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P~l

.

•

12~The1Jally

•

Thursday, April

SenUneJ .

Tai ChiCh.'uan.offered by MA~

Beat of the Bend...
,. by Bob Hoeflich

J

29, 1993 ':'

.

Many of you will remember the amount sold was just a tad
Mike Roberts.
under the 19 doze!J. gceJ set roc the
· He is the son of Nonga Roberts project, Auxiliary members are
of Pomeroy . and the late Bob well pleased with the response to
Roberts, who was a popular the projecL Thank you.
. ,
Pomeroy teacher.
•
You might like an update. on
Thank you, Edna Hunnell, for
Mike.
sending along that little morale
Four years ago, Mike, and a booster. It's good 10 have- a {elder
long-time co-worker, left their full. -- ·think of me once in a while. I'll bet
time jobs wilh the Cleveland-based you even remember thai song: from
Garland Co. and began making a way back when: "Once in a wbile,
product, an aU-rubber rather lhan won't you try to give one little
modified-asphalt waterproofing thought 10 me?". Sure you do.
material. At the time Mike was
director of research with the GarWith alumni returning home
land Co. Mike's company, the next ·month for their high school
Rubber Polymer Co-p., IS the sub- reunions, perhaps, you would be
ject of an article _in the May 13 · interested in securinJ for them one
issue of Popular Sc~ence. ·
.
of lhose excellent VIdeos all about
Mike founded tbe company, Meigs County made by Roger
. invented the produei called Rub-~- Gilmore. A new batch has been
wan and currently serves as presl· produced. They're $6.95 each and
dent of the company which is can be purchased at lhe Farmers
expected to do a minimum a $2.3 Bank and Savings Co. or at ·the
million this year. The company has Meigs County P8lk Office which is
awlicators. that is, people who are in the . former Pomeroy Pablic
trained to apply the product Libruy.
designed to provide foundation
waterproofmg, from coast-to-coast
Margie Warner of Middleport
in the United States, in Canada. and sends a)ong her thanks for all of
the comJliii!Y is expecting to soon your clflls, prayers and support.
begin sh1pping 10 Europe.
She •s had health problems which
· The Akron located company have dragged on 10o Joni. Howevcurrently is plinning an expansion er, she'sfound some help and is
and new products relating to the DOw medically·on the right track.
foundation waterproofing business
1..,
have already· been added. Several
A nice reunion this week for
photos of Mike are visible in the two former Pomeroy High ~­
color brochures used the the fl1111. ates and clissmates.
Blackhawk Constructioo as Mariet· ·
Jennifer Crew Solomon, who
ta is one of Mike's applicator com- has ber doctorate in psychology
panics.
and teaches at WinthrOp CoUege,
Good to learn of Mike's
s. c., drove to Richmond, Va., to
so well. He's bright, talented
attend a convention held in her
deserving.
field of endeavor. Enroute she
slllJllled at Gre8t Bridge, Va., home
The next bi~ actiOn for members of'Aiita Carpenter Carroll, her
of the Women s Auxiliary at Veter- friend and fOI"IIler classmate, who
ans Memorial Hospital will be the joined Jennifer accompanying her
awarding of their annual scholar- the convention. You can well imagships in Mar..
inc that there was some "Pomeroy
The Auxiliary received 17 appli- talk" during the off-convention
cations for the scholarships wllich hours.
makes selection of diffiCult chore.
. Incidentally, in case yoli won- · If April showers truly
bring
dered how the Auxiliary fared wilh May flowers then next month's
its Good Egg TreeS fund-raiser this posies should be spectacular. Do
· spring, there were 17 dozen and 10 keep siniling.
eggs sold for the three tree. While

•

•

The Middleport Arts Council flow together into a continuouJ deflection series, the re_Petition •
will continue to offer its program" series sivinl the practice of Tai Chi series, and the closing senes. Once:
of Chinese Yang Style Tai Chi Ch'uan the ~ce of a $low, the 88. postures are learned, lhey·:
Ch'uan. lnslnitor Eric Chambers oriclllal·stylc b8llet.
may be performed in a long form
will be inaocb:ing the YanJ Style
Tile Yang style is comJI!li!'C! of compoacd of 400 movements. Per-: .
Kiclr:ing Series which emphasizes 88 poawres which are divided into forll)ed correctly, the Yang. form ::
the deve!:/!:,~nt of lower body five series including the inuoduc· should takele about 12 10 30 mm11tes;:
st1a1glh,
and limb control
lion series, the ticlr:ing series, the to comp te.
:
. T6e new ICl'ies of classes will be
·
·offered on Monday e~g• from
7: l5-8:15 p.m. on begJIIIIIIll May 3
,
.
. .
and continl!ing tluol!gh May 17 at
Hal Kneen, county .extension tribu~d free le~flets on vanous~
lhe arts council center on North · agent, was guest speaker at the aspects of gardenmg.
::
Second AveDI!C in Middleport.
II'Cellt meeting of the Friends and
It was reported that th~ Easter.
Students with no previous Tai Flowers Garden Club held at the baskets were greatly appreciated. :;
Chi experience are wek:ome. Fur- . home of Shirley Miller.
·Future projects of .the club•
ther information about this class
He spoke on landscaping stating include planting at the elemen!SfY.;
may be obtained by calling 992· that the way a house faces depends · school, partiti~ating in the nver.
2675 oc 992-7733.
on where and what you want to sweep and msking a flower bed at
The cost of tile three classes is plant. Roses have more disease the new sign pointing 10 the school.
$15 p~yable upon registration the problems if placed in shade .. ~e in Rutland.
.· .
. .,
flfSI.t of class.
stated that Meigs County soli 1s
The next meeang will be J:lel4 at
Dunng the rernainder of 1993, very acidic and will often times ,the borne of Kristal Bolin With the.
the arts c;ouncil is pepared to offer hold the fertilizer and not dislribute club making grapevine wreaths. ••
the entite Tai Chi Ch'uan, Yang it out to the plantS. He also dis- '
,.
Style, long form.
·
This style is one of the three
major schools of Tal Chi. The
Chen Style is the oldest and until
recently ibe most secret.
.
The Yang style is an oui-gi'Owth
of the old Cheri style and was sim·
plificd in its postures. It has
become the most populilr Tal Chi
Style in China as a result of its
introduction and practice by the
Manchll Dynasty royal family. It is ·
most often association with the •
developatent of good health and ·
physical fimess rather than combal. '
The most recent major Tai C)li
. style to develop is the Wu Style
which has quicker movements and
is more oriented towBnl fighting.
All Jlyles of Tai Chi hold potential benefit for the practitioner but
as JICOP.Ie have dif(erent goals and·
obJectives, so do the various
,.
schools of Tai Chi Ch 'uan.
•
ATrEND CAMP GALUA ·Students from Carleton School
· Each style is '-4 upon a aeries
and Meigs IDdustrlell visited Camp Glllla In Gallipolis reeeotly.
of body positions called postures
They enjoyed watebiD&amp; the ClvU War Reeuactnn and Jhey also ,
which are ccimectcd by tranSitional
moves which allow_the posiUieS to
toured Tile French Art Colony.
.
"

Ohio Lottery

NBA
playoffs
begin

Pick 3:

612
.Pick 4:
9441

PageS

Kneen addresses gar,den c[ub

ERIC CHAMBERS
INSTRUCTOR

_ People.in
the news

IRVINE, Calif. (AP) _ Movie

director Spike Lee finally made it
to the University of California,
Irvine, campus for a lalk pos1pOIICd
a year ago at tbe height of Los
An¥.~:S'ft;
10 speak that
night," Lee told about I,SOO peopie during a Tuesday night spcech

:::Ot!i

u:=s

at~

s!":~'i!· traf.

fie on April30, 1992. That was the

second night of riotiilg sparked by
the state coun acquitlilfs of four
white Los Angeles police officers
charged in the beating of black
motorist Rodney King.
•'I was feeling a lot of hurt. a lot
of anger, and I understood why
peo~le were acting the way they
did, ' Lee said. Now, a Y- later,
with two of the policemen since
convicted in federal court of violating King's civil rights, he's not
quite so angry.
·, But the final outcome of.the
case woo 't be lmown until August,
when sentencing of the two offiCers
'
.
.
is scheduled, he noted
Lee, one of the country's li!OSt
.: ....:&lt;. ••
. celebrated black directors, also said
the ultimate verdict is not yet in on
his film "Malcolm X," which
said, "Gum chewing is a right, and I .
wasn't nominated for an Oscar as
Dear
Ami
~den:
I
hope
you
intend to continue." What do I dd '
best film of 1992 and was shut out
now'1 --CALIFORNIA
•;
in categories where it did receive will continue 10 address the aerious
problem of charity fraud in your '
DEAR CAL: Gum chewing may •
nominations.
column. Charity fraud roba a
be a "right,• but anyone whose gutn; . .
genero~~~ public and takea muchcracking can be heard clear acroar ·
needed fundi from the legitimlle
an office is a clod. When:'a tl)e
charities who so vitally aerve the
sul'C1rvisor? How about a signed ·
public interest.
petliion? Othen must hear it 10o:.
Please continue to remind your
Get moving.
·
'! ,
readers
to
take
their
time
when
Is lift passing you by? Wa/11 to '
CHESTER • There will be a fiSh
of Meigs High School will present
Community Calendar Items
solicited
roc
donations.
Encourage
improw
'yoUT social skills? Wrirtfor
fry
at
the
Chester
Fire
Department
an
"Evening
of
Theatre"
Friday
at
appear two days before an evellt
them
10
ask
questions'
about
how
and
.
on
Sllturday
from
II
am.
10
6
p.m.
AM
LoN/.trs'
new booklet, "How U/ ,
and the day of tlult emaL Items 8 p.m. at Meigs High School. The
where
the
money
they
donalc
will
fCIIUring
fish
tails,
hot
dogs,
slopMake Friends and Stop Beln1 .
must be received ftll Ia advaace . prodiiCiion of lhree one-act plays is
tn asaare publication In the cal·
under · the direction of Celia 'py joes, baked beans, salads and be used. If the answers are DOl
l..oMiy." SDid a #lf-&lt;Uidressed.long,
satisfactory, they should not
endar.
McCoy. Admission is $3 foc 111\ults bsked goods.
busilltss-siu enwlopt IUid a cMck ·
contribute. And if they have any
and $2 for students.
or money order for $4.15 (this ill· •
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Regular questions about a charity or if they
eludes postage and lrondling) to: :
RACINE • The third week of
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- meeting, Harrisonville Lodge No. feel that the charity may not be
Frullds, c/o AM Ltutdtrs. P.O. B01i ,
revival is in progress at ML Moriah pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 411 F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30p.m. legitimate, they should not hesitate
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (II! .
Church of God on Mile Hill Road Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a Refreshments. All master masons to · cGntact their state auorney
CIUIIlda. selld $5.05.)
·
in Racine with Ron Blevins, evan- dance Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. invited
aeneral's office or the local
gelisL Services are 7 p.m. nightly with music by Smoky Mountain
authorities.
'
ANTIQUITY ·- Sonifest Saturwith special singing. Pastor James ,Drifters. Red Carr and Melvin
Charity fraud stops with the
Satterfield invites the public. t
Cross will be callers. Public invit- day will be held at 7 p.m. wilh the informed ddnor, Miss Landers, and
Christian Family, Jackson. Public yam column can do a great deal to
ed.
POMEROY • There will be a .
invited.
keep them oo the alcn. I hope you
RUTLAND · Revival at the
speCilll program at the Meigs
will continue to provide that
CHESTER ·There will be a
County Museum on Thursday at Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
7:30p.m. on "The Practice of law will be Friday through May 9 at 7 special meeting of Shade River important service to your readers
in Me~s County Over the Past SO p.m. nightly with Rev. Billy Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Saturday across the country.- ROLAND W.
Years. Participating will be.iuor- McCoy and family. Rev. Dewey at 7:30 p.m. Work in the master BURRIS, ATIORNEY GENERAL,
mason degree. Refreshments. All STATE OF ILLINOIS
neys Fred Crow, Bernard Fultz, King invites the public.
DEAR ATI'ORNEY GENERAL
Jim O'Brien and Frank Porter.
master masons invited.
BURRIS:
You c:an be S11R1 I wiU
Steve Story wil\ serve as moderstor
SATURDAY
blow the whistle on phony charities
SUNDAY
for the program. Public invited.
RUTJ,.AND - There will be a
SYRACUSE - Chicken barbe· whenever I spot one.
dance at the Rutland American
My readers , c;an also check the
PORTLAND • The Lebanon Legion Hall Saturday from 9 ,p.m. cue will be held Sunday·at the
Township Trustees will m~t to I a.m . Music will be by Pure Syracuse Volunleer Department. legitimacy of fund-raising groups by
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the township ~ountry Band. Public invited.
Serving will begin at 11 a.m . .and writing to .the Philanthropic
continue
until the 350 meals have Advisory Service, Council or Better
building.
MASON, W.VA.· The VFW beeri served. Proceeds will go to Business Bureaus, 4200 Wilson
POMEROY •. The Pomeroy Post No. 9926, Mason, W. Va, will London Pool.
Blvd., Suite 800, Arlington, Va.
Group of AA will meet at 7 p.m·. hold a benefit dinner saturday at
22203-1804 or the National
Thursday at ihe Sacred Heart the post home beginning at 11 a.m.
CHESTER - Tfle Ohio Valley Charities Information Bureau, 19"
GETALOW
C&amp;tholic Church. Information may Menu includes one-half chicken, Draft Horse and Mule Association
Union
Square
West,
Department
be obtained by calling 992-5763.
will
hold
its
annual
field
day
Sun~
baked beans, slaw and roll. Call
PRICETAGON
304-773-9191 for delivery. There day across from the state highway 250, New York, N.Y. 10003-3395.
Be
lillie
to
enclose
a
i!Cif-addrased,
POMEROY • There will be a will be 350 dinners available. All garage on Route 7 north of
AMAVTAG!
special meeting at the Meigs Coun- donations will be accepied and pro- Pomeroy. The events begin at I stamJI!'Cl envelope.
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
ty Public Library in Pomeroy o!' ceeds will benefit a friend of lhe' p.m. and include draft horse events, . · Dear Ann Landen: Last year,
my
mother
moved
into
a
nUlling
ThursdaY from 6:30-8:30 p.m. C'!_ll· organization.
WASHERS .
· ·
a fishing derby for children,
I
tied ''Geuing Ready for Reading a
antique tractor and equipment dis- home in Florida. My sister lives
•lasts lof'Oer. needs fewer ·
.within IS minutes of the home. Since
focus on reading (reading slcills
GALLIPOLIS - Washjngton play, concessions and more.
repairs and costs less to
seNice ·
!live in Ohio and operate my own
children need ft!1d how Jl&amp;Cnts can Elementary PTO and Green Ele·
·No
. 1 preferred branc·
LOTTRIDGE - Tliere will be a business, it is diffiCult foc me to visit
help). Nick Weiland, Me1gs County mentary PTO will sponsor the
smorgasbord dinner at the Lot- my mother more than lhree times a
Ed~tion Program! will be ~ fourth annual "country ueasures"
,,. . Paten~
ihe presenter. For further mforma- arts and crafts show·at the Gallia tridge Community Center on Sun- year.
FACTORY
lion call Susie Heines at 985-4163 · County Junior Fairgrounds on Sat- day from noon 10 I :30,p.m. Cost is
My silter feels that she should be
afiCI 4 p.m.
urday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.mJ and .$5 for adults and $2.50 for children ~ fll' visiting Motber two
under 12. Carry-out is available. to three times a week. She w111ts me
Sunday from noon to 5 p.m .
'
CHESTER· The Ohio Val!ey
·
.
Everyone welcome.
Ill help pay for her psoline and also
Draft Horse and Mule, Assocrabon
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TupwiU meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at pers Plains Church of Christ
RACINE • The Southern Junior for doing my mother's lal!ndry,
the Chester Volunteer Fire Depart· "Christian" Cemetery will remove High Boosters will hold a ham and which can be done at the nuning
menL New members are welcome. all flowers Saturday for clean-up. turkey dinner Sunday from 11 am. home for a minimal charge.
My mother h.. been very
·
Those wanting to save flowers to 2 p.m. at the high school. Cost is
FRIDAY
$4.75 for adults or $3.50 for chil· aenerous to my sister and me
should remove them by that time.
throughout the years. I l'llali7.e my
POMEROY • Meigs County
dren under 12.
sill« iJ under a great deal fllstreu.
Church Women United will meet
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy The Liberty Mountaineers will per·
POMEROY ' Meigs County 4- '.Her husband is not well, and sbe iJ
United Methodist Church for the form Saturday at lhe Senior Citi· H hoof trimmin'g, Sunday, 9:30 worried ahollt him. Her request,
May Fellowship planni,ng meeting. zens Center in Point Pleasant, am. to 3 ·p.m., Meigs County Fair- however, upaet me, beet'•• I don't ·
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
grounds at the steer bam. Spon- feel she il j11atiflcd in liking roc
W.Va.
DISHWASHERS
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
sored by Country Shamrock 4-H financial compeasation. ·
• NobodY getS dllrltl Cleaner
·
•O..CIIarWI9
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
HENDERSON, W.V'A. • The · Club. can Kathy Banin&amp;fl at 378Pleue help me be objective. ..
• NO Cldrl¥alft1r ftOidl mort
will ba:ve a preaching and singing Gallia Twirlers Western Square 6267 for appolnbnenL
·
OHIO READER
Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed DanCe Club will hold a dallce Sat. DEAR READER: In my opinion,
invites the public. FeUowshjp will urday r~ 8-11 p.m. It the HenPOINT PLEASANT • 11le Clasderson CommUnity Center in Hen. · sics will Dcrfocm a Vliriety of music )'011' lisler should be compellllted
. follOw.
carrying lhe greater Jllfl of lhe
derson, W.Va. Herb Shelton. callcr. at lhe West Virginia State F&amp;nl) for
MiLLFIELD - There .will be a
Museum, north Of Point Pleasant,' burden wbich has tallcn on her
c1ance and ahoW Friday from 8-11
POMEROY • MDet hog regis- W.'fL, on S!lnday ~ 3 p.m. Public simply becalliiC abe is ill the 1110e
p.m. at the Russe!l Buildin&amp; in tration, S•wP.Iay, 9-11 a.m •.:. Meip ·inVIted. Free admiSSIOII. .
. city with your mother.
You can never repiv her
Millfield wilh mUSIC by Off Sea· County Exletllion Office, ~to per
' 741·221
.animal, maximum or two lllimals.
RACINE • Ricine Chapter OBS ideq•y fOi the t1mo iad aaen~ ·I
can 992-6696 for infiKDlltion.
willii"ICtice foc inspection on Sun- tion lllC ia COila1butiDJ, bat y011 . l i t o - surely can (and 1hould) be aa ...,_ _ _ __
day 4 .,.m.
·
POME!tOY - The senior claSs

do:'J

do

Ann will continue to blow
w·histle on · hon
·ties

...
·-..

Ann
Landers

Community Calendar·

\

'

Low IODiablln 50&amp; Clut.
Saturday, SUDDy, blab In 801.

•
Vol. 44, NO. 2
Multi..... Inc.

1 Secllon. 1~ hfoe 25 -

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 30, 1993

A Mul1lmecll•lnc •.....,....,

',

Lions Club to
•
sponsor czrcus
onMay14
I ,

Middleport to expand
boating facilities with
$94,900 ODNR grant

Tile cin:us is coming 10 town.
In celebration of 200 years of
cin:uscs in America, Walker Bros.
Cin:us, is coming to town on Fridlly, May 14.
.
Sponsored by the Pom~roy­
Middleport Lions Club, the i:ilcus
will set up its tents on the Roek
Springs Fairgrounds. 'lbere will be
two perfOIIIUin&lt;:c:S, the first at4:30
and the second at 7:30 p.m.
"Our sponsorship of Walker
Bros. Circus gives the: Lioas Cub
the opportunity to bring the fiDeat;
in quality family enterllinmelllto
this area while helping nile IDIJIIe)'
for our Lions Cub Silbt ~ ·
projects," uid Jeff Vlama, focal
Cin:IIS Chairioaa.
.
Both wild and domestic lllimlh
will be per(ormine.;..tbe c;in:us.
This will include e
b! conaicL
ered the most intdligeut of all
mats, the fontball playing Boxer
dogs, and 8 dog and pony review•
There will be aerial artistry, iuJ·
glees; acrobats; clowns and DIOIII m
the 90 111inute extravaganza, Warner said.
Tickets are available 8l a special
reduced rate from members of the
Pomerey-Middlepon Lions Club
DOW through the day before the cir~
cus. Information may be obalincc!
. by calling 992-5479.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. Sentinel News Stall' .,
A $94,900 Waterways Safety
Grant has been awarded to Middleport village through the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Waterways, for expansion of bo11ting facilities at the
Middleport levee:
Sen. Jan Michael Long (D-Circleville) 8IIIIOUIICed the Waterways
sat~ Fund Capital Improvement
Grant award Thursday afternoon
describing it as "anolher example
of state government working for
local sovemmenL•
Tile funding announced yester·
day will go toward further
improvements, including widening
of the boat launch ramp, a large
parking area. and the installation of
courtesy docks for the coovenience
of boaters.

a·

. F§~tory . _
·or'dets down
iii March

COMING TO TOWN - nil 'W..,.. .... arc. dlnni wDI
be aw• lo .... • May 14. Pa fa; a Ml wiD lie at the Roek
Sp;lap ~pc i ill • 4:30 ud 7:31 p.-. Tickets -Y be pur• c'
J rn. -Rrlaldle Puasoy-Middleport LloDs Clnb.

J.

Personal income
rises.~.6 percent

WASHINGTON (AP)
Orders to U.S. factories slumped
l.S percent in Marcb, the l8l'gcst
drop in i!Cven moolhs, the goiOUnment said today.
Much of the decline CIIIIC in aircraft orders but many other cate·
WASIDNGTON (AI')- Amer·
gories posted dea ; . I I as well. _the
1
icans
puiUDII i• •••• , ......1 0.6
· Commen::e Depabuent said.
.
peroeot
in Mln:b. but JDDCII mthe
Tbe depubuent said ordas fell
to a seuonally adjusted 11'1111111 life incn:ase came ia C.. mbsidies
of $254.5 billion. The drop fol- m:l •&gt;**I''« 4 .... fell for die
lowed •a gain of. 1.3 percent in lint~ i D - ..0.0.. the govFebruary and a drop m1.3 ptic::eul ernneat said IOday.
Incomes IVIC to a seasonally
in January.
- - raiC rl. $5.26 tril~
adjusted
M~wflile, keY barometen of
lion,
die
Commerce Department
how busy factories are likeJy to be
said..
Tile
pin
- the bell since I
in the future deteriorated. The 1 pen I adWIIICie
in ])ernk and
backlog of unfilled orders
~ida
ri.O.l.peaceut in
decJeaaed 1.2 percent to a nuJ!IDI!.
F*-J
aad 0.5 pe.iceDt In Janly adjusted $470.3 bilHon. It uary.
the first decline siJICe No-*r.
PIPcrllliODIIIIOBII
Ill £n&amp;,
In another bad sip for tiUure
at1iJe.
0.2 pea:aato
production, the invauory of aoodl m
•
• of0.2
held on factory shelves and J.ct. $4.23 iriDion
po:ceat
in
Fcbi•y
and~
)ICitalt
lots roiiC 0.2 percent in Man:b to ·
mJ-y.
.
$380 billion, the second COIISCCU•
II~&amp;:• _., were inlho eII by two

=.·

live~.

While .67 percent of the"money
for the entire project will be provided throug!lthe grant, the village
will still have to come up with
approXimately $48,900. According
to Mayor Fred Hoffman, that
amount can be either cash or "inkind" services, such as labor, supplies the village already has .on
hand, use of equipment and administrative services.
. The project has four -components ·Widening of the; existing
approach' to lhe boat launch ramp
by paving an area six feet wide ror
. a distance of aPJli'O"itnatcly SO feet
to provide for temporary parking
areas after boat launching.
-ConsbUCtion of a 30 foot cour·
tesy dock for the convenience of
boaters and passengers in launching their boats.
.

·rurchase of a 113 by.158 foot

secuon of property oo First Avenue •

at Walnut Street adjacent to tbe
boat launch area for a parlting area
for boater vehicles and ttailers.
·
-Paving and improving the parkingarea.
Estimated costs or the project
include $65,000 for the acquiaition
of six parcels of land 10 be used roc
tbe ~kina lot; $43,500 for the
parking lot construction; $15,000
foc the courtesy docks; $1,300 for
additional paving on the launch
access; and $18,000 for engineering services and contingencies
As explained by Mayor. Hoff.
man, this poject is the third phase
of an ongoing project 10 pJ'!)vide'
adequate boat launching facilities
for Meigs County and the surrounding area and 10 improve the
Continued on page 3 .

Pomeroy man bound over
•
·on charge of burg·l ary

conflictia1

special

March. Tbey were boosted by a 64
percent surge in farm owners'
income and held back by uninsured
housing daiJia&amp;e canaed by a severe
stmn thal swept up the East CoiSI.
Excluding special factors,
incomes rose 0.2 percent in Marth
and 0.4 pen:ent in February. .
In a separate report today, the
dcpar1ment said orders 10 factories
slumped 1.5 percent, the worst

dr=

AnBUSL
roc
clanble goods -

big

ticket items from cars to COIIlflllers
- pltmged 3.4 .percent, the biggest
decline since December 19'91.
Orders for non-durable goods such
as food products, clothing and
papetrose 0.7 percent
.
Tbe most-watched component
mincame - W111CS and llalmes factots io roee 111-ic 0.1 pcRC~Jito $3.01
triUioD after a 0.2 pen:cnt decline
· In February. Government transfer
payment&amp;, IIICh as Social Security,
roee in Marcll and interest income
-down.
The deputinent said a $3.3 billion farm mbsidy payment was the
bnest since October 1987.·
.
'Ileal disposable income inflation-adjusted income after
IUCS- rose 0.5 percent ·in March
after a 0.2 percent decline the
month before.

"" A 31:-year-old J&gt;omeroy man,
was hound over to the jurisdi~tion
of tbe Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas following a preliminary hearing in Meigs County
Court.
Frank Allen Haggy of 41252
Starcher Rd. is charged with aggravated burglary, an aggravat~d

felony of thC firSt degree: Stemming'
from an April 21 incident on Vinegar Street, Ricine.
Al:cording to Assistant Prosecutor Christopher E. Tenoglla, Haggy
allegedly entered a mobile home
between one and six o'clock in the
morning. The victim apparently
came home to find Haggy in the

trailer, Tenoglia alleged. ·
Haggy is ·being held in the
Meigs County Jail in tieu of $5,000
cash bond. If found gQilty on the
charge, Haggy faces a possible sentence of five 10 2S years incarcc:ra·
lion, TenO!Jiia said.
. ·
Haggy 1s represented by AllOr·
ney D. Michael Mullen.

'Buy One, Get One Free' sale on 1993
season
pool passes offered by Syracuse .
.
.

Syracuse is having a "Buy One,
G!t One Free" sale on 1993 season
· passes for the village-owned Lon:
don Pool from May I through May
20. .
Mayor Jim Pape said today the
new pool pass marlceting technique
is bemg implemented in.an effort_ to
bolster sale of season uckets pnor
to opening of the facility' on Memorial Day, May 31.
.
Cost of season tickets, regularly
S25 each, will actually be reduced
to half that amount if two are
obtained during the sale period,
Pape said. He einphasized the specia! price will not be extended
beyond lhe May 20 deadline. The
mayor reported the village has up
to 200 J.18SSCS for the special sale
promouon as the result of over
$5,000 donated by area businesses
and individuals.
Project sponsors include Home
National Bank, Racine and Syra·
cuse; Farmers Bank and Savmgs
Co., The Daily Sentinel, Bank One.
Anderson's Furniture and Appliances, Valley Lumber 111!1 Sujlply,
Fruth Pharmacy, Peoples Bank of
. Point Pleasant, Hubbard's Grecnhouses, Judge and Mrs. Fred W.
Crow Ill, Chancey's Food Mart,
Mr. and Mrs. L. Frank Briah't. Sr.,

beque with proceeds going to the
po61
fund; Monday, May 3, 10 Fritions, Williams and Associates
day,
May 7, from noon to 4 p.m.
Insurance, Powell's Super Valu;
from
Janice lawson, village clerkMr. and Mrs. Bobby Ord, Brogan·
treasllm",
at the water board offiCe
Warner Insurance, Jeffers Coal .and
in
tlie
Municipal
Building; Satur·
Excavating, Crow's Steak House,
day,
May
8,
during
the craft show
Bob Wingett and Davis-Quickel
and
baseball
games
at the park;
Insurance.
May
10
from
llOOD
10
4 p.m. at the
Pool passes on the "Buy One,
water
hoard
·office
and
May 12-20
Get One Free" basis can be pur·
from
2
to
6
p.m.
from
Lowrey at
chased from Pool Manager Tom
Lowrey at London Pool on Satur· !he pool. Additionally, passes can
day, May I, on Sunday, MaY 2, at be pllfChaaed from May 1-20 from
the Syracuse Municipal Building Mayor Pape at Valley Lumber and
during the Firemen's Chicken Bar· Supply.
Don Shaffer, Morris Communica-

Do·wntown.block in Athens·
evacuated after-gasoline spill
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - A
downtown block was evacuated
todsy afrer a gasoline tanker swerv- ·
ing to avoid an onconting car hit an
electric pole and spilled 10 10 20
gallons of fuel,anthorities said.
No injuries were reponed from
the accident, which happened at
about 2 Lm., said a pab'Oiman who
declined 10 be identified.
About 200 to 300 people ~ere
evacuated as a precauuon 1n a

Rotary speaker discusses history of. submarines

S.ALE

RUTLAIID FURNITURE CIC

·

Tbe fltSt submarine in the

u.s.

Navy wu a. turtle-shaped vessel

used ~ the Qvil War, U j.g.
Jolin w. Rice IDkl the Middleport-.
Pomeloy R'*Y Club at ita weeldy
moetin' at the Heath Methodist
CIIIIP m Mlddkpxt.
, The Rbmarine later blew up,

Riceadded
.
Rice il the 11011 of Mr. and Mis.

Jobn Rice and the b!!lbancJ of the
.._Amy Labb.

A padaate of Bastern High
SdiDol .S Obio UniWIIIty. Rice
die Nuc:J. PIJwer 001.c:er ~dale Prolfllll at o.u.
1lefcn lllrlilll bia five-year atint
witllllll Navy. Wb1Ja OS IIIIIQb1 llo.-as &amp;] I ofthe
··. - WWcl bu tOIIDol over the

c••c

DdaJMBIBVaMA••

,...,a.
Ju

·ILH-JII!IIW.IIelh&amp;O..
IH?'R ....
'n
• *!tit I II
£
I
0 ..... &amp;I I' I
IUcl._n&amp;U$1dtD ... U.U.Net • 'DJ.
. ·

.... c-.,nd?

7

7

7

110

i':,~- ~e biltor)' of tho

HI

;~llldlkdill

Ia llliiMuriaa -

llll
dellloUtraled

Dming lhe later stages d tho war, smaller aaack submarines Me about
until two men, Lake and Holland,
U.S. submarines accounted foc 80- 400 feet long.
became active in the early 1900s.
· As fit as safety fOl" die crew is
Even then, liale inlaest was shown · 90 percent of enemy shipping
desboyed.
· in the United Statea, but Oennany
concerned, Rice said his personal
Rice explained that the diesel nllliation detector showed only four
and RU&amp;ia c!r:mon'lllted COIIIiderablo interest In tbe early sub- · submarines uaed during World War millirads after a month on the bost,
D were limilcd bec••iiC they bad to but nearly iiC¥111 millirads wbiJe in
llllri-. Rice said.
come
to the surface or send up lhe lhipylld.
Rice laid AlbiJal Rickover was
SlKikds
for the oxygen their diesel
tho ol6cet wbo ..Uy broQaht IIUbRice said be will be reasaipcd
eo&amp;ines
required.
.
ill Georgia aft« he returns 10 active
llllrinea ID the fOiefJwt In die Unit·
.Nncleai power offers a way to . duty.
eel Slllel. Some activity- evidlnt in World W•l, but it Cllile to get power without the need for
In addition, Mrs: Jon hrrin wa
111o fOiefald 111 Wcxld w. n wbeD 01tYaeo fnlm the uface, so nuclea guest at the me 1"1·
.
Ooman aubmarlaoa actod Ia ar-powered anbmarines can atay
. President Ri&amp;P JepcaMid a YOry
&amp;fOIIIII blown • ~ Hitler under water for u long u three
suceessful panCib bntltfut wa
lieliivod aubmariaea altould be IIIOIIIbs at a time, be said. Nuclear
held last Slllilday with 1110r0 111a
submarine&amp;
are
refueled
every
ISO peoplil.-ved. 1111 ._.
:zd.
UIOd oaly 10 proteCt the homeland;
IDVIIII,
ID10~
ed the CCIIllialtMiol of tile llr ' e 1
bul otbllll Uled diem 10 attack COO·
· Today'• nuclear-powered sub'iOyl, Rico said.
10 llile fuadl for llotlry . . . . in
Melp Coauty.
.
Germany lost 30,000 oat of litarlael are Jnaao ltniCtarel 630
Ladies of lhe HHtb Uaitod
38.000 submarinea durina Wocld feet laq, .... fee&amp; In d1ameler and
W• D. The Ulilld 5111111 loll ono equal in heilllt to a four-atnry
MetbOdiat Cbareb •I'IMI die dJD.
ner.
of every five ~. ~ llld. ....ilding. R..._ lllbmariDol may
-be ..... Rice..,......., The
7

�.

.

-· commentary
for the cost of the S!lle, which
included losses sustained on the old
home due to the depressed realestate markel

Letters to the editor ·

Ohio will be hit hard by energytfa
'

· Pomelo•·

By Jack Anderson;
and
Michael Binstein
These reimbursements are talt·
able. But the Fed · chipped in
$40,261 to cover the offacial's IRS
liability. The Cleveland Fed
acknowledged th8l the move was
extraordinary, but refused to comment furthur.
The Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco and its four branches
SJ?Cnl more than $1 million 10 move
nme employees dwing this period.
In 1990, one employee received
$121,485 to move from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Another
employee who moved from Kansas
City, Mo., to Los Angeles in 1991
received 'more than $227,000 from
the Fed, including $69,230 in l8lt
assistance.

Ron. Supinslti, a tpnkesml" at
the San Fnmcisco Fedelll R ..:.
said the bank was fon::ed to pay
more 10 induce Fed emplo~ 10
move to in &amp;tea known for its hip
cost ofliving, "You have 10dlqle
something out there to get what
you want when housing ·i;OSIS an:
that hilh... he argued.
Asked to comment on these
cases, House Banking Commiuee
Chairman Henry B. Gonzalez ,IIJid
our associate Dean Boyd: "As "'
independent agency, the Fedef'lll
~~enjoys 1he privilege of lettmg tts own pay scales.
"If 1he FCI\Cral Reserve wiSICS
money, the taltpayers bear the
costs, because these higher cosu
uanslate into less income for lbe
Treasury..:. Ironically, tbcae laYisll
expenses are being incurred by die
agency that is the high priest qf
sacrifice and belt tightening."
The Fed has long been one of
the most gilded government
bureaucracies. For yean. employees at the Federal Reserve Baird in
Washington bave enjoyed casb
awards, a private tennis court IIIII a
full-time .art curator wbo regulldy

m

The League of Ohio Sportsmen
is a very powerful lobby and has
already provided the Ohio legislature with over 78,000 signatUres in
suppon of this bill. They will succeed time unless we speak out. I
would encour;age you to write letter or place a call ( 1-g()().282-0253)
· without delay to our house representative, our senatorS and our governor to express your opposition to
this bill.
Mary Taylor
Coolville

a

Board president explains program

Schedule.
That presented us with another
decision.
. Do we take advantage of this in
·· 'our other buildings before the
available money is gone?
If so, we had two options to
consider.
First, do we save $6,000 a year
after our loan pay'llent and do all
schools eltcept Harrisonville and
Salem Center?
.
Second, do we lose $6,000 a
year after our loan payment and
· include Harrisonville and Salem
Center?
I might add that those iwo

•lcolumbusl7s•

.

..a~~, II'IJI1IIlriMal eo.pess
I

--'

l'!i!.etuCS.
die t

.

..

Su::y Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

------Weather------

dais Map . I fora
aooasipL Bat c:ot1pasi011al critics
doa't beline die Fed slloald be
5

Sodi:Cntnl OWD
. Tonight, clear. Low atound 50.
Salarday, mostly -Y· High
80.
EDe7lded lorecat:

near

.., :• ,.... !dz ' KIMiu:Y •
a !i.e of ~l-wide c:utblcb.

Jas .......

(jew '

s

d

7

q;+--

lillllbM ...............
7 atDfii"Wge a£ ............ of-

12 np

I Fakal R

·

On this date: .
.
In 1789, George Washington 'took office in Ne~ York as 1he ftrst pres. idenl of the Uni~ States.
·
In 1803, 1he Unit~ States purc~ased ihe Louisiana Territory from

.

.

.

In 1812. Louisiana became 1he 18th state of the Union. ·
In 1900, Hawaii wa8 organized as a U.S. tenitory.
.In 1900, engineer John Luther "Casey" Jlllles of !he Dllnois Central
"

Jason Nelson

..,.pMc -

To~aJIPIS,G

J111011 Joe Nelson. 16, of Salisbury, Md. died~ 19, 1993 from
, . _ m•ai
m'
-·- acct'.
..
· - - ----- 111 ......,.
deaL
'
A•nd* teenager, Jackie l'llb,
was abo killed in the accldenl. Nel·
son wu driving the car when he
---· and IIIIUCk a
appoacntlYlost """"""
lftle. Both were JIIOJIOUDCed dead at
thel=il ·nnived ~his mother,
.
.:1
c his
Debbie Collina .. Ta • S. .;
father and~other Dana Joe
• ' Nelton
, or Salis•
.and Jady
a Iiiier, T1111 Mlrie CoUins
liS •
of YJar• S· C.. ; his ~ttl
~.
Dim IIIII Bernice Neilan Pelzer,
s. c., Prancis Nelson or Albany,
aadllil step-grand!)IIR:IIIS, Robctt
IOd Avanel HolliilaY. of Dexter.
N - other Mcip County !dlibel •rive.
aeiedwasT lh~ICentllWiCS::f:
Appl

£1"••-'

I

a n: :!i&amp;

ol smries m dlttt
Fed~ AID Gaa:asptn,
wbo- $133,400 • ,_., 1IUIId
be nk ltipc:a .... Fed olf'ac:ial.
Eulier mis MODth Goazalez.
Jd I P II fapres
nlllt DO
r - ?baa • c1111aa en · ·die
Fedeal R
we llalld ia W~­

-=

jrs . . Cllti-

I

*IL .&amp;. . . 6eJ2 FederRm iC: s.k )ll"i+aU. ?be
1

Al:c ...
a=s · .n .,. r. tJ.W
i

s

"'eM&amp;
... , Eif

5

7

I

...

Clinton will lead U.S. into Bosnia
million Americans currently have
no health insurance" and 1he blatantly false implication that they
·therefore have no health care.

William A. Rusher ·
I nominate that health plan, by
the way, as the probable Wacerloo .
of the Clinton administration. Ms.
Rodham Clinton has already alienated the entire medical profession;
the pharmaceutical industry and the
insurance companies, and the
n~&amp;tion' s taxpayers will join the
queue as soon as lhey get wind of
the lleeci.ng they're in for. Last
aboard, but deadliest, will be the
patients themselves - the medical
consumers - whQ will fight like
Kilkenny cats the government's
efforts to ration their care, dictate
their choice of doctors and treatments, and dr;ag 1he whole field of
medical care down to the level of
the U.S. Postal Service.
Worse yet, in the long run, is. the
price we aie payinj! for having
briefly agreed, durmg the campaign, that Mr. Cl,inton's well-

known cliaractei defects "doo•t
matter.'' We now know dtlt he will
clve In to any pressure grOup tbll
can convince him it mc:aas bllliness, from gay activisls to Wesan ,
ranchers, and will lie to cover up
his own involvement in fiasros like
Waco (where he cowered for 24
hours behind the skirts of AIII:Jmey
General Reno).
That vulnerability to pressure,
by 1he way, is about to induce Mr.
Clinton's worst sinRle blunder to
date. Nobody has 'ever accused him
of being uninrelligent - .he was.
afcer all, a RhodeS Scholar - _.
he se~. correctly, that the Unined ·
SLateS has no business bQina into
the Balkans to square die 61aclt
accounts of Croatians, Muslims
and Serbs. At a minimum, if ?be
matter reqUires outside involvement at all, it ought tQ take the
form of a genuinely multinational
operation, with the chief European
poWers accepting the lion's share
of the burden.
Instead they will offer token
help at best, and confine themSelves largely to holding America's
colt while eJICO!!I1lling us to Wide

io IIIII "sawc: Sdllc:ait:L" ..,__
while Mr. a · • is hl:illl:- .,.
•d
, • ...
~ s atilia:a.
Iiiii o1 Lady n h ·{an •
•
bear "nk pilala" of llllfc:riaa
Mwn'iiM). libaa1 • a'
i•• lib
Andloay Lewis {wllo t.riq 40
years of Cold War acwc:t snr a
.u• &amp;( 7._....¥ 5 J)..t
1 Jk EJie W5
flolc•
$'1 !
I
(wllo, i.aediltly, - wiUill&amp; to
.sq
let dleit . . . . whe•ilythis
c:.~e) • ,.
je die
liwes of A
C.ltlwic:c•r• 10

.......... lllc ;
Mr-~
........._ - £4
• doea'tltlwe
tbc killd ol piS il wllllld utc 50
SlaiiiP501bM-olp
c:.So
Aaac:ric:u -.~~en will be
1

:·

•w.a:s

e- ·r--....

- - cbdlfioankB

-;\c JIOIIibly w- nlllis CO!amn Qa
see pat. It t
Wlllk. ol wwsc. _. 1ka we will
belllld ... .,..

__,_

. 'lllll's wiiM we zet few lwtf 1
Allleric:a's f - ca 1M Lica ol
Linde :tad.
"
- • 7 • • •, ' ....
ed M'l fir Nea I fH &amp;IE&gt;
,.A

W'

answer aild she went on to something else.
A while ago, Murphy was a
favorite' of .the young· woma•
whose desk was IICltl 10 ntine • the
newspaper where we both wortcd..
When I asked her bow she could
abide the comedian's filthy· taUc.
she said "But he's so-o-o-o
outraged at, among other things, is (unny!"
Yet the suange thins is, if peothe profanity they are eltposed 10
ple told a sexist, racist or e Iulie
· by the entertainment industry.
~. hey
Eddie Murphy is a good eum- joke in this woman's p
ple of what they are indignant would be immediately Clll do ¥11.
No matter how funny the joke w. L
aboul . .
.
Barbara Walters once inter- · Swearing is not new to our gt"
viewed Murphy on one or her eration, of course. But il is 11!0. ~
ABC-TV network specials. She widespread now 11111 womea ·ao '
asked him; without even a hint of ministers • - , and now dill me.
censure in her voice, why he used swear in front of • 11Ui:L
as' they do in front or onlller mea.
so much bad langwtge.
As revolling u much ol Eddie
"That's the way 1 talk," he
replied.
·
Murphy's humar is,I?IIIV That seemed to satisfy her as an . - and even girls -lljlplleatly see
...... h~ .... wroas with il
today is more explicit,
Railroad was kiUcd in a wreck near Vaughan, Miss., after staying at the
more biolojicl1 and IIIOre obK '"'
controls In an effat to save the passen$ers.
In the 17th century, people
In 1939, 1he New Yprlt World's Filii', billed as a look at "lhe world of
vent their displeasure by
would
·
tomorrow," offteiaUy opened.
·
.
In 1945, "Arthur Godfrey Time" made its debut on the CBS radio net- saylllg ~'Pibawl"
What pol"'l for s - u . wls
work.
·
In 1947, President Truman signed a measure officially changing the more cretttive in tbe 19th cenblry
New Bnaland borne where Bliss
name Of Boulder Dam 10 Hoover Dam.
·
In 1948, the Organization or American States held its fu:st meeting, in Perry arew up. He went oa to
. bec:anle a profeuor 11 Williaas,
Bogota, Colombia.
.
.
In 1970, President Nixon announced the United States was sendtng Princeton and lfaMnl.
In his bOok "Aild Glady
troops into Cambodia, an action that sparked widespread protcsL
·
TeiCh,"
he recalls a aceae nlllat
In 1973, 20 years ago, President Nixon announced 1he n:sipations of
took
place
In the Perry bon . • lid
his aides H.R. Haldeman and Jdln Ehrlich111111, alons with Aaomcy Genevery
auwmn:
eral Richard G. Kleindienst and White House counsel John Dean. '

,..

TV programs, music videos and
records are hurting our children,
our families and our country." ·
What these people say they are

George R. Plagenz

·s-.

,,

''De ilanlwlll'l: ·. . . wollld
. t ..: • nk a:: :M: few
ay-W.. BalleiiCWa'W cckrl
ia JCllilll nlllell a prc:c:Uc:ly die
...... . p 50 ail-- 'DI;It.
1

ill a 1I
1IOicc, die wOtaldt:.slta' . . . . . ..., 50 l!llisl
ill die fill:! ~•liji'--L
••He tOted 10 wod: oablocws,
but be IIIII linllc
dtzll:rity
- - .... ely ill1ifraall 50
tile qlc:l aqle of • stoYCjlipe:
Manilla
waic:alll,
'Jallalinde
''pew, AanllliaJ;.' 'Now

bul---

•litnk-50lkleft.'

·~..,...lqia50._.

,.-·. t-D€'1

'

V

• WOIIL no.. a&amp;- • . .,
.-.a&amp; CD:!tfia.a- -onli.., •
. . P'

~ '!. 44!D•_.a, all!'-•
•'***4• we.,.
5

'"1'1&amp;-

M'
H W-''--- 70 of Tup
una · ......,., '
•
pers Plains died Thursday_, A~l
29, 1993, It SL Joseph's Hospttal
in Plrllllnbtq, W.VL
She was born in Jtennick, Ky., a
dausbtcr of the late Sanford and
Ella Chadclon Howard. She retired
as posllllistress of the Tuppers
Plains Poll Office after 18 years of
service and was a member Qf lite
Tuppers Plains Ladiea Auxiliary
and· the Cheller Church of the
.
Nazarene.
Surviving IPl'e Jtusband of 42
years, Marvin C. Walker; three
daughters llld IIOII..in-law, Rulbic
.and Gary Wille of Uttlc Hocking,
Alice .nd 0ecqc Hulunan of St.
Marya and Mary~ John NcweU
of Long Bottom; 10 grandchildren
and 10 great-graDdehlldren.
Other survivors include three
brothers, Ervin and Thomas pe~~~~~e~:es
.ue~=t~l8al~
et---a:&gt;
ter,
. - Howard, both of J{entuck)o, ·and
lipolis. tr'"'
.~ 11111 .fanner~ II~- Robert Howard of Portsmouth; a ·
_,.aide lfi&amp;b =i2·~~JC. , sl.e psister, ,',l'belmll, Cliffo.r.d .o f '. . ,. Insptc:tloo llated
, He was a· .
.,
oe Scioto Furnace and several rueces
;Racine Chapter No. 134, OES,
Nelton's CODIIlucdon bqsiness.
and nephews.
· ·
w•'ll hold t'ts annual •'nspecu'on
Fuacrdlti vices and ,burial w
, ere
She - ·
m' death by ·a
"p.m. RefreShments
Bl the Fork Shoals Baptist ChUrch • 11011 Joluiie
Ord Walker; seven Monday
. _at 7:30
__. All
be
ed
Pelzer, S., C. ~emorial services brodtenand twoslsrers.
wto~t~d.""''""'
mcm rs urg
- beld m Salisbury~
· Services will be held 2 ·p.m.
Sunclay .at the Wltite Funeral Home .
Reptratlouet
in
Coolville
with
\he
Rev.
Duane
,
Martel~~·
. for 1993
Lowena .Marshall
.
Svdenslricter officiatina. Burial
·
h
4-H . and
market og
Lox • s.
Mlnltall, 69, win follow in Soutb llethCI CemeTuppers Plains.
exhib~ Will be, Saturday from 9ol New Haven,
'l'bunday,
1.1 Lm. Bl the Meigs Coon~ Bxten~riclids
may
call,
from
24'
p.m.·
Apri129, 1993, It the Pl=ll't ~5100
Offi~ Any 4-H or A mem.., NMIIiwa C. Center. ·
. and 7-9 p.m. Saturday.
ber
plal!ning
,to s!Jow market ho!!s
Bcm Oi:lllluw ~. 1923 in New
RusseU
Johnson
at
the
1993
Me1gs Countr Fatr
11aven, abe was a dqhlcr or
llu
rell
.
A.
Jobt-,·
!'oint
,
must
regtster
and pay p1cture
Olma B. (Wan) Roulb of ~w
lla1Cil 1111 the lalo Joltnle D.
28
•
1 Slle was a ..,._... ·tlld
He redred after SO ,_. u a
• -.1! • or · Smitb-Capduut.
&amp;
k:ai
I
AuxillPost
..
CliO"
-1
•., in New Havea.
An action for dlssoluliOI! was
She·was peceded in death by a rers Unioo LocaltS21, H•"'l"""""'•
manber
of
~"'ii~
filed
Thursday in the Meigs County
II• I T, l!dRI B. itouiiL
1
MelhoCIIII
Cltun:b;
7'the
Miatum
Common
Pleas Court of Judge
SuuiNI IDcl. . a clau&amp;btcr,
Kada B. Oibba of Malon; a ilia, l.Odp 119, ~.
A.M.; Point ~ ~,::; I!!Jk!:Y ~n
Mn. Lmy "WWIIda~ Klnl of Mil- Pleaalni Chlplcr t17, R.A.M.; Benl Tripp,
p'lains
Y
n
pp,
.
a.; I liller·ift..law, Belly 1!. £louh l(edcm Slulne or Chtlrlelloo; Pill
al Cnall I N*; lwq plildlolls, Wt~Dt Sbrine CUb and ScoaiJh 1' In ad ition, the followin~
Thursdaactlons foLarryr
divSohermanrce
we~_E!:.
D ± J. _. J - D. Olbba of Rile of Free MIIOIW'y.,
Bora Fellruaq S, 1916 In Point
y:
.............
M •; 1111 two pndda\llhlln.
Villi M. 0i111t1 of Rock Spiap, Pleaalnt, be wu 1 1011. of the ·~ate Pomeroy, ,from Stephani~ L.
011, 1111 Roqudlc R. Zcrtle of Austitl s. 1111 Iva L. (nueae) Hoschar, Middlepon; Franklin B.
Johnson, He wu also.pcc:edo.t in Wilson Jr. from Bunicc D. Wilson,
.._.... hu a..._ ..._,,""' "'-·''botb.
or Racine. .
Service wiD be SuadaH:iMay
' 2; ._,_,
.....,., .........,"""-·
Adivon:ewasgranledThursdlly
• 1:30 pJI!. • the
Sum11 are his wife, Faye · to Melinda. Sue Lane, Syracuse,
p ,, IIGrne wiJh Rev.
. .
(Piaely)
ohnson; one daw!htcr from Tommy N. Lane Jr.,
1101'11-tcrul oftlcialiq. Burial wm · and 111111-in-law,
. Judy and "'Bob
'
falow ill Oiallam Celne?l!ry.
·
B~, P.Uint Mcmnt; one lOR, Pomeroy.
·
A action for divorce filed·,by
PI' h 1i111J c:!l It the funeral
.._ o.S , day from 6-9 p.m.
~
..;.~~ Christy A. Salser from tof121'k A.
Ove great-anode
. IDd one . Salser was dismissed Tuesday.
,
u;,
C • "'""'"
The ' Daily Sentinel
lillfll,, .,..., Jolll
· ., .......)
·
k
SaintiAuisvillc,Ohio.
RJDIIli:NII)
will be II 2 p.m., Sua.,t
Plollliolwd .._, . , . _ , , Monday
"-, Ma~at· the CrDW-Huuell
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP,l,pri and
pts
....... FIWo!! ltl Claoft Bt.l. P.~··"'·
Cldo "t ... Olalo ValloJ ......hi.
Puncnl
With dsc ltev. SIIOvell Direct livcsux:lt cea
.._
C 1
I• Int... FtaawtOf,
· B. Daney oGid""".
Bl selecled buylnJ JIOii!IS Friday bl
Cldo 411
... -11118. ..... ,.... po~:i·u
......,.,.Ohio.
.
follow In the SUIICIUI
the Ohio Department qf Agrieu •
wbn Mvwlc pWIIde rirel
ture: ·
·
be conducted by die Mlalijm LotiF
Barrows an~ ailts: , SQ cents
119 A.F. A.M.
' 1oMr. tlenland Jilht.
.
Prie.ad,
c111 .t .,j l'uuall
1-2, 230-260 111a., cr:fl:
. homo Oil Sllliulay May 1 hill 7111 polnli, 43.00-43.75, a few 4427 ;
9 p.m
'
plants44.~~~; a few 4S.25.
1-3, 47lr
lbs., country
pol!lts. 42 00-43
·
U.S. 1:2, 2t0-:z3o Ills., country
points, 41.00-42.50.
,
Receipla Th~ 8,200. Bsii-

r:;:p~~~- •

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- - .......·btd-M' . .
'How a lin* 50 6e ~ An61r.'
. 'Fuli so PIIIIJSO-! .MillO il
.... wllilc die cJtile' ca r
,
widlawe.tMC
50
•ile.IMillk
...
ltlOWil Qftr ad die I oeepic
were cUI:nly wlleac: .lley

..,....._..

a
· W..:.. '".?:~':50~F=~~u:nl''

nffic:-=7'

ill
"'!!'* lte 10 p.e
,...,
~!!! 7 . . . . , . . .

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n

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you nllla•b wi.. a Ita•

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Livestoc report

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

• ...... lit
...., I ,. ... • a~ •• • I I
... CNlt will bo ( l f t f t -

11o i IJII
b,Nll,.....tllodle
wlom '"""" to

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A 19-year-old Middlep&lt;'ct 1D111 was ciled 10 Meigs County
on a shqllifting cbqe following an incident 11 Fisher's Big Wheel

C. o u r t

~=o(=Y~ with sttalinf a pair of Voit lib-·
letic shoes, II!CCI+rling to a report from tbc Meigs County Sheriff's
DepanrnenL He is to appear next week in Meigs County Coun,
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.

Ravenswood man arrested
A Ravenswood, W. VL, man was arrested by deputies of the
u..; ... County Sheriffs Dcparlmenl Thursday evening on a chaqjc
;;~ llOIIduct by intoxicltion.
Malt Jarrell Iquledly fcllooa the gu&amp;l!lrail on the Ohio side of
the Rilchie BridJc: lnd w• lliU lying ~ the embankment when
deputies lrrived,
M. Soulsby repoated,
Jarn:U was held ia the Meigs County Jail for a period of time ·
bcfare being Jdcascd for anl£lPCIUIDCC in Meigs County Court.

Sheriff·-

.

Deputie~

denl

u

Two actioos for judgment wen: ftled Tuesday in. the Meias
County Common Pleas CQurt of Judge Fred W. Crow m..
- Delaware Trust Company o(Columbus seeks judgment of
$3,260.91 plus costs and inllftSt from Dana B. and Karen L Haines
ofRaclnc.
' .
- State AUIOmol)ile Mutual Insorancc Company of Columbus
sccb judgment of $20,108 pl111 interest fiom Stephanie English of
Middleporl In addilioo, Joyce Clrde of New Haven, W.Va., is
seeking $250 plus inllllreat from Bnllish.

Meigs EM respo'"'s
I

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19 tined in county court

.

At 12:54 p.m. the Tuppers
Plains and Chester Fire Depart,
mcnts ~ 10 a brush f1re oo
,Silver R1dge Road at tbe Oscar
PenningtOO p1operty.
1be Mi""..._ uru't was called
......,.....
to· Overbrook
Center 11 2:08 p.m.
for Dayton McBlroy who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The I'Qmeroy and Chester F'ue
Departments responded to a motOr
vehicle accidcotltRouno5 llld 248
at Chester at 3:41 p.m. One
Pomeroy Squad ~ Sherry
Ncutiling to Holzer Medical Cenlei' and another l"ooneroy linit took
Lynn Taylor 10 Vetcrana.
1 At 4:49 p.m. the Rutland unit

7

a
De..,.

260
so .

malod reee191&amp;Prida~~
Pricer~ 'fl!c
Uvestoc:kAasoa-on:
Clalo: lleldy
.

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...
.=-~~'Tt
llltatlc
;;v;y n -:rt

c uti . .
L----..,;,.._ _.._ __, .. company.
• •

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. . .74.15: clialot ollol 16.$071.00; ,..._._.,. R.OO and
down; old . . 31.00- down.

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Tbe following 19 casea were
pmcessed Wcdnelday ill the Meigs
County Court of Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
· Fined were: Daoiel M. Miller, .
Parkersburg, W.Va., apeed, $20
plus costa; Edward W. Sauu,
Akron, speed, $20 phis coats;
Laura H. Ronkiisa, Nashville, Ind.,
speed. S2S plus coats; Tommy
King Jr., Middleport, rec:civinJ
stolen property, 10 dayl ia jliliAJi:
pended tO three daya. caau; Lola
WbitliJiaton, PolneroY, ~
$21 plus eos11; Sleven R,
Belpic:, llsbil!g wi1boul pennit, $2S
plus costs;
·
Kimberly P. Bnmfield, Proctorville, speed. $21 glus cosu;
~ regiSiialioo. $1 plua costs;
Mtcllael Gobrinal Pbanawong,
Romulus, Mic~ .• speed, $26 plus

t~:~~or~:::~:O~h~

Cootinued from piJe 1
area
.
a
djacent to the Middlepon
. "'8S ~ to Pleasant VaUey
levee.
H 'tal.
The ftrsl phase was 1he purchase
2:04 a.m.lhe Rae~ unit was
of
the old ·railroad depot from the
called to Scopt ~amp ~~d for
Cbessie
System for $40,000, reStorGolda ~acltoSmJ=·~e.talwas
ing it and then creating a C!~
transpcl!ied to L
1 .
The
unit, at 3: a.m .•. around it - the Dave Diles
went to Go I RHidge R?._~d fotor That area. just a few hUDdred feet
from the bolt ramp, was completed
Charles Harper. e was ...en
sevml
years ago.
·.
Holzer.
The second phase was ove_rail
i~t of the boat launching
ramp at the levee. That was c:om•,..,.,.,..._.
.......,.. • '"'S MEMORIAL
pleled· last summer with a $75.000
grant from 1he Division of WatcrThursday admissionS- None.
ThursdiY discharges__, Mary · WIYS which was combined with
Kauff, Pomeroy: Goldie Hendren. $37,500 from Yillallc funds and priPom--.V',
..._ "-'-'-'• Sbade.
vatedonalions.
-u,.~,~-,_....,
The project coasisted of sh&lt;ring
HOLZER MEDICAL CEN1'ql
up a 4SO fQO!aecdon
the boat
Dlacllarte~o Apr!! 2!J ... Larry nmp
10 stop erosion
stabilize
Bareus, Cilia Viii's, FIIIICCS Long, lhe bank, rCJI'iring, lengthening
H
H I•n RQckey
Aubrey amer, e• and resurfacing the 'ramp and
Mildred
Wiltiams,
~Brown, access approach, and doing some
...
Byer Brian
- Octa·
.eresa
•
-·
.
va Akers, Kriatopher
ville, landsclping.
The project for which funding
Patricia Canter, lliandoo Perkins,
Donald Lyons, Homer Bailey, was •u~.J=Y will complan for 1he MidAlice Swidentl, Meaao Goode, , plete 1he .
dleportle~ ~L
.·
d Kl tl p ""' · H bbard
Tod
t e, au•Ctl u
•
PWiher UDJIOVllll tbll area _,
Susie Ray, Raym0114Zioll«, ~ widening and repaviag of First
:~t'~Yn=dc::::W: =~ AVenue last filL The bolt ramp is
Cremeens, T - Cocbran, Mar- acc:r cd from First AYtllue.
guerlt Reinhardt 71!111 Aaioo Dek:ot~
to. .
SPRIN6 VI ,lEY CIN: MA -,
Blrtll, April 19- Mr.llld Mrs.
4~h 4\,'4
Michael Biles, daiiJhtcr, WeDIIOD.
Haber Medical Celder'

7t'

Pomero/

Hospital news

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cosu; Oqrdie A. Roberta Jr.,
WiJiilmltDWD, W.VL, llfCcd. $23
plus costs; Jobn M. . Harriaoa,
~y.assured clear diiWM:c:,
$10 plus costs; B.ay R. ~ 0,
LODJ Bottom, Qeed, SW plus
COlli; Ricltlrd B. Dona, W.-ty,
speed. $21 plus COIU;
Fbonda Chadwell, Mason,
W.Va., passing bad checks; $2S
plus COliS, resti!J!5ioo; scat bell violaliou, $2S plus costs; SooU Hln:ison, Bidwell, driving under the
inftueacc, 10 days jail SIISjMIMic:d to
three, $3SO plus costs, opcra10r' s
~ suspended for 90 clays, one
year probation, SlSO of the fine
and jail 10 he suspended upon com·
pletion of RTP school; Rusty
RQush, Syracuse, no OL, S1S plus
costs, three days jail S~l£"' llc4 if
valid OL JRSCDrecl wilbia 60 days;
Harold Dlrst, Rutland, drivin&amp;
under ~on. $100 plus IXiiU.
30 days Jlil suspended to th~.
days, plaJes and registralion to ~
deli.eted to the llOUit or vc:hicle 11
to be sold: Wayne On•aders. Wellstoo, failure to control, $30 plus
costs; Gloria J. Ross, Portland,
DUI, $350 plus 1Xi1U. 10 days jill
to three days, one year
90-day OL suspension,
me IDd jail ID be SU!pCDd•
ed upon complcdon or R'IP ~thool;
failure 10 oonrrol, costs only; Julia
L. Bates, Gallipolis, speed, $20
plus COSIS.
.
Forfeiting bonds were: Michael
Deitri, Columbus. speed. S6S: John
Ohling«, Pomeroy, dioonlerly conduct, $110; Pien Sheng Miao. Blr·
boursville, W.Va.. speed, $8S.
7

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Lottery results
Pick 3 Nmnbers: 6-1-2
Pick 4 Nmnbers: 9-4-4-1
-The Ohio Lottery will pay
$1,445,333.50 to winners In Thursday's Pick 3 Numbers daily pme,
Sales ··for the game totaled
$1,2Sl,001.
.
In the other daily game, Piclt 4
Numbers players waaered
$270,140.50 and will share
$99,100.
Tbe jackpot for Saturday's
SJ!~r Lotto drawing is worth $8
million.

..............,.. -·
• . _ • • _,lWIDAY

Olft

c:.nrna- uu...,. 1

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DidarpiAfrlJ 21

Mary Hunter, BeUy 1::2:~,
Shirley McCarty, Waynt!
,
J.eslie Hlll, J - Foldetl, c.( Dun·

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Two actions for judgment filed'

u,

ter.

investigate theft

Carl Smjlb of Smith-Bater Road. Reedsvillc, reported Thursday
that a color television was stolen from his residence Wednelday
evening.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Dep&amp;ibtkiill is investigating the inc:i- .

~ ~Jr. ·~ t.eeD ~~
Steqbaer - : choice 7S.OO- ham, Caaec Ca1dwell, -Walter
1 itad chief
••
...,. 1111o illect 72 00-80.00
p~ Bvelyn Pelnta~erry·
cer of Amttlclil BIICirill fmoer. D"'Fmt wlleifen: cboicc 7S.OQ. MoaaiomcrY. Savllla
Mra,
-~:s-Y~!
Gf~~tllli 13.QO;i1Jac:t72.00-79.00. ,
ThomuMai11tn .....
Jef.
I
lid
;,..~
Cowl: I?UIIdy: all COWl $5.00
fcry NiDce ... -.1a-)' Hufr•
MCtnlciiD.srda
illddlwnl.
.·
,
111811, Cryllll WJtlelol, Donna Cox.
taow, • 1a nlkiq at dne
or BUlla: i111 If, au bulll6us ud ~ llblrt, 011tn1y1 Hawb. Pbyl-·
lallllla
p•kWI
Gl AlP.
Slleep ..tlwmltl:
UDCven; 1.75 . Us
A11c1e1m1; 111711e ~
Alexia
the IIIOIIIb.
bnzMlr,
51, ..., will down.
.
...... PleatDI!
~ ~r b I .• :s •
:s.oo llflber; cbolco woo~~ m. Bddlo PlclnnnJnl. Qlda Who-

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:~~&lt;•~'I~~~::I

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Draper ,
elected AEP
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ChaJrmaft
. UMBUS Ohio. ,.._... -B

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ISSO U IOD~.

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Man charged with shoplifting .

Divorces
and · ~::~J::Z~
l ·t•· ,
This niornln1 (Tburiday) at Middleport...

d"

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ClOiliC

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. Mima H. Walker

(Roalb.Je,

.w•-

a

meet

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Sunday tbrouab Tuesday: .
A chance or showers or thunderstorms Sunday and Monday. Lows
4S-SS. Highs 6S-7S. C.bance of
showers or thundei.uam• Tuesday.
Lows 5S.(i(). Hi~ 7S~8s:

In the West, it wu shaping up
as anotber wum day for mlicb. of
california, Arizona and NeYIIda.
Thursda~!,high of 89 ill Sacnmcnto,
. • bnJke 1he eecml for
the date by I degree.
Highs were exff!ted to rCICh
the 4&lt;fs actOSS 1he
adie'l border
States today; the 60s in the Midwest, New Bnsland and Pacific
l'(ortbweat; the 70s in !he midAtlantic region and much of the
South; the 80s in Florida, c.liforDia and lhe Soulhwest; and the 90s
in~ Arizona.
'
High rempcrature for the llllion
Thunday wu 104 degrees • Palm
Springs, Calif.

r--Local briefs-__,

Edna Henry who was traniponed
to Veterans Memorial Center;
12:49 p.m. Pomeroy to Peacock
Avenue for Earl Freclter wbo was
transported tO VMH; 1:24 p.m.
Pomeroy Volu!lteer Fire Department and Middleport Squad to
State Route 143 for a structure fuc:
at the Randy McDaniel residence.
NO' injuries were reported

money in the amount of $10 per
· Trustees to meet
animal
(maximiDD two, one gilt .00
Siltton Township Trustees will
one
batrow)
at that time. Ca11 Clip
meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the
Haggerty
at
992~96 for further
Syracuse Muruc~ J;luilding.
·
inform8110n.
.
Scipio trustees to
Trustees.to meet .
TI1e ,Scipio Township Trusteesoo The Olive Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at will meet Wcdne8day at 7:30 p.m.
the PBgcviUe T~.
'
at the Shade River State Fcrestry
Building.
LePoo to meet
The American Legion Drew
Mother's DaJ dlllller
Webster Post No. 39, Pomeroy,
The F.O.E. Ladies Auxiliary
will ·meet Tuesday at the post No. 2171 will bold its mothelhome. Dinner is at 7 p.m., m~ling daughcer ~uet Tuesday It 6:30
at8p.m.
p.m, Officers will be elected and
new members initiated.
Bake llle platuled
oodmTheBurlil!&amp;hamhldJuni~..~
The .,_!)..!!,toOmESeet~ No.
w
en will 0 • VIU:C, IUUU
• ~.....
and yard sale Ma~ 10 Lm. !86 will·meet Tuesday It :30 p.m.
to 6 p.m. at 1he
Woodmen at the Chester Maso11ic Building,
_Hall in Burlinglwn. Proc:wl! will
_,.,
5.
go to the B!ld(ord 'lolutltar Fire
• h
Committee,
to elg
t calls
. Units of the Meigs County
·
SPec:lal mceling
Emergency Medical • Services
· · The Esliltl'll School Board will responded to eighr calls for assishave a special mectlnt May 6 and tance on Wednesday and early this
12 at 4 p.m. In the igh school morning (Thursday).
cafeteria!OdiScusspenonnel.
On Wednesda~ aa 12:12 p.m.
,
·
the Middleport urut wc:atto Holzer
GI'OI?p to meet
Clinic for Jcssa Br11111011 who was
Women Alive will hold a moth- transported to Holzer.Medical Cen-

-----Area·deaths--.-~

ve '-b.
... IIICRl ddibcn. . . . olilleFcd be .............

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-Meigs announcements-

C1183Aceu:WIOlht&lt;,l~.

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Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to four calls for assistance Thursday.
Units responding were: 9:11
a.m. Rutland to State Route 124 for
Helen Miller who was transported
to Holzer Medical Center; 12: 12
p.m. Middleport to Pomeroy Nursmg and Rehabilitation Center for

W.VA.

his beca •• '"' ia a del w' ' "!
sacaJc widt die c M•ll 111.t ooa
'lo
*'&lt;I
c ... ou 4
AI"',.P die Fed Ita kept iiS
ailics • .., by i.-. . . - _ ,
for ;.... f d cc ..._ rolilical
~ critics

stalion was 89 deglees in 1942. The Ohio, Nebraska and South Dakota
record loW was 30 in 1971,
On Thunday, .thunderstorms
Swuiae dliJ morning was It 6:33 brouahl baiiiO Orla, Texas; CarlSa.m. Slllllet will be It 8:24p.m.
bad, N.M.; lnd lloile, Jdabo. HeavAraud llle al?dae
ier ninfaU durin.l dsc six-hour peri, Rain fell acro11 much of the od up to 8 p.m. EDT illcluded 1.80
South and par11 of the MldWCIIIIIII lnches11Cupus Cllrisli, Tcxa
northern Plains e11ly today, with
On the Bast COlli!, I slow·IIIOY'
thundenloons expected to develop i!ll storm lbout 400 miles east cit
as the day progressed. Tempera- lflc mid-Ailantic regicn - bJoek!
~ were mild all along the East
ing out odlc:r W~ IIller S)ltemS. The
CoasL .
' result was mild; drf ~ today
• Wet, warm air movin&amp; up from from Maine to florida.
Fog covered mucb of the Midthe Gulf of Mexico to the PlaiDs
was causing ·the stcrmy weather. It WCII CIW!y todaf, including Detroit,
brought rain tbis morniDj! tO Cbicago,lindtanapolis ·and St.
Arkansas; Tennessee, LouiSiana, Louis •

EMS responds to four calls

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$152,8011, 1111
nbc: biJlleSl was $257,700 .$7,100-dtlaPl .• •OW..
wiDanttis
Jd
Midlacl

There's no reason why a hundred days into a new president's
term should be a particularly good
time to make a preliminary assessment of his performance, but it's
become sort of traditional. In the
particular case of Mr. Clinton,
what's more, he has revealed mostly inadvertently - enough
about his true self to make certain
·bleak conclusilllls justifiBble.
We know now, for example,
that his whole contention, during
the campaign, that he was a "new
Democrat," sincerely dedicated to
economic reform, was a brazen lie.
He broke his promise. 10 cut wes
on the middle class before he was
'even sworn in. His budget pac;kage
calls for sharp l8lt increases in the
immediate future, and spending
reductions in the sweet bye-andbye, during his putative second
term,
·-- Meanwhile his wife is Sec:retly
cobbling togethc;r a grandiose and
hugely eltpensive ·national health
plan, based on the bet that the
American people are too dumb to
tell the difference between the
technically true statement that "37

I

"r dii:L

Is swearing too explicit? Psllaw!

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Friday, April 30, the I20th day of 1993. There are 245 days
left in 1he y-.
..
Today's Highlight in Histol}':
On Apri1 '3ath, 1945, as Russian troops approached his Berlin butlker,
Adolf Hitler committed suicide ·along with his wife of one day, Eva

France.

INO.

lowell llllry -

schools have coal-fired furnaces
which would have to be replaced
with new gas furnaces. This obviously increases our initial costs. .
We knew we couldn't close
those schools if for no other reason,
because we have nowhere to put
the students. We also knew we
couldn't build two new buildings
for consolidated elementary
schools because the taltpayers had
refused to pass the. levy for that
purpose.
.
As soon as school ends, work
will ~gin iii all remaining Meigs
Local School buildings, includirfg
Harrisonville and Salem Center.
The cost • $67,000 a year for ten
1be woman ahead of me in the
years. The savings- $61,000 a year supermarket checkout line recently
for 10 years.
was reaching for an issue of People
AS in my last letter, we do not magazine when suddenly she
feel we spent $67,000; we feel we puUed her arm back. .
spent $6,000 to modernize .the
"He· has the foulest mouth I've
environment for our children.
· ever heaid," she said after seeing
Larry W. Rupe Eddie ~~rphy's picture on the
President, Meigs Locll Board of cover. "I don't want him in my
Education . house.''
Her decision seems to reflect a
Editor's note: The program to widespread mood about bad lanwhich Rupe rders is made pos5i- guage,
blt through House Bill 264.
Petitions appearing as full-page
Under the bill, schools .are ads in papers such as USA Today
allowed to make loans for energy have been addressed to: "The
saving measures wblcb are Members of the Boards of Direcrepaid rrom money saved.
tors of Every Major TV Network,
Film, Music and Radio Compjlrly."
. "We Are Outraged!" says the
headline in large type, "We are a
group of fathers, mothers, grandparents and other citizens' who are
outraged at how today's movies,

Today in history

Bnwn.

PA.

Freed by Jaw rn- Clrecutive

al

S()O.~·

•
IToledo I 7'Y' I

plid--

IIC(

All of us have read the horror
stories about farm animals, household petS and even humans mistakenly shot ;ts "game." If hunters
have a difficult time distinguishing
between a deer and a cow, how will
they know, from a distance, the dif. (erence between a mourning dove
and a bluebird or a bam swallow?
The answer is, they won't; thus,
many of Ohio's non-game birds.
will be the innocent victims of the
armuhl frenzy knolvn "hunting sea-

Dear editor,
How are' we handling l8lt payer
money?
Last time I ex(llained the cafeteria program. Th1s time I want to
describe another change.
·
The summer of 1992, we updated Pomeroy Elementary with computer controlled heating and power
conservative, higher-intensity lighting . The bill was approximately
$120,000.
Money was borrowed through a
state guarantee program available
for this type pro~t. Com~ of
utility bills dwing 1990 and 1991
have shown a savings of $11,000
for 1992. This verifJCs the promise
of a 10 year breakeven (payoff)

MICH.

b-.

,

By The A!UOj:l•ttd PreSI
Skies will be clear tooight and
lows will range from the mid-40s
to 1he lower 50s.
Though Ohio's weekend weather will not reinain dry for both days
it will be mild.
Suurday's weather will stan out
mostly sunny with cloudiness
increasjng in the west dwing the
~n. Highs will be mostly in
the 70s.
•
There wUI be a chance of show·
ers and thunderstorms Slllday with
higbs from 6S to 7S.
1,'he record high temperalure for ·.
this date at the CoiUIIlbus weather

conditions and

taado .-o1. ille Falual R
ve
lias
ialliy ,_ iacl' B- inde&gt;p • ·: 1 C8lily siKe ils
in
1913. B ~ • • die Fed thws its
OJICilllila-..-eJ fioa ils ; aJ
oa Tt
) L M j . , • , ; : • !I
to ada • . i+. wlltB:
-

Opposes dove hunting
• House of Representatives would
allow Ohio hunters to add the
mourning dove to their alreally
lengthy list of "legal" game.
"Drdsed out" (which has
always seemed like an inane term
siJ!!:e to prepare an animal for consumption means "undressing" it of
all its bodily coverings!), each little
. bird provides about two ounces of
· meaL How many would it take to
feed a family of four? Two ounces
of meal seem.s a poor exchange for
a bini's life.
'
Are you aware that lhese bini's
. maJe for life so that destroying one
• means that 1he one left behind will
• never again produce young?
··
I have ~d all 1he complaints
~ about how 1hese ''pigeons" are such
: a nuisance in our cities. Hunters
• don 't ·hunt iri cities. They hunt in
the COIIIIIry. where 1hese little birds
eat the seeds that mal;.e weeds in
our gardens, where they provide
their own unique "song", where
they~ pari of nature's plan.

AQ:u-Weather• forecast for

ill
t1tc IIIIIs. Top olf..W• ol die 12
Federal Rmw: t.lb- powidr.d
fal.owlal • h*
bomc
aad at wort.. Soac: are radio,.
equipped wllile odlas with
.._. . ' T L Fed 1* jCCS
-abo n:illllwd far-bersltip ct.s ia calaia ;ait&amp; cJuiJs.
·Bc:twcta 1990 ... 1991, dll: Federal Reserve Baal&lt; of New York
aloK
S67JD) ia dull
I*'

Ohio weather will be mlld over weekend

Wcathe1

S.tardly, Mayl

die e•lt '51'i'C art nhjNU

ton Cllll . . . . .

Dear Editor,
.
House Bill 287 before 1he Ohio

OHIO

2 The DIIJ Sentinel

•ddlapDt"t, ONo
Fr'.-,, Apltl30, 1183

WASHINGTON - Internal
Federal
Reserve Board dcicumenLS
111 Court Street
reveal' 'that the Fed has dispersed
Pomeroyi Ohio •
,
more than $2 million in moving
DEVOTED TO THE wn;RESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
eltpenses to just 17 officials over
the last three years - or mtxe than
half of the $3.5 million budgeted
for Bill Clinllll's entire presidential
transition and move (rom Little
Rock,
Ark., to WashinglOil.
. ROBERT L. WINGETT
The 17 officials averaged
Publisher
approximately $118,387 per move.
•
By comparison. a 1989 General
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
PAT WHITEHEAD
Services Administration survey of
General~anager
Assistant Rublisber/Controller"
several Cabinet departments
showed that relocation costs. for
federal employees aver;aged slightLE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
ly more than $14,000,
words. All lettelS are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published. Leners
In one of the biggest cases we
should he in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities,
examined, a new vice president at
the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland received $181,905 to relocate
fron~ North Carolina.
Fed records show that this official received $4,950 for househunting in Cleveland; $16,148 for
the move and temporary _living
anangements; and $35,225 to pay a
Republicans have been in all this. re·location agency. , Once the
Dear editor,
Friday, April 30. marks the Republicans have offered proposals employee's old house had been
tOOth day of 1he Clin1011 presiden- on how to reduce the deficit with- sold, the Fed shelled out $74.323
cy. While history may little remem- out faisi!tg l8lteS and were ignored
ber 1he first 100 days of Bill Clin- until Senate Republicans stopped
ton, American taltpayers surely Clinton's program that cost an
aver;age of $90,000 per job.
wiU.
Ohio Congressman John Kasich
· As tbe nation's leading manusubmitted
an alternative budget
facturing state, Ohio will be hit
that
would
have reduced the
plan
especiaUy hard by Clintoo's energy
deficit
more
than
Clinton's plan
talt, This is a l8lt that knows no
income boundaries-the average without raising wes. Kasich' s plan
Ohio family will pay an .mtitional required tough decisions in cutting
spending first, decisions Clinton
$430a year.
U you earn a5 little as $25,000 and the Democrats weren't willing
you will be paying higher Social to make.
If Clinton's first 100 days are
Security uues. Does this seem like ,
itty indication, worltinjl Americans
Clintoo's "soak 1he rich" stralegy?
When Clinton was elected it can save lime by just s1gning up for
was said that vOI.CIS wanted change. direct deposit of their paychecks
I don't think beini left with pocket with 1he IRS.
Sincerely,
change afcer paying taXes was what
Roben T, Bennett.
we expected.
Chairman
Ohio
Republican Party
I've been asked where the
7

~·

I

.Federal Reserve moves in expensive ways

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnet-Pqe 3

Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio

-·-

Kemper"~

~
•.J~~~
- ,.,..._ ~..., .. _ -

1111 AUitiD Ankn)m.

•

•

7

.

'

•

•

·•

•

�Friday, April 30, 1993

Spo

The ··DaiJ.y· Sen~inel
.

Friday, April 30, 1993
· Page 4

I

.fin the NBA plllyoffs,

.

.

~,

Fl · a complete·s.series sweep !fith 6-5 victory ·over Atlanta
By Tile Alloclatel;l Pres
The Allanla Braves are swting
to get just a little ooocemed.
Yes, tbey .._,sot off to a slow
start last season en IOUiiC to the NL
pennant. But none of those losses
were caused by lhe expansion
Florida Marlins.
The Marlins beat tbe Braves 6-5
Thursday to sweep the two-game
series at Atlanta. The Braves, 11·
13, fell two games under .SOO for
the fii'St time since June 199I.
"I don't expect to be swept by
anybody,'' manager Bobby Cox
snapped. "We should do tbe
sweeping at home."
Atlanta, picked by many to
·repeat as NL champions for lhe
third straight season, bas lost foot
straight~ on its current homesl4114. wub three games remaining
agiiihst SL Louis.
Florida stole six bases in lhe
gam.e, includins three by Chuck
Carr
Carr sin&amp;led with one out in the
seventh and stole bis 1Otb base
before Dave Mapl•n homered off
Pete Smilh (2-2}.
Starter I..uis Aquino (2-1}
itched
six iqmngs for Florida, JlivP
ms up eight bits, walking two and
striking out three. Trevor Hoffman
got the last tluee outs for bis first

·

map-league save.

With a llliiDer on second in the
ninlh and two outs, Hoffman got
David Jllltice to tl,Y out.
"We·' re pfe~p tbe bits,
we're just not
• them out;''
said Damoa errybi 1, wbo bad
four bits. illcluding allome run, for
lhe Braves. "We can't put them
togetber and get some ~- Every- ,
bodr wants to do a httle more
than s really poaible."
~laewbere in the NL, ~ was ~L
LoutS 5, Colotaclo 2; Pbllactclphia
5, San Diego 3: San·Francisco 10,
New York 5; Houston S, Chicago
4~ and Moo~ 7~ Los.AIIaeles 3.
Piusburgb .~ Cincinnlu wu postpaned by ram. '
·
.GlaDis 1~, Mets 5
. Barry ~ bit two bome rons
and Mau Williams added a 432foot shot as San Franciaco took
advanage of five emirs 10 beat New
York and Bret Sabelbagen (2-3} at
Candlestick Padt.
Bod Black (1-0) pitched five
innings, allowing four hits to

1

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llouolon .................13

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Diep (Eiland G-1 ), I 0:0S m.
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cilco(Swilll· l), 10:35 pm.

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Saturday's c~mos

St. Loud (Mapne 1-2) at Atlanta
( S - :1-~ I :OS p.m.
Cbicap (Hull.oy 3-0) at CINCINNATI (RiJO :1-1), :Z,ll p.m.
~ 4-0)" Son Frondoco
(Bnndoy ~-~~4:05p.m.
Co1onda (l&amp;d 3-2) "FloiWo (llooah
:1-2~ 7:05p.m.
Pi«tiNrJh (Tomlin 1·1) II Houttoo
(llroboll :1-3), I:OS~.m.
.
Phi' 1 'rNa
wn 1·1) at lAI Aft&amp;•
-~o- ,!0:05p.m.
Now York (Scbourok 1·2) at Saa
Dioao (f•JlarG-1~ 10:05 p.m.

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eptem .ceordlng tO ....

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your pool till• eummar, PPG
wlllp.y fQrn'::d~r treMment
~
10reatore
the pool tO .,. alpMrea
condition. Wowl 'tVhat eould
and good far your
pockelboolc?
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ch.rge Of only.._

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1-ctEV.
CONVERSION VAN

tnllli

1. . 11ERCURY
WAGON

11816

eastern softballers post
J0-3 win over Southern
By SCOIT WOLFE
led 5~2:
Southern fought back when JesSentinel Correspondent
, Eastern's softball team over- sikJ!ICodner tipped a long double to
~ame an early deficit to post a 10-3 deejlleft field and Christi Maidens
non-league win over lhe Southern reached on an error. Maidens hit
tornadoes Thursday evening at the the balllu.d all three times, but
EHS did a good job to snag the ball
Eastern liigh School.
; The game was a non-league on lhe rust two possessions. !hen
ilffair, while next week's milCh at made 'throwing errors. Maidens
$outhern will count in the Tri-Val- later had a sin$1e.
Angie Swtger reached on an
ley Confere0ce standings.
' ~outhem took an early lead in enur, and as lhe ball caromed into
lhe bottom of the rust when Raber- lhe outfield Maidens was waved
ia Caldwell led off with a walk,' home, where she was thrown out at
/
:&amp;.mber Oblinger sacrificed ber to the plate.
With
the
score
now 5-3 the mid:;econd, and Tabitha Willford bamdle
innings
offered
little offense as
!Dered an RBI single. Following a
1
SHS
hurler
Caldwell
settled down
fly out and error, Christi Mlidens
to
handcuff
Eastern,
and the
'slammed a bard hit ball to short
Eagles'
Shelly
Hendricks
blanked
!hat was mishandled at fust allowing another run to score. Jodi Cald- Southern in order in three of lhe
well walked. but on a misplayed last four innings.
Nicole Nelson had ·an RBI sinpick·off attempt, Maidens was
nailed on a throw to the plate. gle for a lone fifth inning run as she
knocked home Radford, who had
Southern led 2-0.
Eastern (5-5) then got a crack at singled. In the sixth, EHS widened
hard-throwing-lodi Caldwell. Lead- lhe score from 6-3 to 10-3 on two
bff batter Jaime Wilson walked, errors. a two-run single by RadPenny Aeiker reached on a field- ford, a sacrifice fly by Redovian
er's choice, then wilh two out, Jes- and a Rachel Hawley RBI single.
Redovian and Hawley each had
sica Radford struck out, but as the
three
RBI's apiece for the game.
ball bounded away, no play was
Hawley
had two singles, Radford
jnade on the runner and Radford
two singles (2 RBI) and singles
reached safely 81 firSt.
• With lhe bases loaded Carrie each by Karr, Aeiker, Morrissey,
I
~onissey'Slammed an RBI single Redovian and Neblon.
Soulhern hitters were Amller
lo short lefL Wilh the bases again
run, Amy Redovian went down 0-2 Ohlinger, Tabitha Willford an!l
jn lhe count, !hen slammed a two Maidens all with singles and Codrun single. Eastern took a 3-2 ner a double.
Hendricks, in picking up the win
advantage.
.
fanned
three and walked three.
: Southern put two runners on in
Caldwell
fanned four and ~alked
lhe second, but could not score,
three.
I!""
)Yhile Eastern came up wilh two
,.
Southem
had
five
fielding errors
more runs in the bottom of the
and
a
couple
costly
mental errors
frame. After one out. Wilson again
aas
wen.
Eastern
had
five
errors.
;walked, Jessica Karr singled -and
Soulhern
hosts
Vinton
County
Penny Aeiker Aeiker sactificed the
tonighL
runners.
.
: Rachel Hawley then went 0-2 in Inala1 totals
l)le' count before 'slamming a two- Soutbem: 201-000-0 =3-4-5
tun single up the middle. EHS now Eastern: 320-014-x = 10-9-5

go:

wllh between 12 and 21 points and
Despite the poor sbootins by their reserves outscored visiting
both teams in the Spurs-Blazers Charloae's backups 53-14. Kendall
game, EUiott said be was certain he Gill and Alonzo Mourning scored
would tie the same and put San 30 points each and Larry Johnson
Antonio ahead at the free~ throw had 16, but no one else on lhe Horlineinlhef!nalseconds.
necsmanagedrnorethansix.
" I said, ' I'm going to make
' ' Everyone contributed,"
these free&lt;tbrows and we're ~oing Boston coach Chris Ford said.
to win !his game,'" Elliott said.
"That's what we've been saying
Tbe Blazers still led 86-79 on we needed since the season startTeny Porter's two free throws with ed."
'
2:41 remaining. but tbey never
Sherman Douglas bad seven
scored again, going the fmal 3:50 points, seven assists and four
without a fteld goal.
rebounds in the third period as the
"We had been losing games in Celtics, tied 53-53 at halftime,
the fourtb quarter," San Antonio outscored Charlotte 30-18 for an
coach John Lucas said. "But -we 83-7llead.
stole this one."
An 11 -0 run cut the Hornets'
D1vid Robinson was 6 for 20 2~point lead to 102-93 with 2:45
from lhe field, but made his last left before McDaniel restored the
three shots to finish with I6 points double-digit lead Boston mainand 15 rebounds for San Antonio. · tained the rest of tbe way.
Jerome Kersey scored a seasonThe only down note for the
high 24 points for Portland, which Celtics was R.eggie Lewis, who
played without Clyde Drexler scored 17 poinls but was limited to
because of his injured left ham- 13 minutes because of what doctors
string.
believe was hyperventilation or
None of the other playoff open- lack of glucose. Lewis collapsed on
ers was close, with Cleveland rout· the coun in the fust half. .
ing New Jersey 114-98, Boston
Rockets 117, Clippers 94
defeating Charlotte 112-101 and
Hateem Olajuw!?n had ,28
Houston whipping the Los Angeles points, 11 rebounds and mne
Clippers 117-94.
.
blocked shots, and Houston continTonigbt's series-opening games ued its. homecourt dominanc~ of
have defending champion Chicago Los Angeles. The Rockets won for
playins bast to Atlanta and Indiana the 15111 svaisht time over lhe Clip. at New Yort in lhe Eastern Con(er- pers in the Summit and now are·s.o
ence and the Los Angeles Lakers at against tbem this season.
Phoenix and Utah at Seattle in the
Olajuwon scored 12 pqints in
WesL
the first quarter, when Houston
Critics 111, Hornds 101
took the lead for good. The RockBoston, witb 16 NBA titles, ets extended the margin to 59-47 at
.taught Charlotte a lesson in team halftime before a 30-12 spun made
basketball in the Hornets • playoff it 91-69 after three plliods. ·
debut.
"He's one of the best in the
Xavier McDaniel led six Celtics g11ne,'' lhe Clippers' Mark Jack•
jiJ!IIper wilh two seconds to

Southern comes from behind
to hand Eastern 7-3 defeat

choice. Anolher run came in and
By SCOIT WOLFE
'
runners 81 second and third.
Sentinel Correspondent
Ridenotlr hit a bot potaro down
The Southern Tornadoes scored
a 7-3 come-from·bebind victory . the line at lhird. The SJJS third
over Eastern dll!ing baseball action basemiiJI. bobbled slightly, then
tagged't.he oncoming runner as
at Eastern High School Thursday
evening. The game w1s a non- another run scored on' lhe fielder's
choice. Easlcrn led 3-2.
league battle.
BiUy Jones singled for Southern
Jeremy Dill tossed a three-bitter,
faming seven and walking four en to lead off the fifth. Ryan Williams
route to the win. Tyson Rose, in
grounded to short. Jones had tried
relief of Wes Arbaugh, suffered the to $leal and had already made it to
loss as the two combined for three second, forcing the EHS shortstop
strikeouts and four walks.
to go make a basiy throw to fust.
With two out in the second, The ball caromed into dead ball terSouthern bloke a scoreless dead- ritory and one ronner was awared
lock wben Eric Jones walked, home.
Andy Grueser walked and Raben
Wilh the score tied, Wickline
Kimes slammed an RBI single. waited and Jeremy Dill bit a long,
BiUy Jones followed wilh a one- hard sacrifice fly to deep center.
Ryan Buckley made a great play,
run double to ~ve SHS a 2-0 lead.
Rose came m to retire the side.
but Williams came home 10 give
SHS beld a 2-0 lead until lhe SHS the lead.
fourtb, wben EHS put togelher a
Southern scored three more
tblee-run rally. Rose hefped his times in the' sixth on two errors, a
cause with a single, Arbaugh Billy Jones double and RBI and a
,
'
walked, Matt Bowen had a single Williams sacrifice.
to load tbe bases, then Michael
Southern hitters were Billy
Smith dribbled a grounder back to Jones wilh a double and two sin•
the pircber.
gles, Eric Jones two singles, Wick~ Meigs scored three runs in the
for the wm.
Southern was thinking home-to- line a ·double and singles by
!ixlh inning and went on to defeat
Stanley, a freshman, had an out· first for the double play, but lhe Williams, Jeremy Northup, Dill,
River Valley 4-3 in non-conference standing $Bllle for Meigs. He was over anxiety led 10 a dropped ball Andy Fields'and Kimes.
baseball acuon Thursday evening. ' the winmng pitc;her in relief of at tbe plate and all runners were
~Eastern hitters .were Rose,
; The Raiders held a 2·1 leid sophomore Brett Newsome, who safe. The bases were still full and Bowen and Raben Reed. all with
heading into lhe sixth inning before also pitched well. The two com- SHS led 2-1.
singles.
tlilly Glaze got the Marauders bined to strike out II and walk six
Pat Newland then hit a bard 1
Southern ,' 9·4, hosts Vinton
started wilh a single and a stolen while givi.itg up seven hits. Keilh grounder to short, where SHS again- County tonighL
base. After Gary Adams walked, Jones and Brown had two singles looked for tbe double play, but
jllathan Brown lined a two-run sin- each to lead Meigs. Glaze, Pullins · played it into another fielder's Inalns to1a1s
Soutbem: 020-023-0 = 7-11-3
&amp;le to give Meigs a 3-2 advantage. and Stanley also had singles.
.
Eastern: 000-300-0 = 3-3-2
Gary Stanley then, walked and Jim
Chris Toler, the starter and loser
·t&gt;ullins singled in Brown. River for River Valley, combined wilh
Yalley scored a single run in lhe Dave Poling to strike out six, walk
~enlh inning, but Meigs held on
five and scatter seven hits. Paul
Covey and Shawn Cox led the
•
811 W. MAIN STRER•POIEROY
Raiders with two singles each. Rob
Canady added a double, and Poling
and Chris Crace had a single each.
~ignup
Meiss will host Belpre on Fri·
.
The final sign-up for the Meigs day evening.
!O.merican Legion baseball team Inning totals ·
will be Sunday from 1 to 2 p.m. at River Valley: 001-100-1 = 3-7·?
Meigs: 000-103-x = 4-7-p
1
·
Meigs High School's fteld.
WP
Stanley
(in
relief
of
, If there is not enough interest,
,
PKIUP or DELIVERY
there win not be alelm this season. Newsome)
LP-Toler
l':onner Ohio University star Chris
:renoglia will be the coach for this
fear's team.
i

H:

son said ofOiajuwon. "He's a phenomenal player and be had a phenomenal nighL I don't know il we
have·any answer for bim."
Jackson scored 26 points and
Danny Manning 17 for Los Angeles.
CavaUers 114, Nets 98
. Cleveland won (or the 12th time
m 13 games and banded shorthaitd·
ed New Jersey its 11th loss in 12

I

outings.
The Cavs, 18-1 in their last 19
home games against the Nets, (Jad
no impressive offensive totals, but
placed nine players in double fig-

ures.

Craig Ehlo led Cleveland with
16 points. Brad Daugherty was
next with 14 points and 14
rebounds, followed by Gerald
Wilkins and Terrell BllllldOn with
13 points each. Derrick Coleman

had 31 points and 10 rebounds for
New Jersey.
'Ille Nets. with Kenny Anderson
out wilh a broken wrist and center
Chris Dudley sidelined with a broken fool, made their situation
impossible by getting into early
foul trouble. Anderson's replacement, Rumeal Robinson, picked up
three fouls in Jhe first three min·
utes, and center Sam Bowie left
wilh two fouls wilh five minutes
left in the f~rst quarter.
Cleveland took the lead for
good with a 10-0 run for a 24-1 8
lead. The Cavs led 68-4 7 at halftime, ma1ching a team playoff
record for points in a half.
"They're there to be had,"
Wilkins said of the Nets. "We just
have to deliver the knockout )lUIICh.
We can't feel sorry for them .... In
June. maybe."

Prairie Bayou favored
to win Kentucky Derby
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
that Rick Wilson will have to gun
Ky. (AP) - A the colt at the brealt so he won't be
pill wilh the No. 5 on it was just shuffled back.
'
what the doctor ordered for KenBohannan and owner John Ed
tucky Derby favorite Prairie Anthony considered running a
Bayou.
Loblolly Stable entry of Prairie
"It Jlives me peace of mind, but Bayou and Marked Tree. T.hey
I' m sure Prairie Bayou doesn't decided to hold Marked Tree for
know the'~'differenee,'' trainer Tom either the Illinois Derby May 8 or
Bohannan after Prairie Bayou drew tbe Prealcne;;s May 15.
the No. S post in a field of 19 three·
There is one entry - Allen
year-olds for the I 1/4-mile Derby Paulson's Diazo and Corby - in
SaiUtday at Churcbill Downs.
the largest Derby field since the
Prairie Bayou likes to come limit of 20 llll1 in 1984 when Swale
from off the pace, and Milce Smilh won.
now will be able to take tbe gelding
Bill Shoemaker will make his
back without any jockeying or debut as a Derby trainer with
josding in the long run to lbe fust Diazo. His last win was on Ferditum.
nand in 1986, when at 54, he
Prairie Bayou was made the became the oldest winning Derby
early 5-2 pick.. In bis last two starts, jockey.
.
the Loblolly Stable gelding won
lhe Jim Beam and the Blue Grass.
He also won twice at Churchil,l
Downs as a 2-year-old.
'{he last gelding to go off lhe
COUNTY MAPS
favorite in die Derby was Rocldtill
llil STATE BOOK
Native, fifth in 1980. Seven geld·
A booi&lt; containing all of West .
ings have WOn the race, but none Virginia's 65 county maps is available.
since Clyde VanDusen in 1929.
Printed on 16%22 inch double spread
A post-time favorite has not pages, each county has a separate map
won the Derby since Spectacular T!&gt;e book contains 144 pages.
' 19""'
'
The state's 34 ,242 miles or roads are
B 'd m
I
' "' H
,S
the
Anita
shoWn
m detail Towns, c1t1es and
Personal ope,
anla
villages are indexed and located, and
Derby winner, was the early second there is much adtlitoonal mfonnation. To
choice at 7-2, followed by Storm order West Virgm•a County Mop booi&lt;,
Tower, Wood Memorial winner, 81
aend 114.85 !price includes delivery!
9-2. Bolh colts like to run on or vISA and MasterCard accepteil.
near tbC pace.
Make checks payable to
Personal Hope, ridden by pary
County Maps
Stevens, drew No. 7, also a favor521 Puetz Place
Lyndon Stouon, WI 53944
able post, but Stonn Tower drew
16081 686-3:131
the mil. That,means lhe speedy c;olt
Other states available: AR. Fl., IN.
will have to stand in the gate while
KY . M1 , NC. OH, PA, SC, and TN.
the 18 other starters are loaded and
LOUISV~ILLE,

r-----------w·

VIRGINIA

•

....

1-PONliAC

Tbunday'II&lt;OI'OS
CLEVBLAND a•, New Jcney 91,

1993 LUMINA

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NOW

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CUTLAUCBA

110.-

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NBL-111:!$DIII..._fl..,
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~
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....
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lloiUt'

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DlllleNewT'*Ielal•la•p•

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S2S North Second St.
Middleport,.Ohio '

DOMINO'S PIZZA

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FULL SERVICE POOL .OPENINGS

1992 CORSICA

Colitoadoua-1:05p.m.
S..alo. Now 'rock, 1:30 p.m.
Mi • '¢' It Detroi1, 1:35 p.m.
Oo1dad otClJlVI!UND, 1:35 p.m.

L.A. Lot.. .. - . 3 p.m.

TRI·CHLOR 3"
TABS

t24111i

3

6

Yep. If yoU UH the J'rOVIIn

a..... tnl......,..paola~re

more (V••me1• 0-2). 7:05p.m.

~----4-2

.~

$1995 Pin Tax

'Mw•r• r.., •••• D•l - It'• Worttl ''"'' Jrlv•
WE'RE
. :;:~.

W;n0-11), 1:30p.m.
Oo1dmd (Dmo 0.3) 11 a.J!VEUND
(Mooo 1·1), 1:35 p.m.
'
TOI'CIIIIO (Mamlt-3rot Cbk:oso (AI·
V&amp;ft!Z 1.0). 7:05p.m.
KaMa Ci\.y (Oubica. 0-3) at Balli~

Tbunday'a scores

rWLPd.GB
................... 14 7 .667
r
-..................
11 ' ..591
t.!i
_
__, .......- ..12 9 ,l71
NowYGII;,_,.,_.. u 9 .!50
~

INSTALUD

308 E. MAIN ST. POMERQY. OHIO

Deuoll7, r - ' · - t1ot1 ,_,
v
- 4. Wlltoipoe 3 (01'). v...

AMERICAN LEAGUE

GROUND POOL

DON TATE CHEV.·9LDS.·CAD.·GEO'

Satunlay···-

-

Blazers playof~ htstory d1d_lhey
allow fewer POIRtS. They ptcked
lhe same BW!Ie to have one of their
worst offenstve pe~onnances.
~ S~ Antonio SJliii'S, held~
34 pomcs m _the fiCSl ~f and trailmg by 16 _m the .thud quarter
Tl_lursday mght, flmshed the g_ame
With an 8-0 ru~ for_an 87-86 VICtory on the openms mght of the NBA
playoffs.
• Sean Elliott scored 18 points
. arnl capped the game-ending surge
with two free throws with 5.3 sec·
Onds left as the Spurs held Portland
to 16 points in the fourth quarter.
, . "It'~ probably -the biggest win
smce I ve been m San Antonio,"

Elliott said. .
Tbe Blazers shot 38.3 percent
from lhe field and 57.9 percent
from tbe free-throw line. Cliff
Robin59n. a top candidate for the
NBA's Sixlh Man award, was the
leading offender witb' 1-for-15
shooting from the field and 3-forIOaccuracy from the line.
Robinson's most costly misses
were two free throws with 10 seconds remaining and the Trail Blazers leading 86-85. Robinson then
fouled Elliott, who bit lhe gamewinning free throws.
"It probably was the worst
game of my career," Robinson
said. "It was extremely frusttating
for me."
Rod Strickland missed a !~foot

)\1eigs edges River Valley 4-3

Slllldat'• pmes ·

SL ........ T:IOp.m.
CdoopOICIIIONNATI,2:1$ p.m.
Jl'iiUtlmlb. Hoadall, 2:35p.m.
JlhiWIIpl: I· at LOI ~. 4t:05 p.m.
Now YGII; •S..-=4:05 p,m.
- · S o a · · - 4:05p.m.
Colondaot Fbldo, 1:05 p.m.

24n.

FooOIIIM .
DALLAS (AP} - 'fbc NCAA

Suoday's pmes

Mmau17, L o o - 3

NATI
51.

Sports briefs

Teull '
MUNICH, .Germany (AP) Second-seeded Ivan Lend! beat
Magnus O.ntafsoon of Sweden 6-4,
6-4 and lbird see lied Michael Stich
of Germuy defeatod Karol Kucera
of Slovalda 6-0, 1-5 Ia the second
round of the BMW Open.
Temrls
DULUTH, GL.(AP) - Roberto'
Azllol &amp; .....nri ... uplettbird-seeded Mlliv:Wiiiungl(ln 3-6, 6-3,
6-4 in tbe sec!)nd round of tbe
AT&amp;T CballeDB!:,_.._
THAMBURG, Gamlny (AP) Top-seeded Monica Seles of
y gos1a · beat P!11ric · Tarabini
of~ 6-2, 6-2 10~YIIICC to
the quarterfinals of tbc Citizen
Cup • ·
./ •
·
Hockey
MUNICH, Germany (Al'JFrance and Auatria qualified for
next yea's Olympil:s by winning ·
their final gamea in the world
championships. France beat
Swil=land 3-1 and AUIIIia clliealed Ncxway 6-2. llltollay's ICIIIIifinals, Canada faced Russia and
Swedes~ pla-d die Czecb Repub7
·
'
lie.

'

253 W.llaln St., Pomeroy UOO 552·111110
7 North 1-IIQG.S&amp;I-3051

.

'

Milw- (B- 1·1)" r .... (Ler·
fatol-o),I:OS p.m.
California (Seatl w 3-0) at &amp;o.\Clft
(0.,.,. 3-1~ I :05 p.m.
Minoeaota (Tapt.Di 0-3) at Detroit
(Bo&amp;o 1-0). I :05 p.m.
Scoottle (loillloi1 3-1) ot New Yadt (M.

-S.au..Jo4_

Color~do (lleyn~o

It.... .

.

~

eigbt·tellll, $12S mmicJu Di)oisioD
I-A playoff, Committee cbairmaD
Doonic o.-. die ""letic dftctor 81 Olrll!boml, cUd the 12-manber group's delile 10 piOieCt the 20
bowls that bave gUaranteed $70
million to 1-A ICboola aext fall

Ootlaa4 (l)aillq 0-1) 01 CLEVE·
,.~"1:(15 p.m.
(0
' • 0-3) at Nn Ycllt
~0.1),7:30~
Jt-. CllJ ( ' :1-2)
(McnwW J-2). 7,.. p.m.
Callfora.la (Pamlll -2) at Bo.toa
(l)oooc., 1-1~ 7:35 p.m.
'
· t ...... (iltotdoio,.. 3-1) "CDooao.
(Fomoaoloo :1-~ I :OS p.m.
Milwautoe (Nnano 0..2) at Te.ua
~ 2-1), 1::15 p.n!.

U:.,'eloloild

.

By Th.e .U.OC:lated Press

Nev~r m Jhe ~ortlan~ Tra1l

'

endoned the bowl IYifCIIl. a 'lWlflk
afiU Nite offerM 10 spoiiiOI' an

(W.U. U), 7:05,...

NAnONAL LEAGUE

Lee Smith linisiWI for bis major . (1~2) over the left· field wall. Hibleap&amp;-leading lOth save.
bud allowed five runJ and 10 ~
· Allral5, Cabs I
in six inlllap.
.
Craig Biggio's borne run
EsDGI7, Dodlen 3
snapped a sixlh-inning tie as HousKen Hill won bia Wurth llrliabt
too defeated Chicago for its third decision tbls monlh lild Mlntui'
straigbt \lictory 81 the Asttodome. Grissom drove in two rt1111 willl a
Chris Jan~CS and Jeff Bagwell also homer and a tic-breeking double at
llomeled for die Astros.
Dodger Stadium.
,
· Pele Hamiscb (Z-0) pill:hed six
Rookie Fnutk Bolick drove ill
inni~ and pve up four rons and
two ICvenlh-innina runt auia•t
six bits for the win. He also scored reliever Steve Wibon widl bli finS
a run. .•
·
' mJjor-leaaue homer and 0rea Col·
With the score 4-4 in the sixth, brunn went 4 for 5 and ICored
BiiJio homered off Greg Hibbard twice. Ramon Martinez fell to 2-3.

pos!Seii!IO'I committee ...umously

S co t"'e boa r&lt;l
- • Baseball • -

improve to S-0 lifetime against
New Yolk.
Pllllliel5, Padres 3
•
Milt Thom)JIOn hit a two-run
single and JU811 Bell followed wilh
a two-run double ill die third Ianing
to help Jlive red·bat Pbiladtlpbia a
two-same series sweep at Jack
Murphy Slldiwa.
Danny Jack4on (2-0} allowed
three rons on seYCII bits, llll'IICk out
four and walked two in 1 1/3
inninp Fnm1t Scmirun fell to 1·2.
Mttch Williams worked the
ninth for bis ninth save.
Cardillali5,Roddes2
Bob Tewksbury won bi.s rust
game and bit a two-nm single as SL
Louis beat Colorado at Mile High
Stadium.
.
Tewksbury (1-3} allowed two
runs and eight hits in 6 '1/3 innings,
struck out two and wallr«d none.
Tbe rigbt·hander, a career .124
bitter coming in, slagled bis first
two times up egainst Andy Ashby
(0-2).
..

.

Spurs, Rockets, Celtics, Cavs _post wins in first-round action

i-

· In NL action,

The Dally Sentlnei...:..Page-5

Pomeroy,-Middleport, Ohio

.

.

'
Sports
deadlines posted
'

:

The Gallipolis Daily TrlbiUie,
;The Daily Stlllllltl, the Po/111
·PieasQ/It Register and the SIUiday)'jmes-Selltlnel value the contribu~ ions their readers make to the
:fll01'lS sections of these papers, and
iihese contributions will continue to
:be published. '
• How~ver, certlin deadlines for
~ubmissions win be observed. The
·deadline for photos and re1ared arti·
~lei for htsketbiJI and other winter
~- is the lasl day o( the NBA

• L.itewise. lhe deadline for sublnissions of local baseball- and
J()ftball-related photos and related
~les. fnlm T-blllto the~.
fS well u other spring and summer
~. is tho clay of the last pme
of the World Seriea. The deedline
~or Pbolol and related articles for
rootball and other fall sportS is die
Saturday before the Super Bowl.
: Tbele deadllnelllave bDon lnstl·
· 'ted to Jlive readen plenty of time
lO Jet their pbotol bKt from the
photoarapby IIUdiO of eltoico and
10 Jlive IIID 1taff1 tbe opponunity to
Jublish these aporu photos and
.Ucles durinalhe IJIIII'IlPIIile aea·
spn for that SJ!Ofl

~=~00 p.m. each "ight
Staffed Nursery. Each Ser~ice

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS
T~pping

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$1 099 · ·.

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"Something For Everyone"
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Speaker:
. Dr. Jerry C~~nney
·

HILL'S COUNTRY CORVETTES
OH.

247·4161

1964 Chevy lmpal-. 55 Factory

•stoo

4 IPIId.
Fectory Tic.
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1983 Escort Statlol Wagon
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., 95

Dr. Channey is field director for ·
Independent baptist Missions for
Asians. He, paslored in Akron, Ohio
for 9 years and taught in various
. bible colleges.

SPECIAL MUSIC
NIGHTLY
Sulliect: Stewardsh~p

1981 Corvette
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HOUR.S WELCOtaD
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Fa111llies by Faith
·THE PUBUC IS INVITED
· Rev. ••s Keesee, Pastor
Rev. Dwight Ashley. Assodati P•stor

·

•

••

I

•

'

.

�.

·.

By
The
Bend
.

Friday, _Aprt130, ·, ~

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, April 30, 1993
page-6

Thomas R. Jakmides, Depart·
ment Commander of the Ohio
American Legion, will be lhe guest
speaker at lhe recognition dinner of
Feeney Bennett Post No. 128, Middlepon, on Friday at 6:30 p.m. at
lhe legion annex.
Jakmides is a life. member of
Canon Post No. 44 and was elected
to tbe high office of commander at
t)le 74th annual state convention in
Toledo in July.
He is a veteran of World Warn
and the Korean War. He served as

District 10 Commander, as a 100
percent commander arid as District
Second Vice-Commander. He won
lhe Department of Ohio Award for
Post Activities. He is lhe past commander of District 10's First Divi·
sion, Start County, and past commander of his post four tiDies. He is
a former vice-chairma,n of the
National Security Commission,
National Membership Committee
and served as the National Commander's Represeiltativ.e on the
National Employment Commis:

•

sion.
He is retired from Goodyear
,Corporation where he served as
contmcts manager. He is president
an4 CEO of lhe Victors Company.
Jakmides resides in Ncrth Cin·
ton· with his wife, Donna, and
daughter, Carolyn.'
·
The dinner and dance is open 10
all legionnaires, auxiliary, Sons of
the American Legion, and their
guests. '
A dance will conclude the.
evening's festivities .

Stobart-Cremeans ·

.....
1
accepted

'

COSL

Sen . .Eugene Watts, R-Gal·
Ioway, acknowledged Thursday
that the measure he introduced
would not have been offered if lhe
state still was making spendin~
cuts to avoid a budget deficit, as 11
did ill the last two years.
Watts said lhe $3 billioo spending increase in the proposed twoyear budget shows there is no
financial crunch now. '
· "Yes, we can afford it," he said
at a news conference Thursday.
"I may be lhe only _P.erSOn saying this, but the state is not in a
tight budget situatioo. We have'sig.
.
nificantly increased spending in
WOOKWORKING AWA~D WINNERS- Jason Ervin,
this
budget over the previous bienFred Matson and Jason Banett were presented awards for woodnium,
and so let's have a little lruth
working at tbe anuual Racine FFA Banquet. Presentiug the
in
advertising,"
Watts said.
awards is Marvin Glasgo, R&amp;G Feed and Supply, Pomeroy.
Watts' offered the bill in an
attempt to help resolve what he
said was a statewide crisis in avail·
able and affordable day care.
·
'His bill would ajlow a 100 perATLANTA (AP) - The num- was a dip in lhe ·level of lhe body's cent .t all credit to corporations that
ber of Americans with AIDS master immune ceUs, or CD4s, to establish workplace day care censurged by more lhan 35,000 during oilezfifth lhe level of a healihy per- ters.
Watts' proposal· also would
lhe ftrSi three months of lhis year,
grant
a tax credit equaling SO per·
mostly because of a new defmition sonFrom )an. 1 through March 31 ,
cent
of
an employer's costs of proof lhe ·disease, government health 35,7791)ew AIDS Clises were diagviding-services
at a qualified day
officials reported.
nosed nationwide, a 204 percent
care
center
within
a reasonable dis-.
But even cases not attributed 10 increase from the 11;770 new cases
tanee
of
lhe
workplace.
.
the broader ·d efinition surged, during the same period in 1992,
"This
...
willllfOvide
employers·
climbing 21 percent, Or twice the CDC reported.
·
• ·
rate .for the same period last year,
Sixty percent 'ilf those new· wilh the incenhve to reimburse
the Cenoors for Disease Conlrol and cases, ot 21,582, were based 59lely their employees directly, that is .
gtve them money, for 'day care
Prevention said Thursday.
on the 'new definition .
cOsts,''
he said. . .. · ~
"That is higher thail we expect·.
l

· Puoor:
.
Sunday school • 9:4S ...,_
Womup - II Lm. ond 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi&lt;:e - 1 p.m.

AIDS cases surg~ -0

•

..

Cookout held

Larry and Bessie Taylor hoste4
a cookout recently in observance or
her sister and brother-in-law, Ted
and Dolly Spires, Defiance.
:
· Attending were Jeff and Qystal;
Jeffrey and Jonathan Bau$hman•
Langsville, and. Ellen smith and
Virginia Duckworlh, Middleport ~

· Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Aile!)
(Kimberly Jean) Grueser, Middleport, announce the birth of theif
first child, a son, Michael Keith
Sullival) Grueser, Ofl March 22 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed six pounds
and 14 ounces and was 20 inches
long.
,
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Sullivan HolQJan, Racine1
and Mr. and Mrs. Terrene~ D.
Collins Sr., Rutland.
.
Great-grandparents are David
Grueser •. Gallipolis; Thelma
Grueser, Middleport; Alice Hoi~
man, Racine; and Delbert Pridemore, Gallipolis.

a.-

:0..
tl Cllrllt
Puotwlf, lhnil&lt;a¥illc Rd. (RL 143)
-~w.....,

Somdlll' Sdoool - 9'.30 o.m.

Wanllip - ID-.30am., 7:00p.m.
w 1 ny Services -7 p.m.

a-.,

Clo- tl CloriJI
..._, , T_R,..,...
Somdlll' Sdoool · 9:30 Lin . .
Wonbip • 10.30 a.m.

BIT

-'"'-E.U

MLUII•~

PuiOI': liJo N.
Sllldoy Scbool-9:4 ...,_
Bvenia&amp; -6:30 ..-.
Woilneoday s.m-- 6:30p.m.

,_,,......B.

HaWns
- s-lay sdouoi . 9 ......
W:onllip . 10 am., 1 p.m.

w-., s..w:.. _.,p.m.

•

Wonbip- 10:30 am., 7:30p.m.
w
y s.mc. 7,:30 p.m.

.-.....c....
I

-~HOIEY'S·

Friday and Sanuday nighJ.s s to 9

1
•

a.- ofCtwisl
s..-

Cloerd tiCiorlol ..

0

Clli

I

" •

u.a.

Par. Thtron illalllln
Soeoday Sdoool · 9:30 Lin.
. E-m,- 7 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy $avices -7 p.m.
H.-tr_,. C..... oiCJorllt ia
Ckllllla. Ueiooo
llanfonl, W.VL
-Rev. David McMonis
SIPidey Sdoool - II a.m.
Wonhip , 9:30Lm.,7:30p.m.
Wcdnesdoys...i&lt;es - 7:30p.m.

. ML ~.. a.tiol
Founb ol Main SL, Midolq&gt;cMt
PuiDr: Rov. Gtlbell {;...,Jr.
s...day .Sd!ool - 9:30a.m. ·
WO!Ihip - 10;~5 LID.

Church of God
I l L - Clloood tiGeol

AfttlquliJ J!apdll

llociaoo

Puror: JC.me1h Smioh
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
WO!Ihip • IO:~S Lm.
Thursday Servic:a - 7:30p.m.

l'lsur. Rev. , _ Souctfield
s-loy School · 9:4S a.m.
.'
E...... · 7p.m.
W•.. •my Services - 7 p.m. · .

Rullaod Fne WII~Jeidot
' Salem St.
PallOr. llev. Paul Tayloo
Sunday School - 10 ......
E-ma-7p.m. ·
w _ , ServioOo - 1 p.m.

-Cio-ofGod
,._, .lalet F. Corconil
~ Schoal - 10 LID.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7 p.m. W \ 'my ScMocs - 1 p.m.

ond-

s,_ Clooordt t1Geil

Cathol1c

Sis.
•-.Rov. Devi&lt;IR.....U
Saaday Sdiool..,. W~ 9:30 fO,m.
Eu •• Senicel 1 p.m.
W 7 ';Scniwa ~ 7p.m.
Apfle

Sacn' !IUft C a ft a..rdo
161 Mulbeny Avo., Pew.....,, 912-5198
!'.-:Rev. Waller E. Heial
Sat Con. 4:~~: 1Sp.m.; Mau- S:30PJ11.'
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
s.a. t.lu• . 9:30 ......
Dailay!IIMI - 1:30 .....

t""'

·CJoerdo tiC.. tift
OJ. Wloiot ltd. oiiSL 160
l'lol&lt;r.l'll'

s-loy School - 10 a.m.
w....., . JJa.m.
Wcdiad., Semca - 7 pm. .

Now urea.- of God
a..-

.

.

,G.f

NEW

s1 2.00

. ,.....

PIESCIImON SHOP
. tn 11ert1t
s.-11

sis, recurring
inva·
On
ease~
Jan. t,
tuberculo-~-~~=E1W~:~oilll~L':5Y~N4~&amp;~~=:J21~
, ~~~::~~===~J
sive cervical cancer were ad&lt;Jed, So

....

lli,.li,art,

HaiMe

MEIGS nRE
CEITER,
INC.
,,...,_Fullz
'1

1r
PIL.IDIID1

PI II

•awm
SMIS I Slliki

tt2 707S .

............
7

17:1 llartlt s-...1 ....

SL Rl. 12A, Racine
PallOr: William HQbaclc
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenina -7-p.m.
Wednelday Sei'Yices . q p.m.

Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Mcwse Chapel Cbun:k
Supt.: Mike Matson
Swiday •chool - I 0 a.m.
· Worship- 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yice · 7 p.m.

Sunday

Fal~

Goopel Church
Lon&amp; lloctom
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.in : .
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. ·

~·

Putcr. Keilh Rader

a.m.

Middleport Presbylertaoi
..
·· Sundoy School - 9 a.m.
.Wo.,hip - 10 a.m., 4 p.m. ('2nd&amp;. 4th Sun.)
Syracuse Flrii l:lniled Prosbyterlan
· Sund•y School - 'I 0 a.m.
Wonhjp - H a.m., 4 p.m. (lot ol3rd Sun.)

ML OliVe Community Chur('h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sundoy School · 9:30 a.rp.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednc:day Service - 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sei-·DaJ AdYenUIII
Mulbeny 1111. Rq., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Sawrday Sei'Yices:
S"""th School · 2 p.m,
Worship 3 p.m.

United Fallh Church
Rt. 1 on_ Pomc;roy" By-Pus
Pu10r. Rev. Roben E. SmiLh, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
' Wednesday Sei'Yia: - 7 p.m.

7

Un1ted Brethren

Full Gospel Llghthoose
_33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
PastOr: Roy Hwllcr
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thunday- 7:30p.m.

·

· Neue Settlement Church

Sunday Wonhip · 2:30p.m.;
Thursday aeM&lt;:eo - 7:30p.m . .

M~

HtnDon V•lled llrelllren .
It! Christ C~urcil
Texai Communily off CR 82
Pas10r. Roben Sanden
.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Services ·7:30p.m.

· EiJen Volled Brelllren In Cllrlsr
.2 1/2 riill., norlll o( Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pas10r. Rev. Robert Maltley
Sunday School- 10 un.
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yiceo -7:30p.m.

Soulll Belllel New TO!Iomenl
Sil""r Ridae
Panor: Duane Sydenstriclcr
Sunday School - 9_a.m.

. R...._.llle Fello-lp
Churdl'of the N-nn•
, Puu.: John w. Douala•
S..day School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.,7 p.m.
w.m...say ScMces .- 1 p.m.

Sunday Sdlool - tO a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m., 6p.m.
Tuesday Sei'Yice1 - 7 p.m.

.'

Synauo C~urch fl 111e N-~ene
Past.&gt;r: Rev. Glenn McMillan
S101day School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30un.,6p.m.
Wedneoday Sei'Yiceo • 7 p.m.

Flolweodl

P1110r. Keith Rader
Sunda~ SchQoJ • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip- It a.m., 6 p.m.
'I)lursday Service• - 7 p.m .

Pomeroy Cburcll of til&lt; Nazo"l'fte
Panor: Rev. Thc:JTI.lS McClung
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

P.' J. PAULEY, AGENT

N:::ill;:;i;,~-~ Co. _,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES

·SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY -~
--.

· 204 Co,ndor St.
l!l!mtroy, Ott.

' We Fill Doctors'

·-,.,.

Prescripttons.

992·2975

\ :

"2o5141 .

Middit,...t

I

• .

:-oo
·· .. ...._
••

.........

. _,

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

I0

,~

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

FURNITURE

RfSWS
liKE
DI._S

a

HARDWARE

Homehte Saws.

BILL QUICKEL

-

Crow's FamilY, Restaurant

"lul"l'l lt11tu g Fll•l C&amp;ld~t " .
228 W. Mnin' St., Pome~oy .
214 E. Main
992- s130 Pomeroy

992-5432

WANiADS OfT

· FISHER
. F-RAl HOME
264 s.th 21111

Pentecostal
P.n-IA-~Iy

Middleport Cburcll oflhe Nuorene
PallOr. G"''OI)' A. Cundiff
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
wOllhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yicea - 7 p.m.

IAWUJ4GS.COATS

SIIOUffU

Laurel Clllr Free Melhodllll Church
P"tor. Peser Tremblay
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Sei'Yi001 - 7 p.m.

lbodne Flnl Claurch oflhe Nuorene
Pauor: Th&lt;mu L a...,, II
S101day Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.Jll.
Wedneiday Sei'Yiceo - 7 p.m.

· Warship • II a.m.
·
Wcdneodoy Service~ ; 7':30 p.m.

·

Christian Fellowllllip Cenjer
Salem SL, Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Muuer
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.

Nazarene

p._....., 0.... NCWIIWI

Apootolk Fall~

1/4 mile past Fon Mei&amp;s on New Lima Rd.
Pa110r: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m,
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
. Friday-7:00p..m,

Dyesvllle c... munily Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm,, 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Sunilay School • 9:4~ a.m,

IMI¥

Churdl ol j_, Christ,

OffRL 124
Pastor: Edoel Hill
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m.: 7:30p.m.

Hocklnaporl Church
GrandStJ&lt;d
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· WonltW- 11 a.m.
Wednesdoy Sei'Yices - 8 p.m.

Control Cluster

111411t2-1117- tiii·OOKSI
. CHURCH IUPPLIII • IIILES

StiverJvi lie Word of Faith
PallOr. David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 Lm.
Evenini - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service-7:30p.m.

.

Huel Community Church

Townlhip Rd,, 468C
-Sunday School • 9 a.m.
·Worship - 10 a.m .
Wednelday Service•- 10 a.m.

AJbul')' (Srnaue)

93 MHI Street
Mlclcl..,art. Ohio 41710

Pastor: Rev. ViClOf Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
· Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn*'y Semce - 7:30p.m.

Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednelday Services. 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mlsskln
1411 Brid&amp;eman St, Syracuse
Pas10r. Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

lletbel Churcb

Tllppan Plalno St. Paul
Putor. Sbarm Hausman
Sunday 8cbool - 9 Lm.
Wo1111ip- tO a.m.
Tueoday Sei'Yiceo - 7:30p.m.

CaiYIII'J Pltarim Cbaptl
llarrilonville Road

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evming 7 p.m.
Thunday Sei'Yice - 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Piorislt
Pu10r. Helon Kline ·
Coolville Churcll
Main ol Filth St.
SWiday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 a.m.
Tueoday SeMOOI , 7 p.m .

Paoror: Rev. Seldon Jclimoon
Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
I st &amp; 3rd Sunday - 1:30 p.m.
· Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yiceo -7:30p.m.

Faith Fellowship CrUIIde for Christ
Pastor. Rev. Franltlin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m,

Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

R•Uoed Bilslt .Mflllodisl
Paotor: Rev.!Von Myen
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evmin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yiceo -7 p.m.

ReedoYUie

C\\\;((

7

6

Calvlll'y Bible Clourcll
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Paoror: Rev. BIJclcwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WO!Ihip 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p-.m.
Wedne~day SeM&lt;:e • 7:30 p.in,

Fallh Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Rosd

PallOr. Roser Graoe
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WO!Ihip - 11 a.m.

Looi&amp;BoUom
Pastor: Rev. Seldon Johnson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worohip - I 0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviceo -7:30p.m.

.
s..,,..(B.,.r.,

Middleport Communlly Chur&lt;lt
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor. Sam Andenon
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evming - 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

w

Pastor: Brenda Weber
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - I0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servic:eo -7:30p.m.

Ufl\~

WHY RENT?

SnowvWe

·Raclae

J ...pa

.

Tbe Salvation Anny
llS Buuemut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School · 10:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

East·Ltllrt

Cbelller
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Thunday Setvicto - 7 p.m.

Chnst1ar1 U111011
H

Sunday School · ),()a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

VIAND STREET
PT. PLEASANT, WV~

....

Sala c..ter
PallOr. Ron Fiesce
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

Pastor: Roaer Grace
SWid•y School · 10 a.m.
Worship 9 a.m..

Meill CoopenUve Parllll
NorlheuiCiuller
Alfnd
Pastor. Slwoa Hau•man
Sunday School'- 9:30a.m . .
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Soeoday Sdoool; 9'.30 ......
Wonllip Semte: 111-.30 e.m.
Bible SoDdy, w • 1 , , 6:30p.m.

F.,.. bo llopllll
PuiDI' : Ariua Hu11

Av.ulablc at Jlll1icipllling loca1iiJns for a limiled lime.

•

....., l'hilip

FIIIIIBapliltCio. . .
Railroad St., Muon
Sundoy Scbool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wodaooday Serviooo • 7 P.""

p.m.

Qerdo

'-r.d.ulaDomipn
lioeeloy school - 10.30 a.m.
w....., - 9:30 ....... 7 p.m.

VldorJIIopdot
'525 N. 2nd SL Mi""' 1 •
Pauor: Jneo E. K..,..
Wo1111ip- tOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Service• • 7 p.m.

'

I

TrJniiJ Conp-egatiCHlal Church
Pastor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Clwrch - 9:15a.m.
Worlhip - 10:30 a.m ,

SuUon
Pastor: Kenneth Balcer
Sunday School- 9:30a.m,
Worship - 10:4~ a.m. (In &amp;3rd Sun)

Mt. 011 .. Vllltod M-st
Off 124 behind WilkeoYille
Pastor: Otarles Jones
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thursday SeMceo - 1 p.m.

••a.: •·o

RuUand
Pastor: Arthur Cnbc.I'Oe
SWiday Sd!ool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Sei'Yicel - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30 Lm.
Thursday Sei'Yioea - 7:30p.m.

United Methodist

a.
2
s-Joy Sdoool· 9'.30 e.m.

Falnlew Bible Church
letari, W,Va. RL I
Pa•or: James Lewis
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Womup - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yice · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Robcn Vance
Sunday wonhip- 10 a.m.
.Wednescley sei'Yice -6:30p.m.

Momi01Stor

Gnbam United Melllodllt
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. (lit ol2ad Sun),
7:30p.m. (3niA 4111 Sun)
Wednetday Savice ·7:30p.m.

Old lletbe Free Wll 8apdot 01 ..
28601 St. Rt. 1, Mi+11q&gt;M
Sunday School - 10 ......

Putor:Keith Rader
SID!day School- 9:15 un.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yioeo - 6 p.m.

Putor: Kcnne&amp;h Baker

SL Paul Lulheroa Cburcll
Comer Sycamore ol Seoood SL, Pomeroy
Putor:.Geo1Je Weiriclc
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m, ·
Wonhip • II a.m.·

• .., Clooordt tl CluiU

So

·.;::..a-....,..a... · St.lb. 143 jolt all lb. 7
PallOr: Rev. s- R. Aartt., Sr.

ed," said Dr. John Ward, chief of .I -------~---------~-•..
AIDS surveillance for CDC.
" Some of that 21 percent is a sign
that the AIDS epidemic is continuing to grow."
. · .·
Make Your Dream HOlle.
It also means lhat people with
the AIDS virus who have fought
AReaRty At Riverdale!
off AIDS with ~cation for several years are swting 10 get sick,
said Lynora Williams, spoteswoman for lhe AIDS Action Council, an
adVocacy grolip basel! iq Washington.
· "Thp figures should definitely
be read· as a cause for concern,"
HOMES Sf!lrling at
1·800·466· 7671
she said.
Since 1987, patients infected
with the AIDS virus were diagfUIOHlH"
nosed wilh full-blown AioS ·once
they conlnlcted blood infections,
lhe skin cancer Kaposi's sarcoma
or any of 21 othedndicatordis· LOCATEiiATTHE:iuHcroNOFRt:J3.lse6 OVER
pneumonia and
pulmonary

Our Sav- ~- c•urcll
Walnut and Henry St1., Ra-ood. W.Va.
Co-puton: Revo. Riclwd ol
Patricia llcnda-Krua
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

I

'White'• C~apel Wolleyae
.
Cooi¥ille Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
SW1d1y School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m,
Wednesday Sei'Yice • 7 p.m.

Endtime HOUH of Pnyer

·

BelllaD7
Paaor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wedneoday Service• " 10 a.m.
Carmel
Putor: Kenneth !Iaker
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 Lm. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Putcr: Q._ Weirick
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

l'lol&lt;r.DaaSillmp
SoeodaySdoool ·9:30am.
Wanllip - 10:30 am., 7:00 p.m.
w
"sySemca•7:lOp.m.

F......omG .... Millloll
Bald Knob, on: Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Rocer Wii.Uord
Sunday School · 9:30a.m..
Wonhip· 10:~~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yioe · 7 p.m.

New Haven Ch•rd! of the Nazarene
• Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Sei'Yice• - 7 p.m.

Pul&lt;lr: Flcmnce Smith
Sunday Sd!ool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m:

Pineo- ,

..... • Clloood tiCiorlot
Sl.IIL 12A &amp; Co. ltd. S

Pator: Bill Uule
Sunday Scbool- tDa.m,
Wonhip ·IIJJII., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday s...KJ-7:30 pm.

Rula1nd Cllurch of die Nu.aren e
Pastor: Samud Bu ye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedne~day Sei'Yiceo - 7 p.m.

(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

...

SL Jolin Lulhtnn Church

Millt:rS&amp;., Moao. W.VL
s-loySdoooi-IOUD.
W01111ip-1111.11L,7p.m.
Wedoooiioys...ic:a • 7 p.m.

Kinpbul)' Rood
Pastor: Clyde W. Hcndenon
Sunday .School - 9:30a.m.
Evenin1 - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Lutheran

- a . - tiCitrlo&amp;

Evenia&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Seni&lt;es - 7:30

• Clams
• Crab and FiSh
Includes the All-You-Care-To-Eat
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar.

'
R~s~,...

mood

s-loySd..oi - 9:30o.m. '
Wanllip • 10:30 un., 1 p.m.

Wonhip -9:30a.a.
Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

• Boiled Shrimp
Rice • Clam Chowder

Weole7an Bible Rolin- Church
15 P,arl St., Middlepon.
Pauor: Rev. John NeYille
Sunny school - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednes4ay Servi&lt;e -7:30p.m. ,

Rw3 rl a..rdl tiCirilt

P1110r : Rov. Bad Sllalor .
Sunday Sc:llool • ID-.30 a.m.

• Bite·Siz.e Shrimp

Pomtroy
Pastor: Eunhae (Grace) Kec
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 Lm ., 6p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;eo • 7:30p.m.

s...

W01111ip - III-.30Lm.
w. 1 ys...ic:a-7p.m.

su..rR•Iopclll

0

Pine Grove Bible Holi,... Church
1/Zmile oiiRL 325
PallOr. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Servi&lt;e -7:30p.m.

.

Carleton lntudf.no,lnlnatlonal Church

Cbelller Clourch of tloe N...,..ne
. Puror: Rev. Helbert Grste
Sundoy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m. , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

PorUand First Church of Ill&lt; Nazarene
Pas~or: Williain Justil
Sunday School · 9:30 a;m.
Worship - 10:.40 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sei'Yices -?. p.m.

l'elriCIUipel
Pu10r: Flcmnce Smith
Sunday School - 9Lm .
Wo1111ip -10 a.m.

leorcoalled
of Je~~~~C~rllt
In LaUer DaJ Saints
Ponlmd-Racine Rd.
Pastor. Jerry Collins
day School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 Lm.
Wedn...S.y SeMcet -7:30p.m.

l'olll&lt;lr:OuiiSicwut
s-lay Sdoool- 9:30a.m.

RadM Jllnl Baplill
Y(\lllh Pasior Rict Harrio
Sunday School - 9-.301.111.
Wonhip-10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wedn...S.y Se1Vi&lt;:e1-7:00p.m.

1

.,

Putor: Robon Monley
S101day School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Servi&lt;e -1:30 p.m.

Dmora..d tiCitrlo&amp;

1

MI-le
Putar: Demo Newman
Sunny Sd!ool - 9 a.m.
Wonhip ~ I0 a.m.

R,.. of Sba..,. Holi- Church
New Lima Road, Ru~d
P1110f. Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;'
Sunday ochool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
WedDcsday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Hollads Cburch

,........_ a..DtiOrilll
-.BiDWiaes
s-lay Sdoool - 9 a.m.
Wanllip • 9:4S LIIL , 6:30p.m.

~·pilot

• Shrimp Stir Fry

Amy Cleland was the best
weekly loser at the recent meeting
of Ohio TOPS Club No. 570.
Angela Sharp was runner up. Best
KOPS loser was Julia Hysell.
Winner of lhe fruit basket was
Virginia Dean. Virginia Whitlatch
won the gadget gift.
Debbie Hill, leader, _presented a
program on hidden fats m food. .
A. white elephant auction is
planned for the nellt meeting.
The group meets every Tuesday
from 6-7 ·p.m. at the Carpen~ers
Hall in !'omeroy.

Ml

Flnl
s " - ......
41872~Pike
Pastor: S. t..u-O'IIoy•
Sunday School- 9'.30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
W..u-iay Semca - 7:00p.m.
Flrttlllllll*eto.a '
6111 ...J l'llmer St.
Paotor: Rev. J - A. Seddoa
SundoJ, S&lt;:bool • 9: 15 .....
Worship -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
,Lord'• Supper "'Sunday of....,..
.
· Wednesday SoMa:- 7:00p.m. ·

Announce birth

DrpCJwdt ofCJuill

•

'

Coll'ee llour fol~q

·

Holiness

s::::-·~f~ji,0::..

Rullud Flnlllopdst a.Sunday School- 9'.30 a.m.
Worship -10:4S a.m.
Pa•trOJ Flnt ..,.._
Eut MaiD St.
'
Sunday School - 9-.30 ......
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.

•·

Rectm: Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Eucharilt onc1 S1.11day School t l a.m.

Worship - 10 a.m.,'/ p.m.
· Wemesday Service · 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wodnaday Service• - 7 p.m.

Heath (Mlddleport) .
Putor: Fnonk 5midi
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Warship · 10:30 a.m.
Wedncoday Service• • 6p.m.

Gr-~C~urdt
326 E.
· St, Pomeroy
·

...

FOI'III Ruo
P - . 0.,.,.. Newman
Sunday Sehooi · IO ·a.m.
Wonh.ip - 9 a.m.
Thunday SerVice• · 6:30 _p.m.

Episcopal

w....., . ID-.30o.m..6:30p.m.
w • lhy Semca - 6:30p.m.

Pastor: .M.ut MucJOW
Suunlay Servi&lt;e - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10 ......
Wonltip-11
Wednesday Servi&lt;e~JOp.m.

•

THOMAS R. JAKMIDES

IFeaturing five kinds of shrinip I

TOPS meets

..

Free Will B.llll C ...rdo

·$

• Shrimp ~d

7

KaeC..... ofQriot
Wanhip - 9:30 a.m;
s-lay Sdoool - tD-.30 LID,

Sunday School . 10 ...
WoMip • I ILm., 6 p.at.
wemeoday Services -7 p,~~~.

• Fried Shrimp

7

, •• , 1 • Cltwd tl Clarbt
SthoiodMaio
,Po-. AI U..U..
YOIIIII W . . Billl'ruior .
s.loJ Sdoool · 9'.30......:
Wanllip- U5, ID-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W • 1 y Services - 1 P.lll·

Seafood Bar

Watts said aballpark estimate of
costs to the state, based part! y on
the experience of a Florida program that covers center stan-up
costs, would be $10 dlillion a year.
John Meyer, spokesman for
Gov. George Voinovich, said the
administration would have to
examine the proposal and determine specific costs before saying
much about i,t
, "This legislation certainly
sounds as if it's consistent with the
governor's agenda for children,"
Meyer said.
The Ohio Department of Taxation said it had not seen lhe bill and
could n01 comment.

"'
w ' c.-. tl Clorllt
13276 C? I ta'a Hc:.e U
t

Alb Sited. Midd' I

a

Puror: Gal)' Hines
SWiday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 6 p.m.
Wednosday Sei'Yicel - 7 p.m.

S..., Sdoool - II a.m.
w....., - IOa.m,,6p.m.
W
day Setvicu - 7 p.m.

AD New AD-You-Care-To-Eat

Senator seeks tax credits
for child day care
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP) The sponsor of a bill that would
allow tall credits for companies that
provide day care. for employees'
children says lhe state can afford
the estimated $10 million annual

QCC

Wanllip- JD-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
w t
1 yServices - 7p.m.
p

Banquet honors Southern'" FFA members

; -

'

Apostolic

More than 100 members,jar· Yost; home improvement, award for treasurer's book went to
ents 'and guests were on ban for Stephanie Sayre, .O'Dell Lumber; Jason Ervin.
the annual Racine FFA banquet dairy production, -Chris Hamm,
Jamie Christman was guest
held at Soulhem High School.
Waid Cross and Sons; accounting, speaker for the banquet. He is the
Top awards were presented to Stephanie Sayre, Meigs County state FFA treasurer. He is from
Chris Hamm for star greenhand, Chiropqtctic Clinic; mechanics, Gallion.
sponsored by Farmers Bank; Tom
'ns and Jason Ervin; Baer
Favors were provided by Home_
Stephanie Sayre, star chapter FFA~ . Marke
National Bank, Don Tate ChevroRacine Home National Bank;
EI 'city awards were present- let, R&amp;G Feed, Midway Ford,
Chrislie Cooper, Bob Lee Citizen- ed to red Matson, sponsored by
New officers are Christie Coop·
ship, Bank .O'ne. Scholarships, Meig County Litter Control; er, president; Chris 'Brown, vicesponsored by the chapter, were woodworking, Fred Matson, Jason president; Larry . Patteraon, secreJAMES STODART aud CHARITY CREMEANS
awarded to Fred Matson, Jason 1 Bamett, Jason Ervin, R&amp;G Feed tary ; Jason Ervin, treasurer; Fred
Barnett and Stephanie Sayre.
and Supply; farm management Malson, sentinal; Stephanie Sayie,
The greenhand awards went to award, Clifford Smith, Ferrellgas; student advisor; and Jeffery Rose,
John Alkire, David Rush, Eli Craig, small engine award, Fred Matson, reporter.
,
Christa Rose, Pepper Cole, Angela Jeff Rose and Stacy Bufll-pus, by . rib
. .. .. , .. .. ..
I'
, ,.
TUPPERS PLAINS - An open day) at 3:30 p.m. at the Racine Atkins, Jasen Barnett, Fred Mat· Fairplane Tractors; agriculture SCI·
Ce
OWef
church wedding for James Sroban, First Baptist Church with Rev. son, Alban Salser, Stacy Bumpus, ence award, Larry Patterson, Jeff
Racine, and Charity Cremeans, Charles Norris officiating.
JliSI&gt;n Fitch, Mike Thompson, Car- Ro~e. Car_rie . Malon~ by Dan
by.
rie Malooe and Darrell Sayre.
Tuppers Plai~. will be today {fri·
Smtth, auctioneer; welding award,
Chapter FFA awards went to Dave Rush and Fred Matson,
Scott Icenhower of Pomeroy has
Chris Brown, Jeremy Smith, Kathy Hamm Valley Farms.
·
been
accepted into the .Civilian
Ottman, Larry .Patterson, Junior
The urban soil judging team was
Rose, Jason Ervin, Christie Cooper, Stephanie ·Sayre, Corey Rowe, Conservation Corps on~the-job
Jeffery Rose, James Parsons, Chris Stacy Bumpus and Christie Coop- training at lhe Zaleski Camp locat·
in Vinton County.
Hamm.
er. The award was spansored by ed The
CCC is for 18-24 year old
Public speaking awards were Mr. and Mrs. Pete Thoren . The
presented to: for the creed, Stacy rural judging team award went to men and women who are given an
Bumpus, sponsored by Mr. and Jeff Rose, Chris Hamm, Clifford opponunity 10 gain work experi·
Mrs. Pete Thoren; beginning pre- Smilh and Fred Matson, by Fair· ence in many areas while perform·
ing conservation work. The
pared, Fred Matson, Racine Optoplain
Tractor.
Receiving
lhe
parliacorpsmembers
are paid the mini·
metric Clinic, Melanie Weese;
mentary
procedures
award
were
mum wage. A person hired for up
advanced prepared, Stephanie
Sayre, Chester Agri-Service; Stepllanie Sayre, Fred Matson, to 12 months can be promoted
extemporaneous, Chris Hamm, Dr. Pepper Cole, Clifford Smith, Chris twice and receive a pay raise wilh
Doug Hunter; job interview, Johp Brown, Jason Ervin, Chris Hamm, each promotion.
Cooper, Carrie Malone,
Alkire, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Christie
Kathy
Ottman,
Jeremy Smith and
Bush,
Jeffery Rose, by Wagner HardProficiency awards for fruit and
vegetable production were present- . ware.
The seereiary boot award was
cd lb Stephanie Sayre, sponsored presented
to Christie Cooper,
by Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Ord; place- broiiU. Silver
award for reponer's
ment in production, Christie Coop- book went to Chris Harnm. Silver
er, John Hill; beef. production,
· Chris Harnm, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

..

Jakmides to speak at recognition dinn~r

AGRI SCIENCE AWARD WINNERS- Prtseuteclawards
for aviculture scieuce !It tbe Raciue FFA Bauquet were: Carrie
Mlloue, Jeff Rose and Lllrry l'lltterson. Tbe awards were preseut·
ed by Dan Smitb, auctioueer, Racine.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EWING FUNERAL HOME
··n;,,;,~ -

nttd S.~n·it ' (' .-ltu·n~·.• "

E-stablished 1913

992-2121
106 Multoiry Au.

.L ihl_

\S7

Veterans
· Memorial Hospital

11s r. ~arlllllr.

,_,

992-2104

,.
.·I

..

,I '
.

'

.'

.'

'

.

,, .

•

-

••

'

�PubliC Nollce

~ c:--11!..' - 1. _, ....
leg8ly •

S.VIcM.................... 3C),217
Bupptl
0
'
- - - ·· ·
,_,
.....::.:~oo .. oooooooooo l2,174 rr-urylnv
___
'!··--- 1 '!·~
c.ltal OU118'f.
,20
-· - -·-···--. . . TO'rAL DISBiJASE:····24 1 ToW T _ . ,
1
IIENTS ............ - ........,UI .!'!7~-.;····-- •,.:.)
ToW AIDIIpla ovwlllndlt
TO..,.;::, ·••
- 1'~-NCE-·-- • .~....
~
(•-)
,.... ..... ~-·· 1 ,...1
·NON-OPEAAnNG
..,..IINW!'.,•····... - ·.,_
ll'"/AAY OF
INDEBTEDNEII
REVENUE~XPENSES):
REVENUE IANTICIPAllON
rrw.fera..OuL
...........(T,UO) NOtES··
noo.....,..,_...__
vu- v._,_...,.,
Outotand1na .
.
1182
1
E~tura..-·-·-···(:143) ...... •
TO ~ OTIEA FIN.
Nao ............... - ... 43,Wft
SOU~BES) ... (7,5113) A hd ........,... - .....
El!c. Aoplo ond 0...,
Oullotnldlnll
Rnonclna
SouroN
Over/
....._
•
•• ......
l Ex
UWfii. • 1' 1. . . . __ ..........., . , 1

14

Public Notice

a•

Otloer 111_..., _.(15,741)
.- - - 1D Fund CM11 a • 10e
w....... 1,1.___ -~t~,no · ~~~

s.cuHty of......... •
Prop11tv .................... 21,144
==Uon-........... 1,312

Public; Notice

PIMI:W

PubliC Mallei

oaq
'111 ..,

TD:'?., '

··-

12

' ...

:ii*....
I

1

no•••' ADUIUrielt?

. 4:30 P. M. DAY IEfORE

••k

··-·------+---+-

t--;==PU=I=L:::IC=I=n=O=N=~-:-"il ~==~

ao-.

111M and

-~

REMOVAL

«&lt;I
S , r - ..,. «&lt;I
ono (1) · ~
M., 21, I.._
pr3onr
•..,
., II aI'IJ,
ouiD - • • S _ . lllorcl.too w. . . _
« .......
·Irma
' 0 'I , I ·

.

.....,.m

a

.,....

aUGHT HAUUNG
afiREWOOD .

Bill SlACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD nES
IHO.t2'111

IDYll'S LAWI
IIAIITIUICE
· 949-23tlor
1..10-137·t460

• .......
I

Lllwn Mowing,
httlllzlng, Weeding,
•nd &amp;eeding.
. Shrub •Ad Tree
Trimming I. Removal
Anl~lntlli

I Colllmorclol
FREE ESTIIIAtES
411111113-lfn

to I

'"**"'

OPEN HOUSE

I

...........

·a•

::n.:..pi......

PubUCSale
&amp;Auction

Pt. PIS?Sint
&amp; VICinity

HAULING

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL
Rtaioaaltle
Rates ·
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYlE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Pomeroy, Oltlo .

SIZED LIMESTONE

.992·3470

3+83- 1 mo.

'

.

1614)992~5315

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

:~
.. -li£.

T~Shlrts

..r..i.

• Hats • Uniforms

Patneroy,

V•rlety of T·Shlrt.Colore and t..tlt.,.••n 8tyl1e.

MJ4dlepol1

aa9o4
1
Creek load

. . 3/efiiO/IIn

'

lllwnn L Wrltesel

ROOFING

&amp; VIcinity

Beclepfl.... l14 ••• 0211.

~

· - a-.Good
' Goad
Ch-...!·
114411
'All

MlddlefOrt, Ohio
614·992·7144

POI?IIOT, OliO

Wllh

· Only,

4/29/93 'lfl

. _ V. llrwl. .df'IDC€1.
Olllo, . . . . . , IMII ond Sun'
day - . MO II? lohn_inl
_
_
....
II 'rll, ... ,--

............................ Gold Gold..__u.s..
Coin~·

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;
LEATHER 'REPAIR
'
.

NEW-REPAIR

3-1f.83-tfn

2251 Sizth St. • Syrscsse, Oh.

f!~~.'~lng

. 217LhceatiSI.

949·2168

PRINTING

.DAVIDSON'S
.PLUMBING

915·3561

flEE ESnMATES ..

IIIIIIOJ1,1113lllh81.

36970 Ban R111 RQad

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

.

I , _ , Yonl - . Ftt April :110

WICK'S
SERVICE·

IEI'S"iNDaiCI
IIRICE
H2·5335•

'

Fr. . Fa•llation

.

. Roof

lasiH sntl Out ·
FreeEotim.t81,
Low Colli. .:
Work Guo~Mteed
614-949~2335 or
. 4+1

orHE'Ii"Fif["""" .,...

Dl'lcld ....l ....

.__IF&amp;

!i:J

2 pnl -

I

4

I

... -

-y.llty111, ......

,._,.

HoUrs: S... I lion. Claltd
TUI ... Wtd.Fri.

Names in the news

. 1:30oml:30pon
Thun. I I&amp; 10 .,., pm
104~A~ .·
1
~y. 011. 457t8

a

4 w~~t..IAiiJ•...•t
Prices Stsrt1211 at '•

129.95 +Tax

1

EBLIN'S · ELECTRIC

E.rm_loNI.._.In ......
l1ooa. ~ny. Locrl
!raining, UnllmlM Poo..,lll
c.r.w
Opportunii~S.nd,..,;
~.....,...., To:

.....
_.
=;.
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cowaaumo•

• .••

· New Wiring, Rewiring,
. Trouble•ShHIIng
FREE

Big on Voyagers
Pauiortld by Mercury OUtllolrde

J. S. MARINE

-lliiils-.

10 miiM eouth of Gallipollo
on Blllden Rolld
J,

PH, 614:2~180 .,

The Watering Hole presents

graphs and accepted gins.

Ali, whose voice has been
, reduced to a whisper by Parkin·
· son's syndrome. said, "I ain't that
. Uj!ly," as one youngster presented
hun with a porttaiL
Frazier, who .lost two .of the
· three f~ghts with Ali, said he didn't
care for the poem one boy had
written about the two former
heavyweight champions.
"There's oothing in lhetc about
me except getting hit,'' he said.
SANTA PAULA, Calif. (AP)Noel Blanc, the voice of Bugs
Bunny, will not be charged for his
role in a fatal collision of his heJi,
cOpier and a stunl plane.
~uwrs couldn't prove that
Blanc was negligent in the 1991
crash, Deputy District Attorney Jim
Grunert said Wednesday.
. The plane's inslnletor-pilot and
his student were killed, and Kirk
Douglas, one of Blanc's passen·
gm, was injured.
The crash occwred as both air~
craft were tail:ing off from Santa
Paula A,irport, 45 miles nonh of
Los Angeles.
Blanc supplies the voices for
carto011 characters originally. por·
trayed by his late' father, Mel

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Ccnotor 8t.

L
. amour
I

Pomeroy, OH.

IPUIIUIIIMMII

WATERING HOLE .
IT. 7, PO-ROY

992·9901

BARRIS FAR
..

•TRUCICING

D.I.Wi.

s

997:7259

. 54880 SR 124
RUTLAND, OH. 45770 .
(614) 843·5193

REOUCEDI Tuppero Plaine• 3-4111dr00m home on Main
St 1 bath, newer wiring ond general repairs, 2 fivplaoes,
hand!;raflod chandalian~ I+ acre wi1h lencod. back yard.
NOW ASKING $45,000 Owner may acoepl !Moonabla

au.•

tn-nll•
701111

•FRESH PRODUCE DAILY
SUMMER HOURS:
MONDAY·SATURDAY 10:00 I.M.•7:00 P.ll
SUNDAY 12:00 NOON·6:00 P.M.

.

5,10:00 -

21121921tfn

TROMM BUILDERS
~0

318/tfn

From WJSt VIrginia, Cross the Ritchie Bridge
Into Ohio, .Turn Right and Travel 3 Miles. ·

ALL Yonl -lluol II Paid In

RAISED PANEl
HOI ·
INSTALLED PRICES OPENERS .INSTilUD
, b7-$i75.00,
' 16x7-$450.00

Mon.·Fri. 1:110-S:OO
Set. g:Q0-12:00

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
· VINYL SEAL TRIM
$1.00 PER FT.

Sp

HENRY E.Ct.EL./AND..................;.. ..........................1ft
KATHY CLELAND ..................- ..." ..............- •• 111-1111
TRACY BRINAG6R •••••• - ..............~.....- .....- ......21•

IYifEM.

742·2321
"4 · QuaUty A11ured Co1f4faetor" '

'.

•

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. . :llllh, .... , ..lr~'.-

lAM Noolhup 1Win

Ciolhlng,lllto.

T-

Sl-y. lily \ ........ FOlio,
Ohle, ............... Cor&gt;-

""""""' - . . _ .........u

Need Solil401 .. To CaN For
• ...,.,. ~ , .., 1:~ am· llattwr In n.. Horne, Cam.
S:llllpm, In a..roor...,_ ,_ ~P And Supotvltion,

dopllt-. -

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=...~IOiocol MaO To JIOO
R4A ~-•I Ploerr ' •
1110503-·
Ext213.
Owii

TaklftL Appllcoliont AI ·
PIUa
Clalllpallo.
Pose a:O)' &amp; Palnl P..... nt. wv.'

-

AOIIINISTRfA.

c...

c..

... evrnnny=
...... ____
_
----=1.
. -....... -. .
F...llly -

......... ol lllo

I.H.I. llntlly o1 Hulllo t:an

the ~
••· 1 ot an ..
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. 3131113 tfll

Dlnolwol~

nAzt SUPERIOR FUELS AND

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Ch.....,,

••· a f100) bed Lona Tem~

&lt;

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·
. 614 4481167

..

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•.
•_aw .._ "'r na':i

=.,. .-, ............
. . ....
..... .--.
-"!""""' b' .... ~

It, then Ia a

Lany E. Millar

CMit'lte

ldalo
.........,
.,

~

11113 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thril MAY31ST ·
Specilll f.,.m·tarmo with payment 4 tlmeo ·o yMr
, •nd NO INTEREST or RNANCE CHARGE.

Lie. No.II51-IZ

ldlllon • 2:00...,...
ii:Oll
I
p.III. . . . . .Y.

NUIISINO

..

. fillEt_._ .

or:rp:tc:e..... _. ........- ........... - ...· -··••!'•"""''''"''112·2211

t

....

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AwiWI ao • 111y 2 """ ' ·
liWI lliUJodlll
CorolynS.-.
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TIOH.s..nlc Hlllt ~

•Low ash and aulfur
•Will' not gel In winter time. •

.,

OIAIILINI: 2:00 ......

~

.-MiniMum liO Cetane

.
Tlllead ....... 1 .

-

lor
c:.llo,
hold •·.:..~
roteot.wmcar...p~~oea.

difference.

1:41p.a.
IEIW,. . .

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·YOUR HOMETOWN HOUIINO COHNI!CTION: CLE. LAND AEALn.:c· CALL US FOR YOUR HOllE
B'f'INq/IEI I_,,.. NEEDI. WE,_ TO PLEIAI!I

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Wldt 2 t..ISIIttm:

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HOY

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adul, cMdNN, Jnf8nt ctothlng,

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IN POE

In flul.

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EVERY Mil MY

BAUM AODITIClM- Brick ronch homo 3 bodlooms. I 112
ba1h; ~.;arzx&gt;rl. palo. bolo:mant VERY NICE
LOCATIONl ..,a,OOO
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LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
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may

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POSIEROY· 0na lloor lrwna homewl1h 3 bedrooms, bath,
lulllinilhed *-'lot of 100 x 150 ASKING $10,000 .
MIDDLEPORT· lrd.ll. 2 atory hrnl home wllh 2 badroom•, bath, , _ , rool. wonn mornklg goa · ASK·
lNG $8,000 owoaaopt re11oo11ble oflerl

1oo

~.:!,'" •-.
tno.blcscwond_.,-.

Year1 Exp.

.

.

lo S:OO Pll, -

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

1• EVEmHIIG UNDUIIEAIH·

NEW USnNG- Wolnu18Lin Mlddllpol$o 0na lloorframa
homo with 2 boclroomo., ba1h, FANG hHI. corpel/drywllll,
large front po&lt;d'l. off aInial parking. very nice &amp; offordoblo:
$24,500

-Coop- .

363SB SR 7 ·

41'111 ••

NEW USTiNG- S.R. 124 near Rulland 98.99 ocras with
two oldar homea. 2 aheds, one brick building , fnoa gu wl
royalha. Vtfo/ nlco localionl ASKING $115,000

. (Several Sizes and Varieties)

_
... Pl. Jill. Jab ......... 225
Sldl ... ,.......... Wed. ...,.

15 v••,.
Exporlonoo

614·992·7643"
lllo Stlll.ay Calli)
,
"'

,

lnlnlr9ln
111-Zl ·yn o1o1. OWl ol
clorb, 1110,

"*'

CpM!W,ERCIAb ....d RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

E +

...

,

-

New.Homes e VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replac.ment Windows
·
R.oom Additions • Roofing

AEDUCEDI ?llddtaport• I 112 aiDry home 4 bedroOmS,
nice lot, largefrontpOrc:t;, close to shopping. NOW ASKING
$32.000 may accept ollerl

•PERENNIALS

JOB

'
-·
--

offer!

IIIII

•

{614)
667-6621

=~~~eJ·~
FREE
TRAININOW.Yo.
,....
-,...
... . .
..-. !'!:'...- - ...-

ESTIMATES

BISSELL ~BUILDERS, INC.

I

-----

__
_.
--.
.
.
.
--11111
__
__
-.- ................

.GallipoliS
&amp; VICinity

&amp;

I.

'

FEMALE REVUE
, MAY 3RD - 9:00 P.M.

T - 121 Third A ....... CII411131.
FI.ORIIA WAIITI YOU

.(614)
742·2345 .
.

fiiiiSIMIS

s

Do •

ClA . . c/0

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
Licensed, lasured &amp; lo•d•d

s... &amp;c..ire
915-4473
667-617t

Yard Sale

7

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

. .11&amp;1011

2_,_.r_

Rap

-.

. 2 Front Struts • La"r

-•,245

a.....

Old

Employment Serv1ces

1:00pm Friday,
.......
10:00Un.

a;.i;;";;;· '

-iii'

...

...._.~
- to ...,, -

Actu•c•.

_, . . .,

-

ColnL ILT.S.
111 - - . Ooll...;iii.'"'

........

Bo Paid In
DMcllna:. 1:0011m 1M
day - . tile ld It I~ run.

-=====;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;

..,....,_Be
.....__.lie

'!coono,
.. -

1

AI Yonl SliM -

Rtpolr

614-593-5010

=0...

'

FOR WE
Call 614-992· .
6637
St.Rt. 7
C..alllre, ON.

...

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter CIHnlng
Painting

-

SIZED WAESTONE

~,

...

°

. ....17i

llLIIAIU

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

=•,

SAT., MAY 1,

Quality
Stone Co.

IIICIOWIR ORI

......,n

eoil1..., ..

Flower Sl'top

•dVCIRDIIR

•V--

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

"lnaplrotlona"

SHIUI &amp; TREE

modo by thoaa ogon·
claoloarvl- oartlflod or
intending to
cortin'
licotion
from · the
"IIIIII(UOI . . . . . . .
ODWt/00/ADAS.
lllballMd • 0 , • ..
Appliootlono moy ba
Jon•-- • ,
r- L
obtolnal ..., limo by coltlng
..... ....
- •
(114)
441-3022
or
mrt
.,.
Til
I . . ffi £ «&lt;I ....
otnlormatlan - Aoferrol
rao-,
• 7 ... ' . . . .
plckod up •t lha Boord
oEducotlonli .
(Under)
p.
Dlob.
I
OllER
BONDS
I
~-OW. kn._ ._
offioo ol 414 Second
oOutoaach .
4-FAMILYYARD SALE
Other Uon/Net ........ (l,176)
IIIIUES:
·
• ·-1
Avenue,
Room
202,
oln-Uon
Fund Cooh Bolollco
OW-dflll
loge .r !I'
May 1-2-3,4
Galllpollo, Ohio.
o()lhlr Quaiillod S.VIc•
Jon. 1, 1182..............;:4,060
Jon.1 , 1112 ...........- ... 2,511 ::::~";,..riit/11&amp;
/Applloation doalllno: lilly
Priority will .,. glvon to
9:00 am-.5:00 pm
Fu~d Cooh
Nao
'I
tha11 oppilcon'o whaoa 10, 1M.
Much misc.
c..~~~~u~·aa
propooolo ' addre.. the (4) 30; (5) 3,3tc
noodo of 'opeclol" cllon·t
TRUST FUNDS
111111! ••••••••••••• 1,451 (4) 1&amp;, 21,.._..,
242 Beech St., Middleport, Oh.
. PUbliC Notice
population or who will
OPEA/AliNG REVENUES:
•
delive1 . . rvlcao
In
Fund
C•h
Bolollco
~~--•ClASH BASIS COMBINED
vu•---..
underaerved . er••• ·
ANNUAL FINIANCIAL
Jon. 1, 1182.................&amp;,800
Jon.1,1182 ......:..........2,511
"llpaciol" cU.t populotlono
REPORT
Fund C.h Bolollco
. 1Mw 1 -........,...... 43,171
. . ctoflnodoo:
OCEAN FRONT CONDO IN FLA.
For Tho RICII Y11r Elldod
Doc. 31 • 1................ &amp;,100 A.ll..ct ..............- ....... 1,1180
oiSovaroly llontaly Dloablod
2 bodroom, 2 ba1hs. pool, tennis
Docenlber 31,1182
TOTALS
Outatnldlilg
oChlldron/Ado'-conto/SED
RACINE VILLAGE
RECEI'TS: .
. oeG. :11,1112-.;...... 45,422
ccurt. Wall:h shullle launches from
oSubelanci/AbuH
priva18 beach. 1 hoor to Dioney
llelgo County, Ohio
L.oc.:ltuw ................. 21 ;717
ntll II IAN IJNAUDI1ED .
•VIctlmo of Phyolcal ondlor
World.
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
llllllrgo_,.onontol
FINANCIAL ITA'IBIENT
Sexual /Abuoa
TYPES
~
...................
33,470
I -uty thlo lepor1
be
Renl Waeldy or Mon1hly
oEidorly
992-7376
REVENUE RECEIPts:
a.org. lor
oorroct ond true tolllo
oiiUMA,DO/II
L.ocol-................. 21,71f1
RSaillou ................. 120,282 of my tcr.o•ledgo.
.
lnterpvernm•llll
·
LlcenoM,
l
·
C.ralrn
L P...U.
oH•rifllllmllllrod
Revonue .................... 33,470 ,.PermA_.ta..........- ........7,108
Clork·Till rw I·- w
oF...-Ic Cli111t1
Chorgoo for
. onoouo ............ 12,687
527 5th SII'Wt ·
, 1. ~ llol,
-o-rli PopuiaUoniOther
Salflooo ................... 35,631
T0TAL RECEIPTS •• 188,102
Roolno, Ohio 45771
·0 g '
•Any other group • lct..tlJackaon County Polled Hereford
01IIIUAtiEIIENTI:
•
·
•
(4) 30, 1tc
flod In your ogoncy
..
Fin
• ....... -•·
Soc•..... of
I
._ ., -Auoclation 20th Annual Seie Fri.,
(plaooa.,._illc)
p...,Ho........................7,1101
"'''
OGZ . F I'IEM
/April 30th 7:30. 13 bulls, 7 heifers,
IIElGI CliJQII1(.CIIm
in accoldollco with our lllocollonoouo ..... ;::...... 81083 ~ttodi."""'"""'"132,731
10 cows with ·calvea, 8 .steers.
lei
. PubliC NotiCI
lnp
.......
Boord policy, oppHcotiona TOTALAECEIPT8 .... 106,157
of Solo ... .,._
Jackson Coun·ty Fairgrounds,
oh1ll be provided to EXPEtDTURE·.too........................ 3,885
1.81ouro Time
io
oald eo.t ill .._
Cottageville. WV. For l.niormallon
ogonclu
whooe DISBURSEMENTS:
Actlvltloo ..................... 2,14i
•Jilted ....,.~:,:::
argonlzatlonol structure, eunont
ci111304-895-3514.
Socurlty of Peroon a
t-muntty E11vlronwiU be , 111 . . 11 1,....
II
operating policlal ond
Property .......th
......., ..... 111,51l4 ri!.':'iJijjj~
201
Villllll of · tho .door ..... C S
procadur.. ond oervlce
.,
llolgo County on flldoy,.., 21, . . _ •
10 Heal
Pu bile
dollvary odhere Ill the
Sorvloll ..................... 3,195 Tr..,../101o ..................... s,571
omoo of ...,; 10:011 .... .,.
following critoria:
l.alouronme
~ ............ 15,071
ofll~lloporl, lallowillg • I r
The agency aholl be o
public or privalo for-profit
Actlvltloo ..................... 2,34i
P..
... • •-::w~~u.,.., ~
mon1 Govern14...,.
·"'· M.,
or not·lor·prollt agency
Communl ty
eon.nd;;;;i"&amp;;~~:30-=
tho following
..
Envlronm111t ................. 201
,..., projocl
Ca•lllf
«&lt;I F 'a
duly conotitutod und:o tho
41
Bolle Utility
Bupplillond
The VIII IIIII of lllddlop art Towllllllp
a
• II&amp;S
Ohio Aavloacl Cede to
Sovloll
.......................
5,571
~11
......
,
...........
12,174
hao
raulved
T
f11
11,
-r-2
1
conduct
buolnMo
In
the
9:00 AM~12 NOON
Tr...,ortotton ........... 13,7S4 Copilll aua-,............. 21,111 Aomovol Gront from the
·' ....., .......... . .
otalo of Ohio;
1,370 Ohio ~ortonent of Naturol Ohio •C I Jlo- 5
GMorol
~lrrD."::UA·
Layne S1ree1, New Haven
The agency ohlil - · •
GovwnmonL ...•..•.•...14,3110
SE·
Raoaurceo, TreoSource •
to oil fodorol ond ototo
7 c
Two acres on the river.
..... 1iMENTS
. Iowa, otandorda ond
1'-1
~ Out•-,.,.............4,.....
w A1 .........- ........ 247,132 Urbon ForMI ••-nogement
I Slfvlca ................. 1,370
iplo Ov•/
Grant Program, lor the
Nice 3 bedroom home,
rogulotiono u thrt apply
Under ~b..;.....-.(5t,5ztl rernovol oldMignetod trto l'llcllltiM, odminlatrotlw TOTAL DISBURSE·
fireplace, basement.
MENTS .................-157,803 Sale of Flxod/A8-•..a,1SS ond trll 'litumpo In the vil•
oparotlono and oervlco
•
Other
8oui'OIIIN011r
dotlv.-y, Including, but not l .otol ra.ip• o-tundlt
Homestead Realty, Broker
-od
..,_
· 1 000 l~ga. In a~aordanco with
-..- ng ................. •
1t
d foetor of
to
Dl ~~~--• ...... (50,i41)
llmltod to:
RN/ANctjG
Tronol.,.... •.,........ 154,722 : o • on
rogu •
675,5540, 882·2405
Compllonco with aii/Anti- OTHER
Tranolaro-4u1 ........ (122,i47)
ono, the villlltll II r.....tDiocrlmlnolllry State ond I SOUACESI(USES)
Sola of Flxod
Other u.o./Nonop.
ing bldo from intar11t.d
Fodorlilows
•3 ISS
Elcpoftdltu-("••) portloo for tho romov.. of
•
Equal Employmont Op·
o'ih:~;~···..
TOTAL
th••• trae• and otu'lllpo In
portunlty
Public Notice
Public Notice
operodng
Aovb
...........
1
,000
SOUACESI{UBE8)
....
35,767
tho vlllogo. The FOnlrHI
Stet• Aogletrotlon, Cor·
~ ,
Exc
·ohali bo owardod to lila
tillcaUon ond U.:...uro o1 Trono ......,n ............. 154,722
R,i.nc Soui'OM Overt rHponolbla bidder wllooo
Prof
.
.
olonal
Stoll,
F.
8
·
........
(115,487)
(Under)
Dlob. I
bid II rMponolwto tho !milTronofera..Ou1
LEGAL NOTICE
Tr-ont
TOTAL
OTHER
RN.
totioli
end II moot odulftiiciUtl•
ond
S.VIoll
n. Gllll.a-J,....an II
.Pro-HoapitoiiZIIIIon
SOUACESI(USES0... 43,380 2
I
.....,u1 to tho
. v"'-.
·-Bulking Codll
Boord of Alcohol, Drug
Exc.
Acpla onct Other
·n
....
....,
Tho
IIIIOIICJ
ohoil
1111in·
Addiction ond llonW Hoolth
~
Flnonclng So.,_ Over/
The projoct conalato of
lain
oil
finoncial
roporto
In
, S..vl1111 hM announced It oHot Lilli Service
(U •darl Exp Dlob a. Olh
r
·the removal o117 and
occordonco with gonwolly
. . ilaeekhgprapn+ fwlhe oCrlololnlll -ucin
u
........
~
.......
.'
....
(T,sa:}
In
Memory
Of
Our
7
otum
po
In
varlou1
loc•
occaptod -oundr~g prln·
11ono 1n tho vUiago. Mope
provilion of monW haolth -c.. llonllg:in..t
Fund Cooh Boline•
Father
ciplao end procedures
•d drug/olcOhol IIIAicOI aforllllic Evolullllon
J
1 1112
131870
ond locotlo111 l!f "" - (Boord Poley 6.01.00.00).
In.,. oommunity. Con- oRooldontlal Tr-llllt/Aoo·
FU~d c'ooh
REV. B. L. OAf\ST II ollll • • .,. ollllinoil at ·
The ogancy will bo
will bo 11wardad to
lct..tlol Services (Short/·
Doc. 31, 1002 .......... 131,304
Today would have
the Middleport ¥1111111 tt.t~
r.,..lrod to oubmlt • pert
COMmunity ogonclao who · LangT&amp;'III)
PROPRIETARY
FUNDS
bM
birth-.
237
Aoco StrMt, llddloporl,
af thio propoul •n · OPEAAnNG REVENUES:
wll proviclo one or moro of
1. Aaoidontlal Tr11tmont
n your
_,
Ohio. Under tho grant
Agency Sorvlco Pion
the following oorvlcea
CcmprehaniM
Chargoo for
Altho - Cllllnot help
ogrHmant, tho Vil~wiU
which lo In oompllonco
dualflll FY S4 (July 1, 1M • Z. AoaidonUal lr11tmant
8a'vloll .................... 84,681
you celebrate,
provldo ln.. lnd Hrv
In
with tho ODMHIODADAS . Mlocolfon- .,........,.4,5S4
JuM30,1 . .):
Focillty, lncludng:
We mlee you, lllld the form ol oome dobrll
Slo!ll C&amp;'tillcatlon Stoncf. TOTAL AECEIPts ..
.. ~ycholheropy
a . Adult Raeidanilal
hthe
h-y
removal ooll)a clunup
. . . . . .u••
IAI-1111111
Crilll ln..,Witlon -pita
OPEAAnNG
EXPENSES:
~
altho
varlouo
oltao. bidder
Appllcotloil may only be
memorleo .o f the
The ouccaooful
UOIEM• AIIIID
'aa . 7 - 1 1 pat.
muot bo an Equel
groomd.
;(I r ..s 11as a .-wr r Iiiia.
We know that you
Eft!ploymanl Opportu!'ity
Wolor~ . .. iia .
happy
Employer Which prohibita
dlocrlmlnatlon bocauao of
illl&amp;oonalliodoolull !1 I 1all.
"'
There with ,.,m on~
rocm, creocl, color,' noUonal ·
RACIE-a. .....-o.;;..iio . .
court papers Thursday that Jack·
SAND Sl'RINGS, Okla. (AP) . Bllinc. .
.
Brother
·origin, ou, ogo, hondlcep,
homoond_ . . _ _ , _
. ...... ....
son's
A
TV
Music
agreed
to
allow
And •II the other
POlitical offliatlon or bollah.
- M~ Ali feigned a right
'Frantllas·
5
-.:J
.........
. _ll!ls4
NEW YORK (.&amp;J&gt;) - An enter, some Beatles songs to be used on
loved oneo gone on
'rho Vlllogo of Mlddloport Ia
jab to Ill 11nsuspecting teen-ager
raomo,.21
.........
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
• bl!lore.
an Equal Employ.,ont
albums, TV programs and mer;
and crac~ wise about his pretty tainment company that- says
S
Hap
Bl
h
Opportunity Employ.-.
chandising
projects
as
pan
of
57
PO? Utr-U:iioa .... -A _ _ , . _ . ... 2
face. Joe Frazier complained that M1chael Jackson reneged on a
o
PY
rt doy,
Tho project muot .,. com·
Entertainment's
"Beatie
Pro·
bod,_,l, ~
Mi ;, ao1Ali gets marc respect, and every· promise to let rappers perform Bea, .
Ded.
ploted by lilly 31, 11113. The
jecL ,,
bath
anilhllfitwl...,
.
...._
...
...,,.
·· r ' - i o
ties
songs
is
suing
him
fa
$50
mil·
We
mi..
you
vory
Village
rMarvll
tho
right
to
body loved iL
.,.
,
~
mont.IIIIIIS2p
11
a.
a
._
....
...,_
· ''Notwithstanding his COOIIliCtU,
much.
reject ony or all propoaelo
"You're still ugly," Ali told lion.
dlc:ll:.
al obligations, Jackson unilaterally,
The pop megastar bought the
Daughtaro~
end to waive ony inform•ll·
Frazier during a charity dinner at
Sarah Spencer llld
tloo or inogulorltlaa In the
lhe Tolsa Boys Home on Thursday. BeaUcs catalog four yean ago for and without li!IY justification what·
DOt1E
propoollio riCIIvod.
soever, repudiated the conuact,"
WEIDA
"You're still stupid," Frazier $60 million.
Frod Ho,_
Mary Stobart and
the
lawsuit
5!1id.
·
57
Entertainment
Inc.
said
i~
a
DIARUIE
replied.
famllieo.
·Mayor
Then the t\11/0 old rivals, who
Vllllltll of Middiopofl
(4) 23, 3(!, lilly 7 3111
fought three memorable bouts in
the 1970s, .stood up and hugged. .
They also jok¢, signed auto·
Real.Estate General
b . Youth Aaaldontiol
Crllle ln..,ontion/Aoopito
c . Oth•
3.
A•ldontial SUpport
4. CoMmunity
AMidoMa .

&amp;VICinity .

Cheal&lt; out •Y prtooo ....

- - -

....

. Gdlpolls'

Qoaing = nle4n Nood

Canlort :111 • I ljga . . _
Ott 4Sa1l Amo·. u.

.,...,...,

�/

·~ Paga

10-The Dally Sentinel

1993

Help Wanted

11

5I

Ohio

The

~'S &lt;4•'-"ioc "'~ 7

Household
Goods

I CAU ft5Ac, 7N£

NEA Crossword Puzzl•

'

''"'"""'
c'-"""a.
&amp;111 I 00"''1"

ACROSS

~~~!

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 Greek letlor

4 Not Cit.,

IWWIItrll .
12 Corn-plant

part

13 In rNdllilll
(2 well.)

NORTH

IAKJ
.Q6U

EAST
.KJ83Z
.108H4

IQ

.K9
!!OVTH

.A Q 10
.AK2

1'94%

-· BARNEY
TATER'S OUT IN
TH' BARN WRINGIN'

.,.,

WHAT

TH' COW'S
NECK!!

coach

-Rockne

60- Claire,

·w1a:

61 Goddtll of

htallnv
62 Fire realdut

63 Cauauc

1ubatance

t •.Poltlc
· , contraction
· 2 Chlnllt .
paiOda
3 Timtlable

ltllnlt .
41 Econ.

t

abbr.
4 Cow 1ound1
5 Reluctant
6 Princtil7 650, Roman
8 SlaneY
anirmaUvt
9 Wiele thoe
lire

DOWN

38 Speak•

Nor..
7 NT

Opeoing lea&lt;!: t

,15 Not wide
17Tatl
11 Information
IICY·
21 Leugh IOUnd
22 Dancor
Verdon
25 Not high
27 SIMirll
31 Devour
32 Porceptlvt
34 Cautldby
35 ,051,
38- Aviv
37 Collett dtg •

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

57 lclro11
Mmel
58 Footbal

Roman

• AJ 8 3

Pus

. (poet.)

lion•"

.J7 3

SM..
I NT

53 Silvery

14 German lor

.76S

Antwer lo PrMiout Puule

IndiCator
42 Ptrlodl
43 Ntlthborol
Fr.
44 Fog
. 45 Yel (Sp.)
47 SeiVII
41Dan-

Eul
All pass

10 Staamt
II Cricket
pollllion•
1,8 Hurry
18 Hard roll
20 WoOdin tub
22 Crylll~
conllllnint
I lone
23 Thin cookie
24 - tu 1Brule
28 Nixon 1
downfall
28 Affirmative
reply
29 131o 19
30 CltVII
32 ActorGuiar,r
33 Lega mallor
35 Covered with .
velvety

.a

An abbess
remembered ·

• •

By ~ldlUp Alder

:·PEANUTS
THIS NEXT &amp;UV 15 THEIR BEST
~liTER .. EVE~'ITIME J.lE '5 UP,
!.IE 141TS A I-lOME RUN ...

HOLD ON TO TI-lE BALL
UNTIL HE 60E5 AWAV

..
75 Boats &amp; Motors
forSale ·

FRANK AND ERNEST
,

2 -A,_ullful

IDr - · 304-4J11·1812.

•

~

P£RSONNSL

we I&gt;Of'oi'T tll~t ''YES" MeN ~e,t.
-

{~

-

Ott .t viOVt..l&gt;
.f'oi~Vt~ STOOP TO
CONW~I

puppioe
,

1 llin&amp;atUN btt ,t .m.r: li~·~•••

4710.

•

A.,..., ONy COngo Por{llrlcYO,.,

LOSER

TaiUIIve, L.iwMble, Ca. . a All,
1710. 114 •• m1
AICC llolo lloltwoiler, ciOod
T-ont
lloll,
Movlnv, Moko Oltor. 11444!11031.
\4
A1CC Aaalot- Collie, , 11
- . !Oiulo, hod

'""'""" m,to.,£-'IW'P'f
61 Rll\1».'( TO.IA£~

•,

,

Hm"f ~~~.Dt'IY j

. . -.-hll-

r '!\lOOC.HT 'IW ~c voo
WAATEO 10 SltlPCilJmMC.

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By Jeftl'ey McQuain

1110. •-t-:mo dlye or' l14-

1141-2112ovenlngo.
AICC Rtglol- Fomolo MlnllluN Sctino-:115: Wooko Old,
..... 010,114
11101.
Fllh Tonk, ~. 3 Joclcion .Avo.

Point P-nt,

The slang CHILL, like the longer
CHILL OUT. means "relax" or "calm
down." If you hear somebody misus·
ing this verh, don't get upset Chill!

~~3,
- ~~~.....

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~ MORTY

amall anlmll .. and 1uppltM.

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QUICHE.

Wooroed To Bu~: itlolo Fronch

lAD Elrod Robbhl,

Nlc1 Coueh, $125; Tabftl, ·Chal,.

$176; Colo,.d T.V. II" $100; 8
Lorge lllplo Chlino, 614-448-

Financial

..so.

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Business
Opponunlty

E~rlc

Stove 31• Olive

ExCIIIont Condhlon; $100 Ono

·,
o.p
Frazer, Good Shape $tOO.,
_..251.
'

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lricludlo occ
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OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING c6.
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No"; :.'!t.oo~"':t!':.;h~
lhoolllrlng.
Golllo County Florlol For Salo;

R - Llwn Chllno Wllh
CUihlona, $25 Elch Or 145
BOih, 114-141·3230 Or 614-24511217.
•
.

S.rlou• lnqulriee Only! Pha"':
614-37fotll7 Aftor I P.ll.

LDcal V.ndlng Roulo: $1,200 A

-

Polonllel. Mull Soli. I-8CJO.

663-Yond.

Real Estate

ROIOIIIIorL E-lonl ~Hionl
1'111 Soli """"1!!.-!,uol Uloo a..nd
Now,tt4-441-7No.

Mobile holM for ..... price Moo
gotl1ble, mutt be movld,
MJIOUI lnqulrlel onty, 8*"2~

Sam aon. wtU.'alatiWJehlt ....
loci co-.ougo ( l r - clolllon
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•
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11 And 20" 121
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All raal es1ate adVertising In

46 Space for Rent

this newspecer Is subtect to
lhe Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wn1cn makes It Illegal
to acNert1se •any preterence,
lmHatlon or dlscrlmlnallon
based on race, colOr, religion,
se11 famMialslalus or national
ortgln, or any Intention to

Trollor IAI Wlh Bom Pond, 7
lllloo ,oom Oolllpotloo, __Woltr
Plid. ..-.81WH--.

HOUIIhold

or discrimination.•

Ttis newspaper wt.ll nol

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knowinglyfor
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r
ate
Whlen Is In Ykl~tion .the
law. Our readers are
lnlo~ec:J tnat all dwell
·ad¥ertlse&lt;:J In this newsp
are available on Bn equal
oppo n u~ baSis.

TlpoO,

Goods
Build your houoo on -

2
COmbined 1111 ..._ In
city Nmlla. l o i - ·
-

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... bolh ...... 304-17!1-

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

N, i1f-446.

....... Plooled Fll 811&lt;11!4 llclcq 140; CoorclnoUng
Doilporloo,
130; Croorii
_
, 120,114-446-1731.

Merchandise

, mille any such preference.".
llm~allon

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Boot
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Muoic,
1111.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Brett Butler swings at the
often 11 your brother-In-law grabo a check."
Jim

I I~ I

R

pitch about as

tl' I

I

The sign hanging behind the
boss's desk read: "A Real
o Executive Is Someone Who
·
. . . .
; Can Take As Long As . She
,..--------:---,Wants To, To Make A Snap

I

T HC H I
f-,1-rs...:;.l~r.~~~~r--i

~ . ;_.,:r: -7. .:R:;.I. :I:. . ,:t: . . .:E:;.I"~.N;. ;.,I. ·:-ll 0--~~IT:~; ,~"~h:h~~;~,~g q~~·r~~

L
.......L
.......L......J.........1•..,.....1.....1 you develop from 5tep No. 3 below.

8

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

0 ~~ic:~~!~ER .LETTERSI

I

I

I

I

· SCRAM-LETS "ANSWERS

I

I· I
, ..,

• Thirty_ Offer- Price- Ornate - THEIR TRIP
The family of six who lived next to my. apartment had
gone on vacation. A week later 1 recetved a postcard
from them asking me if 1 was enjoy.i.ng THEIR TRIP!
pigeon;•·~~~-:"~-----.!..--..;.-----.;.--.._.-.._.,.......,_ _-;:-;::-,:::-;-;-~~

""·

m.

~THER

IT THAN EAT IT,

A. I've seen that usage too , and'
some dictionaries now include
PIGEON with the sense of"business.".
ENGLISH began in the Orient in the
19th century as a modified fonn for
"business English ." This English ·
tiased language allows basic communication between speakers of different
languages and has nothing to do with

s.--mor.-by
Tholn- • Froncle, modo in
o.mpo11o,

I'D

AIIIFIIII-. ., 1tte, crulee t2,100.

Apnl 21 - lily 22. Surpluo -ol
clolhlng. By 8onclyvtlle Pool
otllcl. 1'!!_: ~J Noon IKI 6:00
Pll. 304-i&lt;-

Furnished

PRONa.JI&gt;Q: IT • KEESI-4:
NOT 'KIN' ITCHY.•

814-&lt;IQ.

F,lrPI Sui•P"tf·'

rull unilll you tulve lnvellllgalecf

'rOU'~ SUPFOSED TO

MusiCal
lnstNments

'fj'/

322~.

21

'Q. Please tell writers not to use
"pigeori English," won't you? Thanks.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Pood...: IMIPPI••, tayal cr.am1,

ma•:

IIAIM.

OUR LANGUAGE

· W TilE. Hill\?

lllondly,-~~

Tonigllt is Walpurgis Night, named
after St. Walpurga, the abbess of Heidenheim, who died about 778. According to Gennan legend, ·on lhil eve
wltcbes ride arouad on broomsticks
and. he-goats revel with the devil, as.
pec:jally on the Bracken in !he Harz
Mouotains.
·
Well, there Is certainly something
bewitchmJ about lo4ay's deal. North,
feeling very llgbtbeaded, uttered the
worde ",Seven no-trump.' He couldn't
explain.what made blm do it. But the
next thing be knew. West bad led and
his cards were on the table. It was too
late to change the bid to three notramp, whiCh he had wanted to say.
South, a strange-looking fellow with
horns aad a spiked tail, didn't utter a
word when be saw the sparse dummy.
Instead, h~ settled down to the job of
wiming.all 13 tricks.
.
· It looked as though West had led
away from the diamond queen, but the
fmesse could wait for one round. Declarer called for the diamond king and
grunted contentedly when the queen
appeared. South finessed his club jack
and cashed the club ace, dropping
East's king.
·
Declarer continued with the club
eight to dummy's 'queen. A low spade
to the.lO won trick five. The club three
was led to dummy's six; ·a second successful spade finesse followed. Now it
was simple for South to cash the A·K
of hearts. dropping the doubleton
queen, and to take the . rest of the
tricks.
As the 13th · winner was 'caahed,
North came out of bls reverie, realiz·
inc be was bathed in sweat. It had all
been a dream. But be smiled: tbe deviUsh declarer bad known how to finesse - and not to finesse - on Wal·
purgis Njgbt.

..._.,.

. lllv 1. tll93

1 ~ lhe year ahead. you might have several

opportunities l&lt;l put some of your bigger
id811 inlo aotron. This coukl be ~U&gt;Io the
facl that obllaCies wtlich pre.v;ousty 110m·
pored 10u will be non·.,lstent. .
·
TAuRUS (Aprllzo.Miy 20) You're ·
elllremely chlritrnalic tOday. and your h.IOh·
Profile per10111lity draws ptap4e 10 you like
· l&lt;l an event
a magnet If you're nol901"9
·

ptansomellllng tmprompluyou&lt;III~ · Knaw

~rei&lt;&gt; loOk lor romance and you llltnq rt.
"'""
The.Astrfi.Giaph Matchmaker instantly ·
reveals which signa ara romilnllclliy~rtOC1

advantages mrghr be denved loday from
people whom you 're invotved with socially.
You miX well with people , both in a group
and on a one·to·one basis.

GEMINI (lily 21,June 20)In your own
qu iet way you 'll -have a strong influence
over people whOIT) you have compassion·
ate bonds with today. You may fiven be

SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) Anything
you dO ICday wtlere you pul forth your vel)'
best efforts is not likely to go L,Jnrecognized
or unrewarded. Don't be arratd to push
.
yourself a bit harder than usual.
responsrble for ~ublly sleenng them In a
·CAPRICORN (Dtc. 2Z.Jan. II) TfY lo
more pos1t1ve directK&gt;n.
.
.-vo~...
ii.
1e whom
CANCER (June Zhluly 22) Today is nola spend some lime tyuuy w peep ,
day tor vou to spend time in $8Ciusion. ···- you feel are e&gt;epa.ns!ve thmkers. Their .
Berng aroun.d olhers will bring oull~ most 1 ~0\IQhiS CO&lt;I~ :~ulate ;::;.~V:":'se.,ral
dynamiC aspecrs of your per~lity. Do
proce~~s a
P you
. h
I I. d
'
gooo ...,.as.
somelhrng t 811!1110 '"" ne~ . s. "·
AQUARIUS (JI!rl. 20-Ftb. 18) Do not dil·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You re'" a good
count your inluitive perceptiOnS in your
ac'tl,evemenl cycle bOth today and tomor·
oomme~~:iltl dealings today. You hOve an
, row. so lfY to locuayour •.fforll ~nd antr·
••cellent and innate sense of timi(lll. and
gres on meanrnglul objectiVeS. Anarnmenl
you gooo ·nsf nels could IIOip
tum 0 ·
1 1
w~l btl gratilying t!Cpllritnce.
frl
.
.VIRGO (r\JIO. 23-Sept. 22) Don'llhin~Onty ~~!s (Ftb. :10-M. .h 20) Today you
of loday. Instead. sran plan~'"' for )OU~ . . might have an opportunity io shore up a
· l,uture aiCpe~tatiOfts. What you conceiY« " .'0 valued Nlallonihip lhet
become a bit
~ .doable and .wrlhrn lila,realm of paiiSibi•· lrayed racenlly. YoUr eftotls wilt bll wei;
113o0ct. 23) Olhlrs .,.
CM!Id, btelull this person wanll II u
_,..
n!UCII 11 -·do
• incl•ned 10 lr'eal you favorllbly today. and..
•- ·
·.lhoy are likely 10 grant you material asaio·
AlliES (March_!!:~.
~ ~~-~"'
'lth .
~ Wh t ~tOdtnvtrtWI·-·NIO~vo·--...,
lance 1 's 11 your·~ , . 0 ever·~
·
blnatiOn II! i could prime
case. don't hesitate to ask .
10 Oll!ers is • com
• ,
8COAPIO (Oct. ii4-Nov. 2aJ Sptclal '
you lor accumulation today. You Ht•Pacl
.
eam whll you .get.

yo.;

hll

DaRA (.......

!.!'

. '

"'

.

�"·

•
Page 12-~ Dally Sentinel

-.

-.

..,.

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.,

'

.

"

~ ''", ·J\,} -·. ··~·~l

:

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.

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

&lt;

14 honored for risking
lives to save others

Sea Hero wins 119th Kentucky Derby- C-1

King
of the
Trekkies

Inside

Popular music as.psychology? Bob
' Hoeflich ey~s the pOssibilities - B~ 7

.1'' ·.

Along tbe river .............Bl-8
Buslness!FI!rm .............,•..Dl-8
Classified ..,..............._..... DJ.7
Deaths. ........- ................ ..A~
Gener111 news ·-·----El-8

1925 was both good and bad year
for Cheshire - James Sands • A-8

EditoraJ ......_ ..........- .... -.A6
Sports.....- ..........·••~ .......Cl-1

Weather.........~............:..•• ..A-2

'

13 flecldon 1$2 P~gte .

· ..· • _ Mlddleport-Polllei'Oy-Galllpoii.,..Pdlnt Pl!!&amp;aant, May 2,. 1993 :.

.

_.. A Mulllmed'' ~ ........

School issues, judge's contest tops _p rimary ballot .

. Eight-part exploration o£
dancing setfor May by PIJS
'

FESTIVAL PARTICIPANTS • Kelly Graeser, left, and
Tracey G.rneser, rigbt, p11rtlcipated In tbe recent Hl&amp;b School
Musical Festival beJel at tbe Oblo Wesleyan University, Delaware.
Kelly Grueser, daul!bter of Danny and Debbje.Grueser, Pomeroy,
made the Festival Cbolr, and Tracey Grueser, daughter of James
and Donna Grueser of MlddlepOI"t, made tbe Honors Cbolr. Se~­
tion was by audition. KeUy lll!d Tracey Grueser are vocal students
of TereS&amp; Davis at Meigs Higb.

By MARY CAMPBELL
· pean?• There's not another culture. dynami(: for a viewer: A man with
Associated Press Writer
in the worh:l in which men and a green face I saw outside a temple
NEW YORK- Public lelevi- ' women emb111Ced and daneed face in&lt;lndia swept me away. I didn't·
siol)'s "f?l!nclng" is as much &amp;bout to face, until colonialism spread understand a word ·and I got it all."
why people dance as how.
· · · iL"
"There l(fe no stand-up rulrra.. "I wanted to approach dance
···oancing" is accompanied by tors," she said. •·•E•ch culture. ·
· from a way that connected it .to . the largest outreach program ever speaks for itself."
larger issues in life, so that people crealed in conjunction with a TV . Grauer slarted wortmg·in dance .
see that dallce comes from series, "America Dancing," with by presenting ch0reo11raphet
could
•
something· real,"· says Rhoda so'!'e 90 ,perfocmance:i and events Jerome Robbins at the Spo!e10 FesGrauer, e.xecutive prpclucer of the . taking place aero~ rhe country.
tival in ltllly. Before moving to ..
eight-part series, which begins
In 'Fexas.rfor instance, 25 orga- New Jersey PBS smtion WNET, • .
MOnday on PBS.
·
nizatioiiS plan the world's longest she was director of the National' ·
mentary PTO will sponsor the Everyone welcome.
Community Calendar items
As far as Grauer knows, never conga line. In Colorado, an alliance Endowment fO{ tbe Arts-dance profourth annual "country treasures" ·
appear two days before·an event
before hu \here been a detailed .of libraries, schools and dance grllm, 1978-82.
, .
RACINE - The Southern Junior lelevision exploratio;&gt;n of dancing's . companies plans a multicultural
arts and crafls show at tbe Gallia
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
For ' 'Dancing," shefntintendCounty JUJiior Fairgrourids on Sat- High Booslers will hold a ham and worldwide diversity and history.
must be received well in advance
dance
f~tivaL
Pittsburgh
will
have
ed
1o proljle American dance. . . .
urday frorn 10 a.m. to 5 ,p.m. and turkey dinner Sunday from 11 am.
to assure publication hi tbe cal·
"To
me,
the
message
has
been a "Family Day of Dancing,'' with
Ruth St. Denis was draw-·'
to 2 p.m. at the high schooL Co.st is •. how many zillions of different 10 loeal trou~ offering ballet to ing"But
·
endar.
Sunday from noon to 5 p.m.
on
Asia
and. the Middle
, East •
$4.75 for adults or $3.50for chil- ways th.ere are for human being$ to . clog dancins.
·
and
Martha
Graham
1 ·
. . express themselves culturaUy, maleTIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- · dren under 12.
FRIDAY
The fii'St show, "The Power of ·
was exp onng
ing their lives rich, in this.case in Dance,'' is mostly about yoga, Native Alneriean ritual and .
RACINE - The third week of r.ers Plains Church of Christ
POMEROY - Meigs County 4- dance," she said.
schoolchildren .taught group dane- Greek mythology," she ' said.
revival is in progress at ML Moriah . 'Christian" Cemelery Will remove
H
hoof
trimming,
Sunday,
9:30
"I
w·
a
nted
the
series
to
be
ing
by Jacques d'Amboise, a for- . ''What made our danee powerful ··
all
flowers
Satutday
for
clean-11p.
Church of God on Mile Hill Road
was. we were drawing on movein ·Racine with Rori Blevins, evan- Those wanting to save flowers a.m. 10 3 p.m., Meigs County Fair- intriguing· to a general audience. I mer ballet star,. who believes peo- · ment
styles qf tbe whole world.
grounds at the steer barn. Spon- wanled .it to have real information pie are born with thC rhythms' of That led
gelist. Se~i~ ~ 7 p.m. nightly should·remove them by that time.
me to the world.
sored by Country Shamrock 4-H that would make peo\'le say, dancing in their breathing and
with special smg~ng. Pastor James
"Two Western~ came· out ;.
POINT PLEASANT, W.V.A. • · Oub. Call Kathy Barringer ill 378- 'Wow! I didn'tknow that. .
Sa~eld invi~ the public. ·
· heartbeats. IIi the second program, of the European court_ ballrOom
·
' The Liberty Mountaineers will per- 6267 for appointment.
"H;ow many people know that about religion, Grauer said, "1 danci11g aJ)d ballet. What stil!ck me ·
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full form Saturday at. the Senior Citicouple dancing is uniquely Euro' ~Jecled forms I thought would be about ballet was that it lias been ·.
POINT PL.EASANT • The Clas- .
Gospel Church in. Long B~ttom zens Center in Point Pleasant,
·'
around so long. The question · ·
sics will perform a variety of music
will have a prcachmg and smgmg W.Va. .
became, why do some forms come
at
the
West
Virginia
State
Farm
':''
Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
into exiSience and remain?
•
Museum,
north
of
Point
Pleasant,
HENDERSON, W.VA.· The
invites the public. Fellowship will
The
message
o(
"Dancing,"
she
on
Sunday
at
3
p.m.
Public
W;Va.,
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
follow. ·
.. · ., .. ·· ·sai•~,.·1·"11 that danCe carries in it a •
Dance Cluli wiD hold • dance Sat- invited. Free admission.
Jot of
about history, values
MILLFIELD - There will be a urday from 8-11 p.m. at the Henand
atlitu!les
- clues to who peoRACINE · -Racine Chapler OES
dance· and show Friday from 8-11 derson Community Center in Henple
are."
·
p.m. at the Russell Building in derson, W.Va. Herb Shelton, caller. will practice for inspection on Sunday4 p,m. .
Millfiel!l with music by Off SeaMONDAY
POMEROY - Market bog regissons.
·
Belgium the conquered
tration, Saturday, 9-11 a.m., Meigs
. MIDDLEPORT • .The Middle·
POMEROY • The senior class County Ex1ens1on O.ffice, $10 per port Gatder\ Club will meet Moo•
The first recorded inhabitants of
or Meigs High School will pr~nt IIJiimal, maxili1um of two animals. day at the home of Mrs. William
Belgium were the Belgae, who were
Morris at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. George
an "Evening of Theatre" Friday at Call992..(i696 for irlforrnation.
probably Celts. II was then conquered
Anderson will present a program
by Julius Caesar and for 1,800 years·,
8 p.m. at Meigs High .School. ~e
.
production of three one-act plays IS
CHESTER - There will be a fish . on herbs. Members may bring a
it was ruled by Burgundy, Spain, Aus·
tria and Franc~. Alter 1815, Belgium
under the direction of C~lia fry at the Chesler Fire Department flower arrangement.
was made a part of the·Netherlands, .
McCoy. Admission is $3 for adults ·• o;m Saturday from II a.m. to 6 p.m.
and in 1830,. it becantlfli constitution·
POMEROY - The Episcopal
and $2forstudents.
.. .
featuring ftsh tails, .hot dogs, slop.
py joes, bakedbeans, salads and Church Women will hold a rum- ·
• al monar~hy.
"
mage sale Monday and Tuesday
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- , baked goOds.
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Chl!fCh
HUHIU.RD'S CREENH(JUSE
HARRISONVILLE • Regular parish hall -across from Pomeroy
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
l• Now Opon For '
,
·· ·
dance Friday· from 8-11 :30 p.m. meeting, Harrisonville Lodge No. Village Hall.
The S•cuon.
with music by Si!Joky Mounta!n 411 F&amp;AM, Saturday , 7:30 p.m.
~~~
Planti (Flew.... &amp;
MIDDLEPORT • Revival at the .
Drifters. Red Carr and Mel vm · Refreshmen·ts. AU master masons
Y
...
talolo),
H-;111
....111, Pen.~
Middleport Community Church, ·
Cross
be c~ers. Public invit- · inviled.
Plims,
Ct.,Iott ..... ,, .....ry
Pearl Street, will be Monday
' .
ec1
'
Plus Anloas &amp; •••••••...,_ ·
ANTIQUITY - Songfest Satur- through Saturday at 7:30p.m. Dif- ' · STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Tb~ foDowlnl students were.
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
RUTLAND - Revival at the · day will be J!eld at 7 p.m. with the ferent singers and prea:hers night- seleeted for beba'l'loral or aademic reasona to be tbe sflidenlll of
c....... •oaoll&amp;
i
the WeJk at Melea Junior Hleb SeOOol for the montb of April:
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church Christian Family, Jackson. Public ly. Public inviled.
11.1511tz.
Ctdlflowtr
.
Shawn Mitclt, blatory, Joe D' Aueusdno, matb, Crystal Eblin and
will be Friday ihrough May 9 at 7 inviled.
HUaBARD'S
.
GREENHOUSE
'p.m. nightly with Rev. Billy
RACINE • Racine Village Tim Lewis, English and literature.
SYIACUSI
McCoy and fam.ily. Rev. Dewey
· CHESTER.· There will be a Council will meet Monday at 7
OPEN
DAILY
11-5, SUNDAY 12·5
special meeting of Shade River p.m. at Star Mill Park.
King invileS the public.
Sallll'lla¥'.-· SY.!'BCuse, 9 a.m. to .
. 992-5776
'
Lodge No. 453 F&amp;AM on Saturday
2 p.m.; ~v1Uc,
3-S p.m.
. .
•,
"•
SATURDAY
at 7:30 p.m. Wotk ip the master
SYRACUSE • Sutton Township
RUTLAND - There will be a mAson degree. Refreshments. All Trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m.
·dance at the Rutland American masler masons inviled.
SUPPLEMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE
. .
Monday at the Syrocuse Municipal
Legion Hall Saturday fr\&gt;m 9 p.m,
Building. ·
The Meigs County BoOkmobile
. PROTECTION
. .
,
will visit the following locations
to I a.m. Music will be by Pure
SUNDAY1·
PAGE VILLE - The Scipio nexi week:
Country Band. Public inviled.
.
SYRACUSE • Chicken barbe·
. .
"lfyoo think you clin't get It, maybe
haven't.
cue will be held Sunday at the TownshipTruslees will meet MilnWednesday -Racine, noon to
hew about Graded Beneftt Whole -Life" .
MASON, W, VA. -The VFW Syracuse Volunleer Departmept. day at 6:30 p.m. ·at.the Pageville 5 p.m.; Portland, 6-7 p.m.
Million• of American• over age 40 are unable to buy add~ioilallle
.•
Thursday -Rutland, 11 a.m. to
Post No. 9926, Mason, W.Va., will Serving will begin at 11 a.m. and Townhall.
insurance at
. standard rates becauu of aome heatth condition.
.
.
.
3 p.m.; Dexter, 4-6 p.m.; Bradbury,
hold a benefit dinner Satutday at continue until the 350 meals have
Are you in that category? If not. y6u probably have a friend or re!«!lve
ihe post home beginning at 11 a.m. . been ser\ted. Proceeds will ·go to
GALLIPOLIS · 'Women Alive. 6:30-7:30 p.m.
.
who ia. Now, you may quality for the aupplemental protection YOII
will hold a mother-daughter ban- · Friday - Tuppers Plains, noon
Menu includes orle-half chicken, London Pool.
need.
·
·
.
quct Monday at 6 p.m. at ,Pale's to 3 p.m.; Success Read, 3:30-5:30
baked beans, slaw and roll. Call
p.m.; Keno, 6-7 p.m.
304-773-9191 for delivery. There
CHESTER - The Ohio Valley R~staurant in Gallipolis.
A special plan from ~rlcan General LHe ancl Accident callltd G~ded
wilL be 350 dinners available. All Draft Horse and .Mule Association
Bentlk Whole LHe II no:N avalllble to ""-' this critical .need. The plan
· donations will be ~Pled and pro- will hold its annual field day SunRACINE · Racine Chapter No.
offers coverage of up to S10,000 with no physk:al exam and.no htalh
COLONY
THEATRE
eeeds will benefit a friend .of the . day across from the stale highway 134, OES, will hold its annual
qlillatiol)l. asked on the application. Find out ~re about Graded
argan~tion,
garage on Rout~ 7 nonh of inspection Monday at 7:30p.m.
.
Benet« Whole Ule by contaCting...
· .
. . .
FRIDAY
THRU THURSDAY .
.
Pomeroy; The everits begin at I Refreshments will be serv~, All
. , Rocky A. Hupp, o.c.u.~Agent
· SALEM . CENTER • Star. p.m. and include draft horse events, members aqed .to attend·
· Rlcii&amp;rd Gere, Jod.. i'O.Wt
!Jc)x 181; MlddleJ)Ort,, Ohio 45760
.'
Grange and Star Junior Grange will . a · fishing ' derby for .children,
In
meet Saturday at 8 p.m . at. the · antique tractor and equipment .disCARPENTER " The Board of
.
. (114) M3-5214
·
.
grange hall near ~alem (:enler. ~tar play, concessioos and mbre. , . . .TrusiOOs of Columbia Township •
Junior Grange will have mspectJOn..
LOTIRIDGE • There will be 3 · ·will meet ¥~datm~:30 p.m. at
.
'
Potluck refreshments will f.ollow .·. smorgasbord dinner at the Lot" ;the rue statiOn tn
nter.
' ..
IHOW 1111!1: .
.the meeting.
. ,ttidge .Community Centel' on Sun•
· ·
·
FAL·IAt-IUN. 7:10 I 10:00·
. day from noon to 1:30 p~m. Cost is . . LETART · The l:eta,rt Township
' MONDAY THIIU THUIIIOAY
·. ut. • M•dlclt,. ~ CIIICW • Fire • HMIUr • Accident "
.QALLIPOLIS .· .Washington $5 ~or adults and $2.50 for children . 'rrustees will meet Monday at 7 ·
eo. lv•llnl .,.. 7:10
AMulty,JAA • Mo!tgage ..
.
.
ElementarY !&gt;TO and Green- Ele- under 12. Carry-out is. available. . p.m. 81th
L..;_~Atl::-·~~~~~~-::.!·~~.~~~~·!•:·~~~·a~...J
. e ofli1ce· build.mg.

Community Calendar

·
.
· ~"' · 1
.
GALLIPOLIS •
.
...-A conleated the right 'to rePresent the uuP m 1 ~for S-In years prior to his
race for tbe Republican nomilialion tbe judge's race to be de_ci~ In appointmenL He also. Sj!Cnl three
for Oallipolis municipal Jud~c, a · Novcmlier. lneumber!l Will181D S. yei!I'S as • domestic relal!ODs refer·
by Gov. George ee in Common Pleas Colin under
set ofschoolleviea lmd Ill miaati.ve. Medley, ~
,action wiD confront Gallia
. Coon"' Vomo'vic 1'n January to succeed
.
Judge ...
n..--'-' An"-w Cox. ·
.,
.,....,.. ""'
votcn when they. go 10 the polls in Joseph L. Cain when Cain ascend·
Bennett assumed the municipal
TliCSday's j!illl8l;y.
· ed to thejudgeship of the Common .. bench in ~977 and held the position
.Polls will ~nt 6:30 a.m. and Pleas Court. iuKl former M
. uruc.· ipal foi 10 years. Since stepping down,
wiD be open wit! 7:30 p.m. in all Judge James A. Bennett are m the he luis maintained a law JQClice in
36 precincts. Tbcre will be no running.
. GJJilipolis and remains active in
chang~s ·' iD ' VOtinl . locations,
Medley, I former cticing service orgl!nizations and party
accordinl'to the Board of Elec· · attorne)"'bt Aboo, had
I fac- functions. Both bis and Medley's
lions.
·. "'·
ulty member in tbe Emerson E. names : were submitted ' to
. Two candidates are vying for Evans College of Business Man- Voinovich by the GOP Central ·
agement at the University of Rio Commitiee late last year uter Cain
·

time

·.p 0.. meroy, .res
. ..I•de·' nts....to. vote. on
. I 0 r .c.urre
. n_.t expenses
' · ·· ""-~ =~ ~edistrict
'1.•9 mi•11 Ievy
·

~

; By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
~g to village officials.
·
Tlmes-SeatlneUtaft'
A leV)' for the same ·amount and
, POMEROY • Pomer()y resi· . same period of time was on the,
dents wiD be the only ones going 10 . November IJa1l« 1!1 a renewaL but
the polls in Tue&amp;day's election and was defCIIed by 14 votes - 439
. the only thing they will be voting for rq 4S3 apinst. It could dot be
on is a live year 1.9 mill levy for put on tbe ballot again as a renewal
.current expenses of Pomeroy Vii- due to the defeat so is returns now
Iage.
'
as a new.Jevy. For most residents,
PoUs . ill Pomero( s three · the
will r~ult in
in tbe tax ·
.precincts - Pomeroy· Village HaD, only a .
Pomeroy Blementary ScboOI, and
bavq
for the pal
Pomeroy Fire.Jlepinmenl.,-_will .
·
results

if:::tll:::s::3~ l~

to ~lcleitts,' deacrlbed the
liilJe as 1 ·~ light levy" ~
the proceeds from the .levy, if it
passes, will bC used to pay for
' S1i'eCt Jighiina, .
·.
.
1'llo ~rl will genetate.appiOxi·
.~$32 000 a year 'l1le eleetric
. ~bill'for l!lc
lights in
·
y is ~ 530,000 a yar,
a-

sriet

cial
,
Smith,
of the
• ty
of Blecpons,
there are no Cllldidates
party 10 be eleeled.
.
.
Fo.ur ~publiC8J1s filed for the
·four ~ aea11 on Middkpon Viilage Council, ilid four Replblicllls
lmd ooo DelllOQIIII for the four_open

.

seats oo Pomeroy Village Comlcil,
resulting in· no races among eandidates of the same puty. Thateliminated tbe need for primaries.

. Those candidalea will go right
into the general eleetion in November.
Republican candidates filing for
Seals on Pomeroy Village Council
were Thomas Werry and William
A. Young, incumbellt§. and ~ .
Wright aDd Joho ,Mlisser.' The onlY
Democrat candidate
was

rot the f!Jur .... on
were
Dewey ~ and Paul Gerard,
both incumbentl; Robetl' Gilmore
and Michael Childs.
Pomeroy ~d Middleport residents may file as independents for
council seatS in eitber\oillage but
the deadline to dQ that is 4 p:m. oil
Tile Board of El(\Ctions
A·2

.A TEST RUN • Abldla1 by tbe law; the
Melp County Board of Ekdio. beJel a opubllc
. test or tbe ballot countlnJ equipment Friday
;..,.

-

al'tenoon. Here Jane Frym,er, deputy dltedui,
Bllrbara Smltla, and RlllrSm8, dlnctor, ·~to
right, ebeell: out the -sJ*m
• • '.,. ,)
'1'

For some Meigs Countians...

'

'

imm~t foDo.W. ~u.g· the release of a following ihe merger .of ill four
consolidation study from the Ohio GalliaLocal ~ ~bools iJito '
benciJ.
. Department of Educa. tio·n. The . River Valley Iligh School last year,
The winner of that race wiD face .
ha ited the---' .,.,.
Gallipolis attorney andformet . Board of Education issued a stateParents ve c
,....,.y"""
common
· PIeas Judge R'1chard. c . ment .on. April 21 lidati
outlining
its
mile
bus
trip
from Crown City to
. thi Cheshire, where RVHS is located
00 at
Roderick Jr. in the fall. Roderick Opposition to conso
s in the old Kyger Creek High
was the sole ~mocrat to nle tor timGe.alll'a Lo·cal voters WI' II vote· School site, as the. nrimAI'V reason
.
the position. ·.
.
, th ·
S r·-m-,.&lt;,., ty of
Voters in the Gallipolis City upon a 4-m.ill operations levy, .or e move. mce a a.... n
·
School Dislrict wiD decide the fate which its backers say is necessary ththe villiJge'sF~Iandnscarehoo~ls
-. su.,_ .
of two tirOPOJed tax issues:._ 8 6- to keep the dlst:rict afloat and help
e nearby t : . taxes to ~
8
mill levy for operations and a 2· pay back some of the $2 million 11 em~:
u
nlillpermanentiDllmVementslevy. hasbeenfoceedth toborrowfrorn the
There will be no·prun
· ary
. ra
· ~It marks the third
in a year the state ovez e past two years. ·
for tbree seats on tbe Gallipolla
district has sought passage of both
In a relaled matter that voters in
.
. h.
issues, which the district feels is the county schools must decide, City Commiss1on of!n 1n 1 •s
vital to maintaining a quality edu- Crown City residents are request- year's election. F"iling
the posi.cational sys
· leiD and to prevent any ing penniss!on to have their school lions were incumbent Carol
•·· revenue -Asti.__.
commissioner
·
.,.;ble bomlwing from .the state.. . ""'
""'' ''""" 10 the Fmr'c 0D'Rourke,
S former
d
d
ha been seekin land Local School District. Supow aun ers an newcomer
to
that; porters of the initiative have sent Celestine Skinner. Their names
merger of the city Schools and the their children to Fairland schools . wiD appear on.~ November ballot
Gallia County Local Schools is ·under the guardianship program without oppoutiOII.
·' ·
won·election to the CommonPle&amp;'l

Coolville incinerator a hot t~pic ·

will

Meigs bookmobile
schedule posted

you

.

SOMMERSBY ~u

.•.

.
'

.

.AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE a ad ·
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY .
.I. I

., .

I

0

,

..

"'

"

..

'

J

kl

l .

4

l

~

.,

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