorial Gardens with · Rev.
Rankin Roach.
·
Arrangements were under the
direction of Foglesong Funeral
Home.

Weather

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Wednesday, May 22
. Accu-Weathe.- rorecast for &lt;!aytime conditions and high temperatures

L G'I
eo I more
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Leo Gilmore, 77, Pomeroy, died
Thursday, ¥&amp;Y 16,, 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
.
Born May 22, 1913 10 MIDe~, he was ~ son of f!te late
Waid A. and Carrie Baer Gilmore.
He ~as a farmer .and a l!ewspaper
camer.for Th~ Daily SCI)ttnel.
He IS sumved by a SISter, Helen
G. Bryan, C&lt;?lumbus; lf!ld a sister
and brother-m-law, Mildred and
Virgil Kirlr:pattick, Westttville.
Graveside services will ~ held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Gilmore
Cemetery with Rev. William Middleswarth officiating. '

,I Dayton I 81 • I •I Columbus I 81 I
o

•

820

ShoWBIS T-siDtms Rsln Flurries

Snow

mproy. Ohio, by tht Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ MuUimf!dla, Inc.,
Pomrroy. Ohio 45'ffl9. Ph. 992·2156. S..

cond

cia"~

postage paid at

MPmber: Th (" Assodated . Preis, In·
land Dall y Press Associa tion and thf'

Ohio Nf'Wspaper Association. National
Advertising Rt'prese-ntatlve, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, Nl'W York 10017.

PO!rrMASTER:
Send · - chO.~~e~
to Th• Dally Sentinel. Ill Cour1 St ..

· By Tbe Associated Preas
Ohio is becoming locked into
another pattern of unseasonably
warm weather.
ForecasJers say the high temperatures the rest of this week will be
in the 80s, some 10 to 15 degrees
above normal.
The National Weather Service
· says the unusually warm conditions
are caused by a combination of
sunny conditions and southerly

JUNE 1ST&amp;: 2ND, 1991

Pomeroy. Ohio 45789.

SlJJIIICIIIPTION RATES

·MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

a, earn.. or~~~- .....

Ono Woek ......... .................. ,...... ,IUO
OM Month ................... .......... ... ,1&amp;.9!1

o... y ..,

ROUTE 82 NORTH OF POINT PLEASANT

............................. .. .. 183.20

III'IOLII: COPY
PmCII:

Camping Available With·Full·Hook Ups
Call Sonny F)y at 304-773-5696 to Res. A Camp

Dally ............. ,....... :...... :...... 25 Cents
Subltr ll~ers not

d'"lrlll(t to pay the cor·

rler may remit In advance dlred lo
Tb• Dally Sentinel 01183, lor 12 month

.

blalll. C""'lt wtllllo 11wn carrtereacll

wool&lt;,

.

No oubocrlptlo,. by mall permitted In
arl'lll when llomeo carrier I«Vice ll
avaiiJbJf' ,

.

llallhboerllrllool

c.a..,
uw..... .................................. au•
-·!hlp

211 w..... .................................. M3.11
:12-1 ................................... ..7.
Olololrle ..._ Ceuqo
UW..... .................................. IIUO
liiW..U .................................. M"'·

--,,

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

DON'T MISS IT!
30 OF YOUR FAVORITE SINGING GROUPS

Let's Sing and Praise God Together!

EY.ENI HELQ RAIN or SHINE!
For 11ore IDformatlon Contact
help aoaill, Pi11ldent (SCM) 882-2049

'

•

Waid Spencer, Tom Hoover: AND CHILDREN'S OBSTACLE
WAGON OBSTACLE COURSE COURSE: Eric Tuu1e and Marlisa '
(MEN'S): Mary Rose and Brenda Bovin; CORN PLANTING: Glenn
Tuttle; FEED RUN: Tim Bearhs, Tuttle, Waid Spencer, Rodney TutTom Karr, Harold Castle, John tle, Chuck Whittington and John
Rose, Waid Spencer: TWO- Rose; CHILDREN'S DRIVING
HORSE RIDING PLOW: Tom TEAM: Toby Cunis, Eric Tuttle,
Karr, Glenn Tuttle, Rodney Tuule, Kass Lodwick, Mike Tuttle, Wes- '
Tim Bearhs, John Rose; FEED ley Karr; Peter Winner, Andrew
RUN: Tim Bearhs, Chuclt Whit- Bovin and J.D. Curtis.
'·
Judging for the two-day event '
liJigiDD, Rodney Tuttle, John Rose,
Tom Karr; LOG SKID: Rodney was conducted by Byron Jimes 811!1
Tuttle, Glenn Tuttle, Chuck Whit- Charles Shain, and Keith Molden ··
tington, Waid Spencer, Melvin was the announcer. Concessions •
Burton; THREE-HORSE WALK· were provided by Eastern Local ,
ING PLOW: Glenn Tuttle, Rodney Band Boosters. John Teaford's -'
Tuttle, John Rose, Tim Bearhs, Kountry Klub made trophies,
Tom Karr; CO-ED WAGON whicl) were sponsored by various•.
OBSTACLE COURSE: Rodney businesses and patrons.
Tuttle, Chuck Whittington, Tom . The next Ohio Valley Draft"·
Kllrr, Waid Spencer: WOMEN Horse and Mule Association meet- wiU be held on JuneS.

Alumni reunions and parties
The Middleport Class of 1941
will have a party on Saturday at I
p.m. a the old American Legion
hall. All class members are urged
10 attend and all Middlepon alumni
are .invited.
. . Pictures on display · .
Old yearbooks and pictures of
MiddlepOn alumni are on display
at ~Middlepon Library. ~yone
having pictures they would like 10
have displayed should take them 10
the library.
Rutland alumni reservatloas
All~tland alumni need to
make
rvations by Wednesday
for the umni dinner at the Rutland
Civic Center at 6:30 p.m. The $9
reservations may be made at the
Rutland Department Store or ~y
calling 742-2191. A group will
dec~!Jile Thursday and Friday
evenmg.

Middlejlort items available
The Middleport High School
Alumni Association has t-shirts,
sw·
eatshirts and caps on sale
sunny Pt. ClOUdy ClOUdy
through Friday at lhe following
C 1991 Accu~Wtlll'ler, Inc. stores: Locker 219, The Middlepon
Department Store and th.e Middl~­
pOrt Dairy Queen. The Items will
also be sold at the banquet on Sat. urday evening.

a•

Another heat wave
forecast for Ohio

GOSPEL
JUBILEE

Pom e~oy .

Ohio.

Ice

VIa A..oa.tod Prns Grap/llcoNftl

BEND AREA

e&gt;very aft~r noon, Monda y
throuih Friday, til Court St., Po·

Publ11hed .

PA.

IMansfield I 79o I•

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................29
Ashland Oil ......................31 1/2
AT8iT ........................." .... 36
Bob Evans ........................18
Charming Shop................. 16 5/8
City Holding ..................... l3 3/4
Federal Mogu1.................. .16 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................24
Key Centurion .................. 13
Lands' End ....................:.. 19 7/8
Limited Inc .......................27 1/2
Multimedia Inc .................27 3/4
Rax Restaurant .................21/32
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............26 3/4
Shoney's Inc.......... .......... .17 1/2
Star Bank .......:..................21
Wendy Int'l... .................. .10
Worthington Ind...............23 3/8
Stock rtporll art tilt 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro,ldtd by Blum, Ellis
1111d Lotwl of Gallipolis.

••

-Meigs announcements--

OHIO VVc'cltilt:'r

(t!SPS lf!l-ltllt
A Dh·..._ of Multlinedfa, Inc.

scan-

.C:"'

The Ohio Valley Draft Horse
and Mule Association held its
annual field day over the weekend,
and recognized winners in 14 categories.
.
The field day was held off State
Route 7 near Cllester , and was
Tonight, partly cloudy west with atte1,1ded by residents ?f Meigs,
a slight chance of showers or th~ Gall~ and A~ Counnes. .
dei'storms toward morning 00 _
Wmners (m the orde~ of rll'st
wesL Mostly clear east. Wedn
throu h ftfth laces) were. HORSE
day, variable cloudiness with
WAL'*'ING ILOW: Glenn Tull;le.
chance of showers or thunder- John Rose, Rodne~ Tuttle, Ttm
storms Highs in the low 80s
Bearhs and Wa1d Spencer:
.
.
THREE-HORSE RIDING PLOW:
Rodney Tuttle, John Rose, Glenn
Tuttle, Waid Spence~; LOG SKID:
Extended forecast
John Rose, Melvin Little, Tom
Thursday tbrougl! Saturday:
Hoover, Waid Spencer, Rodney
Fair and unseasonably warm. Tuttle; WAGON OBSTACLE
Highs mostly in the 80s. Lows COURSE (MEN): Glenn Tuttle,
mostly in the 60s. '-...,
Rodney Tuttle, Chuck Whilting10n,

urday'a Oltlo Valley Draft Horse and Mule
Show field day. Prbes were awarded in 14 categories, and other adlvlties were beld as well.

.----Local brief---:"":"':"~

· Ben Wattenberg

Jon'

.

Field day winners of weekend event na~ed

Moral morass or religious revival?

r980.

'Will held Sltvday ad S1111day, •nd 'Will spoo$0red by !he Ohio Valley Draft Horse and Mule
Association.

GOOD LOOKING TEAM· ThiJ team of
draft horses 'Will one of the entries Ia lastweekend's Draft Hone Field Day. Tbe annual event

Good planting
weather forecast

In Sunday's edition of The Sunday Times-Sentinel il WlL'I reponed
in an article pertaining 10 Southern
High School's awards asaembly
that Norman Mataon received
recognition from the; American
• Legion Drew Webster Post in
. Pomeroy for his panicipllion in the
Buckeye Boys .s~a~erosram. Matson' was tponsore It Buckeye
Boys SlaeC by the Americln J..ecion
Racine Post.

Hospital news

=r.,

HOLZER MEDICAL CINTU
Dischlflel,
20 • ~
Belcbel', llobble
IIIII

Wood.

•

Water conservation urged
The Board of Public Affairs of
Racine urges all Racine residents to · ·
take water conservation measures ··
until otherwise notified. It has been
reported that one of the wells is ·'
down. Residents are insuucted not '•
10 water their lawns or gardens or
wash their vehicles.
•

..
.'

Membership drive
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will host a membership·· : ·
drive at Krogers in Pomeroy and in · .'
Racine on Saturday. Those interested in becoming a members should ..
bring necessary proof of eligibility: ·::
Kenneth
Hagger is the commander.
.
.

Pomeroy alumni tickets on sale ·
Tickets are on sale through
Wedoesda¥ for the Pomeroy Alumni Association's Banquet and
winds. Average highs for this time Dance,
to be held in the Meigs
of year range from 70 in Cleveland High School
Cafeteria on Saturday
to 76 in Cincinnati.
at
6:30p.m.
Tickets arc $12 for
Lows tonight are expected to be both dinner and
dance, and can be
from the upper 50 10 the low 60s, purchased at Swisher
and Lohse
also warmer than normal.
and
Francis
Florist.
The Gary
The record high temperature for
S'twan
Quintet
will
provide
music
this date at the Columbus weather · for the event and tickets for
the
station was 92 degrees in 1941.
dance
only
can
be
purchased
at
the
The record low was 34 in 1883.
door
for
$5.
This
year,
all
Pomeroy
Sunrise this morning was at·
6:12 a.m. Su11set wil' be at 8:45 High School teachers are invited 10
attend and should contact Judy
p.m.
,
Werry at 992-2076 after 5 p.m. or
Yvonne Young at 992-7690 after 5
p.m. 10 make reservations. .
Radne Soutbem Alumni
By The Asloc:llltecl Prell
The Racine Southern Alumni
Here's the lateSt Ohio agriculBanquet will be held Saturday at 6
tural weather advisory prepared by
p.m.
For further information on the
the National Weather Service's
banquet contact Joyce Quillen at
Midwest Agricultural Weather Service Center in West Lafayette. Ind.: · 949-2438 from 8 a.m. 10 4 p.m. or
warm, humid weather should be 949-2695 after S p.m., or Pam Didgenerally favorable for outdoor dle at 949-2749.
work the rest of this week,
Pomeroy Class of 1!141 .
although there's ·a possiblity of
The
Pomeroy High School Class
some isolated t~understorms on
Wednesday.

Correction ·

of 1941 will celebrate its SOt II·.:
anniversary with a get-together on
Saturday rrom 1 ~4. p.m. at the ·
Pomeroy Senior Ciuzcns Center. •
All class members arc urged to
attend. Committee members are.,
Evelyn Gilmore, Maxine Owens,
. Betty Spencer, Lorena Arnold and
. Don Mullen.
ClllllS olrer~
A reverse glass painting class '
will be ofrered at the Middleport
Arts CO'uncil on Wednesday at 7
p.m. with Michele Garretson as the
mstruciOr. Call 742-2157 to register.
.
A mop doU class will be offered"
on June 5 at 7 p.m., also instructed.
by Garretson. Call to register. · :. ·:

S~RING

VALI!V CINEMA

Otr'tee elosed
Planned Parentltood of Southeast Ohio Patient SerVices offices
will be closed Wednesday for a
s~f meeting. Offices will reopen
Fnday at 10:30 a.m.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial HospUal .. MONDAY ADMISSIONS - ·-'
Judith Ann Smith, Pomeroy; Audra
'Arnold, Pomeroy; and Goldie DiU,
Long Bottom.
: ·••
DISCHARGES - Peggy Hat- _
field, Hugh Hanson, Charlotte · •,
Wolfe, and Howard Damron.

111 eJne• _,.,.. IMICIII• · tllat II. !t't IIRtll
1

11101111 ~·=

chui"cMt.

lpl£111.... . . .

ONE.

competltM!y-pricad
for r.uil - a .. oftla1s,

dNtllO'"· c.. uafora..,..

446 4174

polltl

liq
•

IJ

• ' "

and quo-.lkln.

,
"

1

·
;.

I I""'" J
""'

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5JONE

COlD

214 EAST MAIN

POMEAOY
992r.l887

..........

~·

····-·· o.........

••
·'.
'
.,
,. '

...

,.

�Tuelclay, May 21, 1991

The D·aily Sentinel

SpOrts

I ,
'

Tuesday, May 21,1991
~

..

'

!

As the old saying goes, "close Ryan Smilh foUov.led wilh a single,
only .counts in horseshoes and hand Donnie Haynes strnck oul to end
grenades," and GaJ!ia Academy the inning.
·
found that out the hard way in
The Academy kept chipping
MOnday's Division n district tour- away at Jhe Redmen' s lead m the
nament ba!!'ball giiiiiC against Rock fifth, which started when Ryan
Hill at Unioto High School in Young grotmded out 10 shortslqp.
Chillicothe, which the ~edmen A single by Skidmore, a walk to
won S-4 after lhe Blue Devils, who Canaday and a single by Smilh lhat
had touc))ed s11111er Larry DePriest . scored Skidmore cut the lead to S·
. for a nm in Jhc sevenlh, stranded 3. But DePriest survived a passed ·
lhe tying run on lhint base.
ball that moved Canaday ancl Smith
The Redmen, 17-7, drew first to third and second, respeclively,
blood in the tcip of the-second, by striking out Hay_nes and Rod
whiCh began wilh a fly out 10 right Young 10 end lhe fnune.
.
field by Dollfi Stambaugh. Then
Two innings later, the French
Chad Bridges got an infield single, City nine put lhe heat on lhe Hill
and a double.by Phil Bailey sent once again, as Skidmore followed
Bridges 10 third. A single by John Ryan Youns 's opening strikeout
Jenkins scored Bridges to score, with a single. Canaday tapped a
and a sacrifice fly by Charles · ground-rule double to left-center
thomas brought Bailey home wilh field lhat had it oot been trapped in
the Pedro nine's second run. The ·the weeds near Jhe fence, Skidmore
HiD's second ended wilh a ground- woUld have scored on Jhe hit and
out to Jhird by Scott Besco.
Cimaday would have been sJanding
Rock Hill was back in business atthird.
·
in the third, which started when
As it was, Skidmore wound up
Robert Crabtree walked . After .at third, and Canadlly stood at ~­
DePriest struck out, Stambaugh ond, and a few minutes later,
singled, and Bridges' sin$1e scored DePriest's wild pitch provided the
Cnbtree. After Bailey fl1ed out, a Academy lhe advantage lhe laws of
passed ball moved Stambaugh and physics didn't. Tranlslation: Skid·
bridges ahead 90 feet, and an error more scored, and Canaday went 10
by Blue Devil second sacker Chris third on the errant toss. But
Howell on Jenkins' grounder DePriest, repeating what he did 10
scored Stainbaugh and Bridges. end lhe GAHS fiflh, ,fanned Smith
That half of lhe third ended when and Haynes to end lhe affair.
Thomas grounded out 10 third.
DePriest whiffed 16 and walked
The Devils, 12-8, got off 10 a six, and Davis, who got tbe swting
slow sJan in Jhe boJtom of lhe third call for the Academy, struck out
when Clint Davis struck out. But three and walked' two.
,
Ryan Yotmg wallced and advanced
Rock Hill's hit coUeciOrs were
10 second on a passed ball during Thomas (1·2), Bailey (double),
Rob Skidmore's at·bal. Skidmore Bridges and Jenkins .(all 1-3),
grounded out to third,. but after . Besco and Stambaugh (bolh l-4).
Stambaugh, Jhe Hill's first base- The Gallipolis hitters were Canaman, gloved Bridges' throw for Jhe day (solo homer), Skidmore and
out on Skidmore, Stambaugh fued Srnilh (all 2·2).
10 third in an aaempt to retire Ryan
The Redmen will take on
Young. His throw was off the Athens - a 1-0 winner over
.mark, and Ryan Young, having Portsmouth in the opener - on
kicked up some dust in Jhe slide, Thursday at 4:30 at Uniolo High
escaped Jhe dust cloud and scored. School.
Then Christmas came early for Score by innings
Tony Canadar , who rocketed Rock Hill 023 000 0 - 5-6-1
DePriest's offenng beyond lhe left· Gallipolis 002 010 I -4-6-2
center field wall to cut J.lle Red·
WP- DePriest
men's lead to 5-2. But even !hough
. LP .;_ Davis

Toronto edges Oakland 1-0
By Tbe ~iated Prm
David Wells turned things
around real fasL
Wells OIJ!dueled Bob Welch to
give the Toronto Blue Jays a 1-n .
vic&amp;ay over Oakland on Monday
nighL After going 1-3 with a 5.16
ERA in Apri}, Wells is 4-tl .with a
O.S8 ERA m May.
•
ul was a one-zone piu:her in
April," said Wens, Who JUmed 28
Monday. "Now I'm pitching inside, outside ... establisbing myself

I
I

·reaDy weU."

·

Wells (5· 3) woo his fourth
straight Slart, allowiug two hits in
innings, stritiDg out six llld
walking four. He Ills allowed two
earned runs and 17 hits ov.cr 30 innings in his last four 111r11 and Ills
a0.60 ERA during lhat span.
"We bit too many bills that were
up and out of the 5UUe zone,"
Oakland manager Tony La Russa
said "C~ueally, we hit a lot of
ft y balls."
•
Welch (4·3) piu:hed a f'our-bitltl
for his second oomplete game,
SIIUC.k out tine and walked one.
Both his complete games - lbe
only ones for the A's Ibis IICUOII have been losses.
" The bad pan about it is you
Jose, so it doesn't help ~ at au,"
Welc.h said.
.
In other games, California beat
Chicago 6-3, Seatlle beat Kansas
Cily 8-6, Boston beat Milwaukee 3-

0, Detroit beat ·Baltimore 11-5 and
Cleveland beat New Yak 3-1.
Toronto got its run after Ed
Sprague singled to lead off the
sixdl. Rene Gonzales forced
Sprague at second in an unsuccessful sacrifice ~pl and took
aecond on a lWO-OIIt wild pill:h br
Welch. Moolrie Wilson, 3-for-30
lifclime against Welch, foUowed
wilb a double down tbe left-field
Jioe.
ADgels " Wblte Sclllt 3
Mark I ,1np10n 'NOll his fourth
suaigba Slllt, ellowing seven hits in
7 1-3 innings liJd Slriting OUI six.
Bryan Harvey got duee outs for his
!Oib save in 10 c:bances.
Melido Paez (1-4) auowed eight
hits in 7 2-3 innings and lllruck out
six. But be gave up solo homors to
Glly Gaeui, Wally Joyner and
Dave W'mjleld and a lhree-run
homer to Donnie Hill.
MeriDen 8, Roya116
Jeff Montgomery (1-2) dew a
wild pitdJ lbat scomcl the tie-lmltillg run in lbe niodt inning and AI·
Yin Davis drove in four runs as
visiting Sealtle woo for lhe sevenlh
lime in eight games. Ken Griffey Jr.
foUowed tbe wild piiCh with an
RBisingle.
.
Russ Swan (1-tl) pill:hed lhree
innings of two-hit relief and Mite
Jackson, Seattle's fourlh pilch«,
gotlhree outs for his fourth save.

Red Sclllt 3, BIEWtll 0
Jeff Reaulon got his 300ih carm
save and SieVe Lyons and Jade
Clart homered at Fenway Part as
Boston ended a Jhree..game losing
.streak.
Matt Yotmg {3-1) allowed four
hilS. in six innings, struck OUI four
but walked five.
Chris BOSio (4·5) lost despiJe
piu:hing a six-hiuer in his second
complclc giiiiiC. He struck out six
and walked nooe.
~n 11, Orioles 5
Pete lncaviglia bit a llfllld slam
and drove in live nms, sending tbe
visiting Orioles to lbeir 6fth loss in
six games.
.
lncaviglia, who lied his CIRC'l'
high for RBis, hit his fourth CIRC'l'
slam in tbe first after Bob Milacki
(1·1) walked four batiers, forcing in
the game's first run.
·

.,

Jerry Don Gleaton (2-1) allowed
duee bits in 3 2-3 scoreless innings.
JndlaDS 3, Yallllea 1

Eric King (4-4) allowed one run

and four hits in six innings fer his
first victory in five home starts llld
Cluis James hit a two-out, two-run
double in tbe fifth.
The Yankees, who have lost five
of six, have scc,.ed five runs in 50
innings. Cleveland, only 4-13 at
home, woo for tbe Jhird time in 13

games.

.

Ou:k c.y (1-S) aUowed duee
runs and seven hits in five innings.

San Diego, Houston win NL games
A1LANTA (AP) - Ed Whitson tluew slrikes, and Atlanla hit a
lot of lhem. But lhe Braves didn't
hit the ball as far as tbe San Diego
Padres.
Whitson managed 10 scatter 11
hits Mondlly night as lhe Padres
beat Atlanla 7-3. Tony Fernandez,
Tony Gwynn and Fred McGriff
· each had solo home runs for San
Diego, whose victory kept the
Braves one-half game behind first·
· place Los Angeles in tbe National
LcagueWesL
The Braves, who had won seven
of eight at home, scaed lhree runs
in lhe first four innings. WhiiSOII
shut out Atlanta after thai, Slriting
out four and walking none in his
second complele game.
"I made some mechanical ad·
jusunenJS about lhe fourth or 6fth
inning," Whitson (3-4) said "I got
iln top of lhe ball more, . and that
made my slider IIIII palm baJI bet·
ter."
In the only other NL game,
Houston beat Los Angeles 4- I.
For Braves SI8IUt John Smollz

(1·5), it was the SB!Jie Story -pitch
decenlly but come away without a
viclay.
"I had good stuff," said Smoltz,
tbe Braves' top winner a yes ago
wilh a 14-12 record. "I have had au
year. The simple fact is we are not
· clicking."
Smoltz had a season-high 10
slrikeouJS in seven innings, but
gave up eight hilS and five runs.
"I've had quality .sJaits like Ibis
that got me nothing. There's nolhing to blame it on. It's just gone
that way up until now," he said.
"Things wiU change {(X. John,"
Braves piJChing coach Leo Mazzone said. "John had great stuff
tonighl He had an excellent curve,
as good as be's had all year. He's a
quality piu:her."
Smoltz, however, got himself in
· trouble early, giving up a leadoff
single 10 Bi~ in lhe opening inning.
then ttipled
Roberts home and scored on
Owyn~~e. Fernandez hit his
first N · · League home run in
tbe third for a 3-tl lead.

The Braves tied il in the fourth
on • RBI single by Greg Obon af.
tel' Lonnie Smilb aacked I two-run
homer in tbe tbinJ, but San Diego
went abcad to stay in the 6fth on
Robens' RBI double.
G
opened the sixlh with his
~11om« of the season and
McGriff bit his lOib of lbe season
in Jhe eighth off reliever Mike Stanton.
Astros 4, Dodi«J1
Luis Gonzalez hit a solo home
run and an RBI triple, leading
Jimmy Jones and Houston at tbe
Astrodome. ·
Jones (4-1) shut oqt Los Angeles
on two hilS for eight innings, but
left after giving up consecutive
~ in lhe ninth. AI Osuna
ftnishcd for hi~ scconil save.
Jones won his third straight deci·
sion. He struck out six and walked
four. Kevin Gross (2-4) lasled only
four innings. .
The AslrOS scored three limes in
the first inning, capped by Karl
Rhodes' two-run single. ·

appearance and its fight. It' s
defmitely not somelhing a gourmet
cook would prize.
·
The fish runs 36 inches and
longer, and a good-sized one in
Florida waJers wiD go 13 pounds or
more.
"They're extremely silvery fish,
very hard to see in the water
because their sides act as giant
mirrors and relleet the bouom over
whiCh Jhey swim," Pallot says.
' So an experienced guide doesn't
look for a fiSh - he looks for a
shadow - which is fairly visible
"!'"•Itse most boneftsh hang out in
eight to 18 inchesofw.-er.
When you catch one, make
some pictures and tum illoose.

SL'()rcb&lt;)ar(l
a,n.A

\

lw,.._

All 'I1IMo EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EutDI-

, Botton
. T.,...Io
• Dolnll

• Mltrnrtee
: Clnelud
• )'I.,. York

: Bald••
:S..IIIe .
"OHland
.;r..u

W
21
23
II
11
13

13
12

L
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I

....

PLAYING LEAPFROG - Cleveland Iadiau third baseman Carlos Baerga (top) plays
leapfnll In avoiding tbe sliding Alvaro Espilloza

of lhe New York Yaakees in tJie secoad Inning or
Monday's American League pme ill Cleveland,
wbicb lhe Tribe won 3-1. (AP)'

Top five MVP vote1Jetlers and how lhey CO"lll!red for the 1991
season. Michael Jordan domlnaled the MVP vollng wtth a total of
891 votes vs. second place Magic Johnson's 497 votes.
Games

The meat is full of bones that's where lhe name comes from.
"Each of those bones has a lillie
hook at the end of it, and so if you
were to ear i&amp;, you w;ould eat a 11one
thai has horrible, pointed hook on
it," Pallo! says: .
The meat 1s o1ly and strong
tasting, unlike lhe light Jaste and
texture of saltwaJer fiSh,
Flo!,'ida boneftsh are lhe biggest
and smanest in the wodd. They are
usually several pounds larger ~
are harder to catch than Jh.e u
cousins in tbe Bahamas and around
the world, Pallot says.
·
They Jive in the warm' shaDow
water from Miami south
lhroughout the Florida Keys. You
fish fo{ them by either wading or
going OUI in a shallow-draft boaL
A guide is essential ro teaCh tbe
rookie and provide a second pair of
eyes.
Bonefish are bottom feeders .
The moulh is on lhe bottom of the
pointed snout. They eat
crustaceans, mollusks, shrimp,
seaworms, minnows, small eels,
almost anything they can pick up
from or dig out of the bouom. It's
lheir feeding lhit gives them away.
· "When they tip dowli to feed in
sballow water, tbeir Jail breaks lhe
surface. When lbeir Jail bJeaks the
· surface, in order to keep their
balance and fishing position, they
wave their tail back and forth,"
Pallot says.

Points

Assists

Source: AP

Rebounds

,-

f

APf A. TOf'O; Alan Baseden

Chicago's Jordan voted NBA's MVP
By JOE MOOSIDL
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - W'mning an
NBA championship has become an
obsession for Michael Jordan, who
was named lhe league's Mosl Valuable Player on Monday in a
landslide vote.
The star guard of the Chicago
BuDs said be was "happy for the
award. but I want lhe championship
more.''.
"This is well receive4 by myself,
my family, my 1e811Ul181CS. (But)
most of lhe cn:dit sbould go 10 my
teammaiCS, who hive ~ up
and put us in Ibis posilion.'
The BuDs won the -4int of the
game of lhe bcst~f-7 series Eastern
Conference finals against the
Dell'Oit Pistons on Sunday.
"Wlien a team wins, all the individual accolades follow," said
Jordan, who also won lhe MVP
award in 1988.
He received 891 poinJS, includ·
ing 77 first-place votes, from a •
nationwide panel of 96 media
members. Each voter was asked to
select a top live, wilh lhe points
going on a l0-7·5·3-1 basis.
Magic Johnson of lhe Los An·
~eles Lakers, a Jhree.time winner,
IIICiuding the last two seasons,
finished second wilh 497 poinJS and
10 first~lace vo•··. David Robin"""
son of e San Antonio Spurs was
third wilh 476 points and six firsJS .
Charles Barkley of the Philadelphia
76ers had 222 points and two firsts .

Use live bait, such as shrimp,
crabs or sliced conch.
The bucktail jig is the most
popular artificial lure. Fly
fishermen, a growing saltwater
fraternity, use flies lied 10 look like
shrimp.
The angler fiShes from lhe bow
of a small, slight skiff, with a
platform on the stem from which
tbe guide pulls lite craft wilh an 18to 20-foot pole.
·
him belle
The PIaiiiorm giVes
a
r
angle 10 see tbe fish and makes it
easier for him 10 controllhe boat
Ponefish anglers in Florida
water find a single fish, Jhen go
after iL
In the Bahamas, sch.ools of
hundreds of fish are more common.
.
To set tbe bonefLSb, cast lbe bait ·
Karl Mal.one of lhe Utah Jazz
upcnrrenl from il, and let the . had 142 pomts and CJ~ Drelller
cunent carry tbe smell to tbe ftsh. ·· of the Ponland Trial Blazers had 75

(

SEARCHES FOR BALL - Rock Hill tblrd baseman Chad
Bridges (riaht) searches for lbe baD,. wblcb moments earlier whizzed
by bim as GaJiia Academy's Ryan Youaa slides bard Into third base
foUowlng a JP'OIIlldout to third by teammate Rob Skidmore Ia lbe •
third ilminl of Ma.day's Division n district ftnt-round action at
Ualoto High Sebool, ,which the Redmea won 5'4. Young, ,taking
advantase or Redmea nrst baseman Doug Stambaugh's errant
lhrow, got
moments later and scored lhe Blue Devils' fll'st rqn.
(OVP pboto G.
Osborne)

GOOD POKE, TONY -GaUia Academy bead coach Brett WUsoa congratulates Tony Canaday (7) for bis .solo homer orr Rock
Hill hurler Larry DePriest Ia the third ianiog of Monday's Division
n district baseball game near Chillicolhe. Though the blast cut tbe
Hill's lesd to 5-2, tbe Redmeo went oa to win S-4. (OVP photo by G.
Spe11cer Osborne)

·--

•·

-

North Stars to 'face
meaner Penguins tonight

Shadow searching in shallow waters
the key to finding Florida boneflsh
By Bill Sdaulz
Associated Press Writer
When President Bush lllkcs time
off to go. bonefishing, he's after
' one or lhe fmest fighting fishes in
' lhc ocean.
"It's utterly shocking the fllSI
time you encounter lhe first run of
the bonefish," says guide Philip
" Flip" PaUot of Homestead, F1a
" They're capable of melting lhe
drag system on sophisticated
tackle. They ' re capable of a
suslained, unintenu)lled nm of up
10 100 yards. And it almost doesn 1
matter what kind of pressure you
put on the fish ·- he's going to
make that fust nm."
The bonefish 's beauty is in its
,

:Rock Hill downs GAHS
.5~4 in district tourney

points and Jhe other first-place vote.
Jordan averaged 3r.s points to
win his fiflh-suaight scoring title.
He shot a career-high .539 from the
field, averaged 6.0 rebounds, S.S
assisJS and 2.72 steals.
Jordan also was named 10 the
NBAAil·Defensive Team last week
for the fowth consecutive season
after he led lhe BuDs 10 a 61-21
record, lhe best in lhe franchise's
25history.
my best year was two
years ago in 1989," said Jordan. "I
felt aU-around it was my best year."

'?jfelt

He scored a career-high 3,041
points in 1987, but said "I don't
know if that was in the best inJeresJ ·
of lhe team."
"My Slats have been very similar
lhe last five years, but team success
had a lot to do with it," Jordan said
of die MVP honor. "I never saw an
MVP from a losing team."
'·
Coach Phil Jackson, instrumental
in cutling Jordan's playing time to
save him for crucial limes
throughout Jhe season, said, "He
deserves iL It's a reflection on the
Jearn.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)
_:_ The Mario Lemieux mystery
WiD be cleared up tonight in Game
4 of the St.anley Cup finals. Other
than lhat, the Pittsburgh Penguins
still have 10 solve Jhe dilemma of
winning at Met Center.
"I know Jhey'll be aggressive,"
Minnesota cenJer Dave Gagner
said. "They don '1 want to go home
down 3-1. We have to look for the
same game from Pittsburgh just
like we did in lhe second game."
Then, as now, Jhe Penguins
trailed in lhe series before coming
back to tie at 1-1.
The North SJars' 3-1 victory in
Game 3 on Sunday put lhem up
again by a game and put mare •pressure on lhe Penpins.
.
.
The Penguins are hurung m
other ways. Thoy don '.t even know
if Lemieux, the&amp; leading SCort'S m
lhe playoffs, wiU be available for
tooight's game.
,
Lemieux did not play Sunday
night because of back spasms and
was stiU a question mark today.
"We cenainly want him 10 plar,
;· and he certainly wants to play, '
Penpins coach Bob Johnson said.
"We'll have to wait until after
wamfups (tonight) 10 see how he
feels.
"It was his decision not to play
last night. It will be his dedson 10
play."
.
' If not, Johnson hoped his players
would respond lhe same way they
did when Lemi~ux was lost for
most of lhe season following disc
surgery.
"We played Jhe first 50 games of
lhe regular season without him,"
Johnson said. "We were caught off
guard (Sunday night) because we
found out (lhat he would not play)
only IS minuteS before Jhe game.
"I lhought Jhe team responded
wen. We stayed in the hunt ... I
though! we gave it a good .shot. '
Lemieux was not available for
interviews on Monday, no~ were

any of the other Pi1tsburgh players.
In a transcribed interview released
by lhe Penguins' public relations
depanment, Lemieux said:
. "I feel pretty good It was just
like tbe sevealh game against New
Jersey when I had 10 leave the
game. After about 10 to 12 hours,
my back felt better and I was able
10 play in our first game against
Washington. I hope I can play
tomormw nighL"
Lemieux had also suffered back
spasms before Jhe sevendl game of
the first-round playoff series with
New Jersey. Two days later, he
came back to play against
Washington and had not missed
another playoff game before Sunday nighl
However, Lemieux may be tbe
least of the Penguins' ·problems.
They face an uphill climb in the
playoffs Jbat includes aitolher road
game a1 lhe Met Center, where the
North SJars have been dominant
since lhe middle of lhe season.
Since Jan. 17, the North SJars are
20-2-2 at the Met CenJer. They also
have won eij!hl sJraight at home
since a 6-5 lilst·round loss 10 lhe
Chicago Blackhawks. ·
.
"The crowd just has a big effect
here," Gagner said. "Just lite in
Chicago, lhe crowd goes CfliZY.
They ride lhe wave. That's what
we've been doing bcre. Our crowd
has pumped us up."
'
Home ice or not, !hough, the
North SJars hardly feel in control.
"We can't ~ord 10 lose • game,
because you lose momentum thai
way," said Chris Dahlquist, who
was acquired by Minnesota from
Piusburgh in a mid-season trade.
"If we lose, it will be a bcst.of-3
series and we will have lost home
ice."
DeSpiJe lheir success in the
playoffs, lhe North Stars are stiU an
admiuedly "scared" team.
"We are still playing very
scared," left wing Brian Propp said.
"We have to. We can '1 let up ·and
we have worted very hard.

. GOOD CONTROL - Gallia Academy's Clint Davis exercised
effective control of his pitches in Monday's game against Rock HilL
Because of bis three-strikeout, two-walk effort, the Redmen were
forced to e1111 each rua they scored ia.tbelr 5-4 victory. (OVP photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

Southern Conference establishes
new football tie-breaker system
NORTH MYR1LE BEACH,
S.C. (AP) - The Southern Conference has adopted a tie-breaker
system for aU league footbaU
games beginning wilh lhe I991
season.
The lie-breaker, recommended
by bead coaches in Jhe league, was
alll'roved Monday by the alhletic ·
direc10rs at Jhe conference's annual
meeting. The meeting runs through
Fridlly.
Marshau University in Huntington, W.Va., is a member of lhe
Soulhein Conference.
Under Jhe plan, each Jearn wiD
get an offensive series beg~ning at
the 25•yard line. OtherwiSe, lhe
regular rules of football will be followed, The team wilh lhe most
poinJS at tbe end of Jhe overtime
wins.
If neither team scores after the
first ovenime, · subsequent exua
periods will be held unlil lhere is a
winner. The final score will be lhe
·,

_.,.,

-~

....

..

TRACK MEET IN REVERSE? - Gallia Academy's Rob Skid·
more seems to be ruoaing a track meet in reverse, conslderin' that
be sprinted in f'rom third base oo a wild pitch by Rock Hill p1tcber
Larry DePriest (right) in the seventh iaaiag of Monday's game
against Rock Hill to score the Blue Devils' fourth and naal run of
the game. The Redmea won 5-4 to earn the right to face Athens on
· Thursday. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Farley's back woes make her rethink tennis career plans
CINCINNATI (AP)- A back
injury has tennis player And~ea
Farley rethinking her educauon
plans.
Farler, a four-time Ohio high
school smgles chaml'ion at suburban Indian Hill , dtdn't plan to
SJI\Ind much tinie at the University
of Florida. A back injury has
changed that.
"lniliaDy my plan was to come
to Florida and play for 1 year IWO at most - and lin pro," Farley said. "But I never expected to
have a~ injury."
Farley 1s just regainin1 form as
sbc -completes her IOpbomore yes
at Florida. She.expecllto return for
her junior year - 11011181blng dlat
wasn '1 in her ori&amp;inll plant.
Her pllns llll10d changina last
August, when she won three quali·

fier matches and lost in the first
round of tbe U.S. Open. Her back
started bothering her during the
qualifiers.
Doctors weren't able to diagnose the problem precisely. After
resting to let it heal, she began a
regimen of lower back and stomach
exerciles to~ the muscles.
She was back to playing again in
January, but not yet ready to compete.

· When the collegiate season
began this spring, she was still
behind
"Technically my same was at
Jhe level where it had been before
my injury, but my confldenee level
was a problem · in the earl~ and
middle pans of lhe season, ' ·she
said.
'
Nearing the end of the season,

'

IMITATES CLEMENS- Rock Hill nreballer Larry DePriest
one of his best Imitations of Boston Red Sox ace Roger Clemens in
Monday's Division II first-round district tournament contest
against Gallla Academy. DePriest, a senior, fanned 16 and walked
six to lead the Redmea to a 54 vldoty. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

she felt she was bact in fonn .
Farley plans 10 play some satellite events this summer. She also
hopes 10 riy to qualify for lhe U.S.
Open again in late summer.
The back injury has significantly pushed back her timetable for
turning pro. She doesn 'I plan 10 do
JhaJ now unJil the spring of 1992,
and might wait even longer - she
hasn '1 ruled out playing a fourth
collegiate season.
"TIIat's lhe plan. but it has been
allered before,' she said. "Nolhing
is wriltell in stone.''
While Farley's been on the
mend, her family has been recognized nalionally for iJS contributions 10 tennis.
The Parleys - father 1im,
mother Bobbie and daughters
Angela and Andrea - were recent·

ly honored by the United Slates
Tennis Assocation as iJS Family of
Jhe Year.
.
Mrs. Farley is a two-time president of the Ohio Valley Tennis
Association and serves on two U.S.
Tennis Association committees.
Her husband has won sinsles ·titles
in local tournaments, and Angela
Farley teaches at a local racquette
club.
Wllal a ereck!

total of an poinJS scored by each
team in regulation and ovenime.
"I lhirtk lhe adoption of Jhis system is great," said Ciladel alhletic
director Wal! Nadzak, chairman of
the league's alhletic directors. "It
will add even more excitement 10
our games. "

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�- - ....

..

..,.._

Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

~-- ..,

-· -----.

-..

------· -- - .

. .
Tunday, May 21, 1881

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Choking, suffocation most common Terre Wood to serve
•
•
causes of death for infants: AHA . as summer mzsszona

'

I'

Dear Ann Landers: Ololcing and illformati011. And lhe point about
suffocation are two of the most cuddling is vecy imporiii'IL Babiea
common causes of ~lable death need 10 be beld, rocked llld IIUidc 10
in children under I year of ~ge. feel cherished. This is what bonding
According to the Textbook of is all abouL
Pediatric Basic Life Suppon from
Dear Ann Lllnden: rm sure that
the American Heart Association cvecyooe who reads your column
and the American Academy of ~y sees him or herself sooner
Pedialrics, ooe of lhe most cammon or Iller and it can llc a real jolt. It
causes of choking and suffocation is · happened to me recently and I wan\
giving formula, milt or juice to an to say dumt you.
infant who is lying down.
.
A while back you wrote, "N~r
I am writing 10 you llo::causc I am- ask married sona and daughters
distressed by the RUfllbcr of pamats · when they arc going to Slat! a
I sec propping up baby l!_oUics in . family. Thatisanintcnselypenonal
I'CSiaUI'BDlS, grocc;cy StoleS and malls.
maaer and lhe intrusi011.wiU not be
The babies are lying in a SII'Ollet appreciated."
with a boule propped up on a
My son was married ,lhlee years
blantet or a jacket so the parents ago, and I was very eager to
can COIItinue to shop or eat a meal become a grandmother. so 011 many
without being intcrrupled.
occasions and in a variety of ways, I
One of the lessons taught in the would hint to my daughter·in·law
pcdialric CPR course is that in the that I couldn't quite understand what
event of choking and suffocation, Iiley were waiting· for. She always
the victim is not able to mate noise. evaded the question and, after I read
A distinct advantage of breast· your column, I stopped asking.
feeding is that it ensures the molher
This past weekend my son and
will tate the time to sit and feed her his wife came 10 'the bouse to tell
baby. For !he mother who chooses me thai they are expecting. My
fo bottle-feed her infant, I hope she daughter· in· law then said, "We have
Willlali:c ihe time to sit and hold the been pn~ying for this for almost a
little one during feedings. Besides year and when you used to ask me
Jhe safety factor, holding and about it, I felt terribly depressed."
~uddling is very good for the baby's
She then added, "You haven't asked
.development and self-esteem. ·- A me recently and that toot a lot of
pressilre off."
.
1MOTHER IN SAN JOSE
,: DEAR MOTHER: Thank you
Thank goodness for thai column.
:ror an extremely valuable bit of It certlinly improved my relation-

I

Terre Wood. daughter of Robert
· aad Cacby Wood, Pomeroy, will
serve u a summer missiooary at
Kentucky's Cedarmore Baptist
Assembly Ce.mp as part of Son
Praise, a revival team.
She was ooe of Jeveral Cumberland College students who were
commissioned in services held
recently at the Main Street Baptist
Ch111th in Williamsburg, Ky.
"Shine through Me" was the
theme of th.c Cumberland Collcge
Baptist Student Union Commissionlng Service. Dr. Bob Dunston, ,
chairman of the Department and
A ssociite Professor of Religion at
Cumberland Colleio, challenged
lhe stildenls 10 allow dlemselvcs to
be a light to lhole they minister to
this summer, whether In a good or
trying situation.
TERRE WOOD
The Baptist Sllldent Union is an
acti'llll llfJIImizalion at Cumberland and to $Ire thcir faith in a variety
~~~lbta~t~en~c~o~mpasses a large of activities including choir,
who are e&amp;~er revival, and drama teams while at
otller Ouislians schqol.

Ann
'Landers
ANN IANDEIII
AIIpl•
ftlwalp•
u . ., . . .

0

. .

a.....ars±"
ship wilh my daughter-in-law and
rm ever JO gJlllduL
Keep saying it, Ann, o~ and
over. Often when people 11e too
close to a aib•stiOn, their vision is
blurred. Sign me- GRATEFUL IN
HACKENSACK
DEAR HACK: OK, rn say it over
and over. M.Y.O.B., Mother,
M.Y.O.B., Mother, M. Y.O.B. And
thanks for letting me lr:now.
Gem of the Day: Genuine
considttation for otbcrs is:
Leaving some hot water.
Leaving the pany lOber.
Telling a woman she hils lipstick
her Ieeth.
'
Telling a man his fly is open.
Is thot AM Ltwkrs cobunn you
c/ip~d years ago yellow with oge?
For 11 copy of Mr most frequt111ly
req~sted poems twl essays, selld a
self-addressed, lo11g, busilless-siu

~

on

Tuesday,

.

Community
calendar·

·~

-., ,_

um ror commencement exerciSes.

Belpre; Hlldll BIII'I'OIIgbs, Parkeriburt:, W.Va.;
Pat ROIIIf, Belpre; IJid Vlkld tiel wald, Belpre.
In back are VIckie Leonard, Parkenbarg,
W.Va.; Marpret Morris, Vleaaa, W.Va.; Myla
AmabarJ, WIUblllJiiH, W.Va.; Barblln Smttb,
Parkenhura, W. Vii.; Anu Hetidenbot, W81k·
er, W.Va.; aad Brenda Araold, Parkersburg,
W.Va.

APPRECIATED • Sblrley Coaar, director or
Black Diamoud Girl Seoul ConncU's Big Bend
Service Unit (Meigs COIIDty), aecood rr- left ID
front row, received one ul Girl Scoutln.l's most
coveted awards, the Appreclatloo Pla, at a
recent volunteer recognition event In Parkersburg, W.Va. From left ID front are Elaine Hart,
Coolville; Copr or Mlnenvflle; Pat Hamilton,

~ Girl

Scout volunteers·from all
;walks of life recently honored
The stars were shiirlng at Black

Diamond Girl Scout CouncWs Vol·
U,nteer Recognition Gala held
rectptly at the Moose Lodge in
Parkc!{!;burg, W.Va. The theme for
the evCning was "Meet the S181'S."
: Girl Scout volunteers from several service units were rccogilized
at the special event, including local
service units. A carry-in dilUicr for
volunteers and guests preceded the
presenration of service unit awmls.
Attending the gala, in addition
to the volunteers who received
awards, were Ron Whilalcer, JRsi·
dent of the Black Diamond Girl
Sco ut Council,· MariaMe Pinney,
Black Diamond's executive director; Jan Hargate, assistant execulive director for field services;

· ·

Bradford Church makes .
final plans for banquet
The May meeting of the Bradford ChUJth of Christ, Lydia Coun·
cil, was hosted by Karlita Stump
and Carolyn Nicholson.
Mn. SIWIIpconducled the meeting and had prayer request and
prayer.
Reports were given br Diane
Bing,JaneHyscllandJactieReed.
Final plans for the falher-son
banquet were completed. The banquet will be held June 15 at 5:30
p.m. at the church.
The mother-daughter banquet
rcpon was given and the sunshine
basket for May was given to Eloise
Smith.
The women's fellowship will be
held at the Bradford Church on
Thursday.
.
M~mbers were again reminded
to get names and addresses in for
the homecoming.

Lynn Hartsog, assistant executive held in Parkersburg, W.Va. to be
director for ext;emal ~ommunica- . held throughout the council area in
· uons; Lois Martin, regional manag- coming weeks.
er; Judy Bostian, program director;
Ginny Painter, communications
.USY
speei~list; Jim Collins, propeny
supcnntendcnt; and Dec Lawrence
and DJ&gt;t Westfaill, field directors.
Directors from several service units
were also presenL
"fhe Busy Bee Class of the Mid· '
As reflected by introductions at dleport First Baptist Church met ·
the gala, Girl Scout leaders come recently for its May meeting with
from all waits of life. Many of Rosemary Lyons presiding.
them manage professional careers,
The opening prayer was given
families and JOCial projects, yet by Pooch Brewer and rolll:all was
till fmd tim and
answered with a bible verse.
10 lead a
sGirl Scout troop.
e For
ene.tl&gt;'
Devotions were given by Bett~
this and many
other reasons, Black Diamond Gilkey entitled, "God's Wise Plan
Council initiated the gala event, from lhe Daily Bread and the book
wilh olher galas similar 10 the one of Job.
The Jun~meeting 'will be a
potluck at lhc chUJth.
Sandwiches and chips were
lctVed by Betty Gillcey assisted by
Rosemary Lyons.
Perfect attendance pins were
Attending were Gwinnie White,
presented to Sharon Pratt, four Freda
Edwards.1 Betty Denny,
years; Barbara Welsh and Jackie Pooch Brewer, Ruth
Hoover, lhree years; Mary Wood Dorothy Evans, LillianEbersbach,
Demosk:y,
and Kay Logan, two, years. Voted Beulah White, Rosemary Lyons
best cultural program of lhc year and Betty Gillcey.
was Sandy and Charlotte Hanning.
"Current Events" which bad a
patriotic !heme.
Canned goods remaining will be
donated to a local church's food
bank.
Refreshments were served by
WHEN YOU RECYCLE ...
lhc losing auendance team.
Everyone Wins ...

B Bee class
holds mee. ·t·1ng

·

_li

Stewart enlists in program
Rollie D. Stewart II, son of Rol·
lie D. Stewart of Pomeroy and Mn.
Linda Stewart, Homestead AFB,
Fla.• enlisted in the Air Force's
Delayed Enlistment Program.
Stewart, a 1990 Jraduate of
Meigs High School, 1s scheduled
for cnlisuncnl in the regular Air
Force in August. Upon graduation
from the six-week basic training

courJC near San Antonio, Texas,
Stewart is scheduled to receive
technical training in lhe mechanical
career field.
Stewart will be ~ing credits
toward an auociate degree in
applied science through lhe Community College of the Air Force
while attending basic and technical
training schools.
·

Weight: 1111_.-

JO"iliid'liiAc'ltii7_.. __ ···· .... .. .....

f'ii'iiiii"diiian:'iiiii' ..... -····· .........

----:14•

'tiWI(1-1101)
-""
oliN polo poolllono: I (11174, 1111)'
Moot '500' _ , ' (1.1, 11114, 11117, 1177)"

_..,.led:,,

SYRACUSE - Syrac.uie Church
of the Nazarene will be ID ,c:vival
with Dr. J.W. Lambert Tuesday
tbrou&amp;h Sunday. Evening se~Vcics
begin at 7 p.m., except Sunday,
wbellseiVicea will be held It 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m·. Rev. Glenn
McMillan invites ~ public.

Moot -lod.-: •
Moot ...........

il!lll-.-.

~ lltol/11,722t/2-

Classifie
....

POLICtE:S

Harrisonville-Scipio banquet to
honor 1931, '41 and '51 classes
The Harrifonville·Seipio Alum-

ni officers met recently to make
plans for the annual banquet and
dance to be beld Satunlay at 6:30
p.m. )I the Hani100ville ElcmentaJTSc:hool. Menu will include
blbd llelk and deep fried chicken,
peen belns, IIIIIShed poiiiOtlS with
pvy, 'tossed salad, rolls llid butlt.r, icc IC8 and coffee, cake and rce
\

I

cream. Class to be honored are
1931, 1941 and 19~1. Music for lhe
dance will be by "Alvin Chutes
Banet." Reservau011s can be made
by calling Latry or Joy Clark at
992-3690. Offqn are Larry Clark,
president; Howard Gilkey, vice
president; Pansy Jordan, treasurer;
and Joy Clarlc, secretary.

'Ace~• ~ $ .50 dlst;ount for lldf p;ud in advance.
•free ,1ds
Giveaw~ 11nd Found ads undll!l' 15woubwlll be
run 3 d~s •• no ch•ge.
··
'Puett ot ad to1 all captllalletteJS •s doijbh: pnce ol ad cost
'1 p~:nnt lmr type onty ull!ld
.
'Stmt1nut 15 not responsible t01 errOfS t~hvr first d., IChttdl.
tor t~rrtns firS! d.., ad""''"' papurl . Co.ll btdore 2 00 p.rn
d~ ~Iter

;A

i

Renislt.lr

;,u~d

that Galli·

pulls D&lt;~IIV Tr~bunu, ruadurl~l ovur 18 ,000 ho~Mts

_,

COPY DEADLINE
MONO~V

PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
1 WLONFSOAY PA.,!R
THURSOAV PAPER
t-HIOAV PAPER
S·UNOAY PAPER

.• , I

1

OJ\,Y BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 .00 AM . SATURDIW
2 •00 P,M MONOAY

2 :00 P 'M . TUESDAY
2 .00 P M WEDNISOAY
2 ' 00 P.M THURSDAY
'2 ~0 PM. ~R IOAY

31 • Homn

•&amp; ow
...."
H.ppy Ads

.06/day

I
·1
I
9

L'o11 1nd Found.
Y•d Sllelpafd in adltlancel

·

11
12

Meigs County
",.' Codtl14

,446 Gallipoli•
36 7 Ch• .. •

992

'

Mukleport
Poll'leroy

388 Vinton
986 · .Ch•••
241 · RiO 'G r.nde. , 843 'Ponllftd
266• Guyen Din 2&lt;l7 Let1r1 falls
643 Arlbia Oist. 949 RaOne
379 Walnut

742
667

Rutland
Cootviflt

l:tldlll

W•tedto 8uy

Pt,

67&amp;

. ...

~

'

~

' '

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'

.

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

HeiDW•t.t
S~u1tton W.,t.d

Ple•~~nt

I

23 ltof•llon•l

Service~

ctuttll•t

SIGNS

SEPTIC TANK I'UIIIPIHG
POIT -A·JOHN IENTAl

ti&amp; fflDI~t~
~9"frby
by

'

~UALI'fY
Poilll Plaaunl· &amp;75-69~~ I

Read the Best Seier .
Read the
•Remodoling end '
Home Repairs
•Roofing
·
•Siding
•Pelmlng

110 JOI TOO SIIALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTIUcnON
991-6641 or
691-6164

.

-

..

'.
.. .......

.

~·····

"

PROFESSIONAL
SUNROOF ·
INSTALLAnON

.. . .

----------.,.--•Plastic Jugs and
•Cardboard
•Tin Cans

-----------

SERVING MEIGS-MASON-GALLIA COUNTIES
.... Group Tours Available ...

l

'

MICROWAVE
OVEN BPAII
AUIIADS

SHRUB &amp; TIEl
TRIM and
REMOVAL

lriq It Ill Or We
Pick Up.

1111'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

•LIGHT HAULING

992-5335 er
915·3561
Atnn p,_ Pest OHica

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

....,,,

..

117 •• s-1111 St.

992-2269

3/1/10/lln

USED RAilROAD TIES

•Refrig•retore
LNve old Major Appliances at Uttar
oFrwezara
Control Office for RECYCLING
•Stoves·
FUNDED BY: Ohio Depertment of Natural Rasourcaa
Dhillon of J.Ktar.Pteuantion and Recyclng
G-ge V. Volnovlch, Govemor
Frances 8. Buchholzar, Director

•W11hera
•Dryers
•Dishwashers

.

:'

''

.~

PUbliC Notlca

PubHc NOIICI

:

PUBLIC NOTICE

tho Countv Commloolonoro
In CJolllo. Jook- ond Molgo
Coumloo (10 IPPolnt•o).
Curron11y thole .,. 1wO ••·
to bo ftllod by tho Dl·
roc1or of lhll Ohio OIPM't·
mont of Mtntal Httlth, one
of which mutt bo • phyolclan

'

.

oppolnted by the Dlroclor

.,. tho Ohio DlptniiHin1

... Montol Hoolth 14 op·
poln1MI). the Dlroclor of
tho Ohio Deportment of AI·

c!,lhol

.,d Drug Addiction
Sorvicee 14 -oln1MO} ond

•
3;

l

Announcomenta

FOR SALE
'Offoro wit bo rocotvod ot
ttho office of lomard V.
·Fultl. 1 1'11&lt;11 W. Moln

•

,,
•Hot Water T•'*•
•Air Conditioners

, The olgh1Hn momborOol·
llo·Jockoon·MIIQI Bo1rd of
Alcohol. Drug Addiction ond
Montol Hoolth Borvlcn It

I

'

MEIGS COUNTY LinER CONTROL
Union Ave. &amp; St. Rt. 7. Pomeroy
.
Phone: 992-8380

,

''

Servtces
81 Har'neln,provemenh
82 Plumbmg • Huttnu

AntiQi.its
Misc. Merc:h•ndise
!l'lilding Suppli• .

83 EI'.C:I!Wating

·

Electrical &amp; Relrlgur•tlon

84
8&amp;
86
87

Gun11111. Haultny
MotMI• Homo Rep1lr

Upholstery

"At ._nalllt Prlcts"

PH. 949·2101
or ln. 949-2160
Doy or Night

•''
••

!atrwt, Pomeroy. und

'Frldoy, Moy 24 ol 10:00
.p.m. for lhll ulo of the

•I

"Fioulo Allon-nh _,
:, .. . - ol1ue1ed lit 112
' Oront BtrMI. Mldclo·
•por1. Ohio. The oNI 00·
'toto lo 1 2 1101'(, 3
bedroom honw. 1 both,
!buement. oentr•l tor•d
•tlr heotlng. Clirport and
,tarfll lot.

l

'•'
•
•
'

'I

I
.

'

can-

ap~K\intlnllnt.

lndtvhlualo lnlaootod tn
bolng conohlerod fer ltloM
ltatl •ppolnt,.rate can do
10 by roq-tlnll on oppllco·
tlon from:

Qaltlo.J"*-· Mtlgo
· Boord 'of Alaohol. Orug
Addiction and Mental
Hoolth Sarvlcot
414 S_,., AVIflul
P. 0 8011 B14

OolllpoHo. Ohio 41131
l'hona: 441·1022

The Ohio DeJa bl.,ll of
M01tlf Hoolth II pertloulerly

lnWHtod 1ft epplclliont
from primary and ._ndllry
- - oiiMIItal hoalth
oavtcn. The loerd 11 otoo
otrtvlng 10 _._In • bot·
Meed

-mlllr•

1... I llltatlon

oomnwnlly

of .
ond

-~~~ welco- minority or
t.mole epplloaoto u will.

II) 17. 20. 21. ltc

NEW- iEPAII
Gutters :.Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FAU ESTIMATES

949-2161

H-11·1 ooo. pd.

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS

992-7013
or 992-5553
OIJOU ...
1-lliO-SU-GO#o
DAIIWIN, OHIO

lvtlaed.on Jltw
Lima ld.
!·J0.'9Hfn.

1/1/"tl/t ....

IUIPIJIIItn •
CAIPI1 CIIAIIIS
ontl nil FlOOI CAU

J&amp;L
I.NSULATION

•RNtiDIIeble Retn

•VInyl Siding
•Replecement

•Ouellty Work

•F,.. Eatlmetee
'
•C.rget H11 Feat Or(
Time
•High Glou on Till!

Wlndo-

•Rooflng

•lnout.tlon

JAIIIS IIISII

Floor Flnllh

992-2772 or

MilE LEWIS, Ow""
lt. 1, lutllllll, OH .

742-2251

15311 llryen Place
Middleport. Ohio

742-2451
3-J4.'9Hfn

4-ll.a&amp;-lln

11-14-tfn

tO iiiAY WAIIAtnY

WASIIIIS-1100 op

DtYris.-S6t .,

. . .wrOIS-Stoo.,

IMGES---SIJ~ op

oNewHellft

. _... .

fiiiDIS-$125 ..
IICIO OYIIIS-$79 op

•Garaga•

oC.......t•

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVKE

Stop &amp; Ce~~~para
• frN llfhnatn

99MUS er tiS-3561
Acron Fr1111 I'M! Offkt
POMROY, OHO

915·4473
667-6179

10/3011' tfn

5-31-'10 tfn

•Remodeling and
Home Rapalre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

SPEEDY VAC
Quality
Sweeper
Repair
698-6591

GROOM
.ROOM
Complete Grooming

For Alllrllds

EMiliE MERINAR .

o-r &amp; Operator

614-992-6120
Pomtroy,

4-1·'•0-1 .....

HOWARD BROS.

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZER end '
BACKHOE WORK,

NO JOI 100 WU

Fill l$111ATES

' CEDAI
CONSfiUCIION
992·6641 or
691-6164 .
· 1·14-'11 ·1fn

Howanl L Wrlte1el

ROOFING

Speclallllllt ho
CIISto• Frame ltpalr

21fJ MI. ouhldl

01110

IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

WHALEY'S
AUTO PAITS

742-2421

Siln•

CUSTOM

'

OPEN
Tundooy thru Sllurday
10:00 am-11:00 pm

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
hpalr, lrophl••r

BISSELL
.UILDERS

c

•

•IIY oSIU •11ADI

6 fOI *.55

Cll

•

SlEWAU'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

NO SUNDAY CALLS

BISSELL &amp; IUIQ
CONSIIUCilON

1171'f1'1 mo.

r

'

"
'

Contact
STEVE WHITE
992-6434
After 5 D.lll.

992-2156

'

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

•lnaulatad Wire
•Breu
•Yellow
•Red
•Clean Magnesium
•Non-Magn. Satlnle11
•Radiators
•Starters
•All .Non-Ferroua
Metals

Sporting fJoods

ACADEMIC
.AWAIDS
GOLF LESSONS

USID APPUAIICIS

CLASSD'IF.DS!

.I

•Aiuminuim Cans
•Sheet Aluminum
•Clean
'•Irony .
•Cast Alum.inum
•Clean
I
•Irony
•Clean Tranamiuions
(Alum. ·cau)
•Catalytic Converter
•
•Die Cast
•Copper (No. 1-2-3)

Houllthold Goods

62 53
54
55

JOHN I. IEAFOID

Cl.flSSfED RDS

Call Sentinel

'.

51

67 ' Mulic:lllnstrumentl
58 Fruih &amp; Veg..-•bl•
59 For S1le or Trade

21 lusin•• OpponuAIIy
22· Monerw to Loan

,.

III·COINIY
SANITATION

'

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT ss.OO PER DAY

•

-IIIIlS PUICHASID-

1•

56 .. Peu tor Sale

4·23-1

The pnce has been reduced to
$81,900 and ownerfinancmgof up.
to 80% of purchase amount may be
possible for qualifying person to
buy very nice large home on 3~
acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages. rented I BR apt. Property
includes 4,800 sq. fl. farm bldg.
and mobile home.
·

•

At Jet. of St. At. 143 and At. 7 By.Paa nHr
Pomeroy
Ph.: 992-6114
Hours: 9 A.M. til 7 P.M. Every Day

.73 Van• I. 4 WO ' s
Motorcycll!l
75 Bo1ts &amp; Motors for Siht
76 Auto P1rU I. AcCIISCHtc.
77 Auto Aopatr
18 Camp1ng Eq111pment
79 Cwmpe15 &amp; Motor Homn

Mcrch~mlrse

458 leon , ,

742·211811

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABlE!

•

'

71 · Autos for Sal•
72 Truclu for S.le

&lt;l3 F.rms for"""'
44 Ap•tmern tor Rent
4i -· furntshed Rooms
46 lipace IOI Renl
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equipmltll for Runt
49 For Le••

1,1 Wallled To Do '

171 Appte Grove
773 M ..on
882 New Hev•n
895 Let.-t
937 Buftalo

Transport at ion

Hou.. s tor R•nt
Mobile Homn for Rttnl

.S ervices .()ffered·,

·:BULLETIN- BOARD

I

•Cleaner Environment •Reduce Dlsppsal Cost •Reduces Pollution
•Conserve Resources •Create J.obs
, •Save Energy

Real Estate W«tted •

'

2

~

36

61 -· F•rrn EqUipmont
62 Wanted to Buy
6 3 liv,stock
64 Hav &amp; G~ain
&amp;S · Seed &amp; FerUiiler

'

'

I
I'

Busin•• Buildmgs
lots &amp; ·Atreage

14 Busin•• Train.ng
15 Schools • Instruction
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB Rttpatr
17 Milc:elltniKIUI

AretCode 304

Sale

31
35

13 lnsurMct

Muon Co .• WV

tor

Mobile Homes tot Soatv
Farms tor hie

41
42

•·m·••r 1lw

G•lli• County
A'r••Codel14

SIIIJplir.s
&amp; lrvestut:k

32
33

Public: Slle • Auction

I

j,/l,win}{ 1t•lt'f'ht;lll' c•xdtall/{1'.~ ...

;~ 1he DallY S~:u11n*ll t••·

Pht~t~iult

.eo

•.1.30/day .

(.'fa.~si/it•tl I'"K''-~

dilh•l•'-'d d1splwy . Busln~s Card ;tnd llllglll nOIICel)

w1ll alsu ,1pp1tar 111 thu PI

15
16
. 16

1 Card of Th.,k,
2 In Memory
J J\nnoue.etn~h

StiVIce~

Yilfd Silles

pta'cl!d

$6 .00
$.9 .00
$13.00

F,~rrn

Real Estate

.20
.30
.42

F'lliJ 11 1'1 ·nr·n t

pubhci!ICion to m1ke couectll.ln .

clo•s•f•eo~l mtvertlltllllUtll

C¥1)1

.

u .oo

12·J1·tD·tfn

•Batteries
•Radiators
•Oiau (Rinsed and
Separately Color)·
•Aluminum Foil-Pia Pans

,

,

·Ads that mu11 be pa•d m advtt~ncu ill't!
Card ol ThiiOk\0
HliPP'I Ad!ri

POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the borne of Pauline
Eynon. There will be a plant
exchange.
·

a.,.. 15Wordo

R1t1

Words
16
1'5

•

·,

AMes lfO tor c:on•cuttve runs. ..,oklnupd-ws wttl be ch•ttMI
for each darw n -..rate ads .

'A•Is. oul sldc Me•gs.• Gallia or Mason coun1i• llhl$1 bo pre

••

-milS PUICHASID-

'

Days
1
3
6
10
·Monthly

"

Call 614-992·7104 for Appt. ·

603 Mill St .• Middleport
Ph.: 992-3894
Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 12 Noon-&amp; P.M .
Saturday 9 A.M.-12 Noon

Litter Bottles
•Newapapars-(Tied In Bundlea)

.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE Allt AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY t~ru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M. ·
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDA Y

MIDDLEPORT - Michele Garretson will teach a reverse glass
painting class at the Middleport
Ans Council 011 WcdncJday from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

.

·-=

BOion 'noi!ij;"ijij'"'"__., ___ -:

TUPPERS PLAINS - Sign up
for new cub scouu and boy scouts
will be held at St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains on n-Jay at 7 p.m.

Recycle•••lf could mean the world to you.

•Aluminum Cana
•ShHt Aluminum
•Cast Aluminum
•Copper
•Braas

h l o - :wno lndj - I I ) till
-alllo fnlnt .... Ho .quollllod

TUESDAY
NEW HAVEN, W.VA ...
Revival at ·New Haven First
ChUJth of Ood t!Jrou8b Friday wltb
Rev. Rick Wea\oer as )'!vangolist:
Services begin at 7 p.m. .with special singing.
.,

THURSDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local
Board of Education will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at tlie high
Communion for June will be school.
I•
prepared by Carolyn Nicholson. ·
LONG BOTTO - The ··
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Riverview
Garden Club will meet ~
Nicholson with scripture taken
Thursday
at
8 p.m. at the tmme of :1
from Matthew and Revelations.
The title was "SaiL" A poem, "A Delores Franlc. Mace! Barton will!\
speak on "Roses." .
'·
Child You Have" was also read.
~~
Supplies needed by Grundy
BRADBURY • The Mei$.s r
Mount Missil;m for May and June
County
Women's Fellowship w111 .:
are shampoo and crayons. Pact the
meet
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at the )
Pantry supplies for Ma)' and June
Bradford Church of Christ. Ann
are canned meats and drinks.
Hostesses for the June meeting Lamben and Linda Bates will be "'
will be Diane Bing and Bonnie demonstrating the ~ or fabric 3
fans. The public: is in · .
~
Warner.
A bated potato bar and dessert
were served to Jackie Reed, Carol
POMEROY- The Preceptor ;:
Anderson, Nancy Morris, Jane Beta Beta Olapter, Beta Sigma Phi w ·
Hysell, Diane Bing, Charlotte Han- Sorority will meet Thursday at 6:30 ·,.
ning, Paula Pickens, Sherry and p.m. at the home of Joan Corder, ~
Elizabeth Smith, Karlita and 297 Wright St. in Pomeroy for a •
Andrew Stump.
picnic.

MANLEY'S RECYCLE CENTER
.

....

e1-• 5I _.cold. FOil w1

"

Xi Gamma Mu presents pins
The Xi Gamma Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met
recently at the home . of A.R.
Knight for a picnic.
Neisel Gerard presided at the
meeting with 23 members auending.
Kay Logan, city council repre. Jentative, reported on the dinner
and dance held · at Royal Oak
Resort. She stated it was well
ancnded and approximately $1 ,400
was made toward a scholarship
fund for vocational students.

ontllotl'ldl-~­
~Ju
lo I ,_lui fl .. oollor. Will

Ho-:-..,T........,,,.,iii.---·-·-

In MumortiMU

LET'S GET iT .RIGHT - SaDdy W_..er adjusted the graduation cap of her dau1hter, Stepllanle, before she moved Into the
IIDeup of Melp Hlp Schooi!P"aduates about to eater the auditori-

Tho 11-tlmt wlnnlngoil- ... wllllo ...eli1g hit llrot - 0 -

liiitiiiioiio:
iiO..r!~•IIMtt iiiOiiiii!:=:.-: -.:

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Open house at
Meigs Junior High at 7 p.m. for
students ehtcring 7th grade· and
their parents.

'

A.J. Foyt's Indy 500 career

....
· --Lilli
· ......
'1'1! hit
ro hllttltlt
c ol222.+13
-

CHESTER • The Chester Council No. 323 Daughters of America
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the lodge hall. The S71h anniversary of the lodge will be celebrated.
Charter members arc urged to
attend. There will be a prodUilts
party following the meeting to
which the public is Invited.

.envelo~ and a checlr. or lfiOMJ or·
· der for $4.85 (this illcludt!s poS14ge
and halldling) to: Gems, c/o AM
l..tuukrs, P.O. Box 11562, Chica10.
60611.0562. (l11 CfiiiQI/a, selld

.Ohio

·1\ndretti faces two 'great
racers' in Foyt, Mears

Coamaah7 Caleadar l&amp;e•
appear two daJI belole • eY1tit
.... tile . , flleut emiL ltnll
JD81t 111e realftd wei ID . . . _
to ...-e pabllcadoll 1D tile calendar:

21 1991

HOME SITES.

215 N. Soc... Str•t

LAND CLEARING,
WATER anti.JIEWER

IIODUPOIT, Olio 45760
Office 614-992-2116
HOMI614·992·569J
DOmE S. TUIIIEI. IIOIEI

LINES
DU.11UCIS
AVAUIU

HOUSEI•LOTIIFAIIMI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uollnp!
11·1'111-llo

FREE ESnMATE&amp;

992-7451

4-2t·l1 · 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S
•I MIMit'"'

•.,...

UPIOLSTDY
JU·klacand

..,

·Hand Tufting
Cuatom Drapes

LINDA'S
PAINTING

CARPENTER SEIVKE

---"'

-ltoom-tloo!o

l1twlar • l•ttrier

,.. nMAns

- 11-tool ond Plumbl,.
-Concwete worll

-·-tor·b'"""int

Take the pain out ol
pallltlng.
Let rat tht it far you.
mr IUSotiAIII

-ftoollnt

(FIIIIISTIMATEI)

S6Y~Ib....... ee

V. C. YOUNG Ill
.992-6215

614-992-1321

Wo loy Willi W. Do . .
Wo Do Willi We ley.

liAVIIIR-CIS

,_.,,Ohio

10-lt-1 .o.

16141 911-4110

11·14-'90 lfn

4-D·1 mo.

-~

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIPING .
oiLOWNIN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

...........

"Free Eatlm.,_...
...... 949·2101
er ln. 949-2160

NO SUIIIA,T CAlLS

- -···· .

3-11·11"

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

WE DO

POOLS,

-

ROOFING

AND EVEIYTHING UNDRNEATH

CISTERNS, ETC.
I ,625 Gll.-'35-145
lt. I, k• 71-A
llmAIIJD,

TRO-

01110 .,775-9616
614-7CI·2904

FlEE EmMATES

4-Jt-11 · 1 .... . pd.

f.

All CONDITIONIIS • IIAY PUAI'S allll
FIIINAaS FOI MORE &amp; DOUaEWIDI HOMEs
0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

o0 0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

o 0

1

.

IIOIIU 110M1

BENNEn'S ~:::a'

lecwlell Oa Seffartl ScltMI N. aff It, 141
161CI U6•t416 er 1-100·172•5'967
I.

0

�•

--··-,.,.I

The

Sentinel
SNAFU~ lty Brace Beattie

Announcemr&gt;nts

21 1991

1\lelday,

Ohio

.\ .

Shoji,

monumonl-.
..... ArlO Slngloo

8y Cllol..
NcM CltMco. Cciltldontlol. Wllo:

_,_ell,P.O. Box tOG, Clalllpollo, OH 411631.

Roduco; Bum off Fol While You
81111', lou OPAL Avalloblo
Fruth Phormocy.

4

tm -

-

IZIN.:;.':"tol,- . -.
30W
.

Giveaway

tm 8chult 141170 :llir, ~
ptnnlng1• Awnlltg I. A·t
Oond.J.!1,.. .- to .,....toto.

3 bobV mote -no, e wto.o old,
304.al2·2011.

Good Ho,mt. HOUIIbrokln. 11._.

441·'11170.
Frw Puppy, l'emolo, Mothor
Rogtotorld Rotrlo-, 2

Fumlollod Ellclonq, no
FO&lt;Irlh, Oollpcllo, $1'15 Pold. 114-441-4411oftor 7p.m.
Fumlollod E~, ttiG
UIIIHioo Pold, llhore Joth, '1111

1112 luddJ nlollllo heme 2
portioltY lur·
ntoltld and !Ole ott11L :1114-171-

11

Help Wanted

11

EARN EXTRA MONEY 81111 Your
Buolnooo. Wo Supply Conlocto.
P.INM
return
contenl1. Income UmH.... 211 151 3211~
REWARD. 304-7?W210.
Etrt. 1111H.
Loll:
lomoto · booglo,
""00111 biMk. Loll noor Proflo

•Mv•

Fork. ReWIIrd. Hn COII.Iir, no

logo. " found o~-· coli 614lllt·1221 or IM-h3-8043.

FO&lt;Irlh, Oolllpollo, 114 Ill Uti

Help Wanted

1111 -

lro.,..

alrlo d r - ......
11111111. Sr. RT.alln Burlingham.
F~. : Mor 24, 2mtloo out Ftotwoodo Rd. t-3:00. Boyo -hH
baMbO~Jd

11111..0,

hMtert,

moplo hulc\,-~ mochlno,
mli!:. homo. In or lno.
'

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

8 ,

Rick Poo,_, Auction Col!lpony,
full • time 1uct1DnMr, oomDiete

auction - -· Llconood Olllo,
w... VIrginia, 304·7?M785• .

Wanted to Buy

9

Wonted to buy, 81ondlnflllmbo&lt;,
Bob WNIIomo I Bono 114-fiZ.

5441.

3-··-All
......

-

-•me

=•••·

.....-lortot._. ,.,,.

114·1113-11103.

111718.
' Wll.l build polio
. covoro, clockol
Locol
phyolclon'o
otllco
nooclo
ocroonld
·
· put up vlnyt
Wonlod To luy: Junk Autoi
wHh or without motora. Coli . . - .1 -lolor\11 • modlcol ;~:J3.' trollor oldrllnt. 114oHioe
rocoptlon111
and
Larry, Uvely. IM 3U &amp;11!1 J.
lollr1otory tochnlclon. WrHr lex
Wonted To Buy:. llondlna Tl,.. P.17, c/O Point Ploooont R~Jo.
Fmanc1al
bor, Colt ..... 7pJII......7111. lor, 200 Moln Slroot, PGinl

-11103.

Employment Scrv1ces
11

PI-nt, WY 21150.
Pomeroy Nurolnt ·ond Rohob
Conter hOI -tot• oponlng
lor LPN or AN on S.ttltt-7

21

ahlfla. Previa . . ..,..~eno. on
tong.lorm coro pro-. llolory
buOcl o n - of •~nco.

Help Wanted

-==•••lng

INOIICEI

OliO VALLEY PIJIUSHING CO.
,.....,_ lhot you de buolwith pooplo you k..w ond

Corol Konowo~, RN DON
~'
~gr..
dorol
,...,.. ... you.
No ... Coli
lor lntorvlow ...,........01. An
..ntnce nIC 11 'I· 1.aoo.255- Equol ()pportunlly Emplo, ••

NOT to Hnll """'''I' throiMil. tho
moll until roo hove lnvootTgolld

b242ntP41311.

,__,

lhooltlllnt. .
A~hur'o Chain Unk Fonce.
Rooldontlol, Cem-clol, lnduolrlol, FrM Eotl-tMI Com·
IIIII• (notaltotlon. Phone: IM-

___

Lccol Yoncllngllouto. Prtcod For
Oulck Bole.1'100 IH-4044.
T.aHIRT I CAP ICAEEN PIINT·
lNG EQUIPMENT. COMPLETE

23i.att.

ant to:
'
?IN do eu n EXTRA

.. '

54

Dno - - ttplo ovollobl In
0-«.n Alit •110 lor t131J1mo,
pluo utllltloo. bno bedroom
duolox lor 1300/mo, Lllltltl•
pold. ~oo.

Loll 11 loW M . .,1100. oVolloblo
In Iliad~ rtlln lubdhlalonRo!dl

••
,I

6ARA6101.A IS

__

Dno o..., building Iota, _,
town, lor your olng._lde. 304-

----

.,

p.....
...,, ..._,wv,

46 Space tor Rent
Country Moblll Heme Pork,
Route 33, North of P-roy.
1
:13"'olo,
,.,., ·
I
·11171.

·eo•

._.For RMI •

Mobllo -

2 C'o Pork, Polnl Ploooonl. 114448-21111, 114-t4M221.

- ..........

== •u•PO.OOIM •a At1.

Oo USIF I I 111

lurplul:

cho(r, ........ -

r11erch&lt;Jnd1Se
Houiehold

l:k..

-. ir-t=:::=:i~~

--

..

17,100-.---

414 PlaiHip, ... C.l.

""

IIQ.

CUI.,....

Cu~loi-Nt41.

-~~ dU. ...- . - ....

...
........

R-

73 vans &amp; 4 WD'a .

......

FRANK AND ERNEST

•
I

/

(lw Bolo: Yloon Hltrh Oopocfty 1112 Ford Von, Quod Club , I,
........ Hoy'Bolor0,-;\1 '-Ali, w-, Mint CondHion, iiuol 1•
1Hl114-211-1ZI7 1..111....
;·
II,

ttpollo,'Citle. " ' 44111144.

.llm'l ,...,~•lpmont Ill. 31,
1
Ool-, 114 ··hill;
- - , _ I -form
Imp' Tint&amp;. Ivy,

t...... •

..... ....... I:CIO-I:OO •

taDO.Nitllta

Bol.tlll-

R ' dloniiiW...rs. ~
Ollrnllld ............ ,.,
• . .- . n ( ( The Wtoohor
Drprlh ,, 1111 ttl ••••

liTO

.... _.... __ _..,..
............. -•-r63
lonn ...

1

Fanl Alngor XL.!_nt..U, ' '
y... llood. oi, :14,- lllloo I '
PIOO.' iW1I Fanl XLT
400, ...... . -, -'11115.
:;
!!IIIII!J Trollor, Otlwr l'lold
iEauliortrijiiii"'"'iiitt.
_..
Fonn
'
lliolilrtory, Jroltoon OH .,.....
I

==~=·.;-. l:b"'fJ...:"Ltnt:..,•:::

==-~~nl,

Q

•'',.
-~:~.':::.IC!
,..-.
""'
. ...·.=.o.,r:: ,.

hotdir.- ..~.­

.... wtn ~,

1-1013.

GOOdI

-

'dqa,

-r

tlno · - 304-77N171.

-

llottond T ft. Morbltoe, I4JC
-~. no-1111
Oolll
lllnr. ~-.
AI uaoltont
-

,on.~.

-=~=,;;;L;,;Iv-:e;.at;,:oc;.::,:;k;..,.,~lift I Horoo llonl .,_Troller,

, , . ~Rom 10 4a4illhorp,
llod Corir I Rollo.· llllnlrig
. - , Sun - · Ch,_
Whoolo, Ttrwo, ..CondKion. MUll IIIII 114-211-

/riiY

PLANJ'
T/'fl.l YfA~. •. l UJLIAl-.C.Y
/)ON 1 T ~fAL.I;..f ~

,.
''
•'
'
I

•

VIII, :104471-1!171.

•

74

-·

!

Motorcycles

1115 Honclil ·~ lloano. lh210 1
"""·
•
1411. Coli ~.

p.m. • -

VACATION

CAN'T'

1'M1.

tNt Fanl HI-Top _,vorolon

. 11'11 ~eeEf$1QN HAf
'AUffP Ml TO MDIII Llf'

AfFO~~ ONE

UIVT'IL .JuLy,/

Tony travels 10 Italy to collect
an inherilanc:e. (R) Stereo. Q
(l) (Jl Nova New theories or
how 011 Is lortniCI are
lnvestiQ!ted. Q
IIDl 1D • IIHCue: 111 PoHce
oflicera struggle. with a
gun-wielding voyeur. (R)
11J Murder, She Wrote
Stereo.Q
IliOn Stlge
IBPrllllllleWI
0 MDVII: W•ltt the Proud
Land (2:00) '
1:30CJ) ())• Aoreanne Dan's
lather pions to marry
.
Roseanne's beat lriend. CR)
Stereo.
91 IIJ). MOYIE: 'Filii

•· 1'
~: 1

1110 lulukl QudpM 210 for
l2lUO or oftlr. :104-4.,... · ,,
2010 or 304 IN Mil.
r&lt;

7 IL Toll . .h O...lnt R-, MUll loll: 1111 L.oo!rlcler HoriOV "1"
14,~ i2 ft. .,_r Dovlf!!NI. P,IIOO. l-2411t · •·'·
with
'L
I . _ oftorllp.m,

"-111;--·::mHMd
......

...

75 eoata&amp; Motors

for Sale

board,.-,...._, olond
~~· - · · "12110. 304-lllo

._

a

dill,-

ARooll'wllcot•tll . .lollool
411 Oldemoble ....,., ~
upha•rwd ..... 1101 .,..,_

~
bunk
botlo,~:~ w i t h - -

tt]l.
111.
County ,\ppllonco

uood appt..-, T.y.

-

Now/Uood

coii:J04.8'111&lt;1410.

a Church s- Slltllotl

.

76
7t

llrlolt, ""'"· wfrt.
-- - . llrtlolo,04a.CioildeWintoro, liO-. OH Coll1424f.l121.

58

.... , for Sa'•
..

....

iOr;,;;;••o;-;dJ..~r~zi"~,;~;-;:;,.p;

:t'vtee.

Autoa for Sale

'II ,... . . _ luloll, 10,000 - . tully •

-

Night Gillaspie trlaa 10 atop a
bounty hunter belore he klla
a men. ~AI Stereo. g

I

i~';1.:&amp;.

Auto Parta &amp;
Acceaaorlea

•

31111- w i t h - - . 2H

1111-lhan R - .
· ti,OGO.Colli
Only,I*441-11ZT
..... 4....,,

QroaMina. AI
lomo ,.,. flood Dootor. Julio 1H7.......,Co-·-Wlbb. Colt 114 4• 1111:11, t.aao.

Torkor a-.ko, ,,... oom ond

~':""=:.:=.=·

hiV8 trouble with a man
harbOring_ a bitter secret
Stereo. Q
10:00 CJlG IIJl ......._•• Dlel
Shannon agriH 10 help a
teaneger committed to a
mentalinllitutiOn. Stereo. g
III ~ • lhtrtporntrtt~lng
Malian ftnda l)eroall
entwined In the bizarre world
of televillon. Stereo. C
ClJ Ylltnam: II. Tellvlllon
HletorrD
..
(Jl The •fDa Gaps Between
the GoO&lt;I rnd the Bad
Through the Eyee or
Learners
18 CNN Evening N1w1
llll TOO Club With Pat

Two Clenorol Tire l,_) 221 R
?SXtlt?S. both. IM-H2-IAI.

T-.

For . ,n
Fanl !longer, 111. bod; Stldlnt

- · Flborglo11

WI-'-~ Condhlon,

am. ,' I1

114-317·.,.,
-.
•
It
•I
2AKCBoolonTem."""''"' 1171 vw 1111: body - · 8410 79
campers
&amp;
'
y_. Old. t AKC . _ . 010. Coli~ ollor I or
1
- . I y..,. Old, To ., "' , ndo.
Motor Homea
Bollll14417.otn
•
11114 tift. Tour Mulor Trovol
Trollor,
TArdol
,Conlol-.
Air, Care · Froo •I
Awn ng, Lltto - · 114--1141.
'I I
32ft _ , Alre 1111 ••
• ..,l
w-11. 0111, oocrltlco, ••· •'
011- -ion. Bom Cu~lo ,:, l

M'! MQI.. ~AN~
MICPOWA\Ie OVEN 'THA.T
c.o:ll&lt;5 1111~ RE5A.L..I?IST:.:

::l

112 For - . etoto
Strooltla':o'lr.lo, 3111', 1271/1n0.
ptuo
• 114 441 .,.. """
llp.m.

~~=

.,•••• 21tl.

loll ond Choir, H.H por-.
• ,.. w•••••., ......, por
Wook. L..hopid unll - .
Boddlnt. and Ctlool ol o..-.
lncl"'*!r _ .ttS.14 pot - .
lwl
..l ·pot
14.44
pot01-o
Rocllnor
17.71
-11.
with 4 ChaiN, 1?.10 por ·- . 4
- -4 Dr-r
llod, hUO
wook.
Cllool por
of
Drowerw, 13.10 por-. Rt. 141,

•.•

"••A

Se1v:ccs

Rolwtl8an
10:20 (J) MOYIE: Mart ol the
Fighting Lady (1 :45)
1.0:30 III Newe
II). M'A'S'N
ra Crook and Ch•••
@ MljOr LIIQJII Ballbrtll ,
CL)
11 :00 CJlG Cll Ill • IIDl 112l•
91 Ncwe
III Nlgllt Court Q
(l) Newewatch
1[1) • AI'Htllo Hen Stereo. g
IIJ Miami Vice Stereo.

Home

4MitooOifRt.?ln~.

HOUAI: IIOft&lt;!oy thru 111-y,

llo.m... p.m.; Sunday, 12 - .
llp.m.
loll, S71, (llllld oond, 304-1'1&amp;-

2413.

.

I WAIN
AUCTION I FUAHITUR£. 12
Olivo 81., Oolllpotlo.

Real EsldtP

-a ._

-om

'

tumHIU,
·
Work
looolo.1,.._11,

58

I

Fruha&amp;

Vegetablea

......
1171

~

I

er-r,

lt.lrullt lntrlrio. Good Too• Cir. Good Ttrwo,

Tum your clutter into caah,
SJlJfit the eOn way... byghone,
, no need to leave your home.
PWce your clauified rul today!
15 worda or leu, 3 deys,
3 paper1~16. 00
CaU our of]ice for paid ill oJ,,,.,,~•

1 . _ _ _ __

,.,.,.,r

9,___ _ _~,

2----a.._....___
,c.._.

4._...;.__ __

5
-_-_
-_6.
__
7. _ _ _ __

polo,r-~.

Portlolly lumlollod =z:'Jr.V
utHftloo, "-lt,
4 bedroom ~"vel
acre,
ctty wmw,
up,
goOcltecotlon.
.

5 room - w t l h ........,,
and
L.lricoln
A....,..
...._ -- · Not
Coli, 304-87&amp;-

-·
---......

Bldwelt Ohio: 1 lA houu w/4
kU, :"':L1 Mra. tii,OOO. Will

001111-. . . . . . . . . . . .0 .

-

poy-.104-tlt 5!:10.

OO¥IIIHIIIHT HCIIIEll trom .,

cu ~:....~ ...
10.-'----- :'n"r'~b..~
11 •.__,_ __._...,-1
12··-----,,....:--1
13 . _ _ _ _...,

'*

11:30

hoolt..,p, no polo, 1328. 114-ltZ·

7011.

r:..r.=.

P -.

, 54 Mlacellaneoua
Merci!JIIdlae
tlltCorlltoc. . DID
= N I - -- · 2 C1f gorogo 24X32X1,2 1117
overh1M A 1 .,..,... ....,

Ml'lllon M-. r p l"d I .....,1ft motoraln -11, RON

=..JACKSON,

0

OH • .1 -

. ASTRO-GRAPH ·

MOUNTI ORIIJINOUIII. Ill
.... up MI. ·Dave lid. .....
R.R.
1 - . ,,..._

In

1111 Onnd Nlllonol,
--~ TClorlrtl.-,
oonteooih.
- - P o l·"
- AIM'II e-o, rtlr, PIS, P/1,
1 · - tt.ZI ..... Hinging tllf I.ILUbo VI, '11,000 - .

,.,13.10.

BERNICE
.BEDE OSOL

::.~~~...=~

ltilat:u•; tuO Gullti Yllu Col
110,100.
,
. .112
lUI
- ........
_ , . lorry
:104
2227.

«l

,.....

=··
-..:c.:~'"
IF

1 -

'

=
=~·

S

llllo'YQIA

W"""'t

Comptole 32X11 .elloVe ....,..
poat.l300.114 . . . . . .

Ellctrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

-to-

...

C::
....

............ Not ....... ....,
IM4- ouppl(lllool. til
boo,
I
tid
ol.
..., 1 100 . . . . .
t

'·

oroolod. S4MI. PrwclolonFruM luldefl, 114 • 1141.
Colnpo!llt~ lltarN,
Bowlnt
An-

ful 11 pa. llalnllle ....,_ ~

HilL

'

2
bdnll
AJII.
upolllro,
recllcllFIItec:l 1
w..,_rfdryer

Buy or lolL R - Anttquoo,
1124 E. Moln 81-.
Hourw: II.T.W. tO:GO a.m. to 1:00
1:00 IO 1:00 p.m.

COOKWARI
1 qu11 Dul1lna on ......,
oftor 11 .... r hove -

8 . _- - - -

992-2156

Apartmem
tor Rent

Anjlquea

eo-ololptootla ............
Ronlvono·........-. ·.on, OH ,.......,...._ -

14._ _ _ __
15 ._ __ _

Po•eroy Dally Sentinel

44

53

lllllt lind.
al Unooln

I

•••

,

8

I'

1171 Dido Cut- SIO C:how

Nlco mobile lor ront: 1
lduft prolorrod. ,._.., no

.

Ii ~;:~: .:·~hu~:· q:o:~~

I
•

•

I

.

'

Your chances lor generating earnings
from .....,eral aources look -v encour·
aging In the y9ar ahead. One opportunity may be ol a rhort duration, but another could heYe a lengthy run.
·
01111111 CMIJ 21....,_ 20) SkUitul appll·
cation or 'IOIJI leltl*rhlp qualflloo Ioder
will enable you to elleciiVIIY manage
others In wayo they will eppreclate H
being lor their own good. Gemini, treat
yourllfl to a birthday 9111. Send lor
. I&gt;

Gemini's Astro·Graph predictions lor
Ihe year ahead by mailing S1.25 plus a
long, eell·llddreseed. stamped enve·
lope to Aatro·Graph, clo thll newspa·
per, P .O. Box 81428. Cleveland, OH
4410 t-3428. Be surelo state your zodl·
ac sign.
CANCER (.lune 21.Juty 22) secret
fears you've been harbori11Q regarding
Ihe 0111come of an evenl could be erldl·
cated today. There's a lesson here:
Don't worry about things before they
happen.
LEO (Julr 23-A... 22) Appearances
c.ould be dec:eptlve today. and they
shouldn'l bl lnt81preted n.gatlvely. Instead of -1110 your hopee and ••·
pectatlone 11 this tlrntr, elevate tliem.
YI!IQO (Aug. 2J.Iept. 221 Someone
whose debt Ia 1 lilt o-dut mteht have
lo be remlndld now or the old obligation. It you pr- a Httle, thlo lndlvldurlla
likely to come through.
LHIIIA (lept. 23-0ct. D) A matter of
lmporiiiiCB to you and I epeclal lrlend
requlrH dlaculllon 11 thll time. The '-"
sue CM be -ty rHOIWid by being
tranli with one another.
ICOIIPIO COat. 14 llao. 22) You could
be a btl luckier tiWI uaual today wiwe
~- ... concorMCI . In
IIICI, ya&lt;t m'!~!'\' a woy to profit lrom a
tlltuatlon that IIOmeOne eltle ia

.

,

promoting:
SA GinARIUS (No•. 2J.Dec. 21 I A valued lrlend m!'Y be In n~ or moral support todey. Speak up on your pal's behall, prelerably In lronl or others, so all
wiN know exactly whore you ltand.
CAI'IIICORII (Dec. 22o.1en. 11)11 you're
expllch· about oblttetl- todar. rour
chances lor achievint (lOIII will be conslderabfr enhanced. Don't let casual
side lnterHts at- you off triCk.
AOUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) A pleas·
ant aurprlee may be In the offing today
when you di..,over that oomethlng you
lhought you couldn't do Ia achieved
with relatl .. ·
PIICII (Feb. 2~~-~brch 20) Changes
laking PI- IOday that &amp;(11 authored by
outside Influence~ could directly aHect
you. Fortunately, they should turn out
better than those you would have lmple·
"*lied yourllfl.
Alllll Clll8rcii21·Aprtl 111 Don't be r•
luctant to maka cor.ca111on1 In your
more Intimate CleiHngl with lrlenclr today. Rather llllln give -hlng up,
you'may IICiualty glill.
JAIIRIII (April»&gt;llr 20) Your ambl·
tiona, u Willi u your reoourcelulnHI,
wll be -ty arOIIMd today In -..op.
menta thaf'epuld be materlelty rrte~~n­
lnglul. Yow chances lor luffillng expec.
tallone look good.

you develop from step No. 3 below .

-"

.

FORI

I I

.'

I

.

'

.'"'

''; I

BRIDGE

•
PHILLIP
ALDER

The Vanderbilt
Knockout Teams

NORTH
I·ZI·It
+10
•e s 2
US3
+KJI0542

By Ptallllp Alder
The main event at the Spring North
American Bridge Championships was
the Vanderbilt Knockout Teams, won
by Steve Robinson, Peter Boyd, Kit
Woolsey and Ed Manfield.
Most of their gains came via their
opponents' errors, but the most inter·
esting boards res.ulted In swings for
the losers. Today's deal was my
favorite:
.
.In one room, SOuth opened one dia·
mood and revel'$ed Into hearts. When
his partner preferred diamonds, he
suggested hearts again, but North re·
turned to diamonds and South gave up.
Four diamonds made five when Wesi
led a top spade. Declarer was able to
ruff his two spade losers in the
dummy.
·
In the other room, South (Jeff Meek·
stroth) opened with an artificial,
strong one club. West's two-spade
jump was unusual. His hand would
normally contain a longer spade suit
and fewer high-card points. North's
pus showed either a bad hand or a
peaally double of spades; hence
South's reopening double, allowing for
the latter possibility. But when North
removed to three clubs, South made a
brilliant bid of four hearts. He decided

WEST
+AKQ87

...
- ..,
•'.

'.

EAST

-"

+J 6 5 2 •

•to 9 s

.7!4

t72
+Q976

tiO 8 4

+AB

SOUTH

..".
..,..
..

+943

..

.AKQJ
tAKQJ6

+3

•••
,•.

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South

''•

Weol

z+

Norlb . Eoll

Pass

Pass
3+

Pass

Pa!IS

..'·..,

Pass
Pau
i'au

.:

Opening lead: • K
, _ _ _ __ _ _ _.....J ..

-

"

that five diamonds could be one level-.·
too high, whereas four hearts even if
it were a 4-2 fit, rated to have play. - :
And right he was. West led a top ~
spade and switched to a trump. De· ·
clarer won .in hand, rulfed a spade ip "j,
the dummy, drew trumps and ran the .:::
diamonds. Finally he led his slngletoo ;- ·
club. West ducked. Meckstroth called ::
for dummy's king, collecting an over· ·- '
trick. The swing wu 300 poinl8 or sev· ;'
en IMPs.
.• '

The World Almanac" Crossword Puzzle
ACROII

Anawer to Pr•wlou• Puule

lneJene39 Poultry

1 TakiiWI,bV

40 Doctrine

force
6 Covera
11 Not Will
13 Low ctrtll
14. Fulkllout
15 11011 eldar(V
18 Famlnlne
eumx
17 Coat wllh
metal
1g Norma20 Employe
21 R'luleUon
25 Part of t¥1
26 Zero
27qulntuplttr
30 Crown
331mpose 1 tax

43 Comlorter
4511uH
46 NegltCI
49 Smal hole
51 Bo•t•
52 ExCHIIYI
aftec:tlon
53 Flower elllk
54 Ptpper plant

.,.
..
,.

"

.·~

DOWN
1 Fl1herman'a

boot
2 La100
3 Seltct group
4 Trlgon-tr,
term
5 Explorlve
Cilbbr.)
8 Skin Injury

on

34 Songlike

31 ChlniH

7 Le•polle

pagodl
.
38 Song lor two
37 Bronte hero-

B Fighter pilot

8 Footltke pert

10 Frat rlrcralt

Crbbr.)
12 Wrndtrtrl
13 Whtn In
Rome,--

2D Ptenl
contetnere
22 Iring to ruin
23 11 llluetttl
24 S1Uor'1 P•
Iron Hint
25 Chemical

18IIIHrrbiH

IUI!Ix

27 Fruit ole

&amp;!":. ~ ~

..rr+-~+-1-+--1

Col1111 alan

12:31(1) Love Cor.411Ctlllll

I I:' Our Q
ii).Aawhkl4t

IIJle ..._~~~~e.

'·

·.

••

44=

'·

'•

'·

:·
'

:·

42 optrlllon
Tovrttt

,••'
.

dig.

47 OIVIIID(c org. ,
4111ii. r.
lladrtd
50 Hoodlum

•'

'•

'·'·'
'

:·•'
••

12:05 (J) MOVIE: The ... cllboard
Jungle (2:00)

IDe "-nl Copy

31 "-•t•n•
40- -••se
41 llltllrJ

Ill While
41 Dartllll'l

:IBNalllvlleNow
J!'I!:(IHr
g
:;~~~... IIIII Proud
Land (2:00)

or Love

·:''•

Md.

e

PIIPIII
II) • lett

'•'

31 Fll out

I

David LMWman
III MDVII: ICing or IIIII
O.ntlileN (I :00)
ill PllrtJ MID. . . With Nltl

1

31 Angere
32(ellnd
311 Netghbor Ol

CJJe 91 Tortlghl 1111ow

CJJe

.

I•

'

30DIICOUrqed

lcaNCfllw end M,.., King

(l) Ntghtllna Q
12:30
·IIJ) Ldt Night With

-.'

.~

28
28 Gr..el ridge•

Stereo.
III Clrcla of Fear
(l) Adam lmllh'o Mone,
World
()). Nlahtllne D
ArMrilo Hal Stereo. D
• 'The tile' ca !.ala
Nlgllt Stereo. Q
Ill Church IhNat ll8tlon
ra ~pom Tonight
11:31(1) Chee... Q
12:DD ()) Into the Night Stereo:
II). PartJ MID..W With

1:DD

..

_....,

by filling In the missing words

Ill On ltagl
181 M-y(lne

A.T.,

.... ·--·,....,..:

Tl :

...

lor my todoctor's
vlall. When
came
lhe doctor
smiledI

Nfllfhv((le

18 L8rTJ King Uvel
8:30 Cll ()). ITAT The doctors

7IG - Uno NcMioy HIO. 304~oortol, 304-llt- 1'1&amp;-3114.
ttll

_

wm••m Now

•

41 Houaea tor Rent

8:00 ·C Jle IIJ) In the Heal Olthe

I

. . . . . . .. l1t 3111111.·

Building
Suppl!'l

0322, 3 -

Attnt.."11on' C81 TUHdrtL
C2:30) Stereo. Q

Movle.(R)

Polnl
.
Good boll tn!tor. Filii M-11 ft.
- · Older 11 ft. tlborglooo

I o.m. to I p.rn. MOnAol.· .,..
448·111!,. 12? 3rd. Avo. Oo~
llpollo, ....

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Cotnplole heme lurnlohlnao.

A... .. ,~~
.. '

Pl-.~7141.

Inc. Good
ooto. DDooi

~ LIE.

_

t.,

•·,

The ·
ol no food
and blood being drawn, made
me pass out as I wPnt to pay

M,... King

!j) ti~r~9. the Botie?

ALLEY OOP

~

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
. . !'·2o
Weaken - Byway - Knoll :, Umpld - MONEY
Wise words to live by: "Don't measure wealth by lhB
llings you have, Qllt by the things you have for which
fou can't take MONEY."
·

'

7:06 (J) HIPPY Dlyl
7:30 CJ). 0 .itopllrdYt Q
III Mejor Lllllll'• lallbrtll
Chicago Cublat.New York
Meta CL)
.
Cll 1121 • Entenllnrnent
Tonlglll Stereo. Q
()) • M111111'1 Femlty
al WhMI or F - Q
II) • -Mijor L.eegue
Ba11ball San Francisco
Glantl at Cincinnati Reds (L)
raaaaSI8r
CD Mejor League lallllrttl,
(L)
·.
.
iBCIOHfite
7:31 (J) Mljor League laHbal
San Diego PldrH at AUanta
Brevn CL)
1.110 CJl. IIJl Flltlt P - With
Mlllllt Shriver Marla Shriver
IntervieWs actor Kurt Ruaaell,
athlete Bo Jackaon and
sl~r/dancar Paula Abdul.

'
••
•i

.............. oea. AI 1ho Wltoon T - I 110ft. Dlolui,
Door lhoD on Pooell ,.., lid. -.up llllft, ........
PCMueror.,........,1011.
· ~ Whlll Drll.......... ..
LuliAir -ric tu,_ llrlolr
........... 1100. 111111, .....

(II Scarecrow end

cl

.

. , UNSCRAMBl E
ANSWER

MacNeii/Lelnr

~~2
ra Moneyllne

I'

. "·. ·

f9 .lPRETTERS
INT NUMBERED
IN SQUARES

NewiHour I;J
liJ 01• Current Aftalr 1;J
I I ) = Court Q
.

''.

,.., -

.

Cll ()) • lnlkle Edition I;J

.

JD llloool - · .........

I.I!

8

~ 1o - or .Jeannie

'

~.io-.:..JD= G:::!

r

CD Up Ct-.

I .

I

BURCM

~

1:31 (J) Andy Griffith
7:00 CJ). 0 Wheel Ol Fortune
(l) (!)

,.

.1 I, I
r'-=·I~-=·=·=~7~

II). Andy GttlftUI

''

DIM.

olr
10,ooo ITU ~- ZSJI
Bot o1 R - Hood CIJ!I-'
~For Bole. 'IS Yoorw.Oid.

Rcni&lt;JI:.

Alt.• cII RequiNCI. NO P..a.

ALL. OF US ..

DALPIC

_,.:L=-;.Y~A,;:.L..:,A;......~I

ill 1121. CIINIW. Q

;\

t'IU0.-?114.

- Drovttl
~or~
......
DieD, -lluolll!!!g.
I . with
-.
a... Wll ...._ 114- GOod rulllllr••,. 1•• 211»t ....

~

01 , . _ I Cllt T1n11. AI lor

Houoohold tumlo!tlnll. .112 mi.
Jorrlcho lid. Pt. PI-, WY,

,__ "'''"'In

(l) Wild Amertce
(Jl:s-2·1 Contrtct

'

'1171 ~~Drive, Prlie:

_ _h . . . . .. ....

Old. Col...,._ .,••• . , .

Aloe troller
Coli
oaor -2:00 · All hoolt-!IPI·
304-TIJ.

For Bolo: llln;bo'*

.

IT MEANS

THERE'S STill
HOPE FO~

'

-

Stooplnt ....... .with - ....

Houro: lion 111' N. 114-4*
out Bulo- lid.
, ... Doltveoy.
PICKENS FURNITURE

t171-t100.

NOW IN TJ.IE

&amp;ASE8ALL AALL
OF FAME.!

'I

...

1:06 ()) llevet1y Hllll.lea
1:30 CJl. 0 NIC Newt Q
. Cll Abbolt end Coetdci
Cll ()). AIC Nlwtl Q

',.

"" Hootor
.........(lwltl-- ......
Goo
. . _. c..Mionl 4 v..

ou1 ' AIITIIICTED BUILDING, ~
l?lo4100.

TIL -lonol Tono\lna, ~ In Rio Orondo. dl4-24f.

Ci\Sti?!!

HERE TijAT JOE

I

....
171. ............. .

mlloo

42 Mobile Homes

Profeaalonal
Services

. ,I

:I
l!

72 TruCka tor Sale

In . . . . Junrti 21, - " " ..

Uf.IIIO~

Boolllltul lUll .... king ....
..... bod, - - l d -

Q,... · loCo, -h Grove
=:an~ ICIII, Info coli

Mlacellaneoua
Merchancllaa

FRUHo.. ACh-Arllund
tho World cotolog . ,

_ ......... Inc_..._

VENDING ROUTE: 0o1 Rich
torRent
Oulck? No Worl 1111 Wo Ho.. A
Good, ....... A-blo. luol14dl 3111', Lo tod In Everg,_,,
- · Won'f Lut. 1-ICfo.- eon
ottor 4p.m. 114",41-HII7.
1313.
tbr Trollor, Fumlollod. Dopooll&amp;

23

AND IT SA'(S

'

SET UP. WILLING TO TRAIN.

I'llll.

II

•'•''

1112 Corpot ...... 110. lnd up.
~ fUO I up. Malldlll'l
FUift(utre.l-11144.

14,100. PHONit.fOCI.IZI-?001.
-Ina - o : For Bolo. Aflor.
.._ l:uh luil...... 1.aG0-

EAM -11DD PEA WEEK
lOOKS AT HOME.

CALL ~11140EXT.

.

3M~m

AVON I AI - . , t lhiJiey

Af"""

Buslneu
Opportunity

Fixed .CrodH

Clot Loeno. CrodM
Cordo. Oourontood 24tw. - . . . :111 Ill 3211,

=·

CD MBA Today
18 World Today
OOurH-

••

......,. .......
In..............,.. .......

-;:a-....

Wo,.,ld to buy, w - I dryer otNCIIon, Connorl~l Fl-.
1·208-731'
Ext.
In wortil~iMirtdftlon, collrfter 4 CALL
p.llbl

Buslnea
Buildings

gj~

•,.•

2 llodroom, u.tng

bFFIOE 8NCl iiOil LEAIE on
A
.
:IIWII-3201
2nd - . Oottlpolto. ctMo to
lixt.OH11 .
Courl-1-.z-.
nlcoly
HAIRSmiST: Tlrod ol 110% of
.......... olr oondltlonlng,
Nolhl!!!!? Buor 11 You Wont To 18 Wanted to Do
your wet• a ...., 11111r1 fii:ICII.
Bo? Wint More M-? Wontlo
troclor
lilted, Moko- ....... -·No
G,_? Wo've Got TIIO Cll-. -rolo..tld. Pcmorov,
Mldd_,., quat• lho phoM, roo
lorltbo. Clourontllld W"'l" and ~lro ...... 114=1112-11103 0~
Growth· OppcrtunHioo. "110 tor4PM.
..... - · -· p - lor...ony,
....,..__._.,...
Wook bourontood Pluo Morol
~
11~72t7.
Poulo'o Doy Coro Conler.
Solo, ,,.,._blo, chi-. M-F
HYAC Borvlco Tochnlclon• Won- I o.m. • 5;ag p.m. Agoo ~10. 35 LOla &amp; Acreage
tid lmmoclotoly. Send
BoloN, oftor ochoot. Drop-lne l.ata . . . . . . nil.........
To: Clo lox O?S c/o Oollpollo
· 114-441
1224. ln- , _ - •-ruclllon on
DollY, Trlbu~1 IZS Third Annuo, .f lnt Tocldtot
Ooro, 114-44W227.
0.11 polio, "" 411131.
.
Roybum Rood. Povld - ·
s-JoiiH In potlo'o d~vowoyo,
lnauranct ..... men and oldowolko, olobo, 10% dl.....,t
women. C.r• OJII*tunttr ,... lo Bonlor CHIHna. FIH ... lion
molted
....-, SOW'I&amp;-·on
Ccllrsplelo
tloMitoocltntl- Lilli- ........ --71:10.
181, .lolln D. - . no
Couollty Co. .... billion
end •
We ollw uniiMRed Tronolor -!'tf!lpho lo YHS 21oteollllolaeoornfngo polonllot, lndopon- Topo. OuoiHy Wirk. Botlolocllon
dono.!t
Ouorontood. With or Wlt- .. -ion."Tho .... A•tomw.
~Wee.
lng.- give roo- IO- Mua&amp;c.
Pl.... C.N 114 3U 12'11, Lilw ~
go041 Jll9ducl• to - · Jn. lit r gr 11 No. Anrwor. Think
HIIIIve
~­
I o- Apple - . - . 1
quolltr.
3-0400.10£/NPII., You I
• • and _ , wotor,
JOBI IN ALASKA-Hirlntl· Entry .Will bobplt -Undo ot yow 100 ft - - :104·'751level. 1100.00 • -kty. COri' hDUee or mine. Hive ret.rencH. 2142.

~

Crocllt?

~-

I
I

(JJR~"'

'r

:::::'~~~;~
Lorvt Molol lulldlna. Con Sleo

34

WookiY. Exco- Bonoth. Job
r(l . No Expotlonco. 24hr.

pl-.--. ........

Bod

PIZILII

In Chrt_!ge Q
(l) 3-2·1 Contrtct l:jll

''

114

Buslneaa_
Training

Govommont ~~~nil ~1100

Antiquo

..v••"

ONewa
Cll Chrtrlee

••••
lAIII

I'MT BAll'

M

TUE., MAY 21

1:00 CJ). Cll ()). Ill

II

~:01•. =~,=-~

1124-1/31.

_ . , ' - ' 1 -old,
p,ooo. 11,800 ....... :1044711111.
1110 Cltevv Luntlno, loldod. 1

1l1e Dally Sentlnel4age · 8

!VI!NING

•I
•I

lixt.OHttt.

WANTED: lu~pllm.nt Vour ln-.
Pom....,. 2 bodnoom, pori.
come or 0. n 1 CIFMr. Eam
tumL yonl, ~wid ltiloti...,.,
rol. • -·
no ., ... .._
.-.tiiOO • Wootdy, Full «
tori p.m. e.4
•
Port~!- Pro._ P o For Ohio Yollor AIM.
1043.
Adwer1lolna .....
llor • 11uot LNdo I SPECIAL 1octory to roo. 11111
Trolnlng
Prowtdod.
lond
Rooumi To: lex Cia Olll, c/o two « thrM 6od..- Mll70
....... -.splllolr Ill Upl!i
0 . - Dolly Tribuna, 128 ........
oklrtlila, tlo-.., lo
45
Furnished
Tlllnl Avonuo, Clontpclto, OH
..... IIIIJIO. t12,tl7.00
W31.
Room a
(choice ol c:cloro) Coli · m-1 lor_...
'
Shuatlon
Aportmont ovolloblo for 2 or 3
con.tructlorl worbra 304 ...
33 Fanna for Sale
Wanted
2111.
Wo-: Plooo to LIYtl In Town. Bla 4 l i d . - Dokal1t Hcmo1 Aocmolor-.- or ---h.
1-31&amp;1.
lulft On Your LAtt 12?;1111 ona 81orllng II mo-.
•••
·-·
up. 114 111:mt.
OoUio Helot.

7

4Fimlty:

,,•'

\

.,.__,,

lond, ""' _ . . .... clocll,
wllppt-. 304-llt-2713.

•

----.M,oao-.t
OM"!.
Ul Ci..- 441 -7104.· . .. . . ...

1N41h......,14d02bldrond bollia, .. - • ....., ond
cllylr, ~7117.

_,
--1211·--·
Contoril-

.,..11

..'

•'•',,

Wollllnty, $t2,100. · -· • r;
.-'11104.
'

-·

At: a« Jocloaon Pllio,_L« 10.
Sloy heme ond moko QOI)IWk. 114-MI-li'H,I14
Ul 1377.
400
componloo
noocl
hotnewarlienl. can tor lrnlll"' ,1181 H - 1417U, 3br 2
MO&lt;dld mo-go. 31?-NS' PUll Bollw, Control Hoot I Atr.
4330, 011. 31.
All Alll&gt;llo~~ Polio l),ocwa,
tta,IOO: I
7111. 11Uo1 8o
Wo-: lobl'oltor To Como To
My Homo For 7 • 1 Yoor Oldo,
Qllla. St. Rt. 511. R•onco R• By ownor 3 bldnoom · moblo
qulrod.114-?IOI.
...... W/............re-udod

LOST block tohOIIIdor puroo,
Muon
PoMeroy lirtclat.

Pomeroy,
MldcllepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

Dcdal Dovt- llroll,

owner, Indent Condition, tltdl •

bod-, .olr,

lloiltho Old. 1114-:li•tmn.
" I couldn't lind any newspapers from the
Glvoowor: Kl11o,., olllwmolo?
day you were born_..only stone tablets."
wks old, llltor trolnld. Brldbury. ~--...;,.;.._ _ _ _,;_;;...:..;.;,,;,;.;;.,;,;;;,;;;,;;,;;;;_~-~
81._1113·5321.
· Aool ciM kllton, 304-t?l-4720.

Loat&amp; Found

-

·oftor7p.m.
Effldoncy,
AK
11111 ShultZ, 3, bdm, ....., I FumlUtiiKioo · Pold. Shoro Both.
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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Beat of
the Bend..

You golf enthusiasts only have a
few more !lays to get logged into
the mixed scramble tournament to
be staged Saturday at lhe Meigs
County Golf Course, formerly the
Jaymar course.
Saturday' s tournament is a
memorial event honoring the late
James Diehl and will get underway
. at 9 a.m. Saturday morning. The
sponsors, the Meigs High Band
Boosters, are hoping lots of golfers
will be involved since it is alumni
weel&gt;end and the toumameiu ·will
116· a nice activity for many coming
back home for the reunions on Saturday evening. Since the Meigs
High School band is to be the
recipient' of proceeds raised
through the event, the band will be
on hand to present music for lhc
golfers and their friends at the
course about 8:30 a.m. Saturday.
Not only that, but according ro present plans if you should challi: up a
birdie at one of the boles during the
tournament you can expect a tnunpet - orie of the bandsmen - to
announce it to everyone on the

course.
Enuance fee is a SSO donation
to the band. but you will have a full
day of activity including dinner and
you'll receive a t-sbirt. There will
be door prizes and team awards
will be presented to the top three
teams:
A plaque will be presented
memory of Mr. Diehl and memberS
of his familv will be at the course
to receive thaL
By the way, the Meigs Band is
growing in leaps and bounds and
that's why this fund raiser is so
important. Since Director Toney
Dingus arrived on the scene lhe
band Its increased from 40 ro 120
members.
Just call the golf course ro get
signed in.

Congratulations to Mrs. Shirley
Coleman who was named top Ohio
local coordinator of lhe year by lhe
American ·Ins.titute of Foreign
Study.
Al the state meeting Shirley was
honored for her outstanding placement and supervisory performance
in her first year as a local coordinator of the progfam. She placed 10.
' stud_ents in her worli: with lhe pro- :

. ' Tueaday, Mly 21, 1981

----Meigs announcementsNewest home video
rentals
former - a slipt, baldins man

By

MONSIEUR HIRE (PG·13)
Orion. Georges Simenon's novels
were bleat elWIIinatials of l!uman
-- -wea.lcness, sin and lhe failure of
Hoeflich love. In "Monsieut Kin:," Palricc
Leconte offers a. visually rigorous
realization of Simenon's world, a
gr3fll. The Institute pointed out · beautifully worked-out film lhat
lhal "her compassion and empathy may leave some viewers a bit
mali:e her an excellent supervisor queasy.
and counselor". Shirley was preKin: (Michel Blanc) is a tailor, a
sented a telephone answering ser· sexually repressed man whose
vice in recognition of her worli:. By neighbors dislili:e him. When one, a
. the wa~, there are 62 such coordi· young woman, is murdered, suspi·
nators m the State of Ohio.
cion falls on him. He is more concerned, however. wilh feeding his
collection of white mice and spying
ReportS are really coming in on
those of you who have undergone on Alice; (Sandrine Boanaire), a
some son of heart surgery or proce- lovely young woman who lives
dure. Those are 10 be sent ro me at across lhe courtyard. Then, one
109 High Sl, I'Qmeroy, and even- · night, she sees him waiChing ...
Leconte d!aws us into lhe tidy,
rually this column will name all of
the people who have been involved obsessive world of his tide charac·
and responded ro my request. Just lei' with a judicious combination of
send along your name, address, the languorous camera movement and
name of the hospital, and lhe date everyday detail. The film's muted
along with any olher information palette- particularly Hin:'s black
and white wardrobe- make lhe
pertinent to your particular case.
explosions of color that Leconte
Many of you will remember . lhrows out a1 li:ey moments all lhe
. Tim Flesher who served as Meigs mae effective.
Finally, Blanc is a riveting per·
High School guidance counselor
I
from 1976 through 1981.
·
Tim sent along the highest
praise for the late Jim Diehl who
Eighteen women were in atten·
was Meigs High School Prinicipal
dance
at the Tuesday Morning
during Tim's stay in Meigs Coimty.
League
play at lhe Meigs County
Mr. Diehl, Flesher says, made
GolfClub.
.
those five
at Meigs High, the
An
invilalional
10 be held June
happiest o his life. Mr. Diehl was
18
was
discUssed.
an exccllCQt leader and provided a
Winners aflel' o~lay were Norma
great deal of compassion and help .
Custer,
gross; Maxine Gasli:ill;
wonderful to work with - Tim low net;low
and
Elizabeth Lohse, low
states.
putts.
Incidentally, Tim is now principal of Fairfield High School at
Leesburg.
·

Bob

.-~

Title fund
preparations

K,im Taylor is here for a weelc
with her folks, Jane and Bob Bee·
gle, ,vacationing from Dallas,
Texas.
·
Kim who started wilh Radio
WMPO is now an on-air commentator with WMOV in Dallas, affiliated with U.S.A. Radio Network
News. Kim started wilh WMOV a
year ago as a part-time producer
and a pan-time oommentator. She
will be around until Wr.dnesday.

urday evening.

D8llee to be lleld
The Pomeroy Sealor Citizens
Dance Club will have a dance oa
Friday from 8·11 p.m. with music
by the Happy' Hollow Boys of
Athens. Those atten~ing are· to
briag snacli:s for lhe snack table.
The public is invited.
.

Proposal fior
expenditures

Chicago fires
Don Zimmer
as manager

Partly cloudy tonight.

D ol A lu meet
• The Chester Couacil No. 323
Daughters of America will meet
Tuesd&amp;y':at 7:30 p.m. at lhe lodge
hall. (Note the new time). The S7th
anniveraary of the lodge will be
celebralcd and all chanei' members
are urged to attend. Evelyn Holter
will have a products party follow!'I$ tJt.e nieelillg ro which the public
IS. mv1tcd.
.

Thursday, high in the 80s.

NEW DELID, India (AP) -. A
dazed nati011 today bepn a weeli: of
mourning for former Prilne Minislei' Rajiv Oandhi, whose ISSIIISination ·at a campaign rally has struc~

Special visitors

~GANDHI

''

.

'l:/.1

ATTRACTIVE SIGN •
ol the Sludeat
Council of Meip Jaalor H
Sdiool for 1!191
wu having a aew lip erected OD tbe float 111WD
of tbe school. It - CCIIIpleted .._ week. Sewral special CODtrlbutloos were lllllde to the project
- Valley Lumber doaated brku aDd mortar,
tbe late Charles Le1ar of Le1ar Monumeats
took care of orclerllla the sip, and Jim JohiiSOII
provided his bricklaylna skiD to tbe project. Pic·

tured wltb tbe sip are from the lei't, kneeHag,
Autum• Coacle, Kmda ReyJiolds, Amber Bm·

aett, Amy Little, Bobble Buteber aad Tara
Erwill; IIMI'Itudina, Heather Kniabt, Berake
)llake, Sbllo Moore, Alida Ham, Ch1rles Martill, Reule Pratt, Jered Hill, Adam Wyatt, Ali·
soa Gerlach, Dorothy Leifheit, and advisors,
Steplumle Asb and Debbie Mlak.

B(lrton to visit Vietnam as part of
international education exchange
Dr. Marcella Biro Barton, Professor of Hisrory at the University
of Rio Grande, will uavel ·IO Viet·
nam in June as pan of the Council
on International Education .
Exchange Program. She will talce
part in a number of seminars on
"Understanding Vietnam's Historical Perspectives" conducted br the
Ministry of Education and T1111lling
in Vietnam. The seminars wiU be
held at Hanoi University and Ho
Chi Minh City University.
Faculty exchange programs such'
as this one are pan of the effort 10
meet the need for global compe·
tence in institutions of high education in the United States. Dr. Barron notes that as we move towards
the twenty-first century, the
demands of an increaslnfly mtenlependent world commuruty and lhe
rapid J11CC of ilobal cblnge mali:es
it imporlllllt for students 10 learn
about the world and its cultures.
A graduate of 1be University of
Chicago, Dr. Barton has been
reachin&amp; a coune on Vlelnanl at lhe
Univenity of Rio Odllde for six
years. She lw allo been working
on a book 011 Vielllllll. 'Ibis program will Clllble her 110t only 10 see
Vietnam but to meet witli Viet·
· namese academics.

Each member of the American
faculty Jtroup will work on a
research project while in Vietnam
Dr. Barton will look at the impact
'of outside influence on intellectual
and social thought in Vietnam as it
is expressed in the curricUlum and
facilities at Hanoi University and
Ho Chi Min II City University. The
presence of the Chinese, French,
United States,.and the Soviet Union
in Vietnam has Slimulated the Viet·
namese to thinli: about themselves,
their government. society, and their
culture. The changes now tali:ing
place in the Soviet Union have certainly made lhe Vietnamese tali:e
another loo1c at their position within
lhe Communist world.
As Dr. Barton points eut, the
Vietnamese have a unique culture
but they abo have a legacy of war
and conquest. They have lived in
the shadow of more powerful countries whether that be lhe Chinese,
French. Americans, or Soviets.
Their experiment wilh socialism
has been turbulenL Vietnam is in
the midst of ongoing economic
reforms. These cblnp will affect
the political climate of Vietnam
and Southeast Asia. They will
shape Vietnam's destiny. Dr. Bar·
ron suesses that an undenranding

MARCELLA BARTON
of con~mporary Viemam and its
culture IS .Important because Viet·
n~tn. will be a significant force
Within Sou~ Asia in the future.
. At ~e present time Vietnam is
mcreasmgl y open to lhe outside
world. 'lbiS faculty exchange program provides Dr. Barton a rare
opportwtity 10 looli: at lhe multiple
perspectives of the Vietnamese
people, their culture, and their history.
•

Kenar.

Sometimeii the fashion imagery
blends intelllgence with fantasy. In
lhe ewrent Clianel TV COII)IIIerCials
for lheir latesl men's fragrance,
Esoiste, dozens of aorseous
women stand on balcOnies OUIIIde
each of their !OOIDS in some emlic
hotel as they scream (in Freac:h),
"Ob, rage! Oh, despairr'
. "This man must be quite a guy
fDr all these women 10 have gatb-

.

.j

'

· h1ma and~ Chane! exec·
utive are sitting in·a luxury apiutmeat on Manhattan's Park Avenue,
the home, if you will, which
Olanel created as the fantasy apartment for tbe "E-man." Due in
department stores nationwide in
September, Egoiste was launc:hcd
recendy at Bloomiilgdale's, where,
in its first woeli:, it set a sales record
of $150.000.
In this ll)lafiJnent, COIIl)llete with
Hnen sheets, Oriental rugs, fresh
flowers, and leather furnishings,
~es of Ibis ~ man emerge.
· He IS a self-coofident, free-wheel·
ing man who embraces cultures as
well as a variety of wanen -ed
Nathalie, L .. Caroline, M. and
Sophie, according 10 enb'iea in his
per10nal diary left open on his
·antique writing desk.
And it's wcrting this 8ppRl8clt
ro portraying lhe
man as
one who, IICCOidina to its ~rioe
ads, "walli:s on the positive Stde of
that fine line seplrating arrogance
from an awaaeu:as of sdf-worlh. ••
In Ewope where the~ was
launched a year ago, 'sales are
running SO pertejlt over our fore:
cast," accordingiOPalma. ·
But reality is giving fantasy a
hard run for lhe fashion money.
\Vboopi Goldberi is dressed for lhe
Gap ads, Jaquellne Bisset shows
her wrinli:los on tbe cover of Lear's
magazine and hundreds of totally
unknown people are being pho·
tographed for CII,SIOmen who are
tired of the~ ayndrome of the-list decaile.
Levi Suauas, Dewars Scotch,
Beneuon, J. en... and mapzinea
like Now Choleoa, ·Mira~Ua,
Worldng W0111111, VicUJria, F1m11y
Circle llld Countryside are olbers
who have decfdrd to go lhe reality

modern

route.

At New Choices for the Beat
Years mapzine
,eJLomierly called
50 PI• until
'1 Di&amp;est purch•sed it in 1988), bonest+good·
ness DCCIIIle are 11011' the "models"
for ils tishlon aprea~ aliiiCd at
readers over 4S. Its I ly/August
isaue fe8Dires a "True Ql" story

pan.

"We choose people who repreaent different manifeslations of'
beauty rather than a homogenized
or sanitized version of beautiful
people." comments Peter Freasola,
director of communicatioas for
Benetton Norlh America.
Tlte Beneuon ads are produced
in-house and run in 2SO ~nes
worldwide. The clothing is m 6300
storeS in 83 countries.
Not bad fqr a bunch of kids
found most anywhere.

Bedford Community
Memorial Day sale
The Bedford Comniunity will be.
selling sandwiches, plate lunches·
and 'other foods, homemade bread
and pies on MeaiOria1 Day·from II
a.m. 10 7 p.m. at the Burllllgham
Modem Woodmc:ll Hall. ~ out
is allo aVIilable. Proceeds will be
used for the upcq~ of lhe Bedford .
Cemeteriel.

ister'sjob.
Gandhi's badly mangled body, :d.an unruly mob, United News
Opinion polls suggested it concealed in a teak coffin, was
. .
would win lhe most votes, but not a flown this morning ro New Delhi
The Election CommiSSIOil postmlliority, in this land of 844 million accompanied by his widow, Sonia, poned lhe partially completed elecand the couple's 21-year-old lions until June 12 and IS.
people .~ •• • troubled b ligi'
IS
Y re ous
" It looked lili:e someone delibat the roots of India's unruly
and ethnic extremism, widespread daughter, Priyanli:a.
emtely hatl:hed a plot 10 stop him
democracy.
.
and illiteracy and ecologi·
It was tali:en to the All Indian from
' wl' nnl'ng elections." H.K.L.
"It is a serious threat to democ· po~
cal · ·
Institute of Medical Sciences for an
C
racy. It is a shame for us," said
W ' s family has dominated autopsy and embalming then Bhagat, the ongress Party's genPrime Minister Chandra Sheli:har, ~ poljtics for three generations moved 10 Teen Murti House,' Gand- eral secrel!U'Y •. told reporters after
whose government put police and ~ his mother and gntRdfather were hi's childhood home, 10 lie in state. the assaasSJ~bon.
'tead
uoops on "red alert,'.' fearinf vio- alsO prime ministers- but he left · · Crowds of 1,000 to 2,000 peo- - . Bhagat IS amon~/arty
ers
lence could breali: out in ~uon ro
c
Part
pie garhered at both sites.
hkel y to make a. b• . to .h~d lhe
h·
no e:t apparent. ongreas
y
The U.S . Embassy warned par~y. whose mam bmding force
Gandhi's death.
~~~'wials~~
to
meet
today
10
pick
Americans
ro stay indoors.
· durtnJ the _last seven years bad
Gandhi was killed Tuesday
night by a bomb that exploded minAt least 14 olher people were
First reports from wimesses said been andh•.
utes aft« he arrived at lhe rally in killed in tho attack that killed the bomb appeared 10 have been
. ~re~id~~t Bu~ d~ou_nced ~e
soulheaslem Tamil Nadu state, an Gandhi. It occurred in the remote concealed in a basket of flowers ltilling as appallinJ. VICC Presi·
oasis of relative calm in lhe midst town of Srjperambudur, 25 miles sitting on the ground at the base of dent Dan Quayle said toc;laY lhal 1M:: ·
of India's most violent elections southwest of the state capital of the platform.
would represent !he Unlled Stale8 .
since independence.
. ,
~
h
1
f
h
·
d
But
subsequent
reports
spggest.
atth~
~dra
ed that it might have bi:en in a bou- . Gandhi, grandson of 1nd•.a s
After ihe blast, officials post- Ma s, aater e e t IS car an
quet or garland lhal was presented m~dence leader and fli'Sl prune .
poned further balloting. Authorities began walltiag rowanl a platform.
No
one
claimed
responsibiHty;
. 1..
miRI. ster .Ja_waharlal Nehru,
declared a weeli: of mourning and suspicion could fall on any number ro Gandli
f ·~&amp; world s most
closed· all government offices and
·
r ·
As news of the Gandhi •s death pnme mm1ster o · u"'
.
schools.
~.:l:\:~g!~~ .:~:g;:~ spread lhrough lhe country, spo- popul~us de~oc~acy after hu
The 46-year-old Gandhi, whose ra, was assassinated by Sikh radiC violence was reported in sev- mothers ~sass~bon.
.
Congreas Party was voted out of
· era) places. Two children were · .Ga.ndh! s son, R!'hul, has been
· · • 1984
power 18 months ago, had predicl, ~
people, mostly killed in the southern state of' studymg m the Umted S~tes and
ed lhe elections lhal began Monday Sikh1, were.ltilled by inobs after ~ndhril Pradesli when police fired was en route home.
would reiUlll him 10 lhe prime min- Mn. Gaitdhl's as•sslnalion.

u-

1.2rio

EPA

.official. .
.visits
center

Real people can be beautiful, too
fragrance m~

Ia Inc. Newapeper

became,

Card party set

with real grandparents and real
pandchildren in real denim: shorts,
JCIIIS, jumpen and jackets.
"We doll't even ¢all it fashi011,",.
notes Ediror-in-Chief Kate Greer.
"We call it 'Loolting Good,'
because it's n01 fashion, not what
you buy 011t of tbe collections. It's
not uendy. Once you grow up,
being trendy is annoying...
The New Oloices ""cisiat to go
for the real included feedback from
focus f.OUPI and readlira who said
!hey did 1101 relate.ro fuhioll models. 'What lhey were saying was
lhal it dido't go with the rest of lhe
m"ft"ioe," explains Greer.
t Bencuon, their spring cam·
)lllign shows a white boy kissing a
blaek girl, plus a United Nations of
young people laughing in their
briglttly colored Benetton
1pouawear. Since 1983, the compa·
ny has shown award-winning ads
pu:anoting racial harmony, and they
do it wilh real ltids for the most

2~18Pegeo25-la

A lluld

Gandhi's body lies in state;
week o-f ,mourning begins

Birthday celebration

ered in this hotel, so isn't it every
. man's dream?" observes Laurie
Palma, Chanel's vice president of

.

May22, 1991

Homemade ice
cream available

Bf Mary Martlll Nlepeld
Lets faee iL All of us are susceplible 10 some image of ourselves
that we thinli: enhances the one we
already have. E~if we're young
and protest thati'fasllion 'is pb(fny,
chances are we'll proceed 10 dless
in ripped jeans 10 draw attention 10
our anti-fashion fashion.
And the advertising of fashion
Call tell us much about what cloth·
ing represents as' lhe clothes themselves. Currendy, fashion messages
encompass two extremes: l'.'lre fan·
tasy and unadorned credibility.
Prof. Jeffrey Buchman, chair·man of the advertising-communicalions department of New York's
Fashion Instilllte of TechnoiQgy, is
an expen on such matters. He says
fashion advertising has always
beep about the business of selling
some perceived image, via clothing
or cosmetics.
But using real people in th'C
messages is new.
"The use of real people in real
situations ro sell clothing is defi·
nitely a trend," Buchman obaerves.
"There is a sameness about using
beautiful ~pie, especial!~ the
same beautiful people you see m 2S
other ads; Right now, it'.s very
important to stand out from lhe
clutter, and the use of real people is
one way 1o differentiate your
brand." .
·
But, smce sex sells, you cjln
count on fantasy ro be the biper
draw m fashion advcrlismg.
Doesn't every woman wantiO be
supermodel Linda Evangelista?
She's lhe '90s tali:e on Eva Oardoer, a fsct not lost on Kenar clothing, which shows her in all her
pouty sultriness in simple shorts
and little tops. "Now •s not the
lime to be timid," expllins Ken·
neth Zimmerman, president of

Pick 3:048
Pick 4:9183
Cards : 9-H, 2-C
8-D; 8-S

PageS

.

Sharp. enlz.sts .

And it's this weekend .that you
will get together wilh all of Y.Our
former classmates for lhal rewuon.
Don't W"!fY about il. Chances are '
you're gomg 10 loolc much younger
than the rest of~· All you have
to do IS keep smiling.

SoftW..,._... .
There w11.1 bo a men'• a- D
and B 10f\boll IOUrlllllleat at the
Rutland Field on Satu~ and, . ·
Sllllllay. Colt for eaay Ia
and
two balls. For more information
contact Rick Stewart at 992-6365
or AI Evans at 992-S84S.

Ite.aftJleble
Tho Middleport Hlp School
Alumni Allociation hal T· lhlrts,
swoatabina aad caps on aa1e
through friday at the following
stores: I«m 219, 'Jbe .MHJd~.,n
DqmbtiCIIl SUliC lltd the Middle·
jlO(t Dairy&gt; ~- Tlie items will
aiao be sold at lhe banquet OD Sat·

Womea's fellowsltip to meet
, G1rcleD dtlb 10 meet
The Meigs County Women's
Tbe
Riverview Garden Club
Fellowship will IJIOCt :Thursday al
will
meet
at lhe home of Delores
7:30 p.m. atlhe Bradford Church
Franli:
at
Tlllnday
at 8 p.m. Mace!
of Christ. Ann Lambert and Linda
Bates will be demonstrating the Barton will speak on "ROles."
making of fame fans. 1be public is
Card show planed
invited ro attend.
A card shower will be held for
C&amp;rl Findling, 40761 SUIIIIIer Road,
Chh:km barbceue
The Racine Volunteer Fire Reedsville, who will celebrate his
· Department will have a chicke11 791h birthday on Thursday.
barbecue on Sunday at .lhe fire staSouthern Board to meet
tion beginning -~ il'a.m. Home·
The
Southem Local Board of
made ice cream will also be sold.
Educatiat will meet Thuraday a1 7
Field Day
)l.m. at the high school.
The POm"eroy Elemen~ PTO
Sports bauquet plaued
is sponsoring field day 011 Friday at
the Meigs Football Jlield. Anyone
The Mei&amp;s Spring Sparta Boostinterested in assisting should COD· ers will hofd a sports banquet on
tact Susie Allbou at 992-6114 or Thursday at 6£~ p.m. in the cafetethe school 8J 992-2710. Rain date ria at Meigs High School. Parents
bring two dishes. Meat, drint and .
.
will be Tuesday, May 28.
rolls will be provided.
· .
Items110111ht
Hymn lin&amp;
•
·
.
·
1be Meigs County Museum is
There
will
be a hymn ~ spon- ·
, A proposal for expenditures of seeking old, new, handmade or
saed
by
the
Rutland
Christian Fe!·· '
~•tie VI B. federal money for spe- · purchased ·models of boats, cars,
lowship
at
Satwday
at
7 p.m. feacial ed~cauon and prc-sch!JOI JI!O" trains, planes or any type otuansturing
The
Narrow
Way
and Chograms m Soulhern Local IS being ponalion for exhibit durin1 Hersen.
Rev.
Robert
E.
Musser
invites
prep.ared by _Joyce Thoren, local 1tage-Weeli:end, Iune 8 and 9.
The Meigs Local School District distrtct coordinator.
lhe
public.
.
The museum also needa pho·
is presently preparing a Tide VI-B
These ~ are made a~allaNe tographs and lllthibit items repreFlow Tbru Project (Education of 10 e.......,., and unnnvt! SCI'VICCII for
·
h 10 shi
the Handicapped Act, Part B PL pre-Tch;t handfcap)ied children sennng eac wn }·
94- 142) for lhe 1991 -92 school
Pearl L Russell, Racine, was a ·
and
to help with
lhe education of
year.
handicapped
chil~n in Southern
guest Molher' s Day weekend of
Project expenditures will Local School Districl
Mr. and Mn. Floyd T. Chapman.
include personnel, instructional
Residents may have input inro
The
former ~enda Russen and . ' ·
Brian S. SbaJp, son of Mr. and
materials and supplies, pupil the proposal by con tacling ¥.rs.
daughter,
Kim, Pickerington, •
Mn. William B. Slu!IP, Reedsville,
tuition, textbooks, and related Thoren at lhe high school, 9 a.m. to enlisted
attended
a
birthday
party for her
in lhe Air Force.
materials, equipment and excess 3 p.m. May 27-31.
.
great
granddaushter,
Madeline
Upon successfully completing
costs. Anyone interested in further ·
·Blake
Cater
on
Iter
fint
birthday
a1
lhe Air Farce's six-weeli: buic mil·
information about the project C. in
the
home
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Matt
J..
itary uaining Ill I atldaod Air Forte
offering suggestions for consideta·
Caner,
formers~
Chapman;,'
·
Base, near San Antonio, Texas,
lion in the project should contact R.
Baltlm&lt;n.
1be
PiliP
allo
enjoyed
S!Jarll is .sc.hec~J!led \1) receive: tec.hCharles Holiday at the Har·
nicaf ll'allllng m th&amp; strategiC atr· boatins at Buckeye Lake where
risonville Elemenrary School, 742!hey were joined by other frieadi. .'
craft llllintenance CIIRiel' field.
3000.
.
· Sharp, a 1988 gmduate of Eastern
High School, will be eanliag
·The Trinity Church of Pomeroy
credits
toward and associates
is now taking orders for homemade
Mrs. CbaifCs · ~bude) McElin ~ science through
ice cream. The ice cream social degree
hinny, Olendalc,
.• formerly of
the
Commuruty
College
of
the
Air
· will be held June 6 and 7.
¥eigs
County,
celelated
her 94th ·
Advanced orders will be taken Force while attending basic an4 birlhday on May 10 with a dinner
technical training schools.
this wedc until Ma 28.
at lhe home of her daughter and
Flavors availab~ are chocolate,
son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Stanley
vanilla, peach, lemon, pineapple,
Potter, aiao of Olendlile.
banana~...suawberry and butterMrs. McElhinny maintains he{
acotch. me price of a quan of ice
Carl Findling, 40761 Sutnner own apartment and she received
cream will be $2. Advance orders Road, Reedsville, will be honored niany cards from friends and relacan be made by calling 992-3777, Thursday wilh a card party on his tives and also from President and
992·3222 or 992-5480.
79th binhday.
•,,
Mn. George Bush.

Meigs golf news

lears

whose nearly dead-white, muk·
lili:e face C011CC111 a depth of emotion onlr_hinted at in the early
scenes. (Uafonunately, lhil is a
wide-screen f'llm, and Leconte's
elegant visual cornJI!IIilions tali:e a
beating in tbe v1deo version .)
GRADE: 3 stan l!l·
. ·
MEMPHIS BELLE (PG·13)
Warner. The old war movies bad a
certain graceless, cbeerleadin1
cbarm. World War U was, aft« all,
'the last good war," a war around
which an entire nation was united
against foes of such monumental
and obvious evil that they had 10 be
confrontc;d. To make such films
today doesn't 111ake much sense
except as a paean 10 a simpler era.
Which explains "Memphis
Belle," I guess. 1be title refers to
the first U.S. Air Forte bl&gt;mber 10
successfully complete 2S missions
over Germany and Nazi-occupied
France and; thereby, finish its tour
of duty.
Direl:tor Michael Caton-Jones
("Scan(la)' 1) tali:es their final mil·
sion - a diffiCult assault 011 a well·
protected target in Bremen - as a
Jumping-off point for what is
mtended as 11 rumination on the
intenictions of a team of men who
have been through a series of life·
threatening crises together. Regrettably, he mutes much of the d!ama
and unden:uts much of the comedy.
GRADE: 2 stan
(Ftbn grading: 4 stats - excellent, 3 Stats- good, 2 stars- fair,
1 srar- poor).

Ohio Lottery

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
u.s. Environ·
mental Pr!)tection Agency says
auto tailpipe emission tests are a
vital part of cleaning tbe air arouod
.cities where dtcy are required.
EPA Adminisuator William
Reilly said Tuesday dial he realizes
the tests are unpopular. But they
are necessary because auto emis·
sions are responsible for half of
urban air pollutiat, he added.
· "I know that inspection and
mainteilance is not a very popular
initiative," he said "We invite lhe
attention and understanding of lhe .
eneral blic." ·
g In ot:io, the tailpipe tests are
required in the Cincinnati and
Cleveland metropolitan areas.
CoaliaHd 011 JN111! 3
adminiauator of the

Committee reco,mmends
approval' of spe~d limit
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A ards on rural interstates where the
Senate committee has recommend- speed Iinrit'has beeit 65 mph since
·
ed for passage a House-approved mid·l9J7. ·
"(We) are alarmed that our rura1
bill lhal would expand the 6S mph
speed linrit to the outsltirts of many interstate hilhways,, which have
been the safest of all Oltio'a highOhio cities.
·
The S~te panel on Thursday ways, are becoming more haz·
also beard a request from lhe State 8rdous and the avemge spooda are
Highway Patrolro hiie an extra 100 increasilig. 'I1Ieae uadilionally safe
roadways are now over represented
Te·senate Highways and in the number of rural fatalities
· Transponslion Committee unani- which occur annuall ," Riee laid.
But he uaced d:e problem to
·mously apprQved a measure lhat
insufticient
numbers of troopers 10
would authorize a 65 .mph syeed
patrol
the
roads
rather lhan higher
limit on an exua 260 miles of mterspeeds.
state highways statewide which
The patrol and the Ohio Depart,now are jJosted at 55 mpb.
ment
of Highway Safety of wllich
Sponsored by Rep. Cliff Sli:een,
it
is
a
part have tali:en a neuual
D·Akron, the bill mainly would
stand
0111he
speed limit bill. A sim·
affect sections of interstates on lhe
ilar
bill
in
lhe
last legislative sesoulsli:irls of cities.
.
· Moinents after the commttt~ sion failed under opposition by lhe
recommended the bill, Pat~OI state's former highway safety
Superintendent T~o.mas. R1ce director.
The bill now awaits a vote by
v01ced concern durmg testimony
on separate legislation about haz- the full Senate.

•

--Local briefs---,
flan lOOth observance Monday
The 1ooih aitnual Memorial Day observance will be held at
lhe~l;':: Church and c;ernetery on Monday all:30 p.m.
g to Dale Colbura, an olllc:er of the Burlinghiun C~·
lei')' Asaoolation, services ha"' been held every y., but one since
1891. Recorda note that more than SOO people attended lhe 1891

service.

Honor pard for lhe service will be from FOCliCy·Ben~U Post
128 Amcril:an Legion. They will be joined by the ~outh of lhe
Modern Woodmen ofAmc!rica for lhe cemelel')' ~ce.
Otat speaker for the I*Ojplllll will be the Rev. Keith Kapple of
Belp~e, with ScoU Kapple and Floyd and Coleen Brlcli:les 10 provide
vocal mu1lc. lnsuumental music will be preaented by Frank
O'Brien and Denver Rice.
Tlte publie Is invited 10 llleod the serviee.
.
COIItillued OD paae 3••

Runaways
taken into
custody here
Two stDlen vehicles were recovered and three runaways from
Uni011rown were ta1cen into custody
in Racine on Monday.
According 10 the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, the three
juveniles bad escaped from the
House of David group hj)me in
Uniontown early Saturday mom·
ing. The subjects bad stolen a vehicle and were going 10 Florida atlhe
time of their capture.
One of lhe JUVeniJe4 bad apparently called a girlfriend, who diai:ouraged the youngsters from
going 10 Florida. The trio tbell got
b11 tbe West Virginia Turnpike and
abandoned lhe IIOien velticle·when
it ran out of gaolioe.
Walkiag a short disrance, tbe
JI'OUP tbell SIOie a 1989 Ford truck
near Olugow, W.Va. 8d CIIIIIIO
Racine. AI Racine, two ol the IUJI.
jects 1101e a Ford IICCift oued by
'ferry McNieli:les ofl!lm S1n1et.
McNictles and a 6Wd board a
noiae and oblerved .... pair drivlna
away in lhe car. 'lbey chued the
car and ended up 011 the Ohio River
banli: at lhe old ferry Iandi• where
the pair then fled on foot.
1be two were apprebeoded and
Racine officer Don Dye took t1te
subjecll iiiiO ~&gt;' and D.-port·
ed them 10 the Mellis Countv Ilil.
Coatlaued oa JN111! 3

POPPY. DAYS • Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler hal declared Thunday, Ftlday and Sat·
urdly as "poppy days" Ill Pomeroy. Poppy sales
Win be eODJdacted by Drew Webster Post 3!1 of
the America• Lesl011._Pl'oseat tor tbe proclama·

tloa mre, l·r, Poppy t'rlacess, AJbley ·Han~;
. Mayor Seyler; Little Miss Poppy, Brittany row. ,
ers; Jr. Miss Poppy, Amanda Fetty; Sr. Poppy '
.Queen, Iva Powell, Co-chairman; and VIda
Davis, Co-chairman.

Medicaid plan should not be .
included in bl!dget: ·voinf;»vjch
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ...:. A assessments to generate more MedHoule plan 10 exuact hundreds of icaid matching doUars.
· millions of new Medicaid dollan
Even if approved, it could tali:e
from the federal government may . 100 long and lhe budget has to be
have merit · but should not· be passed before a Iuly 1 fiSCal dead· included in tbe state budget, Gov. line the governor and Budget
George Voinovich says.
D;re::tor Oreg Browning said in an
Voinovich said Tuesday it interview after a nevis conference
would be 100 risky because !here is -on 8nother topic.
.
no guarantee lhe federal govern·
Tbe House version of
ment will go al011g with the plan ro Voinovich's bud!let, now~ pending
increase hospital indigent care in the Senate, anucipates :Ul9 mil-

NO INJURIES • No lajlll'les were re~
lila~ IICddelt llell' Raclllt OD Tlltlday.
Rac111e ......... Fire Departme1t ~to'
tile ICellt ol tile wredlllll Mllel Roa ~bl!ll 1

addili~caid

lion in
fundi
in the first y- of lhe biennium
, and $314 million in lhe second.
Medicaid pays the srate $2 to $3
(or each doUar it assesses hospitals
for Ohio's J{ospltal Care Assurance
Program. the House bill increases
assessments, now O.OS percent of
all patient costs, to a ceiliag of .5
percenL
•
Ohio: s Legislative Budget
Coatlaued •
3

van drlftll by Daw IUD lilt 1M tl;p:ld 1 lllepbolle pole. 'Jbe IIUidelt II diJIIder ID.... IptlOI by tbe Melp-GalUI Poll, Stlte Hl&amp;11way
Pltrol. (Sntloel hoto by Deaail M. Wolfe)
•

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