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~By~ The Ben~

The Daily Sentinel
Page-10

The _do's and .don't'~ - ofpurchasing
OW All leldn I live Jn a
, . . . . ill Flarldl. and • . .
!lUmber of Nortllemen are c:omlna
dowa 110 buy IJI*III*II condominl·
11111111111 hom&amp; My condo Ia up for
llle, lllld I bave complied a lilt of
dol and don'u ror prospoc:tlvo
buyen:
·- I. Do not brinJ Ilona 111other
. couple (the .mavena). You are the
bu)'el' ·
· 2. Do not check Oullll apartment
for • friend. II WUIII lime, 11\d

nadliJii Ia pined.
3. Do not blrllill If you don't

latend ID buy.

•

OPENING NIGHT • Pict11red ready ,for tWr

·fila•

performa!lce Ia '~&lt;:r.••••• Nlallt" part
"EveaiDa or Tbta ' at Melp Hllll Scllool•
Friday at I p.m. are: Mated, 1-r, Milly S..._

4. Keep IJIIPOintmcnll or alve a
callllld CIIICOIIf yOU can't make it.
It wW be peatly appreciated.
5. Do not complain about ~·
colon or decor - Juat 11y lt'a not
wbat you'nJ1QOidna for.
6. •Do
., not II)', "I wDI pt blck
li IDf
)11u, " you bavo no lnten on o
doina iL It Ia 10 much nicer ID 11y,
"Thank rx'· but it im't what I had
in mind.
7. Remember, you are In aome·
one'a home. Do not open cloiellllld
drawenwilhoutuklnapennlaalon.
8. Do not alt down llld take up
the aeller'a ,lime if you aren't really
illterelted. Thla Ia not aiOCial villt.
II. Don't II)', "I bavc ID uk my
children," unleuthey ate PIYinlfQr
It, or you areaenlle,
10. Do not uk apeclflc pricea on

•

•

Ann

In hil claaa.
1 live IIi New leney, and ·
children's bil1hday paniel 111 a bli
aD
bulinell: They are held In reatau·
rants, beauty parlon, craft lhopl, etc.
You can ovon bW a birthdaY party
caordinaa. You mggt book dw!le
placel ~evenl monlhl In lj!lvance.
IIJid the coat Qn be .ull:iOI)Oinica I'
· die pho!lo. 1be approximate price II think lhia Ia ~.
'
In the no~apapor ad, and It'•
I havea 4-year-old 1011, 11\d we've.
neaotlable.
.
been ioin&amp; 1D IIIJ)er·flllc:y birthday
I 1, If you ue lonely or depreaaed, parlioJ l'ar lluee yean. How clld thll
don't ~ 10 real 11t111 ldl u
llmacy aeurarted'l
·
"lherlpy: Calla paychlatrilt.
What happona wbcn the child pti
12. Do aot expect the aeUer 10 older llld ~ehlevea eomethlna ,.all)
hold-the Jll*ibi!OIIIor coodo for~ lmpollllit? WW the J*OIIIIthen hire
than 2-i hOun without a depoliL
Yankee Stadium? .. OUT· OF
13. Do not ut 111o aeUer ID rent HAND IN NBW JBRSBY
·
instead of sell •. Look under
DI!A.R N.J.: I aaree with you
"Jlentail.'
totally I "ViaiJ birthday -..lao ror
...
.-- '
.14. Do Ilk if thele II I mortpp. . IIIII are' .for
the parenll, not
die ld~
15. Do Ilk how much the malnil· It remlndl me or the limo I aaw 1
nance llld ~es are.
2-year-old 1anore 1 S200 toy and
16. Do alk when the home 11 lllay for houn with a plo tin lllld a .
available. ·
homemade raa doll. I learned
Sorry 10 make you read IIUCh a -aomethl.na that diJ·
lona lilt, Ann, but thoae are thlnaa · A1111 La11d~r 1 /at111. boolc/11,
lbat peq~le need to know ... JEAN "Nulfets alld Door/11," lltu '""""
(TAMARAC, FLA.)
tlli11g from till ONII'diiOUit, fiwt'1·
DBA.R Jl!AN: No lilt Ia ~ 10111 to till p()lg/14111/y INtgll(ul. S111d a
1r It educate~ people. Yo1111 did, and te/faddrltlld, hmg, biUiwNiu
I thank you,
·
IIIVIIoJH alld a clllck or IIIDMY.or·
. Dear Anu l.anden: I feol the urfor SJ (t!W hltludlt po11a11 llltd
aame way as "Partied Out In lullldl111g) 10: Nullftl, clo Allll Lall·
Buffalo,' whose kid. received dirt, P.O..Bo% 11562 •.ChJcaBo, Ill.
.
.·
. 60611-0562. (Ill Callfida, telld $6,)

Community Calendar

..

-.

MONDAY
POMBROY • 'I'M Melp County Veterans Service Commission
wUI moot Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

•

REEDSVILLE ·. The Bastern
Local OAPSB Chapter will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the high
school cafeteria.

Lona Botto!TI. Pastor Steve Reed
inviteathe public.
POMEROY • BcUea 111d Beaus
Weatem Square Dance Club will
sponsor an open dance Wedneaday
from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oak
Resort. Oary Shoemaker,
Sevierville, Tenn .. will be the
caller.
MlDDLI!PORT • Middleport
Litenu)' Club will meet Wednesday
at :;. p.m. at tile Meigs County Pub·
lie Library. Mrs. Richard Owen
wiD review "A Vision of Light" by
Judith Merld9 Riley. For roll call,
tell of a ".woman of vision."

also explained tho work of the
Child Welfare Foundation. She
1111ed the Vcterans Children Home
·in Xenia c:onlalns 75 percent of vel·
era ria children. She also reported
from the American Legion Flrina
Line that the San Franclaco Euminer stated ihlt ·the 0. S. lntcllf,
gencc Aaencios have determined
that Libya is building an i)nderaround w"-pons plant lbat can pro:
ducc and atoro poisonous gas. Lor·
rene Ooagins, president, sla~d that
the food drive for the homeless wu
a great success. This was given to .
the Cooperative Ministry in
Pomeroy.
Lu~ Hampton, legislative chairll)an stated that tho Leaionalres
face moro chaUengea than 111ytime
since the oraanlzation nearly 7S
)'0111 •ao with the cutbacks in theii;
defense posture and closing or mit:;
itairy bases.
l'he' mccling closed with prayer
by Annette Johnson and the sanfllng
o1' "America."
•
A roast beef dinner was served.
by Mrl. !loss.
.
.
The hOSJCII for the nc1tt meeting
will' be Dorothy Casey of Oallipo·

lis.

CC League nominates officers :

MIKE'S CASE • ''Mike'a Cue" will .~ Jl~
seated durlna "Aa Evalnfl of Theatre" at~
Hlab Scbool ·oa Friday at I' p.m. by tbe selllor
drama students or Cella McCoy. Pictured, k,
are Heather .Franckowiak, Heather Paaley1

&amp;...

c....._ a,_ S,e•cer, Mila Hail,

-..,=; I II Na$ • llloy
-Sl;:r·' J'7..•
,,.c.
,...,.,., ,COI!rt•
W, Carle I ..... ab COIUI aad
I

IIQ

c

.....
j '

TUESDAY
CHESHIRB • The OIIUI·Melgs
Community Action Aaency will
Officers-were·.nominated at the
hold a free clothina day Tueaday recent meeting of the Middleport
from 9 Lm. to noon at the old hlah C~ild Conlervation Leaaue held at
s&lt;:hool building In Cheshire.
lhc Rockaprlngs United Methodist
Church.
.
RA CINE ·• The R80 Ine Atea ' Nom. lnated
_ for ihc 1993·94 YW
Community Organiwion wiD meet 10 b
1 s
... Ka h
Tueldr%. at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
c,:gan n cptem""r arc I Y
~arst, ~sldent; Unda Broderick,
Park· ew mom..__
..... are we1come.
v1ce-pres1dent; Nancy Mo~. !"·
retary;
Blacks!Dn, h1stonan;
RACINE • Tho Middleport PeJIY Helen
Harris, reporter; Kelll
Pomeroy Branch of the AAIJW S111der, treuurcr.
·
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. it tho
President I:-inda, Broderick
Racine United Melhodiat Church.
opened
the meeung Wlt.h the Pled~c
Quilted wall hanaina winner will
of
AII~Fiance
and the "Mother s
be announced. Prayer.
Roll call w.a~ ans~ered with
. RBBDSVILU! • Butern LoCal each
member 11vmg theu "Hope of
Board of Bducation, apeclal meet·
World
Devclop.m_ent." Thank you
ing, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the hilh
notes
were
~c1ved from Ken 111d
school to discuss personnel mat;
Pegay
Harr1s
and Anile Brlckles.
lei'S.
Devof,lons, "~rayor for a Days
· RACINE • Special mooting, Walk, wore 11vcn by Pegy Har·
flOfS
Racine Lodge No. 461 FAAM,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Annual Inspection. Work in ihe entered apprentice degree. Refreshments:

Tops ho.

weekly loser

LORA SAYRE

MA"ITIIEW ADD5S

Hundt.eds of chil~n toddicrs .· National. Children's D ' .H .' li
.
'
Month m f'ebruuy.
and t~n• thro.ughout t~e country Ped' tric Denlilts 11..,.•• t 1ia
11
participated in the American
.
.
........, ..._..
Academy df Pediatric Dentistry's from lbeu OWIIb;alannual art contest.
awareness prr&gt;IIIOIIOIIS. Eacla Jal'
It is held In observance of all place .w-JMcn reoci~ • ••
•

s,.._... . ,...

•
Cl ub revzews

Helen Hayes reviewed lhe book

"A
Year In Saigon'" by Katie Kelly
at the recent meeting of the Mid-

dlepon Literary Club atlhe home
of Beulah McComas with Jane
Regan serving u hostelS.
This book is a Jouchina and
com.pelllngmemoirofayearspcnt
· in_ VieJnam teach ina Amerasian
children, In 1990, Ms. Kelly quit
her job with NBC, lathered what
· few educational suppliea that she
. c.ould find and new to Saiaon .
'I'Mre she wu confronted with the
reality of entire families living
under deplorable conditions. Here
were children barely edating yet
eager to learn. Hor involvement
with her atu4ents went far beyond
· Engllth
leaaons.. She
~came , a$
.
.
'

.

'

. S .
ear zn
. algon,

'V
.1.

they called ·her, ~dtier Alaerit:M
Mother.'" She wu
by dlil:r
cheerful spiritanddleiiranac?esile
to come to the U11iled Stas _.
persuc the Amerieaa ~.
mcludin1 that ,IJIOil duli1le * of all findin.l their Aillericaa ·
fatherJ.
Mart.h* Hoover, ~
conductod _the mwi• wllidl..
. opened wid! the~c:oUru.
Proareu reports 'Wae
.. aboui Cl~ E.rwia, leal
and Eldred Paa10111.
Eleven· me11bers lid IIIICC
gue11s, Emmaline J'raU, Beldall
McComu ad Sisler P'd re lldl,
anawered roll Clll 'Will •A F•

IIIIIWd

tr•

But~ dealinalion;·

·

ris.
·.
Nancy Morria presented a.
sprltual proaram. Each member,
,took J!ll'l in tho proaram, "Prayen
and Prayon Answered." Mrs'/
Brod'.'"'Ak III''A . "Praver 1' uk1'nf
"""
""'
' "'
and receiving. It is taUdna wit ·.
Oad, It Is making a "'nueat known:
unto Him In faith-:' The Lord
instructs to ask, seek and knock'
and lllthin~rs arc possible when
!his is done ,,.
Tho boitess gift was won by .
Kitty Darst 111d the travellna prizil
was won by Nancy Morrl 1 ;,
Hoatessea Linda Broderick and,
Nancy Broderick aorved a deiiCI't'
.course.
Next month Ellen ROuflhl of
Mothers Againlt Drunken Drivera.
will be the aucst speaker ·
•
Four members of Mlddlepor.t
Chllci.CoiiiOIValion Club are pl1111•
ninf to attend tho South Contra.!.,
S~nn~ Conference In llodney on ·
Fnday.

.

,

A

Pomeror.

OF CASH

·as

BEJ. JER'·

A

Complete M,.al/surglcal Cart ·
for No11, and Throat Including
Asthmci, Altrgy &amp;Hearing Aids

'•

John A. Wade~ M.D. ·

OF STifF

•

-~

·992-21J6

I

.

'

'

Low toDigbt In 4011. Clear.
Wednesday, 111nny, high In 70s.

41787

•

..

•

•

.

.

a -I

e

Vol. U, NO. 2A
•11111111111118 Inc.

''

1 S.Cilon. 10 Pt~~M 25 oenta
AMulllmec.. lnc. Ne• p·p1r

Pomeroy,Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprll27, 1993

'.

·council feels FmHA b·est way.to fun&lt;J Hobson ·project
' By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
fum, several moothJ ago on putting jeciS .and that additional suppleSeatiDel Newa St8Jr
water and aewer ·aervicc into exist- . menwy sources of money would
How 110 pay l'ar exlellding Mid· ing homes iD tbat area u well as be needed. He suggested ibat Issue
dlepon's water and sower system providing service for future Indus- 2 monies or Community Developin'to the Hobson area which was uial. development. That
sot mont Block "--g
..m.
..,,.., ~~ be a -..
annexed iato the village soveral the COlli for warer • $168
lllld plemenwy aource o funding for
years ago - diac~ at Mmday acwcr, $239,000.
the projecL
Several pioposals for fundina
-Revltalbatioll
night's ~g of Middleport Vii·
lage Council.
·
were diiC'Issed, including issu111cc
Since Middleport's revitalize·
Mike Strotb of SBA Consul- of bonds by the village, grants
'
' tants,1Kbon, who is woddng witb through agencies like the Ohio
the village on another sower p(o- Department of Development and
ject, met with Council ID discusa Farmers Home Adminislratioa. It
possibili~ for financing the Hob- 'wu .the general consensus that
1011 ~
FmHA wu die beat SOia'CO _10 pur·
,
SttOth and Council talked about sue at this lime altb=! was
a study completed by Floyd G. IIOied by Mayor Fred
ibat
, 'BI'OWIIO Anoda!N, 811 cnglnecring FmHA doea 101 totally fund pro-

•=

B oalid
adopts ne. . .'
polz•c·.y

A new regulation regarding a
$SO fee for cutting off water service after iegular working hours, ·
weekends, and holic:ays hu been
adopted by the Middleport Board
of Public Affairs.
AccordiDg to the new regulation, If a customer U. no shut-off
valve and must call the water
ciCparancnt after hours to have the
water shut off at the meter duo ID a
-leak or for any other reasop, a
charge of $SO will be usessed on
the fOllowing monthly bill.
However, If the customer doea ·
not have a shut off valve a1 ibe acrvice !inC and iristalls a valve during
.the time tbe wa1er II sbul off, then
the$SO fee will be waived.
AccordingiD a directive from
the board, all C~IO!IJ"" allo~l!!
lufve sliut::Olr¥81\oei on·their'service lines In order ID be able to shut
. off their own water in case 'of an
Tb~ policy hu been
· lo encourage cllllonlcrS to
shut-off valves on tbeir scrOUI'STANDING EDUCATOR. Ed Bartell, r1t11t.- - • · •
Iy ree••nl•• by till Melp Local Board f/1 Ed!Kidiia tor bella ID
outltudlaa edaator lit)' the Melp Local Board of Edaailoa.
Here 'ai II CIOIIII'Uidated by Job Hood, boud
ButeRa Is
iDYOIYed wldl t\e Lead Taaer Project, tile RaraJ Sdloola DemOIIstrado• Project aid tbe.State Deparlllleat K·ll Mathematics
Coune of Study Project.

-ber.

lion was OOt funded this year by the
Ohio Depanment of Development,
the need for a strategic plan for
development of the down10wn area
·
as a pre I'1mmary
to next year •s
applicalion was discussed.
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
from 11m Hartzer who has wcRed
on another village project, offering

to prepare a downtowp strategy Middlepon Community Associaplan for $3,800. He said bis plan · tion, met with Council to discuss
would Include reasonable goals for co~c~s of that aroup ~bout revidevelopmont, suggestions on ways tahzauon as well as h1s concern
to fill SIOrefronts, along with assis· about the general lack of suppon
tance in preparin~ next year's • which the community gives to local
application. Council did not take busmesses.
action on the proposal.
'
He asked for ideas on how to
- Tom Doo!ey, president of the
Continued on page 3

.

RECOGNIZED • Ia early April blall wiDdl
daml'pd tbe Salem Center School bulidiDa. A
HCtioD Ill the I)'IIIDUlUDI roofwu ~off the
buUdila. School cuatiDuad, however, wltb the
stair aervlaa meall Ia the clauroo1118, ud other
activities uSually ba1cl In the IJIIIDISium beiDg
moved to otlier areu. Monday moralactbe
~n- alld oilier IJtall' at tbe-sehool:wve ~­
oplzed for their dedication ID coat1Dul11 tbe
educatloaal proceaa aader adverse c:ondltlo...

Eaeb one Wll preaeated I persoaal letter of
appreciation. Ia tbe flrotiP were left to rl1bt,
Croot, Jolm Hood, Melp Lac:al Board •-ber;
Carroll JoliDIOD, Saady Napper, Shirley Vaa
Meter, Darl4 Keuedy, Mary O'Brlea; second
row, Jim Carpeater, Melp Local saperiDteadeat; BI'IID Zirkle, Rita Simmons, Llta Joaes,
Sandy Wal!;er, Larry Rape, Meigs Board presldeat, aad LIDda Stobart. Conale Gilkey 'II'IS aot
present ror the' picture.
.

.

Rape victim may;.~not have been first target ·
By KEVIN PINSON

Boanl mcmbon reiainded cus·
iomers that it is illegal for them to
tamper with water meters or shut

OVP Newt Staff

It appears the Jackson County
woman abducted, raped and shot
off valves at the meter. This, three limes last week may not have
acc:ordiDito a spokesman, causes .. been -the alleged rapists' first
damage ID the meJers and persons · attempL
.
cauaht doing this are subject to
An investigator with the Gallia
fines, according to village ordi- County, Sheriff's Department said
nance.
·
Monday the department has
The installation of shut-off received Jwo reports of women
valves on all service lines willpro- who were pulled over in a similar
vide fiillnclal Mvinpto the village . manner within the past two weeks.
by limiting the need to 1;!111 out a
Two female University of Rio
water depariment emp~ ID shut G~ students pvc descriptions
off service. Damage to meter con- wh1ch matched Vmcent H. Vamey,
nections by customers illeRally . 23, RL I Ewlngton, and,Gregory S.
sbuaing off water valves will be Pickeas, 27, 12283 S.R. 160, ViDeliminated.
ton, as the men who pulled them
Valve lnsrallarion, according to over two weeks ago, die invcstiga·
the bolld, will also be beneficlalto tor said.
·customers who can Immediately
Varney and Pickens, two former
sh• off their olW wlller upon the Ollila County sheriff's deputies,
disc:ovel)' of a leak saving dollars were amigned last week for kidon their monthly bills.
napping and rape.

'the.women, wbo were in the
same vehicle, told deputies they
were pulled over by two mon driving a dark blue or black sedan.
.
The men IOld the women they
were undercover officers. When
the WOIIICII asked 10 see identifiCII·
iion, lhe two mon IWU'IIcd to their
vehicle and left.
Deputies checked the area after
the complaint was flied, but were
unable to locate either the vehicle
or the suspects, the investigator
said.
'
The vehicle allegedly used in
the abduction/rape/shooting is a
dark blue 1980 Chevy Malibu
Classic, he added.
About one week ago, !he depanmcnt received a second repon from
another woman who said a dark
colored car usiDg a nashing dash
light attempted to stop her.
When the woman pulled into
her.own driveway, the following

vehicle reporre&lt;!ly turned off itS
emergency light and continued on,
the inVCSUgaJOr said.
She was stopped before the rape
was reported, but did not file a
complaint with the depanmmt unlil
local media released the rape story.
The woman was unable to give
a description of the driver, he
added.

ProsecuJing Attorney Brent
SaUIIders said there is a possibility
that additional chargea may be flied
once illl the evidence is coUectod
and the investigation is compleied. ,
Local law enforcement agencie$
reported they have not experienced
any difficulues making routine traf.
fie stops since the report of the
alxluction.
,
Gallia County Sheriff James n;
Taylor said his de~ent rarely
uses 111l11ll1rked vehiCles for pulling
drivers over. When a unniarkeil
· Continued on page 3

OU president Charles]. Ping announces retirement
·

·

~Hf.:i ~.!:~~first
time be saw the Ohio Univenity
18 years Aero
· ''It is such 1 lovely
·
· •
·
a1mo
. st ~ Ideal umvemty sctbD!J
with a StmP\CRell for. life and yet !!

. CIIIIDWI more than

=

W. VIRGINIA:

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Tho Mei11 Soil
111d Water Conservation District
board of supervi sou will ' meet
Wedneaday at 8 p.m. at the Meip
SWCDOfficc.
.

s._....

04••••

Pick 4:

·,

Sharon Mallon wu beat weekly
loser and Trina Paulk wu runner
NICOIASSCIDIEIDER
•
up at the recent meelina of 'Ohio
COUNTY
MAPS
'
"
'
TOPS Club No. S70.
IN' STATE BOOK
,.
Beat KOPS loser was Llnnie
A booll cpntalninr aU of W~~
Aleshire and belt teen loaer wu Vit,W.'o &amp;&amp; county mopo it avlilable.'
cd~fi -• samM.auuuwS.
.......... .
Heidi Delong.
.
Prlntod on i 8x12 Inch doublo IPI'Nl..
Virginia
Whitlalih
won
the
fruit
.
P•r•.
••h county h11 1 IIJ)Irl\t mop&lt;
. c.a.. Jri1e d rr·
·
POMEROY • The Melaa Coun·
The
book
conljlino 144 p&amp;Jtl. ..
•;'
basket
and
Maida
Lona
won
the
LonaS.,.•eeilfMb-aradcr at ty !If)' lirO hydrant committee will
Tho
etate'e
84,242
mll11
of
roado
oro
J11iDr Hip School. She ineet It tho Melaa Soilllld Water gadaet gift.
In clelail. Towne, cltiM •nA
Donna Jacks wu honored with thoW!I
is tlic , 1 ol J.W. 1. s
Conservation D1stricl Office on
v1Ut811 ore indued and IOc.ltd. ond
or Rati.£ nd 1helate Ric::: Wedneaday at 6:30p.m. All mem- glfu from the other membera for thoro It much addllion~l inlormulon. T~
Mill Sprinatime.
Sayle.
ben uraed to abenc1.
.
order Wut Vitlinlo County Mop book ~
ttnd 1!4.86 !price lncludta dalivtrH
Plana
for
a
fund
rail«
l'ar
Area
Flrcltlnr wr er
VISA and MootarCord accopltd .
~ecoanltion Pay weio diacussod
Mlullew Addis iu second wi;~g =~J: s:n~ and the aecretary and woiah t
Mako chocko payabla 10
-•
aada • W , . ZW EJementary. p m at Faith PuU n-1 :JIYarch repc1111 were given.
CouaiJ Mapa
lie is tlic- ol Clltlyl Addis of · · ·
·
"""""" Chi
•
&amp;21 Putll Plaoo
. ,
The.JOUP meets every Tueaday
Ly.ndoa BlaUoa, WI 63164 · •
at the (;I!Jlenterl Hallin
1808IIJM.Iill
.
H 1 Alr ....luw .
Hlllftl'IU
Other
olltto
avallablo:
AR.
FL.
IN,
New
members
aro
alwaya
we
•
Ni ' Sot ·w is i fleabman
IUM'UL
KY. Ml, 1'/C. OH, ~A, SC. _ ~nd TN . '
come.
aOIIiiA( ;:Heltdie1011 of
X.. II. S&amp;- File! Davilon.
. s993 . . 1l?Je4411icelellrllioll of
·· ~~a; I0?'4'1D l:illflalth
-~
·
'
I
...... 1k tbe-. rcw- ~··
~ar,
abwi• r -~oa¢epatb!D
7 r 1'lle ...... ror
Till II
die
Cftlllt is 10 ..cwlde an
111M ·
·
·10 SW
awa 1 111
P P ,....,.,.... 1111111.
Dr. Jol!au Jorpun .11 the
Clliil
ror.Hillionll Cbild'ml's
Suite 112 Valley Drive
I·
D1 ne eetltll Moatll for Oatua
Pt. Pleaant WV
0 ~ Ae a. qriv• P'JICiice
~ ~-~;_
.••is hitld to pediatric
.Ca11304-675·1~ for appL odnfonnalion

_ Dentistry art contest winners named

750

Page4

L derS

Contribudons were made to the dent, opened the meeting in ritual·
Child Welfare Foundation Habllat, istic fonn.
U.S.O. and Radio Free Burope
Florence Richards, children 111d
when the Lcwil Manley Unit Auxi- youth chainnan gave reports. She
Iairy 263, American ~eglon mot · reported that parents should teach
reccndy at lhe home of Bdlth Ross, children. 10 beware of strangers.
Pt. PIWIIIt, W.VL
She spQII:o of teenage suicide, dnig
• Helen .Culmer, first vlce-preJI· abuse, child abuse and crime. She

Commualty Calndar Item•
appear two daya before aa eveat
and tbe day of tbat eveat.Jtems
muat be received weD In advuee
to aasure pubUcatloa In tbt cal·
endar.

Pick 3:

blrlhday l!lviraliona from every child

Auxzlzary reviews recent donations
l

Ohio Lottery

Bartrum to
speak with
NFL Chiefs

Monday, April ~6, 1993

•

seiilili _

~· ~= m !he~

-

·:
SUPER CUSTODIAN· Ted Hatfield, rlpt, II ca ldwed a
, Melpl.-1 Sdlool Dllbk:t..,.. CIIIDIM Ill ...... fllncopls
d• t o W die boud -bare awmtlded
far perfor-.
ma- 01 bll "'mmqae" .... Nat Ollly lloel be do ......... jllllllorlll
. jobl, be atokea the ~1 fltruca by da)', bub It at llalit, aad
~-the aaatlt
•liWIII tile • ..... Here LaiTy
IIOir!l prn~ ~~ lladllld wlio- pre·
~eated wldll~ teaer rr- the......_

·:'a.,., :r.:

=;.-

*

Wages, salaries up 3.5 percent

re;: r

u. 18~~
1994
"i ~ · aed ~ ~ Inter:

Dllional :._..
P'na 62 ·d he ill retire
bec~so 'or ~~ prob~s relaled
10 shonldrz llld bloe ailments.
Uadel' Plq, Ohio U. created lhe
School of OSJeOpathic Medicine;
wblcb bas beea credited wltb
increuing the .aumber of famBy~tic:e and primlry-Qre docliOrl
mibeiiiiC.
'l'bo BdiiOn ADimal BiotecliiiOIOIY Ceaier provided reaearch in
Mlmal pi avlicina and IIIIICicd
private ClOIIII*Iiea to lllllbt otb6r
r 111 m:ll at die c:eater.
Tile UDivenity'l CoalelllpDrlll')'
History In~Jilllto 111d !be SIOCter
IDt and
Ceb·
tho ......
lily's llaimdulel by bDOdlq 11e1
with aenral aclloola overaeu, ·.
JIK!lw!ID\:
for
teadi.. ~lb 1!1
City,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Amer· lion ID a 3.S pen:em iDcrelie, tbo
.iciD ....... ...... lllllriel and smallett
Janauy-Dec:ember
~mae 3.5 pen:entln tbc ,_.
ad¥IIICO aiDce • 6.6 pe!Ciilll jaap Ia
'eadod Warcb 31, allahtly falter -1982 wbea tbe index- bepn:
.diiD the rate of overall lnfladoa. . In advance or tbe repon,
the jpiYGIIIIMIIU llld today.
~onomlau at New Yort'a Mit~
_ ne Labor De!llilmliilllld 111e iUblabl Blllk wnito ill lbolr Weekly
iRCIUII iD Ita !inploy-1 Colt Econoatk -Indicator Report dtat
India, c
one of till belt :'tile bolt ..Uilllll on c:onlniQina
• • • fiiMII' WIMW ... WEI, emr.loyeo CCiatlls JaraeJy beblnilm
_
IIIIIICI
_
.
SloWed l'ftlm ibe 4 Jlllaa&amp; lllcn age us. •
a~eadllr.
The Mitaablabl economllta
CG
'I' prlcel1011 3.1 per· . noll1d thalia early I"O,Ialiar 1iD1t1
te8t cl1lrtq die 12 IIORthS Ollded '
riaiDa at I rapid S.5 pen:ent J.....
"OIIio
Uliverlity
II rldi~
Mlldt31.
.
pace bat tTiea aloWed llecaDae of
....
ore•t
...
-.or
.
Poi-CCIIII
till flrlt qua::'t~-t~ the u..t oldlo let I "
. 4il.Mi lll.ctlatDr•..W1
IIMIIt
mae 1.2
SUIJ, dill do DOt_Upect IDy
. dllllbe.U ,. I'IMh..-IDtbe rapid ........... lhiJ OQIICt ' -• - ADd I dllat it can ride dill
JiDII*-•
1111 ,I.'O'M•,_. pace D bolilll
waw lata 811 m:1t1111 - CWIW·
abolt 3.5 jWt I
. - ry,"PIIJIIIid.
~..,':tlri=r~~
Bill Jlma . . . M I wllen

srate fundiD is dwindling.
Provost David Stewart to a two"I thiJ the bli$ic problem is year term ~s provo~t. to replace
how you b~ild a stable ~nd .~de· ~~~ Bthe~!~ ~·
.
quate base m state fundjng, he
·.. ~ .BIJI!Om a pres!·
said. "lust when you reach a point ~nt ,to~ ~lies m Julr. !9?4,
of snbility the sra1e cuts funding
thiS mtenrn appomtment will giVe
Funding · 'dri
b the po!iticai · the new president six months to
realities l:f th~e~a/base and the review orpnizati9flal sa:ucture and
demilnda on that base ••
to make judgmeniS on lhe provost
Pina said he tim~ his retire- posilion," Ping said.
ment 10 onawe effective tranSition
"'!he sesn:h IIR~ ~reening. profor the new president and for the
cess.~ mlft than limply ~g a
scarth ID appoint a provosL
· president. The process 1s a rare
In l811UIIY, Ping appoinleil Vice opportunity for the campus com·

T==

RaoQit
WI=?Piu...,...

u.,..

aaivenl.f...=tter

·....

~·

caalltleiE ...

a.,...,...

...

WALKAMBIUCA WINNEilS...:. Mare tUa
UO walken ,.._ Ga_Ria, Malp ••d Muoa
~~
Mardi oroa. Trt·
Coaty a•AIMrb S1l8daJ Ia Po1at Pmut,

lllwtlilhdtto . . . tllewalkiftlhcl
vlliey
Jf••tlta? Welte•
C. Polat Pa t... Seer
oad 111111 Tlilrcll'llct
two rJ~ llllk
W.VL

•*'-*_...
.., ..... " ...
c....
I(

..-Yell

~-

munity to ~ome !Dg~ther •.review
the st~te of th,~ bm':erslty and
asse~g~~~:~ a~esS:~r absence
.

.

dunngthe 1?9'1•9;i.acadennc year
before retummg td the clasaroomat
the university as Trusllle Profeasor
of Philosophy .and Edncatioo: .
He also w1D help estab!Uh the
reccndy ~wed Ping ~btutc for
ihe TeachmR of Hu1J1811ibes and the
proposed,Cuder ~holars ~.
wh1ch will prov_tde financtal s~pport for ou~tanding students.

�'
....

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-

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Tueeday, April 27, ·1993

.·

The Daily Sentinel

.•
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\.leaday, April 27, 1993

to Jive. TbeJefore it is opposed by
unions, organizations JepreSenting
minorities and the poor, and, for
the most part, Democratic tax
experts.
..
In Europeall countries the
regressiveness is held dow·n by
exempting certain necessities from
the tax. In almost all VAT coon·
uies this means exemplin$ food
and health care. In some It also
means exempting housing and
clothlng below a certaiD price~ ·
1n the pas1, experts in this coun·
try, when ~ about VAT, have
cautioned .against exempting any
good .- service. The theory is d!at
the system becomes corrupt when .
you begin carving out exemptioos,
and that you can make uv for a .
VAT's .egressivene~ by Issuing
crediiS for the poor, and by increasing various forms of public assis-

Robert]. -wagman ·

Prevention, treatment .•. for
·:the sake of Ohio's economy

Lanee.

The argument also is that a VAT
applied at every level would be
partially absorbed by various producers it the intemlediate levels,
before the final product reaches the
consumer. The entire amount
would not be passed ~ong to consumen.
In recent years two new arguments have been added in favor or
a VAT. In this country a Dllljor economic problem is bow liale Americans save relati.e to their counter.p&amp;r!S around ihe wald, particularly
m Asia. A VAT acts as a disincentive to spend, and thus promotes
saviDJS.
· It IS also 8fiUed that a VAT here
would help our balance of trade
problems by driving up the price of
toreign' goods be.e .elative to the
price of our goods being sold
abroad.
In Germany, for instlnce, a German ear carried with it a 9 percent
VAT. When that car leaves Germany and is exported to the United
Stale8, the VAt comes off, and the
car is cheaper here. But when an
American product goes into' Germany, VAT is added, and the price
goes up. The reasoning goes that if
a VAT were ·added here to that
Gennan ear, it would no longm be
as cheap and the competina AmeriC&amp;'\ product would be m01e competitive,

our

•· ' ·exposed
infan\J.
Experts
eswnaae d!at among women of childbearing age, 15 10 20 per-.
" cena may abuse ak:obol and other drugs, with alcohol and tobacro being
: the two most frequently used drugs. Again, it's an economic issue. A
" ·ueaunent program for the expecWlt mother costs roughly $200 a day,
• compared. with $l,&lt;XXJ 10$1,200 a day for a drug-exposed infant in a hospital neonatal intensive care uoiL ·
·
•· For example, "Kathy" was 26-years-old, 32 weeks.pregnant, homeless
.. and addic•ed to craclc-&lt;oeaine when she was admitted to a ·wemen' s IIUlu '· ment program funded by ODADAS. Her drug use bad begun at age 14
·: · and resulted in
dropping out of high school after her freshman year.
Women like Kathy are typical o! those served by Ohio's publicly" '·.funded ueatment progmms. Their personal SIOries are tragic. With proper
I!Utment, there is great hope for them. Kathy's daughter is healthy, and·
·. Kathy compleled her GED during treatment and beaded for community .
·~ college to furtllez her ecUc:•ioo.
., Last year, over 12,000 women like~ rece!ved alcohol and other
· drug treatment services from ODADAS women s programs. Over lhe
· ·' past two years, alcohol and other drug I1UIIIIent bas been expanded by
$3.5 million for Ohio's pregnant women and women with dependent chil' ' · dren. ODADAS bas boosted JeSidential capacity for these women by over
100 percenL The Depertment bas also Place\~ ~ emphasis o'\ programs which provide child ca~e, tbus.oven:ommg· the greatest barri&lt;:r to
treatment and helping 10 heal the whole family together.
.
Governor George V. Voinovicb's commiunent to improving Ohio's
social service delivery sySielTI for families and children is integral to the
Department's efforts. The Voioovich/DeWine Administration bas been
suw:oruve or p~eVention and I!Utment services Wgeled to women· and
· children as a way to improve quslity of life and save money in the long ·
.
· ·run.
, The Department currenlly spends over $9 million to fund 78 pro&amp;m!"s
" which provide JeSidential and outpatient 1feallllent, as well as edocllllOII
and preventioo services to Ql!io women. Tbiny-four percent of the pro••. grams have waiting lists, avcnging 13 individuals at a time with a wait
. for ueatment of 40 days.
.
.
.
· · In addition to IIUting .addicted Oh!O&amp;ns, the Depanment emphasizes
prevention to encourage Ohio cbildli:n to reach their full potential without
. · using alcohol and other drugs. The Department bas developed standardv: ized p.evention goals: I) To increa&lt;Je abstinence from alcohol and illicit
' drug use, 2) To defer !he onset of alcohol use and 3) To Eliminate highrisk use of alcobol and other legal drugs.
.
'·· The time to begin reaching children with an alcohol and other drug
. abuse prevention message is in !heir preschool years. This year, 10 of the
new Drug Free Schools and Communities Act grants will expand alcohol,
tota:co and other drug ptevention services in Head Start programs. Along
with existing programs, the 10 new projects will bring prevention services
into two-thirdt of Ohio's Head Start po~ With the enthusiastic supu pon of the 53 county Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health/Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services Boards and over 500 individual pro•· grams. the Ohio Department of_Alcohol and Drug Ac!&lt;!iclion Services is
maving toward a quality, accesSible systent for every c111Ze11.
(EDITOR'S NOTE: FlemiDa, director of tbe Ohio Department of
·:-Alcohol nd Drug Addiction Services, is a nationally-reeoanized
, expert who was recruited to Ohio in 1989 to start the new depart·.' ment.)

.·

her

A white male could get·a complex·

County losing fine man

us. He teaves us all with words to
·
draw
on in times of turmoil.
The Racine community and
As Rev. ·Grace .and his family
Meigs County will be losing a fine
move on to another communily to
; • man in the near future.
Rev. Roger Grace at the Racine do God's work. My best wishes go
• United Methodist Church has with them.
Betty L. Tlltls!
· : added a great deal to our lives in
Racine
1. the short years he has ministered tl1
•
. Dear Editor.

•

•• r&gt;eM Editor,
•

.,

,

:.

,.
•
:..
•

•

Justice comes in time

patient and never lake the law into
This is a great counlr)' we live your own hands and seek .evenge.
in, full of beauty, hope, equality Justice for all will be delivered in
·and the promise that we shall be due lime.
treated fairly. As we have just wit· . · We Americans should always be
neased in the case ofRodney King, proud and abide by the law.
sometimes at rust we don 't find
This is the system that we, the
justice but if you lruly believe in people, ask for and cteated. Please
our systent, and you always should, support iL
justice will be served in due time.
Jamate JoN P. Scott
Please, for everyone's sake, be
A~222

: Riot a learning experience for inmate
'·

.
}
The riot last week a t the
' . Lucasville State Prison was a very
uagic and devastating evenL It bas
: and is continuing to cause a lot of
· ' tension and grief. We aU have suf.
, · fered greatly including myself.and
• ·• other inmales tbiougbout the prison
; system.
.
· :· . I am deeply saddened by ·the
' foss of innocent lives. Through it
,' . all there are· many lessons to be
• learned. .
. ·.
. This sort of retaliation and
~ behavior is not acceptable, but I
~· believe ·if we just open our eyes
' and ~h forrea'IOO we will find a.
. •. Jot of anawers as to .why such an
~ event ever look place and try to
make changes so thi\_ doesn't ·have ·
'·

.

t

'

J)j:ar Editor,

.

.

to~agaiD.
Life in prilon

is vrzy tough but
we can usually thank the inmates
for lhe uncomfortable conditions of ·
which we mast live in. I koow only
too well.
ln!Uie Joees P. Scott
.A236U2
. P.S.
.
I would like nothing more than
to see .everyone wbo bas ever bro;
ken the law be rebabilitaiCd and
given the ORJOIIUIIity to be me to
live life 10 its fullest, but unfortunately that il so_m~thinJ that v.:m
never rake pllce m our time. I wilh
each 'and everylll)e of you the very
~t in - ~ fiiiUre •..

'

r gain so much personal i~! Policepersons, affmnative-action males make up just 39.2 pcmmt of did no1 reueat into the Malibu

from news magazines d!at it
employers, rap artists, Native the population, yet they account for mountains last month and howl like
me wonder how the hapless souls _ Americans, Japanese tycoons, ... 77 pcmmt of Congress,~ per- a wolf. A Santa Monica, Calif.,
who inhabited the planet-before Islamic fundamentalists and Third cent of state governon.• But I was psycbol~ist and some two dozen
Henry Luce knew anything about - - - - - - - - - - - · thinking this was a democracy, women did that. I did not say about
themselves at aU.
hS
where women and-minorities can · corporate executives that the "lll)e
It did not cross my mind, for
run for offiCe and even win if lhey good thing about these wbiiC, male,
example, that sex is boring until
are sufficiently persuasive.
almost-extinct mammals Is that
Newsweeic recently told me so. II World .dictatorS, all of them saying · And a fmal one I knew: "He (the they're growing old. We get to
never occurred to me until I read the same thing: Yoo've been a bad white male) has lately ac'l,uired a watch them die." According to
the new Time that I may be geneli- boy."
.
taste for country music. But I Newsweek, a female tniCicing comcally ~to violence. And · Really, I didn't koow·thaL And I didn't now it was only lately, and I pany executive said that.
·
it upset me to learn from a recen1 didn't know I was a woman-hater. ball no inkling that country music
It then oceurred to me d!at perNewsweek that I 'am an Ice Person Heck, I was laborin(\ under the was a male preserve. This piece of haps some of the critica are engagwho can't jump, dance .- feel and impression I kind of'liked them. I news will )lrtlbably surprise Emmy- ing in the sallie sort of behavior
tbat I am experiencing "atavistic . also thought sure I appreciated reg- lou Harri§ and Trisha Yearwood. they are condemninJ. Doesn't that .
racial and sexual dread" beCause . gae music and cwried Thai shrimp But bey, they don't read the news ' make them ·bypocntes? And they
are steRotyping _.mbuting to aU
!here are others who can leap, and had no idea that I felt tbJeat- J!l&amp;gs, they deserve to be shocked.
shimmy and emote better than me.
ened by the cultures that produce
I got so worked up lening aU white males tbe biase.s of only
· Damn. I finished that story and I such delights. · ·
these .terrible things about myself some white males. Doesn't that
wanted to tum myself in. lt. feaHe.e's one l "did koow: "One of that I decided to purge everything make them sexist and lliCiSt?
tured the new Michael Douglas them (white males) just became at once and began searching my
Perish that white male thought,
movie "Falling Down," about a president-but one of them always files for further. evidence of my rap my knuc:kles a¢ baDd me my
white guy with ugly glasses who becomes president." But here mi$deeds. Mainly what I fou.nd, news mags. I just realized wby all
goes berserk and shoots up Los again, I have to confess that I have tough, was sdme things I did not those dead, European males manAngeles, and it told how thiS was been laboring under an appa~ently do.
aged to screw up the world for
really ·symbolic of "white male false impressioo, i.e., that anyone
I did not select Rep. Mel Watt, eons: They didn't have Time and
paranoia."
who wants to run for p1e5ident can DN.C., and Walter Tucker, D· Newsweek to sbow them the error
!learned that I am really scared. do so, and the one who gets the Calif., as
·
of their ways.
Said Newsweek: "Suddenly, white most votes wins. Just shows you the new members of Conpess with
Josepb Spear Is a SJildkated .
American males are sUIIIlllllded by how dumb white males can be.
,the "best buns." According to the writer for Newspaper Enterprise
feminists, multiculturalists, -PC
I knew this one, too: "White Charlotte Observer, a group of Auodatloa.
.
female con~speople did that. I

JOSep

pear .

Congress and health care_·. .

.
WA~HINGTON - Pres1dent
Clmton 8 ef!ort !0 e~ health .CB!C
reform leg•slau~n this. year IS m
Jeopardy, say an mcreasmg number

finance health coverage for 36 mil·
lion oninsUJed Americans.
Clinton is expected to unveil his
health care plan in May - later

acknowledlled Clmton IS unlikely
to get his wish. Tlte orficials,
speaking privately, said the White
House hQpe&amp; to generate public .
demand for action this year wben.

Another top House Democrat,

speaking on condition of anonymily, said the~ ltadcnhip now
would be salilfied with health-&lt;:are

action any time within the 103rd
~~e!;':;'C:.~.~~·o}h~f:s~~\~r~:
~~~~~'d.:=~~~~L~d f~~ress. which runs through
troversialnature and •nev1table turf
, . .•
On Sunday, Clinton vowed in a
Democrats who have long _
stnlggles mCoo~.
than hiS mttial target date of May 1 s""""h ro newSJ!Bll« publishers to pushed health care. reform are
. "I.e~ to .81~ up hope.. ;. Bu1 - although the admini.stral!on !'as , .rbuSt.a gut" lighting for enact- annoyed at naysayers within their
If we canh t do It thisandyear, we !tl.do - yeillt tobe~'!...wtedben fonnal legiSlation ment of a far-reaching national own party.
as muc
wrapWax
1 ·up . w The ww•.iden•
. .
health ~·. program. "We cannot
..........
pcople ... are posniOn·· ,
t earas,, we:
wdcan
Rep Henry
.............
~
-~
........
nex Y • .
:
.pres
twas -"1"- m a go on ignoring the fundamental . ing tbernselves as sbptica to be ii
man, D-Cahf., cha1rman of the nationally televised speech to ~problems,'' be said.
·
a neutral position 10 they cube in
House. Energy and Commerce su~ Con~ on Feb. I~ about when be
Senate MaJority 1M!)cr George a beller nesodating politlon,'' said
tor?."'!ttee ~health. .
,. .
wanted n passed.
Mircbell, D-Mainci, initially wanted Sen. Jay Rockefell~, D-W.VL
II ~mgto be diffiCult, . S&amp;ld
"All ol our efforl8 to Simi~ to rna1te the health bill part of this
Clinton "il a practical penon.
House ays and Means Chairman the economy will fail" if acuon is yw:'s lax bill in the hope of speed- He's i superb saleaman. He hasn't
!&gt;an Roste~kowski! D-Ill. "I~ !t not taken this year, be said. "NQt mgitthrou&amp;hCongRa.
· even sWted yet on health care,''
mvolv~ an mcrease m.evenue, It s next ~eat. no;t, five years from now
But two key lawmakers, Ros- Rockefeller said. "Take away the
tough:
,
. .d l
but~ year.
tenkowski and Sen. Robert Byrd, ptesldent, 11k1! IIWIY the Con&amp;JeU, .
Chnton s measu~e ts w1 e Y
Smce then, however, several D-W.VL, cbalrman of the Senate tbe ·Amarican people n 11llld, fed
expected to call for higher taxes to senior administration officials .have ~ Commiaee, object· up and dis~ with this all by

Karen Ball

"~"oday
.II

in history
·

~~=b~ab chainnln'
~:~~n
Dingell. D-Mich.,
of tbe Hou. Bnel)y lid

Dole told reponen u week: "It's
not &amp;Ung to.,... this&gt;-· Nobody
hu the VOieL Tho)' don't have the

.
o1The Alloclated rn.
eammen:e Commiaee, a11o ICO!dToday is Tuesday, Apri127, the 111th day of 1993. There an: 248 daYs
ed hi1 collequa for predictina ·
leftm the year. .
·
·
.
.
.
·votes." .
·
doom about Clin1011'1 chances this
Today's Highlight in History:
. Dole, whb led the. GOP flli- yel6.
·
· On April27, 1805, a force led by U.S. Marines~ thecityofDema, buster that tilled Clinton'• Job•
binaell said he conslder1 the
on the~ of Tripoli ·
.
.
bill, has called for a bipattlsan . subjeCilli tnosa "COtilplex, ret:hnl·
On this elate:
. , .
IDeasum on llcalt!t clnl.
· cal, polidcal and substlntlal" lte'd
· ln1S09; Pope Julius n exconununicaiCd the Italian state of Venice.
.
Democrats are .eluctant to be ever encounter. But""we blvo
In 1521, Ponuauae explo.er- Ferdinand Mqellan was killed by quite as blunt, at least on the· pe•cl vlnually intposaible lea'*
natives in the Pbllipplnl!'a.
. ··
·. · .
· ·
record.
'!on 1llder wry and lim!led
In 1791, the inventor of the telegraph, Samuel Morse, wu.bom in
"If we cu gi,t 11 doae tbJa ye~r ·time COIIIIIIb!~ and I lee liDC:barlestown, Mall.
.
. • . . · · we will,'' y 01118 ~ty· Lew'or - wecan'tdok with tltill-."
In 1822, the 18th preaident of lhe United Statea, Ulyuea S. Otwlt, was Rlcbinl Oeplwdt, D-Mo.. said late . Karel ·I all II i "rlter for
hom in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
',,
.
last month.
· 11&gt;.
•
• ~A_.ted Prell.

The follow inJ people were
as potential jurors for lhe
term of the Meigs County
Court Selccted were, by commuruty:
ALBANY - Tracey S. Perry,
Donna Kay Woodyard, Everell
Henry s~. Murt w. Jloudinot.
. COOLVILLE- Leo Glen·
wood King, Tammy Lucille Put·
man, James N. Wright.
DEXTER- Gtegory Lee Van·
Meter, Waller F. o.Des n.
LANGSVILLE -t Amy J.

•

IToledoJ7oo I
''

•

PA.

IND.

• IColurnoosl73". I

Molden.

Dorothy M. Jeffers, Brian T. Taylor, Millie L. Grueser, Harold H.
Blackston, Chris Edward Neece,
Mary J. Hunt«, Kenneth K. Braun.
PORTLAND - Brent H.
Larkins, Roy Edward Icenhower
f r., Teresa Marie McKelvey,
Arthur 0 . Allen, Jenny Kaye Var•
ney.
RACINE - Adelia Jean
Swisher, William 1. Edwards, MargUerite Ellen Eskew, Aimee l)enise
Pyles, Dan P. Smith, Stacie Lee
Arnold, Delores M. Cleland, Nancy

.

LONG BOTTOM - Clara
May Conroy, Rowena Gaye
Garten, Jobn s. Miller, Robert Lee
Fill:h, Woodlow J. Richard, Nancy
C.H
·

Jacqueline R. Hoover, Donna June
Glaze, Gary c. Harper, Jenny Jo
Thomas, Marjorie Janette Wilt,
David Paill Hoffman, Homer I.
Orinim, Charla Kay Cooper, Bon- ·
!lie Mae Searles, Carol .· Ann
Mourniru!, l'llricia A. Stein, DorC. ·
Pl.
Coates, lfti,...b V. Slaven, Arthur
0111113
A&lt;cu-Weolhe&lt;.inc.
J. Sllauss, Wilkie Holman, George
D. Bottrell, Helen Margaret
l'YI
Williams, Leland E. Brown, Patti·
cia J. Preece.
Soutb-Central Ohio
ThlU'Iday tbroup Satvc1a1:
MINERSVILLE - Norma
Tonight, clear. Low 40-45.
A chanThceundaofshOLowsweu•. mamly Jean Grueser.
Wednesday, mostly sunny and north , on
Y·
m upper
POMEROY Rowena
warm. High in the mid-70s.
40s to low 50s. Highs in upper 50s Vaughan, Clyde Edward Kennedy,
· to around 70. Fair on Friday and
Edencled forecast: .
Saturday. Lows 35-45. Highs 55- ~~leu~~~~~e}:!• ~~dA~~ •.
65.
L Holter Jean S "-··" S
cUWQ&lt;, uzanne
----~.
Richmootl, Paul M. Nease, William
, A. Gibbs, Dorothy L. Musser, Vernon G. Swartz, Brenda L. Morris,
Dorothy E. Sayre ·
~reTbelmasa
Rae ThC oCmpson, Janet R.
Dorothy Elizabeth Sam:, 73, ......e,
. · ouerill, John R.
Middleport, formerly of .Philadol- Hoffman, Glenna Louvina Riebel,
pbia, Pa., died wteXJJeCtedly Mon- Catherine Mae Stacy, George W.
.',AIUndafred
day, April 26, 1993, at her resi- FrancVemonis,~~PadRul,EJe_ftiKJeersm

---------'I][Teather ----------

-

·
•
.
·
rea.
.
eaths---_,;,A
d
, dence.
Bor1l in Letart, W.VL, she was a

..........

Lee Gillilan, Lavada E. Wheeler,
daughter of Edna Black Pickens Bruce J. Reed, William L. Folmer,
and the late Marion Pickens. She RSbaron Sue Bailey, TerryTay
was a spot professional for the dry . euter, Ric.bard S. Owen, George
cleaning industry in Philadelphia
and a member of the First Baptist
Church of Racine. ,
'¥'
y, 'J
Besides her motber, she is surl;~.
vived by a daughter and son-in"-'
·law. Barbara and James Willis,
Albany; a daughter, Loretta
The followinJ COII~Ies recently
Wadsworth, Hone. y Brook, Pa
. .; a . received marnage icenses in
tea
Meip County Probate Court:
brother, Harry Pic s; Rac111e; a
J . M S bart 20 Ra .
sister, Oretba Snicb, Racine; allis-.
ames . to
, , cme,
ter and brother·in-law, Su~and and Charity Anli Cremeans, 20,
Kenneth Imboden, Middlepoit; lix Coolville; James Ed McKnabb, 52,
gtandcbildlen; 16 great-grandchil- and Linda S. Bishop, 45, both of
aren; "'d several nieces .. and Albany.

COU.•nles Qn'Pl'V

fior

William R. Morris

m~Jy of Pomeroy, who died April ceded ID death I!Y an infutt 1011; a
:.!·.:~~~=·~3~ · son-in-taw, Donate! Wadsworth;
Survivors include his wife, and two llistai, O~-Mae Cozart
and Sarah Picbtts.
Louise Morris, and a brother,
Services will be Thursday at 1
·
d
· s
•
George Moms,
an many ruece £tim. 11 Fisher Funer~!f;e in
andHnepbewse
was ac. u·ve,,·n En.-, Moose
!'C!lepor:t withR~.
ryan
....
officiaHn•.
Burial will be at GJeen·
lod
and
and MasontC
ges
wu p.e- woodCemel«y.inRacine.
ceded in death · by his father,
Friends may call at the ftmel'lll
.
•
Geor~e G. Morris, his mother,
ccb-'a from 7 9
Y
· - p.m.
Edna Morris and · a -•-- Edna homeonW
'

.....,.,

Funds recel•ved

-

·

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

•

m:l!i

St.f&gt;!:t!''"'· .

JI()It.ap paid a&amp; PariWlGJ, Ohio.

~~~~;:~disctba~ ~0:

now been ~pleted at Diles Park.
driving without insurance by
Coone~~~= with the
Ponleroy police following 1 minor M · c
tv H
· A th "ty
accident on Powell's parldng lot at
elgs oun., ousml! u on
3 47
Monda
for use of an office in village hall at
: p.m.
v.
$100 a month. An ordinance was
. Kenneth Romfne; 59, was park- given a final readinJ and adopted at
ing his 1977 Ford when he struck the meetm
' g pro
'
viding 'or a reducthe '·"
- - of a ..-_ ....... car owned · · salary r th bou
" ·
~a• ·by Lorna Seth, 64, of Pomeroy. uon m
,or e
smg speThe tail light area of. her 1987 cialist. She will oow receive $1,055
Oldsmobile
d·-·8ed
from the village .epresenting three
days of work, wl"th the rem•'nder
fb
1
f ~ th
o er sa ary to come rom e
Housing Authority, representing
two days of work.
·
to begin at 7:3() p.m. Advance tickCouncil a-" with the Jeeom-~
ets are availabll! for $4 with tickets . mendat!on of th~ Middle_port
at the gate available for SS. Dash · Recreauon Commmee to hire a
plaques will be preseniCd to the -pool manager at $5.50 an hour·for
first SO cars. s~ecial awards 40 hours a week rather than a
include People's ~ice and Driv· recreajion ~tor for the v_illage.
er's Otoice. The event is sponsored Tbe first .eadmg of an ordinance
~~AlcxanderCall
698Spartan5 A~Jetic bmy•Coukillgnclha•
.l t change was .apProved
~s.
·3045, evemngs
·
for information.
'• u'ngItthe
was reported
work
in. getJeady that
for the
season
is
,...
D111ce planned
underway and that the mini-golf
.
course will open this Saturday.
The Tuppers Plains .v.FW P~st That will also· be kickoff day for
No. 90S3 Ladles A!'x1hary w11l LiUle League summer activities it
sponsor a ~ce Fr!dar from 8- was noted.
.
•
11:30 p._m. ~th mUSIC by Sm&lt;i:ey
The m&amp;):'Or was authorized to
Mou~taln Driff;ers. Red Carr a'\d advertise fot; bids for tree and
Melvin Cross will be caUen PubliC
oval . !he villa
· ·
·
srump ~em
•n
ge, a promvited
ject fininced by a grant of about
.
LOdaetom~
~~=~~e Department of
Regular meeting, Harrisonville
Maror Hoffman ~eported on .a
Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM, Saturday, V1. 81•10 ~-'"-from. theODNR,
7:30 p.m. R·._sbments
~
"""
· All master Division of Waterways
to. inspect
-a-m·
Vl"ted
·~u
•
tile boatlaiiiiChing facilities at the
·
D111ce Planned .
· Middleport levee compleiCd last
There will be a dance and shOw summer.
.
Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the Rus~he. prospect. of .secun'\8 the
sell Building in Millfield with manna on Leadmg Creek m tJ:Ie
miiSic by Off Seasons
;
Page Street area owned by the vii·
· ·
!age was di~cussed. The mayor
JqioriCd that it is nooe'!IIU)' for the
1;' • oo
U. S. Corps of EIJiineen to deciiR
Coatlnued froiD page 1
the marina excess piopeoty befo.e
further consideration can be made
~r:!.:r~~!:al~r;.::·bya
about lllinina that over to the vil-

·

o

Moo.e, Laity A. COwdery, James
Paul Wells.
.
MIDDLEJ'ORT - Barbara S.
Shuler, Billie Jo Krawsczyn, Elizabeth J. Stover, Dellerain Earl
Backus, Jim E. Harris, Carla Sue
Saelens, Raymond A . Stew!~ft,
Robert L. Lewis, Edna M. R1chmond, Harold A. Teaford, Carol
Jean Snyder, Thelma Hoy Co~.
Saf!l)l Harmon; Barbara L. l'ridd)'.
JoE. Will, James Johnson, Davtd
Cchades Jeffecrs, ~arry ~dwar~
ompston,
aro yn
vonn
Demoslcy.
·
POMEROY- Richard Allen
land.
Vance, Ada M. Koblentz, John
COOLVILLE- Laura Marie Krawsczyn, Jerry Wayne Harper,
Guthrie, Alben Roland Easunan, Darrell NapP.Cr, Ida Mae Clark,
Taoona J. McGrath.
Shawn D. Gilmo.e, Stephen Alan
DEXTER- Kathy A. Rar. . Foulkrod Sr., Fred L. Barney,
Larry Barrett Jr., Norman J. Hamil- James A. Weaver, Orville R. Hill,
ton.,
'
Charldine R. Alldrc, Paul Edward
· LANGSVILLE - Richard ·L. Taylor, Lawrence G. Clark,
Lambert, Johnny V. McGuire, Sbirlena M. Six, Valerie Lynn WilTamela J. Weber, Joann Lillian · son, Bonnie L. Easter, Karen Lee
Jacks.
Lodwick, Thomas M. Ables,
LONG BOTTOM - Eddie · Tammy L Ball, Augusta May HosDale Miller, Susan Louise Suttle, tottle, Michael D. Hudson, Jimmy
Lorre Diane " O~bome, Gerald Lee R. Lee, Nancy Allen Young, Jeffrey David Howell, Erma Jean
··Ridgway, Jerome K. Howard,
Cl •••
Audra Marie Houdashelt, Tracy
Lynn Hrsell. Jacqueline Marie
Continued from page 1
Naue, Unda Lou Jeu, Rodney D.
get residents to shop .locally, to Roush. David W. Robinette, Patti" · I a!
ha ts chance"
•
·
M Hal
.!~: c~ing~~~cof ~w: to spend cia Gtlil FrancCo, Lal!rall w'al ey,
the·~r
· do
.
. Rebecca Kay otten ,
ter R.
Coocb, Clar&amp; Burton Smith, MagWays of getting people into oolia M. Nitz, Addalou M. Lewis,
Middlepon through special pro- Nadine s. Barton, Fred C; Rider,
grams at !he part_and special pro-

·

·

-

,

0

•

..

p · •l
d •
·
otentia
gran . )fJ,TOrS
l
dfi
J1
se ecte Or lYJ. Q\1
term
'J

Units of .t!le Meigs County.
Emergency Med•"cal Service
JeSpoilded to itine calls for assis•
tance overnight. Units -""""ding
we.e:
.·........-··
M00 da
Tu ~
· · Y--' 1:3 a.m. ppers
Plains to State Route 7 for Carl
Barnhill who was '!'&amp;RSp&lt;irted to
Camden Clark Hospital; 7:44 a.m.
Syracuse to. State Route 124 for
Ella Quillen who was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
8:44 a.m . Pomeroy to Condor
Street for Mary Kauff who was
transporiCd IP VMH; 12:39 p.m.
Middleport lo Village Manor
Aroo....,..niS
for Dcrotlty S"""'
.-M·-·
Mr- who
.was
I1Uied at the scene; 7:49p.m.
Rutland to Gibson Ridge f.- Low-

ell Stanley wbo was ~ to
O'Bieneas Memorial Hospital; 7:S7
p.m. Pomeroy to Kingsbury Road
for Homer Bailey wbo was lliiis·
poned to Holzer Medical Ce~;
8:12 p.m. Rutland to Hysell Run
for Ada Keesee who was lnUISpOned to VMH; 10:22 p.m. Rutland. to
Meigs Mine 33 for Maudie Ratliff
who was transported to VMH.
Tuesday - 2:41 a.m. Pomeroy
to Grant Street for Nola Bradshaw
who was tran.spOr1ed to HMC.

-on.

Ra, ne

.

•

EMS. responds to. nzne calls
o-

. ..

Hospital news
Holzer Mcdle111 Center
DlscllafltS AprU Ui
Hallie Nolan, Margie Goldsberry, Shawna Barry, Mrs. Scou
Cossin and son; Nollie Six, Cindy
Halley, Sandra McKay, Dee Canter, Opal Stover and Shirley Mayo.
Bli1hl AprU Ui
Mr. and "Mrs. Thomas Manin,
son, Rat;lne.
SPHINf, VAll tv CINEMA
446 4\.'4

7

Slate AutO's already
low premium~ can be
reducad IIYtln more by
lnauring both your car
. and home Willi the St~··
Auto Companies.

Let us tell you just
how muc:h,your savings

can
. be.

semna

Cit·-'" ...

.....____. . . . . --.. . ...m.l4

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
.

.

. 90N817

......... _, 0...-_
''

·

Daniel Jones, Melvin J. Lovesee,
M s
A .
Yvonne . e.11ers, rue L.
Reuter, Nellie M. Parker.
RACINE - Anllel Leigh
·· Sm"der• Joyce Ann Werry.
.
REEDSVILLE- Georgia Mae
Sml"th.
RUTLAND - Danny W.
Davis, Robert Dean Williams.
SYRACUSE - Janice Lisle,
Kenneth Harlan Cundiff, Shirley
·
Ann Willis, Elizabeth Ann Hemsley
TuPPERS PLAINS _ James
Ray Wiener.

ftO ....

;:•:!:!

,

BeckySueTrout,EarlA.Goode.
PORTLAND - Kelly Jean
Turner, Robert R. Durst, Ray A.
Wilson, Donald G. Roush; Rodney
K. Allen, John Albert Henderson,
Sheila Ann Long.
RACINE -Deborah K. l-ent,
Julie Arlene Curtis, Randall L.
Roberts, Dorothy Shain, Irwin
Reopath Lance II, John Malcolni
Pape Jr., Reva Norris, Alice E.
Williams, Lori Ricbelle Warden,
Clttistine Ann GJeURser. SStephenAimO.
Jenkins, Ralph E. ose r.,
a
Ruth Johnson, Linda Ann Grimm,'
Kelly Rae Milam, John Finely
McClintock D, Dallas Arthur Hill,
Shelby J. Pickens, Mandy Kay
Boso, Chester R. VtinMeter, Kathteen J. McNickle.
REEDSVILLE- Betty Jane
Buchanan, Jennifer Ellen
Brookover, CJarmont p, Harris Jr.,
Thomas Lee Boggs, Terrance Allen
Smith, Tammy Darlene Cowdery.
RUTLAND- Kelly D. 4mberl, Uoyd M. Harmon, Sandy M.
McClure, Gayle L. Chasteen,
Glema Yarbrough , Cecil Jacob '
Wise, Kathy Jean Willis, Amy_
Beth Brothers.
SHADE - Michael Eugene
Stewart.
·
·sYRACUSE_ John A. Vanreeth, M. Marie Norris, scott A.
L-15,_ Harvey s Martin Peggy A .
"'•
•
'
·
Sllllll, Robert 0. Willis Sr., Don F.
Hendricks Jr., Alberta L Hubbard,
William E Rice
TUPPERS PLAINS _ Troy
G. Sc:yoc, James E. Qualls.

. Th&amp;following 25 JeSidents Jiave
,
- been selected as '""•ntial jwors .or.
the May tenn of'lbe-Meigs County
Grand Jury. Selected were, by
·
. communtty:
ALBANY - William E. Tip. E
w Holcomb
PIC. verett •
•
·
COOLVILLE- Dora May
Calaway.
LONG BOlTOM. Jayne Ann
Collins Kevin N Buckley
'
o·
. · M.
. G MIDDLEP RT - Tma
eary
POMEROY 4 Dennis w. Har•
ris Jr Thomas llreston Hunter
· v· ··. L
c d"ff T" th •
•ctona ynn un 1 ' 1mo Y

laaeftt piMMCI
·
tf1 ..... 'n.. AuactaW rr.a, ... &amp;he
The
VFW
Post
No
..
9926,
Ololo llowapo.per Auodolloft, NaUonal
MYortioiOI ~ntoll ... Bnftham
Mli50D, W.VL, will bold a benefit
Now - - S.le!, 7SS '11olnl .W.nae,
dlllner Saturday at the poll home
llge
Now Yart, Now Yorll 10017.
J
at
II
a.m.
Menu
in
any
necessary
traffic
stops,
be
Ii was tiiiiiOUitCed that a bearing
alnn•'nl
be
POITMAIITBR: .... ohl- to
includes
one-half
clllcten,
baked
said.
on
location of the realonal airport .
Tbo DailY S.nllhol, 111 .c-1 St.,
belnl.
llaw
and
roll.
Call
304-mGallipolis
Police
Chief
Joe
bu
been set fix 6:30 00 May 13 in .
, Ni-.0, OHio 4611111•.
9191
for
delivery.
There
will
be
Owenuidbe
huabd
his
olfteers
the
MeiP
County Cowtroom. The
I1UIIIIC8JP'I10N IIATD . .
3SO dinners available. All dona· to tab JJeOPie'• fearl into consider- JIRlPil'cd location is.in the Rocmey
Freantwor.._0oe Woat. .......................... - .............11.80
tiona will be ar.ccpted and pt coeds ation when· they rna1te aaffic aop.. an:a, Mayor Hoffman said.
Ooe Mon!h........................... - ...........111
will benefit a friend of the orpni- He also nponecl oaly 1llllbd cars
Council member Judy Crook$
01o Year............................--- -W.tO
aJNOU:COFr
Z1t1on.
n ...ny l1lecl for IUCh IICdou.
noted that in 1997 MiM~ will
MHowovor, If we wore lble to oblerv~ Its bicenteDDialOShC said
·~
DoiiJI .........................................
- 26 C.!a.
run
iniO a 1111 btlcllltriat!CP, (and) that tbe Mlddlepot'l Arts Council II
RnlYII
"if·
one·
of oar plain can were IDUIIeltad In
on a IIICerin&amp;
Ul-""*..o.t.t"'•s:.~~oo~ I·· The Mlddle~t Community
5
....,...
sU!:!:!Je.
11011111,
we
woalcllllei'lpt·IO
make
committee
for
that
observanc-e.
Dolly a.ltool .... - . 1U .. 11
...... ·"
·- ~· - - ......_
Since lt will Involve. Jona-ranae
-llo CNdit will bo liMo part, will ltald ieYival May 3-llt aiNIIIc: ssap,• llollltl.
~ OnlildD ~ Ollef Ralph · plannina, she prq1o1ec1 lhat a eom- ..,
.
7:30 p.m. nlpdy. There 11'111 be
11o .-mp~~oo~~ bf, !lllll ,......,,.. 1ft
dlftoreal 1"'"!"--~~en 1114 1lnaen.
~Mt111beot IDd I spoh•WOIIIIII for-• milleD be named 10011. It wu gen. . . when ....... •rrllr .me. \..
.-..tlal&gt;lo.
B_,ane welooale.
· the (h!U..Noip Jlult of die Sque erally asreed that a member or
HJabwaY, Patrol 1110 -~ld ~e Councll .and a·tepeaa.tllliye of the
...., .....rflo_
Car cart.._....
~ beoti no problem• with llllk- · Middleport Community Aasoi:ia~
'
· IJIIIda lhtll Cooiaq.
Tbe Poardl Aaaul Spartan inaiNIIIc: lfaPI.
·.
don be on die bicentennial commit..........._ _
___ .......- ........,.... .11
In otbor developmentl, Chief tee.
_
aw , ..._ ..... _...................... .,. SprlnJ Pllaa. featurina Plill Din .
atld die Dam&amp;, wW bO belcl May Deputy DI!Nd• l!alts!Mtry said t1te
Attendlall were Mayor Hoff,
. . o.-......
. 11 !(...........,.....
...................
21 at Altlalder HIJb Se)loo(. vlcllttl w_ u Nhnecllroin Holzer man, council members, Dewey
..,_.,,__
.... =.
1'
11111 wllllllo llf I ftat Ia lid Medieal Cella' 01 Prlday aad Ia · Honan, jiUidenl. lack Sattstleld,
. . . Os
--·
,,
.... ~. 5:!0 p.tL Mill... . .............
~ andJ111101011Wo11hy.

• _, '"'"" .. ..,,_

SYRACUSE - Grace Greer,
Shirley A. Huston, Judity A.
Williams, Brian David Hamilton,
Rqsella Thompson, Rex F. Cumings, Freeman A.' Enock, Ora P.
Bass.
TUPPERS PLAINS
l)orUhy Lucille.Ridenour, Wallace
H. Culley, Brian Keith Bowers.

·

The following ISO residents
have been selected as potential
May petit jurors for the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
Selected were, by community:
ALBANY - Clarence Edward
Fraley, Edwin Oberholzer, Anita:
Irma Winner, Eric John Holle, Florenee E. Wright, Debra S. Shrieves,
Virgil Lewis Reeves, Freda L.
Hoyd, Geraldine Frances Fauber,
Tammy Lynn Bailey, Silas J. ·
.MulHna, JessiCa A. Brandt.
·
ATHENS- Joseph A. Gayles.
CHESHIRE -Earl D. Snyder.
CHESTER- Larry D. Cle-

A Rutland man was cited for

was-·.
M
•
·
. et·gs· announcements

CWV 111 mHt
A ilecrease in WOlken' compen·
sation claims last year helped 163
Meigs County Church Women
Ohio school districts, i~ludin~ United will meet Friday at p.m. at
. Loc 1 d Ea
Loc
the Pomeroy United Methodist
M
. e•gs
a an
stern·
a
~ th M F 11
b"
~~~isuicts, earn an "eq~ity ~~:~• . ay e ows lp
. Mei.Js Local ~ived $18,7834
and Eastern Local, $6,909.
......_ will~be apladancenedlt ...._ ~&gt;ut'
6
3
distric'
t
·
:
·
•
....,.~
""'"
The
1
.~.ft
.
$500,"""m"
total·~~":.!;~-~
land
American
Legion
Hall
Sa, ·
u-.1
·The '""''P -•:·g ~~~-· .,_ day from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Mus1c
... '""''
· · - uu- will be bv Pure Country Band.
tricts
com
I expens- Pub!" · 'ted.
u and
' compensltion nre
IC IDYl
calculations. "Althouah partici• pJntl retain a separate identity,
PlwrhiDiaad ~
theY. are treated as a lingle risk for
Faith Full Goapel burch in
Workers' compensation ratinJ pur- Lana Bottom will have a preaching
poses,"said Carroll McCammon, and singing Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor
OS.BA ·s deputy director of mtlll.- Steve Reed invires die public. Pel' agement services. Gatea, McDdn- lowlllip will follow.
" aid and Company, a lea.t.·r in
worten'compensationcoet,control
T_..etltltt
services, administen the assoeiaTheBiaBenclStemwheeiAsao•
ciation willliPO"W
Its t!tinl
annual
lion s P'OiflliD. ·
r
b M
golf tournament
11 t e
e1IS
County Golf Course· on May 6.
1- Entry fee is $SO which includes
The Daily Sentinel
· meals. Lunch will be served. at
noon with tee-off at 1 p.m. To .eg(VBP821.._
or tor further information,
ister,
l'ubtiohed oYOry .nan-., Monday ·
contaCt
Joe Clark at 992-20S4 or
"'""""
111 Com
Ohio
..,l'ridaJ,
tbo Ohio
Valloy
~~~~
John Tbomai at 992-6763. Bring
CampaaYIMal-'
tnc,s.,.:::d'"'"'"'' your own teain.
Ohio -15,6Q, Ph. eln-IIM.
UUU

RUTLAND ~ Laura Jo
Childers, Warren Dale Hart, Connie Sue Bales, Roben L. Hall Jr.,
Sharon L. Black, Daruty F. Bricker,
Karen D. Sc:luoek,
SHADE - William Theodore
Hart.

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Coun 'l

enses

dea~~ ~M: ~~~r~ ·. ~':..her ra111er. she was pre- Driver cited

Miller. .

Inez c. Boring, David J. Dailey.

::L~~~~~~- 150 potential petit jurors
s·eIec
.. t ed \ID
. . M eigs
. .venire
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W. VA.

WILLIAM R. MORRIS

Joan Campbell, Paul Domonick
Caroone, Leslee D. Teaford. ~
A..Salser, E.elyn Holter, ComiC B.
Moois,"Cecil W. Fleshman, Glenn
E. Enslen, Camellia Jean Walker.
James rarren Barnes, Debbie M .
Cundiff, Jeffrey Stewart Frank, Jo
Ann Grady, Evelyn E. Hollon. Eva
Mae Blount, ~hawnna Lynn Bobo,
Russel D. Roush, Elz.a W. Birch,
Harry Richard Lyons Jr. ·
REEDSVILLE - Robert A.
Calaway, Edgar J. Pullins, Robin J.
Boswell, Michael Edison Pooler,
Ronald"William Masters, Patricia
L Ingram, SaJll)ra K. Savoy, Anneda Kathryn SL Clair, Angela Dawn
Brewer, Teddy Russell Osborn,

L. Harris, George H. Buchanan,
Jennifer Lynn Buck, Judith A.
Knapp, James G. NaUy, BrWI Ran·
dalt"Corsi, Roy Thomas Grueser.
Mary Ann Spurrier, Roger Lance,

.

VAT may help fund health-care reform

when sold to the auto-putS manu- this meant that 90 percent of the
WASHINGTON (NEA) 111 Court Stn:et
Candidate Bill ClintOn promised facturer: die flllished part would be funds we.e coming from just 78
Pomeroy, Ohio
the~ way he would ever c:onsid· taxed .when sold IQ the carmaker. · corporations. When die Superfund
·DEVOTED TO 11m INTERE8l8 OJ' 11IE IIEIGS-MASON AREA
er im ementing a value-added tax the clir itself would.be taxed when was reauthorized in the ~arly
1980s, it was decided lhat all manwo be as 1*1 of a fundamental
•
overhaul of the entiJe tax system.
ufacturing companies with sales in
Now President Clinton needs to
excess of $5 miJiion annually
fmd a massive new .evenue sowce
woUld pay a .IM! pcmmt VAT.
to fund universal health-care sold to the dealer; it would be taxed·
Opponents of VAT come from
ROBERT L WINGETI
reform. So the task force beaded by again when sold to the consumer. both ends of the political spectrum.
Publisher
Hillary Rodham Clinton is consid- In each ease,lhe tax w.ould .be on .Many conservatives oppose it
ering recommending some kind of the "added value" of the material because it is a "bidden tax" that
VAT.
.
PAT"WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
at each step of production and dis- would be added on top of the preVAT
bas
been
a
staple or taxa- . uibution.
sent tax system, resulting in a tax
' General Manager
Assistant Publisher/ControUer
· lion in Europe for de4:ades. It oper- · The proposal is nothing new. increase. Other conservatives
ates mu~b like a sales tax, depend- VAT has been debated in oooose it on the grouods that it is
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 .
ing on bow it is applied. . .
Congress, off and on, for more lhan '~'uif-family." They reason that a
words .. All letters are subject to editing and mu·st bC signed with niune,
A
modified
VAT
is
really
a
address and tele phone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
30 years. It was sharply debated, man with a wife and childlen, no
national
sales
tax:
It
is
charged
to
should be in good laste, addressing issues, not perwnalities.
and rejected, in the eply 1970s. matter what his income level; bas
consumers at the fmal point of sale. Then it came up ~. briefly, as to ~d more of his earned income
A ttue VAT, however, as it exists part of the tax-reform debate iii the each year than a single man earning
in most Europeaui counlries, is a tax mid-J 980s.
the same amount. Thus, under a
applied against goods or srnices ai
Actually, a kind of VAT does valued-added tax system,-be would
every step of the production and exist in this country already. The pay higher taxes beci!Use be bas a
distribution chain.
so-called " Superfund" toxic-WilSie famil .
To use an automobile as an cleanup program was financed by . Liberals oppose it as a highly
'.
By Ll!Cdle FiemiD&amp;
example: The iron ore would be · an exctse·tax on crude oil, imported regressive tax, taldng more .on a
taxed when sold ro the smelter; the petroleum pioduciS, petrochemicals percentage basis from those .who
' Alcohol and other dru$ addiction bas slipped from the national spot·
, light as the problem Amcncans are most concemcd aboi!l. and this is truly resulting sheet steel would be taxed and inorganic chemicals. However, mast spend mo.e of their incomes
a tragedy. Rising health care COSIS, viol~ and other ills ~I?Uble us ~
· : however alcohol and other drug abuse IS the keystone 1ssue wh1cb
. impacts everything from incieased crime and overcrowded prisons to
I'M GMN6 YOU 1WO PRES&lt;RIPTIONS.
'~ declining educational performance and illiteracy.
·
: The Ohio Department of Alcohol·and Drug Addictio~ ~ervices focuses
'THE ARST ONE IS TO CURE WAAT
· on early p.evention and early I!Utm.ent .as an ecooom1c measure. For
AILe; YOU. THE SECONP ONE 1$'1'o
, ',every ·dollar spent on tJe81111ent and preventioo, $11 is saved in l!ealtb care .
CALtl\ YOU ~WN Wt\EN yOU FIN~
.. costs.
f lhe Depart
~· · Women of childbearing age (15 to 44 years) are one o.
WHAT lHE flm" OME COST3.
'r ment' s tllp budget primties, because the im~t of prevention and !JeBI·
' ment affects two lives and saves the stale millions of dollars. In Ohio, at
· least $92 million is S{!Cnt taking care of babies born with fetal alcohol
-' syndrome, and an estllllatcd $22 million is spent hospitalizing_cocaine

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Jury selected for Meigs County Court

OHIO WcZJtllct

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The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1'

Commentary

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Sports

The Paily Sentinel-Page-S

The Daily Sentinel
·

On NFL draft's final day,

In NL action,

Reds• land Marlins in 3-0 decision

TUeSday, April 27, 1993
Page--4 ·

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By JOE KAY
when the breeze picked up and
CINCINN ATl (AP) _ The ended up being the pivol.al factor.
· "-A- ............ the ....._
"It fot a little windy late and
C·• ·
UICmnab,.....
~.........
" ,_ Hough's
Y.....w k'1Dd 0 took
,.._
..
contra1 away. "
.
hat
do
10 agamst ...,,.....,
w
H
h
'd
••
k
' d of 1ost the
oug sat .
m
lamddeball .
; .Be pmem, they reminded each command."
other. Don't 1ry 10 kill iL Wait until
Chris Sabo opened the seventh
the last second and then slap iL
with a single and went 10 second on
- "If you lry 10 pull it, you't;e 1101 a wilc!pitdl. Cecil Espy walked on
·
" R d
T ny ·five pitches, and Hough fell behind
gomg to,
e s mana~er o
3•1 in the count 10 Oliver.
10
10
:1.;;:.~:s best hit it the
He came in with a knuckleball

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REACHES AGREEMENT
- Mille Bartrum, a 1988 &amp;J1111·
uate or Melas Hiah School,
reached a veriNd qreement on
a free-agent contract with the
Kansas City Chiefs late Mon·
day afternoon. The fCDler AIJ.
American liaht ead for the
Division I·AA nallcmal champion MarshaU Ualverslty Tlavn·
dering Herd will leave for
Kansas City later in lbe week to
sign lbe contract and take part
in a mi.ni-cam.P.· ·No other.
details were available at press
time• .

Sternwheel ·
tournament
slated
The Big Bend Stemwheel Association. will sponSOJ" its third annual
golf tournament at the Meigs
County, Golf Course on Maf ~Enlry fee is SSO which IIICiudes
meals. •
·
·
. Lunch 'will be served at noon
with tee-off at 1 p.m.
.
To register or for funher infor·
· mation contact Joe Clark at 992·
2054 or John Thomas at 992-6763.
Bring your own lelml.

TPBA opening day
scheduled for May
... 8

;

~

The Tuppers Plains Baseball
Association announced that the
teams under its umbreUa will have
their opening &lt;lay Satunlay, May 8
from 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m. There will
he a parade, baseball and carnival
games, concessions and prizes.

•

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---.. - • Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE

rr.

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EUluolll-

W L

Pd.

GB

7 .632
I .579

3.!1

Pit~ ..............IO
NcwYcxk ........-......1

I
9
9

.556
.526
.471

4
4..1
5.S

Aorida .................... .7

12

.361

7.$

Pbillddphia ........... t4

'M-..1 ................ 12
SLI,...;;, ........,....... 11
Chicaao••••••......•.••••IO

•.

:na

wf.IC«It DiYIIIea
I .1l6
S...FnnoiKo ........ ll 9 .sso

%.5

llouolm ................ .IO

Atlaau ............. -.... 11

10

.Sll

San IM&amp;o ........_..... .l

10
12
12

.-444

-'2 ·

second round; and Mark Brunell, 10
Green Bay on the fifibmund.
Mter TOI'rella. ~Van ~It of
Piu went 10 the Steelers with the
216th pick, San Francisco took
Michigan's Elvis Grbac • No. 219
and. three picks after that, San
Diego weilt for Indiana's Tre ~ll
Green.
Wilb free agency foc players aft« four years - often coosilered a
gestation period for quancdJacks, a
theory .Parcells cl•ims 10 adbere 10,
of course - teatns simply aren't
willing 10 invest the time in players
who could leave when lbey are
ttady 10 conaibwe.
Here are the teatn-by-team selections of the 1993 NFL draft.
Players listed by round. position,
school and overall pick in parentheses:

.361
.333

' 1!1

..,

1. Lincolo ~. or. w~-'!!
- ~·:-.l9t: 2.
Rop
OB, oloio s- (31): l. 1faniW
Al•ua4v. P. Appalac•u S..... (67); S. • •
~LB. s..ar.ial (121~ 6, 1i&amp;da I - . TE.

u.,....

.Mmp.-(151~7. -W-IIB.O&lt;­

Iaboml (171); ••

s.... (205~

~

...... Wit. FlooWo

: With its eye. on a beith in the
Disaict 22 playoffs, the University
of Rio Grande baseball team kept
in the race Sunday with a double·
header sweep of Central State at
home.
"'We have six more district
games left, and at best, if we can
win a couple of them, we'll be in,"
Coach Dave Ojtlesby said. "If we
·can hang right m there, we'll be in
good shape for the playoffs."
·
The Redmeit started this week at ,
12-H overall, 10-4 ill the disaict
and 8-4 in the Mid-Ohio Confer·
ence,' where they are in second
1
place.
A three-run homer by Jason L.
.Wright In the fifth i~ing ~sted
· Rio Grande 10 a 9-l vtciOry m llle
opener, one of a number of irnpres·
slve hitting performances that ener·
•·gized the Redmen offense. Shawn
Bossert was two for three with a
.pair of RBis and JasOn Wright was
' tWo for four with an RBho make

•

WediiHday'sgomos

tournamenL

. -

(VIoLo 3-1) •• &lt;loiraad (Wcldo

:1-1). 3:1l p.m.

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career. .·

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ODU takes two
•om Redwomen
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lP]f{IBIB
CJLA~®HIFHJBIIJ) .

AIIJ)

This Is Your lnvitatiOaa To SeU Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE. . .
...
Simply Oip 11Us Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad And Mail It To Us Or Drop It Off At Our Qffice.
Yuu Ad Will Run For One Week. ·

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(NCJTE: 15 WORD UMIT Al\11) YOUR SELUNC PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR f!U!E'AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOr APPI.Y'J"QYARDSALES)
.

NAME:~·------------~--~----~~------~~
PHONENU~------~----------------~--~

MAIL TO:

•

. '•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
(QFFER~6/21/93)

...

lighted by Mike Pope's two for
three performance. Both teams
~ornmitted an error apiece.
The visi10rs rallied in the night·
cap to post 10 hits,.but catne out on
the losing end 11-9 thanks 10 Jason
Wright, who exploded for a three·
run homer and four RBis to lead
Rio Grande's 11-hitsbowing.
Wes Young went two for two
with three stolen bases for the Red·
men,_ while the Marauders
answered with a two for four finish
·

by Dana Figures and a two for ..
t~ree performance from F~ank
Ftelds. ·The ~uders commuted
two ~rs 10 Rio G~'s ~
. Eric WI!"~ his ftntandvte::
fiom ·'::Ettching mound
mu.e
Perry
the loss.
The Redmen were . to .have·
played a lklll;ble.beader wtth WB;~sb
Sawrday foc tiS f~ MOC meetmg
of f!te season, but .tl was Dl$lllOIIed
u~til Wednesday m CantOn due 10
ram.

their planning: Whiff. Whiff.
Whiff. Whiff.
.
The Florida Marlins' 4S-year·
old master or the knnckleblll had it
~ing. He Sln!Ck ciut nine in 6 1/3
mnings - his best total in two
years ~ before throwing a flat one
10 Joe Oliver in the seventh. Oliv·
er's RBI single ~ up a 3.() victory
that hardly took the luster .off
Hough's performance.
. "lie tfuew me one mr tint time
up and I went back saymg, 'Man,
I'm glad I'm a,Pitcher,' " said Jose
Rijo (2·1), wtio allowed j_ust two
hits over seven inniags. "That
shows you that speed means notb·
ing. Pitching is all about movement
and experience."
·
And Hough (2-2) has plenty of
both.
He's had just one bad outing in
'his fi,ve starts, and that was in the
Astrodome, which isn't kind to
knuclders. There was just a slight
breeze Monday night at Riverfront
Stadium that made the pitch tease
and lllltllenL
. "He's nasty,'' said Oliver, who
had one of the Reds' four hits off
Hough. "He throws it at two or
three different velocities. '
· Hough·and Rijo were locked in
a scoreless 11ame in the seventh.

osu repor,t S reCTUl
·
•u•ng VlOm
• 1-ti,0n

n.

=
I

troea,.

....

TOBACCO KING
·. NOW OPEN

SKOAL

,,

$1189 "· .

PEl

CAliON

· CDTON

••D COPENHAGEN
------......
2% MILK

PEPSI &amp; RC

15 ~
PACK

$] 99

RC

._.,...••,.

$3

PEPSI

12
PACK

39

fAllON

· MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 7 PM·11 ·PM .
SUNDAY 1 PM· II
. PM.

....

vz..~l,._..
c..pltit ..... " .m,
. .''""
.ry

TOBACCO KING

c II J•·••ccoll&amp;
c "ww'l.IHaL

HUBBARD'S HillHOUSE

675·1698
1114 VIAND STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV

·. SYIACUII

OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

992·5776
'

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON
(lnclucllng Don.llc and Foreign Subsldlarlei)

'

The Peoples Banking &amp;
··.Tr-u~t Company
State B•nk No. 176
of Marietta, Wasbinp;.. County, State of Oblo ~SO, •t the close of business March 31, 1993.
~~
~-~
Cub and balances due from depository ins tutions:
a. Noointereat-bearing balances aod currency aod coin ............,.................................................... 13,671,000.00
b. In-1-bearillg bai1111Ce1 ................................... ................................ ............................. ............... 3,997,000.00
Securities ...... ............................................................................... ........................... ............................ .. 95.921.000.00
Fedenol funds sold lt JeCurities purcllaied under agreements
1o ro~ell in domestic offoces of the bank lt of its
Edge eft Agreemeotsubaidiaries &amp; in ffiFo:
,
Federal (UDell sold ................. ............................................................ ......... ..................... ............. 14.200,000.00
Loaoa aod lease financing ~eeeivables: ·
_
Loam and leases, ne1 of wlearned income ............................................................ 26 I ,800,000.00
LESS: Allowance for Joan and lease Josses............ .......:.........,... ........................ ......4.868,000.00
Loans and leases, ne1 of unearned income.
·
allowance, and ....rve:.................................. ................................................................................256,932,000.00
Premises and filled assets (including capitalized Jeasos)................. ................ ............................. ........ 7,907,000.00
'

1

~!::.~.~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::::

Thla!IISI!U...........................,.: ......:...................................................................................................399,034.000.00
Thlal wets and l&lt;mles deferred ursuanllo 12 U.S.C.
. t823(j) (sum of items 12.a and 12.b).:................:................................... :............. ...........................399.034,000.00
LIABILmES

Deposits;
·
•
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a. In domestic offices ...................... .......................................... ................................................ .... 342,371.000.00
(1) Noninteresl-bearing .............. ................................... ...................................... 34,209.000.00
(2) Intere&lt;l-bearing ........................................................................................... .308. 162.000.00
Federal fun&lt;b pun:buod llld .secwitiea sold under agreements
10 ~epurchue in domestic offiCeS of the bank &amp; "fill
.
Edge eft AsJeement sublldiarios, lt in ffiFs :
.
,i
. a. FederJil funds pun:buod ................................. ...... ........ ........................ :............................... ...........:... 385.000.00
b Sec:urilil:a sold under agreements to repwdlue .....................:...............' ................................... ... ~.JJ3,000.00
boJTOwed m011ey .................. :............................. :...................................................................... 13,230,000.00
Olber liabilities ............................... ... ...............,.. ,..................................................... ................. .......... 3,422,000.00
Tolal Jiabililies .................................................:..... :.....,............................... ............... ................. .... .367.52 I .000.00
· EQUITY CAPITAL
Common slock (No. or Sb...,s a. Aulborized ................ :.300,000 .................... T ............................... I.875,000.00
Surplus (nclude all surplus ~elal!d to profemd sloc:k) ...............,....................... ..... :................ ......... .7.346.000.00
a. Undivided profits and capilal .reserves ................................................................... :............ ....... 22,292,000.00
, Thlal equity capilal......... .. ................... .,.............................;................................................. ........ ....... 31,513,000.00 ·
Tolal equity capilal and loa1U deferred
·
.
.
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j).......................................................................................................... 3J.SJ3.000.00
101a1 lilbilllil:s. limited-life P..,remd sloc:lt. and equity capilal,
·
and Jo- deferred punuanliO 12 u.s.c. 1823(j) ............. .............., ........................................... 399,034,000:00
MEMORANDA: AlBouDII oulolaDdJac u ofRiport Dale:
'
Sb!ndby J~ten of cmlil Thlai ................................... : ..........................,...........................................·.. 4.6S7,000.00

"· . 'Other

I, 'the uncleni&amp;aed officer, dO bereby decla'e tbat lbit Report of Coadjtion bu been prepared in COIIformanco
with official ioalruci!OIII and IIINe and cGrreciiD tbe best of my knowJed&amp;e ao&lt;! belief.
.
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Jobn W. Coul011,
'Cbiefl'illancial Ollicer &amp; Treuurer, April 22. 1993 - (614) 374·6112 ·

We lbo uodenicaed diJeclon, - . . tbe ........- of tbe Repon of Condition and declare that it bu boon
e..:.Ulllil by UJ and to tbe bell of our knowledce and belief and bu been prepared in conformance with official
instnlclloos and illlrlle aod COD'OCl
Deonb D. BlaUNr
Norm• J. Millroy - Direclon

or

Rex E. Mlideo

.

State of Obio, County Wubin&amp;IDn, n: .
,
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Swam 1D aod aubocr!bed before mo lblo 2211!1 day Of April, 1993 and I beieby eertify lhal lam DOIMI olllcor
dr director of lblt bonk. ·
·
·
·
. u .. M. Pfolf, Notary PubliC
.
My cii1D111¥sl011 expiiel oi:toblr 26, I99S

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LEVI GARREn

10 PACK ROLL

It~ "-ts CRew... &amp; ·

golf league ·after.. three weeks

ara;.de

Oliver couldn't explain how he
managed 10 hit it

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SJ 0'9

SPECIAL OF THE MONTH

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) nature," Ohio State athletic direc·
Ohio Stare has reponed a recruiting lOr Jirn Jones said in a statemenL
viQiation involving incoming bas- "The matter is now in the hands of
ketball m:ruit Damon FlinL
the NCAA and we will have no
Flint, a senior at Cincinnati funher comi"Qent until we hear
Woodward High School, sigp¢ a from them."
national letter of inrent with 'Ohio
Ohio State was not trying to
State in November.
. gain a recruiting adva.litage. by
During his junior year, Flint leaving the campus wttli Fhnt,
made an unofficial visit to Obi() Aye~ said Tue5llay.
State. During that visit, the OSU ·
Flint, a Moot·S guard/for,vard,
coaching ·staff had u.aauthorized is ranked among tile lOP 20 ~~~ .
off-campus CQntact wtth Fllnt at a nationilly. .
nearby fast food restaurant That
Sports briefs
contact violates an NCAA rule
BasebaU
which prohibits in-person off-cam·
NEW
YORK
(AP) - Dwight
pus Con\&amp;Ct p~or to Sept. 10 of a Gooden of the New
York MCIS was
• prospect s seruoc year.
. Coach Randy Ayers and mem- scratched from fils scheduled start
bers of his staff were allowed in· against Lcis Ang~les because of a
person contact with Aint during the bruised right shoulder blade. Pete
unofficial visit, as lqng as.they Schilurek started in place of Ooodremailied on campus.
· , , _. en in the game that was rained out
"We regret this incident, but we in the second inning with ho score.
do not think it was intentional, lll)d The Mets said Gooden, scheduled
we believe it 10 be of a secondary · to pitch :!his . afternoon, ~as
"bumped m the clubhouse tn a ,
freak accident"
· 1

'It wasn 't bad," Hough w 'd.
" It was a littlediflaL, He hit. its"·""'"Y
good, but be dit t killtL ornetimes you get away with it, sometimes YOI! don't I wasn't disgusted
wth~thcotheunLJI!!Ch, I was disgusted with

·MAIL POUCH

PlnArM&amp; ......,.._

• . Co-captain Robin Stull's home
· run on a two for three performance,
which resulted in two RBis, was a
highlight of the Redwomen's five·
hit showing against the Panthers.
Shelley Whitaker was one for
The 1993 version 'of the River· 10. Jack Nugent
three with a run, scored for Rio st"de Sent'or Men's Golf, ··~-. bas
.
Oh'
12
Grande, as Andrea Cummings net"""""""
VmiOn, 10 ........................., ...... .
Jed a double and two runs on her completed its third week of play.
11. Sonny Chandler
two for three trip to bat for OD.
A lOIII of 35 players participat· Gallipolis, Obip ...........................12
·' Kuhns was a1so 1wp ~or · Wikoff,
ed. with Dana
the teatn
composed ol'
Jim 12. Don Wilson
. . 12
. Jennller
Winebrenlier,
Clark
three with a pair of singles.
Greene and BeMf: Benedum walk- . Mi'ddlepoon, Ohio .. :..................... .
The Redwomen's chances were
.
13. Ray liver
·
·
.
.'bun by five errors, while the hosts ing -away with t e honor~. Their Racine, Ohio ................................ !!!
· held themselves 10. two. Tracy Her- . team shot a nine under pat 61 for 14. Bill Hannum
ron was credited with the win and the day. Amazing as .it may seem, Chester, Ohio .............................. 1~
.SuitT Philpot was on the mound for five teams tied fcx second at five IS. Jim Capehart
R"oGrandc
,
underpar65fortheireffor1S,
'
PointPieasant, W.Va..:............li.S
1
''
Rio
again recorded five
A IOta! of 40 different players 16. Earl Johnson
hits but racked up four errors in llle have taken pan in play so far this Mason, W.Va ............................ .!!
,: second half or the bill, while OD season. The Riverside seniors are . ·17 George Bums
advanced orl seven hits and had no alWays gald 10 welcome new play· Cllrton, W.Va ...... :....................... ll
'·
ers and the season is really· just be- 18. Elmer Click
9 had th 1
eanrrdorscu·mPhmillnpogst (was6- )on the ~oundoss ginning with the play to continue Cottageville, W.VL ...................:.IO
until SepJember 28, ·when
19. Pete G-'----A
~ for the Panthers.
· the
· seb
'""'..,... •
·Stull again led the offense with nior fun day and ptcmc w11l e New Hayen, w. va. ..:; ................9.5
~ three peri
at bat held.
20, Lew Gillapd •
ath~oresourlted
,·n a hormancomereun and
A couple of new \)layers aBhye Mason W.Va....... ;..........................9
.._.
·
joined the league thts year. til
three RBls, while Chat Peart (two. Ferguson of Dunbar, W.Va., the
for four) and K!lliY Robinson (one younger brother of Riverside mem- · Sports deadlines posted
. for three) ~h luid a run. for OD, her John Ferguson, and Faye Wil·
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Kithns was one for three wtth a run son, Lawrence Scarberry, Jim The Daily Selitinel, the Point
scored and Karl Riebesell was twq Capehart and Clinton Swisher, all Pleasant Register and the Sunday·
for three.
· of Point Pleasant. Also Frank Times-Sentinel value the conaibu·
The Red women open this BO'ggess of Ravenswood, w:va. .is tions their readers make to the
w.e ek's competition Tuesday at getting his ticks in on the lOur.
sports sections of these paperS, and
horne apinst Morehead' Stale, and
The closest 10 the pin winners these contributions will continue 10
ho··t Marietta Thursday at 3:30 . for week three were Earl Johnson be published.
, However, certain deadlines for
P:!"· ·
and Clark Greene on holes seVen
submissions
will he observed. The
and 14.
Sports briefs
The standings for the 10p 20 list deadline for phoiOS and related arti·
,•
Tennis
· cles for basketball and other winter
.
HAMBURG, Germany (AP)- are as follows:
sports is the last day of the NBA ,
Top-seeded Steffi Graf of Gerinany
Pia. Finals.
bCat Judith Wiesner of Ausaia 6·2, Poe.·aolfer
Likewise, the deadline for sub· ·
.1•S in the rust round of the Citi· l. Jim Wikoff
Sha&lt;le: Ohio ............ ,.................20.S missions of local basebal·l · and
zens Cup.
·
2.. Dana Winebrenner
softball-related pho10s and related
.
Boxlna
M .
. . AGUASCALJENTES, extco Syracuse, Ohio ...:........................ 19 articles, from T-ball 10 the majors:
·
as well as other spring and summer
(AP) - Miguel Ansel Gonzalez of 3. Clark Greene
. Mexico retained ,his World Boxing Huricane, W.Va .......................... l9 sports, is the day of the last pme
of the World Series:"The·dcadline
Cpnncil lightwelaht title with a 4. Jllhn Fergusori
New
Haven,
w.va
..................
rs.s
for photos and related articles for
•
unanimous dccilioa over compaai·
~.
Bill
Winebramer
·
·
football
and other fall sports is the
ot Hector Lopez. Gonzalez
Syracuse,
Ohio
.............
:
..........
.15.S
Saturday
before the Super Bowl.
improved 10 29·0 with 24 knock6.
Cbuckie
Lester
These
deadlines have been insti·
outs. Lopez dropped 10 19·2·1.
EV81lS, W.Va. ............................ 15.5. tu!e'd to give ~ers plenty of time .
7. Luther T!JC,tcr
to get their photos back trom the ·
MUNICH, Germany (AP) Muon,
W.VL
............................
.!]
photography studio or choice and
Lucio Topadah ICOI'Cd a power·
..
to give the slaffs the opponunlty 10 ..
aoal at 15:37 ·o r the second 8. Hlrold Clllt
13 pub!ish these sports photos and
od u Italy ded Austria I· I to ·Ra'\'eMWOOCI. w. v~;...
·
· articles during tl)e appropriate sea· . .
ildvince 10 ·the quarterfmals of the 9. 9afley Rice
ReedlvilJo. ()tlic&gt; •••. - ................ 12.S son for that spon.
wuld champlonablpl. .

·.

S~NUoD •

0

CIGAREnES AND TOBACCO
WEST
. VIRGINIA STATE MINIMUM

HUBBARD'S CREENHOUSE
lo N.., OpeR For

Wikoff crew leading senior

Clean Out Your Clos~t,
·.
'
Basement, Or Garage·... · .
.And Turn Your Unused Or ,
·Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A
'

In its only doubleheader of last
week, the University of Rio Grande
softball team lost to Mid-Ohio
Conference rival Ohio Dominican
6-4 and 4-3 on Friday in Colum·
bus.
As the team started play this
week, it· was 9~ 16 overall, 4-12 in
·District 22 and 2·1 0 in the confer·
enCe.

--4-1

'

. the~~ris Me~erslallowed

..Rio Grande an eight· :tter as ·~
·· vOOrlieii (4:3} liiriit.ell tlie Mataud·
"ers 10 four hits, which were high·

..

..

stretc• a single into • double In tlie sixth Inning
or Moaday night's National League tame ia
Clnclnaali, where tbe Reds won 3.0. (AP)

:Redmen sweep Central State to stay
lin hunt for District 22 playoff. berth

Alcorn last man
picked in draft

'
•

......

MAGADAN'S OUT -Florida's Dave Maga·
&amp;an is retired at second base by Cincinnati sec·
ond sacker Bip Roberts after Mapdan tried to

a

.,.....

1

pCer

1m into the
this
is .
saidpme
than MOnday.
done. Four
bat·
what tbe Reds had 10 show foc all

AU...tltF...._

"In the exact words of the guy
from
Newport Beach who called,
.,
, 4
Koo.u Gly ~ 1·1) "Toronto
'You'D
be like a god down here,"'
•
13 .316
(l.oUcr 1-Z~ 7:3:5 pm .
Alcorn said with a laugh.
,
Jofft'!Mota,ll!zicboc 0.2) at Baltimore
(RIIodal 0.1~ 7:35p.m. .
· Monday's ~e:ons
Alcorn,
a
6-foot-4,
220-JlQUllder
·Milwaukee (Eldrod 3-1} 11 O.iciJO
CINCINNA113, Florida 0
who also punts, converted 18 or 26
(MoOoalrilll-3),1;!5 p.m.
Lot ~ • New Yott, ppd., niD
;
Dmtlit
(Mocrc
2-1)
'11
Tu..u
(Brown
field
goals las( year year for the
SLI..oWIJ.
H~2
'
' 2-1),1:35 p.DL
.. .
Pitubuq,h 4, Atlanw 3, II ilminp
Zips.
He hit all sewn from jnside
'
CLEVELAND (Mwis 1·1) at SeatUe
QU_,.,._.6 •. Colondo3
(lfanooo
2-0).
IOjJS
pm.
.
30
yards,
was 7 of 11 from 30 10 39
rt1iJ.ackriphia 9, s.n FrMcUco I. 10 in·
, N&amp; York ( A - 1·3) ot Coliforni•
yards,
3
of
7 from 40 10 49 yards
•..
~ 2-ll). 10:05 p.m.
nin&amp;mtrea1 6, San Dqo 4
and kicked a 56-yard jlttempt on
the (ina! play 10 beat Toledo 23-20.
Today'sgam..
- • NBA playoffs • •
San Pranc:isc:o ("Burkett • -0) at
For hiS career; he was 4S of 76
PhiloddpiU.o (Mulbollonoll-2), 12:35 p.m.
Thunday's games
•
in
field goals and finished as the
l...olo::;:!CI (Hcn.hiler 2·2) at New
New Jcne)' at CLEVELAND, 1 :30
third-leading
scorer ever at Akron.
Yolk
(
2-Z~
l:o!Op.m.
.
p.nL
Aorida (Annltron&amp; 2-2) at CINCIN·
CbarlaueatBOROa,lp~
"I
got
a
call
from one of the
NATI (Smiley 0.3~ 7:3l .m.
L.A. Clippen at ~t!xl, 1:30 p.m.
assistant
coaches
and he said they
1
PiubwJh {W&amp;icf~ 2-2) at ALlanta
San Azn.aaio 11 Porilmd., 10:30 p..m.
{Avery 1·2),1:-tOp.m.
were
interested
iii
me with one of
•
St. Loud (Cormier 1-1) at Houaton
Frlciay's~:ames
theii
last
two
piclcs.
I 'told him I'd
(Kile 0.0). I :OS p.m.
lndi.anl. at New y Cit. 8 p.m.
&lt;M&lt;ivn 1-3) "Colondo (B.
near
llle
phone,"
Alcorn said.
stay
Au..a.. at ewc.ao. I p.m.
llauy 0-:1}, 9:05p.m.
"About
10
.minutes·
later,
a ~re­
thab. at Sealllt; ro p.m.
/.&lt;
Montreal (Bottenfield 1·1) at Stn ·
L.A.
LaUn
"Plooiai&gt;,
10:30
p.m.
tary
called
and
said
congratula·
Dqo (B..,.. 3-1~ 10:05 p.m.
' .
lions. She IOid me 10 hold the line
' 1 Saturday's pmts • .
i
Wecinesday'spmes
and
the next voice I hear said, 'Thi$
a.tdotto ttBo&amp;oo, 1 p.m.
·
Florida (Hammoacl 0..3) a&amp; Atllnu
,,
Sari
Antcnio
II
Potdtnd,
3:30p.m.
is
Sam
Wyche. Paron, you're a' ·
(OlariM 3-0)~ 7:40p.m.
,
NewJmicyat~ND. 7 p.m.
PiuobwJJ&gt;
(Olio
1·1)
otCINCINNATI
·
Buccaneer."'
·.
'.
L.A. a;ppoa .. """"""·9:30p.m.
(Pull&gt; 1-1 ). 7:35p.m.
·
Just
five
picks
ahead
of
Alcorn
Chicaao (CN&amp;mln 3·1) at Houaton
(SwWiell
3-1),1:0.!
p.nL
was
Michigan
quarterback
Elvis
- • NHL pl~tyoffs • 1
SL Louil (O.bclmo 1-o) at Colorsdo
t
Grbac,
a
former
Cleveland
St.
•
(ltoffin 1·1). ~:OS p,m.
MIRiday's
ocortS
Joseph
player
who
was
selected
by
Philadelphia (Schillinal-1) at San
Piaobwp l , New Jaocy 3, Pl"'bwiJ&gt;
Dieto (Otqllanill·l).lO:OS p.m.
the San FIBIICisco 49en: Grbac was
-(D.- ··3) ....... ""'
W•lri'II'O" 6, N.Y. ldan411"14, N.Y. · ·. fust-team All-Big Ten for the conaeb (II. Maninco :1-2).10:35 pm.
ldondmt.d"'*H
New Y od; (TIIWII 2-0} It S.. fna·
ference-champion Wolverines last
"
"""'""" 5, Quoboc
4 (01). lof......t
Nco (Wibon 0.2~ 10:3l p.m.
lead&amp; IMiriol 3-2
.
season.
Also going in the eighth round
li. ,
TIRIJcbt'l PID...
was
Ohio Stale wide m:eiver Brian
T-"~7~p.m,
!'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Stablein. Stablein, a 6-foot-1, 186Loo Anploo II Calpey. 9:30 PJIL
:.
Eulem Dl•illoft
W'IIIJiN II VIIICIM'., 10:30 p.m.
pounder from Erie, Pa., .was taken
y...,
W L Pet:
Gl
with pick No.210 by the Denver
lld:roiL ................... l3 5 .121 . Wedneedoy'• pmeo
·
" Tondo
hlun...............~ ..:ll I .S79
~
Broncos.
.·
·
1'.
Wuhllll!'"'
..
)'i.Y.
tilandon, 7 :~0
.............- .. .ll
I .579
1.5
p.m. '
"It
kind
of
crossed
my ·mind
·
NewVadt .........- ... 10 I .1l6
3
QuobocMiolonu.J. 7:30p.m.
•
Milw.~ ...............7
9 ,.. 31
5
that I wouldn't get drafted,'' StaCLI!VEU.NIL......7 12 .361
~
Tllunday'o pmes
blein said. "! was a !iDle bit U)JICl
~·
·
-.................
5
12 .294
1-'
Der.it at TG'aDIO, 7:10p.m., if nee.•
'I
becanse' I! lot or the projectiolu bad .
w-.nt.l '
me JO!ng in the third. fourth, fiftb
CaJli&gt;nlia ...,-......... 12 4 .'759
" " ' - • Wlmipot. 1:30 p.m.. ~
'•
rei• ......... -......... to 1 .m %.5
or Slllth rounds. But a lot ~
., .. : ...Ca~pey ................ 0:30p.m.
Cbicqo .....;.... _........ P p.. .500 · · ·· 4·
l
during the drat\ ilnd I'm just
s.aate ...................... P 10 ~4
4..1
•
I got picked l!,Y Denvl\r. NOfi I
~ ............ _.• to
- • Transactions • Jtoaooo
Gly .......... - .7 12 .361
~
try 10 II)W the team."
just
'••
Ootlond .... ;.............J to .m
~
BaMball
·
.
Stablein
had 53 CliChes foc 643
'
A. . . . _ . .
''•
yants and two t.ouCI!doWns 1a1t sea· .
Moiida1'itc:ons
CHICAGO WHlTB lOX - Poo- ·
Mil-•10. I'
·I
son.
He bad 96 JeCeplials for 1,289
.., ,J'•i
•
1··
lihaoocllho- . , . _ - · piloh·
TOftlliOI.Tau6
•• frpm ~~~tM ~Aao­
t~
yiWIIB in his Buckeye
a
.
;
.
q
,
7
.
0
...
_
.....,.
r..,.
Luob,
plcchor,
an
r •.
. Uni~ersity of Cincinnati defen· ·
th• 1.!-day diuw.d liti·retroaedve to
. s..-6,
lliiJai '·~
.
3
Apdl24. .
.
''
sive linemin Rorinie Dillon w._
'.iaken in the sixth round by the New
l
·' L----~~-......--...;....;.--~-oi.
"' --...J Orleans Saints. · ·
·'
CINC!NNATI.. -......7
Colondo .......... -......6
LotAnp ..... _......6

:erez

or

Scorel&gt;oat"d

-.
.•

with the 192nd pick. Both were
from the University ofWasbiJI&amp;too:
Billy Joe Hobert. by the Los Angeles Raiders with the last JJick the

·

51

mr

Patriots ·get ~arshall's Brown in eighth round
By BARRY WILNER
·New Ycxt.
,
, . NEW YORK (AP) - The Sial'S
Ph.oenix lOOk Hearst and, with
of llle 1993 ·NFL draft were Drew llle next pick, the Jets went for the
Bledsoe, Dick Steinbetg, Garrison man they wanted all along,
Hearst an:abust about anyone who linebacker Marvin Jones of Florida
kicks llle
.
State.
In what must rank as the most
"We felt they wanled a running
unusual draft in years, a draft in back," Cardinals GM Larry Wil·
which the effects of free agency son said of the Jets.
were obvious, it was not difficult 10
"I think ~ got the best defenfind the headliners.
sive player in the draft, and as a
Bledsoe, or coune, was the lOp bonus we have an established run·
pick, and the strcng-armed quarter· ncr," Jets coach Bruce Coslet
back from Washing10n Stare fi$· replied.
ures 10 be an irnrnediare $1arter.m
Hearst also was sought by TamNew England, despite what new pa.Bay and the Los Angeles Rams,
coach Bill Parcells clairqs.
who didit 'I have enough 10 ~ntice
· "ijis pbilosopfiy. mdeveloping the Jets.
a quai-temack kind or gQes back 10
As for·the kickers, eight of them
the way it used 10 be," · Bledsoef were ·selecled, the same DIJ!Tiber as
said. "You wouldn't be exp,ected quanerbllcks chosen. !'eriJaps with
10 play for four or five years. '
the draft shortened from 12 10 eight
Parcells knows those rules don' t rounds, some teams didn't want 10
always apply, particularly when go chasing rookie free agent kickTommy Hodson, Scott Zolak and ers when they had all those undrafiScou Secules are your incumbents. ed runners and receivers and tackBut, despite courting Bledsoe since lers and blockers 10 consider.
late January, Parcells isn't handing
The fmal pick in the draft, Mr.
the youngster the job. '
Irrelevant, was a kicker, Daron AI, 'I view. him as a very good corn of Akron. j\lcorn is now part
player who can come here and, of an 18-year lllldition by the Balhopefully, develop into someone boa Bay Club of Newport Beach,that eventually will be the offen· Calif., honoring' the final player
sive leader or this team," Parcells pi~ with ·the Lows1118D (not me
said. •'When that will happen or Heisman) Trophy and a week fdled
how soon, I really have no idea, but with parties.
I promise you I will not throw him
"I never h~ of it before, but
10 the wolves. He will not play un· I'm ready," Alcorn said Monday
til he is ready." .
from his home ·in Vancouver,
... Steinberg's work, in recent drafts Wash. "I didn't really expect 10 get
had been mediocre, at best. His picked after it went 10 the seventh
choice of Blair Thomas with the round, but Tampa Bay called and
second overall selection in 1990 lOOk me. I love iL"
has hurt the New York ' Jets. . .Free agency, as well as a relaThomas has been bitter disap- lively weak crop, affecled the numpointment, with injuries and sloppy . ber of qu~rbacks chosen. Only
play slowing his developrnenL The eight w~nt, f!Jur in. the last tw~
Jets general manager knows he ro_unds,.lJ!Ciudins .Hetsman Trophy
could have had Cortez J(ennedy ex v,:mner Gtno Torretta. He was tak·
Junicx Seau with that.pick.
en by Minnesota late in the seventh
Maybe Steinber-g made up for round.
·
that pick and so-so collection! i11
Quarterbacks~ of course, were
1991 and '92 with his maneuvering the fii'St two picks -Bledsoe and
Sunday.
Rick Mirer of Notre Daple, who
He convinced the Phoenix Car- went 10 Seattle.
dinals that he was interested in
Aft« that. onlv two mom were
Hearst, the All-America running selected until Torretta was chosen
back from Georgia whose stock
rose slwply once his knee checked
out. The Jets could use a runner,
even if Thomas comes through, he· •
cause they lack depth in the back·
field . .
So the Cardinals parted with
By Tbe Associated Press
·
Johnny Johnson, a 1989 PrO Bowl
Damn Alcorn said· it was worth
player as a I'OOOe ~ho gained 'Z34 the wait
yards and scored six ms last seaAlcorn, the University of Akron
son, in order to swap spots with placekicker.
was the 224th and last
player c)losen Monday as die NFL
draft wound up a two-day run. He
w~ joined by three other draftees
with Ohio backgrounds taken in llle
second lialf of the eight-round
Today'• cam..
MinaaHu. (Dalbaiu 4-0) u Milwau·
.
drafL.
be (W..,.,.. 1·3). 2.:0.1 p.m.
When the Tampa Bay Bucca. Tesu (Nen 0.0) at Toronto (Hentp
z.t~ 7•35 p.m.
neers took !tim, 'Alcorn became
Baltimore (Sutcliffe 2-1) at Chic.KQ
. more than just a pro prospect.
.
(MiDo...U~.I:Olpm.
.
Tpe
last
player
taken
in
each
Daavit ~cr 2"·1) at K.luaa Chy
(Cone 0-&lt;),1:3:5 p.m.
.
NFL draft is the sw of "Irrelevant
CLHVEUND &lt;N•&amp;Y 1· 3) at Suttle
Wee'i."
in Newport Beach, Calif.
(iiGolo 1·1). 10:05 p.m.
Botten (Darwin 0-3) at Oakland {8.
Dubbed Mr. htelevant, the hor10ree
Will 0.0), l~·p~.
·
is flown in 10 be the graitd marshall
New York (Xey 2~0) u California
(Finlay 2-ll). 10:35 p.m.
of a parade and 10 appear at a golf

right down llle middle, and Oliver
lined
'. ~i·t 10 left field for the go'-ahead

.

'

''

.,
t

'

-

•:

I

�,....... ............
~

'

n.ctay, Apr1127,1893

By The Bend
·.

The Daily SentineJ..

---

'

· ~I

Tueaday, Aprll27, 199;l
Page

-~

SHOE
LEATHER REPAIR

6
,,

~~W~ ·

Mason County native Lionel Cartwright Past Councilor's.Club has meeting ~
'
secretary's
given
hosiesses.
;
fo headline _concert benefiting Main Street
Co!.Jncil
323,
The
report was
by
Mary
K.
Holter,
protem. The
Oleater
nwnba'
met
Strait. Oint Blact atJd GaniJ . - - - - - - ,,....----, It d!e lodge hall widJ.Eihel Orr and treasurer's report was given by
Goldie Fftderick.
Laa Dlmcwood BSIJCWI ~ saes.
Brooks.
Erma Cleland and Dorothy
Laura
Mae
Nice
presided
ll
the
On his new MCA alwn •
Ritc"e
~ vtsiling Ada Mormeeting llld ad from the boo1c of
'Chasin' 1be Sun.' Ibis ..... • ..;ris
at
the
pomeroy Heallh Care
. StJohn. Tbe Lord's Prayer and the
boy" shows a powafullllll pcililioe
Center.
Mrs.
Morris previously
Pledae 10 the American Flag wae
piece of Md. wllich r l .... 5I
served
as
the
district
vice councilor
given in unison. Members
hiln as ooe m die most •• • p IJ
in
the
inilialay
wak.
.
answered the roll call by telling
talented wriiCtS and i t i iii
Erma
Cleland
read
the
poem
whit each liked about sping.
country music m!CI, 1 blly.
I,t was JqiOited that Alta Ballal'd "Mr Name is Gossip," Thelma
''The ~- also lllliura m
Wh1te read "Be Thankful" and
is home,from the hospilal.
Wesa Vugirua. bave jiiSt """-d a
Laura Mac Nice ad "A Recipe for
song lil1cd. "MiDi Mea.· wllidt
be held ~ Happy New.Year." A prayer was
is ~ 10 creep 111110 , .
SALEM CENTElt - A free ' also lead by Erma Qeland.
radio Slalians. Tbe pq~ ba perSome members wore Easter
community immunization clinic
formed in 16 Slalcs liad tine
hats.
'Laura Mae Nice's hat was
will be bel!llbwsday at the Salem
fomgn countries.
·
chosen
as the most original, and
Towrubip Foe~~ from 1~ ~~B:ve ~ ll _ , .
Erma
Cleland's
hat was chosen as
3 p.m. fur ages two months through
locabOIIS . incl~ ooe•• - ,
1
.lr;;inclergarten age. Parents must the most uniJSIIII).
bolels, faus. nighlclubs and Refreshments
were
served by
bring child's immunizalion record.
unclelground bomb ¢ tm ia die
Middle East
Curremy, the tc.-picce. !ICifI.IOfcD. CAJmVIUGHT
coruained act cutsidas tiJemleha ·
to be an act lhll "bas a ¥11iety m
styles and inftuences.••a group toiJo
has always stayed ~ 111 tofJo we

The Past Councilor's Club of

County native Lionel Canwrighl
will be appearing in a special concat ll the ' Mason County
Failpounds Saturday, May 29,
widl J)IOC'ei'4S going · 10 the Main
SlniCt I'Uint Pleasant prognun.
Go-Mart. IDe. and · Main Street
Poinl Pleasant IIC sponsoring the
~
which will include
r..twriaht, along with '"The
· ~T" llld local band "Id~." in a limited seat concer..
Tbe event begins at7:30 p.m.
c.twriJhl - introduced Ill the
1111io IIJdience when in late 1988
11e rdtan the debut single.
"You're Gonna Mate Her Mine;
wiJich lll8!le a strong showing on
video and llldio.
.
"' Watched IJ All On Tiic
~.·

1

*

Free Clinic to

I

from Cartwright's second
Ilium told the power of young
- · • ~on. Tbe follow-up
siaales. "My Hcan Is SCI On You,"
..r "Leap of Fllith" made the Top
10.
Cartwright's wide appeal as a IIC."
live pcdormer brought rave
''The Players" bave ,,,.,oJ far
reviews throughout · the United Johnny Paycheck. Jdfersoa SaarStlla and Canada, where he has ship, Del Reeves, Lorrie MOrp..
IDind widl such acts as Rebs Mc- Bertie Higgins. Ga.gia S*liM:s,
Entire, Resd~ Heart, George

Shoe~
Repair

Houn: Sun. I lion. Claud

the

r-. Wid., Fri.
...

Games were conducted bf,
Esther Smith and Ruth Smith. Docj
prizes were won by Betty Younf
and Op8l Hollon.
,
Tltose present were Elizabetb
Hayes, Ethel Qn:, Lora Damewood,
Ruth Slnith, Esther Smith, Tbelnl8
White, Laura Mae Nice, Goldie
Frederick, Jean Fmk:rick, Mary ~
Barringer, Erma Cleland, Mary ill·
Holter, Opel HoUon, Betty YOUIII•
Faye Kirthan. Margaret Ambergiir,
and a guest. $andra White.
·:

uo-a:~~J

24111. -RGIICY SIIYICI

Seivices .
lnleriot &amp; Eidtrior
· Paint . Mobile
Homes and
Aluminum Siding
Washing

Thun.l .... 10 111&gt;4 (1111
11M llultarry Ava.

.......,.,, Of!. 4&amp;711

u............
,.
&amp; . ....
.FREE ESTIMATES

SIZED UMESTONE .
FOR SALE

w. •••••••

aNI. .... N, 444

R&amp;C IICIYIDIG
BULLDOZING

Se~ond birthday observed

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

~'=-.Z.:~a
~
lonlo To 11 + Adult

'•

· UNES
,BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES.

HAUUNG: LIIIIMione,
Din, GriYel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONOEO

Hoe

COMPLITE
WELDIIIIID

BISSELL IU,ILDERS, INC.

t4t-2a91er

UDIIIOI
SIIYICE
ILSO . Ill IIIII
IIPIII

New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

IIUOMIIU PIICU

ShrubandT-

CALL IEC
992·7204or
J42s2223

Trlmmlng &amp; fJUIIOnl

a c...-doll

FREE ESTIIIAlES

PH. 614-992·5591

looking tor cui1Wit
addre•••• of Meigs
graduat11 for April
mailing tor Alumni

May 21, 1993.

MalladdreSieSto

Powuaclbr....., OUIII a1rdo

IIY • Sill • TUII
317 I. 21111 St.

J. S. MARINE

. 949·2168

Box 26, Middleport,

H2•1577

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

YOUNG'S

NURSES' AIDE
WITH
CPR .
TRAINING

47269 St. Rt. 241 • I Y. Mile 0H Rt. 7
, Tlln C...ter •• lt. 241

. S.• Bit on Vopgera

PH. 614·985·3949

on Blnlln Road

PH. 81.4-25M1H

. . . .....
......._.....-....
"Pt. PilEI I Ill
• VJcinlly .

...

IIOW OFFUIH••" ••
OIL liD LUll SEmCE
nRE REPAIR DD ROIIDIG

10 mllleaouth of GaiUpollo

........... ..., 1.lllft . .

Ill an Mill?.
·----~,_­

fnNIIIIIIC&amp;

o1

.1 /24/tl/ I M pd

Auto-Bntab

CARPENTER SEIRYICE
. ..
~=·LOOKING FOR
Pluntbln;l
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR

Rutland banquet
. to be held May 29 .

WhkJM

SprfllfTf.,..
s,.efal

.

To place an ad

• Ada ou"ide ll.e eGuaty your ad runa ault he prepaid

• ,p.c.i-.. di.cowtl for .d1 paid ia adYaMe.

r-....
let-._

•elf*

=~:::rt!eou: FHA members

·attend ..ally
1 '

Members of the Meigs HjJII
School .Future Homemakers of
America recently attead a
regional rally a Buck)e HilL
Competing in *ill e.au-=
award of merit, Sbelly Sinclair,
ARROW THROUGH · OUR Todd McDade, TanuDy Qaeeo ..t
HEARTS IN N1!W ENGLAND ·
Sh,erry Seddon; cbapla' aaitilb
DEAR PARENTS: My beartgnes · manual, J:.c?rena Oiler, Becky Gatout 10 ,_ Every piii'CDI who tellds · nes and Gmger Holoomb, ICCc:wd'
,_- Jeacr is IIUie 10 feel yo... pain. . place; tUustrated .talk, Sbmy Scd"Life ...,_
. I · ~-•
don, fust place.
.
- CCIIIln Y """'1 you 1 cruel · These memben will be ri lr ~
· Ndw.
·
·
. · stated convention in Coi-ba aa
. Ya. Jive nq clue u 10 .your Friday.

Public Notice

-

r«rr:icgFo~~T
On AprU 23, 1M, In tha
Melgo County Probata
Courl, Caoe . No. 27127,
Clare Dar•~ 234 tt•mllton
StrMt, Mlddhoport, Ohio
45760, .,aa appointed
Exacutrll ol tha aetrtta ol
Devicl
diU&amp;II d, l8ta
ol 234 Hamilton StrMI,
....., .... Ohio 45710.

Gille
I

•••••

Da,...,

.. .

'*""

Robart E. Buell,

ProbataJudp
L••15)4,
K. NftaolroiiC], Clarlt:
11, 3tc
·

,

raa••-~~~~~s Ill • eupp art ...
gc us 111 ?n ... aty?e Ill

wlllcll
ICC

•

,_

(4)27;

I

.__

'

CASH BASil COEINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
For ._ Flacll Y- Enclacl

....,..._eo..,
... an ...
JW iltlllk _.,.--._

..

~~-

Dacantbar 31, 1812
RUTLAND VILLAGE

.....
--...,
...........
....
...
..., ......
._,...._.eo_..,....

MEIGS

FUND TYPES
REVENUE RECEIPTS
RECEIPTS:

lMII T - ·--···11,111.16

• ••

.... gcUWbfMidlll

..................
,, . ,....
•ot

,..,..................21,217.14

. .. _ ............ tiJis

Ce!iltal

s ..... 1 . . . . . . . .
fOl

~OliO '

GOW?.IENTAL

......,.......
1•z a•

Public Notice

0

Muut ... onlr - • In ...
. . . . . . . . . . , . ...... you
-IMIIIIIIIII

!
•
:

,,
~·

GaWa County Meip County Maaon Co., WV~
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304' •
'

446-Colllpollo
36~-Che.hlre
388-,Vintoa
245-Rio Cr ..de

992-Middlepo+t/
Pomeroy ·
98S-Che.ter
843-Portlond

256-G.,u Dlol.
643-Arabio Dlol.

247-Leta"

379-Wol-

Public Notice

r,u,

949-Raclne

742-Rudand
667-(;oolvUio

Public Notice

l Property-·" ..·• 26,114.57

LliaureTJone

Acilvlllea...........- ..5.216.17
TIWioport.ilon ...... 17.427.41

General Govornmanl ................. .. 17,175.60

Capital

.

Outlay ................ 123~197.83
TOTAL DIS8URSEMENTS ............... 111G,4CI2.31
Total Rocolpia 0../undor

Dlabura................(2,103.13J
OTHER FINANCING

SOURCESI{USES)

EJCC. Rcpta ancl Othar
Flnanotnv Sour•• OVar/
(Unclor) Expand. Dlob. · ·

a Other

1 Mill
0

•~
•

675-PI. Pl-.anl

458-Leoa

576-A......

c.....

•
•:'

I
!1

173-M~2-New .Ha•ea
895~...

;

937-Bullaio

:

:
I

u•noll,

'
•LIGHT HA1ULLN~H
•FIREWOOD

· BILl SLACK
992·2269

.....

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVIa

lrlna 'lt ill Or We

36970 Bal Ia• RICI?I
Potnerey, Olrlo

lEI'S aPBfiaiCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

Prajaolo ............. 122,717...
CIIII1JM lor
len1o•·-··-····~ 7.ot7.AI
FIMo, Uoan~.
a "-118 ............ 14,151.11

....

m·

''

tiE 180U8 .... ;.~. . 1,140.U

. TOTAL ·
RECEIPTI--111.211AI

n......,.

hllli.. l•nh•n

EXPEHDITUIE

. DI88UAIEIIENT8
OllaiAII!...,.I:

11.124 .......... .
742-2211
.

Curnnl:

lloaurltyol...,.on

'i'

IJMIINat..............12,1 0:1.13)
Fund CMh Bal-a
Jan.1,1tt:Z •... __ ,..3,115.7t
Fund Cull Bal-.
Dec. 31, 1tt:Z ........ 1,CI61.16
~Mrvo lor Encumbr.
Dec. 31, 1tt2 ........ 1,061 .16

PROPRIETARY FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
CharJIIIIor

Sarvlcaa ••:.......... 145,615.16
Mlacailallaoua ........5,527.11
TOTAL
8ERVICES ...••..•• 151,142.83
Dt18URSEIIENT8:
CURRENT:

•

ICMWM,

I

. ow,

D

0

II?DOEAI

Oobl

Ohio unit 4 1&gt;.11. aa.y 10,
1113, lor lha ?ollowlng

VI?•

.

r

-oval.. .......triM

.,.

T.Stllrta • Hats • Uniforms
•

Varloty of T-8hlrt Colora and Lellterl1111

Public s.te

&amp;AuciiOn
~,........ Auction

3131113 tin

2 FrGat Struts • Laltor
•,A WU.IIIiJalneal
Prices Stm••l at
1129.95 +Tax

9

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE--REPAIR ·

EIIOIIIo

DEUYEIY SDVICE

frMEetlmaiM,

Low eo•.

I CI II

Worll GuarantMd

14·949,2325, or
&amp;14-592:5010

IISSILL &amp; IUIII
COWIRUC1101

olao iluvlna IU'* ..,.
304·77NM3.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985:3406

667-6179 '

POIIIIOT. 01.

IN POMEROY

4:30 P. a PAY IEFOII

" ..cano•

COUNTRY AND WESTERN
· DANC.E CLASSES I
Baginnaral All AQHI a-r P-1
(Wad.) Pl . , . _ Yltufl Center
•s: ~ p.m. SJr9al; Una o.- .

"t:OO p.m. Couplao: Pllmar o.ncao
·· c.~: MlkkiCulo,e~ ·

1ha prtoo ,__,"""""" •IIUOOind
.

-

........ al . . . -

.. . . . . .

....................... pol·

ron ID*IIUr.
an I l_
l -,1n
""""'
....'"'Inial
......-I .......

.....

01 1111

8R rtpi.P II I \1 . . . . 4,11111 ... .. ....

1:46p.m.
Spacial E.ry Blid
$100 '-volt
Thlo ad gcud for 1
MEl" canL
Uc. No. 0011-32

1 -

Umll

1111• From 'llnlan Ohlo On US
-~ liT... " Kid Filltlnflll
114.5116.

I/2ISID/1

; EAGLES
CLUB

Cow~ Lilla

~~=-·..::
__
;...:":=:::;::::::===;
an nu
r ATTENTION
81:.."'6..'~ l~P~

915 t471

EVERY THURSDAY

' -

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

......u.,
=~=·

992·7553

UTES

3 Announcements .

. ....... u

s':la=:•

4+1

r1ea. J04.171.17'12.

• trilcia:
'

Old lumlll'l, 1111-. .......

marMN. ar1owt=a . _
~ .... 'lumlto.ft
~~~ · OHr llhnln, 1M.

-

112-'J1141.

'2SHOUI

REASOW~E

porta.

lor

Jao·owoPono_....__

An nounc ome nt s

lnfi.. HtiOut

Roof

tnlna

-Flferort.-..._

\

36358 SR 7

wanted to Buy

=·...

.... to lluy -

Urc.r FH.-II«tn

ca....,.

Shade liver Saddle Shop

JeH

SMALL DODI
DRIVEWAY WOII
IIIIUMESTOII

bJ...,

lervk)e ........;....,:... 1,342.81 ' proleoL
.
TOTAL Dti8UA8E·
·The
ol Mlddl_.
MENTI·.............:. 142,137.10 h.. reoelvad a trM
T.... Reoelplil OvwiUndor
Romoval Grant from lha
ot.a.ur-..to ......I,2GII.03 Ohio o . - t o1 Netwll
~PEAATING
Rooouro•, TrMSOuroe •
.
Freel"=
REW~XPENIES)
Urban ForMI MIIIIIIJMIIIII
E•c. Aoi* .ncl 0"- . , Grant Pro:;:"'· leu tha .
VIR. . of Uld•rpof
(4)23, 30, Mer 7 AI
. , .
~IJ lourote OV•/

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS,

·' 992·3470
CHARLIE'S

..... oroad, oolor, utlo

origin, ooa, • · henc5lo
potltioel allllldert or
'1M Vllloga of llflopart
an Equal E111ploy111a
.
~E...Ioyw•. %
_,...,,....... - · · ba ~
pl.tad
31,the..,.,
1-~·
YlU11J18 ,....,..
rajoat any. or all pro
and to waive . , lnlor
au or IrragularT~taa In th
propoa• rooilvod.
1

2251 Sixth St. e lyra-...er Oh.
1614) 992•5215

"A Quolit.y Allured Conrrootor"

SIZED UMESTONE

..P,

Pw;Wftlll
propu* w?H ba
' 1i ro ._....
-.rvto.OHOOOOOOHIOH44,3••
uhiol ily tlte Wlogto ol
c:onweotu.. .
1111•• , lrt, ....... Ceolftly,
.....c................ A,725.44 Ohio In lie O?floo ol the
luppiiMend
...,.,, WIIIIJI ollld•op art.
Mlt!MIIIo .............. 43,475A7

i

PIINnNI

............ Ofilia

•
""d tr-. alumpo In the vii!

-•t

,

742~2321

3-4-113-1

Public ·

(Unclor) ElljHIIC]. Dlob. a
Oilier 111M ltlel .....l,205.03 Iage. In aooordonoa wllli
Fund CMh 811atalo and lecleral ragul"'
.len. 1, 1M .......... 5,457.01 tlo.,., tho vii• Ia .......
Fund Cliall Bal...ca
Ing bldo from lntarae~
Dec. 31, 111!12 •...... 13,662.04 parlin lor the •-val
Auerve tot Enc•br.
· theee IrMa and alumpa ·I
Dec •.31, 1tlt3 ....... 13.662.04 Jhe village. Tha contra~
TOTAL
ohall ba awarded 1,o lh.
BALANCE ............ 14,723.11G rnponolble bidder luhoot
SUMMARY OF
bid Ia rnponolvo to the lnvG~LBI£NDNESS
iadon end Ia
advantrt
0 •W• .... .. s
JIIICHitl to the viU11J18. ·
Outaiandng
The project contlalo
Dec. 31, 11112 .•.•. 400,000.00 tha , _ , . , ol 17 tr- ""
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
7 !lumpr In varlouo lot
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Uono In Jha VIIIIIJI8. Mapo
I certify lh?rl l'8]IOft to ba •d loclllloM ol tha • - ·
correal and lr• to the boet at oiiM 0811 ba obtlllnad 1
ol my knolflrdt.J
the llddlaport' Vllllfl8
...... K. · th 3123113 237 Allcaltraat, lllld?oprll
~.....
«.,.
p D Bo1 420 Ohio. Under tha· ~~
,
· •
IIJI'MIIIan~ tha VII
w
Rutl•d, Ohio 41771 provide ln·klnd aa:r..
(4)27, 11c
the form of ooma dobr
removal and 1ome cl
·
al tho variouo alleo.
•
Tha auooeaalul bldcf&lt;d.
muot'
ba an
Eq..ii
Public Notice
Employment Dpporlunl~
Employer which prohlbl
diocrlllllnatlon baeauoa
PUBUC NOTICE TO

20 , ..,. ..,.

SAYRE

IIICROWIVI 0¥11
ali• YCR REPAIR
'Mdr

BUILDERS

JOE I. SAYU .

USED RAI~ROAD

FING

MIYTHIIG UIDIRIEITI

Rea1011•ltlt

614·742·2131

llLUIU

-

GUVEL &amp; COAL

217 L S..Ntl It,
. POMIIOY, OHIO

ly

If
lad

i

1:00p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m . Wednesday
· 100p.m. Thursday
1:00p.m. Frklay

. Ckusified pases cover the
following telephone exchanses...

·

• r .... Ad.: Ci"WUway and Fou..,d ad. under 15 word 1 ~I be
,.. 3 clap at DO charp.
• Pta Diad for all capitallfltten ia double price of ad ~t
• 7 poiat liM trpo oaly uood
• Seatiael iiMI rmpo.uiMe for en"On after r...ttday (theck
for erron r~t dafad runtln pt~per). c.u hefore 2:00 , .....
day aftor publicatioa 10 •ake eorrec&amp;.
• Ad. that m.wt be fM'kl in acbaDCe are:
Card ol Thaou .
Happr Ad.
•• MemoriaM
Yard ~.... ·
• A cluoir+Od odrMlaeMoat placed in the CaiHpolio Dolly
.Tril&gt;uDO (except Cluoii'...J Dioplay, Buoi- C.rd or Lopl
. NotiooO) wlilaloo appear in tho Point Pleu&amp;~~t Roptor and
... Dolly Sen.................. 18.000 ... _

7tU«A.

l*eilt'l wmt ni&amp;htmare. We wen:

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

7~ ¢l9~ .

told thlJ·ooe of our childrat has a
a ~ llic" oondilion forwhic:h Ibm is
no treatment and we should Jaliiiiier:i8ie:"l~;;;e-Ciii~IJ!Iic1 0: 11er cleadl.
~u
-cc.
Tho IJiin we are feeling is 1 ness or how mtdl lime tile ..,
iadelcribable.. Although we are have lefL In spite or die xaat
punuirlg every avenue. hoping 10 b!~Fkground. if ..., m my .....,.,
fiild DltCXIC In the medical field have 10111e •a ·
1 will ~
w1Jo ~·more, we must face the them atona. neue
rro.
ponihility ofloling our lillle IJI8Cl. you. &lt;&gt;-die )UI'I.myieadtaslla.c
AJdoiab lhe is lli1l with us, we me become lite tinily, and we ._.
ahady grieving. 1bere is such a help one 81101her.
cloud hinging over our heads, it is
Wh.!n pltJMing a " 1£..,,
cliff"JCUh io JCI through the day pays for wlttu? Wllo 6ltllllb rvMn1
widlollt bmking down. We walk 'Th.!AMIANlusGIIiMforBri4d'
aiMICI widllelll in our eyes.
has Ill/rile IIIISWtrs. Snttl
Melle, Aan, help us. How do we drts~d.long. bllliltul-liu-fttJt
p11a 111 pvc up a cbild'l Although and a check or _ , ortlu for
we ~alway~ been strong in faith. SJ .6.5 (rltis irw;/lldu po~ 111111
we are fmdiiJg it )*ticularly hard 111 handling) ro: BrUits. do AM 1..1111pniy.
dtrs. P.O. B~x JJSQ. Clfialto, IU.
May we ask Your JCaderi, many 60611-0562 . (In Callll44. sellll
mwhom have been in our shoes, . $4.45.)

Mondoy Po per
T\le!!day Paper
Wedneodoy Paper
Thunday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M;-5P.M. - SAT.B-12

,r. .

Dear Aail LaDders: Not long
qo, my husband and I upcmaced

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2.156

i•of,.....,..,to

.
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION :

WE DO

HIULINI

.

,

Ofliau for tllis :rear's eYaJt IIC
Diet_ D 2
~ J1 Plul Muss«%. 'fJCC p
~ }J Jim Sllcets, aas.er; ..t Sally W"tllilms Lambert.
..... &amp;y.

Heartbroken parents
cry for help. Ann

N; .....

b 14·44b·073b

614-992·7698

1968 ..... iile .. o'i.t...... liMit
fllv:e,. So "'W I .1• wiD be awwdet ., r'-"l' ca or p _,. hiJdren of
•&lt; ' HiP So .. d .... • •llld
, ... · · - .we .,. being accept·
etllydlc.-.... :·p-iaee.

'

Auoclatlon, P. 0.

..

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

{'10• •

6:30 p.m. b7 Soaya's Country
K"•l • ---=far 1 -illg wiiJ. be
l"Otidc:d by Mite Manisoa and the .
s,~
- Sli6 a.d.
Fealan:s of tile lluquet will

'

lloS.illlllyCallsl

I

ne R~Qaea will be served at

j

614·992·7643 .

I

Rd '

-··.

....,..

~::::;::3:-':~::-~~n ~~::O:h:l:o:4~::H:::·~. ~======~~~

Tile 64111 R......, Alumni Raft.
q.et ... Dlace will be held May
29 • tile Radancl Civic Center.•

.

Meigs Alumni

FREE ESTIMATES

,.

I'IIdor. ............ . 2:00

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
Fl,lEE ESTIMATES

THE lOOK
lAIN
llhltlleport, Ohio .
111111.-Frl. IOsOO.SiOO
......., 10100.6100
Closatl SHiley

Dance on

Painting

eft:

........- .............
ALLY... - - ..........

- - · DI:MIUE: 1:011 ]1.111.
............. ' 3*1 ]I.IIL

411118311 mo.

Gutter Cleaning

___......

I l l - Rolli, ..., Clai. . .,
~ holdll-,fwN-

ltiYII'S UWI
111110. . .

Roo~ilal

•

..... - . -

'1 ......., y... hio: ... 1al.

1~10N37·1460
1.4twn Mowing,
Fertilizing, w..llng,
and Seeding.

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER

LMiai Dr,

1

. c..........

Gutters
Downspouts

...., irip? Or is every day living
the belt gift for her1 What about
Gill ·Oilier children? How do we
llqlllil diem for the-loa? Can we
aWJid My lrlpllhat may ICir them
forewr'l II dlere any way we can
for what lies lbead? We m
a-*en. Can you help us? -- .

GIJIIIpolla
. &amp; Vlcllilly

St, lt. 7 .

NEW-REPAIR

I

Larry E. Miller

Call 614-992· ·
6637

ROOFING

OPENING FOR LIONEL CARTWRIGHT ON MAY 1t 'Tile Players' (above) and lueal balld, 'ldlttyJ es,' {tldow) I ?•" g
Cllrll l.ollg, Joaatllan McCIMabaa, Markel Fer1i&amp;, D ;
laa!clltl« ud Tony Leach wiD be tbe apeal,. IICt tar u r
c-ty Dltlft, Go-Lionel Carl WI Jabt. The COIIDirJ ainu 2 I
lfP'
ed by
Mart Incorporated aDd Main Slftd .._..
n
t, will take place oa Saturday, May Z9 at tile M-. Ca ly
hirpot~ilds, beginning at 7:30 p.JII. A Umited nRiber ollidrets
are currently oo sale at all Fruth Pballillldes -.41 ......,. $1
adYuced ud $10 tbe uigbt or tbe sbow. Cllildrell _... follr se
adalllted tree or CbarJe. All proc:teds will go to hell Iii M&amp;t:i S!!ftt
. Polllt Pie •t Far •ore luf-atloa call, (304) 675-31144.
'
'

MARCH 16THthru MAY 31ST
Special femt termo with p8Vnwlt 4 tlmn 1 year ·
and NO INTEREST or 'FitfANCE CHARGE. '

WILIEI llLR
Plrh 1.. 5lnlct
•wen -Gala Saws

HowGnl L Wrltesel

'

•Low ash and aulfur
•Will not gel In wlnler time;· .
· 1993 SPRING LUBE SALE

-IICIII
IIOWII CUIIC

Stone Co.

Loal &amp; Found

difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane

(614) 742·2345

915·4111

•

" ... "" SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
. HARD FOR YOU.
•BP Dleael Supreme...Try It, there I• a

COMMERCIIL &amp; IESIDINTIIL

Quality

..•

6

New Wiring, lewlrl•g,
Troultl..Shootlng

flEE ESTIIWIS

-

~~---

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

ENRRPIISES

12-5-tfn

.

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

'

eOOZERS
"o8ACKHOE
•TRACK LOADI!R
•TRUCKING .

D. A. IOSION
EICIYAftll
(614) .
6t7,.6621

~I

UFE•nd'

ICCIDIIT IISUUICI
Ufe • Medlure • Clncer • Fire • HNith •
Accldenf •Annu~ty, IRA • Mqrtgege

Rocky I. H1P,, D~C.U. • Alent
... 119
•••i111r1, •1o 45760
(614) 14J·5264 '

Ullll 'Alii fAIAfi.NOI
IIITILUD"PIICU ...... IMAI&amp;It
tx7... 271.00
Va ...... . . .
16K7~4J0.00 ,

ALSO-; m OUI NEW

YltiYl SIAl II.
51.00 PEl FT.

Y-Won't

. . 2)

I

711n.'

pr

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

s .,. .......

�Page 8 The

~tlnel

44

Help Wanted

11

2bclrm. oplo., talol

LMnl To on.. HOwl
~A-1111)

ot:. ~ ·Gnw! A* 141 or

lo ~ For
.._ 1111. . . For Oilr Ell·

.........

-

ooii~1.EDH.

3-~Nioo

._,

~.=J!,~m!IIJ•~tmAf .JJ.' ~~
And

Our

BEAIITIFUL APAIITIIEHT11 AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Trolnliog

-~
-Aarii2T, 11183
·10 A. II., 2 Pll., I I P.ll.
-.. ' llull'klont, -

- ~-

1Kk1 :n Plkl

mea~ ~I 11t

Ul 21511.
to ohoo
EOH.'

- '*-·-

llnollov't ......l
1-14&amp;1134

.

UTATES. 131

. . -Itt-

PHILLIP
ALDER
-Fold ""-•

4214

-

XLT. . . _

ooM. IJ4. v.. oillo., N:, " ' -·
304-l'l'N*.

NORTH

·~~

+vas

Lawn ~ mc•lng and trtrft.,
mlna.. "'II' lnourwil, . - -

1371.'

t:':'

lnt-

a

PAINTINO
I Ulorlor, · m1rot ooClmotn, hlghoot quo!lty, 30,4-7'13-

!lr llo_p Lnm COlo, Com-

Liwn lllrvlce, Wo Do MAll,
II DIZI.
Trl-ltolo Tno lonrloo. Topping,
Trltnrnlna. Feoollrog, Ao-ol,
. _ -lltmowor. FIN Eo-

.Jwm

32 Mobile Homes
for ......

lvlnp. 1 ond 2 btd-

-:i'~~"i:

II 'lllloae

Col-

~

f2

. EOH.

MII'CIIIIncl118

.... NtOiol -

1117 Rlllmon RIVWYIB, 14110,
211dmo., 1 lltlh,~ living
wlh Cllll.........

Pold. t110111o.liiar-..

Merchand1se

Oalllp all

.

a

AdRIIIIIIbadoon.8cenlc OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINQ CO.
r~ca.,...,.... thll rou do buaJ..
....
~'·II:. ....
bod .... . .h pooplo , .. kllft ond
....,.NJlnlnll
.,_eo..
t.woualt ,...
IIWiiiiMr al ... LH.I. ~ of NOT to Nnd
C:..PI...-_Io _. - until you hove lnvwtTgoto&lt;~
,.,..., ....... the •III:CII of lho oflwlnG.
•
• ~·d Dlnalor of
$1,000 W~ IMomo Snock
~ CW'''e . . poM~::
Mini~

noconer

~~~
m..
In tho Lang
T-eo.. .....-•.,_... Abllllf

IIOuto For Polo Choap ,_
10047J.Vollll.

County , _ For Sole;
Po- lnotuln. Onll'l Phone:
to -lnlt IIIII • - o 11WJHII7 Aftor I P.M•
....... tot .... .... st.ll,
-

- -.... -- .... - .._ .._, Lol-.
·=

.._

~

I d&amp;OI ·mellen Early Anwlcan
LA ouKt. ~.:f"' lltd,

t100-.

I -olin
Po-. CoMpl• Training.
ForlniiiVIilf Col llr.
AI: Itt 441 DDIO Thwi . .W
10:00 A.ll. ..:oo .II.

ZltirF

·12:

s.•:

~

- . 14Jilll,111111
· 2 ~~
both,
dlelaa....,,
tum.o.,
...........
Will
.IMI.ID4M2DJL
.lnilt........ - · 304-7'13-

_,1
111
.. l - .
OtWp 't, lion ...., 10o12.
.

-..1114--

lulootMule-tor ounl paptr

----·...

TII.£JIII(lelll
lmn • ?~ Opa"'ag_anllable
, In loaal ........... ofllcL Can- - - - llldlla, tVDina

2k -

-.-,,_
IIIII Ill -loble 41

s.""*r ,_,_

Prior

, _ . . , . ond ..........
-11!101 t plua. I II!IIIMIIII,

.... Nap- Cillo.

1o, pr1oo

lloytag and drpr; ho,.
gOld, In oorwfCe, muot
to oppncloto, . - , , 114-

gol!oblo, •Ill ....::; iorlout lnquiriM ....,, 114-11112- -

~10.

1271'.

lluJl IzariiiDI. 1813 14170 fled.. tkW

All reallllale advertlalng In
this ' - " " " ' Is aub)ed to

lhe Federal Fair Hou~ng Ad
01 1968 wNdl makes 1 Illegal

adVerO&amp;e •lltf prelarenoa, ·
llmlatlon or dlscrtmlnatlon
based on oace, color, ""lglon,
10

sex lamlllalstatus or natkmal
ol1gln, or any lnteRion to

make 11"1 ouch preleoence,
lmlallon or dlscrimlnollon.'
This newspaper will not
knowingly aocopl
advertlseme~

' "

=
v:. ::b; \

r:=r1~a.:;,'=

=:.:..::o.

-

1171.1'M··=

~ W/tllal!l
-.:',
drj 1111, -

PEANUTS

~:

TIRED OF
I'\JS~IN6

"- I

iua

FRANK AND ERNEST

14" Ford ...,_

,., ...... , . _ , M-aood

condltl........ ~

CRSDIT

-

OM

Chlnz

Cablnlt-.

for real es1ate

law. Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellings
advertised In lhls newspaper
are aviNabkt on an 9QU81
opportunity basis.

~.

~=-.r~o~:d==

:::j

...,_, --roq-,no

DEPT.
.....

...

MONtY.

, .-

•·' •

"''•

..

Kina .... - - . ' , . . , . olci1210. - 0 E - o t o v e ,

=•:.;:,;

!Tti!/..10:~
•

FURNISHINGS:

OUTSIDE

~221omp-.

--y-thloi!OII-.
--..,oo.

Rd.,_,-

Celnplng
Equipment

CII tor "'""
1121 oak tor -

44

lnlormlllon on lltby crodoo built

m-.

11WIII-

~ hootlna
MOO, - · Brtcto
:JOoMJS.
- ·

Apartlftent

-·-~-otiouc­ 1"--0niAorw,Por.for Rent
~·t.
Work,
tlon · - 11110, coli 114-852· lloiiY
......
~
a.
11301 -onytlme..
1 Bedroom, 1 a.th EfflcMncy
4 roorne. ..... half t
..... Aptrtmeool,
-,.....,
· Stttln.g,
10
...,_ South
Qolllptllo,
18 wanted to Do
:ww OII'Pit. • a and. und.r ti1Wo,
o.pa.tt
a
Aat&amp;reuoe
1311,000. ·m - . -.. RequirH. 11t 111 •o, LMve
~-WFJI ..ID
Uuuge.
lllLlOP IECWIIOH ·,
1 Bedroom, Heir HoiMr
-...... ,... Conlornporr H"P"'.al. Eocnomloll 011 HMI,
OnI Ill
IIIII With ~~~-. 1111. Fumlolllll, 1241/110.
Do•r ond -~~ WOfto, I&gt;Y tho Pool
And
lome.
....... roto, f14-&amp;t~ln23 • II •Ill I • IIIII A - Dopoolt lltqulrO&lt;I.

-

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

1112.
Your own votci ,oonl ....., - . .
- - 110. otark birth .,..
- - Incl.- 200 ....

55

Building
SUpplies

• e.AFS -DRIVIt.le RULe
Ill : "-EVER L.ET 'THE
C6.R eEH IND 'TOLl ., ,

campers&amp;

-~~na IIJ'..,I14.ea.zta4.

MolorHomea

__

"9E;T TOO CL06E
"TT 'THE' ONE= IN
Fra::JNTOF=YOU . "

1111 Tlul ~~ ah ~ II A.:
Lllnd -.""'For P.o.., 114-1
1.1441.
I

doWII'=•rn,ao,_o_
,.....,.._ .....
1111 CWII,_ -

.. _

•

_ _ , , .... 1. 4

-·

""""'"'· I
...,oon181ried,:

1117 F11t1t ...,
Wloool
'"IDM1p1r·,

E .................
-=-"""'---- :
liZa """· lUll -

lltlh, .

cplfne...,.
'
56 PetatorsaJe
..
i'
:
:
:',.~~.:;;ht-:-::N"'Itolr.....
1111 ......... , . _ ....... AC,
- !......
.... SuppiJo
~ Pot. _,., . . . . . . . . .ion. 11,1111. ,.,,. .....,. I; tiN!; lilllt,- I
~
,...,

...

'0'411

Weblt. HI--·
Cclll4 Ul UIL

~

.....

114 ......... ..., •

,.IlL .,

~- ....... don It
!11110, Ill -

-"""...

-

lUFF

t

1•::

IOW7&amp;-*".

p.m., Sundey 1:00

54 · Mlacellineo.us
Merchandise
tabla. . 18 . oquoro whfto 411
Oldlna. Md olllor lumbor; ook
moulang, bltl'l tub, new vanity.
11". 31x72 plato mirror. I hp

-·~~---

180 Wott POl Chonnol IICS

Syotorn Stoo.o,

a

....... For Lat.

ra:-n
•· .,...,
.........
Old Waad•n ~ Ml;

.....

1111.-.

t.. Grw
I Plooo Uvlng ~- Sullo, One 111111111
Q9od Condition,18221; 1 to1o tweull III n ..... la&amp;f.
~ Con&lt;!Kion, 1121, 114-441- ..., _,... "' t l . ' l l - 2841.
•
One ........ 2t 112llibl
1Ft.
Couolo For
lll"b,~i!!
lldtaround,
Uahl
. . ~~Uolll40
Call 114··· 41ll, Or I
03'111. .
.
.....J - ! 1Jbll I I l l JD1ee.
h12 Tt-11, . l h ! , Aoot . . . . . . . . .lA
lllorogo -lulldlna. Aoilro : $i211 ...... Tow. ........... 1Call A'lorl , ..._.....,_ 1111.
.._ oreoillfYonl Polo
Bll..... lluol
C!'.~2}.00:.~u.:,:. T~AIII ~Cto4
.., ....,_, 1, 2, I,

--Col-.

Corda, $711U llo4o,l14441-ttlt.

'birthday gift Send lor Taurus· Aslro-Graph , foaveto deal w~h someone who is nuiTJ· ·
predictions lor lhe year ahead by mailing ·· bered amorig yo.ur less lavorile people
S1.25 plus a long. Bllil-addressed. stamped today. II you treal lhi6 developmonl negaenvelope 10 Astro-Graph, clo IIIia newspa- lively, it could creala complicalions.
per. P.O. Box 4465. New Vorl&lt;, NY 10163. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) II you
BERNICE
Be sure to stale YQUr zodiac sign.
are selling or-promoling somelhing imJl&lt;lr·
GEMINI
(May
21-:June
20)
If's
besl
no110
tanlloday,
you'd be wise 10 have some
BEDE OSOL pass hearsay inlormallon onto olhers today backup available
to help you close lila deal.
!hal isn 't subS!antiated by !acts. Loose
There's a possibilily you might blow it on
1
remarks could hurl someone's repulalion.
your own.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) You mighl
CAPIIICORN (0.:. 22-Jon. 11) If you don'l
becomalnvollled in an unproductive pan·
know what you wanlloday or hOw you
narship arrangamantloday . The reason it
intend lo gel il, ilorl'lexpecl olhers lo Iigurs
lacks vllaHiy &lt;:ould be !he lac! thai noolhor · things out lor you. You'll have to be bolh
party islorlhnghl wKh lila other.
eoll·reliant and melhodical.
LEO jJuly 23-Aug ..22) -You will resent If
AQUARIUS (J8n. 20-Feb. 11) Your hunch·
tO&lt;IaY it someone with Wt.om you're aSSOCi· es might be besed upon your ar11011ons
a1o&lt;11nas10 do your lhinklng lor you . ,
ralher lhan your logic today, so don't pul too
Convelll81y, others will lind it equally lrrilal- ,much stoc~ in your intuitive peoceptions. .
In tile year ahUd. oll1e111 will be auracted 10 ing il you lry lo lllink for lhem .
. PISCES (Foi".ZO.IIaoch 20) 11 would ~~e ··. ·
endoavorllli.t you peiiOnlly lnlliale.
VIRGO (Aug. ~ 22).UIUIIIy you are belt not 10 borroW anylltlng lrom 1 - al
~lo•-· you mua1 be oortremely caretul lo a ralller IIK;IIIei:t perton, but today . aK today, bUI if yoU hove !10 choice, pay .
be ..,. 11011 you recru~ can·mm solid
you mltll'l be._,
and yield to timpta-· bock lhe loan aa promplly u poailllo or
comrltiullona.
Ilona you -.ld norm ly resiot. Be ....WI. relolm llortpwed Items in tile same state you
TI!UIIUI (Apftt »&gt;ley 20) A normal
· UIRA (lepl. U:0oL 23) In onlor to lultlll
received lhom.
.
orriount of curii!Oity COuld sllmulole your
your axpectalionlloday, you mUll hive
Alllil (llarch 21·Aprt111) You're nollik•
montlfJJR cni u loday. Howevor, H'IOU
ccinlM ot purpoeo. llllllslictol ionl
' ly 1o be veoy plciduct!w todloy Hyou
~ cur1ou1 tor Invalid reaaons. you · operal!lliJ. you may otarllllingo you'll never approach .your objaclivM In a wishy-washy
migltl polo8 your
Into a~uatlonl wile,. !,llnilh.
. . . ·
. manner. Tako.a li'!ft .stance once you
. ldOesfl'l belOng. Tou1111,
youCHif to 1 8COI'IPIO (oct.
22) You m~ll
, Illume lljlOCific poeilion.

ASTRO·ORAPR

1211. metlll brlk1, .aiding mitre

FO... 110 Wilt POl Cho' lpoo,_, Coni1'ICI Dtoo Dual
Cooollll,
lrond ·~iiPNc &amp;·
quollz~ DIIKol Ito_~,
Turntlime, "1100, 114..JII.""'

column
7 TY'oPeep Ill

8 CitY In 110 '
II Wklelhol

--....

11 8uperlatlft

:

17 Tllanlto (Fr.)

18-ert

20 'ap1n111
.
21- .,_
22 Curtlln lllllrlc
24 Att.clluwMt
25 HorM 10011 •

27=
...

28 CollfUMd
olllclall

2t Unlll ol

31 Perform
33 111111c11 •ludr,
37 Club.
38 PIICid In
'
order
42 A continent
(lbllr.)

45 Dock
....-1--li---1---1 41Drep
..-1--+--f 47 linger
Tonne
.,...1---1 41 Now--

In most North American sports, you '-+-+-+-win prize money. But In lirldge tourna.
ments, you win nothing (except mas- hx-f--'-lf--f--'-lf-+k-?
'
·
terpoints). Professionals make money
411 Sllcirt ...., • .
when they are hired as partnen.
50 AclriM
In the rest of the world, cash prizes
Farrow
52 Ill depot
are commonplace, but tbe American
53 ....
Coatract Bridge League bas always 1....-1-+-..-1--+--1 55 IBM product
been against them. Now, though, the
ACBL Is dabbling Ill toe Into tbe water lwrt-+with a tournament at tbe Las Veps
Hilton May 4-8. For details, call (801) ~,_,.,__
332·5586, ext. 243.
Today's deal occurred at one of the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
most populaf money tournaments, in
"-"YCio!lo&lt;
...............
. . - - -.. - -........ . . -.
Each .... 1n thlcipher...,. for 8n0ther. roct.Y• eM: o....- c.
Juan-les-Pins on the Cote d'Azur. How
should the club suit be played?
DUCGK
KU
0
TVI
KOZDV
Tbe bidding is (liven as it occurred, ' I
though some of the · actions will not
AUCWIZVH.
8
KUZ'W
WYIZF
I
meet with uulversal approval.
Declarer ruffed tbe i!llCOnd rouud of
VJVA
YOJ ,V
HW .UMMVK
cjiam!lllds and cashed his three top IUCOK
trumps, getting the bad news. Now he
PVDOCHV .
I
QUJV
bad to play tbe club suit for oae loser. KOZDSZX,
Tbe normal play il to finesse the
ACPR
FVVOVA .
nine. If it loses to tbe queen or king, SW , '
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"Coronora
(they alwaya have the flnal word) know
you finesse the jack next. But as tbere
why
cocolne's
nickname
11
Killer.'
- Dr. Joseph Purach.
Is only one dummy entry, this line Is
impractical. The choices are to cash
.Jhe ace or to enter dummy and lead a
TIAT DAILY Qf'i'il '0 S\" .( - f) "C. ~Q.. e 'WOlD
low club to the jack. Both work if the
PUZZLII 0~ ~Q!J LVI&gt;
"b P&lt;r•., IAMI
suit Is z-z. Tbe former wins when West
ldltod by CLAY l. POLLAN-~---has a singleton queen or king; the !at·
Rearrange I1Ners . cf the
ter when West bas a singleton 10.
four scrambled word1 beHowever, (liven tbat East OJI!!ned the
, low to form four simple word1.
bidding, leading to the jack iln't so
unreasonable.
·.
1
I Y
· The •actual. declarer went into the
dummy and led a club to the ace. "This
Une; be wrbte, "Is still causing me
sleeple33 nights.•
•
•

0

/ c· o o

I
I
I
r .
Ir---------r...,

word such as

A. Scrabble players often ask me
this question about forming plurals.
The word AJAR, however, is not a
noun or a verb; in1tead, it Is prlmar·
lly·used as an adverb, BB in "The door
was left ajar, • and adverbs cannot add
a final S or otherwise be made plural.
More than one door may be left ajar,
but the proper expression in that case .
would be "doors ajar.• Any attempt to
add S to AJAR jars.

·S N U E E
5 ·1 1
1
. . . _

~

- ~t-"""'r'rT,......,.R....;I;...,.;.C-P.,....S.....,...-11

.1'

I I I 18 e Complele _ihe chuckle quooed

L......J.L-...I.L-...I.L-...1."--...1."--.J.

f9 PRINT
NUMBERECi
LETTERS IN SQUARES
0

Woman driver to passenger. "The brakes don't work
that's why I'm driving so fast:
I want to get you home before
we have an ··-····!" ·

by fdlmg 1n the m•ssing word1
you develop from step No. 3 below.

I _I

uNscRAMBLE LemRs
FOR ANSWER
•

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
, .,.
Canaor • Ninth • Veldt - Visual • SHORTEN IT
· People keep asking me how granny has lived to be
so old. Granny told rna that the way 10 prolong one's
lifals to do nothing .to SHORTEN IT!

-

0 1893 TV Dft TIC'hlo!opin L.P.

Ft WOT, IX

••

·.

..

,...

·APRIL 271
'l

to 6:00 p.m. 114-1112-21121.

ron. -

1 Notlhln
2 Number
3 Lilt oldullll
( Soulh DlkOII

IIIII

to Opp, ol NNW

-

-..-r. ,.,.._,
GMOIIne tlr com..,..._, 304-

.... ...........
a 4 l•iauz HOlM On 4 .....
P r r:r1r rem: d rll d Plrtty fur..
WMhZidll'ortJ. - . Utili,_ and .....-oolcl.
Ollllo
__
U
01 Tloe- I_
I I I I_• 8210. Roloow
Connell AI: Donne luc:a •• • llldtoont Unturnllhld: 2 ....
-.v
For- ~ ........... "" Fumlolllll, Coro . . Rd,
~
.
01 . _
No· Ptltl Rataenc•
A•• I wil.l14 241 ie22. ,
Nloo • - o1c1 oh...n bulcllna
(&amp;t..e IIIPIUUI .., I ll&amp;drMIII 2 IR • Myrtle
1 ,......., nma .rt' t, -h .,.. ontorthorolll.
ooeon. I
I - If •.11011 to 1ft
~- In Hllolo!M•Mio, 30K7Mm.
UOO/wooiL
Olilo, IM,IOI, 114-JIJ- or
'
114---1

r.r-'

2

I~

s=::!

· 8 Square

+4

!TUESDAY

I

'.

.;..;...-......,~,.::.;;,.:..:.,_,....._
Buy or oolf. Rlvorlno Antiq•o,
1121 E. lllln Stroot, on R1. t:!C
Houre: II.T.W. 10:00

-"1'·
a.m. to

Opening lead:

AJAR plural by adding S? I was just
wondering.
·

Antiques

53

Eut
1+
2.; ' Pau
Pass ' Pau

Q. Can you niake a

e-. w- .._.::=....,.1

Wanted

Pass

DOWN

..

Nortlo
Pass,

Jeft'rey McQuain
(
The abbreviation QY. stands for
"query." From now on, whenever you
come across the abbreviation QY., you
should have no need to question it.

COot

w10non

-,.

snuet'Jon

2t

llbbr.)
54 OrHk letttr
5I Fr..m~~tl
5I WWIItrot
57 Cut oH
58Wao
concerned
511 Traelluld

SCALS

........ t1111,114.ea , ••.

LMnaand
,_,
-·· 820;
.......
Nloo
- · honiO
oM• tor up
hlble
bww:lla,
ItO; ·ll2a
Subdllllolaft Within OoMpollo to
11xl0-nAII!ono
City School Dlotrlcl ClooO To
liocldi~'IWtn lltK Stt 181, Ful -prlngo
~...,.
CJoiiiiiOIIo I St :~~~~~~~ .t.r.ol '2187.
• "
' .-·· 114-11112- $Ill 110 ao.on t141 Pol; 4 only!
Drowor
144.111; Cor Bod'o,
114t41P1'7.
..... 2btlnn. trollora, ·Condor Bunlo Bod'o, Pootor - · Ful
Line 01 Sout-otom Voooo
~~-.
$2e0ilno~=
Storti~ AI 120.00; lnolono MtnJ
dopoolt, 110 polO, '
Sloopo I I SlzM Starting AI
oft•&amp;pm.
$&amp;.00. 2 Locotlono ·Beoldo ~..0
1Wo bedi'OMI, CIA Mat, Auction Or 4 llllloo Owl 14~
~. • - IIIII oloyor Opon I A.ll. To I P,M. lion .aot.
- - dop. onc1 m., no polo,
tell. dlocounl to oldorly, _,ntrr WindoW 30 - . 1 112 Story, I ... ,;lpr, 150"184",
w-.lloloe""""ITIOnOI'' .........._ Will!
1pr. 100"l!84"• ...,.tot bluo. lx.
........ 114 1431211.
F- ,...,. -Job ,_lion
·. 22.1•.•.. by:aldt
It; ..~tor.
KertiiiON,
-111r
From 1111
011 Rt: ...., pay - Roolnoonyou .... tone
nontrodKionol 710,
_
,
o1111141170
f14.211
1101
Allor
I
P.ll.
With
loomolcor
I ....,.,.,,
-~· (ONOW), ,.....,. Wtih ,....,.......
a ,_ ..,.,, • - oldrtlng, 304..-nl-2082.
- r o d ond ootup .... t 1 -

35.- - Won-

menurlng

OUR LANGUAGE

_..,.7107,

Woouaht loon Toblo W/4 Cholro;
Fon llocll Rocld!1g Choir HS;
Gordon Aroh Wioy'o $121.00

Dbl.
4+

51 SlxlhMneo

34 Fllh dleoiM

36 Elletrlcll

uo. Gl - · _,..,
110.IOWJS.'IIM.

S R - Firat Avonuo, Ga~
SWAIN
llpolla. OK St- Pootdng, No AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12. !Jght oouoh wtlh ohalr.IIO.
l'eto, DoDMlt I Rlhro,..o. Olivo St., QaiUpollo. Now 1 Uood Mouvo -.!'..N.t.o.!21 or ofo
$211111o. ,14-251-1521.
lumlture, ~tors, woot- &amp; ·tor tor oiL
Wootc booto. 6-3151.
l:lko now...,._ biU, ,20, 114tor Aonl- 2 or 3 lltdroom,
Roolno om, 114-IKIZ.eaa&amp;.
11112-31!- YI'RA FURNITURE
114-448~A Or 114-44.,_..28
Twa bid 00:11 houH. t250Jmo.,
'W DAY SAME AS CASH
privata -~~~~ In -oy, PlY OR AENT·2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
own utlhloo,l11 IB&amp;-42Y.

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

-..-.,

T,.t

1~5-----t,.r:y·v~
GOT AI..£. MY

•

$20; 114-'111

lrtok ttoma, 2 Cor 42

JI£.L. TO

RoeSia;

••ts•ndz.

Artpl. ., 1 112 lath,
Eleclilo Hoot Pwnp, CA, Largo
L.enl Lol, Loo- In A Nloo

J\J5T 5f:l'll&gt; T,.t

PK:K=:!:.rru~

on -2 Houohold -!_ling. 112 mi.
II• 101100. In Jemcloo Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WV,
oKr P o l - .,.., eoll-.m-!410.
SIDOO lor ·loll. 1114-tJS. a.oJzoo· _., lltd
-...,
wldrnera, he41dbolrd, 2 tulip
IampO I ml,_, 304-182-3431.
A. I: B. Fumnu,._ New, UNCI, • .,..
Rentals
tlqUOt. Hou- lumlohlngo.
lluon, wv. 304-773-1341.
A·~or, 2 Door, WhitT, t?S;
41 HOU181 tor Rent
Ro~otor, 2 Door, WhKo, $15;
Rolrlgorotor, F - Froo, Ccppertone, $110i Retrlpn~tor, HU'·
I350r1lo $1011 ~- 114-245- veat-Gold, FroJa FNT, Ub New,
11114.
1211; wtolnpool Wllhor
G.E. Wooi!Or NO; Will~
2 or 3bdnn. horne In Autlond, Dry• 111; G.E. Dryer SIS; 30
Inch Eloelrlo
Color
polo, 114--1 oftll 5pm or T.V. $85j 8keGol
lances, 71
anytlllu on
Ylne lllne~ l'folll lo, 114-+167318, Or 1~1 4111.
.. -~2-... Tlolnl.t.
niO.iio.
•
K. eo11 Refrigerator, Color T.V., Washer,
Only. 114-446-241 ' 114-441~g:~· Mlcrowovo, VCR, 814-258·
3141.
.

31

ALREADV?

'""""'

a ,.., --'Y. 1n- j:tL• ~,•~-~
=--~~"."!: Ytllo¥ Oak FumKure1 Qoor~

which Is In vlolallon of lhe

10 -

orl14 1421211.

Co4-

:YI.A.r.'IM~ 1n~on~o~uan

, _ wlh

31 Homes for S&amp;le

=-

-

l'llnlroundt.
~-·...
~

~o~~-.

Wetl

PUnllhrnllll

(7 Underground ·
excav111on
50 Valuable fur

Cash

7:10.
With

lelia. Conoblnool

. - - - _ . , hlolory

to P.O. loll 1071, llarlotta, Ohio
411110. ECE. .
Tloe Cllel'o Oolloy_ And Cllppor
.._. lAof- From Hollcloy
Inn, Ollllpollo) lo Hiring
For Wolt- a.nondors &amp;
Une CoMo, Aftot 3:00 'P.II, lion

..... Fri., ,.... 13 ....... '7 . - . ; 10 -

114-lla-

Soalb

311J..,_..
money
40 Follow•
( 1 l!thloplon
title .
(3 Wlllte
« Clerical dog •
. (5 01

BY- PbllUp Alder

For Bolo: Puoh Lawn 110111!J..4
...... loll ._... - . - .
1114-441-1240.
'
. . .
lloblle ~ tor

TIME'S
A-WASTIN' I!

c/k
.d(_

Build,..,-

.

SETTIN' THAR BEHAVIN'
YORESELF·WHILE THAR'S
A BIG CARD GAME
601N' ON IN LUKEY'5
BARN

2 B R - '-tor oolo. 30477MUI.

35 LOti &amp; Acreage

Ell·

g:to=.,R:..~,::u:~

'

30 Uproot
32 Arrow polton

Antworto _ _ _

lnttrurittnl

on •the table

!311!!!;!1~41~4~ooili~tor~ll~lka.~--- 1 CfMk Rd, 114 441 t31D.

10:00 A.ll.

Alwtl 30 -

P... . - .
AIUII

ii

·-

For-'----.=. .
-

~- A:.":""''"""·

rwM• ~II to: leenlc . . . NU,..

eun...., _.,.
In,... -

.

I'M REAL
PROUD
OF. YOU,
SNUFFY!!

tor ... _

.... _
Oaunly'
lloooloo4 Alii I !kilL Hilt An-

Flmo l'la 1--. Ill hlno, 1
llonth Did, $110, 114-44641111.

:f"'.c:•..::; ~.:..=

ALI8UN I W0U=F TAliHiNa
hlat - Ad.
IEDI
.
·
0111111ooolo
ATTN:
mlnlotlllor. , _ ,...._
eomm.olol- Hoono Unlta,
Old ,Eotollloi&gt;NI Ao
lot. llontloly
"""-""
low M fti.OO.
Coli -~'REE
Asplll .......
Galtll NEW Color Cltalag, 1-412
And-~- .. nw.
121.000 To ta."DDO Flrill .,..,

=:.-·-good, uo.
2521.

Goo&lt;!•

- , $10,100, IIWINI31.

:"
J:l,an; ~llllhen
~. ~
.......
.......

Collootlon,
$all •• 2222.

End talllo, tto; 1110p10

Houaehold

loll; winy! ,.,.rjilooolng, loll

INOTICEI

Alo-

.

alolhlooa. Ill 111111).... Pool
Ollloo. "Frl - -..... Ill 1:00
Pll. 30W7HIII.

toblo, lko ,.., 110; 114-1112-

~· · 14.1ou.ft. 5I
-.2oo1N-..............

AI:

;

Oollo llltlom
Olhora
121 To NO Eto!!; Ehrlo, Poo11oo

CaiJrMn . - ~ Ca11men
211:1 ton - . . AIC, 111 raft@,

~+IR ! 1IoM

-.

46 Space tor Rent

__

flllJilCIJI

.,=j :.:W~a....,..."::

eonw.rvw ......... ....

114-IUIIIIton-....
Couoh I Clo*, 114-117-7'1111.

.

r=--. .,.

largo ....
.4 .~--

AiooiNIIor
- ·p.m.,
AJI-.upo.
Col
.... 2:00

-.-wv.

=. . -

IIOM7f-1171.

wfth _,"11-

-..ns.

•.

BARNEY

lloh'a' . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

..........1

2ew-·• -

Vulnerable' Neither
Dealer: North

54 MIIC8IIaneoua

9:::

15 Southtut
A..... hollda,
18 Glrl'l n1mo
17 Encounter
18 Chief .....,
20 Ftrotllllftdl
whirlwind
21 Altlched to
23 hlore (prof,)
24 Ollrtlll

derful Ule

+AJ32

- . . 1 IR opt.l14 411 0110.
1112.17 ... . , _ , . ...
monilia frla 1a1 l'lftll, , _ ,.-x7D, One W oorn apartment, 8IM1na
-eolll ~~ A - p_...,, t17flmo~
ond otopo,
t100 dopooK, n0 polo, 1-J.
30U olt•lpa .
.
1177 - . 2 . . . •• WhloDOitna Pinal ''" Filrm. 45
FurniShed
to4-I'IWD2or~l.
.
Rooms
1110 · I'll.....,., 14d4. 2 IR,
~~ HIOO. -.m.

llooplna -

fAKJU
.KQ4

. .... 10

1111• ,,_ a:.n~ w•r

Et.......,...,.

EAST

SOUTH
.AKQ 5 42

Trok Lo4 WKh 1om Pond, 7

Dec••- ... .
--,

.71
•Jn

.QS42
fQI074
+lo

·Furoololllll Elllolo!noy, 7 11:1 Hoi
A...
Oollpollt.
.,~
Utllid. Paid. 114 118 ttll Allr
1 P.M.

--Now

.1187 8$ .

10 83

Wanted to Do
.

44'1-IS

.KIJ83

' 1-.a31USATnock

18

~~~:-~~~
12 , _ (Sp,)
13 011 Grtlk
trclllttctura
llyte

Forll~lnfonnotlon

1.

1. In lavor of·
(loard

14 Kind Of CUI'YI

"'"'...

~::::::;=w:o:n:e:b:u:n:c:h:o:f:s:t:'ufTf':o:n:a:::g:am:::e:s:h:o:w:I"===IG.-

12

Y•t111.

f'{O'&gt;£,

.EEKAND

"Looks to me like ~heir decorator

tlvu

11\ o ~l' "..v

ATY tor I!Orlo· UO. Tl,.., rlrM
larATV. 81. ...,_,. dMp Wtll
pump. t100. 30W7WI!IIS.

ACROU .

.

EOE "'-"IIW

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

"too'V6 et.ilf

8oo1 rolla. 'hooDhol typo, lito
ntlghllortrn d.
Dlpod
l
Ntireftcal r&amp;Citlred. 30U75- guMn, full 01 twin bed~, ""'

OW '1111 IIIIINAII To

....,

'-'"*'

In town. .l,poloMionl? avalllble

TIIUCit

'

MII'CIIIIncllae

-.no. op-

fUrniMed,

plbn&amp; 1

ALLEYOOP

54 Jolailaneoul

Apartment
torRent

---.-··-

....,.,_I

~

Tuesday, April 27 1993

Ohio

111 Farm Equipment ·

;m.

~::;::

- . 111'7
111101' Nildbst NltJ;

,.,.

)

141. . . . . . . . ..

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1 ......

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ollonli .......

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lot Ot

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d '"" 'fir*, ..
Troctor,

14 . Electrical I
. RelrlgerMion

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.

M-Ho·
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. tl

•

.

,

�'
Page

\

•

'

10--The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Ohio

1\IHday, Aprll27, 1993'

'

w~~!! itt. f!l?!_;~!!...ot!:::!._.~·
Socill Setw lt7,
pr Ia Adieu

soc1a.l maurance system that
!l'"bodies elem~ts of 8FO.DP term
!nsurance, .pc~s'o!' polici~s. an.d
mcome. rcdislnbuuon. Unlike pn ·
~ate retlrc.1I)C_IIt plans, socill ob.JCIC·
lives arc an mtqpal part of Social
Security. !'~ ~y bin~ at one
of those ObJCIC~ves: ~sunng that
Wolters and tJx:ir f~ ~ cov. .
ered not only m theu reurement
years but also in the case of disabil1ty or.death. In addition, !1Je S~ial
Scc:.unty benefit formula ~ weighted o:' favor of workers with lo~
eanungs w'!O have: less' ~ty
to save d~g theU: workin¥ years.
They I'CCel.ve a Social Scc:unty ben.efit that repre~~ts a g~e~ter per.centage of .the!r average_earnmgs
than do their higher-salaried coun-

•re.

WINNERS · ,Winners In ihe recent egg bunt
sponsored by tbe Radlle American Lelion Post
602 are, in no particular order: ages to four
years, Douglas Chapman, Jordan Pickens,

"What s m It for me?" That's a
commonly asked_ ques11011.-:- and
human nature being wbllu .u, an
understandable one. I hear 1t alot
when .it comes to Social Security,
especially from younger ~kers.
Nonnally I respond by te!'ing ~
abdut the benefits of Social Secun·
ty :- but !don't just talk abOut
reurement. Instead, I stress t~e
often .overlooked benefits Soc1al
SecC:!t·J!lOyjdes younger people
llity ~· payments to
~ ~ IIJ&lt;! c:'Jildren of liiiii!IIOIIC
lt1th ~ dLSabdtty, and surv1vors .
benefus for th,e me!"bers of a
deceased~ ~family.
.
But tocjay I d liJtc to poae a dj!·
f~t questlol,!. Instead of :'Wh&amp;f s
~ 11 ~ J!IC~· how about if I ask:
What s m tt for al! of us?" The
answer to that quesuon sues ~II
beyond th~ bo~nds of as~ssmg
each !'Mencan. s personal mvestment m the Socia! Security syste!"·
WheJ! you consider tbat ~oc1al
SAmectJI'!ty ~~~~of
encans om die briakofpov?"·
!Y to a safe .p~~u of financ1al
1ndependen~ 1 11 s easy to understand why Ills often regarded as
one of the most succeasful of all
government J1108111111S.

Cbelsie J). Rirne; ages tour to six, Mirlnda
Davis, Christina Johutoa, Ryan Hupp; ages
sevea a.nd up, Aatboay Cottman, Cherlssa ·
, . Barnes, Rachael Morris.

Ladies meet for golf
Eleven ladies attended the fust
outing of the Tuesday Morning .
Ladies Golf League at the Meigs
County Golf Course.
Nor man Custer was named
handicap chainnun.
·
- The group contributed $200 to
the club for the new score board.
Winners for the day were
Norma Custer, low gross and low
putts; and Clarice Krauuer, low
net.
.
All ladies interested in participating in t!le group arc invited to
auend every Tuesday morning 11 9
a.m.

Bowling night observed
A family bowling night was
observed recently by members of
Hillside Baptist Church at Mason
Bowling Lanes. '
·
Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
James R. Acree Sr.. Kristin Acree,
.Mr. and Mrs. Joe Humphrey. Kundis und Joe Jr., Mr. und Mrs. Dan
Hood, Heather und David, Ryun
Nolan, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clonch
and Ryan and Valorie, Megan
Venoy, Robbie Murphy, Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean and Sarah and
James , Mr. and Mrs. Ron Justus
and Colt and Kyle, Mr. and Mrs.
Terri Wolfe and ChristOpher, Rev.
and Mrs. Mike Willett aqd Angie,
Teresa Reynolds, Vonda ~ynolds,
Linda Jones and Cory Spaun.

Birth announced .·
Timothy and Tracy Brinager,
Racine; announce the birth of their
son. Braiton Autry, on March 17 at
Holzer Medical Center.
:
He weighed seven pounds and
14 ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Daniel und Pam Riffle, Racine.
Patemal grandparents are Cecil
and Ruby Brinager, Racine.
Other children arc Corey, age
three; and Scort Brinager, age 12.

Winner .announced
Rol)ert Jones was the winner of
!he Middleton DoU from the Meigs
Vocal Music Department. Jones'
granddaughter, Amy, is a member
of the eighth grade chorus. The
winner was selected by Jessie
Blackford.
Mrs. Davis expresses her appre·
-- ... · ciation 10 everyone whO supported
the efforts of the program.
Money raised from this promo·
tion will be used to fund the
group's 1rip to Wyandot Lake in
May
T1_g~s~~~~aMviuss_i1..c~·oedir!!!,eo:t:the

Me

v

.,....

W"

TUESDAY
RACINE ·· The third weelc of
revival is in progress at Mt. Moriah
Church of God on Mile Hill Road
in Racine with Ron Blevins, evangelist. Services are 7 p.m. nightly
with special singing. Pastor James
Satterfield invites the public.
. CHESHIRE · The Gallia-Me~
Community Action Agency wtll
bold a free Clothing day Tuesday
from 9 am. to nilon at the old high
sch9ol buildiJig in Cheshire.
:
·· RACINE • The Racine Area
Commuliity Orgunization will meet
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. New.members are welcome.
RACINE - The Middleport
Pomeroy Branch of the. AAUVI
will ,nee~ Tuesday at 7 p.m: at the
ltaciile United Methodist Chun:h.
·. , Qullied ~all banging winner will
. be announced. .
·
·
·

•

Some ~onld argue that they
real!ze a greater rel!lfll on
!'JCir taxes.if they Wf:tC permitted to
mv_esa their own reurement funds.
It IS reasonable to assume that
some individuals mighf: in~t ~ir
ll!one_y_ profitably, av01d cnppling
disability !lr ~y death, .and generlilly remam unmuae to ill .fortune.
These JJO!!Pie would ·eventually be
able to retire financlal.IY secure. But
how doei one detetmine before~
fact w.ho !b_ose fortunate few will
be? Disability and death arc eql!ai
co~ld

men and women of an ages. In ract;.
statistics show that about 42% o( ·
an men,and 30% ·of women enter-:
ing the wllltforce today will die or;
become disabled before reaching
retirement age
'
One of the ~vantages ofl'CCjuir-·.
ing all workers to invest m a·
national pension program liko~
Social SCcurity is that the fmanciaj '
risks associated with Hfe's misfor- .
tunes are spread throughout tho•
population. In addition, a broad•'
·based social insurance systenf
reduces the impact that inflation ·
and other economic setbacks can ··
have on individu8t contributors. ,.;
Rather than considerins privalc,
i'nvestments as an alternative to.:
·social Security, they should be
regalded as supplements to the pro: .
gram ..:.:.. especially since Sociat:
Security was never mtendcd to be a·
retiree's only source of income. ·,; ·
so _ what's in it for an of us? •
Considering what Social Security
means to individuals in terms of:
retirement, disability, survivors,
and family benefits and what it
means to the countrv in terms of a
better standard of Uvin for man '.
of its citizens, Social ~ecurity
one of the moist impOrtant and fat, ;
reaching investments Americans_
und Ametica _can make.
1.!

"Hands of Heali1Jg" is the theme
for the 1993 Soilllld Water Stew·
ardship Week celebration taking
place this week.
Emphasizing that the greatest
influence on the environment
comes from individuals doing ordinary. thoughtful tasks in their
neighlxl'hoods, the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District is
encouraging individuals and local
groups to join the nationwide
observance of Soil and Water
Stewardship Week.
The conservalioo district, which
works throughout the year on Soil .
!Did water conservation measures,
in providing placemats to local
restaurants and bookmarkers to
fifth grade SIUdents throughout the
county encouragins individual
responsibility and care for natural ·
resources. The local district is only
one of nearly 3,000 conservation
distticts nationwide that works with
the National Association of Conservation Districts to encourage the
wise use of natural resources
through the annual week-long

ATTEND CAMP GALUA ·Students from Carleton Scbool
and Mei~s llldostries visited Camp Gallia In Gallipolis recendy.
They CDJOYed watching tbe Civil War Reenactors and tbey also
toured The Freacb Art Coloay.

Dr. Christopher speaker ·
.for program at hospital

that you may JIOW iun less water to
brush·your teeth is just as important
to tbe environment as a builder
installin' sediment control basins
in a maJOr urban development.
Both require individual action. both
make a difference.

MIDDLEPORT • Middleoort
RITILAND - The Rutland Gar~en Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 Literary Club will meet Wednesday
p.m. at the home of Neva Nichol· at 2 P·'"· at the Meigs County Public Library. Mrs. Richard .Owen
son, New Lims·Road, Rutland;
will review "A Vision of Light" br.
Judith Mcrlde Riley. For roll cal ,
WEDNESDAY ·
POMEROY • The Meigs Soil tell of a "womiUI of vision.•
and Watcr Conservation District
board of supervisors will meei
MINERSVILLE • Tbe WifdWedriesday at 8 p.m. at the Meigs wood Garden Club. will meet
. SWCD Office.
. Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
., honle of Kathryn Miller: •·
·
POMEROY • The Meip CounTHURSDAY
ty dry fire hydrant comm1ttee will
.RITILAND . A free community
m~t at the Meigs Soil and Water .
Con servation District Office on immunization clinic will be held
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. AJI mem· · Thursday 'Bt the Rutland Fire
hers urged to aatnd.
Department from 9. 11 a.m : fQr
ages two months throu~h kinder- .
. LONG BO'ITQM- Bruce Stone garten age. Parents .must bring .
will be in concert ~ednesday at 7 · child'simmunizalionrccord . .•

,T

(Wtlh Uft.Ofl TI'IIY)
lEG. i:l37.00

1

•17'P5

SSJP •296

95

•30• MIIN CAFE UILE
&amp; 2 CAFE CIAI.S
REO. Pia.OO
Allltama Sub~
To Prior Bale
FREE DEUVERY
EASY CREDIT
TERMS
OPEN DAILY

FRI:A~ N

. OBSUVING OWL - Two Meigs County .
boys who touad and aursed an iajured &amp;real
horned owl are tliralng the encouat'r lato a
learalng experience by making aa extra-credit
report on great lloraed owls tor their ·school.

co•l
Of au &amp; OUVI
U1UNIJI446-3045

sALI'26471

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E-ncounter with owl becomes
positive learning . experienc~,,..-

. · _, ·. y ,PM FREEMAN
' The •yout~gsters, U.ing a stick
. Seatlnel News Staff
an~ part of the t~rkey· blln~.
An' encounter with a wounded rell'leved '!'C dazed bird,llld toOk It
Jreat homed owl resulted in a to Robert s horne where they put
· happy eading and a lclntin&amp; txpe· into a cage.
.
·.
riencc for two Meigs County boys.
. Ro!Jert' s mother, Terennta Hai·
Fifteen-year-old Bruce Hawley n~ 58!d they con~ un area vetand his companion, 13-year-old ennanan who advised them OJ! !'ow
Roben Harris, both of Long BOt· to ~are for the owl. In addiuon,
. tom, were in thew~ Monday Me_1gs County Game P!otector
afternoon to set up a llirtey blind K;ellh \YOOd wa.s ex~mmed the
when they found the owl.
bini, whicb by this point had been
Tuesday afterlloon, the boys named"~ ~Y the ~ys.
showed' me the owl as they
Mrs. J:larris said the bini see!'flcd
described their initial encounter !"ore actlve. when Wood eXIIr!l~
with the injured bird of prey. TltC 11; 11romptmg :.Vood's advumg
owl, about the size of a basketball. them to try sewng the C?Wl free at
sat quiedy in the cage, alert but dusk Tuesday· If the bud proved
with eyes closed, its razor-sharp, unable to fly, WOO&lt;! was to come
inch-long talons wrapped tight get the owl und take tt II? Co!umbus
&amp;round the wire of the cage.
for treabDent, _Mrs. ~ Slid.
. A dog frightened the owl which
Mrs. Harris. expl~~~ tl!e two
flew away und 8lll8Cked into a tree, boys used the b!rd as ~lion fo/
Robert said. The bird tried 10 fly an extra-~re~ll project at the1r
but was unable, the boy said.
school.

.

. O:cfsnian radio also said five
civilians ·were killed as Serb
artillery pounded the nearby .Bn:ko
region.
It reported no new Serb
advances today in the Bihac region,
a pocket of Muslim villages, but
said 21 Bosnian· troops were
wounded in shelling of Bihac and

Here Bruce Hawley,15, and Robert Harris, 13, ·
botl. ot Long Bottom, examine the bird tlley
named "Hooter." .The owl was successfully
retvaed to tbe wild Tuesday evenln&amp;. (Sentinel
photo by Jim Freeman)
-

- After boys find wounded bird. ..

.

ICuehton not plotured)

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SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - As heavy shelling
rocked several Muslim towns in
northern Bosnia today, British
communder with U.N. peacekeepers said jittery rebel Serbs have .
threatened to fire on his troops if
NATO bombs their posiiions.
The Serbian warning comes a
day·after tougher allied sanctions
were slapped on Yugoslavia for
supporting Bosnia Serbs in tbeir
year-loag ~g against Muslims
. and Croats m Bosnia-Herzegovina.
I The sbdling by rebel Serbs was
reported today fer a second day in
the key Muslim stronghold of
. Gradacac, a ~eged town in the
•. mountains of far-northeastern

I •

CONSIDER A BEAUTIFUL, m PUCIICAL GIFI
Quality Patio Furni~re Halcron·Meadowcraft &amp; Telescope

SAU •24000

Rebel se·r bs threaten
to ·target··peaceke.epers

....•

,...

Low IOnlght In 40s. Clear.
Thursday, sunny, hlgb In 70s.

3 s.ctlona. 26 P~ 25 cents
A Multi meet. Inc. Nnapaper

Pomeroy.-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 28, 1993

...•

48

AEG.$320.00

Vol. a, NO. 254

·uultlnlellalnc.

Following are tei1 ways you cal\!
act to conserve natural resourtes! •
plant a tree, recycle, conservt.
water, save soil, compost, use led':
energy. apply pesticilles carefully,:
reduce consumption, reuse an~·
repair, and get involved.
•:

Recliners, Sofas, Hlde·A·Ieds
Slmmou leautyrest Mattresses

(CU.hlon not plotund)

Inside today

,..

~

•LOVESEAT GLIDER

Buckeye 5:
5-9-19·20·21-33

"••
,.

•

'

7666

'

.•

REEDSVILLE · Eastern Local p.m. at Faith Full Gospel Church,
Board of Education, special meet- Long Bottom. Pastor Steve Reed
ing, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. ai the high invites the public.
school to discuss personnel matPOMEROY - Belles und Beaus
ters.
Western Square Dance Club will
RACINE • Special meeting, sponsor an open dance Wednesday
Racine Lodge No . 461 F&amp;AM, , from 8-11 p.m. at Royal Oat
Tuesday. 7:30p.m. Annual inspec- Res~rt . ·. Gary Sh~emalcer,
lion. Work in the entered appren- Sev1ervtlle, Tenn .. wlll be the
lice degree. Refreshments.
caller.

Pick 3:
319
Pick 4:

.-

Mark Christopher, M.D., Gastroenterologist on the·medical staff
of the Holzer Medical Center and
member of the Holzer· Clinic; will
be the featured spealcer . the
••
monthly. meeting of the Ohio'Valley Ostomy Association on
•,.
Wednesda_y evening, April 28 at
observance.
7:30p.m. 10 the French Five Hun~
The Meigs Soilllld waw Condred Room at the Hospital. . .. .
....
servation
District
hopes
Steward·
As Dr. Christopher point$ out,
ship Week will Challenge individu'"lnfhimmatory Bowel Disease
als to begin, er continue, individual
(IBD) is a group of chronic disor"••
Soil and Water Stewardship
·
conservation actions that heal the
ders that cause inflammation or
•
April 25 .- May ~ . 1993
area in which they live. The fact
'&lt;-·
ulceration in the smail and large
. .,.
intestines. Most often IBD is classipx~~~~~~~~~~~~~"
fied as Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, but i't may also be
WHERE IUND·IAME MERCHANDISE
referred to as proctitis , ileitis,
enteritis or colitis."
·
IS FOUND .AI AN AFFORDABLE PiiCE
According to the National InstiMARK CHRISTOPHER, M.D.
tute of Health, ulcerative colitis
causes ulceration and inflammation
of the inner lining of the colon and
Dr. Christopher, a flative of
rectum, while Crohn's disease is an ~dras. India, came to the Holzer
inflammation that extends into the Medical Center and Holzer Clinic
WHIRl CUSTOMII SATISFACtiON IS
deeper layer of the intestines and· in 1984. He completed his residenOUR IIAIN COICIRN.
can affect any part of the GI tract cy in internal medicine and a fel- .
from the mouth to the rectum.
lowship in Gastroenterology 111 SL
These two diseases have similar Mary's Hospital, an affiliate of the
symptoms that often refiemble University of Rochester in
PATIO FURNITURE:
another condition, Irritable Bowel Rochester, New Ym. He is board
•2 Seat Gliders
Syndrome (IBS). IBS is a common certified in both internal medicine
disonler of the intestines that leads and gastroenterology, with exten•3 Seat Gliders ·
to crampy pain, gassiness, bloating sive experience in all endoscopic
•Plant Stands
and changes in bowel habits. IBS procedures and performs .over
does not cause inflammation and 1,000 a year.
.Umbrellas
when the bowel is checked, it often
This meeting is open not only to
•Bar Table w/cultured marble
appears normal. The cause is ostomates in the Tri-County area,
top &amp; 4 bar stools
unknown but is thoughtlo bc5' relat- but interested pubtic· and health
ed to emotional stress.
care professionals. For further
•Strap Patio Fumlture
In respon~ to many in9uiries information, call Phyllis Brown •.
•ARIELLE 6 pc. Dining Patio
.Cushion Patio Furniture
. about these diseases, the Oh10 Val- . R.N., B.S.N., C.E.T.N., at 446Group
lncluclea
42"
round
gJua
top
table
Md
4
ley Ostomy Assoeiltion invites the 5080. Ms. Brown urges an~one
•Aasorl8d Colora
general public to theApri128 meet- interested to attend the !l:f,'l 28
arm dining chairs In auorted colors. ,
•Patio Acceuorlea
ing, when Dr. Christopher will give meeting, und she also has
'tionReg. $650.00
SALE
,-an update 9R.\1le diagnbsis, causes, at pamphlets and information avail·
complications und new avenues llf able upon request on the topic of,
WIIH ¥OTHER'S DAY JUR AROUND THE COINER, WHY NOI
lrestment for these diseases.
inflammalO!'Y bowel disease.

a't

-.

J·

Soil and Water Stewardship Week observed

Community Calendar
Community Caleadar Items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure pubUcatlon In tbe calendar.

letpiKt8.

Car
care
edition

Ohio Lottery

surrounding nonhem IOWIIS;

The Bihac regi'on, between
SeriKontrolled territory in Croatia
and Bosnia, is borne. to about
270,000 residents and refugees,
most fi them Muslim.
. aillac; s capture would give
B'osnian Serbs .control over
Bosnia's entire northwestern region
und bring them close to their goal

The lloys took pic1~s of 'the
owl und leamed sevaal fac:ts about
~real horned owls in Ohio. For
mstance, great homed owls are
found in Ohio but arc relatively
rare in this area. They subsist mainly on meat, primarily in the fmn of
mice which they catch with their
lalons und eat with their powerful,
hooked beak.
·
They learned the owl was an
adult bird with estimated age of
two years.
WASHINGTON . (AP) Mrs. Harris said the boys were Female pilots could be flying Navy
successful in setting the owl free · and Air Force warplanes within
Tuesday evening. The bird was·ser months and Army combat.heli free at dark because owls typically c;pptcrs Within a ye. under a new
sleep during the day and hunt at diiectivc set to be signed Thunday
nighL
by Defense Secretary Les Aspin,
The owl flew away then Pentagon officials say.
~ for a moment, Mrs. Harris
The directive also will tell the
said. Then it took off again.
Anmy, Navy, Air Fon:e and Marine
It was liJtc it was trying to say Corps to provide justification if
'"thanlt you," she ssid.
they wunt to. put any battlefield
. role, including ground combat
units, off linits to women.
'"It's big, it's a very big move
for Aspin to be making," said one
senior official, who like the others
spoke Tuesday night only on condition of unonymity.
· The action means Air Force and
Navy women could be in fighter
for 30 percent und insurance corn· cockpits within months, but female
panic$ paid for 8 percenL Other pilots in the Army will have to
Ulldergo special training before flyprograms accounted for 2 percent.
ing
front-line Apache attack beli- .
An offiCial with the Department
C9PICI'S,
officials said
of Health and Humun ServiCes said
Because
the Marines have no
the study's findings on Medicare
wOiilell
in
training
in lillY aviation
and Medicaid SDending show that
the situation is -r,ilot the crisis that unit, chanses will take longer .in
that service.
(Pollack) suggests. ••

bombing threat two days ago at a
meeting behind Bosnian Serb lines.
" If one NATO bomb drops on
!lis country. he said he will launch
an attack immediately," Watters
tola Britain's GMTV. ''The Serb
commander is in charge of artillery
no more than 10 miles from where
I-'m standing, we are well· within
range."
'
Countries who have conttibuted
troops to the Bosnian U.N.. opera·
lion have expressed concerns that_
their troops will be targeted in
retaliation fer outside intervention.
Bosnian Serbs seem to be COIDII·
ing on those fears. On Tuesday,
!heir COJllmunder said be was certain there would be no foreign military intervention to stop Serb:
advances in Bosnia-Herzegovina. :
"I ani an optimist," Gen. Ratko
Mladic told a call-in show on
Bosnian Serb television. "We can
sleep tighL But we should prepare
ourselves just in case. There is not
going to be military intervention
against us."
·
· Later he seemed to hedge his
bravado, saying his forces had no
shortage of manpower ·'but in case
of foreign military intervention ·
even women will be mobilized."
NATO's top military officers
ope~ed talks today in Brussels,
Belgium, with their former Warsaw
Pact adversaries in a meeting likely
to be overshadowed by the crisis in
Bosnia

Aspin said ready to order
air comb.at role for woinen

Most U. S.families ~aringfor
disabled get no professional help
WASHINGTON (AP) - Near- depressed.
"Amidst tears and hardships.
ly two-thirds of disabled Ameriweary
families arc facing this cnsis
cans who need help at home with
said Ron Pollack, execualone,"
the basic activities such as bathing,
tive
director
of Families USA.
eating und dressing must rely solePollack
releasCd
the report as
ly on friends or relatives, an advoPresident
Clinton's
health-reform
cacy group for the elderly said
task force wrestles with bow to
today.
expand
long-term care benefits for.
Families USA said government
elderly
und
dissbled Amencans.
programs ale failing to reach many
Families USA is pushing for a
low-income, disabled Americuns,
while private insurance policies national home -care benefit. A
don't l!eilerally pay to send nurse's Whire Hoose offiCial, speajdng on
aides mto the homes of patients condition of unony111itY, ssid Tues·
who need help with walking , day that the !)resident's plan likely
~g a meal or using would proVide some long-term care
benefits.
Medicare .and ~edicaid, the
The burden of cimn11 for millions of disabled. Amencans ·falls government's health IJISuruncc J110o
entirely to tbeir friends or relalives, j!ra'"s for the elderly and lowmany of them elderly women in mcome, arc already paying for 60
poor health, Families USA said in a pen:ent of the $23 billion spent on
report. The emotional and financial home-health care costs in 1992,
toll leave• many stressed and Families USA said, Families paid
v

of controlling a large, homogeneous stretch of territory.
The new sanctions against
Yugoslavia, added to weaker ones
il!lposed last May, are aimed ~t
forcing Yugoslav leaders- pnmarily the dominating" Yugoslav
republic of Serbia - to use their
influence to stop the war.
In Belgrade, Yugoslav President
Dobrica Cosic today a~ for a
political settlement- 'everything
else would lead to an unfcreseeallle
IIagedy (and) a len' IBid permanent
war in the Balkans. '
Threats of foreign military inter·
vention against the Bosnian Serbs
heated up Tuesday when Russia
criticized its Slavic brethren. Past
Russian suppon of the Serbs bas
added to Western reluctance to 'tum
the sanction screws toO harshly.
Said Russian President Boris
Yeltsin, pledging unity with the
West: "The time has come for
decisive measures to stifle the con·
flicL"
The West and Islamic powers
are weary of trying to halt a war
that has left 134,000 people deader
missing only to be rebuffed at the
bargaining table by recalcitrant
Bosnian Serb leaders:
Speaking live by satellite from
British headquarters in the centrBI
.Bosnian town of Vitez. Ma.i. Brian
Watters, second in cornllllll1il of the
1st Cheshin: Regiment, said a local
Serb commander had issued the

inp for women on combat support
ships. And Aspin himself had taken
note of the Navy's move, expressing concern to reporters that the
services should be synchronized in
ers.
The New York Times published making greater combat (Illes availthe first account of Aspin's plan in able to·women.
Women in the services have
its editions today and the report
subsequently was confirmed by long campaigning for more direct
combat roles, but in recent weeks
Defense Deparnnent officials.
Aspin's directive is clearly their efforts have· been somewhat
designed to upgrade the status of eclipsed by President Clinton's
women in the military. It ClJMCS at efforts to droJ.&gt; barriers to homosexa time when the Navy has sUffered uals in the mtlitary.
a black.eye re·sutting from a 1991
The Defense Department
convention of the Tailhook Associ- sources said Aspln will direct the
ation, a private group of pilots and services to mate "fiscally feasiother supporters of carrier-based ble" changes und has made it clear
aviation.
he wants 10 avoid expensive renoThe Defense Department issued vations to warships to accommoa report last week saying as many date a smlill number of women.
as 17S officers could face disci"It has to be reasonable," the
plinary action as a result of the senior orticial said. "It doesn' t
tluee-day meeting in a Las Vegas make sense to put women on small
hotel in which 83 women were ships, such as mine sweepers."
assaulted.
But women flying the Navy's
Even before Aspin ' s plan top-of-the-line combat aircraft
became known, Adm. Frank KelsO could be aboard carriers within the
Jr., chief of naval operations, had year. the offiCial said
been preparing to create more post·
The law banning women from
warships prevents them from serving on an array of vessels ranging
from small frigates to aircraft carri-

Man in critical condition
after Tuesday night dispute

di.!.B:l.W::.isfollowingin
af!ica11' : :

denc~ at approJtirnately 6:45 p.m.
following a dilp'IIO ~et!!.ii.MOL
and Sieve Vmy of Piintr.

pule at hi1 residence Tuesday
evening. ·
·
Several wltne11ea reported .
. · Steve Bryant, Fairview Road, Vorey struck Bryant in the head
was lldmlucd to die inlellllve care ·th 11ree roo 1 f
unii Of Cabcii-HmMj111fM Hclpilal . d~;: confrool!/ooec:~ ':..ew.:::
. in HllllliDpJD, W.VL,IIUIIIId mid- yard. Vorcy W1i *'-10 HMC and
night for head Injuries. He waa wu ll'elllld lhiiiiiCllllina for a brotranlfetreilto Huntington from ken Jaw.
1
Holzer Medk:el Center.
· Jt:o llm!lts llavc boeil msde, SalAccordlna to Chief Deputy iabory said, and the 1berlff'a
Dennla Sall1bury .of tbe Galli a dqJilblulnt IB llilllllve.dlidnl the
County S.herlff'1 Department, · inl:idenL ·
·
deputies were called to the 'resl~
~.

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. McBUCU II'OR EDUCAnON • Roaeee ud !!e Cn Mila;
OWDen aiMcDnaJclela
ud S,1111r _,ltlpleJ, W.Va.,
~die 11\"DIId aerlea a l t l a dlelr "McciiCIJI 1'11r FhaJ·
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loea!'oa•; la\lolYlal ftn tuool dlttrkta, a total of JOt,•
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Superlnteadeat al Scllooll . . . Rllllel; PWl GoodJIIIe; M ' · -

prbsclpal, Wua•a "&amp;!:ool; J._ Re7110H, prblcl= of
Wallama HIP SdNI al;
litolleJtl. laterml
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