<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10137" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10137?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T12:58:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20577">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6ab4730a0964ddaf8da1a240cb6cfbde.pdf</src>
      <authentication>718e466465a9db4f57d46dcda2afd6e5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32390">
                  <text>By The Bend·
'•

Th~

Corps official addresses Rotary

Community Calendar items

POMEROY • The Meigs Coon- door for $4 each and will go on ball Associa!i&lt;Jn will meet Sunday
ty Wom.en' s Fellowship will meet sale at 7 p.m.
at 3:30p.m. tn the Chester Elemenand tbe.day that event. Items
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Zion '
rary gym. All parents are invited to
must be received well in advance
Church of Christ. There will be an
LONG BOTIOM • A smorgas- anend.
to assure publication in the cal-· Easter bonnet cont,est and Janet bord dinner will be held Saturday
eadilr.
Bolin will be guest speaker. Public at 5 p.m. at the Long Bottom ComMIDDLE~RT • The Jellisons
invited.
munity Building. Cost is $'5 for will perform Sunday at 10 a.m. and
THURSDAY
adults and $2.50 for children 12 6 p.m. at the United Pentecosuli
POMEROY • Members of the
TIJPPERS PLAINS ' The Tup- and under. Public invited.
Church in Middleport.
Pomeroy Merchants Associatiou · pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053will meet Thursday at 5 p.m. at the will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. All
SALEM CENT!lR • Salem Cenparking lot in Pomeroy across from members urged to attend.
ter Elementary PTO will sransor a
Court Street to begin clean-up of
spaghetti dinner Saturday rom 5-7
the median strip and mini-park. All
. FRIDAY
,p.m. Cost is $3.50 for adults and $2
. members are urged to 'participate.
HENDERSON • There will be a for children. Desserts are extra.
The Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Bring tools useful for the clean-up.
round and square dance Friday Public welcome.
Department
is holding chicken
from 8·11:30 p.m. at the Renderbarbeque
.
Sunday,
Madc 2, with
MIDDLEPORT • Revival will son Community Building. Music . . S'J!VERSVll.LE ·Jerry Couer· ·
Lon
on Pool.
proceeds
going
to
be through Friday at the Bradford will be by CJ and the Country Gen- 111 w1ll speak at the Sti.versville
Chainnan
Mary
Pickens
said
serv·
Church of Christ. Tim Wallace, demen. Frank Bowles will play fid- Word of Faith Church on Satirrday
ing
will
begin
at
II
a.m.
and
con-·
Wheelersburg, will be the speaker. die. Everyone welcome.
and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor
tinue as long as the meal supply ·
Services are 7 p.m. nightly aild at
David Dailey invite~ the public.
lasts.
Chicken for 350 meals. an
9:30a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 ~.m.
CHESTER • A free community
increase
of 100 from the departon Sunday. Special music nig tly. immunization clinic· will be held
MILLFIELD - There will be a
April
barbeque, will be prement's
Nursery provided.
. Friday from 9.a.m. to 3 p.IJI. at the . round and square dance on Saturpared.
·season
swimming passes
Chester Fire Department for ages day at !he Russell Building in MillLONG BOTTOM • Faith Full two months through kindergarten field with music provided by Out 1 will also be. available the day of !he
Gospel Church in Long Bottom age. Parents must bring child's of the Blue. John Russell will be bai'beque.
· will have revival through Saturday immunization record.
the caller.
at 7 p.m. nighdy with Charles Hall,
Marietta, evangelist. Special
TIJPPERS PLAINS ~ There will
SUNDAY ·
singing nightly. Fellowship be a round and square dance on
POMEROY - American Legion
Wednesday evening. Homecoming . Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. spon- Baseball siJnl-up will be held SunNavy Pet~ Officer 2nd Class
dinner, Saturday at 5 p.m. Pastor sored by the Tuppers Plains VFW day from 2-3 p.m. at Meigs High Mark
A. Smi , a 1986 graduate of
Slt:ve Reed inVites the public.
Post No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary. School for p&lt;lflicipants age 16-19. Alexander :Local High School of
Music will be by the Happy Hoi, There will be a $10 sign-up fee and · ·Albany, reCently returned aboard
•· POMEROY • Mt Hennon Unit- low Boys. Red Cart will be the ·a birth certificate copy must be pro- !he com bat store ship USS Niagara
ed Brethren Church, Texas Road, caller. Everyone welcome.
vided.
·
.Falls, homeported in GU&amp;nl from a
Pomeroy, will hold revival through
four and a half'-month deployment
Sundat at 7:30 p.m. nightly with , RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Liberty
POMEROY • The Meigs Vocal to the Persian Gulf and Indian
Rev. harles Norris," evangelist. ·Mountaineers will perform at Music Department will present its Ocean.
Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor, Skateland in Ripley on Friday.
annual spring concert Sunday at . The sliip. nicknamed the "Fight·
invites the p11blic.
Mllligs High Scliool's auditorium at mg Falls,' provided logistic sup·
~EEDSYILLE • ~ere will .be .2 p,m. The theme is "Forever and port for Operation Southern Watch
POMEROY • State Senator Jan an mfonnational meeting regarding Ever Country."
·
and d!Rct combat support to
Michael Long will read to the pub- the opening of the Fellowship
British, Belgian, French and U.S.
lie at the Meigs County Public Christian Academy at the FellowPOMEROY - Bruce Stone will forces in Somalia as part of OperaLibrary in Pomeroy on Thursday at ship Church of the Nazarene on be in concert at St Paul Lutheran
tion Restore H~. Niagara Falls
6:30 p.m. in observance-of Nation- Route 124 near Reedsville on Fri- Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at also
provided dip omatic support to
al Library Week.
day at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 10 6:30 p.m. The public is invited. two embassies and to six countries,
a.m. and 7 p.m. School material ll.efreshments will be served fol- including the United Arab Emirates
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local and rooms will be available for lowing the.concert.
and Oman.
.OAPSE Chapter will meet Thurs- view. Registration also available.
He joined the Navy in April,
day at 7 p.m. at the junior high Call 378-6312, 378-6133 or 667CHES1ER • The Chester Base- -1987.
.
.·
school. ·
6946 fo( information.
appear hni ~~before an event

Plan chicken
barbeque May 2
a

Smith returns from
Gulf

CHES1ER ·The Pomeroy OES
Chapter No. 186 will hold its annu. al inspection on Thursday"at 7:30
p.m. at the Chester Masonic Ternpie, Anne Cl. Price will be the
inspecting officer.

SYRACUSE - Revival at the
S}'Jacuse First Church of God wiU
be FriW!Y through Sunday at7 p.m.
nighdy with Steven Carney, Chillicothe, on Friday; Mike Lambert on
Saturday and Mike Finnicun on
Sunday. Pastor David Russell
invites the public.

REEDSVll.LE • The Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
8 p.m. at the home of Janet ConSATURDAY
. •
nolly. Co-hostess is Ella Osborne. · ~OMEROY • · Kay Cecil,
Debbie Gilmore will present a pro- antique collector and appraiser,
gram on berbs.
will present a program at the Meigs
County Museum in Pomeroy on
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- Saturday at 2 p.m. Bring in several
can Legion Auxiliary will meet of'your favorite items for appraisal.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the post
........ home._
LOTIRIDGE-· Gmmtr·lr-mllSic·c.."
.
.
I
l]ight at the Lottridge Community
POMEROY • Sacred Heart Center wil\ be Saturday from 7
Catholic Church will have a golf p.m. to midnight. All bands arc
tournament scramble Thursday at welcome. Refreshments will be
the Meigs County Golf Course. seroied. Every one welcome.
Cost is $50 and includes lunch,
dinner, golf and cart. Lunch will be
KANAUGA • The Liberty
served at noon with tee .. off at 1 (vlountaineers will perform Saturp.m. Call the golf course or Jim day at !he D.A.V. Center in Kanauga.
Hill at 992-3325 for information.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for information.

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a western dance at Middlepon Elemenrary sponsored by the Middle(Xln Arts Council on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. Cost is $3 single, $5 couple. Refresbments available. Public
welcome.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Fire Department will hold its
monthly inservice· training on
Thursday. All members urged to
anend.
MIDDLEPORT - A free com·
prehensive vision screening will be
· provided by Marietta Ophthalmology AssociateS on ThW"Sday from 10
·a.m. to 2 p.m. at Fruth Pharmacy in
Middleport. Reservations arc not
necessary.

Section 404 jlertains to any fill
Rick Buckley of IIHi U.S. Cmps
put
in the water such as temporary
of Engineers at Huntinj!ton, was
working
pads or bank protection,
guest speaker at the Mtddleport·
Buckley
said.
Wetlands were also
Pomeroy Rotary Club beld Mooday
night at Heath Qnited Methodist discussed by the speaker. These
help control flood water and can
Church.
Tbe speaker dealt mainly with fllter pollutants. Cattails can work
regularory JllulseS of the corps. He as a good water purifier, Buckley
said that are two laws in particular . said. They also provide recreational
which affect the Ohio River and its activities such as fishing, boating ·
·
Jributaries. They are Section 10 and and hunting.
.Section 404. Section 10 involves
any struclllleS placed in the Ohio or
its tributaries such as marinas and
docks and deals with permits to
Harrisonville Senior Citizens ·
buijd the structures so that they do
will
hold their fi!St evening meet- .
. not adversely affeot the environing
at
the town house Tuesday at 7
ment, transportation, or inhibit or
p~m. Snacks will .be served. There
change the flow of water in a barm·
will be a drawing for as~ quilt.
ful manner.

.•
i

The K•SWISS·• Classic
is great for getting
around. Or just
h~;~nging around.
Chances are, you·n·
wear out before
they do.

Multimedia Inc.

Eastern· board renews
personnel co~ltracts -

K·SWISS

&amp;

•
WEARING IS BELIEVING.

Numerous contracts for teachers Also non-renewed pending state
A secood reading was given to
and non-certified employees were funding of the programs were the an interdistrict open enroUment
renewed at .Tuesdalc:!~ht's meet- contracts of Sandy Needs, one year pOiic~. That policy will be up ro~
ing of the Eastern
Board of teaching contract, Margaret Cau- adopUOII at the May meeting. Also
Education at Eastern High Scliool.
thorn and Judy Wolfe. library approved WIIS . a contract with
,
COG-SEOVEC for services during
Teachers re-employed on five- aides.
year contracts were Kimberly
Added to the substitute teachers' the 1993-94 school year.
Conidi; Rebecca Edwards, Mary list for the remainder of this school ·
The list of graduating seniors .
Price and Ron Hill. Awarded two- year were Timothy W. Lawson and was approved and it was v~ted to
year contracts were H. David Barr, Teresa Lieving-King.
exempt all seniors who w,ill be •
Katheleen Peyton, Amy Alison,
For the remainder of this school graduating from semester exam inaJoyce Hill and Mildred Wilson.
year the board hinld Jason Hager as lions.
Supplemental contracts were · a volunJeer unpaid assistant base·
The board too~ action to
awarded for the 1993-94 school ball coach, Greg Cooper as a sub· become an Ohio 2000 School Dis·
years to Jim Huff, state and federal stitute bus driver and Mike Hulse trict and. to work toward meeting
programs coordinator; Mary Price, as a substitute bus driver on a pro- the slate requirements.
special educalion coordin8tor; Arch balionary contract
Next regular meeting was set for
Rose, transpOrtation supervisor and . Purchase of an energy services. · May 26 at 6:3_0 p.m. ~~ the' l!igh
coordinator and Carolyn Ritchie, package from Landis aild Gyr Pow- . school. A special'meeting was set
lunchroom coordinator.
. ers was ·approved by the board. for Tuesday, April 27 at 6:30 p:n.
Non-certified staff employed on This is in accordance with the in the high school cafeteria to dis·two year contracts were Randy requirement of State House Bill cuss personnel.
Boston, Sandra Bowen, Gary Dill 264 and will allow the district to
Attending were Ray Karr, presi·
and Violet Lambert. All of the upgmde the heating systems, light· dent; Jim Smith, vice president and
extta-cwricular activity and coach- ing and some roofs, and pay it off members, Ron Eastman, Bill Han.
ing supplemental contracts were with energy savings over a 10:year num and Mike Martin.
non-renewed pending _funding. · period.

ClaSSIC

•
'

219 N. 2nd
MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

2 Po'me•O'"
J women
·
. . k l.lled'
~ More information re_Ieased . mtin·injured in collision
dept~AI.;.~NT~.:'~~~~;'l.s~~~~:

'TIL .

."~(Jn rapelatte mp~ te·di ' mur d,~'

I

.

I

,.,....,..,.,,
lfl,.,.Nllt• •

' I'Ctllll¥JM,

-.......

a/126"
,...,..
. ,.

•
Local brl

'

..... 8.15143·500

..... ,.
....

,IAVf'IIIJ
nu , ..,

,_,,,..

• Black-lacquered
real wood tlnith

I

Ret- "'·'~ f4(1o1150

,•

Dep~ties probe accidents
.
.
;
.

25°/o OFF

:
•

V out our GUESS SHORTS and

Two cited by deputies

..--.....__ •
0

l014t!J·Isl

--

----

-

992·3884

2SIO .N. 2ND
\

---

·T

-----

MIDDLEPORT

· No iajuries l\'Cl'C rePorted in three accidents investigated Thursday by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department
·
Cryslal Reed of Tuppers Plains reported she was southbound on
Ohio 7 arOund S a.m. and struclc and killed a deer that ran iniO the
paih of ber vehicle.
Two vehicles received light damage in un a coUisioq on Smilh
Ridge Road near J;'ortland around 5:20p.m. According to the ieport,
Cheryl Jernagan was northbound and Rocky Hupp was southbound
and met in a curve.
,
Deputies are looking for the driver or a 1969 Ford Mustang
involved in ·a single-car crash at the junction of Flatwoods Road and
Rocksprings Road in Chester Township around 10:45. p.m.
The car. registered to Wellston man, skidded 280 feet across
Rocksprings Road and knocked down five sections of steel
guaidiail. The driver reportedly fled on fooL
. .
I

T·SHIRTS

---

.

Four ireated after wreck

• Compact one·
piece design
• Hangs up on
•
any flat surface

·

....

.

other vehicle.
. away.
The two suspects !hen allegedly · The woman underwent surgery
raped ber while driving around in today to have one of the slugs
the vehicle. Later, she was taken to removed. Chief Deputy Dennis
a site in Vinton County and led Salisbury reported she is in good,
from the vehicle. '
stabl.e condition and the slug has
One of the suspects then report· been scnt to the·Bureau of Criminal
edly shot her 'in the back of the Investigation for' examination. The
head and again in the upper victim has one more slug in her,
back/neck area. The victim was which Salisbury said be believes is
then able to get up and nm and the fragmented. The third slug passed
second suspect allegedly shot her through her, he added.
·
in the left arm as she was ruMing
The sheriff's department arRSt·
·
·· -' · ed two forrnet !leputies Wednesday
e~s·
on kidnapping and rape charges.
II
Vincent H. Varney, 23, Rt. 1
Ewington, and Gregory S. Pickens,
27, 12283 S.R. 160, Vinton, were
arraigned Thursday in the Gallipolis Municipal Court of Judge
Four people received minor inJuries in a two-vehicle accident on
William
S. Medley. .
·
Pomeroy Pilce in Chester Townsh1p Thursday around 3:30p.m.
Pickens pleaded not guill)' to the
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Slate
charges; Varney waived h1s plea.
Highway Patrol, a westbound 1986 Nissan pickup truck driven liy
Bond for each man was set at
Rufus Browning, 54,l'omeroy, and a 1974 Chevrolet Camara driv$250,000
c8sh.
en by Kevin Whobrey, 17, also.of Pomeroy, mel in a curve and
Preliminary hearings for the
sideswiped.
suspects have been set fer April29.
Browning's pickup ttuc1c went off the left side of the road, struck
. Pickens' hearing is at 11 a.m. and
an embanlanent and a fence before ovenurning, !he patrol reported.
Varney's is at 1:30 p.m. .
·
Browning and Whobrey were transported by units of the Meigs
Salisbury said Thursday that the
County Emergency Medici) Service to Verel;3fls Memorial Hospilal
where they were treated for minor injuries and released.
Ohio Revised Code requires law
enforcement officers to use marlced
Two pMsenger's in Whobrey's car, Shawn Ingels, J7, of Middlevehicles' wilh light bars on the roof
port and Donald E. Yost Jr.. 14, ofRudand, were also transported to
when they pull someone over.
the hospilal where they were treated and released.
,
· However, he added, there are
Damage to Browning's vehicle was listed as heavy while Ingels'
times when an Undercover officer
vehi~ SUSiained li&amp;ht damage, the patrol reported.
.
fi. l'ltrol spokesman said no citanons we[~: issued.
must pull over a vehicle. To ease

.
•

·-·

·

"' ·
.·
• gOOd COn· dl"tipn
lC·ti"m UnueTgOeS
SUgery,
Tepor,ted zn

OVP News Staff
, The Galli a 'County Sheriff's
Department released today more
, (ietails of the abduction, rape and
!allempted murd,er of a Jackson
·County woman.
: According to a report from a
' deparlment investigatrir, the victim
:was pulled over by a vehicle using
' a flashing emergency light. Once
, stopped, she was onleted out of her
·car at gunpoint and placed in the
'
·

1 RACK WEST.ERN .SHIRTS

_.._

..

By KEVIN PINSON ·

~

(Men(s and Ladies')

......

.

'IT.' ·

.r

DRY, II' INTBIEIT 1111111.T1lltiUIIII AP111. 311RJI
-

llw AI

~retoa~~:::'a:U:o~u:a:;,T!es~.:o~~
(OVP photo b~ Kevin Pinson)

. (fr011t) and Vlnceut H. Varney (rear) l'rom the

INTEREST

. ___

--·-.
-···---,..--y,.,""""'-·--·· ,., .,. ,.,.""'"" ~~~
,..,..-

~~·-·.

~

'

...

,~

=:.-

......... ··:·;;:....
--------·--

_._....,•••n"
.,..r_.,.-.,.,.,.,
.,,,.,._, ..........

IIMfflet TM 1111 r.or, 'Tht.IIIW ~ LIJIU ttllllr'rwll Ill 1!111 11*1 Colt

Low tonJ&amp;bt ill' 50S. Cloudy.
Saturday, cloudy, bJ&amp;b In 70s.

' Vol. 43, NO. 251

KICKBACK.

Wi'th Purchase of T-Shirt •
~
~
· Buy 2 or more pieces of HANG TEN and
get a HAT (513.99) for s6.99
.
YELLOW .TAG WESTERN BOOT SALE

.

Pick 4:
3025

•

throw woolers

.

698

.•

• Dual' 10" long.

..

Pick 3:

Insi4e today

To meet Tuesday

REEDSVILLE · The Eastern
High School Senior Class will pre- .
sent the dinner theatre, "tJp the ·
Down Staircase," at the Eastern
High School gymnasium on Saturday at 6:15 p.m. Tickets are $8 per
adult and $5 per child age 12 and
under~Ticket price includes dinner
and can be purchased· from any
senior or at the school. ')'ickets for
the drama on! y will be sold at the

FREE TRANSFER

Ohio Lottery

Home,·lawn
and garden
.edition

;Thursday, April 22, 1993
Page--:10

:A

Community Calendar

~

Se~tinel

Daily

-~·Lolli: lll Dtlll, l--l~ CorJ

:

Two IIIQIOrista were·cited by deputies or the Meigs County Siler- .
ifrs Deplrlment followina milhaps Wednesday.
' ·
• · A Oomll• man wu cited for having an unsecured load in a two. &gt;:ehiclo accldi!Jiton Ohi07atC!estcr~ 7:15p.m.
·
. :l'oiichlel Ungcren wu .:~uthbound ·on Ohio 7, when a pieco .of
· steel feU from his veblcte tlld llniCit a'ltopped vehicle owned by
. Paul Roulh, Reedaville. No~ were np(xted.
,·
. , A Portland woman ·wu Cited on clwJes of driving under the
influenco.and failure to control after a OIIC-vohicle crash on Ohio.
338 near the Ria:hle
II :40 p.m.
.
·Olcrla loa wu • - - ' from tho.bridao and, lost comrol of
her vehiCle wbidl aavelled ICI'DU Ohio 338, struck a rotld sign and
• continUed intO a field, chuherlff's clepM ll'"''u repooted. , .

B=ITOWid

I

. .

.

Po:.'ie;_Qi

1

me 3:35P.-m: ~·

Tw"'
women :;er_e . in
Said Fayette
k1lled ~ a Chillicothe 1.111111 sen- County Sheriff ..Yilliam Crooks.
ously mJured Thursday afternoon
Donald L. S1mpson, age unrewhentheircarcollidedwit'!a~k- ported,of29~17 Rt50, ~flown
up truck: Cll U.S. 35 about SIX miles to Grant Me«llc•l Center m Columeast of Washington Court House.
'bus where be was listed in serious
Donna E. McClanahan, 44, and condition with head injuries Thursher daughter, Becky G. Comer, ~I. day night .
both of 127 l!l Mulberry Ave. died
Accordmg to newspaper
COUTt
accounts, Cr!&gt;oks said the two
. P'J 1
women were tn a westbound car

'IIT.z"llz's

t0

mar,tia". [

~~Or .be

that dropPed onto tile
road and then skidded diagonally
across the highway into the path of
a pickup truck: drivenby Simpson.
Investigators had not determined
last night who was driving the car
Croolcs said.
·
.
'
"This was probably one of the
worst tom-up cars I have seen in an
acciden!," Crooks told the Columbus Dispatch.

·
da\1
·
begz"n TUeS
.1..
'J

-...

1

SUMTER. S.C. (AP)- Airman
Jeromy "JJ." Willis· could face
the· ~ penalty if he is convicted
of killing his wife at Myrde Beac~
Air Force Base in January, the Air
Force says. , .
The court mutia1 of the 23-yearold airman is scheduled to begin
Tuesda;yatShawAirForceBase.
Willis has been. c~ with the
Jan. 4 shooting of Marie Willis, 30,
in the baSe legal office where she
was pressing abuse charges against
her estranged husband.
Willis. Qriginally from Ironton,
Ohio, is charglld w1th premeditated
murder, four couniS of attempted
murder, two counas of assault, and
nine other charges. including deser·
lion.
.
He told reporters· when captured
in Brownsville, Texas, after a 15day manhunt that he killed his wife
because he loved her and feared
losing her.
. ·

CRASH SCENE- Four people.received minor injuries in an atcident on Pomeroy Pike Thunday afteraoun. Vehicles driven by Rurus
Browuillg, 54, Pomeroy, aad Kevin Wllobrey, 17; also or Pomeroy
met ia a curve and sideswiped. TreateCI were Brownlna and WhO:
brey, aud,.two p~~~~eaaer's in Whobrey's car, Sbawalngels, 17, Middleport aud Doaald E. Yost Jr., 14, Rutland, were treated at Veteraas
Memorial Hospital and released. Here, Brownin1 's vehicle rests in
dittb at the scene. (Sentinel photo by Julie Dillon)

M
h
.
750
t
k
·
~~:C~1:r~:~h=cb~~ulled
o~e t ail . 'to a e·part
~~;~i::::·:::~ in WalkAmerica walk~a-thon
• Pull over, but leave the veliicle

·' window jusl epough to talk to the
officer.
• Once the officer aooroaches
the vehicle, a.slc: to see identificalion. If he or she does not provide
identification, leave immediately.

Over 750 people from. all over·

Acconling to WalkAmerica Point Pleasaiu, Gallipolis and Midand Magic 101 (WMGG
Mason, Gallia and Meigs counties Chairperson Dianna EDison, Qne dlepon,
Radio)."
·
key
to
the
walk's
success
is
the
enare expecled to come together SunOther contributors include · Ap·
day for the March of Dimes Tri- thusiasm by local business and in·
Counlies
WalkAmerica
for dustry. "WalkAmerica has become ~acbian . Power Company, the
Healthier Babies.
a • r regional event because of C1ty of Pomt Pleasant, City Icc and
The walk is set to begin at 2 p.m. the support of organizations on Fuel, Loyal Order of the Moose ··
in Harmon l'lrll:, with 1 ribbon-cut- both sides of the river," Ellison Point Pleasant Rotary Club and
.
University of Rio Grande, w~ will
ling ceremony by March of Dimes . said.
·
Anobasm'or Bo Ric:lad, foUowed
Among those sponsoring a team be videotaping the walk. ..
WASHINGTON (AP) . by the 3.2 mile route through the in this y-·s Walk are Magic 101; . !(-Mart, Citizens National, the :
Michael Collard feels left out
streets of Poillt.PieiMna.,Now in its Big Bear; BIDk One; Holzer Medi· PoirU Pleasant Junior Woman's·
Conpc~s provided money this fourth year, the walk hu became cal Ceo~ McDonald's; K-~ Club, a_nd Point Distributing are
w• to pay fer the lllat extension !be 11qcst C'lel!t fl ill ltind in the APCo-Poinl Pleasant; APCo-CPM; . sponsonng the ~ checkpoints.
of federal emergency jobless bene· ~
. .
APCo-Philip
Sporn; · APCo- . FirSt aid stations are being
fits, but the unemployed former • Ac:tonlilig to the West Vuginia Mountaineer; Health-Aid Phar- coordinated by Pleasant Valley
libra!')'m.auacrwon'IJCI.,-.lc·
Stale Chapter ci. the March of macy; Citizens National; · Frulh Hospital. First aid will be available ·
Collard, SO, ~ Uvea In ones- . Dimes, the Tri-Couatics Walle· · ~acy; Wlhama Hi;. School; at overy checkpoint and two amboro, Ill., is oncneveral million Ametk:a 1s now the l8qest ·~ Ple8sant Valley Hospital; . · Shell bul8nces will f18!t01 the rouJe. Tbe
jObless Americans no IOIIFt etqi- aapila walk · the
,Che!nical and 1'\loples Bank.
county commiSSion van will abo ·
ble for itneniploymont insurance SOD wa11cen ~
m~ "These buSinesses have dis- psuol ·the route 10 pick up tired .
. .
.
coyered ·tbaJ \ValkAmerica is a w-•t..1 a widespread per· :
.Tham · piciures will be taken
great way to Jlfl!IIIOIC team spirit,
ception - at least ilmong 'those this ye~r•1 Walle Will. oa:ooed the
their employeea," said El- beainning II 1 'p.m. by Randy
. with jobs - benefit payments do 10181 Tho In
Jlliled ..., ..._.... lilon. ·~y fl. them allo help ~ FOIIC!ul'«'k or ~ Jmeae Gallery 1a ..
not continue indofinitely even i( . Amlirtca iJ =~ flu1d·~ ;.;
lin. aqd coordinlte . the walll. . the Sllril!l Vlller, ~ Maaic 101
~:C.'e ~. e unable to find no_w.· of Dimes' Jll08l'lllll of' -.at llid ~ inc:tude Our gold-level spon- will be conduclin. a live ICIIIOII
education.
.
.son, Shell Chemical, Subway of · COIItlnaecl 011 Jlltl

. S million people.
still oilt of work

~:Uar, to

=

~a!~:-;~~:m:w'!i ·

amana

-··

�•.

..
~.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
I

111 Cotirt Sueet '
Pomeroy, Ohio •

'
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Manager

LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
wolds. All letlen are subject 10 editing and must be signed with name,
address and 1elepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Lellers
should be in. good taste, addressing issues, not pmonalitjes.

Questions aplenty
about family and
medical leave act
By JOHN CUNNIFF'
AP Buslaess Aaalyst
. NEW YORK -How well busii)ess adjusts to the Family and Medical
Leave Act won't be clear until afrer Aug. 5, when it ta1ces eff(!Ct
·
What IS. clear.is that it will give lots of work to l(lwyers and consul-.
tants.
.
Much of the law is ope~ to interpretation. While consultants may provide advice on how to implement company programs, tricky enough
under the vague guidelines. tt may take court cases to defme issues.
Under lite law, companies employing more than 50 w!Xkea within a
75-rni.le area must give wiXkeiS up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for the
care of a newborn or for a family medical emergency.
But consider these situalioos posed by one consultant, The Wyatt Co.:
-An employee relllmiog from leave is entitled to resume his or her
original or equivalent position, with equal pay and benefits. How do you
define "equivalent position?"
-An employee of a major corpomtion working at a remote branch
office may not qualify for guaranteed leave, while ·a w!Xker at an equal
level in the home office enjoys fun protection. What do you do when the
employee proteSts?
-A highly J.ll:id employee can be denied leave if to grant it would
mean "substantial and grievous economic injury" to the employer. l!ilt
how dO you define "injury," and which employees are included in the
exempted category?
·
· while lite bill is the law, the philosophical arguments that preceded it
are bound to continue as S!JCh questions are thrashed out, perllaps painfully and COSily in many instances.
But the law is the law. and this is what it says:
Companies coven:d must grant employees with at least one year of service and 1,250 hours of work in the past '12 months up to 12 weeks of
unpaid leave for family and medical emergencies of four types:
The birth of a son or daughter; arrival of a son or daughter for adoption
or foster care; care for a son, daUghter, spouse or parent with a serious
health condition; an employee's own serious health condition.
While it is well known that there is no escaping the law, there is no
escaping its complicauons either. and they are many. How would you
handle these, supplied by Kathy Glynn, a Wyau. consultant? ·
-Under the law, employers can require that workers take all accumulated paid leave, such as vacation days, personal days, floating holidays
and the like, as part of the 12-week leave period.
,
But, Gl~n reminds employeiS, tp compel employees to make such
choices mtght not make good business sense, especially in regard to
employee relations.
-Employe,rs must provide workers on leave with the same health-care
coverage they offer active· employees. No complications here if the
employer pays the entire premium .
But some employers require workers to pay part of their health coverage, and that brings up this question: Can the employer deny coverage if
the employee on leave fails to pay his or her ~of premiums on time?
-To be eligible for continued health benefils dwing the leave, the law
says that the worker must return from leave. But there is no definition of
what constitutes a "return to work."
·
What would you do if an employee returned to work for one day, then
quit? What if the employee. having had the security of employer-paid
benefits, never returned?

I

Berry's World
,.

Page-2_;The Datiy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Aprtl23, 1993 ·

Prison overcrowding
has Florida reeling
.
WASHINGTON - Mary Hegje
of Browmd County, Fla., believes
the &lt;:rimiaal jllllic:e S)'lllm 1111 broken faith· wltb her. family. That's
why she now keeps cl~ tabs on
the whereabouts of Walter Ross
. t.ewis.
Five yean· ago, x.e·wis .stabbed
Heggie's daughter to dealh with a
butcher knife. Lewis had been
released oo parole for good behavior after serving eight Y~ of a
25-year sentence for ra_~~~ng a ~3y~-old wo~ and P!S~I-wh1ppmg a bus dri~. Heggie s daugbter was w~ SIX-months pregnant
when LewiS assaulted her. Both
mother and unborn .child died of
the stab wounds.
!;.e'!'is is back in jail now, but
Heggte wooden for. how long.
"~guy Wh!&gt; g~ a ticket or~s
a little drugs ts domg the full Gail)
time," Hegg~~ told our associate
Dean B_oyd. But !he murd~rers
and ·rapists are getllng off wtth a
slap on lite ~ ... W.ith.in a coopie of .-tbs, I m afraid tt may be
my guy !"ho gets out"
Heggte has good~ to worry.
Thank~ to sever.e pnson ov~r~rowdmg, about 2!~ Flonda
mmates walk out of jail early _each

.
mmth- most bavin&amp; served about directillg more· of its resOun:es to
one-,third of their time. In the liSt drug offense$ and less to violent
fiscal year, parole officials rel..sed crime·- resulting in an increasing
24,713 state prisoners early. By proportion of penons imprisoned
for dru~ offenses and a decreasing
proporuon imprisoned for violent
crimes."
"Get tough'·' policies ori drugs
I have led to a federal-prison system
where more than half of all inmates
are there on drug charges .• Tbe
Office of National Drug Control
.
.
.
. ' 1 Policy estinwes.thatJly 1996 drug
October,~ officials wdl have · offenders will comprise two-thirds
to ~ease a pnsoner for every one of the federal prison population.
admt~ ,
Justice Department ststistics show
Flonda s early release program that since 1980 the average senis the tragic result of good inten- tence for federal,drug offendeiS has
lions gone terribly askew. As the increased by 37 months while viodrug c.uli!Jre stiaed up a ~~~mal lent offenders are sp'ending an
hystena tn the 1980s, pohUctans average of 34 fewer months in jail.
spared noetfon 10 show how tough
In Florida; where .a COlli} order
they could be on usen and selltiS, bans ovm:rowding in state prisqns,
Legi~ passed stiff new laws the steady streWn of drug offenders
that abolished .Jl81'01e. and mandai· serving mandatory terms is now
ed lengthy pnson terms for pos- forcing more violent inmates out
~sing even lite smallest amounts "It'~ not leaving any beds for the
of illeg:al substances.
killers and rapists •• says Sarah
The American Bar Association ArnWine of lite Florida Smre Auorsummed up the problem in a recent ney's office in Miami. Long conrepon: "While drug use is decreas- sidered a state tough on criminals,
ing and violent crime is increasinjl. Florida now leads lhe nation in viothe criminal justice svstem ts lent crime and in the early release

By-Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein.

of inmates.
"You h8ve to aslr. yourself lhe
key question," says Kevin Roberts
of the Florida Parole Commission.
"Is the first-time drug offender
more dangerotis than a guy who .
assaulted someone with a lmifc1
· We have cases of non-violent
hibiwal offenders and drug offend·
ers we'd rather release, but we
can't touch them. It gets to a point
where the only thing left !hal's eli·
gible are the violerit offenders. It .
doe~ 't make ~se.:·
G!ven ~rytng c!r~umstance~,
Flonda pnson offlctals do. thw ·
best to select the best candadates
for early release. But there are
always those who return to their
~ld ways.. In 1988, an ~ly release
!nmate k1lled two pohc.e officers
lu.st 10 days after wallpng out of
Jllll.
·
..
Thep there . .is the case ?f
Lawrenc.e E. Sm1th. 'Sentence~ rn
January 1992, to a four-year pnson
senten~e for ~olding up a store at
gunpomt, Smtih only served four
months before pri~on officials
declared him ''advanceable'' for
early release. A few days l(ter· his,
release, Smith was back in state
cUSIDdy after his involvement in a
shon~~·

I

Flonda correctional officials say
the situiltion wiD reach crisis. proportions by October unless something is done soon . Earlier this
year, florida Gov. Lawton D.
Chiles p10posed a fi\¥-year plan to ·
build thousands of new prison beds
and establish new juvenile detention and dru2 treallliCnt centers. In
exchange, lie wanted minimum"
mandatory sentencing laws elimi·
nared for certain drug and non-vi!l"
. lent offenders. But the plan died in
the state Senate after tobacco lobbyists rebelled over a proposed
Cigarette tax with which Chiles·
sought to, fund the program. •
The result could spell doom for
Florida. "Up to now, wc·~c .
excluded the most violent criminals
from the early-release progmm. But
by October we'll hit gridlock, and:
there wiln't be anyone left but the
most violent oflendea," says Bob
McMaster of the !'lorida Depart·
ment of Corrections.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Is Clinton.pac·king the high court?
Back in 1987, when the Democratic Senate dragged through lhe
mud and ultimately rejecred the
Supreme Court nomination of.
Roben Bark, by common consent

increase the libCral minority from
two (Stevens and Blackmon) to
three.
Moreover, if (as expecred) Justice

cess of selectiiig Supreme Coon
justices undelwent a sea change.
Up liD then, even the most l1lflisan
presidents had felt aome obliption
to nominate judges of indisputable
quality, and senators had delicately
refrained from asking nominees
how they would vote on various .
controversial issues.
Now, thanks to Sen. Kennedy and
the massed mud-gunnea of American liberalism, we can all loosen
our neckties mid kick ofJ' our shoes
when it becomes neces••ry to fill a
vaeancy on the court For as Lord
Melbourne remarked (in grateful
relief) about appointments to the
Order of The Ganer, "There's no
damned merit ilbout iL"
The retirement of Justice Byron
White reduces the relatively conservative y.ring of the coon from
seven to Sill at .the very 1_11081, and ·
enahles Pres1dent Chnton to

Blaclanun is the nelit to retire, Mr.
Clinton may soon have another seat
Qn the~ court to fill - although in
that case he would be replacing one
liberal with anoJher, and thus
would not affect the coon's overall
balance.
·
•·
But liberals have not given up hope
of re-establishing firm control over
the Supreme Coon. The behavior
of justices is notoriously hard to
predict. Both Blackmub and
Stevens Wen: appointees of Republican presidents (Nixon and Ford
respectively), yet they are, as noted
above, the two remaining piUars of
liberalism on lite court And there
are dismaying indications that Justices O'Connor, Kennedy and
Souter (the.fust two nominated by
Rea~an ud the last by Bush) are
tending to band together as a "center bloc" on the court, which

oneoftbeabtestjuristsever~
to that high bench, the whole pro-

William A. Rusher

would leave it divided like Gaul Cuomo, in Rush Limbaugh's fcliciinto three pans, with only Chief tous phrase, "withdrew his name
Justice Rehnquist and Justices from consideration before he was
Scalia and Thomas as dependably not asked."
conservative.
So I am reduced to rooting, in lite
That, however, may be unduly pes· same cynical spirit, for Marian
simistic. Justices O'Connor and Wright Edelman or Eleanor
Souter undeni~bly disappointed Holmes Norton. (Anita Hill would
conservatives with their votes on be a bridge too far. and besides she .
the ticklish abortion issue, but on once sbldied law under Bod:.)
.other questions their performance More seriously, there is one ol.ber
has generally been less offensive factor that may yet play an imporand may perhaps best be described tant pan here. Just1ce Scalia has.
as uneven. Only Justice Kennedy emerged, without milch question,
shows real sig~J .. I!f .. l!.av.ing .. ,. '!.U~~ .. fh,ief.illtcllect~al.. heav.y.. ...
"grown," which is the word used ~e1ght among the CO'!fl s conservain New York Times editorials for ttve members, and mdeed as the '
"sold out to liberalism." And even most brilliant justice on the high
in his case it's early days yeL
bench. _:Not unnatura.lly, he ofte.n
In addition, much may depend on finds tltls role. frustrallllg, w,hcn h1s
the personality and views of the coUeagues. f~ to fol!ow h1s lead ..
woman (I assume it will' be a But I am prtvately mformed by
woman and probably black) whom judges who know and admire him
Mr. Cli~ton nominates. I had .been that he~ to vent his frustration
hoping he would name Mario by makmg. har.sh ~om~~nts and
Cuomo, my theory being that !hat· .sarcasuc ISldes m his.opanlons -. ~
hard-charging liberal would quick- pro_cess .that may ~! umes ~~cccs~
ly drive Justices O'Connor 11 nd sanly alienate the centnsts. , .
Sooter, and maybe even Kennedy,
WIUiam Rusher Is a syndical·
back into alliance with the cOurt's 1 ed. writer ror Newspaper Enter·
three unabashed conservatives. But prise Association.

Elvis doesn't live here any.m ore
It was a no-lose situation for'
Elvis fans.
A medil111i was ·on hand to summon
the
king
of
rock
(LT)/(NU)213(GT)n' roll back"
tiom the dead. But if she couldn't
do it. lite spqnsor of the aeance told
the assembled guests munching on
fried banana-and-peanut butte~
sandwiches (Elvis' fawrite), "That
will be proof he's still alive."
Which was even better, of COU!Se.
As it turned out. Elvis failed to put
in an appearance.
Those who didn't take this to mean
he was alive and well on Earth -·
as the supermarket tabloids n:gularly assure us - might have had
other expiBnations for his no-show.
Maybe Elvis was. busy .~ith o.ther

tbiri~s in the spirit world, such· as
helpmg musicians still on Earth. A
lot of the ideas and inspiration that
come to us seemingly from

the spiriwalist trade.
the side of the pulpiL
Christianity has always affumed a There was a sound of glass shatter. &gt;
belief in an afterlife. But modem ing. The congregation gasped.
scie9ce has served to cast doubt on Then the minister opened the hand·
this belief. The result has been a · kerchief 10 show lhe jagged pieces
growing )ioplllar·desire for certain- of glass to the congregation . He ,
ty
·
popped a "piece" into his mouth, ·.
Spiritualism claims to offer this munched on it an4 swallowed it. :
nowhere are said by believers in certainty. It purports to establish · The people . in the audience
spiritualism to be the wiXk of spir- communication with those who groaned. One woman fainted.
its looking out for us from that have departed this 'life, proving . "Spirit protection is a wonder- ·
I
"there is no death." It is thua a ful reality,' claimed the spiritualist
other world.
solace
in lime' of grief and after- pastor.
I
. ~
Or. maybe Elvis was in heavy
ward.
.
·
After the service, the incredulous '
demand that evening by other
~bJ MEA, Inc.
Spiritualism may be overrun with church members crowded around
mediums.
"What is the meaning of li.'. . MOM, WHAT
Elvis may be the hottest property of frauds. But as we know from the the pulpit to Cllamine the leftover ,
the spirim•lias lhe8e days. llutit is bereaved characte(S ·in Menotti's jagged glass. They went away
ARE .YOU DOING HERE?" .
;
the average person's cravina for · "The Medium." 1Q those who want shaking their heads.
proof of immortality that bas to believe, no amount of ~xplana- What the people didn't know wa$ :
always been lite bread and butter of lion or·denial will convince them that before the service the minister I
they ate being duped. .
.
had placed a dish .containing ice
It is this gullibility ihat makea 11 inside the pulpit. What he was I
possible for the phonies ammg the munching on dwing his "amazing '
By Tbe Assotlited Press
.l.n 1896, the "Vitaseope" system for projecting 'mo)'ies onto a ~CreeR spiriU1I'Iists to mke In lite millions.
demonstration" was not glass, but :
Today is Friday, April 23, the 113th day of 1993. There are 252 days was dcmonatlllred at a music haD in New York City. .
One such fake who came clean a piece of ice.
•
In 1940, about200 peq~le died in a dance haD fire in Natchez( Miss.
left in the year.
after many yeus told ·in a book Tberewereotherspiriwalisttricks. ~ .
Today's Highlight in History:
In 1954, Jiank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves hit lite first of his how he did it.
An accomplice, for CXIIIIple, would :
April23, 1564 is the generally accepted birthdate of the English poet and . record 755 major-league home runs, In a game against the SL Louis Cat- He was a putor of a spiritualist pick the pockets of a member of :
dramatist William Shakespeare. He died on the sam.e date 52 years later.
dinals. (The Braves won the game. 7-5.)
·.
church in Tampa. Fla.
'the congregation. Several weeks ;
On this dare:
·
In 1968, the Methodist Chureh and the Evanaelical United' Brethren One one occuion he wanted to were allowed to elapse - enough :
In 1348, ~ing Edward lU of Englan&lt;Lestablisbej[ the. Order of the Church l)lerged to form the Unired Methodist Church.
.
impress his congregation with the tjme fll' the victim to miss the lift·
Garter.
.
.
·
•
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was ~entenced to deatb for the assassination of ability of departed spirits to protect ed Item. Later, during a ICIIICe, tile :
In 1616, the Spanish poet Cervantes died in Madrid (the same day New York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. ,(The sentenCe was later reduced to . folks on l!Uih from harm.
· "aplrita" wo.uld return the llolen :
William Shake~ died in Stratford-on-Avon, England). ·
.
life imJirisb!tm~q
·
He lOOk a g1aa of ·water that was ObJect to the grateful and dumb· :
. In 1789, President-elect Washington and hiS wife .moved into the ftrit
Thou~t for Today: "Be not afraid of arealiless: 10111e are born ~t, sitting on the pulpit.and poured lite founded JIOIIOIL
.
.
,
executive mansion, the Franklin House, in New York.. . ·
' . . ·· .·
some l!Ciiieve greatness, and 10111e have·areatness thrust upon them. ' water over ~m~ flow eta. ·After .. Geor1e
a oyadlcat· l
1paper Eater- I
In 1791, the 15th president of tlie Ujlired States, James Buchanan; was ' From Act Two; scene five of •'Twelfth-Night,'', by William Shakespe!are . wrapping the tmpty glass in a eel "'Iter. for
born in Franklin c;ounty, Pa.
·
·
·
(1564-1616). ·
·
.
.
'
· . handkeithief, he sm~hed it aaainst Prill! Allliclatlon.
1
·, .:·
l
'

I

George R. Plagenz ·.

r

.Today in history_....:;..,__ __;,__ _ _ _ _ _.......__'-

Plllf:e0.: 11

~~

....

RECOGNITION - Ohio Valley PahMill&amp;
reporters Jim Freeman, ldt, and ltevin Piuw
are reeogniJed by GaUipolls City Schools SIIJift'inteadent Patricia Brennelilan for the ......,....
meat or ihe Junior•Journalist prOJ~:am at tilt
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. Tbe project, aimed .a

w..a.. •I 1' J•
......

*I a • CJ•btiid"s w.

A ROWDY CLASS - A first-year teacher
encounters a tough class and eventually develops
a rapport wltb tbe nnc:urbed students in "Up the
Down Staircase," a dinaer theater to be· performed Saturday at 6:15 p.m. by the Eastern
High Sc•ool Class or 1993. Cost Is $8 for .adUlts

a ...t• .. s illterested ia

-

&gt;••cu;&amp; ldiuDwitllhe

s

•

•

·

M~ Co••dt. The

I

. as ....... , .a .· _t•tkldlaolboard's
•ta

1 1•

I

:. ~ (OVP pllolo)

I

......

and $5 ror children. Admission to the play, without the dinner, is $4 wltb doors opening at 7
p.m. Here, east members on the set
a
scene from the drama. (Sentinel photo by
Freeman)
·

.

-Meigs announcements- More...
Fret . . . .
"' .,.
..
ree ·OGm~
• we wawa
screening will lie plow · "rl Illy
Marietta Opbthe1•6o _,......_
uons oo May 4 ~ ~0 aa. m_l
p.~ . at the Prtescup1~ 9oP •
Middleport. ~
necessary.

Supervlson to meet
Tbe Mei~s Soil and Water Conservation District board of supervisors will meet Wednesday lll8 p.m.
at the Meigs SWCD Office.

- A(

Wcelrmd-wias ·
There will be a •
ing at Red &amp;mit a I • afCIIBI
in Bashan oo Saw*J a 7 p.a..

'**' ..,._

and Sunday u 10 aa. ..t 6 pa.
Denver Hill, Foacr. W.Va.. will..,
speaker. Evt.I)'OIIC irtwilr::d.

DeJII'ee to be coaferred
The Ohio State Gmnge officers
will be conferring the sixth degree
at Warren Local High School in
Washington County on Saturday at
7 p.m. Those who have received
the fifih degree are invited to
attend ..'Contact Opal Dyer at 7422805 for further information.

fUel•··· :-..

~

The Gallia· t'=iiJ:I' 0
·y
Action Ageaey will llald a fRc
clothing day T
'IJ m. .9 aa.
to noon at. the old Ztip sckDi
building in~

c-•iaee•-c

The Racine Area 0
q
Organization will T •; a
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill PaL .,..
membersare• •· ·

. EMS .respotuls
to six calls .

Opening day slated
The Tuppers Plains Baseball
Teams are having their opening
day May 8 ftom 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
. There will be a parade, baseball ·"
and carnival games, concessions
and prizes.

A·re··a death

.

Units of tbc Mcip c--ry
Emergency Medical Snwiil;e
re~.to'Six.alslilr
• •

ov~ inclllllinJial!CCident on ~oy Pib:

•

1

k

n..s-

'Cjay aftanoon.
• •
The Pomeroy Yo!-...,. FDepartment, alollg 1ri* l'llmDJ

.

~~=~ ~~i~.!:

two-vehicle aoadeiiL R.CU
.. Browning, Sbawa lqr:k, 1rewi:1
Ethel Mace
Whobsey and IDa
porred from lite SllCile • Vid:a•
Ethel Dora Mace , 89, of Memorial
Hospi'a1
Charleston, W.Va., former resident
The
Rutland
Wt:at 10
of Rutland, died Thursday. A-pril Meigs Mine 2 atsq!llld
6:13
p.IL
few
;22, 1993, at St)'rancis Hospital in
David Darst Ytbo 11 ¥•.C
Charleston, W. Va. after an extend- . to
Pleasant
VaHey
Hocpi•al AI .
ed illness.
Bom on ~pt. 19, 1903 in Clay 6:26 p.m. lite Tuwm I'Liillli.VaiCounty, W. Va .• she was the unteer Fire iJ)epadau 111!111 ma
A:ddition for a daughter of the laie Mecken Arbaugh
hearec
fire.
·· ,.., · · Durht~n~ aild Angelinii'Maillins.
The Syracuse squad 1i'Call0
She was a housewife and a .Smith
Ridge Road a. 7:SS pa. lilr
member of the Freewill Baptist . Maryann Gutbrie ..t1o- llatiChurch of Rutland.
porled to VMH. 1be iiCoddlrplrt
She is survived by a son, Alvin squad responded Ill . . . Sln:a a
Mace, of Charleston, W. Va.; three 8:59 p.m. for Valda Bailey .....,
daughters, Jeaneua Means o( was l{anSpOo1ed lO VMH.
Charleston, W. Va. with whom she
At 7:0:'! a.m. today, die Sy:•
made her home; Doris Ramsburg squad weal to l'lomemf Pih r.
of Rutland, and Rose Madden of. Octa Ward who wu laka 10
Plain 'City;, two sisters, Florence VMH.
Proctor of Detroit, Mich., and Mary
~tewait of Middlepon; 23 grandchildren, 37 great grandchildren,
and 14 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Sunday at the Freewill BapCLEVELAND (AP)-IIaUIIC
tist Church in Rutland. The Rev. Thursday' night's Ohio r • .,...,
Paul Taylor wiD officiate and bwi- selections:
al will be in Miles Cemetery. Pick 3 Numbers
Friends may call 2 10 4 and 6 to 9
6-9-8
p.m. Saturday at the Cunningham(six, nine,~
Parker-Johnson Funeml Home in Pick4 N "ers
Charleston, V. Va.
34-2-5
'
(thnoe.u:au.-.h)
-::
'
· The jactpot Cor Saa.n~ay·s
The
Daily
Sentinel ,
I .• t
•
Super Lotio drawiJw i l - * $20
I'
(USPS •ta.960)
million.
.

Y-.--

Lottery numbers

.

Published fi'Vt!ry a.RBtnD(m , Monday
through Friday, 111 Cburt St., Pomeroy,

Ohio bj the Ohio Yaney Publiahlng
Cpmpany/Multimedia Ine., Pomeroy,

Ohio -45IJ69, Ph. 992-2166. Seeond clua
poo .... paid at~· Ohio.
·Member: The AModated Pmu, and lhe ·
Ohio Newspaper Auociation, National
Advertiaing Repre~efttative, Branham
Newapaper Sale., 793 •Third Avenue,

New York, New Yetrk

~0017.

POS'I'MASTER: Send addrut ch.anget 1o
Tile Daily S.nbot, 1t1 Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 45789.
~

'

SUIUICIUP'IlON IIATEB

By

cam. or Motor Route

'One ifeek ...........................................$1.80

Qi)e Manlh .........:............................:..l8.96
Olio Yeor.........,.................. ,..............l83.20
•

RINGLBCOPY
1
.
PRICE
Dolly...........................................-,21! Cent&amp;

.

Sublcrlben not dlllirina: to Pl-Y UM! cur;.
er maY. remil jn ,dvanoe dire~ &amp;o The
[)ai}y

98nUneJ Gn a dtree, a"J: or 12

trwin·th bull; Credit will b.,t•en carrier
Mchweek.
·
No. IUblcriptionl by man permiulld in
IJN!III where home c.rrior IICJ'Yicc is
IYiilablc.

•
Mooll8....o.m.llo ...
• ·
1-llolp Co•nb'
t3 w..u ........- ..............................121.114
118 Woeki ......................................... 54!).16

52 Woott·.......................................... ta4. 76
.

u

O•lltda Melp: Cnntr

·

na.

Wetka.....~••~ ............... :................
.o
118 w..u...................................:.......$6a.80
aJ' 'fltlldl..,,,,.. ,,,,:"'''"''f'-'T'''''''' '""I'' J,88.'4(1

·

Zaotc6e-.

~pas. w11o canpletes lite
will ame. a packet of
r-n !lona!rrl by Jo..
a1
·
iillriOding fRe food ·
..1 w ~ . Mdlonald's ~and
m. l'lqles Bank.
P •'""J a I .., enNek1pes will .·
. • • ill pizcs donaled by
lk
Employrrs of SubtRY 11lil ..,. c. bad to serve a
iw-ilcl .-1 salwicfl to each

-=- m,. • _.

Committee to meet
The Meigs County dry fire
hydrant committee will meet at the
Meigs Soillnd Water Conservation
District Office· on Wednesday at
6:30 p.m . All members urged to
attend.
·

Membership meeting set
Meigs County grangers and
·interested persons are eneouraged
to attend ·a grange membership
meeting at the Albany Grange Hall
in Albany (tonight) Friday at 7:30
p.m . sponsored by Lowell
Ashcrafl, area membership chair·
man, and Bonnie Vonderhovel,
state membership chairman.

1M • w " - tk walk sile and

Stocks

-a

or 6e
AYI Foodsystems,
loc..liiDrlstnileuupplia; to Shell
a · 4. will !aVe sofutinks at,

........ .
5

•

,

'

will also be. eligible to
.- a
or prizes...
The first
- .,. •u••&amp;u:1e
.. llte ........
-n.
~-....
wiiiiiCUiwe liEta!IJ the' upcoming
7

b

....

1t' [ I ~ · and
9 1 J C£as iD Huntington,
CWILj or JlaP:· 101. Tile liiSt

~ ....... me. wall will
JG:&amp;iie asil _ . memiJeiShip to
die PYB W"
•Center. courtesy
or n • Wier Hospital; the
p 1++I piKe &amp;esjcln will icceive
... iillqe-- cliiue4 from Pontbnq .S lfc Iliad place finisher
will ac:a:ite a $IS lift certificate .
m.o· . . I Recads.,
1k • ·n l3ising the most
•
; tsi.DIIO i1r ova) will
JNUi;e ll Gilda color Jdevision
~ .._. or f'lilne'l Second
~ wil lie awadt:d a $200
........... • $100 savings
........ be.pa filr tflird place.
~ • ·
• patii:iplats are
M I 8
d 'I' I "S may regislcr

• •D .,' montfledayof
diew.k
I •greeters"
will .., • a-d a. dll: wall site to
a:zu yc a•• .:1 distribute
anti;. wllida can be ex1I o ~ lilr faad l!ld.liwcxs. In.lite
- or .. • • wadler, there.
wiil .., • ._ •
d nunide the
YCMIII ·o-r, pv9ilful' by tile
Jfi(iiMI " •
e CO!D(IaJl}' of.
~ 'lbl ~zj . Amt.y National
Girad..
w - h - - w:lllilllkd 110( to lita:lllaaf:6c-aii:IO*c Trash barn:lk will ... ' ' I I at regular in....
, . ....·a !1\ouJd be ad...,.,._ C
• • A'llellur: will be
••· • • lif •tile die walt is un**••J~

'ROTARY BREAKFAST SATURDAY·
These members of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club, Gene Riggs, president, Dick
Vaughan, past president, and Gene Triplett,
president-elect, I tor, have been busy promoting
tbe dub's .annual pancake breakfa~ to be held
Saturday at the Sealor Citizens Center on Mol-

berry Heiihts. ~rving wiD begin at 7 and coa.tinue 'tilll a.m. Tickets·will be available at tbe
door, $3 ror everyone over 13, and $2 for those
between six and 12. Everyone under six wiD eat
free. Proceeds will go to support Meigs County
service projects.
·

•..., •v•

Weather

a

ii+

•

....

-or.-~,..

F
"

I

·--.1·

FF
. .wat:
• • ,..__...__

0
efl• wasadJhun.
. a - SDday. Lows in the
ia 1111: mid-60s to
lliid-llk.A11 •oraMonday.
1..-s ~~ Jlil:lts irt - 601.
-

A •'

• J

,..._HiPs

Slultlle Bridge

inspection to
close one lone

-·-:': Jk:.
=

'IIII:K willie a •wW.iaspr.c.

·~·­

... T - A Apri 'If. ICI:II!'dilemlkD a
afmp..
-.,s..
wil be con- I a•";;. Aplil21,
1'ft:d.
I ;;. AJd 2a,. _.... idly,

3 ..... 9a.a.m3p.m.
~ W) llllk; will be

•

1k . I ... wit ... ell&amp;

~~:::.~ i

1k

n· .,

a··J

~.

D I ..
. . . T'le lacal ..., '"'
::=~~, ·*ora·
.,.
I ctiw.

.

I

.

.

··-·.

.

·.:.- _-.·. --:_. =- ~~
· .... lea 9"DIIue
In- Be C'pulng
Fdl' bAPI30.

.•.• ,•.

•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
• Thursday admissions - None.
Thursday discharges - Thomas
Turner, Middleport, and Linda
Jenkins, Pomeroy,
HOLZER MEDICAL ·cENTii:R
April 22 discharges - John
Stapleton, Mrs. Martin Davis and
son, Edna Walls, Mrs. Trent Christian and daughter. Katherine Wallace, Ethel Walker, lack Williams,
Dolly Ramey, Randy Balcer, Edison Mayes, Rose Lee, Hannah
Hughes, Wanda Deweese, Margaret White, Chris13ra Lucas,
Matdtew Hill, Dustin Holschuh and
Nicole McDaniel.

IAikiAIN MATINiiS SAT . I SUN .
IAftGAIN NIGHT TUESDA 't

CIPT CIWTJ,tCAYES AYAJLABL£1

Correction
Wednesday's Sentinel repor:ted a
. vehicle driven by Timothy J.
Bearhs, 35, 43354 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy. was forced into a guard
l1lil after he puUed into the path of
a vehicle driven by JaneL. Manuel,
27, 49173 Manuel Rotld, Racine.
It was Manuel's vehicle which
struck .the guard rail, not Bearhs'.
Tbe rest of the report was correct,
however. Tbe Stllllntl regrets lhe ·

error.

..... 'IIR.Il'IIUM.

ro. Clilal, .lACK MCHOI.SON,

· --~~

AFEW
GOODMEN
(''"' ;... • fll.n ..,_;.,., ~~.~~
~· .,. · ••l ,'l' • lo'•'•~ ~

.•.,.. ,

:, •. &lt;:~~t':

BRUCE STONE
IN CONCERT

SUNDAY,
APRIL zs ·
,.
6:30P.M•
St. Paul
. LUtheran

COLOrn THEATRE

.C hureh

'
I'

.

mayor's office. Trees must be
on village
property in front of homes, Thornton said. Here,
from right, County Commissioner Janet
Howard, representing the Resource Conservation and Development Board, Thornton and Village Clerk Carolyn Powell plant the rll'st tree or
the year, a dogwood. (Sentinel photo by Jim
Freeman)
·

Hospital news

I c:loadiness.
1.-illkiDirn.O cofmin
2Da••r• ' diy. dolmywith a
d
e or,.. WCJl ad tbunderS1llnU.. Hip ia die 11pper 70s.
'Jl ·-.,.

'TREE PLANTING - Racine village oliicials
took advantage of Earth Day Thursday to kick
off the .third y..r or a tree planting campaign in
the vlllaJe. According to Village Councilman
Jeff Tbcrnton, 75 trees have been planted in the
village to-date. Thornton said village residents
wanting trees pl.a nted should contact the

POMEROY, OHIO

..

. ADMISSION FREE
· Lov.e Offe~ WW Be Tall•· ·

�•

_,

•

The

The Daily Sentinel~

Sports

.

In AL action,

Bosio·
·• holds Bosox hitless in Mariners' win
-

·- Friday, Aprl123, 1983;

.

Page 41 ·

·T

.

•

In NL action,

.

·

.

·

Wakefie~ knucklebaJI helps
Pirates .hand Reds 5~4 defeat
last three outs for his ftfth save.
P!ldres 2, Ph DUes 1
Andy Benes (3· J) gave up one
run in 8 2/3 innings for his third
straight victory and Bob Geren
homered, leading San Diego past
Pbitadelphia at VeteranS Stadium.
· Geren -hit his borne run leading
off the ilfth inning against Terry
Mulholland (2-2) .. His _last homer
came Aug. 14, 1991 for the New
York Yankees.
.
Giants 13, Mets 4
Robby Thompson had four of
San Francisco's 19 hits ilnd dtove
in four runs as the Giants routed
New York at Shea Stadium. Former Meis player .Mark Carreon
drove in three rut\s, two on his ftrst
home run of lhe season.
John Burkett (4-0) gave up four
runs and four hits in 5 1/3 innings
to become the NL's frrst four-game
winner. Mets starter Pelli Schourek
fen to t-2.
orr game against tbe Pittsburgh Penpins ill,East
. EARLY CELEBRATION - New Jersey
Cardinals 5, Rockies 2
Rutherford, N,J., where the Penguins came 'bad&lt;
.
Devils
Dave
Barr
and
Scott
Neidermayer
(right)
Todd Zeile broke a 2:2 tie with
to win 4-3. (AP)
hug teammate Bill Guerin (center) arter the
an RBI single off Gary Wayne (0Devils' ftrSt goal in Thursday night's NHL play2) to highlight a three-run eighlh
inning as St. Louis beat Colorado
at Busch Stadium. .
·
NHL
Mike Perez (2-1) struck out two
of the three batlers he faced in the.
eighth tifter lhe Rocldes had tied it
in the sevenlh. Lee Smith.worked
the ninlh for his sixth save. ·
Marlins 4, Braves 3 ,
Catcher Benito Santiago
Canadiens 2, NordiqutS,l (OT) . ,
a bouncing pitch an~
Penguins 4, Devils 3
By KEN RAPPOPORT
briefs------ retrieved
Vince Damphousse scored a dis- .'
li!gged Otis Nixon out at ~e plate
Mario Lemieux ignited a threeAP Hockey Writer
·
puted
goal in overtime as Monuaf :
as he uied to score the tymg run
Tennis
The Pittsburgh Penguins contin- goal third period, and the Penguins
won
its
frrst game of the series.
;
with
two
outs
in
the
ninth,
preserv_
BARCELONA.~ Spain (AP)ue to make NHL playoffs history. pushed lhe Devils to the brink of
.
Quebec
leads
the.
best-of-seven
.,
ing
Florida's
victory
over
Atlanta
Top-seeded Arantxa Sanchez
The Buffalo Sabres, meanwhile, playoff elimination.
Vicario of Spain routed Radka ' at Joe Robbie Stadium. Jack Arm- are making their own kin!i of histo- · The two-time defending Stanley series 2-1. Game 4 1S Satunlay at •
Zrubakova of Slovaki, 6-1, 6-0 and strong (2-2) got the win afrer hold- ry:
:
Cup champions can sweep the best· lheForum.
Nordiques
goalie
Ron
'Hedal1
.
second-seedeed Conchita Maninez ing.Atlanla to one unearned run m
A franchise filled with playoff of-seven ftrst-round series by winstopped Damphousse's shot on a
of Spain beat Claire Wegink of the seven innings. Bryan Haryey failure, the Sabres are oo the verge ning Sunday.
power
but lite rebound weat
Netherlands 6-1, 6-1 in lhe second picked up his fourlh save.
of advancing to the second ,round
-Winning Game 3 and posting off the play,
skate
of a Quebec defense- '
round of lhe La Familia Open.
·
Steve Avery fell to t-2 .
for the first time 1983, than1cs to a th!lir NHL record 14th. straight
man
10:30
into
overtime.
~
4-3 overtime victory over the playoff victory didn't come easy
The
Nordiques
protested
!hat
the
•
Boston Bruins on Thursday night.
for the Penguins. Pittsbutgh, which
"I've heard since I first got here twice had to come back from one- goal was kicked into the •net by '
that the Sabres have always got goal deficits, rallied after Bobby Kirk Muller, who originally was ~
knocked out of the first round," Holik's goal with 3:28 left in the credited with the goal. But •t was ;
Scaalo 11 Golden S~a~.c, 3:30p.m.
~ r.:till-1) ll Otkland
Buffalo's Yuri Khmylev said afrer second period put New Jersey_ upheld by a video replay judge. ·
Housl.tlllat San Antonio. 8:30p.m.
(Wclob 2-1},1&amp;.35 p.m.
Montreal was on ,the pow« play
Pho:eNx 11 Owl.-cr, 9 p.m.
scoring the winning goal and giv- ahead ~-I. .
ing lhe Sabres a stunning 3-0 lead
Lemieux made it 2-2 67 seconds because Curtis Leschyshyn was •
Saturday's 1ames
·*
NHL
playoffs
•
a.ioop (llolioa O.l) o1 T_.. (Ou&amp;·
in· their best-of-seven Adams Divi- into the third period, and then .the sent off for slashing Brian Bellow.s .:
man 1-Q). 1:3S p.qa.
•
sion series. "I'm fammar wilh the Penguins quickly moved ahead 4-2· at 9:26 of ovenime.
Tbursdoy's ..,ores
Tnu (Lcibrandl 2-0) at Mllwilli.ee
The
Canadiens
outsbot
the
~
(H
rn. Il-l), loGS"""
.
Piltab"'Jh 4. New ).,..y 3, Pi1Ubural1
history. I know the impor)ance of on .a fluke goal by def~nseman
Nordiques
50-35,
including
12-'5
in
•
Baltimore (Muuina lal) at ltaa~u
ludl se:rial-0
'
the last goal."
Peter Taglianetti and a goal by
.
'
N.Y .lllanden 4, Waah.lnJlOn 3 (011,
City (Pic:budo 1.()), 2:35p.m.
A
victory
in
Game
4
on
Saturdefenseman Larry Murphy on a overtime.
Cl.EVI!LAND (Bielod&lt;i 1·2) .. Oak·
NY hlanden lc.ad serict 2·1
Montreal lhought it had •SCOfed
." , Buffalo 4, Boaton 3 (OT), Buffalo
lind Olill&lt;lu 1·1~4Jl5 f"'·
day in Buffalo would give the shot goalie Craig Billirigton failed
Detroit (Doll8rty 1- ) at Minnuou
leads acriot ~0
.
the
winner 7:38 into overtime when ~
Sabres their first opening-round to catch.
Monlrell 2. Quebec 1 , Q~ fcad1
(BOib 2-0).IoOS p.m.
~
Stepl)an
Lebeau batted Benoit
JCrica·l -1
Ne.w YOlk (Pea 0-1) at Seaulc (Han.·
playoff series victory in seven tries.•
Islanders 4, Capitals 3 (OT)
deflec~-d pass out of the •
Brunet's
am 2-0), 10:05 p.m.
While the Sabres were surprisNew Yorlc's Ray Ferraro scored
B~ton (DOpson 1- 1) It California
Tonlgbl's games
ing lhe Bruins, who finished with 4:46'into overtime, capping a rally, air and into the net. But lhat gOal •
(lAW ~0~ 10,05 p.m.
~it at Toronl0,_7:30 p.m.
was disallowed after video replays
ChicaaoaL St. Laus, 8:30p.m.
the second-best record in hockey from a 3-1 deficit.
Yancwvcr at WU\nipea. 9:30p.m.
Sunday's pmes
s.howed
the puck was hit with a _
during the regular season, lhe powThe Islanders, who also won in slick above
CalJUY at Loi AngClci, 10:30 p.m.
Oica~ at Torc:~~no, 1:35 p.m.
shoulder hei~hl
erful Penguins continued to sur- overtime in Game 2. took a 2-1
Damit at Min!lelcu,l!OS p.m.
. Tcu.sll Milwtukt:c., 2:Q5 p.m. •
Saf:urday's games
prise no one. They beat New Jersey lead in the best-of-seven Patrick
Baltimon a1 Kansu cu,, 2:35 p.m.
Wuhinaton at N.Y . lalandett, 7:30
Sports briefs
'·
4-3
to exrend !heir record playoff Division semifinal series that
Q.EVELAND u Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
pm.
FootbaU
..,
New"'lmkat Seaale, 4:35p.m.
Bcalmi.Jt Buflalo, 7:30 p.m. •
sueak to 14 games, and can com- resumes Saturday. . ,
Bolton al Calil"omia,I:OS p.m.
TAMPA, Fla (AP)- Anthoay
QuetJer: It MoniJUl, 8 p.m.
plete a sw~p of the Patrick DiviSteve Thomas and Pierre Tur- Munoz,
who retired last seasQn ·',
sion series on Sunday.
geon scored .late goals as the afrer 13 years
Sunday's games
-*NBA*as an offensive ucHe ,.
PittaburJh at New Jcncy, 1 p.m.
In other games. it was the New Islanders won for the ftrst time Ibis with the Cincinnati
Bengals, pa d ••
Oicagn at SL l.D.Jis, I p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
York Islanders 4, Washington 3 in season when trailing after two periCalgary
at
l...ol
Angclca.
3
p.m.
a
physical
and
wants
to play next ,;
Atltndc Dlvlllon
o~enime, and Montreal 2, Quebec
ods (1-25-2). They also improved . season with Tampa Bay. 'The Buc- ,,
Oeuoit at Toronto, 7 p.m.
............... ,.. W L Pet. CB
Vanecuvc:r al Winnipeg, 9 p.m.
1 in overtime.
, their franchise overtime record in cancers are coached by former ~
r-New Yolk ...........sa 22 . .725
•·lloaon ............... 46 34 .515
ll
The
Stanley
Cup
playoffs
conlhe playoffs to 27-7.
a-Newlersey ....-...43 37 .53R
IS
Ben gals coacll_ Sam Wyche.
- * Transactions
tinue tonight with Chicago at St.
Odando ..... -........... 39 41 .481
19
Miuni ....................35 45 .4l8
23 1
Louis and Detroit at Toronto ill the
B~ball
. Philodelp!Ua ..........26 54 .325
32
National Lea1ue
Norris·
Division and Vancouver at
WuhinpxL-.........22 ll .775
36
1"
. CINCINNATI REDS Pltcc.d R,ob
Winnipeg
and Calgary at Los
1 Dibble·, pitcher, on \.he lS·dty di11bled
Ctntral Dlvlllon
••'
Angeles
in
the
Smythe. Deuoit, St.
lisL Cllllod up Mihan ~ pitcher! f~
y-0Ucogo .............. 57 23 .713
l:ndianapolis of the Amencan AUOCltUon .
'·
Louis and Vancouver lead th,eir
a-Q.EVELAND....53 T1 .663
4
SUNDAY,
APRIL
23,
1993
· FLORIDA MARUNS - Oea:ignated
•·Ailama ...... ..........4l 31 .52S
15
series
2-0,
while
the
Calgary-Los
.
Scott Po1c, outfielder, for auignment.
;~~-Qunoue .............42 31
._S2.5
IS
Purchucd to contnct of Mtn Tumer,
Angeles series is tied 1-1.
lndiaaa-.................40 ., .500.
17
..••
pitcher, from Edmonton of the Ptcific
Dc,uil.................... l&amp; 42 .475
19
Sabres 4, Bruins 3 (OT)
Cout l.caf!e. Recalled Bob Nttal, cau:h·
•...
Milwaukee ............. 28 52 .350
29
'
er, from Eclmonton.
The ~abres were on the power
SAN FRANClSCO OIANTS ~ .
Scalloped Potatoes,
play when Khmylev scored the
Named Ken Schneider di..!Utnr of direct
Buttered Corn,
winning goal on a deflection.
mukcting and ticket IIC:tYics.
Hot
Roll, '
WESTERN CONFERENCE
After Boston's Ray Bourque
Basketball
MldwHl DlviPon
Small
Drink or Coffee
was called for hooking Doug
..................W L Pd. CB
National Baake\ball AIICX:Ial_iQn
HOUSTON ROCKETS -Pla ced
Dodger 37 jleC(lnds into overtime,
J·ilouaM .............55 2S .681
,.s.., ........ ..... ..41 32 .600
.;
Vernon Muwell,guard , on the injoaed
Khmrtev tipPed home Dale HawerTRY OUR HOMEMADE PIES
a-thah ....................46 34 .S75
9
lin. Signed Terry T01P,. pard:
chuk
s shot ITom the point at I :05.
Denva- ................... 35 46 .432 20.5
NEW HOURS: OPEN 10 A.M;-~:00 P.M.
Minna&amp;t .............. ll 62 .225
37
Football
The Sabres' other scorers were
Dllllu.......................9 71 .113
46
Nalkln•l Football Lt:aaue
Alex Mogilny and Bob Sweeney,
MIAMI DOLPJ-IINS - Si.,w:d Huey
while Boston g6l goals from
Padlk: Dl•l1lon
Richarcllon, dofenaivo end; C"huclr: Bul-.
,.
&amp;-AioenU ............... 61 19 '- .763
,.,
louah, linebacker; Dtle Hnehet, punter.
Bourque,
Brian
Smolinski
and
cam
li-Stau.le ................. s-4 26 .675
7
andl&gt;aill$ 'NhiWct, ti&amp;hl end . ·~
·
, Neely.
·
.
li-Pwl.l.nd .............. so 30 .w
11
MJNNESOT A VIRINGS· - Signed
li·LA. Clippcn ......40 -41 .4CM ll.S
Trailing
'2-1
late
.
i
n
the
third
Iz.e1 Jc:nkint, ~rbtck..
ll ·l..A. LUen ........ 38 -42 ,475
23
NEW YORK. GIANTS - Signed Vicperiod, the Bruins tied the game,
Oold.-t SUI\e .......... 33 -47 .413
21
UII' JCIICI, NllJ'IinS hick.
Sacn.rncnao ............2S 55 .313
36
d'
went down by a goal, then sent it
..elindlcd pkyntrbc:M.
into overtime during a: 2 1/2-minule
y-clinc:hcd division Iillo
span.
.
t-eliachDd ownll b-. . . .

either.
· B:r ALAN ROBINSON
Wakefield walked nine- that's
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - He has
managed for 19 years, ll in the N-1-N-E- for the second time this
minors 81111 eight in the \118jors. so season, yet won, just as he did in
he pretty much figured he had seen the Pirates' season opener. He has
it 8ll.' Then Jim Leyland saw Tim neatly as many walks (25) as hits
allowed (26) in his 29 innings and
Wakefield's knuckleball.
He knew right away he ~as has struck out only 17, yet,is 2-2.
"The guys on the teain earn
Wrollg. He had never seen anything
.!heir
money when he's out there,"
like this.
Leyland
said. "But there's one fact
• 'He defies all the rules, all
logic," Leyland said after Wake- .!hat still remains - l)e' s I 0-3 up
field bmke virtually every existing 11m in lhe big leagues."
Wakefield, 8·1 as a rookie,
rule of pitching in beating the
Cincinnati Reds 5-4 Thursday. looked like he. would be 1-3 this
"He lives on the edge like no other ·season after Chris Saho's two-run
double gave the Reds a 3..0 lead in
pircher I've ever seen."
- Wakefield's darting, dipping, the first inning. B11t he gave up
thrill-a-minute rollercoaster ride of only· one more hit - · Juan
a pileh is a contradiction in itself, Samuel's pinch-hit homer in lhe
the antilhesis [of lhe 95-mph fast- sevenlh -to finish with a four-hitballs and sharp-breaking curves ter and outpirch former Pirares 20. thai usually retire m~-~ hit- game winner Jo))n Smiley (0·3).
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
ters.
So perhaps it makes sense that Aorida 4, Atlanta 3: St. Louis 5,
the pill:her who throws it also cbal- . Colorado 2; Montreal 3, Los Angelenges lhe conventional sc~~ of les I; San Die~ 2, Philadelphia 1;
pitching. The school that ms•sts and San FranciSCO 13, New Yon: 4.
· Expos 3, DQdgeni 1
pitchers should throw suikes and
Darrin Flercher and Wit Cordero
get ahead of the hitters, forcing
them to hit the pitcher's pitch each hit ND-scoring doubles in the
eighth inning off Ore! Hershiser (2instead of lhe pirch lhe)' wanL
·When Wakefield pltches, a hit- 2) as Montreal Ileal Los Angeles to
ter knows he's going to get one sweep the three-game serio.s at
pileh - the knuckleball - but he Olympic Stadium. Jeff Fassero (1usually doesn't know where it's 0) pitched a perfect eighlh inning
going.
for the victory. Mel Rojas got the
Of course, lhe pitcher doesn't,

------Sports
~'ootbaU

.LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)Kentucky cornerback Ted Presley
was in critical condition after
shooting himself in lhe head while
playing a form of Russian routeue.
The 22-year-old from ~sville
is bet!::~ at lhe University of
.Ken
Medical Center.

In

playoffs,

Sabres' beat Bruins 4-3 in OT
to reach verge of series victory

-·

Scor·eiJoard
- • Baseball • -

lo-.r:::r-•· . -.. . ..

NA110NAL LEAGUE

T-

W L
10 4
.............9 6
St. Laoio .............. 9 6
l'ldDqll ,..............&amp; 1
7 1
c.t ...............7 1
Florid&amp; ................. .s 10

l'&lt;t.

CB

.714
.600

I.S

I.S
2.5
3
l
'lll • 5.S

,60()

.5ll
.500
.500

"""1:: .. . . . . . . ...

w-.111.....

u.-.. . .

Sill Fnr . _......10
,,, ___,,, 8
Alt-o ....................9
Soo!lMp ............. .6

6

.615

6

.571
.529
.429
.375
.351
.333

I
I

6 10
9
CINCINNATI........ .5 10

Caland0 ............... .5

I
U
3

4
. 4
4.5

Tbunday'&amp; scores
floGda4,AtlotU3
:11. Louio 5, Colando l
ploal
Soot:Jioto 2,PIDWiolohia I
PilubmP S. CINCINNATI 4
13,NewYoi1&lt;4

_,U. . .
s.ar. ·...

Todaf'spJMS

ONONNAn &lt;P-.h t-0) at oue~ 1o
(OuJmon 2-l),laJO_p.m.
Sui P•• ·rc (W''*n ()..I) at Manue.
ol ( D a u a . - ~l~ 7,35 p.m.
Lot Anaetu (R. Manincz: l-1) at
~(-2-1),7,35 .....
"""""" (S..u.lolll-1) o1 Pi"'bwJJ&gt;
(Oao 1-1),1'35 p.m.
Su ~o (OR&amp; Huril 1·2) at Ntw
Yoil&lt;(l'"""" HI),7&gt;Wp.m.

*-

. SV,r;{'lJJtty' S1!ECIJLL

Plorida (Kirnmond 0..2) It Colorado
(Kulfin l•l),loOS p.m.
(OPW..l.G) .. St. L&lt;W (Oob«ne 1.0), 1:35 p.m.

.

Saturday's games
Flbridt (Aquino 0- l) at Colorado

,u ~"'·

$495

San FIOftCiloo (Bwbo l-1l) • MIII...U
(HiD 2-0), l 'l5 .....
SOft 1&gt;=·
o (~cminara 0-1) at New
Y..t(S.
2-l),l,40p.m.
Lot An u (l:.cv~n Or on 2·1) at

. ~ (J·+- ~0). 7o05 .....
(llamiKh 1·0)" Pilllbw)h
(Woll&lt; ,.I), 7Jl5 p.m.
Adanu (P. Smilh l-1) at St. Louia

(T-boly0.2).1o05"'m.

Suaclay'• games

,

S.. fi&amp; itCP It Mon.tlal: I :35 p.m.

~ 11 Philadelphia, I :3S p.m.
HI;JUkln. ~. f:35 p.m.

LOll

... Stnt:JiotoM New Y.... I o40 p.m.

Atlllu uiL t..m.. 2:15p.m.
CNCNNA11 at Chicago, 2:~ p.m.
fl,odda ... Cokndo. 3;05 p.m.

...

AMEJUCAN I,EAGUE
l.ulem Dl•llkltl
W L Pet.

CB

· -.................... 11 5 .611
l)euult. .. :.................9 . 5 .643

1

T.-

New Yoil&lt; ............. ..1
TOC'I*O·····"'""'"'''''I
Mibnaa. ...............S:

7
7
1
11

· Balcimon ..................tl.

9

ClJ!\IEIJ.ND .........s

.533
25
.533
2.S
.417
_.
.313
6
·.308 . 5.5

• .69l
5 .615

T..- ......................1
Minnev· •..- ...........1 6 S71
CIIMq0....................7 1 .500
s.-Ja ......................1 I .4167
Olt&amp;and ...................S I .31S
Kala City ............ .s 10 .ll3

Toolghl's games

I .
l.S
2.5
3

4'
5

...-s.Milwaube4

v.- Ooltlolla
a.;..p3, 8ollim&lt;nl
~.

S.aJe 1, BOIIail 0
Ctlii..U.I, Cl2VElANil 0

. Tonight's imes .

TcUI (Brown 2-0) at Mil•aultt.c (El.... 2-1),7,0SI"m.
..
ChiCIIJO (McCati.~ 0-l) .ll TorDilto
(A. uoiCr H ~ B5 P-'"' .
· '
Doaal (!oloalo 1·1) • . (&amp;·
-~~~loOSp....

.

lloliimoio (Rhodoo ~ •

·

(OWl« 0.11, I :35 p.m.

.

x-u c;.y
.

Botton· Violl 3-0) at Californii
.

i·G)'; UJJl5p.m.
1-l)

· ~York (A~otl

B~IQ!IatW~!.J!. rn..

.11

.

o

,. 6cld.

......._
......-.

Sin+' dle-•014ilW.C-to·win
die 1
- h of ill d\snic 1 sebec!a.Ie. w?lidl cads M.,- 2 against
Fiadlay • Cooper Stadium in
0 I La. a f' JcAhalb will be
al i16c m.- P"*= oo.
Rio r....,..·s 1 c • • hl•fl!le ends
M.y9ao t •
OsP '&gt;J's CRW latll iu opener
10 MVNC 5-1 . . - die- Cougars
lOOt Ml•
&amp; fi!Pllee emJIS on
Rio GaMik"s pm. Tile Rcdmen
"'"•led fou JUts. Jed by Wes
Youaa~s OH rc. rwo showing,
wlai?e IPle Hils Kited six hils.

in 6 2{3 innings IQ im{J!'Ove to 4..0
Riles by two stepS. •
' ' It makes lhings more exciting as Minnesota beat Milwaukee at
that .way," Vizquel said of the the Metrodome. Deshaies has
already matched his big-league vic·
batehanded play.
· ·
Bosio (1-1) got an excellent tory total of last season, when he
play .from fii'St baseman Tino Mar- went 4-7 in 15 starts for San Diego.
tinez in lhe lhinl inning. Martinez
The Twins lOOk a 5-2 lead in the
fielded Rifes • -hard-hii ball on his eighth wilh two runs off Bill Wegknees and then threw to the pitcher · man (1-3).
to get·lhe out.
·
Yankees S, Athletics 1
The last time Boston was no-hit
New York made Ron Darling
was by New York's Dave Righeni pay for five tbird-inning walks,
on July 4, 1983, at Yankee Stadi- scoring five runs and going on to
beat Oaldand at the Coliseum. The
um.
"That was the first g&lt;~me I've A's, who have lost six of their last
managed. that there was a no-hit·
ter," Seattle's Lou Piniella said.
"As a player I was there for
Righeui."
Bosio, signed-as a free agent
after going 16-6 with Milwaukee
last season·, thre\\' the second noVince Reiber and Gary .Adams
hitter in the history of the hit two-oot back-to-beck doubles in
Mariners' franchise.
. the ninlh inning to pVe the lo:feigs
"I'm not going to throw the ball l';larauders a 9-8 wm over Vmton
95 mph like Randy· (Johnson). I County in TVC baseball action
have to hit my spots," he said.
Thursday evening in McArthur.
It was Johnson who pitched
The win gives Meigs a 3-6
Seattle's fll'St no-hitter, on June 2, mark overall and a 3-2 mark in lhe
1990 against Deuoit. Johnson, who TVC. Mei$S will ho~t Trimble
beat the Red Sox 5-0 on a four-hit· today and R1ver Valley m a double'
ter Wednesday night, was one of header Saturday.
the fii'St Mariners to grab Bosio in
Keith Jones ouldueled Rawlings
the postgame mayhem.
to pick up lhe win. Both pitchers
Bret Boone homered off Joe went' the route suiking out II and
Hesketh (2-1) after a walk to Buhn- walking two. Jones gave up nine
er in lhe lhird for his ftrst homer of hits, while t!:le Marauljers reached
the season.
Rawlings for 13.
·
Elsewhere in the ALit was MinMike "Abby" Welsh ,led Meigs
nesota 5, Milwaukee 4; New York at "the plate with three single~.
5, OaldaJid 1; Chicago 3, Baltimore Reiber added a pair of doubles.
2; Toronto 6, Kansas City 3; and · Nathan Brown and Jones added
Califomia·8, Cleveland 0.
two singles each, and Billy Glaze .
Twins 5, Brewers 4
and Adams added a double each.
Jim Deshaies allowed five hits Jim Pullins and Aaron Drummer

men.

AU1ro., air, tilt, crul11, 2 tone paint.

Phlltdo1phit It CU!VELAND, BO .
p.m. .
New .Ieney 11 Dotroll, 3:30p.m.
Uah at MinniDIIOll, 3:30p.m.
~at L.A. Clippetl, 3:30p.m.

204 Condor Sl

Po.,.,oy, OH.

SPimiDD sa••o
IIDIS

Mon.·Frl. 11:00..5:00
Sat. 9:00.12:00

~7BE

GRIVELY .
SYifiM

Purl;er, Sulliran share lead
in Greater Greensboro Open
.1' DAYID •OI!ItJIAK

afiemoon.
Purtzer aiid Sullivan hold a 2shot lead over 1 grvup of five others, including Mastefs runner-up
Chip Beck.

GltEENSBORO, N.C. (AP)No •«
• Ta. PataJ or Mite

s..un.,.
- die winDer
of IPle fint lliDil of IPle Greater
Gl
3HMvll!-.
fta)USia6cl'IMlidly-nillg

,

::-::of*l!~-~: Sports ileadlines posted
a. tbl: liP 301; .c 1o1r 40!:. wllilc
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
die- ai'.a•• 111 35 b3med The .· Daily Sentinel, the· Point
willl •id .50s, .,_ f•c?IL wind PILtlSIJIIt Register and the Sundayof
.._
Times-Sentinel value the conbibu~
26 pla,as tions their re·aders make to the
ia die fid1 of 1S3 a3t1e IIIIIR:ak par sportS sections of these papers, and
,.·die f'Gn:ll Olb Ct O"J Oub lhese conuibulions will continue to
CGIIISC. a1ra11y mcc1 011e or the
be published.
3'GA n.-'s •,.: , to
ol4However, cerlain deadlines for
indll?ldftlli&amp;IL
submissions win be observed. The
"A 3tt of 131e 31G1es wen: a lot ' deadline for photos and related artiPaiJII:a' .,_ 1 Mil .a tlownc cles for basketball and other winter
wiltPlalespla; ~t...-alitdilfer- sportS is the last day of the NBA
a~~," Slid PM!aii. wiD t ed abe Finals.
•
Peld willl ~ aftr:r atll an1Likewise, the deadline for subaiS •a~67s.
..
missions of lo~a! baseball· and
s..nwr. Slid ll!e - surprised softball-related photos and related
by die illllt-pa •
h pwEd
. articles, from T-ball to the majors,
_ "WIIca I looted OUI and saw as well as other spring and summer
..B or die ncs dne'+ It cm:r 11 spons, is lhe day of the last game
131e 3lold dris -u.1 . 1 didn't _ of the World Series. The deadline
. _ ...._ • .,,1.. ,,.. aid SuDi- for photos and related articles for
.,.,
·football and other fall sports is the
~ Ja A
IIMI 1 diffemtt Saturday before the Super Bowl.
JlbSfiiCiiwe,.!Kdlillyday.
.
~se deadlin:S ha~e beenf~sti..1 .,_ rw: 1 •
131e qe tule tohg1ye reah ersbp ekntyf o umhe
wbeJe !laP. 3ib dris IIJe 8 chal- to get t e1r p otos ac . rom t e
. . _.. ..,, ,
,l9, wiD- , pho!ography studio of choic~ and ·.
dfte . _ t.:ta'JO.
to s•ve the staffs the opponumty to
Li&amp;"t ,._ - rqJ"C'aa early pu~lish these sports photos and
today Ht 1 : : : : were ~cles dunng the appropnate seanJO i.n aollldl 'i04zw I&gt;J' 1111: . son for lhat sport.

=-_.30.,..,.

High-Count Trash Bags

~
Fiberglass
Long Handle
Diggfng
· Shovel or
Bow Rake

ruM.WHJ

%" Reversing
Cordless Drill

• 40-Cotn, 39 ,.... l..aMw1..af Bags

• 3D-Count, 46-Gal. Traah Bags
• 60-Count, 33-Ge' Traah Blllla
• ~ 13-Gal. Tall Kltcfian Bags

2SU0.&amp;103.018,18112

•

&lt;BSuper
Turf Builder

51i61 t5&amp;

Plus2.

"

17171/f111104001N

n.e•

~e Beats Nails.

Q

Spectraclde8

•

33Piu&amp;®

AII-Purpo ae
Cor.sb uctloil

~~

Lawn Weed Killer

153DMI81SIOO

--

..,;:,:,,;::,;.;;.. :::::::::_..:..

Individual dealers may limil quantilills
and may not stock all ~ems.
Some stores may restrict items to
cash and carry terms only.
.
Sale p&lt;ices yaJid Satufday, April2f, 1993.

'

.

Good Neighbor. Good Advice.e
· 1992 IIICI IO~IWTER
• Dr.. pi

-

power locke, V-8.
ctlrl

..•4,895

KING

-HARDWARE

•

405 North Second Avenue, M'IDDLEPORT
'

S,0111le

•

••

•
''

I,-

....
•

••

'

'•

1

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

'

yall»&gt;e Price•

$6 ::!~I

each added a single.
Houston and l:lartow led Vinton
County with two singles each.
lnniDg totals
·
Meigs: 003..()4()..011 = 9-13-0 ·
Vinton Co.: 100-220-210= 8·9-0
WP-Jones
LP- Rawlings

MVNC, which suffered three
errors, got a three for four performance from Todd Reid while
Shawn Tisko was two for two. Rob
Sharfenaker (1·1) was credited
wilh the win and Doug Gray was
on the mound for lhe Cougars.
· The Rtdmen ,then ~veled to
Canton Wednesdily to face Malone,
· but were~ OUL This weekend,
the team.returns to Canton to meet
Walsh for its fmal MOC encounter
of the season, and will be at home
Sunday ill p.m. for a doublehealler wilh Central Slate.

Super Selection - Unequaled Quality

t

"

Angels 8, Indians 0
Rookie J.T, Snow homered
twice, giving him four in his last 'i.
three games, and Chuck Finley (20) pitched a two-hitler as California
beat visiting Cleveland to sweep
the three-game series.

Although lhe Cougars fu-ed off
12 hils in the bottom balf,lhe Redmen wrenched a 7-3 victory with
nine hits and no errors. Yo.ung
again made his appearance ai bat
COunt with a tWO for three performance, and Jason L. Wright was
also two for three to lead the Red-

No Middle Man • Straltht From The Far•

$6 AF..

Sam Militello (1 - 1) and Scou
Kamieniecki combined on a scvcnhitt,er for the Yankees,
~ ~ "'

Doubles by Reiber, Adams
give Meigs··9-8 win over VC

. I've got 'em _- Come get 'em!

1988 CHRYSLER LeBARON TURBO

seven games , arc three games
under .500 (5-8) for the first time
since May 1987.
·

error.

lie R I
3~11 IIIII 84 ia bodl6cMOC•IDislric:t 22, .
- - dlis wed: JfliRI in die disIlia I ,. 3Ollio I)! - + •• (29-S,
J~Md" 3 -{20-2.5--P). They
an: IJ'aih1 orlio Dpmjni&lt;:an for
fiiSt iii IK cmfoewe, wbele the
P. 1 • 29-S IIIII .-defeated

great, looks goodl

Sunday's ·
. rtgular-- nnales

ChioaJG at Naw Yodli, 1 p.m.

5

CIRCLE''S FLOWERS

Orlando 11 New Jeaey, 7:30p.m.
New York a~Aiiladclfl!ia, 7:3(1 p.m.
Walhinaton at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Milwa~ee at AtlanLI, 7:30p.m.
Chic.aao aL Ot.ulaue,. I p.m.
Indiana·at Detroit,. I p.m.
Minnclota 11 Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Golden State at Utah, 9 p.m.
L.A. Laken 11 Sea~. 10 p.m.
·
Ponland 11 Sacr~meruo, 10:30 p.m.
San Anumio at PboaW., 3:30p.m.
Adan1.1at Odando. 7:30p.m.
Mi....U at Indica, 7 :~ p.m.·
Dt11u at'llouAo.i. 8;30 p.m.
&lt;llarloct.lat MUwallkeo. -9 p.m.
Sacramemo at L.A. Lak.en, 10:30 p.m.

Split witb MVNC .keeps
Redmen in playoff race

-4_

Salurday's games

1

T......,6,~City3

·.

~

. C1..EVEl..AND u BOlton, 7:30p.m.

Tbunday's II&lt;IIHS
New

'

Thursday'• scores
Ph..U.II5,.........,114
CU..p&gt; 109, Doli&lt;d 103 (01')
.
,_..,llUila•-•110(01)
San Anlonio Ill, Denwt 111
Seattle iOO. L.A. Clippao 91

w...... JII.-

Ctlif..U. .................9

,,

'HOME BAKED HAM DINNER

CINCINNATI (Brown.in&amp; 0..2) u .

OlicaJo(lli-1-G),IJlS p.m.
(.....by C).0),1

.

By Tbe AIIJocialecl-Press
Chris Bosio didn't even think
about a no·hitter until lhe ninth
innin$. He didn't have to think
about tt for long, eilher.
. The Seattle right-hander wallced
his first two batters Thursday night, .
but was perfect the rest of the way,
sending the Mariners to a 7..0 victo·
ry over lhe Boston Red Sox .at the
Kingdome.
·
·
In lhe ninlh, he g&lt;1t three quick
grounders to end the game and
enter baseball history.
"To be honest wilh you, I just
waited until lhe last inning," he
said. "You know, after that last
Deuoit game (lhe Tigers won 8-7
Sundlly on a two-run homer in the
. ninlh), anylhing was possible and I
just wanted to uy to get lhat leadoff
guy."
Bosio walked two and struck
out four for his ninth career
shutOut. He threw 97 pitches, 60
for strikes, in beaiing the first-place
Red Soli. Boston, which enteted
the game with a .285 team average,
j ".10-1
hit
into 18 groundOuts, ,
BERO'S WI!LCOME -Several Seattle Mariners, Including
With
a Kingdome crowd of
S.. Mejil5 _ . llaai'J Cocto, give a smiling Cbris Bosio just that
13,604
standing
for the ninth
·IIIIa- lllil• lli•frl ill nursdal, nicht's American League game
inning,
John
Valentin
led off with a
..:r.:__ 5~·- il! z !!_~II Red ( x,)wbo lost 7·0. It was the Rrst·no- routine grounder to shortstop
and
....-•.-: ps ... ...,._ AP
...
.
TQny Pena hit an easy grounder to
third for lhe second ouL
"It was kind of hard to concentrate after I got that first guy,"
Bosio said. ' The crowd was just
unbelievable, I mean it was Just
absolutely unbelievable.''
On the last out, Riles hit a slow
. '"We'u: 3 &amp;i'"c m," UniverSity Mike Axline was two for two and
of Rio GIDde Bllscball Coacll Jamie Phillips OIIC' for one ,to lead grounder to shortstop Omar
Dne op:d;J DIJWAI.C. die Red- the Cougars.
· Vizquel, who made a bare-handed
lllauplila"M' ' wle• wilh MidAllen Elliott (04) took the loss pickup as the ball bounced off the
CJiio Co
ca:e rial Mouat Ver· while Neil Gilliland had lhe win for turf. His running throw nipped
a011 Nazarcae Tuesday on lhe MVNC, which committed one

.

...

�,.

'
;

\

' Ohio

Friday, April

1993

In NBA action,

,

'

The Dally Senti

,

Public Not~

Bulls down Pistons·l09-103.in o_vertime
easr..

Cooper doesn't .expect
major changes to come
from annual
scrimmage
..

cor- ol tho WUbur Bailey

way.
chock within 30 doyo of
Currenl Owner•• Name:
21' oMt 101.7 IHI to the Tony S. Mithoon Md Pomell confirmodon.
.Jomao M. Souloby, Sllerllf
c..,terllne of County Road G. Milhoan.
County, Ohio
C-20, otolllng 1n Iron rod
Pooporty Addrua : 31425 Emt11onMeigo
R.
K
ookoot et 111 .7 loot too R.o ckoprlngo
Rood , Attorney lor Pleintiff
oolor-; th111co north 13 Pomoroy, Oh. 45768.
318 Wool Fourth StrNI
deg. •• - t 70.1 IHt lnd
Appralaad ot: $40,000.00.
Deylon, OH • .S402
north 57 "-~~· 35' oaot 101
TEAMS OF SALE: 10% of 513) 223-5200
loet
north 47 deg. 02' purcha11 price cloy ol ollie, 4) 16, 23, 30, 3tc
e111 171.1 fill along the balance c11h or cerlllied
c... tertlne of County Road
•
C-20 to the point of
beginning conllllnlng" 3.82
Rel(ll Estate General

Martin hopes Hanes 500 win
pUtS .him back .in points race

.Roth.. 11..

Trail Blazers abead 114· 113 with
0.5 seconds left.
Phoenix coach Paul Westphal
Tlmbenrolves 110 (OT)
Houston won for the 31st time 'designed an inbounds pass off the
in 40 borne games and extended its backboard to Cedric Ceballos, but
· winnin!! Streak to I~ with a .victory no one touched the ball and the
· OVC! Minnesota, wh1ch lC?,St 11S 11th clock didn ' t start until the ball '
reached Barkley's hands.
·
,
stnUghL ·
•
Barkley fmished with 25 points
Matt B~'s j~per wilh 1:2
seconds left m overtune broke a lte for lhe Suns.
Terry Porter scored 24 point9
an~ ga!e hi~ a career-high. 28
pomts, mcludmg five lhree-pomt- and Rod Strickland had 17 points,
ersAI
..
h the. R'-~ led 7.7 59 eight rebounds and nine assists. fot
the Blazers. ·
.
tho~g
uw.ets .
•.
m the thud q~ter, Chns S~1th
. Spurs 131, Nuggets Ill
boosted the T1mberwolves mto
• Sao Antonio clinched tifth place'
ov~rtime with his second ~hree· in the Western Conference and a
· pomt basket of the season w1th 2.5 first-round date against Portland.
seConds left in regulation.
after Dale Ellis scored 18 of his 30
Hakeem . Olajuwon bad 33 points in a 47-point first quarter
points; 13 rebounds, five steals and against Denver.
·
·
five blocked shots for the Rockets,
The Spurs never were threat.:'
who will play the Clippers in tlie ened after taking a 42-15 lead willt•
first round of the playoffs. Doug two minutes left in the flfst quarter:·
West scored 29 points, Christian which ended 47-23.
Laettner 23 and Chuck Perso~ 22
SuperSonics 100, Clippers 98 ·
for the Wolves.
Seattle won at Los Angeles as,
Suns 115, Trail Blazers 114
re,serve forward Eddie Johnson
Phoenix won at Portland on scored 23 points and Shawn Kemp
Charles Bailtley's buzzer-beating had 20 points and five blocked
bank shot in his first game since shots.
coming orr lhe injured list.
'
The Sonics stayed within a
The lead changed hands t!tree · game of Houston for second. place
times in the final 3.7 seconds. tom in· the Western Conference despite
Chambers converted a three-point Stanley Roberts' career-high 27
play for a 113·112 Suns lead and points and 13 rebounds for the
Cliff Robinson's 20-footi:r put the Clippers.
'

.

•

years.'t --

Hackett and Montana bolh will
be teaching Chiefs coaches and
players lhe offense, which features
new blocking schemes and pass
routes.
Montana, who has played only
one half of one game while recovering from elbow surgery the past
two years, admitted it felt strange
working for somebody else.
"It really sank in," he Sllid after
his workout ''It's fmal."

SHANE
·' . SMITH
Born: May 15, 1969
Died April 22, 1988
Today makes live
. years you have
been gone, •
The feelings for you
are
still
very
strong.
What happened to
you that cold April
night Is such a
shame.
Wv still get chills at
the meiiUon of your
name.
Your smile Is In .our
thoughts day. and
night
Our lives without
· you lust aren't
right.
No matter how· many
friends we have,
old or new ·
No one will ever be
' ·as special as you.
We miss you so
much
' It's hard to lind the
words to say,
The one thing that
makes Heasier
Is knowing ' we'll
meet again on
Judgment day.
Love Forever,

SUNDAY, ~y 2 - 1.2 Noon • ??

as his friend and quarterback went
through his fust workout Thursday
as a Chief.
For the record, Montana was 5
for 5 in his rust team passing drill.
"What went through my min~
.when I finallr saw him in our hud·
die is lhat it s a great new beginning for him personally, ... Hackett ·
said. "This has been a veri diffi.
cult senaration, because of the 14
o

a'"'

DRAFJ' HORSE
FIELD DAY ·

Montanas
abandoned
.
Bay Area for Midwest

Hartman's Sliot at left guard.
Winrow, Cothran and cornerback Tim Walton will miss the
spring game. Winrow, like
• By DOUG TUCKER
. Cothran, has knee problems and
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Walton has an injured shoulder. San Francisco fans looking for
Also absent will be Joey Galloway, somebody to blame for losing Joe
out since early last iieaspn with a Montana might want to tum their
knee injury, and fellow flanker , wrath on the cllildren of Kansas
Chris Sanders, along with City.
By'not'e. San~ and By'not'e are .
The sight of kids playing outw•lh the ttack le8lll.
side in safe, clean neighborhoods
Split end, where the graduation helped persuade San Francisco's
of Brian Stablein and Greg Bealty favorite couple to leave the Bay
left vacancies, is wide open but . Area for Middle America, said both
freshmen Buster Tillman and Eric , Joe and Jennifer.
Starks figure to fight for the spot
"What was really IIPIJe8ling was
On defense, replacements must the neighborhood feefing," I enbe found for nose guard Greg nifer Montana said Thursday, one
Smith, linebacker Steve Tovar and day after she and1iher husband bid
defensive back$ Bryan Cook and an emotional farewell to San FranRoger Harper. Matt Bonhaus will ciscO. "There were lots of children
most likely fill the void left by out. I heard great things aboUt the
Smith's departure, with Lorenzo school system."
Styles and Matt Christo~her seeing
Montana, who quarterbacked
a lot of action at Tovar s spot and . the 49ers 10 four Super Bowl victoWalter Taylor, Marlon Kerner, · ries in his 14 yearS lhc:re, said'comJason Louis, Tito Paul and Tim ing to Kansas City was more a
'Patillo vying 16 fill the two spots in football decision. But-the commuthe secondary.
•
nity playeil a pan, he said.
Few players have jumped into
"You don''t see kids and chil·
day."
.
contention for starting spots this . dren put very often in the Bay
Bob Hoying, the former Mr. spring, but that's not all bad news. Area, playing around in front of the
Football and sophomore-to-be, is It also means lhat the veteran play- home," he said. "To have that
the quarterback. His competition ers - such as defensive end Jason neighborhood feeling is difficult
has come from the only other quar· Simmons and tackle Dan "Big there. Westillloveit,ho~ver.But
terback on scholarship, Bret Pow· · Daddy" Wilkinson- have solidi- · it's just a good feeling we have
ers, a transfer from Arizona State. · lied tlieir positions.
here."
The rest of the backfield, for the
Cooper pointed to those two
Nobody feels' better than Paul
most part, is all but set. Hams, But- along with offensive linemen Win- Hackett, who became good frienils
.ler By'nbt'e, Eddie George and row, Thrush, Rod Smith, Dave with Montana when he was 49ers
· Travis McGuire are the tailbacks, Monnot, Alan Kline and tight end quarterback coach from 1983-85.
in that order. At fullback, Jeff Cedric Saunders, and running back
Now the Chiefs' offensive coorCothran missed most of the Spring McGuire, as making the strongest dinator, Halckett was the ace in the
with knee and academic problems impressions Ibis spring.
hole during two ;week!! of somebut is a cinch to start when Rice
Passing coordinator Ron Hud- times-bitter negotiations wilh lhe
comes to town Sept. 4 in the open- son and outside linebackers coach 49ers. ·
'
er. He will be backed by William Fred Pagac will be the head coachHackett's main job lhis spring is
Houston.
es for the spring game. The squad installing the split-back offenae lhat
The offensive line will be the was divided in half Thursday in former 49ers coach Bill Walsh
same old suspects, with Jack preparation for the contest.
designed and Montana executed
Thrush taking over for the departed
"It'll be a fun day," Cooper with nuidgrac.e.
· Paul Long at center and Jason Win- said.
"The big thing about this
row assuming the sraduated Len
Harris, obviously. would agree.
offense is it always seems to put
pressore on the defense," Montana
said. "It's not a big throw-the-ball·
down(ield, hit-a-home-run-every-

By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State coach John Cooper says
to not expect too much from Satucday's annual spring intrasquad
scrimmage.
"I put a lot more stock in what
they've done in the first 14 days of
practice lhao what happens in the
spring game," Cooper said, "I'm
not saying some lhings mtght not
· happen out there that could have an
inl:luence on who starts this fall.
But we don't foresee any drastic
changes.' '
After 14 workouts spread over
four weeks, the Buckeyes close up
shop for the sprin~ when they take
to lhe field at Ohio Stadium for a
·1:30 p.m. inttasquad scrimmage.
Tailhack Raymont Harris is just
happy \0 be playing a simulated
gallic inslead of running sprints and
going through drills.
.
. "Truthfully, I don't care much
" for spring workouts," he said. "I
: love scrimmaging, but alllhat other
.'.stuff I can do without. It's like the
' -regular season: I don't particularly
care for practicing that much, but
nothing bealS that high on a game

Aa~es Clippers~- ~

Partly because of safe, clean neighborhoods,

•HORSE PLOWING •LOG PULLS
aOBSTACLE COURSE

W &lt;

I

OLD· TOOL AMI TRACI'OR SHOW
Briag Your Antique .I Uaasual Tools aJid Tractors
nd Display Them.

BULLEOII
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE ·
PUBLICAOON
'

WESTERN DANCE
Saturday, April 24, 8·11 pm
Middfapon Elementary School
Singles $3.00, Couples $5.00
Sponsored by Middlepon Arts
Council. 'Public Wefcorne.
Refreshments available.

•tale:

'4,495 .

I( .... LUAVI

,

·

AJ for winning last April, Martin 'said, "We weren't the fastest
car, but that's how. it. goes .in rae-

•

CLIPPER'S LOUNGE
(Tht Old F,.,ch Quarters)

Presents "STAFFHOUSE"
Aoril23 &amp; 24

Don't miss Thursday nl~t. Country
Nighl. FREE DANC~ CLASS
Malo Revue May Slh

POMI:ROY BOWLING LANES
614-992·3432

POOL TOURNAMENT,
Starts at 12:00 Noon on
Sunday, April 25 ·
Open Bowling 12:00 Noon ·

~, ---------------------------~--_L~~-----------L------~------~

'

Dear ADD Landers: This is nay, '
, painful I~ for me 10 write, but I

Sponsored by Ohio Valley Draft Horse/Mule
Association and the Ken Amsbary Chapter of lzaak
t
Walton ~.#ague and Baum Lumber . ·

• need to•get this off my chesL My
• mother passed away last December
: after I long il1ness. She had ~

FOOD SERVED BY EASTERN BAND BOOSTERS

' to be cremated. We contacted a
· fllllCilll hom~ and were told, "We
will handle everything, Don't worry
• about 1 thing. • They said tliey would

•
Cood Ole Fuhlo• Fun - lt't FREEl

4 Miles North of Pomeroy Across From State Garage

l '~veuny. modler'a · remains 10

us

Ann
Landers
' ANN LANDERS
Aoael..
Tlm&lt;J
Creaton

.

able to . cope better than others
because of all those years d ~­
ins at family get-tosC'dtcn. That's
really what childhood struggles are
about-- training for the future.
One thing I learned from lhe bores,
hypocrites, lushes and egot\laniacs
is lhat when tragedy strikes, they
sometimes tum oot to be lhe most
loyal, empathetic' and lcind ones of
the entire bullcb because they
understand what it's like to have
problems, unlike the "perfect"
woman who wrote 10 you.
Oh yes, we also have snobs in our
family, but I love them, too. Sign
me .. KATHY FROM FLORIDA
DEAR KATHY:- I loved your
letter. It's fuU of good, old-fashioned
truth. Thanks for a slice of real life.
Gem of ·the Day: Think twice
before you speak, especially if you
intend 10 say wha:t you tliiak.
What CIJII you give rill perso11 who
has evtryrhing? Ann Liuulers' book·
/er, "Gems," is ideal for a nighlstand
or coffee fable. "Gems" is a collection ofAM Landers' most requested

wtthin a week.
loved one in a cardboard box and
Well; they did exactly that. The suggest that you might purchase an
fllllCilll home messenger anived at urn is inaedibly callow;.
,
my front door at the appointed time
Girard, Ohio, is not a very large
: with my mother's remains in a town. When this letter apPears in
, cardboard box. On top of the box print, there's going to be. quite a lot
' was a label which said, "The of conversation. I believe lhe facts
Remains of 'Ann Smith' - Tempo- are as· you stated them. If there's
rary Container."
more to the story, I'd like to hear
Needless to say, I was totally aboUt it
' shOcked, as was my sister; who was
My condolences to you and yQur
· visiting me at the tiine. After a few family on the loss of your mollier.
moments of snmned disbelief, my
Dear Aaa LaDders: This letter is
' sister cpntacled lhe funeral home and for "Cheverly, Md.," who hated
, asked why in the WQrld they did this family reunions.
I, too, come from a family of
. incredibly cruel and thoughtless
, thing. She was told, "If you are bores, hypocrites, lushes and
intereSted, you can purchase ail U]ll egomaniacs. Family, get-IOgethers
from us for your mother's remains." have subjected my four children to ·. poeflis and essays. Send a self-ad·
: I hope no O~~C else ever has to. go all of the above, and believe it or dressed,/ong, busilless-size envelope
through such a horrible experience. not, my kids are well-adjusted, and a check 'or money order for '
· We found out the hard way that friendly, kind and non-judgmental. $4.85 (this includes posrage and
because it's difficult.to think sln!ight Perhaps it is because they learned at handling) to: Gems, c/o AM l.an·
at a time of great sorrow, it's a good a young age how ·to deal with ders, P.O. Box 11562; Chicago, I//.
. idea to have SOlllC9ne who is not relatives who had every" flaw 606/l-0562 . (ln . Canada, send
emotionally involved take charge of imaginable.
$5 .87.)
Maybe when my lcids have to face
the arrangemeniS. I certainly wish,
we had. •· STILL UPSET IN a boring in-law, an egomaniacal
The' 1955 Pulitzer Prize lor drama
boss, a hypocritical co-worlce{ or a wa s awarded to Tennessee Williams
GIRARD, OHIO
DEAR OHIO: The insensitivity of neighbor wiJO was a lush, lhey are for his play "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."
the funeral director ·is beyond
belief. To aend dle remaina of a

DOMINO'S PIZZA
811 W. MAIN STREEt-POMEROY

992·2124

LARGE PEPP RONI PIZZA ,

$ 99

'

PKKUP or DEliVERY

Now it~ easy to save for Americas 10,603
schools of higher education. Buy U.S. Savings
Bonds for education through the US. Savings
Bonds Payroll Savings Plan - or at your bank eve~week. every month or every payday.
Buy Series EE Bonds for half their face
value. If you hold the[ll five years or more,
you'll earn competitive, market-based interest,
compounded semiannually, with a.guaranteed
minimum•eturn.
U.S. Savings Bonds are exempt from stale and
local income taxes, and they're federally tax-deferred.
And if Bond5 are used to pay for higher education,'
,.
· there may be an additional.federal tax ildvan~. •

Take the first step to your child's high~r
education. Ask your employer or bank f6r
the free booklet, "U.S. Savings Bond~ fclr
·Education." Ol"write: U.S..Savings Bonds
for Education, Department of the Treasury,
Washington. DC
20226.
,.
.

PRIVATE LIPSCOMB

Lipscomb graduates

For curreqt rate.information, call

1·800·4US 80ND •1·800-487-2663
'Tho idYantago o' ~nod ina bookOI !lllitO&lt;I ·u.s. S..f\91
Bonds for Education,• iMiiblo.from.,.. payr~f off&lt;e;f""""' ''""'""" b&lt;
lilt Department of the TFN511'f. Plo~~e read ~ tf'orough~ for mfom•110n about
1ricome lrmits, ~It~ and mher restrict~ btfore.irwest1~ .tor thl5 purpOse

&lt;

..

'

.,..,.._.,.... ......,.,
..

•

. SITUATEO In the 911118 of
Ohio, County of Metga,
Townohip of ChNier, end
ll•ing In Section 12, T-n 2
North, Renge13 WNI of tho
Ohio Company'• Purphue
ond being dncrlbed 11
fclllowo:
.
Beginning 81 • point WNI
obout 2,330 fftl ond oouth
•bout 2,680 r..t and aouth
40 dog. 02' wnt &amp;37 1111
from tho norlheut COI'IIIf of
oald .Seotlon 12, nld point
of beginning being oouth 40
dog. 02' wool 137 feel from
the junction · of the
centerline• of County Rood
c'.!o (old u. s. 33) end
County Ro.od 1;-26, eold
point of bealnnlng being on
the centerline of County
Rood C-20 end ovoo •
culvert; thence north 48
dog. 16' Will 564.1 IHt to
on loon ood 111 it the bue
of • 24-lnoh ·ook; t11111ce
lOUth 66 deg. 52' Wlll.222.5
'""' oiong • f.,ce to .,, Iron
rod oot at the baoo of en II-

'

1 111

1986 BUICK· PARK AVENUE 4 DR:

TONY S. MIUiOAN, et II.,
O.leridlnl8
' COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
· In pu,.u•c• of on Ordor
of Sale 1o - clrocllcl from
uld Court In tho above
..,tltlod ocllon, I wiN lllpoM
to 1111 ot public oucllon ot ·
thit door of tho Courthouoe
on Frldoy, May 21, 1tlt:l, at
10:00 a.m. of oald day, tho
following deocrlbod real

'

r

1

'

· Private T. Shawn Lipscomb
recently glllduated rrom the Marine
Corp. Basic Training at Paris
laland, s:c.
· Ho is home for a short visit and .
will return to Camp Legu11e for
advanced infllltry lnllning on Tuesday. Following trainins, Lipscomb
· will travel to 29 l'llms, California
for commwilcati(Jn ICboollng.
Fanuly and friends traveling to
South carolina wm parents, David
Georgllla Lipsco~b. Linda, Ron,
· Nora Butman; B~ 'Eric Lii?·
scomb,JIIck, Kay 111'11 ick. TraVll
l.iJ*oa:tb and Kristen Predericlc .

,.

!

Inch wolnut, ..ld walnut
being north ao cteg. 23' eut •crea, more or leaa,.
360 feot from tho north..ot excepting oil legal rlghto of

Real Estate General

OFFICE 992·2886

vs

\A horrible experience

~~e~~~!~;~:·.~~ :;:~~.o!e~

.
h
h
,
. three, five, 10, 12 yards.
·
mg. A11 I e cars I at were .aster
"Always we'd try to keep
ByMIKEHARRJS
. MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) than us broke. We won the race by something positive about the play
• Just when things seem to be going running smart and getting the right so that you feel you're alwaY' gain. exactly the way Mark Martin breaks . t-hat's how. everybody ing something on them. There's
nothing more frustrating for a
:. wwo_ ul~~e, adversity catches up wins."
• ,
defense lhao to have an offense just
In this case, it was a first-lap
melhodii:ally take you Q""" all the
~• W'"Even tho.ugh
he doesn't.really way downfield." ·. -.-·
day at N"""'
erash lastS un
....
es.
.
believe Roush's team has an edge
boro, N·C·• ·m which Marti n•s F'-'
u•u
·
· - ' who
Montana said Hackett ''cor.
·
at Marunsville,
Martm
. d
h
Th un der b1r
was
caug
t
upm
'lsNASC
C
·
neredmeassoonaslgotiOthesta· ' s acc•'dent an
· d was tral
AR Winston up pomt diwn today."
..ano th er dri ver
M
·
leader
Rusty
Wallace by 187 points
·
badlY dam aged• re Iegatmg arun
·says he
· confi•dent everywhere
Hac~ett will shadow Montana
•-fi
·
h
·
the
34
.
IS
•
to a 31 st-p....e rus m .
-car the team goes lhese days. '
throughout next week's minicamp,
field.
and watched with intense interest
That unfortunate situation sent
' Martin reeling from fourth to sev.
enth in lhe Winston Cup standings.
But lhe 34-year-old driver is too
confident of what his Jack Roush
Racing team is capable of to let it
· get him down for long.
· "That's just lhe·way it is in rat·
ing," Martin said. "You are bound
to get involved in ~ituations like
that. If was just too bad, but we
can't sit around worrying about it
Like Jack says, 'Put it behind you
, and let's race.' "
This Sunday, Martin wiD be rae·
ing on the .526-mile oval at Mar·
tinsville Speedway, where he holds
the ~k qualifymg record and is
the defending champion in the
Hanel soo.
All the fNturu you expect to ftncl on
"Martinsville is not the mbst
luxury c•r.
likely place for us !0 win," Martin
said. "But I wouldn't be surprised
ihve won here again. You like a
race track Ihat you run good on,
~~~;~~ .hadlle, pretty good results

SHERIFF'S SALE,
• REAL ESTATE
CASE NOMIIEF! 12-CV-3011
THE LEADER MORTGAGE
COMPANY, ·
PloinUII

Angel, ~~~:~~~~

'

Public Notice

, _ ; . , _ , lOUth 33 ct.g.

•.

By Tbe AIIOclated Prea
step closer to missing !lie playoffs
Michael Jordan had a feeling the for die first time in 10 years .. The
strugglinJ Detroit Pisloos wouldn't Pistons trail eighth-place Indiana
let the Chicago Bulla have anything by, two games with two to play,
including tonight against the Pac'We nevtl thought they'd give ers..
.1
"Close, but no cigar," said
up, they always nuikc it tough for
us," Jordan said after the Bulls' Isiah Thomas, who scored 28
· 109-103 victory Thursday night. points for Detroit. all after lhe first
"We never underestimate them. .half. "We're fighting for our playGive them credit They made some off life and just bave to IQ home
big shols in the fourth quarter and and win the two games we have
we went a little cold. I couldn't . left. It's a stran~ league and funny
make a free throw.''
things can happen." ·
Dennis Rodman, who grabbed
Jordan missed five of his ll free
· throws, but scored ei~t- of his 36 24 rebounds guarded Jordan in
overtime, but lhat didn't stop the
points in ovenime for Chicago.
Despite l:n!lling the rust-place NBA's leading scorer f&lt;!f seven
·
New Yode Knii:ks by a game m lhe straight years ·
·
Eastern Conferenc:e, the Bulls will
"l felt when lhey swiu:hedRodwin homecoun advantage in the
man
on me, I could get to lhe hole
conference playoffs with victories
at Charlotte tonight and at New quicker," Jordan said.
He put the Bulls ahead to stay
'York on Sunday..
. But Jordan isn't predicting a 101-100 with 3:23 left in ovenime
Madison Square Garden showdown and then hit tWO more baskets, the
last giving Chicago a 107-101 lead
just yet.
.
·'Charlotte had the night orr and with 52 seconds remaining.
Scotiie Pippen had 25 points
.th~y're waiting for us," Jordan
and
B.J. Armstrong 20 for the
SBld.
.
.
Bulls.
Joe Dumars had 26 points
The Pistons, who trailed 80-67
JAM SESSION - Chicago frontman Scottie Pippen (left) jams
after three quarters, rallied in lhe for Detroit
the ball against Detroit's Terry Mills during Thursday aigbt's NBA
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
fourth quarter and had a chance to
grudge match in Cl)icago, where the Bulls woo 109,-103 in overtime.
win in the final seconds of regula- Phoenix 115, Portland 114; Houstion.
ton 112, Minnesota 110, in overThe loss moved Detroit, which time; San Antonio 131, Denver
has lost four consecutive games, a Ill; and Seattle 100, the Los

F!Ubllc Notice

7

· '

205 North Second Ave.

.'
Middleport, OH
.
CHESTER - Texu Road - 'Thera's more to it that a
drive by won't tell - · Inside tho hau!!8 thoro are 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, a sauna, family room, firoplaee,
skyfighl, and Mexican clav ila in the kitchen. Outside is a
gazebo bar, inground pool and pnvac:y 111101 which would
be great lor anlllrtaining guoots.
Prlcoclat $71,000.
POMEROY- Eb10ozer Street- Feels like homo wilh 3
bedrooms, ono bath, beautiful kitchen cabinets, newer
roof and foroad air natural gao fumaoo. Was $19,000.
·
. ·
Reducodlo $18,000
LANGSVILLE - You'll lovo to come horne to ralalc in the
country, in lhis 2 .bedroom ranch wilh equ!pped. kitch•n.
ott siHong on 13 acraa. If you enjoy hunttng lh1s 11 tho
place for you. Was $42,500. Prh Rdlood t~ $31,500.
MIODLEPORT- BLT (Sottoo Look Twlco) - At this 2 ·
&amp;tory home lining on a large comer lot. Look at tho
extras lhat it has to offer, a new 2 car detached garage,
Lennox .pulse 'umace with ne~ 1;1ir conditioning unit. new .
siding and root. It has a large hvong 100m, 3 bod100ms, I
balh, equipped kitchen with now oak cabinets. Was
$63,000.
. ·
.Now $51,100
EAGLE RtOGE ROAD - Approximately 40 acres .of
ian!!, of which about 20 acral era tillabta. Has a bam wolh
hayloft and an equipment shecl. Pub!l&gt; we~er and oloctric.
available. Many groat buoldtng 11tos and water for
animals. POSSIBIUTY OF SOME OWNER ANAHC.
lNG.
$30,000. .
DOmE TURNER, Book• ............ :...........,...... 912-5611:1
BRENDA JEFFERS ....... -.......................,........ 912-3056
O~UNE BTEWART..... - ....:.........-., .............. 912-Q&amp;S
SANDY BUTCHER .........- ........................- ..... 912-5371
JERRY SPRADLING ..........-...................(304) 882-3418
bFFICE ............................._....,.... _......... - ........-912-2886 ·

992·2259
\

NEW LISTING • Racine : Ranch style home with . 3
bedrooms, balh, lull finished basemen!, newer e!oic. heat
pump two lots of .43 lie. each, driveway, t car garage.
.

'

$53 900

'

'

SHARON HOLLOW RD. ··approx. 20.05 acres with 40 X
28 hunting cabin. Good hunting location.
ASKING $17,000
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story. frame home wilh 2 bedrooms
bath, newer cabinets and gas fumance, basement, largO
front sitting porch.tmmediate possession I
$26,500
MIDDLEPORT • t t/2 slory home with 4 bedroonuo',
F.A.N.G. heat 75 X 100+ tot, large lront porch, beautiful
Ohio River view!
.
ASKING $39 .900 '
GALUA CO. • Roush Lane • 1970 2 bedroom mobile
home and eHiciency apanmenl plu s additional trailer
hook-up, 1 + aae.both units on lot curre(ldy ranted.
$24 ,900

POMEROY - Ot~', homo with 3 fols: Home includes 3
bedrooms, bath, is in need of repair.
Asking $9,500
WE NEED LISTINGS FROM ALL PARTS OF MEIGS
COUNTYI WE HAVE BUYERS WHO ARE WAtnNG
FOR THAT SPECIAL PIECE 0~ PROPERTY I COULD
BE EXACTLY WHAT YOU HAVEf IF YOU'RE READY
TO SELL CALL US TODAY I
HENRY E. CLELAND..............................992-61i1
KATHY CLELAND...................................992-1191
TRACY BRINAGER ................. :.... :........... 949-2439
OFFICE ....................................................992·2259

�'

..

Plgl 8 The

Sentinel

ApostoliC

Pomeroy Clourdl atCiorlst
\ 212W.MainSL

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7 p.m.

Flalwuodl
Pillar. Kcilb ~

. Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · l1Lm.,6p.m.
Thuraday SeiYioa -7 p.m.

;
Qrao:e ~~~Church
326 E. . SL, Pomeroy
• , Rec1or: Fr. Bill Lylo
pOly Eucharist and Sunday Schoollla.m.
•
Coll'ee hour'followin&amp;
·

.

Putor: Delun Newman
Suaday School • 9 a.m.
. Wonhip • 10 a.m.

' Ponl....,

School·

'

'

l!utor:Kcilb Rader

t&lt;

' ~yServiia-7p.m .

SIIOW\'IIIe

PlnoaaPutor: Ooalle Woirick

1·

?

• Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

1,

Sucaa Road Churdl of Christ
Pastor. Joooph B.·Hookins
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonbip' • 10 a.m.,7 p.m.
Wednesdoy S.rvicea : 7 p.m.

·.

Carmel

211601 SL Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Eva&gt;ing ·7:30p.m.
Thoraday Services -7:30

OUrSavlowJAA-C..d
Walnut and Henry SU., Ra_..,....,,W.Va..
Co-paton: Revs. Richiol &amp;
. l'alrida Bondi·K!u&amp; .
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
•
Worahip • 11 a.m.
'

School·
':':!'.&amp;·II

EutLetart
Pastor: Ropr Grace
Sunday,School· 10 a.m.
Won!&gt;ip • 9a.m.

Reedsville Church&lt;# Chrlsl
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 Ln\.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christ1an Union
Hob,.. Churth or Christ In
Cllrlstlan Union
Pastor: Theron Durham
SWlday School • 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

F..... Run Baptllt
Pastor: AriuJ Hurt
Sunday School· 10 a:m.1
Wonltip • II a.m.

MI. Moriah Baptlsl
Fowth &amp; Main St., Middleport
PIUIOr. Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.
SIOiday S&lt;hool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 Lm.

11et11e1 Church
Township Rd., 468C
Suaday SChool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wedneaday S'aviees ·IOa.m.

Hanford, W.Va.'
Pastor: Rev. David McManis

Swday Sc~l- II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn.,day Services· 7:30p.m.

Anllqully Baptist
Pastor: Kenneth Smilh
SIOiday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 Lm,
Thunday Services· 7:30p.m.

'-I- .

· MI. M&lt;M'Iah Church of Goo

Racine

Putor: Rev. JUnes Satterfield
SIDiday School· 9:45 a.m.
Evminc • 7 p.m.
Wi::dncsday Services - 7 p.m.

R-Ule
Paator. Rov. Seldon Jolinaon
Wonhip · 9:30a.m:
In &amp; 3ol Sunday · 7:30p.m..
Surida~ Sehool- 10:30 a.m. '
Wedneaday Stnicel -710 p.m.

•'

Rutland Church &lt;#God
Putor: John F. Corcoran

Sunday School · 10 a:m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - '1t P·!n··
Sacred Heart Calhollc Cloun:h
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
P11tor. Rev. Walter E. Heinz
'" ,
Sas. Con. 4:45·5:15p.m.; Mm· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9:15 a.m.,
S101. Mau ·.9:30a.m.
'8:30a.m.

Tuppni'IIIDI St. Paul

'

Putor. Shiron ilaUJIIWI
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worahip • 10 a.m.
Tueaday Sorvica -7:30p.m.

Syracuse Churth or God
Apple and Seoond Sts.
Pastor. Rev. David Rusldl.
Sunday School and Worship-9 :30a.m.
··
Evenin&amp; Servicea- 1 p.m.
Wednesday SeMce:J - 7
.

"""'"' ,,.u, .

~

'

· 36970 Bal Rua Road
PIHIIeray, Ohla ·

••

&lt;

SIZED UMESTONE

•

.

•'

99~·3470

•'
'
•'

'

I

,,,

SHRUB &amp; TREE
IR'M and
REMOVAL
'

l

. •LIGHT RAULINQ. ;

•

•FIR~WOOO.

'I•

BILL SLACK

;LI:;W;I:;

:=;I;;EY;IN';:S
IUINTEIIAIICE

"

•

949·2391 or
1·100.137·1460

'

'

LaWn 'Mowing,

' FertiiiZIJ1g, Welding,
anj!JSeedlng.
Shruli and Tr•
Trimming &amp; Removal

,
·.;•

ReoldenUII lo Commercial

FREE .ESTIMATES
411tll3-tfn

.

Roy

•

Howard L Wrftesel

ROOFING

,
;

NEW-REPAIR

I

Gutters
I;I~Jwnspouts

G~·rCieanlng
Painting

. .

FREE ESTIMATES

'

'''

Saturday Services;

Sabbalh School • 2 p.m,
Worahip • 3 p.m.

949·2168 .
3-16-93-ltn

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BET
JtK
. A
THAN

United Brethren
· ML . . . _ Ullllld Brallll•\
. "'Cluiot Cll•rcll
''

TcxuCouununilyoffCR.,82 .. ~,

'

Paator: Roben Sanden
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 P'"·
Wedneaday ~ · 7:30p.m.

Eolea United llnthren IR Chrllt
2 112 miloa norlh of Roedaville
111 Saato Route 124
Pastor:/Rev. Roben Marl:ley
Suaday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip-7:30p.m ..
Wednoaday Siomoia ·7:30p.m,

Full G-' LJab. 3304S Hiland RoOd, Pameroy '
J'aww:RoyH,..tor
Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
l!venina 7:30p.m.
Tueaday A Thuraday - 7:30 Polb·

a,....,.

MJddl.,wt Churdl &lt;#lilt N.......,e
Putor:
A. Condilf

..: K&amp;C JEWELERS .

Mill Work
Cah10et Mak1ng
Syracuse

I \•' I •' .
. 1;

GARAGE·FUL
OF STiff

I

::1 1

212 L Main Street
992-3785. Pomero, .

992 ·3978
'""~~
g··~·'

.. .........

..

~.
'

~

MEIGS TIRE
\ CENTE~ INC.

,
·
·
I Ii ....
· ·.

~

r .

J. "n ~~~~ Fullz.
~~~n~g~r

Ph. ltl-210t .

204 Condor

~I ..

011.
992-2975

Pomeroy,

'

.I

.

RAWUNGS.(OAlS

.

'

"F..tutlttg Kentwlly FMd a,~a~~.," ·
228 Main St., Ponntroy 1

fUNERAL HOME
MitWieplll't

BrQ&amp;an-Warner

.rii1'\
·\_=-;T

INSURANCE ...-:--.
: SERVICES
. 214 [ .

f

w.
992-5432

992-5141

)64 s.uth 21111

.,'

Crow's Family Restaurant

FISHER •

;:~

t I'

992-5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

.

Dr.

. Pomer.r

FUNERAl HOME
'

· NatillnwiCie ln.s. Co.
91 Columbus. 0 .

"Dil(~ilr ~nd

S..rl'ic•• A/n·n:r•·
Establlshed•l913.

992-212.1

eotw. M•i~

tfJ.Jlll ,o!MrO¥'.'
J

.,"

271 Nerth

,...,.,

(No Sunday Calls)
2112192/tfn

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

ALL Vard SoiN .. Poltl In
Adva.-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.n1.

47,69 St. Rt. 248 • IY. Mile Oft Rt. 7 '

tho day - ·... ad .. to

Thru c•ester •• II. 241

36358 SR 7

Garag.

Sill: 10 IJ:t.
Friday lo Saturday, 11M1a - · ·
Wlro Spolto AI. ., Lawn l'umltutw.

•o p4l

Pomeroy,
Middleport
· &amp; VlclnHy

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

Roof

All Vord Solie • Plaid In
Adn.... Doedl..: 1-llle
day .,.,_ lho "" .. "' run,
Sultday adftJon. 1:Ciapnl ~. ,.,..
Monday
adMion
ta:OIIa.rn.

318/tFn·

••d 011

FrM Eati111111M,
LowCoata.. ·

\111\11()\
II \ I t

SoiU'*Y·
Yartl Sol• lumllure, dlehoie,
(eo.., olalhlng.,. onleo. . _ ,
Soi\I'*Y 24th only) ,..pm, rain

I I \ \I'&gt; ,\. ( 0 \ ( Ill..'&gt;

ROUSH'S PRIInN&amp;

canoels,

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

CHARLIE'S

,DOZER ~ORK,I

DRIVE)YAY WORK

I ll:~~::
&lt;='l1Ln111ATESl

.tUMESTONE

Plumbing
ext.rlor

,

lyr_..,,,., lh• IDI'III oF

.

.

•

.SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

·.

or t11e1r egent.,

~~!~! !~~ .~
' Pri\CFIPIIOnt

. ,~, nn

.

.'

Pflm'tloy

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~lES &amp; SEIYict

'

... (fl
ii, p.r,
;tttl,oom•enol;:
_ _..
.one
JIIGrll'\l oom-Oial . . .

T·Shlrts • Hats• Uniforms
Variety of T.Shirt COlOra and Llttarlng Stylel.
( .ti l

1&lt;~11.1\

I llf 1\ 1111 ( lllhl'il.IIHJ!I
i(,J..J, 11t)2 ~-q~

' ,992-6215
Pomeroy, Oltlo

REASONABLE RATES

'25 HOUR
,992•7S53

POM.IOY,OH.

~~

31251113/ t

HAULING

HOWAAD

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Save !illg on Voyagers
Po-.cl by llwcury OU!boaide

,J.• S. MARINE

9

RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

EXCAVATING

INSTALlED PRICES
9x7-$275.00
16x7-$.•t50.00

Reo101alt..

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

3-4-93-1

1v.....

Is
looking for cumtnt
addrssses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Danca on
May 29, 1993,
Mall addrau11 to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0 • .
Box 25, Middleport,
Oh.lo 45760 "

I&amp;C
BULlDOZING
PoNDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER l SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
. HOMESITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone;
Dirt, Grnel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591
12-6-tfn

,.....,_,

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

• ...,.... ..v-..•rkiltl
"lneura1 oa •ltl" anti
euiiMittiltl er t11alliltl ..
Jallte Lawaon.. ct•rk·

(t

=:-.,-...~,=~~~ ,.

n ....,., Ylllt!P 1111
,• ...., llunlti!Pal
.

aerv-.·~ht to rejNI

.. ~

992·7075
172 North Second •••·
Ohi•

..

. (4),tf, D,ljl,

.,

Cllrkon-

ottwra•{

' ''

...., buying

I•'* cara a arueu.

304-773-5343.

Okl , tumtll••· gla.., china,
martHa, arrowtiitada, 10018;
..one ja,., 11ao furniture
rollnllhlng, Daby Martin, &amp;14-

wa.. to buJ ._ ax_.... In_,.
11158.

.

•

Ele.II14-2H-1231.
J a D'a Aula Plario .,d Solv....,

1112-'11141.

$1.00 PER FT.

New Wiring, Rewiring,
lroubii"Shootlng

614·742·2131

OPENERS INSTALlED
Y. HP-$200.00
With 2 Transmitters.

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYl SEAL TRIM

· 24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

SAYRE

Uto'*
TV'a
aa.,..

Non'-PilUifl cI&amp;,
Ralilgal
F - , YCR'a, Mlo_a_
Air CondftloMra, Gulmr ......

Worldng
Color

·BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
-1'f!ACKHOE WORK

Rates
,JOI N. SAYRE

Wanted to Buy

Don' Junlr ftiSotl

1.0 mil• .outh of Galllpolla
on Bladen Road
PH. 614-256-6160

propony,

·--

W.nlod To Buy: Junk Auloa

WQn't Find A Better Value!

Wllh Or Wllhoul llolaro. CoU

Lanr Uvoly. 111-311--.

Top Prl- Paid: AH Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rlnaa 811- Colna,
Gold Colna. M
.T.s. Coin llllop,

u........··•er•d &amp; ........
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 742·2345

1$1 Socond A¥1nu., GaHipollo.

W.nlod lo buy: uMd
......... 114-416'0171

4·22·'113-I mo.

""*Ia
"

Employment Servoces

••••a•s

........ -........

11

tiiUTIGIII I AIJiurtOFU

Help Wanted

c.....~a.,.tn.

'AVON• ALL AAEASISI!are your
•..... wMh ... You'll 1ovo IJ.
compony. HIOO.tlll2.aM.

C1R Ire... el f92.1771

4 Ladloa Who Woulcl Ulto To
Soli Avon Call 811-44e-3361.
Apartmanl ......... ..._
County, eend r•urne an11 t•...

~­

20+Yn.bp.S..IM
1-lt-J

phone

Announcements

ENDRPRISES .

laP11inti1~a Services

number

to:

AIM

J&gt;rot-rtlle._ P.O. Boor 1212,
Laltoland, ••orlda, ~
APPLICA110NS Will h ~
lod Unlh Monday, IIIIJ I, FW
U,_ Guanl lloallonl

Pool For

Interior &amp; Exterior

n..

AI~

'13 lwlrnrnlng

Souon. Aaau~uttlna
Expo...._ And r..
"'- ro
• llallacl Or
ad To
Jonloo ~. CJooto.-n.o.....,_
VIII.... 01 SJrao- lllln~
Bldgi., Syr.euae, ONO ant. ~.....
AVON I All. AlMa I llloltlay
Spaoro, ~1121.
.._
W.nlod: -.me.'

Hom!~

Aluminum SidiRg
I•P.c:mer Washing

FlEE . EST-:~·

Claanlng Lady 1 Day .... ~
p Por Rour, i14 44 MU Altai
&amp;P.M.

~:::;;;,~~;:~~

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. I. IOSTON

EXCIYAnfi&amp;
. ,, 14)
667·6621

• ,. ll~tr. .......,....

·. euiD - • and 10!11"
m•r•lll lnl1nt1 Marin•

'

DEUV£RY SERVICE

IUY • SilL a TUDI
,., I. 2etl St.
..,_
MIHietpOI'I, oIIOII..frL 10101-SaOO
-..a.oo
lllll'lley 101...,..,.,
· Cla1141 Slltllley
992•U7,7

to pro~ ID llo Village Clf

Raa&amp;lprlnp

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

Public Notlct

,....:..r:•"

31212

Ad., POIYieroy.

2251 Sl:dh St. • Syrecuse, Oh.
(614) 992·5315

TH~~~~OI

The VI.... of lyraoueo
. will " " " bldl until 12
n_,.._~~aya,1-.nm
lneur-•

run.

Sunday - . . . • 2:00 ......
F~day. Monday adlllon • 2:00
p.m. Salu,..y,
·

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Fr. . Fou1111tlon
llsiH

··-

Gatllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

.Shade River Saddle Shop

· 'St. Rt. 7
CheshiN, OH.

99 2•21]'6

-

S.C....

Ohl•

.
Veterans

liS E.

•

IIWdltpert, .

Memorial.Hospital

·

lbi~ .

'

. 614·992~7643 -

·,

INVITATION TO BID

ltACINE PLANING MILL

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

COMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL

Adventist

.

,._ ......-"··----NAw Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

•BP Diesel Supreme...Try It, there Is a
difference.
·
•Minimum 50 Cetana
•Low ash and sulfur ·
•Will not gal In winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE·
.
MARCH 1STHthru MAY 31ST
Special farm Ierma with payment 4 timet a year
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
larry E. Millar
1-800-598-5654

.3/24/93/1

SaED UMESTONE
FORSALE ,

12-30-92·· '

I

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK ..
HARD FOR YOU.
nA::lo

TIRE REPAIR AIID ROTATIIIG

V. C. YOUNG Ill ·

992·2269
USEifRAflRo•li nB

,,'

Sevcnth-D~y

Quality
Stone Co.

614·593·5010
.
4-8-1

JeH Wkker$ham

''

DDBGOIL

NOW . OFFERING-....
Oil AIID LUll SERVICE

Work Guar~~nteed
614·949~2U5 or

OWNER:

GOOD IIIIICIII

PH. 614·985·3949

J &amp; THOME
IMPROVEMENTS

WICK'S
SERVICE

'

a

·
-!0:30a.m. '

..... .....

•

Syra... Flrll Uala.d Prallyte.;lan
Sunday School· 10 a.ni.
Worahip ' 11 a..m., 4 p.m. (hs A 3rd1Sun.)

Ualtod......, Cll"""'
· RL 7 on Pomeroy By·P~
Pastor. Rev. Roboft Smhh, Sr. '
Sunday Sebool · 910 LID.
Worahip. 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
. Wedneaday S.rvillll • 7 p.m.

~'3~School; 9:30a.m.

':

Middleport l'resbytft'lan
..
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
1
Wonhij&gt; - 10 a"!'·· 4p.m. (2nd &amp; 41h Sun.)

-

eo: Rd. 63

j

4'

'l

411&amp;'9311 mo•

Call 614·992· ·
6637

(614) 982-5082
Sandr1 Hender1011
. (614),9924647
Product&amp; In Stock

t

H.....-vule Presbylaian Church
. W!&gt;Rhip · 9a.m.
·
Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.

ML 011.. c-monlll Churdl
Pastor. L a - Buah
Sunday School · 910 Ll!'·
l!v&lt;llina· 1 p.m.
Wedneclay Semc:O · 1 p.m.

TOrdiCiturdl

,.
(

Presbytenan

W'ednesday7:J~tp.m.

Hoddnaport Cburdl ·
GrandS.....
Sunday School · 10 a.m ..
Wonbip • 11 a.m.
Wedneaclay_l!lmces • 8 p.m.

Paww: Rev. Seldon Joliluon
' ' Sunday' School • 9:30 a.m.
· Wonhip • 1010 a.m.
Wednesday ServioeJ ·7:30p.m.

Church ot God

•

Fallh G,.Pel Church
' Lona Bouom
Sundiy ~ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·' 10:45 am., 7:30p.m.

.Tuesday Seman -7 p.m.

Independent Btluly
COneuttanll
Carolyn McCoy

I

Pastor: Rev. Chrl: Baker
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 a.m.
Bv&lt;llins · 6 p.m. ·
.w....,ada Semoa - 7:00p.m.

Mono Chapel Churth
. Supr.: Mike MaiSOn
Sunday achool-10 a.m.
Worship , II a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.

w~ . 9a.m.

Hartford Church of Chrltlln
Christian Union

MARY~Y

I

Middle-/:: ~',!-1

··christian Fellowship Cenl&lt;r
Salem SLoRuaand .
Pastor. Robc;d E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip -ll:IS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

Coolville U.l'*l MelJ.oollt Parllll
Putor: Htlen Kline
Coajyllle Churdl
Main A Fifth SL
Sunday SdiDol- 10 a.m.

I deaigne_d lor your llldn lype.

'
•

SL RL 124, RaQne •
Pa&amp;~or: William Hoboel:.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Ev&lt;llinc • 1 p.m.
Wednesday. Services - 7 p.m.

D1enllle Communi!)' Choreh
Sunday School- 9:)0 a.m.
· Wonhip·IQ:30a.m., 7p.m.

Rutlaad Bible Molhodlit
Putor: Rev. Inn Myen
Sunday SchoO!· 9:30 LOll·
B-"&gt;a·7p.m.
w~ Servicioa • 7 p.m.

Mary Kay.haa a proveneffective akin ~*• program

•

Churdl at J..,. Christ, '
ApGIIGllt Faith
1/4 mile past Fort MeiJs on Now Lim• Rd.
Pastor: William Vm Meser
Sunday-7:00p.m.
.
Wed!'"aday·?:OOp.m. ' '\
Friday·?~.
.

. .., Srr~u~ Million
1411&lt;Bridaeman SL, Syracuse
Pastor. Roy (Mike) Thompson
'SIDlday Sehool-10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
~ednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Hazel CommuniiY Church
OffRL 124
Putor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School- 9:30·a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

RadJM
Putor. Roaor Grace
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.ln.
Laurll a11r l'Joeo Milhodlat Church
i'aitor: Pete. Trlmblay
Sunday Scbool-.9:30 a.m.
Wonl!il&gt;.. J0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WednesdaY, Sesviees -7 p.m.

Pastor. Char1es Donliaarr
Sund1y schoql - l0:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

FaHh Baptist Churdl
Rlilroad SL, 1\faaon
SIUiday School • 10 a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wc:dnelday Services - 7 p.m.

'

FACIAL

•'f

.

Fallh Tabonacle Chorch
Bailey Run Road
Pastor. Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School- I0:00 a.m.
Evmin&amp; 7 p.m.
Thunday Servic:e • 1 p.m.

·
SuUOD
.,
Putor: Kenaeth Baker
S1mday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 un. (In&amp; 3ol Sun)

Hem&amp;otk'Grove Church

VlcloryBal!llll
525 N. 2nd SL Middkpon
Pastor: llmea B. Keesee
,.,.~
Worship. !Oa.m., 1 p.m.
Wedneaday Serviaet.· 7 p.m.

.

Mornlna St.or '
Putor: Kalriolh Baker
Sunday Scbool'. 9:45 I.DL
Wonllip·I0:30a.m.
Thursday Siirviilta , 7:30p.m.

Lanpvllle Chrl•lan Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,7:30 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCe: 7:30p.m.

Hlllllde llaptl• ChSL RL 143 jua elf RL 7
Paww: Rev.Jomeo R. A""', Sr.
Sunday
10 a.m,
a.m., 6 p.m.
W
y S.mcea -7 p.m.

. Sunday SehooliO a.m.
Evtnina· 7:30p.m.
·
' Wedneaday Ser)o'ice • 7:30p.m.

Putor: Kmaoth Balcer
.
· • SIOiday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45-a.nt. (2nd il41h Sun)

Liberty Christian Church
Dc:x.ter
Pastor. Woody Call
Sunday Evenina-,6:30 p.m.
Thursl!ay Service • 6:30p.m.

Old Belli• Free 'lVIII Bapdll Cllurch

5~..~~~~~~11!,-:'

CALL IEC
992·7204or
. 742~2223

848-2808

•

Rejolcln1 Life Ch•r&lt;h
SOD N. 2nd Ave., Mi!Jdleport
Pastor: Lawrenee Foranan
Suaday S&lt;hool · I 0 a.m.
Wednesday ~rvioes • 7 p.m:

MJdd~ Communi I)' Church ..

II PAIR

IWOUill PIICES

· COMPLIMIITIRY

Sllvermile Word or Fallh
Pa-= David Dailey
Sunday Sehool9:30 a.m.
Bva&gt;ing ·1 p.m.
Thunday Sorvico -7:30p.m.

The Salvation Anny ·
liS Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
S""'!'y School- 10:30 un.
Worship . 10:00 a.m., 7:3Q p.m.

llelllanr
Putor: Kmaoth Baker
S1mclay School • 10 a.m.
Worahip. 9a.m.
Wednesday Stnicel • 10 ,.m.

I

•
••

.

'

'

Putor: Floronce Smith
Sunday School· 10 aan.
Worahip • 9a.m.

MLU-Bas:,
Pum:JoeN.
Sllllday S&lt;hool-9:4 a.m. ·
. Bvenina ·6:30p.m. .
Wednesday Stnicel ·6:30p.m.

Suaday S&lt;hool-10:30 a.m.
Wonhip'· 9::10 a.m:
· Thunday Servioes· 7:30p.m.

·TrtniiJ ConvegaU..,al Chun;h
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church· 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

l'1110r: Ron Fie'!'" '
, Sunday School· 9:13.1-!11·
'·
Wonhip - 10:15 Lm.

Bradford Churth of Christ ''
SL RL ·l24 &amp; Co. Rd.·5
Putor. Derdt Slump
Sunday School- 9.:30 a.m. ,
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7:30.p.m.

Jlellllth- Baptist

'

••

Calvory Pllpl• Cbapll
H&amp;niJonville Road
Pastor. Rev. Victor )blush •
Sunday Sehcel9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Robert vanee
Sunday wonhip • 10 a.m. '
Wednaday service· 6:30p.m.

, Salome.,..,.

Sunday Sc:hool· lOa.m. ·
Wonhip-lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicu· 7:30p.m.

Pu'Or: Rev. Earl Shuler

Enddllle H-ot Pnrer

(11. Burlingh.,. &lt;hurch off Rooie 33)

Sunday School· 9:30a.m, .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. . 1

i

Fallh Flllo-lp C""""• r... Chrlll
Pastor: Rov. Fraoklin Diel:.ens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Other Churches

·Rolland

Putor: Anhur Cnblree

M...,n Church &lt;#Christ
Mil!erSL, Mason, W.Va.
·Sundar School· 10 a.m.:
Wontrip • 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedncJday Service•- 1 p.m.

Putor: Bill Lillie

s~:'io9~.....
· w~ s.,.;.., -6p.m.

.

Rullllld Cburch or Christ
Pastor. Eugene E. Underwood
S101day School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 a.m., 7 P.'!'·

~lilt

Paaor: GlendOn Stroud
Sunday School • 9:30 uo.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
WedneSday SeQiicu· 1 p.m.

IUO, Gll,llll .

Walker Alley
Parta and Sevlce
Mowera-ChalnNw- ·
Weedeatera
Authorized: Brlgg &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan, '
J.Q.C. ~lr Center
Pickup and Delivery
Houra N M.f t-3 Sat
CJO.ed Sunday

••

Calvory Bible Churdl
POmeroy Pike, Cq. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blieiwood
Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

New Haven Church or the Nuarene

RoclSpriap

I

Dexter Church of Christ
Pastor: Chris Stowan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • I0:30a.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.

•

'Putor: 1!oinhae (Gnce) Keo
S1mday
9:15a.m. '
Wonhip • 10:30 a.in., 6 p.m1 ,
W......aiy Stnice1 ·7:30p.m.

·· CO. .LITI
WILDIIG AID
UDIAIOR
SERVICE

RACINE IIIOWE!t CUNIC

••'

'
,

.

12/31.9211fn

•'

Faln&gt;lew Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pa•or: Jame1 Lewis
Sunday S&lt;hool • II a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servioe · 7:30p.m.

Portland Flrll Chureh of lhe Nozart'Jie
Putor: Willian Jullis
Sunday Sthool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:40 a.m., ?,p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

312611 mo.

(614)'992·5449

I

Whlle'o Chapel Wooleyan
Coolville Road
·
Putor. Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

RuUand Chure~ af lhe NUlrene
Putor: Samud Buyo
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednetday Services • 7 p.m.

Pul1 Cloapel
Pu!lr. Flonaee Smilh
Suaday·Scbool .'9 a.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m.

Run Bolin.., Chur£h
Putor. Robert Manley
Swday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m.', 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plain Church of Chrl•
Pastor. Bill Wines
Swday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Ch-. Churdt ot lhe Nazarene
Putor: Rev. Herben G"'to
Sunday S&lt;hool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednaday Se:vioes . 7 p.m.

Mllotrnlllo

1'11s1eyan Blblo Holiness Chun:h
15 Pearl SL, MJddlq&gt;&lt;&gt;rt.
Putor. Rev. Roy Mc(;arty
Sunday IChool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.; 7:30p.m.
, Wedneiday Service '7:30p.m.

'

.

. All HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 a Load
Delivered•

.

Freedom Goopel MJalon
. Bald Knob, on Co. R~. 31
Pastor: Rev. ROJier Will/ord
Sl'ftday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:45a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 LID. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 pm.

Hulh (Mldtl.-rt)
PasfOi; Pllllit $nllth ..
Sunday School·~:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Se!vieei · 6 p.m' ·

Pine GI'OYt Bible Holiness Church
. . 1/2 mile off RL~25
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sun!lay School· 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 P·~·

Hy~ell

Pomfi'OJ Cburdl otlbe Nuanne
Pastor: Rev. Thomas Mc:Ciung

Wonhip.- 9 a.m.
Thund&amp;y SoMea • 6:30 p.ID;

Holiness

''

FlwtiiRuo

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
. TA!(E CARE
·. OF IN OUR
HOME.
. 614·992·7698

'

Carleton Jnlerdenomlnallonal Ch•rch
KinpburyRoad
.
Pastor. Clyde W. Hendenon
. Sunday School· 9:30a.m,
Evening ·7 p.m.
Wedneaday Setvice • 7 p.m .

· Syr-.. CiulrehoflheN...,..ne
Pill«: Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sunda)'S&lt;hool ·9:30a.m.
· Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6p.m.
· Wednesday Servi&lt;JCS • 7 pm.

Putor: Dooaa N'""""'
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Role of Sharon Holl- Churcll
New Lims Road, Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey' Kins
Sunday s&lt;hool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship·-7 p.m.
Wc:dnelday pnoyermeeting-7 p.m.

•'

South Bethel NewT.... ment
SilverRldJO
Putor: Duane Sydmslridter
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
· Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Semoo • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sel!ool· 10 a.m.
WC!IIhip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueaday Services -7 p.m.

Eprscop~l

Sunday School· 9:30.a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

S.h~
Pulorl Kcilb Rader

\.',.

Olear

Bradb~ry Church &lt;# Chrllt '
·
Pastor: Tom Runyon ..

Rac:lne First Bapllsl .
Youlh Putor Rick Harris
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
'Worship · 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.

.

Wednmdly !Jcr¥ICea -1:30 p.m.

Putor. Gaty Hine~ ·
SIOiday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonltip • 6 p.m.
Wednclday S.rvica -7 P-1!'·

Zloo Church of Christ
Pomeroy; Hanisonville Rd. (RL143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:00 ~.m .
Wednesday S.rvicea • 7 p.ni.

"'

• s.m.tay School· 9:45 ......
WC!rlhiP • II .u i.

New Life Church of God

Bearwallow Ridge Church or Christ
Putoc lack Colearovo
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Wo~Jhip • .10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Sorvices ·6:30p.m.

Rutland Flnt llaptiii·CIIIIJ'Ch
,
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. ,
.........., Flnt Bapllot
l!ul Main Sl.
Sundiy School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 1010 a.m.
Flnt Soulhem Bapllsl
.41872 Pomeroy Pike ·
Putor. E. Laniar O'Btyllll
Sunday School • 9:30 .....
Wonhip -10:45 a.m •• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Flnt Baplish Ch_,h
&amp;h and Palmer St.
Pastor. Rev. Jomes A. SeddOn
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10:15 a.m.·, 7:00p.m.
.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lord's Supper·lat Sunday of eviry monlh.
Wc:dnelday Service· 1:00 p.m.

WITH CPR

Pulorl Pll'll011ion

. Keno Church or Christ
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool · I0:30'a.m.

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Strecl. Mlddlepon
Pastor: Mari:.Monow
Saturday Service· 7:~Q. R~
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

NU~SES' AIDE

"'God .,......,...,.

MJddleport Church&lt;# Ch~
· , Slh and Main
PastOr: AI HaniOI'l 1
Youlh Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15, 1010.a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

PU:tor: Rev:
Sunday lchoolWonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Service ·

Glv81Way

'

OJ. While Rd. o(fSt. RL 160

Pomeroy Weslllcle Church orCbrlot
'33226 Olilclml's Home Rd. ·
Sunday School· II a.m·.
Wonhip • lOa.~ .• 6 p.m.
Wednesday S.mces • 7 p.m.

•

.. '

HU

Church of Chnst
"·Pastor: And~w Miles ·
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wednesday S.rvicea • 1 p.m ..

su..r Rua

..

Ohio

, DI

'

'

EVERY THURSDAY

,· EAOI.&amp;S
CLUB

2 FNit Stnts• Wtor

IIIII•••
..............

IN POMIROY

• 4 WL••I

l:.tl_p.j_!L

'129.95 +Tu

. . ....... llnl
8100 Peyoff
Thla ad flOOd for 1
.FAE£' Clld.

u.. No.liOit.aa

...

~

==-'='

· - Uko

··-

~- 1IoM

IIMi Nol ' -·
IWooi&amp;Oid-Pupo,IM'

�..I
23,1993

Ohio
11

St

Help Wanted

HousehOld

54

Goode

ALLEYOOP

72 Trucks for 5818
1171 Fon1

- --.

mo,

NEA . Crossword Puzzle

~WD, .;;J,

114-'11424034.

. '

ACROSS

1112 Ctoovy, onty 14.- ~.

IIIU - . , llu MW truck, In
-~~
--·
101 -V-4,
IUI6',
Wloo-.
$4,200.

I'IWMl

u.

tiM , , _
4$3,800, 114-211Ul'H.

.

'

NORTH
+AKH

•s

cluolvlfr II lllle Aid ·-....q.
TJo,oo1owoylollot.

+75Z

.....

I

-·!'J.•.

1'111-1- ·

onack
11 Place of

~

Bultdlnj, wolaht Md ,_
lournor lormui'• A...... 11-

Go Colt

ALDER

Chillll

~--Amino Aokl llody
lootu~

6 Popular

om-.
Runo

Goodwine:!
Exhollll, ...... tid

.Kl0964

Cloon, Kilt
nogotloblo, -

hp,

WEST

EAST

+J 7 6 2
.KJ72
.A32
+QB

+Ql09
.AQIOP863
.QJ

+e
SOUTH

+8!

••
1800

pump, dock, throo bedroom, hwo
bolhil, locotod an lot In Raclno

:;'tai"'lt,

no,ooo, 114-1141-2203

(OHOW),

1-80Q..

Wan1ed to DO

18
Aa Q

. . . , _ , . caro -Mowing,

!'nlnlna. Landocapo Work. Gary
~ Colli t1WIJ-7121 Fw E•

liiMIM.

Mill'

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North ·

Sectional, ·heat

CteytOft

WCMMn: llaU more money!

Froo olglll- job propwotlon
po~ Uout llontrodHionol

U75
+AKJ10943

41 'HOUS81 for Rent

31 Homes for Sale

•choole,

very

1148-2945.

Sootb

nice,
ot

JAMEY'S GOIN'

20 Acreo, __t 112 Story, J Bodroomto With Electric, Wood
Heat, Soporoto Gorago, Barn. f
llllao From Morcorvllla Off Rt.
•-· 114-216-1801 Aftor 6 P.M.

POP

1111 Kow-111 Ninja 100 ...
4,100 Mllee, ShqwraaM Condlr

4 rooma, bath. half blumtnt,
new Cllrpel:, alr.-eand, uncMr

-:110,000 mllaL
Ooldwlng
ototo.
Vory.lntll'·
nlco.

TransportatiOn

1110.

llpoUa On Second Ann~», Call

71 Autoe for &amp;lite
111711 Olde Cut-. Bill oftar.
304-571o1211• .

=

~.

1224.

lntortor

PAINTING
a 111orlor,

minor

E::•

All bedrvoms hue niiW

e~~ra

locotod bohlnd Rlrtlo"'!
omontary ochool, 614-742·

lownt~~-~~·~~;~~~~

ropoln,
~· .tr•
. . -ootlmotoo,
quality, 304·7T.Io

Plno 91- cai'WIIh "Undor
~ llanageme~lt"

For AppolntmonL
Slap By BtoLt;:,n caro, Corn·
, W• Do It All,

614-441-012t.

Ranch etyte hom•, 3 bedroome,
1 bath, lttached g1r1ge, tMw
Andenlon w"n d a~ntral alr,
Footor8t, - ·
77Wtl0.

Two bedroo•,

~

hiE :sent,

Tri-Stato Troo Sorvlca. Topping, ocroonod
cor bock
-hid
-men
·
poteh, iocro
Trimming,_ Foodlng, Ro,..,ol, 2oi' Jan,
Rt.lll s. 3011o4U.17112.
Stump

3080.

Hemoval.

Fr..

tlmoloe. 114-387-0553.

£a..

Wontod To Do: In Homa Nurolng
Carw, In Your HotM, Rete,.ncee,
1,......_7712 Attor 4 P.M.
Wontod To Do: Light H..,M
Clllning, Call Afta Payne B14a
381-1170.

Vory nlco modutor Ower
11011 _ . a. I BR, 2 bo\~1 2
cor I l l - · 0.. 11 - - . ...t.
aan RMIIy'. ~71-3433 .

32 Mobile Homes
tor sale

Wonting to bobyolt In my homo, $152.17 pw month Including ols
C-or. any oge, MIWY month• fret 1at: ,.,., new 14r:70,
~. 114-8115-4212 olltr dollvorod and ·oac up, llklrtlng
7pm.
and • • · 1oo100437-1125.
Will Do Small Llwno, For $10, 111l04 14172, .-~~~ Lo4, 2 Bod- . 1 112 Bollw, CA, $7,800,
Trimming For$1, 614-441-1851.
114-441-1701 Aa• 4 P.ll.
Will 1111 aardlnl, r..eonable
,.._, 304:e75-l130. GtC name 1880 Folnnon4, -14114; 2 IR,
.:;:. -ton. seeoa. 304-CI'ISonllot.

F1nanc1al
· Business
Opportun tty

44

Bedroom,

1

..nu_,_, 304-1
lllda'IIJ~·IIng.
,

--------·1111110,

141114,goo
3bdflll.,
both,
dlotow-.
lumoco,2 pon:h,

30" . . range; . lroot ....
,.•..-...........or; 1D" lewnmoweri

pllo,_o lumlohod, lou"""'
room locll•Joo, clooo to ochOot
In town. AIID!ICitlono o'lllloblo
ot: WJoao ·o_, Allto. Mt or
coli tn4.ftz.mt: EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTII&amp;NTII AT
BUDGET PRICE8 AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 138 Jockoon Plu

:-'14-=::-::1182-1207:::;:,;::::;::..·- - - , , . . . . - - - - ,

this newspaper Is subject to
Ihi Fedl&lt;al Fair Houoing..,..
ol1988 wtolch makes Illegal
•to iMtvet"tlse •any preterence,

llmllallon 6r CllsalniJnotlon
balod on """· color, ntllglon,
tex tamlillllllus or national
ottgln, or any lntenllon to
make 111f ..c:n preter.nce,
Mmllallon ot !IIIC~mlnoJion:
'

knowlr9Y occopt

lldvelt~l tor

rH.f esi.ate

which 1o In Ylolallon ol tho
tow. Our 10odo11 ore hereby

Jrlormed thlllll dwollngo
adWr1'-d In thft newepaper
.,. ~labll on an equat ·
OIJPO~Urly balls.

m'3M

Hoopltol.

EHicloncy oportmont, Mutbony
Awonuo, P""'""'y, 614-882·71118.
Flfll Hotzor Aponmanto Taldng Appllcotlono, &amp;.;;lor,
Dlooblod Hancllcoppocl, FIIHA,
I , _ ~lllricod, RoqUIII Ap'
pllcol- By caJUng: RLJ
t111--.men1 Co., Inc. 114--337a
8711 Or Wrlto To: RLJ Manoa•
mont Co, Inc. eJo AHWA, Inc.
P.O. Box 1007,. Mo~otto, Ohio
45750,
Equol nouolng Oppor·
hfttv
•.
Fumlohod Apol1mont, 1 Bod, _ , 101 FOunh Avonuo, Go~
III&gt;OIIo, ShOll Bath, $185/llo.
lltlllloo Pold, 114 448 4418 Aftlar
7 P.M.

304-47H1127 oltor 7:00 PM.
Air Torn'c,Air Condhlonor, Worko
Wolll S1 ' 114-251-47115.
AII/FII rodlo wHh turntoblo I 2
opookon $40; 38212 Rack·
ojlrlngo Ad., Pornoroy, Soturdoy
24th only!
ATV lor porto. $10. nroo, rlmo
lor ATV. $5. Moyoro doop woll
JHimp.. $100. 304-475-1135.

Fumlohod Etllcloncy, 7 112 Noll
Ava.,
Golllpollo. $1110/llo,
Utllitloo Pild, &amp;14 411 C411 Allor
7 P.ll.
Groclouo llwlng. 1 ond 2 bod-

Englleh

rvom lplutmlnta.
Minor
and

It YIIIIQI
Rlverelae

olpulmontoln Mlddlaport. From
$1M. caUI14-a:!-411D. EOH.

lltddlopol1, Bolch 81, 2 . bod-

Furnished

Rooms
ADOIM for rant

.:WHk or month.

Barn elate, 12• K24•, S1.00 ead1,

21~4.

Aoed,

can

~75-

rrw.

,... lomo1o Cooko41olo lor oolo,
hand t.d, very tanw, $50 uch,
Ono Electric 21112 ortld lor men lnloinUon, 814-812·
•
112 .For.220 VDita 131 Uood 4G 8Gt1.

114-37WSN.

Houre, 1'144JI.alll.

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

Pole, chc C'ftned box. condull
plpo lor connoctlon to moblla
home, ttoo. 304 Ill 3114.

Poi'loblo

:::t'*
~""c.a"':l:
311-a=lor-

S'lll; po111i!!!~W TV,

BORN LOSER .

.. .....

TO WIE.

wv, 304ai1J...4DU.

46 Space for Rent

pod

Chromo br\loh guard.._ $45; tri
opookor olon~1 ..,o Hch;

2222.

'

l

onytlma.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Fa1111 Suilpl,c:,
~ Llv&lt;:&gt;stock

=

Fifth

w- _""'

2

1

I WA'TCHeO A VER:'Y

.
:

EXCi'nNI!i ~0'1 .

TV I...A5T NJSHT.

i
"'loompw•, fullY ooll-olnod;l

11111

I to I, nc oond, 31)4.;~
.

,

11117 - d , 2411. Exc. cond~·
3313.
. · - · 304o5•..'\
tlon. Soli lor
l

Serv1ces

ft,_..,

81

$50'

-·
--n--..

Dryor, worko good, $50, &amp;14-182- So"""'l polr of hllwy 1318.
work
polr, lft4.WN'!QI•

Home
Improvements

l

....... ·~ Ill. 124 . . . Poitleild,

Dhlo, 114-14W2tl.

•

Hotlond 471 Nino • hoy
blno. good-.
Golo1 88 ¥:.~
loth
. 4r:-·
.. .
~' ~ft" Hlo'lloc, prloo

,_11U41288t

50

83

Livestock

ASTRO-GRAPB

r

·HousehOld

1. 2 ....

=~.~~owner.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

•

BUIIMM or r11111 lllel 2 110t11

wfth 214 • Ill. z •• t . bot·

""'*' -..

-Jl!lllllc -- .. 1a - ..... oppooood ....... ~- lloro

,....---.- .
... fM.?"NNO'.

Rentals

-

.-.;

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

. ::·

1 d

Urilaulln

*'""

'lllrt $4,110;
I Fl.

eo.!!'L..

Rnattt 4 , ,...,... a
hi

Aprf124, 1113
You may ec:quiro a number of new inter•
Hll in tha yNr a*&lt;!. bringing ·Y!'U inlo
direct contacl wllh a largar circle ol
.:ccjuaintancat. . Several Important Jriend·
1111111 cOuld IWIUit IIOffl lhll group.
TAUIIUI (April :10 Mer 201 Be -lert lor
......., opponunltiH tqday,
they
~ pr-n1 themMivea through mort
than '9111Cll· Thcloe may bt above
a..,. 1n pottndal. KMw whore to 1oo1&lt;
lot 11111 you'l· find H. Tlla AltrOGraph lotlllcllmlk8r.il al•nttv -11, which

--.

....., ttl.._
........
E
.....
............
.

llodJ
II TwlaUng

pktch

"'·

lull

..._ . 1

.\

. u
F

p

N Z V 0 V E K F T ·R P

VWBGFM

MVDW

E G P

L N I R

ND
F 0

.w u

F 0 S

M WF OW

MWFIRWK

F

VGIIII

.

'
signs are romantically pe~oct lor you . Mall SCORPIO (Oet. 24·Nov. 22) Two lrleMis·
$2 plus a long, self-addressed. stamped whom you've helped in the pasl are both
envelope to l.talchmakar, rlo ihis ioewspa- working on ways Jo repay your favors.
per, P.O. Box 4465, New York, NY t0183. Neither one is aware ol tho other's eHor18:
QEMINI ("-Y 21.June 201 You'll nol only $AOmARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) This is a
be popular wijhin your social citcle today, gooq day to get iogelher wilh someone you
but yoo coukl also have a strong inllueloce recently met whom yoo woukl like ,to know
over busineSs associateS. Make the most bettor. The loeling is mutual, and interest·
ol this aa..t.
ing re'aulls are indicated.
CANCER (June 21 •July 22) You mighl CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22.JMI, ttl Don't bee!&lt;
have a chance today to' participate In a away from situations today just btC41u..
profitable and ongoing arrangement. they appear to be ladious or tough. You'll
Things might be juggled around a billa 1~ function best when conlronted by chalyou Into the picturo.
.
lange.
·
LED (July 23-Aug. 22) Be hopeful and AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-~. ttl Ter)lporarily
expectant today regarding a matter thai try lo sl1elve things today that lie yoo down
you deem Important. If you feel optlmialic to mundane. boring routines . Make
and lucky, you'll acl accordingly . I arnlfogemantotobowjthalunlriendwhois
5c)motllit 11J good could IWIUII. .
.
• alsO _,ad In ~VIRGO (Aug. 23..ept, 221 Matters thai PJICD (Felt. 20-llercll 2011f yoo anticl·
rolale lo yoor 1:41rHr and llilincea ahoufd ·pate negatlwe rtaulll today, chances are
be give_[' prtqr1ty over yoor othot' .Interests you will do thingllhll will holp bring tham
. today. 1nie is the lfN whtrt you oould fUn 1 abcxlt. The~ will be tnJII you think
up yoor btggelt ecore.
po.-Jy.
/'
·
UIRA (llpl. n-oet. 23) CondHiOna.lhat ARID (lllrch 21-Aprtl Ill Hlhart Ia M1
could have ·a favorable an~ upon your' imporUint mattilr you have 10 diiCuaa with
luture plana are atarttng to lrend in thot anot1o1r today, do Kon a bUll;
direction now. l'a lime 101 you to hltcl&gt; your without having klbltzara looking on, It
. hop8110 litiS rod wagon.
lhould .WOO! out vary wall tor .bcl!h panill.

lilY

.w u
FOS

WOIVGKFEW.

W S S N W

UGKTRP.
P13EVIOUS SOLUTIO!'!: "I gOMrally get to play these

Est-.'"'"' types

........

who have some ~ort of corruption of the soul. .. -. Ron Vawter.

•

0 four
Rearrange le»oro . of
scrambled -do

floe
be-

low to form four simple words.

Is
I
T
I
I

0 RA

uE

BLOMI

I
I

I NUY
1--..;....;;n:';.;..,:;....;.--1
I _....JI~---~.1"-..LI.....J...I...J . 7
•
EL E N0 E

I
Smart coed: "You llunked
the history exam!" Not so
smart coed: ·1 know. But althe
quastions were about things

I

'!;'athappenedbelorelwas......•
~s&lt;TI=-:y.,-=-,.:,.:....:r-1-=-r,~ Q Cornplele !he chuckle quoted

?Y lolling in !he miai"'l -ds
&amp;.....::J.-:-J.-L·...,-L-LJ you .dowok&gt;p
lrom ftp No. 3 bolow,
A. That strange term is DIPSOMA·
NIA, pronounced "dip·soh-MAY·nee·
4
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
uh." The root ofthis noun is the Greek
s
THESE
SQUARES
•
D1PSA, meaning "thirst," and it's
combined with MANIA, which means
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
wa~
··!craze, desire." In use for 150 years,
TO GET ANSWER .
this term for "uncontrolled desire for
alcohol" has also produced a noun for
SCRAM-lETS ANSWEU
~ ·&gt;2
the person amicted with such craving.
Weekly - Joint - Catch ' Poefic • TICKET
That term is DIPSOMANIAC, and die· .
"I know what a careful driver is!" annoullCBd our teentionaries point -out that a clipped form
aged daughter. 'It's one who has just seen the driver
of the noun has been ueed for the past
century: DIPSO.
ahead ol him gel a TICKET!'
· ·
. ·
~~~----~~_.

8

e·

. r ,,

l

I

l

•

BERNICE ,
BEDEOSOL

.... Bott. . - ~­
Ctydo -.Jr.~

THE BICJCX)I&lt;L."''N BONE..:
CRACkER" WRE6TL.I!O
•NOJS:&gt; 'THE MANQL.E:R!

qUMn liD .... full • • blth,'

112 IlL

:ra'i - t•
sao,. brond -rvo 11rao oor
=-:A"' .......... ~-

do you view the English? Tru·
man Capote - many years ago claimed that the most dangerous thing
in the world is to make a friend of an
Englishman, because lhe'll come to
steep in your closet rather than spend
10 shillings on a hotel. Less uncompli·
mentary was George Mikes, who said
that an Engli~man, even if he is
alone, forms an orderly line of one.
Today's deal occurred during an English intereounty tournament played
late last year.
It looks as though five clubs must
make. Suppose East wins the heart
l~!ad and switches to a club. Declarer
draws trumps, 'plays three ~ds of
spades, rolling the last in hand, and
leads a diamond to the king. When that
wins, he ruffs dummy's last spade before playing a second diamond. East
wins and is endplayed into con~in&amp;.a
tuff-and-discard, on which South's !Bit
dlamond disappears.
However, East set a trap. After winning trick one with the heart ace, he
switched to the diamond jack. West
won with the · ace and returned a
diamond.
U East had a singleton diamond·, the
contract was impossible to make. And
if West began with A-Q-x of diamonds,
why would he win. trick two? He would
play low, establishing. two
tricks in the. suit. However, declarer
fell for the ruse. He played low from
the dummy at trick three, allowing
East to Score his diamond queen 19 defeat the contract.
They can be tricky, these English•

Q. I'm a recovering alcoholic, and I
know there's a strange term for craving alcohol. Do you know it?

Ua- a..-blo

bomo,----·
1

•

..

·-'l:alant.l
...... fMn
wfth
Nm

7That111811
8lrrltate
11 or. brllln
mambr10 L.aw llllllllng

The ·English day
of the year

·By Jeftfey McQuain
A small spot or Oaw is a BLEM·
ISH ( "BLEM-ish"), as in "a blemish
on his record." Any misuse of the noun
BLEMISH should be easy to spot.

Goods

33 Farms for Sale
88 .
DOnd. Ylnlon.

f~ern1me

2 E•clemtUon
3 Commerce
agcr.
4 Palra
5 Period of
tlma
6 PronunclaUon mark

Nortb Eut
Pass
1.•
s+
Pass
AU pass

~. .~r) OUR LANGUAGE

SAILJ~

WtTIII'f. TlliOitarH'

1

~nn.

...

WOIJ.() '{()() LtJ(£

=~z:r!~\f.:;
"U' ~
Pick-Up All For. $200

For

now on Nil al P1lnt PIUI, 2801
Jackson Ave, Point PIIIHnt,

0IM.

51

• •

truck'

: WDdtwfn bH mun~~, m;
-'1111.
.
.•
Dab Tool lox For Full Slzo

Burpoo Soodo ond bulk -

!lSI, . . eon wv.

ln-

PS,pawwMIII.
tfno.,.....lnve

bock 11111.

•

•&gt;

Jottor olgn 1211. Froo 1111'on I
delivery.
1.00 513 3151

Saoaor.rillo'o lottloftotdtCondition, twloo=
cloolgn
114-44JI.2781.
~- lllrkoySIMPina roonte wHh cooking. Codor Choat 1 Poich Glldor $100 April :It ·lloy :a. ......,... Mllitrollw - · Alrl»ok-upo. Eoch; Porcn Bp~ng, P-r - - •r BondyWtJJo CIM after 2:00 p.m., 304a7'73a \llthoot BIM, $!10 Each, 14-446- PM,
ornc;;l~
e:oo

Merchandise

1111 Caprloa

Itt.:
•._.lon, 1100,\

~=~.::.:::r.:::..;.::.;n..,:-:-----.-..----:';.
~--·
R~
WV.304372-3133 or 1

Potlo/pon:h
. . 42" · - Nu Sf
-•I
tabla iiiilcholro,

Protty1r.nk
- oklot,- an1r- f7Q.
Slu
. Lona
o.-lomotor, good condition, 304-41J1.3311"" lnlormollionl
$\'5, 814-882-3041.
-drooo,tao-royol
Birch clooot dooro, $49. Euroko - -12, --171o5145.
Tlmbo~lne backpock tonl $70.
Schwinn blko, S45. Pup toni,
$10. 304-8711-4181.
.

car Sloroo, Llko -

Muot _ . .... · - 14,m Red-

CA£l $AL.I-$' .
, IN Tl1f U.$.

•

..;.., toa4 .... lor

-

~

0no Antlclue Follll Ill For t100,

.

Ben driven walk•IJogger ltrtll
mechlne, lenelon control and

~=~.:1 at $t20/mo. Golllo Hotol.
I
11180.

114 441 1140

mon wfth I ,_r worranty,

1

i T!!I"R.:!.Id ~

cludee COYir, fllt«,laddef1$250.

814-1'12·2325.
·
BoMmont Sola: loby Clothoo,
Toyo, Aduh Clothing, Ba ..
cablnll, Vlolon Cookworo, Cor·
nlngworo, I Loto Of Mlocl can
Aftor 9 A.M. Till 8 P.ll. 121

Hf 6AVf Mf
THIS CHAtT of

Of 11188 Al111. Wll Pol1 OUt. Bolh j

an-- -wfth groao

hOUM newly

This.._., wll no!

=
.
::::truck,

5 1oodol or '"""'• 1~n ooooonod
hl~ood,
1
3. all or 00, coli 81~·

A IV

''AIJT06fAPI1': AND

rr..mlealonl,

C'-nrolot

a

fF~oj fo~

(lO.S$

a

310 Turbo. 114o44JI.7125.

to llhop

FRANK AND ERNEST

ChovroJot,i
Oaurontoocl, 1128; 350 Four Bon•
lloln
110; 4 Spooc!•

3 bedroom homo by Dolle M••m Alexander Othe,..
June 11, 30 mlnut• from Gtlvlil $21 To N4! Eac!!; Elvia, Bllllao
Collection, 120 10 $25, 114-446Ptlllt, Clllootlocl 811-4»6421.

F""" Qotllpollo And

20 R. Hnlllro Boot - r i l

1112 T1-n, Shlnglo Roof
Slorago Building, Aoilna: $525,
can Allor 3 P.M.I14-441·f121.
Abovo ground pool, 4118 It In·

Mil

J lod100111 lllalolll Homo. can
Bo Lilt On -od Lo4, illnutoo

.

·~~

2 ChwrDIM
01-11

lnt-lonol bnloll ' - · right

Will

REMEMBERS AN'I
OF US ..

1184 1Ift. W.tcrafl bcwclchN ~
110HP, outboard Mreuty, toq;.
many utroo IC! IIIII, 14500 OBQ,,

76 · . Auto Parte &amp;
Acces_sorles

Holler

TrOitor Lo4 Wijh BomloPond, 7 lllectrk: ......,, ~: 814--992-- ...... . . _ llnod, 120aM
.
wfth/WKhout 1.8 - . ,.,._Tn- 111111 From Goiii&gt;OI
Wator 2J23. .
....., ,.,.., no. dl....... ,.,.
SM't,,.,..._-m't,
.
Polcl. S110/llo.I1445JI.i'iea. '
Colloctlbla '-Franklin Kina 8" ._bedroom- $40. ~
Floor Fan- Workol $25, &amp;14-2452 BR moloHo haoM lor oola. 304l'n-6331.
.
1:1 Wanted to Rent
1121~ Or ltC-441,3230,
.
.
ui)Cioqllnnlnl.

All real•tate adverthllng In

Near

Dopo.lt Roqulrod. 114-44J1.211t17.
~
_ . , . , I pto., tot a1 I l-Ie , op-

eo-n goo - . Colorniil. 45

caw.....t poreh, kllaMn ~.

1

Apartment
for Rent

H'tplt~ ~conomlc.l Gal Heat,
stove, HOI. Fumlohod, $24Wo.

INOTICE!

Real Estate

••

llotol FIUo Point, Vorl
Goiod Concrnton, 114-44t.OS38. •
lluot •1111. 1¥4 Cloltocra•
ca¥Ollor.
3211.,:-~=· wfth
trollor. $1000.
•
•,

1'00!11 lumlohod oot, udlltloo Black Lemox Rund etereo,
1811. Kno• holno, 2 pold, clop I rol. 304-162-25141.
AIIIFM, dual cuoono player!
bdnn., bo mowod from 101, lllddloport, North 4th AvL 2 record!~ bau boolt, $80, 8'f4.
..,......... «I..,....Z·7107.
room fumliMcl eftlancy IJ)f, Mao4C,..ob&lt;lpm.
1887 Rodmon Rl.,..,law, 141110, clop a_ rol, utllltloo pold;30+882. Black prom draa tor 111e, new
2bdnn., 1 both, Jorge living 25M
$110, &amp;14-8112·3041.
•
room with c-..r colllng,

2 112 t o n - AIC, goo-·
OHIO VA~LEY PUBLISHING CO.
hoC .... - · )4.1cu.lt.
, __ _ - you do bull- ~
lrlgWIIOr, 2 - . wltlght
, _ with J&gt;IOiilo you koow, and kit, vlnyt 'IOidorjilllnloog, 1041
NOT to HOld monoy through tho ...... lt0,100,114-11H131.
mollun41 you hiWIInwootfgotod 11181 Skytlno Hatty Rldgo 14170,
1hl ollooih~g.
..
d ellc, 2 l " d come. AIC,

.,

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

ASK ~IM IF HE

~lne.

C.lll14 441 Z5ll.. EOH.

•ny u.'-r

Spoclollt'"*· Coli 814'-441-!i183
plelte Uwn

trano. PI, PS, tiH whoo[ Crulao,
-Jr. Vory clopondoblo. 304-885-

SpeciaJlzlng

Jolla, Tor -·~.lntortor.~..Ex·

tortor a-no,

1171 C.~t~~~ro. 305 eng. AUio.

1208Jmo. -

In FIM Dilt&amp;Wng, Hand Wu

TI-lE PRINCIPAL ..
TELL HIM THE 6U5
WE !-lAVE TO TELL HIM DIDN'T COME, AND
WE'RE LATE
\.WI''&amp;..I\t:vALL TI-lE

111

..... \,

oond on,I14-Mio2241.

1m Ford Falrmonl, nMdl ex:·
hlu.t ,..,elr, •leo motor repair,
In good oho~, 114-882·

roomo, 1112 Both, Dining Room,
coli
1
Utllhy R - Garogo, Nfco Raor
Gultlr-., ftfll- treo, Yard Groot Locitlon 1 112
lor men lnlormotlon 304-175- Block. From Downtown Gol·

_.lng lor fomolo or 1,&amp;.~1=·~··~~~"=·~-~~~~--­
·
mola potlant, 111.11 approved,
HILLTOP SECWSION
- .
oof TLC, call Botty 304- • 3600 Square Foo4 Conlomi'«Y
mmz
Homo Dn 17.8 A1:r" mil Wllh
Pool And 2 Bomo.
Lawn - ' , mowing and t~mo • B3 AdJ-nt Acroo mil Awall·
mlng, fully Jnwroil, 114-812- oblo
'1377.
• 4 Bodtoorn Homo On 4 Acru
.
Wllh 22128 Porty Room ·
llloo PoUIII'o Doy caro Cantor 1 All Of Thl Abovo Within 3 MllH
B - w• 01 HIIC On Jacuon 01
Plu 11-F a A.ll. o5:30 P.M. II
Rio Orondo - Contact Bill
Quolly And E-'"nco Ia The Connell At: Donno Summoro
Moro lnlormollon AI:
111 _ , For YOIW Chlld'o Roolty For
can. Cat1 Uo For A Ylon. lnlont &amp;14-3114-e251·
IToddle!W 114-441-1227. Proo- Nlco 3 bedroom homo wllh 11'111
• - ISchoat Ago ·114-4411- 2 cor guogo, loca1od on nlco

tea-XR Ill .ICX801 ~50; . HondO

- . SlOG; -

Gutt.,. N· ned Light Hauling, vtew1 bgla Rldge, axcallanl
~:t~ Rell•nlill, StaM: conaltlon, 2 car detached
garwge, $51,100, 114-148-3021,

For Sa~ By Owner: 3 B.....

PEANUTS

t310Q, 304-47S-3II47.

$30,000. m Putc ort.., 304·
175-45112 loowo mnNgo.
- t Molntononc:o, Polm!n9, Country Lhllng• 3-Cbdnn. houoo
Yord WI-, Wao- on 1 112 o.- wijh buutlNI

u-

1 Sri Linke't

II!~·::~~··~::r~ the
patron saint wbo
a dragon.

Motorcycles

lion, Pllco To Sol Ali ft.481,
114-248 8581
I

Qaa
Portablll S.wmlll, don"t
~~ 0 thl mill Ju8t

35 Foaa
38 Type of
flcUon
41 S. C!f MJ

DOWN

This is St. George's Day in England,

74

E&amp;R TRIE SERYICE. l-Ing, 3 Room.Houaa On 3 Acr.H, Par·
Tr-lng. Troo Romowol, Hodgo 1
R od
-lniFroo Ettlmotlol &amp;14- t ally 1 om olod, Noodo Work,
311'7'N1'Aftw 4p.m.
$5,800, 114-Jlll-2442. ·

A~r
1•00 ~M
~ ·
· ·

34 0•

lupporlllf

52 llutlctl key
54 ProcMd
55 Kind ofrock
57 SmaMhole
59 - Ptrk,
COlo.
60 Lura

AN'

WMkende Anytime.

IJpm.

IEJ.perfencad Houle CINnlng,
R,...,.W. Rat-, 114-SI8-M20

12 Weirder
14 North of CO
15 llnoi dove .
10unda
17 CHIIen18 Guido'• high
note
20 Kind ol fobric
22 Ordlnenca
23 FJratofita
dt.l
25
a of light
27
eum
28 R•ted on
knMe
30 Shut hard
32 Obteane

.Opening lead: • 2

I

TO TH' PITCHER
SHOW !I

eam1'8111
114 143

Welt

••
Obi.

BARNEY

&amp;14-

Eiactrloal· homa &amp; 3 bedroom, 'pqoolbty 4~ clooo to
town &amp; ~tehool. SDOOo uBO, 114~r llodrtcal oorvlco, 614-1'12-. ~882
::.::-31::::8::8 ·:...,..·- - - - , - Doar anc1 - a t - . by tho 3 bedroo'mo, 1 t/2 batho,
- . 114-14:1-5123 on
kltc~!llll
room. gao hoot,
., · - -aa.
;chr -,. 114·192-7492
after

1 Scold

PHILLIP

_ _ ,.,, .. 1 · -

42 Dtta for
computer
' 44 1ntartwlnt
45 llat'o (Fr.l
47111ttaka
40. Aftglo-Stxon
leiter
50Hud

I

�--~- -

•

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

Community ·Calendar
Comaallltf Cll1•dlr Hetwo daJI bel'olt o event
ud 1M daJ ot t11at naL Items
alllt be received welllllldTuce
to !llllll't pu• Mbl IB tile cal·
elldar.
FRIDAY

Call 378~6312, 3_78-6133 or 667- . p.m. Costis$3.50foradUJtsand$2
6946 for infonnauon.
for children . Desserts are extra.
Pu151ic welcome.
SYRACUSE - Revival at the
Syracuse First Church of God will
STIVERSVILLE • Jerry Cotterbe Friday thiough Sunday at 7 p.m. ill will speak at the S tiversville
nightly with Steven Carney, Chilli· Word or Faith Church on Saturday
cOihe, on Friday; Mike Lainben on and Sunday at 7:30p.m. Pastor
.: MIDDLEPORT • Revival will Saturday· and Mike Finnicun on David Dailey invites the public.
be throligll Friday at the Bnidford s
'
Church of Christ. Tim Wallace
unday. Pastor David Russell
MILLFIELD - There will be a
Wheelasbwa. will be the speaker: invites the public.
•
round and square dance on SaturServic:ea are 7 p.m. niabtl~ and at
ALBANY - Meigs County day at the Russell Building in Mill9:30a.m., 10:30 ~m. Bl!d.7. ~ p.m. arangers and interested persons are field with music provided by Out
~ Sunday. ~pecial mus1c mahdy. ·· encou.raged to attend a grange of the Blue. John Russell will lie
~ursmy provided. .
·
· membership meeting at lbe Albany the caller• .
,.
. LONG BOTI'OM : F 'th F ll G~ge Hall in Albany (tonig~t)
WARREN • The Ohio State
.
at
u
Fnday at 7:30 p.m. sponsored' by
{j~apcl Chw:ch m Long Bottom Lowell Ashcra£t, area membership Grai1t~e officers:wifr be conferring
w11l ~ve ~~val tJ:uouib Satwday chairman, and Bonnie Vonderhov· the stxth degree at Warren Local
Hi h S
.
C
at 7 ~.m. nia!Jtly with Cbarles Hall, el state membership chainnan
g chool m Washington ounty
Manetta, evangelist. Special
'
·
on Saturday at 7 p.m. Those who
. ~inaing_ night!Y· Fellows~ip
SATURDAY
have received .the fifth degree are
l 'ft'ednesday evemng. Homeoommg
POMEROY - Kay Cecil. invited to attend. Contact Opal
dinner, Saturday at S p.m. Pastor antique collector and appraiser,. Dyer at 742-2805 for further inforSteve Reed invites the public.
will present a program at the Meigs mation.
POMEROY • Mt. Hermon Unit- County Museum in Pomeroy on
BASHAN - There will be a
cd Bre.lbren Church, Texas Road, Saturday at 2 p.m. Bring in several
weekend
·meeting at Red Brush
Pomeroy, will !)Old revival throUgh of your favorite items for appraisal.
Church of Christ in Bashan on SatSunday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
LO'I'J'RIDGE • Country music . urday at 7 p.m. and Sunday' at I 0
Rev. Charles Norris, evangelist. night at the Lottridge Community am. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Fos~ev. Robert Sanders, pastor. Center will be Saturday from 7 ter, W.Va., will be speaker. Everyinvites the public.
p.m. to midnight. All bands are one invited.
welcome. Refreshments will be
HENDERSON • There will be a · served. Everyone welcome.
•
SUNDAY
round and square dance Friday
POMEROY • American Legion
. from 8-11:30 .P.m. at the Hender· . KANAUGA • The Liberty Baseball
sign-up will be held Sunson Community Building. Music Mountaineers will perform Satur-· day from 2-3 p.m. at Meigs High
will be 'It~llld the Country Gen- . day at the D.A.V. CCnter in Kanau- School for particigants age 16-19.
tlemen.
Bowles will play fidThere will be a $1 sign-up fee and
dle. Everyone wck:ome.
ga.
· a birth certificate copy must be proMIDDLEPORT • There will be vided.
.
CHBS'lliR • A free COOlmunity a western dance at Middleport Eleimmunization clinic will be held mentary sponsored by the MiddlePOMEROY • The Meigs Vocal
Friday from 9 Lm. to 3 p.m. at the pan Arts Council on Saturday from Music Depanment will present its
Chester Fire Department for ages 8-11 p.m. Cost"is $3 single. $5 cou- annual spring concert Sunday at
two months lhrouab tindcnwten ple. Refreshments available. Public Meigs High School's auditorium at
age. Parents must bring child's welcome.
2 p.m. The lbeme is "Forever and
immunization m:ml.
Ever Country."
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
TlJPPERS PLAINS • There will High School Senior Class will prePOMEROY • Bruce Stone will
be a round and square dance on sent the dinner t~eatre, "Up the . be in concen· at St. Paul Lutheran
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. spon- ·Down Staircase," at the Eastern Church in Pomeroy on Sunday. at
sored by the Tuppers Pllins VFW High School gymnasium on Satur- 6:30 p.m. The public is invited.
Post No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary. day at 6:15 p.m. Tickets are $8 per Refreshments will be served folMusic will be by the Happy Hol- adult and $5 per child age 12 and lowing the concert.
low Boys. Red Carr will be the undti. Ticlcet price includes dinner
caller. Everyone welcome.
and can be purchased from any
CHESTER - The Chester Basesenior or at the school. Tickets for b'an Association will meet Sunday
RIPLEY, W.'VA. • The Libeny the drama only will be sold at the at ~:30 p.m. in the Chester ElemenMountaineers will perform at door for $4 each and will go on tary gym. All parents are invited to
Skatcland in Ripley on Friday.
sale at 7 p.m. .
attend.

.

.

•

REEDSVILLE· There will be
LONG BOTTOM · A sm!X'gasMIDDLEPORT . The Jellisons
an informational meecing regarding bord dinner will be held Saturday will perform Sunday at 10 a.m. and
the o~ening of the Fellowship at 5 p.m. at the Long Bottom Com- . 6 p.m. at the United Pentecostal
Chrisuan Academy at the Fellow' munity Building. Cost is $5 for Church in Mid.dlepon.
ship Church of the Nazarene on adults and $2.50 for children 12
Route 124 near Reedsville on Fri- and under. Public invited.
day at 7 p.m. and Saturday at I 0
POMEROY - County western
a.m. and 7 p.m. School material
SALEM CEN1ER • Salem ~n­ line dance classes will be offered
aild rooms will be available for ter Elementary PTO will sponsor a . Sunday from 2 -4 p.m. at the
view. Registration I!!so available: spaghetti dinner Satwday from 5-7 Pomeroy Municipal Building.

'

~ ~:1"'
The ~.em=:-~-p'appteciation
of the Occupational Work Ex~ {OWE)
class of Meigs High School was
held Thursday at McDonald' s in
Pomeroy.
Students presented pllques and
OWE mugs to show their ippiecialion to their employers. Marcia
Robinson spolce on behalf of the
OWE class and thanked the
employers as thC students not oaly
made money and earned credit, but
gained experience and knowledge
in the business world.
Employers and guests llllalding
were Cbuck Blake and Bob Dan- ·
gerfield, Big Bend F!&gt;odlaod;
C.huck Kitchen, Dairy Queen Bra. zter; April Shoemaker, Dick
Vaughan, Vaughan's Cardiul;
Roscoe and Sandee Mills, Mi:Dollaid's; Judy ~....- . Jon
f Fishe :-r:::-::0
r's Big Wbeel; Linda rig· gle and Mike Smith, Overbrook
Center; J. D. Story of Smith-Nelson Motors; John Anderson of
Andersons; Lennie Haptonstall of
Sears; Bill Gilmore and Tammy
Starcher, Middleport~ and
Tees; Kelly Winter of Pizza Hut;
Carl Hysell and L. B. Vaugban,
Meigs County Juvenile Offu:ers; ·
and Larry Banks, Banb Construe-

.......
Special suesu attendias wert
FaiiDD Taylor, Meigs High School
principal; Gordon Fisher, assi•ant
pnnc
' ipal, ••
u.o._. Higb·, James Carpenter, :Meip Local su{!Crintendent; John Riebel, supenntendellt
of Meigs County schools; Dave
Harris, The Daily Sentinel; Cliff
Kennedy, guidance counselor,
Meigs Hi&amp;h; 1..-ry Rupe, president
of the Meigs Loc:al Scbool Board;
William Buckley, secondary sup:rvisor, Meigs County !chools.
. Also attending- Ron Logan,
msuuc:tor of the OWE class and
students, Heather Davis, Chad .
Deskins, Lila Harr, Corey Hatfield,
Tam Lee. lCdly Mlrcillko, ~e

May, Jason McDaniel , Grant
Reynolds, Marcia Robinson, Lonnie Sroufe, Paul Van Coney, and
Sllannon Walker.
Jim Hill, Manning Roush, Judy
Spencer and Gene Triplett mate up
the OWE advisory ·committee.
Employers participating in the program but unable to attend were
Lulce Curry, Odd Lou; Dennis Sae' ·
lens, Dairy Val'ley; Bill Haptonstall, Sears and advisory committee
member; Angela Capehart, Kelly's
Komer; Salfy Conard, S. and N.

crarts.

.

Core~ Hatfield

on behalf of the
class presented Lo.,an with 'an .
appreciation plaque. "

Mrs. Buckley ·
hosts UMW
meeting

Gardening
of herbs are
a way of life
in Meigs
-B·l

i

r'

'

'

chairs and trash are· strewn along
both sides of the dark and musty
hallway. The smell of smoke
lingers despite a cool draft frOm
broken windows.
For 11 days, more than 400 prisoners and hostages lived behind the
.barricaded iron gate daring a dead·

The Balthaser farm is located on
Briar Ridge Road (County Road 2)
approximately 1(l mile off RouLe
325 in Danville.
Further information may be
obtained by contacting the Meigs'
Soil and Water Conservation District Office at 992-6647 or the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District Office at446-8687.
·

DANVILLE - The Meigs and
Gallia County Soil and WlltJC ConSClVBiion Districts and Coopemive
Extension Services are
·
.a pond clini'c Tuesday atsponsonng
5:30 p.m.
at the Curtis Balthaser farm fn
Salem Township.
The evening will begin with a
dry
hydrant demonsttation by
the local fb depajtmenL
·Eric Norland, state specialist,
natural resoun:es, Ohio State University, will discllSS "F'ISh Stocking
Rates and Weed ConbOI (Biologif
. ire

•

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
I• N""' Op.,. Fer .
TlWS...On. .

ltll111'111ts(flew.... &amp;
v_..,.,....L ....._ ......, Pette4

cal and Chemical)."

Mike Dub!, district conservationist, soil conservation service,
and Hal Kneen, extension agent,
Meigs,IGallia Counties will discuss
"Update on Pgnd Safety, Weed
Identification and Procec1111g Your
Pond From LivestocJr Damage,"
Rel'reshmela will be served fol·
lowing the clinic by the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Uldies Auxiliary.

rea
•

LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) The corridor of cellblock L is eerie.
Filthy mattresses and sheets, desks,

Along the river ..............81-7
Busi8ess/Farm............ .;..Dl•8
Classirted .................- ..Dl-7

.,
111: 11::

• ·:

1

!

:::::.

I&lt; .1111

Deaths••,...........................A-6
EditoraJ ._ .. --......._........ .A4

Sports......................- ....Cl-6
Weather. ..................- ......A-2

.., "'( ~~

Showers. Hlp mlow... 10..

~-

'

.

14 8eollon 128 Pape
A lluldnleclla
new Pll*

"'c.

......, c. 11hti 11. 11 sa.... .,,
·Pin AIM&amp; Mn.l4111tws.

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

. SPECIAL Of 'THE MON'TH
(

HUIIAU'I IIDIROUSE

SJUCUII

992-5776

.,.,,

..

,.,

.... ,_.,.,

..

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

... ,...

'""'''''""'

.Soap box derby plans underway
•

. '
)'

/

ast

•

· RIO GRANDE - A one-day
CiaiiSIIIidle, currently traveling ued. ''They must leave to .acquire
I
.
· conference 10 help area coolmuni; with Gov. Voinovich's business gOO!I jobs. Most parents and grandThoma, MAD~ state repl-eseatative fram Meigs
REMINDER TO STUDENTS - "Be alcohol
ties sttengthen their tools for eco- development tuur in Europe, will parents would prefer to see the
(:oUDty, at left, od Rought attach 1 red ribbon
rree before yo a taro tile key," says Ellen
nomic growth has been scheduled discuss the trip during his presenta- development of local jobs. By jomto ·a car at Southern Higb School while Gerlld
R0113bt, lllate aecretary ~ Oblo Mothers Against
for Thursday, Mar 6 from 9:30 lion, "Retention and Expansion of ing forces, we can malce the differDrank Driving (MADD). Rought said Friday
Rought, vi~' advocate from the Meigs Couaa.m . until 4 p.m. m die Student Local Industry from aDomestic ence to improve the local
.tbat wrecked ears will be placed throughout
. ty MADD chapter, looks on. ('I'-S pboto by Jim
economies or the region. n
Center at the University ·Of Rio and Intemational Viewpoint."
Meigs County to rembld students or tb~ hazards
Freemo)
Local coordinators for. the conGl'llll!le.
"We were pleased with the
or driYina tliuk clariDI pl'OIII naaon. Here, ~t
ference
include Wayne R. Kin,,
The conference is designed to · res.ults of the· Economic Develop·
.
.
.
·manager
of Member Relatiqns IUid
assist economic development pro- ment Symposium last fal~," swd
Industrial
Development for Buckfessionals, ·~members frQm the • Dr. Barry M.. Dorsey, ~dent of
pull.!!f;:,JIId pnv-.' wlllii,_JQWn·. l:lle \.)1\I,VM&amp;" '..JU...B,JQ Grpcl.e. el~9f~.:«;:nqpin•j~
sliip trustees, l1l8)'llrS, city councils :·Howev.er, we believ.e ~a highly fnc.; t&gt;r. Cllarles F. Palmer, dean.¢
and county commissioners with mteracllve and paruc1pat~ con- the Emerson E. Evans Colleg~of
efforts to attraCt business and ere- ference •in which the region s ceo- Business Management at Rio
.
nomic developers, public officials Grande; and Kingsley Meyer, Rio
GALLIPOLIS~ A Kerr man man; Summer Martyn, 11, Route 1 right rear comer of Martyn's vehi- ate jobs.
William B. Snyder, ~onomic and business ~pie ta!J' .~ each Grande's director of Adult and
was arrested for driving under the Thurman and Shannon Fallon, 15, cle . The impact forced Kiser's
Ed1K:ation.
influence, ~ess operation and I0975 State Route 141 Thwman.
vehicle to the right and onto the development manager for Colum- other, rither lban JUSt bemg talked Continuing
Reservations
can be ma.de by
failure to control Friday niabt folB.erryman was transported by sidewalk where the vehicle rolled biiS Southern Power Co., and Paul at'. is vital to strengthening the
calling
the
Loren
M. Berry Center
towing an accident which IDjured Gall18 County Emergency Medical over and came to rest on its right · Clapsaddle, who also directs eco· communicatic;m and coope~on to
for
Economic
Education
at Rio
fiv~ people ~nd damaged tjlree
Service; the others by private vehi- side against a parked vehicle nomic development effons through ensure retention and expans1on of .
Grande,
24S-S353
or
(toll-free)
1•
vehicles. ;
cle.
·
owned by Autom!)tive Rentals, Columbia Gas of Ohio, are the key existing business and industry, and
800-282-7201.
A
registration
fee
ot
figures in helping develop the con- to attract new jobs to the region.
Randall'!). Kiser, 2S, was incar·
AccordinJto a repon from the Inc., 1704 Eastern Ave.
ference,
a follow-up to a similar . "Our most valuable expon loss $10 may be made payable to the
cerated ~y after 10 p.m. in the Gallipolis Police J)epanment. 'Kiser
Kiser's vehicle sustained heavy,
Gallia County Jail.
was soutbbcl!lnd on &amp;stem Avenue disabling damage and was lOwed meeting at Rio Grande in October now is our a~gressi ve, educated BCEE/URG. For more informa.·
young people, Dr. Dorsey contin- tion, contact Jerry Gust at the Berry
Treated and released from Holz- (State Route 7) at a high rate of from the scene; Martyn's sustained 1.992.
Center.
'
•
er Medical Center were Kiser's speed and Martyn had exited a moderate damage and was driven
passenger, Jarred Berryman, 19, 23 • parking lot on the cast side of the away. The rental company's vehiBurger Street, Gallipolis; driver. Eastern Avenue and completely cle also sustained mOderate damage
'..... ······ Kathy-!·. Martyn, 31; Roure .. J..Thur, ., eniered the road.
and remained at the scene.
man, and her passengers Jason _ 'Kiser was unable to slow down
Continued on A-2
Manyn, two months, Route l Thur- or avoid collision_ and struck the

Five treated for injuries, three Vf!hicles:-damaged ··.

OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

,

•

MIDDLEPORT ' Plans are and JacksOn counties in West Vir- experience world competition on a
underway for the June 27 soap box ginia. To qualify, contestants must national level.
Anyone Interested in competing ·
derby tribe held in Middlepon.
be between nine and 16 'years of
or
assisting in any form should
The Meigs County Soap Box age on or before August 1.
contact
Williatn Snouffer or Gary
Derby Association held a meeting
First, second and third place
at Blue Sbak Cab in Middleport.
winners will receive savings bonds Snouffer at992-707S IX' 992-6471.
There will be two divisions run and trophies. The fusi place win- Help is needed in all aras... sponthis year: stock car and tit car. The ners of~ div~ions will travel.to sors, driven and volunteers.
A J!IOOling will be held Monday
event is open to girls and boys ages . Akron With their C8;f and fam1ly
at
7
p.m. at the Blue Streak Cab
nine through 16 living within . memllers to compete 10 world comCompany
in Middlepci'L All inter•
Meigs, Gallia, A.~ Jackson and ~tition. This. is a once-"!-a-lifeested
parties
and participants are
Vinton counbes m Ohio and Mason ume opponun1ty for the children to
·
not only malce new friends, but to urged to attend.

'. ·Two Ohio lawyers nominated for posts
~

'0

. · BJ Tbe ~lated Pitu
Two Ohio lawyon liave been

•

•

•

J

nom108ted to SCJVe as U.S. attorneys, officials said.

'

.

CoNnuNCK PLANNING-

An--

· lc dewlllpiHIIt _ , _ wiD be conducted at
the Unhenii;J ~ Rio Gnode CJ£1 May 6 to as&amp;ist
caamaollJ ktt 1 In t11e1r elfarts in attrac:tlng
Industry 111111 aew jalll. Seen plaaola1the conference qadi are, rr. left, Kingsley Meyer,
cllredur 1!1 Adult ud C021tinuing Education at

Rio Gnode; Dr. Cbailel F. Pabaer, dean o1 Rio,
Grande's Ell._ I. BYIDs Cotteae or Business
Manaaemeat; William B. Snyder, economic:
development lDilaager ror Columbus So,tllern ,
Power Co.; aad Wayne R. King, m!lnliger or
member ·relatlouod lodutrlal development
for Buckeye Raral Elec:trlc: Cooperative Inc.

Meigs County,Fair board plans
- ~Show and Swap' event May 15,16
.
.

•

By CHAilLINI HOEFLICH
. . 'l'lalil SaadMI Stair

:::::~. ?-:e'!.=:a'Ci ~7!:===-jffilld~:

.(under age 6 eat free) .

'"

Ohio ·Sens. John Olonn and
Howard Metzenbaum on Friday
nominated Edmund Sargus Jr. of
St. Clairsville for the poaition of
u.s. aiiOI'IIey for the Soiltbem Dis·
trict of Ohio. Emily Sweeney. or
Cleveland was recommended for
the U.S. attorney for the Nonhern
· Disaict PDIL
.
The Democratic senaun sent a
recommendabon leuer Thunday to
President Clinton. who is expected
to 1llllte formal ITOIIIillllions after
an FBI bal:tground check on the
nominees. Tlie nominati0111: then
lbouJd be conflnnad by tho Senate. .
SarJUI is a graduate o! Brown
University and Case Western
Res«ve Uni~ School ol Law
in CJevelancL He IS I patner With
BQftleh .t: SlfiUS law rum in St.
Clllnville.
"I'm vorj .much looklnl forward to the cllallenp of the job.

pull, a horse show and quarter Antiques Club, the car show sponhorse races, along with ·an exten- sored by the Oldies but Goodies
Car Club, and lbe ans and c:rafu
sive display of 1eSIOied can.
. .The gates will open at 8 a.m. show to be llliOd both inside.the
and it will cost $2 to get onto· the ·new commen:ial building as·well
grounda each day. However, f()r as OUisidc that buildina·
thole wbo plln to lllald both clays,
Addllou Lewis and Mary Kay
Roee
Who are in charp of the craft
an
ldYance
ticbt
Clll
be
~
an iullilest in both," Slrplllid.
the
Sprlnp Palrpaands oo
at
tho
Supr
Ran
Flour
Mill
for
$2.
show
exhibitors report· that the
· MI. s~ bas leMid • an May 1511114 16.
Whilo
tbe
llir
bolnl
II
bringing
response
fro" eraflen bu been
· ulilll~tt U.S. ltiDIDey in tho aarth· · A Weill Count,.:S!.ow and the _....., or accivitiel together,
gOOd
llld
that
they IXpec:t the Ilea
-~ 0111 dillrieulnco 1982 and hal bean Swap• hu lleoa p
by tho
the
clubl
and
odler
panicipana
wW
to
be
filled.
S6wrl1
antique cleaien ,·
chief of the appelllll dlvillon far · p.fojal COIIIlY Aidoltlan Society
be
"do!DI~~~*
own
tbina".ICCOrdare
l1lo
COIIIillliD
to eiltiblt and
the lalt four e ·Sbe ilalfldu· · {Falf Bolrd) b llilt •I Did
sen. Lewirllkl
110 of
w... •~~~ ... un1- n ..
w~~~;a. ina to Dill~ pmi~
S:b ,,..
GoiJtc 01 • day badl days y.'ill
¥erti1JIIId ~Cleveland State the toad baOtlll wiD be
,
be tho wMp• n:tor lbow lfiOD·
Jud&amp;inJ Of llie ear ahow will .
Unlvinity'a Cleveland·Minllall and the bll._ will be
· Contlllled oa A·2
.CoUtll ~Law.
. .e111111aiDera. Tliere will be UICID so.rod by the Big Bend Farm

.

.
.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE .DOOR, . . .

hallway about SO yards long. At the
end of the hall is the cellblock corridor, separated by another set of
gates behind which the' prisoriers
had set up a barricade of desks,
chairs, footlockers, bunks - anything they had.
The prisoners controlled the
entire wing of eight cellblocks
each containing 80 cells, and ~
Conlinued on A~2

M·a n jailed for D.U.I. .after wr~ck

c Maw• 'I.IUea.

.

ly uprising at the Slate's maximumsecurity prison after a fight turned
into a riot. Nine inmates and one of
eight guards who were held
hosrage were tilled.
Reporters on ·Saturday were
allowed into the prison to see pan
or the cellblock and .areas used for
special purposes during the siege.
At the entrance to L block is a
sei of.iron gates that open into a

Rio ·Grande conf~r~nce to eye
economic development ideas

-

.

Inside

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Gaiiii)OIIs-Polnt Pleasant, April 25, 1993

.

·.

-

.Sands examines another Gallia
ghost town- James Sands-B-4

Mulberry Heights Road, Pomeroy, OH.
. .
.
Adults, age 13 and. up -. $3.00 -Children, age 6 to. 12 ·..:... $2.00
.

0

Grant sough~ for rehabilitation
project in Racine • Hoeflich • B-6 ·

·Meigs County Senior Citizen Center·

..

•

Cincinnati rips C.hicago nine 15-5 - C-1

Pond clinic planned

SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1993
Serv~ng 7:00·a.m. to 11:00 a.m.

'

. .. "' ...

•

'

.

#c.

APPRECIA110N BREAKFAST· Meigs High School Occupl·
tioul Wort ElLjlednce ltildents joilled their employers ror an
appreclatioa breakfat TllarsdaJ at McDonald's. Tbe students
II"' Jl)aQ8a awl OWE map to their employen. (Sentinel Pboto
by DliYidilarris)
.
..
.

Mrs. Nancy Buckley bosled the
recent meeting of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women beld
recently at the churth basemenL
The meeting opened with Jllll)'Cr'
by Mrs. Diane' Jones. Mrs. Grace
Weber gave two readings titled
"Think and Be Glad" and "Look
Up and Live."
Mrs, Nina Boston conducted the
?usiness session. Fony' tbree shut·
10 calls were made and cards were
senL.
Members discussed buying trays
for the kitchen. A balce, food and
craft sale will be held May IS at
the church basemenL
·
The meeting :was closed with
prayer by Mrs. Emma DursL
·
Mrs. Pauline Brewer became a
new member.
, A game was played with 'a prize
·g1ven.
.
Refreshments were served to the
above named and Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Pearl Osborne, Mrs.
Frances Reed, Mrs. Gladys 'Ibomas
and Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
. The next meeting will be with
Mrs. Durst who received the door
prize. Each member received a pot·
ted pansy from the hostess.

anca

J

~

L block corridor filled
with· debris at Ollio pen

.o ta

'

..

75 n·nh

• VoL 21,' No. 10
Copyrighted 1183

Invites You·To The

.

~..

ea:r.:

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

'

...

Sunda.'

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

:•

0

Friday, April 23, 1993

Students honored during OWE banquet

ap~

-- -.....

'•

u,.,...

c.

L

r

I

'

'•

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="347">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9641">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32392">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32391">
              <text>April 23, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="764">
      <name>mace</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="815">
      <name>mullins</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
