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                  <text>Tips for gardening

Program uses agriculture to teach math and science

By READER'S DIGEST PO.. AP Ntwlleii&amp;Urel
High-quality ganlen tools can last a lifetime with proper ~·
Tbe steel beads on hoes, shovels, rakes, 'f""e•, trowels and packs
sbould be kept clean, sharp and rust-free; rotary mower blades .
sboiJid be s~ llld baJanc;ed every few months.
.
Here ..-e tips to help you ready your tools for the gankning season:
CLEANING
- Clean tools after each use and store them in a dry place.
Sc;rape off mud and din with a puny knife or similar tool, and wash
off the remaining dirt with a hose.
.
- Rcnove rust with a wire brush, sandoaller. or a rust-remQVIDg
chemical, then apply oil with a brush or raS· to cl~ and oil a hand
tool in one easy optnllion, fill a S-gallon bucket wtth sand and add
used oil drained from the crankcase of your .mower or car, 'rllfl!SI
the tool into the oil-soaked sand several nmes. The blade wtll
emerge cleari and oily. Repcst the process occasionally during gardening SC8SOII to pn:vent rusL
SHARPENING
Keep cutting and digging edges sharp to make gardening easier
and to pn:vent possible breakage ca,used by excess pressure m tool

~ou can sharpen shears, sickles, pi'ulling knives and other

cutting tools by grinding, filit:tg. or by using special sharpening
stones such as a whetstone or slipstone.
- If a cutting edge is very duD or nicked, it should be powerground or ftled to n:move the nicks and restore the bevel. Knives,
scissors or axes should be finished to a sharp edge with a whetstone

'
I

or sli~sbamen digging tools. place the tool in a vise and use a
coarse 10-inch ftle to restore the original edge - usually a 45degree bevel. On flies. the bevel should be;, on the outside edge of
· the blade. A 6(klegn:e bevel is best (or general use; a.30-degree
bevel for cuUing .heavy weed growth. On hoes and shovels, sharpen
the comers as well as the cuUing edges.
·
-It's very important 10 keep ~es sharp. ~lamp the head of the
ax, edge up, in a vise. Use a medium~ut mill file, never a power
grinder, which may ruin the blade's temper. H~ld the fil~ ~t
against the head and draw it upward toward the cutllDg edge, lit'llDg
off It the end of each stroke. File both surfaces, rounding them to a
convex proftle. Retain this pror.Je to the comers of the blade; don 'I
taper die corners. Check the edge by loolring down its length. Bright
· spots indicate dull areas. Keep filing until the edge looks almost
invisible. Finish by honing the edge with _a !Q'!"d slipsto~e. Slide
the stone along one side and then the other m a circular monon.
SHARPENING ROTARY MOWER BLADES
Rotary mower blades should be sharpened and balanced twice a
season or at least frequently enough to retain the original cuttingedge ~gle. (A dull blade will tear the grass instead of cutting it and
Wiil also sttain the engine; a badly nicked blade ~an·cause ~bra­
lions; an improperly sharpened blade may not provide enough lift to
pick up the grass and cut die lawn evenly.)
GARDEN TOOLS
To sharpen. follow these steps:
- Always disconnect the spark plug or unplug the power coni
ftrst. Grasp the blade in a gloved hand or _with a heavy rag ~d
loosen the securing nuts or bolts. If a boll sucks, apply penetratmg
oiiiD the bolt and rap the wrench with a hammer.
·
- Remove the blade and check the stiffener for cracks or bends.
If you need to replace the stiffener, use a manufactw;er's.recommended pan - a bent or homemade part can ~ause vtbratton lhat .
will dama~ the engine.
·
- Oamp the blade in a vise and shatpen with a medium-cut flat
file along the original angle of the cutting edge. File in one direction
, only - toward the edge. You can also use an electric-drill shatpening auachment, available in hardware stores.
.
- Use a screwdriver or knife as a pivot through the center hole
·of the blade to balance it Check the balance one way, then flip the
blade over and check again. If the same end of the blade drops consistently, file some metal from die rear of the heavy end .(not from
the cuUing edge). This wiU lighten the blade without harming the
edge.
· .._, ____ .. both ways, ..,.......,
-'---'1 •t.
· malring sure
·
- If the blade IS .......,,......
the lifts point upward toward the deck when the mower is right side
up.
Note: A bent blade will make a ragged cut, may ICalp the lawn in
spots and die vibratiOns may cause serious engine damage, so it's .
best to re lace it

·Patrol cites driver

3 a"ested

GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell

area man was cited by the Gallia-

Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol following a two-vehicle
accident early Saturday in Addison
Township.
Ticketed for DWI and failure to
obey a stop sign was Larry B.
Mitchell, 24, 252 Skidmore Road.
The patrol s11id Mitchell was
southbound 01) Township Road 329
(Oliver Road) at 6 a.m. when he
reportedly failed to stop for the
stop sign at the intersection with
County Road 1 (Addison Pike) and
struCk an eastbound vehicle driven
by Kristi L. Lemley, 22, Rt. 1, Gal-

May 26,1891

Pomeroy-Mddleport o·mpo11a, Ott Point Plie•nt. WV

Pltg1 08 Sunday Tlm11 Santlnel

· CHAMPAIGN Ill (AP) _ At said M8rilyn Querry learning &lt;:oor·
an urban school~. De. die lleart• dinaJor It die schooL
of Amcric:a'l flnobelt.llllldents are
"Now they tnow more about
·
•
·
· u1 '
d th '
· ·
conceotnllng ~.a diffen:nt venton :
tll!'ecl:, ey are exctted
of the ~ R s. ~ Rootworm, . t ~ . ea. It matc:' Jearn.
crop
li"""'RatIIJd
~h.
Teachen
diesoil
Fraaldin
Middle !"g
mg"basic skills a lot more mflnlltSchool received a $56 000 grant
Teachers develoP. classroom
from die state to develoj, a one-of· materials for this ptlot program
-ki d
· 1 ... ·
with th.e help of local farmers
a n. cumc:u IIID,wu semester indu
andocberex
•
::::mgslifi~=R= tech·
s!k~a sixth-grade~- ·
"W:n: ~die rlcheUpic*· ic, class, for inlllllee, warched bee·
· th
ld but · lrids ties b~ a ybean leaf
. . 10 dine
al ~ m
e wor •
our •
the
of
.
~ad httle awaro~ess. about ·~~ . ~. a ganlen &amp;r=1 bean.
tmportance and die jobs ll creates,
DICSSige. plants can be bred to
Coatlnued trom D•l

10

• .••
BJg.

Richard D. Rippe, president of
the National Association of Business Economists, qreed. sa · it
was ''one more hint, along
a
few olher pieces of data. that the
recession may be ending in the near
future."
Rippe said the CORIIellSIIS of the
58 profesSional economic forecast~
ers in his association's survey
that the recession would end .
. soon." In f~~Ct.ll percent said it
aln:ady had ended and anOiher 60
pertent said it would hit bottom in
the quarter endiDJ Juae 30.
·
, At the SIII1C tune, 93 percent of
the forecasters said the recovery
would be slower than average and
Micbael K. Evans, '-1 of a Wash·
inf..oo. economic forecasting ftrm,
Slld the slight decrease in unem·
ploymenl bei!Cfit claims suppor1S
that forecasl.

=

.. was

"We should have had a sharper
fall," he said. "The fact tbat we
didn't suggests lhat it's going to.be
a very anemic n:covery."
Still, all categories in the
durable goods n:port posted gains
except transportallOR.
Excluding aircraft. non-defense
capital goods orders - a baroniCter
of industry plans to expand and
modernize - rose 3.5 pertent, the
fust advance since January. ,
Defease orders, which had fallen 14.1 .-=cot in M.ch, n:bound·
ed 9.4 percent jump, to $7.4 billion.
But even excluding the spurt in that
category, overaU orders advanced
2.S percent
' Orders for electronic and other
electric:al equipment shot up 11.0
percent, to $17.4 billion, ilfter a
l3.S percent decline a month esrfi.

.

S\Mrl¥

Sl.OO IAIIAIII lllllilfr MSIIU

-

I

ITAU fAIM

A

lfUUIAMCI

CALL ME.

•

State Farm
lnsurnnc..-c Companies
Hufl'lt' t&gt;lfat.T!': Bloomln)llrm, l llinui~

Like a good neighbor. Slate Fann

is there.

SPECIAL FACTORY
SALE CARS!

'

EDWARD
·SCISSORHANDS

PG 13

HOjiEk\lJ)\~
IAMII•

JOHN'S MONUMENT

1991 GRAND PRIX 4 DR.
Power wlndowa, door locka.
aette, tilt, cruiae.

AS LOW AS"••

C81·

S12, 900

1991 GRAND AM GT
.
2 D~.

Qued IV engine, tilt, crul1e. caa·
aette, rear diCk lid, apoller. ·

t:.v.t;.

WAS 114,1:0..,

Sl 0, 990

1990 CADILUC SEDAN

DEVILLE

Choo1e from 3 low mileege unitl.
119,741 NEW

S191 900

OILY .

1991 TRANS AM GTA

Today' a muacle car- 6.7 Litre V-8abaolutely loaded, 8,200 low mile•.
$14,000 . .
WAS S19,990

. BDUCIDTO

Sl 7' 88 8

Hospital news
We Have A good Selection On Display
In 6 Different Colon. Marken &amp; Vasts.

••

wua

4 79 Jeckaon Pitt•
GAI,LIPOLIB
614·441·3837

314 hat Mlin St.
POMEROY
614-182·1212

AND ITS ON SALE SUNDAY, MAY 26TH ONLY!!

tHE PIICE IS

MONDAY, JUNE 3

POlWl614-446.06H
-·••"••noN
AND I.D.

....., .

•

TAWNEY STUDIO
tttRCMDAVL

GAWPOUS, 01.

ONE .WEEK ONLY!!
1990 CHEVROLET 454 SS .

PICKUP

Super towing pickup, looal owner paid 118,800
la'st year and hae kept hla truck in storage. Less
then 150 actual m!l••·

Sl .
41 888
IEDUCED TO

BUY ONE AND GET ONE FIEEI

See Marc Carman, Don Carter, Harland Wood,
Hoyt Mullins, Cindy Epling or Greg Smith Today.

SPECIAL
Monday. May 27 thru .Sunday, Juria 2

PHOTOS
5 MINUTES

(RIDS JUNE JID)

A dellclou• SUNDAE with vanilla Ice creme.
hot caramel. hot chocolate. whipped creme,
I'

PASSPORT

Regional
Rebate on New '91
LeSabrn PLUS Up Yo
Sl ,000 National .
Rtbatt - 14 In Stock

McClure's Family Rulaurant

TURTLE
,.fu;.~~ A~0 · SUNDAE!
tVG.QYaoor ·L.li'ES ou~
.

FOI GAUnUS &amp; POMEROY

$400

BULAVILLE PIKE - GALLIPOLIS

t&amp;~;,

.DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES

SPECIAL

STOP BY AND SEE USeUST DATIS INGUVID

Gen. Hartinger Pkwy
MIDDLEPORT
614-912-5248

CHUCK WAGON SANDWICH oa
CHICK~N PAniE SANDW~, $14.9
WitH MEDIUM FliNCH FillS

o•r $J79

.Clear tonight.
Wednesday, high in 80s.
Partly sunny.

Page4

•
Val. G, No. 11
Canrigllted , ..,

-·
Pomeroy-Middlepor:t, Ohio, Tuesday, May 28, 1891

1 Secllona. 10 p.,._ 25 oenla
A lluldiMdllo lno. Newapa!*

Eastern board secures·operating expenSes loan
'
'A loan of $175,000 to be Used

Debbie Weber as head teacher for He also discussecl placement of School Athletic Association was approved was the Software Service
for operational expenses of the Riverview Elementsry sChool and special education units for next .authorized, a waiver of tuition for Agreement with the Southeastern
Eastern Local School District for Ron Hill as head teacher for yesr
Ulrich Hofsass for the ·1991-92 Ohio Voluntary Education Coooerthe remainder of the 1990-91 fiiCal Chester Elementary School, both
The board approved 20 days school year was approved, and stu· ' alive for the period of Jl!ly I, 1'991.
yesr will be secured by the board for the 1991·92 school year.
extended lime for Janice Weber, dent accident coverage was acc;eP.t· through June 30, 1992.
from Fanners Bank.
·
High School Principal Charles borne economica instructor for the ed from Guarantee Trust Ltfe
It was agreed to advertise for
Tbe Eastern Board of Education Moore reponed on a football camp 1991-92 school year and 30 days Insurance Co . through Brogan bids on bakery products, 'dairy
authorized the tteasurer at a meet- for grades 5 through 9 to be held for Brian Windm, vocational agri· Warner Insurance Service.
products, gasoline. diesel fuel, fuel
10 hanTbedleloanthe July 11·15 at Eastern High School. . culture instructor. A communica- ·
inoang
Th~th
.,
Y
nighBankt
The
board
authorized
panicipa·
oil,
oil and grease, tires and tubes.
l
wt .-armors
·
He also gave a report regarding the lion was read from the Eastern tion in the Ohio School Boards
Carolyn Ritchie. cafeleria super·
will be secured for a two year peri- current status of die SVAC.
High School band Boosters thank- Association Workers' Compensa· visor, gave the board an update
od and is to be psid back in equal
Graduation was announced for ing the board for assistance in the lion Group Rating Ptpgram for Jan. regarding the cafeterias throughout
instaDmentswithinterest.
6:30p.m. on June 2 at the high CountryUSAfundraiser.
l, 1992 to Dec. 31, 1992. Also the district, and the board com·
. Hired during the meeting was school by Supt. Richard D. Smith.
Membership in the Ohio High

.

mended her for improving the
operations this fl&amp;'l school year.
Tia Pratt was accepted as a
tuition student for next year, and ·
the board approved an agreement
for services from the Educational
Technology Setviccs.
Next board meeting wiU be held
on June 26 in the high school cafeteria

Attending wen: Ray Karr, pn:sident, Charles Knight, vice prcsident, and members, Bill Hannum,
1. 0 . McCo v. and 1·1111 smt'th .

receive Middleport Pom~roy :Alumni events draw
·
Alumni scholarship awards more than 350 Saturday
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SenliDel News Stiff
Recognition of Nan Moore, a
19 I9 graduate of Middleport High
School, and the presentation of
seven scholarship awards were
among tho hilhlights or the 1991
Middleport Alumni Association
reunion held Saturday at Meigs
Jullior H!gh SchooL
.
Mrs. Moore. to whom the alu!n·
ni program was·dedicated, retired
in 1964 after teaching 36 years in
the Middleport school system. Her
·first 9 years beginning in 1928
were in die elememary grades, and
the next 27 in die high school.
A plaque and an arm bouquet of
.roses were presented to Mrs.
·Moote on behalf of the Alumni
~ 41Pil'ioa .))r. AI ~ ••1J181·
..-..r c~reniOiiiea. Sbe 'Was also
~led a t1oral arrangement for
being the oldest g~uate at the
bl!nquet.

.......-N
. . . were reponed an d
o lnJurtes
there was slight damage to both
vehicles.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS Carl Alley, Racine: f:Iarold
McDaniel, Pomeroy; · Rtcba~d
Wamsley, Racine; and Lena Heil·
man, Pomeroy.
FRIDAY DISCHARGES -.
~lene Lee, Billy Bn:wer, Judith
Smith, Racinda Farley and Kenneth
Clark.

Indy 500
race Sunday

Se~ven

•

;

GALLIPOLIS - Craig D.
AliD
Durham, 30, Vinton, was arn:sted
and incarcerated for dismderly conduct by intOxication by the Gallipolis Police Department He was lalu
released on an F-4 summons.
!\
Frank T. Radvanyi, 32, Gallipolis, was arrested and incarcerated 1 - - -.....,.,...,., .....-----lP~G!........~
for disorderly conduct after a warn446·1
ing by the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department He later posted bond,

Pick 3:357
Pick4: 7547
Cards : ~-H, K·C
3-D; Q·S

com

CIIOII •0111111

T f1q

Mears cops

Stores.com

c- el 1IIJnl An. I Sl8te St.
OIL
Phone 446-UlO, ~~ U6-4SII

FAMII• (oJMifl• Wi!HU\

Ohio Lottery

i.?"

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

u.oa IAIIAII •n•rs y.,..., I

·

have natural reiislllnCe to m-as.
the morning. When something
"There~ SOIIICIIIin8 in die plant ~~ to be done, we ~ve to do!
that doesn t smell good or taSte tt
.•
,
""""to die bugs, so .they woa't cal
Students VISited other farms and.
Keviti Steffey, an entomologisl qricuJiural bttsiMues in die coun·;
from the Uni~·of Dlinoi.s told ty while ~(¥hen cqanized a sepa-·•,___ , 'It's . spmac
. h.'you ra•••..,..
....:....•··-•
~.,.,_ at u"'.... -hoot ._
u"' c.......
_ _ ........
might prefer somet!ili'l else." . .
~t 300 sov!Mts are involvedi ::
At a nearby Fnto Lay .facility,
Classe~ are a l~t more. l!n:.
~orker Alan Mowe9' showed because thu~gs ar_e ~n r~~hst~c _
stxth-graders where hts com~y terms, not JUSt ftcuon, sa•~ :
that eventuaUy will be eifbth·grader Jeremy ~artlOtll,.
~ mto anact•
.
uSJ~g algebra to ~e!C""UIC what:
lf.1C?'I.eat. a
chip east of portion of a farmer s lliCOIIIC comes ::
the MISSISilppt, the corn probsbly from corn.
•
is cominf out of this part of Ill•·
1n the school's computer lab, the ~
noi5," said Mowery, claiming lhat boy used govemmen\ statistics 10 ..
Frito Lay pays its farmers ~mi· · calculate corn and soybean produc· ;:
urn price for their crops. "1bey've tion and cash income of Illinots 1'
responded by bringing us top quali· farmers. He also produced a graph!
ty com."
showing the importaliCe of corn.in :
Dennis Riggs, a local farmer, various COWllies.
showed the students his com and
"I've really seen a bushel, and 1'::
soybean storage bins and gave know whal'il looks like," said}
them a chance to hold baby chicks Banlotti. •'I know now how com- ~
and a lamb. He also gave them plex agriculture is and bow much;.
som~ insight into the business of
money is involved." •
. ;
farming.
.
Querry. the school s learmng - .
· "My wife and I nm !his farm," coordinator, hopes the Fr31)klin::;::
Riggs said. "We don't stop at five program will becOme a model foro'clock and start again at eight in other schools across the coun~~t. .::.

eril.- - - - - ·
446 4524

'

ITH

BUICK-PONTIAC
GAWPOUS, OliO

446·2282

. SCHOLARSHIPS AWARP~
Five scholarships of $550 from
the Susan Park Scholarship Fund
were awarded during the banquet
to the s6ns or daughters or grandsons or Jlf'llnddaughters of Middlepan High School graduates.
Receiving the awards were
Maurisa Dawn Nelson, daughter of
Don Nelson. class of 1967; Darcie
Malinda Wolfe, daughter of the late
·Mary Lou Teaford wolfe, 1966;
Joseph Paul Smith, grandson of
Lincoln E. Smith, 1953; Phillip
Don Swjsher, son of Elaine Davis
Preece, 1968, and Mark Walter
Crooks, -son of ·walter Grene
Crooks, 1958.
According to a report from th~
Park Scholarship COIJimittee, that
fund now has a balance of
$38,324.21. Only interest from the
fund is used for scholarships.
Paul Joseph Smith was also the
reci{'ient of the Crawford-Gray
Lewts Scholarship of $350. That
scholarship was established many
years ago by Dr. Edward W. W.
Lewis, class of 1934, in honor of
Dr. Richard H, Crawford, H. Bur·
dette Gray, Mr. and Mrs. George
H. Lewis, and Judith Andress
·Lewis and Dr. Lewis' eight sib·
.lings.
Tbe fust recipient of the McComas-Moore Scholarship established
last year, went to Heather Pullin,
New Haven, daughter or Steve
Pullen, MHS class of I967. The
amount of the scholarship was
$1,000.
All of the scholarshiD recipienrs
with the exception or Mark Walter
·Crooks who resides in Maryland
were pn:sem for the banquet. ·
BANQUET PROOkAM
Approximately 275 alumni and
,guests attended the banquet ~nd
dance. The dinner prepared by
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, was served by the
youth group of dte Middlepon First
Baptilt Church. Mike Gerlach had
the invocation.
Mrs. Lee McComas was pre·sented a plaque in memory of her
late husband. long-time Middleport
educator. and there was special
aclalowlodpnent of Harry Feath·
eutone, clasi of 1948, whole compaliy 'designed and manufactured
die Mtt:nna that baCked down scud
milsiles in die Gulf war 80 that the
Patriot missiles could destroy their
. ~~~ were presented to Dana
Walburn of Oregon, the alumnus
wbo traveled the farthest to attend
'the bsnquet. and Judy Arnold, 1991
Alumni Association president, in
appreciation for work on the
~ reunion.
BrrM,,MrJ. Arnold other 1991

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Virginia Smith Heilman.
Sentlael NeWJ Stiff
Pomeroy, Evelyn Heilman Midkiff,
Despite the heat and humidity Quartz Site, Arizona, Oscar QuaDs,
~aturday evening nearly 350 Pomeroy, Harlan Wehrung and
Pomeroy High School alumni and -Aileen Wehrung, Pomeroy, and
guests gathered in die Meigs High Mary E. Chapman, Pomeroy, class
School cafeteria for die annual ban- of 1932: Catherine Raub Welsh,
quet and dance of the Pomeroy Pomeroy, Fred Crow, Syracuse,
Alumni Association.
Helen Williamson Boster, GallipoA feature of the reunion was a lis, Lollise Bearhs, Pomeroy, class
tribute to the late James Diehl, of 1933. ·
Wilhamine Smith Mai~V, Westlong-time principal of Pomeroy
. High School. and an acquaintance erville, Victor Hysell, Pomeroy,
of many of the alumni attending. Rachael Elberfeld DoWI)ie, Racine,
The program book featured a pic· class of 1934;. Dorothy L. Swank
ture of the popular Mr. Diehl along Crispin, Westerville, Genev11 Webwith a commentary on his career in ster Haney, Findlay, Evelyn Roush
the Pomeroy schools.
Seelig, Westerville, William
Other htghlights included the Grucser, Middleport, Ed Baa- and
recognition of reunion classes, Ruby Rice Baer, Pomeroy, class of
1921, 1926, 1931, 1936, 1941, 1935.
.
1946 1951 1956 1961 and 1965
Edward and Jeanne Hmes
•
'
..
•
'
• Lie iler Col bus Mildred lh1
,, ~nd. die a. f)'ardang .Cif l~l! ,Bob ~R ~ • ·~um . S •. .... Dl !•
RO'tieni SChOiiarahips. ·
·
acme,
~• · ut.un
xo.. ,
Given special recognition was . Pomeroy,
Fell Marsball, Now
Mayo Crary Mora of the class of Haven, W. Va.. lda WaddcU·Cmp1921, die oldest graduate attending, er, Kirkersvill~, Joan ~ &lt;:asto,
and Linda Reuter Barber of Syracuse, Ehzabeth Williams
Anchorage, Alaska, who traveled R~. Syracuse, Margaret Ne&amp;'JO
the farthest. ·They were presented Davts, Athens, Emma Ebersbach
1991 Christmas ornaments.
Clatworthy·, Middleport, Artie
The scholarships of $600 each Ebersbach and Elizabeth Duffy.
were awarded to Aaron Sheets, Pomeroy, class ofl936.
Meigs High School graduate and
Beuna Jay Casy, Columbus,
CotyT.Boothe agraduatoofHan· Dorothy Yost Smith, Racine,
&amp;:~~ RECOGNITION • Tbe 1991 MHS AlamBI Re1111lon
nan Trace High School. Sheets is Corde,lia ~urtis Bentz, Florida,
was tl
eo Mrs. N• Moore, a 1919 gradaate 8lld lolla-tlme
the son Of Jennifer and James Franklin Rizer, Pomeroy, and Paul
sclloll Iacher. Mrs. Moon, who retired In 1964 after teadalng In
Sheets and Boothe is the son of Carmichael, South Webster, Mar·
tile Middleport KbooliiYitem for 3ti yeirs, was preseated a plaque
Coty Boothe, and the grandson of garo~ Th~mas Ba_iler,. Pomeroy,
•d 111 arm bouquet ol rG&amp;es. She also recei~ed a floral arrangeson of Olin Boothe, Pomeroy. and Sylvta Heilman Midlriff, Pomemy,
ment In reropltlon of being die oldest graduate attending.
the late Henrietta lhle Boothe. To class of 1937.
qualify to apply for one of the
Ruth Hazelton Yo~ng, Mid&lt;!Jeofficers recopnzed were Jerry van Cunningham. Lima. Charles scholarships, students must be the port, Helen Spencer Rife, Cheshire,
Inwagen, vace president, Carol Entsminger, South Charleston, W. son or daughter or the grandsm or Milton Houdashelt. Gallipolis,
King Brewer, secretary, Joseph A. Va.: Gene Harris Columbus, Janet granddaughter of a Pomeroy High James Guinther, Waynesville, Ziba
Young,trreasurer, and Kathy McEI· Harris, Columbus, Mildred Mosley, School graduate.
Midkiff, Pomeroy. class or 1938.
hinny Hood, decoration chairman
SL Albans, W. Va., Dorothy Stew·
Master of ceremonies for the
Thomas Smith, Columbus,
Officers elected for 1992 were an White, Roscommon, Mi., Chel banquet was Charles Kitchen who Grave Winebrenner Jarvis, Hunt·
Iva Stewan Sisson, president, Pat Rice, Atlanta, Ga.. 1940.
also Jed die group in sinjing of the ington, W. Va., Dorothy Curti1
Michael Arnold, vice president,
Bill Diles. Athens. Rosalie Rice Alma Mater and "The Purple and .Sheets, Pomeroy. Charles Carpet,
Diane Van Cooney Lynch, secre- French, Worthington, Goldie the White."
Kirkersville, class of 1939.
tary' Gail Stumbo Hovatter, trea- Gilmore, Pumeroy, Nina Haddox,
Officers
elected
for
next
year"s
Lawrence Leonard, Pomeroy.
surer, and Margie Harris Blake, Hollywood, Fla., Clarice Gibbs reunion wen: 'Bn:nda Strauss Mor- Harold
Heilman, Bellefon~&amp;ine,
Susan Morris Baker, and Marilyn Krautter, Pomeroy, Bettr Brown ris, president; Mary Scott Wise, ~gela Lewis Houdashelt GallipoStumbo Meier, decoration commit- Lamben, ReedsviUe, Lots McEl- first vice president, and Judy lis, class of 1940.
.
tee.
'
hinny. Middleport, William Reich· Wehrung Werry second vice presiMargaret
Thomas
Mtller,
Door prizes were awarded to man, Chattanooga, Tenn., Jean dent.
'
· Columbus, Robert Jay. Columbus.
Raymond (Cui/) Allensworth, Gor- Rogers, Oak Harbor, Joan Roush
'
Eddie
Buffington
had
the invo- Roben Wolfe, St..Petersburg, .Fla.
don Harris, Bob Mitch. Mary Russell, Reynoldsburg, Walter cation and benediction for the ban· Don E. Mu~en, Middlepott, Wilma
Mitch, Carole Anderson, Emelyn Smith, Columbus, DeUa Sommers, quet. The Gary Stewart Quintet Eynon Retber, Racine, W. M.
Scarberry, and Gene Grate. Esther Ravenna, Ruth Tygrett, Point provided music for dancing.
Riggs, Texas, Janet Turner ~oush,
Jackson Johnson of Delaware who Pleasnt, W. Va., Robert Tompkins,
ALUMNI ATI'ENDING
Apple Creek, Joseph Ohhnger
won $125 in a cash drawing donat- Towson, Md., Marjorie Miller · Pomeroy alumni attending the Columbus, Richard B. Elberfeld,
ed her winnings to the McComas- Vanderhoof, Marion, Bob Welte, banquet and dance were:
Hamilton, Laura Mae Hartung ·
Moore Scholarship Fund..
Denver, Col., Rowena Autherson
Maye Crary Mora, Pomeroy,
Music for the dance which fol· Johnson, Columbus, Sylvia Rice, class
of 1921; Maria Slrinner Foslowing the dinner was provided by Atlanta. Ga.. class or 1941.
ter,
Pomeroy, 1922; Virgie Meier,
George Hall at the otgan.
Nelle Childs Bahr. Middleport, Aleron, 1924; Katheryn-Bailey
MHS ALUMNI TIIERE
Henry Clatworthy, Middleport, Scott,
RaCine, Irma Hood ThompAmong those alumni attending Robert Mitch, Wheelinl!• W. Va., son, Henton,
W. Va.; Lucille JiviTheodore T. Reed, Jr., 66, of
the reunion were: Nan Moore, Mid- Ken McElhinney, Mtddleport,
den
Swacthammer,
Mason,
W.
141 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy,
dleport, class of 1919; Fairie Jo~ A. Young, Pomeroy, 1942;
Kennedy, Middlepon. 1924; Nellie WiUwn Guthrie, Middlepon, Patri· Va., 1925; Edwin Webrung, MI. prominent Meigs County banker,
Zerkle, Middleport, 1925; Ruth cia DeVol Kloes, Bidwell, Mary Angel, Oregon, Nonga F. Roberts, died unexpectedly Sunday, May
Arnold, Middleport, Eugene Seines Mitch, Wheeling, W. Va., Pomeroy, I927; Charles Winebren- 26, 1991, at Ripley, N.Y.
. Mr. and Mrs. Reed were returnErlewine, Long Bottom, Edgar Marjorie Diles MitcheU, Athens, I . ner, Marietta, Cecil Heilman,
ing from South Hadley. Mass.
Tuckerman, Athens; 1926; Kather- Wilfard Ebersbach, Chester. Rowe· Pomeroy, I929.
Mary Kathryn Baer Roush, where they had gone for the SOth
ns Warren Young, Pomeroy. 1943.
ine Swanson, Middleport. 1927.
Racine,
Charles Gloeckner, Jack· reunion or Mrs. Reed's class at
John Mayer, Grove City, 1944;
Ruth Anderson, Middleport,
sonville,
Fla., Genevieve Welker Mount Holyoke College.
Charles King, Pomeroy, Gordon Harry Clark, Minersville, Roben F.
Well,
Pomeroy,
Lula Russell
Since 1962 Mr. Reed bas served
Harris, Columbus, and ln:ne Lam- Ginther, UJ?per Arlington, 1945;
Hampton,
Pomeroy,
Dorothy as pr~sident and chief executive
bert, Columbus, 1931; Leona !tic hard Bailey. Doris Barker Bai·
Erlewine Bailey. S)lringfield, Max- ley, Middleport, Maxine Thomas Winebrenner Whaley, Shade, Bar- officer of the Farmen Bank and
ine Coals Gaskill, Middleport, Balser. Mansfield, Patricia Karr bara Elberfeld Lytle, Chillicodie, Savings Co., PIMneroy. He joiaed
I 934; Mildred Long, Middlepon, Bauer. Dover, Kathryn Russell Evelyn Qualls Woolfolk, Hunting· the bank in July_ l9SO llld prior to
I93S; Lois Diles Busb, Columbus, Evans, Middleport. James Hawley, ton, W. Va., Geneva Duerr Haller· be named president served u vice
Clifford Cunningham, Lima, Sebring. Fla.. Louise Glaze Rad· man, Cincinnati, Olen Harrison, pn:sidenl and assistant ¥ice presiCbarl68 Gordon, Groveport, Robert ford, Pomeroy, Freda Darst Rus- Pomeroy, Florence Smith, dent He wu elected a direc:IOI' in
Pomeroy, Miry Conway Mosllman,
Kina. Middleport, Jean Lama sell. Spring6eld. Alfred Scarberry, Gallipolis, and Jim Hazelton. 1957. He is.a past chairman of
Group 7, Ohio Bankers Aasocia·
.
Moore, Middlepon, Mary Harris, Gallipolis, 1946.
Pomeroy,
class
of
193
I.
Coatlnued OD paae 3
Condnuecl oa )lale 10
_Columbus, James Stoneking.
'
Akron, Eugene Schaaf, Upper
Arlington, 1936.
Phyllis Diles Jividen. Athens,
Dwight Russ, Athens, 1937; HarOld
ing as Education orricer of the theme of the banquet atlellded by
By JULm E. DILLON
Hubbard. Middleport, 1938; Betty
Ohio
Division of Wildlife high· nearly 400 llumni and giiCillllld a
Seatlael
News
SWI'
Allensworth, Groveport, Raymond
liahted
the 1991 Racine Southern red, white and blue color acbomo
Allensworth, GRoveport; Maxine
Selectim
of an alumni ldng and ·Alumni Baaquot beld Saturday was used in die dccorldons
the
Bennett, Columbus; Charles queen, awarding of a ICholarship, nisht at Southern High School.
Cbarle1
W.
Hayman
Gymnasium
Brooks, Mansfield, Martha Robson and a talk by' a graduate now &amp;erv· ·
"God Bloas America" wu the where die bulquet and dsnce were

'

Nice, Pomery, Wanda Jacobs
Eblin, Pomeroy, Margaret Quick
Cottrill, Syracuse. William car:
man, Fair Oaks, Calif., Lorin~
Grueser Arnold, Pomeroy. Betty
Hoffner Martin, Columbus, Evelyn
Mayer Gilmore, Pomeroy, Eva
Jane Simpson Wolfe, Olmsted
Falls, Paul Tedrow, Wellston, Rutl)
Thornton Reill!lan. Ambler, Pa.;
Lucretia Kasper Smith, Pomeroy,
Geroge Carper, Pomeroy, James N.
Roush, New Haven, W. Va.,
Charles Lewis, Pomeroy. Clifford
Carman, Columbus, Roger Morgan, Athens, Betty Bearlu Spencer,
Pomeroy, Maxine Casto Owens,
Pomeroy, Paul Karr, Long Bottom,
Betty Maag Reibel, Pomeroy',
Althea Reibel Strong,.Wilkesville,
Bernice Stone Theiss, Racine,
Mary Lisle, SyrtiCIIIC, clas of 1941.
Wanda Potts Rizer, Pomeroy,
~d5
,~ irignia Baer Deavers,
Re
• elliS oll942.
Wolfe, St Petersburg, Fla.. Mario_rie Reuter
Leonard, Pomeroy, Mary· Wiggins
Bentz. Pomeroy. Belva Young
Glaze, Pumeroy, Virginia Church
Crew. Reynoldsburg. Richard
Gress, Middleport, Vada Paulsen
Hazelson. Pomeroy, Marvin Burt,
Pomeroy, class ofl943.
_ ,
Rose Marie Ne&amp;'JO Riggs, Texas,
Helen Baer, Pomeroy, Harold
· Blackston, Pomeroy. Rober,t
Hysell, Syracuse. Lois Neutzlin&amp;
Burt, clas of 1944.
.
:
John Weeks, Pomeroy, Patrick
Wood, Pomeroy, Eunice Hill
Jones, Pomeroy, class of 1945. :
Roy Holter, Pomeory, Junior
Seyfrjed, Lynchburg, Va., Howard
Mullen, Pomeroy. Crolyn Baer
Salser, Racine, and Vic Sponagel,
Columbus, Class of 1946.
.•
Mildred Kapteina Phillips,
Pomeroy. Kennel worth Nease,
Pomeroy, Frank Vaughan,
Pomeroy, Bill Ohlinger, Pomeroy,
class of 1947.
Evelyn Pick Young, Sidney,
Jean Werry, Pomeroy, June Whaley Van Vranken, Norfolk, Va..
class of 1948.'
Edward Ball, Pomeroy. George
M. DaUas, Calilfornia, AM Foster
Cotterill, Pomeroy, class of 1949,
Bob Parker, Waverly, Helen
Grueser Blackston, Pomeroy,
Roger Grueser, Bob Ilurton,
Pomeroy, Pat Burnside Thoma,
Continued on pap 10

Theodore T. Reed, prominent ·
Meigs County banker. dies

THEODOilE T. REED

Simpson guest speaker for Southern Alumni fete
or

held.
Speaker Brian K. Simpson, a
1954 1raduate, now ae"ing as
Education Orflcer for the Ohio
Division of Wildlife, wu a memCoatllaed oa pqe 3
41

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Pomeroy~lddleport,

Ohio

OdasNelson

TUesday, May 28, 1.991

Could Winnie Mandela get justice bere?

•

Would a. trial for Wianic oa racial and regioaal biuea as
Mandela in a U.S. court have been sin~ bials in South AfrU
fairer than her trial in the South
ScoU King llld the Rev.
African court? Would you be Jesse Jackson ignored those
disttesscd if I suggested that the D'iological realitios: Witbln boun
verdict might have been the same?
after MIDdela was SC~"enred • bodt
Answering affumatlvcly to both King and Jll:bon denounced the
questions merely reflects an verdic 1 because she bad been
American delusion that a bial by a convicted "by a liDp judge in a
jury of one's peers insures a fair · raciBt lep1 system" and not ''by a ..
. trial and that a jury trial is illtY of her peers."
preferable to a trial by judge. To
Of far IIICR sigDificance was the
denounce the Mandela verdict cautious reaction of Archbishop
because she was tried, convicted Deamood Tutu, wbo wu shocked
and sentenced by one judge is to but did not challenp the verdict's
iJnore certain malevolent 1wsbaesa (silt yaan). His stl'en!MI
stmilarities between the judicial even implied she might have been
systems of South Africa and suilty. "The movement will
America.
.
continue and will honor her for the
Democracy docs not guarantee good things that she did aad
fairness. It only ordains "a recognize that human beings are
consummation to be devoutly human beings." The bishop is a
wish'd.'.' Jury bials in America are true Christian.
.
.
as subject 10 manipulations. based
But can one forgive America •s

MULTMEDIA.INC.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

r

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publlaher

General Maaarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
A!Miataat Publlaber/Coatroller

'

A MEMBER of Tbe Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoctatlon.
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LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban300
· words loq. All letters are subject to edlllnc and must be signed with
name, add reo a and telephone number. No unsigned lett~rs will be published. Letters should-be In gOOd taste, addreulng Issues, notpersonalt·

,

Ilea.

·

School board fight
repeats h·istory
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer

COLUMBUS - A con~vezsy over the mabiup of the state Board of
Educatton - I S arguments heard almost 40 years ago when voters
created the board and gave it the power to appoint a state superintendenL
· Gov.~ Voinovich is behind a bill reducing the board from 21
members 10 11111e and giving him the lllltiKJity to appoint members, who
now aR: deciCd in each congressional disbicL ·
.
·
•· The governor Slid he is fruSllllted by often-heard assertions that the ·
system bu declined and it's the governor's and Legislature's fault,
although tbe bolrd and superintendent mate IIIOSl of the policies.
"Bverywbere I go, some people are SUJ)Iriscd to be told that," said
Voinovic:h, who could influence the selection of the supc:rinrmdent, Wider
his IIIOIIQII), even if he could not make 'the appoinlmcnt outJ;iebL
. ObiO'a 1ooJ1ime superintendent, FlankliJi Walter, is retiring Aug. 30.
He said he wanis to punue oth« goals.
·
·
,Voinovicb said be did not lry to squeeze Walter out becansc after
decidins 10 led: changes, he became convinced he could work with iwn.
· But after Walter resigned, the governor sent the bill to the Senate
wlleRI tbe debate, in a manner of speaking, is history is ~ itself. .;In 1953, wbco voters approved an amendment that
the board
a(ld gave it the 111thority to appoint the superintendent, dlcy left it up to
die Lepalature to determine the JllUIIber of members and specify whether
IIIey would be ~intcd or elected.
::'The May edition of the Ohio School Board Asaoci.uon's JoumaJ. says
~aken in 195.5 debated not only the selection proc;ess but a House
pjq)oulto have mne members -the same as the govanor proposes.
. ,: OSBA said the Senate finally agreed to an elected board if the House
ll¢e(AI'd elections In each of what was tben 23 congreaiooal districts.
;•It s been that way since, although Ohio, because of nalional populalion
siJifts, aow hu only 21 disbicts and will lose two IIICR next year.
Sen. Eugene Watts, R..COhambus, is sponsoring Voinovich's bill, ·
which promJ)ted these comments last week at iiS liist Senate hearing:
Waas salilthe billii\)Vides the governor with a mechaniSm to aascn a
leadershiP, role in education and that it is non-partisan.
He saad Ohio~s 21-~ber board is the la!'gcst of its kind in the coun·
lry and that student achievement does not match other siBtes with gover·
J!Or-appointed beards.
Sen. J111 Long, D-Circleville, said he was concerned about tbe ability
of a gubemaroriaHappointed panel to represent the varied interests of all
Ohioans.
Sen. Richard Scbafralb, R·Wooster, said the bill seemingly sets up a
system wilhout checks and balances. "I can't understand why we fccl the
whole thing has to be appointed," he said.
Sen. Roben Nettle, D-llarbcnon, said an appointed board would inject
partisansbip into edUCIIion policy-making.
· Sen. Jeffley Jolm!ou, D-Cieveland, expressed concern lbat an end to an
· elected panel would . _ the end of minority participation.
Education Chairman H. Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro, said all the issues
would be eQillincd Ill fuJure hearings.
•

foday in history
•••
,·

By Tbe Allocilted Press
;' Today is Tuesday, May 28, the 148dt day of 1991. There aR: 217 days
lOft in the year.
;:Today's Highlight in Histll'y: ·
• On May 28, 1934, the Dionne QUintuplets - Annette; Cecile, Emilie,
Marie and Yvonne - were born to E1zire Dionne in Canada.
: On this dale:
- In 1533, England's Archbishop declared the marriage of King Henry
VlD to Anne Boleyn valid.
In 1863, the first black regiment from the North left Boston to fight in
the Civil Will.
In 1929, the first aU-color talking picture, "On with the Show,"
opened in New York. .
.
In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt pushed a butron in Washingtoll signaling that vehicular traffic could cross the just opened Golden
Gate
Bridge in San Francisco.
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Letters to the editor

iqthe rax.
.
.
:: Battelle Memonal Instllute,
d)ouJbt to be one of tbe most effec·
ti¥e privl&amp;e -.n:1t mpniutions
Ill lite COURIJ'Y.. receady updated irs
IIUdy of retailers' com 'ID'i•ted
With beinJ tbe 111111'1 tail collec10r.
'Ole lllldy re-*1 that it COlliS the
~owrqe ittercJta more than 3,. of
tie tail c:ollccted
Tbe Boase, ia approving the
blldaet, wisely dec:tded that rhe
veadou' allowance ahould be
reMiNd, The House bu ICDI the
bildae&amp; 10 the Senate, where it is
.,., under a.Pdewldon.
• Aaaumina that it wu "raiDing
outside,- the House followed tile
~

Governor's lead in taking money
from the "rainy day" fund to
achieve a balanced budget. The
"rainy day" fund is the equiYBient
of a state savings account to hold
money for use ia bad economic
times.
The Governor's staff is now
urging the Senate to repeal the ven·
don' allOWIIICC in order 10 replen·
ish the "rainy day" fund. This is
blld economic policy.
The vcllllori' allowance is now
being used by retailers throughout
the srate as pan or operating funds
essential at this time of a downturn
in the economy. Certainly the vendors' allowance plays an important
role in holding coasumer prices
down.
According to estimales from the
Legislative Budaet Office, Meigs
County retailers retain $54 thou·
sand doUara ann:::r: vendors.'
aiiOWIIICC. The q
Is: "Is the
ecotlomy of Meags County better
served by Jetai1era ftJIIinina villlly
noecled operating funds or ia tbe
county beaer ICI'Ved by baviJt&amp; the
money lay idle in a state ·saviDgs
IICCOUllt7"
.
Sincerely,
John C. ~y Jr,
.
Plaident

II

·racially two-tier criminal justice 44toll
And a jury bial is not always a
system?
.
.
Consider the following racaal trial by one's peers. In
Philadelphia, a white assistant
disparities:
lllack American males are disbict attorney. Barbara Cluistie,
imprisoned at four times the rate of was rebuked two months ago by a
black Sout~ African males, ·federal court for systematically
according to the Washington-based excluding blacks from a jury in a
·Sentencing Project.
murder case involving a black man.
The proportion ·of black
White attitudinal racism
American~ arrested for aggravated
operates much the same way in
assault in 1987 was more than tlm:e America and South Aliica. In both
times greater than the proportion of countries, whites and blacks shaRi
whites, according tO the FBI's an indi~rable equality of criminal
National Crime survey, even JliOJlCIIStbes.
dtough the racial rates for the aime
Both countries share another
were 11moat identical. Translation: disturbing pathology, In 1991,
Whites were warned and released; black-on-black crime is as
blacb were imprisoned.
iniquitous as Ku Klux Klan-onJuvenile ·arrests for violent black lynchings in 1941. The
crimes between 1977 and 1982 · mutual .slaughter between black
were numerica!ly almost the same Soudt Africans roday is as lethal as
for black .and white teen-agers, but the white South African police
blacks were imprisoned at a rate of fon:e's history of mm'dering bla\:lcs
exercising their God-given right 10
freely speak the truth.
·
In tlie Winnie Mandela case,
some of the evidence was shaky.
But much of it was based on
credible witnesses. As a result,
some · black South Africans
denounced her sentence for
different reasons.
"Too lenient," said a black
journali'st in Soweto where the
Mandelas live.
"I don 'I deny that Mrs.
Mandela committed tl!e crimes," ·
said Doris Diamini, a neighbor,
who still argued· for a lighter
sentence.
Winnie Mandela is a
magnificent woman who has
endured· a history or persecu lion
and suffering that might have
broken a weaker woman. In
rejecting her bid fir the presidency
of the African National Congress
Women's League last month, her
colleagues· only acknowledged her
frailties; they were not overlooking
the larger evil of racism.. They
know with the same certainty as
black Americans that Ia Iuta
continua (the struggle continues}.

Teen reporters get the job done
Sarah Catlin, age 17, just
learned one of the fmu(am'ltltala of
journalism: "Shoot tbe messcngcjr."
Catlin and her colleagues at
"HTV," a video newsm&amp;J.&amp;Zine
produced by students at Hillcrest
High School in Springfield, Mo~.
did what none of tbe professional
journalists in town had yet bothcred to do. They came up with
inefurable proof that local package
stores were selling liquor to
minors. The television special that
came of their reporting was broad·
cast on a local cable station.
Authorities will now almost
surely act to stop the illept (li&amp;C·
rice that risks the lives of llllrll8IUI'C
drivers; the story may save lives.
But no sooner had Catlin and ber
fellow reporters broken the story.
than they were c&amp;ujlhl in the same
crossfire that their professional
counterparts have come 10 talce as a
fact of life: There's plenty of loud
y~llin_g, and most of it is in their
direcbon
•

"I'm not hal'~!! with what the . techniques: They had gotten asupress is doing, cried one of four ances from police and prosecutors
clerb tbe students vii1eoatped lell· that lbe llllden:over teens woi!ldn't
ing·liquor to teens. aThis pre8sure' be prosecuted, then poSted'i'ideo '
is unbelievably cruel." lfe called cameras outside the stores while
the reportina a amedia circus." The the teens went inside and tried 10
clerk told the local newspaper that buy liquor.
the store's owner bas contacted a
I asked Catlin if the negative
lawyer and is adeeply disappoint- reaction had made her reconsider
ed" in tbe ~I reporters.
the reporting strategy tliey used.
· The clerk nid he is resigning She was fmn in her belief that the
from his job bcalusc. of the repcn techniques were necessary. "If
"Because of the ratnificationa of we'd walked in with a camera, saythat show, a lot of peoples' lives ing, 'Hey, we're minors. will you
are going 10 get screwed up," he seD us li~ucx'l' it would have done
said.
·
no aOOd. she reasoned.
Then there 1R1 the kids who 1R1
fler resolve was
I've
sore at tbe young repottcrs for dry- been on the same hot scat many
ing up their booze sources. aSome times, and I wondered if the feel·
kids h~ their friends - tbe ones ings were any different at age 17,
who drink-mad at them; Cadlil when a paycheck doesn't hang in
sars. "They said they couldn't · the balance 8114 half the &amp;letters 10
believe we ~l!Sfed ~ s~." · · the editor aren't calling for one's
Some cnucs, especially liquor· head.
'
,
store~~~ who were caught in~
"I feel kind of bad th.at some
act, cnttcized the student reporters (IC9ple might lose their jobs over

reassurmg.

•

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Sarah Overstreet :

it.n she said. "But 1 feh worse until·
t_he pe.ople started being such
Jerks. Seems some of the redhanded, ·red-faced adults tete.'
phoned and harassed student
reporters and their PIRIDts.
Yet had a group of concerned
PIRIDIS Iaten it upon themselves 10
do the same thing the student
reporters had done, 1 doubt if anyone ~ould have squawked about:
techmques. They'd have concen!rated on what was happening and
how to ¥et it stopped.
· Catlm remams unruffled. The ·
bottom line, she said, is what's
important, and it is this: "It needed
to be done. Kids get killed because ·
of dais."
Indeed. ''Because of the ramifications of that show, a lot of peopic's lives aR: going 10 gea.screwed ·
up," the clerk said. Because of
"HTV'"s story, maybe some teen- .
agers' lives won't be "screwed up"
bk their being able to buy rq
• uor .
I'J gally.

Is there a little ~ice age' coming?
As Robert Frost sang, "Some those who favor rae.
say the world will end in fire, I
According to the latter, I{IObal
Some say in ice.'' During the early temperatures are rising gradually
1980s, when Carl Sapn was scar· but inexorably. because or
ing the wits out of tbe im~on­ increased emission of "greenhousc
able with his vision of a 'auclcar gases'' such as carbon cJioxide. As
winter," the ice suppOrters had the a result, the 21st century wiU
edge. But recently, with die end of allegedly sec a variety of disasters,
the Cold War and a few tempera- ranging from the extensioa of trop..
ture statistics, Sagan ~ his icy ical climates into the temperate
scenario have been hustled off dte zones to the melting of the polar
1stage by the media and replaced by icc caps and the flooding of the

A bad economic policy

Dear Editor:
.. When the Governor sent his
tlienniai ·budget to the Ohio House
of Representatives, he proposed
elimination of the vendors'
allowance that retaiien m:eive for
c!lllecting and rel!litting the state
· Illes rax.
:: A vendors' allowance in some
f.orm bas been in the Ohio law
Iince the sales tax became effective
iii 1935. Cumady the law DrOVides
for the retli1er 10 retain l.S~ of the
tail collected to panially compen·
Die him for COlli incurred in acting
v an ~~e~~t for the Sllle in coDect· ·

Chuck Stone

I

Ill Court &amp;reet
Pomeroy, o.to
DEV. TO THE JNTERI!STS OP THE MEI(lii..MASON AREA

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Berry's. World
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By William A. ·Rusher·
world's seacoasts. (Scary, isn't it?l) of rising world temperatures, ·
The rising level of carbon diox- there's another who vows that they
ide in the atmosphere is haven 'I risen at all. And there aR:
attributable, among other things, to · scientistS, quite uninvolved in this ·
automobile exhausts, and on this panicular controversy, who sec a
rock the "global wanning" enthu· very different future for the globe.
siuts have accordingly built their
Take Dr. Sallie Baliunas, an
cburcb.ReaMHUng,appuently,that astronomer at the Harvard-Smiththe problem isn't cars but the peo- sonian Center for Aslrophysics. :
ple who drive them (shades of the She hu been studying neighboring
NRAI}, former Senator Daniel stars that resemble our sun, and
Evans calls population growth "the r~ that sunspot activity on them .
biggest single ·driver ofatmospher· (wh•ch resembles our sun's in ·
ic pollution" - an indictment that being cyclical} tends to increase
implicitly calls for the slaughter of their energy output. Four of 13 •
several million IIICR fetuseS every stars viewed nightly since 1966,
year, to keep the poDution clown.
however, currently show no
Environmentalists aR: also hot sunspot activity - which shl)uld
for requiring new cars tq have a lead 10 lower energy outputs, and ·
fuel efficiency of 32.S miles per colder temperatures on any planers
gallon. instead of 27.S as at present they may have.
- breezily disregarding the fact
Oddly enough, just such a disapthat lhis will coinpelllllllufacturers pearance of Slllspots was recolded
10 build lighter, more fragile cars, by Edmund Halley and other
thereby increasing the number of
between: 1650 and
people killed in crashes by some astronomers
1720. And, sure enough, Europe
unknown figure.
so cold that the period is
What the environmentllists pro- turned
now
called
"the little ice age."
foundly dislike,
the other band,
The
canals
of
froze over,
is a recent n:commendation of the powing seasonsVenice
slotened
sharply
National Academy of Sciences.
Ill northern Europe, and hunger and
The Academy bas issued a repon coldwerewi~
·,
• endorsing the coneern over global
.
Dr.
Baliunu
told
the
Harvard
·• Wltllling, and even tried to placate
that, by analogy to the
liberals by calling for increased Gazette
aforementioned
sws, she expects a •
appropriab0111 for mass lr811sil (to
SUIISpot minimum and "another Iii·
rCcluce the number of cars on the de ice IF cUina the belinning to
road, you see). But the Academy the middle of the next century."
ruined the environmentalilll' day She 'added that she is not cODtraby lila canm, for develcljlalent of
the "slobal warming" fore· ·
new Jeacntlon of nucleilr dicting
a
caara,
but
simply warning that the ·
pewer generators, to reduce
latter
J)henomenOO
may be overrid· · '
reliance on fossil fuels that cause den for several decades
by the new
vutly more pollutioll thaD nuclear ..liale x:eage.
·
..
power.
So don't forget that, as Frost
1be 1r011ble, tllough, is that for ended by concludlna, "ice 1Is also
every scienlilt who sees evidence greet I And would su(face. •• , .

oo

whole

q.~ ..... &amp;••· ',...~

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

"Just anotiHN pretty face/''

lj,

. ..

~-

.-

·•

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The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

--Area deaths~-

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
'

Daily~entinel

.

TUesday, May 28, 1991

Commentary
The

.....

9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral

home.

Odaa 0. Nelson, 68, a resident
of CoiiBIIbus and native of Rutland,
died Friday, May 1A, in 0n1tt Hos·
pita!, Columbus.
He was born January II, 1923
in Rutland, son of Freeman and
Maggie Cremeans Nelson.
A retired mechanic, he was a
member of the Alum Creek Baptist
Church, Fraternal Order of Forecaaten and Moose J..odie.
Mr. Nelson was preceded in·
death by his .wife, Edna; three
brothers, Roy, LIQyd and Leland
Nelson; and one sister, Lillie
Smith.
He is survived by one daugllter,
Linda D. Baise, Columbus; three .
grandchildren and several great
grandchildren; . _ siJtcn, Bomie
Miller, Hazel Moore and Gadys
Blosser.
Funeral services were beld
Tuesday (roday) at the Church of
the Nazarene in Rutland with Rev.
Darrell Davis officiating. Burial
was in Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
Arrangements were under the
direction of the 0. R. Woodyard
Co., Chapel, Columbus. .

Lena Heilman
Lena Heilman, 93, of .37S95
Hemlock Grove Road in Pomeroy,
died on Sunday, May 26, 1991 at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. She
was a housewife.
Born in Pomeroy on July 9,
1897, sh~ was the dallllhter of the
late Seymour and Effie Will.
She is survived by a stepson,
Cecil Heilman, of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter, Evelyn· Midkiff,
Quartzsite, Ariz.; two step-grand·
children, Allen Heilman, Colum·
bus, and Grace Forrider of Rich·
wood; several nieces and nephews;
several great-grandchildren and
three great-great-gnmdchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by four sisters
· and four brothers. She was a mem·
ber of the Rock Springs United
MethodistChurch.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Alan
Blackwood officiating. Burial wiD
be in Burson Cemetcry in Shade.
Friends may call from 6 p.m. to
'
'

Charles Knapp
Oladea AnthOny Knapp, 1A, of
Middleport, died Sunday~ 'May 26,
1991 at Grant Medical Center in
Columbus. ·
He was born in Pomeroy on
December 18, 19~. the son of
George and Bertha (Young}
Knapp.
Besides his parents, he· is sur·
vive&lt;l by a brother, Greg !Wpp, of
Middleport; a sister, Mrs. Dorset
(0eorPnn) Ste'IVIII't, Letart, W.Va.;
a nephew, AOOiony E. Stewart, also
of Letart; a grandfather, John
Young, Sr., Muon, W.Va.; and
several aunts, uncles, ncpltews and
cousins.
.
He was preceded in death by his
paternal grandparents and his
maternal grandmother.
Services will be on Thursday at
I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in

Middleport with George Hoschar
officiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetety. .
Friends may call at the funeral
holile on Wednesday from 2 p.m.
10 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

OLDEST ATTENDJNG - Emma Adams and Blll Stewart,
araduates of tbe class oll930 ol Racine HiRb School, were recognized for beiag the oldest graduates Ia attendance at Saturday's
Racine Soutbem Alumni Banquet held 11 Southern High School.

Simps on guest ...

ALUMNI ROYALTY ·Shelly Wlarbrenaer and Jeremy Rose
were crowned queen and king durlag tbe 1991 Racine Southern
Alumai Banquet held Saturday e':ealng at Soutb~~n High School. Crowning the queen is Joyce Qmllea, secretary-treasurer or lbe
alumni association.
:·
....:c=on=tin=u=ed:.:.:rro.:.:m:.::p:.:::ag:.:..e1::...·_ _ ___:__ _ _ _ _ ___:__ _ _ _ ____..

bd of the Wildlife Division's State

Racine, 1931; Clifford HiH, Sharon Ervin Hubbard, Racine, Helen Tal boll~ New Lexington, Art
Racine, Harold Roush, 1933; Flo· Joyce Deeter Adams, Grove City, Hill, Charles Cutright, Kent, Peggy. ·
renee Adams, Racine, 1935; Lucy . Pam Buck Greene, Circleville, Holman, Racine, Ken Hays ~
Grace Krider
Taylor, Elva Brinker 1;\arni!z. Keith D. Ashley, Pomeroy, Becky Turkey, Vernon Cady, West Jeffer·
Pomeroy. Dorothy Yates, Oak Hill, Mallory, Racine, David Grindsraff, son, Erma Hill, Racine, Rodney
Grace Sayre Krider, 98. or
Elizabeth Lewis Perry, Canton, Rita M. Mathews, Racine, Cary Holman Racine, Jay Proffitt,
Fourth Street in Racine, died on
Ruth Ellis, Columbus, John Hill, Morris Jenson, Livermore, Calif., Pomeroy, Robin Fonune, ElizaMonday,May27,199latVetenUis
ears.
Racine Margaret Gloeckner
1971; Jane Allen Rigsby, Franklin, bethtown, Ky., Diela Shreve,
y
'
'
'
.
MynIe Eas terdaY Holter• •
Memorial Hospital. She was a,
His duties include serving as a ·Racine, Francis Norris Cady, West Tenn., I972; C'mdy HoImes, Iron- Racme,
housewife.
.
public infotrilation and education Jefferson, Clara Mae Robinson ton, Sandra Kay Grindstaff, Racine, Charles R. Manuel Jr., ·
She was. born on January 14, offiCer where be insttucts the pub- · Sar$ent, Racine, Edna Knopp. Racine, 1974; Cheryl Larlcins Bay- Racine, George Holman, Syta&lt;:use,
1893 in Racine, dte daughter of the lie in (Jrell'lll safety, watercraft and , Racme, Mary Easterday, Racme, lor, Pelzer, S.C., Gregory Keith Shirley Gillilan Simpson, Racine~ .
late Lewis and Mollie Harpold warer safety' and he also conducts . 1936; Paul Sayre, Portland, Mary Circle, Bluefield, W.Va., Jtul\es E. Gerald Simpson, Racine, Bill COl'•·.
Sayre. She attended the Racine fishing clinics. He works with the Johnson, Racine. Clarence Brad- Holman, Middlepon, 1976; Anna nell, Racine, Marilyn Sayre, Sue
United Methodist Church and was news media making television ford, Racine, 1937; Hayman Bar· Norman, Racine, Lisa Allen Beegle, Racine, Mrs. Carl Morris; ·
a member of the Racine Cbapter of appear8nces and radio broadcasts nirz, Pomeroy, Edith Grimm, Kent. Woods, Middleport, Denise Jerry Lee, Columbus, Lois Bell. .
Order of Eastern Sw.
and he also writes new articles. He Robert Beegle, Racine, Clifford Roberts Holman, Middleport, Racine, Linda Weaver French, St.
Surviving aR: several nieces and instructs wildlife officers during in· Beaver, Grove City, 1938; Alfted 1971; Brenda Manuel. Racine, Louisville, Martha Lou Beegle,
nephews.
. service training classes and also Cozart, Youngstown, Curtis Brad· 1979.
Racine, Francis Cady, Marger~ :
Besides her parents, she was wildlife cadets at the wildlife train· ford, Arlington, 1939.
Becky Rhodes Maxson, Roush, Theresa Walton, Ncwar •
preceded in death by her husband, ingacademy.
·
.
Libby Willford, Racine, Gcral- Reedsville,
Della
Wolfe, Carl Walton, Newark.
'•
George Krider; · her daughter,
His wife, Bonnie Badgley SimP. dine Cleland, Racine, 1940; Carroll Portsmouth, Tony Adkins, Hephz·
Kathryn; two brothers and one sis· son, is also a 1954 graduate of Norris, Syracuse, Mildred Morris ibah, Ga., Paula Fortune, Eliza~ter.
Racine High School. They have Swift, Columbus, Paul Paynter, town, Ky., Cassandra Ev~ns
At Mrs. Krider's request, there t"\O children ,aile;! four grandc)lil- Albany, Ruth Stearns, Racine, Adkins, Hephzibah, Ga., Steven T.
wiD be no funeral services or call· dJen, .
Marsha WeDs, Pomeroy, Tom Bee· Circle, Gallipolis, Peggy Sue Bush
ing hours.
'Jeremy Rose and Shelly Wine· gle, Racine, Ralph Neigler, Racine, Lee, Ravenswood, W.Va., Crista
In lieu of flowers, donations brenner were selected by alumni Betty Wilson·Bearlls, Racine, Mary Beelge Blower, LancaJter, MaJ:k
may be made to Racine United vote as the 1991 Southern Alumni Shain Reinshell, New Plymouth, Simpson, Middlepon, 1981; Ton)B ·
MethOdist Church.
King and Queen. Participating in Ruth Karr Sellers, Portland, Mary Salser Hunter, Jerry Wolfe, Racine,
the coronation ceremonies was Wolfe Otd, Letart, W.Va., Mattie 1983; Lisa Hood, Middleport. Tony
Cootlnued l'rotn P'"e 1 Joyce Quillen, Lisa Pape and Lawrence, Portland. Addie Norris, Deem, Portsmouth, 1984; Dixie
...,
Tammy Chapman.
Syracuse, Charles Wolf, Hebron, Dugan Wolfe, Racine, Jim and
6:30p.m. 'Wednesday. Frien4B may
: Other ·candidates .serving as 1941; Ruth'Bradford, Racine, Paul Paula Winebrenner Daugherty.
call at tbe funeral home from 7to9 court for ·the king and' queen were Bee~Ie. Racine, Gilbert Hart, Middleport, 1986; Dina Shuler,
p.m. Wednesday.
Jason Shain, Andy Baer, Jamie Racme, 1942; Midge Cozart, Columbus, Patreee Circle, Racine,
In lieu of flowers the family Anderson, Lori Crow, Robyn Stout Youngstown, 1943; Juanira Parsons Mary Baldwin, 1988; Sarah Philrequests that donations be made to and ChrisHarrnpn.
· Kimes, Parkerburg, W.Va.. 1944; son, Syracuse, Becky Winebrenner,
Grace Episcopal Church or a chari~recipient of ~e SSOO Racine Audrey ~oicltYJI, St, ~lair Sholtl~· Syracuse. 1.989.
. ,
tyofcboice. .
.
- · · Southern .Scholarship was Jarrod Micl(,1-Randall Talbou.-New Lex·
Jan Williams, Racme, Shelly
Pallbearers will be Carson Circle, son of Nancy and Carl Cir· ington, 194S; Billy Jo Spencer, Winebrenner, Racine, Jennifer
Crow, Rick Crow, Roger Hysell, cle. Circle, who was the 1991 class Pomeroy, Herman Carson, Smith, Racine, Kelly Marcinko,
Jon Karschnik, Paul Kloes, and Ed saluratorian, will atten.d Ohio Uni- Coolville, David Sayre, Racine, 1991.
Dursi. Honorary pallbeil&amp;s will be versiiy this fall where he plans to Freda Ferguson, Racine, 1946; Paul
Others attending were Mike
FARTHEST TRAVELED
Fred Crow, Theron Johnson, Ben maja' in engineering.
Bradford. Athens, 1948; Carl MQr· ' Struble, Syracuse, W.F. "Pete''
. Mary Smith Hays, grllcluste ·
H. Ewing, Paul Eich, ferman
Pam Diddle, president -of the ris, Mary Johnson Gillilan, Chester. Bearhs, Racine, Louise Stewart,
Moore, Douglas Li~. and Richard alumni association, welcomed the 1949.
Racine, Jeff Frank, Racine, Etta
or the class or 1'971, wu pre·
Rulli Frank, Racine, Audrey E. Mac Hill, Grace Holter, Racine,
alumni and was joined by Joyce
seated a plaque al I be 1991
QuiUen, secretary-treasurer, to con· Hayman Hart, Racine, Aaron Dolly Hill, Gallipolis, Perry Hill,
Racine Southern Alumni Ban·
quet held at Southern High '
duct the business meeting. Other Wolfe, Racine, 19SO; Mary Brad· Harry Holter, Racine, Dorothy
School oa Saturday evenlag
officen are Bobby Hill, fliSI vice- ford Carson. Coolville, Eula Sayre, Racine, Christi Collins,
g
president; Lisa Pape, second vice- Hensler, Middleport, Georgann Syracuse, Joe Proffitt,,Racine, Rotfor the farthest traveled. Sbe •
A Middleport man died on Sat· president; and Tammy Chapman, Grimm, Kent, Grover Salser Jr., lie Stewart, Pomeroy, Fred
traveled from Turkey ror her
urday evening, the victim 'of an third vice-presidenL .
Racine, Vernon C'ounts, Wester· Strawser, Bob Hill, Barbara Dugan,
20th class reunion.
··
appareq,tly self-inflicted gunshot
The class of 1971 presented a ville, Gladys Counts, Westerville, Racine, Vicki Hart, Pomeroy.
wound.
plaque in honor of Gary •Hart and Don Bel~ Racine, Dprothy Chaney,
According to the Middleport eacb ·class was presented and rcc· Racine, Dorothy Salser, Racine,
SP RING VAllEY CINEMA
Police t&gt;epanment, the department ognized . by ,Tammy Chapman, n-·cornel(, Rac•·nc, G'-'d Pow·
446 4524
. "
was called to 300 Hudson Street Bobbi Hill and Lisa Pape.
.
"""
''""
where Charles Knapp, 24, was
Hostesses were OrDal Miller ell, Pomeroy, Thelma . MontU.OO IAMAIII MTJ.-ES mual' I SIJMIM
Sl .OO lA-IIt NICIIT TUESOI\¥
found lying on the front steps of Diddle, Joann Manue Willford, gomery, Logan, 1951; Gary Gibbs,
theresidelice.
Shirley .Pyles Evans ,and Marsha Racine, Vera Norris and Bob PeckMiddleport squad tran~ported Pnoh R 11
ey, LadsOn, S.C., 1952; David Hill,
'Knapp 10 Vetenms Memorial Hos- · "'i''Bu~~ 'and the Nomads" . Racine, 1953; Norman Roush,
pita!, and shortly after 11 p.m. on played for the dance following dte CharlesiOn, W.Va., 1954; Janet K.
Saturday, Knapp was taken to banqueL
.
Beegle Roush, Charleston, W.Va.,
Grant Medicai Center by Health
ALUMNI ATTENDING
Ray Turner, Grove City, Ruby Ann
Net helicopter.
•
Emma Easterday Adams, Turner, Grove City, Don· R. Hill,
The department indicated that a Racine, William D. Stewart, Racine, Carole Johnson Gillilan,
22 caliber handgun was used
Racine, class ofl930; Esther West. Canton, 1956: Dennis E. Hill,
Racine,
Dwain
Sayre,
McCutchenville, Don Johnson,
Ponland, Larry Ebersbach, 1957; ·
Carl Wolfe, . Portsmouth, Linda
Dance to be held
aR: welcome.
.
Hill, Racine, 1958; Shirley M~K­
Ads available.
The Belles and Beaus Western
elvey
Johnson, Portland, Ron
Square Dance Club will hold a
The Mci.s Co~nty Soap Box
dance on Saturday from 8·11 p.m. Derby ~~on IS seUmg adver.· Salser, Racine, 1959.
Mary HiD, Racine, 1960; Joyce
at the Pomeroy Senior Citizens !J&amp;cments fo~ Its pro~. Anyone
Circle
t&gt;avis, Little Hocking, Roger
Center with caller Scotty Schaver, Interested m pur~has1!'g an ad
JARROD C.IRCLE
Akron
should conract Ang~e Swdt at 992- Birch, Racine, Bob Harden, West
•
Chester,
Floyd
Chapman,
PickerSpecu;lspeakers
7112 or 992-2057.
ington,
Kenda
Chapman,
Pi~ker·
Mark and ~rystal Becker will be.
PIU'tlcip~tion enco!'ng~ .
speakin at the Hysell Run Holi· ·
Anyone mterested m parbc•~· ington, Lynn Shuler. Racine, Mary
Somttliing gooa's Nways Coof.i.no .Jllt
ness Ch~h on Wemesday at 7:30 ing in the Heritage Parade m O'Connor, Shermand, Texas, Ron
p m Pastor Bob Manley invites the Pomeroy on Junc 8, sponsored ~Y Beegle, Racine, Joyce White,
p~biic.
·
the Pomeroy Merchant~ Ass~•a· Racine, 1961; Jamce Salser,
Free clothing day
lion, shouJd contact Angle Swift at Racine, Jess Wood, Coolville,
Roberta Maidens, Racine, Leanna
Free clothing day wiD be held at 992·7112or 992-2057.
the Salvation Army in Pomeroy on
Trustees to meet
,
. Beegle, Racine, 1963; Randall
Thursda from 10 a.m. 10 noon. All
The !-ebanon . Township Reiber, Racine, Lynn Mallory,
area resrdents in need of clothing Trustees WID _meet. Fnday at 7 p.m. Racine, Bill Wickline, 1964; Nancy
l.ocllld an RL 33 bnlde Muon 'Exion IIICI Mason Molll, Muon, WV
at the toWnship building.
Campbell, Racine, Tom Weaver,
.
.
. .
'
Syracuse, 1965; Charlie Matthews,
Racine, Karl Russell, Manhattan,
HOMEST'\:7J•; LUNCH SPECIAl~~
Kan., Larry Circle, Racine, Tom
11unrlwJI'I idwJ. I I u .m to :1 Jl.T11
Theiss, Racine, Jean Savaugc
Weaver, Syracuse, Bcverlee WickSix occupants of a car that went
Robinson-Grimes, along with line, Racine, Clarence Hill, OalTUESPAY- Turkey Club, Fries, Soup
over a 20-foot embankment on .,assengers, Fawn Stevers, Happy lipolis, Sharon Theiss Birch,
Spring Avenue, Pomero.Y, early Holly Road, Tye Tolley and Kyle Raci'ne, 1966; Robyn Reiber,
WEPNESPAY -Grilled t-!am &amp; Cheese,
Saturday evening escaped serious James, Pomeroy, were talcen by the Racine, Nancy Circle, Racine,
injury.
·
squad to Veteran~ for treatmen.t. Anita Houdashelt Moore, Goshen,
' ..?'
Fries &amp; Soup
The driver
others Were Passengers Jam1e and _TraviS Ky., Bob Grucser, Sidney., Marvin
ralcen to Vetaans Memorial Hospi- Hayes, Bradbury, w~ not IRJured, T. Hill, Racine, Brenda Norris
tal by units of the Meigs County ' it was reported.
Sttawser, Lancaster, 1967; Aaron
JHURSPAY ~Beans and Cornbread
Ertaergency Mecncal Service. They
Robinso~.qrimea was cited for Sayre. Racine, '1969.
were alllrCated and released.
no operaror s license.
K.enny Theiss, Lancaster, 19'70;
According to Pomeroy Police
Police investigated a minor acci· Patty lble StFublc, Syracuse.
EBIPAY -Pepper Steak Over Noodles
who investigated tbe accident, dent on the Pomeroy Elementary William K. Beegle, Gallipolis,
Willie Robinson-Orimea, 16, Brad- S~hool parking l~t. Friday. John Dennis Hart, Pomeroy. Barbara
11JDDAT 1&lt; ~T. CJIIIJIIIU 1JIIIDD 1:1 :&amp;AT nut&amp;
bury Road, Middleport, wu driv· LISIC1 S~IISC, driving a truck was Bass Brown, Syracuse, Debbie
ntOJI CBD MJ:JI'I IIIIIV.
DRINK &amp; DESSERT)
ing a car owned by Cindy Hayes, backing mto a parking space when Norris Theiss, Lancaster, Mary
.
LDDU
also of Bradbury Road. She told his vehicle struck the rear bumper Hays. Turkey, Carroll Cleland,
police that she pu11cd imo a lot 10 of a parked car owned by Rod_ney Ironton, Shirley Sayre, Racine,
tum around the brakes on the car Frecker, Pomeroy. There was I~ght
Paul R. Johnson, Rochester, Susie .
8El'IIOR8 GET
failed, and it plummeted o.ver the damage to the Fre~kcr: vehicle. Biggs McKay, ~ine, Linda Hoi•
.Oij
1~ DI8CO'Ul'IT
embaDianent landing on its side. There were no cuauons nor Jon Hamm, Racine, Tom Hamm,
The car was demolished.
· , injuries.
· Racine, Buddy Pyles, Racine,
Pistol Team. which won three
natioaal police pistol cham pi·
onships and Jae won the 19~2 in~vidual national ~I cbampionshap
at Jackson, M1ss. He has served
with the Division of Wildlife for 32.

T'heodo·.,. T. Reed...
0
1 .,_

lion.
Mr. Reed has been very acti.ve
in fraternal, church and civic affairs
in the community for many years.
A member of Grace Episcopal
. Chw-ch, Mr. Reed was a veslryman .
for several years and served as
senior warden.
.
A 33rd Degree Mason, Mr.
Reed was a past master of Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, past district
deputy grand master, Twelfth
Masonic District, F&amp;AM of Ohio;
member of Pomeroy Chapter 80
RAM; Bosworth Council 46,
R&amp;SM; Ohio Valley Commandery
24, Knights Templar; Valley of
Columbus Scottish Rite, Aladdin
Temple, Columbus, and a past
grand treasurer of die Grand Lodge
of Masons of Ohio.
· ·
He was a past president of the
Middleport-Pomeroy ·Rotary Club
and the Pomeroy Qwnber of Com·
men:e, served on the Meigs County
Library Board, and was a member
of the Pomeroy Gun Club.
.
. Mr. Reed was chairmail of the
Meigs County Hospital Commis·
sion when VeteranS Memorial Hos·
pi tal wus being built in Pomeroy,
and was on the Board of Trustees
of the Medical Center Hospital,
Gallipolis, and became a member
of the Board of Trustees of the
Holzer Medical Center Hospital
when the two facilities merged. He
· is prescndy serving us that board's
vice chairm81).
Mr. Reed served a seven year ·
term on the Ohio Development
Finance Commission and was
chairman of that Commission for
18 months.
He was a veteran of World War
II, a member of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, Pomeroy,
and a member of Pomeroy 40 ct 8.
Born on May I, 1925, in Akrpn,
he was the son of the late Theodore
T. Reed, Sr., and Sarah Calder·
wood. He gmdllllled from Pomeroy
High School, attended Staunton
Military Academy, Staunton, Va.,
and graduated from Ohio Universi·
ty with a bachelor of science
degree in commerce. He was a
member of the filS! class 10 graduate from the Ohio School of Banking. He was also a graduate of the
Graduate School of Banking at the
Univmity of Wisconsin.
Mr. Reed is survived· by his
wife, Nanc~ Bean Reed, tluee 80IIS
and daughlers-in-Ia~, Tom &amp;!'d
Kathy Reed and Bruce and Rtta
Reed, all of Pomeroy, IIICI Paul and
Lauric Reed, Middleport; five
graadchildren and one step-grand·
child, his stepmother, Edidt Reed,
Middleport, and several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded _in ~by bis
parents, his fmt wafe, Bbzabeth,
and a sister, Apes Schcllhaac.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at the Grace
Episcopal Clturch where friends
may call one hour prior to the ICI'vices. The Rev.,Dr. Roy C. Meyers
will officiate at the service, and
burial will be in Beech Grove
Malonic services will be
Funenll Home at

~Ewing
~,,

Man dies from
Un ShOt WOUnd

Meigs announcements

MASON FAMILY
R.ESTAURANT

.

Car goes over 20-foot embankment;
Saturday; six escape serious injury

and.-

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�The Daily S-entinel

Sports

.

n..esday, May 28, 1991
Page-4

Mears wins fourth
Indy 500 Sunday
. car and did several laps over 226

APMotoi~ISWriter

S

mph.
INDIANAPO
(AP) - · It. is
"He didn't have to do that,"
already bein8 called "The Pass"
IIOd it gave Roger Pen$kc an insta!tt Penske said. "He could have done
a 222 or 223 and that would have
of fear and lhcn a glow of pride.
been enough for everybody. But
The guiS)' move by Rick Mears
late in Sunday's Indianapolis 500
the IUYS were jUSI crushed because
what happened was our mistake.
propelled him ~ Michael AlldretRick jUSI felt he had to do tbat.
ti and on to his fourth victory and
"Th~t was just like yesterday.
Penskc's eighth at tJte Indianapolis
After Michael passed him (on lap
Mota Speedway.
187), he knew he had·to do it, so he
In pro football, "The Pass" is
the touchdown from Joe Montana did"
The results
to Dwight Clark that gave San
Here's the official order of finFrancisco its victory over Dallas
with 51 seconds to go in the 1981
ish of Sunday's Indianapolis 500,
NFC championship game.
with starting position, driver,
Montana has since become a hometown or country, car numb!:r.
symbol of excelleoce and winning, chassis-engine, laps completed,
a fact not lost on Penske.
aveq~ge speed and reason out if not
Asked Monday if he knew how running, and prize money
good Mears would be when he announced at victory dinner Mon,
signed the virtually unknown driver day night (R-rookie):
in 1979, Penske replied: "I knew
I. (1) Jtick Mears, Bakersfield,
he was good but I didn't realize I Calif., No.3, Penske-Chevrolet,
was gellinF Joe Montana."
.
200, 176.457, $1,219,704 (record;
Mears latest victory was in old record $1,090,940, Arie
some ways a typical day for him. Luyendyk, 1990).
He ran the first half of the 200-lap
2. (5) Michael Andretti,
event strategically. getting his car Nazareth, Pa, No.IO, Lola-Chevroset up just right, then went for it.
let, 200, 176.402, $601,753.
When Mears' Penske 91
3. (14) Arie Luyendyk, NetherChevrolet, running close to 220 lands, No.I, Lola-Chevrolet, 199,
mph, arced wide around the outside 175.464, $317,0S3.
o( Andrelti' s Lola-Chevy in the
4. (6) AI Unser 'Jr., Albufirst turn, taking the lead witb 14 querque, N.M.. No.2, Lola-Chevro- ·
laps to go, Penske says his heart let, 198, 174.518,$223,916.
skipped a beat.
5. (7) John Andreui, IndianapoPenske said visions of Mears, lis, No.4, Lola-Chevrolet, 197,
his driva" and friend, crashing into 173.742, $205,153.
the fust tum wall two weeks ago,
6. (33) Gonion Johncock, Hastflashed through his mind
ings; Mich., No.92, 1990 Lola-Cos"I just looked !Jack to Friday worth, 188, 165.323,$275,690.
·when we made a mistake and the
7. (3) Mario Andretti, Nazareth,
' wheel came off," Penske said. "I Pa., No.6, Lola-Chevrolet, 187,
remember I saw sparks under the engine, 166.178, $203,478.
car and heard the big bang. He hit
8. (17) Stan Fox, Janesville,
.•really har!l and I thought he was Wis., No.9!, Lola-Buick, 185,
·: hurt bad.
162.7&amp;~. $201,090.
• "When Richard Buck (Mears' . 9. (20) Tony Bettenhausen, Indi.:Crew chiet) said 'It's yellow,' Rick anapolis, No.J6, 1990 Penske-:said, 'It's me. The car's not too Cbevy, 180, 158.192,$170,016.
: bad.' Then he said he had to get out
10. (9) Danny Sullivan, Vail,
· because he couldn't · breathe Colo ., No.20, Lola-Aifa Romeo,
:' becanse they were foaming the car. 173, engine,J69.1!88, $194,403.
·:lbat 's how cool he was."
11. (15) Emerson Fittipaldi ,
: Cool doesn't do justice to Brazil, No.5, Penske-Chevrolet,
Mears, who carne back two hours 171, gembox, 169.062,$183,728.
after the mandatory hospital check
12. (27) Scott Pruett, Dublin,

,Connors, Agassi claim
:French Open victories
By ROB GLOSTER
.AP SporiS Writer
. PARIS (AP) -Two genera• lions of American tennis outlaws
: serenely passed fust-round French
: Open tests Monday, but the ulti· mate rebel - John McEnroe • feU meekly to Andrei Cherkasov in
four sets.
Jimmy Connors, 38, splitting his
: time as a player and TV analyst,
' overwhelmed Todd Witsken 6-3, 6: 3, 7-5 with 11 methodical display of
: baseline mastery on an eerily quiet
· Court No. 1.
: Andre Agassi, 20, wearing a
pwple, gray and white outfit tbat
: 'pales in com)lllrison to last year's
· hot pink ensemble, played like a
·• zombie for nearly two sets before
; raUying to defeat Marc Rosset.
• McEnroe, the 15th seed, gently
argued a few line calls but displayed l!ttle of his old· ftre as he
collapse4 after dominating the fust
set against Chertasov. The Soviet ·
won 2-6,64, 7-5,7-6, capping a 70 tie-breaker with an ace on match
point of tbe 3 1/2-hour battle.
McEnroe, who recently became

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSI'II lfwtl)

A IMv .. lofl or Mu .. medla, lae.
;
•

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St., Po·
moroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub.. IIJhtne Company / MultfmMia . Inc.,
Pomt'roy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·21~. lie-

road clast
O~lo.

postag~

paid at Pomeroy.
.

Mrmber: ThE- Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Auocla11on and the
OIIJo Newspaper AlsoclatiOD. National

~
••

A.dvernatna Repretentattv•. Branh•m

:

NfWopoper Sales . 733 Third Avonue,
Now York, Now York 10017.

POSTMASTER: St-nd adclrfls chanaes
IO ,.. Dolly Sentinel. Ill Courf St ..
l'lltiiOrtl)l. Olilo f!mlll.

8VIIICIIIP'nON RATI!II
8J' Carrier or Met• .._e
0no Woell: .. .. .... ..............•.•......•.. .$1.60
Ono Month ........ .. .. ............... ....•. J'-95
Ono Y..r ...... ........ ............. ...... 183.1111
81NGU:COPY

PIIICE

Dolly .. ' ..... .......... ........ .. . ·····. 25 ~nts
Bublcrlborl not d .. lrtngtopay tho car.
rlfr may rftnlt 1111 adnnce direct to
Tllo Dolly !lettllnel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
IMJII. Crtdll will be given carrier ..ch

-·
-·---

.

No JUblcrlpllo111 by mall pe&lt;mltte.lln

lrHJ where

avaOablr.

h~

carrl.,-

~rvlceo

ts

loolllelfolpc...tr ,
13 ti(Hila ............... .............. ..... $21.84
2SWHila .................... ..•.. ... ...... U3.16
52 Woelt:,;;.-'ihjjj,i" ~ ··- 18478
],! ........ ..... .. .. ....... .. . .. ... .......... 523.10
Ill WHila ............. ....... .... .......... N5,1i0
M WHila ... ...... ............... .......... 1118.40

"I was luckr, to win the second
set," he said. 'If he had gone up
two sets, then the possibilities of
me wiMing would have been pret- .
I)' slighL"
Capiati had a good stan against
Plccolini, she became Wlllt'ZYed by
the Italian's IOO{)ing returns and
faced three set pomts in the second
· set of her 6-2, 7-5 victory.
' "I 3lar1ed losing my patience a
liule bit," laid Capriati, a semifinalist lasl year in her first appearance at Roland Cllrros. "I wanted
to get it over with too quickly."
~

Dibble gets 12th save in Reds'
3-2 win over Giants Monday

Natloaal Leque

In the majors...

BATTING (Ill 11 bau)-T. ow,..,.
Saa ]);om. .359; 1-. 5I. Loulo, .350; ll

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Elllt Dlvlllon
W

L
II
.......... 2S 19
-......... 23 •:10
...... :10 23
....... II 23
·' .......• 16 2S
...... .. 13 21

a.....
· HOW SWEET IT ~S!- Rh:k Mean ldsses the Bllf1·Waroe~ trophy be won durin&amp; tlie tradllloaal winner's photograph at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Mo]lday. Mears won bis fourth Indy 500
Sunday to join A..J. Foyt and AI Unser Sr. as the only four-tll!le
Brickyard champions. (AP)
Ohio, No.l9, Truesports-Judd, 166,
engine, 169.545, $159,191.
·
13. (30) Dominic Dobson, Fairfax, Calif., No.66, 1990 Lola-Judd,
164,144.01!3, $159,190.
14. (32) Randy Lewis, Hillsborough, Calif., No.39, 1990 LolaCosworth, 159, 139.752, $150,490.
. 15. (I I) R-Jeff Andretti ,
Nazareth, Pa., No.86, Lola-Cosworth, ISO, e,ngine, 163.551,
$167,490.
16. (24) R-Hiro Matsushita,
Japan, N"o.7, Lola-Buick, 149,
130.903. $145,891.
17. (19) Scott Brayton, Coldwater, Mich., No.22, Lola-Chevrolet,
146, engine, 177.811,$172,191.
18. (21) Bernard Jowdain, Mexico, No.48, 1990 Lola-Buick, 141 ,
gearbox, 160.31!8, $140,190.
19. (4) Bobby Rahal , Dublin,
Ohio, No.l8, Lola-Chevrolet, 130,
engine, 174.790,$153,741.
20. (22) Geoff Brabham, Australia, No.2 I, Tll!ll~-Judd, 109,

$l~f.~5)

MilNew Yolk
Clowlond
Boltimcn

JOIN ELITE COMPANY- At a photo Belllon Moaday at the
Indlaaapolls Motor Speedway, Indy 500 champ Rick Mean (right)
holds up four ftagers for each of his Ylctorles at tile world-famous
track, while ear owner Roger Penske holds ap eight fingers for each
of his ~rs that bas captured the cbeckerrd nag In tile nee's history.
(AP)
No.I4, Lola-Chevrolet, 25, suspen31. (10) Eddie Cheev,er, Vail,
sion,l42.216, $153,591.
Colo., No.8, Lola-Chevrolet, 17,
29. (16) Kevin Cogan, Palos electrical, 85.950,$125,591.
.
Verdes Estates, Calif., No.9, Lola32. (29) R-Willy T. Ribbs, San
·Buick, 24 , crash , 157.148, Jose, Calif.., No.l7, 1990 Lola$127,391.
Buick, 5, engine, 26.686,$147,791.
30. (28) Robeno Guerrero, San
33. (23) R-Buddy Lazier, V;UJ,
Juan Capistrano, Calif., No. 40, Colo., No.7 I, 1990 Lola-Cosworth,
· Lola, Alfa Romeo, 23, crash, 1, crash, 14.870,$162,690.
150.605,$125,203.
·

A ll•

l •
• ·
zson
c
azms
vzctory
zn cOCQ•c0 la 500

racing team.
·"He keeps building my confidence more • · and . more,: '
McReynolds said. •'If he asks us to ,
turn the engine. around and run "it
backwards now, we'U do it."
The comfort was never beuer
than 90 minutes before the CocaCola race, when the engine in All.i·
son's Ford developed a problem
that could have jeopardized the
team's chances. It was the same
engine Allison used to dominate
The Winston. but it had to go.
Car owner Robert Yates made
the decision to change engines,
even on such short nQ!ice.

DOWfiNG CHILDS
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Ill S.llllll St.. ,_..,

TOUI •DEPDMIII
AGifiiS SIIY.G
•

•Gs co.-m
s•cr

u•••

HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
\

Mocill,-&amp;

Pel.
.!!11

GB

.561
.535

I l/2

.465 4 1/2
.439 5 1/2
. .390 7112
.317 I0 112

West Dlvlsloll
WLPd.GB
Tau

........... 25 ••

OokiMd

.MI

......... 26
Calilamia •......• 20
........... 23
Cbicoao ......... 19

-

lWiu City

17
19
21
21
······· :10 20
.•..... 19 23

.605
I
.!lSI
3
.523 4 1/2
.47$ 6112
.455 7 1/2
.452. 7 112

Monday's nllllls
DlaoillS, Mil-9, 14 inn.
NowYalk6,-5
Clewlond 3. ]Lobi • 2
r.. u. Miu • "
K.mou City 6. Sooulo 3

OniJ'--

·

Bottoa (ClcmeDI 6-l) 11 New Yfl:dt

(Louy 3-3), 7:30p.m.
Clevelaad (NIJ)' 1·4) u Blltimott
(R.Snlilh ~7:35p.m.
o.land (MaaR 6-2) ol T......, (Act•

1·1). H5p.m.

CaUIQmit (Abbott 4-4) at Chicaao
(lloup 1·2). I:OS p.m.
o.a.il (T_. :1-3) u Mll-*• (Au·
p1 :1-2). I :OS p.m.

Mianuot. (Erlcboa 6-~) at Tea.u
(Gumlan tl-0)....35 pm.
K.aaau City.,(Gordon 3-2) al Seattle
(lluoal ).1).10:35 p.m.

WeciMsday'l pmes

~. ~~T~7:1Sp.m.

L Pd. Gl
IS .643
19 .551 3112
19 541
4
21 .523
5
20 .4$5
•
20 .455
I

West Dlvlsloll
L
11
19
:10
23
26

PeL
.511
.523
.52A
.489
.395

GB

2112
2112
4 .
. I

3Q .318 Ill!!

Monday's remits
Now Yad&lt; 3. Ollcoao I
l'lulburlhl, ilL LouiJ 0
Monlno1 I, Pllilodolphia I
Al.lanu 3, Sua Dieao I
Cioclnnlli 3, San .......... 2
Loo AnJo1oo 4 . - I

foam pad, full

Montreal (Boyd Z..5i" at Phi11delphil

Naw York (Coat 4·3) n Chieaao
(Bootlo 2-4), I :OS pm.

PiUibllrah (Tomlin 3·1) at St. l,.o;uil
~ 2-"3). 1:3!1 P'!'·
A...... (P.Smith tl-0) ot Son Dloco (1'1&gt;-

Wtllaelday's pmu

ft. sidewalls, textured ceiling· throughout,
mirrored featured wall, mini-blinds, house lype door with

storm, 30 gallon electric water heater. vinyl covered drywalls
throughout, stainless steel sink and much much more .

LIST PRICE INTRODUCTORY
1
16,900
SALE PRICE.......

$13 995
7

PER MONTH .......... .. $158 20 *

Pra· of horne include• delivery and hl·up wilh lll&lt;irting, one .., o1 otepo
wllh ~·~ deck, zo
of matllrlill tor all Ytlllly hOOkups,
tape, tie
downs. and bloel&lt;.

n.

neaJ

Major league·leaders
Amerkll! Lellaue

BATllNO (Ill al beta~-. Cali·
fomio, .36\4; Horor.. - · .361; D.
Hcndenoa, O~ud, .35•; C. Ripten,
Baltimore, .3!50; Molitor, Milwa\lkee,
.343.
RUNS- D . HtndenGI'I, Oakbnd, 33;
Siern, To.u, 32;. Pllme:ilo, Tuu, ll; C.

Ripk.._ Boltimooo, 30; Fi•ldor. Douolt,
30;l'oloala,Caliromio.30.
RBI- D. H•denon, Oatdand, 31;
Fioldor llo&lt;ftlil. 36; C. Ripbll. B·"m3l; ~ Tea.u. 31; 4 IN u.t 'wilh

32.

Hrl"S-MoU.,.., Mllwoukoe, 61; l'IK:t·
au, Miao...., 60; D. - . . . O K ·
laad, Sl; R.,..W., S.alo. S7;

1._.

Calilomil, s&amp;

-C'loual· OKian&lt;l,
14;DOIJBI..I!S-D.
C.., T-13;
T...._
13; a. Al«nu. To...... 13; S .,. ti..
with 12.
TRIPLES- Moli&amp;or, MilwaU.N, 4:
Pdoaio.Calll\nia,4;7-tWwith3.
HOlliE RUNS-D.
OK·
land, 12: C. .__ lalth , II; 0...
lloltail. I i; l'loWor, - . _ 10; Iloilo.
Clowlllwl, 9: y - Mll....... ' ·
STOLBI'I IAUI-&amp; . H•donoa,
OUio~OIIIa, CaUrorala. 14;

!loa-.

•1eo monthe Wllh 11.70'% APR

and 10% down 10 QU8Itfled buyera.

11

Stop In And See Jot'" Smith Or Dick Cole For Details.

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
'

Located 5 Miles East Of Rt. 33
on Rt. 50 East, Athens 592-1972

-~~~:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::1
~

~nt.·-..~~~='!'4'~

Alaltoi,T-10.
PrrcHINO (5 +wd;MIH '!IV-.
Califomi1, 6-J, .151, 3.31; Boltoa,
,..,.., s.1 •.ns, U6; 'I
Do- . 5·1 , .133. lAO: ,.,.....
,.....

., s-1. J31 :t.IIS: PW;;. c:F'i 7·2.
.771.3.41.
~.-.n:

l . l - 1oaa1o. 661 R.zaa, T - 63:
Mat oiL Cldoap, 51; - · c.u.-.
IAVBI- IMNoo, 8 - 14; D.
W~T;.,
12: I ]If, Cl*IJM,

.... ,..

n;
........

]]. '

OM'

fran-

-)-ll-.

STOLEN BASES-coleman, New

Yoa, -17; DoShlolda, Montreal. 11;
N'li.CIIIi, All111ota, 17; Orillam, Madtroal,
16; 0 . SnUb. St. Loulo, 14.
I'ITCillNO (S
Loo Aa oleo. 1·1 • .119. 2.01: Smiley.
7·1, .I?S, 196&gt; Cr" •••· St.
• • . ~7.2.62;-. 5· 1, .133, • .15; J. l ..... lfaooawo. 4-1,
.100,:1.41.
STIUUOUI'S4lac~m. New YOlk.
66; lea•, Sm Di.,a, 57: Coat, New
York, SS; Oluine, Atlanu , SS; Rijo,
Ondnnati, S4.

SAVES-Dibble, Cillciua1i, 12; L.

Smillt. SL Loulo, 12; Dove Smith. Chloa·
so. tl : Lellarlo, Son lllqo. I 0: Fnneo.

3-1
~-r.MoJ-21
115, Deault 94, Chicaao wina

..':::!'

,._, Mor •
·
LA.l.inll atl'&lt;lllllnd, 9 p.m.
--r.w.rJt

-.L.A.

--

l.Wn, 9 p.m.• if ....
. ...,..,,,.... 1
LA. Lak., a&amp; Ponland, 3:30 p.m., if

Transactions
BuebaD
A-nlAaiiM

.

CLEVELAND INDIANS-Aclivatcd
~~~~Welder, from the 1.5·day

dl~ablod

(Clnono J.O). 7:35 p.m.

7'1~

..IJ .

TRIPI.Il T. Owyoa, s.. Dioso, 6;
c.m ...., Jlouaaa, 4; L Ooa:sl• Hoal·
ton, 4; T. Ftmaadez, Sen Dioaa. 4;
Fcldar. Saa
3; fiolay, 3.
HOM!! RUNS-E. MoGdll, S.. Dioao.
11; Joha1oa, Now York, 11; G. Bill;
CJ:i~· ·~ ~ San Pnncilco, 10; '

Coast J..eaaue. RecaUed Paul Abbott,

New Ymk at Chiclao. 2:20p.m.
Ciru:im•ti at San Frmcilco, 3:35 p.m.
., Philodol~. 7:35p.m.
l'itloboql&gt; II SL Loulo, 1:35 p.m.
Atlua aS.. Diop, 10:05 p.m.
- · t l A I Arifol&lt;o, 10:35 p.m.

FEATURES INCLUDE: upgrade carpet throughout, ;-.-·

....... .

pitd&gt;c&lt;.t- Ft.dutd.
OAKU.ND A11D.J!11CS---AcUvated
Dlvo Sw.tn., pildl•. frem 1M lS-day

CIDcinnoli~&amp;4-2)atS..fnn·

Jl

Clico~l:Juatice, Atlm&amp;a, 11; Sutd·

MINNI!SOfA "lWINS-Ot&gt;Qonod Pool
Cuitn, pitcb«, to Porlland ollho PacifiC

TonJcht'lpmta

3 BEDROOM

IDTS-T. awy., Sal ~I
661 1SL Lalla, 56; Samuol, Loo
• SS;
Baaillo, PiaabuiJh, 51; F.
· • S..
D!... 49.
DO!iiiLES-Joao, SL Louu, 15; H.
Mo..U, Cinoinud. 13: T. Gwrtm. Son
D!.... 13; llooWia.l'illabu!p. 1:1: a.....

(llest-ot..ae..n)
-.r,MIIJ:U
LA. l.Wn..J!6..Padbnd 95; Loo A..

..,.., (T.Wlloon ~~ 10:05 p.m.
"""""'(X.IIotnonde ~) .. Loo An·
aeloo (8-4-4).10:35 pm.

14X70

tloo, Atlama, 3:1: EM, PhD ' ' N· 32.

Conference llnall

.'1

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlvl11011

······-····· W
LooAa..... '····· 2S
Allin..
·······-·· 21
CinciMOii ·-··-·, 22
Son Jlioto -······ 22
llououn
.••, .•... 17
San Pnrtcilco ...... 14

Loo An·

NBA playoffs

BGI&amp;claai.N•Ycd, 7:30p.m.

c.- llllll-.7:35 p.m ..
Calilamia .. Chioqo. 1:05 p.m.
MiMelola at TUII! 1:15 p.m.

.J36&lt; -

New YoU, 9: J. Ho..U, lAo.......... 9.

lloln&gt;itu Mll-*-.2oJ5 p.m.
IUnAI Ckr at Sea~ 3:35""p.m.

······-···· W
P111111\qb .••••.. rt
SL Lalla ··-····· :14
New y... ···-·· 23
C!Dcqo
·-······ 23
" ' - ·-·-·· :10
l'lliladeljlhi• •..••. :10

"·

Franc:ilco, 9.

TOIIIcbt's pmes

.

d

ploo, .3!3; lloallo._....•.:l27.
RUNS-DoSWolda. Notilzwl. 32: T.
p.m ..... s .. Diaoo. 31; 0. Smith, 5I.
Louu, 29: s.-.r. 1M Allaaloo, 19:
S.-.IAI Aapl-. 29.
RBI-CatderOil, Montral, ~$; W.
CWil. S.. Fnnc:ioeo, 3:5; T. o..,..,_ S10
Diop, 33; I...,_, New Yodl, 31; 1..

0 Neill. CtaclftGati, 9; W. Clark, San

,_1.2).10:05 p.m.

MEIGS .COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

The Tax Books are now open for the
June or Second Half Collection of the
1990 Real Estate Taxes. Also for delinquent tax. Closing date will be June
20, 1991.

.......... 20

T-.o
o...il

electrical, 149.455, SI36,491.
21. (32) Pancho Carter, Brownsburg , Ind., No. 12, 1989 LolaBuick, 94, engine, 106.025,
$139,7031.
·
22. ( 3) Gary Bettenhausen,
Monrovia, Ind, No.Sl, Lola-Buick.
89, radiator, 158.183,$177,890.
23. (26) Tero Palmroth, Finland,
No.23, 1990 Lola-Cosworth, 77 ,
engine, 159.948, $131,990.
24. · (18) R•Mike Groff,
Northridge, Calif., No. 50, LolaCosworth, 68, water leak, 118.103,
John Paul Jr., West
Palm Beach , Fla.• No:93, 1990
•
Lola-Buick, 53, oil leak, 69.703,
$130,690.
26. (8) Jim Crawford, Scotland.
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
No.26, Lola-Buick, 40, engine,
AP Spot;! Writer
135.581, $133,690.
·
CONCORD,
N.C. (1\P)
27. (12) Scou Goodyear, CanaDavey
Allison
has
won the last two
da, No.15, Lola-Judd, 38, engine,
NASCAR
Winston
Cup events and
94.422, $127,791
no
.worse
than eighth in .
finished
28. (2) A.J. Foyt, Houston,
five of the last six races.
Until he got to Charlotte earlier
this month, Allison ·had been winless on the Winston Cup circuit.
The sudden turnaround was not
easy. particularly since crew chief
Jake Elder was replaced two
months ago with . Larry
McRe[nolds. Elder is now with
Darrel Waltrip's team.
·
"It's never easy when you
change personnel," Allison Says.
"You build up relationships, and
when things get to a point that
they're not working out any more
and you have to make those
ch•nges, sometimes it's hard to
deal with."
Just before the Coca-Cola 600,
Allison was sick and his car was
even worse. At the end of the day
at Charloae Motor Speedway, Allison had won NASCAR's longest
race to cap a 14-day stretch in
which he'd won twice, pocketed
more than $462,000, and gained a
new confidence in his realigned

a father for the third time, said the
recent lack of match experience
affected his mental toughness.
"My mind told me I shouldn't
come here but my heart said to
come, that some positive things
could come out of it," he· said.
"But the boaom line is I lost in the
fust round, so it'~ hard to get overly positive."
·
·
Mi~hael Chang, the 1989 champion, seeded lOth this year, defeated Jan Sicmerink 6-2,6-0,6-3.
In wol!len's matches, No . .2
Steffi Graf and lOth seeded Jennifer Capriati bOI,h struggled in tbc
second set of their victOries.
Graf won 6-3, 7-6 (8-6) over
Magdalena Maleeva. Capriati
defeated Katia Piccolini 6-2, 7-5.
Brad Gilbert, the 16th seed, lost
in four sets to Frenchman Cedric
Pioline. ·
·
Seventh seeded Guy Forget of
France strug'gled to a five-set victory Ova" Malivai 'Washington of the
United States. Other men's seeds
advancing· included clay-court ~­
cialists Sergi Bru~ and Emilio
Sanchez of Spam, and German
Michael Stich.
Among the women. fourth seed
Mary Joe Fernandez was a 6-3, 6-0
winner over Francesca Romano,
and Natalia Zvereva, seeded 15th,
did not lose a game to Donna
Faber. Other winners were No. 16
Anke Huber and No. II Kateiina
Maleeva.
"To somebody who thought
they never, ever would play again
and to be out there witb the best
players in the world, that is pretty
damn good," Connors said.
"I felt lilce I pia~ aJI right,' •
McEnroe said. "f thmk my concenRETURNS SHOT - Amerkall Andre Aaassl retuns a shot to
tration cost me the mate h. The Switzerland's Marc Rosset in the first round of the French Open
poiliiS I needed to win I didn't"
Monday. Agassl won 3-6, 7-5,6-4, 6·3. (AP)
Agassi woke up fu time for a 3- ·
6, 1-S, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Rosse!.
Agassi was down a set and irailLEGAL
ing 5-3 in the second when a fan
with a decidedly non-French accent
yelled, "Whip his butt, Andre! "
He complied, winning the next four

games.

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

By DENNIS GEORGATOS
" You can't pitch lilY better than
AP SJ10111 Writer
!hat. It's that simple," Reds manSAN FRANCISCO (AP) ager Lou Pinie11a said
Rob Dibble's 12th save had a spe"He's the best reliever in basecilli sif!ificance, apart from the ball right now by far,' ' echoed winfact it bl'd him with St. Louis' Lee . ning pildler Jose Rijo (4-2), who
Smith for the National League lead. allowed 10 hits. "There's no doubt
"I'll tell you what That's my · about iL"
career high n~ there so I'm jus~
The Giants, meanwhile continexcited about that," Dibble said . ued to struggle, losing for the 12tb
after S!riking out Will Clark for the time in 16 games and the fourth
flllal out Monday as the Cincinnati time in as many games againll the
Reds beat the San Francisco Giants Red/! thisseascm.
3-2.
Dibble relieved Rijo as part of a
In euning. his 12th save in as double switch that followed Eric
llllllY chanCes, Dibble woJted the Davis' eighth-inning eJection for
flllal two idninp and fanned three arguing a called thirdllrike.
Giants, &amp;i ving him a startling 40
D3vi$, who snapped a 1-1 tie in
strikeouts in 23 and one-third the r.... rth inning with his seventh
innings. He also Iowmd his earned home run, had to be restrained by
run averase to a microscopic 1.16.
coaches Sam Perlozzo and Tony
Over his lasl 10 outings, Dibble Perez after the call. Before leaving
has pitched 14 innings and allowed the field, he !brew his balling helno runs and only five hits.
met in the direction of umpire

that day, crawled into his backup

By MIKE HAIUUS

Tunday, May 28, 1991

r· u:¥-.u.

Hsl. Optioned Dana Allilan,

C.,\cber, to Tacoma of the Pr.cilic ,Cout
siA'M'LE
B1i1t-

MARINERS-Activstocl
pjleboo-,
IS-dey diaoblodlilt. l'luohuod t h o - ol llidl
Amaral, infielder, and Alonzo Pow.U,
oulfieldor, from Cal11ry of tho Pacific
Co..t Lcape. Optione4 Jeff Schaefe.t,
ahoru10p, and DIVe Burba, pitcher, to

,_the

Cal.JIIY. Dlaipalld Mlu S&amp;nauo, catch·
cr, f• &amp;lli.pnllllL
TEXAS RANOBRS- Puoeboao4 tho
CCJAtnct.s of Joo Bit.ket ta.d eric Nolle,
pitcherl, from Oklahoma City of &amp;he

AllleriOon Alllioiaion. Ploood Scotl OU·
~. pi.-. ao tho U·day cllublod
lilt. Dlinptod lim Poole.
fot ...

pi-.

aipnall. Nallooall.Aquo
ATI.ANI"A BRAVES-Pie... Doua
Sialt, · ao tho 15-day Mblod liot.
C.llad up llondy SL ~........ r..m
ltichmond ol cbe •rmnm:o1-LIIaue.
CIOCAOO CUBS-()ption.el Steve
pild&gt;or, Iowa oltho -'-'&lt;on
AMOGiaUon. hrdwed the c.tnct of
Cad lAiodnn. ouU!oldar. fnn]owa.
CINCINNATI REDS- Piooecl Norm
O.ulltlll, pild&gt;u. on tho 15-day clioablod
J.i.l&amp;. Called up Kip Orou, pitdl.s, from
Nadtville fl the Ame:rican Auociation.
1DS ANGELES DODOERS-Activat•
od All&gt;odo Clril6r&gt;, lh"""'J', fnn tho 15·
diy diooblod llal. Sent 0... Smith. ln·
fielder, to Albuquerque the Pacific

W""""

to

or

&lt;t;6~ EXPOS-Piocod Androo

Oalunp, lim boMm&amp;n. an tho 15·dil

dilabl.. liol. Acdntod Millo Pitzpra •

. . -. fnntho 15-clay-ljA.

---.-.to. . . .
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - Re caUed ~ Mtlnwari.na, calthet, from
fl{ .... PKillc C.Ut Leo-. Op-

Hockey

Noli_._,!Aapt

8UJ&gt;IIALO SAIIREI-Tndod Ducy

.............. v

lull fcrlaican eceddmriw.

tiNcria

Bruce Frocniming.
Davis denied aiming the helmet
at Froemming - "I jUSI left it on
the f~eld,' • he said He said he was
frustrated Ova' whal he IXIIISidered
a rash of bad calls in recent pmes.
"This is jUSI something that has
been building up with me,'' Davis
said . "It's 'been happenin&amp; too
much lately. I've been gelling the
shon end of the stick."
The home( to dead center was
Davis' 25tb career homer against
the Giants, the most .he has hi'
against an opposing tcanl .
Cincinnati took the lead for
good in the fifth wben Freddie
Benavides singled off Don Robinson (1-4), aclvanced on Rijo's
groundout and Chris Sabo 's single
6efore scoring on a grou!)der l;y
Mariano Duncan.
"I had good cornimmd of every
pitch I !brew," said Robinson, who
aUowed three runs on seven hits in
eight innings. "I'm happy about
'that, but I wish I'd have won. Rljo,
threw Rreat and with Rob Dibble
over there, you better get ahead."
The Giants tied it in tbe fourth
when Mike Felder hit a two-out
single, scoring Robby Thompson,
wbo had walked and stolen second.
Duncan walked. advanced on a
grounder by Hal Morris and scaed
on an infield single by Paul O'Neill
in the Cincinnati first.
Thompson, the Giants second
baseman, ran sidewayS to field the
ball on tbc grassy lip beyond first
but made no throw home·as Duncan raced for the plate,
"When Robby picked up the
ball it was soaking wet and he
didn't want to throw because he
wasn't sure of whele it would go,''
San Francisco manager Roger
Craigsaid

.

The Giants scored in the bottom

•

eight of his 10 starts. He lowered
games, .. he S8l"d •
.
In the other clubhouse, Indians . his ERA to 2.38, fourth in the
manager John McNamara appeared
(See AL on Page 6)
just as frazzled. His white hair was
soaked and he hll() his belt loosened
.as he sagged in his chair.
''We seem to make it interest. ing, don't we?'' he said. "Every
night, it's one thing or another."
Cleveland came to Baltimore
having lost four of five and 14 of
19. But this time, the Indians got a
good effort from their buUpen.
Coming into the game, the Indians' relievers were 1-4 in May with
It's tbe
ONE
one save and a 6.75 ERA. But
b•IDell PollCJ ...
when Candioui tired, HiUegas propacltapd
proteedGD lor
vided blessed relief with two
.
retail
stores,
offtcea,
shutout .innings.
cburcbea, apartmeata,
His second save came one night
after he blew a one-run lead in a
drug stores. Simplified
loss to the Milwaukee Brewers.
In content, convuleat
"I didn't .think about last night
In format aad very
at all. The only thing on my mind
affordable.
was to be aggressive and get that
last out,'' HiUegas said.
The Orioles put ruuners at first
and third with two out in in the
ninth, but Hillegas got Mike Devem~ux on a Oy ball to center.
·
Candiotti (6-2) allowed seven
214 USI Ulllll Sl.
hits and walked two in seven
PHIIOY
innings. He struck out seven and
992·6617
gave up only one elimcd run. In the
last tbree seasons, his ERA against
Baltimore is 0.64 over 28 innings.
Candiotti has four of the Indi•
STATE .\VTO
, . ; ) INSVRANCE
ans' last nine victories and has
pitched at least seven innings in

snm

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DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE
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OUR LEVEL BUDGET PAYMENT PLAN WILL BE
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••

0.-y Carter's sacrifice fly.

·

Pirates 8,-Cmlinals 0.

(See NL on Pap 6)

RUTLAND .FURNITURE

JCHIN A.·W~DE, M.D., Inc.
PUASAIIT VAUEY HOSPITAL

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"WE NAVE HEA/1./NI AIDI"
.,., 1..,1 .

•

runner at first to complete a double play In the
second Inning of Monda1 night's National
League aame in San FranciSCO, which the Reels ·
won 3-2. (AP)
·

Allred's tie-breaking homer
pushes Tribe 3-2 to win over O's

of the first when Felder doubled,
took third on ·a fly by Willie
McGee and was balked home by
By DAVID GINSBURG
Rijo.
AP Sports Writer
Elsewhere, it was Los Angeles
BALTIMORE (AP) - It
4, Houston I; Piltsburgh 8, St. doesn't matter if the games were
Louis I; New York 3, Chicago 1: close, or if he was tbe m~er or
Montreal 8,1'biladelphia I ; Atlanta the eoach. Johnny Oates is s1ck of
3, San Diego 1.
losing.
Dodgers 4, Aatros 1
. The Cleveland Indians kept
Ore! Hershiser is returning to Oates winless in four games as the
see if he can regain the form that Baltimore Orioles' manager, using
made him a Cy Young Awanl win- Beau Allred's tie-breaking homer
ncr. Ramon Martinez seems headed and the pitching of Tom Candiotti
in that direction as baseball's and Shawn Hillegas to notch a 3-2
biggest winner.
· victory on Monday night
-where does that leave Mike
Baltimore has now lost five
Morgan? He may be the forgotten straight - four of them under
ace of tbe I •.. Angeles Dodgers' Oates, who took over for Frank
·
brilliant pitch' "~ staff, but he leads Robinson last Thursday.
the league in earned run average.
. Only RObinson, with 15 straight
Morgan (S-4), whose ERA fell losses, ~d Paul Ri~hards, witb six,
to 2.0 I, had a season-high eight have $Otten off to· worse starts as
strikeouts and w~ed none while an Oriole manager.
·
allowing six hits in eight iunings
"I don't want my name down
Monday night as the Dodgers beat there with Franlc and Paul.~ ' Oates
the Houston Aslros 4-1.
said. "I've lost five straight now .
Being overshadowed by his We need a win, bad."
teammates is not a concern or tbe
When told ihat he had only lost
31-year.oJd right-hander. He's sim- four as the Orioles' manager (one
ply glad to be on the mound at all.
loss occurred when he was the
"The only thing I was upset fust-base coach), Oates replied, "I
about was my hiD injury in the win- don't care if I was the manager, a
ter," he said. '"I didn't know if I coach or a player. We've lost five
was going to pitch this year."
straight, penod"
He did, but didn.' t get much
The last three of those losses
respect after the exhibition season.
were by one run. but that hardly
"I wasn't too happy coming out mattered !0 Oates.
of the spring as the lffih starter, but
"The past two nights we ' ve
I was happy just being part of a done some good things, but the
ream that was being pi~ to win bottom line is we've lost two
" ," Morgan said. "We haven ' t
really even played great baseball
yet and we're in fust place."
And likely to stay there if Hershiser can make it aU the way back
from reconstructive shoulder
surgery that sidelined him for a
year and Martinez continues to
pitch well after an 8-1 start on the
heels of a 20-6 record last season.
Hershiser starts Wednesday
night a$alnst Houston.
Edd1e Murray, who has eight
RBis in his last four games, drove
in the 1,400th run of his career for
the Dodgers.
ALL
The only run Morgan allowed
was Steve Finley's third home run,
witb two out in the eighth.
Ken Caminiti's single to start
the ninth finished Morg~n. _Jay
Howell came on to get h1s mnth
save, making the Los Angeles
·bullpen perfect in 13 save opportUnities.
The fust four Dodgers reached
base in a tbree-run fust against Jim
Deshaies (2-5), who had won his
previous four decisions against Los
Angeles.
.
After Breu Butler's infield single, Juan Samuel had an RBI dou6Je and took third when right fielder Kari Rhodes misplaYed the ball.
Samuel scored when Murray foJ.
lowed a walk to Darryl Strawberry
with a single. Strawberry scored on

RATE .ROUTI12~

(304) 675-1244
r

BREAKS UP DOUBLE PLAY -Though
San F,ranclsco's Robby Thompson (bottom) Is
retired on Ibis play, be does prevent Reds short;
stop Freddie Benavides fr:om throwlna out the

~·

.'

RUnAND

�~ ... I

Page 6

•·

...

-

- ... ...... .. ·~

. .......

.,...

··~

The Dally Sentinel

.....

~r

•

0'"'. ,.,. •• ._

-

~·-.,-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy-Middleport, umo

21f,llllfl

In the NBA's semifinal series,

---~

~Bulls

sweep Pistons; Lakers
.dlead Blazers 3-1 in West finals
;•
·~

11 BILL BARNARD
AP &amp;.netball Writer

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)- The Chicago
• BuiiJ c:oml_lletcd a 4-0 sweep of the r:wo-lime dclend• ing c:blmJ)Ion Dclroit PUions in die Bula1l Confer· ; ence flllllls with a 115-94 vicrory Mondly.
•
MidlaeiJordan scmx1 29 · 11 and Seouic Pippen 23, as the Bulls paid ~ Pistoas for post·
leBSOII defeats in each of the last three yean.
:.

• · The Bulls, wb(l st&amp;ned in 1966, advanced to the
:: NBA flllllls for the fll3l time. They will meet the win·
ner of the Western Colifmnce finals, whicb the Loa
:; Angeles Lakers lead 3·1 m'er Portland Trial Blazen.
"'
the ~p series will SU111Friday, Sunday
: or the following Wednesday.
:
The Pistoas, geaing.just 13 points per game rrom
• its frontcourt starters in the series, moved Mark
"!- AguiiTe into the lineup in place of Dennis Rodman,
: the NBA 's defensive player of die year. Aguirre,
..:: James Edwards and Bill Laimbeer combined for 29
· - points in the lint half and 34 for the game.
;::But Chicago bad a sleeper of its own in John Pax·
! son. Avcrqing 4.3 points on 33.3 pen:ent shooting in
:: · the series, Paxson scored 10 of his 12 f!rSt~uarter
~· poiniS in a 1:35 span, leading die Bulls to an eight.,.- point lead they never lost
,..:
Chicago started the third quarter with an 11-4
" · "Spurt, extending a seven-point balftime load 1068-54.
After Aguirre hit a three-pointer ad Joe Dumars
connected oo a jumper, the B.ulls ICipllllded wilb •
15·5 run, keyed by Jordan's seven pomts, for an 83·
64 advantage with 3:13 Jet\ in the period.
The PiStons, wbo were led by Isiah Thomas with
16 poiniS and Edwards with 14, didn'tlhreaten again.
• Detroit suffered ill first 4..() sweep ever.
:
It's the setond lime in lbree years the ckfending
1 champion wu eliminated witb a 4..() sweep. The Lakl en lost 4..() 10 the Pistons in the 1989 NBA finals.
The Bulls
0-4 in previous trips 10 conference
flllllls,losing 10 the Milwaukee Bucks in 1974, Gold·
• en Staie Warriors in 1975 and the Pistons the last two
yean
~troit. which made its rlfth c:onsec:utive appear; ance in the conference fmals, ~bed die NBA finals
die last dlree years, winning the championship in
; 1989 and 1990. Only two reams - die Minneapolis
• Lalters and die Boston Cellics - have won three
: •. Slriaght championships.
Neither team led by more than two points until
• Thomas converted two free dlrows with 4:3 7 left in
the fll3l quarter, giving Detroit a 20-!61ead.
~
Paxson then soored 10 quick points during a 164
' spurt that pat Cbic:ago ahead 32-24 wilh 39 seconds
, left. His hot streak included two foul shots after tech: nic:als against Detroit coaches Chuck Daly and Bren·
dan Suhr.
:, · The Bulls extended the margin to II poiniS twice·
• in the second quant,r, at 4!5·34 on a rebound dunk by
' Cliff Levingston and 47-36 on Craig Hodges' free

l.

wm

'

throw after Deaail'1 foanlueciiiWcll of !be bllf.
Edwllds, wllo bad a lOIII of 11 poinla in die tint
three J8111CS, scored 12 in tbe tint 1111!, inl:ludiJIIa
jumper with one IICCOild left lhll c:lalecllbe m-.in 10
51-SO.
·
. Laten 116, Trail Bluen t5 - At Portland,
Ore., the Loa Angeles l.aken are lootin.lliko 111
NBA c:blmDioaslliD-. 1be Ptidaid Tnll Blazaos
are lookingliko u "NBA ...,...•...., lellll.
As a result, die Laten can wnp up tllelr aindl
Western Coliference tide Ia die last 12 yean with a
vicrory on Ponland's bomecoun in Game 5 lllllight.
"Tbcte's no Je8SOII for dlis," die Blazers' Clyde
Drexler said. "Iam'taodti-....1 iL''
That sums up die Trail Blazers' feeliDJI' after a
pair of blOWilUl lolses It die Farum OYer ihe week·
end. Ponland. which bad the NBA's belt ~-season record at 63-19, went ID Loa Anae'n tied 1·1 in
the besa-of·teven series.
Wbat followed was disaster at tile bands of a
Laker team that obvioasly bu figarcd out bow to
SlOp l'ulland's run·and·gun,sJam.duuting 8llaCk.
The Blazcn are a team dill openiM oo emolioo,
and they c:ame out flat in two of their biaat games
of the season. They lost 1116·92 Friday nilfit and 116· 95 Sunday. Game 4 was Portland's mcist one-sidecf.
loss of die season.
· ·
· "I lbint the La1rm bavc played pelt defeate,"
Portland's Danny ~je haven't adjusted
10 what they're doing.
know wblt we ~re doing.
I think we've become
·
They're just clog&amp;ing the middle,
mg itiODIII on us. We're not
llndiDg the open man. Obviously, we're in deep trou·
ble."
The Lakers know what it tab:s to SlOp Portland,
Magic Jolmson said.
"We gilt control of the tentpo early, slowed up die
game so they couldn't get in their tralisitioo game.
The only way we am beat l'llrlllmd is wid! defente.
That was the diffmnce in the last two games," be
said. ·
The frusttated Blazers bave made 34 turnovers in
the last two games,l9 on Sunday.
"I never thought we· would play as bad as we did
in these two games," Portlud bead c:ot~~:h Rick
Adelman said. "I think we will come bact and play
much beaer Tuesda~. I believe in my team, I know
they c:an come back. '
All season long, die Blazers talked about how
hungry IIIey were for a cbamrioosbip. bow they got a
liSle of it in 1aat year's finalS and knew what it takes
10 win it all. The only team dill sbowed thlt kind of
h~er in the Fonn was Loa Angeles.
• If we play like we did thete last three games, ·
then there an! plenty of doubiS," Dlexler said. "It's
not over yeL 'The question is, do we want it bad
enough and do we bave what it takes to do it? .'Threeto-one is ~h. We've got ourselves into this situalion, now we ve gotiO get ourselves out"
·

Classifie
TO PlACE AN AJ) C~ti. 992-2156
MONDAY lhru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. wlil NOON SATURDAY

· nouo su·~on

POLICIES
'Ad• outsido Meigs. Gallia or Muon c:ounti• must be pre .
p~d .
•
'Ruc:tHIW S.60 dlacoum for adt paid'" •dvance.

Milwaulcee 9 in 14 innings: New
Yorlc 6, Boston 5: and Kansas City
- mote a Nn, made up for his mis· 6, Seaule 3.
: take when he drove his third homer
Ralaen 11, Twias 4
' deep into the right-field bleachers
Minnesota manager Tom Kelly
, 10· give Cleveland a 3-2 lead. He sees a lillie of the 1927 Yankeea in
' went 2-for·4 after entering the . the Texas Rangers. ·
: game in a 5-far-33 slump.
Well, at least some of the nwn;
The secret? WeU, for one thinjt. bers look similar. Let's see, Brian
no one was going to catch hts · Downing is hiainl.389, Juan Gon• homer.
zalez .355 and afael Palmeiro
: ' ·" I've been hilling pretty well .331. As a team the Rangers are
1 lately, but either right at someone
baaing .294. For the record, the '27
' or where a guy am run and catch Yankces hit .307.• up 10 it." he said. "That homer
Texas came home and stayed
• tonigbt was as bard as I've hit the hot by winning its 14th slnligbt
: bnciJID in awhile." .
game u Gonzalez and Julio Franco
The Orioles took a 2-0 lead in eacb drove in lbree runs 10 help the
- the fourth Wilen Randy Milligan Rangers rout Minnesota 11-4 Moo·
; d!OjJJH'.d u RBI single in front of day night
.
,
·. ,1\JJred in rifbt and Ripken scored
Palmeuo added three of Texas
. after lillredJuuJed the ball.
15 hits -the lith saaight game in
The Indians made it 2-2 against which the Rangers have had at least
ilob Milacki (1-2) in tbe fifth. 10 hits. Texas is hilling .348 dwing
After Brook Jacoby led off with his the winning streak.
.
third horne nm. Joel Skinner sin· · "I've never seen a leain wilh an
gled, Alex Cole doubled .and Felix offense like dlis team," Rangers
Fermin scored Skinner with an manager Bobby Valentine said.
!JPP08ite·field single..
The last American League ream
· Allred, Candiotli ud. Hillegas to win 14 slraigbt was the Oakland
did the rest.
Athlelic:s, wbo did it April 23·May
:
Elsewhere in the AL it was 9, 1988.
- Texas 11. Minnesola 4: Detroit 15,.
The streak has brought the
•

Allred, whose error gave Balli·

Words

15
15
15
15
15

1

3
6
10
Monthly

ov,r 15 Word&amp;

Rate
$4 .00

.

$6.00
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l •

.60

Call 614-992-7104 for Appt.
Learn To Decorate Cakes .·

Bastc to Advanced classes start·
ing soon. Nancy's in Burhn·
· gham, half way between Athens
and Pomeroy. Call for more in·
formation 992·6465.

seasons to belllg a sweep Ylclllli
Bulls, wbo won 115-94 Monday lo wrap up
NBA EaStern Conference finals and earn a trip
to their first-ever NBA cbampionsbip series.

NL games...

over the 375-foot fence in left cen·
ter field. Harrison was hitless in
three previous at-bats with one
wallc. .
Matt Ban's two-out homer in
the top of the ninth .lied the score 55. Ban was 4-for-S with two RBI
for the Buckeyes, whose first tour·
nament loss was to California, I().
8, on Saturday.
·
Sparma. who fell to 8-3, had
struck out eight batters after giving
up four runs in the second inning.

(Continued from Page 5)

Frank Viola (6-2) beat the Cubs
for only ihe second time in seven
career decisions. John Franco
picked up his ninth save.
Expos 8, Pbillles 1
Ivan Calderon, a last-minute
starter, had &amp;wo home runs and five
RBis.
Chris Nabholz (2·3) allowed '
·auack.
'
three hits in six innings. He struck
Meta 3, Cubs 1
Howard Johnson and Hubie out six and wallced one.
Pat Combs (2·3) allowed five
Brooks bit bome runs 10 help New.
York beat Chicago, handing Cubs runs on three hits - including a
manager Jim Essian his first loss in three·run homer by Calderon in the
six games since replacing Don first - and a hit batsman in one
and one-lhird innings.
Ziminer.

Doug Dmbek pitched his second
c:areer one-hitter, allowing only a
solid single to center by Bernard
Oillcey with two outs in the sixth
inning. Drabek (3-7) struck out two
and wallced none.
Jay Bell hit a three-run homer
and double to pace the Pirates·

•

Ttaen 15, B11weas!l
Milt Cuyler's three-run double
:.ighligbted Detroit's seven-run
141h inning.
The Brewers had 18 hits and the
Tigers 13 U the ICIIIII played for
five houn and 37 minutes. Mike
Hennemu (5·1) pitched die last
three inaings far the victory.
Alan Ttlm!MII led off the 14th
with a ~off Cback Crim (3-2)
and the
IOided the bases on

Man Toome.v got his second victory against Ohio State in the liJurna.
ment, improving to 6-S.
California (37-27) ended its season Monday afternoon with an 11·
5 loss to host Wichita State in the
regional championship game.

H1ppy Ads •
Loat 1nd Found,
Y•d S.le IPiiUd in ad'Wintef
8 Public Sale &amp; Auction
9 w-..ttid 1o Buy

Metgs County
Area Code 614

446 Galhpohs
367 Ch•hife

992

388
245
2Se
643
379

985 Ch•ler
843 Pont.nd

MukUeport
Pom~troy

Vinton
Rf9 Grande
GuVtn Dist.
Arabia Dist.
W~nut

24 7 letart Falls
Rac.ne

949
742

667

1~
16
17
18

Mason Co .. WV
Ant • Code 304

Rulland
Coglville

676 Pt Plt~•ant
458 Leon
676 Apple Grove
173 Mason
882

M~tcettan1:10u s

49

flH

Busin~s OpportuM.,
Money to l.oan

23

Pfoh1SS4onal ServictrS

le•a

Servrces

Household Goods.

51

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

SAVINGS•••

52 - Sporting ~oods
53 Anl•ques
5~ Mile. Merchandise
56 Building Suppli•
56 Pels tor Sale
57 Musicallnslrumenh
- 58 Fru111 &amp; VegtJ~•bl 85
.59 For Sale Of Tr•ne
,

in the l:lassifieds!
.

Public Notice

Public Notice

, ' NOTICETO
CONTRACTORS ·
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
ColumbJra, Ohio
MAY 10. 1991
Controct • • • Lovol copy
. No. 91-11411
UNIT PRICE CONTA.t,CT
Sooled prapa_.o wll .,.
r - I d et thl offici of thl
Dlr-r at Ihi.Ohio Depart·
""'"' of Tronopartatlan. Col·
umblro. Ohio. untl 10:00 A.
M.. Ohio IIMdord Tl..,.,
Tu-y. Juno 4, 1991, tor
lrnpravo11111nta In:
Mlig1 County. Ohio. to I
Improving
MEO· 1 43·
t8.21), Steto Routo 143; by
....teeing whh oophalt
cancnto.

Dlroctor.
.
Tho Dt;actor ,...,.,,, thl
rlghl to Nject ony ond oil
bldo.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF '
TRANSPORTATION ·
(ll 20, 27, 2tc

Pov.....,.c wktlh -

Reg. S5.JJ.$6.7$.S7.75

NowS450

12 INCH FEIN$
NOW S650

41NCH MUMS &amp;
GERANIUMS

50C

NOW
ooch
"While Supplies Last"
Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 am ~ S pm

I.Mgth:

, 8 IHt

11

Closed Sundap and Menwwial Day

Hubbard's GrHnhouse
SYAACUS{. OHIO
992-6778

The femiiV of Ruth I.
Wolle waulclllketoex·
preu our deep eppre-,
clition end thonka to
aur rolltlv•, frlende
ond neighbors for the
vlalte. Cllrda. floWIIII.
food end prayere dur·
Ina the lllneae 1nd
dMth of our beloved
mather.
Sptclll thenka to
Aev. Rollend Wlldm111
for hia
can110Hng
worda. Sy.--H E.M.
S., Dr. Dougtea Hunter, · the nur~• end
llcia from the Home·
Heelth C1re - the re•
pitt elda, from .the S•
rilar Cltl&amp;enl. the Alzhelmera Md Rollttd
Dlaordero
progrom
ond tho Ewing Funerel
Home for their ••·
vlcea. Your klndnwHI elweyl be remtm·
bertd'.
Lowrance &amp; Merjorle
Hoffner. Beryl &amp;

Ruby Wolfe.
gr1ndehldren.
grell·grondchlldron
end
grtlt:grMI·IIrtndeon.

Help Wlnttd

Tettletoa. T11viJ Fryman's siDJie
INpped .. 8-8 tie, and Cuyler tben
hit •Iowa lly 11111 over mm- fielder Robin YOUIIl to clear the lllaea
llld JUre 1112-8.
Andy Allanson doubled ia
CUyler and Jolla Sllelby bit hit lee·
ond homer of the leiiOII to mate it
lS-8.
.

742-2451

II. 1, lullorwl, OH .

-- ----

-ruui.lc~;Rc .. lt

·

205 N. SecOnd Str•t
IIIDDlEPOIT, OHIO 45760
. Offill 614-992·2116
HOME 614·992·5692
DOlliE 5. TUINEI,

CLASSIFIEDS%
992-2156

HOUSES•LOTSM~AI~MI51

COMMERCIAL
We Need Llollln_s

J&amp;L

·INSULATION
•VInyl Sieling
•Replacement

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
flow "-ln luHt

.. Free Eatim.tea••

PH. 949·2B01
or les. 949-2160

81 Home IR1prowe.ntllll •
82 - Plumb•ng &amp; He at•nu
.83 EllCIV•ting
· ,
84 Eler;tric:IW &amp; A11lr•g~~ra1tgn
86 Gunetal Hau lmy

fiti

Mobtle

•

Hume Rt1p1ur

87 UphOiatery

·

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

WAIIIUS-$100 up
DIYIS-$69 up
llfiiGUAIOIS-$ 100 op

IANGES-Got-Dtc.-$125 up ,

••mas-sus .,

'

M:ICi OVfNI-$79 "'

NEW LISTING- IlEAl AS A PIN- This very well main!·
ained 2 story home has it alfl4 bedrooms, I~ baltls, family
room, 2 car garage, new·wc unit, new wallpaper in k1tchen
&amp; dining. famrly room &amp; bath. l1rge front sittmg porch -all
drapes go w~h this very brigllt and cherry home. Decorated
mostly wil11 m1uve, blues &amp; pet:h. ONLY $47,900.
,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992,5335 or 915-!561
Arran from Post Offko
POMEIOY, OliO
10130/'U tfn

BISSELl &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION
ONew HOIHI
OGara••
•Complete

Rt-dellng
Stop &amp; Compare
F.rH E1tlntat1s

985-4473
667-6179

• you can have youi cake and eat it, too! All
a country setting. yet within m1nutes of all the
conveniences of town. This property has app1. 3.88 acres
with a2 story frame home that has 3 bedrooms. family room.
equipped kitchen, I car garage and a barn. Many other great
features! PLUS .. .THE PRICE IS REDUCED... NOW YOU CAN
OWN THIS HOME AT ONLY $29,900. ·

5-3t."90 tfn

Til-COUNTY
SANITATION

NEW LISTING- BUTTERNUT AVE.- live in it or use as a
rental. 2 story home with extra lot tn town. Some plumb1ng.lf
you want convenience - h~e it is at only $10,000.

SEI'TI( TANK PUMPING
PORT·A·JOHN RENTAL

742-2&amp;86

lutland on New
Lima ld.

H0·1l·lm.

•Remodeling and
Home Repaira
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or
698-6864
THE

GROOM
ROOM
Conqjlete Grooming
For All Breeds
EMILEE MERINAR

C•lifilcl or Trained Nursilg Assistants

NEW LISTING.- POMEROY - I~ story home with poten·
tial. 3 bedrooms, bath, utility room , nice siz.elot. Needs work
- ASKING $20,000.

992·6648 or
. 691-6164

SUTTON TOWNSHIP - App!. 51 acres of mant land with
utilities availlble plus free gas and royalties. Owner will sub·
divide - call for information.

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

OVERBROOK CENTER

333 Pqe Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760
EO I!

..,•..,;.""

yoo?
CLASSFIED

HENRY E. CLELAND .......... .... 982·61:J
JEAN TRUSSELL ................... 949-:all
JO HILL .......................... · · · · ··· 9811·
TRACY BRINAOER .•••••••••••••.• 949·2438
OFFICE .................. ......•...... .•. 982·22119

All

POOLS,
CISTERNS, ETC.
I ,625 GAL.-13$.$4$
••• 1, ... 71·1
1un111D,
OliO 45775·9616
614·742·H04 .

4·21·11 · 1 mo . pd .

Ntw I•· ·
Stll/(/1 ..

AIR CONDmONERS • IIAT PUMPS ond ·.,
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

.... ....... ... .. .. . .. . . . . . . .. ....
'

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME ;

~~:~~:G'

.

Located On SaHord Sdlool ld. off lt. 141
16141 446-9416 or 1·10
' D·l71··59117

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PROFESSIONAl
SUNROOF
INSTALLATION
Contact
STEVE WHITE
992-6434':

949-2168

Aft~~71~,~·~·· .

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

YOU~G'S ·
CARPENTER SERVK E

4·5·91-t mo.

AU IIADS
Iring It hi Or Wt
Pick Up. . ·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561
' ' " " ,,.. Pert Office I
117 •• SectrJol
POIIIIOY,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGIS

Doy or Night

•Remodeling and
Home Repaire
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

l/22/tfn

.rna.,_

614-992-6820
Pomeroy,

'·

742·2328

·
INtmflfllt

Owner &amp; Operator

CONSTRUCTION

can~

•20 Y81ra Experience
oQuellty Homea and
Cuatom· Remodeling

"At l"sonalllt Prien"
PH. U9·2101
or lee. 949·2160

CEDAR

YOUR HOUSE IS TOO GOOD to GIVE AWAY .•. DONTBE DIS·
COUIIMED IF A DEAL HAS FALL£N THROUGH. SOlE·
TilES, WlliOUT EXPERT HELP YOU DONT SPOT THE
IISIIY OPTION. GET A FRESH START! GET PROFESSIONAL
ASSJirMCE. WE BELIEVE IN A CONCENTRATION OF
HAID WOIII... AIID WE USUALLY GET.'IESULTS. lAY WE
HELP YOU SELL YOUR HOME?
j

FlEE ESTIMATES

1 2-,i-10-tfn

cro~~~

4·23· 1 mo. pd.

TROMM BUILDERS ...:

NEW- REPAIR

11·14-tfn

90 DAY Wlllllln

AND EVERYTHING UNDEIJtlitH

eiUY •SELL •TilDE

2111 MI. outside

USED APPUANCES

ROOFING

Howard L Wrlttstl

742-2421

539 Bryan Place ·
Mlddtepo", Ohio

WE DO

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
OPEN
Tueodoty thru Saturday
10 :00 am-&amp;:00 pm

Wlndow1
•Roofing
•lnauilllol!

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SI!)ING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-tl-ttn

Real Estate General

·992-2259

3-14·'91-lfn

NEW LISTING - BUnERNUT AVE. - Th1s used to be adu·
pie! -but n.ow made for I fam1ly. Keep itltlat way or duplex
again and use as a rental. 4 bedrooms -! needs work at th1s
price - Ws no problem! $8,000.

Our rapid arowth as the am's ne!ft~t and fi·
nest Skllltd Lon&amp; Term C.a~e f1c1lity. ~as
crntld lllmtdillt opportun1ttes .for Ctrt1fted
or Trainld Nursina Alsistlnts.
Co~ for a visit, taik to us 1bolrt your experl·
•c•. and we will talk t.o. you about our Wilt
prqram which beains at $4..60 per hour. PLUS
aperlence compensation, offtrld In whit Is
tluly 1 uStlte Of The Art" Nurlilll Ftclllty. Stop
by for an Interview. or phone Klrl1 H1111ter 1t
(614) 992-6472. and let us show you t ..t 111
nursln1 homes are not alike.

Fielder llld Mlclrey

USED RAILIOAD nES

1 card of Tbanks

"'Tho dati lit for camplo·
cion of lhla wort&lt; olrlll .,. 11
... forth In lhl bidding pro·
paul."
Each bldclar aholl .,. rt·
qulrlld to fllo wtth hlo bid 1
aortlflod ah"* or aHhlor'o
ahock for on omounl oquol
to fivo per cont at hto bid. but
In no _ , rnoro chon fitly
lh0u11111d dahra, or 1 bond
for 11n per cont of hlo bid,
PIIY•bll Ia the Dlroator.
Blrlrforo murrt oppty. on tho
prDplr tarmo, tar quollflco.
llano 11 lno1 len d""' prior
to 1111 dalo Mt tor -nlng
bldo In accardlnce with
ChopJor 11121 Ohio RoviMd
Code.
Pllno •d apoclflCallono
on on tHo In thl Doportlllllnt
at Tranoportatlan •d the of·
fico at The Dllllllct Deputy

HANGING BASKETS

992-2269

Milt! lEWIS,. Ownor

,,~­

~-·····-·-·--··~----·--·-

Ttme

BILL SLACK

,-.

-

. .....

INOEPINDINT •
CIIPn CUIIIIS
end n1:1 FLOOI CIIE.
•Aeaeonabte Retea
•Oualhv Work
•FrM Eatlmetea
.
•Cerg~ Hea .Feat Dry
oHigh Gloat on TilAI
Floor Finish

8· 1 2· 90-tfn

.

Pralocl ond -

ALL FLATS OF
BEDDING Pl~NTS
· . NOW $450
10 INCH

Rsg . $1.00

Wanted to R ent

Equ1pment for Rtt!ll

'7 I - Autos tor Sal_.
72 Trucks for Selle
73 'hms &amp; 4 WD 's
7 4 MotOfcycluro
1&amp; Boatl &amp; Moton tor Sah1
76 Auto Parts&amp; Acc:enoflm;
77 A\lto Repa"
78 Camptng Equ.pmt!llt
79 CMmperv. &amp; Mot01 HOilltf!O

Merchondtse

WantedToOo

·, 22

21

·

47

Schools B. lnllructtn n

Farm Eq\41pmum
Wanttd H) 8uy

Transportation

48

Rildio. TV B. CB Repour

ll~oluLk

63 l1vtslilt:k
64 Hay I Gr.1m
65 Seed It F...-tllllllr

Real Eat•t• W•nutd

Mobiht Hot'nvs lqr Rt111t
F•rms for Rent
44 ~ Apartment tor Runt
45 - Furnilhe4 Rooms
46 Space tor Rant

lihijili4fill

New H•ven

895 Letart
937 IJutfWo

61
62

Business Buildlngli
loll &amp; Acre-ue

Houtea tor Rent

4I
•· ·4 2
43

Ill S.,ppiii:S

1\ l

Homes IOf S1le
Mobtltt HomM tor S .JitJ
Firms tor Sale ·

l;fiiDifill

11 HelD Want od
1 2 Siluahon Wanted
,13 ·Insurance
14 Business Tram1ng

....

33...1 fMt or 1.43 mlle.

END OF SEASON
CLEARANCE SALE

Rsg. 19.95

;Jl 32
31
J'
35
36

Servll:es

Call Sentinel

WICHITA, Kan. (AP)- Mike
Harrison's home nm in the bottom
of the ninlh lifted California to a 65 victory over Ohio State and
knocked the Buckeyes out of the ·
NCAA Midwest Regional at Eck
Stadium.
The Buckeyes, who lost the
game early Monday after two
weather-related delays, finished ·
dleir season with a 53-13 record.
Wid! one out, HarrisOn jumped
on the first pitch from Ohio State
starter Blase Sparma and sent it

Clfd ol lh.nks
In Memory
Annoucements
Give.w•v

Employment

Gtllli• Counly
Area Code 614

f.J

Re;;l Es!dte

5
6
1

Rates arc lor con .. cutl'4''runs. brokenupdi1Y5Wtll bech•ged
tor each day as •eparate &lt;id5 .

The pnce has been reduced to
.$81,900 and owner financtngof up
to 80'16 of purchase amount maybe
possible for qualifying person to
buy very nice large home on 3~

and mobile home.

Cal tops OSU 6-5 in NCAA,baseball tourney

i1ininfs

1
2
3
4

.05/day

S1 .301doy

PRICE REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

acres in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2
garages, rented I BR apt. Property
includes 4,800 sq. H. farm ·bldg.

(AP)

Royall6, Marillen 3 ·
Geor$e Brell's single in the
sixth innmg drove in the go-ahead
run and lied him with Lou &lt;lehrifl
for 38111 place on die all·time hll
list.
Winner Kevin Appier (3·5)
pitched a four-hitter, struck out
three and walked two.
'
The Royals trailed 3·0 after
three
but went ahead with"
two runs tn the sixth to chase·
Randy Johnson (3·5).

~nnouncemenls

.20
.30
.42

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLI9ATION

...

LONG WAY DOWN- blab 1bomas (fore·
groand) llld tbt rat of tbe Detroit Piston~ found
oul lbt bird way llow far they bad to fall from
tbe stratospbeJ'e or back-to-back cbamplonsblp

Hall also homered in die seventh off Red Sox starter Danny
Darwin and Jesse Barf.eld hit two
solo homers.

I

Days

==~==~~===r~~~~~~'
· BULLETIN
Business Services
. . . BOARD
. . DINO-MITE
o:

of Sanda7'1 NBA Welten Coolerelllje.dJal!lpl·
onsblp series pme, wbk:b the Laten won Uti·
95to take a 3-llead In lheserlel. (AP)
·

THE BUCK STOPS HERE - Porllaad's
Buck WWiaiU (52) flndl bls progress Slopptcl
b11bt L.A. Laken' Sam Perkluln the flnl ball

CAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 ;00A M . SAfUROAY
2 ~ 00 P M MONOAV
2.00 PM . TUESOAY
2:00PM . WEI;)NESDAY
2 :00PM . THURSDAY
2 00 PM. FRIDAY

Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

POME-ROY, OHIO

10 ().I. .

RECORDS WIN - llldlaas pllcbtr To• Cudiolll dellven 1
pit&amp;* Ill Mn' 7 IIIPC'• pme apllllt lilt bOlt llaltt.ore OJIJie•,
w11o tel 3-2. Ia 1M .... Cllldloai pve ap 1tvt11 IIIII, AI udl 011t
.,._ uclwdredtwolll.,_laaiiiPofwurk. (AP)

Yard Sales

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THUASD,C.Y PAPER
.. HillAV PAPfA
SUNOAY PAPER

.. . ....

Ylllkees 6, Red Sox 5
Mel Hall's second hOmer of the
game, a three-run shot off Boston
relief ac:e Jeff Ralrdon in the ninth
inning, lifted New York over the
Red Sox.
Hensley Meulens led off the
ninth wilb a single and Kevin Maas
followed with a line drive off Rear·
don's glove for another single
before Hall hit his seventh homer
down the right-field line.
Lee Gueaennan (1..()), the founh
Yankee pitcher, worked a hitless
nindl for the victory. Reardon fell

. Wllb to

In Mumoriam

poleS 0-.lfy fflbunU. fUIIC:hntg OVer 18.000 honu~s.

Rqers from sixth placo and S 1/2
games back 10 lint place by a game
over Oakland. Texas returned
bome after winning six straight in
Minnesota and Smtle.
The Rangers improved to 17-6
in May. t)'in.lt die team record for
viclllries in the monlh set in 1988.
Last May, they went .B-19,
· "J guess the '27 Yankees did
what these guys are doing right
now," Kelly said.
· Apin the Ringers won despite
a shaky performance from their
staning pucber. Kevin Brown (4-3)
gave UP. lluee earned runs on six
bits in five innings. Brown, wllo
had to work out of jams in eac:h
inning, walked five and struck out
two wbile throwing 90 pitches,
only_~~ for strikes.
~Puckett went 4-for·S for
the Twins.

H11ppy Ads

*A cl•s•fuxl advtJtlist~n1Uilt pliiCt:d m lhe 0.1tly SuuiiiUII (11!1 ·
ClfPI
clt~sSthtotd diSplily , Busin~s Card and hHJill noth:H)
wtll alsu appttar .,, Ihe Pt Plc~n Rents let tuld the G•th

1AL contests..• _;,(C_onti_·nu_ed_from_Pag-=:e....:.S)~-----; American League.

e, The

tfrec ads
Gi¥eiiWI'f' and Found itds .und• 15 words will be
. mn 3 d_.a at no c:h•ge.
'PriCe of ad IQr •II capitall-'.ttt.IS is doubto pnce otad cost
•7 point ·• • lypa oniV used .
. .
'Sttntthtll ,ll not responsible tor errors 01her tirst llirf. !Che~
for error f. lirll dr~t •d runs '" papm) . Call b~lore 2 .00 p.m
d.w attur publication to maktt cou8chon
~Ads thll must be paid m advance ar•1
Card of lhanks

P8a•

The Deily Sentinel

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16·15-tfn

ACADEMIC .
AWARDS
GOLF LISSDNS

,,..,

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
R1palr, Trophies,

Sign age
JONN T. TEAfORD
CRnD, OliO

---

-fiOom AddltM»n1

ond

-EI-Iosl

. .

Plum~lnt

-Concrete worli ,
- Roofing
- lnterkK • l•terkH' ,
Pslwllo!g

,,
t'

•e

(FA I!I! !ITIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

P-oy, Ohio

·

11·14-'90 lin

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
S. . . .IU!gln

CUitea froMe t_,.lr
NEW • USED PAIITS
FOA ALL MAKES •
MODELl

992·7013
or 992·5553
01 YDU fill

1-aoo...a..ooq
DAIWIN, IHO
1/ t i"IS / t mo.

HOWARD liO$.
EXCAVATING;
IULLDOZEA end

BACKHOE WORK.
HOME liTE•• .
LANDCLEAAJNG.
WATEA end SEWIA
LINEI

•

DUMP TIU(-115 ;
AVAILAIL£
FAEE ESTIMATES

992-7451
4-zt·tl· I mo. pd .

'' MIN/I""·
UPHOLSTRY
IIJ.Ie. Sue1tl

llj:le,ert

Hand Tufting

Cullom Drttpee
!16\'Nro.,.,...oo

Clllt~

614-992·!121 .

SIGNS

We leyWIIIIW.Do.
Wo Do Whet We lilY.

tO.It-t ...

b '/ tldr HtOitlt~'f

J?'*"rby

~UALITY '

\

•

I

r

"

,
'

�Page

S

The Dally Sentinel

\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

May28,1991

lUNUY· May 28, 1991
BQRNLOSER

43 Ferme tor Rent

Read the Best Seier
· Readthe

. 1M Deily Sentinel Plge I

Pomeroy-llldcllep 11"".,
-. OhiO
-. . . . . -

........

Television
Viewing

CLF\SSIFED RDS

M

TUE.. MAJH

M

IVINNI

Announcements

F R AD T

3 Announcements
Moot ArN Slngi&lt;oo Br.

~

Nat Chance. Coi1fldonl 1. Wrllo:

Hoon... rchL!'2· Box 1M3, Go~

llpollo, OH 4.,.,.,,

4

Giveaway

l'.'j",fj

M'&lt; NAME IS SALL'r'. AND ..
6ECAUSE I'M 8166ER ~AN

Freo PupPlri. 814-44to0417.
Robbh pon, 304-675·1111.

•

1

't'OU, 1M 601N6 TO BE

To good hOlM molhot Collco

•

•

h~~~~~

"What would my payments be

• w

,.._T_U_T_O_L_E___,IInctudlng the - -r

VOUR TEACHER ...

cat I cut• kltt.,.., t14~18.

•

.1 I I' I I' I e

COfllplele 1M chuckle quolod
.
.
.
.
.
.
by lillini
the missing -d•
.__.__._......_.._......__. you doYOiop from stop No. 3 below.

In

r"· t ~

SCilt.M liTS ANSWIIS
;·:'

7

Yard Sale

lnflnn - EmetY - Woman - Jewllh - MEMORIES
The elderly tiank leiter oouneelld lhe young boy

~was-=1,~~:,.~
pleuant MEMORIES."

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

_
.
~--------------~ ·
Wi-n

NORTH
.Qt

BRIDOI:

.AII:U
tlt172

: ALL Yard SOlei lluot 8o Paid In
, Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
•tho day bo,.,._ tho ad lo to run.
' Sunday od"lan • z:gg p.m.
: Frtdoy. llonMy '\flhlon • 2:00
t p.m, Saturday.

+Itt S

PJUUJP
ALDER

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's :
·a a10 ........ a,ooo. -....

..,

IU.ST
.AII:JIU

WEST

•au

•Ju

.164
+95

ll!IJ.

+Q It&amp;

+AJ712

SOUI'II

••n

THIS' MOV/8
WA~N'T ~~J..IAfh;l. • • .

IT fJt:Aplt&gt; f

c-. -··.-

Supplt&lt;"s
,, livestock

rdiPl

---- -·
e.-. DR

W..l

s NT

Nor..
I NT

lui

Puo

PUI

4t

Pua
PUI

4•

tbe biddiac ltarted•
ldentlcaUy at both tables. South's
jump to tbree no-trump lltowed a bal·
IIICed baDcl with tbe values for came.
btll it dealed four ltearta and it denied
a spade stopper. How come? Moat U·
peril tR •LebeuobJ,• in wbicll a re-

.
;
t117 Honda' 100 Magno, \oGD
ml~--=~.0011 ·~.
terl:OO PM.
,,

-lnal

s•
Pa.
~

~

Lebel**'

75 Boats &amp; Motors ;•.'
for Sale
·~~
·
- llartlnN,_~ !t:GI hi&gt;. flO,,
eJC oontl ll,fluu....771-1111 , •

'

1Hfl Baaa Traoltar PFII _ . ,

.--Ida. - . . . . . :
_..,

,_,

-r·

- · ........ ftndar, ....... -.
- . lol ........ btrn; .."".

........
~-- ·~ ;
. . . ..,~ro~tat,
condltton,
:IIM1

lhow her three-car!llteart boldla&amp;. Jte.
member, she ltld already dlllled four
ltearta with ber jump to IUee notrump. North wu bappy to play ill tbe
4-S Ill
.

. , _ of two IIHrump II artificial,
Welt led a spade, Eut plaYinl tM'ee
utla&amp; tbe opener to bid t1tree clubs. I'OUIIdl of tbe lUll Declarer, wru. Iter
Tb• tbe , pa t4er caD bid tbree ao- back firmly apinlt tbe waH, nafled in
trump eltber lmllledlately or via the tbe ~, drew tnunpe. na 1ler dla·
tWIHIHI'UitiP
bid. ID the ,111011111
led a club towutl tile kine·
former cue be dealelaspade stopper; West ltld tbe ace and wu •t of
in tile latter he llhinn one.
spades, 111 tbe very lucky coatract
North, "-iil&amp; there WIIIIO spade• IMde·fW pl1111 at.
lltopper, retrelted to bll diamond •t.
South -.Irina Levltina, a Rttalan
AI -tlte lint ta~. Soutll puled, The wbo Uftl in 'l'eiDecll, N.J. Site II bet·
conti'IICt (four dlatiiOIIdl) sbould have ter known u a cbea player, ltavlnc
made, but declarer erred and linlllted come within one win of capturla&amp; tbe
one down.
ttl~ World Women's Cheu CblmplonAt tbe second table, South decided to lltlp.

1117 TRX210X fHr wt 1ltri

~

....

Cllamp!enshi~

ters p.m.

25HP

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Opening lead=• 3
tbeiD~c;=:;llt Knocltout Teams t
at tile SpriDc North Ainerlean Briclce .,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1 - KawuloiiDO LTD, t.aimar,
aaroge ~apl, tow m•laa. fomliod $21110, 114-lla..MI o~

$1,710. aftar S:Oo PM,
1121.

+II

ConwnticJDB ca111e controversy. Soclll players dislllte tllem, but sometlm!ll conftlltiOIII llelp plin to niiiCh

:_~

1111 T....,..,
1100-.,bocllrOai,Ollc. cciM.,
tillS

tAQJiot

The Lebensohl
story
By PIIIJilp Alder

•

tillS
304-77W011.

.Q 105

' '

'•

Employment Serv1ces

The World Almanac! Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS .
2 Oua~ar Paf)Oio For tm Noo(a.
t Slda, ..._ 814o441-7711.
;

Household
GOOds

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

lx12 Carpet rom. .MO. ond up.
Carpol Joi.OO a !!I':_ Fumlutra, 114o441-l'lof'.

ueE YOI.IR
IM.A.Gi'INATtON,
DUMMY!

.

12ft. Campar, ' ' - I . IM-J71.;
2121, Aok For lhlrloy.
'

• So¥1et

I' · HANeS AROIJND

WI'TH A F'RSTlY

~CAOWD.

County ~ Inc. Goad
uaodlpplll- T
.Y.- ODon
I o.m. to I p.m. Mon...... •14-tll!,. 127 Jnl. Avo. Galllpollo. .....

wa-..
rane-.

.....

Cull Buoi,_.Vendtna Roula
For lalo Choop. Boll aiilcldy. t·

on loa for
--to..nat.....,
-ph.al 1 or 2 doya por - - .
lnteruled persone confect
Branda Amoa at :104415-mG,
oxt. 55, Mon-FII 1:00 AM-4:00
Booutlcll~

PM lot bid tonn. DudMna lor

IOO.S44-1181S.
l,.ocal Vandlng A-. Pricad For

Qulclt Sate. t-.za.-.

Rentals

Bo-

Pon-.

. . . In

•

conauKing dlaiMian ......... for

Lakin ~~. Laflin, WV. ·
bo NQIIIINCI/IIcllliOd dloiMion.
bo porioll!oad
two
dip ·
porto month.
•.......

I
n
~--·

2142 bill

Rio

Unlum- _

14,1ttl.

lc-.1250hno. lf4.44HIM.

room~,

~~o,.,..

- lol-.

Nowi'.Jood

.

Houoahold lwnlohlng. t/2 mi.

Jorrlcllo Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,
Clll,304ol71o14110.

TransportatiOn

_ _ brloll,_ ..........
.... Clailda'tara. litoffntate,
ClraRclo, DH can tw.
:MNtl1.
.

58

--------1
71 Autos lor Slit

Pets lor Site

-·

'71 CIMaro -

Professional
Slrvlels

T I L - - r-tna, -

=In·--~

$1,100. , _

, z 80if.

1 lath, Gat Helt, Clt_y

1111
R. ..
_ , Mal~
11,000. .......
Callo

1117 . .....,

141'111 -On 1 Aero
- Lot ,.,
WithRonl.
Ell·
...,.
To HIIC I Stano. 11270/mo.

Ca-.....-

f:"M~~·

c-

~--·

............ 1nt-. - ....
._
1171 -

~~gars-r114441-.

.

1 Dry rlvar bad

2 Uprllinl

3 Co!umnlll BomtMICk '
4--IIIJ

NDW HE'S
TH' SPITTIN'
IMAGE OF--

·=knife

brallier' I

1 1 1 1 II

37"*--'t

kMI*?
5 Rangaol

40 Pronuncll-

ktiOwladte
llitiiNWitlltr
7 Tfnga dMply

3e~

tlonmerk

....., qla.

12 ......, ..
.uat

.....
.....

13Danlal'l
18 Lawyer'l

.

repH,. rr ... 114 MII011

.........JACK-.
__ ,n_..,_
IVANI.

r

•.

lnad. -

014. 1 -

A1-1121.

~=:Mr.':

':llh

Thuctdailllrd, -

82

PlUmbing &amp;
Helling

,.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

r) '

Ca.,.,.. .........

,:~
oa..,ona Oha.
114 . . . . . .

.

...,21,1111

cy.;i.

An unproductive
1181 IIMfly come
to"" end. You lhOUid be able to eiCf)eri·
ence victory In the ye~~r ahead on tho

~---~----~

57 Travell

,,..· ~....,-·

I

I

5I Treetop
hOma

Wludsau I ....... FtM
llmolaal llafrvoll, No- To

lallflo Tanlt,......
Gollo
ca.
-IYAIIIINTIII' flU,
"" vw _, llodr .......... ....- . DH 1-ICINIHia.
010. Calli~ aftar I or
01'1 " . . . . .
0....
--.
.
G rgaa Crao1t
1141. Parta,
aupo
1IJI Cllllj- ConloiNI . , ~ and ......,. 114.-.~,-­

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

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

anttell

55 New

Older I

flon'a TY ... ~lllna
In l8nlth .... ... •lcltla .....
lual
N.ftiiiF/2.
- ......
-- ·.. 31,000 ... alhar ......... .... -

111110..'!Oro 1.--rtll. Allor
I::IIIPII,OIII-..-_

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

54lla¥1nO

nlelt-

THANKY, ELVtNEY!!
LET ME PUT HIM
DOWN AN' I'LL FIX US
A CUP OF TEA

e::"'
mv
(2wda.l

Oftlw•.,, 111 1127 beloN 1p.m.

Real F state

............ Ill F.!llf laaailon.
ll1111111d_ . . . .. ...

51

=..":-:;:: "r.".i

movtna 100ft.
.liT
IHAfllll Runo graot, IOWJS. Aal'lllon ........ r

. . . . . tiiiii:IM

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

23

.

Supplies

40 lndaflnlle

311!dw.-d'a

TATER IS TH'
SPITTIN' IMASE
OF YOU,
LOWEEZ.Y!!

hlmlohlna. WATIR WILLI DRILUO: foal,
Houre; Mon-Sit, .... 1'14o411. raaJallabla..,..._f14.111.mt ·~ae~ng· ... fbo · - ...
:II par ... " fnttr·
0322, S ""' Bu...,HII Rd.
•ad uA :tlt.s:IJ-1817 aftor
FrN Dollvory.
'
55
Building
1:00PM. .
y_.. lap ne.•
PICKENS FURNITURE

Complelo

(ellbr.l
48 i.aalletttr

arlerlet
32 Flxad pay
34Wool
31-lly

BARNEY.

··:-=:r-•;

;:;:...~=··

· LAYNE'S FURNITURI

Grande .t.rwa.

-•oontactBrondoAmoaal
304-67!1-3230, txt. 51, llon-Fr~
1:00 .t.ll-4:00 PM f0&lt; bid r-.

Doadlino r..- applying II Juno

~

27 Join
30 Larie

Serv1ces

Toddr laar C1l1 otlort, 0... 100
--l
Plnll , IIJf $' , I

1n lp.m.-tp.llt.

4br Homo

'

w. · -

41 Houses lor Rent

2br ~. lullt In O..n I
Malta flfg I Worltlng AI No I!Jflll'- II
ory, For ~ .'""-I In Yard. North
FrN Informal ion Bond A UIASE Gallli
-rlct. lf4.4.1t.
To MAO lullt Malltra, P.O. Box 1111 alor 4p.m.
ms,
DH 41M2.
Jbr HO\III, Nowly -tad,
. _ _ . boauty and tanning o-tooltlng Rlvar, :. lllloa on
Rl.7, 2 Acrao, MOD. 114o441-1115,
Rlploy~ ~· land fn.
qulroo INUtr - . P.O. lox 114o441-1243.
131, A.,..,, WV 2527'1.
3br Ranett. elly Mho all, Ptanl:
Subdlvlolon, ,,.,..,._ 11+371-

-CIUiytlaT..._
float Adular,·
....... .... . . . . . .

- .......

12 Order
14 Haft milk
11 llnlllecl
11CIR--

170111 ...
11 Pull to work
20AIMmbte
23 llore twilled

fGicf.:
..... llflll,

USED APPIJI."CCI
~1Wo,r~
tlryara, •a119.1•n. . . . . . . Gillan
.
lkl111 IIDill1 Clll, a Clu u1 • • Puilp.
120.
.
l,ltiPar Rtv. M ...
CNoi-I.Col-.

00011

1D=~toll
day

14JIMII...-, Toni, 2 - ·

f!&gt;g -:"able,, -

45 Heal unll

1 lnNcl

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

42 VMUitM-

.......

-mel defeat.
battlellelda - · you pr-..Jy
•••••, ,..., 21.,_20) II you get 100
Involved wllh. dtpendent lrfend today,
you may ltnd yottrlell taking of , .
lllonlillltllfM your pal 1181 lilglaclad.
Gllmtnl, treet you!NII to a blrlhday filii.
Send lor Gemini' I A1tro-Grapll pradtc-

* ' I ,._ OMIIntl: • • I
.... Ill lloaL fllolrollan

...... .,

car-

\
,._,.

,.......,.

---- .....
'

.

••
~

1

....

tl

lions lor lha year ahead by mailing
$1 .25 plus a long, 11811-addrNIId,
stamped envelope to Aatro-Graph, c/o
lhll -.paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve·
land, OH 44101-3-428. Be sure to alate
your zodiac llfgn.
•
CANCER (..,_ 21-.luly 221 Don't give
too muclt credence today to the com·
menlo of a df19runtlad acquaintance
who seldom 1181 anything nice to MY
about otharl. ~et people like lhil do
thalr own per10na1 publicity.
LIO I.IU!r 21-Aug. 221 In order to
ach- a key objeCtive today, you'll
have to belmlrl• well u delarrnlned.
11 you tack- of • - quallllee, you
could IIIII ffal .
YIRGO lAIII· 21-lept. 221 Even though
your ldeU are likely to be beller than
thOM of your PMN today, you might
lind n Imp a II* 10 gelD their aupport .

a..A (a.pt. 11-o.L IJI Be on guard
today 10 thai you .-.n't drawn Into a

campflcalad t1eu afoponent In which you
could end ·up haWig to make good on

acknowtadgment lor clolng thing• sue·
caelully today. eon..eely, however,
you might be Inclined to blame othera
lor your lllfluree or mlllakee.
CAPRICORN (0.. 22-JM. 111 You're
Hkely to be aoclable and gregarloue
~~round lntlmalelriencllloday,

bill-

In the company of unfamiliar ~

you may be unr--"'Y uncomfort·

able and behave accordingly.
..OUAIIIUS (.lan. 20 ....,, 11) II gettl"!;
your surroundlnQI In orCS« gl- you

enjOyment today, thll'l - · But don't
get down on -lalee jull IMICauM
~ mlghtn't...,._llta- degree

lilt_,

01 ~ "")'8111' .... prOfeel.
PII Cll (M. • M
Whan gab- ,
bing wllh 1r1enc1a today, you won't be

too good 11 h8nclllng fulfa In the cOnV8ratfon. YII!IIDikl aplll tha _ , , about
-ltfng thai lnlenclod lor
!Mfr-.
..,..l*alt :n-Ap~~ 'II) You',. ffklly
lo be mm.rllflr rnoll¥lleiii'*Y. a rMI
go gal. . In tltfngllllat ani flnaiiCI~

Howe..,, In yourICOIII'IO (0111. 14 No 1. 121 II you are gem IIIlO .-cl, you mfghlbe "1he
too • - about haYing ~hing ,....,.. klllll~ Ol"llta
donll your '"" today, you could end up TNIIIUS (A(Irll • Mtr . , Don't let
In a llllllfe 01 Willa """" a lrfend who II Olhere ...... 181 Ida ... you today In
llluellonlwlttNyou a!IIWto ..... per·
U8UIIfly : " ' ' - ' yielding.
IA.n'
(IIR. a-Dec. 11) You IOMf golll. If ,you loflow lllelr .......
could pe quite -oar to ..-ve proper 110111, your ellariiiDikl ~ ""'lft1te. '
ar.o!Mt'a~.

~lfnglullo you.

t••·"

.

'

'

'z"

zx

MJJIZXV

HYJTWY
.CPI

XJISJI

liMY

I 8 X X

LIL8SJ.
PREV10U1 IOLUTtON: "In
gDing

ZA

VCZI

J A 8' X

to Ill me." -

IIIII bt IfF I

a-

HICS

""

ex

WI Z 8 M,
IJTIP

Ul

UCIPA8XX . '

II' I dog at dog, llnCf

Golda;u.

.,.,
I

nobocfy'l

�1\leeday, Mlly 28, 1

Pomeroy-411ddleport, OhiO

Seven receive ..._c=on=till=!led:;:::.:::trom=.!:~1 ---------l
Virginai Betz, Hilliard, Harry
Featberaton, W0011tec, John Kauff,
Pint Pleunt, W. Va., C. G. KerwOOd, Columbus, Nona Nelson,
Pomeroy, Mildred Baile1, Middlepon, Muiten Seyfried, Lynch·
burg, Va.; Ted and Clarabelle
Riley, Jr., Midcll~, 1947.
Marie ADen, partariburR, S, C,,
Mary Rollins Scarberry, 'tuppers
Plains, Jean Clark Null, Middle·
port. Bill Moore, Chillic:othe, Don
Becker, Middleprot, 1948; Kiuy
Bachtel Dallas, Agoura Hills,
'
Hazel ·
Calif., DaVI'd Oiles, Raeme,
Hawltins Gintber, Upper Arlington,

· • Darcla Malinda Wolfe
Susaa Park Scholarship

Jamey Holiday Acworth, Ga., Jean
Ashley Shamblin, Gallipolis, 1949.
Robert Richards, Orion, Mich.,
Naomi Overtwf Darst, Gallipolis,
Ida Hartley Roller, Waldorf, Md.,
Jean CraiJ, Middleport, Mary
Brewer, Middleport, 1950; James
Buell, Knightdale, N. C., Myron
Duffield, Buffalo Grove, Dl., Don
Pa"""
,_, Dayton' Juu' "-born' Clars
Sanborn, Houston, Teus, Betty
Ashley Snow, Shade, Bill Swisher,
Middleport, Roscoe .Wise, Middleport, James Roller, Waldorf, Md.,
Jo Ann Wilson Taylor, .Westpon,
Conn., Richard Walters, Columbus,
Frances 01ase Yowtg, Clifton, W.
Va., 1951.
Doris Mayse Coientan, Jackson,
Harold Hinkle, Columbus, June

Phillip Don Swisber
Susu Park Scholarsbip

.....

Heatber Pullen
McComas-Moore Scholarsblp

Mark·Walter Crooks,
Susan Park Schoolarship

•

Community calendar
Community CaleJidar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that evenL Items
must be received weD Ia advuce
to assure pablicatloa In the cal·
eadar.

meet Tuesday at 7 11.m. Turkey
beard cOntest will be JUdged at this

time.
POMEROY - Boy Scout Troop
249 wiD have a committee meeting
on Tuesday . at the United
Methodist Church in Pomeroy at 8
p.m. Ail members are urged to
auend.

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The Ohio EIB Phi
Chapter, Bela ~igma Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesilay.at 6:30 p.m. at
Gilmore's in Pomeroy for the end
of the year picnic. OffiCCill will be
inSialied. All members are urged to
auend.
HARRISONVILLE - The Har·
risonviUe Past Mattons will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home
of Janet Bolin. A1J past mattoos are
invited.
HARRISONVILLE - The Har·
risonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at 7 p ..m. at the town
house. Those attending are to bring
s,nacks and all members are urged
toaw:nd.

. WEDNESDAY
GALLIPOLIS : The Middleport
Literary Club will hold its fmal
meeting of the year jointly with the
Rive~ide Study Oub of Gallipolis
at the Stowaway Restaurant on
Wednesday. Members are to meet
at 11:45 a.m. at the home of Faye
Walia~.
.
THURSDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gailia Meigs
Community Action Agency will
have a free clothing day on Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at the old
· high School building in Cheshire.

~~~~~;.

..... ,;.~ ....- . Ky., Tcm

~Don Erwin.

Clyda 'Taylor
L. Gilmore,
Ray Kloes,
".;.... Crooks,

Low tonight near 70.
Thursday, high in mid·
80s• .Chance of rain 30
percent.

Page4

Freel

Ward

Beverly
Mi. Tf!l!Mm'

•

L nn Dsniels

~arllyn Anderson,
Cinda Sauer Harris,
Iva Srewart Sis9on,
Jerry Van lnwagern,
Narsa Frost Van Meter,
W Va., Alan Wallace,
1965.

2Seotl-,1e
A Multimedia

'

Meigs board hires personnel,
approves summer programs

Ka~hinny

.

FAN SUPPORT • LL Gov: BreretGD Joaesls haged ., Goodwin Dempse;p during •Is victory celehralla. Tuesda;p iiJpt Ia Lex·
ington, Ky. Jones won the Democratic prlmaey lor gowrnor. (AP)

Jones wins primary.·
in l{entucky race
.

White-Westinghouse

•

room air conditioner

Aaron Sheets
tom, Edwina Belle, Middleport,
Dottie Musser, Pomeroy, Roberta
Hoover DU!Ioa, .Siwoa ·Y-ollDg
Justis, Naman Price, Ralph Stewart, ail of Pomeroy, Dor Coates,
Middleport, Mike Roberts, Akron,
Rulh Ann Brolhers Riffle,
Pomeroy, Paula Sayre Welker,
Pomeroy, William Young,
Pomeroy, Nelora Mossman Morgan, Jim Sprouse, Ben Ewing,
Pomeroy,class of 1961.
Anita Russell Neutiling, Parkersburg, W.Va., Mike Werry, Belpre, Jean Chapman ,Wilson,
Williamson, W. Va., class of 1962;
Judith Wehrung Werry, Pomeroy,
class of 1963.
.
Louaqna Leonard, Columbus,
Jennifer Crew Soloman, Rock HiD,
S. C., Brenda Bailey Hysell,
Pomeroy, Yvonne Deal Young,
Pomeroy, Janice Wehrun$ Kilker,
Menton on the Lake, Ohto, Carla
Will Werry, Belpre, class of 1964.
Charloue Lambert, Nelsonville,
Linda Smith Russell, Manhattan,
. Kansas, Beverly Johnson Roush,
Pomeroy, Darla ibersbach Siley,
Marietla, Brmda Owens Lawhorn,
Warminster, Pa., Barbara Kenney
Loftis, St. Peters, Mo., 'Linda
Reuter Barber, Anchorage, AJaoika,
Jay Russell, Medina, Carl Aleshire,
Franklin, Ohio, Vickie Felly MiBs,
Dublin, Diet Werry, Vienna, W.
Va., Guy Saraent, Pomeroy, Rex
Cum·mings, Syracuse, Sharon
Biggs, Pomeroy, Sandra Gilmore,
Amblin, Jeanie Ebersbach Sims,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.. Linda ·
Slewart Brooks, Thompson Station,
Tenn., Jeff Gibbs, Cincinnati, Bill
Francis, Tuppers ·Plains, Carson
Crow, Pomeroy, Gail St. Clair,
Pomeroy, class of 1966. ,
Mary Francis ·Rose, Winter
Springs, Fla., class of 1967.

'

'

•'

White-Westinghouse

$199°0

EHS jlow-thru project

rl.,)

WE ALSO HAVE
7,000 BTU
9,000 BTU
12,000 BTU

IN STOCK
8,000 BTU
11,000 BTU
18,000 BTU

INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY
106 ·N. 2ND
992-3635'
I

MIDDLEPORT
.......

'

.I

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) marijuana, had '24,159 votes;•or 6
.Democratic Lt. Gov. Brereton percent.
Jones built rna-gins throughout the
Hopkins, who has represented
state to claim the Democratic nom· cenuai Kentucky's 6th DistPct for
iqation for aovemor in Kentucky seven terms, had 70,147 voq:s to
: T~day, but the Republican pri- Forgy's 69,958 votes. Nearly 81
. mary was too close to caD.
percent of the state's precincts
Jones, a former Msson County were J!:porting unoffiCial i'esulu.
resident, and son of Mr. and Mr.,
" lilcOiiJ Kentpcky ei
~
E.'Batow J_, of·I'OIItlm-nt,
hod 145,282 votes, or 38 percent,
with nearly 80 pe!tCIIl of the state's largest vote totals and lhil was no
3,231 precincts lq)Olting unofficial exception and that was borne out in
returns.
·
Tuesday's voting.
Seven-term U.S. Rep. Larry
Joiles raised $3.8 million io $2.4
Hopkins was in a virtual dead heai million for Poore 8iJd $1.6 million
with Lexington lawyer Larry Forgy for Baesler. Hopkins spent $1.6
with fewer than 250 votes separat- million on his campaign to just
ing the two from more than 430,000 for Forgy, who .based his
140,000 cast. .
.
· campaign on accepting only $300
Lexington Mayor Scotty Baesler conuibutions instead of the $4,000
concedecf defeat to Jones, but for· legal maximum.
mer siBIC highway chief Dr. Floyd
Jones aDd HoplciJ!s, who both
Poore refused 1.0 give in while he call central Kentucky bome, were
awaited vote totals from far west- the pre-election favorites, but both
ern Kentucky,' one of his had unexpectedly difficult pristtongholds.
maries.
·
.
Baesicr had 118,002 votes, or
Mr. and Mri. E.' Bartow Jones
31 pereelll Poore had 94,814 VOteS, were in Kentucky 'last' night and
or 25 percent. Lexington lawyer today and were unavailable for
Galewood Galbraith, who based his commenL
campaign on a )lromise 10 legalize

•

sons, Steven Patterson, Robyn
PiiZer, Robin Prentice.
James Pyle, Lori Ritchie, Kelly
Rizer, Cyndra ·Roberts, Jozie
Roberts, Nathan Robinette, Carolyn Robinson, Sheryl Roush,
Lsura Salser, Artis· Salyer, Gayle
Salyer, Ann Sisson, leanne ·
Slawler, Kathy Smith. Margaret A.
Smith, John Snediker, Deanna
Spriggs, Virginia Lynn Swain,
Terry Wayland, Ralph Werry,
Helen Williwns, Kay Wilson, Sheiagh Wilson, Donna Wolf, Betty
Ann Wolfe, Amy Young, Mae
Young, Bryan Zirkle.
The board approved a field !rip

for vocational agriculture students
to Toledo on June 10 and II ,
Emphasis of the trip will be on
learning 11bout farm business in
Ohio.
·
Alga Duarte and Natalie Garnier
were acoepled as foreign exchange
students for the next school year.
Action on membership in the Ohio
High School Athletic: Association
was tabled wttil the next meeting,
and Sandy Napper's grievcmce handled in executive ·session was
denied during llie open meeting.
Brent Manley, bus supervisor,
c.omplained to the board that the
Contlllued on page 3

GNP drops 2.6'percent during first quarter
. WASHING,TON (AP) - The

ier U.S. trade performance and
newfound strength in government
rate of 2.6 percent from January spending helped to make today' s
through March as the country suf- GNP report look slightly beuer.
fetecl ill firlt CC)IISCCUtive ~Y
Still, lhe 2.8 percent rare of
declines in ecooomic actiVIty since decline was significantly steeper
the 1981-82 recession, the gqvern- than the 1.6 percent drop recorded
ment said today.
in the October-December qusner.
The Coriunefoe Ilepanrnent said The two consecutive quarrerly
the falloff in the gross national · declines were the fust since the last
product, the total output of goods reoessioo eight years ago.
and services, was only slighdy less
The economic hard times took
severe.than origioally reported a their toll on American businesses
month qo.
during the 6rst three months of the
At thai time, the GNP drop was year. The Commerce Department
put at .2.8 percenL However, a bet-

u,s. economy shranlc at an annual

said in a companion reJ)ort that ·to annual rate of 3.6 peroenl, comafter-tax profits of U.S. corpora· pared to a ·6.3 percent rate of
lions fell by S.6 percent in tho fitSt mcrease in the final quarter of
quaner. lhe biggest drop since a 5.9 1990. The improvement was creditpucent decline in the third qusner ed .10 falling energy pioes.
of 1989.
·
Two consecutive quarterly
The first quarter profits decline declines in the GNP meets the
followed a 1 percent drop in the common definition for a recession
fourth quarter as a number of although lhe National Bureau of
American businesses suffered a Economic Research, the official
profi~ sq~eeze caused by the arbiter of when downturns begin
recessJOII.
and end, has actually picked July
Inflation, as measured by an 1990 as tile starting date for the
index tied to the GNP that tracks current slump based on readiap of .
~bases, moderated slgnlficandy a variety of monthly Slatistics.. · •
m the firsl three IIIOIIths of tho·year ,

=
· ~'::-::t~ w:~~ ·'Project threatened by lack -of-financial backers

Vinton County man pl~ads
innocent to weapons charge

5,000 B.T.U.

•EASY TO INSTALL
•PLUGS IN LIIE l LAMP
•115 VOLT
•CASH &amp; CAllY

CHESTER · The Ken Amsbary
Chapter lzaak Walton League will

The Eastern Local School Dis·
uict is c~tly preparing a Title
VI-B Fiow·Thru Project (Educa·
ticxl' of the Handicapped Acl. Pin
B, PL 94-142) for the 1991-92
school year.
·
ProJ)osecl project expenditures
include latrumenlli materials and
suppliea. pupil tuition, transportation and related services, equipmtnt and euea COilS.
Anyone Interested in further
infcnnation about tho poject or in
offering a•ggestionl fcir consideration should eont.ct M11y Price at
Easlan Hi&amp;h School, 985-3329.

.

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Davis, Shelly Dubose, Unda Dye,
Sentinel News Staff
Sharon Edmonds, Michael
Apptoval to hold a girls' basket- Edwards, Teresa Fields, Judith
ball camp a1 Meigs High School, Gannaway, Fern Orimm, Lucille
)llDC 3-7, was given to Ron Logan Haggerty, Carol Hare, Jodi Harriby the Meigs Locsi Board of Edu- son, Kemberlee Hemphill-Hood,
cation at a meeting Tuesday nighl
Sandra Holcomb, Paula Horton.
Joy Bentley was sranted a leave
Lois Ihle, Rose Ann Jenkins,.
of al!senoe for the 1991-92 school . Todd Johnson, Kathy Jones, Chris
year 10 continue her educalion, and Judge, David Kaufman, Farie
Kathryn Po-ll was employed as a Kennedy, Michael ,Kennedy, Barteacher on a continuing COIIII'IICL
bara Lawrence, Vinas Lee, Karen
The board also employed 72 Lrons, Helen Magg, Carol Mahr,
substitute teachers .for next year. Lmda Mancini, Judith McCarthy,
On the list are Jeff Arnold, Nancy Pamela Morris, Michele Mowrey,
Basye, Jenninp Bee~Nma Bias, Daniel Murray, George Needham,
Sanilra Cobb. Larry
' Deborah Gerald D. Nelson, Margaret Par-

__;:__ _

•

•

at

ep, Columbus, Betty Ward Field,
Troutwoocl, Janice Chikls Falkner,
BirminJ!Iam, Ala., James Mourning, Middleport, Marlene Knapp
Yeauger, Winchester; Patticia
Williams Kendrick, Powell, Vivian
Abbott, May, Pomeroy, 19S6.
· Richard Hovatter, Middleport,
Barbara Murray, Pomeroy, James Va.,
Bowles, Point Pleasant, W. Va., Lewis
Edward Kitchen, Middleport, 1957; Willard ,Buddy Moore, Thc1ma:l
Judy Arnold, Middleport, Vonda
Walburn, Vienna, W. Va., Betty E-. Mi:o~=·
Beclcer, Middleport, Jeaneue
Hood,
Thomas, Middleprot, 1958; Jen- .port, Mite Gerlach aDd
nifer Daniels Scott, MiddleDon, GIUCSC{ Gerlach, Middleport,
John Bacon, Indianapolis, lnd., Nelson, Middleport 1967:
Carla Wilsoo Lobrer, Troy, 1959.
King Brewer, ~:~~~
Olivia Bowles Locteae, Shaker Carol
Elaine Davis Pleeoe, Point
Heights, 1960: Daniel Malit BDt, W. Va:, 1968.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission .
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

\

Pick 3:816
Pick 4: 1950
Cards : 8-H, 7-C
2-D; 10-S

J..epb Paul Smith
Susan Park Sdlolarship and
Crawford-Gray-Lewis Schol·
arship

pomeroy Alumni ... ..;:;C;:,:on.:::tln;;:;ued;,;:..:.:.:..;:rrom..:;.pa.:::.ge:.....lL...I_;_,__ _.:.....__
Pomeroy, class of 1950.
Yvonne R. Roush Richardson,
Columbus, Hazel Schreiber Bali,
Pomeroy, t$ning E. Walker, Canton, Shirley Hysell Sopher,
Pomero~, Lily Giroiami Suickland,
Woodville, Norman Ray Smith,
Gibbstown, N. J., Kenneth E.
Imboden, Middleport, Janet' Hili
Theiss, Racine, Donald Hunnell,
Pomeroy, Norma Scholl Harrah,
, Vandalia: Joanne Jones Williams.
Pomeroy, class of I951.
Phyllis Meier May, Pomeroy,
class of 1952.
Frances Evans Hunnel,
Pomeroy, Ted Scott, Westland,
Mi., Sue Struble Cromer, Marion,
Marlene Moore Wilson, J&gt;omeroy,
class of 1953.
•
·
Coty Boothe
Roger Heines, Logan, Marilyn
Hemsley Brown, Pomeroy. class of
1955.
·
Etta Gerhart, Dubois, Colum~arolyn Charles, Pomeroy, Jo bus, Carol Curtis Riggs, Pomeroy,'
Ann Deck Rathjen, Fostoria, Dr. .· Dan Morris and Brenda Suauss
Hamid Brown, Pomeroy, William Morris, Pomeroy, class of 1957.
Qualls, Gallipolis, Iris Qualls .
Janet Carpenter Yo'ung, LaoPayne, Middleport, Mary Scott caster, Marlene Scholl Harrison,
Wise, Middleport, Ron Bearhs, Pomeroy, class of 1959.
Pomeroy, Bob Hill, James HubCharles Riffle, Pomeroy, James
bard, Lancaster, John Yo11ng, I.an- R. Smith, Tuppers Plains, Jack
cas1er, Tom R. Reuter, Janice Rif- Welker, Pomeroy, Charles Kitchen,
fie Reuler, Pomeroy, David Riggs, Mason, W.Va., class of 1960.
Pomeroy, Shirley Bowers BumDavid Brown, Zionsville, lnd.,
gardner, Middleport, Dale Harri- Sally Foster Williams, Marion,
son, Pomeroy, Harley Mossman, Judy Roush Flowers, Pickerington,
Pomery, class of 19S6.
Darlene Justice Newell, Long Bot·

Duff'Jdd, BuiJalo Grove, lll, Nola
Swisher, Middleport, Mary M.
Walbilrg, Powell, Nancy Beaver,
Middleport, 1952: Mlrilyn Bbers·
bach Wolfe, Racine, Blline Walburn, Vicmla, W. VL, and ArlaJe
Bowles King, New York City,
1953.
.
Rae Ow"'•""'-"",
...,.,_..
- W - J ....
••.__,....
Laura Rowley Harrison, Pomeroy,
Marcella Taylor Worner, Barboursville, W. VA., 1954; Gary
Wayland, Middleport, Pbyllis
Ebersbach, Orchard Late, Mich., .
Ronald Fultz, Westerville, N1955;

Ohio Lottery

Portland still
alive in N.BA
playoffs

McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) Raymond Johnson, owner of a Vin;
ton Cowtty bam raided during one
of two cockfllht raids May 11, bas
pleaded innocent to acharge of car·
rying a concealed weapon.
·
Judge Michael .Brame of Vinton
Counly Common Pleas Court set
bond Tuesday at $15,000.
Johnson is free on an identical
bond set bY the Vinton County
Court and will not be required to
post a new bond, deputy court clerk
Lisa Gilliland said. A pretrial hear·
ing is scheduled for JllDC 11.
Off~c:ers say Johnson, 57, was
not armed when agents burst
through the doors at tho beginning
of the cocldi~t raid.
But as VIIIIOn County deputies
processed about 300 people cited
for cockfighting, Johnson went to
his pickup truck and stuffed a
handgun in his ttousers, the offiCCill

last week in Scioto cOwtty, where

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) High-sulfW' coal can be converted
to low-sulfur oil that bums clearuy,
prornolers of the process say.
But a p~ to test the technology
on a commercial scale, a1 a proposed $220 million plant in Warren, is threatened by the lack of
futancial backers.
The conversion process, developed in part wilh $3.5 million from
Ohio's clean-coal technology program, is up for review by the federal government in Jwte.
Ohio Clean Fuels, a Toronto
company, needs at least $100 million in financing in addition to the
$45 million lhe U.S. Department of
Energy has pledged. The federal
government may withdraw backing
for lhe Warren plant unless promoters can.line up more money for
il
Ohio was prepared to spend $6
millibn to support the projecl
Tests show that the low-sulfur
oil is best obtained from the high-

the second raid took place.
Evidence again• tho seven, who
were chargecf with possession of
criminal tools, will be' referred to a
Scioto COilDty grand jury for possible prOsecution. ·
Attorney James Scott Smith,
The Pomeroy Police Departwho is representing ooe of the men,
said he cloesn 't expect additional ment investigateciiWO accidents on
Tuesday.
charges.
The first accident occurred at
"When the specific crime is a
the
p.m. · under
misdemeanor, you can't use pos- 1:4 7
session of criminal tools to make it Pomeroy/Mason Bridge. Angie
a felony," Smith said. "If they Eiliou of Rutland was turning onto
want to make cockfighting a West Main Sueet, stopped at the
felony, let lhe Legislature change stop sign at the inlerSCCtion.
iL,.
.Terry Wolfe of Middleport,
The more than 700 roosters driving a 1985 Dodge, struck
seized in the raids are still being Elliott's vehicle when she pulled
held in a Scioto County poultry up to the stop sign. Both vehicles
sustained moderaiC damage. .
.
bam. .
Eliiou and a passenger in her
Brame declared the roosters
1986
Ford, Heather Mitdlell, were
conttaband and ordered them
said.
humanely destroyed, bul the Ohio treated and released at Veterans
Johnson's attorney said his Gamefowl Breeders Association Memorial Hospital after being
client went to the truck for appealed lhe decision to the 41h . transported there by Pomeroy
squads.
cigareues and did not pick ·up the Ohio District Court of Appeals.
gun.
Wolfe tefused tteatment and
The appellate court cxrencled the
Felony charges against seven lower court's stay ' of execution was cited by Police Chief Jerry
Rought for assured clear dis1anoe.
other defendants were dismissed ,wttil June 3.
John W. CAsto of Point PleasBDt, W.Va. was cited for driving
under suspeasion following a second accident shortly after 10 p.m.
laslnigbt.
Eber Pickens Jr'. of Syracuse
Both offices of Farmers Bank and Savings Company (Pomeroy
was driving a 1988 C~ryslcr
and Tuppers Plains) will ciOie at noon on Thlll'lday for the funeral
belonging to Deborah Lowery of
of Bani President Ted Reed, Jr.
Symcuse when he IIOPIIed at a yelIn addition, the Pomeroy offices of Bank One, Athens, N.A. will
low light on Bast Main Stteet.
close from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. 10 that employees may atlald the fillerCasto, who was foUowin&amp; Pmens,
a!.
thought Pickens would drive
i~vestigated
throalh the light and struck the
Chrysler in the rear.
·
Tbe Meigs County Sheriff's Department bas invettipted the
the C-~sler sustained light
Contillued OD Jllllt 3 ·
cJamase. while Casto's 1978 Mercury was not damaged.

cessing and is ·converted to nonpolluting subslances, she saiil. .
Robert Shannon, retired president of Ohio Clean Fuels and a currenl board member, blamed uncertainty about the specifiC provisions
of the Clean Air Act for holding liP
some investors in the 11roject. In
addition, Energy Department officials are blaming the economy.
Robert Gentile, assistant secre·
tar)' for energy, is to decide in Jwte
'

Banks to close for funeral

Breaking and entering

Jack Peavle;p or Pomeroy
was wekomed bome on Tues·
day by the starr and atudent
body of tbe Slllsbary Elementary Sebool. Peavle;p, wbo
plays an active role In the
scbool PTO, baa spent tbe last
four months In .O peration
Desert Storm wltb tbe l-"tb
Medical Company ot the West
Vlralnla Army · Natioul
Guard. He arrlwd baek home
on May 4, Tbe ~ervh:e aot
11nderway with the studeata
slaalaa Tbe S'-r Spaaaied
Banner and God lieu tbe
u.s.A. Amy a-,._ MelD

'
~·

'••

'•

~.

'-~
~

~

Hlp Sdlool IDI rn. a Di-

taace. Penle;p, rlallt, tbea
!bulked the lt11deata ror tht
cards ud leaera the;p-t blm
while be •md Ill the 1m'. "I
wa1 Ia a war ODe ot•er tl111t
aad aobody lent me IIJ'·
thlac," Peavle;pllld. AbOYe, .
Peavle;p, bls wife, Janet aad
their two e•ndrea, Kim alld
Tl•, 1tud wltll 1 . .aaer
lllped b;p Sllllb11J1'11tade111L
Klm •d Tim both attend SIJ.
lab11J1.

-·
\,

I

whether the deparilnent should
continue to hack the program while
investors are soughl
The concept has been proven in
demonstrations in New Jersey and
at the Energy Department's pilot '
plant at Wilsonville, Ala.
·
Ms. Bird remains optimistic
about the projecl Even If it loses
federal money, tile company can
resubmit its plan if it eventually
obtains privale financing, she said.

----Welcomed home...

Police probe
two mishaps

-___,;..· Local briefs........-;...... . .~~
:

v.

sulfur coal mined in Ohio, a Slate
development official said.
·
"They found Ohio coal is best
for the process," aaid Jacqueline
Bird, director of clean-coal ~ech­
nology programs in the Ohio
Department of Devclopmenl
The higher the sulfur content of
coel, the better is the conversion to
clean oil, Ms. Bird said. The sulfur
acts as a catalyst during the pro·

l

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