<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11032" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11032?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-23T00:10:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="41998">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/03c61cef2bba2169d951f24368cbdab3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7ce764e06a8826a83a1cc972656db227</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34813">
                  <text>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

�,:Commentary

•

Pltgl 2-The Dally $1ntfnet

.

(

\_ .} t '

POmeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednelday, May 28, 1•1

1

The . Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

.MULTIMEDIA. INC.

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
.Publisher

,.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General .Manager ·

PAT WHITEJU;AD
Assistant Publlsher/Conll'oller '

• •

..

'

'

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press·Asso·
elation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
, , name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
... . Ushed.
t~s .
·

.

•' · ~----------------------------------------~

· ·More and more Americans
:·: .seek bankruptcy prote(:tion
.. .

Big oil wells in Burma, despite politics
WASHINGTON - There is
one TV commercial you can bet
two big American oil companies
are never going to make. It would
show the investments of Amoco .
and Unocal being protected by
Burma' s brutal military - the
same military presiding over one of
the world's worst human rights
records.
These two American oil compa·
nies are amon- 10 international
fmns lhat have mvested in Burma's
fulllre oil deposits and are currently
exploring under contraet with the
ruling military government. An
Amoco spokesperson justified their
involvement in Burma by saying
that oil companies must •'go where
Jhe reserves or prospeclive basins
are."
Others believe that big oil is
unwittingly abetting in the abuses
now taldng place in Burma. . ..
Ironically, the current sttuauon
is taldng place in the wake of free
democralic elections last year won
by a pro-democracy movement.
But instead of brinRinR freedom 10

the ~e.~ eleciioRs triggered a
horrifying military biJCklash. .
Amoco has been explonng a
part of Buf!Da that is only a fe_w
hundr.ed mtles from the Kachm
rebel msurgents, who ~ counf:ed
!IS one of Jhe best guernlla ~Jes
tn the WClr~d. '!'he t~ugguh
Burmese miittary IS se~mg as a
proteCtion force for the oil eompa·
ny.
.
A s~n f~ ~told
us Jhat "':bile there •.s ~ mthtary
p~sence m _the area, 11 ts not provtding secunty for. Amoco. However, our reporter Ric:haJ:d Ward was
told by sources that the cont,rary .is
true. ~ven Burm~se off!ctals .m
Washm,gton .~ disagree•~!' wtth
Amoco s asseruon. Soe Wtn, ~t
secretary of the B1!f1D11 Embassy m
~ashtf!gton, satd that Amoco
mstallauons were not only_ safe, but
that th~ company ~ enJOyS total
proteeuon by .~ . rruhtary- e.ven
~.own to provtding tran~rtatton.
They (Amoco) :wouldn t ~ ab!e
to_get around wtthout us, Wm
S81d.

By LAUIUE ASSEO
As.wciated Press Writer
;, : , WASIDNGTON- Lewellyn P. Hall Jr. doesn't run up huge bills, but
,• · be wound up in bankruptcy court anyway. His financial bOObies began
,.~ 1 .when he lost his job and fell behind in his house payments.
"I was making good money; lhat's the only reason I got the house,"
resident. "The pressure got on, so now I'm back
,.... ~d Hall, a WashingtOn
,,
,. • 10 square one. "
1 . . Hall is one of an increasing number of Americans who fmd themselves
:1 • in U.S. Bankruptcy Court as the nationwide recession drags on.
~..
Hall, who worked six years for a company that rehabilitates apart·
:. -ments, has no other debts. So he filed a Chapter 13 plan that - if
; .approved by the Court - would let him keep his house and pay the baCk
paymentsover several years. ..
.
c .
"I find a lot of veterans are falling into this," said Hall, who has a
., : Veterans Administtation home loan. "A lot of my friends are losing their
houses for the same thing."
·
Personal bankruptcy filings have been rising steadily over the past
decade, but a110111eys and experts in bankruptcy say they began to sky- ,
rocket after the recession began last year.
"The largest reason is the economy itself," said Harry, Dixon, an
_ Omaha, Neb., bankruptcy lawyer who is chairman of the WashingtOn·
: based American Bankruptcy Institute lobbying group.
·•
", · "There are more people who have experienced unemployment, catas·
... · trophic illness, divorce - moce people who have become victims of the
economy, things like foreign competition ·- than ever before," Dixon
f~•

•

: 'Said.

~

'

'

';. : "There's no job security even for the middle-class anymore," Dixon
" said. "When ~pie begin to pare back,. they pare back management as
·' well as others. '
· • Last year, 718,107 Americans filed personal banlaupiCy petitions, up
. _ from 616,753 in 1989, according to the federal Judicial Workload Statis·
·
" tics handbook. The tolal was 287,463 in 1980.
: Cecelia M. Lewis, chief cleck of the federal bankruptcy court in Man·
• hatJan, said her court recorded 875 personal bankrupiCy filings in April,
t1 .compared with a 1989 average of 457 filings per month of both business
, 'and personal cases.
~
"It's prettr incredible what's ~ing on around here," Ms. Lewis said.
' Her court has' added staff and vtsiting judges and gotten help from the
l Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts to handle the increased caseload.
Baron Grosho.n, cleric o.f the banlcruPtcy court in Ch8rlotte, N.C., said
.personal filings are up by 20 percent to ?30 percent this year.
, 1 . . "People have a tendency to go out and extend themselves to whatever
1 'they can afford at the time," and when Jhe economy goes sour, many get
in trouble, Groshon said. "I guess it's the American way. We want as
many material things as we can get.''
Many or those filing for bankruptcy protection in Washington in recent
months reponed tens of thousands ot dollars in bills, and some bankrupt·
cy experts blame banks for letting people have too many credit cards. But
there are other reasons why people sudden Iy come up short.
.
Wade D. Wallace of Washington, a printing press oJierator, got in trou·
ble after he and his wife separated. His wages were garnished to pay his
utility bill and he missed 13 months of house payments, according to his
l Chapter 7 filing.
.
;
Chapter 7 bankruptcy allows a person's assets to be sold to pay his or
: • her bills, and that trJ~C of case of~n is settled within several months.
• Some debts can be dismissed, although tax bills and siUdentloans cannot.
'
Some people file Chall'Cr II reorganization plans, although that type
of bankruptcy is usually mtended for businesses. Others use Chapter 13,
which sets up a court-supezvised plan to pay back debts within five years.
For many people, bankruptcy proteCtion comes as a relief because it
, forces credit collection agencies to stop contacting them, said Joseph
: ' Goldberg, a WashingtOn attorney who specializes in bankruptcy.

•":.
I
I

.Today. in history
By The AB&amp;oc:iated Press
'
· Today is Wednesday, May 29, the !49th day of 1991. There are 216
days left in the year.
· ·
.
'
Today's Highlight in Jiistory:
.
.
·
On May 29, 1765, Pabick Henry denounced the Stamp Act before Vir·
·. 'ginia's House of Burgesses. Responding to a cry of "Treason!," Henry
replied, "If this be treason, make the most of it!"
• • On this date:
'
•• J.f · • In 1453, the' capital of the Byzanline Empire, Constantinople, fell to

J

\~

I "

&gt;/ {

I'

;

I

&lt;·

enf!

r.·.

..' -

Use of the military for security
has stirred a controversy among
human rights actlvisu. Amnesty
Atta
International has compiled a re:pon
ou the human righu abuses of the
Burmese military detailing forced
labor and consaiption of 14-year·
olds in the fight against the insur· use against its own population.
Congress has passed legislation
gems, as well as mass executions
in
the Customs and ·Trade Act Qf
and starvation. The reason offered .
1990
requiring President Bush· to
by the government for the execu·
impose
crade sanctions on Bunna if
lion of slave laboren is that if they
It
doesn't
relinquish power to the
were left behind wh.en a iob was
elected
party.
But the Illest out or
done. they mig~ report the army's
Burma
suggests
there will be no
whereabouts to the rebels.
Meanwhile, there are alarming · democracy.
.
.
Even if trade sancbons go mto
reports that Bwma's government is
stockpiling modem weapons. The effect, many believe they will not
affect lucrative exploration by big
government~ iust.cut a Sl billion
arms deal wtth ChiDI for planes, oil companies lhat are enjoying the
tanks and olher weapons. More· proteCtion of the country's repres- .
over,_ they have been am.assing sive military.
TRAVELS WITii BAKER chemtcal weapons, promplillg the
Sta!C ~ent 10 .mel~ B~ Sourees inside the National SecUrion tts li~t C?f counlrleS With worn- ty Council believe it wiU like personal pessure from President Bush
som~ chemical weapons programs.
S1nce Burma faces. no external to forge a peace setdement in the
Middle East Baker baa focUIOd on
thr~s. sources belie.ve that the
procedure,
not substance, and has
chemical weapons are mtended for
been elusive about the real U.S.
position. There's a subplot to this
Story - 9aker is setting bis sights
on a run for the White Houae in
1996, and is not arutious 10 be'associated with a major diplomatic or
policy defeat. But the adminiBtration is wasting an oppMWiily ere·
ated by the U.S. show of strtngth
in the Gulf during Operation Desert
Storm. Bush's popularity is at a
peak, yet he baa el~ not to risk
any of that goodwill to achiev.e
some grand goal. Political strate·
gists, not diplomals, are calling the
shots in the Middle East
MINI-EDITORIAL - :;orne of
,the unsung heros of the Gulf War
still remain in that region, working
around the clock to clear. thousands
Qf mines from busy sea lanea and
harbor mouths. Recent U.S. Navy
figures show some 800 mines have
been destroyed, mainly by mine
sweeping ships and ait·sea person•
nel lowered by helicopters. These
forees are forgotten in the euphoria
of today's celebrations- and
deserve their own parade when
Jher. come home from finishing a
perilous assignment
Copyright, 1991, United Fealllre
Syndicate, Ine . .

I

IND.

CAVE JUNCTION, Ore. (NEA)
'- Deep inside the Siskiyou
National Forest, an imposing ridge
whtll'e sturdy conifers earlier grew
in profusion stands desolate today.
Scattered across the barren crest
and slope are a few withered
seedlings and limbless dead trunks
- the only reminders of .a onceverdant landscape.
.
·
It wasn't supposed to be this
way. Shortly after all of the old·
growth trees were ·clear-cut in the
mid-1980s, the ridge was replanted
by the U.S. Forest Service. Regeneration should have been well
under way witbln a few years.
"It's a classic reforestalion fall·
ure - and hardly the only one in
the 'region," says Robert Brolhers
of Headwaters, an environmental
advocacy organization here in
southwester~~ Oregon.
But the Siskiyou is badly
scarred Many parcels remain virtually lifeless years after their towering, majeslic trees (some of them
centuries old and hundreds of feet
tall) were sold by the Forest Service at unconscionably low, subsidized prices 10 satisfy the commercial limber market's voracious
demands.

Ugly gulches have formed in
some locations, disfiguring the land
and allowing rain and snow runoff
to dissipate soil that will never
again ,sustain growth. Elsewhere
are sites where steep grades, high
altitudes and rocky soil have
thwarted as many as six restoralion
efforts.
Similar devastation is under way
throughout the country's 156
national forests, where 12 billion
board feet of lumbet are being
removed every year. Almost half oT
(hal total. 5.5 bl'llt'on board feet,
comes from the Pacific Northwest
About one-quarter of the re$ion·
al harvest from public and pnvate
forest lands goes to Asia, principal·
ly to Japan but also to Taiwan,
Korea and other nations.
The Far East buyers are willing
to pay premiums of 25 to 100 per·
cent over the prices offered by
domestic customers- but the vast
majority of the exports are in the
form of unprocessed logs, a product that requires no mill labor in
this country. That arrangement
shifts the value-added work over·
seas, thus depriving Jhe region's
residents of considerable income.
Several independeJI! analyses of

Jhe industry have recommended not
only that raw log exports be
restrained but also that greater
emphasis be placed on producing
within the PacifiC Nonhwest profiwble items such as doors, cabmets,
furniture and other millwork for
sale both domestically and interns·
tionally.
Such a focus on quality instead
of quantity could minimize both
forest overeutting and economic
dislocation.
The industry, however, long has
been topp1ing trees at a recldesslY
high rate~ the 70 pereent of the
country's forest land that is private· ly owned; Indeed, timber harvests.
nationally have doubled in the last
40 years.
With private lands decimated,
the industry has been pressing for
the right to snip the public forests
of what it disparagmgly - and
inaccurately - characterizes as
"overripe" and "decadent" oldgrowth uees likely 10 rot faster than
they grow.
· But the primeval stands of fll',
hemlock, cedar and spruce are an
irreplaceable natural resource
whose value to society extends far
beyond the recreational opportuni·

set. By defining white masculinity
Compare Norway's 35 percent
as the normative value of American to America's 6 percent (29 women)
polilics, white males have created in the House of Representatives. In
negative images of women and the U.S. Senate, it's worse; only
minorities as national leaders, , .two women out of 100 (2 pereent)
excluding them from the power serve.
structure.
Power is not always a function
Those exclusions in Jhe United of numbers, but numerical preponStates are especially invidious derance helps. Women's powerwhen compared to Jhe dramatic lessness in CoDgress is further
progress women are making in compounded by Jheir paucity ·of
other counbies. A few weeks ago, subcommittee chairmanships when France installed a woman, congressional dukedoms where the
Edith Cresson, as' prime minister, real power is exercised. Women
that country joined Bangladesh, chair only seven of the House's
Dominica, Iceland, Ireland, Nether- 131 subcommittees.
lands Antilles, NiC81llgua, Norway
At first blush, one might be
and the Philippines, which all have tempted to attribute such power·
governments headed by women.
lessness 10 a sexist society. That's
Of those nine countries, none only half of the problem; women
can remotely match Norway for are equally cul!'9ble. .
substantive governance by women.
Despite thetr heightened politiThe prime minister, Oro Harlem cal consciousness, women still tend
Brundtland, and the beads of the to accept their manufactured inferitwo opposition parties are all ority by voting for men over
women. Of the 165 members of the women, often holding women canNorwegian Parliament, 5~or 35 didates to higher standards tlian
percent) are women. And
can· they require of men. That has been
didalcsformayorofNorway'scap- true even when the male'1 posl·
ital, Oslo, are women.
lions subvert female empoweuu.:nt
To Norwegian males nervous In laat yar's Pennsylvania goberabout women having too much natorial race.~. women voted for
influence, Astrid Noeklebye incumbent, uov. Bob Casey, a
Heiberg, the Conservalivo Party fanatical JI'O'!ifer, over his Repubcandid•te for mayor of Oslo, offers 1ican pro-choice opponent, Barbara
a reminder: "They still have two- Hader.
lhirds of Jhe Pullament."
Women can have it both ways

.,..

••

•

· Chuck Stone

by being nurturers and politicians.
But they cannot have it both ways
by voting for male candidates who
perpetuate the status quo and still
expecting to acquire power. Equali·
ty must be worked at. It's a lesson
that the women of Norway are
teaching the world
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Berry's World

broke records Tuesday from NQith

Carolina to Connecticut and from

region, the Northeas~ the miildle
Maryland to Iowa.
High temperatures were forecast Atlantic states and the South;' and
in the 60s in the Northwest and the . the IOOs in southern Texas. '
The high temperature for the
Rockies; the 70s in the Northern
nation
Tuesday was 107 degrees at
Plains and most of California; the
Presidio,
Texas.
80s and 90s in the Great Lakes

Proposal could help change
Ohio's educatonal system: Ong

•I

I

More hot weather
in store for Ohio .

-----Weather-----

I

.

.

Local briefs...---,

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

Road

Robert Walters

U. S. women must share the blame

Tennessee, West Virginia, Virginia
and Nonh Carolina. .
.
Tempera&amp;ures in the 80s and 90s

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - . A ly in math anti science, and achieve land Foundation, read a statement
bill giving Gov. George Voinovich · results.
from that JU'I)up's ~xecutive direc· .
Columbus 87•1
the authority to appoin\ a scaled· "This is a time roc bold change tor, Steven Minter, cndorsing 'the
down state Board of Education has and our educalion leadel'$hip Struc· bill. Minter, also a member of the
been endorsed by John D. Ong, ture in Ohio should reflect this," governor's management council,
chairman of the National Alliance he said, adding that the needed suggested a companion measure
of BusinesS.
chan~ will require strong leader· that more defines the role of the
said
Tuesday
that
the
pro·
.
Ong
ship
'from those in which the peo- newly constitute4 board.
·
W.VA.
posal could help clear the way for ple have Jhe most confidence Education Chairman IL Cooper .
bold changes in Ohio's educational the governor and Legislature."
Snyder, R·Hillsboro, ·said OPP.Osystem that will better prepare
He said the size of the present nents of the legislation - who
Ohio students for the emerging board inhibits changes aild that include many state and local school
global economy.
"the uniquely large boanl we have offtcials who want to preserve the
. Ong, also chairman and chief today among the 50 states is not a present system - will get a chance
By Tbe As.wciated Preu
. executive officer of Akron-based competitive advantage." Ong said to testify later. .
•
. ·Forecasters said the only change B.F. Goodrich Co.. testified at a he would like to see the board
In other action. the board:
· · in Ohio's weather over the next day .proponent hearing of the Senate reduced to seven members but that
-Released
$2.7 million to
~ T.,.,.,.. Flaln FlurrifM Snow
lcll
sun:z Pt. Cloudy Cloudy or so is it might get even hotter as Education Committee.
nine - as with the Ohio Board of cover the eost of emergency repairs
wa AUoclllftl,.,... GrophlciiiWJt
0111111 Accu--lhOr, tnc. the state remains under Jhe influ·
Under the proposal, the board Regents - should be functional.
in 71 school districts statewide.
ence of a stationary high pressure would be reduced from 21 memOther witnesses included Timo· The six largest graniS of $100,000
system.
bers, now electe(j from each of thy Cosgrove~ the governor's direc·
went 10 Jhe Ashland, North
But a little relief is in sight by Ohio's congressional disbicts, to a tor of policy and legislative initia· each
Olmsted,
Bloom-Vernon, Trimble,
nine-member panel named by the lives who reponed an endorsement Fed.eral-Hocking
,in the mid-80s. Chance of rain 30 Friday.
South Central Oblo
and Buckeye
The National Weather Service governor. The members then would of the bill by a majority of the Gov· Local districts . Tbe
Tonight, variable cloudiness percent
smallest
. says highs on Thursday will again name a state superintendent
'
emor's Educational Management amount of $4,700 went to Norwalk
Elrteuded forecast
with a chance of showers and·thun·
be around 90 degrees and humidi· ·
Voinovich earlier said the gov- Council. That group also includes Schools.
Friday throop SUDday:
derstorms. Low near 70. Chance of
ties
will
be
high.
By
the
weekend,
ernor
- regardless of political business leaders frQIII major Ohio
Fait
on
Friday
and
Saturday
and
t;ain 40 percent Thursday, variable
-Waived competitive .bidding
however,
tile
highs
could
be
10
to
.
party
should have more say · c~rations.
a
chance
of
showers
Sun~y.
Highs
cloudiness· with a slight chance of
for
a $419,228 state contract with
15 degrees cooler.
·
·
because Ohio's cilizens hold him
'They (council members) feel Burgess &amp; Niple Limited of
showers and thunderstorms.
. High 75-85 and lows in the 60s.
The record high temperiture for responsible for educational policies that the bill is needed 10 give the
•
Columbus to conduct the annual
this date at the Columbus weather · over which he has little control.
governor more direct input and to inspection of the Andtony Wayne
station was 94 degrees in 1914.
Ong said that while Ohio's pre- assure accounta)lility," Cosgrove bridge on Ohio 2 over the Maumee
The record low was 38 in 1949.
sent system may work, .it does not said, adding that under th\1 pfe$Cnt River in Lucas County. The same
Sunrise this morning was at prepare students for jobs in a global system "the governor has no direct
Coatlnued from Plllt 1
will be paid $310,617 to
6:06 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:52 economy in which other nations influence except through the bud· company
inspect
the
Craig Memorial Bridge
breaking and entering of the Dean and Robin Harris residence oil
p.m . .
on
higher
standards,
especial·
get
process."
insist
on Interstate 280 over the Maumee
State Route 325.
·
Peggy Caldwell, of the Cleve- in Lucas County.
According to the report, the residence was entered Monday
sometime between noon and 8:30 p.m. A VCR, jewelry and coins
were reported missing. An agent of the Ohio Bureau or Criminal
Invesligation is assisting in the investigation.
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler sign; Ivan Woods, Long Bottom,
processed 11 cases in his court on forfeited $43, failure to yield; Han·
Walter Otho Maaox of Point Pleas·
Lawrence
Mattox
son
Buckley,
Pomeroy,
forfeited
.
Tuesday night
ant, and Leonard Maaox of Nitro; a
equip~~Jent
Forfeiting bonds were: Kevin $47, speed; Wanda Gardner, .
brother-in-law,
Lewis, Jr. of .
Lawrence Mattox, 68, of Smyr- Dunbar; and twoMilton
Sparks, Mason, W.Va, forfei.ted Langsville, forfeited $SO, speed.
grandchildren.
Damage 1,0 a Lima 80-ton truck crane at Jhe Yellowbush bridge
Fined were Jeff Whittington, na, Ga., died Monday, May 27,
S4 7, speed; Roger Holter, Raeme,
The funeral will be 1 p.m. Satur·
repair project is being investigated by the Meigs County Sherifrs
forfeited $60, speed; Darlene Pomeroy, $213 and costs, threaten· ' 1991, at Kennestone Hospital in day~ June I, at .the Crow·Bussell
Department. &gt; '
Casto, Pomeroy, forfeited $4 7, ing remarks, $163 and costs, gave Windy Hill, Ga:
The report of the damage was received from Claude James of
A retired employee of Lockheed Funeral Home with the Rev. Steven
speed; Richard Baker, Reedsville, false information 10 a police offi.
Alan Stone Company, who also said that. the barricades at the site,
Dorsey officiating. Burial will be in
Pa., forfeited $63, traffic li$ht; cer, $63 and costs, no operator's Aircraft in Marlena, Ga., he was a Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleaslocated near ,Racine, were also overturned, damaging flashing
Sherry Walker, Rutland, forfetted license, $313 and costs, fleeing U.S. Navy veteran of World War ant.
lights.
.
$60, no insurance; Diana Gray, from an officer; and Laura Frye, II, a member of the First United
Friends may call at the funeral
Methodist Church in Smyrna, and a
Mason, W.Va .• forfeited $43, stop Pomeroy, ~8 and eosts, speed •.
home
Friday, May 31, 6 to 9 p.m.
1941 graduate of Point Pleasant
Hi h School I
~o~ 14, 1922, in Leon,
The Daily Sentinel
was
a son of Edna (Ord) Mattox of
Several thefts have been investigated by the Meigs County Sher·
lion at the Fellowship Church of Point Pleasant, and the late Carl W.
Hymuslng'
iff's Depanrri'ent since Friday.
(USPS II.... )
Jhe Nazarene in Reedsville on Sat- Mattox. He was also preceded in
There
will
be
a
hymn
sing
at
the
A· Dt~illon of Mu..meclla, lac .
Don Thompson of Canolton Oil Compaliy of Newport, Ohio
Mt. Olive Community Church in urday. Call 378-6422 to reserve a · death by his wife, Betty (Lewis)
reponed Tuesday that he had three logic control boxes stolen from
Publtahed every afternooo, Monday
Mattox.
Long
Bottom on Saturday at 7 p.m. table at $5 each.
three wells on County Road 19. Value of the boxes were estimated
through Friday, 111 Court St., po.
In addition to his mother, he is · meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley P\lbfeaturing local talent. Pastor
at $850:
llshlng Co:-;:cany!Multlmedla, Inc.·.
also survived by a son, Lt. Col.
Baked steak dlDDer
Lawrence Bush invites the public.
Harold Graham of Harrisonville reported on Monday that somePomeroy, Oh o 45769, Ph. 992·21:14. SePhillip
M.
Mattox,
stationed
with
The
Olive
TowrL~bip
Volunteer
EatertalDment
cond class postage- paid at PomerOy,
time since Friday someone had stolen two cows and two calves
Ohio.
·
Entertainment at the Racine Star Fire Department will have a baked the U.S . Army in Germany; a sisfrom his field. He reported that his fence was cut.
.
ter,
Mrs.
Eustace
(Bessie)
Wilson
steak
dinner
at
the
frre
station
in
Mill
Park
will
begin
Saturday
at
Sheriff Soulsby also reponed that a number of ~box vandalMember: The Associated Press, In7:30 p.m. Dates thereafter will be Reedsville on Saturday from 4-7 of Point Plea!iant; two brothers,
land Dally Press Aa:soclatton and the
isl!l reports were reponed over the weekend.
:~
p.m.
Ohio Newsp~r Association. National
every other Saturday.
.
·
Adwrttslng ~resentatlve. Branham
• HerbaUsts to meet
Newspaper
es, 733 'Illlrd Avenue,
The River Valley Herbalists will
Beaentto be beld
New York. New Yo'rk 10017.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home
POSTMASTER: Send addrels chanK&lt;S
· Marriage licenses. have been issued in Meigs County Probate
of Juanita Conrad in Ripley, W.Va. No. 9053 in Tuppers Plains will
Am Ele Power ..................29
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
FOmeroy, Ohio 4!1'711!1.
Coun to Roger David Coates, 37, and Paula Annamarie Wendland,
have a benefit for Linda Tippie on
Bazaar
Ashland on ......................32 l/8
25, both of Pomeroy; to Joey Lee JaiTCll, 20, Racine, and Debbie
There will be a bazaar and auc· Saturday beginning at 8:30 p.m.
AT&amp;T .......... .................... .365/8
SVJIS(RJPTION RATES
Lynn Grealhouse, 20, Racine; Robert Lynn Ritchie; 22, and Bridget
Cost is $2 for adults and $1 for
Bob Evans ........................ 19
By CArrier or Motor Route
"
One Week .. .......................... ...... .$1.60
Dawn Bing, both of Racine; Orville 14 Phillips, 46, Pomeroy, and
children under 12. There will be
Charming Shop................. 20 1/4
,One Month ..... ............................ 16.95
. PabiciaAnn Sigmon, 31, Pomeroy.
door prizes and cake walks. Public
City Holding ..................... 14 1/4
Onr Year ..... .......... .... .............. $83.20
is invited.
Federal Mogul..........,....... .17
SINGLI! COPY
PRICE
Good6earT&amp;R
......
,
..........
25
3/4
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dally
...................................
25 Cents
Smorgasbord dlnaer
Key enturion .................. 12 7/8
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS There will be a smorgasbord
Subscribers not deslrlngtoJ»ll)' the carLands' End .......................20 ·
Mildred Pierce, Syracuse.
rlf"r may remit In advance direct to
Meigs· County Emergency Medical Services answered five calls
dinner at the Lollridge Community
Limited Inc .......................28 1/8
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
TUESDAY
DISCHARGES
•
for assistance on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
·Center on Sunday, from noon to 2
Multimedia Inc.................27 7/8
basts. Credit wUJ be etven carrier each
Carl Alley, Max Folmer, Audrey p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50
Week.
At 10:48 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Spring Avenue for DelRax Restaurant .................21/32
Arnold and David Manley.
bert Pridemore, who was taken 10 VeteranS Memorial Hospital.
for children under 12. The center is
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............26 3/4
No subscriptions by mall ~mltted In
At 2:19p.m., Pomeroy squad went to West Main Street. Angie
areas where. hom£" earner service Is
located on Athens County Road 53,
Shoney's Inc .................... .I? 1/4
avaJlable.
Elliott and Heather Mitchell were taken to Veterans. Terry Wolfe
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
five miles west of'Coolville.
Star Bank ..........................21
refused trealment. At 4:21 p.m., Rutland squad went to Langsville.
Discharges, May 28 • Amber
Mall !lublerlplltoo
Wendy Int'l..................... .9 1/8
AA meetiDf
lulde Motp COuotr
Nellie Hatfield was transported 10 Holzer Medical Cent,et. At 8:29
Campbell, Mrs. Michael Chowning
There wil be a 12-step AA
Worthington Ind...............24 1/8
13 Weeki ........................... , .. ,. $21.84
p.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 2 and took Mark French to
and daughter, Vickie Herdman, meeling on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
Stock npor/S an the 10:30 a.m.
26 Weeki .................................. U3.16
Polly Little and Justin Rose.
52 Weeks ......... ............. ....... ..... 184. 76
· Veterans.
JTPA office in Pomeroy.
IJUI!Its provilled by Blunt, Ellis
.
Oultlde Metp Countr
On Wednesday at 3:43 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to East
Dance
and Loewl of Gallipolis.
13 Weel&lt;s .. :............................... $23.18
Dlscbaraes May U - Wayne
State Route 681. Betty Anderson was ttansported to Veterans.
There will be a round and
26 Weeks ........................... .... :.. $15.!10
Butts, David Evans, Mrs. Larry square dance on Friday from 8·
52 Weeks ... ............................... $88.40
Howell .and daughter, Samantha II :30 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
Johnson, Micheal Malone, Dennis VFW Building featuring Country
coatiaued rrom page 1
I I • • • - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - ' - - - McFarland, Breanna McGuire, . Grass. Ronnie Wood is the caller.
Sharon Meadows, Mrs. Kevin
treasurer, Jane Fry, had been rude coordinator for the 1991·92 'school Roush and son, Mrs. Roy See and The public is invited.
Dauce plaaed
10 him during a discussion on req- year.
daughter, Belinda Sharp, Lyle
The
Twirlers Wester
uisitions and invoices pertaining to
The vote by the three members Shillington, Ruth Stebbins, Mrs. Square Gallia
Dance
Club will hold a
the bus garage qperauon. He said · present was two to one, not a Wilben White and son, tind Audrey
Saturday
from 8·11 p.m. at
dance
~·
he had taken the matter to Supt. majority of the full memberShip as Young.
the
Henderson
Community
Center
James Carpenter, who advised him required by law. Snowden voted
I
.
~
Birtlls May U - Mr. and Mrs.
that Mrs. Fry works under the against employing Walker after Donald Criner, son, Oak Hill. Mr. in Henderson, W.Va. Keith Rip4irection of the board, not the questioning whether he has the and Mrs. G.E ..Guinther, son, Gal· peto will be the caller. The dance is
A
superintendent.
·
ume to do the job in view of his lipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Robert open. to all western style square
· ·Board Member Robert Snowden other duties, as well as his qualifi- McCiell3nd, daughtet, Shade. Mr. dancers.
Special meetina
•·A
th all
1 ees are catitlls for oerforming the service.
Mrs. Randall Might, daughter,
Rev. Calvin Evans will be guest
Will.- out at emp oy
Supt. Carpenter noted that and
the direct supervision of ~ · Walker has run the EMIS Jli'Ogr&amp;m Middlepon.
speaker at the Mt. Union Baptist
s~tendent and after some dis·
Dlscbaraes May 25 - Gina Church in Carpenter on Sunday 8l
WEDNESDAY: La~•
C!IHIDn. the board directed that at the high school for the past two Birchfield, Lena Collier, Mrs. Mar· 6:30p.m. The Calvin Evans Family
THURSDAY:
"German Night"
Sllf'l:, Carpenter, Mrs . Fry, and years, and that he would be spend· tin Davis and daughter, PoUy Dil· Singers will also perform. Pastor
1!fP!ey get togelher to. w'!rk out mg Jhe summer settinJ up the sys- ion, Bobbie Hammond, Gwendolyn Joe Sayre invites the publi.c.
SATUIDAY: lrollecl Ala*an Pollodl
""i .,001
f~
cauon
tem and planning an m-service for
Kirby, Kimberly Morris, Magnolia
Bible Scbool .
•
1.1.0. lllls, Prima 1111,
~~::":Or T - · secretaries in the various schools of Nitz and Steffi Shook.
The
Mt.
Union
Bapust
Church
D•p fried Butterfly Shrimp
1J pry, the board voted to putici· the disbict. The superihtendent said
Dlscbarges Ma;y 26 - Kathy in Carpenter will have bible school
• ~ in the Ohio School Boards dial the district has no choice about Campbell, Mrs. Roben McClelland Monday through Friday at 9 a.m.
~NOCiation Workers Compensa· implemeining EMIS since it is a and daughter, Brenda McDaniel, daily. For transportation call 698- ~n~•SERVING LUNCH: Tue1dey thru Fridavm:m
. ,liOn Group Rating Program. Mov· state-mandalied program.
and Mrs. Randall Might and daugh· 3411 or 742-2138.
11:00 e.m.·2:00 p.m.
jr\
ing into lhat program will save the
Respondilq to a question from ter.
"--'
Wedne1day
&amp;
Thur~day
6
p.m.-8
p.m.
tv'
Yu&amp;OIIavia's chief crops are corn,
district several thousand dollars, Board Member Jeff Werry about
Blrtbs May 26 - Mr. and
Friday Ill Saturday--' IS p.rn.-10 p.m. _ . ~
according to~financina for the program which Mrs. Mark carter, son, PabioL Mr. grains, ,tobacco and auaar bettl.
Al:countability for money made will require computer systems in and Mrs. Michael Chowning,
CLOSED SUNDAY 8&amp; MONDAY
.L
from vending machine sales was all scbools connected 10 a central daughter, McArthur.
FEATURED
DAILY
SPECIALS
.,
The United States had t,0~2 inter·
also discussed and it was decided system, Supt. Car!lenter said ·that
Carry Out Available
)
Discbarae• May 27 -John continental ballistic mlaailea (ICBMa)
Jhat the treaSurer will make eon· die lillie has provided about S2.SOO Blazer, Mrs. Mark Carter and son, to the Soviet Union's I,S9• in 1980.
taCtl with penonne1 in cJ.ge of for computers and labor over th!l
Mrs. Donald Criner and son, Mrs.
; vending machine• ll the .VIrious put couple of years.
G.B. Guinther and son, Cindy Hal·
I
schools to set up • reponmg
Personnel and pending negotia· ley, Amanda Henry, Michael
112 East Main
Pamaroy, Ohle
teml on fuDdl pileraled. ·
tiona were discussed in executive Hunter, Virgie Ours and Evelyn
RESERVATIONS 4CCEPTED
After a len~.discus1i~. the seulon following the open meet- Stapleton.
board turned
die IUpCl'llllell· ing. Attending were Larry Rupe,
Blrtbs Mar 27- Mr . and
dent's ·recommendatloa to blre wlto presided in the absence of · Mrs. Mark Addis, son, Crown City.
Gary Walker 11 tho Education Robert Barton, president, and Mr. and Mrs. David Scouten, son,
Management Infmnatlon Syawns mcmben, Snowden and Weery.
Gallipolis.

..

_ _ Area death--

damaged

Thefts, vandalism investigated

ties they afford and ·the scenic
beauty they provide.
From ueetop canopy to forest
floor, Jhey support an elaborate,
interlinked and biologicaUy diverse
ecosystem that includes hundreds
of species of valuable plants, animals, fish, birds and insects - all
part of the planet's precious her·
itage;
·
Medical researchers recently
have identified the bark of the yew
tree h' h
· the Pac'f
0 n1Y 111
1
• w 1C grows
ic Northwest,
as the sole
somce of•
a natural anti-cancer drug that dis·
sipates some malignant tumors
resistant to all other forms of treat·
t
m~bwly, even when reforcstalion
efforts are teChnically successful,
they invariably fail to duplicate
those natural conditions because
diversity is sacrifiCed to efficiency.
For mstance, seedlings of a single species planted in a grid pattern
produce commercial tree fanns that
operate on short-rotation growth
and harvest cycles. They bear no
resemblance to the thriving foresiS
that now are rapidly disaiiDearing.
{C) 1991
NEWSPAPER
EN'Il!RPRISE ASSN.

'

By The Aaoclllted Preu
.
R!lin fell over Jhe Plains early
today while the Midwest and South
braced for more Jhunderstorms.
Temperatures in the nation's
Northeast quarter warmed toward
another day of record-breaking
heat.
Rain, reported this morning in
parts of Nebraska and Idaho, was
expected to extend throusftout the
N,orthem Plains later in the day.
In the Midwest, severe thunder·
. storms with large hail and high
winds struck parts of Michigan,
Wisconsin, Mmnesota, Colorado.
andKansas.
.
A band of thunderstormS today
was expected 10 stretch from north·
em WISCOIIsin southwestward into
northern Texas .. Thunderstorms
also were forecast for parts or
Louisiana, Mississipi, Kentucky,

conditions and

IMansfield I as• I•

•

I

The Dally Sentinel Paga 3

.

By Jack Anderson

and Dale Yan

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Midwest, South hit by thunderstorms; East remains hot

1 l\ r

MICH.

Logging endangers natural resourse

When two widows of prominent
politicians, 8,000 miles apart,
~ I ~ . In 1790, Rhode Island-became the 13Jh and fmal original colony to rat·
declined to succeed their husbands
~: : ify the United States Constillltion.
in public office, they made a powt: · In 1848, Wisconsin became the 30th state of the union.
erful statement about the ubiqoity
1 &lt; • In 1917, the 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was •ofwomen'sdoubleexistence.
1 1 born in Brookline, Mass.
Teresa Heinz ruled out succeed·
:._: • In 1932, World War I veterans began arriving in Washington to ing her husband, Sen. John Heinz
::, ·demand cash bonuses they weren't scheduled to receive for another 13 of Pennsylvania, ,after he was
'1 yean.
·
·
recently killed in a plane crash.
; In 1953, Mount Everest was=auered as Edmund Hillnry of New Fluent in five languages and
~J. Zealand and Tensing Norkay of Ne
became the first climbers to reach · knowledgeable in foreign affairs,
the summit of the 29,000 foot Hi
yan mountain . .
environmental matters and family
1 ••
In 1m. Tom Bradley was elected the ftrSt black mayor of Los Ange· issues, the African-hom Heinz was
t.: ' 1es defeating incumbent Sam Yony.
·
deeply sensitive to her children's
: ; in 1977, AJ. Foyt won the Indianapolis SOO a record fourth time (The concerns aboutlosin~ another par• • race feaauml the rust appearance of a woman at Indy, Janet Guthrie, who em's nurturing topolilics.
; i · had 10 drop out because of
aoublc.)
Sonia Gandhi rejected the offer
: : . In 1980. National Urban
gue president Vernon E. Jordan Jr. was to continue the Nehru-Gandhi
!--. ihot and seriously wounded in a mOtel parlcing lot in Fon Wayne, Ind. dynasty by succeeding her assassi·
~ : (Joeph Paul ~. a self-proclaimed racist, was bied but acquitted of
nated husband, Rajiv Gandhi, as
• • riollliJig Jonlan'scivil righiS).
.
.
Jhe bead of India's Congress Party.
[:
1o 1982,=4SO--old schism between the Church of Rome and the The•decision of Italian-born Gand·
parch of
came closeT to an end as Pope Jolm Paul n and the hi, who sjleaks six languages, may
, • , Archbishop Cantsbuty, Roben Runcie, Jl'lyed rogether in Canlertlury hJve been influenced by her dis·
I . Calhedral.
taste for politics and an intense
:In 1985 limy-five people were killed and hundreds injured in rioting devotion to her family.
: dill CI'UIII1IiJ between 8rililh ll1d Italian spectatm at the European Cup
Neither of the two rejections
mean that public life is more bur·
: : JOCcet (mal in Bruslels. Belaium.
·
•- : In 1987 a jury in Lot Anples found "Twilight 7.Dne" movie direc~ densome for women than men.
: • Jolm Lllldis and four auociatellanocent of involuntary manslaughler in Many .women are both nurturers
and politicians. Bul the fact
'I the dellhJ of actOr Vic Moaow and two children.
- - In 1988, Ronald Reapn beeline the first American president in 14 remains that women do not begin
to wield political power iDa system
: years to visit Molc:ow.
:;
Ten years qo: President Reapn'slf*ial envoy Philip Habib, Oldered der'llled by males.
' blck 10 the Middle East lfter ~ wilh the ]resident, said a .-=eful
"To define is to exclude artd
' ; -~resolution 10 the Syrian missile crisis tn Lebanon was achievable.
negate," wrote Jose Ortega y Gas· ·
f

· , lheTwks.

~

'

Accu-W~ forecast for

111 Court street

l

'

I

.. •
".

,.

I

Tbunclay, May 30

"'~'
I l l

..

wednaaday, May 29, 1891

Meigs announcements

Oct:

Marriage Ucenses issued

he

Stocks

.

Hospital news

EMS units answer jive calls

.

Mel·gs boa•d

/!

DINNER

z.
I'

SPECIALS ....

"""on

·!

·Rim

srs·

~·

o,....

fo - · - • • ..,. SP

GILMORE'S
.,

.,

,,

'

m~

�....

·
Wedneeday, May 29, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wilson avoids minors, leads Giants topea6-2 win over Reds

Wednesday, May 29, 1991
Page

. By DENNIS GEORGATOS
ftnt two l!ll'J ~ore 1ettina bat·
lt.P Sports Writer
tered for StX I1IDS m one llld oneSAN ~~CISCO (AP} ~ lh!rd innings by the Reds last Week,
Trevor Wilson a fust wir;t of the said_he ~ _out the conttoveny by
season toolt ~ lot m_ore domg than staylllg ~ye:
the San~ Gianti expected.
"I believe 1n myself. When I
The pronusmg left-bander sur- wallt: out there, I know wbat I'm
vived an Cf!81ic ~Y in the bullpen, capable of," said Wilson, who
tense relauons wtth management struck out five and Wllked one.
and an aborted demotion to the
Dave Riglletti piu:hed the ninth
~inor leagues before_flll8lly ~ f~r the_G~ts, who won for }ust lhe
m the plus colw,t!n ~th ~ 6-2 VJCIO- f•fth._u~ 10 17 game~ an~ beat
ry over the Cmcmnau Reds on CUIC~li for the first lime m five
Tuesday.
meeungs. ·
''It's been a suuggle for me this
'_'The most imponan! thing I _did
year. ?-'ou IUY8 kn!'W that.'' Wil- to!'lgh\ WI!JI lhn?w_ in~tde more,"
• $011 sa!d after lllowing two runs on · said Wilson, adding that he wanted
~ four h;ill ~eight innings for his to make up for his shellacking last
fmt VICtory smce Aug. 8.
• Week.
Wilson, 24, went 8·7 last sea"When~ hil me aroumi'like
~ son. including a JIIIIC 13th one-bit· they did in Ctncinnati, you don't
ter in Sill Diego. Bul he bepn this forget that," said Wilson. "I bad a
seuon in the bullpen and pitched little bit of an idea about what 1
- so pdorly that on April 28, Giants wanted to do tonipt, a liale paygeneraliiWIBgeT Al kosen declared back."
· ·lbat Wilson was being sent down to
The Reds noliced the difference.
. the club's Class AAA affiliate in
"Last time he was starting us
Phoenix.
.
out on fastballs and never got to his
· A chagrined Rosen later learned second pitch," Eric Davis said.
.. Wils!&gt;n was out of options and he "Tonight, he was mixing his pitch'
rucanded the demotion before espretty good."
·
exposing Wilson to waivera and a
. Wilsoll was ~UJ)IJOfled by a 12probable claim ~ another ream.
hn attack that 1nefuded a 3-for-4
· Still, it wasn t until May 12th, performance by Mike Felder.
after he already had three losses in
Felder, getting playing time
~ relief, that Craig put him into the because Kevin Mitchell is nursing
starting rotation.
a sore left knee, drove in two runs
''I was criticized by a lot of peo- and scared one.
pie for putting him in the bullpen
•'I'm just trying to spark the
early but I didn't feel he was ready team." said Felder, signed as a free
(to swt). I feel he's ready now,'' agent April4 following his release
Craig ~d. "But it didn't . .n · by Milwaukee. "I'm just here to do
overnight Norm (Sherry, the ptU:h· whatever I can whenever I' in
• ing coadt) deserves a lot of credit called tqiQn."
!"because he worted to get his delivIn his last fiVe games. Felder is
: ery straightened out. It's more 11-for-20 (.55Q) and luis driven in
compact pow."
·seven runs from the leadoff spot.
: Wilsori, who pitched well in his
·
·
·
·· ·

4

Portland beats L.A. Lakers 95-84 for second series win
By BOB BAUM
AP Sporll Wr~r
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) _
Buck Williams is rebounding,

The Blazers led by seven at lhe eral time•- Sometimes Kersey
can earn their eighth trip to lhe
Magic Johnson, who scored 29
NBA fmals in the last decade With · poiniS but was only 3-for-14 from start of the final period and Los guanled Vlade Divac. Williams, an
a victory Thursday in the Forum, the field afttt making his fust five Angeles didn 'l get closer than five all-NBA defensive team selection
the last two years, often was
where they bl~w out Portland twice shots, didn't know how much Wor- .the rest of the game.
Adelman went with a switching against Worthy. Kevin Duckworth
thy's injury affected Tuesday's outBlazers bad the best come.
defense' for the first time in the guanled Sam Perkins.
the matchups sev- · The way the Lllken bad been
road record in the league in the reg"It's a factor offensively for series.
ular season, but they're 1-5 away us," Johnson said. "But wbat they
from home in the playoffs. So will .were doing to us on the boards, he
they be able to continue the intensi- couldn't have helped us there. They
ty !bey displayed Tuesday night in played volleyball with it most of
the hostile environment of the the time."
Jcrome Kersey had 20 points
Forum?
"A lot of tliin~s have been said and 9 rebounds. Drexler added 19
about this teams mental tough- points and Terry Poner 17. nine in
ness," Williams said. "The true the third quarter. Williams and
test is going to be in Game 6."
Cliff Robinson scored 13 apiece.
The Lakers will have to win
In the first half, the Lakers
Thursday without a healthy Wor- seemed in good shape to win the
thy, who sprained his left ankle in game and advance to a fmals showthe fttst quarter. He tried to play down against the Chicago Bulls.
but fmally sat down for good wilb .They led by as many as eight
9:34 to play and fmished with 12 points and still were on top 50-47
points.
·
·
at balftime.
"We tried to see if he could
"Everything was good," Johngo," Laken bead coach Milce Dun- son said. "It jwit fell apan."
Ieavy said. "But it was clear he
The .Blazers caught up in an
couldn't, so we just tried· to get him intense third quarter, when there
out of there and hopefully ready for were five ties and three lead
Game6."
changes before Portland rook coo·
Worthy said he plans to play trol for good with an 11-4 run to
Thursday, but team physician end the quaner. Five different playStephen Lombardo said the severi- ers scored during the decisive
ty of the injury wouldn't be known burst
for 24 bows.
·

=:i"~r'!ftYB\!z':'!gs:l~~ las!fb:~~,I

in the Western Conference finals. ·
. Williams set the tone for a dominating Portland perfonnance on
the boards Tuesday night as the
0lazers beat Los An 1 95 84 to
"fCf:CC a Game 6 on Thursday.
gees •
• "Buck
really intense before
lhil ganie. He was very quiet, and
th·a t's very unusual for Buck,"
Cycle Drexler said. "So I knew be
·
lik
·
~.gomg to come out e a maru·
: Williams grabbed 16 rebounds
a~ the Blazers commanded lhe
boards 52-33, including a Portland
pfayoff record 26 offensive
rebounds. The Lakers bad just nine
offensive boardS.
·Seven of Williams' rebounds
ClliDe in the third quartet, when the
Blazers outscored the Lakers 28-18
IO:take conttol of the game.
- ''Buck was awesome. He was
•
unbelievable,"
Portland head
coach Rick Adelman said: "He

w•

l

~everywhere."

: The Blazers still trail the best-

o~-seven series 3-2 and the Lakers

.

playin~, the Blazers had to do
something, Adelman said.
The Lakers commitied 17
tumoven. Ponland outscored Los
Angeles 24-15 in points off
turnovers and 34-18 in secondchance poiniS.

Minnesota hands Texas 3-0 defeat
· By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
Texas Rangers mana~« Bobby
Valentine just waniS hts team to
play well, so he isn't bothered a bit
now that the club record 14-game
winning suea1t will be discussed in
the ~ tenSe.
: • It's not like we were going to

win all the rest of them,'' Valentine
said after the Minnesota Twins beat
the Rangers 3-0 Tuesday night.
The hype that had whipped
crowds into a frenzy at Arlington
Sladium also will die down. Valen·
tine doesn'tthink that's such a bad
thin~-

' It's a .162-game season and

.'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division

••

.,
• B0110a

*', T..-o

; Doaoil
,. Mii...U.
~ New Yark

•. C1owlaad

. Bolllmcn

•.
•'·•

Ric:::::

GB
I·
21/l
41/l
61/l

I Ill

10 1/l

West Dlvlsloa
W L PeL
........... 2515 .623

•Teu~

,.

' W L PeL
...•. ;••.• 25 II .511
......... 25 20 .556
........... 23 21 .523
...... 21 23 .477
....... II 24 .-429
....... , 16 26 .311
........ 14 21 .3~3

: C•US

Gl

•...•.... 'ZI 17 .614

~

·•

~

•........

20 .545

3
41/l
51/l
6 1/l
6 1/l

.. iSeiiiM
........... 23 %1 .511
·· ~
......... :1021 .4U
~ Mlnnnos·
....... 21 14 .-16'1
~ " - Cit)' ....... 20 Z! .465

,.
~:

Today'saames

Detroil (PCt.ry l-3) at Milwaukee"
(N...,.4-2). ~11 p.m.
~Cit)' ( 8 - 3-3)
(llolmoo 4-5). 3:35p.m.

"s..w.

Bolton (Bolton 5-1)" Now Yodr:
1I
4-Z~ 7:30p.m.

(S

Qnelaad (Nicboli 0.3) It Baltimore

'

(l.I&gt;U •.

:1-4~ 7:35p.m.
Oaklud (Slu.arUi 1-1) 11 Toronto
(Eoy 6-2). 7:35p.m.
: Califomia (Fialo)' 7-21 "Chicaao (llii&gt;-

I&gt;Iud 3-2),1~ .,...,

Mk
e11 (Mcail: .._S) at Tu.u (Ryan
' 3-3), 1:35 p.m.

.

Thunday'l cames

c.tilomia 11 Dlicq,o. I:OS p.m.

to, 5-1, .133, 2.9S; 4pllod- .771.

~.Bootoo.IO;

R.I......,, s.u~., 66: R,... r ..... 63:
Mcllowoll, Qlicop, 51; Pioloy, Cl]jf.,..
nia,56.
SAVES-:ttur4on, Botton, 14; D.
w.nt., Toronto, _12; ~enley, o.tland,
12; Han.,-, Calif..,.., II; !off Run.U,

Tuai.11.

o.tliDd a TonllliO, 7:SS pm.
- I l K . . Cily,l:35p.m.
S.W.e .t Tu•,I:3S p.m.

,.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvlslcm

WLPCI.GI

PI""'""" ......... 21 15
: New Yadt ....... 24 19
. SL Louia
.......... 24 20
E~;
23 22
·
....... 21 24

.651
.551
.545
..511
.467

4
41/2
6
I

:.

.444

9

.

... . . .

......... 20 25

West Division

·•

WLPCI.GB
...... 26 II ..591

: Loa Anplor
Atlanll
........... 22 19
. cincinnati ......... 22 21
'· S..Dioao ........ 22 24

.537
.s12
.471

21/l
31/l
5

......... 17 71

.316

9

· """""'

Lollil, .331; Bi~Jio, HOUlton. .326; H.
Moail, Cjncimm .326.
RUNS-T. F.,..dcz, San Diop. 33;
DoSbi&lt;ld. """-!. ;12: Strawboay, U.
Anplol, 31: Bllll•. too Aaploo. 30; 6
uo 1i6d wilh 29.
RBI-W. Clark. San Francilco, 36;
Calderoa, Mco-', 35; Jllltice, AIIIDta,
34; tow,., Sill
S4; Jolmson,
New Yadt, 32; Eluk,
delphia, 32.
HITS-T. o.r,m, San Dioao. 61; '-.
SL Loud, 57; Samuel, l&lt;» Anaol01, 55;
Boailla, Piu.borsb, 52; 0. Smilh, SL

Di,;r!,

Louia,51.
DOUBLI!S-J- SL Louil, 15; H.
MOIIU, CiDcin'Dati, 13; T. Gwynn, San
01,.., 13; Bonilla. PilllbwJh, 12; Sandbaq.O.ino..,l2.
TltlPI.BS-'1'. Owyon, San Dioao. 7;
Cllldlelo, """"""- ;: Poldor, San l'nA·
ciaca, 4; ,L &lt;Je=z·'• 1101111Gn. 4; T. Farnandcz,S..Diooo,4. ·
HOME RUN~. McOritr, San Dieao.
II;
Boll, Cbinoao, II;!...,_, New
York, II ; Ml~eboll, Soo Prancilco. 10;
o....... Chicat•· 9; ONoill, Cincinaati,
9; w. Clazt. SaftPnr -...... 9.
STOLEN BASES-Coleman, New
Yoat. 27: 'WH=Ids - . 21: om, .... .17; l'lllloo.AIIIDII,I7; 0 .
Smilb, St. U.U.,IS.

a.

~-··-7:35p.m.

'

Califonla, 6-1, .157, 3.31; Bohoa.
B - . 5-1, .133, 3J6; lloooemon,llotmh, 5-1, .133, 1.60; -~ y..,.,.

BATTING (Ill ot baii)--T. Gwynn,
Sm Di..o, .3S6; Jooo, Sl. LoW., .345;
SIIIIINI, t.o Anploo. .333; 0 . Smilh, SL

••
••
'

I

STOLEN BASES-Jt. Hcndcnoa..

Oaklaod, 16; Poloolo, CoUfomia, 14; .
Cuylor, Douoit, 12; tWooo, QUcoao. 12:
Briloy, Slllllo, 10; c..... SOIIIIo,IO; R.
AJcmar, Tcrorm, 10.
PITCIDNO (5 docw..,)-Lanpton,

Nallenal League

.:

I

HOME RUNS-D. H•donon, OUIIDd; 12; llccr, Dclroit, 12;, C..
Blllimcn, II; IWAI«, iloln&gt;it, 10;
ClcWbnd, Sli'Yckd, Milw•uk~t~C. 9. ·

L PrrCHING
An ol,.,(5I •deciaiool)---11:
I, .119, 2.01;- Smiley,·
7-1, .175, 2.96; Cupomla-, SL
Louia, I, .157, 2..52; l'omlaoi; - ·
5-l, .133, 4.15; I. Jona,lf......,, 4-1.
.100, 2-41.
STJUX.EOUJ's-Goodeo, Ne.w York,
66; Benet, San Dio1o, 57; Coao, Now
York, S.S: Oltvine, Allanta, 55: Rljo,
Ciaclooall, 54.
SA YES-Dibble, Cincinnati,_ 12; LcSmidt, St. LouiJ., lZ; O.ve Smilh, Oli.CI·
ao, 11; Franco, New Yozk, 10; Left'erta,
SmDi...,,lo.

. S..l'nllcilc:O ...... 15 30 .333 II 1/l

.•

NBA playoffs

Tuesday'• scores

,• PIW•d-lplri•l1. Mordreal.O
New Yadt 9, Oticqo I

Conference finals

FL tazht,St.l.cUII
At1a1N I, Soo Dlooo 6

6. ClDciaMU 2

S. frm .

LoiAnplor I, u - 2

Todoy'scomes
New York (Cone 4·3) at Cllic••o
' (Scoolaa 2-0), ~20 p.m.
', CiaMnati (Hammand 3-2) II S.:~ Fnn-

' cilco(B- Z.3P:35 p.m.
' MclnuuJ (M.Oatdncr 0.2) It Pbiladcl•
t pll!l (Mulrc'land S-3), 7:35p.m.
; Piluburatl (Z.Smicb 6-2) at St. Louil
. ( 8 . - ~ll.l:35 P."'-

Atlanta (Olavine 7-2) at San DieJO
• &lt;J- 2-5), IO:GS p.m.
(ll.amiodl 2-3) " Loa Anploo
1 • o.o~ 10:35 p.m.
.

(llest-&lt;~f-seven)
Mooday,May27
OW:aao 115, Devoit 94, CJncaao wiru
aeriea4-0
Tueldi.J, MIJ21
'
I'Miand 95, LA Lakm 84, LA LUers
lead aaia: 3-2
Thunday, May Jt
·
Panland It LA Lr.i:m, 9 p.m.
SaturdJy, Jurae 1
LA Laken 1t Portland, ~:30 p.m., if
-uy

Transactions

-.lAo. .

' I:

• Houllcn at San Diep, ·~ p.m.
: Alldl • S.. F• 'roo, 10:05 p.m.
, ctaOnaali 11 Loa""'""'- 10:35 pm.

Major league leaders

I:

Amerlcu Leatue
BAmNO
: fC1111i1, .10;

,. n

t ..

:f.

at

bo11Hoynor. Cali·

• Mlnn•nla, .361; D.

• ..... .lM; c. ..........'d

,.,

,)42.

Jl.toM••· Oallland. 34;

• · - Touo. ]l; ea.-. Oatlaod, 31;

·-.Mil-..,li;Palmolnt.Taaa.
•- 11.Ul-D. Haa-oo, OuiiDd, 39;

• ,.....,Dalnil,36oC. I.I!*-.B•"' ,.._
S31 G
I T..., 33;
Calli..,.

lo-.

01!15e!d-

I

'

Five local IIliCk and field participants - four Meigs Marauders and
a Gallia Academy runn« - turned
in top-four performances in last
week's Division n Southeast District track meet, held at Ironton's
Tanks Memorial Sladiwn.
PanicipaniS who finished fourth
or higher advanced to the regionals.
In the boys' session, South Point
edged Ironton 93.-89, and Federal
Hocking, which toolc third with 56
poiniS, was follOwed by Rock Hill
(48), Fairland (45), Wheelenburg
(42), Coal Grove (36), Warren
Local (31), Meigs (22), Vinton
County (21), Minford (10), Chesapeake (six), Oak Hill (two) and
McDermott Northwest (one).
Marauder Matt Haynes earned
his trip to Cambridge by leaping 6
feet 1 inch in the high jump-- a
Meigs school record that was good
for a second-place tie with Coal
Grove's Carey. Rock Hill's Damron won the event with a 6-211ight.
Another of Haynes' teammates
who will join him ·in the regionals
is Adam LiUle, who turned in a pair
of qualifying efforiS, • he signed
in to the regionals with 16.3-second
sprinl in the llO-metcr high hurdles and a 43-second dash in the
300-meter low hurdles. He took
founh in both eveniS, and in the Jat.
ter event he finished three-tenths of
a second ahead of teammate Frank ·
Blake, who came in fifth.
Other finishes by fellow
Marauders were (by event and
place):
.
3,200-meter run - PJ. Chadwell, fifth, 11:17.6.
4 x 100-meter relay - Meigs,
:47.2.
'
Huestis, Davis, Scott advance
In the girls' session, Jackson
beat Belpre 90-71, and Fairland,

HOMES

·.

~l&gt;.mSu

G/FREE
'"'·

The quick, easy
way to colorful

decorating
schemes
without objectionable
paint odors.
For all lntericir

•

B-.

i\L games...
.
(Continued from Page 4) ·
and two RBI singles, Dante
Bicbelle a pair of two-run homers,
~lilY Sheffield a three-run shot and
Paul Molitor a solo homer.
: Robin Yount collected his
2,800th hit as the Brewen backed
pon August (4-2).
•
Atbletic18, Blue Jays4
i Jose Canseco hit a three-run
..... homer and ~d got a career. J!igh four RBis froiD Mike Gallego. .
. Gallego had a two-run ho~er
·anc1 a two-run sinlde to back Mike
Moore (7-2). He afiowed three runs
on four hilS in six innings, striking
put three and walldng four.
• • White Sox 6, Allgels 5
: 'Tim Raines had a two-run ·
bclmer, and his tw()-(lul RBI single
drove in the winning run in the
ninth innnin$Raines' smgle came after Ozzic
Quillen doubled to drive in pinchhiuer Dan Pasqua to tie the game.
The hilS came Off Bryan Harvey (11), giving Don Pall (1-0) the victory.
Royals 6, Mariners S
Kansas Cily continued iiS hot
play under new manager Hal
McRae, winning iiS founh straighL
• Tom Gordon (4-2) beat the
Mariners for the JCCond time in less
than a week. Mike Macfarlane put
Kansas City - 4-1 since McRae
replll&lt;:ed John Wathan - ahead to
stay by hitting his founh home run
to stan the second inning.
Gordon (4·2) gave up a fifth·
inning hocile run to Ken Qriffey Jr.

walls.
Washable.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
IUSON, WY•

When You Need Prompt'
Dependable Propane Delvery..•

I'

I

Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
Customer Service
What mailers most to you when it comes to propane?

Prompt delivery. Reliability. Safety. Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helpful deHvery people.
.I

..

8 Gallon Min.

Track notes...

the shot put 30 feet I inch. Quallfy- given).
·
ing ahead of her were Rock Hill's
100-meter hurdles - Jennifer
Cremeens (32 2 1/4), Northwest's Taylor (Meigs), sixth, :17 .4.
Smalley (36-8) and Belpre's Reck
4 x 400-m~ter relays - Gallia
(37-7 1/l).
Academy (Whitney Adkins, CaldOther finishes by sister Blue well, Jennifer Bradford and
Angels and Marauders were {by Huestis), lOth, 4:32.7.
event):
Blue Devllll end season
At Logan last Saturday, GA's
300-met~r ... rdles - AJ;~
HudiOII (Meigs), fifth, :50.9;
Courtney Hutchinson's effort in the
Cald~ (GA), llixlh, :Sl.2.
. 800-meter run (2:03 .2) and lhe
- 4 x BIO-meter nlays - Meigs, 3:41.2 time by the 4 x 400-meter
fifth, 11:21.7; Gallia Academy, relay team , (Chrislian Scott, ~ad
eiglllb, 11:34.
·
Neal, Kevin Young and Huu:hinLo•• jamp - Amy Wagner S&lt;lll) were the Academy gents' best
(Meigs), fifth, IS-II; Davis finishes of the day. Both perfor(Meigs), sixth, 14-11 1/1..
.
mances were good for sixth .place.
3,200-me&amp;er rua - Laura Also placing in the top 10 was
Saunders (GA), sixth, 14:58.2; Neal, who rook eighth in the 200Amy Skinner (OA), lOth (no time meter dash (:23.7).

...
e~ll

-

. Cy••n I U"la .
99!·1943

'

'

•

I

,

'

8 Gal. Min.

Pepsi

.

ENTER TO WIN:
(No Purct.st Necessary)

Ill :l /'Ill

W~DNESDAY -Grilled

Ham &amp; Cheese,
Fries &amp;Soup

10 GALLON GASOLINE ( 10 winners)
12 QUART CASE VALVOLINE OIL (3 winn•rs)
Various Other Prizes To
Be Awarded
•
DRAWING JUNE 1 -

"A WINNING COMBINATION"
~

'

.,.

'

r

.
•:

'"'" --

.
·-·-· ~-- .

••

·~·

.

"'

...

.. i '

I
~ /,

ACC&amp;PiltD

..

llaliiHtn&lt;

&amp;.
Collon Cnnd•'

•
•
•

•
•
'

•

II

· AMERICAN li:XPR£SS

12:00 P.M.

FIU;E

••

LDIIT 1 CJDI.D I'D AD1ILT

CLASSIFIEDS .. :
Y!!!!~ Key to Great Buy•

I ,

•'

,

TUESDAY· Turkey Club, Fries, Soup

15f

11 a.m. • 5 p.m. Oally

1fOMESTYU~ l.UNCH SPEC1;1LS
1/u!idCIIJ/ I rti&lt;IIJ. I I U HI

,••

I'

Wllh Flii·UP

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT
'

•

•

l Liter

1\IWMY It 'l'lllmiDAY, CIIILDJUIII UlmER Ul JUT ll'lliZ
IPIIOII cag•p 8 IIDitnl. (EXCWDES DRINK A DESSER'I)

"!·SOU

~HotDog 2~'

Somttfling (joot!'s N'UNl!JS Coofjng }It

-

•
•

(Offrr Expires JUflt I, 1991)'

(Continued from Page 4) .

FRIDAY -Pepper Steak Over Noodles

Ferrallgas
a.• n S."lce

S and R Gas Service

•
•

•

With FIII·Up

THURSDAY -Beans and Cornbread

PH. 992·2556

-~~

16 oz. 1\Jmblers

:. HOT POTATO- AI Reds aatdaer J'lt' OJior.
, : er jugles lbe ball a if It were 1 llamlnftnber,
: :: San Fnncisco's Kevin
slides in to score O!ll

WnH FliES ....... ~······""""" S1.34

PO.IOY, OliO

'

----------------------------~~-----------------------· ~

I

"It lila IIMI ef till p_,.y •••• .......

•

~~:~--9 Jl""· Mnn-Sa

which showed up in tl)ird with 60
points, was followed by Wheelenburg (53), Nonhwest (52), South
Point and VintOn County (38 each),
Rock Hill (25), Minford (21),
Meigs (16), Chillicothe Hwttington
(II), GaBia Academy (10), Olesapeake (nine) and Ironton (two).
The Blue , Angels' Heather
Huestis and Marauders Ronnea
Davis and DanicUe Scott advanced
to the Division II regional track
meet at Cambridge with qualifying
effons in their respective events.
Huestis, a sophomore, was the
only French City traclcster, female
or male, to advance to the ~onal
level with a 2:32.9 finish m the
800-meter run - finishing second
to Nonhwest's Amy Miller, who
broke the tape in 2:27.7. Davis, a
senior, cap!Ured fourth in the tOOmeter dash with a time of 13.2 seconds. Finishing ahead of her were
Jackson's Heather Exline and
Amber Mustard (second-place tie,
:12.8) and Fairland's Melissa Topping (winner, :12.4). Scott, a freshman, rook founh place in healfing
(See TRACK oil Pa1e 5)

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

•

a

~;t~~~

64&lt;

'

.. fftllll Sm·x WU.-Bum or the In""'M'md Leap.

,j

·

HIGHEST BID

Local ·track notes•..

CORN DOGS

PIIIIADIIIJIII!A PIIIWBS-J&gt;ia.c:od
Da111toa, ............... 15-day
dloallodlia. Caliocl up Rkt Scho. Wield-

......._c...·' ·,

,

Rt. 7 • Chester. Obit)
Harold &amp; Betty Newells • Owuers

Special of the Week! ·

SBATTLI! MAR.INBRS-Puzehuod
.... of AlouD Poowall, Olllfioldor,
baa Calpyoflllol'ullioCout Loapo.

• 14; a. Al-ar. ToroalO, l.t: Caner,
' · Tau~, 13; S ue
• T_., IJ; C
: ....... 12.
TJJPLIS-MolllOI', .Wntall:.., 4;
oti•.Wtlfllll

:•
·

Chi:;.,

(AP)

o....

••

Elsewhere in the National
League, it was Philadelphia 12,
Montreal O; New Yorlt 9, Olicago
8; Pittsburgh 9, SL Louis 8; Allanta
8, San Dieao 6; and Los Angeles 8,
Houston 2.
PIIIUies 12, Ex(IOI 0
Tommy qreene ~ted most to
prove that hiS no_-hnter was more
than _a fluke. He did. . .
Ftye days after p1tcbmg a 2-0
no-hitler at · ~Ontrea,I. Oree~e
~a three-hiuer ap1DSt ~VIS·
llmg Expos Tuesday as ~lade!P!"a won 12-0. Grec:ne_ thinlcs he
p1u:hed ~ven be~ this tune.
In hts no-hitter, ~e w~lked
seven. in the rematch Wlth Oil Can
Boyd, Greene ~ none.
·;~ lhoupt 1 jlltc~,ed a lot better, Greene wd. I had ~Iter
command of ~Y off-speed ptU:hes
ar;td Ir;tY ~bills. That niade a
btgGdifference(·
bance
· reenc: 4-0) only ~ a c
to ~ mto the rotatton !Jecanse
of an mJ~ to Dann~ Cox. In~
starts thts_ se~son, mcluding .six
scoreless mrungs May 1 ap~nst

!.-:':1;

CHESTER QUIK STOP

dilablod 1111. opboood Matiaa Cllrillo
lllllilJ ployor. to
of .... ~

N - .......

VICtories.

on-

game in Portland, Ore. Tbougll lbe Trill Blaz.
ers won 95-84 to stay alive in tile best-of-seven
series, lbe Lakers bold a 3-2 lead .in the series•

1he 15.-da)'

MILWAUICI!I! IIRBWEIIS-Acdvl10d
Toddy Hintn, pilcbor, from lho 30-day

Sl; ·--·
,; ~"'
· ...............
.51;-.T-.57.
DOlJILP-Do
OUJID,d,
Jl

01'1

alLoo....

~--62;"'*­
•· .a.
M' - · 62; D. H '
OM0

ENCOUNTERS RESISTANCE -1be L.A•
Lakers' lames Wortlly (rlgllt) hies to go to lbe.
boop, but encaunten reslstuce in the form or
Portland frontman Jerome Kersey during Tues- ·
day night's NBA Western Conference final

•
'

c.:n.. •P Th.I.t Prohwboh
........ fromltoobootoroltheln-·...,:

l:

"I think I
left a lot nf bills
out C1Yfll the piiiC llld !bey did their
job and hit them," Anulrong said.
"I just didn't make quality piu:bes
when I needed to."
!'one-out single by Kevin Bass
fl;DIS~ Armstrong, w~ gave up
etght ~ -~ five runs m five and
one-lbird mnmgs.
. Wilson joined Don Robi_nson
m:td Bud B~k ft!!th~ only GIBDIS'
pllchers w1\h wms 10 the last 17
game~. Black has three of those

a·

t

diHblod lil1.

~cioa.

~ .35t;~Min·

• tiJMI-l).

~nc~, Anlllllaa

third.

S111 PranciiCO, Oi- hal
Ul' (3-2), "tbe third Pirate~ pitcher, oae walk and a swon-high nine
five hillllld no 111111.
·
worked hro ICCnlea ianinas for llrikeoula Tim Crews finished.
Dellao DcSblolds 1ined a llqle the vicby.
. lraYII I, Padrel'
to Clllllir field 10 leld oft 1111 pne.
Do tl&amp;••l, AID'GI1
Dave Justice broke out of
DeShleJdo - Cllllht • lha. bat
Darryl Strawberry bit biJ ftm slump wilb 1 two--roil, baea-lolded
Maraail
lloabled 10 c:ea- bome run ta DOOr Stadium dais sin&amp;le in the ninth inning.
tor. Oree11e then 1track out Ivan
1011, alllnlotUD 11101 in die flnt
JUJtiee was in a l ·for-17 slide
Calderon aad got Ron HuiiBY on innin&amp;and 0-for· lO with runnen in scor:
ID infield out to ead die ituting.
Stnwbeny's homer, his sixth of iag position when he put the
''In the ftnt innin~t 1 wu in a the seuon, came off Xavier Her- Braves ahead 7-6
little trouble, bull battled out of nandcz (0-S) . . beiDCd Illite Tim
Mike Sl8llton ·(1-0) pitched one
it," Greene said.
Belcher Ill a4-0ield1n the tint.
inniq for the victory; and Juan
Rookie Darrin Fle~her, ~ho
~lc~ (5-4) pve up two ru_ns
got three outs for his
caughl Greene's no·h•uer, bn a on rune hiU ill •"111 inainp, wtth
Jixtll save
lhree-nm hom« in the fiftb inning
•
and added an RBI sinale to pace
the Pbillies' offense qainst Boyd .
(2-6).
·
M1119, Calle 8
Dave Ma1aclan's run-scorins
doubleindaeel&amp;blb·innin&amp;IJIIIIIPCd
a tie and New Yen survivediiiOihcr sloppy disDlaY 10 bell
HEABIHILL
21'x52' 3 .....
Pinch-hitter 'rim Teufel
•
with one 0111 in die etpth qalnst
MUST BE SOLD IMMEDIATELY
reliever Paul Asaenmacber (2-2)
and stole IIICOIId to aet up Map' OR SOONER!!
diD •s gamo-winning bit New york
led 8-5 lifter six innings, but the
Cubs tied it in the seventh on
WILL SELL TO
Andre Dawson's two-run homer
and and Chico Waltet's RBI linOVER OUR COST
gle.
Alejandro Pena (1-0) got the
MERCHANDISE SUBJECT TO
victory and John Fnnco got the list
INSPECTION PRIOR TO SELL.
threeouiSforhis 10dl save.
Pirates 9, Cardluls 8
BIDS WILL
ACCEPIED ON
Barry Bonds drove in three runs.
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991
Bonds was 2-for-5 wilh a run-ICCI'ing sinsJe in the fint inning ind,a
· PUA$1, NO M"IISOI IWTOIS
two-run triple in the fifth.
IUYD .St TAD IIID'AR POSSISSION OF HOME
AM.y VID Slylce llao bad 1 tworun triple and Orlando Mtmd had
an RBl double, walked three limeS
and scored twice. Pitllblqb broke ·
Open
Locattcl At
opeli a 4-3 game With five I1IDS in
Mon.-Sat.
Juncton of
lhe fifth.
Clrdinals starter Jose DeLeon
1.30-1:00
33 &amp; 595
(2-4) gave up six runs in four
Clolld_Suay
logan, Oh.
innings, allowing five hits and
walking five. Reliever Stan lellnda

Sclf-Serv, Gasoline
. With

BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Piaeod

Tbunday'saames

The Oianu c~ J~&lt;:k Armstrong (4- 3) in lhe lixlb, when lbey
sccnd two runs, !Jicludlnll ~o~ homer by Willie McGee, bts

it•s over," Ruben Sierra

said. "What this shows is that we
are capable of doing it butlmew we
couldn't win them all. Erickson
pitched a great game."
Scott Erickson q uiete&lt;l baseball's honest baiS in 'doing it, pitch·
ing eight innings and giving up
only seven singles .
Texas entered the P!De with the
major league's top h1tting pen;enl·
age of .294 and the best slugging
percentage at· .447. The Rangers '
also had the best on-base percentage of .365.
The Rangers, who had no less
than five runs and nine hits in any
game during the slreak, were trying
to beCome the first team since the
1977
Kansas Ci!Y Royals to win 15 ,
•
' ' 1
marow.
Erickson (7-2) worked out of
trouble in the first, fourth, fifth and
seventh innings aild didn't allow an
extra-base hit among seven: He
slruck out seven· and walked three
over eight innings for a career-high
seventh straight victory.
Dan Gladden homered off Jose
Gqzman (0·1) and J(irby Puckett
had two RBls.
Elsewhere in ihe American
League, it was Boston 6, New York
2; Baltimore 5, Cleveland 2; Milwaukee 15, Dettoit 2;:Oakland 8,
Toronto 4; Chicago 6, California 5,
and Kansas City 6, Seattle 5.
Red Sox 6, Yankees 2
Boston's Roger Clemens broke
out of a personal slump by giving
up one run and three hilS in eight
innings for his first victory since
MayS.
Clemens struck out eight and
walked one, allowing only Steve
Sax's RBI double in the third
inning.
In his previous three starts,
Clemens had given up 23 hilS and
15 earned runs in 20 innings.
Luis Rivera drove in three runs
and SCored twice to help Clemens
(7-2).
Orioles S, Indians 2
Baltimore. finally got manager
Johnny O!Ues his fust victOry, beating Cleveland at Memorial Stadium
to end a five-game losing suealt.
Randy Milligan and Tim Hulett
homered for the Orioles, who came
into the game having lost 10 of 12
before beating Charles Nagy (1·5). ·
Roy Smiih (1-0) allowed two
runs and six hilS in six and twothird innings.
Jlrewers 15, Tigers 2.
Milwaukee had a season-high
five homers among iiS 15 hilS and
Dale Sveum had five RBis.
Sveum hl!d a three-run homer
(See AL on Pa~~t S)

B-baH

o•

•

that was just a fanfare Stretch," he
said.
But by winning the most games
consecutively since Oakland in
1988, the Rangers proved a few
things to themselves, if not the rest
of the baseball world.
'~Now

The o.lly Slntlnel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

.

I

•

�- ........ .
Page 6

-- ··· .............

-

~

..,

____ ... ._ ..

... --···

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

__

. ____ ·--- ___ ._....

Ohio

the Dally SenUnel

wectne.day, ~ 29, 1991

TI'Ie Dally

•

NASA begins second .
countdown for Columbia
I

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(AP) - · NASA resumed die count·
down for the shuttle Columbia's
medical research mission after a
10-day delay to replace damaged
fuel sensors thai officials said
could have caused the shuttle to
explode.
The countdown clock began
ticking Tuesday at 9 p.m. EDT.
NASA hopes to send the spaceship
into orbit Saturday mormng wilh
seven astronaUts; 30 white ra!S and
2;47g jellyfish.
Workers also had to replace bad
computer parts in Columbia,
NASA's oldest shuttle. ·
"All the work is done, and
we're ready to go," said Lisa MaJ.
one, a spokeswoman for the

..

I

-·
Ohio Lotter7 Jackpot, are pictured darin1 a
press ~rerence ID Cleveland TlltlidaJ. (AP)

LOTTO WINNER • Kimberly and Robert
Dible of Fostoria, winners of tbe $21! million

'Winner of $20 million wants
:. kids to know value of dollar

I'.
tournameat was lleld Saturday at tile Meigs
· Golf Course aad was lleld ID memory or long•
time Meigs Higll Scllool priacipal James A.
Diehl Jr.

TOURNEY CHAMPS -The team of Dao
Morris, Mike Bartrum, Curies Ad!rlgs aud Ed
Dnnt (L·R) won the Meigs Band Memorial Golf
• · TOIU'IIallleat wltb a IICOI'e or 13-uader par. Tile

Ray Redman (L·R) flnillled ID second place in
the Mel11 Band Memorial Golf Tournament
with a score of 12 ander par.

RUNNER·UP QUARTET - Tbe foursonu! ·
or Red Tucker, Diaoe Ingels, Mary O'Brlell aod

CLEVELAND (AP) - The er randOmly pick the numbers.
wi~ of a-$20 million jaclcpot in .
Dible and his wife Kimberl~,
the Ohio Lottery's Super Lotto both 26, said !hey were relaxing m
game says he wants !o raise his their mobile home in Jackson
three children 10 Jcnow the value of Township, just north of Fostoria,
a dollar.
)1y watching the Iouery's retevised
·· With an after-tax check worlh drawing Saturday evening. Dible
· :.$588,461.54 arriving each year for knew almost instantly he was li
'·'26 years, that task for Robert and winner.
;.Kimberly Dible might not be easy,
•'I was stunned. It was unbeliev''Our children· have always been able. We sat there and todted at it a
raised in a normal atmosphere and few minutes, tben I 0 minuteS after
we hope to """" that," Dible said that we left home to see our parTuesday. "Werre going to teach en!S," he said.
them lhe value of lhe dollar just
Mrs. Dible said, "My heart just
like we have in the past. We m~ghl felt like it pounded out of my chest.
, be a bit richer, but we intend to I couldn't breathe."
maintain the same,style of life. I'm
The parents of boys ages 7 and
not jumping up and lhrowing fits 4 and an 8-monlh-old girl said they
. ,;;.YeL"
.
tried to maintain lheir composure
"" Dible played $5, good for five Sunday and on lhe holiday Monday
::::wagers, prior to Saturday night's until they could make their claim at
:;drawing. He let the lottery comput- lonery .offices Tuesday. Dible said

he kepi the valuable tickel in a
plastic bag in a sodl: inside a boot
Dible is a laborer at Oreat Lakes
Sugar Co. in Fremont. His plans
are to help relatives, buy two new
cars and build a house in tbe townsJ,ip where ho now lives.
"I've talked to m,)' boss and I
plan on going back. I m too young
to quit I know it's a 101 of money,
but I'm onJr, 26 and I've go! along
ways to go, ' he said.
Mrs. Dible said she can't
explain the feeling of winning such
weallh. She said she expects to
know the feeling "probably when
the first check comes and every·
body Star!S knocking at the door.'
The winning nwnbers Saturday
were 8, 9, IS, 17, 26, 40. The last
$20 million jackpot was Jan. 19,
and lhree people in Lorain County
shared the one winning ticket.

fDemocrats make quota ban more

explicit; rights bill nears House action

r~ ··
-­
/"'•
.._.

.... ....
~.

,...

•••

..1:.--··
. ....,... .
,..,. _ ·-

1
(

'

''•'

t
j

CAP'J'URES TIDRD - Wltll a score of 11·
uader par tile founonie or Doug Hunter, Jay
Harris, Mike O'Brien and Jeff Werry (L·R)

took home third place llonors ID lbe Meip Band
·-Memorial Golf Tournament held Saturday.

·

•

I

.

.

~

PRESENTS PLAQUE - Tbe famUy or tormer Meip HJab Scllooi priDdpal James A. Dlebl
Jr was on band at Saturday's Meigs Band
Memorial Golf Tonrnament. Tile tournameat
was held In memory or Mr. Diehl wbo passed
away ou April 15. Toney Dingeas Meigs HJah

Top seeds Edberg, Becker advance
to second round of French Ouen

•
'
•':

By DAVID CRARY
. va of Czechoslovakia and fourth·
seeded Mary Joe Fernandez was
Associated Press Writer
[ ·~
PARIS (AP)- A year ago, the
1
lOP men's seeds barely had time to
f unpack before lhey were b_undled
~
out of lhe French Open. nus year,
,.
Stefan Edberg and Boris Becker
,.
look like they plan to be around a
I
i while.
Top-seeded Edberg and No. 2
•'•
sec(! Becker displayed peak form
~· Tuesday in qualifying for the sec·
' ond round. Neilher got ·that far in

k

Sports briefs

1990.

--

,,

I

~i Cise.

$]sol

'IPAGH!n •

\AlAD
ROll

i

j

ONU'.

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
27 il Wf\T Ml'tiN

POM£ROY
9'12 5432

LARRY'S WOODWORKING SHOP

I

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT. 10 AM-6 PM. CLOSED SUN. 8t MON.
()

A

.

P01lTO·OIIIOII

B

N

~0.,
c.:~
·

e

GETS HOLE-IN-ONE - Steve Trusaell of Long Bottom
achieved tbe dream of every golfer by
a hole-In-one tbe
Meigs Band Memorial Golf Tournament.
Uaced lbe par-3 on
the seven.tb bole Ill the Meip Golf Coane. Pictured w1t11 TrusseD is
tournament cbairman Mary O'Brlell.
.
•·

INSURANCE
111 S.lllld St.,' u..,
•ascoam
•

627 3rll A,.., Gallpolls
P1.446·16H
HOUIS! I A.M.-6 P.M.
"

~

coa•a CUPIOAIDS

&amp;.,.(1\
GUf. C.P"

SPICE IACIS

PICTUIE FlAMES
(ANY SIZE!

c

N

s

.. WHAT DO YOU NEED?"

.

I

.

222 EAST MAIN ST.

•'

,
I
I

!

BUILD AND INSTALL

"FREE ESTIMATES"

' '
"' KENNEBUNKPORT Maine
·
h'
be
~. (AP~ -President ,Bus must .
::" g~lttng bette.r. He s back !o h1s
.. h1gh-~ 10~ game. And doctors
,., have_glv~n hu~ lhe go-ahead to
.;,startr.::gg.:~rested than he has
"' ·
·
·d ·u
.. smce lhe on~t of h•s thyro1 I ·
ness, lhe ~dent on Tuesday pro"'noljiiC~ himself rev1ved ~res~
• ,from hi.s five-day y~ca~on at his
oceans1de home. I WISh I, ,had
Jlbout ~our more days here, he
~ com~:den · headin ' back
.~ to tbe ~ H~~y vi!a typ· 1· B h d
C I rado
•ca. us
etour oo
Spnngs, Colo., w~ere he was to
address the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Meanwhile, technicians are
chec:king the tap water at w~·s
Point in Maine and at the White
on the odd chance that it
• House
might
contain
two chemicals •' iodine and lithium - !hat are
'' sometimes associated with Graves'
'I disease, lhe thyroid disorder suf·
\
Cered by both. the president and his
wife
Barbara.
j
NDI only do the Bushes have the
condition, but their dog Millie suf·
fen from a related disorder of the
auloimmune system.
:
Buah expressed astonishment

:
•
'
:
'

CUSTOM MADE
TAlLIS

PHONE 992-6492
POMEROY, OHIO
"

I

injured by the use of illegal quotas
- could sue for monetary darnages.
The new language was revealed
as House Democratic leaders
released the long1Waited full text
of lheir new civil rights bill
The bill has been undergoing
back-room revisions for more than
two months, , since clearing the
House Judiciary Committee in
March. Last week Democratic
l~ders released a one-page synopsis of lheir changes bul continued
to refine !heir bill.
It was scheduled to go before
the House Rules Committee today,
which will set rules for amend·
men!S and debate. The full House
is to take up the bill Thursday,
although a vote could be postponed
until next week.
·
The anti-discrimination bill is
intended to reverse a .series of
Supreme Court decisions that have
had lhe effect of increasing lhe bur·
dens of proof on plaintiffs charging
. bias in hiring and promotions.

:
:

:'!:: ~:rm:'t!:U:~~~·
I:auth ·has always claim~ to be
refieshed by his frequent 1nps back
10 tbe sill-acre compound lhat has

been 8 Bush family vacation home
,,_,......,,.thecenh•rv.
......,..~
_,
&amp;R
But this time, the R
was
mare imponant lhan usual as Bush
fights the thyroid disorder tblt
lljlped his llm!gth and lOOk men
than a dozen pounds off hie
already-llnlty rr.-. windln
As tbe president wat
I up

:'

·-·

J

.The main effect of the
Democrats' new Language on quotas is to write into (edenl statutes
the quotas prQhibition that has
existed in case taw as a result of
court decisions, sponsors say.
Neas said the bill "emphasizes
and codifies that such quotas are
iUegal."
The Democrats' latest version
says "the use of such quotas shall
be deemed tO be an unlawful
employment practice.''
It would define quotas as "a
fixed number or pettentage of persons of a partie~ DICC, .C&lt;?Ior, ~li­
gion, sex or nauonal ongm which
must be auained, or which cannot
be exceeded, reprdless of wbelher
such persons meet necessary qualifications to perform the job."

from the shuttle Atlaalil. ·
None of tbe five was as badly
damaged as tbe one taken last fall

National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
Columbia's nine-day flight was
to begin May 22, but the countdown was halted the day before
launch.
Mission managers feared
Columbia's fuel temperature sen·
sors might have cracks similar to
thOse found on a leaky sensor
removed lasl fall. They did not
learn of the cracks until they
received a report on tbe sensor tW()
days before 1he scheduled liftoff.
One of nine sensors removed
from Columbia late last week was
found to have a cracked weld.
Tests also revealed cracks in the
steel welds of two sensors taken
from lhe shuttle Discovery and two

from Columbia, said NASA
spokesman James Hansfteld.
.
The fear was that if one of the
pencil-sized sensors broke, pieces
of it could be carried into a hi~ ·
pressure turbopump, cau11ng
engine failure and an explosion.
Columbia had computer II'OUblc
early last week, too. One of the
ship's main computers failed, as
did a unit that processes computer
signals,
.
.
· Columbia's nine ~ dal voyage
will be the 4lsl flight o a shuttle
and tbe first mission since 1985 to
use Spacelab. The bus-sized Jabo.
ratory fits in the cargo bay and is
connected to lhe crew cabin by a
tunileJ.
I
The crew includes lhree physi·
cians and one cell biologist Three
of the astronauts are women, a
space flight record.

Study looks at ways to
recycle medical waste
MONTPELIER, VI. (AP)The life-saVing business of a hospi!al opemting room generates loiS of
paper and plastic waste. Now a
recycling experiment said to be a
rust is si::cking ways to restore life
to.that surgical trash.
"Most people lhink it's bioodr.
messy stuff. It's not," says Holl1e
Shaner, a recovery room nurse at
the Medical Center Hospital of
Vermont "Much of it is sunilar to
hotel waste."
The hospital's surgical wing is
the site lh1s month of a study in
separating ~urgical !raSh as. a ~­
tude to finding ways to use 1t agwn
rather than dump il in crowded
landfills.
- Connie Leach, an independent
recycling consuitan!, said lhe effort
- caUed MedCycle and funded by
an $Jl,OOO grant from the Vermont
Agency ofNatural ReSC?urces represents the first surgiCal recy·
· cling program in the country.
Already, she said, the hospital
emergency room has been able to
cut b)' 75 to 80 pen:ent the amount
of stUff it used to throw ouL
During the ftrst 1S days of the
study, more llllill a ton of garbage
was diverted from lhe dump for
potential re-use.
"I hope to ~e Ibis a mod~!
for hospitals aqoss the country,
Leach said. "They can team lhere
is a way 10 control this type of

to protect her plants.
·
Other was!C includes rigid 'plas·
tic trays, film, white virgin
boxboard, solution bottles and alu·
minum products.
Leach is sending samples of that
kind of trash to recycle11 to find a
potential market She says many of
the plastic products could be recv·
cled into ~,&gt;lanters, garbage cans and
lawn furniture.
Before the recycling effort
began, Shaner and Leach anticipat·
ed that hospital workers could fill
about 50 !Jags a day with recylable
materials. More than twice that
number are being fiUed.
Now, the two hope to publish
lhe results of their work in medical
and solid waste journals. ·
"We want to show here's how
to catch the stuff and here's what to
do with it," Shaner said. "And we
want to demonstrate to recyclers
that medical waste is not all dangerous or a public hazard.''

END OF SEASON
CLEARANCE SALE
ALL FLATS OF

BEDDING PLANTS
Reg. •uo

NOW S4SO
10 .. CII

HANGING BASinS
Reg. f$.75-16.75-17.75

NowS450

12 INCH FEIN$
Reg. sus .
NOW S6SO
41NCH MMS I

GEIANIUMS

Reg. $1.00
NOW
-~~
"WhUe Supplies Laat"
O..n Man. thru Sat. • ...s pM

50C

. CLOSED SUNDAYS

Hubbard's Gr•nhouse
SYRACUSE, OHIO

992-11771

waste.''

Shaner said separating hazardous, infectious waste from re·
usable trash was no problem
because it was already being sepa· ·
rated for safe disposal.
"Recyclers think AIDS and
hepatitis and the New Jersey beach
when they think of medical
waste," she said. "Most of it's just
plain old garbage."
-More than half of what gets
thrown out in the operating room is •
packaging material.
.
All instruments, gauze and hquid used in surgery must be sterile.
The materials come hermetically
sealed - double and j~Ven triplepackaged in some instances. U~r
the MedCycle program, the vanous
kinds of packaging are iden!ified
and sorted.
The bulk of this is "blue wrap,"
a fabric made of paper and plastic
weave used to cover sterilized surgical insiruments, stainless steel
bowls and all other items used in
surgery.
Leach covers her garden with it
A Long Bonom man was cited
for failure to yield at 111 intersee·
a vacation '!f boatinl and BOifing, Lion Saturday foUowing an accident
he was looking more and more like on State Route 124.
\PRINh VAIIIY WHMA
his old self- even gaining back
Donald E. Myers, 79, was cited
·1~6 4\24
some of tbe lost weight.
He said he's sleeping better and after he pulled into .the path of. a . 1uo - · IIOTitas , . _ , , - ·
crossing car near Third Ave~~ue m • ,_.:.,::.::·'" ...... """ - ·
doesn't have so man)' bouts of Olive
Township.
' Accordiag 10 a report from lhe
fati$u.e as before•. and his. been
Gallla-Meigs post of tbe State
regwmng some of his loll weaghL
After dropping from his usual Highway Patrol, Myers pulled into
200 pounds to 185 pounds in lhe the path of Harold C. Nonnen·
s ace of three weeks, Bush said macher, 24, of Whipple. Nonnen~t when he weighed himself on macher was unable to stop in time
Tuesda morning he was back up and struck Myers' vehicle, resultto t90. Y
ing in moderate damage to botb
For the first time in his life, vehicles.
.
wu
injured.
Neither
driver
Bush said, he's 6een taking naps
According to the report, a panenafter lunch.
·
"In terms of feeling ~ood, I ger in Nonnenmachcr's ear, Dianna
really do. I'm not just putung that L. Nonnenmacher, 22, wu 11'1111·
on,l feel veer good."
oorted 10 Saint JOICph's Hospital in
The president's doctors have l&gt;arlcersbwi, W.Va. by the Meias
even~·ven him lhe so-ahead to County EMS. The hospilal had no
· aaa1n
record of her treatment.
~.n h=r.:~ei't up to tile presi·
dent," said Dr. Lawrence Mohr,
one of two White House doctors
who spent lhe exloended Memorial
Day weekend here wilh Bush.
Earlier, Bush's physicians had
told him to slow down and ternfro vi
~~~t:.ay m gorous
"He's feelina well, his medication is being tapered accordinl 10
tbe original plaa, and evaylbillc Ia
going very ·weU, IIClCCII'dlng 10 our

.
.
i;Bush may resume Jogging ·

'.'

j
!'l

T

~

"

!

F
0
R
K
I
H

COUNTY
APPLIANCES ·

10. . . . . . . . .
l61WIS-WM

s•a1•••

'

IliAD IASIITS

s

~, ~
t~
YCI STOIAGE IACIS

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS, ·
REFIIGEUTOIS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES

· DOWNING CHRDS
MUlLEN MUSSEl

•

.

E
T

noWII 51AIIIS

11115

~

;;,: Ralph Neas, executive direetor
;)' of the Leadership Conferenc;e on
"'Civil Rights, said that with the new
' language, lhe bill would establish
;: in stai!Jte that a victim of so-caUed
,. reverse discrimination - someone

AT
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

urn.

.

Becker, who crushed rust-round
rivalJordi Alrese or Spain 6-2, 7-5,
6-2 after four weeks away from
.
tournament play, was scheduled to
~
be back in action against Australian
'
Todd Woodbridge in one of
r
today's feature matches.
~
Edberg, who has a day off, rout·
·•
ed Belgium's Bart Wuy!S 6-2, 6-2,
; : 6-3. Like Becker, he suggested that
• · conditions at Roland Garros Slldi·
um 's clay courts are better suited
Ibis year for their type of power
game.
..
"The balls are quicker. ... The
cour!S are very, very hard, almost
like hard COur!S," Edberg said. "It
is good conditions for us who hit
the ball hard. I like it.''
•
· The big guns in the women's
'
field also served notice they're on
track for second-week showdowns.
•
Top seed and defending champion
•
Monica Seles, along with No. 3
•
seed Gabriela Sabatini, won .easily
•
Tuesday, following No. 2 seed
Stcffi Graf into the second round.
Sabatini and Graf each could
delhrone Seles as the No. I
women's player by winning the
•
•
French Open.
All but one of the 16 seeded
•
women
survived the first round .
•
The
victim
was No. 8 Zina Garril
'• 11011, never comfonable on clay. and
•• tbe Yictor was a Japanese teen·ager, ·
Nlllllo SawamaiSII, who turned pro
'
'
only twO monlhs ago.
:
Seles has lost 10 bolh Graf and
:
Sabllinllbis )'ell', bui she .brimmed
! with coafidence Tuesday.
.
"I always pial, my best ten~1s
hele," she said. ' I love evaything
about iL"
Seles and Sabatini llave today
off. Graf was to face Pellll Langro-

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
IS SPAGHETTI NIGHT

Base baD
NEW YORK (AP) - Tommy
Greene of Philadelphia, who
pitched the Njitional League's fust
matched against Germany's Sabine . no-hiller last Thursday, was named
Hack.
the NL player of the week and
Tony Phillips of Detroit won
American League honors.
·
Greene, a 24-year-old right-han·
der, struck out 10 batters and
walked seven in his no-hitter
against Montreal at Olympic S!adi·

Phillips went 12-for-20 for a
.600 balling average, had a .714
on-base percentaf!seS::Ored nine
runs and Stole four
Auto racln1
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Kevin Cogan, who underwent
surgery to repair a fractured upper
ri~ht arm, right forearm and riJ!ht
th1gh sustained in a crash durtng
lhe Indianapolis 500, was upgraded
f~om satisfactory to good condi- ,
uon.

Band director is sbowa presenting a plaque to
tbe dangbters ol Mr. DiehL Pictured are (L-R)
Charlene Diehl Rutherford, Dingeas, Jo Ellen
Diehl Ye11ry and tournament chairman Mary
O'Brien.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Demoeratic-spoinsored civil righ!S
bill headed for House debate Ibis
week will contain a more explicit
prohibition on the use of racial
qUOIU in hiring.
.
The' latest change, released late
Tuesday, reflects lhe new lengths
· • to which Demoera!S are going in an
effort to blunt the potent political
· argument lhat President Bush and
, other Republicans have made in
. opposin~ lhe Democra!S' anti-discriminabon bill.
Bush has labeled lhe measure a
"quota bill" and said it would
encourage employers IIi using bir~ ing quotas. Democrats say that
charge is untrue, but they have
': 'found that coun1ering its political
.; impact has been a frusllllting exer-

•

In dark brown.

z.

Men•o obleo 61/a-1
R"ll· 19.99. oole 14:99.

In brown with tan lrim.
Men·s sbleo &amp;'lt-1
Reg. !'9.99. aale 14.99.

Woman injured in
2-car accident

lo black
wilh brown lrim .
Men'• al~e~6 1h·l2.
Reg. 19.99 ..... 14.99.

Smart looks at a smart price! Sa-.e on aelecll!d leather
casual' oxfords and slip-ons. A great combination or comfort
and value! Reg. 19.99, sale 14.99.

In white.
Men'ooll.. 6'h· l3wltle.
Res. 24.99. aale 18.99.

Total HeOith Care for Women

::::t

MAMMOGRAPHY.
.ULTRASOUND
01/GYN

=~'4we're very pleall4,"

Bush was back to 10101 of his
old tricks too.
On Sunday, be pta~ 18 bolel
of_sotf,lba llllde a -tun~ ill Ilia
golf cart. and watt liD and played
another nine. After lbe 271h hole,
be told olber - • ~ his four.
some witllin clear eaqliol of
tba b
ted
Ia
t o WID
toP Y
Wllln reporter~ pollled, Bub
belmed and 8lid: "Ililt tr11111g."

:=nmno.

Play It amart In leather atbledc oxford&amp; from Plcway!
Chooae from CI'OIS·trainen or 1porty court Ryles,
huy prleed Ill S5
Ret- 24.99, l8le 19.91.

HOLZER CLINIC

,

SALBINDS JUNitl

Moot- ...................,.

OHIO liVER PLAZA • Upper lt. 7, l•l,ells, Ohil

.•
"

•mart·

om

992-2111
446·5311

'
"

lo while .,. black.
Men'o obi.. &amp;Yt-13 •
Jlea. 24.99, . . 18.99.

J

,,

/

�P8!Je

a

the Dally Sentinel

Measles making comeback; more deaths reported
ATLANTA (AP) - Urban chiJ, eradkated from the United SIIICS.
dren are getting measles and dying
There were 97 suspected
in numbers unthinlcable a few years measles deaths in the nation last
ago and health experts have a simc year, the most since 261 iD 1966,
pie explanation: Children are not when 200,000 cases were reported.
getting vaccinated
Measles vaccine Is usually given
•'From the public, health point · as a combined meases,mumpsof view, we reall~ow what the rubella inocculation and is recom,
problem is," s · Dr. Roger mended for most children at age 15
Bernier of the feder Centers for months. .
Disease Control. "Infants are not
But many children aren't getting
being vaccinated in time in our vaccinated until they enter school
large urban areas.··
One solution is to make vacci·
nations more easily available, he ..
said.
Nationwide, 4,079 cases have
been reported this year and more
than 26,000 were reported in 1990 ·
to the CDC in Atlanta. It's a sharp
change from 1983 when 1,497
were reported for the entire year,
and health officials were making
plans to pronounce the disease

when they are forced to bcca1J!!C' cl
school immunizatloo laws. Almost
half of last •year's 26,527 U.S.
measles cases occurred in children
under 5.
.
And yoimg cbildren toda)' may ·
have lower immunity to start with.
They could be less protected
because their mothers were artificially vaccinated, and didn't get
natural immunity from having the
disease, Berniez said.

BIG BEND

cude pD"liDIP''* .... e«ep-•I"
lhl
New York City bas reported
IIKlRI than 2,000 men• -lhis
year IDil than 4,500 liace ill
outbreak beaan in March 1990.
Pbilade1pbia 1w reponed 1,215
Clle8 thia year, 60 perc:enl in chile
' cllalllllder S: the cilY ))ad just 293
ClleiWt year.
Philaddg:~ has reported Dille
children's
s in lbe outbreak,
including six from congregations
tbat shun vaccinations on reUgious .
•

With the younger patients
comes an ina' sed risk of serious
comP,Iications.
' Deaths from measles, and
complications from meules, m
higher tban we have had in a long
time,'' Bemlet said.
· Measles begins with a fever,
accompanied by a cough, 8lleCZing
and sae lhroa4 then devdops into
a lliSh. It is most con~ before
a rash appears. Complications inJ,

......

L

~~ hospi~zation was raie

care.
'

~·~ ~

case

!....

We're Proud To
Welcome Home
AlloiOUr

Sou and Daapten
ol Freedom.
' .

OHIO VALLEY
FOODLAND
OPEN
24 HOURS WEEKDAYS
THIU .DNIR SAT.

i

By EVE EPSTEIN
Aaodated Prell Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The town of
Ripton was the IOlVn that never
complained. It was on record as
volunteering to talce a toxic waste
dump. Then it said it would ta1ce
. nuclear warning towers no other
community wanted
But it's all a fictioo; there is 110
Ripton, Mass., except in the minds
of legislators who kept the joke
alive in the 1992.budgeL
In a rare lij!ht moment during
budget wrangling, the House gave
i
Ripton nearly $4()(),lXXJ "to ·inves,
ligate ... the pedacious activities of
the endangered howa!ne antalySL"
I
To some, that solinded suspkiously
1·
close to "House Ways and Means
Analyst" - the people wbo put
·"' out die blvlaet
,
'Others ace it differendy.
"That' sa very, very rare vicious
animal, exclusively in Ripton as I
understand it," said Robc:it Austin,
assistant commissioner of the
state's Division of Fisheries and
Wildlife. "I hope it's not too late to

ASSORTED

Angel Soft
Bath Tissue

I

4 ROLLS

.2/Sl

•

DELTA PAPEI TOWELS•••••

1:,

!

I
!

1112 DOZEN

•

\

I

I

.'.i' ' •'' •. -· ,, ~ --""

FOODLAND

'

FOODLAND

I

White Bread

Large Eggs
18 CT.

CTN.

. ;•

I

'':to.''" '

\ ---

~

1-LI.
LOAVES

een,

'

'

erans.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATIJRDA Y ADMISSIONS None.
SATIJRDA Y DISCHARGES Mary McAngus, Neil Cowdery and
Aloyshius Onleaet.
SUNDAY · ADMISSIONS None.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Richard Wamsley and Myrtle Wolford
MONDAY ADMISSIONS David Manley, Middleport and
a..ce Kridllr, Long Boaom.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ,

By DAN SEWELL
As&amp;odated Press Writer
PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) Genetic tests indicate William
Kennedy Smith had sex with a
woman who says he raped her at
the Kennedy flimily estate.
Specifically, a DNA analysis
released Tuesday shows an appar,
ent match between Smith's blood
and evidence ta1cen from the body
and clothes of bis alleged victim. _
Smith, wbo is to be arraigned
Friday oo charges of second-degree
sexual battery and misdemeanor
battery. haa denied
doiiJa. He
hasn't confmned o~ having
inlerCOursc with the woman, but his
cousin,·Patrick Kennedy, has told
authorities that Smith told him he
had sex with her.
Mark Schnapp, Smith's Miami ·
attomey, did not return repeated
telephone calls to his offiCe after
the test res.ults were released by
Palm Beach police on Tuesday.
Prosecutors and police consider
. DNA tests highly reliable as evi,
dence of sexual contact. The
chances of another person having
the same DNA makeup as Smith
are I in 300,000, the report said.
: But the results woUld not indi. cste whether force was used, and
· defense attorneys often challenge
the reliability of such ICSIS.
DNA is an individual's genetic
. signature, found in the chromosomes of every tissue cell.
ne report said DNA profiles
; from vaginal swabs and the
woman's underwear mateb blood
: samples taken from Smith.
~.
None of the hair samples taken

'I

•

.

""'-'. ·
llfiiiiiiU.

..

.1.

"I feel completely vindi~tc£
and my (attorney) has shown these·
articles to be untrue," the 59-yearold actress said tluQugh Miss Sani. '
"Mr. Plpiano assures me that after'·
the National Enquirer management~
determined that the articles were in:
error, the Emuirer acted prom"'1y•
and in pld faith."
yu :
Papiano woUld not disclose the:
amount made to Miss Taylor.
••
"You can rest assured Elizabeth •
. is very happy and only the biggest.'
and the best makes bcr happy," ·..
Papiano said. "It cost them a lot{)f: '
money. She is very, very pleased.: :
"We weren't int'erested in ·.
retractions or anything of that sort. ·
although they offered iL All they
bave to do is tell the nuth. Unfonu, .
llllldy, they haven't been telling the •
bUth.' '
it.
•

Santa Barbara County orders stores to .~
post lambskin condom warning signs ·

American Heart Association
. Nearly IS volunteers from the
Meigs County American Heart
Association sold 1.40S flowers to
area businesses and community
residents to help fund heart di'lelse

research.

"This carnation sale was dedicated to the memory of James
Diehl who has alwa,rs chaired the
event int he past, commented
Denver Rice, AHA volunteer.
According to the American
Heart Aasociation, bean disease Is
the number one killer of women as
well as men. Althouab the death
rate had dlupped 24 percent in the

AEROBIC DANCE CLASS
SESSION lEG- JUNE 3

.a.WIBS-16 CLASSU SJJOO

•oiiDAY ,,,. ,...

ua•uY 5145 , ...

CABDOII SCIOOL-SYUCISI, •o

JUII.

JOY .... WIMIII ttN7t4

,;1

·

OW&amp;, ..sYAflr &amp;&amp;IAC'IGI ttl...ts

'.

i .

Details of the settlem~n i,.
reached last weet, weren' t dis-1'
closed as Plfl of the agreement;
said Miss Taylor's attorney, Neil·

doesn't. ''
Lambskin, or natural memblane
· prl)phylactics, have pores that mate
them permeable, unlike latelt con,
doms, wbich are made of rubber.
County ~ealth officials say studies have shown lambskin condoms
are 9S percent effective as a banier
to the AIDS virus, compared with
99.6 pescent effectiveness for latex
condoms.
Condom lnanufacturers say tbat
while it is theoretically possible for
the AIDS virus to get through
lambskin condoms, they feel their
products are safe.
.
The signs, in both English and
Spanish, will say: "Warning: Con,

doms are not 100 percent safe, but
latex condoms labeled for disease :
prevention provide greater protec- ~
lion against AIDS than do natural :
condolns."
..
The ordinance was dlafted at the :
' 1IIJing of a local businessmiln, Jim .'
N~. who say.s he was infected ..
with the AIDS vuus while using a
naturaJ,membrane condom.
Niss!eY, 38, who was diaanosed
with AIDS last year, says fie has ·:
made a persona) crusade of telling ·
the public that natural,skin con, '·
doms are inferior Ill latex condoms :
as potee:lion against AIDS.
.;
First·time offenders could lie '
fined $100.
:

:

,,

----People in the news----,

DANCE FOR JOY

None.

·'

By JEFF WILSON
"The Enqairer gained access to
Asaod11ed Prell Writer
all of Miss Taylor's medical
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Eliza, records and is oow satisfied tbat the
beth Taylor said Tuesday she has articles reporting on her medical
settled ber $20 million lawsuit condition and the report that she
•.gainst the National Enquirer, get, was drinking were in t:m:lf," ~
ling an apology aod money for Taylor's publicist Olcn Sam S8ld m
bogus stories portraying her as a a statement announcin11 the settle,
~r witll a disfiguring disease.
ment reached late last week.
Miss Taylor, who nearly died
"We regret the inaccuracies iii
during a hospital stay last year · lhe anicles, bill are pleased tbat this
6lcd suit clainiing she was lament~ dispute haa come to an amicable
ed and libeled by the supennarkct end," Enquiler Editor Jain Calder
U!bloid's front page headline, "LiZ said in a swement released throllgh
Docs Furious. She's Boozing It Up Miss Sam.
in the Hospital...
Calder said froin his Lantana,
The June 12, 1990, issue also Fla., office TueSday that he would
featured an inside headline, "While not discuss the case beyond the
Doctors Battle to Save Her Life ... statement
Liz Boozes It Up in the Hospital."
The National Enquirec was noti,
The Superior Court lawsuit also
fied about the inaccuracies in its
tar¥eted a Jan . 19 story titled,
stories and headlines four days
"Liz's BeautifUl Face Ravaged by
before publicstion, Miss Taylor's
Killa Disease. Doctors Order Sutlawsuit said.
cide Watch After They Finally
"The Enquirer has made an
Diagnose The Mystery Illness."
appropriate monetary payment to
The story said she had lupus, a Miss Taylor for the articles ancl
cllronic skin disorder.
apologized to ()er.'' Miss Sam said. .

in the conpessional ilwesliptioo.
He was convicted of taking an
illegal gratuitY for accepting a
$13,800 home security system
from .Richard Secord, a former Air .
Force major general and ht1siMss,
man enlisted by North to airlift
arms to the Contras.
The two judges on the aJIPC!Ils
cowt ~ who voced to set aside
North s convictlons, David s.e~Je
and Laurence Silberman, were
appointed by former President
Ronald Reagan. ne dinenting
partel member, Patricia Wald, was
named to the ~ court by for,
mez President Junmy Carter.
In bis Supreme Coun appeal,
Walsh said a great deal more was
at stake in the case than North's
convictioo.
If the appeals coilrt ruling is
allowed to stand, Walsh said, it
· could threaten future prosecutions
in high-prom~ ca_ses that J111!111Pt
COIIgrCSIIOnai mquiriell. 1
As with the Iran-Contra affair,
political realities and public
demands for action spur Congress
to investigaJe before criminal prose
ecutlons are cOmpleted.
The appeals court ruling "will
have a substantial chilling effect on
the use of immunily Olden 10 fur.
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
ther COI!gressional inquiries,"
(AP)
- County supervisors have
Walsh said
t.eniatively approved what they say
is the first law in the nation requir,
ing stores to post signs warning
that lambskin condoms don't prl)tect against AIDS as well as latex.
Passed unanimously on Tuesli.•y, the measure is expecred to be
adopted after a second vote June
11.
save it'•
"It's a righHo-know issue,"
to tweak their colleagues - poiDtsaid
S~ Mike Stoker after
Nobody is talking about Rip- ing out that nobody really knows
the
ordinance
passed 5·0. "The
ton's oriJIIIS. All that is known Is what goes on out in tile boondocks.
public
has
been
given a false sense
that some legislators recall its first Since its inception, the House
of security that condoms l:~ent
111entioo came in the early 1980s, Ways and Means Committee has
AIDS and the ev:idence has
me
and that it since has been symbolic helped )le'lpetuate the prank, trying
clear
and
convincing
that
it
of civic duty.
to see if those responsible for
"They're known for being a putting together the budget at other
rather ho!ttable community, in s~ would catch Ripton.
terms of ·ng projects that other
'Pan of the fun is to see if we
communities don't want," said can get it 10 the governor's llesk,"
Democratic Rep. Christopher . said John Regan; a committee
BURBANK, Callf. (AP) - Ste,
Hodgkins, who haa a Ripton sign in spokesman.
Vie Wonder says Spike Lee's new
his office but denies inventing the
Money for Ripton was not movie about an interracial love
town.
included in the budget' s bottom affair inspired him to ~ord the
Fonner state Sen. Peter Webber, line; ad the bUdget is now be(on: soundtrack, his.fust album in four
who now serves as commissioner the state Senate, where Ripton •s years.
· clthe Department of Environmen- fundi!lg is likely to get knocked
The blind singer listens to films
tal Management, first noted Ripton ouL In the past, money allocated and has friends describe non,speatcroppiDg ~ iD die Clrly 1980s.
for Ripton renrted to the state's ing sequences. He liked "1ungle
• 'I cim t claim aulborship or main bo'*kteping account, lcgisla· Fever" and proiluced 11 songs.
starting it, but I' 'le been brought tors said.
"In fact, when I saw (it), I
'
· into the inner cirole over the years, ·
were a few legislators thought it worted so well that I
since the mythical town is in my whoThere
noticed
the strange Iangusge told (Lee), 'You don't need any
fotmer diSirict," said Webber, who
music for the film. Just leave it the
the House budget ~fi:· but way
represented com.munities in the in
it is,"' Wonder said in an
they
were
told
it
was
a
.
·
e
lhat
western part of the state.
interview published Sunday in the '
wllli
part
of
another
community
Legislators from rural western andd)cybelievedit
Los Angeles Timca,
·
Massachusetts have used the town
Much of the music addresses
race relations and social conditloos
that Wonder said haven't improved
significantly since he WI'Oie "You
Ain't Done Nolhin'" and "Higher
Ground" in the 1970s.
"It's kind of like things have
changed, but you look around and
there is still so inuch to be done,"
from tbe woman matchid Smith's sibly indicating she was on the he said. "I'm still optimistic, bull
hair, according to the report.
beacb at the Kennedy family's sea· feellhat sOmething drastic is going
The SlUdy also said one out of side estate.
to happen before people understand
four genetic loci, or locations of
The 29,year-old woman has said the need to change."
~enes on the chromosome, was
"Jungle Fever" .opens June 7.
she drove Smith to the estate after
mconclusive. The report dido 't say meeting him at a Palm Beach
what that meant about the strength nightspot, and that after they
of the match.
'
walked on the beach h~ tackled and
Police would not discuss the raped her.
report.
The DNA tests were performed
Police Chief JosePh Terlizzese on tissue taken from vaginal swabs,
said the DNA results jlobabty were the woman's undawear, her dress,
the final piece of key evidence in her pubic: hair, a pair of shorts and
lbe investigation of the alleged a T-shirt. Smith gave police sam,
Marcb 30 rape. Police waited two pies of his blood and hair from his
months for the results from an FBI head and pubic area.
laboratory in Virginia.
The woman haa told investiga·
Smitb, a 30--year-old nephew of tors that she didn't change her
Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. underwear before going ro a hospi·
l(ennedy, is free on baU.
·tal for a rape exam, but did take off
According to the report, gran, her dress and put on shorts and aT,
ules of sand were found in the shirt provided by a friend, Anne
woman's dress and unda'wear, Jli?S' Mercez.

~

"

!

•

R'eivers," but shortly after th!lt.
while seven months pregnant, her
lung collapsed and she nearly died.
· She and the baby survived, but
her inemory was affected. Miss
Farrell ran .into Andrew Prine at a
party and forgot she had been mar,
ried to him once for two weeks.
Miss Farrell said she went to a
psychiatrist, who told her to "just
get on with your life.''
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C.
(AP) - Buit Reynolds says he has
a personal feel for the characters of
"Eleemosynary," the play he's
directing at the Flat Rock Play·
house.

Rehearsals began Tuesday and·
the production opens June 4.
"Eleemosynary" is about com-.
munication and three generations
of women, Reynolds said. The tide •
is from a Latin word meaning "of, ,
relating to, or supported by chari- ·
ty... he said.
"I certainly identify with the
people in the play." said Reynolds.
"In the ·South, there's a saying
that 110 man is a man until his
father tells him so," he said. ' 'My
father never told me until! was 43.
Not until then did I ~ out that I
could quit acting,stuptd."
c

DNA tests indicate William Kennedy ,
Smith had sex with alleged rape victim
I

...._..
........._.

of the Iran-Contra affair he helped
PreJIIIR: for Rcapn lldministration
officials who were about to tellify

The Dally Sentinel-Page

National Enquirer apologizes
for .bogus story on Liz Taylor: ~

Fictional town reaps nearly '
1, $400,000 in state budget
1

SUNDAYS 8. AM-10

..

ed, without comment, an appcal by

c

•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

North challenging his prosecution
on other grounds.
The outcome of North's case
also likely wiD affect the proeecu,
tion of former national security
~ytoCoopess.
adviser John Poindexter, North's
The justices, without comment, boss, who was convicted in 1990 of
let stand an appeals court rulina five felonies.
that said the fanner White House
Poindexter also gave immunized
aide may have been denied a fair testimony to Congress, and bas
trial.
appealed his conviction.
At issue was whether indepen,
The Iran-Contra affair became
dent counsel Lawrence Walsh and public knowledge in 1986 when it
bis starr Violated Nortll's rights by was revealed tbat the Reagan
using testimony he gaye to administration secretly sold
Congress undet' a grant of immuni- weapons to Iran and used proceeds
1y.
to help the Contras, the rebel forces
The U.S . Circuit Court of fighting in Nicaragua.
Appeals ordered the trial judge to
Congress granted North immu,
detenninc whether testimony was nity and ordered bim to testify at
influenced by North's televised hearings on the Iran.Conua affair.
appearance before congressional Nothing he said at the hearings
committees. The appeals court said could be used againsl·him in crimi,
a new trial must be held ~ or the nai proceedings.
case dismissed- if any of the eviNorth was convicted Ma1 4,
·dence was tainted
'
1989., on three of 12 crimmal
Walsh appealed to the Supreme counts against bim. •He was sen. Cowt.
. tenced to 1,200 hours of. communi·
North 'W8S convicted of mislead, .· ty service, which he haa completed,
ing Congress in its investigatioo of and was fmcd $150,000.
the Iran~ntra affair, aa:epting an
The appcals court, in a 2,1 rul'
illegal gift and unlawfully shred, ing last JUly, temporarily set aside
ding sensitive government docu· North's convictions for accepting
ments. Only the flfSI two convic, the gift and for misleading
lions were at issue in the appeal the Congress.
.
bigh court acted on today.
The charge that North misled
The Supreme Court also reject, Congress stems from 1 chronology

Your Locally Owned
Community Minded
Supermarket

Squads receive ·
27 weekend calls

•

·~·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme Court today refused to
hear arguments in the Iran-Contra
of Oliver North, clolring the
way for new hearings oo whether
his trial was tainted by his televised

,

"D-'--'d.

. . ... .. _ ... -. &amp;.

Supreme Court refuses to hear
.North's Iran-Contra case

" There's 110 evidence of any; "
signifacant change in the mcasleJ,.
~.

... ..

Wednllday, May 29, 1991

in die days w11cn ann'" wa COlli•
111011, • ecri1n • ' 15 pet'CCIIIIIO 20! ·
l of IICI. . padell• ~
. t ~ Jest ,_-,
'•·
C:~~en ay die ill:rr m:::
Wb• and boiP"'ti!ltionllleml- ·
from line faclols: die YOURI l8f'
of today'• -lea )lllien-. tbeif·•
lower blrtb immunfty Ievoll an4·
e'len the quality Of dlelf medicll}~

l

Several auto accidents were
among the 27 calls for· assistance
answered by Meigs Counly Emer:
gency Medical Services units over
the f4emorial Day weekend.
On Saturday at 9:3S a.m .,
Racine squad went to State Route
124 for Sarah Blake, who was
taken to Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital. At 10:29 a.m., Olive
Township Fire Department and
Pomeroy squad went to Reedsville
for an auto accidenL Diana Nan,
nenmacher was transported to
Camden-Clark, while Don Myers
and H.C. Nannenmacher refused
treatment. At 10:34 a.m., Middleport squad went to the Flood Road
for Daniel Riffe. He was treated
but not tranSpOrted. At 11:01 a,m.,
Middleport squad went to South
Third. James Conde was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 7:11 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to Spring Avenue for an auto
accident. Fawn Stevers, Willy
Robinson Grimes, Ty Tolley and
Kyle James were taken to Veterans.
At 9:46 p.m .. Middleport squad
went to Hudson Street for Charles
Knapp. Knapp was Iaten to Veterans and latei by HealthNet to Grant
Medical Center, where he died.
On Sunday at 12:37 a.m., Tuppers Plains squad weilt to State
Route 681 West for Helen West,
who was taken to ·camden-Clark.
At 8:10a.m., Racine squad went to
·Sti~ Road. Freda Calpenter
was taken to Veterans. At 9:25
a.m., Racine squad went to Fourth
Street Grace Krider was taken to
Veterans. At 9:30 a.m., Rutland
unit went to Main Street. Robert
Hill was taken to Veterans. At
10:02 a.m., Racine sql!lld and fire
department took Goldie Reitmire to
VeleniiiS. • ·
At 3:07 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to W.elcbtown Hill for Dave
Manley. He was Iaten to Veterans.
At 6:09 p.m., Racine squad went to
Ohio valley ea;:roonds. sarah
Snodgrass was
n to Veterans.
At6:47 p.m., Pomeroy squad went
to Union Terrace for a $as grill lire
at the Gemld Reuter res•dence.
On Monday at I :24 a.m ..
Pomeroy squad went to Peoples
Temce. Annette Bartow was taken
to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.
At 1:25 a.m., Sr.mcuse squad went
to Syracuse Trailer Park. Geraldine
Spencer was Iaten to Veterans. At
6:02 a.m., Rutland squad went to
Leading Creek Road. Rena Marshall was treated but not transported. At 7:54 a.m .• Chester Fire
Department went to Rock Springs
Road for an auto fire. Shirley
Sopher is listed as the car's owner.
At 10:42 a.in., Geraldine Spencer
was taken to Holzer Medical
ter from her residence by Syracuse
squad. At 12:50 p.m .. Pomeroy
squad went to Peoples Temce for
Annette Bartow, who was taken to
O'Bieness. At12:35 p.m., Syracuse
squad took David Lawson to Ve~r,
ans. At 1:22 p.m., Tuppers Plains
and Olive Township units went to
State Route 248 for an auto acciden~ Connie Ross was Iaten to St
Joseph Hospital. At 9:50p.m ..
Racine squad went to the fire
department for Hank Moore. He
was Iaten to Veterans. At 11:03
p.m., Racine squad went to Mile
Hill Road. Mary Ann Kiser was
taken to Holzer. At 11:07 ·p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Crew
Rolid. George Lemley was lalcen to
Holzer.
At 12:57 a.m. on Tuesday, Rutland unit was sent to Meigs Mine
31. Terry McQuiee was transported
to Veterans. At 7:01 a.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Mechanic Street.
Lorinda Hudson was Iaten to Vet-

•

w.rnday, II!! 11, 1111f

/)

'ny DGOODSUSONS•
Honey M1llllrcl s.l Dl • «Mil, .
Ill aiiiiiiiLnlllllllllnl

. .• .-eelakd wilb
atouch of~

4 ·· 11110.
4· .5 X 71
32·WALLETS
18 ·GIANT WALLETS ·

r Hf

t

FIUTH PHAIIIACY #6
78e N. 8-nd Avenue In
Mlclchport
Sunday, June 2, 12:00

Noon tl15:00 P .M.
Portr11W Dellv.red:
Wedi!Hdly, June 19
9:00A.M . t1110:00 A.M.

�Paga 10-The o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 28, 1911

1

Ohio

Students honored for their extra efforts
Studenls were recogaizOd for

OUIIIIlldins academic exira-currie·

..
'

.

...
.

_,
"'

ular achievcmenll at lhe ·Soulhern
JUDior High School awanls assembly on Friday.
Perfecl auendance honorees
were Jobn Card. Tassie Cummins.
Shawn Dailey, BJ. Ervin, Paul
I hie, 1conifer Lawrenc~. Gabe
Smith, Nick Smilh, Craig Wolfe,
Rayan Y oun~. aU sevenlh graders,
and Bill Crail!, Mike Craig
. • , Tracy
Pickea. Angel Roberts and Brandy
Roullb, eighth graders.
Recognized for being on the
honor roll for lbe entire school year
are: Robbie Crow, CJ. Harris, Paul
Ihle, Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer
Lswrence. Jay McKelvey, Mandy

..

~

•

Holly Farms Grade A Gov't.Inspected

'

.Fresh Frying
\

.'
•....'
.......
·;:;..,

.

i•

Limit 2 Pkga.
l'W F...tly W.. Airy 00. Pvdlue
(""h""...... pmhlt ., d by ...., .

'

.

.

••

IC ·en reast

:•
I

•

Mills, Jason' Shuler, and Rayan
Young, all seventh graders, and
Brian Anderson. Randy Bing,
Grant Circle, Andrea Moore,
Kendra Norris, David Pickens.
Tracy Pickelt, CouriDey Roush,
Amy Weaver and Ryan Williams.
Hooored for lllCCiving all "A's"
. for lhe 'yU£ were Mason F'ISber and
Matt Morrow, both eilbth graders.
The Presidential AcadND.ic Fil·
ness Awards were preseoiC4 10
Bri11n Anderson, Randy Bing,
Mason Fisher, Andrea Moore, Man
Morrow, ~endra N()!Tis and David
Pic:kens. The aw&amp;rd goes 10 those
eighth graders altaining a "B+"
avemge lhrougboullhc school year,
and scoring al or above the 801h

'~

percentile on a S1811dardlzerliCSI.
Citizenship awards wire ·pre·
sen led to seve nih graders I ohn
Card, Jennifer Cummins, Jennifer
Lawrence, Jyl Matthews, Kelly
Swisher and Rayan Young, and to
elgblh grade SllldtniS Randy B~,
Kellee Collins, Jason Ervin, Eddie
Friend, Chris Hamm , Andrea
Moore, Kendra Norris, Courtney
Roush and Bridget Varney.
Those students must have never
been suspended from school or rid·
ing the bus, must bave received no
more d!an 10 delentions. must bave
missed no more lhan 10 days of
school and must be cour1eous
&lt;!ependable, responsible, coopera:
llve and must acccp1 positive criticism.
·

•i •
••
••
•

-·-.-....
~

1:"'

·-~

'

•
' •'

1.68

'

.

Open8:00 am

•

\ •

and

''

I

I ,

LOYALTY DAY· Semy-ftve people attead·
ed Loyalty Day ~ces 11o1tec1 by the Tuppers
Plains VFW earlier this mODtb; including mem·
ben of the Mason, W.Va. aad Athens J!08t5, and
rour American Legloa Posts. Joe Struble was the
gUest speaker ror the eveat, wblch honored ser·
vice mea aad womea Ia Operatioa Desert

•
r1n

Starm. Pictured, rroat row J..r are Chris L8Dfe
and Keith Haaer, who served In the war, Enla .
Mae ud DoD Laadoa, whose SOD served, Norma
Hawthorne, whose SOD served, and War Veteru
Robert Malsoa. Ia the back row are pareats
Carolyn Bissell, Carolyn Bissell and Darrell
Hawtborae, ud Serviceman Kevin Lute.

1.68~.

· Top10U or Compost
Plua organic: peat. For
all your lawn and gardening
needs. Handy 40-lb.' bags.

Hemlock Grange holds regular meeting
was

The charter
draped for Jean
Lee Echard at the regular May
meeting of the Hemlock Grange
No. 2049 with 31 attending. Rock
Springs Gran~c members were
guests and a dmner preceded tbc
meeting.
The f.rogram was directed by
Pal Ho ter, guesllecturer. Her
theme was "Treasures and Pleasures." A reading by Sarah Caldwelll "lianh·' s Treasures" opened

•

I

I
I

'

lhe program wilh a song, "All
Things .Bright and Beautiful" by
·Pal Holter. Other readings were ·
'"The Nesting Season" by William
Radford; "Earth's Pleasures" by
Harold Blacks10n: "Conservation
Practices" by Pal Holter: "New
Batbing Suit" by Nancy Radford:
"Going lo lhe Fair" by Francis
Goeglein; "Happiness" by Pat
Holler. The pro11ram concluded
with everyone lelllng !heir hobbies. -

,.,., wt .

Kalhryn Miller showed her
"Double Irish Chain" quilt which
won cuonty and slate cootests and
made honorable mention 81 nationa1 contesL
At the next meeting on June 15 .
the program will be on deaf prob!ems with a speaker wilh the public
inviled 10 attend. Reftcslunents wiD
be served following lhc mcc1ing.
Yearly inspection will be held al
lhc July mceling.

EARLY BIRD
SPECIAL 8·1 0 AM
SAnJRDAY ONLY!

1.97Bag

Playsancl or concrete

mix. 50-lb:• sand for play
or garden use . Concrete
mixes wilh water.
"Net wt .

'

For our 50th .reunion - 1991

I

l

Jumbo Roll - Prepriced 69~

' I,,..... I

Towels

I 'I,

•

lo

I·

•

.'• •

I.

•
r1

Umlt '4 Rolls

FWF..u,wida~w,o...p.,
·3 n d by 11M)

(e ............. ......

•

~

Community calendar

"

·- •

Pq.

Community Caleadar Items
appear two days berure an event
and the day of that evenL Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure pubUcatiol! In the calendar.

t

I

r

·'I
'·
.,
I

Your Choice EXCEPT SUced Beef

I

I

I,.

Banquet

L
!... ~ ..
I

24 to
28 oz.

I
I

' •

'

i

J,- .

Bordeda Elile ·

I;

Ice.

•

t.

I
I
\.

•

1

Box ··
~~--~----~----~

I

'I..

· There was work lo be done, our
failh to hold,
Waiting for them to return, so
brave and bold.
Then it was over, lhe war came to
an end,
Another chapter Closed, a new one
store
to
begin.
For us lhat day as we walked
The
hells were ringing, a lot of stothlougb lhe door. ·
ries
10ld,
Some went 10 college, others
So many weddings, lives starting to
slayed behind
unfold.
·.
To look for jobs or love to fmd.
Some boys left to fight for our Next came the babies, so· new arid
sweet,
country dear,
We
had to learn 10 guide those tiny
Tile girls stayed a1 home 10 hope .
feet.
and fear.
We JeftP.H.S., we hold so dear,
Time 10 go 10 grearer things
To leave lhe nesl, to spread our
wings.
None of us knew wbal was held in

I

I

II was fifty years ago thiS year

ntrees

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Mark and Crystal
Becker will be speaking al lhe
Hysell Run Holiness Church on
Wednesday al 7:30 p.m. Pastor
Bob Manley welcomes the public.
THURSDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gallia Meigs
Communily Aclion Agency will
have a free clothing day on Thursday from 9 a.m. 10 noon 11 lhe old
higb school building in Cheshire.

POMEROY • Free clotbing day
wiD be held allhe Salvalion Anny
in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10
a.m. 10 noon. Alluea residenll in
need of clothing are welcome.

FRIDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
Lebanon Township Trustees will
meel Friday aa 7 p.m. at lhe township building.
SATURDAY
CHESlER • The annual Chester
High School Alumni B•quel and
Dance will be held a1 lhe Chester
Elementary School on Salurday.
The banquet will begin 816:30 p.m.
foUowed by a dance wilh music by
·Charlie Brown RiiZ. Call 378-6294
or 985-3855 for late reservations.
POINT PLEASANT - The Lib-

erty Mountaineers will be appearing at lhe Senior Citizens Center in

Poinl Pleasanl, W.Va. on Salurday.

How busy we would be, the next
twenty years or so,
Molhers wilh their many duties,
Daddies bringing home lhe dough.
There were P.T.A. meelings,
church to attend,
Dancing school and ball games,
and cooking 10 no end.
There were swimming lessons and
birthday parties galore,
Soon time again to pass through

.'
I

, ltoundup~
nn~
''

i

·

~- :

~l-lf ,_.,

I

that door.

This 1irne it was our children.
among lhe cheers so loud,
3 We were in lhe audience, and oh,
so very proud.
No11oo long, we'd be grandparents, a new being 10 hold,
Anolher page to. turn, and more
lives to unfold.
I know we're getting older, addjng
a pound here and !here,
A few more wrinkles also, and
some grey in lhe hair.
But flfly yearsI How fas1 lhey 've
gonebY,
·
They say as we gel oldet, tim4"•
really fly.
Anyway ills time again, for laughter and cbeer,
To gel &amp;ogetber and celebrate thai
which we hold so dear.
The Purple and White will fly once
mere,
As we galher round and walk
lhrough thai door.
There will be !hose "remember
when" and loiS of old friends to ,
meel, . ,
Dancing 10 lovely music, plenty of
good food to caL
So come from near or far, come
one and aU,
Helf us to cclebrale, we wiD have a
ball.

......nt.

2 For$1

8. 88 ~- ·-·-·- " 5.97 ~-····

Patio blodla. 2 X B X 16"
blocks are perf&lt;ld for land·
scaplng, walkways and paHos.

Roundup in convenient 'kgallon, ready-to-use applica·
tor. Controls unruly weeds.

2.97

8. 97 ~- ...... 4. 93 ~-·~~~n~m

12" kettle planter.
lt" kettle planter ...... 4.97
16" kettle planter ...... 5.97

Ortho home pest ooubol
rids your home of Insects up to
6 full weeks. 1-gal. sprayer.

Ortho Weed-8-Gon won't
harm grass or shrubs while it
kills weeds. Ready to spray.

Ortho synemlc rose and
flower care feeds and fertilizes as It kills pests. 2-lb.•
·Nd~.

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
wiD hold a dance on Salurday from Evelyn Mayer Gilmore
8-11 p.m. al the Pomeroy Senior Class of 1941
Citizens Center wilh caller Scotty
Scbaver from Akron•

.' I ,. ..

jlI
It \

~

f

11 I

•

'

fl ~: :

.1

.

,,

8.97
Haldv .........

Aat

are

N8dy Io plant. Perfect
~~COlleT, more.

97~~-

4" gerllnlunw add
elegance to lillY size

garden. Kmart value!

8.97~.

3.97~.

BlniW.arboK
pkn • . Both are slur·
dy, "' thei reslslmrt.

On Sale Wed., May 29 Thru Sat., June 1
Avaflable At Your Local Kmart Garden Center

I

�P8ge 12-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 29, 1991

Pomei'oy-Middleport, Ohio

Giles hosts Fernwood club meeting Alfred UMW take up a
Thelma Giles hosled the m:ent
meeting of die Fernwood Garden
Club.
Marge Purtell had devotions
usinJ an article, " Springtime
Thoughts" which chronicled lhe
coming of spring and the many
changes of spring. Using a quote
from Isaiah she also read a poem,
"The Rose."
An amendment was made to lhe
club by-laws concerning lhe holding of office yearly.
Roll call was responded with.
members naming lheir favorite tree
or shrub.
.
.
Reports of the spring regional
meeung were given and also a
report of the club memben going

Sq1

I

to Connie HiU's Herbs and Harris

Farms to see the~-

The group had been asked to
make Dower bed plantings and they
cbo6e one to do in the futme. They
will also continue the plantings at
Zion Church of Christ and at the
Wolfe Pen sign.
The county fair Oower shows on
Monday and Thursday will be
around lhe lheme "Americe, The
Beautiful" and Fernwood has six
8mlllgements to do.
For the progr11m the group
reviewed a video "The Art of
Landscapin~ by Howard Garren.
Garret advued viewers to shop
around for a nursery With which
,they are comfo~table and with

whom questions will be answered.
· The video was divided into trees,
Oowers, hanging baakecs, houseplants, shrubs and ground cover.
·He staled that wilh each pun: base
one should buy Ollly those plants
lhat have fuU tops and good roots.
The roots need to be disturbed
before planting and water freely.

Mothers recognized .

collection for ab~sed boys ·
boys,~~ges

12-18.
. Flmnce Spencer had lhe prayer
calendar and chose Jean Jacobs,
education missionary in Peru. The
group signed a birthday card for
her and one for Carl Findling, local
resident.
•
Mrs. Spencer served sandwich·
es, angel cake, and fruit plate during lhc social to diose mentioned
and to Nina R,obinson, Martha
Elliott, Sarah Caldwell, Thelma
Hcndenon, Osie Follrod, Martha
Poole, Nellie Parker, and Charlotte
VanMeter. Mrs. Spencer gave each
members a coxoomb plant

The next meering will be held
June 18 at the home of Suzanne
Warner with the pt!&gt;gram on

MStone Planters."

Others present were Evelyn

Thoma. Kathryn 1obnson, Suzanne

Warner, Marge Purtell, Ida Murphy. and guest, Peggy Bole.

1991

Motbcrs of die Trillily Chun:h ;
in Pomet:oy were recopized on •
Molh«'s Day with presmllllioos of •
individual planes.
Hanging basktJ.s were preseoled
to lhe youngest grandmother present, Judy Werty; lhe IICWett moth- ·:
er, Sandi Hawley, JIIOiber with the · •
most family in churcb, Carolyn ::,
Thomas wilh nine membcn of her .:
family and lhe oldest molher was .•
Eva Dessauer. ·
.
The junior choir ,sang "Failh of ·:
Our Fathers" and the preschool
choir sang, "God Made Me" and ;·
"Get on lhe Art." The youlh choirs •
are directed by Ralph Werry. The :
senior choir is uDder the dQ'ection ;
of Lois Bun. They sang "Thanks to
God for My Molher."
.

Ohio

· Classified

•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PlACE AN AD tAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru fiiOAY I A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. until
SATURDAY

J&amp;L
I.NSULAnON .

C•ltl •J T"•hl
111 Mm~ort.rn

•VInyl lldlng

•Rept.c-.nt

•A CIH rHiMI ....,.,..,_,_ piiii:N ill 1llt0tily '"''"".. (M·

Our

tet~t

- cl•tifilld llfllpl-r, l w•in•t C.d ld ,., .. noticHI
wlli .......I t - '" , ...... , . , _ , ............. '"- 01111
,ot;t D~ 1tlllu~tt, ·~ twt 11,000 1101'11"

,.. Wt'H•T

COl'\' DlAOUNl ..:
MO"OATPA'U
TUIIDAV PAPJtll
W!ONliDAY ..A.. lA

COPYRIGHT 1181 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND ;
PRICES GOOD S!JNDAY, MAY 21, THROUGH SATUR· •
DAY, JUNE 1, 1181, IN Pomeroy

TMUI\IOA't'

-.

s-. .....,. •

Cla~.•i.fiell

..aaav

''
'

II~

t'JI - ,1 . flt1•1~1
4111-Lto!\

-

'r

.

,(

. t

···
~"·'
•• , -_...
,u.,.

111- N- Haw1n

142 - "11tl...cl

131 - IYihlo

81'7 ~

'

1!::=;::;;;:::::~ :·

MetoreyCI•
,74-..........
Mil••••., '....
11··'"''' ...,..,, Ace•..,•

H.o •anl' L Wrtt.sel

17·· htoA"•

H ·Ctmttlnt 'l.,..,._,

111 - LII"I

toot..ill•

. --

5

WE DO

Ads

.

,•

•'
'I

:·i
•'··'''•
:·

10 Am-4 PM

On front porch and in living room inside. China cabinet, buffet, stereo cabi·
net, antique sewing machine, dishes,
records, household items, hall trees,
N1entelido tapes and much more.

..

•"
•~

•'

TIIM and

-

I

Real Estate General

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259

Galan

ggc

Fuji Blank VHS
Video Tapas

Fried Chicken
1-Pitca Pkg.

%-Gallon

LAUREL CLIFF ROAD - Sectionel Only - NO LA.ND - A

NEW USTIIIII- IUntRIIUT AVE.- Live in it or use as a
rental. 2 story home whh extra lot in tow~ . Some new Plumb·
1ng. ff you wanf convemence - here 11 11 at only $10,000.

three year old 24x52 hQme that has afamilY room with afirePlace. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, cathedral cellme. skylifl!tt, exira
Insulation, heal pump, and many more extres. 130.000

POMEROY - Pucock Avt. - =etely remodeled with
new windows, new carpet, new al
e~hin&amp;- HIS a dtn·
in&amp; room, living room, 3 bedrooms. foyer, llehent'thdnew
cabinets, new batfl, and a fuH basement wilhSTiolsSEoE
ows
1U
and ds own new furance.
..... 000

::!.

RUTLAND ~ S.llh Rill Rd. - This diJI~itd country resi·
dence is a Plc11fretque settinawdh • rlilwood IIOftlt
way blck from tht road. Hast dreem~ Plein llill:lltn. _,..
·dral ceilntl on SiliCious hinl ·~ with fi"*t, end llin
are two baths. This 124acre farm IS set up lor beef cattll. ~
hes 1 large metal barn and olht1 outbutldmp ~~~
ponds.

'

!."!!'

I

Krager
Bllttlr••

I

•'
I

Gillon

I

SJII

•
I

•

'
•

(

-.....__.

-

'

-I
- ·-

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVKE
992-SUS w t15-JS61
Acr.. p,... PMt Office
I'OIIIIOY, OliO

'

~--~ I ..
I

t

I

I

i

1

'

••

•

......

................ ~
.........................
••••u•• ••• •............

•

71

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM St!)ING
· •BLOWN IN
INSULATION

S!IMialll... In

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

"Free Eltlm•t•"

...... ...,

..

CuttoM ,,.., ltpalr

PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949-2160

992·7013
or 992,5553
01

NO SUNDAY CAUS
3·11-tln

rou. . .

1..........oou
DAIWII,

A'IIIOIIIlri'llW Ills

~

~.; R... "

IIEW USTIIIG - POMEROY - 112 story home whh poten·
tial. 3 bedrooms, blth, utimy room, nice size lot Needs work
- ASKING $20,000.
IUTfOII TOIIIIHIP ..;. Appx. 51 earn ol VICini lind with
utlfllill millble plus free gas and roya~IIS. Owner will sub-·
divkle - Cllllor infornlltion.

HIIIIRY E. CLELAND .............. 112·1111

OPFICI .................. ................. M1·2211

INSTALLATION
Contact
STIVE WHITE

=:.-· ' ,.,.... ....

kilt- 1

_,, 2 -

114-~2-

QI\:xway: VInyl oouoh, ~
a:v~t . 114 ..

C:::'ZJ.....- tt,rat

To a-d " - -hlr Clllco

... ' - k a - t , 114-NI-4411.

APPAUCHIAN
I

WATD

. ,

HAUliNG
POOlS,
CIMINS, nc.

1,625 GAL.-135-145

Cetlifild or Trained Nursing Anlst•ts
Our rapid &amp;rowth II lht 11'11'1 IIIWIII tlld fi•
nest Skilled Lon&amp; Tenn Clrt Fecilltr his
cr11tld I11HIIItt op"rttllltles for Ctrtlfiftl
or Trtilltd llmllll Assistants.
Come for 1 visit, talk to Ut IMtd your txptrl· .
ence, end we will tllk to_ f8.!! IIIOIIt our ~
pt'OII'III wlllclllltllnelt MAO ,... llllr, PLUS
lfltllf &amp;I~
truly a ...... Of Tilt Alf' - - ~
~

,.,.,. o••••llll•\
JiliN TRUIHLL ................... Ml•ztto
JO MILL ................................. ltll ::.::
TRACY IRINAOER ................ 141·

SUNIOOF

992-6434
After 5 p.m.

NEW LISTI.G- BUTTERNUT AVE. - ThiS used lobe 1 duplex- but now made lor I !emily. Keep itlhatweyor duplex
111m and use 11 a rental. 4 bedrooms - needs work but at
thiS pnce - it's no proiJiem! $8,000.
.

SYRACUSE - Cl011 bit liCit ltdl,_. - An ~~
with t new heal pufllll, new I'ICIIIINI......., ,_,.
side Home hex 3 bldr-, suna·-. dfninl Nllll. ~
rourid porch, end 1 Plltio. Two of lhe bldroarlllllsJfl

••'t

12-'l ·llf).dn

PIOFUSIONAL

992-2156

Breyers
Ice Cream

•

a•••

IICIO OWIIIS-Srt .,.

£LASSD'IEDS!
COUNTIYT Yes, you can have your cake and eel rt, too! All
the beauty of a country setting, yet within mmutes of all the
convenitncef of town. This property has appx. 3.88 acres
with a 2 story frame home that has 3 bedrooms, femily room,
equipped kitchen, I ca• garage and a barn. Many other great
features! PlUS .. .THE PRICE IS REDUCED ...NOW YOU CAN
OWN THIS HOME AT ONLY $29,900.

•

Springdale 2%
.Lowfat Milk

llfti-JU.,
. . . . . .1015-.110.,
IAIIIIS--.-$1U.,
fMIHI-S115 " · '

Call Sentinel .

RUTLAND - Nice fenced backyard and a 2 story frame
home with 4 to 5 bed•ooms, dining room, and b1ghvmgroom.
carport, playhouse. and storage bmldmg. Assumable loan
ava11abie wrth $3,000 down payment ~nd assume the .loan of
524 ,44 1.99. The monthly payment 1.s $310.00• wh1ch 1n·
eludes princ•pal, interest. taxes, end msurance. 1here IS 24
yn. left to PlY and the mteresl rate II 12.5%.

..... A , II

691,6164

We

HYS£U RUN ROAD - Nltd 1 home out'of town? Anlet 3
bedroom home with woodburn•. Pd lots of kftchtn cabi·
nets.
PRICED AT $29.900

•.....

Far

CEDAR
CONSIIUCnON
992,6641 or

NEW LISTIIIG - NEAT AS A PIN - This very weN maint·
ained 2 stDfy home has it all! 4 bedrooms, )II belhs, family
room, 2 car garaae, new A/C und, new wallpaper in kitchen
&amp; dininL 11m1ly room &amp; balh. Large front s1t11n1 porch -all
drapes flO with this very bript and cheery home. Decoreted
rnoslly with miUve, blues and peech. ONLV$47,900.

1

MILK OR

FIIEE ESTIMATES

WHAUY'S
AUTO PARTS

Tu'i&lt;)u

LOOKING FOR A COMMERCIAL LOT? - Just off the main
street. You really need to check this one out. located on 3rd
Street, Middleport.
LIGHT

._., .,

...•.. .....-·

. N 2ND -IIIDDLEPDRT- Look atthisone - itcan'be RESiDENTIAl or COMMERCIAL whatever WIY you wtnt!J!,use rt.
GREAT LOCATION. Can be yours for only
" ,100

i&amp;-Ct.

•.

T·120

tolAY WAIUim .

us.ooo

-,::.:-

""

... .

USD APPUAICIS

·

NO JOB TOO SMALL

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

,,

BALL RUN ROAD - You need to see to appreciate the 3
acres with an older house that coukl be you• dream houseOut of town but not off the m-I'H'E rP'R1cE IS JUST

Laraa Egp

5-10·11·tfll.

tFREE ESTIMATES)

~.·./4~'-·

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.
DOTTIE.$ . TURNER, BROKER

...

on Now
u- 111.

,_,.

992·7451

...... . . .

..
.
...

lutla~~d

- 1 - . E•twlof

FREE ESTIMATIEI

.Grade A

742-2421
21/~ Iii. ouh. .

-~ooldnt

EXCAVAnNG

32·01.

KROGER

Pick Up.

10:00 om-11:00 pm •

-ca~~~DtMewo'*

TIUCIIING AVAIWLE

t~~~c......-w

Kroger
Orange Ju

Tu•dly thru Sotuldey

- E I - end Plumbing

HOWARD

Hamburger
Dill Slicp

•

AU IIIIlS
lrl111 It 18 Or Wt

USED RAILROAD nES

VLASIC OR
KROGER

J

OPEN

- lllteom AdcfitiMI1

IIMOVAL
•LIGHT .HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

~

OFFICE 992·2886
HOME 992-6692

..IY •SIU •ftADI

- Gwttwr worll

BULLDOZER Mid
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES • .
LANDCLEARING.
WATER 111td SEWER
LINfliS

'

.

'
STEWART'S
• •
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES •· ··•

•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

.

•'

"&gt;

pd .

a.--:=:::::::::::~ ..
.:
,_

SHIUB &amp; TIEE

frt• Frlt.. t

Real Estate General

32-oz.

4~5~11·1110.

Home Aepelfl

'

.....

949,2161

•Remodeling and

H1ppy Bl;th••r

THIS l"x 1"
BULLETIN BOABD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

....'

.... 949·2101
or It~, 949-2160
'
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

•

........... htt Oftllctl

Lor•y 1 Lar•••
Loo• Vfto'1 "40"

MONDAY, JUNE 3

•
•

FREE ESTIMATES

snv1a

10 AM·4 PM

'l·j
.,I

"At 1-naWe Prices"

992·533S.or
91SrJS61

. SATURDAY, JUNE 1

..:I

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Gutters
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

lEN'S APPLIANCE

124 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy
FRIDAY, MAY 31-10 AM-4 PM

.,
.,
.,

NEW- REPAIR

BISSELL
.UILDERS

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

BOICE
MOVING OUT SALE

;'

~-~

ROOFING

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

..'

:

ROOFING

'' ~ C1mp•• I Metor "emn

--

,.,.,
..,,.,., 0•77:11 -. ·Mit""

24i- Let•n F.,,,

141 - f11c l~1

....

''BULLETIN
- BOARD

•

U.S. Grade A,

Dill

·Mi!WitfOII
Pomtroot

Middleport.

1
'" ....
U1 ·- '"''"
Trvclotlttllolt
73·· 11''"11 I WfO 't

.
Ott R11ultt Fut

•

Elch

Chicken
Breast
Quarters .....lb.

IQ- Qal.....l

371- WIInttl

992-2772 or
742-2251

1138 Bryeil Piece

M"l!fl Cll . W\1

t4J - AII~I

JAIIIS DISII

a .....

po!fe.• .ro•w 1l1r
""'CoclelD4 .

241- Kio ._...,.,

U - WIIttef to I""
ll ·· LI¥Mtodl
tl - hM I Fefilut•

Mtlfl C o ... ~ty

JR- Itllfllon

. , _ ,. ,. . . . . . . . . . .tl

t t -H-v 1

..,,,,Codt t11

317- Ch•hir•

•

Ripe Texas
Cantaloupes

- ,

Qlllll il C:OYOity
~,. 1 codtl1•

2H-~Ditt

9 SIZE

'

foiiOit'irt!f rrlrphmiF rxchall!fe.• ...

.

...........

"'M'f"'

FIIIOAt PAP-Ill
IUfWDAY PAPI!R

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTinES. NONE :
SOLD TO DEALERS.
••• a .,. Pa~CY-&amp;c:h o t - -•11 .~ itMIIIINquireclla be
•VIIIblelur :
IICII ac._
opecllicllly In thll ld. II .,. do run out ot 111 •
Ildwrtilod ltlrn,- will ollar you your choicio ole.........,_ itom, when I'm' HI, ;
relllclina l h l - AVInge or 1 reinchock which.,...,""" you Ia jiUrChMo lhlld\l'liwd •
111m II lile Jldvwt(U~ priCe willlln 30 cilyl. Oni\1- vtndo! coupon will be ICCipiWd pOr •
~
.
.
. .

•an

-

Window•
•Roofing
•lnaulatlon

II

1w fer •• llltiMtw, er ,... firlt
..
(C14) "2.-472. uclltt n IIIDw PI tlllt all
nunlnallollts n not allu.

OVERBROOK CENTER
333,. ....... - · · " · - 41710

... _1, ... 71·1

amANt,

OliO 41775·'"'

I

Lost 6 Found

=-ol. e::.:l:"'rll:rJ:
I'OUND,

... ,... - ·

~or•·ml.

IN---·

LOIT In ....,. "'-"'._1!""11

lilt lor Kim.

IOW~20

LOIT: lllllold, PlY· N found,
D111114-44WtSI• 4411 · .
LOIT: One _ , oil of •
lulolllloot... w........ ...,..
"'"""" -

of ...................

614·:r•z·m•4

1112:
·~· lnl-lon. · - '·
7
Yard Sale

•Remadlllng and
Ho!MRepaift

Gall!POlls
6 VIcinity

.,.......
........
FULLYliiUIED
eReotlnt

,•...
.,.m

.........

111 .... ..., ... 11. ....

_,
IJ

...

~

fl\ts4,

•

I

t· .

�..-

Wedneeday, May 29, 1991

wednelday, May 29, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
SNAFU~ by 8111« Beattie

Gallipolis
&amp; Vk:lnHy

l ---........:--

a«41ir Flnllbocl ao-. cA,
112 Lol. a- CiiY Scllocl
i111t1!01. a- To Town, a

c.ntMary Tount.,u.: Friday,

II~Ipn.J. $41,000. ' 111118

Soturdoy. 11131, 111. 1 un. • 1
p.m.
Frtdoy a - • r: Half milo oft
Rt.7 on o • crgee er.k Ad.
Hugo Ru . . . . . Solo: Slot, 111,
~- • - US. Ohio Avo.
by QoiUpollo City Pool.

4421.

44

tbr ~- Low Utlllill. -rand
Traoh Paid, 1240 Ptuo Oopooll,

M

lloln St-. 114 141 IMI.
er- Clly.UD,OOO
r-Iel Yon!. 114- 2 bdnoo
Apt.
upolaiN,
441-11211, ti4-441-111 t.
1'11 c:r 'ed,
waehirld~r
411r, 1 112 llory Fr Hoo. Filii book"'Po no plio, 1221. 114-tt2·

Sllr -

B-uuiOu:t, z illtbl. Cfi, ·aTo T-n, l)oocl ..., Sn.l,
Prload To Solll14-44t-7122.

Darago Apon:nont 101
I.Ocuuul
Stroot.
Slovo,
Allrtaar11or, .. W- Fumlobod.
ttoo Dopoolt.

21:r

Apan.,.... ,_. ,...

on Spring
Avo. ttoo. dopoaH, tteo. por
month I _ , _,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAICIS AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1131 Jockoon Ptko

1. . Dodge

conaga lor,.,., 1umialiocl, AIC,
carpll, aood nolgliliorhoocl no
~::. Pll-nt. wv •-304=

roqulrocl, no poto, 114-112-2211. ·

II~ I,;Sot. 8 till
1. U - PIU Oft HI. 141 Ol
&lt;;onlonory. lltb A N - on
loll MIN. Mdoo.

AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
Excallont
Pay,
a-lito,

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Trensport.tlon,
407·:zt5..7100,
Ext. 1171. ll.m.-10p.m. Toll
Refu~d. Member of Aualrellan
Arntrlcln Chlmb.r of Com-

••=

Shl~oy

12

,.

i

.

,...,,

..... ....... PaniMG40 Plant,
Fldly Moy 31 and 811 Juna 1,
1:00 IIU 1:00. DNio,. wotcomo.
304.fl'S-2211.

AVON I AI A,..o I
Spoaro, :101-11'111-1421.

EARN $3001$500 PER WEEK
READING BOOKS AT HOME.
CALL 1.f11-473-11140 EXT. 111'11.
EARN EXTRA MONEY Stan Your
!IIIIIRMI. Wo Supply Contocto.
lncomo LlmHI-. 211-11!15-3213,
Ext~ 111H.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vk:lnHy

S loiiiiiY yarcloolo, Soturdoy 11-?,
laclloiU
llii:ycto,
·..
• a..
.. Tractor lrallor drtvoro · unatortol.
__
mlo,
....
mower, ent...., houJahold tor INiflllle driving for flat bed
• - mile. Comor AI. 143 and operation
baolel
In
loll Run.
. Rovonowoocl, WV. Looking for
~;..;,;:~=-:=-:::=:-: · cl~vora wfth 2 r••,. vorlfioblo
5 iaiiilly Qo,.ga Sail: 11131.fl1 11 oxporlonca,
~
driving
Tertor i'M&amp;denc•211 Union Ave. record, must p111 dru!:ci'rn-Raln-thlne.
CUr· lng and road ,_,, 100..
51.
taiMiboclapruul clothlng'lll
oiUI.
Exporloncacl balling and ~
I!'Q lnotallor and man,
llovi,. 0111 Soil: 124 Aoiotly Ouunon Hall, luuc, 1317
MIG: urry Aua. Frl-8ol 1131.fl\ Olllo St, Polnl Pt-nl .
Experlencec:l home lmprov•
Qlgantic yonl ull: Scuba gaar, mliil ..... por.onlo covor pro. rumtture, ctachlng, anttquee, Ml ·~lnlmenta In Athena,
Alnr
..uppor 11o1ga ·&amp; Dalila eounuoa. a...t
11-lo. ltorll ~y so.
ccmm1illon. 1-715-4NI.
- y : B r - r 1 Main, Exporlancocl Pwaon In car
Rocd111. lloluy •wno. clr_.ng S1oroo lnllotlalion And SaloiiHa
1-. blgb ctua~. lntolllvloloil Sorvlco And lnotollatlon. Apply
...-, goa boltwo, clothing.
In P...on AI - ·· Ellctronloa,
" · Ron _ . . , 11131-1/1. Roclno. Cl.tllpollo.
,, · Comor SI.Rl124 and -.n Oovommont Hiring $700-tiSOO
"
Ad·• t o. m·_. •ft·m. .....
• " Wook~. Excallonl -IMI. Job
1um11-, ololliing.
Bacu."Y· No Eoporlonco. 2151511-32011 Ext.OHI1tl.
JOBS IN AL.AIIKA-Hinnp,. Entry ·

_.,

. e

__

Public sale
&amp;Auction

. . ----r. -·
Poanon- eom...,y,

-

-~....._~OIIio,

VIrginia, 304·77S-15715.

-

.

~·LL
1-:zoe.111Ext.
11171111.
Noocl, money? Bo 1 Cbrlotmao
An111nd
Tho
World
O.monatl'81or aHolutiJ no ln-

Wlntac:l to Buy

...

Colli
....,..
.... wwriot~
....
-.
.........
..-· · ....

,,

-

tnilnlng and no collac:tlng
or dlllvery. 1-lave tun 1nd maki
lrtendo. Contact Pat Drwnloo,

mlalon Neelve frH umpte ldl,

old -

top, old clotla,

011 I""!'!IIP and old rup.
• • IaII • "JJI4.71111.

304-

-

Wlnlocl to buy, Standing timber,
Wllllamo a Bono ~14-tN·
Wlntocl to buy, w - a cliy.r

In -...a-~. call oHw 4

p.m. I~
W.ntocl To Buy: J101k Autoo
• wHb or w1111out . . - .. can
• J l.anY u... r. 114-381-1303.
""• Top For: All Old U.S.
Colnl,
~
. . . . Colne,
tortlng,
Co1na. II.T.S. Coin Sllop, 1St
Sooond A-•· Gallpollo.

R"f:,

lko lo bur otoctrlo
.....,.._,
t.d.
lfen t nably
Coli ,anytlmo. 114.fN-

.=r·

-

Employment Serv1ces

---··
11

Help Wantac:l

• • AVON • AI . . _ can Morllyn

;:

AMERICAS lEST HOM~ Pony
lbo '
"""'·
World Chrt.lII lilting aupa,_ tillnlna elMO, Juno 7 aiid

1.304-m-aN.
Anoww Locally For
Nat-do Company. FUIUPan-

Ume 11-g•n*lt

or Y(lll Train!

Hlrlnt . lmoMcllaiiiY. Ell,.rnoly
·High Wogae.104-4U-1131.
...,..... For :1-11
Sbltl. t - 3 . 11o1oro 2p.m.

-lclaiY-

on 1M lor
-Hoapllal·
to
wort
11 -11.
uldn
1 « 2 dayo por
lnt- por.ono contact
a..nda .. 304-t'lll-3230
IlL Ill, llon-frl 1:00 AM-4:iiil
PM lot llicl fwm. Dooc111no lor
applying II Juno14, 1811.
- i n l l -ian ....,leN lor
...... Hoijlllal, Ukln,

wv.-

bl rogl I M'llcanaocl dlotHian.
811 Jllc• to lie pertormed two
. , . pw month. - l e i
lrondo- II
~. nt. 55, Mon.Ffl
1:10 AM-4:00 PM lor llicl
.. fw opplylng · lo Juno
14,1111.

-contact

Commercial

Olllo.

Wantlel• udy to ltvo-in wHb ol·
dorly mon in Doxtor, OH, call
614·742·2521, anytlmo.

Business
Training

14

Rl1raln
Nowti!Soutllaallwn
Buoln- COIIogo, Sortna Valley
Ptua. Call Todliy, 8~387H
Aoglotorllion ,_12748.

15

S04.f'lll-2111.

PART·TIME OFficE POSmON •
In Pomeroy, Gerwral oHic• 1kllla
nNdocl Including typing and
bookkooplng noOclocl lor · thlo
lob. Computer experience help.
lui. Mul1 bo poraonablo and
bavo tho abiiKy to hancllo toto~ and _.. - ' " woll.
Send ,....,. lo Tho Doily Sonllnol, Boo 7215, 111 COun St.,
Po-or.
PooiUon Avallabll For Storo
Managar. $5.00 Par Hour, No
Bonolltl. 40 Houro 1 Wook Con- '
t:n.nt on Grant Funding. Hlgb
Scliool Dlpltma or Equtvll•nt
Monogarlol Ex-nco. AbiiHy
To WOrk Wltb tiooplo. lonclablo.
Soncl Rooumo To: P.O. Bo• 105,
Cl.tllipollo, Olllo Ul3t. lntwTo Stan Juno 3, 1111.
-

Aviation Tranlng. 10
Wook "'oaram. Hollllng &amp;
Flnanclll 1Ucl Anllobto, (If
Oualllacl). HS or JED Roqulr.cl.
Job P n tRlvlrlldo
- -Scllocl
· 1·
100-637·1
t$3,
ol Aeron1uUca, Udc1 New York.

18 Wantld to Do ·
==:--:-"""',---::-tto.oo Swvloo call on applonco
,.PI!~ frH appllanca pick-up.
114-MNMe.
Billh Hog llarvloo. Rouonablo
RaiN. NO Job To. Smolll 1143711-2142.
Qwclona
tractor
tlllocl,
ratovotocl. P«no(OY, Mlddl.-,
Choahlro arHo. l14-tt2.fll03 atlor 4PM.

P08iTIDN OPEN
Eoaclllln DlrOCior .
Dalila Jackoon Malga loanl 01
At..-, DNa
Aclcllction and llanlai Hlltb

f
blo, MNII ~- l-'ocl·
Fonood A,.., Any Sbl~, Any
Ago. Coli Anytlmo: 814 411 20tlt,
Miony Rolaroncoo. 1 Clild, tto; 2
·112: S ·ttl.
Mloo Paula'o Doy earo Conlw.
Solo, affonlablo, ohllclcano. ~
e o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Agao :n.10.
Bafora, aftor ocliool. llrojHno
•• ~. 114 441 1221. ....
lan1 Todclior ea.., 114-44NW.

- · · lnotruction: Plano, lnllrumwrlll, - · canlfllll In·
otNCtor. 114"!111.f140.
Sip: (VInyl Loltortntl lual·
.... Or T1'11Cko, Elo. 814-246Nit.
WIH .....,. •in , my homo
&amp;nJihna. RoctMr ..., Ratai'Mt
- lvalilblo. Caii81WQ.17111.
Will llabyodt In ... d*M,
0r
Siimmw.

y;.:,
Homo
EIMI'I-

";;;;;,;::;=.uuc:=::•::·'.;:14-441-~~7070211::::.-:
~
WIU blbyiH - - 11 your
houM or mine. Have
IM-tll2.fiiOS.
Will build polio cowuo, dockl.
ocnoonocl roorno, put up vlnvt
olcllng « lrolilf oklnlng. IMo
241-11111.
r
=.;;~:=--=--:----:--:-:-1
Will Glva Plano Laaoono In My
Homo, 14 oo Hall ....,, Monel
Ttwu , .... .:.. -~.
IY
,_,.

,....,a..

1orm:

Drua
Add ion
and
-ol -· ·
Hoalh
Servlcoo
11 cur·
ooa111nf a oldllocl lei- 21
Buslnesa
mlnlolrator to _.. ao ExacuOpportunity
live Dlractor. Tho PoaKion Will
_,.. 10 lbo loanl'o Child Eo·
INO'TICI!I
aclllln Oiflcw ond orlll bo 'OHIO VALLEY PUIUIIING CO.
,.opcnotbto 1o&lt; _,.,. plan- ......,monda thll you do bullnlng;
an&lt;f l¥11uotlna .,... wMh pooplo you know, ond
IWYUC&lt;UI jiR&gt;vldacl by contracl NOT 1o IUII1d - · = t b l
-llo; ..-..::a" ouporvl- mall untl •ou have ln.., lei
cal manogomont of lodoral, lbo ofllrlng.
llato ond loCal
public Anbur'o Chain Link ~nco.
--ho~ o public Roal-1, Commo:clal, In-~
b oorvtcu; ond duolrlot, ,,.. lllln:otnl c.....
community
oclucallon plote IRIIIIIallon. Pbono: II+
-ramo. Sddlla .,. .,.._., ..-..m
In grant-= propoul · ~C:.u:..cb:=:,:lu:.oi.,._
-...,_Voncl..--o::ln-g-Rout=--.
~at'\\.:and...,...111~,:Z For Solo Cheap. Sol QUickly. 1·
IHhor bo 1 lfllllliiocl ~IOO~S~44~1N~I~===;.­
Commwclal Building tor oalo or
na.,. 1 ........... .._,.. In an ...... St. At. 7, CMehire. eM31
oclmlnlotratlvo fillcl. .ll qualliilll ~-=~;:_::·~-.:-.-.:-.--::,­
candlclatoo mUll blvo al Local Yoncilng ·Route, Prlcad For
,.... .. lncrlloluug Oulok - · 1'100-212-.
ma~ roaponalltd- In a
Moko llg I Wortdng At Home.
montal boallll, or drua
odcllct~ or rlillocl- oof. No Experience Neca•••~· For
Sond A WSE
tina wtth a knarrt.. o1 the F-In-lion
IIAQ Bulk llallon, P.O. lloo
Olllo - m ofoa,., Thlo ~ To
lion oHwo a counpllllln uual!ry 1733, Pori ........., OH 41112.
•nd a compillwwlw Hnell8 Succ- ~ ond taming
packaga. _
... appllconlo
oaton In Rlploy, WV. 8oncl In-klaubnilta-- qui,.. hautr. hlon, P.O. lloo
.!~'•7· ~~ 1131, Rlt~NJ, WV 211271.
Cholo_, - I n Dlractor
So:;"":!~· Clolla Jadt- 22 Money to Loan
ti,OOCII$20,000 - 1 Loano
And Dobt CoMolldol~. Licon·
~ .... e, P.O. Box 114, ooc1
And...,_, can Toa F-,
0 7; lr, OH 4113'1. Equal Qp-24 Hours, 1..eoo.• nm.
wll
Bod Croclll? l'lxocl CMK
Muo:14, 1111.
Report, Dot Loono. CreciK
Clounntolel Anula.
0. 111:14 ..._ ReiN auntltiva Corda.
2411r. R-llng. 2ft Ill 3211,
Fer
!!Jilllo Win FM 111.011111.
"-,...loft.Exportanca
............
Contact
....
~. Tiln WOTil
,.lilly

-•OIIntl

Ilion;--· iundei....-; . .

32 Mobila Homas
tar sale
1417U with 7X24

iL Expanclo, Sbr, 1 112 bol..,,
buht41 microwave, dllhwuh•,

and fire••· new carpet.

10111

otoctrlc, 1fonl porch. tt1,800.
814-44f.0381, 814-441-8114.
1114 Manolon 14110, 2. bod·
roomo and bolba, all •c.
- a n d dryor, 304-175-717l
1111 14x7V lloclunan Homo. spa.
clouo With Eotru. Nicol Floxlblo
Twmo, 114-tt2-112St, l.Mvo
Mo-.114 Ul IIOS.
1811 · Cla:ron, 14111 2 loci·
A Eloel~c, ~ 1 Bath

.

::c!:::.J'A'd':"'nlll'"::l:R":!.,"':

,,..::r:';

- -:..A=
a..-.

la.iWMii

:.'!!..'!!"'- of I un. to 4 p.m.
- - . Tlw f!Woy~ E.O.E.
--lnoocl:p~.-•111111

I ;I Jill

•

~

can 1 - • • • - of 41
-.Acluroeyo-IWII
t.-111 on 111 olllco , . _
alblllltoo. Cal llr. Conln .....
10 . .... . 4 p.m••,...._
~
.:.-~
ft· -=------1
Tourt.m Dlract« ~lllllly·
Enthllllaotic1:at.MII•o - ;
With Clood
And lklh, W11o- Tbo Pulldlo
Watt. Bacbalorw ~WIIh
IIIU&lt;uuound In T........,ullilo
lloMII'cno. Baialy Noaolllblo
Ftllll $14,000. D S 10 Por Af&gt;lll ..llft Juno ao. lntarvloiie
. . . 17-21. ........,,..... To:
CU • . c/o Gall,alle O.llr
Trlutlnl. 125 Tlllnd An-. cw.
lljlc:ddul, CII4N:It.

•

31 HamH for Sll•

112=

-

...... 2111
..._o,,_~-t­
.......
..
1M • . . . ,
fw t t I ili:aA.

10-

uoom

w..-,

-·Tho

'*

3br Rancll, ely achpolo,

Subcllvia~,

Plonl

S37Siun0. 114·37112142 MN1en 5p.m.•ap.m.
4br Homo In Rio Orondo Araa.

J ,. dFDOM. 1 ... , frame.
_,., llr, full llze b 1 :wnt, 2
•lddllp I f. $1\100. 114-o

-:n-b

I or

caii:I04-87tl-1410.

RENT 20WN
1~4-44~-at~~

~ and Supply Sb:r. Pel
yloo.
1... Pal Food Doolor. Julio
~"':mc:"ll 814 441~31. 1-800Quoomlng. " ' - .

·--·

(1100.-$110.) 114-lta-781~

42 Mabile Homas
lor Rant

B:ftlanJ ~ PUIIIIIII Dlnotto wnb 1 4 01111'11, Taklna Dlpolb. •14-317-7231
aftwfp.m
. .
ttO.II Wook.OPEN: lllonday
Tbru Sat-r. ILm. to lp.HL1
Sundar 12 Noon Till lp.m. • !loa and cat """"''"" a1
Mlloo ott R - 7 On R - 141, -In Pi&gt;odll
C"~
yro ooporlonca,
In Contanary.

Aontall: HoUNO • Aplo. Mid·
d - Po:UIIIoy-ltow Hovon.

1br Trallw, Fum-. Oopooll a
- - Aoquduocl. No Poto.
2 IR oil,...,.,. 114-311-2171.

Ju-

==-NoPeloAio

,..,g I anal 2illll--onlloc,..ln
Noolly

1

on Caltuum 1111, . . - ~

or oaupto 10 kocjl rani Iiiii
lrallor Oloan. call Mrilngo 114-

-1.

ao:a

~~=rvw::.

6000 t.IORNIN6, CLASS .. M'{
NAME 15 CI-IAALIE 6ROWN ...
WELCOME TO 616LE SCHOOL ..

ltrawbeulee:

=

Conlelnere
11-,

P:ovldtd. Oporu
Thru
Frtdoy, ~.L..IIOIUnlav. N;
CtOIIcl su....,. Tarlor'ii

_.,._.....

Floh Tank, IMII

Jac-

l=

~~-· 111 411

SlrJolbwMII: Pick 'Your OWn.

Col Clauclo Wlntoro, 114-241-

1121.

Stra-rt.a:
Pic~-::·
llay 21. 'Rouab'o
Fouun.
.In Ordouo. Col
22S7.

•

•

11183 Cba- - · · lnQO.

31M·'77Sa'l1.
•'
1813 IIIZIIId OR 110 T. .plor,
1100 mille, blckrlll:, 110. aDnd.,

1814

~

Honc1o V-41

lilbro-~, 110

• ••

. origl

&amp; L I'JL'SIOCk

'111' ~·

~

1111 lAna 4 WD - . 0,100;
1100 MF l3,110; 1111 MF Wllb
Hay Bolo&lt; l!oWI!oll -lno,
Roko1.!3)IO; c.. lilwl:oy T,..•
tor wum
P-, Dloc,
Mcww, 12,4111: Dwnw WIU
Flnonca, 114-211.fl22.
Fllmlll Cub, aood cond., all 10•
- - · ll&gt;f.441 4312 or 4411n 1.
-:----------------- n o· t~mmor XR30
Montll Ullarlcuftlvotor, _ , . .
many )obi aniiOid lbo yonl,
llcllto aqul- wolgho 20 tbo,
llko now, 30+5711-2132.
Jlm'o Fwm~ul-::1, BA. 11,
Gall
I, 114-441-17'17;
Wldo now &amp; uNci tam
lroctoro a lmp111o11nto. loy,
~~1, ltroclalll
NGG!:00-5:00 -lrdayo,
- ·
·
Haw ~land 2M R1ke, Olt.r
Alkol, Holland 711 A. Hay
Blndo. lntomationll 'HO Hoy
.. lind. M-y Dvna lalonca
Mowar s...,ra BaiH. Otbor
Flolcl Roady Equl-11 Howo'o
Fauun Maclolnory, Rt. 124 l
May- Aoed. 1144115-1144.

a-.

Pt-.wv.

'1 ""•·1

1"!'";·

..... .

'

0

tar Sale

:

..

1111i loyliMno~.'! !11 .~ hit. ~
.. ,
110
CG1d, .-....,. nMie •.
llo· Jolin. .....~~. _..,.
MGitor, ......,..,.,

...

Auto Pans &amp;
Accassorlas ·

su-

64

Hay &amp; Grain

111'•·

Toblcco baoo 2,1011 lba, , .. 1840.

71

'TI Comauo tt,IOO. tt,aoo. bocauoa moving ooon.
SHARP! Auna grll1, 304-e'lll3541.
'81 Park AvenUI Buick

One

_,.r, 150,000 mlill, uul1~ •
qulppocl, oxo cond, . 3~'111IOIO.orl~.

·

1112 Ford Qaiuy 4dr, 31,000 ...

1H711omMY Cailntl conv. Now
broltaa. llhoiiOI bollory,
lop, "·100 010. 114-3N-2142.
1171 VW Buo: body aood, 1410
OBO. Colt a...-..cMI aftor I or

..- .
-

1172 lion!- 2210, ucollont,
13,200. sowa.a11.
1171 Chryollr Cordoba 310,
auto, runa aooc:l new rwbuMt
,,..., poot Tmlilof, a - car,
iOO. ooya 114-112-2'151. Aftar

r

-··
·" ~
:lll4oi7MII$. aood
1171
Ford
corodlllon 1100.
1171 Dido Culloaa, lair cond,

..,..,..,_,

Home.
I
llnprovements ,

Worlr,

BARNEY
AW,SHUX··

I CAN GIVE HIM
TH' TWO DOLLERS
I OWE HIM
SOME OTHER
TIME

'liR

Trliiilliing, Tnto -~

Trimming. F,.. ~ta . 1
317-71117:
F,.. pick-up Lawn a
..polr, 20 rr lip.
JET
AerltJon Motor.. r1p I Ired ......
l rH:udll IIM!Ioro In llocil, EVANS, JACKSON, Cll. l.aoo1137-1121.
.

i:

·-wou. .
.

Oa:~

82

.,..~t .

~~- ------------------------

ASTRO-GRAPH

lwvtoo,
Creek lid. Pilla ,,._
and ...., . . ,, ,,..

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

l::'~~no~iat'!£:'...!:
.

. 112

Pa-

a-

--

Cilow , .......

!FU!IWd. ... •

'"~
••••m .....
. . ,. ,

Electrical a
Refrigeration

-.

Wool
Pus

I.

There are days when you seem to be
dealt all the right cards as defender.
Your partner makes a good lead, and
you have an eight or a nine to encourage him to continue. On other da)'ll
nothing · goes right. Your partner
makes a great lead. but you have only
the two and three with which to signal.
He sees the three, thinks it is discouraging and makes a fatal switch.
· In a Vanderbilt match at Atlantic
City last March, North became the declarer in four spades at one table. East
· led his singleton club. Declarer won
with his ace, drew trumps . in three
rounds and ran the clubs, discarding
two heart losers from dummy. Now
declarer led a diamond: he lost only
three red-suit tricks.
At the other table, the bidding (given in the diagram) was very aggressive. Perltaps South should have doubled lour hearts, but it takes careful
defense to defeat that contract. instead be went for his own game.
West led the diamond ace. East was
in an ideal position: he dropped the di·

Obi.

Paos

4•
Paos

Pass

Nerd:
t+

Baal

Pua
Pua

Obi.

2• 4.

Poos

Opening lead: + A

amond nine. Whether his parlller
tbougbt this was encourallttc or
thougltt·it was a suit-preference signal
for heart&amp;, East held what was needed.
West, boldin&amp; a llngleton diamond, actually read the llitplll as suit preference and switched to a /ow beart at
trick two. East won with tbe bean
queen, caslled the diamond king, pw
his partner a diamond ruff, and regained the lead with the beart klnl·
Now a fourth diamond effected a
trump promotion: U South ruffed low,
West would overruff; but wltea declar·
er ruffed high, East bad to acore a
trick with the spade jack. Tbat wu
three down, plus 500, aad a pin of 920
points.
.
@ 11t1, NIWV._N.III'Wiii!IJ..
_"'OWOI -

ACROSS

1 Folklore

creature
6 Grind
' logelblr
11 Thalia lo uy
13 Shade ot
dlll&amp;rlftCI
14 AviatorEaritert
15 Spoiled

18 "AI you- "
11 Firearm

Edlton

53
55
57
58

Dellc1le
Predaltrmlne

lloral Morel

Spreed

· about, ua

19 Lrrtc

20 Grl¥11 rldgll ·

1om

59 MllllarJ
opereHan
60 Sllocl GrHft

Rolalnor

DOWN

Affirmed

Wander in
1lor1
31llulllan
liQuor
31 lloulc ploce
31 illqWtcl
37 Frith drtnk

40 Gloomy
41 Not many

.

rumor

ownera'org.
23
24
27
211

A-or lo ProYiouo Pulido

44 Fur·baarlng ·
animal
461nltr - :
1mong
olblro
48 502, Roman
49 Thomu-

1 Chaw

.........

2 Chrlaltn

71noo&amp;H

3 BlbHcal

8 llogltiYtton

4 Billie
5 ln•tnlor

o-

g ""' dl1llllon
10
row oi
lhnlllt
12 - 8bidlum,
NewYort
13 Comll ctou

Wdlilnor
6 Stuart lor

Augualua

llanelli• -.ld come to you In the , _
-.ad by Wltf 0: con:ecta you de'&gt;elop
- -In 1arga organiUIIOIII or clubs. lnvolvO
'"'vtoui'Mii In Iiiii envlronmenl. one Where
·• . ;c · n have a chance to cuHivllle , _
·l •\1,-

I.
I
•lSI
(llaJ 21..111110 ID) Your creal V·
• 1ty II at 1 hiQh iovel now. You COUld be

•"' I

.. cc 111u Wllh thelhlng&amp; you coral...,
provtlled you , _ ll:rough on 1111111
,;~· your110 lnd ot turnlnll lhlm - • •
~

l!ctctlo Dodd Ecldlo
bllpa In aCIIVIII friend out ol hiding alter 20 Jllrl.
Stereo. a .
(Z) (I) Prlnol Ch&amp;rlll: Tbo
E1rlll in the 11111- The
prince beillvaa lndiVIduall,
not govtmmtlllll, can m1k1
lbl dldierence In aavlng lht
(J) (I) •

.....

-VIC

=zr:.ku:u.

Soo..

11lNew1

BERNICE
BEDE O!?OL
Davlo

By Phillip Alder

e

...........
;;;,;ri;:

Ava.

Fer Soil: 111 - n laldmo

F - n Derek's favorite
uncia marriet a younger
woman and !hen dies. (RI
Shno.a
0 MOVII!: llunnilltl Aglinlt
Tillie (2:001 Stereo. Q
• NUtwttle Now
8 Lli..., Kl118 Uved
1:30 (])
!IJ De1r JaM (RI
!May Ba P~ad by NBA
Flnolo) Stereo.
(I) (J).
lut Love
H~nnah allracto a
. womanizing gl()be,trOIIing
phOtograplier. (R) Stereo. g
10:o0(]) G i1J1 Ouanlum IMp (R)
(Miy II Pra-Enupled by NBA
Flnalt) Stereo. g

'

tl...._lllelrlloJabTo
BlgOrl_l _ _ '

I ' R TREI.RVICI.

homeless man who clllms to
be a ll@ndlry jazzmen. (RI

(1·00fa

F... - - -day
Call or
.......
1·
114-237-,
nlfd.
!!OQIII B-monl - ftng.
.

=

•

11D1 1121• Jakl end 1M

W.t!ERPIIOOf'INO ~

WI- I

Flntltl Stareo: !iJ

(J) (J). Dootte " - ·
M.D. Doogie trH.. a

Perallin GuW conaumoa lhe
moclla and lhe polilleal
lllderlhlp ond dlatrac:s
America'a attention 11'om !he
strucxtloa of people at home.

g::•:

Autos far sale

THA.THAL-FOFA
PEP~ I PIZZA ..•

'
AND
WAeMEO IT c::oNN
WITH iHE OT'HER HA.I...F.

Stereo. Q
.
CZl l!l MOrera/TIIO
Homotronl Tbl war In the

c:unlo Homo ...
y... bpwlou•
'
11-. Room Aclclltlono,

Transportation

~TEN

A WINK A(..(..
LA'OTNI6\-IT.

llilllmo
.... Local
..... lurilio'luocl.

65 Seed &amp; Fanltzer

I GiUESS :t 6HOUi..DN'r HAVE

I DIDN'T51.EEP

="•
-,g.=

IIASIMIHT

Vulner1bte: East-West
Dealer: West

Colllllly of

1:00 rllO iiJI NIQill Court (RI
(May Be Pre-Ei!!Pied by NBA

14114 Hltarv Tint, a Bunko, Foktlng T-. 2 lluuilor • - ,..~

81

I

+753

+KQH

The World Almanac111 Crossword Puzzle

onail, searching for scientific
secrets to help them gel rich,
travel to the castle of a mad
scientlat (0:301 Stereo. g

Llmoualn calf paluw, r.glo• - · Roglll- Limoulln
llolflro. 114-tl2.f1110.
.c.t•lrtlo
.........-114 44~5..
CIU Tank.
Now 11 H. Goooonock Horao ond
Stock Trallor 13,~i.14 ft. Horaa 1177 Royol K,_,
•
And Stock Tralilf wnb Oreoolng por, oloopa I, 1'110. I
'
Room 12.100; Lalo 01 N- l
Uoocl tack. 114 211 1522.
Purllluocl ChL 13 noonlbo old.
Se1 v1ces
814-317-'11151.
'F,.;or....,.So-ta_:;.:Ha:.,.o.;_y,;.AI_;,R_...,.-_,-,""4
Acroo, ttoo. 114-211-114113.
FrM H.ly. mixed hay, you cUI,
you boll, call14-tt2•7801.

.... .,
•a•

The good
signaling days

Hom:ra lhow A pig and a

campara&amp; :
MotarHomas

....

Wrote

!'=
le Cllt=

2 Ouanw Plnolo Fer 1171
1 Sldo, 140.
£

79

I

1rom a hospital windOw. (PI

1111 Dido Cutlooa
lor
pano. v~.~~ -or t~oo, hew
........
- · C!oll S04.f7&amp;.tzz7
....... p.m.
.

·-7711.

h

e

1171 lcyf. :Ill Chry- block
and - . G4bW a_,ocl

_... --a...

a

(2:001
I:OI!Il MOVIE: Night of the
Grduly (2:001
1:30 Cll (J) 0-lng Painl
Jison and MIUIII&amp; 888· Parla

Cabin
·11\chor, 40 ' lb.
brand ....
110. :104.f71-7232.

78

Murder,

Stereo.
8 Ju11 For L.augila Wildt
Harry Anclorlon Comtdlans
Harry Anderaon, Donnla
Blair, Jell Foxworthy a!1d
ottoera perlorm. (I :001
8Prt1110Newo
ill! MOVIE: The Court J11lor

75 Boats &amp; Mota..S

Livestock

,_....,....__;.~...,...---.,...

.

- - l o In A-ORO cond Moy
bo ..... 113 lftlllob Ad, ,'potnt

.

I

SOUTH

a

11117 TRX210X four ...,..,,
~ aftw 1:00 PM, 304-f'lll-

61 Fann Equipment

+A

+1017431

e

ALLEY OOP

I

9AJ9 2

Major Leaguo BeHbaH

7:31(J)Iob N e I:OD (]) 0 i1J1 Un;ootvecl
My.,_ The wrongful
conviction ol a rotariied man
lor murder Ia llWYIIned. tRI
SllrtO. a
(J) MOVII!: Vlndo:lb:.
lurMI of I Mette 8olde (PI
1 ol 21 (2:00)
(I) (J)
Tho Wonder Yura
Kevin and hlo mother have
Thanksgiving Without his
Iaiiier. (R) Stereo. Q
CZl l!l Tetit~WIIii DftiCI
Froat Stereo.
24 ......,., A Ch11c1Nn'1
lla.ltai (0:30)
illiiiMOVII!: AilaUt Lal
NIQ .. (A) 12:001
11210 Rocky lnd luiiWinltio
ROCky lnd Bullwlnklo travel
'io l!oilyWood; OuclloJ
Oo-RIQhl lllrchel tor Nail;
Mr. Know·lt·AIIIeiil MIO to
nx a Hal; Borta recfloa
poa!ry. (0:30)
.

:nlllo, OIC coiicl, claM li-

PM, 30W'7WU1.

WEST
.104

(LI
.
OCrollfiN

~~Ili-~~~

:

17!0.114-2411 .....

PHII,I,YP
ALDER

Sllaltat

FXS -~~- Do-.
aa,ooo. I1W'INliM, 114-441-

I

+u

~Tu!:.'~;.~

.

I

tQJIOt

a Wheel of Fortuno g
I!JIO M•A'I•H
ivdf'(,Ot&gt;Y'$ fti~f
lf./T Ttff CtiAMELfON.S ....
Tf'IEY'Iti Cf'IAf'IGING
OVjfiT$ A6AIN·

5-lt-11

917S

(J) • • lntertillnmlnt

oand, fi,'IOO. SOI-li75-1S1• or
1711-4215.
1
Hondo lOO Mogno, \000

r nm Supplr•:··

63

' iUc~Q

0

S· Z8

NORTH
tKQ78

BRIDGE

7 30

1177 Kaw-ld KZ-710, good .

~.

COUrt !;I

7:01 CI1 The Jella,.....

-·Cal - 4 q l .oi-

ANSWIRS

Marely- Draft- Raven- Outlet- LATE FEE
I knew the guy waa a bad credit risk when he asked,
• Wtult would my payments be including the LATE
FEE?"
.

Affair g

.~

~

1171

SC~ETS

0 loatec- ll1d Mra. King

·

Matqrcyclal :

tw4~.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

~g

l

~~t

18 gOod . 18

1....~-.L-~-L-...L.......J you develop lrom otop No. 3 below.

oecuNriog

a. . .

1-" Hondo 310 CB, 1400,, 114-

Barry

$-2-1c-

~ ~tp_tnatdeE~g
. ~lleii/L.._.

drlvo, lair ~.
aeoo. 30+77:J.IIo!O.
•
1811 Dataun 4 - 1 Drtv., RoluiR Enalno; 1111 ~10, 41•, Extandocl Cab, Qood Sblpol 114-

74

CoateiiO

~ I Oream ol Jelnnlo

lion, 4 -

~

=:w~r:::rve
llblea smelled
~1-..:1B;. . .:;I;. .:L:. ,I:.;~-ETI. :M.:.,. .' I_-'1 ;·~~:~: i~~~h~~l~g ~~
-

7:00 (])

11'N Btu. Y-1, luiO trenlmleoo

371-2820.

I think that the IHe axpec-

.I~=~==~~=~·~=~~ ~

1:31 (J) A1M1J Ortlllth
0 !IJ Wheel of Fortunt

'13 S10 BIIZor, 12,000. 30-W'III1113.
•

Str....,.._: $1.50 OUer'i You
Pick: tt.25 Cluarl Plcldng New.

-··

·

I

D0 I T I

• """" Grlflllll
0Upetoia

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I ;

suo.

304-·2237.
Fonn.

·

I 12 I I I

II(II'Ha

~~-~llowa8g

l

be-

-.11.

~mplo

Ch8rge g

(J) AluiMitt lnd

Now T..-lon, 1111lnolt

iiU-7117.

IIIII 0 0

:M

THYACT

I

810111) IIWI\Ched
8:30 (J) 0 0 NIC News !;I

1

vegetables

I

OOur-..

--=-=--=---....!-

-.zm

Tablo a 1 c1oa1ro -~ wttb
-11. . Col
lt4-SIU183,
anytlmo.

om.;: '!!!!-'·
......

Tlroo, 114-3711-2114, • 1414
I=:.::::..· Ford F-250 ' •x4,
oloclrlc boll guHar, 12110. 1HI
:*:.:;:.f::;71':,;1114:.::;::.·- - - - - •·
t'· •1 p· :t... Now
· - ""
~ r . . ~loft.
""· '
Paint,
UCIIiliil
58
Fruits &amp;
M,lll Flrnu. 114-445-!:104, ,,.

-;;;;;;;;:-a,;if"iiijjpij~i'O;:p;j IIIII mliii.IM-112·2'172.

Vl'ra F a Chltr, ttuo :,.~
llocll::or, M.47 W..:.,
llociloor, 11.13 WoaiLIWik lad BOIWI- lo&lt; lllo, boVI both
Comploto 11.41 Wooll, 4 Drowor panunto, uRUIIIOI markdnga, S100
~. 13.21 Wllk; - · lacl- ........2......

l'nlll ....... 1 ........ of . .

Cal 114 Ill

·-·

Instruments

t:.:'z7:l.

11

u

IIR-onlt Rt.

oHor7p.m.
Fuml.Efticloncy,
AI
UtltHIII , Paid. Shore IIIII.
tt:wmo.... Second ....

m• -

2 ...._ lor oalo 11v ·
~- .....lo.lloCIIecl l'rivlil Lol. 141 Cantwwy
Mall!il. W'l, 1 _ ,
Co11ua:III•IY Locollcl,
~-~ ..

=
==a

u11

bed=:;.::rex

2l:r
untumtolied
For Ronl.
Nloo Loojlllon,
Cloan,

M.

eu ue

•ol•

114 Ul 4171.

-

Fowth, O.lllpolll,

a

Du"""'ln FruK Form: Jull oH
SA Ill .. Albany 11UIItl1211. ,...._ MII-7PM. Ftoob
fniN ond - - . banalna
llllkoll, 11'ult IIIII. Atiilafi
pooclucto. Homo grown apploa.
11f4 E. M•ln It,.., PDIMroy. MOUNTS GREENHOU8E. 112
Houra: .M.T.W.10:00 a.m. to 1:00 milo u~ MI. Olin Rd. Baaldo
1:00 to 1:00 p.m. A.A. In Bklwoll. 114-1314.- PG4ol- 14.00 OliO
Hundred; Tom1.t011, pelunila I
54 Miscellaneous
G4blro- •us -· Hanging poll,

· Marchandlsa
a.ac:1ouo living. .1 ond 2 illllapo~mwrll at VIl01211
Inch
Maand
Alnnlioo till
Apanmonto In Mlclclll_.. F - Allrlgarl1or, $210. 114-311-117311.
ttllll. can 114--·7717. EOH.
z .....:oorn - aooc1
'Fumlobod
-~~homo, 1 mill nolflduboo~ood In lllllllnd, 6p l
:,::_::. ~~ ~pot~l
below
town,
o_.ng
rlvw,
:of,
polo, Ill,._
~·
...f
Porcfi &amp; Ulldot'plnnlng. ~­
roq, no
no pile.
oouc
oamo
COncllllon, MIIOI Sooi To Ap- Net SU- lo&lt; Clulid,.., Polo, u naw. coraole COlor T• • tMlilwth.
.
-lm-to
P - CA. 114 4tl 0331."
Ilon,
ttuoa.
eoN 114---.
-.piing appllcallono lor
2 . .... oalo. $110.
..-tog Fer A Dool? ~r A llooon Apo-. Equol- 514-liiWSH
Bank Reclaimed Moblll Home. lng Ojlp., air ccnd., laUndry
F•ntolllc Soloctlon AI Low AI room, tr. traah pickUP. cloeil 2714 iL obovo gnound round
1100 Down. Call ~~- Homo to etorH I eciiOole; 304·77'3- poo4. UMcl 2 - · 15 yoor war•
1521.
Couulor, l.aoo-1811-571).
ranly.
co.,.,, wblter covw.
Evalyll:lng
· lnllatllcl
Moblll homo lot' oalo. 12XIO One bldroarn 1pta av..labll In . largo
...., ...- dock. 12,100.
1141811 ICno• modo! . 114-tN-3021 Q.Kon API Biela lor $t351mo,
plllo IIIIUIIoo. 'tlno blclnoorn 4-IUSII, 114-441-fiM.
or814-tt2-7107.
dllllioo fw 1300/w.o, IIIIIKIII
401 Nylon Corpot. 2
and th... loll. pold. SM-1'75-4100.
Pt10117. IIIII For - · 11430C.f82.3N7.
Rio Orondo: Nlco, 2Jfso no plio. -7187. ·
SPECIAL iacloty lo you. 1111 idoal for otudonto.
nuo. 114· For Soil: I H.P. R"'"'lllor, M.T.D.
two or thf'le bedroom 14X70 445-110311. .
Choln Orin, tt71· 21" llylvonlo
modlil, complllol~ Mt up In.V., $100; 1U CUPT cotdapol
cluding oklnlng, tit clowno,~l Thrw
In 11lcef- T
SIOO;
, lull boN- RolrlgarlloriFtM..,
lapo and olopo. tt3,nr.OO lont notal
Kon- '100 HD Wa....,, $100;
mont
wlliunclry
book
upa.
304( c - od oolor.) can · - 1711-17111 ot 1711-3111.
K - liD D!Jor, ttOO; Kon7211-4MS ""-llo.
m«&lt; 12. Zig Zog Eloclrlc
-ng Mocblna, In Coltdn11
45
Furnished
33 Fannslor Sale
$tl0; Cllll14 411 3111.
IU ..,.. In Cloy Townohlr,:
Rooms
Ac,.. ot llino llmbor, 304-8711houlall-bto wKh ocmo ropa r, Apanmont •""llablo lor 2•or 3 1217, Polnl Ploaaant Rl2 o... r
otllar Olilbulidlnga tho aaUM.
Fonn Ia undor lilid Wllh - ·· conl1ructlon - . . 304-1112· ;:Road:::;::..·-::-:=-:::-'-.;...,-::-:-.,.APPII II C Comp&lt;llw, P~nlw,
boo Umber. H lntwlllocl, 25111'
call.-lnp: 114-441-1400.
Aowna for rant.- or month. Soflwono, Dill: l Hlllclo, Super
~:1:2' 11 t1201mo. Dalila Hotat. Doall Coli 114 441 NOll.
34
I
1510.
.
lla 4 Bo dnoorn Doko4o Hon!01
SIMPina roomo wHb oooldng. lull On Your Lot. U7,HI ana
Aloo trallar apaca. Ali book-upo. up. 1,....._7:111.
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on Coli aftor 2:00 p.m., 304-77S- ConcrWto 1 P!llllc oopllc lonko,
2nd Avo., Qalllpollo. Clooo lo 51111, Mo- WV.
Ron baM EllleUDrioao, JackCourt Hou•~~t· 1 room. 2 room•,
46
Space
lor
Rant
oon,
OH 1- . .37..5211 ·
3 _,., • roomo. All nlcoly
doOoralocl, air concllllonlng,
HD UIIINy TNior, (4d), Stain·
your wll• a -or billa,. pold. Country llol&gt;lio Homo Pari:, illo Sloal Count.,_ t~ DBL
Mlko your c - now. No Rolllo 13, North ot Pomoroy. Dock Pizza Dvon. (Cioo • Eo·
q - ovw tbl pbono you Lcta1 _....all, porta, IIIII. Coli baiiOI - . I 1 I :&amp;.1 1 Mo!hl.no, · ..._ Douah Ml:tor,
tbom. Pbono lor an 814--·11171.
aDDOintment. 514-441-71811 clay,
spiral ~. l:rlftwnan
~-t53ten.
Rocllal Anoo Sow, Sylnnla 25"
Merchandise
Color TY, lilt Chari Allnt Yon,
One Dwnor, Vary Cloan, And A
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1114 Pontiac 1111, Sound Car.
Lola &amp; acroaga anlialolo lor
114-241 III:L
51
·
Household
new holM aonatrvtlllon on
HotiOiinae lpa Hot Tub,
Rayburn Road. Pavocl road,
Goods
1"4'"i7"1"'" wllh rww oonr, 111:
-u:ty
watw,
,.uonablo
..- - · Compillo lniorma- h12 Carpot ,.... 110. and up. ~,100. 104.f78-1571 or
lion molild COl f8CIUIII. 304.f75- carpal $4.00 &amp; up. lloiiOhon
1213, John . D. Clortach, no Fumlutre. e~'JiaoW.
Ltila of -wnKy clotbol,
olnglo-wlda lralllro, pllaoa.
- . lolrly . . .. Qlrll
AC, 1,000 BTiJ, 1111; Aoor F1n, a toto II Molgo Memorial sao.114-4....,,. "
clolhoc, 12 • 2T. Will
oall al II ono prtc• ot
Votorono odcllllon. Tho vauM ai&gt;cl
_....,.eon
114441-1'
111. .
lwo bNdotonoo lncludod, 304· County Appllanco Inc. Clood
UNci applla-, T.'v. uta. o- Lu-.: Woinut a Chorry.
77S-NS1.
1 o.m. to I p.m. Mon..Sot. •14Lola 11 low u $1,500. avallablo 445·11'!~. 127 3rcl. An. Cia~ Sen: Old I planed. A11o bae-boMd, callnl. llc. l14 1tl 1038..
In Moadowhlll SUbcllv~•-- 2.8 Upolla, att
'"""'
mlllo oul Sonclhlll
Old, Dining room ou~ -~ablo, 4 Now......._ aR olzoo 11.00, Now
RESTRICTED BUILDING, 304- chlln,
Dlnlm • - • 120.00, Work
hUlett, 304el11t-3317.
Pinto 11.00, Frl.-Sal. 1SS Buttw171-4100.
LOTS FOR SALE In Clolllpolil GOOD USED APPUANCIS nill P-or. lo-4 p.m.
clrpre, rlilfgaratora, ~""::.~:!
Farry. Will
traliora, c1ty
wator avalloblo. Phone ~"'­ ....... Skiiaao A:IPIIancol,
:rm
U - Rlvor llil. looldo llono on .....,
-blr
.
Cuoll Molal. cau 114-441-73111.
Doyorlb JPI 114-441-2844.
Ltila,' FIDiii 1 10t1 up. Prlvoto.
Guhl'l Fabric Shop: G C - r Hoal lrotwn,_lWo 4x10 II.
AI. SS. lloctu:oy, 11144•5-1441.
PI..... IO GOIIon •orogo Tablo
~!'~~
~ack.:.;·~
Ono ICtl bullcllnc loll, - r
'
Clm:Uiodng Pump. .W'III~~ , _ olng1Hflcle. 301- ~ Huga 8ummw 2241.
Solo: Hunclradaof~oftt
Toddy Colllcllon, Ovtr 100
- fl, OUII
· l'lo"!!J~For Soil: Rlnr bonk puoporty In ....
il yelL
IUO ....
rolf, - . :
Pink
Roproductlon
plua .,.,., Sail loll
satu,. DIDrloclon QdooMiorvica For I;
Mo-. -J'71.1111. · ·
clay.
&amp;ni!Qua lad, OtbW- ,...~
que hrnl. 114 141 1107.
Rentals
Haavy W1&gt;Cdan bunk blclo
w l - , tt71. 304-f'lll- WATER WILLI DRILLED: hill,
40111.
rea aaneble eervlce. I'Molll--7311.
41 Houaas tor Rant
LAYNl'S FURidlTURE
S5
Building
Complota boml 1umlllolnga.
2l:r Houao, lulil In O...n a
Supplies
Hou..:3 . . .out
. 11-1.
·Ranga. Fonood In Yard. Nonb 0322,
mlill
lulavlllo
Rd.
Qalllil So- Dlllrlcl. · - F,.. Dollva:y. ,
Block, brick, Dllloo, winlllloftw4p.m.
llntlll, Clailclo WinPICKENS FURNITURE
....
Rio ar-. 011 can
NowAJoad
24HI21.
1umlehlng. 112 mi.
Jwrlcloo Rd. Pl. Ptoooant, wv, 56
Pats lor Sale

is'tl*'w t•.::.ted !r.i

....... 111 •• 3143.

!"'

;::a.

Schools6
Instruction

=ir..:''

You tuuy a mcvo I 2 oto.ry, I
- . , _ l o r tto,ooo, call at,.
tN-3431.

- Fo-.

SHuatlon
Wanted

~&lt;lolita
.~!'~~~ loanl
'.,.
...,._

•

..

For

Ro!Tigoratlon, ~Ina &amp; Air
Condftionlna. rn p.,_
v....
R.trn~,.- a eoonn1,
211 .Will COIIogo, Rio OrondO,

~::'i~c::',;~1ri=l:;, ~· Child caro: Cortlllocl, At-

v•tmanl. Wortc your own
hour..· Receive o-roua com-

9

Per.on

Fuml- 4 Roorno • lith.
Goods
Dopooft Aoqul...._ •14-441-11111.
SWAIN
Fumlobod Aponmant: 111&lt;, AUCTION I FURNITURE. Ill
·----~
•
fto
Upl11 I.., - ~vonua,
-~ Dl~
- St.., -~-.polio• - ' '~~t
~
11oo111, Now Carpot, Now tumwork•-· """
•.~~. 11 wn ·•
~'="' su.olta, No P.a~o. 114.. ~· •
Vlnvf Floor Covorlna: 13.H l
Fumllbocl
EHicianCY,
820 14.H In llocil. Moilohon Cor·
Fourtll, Clalllpolll, ttlll UtiiKI11 plio. 114-441-111...
Paid. 114-441-441, IIIW 7p.m.
, . , . _ IHicloncy, ttiO ;;.53.:._~A~nt=lq:::;u:;:es~~­
Ut11Nill Paid, Sba,. lath, lQ1 11uv « 1011. dllvorlno Anllquao,

ctoan. No Polo. Rodarllloa I

Wantlel: Ex-'onood Sontlco

~

t========T-========-1~72~~rru~
· c~k~s~lor~SI~.Ie~llotor
· ;_
Household
!!i1
Musical
1177 llazor, 12.000. 51

M

OllllldelilePOATOW-Today

1111 N!':""3 ~~~~~o., Wlalr, *JIIOO;
1111 ,..,..... auto., W/alr,
h085i , . , cantl•r, . auto.,
$1400. 11W51-1270.
For Soil: 1111 Chivy Covalw,
Typo 10, Loldld, Runo Qroat,
Supor Cloauu, PS, PI, Ttl, All!
CNaa, 8uliroof, Mult , Sell
12.000. 114-441-mt,

=·PH

(J) 0

I

olllo..
•,,:: 34,000 ' m-. 1
power m
CWRir, .... cond. 11,100. 114411-117111, ..1-7104.

Complo!oly twndohocl omoll
..,_ loi 1 or 2 - · No
plua utiHIM. iM-441-

low lo form fovr

a:r~g

..U, $5,100. 304-m.eMO. ,

from $112/mo. W•ll• to ahop &amp;
mo-. can 114-4414511. EOH.

1225
utiiRIII
iuucfuclod,
dapooll
For rwn,
1 bodnoorn
alia:lmont,

=.. . .

MO (J) 0 Ill
GJ

-Door
ca.
1117
Ford - Lock'
oolto.
Ailor .p.HL, .,.._.
·
1117-.. Onund Am, PS, PB,
IUto trantrnl_..,., •no _.

11....,._

38711.

WED.. MAY 21

horrD~~go lottoro of
O four
ocramblod -d•

EVI!NINQ

·=: ·

7011.

The Dally Sentinel Pegl 15

Television
Viewing

Apaltfnant
lor Rant

.-.mo.

Thura. .ond Fri.

BORN LOSER

)(IT' N' CARLYLE~ lly IMI)' Wriaht

31 Homas lor Sale

1

Pomeroy-Midcl~. em~

others. Trying to patch up a broken romance? The Aatro-Graph Matchmaker
can help you understand what to do to
make the relationship work. Mall $2
plus a long , seli-addresoed, alamped
envelope 10 Malcbmalrlii', P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland , OH « 101-3428.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) If lhe - ·
you've recently sown haven't produced
a harvest yet, don't despair. Thlngs' ere
much better than you aur111i18, and a
bumper crop could soon be In the
offing.
LEO (Jutr 23-r\ut. 22) You are In a very
Interesting cycle where Intangibles
could prove to be ot muctu g r - valuo
lh111 lhlng&amp; 01 a mat- ntturo. You
mil' begin 10-...,. ot INo: lodliy.
VIRGO (Aug. a llpt.ll) Whllo lhlnga
may be presently coming your way wHhout you having to aoert too much ettort,
lmaglnt how much more oautd bo done
wyou r..:ty ttppllld yourMII.
UIIIA (lept IJ.Oot. IIIII you to do willl you can to help olherl
achiovelilelt IIOPIIII1d Ppecl&amp;llona at
lhla time: wt:al will be benellclal to lhem
wt11 be of ~e~u• UldV~ntage to you.
ICO . . IO (Oot.l• Naw. 221 Your chlirl
liiOWI that you .,. dllllned 10 IC-

compdllll ~ llgnlilc8lll now
that WIH produce dual beMII:o. The bonUI portiOn,._.,, rr18Y not bo Initial-

~-

"

ty apparent
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 11-Dea. 211 TINa
Is a good day 10 ....,.,,.. a problem
yoo have~ unablo 10 resolve. Sever·
al aolullona ll:al prevtoully eluded you
could now becoriiO ollvloua.
CAPRICORN (Dell. 22......._ 11) An enlerprlae thai hu Cllplured your allen·
lion 11 In dirt need of aomethlng you
po148S1 In order 10 profllable.
Try to ellablllh Hnk. . lodl)'.
AOUARIUI I•· ....... 11) You
lhoold be rather ettecllve operating on
your own today, bul ~ou could be even

more productive wtth 1 c..,able part·
ner. II a learn ptaw- tlltuli of a

.-.

~lll'elt-•"

!Ito -

..,.,lltea11111&lt;e

oppertunily you've bell1

hoping lor Ia 1baul Ia pr-1 Itself,
JKIIId'IY loctay. II reedy.
AIIIU (....,lt•Apfltll f'rlor:dlere
Ilk.:, lo ln1plrt - - ,• • • to you led8lt
that U.,.,. r.:uctMt to .._with olh·
en. Thll oautd be up 1 clllly 1ru0 In a
IOCiai 1811ing,ll1d willl you :.rn wiA be
uaetul .
TAUIIUI (Apfl . . . . ID) Your liMn·
clad prOipeCII loOit ..... ~
1M - ' : . Ava. You m.r bo
tuctder tillll UIUII in WIIYI illat GOUld
ernpfldy your~--

~. (1 :00)

•

De 411(-. Stereo.

iOib:rT..t&lt;

ew-Newe

0 .,.. Cillll With ""'
Robertaon

10:01 Ill MOVIE: Ort&amp;IIJ 11'01 (2:00)
10:30 ill Craalt and Chiao
tD'ttlb•ITonllht

11:0011: !llO ill DO
......c.tQ

.
I

-c---..--. . ,___. ,._
CILIIRITY CIPHER

eiOfl..._ll'l .. ...,....,.,.,..,._, ,._...... c......,a

NIWIU lllh

Menlo IIIIi Stol'lo. g
. . . . VIla lltlrao.

.............. Wilt
Harry Ao: I . .'Comeclilnl

Harry"'.,..,,
"""'*
Blair, Jell Fox--., lnd

...........

Olhlra ptl1otm. (1:00)

G

ZIP

XTM

R ' I

C W U. R K P U U,

·

IPZUHKU

J X N

UTHX

Rill

ZKA

Ill ' I

UJZKARKD

HK

JTPI.'

CPJJM

CHJT

lpa IICIIIIII

0 111..-w IIIII MN. tcJng

· 11:JO=.~TIIII(IIII.,_

.....

:! ::-.....

-

DIZCYP.

PREVIOUS ~LUTION: "II It foolllh Ia 1 - 0110'1 i111r In gr1e1 u .....,....,
IOITOW would be rnedrt len With ,blldn Ill " - Ciolro.
• ...._..,

II

Dll&amp;nM

1'

,

�•

• •

.'

•

l

•

1

..

• •

•

...

..

Sentinel

LOTSA.
POP
Monday t"Mu Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Astros
. Page4

$)9.9

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•

MIKE-SELLS

·,

POTATO
CHIPS

We Will Be Open Memorial Dav For Your·
. Shopping Convenience ·

.
'

Reg. S1.49

.

$ 59 ZESTA
Cubed Steak •••.. ~:·. 2 . CRACKERS
BUCKET

_

•

.BonoM

99.&lt;

... La $269
Round ·St.. e·a•~ll ••••••••

LB

Chuck Roast ••••••••
COLBY LON,GHORN

2 liter Btls. ·

$] 79
PINK

SALMON

Cheese ••••••••••••••••L:. 189
KENTUCKY BORDER

Wieners

12

oz.

•••••••••

$1 9 ~60Z

89&lt;

..

BEEF ·
10 LB. PACKAGE

$14.90

Bananas •••••••••••• ~·~ •.

GROUND .
CHUCK

KRAFT AMERICAN

79
Cheese Singles~..&amp;!. S1
QUARTERS

Shedd's Spred ••• }!o~39&lt;

I0 Ll, PACKAGE

$]690
.'

KEMP'S PAIL

KRAFT SQUEEZE

MASTER llEND COFFEE

MUSTARD

34.5

oz.

$3 49

aoz.

19(v•

GtH 0111y At ,... ., s.,.
GtH.., 16 tin,_ 1, IH1
1i111t I hr c.t1-

CHARMIN TOILET nssuE
410ll
PIG.

99&lt;
.
,,.,.y.

GtHCWyAt,_ ••
GtH Mey 26 tin ,_ 1, 1HI
Lilli! 1 "' c.t-

136

oz.

Kendall Dunfee, Strongs Run Road, was cited Wednesday
evening to Meigs County Court for operating a m0111r vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol followillg a single car accident at
Carpenter.
According to the repon, Dunfee was traVeling south on Route
143 around 9:5~~~- w)len his 1983 Renault went off the roadway
on the right 1m • g down a road sign. His vehicle stopped against
a five-suand barbed wire feace.
'
··
In other matters, officers from the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department and the Racine, Syracuse and Pomeroy Police Depan·
malls completed fireanns qualifications on Wednesday. A Bureau
of Criminal lnvesliiations instruCtor officiated at the 9ualifications
held at the Iuac Walton Club Farm in Chester Township.

$5s.r39·v•

GtH 0111y At ,.,•••
GtH .., 16 tin ..... 1, lftl
lillllt 1 "' Cwt-

Squads respond to 7 caUs ·

'·

.

I

Units of the M~gs County Emergency Medical Service respond·
ed to seven calls for assistanCe on Tuesday lllCl early Wedueaday
manin~
.
On Wednesday the Pomeroy unit, 11 10:10 a.m., wu called to
· Condnued• DD

..

,,

\

and operation, $839,000.
•
Petersburg, planning study·,
$550,000.
Island Creek, Logan, planning
study, $370,000.
'
. Cabin Creek, planning grant,
$135,000.
Ohio River, comprehensive nav·
$igalion study of waterfront,
124,000.
•
Elkins, maintenance and opera:
lion, $5,000.
.·
•
Elk River Harbor, dredging sur·
vey. $1,000.
. ·

By BRIAN J. REED

· University Scholar at Ohio State

Regenrs Scholarship, She plans to cialize ill public relations.
anend Ohio State in the fall, where
41 otbers to graduate
she will study pre·law.
Those other students scheduled
Plans PR career
to receive diplomas are: Christi
Salutatorian Redovian is the Dawn Adams, Christopher Lance
daughter of John and Rosetta Adams, Lorrie Lee Baker Jerrod
"Tunie" Redovian.
Scou Barber Robert Michael
. She was a delegate to Buckeye Bauer, Suz&amp;Me Gaul Clay,
Guls State m 1990, where she was Leigh Cleland, Toby Joe Cunis,
~lected to the House ofRepresen,\8· . Alyssa Marie Eddy, Steven Paul
tives. She served as Hugh O'Bnen · Erwin Lorie Ann Falls Matthew
'Youth Leadership Ambassador in Todd Finlaw, Sandra Faye Foster,
. 19~9. and was .a Governor's Schol· Jason Brent Hager, Mandie Diane
ar m 1988. Th1s vear, she received Harris, Raben Eugene Hawk, Edna
the DAR Good Citizenship Award, Mae Driggs Hensley, Toby Chris·
the Outstanding French Student tine Hill, Brenda Lee Holler Earl
Award ~nd the Holzer Science Richard Hunt, Thomas Pr~ston
Foundauon Award and Scholar· Hunter, William Ray Johnson, Aleship.
sha Michelle Keney, Mary Ann
~he is the secretary of the Kibble, Carol Sue Kimes, Tina
Semor Class, president of Student · Darlene McGrath Amy Beth Met·
Council, vice president of the zger, Douglas t.eroy Miller, RanNational f_lonor Society, captain of da1l Lin Moore, Mark Allen Murthe Vars~ty Track Team and a phy, Angela Beth Murphy, Carl
member of the Eastern High Edward Parsons, Lisa LaDonna
School Otoir.
. Perdas, Christina Dawn Pooler,
: Sho is cu~rently employed at ~igh Anne Redovian, Jason Brian .
McDollald's m Pomeroy. She has Rtdenour, Donald Ray Spencer,
been accepted into the E.W. Thomas Jared Spencer, Suzanne
Scripps School of Journalism at Lynette West, Michael Darrell
Ohio University. She plant to spe·
Continued on page 3

Anw-e.

I

windows and· other vandalism to
the historic building.
The commissioners approved
two funds transfers. A mistake in
the Meigs MRJDD traasponation
grant appropriation was corrected
with a transfer from the MR/DD
account to a new transportatipn
grant account. Secondly, the com·
misslonm approved the lransfer of
$500 from the juvenile co1111 jury's
fees account to supplies.
The commissioners appropriated
a budget commission certification
of $295 in to the Parks District
fund. According to a letter from the
district, the monies were made
available by donations for tourism
promotions.
. In other business, the commis·

sioners:
- Reviewed a letter regarding
pending automation in the Meigs
County Title Office. The letter stat·
ed that a representative from
Motorola would be on the site to
re':iew the facilities and to prepare
a Site assessment;
. Approved attendance by
Recorder Emmogene HolsteinCongo at the Ohio Recorder's
Summer Conference in Cincillnatl;
• Accepted a bid for bituminous
products for the month of June
from Asphalt Materials Company. .
Attending the meeting were
Commissioners David Koblentz
Manning Roush and Richard J~
and Clerk Mary Hobsteller.

National spelling bee
champion to be crown:ed

Deputies charge man with DUI

SURF DETERGENT

arid opeiation," $1.2 million.
Summersville Lake, mainte·
nance and operation, $1.2 million.
Burnsville .Lake, maintenance
and operation, $1.2 million.
· Tygan Lake, maintenance and
operation, Sl.l million.
Kanawha River, navigation
study, $995,000.
Moorefield, planning study,
$950,000.
Stonewall Jackson Lake, main·
tenance arid operation, $865,000.
Beech Fork Lake, maintenance

EHS seniors to receive diplomas Sunday

University.
Valedictorian Andrea Cleland
She is a twO-year member of the
will present an address entitled, Scholastic Quiz Bowl Team, a rep"As Time Passes By" at Eastern resentative on Eastern's Student
High School's 1991 commence- Council, a meml*r and officer in
ment exerci,les on Sunday evening. Teen Institute, a member and offi·
".We Can Make a Dif!erence" is the cer ill Na~onal Honor Society and
title _of the sal~tatorian addr~ to has rece1ved the Algebra II,
be gtven by Le1gh Anne RcdoVWI. French, and Tutors Awards. .
Combined commencement and ·
Cleland served as co-ed1tor of
baccalaureate services will be held the 1991 ~temcr, was a member
in the school's auditorium at 6:30 of lhe cho~, member.of the ~(\A
p.m., and 43 sllldents,are scheduled Leuermen s. Club, and 1s a ~1pre_m
to receive diplomas.
.
of the Presulen~ Academ1c F1t·
Rev. Sharon Hausman, Pastor of ness Award. She IS a member and
the Tuppers Plains;Chester·Alfred offteerof~J!IliorCivitan.'
Charge of the United .Methodist
In addttion, Cl.eland has been
Chmch will deliVQ' the bacc•laiU'e· ho~ at the Meigs County Acl!·
ate address, "Friends for th~ ~IC Banquet every year of ehpANDREA CLELAND
LEIGH ANNE REDOVIAN
Future".
b1hty. She was honored at Juruor
Active In CommoDity
~rship Day at Ohio State Uni·
Cleland · is the daughter of versny's Columbus campu~, B!'d
1 t.J U
Charles and Viola Cleland of Long has served as freshman and JUDIOr
,
.
Boaom.
class ofticers.
.
She carried a perfect 4.0 grade
·She was a Valenune Queen can·
up.~ .poi,._t a;verat~ .lh~?'!JillO~t llig~· · ~and 'parti;~ipated recenlly i~
, JJ( , · .
.... . l:j~· • ·
&amp; ·,
, ..~llQOl, ~ .an.lrlhiQ vJ»,VCtSity Ociv·'' the WSI\Z-TV Best of the Class
••
emor'sSummerScbollr,aregional program.
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)- · andolhercilies.
.
scholar in the Talented and Gifted
Cleland has received.a scholar·
About 260 miles of illterstate highRep. I oseph Vukovich, D· program, and has been named a ship to OSU and the Ohio Board of
ways that carried a 55 mph speed Youngs10wn, said his bill naming
limit on Memorial Day may be roadside rest 8le8S along interstate
marked 65 mph before the Fourth and primary routes after
. ofJuly.
POWMIAs was patterned after a
The House completed legisla· similar program in Winoil.
By BRIAN J. REED
but continues to be considerably
. tive work Wednesday on a bill
"In Dlinois lhey found that the Seatlnel
News
Staff
.
less
than the cost of the old sySll:m
increasing the limit and sent it to program was v«y ~saful. Vet·
Charles
Knight
was
re-appoint·
of
indigent
council appoinunents.
Gov. George Voinovich. Sponsors erans groups donated their time, ed as Meigs County Public DefendKnight does not receive an
have said Voinovich is expected to their money, and it virtually cost er through mid-1992 at Wednes· allowance for staff salaries, office
sign the immediately-effective the state of lllinois nQthmg," day's regular meeting of the Meigs expensesorotheroverhead.
Vukovich said.
I
.
measure into law.
Commissioners.
The regional office, under the
In other action, representatives
the measure would require rest County
The commissioners entered iniO direction of Westfall, serves public
approved 97..0 and sent to the Sen· areas to be named aftet POWMIAs a contract with the Ohio Public defenders in eight counties with
ate Sl:plllllte bills that would:
who lived in tbe immediate area. Defender's office for a period resources, research staff and other
-Name improved roadside rest Markers also would be installed begillning July 1, 1991 and ending services.
areas after Ohioans listed as prison- listing the names of all MfAs from June 30, 1992. Knight has served
In othec action, a bid from Atek
ers of war or missing in action the state.
as
public
defender
since
1989,
Corporation
for the purchase of a
from the Korean and Vietnam
"We cannot as memben of the although the contract for those ser- new computer
system for the
wars.
General Assembly bring a single vices is now between the commis- Meigs County Auditor's Office
-Permit life insurance compa- person back home that's listed as sioners and the Ohio Public ·was tabled. The bid was the only
nics to offer policies that would an MIA. But we can as a 'member
Office, instead of o~ receiv.ed by the board and was
pay to terminally ill policyholders of the Ohio House of Representa· Defender's
between
the
board
and Knight him· submitted in the amount of
benefirs that.otherwise would go to iives go on record as saying we self.
·
$73,295.20.
their beneficiaries upon death.
don't forget, we still remember,
Several minor changes in conThe commissioners postponed
Representatives gave a final and we'll do everything we can to trac!Uallan~ were presented to action on the bid pending review
green light to the speed limit bill keep their memory and the issue the commtssioners by William and recommendation of Auditor
95·2. It primarily would affect alive until &amp;he issue is resolved or Kitts .of the Ohio Public Defender's William R. Wickline.
stretches of freeway on the out· people .-e brought home," he said. offiCe and Mike Wesifall, the direc·
Recent vandalism at the fonnec
skirts of urban areas which now are
Rep, EJ. Thomas, R-Columbus, tor of the regional public defend· Meigs County Courthouse in
posted at 5~ mph.
won unanimous passage of his life er's offiCe based in Athens.
Chester was diScussed, with the
Rep. Cliff Skeen, D·Alcron, the illsurance measure.
In addition to the minor contrac· . commissioners voting to .close the
chief sponsor, said he expected the '
The bill would specifically per- tual changes, a small increase in area at~r 8 p.m. each night. The
~igher limirs would be .~sted ~th- · mit companies to accelerate life . the county's cost of the contract commissioners emphasized that
m a matter of weeks. I defuutely insurance benefit p~yments to ter· will take effllCt in the new contract. after that time, ~sen wlll be
expect them to be in before the minally in policyholders so. they Currently, the public de~nder's arrested and prosecuted. The Meigs
Fourth of July," Skeen said.
could use the money for expenses office cosrs the county $23l'l00 per County Sherifrs office has also
Passage was made possible by illcurred in lhe late stages of a ter- year. That amount has increased to pledged to step-up their patrol of
new Federal Highway Adminislra- · minal illness.
$24,210 for the new conlract year, the area in light of recent broken
tion rules affecting sections of
''The provisions of t~is bill
interstates near urban areas.
would help ease the fmancial burNew streu:hes eligible for the 65 den for those individuals with a
mph limit would include those near qualifying terminal illness and it
Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus, would do so re~ardless of their
Toledo, Lorain, Cleveland, Akron age," Thomas wd.

--Local briefs-----.

1
Ice
Cream
•••
:.G,u:~~:e
l
$2
99
Ketchup •••••••••••!~~!•• 79 &lt;
$ 39
SUNSHINE
$ 99 FLAVORITE ASSORTED
Jr. _Pops •••••••1m:... 1
Do Food •••••••• ~~!~. 2
MAXWEU HOUSE

the House Aru'tions subcom·
mittee onnern and Water,
requestin~ funding levels for water
projects m West Virginia. In each

Cumberland River, flood control,
$33.7 mi1lion.
Willfield L&lt;icks and .Dam, navigalion, $15 million.
Ohio River locks and dams,
mainteaance and operation, $14.3
million,
Ohio River, open channel work,
HuntingtOn, $1.8 million.
Sutton Lake, maintenance and
operation, $1.6 million.
Bluestone Lake, maintenance
and operations, $1.5 million.
R.D. Bailey Lake, maintenance

Commission re-appoints Knight public defender

GRQUND

GOLDEN RIPE

state's economy."
In March, Wise testifiCd before

case, his ·funding request was
adopted by the House as part of the
Energy and Water Appropriations
BiD.
U.S. Reps. Wise and Nick Joe
Rahall, also D·W.Va., said
Wednesday West Virginia projecrs
funded by the bill include:
East Lynn Lake, flood control,
$48.4 million; maintenance and
operalion, $1.1 million.
Gallipolis Locks and Dam, Ohio
River, navigation, $38 million.
Levisa and Tug forks and Upper

some Ohl•o z•nte•('lt·nte
•
·
•t
•
•
s,need lzmz s ·II,OJn·a .. '

WHITNEY

$

.

.

"The action of the House means ·
that the Third District should continue to lead the nation in the
amount of money spent on building
locks and dams," said U.S. Rep.
Bob Wise (D·W.Va.). "Sucb inland
waterway consuuction is vital to
river commerce throughout West
Virginia and that is essenlial 10 the

·

PRODUCTS

LB

3 Secdono, 44 PoQH 25 .,..,
A lluiii!Mdlo Inc. Newtpllpel'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 30, 1991

Sentinel News Staff

$ 59
R1beye Steak ........ 4 . .

US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .

•

.

'

lB • .

Chicken ••••••••••••••l!·. $129 R.C. COLA
F~yer

By AP and Staff Reports
.
WASHINGTON • The Gallipo' lis Locks and Da,m will receive $38
million after the U.S. House of
Representati.ves B(lproved a water
projects bill that mcludes $172.3
million for West Virginia projecrs
and studies.
.
The Energy and Water Develop-ment Appropriations Bill for fiscal
year 1992 provides $21.5 billion
for U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers,
Bureau of Reclamation and
Ap.Palachian Regional Commission
pr&lt;ijCCIS.

BREASTS
MIXED

'

Low .tonight near 70.
. Friday, hot, hummid.
.High near 90.

Gallipolis Locks, Dam ·receives additional funds

89&lt;

.USDA CHOICE BONElESS BEEF

Pick 3:994
Pick 4:4221
Cards : Q-H, 9·C
4-D; 8-S
Super Lotto: .
6-23-24-35-40-41
Kicker
415493

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS '

STORE' HOURS

PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 26 THRU SAT., JUNE.1, 1991

Ohio Lottery

Dodger ace
shelled by

..

'I

---~ - ~.-. ~

pqe'

-

--~·

.

'

'

-

WASUINGTON (AP) - While
other kids were turning luteovires·
cent, Casc;y Lee Weiss could Spell
iL He also knew newel and handled
sudoriferous without working up a
sweat to bring him to today's fmal
round of the 64th National Spelling
Bee.
Casey, a 13-year-old seventh
grader from Vallcy View, Texas, is
one of six srudenls who have made
it 10 the contest for the third year.
He looked totally relaxed.
"He's always like this," said
his moiller, Ruby Weiss.
Bnt life threw a curve to
Casey's fellow Texan, Olivia Ann
Munoz of Odeaa. The 11-year-old
fifth grader was awakened by her
father in tho middle of the night
Wednelday; houri before the start
of twO days of ~lion and told
her motherbaby.
Olivia "was real~;· &amp;aid
her fathel, Javier Mwloz, now also
the III'OIId r.dlclr ci Javier Jr.
, ·. Oocton had told Mary Munoz
she had thtee weeks to go before

had2!:

~

.•

the baby was due. The doctors
were wrong.
Olivia seemed fme for the momin!! rounds of competition, but her
mmd was elsewhere.
"After I spelled my first two
words I started thinking about
everything," she said. She missed
on the word "capitatim," head tax.
She was at a local hospital an
hour later holding her baby brother.
"He's cute. I feel happy," she
said.
Olivia was "a Utile dilappolnted" about her spelllna perfor·
maace, but "we're IIJ'OIId or her,
she tried as hard 11 she could, •• bet
mother said from the holpjtll.
Sixty-two of the 22? spelling
champioas from the United States
and Mexico City were aone from
the compelidCII 11 lbe end of lhe
third round Wednesday. The
remainillg 16S lhldenta were to
compete until a arand champion
ttiwnphl.
The winner geu SS ,000, a troCondnued oa paee 3

--

••

BEE FINALIST- AIR Kllll, olllellllrt, Ofdo. ....,_, dtll'-

int lbe ftrllt roud or the Natlollal Spelllq lief&gt; Ia
Wedaestlay. (AP IMerPIIoto)
·

Wltillllatn

;-~-:-:.----·1l·--'"----.:.,._~

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="310">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9601">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34815">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34814">
              <text>May 29, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2107">
      <name>mattox</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
