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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

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.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;

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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.
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··
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 ·

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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

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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.
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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
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s,need lzmz s ·II,OJn·a .. '

WHITNEY

$

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"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 .

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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

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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!:

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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

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

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

Wltillllatn

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Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, May 30,1811
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The Daily Sentinel

Around Ohio•..

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tilities, compounded by profound pov~ for many of the 340 million

~:~~ ISS people have bem killed in eleclion-related incidents in tbe
: past month. It is going into the record bonk as India's c!Mdliest eleclion
season in its 44 years ~ an independent nation, following the end of .
British domination .••
Can India make it as a democracy? British Prime Minisu:r John Major
, bas no doubts about that
There will be times when it is difficult, times when it is turbulent, but
then India is a vibrant democracy, and I am sun: it will SW"Vive.
Free people IIIOUIIIl the world must hope tbat it does. India as a democracy is a prime example to other nations dial democracy can wort and IS
worth the sttuggle.

Kanjorski admits Pennsylvania
got a plum- but one that otherwise "would have rotted on the
ground."
Because Murtha is one of lhe
people who controls the PenJaaon's
piggy-bank, no member of
Congress is eager to challqe the
rationale behind Pennsylvania's
sweelhean deal. An Armed Services subcommiuee be1d a privare
meelin$ recendy at which the issue
was nused. But many lawmakers
fear that raising the challenge
·would backfue qainst their own
bids to acquire military bases and
projects in their own districts. And
they know Murtha bas a long IIIClllory.
But a few members drafted an
amendment to grant all states the
same access to excess 'lJ~litary
equipment that Pennsylvama now
holds. Our associate lim Lynch bas
learned that the House Rules Committee has quietly killed the
amendmenL
Kanjorski told us that the
"emergency" appropriations bill
was a "good engine" to IJIIIPCI his
pet.project into law. It would have

eL

In the wake of the spendingspree of the 1980s, U.S . military
warebouees are overflowing with
siii]IIIIS equipment, and much of it
is Of w1ue to m·-.....,_•;ties and the
-·.1

pnwili·V::~asgl,:itli?!~=
-'

cloae around the countty.
·But few realize the Paltagon bas
a new pecking ordc:r for this excess
eouipmenL It is first offered to all
· iriililll')' units, then to Peunsylvania
and needy foreign~vemments.
_,.
Everyonee lse ...ers.
~te the dubious manner in
wbicb 11 became law, Kanjorski's
project carries the seeds of a sOUnd
idea. Kanjorski may understand
how states can betlcr use the massive ~ swplus that often otherwise winds up selling at auction
as scnp.
The Pennsylvania equipment
cenu:r glories in comparing itself to
Benjamin Franklin's concept of a
bonk library. Its brochure credits
Kan:.-J.;
,..._ with the vision to create

WoR\&lt;6[) DIS~TER RtUEF ~.

-

Slalfin'-

n. :Today in history
.

that

•

t"

might upset you.
(I am aware of the surveys that
said most of you endoned the ceosorship. Sony, but your opinion is
not the sole factor that detcnnincs
news coverage. If it wer,.e. there
would be no need for a First
Amendment because no unpopular
ideas would exist that need protection.)
The fact is, there WM not a single, credible reason why the press
should have been so rigidly controlled.
The logistics of moving journalisiS around were unmanageable, the
· brass hals said. This sounds -ge
coming from people who now
boast in their PR litrnlllre tbal they
"moved in 30 days lhc equivalent
of Lafayette, Ind. or leffason City,
Mo., includinll ali residents, food.
- · vehicles and their bollsdlold
"""""'" to Saudi Arabia. The truth
1;,-;;dy the television dandies need
to have their hands held. If real
reporters can get tbeie, they ought
to be allowed to go there.
All tboae glory-aecking pressics
would inundate die baalefield, they
said. Oh, bull. The nih is, there
were 1,600 joumalistS at most in
the Gulf region. Thll's one for
every 31210ldien, or one for every
529.3lqiiii'C miles in Saudi Allbia
IIIII Kuwait- about lbe densi~ of
· the lwm IIIJIIOSpilere, howe- you

Mary Hazel Swill Francis, 88,

of Bowles R.oad, l)exter, died
Wednelday, May 29, M Ibo E1olee
Eblin bomc of Brownell Ave.,

Midd1epon. followina Ill Mllnded
illnMs.
Sbe
a formlr aebool 'v
and a bomemt' • len 011 SeDt.
12.,1902 at Outer, alae wu cht
dallllllar or !be late Willi• H.

w•

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP}Donald Blrjtlls trYIB&amp;to gllit ai
chairman of the lutfar COallJ
. Republic811 l'lity. But he'sllavill&amp;
trouble g.aldf ICGIODIIe 10 accept
his ruignaiion. . . .
Blrgel Slid he would realp lfter
he was convicted of punching a
man in a bar. Memben of the eounty party's 343-panon exacutivo
commi,ttee wcni utad to meet
Tuesday lll&amp;bt to rann.Jly ICCepl
chalrtnan Bilpl'a
tllld
to vote 011 a 111'1' dlliriiiM. .. .
· '::
Pat Heiwll'd, lMi CIMiliiJ OOP
executive diNctor, ll&amp;id 161 membeis showed up - &amp;bon of 111&amp; 172
• neede,!lto com.::;:r:IIOhlm.
.. Under pany bylaws,
'1 Nli&amp;nation must be
bv a quorum or lbe cxec:utM CGI.i.l•
·

nolr tm

.:

~ws dispaJcbes,

Kiernan respond·

ed: "Public affairs ofllcers looted
at pool reports for violations of
four principlea: security, accuracy
policy IIIII propriet):." And how did
he define puptiety? "Good lasle."
he said.
Ar:t:urrtcj, poUcy and~
I submit 111 you that in a
·
system such as ours, it is fundamentally obnoxious Inti intolerable
for the U.S. mililll')' 10 be censoring the news to ensure it meets
their standards of acctney, policy
and liSle.
Defenae Secretary Dick Oleney
bas alleldy said the pool system is

.-•
w

The Daily Ser:atinel

•

.
{lMPill. . . )
A IllY- ol Moltlmodla, Joe.

Publlobed nrt lftlniOCII, Mooday
thrCNIJII Frtdly. lll Coon Sl ., J'O.
MerO!'· Otlto. by lilt Obto Valley Publllhlq Compuy!Multtmedtl. Joe.•
l'olnol'oy, Olllo lli'IW, Ph. 112·2"'. S..
....r clw 1101..,, pohlal POmoroy.
Ohio.

Mfm.b«: Tbto Allodated Prtta, IDIand Dolly Pr... -IliOn aDd liN!
Ollto Nf'W*'IiA.ModltiGil. Natklllal

-~~
... -•'*"'"""·
llam
N..,.IPiper
fti/ '131 Tlllnl...
Avenue,
New Yorll, Now ork 10101.

--. ---

Berry's World

t'OIIIII'Qf. Ottlo -

·
lllwa&amp; iiUN h'l'll

OF

One WHII .......... ...... .. ........ ...... ...n.•

Tile :rl)ll'f, \ &amp;Jet41t,. TAA,.
1\IIS ...~ IS Cft"%111Ul ~N

I

'

"

Ono Monlh ................. ................lUll
ono·YHr ....................... ........ .. IIUO

IINGUOOPY

file&amp;

-oll.

Dilly " ...... " ............... ... ....... . Coato

()I(J'"'

r#. ~

dcd~=·

·
bondl were Malcolm
B. Guinther; II,.Pomeroy, $460,
, phyilcal control of motor vehicle
while under the inftuence of alcobol or drup; Terry K. Alvarez.
CliftoJI, W. Va., $60, running a
atop 1i1n: Alaa Gerwig, Cot~ville, W. Va., $60, expired
~ and RheU A. Milhoan,
Putneloy, $51 bond. spt"ding.

END OF SEASON
CLEARANCE SALE
A&amp;l PUTS Of

IIDD•G PLANYS

ltOW 14 50

.... 16.50

10 •CI

lllNGIIG IASIITS

... IUS

J..ia llobtrts in

SLEEPING WITM
THE ENEMY •·
AND

HOME ALONE

PG

FIIIIS ,,...,..
iow 1650

• •et MtiiS I
GllliiUIIS

.... suo

IIOW

RANDERSON'S

30°/o OFF

OL APPLIANCE ·SALE

WOMEN'S BLOUSES
DIISS

25°/o OFF

PANTS &amp; TOPS . .

.

.~

•.

'
.
•IEFIIGRA101S
•DIYEIS
•WASRIII
.
•DISIIWAIIDS •GAS,UNGIS .eELEC111C RANGES
••CIOWAYI OYENS •TRASH COMPAaOIS
•All CONDtnONIIS
I

.

,

'

I

SAT.DAY, JUNE 1
WilT•

----,.

..

.
. -·-· ..

-----

POICH &amp; PAnO

. ····-

----- -----

-

1

8
I0IAIHI'I
________

A

TURF.

-····-----,.. J.._
-~-..
...

----~-~---~

-~ ............................. 4

. . . • • ...

• ·noel

.. _____________

------

• " '11'1,

Ohlt

.

ne.nocK

SALE

•·.

·- -

-- .
*lxtn Heavy Orade
'
"12ft. Width
•Q,..n, 1.-n. Orey
•1 00% Oltfln "lie
"31 Month No-Fide

Vinyl Floor Coverang

···-········ ············-----

•15 tatttftll .
•12 ft........

•

lncUanapoUs firm diseoven:

SILl

w_."antv

•Reg. '1.00 aq. yd.

~

.

Special cream
A

for arthritis
INDIANAPOLIS.lN . IWinl Bul·
lttinl- If you ouffer from the pa~n
of arthriLi1 . rheumatism or bursi·

tis, cher•• a imall tompany in
lndi•n•pnlit. lndiua that manu·
....,._ • produel U.. yw shoUld
try .

The prodU&lt;t is calltd l'llln·BIIIt·
RII. and iL is a -bini """jcoJed
-

Llw y011 limply

mu-

san

Read what our usen
have to say:

'rhaM

wi'h abiONWI)' DO ...... I wish I k,._
about PAI:"t BU»T '-1 110·" II. ~..S.

Thaup

u.P&lt;.

,YOI.I !"

llolp lnlo the joinll whono pain
...... IHilfllal inlunL relief.
Allll trhM ·o ,_. it will not sLain

•heeu.

Sll.

-m

lnto)IWI' Mhlnlioinll. I t - loO
work inllnldia&amp;oly by ponotralinl

bed

-Finn~~~~ -Qulted
_, 0 v.. werrentv

" I UIMI PAIN BUST bec:IUte I IUfftr
from tenltlon i.n my b.ck and lhcMlklert.
I ~an ' t pn.i.• yeur prodiiCt enau,tt. I've
u_. other ol n~mtnll, bul thtY don't
1.0 w""k as fu\ nor li1L U .....
ThaM rou . Tklnk you ...

.. LlhL niJhl when I Wlnl kl .... I
NbbH ....,.. Po\ IN HU!f( on _,. ...,.
KhinJ U.. I&amp; miDIMt LMer I WI

• _ . c~«h'•••

,....1acOMFOIT

S101
S2....
..
lltl
u.P&lt;.

Ill

CARPET
SALE
WIHA¥110

STYUS
01 SALI

eound •~'-P . . wm " .,.. ltw

.

·· I'm 7:t

)'NI'M atd

Mid •fttr lnlm an.lbi·

lilt product Is not. t i!l in both h.nd!(4 1nd 1wt. On damp,
widely lu+own. it 11100\1&gt; llle and cold d:ays I .atlld w .. aut or my mlnd
u... claim Lha&amp;. there ·· nothing with pain. N01. an.vmo"'. I now ~juy
ptl~t.'t' of mind and p1in ltft joblls .
... OD lilt lliiJlkt&lt; LhK ev&lt;ll IXIIIIOI
tt•ap«lhill.v ,··
tt.tu;.
doot'to iL. In facL. occordina o.o
c:ornpany pP'Hidlnt l::lf')'an Auer ...
" Wt' gwt mort' rNJrd t! r ~ UP! Olis
prod~cr tAa11 any~~· lht~ rJthr JJ

PIICIJ All LOW -

.lutY IS IIIGHI
CaiU.Forlle

..... ,,.. Chtete.

prflflnt• iN vtlr liNt .' And pt:upk
wrife u ,_._,., ctar I«Uing 41~ lhul
if ·•A&lt; but.· ..

. . ......au

Sulll&lt;rtt&gt;eroiiCII d•trflqrtoJiliY tbe-·
rter may l'flllll 18 - • • • , . _ •
T!loDilllySilt.... oaaJ,tarU-'t
blall. Credit ..atiltI I - - '

''
•

'

''

.......

llomt-. . . . ,=

NO IUblorlpl- II!' mall palM....
II
aVItlllllt .

llftll ,.b. .

·-- ...........

13 Wttiii .................... .. :........... .

26 w..u..................................

52 .,................................ -..

~

50C _.,

"Wldlela,,UULMI"
..,_ ... lhnl Set. • --s pm
CLOIID IUNDAYI
............ GrMIIhoUII
IYRAC~=~:HIO

"--

1 IACI

:..

md coa. maldtls an illepl turn;
PeiJY s. Davis, Long Botrom, $10
llld COlli, illepl tagS; Richard l.
GUmore, Pomeroy. SSO and costs,
sivinl fa1ae information 10 a police
ofllclr, and SIOO IIIII costs, posseslion of marljlllna; and Jeff CWJ~~iff,
Middleport, $2S and costs, disor-

•

TOPS &amp; SHORTS

•a

· Otbon~fined in lhe court were
'Emelt L. erou. Pomeroy. S2S' and
CCIIII, disoldetty manner; Phillip l.
· Fry, Point Pleasant, W. Va., .$10

~'...,.., 1!fiMCII

fii.·SAT.-SUN.

HOJDR MEDICAL CENTD
l)lacbara••· Ma}'}9 · Mn.
Mid.: Addis and-. Clllillllallf. •
blr, . . . Dotr, trarte. MoodilpaUJh, Alan Moore, O.llra
Rouali, Linda Snider and Mart
Stall.

1 UCI GIIILS S. . . .

-.

POSTMASTER:: Stad adlhls chu~
to Tile Dilly !lonllnol. IU Cow&lt; St..

6"m.ICTUftl..

Cell=

. Jl. &amp;

~

.....410

I. Jr-r"

WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
-.Berdla Tuttle, PomtiOf. .
.
WEI&gt;NI!SDA Y DISCFI.UOBS
- Harold McDaniel.

•••m•o
NEW nEMS ADDED

DoiAtomeet
District 13, Daughters of America will have a dillricl meeting on
, Salurday at I p.m. at Chester
Lodge Hall. All members in the
district are urged to aa.nd. Plans
will be made for the state session in
Maricaa in AUIJIIL
Easter• pradfa llallld
The lillian Hiab School aeoior
breakfaat will be held 011 Pdday at
8:30 un. All IMIIIion are liked to
attend the bn Jrf1M llld Ibo padua.
t1on pxtice tollowiDa- 1'110 tcboo1
awards ...mbty will be held at 1
p.m.

',·,

VR'L'ERANS MIMOIIAL

CLEVliLAND, Ohio - Multimedia Bicadcallin&amp; Preaidont Bill
Bolster IIIUIOtiiiCid today that Pat
, Servodidio bu baen n.-ed vice
-' presldent ~ ~-~er of
, • WKYO.TV, tn Clevtl..u.
Sorvodidiei hal baen President
or RKO o-at, lac., New York,
since 1987. He 1IIba over the JIOil
vi!Cated by Jobn Uowollyn, wbo
will leave the NBC 9btiop on May
31.

here 10 ,stay, but! have a message .
for him: It will not stand. Your
pool system was coming apart at
the seams when the war ended, and
you've already been served notice
by four nctwodts, two news ltllpztnes, the Associated Press and
many major newspapers that the
rules are going to be rewritten.
Your pools are yesterday's baba
ghanoush, Big Guy.

,._'fA FAAE

Jllld Cia lllpbew• . Bes1des ller pll'...... -~in~~y
·ber ltulband, . , . FranciS,_Sll.... PIAIII Mlellall. Bess~ R.IIS,..u, and Mabel Swan, and two
blodlen, Jalpb and J - Swan.
Sill li'U a •...W of the old
DmrwBIIIoQri II •CIIurcb.
Orluflldt 111\'kw wW be held
at 1111 tllllOJ!
I&gt;MWil
1 p.m. Slllurclay. "
DliiCber
wt11 J11 I Tba will be 10 calliDI IMMm at the lwiRI Puaetal
Heime Widell II bllldlJill llfllllit-

'

Joe Spear ..

TilE CUll~!'&lt;~,.

Hospi~ n~nvs ,.

.SIDEWALK SALE

oppo-:

~~~ti!S ~0 ~'TL£MiN

f'""''

RKO prwlilknt fill JUHl
for Multimedia post

~

Want to know lhe real reason?
Listen to the words of Col. David
R. Kiernan, a top Army public
affairs officer who was recendy
interviewed by a student in my
communication law class at The
American University. Asked to
explain the criteria fat censoring

s

GOP cbalrman needs
·• quorum.to l'llip

nation and a developing nation, a
nation decades behind the U.S. in
terms of economic development.
*
Add to this contrast in economies
;:
the very real drug smuggling and
illepl alien concerns thai would be trade agreement with Mexico.
-:
heightened with open trading · Since 1978, in large par
between our two countries, and because of foreign imports, more;
what you have in my judgment is a dian half of tbe glass manufactur-u
recipe for disasu:r.
ing plants in the United Stares have.
In more immediate terms, a free closed, resulting in the 1088 offt
trade agreement with Mexico could more than 21,000 jobs. Since 1985,•
very well sound the death knell fot Southeastern Ohio alone bas lostca
the Ohio glassware industry. Even over.. I,700 glass industty jobs. As"':
with the existing tariff suucture the representative of a region;
tietween our two countries, Mexi- whose economic fate will be great- ·
can exports of household glassware ly influenced by the ourcome of the ~
to the United Slllle8 have increased Mexican free trade negotiations, I
67&lt;1&gt; since 1984. Open our trade will continue to do aU tbat I can to ..
border with Mexico and remove an see that Ohio's glassware workers!:
tariffs and what you'll have is a are not left holding the short sbaw.:
repeat of the situation the once Toward Ibis end, I bave been in
renowned Ohio pottery industry repeated contact with Ambassad&lt;!r •
faced in the wake of World War II. Carla Hills, our U.S. Trade Rcpre-;':
It will be deja vu rat many workers sentative, to impress upon her .the .
and their families in our region or concerns that many of us in
Ohio who recall the heydays of that Congress have for the future of·
once thriving industry. lust as ·the such significant industries as glass, •
Ohio pottery industty was virDtally and to undencore my strong
put out of business by cheaply pro- sition to the course these ~gotia­
duced imports from the Orient. so tions are taking. Free lrade is fine, ~·
too could be the fate of the Ohio but we must also make sure that it :;
glass induslr)' in the wake or a free is fair!

malion.

''*._ r-.

.... $100 IIIII COlli wilb a five day
I oe oa a dllrle of asault.
$100 and colu wltb live daya in
jail for noillliDJ arreat. and $100
· and COlli oa a charp of criminal
jill

.... 1US-'6.75si7JS

SWill ud Miry E. Folden Swan.
Su II nrvlml lw six nieces

Mary Francis

s
Cong. Clarence :

mt:aSUI'C iL
All those loose-lipped reponers
would jeopardize the security of
the troops and the mission, the mililll')' said. Is there anyone out there
with a fiiiiCtioning brain who Indy
believes this garllage? 1be truth is,
journalists can p;ovem themselves
very effectively, as demonstrated in
Vietnam, wbere they roamed freely
and di!IClosed lillie sensitive infor-

:l: Jf:

--Area deaths--

-

Mr'ller

::

Ells .

casf

Poll system won't hold up under fire

aao:

'National...

•

as being very similar to lhe one
negotiated and asreed to during the
last Congress with Canarla Penonally, I feel the Administration is
overstating the similarities between
a prospective fnlc trade agreement
with Mexico and the one arrived at
with Canada. Cailada is a countty
very siinilar in culture and economic development to ours. Mexico, on
the other hand, is still very much an
underdeveloped nation. Mexico
lags rar behind lhe United States
and Canada in lecbnology and productivity. It also lags far behind its
friends to the north in wage and
employee benefits, in workplace
saf~, in environmerllal ~lion
and in public health considerations;
and herein lies the crux of the problemaslsceiL
. The average manufacturing
wage in Mexico is currently S7
cents an hour, compared with
$10.47 per hour for WOJkers in this
country; and if you add in fringe
benefits the differential is ·all the
more extreme. In many respects,
the proposed rree trade pact with
Mexico is unprecedentrA! in thai it
seeks to create 111 open trade border
between a highly industrialized

I&gt;avid S. M1111um. Middleport,
wu fined on five c11ar1ea wbon ba
"' alii tbeco.tolMiddlcpon
MayCJr Prill HoiDDal Wednesday

'1'111=

projects in road repair. garbag~
removal, rcforestauon and other
• .-.... .
local """""·
Last year, the regional cent~
received surplus equipment that
cost the Pentagon about $3 Jllillim ~
The center's entire laundry list
....
2• d
includes 30 bac....oes, • umjl
truckS. 20 gar~e ncb and 17,
cranes. Kanjorski claims the wis1J.
list will barely dent the surplus
stockpile.
•
DUBIOUS VICTORY ~
Almost 18 months after the U.S
military overthrew Panamaniano
dictator Gen. Manuel Noriega·,
!here.are troubling signs !hat lhe'
war has accompnshed nothing~
Dru kingpins still bide their illcPI•
in secret bank accounts. the~
laundering of drug money is worse..
than it was under Gen. Noriega."';
Several pominent political figure&amp;
and journalists in Panama have
complained to us tbat their phones..
are tapped, and real freedom of tlJct:
press remains elusive. Even th
president of Panama, Guillermoo
Enciara. learned that his phone wai
tapped. The IIJllling is the .work at.
rival factions in lhe government:"
Each faction has fllf!lled its owh'•
quasi-intelligence qency, whic "
spies on others. Each has alsO,;
developed its own private 1110y.
rensions between the rival pllliesM
in Washington as to wlielber U.s. :::
military inu:rvention accomplished~
very milCh.
:;
MINI-EDITORIAL -· Our
oceans are again becoming dump-~
ing grounds for dangm)us ll!cdical:,.
waste, and lhe FBI baa a. pretty ,.
good idea wbo the cu1prill are. lust..
two xears ago Americans were •
appalled at the spectacle of waste;:
wasbin&amp; up on East Coast beaclles.::
forcing them to shut down in th~ ..
middle.of summer. Now the WillOw
bas turned up on the West Coast;,;.
The FBI suspects ·!hat it II being~
dumped wilh Mafl$ connectiOns. •
Copyright, 1991, United Feature':
Syndicate,lnc.
·
:

. -•

•

j!1:\,illed as a key io ~

Fast track will leave Ohio .holding short straw

on 'l'llllday at 7:30 p.m. Officen
are to....- c' ,_ •mu

Stocks

~;io~.ar::~·

This past week both chatnbers
of Congress defeated efforts to
derail the ''fast traek" authority the
.
Bush Administration sought in
: ::
THE MAR1ETIA TIMES, May 23: At last cbeck, the sWe of Ohio order to proceed wilh internaJional
• • was not gnmting lifetime job guarantees.
lrade negotiations with Mexico and
: ·:
but don't tell lbat to the union representing state workers .• people to conclude the ongoing General
·: : employed in state liquor stores or staff with the Department of Liquor .Apeement on Tariffs and Trade
·: : control
{GATT) negotiations, commonly
: · , • Tho9e three groups are ttying to talk Ohio Houae members into voting
referred to as the "Uruguay
:::: against a plan to rake liquor stores out of stale hands and sell them to pri- Round," that have been taking
- • • vate businesses.
place in Ge~va.
: :
Geaing Ohio out of the liiJID sale bnsiness mates sense. The Illite can
While I fully support tbe latter
-. • regulate sales through licensing pnx;ecDes and laws, as nwnerous stales negotiations, in
I feel the U.S.
• : :already do, without being responsible for
buildings. inventory bas milCh to gain from the further
. • ·and evel}'lhing else that goes with running a business. Selling the state refllf!ll of ihternationallrade regu• : :operation would genet!'le ~t $47 million for the Illite, which can use lations called for by the Uruguay
· : aU the revenue and savmp tt can 6nd...
.
Round, I think it would be a serious
: ·: · As difficult as it may be, Ohio House members should objectively mistake for our eounlr)' to conclude
: : weig~ the potential loss o~ !,400 stare jobs against the beOO'its of privatiza free trade agreement with Mexico
- • ing liquor sales. The decision, to be rea:hcd after bearings resume next atthistime.Notonlywillthis"fast
:: • _~ ~not ignore !~!C. realities ofwblt privatjz~ :would~ for
track" authori~ permit the Admin· : :emplo)'ees. But tboae reahties should not be the determining factor m the istration to proceed with trade
negotiations with the Mexicans, it
• •vote.
will restrict the ultimate approval
or disapproval of tbal ilgreement by
Congress to a slraight up or down
vote. No amendments or revisions
will be penniaed. It will be a "lake
it or leave it" call on the pan of
•• •
Br Tile "-~~ted l'ral
Congress.
.
· : : Today is Thursday, May 30, the I~ day of 1991. There are 215 days
The Administration has tried 10
.; •; left in the year.
·
package its Mexican trade initiative
: ·: · : Today's Highli&amp;bt in Hillory: .
-:- ·. On May 301h, 143l,lCBJ of Arc, condemnetl as a herelic, was burned
: : ·at the stake in Rauen, Fnmce.
• •
On this date:
I ·:·: In IS39,SpanishexpknrHemllldodeSotoblldcdin~~-~~~
:-:- In 1854, the ICiritonc:s ofNelnsb and ICinsas were eSiab ·
.
The U.S. military fought two
1 : : :
In 1883, 12 people were trampled to death when a
at that tbe
major
wars this past winter, and
·: · : recendy opened Brooklyn Bridge- in imminent dan of collapsing
they
think
they won them both.
:-: • triggered a stampede.
They're
wrong.
.:. : In 19ll,lndianapolis saw iiS first long-dislance auto race. Ray Harroun
The first was the baale to kick
: : was the winner.
.
Saddarn
Hussein out of Kuwait,
.: ' :
In 1922, the Lincoln Memorial W1S dcdiatrA! in Washinotnn D.C., by
and
this
was
a clear victory. The
·. -. Chief Justice William Howan1 Taft.
e-·
second
was
the
ball1e to convert the
. :: : : In 1937. ten people were tilled when ~ fired on steelworkers
American
press
into a docile propa•• ·. demonstrating near the Republic Steel Dllnt m South Olicaao.
ganda
tool
and
this skirmish is far
I :: : : In. 1958, uni~tified ~ldicn lr:il1;cil in World War U Inti the Korean
from
over.
·
. .•. · confliCt were buried at Arlington Nalionll Cemetery.
There
is
lit11e
question
that
the
i ::: ·
In 1971, 20 years ago, the American space probe Mariner IX blasted
press
got
snookered
by
the
Pen• • off from Cape Kennedy, Fla., on a ~Y to Mars.
tagon. After the fiasco in Vietnam,
:-:
In 1980, Pope John Paul n amved in France on lbe f111t visit to thai
:-: countty by the head of the Roman Catholic Church since the early 19th the brass hals began planning ways
to limit media access to the baltic·
- . century.
.
field,
and they devised a "pool"
:. : In 1982, Spairi became NATO's 16th member, the first countty to
system
wherein small groups of
: ·enter the wesu:rn aUiance since West Gennany in !9SS.
reporters,
photographers and tech·
: .:
In 1984, an American~~ and tbrce other people were tilled
·
nicians
would
traverse combat
~ : when a bomb exploded inside the Na..,uan jJIII8le heldqulnm or rebel
zones
in
the
company
of military
· • leader Eden Pastora. who Wll wounded
escorts.
:,:
In 1987, the Soviet defeaae m!nl. . md chief of lir defenses were
The press coOpea1lled in the ere,: · filed. twO days after a YOUII&amp; W• 0enaa pilol-111 Soviet ail space
ation
of this odious device, and it
:::: :11111 llndcd in Molcow's Rod Squue.
turned
out to be the primary inslru: • Ten yearuao: The PII 14 "of B•&amp;Jw!eeh, Ziaur Jbh!!!WI, w u ment
through
which coverage of
.-. ·siPSr~ in a r.i1ed miliiUy eoup.
Gulf
conflict
was controlled.
the
·~ • ' F'ive yeanqo: Twenly-cae eldtirtf y
IF' were tillod when a lOUr
Thanks
to
''pools,"
'&lt; bus went out of control 011 a me • ntallllll plunpd iniD lbe Walbr public aotliale moretheIbmAmerican
111 offi· ~: River aear the Calif'Crnia-Newcla IIUidli.
cia!
version
or
the
war.
The
tnlOp8
·~One year
Soviet rur·bl Mildllil s. Oorlllchev mivecl in Washweren't bean! a~~~~piNnin' btn"ae
"' :Jn&amp;JOD ror bls iummit with Pr 1 BuilL
escorts monilcncl evay llllel~iew.
~ . i today's Birdldays: Aclor Oilt Walter is 64. Aacl Keir Dullea is 55.
was no footage of errant
: :Actrell "Ruta Lee Is SS. Act« MicbrlJ. Pollanl is 52. Cotmlr)' linger There
bolllb
damage
bec:ause tbe Pen• -wynonna Judd is 27.
'
tagOD
didn't
.elnee
any. The shed:: : T1lau&amp;ht for Today: "Man Is wllllllc believea." - AnlllD Cbckl!Ov, ding of American blood
was not
· Russian IUihor-drarMtlsl (1~1904).
eeen because the ceuon tbougllt it
40 •

ean...

:
.. uipnent lilnry .. 'lbe

Trullla to Dlllt
Tbe Board of ·Trulllll tf
Columbia Townahlp will ••t
Monday M 7:30p.m. • die file M1.

Sllld ltiUD IIC!II! 1br S• - - Coup w11o - •tr•IIIIPOI-ortledl!d to Holzer
Vu stn IIIII I I n'
Mcdlr.a1
Tllll'oelloy Ch~ of Cllrill
The kllae llllit, at 12:~·:·· -~ 10 Roata 124 fat Guy ·
will lla~ libl• Scbool nl&amp;faL
~wbo-1lllla10
.
~ . . plus •
Sn fly
J - 7 6'011 6:30He wu fined$2S IIIII COlli CKh
on
two cbarJ11 of cllaanllrly lilllllThc
~
Tolflllldp
Vob
•
11:45
p.m.
aia•lly.
Andy
Miles,
In~ J.Oi!!:io~r= 1 w:f~--=:, we:=..~ ror fire Depanment wil bave a 1111:111r minisiilr, lravieel tbil )iublk.
Al6:5S ,P.tn. die I\ 1 07 lllllt - I l l die~ ...... and
puU on Salunlay wldl weiP-In 11 5 Tru ' 11 II . . .
R.., 'IP*rion Cellwlbr Bxbi ru.ll, lllrlll Ill V I a.
p.m. and piJIIat6 p.111.
Tltc'l.ecatt ToWUitip Trusteethes
1
The lacine ualt, at 7:34 p.m., - c:a1led 111 IJay!IID Raid where
C1uae&amp; included 1211anie.JIDMI' wiB . . Maadly • 7 p.m. 81
a.ill Powellwu D ~ bta lilt Diilij1Cii1DCL
Am E1e Power ..................28 718
· and over, 12 hone power aad offJCih!Udhtl inlAIIrt.
All1:47 p.m •.tho...,........... malt WG Ill BIOwnell A-ue for
Arhland Oil ..- ..................32 3{8
under,
cbild's
800
dall,
.....
900
PDitD
.
.
.
Mary PliDcis.
··-·
.
ATolT ...............................36 3/4
class, lllults 1,000 clau,llld 111n111
Tho Mo~a Coa:u; . Public
On
at 2:34 a.m. the MJddllpnrt unit~ to Asll
Bob
EV8111 ....-..................19
l ,IOOclass.
Emtbeployeeaci....!...~
meet at
Stnet fllr Ni Whilllll:h who - a 1 11 ted Ill
)oledical.
Olll'ming Shop .................20 3/4
will
al10
be
a
11att1ocae
IOIUor _ , . CIIUr on 1une 6
Tbere
Cenlar.
Qty HoldiD...................... l4 1/4
witli hambur&amp;en, botdoll and at! p.m. Alllllltllbars a urpd 111
Faleral
Molu1.................. .17 518
hoiiiCIIIIde lee~.
lltlend.
Goodyear
T.U .................25 7/8
10 IMit
Gai-de•
Clall
D
~
~=
Couacil
No.
323
~
Cen:blion
.................. 13
c.111: •• ,.,....\
The Mlddlejlon OuciiD Clab Dau&amp;hten of Alllrica will meet
l..aiJds'
Elld
........................
19 7/8
0
l.ilni-IK. ..................... 27 7/8
phy, a n:~an Eacyci0J1ltdla
.&amp;as d w, die lleld bepn with ;);~
:-~~
SIIDJday II 1 p.111. at 1111 Oleater
011 liS paa ud 114 boys. They The pro&amp;ram. "Nature's Way fer Loci&amp;• IWI • .fill IIIUIIIerlln lhe
Mulllmctllla Inc.................27 3/4
BABCd~TV'a,•..._. ~..,...,.. Mmllil&amp; Aa.r I I I dtam ..ty 9 milllrin IW- P C
Ru:
••• ant .................21/32
"", dialrict
.. w;atd
to
est ontroI•• ·-'II
.,., .....
,. ,_......,
.......
wiD be mada
fOr thoII Joo in
RobblnsolMyera
...............26 3/4
ica."
deaU wbo u&amp;erell 't::.l
. ear's Mn.
David Bowen.
u ......._ in..,_
Sbolwy•a
Inc.
....................
17 318
BrlakiDa the lee Ma !ha IDitlb- ..... bee • dltblll
- - ._est pan for cothltanll. Nobody
Till C08ptf~'IM, wbk:ll bepn OESto-1
S11r
Bank
••.••.
•
...••
:
...............
21
1/4
The Pomeroy~ No. 111 Graap blm.t
·
wanted 10 mill.ty.
Ill 1925, is ljiODIOI'Itl by Scripps Order of tbe !aatem Star wui
Wendy
Int'L
.....................
9
3/4
The S• &lt;lllln&amp;e IIIII S•lunicr
A b1a lll1k brolre 0111 on Carl Howmd -IJIIL*1 In 13 cities honor its put malnllltl ani1 ~ . Gran111 will meet Sallllday at 8
Worthington Ind...............Z4 118
lactson'a face after silt made it llld 201 otbel dilly, weetly and
p.m.. at the iraDJC ltall 011 COUII\Y
Stoct rrpora «n liN 10:30 11.111.
throu&amp;b tbe first 1"0iilld. She apeiJecl Stllday MWijllpiil. .
Rolld I -lalein Conllr.
Jll'fl'lb4 t1 Bl•lll, Ellis
8114l.tllwl of c;.tlflolll. ·
"rudenture" correctly. Tbe 11Tho atndenll rcpruent every
.
Star JuniQr Grana- will bold iiS
ynr-old fifth paler liaB MDOIOii, ltate except Delaware, plus the
C..U.iledfroiDPIIIl
~~·CWAIIIdiUborLa., mlllal 011 a tricky lhinl-~ Diltrict of Columbia, Guam, PUerto
Wbeeler,
Aaioa
Anlbony
Willloa,
·
dinaltJ
• well u the phologword, "pertaloca," the ltlat'- Ltico, the Vlrpn Islands, Mexico
J•Jia
Tboodare
YOUIIIraphy
IIIII
Ill
COIIIIItl wW ba held.
coverlnJ of a diatom. A cllarom is a and U.S. depeiidenll' lcbools overAn
awards
auembly
will
be
A
pot1uct
IUPJMii wiD foUDw the
type of llgle.
.....
beld on Friday at l p.m. at the m....,_ All memban . . urpd to
acbool, and the public Is inviiitl
aaend.

--

doesn't cost the government a niclc-

....;

that

•

wasted vatuabte time to v.:ade .
lhrongb the conventional leguda-

CLE~ 'OJR P\.ATE,SON ..•
REMEMBER T~ FOJR,OVER· .

The world's largest democracy must cope with deep-seated edmic hos-

. ;.
THE PLAIN DEALER, Cleveland, May 23: Ethiopia's mercUrial,
: : cruel dictalllr, Mengistu Haile Mariam, has sc:en the inevitable and fled.
• - Could it be an end to the 30-year agOny of civil war in the Hom of Abica
; : ' land is nign?
:: · • Rebel forces were within 40 miles of lhe capital, Addis Ababa.
: : Mengistu also bowed to W~ pressure in leaving the natiol). U.S.-bro: : kered peace talks begin next week in London. ..
, • · Ethiopia's peoples and culblres are among the most ancient of Abica,
~ : ·;JraCing back to the 2nd millenia B.C., when the empire rivalecl Egypt as a
~ •: regional power. The nation almost minlculously escaped inlact from the
: •: era of colonialization, despire . a brief period of Italian nate and Italian
• ' • domination of Eritrea fur about a !Wf-&lt;enllll'y.
: · ; , It is ironic
regional aspirations should DOW be threatelling dissolu- ,
~ • tion of a nation that colo~ spmd. But tboae aspirati0111 can't be
: : .• ignored. That must be the chief guidance the United Stares brings to next
:: : week's peace talks.

c.., una,.l

Jack Anderson . . :•
_:::;::.::that~~ and Dale VanAtta _.

feel !hey ought to have some of,
100.''

Local brlefs•..--..---- -Meigs announcements-- -Middleport Court news-

~

Pennsylvania has dibs on Pentagon's extras . :

WASHINGTON - Pennsylvania
lawmakers bave managed to
U1 Cout Street
make their swe the first in line
Pomero,., OW.
wben it CODICS to receiving bandDI'J'VOJ'ED TO THE IN'I'EBI!STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ABEA
outs from the Pa!taaon.
The political coup means lbat
Pennsylvania can clailll excess
fortlifts, traeiDrS, blcthoes. dump
uucks, salt spreaders and other'
ROBERT L WINGETI'
CBAitLENE HOEn.ICB
equipment in tbe Defense
heavy
l'llblllher
·
Gellenl Maaarer
Departn1ent inventory beftR other
states get a chance .to look over
PAT WHI'l'EREAD
'
what's available.
Aaalataat PllbUUer/COIItnller
This.ammgement was quiedy
tacked
on to lhe Dire Emergency
AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press AsSoSupplemental
Appropriations Act
ciation and the American N~spaper. Publisher;!!
Association.
.
· Of 1990. It was made possible by
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be ten tllall300
the powedul Rep. John Murtha, Dwords long. Allletter;!l are subJect to editing and must be slped with
Peiln.,
chairman of lhe defense
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubappropriations
subcommittee.
lished. Leiters should be In Rood taste, addrealng Ililies, aot penonaU·
Murtha
slipped
the
"demOIISttalion
ties .
·
·
program" into the bill for his colleague, Rep. Paul Kanjorski, DPenn. This regional equipment center is based in Kanjorski's district
and services the entire Slate.
~ennsylvania •s preferential
treatment has left members or the
By tbe A.aciated Press
House Armed Services Conunillee
Following are excerpts of editorials publlshecl teeendy in Ohio news- irate. At an April hearing, Rep.
Richard Ray, D-Ga., noted that
papers:
.
. .
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH, May 24: The sn-e essamnanon Congress bad given "Pennsylvania
Tuesday of Rajiv Gbandi, M India's fcxmer prime mini...,.~ to a kind of plum which other sta~
return his political pany to power in parliamentary elections, illuiitinales
thai great countty's tragic, cbronic suuggle as a nation of exlleme divc:rsi~-

r--~-

'Ill 3

11W DII'Y 81nllntl

ThUrwd!J) ll!y 30, 1111

N

II

,.

.

.

·" ..

'•

·I

�'

•

'

1

•

........ .. -

-

.. .... .. •.. .. . ............

-

.- .

. . -·

·· ·~ ,

-

,..,___,.,...

___......

"'

...

._

____ .. . . . ___. - .... ----· -- .....
.

The Daily

Sports

Sentine~
Thul'ldliy, May 30; 1991

Page-4

Houston posts 8-2 win over
L.;\., returning Hershiser
By Tbe Assoc:ilted Press
Ore! Hersbiser came up a big
winner eyen though he was the

loser.

'

·

More 'ihait a year ago, Hmhiser
hun his shoqldet and some thought
his career 'flis in jeopardy. But the
former Cy .Young Awud winner
had revolutionary reconstructive
surgery on his right shoulder and
then went through monlhs of reha.biliwion. . ·.
He returned to the mound at
Dodger Sladium Wednesday night
and gave up A&gt;ur runs on six hilS to
Houston in tJte farst inning. The
Aslros ~~ m to
. beat Los Angeles
8-2 behind f&gt;ele Harnisch.
"I feef good aboqt .what happened out.IIi~ tonight,•" ~ser
said. "I feel iood abOut lhe way I
threw lhe bal[ If I don't give up a
hit to lhe pitcher and I don't balk,
lhey only get two runs. So I really
buried my~lf."
In four innings, Hershiser gave
up four ru'ntllnd nine hits - all
smgles. He. walked Ibm: and struck
out four. : . ~ ·
"I just ·hope everyone underslallds. What 'lhey ~ seeing, and
what I am!liYing, is a miracle,"
said Hers~iser, who inspired lhe
Dodgers !Q a Wqrld Series victory
over Oakland in 1988.
The first four Houston hitters
singled and scored - but in fairness to Hershiser, it wasn't like he
was being bombed. The Astros
entered lhe game averaging 3.5
runsagame.
·
"I lhink otel pitched beuer dian
the box seore is going to show'"
Dodgers catcher Mike Sciascia ·
said. "I tliif\k he's back. I really
expect Orel to be a big part of our
1 staff Ibis y~,"
.
The crowd cheered when his
fust pitch' to leadoff hitter Steve
Finley was called a strike, and
·

groaned collectively as the next
pitch was grounded to deep short
for an infield bit by the speedy,
left-handed hittiQg Finley.
Elsewhere in the National
League it was New York 8, Chicago I; San Franci!JCO 6, Cincinnati
'I; Philadelphia 2, Montreal .!;
Allanta S, San Diego I; and PittSburgh 6, SL Louis 0.
Pirates 6, Canliuls 0
Zane Smith pitcbcd PitiSburgh 's
second one-hmar in three days
against SL Louis.
Smith's one-hitter came two
days after Doug Drabek one-hit lhe
Cardinals in an 8-0 ~- It was
lhe second one--hiuer of his cueer,
and second in 20 stans with the
Pirates. He held the Meta to one hit

,.,

three-ron fourth.
Cone (5-3) wild-JI!tched Ryne
Sandberg home with the bases
loaded in the first inning, but struck
out Andre Dawsoo and ' Chico
Walker, stranding runners on second and third.
GlaDIS 6, Reds 1
Matt Williams hit a windblown, opposito-ficld homer to key
a four-nm ~enth inning off Chris
Hammond (3-3).
run!"~~~:. drove in three

Francisco Oliveras (1-1) was the
winner. \vilh tw,o innings of scoreless rdicf of John Burtett, who left
the .game after five innings after
being hit wilh a lli!e drive.
Braves S, Padres 1
lastS~ 5.
.
.
Tom Glavine pitched a seven·
Smith (7-2) won for the fifth hitter for his sixth Slraight victory
time in six starts and lowered his and took over lhe NL EkA lead at
ERA to 2.19. .
. 1.99.
.
Glavine (8-2) threw his second
Barry Bonds' RBI double in the
fourth gave the Pirat.es the lead and straight complete gime to extend
lhey scored four more in lhe flfih his league-lead to five. He was two
off Bryn Smith (4-3).
outs away from bis second shutout
when Shawn Abner, who was hit·
Pbllla l, Exp• 1
Charlie Hayes, who earlier ling .167, hit his first homer of lhe
s~ an CJ,.for-31 streak, led off season.
Terry Pendleton '!lfCDI 3-for-5 to
lhe etgblh inning ~th a IIomc ron
Hayes' fifth homer came on a i. extend his ·hitting streak to 13
0 pitch fro~ Bury Jonas (2-2), and games and Dave 1ustice snapped
made a wmner of Terry Mulhol- out of a 2-for-18 slump with an
land (6-3).
. RBI double and opposite-field
Mulholland, who has worked homer off Andy Benes (2-6).
thropgh at least eight innings in six
of his last seven stans, gave up six
. hits in eight inniDJS. Mitch
Williams wmted the nmlh for his
nintbsave.
·

jt.\

Ryan returns from DL, is hit hard in 9-lloss to Minnesota
"I ligmed I wouidn 't haVe good
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Spartl Wrlier
. command beca1• of the laf!!lr,"
. Wblle the return of Nolan Ryan Ryan said. "I showed that if you
frDI)I the disabled list was not an make bad pitches you are going to
.
event worth remembering, base· get bit hard.
bill's no-hit king ,.,., e~ his toss
"They were bitter'~Eilches,
to 1114! Minne1oai Twins Wilh mixed hanging cwves and fastba s up in
lhe zone. I don't expect any stiffemotioo.
ness
or discomlort."
. "It felt fine. physically," Ryan
A
three-run homer by Greg
said after allow10g five runs in four
Gagne,
who had four RBis 10 tie
innings of the Texas Rangezs' 9-1
his
career
high, was the big hit off
loss Wednesday night. "I was
Ryan
(3-4).
Pitching for the fust
pleased with the way my ann felt,
time
since
straining
a shoulder
~ I was dislippoinled by lhe way I
·muscle
pn
May
13,
Ryan
allowed
pitched.
five
hits,
struck
out
four
and
Disappointed, but not surprised.

Saunders to guide Dublin into
Division l regionals vs. Newark
Former Meigs High baseball
coach Tim Saunders will lead his
team into Sweet 16 pia¥ Ibis week·
end in Division I regional semi·
final action. Saunders and his
Dublin Shamrocks will play topseeded Newuk Friday at Dubhn
High School at 1:30 p.m.
· Saunders has led lhe Shamrocks
to a 27-5 mark on the season,
Dublin was ranked ninth in the
final state rankings released last
week. Newark is 27-4 on lhe sea·
son and is ranked one spot shead of
lhe Shamrocks in the state rank·
ings. The Wildcats defeated the
Shamrocks 11-0.earliu in the sea·

TO NO AVAIL -Reds manager Lou PIDiella (wear~ng jacket) araues wltll, home plate
umpire Ed Mnntap to oo a'1'811 about a drike·
call In the seventil liming ot Weclnelday nlllat's ·

'

err

By_,

.......... 25 19
......... :16 211 '
Douoit
_.....: .. 23 22
Mil- ...... 22 23
, Now York
....... 19 24
. ~ ... ._.. 16 v
..-: · - ........ ll 21

..

·

~'

Metsi,Callll
Dave Magadln drove in three
runs and David Cone pitched a
seven-biuer.
Magadan singltld borne two runs
during a five-run third off Bob
Scanlan (2-1) an!l had ail RBI single off Rick Sutcliffe during a

..

W
Teua " ...... ""' 2S
Ooldaod
......... T1
Ca1ltamia .... - .. 25
......,
........... 24
~
....... 22
Chioaao
.... _... 211
""'""'City ....... 211

Pd.
.610
.600
.ll6
.l22
.478
.476
.-l'l

L
16
11
211
22
24
22
24

Connors said.

His legs were weary, but the
crowd was cheering him.
"It's one of lhose things where
you tty to grab lhe last bit of ener·
gy you have," be said. "Some·
times it works, This time it
worked."
Becker, the No.2 seed, dropped
his fll'St .two sets to Todd Woodbridge and fell behind 1-3 in lhe
third while hampered by a thigh
injury.
"He's a champion," Woodbridge said. "He kept coming at
me; being aggressive. I didn't
expect him to give up. I expected
him 10 fight to lhe end."
.·
. Becker fought, and eventually
· won 5·7, 1-6, 6·4, 6·4, 6-4 in 4

12:-.
12.

-4;1,0........

•

9: w. CJa4. San Fnociaco, 9.

Frlclay'slamH

o...ilotCimiand, ,,:IS p.m.

.t. Toroa&amp;o. 7:35" p.m.

Die~,

59; Glarinc, Atlanta, 59; Rijo,
Cinc:aau~Q. 54.
'
SA YES-Dibble, Cincinnati., 12; Lee
. s-, S..lAW. 12: o.•• snm~t, Qdel11; FtiiiCIO. Now Ylllt, 10; LefJ'n,
lftDi ...,IO.
.

r..

,

NBA playoffs·

.

Conference naats
(Best-of·ae•en)

~-at Kaalu Chy,I:3S p.m.
S:C.tll6at Te.u~, 1:3S p.m.

MandaJ, May 21
Cbiooao Ill, Dclloit 94,
..,;,. 4-0

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Rut Dlvllloo

Salurday, J-1
L.A. Lai.en at Pottla.nd, 3:30 p.m., it
~

Transactions

Wnt Dt•loloa

&gt;

8-blll

WLI'd:GB

:: t.o """"" ...... :II; 19 .l71
• Adon&lt;a

........... 23
j
Ciaciaalli ......... ;2
.. San llios• ...._,. 22
.....-.. II
S.. Fnnciooo .. _.. 16

19 J41

22

A-l.oquo

I lfl

KANSAS CITY ROYAI.S--Activotod

.500 311.2

Mike Bod4icluo, pildler, hun lhe 1l-day
d:iubled lin. Waived Da.a Schal&amp;Od.cr,
pi&lt;ehor.
.
MINNESOTA TWINS-Si&amp;ned lluoly
Richanll, pilcbC!f. 10 • minOII' ...... contract wlth OrlaDdo of lhe Southern

2l .468
l
T1 .400
I
30 .341 10 Ill

....

Wedatlday's ocores

.,...

New Ya:k I, OUcaao 1
San Pnn ·.,... 6. CiDcionlli 1
P.Qadiptl• 2.Maaa.ll

OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Placltd
Kilt ~Men idoNfw, r:::a, • tbe 15-day
dinblad 1ia IW
• 10 May 21. C&amp;11od
up B...., Wal1Ga, JliiC.,_, flom y....,.
rL the Pacific Cout 1AI
SEATI'LB ~-l'lo.... Ri&lt;h
Anla:al. .-.p. en lbo !Soda' diublocl
list. Recalled Jeff Schaefer, lhottltop,
rrom Ca1uno
l'loi&amp;C- ........
TEXAS iA~S-Aca.vat.ed M"olat
Ryu, tpik:ber, from the 15-dlly diltbled
lilt. Pltoed Bebb,- Wiu, pitcher. on \he
1.5-cl4y diAbled lilt Jetrotctive to May 27.

-6.S..Loaia0
Adong],Smllilpl
-I,LooAI!pkw 2

Today'llaDIOI

Houaaoa (J. Jon• 4·1) at San Diego

.r•

p.m.

Adama (Smallz 1-6) at San Pnncilc:o
.,, . (Do. . . 2-%).10:0$ p.m.
0.2) II l.oo Anp1al
(ll-1·1), IO:ll p.m . .

Cincini1IOi-

Nolloftall.oque
LOS AN0BI.BS OODGERS-Acdvtt·
od Mite ShtlpCIIOD, inliel•..-. from lhe
15-day diaabled Usc. Optioned Barry
Lyona, ca\ebar, to Albuquaque ol1hc Pa·
cilic CoaaLoo
s.&gt;:N omt:t'PADRES-I!x""'ded !he
contracl of Dick Freemtn, preaidcnt.
........ lho 1992 - · Aoeivated LaDy
ADdonen, pilcher, from lhe 15-day 4il·
a'bled liat. OptiDDed Stno Roa:enboq,
pildla. 10 Lu VCI• o( lho l'loi&amp; C0111
~ CaUod up )0118 MU!nd-. pilchlll',
-LuV....

Frklly'apmes

Cbioap II Monaoll.7,35 p.m.
l'ilUiooqll 11 Philadelphia, Bl p.m.
NewYCIItatSL LauJi, 8:35p.m.
HOIIIIUIII n $an Diop, 10:05 p.m.

~atl.oo ~.10 ,3lp.m.

AilanLI&amp;l S.. ~.10 : 3S p.m.

Major league leaders
Alllerlcaa Lea&amp;U• ·

.....

••••
I

8AmN0 (Ill al bttli)- M._ Lewis,
~• .361: !.,..., Calif'!"'~ .3ll:
Hotpor, - · .3ll: C. Jtiplon, Btl·
Qmare. .3S2; Sicrrl, T0111, .345.
RUNS-D. H.......oo, Qal:larul, 34:

Qomtl1iC Of 1mport
or

Foreign or

Domestic

15
••

11

.

Moli&amp;or MiJ,wallkoe. 33; Sinn, Tex11,
31&gt; C.~-. Baldmole. 31; Canaeco,
Oakland, 31 ; Maal, New York, 31 ~ ,

11M

l'lllnoUv.T..u,31.

JBI-D. Henftnon. Oalr:lud, 39:
PioWao,lloaoi&lt;. 36&lt; C. llipkal, Balllm.,.,
34; Joyner, Califemil, 3-4; Tbomu,
Chi&lt;a 34
•
~tor MilwauUI, 64; Puck·
.u. M " m ot•, 62; D. Honde:ncn, ,Oik·
land, 59: Rcyoolda. Seanlo. 59: s.cm.
T....,l9.
I)OIJBI..I!S-R. Aloaw. y.....,, 15:
D. Hend.rtoa, Odland, 14; Cn1cr,
Toano. 13; 0m"W T-. 13; l'nm·
...... -.... 13: While. y...,., 13.
TR.IPLBS-MolUor, Milwaukee, .5;
w.. c•m ··, 4: 9 a. tied with 3.
HONB RUNS-C. Jil*4o. loldm&lt;n.
t2;D.ll ' on,~. tl.;O.,Douoil. 12: .,....... J)ouoil, 10: .... dod
9.
' wid!.
STOLIN BASBI-R. Hondarooa,
\
Odll_. l6; Poloaia, Calilonda, 14;
,I
13;
12:
.. Al'!!!!!tT-11·
PITawoO (5
•

'

1rorn ••• •

3"'''"

'

-a.... a.,-,-

--}-Lallploa.

Clliloallo. 6-1 .1!7, Ul: a-.....
Dotloi&lt;, S-1 , .i!S. (,6Q,~SIO&lt;~:·

T-. 5-l, .133, 2.9l;

•

«·
771

~~::w;a::.-~...,;,., ~

--·-I

OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
- - 1 : 1 1 1 a.m. IOip.m. .....,._.., Prldty,
l:lllo.m. 10 7 ,....

BMketbaU

NadDftal' ±d"'l ,...,_l,'&amp;orl
DENVER NUOOBTS-Named Jim
Oillallninet and III'NiiniiOCiftLary •

Hookey
NIIII,..I-Loopo
BUF'JI'ALO SABJU!t-3ipod Brad
May, Bnd Rubtchllk aad J..an Winch,
f......U.
.
IIAR'l1'0RD WHALEJl5-Pirod Ridt
Ley. O!)l,cb.

GALUPOUS .

o.m. 101 p.m. lun&lt;lty

'"'~d~,::;...-

~·,._
OeH!o:&amp;a,
)klJoweU.
OW.·
!z!'!:.
61: ..65;-"
'

·ao;~VBs-aear4on, ao.... 14; D.
w... T - 12: &amp;lleaalo!'. Oolduld.
12: H....,. Calif..Dlo. 11: Toll RuoHU.
T-.11.

Nallo..t.......,.

BA1T!N0 (IIIII baU•~)-~P··~·':.,~'"'.·

The first annual Eastern Ea8les
Football Camp will be held for
grades S-9 during the wed: of July
15-19 frl?m 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
Eastern High School.
.
The camp will be open to both
resideniS and non-residents of lhe
Eastern LOcal School DistricL To
secure an application or for more
information please contact the
Eastern Athletic Booster Club, in
care of head varsity football coach
Randy Churilla, Eastern High
School, 38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville

Hershiser returns ...
(Continued from Page 4)
time. "I will not pitch again."
Hershiser took two weeks off
· from lhrowing and he was pitching
in a minor-league game less than
two monlhs later in preparatioo for
Wednesday night's return.
Starting May . 8, Hershiser
pitched in four minor league
games.
.
In his fmal minor league stan
last Friday ni$ht, he threw 92
pitches in seven mnings.
Hershiser won the National
League Cy Young Award in 1988
wilh a 23·8 recool and 2.26 ERA.
He finished
season Wilh a mllior
· league record 59 CODICCUtiVe IC(n.
less innings, then went 3-0 ill the
postseason as lhe Dodgers beat the
New York Mets in the NL playoffs
and the Oakland Alhletics in lhe
World Series.
Hershiser was 15·15 with a 2.31
ERA in 1989 and 1-1 in four games

me

992-3194

just thank God lhat Ibis has
all worked out and I'm goin$ to
have another chance," Hersh1~
said. "You work as long and as
bud as we have for 13 monlhs and
you go through a lot of ups and
downs, but the one constant has
been that God has been lookina
over us.
"I don't know if that's going to
end up turning into wins, but S~?~DC­
thing positive is going to come out
of Ibis rehab."

992~2124

ll am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

PIZZAS
2111115,

OR SOONER!!

WILL SILL TO HIGHEST BID
OYER OUR COST
MERCHANDISE SUBJECT TO
· INSPECTION PRIOR TO SELL.

BIDS WILL BE ACCEPTED. ON
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1991
PLEASE, NO DEALDS 01 IElliOIS
IUYD MUST TAU IMMEDIATE POSSESSION OF HOME

Located At
Jundon of
33 &amp; S9S
Logan, Oh.

Ofllll
Mon.·Sot.

1:30-1:00
CIDMd s.lly

WE NOW
HAVE
DIET PEPSI

UIGI
PIPPEIONI
PIZZA

Aa you lmow, CU lhayblf Is· Serious BuaiDell. It IDvolvea aerloaa mcllle:r.

Perbap8 you've beeo pattlq o1fbU7lnl tbat new car or truck J'OU 10 MdloaaiJ
need. Well, now ... Th•nkt to a aerloaa new PrlciDf PoUcy at TUna,ate
GallipoW. ... You caa bu.r ua:raewForcl car or truck for •49 over lllvolce.
Is aot a ale ;,. l'fot a apeelal promotloa ... But tbl1 la now the ever:r clay
price ••• ODlJ' at Tunaplke ofOalllpolls: •49 Over IDvolce oaua:raew Ford
or truck. Involc• an poate4 oa aD new cuw lUlcl trucka, 10 alaop Tunaplke
GalllpoUa when we'te opeD or cloaed lUlcl check our ucluslve low prlclllf.
WBf PAY JIO.RE SOMEWlfERE &amp;;rSJC?

*49 Over InYolce ••• That'• The Price Every Day
At Turnpike Of Gallipolis!
It's No Wonder Tl.unplke UnderseUs Those W1w Won't Be Undersoldl

LET THE COMPETITION BEWARE!
AT TURNPIKE OF GAU.POLIS, WE ARE GOING OUT FOR ALL THE BUSINESS!

'49"' OVER INVOICE, EVERY DAY, EVERY DAY, EVERY DAY!

$699

•1H1 ...._.,..._ lfle. hr~ ...... ..., ... . _ tiO.OD. .,...,.,.,_ IIIIIIIM to

-1'-v••--·
- ·•••.,.. :n1 ,..,...
a ...
PMT'IIIIIAIIIICM--111U--&amp;VAPU,IUP

J

MUST BE SOLD IMMEDIATELY

YOU· THE BUYER· RECEIVE ALL FACTORY INCENTIVES l REBATES,.If APPLICABLE

CAIIYOUT o•Y

$999

HEATERHILL28'x52' 3 BEDIM.

J 'I

Hours:

2 MEDIUM

OH4S712.
· The entry fee for the camp is
S20 which should be liulde payable
to lhe EHS Athletic' Booster ttlih.
Refer to a future edidon !If Tlie .
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times
Sentinel for 1111 application or send
the foUowing information and entry
to Churilla: name, grade, age,
home, address, home pboue, emergency phone and shin size along
with a parental/accident release
notice. The application deadline is
July I.
.
'
Highlights of the camp will be
non-contact drilling, form and llexibility running techniques, and
movement skills, poper lllllce.and
stan·up, inSII'IIclion in centering, ·
passing, kicking, cltebing and line
tcchniqiiCS. Campen will be cbal·
Ienged to raise your expoctationl in
play, conduct and sporiSIIIIDship,
and instruction in die mental and
physical aspects of the game will
be given by guest speakers and
films.
Students should brine football
shoes, tennis shoes, gym shorts,
shirts, and socks.
Each camper will receive a Tshin, and cenilicate of attendance
as well as a strong base knowledge
of the game.

A -•.:ISS: T.Ow,.... ... Dilp, .-:

v

MANLEY'S TRASH SERVICE

last season.

Pomeroy

.

•

-~···-SPUT ,

cmcaao .w

,._,,May :II
.......... 95, LA. LWn 34, LA. l.ok·
en lead ..W 3-1
,.......,,Mayll
PudaDd at LA. l.aktn, 9 p.m..

•

:er ... .

I

NO QUESTIONS ASKED

STIIIKEOilrS-&lt;Jooclen, Now Yon.,

WLPcL
Gl
Pitllblqh ......... 29 ll .659
• New York
....... 2l 19 .l6S
S&lt; Looio ........ _ 24 21 .l33 ll/l
7
23 23 .lOO
.
. ....... 22 24 .471
9
. 10
"
......... 211 :II; .43l

......

Football camp set for July 15

66; COlle, Now York, 61; Boa•, San

J

1311

, 1, . ~7, 2.52; ....,_, HOUIIOn,
! -1, .133, 4.1!; Olavina, Atlanta, 8-2,
.100. 1.99, I. 1....., ......_ 4-1, .100,

c...,......SL

2~.

Ooklaolot Oliap. I ,OS pm.

ALL DRESS
AND FLATS

PrrCIIINO (ldecioiooa)-II.Mulinoz,
Loo A clea, 1· 1, .119, 2.01; Smiley,

7-1, .175. 196:

a.....
r ...... (s....

.

BECKER WINS ANYWAY- Despite bavlq bill rlaltt tbl&amp;b
wrapped In a baada~t, Germuy'a Borlll Beeler makes a liadhnd·
return to AustraUa's Todd WoodllrldiC ill tile secoad rood of
Wednesday's Frtncll Opealn Paris, wllldl Becker won 5-7, 1-6, ti-4,
6-4, 6-4. (AP)

STOLEN BASES-Coleman, New
Yodl, Tl: OoSb;.w, - . 21: &lt;Jda.
ICinl, Manb'Cil, 18; Nixon. Allan\tl, 18; 0 .
Smilh, ill. Loulo, ll .

'•1. Oica&amp;o•

·,

.

11; 0. Bell. Chicap, 11: 1 - N"'ow

York, 11; Mitchcill, San Francilco, 10;
Do....... Cbicoao. 9: O'Neill, Ci!tciMod.

Mil.....U. tl New Y"om, 7:30p.m.
Bab:imcn at BMOR. 7:35p.m.

C·Uf

.....

HOME RUNs::.cF. Mdlrilf, Son Dieao.

eta 9, Teua l

OoliiiM (Wolcb H) "

4:

........ San Dlqo, 4.

r ..... a.Ooklad3
u;

LA.•

Poldor,

6lfl

lllm,zaS.l), ''3lp.m.
1 - ala COudUil 3-3) atlCulu City
(~ 1·2),l,:llp.m.
s.aJ.e (Del.acia 4-2) at Ta.. (h&amp;en
, 4:3), a,:JS p.m.

,•

To The Person Who Took A
MOTOROLA TWO-WAY RADIO ·;'
From My Tr~ck I Will ·Pay
.$1 00 FOR IT'S RETURN~

T.o..,...s..

Calilamia (McCu.kiil 4-5) tl Chiea&amp;o
(Mdl well :1-2~ I ,]l p.m.
• ......._ (BIIIud U) "
(M.
Y"""'l-2~ 7:31p.m.

_,.

•NOTICE•

St. Louil, 16: H.
31fl
l1fl
llfl

holliS, 2S minutes.
It was lhe sixth time in Becker's ·
career be has come back from two
sets down.
"That helps," Becker said .
"My opponent knows that it's fu
from over."
Becker's foremost rival, topseeded Stefan Edbera. returns to
· action today. He has a careerS~
record ajlainst his scheduled foe,
Austrian Horst Stoff.
Mooica Seles, seeking to defend
her women's tide and N~. I ~ing, was to face South Afnca s ·
Mariaan de Swardt, ind third-seed,
ed Gabriela: Sabatini waa matcbeil
. against Emanuela Zardo of
Switzerland in IIIXllld-round play.
No. 2 seed Stdfi Graf advanced
to the third round Wednesday,
trouncing Petra Langrova 6-0,6-1.
Fourlh-seeded Mary Joe Feman· ·
dez defeated Germany's Sabine ·
Hack 6-4, 6-0; No. S Arantxa
Sanchez Vicario beat AustraJiaJI·
Kristin Godridge 6-1, 6-2; No. 11
Katerina Maleeva beat Japan's
Aldko Kijimuta 6-2, 6-3, and No.
13 -Nathalie Tauzi1t beat feiiOII&gt;' ·
Frenchwoman Nathalie Gucm:e 6- ·
2' 6:1 .
·
·
~..

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

2

Today'• games

CONNIES. AUDITIONS. NATURALIZERS

s•srlli

Dublin, which entered district
play with a third seed, eamed a trip
to the regionals wilh a thrilling 1-0
victory over second-seeded Westerville Norlh oo a twO-Out squeeze
play in the sevenlh inning.
Saunders coached the Marauders from 1982-1985 and 'led the
Maniuders tO lhe schools first TriValley Confii'CIICC baseball title in
1984. In 1985, be left to 18ke an ·
assislallt coach's position wilh the
Indiana Hoosiers. After two years
with the Big Ten school, hew
returned home to central Ohio to
coaeh lhe Shamrocks.

GB

a.-cn2,a...to.d 1

CJ'r

FRIDAY, SATUIDAY
and MONDAY

SHOES

son.

Agenor eVened the match at two
sets each. and seemed poised for
victory when he won· three of the
first four aames in the final set.
Connors somehow shifted back
into a geu few players have and
won 6-4, 6-2, 3-6, ().6, 6-4.
. "Once it got into lhe fifth, and it
was a matter of who was going to
get down and dig and grind and do
whatever it takes to win the match,
I'm pretty happy in that position,"

West Division

NewYark7,BooiOn0

"I was done. I was suze of iL"
Hershiaer aaid llllldc a hurried 10
call his wife, Jamie, in California.
· "This is It, I'm finished," he
said be told her for tbe millionth
(See HERSIDSER a. Pip 5)

Ill SAVINGS

•voring an improbable ccmeblll;k· at age 38, jumped to
a tW&lt;Hetlead ovu Ronald Agenor
on center court Wednesday. "I
can't lllay much better than lhat."
he saiil.
Then
fell

91(l

S.alol, ~tuuM Cit' 0

:;:&amp;.

1st PAIR••••••••••••••••••• 20°/o OFF
. 2nd PAIR••••••••••••••••••25°/o OFF
3rd PAIR •••••••••••••••••• 30°/o OFf

By DAVID CRARY
Aaodated l'rtM Writer
PARIS (AP) - 'Champloos. ·
Boris Becker and Jlmm¥ CoiiiiOfS
demonstrated the me:::;.':!f!r tbe
word in French Open
they
so
could have 1oet.

J65
~
Jll 21/l .
.419 3 1/l
.oM2 l1/l
.m a lfl
.349

second.
.
After consecuti •e doubles liY
Kent Hrbek ll1d Chili Davis. I.YID .
issued a walk and Gagne followed
with bis fifth homer.
l!lsewhere, it was California 8,
Chicago 4; New Ycrk 7, Boston 0;
Toronto 8, OatJand 3; Bal~ 2,
Cleveland 1; Seatlle 8, IC.nsas City
0, and Milwaukee 6, Detroit 2.

wins in·French Open
Connors, Becker
notch
Conn&lt;is.

.l~

Mil- 6, DioCnid 2

forced layoff, the 32-year-old Hershiser was Sbootinil for his IOOih
big-league victory.
. .
:"Nobody knew if I CQU)d come .
back," he said. "Not Dr.Jobe, not
1
lherapistPatScrenar,nObody.
'.'Thete was nobody I could '
photic who had been throuah lhia.'
There was no medical book1 could
s~~y .. There was no proven reba·
b1h18UOII schedule because there
wasnoproven·rebabililati!)n."
Henbiser admitted that 11
rec:cady • MJn:b 15, be thought
his career .wu finished at the
Dodpn sprins ll'liDin&amp; belldqarterut Vem B -h, Fla.
He was pildtiaa what was llllpposed to be his last simulated .
pme, !Jifore be would plulb ill an
exblbilion ~
"After JUSt a couple innings, I
was tired and I ached," he said. "I
was throwing the ~I like 1 man
who had just unclelgone surgery lJll
lhe WIOIIJI urn. Per the first lim,e, I
believed I WOuld never pUCh

.

._was

.

WedDtiilay's ocores

Swing Into Sunnna·r·

.

his seventh no-hitter on May I ,
millsed two 8t.IS while oo lhe DL,
ne
h was only the fourth time in 70
S111U widl Texas thai Ryan hadn't
lasted 8lleast five innings.
Aflel: Texas took a 1-0 lead in
Ryan '1 earned run average lhe farst oo Brien Downing's dou·
jumped rnxn 2.94 to 3.56. The 44- . ble and Ruben Siena's single, the
yeao-okl rigbt-lalder, who pitchDd Twins struck for four runs in lhe

WLPcLGB

ow-m~.4&lt;ll

SALE

won ft\oe o{ his last six decislona
afW .. 0,.3 - .
the IIIXllld straiabt
for Tuaa, which bad won 14 in a
~~being sbut out 3-0

~RICAN LEAGUE
Rut Division

National Leaaae eame against the liosfSan l
Franclaco Glaota, wlto wop 6·1. Tbe rhubarb ;.
' took place after Reds Oird baselliau Chris Sabo :
was ClUed out on strikes to end tile top of tile
seventll. (AP)
·

. ·,

cmt

walked one.
·"It's always soliletbinlto get
one off Ryu," Aid GaPe. Who
was given the baD aft« a lao dRw
it back 00 the field.
The night belonged to Gape
and Jack Morris, who pitched 1
four..IJitter wbile lltriking out a IICIson-higb eight, Morris (5-S) has

I

Hershiser returns:to ·
action with Dodgers
By·JOHN NADEL
AP Sports Writer
·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Thirteen months after undergoing radicarshoulder surgery,
Henbis. er returned· to the mound for the
Los Angeles Dodgels. He believes
his comeback.is a miracle.
And he said SQ in a story he co~ulhored in Wednesday's editions
of lhe Los Angeles Times.
"Maybe r,eople don't know
this, hut I a ways say a prayer
before I start a game," HershiiiU
wrote.
,
"When I make my fnt start, I
am going to be praying so hard,
I'm worried that I am going to
break down and
right there on
lhe field. I'm w~ed they'll have
tQ delay the-game to calm me
down.
"I just hope everyone under~tands. What they are 8eein~ and
what I am living, is a miracle. '
Hershisc~ made his return
·Wednesday rught apinst the Houston Astros at Dodger Stadium. It
was his first ~ce in a bigteague game smce April 25, 1990
.·- two days before Dr. Prank Jobe
performed major reconstructive
1Dfiery oo his nght shouldc:r.
· As be resumed his career after a

The Dally Sentinel Pag1 5

Pomeroy Mlddl!f!On, Ohio

Thur!Ciey. May 30, .1991

•!

I

I
I

�'

'

•

1

·' •t

Paqe &amp; The Dally Senunet

Thursclly, May 30, 189'J

Pomeroy--Middlefort, Ohio

Thunderstorms., hot humid

Friday, May 31

Weclnelday were brokan m North
Carolina, Wjscolllin, Ohio. West
Vl!]Pnia, South Carolina. Dclaw~
andPennsylvania. In Plliladclpbia.
the.· mercury climbed over 90
degrees for the eleventh time this
month.
.
In contraSt, winds ot up to 40
mph were expected to keep tanper·
aturea in San Francisco in the S0s.
Temperatures through! the North·
west were expected to be equally

low. .
·
Higb temperature~ today~
forec&amp;ll for the~ m the North•
west and the Rockies;. the ~ and
70s for most of Cal1forn11, the
Northeru Plains and most or. N~
England; and the 80s and 901m ~
Midwest, the middle A~tl~
stileS, die Nonbelsl and the
•
The high for the llllion Wednel'
day was 106 de~ at Presidio;
Texas. .

(six, twenty-three, twenty-folll',
thirty-five, forty, fortyo(JIIe)
The jsckpot is $4 million.
Kicker
4-1-5-4-9-3
(four, one, five, four, nine,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·
three)
Businesses wilDie products or oper·
ations expose people to chcmicals Pick 3 Numbers ·
9-9-4
believed to canse cancer would
W. VA.
(nine, nine, four)
have to provide warnings under a
Pk:k4Numbers
law that voters may be asked to
4·2·2-1
approve next year.
·
(four, two, two, one)
Ohio Citizen Action, a nonprofit consumer and enviroiunental
group that claim$ 450,000 contrib- Cards ·
Q (Queen) ofHeans
utors staltwide, said Wednesday it
9
(Nine) ofOubs
was starting a pc:tition drive that
4
(Four) or Diamonds
could place a nght·to-know mea·
8
(Eight) of Spades
sure on the ballot in November
8p-CIH)5-29-91
1936edt
019111 Accu--.lnc. 1992.
If it becomes law, the initiative
would require warnings on products or food sold in Ohio that con·
tained any of 458 specific chemi·
cals believed to cauae cancer, birth
defects or reproductive~
Industries whose operations
Fridar will again be hot and exposed nearby residents to such
humid wtth widely scattered main· chemicals would have to notify
ly afternoon thunderstorms. Highs them by mail..
will be around 90. .
.
The record 'high tenijlerature for
this date at the Colutnbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1915. ·
The record low was 36 in 1984.
South Central Oblo
Sunrise this morning was at
Tonight, partly cloudy, warm
· 6:06 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:52 and muggy. Low around 70.
p.m.
Chance of rain 20 peiCCRL Friday,
partly swmy, hot and humid wilh a
slight chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Higb near 90. Chance of
"If I could take the strong rain 30 percent.
auributes of each one of the candi· Exteaded forecast
·dates, I could come up with a great Saturday tbrou&amp;b Monday:
president," Manning said "UnforContinued unseasonably warm
tunately, that can't be done."
and humid each day with widely
The university system's board scattered to scattered thunderwas to meet Thursday to consider storms. Highs in the 80s to near 90
the candidates;
and lows 65•70.

GaDlpolls Stockyards Co.
May 25 1991
Medium Fr.-, i &amp;: 2 Steen:
2S0-300 tbs., 94.50-125.00;
300-500 lbs., 93.00.106.00;
500.700 lbs., 74.00.103.00;
7QO.Up 75.00-85.50.
Medium llrame, 1 &amp;: 2 Heifers:
250-300 lbs., 85.00.104.00;
300.500 lbs., 80.00.96.00;
SQ0.700lbs., 75.50-89.00;
700.Up 68.00-81.00.
Butcb• COWl:
' Utilities, 54.50-61.00.
,
Caniler/Cuaers. 55.00-down.
Light weight low gra!le cows,
47.00-Down.
.
Heiferettes, Up to 71.00.
Holstein Steers llld BuDs:
300-800 lbs. 75.00-100.00.

Buteber .Bull:
Utilities, SS.00-68.75.
Canner/Cutter, 53.~.00.
Veal Calva:
Choicdprime. 92.50-105.00.
Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Sprlaler CoWl:
675.00 8t down.
Cow/Call Com.:
1050.00-down.
Baby Calva: ·
180.00 8t down.
Butch• Sows:
400-600 lbs., 47.50-51.00.
Top Hop:
.
220-250 lbs., 49.50-51.50.
Butch• Boars:
,.
39.()().41.50.
Pip by Head:
18.00-38.00.

MICH.

LOttery

IMansfield I aa•l•

berS

~~~u:!;th~ su~l1!~5 -4().4 1

en b • ct"
I IZ S egiD 8 IOD
for warning law
C •t•

·nw,..., GllfPI'tlt;INtt

Humid weather will
continue around Ohio
By Tbe Alloclated Press

Forget about any possible relief
from this hot and humid Oh.io
we&amp;Jher in the ncar future.
The National Wel!ber Service
. now says the 90,-degree heat and
· oppressive heat will continue well
into next week.
Tonight will be warm and
muggy with a chance of thunder·
stormS nmh. Lows ~m be 65.70.

(1) ET-391. 88VIi $40. 3· .·
number memo~ Reg. 99.95.
143-557, Sllle 58.95
(2) ET·421. 88VIi 150. 30number me~ flag . 119.95.
143-558. Sllle .95
(3) ET·414. S.W 150. 10·
number memory. Reg. 109.95.
143-559, Sale 59.115 . .

-.00

Computer
• ault-IIIMS-oose
I 3M!" Drive 25·1063

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.......

With .Furniture"from Ufestyle's

llr Dlllce

ZII·IIIIUT

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•Sofas
Starting At $499
e&lt;:ountry Glider/Rocker Loveseat

$69900 .t.tll .._·
· •Sleep Sofas Starting At $59900

1.8-Z-Boy, Benchcraft
lo Lane Action
Layaway Now for
Father's Day

$

Starting

S39900

•New Shipment of

Brass Headboards
Starting At

$5 900

As Low As
~ions

CUt

25~

29900

of (ountry, .

(ant~~~~parary,

Wood &amp;

Dlllylfl£111 ....... Dell

Save '280 19~

In-......

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200 Wordi .Per Minute

Low llo

Up to

PAno GROUP
By Ttlncope

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120

128·2112

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$8900

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... f17t.OO

SALE

$12900

•S PIICI DIIING GIO..

s.t IIICI... 41" Ulltllr•a T.W. IIIII 4

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$5 9900

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It would have taken more than a
g9Qd rain to dampen t.he sjliriiS of
the Ame(ican Legion units condueling Memorial Day services
Monday.
Legionnaires of bot.h Middleport
and Pomeroy were out part of the
day for brief services at cemeteries
. around the county.
Most everywhere the crowds
were small. Not so at the Burlingham Church and Cemetery where
the tOOth annual Memorial Day
observance attracted about a hun-

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Three Meigs Countians were
recently named to the National
Honor Societr of Phi Kappa Phi at
Ohio Univemty.
Named to the oational scholastic
honor society were Sharon K.
Hawley, a graduate student in
music education and wife of
Georae L. Hawley; Jennifer L.

vacatzon B l'b[. e sch00 [ se(

Community Caleadar Items
appear two days before an event
aad the day of that eveat. .~tems
must be received weD in advance
to assure publlcatioa Ia the cal·
eadar.

Air Cross Tminerh low.

TlftJRSDAY
CHESHIRE ·The Gallia·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.

Naill I

to

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•ooo-lnll _ _lilll_,ftni_. _ _ _ _ ~Mico""--ftCoop .

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A family get-together was held
at the home or John Walter and
Belinda Dean recently ·to celebralt
. the birthdays of John A. Dean and
·. Kenneth ·Marlcins, and the anniversary of V~rmont and Kenneth
Martins, l!etty and Robert Reid
and Frances and Junior Smalley.
Enjoying dinner were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Martins, Racine;
John and Virginia Dean, Bob and
Beuy Reid, Pataskala; Hobart Jr.
and Frances Smally, Wierton,
W.Va.; Donna Young, Pomeroy;
Joshua Smith. Rodney Reid, David
Reid, Tammy Downour, Melia and
Megan, all of Patasltala; Bill and
Ruth Spaun, Shannon and Ju!ia,
Pomeroy; Susie Riffie, Tamtko
· Riffle, Adam Riffie, Pomeroy;
Judy and Kenny Jones, Eldersville,
Penn.; Dale and Natalie Smalley,
Chris Uu, Brian Utt, Adam Utt,
Amy Hartford, Season lbbs, all of
Wetrton, W.Va. The host and host·
ess, John and Belinda Dean, Jeremy Dean, James Dean and Sarah

Parsons enrolls at NC
Carl Parsons, Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, baa been accepted by
Northwestern Coli~~be1in
1991.
cluses in the A~
He is majoring m tbe IUIOIIIOiive
IIIChnology J1Dg11111.

A I R

.

on

Rock Sprfugs UMW meet .

SUNDAY
CARPENTER· Rev. Calvin
Evans will be lhe guest speaker at
the Mt. Union Baptist Church in
Carpcnltr on Sunday at 6:30 p.r:t.
The Calvin Evans Family Singers
will perform. Pastor J9e Sayre
invites the public.

Y!!~r Key to Great Buys
SPRING VA illY CINEMA
446 4514

.

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Sl .OO MIIAUI •IIIIT lUESCliiY

1991 ......
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FRIDAY
MAY 31ST
9AM • 5 PM

Following dinner gifts were presented to the guestS and music and
singing by the hosts were presented. Games and swimming were
enjoyed by all

w.~~·

MIDDLEPOI1, OHIO

CLASSIFIEDS. .. .

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...D/II-IIoolt4"WIIInl•••__,•1\aa n •aat
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992-5627
219 N. SECOND

DEUVERED. SERVICED
Peyment figured at 1011. Down,
20 Yra .. 12.21111. Apfl .

.

Swartz, Pomeroy, a senior majoring in pl:ysical therapy, daughter of
Roger and Marlene Swartz: and
Tammy Holter, an industrial and
sys1ems engineering maj&lt;!r, daughter of Ronald Holter, Btdwell, and
Linda Holler, Racine.

AUMC men honor mothers

,. Family celebrates birthdays

Glan &amp; Iran.

,/

{_~/;·.~···

'

SATURDAY
CHES1ER · The annual Chester
High School Alumni Banquet and
Dance will be held at the Chester
POMEROY • There will be a
Elementary School on Saturday. 12-step A.A. meeting at the
The banquet will begin at 6:30p.m. J.T.P.A. office in Pomeroy on Sun·
followed by a dance with music by day at7 p.m. ·
Charlie Brown Ritz. Call 378-6294
or 985·3855 for late reservations.
LOTIRIDGE • There will be a
smorgasbord dinner at the LotPOINT PLEASANI' • The Lib- tridge Community Center on Sunerty Mountaineers will be appear- day from noon to 2 p.m. Cost is $5
ing at the Senior Citizens Center in for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12.

SYAIIUIG AT$29900

•Dinette Sets

•Queen Set of
Bedding

'

TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Building from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring Country Grass. Ronnie Wood
will be the caller. Public is invited.

RECUNERS ·

All with •1m illillr.rillg mattmMI.

Starting At

SJ99

$39900

SALE

llg. S15JI.OO

;~ala

Flog.14ti.OO

lllllh strock patt•n ill patel colan.

•

LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a hrmn sing on Friday
evening featunng the Daily Family
and other !ileal talent. Steve Reed
invites the public. Refreshments
will be served.

Save..,.

1MB RAil

e&lt;:onfeqlctrary Sofa &amp; Lovesaat

~

FRIDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP • The
Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the township building.
VGA
&amp;riiFhlcl

SALE

.

POMEROY • Free clothing day
· will be ~eltl at the Salvation Army
·' jn Pomerpy on Thursday from I0
1 a.m. to .noon, All area residents in
need .of Clothing are welcome.
'

Summer Sale

111.1759.00 .

·.

versity ill Durllam, C. thill fill.
He plans to get I
in public
policy and intenlational relations
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds reviewed Reynolds stated that the story
and then follow in his fllher's steps '
the
book ''The Wind at Momin " achieves the perfect blend of hisin a Navy career, perhaps as an
by James Vance Marshall at ~e toric facet and epic drama.
intelfigence officer.
recent meeting of the Mi4dJepon
Mrs. Hackett presided at the
The popular "Concert Under the Lirenry Club held at the home of meeting and welcomed the memElms" series at Ohio University ·Mrs. George HackeU Jr.
bers and one guest, Nellie Zerkle.
During her review Mrs. Roll call was answered with memwill begin on June 19 and continue
every Wednesday at 7 p.m. through Reynolds stated that the novel bers and guest telliJig or a histo.tical
July 17. Ron Socciarelli is the · recreates the true story of Magel- dream unfulfiiJCd.
.
director. Meigs Countians will lan's historic voyage in the autumn
Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs.
remembCr him for the many sum- or 1519 when five ships and 273 Reynolds gave brief insights or
mer concerts he bas conducted in men set sail into the unknown. thCU' lives and Mrs. Hackett read an
P
. omeroy_ over the year$ under three years later one ship and 19 article on "Tea at the Ritz." She
men sttuggled back They·were ~ . also presented the gavel to Mrs.
$110Dsorship or Bank One.
first men ever to have sailed IIOWKI Bernard Fultz who will serve as
QuillS from everywhere will be the world. The voyage was beset president in the fall.
on display at Quilt National 1991 with stonns, s~recks, mutiny
The hostess served a three
wn. The story course English rea as it is observed
to be held at' the Dairy Barn South· and fear of the
eastern Ohio Cullur&amp;l Arts Center was told from the view of a young in England.
cabin boy, Juan Vizcaya. Mrs.
on Dairy Avenue in Athens.
The exhibition will highligl)t
work of 69 quilt artists from 26
- states, Canada, E.ngland, Germany
and Japan.
.
On Mother's Day the men of the · Nicole and Kr,le, the Plains; Cindy
They will be on display frOm Alfred United Methodist Church . and Rick Dtllinger, Cassie and .
· June 1 through July 28.
. .honored 21 mothers with gifts of Richie, and Iris and Clarence
.
potted geraniums. Special recogni- Warner, Athens.
Kenny Wi~s needs YOU. · tion was given to Clara Follrod,
Marlene Donovan &amp;I tended
Have you signed up yet to par· oldest mother, aDd Tonya Brooks, Sigma Beta Tau, National Nurses
ticipate in the fune 15 Ohio River youngest mother. Lisa Henderson, Honor Society at Ohio University
Sweep?
Sharon Gilligoly and Gertrude on May 19. She assisted with the
Kenny is organizing the local Robinson gave readings. Florence program
, SwCCP. where selected sites along Spencer read from a letter of John
Sarah Caldwell attended the
57 mtles of Meigs County river- Taylor concerning his mother, Icy graduation of her granddaughter,
front will be cleaned. Volunteers Taylor.
Kim E.wing from Meigs High
are asked to register with the Meigs
Alfred Church celebrated family School on May 19.
County Litter Control office at day with a dinner at the church on
Martha, Joe and Will Poole and
992-6360.
May 19. Rev. Sharon Hausman · Nellie Parker attended the birthday
As a reward for picking UJi litter gave tbe blessing. Those auencling party of Homer Parker at
along ~e river bank, eac:h volun- ,from ·. a distance included Larry Stiversville on May 19.
teer will be gtven a T·shin. '!)'ash Ritchie, Caldwell: Kathy Essman, · ·
··
bags and stoves will be provided .
.
and everything that can be recycled T l
•
willbe,whiletherestwillgotothe
landfill.
The Pomeroy Uni!ed Methodist "Share God's Blessings."
Have a nice weeki
Church, St. Paul Lutheran Church
Students will study the Bible
and Trinity CongreJPitional Cbun:h and .Participate i~ art activiti!ls,
will be holding a Joint Vacation mustc, servtce proJCCIS, recreauon
Bible School from June 10 tluough and worship, all centered on the
June 14 at the Trinity Church, Sec- theme of blessings.
More information may be
ond and Lynn Stree!S in Pomet'!ly
from
9-11:30
a.m.
daily.
obtained
by visiting the church
Point Pleasant, W.Va. on Saturday.
Classes will be offered for chil- office from 9 a.m. to noon, TuesFriday m01'11i11gs, or by
POMEROY • The Belles and dren age three throogh sixth gnlde c~fN~gh
. g 992-3172..
.
'
Bealis Western Square DiuK:e Club and all children or die community
will hold a dance Saturday from are invited to attend. The theme is
8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center with caller Scotty
Schaver from Akron.
Several donations were made at
LONG BOTIOM • There will the May meeting of the Rock
be a hymn sing at the Mt. Olive Springs United Methodist Women.
Community Church in Long Bot·
The meeting opened with The
tom on Saturday at 7 p.m. featuring Lord's Prayer by the group follocal talent. Pastor Lawrence Bush lowed by the singing of hymns led
invites the public.
by Sharon Fobner.
Officers reports were given and
HENDERSON • The Gallia Betty Will gave the card repon. , , •
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Prayer for the sick and needy'
Club will hold a dance Saturdiy was given by Katherine Riley.
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Bc;:t;oster gave devotions
Community Ceiuer, Henderson, with
. • "Mother MaP:" and
W.Va. Open to all western style "Mother's ~.·
square dancers.
1be JX'Og11111 given by Katherine
Riley was entitled "Seasons of a
REEDSVILLE. •· The Olive Woman's Life."
Township Volunteer Fire DepartAs it was Katherine Riley's last
ment will have a baked steak din- meeting with the group, she was
ner on Saturday from 4-7 p.m. at given a card signed by the group
the ftre swion in Reedsville.
and a gift.
Dorothy Jeffers closed the meetRACINE • Enleltainment at the ing with prayer.
Racine Star Mill Park will begin
Saturday at 7;30 p.m. Dares thereafltr will be every other Saturday.

Meigs honor students named

Community calendar

In- Calllog
~1000HX

D Wllh
, ,.,.. .

,

. Mark Walter Crooks was the
only recipient of a Susan Park
Scholarship not able to attend the
Middleport Alum!)i banquet where
they were presented Saturday
nighL
Mark, son of Gene Crooks who
graduated from Middleport in
1958, will be attending Duke Uni-

Weather

Enioy Summer In ·Style

•

dred.

Marshal/board meets to select president
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- None of the four finalists for
Marshall University's presidency
has strong suppon on the Univemty of West Vifginia System board,
which makes reaching a consensus
difficult, Chancellor Charles Man·
ning said.

By Cbarieae HoeiUcb
Tax appraisers are in Meigs
Couaty now carrying out the first
step in the planned reappraisal
wbtch will take place later this
summer.
.
Bill Wickline, auditor, advises
that ptoperties are now being listed
and checked for S11'11Ctural changes,
such as additions, but that pricing
on each property for tax purposes
won't talce place until later this
sutnmer.
.
The work is being done by
Appraisal Research Corporation as
a preliminary to the actual reappraisal which according to staie
law has to be done every six years.
This is the year!
. But there is good news . The
new figures won't go on the tax
books until 1992. And, of course,
taxes for 1992 are not payable until
. 1993.

Thct Dilly Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....;_Community Comer----- Literary Club reviews
N:
dearee
Mage/an's historic voyage

·Livestock report----~

ta, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi

~tna

continues .

By Tile A.odl4ed Prell
and much of New EDgland.
Temperlblre8 were wmn in 1M · On Wedneaday, thl!lldentorms
nation's eastern ball early today caused flooding, tornadoes and
and the reJioa pqaec1 for aaotber damaging hlil in Nebruka. Power
day of record-brakillg bciiL Severe 0111qa were replllcd in Kansas.
High ~emperature records for
thunderstorms continuod to baUer
the Midwest
Rain fcll emy today in parts of
DUm
Washington ~. nortbem California, Idalio and Nebraska.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Severe thunderstorms were the selectiona Wednesday night in
·expected to develop in parts of the Ohio Lottery:

Accu·W~f~t

VIa

weat~er

Thuraclly, May 30, 1991

SATURDAY
JUNE 1ST
·5 PM

�•
~--

• Page -B-The Dally Sentinel

.

·

Thursday, May 30, 1111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Host families sought
:Meigs County scholars
honored during luncheon
Five top Meigs COunty scbolars
from Eastern, Southern and Meigs
High Schools ~ being featured oo
the WSKZ television f salure to die
"Best of !he Class 1991" which
will airdwina May and June.
All five Sllldents; valediCIOI'iw
or !heir classes, are being fealuled
in Public Service AllnouncemeniS

toms, their native Jan~ and !he

Mrs. Shirley
Coleman,
Pomeroy, local coordinalor for the
Academic Year in Americs High
School Exchange Program, is
. presently interviewing families in
this part of Obio to host a foreign
exchange student Tile cross culwral learning program places
teenagers from Europe, Asia and
Latin America with Amer!Cin fam··
ilies for a semester or school yesr.
Ohio has been host to dozens of
foreign Students this year. "Spring
time is the most exciting time of
the program year for these students," says Coleman. "They love
the prom, yearbooks and class
rings." Customs like these, which
are part of any American teenagc:r' s ell)lerience, ~ new and differ·
entforreens from abroad.
The program also gives American families !he chance to learn
abol!t a foreign culture. Exchange
students brinl[ their hnlidav cus-

l!w were videotaped during a lun·

cheon held at the Huntington
Museum of Art oo May 6.
Honored were Andrea Leigh
Cleland, Basrem High School; Ienaifcr Dllrlene Smilh, Soudlem High
Scllool; and Aaron B. Sheets, Jennifer L. Taylor and Kristen A.
Slawta",lll of Meigs High School.

Ladies Circle elects officers

Off'ICel!l wen: elected at !he May
meeting of the Faith Gospel Ladies
Circle held at the home of Mary
Alice Bise wilh Virginia Walton as

Business Services =-

Humphrey, Diane and Tomisina
White, Dolly Reed.
Devotions were read by Sandy.
Cowdery to celebrate Mother's
Day.
There were 24 shut-in calls
reported and C{U'ds were sent to ·
many from the group.
A mother-daughter banquet will
be held at the church on Tue~y
with a theme of shoes.
The June meeting will be held in
the church basement with Diane
While and Tammy Cowdery.

special di•hea of lbeir homelands
~to lh~ir Ameri~ homes. "It's
like a lnp abroad without evc:r Ieav·
ing home," IIOICS Coleman. "These .. to-bolless.
Officers are Vivian Humphrey,
interesting young ambassadors
soon win the hearts of their hosts president; Dolly Reed, vice presiTiley arrive as strangers and dent; Diane White, treasurer;
become 'sons' or 'daughters' in Tammy Cowdery, secrewy; and
Sandy Cowdery, dl;votionalleader.
their American families."
Attending were Erica Boring,
Next year's participants, chosen
from hundreds of applicants, will Bobbie Reed, Tammy and Christoarrive in Ohio in August. They all pher Cowdery, Debbie Barringer,
SIIC8!t Ellj!lish, sre covered by full Sandy Cowdery, Vivian
medical.msurance, and have !heir
~wn spe~ding money. Host ramilies rece1ve a travel scholarship
worth up to $800 off !he cost of an
A wedding shower was held Purtell, and Duane and Hazel Stan·
A1FS studyflravel abroad prognun. recently for Kathy Hess at !he Zion ley.
.·
,
•
Families interested in choosing qurch of Christ The shower was
. The door Jl11ZO W!IS presented to
a boy or girl to host for the 1991-92 given by Julie Stanley, Becky Fos- Cindy Nau. Other gifts went to Ida
school yesr should contact Cole·. ter, Lena, Bev and Roberta Nappec. Murphy. Charlotte ~ess, Mary
man at 742-2125 to set up an inter· · Cards and gifts were presented Cole~, Martha Cunrungham and
view or call regional director to the hcnored guest and refresh· Demck Nau.
Lynne David at 1-800-322-4678.
ments were served to Mary Cole·
man, Bonnie Arnold, Margaret Chester alumni to meet
Hysell, Charlotte and Becky Hess,
· The Annual Chester High ·
It was not~d there w11l be a I ulie Stanley, Lena and Bev Nap- School Alumni Banquet and Dance
county hymn smg the last Sunday p~r. Angie Hess, Peggy Bole, will be held at Cbester Elementary: •
.Marlha Cupningham, Freda Elam,
in June at Tuppers Plains. · .
onSa~y.
.
The next mccong, 1une 27, will Dorothy Reeves, Ida Murphy ,
The
banCJuet
will
at
be held at the Hemlock Grove Bossie Hysell. Evelyn Thoma, Ann 6:30 p.m. with a dancebetoserved
follow
at
Cindy, Lee, and Derrick
Chruch and a ladies quartet concert Williams,
9
p.m.
with
music
by
"Chsrlie
Nau.
.
·
will be presented by Charlotte
Sending gifts were Lee Hysell, Brown Ritz."
~ben, Jane Wise, Donna J~- Kay,
Call 378-6294 or 985-3855 for ·
Bill, Jeff, Joe, Jessica McEI·
!"~ &amp;'!li Sharon Hawley. The pubhc
late
reservations.
roy, Bertha Bing, Bob and Msrge
IS IRVIt,ed.

"-"·111'11
..........

...........
FUUYIIISUI£D

•suLL

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

SIDING CO.
...._

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KRISTEN SLAWTER

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.

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It/ JENNIFIR TAYLOR
1..

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report 011 Cbarldine Alldre.

.

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110 SI!IINY

...
'

TO fUCE AN AD Clll 99~·21 56
,, MONDAY tl,ru FRIDAY I A.M.. to 5 P.M.
'

•..
'

JENNIFER SMITH

AARON .SHEETS

'

..
'

Circle graduates
· Marie E. Circle, son of Patricia
Circle and the late Melvin G. Circle, gradUIIed from tbe University

of Kansas at Lawrence, Kan., on
May 19.
Circle received a Bachelor of
AriS degree inpoliliCII acience. He
·bad been a member of tbe University of Kansas ' ~~~~~~Ching band and
numerous pep bands for all four

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

Al\'DREA CLELAND

I

I

I

I

:Mother-daughter banquet held
The annual mother-daughter

. blnquet of 1bo RICIDe Fine Blptill
Cburdl was beld IIICflltly with the
theme ''In Mother's Poocaeps "

A CSJnd dimc:r was ICrved 10
13llldics.
A short mpOID,P.IIIWmu Collowod b)' I
. IJIIPPCl show ailed, "Nooh IIIII lbe
Ark". J*!C:Dted by Roaalee SayN
and Lisa Wodanan was enjoyed by

•

•

'

all.

Hanaialba*ds were preaenrecl
to Oamet Ervine, oldest mother;
Carol Pipe. younflllll mother; Ellie
Smitb, mother with moat fllllily
preaent; Shirlee Cappo, daughter
who CillO the fwlbeit.
Bertha M. Sayre, Miuionary
Circle, was thanked for a memoJable evening,
,•

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2 t~thel
price of

12

exp.
15

exp.
24

exp1•
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36

exp.

$2.99
$3.99
$5.99
$7.99

v,u 1r lh '\t
l~"* ll'i ub!tmg ,,r~llCr.
~~ ::.lure h •r Jl!t.lil::..

I

everyday LON price•

PHOTO CASH
BONUS COUPONS

FRUTHS PHdTO SHOP

QrreetiOft.

~c..,

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

ToillunL ,......,.. -~~.- ·
'
DAY 811'011! I'UILIC&amp;TION
CO" OIADLINE ~1HIOA.M. IATUIIOAY ,
MONDAY PAPER
. :. 2'00 P .M. MO!ID&amp;Y
TUEIOAY ,APJi!A
- 2 :00P.M. TUIIDAY
WIDHDDAY APIA
. - 2'00 P.M. WIDNIIOAY
THUAIOAY 'PliPER
- 2 ,oo~ .M . THUUOAY
FAIOAt PAPIA
- 2 t00 P.M . F91D&amp;V
IUNOAY PAPIA
polio Dilly

..
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25°/o

,Clauified

•

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·- 1lol0-tfft

11 - Perm EQu"""*'t

12- Wantltd to luv

11- IGhoolt • lnlttUCtton

13-LiVIIIDcll
14-Hay • Grein

11 - lhdio, TV. Cl R.. ~,
17-MIIIC..,IIOWI
U-W_.tcl To Oo

21

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AWilli
GOLI USSOIS

&amp;&amp; - Seed &amp; Fertiliur

A,.oCodol14

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AIHCodt 104

...6-Gtllipolit

182-MiM.Ort

171-". Pl ...lnt

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14~-ANbit

Jn-WIInot

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33-Perrnt for ltle '

71--C•mping lq_wlpment
7t-~mp•• a Motor Htmll

Hom• tor 1111

34-···'"·· ..........

77- AutoA..,M

Ae-•1•

•••-Letert
937- autt••

....

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41-H•u• fOI'Rtnl
42-Mobite Hom• for. Atnl
4l-ftflnt tor lien•
44-Apertment fof Rent
41-FwrnilhM "oocns

•e?-Co.tville

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.

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with the lnt•nll

-tt.

sv-•

of ilollort Wllilltl, -

dint end Prlnalp•t MMI...,.
1317 CoU•a• llood. lyre-

ASSORTED

••

On front porch lltd in livin&amp; room illside. Chin• ablnet, bulfll, stareo calli·
net, antique lll!in&amp; mtclline, dilh•,
re~:ords. houaehold itemS, hall n..
N1entendo tapn end much more.

SPORTS
BLOOPER
VIDEOS

'•

••
' ••

I

·cHIPS

'•
•

•••

.•

REGULAR AND
BARBECUE
lEG. S2.29

~

.
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•,•

SALE

.

••
'•
;•

cuoo. Ohio, duotng ttMI 110
dly pertocl beginning Moy

i

MONDAYJ JUNE 3

••

POTATO

10 AM-4 PM

31, 1111.
Ill 30. 1to

. 10 Alll-4 PM

PRICE ·REDUCED - PARTIAL OWNER
FINANCING AVAILABLE!

awaa---.....n7

F&amp;Uib-$tHor
'
IICICI O¥BIS-$H or

The pnce has bien reduced to
S81 ,900 and owner fin•nc•na of uP

KEN'S AFPUANCE

to 80% of purchase amount may be
possible for quallfyin&amp; person to
buy very nice II!Jt home on 3\t
acm in Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths. 2
•ataps, rtnted I BR apt: l'nlperty
1ncludu 4,800 $11. ft. farm bide.
1nd mobile home.
Gall 614-992-1104 fo~ Appt.

SEIVICE
9t2-SUJ • HS..J561
au..
hllllflle

742-2421 ·

. 2'11 .. •••I*
u..

IULLDOIIl 1M1

'·
I••.

. IACKHOI WORK.

HOMI!Iml,

·''

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.-I
••
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10:00 em-1:00pm

DCAYAMG

,~.

LANDCLIAIING,
WATII 8lld IIWIR
UNII

11UCIICI AYAIAIU

r •• ••

384 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 44531
•
(814) 446-8620
•
2601 JACKSON AVENUE POINT PLEASANT. WV. 26660
(304) 876-2303
788 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT,OH.46780
(614) 992-6491'

thru letunley

HOWAlD

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$199

O;tEN

Tu•dly

FREI ElnMATEI .

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s,ua· 1111

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by

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667-6179

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~UALJTY

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NO Jot TOO IIAU
FlEE ESTIIATES

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WI ley WiMit W. Do .
WI DoWilllt

•Siding
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=sJ..'"J. =-~~to 1.

Clollwo,

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don 11041.,1. IIIIo to
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don ot the
MimiOI·
pellullollna or ot 1111 hoiNI

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SNYDERS .

Contact
STEVE WNm
992-6434
After 5 p.m •

DI'S'::li'AIIa

S6Y..nls,_l••

NOTICI OF AVAILAiiiUTY
FOil PUIUC INIPICfiON
The . Caaletuu CDIIII
lowdT...- ...
Mlnuel-mofo,.....

'"

FRIDAY, MAY 31-10 AM-4 PM
SATURDAY, JUNE 1

.

SUNROOF
INSTALUnON

O'ftlj • • . .

Hind Tufting
Cu.tom D111pa1

BULLETIN
BOARD
-

· pol .

PIOFISSIONAL

MICIOWlYJ

• .llif I

124 Mulberry llvenue, Pomelo~

.,'•
:·,••
•
I
' •••
••

Gutt.t:t
Downepouta ,.
Gutter Cleenlng
Painting
mE mr•am

•IIOlSTRT
111-la. .....

MOVING OUT SALE

••

sa••..

47-WIIItH to .. tnt
41-EQwiOment for Aent
41 - For L•••

BOICE

,.' .

lepalr, lupllle1,

••- a,.c. ,., "'"'

R~eufte fttf

. . . ..,. 1 -

IIIW,- _,All

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lervlaa for
1110. In IIDDr... Wlllt

24 PACK-12 OZ. CANS

CLUIS
JO. I. IIAPOID

31 - lott • Acr•11•
31- AIIIIh.... W1n1H

112-New Hewen

141-A..ine
,.~...,

·

773 - Mt~on

31-Hom• to. Solo

71-hltt &amp; Motort for lilt
71-Auto ttlrlt •

32-Mo~n•

176-Applo Coovo

241-"lo Gm.de 143-PDrtltnd
ZH--0..'11" Oiol. '247-lolln Follt

CUSIOII lOLl

73- v.,., • • ~a·,
74-Matarc:ycl•

418-Loo~

111-Chtlltl,

388-Vtftton

6 POl sss

71 - Au101 for lilt
72 - Truclll for I ell

23-l'rofW ...... IIIP¥ioet

M ..oi'ICo .• WV

Mel .. County

-euem•• Opportunhy

"'

$499

$399

BILl SLACK
992-2269

~, 11'. :llr. ' liP'

1J-In•ur.nce
14-lvtin . . Tratning .

'

SIIES 30·44
ASSOnED stYLES
AND COLORS

•FIREWOOD

17.- llutialllnattumlftfl

11-Fruits. Veg . .tll•
11-fOf 111&amp; or Trade ·

c\ll\d

W.med

••"

RC COLA

11- Pet• tor Sll&amp; ..

f

22-Monw to LOin

following telephont&gt; exchanges ...

:M7-Ch•Nt•

••
••

•LIGHT HAULING

11-luildllno luopll•

·--····"'

12-litt~etiOn

01110 41771..616
614.•741·1904

lOOPING

""·7•0

0...

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f tn~ni.lol

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OFF

........

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

a•-Misc. Meroh.-.•

AU---IIPIIIIIn

~~---~mllloft

CISTEINS, ETC.

4-...1-1

••.00

?4M
- . . ,u 10
I ..

.......

POOLS,

NO SIIIIIAT

949·1161

11.00

U-Amiquoo

....

4-o~wo

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wMt oliO ..,. . In tho ~ . " . . ."' ,....._, anti ttto G•fll·

CASE
KNIVES

J-ln~ry

J-AMHNOflmtfttl

7- Y•ll 1111
in tdvencel
• 8-ft.ubtie- Sete • A.tc:16an

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• ..,, -etl•tlfloddlsplev.

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BELTS

14.1)0

11 - Houtlltald Q_.
12-......... -

· - "·""
Acll
1-Lelt
end
Found

•A ol•lffi• lllellfen.,._-!- T..ao.tt, IMIIMt I•·

'

FREE Coupons lor you to
save lor FREE photollnlsh·
tng 1118rchandlse and· processing. Look ior coupons
on every Roll Print Order
raturnad to you !rom

.., ...

eri-.Mt·IIM

11.30/doy

11

1-CoN of Th.,kl

CJI befOre 2 :00p.m

llLWMtl.

SHill &amp; TID

'run I • .,. 11 no .......
'ltri• ol 1~ fot ... c_..,ll-'•• ;s doullle prict ol •• Mit.

-loin

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MEN'S

Rote

~• . 01111• ., .... - ....... ,.. ••• , .
old.
"
1 .10 . . COUM foqlds paid in ..... ~.
•,,.. edt - OM&amp; Ja, and Fouftcl . . wM• 11 wont. Will _,,

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.... - · -•otter Iiiii dl! . (Chtel&lt;

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·

APPALACHIAN .:1
=~~=:·::..or:::
_, • Tulldly.
WATEI
011\tMIIMJ TOUII.tU.: Friday,
HAULING
fill r•w. M'l, 111. I a.m. • 1

"At 11 nl'n" 1 , . _..
Pl. •••••• ,

113.00

18

Montlllv

•Ado tlllll '"""be plld In ldtOIICOIN
. c.t• Of Thenb
Haf!ipy Aft
In
Ill•

~

Park awareness
:
Mary Powell, Meigs Couaty County for public enjoyment and
·: Park District Director, bas writ· apprec181ion. This may be conservten a series or articles alloat ing sreas in llieir entirety or desi.$0·
, . Melp County's parks ID obser· inl! park and recreation faciliues
, vance or "Park AwareDell Wlihln these sreas wilhout destroy: Month." Emphasis or 11er artldell in'- the integrity of a property,
; will be oa tbe varloas parks Ia building or waterway.
An organizational structure was
• ~he county, how they were atab·
designod
10 provide for the UbnOSt
- lished, and the rac:illtles avalb!ble.
eff'IC~
in the llllllS8Ction of the
• Tbis first article, bowever, deals
District
s
Internal and external
with establlsbment ot the Melp
·
affairs,
the
componen!S of which,
".•County Park District.
by their nature or character, arc
· ~ Special psrk districts, created related to the development, growth
· under Secuon 1545 of !he Ohio and welfare of the eommunity.
The district must open the
: Revised Code, ~ locally govc:rned
and have !he pwpose of preserving untapped reservoir of resources to
: and conserving the unique natural develop parks, recreation, and
IOilrism whicb will prompt subsc·
sreas of !he community.
· Each district fme tunes that pur- quent economic expansion.
Tile county pomnes an ilttrip·
pose to the needs of the community
or sres 11 serves. Some district are ing bistory, appoKilnately 62 miles
nature preservation agencies, others or river ?rootage and waterway
' help fill their community's needs which enjoys a great deal of use
· and sre !he only agency for both even in its undeveloped state. Tile
· organized recreation and open scenic beauty wilhin the c&lt;iunty space preservations. Most fall the cliffs, deep hollows, lsrge open
' ·somewhere in between, serving spaces, and the vast amount of
!heir communities without dupli- forested sreas provide other oppor·
, .catin• services offered by other !unities.
Tile Meigs County Park District
. agenc1es.
is
in it's infancy. With vuious
Tile need for a~encies such as
plans
formulated, the next phase is
: the local park distrtct is increasingly important as Ohio becomes more to~Mnrea~le~B~~
urbanizccL Tile Meigs County Park which will be adequate for the
: District was formed to fill this development and maintenance of
:need. The need is for nearby parts projects.
When projecta are developed
in which to walk; play, illd escape
from the hustles 111d pressures of and promoted, they will help Meigs
everyday life.
County to become more attractive
Tile JllllliOIC of the Meigs Coun- to new indllltries, businesses, and
ty Park Diatrict is to JII'CSCi •e and touriJls, as well as provide enjoy·
conserve the natural sreas of Meigs meat for local citizenS.

I

8l£PRINTS

years.

Altending the ceremony besides
his mother, were his sister Marianne, Kansas City, !Can.; his' grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Blo(reslee, Pome!Oy.
The Blakeslee stopped at tbe
home of !heir other daughrer and
family, Mr. and Mrs. James Butch·
er, Rockpon, Ind., on the way to
and from the pldualion.

I

15

I
10

in.,.,.,,,
d• atl• pultfiOM'-' to m••

'

I

3

I A.M. until NOON SATU.DAY

t . ....,, llftt tl., ell ruM

GUARANTEED
NEXT DAY OR

I

Words
11
11

Dev•
1

,

...

,Res•••
.
I
-~-·­
IFIIU ..,--TUI
V. C. YOUNG II

•' • •l.....

AT YOUR AREA FR_
UTH PHARMACY STORES

PHOTO SHOP

~. -c.

The Area's Nu111ber ·l Marketplace

.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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.
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.... - - Pol, ..., 3111

Utter. QIADLMI: 1:10 p.m.·
..,..,_llllodlltorun.
~- • I:GO p.no.
~~
2:00

1,625 Ul.-135.145

CAIFENIU

"•'

$2.00 OFF

CUSTOM 1ar
1101115 &amp; IMAGES

I•••• L W;llalll

COOL DEALS FOR

'

.........

992..641 or

••

-

.

• •11111111".

CIIAI
CotUIMTIOM

BISSELL·
.UILDIIS

-

lolur-

r.::.L."- 111. 1ft .... -

FHEEIMAJES

•VINYL IIDING
•ALUMINUM IIOING
4LOWNIN
INIULATION

.

1J.I'lWIY •
t::.:-..:Usll-.....
.....,,..._ .........

..... Ill.

..1-Rt

~?JJ!~Pu~~wf~Howship meets ·

I

=·t'W:..~
'!IIIIo .... ,..,, ......

.,.entDIIsllngMII

Wedding shower held ·. ·

Fellowship met recently at the
Bradford Church of Christ with
devotions by All~gra Will, Dexter
Church of Christ
Jane Hazelton led !he opening
song and Ruth Underwood hsd the
opening prayer.
Kathryn Johnson conducted the
business meeting wilh secrewy's

Qlllplllle
l Vtclt'dty

rtaaa!ION

·~

•Reoflng

•llltulatlon

llkxsa;:tiAIIMHar:..,.
:&amp;.-.
..............
..... ,,, Vl!lrl - .
c::::l.............. ...
~

�•

Sentinel
9

Wlnted to Buy

SNAFUe

.,_IInce B

Thul'8day, May 30, 1991

1891
72 Truc:U tor Sell

- - to buy, -

I drywr
"'
................
--·- 4
IIOt
p.111.ltloal

-

WO- To 1ur. J - Autoo
wllh or • - - - . Col
!.My Uwly. IM ~~~ II •

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Colno. II.T.S. Coin
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Television
Viewing

~! He'(, Ia' l'lllJI.t&gt; ""-'
;~ Filla" Mnt A~~~ 11C.U6

41t4,
Coo •• loft.

'k IJI PI, N, New

..,.

Point,

For: All Old U.l.

T01&gt; -

The Dally senune1 Pill• 11

BORN LOSER
~A*tQOOO

-

•

~·-sos ~'1t~~:::i:~

Vlnt&amp;4WD'I '
.~

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111

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....._Aller 4p.JIIL, 114 1• I

111-4100.

LAYNI'S RIRNITUIII
Ccue'Pt ...... ~

..........

PICKIHifURNITUIII

...,...._

........
.......... M

~'Ill

0 TllllrDLghllllll Dignl

CAN ANVONE TELL ME
WJ.IO J.IIT GOLIATH IN TJ.IE
f.IEAP WI TI-l A STONE?

0 Wlll1ll Ttrdey
DOutHOIIH

I KNOW ! TJ.IE

R0 B V A

. 1:11 (J) ••tlaMCI
I:IO&lt;Ze Ill NIC Nftl Cl
Cll Alllliit end Colli ItO

GREAT 6ATSBV!

I ~~c:.::.:-

OUp&lt;;loH
1:31 (I) AIICiy CJriflllh
7:00
Ill W11M1

-

1-...,-'1;;....;lr-:.;,IF--il':'.=..,l":''-1

Q

of

ll&gt; e
'-ne
. , iJi I Dream at Jeannie
.SCIAM-Lm ANSWIRS
s-2.&lt;1
·
Chatty - Gland - Idiot .:. Humble - BACON
1think that the life expectancy of everyone would
grow tremendously If green vegetabiBS smelled as
good as BACON.

~Q

1111
liD ~:I Court Attolr
Q Q
«J
Q

==;.ntor

42 Mobile Hcimes ,
ror Rent

D Ilea- end

111rTrollor,
....... - Rl~:-· DopOIII'
No ......
211r T.-. Etno.lonoy A!llrt-

7:30 ~

J bId - · fumlollod lrtllor,

Coneulllng PhanMGL,Iervta•
,.,.. ......

Hooplll~

....

wv.

ltd-_. . ·- ----_, .......- ....... =::a
- _,...., .,...,. end

.....
" "-.nd-wllltllll
"- be · aline eottwn P"'hf!'. lnll,.. - . ..............'JIIMUII.

Amoo II :IOM7WZ30 EX1 II,
llon-frt. 1:00 All-4:00 Pll, ,.,.. ,..,_,.
bid farm, Doocllno ,.,.. opplylnf

DRIVERS • OTA ·
IIIIIEDIATE .HIRING WITH 111IIEDIATE ANSWERS. Pllono .In
ollllllcau- 10ott&gt;1od 7A.II.··
1P:ll.~...Mondo)' tllrouah l'rldoy,
..., _,. onil - will ond nollly you of - • - .
5P.II. riiO dey. -

.,-

•'

..

Comlllei'GIII

Ai:Y~"'!:· ~ .

2M Will Colllgl, Rio Grondi,

OIIID.

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WANTED: Port-tlmo

Proetlcol -

1211 llrWIII ,.,..

-

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two oommuniY .r.,rou~
tor
with ~ • 11ment11
dlubllhllo In GaiUo Caunly
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17114 ft. · - ground round
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pool. Uood Z - · 11 -ronty, 1011r - · • - - · - . . . tru 1-.
Evoryt::t.,ln al dod. ...... 1- . &amp;J,IOO. 114-

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produclo. -

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mill up Ill. Olivo Rd. R.lt, In llcllnll, fiWU.

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Cantil""' 44.000 mltoo, 111 qlno. 114ProvF••·Iclod.HCipoft~~a .ThHN . IQ.'IIOO.

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114-

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I'M SORTA
HOPIN' FER A
BODACIOUS

WANT FER
YORE BIRFDAY,
. LOWEEZ.Y?

AI.ARM
CLDCIC

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Awrollon 1101-. ropolrod. I ro-bulft moloro In !Floc~, RON

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WATER WILLI DRILLED: 11i1.

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......._.,....,...
1711.

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UphOIItery

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Pau . Paa

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li:u4

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AUpua ·

Opening 1!184: Q
,__ __,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J

casll the jack of clubs to draw dwnmy's last trump. Soulll fuffN lite
spade exit and caabed lite diiii!QDd
nine. When the eigbt did DOt drop,
South's 1081og tricks totallll flllll' one trump
and three dlaJnoacll.
11 declarer bid ltarted Oil lite beartl
at trick two, he coulcl bave ruffed the
seven of dlamoodlln tbe .o.~--· ••A

·-••••&gt; ~..

~de Ida contract
.. Note finally tbe inadvllabllit1 of tbe
lead. II West bad llarted with eltber a
spade or.lbe queen of dlamoadl, the
defenders would bave come to four
tricks - one spade, two dtamoadland
a trump.
ce-.-ANiilNILU S i l l -

•

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
31

8 Glacill rtctoe

12 Dlllrlct
13 Neighbor of

u.s.

14 Blind 11-

18 Wager
17 Zoll heroine
18Ac-

Farrow
111 Ponllffl
21 Saucer's

mala ·
22 Conductor

- ,,.,rn

24 Delallon

28- Cl1lre,

WIL
'
27 Cracked
28Hon
d'oeuvre
mlxtur:.

~!mono

Anower 10 ,__l'tdrrll

oailll

32 Gone~clertal (lbiN.)
33 Shrtd

34 HandtH
37 Sgt.

40 Hone

41 Rtnas

43 Club-

44 SlrHICII'I
48 Sallllherb
47 lnlar -:
among
olhert
41 FlrNrm
ownera' org.
50 Suppoolng

(2 wdL)

51 Compt1cont
52 Enryono
53 NutNftCI
54 HIO'nl .. Pli't
55 CauiUc

oub1lance
58 P1la

DOWN

LeaiUI lallbotl

f..~!l'rlmetlme U..

,....

91

ASTRO-GRAPH

...•'•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
.,

'

.

Mar31, 1111
It looka like you could play a major part
In a worthW!ill endeavor In lho )1881
:~ - · But you won't- lite llmollghl;
• • . you' I oplrlle trom the wings with more

-

'" concet II for tiiiUitl lhln IlPPI• III.
li?IUI (lllr 11..,.,. It) Your great~

";.~

•.

.,,
,·.

=

~ lyet on the Prlzli Slel'eo.

...-....

,.,

e

Pass

Nor"

Franclaco Glanll CL)

_... _ _ .... wv

lloptlo Tonll

Wetrt

There are times when, as declarer,
you can uncover a vital clue from the
opening lead. At sucb times, keeping
your eyes open will save you from going down. But even the experts are
blind at times.
Today's hand came up in an early
round of the Vanderbilt Knockollt
Teams in Atlantic City lait March.
Wbea West led the queen of clubs, declarer llllould bave drawn the conclusion that the trumps were breaking 3-1.
Against a part-score contract like this,
it was tmllkely tbat the lead would be
from the sillflleton queea or Q-J doubleton. And If the suit was breaking 3-1,
t1tete wu no point m
· drawtog
·
anather
round of trumps.
However, at one table~ player who
had·won more than one world cllampi·
onshlp did cash his iecOnd top trump
Tllen he started to run the hearts dW:
carding the queen of spade&amp; 0~ the
third. He ruffed the three of hearts in
. band and led a low diamond, covered
by the jack, kiiiJ and ace. But now
East could return a diamond to his
por.taer's queen, permitting West to

Atlanta Brave• 11 San

,_., lind ,... '
Gallpollo, Olllo
114 ... , . .
.

Clnlol
110.Manahan
end up.
II ...._ Mazuo:ilf ~
JUO- I !IPo
........, . .... end Puo:Mco en ttl JMC.
t111J I w • 7 dttl . . .

of 1998. Stereo. Q
10:00 (J)
Ill LA. Law (R) (May
Be Pre-Empted bp NBA

••

82 • Plumbing &amp;
Hutlng

•

about the Great Depratalon

(J)Nowlr
(I) Slajor

Clllor-.lllumttno

I

"""'-'
Stereo. Cl
'
Cll
(J) e MJ Lilt and Tltnq
Ben IIIII toll grendcltldran

TWD? .

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

Ftnata) s -. Q

:::':r.'l!,:,:ol:.

tNat..!!J!!
,., i§~
.., a hiJ ~j~

-.-wv.

HOW COME
YOU NEED

•• 742
.Aitt652

By PldlUp Alder

15 Pleaae reply

Nolhvlle Now

Top Ranlt loJdng
Ughtweitlht bout: Todd
Footer (17-0, 15 KOa) va.
Tommy Hankl (t9-7, 8 KOa).
t D roundtl, from Sltelbp,
Mont. (L)
8 Lany King Llvel
1:30 (J)
Olltlnfelll (RI (May
Be Pra-Emptocl by N8A

1

P.,..tng 110~~~
,
--.011 1-..:17.....

11'111.

=

21T-7'11T.

Co. RON EVANS ENTERP

......

(1:0b)

Big o. Bmolll 114-441-CI3ZI.

-4311 OllloiM-411-2414.

I

akotchoo outside the Untied
Kingdom tor the flr1t Hmo .

-

The lead
warning

lnolrumonl

..r.!/1

•

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.Q

5 Hawlilln

«J
Hlll'l WOIId TBenny Hill tllkea h11 comedy

tlnjo

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~8evet1y Hill, tcl210

BARNEY
WHAT Do YOU

•Ho

.A863

ACIIOIS

murderer whOM brOther
clalml the guilt. Stereo. Cl

:~·

EAST
.AJI0654

ALDER

•

2)Q
1111 oe.The
JICk defendt a convlc:tld

1M. Looll roforonoM tumlohod.
,,.. - - - ·dor
Clll or
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1114-D7-0411,

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•111.1111-.
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Flnatl) Stereo. Cl
(J) Clle MJ Life and ,._,
Ben recatll the stock riiiFrkel
cralh of 1tl87.
(l) (!) MJ1181yl Morte Ia

•~

,.._.......,
Yoono Ea,.,- On Olllor &amp;

••~•

alarta 1n argument. (Rj (May
Be Pra-Empled by NBA

•••

Home
Improvements

s..1110. ~:~~

1:00 &lt;Z e Ill C....,. A lll'ank

·~·'"'·
11
fl,
........ ...., 4, 114'102·1'112.
loony-. Ulld cero, 1m
. . , _ Time · Motor Homo,

Serv tces

t.be.

America~ ?Iuiie lfiop

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MlhrOOI!J

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Will GriPi.

R.
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li30 (J). aJ Dttterent · .
Ron lrlaa to daclde on 1
carwr to purtut. (Rj Stereo.

Adulor,

U"""""""'l llflllmo guo-

~-

. DMciiJ c:a.eo (1 :55)

Cotllylkr - · ·
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Almroom
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11,000. 114-37'1......

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1:01 (I) ?IOVII: TnMulae· The·

MoM Hllory TMII, llunbo, l'ottli!lg Tobit, 2 Bunw 81.... With

CUrlll -

A.,.lloyol
- Ookto

ca:oo1

Motor Homes

1011.

---

10ft

For ..... Comp '"'·
Park, Aoolno, 011.

Ill PtlmaNewa

0 MOVII: Ono on

1171 Oldo CIIIIOII ... . - ,.,..
pirtL V..e, '221 moiDr'$100, \new
rodlohlr 110. Clll ~~
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1

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per, ....... I, ll!IO: 31M 451

1111

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their hlgh-tchOol cou1'111ilp.
)Siotao.CI
Muact.r. h Wrote
lo1110. Q
80nl18ge

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Poll

e

and Marge ramlnt.ce about

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ot ....
..~......, 1:00
Pll.

Tonk.

Mfllerla• Dowling and Steve
are tnvl1ed to tilt hOme of an
111YIIIrY wrllor. (R) Sloreo. Q
. (l) On lila ••__,.

il])
_

g'""'""·

OM

of

2) (2:00)
•
(J) (J). ,ether Oowllng

2

bombing lnveatigollon turna
up _ . , murders. CR)
Stereo. Q

1114 Cl11ll Croft Cl-, :13 II,
dual 2113 Chow ....... (120 lire
oftor ..lotUI), ....,. I,
retriOif'ltor, ltovt, . 2 11nk1,
liNd', Kolltllr
o.tvo
on trolllr wllfi - ..

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8ec • ot 1 Mlfllr 111c11 (PI

91 Oe T"' Cope A

Auto Psrts&amp;
Acc:eiiOriiS

78

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SOUTH

tfomnamlng D

·

NORTH
1-11-H
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Two Ginoral Tl,. (now) 225 R
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lrono, g - lnl6rtor, • - 011, 75X11175. bolh. 114-H2-eut.
11100. Doyo 1-4111. Allor
1:30PM, coD 3Q4.e7a.llll.
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otlwro- 11.21d&amp; Horlglns polo, - · · 1~000 mi., 111,000.
For-: I H.P. llcle-,II.T.D. 11.10,
..-.1141111011

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, _ _ _ homo,1mNI
_....... . . . 11MIJ.'P104
14-121, bttow town. IVIIIOOidng rt., Commodore
ollori:IO ~tom.
pullr,
Not llubblo lor

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CA. 114 441 Dltl.

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a 111, ~ • A-1
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lnoll llolllgorllorl 1210. 114-311-mt1.
3114471-7114.
2 ~ J Win ' maflllll hDmtio ~
Fruita
nolg-h'. d "' ........... dip a
ro~ no polL 114--1,
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Vegetables

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1171·
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1111 Pilrmonl. 141171 'lll24 Pokl.l14-4*4411oftor7p.ll.
ft. laponclo, ' :llor, 1 Ill botho,
Fu- ' lltlcloMv., 1110
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4411114.

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Calla~lor - . tumlohod, AIC,

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lllg J:::"!M Oft.X11ft.
T-7211.

lor on !1Prfn1
A... $100. ...... ..... ,..

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111

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lorN-,~•~ ft, ~ Ill: 110,
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IUDGEI' IIIIICII AT

.,,lniiMnt...........

IM417.ow.

BRIDGE

e

NOT u
•
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ALL. RI61-1T, CLASS .. JUST
TO 6ET US STARTED HERE
IN OUR SIBLE STUDV...

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Empl oyrnc11t Serv1ccs

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..,. cc , _ todoy lllould come from
ollulllons - · you can lranlform
-hlng 11111 11 ~tty lnetlecllve
!nlo -hlng thai Ia wort- end
uiOful. Get a jump on lite by undertlaridlnglhe Influences which 1111 gov.

emlng you In lhe ye•r ahead. Send tor
Gemini's Aetro-Graph pradlciiOM today by malll"ll $1.25 pluo a long, oetf.
addrMMd.llamped envelope to AatroGraph , c/o this newapaper, P.O. Bo•
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac olgn.
CANCER (olune 11-.luly 21) An lddl·
tlonalalranathenlng ot banda could oc·
cur at this limo Wllh two trllndl with
whom you already hive a loyll llllance.
This will be due to a new lnvOIYMooent.
LEO (.IUIJ 13-A"'- 22) It you puroue
constructive objectives, th!a could be
an ••tnrmely productive day tor you.
·Don't waale limo on gollll of pollry

$AGITTAiiiU8 (Nov. D.O.. 11)
Whllre dollars and cento ere concMrled
today, you're likely 10 be bOih Ingenious
and Intuitive. Thll combination could
put .you In lhl profit column before the
day Ia over .
CAPRICOMI (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) It you
till lncllnocl to command 11t1entlon at
..., type ot gatttertng today, underplay
your rote Fllhlr than .np11aaa. 11. A
lOw-keyed etlort enh._ your
charisma.
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AQUA~I
110-F.to. 11) A Nrlll
ot unique dovetopmenla could uehllr In

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unexpectocl opporhlnltlea today. n you
IIWitlly, they might 1111p you
conHq-.
olljeotlw.
VIRGO CA.... ZZ.8... 21) You riiiFY 11- PIICIS (F. 10 P'IIOII 10) CounMI
nllly have 1111 oppor~un~ty today, In a you otfet -lodll' wiH be both.,.._
social oetllng, to lllabllot1 a contM:t
and Ullllled.
" ·POint•
·you've long dallrad. n COUld be o f . - corned
you'H know
to Thll
get your
to you In lurthortng your ~ bp leaching. not 1M-~~­
Int-I.
AIUU (lllnii11·Apllltl) Colrt!*itM
u.A (. . . II 0'111 Dl You could be ~ wlllllmutate r-~nae­
luclcler tllln ....... II IIIII lime In en- nully. r-rcotutr.a. drlwr end ... to
hancing
ltiWICiol pcrelllon. wyou wtn toctar.
per1a1n
have lilY trr1g1t1 ~ lhll may 1P111 10 your car-• .._,. lrtlel- or
proltt, do
u.n now. alllul.
ICOIU 10 (Oat. M-Jior. D) Two lmpor· TAURUS (Ap!IIIO..., 2D) You liave
11M trend *-·- ...,...dly mobile ., tho.,._ t-.tty loday to 1111W out
lhllllme: One'*'"'"' 10 your populert- olhlr8' good ~endMigg 11110111 enc1
ty lllld tho to your mat-1 clr· expand upon !'-' In unique, lllvlnta.cumat-. Be hopeful.
geoua way~. The reiUIII wlllplaUII you.,

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liory
Two ltlentrgert become the
subject of a natiOnal manhunt
tor the murderer or a South
C.rollna~k:e chlal. (1 :DO)
Stereo.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There are two reatOnl why I'm tn lhow IMIIII,.NII
end I'm llandlng on bOth ol them." - llotty Grable.
, nnl,
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IH1 by NEA. lfte,

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�1991

uruu

Meigs announcements

,.

Teea Weellel!d pJ'OII'IIII plaDDed
The Ohio Division rl the Allier·
ican Cancer Socioty is offering illl
first annual Teen Weekend Pro11ram to individuals Bled 16
lh!'OUIIh 20 who arc ~ing ~
·for cancer or· who n m JeiiiiSS10II
from caacer.
The 1991 Teen Weellend pro-·
gram will be held July 19-21 at
Geneva Hills in Lancaster. The fll'SI
30 .individuals registered for the
weekend will be accepted
.
The camp will be staffed.with
· medical persoonel and couaselon
to assist teens
~ial needs.
1
Disruptions iD
diets and
medical sc:hed ea will not occur. •·.
The enlire tuition for lbe weekend camper will be paid by the
American Cancer SocJCty tbrou11h
individual and ~ donations.
The weekend will pvvide teena .
with a chance to shan: a fuD-Iilled
camping experience with their '
peers. Activities wi.ll include
canoeing, fishing, swimming, hiking and cooperative games.
Because individuals wilb cancer
may tire easily, the pace will 116.
adapted and rest periods will be!.,
providcd.
. .
To re11ister for the weekend,··
contact the~ and rehabilita- "
lion department at the Ohio Divi:••
sion of the American Cancer Soci' ..
ety at 1 (800) 6116-4357 or 1 (SOOt ·
889-9565.
••

Ohio Lottery

Lakers win,·
gain NB,A
finals

• Pick 3:771
Pick 4:0795
Cards : 9·8, 6·C
4-D; 2-S
Low tonight near 70.
Saturday, humid. High in
90s. Chance of rain 50
percent.

Page4

•

i!:

Till!: PROFS • Oblo Ulllvenlty's juz qlllll'tet
''Tbe Profs," ire sbOWD here prepar!Dg for tbe
Ariel Theatre's 1ala "Galaxy of Stars" nrst
aaalversary celebratlQn Frlllay, May 31. SbOWD

bere left to riJbt .re bulllt 'DaD :-~ilUcb;d
laellstllbllplloalllt Da'rid Lewll, pllllflt
S)'I'IICue aad drummer Guy Remollko.
.

.OUjazz quartet to peform Friday
"The Profs," a jazz quartlit from
Ohio University will be one of the
featlRd groups aube histllic Ariel
Theatre's "Galaxy of Stars" first
anniversary celebration. The gala
event is Friday, May 31, at 8 p.m.
The group is comprised of faculty
members from the School of Music
at OU.
The Profs will be performing
such hits as '"I'he Song is You" by
.1erome Ker11, "The Girl From
•Jpanema" by Antonio Jobin, a
medley of IWies by George Gersh·
win as weD as others.

-

Members of the group include
Guy Remonko whose credits
include being tbc principal pcrcussionist with the Ariel's own Ohio
Valley Symphony and pianist
Richard S~use wbo performed
for tbe Ariel's Grand Openina last
summer and, Dime recendy, at the
piano dedication concert. That
exquisite performance was a benefit for the Ariel Theatre. David
Lewis, also no stranger ID the Ariel
stage since soloing with the OVS
Ibis spring, will perform on both
tbe clarinet and saxop!lone. Bassist

Dan Clalk romxls 0111 tbe group.
· 9tber performers on tbe progmm include the Second Century
Singers with a variety of patriotic
songs and Jonathan &amp; Judith
Cavendish presentini tunes from
''TheSoundofMusic.
· TiCkets are$10 which includes a
reception in the Masonic Hall
immediately following tbe performance, Tickets are available at
Peddler's Pantry, Bruaicardi
Music, Criminal Records and the
Stowaway. For more information,
caD the Ariel at 446-ARTS.

THE JOY SINGERS - ne (nJap "Joy" wiD be "'&amp;lng at tbe
Bead Ana Gos1lel Sing at .tile~ Coanty Fair Grtlllllds liD Sat-.
urday aad Saaciay. Tile
ol Dortby Bailey aad Patty
Henaler. Tbey will abo be al
Jane 14 aad 15 at tbe annual
Singing ill Plnea event. Tbey w1 be singing at tbe First Gospel
Sing In Gallla County at the county fairgrounds on Aug. 30 and 31.
The group ... a-eated a Dt1l' t1q1e ·wllch wll be released Ws fill
entitled, ''The Anointing," Henaler wrote etpt nl the - . . oa the
tape and Bailey wrote the - . , "He Took Tbls Heart of Mille."
JCIJCI! Cuey wrote tbe -e. ''MODIIIIy, Is Tbere Room for Me In
Heaven," for Heuler's ~ugbter, Julia. Tbat 10111 wiD be released
tbls flU. To sc•edule tbe IJ'OIIP call247-2575 or 94!1-1721.

grou':;-

Middleport
class
of
1941
gathers
JWIY
A
was held at lbe Middle·
ponLellion Hall for the Midd~
High School Class of 1941. A
calered dinner was served to !bose
aaending.
·
.
Attendinll were Roena A!iiherson Johnson, Columbus; Lots and
Kennelh McEhinney, Middleport;
Artamae Baker Buskirk, Middle·
port; Jean Bennett Ro11ers, Oak
Harbor; Betty Brown and Charles
Lambert, Reedsville; Bill Diles and
Mary, Athens; Goldie Gray
Gilmore, Pomeroy; Clarice Gibbs
Krautter, Pomeroy; Ruth Hamilton
·
Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
OOiotll}' Mallidn Jenkins, Middle-

port; Sylvia ~yer and Ches~r
Rice, Union Ctty, Ga.; Marjorie
Miller Vaad4;rhoof and husband,
Marion; Bill and Barbara Reichman, Fairfield Glades, Tenn.; Denver ~d ~ora Rice, Middlepqrt;
Rosalie Rice Frencb and husband,
Worthington; Helen Jane Root
F'telds, Delaware; Jean Roush Rus·
sell, Reynoldsburg; Waller W. and
Pennie Smith, Columbus;
Josephine Stewart and Dallas
Blevins, Middleport; Robert C. and
Elizabeth Tompkins, Lawson, Mel.;
Nina Triplett and Chet Haddox,
HoD:fW90d, Fla.; Della Mae Sommers, Ravenna; Mr. and Mrs.

~; lack and DorOthy ~tew-

While, Ros~omman 1 M1ch.;
Martha and Ttp CunntJ1gbam,
Lima; Raymond and Betty Jo
Allensworth, Grovepon; Gordon
aad Mary Eunice Harri~, Colum·
bus; Gene and Janet Harris, Co!um·
bus; Charles Brooks, Mansfteld;
Mildred Asbury Mosley, St.
Alban~.
W.Va.;
Cbarles
Entsm1n11cr, ·Soutb Charleston,
W.Va.
art

BOB'S

0

·~

VBS scheduled
Reedsville Chulch of Christ. the
Eden United Brethren Church and
the Reedsville and Lon11 Bottom
United Methodist Cbun:ll will hold
combined Vacation Bible School at
Riverview ScboolJnne
10.14will
from
,., ___
be
6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m..............
held for aU ages, including adults.
Everyone is welcome.

IC.E COLD MELONS
4 us.. $100
BANANAS
GERANIUMS
SI~E FLAT OF

18 $4lt

ASSORTMENT
.PERENNI~L PLANTS

5

5" SQUAll POTS

COCA-COLA

FOI $599

$288
IEGUlAI 01 DID
·
12 PACK

,....
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'

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••
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MEIGS FARM MARKET
POMIIOY OHIO

300 WIST MAIN

•••

I

8 GREENHOUSES, INC.
Announces.

SPECTACULARSAvtNGS

'
'!'

FlNISHIN.G TOUCQES • Jllllior Smltb aad
Ray Pai'SOIII were bard at work on Thursday,
puttiJII tbe flnlablng toudles oa flowers ~lmd
tbe base of tbe Civil War moaament in

Pomeroy. Smltll and Panou, Melp Couty
Courtboue e1lltodlal ataft', helped plant bandred&amp;· olllowers ·~ the JaODIIJIIent and in
othe.r areis 8W'I'OIIIICIInt tbe eovtboue.

Southern board discontinues
noon kindergarten bus routes

Wisconsin
girl claims
spelling title

PRICES GOOD TBR.U END OJI' SEASON

'

WASHINGTON (AP)- She's
a voracious reader and her mom's
her speUing coach. That plus some
good guesswOrk ll)8(le ·13-year-old
1oinne Lagatta tbe winner of the
641b National Spcl1ing Bee. ·
Joanne sailed throu11h tbe ftrSt
eight rounds of co~petition and
then survived a llfUClinll 90-minute
battle Thursday all8instll-year-old
sixthrr Maria Mathew of ster·

lin~ 'two-day spelling bee began

And Of Course, Boll's Bas rhe Fresh Qualit)t Produee You've Come ro E*peet •••

VID"LIA ONION

59¢

LB.

'
FLORIDA
NEW WHITE
POTATOES

JUMB06SIZE

$299 ~:~·

$199

EACH
SPELLING CHAMP • Joanne Laptta, 13, ol CllatonYIUe,
Wis., bolds tropby above ber bead after winDing the 1991 Natloaal
Spelliag Bee in Washington Thursday. (AP)

Now Two Conuenfat l.oeatfons •••
1/4 Mill Nonh of Pomeroy/MIIOn Bridge
MUon,WV
PhoM (304) 773-5721
Open: Mondly-Saturdly, I 1111-1 pm; Sunday, 9em-9 pm
2400 Eulem Avenue (1C1"081 from K·Mart)
o.Jllpolll, Ott
PhoM(I14)441-1711
Open: Monctly-s.turdly,. 1111-l pm; Sunclly, 111111-1 pm

* PRODUCE
PRICES EFFEcnYE FRIDAY, MAY 31 THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1890
*PLANT PRICES EFFEcnVE
MAY 31 THRU END OF SEASON
FR~AY,

, FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED ON PURCHASE OF VEGETABLE BEDDING PLANTS AND·BULK SEED

lno. -opoper

---Local briefs-Wreck damage said minor
Minlr front end damage was occurred to a parked car owned by
Rillerview Petsonal Care Home, West Columbia, W. Va. Thursday.
The owner i'eported that she had Jlllked the car behind Andersons
on 5ec:oru1 SL and apparently BDOiher car backed into it causing lbe
&lt;ian/age.

.Funds sought for scrubber
, Ohio Mining and Reclamation Association President Neal S.
TOS1i:Dsoo calleil upon President Gecqe Bush to finance a scrub~
in Soulbeast Ohio 011 tbe Kyger Creek Po~ Plant that sel!s •ts
clectric:ity to the U. S. Depiubnent of Energy mstead of financmg a
ac:rubber in Krakow, Poland.
.
Recently the U. S. Department of Energy made a conmubn.ent 10
spend over $7 million for a scrubber in Kmltaw. Poland but will not
Coatlaued oa pap 3

be removed.

"Listen, I want to burn Ohio
Utilities Cl!airman Frank coal. So lbereforc, any way it can
Sawyer, D·Mansficld, and Krupin· be done for utilities to burn Olli&lt;i ·
ski said in interviews later that lim- coal tbat's what I'm for," Riffe
ited tax credits worlh an estimated said at a news conference.
$6 million oripnii\Iy proposed in
"It's my understandinll that
the measure probably would sur- lhcre's either some grants or feder·
vive.
al money that's available to tile
The bill is intended to encour- · states. I think we've 110t to use
age utilities faced wilh new federal every means that we can to get
clean air regulations to instaU lhe some of !bat," he said.
anti-pollution equipment needed to
Sawyer said limited tax credits
conunue to burn tbe state's high- originally contained in t.he blll
sulfur calli, rather than switch to probably would be retained.
cleaner coal from outside Ohio. . .
As first proposed, tbe measure
Riffe favored use of federal would have provided credits of $1
money, instead of state tax credits, per ton of Ohio coal burned for
as an incentive for utilities to mstall companies that instaU scrubbers- or
smokestack scrubbers or related . other equipment to comply with
equipment.
Condnued on page 3

Release $50,000 to improve
Middleport boat ramp

Action required &lt;!ue to the her as a ful!-time aide at the kinder· provide any ~lion to such .
change to an aU-day kinder$anen . ganen .. Durin$ the past sc~ool year; · activities.
The school calendar for the ·
was taken at the reaular ~ma of · Frederick~ \lOth jobs.
tba.SaUdlern Loca1_ S~BQIII'd · .S~ .-~ 1991-1992 school year was 1
held recendy.
. . , , lcinderlanen on ¥&lt;lllila,&gt;;1,W~. approve"il bv thC board. The ~: ·
· The board lrioved 'to diScontinue
day aad Friday on~ seme!'terllnil• er4 ~ is sec 'fdr ~ugust 26,
tbe noon ldndergarten routes since Tuesday and Thursday the next the first day for students is August
kindergarten pupils wiD be attendsemester.
27, tbe last day of school for stuing school aU day. The conii'IICIII ofIn another cost-saving step, lhe dents is May 28, 1992, and lbe last
Delbert Smidt and Larry Smith as board outlined rules and regula- day for teachers is May 29.
·
noon-time ltinderprten bus drivers
lions for transporting students to
Tbe board agreed to join the
were tenninaled.
and from sponmg and band events Ohio School Board Association
The board accepted lhe resign&amp;- and otbcr extra-curricular activities.
Worker's Compensation Group
tion of Romaine Frederick as a Parents will be ICS]lOIISible for such Rating Program. This PfOlmU!l .is
;.:~!::;:! bus driver and hired
transpOrtation. The district will not
C011tinued OD page 3

ON ALL.THEIR TOP QUALITY PLANTS

SWEET

By JOHN CHALFANT
Assoeiated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS- A clean air·
coal mininll bill that hit a roadblock
in tbe House two weeks ago is back
on
Speaker Vem Riffe said
he hoped a revamped version of lhe
measure could be ready for a vote
next Thiii'Sday .
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said
Thursday be had sent the bill, drafted by a special panel headed by
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, D·
Steubenville, to lhe House Public
Utilities Committee to be
rew&lt;rted.
Riffe said up to $20 million
worth of~ state tax credits
!bat the measure p~sed to give
utilities that bum Ohio coal would

course:

OLOSEOUT
TALL

A Multi

Clean air-coal
bill back on· track
in ·ohio House

Simmons graduates

Debra McGuffin Simmons,
Huntington, W.Va., daughter of
Dorothy Me Guffin and tbe late
Harry McGuffin, Middleport, was a
December 1990 llf8duate of Mar·
shall University.
She .was awarded the Re11ent's
.
Elachelor of Arts Dep'ee.
Her busband, Kevin Simmons,
recently completed a course on
· emergency medical tec:bnok&gt;IIY and
Raben Weue, Denver, Colo.
is now alk:ensed EMT.
Afternoon 11uests were Nan
The Simmons' arc employed for
Moore, Middleport; Maxine Ben- VQCA Conloralion qf West Virnett, Columbus; Joe A. Young, ginia in the fiuntington area.

28 olll,;':;.!4 Pall"" 21-.ta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 31, 1991

Tbe State Controlling Board bas released $50,000 for redevelopment or tbe e:rilltlna bOat ramp on the Ohio River at Middleport, liecordlnl tQ a.release today from tile Oblo Department
oi'N•tarat Reloureeai;r
·'··
·
I!IIO.Ieet wiJI Include 11.-k atabiiiUtlon and protectloo,
launc:ll ramp uJIIII'IIde and repaving tbe exl&amp;tiq iauc:ll nmp
and parklna racllldes.
Tbe total eatlmate c:ost for· tbe project is $75,000 wltll
ODNR •a DI¥ision or Waterc:nft payiag two-thirds of the eoustruc:tion C0S1s. Tbe balance or tile project c:ost Is being haadled
wltb village funds and tbrouilt contributions from businesses
and lndividuls.

n.

Congressional panel looking
into RAC safety record

By T J. SIMONEAUX
Assoc:lated Press Writer
, CJiARLESTON, W.Va.· When
federal iniiCStigators were turned
away at lbe gates of Ravenswood
Aluminum Ccxp., the United Steelworkers asked Congress to take up
its complaints of safety and health
problems at the Jackson County
planL
.
This week, Congress agreed to
take charge of the investigation.
The House Education and Labor
CommiueeUs Subcommiuee on
Health and Safety will study
Ravenswood AluminumUs safety
records, slaff director Sy Holzman
said Thursday from Washington,
D.C.
''What we have done is request
the safety and health reports .. to
begin looking at whether lbe com· ·
pany has problems," Holzman said.
Ravenswood Aluminum arid tbe
United Steelworkers have been
locked in a labor dispute since Nov.
I, when their contract expired.
About 1,700 union workers have
been off the job since then, wilh tbe
union sayin11 they are locked out ··
and the company saying they are

Safety and Health Admimstration
investigators sent to investigate
complaints filed by the United
Steelworkers and others were
turned away by plant officials, even
though they bad an access warrant
signed by U.S. Magistrate Jerry
Hogg.
Ravenswood Aluminum called
the federal investigation TTharass·
mentUU and said tbe complainlll
were llfOUDdlcss.
''The very fact that RAC refused
to let them in the plant says that the
companr was hiding somethin~,"
said Umted Steelworkers District
23 Director lim Bowen.
On lhe S~UDe day, two employees of a Ravenswood Alummum
subcontractor were injured while
moving equipment in the plant,
authorities said.
After the union asked lbe House
subcommittee to investigate the
plantUs safety record, Rep. J~h
Oaydos, D-Pa., the panelUs chairman, asked the federal safoty agenCoatinued 011 page 3

with Z1.7 contestaniS.
Maria is a bilingual ~tudent who
skipped kindergarten and whose
parents are both physicians.
"I got more and more ner·vous,'' said Joanne, an eiiblh·grader. "I just wanted IIi caD ita lie."
But she correctly speUed "inappetence" and "anupyretic" to
come out on top in what might
have been the longest one-on-one
competition in tbe history of the
contesL
There's been ~Otbing like it in
lbe last 20 years at least. said Mary
Brooks, a speUing bee judge.
· on strike.
Last Th.ursday, Occupational
Joanne IS a near-straight-A student from Clintonville, Wis.
"We are just to!aUy awed," her
CHARLESTON, w. Va. (AP)
English teacher, Ed Johnson, said
M
un· ersity
,f her victory.
~ A George ason, IV •
administrator wasn t the rust
"She reads recipe books. She
choice of several Marshall Univerreads dictionaries. She reads encysity factions as tbe school's next
clopedias. She is a very, very lifted
ffi ial
lh 'II
young lady," Johnson said.
president, but 0 •c s say ey
work with him.
She hadn't even beard of most
J. Wade Gilley, senior vice pres·
of the words she got in the last 17
ident
at George Mason in Fairfax,
rounds a11ainst Maria: "Maybe
Va.,
was
renta.~~st"named Th~about three" sounded flmiliar, said
day
by
die
Um
ty of West VuJoanne. S~t kept living each
System's
board
to aucceed
inia
one "an in · ent pcss."
~ale
Nitzschke,
who
resigned
last
She fiU ' rillbt 011 "uniiUCfyear
to
become
president
of
tbe ,.
doned, which means unrecomUalversity
of
New
lfllm)llbire.
nen...t or unrequited. And lbe got
GiDey, 52, said Thursday from
f·WijiUeno," a decorative writing
his
home in Vienna, Va., he wiD
cabinet
.
accept
the Marshall presidency.
But the winnin11 word
The
board
will meet June 21 to
"antipyretic" was notbin2 new.
ake
the
decision
final
"We Just studied it ln health
m
System
Chancellor
Charles
claSs," siie said. It means preventMannins
still
need•
to
aeaodate
ing fever.
alary and beDofita with GlUey.
She and Maria stood smiling
Nitzachke earned $83,000 a yw.
f01101bcr as Joanna held a huge 11'0The final cboice among lhe four
J.
WADI
GILLEY
. Continued on paae 3

Triplett firm
awarded
•
•
engineering
contract
•

By CHARLEN~ HOEFUCH .
·Sentinel News St.n
The contract for en11ineering
services on the $127,000 Pearl
Street reconstruction project has
been awarded by Middleport Village Council to Triplett Engineer·
ing of Pomeroy.
Triplett's bid was $8,000. the
lowest of lbree bids received.
Engineering services are to be
completed within 45 day~. and it is
anticipaled that tbe actual work on
lbe street, sidewalks and drainage
system between Laurel and General
Hartinger Parkway will begin wilh·
in two monlbs.
The village has received
$80,000 in Issue 2 monies on lhe
over811 cost of tbe work.
A mandatory trash collection
ordinance was ~iven a first lt'lding
at Tuesday mght's meeting of
Council. Provisions of the ordi·
nance call for lbe new collection
and billinll system to 110 into effect
on AulllJSl I. The rate will remain
at $10 a monlh with a $2 reduction
for senior citizens and handicapped
individuals.
Billing will be handled through
lbe village with the amount 10 be
added as another item on the
monthly biUs for water and sewer.
Council accepted the bid for
mandatory trash pickup from Manley's Trash Semcc, Middleport, at
the May 13 meeting. It was the
only one received in response to
advertising by Council.
The new coUection system wiU
operate under a lbree year conii'IICt
with Manley. The contract will
contain tbe nght 10 renegotiate the
Continued on page 3·

J. Wade Gilley named new
Marshall University president

-

.

-

-- r- --

finalists came down to &lt;:;mey or
Bruce Carpenter, president of Eastem Montana Coll~e, sources on
the board told The erald·Dispatch
of Huntington.
The other rmaliSIII were Edward
Boehm, Marshall's vice """•ident
1
"'of institution&amp;. advancement, and
George F~nckson1 former Eas!em Washmgton Umversity pres•·
deaL
.
. · Carpenter, who emphasized lhe
unportancc o( ~ICs .over athledcs, was the chotec of the Marshall Faculty S~, student gov~ent .and ~ed slaff..
llbink !:'e ll. take a Wllt·an!l- attitude, 111d Kalby Chezilt,
p,resident of the Faculty Senate.
He will have a honeymoon, then
we'D see if be can make !be ':'!Bf·
ria&amp;e last. We hope that be can.
However, Gilley said be sup·
porta much of what ~ter says
about spodl and acadcnncs.

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